THE MIDDLEBDRGH POST. OEO. V. WAtiKNSELLKl., Kditor nul Proprietor. Miipi.r.M-iiii( i'v, Ai itir. Id, 1 ,.ti'i. 'I h I'ltilmt Htiiti'N nuil Knrojio to gether lmvo '2'i2,H'i Mind jmoi'lo, (ornithine 1. than one in 1,000. It in luirdly to ho credited, lut it in nuthoritatively Mated, tlint tlio iiilo fit tho I'mti il Slates, nnntially chew ?.!(, 0(10,000 worth of j-nm. A l'ri'tuli newspaper fny that I'uri.pi: will utio of those tliiyn have, to tuko ii ami iIih njsrt of Atucriciu pre tentions in regard tn Aun t iean terri tory. "We aro tins notified before limnl wliat wo nre to expect, " remark the New York Triliiun. iJorchri'Viiik, the Anturoti iv plnrer, nny tho rennuti there arc fewer A ijtnrot if i u ilitiiiiiH than Arctic uiies h Unit it in fnl Ur nrmitid the S ntli l'olo ninl results, lire less prniiiisitij'. II in tn t ix'i'ilitiiii,wliicli htiirtn from l-u-lim 1 in Sijitriiiln r next, will Lave for its tiliji-ct tlii) dibcovciy of the Mouth magnetic pule. The Atlanta Constitution cliiitns that "the people of tho n..i thi ast nhd iiortwi-nt ii ro tin d of LliznrdH at d droughts. They nr.' m i kiiiK homes ill Iho NcetiiitiH whrii'tho cuiiditiuiis of lli.stonce am mure fnvorulii. Already they lire M-inlin lure colonic .outli ward, und the wiping out of scctional hiu will Initio millions of theiu here. Tim Iicxl ilceiido will hue It ldf tide of immigration poiiriti'- into tho south. "O.mi I'uiilV Mthtry an riv-itl'iit of the Transvaal, wolki out lit al'Diit gd.j.QOO per mi'i-.im, wiih S.!,oii; a year for "ci'lleo money. '' i. c. , for en lertainiri; j ti I j m srs. We may add that tho id 1 iji'iitielil ili keeps Well within tin; SJ.IIHil, for Ins ollieial en tartainnieiits nro iieithi r mum mini tior costly. As i e-ar.U his private fortune, this may he put roughly at n million Merlin-.'. How he made it is klionn only to himt-rlf " ' ' M I'ivo lmndr to have no1 crn Mate' ''- t of o sec tions mi , UK' .ol tllWi st- cni faiiner-ainl in din in;; them to locate ill the South. Tin; Southern llidils tl ial iihsoeiat ion of Alahama b;iys tLut reports from its iiM in'ies ail ovi r tho South show that th re has 1 - n a re inarkahle iullow of immigrants Ironi the Northwest hine.) Christinas, and there is every indication. U ('hires tlio New York Sun, that the imm il-i.. t ioti wi'1 hhow a lut .-i ir, eii as; as the t-j r 1 1 1 pr jyrisseK. It is proposed in flail to ol'i.;n Ii i.e ill eo-opel .it I' ill with liei j: hiioritijj dtat.sau " Arid K'. io:i ( .xposito-n," to ho held hiieei ssivi 1 v in the princi pal eitn s of tlii- llaht, for the purpose of hhowui'lhe prodiielsan I resources id the and n ylon and of ti un.; to dispel tin; notion tha' still ci-ts in mini: ii liters that tho Country be tween the Jl.ieKl-s u'l 1 the Sierras is a tmpeh hH desert, oivcu Up to M;tc'c brush lllld coyotes. SpeellllcUi of ptollletH from tho In Ids und oich irds would bo bhowu, with hauipleH of tho mineral treasures of the region. Tho exliib its would ho displayed iu tho chief pities first, nnd then divided up for exhibition. ill htnallcr cities and throughout tho l'.ihtern Mates. The main idea is, of course, that Mich au exhibition would attract imiiiigratioa und capital to tho arid West. r.irminghiun, lig. , luHiiufactiircK Dot only tho K"1!" f"r various races, but tho crowns for their kings. Whilo a great many of tho gods aro cheap BtVair,ioiuo aro rather c istly and ar tihtio iu debigu. Crowns range iu prieo from $" to SoO ). Ttiero is a blight falling oil in tho demand for crowiiH, howeer, hineo ho nmuy ;v npo kings hnvo taken a fancy to tho tilk hat mid wear it ou atato occusioUK in lion of n crown. The cheapest crown aro truly gorgeous, beiug dec orated with diamonds and other pre cious HtoiioN, all of glims. "On ono occuHion," nays mi KngliBh truvelor, "when I wan out iu Africa, I haw no fewer than twenty guiull chiefs with crowuH of thin kind upon their heads nud a