V Em I? - ' H j s t 1 7 r I U THE RED CLOUD CHIEF. - Ml. L. THOMAS, Publisher- KKI) CLOUD, jSKBUASKA. vm;i.;y::u. to a j.i ntxr.u love it. Wh:lt.-.ir? I "enmi.il think!" AllllOH;-li t In" t iurvc .v tr..- il CM Ii n set, "J In- i :il mi 1 : illi-'l l ui-iK'- lie- -, Tln-n oiii i inai'i s. inj rejrret. An- 1 tli lar wiwi;-. At "this jMjlnt let us -ty And face llir truth, Imt after tri our wny. 1 emiim! think." N" .r ttlicr fct-l," IVit-tiitiieeji.iillii.il. My tun -s an- low; ; imv.irtl treim.r I iciil. Itul vj.-iik tlii- v.nnls ruliiily iml .: Ilnm mli-r, -ir, it is a iimntli V n-oro binw lint i dii -uk! tin-.. Tcim utnl erica arc o"cr. ' I ftiisTiot think;" hr-re. once for all, tlni-o'iT tin- Imp . nii'1 let mi pass. Minims I Iitvejmi, I'll if a tall lli-loiv jour feet :ufl w.nl: "Alu-" If iiieiitMl in mltii you jt-k. no hclp.-mi I Meet lorn nun like jou; tln-ii p,iss me l.y. " I reinnni think;" yoi. vuu ilt.l try. Ami lull. I'm jji.tti till to ounow, AliI slmll !! ever, tii'iiijrh I ''i. IT parting s Ii tr.l, ii II Mill allow Tim iwsi that -rr.tcc hume pain may w II cm- piwt With lull conti-nt in -pito ol nil tliut'd niiivw".. IMiiiuttliink:" I feel; soiiii-timf, On ntn'fKi-.mioii". -lnw a -a ill: I lii-sucfi iiiii-k; nml miiio .Hi rhjiiii-il. Ami m-i-. fir'-h. that o. ipiil Tll"iriilof Jtaifra'ii-c on my vuiin.lil heart, Aa! hIhioM. It tl it, h .-, Vr it ninurL Owe, tni it seeim 1 not ijmt" like this To loollih III". It ..(nil il lloilll rolov-invil work Itin.uli w.m- nifl lll-s. To In (imip irl oj such jj.kmI M.uir Ai ne'er liiMiriiik Imin ve.iriiisir;mcf, IT 'liiirais tltif c ivoiil'l ui-jmi but i(iltj I tlxHicht to ! it worM ajt irt, Il!-l.- -volll-illlll olil lliHikrt. VllcretO, .Bi-ar) tcith m liram .mil li'-iut, Vhi"1 lml!v conn to lest tin- two. Some s'M-uil thorns I thought to pJur-k; In S'Httll, bisjifl your tlmibta with woman's liutli nii'l truth! TliofcdroHinsiiri- jist, I "cannot think;"" Go, Feok home Inylt-lirowi-il, gracious llllf'll, Atriav-tii- itiiiitniii- wo-it to ilnnk. Awl hear tnnii priii'li-st lips i-Vrsi'en IMvcfHirwH lull MiHiit-! II iiiultoii jinil Mill. "1 (Hi'll lmi- lor Minp'' . Io iii s r n-c Mill. Jttvjtluitr .1. f i. in llt-hni 7'iiiiurrfpf. VAIAS VALKXTIXE. Iiss A":tlfiili:t WlirirwIiflV- was the iihiik on h-r inv c:tr! jil.itu, ami -v t'otilil not In lji thinking it. looked rjnite likf llie name in a timel. whether .sin' hl.el like a heroine, then; or iot. She was re:t emtnh fur a heroine, though, if that were all as pretty a little piece of lle.-h ami liiooil a eerlroil thestieeti of 1'ioston. Ami il" ou ehaUi-ne in: m thai. 1 shall have to ask von if jrreat sUirtleil lirown ees timler that tangle of golden hair, onl whtie clfe wis to he M'en beneath the lilaek f ltirli:in hat; if a .straight little nose; ejuisilelv cut lips, whoM-ilimjileil smile sjimved teeth lihti :t pur nf pearls; a elvet .skin, all snow ami Mush; ti pink, soft ehin, li-ilf hiihleii regain in the Maek fo wrap thai hil the roiiml slemli-r shape -if tin-re was Mii thiii"; but beauty in all that (lahnjj eoinliizi.it ion. For that ispictty Vai WJiarm-lilVe as she pan-eil on the steps of her fat Iter's mansion, ami frlniM-wI tip ami down the street for the carriage, while absently oiieniti"; hei wallet. ihe had jst come home to her fa ilier. after a ten ears' sojourn at her MJifHl and linishin seminaries, hating siM-ii linn oiih in a lew ol her vacations, and only jtisl emuijjh to foster an im mense awe am! admiration, :imi an in lellse tlesiie to stand Wi-11 in hisees. I!e had lost his wile leu ear-. a-o. ami Ii:ni lived abroad mo-l of the time .since then. He was so silent and so jjrave that she dared address him mi:e ol her tainiliarities. feeling as if he were sitting in judgment on h-r. and seeing where she fell short of her dead mother 's- per teetions; and et he was so jraeioiis, so hiiudsome. so learned, so ;raiiil in her eves', tint she i:iii!v adon-d him. cslio had on her mother's beautiful furs now. "iven lonir since hv a rich old tmele who never jjave auvthiu else. Mn did not eaetlv know whether her father was rich or not; that is, tor the life they led. He had made her his housekeeper, and told her theie W.is ne eestt of eereisiii"- e.m' in the tdaee; and she had not ipiite understood whetlier for the s-ike of eeonomv or for the sake of making her a od house keeper; and she was thinking whelher tin purchase he va about to make were iniite warnmted: and opening her wallet, had taken out the card and the hundred-dollar lull just riven her lor the partv oitttit, to put them awav more neatly, when a iju-t of the sharp Febru ary wind came rulllii round the corn er, and stialehcd it from her liii-rs. and whirled it away into the air. ami out of Mht. all in an instant. Slieave an involuntary cry. and