v«*" k* COLOR-BLINDNESS. A of Vision Which Is Said to Bo Largely Hereditary. The defect ot vision known as color­ blindness is a very curious one. Il consists ot either total or partial lack ot ability to disting.il-h color, while tlie sight may be faultlM. in every other respect When total, the sensa­ tion of color is absolutely wanting, and the individual sees only different shades of white and black. These ctsea. however, are extremely rare. More common is partial color-blind- tiosH. where the sen-ation Is defective in relation to cer ain colors, but not to alL This is of three kind«—red- blindness. green-blindness and violet­ blindness. Cases of tli»last variety are so sel-iom met with that tho term oolor-blindnoss, as commonly used, lias reference Io either red-biindnoss or ereon-blindiioss. P r«ons vh > -Jiro rod-blind »no all red obj ect as a shude of gray, and the sanw true of the green blind as to r<>»u. A mixture of white and black in proper proportions will give to tlie color-blind the same sensation as the different shades of red and green. It is some»hat singular that while there is no reason to doubt that color-blind­ ness is as old as man, it was not dis­ tinctly recognized and accurately de­ scribed until a little more than a hun­ dred years ago. Tlie first case on record is that of a shoemaker named Harris, who lived in Mayport, England. It b said that his first suspicion of any peculiarity of vision on his part arote when he was altout four years oliL Having by acci­ dent found a child’s stocking in the street he carried it to a house near by to inquire for the owner. He noticed that other peoplo called it a red stock­ ing, but could not understand why they did so, as it seemed to him com­ pletely described by calling it a stocking. He observed, also, that while the children with whom he played could distinguish tlie chorries on a tree by some pre­ tended difference of color, ho could onlv tell them from tho leaves by their difference in size and sliapo. Ho found, too, that by means of tills diff ironce in color, or in some way which he could not understand, they could see the cherries at a greater distauco than lie could, though in cases where their sight was not assisted by the color, he could see objects at as great a dis- tance as any of thorn. Tliis case was described in 1777. Seventeen yenrs later the celebrated English chemist, D.ilton, described his own case so accurately and minutely that color-blindness in general, and especially tlie form of it with which ho was afflicted — namely, red blindness— has since been known as Daltonism. He says that he was never convinced of any peculiarity of liis vision until ho accidentally observed the color of the flower geranium tonale liy candlelight. Tlie flower was pink, blit appeared to him almost an exact sky-blue by day. Bv tlie light of the candle, howevur, it seemed to him not to have any blue iir 1L being what lie called red—a color which forms a striking contrast to blue. His friends, to whom he re­ ferred tlie matter, agreed that the color wns not materially different from what it was by daylight, except his brother, who was subject to the same defect as himself. Two years after­ ward he began to investigate tlie sub- j ct of colors, or color-blind test. Ho found that ho could distinguish but two, or at most three, colors in the rainbow. These wore yellow and blue, or yellow, blue and purple. Hia yellow Included tlie green, yellow, orange and red of others. This was the same Dr. Dalton who afterwards, though a Quaker and conscientiously opposed to wearing bright colors, when ho had received tlie scarlet gown of a doctor of laws for presenta­ tion at court not only donned it with­ out objection, but also wore it for sev­ eral days upon tlie street, in happy, unconsciousness of the effect which he produced. Col. r-bllndness is largely hereditary, and affects males much more frequent­ ly than females. It oils s from birth, and there is no