remarkable body of uieu they looked. Ono of thou) deeoruted his roynl person by wearing it puir of trousers as a coat, while u puir of old gaiters were the only article of cloth ing upon bis lei's " Hluileiila' (iliuhily I'ruulc. Ponio pranking MinlentH htole the hu man nkeleton belonging to tin; high ehool nt k'recjxirt, Me., the other night, nud run It uj by the hnlyunU to tbo .WV f. . . ' ... ... HOME-MADE SUNSHINE, Vf hot eare Iiw t)i tiny go by Whiulicr gloomy or brhtht the ky? What earn I whnt tho wntlnr miy t"? Cold or warm 'tis llio rnme to r.v. For my dear home fklos they nro nlway Mul And tny dear homo Wdtlior (the glal dny thro1) Is "li-auiifal Mimiii T" from mom till night, And my feet walk ever in Iovo'h trim lltflit. And why? Well, horn Is my hnby fiwert, Following mo Mimd on ri-stlos fwt, H'liiling on tr.ii thro' lii.-,ft hlim eye, Aa l gln l'lnnlm ami hrlglit'nlng my In-door ki-. And hitiy'.s father, with fond, true heart (To tintiy mi l m, hoino' l.etti-r psrlj His faoo is snnsliino, and w ri-joko lu tho miisio h'-ur 1 in lif.s loving v ileo. Ko why should tv ihi ilaJgo by The gloom or th lU'ht of tho w ith-r nnd sky Of th ontsl.J. world, when vrVr husy all day M.-iii'ifa 'luring temshlno whleh la ls not imnj? With wiillc, with kl with ra.- ornl with Joy- Fnth"r nnd mnthir, and tat.y-hny . Wear" llTing i-ie'li dy in ili hun-hlno we tiiiiki' And C M k' l'p tn ou 1 gui In .-t (or l iv.'V dear sai'! '-lary D. I!riu. In Harper's Bazar. Rockcrton'sSwcethcart, 15 . A L P il J u S RyP'fC) MotiroiigU nnd I A it ftl luai' I''" Ilo ui u D TA" A !' U -Vvcuior, priu. R W.r.M Sz-T-B tt Clliilllv in "rails." but hehtill ninused himself by denliug now and again to tho extent of 00 ),()!iil or so, nl though for gen eral business he bud practically re tired from 'Change. Ho was it wid ower, with an only daughter. Miss l'liyllis Monrongh, m;ed twenty a line, handsome blonde, who luul taken lip the Mudy of ncieiice. 1'hyllis had, nl coiirfe, licajm of of fers, eligible and otherwise, hut (die bad not met tho mail whom tdio eared to mnrrv, mid, ut her urgent desire, her fatln r had sent her to eollcgo to iiiahlo her to purine In r Mudies. Sho went to the college with a mind fully made up to devote her life to science ami to nhjuro matrimony. In s ' hir-self put it, sho bad ' e.ii t nud thrown tho JnicKcrtoii, who Wus Htu ly ny iaw tin re. Yr.un Ibickrrtou catno from n good family, was rich, good lookiug mid in every way eligible ; but when l'hvliis wrote to lnr "papa" informing him of her tender passion and asking his consent to hei engagement, sho re ceived ii telegram ' (ho wus so urgent that he would not wait lor tho poM to carry his refusal) : "No. t'omo home nt once." l'hyllis had ko rarely been denied anything that Mie was nngry, iiston ishc 1, dumbfounded, brokenhearted ,i!l nt (Mice. No mere words can accurate ly liehcribe lnr feelings. However, there w:is no In lt for it. Sho must oh -v. And so, niter an interview w ith her lover, in which thev vowed eternal attachment, hhe precipitately threw U In r studies and her newly found hopes of bliss and returned to New York. Her father received her kindly, but with ii firm set countenance, which bho knew from her observation of his deal ings with others indicated tL.it Lis mind was made up, und that nothing could niter it. She, of course, burst into tears to begin with. lint it made no visible flVcct on her parent. "My dear l'hyllis," ho said, "you cannot imagine how it pains me to be obliged to run counter to your de hire, but when I hnvo explained mat ters to you, I hope you will agree with ine and give up the idea of marrying this young Hockerton." "When I was n lad my father had a farm out West, the adjoining farm to which belonged to Ralph ltockerton, the grandfather of the young mun you have met. 