CAPITAL CI IV COURIER, SATURDAY, JANUARN t8, lbyo H5S; 99 I 1, tr Handkerchiefs Expecting that ns In the past, Ladle1 Handkerchiefs would continue the most popular o( article or Holiday Gilts, we secured such a line as we are turc was never before displayed In the city. Among them j French and Irish Embroidered Hemstitched, From ioc. to $300 each. Swiss Hand Spun Linen, Hand Embroidered, From $200 to $10011 each. French Silk Bolting Cloth, Hand Embroidered, From $1.35 to $3.50 each. Hand-Made Duchessc Lace Edges, From $1.00 to $u.oo. If you arc In doubt ns to what to,buy this Is your chance. Respectfully, 133 to 139 South Eleventh Street. Intending Visitors to Europe, Watch this Space ! SEE IT NEXT9WEEK. Whitebreast Coal and Lime Co. Canon City Whitebreast Walnut Springs AND ANTHRACITE. Lime Telephone 234. Hair Plaster Cement Office, 109 South Eleventh St. For 1890 Consider Scriunijr's Magazine when you arc deciding upon your reading matter for next season. The subscription rate is low $3.00 a year. The standard of the Magazine is high, Its spirit progressive, The illustrations arc interesting and of the best. There is not space here to give even a summary of the feat ures to appear next year, but among other things there will be a NEW DEPARTMENT and ADDITIONAL PAGES, and groups of illustrated articles will be devoted to the following subjects: African Exploration nnd Travel, Life on a Modern War Ship (3 articles), Homes In City, Suburb, and Country, Providing Homes thiough Building Associations, The Citizen's Rights, Electricity In the Household, Erlcssohn, the Inventor, by Ills Authorized Biographer, Hunting, Humorous Artists, Amciican and Foreign. There 111 be 3 serials. Robert Louis Stevenson will contribute in 1890. Each subject, and there will be a great variety this year, will be treated by writers most competent to speak with authority and with interest. Readers who arc interested are urged to send for n prospectus. 25 cents a number; $1.00 for . months. Charles Scribner's Sons, 743 Broadway, New York A NE0RES3 106 YEAHS OLD, Her rrogrujr In Four Onirrntlmit Number I)n llnmlroil unit NlnMy-sli. Henenth tho sheltering roof of a faithful ton, In tlio outskirts of 8U Joseph, lives n col ored woman, Jnno Hnrvoy, who I 103 yenni of ngo. Bho naa born In Ilourbon county, Ky., on Oct. 17, 1781, to "Mammy Hnrvoy," n negro woman owned by Col. ltarvoy. For thirteen years Jnno Hnrvoy, who, Ilka most other negroes, took tho nnmo of her master, lived nlxiut tho Kentucky plantation. Then Col. Hnrvoy mndo tip his mind to lenvo Ken tucky mid vonturo tlll further west Bo ho gathered his family, consisting of nlxiut fif teen negroes, sovornl sons nnd daughters, mid started. On thoy pushed until ho halted his enrnvnu where Glasgow, Howard county, Mo., now stnuds, nnd stnked off his Inud nnd pntluutly united for tho country to grow up with him. Hut tho colonel jwilil unturo'i debt long ero tho country wns grown, nnd nil his property reverted to his eldest son, Dr. Henry Hnrvoy, whom "mnmmy" nffcctlon ntcly refers to ns "olo mnssA." Tho cllmnto of MIsKOuri seemed to ngrv with Jnno Hnrvoy, for hor strength, ngtllty nnd sturdlnorw lucroiiMl with each mralng dny. Bho worked In tho Holds, assisted tho chopjiers In tho woods, baked tho hoo enke, fetched tho ntcr, mlndetl tho children nnd rodo horsebnek Into tho settlement, with never n complaint. John Hnrvoy wns an other slnve, and a good slnvo ho was, too, If mnmmy Is to bo Mloved. Jnno was nhout 20 years old when John renllred the first throbs of n now liorn lovo. Hn was nsslduous In hU attentions, nnd tho llrst thing she know John hnd ontcrod her young lifo so thorough ly nnd completely that sho hnlled with joy mnssn's jwrmlsslon