3 THE QUES .2 WE HERE FOR? ..on I Fool mm! Dletli m . Ilethl Intake Wlilrh Iar y ".ke Alia, Uowirtr Humble, a f 1 Thing. The average man ia a fool. And he dieth U the fool dieth. Quietly Bitting in your New England homo, content 1 with your breakfast, comfortable ia your surroundings, peaceful atniosphore ftaggesting an everlasting freedom from un pleoitant activitun, take a pieee of pajx-r and write on it the names of the great of the earth. Put down men and women prtut in any line mental, moral, physical, financial. Include utatetiinen, financiers, writers, ora tors, inventors, .explorers, luunuiiitarianH, aye, and if you will, put in thorn who aro noted simply for length of layx, or personal prowess, or height. or weight. How many have you Oughtn't that list to bo longer What are we here for? Oughtn't there to be an aim for every human bing besides the mere getting of bread ami butter, providing of a shelter anil clothes Parents may with Ftie degree of justice say: "Well, it is too l..) now for me to have an aim." But it seems to m, when they have, gotten that far in the sentence, the faces of their children should rise In-fore them, and the thought born on the instant, that their aim should bo to give their children an aim, should be thenceforth their guiding star, the very helm of the voyage of life. The parents make great mistakes. They have an idea that to refuse this, that or the other to their children is an unkindness. As a matter of fact, it is tho truest kindness often to ref use. A majority of parents hesi tate to refuso favors to their children from the most selfish motives, unrecognized, but existing, all tho same. Discipline requires strength of mind. It requires not only men tal strength, but moral strength and phys ical endurance. Very few of us aro endowed with all of these, and the great majority of us have little of c ither. It takes time and latienej to train a dog, therefore it is very much chentier to iniy a trainer $10 a month than it is to lothcr one's self a bruit it. l're eiselv mi with children. We sixjil thsm at homo and send them to schol fur their edu cation. There is so much in us that is un used, so much that might bo made available, to put it selfishly, for our own comfcrt, for our own happiness, for our own delight and appreciation of the lounteous gifts which are showered upon our jath have not the siiiht to see. but which we A man ho goes through life with no other ambition than saving money is a moan man; but after all he has an idea. He wants to die a rich man, and he dx die rich. Ev ery body laughs when ho dies; but he has had the solid satisfaction, all his life long, of pursu ing a course designedly and deliberately marked out. The fact that it is an ignoble aim has nothing to do with the case. He has an aim. ami ho follows it tho end. A man who desires to become a good public speaker may fail in convincing others that he is a good public speaker; but he, having marked out that line of endeavor, educates himself, reads books, practices oratory, yells behind tho barn, shouts over the bounding billows, talks in the seclusion of hU study, speaks ns ho walks the crowded streets. Do you meau to ..n ini that he is not havinz a rood time Do vou mean to tell me that he is beside him self w hen he docs that Can't you see that letter man. a more useful man, even if he never succeeds in reaching tho goal? Tho very fact that the moment we begin tn eonsi.h r the sub ject of aims, our minds divides them into classes, proves conclusively, first, that it is an interesting thought, and s-eoiid. that it is one which, outworked, will do us gooL I don't mean to intimate that the average man, the ditch diggers, the day laborers, the slaves of capital, tho Indians in their forests, the vast horde in jungle, eivamrk or trlade. need l expected ever to stand uin mountain toj and view the pros- t oer. hopins Dy exierc eye some glittering joint toward which to shoot I.a arrows ol tlieir ues;re, oui- uu " , i ambition could lo implanted in their breasts, lowlv. humble, loverty stricken thougu l he. tho man would bo happier, more usefu" , more contented, and the race would be elevated manv points. The ditch dizer who means to havo his ditch straiehter and cleaner than that of any other man lias an object in life. ' Tho man wl.n builds a stone fence and regards its neat, recnilar surface, its direct course, with .ltinf etion. and eoramres or contrasts it with the fences of others less careful about 1dm, has an ambition, and he is a better man for the fact. The express clerk, whose tahy lv.k is lenible and whose crate list and drivers' books are neat, with readable ad dresses and decipherable figures, is a better mnn. a better servant to his company, a more acceptable public worker, than his fel lows who scribble the scrawls we orUinarUy find in express delivery books, tho only legi ble feature about it being the cabalistic