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mpairi ends, 1 T tystomny iny one of 1 Rapid Decline. “LI QNIWNCO3Y S1SI99NEA GNY SNVIOISAHd I BEST TONIC. aickly and completely Cures Dy i in all Dolore Hewribmen, Helching. Tastina the "00dy &o. Tt enriches knd purities tho biood, s fates the appetite, and aids the assimilation of food. V. T Rosaizin, the onored pastor of 1he Reformed Church, Baltimore, Md., says: ing used Brown's Iron Bitters for Dyspepsia fon. 1 thko groat, plassura in rcs mondizg fihighly. Kiso donridr fta splenid onls ator, aid very strengthening " oo s above trade mar Andertasod rod linea i only by (I MOTE, MD. ion. afottmstion About cipos, Inform o i deal ins, oto., lors, in modicine, or mailed to Aty Address on receint of So. stamp. ViR Rokhi ¥ s SROAV GLAIY, , wtgin 4 WBST OPERATY LWICKEST SELLING aND 'TERRECT COORIGY STOVE Wear afered ta fhe publie Manhood Restored REMEDY FREE.—A victim of youthfal imprudence eansing Prematuro Decay, N Manbood, &e., havi i N {6 a4 Sufforors: Addross, J.HREE VIS, 43 Oliatliam St Now York, Indigestion Cured, T suffercd for moro than five years with Indiges- #on, ecarcely able 1o retain tho elwpleet fosd: on my} stomach. Thobur ning sensation was aimost intolerable, and my wholo tystom wan deravged T wag wakeful and could not tlcep, aod consequently moro or less nervous sl tho timo. I decline in ficsh and suffered all tho usual depression attendant upon thie terrible diecase. In a word, I was wiserable. Ab last, failicg to find rellet In anything clse, 1 com ‘mouced the ueo of Swilt’s Spocifio. I began to im— prove atonce. The medicine toned up. the 8om ach, strengthened the divestive orgavs, and sson ull that burning ceasod, and I could retain food withous dificulty, Now my health is zood, and can oat any- $hing {n the thaye of food, ond digest it without the slighest difficulty. Imost choorfully bear this tostimcny becauso there aro bundreds sufering as 1 was, and am pure can bo as readily hesled. Take $ho prescribed dose after eating wstead of before. JAMES MANN, No, 14 1vy surech. Atlanta, Ga., May 13, 1885. Treatlse on biood and'skin disessos mafled freo. or Tho SwitSpecif ., Drawer 3, Atlauts, Ga w 1672348 N DOCTOR WHITTIE £17 &t € A & roguin e RRIAGE " ‘hook, of groat e, Bipsiriie o7¢ Xobowd b7 James Modioal Instibute B Chastered by theStateof Lli= Mnois for theexpress purpose of giving immediate relictin all chronic, urinary and pri- B vate discases. Gonorrheea, PR Gleet andSyphilisin all their ¥ complicated forms, also all discases of the Skin and Blood promptly relieved and permanentlycured by reme- dies,testedin a Forty Years 5 Apecial Practice. Seminal ight Losses by Dreams, Pimples on the Face, Lost Manhood, ositively ciired. There 48 no cxperimenting, The appropriate remedy as at once used in each case, Consultations, per- onal or by letter, sacredly confidential, Med- Acines sent by Mail and Express, No marks on package to indicate contents or sénder, Address DR.JANES,No, 204Washington St.,Chicago, Il . A S A 057 TR A Clear Skin is only a part of beauty; but it isa part. Everylady may have it; at least, what looks like it. Magnolia Balm both freshens apd beautifies. e ——— e TP TIATL. T ISHHe4 - RINAV NITDTDAIDYD 16 108 An Ingenious Letter. A young lady, newly married, baing obliged to show her husband all the let- forn she wrote, sent the following to a frierd. Toe key 1s to read the first and then every alternate line only: 1 cannot be satisfied, my dearest friend, blest as 1 am in the matrimonial state, naless I pour 1nto your frieadly bosom, which has ever been in unison with mine, the various sensations which swell with the livelleet emotion of plonsure, my almost bursting heart. I tell you my dear busband is the most amiable of men. I have now been marriod seven weeks, and have neyer found the least reason to repent the day that joined ns, My husband is both in person and manner free from resem- ugly, cross, old, dissgreeable and jealous; ‘mongter, who thinks by confining to secure a wife, it is maxim to treat as s bosom friend and confidant, and not plaything, or mevial slave, the woman chosen to be his companion, Nelther party, he says, should always obey implicitiy but each yield to the other by turns, An ancient maiden sunt near 70, & cheerful, plessant and venorabie old Iady, Tives in the house with us she is the de- light of beth young and old; eho I ci- vil to all the reighborhood round, 5““0“. and charitable to the poor. am convinced my husband loves nothing more than he doos me; he flatters me more than a glass; and his intoxication (for 8o & must call the excess of his love), often makes me blush for the unworthiness of its object,and I wish I ecould be more de- nerving of the man whose nameI bear, To say all in ove word, my dear, and to rown the whole—my former gallant lover 18 now my indulgent husband; my husband oturned, and L might have bad a prince without the felicity I find in him. Adieu! may you be blest as I am un- able to wish that I could be more heppy. ———— HONEY #OR TaE LADIES, The day of flounces are no more. Plueh will be very fashionable again, ‘Wo are to have another velvet and velve- teen season, Braid is again in fashion, but for cloth dresses only. Scarlet and dark navy blus sre introduced 1n combination costumss and carrisge jackets, Polonaires draped in many ways will be very protty if made of the new striped fabrica just brought out. Another season of lace is predicted, and in- dicated by the first importations of dresses, hate, and bonnets, The glad season of the year is almoat here, when loyely women prescrves pretty much everything excepting her equanimity, An effectiva design for a wall pocket 18 convontionalized yollow joesamine worked in Kensington stitch on '‘dead leat” sattsen or serge. 