THE DAILY HERALD, PLATTSMOUTTL, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 18S7. PRAIRIE R0SE3. A fcr!sr of ron, pink an I nwit, Tlmt lunl. in loam their f lender tort. That xeiiil a lireiith tlio Hprlni; to n-vt Acrosit n :ieat exjuiuwe; Tlwv lenn ft -lii Un togvilKT lif-ro, Tliey Krnile at lov, with t:wm fair Wlmt ke tin; HiiiiHliine Kli'itiu nenr? Young love, iM-relianee. A ImnIc grown lliu with (iiitiinui'H linzo, 'I'i'iiilril:! thut I'lin in loving Inne, Through lre:ir, or cold, or Homly il.iyn; Aeri'ss llm jjri'iit i?xi:uiho Cilllli'tt on I III' (ieree :M'.lelnlMT mm, Wlii-li rosy llusli and rf lirni-'ri (lulu:; The rnyM I lie faded tlowera Hlmn Witlii.uL n k'hicu. fill, homely loves that ol.uip her round. May you enough for her In- found -(I.Ike Hister roses on one mound Amid a jreut ex muse) -May no jjity wooer iisk n Hiuih -Too lightsome wilit with winsome wile! lint k'uiniliL; love to hold uwhiii. Then low, p-n'tiumi. 1'Ui SiiephenJ in ISostmi Trniiwrijit. Till- SIIOKS OF I5IMLM). Listen to tliis htnry thsit llio grand iKllir .f t .Vrmsmy tell to llx ir ctsuhI- liillreli; ornisiii V, : I m t 1 1 i Ti 1 1 cmiislry f Icijfmls atxl ( rexeries, sli-rc tin moonlight, il:iyin on lln- mi.-t of ol.l Kliilir, cn-sitcs Si IIioiissiihI fsint.ist ii- i:-:-iins. A Mr wouism livi-il silono tit tin- f:ir cml of tint vill;i'ce in :i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 il- liltlc lions-; tin- ilwt-lliii;; v:ts misi-r.ililr cnoiiuli Jili'l oiil;liii' J only limsl iM-ccsswiry fin nitnre. An ol I lil willi wrcsit lutl columns, from wliirli linn ciiiisiins of yi liowiil Kcr;i,1 it Isiirsulirij trough to put tin; l.n ;ul in, :i wsilmit i lu st sliming w illi cli-snimr.-, !nt vliosi iiiinilx i Ii hs worm lioles, lillt-il li willi wsix, slinwiil I' Hi;; fcrvi--; si stiitiV'l sinn h.iir, fsnloil siml worn ly tlx sli.ikiti Ih-skI of 1 1 t fTsiiiilriiii, si wliii-l jM.lislieil smooth ly Jiiih Ii nsin; t hsit v:is sill. Wi- wen' froiti'j lo forget si chiM's rrnllf. 'iil now, O! sosolily lirn-il, :irnl f. ililtil iluwii willi si pretty tliw.Ttil i-overliil workiil liy si loving ikiiIIo - thsit. of SI 1 1 lot I it .T llcCorsitin tlie liisincvr of Iht lit Ho .h-sus. All fl 1 1 lielifs of the Kr lioiisi- wcri' tfiitrnil fhoro. TIi" fliil-l of :i Iuiijmi-nuish-r or of sin Anlii- councilor woiiM not liavc Im-ii inmv t-n. Icily i;nllil. Holy irli"?ility! Sweit folly of flm mollifr, wlio ili-iiii-.s Iiitm-II' t vt-rj I liinj to n:ilc- si lillli' luxury, in !; midst of lift want, for Iht ili sir nuisliii. This crsulli; K;IV' :l l'lid:iy siir t tliu .iu-lnl stiii I Mii.-ill ;md dirty lml",ii";, si.ml Ii.it tins ever fotup.issii n:ile lo tlio-u wln jiro iinfortunatf, I'liilileiii-d1 its liari'iicss willi tufts of liouc li-rk siiid with lvt:1y iiiiKts. ' Whili- wftniii.-; to lx; Im! para-Fiti-rt I Ih-ho j;hiI. pit il til- 'l.iuts purjioscly jrrow in tin.' hol. s in tin roof, lillin-j; them tup and trsmsformin."-tiu'in into n-spli-n-cU'iit liaiiKir.j; Kiskfts wliicli silso s-rv d to ktvp tlif rain from falling on tlio crsdlo; fven lli pigt-ons ll;itl-n'd thom f'lvos si.siinst the windows and coed until the t hild fell nslii-ji. A tiny liid, whom little ITanz had ftxl -tvitli liread t runil-s in tlio w inter when tlU! hiio-.v whitened the ground, now, in the PrinK, 1't fall a Ristiu from his l-ejik atthuootof the wall, and from it hail f-prung n lxnutiful hiier weed vine whirh. f.