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cen es Bheumatism and 1 Weuraigia Curedin Two Days. The Indiana Chemical Wo. have disty ered a compound which acts with truly marvelous rapidity in the cure ot Rhey- matism and Neuralgia. We guarantee jy to cure any and every case of actte Inflammatory Rheumatism and Neuralgia in 2 DAYS, and to give immediate reliet in chronic cases and ettrct a speedy cure, On receipt of 30 cents, in two cent stamps, we will send to any address the prescription for this wonderiul com pound which can be filled by your home druggist at small cost. We take this means of giving our discovery co the public instead of putting it out as a patent medicine, it being much less expensive. We will gladly refund money if satisraction isnot given. Tue InpiAna Cuemicat Co, 10-1yr Crawterdsvillc Ind er) “ SSonmurers iit ta Sa Sold by RGINI ‘The only sure Cure for Corns. Stopsall pain. Ensures comfort to thefeet. Ibe. at Druggists. Hiscox &Co., N.Y. CONSUMPTIVE Have ro Cou Bronchitis, Asthma. Indigestion! Use PARKER'S CINGER it has cured he Rie drole dy for all ills arising from defective nutrition. time. 0c. and $1.00. WALLS & HOLT. FARMS and MILLS SOLD ad exchanged. Catalogue. i. B. CaaTHN aco, Nikiehmond. Vs 436u MADE WITH BOILING WATER. EPPS 5 GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. COCOA MADE WITH BOILING MILK. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair. (Promotes a luxuriant growth. INever Fails to Restore Gray} Hair to its Youthful Color. Prevents Dandruff and hair falling @p WEAK KIDNEYS BACKACHE Weak anid Painful Kidneys, Back and Chest, Rheumatic. Aching Sides, ciatic, Sharp and Muscular Pains, relieved in one minute by the ‘ H p The . eae Ba Gaticura Anti I Pain ‘i Plaster, and | speak and breathe without difficulty, only instantaneous pain-killing, strengh- “2h eulertoed ar isne ening plaster. 25 conte five for $1.00 eat Nussbaum advised her to dispense eS or of Porren Drug aND CItkMICA » Boston Pimples, blackheads, chapped and oily skin cured by Cuticura Soar THE GLORY OF MAN STRENGTH VI FA HAUSTEDVITALITY “UNTOLD MISERIES Reegkps rom Fol moor. Vice, Ij for Work, cece athe afar Avoid unskilful pretenders. joranee, Excesses 0} ried or Socalee Relation. ‘ive Prospectus distinguished author, W: ceived the COLD A’ from the National Medical Assoc! AL DEBILITY. Dr. Parker and aco: of Assistant Physicians may be consulted, eo deatiaily, by mail or in person, at the effice c’ THE PEABODY MEDICAL Birected as above. I believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life.—A. H. DowE.Ltr, Editor Enquirer. Eden- ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. The sEest Cough Medi- cine is Ptso’s CURE FOR CoyxsuMPTIon. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. 2c. FEE RR me a SEIS. | Many years’ PSE unfitting the victim this great royal8vo. Beautiful ice, only $1.00 by plain wrapper. Illus- BS if aoa 2 Spply ho Lan phe ND een ace sa oe the PRIZE ESSAY on NERVOUS © ‘and ‘TITUTE, No. 4 Bulfinch St., Boston, Mass., io whom all orders for books or lettera for advice should be meet ACCIDENTS IN SURGERY. Confessions of One ef Germany's Most Eminent Practitioners. A clever surgeon may often attain wonderful results through a single Operation; occasionally a disease of standing disappears at one stroke, and the subject is ‘new made o’er again;” the skilled operator getting, very properly, all the credit for the remarkablecure. It is not less true, however, that accidents some- { times occur during operations, in spite of all the care of th® practitioner, which almost drive him to despair, and not infrequently prove fatal to the patient. You seldom hear of such cases, for naturally gentlemen of the profession do not care to mention them. Prof. Von Nussbaum, of Munich, the celebrated surgeon, is therefore entitled to commendation for his ¢ “an- dor in publishing an interesting ar entitled ‘‘Accidents in Surge’ which he relates his own experience and that of some of some of his fellow practitioners. What strange things will happen in the operating room! It has more than once occurred that the wrong tooth has been extracted, especially when the patient was chloroformed and {could not be questioned again at the time. Once, however, a man at the hospital had the wrong leg taken off. It happened in this way. A patient with both his feet bandaged was laid on the operating | table. Both legs were diseased; the right one was considered curable, but the left had to be amputated, as it was supposed to be past healing. Unfor- tunately, they