darted alter it. but to no purpose hen, there, every where, it had nailed far over the house tops, and there an end. She burst into tears :is the horses came prancing to the door, sent them away, and went back into the house. Wliat under the heavens was she to do Tell her father? Not for the world. He would probably never trust her with another cent, He would uat urallv brinjj back that horrid old Mrs. l'viis'hyn. and put her over her head aStin for housekeeper. He would nev er look at her without thinking of her indifference to his wishes, ot her c:ire le.ssness when he had so particularly en joined care upon her. lie would say she was just a child airain she. sev en teen years old - and had better put oil" balls and parties and a debut till she was old cnouiih to take care of the mon ev jriven her to buy a jrown with. And anyvvav she dared not tell him. And once up in her own room, she tore off her things, tlrevv herself down, and cried till' eves ami face were swollen past recognition, and a Ila7in; head ache took the place of the day's expect ed pleasuie. And how was she to conceal thethinr. anyvvav? was the sentence that kept buzzinr through her bmin liken bee with a stin.-. Finch on the housokeoi iii";? Winter would be over lonrenourh before .she could .saw half of the sum bv any such doimrs a slmttinp: otl but ter and crr :nd suar, ami in:ikinr Susctle boil the coffee over a m'coiuI ilay allowing that she could pcrstiadc her father to think that the coffee was fresh bybuvinjr ecoml cuts of beef, by inakinr; entrees of what they usually ;av the poor Folevs. Even if she dis inissed the table-rirl. and rot alone; with Martha, the liotise-maid. under the plea that she could not suit herself yet with another, that would not riw her any part of the money in season to use it; she must have it to-day. or not at all. She had nothing to pledge for any luoneu for her father had not yet riven her her mother's jewels, not thinkinjr jewels proper to a debutante; and if he had, she could not have so be tnued him as to let his daughter do such a thin";. Nor, for his snk'e, could she have borrowed it. had there been any one of whom to ask the loan. Any one? The throb that her heart gave just then did her achinir head no rood. Well, what could she do? Nothing but lie still, and let her bursting head throb, and let Martha put hot water on it, and tell the story of her old mother's blind ness, which she heard like omc one in a dream, while visions of her father's con tempt for the heedlessness, for the van-113-, that so occupied her thoughts that they could not even remember common caution, moved before her own eyes like the figures of a nightmare. But sleep came to her relief at last; and when she awoke it was dark in the room, and her father was sitting beside ber bed with his hand on her head; and she took down the hand, and held it to her lips and kissed it, while her tears silently welled forth again; and pres ently Martha had brought her hot tea ind toast, and before long she was asleep (or the night. Tho sunlight of another mornim: brought with it some elastii-itv to meet her trouble. She l-g.;n jiiillin live lier wardrobe, and wondering if s,,. could not make thi thing and that thing do. She half thought !,. could, although the blow was bitt.-r to the pretty creature that loved pretf things, and loved to surround h'-r -It with thorn, and although sh,; dimlv fi It it wa- doing injustice to hr father again to lot his daughter make her first formal appearance in the world in other than fn-sh new splendor. "Although I don't believe anvbody will eer know in all the world,'' she said: I have such a knack." Hut when she had decided on her course of action, she still reali.-d that that hundred-dollar bill vva- her father" s property, and must be rc-ton-d to him. Well,'' she rea-jom-d. papa has just given me the new hor-e for mv coupe; but walking i- good for me, :.nd 1 can use the landau horse, all I wuit. And if I lend him for three monv to Miss Humphreys, whose own hor-e has fallen lame, I shall save his board in our stable, and that will be the same asp u ingpapa fifty dollars and saving nothing about it. And if I dismis-, Ann, and get Mar tha to take her work for a while, that will make up the rest in time "" Stiil, if her father chose that his daughter shonld have her own little private car riage. vv;ls not this, in reality, a way of cheating him? the under-cunent of thought would come. And when In had munbeied and arranged his serv ants, what right had she to come and make his statu less? And then the de ceit of it all! No, it was mote t'taa she could bear: and she came near breaking down into another hesdaehe. "I will do the best lean with what I have."" .she said; "and then I will tell papa - may be' It was