THE DAILY HERALD i Tin fiSiVitruTn, xtismiASKA, .SATtflioA V, -NOVEMBER U 1$S&V.. BOYS' LIFE AT SEA. ritcm iwfc MULFORD TELLS A BIT - OF YOUTHFUL EXPERIENCE. First Lcmoui Taught on SUip Hoard Sail or ism of 1 are Learning Good Man- "?rs A Hullj la Authority An "Ordi nary Seaman." Tlicre were on board eix "boys" besides myself, aid all from tle same village aa .our captain. 1 liat was the principal rea son for shipping on his vesseL It was not a good thing to do, aa we soon found out. 1 o be known on board as a friend or protege of the captain is to draw at once a prejumce unfavorable to you from crew and officers. They think you are trying to creep in at the cabin windows. a no motto on shipboard is that a true sailor must come in through the hawse holes. I hat may or may not hold true. according to the kind of boy or material t that comes in either way. If a man has ' got the sailor in him " it will come out anywhere. I was in the second mate's watch. lie was a torn brute. But he swore half of my sickness out of me, and the fresh air and enforced exercLse of founding the rust troin the cliain cable before it was fctowed away did the rest. Our exienence was rough. But it was useful. e learned in a short time many tilings our parents had neglected to teach us, such as the art of mending and wash ing our own clothes. Up to that time I Jiad no idea of thi eternal necessity of repairs on clothing. My first efforts with the needle, one sunny morning as I 6at on deck, called forth abusive expres sions regarding my lack of skill from the third mute. lie condescended to teach me. Our earlier efforts at wash ing called forth contemptuous expletives from the old sailors, who said that such badly washed clothes hung in the rigging were a disgrace to the ship. We resorted at times to a sea wash, which consists in tying a flannel shirt to a line, flinging it overboard and letting it tow after the f-hip. Sometimes we hauled in our lines less the shirt from badly tied knots, and sometimes, when the ship was surging along at the rato of ten knots an hour, we hauled in a shirt less a good deal of the warp, for a bit of cloth won't last long when treated in tins manner. SAIIjOKS BILL OF FARE. Our sea faro was "lobscouso" and a fluid called coffee for breakfast; "salt horse" and hard tack for dinner on Mon day, ork and beans on Tuesday, salt lieef again on Wednesday, salt lish on Friday, and beef again on Saturdays and Sundays: a lluid called tea, sweetened In bulk with molasses for supper, and on "duff days" (Thursday and Sunday) a Inmp of plain boiled Hour, without plums or other fruit to give it the true inwardness of a pudding. This taught us how wo had been humored and pain in-red at home. For the lirst time Jn our lived wo really appreciated the value of our homo breakfasts, with milk in our coffee, buckwheat cakes, and a score of other things, whic h wo thought t ame as easily as dew from tlio clouds and must bo everywhere. Some of us had le longed totho Dainty -und-tUflicult'to-sult-- cub order of Itys grumbled at the coffee for breakfast, turned up our noses ut this or that dish, and made "mother hustle to get us something lit to eat." Three weeks at sea cured U3 of that. Even th'J tunc! of real coffee, as it was carried ly fho black steward from the galley to the cabin table, was a treat, und fin (occasional cold breakfast roll or a r!i.;r.irded bit of any cabin dish that found Ks way to us was a luxury pot .to le !cNcribed in word. Theso were j "beiKivlins." That i the sea phrase for' Ihe'crumbs that fall to the boys from the cai'laiu's table. "Ibscouse" is made of bard bread. !oiled a short time with thmlded tfajt ecf. It is ft relishablc dish anywhere. A midnight luxury for a sea lunch h tt biscuit, an onion and a slice of r 'W pork. It Bounds rough to the lands man a ear. but I have seen sailors, after being a month ashore, longing eagerly for this "combination. LEARNING GOOD MANNERS. I am almost ashamed to say that it was necessary for us boys to go to sea in order to learn some pecessary planners. For instance, when Fjoken to by an pffi cer or ordered by him individually to do any duty it was required of us to say "Aye, aye, sir," Jn order to show that; we had heard what ho had said and not go off without saying a word, as wo had ,Otion done in somewhat similar circum "tit;inee3 vjth our parents, leaving them in doubt whether V w heard them or jioj. Then wo were required to show a certain deference, even to the elder ;,jJlors. but wo had not been i:i the habit i l i):iw; to many of tho grown up men of our' Vllj.'i.".v. If boy on chipboard wan too Ire..!)', us tlio modern saying goes. A a trench Serial Gather! nc Take a large French family reunion. Few social pictures are prettier. There ts very likely an entire absence of that hearty familiarity which characterizes pur Thanksgiving or Christmas gather ings. The children do not romp, the jrown people do not appear as if at lost the moment had come when all outward restraint and formality could be thrown aside with a clear conscience. The vis itors do not "make themselves perfectly at home," the hosts do not invite them to do so, or treat them as if such were the case. There i3 everywhere perfectly ap parent the French veneer of artificial courtesy. Children are treated with po liteness and not hugged; babies are ban ished are eenerallv. in fact, in a state of chronic exile: if at times everv one is talking at once it is evidently bo- cause of the social desire to contribute to the conversation, rather than because of the unsocial disposition to neglect one's neighbor's appreciations an abys mal difference in itself; there are no un comfortable silences passed in simply 'sitting round" and cudfrelins: ones brains as to what to do next; the great an ana enjoyment of social life be ing conversation exchange of ideas, or not ions, original or trite, but always cast in more or less careful form games are far seldomcr than union;? us resorted to as a substitute, and being invariably for money probably owe their popularity to the ingrained trench disposition toward avarice; an avarice which always seems curious to us. but about which in its milder manifestations there is never any concealment. Games themselves arc never conducted m. silence. Ihe solemn stillness that with us accompanies the rubber of whist, which is more and more tendincr to be come, even as played by the young and tnvolous, a tremendously serious thing, and which indicates clearly that the game is an end in itself and not a pastune, is unknown outside the clubs in France. An occasional old gentleman who, when the stakes are high, insists on a subordination of talk and vigoronsly represses his partners i endency to dis cursiveness, is voted a nuisance. W. C. Brownell in Scribner s Magazine. STOLEN DIAMONDS AH MOV'S STRLET MAP.KGT. SOME CURIOSITIES OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRAFFIC IN ILLICIT GEMS. with the old salts of M forecast o an( .k i. nu ll inclined to move hi i tongue f;liU.v when in their company, tither vHh !:; or hi own males, ho wan very ijulclilv reridnded M-it his chaff and verh::j"horoo play must, j re served for Jij j own fijieciu eotniany und for u lisiv i'.lid place. Onr s'iij was furnished with a bully roond mate, lie was knocking some I odv dowii tniK'h of the time. Hii:i wr.: iliu-hg tho l'nisli of hp era of f:u;t C'ali l.jrnin dippers, high sailor's wages ami i'iu.t passage: to San Francisco. Met. ,J) -vp.nl, claiming (to Ito able minion, Z'h't li.d not mastered their trade. Bo ei.issj : al io waman's vocation in a t.ulc as much us J y. of a shoemaker. Jit; i-hor.M know all about knoj ting and rhVi:i; and be equal to any repair ff .vrk required alolt. An "ordinary sea luun" J- oxpectcd to "hand reef and teor.w which, in substance, means he "tihouM know tho roj,?s," bo able to xnako himself useful oii x yard in reefing and not hang-on a useless pneurobraneo nsltlid. Ilo should know also how to steer a elJp rroicrly, which, in tho c:use of a greot juaro rigger, possibly having nil studding sails act, U very tuffercnt nd rnoro difficult Affair than .he steer ing of a fore and aft vesseL A "boy In maritime parlance, is not expected b know any tiling, and ft greenhorn will bp rated as n, boy, though he h 20 vrars old. l'rentico MuJford in New orl fetor. A Wonderful