-olenin.L-; its If to the stones with its Kreeii claws, lial entereil the room through si hroken pane, ami crow ned the child's cnidle with it garlands, so that in the niornhiic the l-luo eyes of little 'Han, and the Mm? bc-lla of the vine awoke at the ssime time and looketl in telligently at each other. The dwelling was. then, poor, hut not gloomy. The mother of llan., whose liusliand liad died far aw ay in the wars, lived aa best she could upon the few vegetables that her garden yielded, and ujion what little she made from spinning; -very little indeed, but llanz w suited fot nothing, that was enough. Certainly she was a pious and U lieving Atonian. this mother of Hsinz. Hhe said lier prayers, worked and was virtuous; but she committed one sin; she took too much pride in her son. It happens some times that mothers, seeing their U-auti-ful, rosy babies with their tiny, dimpled 1 Kinds, and their white fckin ar.d their pretty pink nsiils; imagine that they are theirs forever; but Cod gives nothing. In, lends only; and lik a forgotten creditor lio comes sometimes suddenly to claim liis due. Hecause this fresh lnul had lioen jrafteil front lier stem, the mother of llanz thought she lisid causi'd it to le iKirn; and (Jh1 who from the depth of liis blue vaulted par:niise that is studdetl willi golden stars oIk-ci vcs all that h:ip liens on earth, slinl liesirs fr.ni the end of infinity the noise" that a blade of grass makes in growing saw not this with -pleasure. He saw, too, that Hanz was greedy and that his mother wsis too indulgent with him in this evil habit: often this naughty child would cry when, after eating grapes and apples, he would have to finish his bread, that so many poor people are in need of, and bis mother would let him throw away the piece lie had bitten into, or would finish it herself. Now it happened that llanz fell ill: fever burned him, his throat was choked, and his breath came heavily with a rat tling sound; he his the croup, a terrible discsi.se t hat hsis made the eyes of many mothers and of many fathers red with weeping. The ioor woman at this sight felt a liorrible pain at her heart. Without doubt you have seen in snmo church the image of Our I,ady clothed in mourning and -standing lt-neat h the cross, with her breast torn open showing the bleedino; heart in which are plunged seven Silver blades three on one side and four on the other. The meaning of this isthat there is no more fright fill agony than that of a mother who sees her child die; and this sdthough the Holy Virgin lt-lieved in the divinity of Jesus and knew that her fVn w ould rise agsxin. Now the mother of ITanz had no such hope. During the last days of his illness, while she watched him, the mother me chanically continued spinning, and the 1mm of her wheel mingled with the child's laliored breathing. If there are those rich who think it ctrango thsit a mother should spin beside the dying bed of her child, it is that they tlo not know what 'torture poverty holds in Jta m-nqn for t.h soul. Alms! it doesn't alone destroy the body, it breaks tlie beart also. , ' l Wliat she was spinning thus was the thread for tho shroud of her little ITanz. She did uot wish to wrap hid precious ; liody in linen that h.ul lcen used, and she. had no money; and it was for this reason lh.it site made her w hee l rumble with such funcrcsd activity; but she did not moisten the thread with her lij, an wsls her custom; enough teara fell from her eyes to wet it. At the cUjse of tho sixth day Hanz tli-d. Whwther it was frotu chance, or whether from sympathy, tho wreath of the brier wo.l vine that caressed bin cradle laagui.shcd, faded, dried and let fall its lsu-l cri.sjx-d blossom n his luil. When the mother wsts convinceij that breath had flown forever from tho lis where dentil violuts hstd replaced tho riKii-s of life, she covered the lx-lovid dead, took her packsige of thread under her arm, and di rifted her steps to the w istver's. "Weaver," wiid she. hi-ro is some very even thread, very line and without knots. The spider ilues not spin thinner Ix tween the rafters of the ceiling. lied 3ur slmlth' come ami go; with this thread must ou nisike for ine a ysird of linen, sis soft sis the linen from l"risc and from Holland." The weaver look the skein, sidjuslcd the warp, siml the busy shuttl, draw ing the thread alter it, Ix gaii lo lly bsick and forth. The Ii.iUIh I tightened the woof sind the I i 1 1 ii grew on the frame without un cventuss, without break, sis line sis the chemise of sin sirchdiu hess. tr the linen with v.!ii Ii :i pin .