IDA LEWIS AT HOME. Bow the Famous Heroine Lives in Newport Harbor. Running from the mainland into the west side of Newport harbor is a long, stanchly built wharf. Were you to find your way to the end, you would ere long see from the lighthouse beyond a woman appear and glance in your direction. Presently, with agile step, she runs down the narrow ladder fastened to the stone wall, jumps nimbly into a boat, unties it from its moorings, takes the heavy oars, and with a beauty of stroke all her own pulls with a long and a strong pull that sends her flying toward the steps of the pier on which you wait. Her back is as erect as that of a young girl, her j powerful strength manifest in the great j strides the rowboat makes, and yet, when ! she deftly turns it round and you get a good look at her face, it can be seen that > it belongs to a woman in middle life, but upon whom time has left few tell-tale marks. She puts out a welcoming hand with a beautiful white wrist, adding a cheery smile and a word of greeting as she makes ready to take you over to Lime Rock as her guest. You have cause for self-congratulation in being thus favored by the heroine, Ida Lewis. Life on a lighthouse, situated as is Lime Rock light, is not the gruesome thing generally imagined. With a six roomed house there are cares that fill the day, and like any other ' 'gude wife,'' Miss Lewis has her pots, kettles, and pans to attend to, rooms to sweep, beds to make, papers and magazines to read, letters to write, and all the various et easterns to mauagc which fill the time of a busy woman. A devoted church woman, she spends Sunday on shore whenever her brother is at home. As the only woman light-house keeper in our country, and the last one that will be given a light—for such is the verdict of the powers that be—Miss Lewis has other duties that are unique. Exactly at sundown she must light her lamp, and precisely at midnight another must be substituted. All through the night it must be watched, and Miss Lewis likens this constant care to that demanded by an infant The wick might flare or burn j low, the chimney smoke or crack, or any j of thehundred-and-one accidents happen i that are ever taking place with the use I of kerosene oil. She can but catch cat-1 naps; hence the nearness of her sleeping room to the light. At sunrise the law requires her lamp, like the foolish vir gins', to have gone out, and from this she is an early riser. The responsibility is no small one, for the slightest neglect of duty or accident to her light or lenses would bring a report from the first sea man who suffered by it. Lives hang on her vigilance, but to her credit no light on all the coast is as regularly or per fectly attendod to, nor does any other gain from the Government Inspector so high a report. Miss Lewis keeps a daily expense book, noting just the amount of wick and oil burnt, and the time to a second of the lighting and putting out of the lamp. In addition, a record of the weather must be entered daily. As Lime Rock light is a first-class light, 110 rations are allowed, the yearly salary be ing $750 and two tons of coal.—[Ladies' Home Journal. Russian Growth in Asia. At this moment, a quarter of a century since the capture of Tashkend, the Rus sian possessions in Central Asia already j extended over an area of 20,000 square miles, rich in fertile oases, and counting a population of about three million in habitants. The respect of property aud legality have been introduced into that country. The population, harassed by despotism aud plunder, now reposes undor the scepter of the "White Tsar." The works of peace and commerce are I rapidly developing, aided by the creation of a railway which unites Samarcand to i the Caspian Sea. The agricultu /nl cx- | hibition at Tushkend has just demon- ! strated with evidence what Russian dom- j ination has done for the country. And all this is due to the intrepidity J and heroic pationco of a handful of sol diers led by Tchcrnaieff. The wars of [ Central Asia, like those of former days ! of the Caucasus, were an excellent school for the Russian troop's; not only did tliey form men but they created brave officers. The names of Tchernaieff, Sko beleff, Kouropatkine, AbramofT, Golo vatchoiT, Kolpakovsky, etc., are there to prove the fact. The capture of Tushkend was 110 small thing when one thinks that a detach- 1 ment of 1,800 infantry and cavaliers, backed by ten pieces of artillery, besieged such a large town, having a circumfer ence of sixteen miles and over 100,00(1 inhabitants, sixty-three cannons, defend ed by a garrison of 80,000 men. The | fight in the streets lasted two days. The Russian troops took over fifty barricades, sixty-three cannons, sixteen large ban ners, several thousand guns, thirty six tons of powder, whereas they lost in all only 157 men.