sign of c. o. d. Go into any great printing estab lishment and you will find that there are cer tain clerks in the advertising department with whom the public prefer to dcaL Why Because they are desirous not only of serv ing their employer by pleasing ins patrons, but of advancing themselves in their em ploy. It is their aim to be civil, to be oblig- insr. to bo helpful and to be correct Go into the city editor's room and talk with him. If be will condescend, between his cigarette puffs, to open bis oracular lips, he will tell you of the twenty or thirty re . porters under his control three or four are he group upon wnom ne cnieny renes. Thy! Becausa tbey aro ambitious along eir Jino of work; because they are nl- ys on time; because they have a quick 9 for news; because their copy is clean; .auso they dout spend an hour in revising id interlining and crossing out and chang er expressions. I went to school once to a man whose ;zer nails were always dirty. Ha produced A profound impression oa uio, and I don't be lieve I have ever had a dirty finger nail since. He little knew what hs object in life : was, but so far as I am concerned, the only thinz I ever learned from him was by ob- serration of his excessively dirty finger nails. Joe Howard in Boston Globe, Car Korses in Cabs. cab driver who was on duty at the - residenco during the general's i 11- on the curb one morning and dis rnedly to the reporter about cab o make a first class cab horse," .he best way is o take a broken et car horse, the older and tougher better. Take off his shoes and turn pasture for a season; then brin id put him in harness. He will 3 the work and rough handling ' ruin a plump young horse from Tho hardest work on horses is rlc by any mean A horse reb sooner in a herdic. ' rry out and crack a ian the cobble '"too Post Xnu t . . Lrlftn L. AVMt Mes) Wuj tb World Knows. John Bright is so weak tliat e ren bath choir exercise exhausts him. Lord Lonsdale ia Bending homo copious diary notes from North America for pub lication. A son of President Tyler lias been chosen president cf William and Mary college, at Williamsburg, Pa. Tho two sons of Joe Chandler Harris, Julian and Lucian, are now called "Brer" Fox and Brer" Rabbit by their friends. Jay Gould is poorer than tome ieople suppose. Instead of leing worth nearly 200,000,000 he is worth only $73,000,- 000. Applicants f'r cltarity should let him alone. Mr. Carlo Pellegrini, tho celebrated caricaturist, will not le interviewed nor photographed. Ilo adopted his well known signature "Ape, ' he pays, be cause when caricaturing ho "apes" tho peculiarities of his subject. President Carnot, of France, has been placed in a curious dilemma. Ilo was taught tho handicraft of a carpenter in his youth, and tho striking carjienters of Paris havo written to him, complain ing that he lias not attended their meet ings nor subscribed to their fund. Russell Sago is at least fifteen years older than Jay Gould, but ho has not a wrinkle in his face, and is ns well pre served as a man of 00. lie attributes his continued good health, after twenty fivo years in Wall street, to the fact that ho never permits himself to worry about business outsido of business hours. The mikado of Japan has almost fin ished his new palace, which has taken six years for its construction. There are 400 rooms in tho building, and the din ing hall will seat 127 guests. The fur niture of the state department came from Germany. Not the least Interest ing object in tho palace i3 an American piano. Before Edward M. Munch, of Buffalo, died he directed that his body bo cre mated in the Fresh Pond crematorium. and his ashes scattered over one of the flower IkhIs on the lawn in front of tho retort house. Mrs. Munch faithfully carried out the directions of her husband, and for weeks afterward his light gray ashes were plainly visible on the flowers and plants where they had fallen. The correspondent of The Independance Delgo at Home writes that the Btato of Loo XI IPs health Is far from satisfac tory, but that his real condition is care fully kept from tho public. He is in a pninfuUy nervous state, and is constantly pursued by a morbid fear of death, tho slightest ailment assuming in his ex cited imagination the form of a serious disorder. Dwight L. Moody, tho evangelist, is very much opposed to having his photo graph taken. lie sat to a photographer only once, and tliat was just before ho left England, because he wanted to leave his portrait with a few friends; but ho broke the negative with his own hands, . a i so mat no more impressions coma oe taken. Mr. Moody makes his homo at Northfield, Mass., where his mother, now 83, still lives, and where lie has his co worker, Ira D. Sankey, for a near neigh bor. Men who have more than one occupa tion frequently uso dirferent forms of their name for each one. Mr. Stedinan, for example, as the banker prefers to he known as