-,1 dries the -liali e sit. the allar. When the thread was sill used the weaver gave Kick t he linen to the jioor n loll hi- and said to her, for lie had un-!'!.-IihnI s.II from the unhappy lesiture's lHk of lixed despair: The infant sen of (he emperor, who died laM. oar, iu his little elxmy fillin with itssilviv nails, wsis nol wrap-d iu linen that was softer or finer.'1 Having fwlded (be linen the kmt mother piitfxl from her wasted linger si thin ring of goi1, ijuu'le wotu. (;.m1 wc-sivit, " tJ'ie said, "lake this rine, - my tusiiriage ring--the only g.ld 1 h.iVi" Over jH'SScsUed."' The worthy v.eaviT did not wish to tsike it, but she said to him: "I have no nc-d of :t ring there wh?n 1 am j.oing. for, I feel il, my little boy's iinns drag me underground." Then she went to the carpenter's. "Master, iu kindness take some od, that will not rot ami that the w cannot, destroy; cut from it live 1 .rg j iaiiks and two that are smaller and I,,., I-.. v-t'. ife ei f eoPii-i iS this i.ieas eie. The pi. me. M'lllv carpenter t"k his saw ami h'u ariangetl the planks, shuck an is he could with his mallet, so sis not to force the iron points into the poor woman's heart before they- entered the wood. When the work was completed one would have thought it, so csrefully and well made it was, a lox to put jewel and lace in. ( 'si q H-nter, who have made such a lieautiful colfin for my little Han?., I give you my house at the end of tho village and the little garden w hich is behind and the well with its vine. You will not have to wsiit long." With the sJuoud and the coffin, which she held under her arm, it was so small, i he went her way through the village streets, and the children, who do not know what death is, cried out: "See what a ljeautif! Uix of toys from Nuremlf rg llanz's mother carries to him; without doubt it is u city with its houses in painted aJiJ varnished wood, its steeple Kurrounded with lend, iti battlements and If! fry and tbe trees, for the promenades, all frizzed awd grcun: or else it is a pretty liildle, carved, with si bow like st horse's mane. Oh! fT we orJy Lad such a box!" And the mothers, growing pale, kissed them and made them still. "Impudent ones that you sire, do not sny so; do not envy her l-.c-r jewel box, the violin case which one carries under the arm w eeping. You will have it soon enough, poor chil dren!" When the mother of Hanz reached home the took the tiny and still lovely 1"h1v of her sou and began to dress hitu for the last time, a toilet w hich must be a Aery caruful one. sis it will last through eternity. She dressed him in his Sunday clothing, in Lis silken dress and his jf lisse, trimmed with fur, so that he would not be cold in the damp place w here he w as going. She placed beside him his doll w ith the enameled eyes that In hsul loved so much that it h;id sdwaya slept Ijcsido him in his cradle. llrwv Hie lingered over the task! How many thousand times she gave him his Isist kisr,! At the moment of smoothing down the shroud, t-he jf rccived that pho hail forgotten to put on t lie desid child liis pretty little rod shoes. , lhe sought for Ihem in tlio room, for it hurt her to eroliave those feet that, be fore so moist twid so rosy, were now icy and pale; but during her absence the rsits, having found the shoes under the bed, for want of If Her food, had nibbled and gnawed them, sind had lorn the kid. It was a groat grief for the oor mother that, her llanz was forced to go irsto the oilier world with bare ft ct; for When the heart is one great wound it is sufficient to touch it to make it Uecd. She wept lx fore those slufd; from (hose dry, in flamed eyes a tear