Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1879)
r2 -, THE RED CLOUD CHIEF. 2. U TIIOJUS, PnblUhrr. RED CLOUD, - - XEBBASKA. soya. Hny.BWM-t !ny, (orthou art fair, Fair, Mini lull, and calm; Crowns! lliniiiKh all thy Koldrn hours, U Itli Uivh'h rfliPht, ptirr-l flowiTr, SlniiiKin Kaltli'N mit-lmki-ii iK)wcr, llkli in Hoiiu'm ,rlKht lialm. Ptny, hat chance and clianxo 'may wait. Am you Klhh'away; .Now in all o t'hul ami Ini;Jit. Now uj brcu tin. tti frf ltlu'llt! .Vow uo Mnllr hi r.it"H cli-.plte. May uitli ii-, ntt tiny. . Ah! Hhcrati not. may TitU; All tliltitrn tmiht ili'uiy ; So w itli lii-ml. mi'! Ih-iii t, and will, TiiLfltii-joy Ilia' llnrH tll. 1'iikt! tlio puiiM-iln xtrltu suit! 111, IYIzij tliu pa-sltiK day. All the Ytar J.'ouiut. MY LITTLE WOMAN. Would tliij diamond wi-m mich n pi'crlvf s win II lLitn-uiii:l nun fiKit round? Would tin- rose leal yield uc!i uawict iit IllllH) H It covi'ri-d yiinln o! ground? Would tin: diw lropn nei'tn m Hear and pure II dew liko inln Mluiuld tall? Or thf llttli! woyiaii lo half ro rat If ulio were Mx feet tall? 'Tl the hand an soft an the ni'itllnj; bird That rlps with a rlp ! ntei-l ; TIh the voice an hui- t a- the r.uiuiiiiir wind That nili-H without Hii-al. And tin warrior, scholar, the faint and wie May Ilcht and plan and piav. The woild will waif to tin end of time In the little woman' way. LITTLE SAM. If any people ever deserved im much money as they knew how to take care of, popular verdict declared it to be the Duans; and nobody grudged thorn either their money or their loveliest of home. In one of the city Miburbs where pave ments and lamps had not yet stretched, where the country ways were overhung with elms and beeches, and every house was .et in la ns and gardens, stood this home of theirs an old stone mansion, with bays and balconies overgrown with Virginia creeper and wLitaria whose Ml'tllt hml intr1-.rii;til t lir.mioti'ou uiili the masonry :it everv crevice and were :ls stoutand strong ns rones rones here r " and there stretehtii m tightly that they fang in the wind like .olian harjis. Within the house the hall was laid in old tiles, and covered with rugs, the noise less and beautiful drawing-rooms and library were lifted with inherited treas ures, and, to say nothing of sleeping rooms and nursery, the play-room was a fairy plnce, and nothing less. It was the only room in the house that Mrs. Dean had changed when she came in to reign ; but she had arranged this great sunny place to please her own fancy, and not that of her husband's ancestors. On tho wall she had a paper hung, con trary to tho canons of art, she was told, but delightful to the eyes of her boys and girls, where on a skyey imcKgrounu oiusii-roses climbed all over a gilded trellis, birds built their nests and lilted on the spray, and children's f:u'.s peeied in and out the garlands. The lloor wore, a thick felt that allowed no tumbles to hurt the tuinbler.and that deadened every noise; and for (he remainder, there Was no contrivance to amue children that the mother had not amassed iu that room. There was tho big white rocking-horse nearly as large as her own ponies, "all saddled, all bridled, all fit for a fight;" there wis the mimic nine pin alley, the bagatelle tables, the phil osophical apparatus and the telescope, with which Mr. Dean used to perform for the children, and give them glimpses of the " fairy tides of science" when the other fairy tales pulled, and of worlds beyond when the pleasures of their own were not enough. And then there were the walking and tho talking dolls, .with a multitude of other me chanical toys, and there were parallel bars, and, yes. a low Hying trapeze. A happy little set of savages they were that had the freedom of this delightful room when the day's spelling and mul tiplying were over. There were Kobin and Mattie, the twins, and Ned; there were the two orphan cousins that had been added to the number; there were usually more or les of the neighbors' babies; and there was Cyrus, the pet and darling of them all, a fair faced, blue-eyed little fellow, with his long yellow curls floating over his shoul ders almost too loeh it seemed to that household, for common llesh and blood. A precocious little creature too, for his four .years, full of mischief, his old nurse said, as a nut is of meal, and full of sweetness too. Singing about tho house from dawn till dark, kissing the dog, which felt him a peculiar charge, worrying the cat, feeding the birds, varnishing the chairs with the mucilage, decorating the wall with his fingers dipped in the ink-bottle, break ing the precious flower from tho stem for some unwelcome guest, knowing no difference between servants and mas ters, and having kisses for all, always serious and always loving m the midst of his preoccupation and mischief, the little fellow was the ideal of home and of tho region round about. One night as they all sat in the play-room by a fire (it being rainy outside), when the games had failed any longer to amuse, each ono recited some verse already learned; and while thus engaged, it was found that Cvms had been printing on tho bit of a black-board, in uncouth but very recognizable character, the let ters of the alphabet; ami when the others had said their say, he came and stood by his mother's knee, and repeat ed the " Better Land," in his sweet, se rious voice and baby patois. As Mrs. Dean went through the play room, later, with a candle in her hand, those characters upon the blackboard llarod up liko the handwriting on the wall, and made her shiver, tis she after ward remembered, she knew not why. She passed through into the nurseries, and saw her little people all gently sleeping there ; but somehow her heart seemed to linger the longest round Cyrus, as he lay with the coverings toss ed to the winds, and his yellow curls streaming round his face in its rosy slumber like a nimbus. The next night that little bed was va cant, and bands of men were searching the country far and wide for Cyrus; the father rode, half frantic, from one place to another; tho mother, after the first, staid at home and wrung her hands, the other children clinging dumb and awe struck to her skirts. The boy had been stolen. Only these that clasp their own ba bies, and think of what might befall the darlings in some such dreadful unknown, can realize tho agony that night and day brought to those parents for weeks and months. It is idle to tell of that grief, of the efforts that were made, of the fortune that was spent, of the use lessness of it all. The picture of tho little head on its pillo'w that last night hung constantly before tho mother's eyes; all his charming little sayings were in her mind ; she could see him tearing up bits of paper as he leaned out of the windows, and, as each one softly floated ' away.repeating the lines about the death song of the swan " Fwoating down by ber'se'f to die;" she remembered the absorbed way in which be would look up, declaring, " I buzhy now;" the in souciance with which, when she remon strated upon his Haughtiness, he bade her to "take it eazhy ;" his " volerble jMtpers;" in- short, all tho things in which he had beeirjust one trifle more charming than the otherxhildren the other children who would Z! a( tUnf- nt.;Ul 1 .. w t...M, i-uim uiavLnmo-s our of ci and would not even suffer ttm Kfio ' couth characters upon the blackboard 4,V wo 1UU (JUL But ono year followed another, and another followed that, and although Mr. Dean had agents everywhere through out the country, and was constantly on the nlcrt himself, no word canui of Ids little Bon. Yet anr thin"; seemed lcUer than that he should le growing up in the hands cf those vile enough to ab duct him. No reason for the stealing hail ever appeared ; no message or mes senger from the wretches had ever made any overture to the father for a ransom They began to hope that the dear ch'ild had died. Sometime) his mother feared that she could no longer control her rea son; her health was breaking down; and ahc could hardly allow the other children out of her steal. She knew well that it would be better for her if f he could go about among people; if she could visit the poor; if hc could loe her own sorrows in trying to iusuajrc those of others. Hut it seemed to her that the sight of the trouble of others would but aggravate her own trouble. Nor had she any thin" to give in char ity; Bhe felt that every dollar nn.'t bej saved for spending in the search lor her little one; she was ready and eager to tell her great white diamonds, each one of which was a Miiall fortune, and all the family plate, the accumula- Hon of generations, that hud u-hmI tj' delight the children with its great ring-' ing vibrations before the butler put it away after any more stately banquet than usual. That she would have part- ' ed with everything and have gone to ( til'. in i trurrnl fit linr.l !iiKtir tlir.ro is. no need of Faying, if that would have given her buck her boy again. .She his rags, and by gentle motions led him : .: J"'uo '-iJ t .;it11' Kwt-,, "-knew-whnt it was to live in a garret, . on, and into a large sleeping-room, with I "ro,ller-'d by the hand in brilliant colors, too. for in t.rii biironninir sh liul ironn i i! I . littlo wl.iio l.!a 4...r.. .,il. ire Shown for Vests and TttCTS. with her husband and certain members . dren lay dreaining, and one little bed of the police though scores and scores that was empty. On this bed the dog of garrets and cellars in the biaek heart bounded, and in every way lie knew in of the city. Only one of them all. , vited Sam But Sam turned awav. and though, she remembered in particular, it had made her shudder so; there was an old crone with a sinister hiugh, smoking the stump of a pipe there; j room, as if the spirits of dead pleas there were some children asleep in a , ures lingered thorc. As he stood in the huddle of rags on the floor; the ollicers I door the moonlight now lay full on the had shaken them, one and all, but they j great white rocKing-bor.-e, " all saddled, were none of hers. The place was not ( nil bridled, all tit for a fight;" and there more filthy and squalid, not more loath-. in front of the empty fire-place was a some to the senses and oppressive to the .little empty chair; the dog stretched ' "sm ' l :in otners s'10 "!lrt sct'n ? 'i"1 ,l ..,-.. .1 !..... .L... I... I... .4 - - 1.... I. ."'.'"' VV,WL '" "''''' .-uuuiiuiiH, ii'i.inuimu nob njioRuu dozen words with the old hag before she fainted. And after that her husband was reluctant to have her continue such visits. But the visit made, perhaps, no more impression on her than it made on the dwellers of that den. The day "the pretty lady came with the cop" wa.s a day in the calendar of tho?e children, who, doubtless, were all thieves after their kind. They remembered it, per- haps, the more particularly, too, be cause, when the callers had been gonoa little while, old Hannah, tho crone afore said, knocked the ashes out of her pipe, lifted the loo?c board in the floor, and took Sam out of his bed there a bed in which most of them had slept, and to which fresh air came from a chimney Hue; and then there had been a smoth ered outcry, for it looked as though Sam was dead. But it turned out that Sain was alive, after all; he was only sound er asleep than usual. He slept almost all the time, as they used to wish they might, instead of being ser.t out on their beats a dark little creature, wilhclrso-ly-shnvcd head, and with a vacant stare in his stupid eyes whenever he opened them. Sam had been whipped two or three times by old Hannah because he didn't answer to his name when ho was awake. He answered to it now. But, on tho whole, they hadn't seen much of Sam since he came, for they were out, each on his own lay, most of tho time, at different hours of tho day and night. Perhaps nothing could sooner blot I he past for a child, stunt the growth, and produce a degradation of the moral tissue, if one may tiso the phrase, than a S3'slem of drowningout the brain with narcotic drugs. It was the system used in old Hannah's school. Kach one of her little pupils woke at last, icady to receive the impressions she prepared the impressions of finished crime and graduated complete rascals, some fit for one work and some for another. Sam's small size, if nothing el.-e, would have settled his calling: ho was set apart to creep into houses through small spaces where a larger ono could not enter, and to open the doors for his masters. He was first made to be more afraid of them than of anything else on earth; and then, the work of drugging being over, ins intelligence was allowed to play with a basketful of old locks and keys. In :i3car'd time he was almost an expert, and those locks were some of the few things on which ho showed any signs of intelligence. His mind appear ed to bo a blank of all but fear; some times, if confused memories came to him, and he uttered a loud word, it was only to cower at tho sight of old Han nah's lash, and its stronger and more recent memories a little fellow still: ho had not grown two inches in two years. one iwwgnt, a oasKet or crusts on his arm outof which, do all they could, he would nibble he was told to follow Burt into the street (an old man with a sack on his shou'ders), and not to lose sight of him. And when tho experiment had been tried often enough, Burt went some way ianner into tnc countr