The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 03, 1895, Image 8

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    CURED HIM.
HI* mil Taka* • Knit On* of III*
Fosmnonla.
Tho Imagination la probably a more
potont faotor In our everyday life
than most people would be willing to
admit. Tho other day a man com
plained to the wife of hit bosom of
feeling dreadfully sharp pains shoot
ing botwcon the shoulders and
through the chest She ridiculed
him, for he is a man who never (fets
sick and lias no sympathy with coin
plain injj people.
“I shouldn't wonder if you had the
pneumonia,” ssid she. "Anil It would
serve you right—staying out every
night of your life after 1 o'clock in
the morning."
"No doubt, but the possibility of
being a widow within three days
seems to please you. Dou't count
your ehiokons before thoy'ro hatched,
my dear. I'm not dying yet"
"llul pneumonia is nearly always
fatal,” she remarked pleasantly. “Of
oourse I would give you the regula
tion allowance of allver handles,
flowers, etc. I always thought a
plain ptata with name, dates of birth
and death uro about the correct
things. I saw a nice second-hand
one in a window that might be altered
very easily."
liut he was so mad by this time that
ha missed the quiet laugh that fol
lowed him down stairs. The moro he
thought about it, liowover, tho more
he felt convinced that he had the
pneumonia. He atopped in a drug
store and the druggist said it was in
digestion. Then he got about a dol
lar's worth of patent medicine and
lay down in hla hack office and took
it all day. lie felt worse. He stopped
at his doctor's on ills way home and
was examined for pneumonia. After
being thumped and pounded for half
an hour ha was told by the doctor
that his lungs were all right, for
which he paid tS. He got a prescrip
tion for a cold, wont homo and, lying
down, went to oloep and forgot to
take it. The next morning ho was
all right.
"I knew I’d cure you," said his
wife.
THE FORSAKEN.
Th* Uuth-Kipnlinmd Man Don Not
t ry u*or Its P«f >•.
Wo went to the play the other
nlj-ht, Mary and I. It waa "Leah,
the Forsaken." On the way home
tender-hearted Mary erled softly over
the aad fate of the heroine. I chided
her, saying In my oold-bloodod way:
■■ "Wasn't it best to drop tho curtain
When the romanee died out of Leah’s
life? Suppose she had lived and mar -
fled her lludolph. She would have
beeome a blotvay garlic-eater and
Jy, Rudolph would have taken to beer.
K Better stop living before the love
stops."
Mary retorted that I was only the
% orlslng abont married life, and then
I told her this story:
Lately 1 have bean watching the
sequel to an elopement The elope
ment ooourred fifty-two years ago.
The young oouple married and set
tled i down. They seomod made for
- each other. Their love was great
They were people of education and
refinement They had never had the
hard struggle for a living to ooarson
them. Vft this pair have lod but a
oat-and-dog life. For half a century
they have wearied their neighbors
with their mutual recriminations.
The woman was a few years older
than the man, and ho has resented
the faot for fifty years and fancied
himself imposed upon. The wife has
been In bad health for some years,
and the husband has been anxiously
waiting for her to die. He an
nounces his intention of seeking a
yonng wife as soon as the old one is
gone. He continually denounces to
others what he calls his wife’s selfish
ness In asking him to promlso that he
will not marry again.
Oh, yes, love is beautiful. But the
novelists and tho dramatists know
their business when they write
"finis" or ring down the curtain as
the hero and heroine turn away
from the marriage altar.
Gounod sad Moudolsshon.
While still a young man, Gounod
went to Leipsio and played some of
his music to Mendelsshon, to whom
he had been introduced by the sister
of the maestro during his stay in
Rome, lie was sitting at the piano,
executing oue of his masses, when
Mendelsshon suddenly rose and inter
rupted him. "Was that composed by
you, young man?" he asked. "Yes,
my dear master," was tho reply.
"Astonishing!" rejoined Mendelsshon.
“Why, Cherubini could not do better. ’’
At that moment Cherubini was an un
contested authority. The compliment
was, therefore, all the moro precious.
Hour! l)ld Not Car*.
‘ In n supplementary (third) volume
of Liszt’s letters, the greatest pianist
relates an anecdote, which, while
omitted in all the Mozart biographies,
was told him on the best authority
at Prague. At the first performance
there of “Titus," the emperor, in
whose honor the opera had been com*
posed, left the house after the first
act. The director, in great consterna
hastened to inform Mozart, who re
plied calmly. “So much the better,
then we shall have one donkey less in
the theater.
