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SODA Best in the Warld. | ed it to be a tissue of falsehoods. 25,000 FATAL CASES 0 ANNUALLY IN THIS ALL TREATED WITH QUININE Dr. J. 8. Mitchell, of Chi: , in a clinical , hospital, Oct. 7th possible ing quinine, as at the best it only effect » Leap oan! reduction of tem- ped and after forty-eight hours the fever usually higher than at first.’’ DESTROYS THE KASKINE ociseise Greus ix FEVERS, Malaria, Dyspepsia, NERVOUS DEBILITY, Liver, Lung 3 kidney Disease Prof. W. F. Holcomb, M. D.,54 East 25th St., BW. Y. (ate Prof. in N. ¥. Med. Coll.) writes: So a a ne jucee the a! Reece ee, De. . 5. im! . . + aaa **Kaskine is the best medicine f tient treat- Ev @.Francis Hospital, N.Y. } ed wit Kaskine has been disch’gd cured nellevue Hospital, N. Y., ‘‘Universally suc- @eestul.’” St. Joseph’s Hospital, N. Y., ‘‘Its use is considered indespensable. It acts perfectly.’’ Kaskine is leasant to take and can be used without special medical counse! Send for the at List of testimonials unparal- leled in the history of medicine. $1.00 per Dottle. Sold by er sent by mail on receipt of price. THE KASKINE CO., 54 Warren 8t., New York Please Don’t Forget It That Dr. H. James Cannabis Indica is pre) in Calcutta, India, from the purest an: Native Hemp, and is the only remedy, ei that country or this, that qill positively and permanently cure consumption, bronchitis, Ssthma, nasal catarrh and nervous debility, or Break 4} cold in 24 hours. $2.50 per le, three bottles $6.50. Craddock & Co., Proprietors, 1032 Race St., Phila. Its causes, and a new and EAFNESS trey OU ar own hofne, by one who was deaftwen- ens years. Treated by most ofthe not- a Cy iste without benefit. Cureb himself = months, and since then hundreds of @hers. Fall parti T. 8. PAGE, No iculars sent on application. 41 Weat Sist St. New York. Winter Exposure Causes Coughs, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Selation, Li ¥ Backsche and Capcine Temedy cureina few hours the least bene- isof ovo _ of tmitattons ander ‘sists eounding names, sach as ‘* am,’?**Cap- icin” oF | Capalcine."* Aak lor Benson's and Day. All draceiste. ror wae ae SEABURY & JOHNSON, Proprieters. New York." Sttusnlates the > torpia Mver, strength- _ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, ttotricts thetr virtues are meee ta Trestug thonyeton Sold Everywhere. Office, 44 Murray St., New York, BR. STRONG'S PILLS! The Old, Well Tried, W Health ‘Renewing Remesies. eo Sud att Bittows Disorders. " sm. Insare h Appetite good raguiarity of the bowels, Precious fem. aud Riviag wager aad i Dold : Meu. Uedar: ns A LIBEL SDIT PROMISED. —_—+es 0 — st. John's Son Will Resent a Slander on His Wife. Topeka, Kansas, Feb. 7.—A few days ago a Wichita paper pub- lished a scandalous story concerning ke uary he had the daughter of a prominent citizen of Colorado with a revolver at his head and while the corpse of the | illegitimate child lay dead in an ad jvining room. St. John and bis wife arrived in this city to-day. ot the story as published an declar He said that January 8 he was married in Garden City to the daughter ot Judge W.B. Felton ot Canyon City, Colorado, ex-warden of the Color ado State Penitentiary, and this was all the foundation there was to the statement To-night Mr. St. John left for Wichita, where he will bring suit for criminal libel against M. M. Mur dock, the editor and proprietor of the paper, and also against the pro- prietor of a Burton paper which also pubnshed the storv. St John is a pleasant looking gen tleman very much resembling his tather in appearance, while his wite is a neat appearing lady about 23 or 24 years old, of retiring, modest disposition. He states that as tar as the papers are concerned no compro- mise will be accepted by him. He intends to fight tor the vindication of the character of his wife in the courts. Testimony From the Seashore. I have been suffering with rheu- matism tor about twenty-five years. I am now forty-two years old. My pains were so great that I have been confined to my bed trom eight. to ten months at a time, and two years ago I was in bed about nineteen months pertectly helpless, being afflicted all over. At that time, having tried every known remedy betore, I commenced the use ot Swift's Specific. I used about two dozen bottles. 