means known by which It can be remedied A temporary condition of color-blindires« is occa­ sionally met with, due to disease m Injury, which passes away with tho condition which produced it The existence of color-blindness in persons occupying nspotisible positions in the railroad and marine sorvicos is a source of great danger to the travel­ ing public, and in most countries ex- aminatiuns are provided by law, f r the purpose of testing tlie color-per­ ception of all applicants for these positions___ Golden Days. A 1 Personal Work. Th. duty of organ tza ion Is often pressed on us. and not too often, for It Is to ho accomplished. But in per- frming it we should not forget the other duty—that of personal effort, put forth singly, without the joining of any hand, without even the notice of any other eye. It is easy, when societies, etc., sre in fashion, to trust all to them and to loose our religions identity in the ma-S'.hat mak 'S up the fraternities. B it It is at a sacrifice of culture and growth that we do this; upsides, every cans- needs indivllual helpers and can only prosper property when they are secured to IL— United Pretbylerian. k ll I. I. All the corkwood of commerce conies from the Spanish peninsula, where the trees abound not only in cultirated forests, but also grow wild on the mountains. The tree is like th. Ameri­ can oak. with leaves similar to the oak and acorns. It takes ten years for the bark to becom. a proper thickness to be manufactured into bottle stoppers, life preservers and seine corks. When stripped from the trees it is to be boiled for two hoars, cured In the tun for a week and preened into flat pieces for baling and shipping. The denuded trunk, like s ben nibbed of her eggs. d<*s not sulk end quit the business, but throws out a fresh covering for a fresh spoliation. One tree has been known to yield half a ton of corkwood. One pound of cork can be manufact- nred into one hundred anl forty-fou, champagne corks. The haled cork is •old to cork manufacturing oenters.— GLORIOUS | k MOUNT SHASTA, Poetical Description of the Grandest Mountain in America. Bctwoen the great pines going up you sec the religious dome of Mount Shasta, its snows and frowns so mixed that one perceives it nearly with super­ stition. Shasta is ono of the finest mountains in America, a naked dome of rock, gravel and perpetual snow, made by a volcano, and having two side pieces or transepts, the whole mass standing up white and dun in crazy-quilt patches of triangles of snow and ovuls of rocks, and slides of loam and gravel, above a skirt of Oregon pines, which are of sober green and seem the kirtle of a huge, muscular, naked man, wearing a clout of green as he kneels upon the platead and surveys his brood of inoundy peaks extending around him in an amphitheater of a hundred miles. There is but one Shasta, and he is a Sierra—one of the bold range beyond the Rockies, overlooking the Orient West “There is t..o East, there is Europe," says the statue of Thomas Benton at St. Louis, pointing at the same time West. There is a county of California called Shasta, and a range of mountains be­ tween Sacramento river and the sea is called the Shasta Range. It is only a night’s ride or a sleep of 340 miles be­ tween San Francisco and Mount Shasta, and in this ride you rise nearly 3.600 feet to Sisson, in Strawberry Valley, from which Mount ShasLa’s peak is still 10,885 feet higher, or above the sea 14,440 feet. It is 10,000 feet higher than the Lick Observatory on Mount Hamilton. This is the power of Mount Shasta— that it rises so grandly above every thing else—not like Pike’s or Gray’s Peak, one of a large family of mount­ ains sitting around the white table­ cloth of the skies. It seems the high­ est when you are at it, and looks to be inaccessible. The railroad keeps wind­ ing around its base as a wheelbarrow is guided around a cathedral’s steeples. It is more than twice the height of Mount Washington, and is seven-eighths the