1n this country 3,000,000 women support themselves by their own efforts, Masny of them also support children and worthless husbands, Real ostrich feathers are used on round hats, Larce hats in Lous XV.or Gains. borough shapes will bo worn during ths come ing winter, Neither busiles nor corsets are worn in Japan, and when a Japanese maiden sits down in a skating rink she gets her money’s worth every timo. Girls in eearch of materials for crazy quilts are advised to apply to the railroad compan- ios, because they throw away thousands ot old ties every year, Puffed shoulders ara out, of fashion for street dresses, The sleeve fits as closely as a glove, and if the arm is slight a soft cotion lining gives tho required roundness, Men’s vests buttoned straight down will not be worn with tailor jackets, These jackets are now used as outer garments, and do not form part of the teilet, During the early autumn, jackets, capes, with one or eeveral collars, and in fact all emall articles suitable for wear before the weather becomes cold may be seen, *“That the influence of the women of one generation is apparent in the men and women of the next is a rule universally recognized.” The survival of the elipper through the ages is evidence.— [The Judge, An Eoglish variety papor says that there is a complaint among young lsdies that skirts hamper their movements in_playiog tennis and that next season they will probably be dropped, Good gracious! “Ishould think you would reed a military guard to keep the young men away,” said & citizen to the father of six marrisgeable daughters, ‘Ob, I'm a pretty good foot soldier myself."” was the cheerful reply, A lady in Logan county, Ky., sleeps two or throe days and nights at a stretch, and then remains awako for » like period, She would be » pleasant kind of a companion_ to sit up with were it not that she 1s 80 years old. *Oh, hubby, I've had such a dreadful accl- dout?” ““What is it, my dem?” '‘I've bro- kon the hall mirror, snd you know it is & e1ga of bad Inck to break a mirror.” S0 1t is, my darling, especially when the mirror cost §14," ~[Chicago News, Comfortable and novel gossamers, provided for the coming wet eeason, are made of doe- colored mohair, made perfectly water-ropel- Isut. These bave long capes and are cut in closo surtout shape, aud long euough to cover the entire dress beneath . A pretty French bonnet in princosse shape, displayed by an up-town milliner, had its en- tire surfaco covered with deep rad and orange- shaded velvet, nasturtiums and wall-flawar blossoms, which were veiled with black Brus- sols nets dotted with jt beads, Stylish black bonaets are trimmed with Gark-colored plumes, or Firds, placed smong culle, crope, or loops’ of mnira riobon, Some round hate'are enlivened by a band of Leg- horn straw taken around the brim. Bright flowers or feathers are quite unsuited to thus purpose. Clquelicot red and » deep rich shade of alive brows are baudsomely combioed In ele- gant Parision visiting dresses of Lyons eatin sud plush, The richnst and most elaborata of these bave the poppy-red satin waist cost densely covercd with msguificent embroid- ery of olive-trown beads aud chenille ot a like n round skirte continue in favor, Some- dress, side back of the hip, like Marguerite’s dress in “Faust,” Skicts are also arravged in lnrglf round plaits, with & very small puffing in the back. Black will no doubt be more favored for stroot costumes this season than any other color, In combinations there will ba hun- dreds of brigbt effects, Red, 8o long admired, and yellow, that has app:ared «of style all in one season, also becoming very popular this fall and wiater. **Would any of the ladies like to have some wine?"” asked the hoat at & swall social gath- eriog. The ladies all looked at each other as if doub:fal what to say, when one bright lit- tle matron spoke up: Well, I should hate to say I didn’t want any,” This broka theice, and the berolne was applauded as the glasses went around, ‘There is & tendency among u'tra-fashionable people to remove the bang entirely, Girls in society who have low, broad foreheads brush their balr back plainly, leaving only a few stiay curls on the brow, This fancy s taken from the English aristocrats, who no longer perwit their doughters to wear curled bangs. “‘Straight fiioges” are still in yogue, although uot as becomirg, _A pretty girl at Sea Girt in sttempting to give another damsel a farewll kiss at & © window slippad under the wheels of the o and pearly lost her life. If the kissee had only baen # young man the maiden’s venture- someneess could but bo applauded But to waste that amount of sweetuess on another woman was siwply calealated to draw upon the kisser the fate she narrowly eecaped. A vhitivg drees of black faille and worsted lace hss the faills skirt covered with laca, ‘The laca is pathored full to the belt, Oa the lower part of the silk skirt Is & lacs p'aitiog. The faille waist is poluted back and front, and laces down the back, A deep jat collar is cewed to the waist. 