amputated the right leg, and did not discover their mistake until after the operation, when every effort was made to save the left leg— the worst of the two—and with succe In modeling artificial noses from por tions of the skin cut from the forehead (rhinoplastic) it sometimes occurs that, after the healing process, a part of the new organ mortifies, or that the noble features collapses into a shape- less lump and leans over to one side. During an operation on the glands in the throat, Nussbaum’s lance broke against a hard substance in the center of the gland, and the patient swallowed the broken piece, which was about an inch long. To prevent the sharp steel causing laceration of the stomach and intestines, the doctor made the patient swallow a glass of sugar and water containing a tablespoonful of diluted muriatie acid, and in forty-eight hours the piece of steel passed without any trouble and was found to be black, rusty and blunt, owing to the effect of the acid. False teeth are often llowed inadvert- ently. Prof. Nussbaum mentions a case where a woman swallowed a plate with five teeth which stuck firm- ly in her gullet, and could neither be moved up nor down. As “she felt no pain and was able to eat and drink, L | with an operation. And now the lady has had the swallowed set of teeth in her throat for nearly two years. Nussbaum calls it an ‘accident’ when a surgeon, in performing’a diffi- cult operation, leaves in the body a piece of sponge, or a pair of pincers, or a piece of india-rubber tubing, thereby causing the patient’s death through blood-poisoning, and there- fore recommends the practice of count- ing all instruments, sponges, etc., both before and ater the operation, by way of acheck, for then you can easily as- certain whether you have forgotten to take out something or not. When chloroform was first applied, patients frequently died under the operation. At present, the deaths average one in twelve thousand in cases of chloro- form treatment. The professor closes his article by stating doctors can learn more from an unfortunate case than from ten lucky operations, and that’s a comfort.—Berliner Volkszettung. Drunkenness or tie Liquor Habi Positively Cured by administering Dr. Haines’ Golden Specific. It can be given in a cup of coffee or tea without the knowledge ot the person tak- ingit; is absalutely harmless and will ettect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderate drink- er or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Specific in their coffee without their knowledge, and to-day believe they quit drinking of their own free will. It never fails. The sys tem once impregnated with the Specific it becomes an utter impossibility ior the liquor appetite to exist. For tull partic- ulars, address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO., Race st. Cincinnati. O. t A frugal wife said to the doctor, | who was cutting open the shirt of | her husband, who had just fallen | from apoplexy: “Please cut along i the seam, doctor.” | Eupenpsys, This is what you ought to have, in tact, you musthave it, to enjoy tite. Thousands are searching tor it daily, and monrning because they find it not Thousands upon thsusands of dollars are spent annually by our people in the | hope thet they may attain it. Ahd yet | it may be had by all. We guerantee that that Electiic Bitters, if used according ' to directions and the use persisted in, | will bring you Good Digestion and oust ne demon dyspepsia and install instead upepsia. We recommend = Electric | Bitters tor dyspepsia and all disease of j Lives Stomach and Kidneys. Sold at | soc.and $.0o per bottle by Walls & Holt, | SropErt es that is nothing new; it always does fey belonging to Mrs. James Lewis, | H wife of Capt. Lewis of the clipper | ship Stephen D. Horton, possibly | saved the lives of 19 people on De cember 27 by discovering a fire in the cargo of jute. ed down the hatches and crowded | sail for Pernambuco,400 miles away. caused, the captain thought, by the fire having reached a part of the 100 900 tons of jute. the vessel was enveloped in flames. Mrs. Lewis was dragged from her cabin by her husband, and both suc ceeded in climbing into one of the two boats that were hastily loaded Eight men jumped overboard, and one of these, John Davis. was drown- ed. went back for some clothes and was suffocated. the ship burnt the captain, his wie and nine men in one men in the other lived on hard tac! and a gill of water apiece under thc fierce rays of a tropical sun. were picked up on December the bark Twilight, bound from Cai diff to Valparaiso. ping paper, but it saved her lite. was in the ble and could live ouly w a New Discovery, and gota s i i grew better tasf, ontinued its Saved by a Monkey. New York, Jan. 30.