Wirt Railroad Car Saak
Wire car seats are being experi
mentally introduced by the North
British railway into a number of
their carriages. The seat is composed
of a series of ' specially manufactured
steel rings knit together and firmly
Stretched, the chief features claimed
being comfort and durability, al
though an important point is the fa
cility with rfhich the seats can be
rigged up,
diting the pi
materially expe
of coach conatruo
A GORILLA DISSECTED.
Tin l'onoh Noil tlm l.ungi Produce* thi
drill Hour.
An autopsy wan held upon the body
of dumbo, the gorilla which died late
ly at 1 Ids ton. Professor Franklin
Dexter, nf tho Harvard medicul school
and Professor Councilman, formerly
of Johns Hopkins university of Haiti
more, now professor of pathology at
Harvard, conducted the examination.
Consumption was found to liavo been
tho cause of denth. The doctors de
cided that dumbo was ubout 40 years
old, and that he had had tho ^crmi of
tubercular consumption of the slow
variety, which is a disease the Hlm
ladae are particularly subjact to in
this cllmnto.
One discovery was that of a sort of
a pouch or bag In tho chest, in front
of the lungs, and connected by means
of an independent vulvo with tho tra
chea, or windpipe. This is undoubt
edly the organ employed by the go
illas in making t heir peculiar roar.
The brain weighed 17 ounces. In
its structure it bears a striking re
semblance to the human brain, being,
however, broador at tho base and
narrower at the top, and exhibiting a
far loss number of convolutions. The
brain will be subjected to a variety of
delicate tests and a minute micro
scopic scrutiny.
Tho doctors found a lot of minor
points to interest them. Pro
fessor Dexter und his assistants
intend to make an exhaustive com
parison betwoen the gorilla and a hu
man being. In life (Inmbo measurod
Q feet 0 Inches in height, and in
health, weighed 108 pounds. His
arms wore 1 feet in length, and his
muscles of tho texture of wire rope.
DIRE THREATS OF SCIENCE.
How the Cliemliit Would lake Away
the .lojre ot Human Life.
Wonderful tilings are going to be
done by the development of synthetic
chemistry between now and the
year S,000, If Professor llortholot, the
French savant, is to bo believod.
Tho food and drink producing ani
mals and vegetables will not then bo
encouraged to exist for human life,
but food and drink will be manu
factured direct and to order by man
himself, and served In highly
concentrated tablets, vest-pocket
size. A person may then carry
about him two or three
table d'hote dinners complote, from
blno point oysters or little neck
dams to crackers, cltecso and colfoe,
and tobacco, and with all his wine
and cognao Included. This change
will bo brought about, it Is said, by
the remarkable progress boing made
In compounding food and drink from
their constituent elements—carbon,
hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. It
has advanced so far already that the
preparation of beefsteak from its ele
ments is assured, and nicotine, the
esseutlul principle of tobacco, has
been produced from coal tar.
Life, indeed, would not bo worth
the living should the professor have
Ills way. The ready-made tablets of
food aud • drink would be horribly
alike to the eye, the taste, and the
understanding; eating and drinking
would be purely mechanical; good
fellowship and wit and imagination
would depart and existence would be
utterly material and dull.
RAISED HIS SALARY.
Because the Doorkeeper Refuted to Ad
mit Him Upon HU Own Stage.
ft. R. Jacobs is a great stickler for
discipline, and his rules are very
strict and must be obeyed. One of
the most rigid of these rules is to the
effect that no ono not connected with
the theater or tho company shall go
back on the stage without a pass
from the house manager.
Once Jacobs visited his New York
theater, after a long trip among his
outside houses, and he started back
on the stage to see some one. In his
abseuce Manager Kdwards, of the
house, had engaged a new stage
doorkeeper, and the man had never
seen Mauagor Jacobs.
“Here, where are you going?” de
manded the new man.
“On tho stage, of course. I’m Mr.
Jacobs.”
“I don’t care who you are, you must
get a pass from Mr. Edwards. Those
are my orders.”
Instead of becoming angry, Mr.
Jaoobs went around and got a pass to
go on his own stage.
“What salary do you pay that man?"
he asked.
Edwards told him and he ordered
it increased at once. He admired a
man who knew his business.
