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“THE TALE OF TROY. Jef the Greatest Pleces of Imaginative E Poetry. @ one thing which seems approxi- certain about the chief author Iliad is that he was a Greek of n Asia Minor. The weight of nce appeared to the ancients to toward Smyrna as his native and modern students generally in this opinion. Yet the poems ves give no hint of any Greek @ existing in Asia at all. On the ry, the poet apparently assumes his tale belongs to a period before emigration of the Hellenes, from gir peninsular home, eastward across le gean; that is, before the gray wp of Hellenic history! It is not ikely that the siege of holy Ilios is uth a far-off echo of that eastward ing movement itself. ut the more completely the Tale of eludes the grasp of historian and nologist, so much the loftier is the sition which it assumes in its true acter, as a masterpiece of imagi- ive poetry. The Iliad satisfies happily the three demands which may make upon every artistic cre First, the plot is eminently T. LL: PETTYS A. Of WELTON PETTYS & WELTON DEAL?! RS IN Fancy Groceries, ¢ of all Kinds. | | > Staple: o Feed and Provision UEENSWARE AND GLASSWARE i;CICARS AND TOBACCO,] Always pay the highest market price for Countr . in itself. Th : MG Giiaced in th opening Produces East Side Square. Butler, MO fg, O goddess, the wrath of Achilles, the Off- |... eesmmssmernten cece Pa SSS eR a = spring of Peleus— steadily worked out to its final re- lults. Even the death of Achilles mself and the fall of the guilty city foreshadowed in so distinct and ppressive a manner that all our onable curiosity is satisfied. Sec- diy, the warriors and matrons whom we see acting and suffering, hhether they are real Greek men or are at any rate pre-eminently hu- n. We do not demand that the con- litions of their life shall be such as ver existed, or could have existed, on four earth. Nay, we welcome romantic d imaginative surroundings for the pet’s scenes. We only insist that ithin their environment the creatures the artist shall act as real men and yomen would act under such circum- /stances. But thirdly and chiefly. Homer's characters are heroic. They tower high above the commonplace “levels of humanity. They seem not 80 much like ourselves as what we would wish to be. Perhaps it is weil to say. as frankly and as plainly as rpossible, that this is the final and in- dispensable test of the artist's right to “be. We ourselves know the pettiness, ¢ the limitations, the disenchantments of } human life only to well. The preacher, }. the teacher, the political and social reformer, may, perhaps, accomplish | some good by merciless analysis and satiric caricature of our failings. The artist is the creator of the beautiful. He must inspire and uplift us by set- ting before us something wrought in our likeness, indeed, but nobler than our ordinary selves.—William Cran- ston Lawton, in Atlantic. +o ALEXANDRE OUMAS. “Two Excellent Anecdotes Told of the | Mrs. 1, Famous Novelist’s Rooks. Two anecdotes are told of Dumas’| Between Mrs. Harrison books, one by M. Edmond About, the | Lo: re ey eee other by his own son, which show, in So xaas Ren ahic ane ged her everywhere, she lovec brief ee, why this novelist is so aE ise oe ee Ae ene |Jamb you know. But now, alashe beloved, and why he deserves our |2'!8 been the means of ina oh jJamb’s no more, aud Mary's spits affection and esteem. M. Villaud, a]what is probably an all winter's | droop—the sheep is metamoros railway engineer, who had lived much war. ed into Dr. Sequard’s soup, theoc- in Italy, Russia aud Spain, was the tor caught the little lamb and kek- rson whose enthusiasm finally se- : : ve. | ed it in the head, and jammed in a sees matitue formas. | He Au. so | the importance of her intended re- | Hestulltillstevaern ae a an much gratitude to the unknown friend | ception, Mrs. Logan contrary to her doctor took the mutton juiend of lonely nights in long exiles that he | habit since her widowhoood person- with a little squirt, administel it could not be happy till his erence ally called on the ladies of the cabi.