—A pet mon- FOUND IN A CRATER. | Discovery of a Beautiful Mosaic Agate ina Mexican Volcano. | An odd-looking genius, who is a | guest at the Coleman House and fre quently seen about other uptown hotels, is William Cooper. He is a slender, wiry man, with a sandy beard, freckled face and twinkling eyes, who wears a brown beav sombrero of Mexican patter! which he is dis- tinectly marked out as different from the ordinary run of men in New York. Mr. Cooper has come from Mexico, where he has made important geolog- ical discoveries. | | The crew batten | Soon after there was an explosion, traveler. S years ago he tous of salt-petre stowed among the Je ae excursion up the Congo river, in In a few minutes | africa, between to Liverpool a valuable ivory and other African merchandise. He is a born trader. fluent for onyx and r: England Granite Works, using larg the constr interior of a great building on Broad. way, this city. Cooper went into Southern Mexicc and located at Esperanza, where Another man, Henry Younger, For three days and nights after boat anti. ten Frenchman from N Juilio M. Chopin. south of Esperanza is the voleano o! Zempoatepetl, v 30 by One of these found and brought out of a stone which came udventurous native: the crate! Mr. Cooper and was _ purchased .,.| by him for a silver piece of small persaves Her Lite 2 S i va'ue, which h e proven to be a It was cust an ordinary scrap 0} wrap mos: agate of and even fabu- ne irther lous value. Fr: disclosed the fact the crater is one solid bed or mass ¢ mosaic agate, all of which has com into the possession of Mr. Cooper an his partner. ing of his good luck. inguiries pressed on him said: exploration ha as t stag told by physicians thé ot consumption she was incura a short time; she eighed less than -eventy scrap of paper she read of Dr. ampie bott pounc t helped her, she bong bottle, t helped more, bought another and use an He has been a great seven hundred and eight hundred miles, and brought back invoice of Nearly two years | ago he first went to Mexico, where his use of the Spanish language made him perfectly at home, to look | -e marble for the New | which was quantities of rare stone in tion and decoration of the he formed a partnership with a young »w Orleans named !wo hundred miles thin whose crater the Indians penetrate in search of sulphur. under the eye of that the bottom of He is modest in speak- but in answer to A QUEEN'S HOUSEHOLD. Dignitaries and Parasites Who Draw Sal- aries Without Doing Any Work. Queen Victoria’s heusehold has arly usand officers, subordi- and attendants. The Lord Stew- at the head of all with a salary | of $10,000 a y flicers and ser- Vants, exc connected with the P able and chapel, The active subject to duties of this c performed by the Master of the Household, who gets $5,790 a year. The Lord Treasurer ranks next to the Lord Steward and acts for him iu case he is absent, while to assist him he has the Comptroller of the Household. who likewise does nothing. The Board of Green Cloth, composed of the four above named offi- cials, adjudicates on offenses commit- ted in certain parts of the palace, and has clerks and The clerk of the kitchen keep ac- counts, check s, and give orders to tradespeo Ther ‘e } secret and h ‘ood « is a chefand many cooks, a | head of the confectionery department, | of the ewer” or linen department, a chief butler, table deckers, men in charge of the plate, pantry and of the and lamp lighters and dispensers ofalms. The Lord Steward is judge of the Court of Mi urshalsea, with power to dispen *c among the Queen’s domestic servants, and the court has a a ” Knight Marshal. The Lord Cham- f | berlain gets $10,000 a year and, with the Vice Chamberlain, superin- tends all the officers and servants of the Queen's chamt xcept the bed chambers, under the Groom of the 5 ell as the offi- cers of the wardrobe. The Keeper of Her Majesty’s Privy Purse is her finan- cial secretary at a salary of $10,000. The the Mistress of the Robes, the Groom of the Robes, Ladies of the Bed Chamber, Maids of Honor, bed chamber women, Lords in Waiting, Grooms in Waiting; Gentlemen Ushers of the Privy Chamber, Daily Waiters, Quarterly Waiters, Grooms of the Privy Chambers, Grooms of the Great Chamber and Gentlemen of the Privy Chamber. The Marshal of Ceremon- 3 Tr re 3 of 8 d is nw strong, healthy, rosy, plump, “The