1t is lined with wlk. The tight-fitting sleeves buve jst coffs, Ba- Low the jot collar which reaches in front to the middle of the walst, ave four rows of shirring The Frevch patterns for bair dressizg are of such prouounced siyles that American ladies peefer to bave then: wodified hittle before wecepting thew, and in eowe instances the THE DAILYBEE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 1385 models are so changed that they retain but little of their original cbaracter. The French ore more in favor of the light, flaffy styles than the Auerioin Indies are, who appear to Iike best th se modes of hmirdressing that are more masrive and solld looking. Choviot is largely imported this season and in & diversite of havdsome designs, In char- soter it closcly recembles goods of 1he same name brovght out for gentlemen’s wear, but the former are lighter in texture, and inter- mingled with other fabrics like chenille, silk, velvet, etc,, and are also more diveraified in coloring, These goods are first choices with many Iadies In selecting fabrics for “tailor costumer,” although the beauty and vaciety in woolen fabrics of every description have rarely, if ever, been equalled in the history of trade; silks, & velvets, and, indeed, al. most every sort of rich dress fabrics havin, given placo to these materials for utility an atroet woar, Millinery for autumn and winter showa a reponderance of medium and small 08 in Ponaste, ‘Thers e, howsver, Some lares shapes, one of which, the ever-popular poks, has & deel, brim with the edge bent down. Turbans cootinue in favor, a modification of this style being adapted tu persons of middle age. Galnsborough hats with slightly taper- ing crowps of medium halghl aro revived, while the Lnglish walking hats have some- what wicer s than formerly, ~ Bird's wings, fancy feath d birds will be the prevailing trimming, although ostrich tips are seen on many of the Paris model bonnets, If broad-brimmed hats become popular long lumes will be worn. Metal is used eparivg- y, but beads of every siz3 and shape are em- ployed in profasion, i O S Darning Her Stocking, A bevy of fair girls they were, And all excoediog busy: Maud sewed upon a crazy quilt, And 80 did Jessie and Lizzie; ‘While Jennie painted on a fan Some charming cherub faces, And Nell and Bell right skilfully ‘Wove yards of pretty laces. But Peg, in wicker chair badecked With ribbons, gently rocking, Darned ~frot drawn on her little hand— The toe v her silk stocking, Her dainty, black silk stocking. Ob, such a picture ns she made, “'ho golden sunbeams elancing Upon her head, as to and fro. She swayed with grace entrancing, Her lovely browa wero slightly bent Her lips closed rather tightly; One saw at once her task was not A task to thinlk of lightly, With caro she drew ths fine thraad through, The stitches interlocking, And with her needle piercsd my hoart While darning that silk etocking. That dainty, black silk stocking. =.n—[Margaret Egtingo in Good Cheer. —— CONNUBIAUITIES, —_— Samuet Plimsoil, M, P,, tho sailors friend, is soon to be married toa wealthy spinster of Hull, Evgland. The engagement s aunounced of the Rev. H. Price Collier,of Hingman, son of the Rev. Robert Laird Collier, and DMiss Gertrude Dame of Commonwaeaith-ave, Boston, The wedding of Mr. Francis B, Hayer, of Lexington, and Miss Nina_Katherine clunt, niece of the artist the late William Hunt took place at Weathersfield, Vermont, Tuesday evening. A spacial train carried & number of guests from Boston. The greatest mazeiage of the year i France is to take place at the Maceleine this month between Count Charies de 1a Rochefoucauld, the elder sun of the Duc ds Bisaccia and the Princess Charlotte de la Tremoille, dau ¢h- ter of the Duc de Tremoille, who is also Duc ce Thomars, Peince de Tarente aud Princa de Talmont, The wedding of Miss Mary Augusta Young daughter of Colonel ', Young, ot Honesdale, Peun., and J. B, Dickson, son of Thomas Dickson, late president of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Cowpany, took place in Grace church, Honesdale, on the 9ch. elaborate ceremony aud many prominent people were prescnt, incluling Galusha A, Grow, Thomas Crnell and others, A canopy of evergreens and _hop vines was erected at the chancel. The aversge man fails to find out wherein lie the faecinations of tho female echool tracher for his sex, In Colorado & new supply of teachers is needed every year, for the reason that thoy all get mar:ied and in Connecticut they are refusing to engage them unless they promise to renouace all love making during their term with the ferrule, It vught to re- quire some courage to propose matrimony to a schoolma’am, and yet it wou!d seem that the number of brave and heroic men is continualiy on the increase, Down ina Maryland camp meeting, one day last week, a Methodlst clergyman met the sweetheart from whom he had’ separated in & quarrel forty years before. A gay young damsel surprised the venerable swain in the act of presenting a boquat of wild flowers to his ancient love, and in order to saye himaself from the imputation of flirting at the age of three score and ten, he thereupon made offer of his hand and heart and was sccepted. They were marrried upon the spo*, and a bevy of children and grand children, rein- forced by two teething great-grand children, wished them joy of their honeymoon, The marrisge of Mr. W, W, Sherman, of nd Miss Brown will take place next month. Miss Brown is the daughtsr of Mrs, John Carter Brown, of Providenca, who i one of the richest ladies of that city, Mis Spaulding and Mr, George Freeman will be married at the residence cof Mr. Kemble Paulding, at Cold Sprigs-on-the-Hudeon, and siss Neilson and Mr. Middleton Bor- ough will be married at the parish church at Far Rockaway also durivg the same month. Another October wedaiog will be that of Mr, Sidney Ripley—who is now known as Mr. Sidney Ripley Dillon, in