than usual, and littleSam was shoved through a cellar-grating to go up and open the way for Burt and those who had been awaiting hira ; and that night little Sam began his career of house-breaking. But all of little Sam's share m the transaction was a sort of inchoate terror of what would happen to him if ho did not do as he was told. And as for what the men did after he let them in, he had not so much idea as the mouse in the wainscot had ; nor, if ho had known, would he have been able to see any wrong in it. If they wanted pleasant things, why shouldn't they have them? Being satisfied, and in good humor, they would give him the fewer blows. But only a few months after that be ginning Burt and Bobbins were in their prison ceils, old Hannah's den was broken up, and Sam and the other little outcasts were homeless ; or rather they would have been had not Sam's pro ficiency with locks been known in the craft, aud he at least claimed as a pos session worth having; and thus tho series of tho most unaccountable and daring burglaries ever known in this part of the country went on uninter ruptedly. It was a bright moonlight night when the three confederates pushed and shoved little Sam up the great ropes of wistaria and woodbine that he miht crawl through the open crack of a small window, with his customary instructions to find a door and open it for them. Once within, he conld see his way tol erably well about the place, and he noiselessly traversed one room and an other, aud had reached the great upper hall, when his fear of tho men outside suddenly gave way to a more horrible fear; for a great beast rose and was be side him with one leap a huge mastiff tatler than himself. For a moment let tie Sam was paralyzed : the next thing would be those white fangs in his flesh : he knew he should be devoured. But he could not scream. He dared not And then the great creature had put his two forepaws on Sam's shoulder, and was licking his face and hands and head as if he could not have enough of him, till the child sank on the rug, when he subsided, and lay beside him, with his nose between his paws, while Sam look ed down the long length of the hall be low, and saw the swinging silver lamps. .- nunc owuio iu its nicne, me oi ine oronze knight, the dark chness of the rugs upon the had seen it 'tiles, jU as -if Jho Uf..ik.ttrkkaklyiS.kwt..i S ,flnBtfr.lalld..iI....K .... .... -- . K 11 every night of hi life. Meanwhile the ' dog steadily purveyed him in the inter vals of his caresses. After all, Sam j thought, the dog was not going to hurt him; in fact, he seemed in some way like an old friend. After all, thought Tribune, this is no place for little boys , they ought to be in bed. And be pro ceeded to show the child the way. going ofTa little, then coming back, taking a ' portion of bis rags between his teeth, jf and endeavoring to lead him on. It was a new experience to little Sam. In other places the dogs had drivew them oft", but this sleepy and lazy old fellow showed nothing but hospitality. I In followed whether he woula or no. The 'dog led him into a large room first, witn wide winnows, mrougn wmen a Hood of moonlight fell. It fell upon an open organ with white glimmering keys. As Sam naw it, some idea of a singer sitting there seemed to rise on his fancj a singer who had one arm around him as she sang, and held his head f gainst hcrehotildef. What -bould he know of singing ? Since he had een old Hannah, singing had been tin- heard As he moved, tho blackboard his eyo, half covered with caugnt me uncouth characters in chalk. He remembered now that ho had beard of a little boy who showed the big children what he could do one night. He crept toward the blackboard, and took up the crayon and made one or two of those misshapen letters over again. Then he put down t Tin prurnri tltrhci. mnn ftn .f-.tS.r. . for hira "outside. Hut tho dog still held went back to tho plav-room: something scenic! to delight him in tho white glimmor of tho l:inre I 1 .. 1 " . .. i himself at his feet. It scemu J so pleas- '",u a" war an" coinionamc: lie ' wiLt hoi so iiiucii airaiu oi inoe men outside as he had been; the children's faces looked at him in the white light out of the roses on tho gilded trellis as if they wished him to stay; the little head nodded and fell forward on his breast. But all this seemed exceedingly out of the way to Tribune; and after awhile it apparently occurred to him that if he could not make Sam go to bed, ho could j go and speak to his mistress about it; and it was hiscold noso m her hand that woko Mrs. Dean from her uneasy slum ber. In a moment she was out of bed " There is something wrong," she said to her husband. " What is the matter with Trib?" And before her husband was fairly awake, she had followed the dog to a playroom, md there, witn the moonlight falling round him, sound asleep, his head upon his breast, in the little chair before the ' ipiy ueariu, sue saw me cniid. For one throb of her heart, ono great plungp,she thought the worst had come, and that now she was really crazed. But with another she had seized the ehild, aud was tearing off the rags that hid the diilerence between his white body anil his little brown little ' face 1 wniio me cnim openeii ins eyes dreamily, and put up a sleepy mouth to KRs her. "It is he! it is he! it is he!" she cried. They have cutofl'his curls, they have stained his face, but they could not hide my little Cyrus!" And although Mr. Dean woke the servants, anil roused the neighbors, and scoured the place and the region unsuc cessfully, and never ceased regretting that those house-breakers had not crack ed their last crib that night, yet Mrs. Dean, in her heart of hearts, as sho de voted herself, every day with fresh frui tion, to the task of awa'kening his dor mast intelligence, could never fe 1 quite grateful enough to them for bringing back her boy. Harper's Bazar. Bedstead Superstition in Germany. Having ordered a neatly c instructed .single, bedstead, says a corresnondentwf London Xolcs and Queries, with sorae- wiiat iiign ami oruaiucnuu sines, l was t surprised when it was brought home to find that the ornamentation of ono side of tho bedstead was not repeated on the opposite side, it beiug, in fact quite plain. I expressed my surprise and dis satisfaction to tho maker, saying that when a bedstead was placed with its head against the wall of a room, the sides, then showing, will appear quite unlike ono ornamented and the other plain. At this tho maker expressed hi3 surpriso that I should bo ignorant of a . German custom aud prejudice; "for,"t says he, "in Germany single bedsteads ' are only placed sidewiso against a wall or partition, and only removed from