The M lnnowing null,
“Fifty-three years ago I invented
the winnowing mill now in common
use,” says Moses Gilman, of South
Sangerville, Maine. “If I had had it
patented I might have realized a for
tune from it, as all the machines that
have beon built since have been upon
the same principle. Even the thresh
ing maehino separators which have
superseded the old time flail use the
winnowing mill substantially as I first
made it for clearing the chaff from
the grain. I have invented many
other things that were valuable, but
I never ashed for a patent” Mr.
Gilman, though 7? years old, is still
at it, inventing, and says if his
strength and reason hold out he is
going to produce some valuable new
ideas yet
A Legal Equivalent.
After their engagement had been
broken off a Michigan man sued his
quondam sweetheart for the recovery
of certain jewelry which she refused
to return. The judge in deciding the
case asked the lover if he had ever
kissed his intended bride. After he
had admitted that he had done so,
the judge dismissed the suit, holding
that kisses and canesses were a legal
equivalent for presenta
SHIFTED RINGS,
I And Almost llroko s Pawnbroker's
Heart.
Another clevor trick that came near
being successful wan that of a man
who went into a pawnbroker’s with a
magnificent ruby ring1.
“How much do you want?” asked
the pawnbroker.
“What will you givo?" answered the
customer.
After examining the ring the pawn
broker offered 8300, which, consider
ing the jowol was a gem, wasn't too
much.
“No," answered the man, “I must
have 8400."
This tho pawnbroker refused, and
tlie man replaced the ring on bis
tingcr. ,1 ust as lie reached the door
he turned back, saying: “Oh, very
well; I only really needed 8300.” Ho
handed back the ring, and the pawn
broker counted out six crisp fifty-dol
lar bills, lie was just on tho point
of handiug them over when a clever
assistant whispered: “Examine that
ring.”
The pawnbroker took the hint, and
upon examination found tho ring to
be in every respect the samo as the
ono previously inspected, except the
ruby, which was mere glass. The
settiug and the diamonds were gen
uine.
During the moment, for it wasn’t
longer, that the man had turned ho
htid substituted one ring for the
other. Tho pawnbroker, not satis
fied with having escaped a serious
loss, had tho man arrestod. When
searched ho had throe similar rings
in his possession. The judge, how
ever, had no sympathy with the pros
ecutor, und after stating that there
was no evidence against the prisoner
in such a case, discharged him.
AFTER MANY YEARS.
Forty-Five Tear* of • Man'* Life •
Doll Illsnb
A Portland narrator has a story to
toll of scientific as well as popular
interest, bearing upon the little
understood machinery of that most
wondrous organism, the human brain.
"In tho village of Lube," says the
Portland raconteur, “lives Clem
Wallis. When he was a boy about 15
years of age he went out to his
father's pasture to catch a frisky eolt.
As ho was about to place a halter
around his nock the colt kicked him
it the head, making a ragged
wound. The wound healed, but
in soon became apparent the
man was slightly demented,
and his hallucination took
peculiar forms. lie would travel up
and down the bay on the steamboats,
claiming proprietorship of the latter
and refusing to pay fare. Tho steam
boat mon humored him, as he was
considered daft, and he was tho butt
of the small boys’ jokes and banter,
lie has lived in the village since and
is now 00 years of ago. About six
weeks ago the local physicians deter
mined to experiment on his case.
They found that a portion of his
skull had been forced into contuot
with the brain by tho blow, and by a
skillful operation removed the pres
sure. Strange to say, the man has
now recovered his reason, and tho
first question he asked when he re
covered from tho operation was, ‘Did
tho colt get away?’ Wallis is per
fectly sane now, but forty-five years
of his life are a perfect blank to
him.” __
ON A CHERRY STONE.
A Talented Convict Carves Ills l’etltlon
for a Pardon on One.
Gesa lierger, the actor and news
paper man, has a picture in caligraphy
that has a remarkable history'. It is
In size 30x42 inches, and is the work
of Joseph Loew the most noted coun
terfeiter that the Austrian govern
ment over know. When an applica
tion is made for a pardon in Austria
tho red tape policy of that country
cbmpels the applicant to address the
emperor with all his titles. Emperor
Ferdinand had about forty titles.
Loew engraved all of these names,
together with his petition for a par
don, on a cherry stone. The letters
were so fine that it required the aid
of a powerful microscope to decipher
them. One duy when the emperor
visited the prison Loew in person pre
sented a cherry stone to the emperor
and told him what it contained. The
emperor made an examination, and
was so amazed at the work that he
gave him an unconditional pardon.
