f w Look condition of your blood. At F . , .U.nM In lAHlMMlnMl irt, ir mcliiru cii.un- 1 tnJ dmpDw, chilly nights, lowering ,, dnnchlnn rslns. These sudden 1,-!. trinff on f olds, fevers, pneumonia, Wil, and other ailments. Keep the Yrure rich nI full of vitalltT and you rtfirsaoarilla w L ,1,.,1-ln frt I he One Tme Wood I .arlflf r J K Ill3 I'd'. " digpstom 26c. tfted Four Thousand Miles. m .1... .,..,n1 yflT llin tflL 1 Oil' 01 I"" ton1 ' lV 1'HII- I jninji. far nwny m me soutn en- there res! B inrjrn r.uiwuy nuns- tniyo. was carried ty winds r irniitH from sonic point on ma ferula coest to Its present resting It ownership, noino port nnu ... t. ......... t-t... .Is tl OX II" loss lire llllninM ll. .loiin vl.'y. mute ,,f nilsnlonnry lrla tlllltf fl nr. faw mo nil -' .'.oity ilMtit It recently, n said: ".. ran the Marsl.uII group in tsopteintter in the omrse f our tur through .lands. hikI our Intrntloti wn nt ,,1 to this Ijubo b.arge resting on n I ni:i'l'' careful examination of it the iily murks of IdontiftVntlo.i t were tin' word 'Transfer' nnl i!,.n vliitloii Till.' Tlif rest of til" caml tin' port had lri-n obliterated. licre were imrrow pango tru-ks on ni n couple f big onirics still lu- nnd ory well preserved. The o Itself was pretty biully wpnth.r n. but It was still In very nood itlciti. It "as nbnllt lot) feet long, nf heavy timbers. The bottom been copper covered, but the nn- lui'l stripped tlint off. They hud . an attempt to bronk the craft uu, hut that was beyond their power, te i Npi'rli iK'i'X of tli.nt Imrno would :inl to ooiiJorMm-. It may have pii tlif 4,tHnl odd mlli'M whirl) ill- coast and tin' MurshnllH In -y fli'irt Hi'af of tlnio, or It inluti'. taken n romarknUy lonj; pi'rlod. " ;ii!ry ninoii Bliliiphiif moil nit to 1, mlty of tlio MtrniitfO oraft fallod nov any lljlit upon t lie mibjoct. . Is no record of the loss of any ar and tlio pciirral Impression ..it It was probably nwopt nway din' of tho lower const ixirts by rai. and carried out to sea. to bo 1 by wind and son to tho Mar--.-San Francisco Chronicle, hurt your feelings for people to tlmt you r.re tickle, but you bvt .ire. Kry man laltim to road both Bides, MD li'.'in d''en. RED SALESWOMEN. MPL0YER3 SHOULD BZ MORE CONSIDERATE. caliiiK striliMiK iit by n Young Lady in I'rooklyu. the va.t retail i-stublislnnents of litirr,. niuny women ure cm- 1 US S lll SWUllU'Il. fi rm.'i-ly held the pnsitious that . Attn ' v'-.T-:- 3rW mWQ ' 1 1 r AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE- trutifj IIICHH roeii.'ciod todu line work. Their dntli'q 1 them to be on their feet from Hi.' to lii-'Ht. and liiiinv nl them. . w - hort time, contract these ilis- 'ir uimpluints culled "fcniulo es. ' noei iir irreirularittes. sumiresscil f'iiiful iiieiihtruation, weakness, tion, leueorrlxi-u. ircneral de. nn.l nerrmis prostrtttiin. v nr.' U-vt with such Kvmiitoma ''HI (;, n,.s lnvil ml.. ..if. ''' ii'i'itabilite. ni'i'Vim iii.vu nevi, ineUincholy, "ull-(.'iine" ' ;tiit t(-l.e-left-ul.mo " fccliuys, SMld llopl-lcssneits. "h ensv-, tliere is one tried nnd r ui ,iv. I.vdia. I'. Ii,l. l.n.-u r '' ' oiiiMind ut onee removes trouhli-s. Tl... . .1' : . - -" tui.unui 13 It v lear Mrs, l'inkhnm iAffnt. Vim r iinKVi'i'i 1 too inihi'ruble to ffo to tho (J Ww"kl "lf'. 1 urn now buck: i ay oi,i j,itu.e, ttllJ Iu.vup fclt F " ' Ull 111V llfi.. TliA ro pains nilll w,liu.s ,mvo k,ft I uin not a bit l-fe liH.ks brighter to mo. I rM tired. nv tmnru, ' 1 could hcreuiu riUt out l - J v rVi-tuble ( mid is You auk- i'U to from "If. woiuan In litil'n lihould tfn. r,,. . . ' v vuur wuu fi'mi-ilv. I ti ,...1 .. ,. , - --- w you, um ou for being M good to me."