| to Mary's pa, beneath his ver nm ANOTHER SPLEANDID GIFT 1! AN ELEGANT WORK OF AR’ To every new subscriber or renewal for the Weekly Globe-[Jemocrs (10 Pages) ONE YEAR THE BEAUTIFUL ENGRAVING, “THE SCOTCH RAID” A companion pieceof 0 A group of cattle and sheep (by Rosa Bonheur)- “THE HORSE FAIR,” which was, until recently, the premium vh the WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT. sax-The price of the WEEKLY GLCBE-DEMOC and the engraving “THE SCOTCH RAID,” is only ONE DOLLAR. Subseribers desiring both pictures can have “The Horse Fair” or SRAT, one nr 2 25 cents extra. Postmasters and news dealers will take subscriptions, or remit dset to the GDOBE PRINTING Co. beeSend for sample copy of paper. a Mary’s Latest. had a little lamb, its tee was white as snow, _ the eritteng- nand Mrs. Harrison at Odds and Mrs rs yp gan and between Mrs. Logan 1 ampment The story goes that, anticipating s found a permanent expression. eas s = aya 2 ee = es returnin: oe Sennen me went to con- | 2¢t aud invited them to receive with Shirt. And now the old man ats lt M. Vi Bori hi ld him|her. They all declined on one pre- 24 baas, and cavorts aroundike Reeeter tyson nore, who: to os : se == jimad, and says that Mary's :tle this tale about George Sand. M. Borie tense or another, chanced to visit the famous novelist just before her death and found Du- ; eae mee mas’ novel, “Les Quarante Cing” (one Mrs. Logan to receive with her at of the cycle about the Valois Kings), |the White house. lying on her table. He expressed his Considering the invitation extend- | wonder that she was reading it for : 5 . i the first time. ‘For the first time ed to the cabinet ladies ane that she | woman knighted in why, this is the fifth or sixth time | Was the only i have read ‘Les Quarante Cinq’ and | America, her husband’s relation to ad cat tie : am ill, a rg the order and her own importance melancholy, tire liscouraged, noth- : & - Ban ope ing helps me against moral or physical on this occasion. Mrs. Logan it is troubles like a book of Dumas’.” | Currently thought, had every reason Again, M. About says that M. Sarcey | to expect discrimination in her fa- was in the same class at school with vor. alittle Spanish boy. The child was st tc hing s = homesick; he cofld not eat, he could But it is hinted that Mrs. Harri- not sleep; he was almost in a decline. | 80N is to good a politician to foster “You want to see your mother?” said | an incipient presidential boom by Tee apg Be abe is dead.” | pushing Mrs. Logan to the front. | “Yor ther, then?” “No; | £ Ei 2 Re Aa sears pee Oe dias ro The hold upon the G. A. R. and the | tis alleged that the barbwire | ters?” «I have none” “Then why |Masonie, which Mrs. Logan is evi- | trust has augmented the cosithat are you so eager to be back in Spain?” | dently determined to maintain can | commodity at the rate of $8}ton. “To finish a book I began in the holi- scarcely be explained on afiy other | The rods which enter into than days.” “And what was its name?”|~ t ges = ufacture of this valuable fenc ma “Los Tres Mosqueteros!” He was |$tOund than her well known interest terial are protected by a ty of jin the future of General Alger, of ; more than $13-a ton, so thatei Michigan. and to make it 5 i ~~. | lamb has saved her poor old w.—- worse, Mrs. Harrison did not invite Ex. Drunkenness or the Liquor abi Positively Curea. by adminisng Br, Haines’ Gelden Specific. . It can be given in a cup of coffer tea Withovt the knowledge ot the perstak- |ingit; is absolutely harmless a will | ettect a permanent and speed:ure, | whether the patient is a moderatéink- er or an alcoholic wreck. Thousis of | drunkards have been made terrate | men who have taken Golden Spéc in | their coffee without their knowled and | to-day believe they quit drinking:heir own free will. It never fails. “Isys: tem once impregnated with the ‘cific it becomes an utter impossibility the liquor appetite toexist. For tullrtic ulars, address GOLDEN SPECIFIC ¢ 185 | Race st. Cincinnati. . homesick for ‘The Three Musketeers,” ign | and they cured him easily. That is So, whatever slight is ; barbed wire is excluded freom what Dumas does. He gives courage | put upon Mrs. Logan it petition with the new true The ; could not and life toold age, he charms the half- eareenae! farmers of Kansas and of ot ag | Hartford road. THE TRAIN DISPATCHER, | He Must Know a Great Many Things ana Do Them Well. The position of a train dispatcher is | @very responsible one. Indeed. it is the most responsible one connected with the transportation department. They are required to be good telegraph Operators, have a general knowledge of rules governing the movement of trains and have a great deal of confi- dence in themselves. Train dispatch- ers as a rule are men who have served on the road as operators and have gained, by practical experience, a knowledge of the different depart- ments of a railroad. Among the numerous bits of knowledge a dis- patcher must possess are the follow- ing: He must know all the grades, curves, capacity of side-tracks and location of all telegraph offices on his division; must know the hauling capacity of all locomotives running on his