The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, May 19, 1899, Image 5

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    I
Clearance Sale
In order to reduce my stock I will sell for
Thirty Days at Prices That
^cannot be duplicated any where. Sale limited
to stock on hand
AND FOP CASH ONLY
.
A $7.50 Rocker will go for $5.00
A 2.50 Mattress will go for 2.00
A 2 50 Bedstead will go for 2 00
A 15 00 Bedroom suit for 11 25
A 50 Lamp for 20
Picture frames at half price
^ND SO ON ALL THROUGH THE LINE. COME QUICKLY AND BUY AT
PRICES YOU WILL NEVER AGAIN GET A CHANCE AT
Hardware. Stoves and Tinware
GARDEN SEEDS IN BULK, FIELD SEEDS ALFALFA, MILLET ETC.
A complete line all through and bought before the rise in the market.
Yours for business,
E. H. W ATKIN SON, Loup City, Neb.
THERE IS
ONLY ONE
OVERLAND ROUTE
UNION
PARI FIT
1
DIRECT LINK TO ALL POINTS IN
Nebranka, Colorado, Wyoming
Utah, Pacific Coast and
Puget Sound.
i --
Palace Sleeping Cara. Ordinary Sleeping
Cars. Buffett Smoking and Library Cara.
Free Reclining Cbalr Cara
Dining Cara. Meals a la Carta.
For timetables, folder*, Illustrated books
pamphlets, inscriptive of the territory
traversed, call on W, D. CLIFTON,
. X-~ Agent.
Anyone sending a sketch end description may
quickly ascertain our optniou free whether an
invention la probably patentable. Commenlea.
tlons strictly oonndenttel. Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency fur securing patents.
PatenU taken through Mann A Co. receive
special notice, wltbuut charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. I era eat cir
culation of any sclentllo journal. Terms. H a
Fold by all nawsdaaless. J
Buy Binder Twine
...IN OMAHA...
■2r*5? ‘TlfmZnn?
Ths Wsnbsa Wtss.NAi Cm
OMAHA.
• r»»o lacUoli.f UU *1. *«<t JOe m l wo
VIII ••■>4 jnu lltl# tM auttful Maudi>llua
b» ripJ-M O. 1» aubjovl to «
Uoa If Ku-ul rMtHf mif|i
l<« (M 1 11 11*0 OipfOOO OUf HI
IaT i>r»» tt i*. w». h u* w«« iho w«
or I-..Su *u*J r Ipf«« Ttila
mu!*r| *« > ,»trui*4on».»olld ocoooo
r,W«'M" '1 *«<1 oW'kir »>i**ohoro4
o, l~ 4Ut i'»4 |H art luUoftlr #k»»d
* Oo«oo*<* -I ua/of o*»d*i.*l «*■ brllalt
ML You bar ••Ilk* r a M»»4«Uao.
*, !*»*.) *V i.*Ha aU*» ■>*•*•»»*
rito Mr * KtTft muatv *11 at »W<r* •
Atdroo*. * Hoopo, OorW, »•
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Wtoata.
4J
a.k,
Uua » ara
far iko rou*i*l 1 »•(* *t« Ik* t nlu« |Vl{
W, lu »«m h* .* l**' ■ * tl , (*•» Nuttikil
Klpl *1 * . . Ilrt lliuK >) tno». Ilif
|M*» *1 *100 MM Oliull llvl.f*u
• 111 b* will i|(HlU AHtl fill' Inf•*<m*%U**o
m-k i* uinuk AgoHi
OPENS AT OMAHA, NEBRASKA, JULY 1st,
CLOSES OCTOBER 31st, 1899
Will Eclipse Last Year.
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SPECIAL
FEATURES
Colonial People
Bird*. Animals...
Products. Homes
Pain’s Fireworks
Art Exhibit Me
chanical Exhib
its, The Midway,
Godfrey's British
Military Band....
•SO 45.
The ::bove greatly reduced rate boa
been made by tbe UNION PACIFIC to
California points Through Touriau
Sllepera, quicker time than any other
nces. For tlckeu and full information
call on W D. Clifton, Agent
NOTICE.
We will stand tbe Stallion ' BUI
Mac” tbe ensuing season at tbe barn of
B. T. Snyder, in Loup City.
B.JT. Bnyokr,
N. B. Thompson.
SHORT HORN BULLS.