well .she added the mav be, for it made her heart beat like a little trip-hammer to think of the pos sibility. It was her own birthday parly for which this paitieular dn-ss was lo have been provided, and a garniture of di!V-r-ent flowers and ribbons was to make another dress of it for Mrs. Mount jov's f.ernian given to heron tin- following night. She had come into the world a little Valentine, and perhaps that was the reason lln-v had ca'hd her Valentin, as the nearest way in which llnv could approach the name for her. And she had thotiirht of such a preltv dress for that St. Valentine"-, night of h-r: the whole front a broad wreath of embroil! cry in vellow pearls, and tin- rest a How of creamy Spanish hn-e, with no other color than that of the broken wieath of great red m-is falling from the cluster at her heart; and th" in-l night tin pearls and the lace were to go over her old gold silk that she had worn at her fathers little dinners to gentlemen, win-re she had been presiding, almost as if she were not piv-cnt, in the two weeks since her ret inn. Well, she had a blonde lace shawl of her mother's, Millicieiith creamy with age, -die was uif; that would goa goo I wav: and she had a ha!f-do.en scarfs and fichus of the same sort of lace that could be made to go the rest of the way. She must forego that gorgeous front of pearl embroidery: but she had some money left that would buv illu sion enough to shirr up and down the lnuit in its pla , and gari-mds of long green shining grasses to hide the joins and cover .short -cuniing-. And would 110J Arthur Mountjov be jitst as likely to bring her those great ross as ! had been before? And the one dress must do for both parties So there was a week of seclusion, of puckering and pinning and Irving on. of cutting and ripping and basting and stitching: she grew quite pale over it, and her little pink lingcr-nail was worn away bv the needle. Hut she hml learned how to do all such things in the fancy parlies at school, and when she rested Irom her labors -only on the very morning of the birlhdav party. St. Valentine's Day itself -the dtc-s was iuite a charming one. 'Yes.' she said to herself, "it t retllv perleet in its way. And now. if 1 had not lo-t tin bill, theie would be a hundred dollars toward taking the cataract from Mar tha's mother's eve." it never occurring to her unpractical mind at the moment that it would have made no difference to Martha's mother whether she had lost that bill or not. " So your t:isk is over. Hut I had no idea, V.-il, tlkit you were to make your self a little wreck over it," said her father, looking at the pricked fore finger, when she came down that morn ing alter breakfast to read him the tele graphic news in tho AIrcrli.i r. " I thought 1 gave vou money enough to have the whole thing done to oui mind out of the house;" and at the words the color rushed b:ik to her cheeks, s,o that no one could ny that Val was pale any longer. " Will you let me try it 011. and look at me, papa?" she asked, between three and four rapid breaths; "and see if you are entirely satislied? And then, per haps -" Ami she looked up at him with her wistful brown eves. "As if there could be "much douht of that!" he replied, smilingly. Hut she had danced away wit limit finishing, her heart half tilled with courage bv that smile, which, if it hail not been given to her oftener. was merely because of preoccupation: and in an incredibly short space of time she had re-appeared in the splendor of her tarnished gold, half veiled in the sheen of the silken lace. "Your little Valentine," sh,. , with a sweeping courlesv. And then, wondering at herself, "and changing tone and color, she added: " You know it will be far lovelier in the evening light: and 1 am to have t.;d r ws here." and she kept her hands clasped over her heart, as if to indicate where "here" was. but really to repress i;, beating, so that she could go on and tell her story and confess her fault: when, all at once, her father, lrid clasped her in his arms, regardless of crushed lace or ribbons. ,0 much to her ama7emcnt. so much to her passionate delight, so much to her consternation and contrition, that the cry came tear ing out of her mouth: Oh, papa, I don't deserve it! I I meant to tell vou 1-" But he was not listening. "Her mother her mother over again!" he was saying: and he had led her into the curtained alcove of his library, where she had not penetrated before, and had drawn back the curtain from the long picture there, to let the broad sunbeam tall full upon the painting of a dazzling yellow-haired and brown-eyed young creature, drawing her ivory satins and laces about her, and smiling from the canvas with all the richness and full ness of blushing life. "Oh. papa!" cried Val. "Mie would never have done