L. J. Stedman, and in btpra ture as Edmund Clarenco Stedman. In business circles Mr. Francis Ilopkinson Smith ia known as F. II. Smith, or Fran cis II. Smith, while in art circles he has" a wide reputation as F. liopkinson Smith, anu so business ana art nave their nice distinctions even when exemplified in the same person. When Signer Verdi arrived at Monte- catini, where he is spending his vacation tins, year, he touna a tine grand piano installed in the sitting room which had been taken for him. It was open and, as a delicate compliment to his illustrious guest, tho proprietor of tho hotel had placet! tho score of "Trovatore" on the stand over tho key board. The composer removed the book, closed the instrument, locked it, put the key in his pocket. started for a walk and f lunar tho key over the edge of. a deep ravine. There Is a stery goinar the rounds about the lato J. C. EngeL director of Kroll's Opera house, Berlin. He asked two of his stars, Nachbaur and Reichrnann. into his sanctum, and invited them to men tion their conditions fcr a new engage ment. "Well," said Nachbaur, "you know my terms. .Half the gross re ceipts.' "I also, ' 6aid Keichmann; "I cannot take less than half the gross." Gentlemen," gravely replied J. C. Engel, "supposing I accept, will you, oc casionally, let me have a free tioketf I should like to be able to enter my own theatre." Referring to the emperor of Austria a recent writer says: "He has no taste for court gayety and loads rather a solitary life, retiring early and rising with the dawn. When, however, his presence is necesfary at official ceremonies or festive gatherings he is one of the most punctual of men. Ills only passion is grouse shooting, and in the seaaon he frequently slips away from Vienna to the Alpine forests to indulge in his favorite snort He 'is very charitable, and. haviiur a 'argo fortuno of his own, distributes his bounties freely though disereetlv. Fran cis Joseph is never ill, and owes his ex cellent health to his constant occupation and proverbial sobriety." A tail, dark man, with raven black, hair, high cheek bones, sunken cheeks and the garb and manner of a gentleman of the old school, a physician whose name at one time hung upon the lips of the entire country, visited New York last week. He was Pr. Taft, of Waslnngton, who was sitting in a froL seat at Ford's theatre when President Lincoln was as sassinated, and who, on a call being made for a physician, entered tho box where the wounded man had fallen to the lloor and took charge of the case. He jumped over the footlights and was passed into the box at the front by the assistance of three actors. Dr. Taft caused the president to be carried across the street to the bouse where be after ward died. Mr. Lincoln was so tall in stature that no bed in the house would receive his prostrate form, an j he was laid upon mattresses on the floor. THE JUGGERNAUT MTTII. MONCURE D. CONWAY PLAYS ICONO CLAST TO THE BLOODY CAR. The t'untoiu of Self Immolation t'mler - the Wheel of the Hindoo Idol Never If ad au KzUtenre How the Story Might Have Originated. Thei-e is no horror more widespread than that of the car of Juggernaut No church or chapel or Sunday school room is un familiar with tho vision of idolators throwing themselves beneath the blood stained wheels. There are few American girls loyseven who have not shed tears and dimes jr the victims of that cruel idol. The dreadful self immolating has added a proverbial similitude to pulpit and platform eloquence. Grim Jug gernaut has got into cyeloiMeuias. Jut the chariot of truth is passing through tho world; many cherished fallacies must bo east beneath its remorseless wheels; among them must bo crushed this worldwide notion about Jug gernaut. It is a delusion. Hard as it is to lose one's jet horror, this one must be given up. The supi'ioscd custom of immolation under the wheel of Juggernaut does not pre vail never did prevail. On the contrary, Juggernaut is tho most humane of all oriental deities, and his cult tho most civihzeiL I could fill a column with ollicial and un questionable proofs of this paradox, but re serve the space for some facts of more inter est to the reader. It will be sufllcient to sub stantiate the point by a few competent au thorities whose testimony1 has not been dis puted. GAZETTEER GEXEIIAL'S r.EPORT. Dr. V. V. Hunter, gazetteer general of India, says in his Orissa (1S72): "In a closely packed, eager throng of 100, 000 men and women, many of them unaccus tomed to exposure or hard labor an 1 all of them tugging and straining to the utmost under the blazing tropical sun, deaths must occasionally occur. There have, doubtless, tieen instances of pilgrims throwing them selves under tho wheels in a frenzy of relig ious excitement But such instances have been rare and aro now unknown. At one time several unhappy people were killed or injured every year; but they were almost in