lluddblat Temple. ' A missionary who settled in the prov vhico of Sz-Chuan, central China, uuJ jrlaited tlio great Buddhist peak Mount Oincl, Uoacribea tho temples as still show ing many wonderful works of art, not withstanding conflagrations, devastating ,war and rebellious. Near tho foot of the mountain to a pagoda of bronze, thirty feet high, ia fifteen stories, cov ered with an Luxnenso number of figures delicately cast. OX ures of Dpdd- Ihera rso no less tlva .7" " ' ' (which have bera r ' of rea. C"'" , Advantages of Imperfect Health. Perfect health, wliile conducive to mental serenity and soundness, has not been shown to promote or produce de cided activity of intellect. The abso lutely healthy man is more likely to ex cel in tho baseball field, more apt to de velop into a being whose extreme tyix? of animal perfection in found in a Sulli van, tnan to become a iiumDoiut or a Ilcrschel. Perfect brawn has not been shown to lead to gifted brains. The man whoso body is a perfect machine, an swering to all demands upon it, con ferring the keenest pleasures in life upon its jxjssessor, is the man to win fame in fields whore mere brain work is not the desideratum. lie will bo foremost to launch new enterprises and in opera tions demanding risk, bodily exertions. physical strain. These po will do be cause therein ie finds a safety valve for hij turplus vitality. lie could pot en sure the sedentary life which the close .tudcut or tho successful merchant finds .bsolutely necessary for the conduct of lis professional or business duties. IJi'.t, on the other hand, the man whose erratic liver or complaining stomach re minds him of till? shortness and. lincer taiuty of things mundane, will bo the pruc.ont, tnougntiui, calculating s-.nu cencrully successful businessman. Ihe man whose import eel ion or bouiiv neaitn -i ves him no hoiie of en loving life as he otherwise would, will, accordiug to the livine law of comjensation, find, in th'v xerciseor ins menuii iucunies, wuai no healthy brethren find in pleasures of the 'lises. It his tastes lie in the line of money getting, his admonishing liver or tomach help to make lam shrewd, close. (mating and prudent; make mm look ahead and prepare for reverses and the ill fortune that ho cannot banish from !:i.i mind as the almot t inevitable end of ihe battle of life. Obeying his inward monitors, ie vil assume no risks where the healthy maiiyould ppurt such Li the fullness of hi:i self confidence and so tho chronic vfctim of a disordered body will achieve success in business. and, though at no time a brilliant man, will not end his clays in poverty. So, too, will tho intellectually active man, abandoning hope of perfect physical health, achieve fame and distinction in field: of thought." There' is much' to be said in favor of the advantages of imper fect health.-Pjttsb'urg liuUetin. A I'lno Taste in Tea. Mr. Guy Maine, the Chinese lecturer, related the following instance in regard to Chinese tea drinking the other even ing to a rojortei'. Ho said that when ho was a loy about 11" years old' ho lived with his father, who was a little near sighted, in a cottage in tho southern part of China. One day he was cleaning out Ids father's tea ketilo and could not get all tho lea leavps put, so lie put lua hand in the kettle.' About a half hour after ward his father "called for liis tea, which Guy took to him and returned to work. Shortly tho old gentleman called him again ami asked him if ho did not tell him never q pui; his hand h (-he. tea kettle. "Well," said Guy, "I did not know whether my father was pecking through tlio keyhole watching mo or not. So I let three weeks pass when I knew my father was out on business, and I again put my hand in tho tea kcttl'3. hat evening I was called to answer tlio ques tion wilich was asked mo several weeks boforo. Uut you can rest assured from that tune to tlus I have never put my h j'id in any tea kettle." New York Lvening Sun, Mind and Hotly Suffer. rrr1 m hi v there are no other people bo peculiarly liable to dyspeptic troubles as Americans. They are notoriously erratic. not only in their habpls of eatmg, but m other wavs pf living. They arO always