division, and the reputation of all engineers and conductors for ‘‘making time. His duties consist of issuing telegraphic orders to trains to meet each other or giving one train the right of track against another. All railroads have aschedule, on which all trains have a given time to make a trip over the division. he schedule also shows the time each train is due to pass all stations. Trains are classified (varying on different roads) follows rst class, passen- ger trains: second class, regular freight tr third class, “wild” or “extra” trains. The trains take pre- cedence over each other in the order named. horth or east-bound trains have the “right of way” against trains moving south or west, provided, however, that fir: ains moving south or west huviag the right to use the trac inst second or third-class trains moving in the opposite direc- tion. First second-class trains are shown on the time card, while third-class or irreguisr trains can not leave a te without first obtaining an order from a dispatcher onduty. Train dispatchers work eight hours per day each. ‘The first trick man reports at eight a. m., second trick at four p. m. and third trick at twelve midnight. The chief dispatch- er's hours vary, he being required to be present whenever his presence may be necessary. As each train es and leaves a station the operator reports it by using the signal os os os, which attracts the dispatche attention and he carries the time on a called a train sheet. Thus he is enabled to keep track of his trains, knowing just where they are. If trains could only be on schedule time his work would be light, but as it is they are generally late, especially freight trains. Whena train having the “right of way” becomes late and another train having arrived at the designated meeting point on time, the dispatcher changes the mecting point by issuing an order to both trains to that effect. These or- ders are delivered to the conductors and engineers and they, after reading them, sign them gnify their un- derstanding. The operator then sends the signatures by wire to the dis- patcher who. after indorsing them on the order book, ‘O. K.” the order, giving the signal that it is correct. There are other forms of orders is- sued, such as giving a train a given time to make a station against a train of a superior class or having the right of way against them; giving a second- class train an order to run ahead of a first-class train; giving a train orders to carry signals for a ‘second sec- tion” of the train receiving the order, etc., etc. It requires the greatest watchful- ness and care on the part of the dis- patcher to keep the trains moving and from trying to “pass on a single track.” The duties are very hard and a constant strain is kept upon the mind, but by faithful devotion to duty they in time are promoted to be train masters, superintendents and so on up the ladder. Omaha World-Herald. Also class and on. € sheet tos Baltimore's Columbus Monument. Baltimore is the possessor of the only monument in this country to the memory of the discoverer of America. Strange to say, it was set up by a foreigner, the first French Consul to the port of Baltimore. an ardent admiration of Columbus. The existence of this monument is not | generally known, and it has particular interest now in view of the accumulat- ing importance of the coming Exposi- tion of the three Americas. It stands upon an elevated plateau on the lawn attached to the Samuel Ready | Female Orphan Asylum, at the inter- | section of East North avenue and the It was erected nearly conscious nostalgie, the heimweh, of | be constructed here upon any other ' rieultural states which - sus the | childhood.—Scribner's Magazine. ground. 5 policy of protection are thuab!- i Avery rich incident has !eaked ,ed to see how much they ~— for | the privilege of voting agaitheir | own interests.—K.C Star. ——-+2___ No Trouble After That. Briggs—I have been hunting all the | morning for a friend of mine, Boggs. | her cabinet invitations. out connected with Mrs. Logan and It is said but I'can’t find him. I wish he wasn’t | The Cronin matter w In E s0 much trouble to git hold of when I | that after a presentation of one of the the course of time it will pably want him. . a 2 | Nvitations to the wife of on= of the Boggs—I'll tell you what todo. The | next time you see him, Briggs. borrow ten or fifteen dollars. After that you} - can’t walk the streets without running over him.—Time. embrace the whole city oficago tu one way or another as gects, “Excuse me, madame, but I did / jurors or witnesses. Hap; the case will mainly be confine: Chi- t secretries, that lady remarke {not catch your name.” “Iam Mrs. cago and Trelanc —.