height of Mont Blanc. For 2,000 feet the snow-slides drop down its sides, frequently turning red. Then for 4,000 feet lower tho inorganic mass stands like a Vulcan among his cinders. Next for 2,000 feet encamp the firs, where once the lava licked the world. Yet it is only twelve miles from Sis­ son on the railroad to Shasta’s top, and women have ascended it, and pant and grumble in the deed less than men. In four days there was carried up by white men and Indians a copper monu­ ment weighing 3,500 pounds, which can be seen 190 miles away. But no signal officer can live on Shasta's top. Its pimples, 1,500 feet high, are like the warts on Cromwell’s head when Warts like clouds that rise against the sun, But make him greater seem—not greater grow. As I passed Shasta a great white' cloud was trailing from it like a pen­ non, called the “Snow-banner of Shasta." It really was a palpitating, cloud-like wild bird, failing for breath as it flew, and holding tip-toe to the peak, with its feet in snow-drifts, while its plumage blew outward and away. There is a butte, or mountain hump, near Shasta, 6,500 feet high, but the snows, like virgin belles at court, dis­ dain to coquette with it, and keep all their flakes for Shasta. It, too, is a tine and stuck-up thing quite solitary, but the miners only call it ¿Uiasta Butte, as the actors called Mr. Greene, when he compared himself to Shake­ speare, Shakespeare’s call-boy. Coining up to Shasta from the south by the tortuous canj’on of the Sacra­ mento, you see the great mountain vaguely yet tremendous, as Io saw Jupiter in his cloudy passion, but, go­ ing from it northward, as the locomo­ tive turns often to see it, the god stands out naked as before bold Juno in tlie domesticity of the heavens: the pastur­ age plains of the Klamath stretching below him like a coverlet pushed away. You see him to be a volcano put out by snows, and our only worthy brother of the Alps, like Monte Rosa dissected out of them and spirited away in the Gambols of the Titans. The Alps too often hide in the reek­ ing dews of Lombardy, but Shasta is set in a sky that in limpid as the blues in the eyes of babes. How still it is, with that great, un­ mistakable scar of crater a mile and a half wide, telling were hell climbed up aud vomited its blood and flame to­ gether drunkenly for some momentary spasms of thousands of years’ We have resolved that hell is not, but there is Shasta, and somewhere must be fire. Glorious relic of a time when man was not, and Pan was playing with the tools of Vulcan, the molten waste of Shasta ran away, spilling westward into a range of mountains, each spat­ tering up to be like Shasta’s self, but making only tame miniatures of it.— Gath, tn (hncinnati Enquirer. —Lord Tennyson* receives an income of from $20,000 to $25,000 a year from the sale of his books, but not a cent of it comes from an American publisher, despite the fact that his poetry is nearly as popular here as in England. —William Jessop recently died at Sheffield, Eng. Mr. Jessop was well known in the industrial world, and his name will be recognized wherever steel is used. “Jessop’s steel" is a monument to hia memory which will not soon rust out —Captain Frank Burkitt, the editor of the Okolona (Miss.) Messenger, is assisted In his duties by Miss Jennie I>ee and Miss Mystic Burkitt, his daughters. They edit the State news and the society columns of their father’s paper, and also set type for it —Mrs. Elizabeth Carroll, of Warren. Ind., claims to have been born in Pennsylvania in 177L Her husband was a soldier in the war of 1812. There is good reason to think that Mrs. Carroll is really one hundred and thirteen years old. although »he is active as most women of sixty. —Dr. Gatling has invented another gun, which he calls the “Police gun, and which is designed for use in riots. It is brass, weighs seventy-eight pounds, is mounted on a tripod with a universal joint, works very much like the Gatling gun and will deliver oqg thousand shots a minute in any direc­ tion-side wav a. op or down. THE ENGLISH HANGMAN. fie Tells of H| n Various struggles to Reach His Present Eminence. James Berry, the public executioner. Ims taken advantage of a recent pro fessional visit to Chelmsford to confid« to a reporter a number of particular»* regarding himself, his family aud hi.