what I have: she would never have deceived you; she would never have lost " And just then the ringing of the door bell resounded through the house like a gong. "Perhaps it fs a valentine for me," she exclaimed, changing her tone instantly, as her father put fier away. "I never had one." And Arthur Mount joy had already come with her roses, and she had to see him in all her finery, her blushes and smiles and tears. But it was for a brief moment that he had the pretty sight: for she would not have him stay too long, and let him out herself rather than summon a servaut; and she lingered there at the door half a moment, looking down under the arching tracery of the boughs of the wintry Common, as the postman came laboring along. "How busy he is!" she said, with a. joyous shiver. "Do you know I never had a valentine." You shall not say that after to night," was the reply, with eyes ths meant more thw tho words Unless," she added, "this is one!" I'orat the very moment a vvi-p of pa pet ame flut'ering out of the air from an nv is'.i.ie s iiuew here, and nlic h td pi:1 out her hand and eritiglit it. wh Ar thur"" laughing help a torn, crumpled, ragged hutn'rcd-doilrir bill, that looked is if it were the id'Vitieal one hh had lo I a week ago. that had come home, like a prodig.il, tired and worn out with its wanderings. "Oh. Arthur!" ehe cried. ' Look at it! Can it be? Do vou believe oh. is it possible it could l that very bill?" And before either o! them knew what she had done, she had shut the dour in his face, and had tlown up the stairway to find her father, up setting on her way a score of jHts and planus with which thy Uorista were dec orating the hail for tin night. "And soyo'i have a valentine at last?" said her father, mooting her. with a strange bright look on his face, as he s.ivv the w isp of paper in her outstretched hand. " Papa." -hc cried, stamping h"r little foot, an illumination breaking over her. "vou kne.y it all the time! You dropped tiii- into the air from the poroh window for my hand to e.itch. I see it ail. No hundred-dollar bill ever came fHttoring back to its owner in all the world."' Why unler tiie sun 1 1 - 1 shi- ever be.-n afrai 1 of such a father as this! " Very well." he said, laughing. " Ynii h-tve gre-it perspicacity. Miss Wiiarnelille. I V know it all the time. I was at the window, and saw vou lose it that dav a wi .-k ago. I waited foryon to tell me. When nu were silent. '. took Mr-. Mountjov into council, ami I had two toilettes prepan d for Vou. ne is a white satin, wit-i gold embroider, and cords and lasscN. and the oiler, some vrt of a miiacle in blue and s.l-vi-r, she tells me. And I made up my mind that il mi kept the secret, some one else -.hoiild kci p the tin -si-.. They are on tin sofa in v our dressing-room now. This will do for -o:n- other time, mv darling. And as for v our valentine, it a better valentitf. i- it not, than all Arthur Mount juv's Cupids and roses'-" And Ii- smiled again, -ignilieantlv. at the ro-scs mounting under the dark lash-e-i. A r matitii- valentine, too," he said, "thatiomes fluttering round the house from nobody knows where, am! without the aid ot mortal postman. Do you think. Val. after all, votir valentine can do anything more worth while than help lake tin- cataract from Martha's mother's eve?"- UtrpT's Itazar. A Veteran Comluclnr's ConfosMon. A repot tor met an old railroad con ductor U'-tcrdav. and was .surprised to hear that he had been discharged. " Y s," he said, " the old man side tracked me." " Wli it for?" Well, I suppose ho thought I hail too much moncv." Vo-trs or his?" And he laughed. " You remember I began working for tl.i' X. v. lload in ISiJ.'i, at the close of the vva. From i 1 a mouth I was gradually raised to 5-100. The othr day the 'old man (the Super intendent) found out that I owned and was paving tae.s mi .flJ.'iUD or ?!.". ' worth of proper! v. So he kicked. He offered to keep 1110 if I would 'resti tute. but I said I gue-sed I had rail roaded about long enough." "How diil you save all tli.it money in fifteen vears Irom a sa'ary of 't!o' increased gradually to.?l,"IUil :t vear?" And he laughed again. "As Fin out of the business now and kind o like railroad companies. I don't mind explaining the conundrum. VU hold up m hand, though, and swear I ahvavs accounted for every pas senger I ever, carried. Hut I watered 'cm watered the company like iLs Di rectors water the stock. And I did it this wav: You see. even vear the 1'residciit and gi-i.eral ollieers is-uc an unlimited number of annual pass,., Smue of these are in cchange with other railroads, but most of them are to high-eock-a-lonims. Congressmen, and members of the Legislature. 