—[New York Mail and Express. A Banker's Experience With Brig ands. Signor Arrigo, one of the wealthiest bankers and most exteusive land owners of Sicily, has just effected his Release from a captivity of twenty-one days in the mountains by the payment of a ransom of one hundred thousand dol lars to the brigands who had kidnapped him. Twenty-one days had elapsed be fore the negotiations on the subject were completed, and during this time the cap tive millionaire lived in a mountain cave, sleeping on a bundle of hay, aud forced to conteut himself with a diet of black bread, fruit, and a cheap, but very pow erful Marsala wine. On the day of his release, he had not gone far when he hap pened to meet a patrol of three carabini eri. So ragged, unkempt, and generally disreputable did he appear to them, that the worthy gendarmes were convinced that he was one of the band of banditti for whom they were hunting, while he was equally confirmed in his belief that the gendarmes were nothing but brig ands in disguise. It was not until the police-station at the gate of Palermo was reached that the carabinieri became as sured of his identity and consented to cut the cords with which they had secured him.—[Argonaut. A Shrinking iDesert. Already the area of California's desert lands is shrinking like the waters of Lake Tulare, and it will be only a few years before it will no longer be seen on the nmps of the State. Every day people are finding out that desert does not mean Irreclaimable and that underneath the gray and drab desolation of these lands lies the richest of fertility. All the elements of productiveness arc latent there, and only need the revivi fying influence of water to wake into aotivity and usefulness. Eastern capital ists have not been slow to see this and to act accordingly. The latest evidence comes from Chicago, where it is said, a [ gigantic scheme is on foot for irrigating over 500,000 acres of desert land in Southern California. This is to be accom plished by impounding the waters from the mountains in immense storage reser voirs, whence it will be conducted to the land by a system of pipes, ditches, and flumes. This is just what has been done at Riverside, Redlands, Los Angeles, Pasadena, Fresno, and a score of other places, where the results have been most gratifying and the profits ample.— [San Francisco Chronicle. ASBESTOS AND ITS.USES. A Queer Mineral Which Serves Not a Few Vegetable Uses. "Here is a towel that is never washed and yet is always kept clean," said a chemist to a Star reporter, handing to him at the same time what appeared to the eye and touch to be nothing more nor loss than a piece of coarse cotton toweling. 44 What sort of laundry do you send it to?" was the natural query. 44 This kind," replied the man of sci ence, going over to the corner of his la boratory and stuftiug the towel into a small stove that was burning brightly there for chemical purposes. "I understand," said the visitor. 44 You never use such a towel more than once." 44 You are very much mistaken there," responded the chemist. "I use such towels almost forever, and they almost never wear out." With that he lifted off the lid of the stove again jjnd took out the towel with the tongs, dipping it in cold water and then handing it once more to the news paper man. 4 'Why," exclaimed the latter, 4 'it is not even injured! What is it made of?" 4 'lt is made of rock," answered the chemist, "but a very peculiar kind of rock—so peculiar, indeed, that the an cients supposed the stuff of which this towel is woven to be of a vegetable na ture. They used to wrap bodies that were to be burned in cloths made of the same flax-like substance in order to keep ! the ashes from being lost among the i charred wood of the funeral pyre. Also j they used it for napkins and for lamp ! wicks." "But what is it called?" "You have often heard of it under the name of 'asbestos,' though very few peo ple apparently have any notion as to what it really is. Enormous deposits of it exist in Canada and elsewhere. It is a form of a very hard rock called hornbleude aud is found in strata of a fibrous consistency roadily divisible into silky strand resem bling flax. This likeness has given it the name of 'earth flax.' You can see for yourself from this towel how much it looks like a vegetable fabric when woven. Au asbestos towel may be used for pretty nearly the same purposes as an ordinary towel, and, when it is dirty, all you have to do is to throw it into the fire and rake it out after a little while per fectly clean." "Is asbestos used for any other pur poses in these days?" "Oh, yes. It is employed for roofing material, boiler felting, paper stock and in the mixing of fireproof paints forstage scenery. Also clothes for firemen and gloves to handle red-hot iron with are made of it. Sometimes the mineral is found in thin sheets of interlaced fibres, known as 'mountain leather.' Elsewhere it is not infrequently procured in thick sheets, and in that condition is called 'mountain cork.'"