- Subject: "Ofttti of Citrbnncla. Text: "And I will mriku th? windows of SKBtP, and thy Rates of caruuuplos." If. Ut., U Pcrhnp bofln k human dloorvit of most pnlnfut and ofttimm rnt.tlrhnrnetorln namml aftr It, th rhurnh mut the world have neror donnjustloototlmt tntcnnnnnd all-iiRirwtlT piwlmis ston, the enrbunclo. Tim poarl Ihnt Christ plcknd np to illustrntn Ilia r mon, nnd the JnnT and tho rnpphire and the uTietliyst which the njionnlyptfo vinion tnasonod into tho wall of hwivim hare had proporreooirnltlon, hut thl. In nil the age, Is the flrt sermon on thoearlunle. Thin precious utono lit found lu the East Indies, in color in nn intnnsn uoariot, and hold up between your ryo ami the run it Is a burning coal. The poet puts it into rhythm as ho writes: I.lko to tho burning coal whenoo comos its naino; ' Ainoni; tho Greeks n Anthrax known to lame, Oo.l nets it lilch up In Pihlo ervtalloirrnphv. He ruts it with a divine ehlsiil, iharpons"it with proelMi reometry. nint klunlee Its tire Into nn almost siiHrnutiirul flamo of lmnty. Its law of fiyiiunetry. its law of none, Its law of parallelism, oometliin to exuito the nmnnmnnnt of the seientlst, ehltno tho cantos of the poet and arou tho adoration of the t'tiriritian. N. ono but tho inllalte (ot could fashion a carbuncle as laro m your thumb nail, ami as if to make all aijcs appreciate this precious Mono !to ordered it to be st In tho llrst row of tho hluli priest's bnast-plate In olden time and hllier up than the onyx nn tho emerald and the diamond, nnd "in Ez"klflprophicis concern I ir.; the splendors ofth Tvrian court, tho ciirlninclo is men tioned, tho brilliances f , walls and of the tassellne,i Moors tui-i;sti I by tho lliliin sentence: "Thou hnt wulkel nn and down in I he midst of tho stones of lire:" IJut in my text it b' not n solitary spchncu that I hand you, ns the keeper of a museum niiirht tik down from tho h!i"I( a precious stono nnd allow you to rxamlno It. N-r Is it In tho j nnol of a door that you mlht matid an I study for Its uinpio earvimrs or bronz" I traceries, but thor" is n whole cat" d It lifted boforo our ndmlrini; nnd astounded vision, nyo! two trntes of it, nye! many tfatcs of It: 'l will malvO thv Kates of carcuiieles.'' Wlmt Rates? Gates of the Church, (intcs of anythim; worth popsessim;. tint,. of siic.'osslul en terprise. Gales of salvation. Gates of Na tional achievement. Isitiith, who wrote this text, wr.jto also nil that about Christ "as the lamii of tho slaughter," r.inl spoke of i:hrist ns snylnit, "I havetrod tho wine press alone," nn I wrote, "Who is this thnt eonmtli from din. with dyed Karnents Irom P,o7,rah'" And do you think tlmt Isaiah In my text merely happened to r'prewnt tho (rate as rod irates, as carmine Kates, as Kates nt car buncle? No. H'j means that ta through atonement, throm;h blood-re I strUKKle, through iiKonles wo ct into anythlnjt worth KoltliiK into, llenveu's Kat' innv well bo mailoof pearl, a bright, pellucid," cheerrul cryslallratlon, because nil tho struCKles are over anil th.ro is beyond thoso Kates nothiiiK but raptures and cantata and triumphal pro cession and everlaslini; holiday and kiss of reunion, and so the twelve Kates nrutwelvo pearls, and could be nothliiic less than pearls, lint Christ hoisted tho kiUoh of pardon In Ills own blood, nnd tho marks of olnht fiiiKors and two thumbs are on each ate, nnd as lie lifted tho mite it leaned against ilis forehead nnd took from it a crimson impress, nnd nil those (rnte are disply dyod, nn I Isaiah Was rilit whea be spoko cf tueso gates as Kiito of carbuncle. What an odd thlnjr it Is, think some, this lueaot vicarious suITorlnK or HUfTertiiK for othorc! Not nt nil. 'i he world had ia vi carious sulTorlnx millions of times before Christ came nnd demonstrated it on a scale that eclipsed nil that went before nnd all that shall come after. Kaclmel lived ouly lonu euoiik'h after tho birth of her eon to jrlve him n name. In faint whisper eho nuld, "Call blm l!on-oni," which means "jon of my jialn." and all modern travelers on the road from Jerusalem to llothol uncover their bends and stand reverently at the tomb of Ilachol who died for her boy. Hut In nil nes how many mothers dio for their children, unci in many cases Krown un children, who bv ro. crciuiey Utah clear throiiuh tho mother's I heart: Buttering for thor'r Why, the world ; is full of it. "Jump!'' said tho engineer to tho llremnn on tuo locomotivo. "One of 1 us Is em, nun to die. Jump!" And so tho