1 al wavs made it my business when one of those fellows took my train to 'pipe him oil" -that is. get in mnversation witii him, lind out where he lived, and what his business was. Ymi know, passengers alwavs like civil treatment from a conductor: it seems odd like. With this acquaintance 1 iwd him." " I'sed him?" "Yes. used him. Knowing about how olten his business reiuitvd him to travel. I traveled for him. Do vou catch on? When he didn't travel. I just deducted that much from my cash rv ipts and credited the annual bum mer with one trip. My division cash fare was a little less than seven dollars, and it was a poor run for me if I didu't turn in two or throe old duffers." Ah, I see. You robbed Peter to pav Paul?" " No, I robbed the annual passhohler to pav mself. Hut my best holt was in catching the passhohler w ho wanted to rob the company. There's when; 1 made the most of my money. You see. the average member of the Legislature not only thinks the compauv should carry him free, but all his friends. So in loans his pass to Torn. Dick and Harry, his neighbors. I made it my business to identify every Legislative passhohler. I'vcrv two or three weeks a man would get on mv train and show up that pass. I would give him his check, go on through the train, do my work, aud then come back and sit down by him. I would say. Let me look at nur pass again?' He would hand it out. I would then turn to my uiciuoraudur book ami read: Archimedes Skrtiben dike. tall, dark hair, thirty years old; annual. 01i7." Then I would turn to the rooster, and s.ay, Why. you're not Archimedes Skrubendike; you've no right to ride on this pas. Head the conditions on the back-Not transfera ble." And then the fellow would go all to pieces. He would lcg. aud plead, and oiler to pay fare, but I was too ily. When 1 had him bad enough scared. 1 would say: Fm sorry, and I hope this thing will never occur again. Now. 111 tell you what I'll do. I'll not take up this pass, as 1 an instructed to do. for Skrubendike is a good friend of the rail roads, and I woul lift have him get into trouble for anv tiling in the world. You give me ten dollars, and 1 will let vou keep the pass to give back to him. only you must promise" never to tell him v oil got caught. And the follow would snatch out ten dollars quicker' n wink. It's an honest fact, in one vear I worked one old .skrubendike for inore'n ?300. The old duffer even loaned his pas3 to women." " Anything else?" Well, if these two rackets don't ac count for what Fvegotit's no use buzzing to a blanket. -blank newspaper fool."" Chicago Tribune. I Germany would be a very poor place for American merchants to do business in. Several wealthy and im portant retail merchants of Berlin were arrested and prosecuted for fraud dur ing the holidays, for displaying placards bearing such announcements as Sell ing off the Entire Stock." Goods slightly damaged by fire." etc. The prosecutor brought evidence to show that these assertions were purely fiction used as inducements to buy, and the court sustained the charge 6f fraud. Christian Union. i ' Everybody- is bound to some kind of service: everybody is dependent upon his fellows. 'The veriest recluse must have food, clothes and a shelter and, if he can make these himself, he is still dependent upon the courtesy of hi neighbor to let him alone. It is impos sible to be wholly independent, and the attempt might as well be sbnndoned. But it is possible to be reaaoab"e; - is vfri-i.tvite reach devS-y on IIO-tlK. FAK3I AND ("AIl.MKX. Iwvr for v'"gne One drachm aeh of 1. 1 -.t 1 iv. :. ir. oil . f ctn-u. vil I i r-"ttnr-' and op -f ennamen. nfid. two.lr. Luis n oil ot tt.-rg -iut, mix and add a pint of alcohol. Ovv ng to the hiirh pr.ee of fit! for -to-k, tin re are l-tvy -irtr'n, if "salt lay" being m i!e fnci the New Jer-ey mnr-hes. Formerly it was. ei Milered scarcely vwrtk ULing. but the growing. demand for hay hiv g.v- n it a value vvlich it never before k,s,-,-,-,1 To make wall paper .stay on white washed walls, tt-e one M..it;d of gbie ami one-fourth brof soap, dissolved in siv q-iai-s of srn.UH.'g Water. Let it stand until blood warm aud apply with a whitewash bru-h, let it dry thuroiigii !y. and paper. It i- generally conceded. s Florida evhange" that the hrnwn r rusty orange is much tho swiftest, an-i can be kept longer than the bngUl fruit, but bv a no1 111111-11 ! erver-1 of t.is'.-. the brown fruit is depre iited in North ern market.! and sok! at half ' price cf fairfruit- If one wishes to calculate tho cost. as he shu hj, of the e Miens of cow-ring afield with :u inure, it can be done -is follows; If (aeh tv -!'' To.il is di vided into ten heaps, and the heap1 are placed four p:nes attar., thirty-one and I a quarter loads will io it mirud U cover mi acre. j -The he-t sandwiches are made of thin si';,-.- of bre.t ! but'eni and folded, I witli cold-boiled ham lot ween them. .! 