A FANTASTIC EDIFICE. The Strangest and Most Whimsical Building in the World. The history of the church of Vasili Blagcnnoi is as strange its its aspect. It ] was built by order of I\an the Terrible. ! at the expense of the priucipality of Kazan, as an expression of gratitude to God for the Czar's conquest of that country. The name of the architect, an Italian, is unknown, but tradition | relates that his eyes were burnt out by i order of Ivan to prevent him designing | in future any more wonderful mouu- | incnts. "It is my wish," said the ter-1 rible autocrat, " that this sanctuary re main the unique and glorious mouu- j ment of the genius of this man." In the basement of the editice are two chapels, and on the upper story nino ! chapels, surmounted by nine cupolas, ! onoh different in shape, dimensions, j color, details, style and structural dis- i position. The spire, too, is placed at the east and not at the west, as ortho- ! doxy demands. The facades, again, are j all different and without discernible \ plan, and the whole structure, with its suggestions of Hindoo, Byzantine, j Gothic and nondescript architecture, | and its profusion of painted ornaments and masses of crude yellow, blue, red and green, forms nil admirable and mysterious harmony, the secret of which none can explain, and the charm of which 110 words can describe. The whole exterior, with its superimposed arches, its profusion of color anil gild ing, its painting of roses and other flowers in panels all over the walls, is strnngelv original. On the pedestal formed by the nine chapels and their basement arc placed belfries and cupolas starting upward from masses of masonry resembling the imbricated foliage of the artichoke, the scales of the pine cone, or the opening buds of the cnctus flower. In the chief belfry the Italian element is clearly perceptible in the first three stories, above which is a story resembling an Indian pagoda, which in its turn is surmounted by a hexagonal orockcted spire, on the summit of which is a lantern and an onion-shaped gilt cap. Another b lfry supports a cupola in the shape of a pineapple all covered with pointed facets; on another the pineapple cupola is laced ovor with a symmetrical network through whose i meshes, the points alone are visible, i Another .cupola imitates the ribbed form of a melon; another, the twisted j folds of a monumental turban; another, the close scales of the sei pent. Let it bo remembered, too, that each of these cupolas is of a different color—one orange, another sky-blue, another apple green, another deep red; and that, be sides ] nint in profusion, tho mou'dings, cornices, consoles, panels, pinnacles, I imbrications and tiers of arches are lavishly decorated with brightly colored t glazed faience. Of thisfanstostic arohi- | toctural dream, suggestive of uncanny sea monsters, half fish and half-flower, of gigantic fruits, or of vegetables and Oriental turbans of such capricious and impossible proportions as one may con ceive in a nightmare, Theophile Gautier has given us a poet's descrip tion, which we cannot do better than cite: "Tho Church of Vasili Blagennoi," he says, "is without doubt the most original monument in the world; it re calls nothing that one has over seen, and belongs to uo known style One might imagine it to be a gigantic madre pore, oiystalizcd colossus, a stalactite grotto turned upside down—a thing which has neither prototype nor simili tuile. It might be taken for a Hindoo, Chinese or Thibetan pagoda. In look ing at this impossible church one is tempted to ask if it is not a whimsical will o'-tho-wisp, 1111 edifice formed of clouds fantastically colored by the sun, which the movement of the air will presently cause to change in form or vanish "into nothingness." [Boston Transcript. (Superstition About Storms. Caverns wore supposed by the Rom ans to be secure places of refuge during thunder storms, and they behoved that lightning never penetrated more than two yards into the earth. Acting on this superstition, the Emperor Augustus used to wiihdraw into some deep vault of tho pala o whenever a tempest was feared, and it is locorded by Suetonius that lie always wore a skin of seal around his body as a protection agaiust light ning. That both precautions nro equally unavailing needs scarcely to be men tioned. Lightning has been known to strike ten feet into tho earth ; but not oven tlio marvellous accuracy of modem science oan determine at what distance from the surface a safe retreat may bo fomul from tho descending fluid; and even wore this ascertained, tho dangers from