deference to the wishes of his grandfather, whose adopted son he is, and will inherit a g t _deal of bis grandfather's wealth—and Mies Mary Hyde, will be celebrated at the residence of Mr. Henry D, Hyde, at Babylon, Long Island, Itissaid thabthy marriage of Mr, Richard H. Huot and Miss Pearl Carley will tuke place in Germapy the latter part of this month, and that Mr, J, ¥ D, Lauier and Miss Bishop will be married in November, altogether a very brilliant number of wad- dings to begin the seazon with,— [N, Y. Times, ——— Visi’s of the Dead to the Living, Thousands of stories on this subject are told; all of which when thoroughly sified, are found to have their origin in dyspep- tlo and nervous dreaws To get rid of tuoh upplesssut dreams, tone up your stomach and strengthen your nerves with Brown's Iron Blitters. Everybody who trios thls famous tonlc fiads 1t rellable and pleasant in ite actlon. Mr. Aug, Kane, of 634 Elm street, Clucinnatl, says, “Brown's Iron Bitters entirely cured me of dyspepala.” o —— §.Only a Hea Tempt me not with diamond rare, Though of worldly goods my share Runoeth low, Give me, though, Fire for aye and aye we part— Give me but a single heart, ‘Wealth enough thou wilt impart X thou vt §o me the hoart esire, "Twill inspire In mine own & grateful blush, For ‘twill ill y bob-tail fush, A IL R e S Ladies who value a refined complexlon must use Poazont's Powder, — —— A prominent cattloman 1s authority for the statement that 13,000 head of beef cattle from northero ranges, which have heretofore faund « market in San Frauclsco, have been sold to eastern buyors shis season’ for thipiment east, e —— When Baby was sick, we zave her Castoris, When she was a Child, she eried for Castoris, When she became Miss, she clung to @ storia, Whea sbe bad Children, sbe gave the. Castoris nxes. A Pair of Para " once eang the Of something “bitter sweet, poet, We read of poverty that maketh riche, And there iy “pleasant pain”—perhaps’ you know it, In scratohing hard your foot whene'er it itches, There is repulse for every ardent lover That eloquently asketh a cnres There 1s # maiden’s ‘no” which men discover Ts nothing but another toim of “‘yes,” —— MUBI(S:I: AND D RAMATIO. Annie Ward Tiffany has returned from En. gland, @ The new opera houss at St. Louis was opened last Monday night, The play which Bronson Howard is writing for Miss Helen Dauvray will be ready by October 10, Hedwig Raabe, the great German aotross, has been epgaged for twenty star perform- ances at the Thalia theatre, Denman Thompson Is apparently as popu- lar as ever, His second week at McVicker's opened with a good house, A daughter of the confederate Gen, Ohoeat- ham, Miss Kisty by nams, has made her de- bnt upon the dramatio stage, Five dollars and twenty.five cents was the charge for orchestra chairs to Mary Ander- son’s recent performance of Rosalind at Strat- ford-on-Avon, Mile, Nevada will bring with her from Italy two American virls to appear in opera —DMiss Johnston, of Wathington, and Nellie Everest, of Philaaelpbia, The Rosina Vokes' London comedy ecom- pany under engagement to Mr. John Steteon tor a tour of the United States left Eogland for this country on the 17th, Mr, Joseph Jefferson is again a father. Tho youngest of the Jefforsons is of the mas- culine type and is reported to be particularly noticeable for his vecal gifts, DansRice, the veteran circus clown, is now in Houston, Texas, prosecuting a claim for 177,000 acres of land which he urges was as- sighed to h'm forty years ago. UThn firat production in this country of the rendwinners, o drama adapted and teans- lated from the Fronch will tuke place at the Grand opera house, Brooklyn, on Monday next. Maude Miller (not Muller), a daughter of Joaquin Miller, will plsy one of the principal pacte in her father's play of '“49,” which London McCormack will bring out this reason, The Fifth Avenus Theater has boen packed every night with the performances of the Eng.- lish company in “‘The Mikado,” and Duffs version ot the same opera conticues to incrozse its popularity evary night, Mary Anderson will open at the Star thea- tre October 13 in ““The Hunchback,” and not mn ‘ Romeo aud Juliet,” as has been reported, Mr. Ernest Harvier is now exclusively en- gaged to attend to her business, Daring the past week Mr. Stanton, direc- tor of the Metropolitan orcm house, has con- cluded negotiations with Herr Standigi by cable, and that baritone will be heard in the coming seagon of German opara, Miss Adelaide’s Moore’s tour of the coun- try will begin in Richmond, Va., October 12, when she will produce ‘‘As You Like It,” and from whence she will go to the principal cities as fast as may ba expedient . Real Italian opera by real Italians has mafe decided success in San Irancisco, where better rendered operas can be epjoyed at twenty-five cents admission than mora pre- tentious houses have chargod fabulous prices for witnessing, Mr. Edward E. Rice has finally settled with Mr, John A. Mackay to play the princi- pal character in ‘“‘Evangeline.” Mr. Kice pays Mr. Macksy $3U0 a week, which is tho largest sum in the way of salary that I have ever known to be #ivon to a comedian for a production like this, John E. Owens, the actor, has fully recoy- ered from the serious iliness that at one time threatered to ring down the curtsin on his earthly career. 