>eo—____ | —A little boy of three years, whose | as mother played the organ in the | the visitor church, and who was obliged to be ‘eyebrows. left to the care of others, was asked | aa: oe one Sunday morning what his kitten | eee responded | elevating her | More than s tramps weject- ed irom the train betweenthrop and Fresno, Cal. a few di ago. Logan.” said the The Fr s crowded from was crying so piteously for. “I don’t hostess slowly and impressively. se i i ; i :. _ renty to thirty sts made know,” said he, in tearful tones, “but Rell Rac ied cy penis te SES sts Tnade X ’spect the old cat has gone to! 4, 1 wil try not to forget your (daily. It is getting near wr and Saige | . 3 arch.” ; mame. tramps go to a warm clima . { 8 a a century ago, yet it is in a fine state | of preservation after having withstood Itis the | the storms of so many years. design of the management of the asylum to appropriately.decorate the monument in October, 1892, of the great Exposition of the three Americas, as a help to emphasize the circumstances under which erected. The monument is built of brick said to have been imported from England or France. At first it was covered with plaster, but it has since received a coating of cement by the Ready Asylum trustees. It is quad- rangular in form, and slopes from a base of six and one-half feet in diameter to two and a half feet at the top, andis about fifty feet American. —The bell that calls the arithmetic class is the school boys’ dread sum- mons.—Merchant Traveler. He was an eccen- | tric man, possessed of great wealth and the time | it was! Consumpnon Cured. BATES COUN TY ! i An old cian, retired from pratice | having ! ris hands bv an! N s S I ry the wa ota a iona an n 8 sir © remedy f espeedy! band permanent cure ot Consumption, | i Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and al!; { throat and lung affections, also a positive | jand radical cure for Nervous Debility | 1 Neryous complaints, atter having i its wendertul curative powers} (Organized in 1871. )*} OF BUTLER, MQ. Capial paid in, - - $75,000. tested in thousands of cases, has felt it his duty fo make it Known to his suttering fetlow. Actuated by this motive and a relieve human suffering. I will se ot charge, to all who desire it, this re- Surplus - 2 + += &>1000 ceipt, in Ge » French or Pop ust: with tull directions sor preparing an = 4 using. Sent by mail by addresing with eae Ho ae tcsident: stamp, naming this paper. W. A. Noyes, C. CUARK is ’ Cate E 149 Power’s Block, Rocheste N. Y. j.c. = ‘ashier Trustee's Sale. Whereas Sarah E. Owen in her own ri, ht, and Reuben S. Owen her husband did by their deed of trust dated the 23rd day of December A_D. 188%, and recorded in book 45, page 212 of the records of Rates county, Missouri, con- vey to Henry C. Wilson, trustee, the follow- ing described real estate situated in the county of Bates and state of Missouri, to- wit: The west half of the southeast quarter of section twenty (20) and the north half of the northeast quarter of section twenty-nine (29) in township forty-two (42) north and in Tange thirty-three west of the fifth (5th) principal meridian, to secure payment of the sum of one hundred dollars, secured, to be ae by their ten certain notes of even date with said trust deed and payable to the order of William F. Leonard. one July Ist 1886 and one every six months thereafter until all are paid, wit interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent per annum from maturity. And whereas it is provided in and by said deed of trust that in case of default in the payment of either of said notes or any part thereof, when the same should become due, then all of said notes with interest up to the date of sale, at the election of the legal holder or holders thereof should at once become due and payable, and on request the said trustee shall udvertise and sell said By Mary A. Livermore | Her own Narrative of “FOUR YEARS PERSONAL EXPERI- ENCE 45 NURSE” in Hospitals, Camps, and on the Battle-teld. Xo other book has drawn so many tears. Bright, Pure and Good. of matchiess interest and profound pathos. af selis at ashe f oe oe sing: “hook to make money on now an nr the holidays. J” 40 compention. al em id Steel Plates, oon Hatiles ia fetnty cen and Women. Distance se hind: re Fraghts and give Extra Terms. Write A. BD. WULTHMINGTON & Cu., CRAYON PORTRAIT While introducing our tine work, if you send us a photograph of yourself or any member of your family, we will make you a full life-size Crayon Portrait Free of Charge. The only consideration inposed upon you will be