Three red yearlings eligible to regis
try. Bred and raised and for sale by—
Samuki. McClkllan, North Loup, Neb
KAILKOAD PALACKS
The new Palace Sleeping Cars, built
specially for the UNION PACIFIC, and
recently put in service on their famous
fast trains to Colorado, Utah, Califor
nia and Oregan points, are the Attest
ever turned out.
Throughout tbe Interior the drapings,
wood work and decorations are In the
most artistic style, and the convenlen
ces vastly superior to anything ever
seen before.
These cars are attached to tbe Union
Pacific fast trains, which make Quicker
time to all Western points than trains
of anv other lines.
Tickets, and reservations can be ob
tained by calling on oraddresslng
W. I). Clifton, Agent,
“A word to th« true la aufflclent" mil
a word from the wiae ahould bo aufll
eirni, but you oak. *bo ore tbe wtaof
Tbnao «rb« know. Tbe oft rrpooied «•
Im*iidicr ut truatworlhy prraona may bo
tak*» for knowledge Mr. W. M. Ter
ry aoya Chaiuborlatu'* Cougb ltrmady
five# boitrr aatlafactlon Ibui any otbor
ill lbe market, lie baa been In I bo drug
bu»lurea at Klkton. Ky , fortaelvcyeara;
baa *«dd buudrrda of boitlra of ihla fe
me.I* and nearly all ot' er cough medi
cine* manufactured, which abowa eon
duali ely that Chaiuberlalti'a la tlie n ai
aalOfatlory to lb*> |>eot>ie. and I* tbe
beat. For ante by Odeodahl Bra'*
Bt HI.INOrOM HOI TK
Tbe It ir0ti«tHome nf«n rieeed
ingiy loo round ir'ji rate* lo
I.mcim(He, Ky. M»y II 14 H*tum
limit. Mat Ml
I'urtU id. Or, M«y 14 Id. H i urn
llioli. duly |4
IfcMitrr, I'ul, Hay Id I? K*turn
limit, dune IS
Mmora|M>|la. Minn .May Id Id Return
limit, .‘une Ini
M«»uutt, Va, Mat U In Heturn
limit, dun* Slid
dan I ran. (**-«. t’ol , May IS Id Hrluin
limit, duly IS. t all ami obtain full to
fornaatbm
H I. Amttt'n.
Arot.B A M H N K
Garden Seeds—New bulk
just in at, W&tkinaons*
OLUBBIMO RATH
Pay Up Farm Journal
and get a
Big Bargain. Five Years
By special arrangement made with
the publisher* of the FARM JOURNAL
we are enabled to offer a 6-years sub
scription to that paper, and one years
subscription to the Noktuwkstkian for
• 1.50. The same offer is made to eyery
old subscriber who will pay all arrear
ages and one year lu advance, as well as
to new sudacrlbers. Jn order to get the
FARM JOURNAL at this low price it
will be necessary to walk right up to
the captaiu’s office, for we have only a
limited number of 5-year subscriptions
to dispose of. The FARM JOURNAL
is on a solid founditlon and perfectly
trustworthy.
We will also furnish the Kansas City
Weekly Journal, one of the BEST
weekly papers lo the west, and the
Nubtuwkstkbm for •1.20. This is the
same paper we clubbed with last year
that gave such general satisfaction.
Also the Semi-Weekly State Journal
and the Nokthwestkiui for •1.80
TIMK M KONST.
When you are traveling, due consld
eratlon abould be given to tbe amount
of lime spent in making your journey.
THE UNION PACIFIC it tbe Bkst
I.ikk and makes tbe Fastest Tint by
many boors to 8alt Lake City, Portland
and California polnta.