—[Washington Star. The Value of Oysters. The Maryland Oyster Commission has been examining the oyster-bods of that State, and finds the possible wealth in them far greater than has ever been imagined. Maryland leads the Union in the pro duction of oysters, yet the industry is declared to be undeveloped even there, and awaiting more systematic methods. The thousands of acres suitable for oysters in Chesapeake Bay can be made more valuable and productive than any acre of any truck farm in the State. The area of oyster-beds in Maryland is over 125,520 acres, or 103 square miles, but it is only a small proportion of the land suitable for such purposes. The commission finds at least a thousand square miles, or (540,000 acres, equally ! adapted for oyster planting. Much of : this ground would yield, if properly cul tivated, an annual oyster crop of fully SI,OOO per acre, and tho minimum profit of the entire district, under any system of cultivation, would be SIOO per acre, or $04,000,000 annually for tho entire oyster district. Rhode Island, which has a very small oyster area, is getting from SSOO to SOOO an acre from it. Next to Maryland, no State in the Union has finer opportunities for oyster culture than Louisiana, which, in its numerous hays and so-called lakes, has an area suitable to this industry even greater than Maryland.—-[New Orleans Times-Democrat. Why Do The Heathen Rage. Not long ago the British ambassador at the Persian court publicly presented a copy of the Bible to the shah. At once there was an outburst of rage among the Mohammedan population and the guard of the British legation was doubled! What is the matter with the Mohaoicdans? Suppose the Persian ambassador should bring a magnificent copy of the koran to the queen of England or the president of the United States; and suppose the Chi nese ambassador should follow with the writings of Confucius; suppose someone else should present a copy of the book of Mormon and others should bring volumes containing tho writings of Zoroaster and Buddha; would there be a riot or an earth quake? All these gifts would probably be received with thanks and perhaps de posited in some great library and left to slumber there in peace till disturbed by the research of the curious. Christianity can afford to hear what men say and read what men write. It can tolerate free speech and free discussion. Its foun dations are too broad for panics; but when the Bible appears 011 the scene it seems to just, set the devil crazy to do some thing to oppose it.—[Armory. Our Children's Inheritance. Unless we are now able to preserve our mental and bodily forces intact, our grandchildren will be victims to our faults. They would even have the right to a certain extent to call us to account for our careless conduct. "What did you do with that vigorous body and healthy and sturdy mind that wore given you by your parents? for it is by your fault that we are miserable and sickly." The importance of the question is thus well established. Since the future de pends 011 the present, it is no loss than a question of the future of men. This being fixed, the query arises, Is there mental overstrain? A careful examination of the facts gives us occasion to answer afflrma | tively. In consequence of tho prodigiously j artificial conditions of existence which our advanced civilization has imposed upon us, we have greatly modified the habitual and physiological life of our or gunism. A close study of the habits of contemporary men, such as the author of this book has made, will show that nothing is less in agreement with a healthy vitality thunthe mode of living of to-day.—[Tho Popular Science Monthly. FOREIGN FIENDS. Murdering Travelers by Means of Opium and Chloroform. The New York Sun writes about the gangs of miscreants who travel over the European railroads offering drugged re freshments to travelers of opulent ap pearance. If the traveler refuses the re freshment, the robber waits for an oppor tunity to hold chloroform under his nose. An overdose of chloroform, which re sults in death, is not unfrequently ad ministered, and the murderers are never caught. On one French railroad two travelers were found dead from some in explicable cause in one day. The deaths were attributed to apoplexy or heart dis ease, but there is very little doubt that the deceased persons had fallen into the hands of the chloroform gang. There are also opium gangs, whoso work is less deadly, but not less effective from the robbing point of view. The members of this gang are provided with cases containing cigarettes or cigars soaked with opium, which they offer to passengers they intend to rob. The methods of these ingenious vil lains are apparently borrowed from the East, where ingenuity in crime has been highly developed during a period of sev eral thousand years. There poison pure and simple is used. The following notice has recently been posted in all the stations of the Eastern Bengal Railway: "Travelers are warned