for her to become John's wife. Bo ono bright Mny morning sho took her dusky lover's hand nnd mndo tho vows tlmt ttound her to him until denth did them part. Tho union was frnught with blessings in tho shnpo of divers and sovernl pickanin nies, nnd when John hnd seen his Jnno le como n mother for tho fifth time, ho dlod. Her widowhood wns of brief duration, for as sho recalls it, In 1807 sho again lccamo n wife, nnd by this union had uliio children, seven sons nnd two dnughtots. Tho sons grow to mnuhood, and were strong, healthy men with progeny when tho war broko out. Five of these sons entered tho Union nimy, and two of them dlod on tho battle Held. Her oldest IK ing miii In now bO years of age, and lles in Hlieridnn county, Mo. At tho close of tho wnr ho choso tho name of Georgo Washington, nnd possesses that proud uamo oMn lion. Until six weeks iigoiiinmmy lived with liiti i ami her grandchildren nnd great grandchildren, but then Itoliert, who is 67 jenrs old, went down to visit her, nnd brought her Uick hoi o to his homo, nt 2,013 Mulberry street. Bho relates with jiosltlvo humor her Jourroy to t.ilsclty. In the 103 years of her exlsteneo sho had nover ridden on n railroad train, nnd, ns sho oxpressod It, "I wnr skeereil nt fust, but likeil It tol'nhln well nfter." A reporter called on Mammy Hnrvoy tho other afternoon and found that sho wns out visiting nt tho homo of her other sou, WI1 llm Bunco (who had ndoptel tho nnmo of a former muster). William lives buck of his brother Robert, nnd Is 7 1 years old. An In quiry addressed to her regarding tho number I nf l.n. .Ilrnfl, iliiurtiinitnt.lu Pnlt.nH ..' . old lady. "t . , " uO said slowly, "1 don' 'ractly know how many I hov got. I counted over a hundred gmu'chillun ono day when I got tor thinkln' 'lout it. I'vo hnd fourteen chll luu, an' all ob 'em' hod lots o' chilluu, too. My youngest darter's got fo'teon, an' sho nln't but llfty-fo' yenrs ole." Hero her sou Robert Interrupted her nnd (stated that sho tins 1!K1 grandchildren, with several precincts to bo heard from. Mnmmy wns not ipilte sure nliout It, but lielloved nt last accounts that sho hnd forty-six great grandchildren anil twelve groat-great-gnind- children. If this is so, and there Is no reason to doubt It, then sho Is rmxmslblo for 100 people hi four generations, n record of which tho old woman feels Juitly proud. Mnmmy has never worn glosses In her life, nnd sho eatH about everything, notwithstanding tho absence of nil but three teeth. Bho only par takes of two meals u day, and entertains a devoted fondness for corned beef hash, hoo cake nnd mush. Bho goes to led nightly nt 0 o'clock nnd arises promptly with tho light of day. Her figure, is stout, nnd hor weight Is about 170 kuii1s. Bt, Joseph (Mo.) Tele gram in Now York Bun. BETTS St MEHVER, k MENDOTA COL'RADO OHIO BL'K CAN'N CITY COHL WOOD AND BEST ANTH'CITE 1045 O Street. Telephone 440 A 1'rccoclons Lover. According to u Madrid correspondent, a boy, only 12 yenrs old, found In tho streets of Madrid a 100 iesuta bank note, and changed It at a money changer's, dividing tho skj11s with another loy, 11 yenrs of ngo. Ho then bought n pistol nnd bullets, and tcgau a quarrel with his plnymato about u little girl of li! yenrs of ngo, tho daughter of a well-to-do grocer, whom ho called his swoethenrt, and whom ho accused of showing a prefer ence for his companion. As they wero dis cussing tho matter they happened to meet tho girl with her female servant, and tho older lioy deliberately aimed nt her anil shot hor dead. Iioth lioys wore sent to Jail; but despite his comrade's ami the maid servant's testimony, the accused says tho pistol went off accidentally. London 01olo. The I'uiier of Mlriimlio. In