ascending electric currents remain the samo. With regard to Boul-skin, wo find that tho Romaus attached so nraoli faith to tlieni us non-coniluotors that tent's were made of tlimn, beneath which (the timid used to take refuge. It is a curious fact that in tho neigh borhood of Mount Covennes, in theLan guedoc, where anciently somo Roman colonics were known to liavo existed, tlio shepherds cherish a similar snper etituf jon respecting the skinsnf serpents. These they carefully collect, and, hav ing covered their hats withal, believe themselves secure against the danger of flu, storm. M. Lubossicro is disposed to see a link of interesting analogy be tween tho legend which yet lingers in the mind of tho peasant of C'eveunos, and tho more costly superstition held in roference by his Latiu ancestors. The Emperors of Japan retire into n deep grotto during the tempests whioh rage in sueli severity in their latitude; twt, not satisfied with the profnudity of the excavation, or tho strengh of the stones ol which it is built, they complete their precautions by having a reservoir of water sunk in their retreat. Tho water is intended to extinguish the lightning—a measure equally futile, since manv instances have boon pre served in which the liuid Ims fallen upon tho water with the same destructive of feet as upon land. —[Now York Mail and Express. Hypnotism and Surgery. The other day n young woman suffer ing with a tumor presented herself at tho operating room of Dr. Tillany, a French surgeon. Instead of using chloroform or ether he managed to throw her into a pro found hypnotic sleep. She even placeu herself on the table where tho operation was to he performed. For twenty minutes tho surgeon plied tho knife, the patient showing no signs of pain. At tho end of that time she was awakened and declared that she had not suffered in the least or known that anything was taking place. This is, however, a rare misc. Not every ono can be affeeteil in that way. Still it is an interesting fact that under certain favorable conditions a hypnotic sleep, (perfect and complete, can bo induced. —[N. Y. Herald. REARING REINDEER. An Important Occupation in tno Steppes of Siberia. Bearing and tending reindeer is par excellence the profession of a Hamoyede. If not rich enough to possess a herd of his own he enters the seivice of the owner of a large herd, who keeps him and his family in food nnd clothes and gives him a certain number of reindeer calves per annum in return for his ser vices. The servant thus lays the foun- j dation of a herd of his own, and, if lucky, can, after a few years' service, set up on his own account. Luck, how- I ever, plays a great part in this means of livlihood, for " reindeering" isa great lottery. Tho animals are very liable to a disease which corresponds to the rinderpest in cattle, and which in a day or two will kill off a herd of COD or 71M) deer. If this happens in the middle of the Tundra, the local liarno for these great, hare arctic steppes, it pr bab'y means death to the owner and his en tire family, as they are left possibly hundreds of versts from any human help, without food and without means of lo comotion. In my subsequent journey I came npou the scene of ono of those not uncommon tragedies, and I have al ready witnessed n more pathetic sight than the half-standing cliooms sur rounded by a few sledges and the other poor possessions of the ill-fated owners and scattered ail around tho bones and and horns of the pest-stricken herd, j The ownors themselves hail been subse quently buried by some native passing by, as we found tlioir wooden box-liko graves on a bill a short way off. Though tho loss of the herd does not often prove as fatal as this, to the owner it always means material ruin, and I saw a good instanoo of this at Obdorsk, where I came a ross a Samoyede, at one time the owner of a herd of 7,000 deer, rep- : resenting roughly a i apital of £3, ">OO, content to work as a laborer at 40 cop ecks a week. When successful, on the other linnd, the rearing of reindeer is a most profitable occnpa'.ion. When clear of disease the horil is almost sure to dunblo in number year by year. Their cost of miiintanence is nil, while they supply their owner with all his essential wants, and with the pecun- 1 iary means for obtaining such luxuries as are witnin his reach. Their hides provide him with clothing and shelter in the shape of his hide-covered clioom; their meat forms tho staple of his food. The skin of a calf in raw condition yields about three ruhlos; when very young and dark, as much as five. The skins of the older