Not only did ho pardon him, but
gave him a position as a detective to
trail down counterfeiters. Loew was
a well-informed man in all the arts
and rascalities of counterfeiters, and
in less than two years after his par
don he ran to the earth almost every
counterfeiter in Austria, and died a
few years ago covered with detective
honors. The picture, although made
fifty years ago, is in a remarkable
state of preservation.
SMinE What They Do Not Sea.
A firm whose place of business is in
the Bowery has devised a novel
scheme of attracting1 peop'e to its
show windows. The window panes
are large and costly. On the inside
of the glass a number of lines of
green paint have been put on, so that !
they represent a broken window !
plate. Every detail has been so clev- I
erly perfected that the deception is ;
complete, and the curiosity of the •
wayfarers is so excited that they I
step to the window and touch it, only |
to find that it is a mockery. ' :
__ ' i
A Long-Felt Want.
A druggist's clerk in Boston has
succeeded in making a medicine
which will deprive a cat of its voice
without injuring it in the least.
Seven large Tom cats were experi
mented upon last week. They sat on
the peak of a roof and made frightful
faces at each other for four hours
without uttering a sound.
CHARLIE IS LOST.
And 111* Dear Aunt Mopes for the Re
turn of the Wsndorer.
Charlie's aunt came into Chicago
police headquarters and wanted the
department to go out and hunt for
Charlie, whoso last name is O'Hrien.
Missing children are reported every
hour of the day at headquarters, and
they didn't see anything unusual in
Charlie’s disappearance until the
facts came out. They turned Charlie's
aunt over to Detective Swan.
The detective, witli due regard for
the sorrow at the thought of the lost
Charlie, prepared to ask a number of
questions. Tears almost welled up
in his eyes as lie pictured the little
lost one wandering helplessly about
in the streets of a great city.
"What time yesterday did you miss
him?" lie gently inquired.
"Sure, it wasn't yesterday at all I
missed him," said Charlie’s aunt.
“How long ago was it?" softly
asked the detective.
"Three years ago come last Mon
day,” was the answer.
Mr. Swan foil back in his chair with
a dull thud. "Three years, did you
say?” and he looked out of the win
dow so lie could have a laugh all by
himself. "Have you a picture of
him?” asked Mr. Swan, and the caller
produced a tintype of a clever-loolcing
little chap.
"That was taken some years ago,”
said Charlie’s aunt. "lie was six
years old then.”
“And how old was he when he dis
appeared?" asked Mr. Swan.
"Ho was over IT,” was the answer.
Mr. Swan gasped again. "And
then lie's about ?l now,” lie re
marked. “And then he’s been miss
ing three years and you don't know
where ho is and we’ve got the picture
of a hoy six years old to linl him
with. That picture looks about as
much like Charlie as I do. The best
tiling you cm do if you want to find
Charlie is to advertise.”
A BIU BtKVAN I UlhL.
Hxpnrlence of n Clubman Who Whs Fou:l
of I rautlcal Joking.
A certain clubman, who attempted
to play a practical joke, was non
plussed in a very unexpected way.
Hi- says: “l am very particular about
fastening the doors and [windows of
m3' house, I do not intend to leave
them open at nights as an invitation
to burglars to enter. You see, I was
robbed once in that way last year,
and 1 never mean to be again: so
when I go to bed l like to be sure that
every door and window is securely
fastened.
“hast winter my wife engaged a
big, strong country girl, and the new
comer was very careless about the
doors at night. On two or thieeoc
I casions I came down stairs to find a
window up or the back door un
locked. I cautioned her, but it did
no good. I therefore determined to
frighten her. I got some false whisk
ers, and one night about 11 o'clock I
crept down the back stairs to tho
kitchen, where she was. She had
turned down the gas, and was in her
chair by the fire fast asleep, as I
could tell by her breathing, but tho
moment I struck a match she woke.
“I expected a great yelling' and
screaming, but nothing of the sort
took place. She bounced out of her
seat with a ‘you villain!' on her lips,
seized a chair by the back, and before
I had ma le a move she hit me over
the head, forcing me to my knees. I
tried to get up, tried to explain who
I was, but iu vain. Ueforo I could
get out of the room she struck me
again, and it was only after I had
tumbled up tho back stairs that she
gave tlie alarm. Then she came up
to my room, rapped at the door and
coolly announced:
“ ‘Mr. -, please got up. I’ve killed
a burglar.’ ”
Seeing at Kiglit.