n letter to tho present writer In May, IS75, Btnnloy says: "Mlrambo has become a bugbear to nil this land. Mothers still their infants' cries w 1th hisdreud nnmo; young lnds umuliitohU gieat deeds, and fan their courage with singing nt night of his wars, and work themselves to a delirious frenzy, while tho elders sit under tho trees In tho village square, nnd converse In wliUH.rs resectlng tho latest reports heard of him. Indeed, I shall lx glad when I have put some broad countries between ni e:rup and his. Wo will then lo ablo to travel in greater tmncu, for, wherever wo go, we are taken for Mlrumho, until long and tedious explanations ha vo dispelled tho alarm of tho natives. " F. 0. do Fontaine. Klectrlo Stmt IIolaL Tho electrical ammunition hoist of Lieut. Flsko, now In operation on board tho At lanta, is giving great satisfaction. Tho ap paratus is called into play on nil general quarters' calls, and hoUts projectiles weigh ing AM) Hjimils from tho IkjUomi of the hutch to the gun deck in ten seconds. In no In stance, has the hoist lecu taken down or given the slightest trouble. The Introduc tion of tho apparatus was strongly opMsl by several naval otllcers, but its elllclenoy has now secured fur It unqualified com mendation. The hoist is now used on the Chicago, nnd is to bo put on board all the now ships. Now Yoik Commercial Adver tiser. Item!) fur tllm. "Gentlemen," rciuniked the straugei who had galloped out of town on a steel gray gelding a fnv hours before tho wgiloutes caught iif'Wlth him, "I was brought up au KplscopalUu, will borne ono kindly loan inns prajer lok U'foro this goes any farther!" The chalruansald ho didn't believe, there wa ono hi tlii crowd, but they could accommo date him n Ith a uooso halter. Thoy did so, and it quieted him. Uurdotto lu Drooklyn Eagle. SLEEPY LITTLE EYES. CRADLE SONG. Published through The American Press Association by permission of Xowhall tO Evans Afusio Co., 171 West fourth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. Words by E. E. REXFORD. Modem to. MubIo by HENRY LAMD P I. Swings the cra-dln to nnd fro, B. Droop tho rose-leaf eye -lids, hut fmmmmmi rit feSre,&W, S-S. z-WH - Wrtwm piSiiscfe .j-j-j mimimmmm Hook-lng hoft-ly, rook-lng slow, Ah tho child it pll lows, seems A 1 most In tho laud of drcntnst Kiss -is will not keep them nhut. In - to mine laugh bn - by'u eyes. Oh, no rotf-ulsli nnd nowise. 1P Wp4pimi i t(: 1 I i i3n? I Then bo hold, wide o pen Hies So n llow'r nt break of day All at ouco tho biv by's c)el Shakes the pm)11 of sleep u . way j (l i s I" tfisl ' 1 if r j 1 it , J 1 It , j 1 Kt IWFHATN. ' . 7'emjio ill Vahe. What shall mntli-cr do to keep Sleep-y lit-tlo e)es u - elccp? What shall moth-er do to nmko .Slumber come, my wldc-n-wnko? Sleep, my n by, dream nnd I mm- '""S ,i it JU . .. -fiimm jiiS pjHrip:-! rcat, Cud -died in your cra-dlo nest, Whilo I drop warm kiss - ea In.... Dimples deep on saii3iEEjsfa 7Z. -- mm '(&s-- i . WMT 7$ X ZCH 'JSt i giif check nnd chin. Sleep, my ba - by, drciim and rest, Cud - died in your era - die-nest, ?: -P- -vtT - -z fz m T". t : B O- Fl:g rz: &-9-XSXZ t -I- i i i j r 7 mmmim -? V0E3 r F il-l-vm-- (Tis U-ryrrzrriz: g , 1 y y- -4 -- -- ' I ff -- -p- i . r . T T" , T T , r t 1 1 . . 1 l ... 1 kaPlspEgfega5feB Lento. ,Zi??3Z Whilo I drop warm kiss - ea in Dimples deep on check and chin. .- fct Sleep and rest. I- I I 1 1 j 1 :i ' CopjrlRtit, lt), bj Tlio Ncwliall A Kaii Mttlc Co. 1 All the Latest and most Popular Musical Composition tnav be found it ' ORGANS PIAN0S CURTICE cc THIERS, LEADING MUSIC DEALERS 207 SOUTH 11TH STREET. SHEET MUSIC Large Stock of the leading American made Guitars, I'iano Tuning and Repairing promptly attended to. NOVELTIES