0 is stlll at his country seat near Townsend, Md., gathering strength for his season through the south, Ha goes in in a fow days to Cnarleston. Mr, C, A Chizz)la is extending his mana- gerial sphere, He is interested in several ventures this season. Ho will mansge Sal- vini’s tour and Miss IJmma Nevada’s concerts and next year he will bring the great Krench actor, Coquelin, Sr , to this country, Buchanan’s melodrama,* Alone in T.ondon,” had its fisst production mm New York last Monday night. ‘This ssneational and spec- tacular effort was taken rourd the country last season and achieved a fair success, al though its scenes are all laid in London. Among the artists engaged for the ap- proachivg Worchester festival are Mme. Fur- #ch-Madi, Mies Juch, Mme, Blanche Stone- Barton, Miss Hattie J, Olapper, Mrs, Belle Oole, Messrs, Whisney Mockridge, Whitoey, Stoddard, and Babcock, Mme, Teresa Car- rend, and Mr, Leopold Lichtenberg, Bight concerts and seven pablic rehersals will "be given under the direction of Mr, Carl Zer- rahn. Maggie Mitchell,, with H, E, Saundford, business manager, will be “supported by Charles Abbott, k. F. McClannin, Jas. T, Galloway, Geo. A, Parkburet, Frank Doud, F. E, Queen, Thos, McBiide, Tom I3onard, Dodson Lomax, the Misses Lnlian Androwa, Eliza Hudson, Minnie Galloway, Emma VOE' ler, Mamie Jonex and Me.dames Ii. A, Eberle and D. B. Van Deerin. Lust Monday evening was eventful in Phil- adelphin by reason of the number of iwm- portant cccurrences at the various theatres. The first of these was the formal opening of the new Temple theatre and Egyptian Mu- see, which has teen erested at very great cost by Mr. George C. Brotherton. Tho theatrs i8 one of the largest in the United States, and in connection with it an establishment similar to the den hiusee in New York City is to be rup, the whole house being accessivle to the purchasers ¢f siogle tickets to the theatre, —————— Divapp antment, When eporting mortals dare to ditfer And stake their cash each on his plan, ‘What is it makes the hope grow stiffer In every trus AmericaL? The baffling breezes which bring trouble, Aund from John Bull loud curses call, Cao but our satisfacticn double; We beat you withno wind st all. And bad the western wind proved true, Where, whero, Genesta, would ba you? o ——— RELIGIOCS, The congress of the church of Eogland is to be held this year in Portsmouth on October 6, and succese1ve days, The presbytery of San Francisco has now upon its rolls two Chinese, one Japanese, oue Welch, one Spanish, aud one French church. All are prosperous, except the Spauish, which is & present wishout & pastor, Rev. Dr, Newman, it is apnounced, will probably become the pastor of the old Metro- litan church, Wushington, D, O, Tais was Presicunt Graot's church, aod’ Dr, Newman was pastor at the time of his connection with it. There bas been rapid growth in the Re- formed Episcopal ohuich during the past eight yems, Linow has 0 bishops, 103 presbyters and deacons, 7,043 communicants, prosperous Sunday schools, and church property valued at 81,021,669, Lord Pluoket, the new Protestant Episco- pa! archbishop of Dublin, publicly stated at a recent convention that he had invested in more than five kundred ruffizs on cpeniog a church bazear at Kiogston, He denies that church ruffies are an incentive to gambling, Rev Charles K, Orawford, a Sioux Indlan preacher, commissioner for the Presbyterian rynod of Dakota, is pastor of & charge, coi- pused of his own people, which is bot ouly self-cupporting, but latt yoar gave nearly $700 for carrylng the gospel to other tribes of In dians, Methodiem, it would seem, has obtained a good footing 1a Newtoun land, According to statistios just published the adherents of tho o number 48,943, makiog a clear , 41 duriog the year, The total number of churchi s and mission stations Is 63, It was only in 1878 that the Oathollc hiar- srchy was restored in Scotland, &f er the lepse of 235 years, Biuce that date the Oatholic church has shown marvellous vitality in the little kingdom, It has now one srchblshop, fuur bishops and 323 secular priests, Church and chapels number 206, ‘Lhere ara 27 coa: vents and 107 congregational schools. No bady of cbristians work more quietly or more «ffoctively than the Quakers, Outside of the denominations not many have heard of of the Friends’ Foreign Micson association, and yet perhaps there 18 no mora e flicient or- ganization which has for its cbject the conver- sion of the heathen, In covnection with this association there good people have agencics at work in Irdis, Chins and Madagaecar, The annual subscription to this society bas renched this year the sum of §20,000, The census of 1881 placed the Catholle pop- ulvtion of Lower Canada at 1,170,718, Adding the population of the diccese of Ottawa and the vicatiate spostolio of Pontiao, the popula- tion is over 2,000,000. The provincs of Tor- onto, in charge of ' Archbishop Lynch, hss not more than 00,000 Cathclics, o great deal Lss than the diocese of Montreal, These 276,000 or 250,000 have an archbishop and five or six | bithops, The province of Halifax, which comprises the three mmitime provinces, counts only 265,001 Catholics, lees again than the provinen of Toronto. It has an archbishop and four or five bishcps, The provinoe of Sk, Bomface, which comprises Manitoba and ali the morthwest, numbers 80,000 Uatholics. 