against accept ing liquid or solid refreshment from per sons unknown to them, as many persons make a trade of poisoning travelers. They first enter into conversation with the latter in a sarai or elsewhere, and then endeavor to gain their confidence by say ing that they are to be traveling compan ions to the same station. When they ar rive at a place suitable for their designs, they offer the travelers poisoned food, or poison the drink or food which the trav elers are about to take; then they make their escape after plundering them. Sometimes they throw poison into the water of the travelers as they draw it from the well; at other times, they poison sweetmeats bought at bazaars, or else ready cooked food." This Is certainly the kind of literature calculated to interfere with the monotony of traveling for those who are alone, sep arated by thousands of miles from their families or friends. The knowledge that such a notice is considered necessary by the railway company would scarcely reas sure those families. The rapid progress which the Bengaleo lias made in learning the English language lias opened up a new field of industry to him. It would be worth while for the French and other police to inquire whether the chloroform and opium gangs do not themselves hail from the East. The de velopment of this branch of crime in Am erica is next in order. The place is get ting two crowded for road agents and old-fashioned highwaymen. Race Between an Air Ship and a Train. As the Spencer war balloon, in a recent ascent from the Royal Military Exhib ition, now being held in England, reached Plaistow a train was passing through bound at Shoeburyness. On the arrival of the train at Shoeburyness, to the surprise of the guard, the balloon ists were quietly waiting for him to take them and their machine back to London, the balloou lmving accomplished the journey in twenty minutes hssthan tho train, says an exchange. The voyage through the air was very interesting, and when at an altitude of 7,500 feet, as re corded by the aneroid barometer, the throbbing of the steam engine could be distinctly heard, also tho report of a sportsman's gun, accompanied by the bark of a dog. The traveling was at the rate of about twenty-live miles an hour, but to the aeronauts the balloon was appar ently stationary, and it was with great surprise that, on emerging from the clouds, they found what distance had been actually covered.—[New York Tel egram. A Substitute for Gunpowder. A Paris newspaper, tho Paix, states that a French scientist has made a dis covery which is likely to revolutionize the art of war. M. Paul Gilford has found out a liquid gas, which cau be used to propel bullets, cannon shot, or shell. The Chamber of Commerce of St. Etienne has been so impressed by the value of the discovery that it has conferred upon him a gold medal and a more sustantial reward of 10,000 front s. A small stool receptacle is placed under the barrel of the lille containing 500 drops of this liquid gas. At each pull of the trigger one drop falls into the breech of the barrel behind the bullet, and contact with the atmospheric air causes it to volatilize instantaneously and with a force of expansion exceeding that of gunpowder, and drives the bullet be fore it with cquul or greater velocity than gunpowder. No sound or smoke is produced.—[London Standard. England's Beauties. The far-famed beauty —aud it still ex ists—of England is only to be found in the middle and lower classes. The aristoc racy are absolutely ugly in the general sense, aud the ugliest of the lot are the maids of honor generally in attendance on Her Majesty. On the other hand, the shop girls, the waitresses and barmaids of Lon don are often absolutely beautiful in both face and figure. The trim blark dresses which thoy wear, free from triawnings or adornment of any kind, and their snowy aprons only onhance their charms. The contrast sometimes of a bevy of waiting woman in attendance at 011 c of the great mausions is so strange that one begins to wonder how it is that the lady cannot dis cover the secrets which enable her maid to possess and preserve her good looks.— [Philadelphia Times. All Belles, They are all belles, the women of Monte video, so say enraptured sojourners in that favored land. Beauty is there the herm itage of every daughter of Eve, front the humble flower girl to the fashionable dem oiselle who flattens her pretty noseagaiust the jewellers' shop windows in the Calle Vicutc Cinco.