deer fetch about two. With this circulating medium in his pouch, the Samoyede buy the vodka anil other creature comforts his soul delights in, or adorns his wife with the spangles anil strips of colored cloth she so highly prizes. But over and above all these gifts whioh the mild reindeer presents to his lord is the one which to the nomad dominates and determines all the rest— ; that of locomotion. This industry, if so it may be termed, necessarily implies j the nomad life pure and simple, the ' Samoyedes pitching their tents where ever reindeer moss is abundant, and moving off as soon as their herds have cropped the surrounding district bare. In Winter the Samoyedes prefer to be in the vicinity of forests, partly for the sake of the wood which they nee 1 for fuel and for making new and tinkering up , old sledges, partly because tlio snow here is not so deep as in the open Tun- | dra, and the deer can thus get more easily at tho moss. Here also they trap the white fox and ptarmigan, the wings of which have a groat sale. In Summer they drive their nerds into the Tundra, | over whioh a large portion of my journoy lay, and which I may hero take the op portunity to describe. The Tundra is a messv marsh, slightly accentuated here and there with low hills, and sprinkled with numerous shallow lakes not con nected with each other. For milos ami inilev the ground is so marshy that ono runs the risk of sinking up to one's mid dle if one attempts to walk over it. Now nnd again one comes upon a spot whore tho ground resembles a Scotch moor minus the lioather, a very moss with an occasional dump of low willow brushwood. These spots tho na tive makes for when, after his day's journey, ho wishes to pitch his clioom, as the moss here grows thick anil rich and the brushwood affords tlio little fuel he requires. Not a tree, not a rock, breaks tho monotony of the soeno, and the greenish-brown color of tho Tundra, i losing itself in a dull, gray sky, is nS dreary a picture as the human eye can well rost upon.—[Murray's Magazino. What a Girl Should Learn. To sew. To cook. To mend. To bo gputle. To vuluo time. To dress neatly. To keep a secret. To be self-reliant. To avoid idleness. To mind the baby. To darn stookings. To respect old age. To make good bread. To keep a house tidy, To oontrol her temper, To b- above gossiping. To make a home happy. To take care of the sick. To humor a cress old man. To marry a man for his worth. To bo a helpmate to a husband. To take plenty of active exercise. To see a mouse without screaming. To read some books besides novels. To be light hearted anil Heet footed. To wear a shoe that won't ernmp the feet. To ha a womanly woman under al) circumstances. A Sturdy Centenarian. The guardians of the Eiffel Tower, in Paris, were lntely surprised to receive a visit from a man one hundred and two years old, who wished to ascend the great tower. He was quite willing, however, to avail himself of tho elevator, for, though he is able to walk sovornl miles a day on level ground, and carries his cane as a "switch," and not as a support, he did not feel equal to a walk up a flight ol stairs nearly 1,000 feet high. This old man, whoso name is Hordnin, and who was formerly o harness makei by trade, lias had a somewhat interest ing experience ill his last years. About thirty years ago, when past seventy, lis granted all his property to n nephew in oonßiderntion of a rogular year y income to bo paid to him. Tho day ho was a century old he called tho nephew and said to him: "Well, my boy, I think you have made me an allowance long enough. 1 shall not be a charge on you any longer, because, you see, I ve saved up enough to live on."—[Youth's Companion, A CURIOUS COUNTY. A Section of Kentucky Where For eigners Are Rarely Seen. People in the East will hardly be lieve it when they aro told that Ken tucky has a county in which only one man was ever killed; but it is a fact, notwithstanding. A number of years ago two intoxi ated men fought in this town and one was shot to death. That was the only serious crime ever commit ted in Trimble county. The people of Trimble county are one big family, and they form such a re markable community that tho readers of The Hun, says a correspondent of tho New York paper, should make this ad dition to their knowledge. Trimble is a real Acadia, Bedford, the county seat, being situated almost midway be tween two large cities, forty miles from Louisville and sixty miles from Cincin nati, fifteen miles from the nearest rail road. Yet the strife of tho outer world has never reached here. Crime of any kind