could still gush forth. I low could she get some shoes for Hanz, sin? had given away hrr ring and her house' Such was the thought that tor -montcd her. l.y dint of dwelling on it, Ihcre csitue t her stn idin. In the hut tlxrc remained r-tiil an en tire loaf of bread, for the unhappy one, nourished by her grief, had eaten noth ing. - She broke this lonf, rememltering that formerly. o':t of the soft part, the had made pig fiis. ducks, liens, taUits, lioats ami other childish things to amuse Hanz with. Placing tke soft bread in the hollow of her hand and kneading it with her thumb, smd moistening it with her tears, she made a pair of hhoes with w hich she shod the cold and blue feet of the dead child, and. her heart comforted, fhe smoothed down the shroud nnd closed the cotlln. "While she was kneading the dough a lieggar had come to her thresh old, timid, askiDg for bread: but with her hand she had motioned to luui to It gone. The grave digger came to take the box, and buried it in a corner of the cemetery under a clump of white rose Lushes; the air was sweet, it did not rain, and the earth was not wt; this was a source of consolation to tho mother, who thought tliat her little Hanz would not bo too un easy his first night in the tomb. Itsiek in her solitary house, she placed the child's cradle next to her ltd, lay down and fell asleep. Exhausted nature had sueeuinlfd. Sli-eping, she had a dream, or at least she thought it was a dream. llanz ap Ifsircd to her, dressed, as in his coffin, in hi Sunday clothing, his it-lisse trimmi-d with swansdown, holding in his anus the doll with the enameled eyes, and wear ing on his ft ft the shoes made of bread. Ho seemed sjul. Around his head wsis not that aureole with which death should rightly crown little innocents; for when a Iwiby is put in the earth there comes out an angel. The roses of paradise did not bloom on bis pale cheeks that death hsul painted so white; fears fell from his blonde hushes, ami big sighs rent his little breast. The vision disapjfared and the mother siwoke, cold smd shivering, over joyed to have seen her son again, dis Inrscd bee: u ise he was so sad; but she rcsissiired herself, saying: "l'oor llanz! even in Paradise be cat unit forget ine." The following nihl the apparition came once more. llanz wsis still 'more s:;il. still more pale. His mother, stretching out her sinus to him, said: "1 e:ir child, console thyself, Sllld do not become weary in heaven, I sun going there to join thee." The third night 1 Ian, c suite again: he groaned smd cried uiorelhanon the two prifling nights, ai'd he dissipjH-ared clasping his little hands as if in supplication; he did not carry liis doll, hut he wore, as always, the tiny shoes made of bread. The anxious mother went to consult a venerable priest, who said to her: "I will watch with you to-night smd I will iiestion the little ghost. He will siu swer me; I know the words that one must use to innocent an well its to wicked spirits." I Ism. p k -si red sit the usual hour and the priest challenged him, using the con secrated words, (o tell him what it wsis thsit tormented him in the other world. "It; is the shoes of hresu! that cause my torment smd prevent nie from siscending t he disMiiond stair-! ol pstrsidise; they ore heavier to my feet thsni si postilion's ImhiP;, ami I cannot get Ifyond tho first, t wo or three slops, sind that gives me so much grief, for I see up (here si cloud of lieautiful cherubs wjh rosy wings w hocsdl to me to come and play, sind who show me their silver toys ami their '? l:-n toys." Having ssu'd these words, he vanished. The holy f:it her, to w hom tho mother of Ii. had confessed, now ssiid to her: You have committed a grievous fault. You hsive profsimd the 'ilsiily bread,' the bresul that is sacred, tho bread of tht: good God; the bresul that Jesus Christ, at his last, supper, chose to repre sent