variably cases of accidental trampling. The few suicides that did occur were, for the most part, case.j of diseased and miserable objects. Tho ollicial returns now place this lieyoiid doubt Indeed, nothing could bo more op posed to tho spirit if Vishnu worship thau self immolation. Accidental death within tho temple renders the whole place unclean. The ritual suddenly stops and tho polluted offerings nre hurried away from the sight of the offended god. According to Chaltanya, th apostle of Jaganath, tho destruction of tho least of God's creatures was a sin against the Creator, is'elf immolation ho would have regarded with horror. The copious religious literature of his sect frequently describes the car festival, but makes no mention of self sacrifice, nor does it contain any passage that could be twisted into a sanction of it Abul Fazul, the Mussulman observer, is equally silent, although from the context it is almost certain that, had ho heard of the practice, ho would have meutioned it. Bo far from en couraging self immolation, tho gentle doc trines of Jaganath tended to check the once universal custom of widow burning. Even before tho government put a ttoptoitour officials observed itsconqiarative inl'requeney at Puri." MAKING r-EP.SOXAL, IXQriRT. Being in India eleven years after the above was published, I conversed with Dr. Hunter on this subject, and found that tho cy;dnoea even for suicide under tho ear at "uhj diminished since hw vvui k wt written The English comniissioiV at Orissa had in four years kliowu but one death by accident, and two in which the viotims had rid themselves of excruciating complaints. This was just after tho province passed under English rule, which did not interfore with the festival. Professor Bain, of Aberdeen university, savs "An Indian t-ivil servant, Mr. James Ocddes, who had been resident magistrate at Orissa, where the festival is held, informed mc, from his own knowledge, that no trace ff the practice of immolation could be found in tho publio records of the district" According to Wilson, the orientalist, pil grimages to Juggernaut have been custom ary for only some l."0 years, so that the annals are traceable. Dr. Hunter has gone care fully through them, has conversed with the oldest inhabitants, and found no explanation of tho bad reputation of tho cult It is sur mised that some early missionary vrho wit nessed the car festival did not understand th;:t the reason why human beings drew it instead of animals is lest one of these should get kiLed and so pollute the sacred precinct Tho man can say if he is ill or exhausted, but not the beast, who might be driven to his death. Shocked by an apparent degradation of humanity, meant to preserve animal life, such surmised missionary, if an accident oc curred, might suppose it part of the pro gramme. His physical and moral nerves un settled might inflate the story, and when this gained currency in missionary meetings and swelled collections, its inflation would hardly diminish. There is an evolution in stories; a survival of the fittest for raising contribu tions might so develop a Juggernaut acci dent or suicide that the original witness would not recognize his narrative as told in tho tabernacles. Suicido is different from self immolation. There are more religious suicides in England than in India. On the day after the Prince of Wales attended a thunksglving at St. Paul's for his recovery, I read a paragraph stating that several per sons were at one point crushed to death. Tho item might float like a thistle seed to some far land, and spring up to a belief that in England human victim are olTered on the recovery of a prince from illness, Mon curo D. Conway in Boston Herald. Italians at Summer Resorts. From what I have seen cf well bred, well to do Italians at summer resorts I should say that they take their holidays in ways more sensible than rich Americans. They make far less display in dres3 and equipage, they keep better hours and avoid excess in exer cise and amusements, Tby show less anxi ety to be exclusive in their associations and high toned in their manners. They do not thrust long pedigrees or long purses down your throat. They bravely wear comforta ble old clothes. Their kirtles and their- titles, their coats and their coats of arms set easily upon them. Many a fair contessa, whoso homo ia Flor ence or Ronio is an ancient palazzo, with lots of blood curdling family traditions about it, a big gallery of family portraits in it and a family specter or two, takes with her to tho baths of Lucca or the seaside fcr less and less costly a baggage than many a New York belle, with no ancestors to speak of, and oniy & photographic album of family portraits, going from a spectexless boarding house to Saratoga or Long Branch. Grace Green wood's Letter. The wise men keeps a diary. ' There is no telling when the most obscure person may become suddeidy