For time tables, folders. Illustrated
books, pbampleta descriptive of tbs ter
itory traversed, call on—W. D, Cur
Ton. Agent
ACTIVE HOl.K ITOKS WANTKD KVKKY
"where for The Mtory of the Philippine* '
by Mural Halstead, commissioned by the Oov
eramcni ns liflUial Historian to Um War De
partment. The book was written in army
camps at Han Francisco, on the Pacific with
(ieaemi Merritt In tbe hoapttel at Honolulu,
la Hons Kona, la the American trenches st
Msails, la the Insuraeat camps with Ajruisal
do. on the deck of the Olympia with Dewey,
sod in the roar of battle at the fall *f Manila
Hoanasa for aaenia. Ilrtmful of octalaaI pu
! lurea uken by aorernment photuaranker* on
! tke spot I.*r*e linok l*>w prices Hta prof
its rrelahl paid. <'red II alrsa. Drop all
tra»k» ouolfclal war books. OutBt free Ad
I Arena. r T. Barber Kee y , Star laauraare
i it Ida i hleaao m
NERVITA PlLLSiEE
Cures Im potency, Night Emissions arul
wasting diseases, all effects of self*
guise, or escess and lndU
etloo. A norvo tool*- ami
sod builder. Brings the
ok glow to pale checks an-1
stores the ire of south
1 mail ft Or per bos, <1 lwir>
1 with * wrlllen gunrnn
toe to cure or refund the niuu**).
Head for circular Address,
NKRVITA MCOICAL CO.
Chnssn A jssosse Ms, CtMUUO ,U~
rua asi.a nr
ODKNDAIIL naoa
l '»up tkf, N*br
SPANISH GRANDEES.
FAMILY PEDIGREES THAT RUN BACK
TEN CENTURIES.
The National Vanity Border# on tlie Ab
■nrdly Orotenqne, and Flaying the Oen
tlrman Baa Been Called “the Kndeinte
Dlaeaae of Spain.”
It is related that a young guard, hav
ing neglected to pny the usual salute to
a Spanish duke at the court of Madrid,
excused himself by saying that ho did
not know the offended nobleman’s rank.
“My friend,” replied his grace, “the
safe rule is to assume that everybody in
the palace who looks like a monkey is a
grandee of the first class. ”
The truth is the Spanish are a thor
oughly mongrel race, and their conceit
of themsolves amazes us. Their country
has probably been of ten or overrun and
conquered than any other territory of
equal extent in Europe. Phoenician,
Carthaginian, Roman, Vandal, Visigoth
and Moor havo all successfully made it
their stamping ground, and the effect
of all this upon the pure Castilian
blood, whatever that may be, is indeli
bly stamped on every really Hpanish
face.
But playing the gentleman has been
called “the endemic disease of Spain,”
and the national vanity is something
grotesque. One of their historians seri
ously advanced the theory that tho first
inhabitants of the country "arrived
by air,” so impressed was he by tlioir
superhuman qualities that nothing short
of a descent from the sky could account
for them. A subsequent historian, how
ever, after a long and grave discussion
of the question, finally announced his
opinion that “they more probably came
by land.”
Alter this we need not be astomsbcd
that the Spanish claim to possess the
oldest families in Europe. The surpris
ing circumstance is that the olaim is
not wholly without foundation. Their
family names can in some cases be trac
ed back to an incredibly remote period,
though it must not be assumed that the
original blood persists in any purity.
Probably the most ancient family in
Spain i» the house of Paoheco, whose
estates are not far from Carteia, now
called Oartaya, in Andalusia. Plutarch
tells us that when Crassus fled from
Italy he concealed himself for eight
months at Ximena, near Carteia, in
oaves belonging to a Spanish gentleman
named Paciccns. Cicero also mentions
this generous Spaniard, and there can
bo no doubt that he was one of the an
cestors of the Pacheco family, whose
name is obvionsly derived from his and
who still own the caves. This carried
them back about 2,000 years, to a period
antedating the Christian era, bnt it is
possible to trace the line mnch further.
The name is clearly of Phoenician origin,
being nltimately derived from “patai
coi, ” the word by wbiob the Tyrians
designated the carved fignrehead of
their galleys.
The identification is made more com
plete by the fact that the Phoenicians
were the founders of Carteia, as of Cad
iz in the same province. That adds
another 1,000 years or so to the Pacheco
pedigree. Think of it—a landed estate
remaining in the possession of the
nune family for 8,000 years! This is
doubtless the most wonderful family
tree in the world and unusually well
authenticated. Tho Pachecos may well
be pardoned for taking pride in it,
though it roots in rather unsavory soil
at last, for the great original Pacheco
was evidently a Tyrian freebooter.
Names that trace back to the Cartha
ginian occupation in the time of Han
nibal are also found, and the title of
Hannibal's own clan, Barca, is perpet
uated by tho Barciaa and Garcias, well
known families of Andalusia. There
are also several names of Homan ante
cedents, as Ponce and Cane, in Latin
Pontius and Canius. A Spanish gentle
man bearing the latter name was a per
sonal friend of the poet Martial, all of
which seems to bring antiquity very
near—in Spain. The fact of the matter
is she has never emerged from antiquity.