is practically unknown. The people are all small farmers and fruit growers, descendants of Virginians and Mary landers who settled here a hundred years ago, nnd are scrupulously honest. The last lawyer who settled in Bedford came near starving to death, and wont to Kansas a half dozen years ago. There is a court house in this town, but it is needed only for the preservation of the county records, title deeds, and such things. At the last term of the criminal court there was only one case to be tried, and that was on a charge of petty larceny. But it \\ as proven that the man was not guilty. Every resident of this county is of pure English or Scotch descent. There is not a foreign-born person in Trimble. Although so close to Louisville nnd Cincinnati, a German or Irishman would be a curiosity in Bedford. Last spring an Irishman, Alike Rafferty, from Louisville, came to Bedford. How be ever got hero or why ho eame no one knows, but soon after his arrival word was circulated that a foreigner had come to town. Rafferty went into the gro cery to buy 15 cents' worth of cheese for dinuer. Tho proprietor stared curi ously at him, but gnve him the elieese, and lie sat down in a chair to eat it In a few minutes a crowd of small boys en tered, and ranging themselves in n straight line in front of the Irishman gazed at him with tho most evident cu riosity. Rafferty thought there must he something tho matter with his per sonal appoaran e, and asked tho pro prietor if there was anything wrong. The latter replied in the negative. Alike i then wanted to know why all the boys : were looking at him. "Why, don't you understand?" said tho merchant. "As soon ns you bought that cheese I sent out word that there was an Irishman here. All Irishman don't come to Bedford every day. In I fact, it's heou ton years since one was I nere until you caino. Y'ou aro the first Irishman tho e boys over saw, and, of rourse, yon are a show to them." Ea'Terty wliist'ed, and then grew 111- li quant. He said ho was neither a Heat lien Chinee, nor did ho belong to a museum. He left the store, followed by an increasing crowd of small boys ind some rather large one. At the itreet corner he met a little girl carry ing a bucket of water. The weather ivas warm, and ho asked her for a irink. She looked up, for the first time in her life saw a stranger's faco, shrieked, dropped the bucket of water, ind lied in dismay. That was enough tor tho Irishman. Ho set out for the sparest railroad station, liftecp miles iway, and never stopped tramping until he got there. For o\oramilo a crowd followed him at a respectful distanco. Since then Bedford has not been troubled with strangers. No Man's Land. In Euglaml, that strip of land along the edge of the sea which is covered at high tide, but is left bare at tho ebb, has boon called "No Man's Land ' from an early date. This strip varies in width according to tho shelving of the shores. It is of peculiar charaoter, and the apt ness of its name is evident from tne fol- j lowing description, furnished by the author of "A Sea-Painter's Log:" There is nearly always 0110 figure to bo seen upon No Man's Land, working his way to and fro along the windings of the smaller creeks and over the mud, walking with careful, measured tread, and never resting long upon either foot. This js the eel-speurer, who, with mud pattens— or mud-shoes —firmly laced to [li feet, tows behind him a box abend two feet six inches long, and slightly rounded at the bottom. Lie works care fully over the ground before him with his spear, like a pointer in stubblo. This man knows every square yard of the mud for miles, and has earned a Hying upon it, and on nothing else, for the last forty years, his whole stock in trade being his mud pattens, his spear, fipd the hex that slips after limp Wlipn his tide is oyer, hp slings this box, >vith twenty or thirty pounds of eels in it, upon His spear across his shoulder, —his pattens hanging in front, —and so trudges to market. Like the heron, the eel-spearer is nearly always alone, and only those who have spent an hour or two upon the mud ip pattens, a mile or more from yeal land, can form an idea of how very nmoh alone ho is. I have spent many an hour in a boat far out at sea, and know that the small est boat in such a situation is as a house compared with the eel-spearer's two bits of elm plank fourteen in lies square. At every step they sink and suck in the mud, and tug at the lashings which se cure them to thp fpet, so that both the quality of these cords and the way they are made fast become quite ipiportunt matters. The