The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, December 24, 1888, Image 3

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THE nXlLY HEilAI.0: I I.ATfSMOnTli. NEliUASKA, MONDAY. nKOBMUKR M. 1-SS.
L'
1 1
1
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A Tl! II' TO AFRICA.
HACITS AND
ZENS OF
HOMES OF
THE GOLD
THE DENI
COAST. How lO-Yoar-Old Mother Carry TbeLr
)lall-a Singular Though Rudely Elab
orate ItnrlaJ Caitoin Ao CDcomfbrtabl
Conveyance. "
Although tho (JolJ Coast is not favor
able for tho prolongation of life of white
men, the natives aro strong and healthy
enough. I he children aro particularly
uprurhlly and fat. 1 lior nui aliout in a
ptate of nature, with merely a girdle of
lcad around their waist a. in lieu or
clothing. They are marriageable at an
t'arlv ng commencing the cares of
wedded life at 10. The infants arc car
ricd by their mothers in a x-culiar xxi
tion. A piece of light woml alwut ten
inches long hy four or five broad w cov
cred with cotton ami tied around the
woman, bo as to rest uixhi the lower rart
of her buck. Uixm thin the infaut is
placed, straddling face to the mother's
buck artjj secured by a fold of her cotton
cloth. vh? woman i.-t thus free to work
and the ha!c U near the nourishment
necessary for its existence.
D3Y HXATHEK HOUSES.
I saw some very eld persons here. One
day on going down the road toward the
castle, 1 saw a venerable looking negro
sitting m a wicker c hair, bareheaded and
fully exjxwed to the lierco rays of the
sun. It was about noon, when the sun
is very fiowcrful, and tho old fellow's
skull was devoid of wool, bare and shiny.
J 6toried to speak to him, placing my
hand on top of his head and finding the
heat excessive. lie spoke in tremulous
tones, telling mo he was nearly 100 years
of age, and that his blood was cold; so
he hud his chair placed in the sun so that
his system could bo warmed thoroughly.
The houses ure mado of sun baked
bricks, or adobe, which material is all
right during the dry rortion of the year,
but has an inconvenient habit of tum
bling about your devoted ernon during
a continuance of rain. The walls of the
houses are (hick, to keep the great heat
out, and tho roofs are thatched with
dried grass. Two of us occupied one of
these hou:.es half way between the castle
and the lighthouse. The under story
was a merchant's store, and we occupied
the top floor. We had leen experienc
ing rather heavy rain for a week, when
nno night the wall facing the direction
tho wind came from collapsed, bringing
down the roof with it. Fortunately our
cots were on tho other 6ide, otherwise
our earthly glole trotting" would have
leen brought to an untimely and suddoa
end.
Cl'RIED IN OOLD.
The burials of the lold coast ore very
necu!iar. Most of the ixple own thefr
Iiouses, and the family have jperliaps
lived in them for generations. The cus
tom i?oultet--s arose from considerations
of security, for fear tho graves might be
rilled. They always bury their dead
within the walls of the deceased's resi
dence. The house where we were Jodgeq
was searated from tho adjoining one by
a narrow allev. The tviudow of our up
per room looked into the lower story of
the other house, as a door was just oppo
site us. We were thus enabled to vievy
the whole proceedings. The wife of the
owner, a young woman about 20 years
ijt, age, had died of puerperal fever and
vvas 'laid out on a trestle covered with
black cloth, attired as in life. In the
center of the room a trench was dug, the
depth of which wo could not exactly de
termine. I ho body was literally covered
wifJVgold ornaments. Gold beads round
her' necli. in'-ii double row, gold bead
girdle, earrings, rings, pins, bracelets
all of massive form and chased, but not
verv finely. The workmanship is not
of the highest order.
A rich mulatto lady, widow of a white
merchant and niece of tho ruling king of
Asliantee, was among the mourners.
She had a vial tilled with cold dust in
her hand, which she emptied into the
mouth of the deceaised woman, scatter
ing tho overplus on tho face. Some wo
men then took the body and wrapped it
. carefully in a unite sneer, they men
lowered it with cords into the grave. A
brazier was burning in the apartment,
which was large, and usually the parlor,
Onto the hot coal they then threw some
odoriferous gums, wluch gave out an in
tense smoke. This had the effect doubt
less of driving away any evil spirits that
might have been loafing around seeking
something to devour. Under cover of
this smoke, which was too dense for ua
to see through, the earth must have been
tilled in: for when we could discern ob
jects aain the floor was even and
stamped down, looking as before. 1 saw
no men present during the interment. I
was informed tliat during a little diffi
culty iK-tween the French and a native
Ling, men were landed from a war ship,
who, after driving r way the inhabitants,
had Kroo hoys to duj up the interiors of
the chief houses, and secured a fair
amount of the precious metal as lxty.