this position and placed with the hetil against tho wall to receive a dead body." And the worthy maker assured mc that' no whero in Germany could a native be in duced to sleep on a single bedstead which had not its side placed against a wall or partition. The same objection does not hold agains placing two single bedsteads side by side, with their heads against the wall. Old Potatoes .Made New. Another idol has been broken. One more of the illusions of youth has van ished. When you think that you are eating new potatoes you are probably only eating old ones that have been re juvenated by a process of steeping and washing; in acidulated water. Potatoes, like ladies, are susceptible to the influ ence of balms and washes. For the homely tubercle and for the fading beauty a means has been found to re pair the irreparablo outrage of years. The operation may be seen through the grating of one of the pavilions of the Central Market. The old wrinkled po- uuous are suomiiteu to a vigorous wash in in tubs, and tho acid causes th old ! brown and wrinkled skin to fall oft", and also a tallow candle. Strange to The rejuvenated and blonde tubercles j relate, that night he felt no ill effects are then carefully dried, packed in boxes ( caused by the rash deed, but next day lined with snowy white paper, and sent ( t , glass began to cut and grind his to grace the eounter of the fruiterer's , bowels, compelling the man to writhe shop. Paris Paper. and scream in agony. This continued T, T. n., ' ' ' ,. , , , i until Thursday morning, when the poor lho Hon. Giles Potter, agent of the wretch was brought to New Prague, in Connecticut Board of Education, lately ' the delusive hopenat a physician conld visited a school in Lake's Pond, in that , save him from his inevitable and fast btate, and found only ono scholar in at- . approaching death. Of course no phy tendance. There were thirty-nine school sician's skill could now save or even children registered in the district, but prolong the life that had been so delib the average daily attendance was six. eratelv; though unknowingly taken. It to A homes of a few of them was pitiful and heartrending to hear the proved to Mr. Potter that "quite a num- poor mortal moan and scream in agony ber of children of American parents , as the death-dealing glass slowly but were growing np in ignorance within constantly cut its way into the vitals eight miles of sew London, in tho old , This could not long continue, however town of. Waterford He vLsited two and death kindly relieved the uSr farmers whose children, ranging from man Thursday afternoon. AwtSo? ?no5 i L68" ?l aSe c-ould not tem examination was held.d the A Twob0yswthwn0m bo talked' man's stomach and intest ne? were S I r?k S as to be under' foQnd to literally ground to pieces stood, though their parents were Amcr- A wife and nine children are eft de icans, and they were : healthy chddren pendent by the foolhardiness of If mat about twelve years of age. To one of crazed by drink. Th& may proS ooymsaid"t S"a cS? dime ' tho addiLS tohe ooy .amitwas a cent. , excessive use of a substance so deadly President T T. TioV,r of ti,n r " i?its final eSects s thai swallowed by a. J55SS5 hiSed !& , -snto, I01' J the superintendency of the Brooklyn nakopte (Minn.) Argus. (X. Y.) schools, at a salary of So 000. A guest at the Christmas dinner of His salary at Iowa City is only $2,500. j the United States Consul in Bangkok Tn 18-sVnM.Lr T, j SiaD1 states that the edibles were all In 1Si8 England imported and used t most entirely canned food from Ame-'-T?"S1F'P?e8 201,300 tons of oil ca, including turkey, hickeS SSrf cjve irom nnseea. rane and cotton-sppH Fu one-third more than the year pre- j j FASIllO OTES. mac uctcaroi' hair, caaamere, .Henrietta cloth and nearly all black common ceowni a law of fcralth. thx goods arc the popular material forU food sboald bo tn .lowly. co street wear with American women. Lace Is the most fashionable of all trimmings; waistcoats are trimmed with it, and also the lace jabot is considered ' a part of the costume. t I'oloaaisea and basques are both worn with waistcoats; the latter are worn with ball and fancy costumes, as well as with walking costumes. A street or walking dress must be . uarc, snort anu. unobtrusive in its tea era! effect; while Wright colors and laces j should be worn with tho house dress Dressy aprons of muslin are fash ionable for home toilette; they are tnm nitd with lace and bows of ribbon, and tho one pxcke: is ornamented with a bow. Two small red -clay pipes, decorated with tlowers and mottos, with the stems tied in a cross witn blue ribbon, is tho I newest chandelier pendant in fashiona ble houses. They are called "peace pipes." Satin and French bunting makes a ocauuiui comotnalion lor walking suits. Lace will be used profusely on these costumes, but it is very poor tate to wear whito or colored laces on dresses for thostreet. The vest is the distinguishing fea ture of tho stilish costume, for the rea son that is affords excellent means of I "Educing bright and contractive ef I Jot ornaments are very stylish, par ticularly the cut jet horseshoe and cres j cent. Ihesotwo arc worn on nearly every inmg wnere an ornament ca I put. .Jet Ls the only ornament used for n oe deep mourning, steel, silver and oy dizetl silver being reserved for haff mourning. The fashion for flower bouquets is to have garden posies with several old fashioned lluwers in them; bunches of thousand leaf roses, a spray of mignon ette, a pansy or two, a marigold or a butW-rctip md a few ferns are tied together m,d used in bonnets or lor waLt bouquets. -The "Z.nobia" armlot I. a ,,,. I he " Zenobia" armlet is a band of perfectly plain, smooth gold, with one largo stone, either topaz or crystal, set in a band of tho severest fiimnlicitv. ! i This armlet decorates the upper arm, and there must be a pair. Its simplicity of effect is most chaste, becoming and classic. Novelties in shoes have Louis Quinzo heels, and many straps across the instep, with bows and buckles. These are for the house only. A neat, trim boot should be as much a part of the walking costume as the well fitting, soft kid glove is considered inseparable from a lady's toilette. The late handkerchief is almost wholly of laco. Tho center is a small square, round or oval piece of fine linen cambric, upon which is tho owner's crest or monogram. For evcry-day use tho small souaro of linen lawn, with deep bra is in nioro perfect tasto than those with colored borders A German feather dealer in London recently received 32.000 humming birds. 