famous, and such a one will Bnd his reminiscences worth their weight in slyer certificates. Harper's Bazar. STRAY NEWSPAPER ITEM3. , It is announced that there will be an other "Passion Play" at Ober-Ainmergau in 1800. Of tho 8,000,000 francs worth of china made last year at Limoges, one half came to America. Engines of 20,000 horse power havo Keen ordered for the new cruiser IJlako, at a cost of 140.000. It is 6aid that barely half a dozen wa tering place hotels thus far have met their expenses. The reports of extravagance and show nt our watering places are not so loud nor so numerous as usual. The daily opening of the churches is being advocated heartily by Lord Car narvon and Jhe bisliop of Cambridge. Parisian swells steadily giro way to English fashions. They now wear tho regular short white tie for evening dress, instead of their former black butter flies. A newspaper in Constantinople says that 212 Christians and Jews have be come Mohammedan during the past year, a larger number than those who have abandoned Mohammedanism for other religions. A Michigan peddler who sold goods on the cars, first singing a comic song to attract attention and please his cus tomers, dropped dead in a train a few days ago. Ilo is believed to have left a fortune of $200,000, accumulated in this manner. Germany is doing considerable Fv .tv. missionary work U Iiuj eighteen societies and supports 522 mis sionaries, who look after their 210,000 converts. Last year the total receipts in money were over $700,000. Three Chinese pheasants attacked a 14-year-old boy near Vinegar Springs, Ore., a short time ago, and fought him so hard that he dropped a sack of wheat he was carrj-ing and fled for safety. When the neighbors went to tho 6iot the wheat and birds had both vanished. An Australian footlxill club has ar ranged with an accident insurance com pany to pay any of its members who aro disabled while playing tho game 30s. per week as long as they remain on the 6ick list, and 200 to the relatives if the Injuries received in the football field should terminate fatally. The great white marble palace which Wilbur F. Storey, of Chicago, built, and which is one of the features of that citj, is again offered for sale. Although still unfinished, more than 800,000 has been spent on it, while it Is doubtful if one quarter of that amount will bo offered by a purchaser, Bolivia, which has an area of 500,000 square miles and a population of 2,000, 000, is without a single Protestant mis sionary. Two American teachers, en couraged by Bolivian gentlemen and recommended by the Presbyterian board of missions, expect 60011 to establish a school in La Paz, the capital. An Englishman who was playing bil liards in a public house in Broml-; maj0 a bet that he coukl get on- of thg ivorv balls into liijmon Ho" did get it in, and thur. it stuck, in spite of all his orts to dislodge it. The Burgeon who was called in extracted the lump of ivory, but oidy after taking out several of the experimentalist's" front teeth. At Spezzia, Italy, the whol9 Italian fleet is to assemble for a two months' ex ercise. One of the items of the pro gramme is to show the facility with which a large force can be disembarked, fully equipped for attack, and English alarmists predict that it will show how easily England could be invaded before a defensive foiee could be gathered at any point. A monument to tho memory of Em peror "William will be erected by the in habitants of the upper Fichtel mount ains on a peak rising nearly 4.000 feet above the level of tho sea. The spot affords on one side a view of the Saxon lowlands, on the other that of tho Bo hemian forest, with the Keiberg closo by and the spires of Carlsbad in the dis tance. A Bridgeport paper says that a cat was caught by a locomotive the other day and cut in two by a wheel, which passed over the body back of the shoul ders. "After the locomotive had passed, ' ' says the paper, "the forward parts of the cat's body dragged themselves to the home yard, two or three rods distant, and there the little life remaining flick ered out in a few seconds." The IJttle Seal Cried. A seal about two months old was 6een yesterday on the deck of the schooner Arizona, which was moored at the Com mercial wharf. lie is the skipper's pet and a great favorite with the crew. The captain said: "I have had the little fel low about six weeks, having caught him at Stable Island. lie was asleep when I came upon him, and before he knew it I had him in my arms. In three days from that time he was as tame as a dog, and will now follow me all over the ves sel. In the morning at about 3 o'clock the seal takes his position over the hatch, and there he will cry until some one of the crew goes on deck and feeds htm. When we are outside I throw him over board and let him swim until he is tired, and then ho is only too glad Jto be taken on board again." The little fellow seemed to enjoy