The kingdom of Asliantee adjoins the
Fantee country inland. The people of
this kingdom are not 6Q tall or athletic a
race, but ere lithe and clean limbed,
tive and intelligent. I preferred theui to
their m ijhlwrs, the Fan tees. 1 went up
as far a.i the I 'rah. a pleasant enough trip
cf several days. As there are no horses
ror mi:!es, nor even the humble Jerusa
lem po::y, we were carried in hammocks,
a bad imitation of the Indian palkec.
These contrivances are made of canvas
airu 6iu!ig to a iule, which latter is cai
ried ou men's shoulders fore and aft. It
is a very jumpy, jolting method of loco
motion. 1 heard of ono poor fellow who
was being carried in one of these vehicles
Of little rata?, being sick with coast fever.
The jolting irritated him so much that he
called out to them to go slow. The
bearers, thinking he called out to them
to go faster, through ignorance of the
language, literally jolted him to death,
lie was quite dead when they reached
his residence. Cor. San Francisco Chron
icle. -
What Stars a Woman.
There never yet was a woman so gifted,
wealthy, beautiful or high in social posi
tion that she was not marred by a cold,
distant and supercilious bearing. There
are so many sorrowful things in life,
there are so many hurts and wounds for
all of us, it seems to me that every woman
ought to cultivate a sweet manner and s
kindly glance for the stranger or the
acquaintance. It costs nothing, and, like
a ray of sunshine, it warms and strength
ens many a frost bitten life whereon it
falls. 1 think some women and girls
hare the idea that a haughty and proud
bearing impresses a stranger with a sense
of their importance. This is a mistake.
Tin tnilv treat are never arrogant oi
cold but nsodest and kind in demeanor,
wliila th unworthy rud prssujspiaoB
f , r - T?'
BLONDIN, THE ROPE WALKER.
DUcsiwi III. "Hlih Art" and Tell
Santa Kiprrieorc.
A roie walker is like a poet, born and
f
not made. I myself be trail to toddlo
I along a rope when I was only 4 years old.
ami in my otn year l gave a siieeial ex
hibition on the high roie lcfore the king
at Turin. It is a usual tiling, no doubt,
for the apprentices in a circus to be
taught roiw walking among their other
lessons, but only a few of them ever get
beyond the rudiments o the art. The
usual system of teaching is to make the
pupil walk along a narrow board tho
width of which is daily decreased until
it is barely thic'cr than an ordinary
rope. I'osturing and the assumption of
graceful attitudes are taught in this
manner, and finally the pupil is intro
duced to the rojKj itself.
The apparatus which a leading rope
walker uses apX'ars in the public eyes to
te simple enough, but in reality it lias to
be constructed and arranged with tho
greatest of care. The rope I generally uso
is found with a flexible core of steel wire
covered with tho best Manilla hemp, and
is about an inch and three-quarters in
diameter. It is several hundred yards
in length, and the cost may be 500. The
roe is coiled from either end on two
large windlasses, and when supported by
two liigh poles the windlasses are turned
until the rope is stretched perfectly
taut. It takes me, as a rule, several days
to adjust this simple apparatus to jcrfee
tion. The balancing pole is made of ash,
is about twenty-six feet long and weiglis
some forty or fifty pounds.
I am often asked as to my sensations
when walking the rope; but if by that
is meant whether I feel fear or nervous
ness, I must answer decidedly in the
negative. When walking I look some
eighteen or twenty feet ahead of me,
and whistle softly or hum a snatch of a
song, as the humor may seize mo. I also
Invariably keep time in my Btep to the
music the band is nlavincr. and I find
that helps mo wonderfully in preserving
my balance. With my own weight and
that of the balancing iole there must be
about 5JJU pounds bearing on the rone.
which naturally gives considerably, tliis
sagging being one of the chief difliculties
we have to encounter in keemnr our
balance. I prefer to perform in the open
ajr.