* profession. Some of his oonfesiions an <»f a kind on which persons of goo<’. taste would hardly care to dwell; others are comparatively void of of fense and undoubtedly curious. Ther seems reason to suspect that political »ympathies have had something to d« with the choice of this highly respecta­ ble organ, of East Anglian Conserva­ tism as the medium of these confidences. In other words, James Berry is, accord­ ing to his own declaration, “a Conserv­ ative through and through," in that regard differing from a brotlier of bis (of whom more anon) whois, or rather was, “a Liberal, and in favor of abolishing capital punishment." Berry, we gather, stands Na 14 in the list of a iamHy of twenty>ono children. It will hardly surprise any one to leal n that his friends did not approve 01 his choice of a profession, but all right-feeling persons will be shocked to hear of the disastrous indirect effects of James Berry’s abnormal inclinations upon his afflicted relatives. Questioned on this delicate subject, he replied, mournfully: “It killed my mother and brother." Then, with an apparently morbid pleasure in harrow­ ing details, ho went ou to say: “When Marwood died I was appointed in his place, and directly my mother knew of it she was taken ill. My father’s solicitor then wrote the Home Office informing the authorities of this. The result was that I gave up the position, and Binns got the appointment. My niother died soon attci wards, and then, when 1 saw the way in which Binns was going on, I caiue to the conclusion that he would not hold tho place long, and I again wrote to tho Home Office, stating that my mother was dead, and that there was nothing now to prevent my accommodating them if my assist­ ance should bo required. Soon after that I was engaged to hang two men at Edinburgh, and I have carried out nearly all the executions since then." The sequel of the tragic tale is yet to tell: “My brother," he went on to say, “ha»l married a girl with plenty of money, and his pride received a Blow on my appointment. That was the cause of his death." This, it appears, was the brother who was “a Liberal" and “in favor of abolishing capital punishmont" It must be confessed that this unfortunate member of the Berry family could hardly have given h more emphatic proof of his dislike of the hangman’s office. It is to be hoped that we have here reached the final incident in this ghastly tale, though James Berry’s final observation,.“Al­ together I have buried my mother, two brothers and two aunts within the last three years," has a painfully ominous sound.— Exeter County {Eng.) Chron­ icle. NUPTIAL NOVELTIES, The Queer Wuy In Which Nome Weddings Are Celebrated. At the bottom of a good many strange developments of civilization which we owe to America lies a. passion for novel­ ty for its own sake, and not for any ulterior benefits which is produced by it People who dislike the old hum­ drum methods find all round them a a society equally fond of “new depart­ ures;" and in a democratic land the unusual is not always frowned upon as being necessarily wicked. American couples have before now been married in balloons, in railway cars, and even in bathing machines. The individuals who delight in these social antics have no desire to shock their neighbors or to do any thing that will be dubbed grossly iniquitous; they only choose to act for themselves and to do things in their own way, to step out of the rut for a time. They will bo able to talk afterward about their wed­ ding as having been determined under unique circumstances; their children will proudly boast how “their papa and