him self on the vessel's deck, and was very fond of the caresses of the crew. When he saw one of the men approaching him he would hobble toward him and tease for a mouthful of fish that was generally forthcoming. Portland Press. Automatic Machine for Perfumery. One of the latest projects for catching the pennies of the public is an automatic machine for jerfumery, a number of which have been set up in the approaches of ferries and other public places. By dropping a penny into a slot, in the 6ame manner in which nickels are dropped into the patent weighing machines, an automatic fountain is made to send out a spray of perfume for the handkerchief. The crowds of people who go down to ,the sea from Thirty-fourth 6treet ferry take up so much f this perfume that the odor has become disseminated through the cars of the Long Island railroad, and in some measure acted as a public bene fit in offsetting : th horrible smells of Hunter's Point, New York Tribune. lUord to FJepub'tifcL., The importance of the results cf the present political campaign can not be overestimaterJI by those who desire tho 6uccesa of the Republican party. The Democrats, bocidea tho "Solid South." aro. In tho North intrenchod behind breastworks of public patronage. It will tako steady, earnest, and united work to dislodffe them. No'hlng will so euroly bring about that stomtly, uest. ad united work as the circulation of souod poiitiotl literature, and OB THIS CLASS NO OTHER 13 AS EFFICIENT A3 THE DAILY AND WEEK. LY NEWSPAPER. Speeches and documents are road ty tho tow, and when read are la.id aside; tho newspaper la tho tiroslde friend, the trujtod family companion. Its influence is continuous, constant. Tho Republicans can not aid their party better than by circulating H$tTke DailI Inter 0cean- It is a live Republican Newspaper, and La.3 been faithful among tho Uithloa.i In Chicago. No man has ever questioned Boundnoaa on tha platform, bucauju the principles cl the pla form havo beon advocated by THE INTER OCEAN many years. PROTECTION TO AMERICAN INDUSTRIES AND AMERICAN MARKETS FOR AMERICAN PRODUCERS havo boon its battle cries from tho beginning. It did not tako it tlx weeks to ascertain whotiior it could ttand oa the platform or not. Republicans havo dono much to aid in tho Inculcation of tulso politie&I doctrines ty patronizing papers that advocate them. Why should tbey do so when thoy can avoid it by tubscribine for THE INTER OCEAN, which is acknowledged to bo The Best and 7Vlost Reliable newspaper .Published in Chicago? In enterprise, nows, editorial ability, and everything that goes to maiie A COMPLETE NEWSPAPER it li uii-xcelled by any of Ks contemporaries. Every Republican ought to subocribo for it. Every worklngmn ought to cutecribo for it. It ia the paper for all classes of patriotic people who bollevo in protecting the homes of America. You can subscribe through your newsdealer or pootmastor. If you are unable to do that send direct to the off ico cl publication. Samplo copies aro always rent on atyniicatlon. Artdrosa lL1"EZI? OCEAN, CHICAGO. X- PE AELM AIT, -DRALElt IN- TOVES, F ANIJ ALL HOUSEHOLD GOODS. -LATEST WINDOW KEPT CONSTANTLY ON HAND. SIXTH STKEET, I1ET. MAIN ANI t MMI , imnii in miiu Tinn-mri Be n q ell -DEALERS IN- Fine Staole and -Headquarters 'uitss and Orances, Lemons, Banans and all varieties of irc-nli and Canned Fruits constantly on hand. PRICES LOW. GIVE US A CALL, BEMETT TUTT, ain Streot t ii ,T,P - Jonathan IIatt. wlTMw nrvntr t A PTT"RT?R ad dealeks is BUTTKTl AND EGGS. BEEF, POltK, 3IUTTGN AND VEAL. THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND. Sugar Cured Meals, Hams. Bacon, Lard, &c, &c ot our own make. The best brands of OYSTERS, in cans and bulk, at "WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Hoi bJ I i i m rn , lit )'?:-: 2! O 2 ITJ rr, X 5 W ' in U ; O C 01 0" b P3 O S 2 o ITJ Bend, your job work to the Herald office. ci r- : : a a s URNITURE, KINDS OF- STYLES OP- CUETAm VINE. l'LATTFMOL'l II, KKH. i ea T u I . Fancy Groceries for all kinds of- Vegetables I J. "VV. Martins. lira c.5 C. F. SMITH, The Boss Tailor. Main Sr., Over Merits' Slue Store. Has the best and niot oniplitr f!ook of samples, both foreign and domc-stic ' woolens that ever came west of Missouri ! . . . : i.. :, , ...: river, isoie im-se pnet-s: dumih- puiu from 1 to dr-s3 suit?, $25 to $45, pants 4, -, $0, $0.50 and upwards. IWill guaranteed a fit. Prices Defy Competition. DRS. CAVE & SMITH, "Painless Dentists." The only Petitief in tin West coi!tnilit:jj thia w System f Kxtractiiig ami rilling 'J eelli without l'ain. our M);-.fcMlii-lic is en tirely free from CIIL.OUOFOR3I OH ETHER ANI IS ABSOLUTELY Harmless -- To - AIL Teeth extracted and rtific!al te-th luertel next day if l siied. 7 lie preset vntion .( (lie natural teetli a specialty. COLD CROTC. GOLD CAPS, EE1EGE WORI. The very finest. cflW in Ui.lcn Block, over Fncke'i Drug Store,. xxx.