—[Loudon Herald. In proportion n nations trt more corrupt . more disgrace will be considered tc to I poverty and more respect to wonltn. A STORY OF FREMONT. Pardoning a Prisoner About to be Led to Execution. Captain Swasey is au enthusiastic ad mirer of Fremont's career on the coast and declares he Is deserving of every word of praise which has been given him and more too. The veteran is aoout to express his views on the much-mooted subject of General Fremont's career in an historical and biographical work. In reference to the charges of excessive severity und of brutal treatment to the prisoners who fell into his hands, Captain Swasey relates the following dramatic incident: Just before the capture of San Luis Obispo, the men under Fremont had been subjected to great exposure and to priv ation and hardships of all kinds, and their hatred of the Mexicaus had reached its height. In fact, it was pretty clearly understood that if any of the enemy was unfortunate enough to fall into their hands they would spend but little time or sentiment in disposing of him. I On December 17, two days after the tak ! ing of the town, the pickets captured | Don Jose de Jesus Pico, who was called Totoi. He was tried by court-martial on | the charge of breaking his parole, was ! found guilty and was sentenced to be shot. The fact that Pico was a leader rendered him still more an object of hat red and distrust, and on every side were heard mumurs of approval when it was decided that he should pay the penalty of his treachery with his life. Tlie ex ecution was ordered for 10:30 o'clock in the morning, and at 10 o'clock the whole battalion was ordered to parade on the plaza, where the execution was to take place. The prisoner was confined in a room in the Mission. Fremont with two or three of his officers was present awaiting the coming of the prisoner's fam ily to lake their last farewell of the be loved husband and father. The prisoner, with bowed head, was seated on one side and opposite stood Fremont with folded arms and face unmoved from its usual stern demeanor. The officers in grim silence were grouped about when the wife with her eight or nine young chil dren entered, dressed in the deepest mourning. The wife was a beautiful woman of stately bearing and the chil dren of delicate and refined appearauce. No word was uttered to break the silence which had grown oppressive. Then the children fell upon their knees and with tearful eyes and outstretched hands mute ly begged for the life so dear to them. Among the officers present was that stern soldier Captain Richard Owens, who had never feared a living foe, but whose eyes were then dimmed with tears at the pathetic sight before him. Sud denly, for he could uo longer control himself, he uttered the one word: "Col onel!" Fremont's face relaxed its deter mined expression, and he exclaimed: "Yes. Dick, I know we had rather meet a thousand of them in the field to-morrow than take this one life." Then, turning to the prisoner, he said: "You are par doned; you are free." The prisoner fell upon his knees at Fremont's feet and pressed the hem of his cloak to his lips, exclaiming brokenly in Spanish: "My life was forfeit. You have given it back, and henceforth it shall bo devoted to you." Instantly Pico ordered that his horse be saddled, and from that day on there was no more devoted follow er of Fremont through danger of every kind than the man whose life he had given back to him.—[San Francisco Ex aminer. How Gold is Shipped. When one recalls the fact that millions upon millions of dollars in gold annually seek Europe to provide for the necessities of our import trade, the question of how gold is shipped to Europe becomes an in teresting one The Bank of America is the largest shipper of gold from New York, and indeed from the United States. Shipments are made in stout kegs, very much like the ordinary beer keg. Every one contains $50,000 in coin or bar gold. : The latter is the favorite for these ship- j ments, since the government permits the sub-treasury to exchange coin for bar 1 gold, as coin, in a single million dollar shipment is liable to loss by abrasion of from eight to twenty ounces, or from $l2B to $320; while the bars only lose about three-fourths of that value. Where coin is sent double eagles arc preferred. They are put in stout canvas hags, each one containing 125 double eagles, or $5,000; and ten hags till each keg. About the only precaution taken against tampering with kegs, is a treatment of keg ends technically known as "red tap ing." Four holes arc bored at equal in tervals in the projecting rim of the staves above the head. Red tap is run through these, crossing on the keg's head the ends meeting at the centre, where they are sealed to the head by the hardest of wax, and stamped with the consignor's name. The average insur ance is about $1,500 per $1,000,000. Then there is an expense of about $2 per keg for package and cartage aboard ship, or S2OO for the same sum and the inevitable loss by abrasion, whatever it may prove to bo. There are great Wall street firms shipping from $25,000,000 to $40,000,000 annually. Some of these have for years insured themselves, aud assert that the saving has been sufficient to replace a loss of $1,000,000. These are large figures, but this has become a country of large figures and affairs.