voleano of Zempoatepetl was weighing Sounds, For fuller partic- | celebrated long before the conquest | ies must have an absolute knowledge ulars send stamp to W. H. Cole, diug-| period for rich opals, topazes and | of Court etiquette. gist, Ft Smith. Trial Bottles of ths | precious stones found at its b: The The official places many of them Beonceral eS very sree sau Ve Ure agate we have discovered differs from | call for no performance of duty, be- Gy EE ee the ordinary stone of that name in the | cause with the change of customs the a A fact that it is mosaie in formation. | duties have become obsolete. The Love Ina Cottase- The colors blended are those which | Master of the Tennis Court does noth- “Chally,” said Amarantha Jane, | are found in the ruby, topaz, emerald, | ing. There area Master of the House, oy mote that your spirits recently turquoise and other stones artifici burgomzster, keeper of the swans, and ¥ inlaid and combined by nature i hundreds of a its to the officers seem to be bubbling over with hap piness. tell me dear, what has “I will,” her waist and imprinted a kiss on her inviting lips. while I was melancholy, blue as in- digo—had no appetite, was billious and dyspeptic, but the use of two | Tam glad to sce it, but dk eaused it?” said Charley, as he encircled has a pearly luster like a moonston' with its crys ated in color is so marked in the formation of tk mosaic as to bring to the tions of outlines of figures stals varieg 5 delicate “You know for a of a painter. stone has yet been found alike. It cubic feet. the day soon; there is more of this medicine at the drug store.” trip from the station to the mountai “IT have studied up the history the volcanosomewhat. Traditions that it broke out in eruption in t year 648 A. D., the beginning of o knowledge of the Toltecrace. It co A Good Chance. y It is eur candid conyiction, that if the farmers ot this district, who does not see Coleman’e Rural World everv week, would send tor a sample copy, and read it through, they would subscribe tor it at once. It only costs $1.00 a year, which is less than two cents a week, is a large eight page, seven column paper and full to overflowing with live agricultural, horticultural, “stock, sheep and horse news, is ably conducted, intelligently edited, and in every sense calculated to educate its readers in the best methods ot conducting their business. We will send it and our own paper one year tor $2.00. For sample copies,address C. 1). Cole- man, 705 live Street, St. Louis, Mo Subscriptions may be lett at our office throne of King Xototl, who reigned Zempoatepetl. habited only by Indians. Senator Vest on Samoa, part honest. Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 28.—Sen- ator George G. Vest arrived in this city this morning from St. Joseph, where he attended the funeral of the late Congressman J. N. Burnes yes- terday. In regard to the Kansas City Post Office, the senator said: “Thad no trouble in getting Mr. Adkins confirmed, and I think the post office will be well conducted by him. The Times has criticised my course in regard to this matter, but Their form of worship is Catholic.” In speaking of the discovery Neuva Monda, a paper published Paxaca, makes gestion: of this voleano, which proves that time, though at present it and over 10,000 feet high. Could t! stroyed, and the bodies petrified criticise my acts. If I should intro- duce a resolution indorsing the Lord’s Prayer I guess the Times would criticise it.” Senator Vest said that he does not apprehend any trouble with Ger- many over Samoa. ‘,There will be El Commercio de Mexico compu Pieces of the mosaic are now being for exhibition.—N. FY. Letter. —__—_ = —__—_ —*‘Prisoner,” trate, found dead drunk on the street. have you to say?” no war between this country and] guilty, your Honor.” ‘Ten dollars Germany,” he said: “I feel pare and costs. Next. Same charge ; countered by the lasgest boat ee against you, sir. to make?” ‘Your Honor,” repl the prisoner, wiping his spectacles that the difficulty now existing will be amicably settled.” The Senator leaves for Washington to-morrow morning. great dignity, “‘with your permiss I wish to enter a plea of guilty to Shithers always tries to be strictly accurate. Upon a recent occasion he was asked the age of his baby, and immediately replied: “Six weeks and thirteen days, thank you.”