mamma were married in a balloon," or In a box on wheels near the briny deep, an the case may be. Who can say but that some day a bridegroom will astonish the specta­ tors, his mother-in-law, especially, by appearing as Robin Hood, in a tasteful suit of green, with quiver slung on his back? And it would only require one step farther for the officiating clergy­ man to don the vestments generally associated with the name of Friar Or the bridegroom might be married as Orlando aud the bride as Ro.alind. In our English weddings—we know not how the Americans manage this detail—it is usual for a few seloct and favored individuals to kiss the bride in tiie veS'ry when the whole performance isover; it would be obviously impos.i bio for this special feature to be omit­ ted. and equally inappropriate for th. bride to be kissed in public. Therefore it would be essential to have an Im­ promptu vestry at hand—say tho hol­ low of an old tree—in .which, besides, the register could be signed and the usual fees paid. A pleasant lunch on of doors at the conclusion of the cer rnony. a far and faint imitation of th lawn at Ascott, would be ever •<> much nicer than the stiff and formal wedding breakfasL or lunch, which everybody about i qatea. — London Telegraph. FREAKS OF FORTUNE. 5UACOBS Oli REWARD! i I i I I IL ÍI I CONSUMPTION, C atarrh CREAM BAL m K&V rm JH n 'I Liver, Blood, and Lungs. Try the Cure | B $500 REWARD FASHION CATALOGUE The Van Monciscar L I DR. MCNULTY. VUUUWEJGA/r n*PRICt$ CKEAM WESTCOTT BROS. QFFIK i U L L U U CARLSBAD IN CALIFORNIA. > Î §AKlN§ I ARRHn?;;! l/llinr KNAKrl I l\ Il nU LI ■ I FIN, Ottonwoo.1, Hhuta County. Cal fruit belt Upper HecremMstu Valley; or, to ft. GRIFFI N .Tolo, leekaon C...... tr Or., eenter v about 4.0J > dipping in cold wet r. cubic feet of apace. Carbon and dui- om represent th. balk of the aolida; the phosphorite, aulphur, potasaium, »odi­ um, and iron weighing only from 1| to 26 oanceqezqji. — Jlrkannam Traveler. — ma. remonstrated oootty, ••when I was at grandma's she let tne have two pieces of pie. ” “Welt she ought not to have done so. Bobby," said hia nt ther. “I think two pieces ot pie are too much for little boys. The older you grow, Bobby, the more wisdom HMlI------------------- ,--------------- you will gain." Bobby was silenced, bat only for a moment. "Well, ms,” he said, “grandma u a good deal older than you are.” _ . . » T Gue»t (wildly) to Ariionz hotel clerk - “1 wonder how I should feel If I won 1 Say, there, a man under the bed in that room you g«ve me. Clerk tkimUy) -That', tl nnn ** for even grain of poi»- fll5,<0> In the lottery f 1» a remark one al iJiUUU vneua Hubeiauvea iuu~d in Wladum’s Bobertlne, right; he’, d.ad. W- j >et left him ackuowledged the roost delightful and onlv reaily fr quentiy hear». there till his fri nds could come t r him Larudem toilet article ever produced for beautifying A. and ureMMViug the ouroplexiuu. removing tan, nun burn, David Stern, pawn' roker, 614 Clay to morrow. Front! Two whiakiee for 31. TRADE (reeklefl and all blemish*a aad roughueee of the ildu. »treat, is one man at leant who hat ex|>eri- U-ed aud indorsed by the elite of aoeiety and the PIACE UN KABTH «»a^e. Sold by all dru,ghts at 50 cent« per little. eneed the sensation of winning a fortune WuMsud ManuHrtur-S by W M WISDOM Awaits that countless army of martyrs, whose A OO., Obemi^te, Portlaud, Oregon. fur a dollar. Ou Tliursday he drew 61 i.. | ranks are constantly recruited from tlie vic­ 0 0 from Wells, Fargo & Co's bank, his ; tims of nervousness and nervous diseases. coupon, representing one tenth of the cap The ____ price _________ ... course of ve to note from the __ of the .