hh ImhIj-, smd sif ter having refused si piece of it to the lfggar who esinie to your doorsill you made shoes out of it for your Hanz. You must open his coffin, esike olt the shfs mside of bread from this chiM's feet and burn them in fire, which purifies all." Accompanied by the gravo digger and by tho mother, the priest went to the cemetery. With four blows of the spade the coliin wsis uncovered. They opened it. Hsinz was lying within just as his mother hsid pkiced him, but his fsice liore an expression of grief. The holy priest tenderly took olT tho shoes made of bresul from the fft of the dead baby and him self burned them in the flsime of a wax tajier while he recited a prayer. Whs?n the night came on'llanz ap peared If fore his mother for the last time, but j.iyous, rtisy, contented, with two little cherubs with whom ho had already mail friends; ho woro a wreath of dia mords and his wings were made of light. ".h, my moihorl what happiness, whsit felicity, and how lieautiful. They are tho gardens of paradise I There we play forever, and the good God never scolds us." Tho next day the mother saw her lxy again, but in heaven, for she died before evening, with her head bent over the empty cradle. Translated by Anno C. Mili'ord Barton from the French of The ophile Gautier for Home Journal. A Young Ventriloquist. A little Boston lxy who was taken to the entertainment of a ventriloquist some t ime ago, and who was a close observer of the performer's modus operandi, ac companied his parents last week to his father's native town, and among the places visited during their rural sojourn was tin; country cemetery, where sleep the progenitors of his paternal jiarent. The latter pointed out lo tho child a cer tain mound, s;iyu:g: "There, dear, is the yrave of your grandfather." The little fellow gazed curiously at tho placo of i-iCpullnro for a moment, and then, seized yy a sudden idea, stooped down, and rap ping on the tombstone, said: "Grandpa, ore you down there?" following .it up with a self supplied "Yes" in as deep and guttural a tone as his little throat could make vocal. "Ut-s you want to come upV" he resumed in his natural pitch of voice, and tigain dropping to the lower tone answered his own query with a bass and hollow "No." The parents, greatly shocked, cut short further venlriloquial efforts on the part of the too precocious child. Boston Budget. Facts Abont London. Alout twenty-eight miles of new Ftreets sire laid out each year; about 9,000 houtes are erected yearly; about 500,000 houses are silready erected; nlut 10,000 strang ers enter the city each day; fdfut 123 persons are added daily to the popula tion; altiut 120,000 foreigners live in the city; about 129,000 pauif rs and beggars infest the city; altuit 10,000 oliee keep i order; alwut 2,000 clergymen hold forth j even Sunday; siljout 3,000 horses die j every week; and, it is said, alfmt 700,000 cats enliven the moonlight nights. Pub lic Opinion. A CJoocI Old Age. Long lived heredity is not simply a physical tendency to live. It is also a tendency to the habits of life, conduct and thought that preserve constitutional vigor, and hold in check or eradicate whatever might hamper nature's recuper ative power. This suggests tho practical lesson we would enforce. By the voluntary culti vation of good habits those who have reached, say the age of 30, in sound health, may hepe to live to a good and happy old age. Youth's Companion. THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM. I IU IlWtory In Ilrlef A Popular Tuney. A Welcome Cilfttlil Kvent. I "Where can the Star of Bethlehem Lo found?" is tho oft rotated question that j coiues from insiny qu;irter.i. Tin fact is, , no such star is visible in any irt of tho i heavens. An observer with a vivid itn ! agination fancied he had discovered this ; long looked for star, and announced its j retuni in some journal