—Har- per's Bazar. alcoholic trance.” —Chicago Tribune. An apophyllite or tish-eye stone, whic eye sugges- and perfectly drawn as if by the hand No two pieces of the taken out in blocks of one to fifteen The crater is one hundred takes forty-five days to make a rough tinued an active voleano for about 500 years, during which time many pieces of stone of mosaic formation were thrown out and picked up by the na- tives, by whom they were made into necklaces and other ornaments. The the Twelfth century, was ornamented with fragments of mosaic agate from The country round about the volcano is a wild one, in- It is as un- known to the people of the United States as the jungles of Africa. The Indians are cleanly and for the most They make good house servants, and are nearly all religious. this statement and sug- “Sea shells were found in the crater was connected with the ocean at one is more than 100 miles distant from the sea coast, mosaic deposit be the result of av canic eruption under the sea at one time, in which animal life was de- mass, forming the strange deposit.” the value of the volcano at $1,000,000. said the chief magis- “you are charged with being What “I reckon I'm Have you any plea the tail of his coat and speaking with charge of being discovered on a public thoroughfare while in the condition technically and scientifically known as “My friend,” said the magistrate, kindly, your offense = merely a nominal one. You may go.” mentioned. All this looks like keep- ing house under difficulties, and Queen Victoria ought to be well paid for it. —Good Housekeeping. ——__. 2 ——_—_—_ THE TSIEN-TANG SORE. A Great Wave That Rushes Into Hangehow Bay Twice a Day. Captain W. U. Moore, R. N., of her Majesty’s surveying vessel Rambler, has lately been engaged in observing h e, Sy ne ly is bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medi-]} and eighty miles from the nearest URS teal ater 2 fei ~ —— 5 S : : Ne ae river. Captain Moore ‘egards Sas cal Discovery has brought me out So sau “> Bae eI the cighistob he worlds wien and I am ‘bright as a button.’ I feel arte oe Bes Ue "| no resident in or visitor to China : wheeled trucks, drawn by oxen. The é 4 tee likea new man now. Jane, name] 1044 is mountainous and rouet me should miss seving. It occurs twice in every twenty-four hours, being most remarkable at spring tides. Captain Moore favored us with the following notes: “The best place to see the phenom- enon is from the sea-wall at Haining, about two miles cast of the Bhota pagoda, where there is a violent re- bound of the flood stream, and conse- quent upraising of the water behind the front of the bore. The bore can be seen approaching from the upper gal- lery of the pagoda about ten or twelve miles distant; and heard ona still night, one hour before it strikes, when it is twelve or thirteen miles distant. It is highest as a whole and most regular in form opposite the pagoda, which it passes at full change of the moon ata speed of twelve to thirteen knots an hour; precisely as the moon crosses the meridian of that spot. It has its origin off Chi-san, a cape about eighteen n. of ys he ur n- in miles east by south of Haining, El and travels to six miles above the city of Hangchow, a total distance of forty- two miles. Under certain combina- tions of wind, spring-tide and rains up country, it commences as far east as Chapoo, and retains its distinctive character to about thirty miles above the city, a total distance of over ninety miles. The general height of the bore, that is the crown of the cascade, varies at spring-tide from seven to eleven feet. It has been seen much higher on the approach of « typhoon and con- sequent banking up of the water in Chapoo bay. The water raised by the rebounds from the sea-wall, especially that mentioned in the foregoing re- marks, mounts to a height of twenty feet or more above the level of the river in the same spot five minutes before. “At neap tides the bore sometimes does not attain a height of over three feet, but the speed of its progress still renders it too formidable to be en- it his ol- in tes set ied on ‘ion the China News. —_——. + s—__— —First Kentuckian—‘‘Say, Colonel, preachin’ to a crowd o' women an’ singin’ ‘Would I Were a Bird’” | the feathers. gation for ships in the Tsien-tang is not practicable, though the depth of water is sufficient—if time or tide is regarded—to reuch Haining from the ocean in vessels of fifteen feet draught and to anchor off the pagoda.”—North there's a Mormon elder down the road Sec- | ond ond Kentuckian—“Well, I kin furnish S JACOBS Q FOR WATERMEN, Ee ALL MEN whosep place them on the such as Seafarers, and River Cra Yachtmen, Boatmen, should be guided by CAPT. 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