pattens are fastened ip a particu lar mapper, which is seldom deviated from, for the sa'pty of thp eel spearer depends too much op his footbvmr Is lor him to venture 011 rash experiments with tliem. The special skill, the local knowledge, required to travel Rafely over these mud-lands is not unlike thot needed by the mouutain guide. There is mud which, though too soft to go upon in winter, will carry wo'.l enough in sum mer, wlion the long sea-grass is tough, and forms a upon it left spread by the tide. And there are pits, deep and soft, like crevasses hidden by snow, into which you may sink at one step up to the waist or dee; pr. To get out of one of these a man must, by cutting the lanyard or untying the knot that fastens them, first get rid of his pattens, which suck him down: and then, extending himself horizontally, with his spear held across in both linpds, as one would extend an oar in water, he .nay find it possible todraw himself out. But it is only a chance, and when out, he has but his eel-box and spear left him to regain the shore with. Experienced mud-walkers, however, by carefully sounding before them with the spoar or an oar, for the most part avoid falling into such traps, THE DIME MUSEUM. BY T. P. CRANE. Twliero. We If 4-a always feel a sensation of relief after leaving the [place. The woman with the Heavy beard repels us, and we thank fortune that our own lady friends and kin are toot heavily bearded as this one. Any woman afflicted with a large growth of beard can find a lucrative position as a monstrosity in a dime museum, but will find herself tabooed by her friends, •and especially her gentleman friends, 'if she does. ! Living skeletons, fat men and fat women, midgets, dwarfs, and giants, •'wild men from Borneo, and other un fortunate people, are the stock in trade of dime museums. This stock in trade ! never varies. It is always in fashion. ; Those who visit a dime museum for ftlie first time are struck by the plebe ian aspect of the people who throng its galleries and its chamber of lior- Tors, and they may probably be struck [by the man who runs the electric bat fery to try the machine. A placard is acked up on the wall with the follow ing equivocating remark printed there jon : "Electricity free. Only ten cents." rElectricity free" being printed iu [heavier type you are naturally fooled, because you only see that clause by a hasty ami casual glance. If you have no conscientious scruples or strange antipathies to electricity, you "go tho lnaciiino one if you lose," as a sport would say. If you have ten conts about you it is all right. If you have not you will suddenly feel a yearning sen sation, as if you would like to have ten cents or sink through the floor, while the suave and refined electricity man politely informs you that ten cents is due him. 'Mid tho jeering and sar castic remarks of the crowd you try to explain, as meekly and sheepishly as you can, that you thought ho was run ning his machine for sweet charity's sake, and not for the filthy and con taminating root of all evil. In your promenade through the gal lery of wonders you frequently come across "fakes" lilco tho following. A placard reads thus: "Draw tho curtain and see the homeliest person in town." You draw tho curtain, and see your own reflection in a mirror. At least you do so if you are not pretty cute and knowing. You are astonished and awed by the "human salamander"— the man who drinks molten lead and boiling oil and rubs red-hot pokers across his tongue, and winds up his performance by indulging in a dessert of burning charcoal. You wonder how Sio does it, but ho does not offer to ex >lain when you ask him about it. I People who \isit dime museums should ask no questions and they will hear no lies. If you see anything there that baffles vour keen intellect and causes a Heavy sensation, as tnougn you had a great weight on your mind, go to the manager and ask for an ex planation, and do not question tlio freaks. AY hen inspecting the bop yors of the Inquisition, which is done up so artistically, and painfully lifelike, in wax, do not lot your emotions overcome you. Remember that you paid your dimo expressly to see these horrors, and you should appear as if you were enjoying yourself. It is not considered "good form" in Bridgeport, the "swell" and I .smell district of Chicago, to evince any pmotion, either of pleasure or pain, at ! the dark side of life in a museum. YVlien you have wearied of the curi | ositics, you visit the auditorium. Tho players are quite amusing iu their poor, weak way, and those who have been there frequently in the past can readily recognize them as the same players they had often seen there be fore. —C h ten go Ledger. Yale's Famous Coxswain. Ralph Thompson, who had been cox i swain of the Y ale crew for throe years, ; has announced that lie shall not con- I tinue next year. "Shorty," as ho is familiarly known, has a great record as a coxswain. In all he has steered twelve eight-oared crews, including fhreo Yale eights, six class eights and fliree eights at St. Paul's preparatory school. Of these races ten have been victorious for his side, and in three in stances, as it has been asserted by com petent judges, tho victories have been ; due to Thompson's superior steering.