1t has an archbishop and three or four bishops. e —— PEPPERMINT DROPS, The day of the green apple's over, The banana peel’s joke is most done, Theice man and foe cream discover, They'ro loft and the oyster’s begun. A cyclone i like waiter. It oarries every- thing before it. Tt is not oream that ouzht to be whipped, but the milkman, ““Your Ianguage is wholly uncalled for,” ns the publiher tud the suthor whoso works failed to sell, A Nevada court held that a men_who had 85 in his pockot and bis bonrd paid for a week ahcad is * a capitalist” within the meantog of the law, Groek is the language for_postry, Freoch for love, and Italian for _hand-organ’ melody; but the man with a chirt-collar that doesn’s fit ia tho same holpless baing in all, Tho Shan of Porsin has written o tragedy. It will be played at Teheran, and if the au- dionce doss not applaud, the prime minister fornia, A woman is said to be at the bottom of every quarrel, There are 500 Carolines at tho bottom of the row between Spain and Ger- many. May the best man win,—[Chicago Herald, Mean men are often heard of, but few can equal the man near Boston, who, according to an exchange, receutly swallowed a 85 gold piece and refused to give up more than $4.50 to the stomach pump. Customer—*‘Hava you some good itr ported cigare?” New Clerk-—“Not just now, but wo shall havo in abcut sn hour, The printer around the corner_is st work on the labels now. "—-[Chicago Newa, Thero have been various answers to tho conundrum: Why is a sh p called she? Wa think the propor answer is: Bocause he 1s bandeomest when she is well-rigged, Wives should cut this out and show it o their hus- bands, ““Now then,” eaid a busy lawyer to ono of a number of waitig clients, “'You are next, sir.” “I'm what?” *Next.” *No you don’t,” said the client, moving toward tha door, “T dido’t come in hore to Rget ehaved.” A recont shipment of 60,070 pounds of Lim- burger chesss from Monroe, Wis., caused a stampode from tha wharf of that city that ro- sulted in the death of one person and the probably fatal wounding of several others. “The occurrence has paralyzed the industry in that vicinity. When you pick up a newspaper avd read that “‘the awtul holocaust leaped with lurid hands to lick the emblazoned clouds that caught the irradiant glare and hurled it into the abyemal spaces beyond the paling stars,” you can just ket a cool thousand, without reading acother line, that a cow barn, worth 8310, was burned in Larkins’s Corners,--[ Bue- dette. — EDUOATIONAL, Mr. Lawrence Barrett's Haruard College address, to woich we aliuied last week, will ba delivered next Moarch while Mr, Barrett is acting at one of the Boston theaters, Oswald Ottendorfer, of New York, has re- turned from his native town, Zwittau, in Aus. tria, to which place he has jusc given 100,000 for the erection of a building to be used as a poor house acd orphan ssylum, Some years ago he built a school house there ¢t a cost of §20,000. Professor Homer B. Sprague, late of the Girls’ Latin high echool in Boston, and wall kaown as the author of numerous manuals of historic and Iog ish literature, has accepted the presidency of the Mills female shminary, across the bay from San Francisco, which fills the eame function for the coast as Vassar col- lege does for the enst. All told there are cloee to one thousand pu- pils in the Chicago Kindergarten echools, and wuny ordinary methods of computing influences must utterly fuil when one attempts to show what a power they exart upon the pupils di- rectly, and ubon the homes—if such in many cases they may be called - from whence the pupils come, indirectly, The idea should not D3 entertuined that in any way the kinder- garien is antagonistic or even jealous cf the common gchool, The fermer #hould nover ba sllowed to in the least take ths place of the latter. Oae should eupplement the other, the common school taking up tne work whore the kintergarten-leaves ic and carryiog it for— ward tothe grand results that are possible under & splendid common school system, — [[nter Ocean. I all tho suegestions made about popular education nre adopted tha daily enrriculum of the public school of 1900 will be abeus as follows: Oae Heur rewing, one hour washiog aud ironing, cne hour cooking, one hour table settiog and other branches of housekeeping, one hour muzic, one hour danciog, cne hou paintiog, one hour modeling and sculpt ure ons hour reading, one hour writing, one hour arithmotic, one hour boolkeepiog, one hour industrial ‘education, one hour civil govern- ment, one bour esch on geogeuphy, nlgebrs, trigonometry, Latio, Greek, I'renoh, Germun, botany, astronomy, teriff nud free trade, farwing and the weather, 1f the scholarof 1900 his any time to spare probatly some en thusiast will suggest the study of ulectricity, wrial navigation and the nebular hypothesis. Dont crowd the children,—[Norwich (Uonn, ) Bulletin, e AMPIETIES, A religious weekly talls “how to keep from golug to rleep in chirch.” Ono Way is to slé near the choir. A prize-fighter was killed in Texas Sunday: In view of the results, it is hard to call this desecration of the Sabbath, A goo1 deacon in Ohio wittily says that ab- sent membera are like mud on a wagon wheel; they add weight, but ncither strepgthen nor beauty. ‘The Boston Transcript tells of a man who returned a Bible which he took from a South- ern goldier during the war. He was from Chicago, and of course had no use for ik, Mme, Adam’s organ, Lia Nouve'le Ravue, tells us, in speaking of the trouszesu of the Princess Beatrice, *‘that the youug Princess, who 18 very pious, has had several verses of 4ho Bible embroidercd on her linen,” ‘*What becomee of men who deceive their fellow-men?" aiked a Sunday school teacher of her class. “They lose the confidench of good people " was the prompt answer. *Very well, indeed, Now, what becomes of the wo- men who do the same thing?” The question ttuwm; ed the class for a minute, and then a liktle girl piped out: “They usually catobes the man for a husband, muw,” Mr. Downe, & notorlous Boston clergyman, ix doing all he can to make himself more noto- vious, Tue otber night, at & prayer meeting, he curprised the wudience by shouting, L wish I was & tom cat—an old tom cat!” Toen, when thanoige this s t made had sub- sided, he oontinued: *No, perhaps not for the resson you think, nor as the publio would sy, because I want to scratch and fight snd bite, bus raslly so that 1 would always keep in good vedo o ——— Hunt's Remedy is purely vegetable,snd 16 made expressly for all dleesass of the kldueye. Extraordivary succees everywhore, A rure cure for all kidney dizeases is Hunt's Romedy, For carly loss of yhysical power. A sue care s found {n unt's Remedy, | Never faita, will know the reason why.