on tho jump. Personal convenience and welfaro are among the minor con siderations; thero is always some other to take precedence. To acquiro wealth Li tho ono njin of many, but not alb Bomo have a nulo purpose in nre-rto win in tho art,' the literary, the scientific, or tho olitical world, places which "can not bo easily filled when they aro gone. Hut ambition is singularly the character istic of ail. Is'ono seem satisfied with the present; nil cherisii ionu nopes pi me fi.fnr.v JVor is tins passion as a ruie uioderato jn intensity, wisely regulated and limited to u healthy stimulus. Many feci its full tenacity and power, and all other promptings are held m check by it. Again, it is . too often ill directed, and when it to, mind anil liody inevitably suffer. ' In a word, Americans are a rest less pcopla, possessed, by thai eons tact cud wearing anxiety to "betttr- tV1 - -""-n. The pora fv ' Schemes and Artifices of That Rascally Irateruity, the "I. D. U."-Uow Stolen Stones Reach Enrtipe Sooie Interesting Stories The Dyins Oijrpr. Dr. Matthews, an Lnglish practitioner who spent inanv years in the diamond field of South Africa, lias just published in England a book on the cub ject. An interesting part of his book is that which deals with the development of the greai diamond digging industry, and the schemes and artifices of that rascal! v fraternity, the I. D. P., or illicit diamond buyers. There is a saying tliat five years m boutn Atrica is cunicicnt to corrupt the most immaculate, and that a man who has lived there for seven should net be believed upon his oath. Dr. Matthew revelations certainly trive color to the saying. Accordim? to his account, the larger part of the community of Kimber- ley is mixed up in this nelarious traihe Diamonds, as most icople will be aware, are sorted out of diamondifcrous stuff by native "hands." Some of these hands are probably in the pay of tho f ra ternity. A fine stone is turned up by one or them when nobody is looking, lie seizes it, hides it in his hair, in liismoutli or in some other portion of his person. Or if a goat ho liandy lie twists it in his wool, and tends tho animal affectionately till an opportunity occurs of redeeming tne stone, ur, perchance, he conceals it behind a rock, or forces it down the throat of a dog, or, Homeric device, he swallows it himself. 1 herein beinjr re stored to the light of day from its hiding place, wnatever it - may have been and many a diamond now sparkling on a lady s neck has made acquaintance with the 6tomach of a Kafir the dusky thief m due course puts himself in communi cated with another native of a superior class. This man is a tout in the pay of a low white man a "mean white," as ho is called in the colonies. HOW it is DONE. The tout buys tho 6tone for, let.us say, a hundredth part of its value, and the thief spends the money in the vile drink which it. is the peculiar pride of civil ization to supply to the unsoplusticated savage, and, so far as he is concerned, there is on end of the transaction. Then the tout carries the stone to the "mean white" and receives from him a sum of money, perhaps double what he has given to the actual thief. The "mean white" in his turn takes it to the licensed buyer of diamonds, who i3 possibly a person of glarn and even aggressive respectability a" church warden or a member of the municipality, or at' least a merchant of good antecedents and from him receives perhaps a tentli part of the worth of the gem. So far so good; but still tjhere are slips between the cup and tho lip, and it $3 sometimes found difficult to 'convey the stuff out of the country to the linal receiver in Lon don. To this end many artifices are re sorted to. Innocent looking fowling pieces, on examination, have been found to be loaded with diamonds to within an incli of the muzzle, whjle suc! depos itories as iVycls wjtli' "holes cut; hi the leaves, t be uuills. of ostrich feuthers and boots with hollow heels are not uncom mon. Often the fair sex are found to be. use ful auxiliaries in theso adventures, for tlicre to a peculiar sacred ness about a lady's underclothing that appeals to the mind of the customs officer.. ' The man would bolibht who" "merely ventured oi her Lack Jiair. However' this may be, by far tho greater puncher f;f stones so procureu arrive saic ly m tiurope. Most jjeople will naturally think that tho na tive rascal who takes the stone is respon sible for this Ktate of tilings, but it is not tho case. The native never dreamed cf stealing diamonds until ho was taught to thieve by the white receiver pf stolen goods. " " ' ' ' J.OMK INTERESTING STORICS: Dr. Matthews tells some interesting tales or tho I. D. 11. fraternity. In the dead of a certain night, in the year 1872, he was roused from sleep and confronted by a trembling and middle aged citizen of the fields, who informed mm that he had swallowed a 'thirty carat -'diamond and two sovereigns just to show Ids mends how was now auxiou foreign substah' ably begun to disagree. Ultimately they were recovered, and tho happy citizen departed with the diamond. leaving tho gold in payment. Of course this man had disjosed of the diamond under mmiiiejp fear 'of 'detection; but why ho tobk the two sovereigns it is dif ficult to say, unless it was to get his hand in. Some people, by tho way, appear to bo able to swallow very large stones, for so lately as last 3'ear, a native dying under Btispfcicvad ckcumblnuce's' ereigns jusi to snow ius tlio scomidr'els did it, and ixiqus, to !e. 'nd pf these caiiues, which liad prcsum- iy lito body was opened and a bixty carat stono found in his stomach. Hero is another talo. A wliito gentle man lived with a pretty Fingo woman, who also acted as his agout in the "trade." He. feirll pf fevei', ami for weeks lay in a state of delirium, between life and death. She nursed liini tenderly through it all, and, what is more, kept up his connection with the "boys;" so that when he came to himself she was enabled to present lum with hundreds of carats of fine stones, nd now.J piark tho seoiieU ' Jo sooner was ' lie strong enough than he departed for Euroie, taking every gem and farthing 6ho had collected with him, and leaving the un fortunate girl to starve on the streets. On a certain occasion Dr. Matthews was railed in to attend p dying diggetp, who iiau once worKea aciaim tor mm. j.ih'so were tho words that greeted lum when he told tho man tliat there was no hope: "Doctor, I cannot die without telling you how, when I worked your claim i i ISo, 0, robbed ypu pf p wriy ull your diiuuonds." In the face of 6tories such as these and a mass of other evidence, it to sometimes difficult not to believe that civilization is a failure and tliat the educated Christian man, except under very exceptional c ir-r punistanccs and when restrained by tlio strictest pressure of law, is a lower ani mal at heart than the savage he despises and destroys with drink and rille bul lets. Tho Argonaut;, The Near Future, Elderly Bride (to her husband) Darl ing, when I begin to. grow old and plain, will you worslup we as paiionuteJy as you do now? Young Husband Ah, dear, can you doubt me? Do you imagine for a moment that my love for you to so short lived? Harper's Dazar. . II 111. J I ! -.11.-1 L quickeet dghtseclng on record to "erican woman, who clairm ' ii tsa hours. Queer Vegetables, with Odd Nun.cs. That Chinamen Delight In. Lee Fong is the pioneer Chinese- tn.ck gardener and farmer in America. His brother, Lee Foo. is bis partner, unci to gether they cultivate a thriving little Clantation of two acres in the fir .!' and eautiful region of Astoria. L. I. Three mornings every week I.ee Feng or Ljee too drives down to Chinatown from the Ninety-second street ferry. percned lugn on the seat of an eld wagon whose ribs and spokes still U ar linger ing traces of former beauty, and pushing on reins connected with a Lay horse tliat to not given to shying, curveting or caro- coling to any great extent. 1 hey supply Cliinese vegetables to tho Chinese store keepers in Mott. Fell and Bayard streets. and to Mr. Yuet Sing, who maintains the big grocery under the Jo:js house i:t No. iu unatnam square. 1 r.cse Chinese vege tables all come from seed: tliat Fong and l-oo imported from China Ia.st winter when they made up their minds that farming was the proper thing for them to try. Iiicv are called ongqua, "la qua and 'bak toi." The principal customer of tho Lee lircthers Agricultural company (limited), to a modest young gentleman named Ah Mov, who does business on the curbstone on Mott street, in the heart of the Chinese quarter. lie is a coy youth and an honest. He to afraid to answer many questions about himself or his vcgetaiJles. but he deals honest Ir with lito customers and v: ives them fair weig'it. No kind of food to sold i:mou: the Cnme::e bv measure or by coimt. Everything to t.-ouirht by wci-rht. An artist did nome quiet marketing m order to estni.-hrn eor.J:!cr:uel relation:; with the proprietor, wnoso chief charac teristic was a lierpctual tendency to say "stir rvnf rrmixP tr ercru nnoctinn f 1 t -j. j was asKed mm. Iverv one or Ins veire- caoies, including a big invoice or suyrar cane from Louisiana and some New York state apples, was held at tliat figure. He weighed everything lie sold on a quaint. old fashioned scale, whoso rod was ma hogany, very old and much polished by long friction. The chances are tliat with it Moy's ancestors weighed out food to Soo Chow citizens long before the United States were heard of. The weisrht is a clumsy hunk of rusty iron, and the di visions of weight are indicated along the rod by Hundreds of lino brass nails, which are driven so 6kilIlulJy tliat the rod is not cracked anywhere. The vegetables sold by Ah Moy attract large crowds of China men every morning a i ter Lee Fong has driven sway. The rrcatest of all these is ong qua, which to a s; ;uasli with odd convolutions and of weird, grayish ereen coloring. There is a bloom on "it like the bloom on a peacli, and its rind to verv tender. "Him good to cook," explained All Moy. "Cook, boil, belly nice to eat CU. j WJVA A V 1 .'XV. MX 1C, La qua and clia qua are distant rc la- tives of ong qua. Cha qua is a cucumber covered with furry spines and about four times as big as our ordinary gherkms. It to boiled and eaten like squash or pickled wiui spices, ja qua is a small squash much used for tlie making of sweetmeats. It is candied and put away dry in boxes, like candied ginger. Dak toi to an odd sort of vegetaLle. TP v.n Ameyiean it to a pombmation. pf cabbage, celery mid cai5d-oyer, Ah Moy bays, "You cook lum. iry a mtlo or boil, which are prob ably as good as any other ways of serving bak toi. The heart of tho vegetable is like the heart of the caulillowcr. Its stalks are wliite and resemble celcrv btaiks."mul at the top thpy broaden out into a very fj.ir mnration 01 a caouage icai. There to anotlit-r variety of toi known as gai toi. '11ns is like the .other, with the exception tliat jtsi sta jkti jij ticen. It isnscitl fill- lHiUnif. cabbage fashion. and is atoo put in soup like okra. The sugar cane, called gam chiali, i.i a fine tiling for a man to eat who wants io have luck. Ian tan players are verv fond of OUR LATEST IHPEOVEHENTS ! "Competition la the I.lfo of Trade," and If yon have not sen onr latent Improved coodj yon" inot Imagine how lively lral? I, or how impel our competitor have to work to keep Ithlu iKht or on. : your retailer for tho JAMEU JIEANa' 3 or tho JA.UE-S .IIEANS 4 HUUli' cannot according to your needs. l'oaitlyeiy none eennlna unless barlnir onr name and price damned nlalnlv retailer will supply you with shoe so Ktaniped if you Insist u;ho hfs dotn so; if you Uo not IXWUICI 9 W9 IUWM J UU 1UIV WUJ U0 aw wiuca UVM U1V.U t U1MG m uutr flUUb - II am a V- ESS JAMES MEANS' 3 3 SHOE . UNEXCELLED IN - STYLE I'N EQUALLED DURABILITY . AND - ERFECTIOM of fit; JAMES MEANS j $4 SHOE CANNOT FAIL 5 TO SATISFY. The most. FASTIDIO Mil I . -sa m M Z Uliff Such has been the recent progress in our branch of Indimrrr that we are now able to affirm that the James Means' $1 Shoe Is in every repM't equal to the shoes which only a few yearaso were reltll atHk'hc or ten dollars. If you will try on a pair yo i will be convinced that we do not exaggerate. Ours are the ordinal $ and $4 Shoes, and thoke who Imitate rair system of buolneos are unable tcontK-te Willi us la quality ot factory productii. In our lines wo are t be largest niunufa'tiirer In t he United states. One of our traveling salesmen who i tiow vUillng the shoe retailers of the Pacific Coat and Zlocky Mountain Region writes from there as follows: I am more than satUfled with the results cf mr trip. I hare thus fnr succeeded In placing our full line in the bands of 'A No. 1' dealers In pvery point I nave viHlted." He goes on to Kay. "This la a splendid region for us to sell shoe in. because mot of the retailers are charging their customers at retail about double the prices which the shoes have coxt at wholejuil. The consequence Is that the iieotile who wear shoes are paying six or wren ttolbm a pair for shoes which are not worth aa much as our I AMES MEAN.)' JS3 and 81 SHOES. Our shoes with their very low retail prices stamped on the soles of every pair are breaking down tho high prices which have hitherto ruled in the retail markets ben, and when a retailer put a full line of goods In bis stock they at ouoe begin to go oil like hot cakes, ao great Now, kind reader, just stop anl ootutlder what the above signifies so far a yea are concerned. It ssures you that If vou keepon buvlng shoes bearing no manufacturers' name or fixed retail irice tamtxNl on the soles, you cannot tell what uu are getting and your retailer is proluibly making you pay double our name and the fixed retail price upon the sob's of our shoes before they leave our factory ao thai you re aald by wide-awake retailer in ail parts mw our reacn l cannot be made to pay more for your shoes than they are worth ? Shoes from our celebrated factory are aald by wld the country. We will ulace them easily withlu your reach In anv Slate or Territory if you will Invest on. cent In a postal card and write to us. JAMJ23 & CO., 41 .Lincoln St., liosioii, Mass. it. Alio ciuie mav p curen vavv; but ii u bos$ pioklea ami fieil 'iii laril. All of the ifidtinctl.v" Liincse.' vootaLles liavc 'tie peculiar taste tliat all Clun'i- foods wl'tfil broi'c'it tiihi toliLirt wi'li ta Auiorioan palate. Tliev art i.uaiiy bouglit up and cooked before tln-y have time to decay. New York World. The IPf ijy ilrla of l:icliu;outl. People vrho. have gone to tlio exposi tion" at lviclirabin pjoiik of tlio immv handsome ' vomen seen. r tlio frowds tlierc. 'riis observation no doubt well foiUidw. I'ltiuiH'iid 1j ri very proviiu-ial citv in litany resects, !iv;t slio ij metro politan if not cosmopolitan in the beauty of her women, if this meant that the beauty of her women U m.n paMtl. There are po pi o.emhieiit belle 'in liich niond now us, thev'o wero in the tlavs closely 'following the war, when Mattie Ould trausilxed with both her wit and beauty everybody slio met, hut what lias been lost in iiitlivdual celebrities :t::i been more than made up in a ivat multi tude of woiKlerfui'.y hi tractive women, "lany of 1 hein aro blondes. ' Thcro is a larger projiorlion of Llonlo women in Ricl;inond than in any other i itv i: tlie country. ThLi vo.e uaturr.I!v rind lawfully ftiii tlicir Kn;;iisli nri"';!; try. There," i vcry 'littla "pf tlio pam. h or Frencli" jn(eriai.luro fountl in Viri::i.i. arid lichee thy creolo typo of leauty is rarely been in tlio state. The world lima after blondes nowadays, especially after blonde or poldcn h;ur; and tsuch liair as t!io IIk!iit;r.rtd women have! It ii a spnti;:! corir.if.lion of tho renial oijiithern euii, ui:l is as dihtinet in its beauty 11s the golden leaf tolxirco for v.Iueh Virginia, is eo celebrated. If a .nan wero starting out general! v in fieurcls of o. bride, if lio were willing to allow himself to drift where t lie Aiiieri van woman reuchfa Uo pink and aiex t;f pUyi'! ierfectipn and attractiveness, ho piiglit to drift towards Richmond. Va.shington Post. Why fchc V.'an Ttlenlne. V.'o wprp running down from Charles iun to Savannah, and tlio train was lium ming along :.t higli kjkjciI, when tlio danger signal blew and the airbrakes wero put on hard. As tho train i.topicd all tlio pasiMngers pilot! out to reo what was tho trouble. in;I v.e kooh discovered that a culvert round the bhort curvo hatl been washed out. A negro woman liad flagged the train with a white nitron, and of course wo ull looked niton her as a hereine, "When did yon discover that tlio cul vert had gone?" I asked.. "Jist about half an hour ago." "And your lirst thought was to stop the trainV' ' "Yes, sali." "Weil, you aro a bravo woman. Wo owe our lives to you." "Does ye? I nebbcr thought of that." "But ytai stopped the train." "Yes, sa!i, but I didn't want dat bull gino to git oil do track an go plowin' frew iny cotton patch en' frowin' hot water all olter the placo. Dat's why I Ktopied do tvaia, uih." Dctixjitj Free lYeaS. I- Ij 3E 2T, -DEALER IX- STOVES. FU RNITURE, ND ALL KINDS OF- HOUSEHOLD GOODS. -LATEST STYLES OF- WINDOW CURTAINS KEPT CONSTANTLY ON HAND. SIXTH STREET, BET. 3!AJN AND VINE. I I at a .voi hi, m.b. ajaaKpajctT!BTMrJsw3rjrjr3iiCTaMjrajcJ JJia L.r f7V t9xto eaT ) OJLY S3. IO FOR - THK WEEKLY 1 1 ERA LI) k: Demorest's Monthly Magazine.? A WONDERFUL PUBLICATION. Many ennpoee DEMOIIKST'S NOVTIII.Y to be a fahioa magazine. Tliif is great mic lake. It undoubtedly couLains the finm Fac hion Ir tartmbnt of any maguzine published, but tltit la the case from the fact that mreat r-nterprie and ex perience are shown, fo that each department is equal to a magazine lu Itself. In Dkmouest's you get a dozen roaS'nes in one, and secure inure ment and Instruction for the whole family. It con tains stories, I'oenis, and other Literary attractions. Including Artii-tic, 'Scientific, and llonwhold matters, and is illuftrated with original Ste-1 Knuravinms Photogravures, Water-Colors, and fine Woodcuts, making it tho Modki. MiotziM op AxiRin, Kach cot cantain9 a Pattebm Cianeit entitlln" tha holder to the selection of Ant Pattern illustrated In any number of the Magazine, and in asr tbx 81ZI8 manufactured, eaca valued at from sfJ cents to 30 cents, or over $3.00 worth vt patterna per year, rree. , Yearly subscription. 2.00. A trial will convince yon that yon can pet ten times tho vuluo Of the money paid. Single copies (each containing Pattern Order), SO cents. Published by W. JENNINGS DEM0KEST, New York. The above combination is a splendid chance to get our paper and Doutl' ilosTHiT at s reduced rate, fieud your aubecriptioua to tuia oflloo, . - - Jonathan LIatt. J. W. Maktuis. &1MjSJSJOLSJSS TSL&JTJS l C.t WHOLESALE A1T23 XlIHTxilX, PORK PACKERS and dealkrs in BUTTER AND EGG". I3EEF, PORK, MUTTON AKU VKAJ THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND. Lard, tSc., in ii'.i. and l l.lk, lit T Y M EAT Sugar Cured Weals, Hams. Baccn, ot our own make. The N'st ltntinl. of OYSTERS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HEALTH IS WEALTH ! Dr. THE LADIES' FAVORITE. NEVER OUT OF ORDER. If you lclrc to purchase n acwlnir maciilne. ask our nircnt at your hi'o for U-rins and S rices. If you cannot find our agent, writo irect to nrarewt mllrTtstityou tx-low named. NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE G.ORANGE,MASS. kmicabo - 28 w0N SQUARE N.t. 'Lir... ... ATI.ANTAA. T LQUI3.M0. DALLAS. TEX. MttrPAicccoei K. ('. West' erv fimi !'.r:iln Treatuiriit a ju:ir.-iiitc .pi cine for Hysl-ria tnv.rurH, ('iiviilsiuiiH. Ki's. N-rvnt S' rri:l.'l;. Il.-art-jn-hi'. Nervecn. I'rofl rt i it csii!c1 liy llieiitA of ii'eoliol it t .l'a'fii. VjiU-f ii'ln ks. V-I't;il I - lirct-I'Mi, Sof K i.lu' of I In- I'.tin trviill iii lu In -s;n.it y au-t It-ndii't; t n ix rv. !- :ty :uil deatli, r:n:iiire dd Aue. M:iirriMi.-M, ! ". of I'ow er in eil l.er s x. Iiivi lin.iiirv h :mrt ier- niiit rrlnct taiiHt-d liy over-fxer'ioti t-l h lirain pi'lfuhii.xf tirovcr-'iidt.lrnri'. I'.wli lox conl.iiiis one 111.fl tnti:.. lit. $1 Ml a liox or. six l.of f,,r tU.tm, sei:t l-y -11 tr.ali2oa ree-iit of iilc WE OU AKAKTEE SIX HOXES To cure ;mv e:ie. With em-li ii''r n-c-lv"l liy ns f'tr six lors. .?ron i.Hi ttllli f.l.fM, we will weiiii Hie .tir-!ia-r s-nr w tiiteii etnirn ti le e f 't'liirn the n-one if tie t xln,t-iil doea not fITeel h enri. f Stmrai'tt-r iti l only tiy Will .1. Wnrtiek sole a i.l. i'latl'iiiontli. Nef V rstuiiil atfention imy cure. to all Ruslnet i Knliust- XOTAUY IX OPFK'K. Title" Kxniirinefl. lHt.ticls '"oinLileJ In surance W rit ten, 1 i ul KMato tild. J. M. MUIR, Plattsmoiith, Neb. I Uetter Fuellings for making Farm Loans than Send your job work to the ILekald Any Other Ajeaejr. office. Plattscaoata. Kebrni:n m '