'I need not go into details; it will Biillico for you to know that my father mid old Hockerton had a bitterquarrel, mi l that n feud ui'o.io between the two families which cau never be healed. "I would rather see you in your eollin," Lo added, melodramatically, "than see you the wife of one of that brood." "Rut, pipn," ur.'jod Phyllis, "it is n very long timo ago, aud 1 don't thiuU that ii quarrel between my grandfather and his grandfather should bo liny reason why (loo I mean Mr. Hocker ton should not bo a good husband to me. He is rich. I've always done as you've wi-hod, and now, wheu I feel that my life's happincs is at stake, you make this stupid objection." She sobbed afresh, but her tour wero thrown away on her obdurato parent, so bhe tried to cross-examine him on the subject of tho quarrel. "It must have been a very dreadful quarrel, papa, for you to harbor re venge all these year. Tell me moro about it. If my life is to bo blighted," (the said, sighing deeply, "I should liko to know it." Mr. Monrough felt himself potting into a cornor w ith his daughter's wiles and tears, and ho got a bit angry." "It would be of no ase," he replied shortly; "my mind is irrevocably made up. Rut I may say that, as was common in those days, the quarrel led to lighting, and until your grand- either family took every opportunity of trying to take the life of no me mem ber of tho other. After father's death we told the fr.rra and came Kast, and ao the enmity ceased actively ; but 1 could never concent to your marrying into that bated family never 1" "Rut, pupa," insisted the girl, "wbnt wax it about? What led to the quarrel ?" "It was about a ctrca.n, my dear, which rati between the two eMateis. Old Kock( rton inintel that the water wns all on his land, whereas it was the boundary, and we had the right on one aide of the stream and ho ou tho other. Hut it really distrisscs me to think abo'it that dreadful time, when for two wholo years 1 wnlked about witli my life in r.iy hand, no to penk. I beg that yoti w ill ha v no mere ou the subject." "Well, put one question, pnrii," nuked l'hyllis, with mi ive to future contingencies. "Was any one killed." "No. No one was killed," answered Mr. Monrough; "hnt your irrnnd father was hhot in thearni, mi 1 1 never can forgive them never ! never !" Her fatln r then iiii-t. d on her promising him that sho would not marry without bts consent, which she i 1 rendily i noush, but hhe s r.v it was nudes arguing with bim any btrther, and for the time the matter ended. It soon became evidect to Mr. Mon rough that i'hrllis was really in ttiug mid making herself ill nU.ut "that confounded fellow Iloekert. n,'' ns he hnid to himself. Jlo was a man of action, an. I determined to . b'u' Ulr ' thoroii'.'li change u' j "'lid Tiiyllis, my girl," he sii 1 the morning at breakfast, "liow n- you liko to ki to I", 1 1 gland for a bit?" "Oh, pupa hhe ( xclaiiue.l, with toe mo-t brillian' look on In r face that h" hail sc "i there for a long time. "That would he liidishtful. Yo'i know I've always wanted to go across and K-e the Oi l World. Rut ea:i voii sparo the time?" "We'd, no, n.y girl, 1 can't just now," ho n plied. "1 iru obliged to remain hero for a time, as I have a speculation on which repnres my presence on the spot; but Mrs. Laker nig isgoin;; over by tin; tn t I'un nrder, mid hhe would chaperon yon to your U!:ele's in Matiehesti r, wheio you could stay and iimuso youreli till I arrived, which probably 'would be in about three mouths." So it was settled ; and. the following week, Phyllis (having lir-t in tor me 1 young Hockerton, with whom she kept up a secret correspon b nee, of her departure and her' destination) i-tepped on board the mail steamship tinder the care of hi r lily friend and .'ourse .'