™... boon _____ is a s. stcmatlc that nine4entiw of Ital prize of 9 *1° 1,1 t*w muary draw Hostetter'. Huxnach Hitlers, the finest and I fatal cases reach their chronic stage through Ing of the leiuislana Slate Ixittery having most genial ot ionic uervln- s. pursued wlu> a stupid indifference to a correct treatment 9 txeu iiiiui-dialely honored. A Chronicle reasonable persl.u-nee. KaUer, pl, saunter when the system is first assuiled. It is easily reporter, who heard of Mr. Stern's lurk, ! * d “r',r thl« than to swash the victualing .Xht ¡he fortunate Pa-^er at hl department with pseudo-tonics, alcoholic or shown that thousands of live» could be saveci NEItVOVN PA INN. the reverse, beef extract«, nerys foods, nsroot- place of business, aud found hiiu iu the a t ic*. serial, ve« ami poisonx in disguise. ‘ Tired Torture.—For instance: S ciatica , which so oi emptying a huge sack of shining tw< n y Nature'a M-*—’--------- *----- ’ balmy •— sleep," • - - • is -• sweet — restorer, the sorely afflicts the human family, ami which dollar pieces ou a table in the rear of his I providential r* cuperant for weak nerves, and is defined to be neuralgia of the sciatic establishm.-ut Mr. Stern was, to «ay the | this glorious franchise being usually the con- LIRE» Al.I. HLMORS, nerve, rheumatism of the himjoint, or parts Hia usually I I Be< luouc <* m ”f sound digestion aud incrsa.sed least, somewhat excited. ytaor the adjoining it, hip gout, ¡»ains m the loins and from a common Blotch, or Eruption, »it« and hii I Ti Kor. the great siomacltlc which insures hot)» swarthy couutonance was white, »ire. ann and his ‘ ¡a nrutim-u alfM) of al thc rO4|uircd hips, even in its mildest form never seizes tn tho worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, « Fever - «ores,” Scaly or Hough dark eyes blazed with strong euu ti >n — — time. Not - unrofreshed aw ikons thc Individ- i its prey without due warning. Skin, in short, all dtoMBee caused by bad “Yes, 1 have won,”Msaid he, iu a voice ual who uses It, but vigorous, clear headed I SYMPTOMS. are conquered by this powerful, puri­ that was quite husky for the moment. and tranquil. Use the Bitters also in fever Acute.—Sudden and acute mins in the hip blood fying, and invigorating niedicine. Cireat “There laJihe tmoney. 1 have just come and ague, rheumatism, kidney troubles, con- and loins; redness, swelling, tenderness, bating Ulcers rapidly heal under its be­ s ti patio a and biliousness. from the b nk with it.” soreness, fever, lumen -ss aud sometimes ex­ nign influence. Especially lias It manifested potency in curing Tetter, Jloso Huah, He added >hat he had not counted it, but cruciating pains. The disease* rapidly devel­ its The Illinois corn crop of 1887 was the Holla, Carbuncles, Soro Eyes, Scrot- the information was scarcely necessary, smallest since 86*. the total being 129,- ops into chronic or inflammatory stage. ulous Sores and Navel lings, Hip- for he was in no frame of mind to < ount I U0”,0( 0 bushels. THLATMKNT. to lilt Disease, White Nwedliiiga, auy thing. The $15,t(M) made a great heap 1 ■ oitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Cure.—Rrb the parts atfected thoroughly and Bond ten cents in stamps for a of glistening gold, that c inked and glit­ ▲ 1 the art and taate of the beet a thta seems to have vigorously with S t . J acobs O il ; create a Glands. large treatise, with colored plates, on Skin tered cheerfully as the Stern family ran been combined tn the inaguitieent package of imp rted burning sensation by the friction of rubbing Diseases, or the same amount for a treatise and Ohromatie Cards which is being offered iger« through it. It. Thej They seemed, as Oleographlc Oleogrsphlo «nd Chromatic Garris Itolutf offei their finger« on the Oil; apply warmth; flannels wrung * - on Scrofulous Afftnstions. have scarcely S’11 kuo’" “r,‘‘ “* ~ rumina Broth.™, oi - r.i ltu. yet, io L ---------------- \ real! ” ed T their good “THE BLOOI1 IN THE I.1FE.’