Nocturnal creatures assume nigln
activity for some other reason than
that they cannot see by day or that
they see better by night. The bat
sees admirably in the brightest sun
light, as any one knows who has
ever tested one by poking a stick at
it. It will open its mouth and make
an angry grab at the stick, when it is
not near by several inches. Professor
Colies says it is the same with tho
owl. They see perfectly in bright
sunlight, and better at night than
most creatures.
A prisoner in India recently, on be
ing released revenged himself on the
assistant commissioner who had sen
tenced him by cutting off one half of
his mustache while he was sleeping
out of doors on allot night It was
then found that thero was no way of
punishing him under the penal code,
for, while cutting the hair of a native
is punishable as dishonoring the per
son, there is no such provision for
Englishmen, and the bodily harm
doue was too slight to be considered
%n offense.
The Sam-* Tiling.
An anthropologist who makes a
specialty of the habits of women ex
presses surprise that so many of them
should allow their pictures to be
published in patent medicine adver
tisements, but a philosopher ought
to know that it amounts to the same
thing in the long run whether you
get your picture printed for being
great or for being cured of catarrh or
liver complaint
One Hope Litfi
The second was despondent “The
other fellows have agrled to our
terms,” he faltered. Th^ pugilist
was obviously disconcerted, but his
buoyant, courageous nature at once
asserted itself. "There is yet a
chance,” he exclaimed, joyfully "the
governor of the state, you know.”
Thus despair was eventually com
pelled to take flight
F. E. and H. V. Ey.
Change of time of passenger trains
iVo. 3 and 4 to connect with the flyer on
! the C. and N. W. for Chicago and points
east. A doling car will be rut on the
Northwestern tiai.i so that passengers
can get supoer leaving the Vahev, also
breakfast going into Chicago on "A La
Carte" plan, psssenge s to pay 'or what
they get. "a -ser ers going to Omaha
can do so and get home in two days in
stead of th ee as lietetofore.
W. J. Done:;, Agent.
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
NOTICE rolt PCCVCA" 'ON.
I and Office at O'Neil.n,:c., I
Deoeiiilier'8T. t
No *ce tfl hereby f'ven 1 tint the o'lowlnff
I'Uiiia <1 sctl'ei' lias Ined notice ot ii's Intention
to make final pi oof in sunpnrt oi i' H elaim,
ami that sail! jnoor will tie made beioru tlio
refi ter amt rei ei' er at O'Neill Neb., on
j.r > ary 10, ISO.',, viz:
DAN !EI, TOOI11I,I„ one of the heirs of Dan
iel P. Toohill. dneeasetl, It. K. No. Plot),
Ko- the S\V NW >a and NW StV 'i.Sec. 3,
Tv n Itange 11 w.
I-iu names the '’oMo.vbig witnesses to Drove
tils eon.Pomes re :deui e upon mid enUiva
tlon or said lend, v .:: Henrv llo le, John
Wynn, .lames Wynn, .lames Oallageer, all of
O'Neill. Neb.
SJ-li JOHN A. HAUMON. Keglster.
NOTICE.
Dei films National Hunk. Paddock Hawley
ton Company. National Hank of Sioux City,
Iowa, Qumcy National Hank, and Michigan
glove Co., defendants, will take notice mat
Jane A. Dimock. plaintiff, lias tiled a petition
in the (list rict court of llolt county, Nebras
ka, against said defendants, impleaded with
Joan J. WcCatTerty. Mary A. McCafferty,
Timothy Dwyer, Marv A. Dwyer, The County
of Holt, Hank of Valentine. The city of
O.Neill, Lee Clai ke Andresen Hardware Co.,
Hlalr State Hank. H. C. MeEvony (real name
unknown ) Corteiyou. Ege & Vanzante. John
(i. Corl .*l)ou, A. A. Kgt (real name unknown,)
air. M. N. Vanzante (real name unknown.)
the object and prayer of which Is to foreclose
a mortgage dated February 1, is.ss, for $c>( ).(!0
and interest and tax payments, on the west
half of southwest quarter, and southeast
ouarter of southw* st quarter of section two,
low ship twenty-eight, range eleven, in said
count v.; veti by Patrick C. Murphy to Mira
J. Aobotr. and assigned to plaintiff, which
mortgage was recorded in Hook ), Page 4IJ.
of i he mortgage reeoids of said county, and
l•> have the same decreed to be a first lieu,
; id said lands sold to satisfy the same.