.rrived nt her uncle's iu ehcti r. o wns warmly received by hot ;-h relatives. Mr. Thomas Spun er Mo iii'.ther's Vi'otLer) hud a lur-'o buiiuess i spinning trade iu Manchester, ami reMded nt Rirkdii'e, going backward and forward to his business, so that she hail the benefit of the sen n:r. What with that, nud her voyage over, an 1 her new sur roundings, hhe ij a very hhort time resumed her old healthy look-, and, ns Mr. Spiiudcr wrote to Mr. Monrough, "she leeiiieil to have entirely forgotten her love nfhiir." She also, ol cour-e, frequently wrote to her father. In one of her letters she i-aid : "1 am n fully eomfortabl. hero. Hveryholy seems to do everything possible to nia.ii; mo happy. I'ncle Thomas's son (b urge is at home from the t:uiver-ity, where ho is studying for the ''l urch. He seem i a very nice young mini, not nf ail soicmu as one would think, and he plavs tennis lovely, lie returns to Cambridge to morro.v." "L'm !" retleeted old Monrough. ns he read this letter. "That'-, more like it, now !" J'hvllis had been iu F.nghuid for two months mid everything had settled dowu quietly, when Mr. Monrough was electrified ono morning to receive u cablegriim from her: "lieor,"' Ims lining all tlio way from eol. Ictfe. Wants i.i marry me Immediately. Uo consent mi 1 make nu happy, Tuvi.i.is." "Weill this beats all !" murmured Mr. Monrough, us he stared nt the message, "lie must have fallen very deeply in love with her, indeed. Oh I 1 cousent. Rut how ubout the settle' went? I suppose that Tom Spauder reckons on my doing what is right, and so 1 will. I wish i could get over, but I'm stuck fast with that specula tion for another month. It might loso me a million if I left it, nud 1 can't afford that. Well, here goes!" Aud he bent this reply telegram: "l ni't mi 'cr-tan 1 tlio hurry, Inn I con sent. Ami i r pleased. Wisli ovry hai.p. iiess. Cumi n loavn lir for u muiitli. Tell mule I wul air.iUj;u liaielsumely. "iJ.Slloco.', Ten days after this message, on tho morning of the arrival of the Cunard steamship at New York, Mr. Mourougn was sitting in his private cilice when tho door opened and in walked his daughter, leaniug on the arm of a very well-set-up younj man of course, her husband. The old mun jumped up. "Well, this is a surprise I" he shont ed. "What on earth made you in such a hurry to get married? Ah, well, I was young myself onee, and I know when I fell iu love with your mother I wns iu a deuoe of a hurry to get married." "Ob, papa," murmured Phyllis, as she threw her arms round his ncck and kissed bim. "It was so kind of you to give your cousent. I am so happy. I thought you would, though, wheu you knew what a Jong way George had come to seek ma I" "Oh, well! I guess it's not such a very long way, afer all, replied her father. "England's only a little nlaoo altogether, you know." 'Well," said George, "that's true ; but its' picrti nnrin 4000 Tniles before The elder man started at this obser vation, he couldn't understand the ap plication of. However, he passed it over. "Well, George, my boy," he said, as he shook his hand in a hearty grip, "I'm trulv glad to have you for a son-in-law. And, how's your fithcr?" "M? father?" echoed Oeorge. "Ile'i been dead this ten years or more!" "What does all this mean?" cried Mr. Mocrough, in amazement. "Am I mnd, or what is it? You've just left your father, my brother-in-law, Tom Spnnder, in England, haven't yon?l riiyllis threw np her arms, and, with a wild shriek, fell down on the thick est part of the soft fur rug that lay be fore tho fireplace, in what appeared to be a dead faint. Tho two men bent down nt tho sumo time to attend to her, and bumped their heads together, and everything was confusion. "My name's not Spnnder," said fleorge, hurriedly, as bo rubbed his bend with ono baud ami supportod l'hyllis with his diseuoaged arm. ".My name's Rockerton, nnd I went all thy way from college in America to KiiL'lnnd. to secure your daughter." The pen refuses to record Mr. Mon rcugh's forcible language when ho was thus suddenly male acquainted with the fact that he had given his consent to his daughter's marriage with tho son of tho family to which ho had sworn