* out in hot water. l,,i, L n I *k r thu * .... fortune. They looke i at the gold, a>>ri and fol» felt m" Thoroughly cleanse it by using Dr. Pierce’® To pr<>cure theae elegant froated aud satin hinged Golden Jledleal Discovery, and good Sold by Druggi^U and De ilert Everyu'hrre. it, as if they expected to ae«* it vanish like | ca>ds, buy a box of Dr. C. McLane's Celebrated Liver 1111a for 25 cents from your diuggiet and mail the out digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spir­ the fabric of a dream. But there was aide THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore». MA. wrapi*er with your addre-« (plainly w itt n) and its, and vital strength, will be established. n -thii g intangible about the heap of yel­ four centa worth of stamps to Fleming Brothers, Pitts low twenty-doliar »ieces. Some of the bur^h, Pa. Y**u will l>e surprised and delighted with money slipped from the table a d rol ed the beauty and variety of the cards you will receive. ELY’S which Is Scrofula of tho Eungs. is ar­ merrily along the floor, jingling as if d - rested and cured by this remedy, if taken bo- Hen eforth Mexican silver will be ac­ lighted to have been freed from the re­ foro the last stag« of the disease are reached. cepted at the Cuban treasury at 80 cents straint of the bank vaults. The toddling From its marvelous power over this terribly youngster on the floor filled his little hands on the dollar. fatal disease, when ilrst offering tills now (¿irthmted remedy to the public. Dr. P ieiicb with the valuable playthings, and seemed (nought seriously of colling it hie “Con­ THE LAMM' FAVORITE. as much pleased with their touch as his sumption Cure.” but abandoned that older relative, who»« eyes were fixed on The neweat taahlou In ladlea' hats will name as too limited for a medicine which, the table. Mrs St rn was spee bless, and doublleaa cadae a flutter of pleasurable from its wonderful combfriation of tonic, or could only clasp her hands and »mile i t excitement among the fair Hex. I-ad I ch are strengthening, alterative, or tilofwl-cleansing, anti-bllious, pectoral, and nutritive proper­ her lucky spouse.&The latter was still too ____ always ------------- euecepti — 1 — le ---------- to the ----------- changes — of - a ties, is unequaled, not oirty iffi a remedy for excited to think or act with habitual com- fashion plate and the more startling the consumption, but for all Cliroulc Dis­ ness. He wall ed fr in the gold-laden depart're, ih more i___ earnest __ _— the o gossip eases ot the table to the front door and bacs a dozen over the new mode. I)r Pierce ’ s Favorite [ >de. Dr times in a minute without apparent pur-' Prescription is a positive cure for the ills pose. Customers came in and looked which afflict females and make their lives If y. t feci dull, drowsy, debilitated, have around, but he -eeined to see nothing but miserable. This sovereign panacea can be sallow color of skin, or yellowish-brown snots the glittering fortune ih.cessary may kindrod affections, it is an efficient remedy. be found in any kitchen. Address, GEO. Jf. PER being 3 years old, was confirmed in t uri ted States, it is said. Born ny D ruggists , at $1.00, or SIX UIVAL, 122 Ellis Street. Nan Francisco. BOTTEEM for $5.00. religion. On Monday we had a banquet, Send ten cents In stamps for Dr. Pi^rce’S and he got many valuable presents, in WEAK LUNGS MADE STRONG. book on Consumption. Address, eluding bank-books showing money de-1 World’s Dispensary Medical A mo - loomingdale q Perao s who stay It doors all the time posited for him by friends. On Tuesday, j elation, t»3 Main Street, B uffalo , N. Y. brothero coin! .g home from school he stopped at, and lean over a counter or a desk, sooner the Chronicle bulletin-board and ippied j or later discover that their lungs are giv­ OF THIRO AVENUE, FEW YORK CITY, off the list of winning^numben’ in the ing out. Editors are often thus afflicted. have now ready their handsomely illustrated eemi-aunual Louisiana State Loitery, and r ished down to say, ‘Papa, you’ve won the $15,000.’ 