that you exhibitit it to your friends as a sampie of our work, and assist us in securing orders. also that you promise to have it framed suita- bly so that the work will show to advantage Write your full name and address on back of photo to secure its safety we guarantee its for we PF forcircalarsto | ‘Martford, Coan. return Our offer is good for a few days only, | premises. And whereas the notes due and and the sample portrait is worth being as | payable on the first day of January and July fine as can be made. Address American Por- D_ 1889, arenow due and wholly unpaid, trait House, 5 and 6 Washington St. CHICa- | and all of said notes aud interest have been de. GO, ILL. in the Wor! clared due and payable to the legal holder thereof amounting. on the day of sale to the sum of one hundred forty-six and 25-100 dol- Size Portrait House Largest Life: i GRATEFUL—C( lars, including the costs and expenses of this Ua das 2 proceeding. And whereas by the provisions "ih Ei & of suid deed of trust, the legal holder of said R Kot Lotes may nominate and appoint a successor m § a in trust in case the trustee named, Henry C. ae Wilson, should decline to act, and the said Henry © Wilson having declined to act and the undersigned having been appointed his successor in trust. Now therefore at the re- BREAKFAST. ‘‘By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of dig. tion and nutrition, and by a carefal app! tion of the fine properties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors’ bills It is by the judicious use of euch articles of diet that a constitution may be eradually buiit up until strong enough to resist every tenden- cy to disease. Hundreds of subtle ‘maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherev- er there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well forti- fled with pure blood and a properly nourished frame,’?—Civil Service Gazette Made simply with boiling wateror milk. Sold only in half «nest of the legal holder of said note.I will,as trustee DAY € hour a afores, n THURSDAY, THE FIFTH : ER A.D. isso, between the seftso ka om and5 o’clock p m., tday, at the east front door of the court . in the city of Butler, county of Bates ud state of Missouri, sellto the highest bid- der forcash, the above described premises, and all right and equity, including homestead of the said Sarah E. and Reuben S. Owen. LESTER M. HALL, Trustee. Public Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the probate court of Bates county, Missouri. made on the Ist day of October, 1880 ponnd tins. Eanes ben aty ehial JAMES T the undersigned public administrate: ter said ‘ oR Y London eariana county, has taken charge of the estate of Julia conten, England. TA. Medley deceased. All persons having claims against said es- tate, arerequired to exhibit them to me for allowance within one year after the date of said order, or they may be precluded from any benefit of such estate: and if said claims be not exhibited within two years from the MROD's | HI date of this publication, they will be forever barred This 5rd day of October, 1s89. ic. J. W. ENNIS, 0 ASTH M 46-4 Public Administrator. A eee Trustee's Sale. Catarrh, Hay Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping Cough, Croup and Common Colds. Recommended by Physiclats and sold by Drug- gists throughout the world. Send for Free Sample. HIMROD MANUF’G CO. SOLE PROPRIETORS, 191 FULTON ST., NEW YORK Whereas, Thomas J. Perry (a single man) by his deed ot trust dated May 1, 18Sy, and recorded in the recorder’s of- fice within and tor Bates county, Mis- souri, in book 52, page 33, conyeyed to | the undersigned trustee the following described real estate lying and being sit- uate in the county ot Bates, state of Mis- souri, to-wit: Lot three (3) in block twelve (12) in Williams extension of Williams addi- tion to the town (now city) of Butler, as the same is marked and designated on CHICHESTER'’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS. ‘ross Diamond Brand. The only reliable pill for sale. Sefoand | the recorded. plat thereot, which con- ‘ mond Braet tired eee arse tas veyance was made in trust to secure the with biueribbon. Takeno other. Send 4e, (stamps) for particulars and “Relief for ,” in letter, by mail, Name Paper. Chichester Chemical Co., Madison Sq. payment of one certain note tully de-| scribed in said deed of trust,and whereas, / default has been made in the payment of| the interest on said note, and the; same is now long since past due and un- paid, and by the terms of said deed off trust, if detault was made in the pay. ment of the interest when said interes was due, then the whole