Nowadays J never practice, and even
my most difficult tricks, such as turning
a somersault over a chair placed in the
middle of the rope and landing with my
feet on the other side of it. are usually
performed without premeditation, just as
the whim seizes pie. Ihis enables me
without effort to vary my programmes at
every performance, and prevents them
from becoming monotonous to me,
I
couJd remain a year or even longer with
out ever setting foot on a rone and then
go on and tread it as safety as though 1
had leen in constant practice.
li l myseii ao not ieei nervous, I am
afraid the many persons I have carried
on my back across the rope have felt a
trifle perturbed, save when they have
been professional assistants. In reality
there 3 nothing In the world for them to
he afraid of. All they have' to do is to
sit perfectly still, refrain from clutching
me too tightly around thp peck, ant
leave the rest to inc. When I am carry
ing any one over for the first time I chat
to him continuously on any indifferent
subjects i can minis aooui. anu try in
this manner to relieve his anxiety, and I
always caution mm against looUm
downward when in miq air. Somehow,
though, he never seems ouite happy, and
I always detect a gasp of relief when the
end of the rope and the platform are
reached. More than once the victim has
devoutly exclaimed: "rseyer again!
My well known trip oyer Niagara falls
was doubtless productiye of nervousness
to those gentlemen whom 1 carried over
on my back, and for myself it was pne
of the experiences of piy life. J wfs
elevated some J50 feet above the torrent
and had to walk a distance of pearly 1,200
leet. ihe rope ltseir was unlike that
which I use at the present time. It was
formed entirely of liemp, and was about
three inches in thickness, and its adjust
ment in place was, in its way, quite an
engineering feat. The rope cost several
thousand dollars, ana remained in posi
tion for nearly two years. I have walked
across enveloped in a sack made of
blankets, have wheeled a barrow across,
turned somersaults, cooked a dinner, and,
as 1 have said, carried a man over on mv
back. It is doubtful whether I shall ever
repeat this performance. New York
Star.
Nothing but fJmbarger.
Occasionally harrowing sights of the
sufferings of the survivors of shipwrecks
are published, and it makes one s blood
run cold to hear of people out for days
in an open boat with 'only two crackers
and a bucket of water to a man, and as
the days pass by, and no friendly sail
comes in sight, the rations are reduced
to one cracker and two buckets of water,
and at last lots are drawn to decide as to
which of the party is in the best condi
tion, etc But all these stories pale into
insignificance compared to the sufferings
of t-apt. Stott and the crew of the
steamer Howena, who got aground on.
Lake river lately while after a raft of
piling- They were fast in tho mud for
four days with nothing to eat but Liffl
burger cheese. What their sufferings
were no pen can describe. Portland
Oregon ian.
lie Kecpa a Scrap Book.
I hear from Rome that the German
emperor only looks to advantage on foot.
lie "sits low," the backbone being short.
With this the legs are long. His figure.
therefore, is an ungraceful one for rid
ing, the knees advancing far toward the
horse's head, and the legs and thighs
forming an acute angle, lie lias given
up wine and beer drinking, does not eat
much and absorbs quantities of tea. II is
face was worn and showed fatigue wheq
he was in Italy. Every morning and
evening packets of papers were placed
on a desk in his sitting room. He
glanced over all that was about himself,
and when he had done so paragraphs of
.-hl h ho was the subject wero cut out
lir a secretary and pasted into a scrap
rix. London Truth.
Horses on Soowshoco.
Snowshoes have been worn for years
by horses on the Orovplo and Quincy
mail route during the winter months.
It would be impossible for them to travel
over mo deep snows witnout tneir aid.
i horse that is accustomed to wearing
them will travel tire and sU miles on
hour, where it would bo Impossible to go
that distance in a week without them.
T lie shoes are made of thin steel plate,
about nine by eleven inches, fastened on
the lioofs with clamps, ine horses are
shod with Ions heel corks which go
t':rt-..rj, t!i nyyjriuVs,' rcl preveri
f . . . - i
TEMPORARY MARRIAGES.
Persian Couples That Contract Matrtmoa
for a HpeclOd Time.
A writer in The Philadelphia North
American describes ono marriage custom
among tho Persians which would hardlv
met t with favor iu this country. A Pei"
siaa coupla may enter into honorable
matrimony for any specified time a day,
a week, a month, six months or longer.