— Hartford Courant. MORE OR LESS AMUSING. A PAPER weight—dead heads waiting for the curtain to rise, j WHEN a man is hung the evening i papers gets out a necks-tra edition. MANY a woman becomes some man's better half merely for a change of quar ters. AUTHORITY is Jike dried apples. A j few cents' worth will puff a small mail up astonishingly. THE young King of Spain's nurses probably have little trouble in keeping him clean since ho is himself tlio Cas tile's hope. WHEN a man starts out to lecture ho puts on a dross suit. A woman with the same purpose in view puts on her night-gown. QUEEN OF SPAIN— Moi Gracia! The babv king has the stomach ache. Lord Chamberlain (excitedly)—Woo-o 1 Call tliu "* ' Pha3es of Economic Entomology. Nature seems always endeavoring to maintain a balance. When destructive insect pests increase greatly in number, parasites which prey on them also in crease and finally reduce their number to a normal point. It is estimated that parasites now destroy over ninety per cent, of the Hessian flies before they get a chance to damage the wheat crop. Jt is hard to say what the farmer and fruit ! grower would do were it not for the b-'ii e icient work done by the parasites of in sect foesinkeejung thorn in check. An im portant discovery in this line of economic entomology Ims recently been made. For several years the clover seed crop in New York and other Stales has been greatly damaged by the lavages lof the little orange-colored midge. Sometimes the seed crop would be a total failure, owing to its ravage?. Of late yea s the trouble has grown loss, and the cause of this is now known. While studying the midge, Professor Lintner discovered that it was being attached and destroyed byji microscopic pardtofce. This natural enemy of the clovey midge the professor identities as one of the ohaloid llies, which are so useful in keeping down de structive insects. —[Farm and Fireside. Alice Licbmann, ngeil nine, is astonishing Loudon critics with her skill on the violin. Musicians more than ten years old are be coming quite rare. "Mamma'i filttln' Better.** There is gladness in the household; ' The shadow fades away That darkened ail the sunshine Of ma y a summer day. "O, mummVs getting better,'* The happy children cry. And t ho l gut of hone shines bright again In the loving husbanu's eye. In thousands of homes women are "sick unto death*' w.th the terrible diseases so com mon to their s.-x, and it would seem as if all the happir ess had gone out of iL'e aud the household in c n equcnce. For when the wif and mother suffers all the family suffers with her. This ought not to ho, ami it need not bo, for a novur-fuiling romedy for woman's ail ments is at huiu. Many a home has been made happy because tlio shadow of disease bus been banished from i l>y the potent power of l)r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription—the un failing remedy for all weaknesses aud diseases p 'ouiiar to women. SSOO Howard offo od f- r an incurable caso of Catarrh by to proprietors of Dr. Suge's Rem edy. 50 eta., by druggists. It is reported that. Baby McK'oo remarked to the President of the United States: "It's a long time between frolics, grandpa I" Forced to I-eavc Kouie. Over 6S people were forced to leave their homes yesterday to call for a fret trial pack age of Lane's Family Medicine. If your bloo I is bad, your llvor and kidneys out of order, if you are constipated and have headache: and an unsightly complexion, don't fail to call on any druggist to-day for a free -ample of this grand remedy. Tho ladies praise it. Everyone likes it. Large- siso packago 50 cents. John IV Rousa, tho loader of tlu> Marino Band of Washington, nays that wo have no Notional nir. No? What's the mat lor with our air ol confhlcuco? "There is a tide In the affairs of men which if taken at (lie flood leads on to fortune.' If your affairs arc at a low ebb now, don't fail