— [American Banker. Singing Psalms. In singing the psalms, the old custom was for the ylerk to read each line—some times two lines— before the people joined in with the music. This practice is sup posed to have originated in a desire to assist members of congregations who were unable to read. It began in Eng land, and by-and-by it was taken up by the Scotch people, who, instead of look ing at it in the light of convenience, be gan to consider it a matter of principle; so much so that when efforts were made to abolish it great opposition arose and many people left the church. It is told of an old widow atTarbolton, in Ayrshire, that, though living by her self, she went through the form of family prayers every day, and read aloud to her self each liueof the psalm before singing it! The celebrated Dr. Chalmers related on one'occasiou his own experience of try ing to abolish this old practice at Kilmeny. There was one old lady who stoutly maintained that the change was anti- Scriptural. I)r. Chalmers took an early opportunity of visiting her, and on in quiring what was the Scripture of which she regarded the change as a contra vention, nt once was answered by her citing the text, "Lino upon lino." It is told of a Scotch precentor that one Sunday, going through the psalm in this old fashion, he stopped to request some members of the congregation to allow a lady to get into a pew. and then went on to read the next line of the psalm, "Noi stand in siuncrs' way!"—[All the Year Around. Hunting* Alligators in Mexico. Mr. Joseph Smith has arrived at Galves ton, Texas. fromTampico, Mexico, in the schooner Garncrk. which he had chart ered to bring to that port a cargo of alli gator hides. Mr. Smith was asked why he wont to Mexico to hunt alligators anil replied: "Alligators are becoming so scarce in parts of the United States in con sequence of their skins being in such de mand that many persons have engaged in alligator hunting as a means of mak ing money. I learn that in the vicinity of Tampico there were plenty of them, and my information proved correct. The alligators had never been hunted by the Mexicans but I soon hud them at it. "At first I shot at them, hut a Mexi can conceived the idea of harpooning them and carried it out so successfully that we followed that method, i was down there eighteen months, and during that time I secured hides to the amount of $50,000. It is quite exciting to take a sportsman's lamp, quietly sneak along the river bank, and, finding one of these monsters lying at the water's edge, hnr-' poon him. It lakes a steady and quick 1 eve to strike him right and a strong arm |to hold him after he is harpooned. I found no trouble in getting along with the Mexicans and enjoyed my stay very much."—[Picayune. To Loosen Glass Stoppers. Hold the botHe or decanter firmly in I the hand or between the knees, and gent ! ly tap the stopper on alternate sides, j using for the purpose a small piece of I woocl and directing the stroke upward, j Plunge the neck of the vessel into hot I water, taking care that, the water is not > hot enough to split the gluss. If after some immersion the stopper is still fixed, recur to the above process. Pass a piece of list round the neck of the vessel, I which must be held fast while the list is j drawn rapidly backward and forward. Take a steel needle and run it around I the top of the stopper in the angle formed j by it and the bottle. Hold the vessel in ; the left hand and give it a steady twist I with the right, and it will very often be j effectual as the adhesion is frequently I caused by the solidification of matter j onlv at the point nearest the air. If this j does not succeed, put a few drops of oil I round the stopper where it enters the ! glass vessel and then warm it before the fire. When thoroughly warmed tap the I stopper of the bottle on alternate sides as ! directed above, Repeat this operation if I necessary. Scotland's Old War Song. At a meeting of the Town Council of Edinburgh, the Lord Provost said that at i present there was for sale the original j manuscript of "Scots Wha Hae," and it j was in danger of going away out of the I country, but the Council could purchase it for £7O, and he thought it would be a great pity that it should he lost to Edin burgh. It would be a great shame that the great war song of Scotland should pass to other lands, and he moved, there fore, that the Council should authorize I the purchase of the song. Councillor : Aula jo Jamieson said he thought it was I just that it should be known that that monument of history had been purchased I by a Scotchman (Mr. Kennedy, banker, I New York), who desired that, before re i moving it to America and placing it in a j museum there, the metropolis of Scotland should have the opportunity of purclms- I ing it at the money lie paid for it himself. The Lord Provost said he thought they were extremely indebted to that gentle ' man. It was then agreed to purchase the song."