'imp the ham hue and m i-n it wifh I -alt. pi-pper and mu-'ird. If the h-.-m I meat a'oi.e is tis.-.i a little melted butter j may be added. Cheese sandwichi; are tcrv nice: the cheese may i grateit or ut in thin slices. Mu-tard is a Id.-d or not, as ".on p!eae. Careful experiments have prored Mint com which is hill-d will blow down more readily than that which has level .-ilture. This cm b- iu counted for by the fact that coin r-Hts run vrry near the surface, and when hills an made I I hey an confined to the -mail sp:ie' covered bv the lull: while in h-vol cul ture"th; roots run irom one row to the 1 other, thus enabling the corn to stand s'roi'g. as nature intended, and in no j wav liable to be blown down except by winds of unusual violence. A dish of bright, red apples is al vvavsan addition to every table, and make the be-! c liter p'-c. Apples and sago, or tap'oca. make a nrioJi ! tc r dessert tl'ti'i the much praised pies which are so universal among the Americans. Apples chopped tine and cooked with hdi the amount of br-ad crumbs nibbed through a colander, or grated with sugar, bits of butter and cinnamon, or allspice, and baked in lav era fur a pudding, urikc a title ih scrt. It is said that fire proof houses cm be built of cotton and straw. In pre paring these m-iterials. raw cotton ot "tenor quality ami tl.e scattered refuse .s plantations and sweepings of facul ties r:re mixed and converted into a paste, which becomes as hard is sjo'ie, and thru is calied architectural cotton. It may vo made in large slabs, wlurcuy the htiildi.'g of a house would be 'rapid in c miparisoii with the pra tieeof lay ing brick 'ifter brie-, at.d at about one third tin cot. For the other part wheat straw is treated in a wav already known and convened into past-board. Fin she, t . Vitis pr.pari d are s.akcd in 1 solution which hardens the libers, and ihev are then c impressed under nr nioiis powei into beams and hoards of air. risjuireu sie. The effect ot the soaking is said to render them di.lit till 01 comniisi:on. The Ilffi'i'l nf Irrii;atiiii in Califoniia. Tin irrigation of large tracts of land in s.une ot the southern counties of Cal ifornia has produced malarial diseases ! to such au alarming extent as to presi nt i scrimis problem in comic-lion with , the further settlement of that region. 1 .Most ot the lands in Frc-uo. Tulare nud i Kern eouiiiies that have been subjected to irrigation are of the class freqtieutiy termed desert lands; v it limit irng.-tioii thev are utterlv valueless for :ig-i(tilt- , ural operations, but with it tin ir pn dtictivitv is astonishing. Since tin lat ter fact has b -ell dt tnon-tr.ated there has begun a large immigration into the counties named, and extcusivu irrig.i- i timi works have been cims'riii-teil at heavy expense. The p si I ility of chills and lever was tnt thought of in connec tion with the sandy soil and dr climate , of the region until the malarial svmp tonis made their appearjmc. The ' progress of the ague lor the last two I year, has been rapid and general, and. I as inigatimi has comparatively as vet ! miTi h begun, the future i ain-,1 disinil to contemplate. The inhabit ants of the llraos bottom are no wor-e oil' than those of the irrigated lands of , Calitornia are likely to iv. There i- no ' exemption from the attacks, it I c'r,'. a notable tact that the Chines., who are to a considerable extent employi d as laborers, do not enjoy the immunity which attaches to the" negroes in the .swamps, of the South. Various sugges tions of remedies have been made. n'io idea being that if a system of thorough drainage should be combined with that ( for irrigation, it would mitigitc the evil. Some benefit seems to be der'.vtal from having rooms used as dormitories at a considerable elevation from the ground, and huts raised on long po!s have been tried, while one wealthy vine grower ha built a three-story dwell ing. Others seek immunity by Fvmg in villages at a distance from their farms and the irrigating ditches; and perhaps this practice vvill become uni versal. A showing that the question is . not a local one. confined to the coun ties named, it mav be mentioned that ' the same experiment was tri-1. with similar results, in the county of Yolo, a hundred miles north of San Franci-co. A large ditch led the waters of a small stream across a number of laruis. and in ' a few years ague became common, fam ilies began moving away. and. as irri- 1 gation was not indispen-ihle to cultiva tion in this instance." the ditch w-.v jtnal- ' Iv closed. -V. Y. l'ol. Cookotl Ioat for Fot1. It is too much tho practi 'to food raw meat to poultry under the mistaken idea that a? the worms and injects eaten with surh avidity are uncoukeil. -o shouUl be any meat giveu them