enifincer died at his post, trying to save tho triiln. When this summer tho two trains crashed Into each other near Atlantic citv, nmom; tho fnrty-Hoveu who Int-t tholr lives, the eiiKlneer was found dead with ono baud on tho throttlo of the locomotivo nnd the other on tho brake. Aye! there nro hua dieds here to-day sufferinK for others. Volt know anil God knows it Is vicarious earl llco. Hut on one limestone hill about twice the heiKht of this church, live minutes' walk from tho Kales of Jerusalem, was the sub limes! case of sulTeriiiK for others that the world ever saw or ever will see. Christ the victim, human nnd satanlo malevolence the, executioner, the whole human race haviriK an overwhelming interest in the spectacle. To open n way for us sinful men and sinful women Into glorious pardon ami hiKh hope nnd eternal exultation, Christ, with hand dripping with the rush of opened nrterie", hwuuk buck the Kate, and behold! it Is a red Kate, a gato of deepest hue, a gate of car buncle. What Is trim in spirituals is true in tem porals. There are youuK nimi and older men who hope, through tho settlement of this norid controversy between silver and old. or tho oimet illlo tpinrrel, that it will become easy to make a living. That time will never coino. It never has been easy to innko a UvIuk, The men who have It very easy now, went through hardship and self denials to which most voung men would never cement. Unless they got it by inheri tance, you cannot mention twenty-llvo men who have noma to honorable fortune that did not Ilk-lit their way, Inch by inch, and against fearful odds that again nnd again al most destroyed them. For some good rea son God has arranged it for all the centuries that the only way for most people to get n livelihood for themselves and their families is with both hands and ull tho allied forces of body, mjnd ami soul to push ha :l; and push open tho red gate, tlio gate of carbun cle. For the benellt of nil voung men, If I bad the time, I would call tlio roll of those who overcame obstacle. How many of the mighty mon who went ono way on I'eiinsyl vaiilaavunue and reached the United Ktates Honnte, or walked tho other way on Pennsyl vania avenue and reached the White House, did not have to climb over political obloquy? Not one. How much scorn nnd scolT, and brutal attack did Horace Mann endure be tween tho time when be tlrst Imgau to light for n better common school system in Massa chusetts, and the day when a statue in honor of blm was placed on the steps of the Mute House overlooking "Tho Commons"" Head the biography of Hobart Hall, tho Daptlst preacher, who, though ho had been pronounced a dunce a school, lived to thrill the world with his Christian elotlencu; and of George I'enbody, who never owned a car liuge and denied himself all luxuries that be might while living and after death, through Inst will uud testament, de vote his uncounted millions to the edueatiou it tho poor people of Eng land and America; uud fct bishop Janes, who In hie boyhood worked hi passnuu from Ireland to America, und became the joy of Methodism und a blessing to the race. Go the biographical alcove lu city. State, or National library, and find nt least every other book an Illustration of overcome ob stacle, aud of carmine gate that hud to be forced open. What is true of Individuals I.itrue of Na-1 tlous. Vn it a mild spring morning when the rilKrim FHthers lauded on Plymouth J ltok, auddld they come in a glided yacht, (ray streamers flying? Ko. It was In a cold December, nnd from a ship In which one would not went to cross the Hudson or the Potomao River. Scalping knives all ready to receive them, they landed, their only wel come the Indian war-whoop. Hod men on the heaeh. Bed men In the forest. Ited men on the mountains, Ited men in tho valleys. Elvlng gatoa of red men. Gates of car buncle! Aboriginal hostility pushed back, surely now our forefathers will have nothing to do but to take easy possesion of the fairest continent under the nun. The ekloa so genial, the soil no fertl, the rivers eo pop ulous with finny