of the d:iy. Tho j jtiragraph was wide ly copied throughout j the country. Tho idesi plcsiscd the Mpu j lar fancy, was received with almost uii ' questioning faith, and the sky wasesigerly scanned for si glimjise of the stsir that onco shone over the humble dwelling that enshrined the Kcdifiner of mankind. Even the jiec rless Venus wsis impressed into service, and was firmly Iflieved to lo the sacred stsir once more shining iqioii the earth sifter wandering for ages in tht: star depth:). The history of the so called Star of liethlehcm is brielly this: Tyt ho P.rsihe, a Banish sistronomer, discovered, in the year 157'i, un apparently new stsir near Cstpli in CsLssiojfa. When lirst Mien, in Noiemlfr, it hstd attained the fust nisig nilude. It increased rsipidly in briUiaiicy, until it rivaled Venus, and was visible sit noonday. It began to diminish in bright ness in IhfemUr, and conliuded to fade awsiy until the following Alay, when it ditsapjfared from view. Forty yesirs later, when the telePcof was invented, si f.msdl telescopic stsit was found close to the sot where the won derful htsir was wen. It is still there, siml is probably the same. It is now classed among vsirisible stars, and is, therefore, liable to blaze forth at any time in the ssune extraordinary nuinner. After classifying the s tar sis a v irisil le, the next thing to Ix; done was to find osit its fiiod of variability. Astronomical records were sesirt hed. sind it wsis ascer tained that aliout the years 12l".:j and triC bright slsirs suddenly apjfared near tho ssune qusirter of the in avens. It wsis, therefore, (,-lassilied as si varisible, with si period of ulttiit oO'.t years. Counting bsick three periods from '.)(;,- t he exsict period beinj; nneertsiin. the stsir may hsive sippeared near the lime of theCSiris liau era. Some imaginsitixo observer, for this re.ison, christened it the Star of Bethlehem, smd with scarce the sh:dov of si foiindsitiou the nsiine hsis iidliered to it ever since. It is sdso known us the PiL't iiti Stsir. sind siniong astronomers :i:i 5lu- star of 1572. If the star be a vstriable, with a period approximsil iug to '.',('.) years, it it lion due smd liable to bun 1 forth into sudden brilli.incy :tt a?iy time. No c It e ent would Ix- moil- weleoi'ie to st:trono)ners. The scieiil ifie world would U- wild with O'sciteiuent over the sitbstsint i.-it ion of stn ingenious theory smd the continuation of its hofs. Its first sippesusinee, ilse.vsat pos.it ion in tho hesivens. its ch.ingi-ss from day to day, would be telegraphed all over the country and immitely described iu the journals of the day. The advent of a comet, spanning the sky from tho zenith to the horizon, would If of no ac count in comparison with tho blazing star! Meantime the telescopic ttar near Caph in Cassiopea shows no signs of smy coming disturbance, and ol,c rvrrs must wait j nit iently for developments, remem lf ring that the outburst will be sudden, if it come. It is generally considered that the ex traordinary chsmges of light in stars, liko that of 1572, are caused by sudden out bursts of glowing hydrogen gsis, which by its own light and by heating up the wholo surface of the btar causes the imnienso increase in brilliancy. The sjiots, facuko and rosy protulfranccs on the sun givo some idea, on a small scale, of what may be going on in other suns on a much larger scale. -Fortunsitely, tho new or temporary stars observed by terrestrial astronomers numlf r only rdiout twenty four, sm infinitesimal number when com pared with the boundless millions of stsirs that shine with nearly unclumging bright ness. The probability is, therefore, sniali that our tun will be added to the list of blazing stars. He will probably shine for millions of years to tome, as he has shone for millions of years in tho past, and if observed from other suns and systems will lie classed as a