1 have never’ had anything to act so promptly and efficiently in my life. Mv health and vigor were restored ; I can walk and nde as well as when a boy. My business 1s such as to keep me on my feet about fourteen hours during the day, but I go through without any inconyenience. Ican cheertully recommend S.S. S. to those who suffer with rheumatism Gro. T. McDona.p. Darien, Ga., Nov. 18, 1886. Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis- eases mailed tree. The Switt Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. Fire at Polk. The dwelling occupied by Henry M. Lighttoot took fire last Saturday night, and with its contents, inclu ding $250 in money, was totally consumed. Mr. and Mrs. Light- foot were at the home of the lady’s father, Mr. P. J. McLin, assisting in the care of a sick child, and when the fire was discovered returned, but were too late to save anything. The house was an one an one and a half story frame owned by Judge Zum- walt, whose loss is $350 or $400. In addition to the money destroyed Mr. Lighttoot loses all his household effects, valued at from $150to $200. There was no insurance. The fire is supposed to have oriyinated from a spark from the fire piace upon the carpet.—Bolivar Herald. Canada seems to ape the United States in every possible way: They have developed a ring ot boodlers in Quebec who {have stolen that pro vince deaf, dumb and blind. Not content withjstealing the gold trom the cotters, they took the furniture and plate from the late speacer’s apartments, and eyen stole knobs trom the doors of the State House. Since the settlement of the colony of American bank; cashiers Canada’s development has been phenomenal. —St. Joe Gazette. Don't hawk, hawk, disgusting everybody, Catarrh Remedy. and blow, blow, but use Dr. Sage’s He denied the truth | | Harry C. St. John, son of ex Gov- | | ernor John P. St. John, and a prom- | inent attorney ot Garden City. | asserted thatin the early part of Jan- | been forced to marry | have 1o register anc Ir it be true that women have a great repugnance tO making their azes | ia t known, this terror may Operate to | keep them trom registering and | therefore from voting. Joinny’s Composition on Medicine, “There is to kinds ot medicine besides the kind you Rub Op and the first kind the Soft Kind which you take with a spoon while A man holds your Head ana Riggle some because it Tastes so and the other kind is the Hard kind which is culled Pills and it is the Hardest of the whole because it is so Hard to gO Down but it does not make any Difference Which hind you Take when you get it Took you wish vou Had not tor it makes quite a Row in your Stomach and Riots around.” Evidently Johnny’s experience in medi- cine does not include Dr. Pierce's **Pleas- ant Purgative Pellets."’ which are easy to take and do their work quietly and calm- ly Neither does tt include in the way ot “Sott Medicine’ Dr. Pierce's “Golden Medicil Discovery,” which though pow- ertul to cure all chronic derangements of the liver and blood, is pleasant to the taste and agreeable in its ettects- Un- equaled as a remedy tor all scrotulous diseases, pimples, blotches, erruptions, ulcers, swelled glands, goitre or thick neck, fever-sores and hid-joint disease. Ata charity fair in Pittsburg a canary bird sold for $500. This is probably the highest price ever paid tor a feathered songster. Brace up. You are teeling depressed, vour appe- tite is poor, you are bothered with Head- ache, you are fidgetty, nervous, and gen- erally out of sorts, and want to brace up. Brace up, but not with stimulation, spring medicines, or bitters, which have tor theic basis very cheap, oad whisky, and which stimulate tor an hour, and then leave you in worse condition than betore. What vou want is an alterative that will purifv your blood, start