—[Public Opinion. Care of the Teeth. I Perfect cleanliness is essential to the ; preservation of the teeth. It is the stern ; opinion of a leading dental surgeon in | this city that if the teeth are kept clean, : free from lodgments of food, tolmcco, I and sugar granules, the decomposition of ! which produces decay of the dentine, i teeth would never need repairing. After each meal the mouth should he washed with tepid water and a soft brush and all particles of food removed by a quill and ; dental fioss or sewing silk. The inside of the teeth need more attention than the outside and if the brush cannot he handled freely use a soft cloth to prevent the accumulation of tartar. A few drops of mvrrh used on a wet brush once a week will harden the gums and sweeten the mouth. Pins, knives and gold tooth- I picks arc very bad and should never be used, save in the interest of the dentist. If the quill is not available and regular pine splinters are beyond reach, whittle a match. True to Her Maimed Lover. A young woman in Parkcrsburg, W. Va., recently advertised for a husband and received numerous answers, to the I writer of one of which, a St. Louis man, ' she became engaged. A time was set for the wedding, but before it arrived the groom met with an accident by which he I lost a leg. But she was a woman of her j word, and after his recovery they were married. She recently wrote home that her husband was engaged in steady em i ploymcnt and was a good man.—[Chi- I cngo Herald. The Black Mirror Mystery. j It is claimed that a Pittsburg chemist j accidentally discovered the way in which I black mirrors were made by the ancients. He made an artificial obsidian, and in polishing slabs of the material made his discovery. Obsidian is a substance pe culiar to volcanic countries. It looks | like glass and is of a coal black color.— [Detroit Free Press. If aftllcted with sore eyos use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Lye-water. Lruggisis sell at*6c.per bottle I Those who have ill intf ntionncHiinotafford I to work with tools that have an ill sound. Albert Bureh, West Toledo, Ohio, says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure saved my life." Write him for particulars. Hold by Druggists. 76c. The world is his who can H.>O through its pretension. FITS stopped fre' by liit. KMMK'S GRRAI NIfRVK RwrroiiKii. No ( its after first Day 1 use Marvelous cures. Treatise and S- tri bottle free. Dr. Kline.Ml Arch St., Pbila., Pa ; Much time is necessary to know people ; thoroughly. The nery hfst way to know whether or not Dobbins's Electric Soap is as poo/as it is said to be, is to t> yit i/nurxf . It can't deceive ynu. Be sure to get no imitation. There are lots of them. Ask your grocer for just one bar. Anger makes dull men witty hut keeps them poor. Confirmed. The favorable impression produced on the first appearance of the agreeable liquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs a few years ago has been more than confirmed by the pleasant experi ence of all who have used it, and the success of the propr.etors and manufacturers, the Cal ifornia Fig Syrup Company. Making- Camphor. Camphor is made in Japan in this way: I After a tree is felled to the earth it is cut into chips, which are laid in a tub over a large iron pot partly filled with water and placed over a slow fire. Through holes iu the bottom of the tub steam slowly rises, and heating the chips generates oil of camphor. Of course the tub with the chips has n close-fitting cover. From this cover a bamboo pipe leads to a suc cession of other tubs with bamboo con nections. and the last of these tubs is divided into two compartments one above the other, the dividing floor'being perforated with small holes to allow the water and oil to pass to the lower com partment. This lower compartment i* supplied with a layer of straw, which I catches and holds the camphor crystals 1 that are being deposited as the liquid passes to the cooling process. The cam phor is next separated from the straw, packed in wooden tubs and is ready for the market. The oil is used by the na tives for illuminating and other pur poses. Tho Sa tor's Confront on. [ I am not aa youug as I was 'tis true. Yet for uiauy a Oajr and muuy a year I hope to sail o'er the deep waters blue, j Returning ever and again for a chat with | Once i was a jolly young tar, Froo from life's ills, strong as a bear. As sailors ought to be and generally are. E'en to-day 'tis a marvel to some who know of IUYOKC That old feather Time his imprint don't show. Why they should 1 am at u loss to know, Unless 't is simply this: I don't limp as 1 go! That perhaps is duo in all my travels l'ar and wide To a fait iiful friend who is ever by my side, Not a st ranger to you! its name well known ft me. Especially to those on economy bent, For surely nothing can save doctor's bills And us old folks rejuvenate. Like that great slayer of pain— Dr. Tobias's wonderful Venetian Liniment! He tlint has energy