80,000 aquatic birds and 800,000 pairs of wings in ouo consignment, and all these wero meant for tho milliners. Tho humming birds' tiny wings aro mounted 1US a l)in ar'd use" to fasten laces at the tnroat anu on tuo nat. The most original bonnet of the season is a coarse straw, composed, liko Joseph's coat, of many colors. It is not at all so striking, however, as a straw in plain blue or deep wine color. The combination usually consists of ivory and mastic shades, combined with dark maroon, olive, Faience blue, paler green and brown. Tho trimmings must cor respond in every particular, tho most fashionable consisting of a broad, full ostrich plume, containing a mixture of lio same colors, and satin ribbon strip J to match. Of course such a hat is t jstly, because it is unique and rare, and the colors aro so artistically blended that its effect is not showy or pronounced. j Very many of the dresses for girls , from 2 to 10 and 12 years old present tho ! effect of a kilt coat. Tho kilt plaiting is j made up of either very wide box or very wide sido plaits. Often these dresses j aro nearly all in ono piece. The triin ' mings, instead of giving a princcsso ef 1 feet, simulate a long cut-away coat with a frranklin vest extending to meet a deep kilt flounce sewed on underneath tho coat, and representing a kilt skirt. Again, the coat effect is brought about on princesse dresses by the addition of broad pockets placed low down on tho sides. For school girls wash dresses are made of pretty Scotch ginghams, percales and chintzes, with polka dots and borders and bandana plaids. The Srinciple of combination rules alike in idics' and children's costumes and in silk, wool and cotton fabrics. In all, solid colors aro made up with figured stuffs to match. A favorite way of fashioning tho gay plaidcd bandana and percale dresses is in a kilt skirt set on a deep yoke lilting about the hips closely, and a yoked or plaited blouse, belted in. For younger girls, in wash goods, corny little slips, with the whole front of the . garment laid in box plaits down to a i bpanish flounce, while the back is gath j ered into a yoke and the neck of the I dress is finished with a deep sailor col lar. One of the simplest ways of mak ing up drosses for little girls is the Ga brielle shape, fastened at tho back and finished around the bottom with a kilt .'aiting. White dresses are in many instances finished with a Spanish flounce, box-plaited on instead of beino gathered. These flounces are in turn dged with lace, embroidery or Ham burg edging. a Swallowing Pulverized Glass. Mr. Cichia Iensburg, Le Sueur Coun ty, got on a spree last week (Mondav), at Montgomery, and offered to wager that he could swallow the glass con tained in a whisky flask. The wager was taken up by one of the party pres ent. whereuDon the drunken msn nro. ceeded to swallow thn niilwriTArt irUe hoof !,. iuZ. . . --- Potaoand oSS? VeKZ: TrSS; and pies, both miace and pumpkin. .V Outloa of Kalis;. it has losz been considered, as br swallowed until well rniitlcaJed. Some oWrvaikm ami rxpriavnt. however, hav bcn recently made whwfc indicate trunzir that ibl tnacip!e of low eating, so far as health i coacm- m1, is not true with rcpoct to all rario- tics of food. Animals in a state of natar as L gtn crally mgnud, tend Jo accoiam5date ihni3dve ia tb mot farurablc man ner to their conditions , if a cow natural ' ly rmainae, why hoald a dog nataral- ly take a chunk of rmt at a swallow without stopping U chew n? It may bv said that the ruminant hv a special digestive apparata. bet the fact re t mains that the food U eatrn a is be.i suited to it, and thu dog, following na ture, does what i best for hira, or, in other word, if it di-agreed with h dt- t:etion to oat raridlv. he would reform and take it more slowly. Followin' out this idea, exm-riments were made UDon a dog. with the following roulw If K. n..t k..,.. 1.-.. .!,.. ,i... ...., , ..... .Uv..., .. ...,; .t. . .v ..yK, wa.s reduced to a hash, or cut into Use pieces, tho digestion wa- at i iu.per- f.-ct, a coniderabl portion of the tirdi t-ested or imoirfivtlr !i.'rV.I m.at ttur found in tl.n ...-r..t . " If nml.r K.. same conditions, "meat was fci to the dog in lanre piece-, it was bolti! at a gulp, with the rc-ult that little, if any. passed through undigested ; compared with the result from the chopped meat, it could be called a perfect digeVion for I tK..i.. ...;..,..-,...t ;,k -.1.1 ,"--" " vmf. .-"-.... -- cidedly fcrm. imperfect digestion for the fine So far iw simplrt experiment goes, this must be pretty conclu-ive for J , the dog ; but can the same hold true i .....v. -'.. i. i ..i.:... i nun iL-.j.Vl.b 117 VlkV UUIIJIIU suujn;t- A brief review of the tlpt portion of the digestive process, so far as under stood with re ard to man, will help in 1 answering this; and fir?t to bo consid ered is ttie unuth and chewing appa- ra'us. Says hosier: I h chi-f pur- r ,-w .... ... .,, ... .--..... .... ... .., ...w.u ui .w... nun g .-u-.iiSt III iii:l.slji i.iijii iiii ui'i'iHLi; 'iiii- . mastication and deglutit'on. I? ST": S 1 J? iC'oU1 f""" j ?n som? of tb f,.nl lup; . 0n tM? tl ""J a .9Vht "nU,s,j,n? """' find on protetds none. Its character- , istic property is that of converting. starch into grape-sugar." According to Wundt, " the mouth secretions possess. besides mechanical, chiefly a chemical action-tho changing oyer of the .-larch anil glycogen contained in the food into sugar duces I he ferniniiL l.inv. vhiih urn. ... " -" -"I--- this transformation. Dtvaline. is not a specine element oi ine motiiii-se. .... . , cretion, f-mce, aside iroin mo intestinal secretions, all tissues and fluids of the body contain starch-ferment. " From this it will be seen that no di gestive action on meat or animal food takes place before reaching the stoma'di, and that, for vegetable food even, tho action of the month-secretions is far from all-important. As to tho mechanical action of I he mouth in preparing the food for deglu- tition, this is not specially necessary f jr morsels of meat of tho ordinary sie in troduced into the mouth, while for a largo portion of tho vegetable or plant prouucis eaten ami it is upon these j tam any success in improving slock, a that the saliva exerts its chemical action ( farmer should have sufficient means to mastication is necessary before they , pnrchaso from time to time as ho sees can be swallowed. Tho meat-foods are t tho necessity of the introduction of in themselves sufficiently moist, while , fresh blood. Ho should also boa man many dried fruits, breads, and the like, j of sufficient intelligence to know that in endless variety, first need thorough it is impossible to have good stock if it reduction. I is ill-fed and poorly sheltered. The im- A piece of jelly the sizo of a walnut provement of farm strck is not