life, the acreage eo im mense, there will be nothing to do but eat, drink and be merry. No. The most power ful Nation, by army and navy, sounded Its protest across three thousand miles of water. Then came Lexington, ami Bunker Hill, nnd Monmouth, and Long Island battles, and Valley Forge, and Yorktrtwn, and starva tion, and widowhood, and orptmnaire, and the thirteen colonies went through sufferings which the historinn has nttempted to put upon paper, and the artist to put upon can vas, but all In vain. Engraver's kulfe, nnd reporter's skill, nnd telegraphic: wire, and daily press, wlil di have made us acquainted with the horrors of modern batllellold, had not yet begun their vigilance, nnd the story of tho Amerl"nn ltvolutlon lies never been told, ami never will nn told. It did not take much ink to sign the Declaration of Inde pendence, but It took a terrllle amount of blood to maintain It. It was un awful gate of opposition that the men and women nnd the women ns much ns the men pushed beck. It was a gate of self-sacritlce. It was a gato of blood. It was a gate of carbuncle. Wo are not lndbtnl t ) history for our knowledge of the greatest of National crises, Mmy of ns remcmb r It, nnd fathers and mothers now living had better keep tell Ing that story to their children, so that In stead of their being dependent upon cold type nnd obliged to say, "On such a pnge of such a book you can real that," will they rm her be n'de to sav, ".My father told net so!" "My mother toll mo s,." Men and women who vividly remember li5l, and HiVJ, and isi;:i. nnd I'!!, lie yourselves the historians, toiling it, not with pen, but with living tongue and video and gestur.. That l the great uso of Memorial D icoration Day, tor the co Un lilies en the grave tops soon he. come breathless of p"rfume, nn I in a week turn to du-t unto that which ,. beneath it. J'.ut the story of courage an I self-s aerillce and patriotism told on platforms and In households nn 1 by tho roadside ami in churches nnd in cemeteries by that annual reel till will be kept fr 'sh ill the memory of generations ns long as our American iiit.lt u tbms are worthy of preservation. Long nfler you are dead your children will be able to say, with the Psalmist: "We have lirard with our ears, O God. our fathers have tol l us, what work Thou ,,-t u their days. In the times old." Hut what a time it was! Four years of home sickness! Four years of brotherly ana sisterly estrangement! Four years of martyrdom! Four years of massacre' p,it them in n long line, the conflagration nt cities, nn I see them light up a whole conti nent: Put them in long rows, the hospital, mnklug a vast metropolis of pain ami paroxylsm! Gather them in one vast assent Idage, the millions of bereft from the St. Lawrence to the Gulf, and from the Atlantic to tho Pnclllc beaches! Put tho tears Into hikes, and the bio id Into rivers, ami the shrieks Into whirlwinds! During those four years many goo. and wise men nt the N.nh and Buuth saw nothing ahead but annihila tion. With Sll'-'l a Nll'lonul debt we could nrvr meet our obligation! With such moral antipathic Northern and South ern men could never come Into amity! 11 p. rcsontatlveg of l,oul daliii and Georgia, nhd the Carollnns could never again sit el !o by sblo with tlio lieprvsentaliv'.'s of Maine, Massachusetts nnd New York nt the Na tional capital. Lor 1 John bussed hnl de clared that wo were "a buhhlu.burstiui; Na tionality," and it had come true. The Na tions of Europe had gathered with very re signed spirit nt the funeral of our American Hepuhlio. They had tolled the bell nn Parliaments and llclchstags nnd lowered their Hags at half mast, aud even the lion on the other si lo of the sivi hn l whined for the dead eaiflo on this side. The deep grave had been dug, and beside ll.ibvlotl, and Thebes, and Tyre, and other dead Nations of tiio past our dead lb-piiblio was to bo buried. The epitaph was all ready: 'Hero lies the Amori' iin U ipublle. lloni at Phila delphia, lth ut July, 177ii. Killed at Jlull Hun, July a I, jsi;, A-'ed elchte-llvo years and