deadly hatred, and tho very mnu ho had before refused, whilo nil the time no had thought rhvllis was i i ....:? . t i - .i : linn it iijk winitj ,-ioauuer, uio urovu- cr-in-law's sou. I ror nboiit llvo minutes tbo placo ! would hardly hold him, mid his linger ! ,V1U ,,!, ll, I,,, (,.1. ... .... store hi ...i.i. it ...i.n nr iiiiiiun v j daughter, leaving her now loiiud husband to "briug her round" , as best ho could. j However, by tho timo hoh.i l roaro.l i himself out of breath, ho saw tho fu i tility of his further opposition or re- sentmeut; and, like the good business i man that ho was, ho veered round and : met the wind as it blew. I "Well! well!" ho said, "I've been done! Rut what's done can't bo h. Iped." lie thenturuol to assist Phyllis, but by a strange eoiuoidence thnt young lady had just "como to," and in a burst of hysterical tears, begged forgiveness for tho little "misunder standing." "I forgive you, you little witch," her father cried. "Rut I have my suspicions nbotit tho 'misunderstand ing. '" And Mr. Monrough has never I pen able to decide iu his own mind wheth er it was accidental or of "malice pre pense" ou Phyllis's part thnt tho "mis understanding" occurred. Ho bus, on severa! occasions tucKlod his daugh ter ou tho subject, 'but has always managed most skilfully ' qtvssticc r.nd r., elm and . . . are the happiest couple imaginable, and (ieorge "is not such a bud chap ufter all," Mr. Monrough has long siuco ceased to iuquiro iurther into it, und has also, of course, "buried tho hatchet" with tho Hockerton fam ily. Tit-Hits. The WinrJ Willi tlio Whip. A decided sensation bus been created in Vienna by a man who probably stands alone in the world in his par ticular litu of performance. Thin gentleman's name is Piskslug and ho is mi Atistro-Huugariiiu by birth. Ho is an expert, or, rather, a phenomenal urtist iu tho use of the whip. The lir.st thing bo does is to take a long-lashed, stout-handled whip iu each band, mid, with orchestral ac companiment, proceed to crack or snap them ut u terrific rate. Tho tona l ma lo by his w hips in this man ner is graduated from a noise like a rille report to the roft disk of a bill iard ball. It makes a curious sort of music, aud i-erves to show how he cau regulate tho force of each stroke. Moro interest, however, is evincod when ho seizes a vicious-looking whip with an abnormally long lush. It is provided with a very heavy handle of medium length. This is his favorite toy, nnd what he can do with it is really wonderful. He first gives an idea of what fearful force there lies in a whip lush in the hands of an expert. A large frame, over which is stretched a calf or sheep skin, is brought on the stago. This is marked with dots of red paint. Tho man with the whip stops ui, and swinging tho lush round his bead lets tly at the calf skin. With every blow ho actually pulls a piece right out from tho leather, leaving a clean cut hole. These pieces aro distributed among the audience to show that .there is no trickery about tho performuueo. Af ter this he takes a frame with three shelves. On these there aro a dozeu or more of medium-sized apples lying very close together and provided with largo numbers. Anyoue iu the audi ence may desiguate which apple he wishes struck, and the unerring lash snatches it out like a Hash. ' A still more difllcult feat is tho snapping of coins from a narrow necked bottle. A piece of silver about the si.e of half a crown is put over the cork of the bottle, which stands on the edge of a table. The whip artist, without appearing to take any sort of aim, sends the long lash whizzing through the air and picks off the coin without jarring the bottle, much less breaking it. Tit-Bits. A Singular Jubilee. A singular jubilee has just been celebrated by a famous Austrian poli tician, Dr. Smolka the fiftieth anni versary of his condemnation to death. As a young man Dr. Smolka was sent euced for belonging to a treasonable society, and only escaped the death penalty through a general amnesty. Afterward he beoame a loyal subject, and rose to be President of the ill S.T.T.