The 8panish, however, are inclined
to look back to the Goths as "the purest
fountain of nobility. ” This oe. -aiuly
seems a strange perversion of sentiment,
for of all the barbarians that came down
from the north to lay waste Roman civ
ilization with fire and sword the Goths,
with their cousins, the Vandals, were
the most irredeemably villainous.
And these Goths were no extraordi
nary heroes either, even in war. With
supine and braggart inoompetency they
lost to the Moors in the eight months'
campaign a supremacy which it coat
tight centuries of conflict to regain.
Yet "Gothic of Spain” is the pet phrase.
ao a rank outsider ll would seem t imt
the Rusque families have the moat hon
orable lineage, and their pedigrees run
back to time immemorial, though not
Mail? traceable. The Basques represent
the original population of the Npauish
peninsula. Their seat Is the mountains
of the northern district, and In many
ways remind us of the Welsh. They
have the same simplicity of life, and
the name really justifiable pride of birth,
for their blood is the purest in Speiu, if
that counts for anything. Like tits
Welsh also, they have to a considerable
eitenl maintained their ancient lan
guage, one of the strangest which sur
vive upon the earth, bearing u > resent
bianco to any other iu Europe.
These Basque families, fur the must
part, bear names which appear to be
^graphical iu their origin, as Ugarte,
meaning "between waters;” Zubin,
Mlhe brtdgei" Ibarra, “the valley'*—-a
style which reminds as of our American
Indian*. allhoegh it is found mute •«
lass all over the wurtd. The twruuua
lion “«%" an tuouuou in ttpautsh
a*m«a la Haaqus, aad signifies '' son. * *
as Pare* sen of Peter, asaetly like oar
own P*t*r»»o — Pittsburg Impab h
A U|M UmSms
Util —i>«d you ever try any of (email's
•A cent dinners?
Jlii—Vas, 1 ale three if them todaf
at awa-Iosksn tuiwsns.
LONG DISTANCE MAILS.
Tltne of Letter* From New York to far
■way I>r*tI nation*.
A letter scut from New York to Bang
kok, Siam, travel*) overland to San
Francisco and thence by water, reach
ing its destination in nhont fit days,
having been carried nearly 13,000 miles.
A letter mailed here for Adelaide, Aus
tralia, also goes via San Francisco,
travels 12,845 miles and is delivered
usually within 85 dnys. New York mail
destined for Calcutta goes by way of
London, traveling 11,120 miles in 29
days, while mail sent from this city to
Cape Town, goes 125 miles farther in
two days’ luss time.
Mail communication between New
York and Hongkong ordinarily con
sumes one month of time. The letters
go by way of San Francisco and oover
10,500 miles of diltance. Toreuch Mel
bourne, Australia, from this oity a let
ter will travel 12,265 miles in about 82
days, and to reach Sydney a letter will
travel 11,570 miles in 81 days. The
mail route from New York to Yoko
hama, via San Francisco, is 7,848 miles
long, and about 22 days are oousumed
iu transit. To go to Honolulu from this
city a letter travels 5,645 miles in 13
days.
Leaving New York on steamer days,
mail matter is scheduled to reach Rome
In about ten days, Madrid in ten days,
London and Liverpool in eight days,
Rotterdam in nine days, St. Petersburg
in 11 days, Vienna in nine days, Paris
in eight days, Berlin in nine days and
Athens and Alexandria in 14 days.
Oommunication with South American
ports is muoh slower. It takes 24 days
for a letter to go from New York to Rio
Janeiro, whioh is only about 50 miles
farther from this oity than is Alexan
dria. Mail matter going from New
York to Buenos Ayres, which is 8,045
miles distant, consumes 29 or 80 days.
—New York Times.
VEGETABLE GEMS.
Bamboo Opal* and Coeoaant Paarl* Found
In tbo Philippine*, Though Rarely.
Among other qneer thing! found in
the Philippine! are vegetable gems.
There are not many of them, though.
The bamboo is empty normally. Otoe
might cut open a jungle of the giant
graaa and find unaltered hollowness.
Bnt once in a million times or more ao
oident brings to light in the bamboo
•tern a gem. Nature has molded into a
lump a little of the flinty material
which makes the outer stem so hard.