all ae would give little'trouble in swallowing, j accomplished by tho use of thnrough since it is moist and of a yielding char-1 hred males. Few farmers am aware, actor, while few can swallow a pill the ! until they have tried it, how much can size of a pea without distress. Teeth I he accomplished by taking animals that and chewing, then, have their purpose, 1 havo been poorly housed and fed and but with the exception of the incisors keeping them in warm stables and feed- occasionally, that purpose docs not in-; I'llllll. niPHt. III1IIOI4 it li'li linnnmn ilrl.i.li this is with respect to the food before it ' reaches the stomach, but, of course, the ! question then arises: Would it not bo ai better condition for digestion if it had I been thoroughly masticated ? , i ue ioou on reaching ine stomach is kept in a rotary motion by the muscular t wans, anu oniy auer a nine noes it le- : gin to pass the pyloric orifice, and then ' only by degrees, since tho digction far- ther on is a much finer oueration, and I can go on but slowly. The length r-f I time that the digestion properly lakes, is, according to the present knowledge 1 of the subject, several hours in fact, I somewhat longer than has cenerallv been supposed. Now, if the meat is . swallowed hne cut, it beams to pass through very quickly, and before it has been fully acted unon bv tho I'lstrie juice. This action as regards meats consists in "dissolving the sarcolemma from the muscular libers, and dissoh ing proteid matters and converting them in- t- tl1ltlin13 " -.. ,L a -,,Bp.uu. . . . viisiuren.gasinc, juico has per sc no effect watever. On grape-sugar and cane-sugar healthy gastrie juice has no tiled." In fats alone 1 it .has a slight emulsifying effect, but if still in the tissue it is di.ssolrpil out. MilK h nccordiiiirlT acted on bv being first curdled on ieichingthcstoni-1 ach, after which it is leisurely dissolved again in ine uesireo iorm. The rotar- movement of the contents of tho stomach is to facilitate the action of the gastric juico to bring the various particles and lumps of the entire mass into contact with it as it exudes from the stomach's walls. If the material has come from tho mouth finely ground tip, a considerable portion goes over into the duodenum before it has been prop erly acted upon ; but, if it has come down in coarse lumps, these begin shortly to dissolve, passing into a more or less fluid condition, and this can be taken crc of with aboutthe same rapid it by the digestive apparatus following ; oy mis arrangement no portion of the food would be allowed to pass from the stomach unprepared for the next step in the digesitive process. All portions, then, eren the finest fibers, of a meat diet, must be acted upon by the ga3tric juice before passing on ; and this action progresses best by slowly wearing off the outside of the morsels. Prof. Ludwig has made some general experiments as to the truth of this theo ry upon himself, eating coarsely cut meat at one time and fine at another, without at least being able to detect any ill effects whatever from morsels as large a? it was convenient to swallow. Many workingmen, business men. and others, almost bolt their food without! ,. W.I.CUCUW uigcauuu, e sbouiu i red ants in a shallow un cover, smeareu bear in mind, of course, that they have i with lard, the ves-el having accidental to chew much of their vegetable food i It h loft in !, tr-ifV inmw for convenience in swallowing, and also that the indigestion of business men oc casionally is due more to their nervous condition at the time. A slight amount of chewing or mum bling serves to detect harsh substances, as bones, and to prepare for swallow ing; foreign matters of considerable size will, however, gradually make their way, and, if not rough, may pass with out injury. The writer once had an ex perience of this nature with a piece of iron an inch ia length and a third in di ameter. To conclude, then, with respect to man as well as other flesh-eaters : it is not only not necessary, but also not best, to chew meat of any kind to a fine condition, but to swallow it in conven- With renrd tn ll nr.n.ff 7TJ? I tu- ur u TT 7. ! T he Golden Jabflee" of the St. Louis University (Catholic), being the Qfueth anniversary of the f jondation of 1 ot ut,tu,ont was celebrated on the -4tn alt. with great ceremony. FARJI ToriCS. Wiiw to Cvr Wheat H U Ka gle la a pablio J4rr. d U ra Tirasl on U wtw-at harrrrtt Mid tJj: d the crop l est befort the crala hsL .1 it tnflky Uo It wil!, shriTTl ilsJ ! ia weight, although it may maie uperior floor If. on lh other hd. whnat i left until orer-rlpe. the rri j income rwjsh aad harh sad tlw thicken and crls brittle, o that toe brao no af- It manlpulatioa will brine it Into con ditlon to make the bet whit floar with j out a largw projirthTa betog carrw! off "n va fraa tietween inee extreme Mr. Kngle leUeret the problra i o!v el. He i confirmed in th oo!akn tht as oon a th wheat jrrain ha r fnm the rntlk to tho dourh taU i ' he cnt without io!n;r inv weight t6e dousb crtoil. be farther arjrt oran i tain ami eJaUc and ca I rrsdlly iepara:rsi. learing tb larrr protxruon of white fiMir From tht time until it become over ripe the braa "ninoes to inirten aad tecoroe more ' "n.ue; tne Hour ia conMouenc- wi.I . ?r decretv; in waght Mr. Knple . aTies that wheat cut In l d.tue-br , - -- -- --.- , """ '"" "" r.-. jpn-aii in me no Hn ""V ur -uuueniv. i ' ?h ckoi al onc'. and tut lfnnl and captrd all the - i '""-'er. -o a.t to cure ,v ir a pn4 hi. K.irly Clltttni. he belle-f. ha the a,lvantag of 1., l,.,i by he?tnj: in the Muw th.fl invf - he briithter aad u",ro vauiaoie for fred.and tho sheave, w!" I!xck ln nthinl Ie, upace than wl,on cnl aftr belni- fully rije. .. jikkkdim; a.M t;RK or StvOK j Improvement in ! stock requires tii the breeding of farm me, money and unlituit- j 0d patience lt rcouircs timu to at- tain even moderate succe?. There are of necessity failures at tir-t. tho reult. possibly, of a lack of experience, more often of attempting too much. A fann er who has been successful in other ven tures, gets irupre.ittfd with the belief that he can irakc a good thing by going j Into (bloosle.! stock. He embark, ,n j inu renture witn the unpn'siton Uronir , upon mm tnat be CHn Ret n, ,aHcn i.. ..;.. i. i.A . t .... iii- neii;iiiKi jor mc sux'it ne orei' he has to pay for tho stock he, won .u ianner ever manna gr mistake, in order to in-ure a brue sueecM he must not only produce nor excellence, nut rrn mttt also a market for his stock If he f either respect tho fate of his vent sealed. If ho Mtcced. thero are i dilliculties that beset the business. . ios.s of animals bv 5rkn or , : . .. : .... . . .. ii .