to Write to 11. P. Johnson & Co., 1000 Main St., Richmond, Va., who have plans that will on able you to make money rapidly. Close obiervers any that lhilTnlo Bill would not have mot with HIICCCKHIII Europe if lm had not, worn long hair. His locks wore, so to speak, the key i<> \ ictory. When Dobldns's Electric Soap was first made In I*6l It cost 20 cent* a bar. It is preciitrly the same ingredients and quality now, and doevn't cost half. Buy it of your rrocer and preserve your olothes. If he hasn't it, he will get it- Senator Quay, it is reported, wants to ho Governor of Pennsylvania., as n stop to the Presidency. Con it he that Pennsylvania is willing to become a Quaystone State? The most prominent physicians in the city smoke and recommend "TuiiHill'H Punch." King Alfonso, the baby potent a roof Spain, has just enjoyed bis first sea bath. Ila must, get used to breakers. There are a good many ahead of him. U .'Hi Why Don't You take Hood's SurMuparilla, If you havo Impure blor d, havo lost your appetite, have that tired feeling or nro troubled by nick headache, dyspep sia or hlllousncfts. It lias accomplished wonders for thousands of afflicted pcoplo, and, if givou u fair trial. Is reasonably certain to do you good. "I havo boon troubled a great deal with head- hod na appetite, uo strength, and felt as mean as anyone could, and IHI about my work. Since taking liood'u Sursaparllla I havo not hud tho headache, my food has relished, and seemed to do mo good, and I have felt myself growing stronger every day." 11. A. STKIXXAX, 19 Grand Avenue, Grand Ilaplds, Mich. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. L IIOOD & CO., Apothecaries, I\vull, Moss. 100 Doses One Dollar Ely'sCreamSalmipSs^ Mlve Hollof nt Onco Tor Bj^s* o ] COLD IN HEAD.^ YFMR CATARRH. EtfISKS sr.'S'-Y ERIIMSs! BEST IN THE WORLD 18 el S- M O E lif" Oct tho Genuluo. Bold Everywhere. FF YOB WISH AJS : , ~Q^R \ KVULVKLL orated SMITH h WESSON C? a arms. The finest small urins (( YV'vi ever manufactured and the Vj. )] )l \y*\ first cholco ol nil experts. Manufactured in calibres."wand 44-l 11 iI y ii nil ncciirncy. In mot bedcceivwlhy cheap inn LIEU BLC CIINI-ICOII lint IU L ioux which m c often sold for the g i u uo article aim are not onlv unreliable, hut dangerous. The SMITH & WESSON Revolver* am nil staini>od ujon the; bar r-ls wiTi linn's n.adi'.i-fss mm d&t s of p:it nH nnd are gunrnmocd perfect Inevorydetail. In aistupon having tho genuine article, and if your denier cannot supply you an order s-nt to a dares-* below will roooiv.i prompt an I careful attention. Descrptlvecutal-v.-uo an I nrloev furnlshe 1 upon au plloaton. SMITLL & WESSON, KJT"Muutlpn this paper, .HUNS, is a. solid handsome cakeof scouring soap which has no equai [ for all cleaning purposes excepHn the laundry-To use it is Vo value it— What will SAPOLIO do? Why, it will clean paint, make oil-cloths bright, and give the floors, tables and shelves a new appearance. It will take the grease off the dishes and off the pots and pans. You can scour the knives and forks with it, and make the tin things shine brightly. The wash-basin, the bath-tub, even the greasy kitchen sink will be as clean as a new pin if you use SAPOLIO. One cake . will prove all we say. Be a clever little housekeeper and try it. Beware of imitations. There is but one SAPOLIO, ENQGH MQEGAN'S SONS C 0,,. NEW YORK, , A Suake Swallows An Eel. T While the carpenters were recently working on the bridge they noticed u J 1 lively commotion in the river and saw a j TRADE large water moccasin fighting an eel al- | most as large as himself. The suake , I swam ashore and never loosened his O flfttl grip until satisfied that the eel was Jn Km* f^sSvcfIK IOMJL I ftl thoroughly dead, then he began the T difficult task of sw allowing an object a IT COIfOUERS PAIN, third larger than himself. When the Kenevea ana cure* HEADACHE, snake hud swallowed one-half the eel ho j EHEUKATISM, Tocthacbe, Sprains, was killed ami a stick stack through NKI HAI.GIA. BIHIISW ezuina |(iuo Kmw"' Sciatica, Lumbaflo. Burns and Scald.. At Druggists nnd Dealers. Queen Victoria is clever. While in Wales I THE CHARLES A. VOQELEIt CO.. Baltimore. MA she, of course, gives tlie Welshmen taffy. I TO 11KAL ALL BLOOD CONTAGION. 