The nodule usually presents the appear
anoe of an opal, and several specimen!
•re in the museums which reproduce
the characteristic lines of that gem.
These nodules are known as tabaoeer.
It is interesting to note that the first
chemical and mineralogical examina
tion of them was made by the Jamea
Smithson whose munifleenoe establish
ed the first of the scientific bureaus of
the American government.
In the condition in which the fruit is
known in the United States the milk
in the cocoanut is considered its only
oontent. The really ripe nut, however,
Is filled with a white spongy mass, rich
in the finest oil which the nut produces.
This sponge is exposed to the hot sun
for two or three days in a wooden
trough until thoroughly pulped. The
last of tb« oil is then extracted by
squeezing the soft sponge in the hands.
Very rarely this careful handling has
developed the presence of small spheres
Which have much of the luster of the
pearl. Eight or ten of these cocoanut
pearls, all discovered in the Philip
pines, are treasured in European muse
ums. They range from tlio size of a pin
head to that of a very small pea.—New
York Bun.
The Englinh Flag.
England’s national flag has been
called "a triplet of crosses,” for it is
composed of the cross of Bt. George, the
cross of Bt Andrew and the cross of
St Patrick. Thus: The flag of “St.
George for merrie England," a rod cross
on a white ground, the red lines drawn
straight from top to bottom and from
side to side; the flag of St Andrew for
Sootland, a white cross on a blue
ground; the flag of St. Patriok for Ire
land, a red cross on a white ground, the
narrow red lines drawn from corner to
corner. By placing the cross of St
George on that of St Andrew we have
"the Jack,” us ordered in 1006 by
James 1, whose signature was always
"Jacques;” hence the expression, “the
Jack. ” By laying the cross of St Pat
riok over thut of St. Andrew and then
placing that of Bt. George over both,
we have “the union jack,” as borne
since the union with Ireland in 1800.—
Boston Transcript.
Tra« CrartMj.
General Robert E. Lee waa in the oars
going to Richmond one day and waa
■bated at the cud farthest from the door.
The other scat* were filled with officer*
and soldiers. An old woman, poorly
dressed, entered at one of the station*,
and finding no seat, and having none of
fered to her, approached the end where
the general was seated. 1 ie immediately
rose and gave her his seat.
Instantly there was a general rising,
each one offering hiaeeat to the general.
But he calmly said:
"No, gentlemen, if there waa no seal
fur the infirm old woman, there can be
none for me "
The effect waa remarked. One after
another got on I of the ear. The seats
teemed to tie too hot for them, and the
ftueral and the old lady soon had the
car to themaelvea
Is leawtlsto We—ssUy.
lira Watt*— What ta ou that button?
Wall*—"Remember the Maine. "
Mrs Walla— It Would d» more im
mediate got si tf you would get u button
with "Ue't Purget the tiruuertea" on
it, — Indiana pul ie Journal
ml cite
Haiti la n native name, mean mg
m< uutaUe as mesa try The name Cube
Is i I native origin The meemug la tut
km.wn.
Wertiry ud ▼anna.
AHtronomeni generally now admit
that the more recent studies of the
planets Mercury and Venns tend to con
firm Schiaparelli's opinion, advanced
some years ago, that both of them turn
on their axes once while revolving
about the sun. This, however, is a very
difficult point to settle with oertalnty,
the reason given for this being, and
very plausibly, that the evidence rests
upon observation of the exceedingly
(hint markings upon the disks of the
planets, the fact being that very few as
tronomers have ever seen them at ail
with distinctness, and only those who
have made a most persist**^ study of
them and are favored with vision espe
cially sensitive to snch details are com
petent to express an opinion as to their
oorrect interpretation.
It is argued that if, as held by some,
the rotation and revolution periods are
the same bo a correct opinion, then the
climatic conditions of the two planets
must be most remarkable. Furthermore,
our moon always shows the same face to
the earth and no knowledge exists ot
the hidden part, nor have the supposed
Inhabitants of that oonoealed hemi
sphere ever seen the earth. This, how
ever, is of no importance to them, as
the earth is not the source of light, heat
and life on the moon. Ail parts of
the moon are brought under the sun’s
inflnenoe ji st us all parts of the earth,
though the day and night are 14 times
as long as on the earth. Bnt how it
most be on a planet which has one side
only exposed to the sun, astronomers can
give no answer. —Exchange.