A priest and u written contract aro re
quired, as in the usual form, and a
dowry and present bestowed. Whether
the transaction is entered upon for a mat
ter of days or ycara, at its termination
each one goes their way free of all
further obligations toward each other.
This form of marriage is indulged in
largely by travelers and men whose voca
tions take them from place to place. A
mixed party of travelers men, women
and children arrive at a village. The
susceptible heart of one of the gentlemen
is touched by the charms of some rustic
belle. The villago priest is summoned
forthwith, and the young lady's father
invited to tho caravansarai.
"I wish to be united in matrimonv to
Jrour honored daughter, the light of Mo
lammed, oh, my father," says the smit
ten traveler. 'Inshallah."
"Bismillah!" returns the parent, "for
how long?"
ror three weeks, on, my rather, says
the traveler, "and I will make the settle
ment ten tomans five tomans down and.
fivo upon our return from Meshed, tho
holy, three weeks hence, when your
aaugnter snail oe returned, thrice blessed
from having made with us a pilgrimage
to inman uizaa sanctuary.
"What! ten tomans pooh, pooh!
screams the father derisively, and mak
ing little of tho advantages of the pil
grimage to Meshed. "My daughter is a
jewel and tho belle of the village. The
settlement must be 100 tomans cash
down."
Tho prospective bridegroom and the
father of the ypung lady r the case pow
argue and squabble for probably an
hour, at the end of which time they
compromise on thirty tomans and three
quarters. Tho priest draws up a mar
riage contract then and there, which the
groom and tho bride s parents sign. In
it is stated the exact terms of the mar
riage, the amount of the settlement, and
tho time the contract is to expire. The
priest is fed, the settlement money paid
over to the father, and the blushing
priao, who has had nothing to say m
tho matter whatever, is handed over to
her husband. She is mounted on an
ass or bundled into a kejaveh and ac
companies the party to Meshed.
Three v.Teeks later the travelers halt
at the. same village on their return. The
bride of three weeks slides off her donkey,
kisses her husband s hands and returns
to her pa rents' roof. She is now a
charming young widow, ana porscsses
thirty tomans and three-quarters, besides
an extra toman or two presented by her
husband at parting if he has been pleased
wiin ncr conduct as a spouse. With
thi3 snug sum, and the r.dditional charms
of her new condition, she pf courso very
soon maes mincemeat pf some worthy
ypung peasant's heart and settles down
for life. It sometimes happens, how
ever, that the vpung bride takes ad van
tage. of the temporary marriage to steal
away her husband s heart, and then at
the old home a new marriage contract is
drawn up and she becomes his lifelong
ueipmeet.
A Woman on Kissing.
it nas Decn tne gaiiant Habit of men,
irom time immemorial, to comment un
favorably on tho habit which women
have of indulsrinsr in the useless distribur
tion pf kisses among themselves, but Jt
is not pften that the animadversion of
the erring sex itself is visited on the same
theme. A critical young lady, however,
was recently heard expatiating vigor
ously against this senseless custom, "Do,
ior goouness saKe, 6n.e remarKea, "Bay
something about the 6illy way that
women have of kissing each other every
time tney get togetner. it twenty women
wero to meet in the street every last pne
of them would have to kiss the Other
nineteen, and there would be let me see
-$80 kisses worse than thrown away,
for probably in ten minutes the whole
party would separate into squads and go
off talking about each other. When you
see one or tnese very violent misceuane-
y violent misceuane-1
ous kiss-everytliing-witliin-sight kind of
woman, it is safe to set her down aaal
fraud, which she generally
is. If 1 had
my way, tossing shpuld be confined to
family use and for medicinal purnoses.
Now. don't you put my name to all this
or I will kiss you right on Washington
stTcet tho very first chance I have."
Then the talk ran off on pther kinds of
kissing, and a story was told of a young
lady who kissed a baby held in its father 'e
arms; tnen in a moment of temporary
insanity or abstraction she 6tood on tip
toe and kissed the papa. Realizing in
stantly what a dreadful thing she had
done, she wheeled around and kissed the
baby s mamma, who was standing near.
and retired in good order. Her satirical
sister squelched the poor ypung woman
as they left the house by- asking her t
she didn't want to go. back and finish it
by kissing the hired girL Indianapolis
Journal.
A Surfeit of Beauty.