-urioui niauer. in nrceuin; I nncrn,r...i ..tt ti. t, ' thor ' "'"r-" - -.... nil' iiilh.vu is a j,0w matter. If the business i confined to tho Improvement of grade stock, the profits therefrom are at tho best precarious. Tho man who sets out to improve his stock has to work with peculiar tools. Any thing that ho accomplishes is only apparent after a long time. A man who is un willing to wait several years for tho frui's of his labors should lint ro Into stock breeding. Ho will lie too apt to abandon tho task ere ho sees the first token of success. No farmer xhould at- tempt tho improvement of stock unless he has patienec sufficient to giro tho experiment a fair trial. In order to at- ig generously on wholesome food. I horoughbred stock kept for breeding should be well kept and vigorous, and their offspring should not be stunted. Cur. Country Gentleman. Tiik Wau o.v I.nskpts Cut-worms Where cut-worms are troublcso.no in tho field, a very oM and at the samu u a very good remedy is to cn'rap them in holes made near tho plants, or hills, if in the cornfield. An old rake handle, tapered at the end so as to niake a smooth hole, five or six inches deep, or more, will answer very well f(r this purpose. In the morning tho worms that have taken refuge in those holts mav be crushed bv thrustinir tho rake handle into them again, .and the lit. 11 '. a M at . -imp is set lor ine ne.; ni!?nt. it is always well in planting to make pro vision for the loss of a stalk or two bv ' cut-worms or other causes, 3s it is easier ! to thin out than to replant, j May-bcctUs. These are the perfect insects of the white grub, so destructive la to lawns, and somet mes to meiu nwi A French plan for destroying, or rather citchiug the cockchafer, a very similar orchard after sunset an old barrel, tho ;n.;.i.. ..t ,k:i. u.., i. i tnrrnd aiHiuiiinm,,ffi, i...i L nlaced a liphfed Inmn. nml thn inornL. circling around to gut at the light strike thidr wings and legs against the tarred sides of the barrel, and cither get fast or are rendered so hclplef s that they fall to the bottom. Ten gallons of beetles have been captured in this way in a sin gle night. Sluns English gardeners place hand fuls of bran at intervals of eight or ten foct along the border of garden walks. The slugs arc attracted to the bran, and in the morning each little heap is found covered with them. The ground is then gone over again, this time the operator providing himself with a dust pan and small broom and an empty bucket, and it Ls an easy matter to sweep up the little heaps and emptv them, slugs and all, into the bucket. fc In this way many hundred have been taken in a single walk, and if a little salt and water be placed en the bottom of the bucket the slugs, coming in contact with it, are almost instantly de stroyed. Ants When these injects are trouble some in the garden fill small bottles two thirds with water, and then add sweet-oil within an inch of the top; plunge these into the ground near the nets or bills to within half an inch of the rim, and the insects coming for a sip will get into the oil and perish, as - a . T... .... it nils the breathing-pores. The writer once entrapped in a pantry myriads of means of entrapping them, suggested to ma by Professor Glover, many years ago, is to sprinkle sugar into a dam pened sponge near their hannts to at tract the insect When they have swarmed throogh the sponge it is squeezed in hot water, and the trap is reset until the majority of the insects ate killed. Aphix A remedy for plant lice upon the terminal shoots of rose bushes (or similar hardy plants), sid to wort like a charm, is as follows: Take four onns of quassia chip?, and boil for ten min utes in a gallon of soft water. Take out the chips and add -t ounces of soft soap, which should be dissolved in it as it cools. Stir well before using, and apply with a moderate sized paint D.rQ3n ephing npward. Ten minutes Scale. A French composition for de- straying scale insects, plant lice, etc. on fruit and other trew, is as fallows: Bjil 2 gallons of barley in water, then remove the grain (which may be fed to ' the chickens) ana add to the liquid itUjMry of pxict. V)wn foU 44 1 wmxtU of laaBP-blwik. taltlajr U fp? fcaj tita. tJtea Jd ps4 aad Jaif fbonvnt of nljhjr ao 1 quart vi !. bol Th Hilttsr it applied -"ritJ a paid brtth. fint odci a 4f-sjft broth to tfsww too, etc It iis?t dntroyt th laecl bl ffitr tfe Vati r TV The SlBw (XIkI T tVrvt The owren 1 1 lh Car- V r, t fcci ry hr recat r rwv.ed 9-"e,hJr f t fura.ih.ax ll.' car fr tis rvach Navy. mk.r !' m at t r that ooaalrr. aa crder K r 3, . hastr a v a. Ok i L - J - t , T' -- vf v 4 ft v v " r I "4 "t ta , ire I i i n- -. llt't 1.XI ,i. KtttlJtY 4-4 i.tt. -to-4 f '. -l Umi t oM . - , . ! , UUl . -l St u tM a w Hit' - . - myMti. tal two! t t Jive ! tmmtrmtm-t 1 I-mIi V1m-I tJ ..-jrj t t Hi- . --J (TATlll lf ikf eM (! -T. - ttovtl X ttts ait- HM m ... . H,Mt ,4 ' J' V t etM &jp" s Uitt v -- Wr- arti-W.l iu rf- t tMtk TJmi o4ImI 4 !' lV-fr' 1 w.rtl liwi 4km tmrwtt . IU l inuM imI Vwwi n.lt k et 1'rt tmU UlAefcHM I t - , m .--- .- i".. ... - te'l -si-V -t l 1-Mo.HiN 1 t1 ,l-Vl "'V1?' -- rtw xi ' A MIW M 1Mt T lv M II,HCm. S. V. Kcm tho ftiltowllHC trUmMl f If i i Uott"tcfV AbMtrWln CMlMn. lMtftlt nltk .!frr, Bd I'lWw IJM W A.Mre U to ikk, Mnjrer.."'M N. th-i..u uk m. Un i. tVHrwr 1J, Jr IU ItlHMK.-t u IItttfr UB fx-rti xtflttr.l tlh t . ?errr. I trl t of rotir AIorblnc tHih n. Mr h'3 i rj . I lmj''oiec. a 1 I ni n '...! si!itr of x.tvr tailc of re ir hiill .- h protiiil fro-sin.'lo t all it r tl.e r. ! II Lul r.ut I ralM? to J tlil Ukj 1;c Iku UUlnM.l T adi'ptrd a thettl tUrtLr .U U market. Tliej iiarc no r(Ul. A tiooil .Tlrdlrlnr. .tac4i1rrnV Mt co Ointment. .n l.iV !l rule fur l'llra. (itr lurUNl rrl (f Uft crfct J-er Un. At a!l ihug t. re. in i.i i Chiw Jtrkana' Ht hert NaT Totaeeo. CA r-txioCikp, ClirwiiMs etc tarJv nvn!n JUtMdaMJK. 10c L S l'nlO. VlM.J U. SENT ON TRIAL ro iTju.iin: Hfmf -ii. . ll:. ll.M. Jtfi. WKft. ACCVTC w-'.ooo a ':. M foe MULII I Ol It rlln lili-llii.li .! n In irfc Xunt A.W a. J, 1L.UjU n.r j Hr. l, MaJiMtfi llvt tf ) I" ( A VOSTH Afri u U antral V,'t1 KAnM rllln Hlrl. In lh "M, n a AGENTS, READ THIS. Wtlja; AotiU a SiUif ll'0 t- iiw.oa and -MJikLi" aJkr a lalv r win I !.. town. r,t aiJ "hlri ful mo-nttn UuMtiitiiimir "vu , 4rtn. AiUim MlttlUA.N 4HL. UinUI UkI. llDlJaUljLO ALL W HIM LARGEST HOUSE IN THE WEST! OIUU !.SoMl ITfll. I - Ul ll ' i "1 mil Vi tli TrJr .- I r fit l'i aittrrv H It. 1 I.KU h HIN 4th Slir.1. M Uii, M GODOKEWS T all nut lit rtir ' rw alii iW.ii t tr"'t an 1 irti' ifnr I. I .'A.