seventeen days. Peace to Its nsipv." Hut hofor.i the o.ieipiies had quite closed there was nn interruption ot the ceremon ies, und our dead Nation rose from its mortuary surroundings. God ha I made f r It n special li 'Mirrcctlon I'ay, and cried, "Co::io forth, thou ltepuhilo of Washing ton, and John Adams, and Thomas JeiTer son, and Patrick llourv, and John Hancock, and Daniel Webster, and S. S. Prentiss, and Henry Clay. Come forth!'' And sho came forth, to ho stringer th in she had ever been. Her mightiest prosperities have cine sin, ., that time. Who would want to push back this country to what it was In iwtor lsvi' Hut, oh, what 11 hl :h gate, what 11 strong gate she had to pull back before she could make one Utopia advance! Gate of Ham ! Hee Norfolk Navy Yard, an I Columbia, and Chumborsbiirg, and Charleston ivi lr! Gate of bayonui.! See glittering rllles and carbines Ibusii from the Susquehanna, and the James, to the MKislppi, an I tho Ar kansas! Gate of heavy artillery, making the mountains ot Tennessee and Kentucky and Virginia tremble as th nigh the earth itself were struggling iii Its last ng my. Tne gate was so llery and so red that I can think of nothing mere appropriate than to take ue suggestion or isalah lu the text and call it n gate of carbuncles. This country ha been for the most part of Its hlst jry passing through crises, mid after each crisis was better mf than before It entered it, and now we are at another crlsiH. Wo are told on one hand that if gold is kept ns a standard an I silver Is not ele vated, Conlldenee will be restored nnd this Nation will rise triumphant from till the lluiinclal mlsrort lines that have beeu nll!iet ing us. Uu the other hand we are told that If the free coinage of silver Is allowed, all tho wheels ot btisiiis will revolve, the poor man will have a better chance, and all our Industries will begin to hum and roar. During tho last six Presidential election 1 have been uracil to enter the political arena, but I never have ami iiever will turn tlio pulpit lu which 1 p reach into a political stump. Every minister must do as ho feels called to do, and 1 will not criticise him lor doing what lie considers his duty; but all the polltli .'d harangues from pulpits lrom now until the U I of November will not in nil tho Unltoil States change one vote, but will leave many ears stoppe 1 aguinst anything that such clergymen may ulter tho 111st of their lives. As a general rule the laymen of chur'hes under: tiind politics belter than the clergy, because they (the laymen) Htudy politics more than the clergy, and have hi t ter opportunity of being Intelligent on these subjects. Hut good morals, honety, loyal ty, Christian patriotism and tho Ten Com luaudmeuu these we must preach. God says distinctly lu the Wide, "The ttilvor und the gold ure Mine," and He wilt settle the controversy between those two metals. If ever this country needed the divine rescue It neecU it now. Never within my memory have ho many people literally staive l to death as In the past lew months. Have you noticed lu the newspapers how many men und women here and there have been found deud, tho post-mortem examination stating that the cause of death was hunger? There is not a day that wo do not hear the crash of some great commercial establishment, und, as n consequence, many people are thrown out of employment. Among what wo considered comfortable honest liavuuoraejirivutiouniid closcciilculatlou uu I au economy that kills. Millions ot people who say nothing ubotit It are at this moment at their wils' end. There ure millions of people who do nut waut charity but wiint work. The cry has gone up to the enr of tho "Lord of Habaotli," uud the prayer will be beard and relief will come. If we have nothing butter to depend on tlmu Ameri can pulltU'e, relief will never come. Who ever is nlPetnl to the Presidency, the wheele of Government turn so slowly, and n enuone In yonder white building on the hill mar tie the hands of any President. Now, though we who live In tho District of Colnm bin cannot vote, we can prnv, and