- [The Alta-Cali- | SINGULARITIEDY, A rooont earthquaks in Fearon afl. cted only the chalk formations of the eatth's surface, and was neither heard nor felt by men st work in the cosl mines beneath, A peculiar b'ack paper of Siam and Bur- mah, rade from the bark of certain trece, {8 used very much as are slates {n Europe and America, The writing upon it may be rubbed out by applioation of betel leaves, just as slato writing is erased by means of a sponge. Miss Olive Waldron, of Walaks, Pa., has a blackbird that she fo'nd in the woods, and cared for until it was able to fly, when she re. Jeased it, but it would not desert her, It flivn off in the woods and core her call of Dick, 1t goos to roost with the hens in the heocoop. The house ont knows that 1t_belongs the fam ily, and pay no attention tu it. A French chemi t has made the alarming discovery that, by vha troatment of corpses to baths of certain metals in solution, the body can bo made more parennial than brass, and that hereafter a realistic age will be able to do without the statue of a great mon, beesuse it osn set up the graat man bimself, solidified into gold, silver, copper or other mt tal, In the camp of a New York rcgiment was a pot crow beloneing to_Heory Duval. This crow had but one leg, It is fed in the pres- ence «f other crows tl look with wonder at its foarlesaness. They evidenatly supposed ite loss of & log accounted for the care it received, for one day, when it was whistlad for to come to ity dinner, a crow stepped from s crowd of isiting crowa, hopped ou one leg to the sol- dier, eat heartily, and hopped twenty feet away. Then it let down its other leg, which 4had veen hidden under 1% wing, and then flew away, A night blooming cereus in Roxbury played @ curious caper on Monday morning. The vine had thirteen bads, which on Sunday gave indications of unfolding their hidden beauties during the night. Thry were watched with intense expectancy owing to their number, but from the cold or some other cause they did not open at the customary hour, and the watch was reluctantly ebandoned. = After the sun had risen, however, the astonishment of the fawily can be ea-ily imagined whnen the discovery was made that tsn of the thirteen buds had beguu to nnfild, and ers an hour thir magniticance was displayed to many ad- miring eyes. They held thole vigor and beauty far into the day. Why euffor thoe toriures of bililonrness when Hood's Seraspartlla will give eure relief? Sold by a'l drogglate. 100 Doses Oae Doliar. T — A great many forders ars chavgiog hands at the South Omaba yards, A large propor- tion of them will be taken into Towa and fed during tha wister, Among thoss baving etock at the yards yesterdsy were the follow- iog: 0. T, Ward, Rising, 76 hogs; Bliss & Blies, 81 hoga: H. Lemmer, Humphrey, 76 hogs; M, McBride, Benton, 08 hoga; J. Ryan, O'Neill, 42 cattle. rm— Any Small Bouy, with a Stick, coan kill a tizer—IFf the tiger heppens to bo found wken orly a liitle cub. So con- tumption, that desd!tcst and most feared of discates, in this country, can assaredly ba conquered snd destrcyed it Dr. Pierze’s *‘Golden Medleal Discovery” be omployed early. e It is estimated that there are in Arizona 800,000 haad of cattle and room for 1,000,000 more, Tho soil is very frtile, and all that is wanting is water, which is being supplied to a certuin « xtont through irrigation. Governor Tritle, in his recent report, nays: “'Should all the grazing land in the torsitory bs made available in this way it is estimated that th::lu \xould be ampls pasturage for 5,000,000 cattle, — —— Nervous Debilitated Men, You ara allowed a 7ree vriai jor thirty days of the use of Dr, Dye’s Celebrated Voltaic Belt with Electric Suspensory Appliances, for the speedy rehiof and permanent cure of Nervous Debility, loss of Vitality and Manhood, and all kindred troubles. Also for many other dis- eases. Complete restoration to health, vigor and manhood, No risk is incurred, Illustra. ted pawphlet with full information, terms, etc, malled tree by addressing Veltaio Belt Co., Marehall, Mich. ——— He Doserven a CHat, BrooxineroN, Ill., Elmer Jones. a farm hand ¢t Weston, this county, was ludzed in jail for on attempted assault upon two girls, daughters of his employer, aged ten and six yeurs. Tha citizens were about to tar and feasher h.m, when a constable interfered and rescued him, PILES'! PILES! PILESII A euro cure for Blind, Bleoding, Itching and Ulcorated Piles has been discovered by Dr., Williams, (a0 Tudian remedy), called Dr. Williams' Iadian Pile Ointment. = A. single box has cured the worst chronic cases of 25 or 30 yoars stsnding, No one need suffer five minutes ofter apolying this wonderful sooth- ing medicino, Lotions aud instruments do more harm than good, Williaws' Iudian Pile Ointment absorbs tha tumors, allays the intonso itching, (particularly ot night after getting warm in bed), acts as a poultice, gives natant relief, and is prepared ouly for Piles, tehing of private pirts, and for nothing else, BRIN DISEASES CURED De. Frazier's Mogic_Ointment, Cures as ~by magic. Pimples, Bluck Heads or |Grubs the lotckes and Eruptions ou the face, leaving CJACOBS CERMAN REMED] FOIR FPAIN. URE Rhcumausm,(hcuraalgla. Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, re Th wellings. Sprains, druives, Ru Sealdu, Frost Bites, A VO (Bamessersto A. VOORLER & €03 PENNYROVAL PILLS "“"CHICHESTER'S ENGLISK " The Originnl and Only Gen NAME PABER, DEBILITY T from Crror oF exceses, owel Diseases of the 1K idneya, Blnds 1 Prostate Gland OUR LD b Hedic gy b A e W urgery. Treatise and tege "- pondence contidentl . TRESKOW, ew' vk, Mothers. Thero e upon the siin cf every human being child aad adult alike, 2,200.000 po ¢s. Through {heto pores in the form of tusensible perapiration, 18 expellod moro than one-quarter of the nourishment taken Into the system. Tae lmportance of kecping open these derspiration valves upon a olild's body, s second only ) that of prowp!ly digestiog the food 1t wa b0 0pen the poces of {ha skin and to late the food tnat Dr. Plichor formulated Cag~ Tooso bawels, coastipation, fevers and erup= eates torla. tions which aro £o corstant amorg infantsand chil- dren, and which kili ono-third af ail children betore they are five yecrs old, ariso principslly from these two caces. It is from the wondertul resulis attondant upon thy uso of Castorla ia regulatng the stomachs and bowels acd Keeptog open the pores of tho ekin, that Castorla acquired its worlh wide repntation. With plenty of water for the bedy, pura »ir for the Iuvga and Castorla to assimilate the £90d, thore noed bs no unaccounted for sickness among childrcn. Cas torja isa vegetable prescrlption witl.out morphine or other narcotlo property. Thirty years extoneive ugo hasgiven it a history never attainod by another mdicine. PHREYS’ Manual cf all Diseases, By V. NUNPHREYS, 2. D, LY LOUND TN CLOTI and GOLD Mailed Free. H NC vis, estion, Inflammations. vor, Worm Colic. x Loothing of Inta T SrasTRLm] o hache, Faceach Diendnehes, Siok Hoadaoho, Voriig. HOMEOPATHI | SPECIFICS 1d by Druggi Ao lk)fl\h(p 8. H, ATWOOD, Bree” (1 of thoroughbred aud high grade Plattsmouth, Neb, Herelo d and Jersey Cattle, Ard Tbv:rg:i-"!.d Joreoy Rl-d Hwina ALYON & HEALY, Tisisisisiisisle [EEEEEEREN ol 3339 “a iods. TR theumatic Pain Chills, Malaria. Blind or Bieoding . #rh, Influonza, Cold oping Congh, Violent Congh ebility, Physical Weakness ense. T BT Sbrolok! SSaRma Ton . Fui Saltakin clear and beautiful, Also ctires itch, 1d, Rhume, Sore Nipplos, Soro Lips, snd bstinate Ulcars. Sold by druggists, or mailed on receipt of cents, Tetailed by Kubn & Co, and Schrooter & Becht, At wholesale by O, ¥'. Goodman, " Medalw for Trovpers, Orrawa, Sept 18 —Imperial silver wedals are to ba conferred on troops recently oogaged in the suppraasion of the northwest rebellion, THE BEST THING OUT FOR Washing & Bleaching Tu Hard or Soft, Hot or Cold Water, BAvxs Lanon, Tis and' S0av AMazivoLy, and givos universaisatistaction, No family rlch or poor sbould be without it. Bold by all grooors, BawAr of imitations well de- #lguo ) 0 mieload, PRARLINK I8 the ONLY 8APN lube saving compound and always beare Ahe sbove eym. bol aud name of JAMES PYLFE NEW YORK, EDWARD KUEHI, N . (4TER OF FALMYSTHRY AR OONDITIO 1 208 Fanth strood, beswoon Farcam avd Huiy wha theald of guard 13, obbalnin; gianoo o ncaont, wud on fhe future, ool s0d shoel orte bailniaob 0B guaTALVesd GRADE ORDINANCE NO, 7, An ordinance est ! lishirg the grade of 19 h from Urace stre<b 40 Ein streot in the city of hs: Be it ordained by the City Couneil of the city of Omaha: Seo. 1. he grado of 16th strect from Grace strect to Kl streit 1 the city of Omaha, 1a horby estb- lished at the foilowing *clevations, the ginde hiing uuiform stralyht lir cs betwoen tbe polnis b) coified Elevatlon of Ilevatlon of W. ourh. 66 7.6 o7’ North curb of Grace st, Bouth carb of ¥prace sk Norta curh of Spruce st. Eouth corb (f Lk st 0.8 Noith curb of Luke at. . 6.6 Soutn curb of Kl 8" 2 0 Sec. 2. Tols ordlnavce shaul take effect aud be lo fo102 from and afier 1ts o Bage. Passod Sojt. 2d, 1685, J. B v, City Clel, W, ¥, Brois, Pres Oty Approvel, sevt Heh, 1536 Jaums B, Buvr, Meyor, A State & Monroo Sts,, Chicago. Willsea TISTRICT 0¥ Cot Upie, Waehicgton, 1916 85th St. “THE CEDARS * A boarding and day school fer young ludice. Delight'uly tiuared 0n' Georgelown Heigits, Lareo grounds; sugerior scholaslc ad anteges. Miss FARLE. A FINE LINE OF Pianos & Digans —AT—— WOODBRIDGE BROS,, MUSIC HOUSE OMAHA, NEBRASKA. DREXEL & MAUL, Suosessors to John G, Jacobs. UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS, At the <11 stend 1417 Farnam strect. Orders by to'egraph sollolted and prompily attended to. Tules phonie No, 226. Noticel WNotice! HKotice THE MAGNETIC HEALER, To all who are disessed or affifoted, uo mattor how fong the standing; oome and be bealed. Feaniale diss cases whero modicines havo fallcd o give rellef, # §peolalty; come one, come all and te healed by the Maguetio healcr, the only sure escape from any dise ease. ¥or oxamloation, our chages are 31, for each treatmont, or visitations §2; erma strictly cesh, MHEBRASK.A NATIONAL BANK OMAHA, NEBRASKA Pa Ur CAPITAL, .. BuseLus, May 1, 1685 DIRKOIGRS, H. W. Yares, Presidint, A. K Turzaues, Vice Precdd nt, W. VM ki, Juny » CoLuixe, Luwis 5. dikko, W P H VANKLSG OPFIGK: The Iron Banl. Cor. 12ch end Faruaw Btr ot A Genesal Eatklug Busin 83 Transnoled.