Mnrdsrars Mar B* “Wloa."
At daybreak at Sakhalin—yon could
hardly see daybreak on account of the
ahntters—one of the ugliest looking
women I ever saw orept in with a cup
of tea that is always given in Asia very
early in the morning, and she was a
murderess. 1 went to the little tent ont
sido to have breakfast, and a man cams
up behind me and reached over my
shoulder, and he was a murderer. When
we rode out after breakfast, a man with
magnificent broad shoulders and splen
did face drove, and he was a murderer.
The fact is, strange as it may seem,
they (the governor and Russian officers
at Sakhalin) have no choice. All the
domestics must come from the material
they have, and if you take a thief he is
almost always sure to stay a thief, while
a murderer may be a very nice kind of
a person. They did that kind of thing
among themselves, and 1 don’t want any
better men Mian some of those that were
sent there for murder.—Bulletin Amur
loan Geographical Society.
A Gallant Thief.
A won mu in London recently had her
pocket picked, one of the article* being
a sealed and unaddressed envelope, con
taining a £5 note. The next day she re
oeivod back the stolen articles, with the
following explanatory note:
Dsab Madam—The exigencies* of my profae
■Ion led me Junt now Into poattoaielnn of yoor
purse, where I And 00 shillings, which I appro
priate to my own need*, and these pupura,
which I return to you. I do this because 1 feel
especially dcHiruus to restore tbla little white
envelope, which I have not been Indiscreet
enough to oi» n. I know very well that when
a young woinuii goea out with a little white
envelope ao cun fully carried in her pocketbook
that this envelop-! contains a love letter whloh
■he Is seeking a <•' i since to address secretly to
her beloved. 1 will not wrong your lover by
taking the sweet v. ords and kisaea whloh yon
meant for him, and I am very sorry that I
have even for a short time delayed hie receiv
ing his letter. May you be happy, dear girl,
with him whom yon have chosen, and believe
always In the good wishes of your obedient
servant._
A Qnlet Nesting Place.
A peculiar aocident overtook a Hick
man oounty man named Arnold. One
morning not long since he arose early
and went to the wardrobe, took down
his summer trousers and drew them on.
This proceeding resulted in such yells
that the entire family was awakened.
Mr. Arnold was soon surrounded by the
family, which was anxious to render
him assistanoa. His only wards were,
"Pall off the pants.” The oombined
efforts of the family were vain, how
ever, until some one suggested that a
team be ripped. This done, there was
disclosed not a hornet’s nest, rats or
anything of that nature, but a oat with
eight kittens — Hickman County
(Tenn.) News
Lord Rothschild's Physician.
One of the Chinese methods is, I be
lieve, to pay the physician as long as
the patient is in good health, with the
obvious intention of making it the in
terest of the doctor to keep the patient
well. Apparently this is the method
Lord Rothschild has adopted. I hear
that he pays Sir W illiam Broadbant s
retaining fee of 1,000 guineas a year,
conditional on Sir William visiting him
every Saturday to feel his pulse and see
that be is keeping in good health.—
Sheffield (England) Telegraph.
Cgly Bam.
The Bosjasmamt, in south central Af
rica, are exceedingly ugly and exist al
most lu a state of animalism. They
dwell in holes, live on roots and reptiles
and have very much the appearanoe of
the ape.
The Calmuckt of the gnat Tartar
family an, although civilised, extreme
ly ugly. They have short, fat nosa*
■nail eye* high cheek booee and a
protruding chin.
Tim* lk«
Motbar—What la Iha irillHf, (Jlara?
You Uiuk utirtn-MH'd
Ulan* (a tiriilu)—Uaartfa haa--haa had
h. * off ou a—a trim aud b« wua't ba
baok fur—fur »wo .Uya—buuhuol
rtaiua Molhar («>um jmn la tar)
Mow lutitf will your huabaod ba a way 7
haata Clara- I fortfut to aah.— Haw
York Weakly
«M| u*a Mar* af !>»■
I ha uaw r»ti« gaaaa utlUlly at iha
•uail buy ia tha haaday whoul uimI
atya. “My (bar tiltla fallow, bara you
fuMt lb*> 'Thirty um. ArUokaf “
“Nm' rajutaiwi tba Muail buff. "ba*
I'ra iwad Iha 'Forty Tkkvti' ' lint