my prayer day and night shall bo, "Oh God, hear thecry of the souls from under the altar! Thou who hast brought the whent and corn of this season to such magni tude of supply, give lood to mnn and beast. Thou who ha 1st not whore to lav Thv head, pity the shelterless. Thou who hnt brought to perfection the cotton of the South and the flax of tho North, clothe tho naked. Thou who hast filled the mine with coal, give fuel to tho shivering. Hrlng bread to the body, Intelligence to the mind, and salva tion to the snttl of all the people! God save the Nation:" Hut we must admit It Is a hard gate to rush back. Millions of thin hands have pushed at It without making It swing on its hard hinges. It Is a Kate made nut of empty flour barrels, aud cold fire grat's, and worn out apparel, ami cheerless homes, and un medicate! sickness, end ghastllness and horror. It Is a gate of struggle, A gato ot penury. A gate ot want, A gate of disap pointment. A rod Kale. or what Isaiah Would nave called a gate of carbuncles. Now, as I bnvo already suggested, ns there are obstacles In nil our paths, we will bo happier If we consent to have our lile a struggle. I do not know nnvnne to whom It Is not n strugle, I, nils the Fourteenth thought he had everything llxnd Jut right nnd tlxed to stay, nnd so he ha I the great clock nt Hordenux ma le. The hours of that clock were struck by figures In bruize rep resenting the kings of Europe, nnd at a cer tain time of day Wllll im the Third of Eng. Innd and other kings were made to eomonut nnd bow to bonis the Fourteenth. Hut the cluck got out of order nn day and )ut the opposite of what was expected occurred, ns the clock strip-k a certain hour 1,oii too Fourteenth was thrown to th feet of Will lam the Third. And so the clock of det1ny brings many surprises and these go down that you expected to Mau l, and nt the foot of disaster most regal conditions tumble. In nil styles of life there come disappointment and struggle, God has for some good rea son nrrnuged It so. Il it Is not poverty it Is sickness. If it is not sickness, it is per vu lion. If it Is not persecution, it Is contc-t with some evil appetite, f it Is not some evil appetite, t s bereavement. If It is not one thing, It is another. Do not get soured end cross nn l think you,- oao is pvuiiai. You are just like (ho Vest of us. y.ui will have to take the bitter draught whether It bo handed to yon in golden chalice or pewter mug. A man who ha a thousand dollars a year income sleeps siuinder and lias a better appetite than the man who lias live millions. If our life were not a struggle we wool 1 le v r consent to get out ol this world, and we would want to stay here, and so block no the wnv i f the a Ivnnclng generations. Hy thotimeth.it a man gi ts to be seventy years of age, and sometimes by the time lie gels to bo lllty years of age. he saysi "I have hud enough of this, 1111 I when the l.ord wills it I 11:11 ready to emigrate ton country where there are untaxes and the silver iif the trumpet put to one's Hps has no quarrel with tho iol I nf the pavement under his feet." We have in this world more nppnrtumtv t" cul tivate patience than to cultivate nnv other grace. I,rt that grace be strengthened lu the Itoyal Gymiia-I'im of obstacle and op position, lui'l by the help nf God. having overcome our own hindrances and worrl meiits, let us go forth to help others who-j struggle Is greater than our own. Didn't Know It Wae Loaderi. NO MO.E CHEAP BICYCLES. A Tool of Cycle Tube M al.ers s.ibl to li ne lleei Forme t. It Is rumord that th high-e'.a s bi. vcio tube manufacturers are forming a p ud, "the object ot which Is to exterminate tho de moralising cheap machine an 1 perlect a sys tem which will bo effective In keeping Uie low-priced bicycle from becoming a com petitor again. It Is nUo reported that certain manufac turers met In New York and entered Into a Compact With the above nhicet In view, ly menus of which the "assemblers" and cheap producers must quit the business, slucn they will b" unable to pureha'o in this country or in Europe