-VV VVV1 0 i 8 a Df it Vek be rem .H. McLean's Liver and Kidney Balm. . grand medicine. I used three bottles, and. thanks be to God, am a in again. You are at liberty to publish this if you desire, a I would J to be the means of calling the attention of victim of diabetes to a (il xnai win it ivo mem a D letsea re net. linns ph ii i ipi mt mat win give them a blessed will - Columbus, Neb, Don't Tobacco jf lit and Smolio I vW 11 - I II IM ia ma arm arm mm s a mm amw m ' m " SYS VI II I I f SS I I MS l "a II I I S ssr "ill i yy ii a. i m i i if u 41 K wJsyy c'cco. CTQ ennily nittifirtli? rnrn rnnollpntlnn. rnrfl' vrertntile, m, tlu ousv. Bold bv druuKlsts fvcrywlii.'iv, guuruiitvuU tocuio. THE IIHHT lll.AHI. t'iu"li not ilm ruliy tviuo, nsi-r iu th howl ; mlth nn I li.ipiiln.'.-is, ir to tlm mill. (.Ins', in yot iintonoli'Vl, t "is..ii urink: m,mi(iir '.nt Y'liin. Thi llHUK Ail' Sut il. E'r J'au- LI r And cmveJ tlicroon your iihiiic. Look yumlor nt llKlt lirnkon wrcok, With tott-'rltiK Hti-p Blul nlow ; FIh was n youair uu 1 lumori'.l man A fow Hlmrt yearn iu-d. H" bad of wnltli n buunillrMH nlo Loved Riiilli-d upun hh wayj Ills ltfn held every bap pi in -as, But wlint U he to-day' A hroken, hl'inti'l, r:ii.'i;iil wretch, .Mon pufi.H him hy with S '.irn; Better it wero for'hlm nnd bin Jlo never hnd heeu horn. Yi'lmt n.iiile him what he Is t-iiay? What rohh. him, ilo yuu think? What Mole IiIk hmior nn'l his uaiue? The eiir.ied lleuJ ol drink. W iuld you, too, tre:nl the downward way, And Im to rum n hlave, 'Till fal-e to truth, to lumur l.mt You till u ilriiiikarj'it Krave? Eon't any: "I'll only ilrlnk just ouei-j That surely Is no Imrm." ThHt latttl Klas, tint llr.-it you take, t'oiiurviM your sieudy arm, You say that you can ctop tit wlllj It ts not -o, my Irieud; After the llrst tho second ooiuim, And soon yon reaeh the end. 'lis tho llrst K'ass that makes tho sot, Then hhuu it whilo you eau; Bb truo to honor und yourself, Ood'f noblest work a num. Pon't troad tho rapid downward way, To till a drunkuril'a grave; Look up to Him, it you aro weak, Who baa tlio power to save. Don't drink that first, that fatal g'.oss, 'Twill dim your henminu eve. For honor's take, for lo.e s dear take, For God's sake pas it ly. -Mrs. M. L. P. TUIPEBAXCE NKWH AND NOTES. The fact that there aro drunkards is proof that moderate drinkiuK is not safo. Doew it pay the Btato to bang one citizen because another citizen sells him liquor? The consumption of Intoxieatini ltiUors In New Zealand Is decreasing year by year. One dollar for religion and Ave hundred for rum Is about the ratio in this day ot modern cirillzutiou. It doe not ray to have fifty working men ragged in order to have one saloou keeper dressed in broadcloth aud Hush with money. The saloon produoe the irrand majority ot the paupers, nnd then the sober people of the community havo to support the product. It does not pay to have ten smart, aetlvo, intelligent boys transformed into thieves iu order to enable one man to leud au easy life by soiling liquor to thorn. Dr. Nunsen, who Is said to have found tho North Pole, has put himself on record aa be log opposed to the use by aretio expeditions of intoxicating liquor in uuy form. Qllhert, tho man who paid the penalty of bis crime on the scaffold, in Boston, reoeut ly, publicly doolared tn bis Intest utterances that liquor was the cause of bis downfall. 