11 Erastus R. Sutherland, editor of 7'A« East- Is offered by the proprietors of Dr. Bago's Catarrh Remedy couldn’t crei it it at first, but as soon as 11 ern State Journal, White Plains, New which contains a most complete list of latest tor a case of catarrh which looked over my list of nunibe | terb in my family since D68. In that year Domeetic. which are sold at such low prices as to nose, offensive or otherwise, partial l<»sa of learned that it was, and I had it cashed i I had au attack of pneumouia from which make their name renowned throughout the Toll, taste, lNeu.Ne*« <’ oiik 1 bn . •ire prompt relief and cure for lire. is somewhat influenced by superstition. ft In the whitening hair, B.th ttoxc. Cn.alt C.Bfld.Btlallr Before the January drawing of the Louisi­ <’oldm etc., eff« ctual relief is found in the ths untimely wrinkles, nn-rtOB—18» * 184 THIRD HT. use of ‘ lirown ’ s Bronchial Troches ” Sold ana lottery he invested $1 in a one-tenth 1 tho loss ot form —in fact, In all the signs of prema­ coupon (I ticket 73.18‘. Directly after only in boxes. 2ft cts. tura old ago. getting the coupon the gallnut Colonel ran Men, Young Men,Old full tilt on Kearney street against a cross- I T he greatent blood - purifier and ner­ Men, and Young Old eyed woman. On the next block he met a vine in the woe id in llubb’s Nerve-Tonic Men, yon need Hobb'a Pills. funeral, and as the superstitious code of Nerve Tonic Pills. It lx Brain Food, It is amuacleinvlgorator; builds up the Waste ill omens marks these as sure signs of bad Places ; makes the weak strong and vigor­ luck, the Colonel concluded that his ti ket CONSUMPTJOjr BUBKLT CUBED ous. Are you suffering In secret for past was mere useless paper. I own the street Alfalfa, Onion Hets, Oraaa, Clover, Vegetable anti errors? We will Indorse for you if you try the Editor : — he met his friend K. S McCann, also of To 1 lease Flower Heed«. By far »he largest and mu oorupiete inform your readers that I have a pos­ the Nerve Tonic Pills. Even if you aro ■took on the Pacific Coaat. Kansas, and alluded laughingly to the ill it! ve remedy for the abo ze named disease. By weak and nervous with loss of vital power — Large llluatrat< n the «'arlflbaU tent chemist, who has undertaken t make plan, under the direction of l)R. SCHNEE, the cele it presentable for bank purposes. Mean­ bra U m i I'hjrxician, who haecuretl theMi ailnutntain am*wt HOLTZ. M I» . 1’hyxlciau. time “Bia Pete” sits on tl e top of one of (,'or State Mini ('ota Htrweta. th* high stools in his coffee-hous«*, unde-1 Big tf has given univer­ elded whether to takrf off his coat and go to work or make arrangement» for a tiip i sal satisfaction In the to Europe. The apprentice who has been , cure of Gonorrbtra aud I TO » DATS. Gleet. I prescribe It and the cause of so much misery is hiding for his life In the hills bac k of Ten ea -al. feel safe in recommend­ »r«Mly by las John Foster, an employe in an Oakland ■ ing It to all sufferers. Chsaicxi brush factory on the creek, near the I A.J.STOHKB, E.D^ Broadway landing, won $'00 in the Jan­ Decatur, III. uary drawing, so that California fared PRIffE SI.OO. . well at the hands of the fickle goddess this Bold by hrug.istc J Farina for Halo. month.—San Francisco Chronicle, Jan. lfi. «1KNI» NTItirN »OB < IB4T I.AIt tn M GRIP > .«••• - ! The bAHt PIANO »n «rthl »'H'nex Bro.’s PIANO? PATTI’S peetorence. Manicai Department A- Ix. Rancroft A Co., Ito- moYed to 132 Poai Ht.. Bari Francisco. Ol. AM i SSLMWBL ISÄ'OJH! R5« larigevacnv. Oeauiae otad« by J P Alien. Si. Paul. Mlaa ¡ aiaQP'P Hy return mall. Full Ikenrrlptiea rntE^^ ioonr»co’cr."1.-i.“FT I To OH a Day. Samples worth $1.50, FREE. Lines not under the horwesfeet. Write B«rw. ,Vlolly.MIrh. stkb ' s SArrrvlixixH oldvr C o P. Me I J. No. TO) « F N. IT. N a . JO? WEAK NERVES paine’s 6.000.000 people use Paixx’sCEuxavUoMPocMD la a Nerve Ton to which never fails. Containing Celery and <;*«•. thoae wonderful nerve ntimulanta.it epnedily cures all nervoua disorder«. RHEUMATISM pAirnt'« C vlxxv C omkh xd purifies the blood. It drive« out the larta; sr:d, which caua> a Rh«-uinatiMn. aud rw»t«>rnn the blood- making organ« to a healthy n n