the-materials ne vssary t con tinue business. It Is said that one of the promoters. It. W. llartman, has gone to Europe to shut out competition and etaldili reciprocal ,ir raitgeuieiils. Interviews with psoplo inter. es!e I Iii theblcycle bu-iliess all I who sh nild be well posted, fail to conllrin all of the sti ry, some having heard rumor while oth ers pr..f"s to believe that il I without sub stantial bniinlatlon. EDUCATION OF TNE INDIANS. (nod I'roeri's, In Hie l ast ur i:rooli d by t.'iiiiiiiiiH-liiupi I. run nin:;. Tli" ( ' inmKsioner ot Indian Adair. Mr. browning, has submitted his annual report. Ho says that with 110 outbreaks during the year, tit Iiication and civilization m'the Indians mu t have ma e progress, and tho main eilort now i, and for y u-s mu t b", to gel the Indian 1 11 bis allot mcim! so a to he coin. 1 s";i.upporting. The Indians a r 1 be coming adepts in handicrafts, nnd r. ivet lal year In pay from til G ivenrusiat ever M'Kl.nill for work done. I. location ,,f u. bans mad" rapid progress In the Govern ment and Industrial training school. Then were enrolled 111 nil schools, '..t. l.'i. pupil. The ('om'iilstoiior praises the work of the Held matrons. He suggests thai the com mission appointed to treat with several tribe of Indians for their lands bo continued to clear up the wor of making sales of hinds and the en'ciition of deeds. The Cummis. sinner lays stress upon tho need of legi ilu Hon restraining Uiu earn of liquor in Indian l e.sei vat Ions, MODEST HERO CRUSHED TO DEATH. Now York I'olli einail Naves Two Live uud I. osps Ills Own, Spurring furiously after a pair of runaway horses ill West Seventy-second street. New ork City, Mounted Policeman Thomas 1!. Mcli.tvre save.l J. P. H iblnson and his wife from se.'lous Injury, perhaps from death, and as they hallo 1 him f ir the hero ho was, his own horse throw blm, fell on him and crushed him futility before their eyes. Tho brave man soon died In Hoo'.evelt Hos pital, llo was In the prime of life nnd was soon to ho promoted, 'llo had thrice re 'eived honorable uinutlou for bravery in stopping runaways. His act was the most heroic dee 1 ever per formed by a mounted policeman in New York City. Hi attempt to stop the running horses ho knew meant great danger for himself, an the animals were plunging madly toward a series of elevated railway ipillars. Slelntyro took the chance and won, but paid the p n alty of his heroism with his life. Ilu was buried witii imposing honors. DEBUT OF THE CUBAN ARTILLERY. General ionip('s ('oiiicrHliilutlitiis on the ork iiT the llntcliklsTwelveroumlrr. General Maximo floir.ef., Commander-in-Chief of the Cuban pat.iot army, has ad dressed to General Callvto Garcia a message congratulating him uud his troops upon the success obtained lu the iqieralions iu the districts ot Gihara aud Holguln, where tho Spanish have been forced to abandon several positions. Especial mention Is made by General Gomez iu his message of the h.Ollant debut of the Cuban artillery corps at tho attack upon I. a Loinn do Hlerro ( Iron Hill 1, where a Spanish fortress was totally destroyed bv the twelve. pound Hotchk'ss gun recently sent to Cuba. There ure two Americans mining the patriot iirtillerymen, Moasrd. Os good uud Chappleiiux. A VlllMKe Lighted by Natural Gas, Caledonia, N. Y., Is now lighted bv nalur.ii gas. The village pay ouu cent a Uuy fur ouch one of Its otruut light. ' y VIM. 1 .Jt' iuil .-x sv "-t-'-ii. j MerVorolirr-My baby has had t'.u wind fbllc for two ilayH. fs'lklcfnco Whht cillisid tho li-nuMo: McSooichi r -Tin1 pnor kid tiled u rut Its teeth 011 my pinutiiiitic tiro. Gladness Comes Atlll n better litulcrst;indln; of tho transient tin t pre of the r.iutiv ph vv lent ills which vn'i'r li bi d re nnoi. r 'ef forts -n-etit lo ctTiirt -j.h a -ant o Hurts rigditly iliivctcil. There i coinfnrt In the ljinvl.'d;ri) tli-it so numy forms of sickness! nro tp.t d'te b nnv actual lis i .ise, but simidy t n rote I qiat.