ot the principa PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifics the haur,| Promotes a luxuriant growth, Never Fails to Restore Gray| Jair to its Youth: ‘olor. was to become due and payable al Prevents Dandrutf once and the holder ot said not Oe. and zs Ha Wises having declared the principal du Now, therefore at the request of the | gal holder of said note and pursuant the conditions of said deed of trust, will proceed to sell the aboye describ Ni ON & HAMLIN premises at public vendue to the hig Co ORCAN AND PIANO Co. est bidder for cash, at the east fro} : ; decor of the court house in the city | qa BOSTON, NEW YORK, CHICAGO. Butler, county ot Bates and state | ST a . : sine | Missouri, on oe NEW { Contains a five octave. Nine| * mic’ ir ous | Stop Action, farnished in 8 Wednesday, October 30, 1889, fos MODEL large and handsome case o ‘ A , [solid black walnut. Price $99 | D€tween the hours of nine o’clock in ORGAN. cash; also sold on the Easy |torenoon and five o’clock in the afte SuyEE pose raemn at o per iuar | noon of that day, for the purposes of si mm LE er, for ten quarters. when or- | ;.; i + : } ‘2244, | gan becomes propertp ot per. | ifyIng said debt, suterest and costs; (son hiring. F, J. TYGARD, 46-4t Trustee ({ The Mason & Hamlin = oe See “Stringer.’’ invented and Order of Publication. MASON tented by Mason & Hamlin = = in 1s82.i6 used in the Mason & | STATE OF MISSOURI, ¢ ,, « ~ Hamlin pianos exclusively. County of Bates. nee Remarkable refinement of | Inthe circuit court of Bates county, Missouri, HAMLIN | tone and phenomenal capacity in vacation, October 5th, 1889 Henry a to stand in twne characterize son, William Farrell and John E. Hayne, | PIANOS (these instruments. laintiffs, vs. Annie R. Babcock and F. L- uty, defendants. Now at this day comes the plaintiffs herein by their attorney, T. W. Silvers, Esi » before | the undersigned clerk of the circuit court a Bates county, Miss: uri, in vacation and fill =; their petition alleging,amorg other things that ~~ the defendants, Annie kK. Rabcock and F. L. Pronty are nou-residentsof the state of Mis- souri Whereupon it is ordered by the clerk in vacation, that said defendants be notified by publication that plaintiffs have commenc- ed a suit against them ir: this court by petition, the general nature and object of which is to obtain a decree of this court declaring that certain notes secured by a trust ceed hereto- fore executed by the plaintiff, William Farrell | to the defendant Annie R Babcock upon the | nor**east quarter of the northeast quarter and the “If of the southeast quarter of the r of section eight (s), town- ($4, range thrirty-three (33) tes counts, Missouri, and which said , trust deed is recorded in book 16 at page #4, of the records of trust deeds and mortgage the office of the recorder of deeds of Bate. .+ 8 ty, Missouri. have been fully paide und dss- ‘zed, and that by reason of the p mentot said notes said trust deed became ana now is null and void. and that the cloud on the title to said land caused by the record of said trust deed be removed. And that unless the defendants be and appear at the next term this court, to be begun and holden at the cours house in the city of Butler, Bates county, Missouri, on the third day of ae A. D- 15%, and on or before the sixth day of said term,if the term shall so long com \tinue—and if not, then on cr before the last day of said term—answer or plead to the peti- tion in said canse, the same will be taken 96 confessed and judgmert will be rendered 8 ee & And it is farther ordered by the clerk afore said, that a copy hereon be published, according to law, in the Batler Weekly Times, a weekly newspaper printed and lished in Butler, Bates county, Missouri, four weeks successively. the last insertiol be at least four weeks before ihe first i February term, 109, of said Bates circa POPULAR STYLES ORGANS AT $22, $52.50 | $60 $73 $4 AND UP. Organs and Pianos sold for cash, Easy P ments, and Rented. Catalogues free. THE GLORY OF MAN STRENGTH.VITALITY ! How Lost! How Regained, “nine . THE SCIENCE OF LIFE entific and Standard Popular Medical Treatise onthe Errors of Youth,Prematore Decline, Nervous and Physical Debility, Impurities of the Blood. EXHAUSTEDVITALITY ‘UNTOLD MISERIES Resulting from Folly, Vice, Ij Excesses or Overtaxati Ei SHS Uniting the victim for Work, ness, the Married or Social Relation. Avoid un: ful pretenders. Possess this great It contains 200 pages, roval §vo. Beautiful rice Only $1.60 by Plain wrapper. Llus- now. The in ruit C= ites ted, cond. f the ei . person, at office of MEDICAL INSTITUTE, JOHN T. W. Silvers Att’y for plai