nealthy action of Liver and Kidreys, restore your vitality, and give renewed health and strength. Such a medicine you will find in Electric Bitters and only 50 centsa bottle at John G. Walker’s Drug Store. MISSING LINKS. A nail-factory at Brierfield, Als, —_ out four hundred kegs of nails per. jay. An Ohio _ sent forty pounds of a as a Christmas present to his best Schilling, the coachman son-in-law of Morosini, the banker, has enlisted as r United States marine. Lady Colin Campbell gave Sir Charles Russell $5,000 as a retainer and $850 per day during the trial. The Copp Blizzard, the Casseiton Blizzard and the Eik Point Bhcard are three Dakota publications. The Czar of Russia is said to be drunk nearly all the time, and in a ¢on- dition bordering on delirium tremens. Near Toronto is being constructed the first steel steamer ever built in Canada. The engines, however, are being made in Scotland. The new chamber of commerce build- ing in Cincinnati, O., will be erected by contractors from Worcester, Mass., and cost about $600,000. To Mandan, D. ‘T., s movement is on foot to secure a reduction in the price of beer to 5 cents a glass, as an induce- ment to German immigrants. A farmer of New Hope, Cal., who planted 500 acres in potatoes, has had such an abundant crop that he cal- culates that it will yield him $50,000. A man tovk a car load of horses from Miles City, M. T., to the East, and, failing to sell them, took them back again to the place from which he started. At Fort Shaw, M. T., the cattlemen are subscribing to the proposition to im- port several packs of fine dogs to be utilized in destroying wolves, coyotes, etc., on the range. The Tuscarora (Nev.) Times says: The new rule to follow now in buying stocks is to buy 'em when they are low and sell when they are high, and watch your broker with a shotgun. The stretch of desert lying between Palisade and Wells is noted i: being by far the coldest region in Nevada, ther- mometers frequently marking a temper- ature of 50 degrees below zero. _ Francis pag finds such an exten- sive field for his temperance labor in Cincinnati that he has decided to re- main there for an indefinite periad, and has canceled other engagements. Mr. J. A. Bostwick, of New York, wakes the forests of North Carolina by a donation of $50,000 to Wake Forest College, a Baptist institution, to which he had previously given $20,000. Thé North Star Toboggan Club of Grand Forks, Dak., claim to have the longest artificial slide im the world. The trestle is 900 feet long, with s fall oe eee wore in 100 for the first 300 Rev. Henry Ward Beecher noticed that ice isa — in England; that waiters are co! by a request for water, and that an American is known in oe by his calling for water t, recently issued, it and for fire pears that there are in that city 45.197 dwelling-houses, 81 hotels, 2,988 stores, and 5,057 other buildings, valued for taxable purposes at $682,606,000. During the past year $15,284,986 was expended for educational pu in the state of New York. Of this amount — sega for teachers’ w ere are 31,325 school-teachers and 1,735,073 school-children in ‘the state. Mrs. G Sage, of Harlan, Ia, is reported to have traveled 14,000 miles in pursuit of her husband, who last fall ran off with the hired girl. She doesn’t has nothing else to do and is fond of travel. 1 give their age. | Lf women vote in Kansas they will | | | care particularly for the man, but she | | Of Pure Vegetable Ingredients. i ‘AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. AN To All Wanting Employment. ge teon Ene nd Capable Agents States and Cana- patent Je of great merit, om s. Anarticle having a large sale, pay- ver 109 per cent profit, having mo compe- and on which the agent is protected in lusive sale by a deed given for each and aty he may secure from us. With all antages to our agents and the fact that js an article that can be sold to every house- ight not be necessary to make an to secure good agents we have concluded to make it to nly our confidence in the merits of our i tion, but in its salability