It is doubtful if there is any one state
in America containing so many pretty
women as California and any one con-
so few as New York. As ono
walks down Kearny or Montgomery
streets in San Francisco, one becomes ajr
most surfeited by the unrelieved ranks
of pretty girls, with, heir round, plump
figures, their vivid coloring, ana deli
cate, regular features. They are fre
quently painted, but they are triumphs
of nature over art for all that, and could
well atiora to aiscara the roujre pots.
They do not dress as well as they might,
but their figures are so delightful; thev
look such thorough women, instead of
suggesting a 6tuffed fasluon plate, that
one is willing to forgive San Francisco
icr lack of good dressmakers, -Gertrude
Franklin Atherton in San Francisco Ajv
gonaut,
Ice Made with CoaL
The various cold storago companies
now springing up over the south and
west promise to work wonders in trade
and household affairs. The anhydrous
ammonia, which is their cooling agent,
comes from the soft coal used in making
gas. It is driven off tn process of cool
ing. It costs nothing but for fixtures to
refine and make uso of it, A ton of coal
yields twenty gallons of ammoniated
water, from which the ammonia U
separated in vapor, then forced into
liquefaction, by a pressure of about 120
pounds to the square incli. When al
lowed to return to gas, it takes away the
heat of whatever it touches.- As it can
be sent through pipes and come back to
rs usa over ana over prin, there u
MIKE SCHNELLBACHER.
Wagon und 111 tick smith Shop.
Wagon,. Buggy,
Machine ami Plow
Horseshoeing
A Specialty. He uses tho
II 1 i I i , I . 1
jiorscsnoe, me uesi i lorscMioe lor Hie
Farmer, or for Fast F.iving nnd City
purposes, ever invented. It is mad.- so
nyone can can put on sharp or H it corks
:.s needed for wet nnl slippery roads, or
-niooth dry roads. Call ami Exiiiiiinc
hese Shoes and you will have no other.
J. Wi :SchneHbacher,
Tith St., I'lattsmouth, Neb.
ALFRED DOLGE'r::
Celebrated French Slippers
R. SHERWOOD'S
. IKEItvI PSTER,
Practical
Piani ana Organ Tuner
AND RKPAIKKK.
First-class work guaranteed. Also deal
er in Pianos nnd Organs. Oilice at lioeck's
furniture store. Plattsmouth. Nebraska
Thoroughly cleanse the blood, which la th
fountain of health, by usintr Dr. Pierce's Gold.
en Aieaicai .Discovery, and
fair akin, buoyant spirits.
srood diireation.
sod viror will be established.
uoyant spirits, una DOUliy
health
UOldeu Medical .Discovery cures all humora.
from the common pimnle. blotch, or eruDtion.
to the worst Scrofula, or blood-poison. Es-
teclalljr has it proven ita efficacy la curios
alt -rheum or Tetter, Eczema, ErysipelaX
Fever sores. Hin- Joint Disease. Scrofulouil
Sores and Swellings, Enlarged Glands, Qoj
tre or Thick Neck, and Eatinsr Borei er
Ulcere,
" Golden Medical Discovery cures
tion (which, is Scrofula of tbe.Lu
Consumo-
i.ungs, py its
bv
wonderful blood - purifying, invigorating.
ind nutritive properties, if taken in time,
or Weak Lungs. Spitting of Blood. Short
ness Of Breath. Catarrh in the Head. Bron.
chitls. Severe Coughs, Asthma, and kindred
affections, it is a sovereign remedy. It
promptly cures the severest Coughs.
or Torpid Liver. Biliousness, or "Liver
Complaint' Dyspepsia, and indigestion, it la
an uneaualed remedy. Sold bv drua-sriata.
J"rio $1.00. or tlx bottles for 15-00.
BUSINESS IM HECTOR Y.
ATTOKNKW
S. F. THOMAS.
AttoFnev-at-rLaw ami N'otui-v Puhlte. '
Office In
Fitzgerald Block. I'luttsmoulh. Neb.
ATTOKNliY,
A. N.
SULLIVAN.
Attorney-at-Law.
Will jfive prompt attention
to all lUHliifts Intriistpii t. -;
uuiun nincK. nasi side. riRttsiiioiith. Neb.
R.KOCEKIES.
, CHRIS. WOHLFAKTII,
Staple and 1 ancy (;ro?r'es. Glas
lassware and
Crockery. Flour nnd Feed.