4< Tfi lis it the ftwifVs Specific Drought unto the world its blessing; Over land awl over water TVent the priest and Uanita; Bringing to the ]>eoplc tidings Of relief from blood contagion— Of a salutary agent That would purge them of all poison." T~M.TIUOT RUVM ROIL! YY "UAIUTA." ' Treatise on Blood and Bku> Disoases mailed free. SWIFT Sracirfc COMPANY, Drawer 8, Atlanta. Qa' Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. Ifcw Cures where oil else fails. Pleasant and ugreeablo to the gj ICKE RHir wua ln th *bl?2 , on '* waste your money on a *um or rubber coat The FISU BRAND BLICKEB B tßiOEifiur l A S i^ Bolu .L cl T.Sro'r,\??,i r i?VJ.r* 00r, * n,lw . l i l t. kce P T? u dry in the hardest storm g —■ — - Ask tor the FISEIBHAhD" SLIOKSB and take no other, if your storekeeper doei DUTCHER'S j jWIiOjIYC 6hoct wUI kUI a Quart of flies. I (\ R, ' U^ rt bussing around ears, j (' \ Bend SflTcantiforffsiuLts to . Vli P. PUTCniili, St. Albans, Vt. TH EA L DIN E FI REPL AC E. aR The A liiliie produces Wunti ' 1 Floors, I'erlVrt Ventlla- 1 1 ,wn ; koops tiro over night and wood or mis "ran | ■HL3ESBSsr Address ALDINE MFG. CO., j iiruuil Itupldn, . Michigan. at* m as Alter AI.L otTiera Br. Lohb,■! Twenty years' continuous practice In the treat- > incut and cure of the uni'ul elfeciN of carly vlce, destroying both mind and body. Medicine and treatment for one morth, five Dollars, sent securely scaled from observation to any address. ISooU on (tuccial IMHCUNCM free. WEBSTEB - THE BEST INVESTMENT Tor the I K boo pro huial Library. lias tcei for iany years Standard Authority In lie Gov't Printing Office anil U. S. Supreme Court. It is Diglily Rszommcaded liy 38 State Sup'ts of Schools an! tlic leading College Presidents. Nearly all the School Books pnii lisliei la this cornilry arc hased upon Webster, as attested hy iiie leading Uchool Roolc Publishers. 3000 more Words ami marly 2000 more Engravings tbau any outer American Dictionary. GET THE BEST. ' Bold by all Bookseller#. Illustrated Pamphlet with specimen pages, etc., sunt free. CAT. MEIIRIAM & CO., Pub'rß,Springliolil, Mass. Took OCT His Under Lip.' ' Eight years ago a cancer caruc on my lower lip. 1. bad If cut out while it was jet small, and it heaMtj up apparently, but soon broke out again, and com menced eating very rapidly. It took off my undo* lip from one side to the other, and down to my chin., 1 had it treated by burning, and got so weak that J! did not I hink that 1 could stand it much longer. A4i ter much euffcriug I discarded all other treatment,' ami began taking Swift's Specific, and the coneer soon began to hcul, and in u short time it was com pletely healed and 1 was entirely well. It is no#, over threo years since I got well, and there has been! no sign of any return oi the disease. I know it waft' cauccr, and I know it was cured alone by 8, 8. 8. 12. V. I'LIUIAND, Huston, La. 8. S. S. cured me of malignant sore throat mouth, caused by impure blood. The trouble OK- 5 tended down to my left lung, which was very sore. The doctors practiced on tuu for three years without? relief, when 1 left them and took 8. 8. 8. Four bot tles cured me. DEN IULBY, Meridian, Mia*. f | PEERLESS DYES jgjjggg. ! RROBtAP >TI T I)Y. book-keeping.lUuuae*yornu| Ai| JWiC Penmanship, Arl hnietic,short-hand.eta* 3 3 thoroughly taught iy MAIL, circulars tn£ I llrvßut's Caileae. 457 Main Bt. buffalo, W.J, §25 ™ 'f-Kuk'S '***■" iIihIUCAL CO., Richmond, Va. ofjPfi| ■ B B Bfi tndmiikeyßsb* y\M' KM BS K ra2B Its cured st homa with I ISI Hi S^JSSSB: AwmSmi B. M.WOOLLKY. M IX Atlaata. €*, Office Wi Whitehall BV NORTHERN PACIFIC. II LOW PRICE RAILROAD LANDS , FREE Government LANDS. MILLIONS of A (Jit EM of each in Mlnuesota, North i Dakota, Montana. Idaho. Washington *nd Oregon. CCUn FftQ Publications with Maps describing tb* Obtlli run bt'Ml Agricultural, Grazing and Tim ber Lands now o|mn to Settlers Sent t i c©. Address CHAS. B. LAMBOfIN, L ,'J DROPSY TREATED FREE. 1 osltlvely Cured wltli Vegetable Rcinedlea. Have cured thousand* of cases, euro patients nro ' nouneed hopeless by best physieluuß. From llrst dosa symptoms disappear; in ten days at least two-third* all symptoms removed. Send for free book testimo nials of miraculous cures. Ten duys' treatment I free by mall. If you order trial, seud 10c. In stamp* to pay postage. Pit. IL 11. GREEN & SONS, Atlanta, Oa. CS#*" LATEST IMPROVED HORSE POWER MiichinPH for TIIKPKHINU ACLKANINU Cruin, also A\VINC WOOD EAST DRAFT, OUS ABILITY & QUANTITY OF WORK foBPT3SSI2 A. W. GRAY'S SONS, FaTKN IkJLB AND SOLE M ANI'KAATTtTHERH MIODLLIOU .N KPUINUB,' Yl, Mf d 0,1,7 bj th * Wo havo RO, i Big C! to* Chamlotl Co. man >' yf a ". and It baa Clncinuatl.SSßHl RleUom ° " l "* D. It. DYCHF. A CO., Trad^*SSoj2^artl S1.00. Sold by Drugglitil OPIUM HABIT. , A . \"' l ialh!) Treal.lt*Cs (living I full Information of un Easy and Speedy cure free 15 iiie afflicted. 1H. J. C. normAN^Jefie.rsou.tVisconaln,