l-y their owners. But the early worm which Iiiddy takts in her tnpty crop. soft, puipy and eni.siieil J(y tlie bill before it descend the gullet, is tine tiling, and the coarse, dry, tnmrv. fatli-s tlcsh thnvvn to thorn in the runjrh" anil the tourh i quite another, even if the carcass of horse or heep so bestowed is not still more objectionable on account of dis ease. True, these nearly "dry bones may serve to while away a weary hour in the monotonous life of the poultry yard, and happily the fowls may lab-'r iitidcr the impression that thev are eat ing somethiarr- And so they may s.erve a certain purpose in the poultry World. But for real aid and comfort to'the fowls save .".11 your refuse meat, and buy. m addition, liver, lights, heart and all. as the old story runs, from the .shair bles. and boil all together for two honrx or more. Then chop finely and mt with meal in the water in which they are boiled. .This dry. rich mes5, show ing bits of meat, like the raisins in plum pudding, will be a dish n"? to jet before anv -queen of the (poultry) -"-fy1"' and She and h-r.maithof -louor will p-J vou'for itiu more titan, ivor.ls. " v r jHMhet. hiirh wiru r .-. mil show on' many a. ---.-ceetliug dav. Peulirj lard. Hiicinles of the French. Among tnc no:tie sec- wntcn :nc French l.avu now to count in North Af- ii-a is that of the noui. foundtd forty years ago by the hoikh of llmt name. '1 his .-tvt, v,luci is now under the lead rh;t of hU swn and siu censor, El MeJicdi. h is iu ctu'erof action : Djrh'il, in tho pnvicc of rripli. ' xnu. according to a corr.-Lpondent oj the ifruit ftir trttKtn.. ratmhen - UvO extend alio, cr Algeria. I V -"hub, the at of the brotherhoi. is altout thns dav s' march to the we: ol Syoiia. It is.a small tmvn. srroutMled tiv'rant - ..irts, and in the outer is the rehgk-. house Known as. tie V.x aia, w .th tla- t.iinl.of N,.r,oussi. to which t..!'rimir-4 are made from every part of .W.rth Af-' ricrt. Upward of four tiimsand people n-'ide in the Zao-iin, at tlw !tl t whom is I.I 'ehuU, ngardeil ty hi.s followers as the reformer o! the .v'--hsmn i dan relv-to.i, wln. iniming the pr'i hcts have announced for the cad of tho thirt. nth ctntnry of the hegua (X 'V.i.tber II, 1".). ill Mehcdi is a -worn fin my "I tne in . xne ney oi Tuni, and the French, whom he woa'd fain bweep into the sC.i with lh army w hn ii he Rserts will be nt his command i.ext autumn, and ht cXH-et- to found a great Arabian empire, in Xorth Attica --.. Jjmcs" Cla.t 'Ir. A thoroughly Amoricftn city has in en k.id out in the state of Chiapas, ilciki. The -it is a beautiful plateau cf htiid. thr uh which runs a never lailing stn-am ot mountain spt mg water, cVar as crv stal, fu'I i f fish, and afford : ' p wcr"for ai.v am unit ot manufac turing madam rv", d analtitudoot tiine ti'-UsAiid fet nb.ve the sta level, on the line nf the Mexican Southern Kail red. It is c.i'Ku Allen City. Around the city aie la.d out and taken up twi-i-tv -four sifiee farm-, each touching 'he city plat. Then will be ovtr thrie in. I-; 1...H c uiee U--S ,,-., ,,.,ov.B. , at tlu plate vvulun the coming v. ar. all to be ti:iniI ir: d and raised to bearing within the next four vca-s. All g..is. stoiesiindsupphas, !rri?lu.n,l imtrle- ni'iits. machinery, building matcrnu. and lurniture for th.c colonists arc - - einpt from duty; also all exports and iiii,..irw of prod'n.-ions of the . ottntry. and stock tm- wotk or iire'-in g pur- po-i-s are exempt tor ten v rs. 1 In (loii'Ms thus far are from California. it is believed that the Central V.i- I In i'lhc (lakltud lerrv depot, wliii li vva- sin tis ai ine sines aieciiin ., 'ii-i i n-ci;. j The total rcre-ents the original esti- llia'id !eii"'h of the whole li:il.!ui. t, . . .1 ..iii... i..i. . ,' Hut to these were added tw. thirt.v-te. , shids, or, as tlu-v ate termed in ra: mad j . .i : l .. 1. .. f... . 1 .. (till 11 CiliiK'V, ' ' tM'IU-, -Ullltl tlll'HHll, eio-lli ofihe depot :,:i.linr is clo-o t uioti l.lto feet. The bie.idth is :M I feet. The niolc b. ,' lect long from lite Oakland -bote. For a di-..nce ot t . "..'i let it is wide enough to carry fo-.ir railro'id tracks and a carriage-way, or a width oi al ml one hundred t-ct ; hence lo the end of the mole it meit-a-. s to a width of .' fit-t. It is estinMud at the ofu es of the Ceur:.I Pacific U-itl-roud Company tint over ono million cubic v aids oi earth, g.avel and rock hivebcun u-wd in the coti't ruction of tl.e ntolc. . A little ly called out to his father, who h u! mount! d his horse br a jmtr rcv: Cood-hve, papa. I love von thir'V utiles 1 itig.' A little sitter quickly added: " (iood-bve, dear papa. You vvdl never iii!. to the end of my love.' m M. .... t .. 'V....l.l.. limy i .tstor in oimi.fi-. Tony rat,.r. or Xcv York. v. ho Is novr with h's iiiimitab.c va.