ppoee sees that will handle it with energy. Our agents now at work are making from $10 to $600 a and this fact makes It safe for us to ffer to all who are out of employ- agent that will give our business a trial and fail to clear at least $100 in this time, ABOVE ALL EXPENSES, Can return all goods unsold to us and we will refund the moncy paid for them. Any agent or general agent who would like ten or more counties and work them through sub-agents for ninety days and fail to clear at least $750 ABOVE ALL EX- PENSES, can return all unsold and get their moneyback. No other employer of agents ever dared to make such offers, nor would we if we did not know that we have agents now making more than double the amount we guaranteed; and but two sales a day would give a profit of over $125 a month, and that one of our agents took nee se orders in one day. Our large de- scriptive circulars explain our offer fully, and these we wish to send to everyone out of em- ployment who will send’ us three one cent stamps for postage. Send at once and secure the agency in time forthe boom, and go to work on the terms named in eur extraordinary offer. We would like to have the address of all the agents, sewing machine solicitors and carpen ters in the country, and ask any reader of this paper who reads this offer, to send us at once the name and address of all such they know. ‘Address at once, or you will lose the best chance ever offered to those out of employment to make money. Renner ManuracrurinG Co., 116 Smithfield St., Pittsburg, Pa. | to be made. Cut this out and return itto us, and we will send you free, some- thing of great value enu importance to you, that will start you in busi- ness which will bring you in more money right away than anything ejse in this world. Any one can do the work and live at home. Either sex, all ages. Something new, that just coins money for all workers. We will start you; capital not needed. This is one of the genuine, important chances of a lifetime. Those who are ambitious and enterprising will not delay. Grand outfit free. Address Truz & Co., Au- gusta, Maine. ner THE CENTURY For 1886-7. Tue Century is an illustrated maga- zine, having a regular circulation of about two hundred thousand copies, often reaching sometimes exceeding two hun- dred and twentv-five thousand. Chief among its mary attractions for the com- ing year is « serial which has been in ac- tive preparation tor sixteen years. It is a history of our own country in its most critical time, as set forth in THE LIFE OF LINCOLN, BY HIS CONFIDENTIAL SECRETARIES, JOHN G. NICOLAY AND COL. JOHN HAY. This great work, begun with the sance tion of President Lincoln, and continued under the authority ot his son, the Hon. Robert T. Lincoln, is the only full and authoritative reeord of the life ot Abra- ham Linceln. Its authors were friends of Lincoin before his presidency; they were most intimately associated with him as priyate secretaries throughout his term of office, and to then: were trans- terred upon Lincoln’s death all his pri- vate papers. Here will be told the inside history ot the civil war and of President Lincoln's administration—important de- tails of which have hitherto remained unrevealed, that they might first appear in this authentic.history. By reason of the publication cf this work, THE WAR SERIES, which ha~ been tollowed with unflagging interest by a great audience, will cccupy less space during the coming vear. Get- tysburg will be described by Gen. Hunt (Chiet ot the Union Artillery), General Longstreet Gen. E. M. Law, and others: Chickamauga by Gen. D. H. Hill; Sher- man’s March to the Sea, by Generals Howard and Slocum. Generals Q. A. Gillmore, W. F. Smith, John Gibbon, Horace Porter, and John S. Mosby will describe special batties and incidents. Stories of naval engagements, prison life, etc., etc., will appear. NOVELS AND STORIES. ‘‘The Hundredth Man,” a novel by Frank R. Stockton, author ot “The Lady, or the Tiger?”’ etc., begins in No vember. ‘I'wo novelettes by George W. Cable, stories by Mary Hallock Foote. “Uncle Remus,” Julian Hawthorne, Ed- ward Eggleston, and other prominent American authors will be printed during the year. SPECIAL FEATURES (with illustrations) include a series ot articles on affairs in Russia and Siberia, by George Kennan, author ot **Tent Lite in Siberia,’ who has just returned from a most eventful visit to Siberian prisons; papers on the rood Question, with ref- erence to its hearing on the Labor Prob- lem; English Cathedralb; Dr. Egghs- ton’s Religious Lite in the American Colonies; Men and Women ot Queen Anne’s Reign, by Mrs. Oliphant; Clair- voyance, Spiritualism, Astrology, etc., by the Rev, J. M. Buckley, D. D., editor of the Christian Advocate; astronomical papers: articles throwing light on Bible istory, etc. : PRICES. A FREE COPY. Subscription price $4.00 a year, 35 cts. a number. Dealers, postmasters, and the publishers take subscriptions. Send for our beautifully illustrated 24-page cataloge (tree), containing full prospec- tus, etc., including a special offer by which new readers can get back numbers to the beginning of the War Series at a low price. A specimen copy (back num- der) will be sent on request. Mention this paper. Can you afford to be without THE CENe TuRY? THE CENTURY CO. New York. Territory given, satisfaction eed. . Address DR.SCOTT.842 3roadwey St.,N.Ye COCKLE’S::::s PILLS This old English Family Medicine in use for 86 years, all over the world, for Bile, Indigestion, Liver, &c. FREE FROM MERCURY. CASTORIA A for Infants and Children. “Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that [recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me.” EL A. Arcugr, M.D., 111 So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y. Castoria cures Colic, Sour Stomach, Diarrhosa, Eructation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes @ witout injurious medication. Tax Curravn Couraxy, 168 Fulton Street, ¥, M’FARLAND BROS, | Keep the Largest Stock, Atthe Lowest Prices in. Spooner Patent Collar! —PREVENTS CHAFING CAN NOT CHOKE A HORSE Adjusts itself to any Horse’s Neck, has two rows ot stitching, will hold Hames ia place better than any other collar. SCHWANEFR’sS | CTH Prevents braking at end of clip, and loops from tearing out. USED ON ALL OF OUR HARNESS. SOUTA SIDE SQUARE BUTLER MO. $1. $1. Sl, THE WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT - t#- ONE DOLLAR A YEAR The following comparative statement of a number of the most prominent Weeklle published in the United States shows conclusively that the WEEKLY GLUBE-DEM OCRAT is from 2< to s0 PER CENT THE CHEAPEST. ST, LOU M0. (10 PAGES|70 COLTS 8 Pages % Columns 56 Columns | | | Weekis Republican, St. Louis Weekly Tribune Chicago. Ill Weekly Times, Chi , Weekly Intur Ocean Chicago, 11 Weekly Enquirer, Cincinnati. O Weekly Commercial Gazette Cincinnati 0... Weekly Times, New York City. Weekly Sun, New YorkCity. Weekly World, New York R2annane SRSRETS 14 Columns of Solid Reading Matterin Favor of thc G@.--D. BEFORE SUBSLRIBING, or renewing your subscription to ‘any other paper, send tor a SAMPLE COPY of theWEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRA1. PRICE OF THE 01HER EDITIONS OF THE GLOBE DEMOC’T. $12.00 00 annum 00 Postmasters and Newsdealers are authorized to receive subscription or send direct tothe GLOBE PRINTING CO., ST. LOUIS © ST ESTABLISHED M0. It to now neari; iy ate more over the this medicine was offered made to grow in aes by the timely use of B. = mrs im their practice, and many ©' pe ve to ite uniform sucess. In fact. it never fails. ive. not suspecting the cause of the Great cantion must be examine every bottie he havs of it. The siinnie jook closely and carefully to see that the initials are B. A. + ape kn gered for so surely a tafant. New Feaxktix. Howarp Co., Mo. artz & Co., Pitti . Pa Harti 8 ave used some of that most exerilent , Havinz used | remedy. B. A. Fahnestock’s Yermifuge, and found it to | { have the desired effect. 1 think your vermifuge ean | * not safely be with in any family. i ron J. W. BUBBARD. %. D. LLE SGHWIRTLE (0. a. coseetsccc.. Mushers