Vou are renuired ♦ » answer said petition on
or before the ;th day of Juiiuur', V'h>,
Dated December 17.1*1)1.
‘.'4-4 Jank A. DimoCiv. “Ia'ntiff.
Hv Munger & Courlright Atto. ncy.-t.
Notice to Non-llesident Delcunan's.
* itt A. Proffitt. Louisa A. P. lit. E ’ a
An i Co wen. T. It. Bowen, her hnsoanu. Tue
K; .i) 'I Champ investment Com pa ay, J. F.
Ktiti'aHI, Louise C. Kim hull. Georire 11.
Cbi'tiiD. Alla 1). Champ. Ceorge >V. Tinner
am Airs. George W. T rner, first name t»n
UfO' n. defendants, will take noth ethat on
i ■ dav of Novem er, IS*' . F. C. Lnuqee
Chat lea Burr To ie. trustees, plaintiffs
it’, filed a Petition in Cm disliin ourt of
county. Nebru&k.i. against said defend
•* •" he object ami v, aver of which are :«i
to* .use a cerUtii. nc.t' sij.e executed by
do i Janls Jol. i A. P»olutt and Louisa A.
IV nitt, ills wi.'e to Thu Kimhali Cnamp Tli
ve.*- nic.it Company upon ilieerst ImU* o* ihe
no, ,iw t qua • tat* o- .section four, ; nd the
c i. nr of tin* northeast quarter o.* seed ion
ii\f, in township twenty-seven, north of
u i vo ti ne, west, in holt con itv. Ne mishit,
to • < »i. e the pry incut of tie it* pioatissoiy
no j da ed August s, is.ss, for the sum o'
f‘ » »Pd in*crest i;„ the rate of seven per
• i. per aont'oi prya oie semi-amiually and
*( i per cent, a "ter maturity; that there is
i’d'‘’ due upon said notes and mortgage ac
<oi‘ dig to tnc terms thereof the sum of $»:J0
•merest at the * ;• e of ten percent, per
annum from Novem ie • 1. and plain, id's
pi; ’ that said prenr 5 may be do revel to
be sold to satis y the amount due thereon.
t o*t tire retuC-ed to answer said petition
e • o.‘ Of fore tue Vlii dav of January.
Dated Novem tier** I’si'i.
V. V. 1.01TCKB A.iU ,.«*• I.K8 lit*III*.
1 ivs.ees, Plaieti Is.
11 o •
Hv W. n. Puller, Auonu'y.
Tor...vs
Notice of 1'issolutton of Co-Partnership.
y.'i oc Is li. -ehy riven t'lntilio mi.Jnt"
sl' i '"‘rt-l(n"ie ex'st'nir lie .wren H. j. Have*
J. I„ .Mark and dalny business under ih<
I.,' "1 name and s, vie or tile O'N'olli Hour and
Iced oinpany, s this day lev.,limited .y
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Ueeeiver. | 1
iittcCLURE’S
MAuAZINI
for is;
i Volume I
begins
Decern be
1894.
A spleodlilli
Illustrated lift
'NAPOLEON,
the great feature of which villi
5EVENTY-FIVE PORTRAIIJ
of Napoleon, showing him fronyi
to death; also portraits of his la
and contemporaries and pictcia
famous battlefields; in ail nearly
200 PICTURES. 4
Begins in November and runs this
eight numbers. The
Eight Napoleon Numbers, tu
TRUE DETECTIVE STOS
by authority from the archives ol
PINKERTON DETECTIVE AOSB
Lincoln and Pinkerton (Nor. t
the Molly Maguire’s; Allan Pit
ton’s Life ; Stories of Capturcofl
robbers. Forgers, Bank-robbert
each complete in one issue, nit
SHORT STORIES BY
W. D. Howells Bret Hirte
Conan Doyle Rudyard Klpllat
Robert Barr Clark RuutS
Joel Chandler Harris and naaidl
NOTED CONTRIBUTORS.
Robert Louis Stevenson
P. Marlon Crawford Archdeacon!
Sir Robert Ball Prof. Dm»
Archibald Forbas Thomas Hat
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