JULIUS PEPPERBERG,
MANUFACTURER OF AND
WHOLESALE & RETAIL
DEALER IN TUy,
m . y. . .
UllOlCeSl HraiMS M I ;l(TarS
O '
including our
Flor de Pepperbergo and 'Buds
FULL LINE OF
TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES
always in stock. Nov. 26. 1885.
C. F. SMITH,
The Boss Tailor
Main St., Over Merges' Shoe Store.
Has the best and most complete stock
of samples, both foreign and domestic
woolens that ever came west of Missouri
river. Isote thesg prices: Business suits
from $18 to $83, dress suits, $23 to $45.
pants $4, $5, $6, $0.50 and upwards.
t"Will guaranteed a fit.
Prices Defy Comoelilion.
fEL BROWNE.
LA.W OFFICE.
P rsonal at'eutlon
to all Business Enlrust-
?o my care.
XOTAHY
Title Esamiued.
IX OKF1CB.
Ahstarcts Compiled. In-
surauce Written, heal Estate Sold.
Better Facilities for making Farm "Loans than
Any Other Ageacj.
PlaltMiuoutb, - Nebraska
Dr. C- A. Marshall.
IResidexit Dentist.
Preservation of the Natural Teeth' a
Specialty. Anesthetics given for Pain
less Filling or Extraction of Teets,
Artificial teeth made on Gold. Silver.
Rubber or Celluloid Platc6. r.nd inserted
' as soofl aa teith are extracted when de
' sirertJ .
i ll t warranted, Prices resviri.
Eo
in
For suitable Holiday
fine! line of
Silk and Cashmere Mufflers
nnd Silk Handkerchiefs at
Fancy Linen Table
in
Stamped Gcd
a; i.l
T;n. -
CLOAKSiPLUSH SACQUES
we have placed specially
tercst the purchaser. Fol
low
HANGING LAMPS, FANCY U!'S AND SAUCKRS
and Fancy Glassware
partment.
fee
HAS THE LARGEST
OPEY
FEAK.JLMAKT,
FURNITURE, STOVES
TIKWAEE jSlITD
HOUSEHOLD GOODS.'
In the city, which he is o fieri i-g at
A complete line oi' "Window Curtains at a sacrifice.
Frames in great variety. You can got everything you
You can buy it on the installment plan, pay so much each
month and you will soon have a line iiirni.shed house
and hardly realize the cost. Call and see.
SIXTH STREET, LET. MAIN AM)
it Will Be $15 in Yoiir Insifle PocM
IF YOr WILL CALL AND SKE THE LAUGK STOrK OF
DIAK10HDS. WATCHES.
AND JEWELRV
That Frank Carruth fe Son has before purchasing Christmas
Presents. Prices are such that it would not pay to cross the
street, let alone going to Omaha, this year. All they ask is
AST OFFORTUTZT'TI
To show you the Fine Goods and Give You Prices on every
thing you could ask for in the line, which will be sold if they
have an opportunity.
J LITTLE GASH
Will go farther tin's year than ever before. Don't Fail to
call and see the Display of fine goods.
FRANK CAfiBUTtt SON.
X5ovy Blocls, Plattsmouth..
B. A"iM.:Tlme ITable
No
No,
No,
OINO HAS.
No, 2. i -.33 p. m.
No. 4. in
No. 6.-7 :13 p. m.
No. 10. 9 :45 a. ro.
1. 5 :io a m.
3", -6 :40 i, in.
5.-6 :47 a. m.
7.-7 -P n. in.
No
No. 9.-6:17 p. tn.
i0. Il 6;27a.m. . , .
AU train run dally by war of Omaha, except
Nov 7 and 8 which run to and Irom Schuyler
daily except Sunday. .
N. Is tub to Pes Junction at 3fta m
.
&
J
Presents w aro
showing
very reasonable prices.
Sets and some pretty dtins
el 'i'idies. On our
prices,
low enough
to in-
through
our Queens ware I)e-
AND FINEST STOCK OK
Prices
that will make
them sell.
Picture
need.
2v ZbT,
i i.AiTf j ( mi, j 1 1 j.
1E.
J. H. EMMONS, 31. D.
H0VCE0PATI1IC
Physician !Sypt)r
Office over Weeo'a t'm I f
KelJenc In Dr. Bcr'" if "
'liroife DiomsM and .
Children a npciall v '
f- nf 7 to. pn.f
a
VN--