variable, with a period of aliout eleven years, corresjionding to the cycle of sun spots. Scientific Amer ican. A rtiff ricfclo Factory. Fredericksburg, Vn., has a big pickle factory that is supplied with cucumlt-rs from the lands adjoining the city. This season the supply has reached 20,000,000 cucuuiliers, those engaged in their pro duet ion furnishing from 200,000 to 1,000,000 each. An acre will produce 100,000, and they fell in Fredericksburg at eighty cents pfr 1,0')0. The objtf t is to get them an inch or sin inch and a half long, and this requires active picking before they increase this t.izo. A boy will pick 3,000 in a daj Picking them thus early increases the productiveness n the vine, smd, while the season lastj. others are appealing in place of those taken from the vines. New York Sun. Tlie Con rt eons Pernliiiin. The Persians are a very punctilious race; and it is the sensible custom of the country, on making a call, to announce beforehand that you are coming. A thousand and one little jioints of punctilio have to be observed. A certain number of cups of tea are de rigueur, three pijfs at lesist hsive to If smoked, a few whiffs from each; the rank and precedence of every guest i:? rigorously ohsorved, and each visitor intrigues for, and generally receives, a little more than her due. To omit to return a visit is an unpardonable offense. The particukir place in the apart ment of each guest is regulated to a nicety, and many and bitter are the feuds ou this subject. St. James' Gazette. Ignored ty ISerman 1'apers. In four pages of ews from all parts of the world in The O.iognc Gazette there is a single line from America, telling of the emperor of Brazil's departure for Eurojie. The case cited is not the exception, but the rule, not only with The Gazette, but with all German papers which reflect the government's policy. The United States are referred to as seldom and as briefly as possible, and this in spite of the fact that there is scarcely a family in Ger many which has not a relative, a friend, or an acquaintance here. If the German chancellor could arrange a map of the world to his liking, there would not be a republic left on it. St. Louis Republican. BOOTS & SHOES The hiiim.' ijiiiility ol gooils 10 ju t cunt. elieujM-T llian suiy luniHt? west of the iMissis:-iii. Will never he nmleiMihl. Call siml I convinced. PETER MERGES. mm mom FURNITURE i.; rrrf-rY'f'G- !": v Hfi- mv ?; SET ! Foii am, FoU Barlors, rooms, E53ris!'roms. Kitchcrig, ISaSHvays mid iMiiwk, (JO TO Where :i iii:inilicent. slo-k :ii UNDERTAKING AND EBALfJJHG A SPECi-.LTY. gSt 'iigfc iP ColiNKIi MAIN AND SIX TH rH (St OCJ ssoi: to W ill kwp ciini'tsiiii ly h ii:unl j n ! A f:l I- P i . Us roes ana leoscioes, rainis. Wall 1'ajK-r nut! a 5-'i:ll Iiin (" DRUGGIST'S S'D'IT.'DRIE. PURE LIQUORS. RICHEY Corner J'earl ami OKAI.KliS IN COBB in OM Lowest S8atf5. Tims GlssTol STAPLE AND F&QBRr FEED- & PROVISIONS. WE JIAKK A ff 'r.ITV Ol' PiX I : VHUt'ti V.U V. . iti. TO Five DO'.URS A DAY. urns mmJ EMPORIUM i r-m i;M, b-i BEDROOM SU ! classi::; or nl (ioml mid Fair lYii.-os ou im I . I'b.'.TTS.WiH'TII. NT.IIUAM.'.V Iff fcj , .1. M. IKHM' IMS.) a f i!l ;mmI fi n ii i 1-' l in k of piiif n i BROS., Sf-wntli Slrci ls. ATX KINIS OK MM1K0 l J& tij B. HUH PHY & f.Q FANCY Affi-iifs vilio sis- niii 1 :- i iis MiSsi'rij;Jiiis .a u Ti:i: u:i.i.!,y !r:!:oir n:s;i: i:: HiMl.r Ms sjii-cisil .ir-r cf lOLIi .iillH I Olt jj -r ilssy Willi vci) litili i-Rorr, V ..ni sisri'iils to n-jiri st-nt lis u. U tin- County iinl fft Jiislrii-t F:i. ;i ml in cvt-ry fiswn tr liw nitid Si;i:r-. Ni-iul ui i iJ.-i)ii..l- i).l i a'iits til III ;il . Virv lilir.ii -mi:i m -- J. IO"S:itll C:jl j:rfZt-S f.ir ls"'t Iitn. tfS!' rOi:;i.T Unit any t. cm Uam- I UK Wl-;-;iL -& TllY.l. Titles sitit to thiir Kliir-v-; Four p; MimtliH on trisil lii '- f cnt-. Ariclros tt THE FREE FRF.So CO., i . -i LI