enough in his constitu- } tion to root out a vice should go n little j further ami try to plant a virtue in ils place. ÜBB All the year round, you may rely upon Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery to purify the blood and invigorate the system. It's not like the sarsaparillas, that are said to be good for the blood in March, April and May. The " Golden Medical Discovery " works equally well at all times, and in all cases of blood - taints, or humors, no matter what their name or nature. It's the cheapest blood-puri fier, sold through druggists, because you only pay for the good you get. Your money is returned if it doesn't benefit or cure you. Can you ask more ? " Golden Medical Discov ery " contains no alcohol to < inebriate, and no syrup or sugar to derange digestion. i It's a concentrated vegeta- j ble extract; put up in large bottles; pleasant to the taste, ! and equally good for adults or children. The " Discovery " cures all Skin, Scalp and Scrofulous affections, as Eczema, Tetter, Salt-rheum, Fever-sores, White Swellings, Hip - joint disease and kindred ailments. II HUE **TT l> Y . Book-k. cping. nusincus rormi. M| vJ m t penmanship, Ari hiu-'tic, short-hand, etc.. IE thoroughly taught by MAIL Circulars ira I llryaut'M ('•ilrae. 457 M ,r.l - in I l-.ri.l.i x Virgin a cheap. Circular. C.R.CULLKN, M.D.,lfe?CuleSt.,Macou,Ua FILILS ( mr WORTH A GUINEA A < For BILIOUS & NERVOUS DISORDERS S^ H ? Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired I s Digestion, Constipation, Disordered Liver, etc., > ? ACTING LIKE MAGIC on the vital organs, strengthening the c ( muscular system, and arousing with ihe rosebud of health ( C The Whole Fhvsical Energy of the Human Frame. v ? Beecham's Pi I is, taken as directed, will quickly RESTORE ( I FEMALES to complete health. S S SOLD BY ALLDRUCCISTS. S > Price, 25 cents per Box. / ) Prepared only by TEOS. BEECH AM, Et. Helens, Lancashire, England. \ ) B. F. ALLEX CO., Snip Affrvttt for Vnited State*, SOS it 307 fVomf St., Xcw > York, who (if your < "gl , .. rl nscr_bG TnQpfig^r* aye Ho.o-no y =J)orib refuse edl= faur Advice Kr fo use SAP© Ll©: Ibis HFsolid cake of scouring soap, \L used for cleaning purposes I asked a maid if she would wed, And in my home her brightness shed; She faintly smiled and murmured low, "If I can have SAPOLIO." EVERY WATERPROOF COLLAR on CUFF ———— THAT CAN BE RELIED ON BE UP Not to StiollT I the T mark ££OX to DiSCOIOPj ———— BEAKS THIS MARK. TRADE NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. CAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. Warm Weather Causes That Tired Feeling. To be Strong, Take Hood's Sarsaparilla PENSIONS SiHIS tor blank applications and Information l'Traitx Pension Agent, Washington, l. c. nDlllll HABIT. OBlf F.ri.l. .at UllUm easy CI RE In tbe World Dr. I Wi lulf I j. STEPHEN*. Lebanon. 0 PENSIONS If=ll plication. Employ the old reliable firm, J. 11. CltA I.LE iV CD., Washington, D. C. CALIFOUN 1A EXCURSIONS Weekly l rat-sand best accommodations to nil points \v..,t L.M. WAIT:US*CO.,.xi. Br. . :KewYorkCßy I,'.''"{.''J. u • Fee #lO when ymi g.-t your inuner. Blanks True. JOSKI'U H. HIXTKIt, Ally, VVa.hli. B ua, U. C. FRAIER.ffM BEST IN THE WORLD U R L A% O C tJT Oet tho Genuine. Bold Everywhere. 7°lo to 8"l, interest AM CO and upwards. Securities first-class, and in terest guaranteed. References furnished on appli cation. Correspondence solicited. Address, FIRST STATE BANK. BRI'NIWO, NKBL >( lltl) AND SWEAT! FEET." This remedy will stop the sweating and remove bad odor immediately. Wear hosiery a week and there will be no had odor from tliem. Sent postpaid for .*. One package will do the business. Send P. u Order to E. H. A: <5. J. GRAIN, Spring Valley, Minn., Fillmore Co. PENSIONS FOB I LIIVIUIIU charge. New Law. Application blanks sent free. 11. C'. TANNER, Patent and Claim Attorney. 1317 F St., Washington, U. C. f B /'joneVx / TON SCALES \ ( OF \ S6O BINGHAMTON \B..m Box Tare Beam/ 3? N. Y. A.J F|ENSION'SW£ 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Quroan. 2 vrs in hist. war. 15 ftriiudicatluK claims, atty sine* WML FITCH & CO., 1 o*2 Corcorau Building, Washington, D. C. PENSION ATTORNEYS of over *Z& years'experience. Successfully prose cute pensions and claims of nil lends in shortest possible time. ZirNo !• EK cm.k*s svcckssvul. t CUM S^wS E I IL "fl * I fITHK WONDERFUL I(■ 'v/ . W Wholmalr/art<*ry /irir. •" CDCC and ship goods to be /V -, / (jnEfrVß D Tl& •aid for on delivery. l(—i J W HK*L 'HAIM Bond stamp for Cata- \sALSX J\ _ TP_ III B >• Hilt I lit. MWii. CO.. 14ft KTSth 81. PENSIONSfIIit UcCormick A Son*. Washington. D 0 , A Cincinnati, 0. il dorse Big U ft- the only MG3jf3r Car*, tn TPj epecldc for the certainuere TO 6 DATS. VJ of this disease. JfgWßaaianwad noi *• V o. H. INOII AH AM. M. .IN, ydf —— Stricter*- Amsterdam, N.x! EX Mr 4 oaiy by the We have sold Ilig G fOf Ohio. D. R. DTCHE A C°^ SI.OO. Bold Ly Bracelet*