-il eotnli tinili'f tho i. Ww, wlitidi tin- pli n-atit fain'ily laxative, ,-yrrpi f l i' .prompt ly rctiiiivi s, 'Jlmt'i., ,!,y it I , tlio only remedy with miHi u. of families, mi is) everywhere i sli-cto-' I to hi 'My by ttl Who value p-.iod he:. 1th. 11 , lu tn iii ial l clTcets nie duo I 1 tl.c f i.-t, tlmt it is tin Asparagus Is. I. oldest known plan, that ! I.aVi.T-:!3' v it Vm t .'h' blM ,, n" 'tu has been used as .,o, i na.iinns s. y 11.1)1,1. n.. on it it in, tint 1 or.'.iin mi whli h ll 11 t. It 1 . ther.'r.'irt " n'l important, in ic- .. r tn 1 , t ilsl i:te j Vvr .Incp I-".. Mere l-sve bn tt fioiul ell. i t i, ! v. , v. In 11 1111 p;;r- I fi.. ,-iri wi,.. .Id.,, th..i ti.r.. is ,, s, o i,,o fhace.thiit y.ui have lo-- retmio.. nvt !,., I ' d, er s ,, ,,,. , i..it.. . li,.,,.. which hi-i. mill':.. -In:-, . I bvtl,o California Li.re ,.l Is. ..,.. ! , .,,.. ,. SyrnpC... only, all I snlil bv all rctV 11, ws. Iiww liiui-h. eiir sr.s'i'l I s It. U! a bio ib'ii" i 1 ,. ' I he nvernge duration nf ,, regf,,.ef.. I,, . ' I'.' ""; ;"' rood l.'V.'fl,, in Indlais l.'.veats. ' 1 ' , rind tuo v 1, i;i 1 . r ".ih.v. then I.imv. . , t IV,'. nf il lb I' I I'tlli'ill : .'il'.' ted tlel'di'il. FITSstotiipil fipcnn lpfrm.im.itiy, iii. ,1 1 n iVi 1 d w it h :! .: tn.il ill nno t sftrr rt iluv's ,., ,. (i ,r i.n' ' 1ii.iV b. 1 .iri:. i:.!i' I ! ; 1 ... p ,. ' : ', h'ful rnvHitNTiiiiit. Kref '.,tt1l !,.,:t ,. ,, ,1 ,P, ,,. , ,iV'.i..ati . but if i t I 1 nf I , r:ve A lu'W s ,-. red in Afrb a. t gitalin ha 1 11 ol: I Hill I'lltlll I ,,f ),, !,,,, ,M -e of the li'iii:- by I 'I si 1 s 1 t,,,. c, 1 p,,, . I 1. 1 Mi A V N. be I I, ,l,. o.. . I,. 11. -, Canterbcry ( ;ith. I: il Is 5.'.". feet long, 17s feet wide nnd '. il b i t high. the w.'ll-int'nHM'i1 I' i:."- f 'nte1 Iii 'lie 1 Used alul ; ivr , nn . Iier... Svnnuif " I ! llei- t l:tr -ely In I' ll s.ll islai't II III. TNI It ilil A hg wiu'h ltidks discocrafirie:. Hut win 11 yi.it lnve the rlcl.t m re .1.11 to nun, k 11. c cm ,t Ma, kef s loll, . i,itii,ll.u Lal'..b la hull null ulnaily. Sunlight Soap Is the wr-.; -n to co. It will 11 thiit big w ill leek like n pile nf driven mew. AH tin slin Is nnd blnnki ts nn well SN the ile' i -.te fal. ties will be mveil by Sunlleht 5onp, nnd lb. 'in wm.'t lie any tmrttig or ripping, btcuimo )ou ilun'i Imvu to rub. Less tabor (Ircatcr Com!nrt Ij-n-rHn., I.bl , Hudson Hirr!"- PH., N.T. HRKSE CViiER '":: ' Mi, i.k 1 .i M, n 1 st ., M ,.i, lu 1, ii' i. '. , .re bir I re rc. Ml S -!..lel v. It I. !"" ' ' '"" " l" I - ke II I ' I' . losri elllee.ta " ' ' e - na. ' ' iMll iV , . ;lS ,' itistiut.d 1 sr. B5Wk i 0V''."' '' L V ' iii. lllU)l',y. ! ' V; " ' '"" ''"O'l lle-S... J -K ' IvVl". ' ) U 1 yk'' V' V ' an;, if. ,-,,,. .,,t n L 'At'J 1 iV 1 - 'k 3l M i' ' "' -i it.iiu. ' ' C- '- ! V 1 A i "' '-s 10 c.: the I 1 J ''it! 'e-ii' lb.r.s I . t!' ill. r.e..er.. 3 . .u Til. " '. lie. I ...k... ..... 1 V'Ji. ;. ' "" ":"'ii,e ,,u i It ' i! ' e' li. l id bv r. ,l lie olir I I. Wl tie . I , ; 11 11 . . 1 I'M,.,. 1 11 " J trs'i ! lb,r-i' be,. 1,. .Mrfc n Hi b,rwr,l. ..t piU, III, r,.'fl,t of i.rl,,. lu lAltip. Annrsil'T Me- H e ir lei f e,l h frirqe In limn to bp i;eic... t. il l .r w.o.l .1 U en islf. Stlleb mil b." ur, "1 ter o Iv te: t , -1 i , rm. ttuna I'l l.lal:is., O,. I 1.11 j in, sill !!.. N.Y.ca PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLASMS. JOHNW MORRIS. tVrtSHINfiTON.O. a l .l. Prln. ,i l li.mlltrr V k I"'iol. n l)ur. in lst vr, Ijusjudi.'Stiiig s.a.uu, Mltj. aiu'S nnilllJ iiml WllltiKV Imbli CUII..I. Peek .-n: Ur lUn hkk. Pr. n. M. Weoi.irv. AllilUtS.O llesl 1 ..iih ,j rui 1'ustes (liN.t. I'm Mt M time. s,.l, br ilnv l"s. i Ivif'M "How hippy could I be with either Were other dear charmer away.'1 mm v.;. .'SJ.v- mm The npest and sweetest leaf and $ th manufacture of "Battle Ax" and no j matter how much you pay for a much smaller piece of any other hfeh- ) grade brand, you cannot buy a better T & chew than "Battle Ax. 4 cattle Ax almost as large as the T other fellow's JO-cent piece. "One Year Borrows Another Year's Fools." You Didn't Use Last Year. Perhaps Ycu Will Hot Th's Year. ( i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers