1 4 !Wi!' at- ..v . i UrvJS, Publishers ry Thnrs'lity. n. ,U'v pn-t-1 oi -In I 1 r r v .i.er Vlusamt I 7 TKHilS FOB WRINKLY )n oopy, one ysar, In advance..... tfc) me ooiiy, one year, not In advance i I ne copy, in monthf. In dance .. 76T .. 76' . 40 One copy, three month. In advance tbhms run DAILl ne cop one yar In advanoe n enpy pur week. Ly Cirrler ne copy, per month soo .. it .. DO SATURDAY, DECE.MHKR 10. lsui It in now practically settled that Sherman will he his own tiiici'e.Hrjor t" the penatorln'r. Evkky r ubli jim ji:iiver in the J with I'resMent country N IU;i llarriit l Tin -- - UlAIN'E and Hirrison bold paral 1(?' views upon the live i.-.iiiisof the .'lay. How about the views enter- tained by Cleveland and Iliil? TlIK republicans through. .ut the C unity desire to see the man chosen president in VJ whom the republi can convention shall nominate, let it be Harrison or Hl.nne. llwt is the kind of unity that will win. The republicans of the country demand of the democrat that they prepare a bill providing for the re peal of the M'Kinley law in order that the tariff may be the para mount issueili Ifi Will they do it? The democrats in congresn would not touch the McKinley bill with a pair of tongs. They deem it far more nafe to view it from a dist nce. Walk . gentlemen, walk uy ami carry it to the rrar if you l.ke. TlIK democrats had better send another .'"tariff "reform" delegation iu ine noriiiwesi to leacn tne p-o-ple. On the other hand the people would like to see these reformers proposed accord with the doctriue expounded. Tub democratic press appears to be considerably worried that Har rison should appoint S. H. Elkins, tiecretary of war, because it appears to indicate thflt perfect harmony anil unity, exists between Secretary Maine and the president Many are the trials and disapointmrnts of the democracy. RULES RELATING TO THE NEW SCHOOL BOOK LAW. School boards should make pro visions at the annual meeting for carrying out its provisions by levying tax uTicient to buy new books. Of course, the new law will not affect those districts which have already supplied the pupils with free text-books further than to make it necessary for them to know for their own protection that school book publishers with whom they may enter into contract hav- .-mni iw1 witli the renuirp- - meats of the law by filing in this office sworn lists of pr ces and necessary bond. The law is compulsory upon the school districts of the state. It is not necessary for those dip triets whose books are satisfactory to discard these bookd and to adopt others; it will be wiser wheneverthe books now in use are fairly satis factory to retain them, and merely to supplement the present supply by the purchase of enough books fo meet present needs. I ilo not understand that it is nec essary in compliance with law for a school district to enter into a for mal contract with a publisher ex cept in case of a wish of the board to make a permanent arrangement with a publisher for suppy ing the district for a specified time, as one, two or ill-, re years. Forms of con tract are ,in course of preparation and wiil be Jfurnish.d the districts in the course of the summer. Certified copies of prices of books will be supplied from this office as publishers may avail themselves of the privileges granted by this law.-June, jsoi. Are teachers compelled to purch ase books of the firms that have filed bonds and lists of prices in the state? The purpose of the bond of a puMinher is the protection of the school district where a contract is for furnishing books mid supplies for a period of time, as one, two or v.-ir',' year. No v.ilid contract can In-made with a publi-dier who lias not hied a bond and pru:e-list a .r.,vi led ! i .v.-; th. ! v m.-ke- no V V ami i XLi "'"' rovstona relative to nf" not included in t-uch a i 'jinract. ! - July, l'l. I The new ehorl bor I:rv ';m,lot 'ulfect a form." vOiitr.iot with a t.ub jWliiu company. The I iw pro i vules that the hook and supplies shall be owned by the district and ; furnish?.! the tnioils free. The mat ter,"f ihi a new conirui't rests with your uivu judeineiit. but wince rudder the new law the din ti icLprok-cti-d by the lo ird bond UarThe pufoliMier, rii'.-u in t.iis o.uce your district officers may deem it bent to make and 8i;u a new con tract. August 14th, 1'.1. Does the new school book law obligate fjubliMhi-rs who have filed Hwrn statements of contract prices and ondi to furnish their publica tions ttaid prices to districts which no not make eoritriets? No. Districts which do not make contracts are not entitled to con tract prices, nor to the protection of the publishers' bowls. The above question hna been sub mitted to me and the answer imme diately following said ipiestioii is the opinion of this oflicc. A. K. ("ml liV, Stint. ru!:!ic Instruct'"'!. MY MILOR LOVER. I Wilt' h lill'l lit. My fl.lp In lute TliRt brine m" Miilnr lover. I witti li I lu; r:i:l- ii tin y tiy liut iliinly out iiiu 1 V.iiu t thr mV)', !Wl unfile bmi.,'4 l;arh toy liiUT. To mo iil'iii Tlii' Mir.i'V low moan TVllsff my Kiilor Iovit. Yearn luve I wntriinl. but all in T.-io: Ob. hull I w oti tun h ah'uio Al) Iiiuk Imt aailor lovrrf With wi-ary lieat The wave ri-Kot. "Cone U ayiaiJor lover." They tell to me ltl unmoUirje, Of sorrows that ar rarely known Tell of my Iuiik loot lover. Ere llfe'a ad day Hjall il away Brin liaek. O aea. my lover. O'er mountain, hill ami winding stream I aee the rtiii's hu-U f.Mliov beam TIiti ahnll my aoul pane over Tl.e Slyiflan river, (tone, iroue forever To mwt my lonit lout lover; But mill I wan h. but wkIi h In rain. While at my la-art grow n keen the pain, Kor rny departed lover. Byron U. liurdii Ic In Yankee Blaile. Plranant Game for ICveulnfa. A pl'viMiit Knm t'ir an evetiinj nt home, atnon a few yailin jsojile and their Hei'iilHrs, is called "Vuti.n," A card with some apiiropriato lines tuny announce Uie eveninif to your friemla, nnd for an honr tlm hosteis or eiiiie ono else a-viineil tlm duty may r'-ad qnola tioim, the gtD-hts giving the anthor. Well known lines should be written on slip of paper and put in a pretty ribbon banket The guests are seated in a circle, and after the first quotation one is given a ruinate to name the anthor. If he fails, the reader gives the right name and No. 3 reads the next quotation and paw to his next neighbor. To give variety an author's name may be given, and a point is made by the first one who responds with a quotation from that WTiter; or a subject may bo given and appropriate quotations called for. The one making the greatest number of points wins the game. Another game that calls for quick thought is called "Observation. " On the card given to each person is a list of ten articles that he is given ten seconds each to see. An evening devoted to curios, after the fashion of some of the clubs. Is ako both delightful and profitable. Eacn guest brings a curio and Wis the history of It In the same manner a geographical rlnh sometimes ranes it weninfni by having f-ach luember bring picture of some spot where he lias traveled and give a little talk about it. New York Post In rcfcrcscs t eb.-.tisscj' ia dress makers for carrying out ideas I had an amusing experience. My sister's stay in Paris was too short for my dressmaker to undertake all she wanted made. For the bent things we went to a bi;; dress maker, whoee importance lies in great pretensions. Among the things ordered there was one fur which I wanted my own way. The woman exclaimed: "But that is not practical. You women Lave ideas, but they can't be carried out" "Well, if it cannot be carried out I Will lie responsible for spoilt cloth if there be any." I knew she opposed it because the idea was not her own, and that it did nut go to swell the bill with yards of lace, feathers, furs, passementerie, etc She consented at last; the dress was a greet success. A few weeks after I had occasion to call on t- dressmaker, and what was my surprise to find several dresses in the showroom with my idea very practically carried out, and what was my greater surprise, when the wom an came in, to find she was wearing my idea practically demonstrated on her own back. Brooklyn Ealo. What "I'uaU laaac" Was Doing. Tommy was sent off on an errand one morning to a farm lying just on the edge of the town, the owner of which was fa miliarly known as "Uncle Isaac." The honr was rather early, and when he ar rived such members of the large family as could be spared without seriously in terfering with the rnnningof the domes tic machinery were gathered for family worship. Returning home, his mother ques tioned, him atsmt his errand, and with the curiosity alut one's neighbors which takes deep root in village soil, she asked him what was going on at the farm. He told her of the ucctpttions of one and another, ami addta, "and Uncle Inuac, he was ia t.!t s-ttiii room a praytrin on't just i ti.:bt :i- he could player." New York Trii.t.r-. rpro' ?!., Iiarthulili. xue iitlo ah mj. iui itiuitii wan imtmTi- nary perscn, and m her nini ii. Ui Lirih day she look. 1 t-., full of life and beamed so with uteuui v.or and heartiness that I wonder fche did not hva to a hundred. She was left a wiovw early, and devotiij herss-lf to the education of her soiisaul the stewardship of their paternal prop erties, which nuder her management were increased to fortunes. Though to Well endowed with the money making faculty, she was a person of a Kotieroca disposition and given to hpitahty. - lu youth she was reputed liie hand somest girl in Alsace. As an old woman she was more than handooiue. 'The pure outlines remained, and the fire of the kindest, quickest and most lumbent pair of eyes imaginable was never quenched so long as lifo remained. The ton mailt have had her in his head, as he remem bered her in hr younger days, when he was sketching the design of the statue of "Liberty Enlightening the World.' It waa her idea that Liberty should not be en pate de g'limanve, but of a grave Hiid severe ass-ct Liberty was the bei-t of all conditions, she used to say, for tho!e who wero severe npou themselves, ami the worst for the Keif iuilul'ent. One never saw a trace of self righteous har.ilnie8 iu the old lady. She was vi-ry indulgent toward the erring; but that grace, die said, came with the wide ex-p-rienee of old ae. It was a source of eiij'iyiiii tit to hi-r to drive to the I-lu of r?w;ti, in t'ne Seine, an 1 look at the re titiei cl i- py whieh was set up I here a few years iio of tiie famous Maine which now stands at the entrance of New York lairlnr. One of her Kiy.ii;:s was, "llo tint r'J .reji bii hie.-.-; cloud it out with g'Ssl ideas." Li llliloll Triilli. A I'urU ( anille Slory. "Lvery traveler wini slops at a Paris loilin house," laughed a woman the ot!e r day, "has a c.uelle f lory, and liere U initio: We were serve. with two camlli-s every lnoruiri?, winch we never liaif ust.-d up; thi-re would be taken out, however, and fresh ores appt ar in their placi-s. Knowing that we were being charged for every caudle we determined at lea.tt to enjoy added illumination, and my li unbuild 1. Hiked arntind for a place to hide them during the daily doing tip of the apartment. On the tp shelf of a cabinet arrangement in a corner stood a large Japanese vase, wide and deep. Up to this Mr. climbed, todixrover that we had been forestalled, for in its capa cious hollow we found seventeen can dles, every one burned down perhaps an inch. "Some former lodger had ri-s-ntel the caudle swindle like ourselves, and h.nl put his daily allowance where it would do tin proprietor no goi si. That night a brilliant illumination of nineteen caudles, each net in its ow n grease on the marble top table, g ive us something like light During our stay we hid and accumulated caudles, so that we had always enough to read by, and when we left we deported our overstock in the vase fur the benefit of some searching suL'ceieor." New York Times. The Bollglnn of tblna. The three great religious of China are Confucianism, Buddhism and Taouisin. The bulk of the people are Buddhists rather than Confuciaiiinte, and there are millions of infidels. The tomb of (Jon f ucins is at Mecca, for many of the Chi nese, and thy make pilgrimages to it Confucianism ia more philosophy than a religion. It contains many of the beau-, ties which w suppose to be exclusively the properties of Christianity. The golden rule in a negative form was an nunciated by Confucius, and as a system of morality it is beautiful. The Taou.at have more superstitions than tlie Con fuciaiduts. They began about the same time as Confucius, their preacher being one Laou-Tsze. The state religion, in connection with which all these religions come in, is the worship of the emperor, who is the son of heaven and the prophet, priest ai.d king of the pfopld. Ho worships for them in the temples at Pekin. When tiie great Temple of Heaven was burned down a shudder ran down the 3K),0o0,0X) spinesof the jjreat Chinese nation. It was thought that this was a warning from heaven that the emperor should be de posed. Frank O. Carpenter in National Tribune. Ilegflnf letters from Loadoa. "Ever since I was abroad," said a well known New Yorker, "I have been pes tered with all sorts of begging letters. Tliey are mostly from the managers of Englinh charitable institutions of vari ous descriptions, though some are from private individuals. The former inclose a variety of printed matter illustrating the purposes and work of the institution. The latter are abject appeals of appar ently professional begging letter writers, with which London abounds. I was talking with a friend about it and he said he had the same erticrience for about two years after he bad built a fine bouse here, a description of which and bis wealth got into the local papers, lie w.l deluged with begging letters from a"imo"t every capital in Europe and es pecially from London. "'le people are the worst and nuait persistent beggars in the world. Fancy an American mailing begging letters to Londoners! I suppose there mtiHt bo money in it or they wonldu't do it." New York Herald. "Brao." The ihtellignnt foreigner is highly amused at the indiscriminate way lo whlcb Edglrah audiences nse this word, regardless of the number and sex of the performers whom they wish to applaud. A tenor is, of course, bravo; but a prima donna is brava. More than one male artist can only tie bravi, and if there are more ladies than one on the stage, and do man is to Is? included in the applause, they should be hailed as brave at least according to Italian grammar. Notes and Queries, ' The art of longevity, all the world over, is a regular life, temjierate in nil thing, with abumhiuee of pure air and water, anil fr to'n from nmi ! v, t ate and worry. 1 pave bern a ureut eiiilerer fioni ::;. oTh for over ten years; . it - : br.;l, c;:t:!'i hard!" !.rr:l Stmie nights I could not sleep and loul to walk the lloor. I purchase d My' Cream ltalin und am tisin;lit freely, it in working a cure surelv. I have advised eeveni) friend j; uee it, and with liuppy resultem every case. It is the incd' inc. iibave all other for catarrh, nrA it is worth its weight in old. I tlihnk God I have found n remedy I cj' use with safety and that does hi that is claimed for it. It is curing my Oealness. if. W. hpcrry, Hart,1 ford, Conn. 1 PLACES OF WOKSIIIP. CATitoLtr. ft raid's f'liuri"h. ak, betweps filth and Hhtli. Father I'aiuey, Tutor Sen ! : V ivmiI Kiel In A. M. RuliUay fcl!(.el at 7 :!, "I'll Uelirdlctlun. CllHITIAN. Corner l.joiiit anil Flirhlh Bts. Seivli e mornlnK and rvei leu. Elder a. (iatuway pastor. Hunday rk-houl 10 a.m. Ei-fcopAL.-St l.nke'n Church, corner ThlrO and. Mil. Kev II B. luivei. panlor. her lret : It A. u. s.d 7 :3Ur. M. fcuuday rk-hisil at 3 :.10 r. M. k r, nuns MmioinsT. wr Wth ft aid liiaiill". Ke. Illit. l'alor. Services : 11 a. M. and 7 M r. . huuuay tkhwul It) M A. m. I'll fan vi HIAX. ervlce lu new church, cr m r suili anil liciinte l. Ili v. J T. Hainl, imi. tor. sui.iluv-ci isil al ;;' ; I'reai'lilug at II a. ni.n-.il i in, 'l he . II. s c. K ! IM clmri-ll lnee eveiy r-. 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 - i - 1 1 1 ' - - Hi T : 1 '. In the Imviiii-'iI of the cliiiirh. All aie nulled to attend Hi cue ll.tetlliH. Tiiiht MrTiloMT. Si tti Ht,, hetuen Main huh I'-utl. !:. I. V. Mint. I. I). iat..r, k.',v : 11 X M. H IMI Y. y Slil.lla. Si heel s..')A M Its) 1 1 inii'li K V eiii e.iljy even- ha:. MiiMi? I'cvMin fitu .- Comer M:tln and .s.nili. I., v V. it.-, ..i t . r. N-rviiea imnal leiliM. ."-.lilel. ) r! .i.l 'I Mi A. M. w 1 1 in-" '' N.:r ' 1 m. AI.-Cir:i!ilte, t.s- Iweei. I ill ll M UU. C' l oiiKl) I', t-TlT. - Ml Olive, link, lietaeen lllltll Hi I iMil'l 1:.-V. A. I'.lewcll. I'HH- 1nr. hi-i ! 1 1 h in. ninl 7 : .i (i iii. I'luyer l;.eeli,i: e.i(r.il;t) l t hiii.-. Vi t N'l MI'S' C lti-TM Jtaooi.'IATloW KiM.lt ill V iC'Tlli-lll llliw-k. M.'.lll ifteel. (in. I el l,eellll. f.tl lie(l olli.eerV Sl-llll.ky at fi ftl.'.l ;.l 1 m'i-Ii.i . 1'l.olti. om'! w, i'k l.-niii e a. in . Iii : ."in i. in, Sol TII t'AMK TAI-SKSai l.r -Hen. ,t. M. V jimI, I a'.ir. Si-ivn-.: Sui.ilKy hi liool, .i in.: I n r.il ! i'. II in. nt.il M i. m. ; I'Mvei ii ,sf lur!t:.y niflit ; cliolr luac lir rrnl i.v infill. Ail ale Kelcutne. KNKilllS OK rVIIIIA" liauntlet litce Mi. 47 M' . i. ey.-iy n eilni'-imy evening t their h II In I'ariiie'e A Cnnv I I -k . All l Ulna kmylits are eimll i ly in led to ailend V. C. Maihall, (' C ; ll bovey, K. K. 8. A o. tr. w,.ii. Me. i. flr- t aim thlid KihUy ' ere ilia-" ot eiich pioiiiIi nt li. A. K. Hall In KiK-kai-.k Min-k. Frank ermllyea, M, W. 1), I:. Kin role, llerorder. 4 O 1' W Ki kl - STeera .eini finS lnnrlli Kml lV i ViT ll l-n In the li.oe'ti a' O. A It hall ill lt kmiod hloek, Ji .1, Morgan, M W, I . T, liroall, llernlili r. OOV.M. All ' tM-rM Cm ticil No o-t lk Meet at ihe K, ill Y h ill in III-fariin le & Crnil' h'iM-K e'-r .--i lie t A- 'lull., vi-llll, hi. ;lii'-ti li,i" . Memy ll.-rnl :, I:. k nt ; Hi"!! rt'nilii S efetm v. CASH IIIKIH. No. I ft. I. O, (I. . IlieeH ,r y Tuerilay iin-lil at Ineir l,a!i In rii'.-iHid Jviek. All Odd Ke'l'ine are mrdially Oivited , attend Kli'li v 1 . 1 1 1 tj a In I'leeiit. J t , y S. i. M. W.lirnL'e, swreiary.f JHK CI1I7.KNS HAXK. P1.ATT8M0LTH . NEHltAHKA Oapltal stock paid la I Authorized Capital, $100,000. orricaas 'KAKK OASKOTH, JOS. A. CONNOH, President Vlce-Pre.Ueui w. n. cufinrsa. ce&isr. Diaaeroas ask Carrulh J. A. Connor, IT. K. (lutbiraal t. W.Johi.ou. Henry Bo-ck, John O'Koeta W. I). Merriam, Wis. Welaneainp. W. H. Cuahlnr, ."BAMSACTKA GENERAL BASIIN3 B0S1KQ wie ert!(leie of depoatti hearlnir Inters! Hun and tella richaiit;e. rounly and elty .. C. MAYKS COb'.N T V - 8L BVEV0II ASH CIVIL i:0I.KKR All order, left with the county clerk will lie promptly attended to. OFFICE I.N t'Ot'KT IIOt-'SK, l'lattsinoutli, . Nebraska When you fio to a nhoe store your object isnot tviily to buy shoes but to procure for ta hut you pjieud the best that your money will buy. Ix-ss tluin Ibis will not content you; more thnn this you r.-innoi, in rea son, ask, Our methorls nre Ba Himple a your desires. We do not lift your exjicctiitiotis to the clouds, but wf real ir. them whittcver they Bre. We will never sacrifice your interests (o ours nnd nowhere else rim you et a fuller ami fairer equivalent for your motley. An especiiilly jirolituble t.urcli.ise for you ia our etc. BOOTS, SHOES on nuBnr:ita P. SHERWOOD. : "tol Mnin Street 19 J. lTftH.SFcRl x . -- DSAIJJIC IN STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES GLASS AND QUEENSWARE. Patronajfc of the Public Solicited. North Sixth Street," Plattsmouth, F IRST : NATIONAL : HANK OK I'l.ATTsMOL'TIl, KII1USKA fald up capital Hilt Itie , ...('I Ofl.no . .. lii,i).iu r Ihe Ve'y l.el fa'-:!ltlci ( ir Ihe promt, ttnli'.-w tluli of IlKllltuale iiiiiiliin IJusinoKs HtiM-ke. hondi, Kohl. Roveriuoeiit ai d Iocm .-mine t'otu-hl t.inl tui it. Iiepiu leci, . llet llltelet allnwiil on I lie relt;iletl.. .Jtafti ilriiwo, av.tlliilile In an purl of t iiii. JM.ii.xai.il ail the pili cipal liu o kiiroie. Kil-LFCllOSS MAPS AM) I'HUMIH.V 11 F Sir. 1KI). Illyheit ma.aet price i-1.1 lor Coiinly Wit rant, Stale ana County hoinla. UIHKCTotiH Jnhn Flt74.rald f). II li -north ham Waiili. V. K. hj.e Oeurxs E. l)oi-y lotio Kltiifraiit. ri. Wli. Freldenl l 'f jSEW HARDWARE STORE S. K. HALL A SON Keep a'l kind" of tuilMer hanlwar on tunt and lll mpply cmiia'-tiire on nun! lav untitle t-r.M Tirr nooFiNo! HpiMttliiif and nil 1 iti'l" "1 on wirk ptotu' ily dine, iinl-rt Iron l.'el cinaitry tinjicltrd BIS P. arl Kt. I'LAITIIMDUTII. JfKII. Mexican Mustang A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast A long-tested pain rc'.ieTer. Its use is almost universal tjr the Housewife, the Farmer, the Stock Kaiser, and by every one requiring an effective liniment 5o other application compares with it in efficacy. This well-known remedy las flood the test of years, almost generations. No medicine chest is complete without a bottle of Mustano 1 1.1UBNT. Occasions arise lor its use aimon every lj. All druggists am) dealers have it Everything to Furnish' Your House. I. PEARLMAN'S flRFUT MODKKN- HOUSE FURNISHING - EMPORIUM Having nurcli.isi-il the J. V. Wockbach store room on south Main btrcct where I urn now locatcJ can nil oods cheap er than the chcnpcHt having jiiht put in the lament htocV of new good cvor brought to the city. Gasoline Htovc and furniture of all kinds nold on the installment plan. I. PEARLMAN. X J 1 v THE POGITIVE CUlE. -JaxT .i luuri usiin, ss im X a i. mri it, t li -..JasTliu " Row l f. Kiiic. il.at ysi al S vh.it I ltiu, )oil U. son ll) selllOl Of ine. , ) Kvif! 'M dn't know: I rvrtalnlrdo Dot Wie any -i' "ii in thaf itiu.i tion." J tNsiKt " W ell. iliinna tin- lu.nl fear months, for axaiulile, )UU have taken up pilllllllltf, tf-.r-ti i' I I ' T 'A I (i t e 1 l i 1 1 ; i: I ' . . ' J . . t. without any tn Iit : you rame tnthe rmcue when Mi-t IitHro i.iwitiil her IS'Wirtecluas f iniMeoly, ami ceriainly e are all tniprov- . Iiii IU ifr.u-fl ur.iiiT ;;w fitsT'S 'i"" ; I heard ar,..i ..ll.r... T if I .in.... l.t.t eif.tiffiff )t,.w 1 Lis chili ma lo tnintakea In piuyinir Iuim Iwli: I yon i';n to In up on nil the hiiest fielv' and ( know lout wlititto diniinlerall eln iiuifttuiiees; ' you eiiU 'Ciiti I,. a ullv; und In the l&t month ynti nje iniiniriaio In hce It h. owing-, youte-liiue. toyour phypii-ulciiltureeier-iwa. wiieni do yen uel nil ot your iuroiiimlioi) t from In tuia little nul-nt lite way placer fur V you never ir'i lo th" ity." Katk: ' wiiv, .ieniiie, you will make ma Tnm. I tmveoiily i.noaoiiriwiif liilornmtion, 1..., 1 I. ...F...1.II I, ln.Hf It IKM'ta &.II IKIlllta 1 r-rv w I'I'imi In-ir of nnytliinir new lint what tiie in kt lew itu s In inu loe lull Information ctl the ".iloii t. W-f hul .Miooil-'e Ao'l a irn ut tre.nuri) H la lo in ell, n riMll.v f.rn.-tii me reielms for ll-o w' hoiiv-lu'lil : I nt Iter Ii.hkuiii tip hit iimmin,. that In' lnn tiikeri fur ymra, n h kiiih t ti IS) One )ive4 rtinre Htnl N iter llilorUililn.il on tti" aiihje. n of tlie ilny; and inoilur saji tit it It m tleit fi.it miik. s I i-r Hu h n fiitnem l.oii.li.H.iM r. In liti-l. H'o nil lllfie t .a it hi tlie only re;tllv rMil,r llii'-'itrii.e tniiuioeti, w.- iiliw M lit lor t- I IT) leu ill 111! I'l tl.eoi n 1 1 II nl Union ms ml I r lie t). mi"i her S i' lor oiii..ii. mid ntiotlier for ilnl.lnti only, While tin. i.l ii m. in every o-ie of tl; ft as nolv need t itileotio I'l-f-tnl of f ni I, a nd I .:il e ti ; 1 : j I ...-i. : :v t'le' in. it II only f :.oi a j .r. T. rn.i- m-ii tl iul 1 am t-nt bivn.li In iny iriwi; l.nl I a ill let you W-J osiH. or. In-i ii-i-'m.;;. eeivl lo rent . to I iie 'il-lile-r, ?V. J.-tmm I M-tnoHtif. l"i I. itnt Hth Siii- t. New Voik. for n wino ,'e rope, mid I lull iiiiv.o . eon-'. I. -r that I have ihaie yU a Kn-.il invor; ai.ili.my l-you will I- 1 1 1 in if li" out. as you ej.v we huve the ret to tut lull or tiritiK the la -it Inltiriiii"! fniully In town. If t)utt l.o m , it is Livu.oreiit'i i amliy klugaaiiis that lit ll" A fibenil oder-oiily fil.fiO for Til Iv WKKTLY IIKKALD und Uemorest rutmly 1 aiinie. t7Senl your suliscri)tioti to this ti44 Sclentiflo America! ' Anenev fort J CAVEATS. A-a" a TRAOZ SSARKII, .. .a OtSlCN PATiNTt 1 f COPIfwICHTi, .(o. Tr Inf'-irmalirm tnd free ITsmltwint wrlta Ar XI ? A I O. l!iil,AT. M oi. O itl.t .rreg f,r MNurinu p.ltelits III Aniei . .very pi.leiit ttiketi ent l.y an Ir l-r'nirtil lw.fi.re t'.e imLiiv Itr a ieiii givo rr ut cl.uriie in Hie Scientific mencau larct r1milttrtn of n? wnnxuff Xrr in ihn mn ltmilfl t. without It, WfWkir, ..00 ft i.-r; l. M) ii Pf.-inih. Ad'1r w Wl'Nj. 4 CO., 't BMjuiiu, tl iinsavft. New Murk. . 1 t n is, isr-wy.nf. r..'60-(j J Liniment 1 (