'Show me the child," said s woman lee turer tbe other day, "nnd 1 will tell you the habits of the father." Mho's right, the drink ing man Is known by the poverty of bis family. It does not pay, says tha Temperance Ad vocate, to have titty working men and their families live on bone and soup and bait ra tions in order that one saloon keeper may flourish an roast turkey and champagne. All the leading newspapers aro talking about the liquor traffic, admitting that It is an evil thing and suggesting some means for taking oare ot the results. This means thinking, and thinking means much fur the Cause of total abstinence. VIhsI Was Prematurely Kxploiled. The premature explosion ot a blast in the tunnel works ot the Pioneer Electrlo Power Company, about four miles from Ogdon, Utah, killed five men and horribly mutilated seven others. This is the company In whioh Mr. Bannlgan. Ilhoda Island rubber mag nate, ilnvetited heavily. Beuator Frank J. t'annqp is the general. manager. Cured Diabetes, March 14th, 1895. Tht Dr. J. H. McLian Htedicint C6., St. Louit, Mo. Gentlemen : I desire to express my heartfelt thanks to you for my marvelous restoration to health. I was sick for many years with a bad case of diabetes which made me very thin and weak. I also suffered much loss of sleep, having to et up so many times at night to pass urine, arid also great annoyance from thirst that water would not satisfy. A few months ago I began o follow your instructions in regard to diet and to use SI I relief. LOUIS PHILLIPS, Columbus, Neb. mn.tr, Stronor n brintra h n the foolln youth tn t.im J rri nr.n ro itt nii It roBtoroa lnnt-. i,i YOU ma onln . pounds in ton dayg. GUARANTEED TOBACCO HABIT CLi GO DUTT nnrl frw a Vu-w .1 COStS OnlV Al. Vniin ,i flTUa.rRnt.nn n. snii.A -ti-., yv I r I I I is; 'WMavr V UlUlit'y ' lUnClCa. Bnnklnt. Writ.tnri minfo-nf- . ana eamplo free. Addroea nearest ofUu THE STERLING REMEDY CO., MONTREAL, CAN. NEW Vf PURES i AND BES LESS THAM HALFT PRICE: Or OTHtRBR -f- POUNDS,20 HALVES.IO QUARTERS SlJLDIM r.AMs I1N RI'P-A-N-S ft The modern standi arc! Family IMcii' cine : Cures t! common cvcry-il; a. ills of humanity. I Id WHAT INTF.MPEUANl'E DOES. The New York Journal, in an arti i which It counted up the Itnaneial ami I cost of Intemperance in its city, couelu 1 ioiiows: )t But Father Knickerbocker's loss is n k to that of these cltir.eus them.selvi . U. year's army of uufortuuates whom I ov led to law-breaking, if place 1 iu sin.' tyc allowing each person two feet to H, 1 would stretch from tlm Tombs prison i: jtak York to the jail In .Newark. N. J. Smmc weary, woeful lino never marched f ii a (ulil world; no speetaulo so horrible as tin? d a' oentration of the drink-horn horror-' it York alone was ever presented to tiou. But if it were, its frightful thii..' I unseen, llioso who watched tlm gr Hue wouhl see 'j:),0U0 men wms' Inanhuod alcohol bud ilufeate 1; XOOU '' from whom lluor had stolen all tin best and highest. But they would the wrecks. To fully nsn the ilr to i meaning ot the sud line they would r t I ee a parallel procession containii.. k " ttiarchers as they were before their fail Aud even that would not half tell I- I rid tale, it would only show the v Uiiuor on the ones who had drunk it. other and even greater army would 'J crulted it those who suffered In 1HV5 t!' the Intemperance of others wars gn" Wives bruised and blooding from dr- husbands brutal blows would bo In It- ray; onlidren neglncted and left to st' drunken mothers would totter weakiy ranks; mothers distressed and broken ' Sins of offspring, liquor-wrecked, i walk, weeping: husbands, gloomed n perats through the wickedness ol i dmgped wives, would march bliudlv. That "at the end it stlngotb like au Is sb wn by the city's hospital report nuucreu ana nighty deaths were ,'i ,.l:H 8H.', caus'd by drink in 1895. Ut thu 5 lost iirough pneumonia, at least ine 'icfltors say, might uu ve beou sh' the laitlms not been weakened bv' Con -tmptton claimed fi2nt victims and ui these 11)01) might bavo livedo nac :hit used liquor. And so the s' ir.ei a weary, weary story of mi wrt e and death. No temperunut evr rkoken was half so powerful I se against strong drink, tvulcl ' dr own awful wnrL iiliom to Ur own en. in . CO Jit X7" I SH' Ml M u