-! an 1 irti' mf a I allHIul U.rxiM. tn I r.tSlTitUl t r ; J Alivrban rI K r'iii I l I'lnimi if 'i txt inar nton Hlui .mrth mnl!r . iwh a li nt-r lrrB !rrl laU'l t . Tti'ie l Vt n"iw! in It te aci 4il I t- t - iDf J r".IUr 'lrmnilni"fl I '. t.l.t'.AHOV ta ,Mimtir m, ikr. i E MPLOVMrNT FOR LADIES or MIN.BffO to I OO PC IWOMTH " ir-t -. Mt !. Jl I.I Mi Nil Waiuitr , r-" l...tri.t llr.1 Tht COMPLETE HOME TTh- Mt1. Il-ilh. ltsitj W a Smiin- t.t Wrn !. M'T Milne ami Si-fxltr ari aij c -, 1 limit with In fMaf-l II Millie inlr.li : llrr.l... nl nil. In Mmilf U.rrail. ij a cI,Km!m r.writu of fitiiill.r I If.-. K.ir lu.l drol-U.n f rtlra Irrmi, Allwl J. 4". Drl I III V Wt .. ltlrC. III. P AGENTS WANTED FOR TH HIST0RY"tW0 It erriLa n. 3H f.- M.t !ral fi(T'li-B -t I W( rtill riilum') (aara.afxt It U nMt rrnr" Ur of Ur rrt nri it.l.ibL It wl J at lx t tu4 tn r-rtrri'ii paco aia fr tntni t At ta, ail wlij It ll tulrr tlian artf ilbr VttA A'ti. HATIO.ML I'l ll.llll(i C lit IjiiU D. H. LAMBERSON. rn. worrr airwr X1.I3 IVX INOTON'M CELCHUaTin IIKCrtH MiBI.IQ ItifloM, Shot-(uns, HeYolrcru, CARTRI08ES, SHELLS, PRIMERS, 4c. Lo f: "SSaHSSiai." SEWDfS KACHIJfSS MWm TH4 mtMttiiflmi, Ft wtkft an Artit la vaoWt tn rT7 coiurtr. itimp 'nt lumtMl CalaJucua. UKjtm and rrnina. 237 HaU SL. Cbicara. 13. V.4 Wat CLIFFORD'S FEBRIFUGE on. FEVER AGUE ERADICATES AIX MALARIAL DISEASES from tkm SYSTEM. J.C. RICHARDSON, Prop., OrrorSltA-IlTorrfl. ST 1ifK BR. JOHN IULLS Smitli's Tonic Symp FOR THE CURE OF FEVER and AGUE Or CHIttS and FEVER. Tfl srrcrittor f Uds eJbrat4 x2irit jastly claims for ft a iaperl arityoTcr all rta td.'e rrer effered to tht public tux tfc SAFE, r CEETAIS. SPEEDY sd?ZMA5Z!rTc3r , QfAgasi Fever, 9rChillaax4 Fever, vfceth , ercfa&snorlssgiUadiSfr. He xtiert to tie I eattre Wettera asd Soatiera cesatrj to bear t his teitissesy to the trzts cf the urtioa that ia so ee whatever vJl ft itil ta csre if ' the dixect.3xi are itrictlj felloxti aad carried oat. Iaaffreat msarexseaatiagledeie ha beemr&fieiest taz a care, aad whole faasiliee have toea eared byaiiag.'e bottle, withaper fectresteratfea of the g eaeral htaltlL. It If, ' severer, praiest, aad i a every cam are eer ula ta care, if its aae i cestiaaed is nailltr dotes for a week or two after the dlaeaae haa bee cheeked, more eeaccially ia dimealt aad leaf -etaadia; ease. Utaally this mtdlei&e will set repair easy aid to ke? the brsrcls is spod erier. fhoald the pail eat, hswe-rer, re qairf a cathartic sell ciae, after ha-rlogt lira three or foar dotes of the ToaU. a aiarlt dote ef lULLf TXGET ABLE FAJCLLY FILLS will be taiEeiest. Ta ?esaise SMITH'S T05IC ITXUP mast have OK. J0H9 B CLLf private stas? oa eaea bottle, OaLJOHSltTLLaslyhaithericst to staaafactare aad sell the oriaaal J0HX J. SMITH'S T0HIC STIUF, of Lcctsvai, Xy. Exasiae well the label ca each bottle. Ifasy private etas; ia act oa eaca battle, do ast paichaae, or jn will be deeelTed. Manufacturer and Veneer of SMITH'S TONIC SYRUP, BULL'S SARSAPARILLA, ULL'S WORM DESTROYER, Th Popular Vamecf ! f th 9a y. rrtedaal Maee, n Staia Sc. L9CISTllXk KT. - W J " f- "' ' - II H H j H rH- nH , at H H.. tho,-- t"lt t.n li. iTTiiSTrTr u.Tl .lu i 7S-. mt tk ?SV itl jt - -,tf-- J i.a .. !" ' I r j L P. EWALD & CO t--kxs t" i i mow. rmx ajo wood rrocK. mrfVm Gufta Percha PAINT. nuftur-t um J TOlitl iiumin r swe-c. SiT j 1 -. Trr 4 j , "THE PKKUtT TOS'IC V t t . ..i-Ij - liil Tho only 2D cont AGUE REMEDY M IlkMdl'tf L-iiiiT't .in-a M I kMIU 4 H C hflJW. rijEZJvxoxriiii- HHllllkia2! iJKlllllllllllllllllllllllHl in si kt m -V NEW METHOD Of Photo-Enamel fainting. Trf n. -j. tfc WbMHn iji . 'iw 4 f . t;i..xin r iv lt.- rm l fcl.l lu f t4 I fcM W I !, ., ,i - 4 - ,5 m --4 E, E PRATT, 79 6t, CYcaf. IIU H. A IMTTS' SONS MANTd CO, TAW Jif .- M 3 t !., BARSE& SNIDER (l-.lablt.k" ItTSi. Live-Stock Commission. XAS3A3 CITY BTOCK YAKM, HO. Uulri in- tsrUfc) !" K. ! S t UImi l 4iImim.m.4.ii ..! mmmI. OCCIDENTALIS. jft.-.o run tiu tr. I. r?iiOa l U4.I. Ua rufs . ii wui r - .a rl i.w. . it I MMHII n ? t t. HlitlaMl'fl rt.-.,i1nnm aJ V ft. II U Um )hhm tUJ ' - - t&ma Ml niaM ulll .fuJ. T . It U fWHI t ta ui. t v,i itn IV . It dan a4 imirtM r ill t, It U a rvrtatn Oaf rt n 4 At !. It pun 0iltfaaj ajU kit 1 1. lttr l'r-On-. . Kmwa r rat r . I. t-iajtlK rit 1mm 4 i l'. stiimeh a1 ttilra IW Iwd tgalwat lilai a4 lll.fnf all WiMraJa. ai f.ij ttr- JLu I'll" . "1 IMH I tit fKI OI llt t ll 111.-1.1,. 11 It M v it44iit. 7Y4a Jt?'...", nt. km c.ir- t I IIAI 1 k v I aa . .Clllt,llHii .JJMU.cv.watjK. la, 6RAEFENBERG VKOKTAMLB PILIaS Mlldett evr known. wit MALARIAL DISCASCt, HEADACHE, ilLIOUft. NCSS.INDICCST10NMMJ. rEVEM. TImm VUAJS and rtprf bt'th ta 'I OMIIft Thi list Thrtshir ti WkMb I II I a a rn-rti rit t It a ). w t Iml i-r"jfcf UAtfM-f.M'1 .I'Jumaml -W bat f : jf a( IU f It I' .-Tf .. t f -st ia Iu t-rae-wnl, It it tit txtti pfM t H UifW a4 f'tlz raftn It a aw tt t ttm rw.jf tr !. It rujw t l ftr-v. 4f w. hi BelkNM tUfMllr to ta h. im mt'.tt, W-a , mm, aiwl UHUrt O 0.4a aaafaet t Wiaiil' I M Uj niilK . it wtll hvU erate O a iry Is iktt I Flat a4 Tlnvbl H few t "ft tifmht' aaw rlwaw ir-C ln aa ! aot m rtt4lf atK 1 ra J"f b ttihnf ! t irr'. Umi'pm' I fprt 4 trpmrttUit awl rtaMc a-r(a Utaa aCM f aarJit OttO. al u U rfM44. 1 af UB t iv tnAt lw't at n m 'ft iit timer bulUr attarlfM u a arm ar4 n 4v lav Hrl.l ttmr It 4x U irv w a4 tvtvr tfcao afl imMlTit tyni mrt muai. Hcr.r-r. a Gmifr. A lmif-4 )1ll fv" an lr.l Wawtlifa. as trrtt a4. r cflafJ trf a. af4 araajSV 9m )7alaUla ami CbrUart, aA4r-i H iaarrV vaacK. n.mtx m ; ftTILt.VATKn. Mt:t. NICHOLS, SHEPABO CO., tt(g Jait. ftoli. i ORICIIfAL and oily cehui.ie THRESHIWG WACHIKEBT. ffVKF. HtUkUmm Gn-ilmt. TtaJattaf, at- ul aMt la T -' t tli. f m4 -m. 7MlriftMTal4MrirtaQwk SjriXiJirevrrTlirraWraalaHaltr. rtil S9 aM Tnimi ana, njrwtatf Sm T-r. OV raritiW um ThrMlurr tstimm, VMA rwiaM. aa-t 7, mum Ttr.ilW liaw pat trnsK mki itwt4 tum a tnlMa.lhHwtilMUMl.al K1I9 EUAar HI A Vailttlka M ag attor .1 tmtm , mi. I m It. Bi ai a. Kerr alr Taatir Smptritr far WWamveaia; ta rit. Taaxa. iV Cm. a4 Saa ' a -rntuf' m ftfaia mwla a attai rTiwrtwca WmrtmtmAtp. EZftpaat Vblak, Vara af Twnm. riiiln . Ipmim. . MiKTrX0CHfr3Sar?Uilrr "rta, ealKf Wiaww.atiramiilwi4lMrL KaM Gaaa. ttrx ha aa tiatr;n fcaawTa. T"t Siart f Sriurarr. JU4. Cr(a frCafn K..aa4r - E"M tt a. am. T" FartiUr. CM mr l!rr .WBiwmtK iii ltH.li. Waaja'aa whkm trmsTtstft rm jtmrmmrsm mlrm mmm awl Ih A9 mtAmmmT. A4rrHmr Hkm a jASj0DMi i'tfJRflHMn j " . ."B,amT r,7V Btn I aatiaaWBaaaaaaaaaaatatal- ! MW I I l -j. a . "Jjl "w w' "gl'w lallallallallallallalB'l nftaftaftaftaftaftaftaftaftaftaftaftaftar Vltla I SF. ViMbkValiBiaSatatJVaPPPf V " WE tuKmtlfal3mm3ZZ?-" yfcjTsssiiB RRRRRRRRRRPfSV Tva e ppRk nKPB3mJslM wT sJaiBReT as-iaama 1- ir titii in llianaiK f i