-.ety ciiinbinution. md-ina tatirof the jintu i;m1 c.tn-s of t tic 1'i.ioa, i' rpci2tus'il as t!ie lpiil-n i liuta tr v-t'.d.st and varlcy prrl -nr.cr of the Liiitfl stat'-s. He owns ami run a tim das theater -n lirOiidna. -'- York t'ltv, and lias Kttticrft atxjnt linn tlie lx?t troipp of varirtv art.-H th.it cou'il Ik o1 t.ttn 1 The coai;.ativ h ii jntcotnn!rtiI a linlliuit eni?ciiifut at t:i- Yalnut strfct 'lhratcr. rhtl.u!i-iiIil.i, au.l aft cr tl.e prt Ptit to .r tliey 'ul rci; ;Kar in 1 -hv raster's own fifater in Ni-w York Cty Mr. l'astor Is the o-.t'-nst r ot lit j c-uliar school of character snip: , and Ljs ma!r iiuusflf itiiincnacly si;mlar, hivttij; realize 1 bv hn talc its a Iarj;e fortune. 11:c writer of this artiI ra"t Mr Pastor rc crn'lyat the Itmghain Hou-e.ln I'll ilwlcl phis, and found h. in a5 seaiat in pavato as he is amusing U-f cc tin p M'.c. During our ton. vcrsatioa I Inquire 1 aj to hi- hvsical health, and lie replifd tlut. a-.! aithstanditsg tha btra n i:sm him In the discharge of his pro feiiunal duties, it n-s C5ceHe-.t lie had o cjsionally cctc pai:i, cither tho re mi.: nf rhcimatt attacksorc.dJ. ltitaiy torn, 1 nuts of that character tiCMr trou'-le-l hitn Io:i. as he had found out a re-nrdy for all su h ftnn-ir-inp auVetioui. I a-"." 1 him . hat the reta- dy was, and he recl'cu. " St JarobsOil " I then learned from Mr. Pa-'or that be roasidrred the Great tJcrman I."tiiedy anscellut prepa rati.ia rcr the cure or r-'.ief of rheumatism, and that it was a?xut the only thmjr tied amon pro"e?'' -na ;cop'e forthat ditrc'.ti conmlair.t II took little of It with him whenever he -t trareli'ie;. .ind would no! without :t. ar.d kr-w tint it a5 vcrr pDpul with a number of members of hi can rwn- pany. A ronvers-t -n hei i itee lucntiy w.tn variotii member of the organization revealed the fact that St. Jarote Oil had t een perform- iamo't invaluaKe service for them in the w-.t rfcurltc them of r'letiaiaf.sm. Nea-y , every artUt in the troupe u;ed it. and was "n thiiastic in its r-use. and the writer was really forced to the conclusion thit Tony Jtor was (-mainly in Iu-k in having so vala able an artie'e known and emploved by his in tnita'-'y t;ood company of perfurme.-s. for it enabled every oo to be ala-ayj m his place, tau insuring c.-mfort to the man tpemeut and genuine 6atisf Jit.oa to the p-a 'iic Tony l'astor would certainly be in tr-.uble ntho :t St. Jacb Ot! Ai ieait, other maaajri whvic artLsts bare been temporarily unup lA.cl. have nofced the tii'erence between st. Jacobs Oil in stock and Si. Jacob- Oil out of stock amonj; the members of EiCi. A". Y. i'hpptr. 1 formally opened with a public ball not I ttUiCtt U'li-f. fthtut!t fiur.tii. j -. u ! luii" unco, is the longest of anv in cmii I ..rirJ to tin-1 ty I! .- : thir-vn Id. 'J he train sheds on e'ltiier '"'' Hie t-tor 1 1 h.l U.-i. , , , . , ..-i Ir'l I linens biz v.s ati.l .Ii.jf lnrii. r. S'dc an- t'.t feet hug. I he two n I ,., .,:.. i . i , ,. ti vv it.,, - . . V."-; trcr t?-e-:i wo wc-i-i-i i-!': c't-T-n '- t. We make thU wnf-. : " .MJF..VT. SOW CTH 1 NO Co. Tc r, canlcsi.s-eU there s , tc, .!-' rs ,,- W vni 1.0. SSJJclWT. fct- LouU.Mo. p.,1 1 . .ntrr la.i . coB-tnt rj i- r ..f e rr;UT , -I, , ". nr , h..-. n A . . n.a t iiuJoa us -.Air - f ir, -- , 1 ftbtM I O K-rci.- uo.. ii..vsi i c .n t wt.t them - s::m1. t at 1 --v 1- ; a v. a, - i' . i 1 Iiavt- rn eti! a hk in tb Jtel And --rtair t:.-tn - - - lor mUico ikinLie Am- i Sin S! -Ti"' "'' ;'- " ' Mt'Tacu." f.aju-V.1 a Ia"aj t-'rL -I' . x-wunirj-cri.:c'rTrr.-'jo;.f.i Jftl-A llrnr ruu-t N- -its, p-r.-e t. - , jfcO-JXlT I? ') 'l!?llL J "", va.- my tlaisftuer ' qaen 1 tt.r ' 1 J'-iAi.'-MJm iironwa.:''. . . lvds.f v""neiwrftli.iiH. L- -'. r I - - -ri'asisrssi - '-' S6 PER '0-'-,": s L t'r.vl ltrln.' with ml m. nMiiJrW a.- v-u..'! - . ivrt-v 1 . t .' daX ' ' , I.ax.k while tuttous r w frn 1 ; 'rr i 1 .- i r jt- ..vp.-v.K.ts. Thi fc. an excr It. Linns' th .-i?r's caJiv an txiti:e.t on tti blt'ii; tfre jiJtC cn-I- ii.ia af'rr tniin j. c.minz a . -jv-t v...ukl know -vtiere to tate hm J ' - j A Detroit sirl)is oi a na f r$: I (Li.'iac"l-r ht-iac hert;.. Tt-' c iir..,t!i!..U-a But we 'Trrnt.-- L: -ftu.najti'. hecoui.1 hart- katr-re-S r- : th. . nit, u-j and .t ila t t-i ' ? iKr- M.c.j-un atz ali-aT- ki uj. t-o. a i'o-ft't -itn. The winter l iaiM at tlie Vrt ' -i t -lc- cto w.i Lv to U: rtViaatCiL L. a r r, ; i.t .oc tkai -- rTe a re-.'n f-r s U t the trap "(! fcn tirtfa up 'T tt - -i.oiper. We are nut -upj.cr-i l j ' -J l-cttrr do-ra .s..-:th. here - ' , - - A Sa Tkao i " i- 3. fivr:te tiea-Lri? tM t (ZifRrl crsotemptXHTT Tus ' jeet.re serve, jo (!?-aguish stjta atjJ t'r r-c oi xJms aoXil liftf. A- Catn. -T n -ofied hit ftrbject, hei tie out 3 Jnli Cmiciit,' tJtlspreii Fczz 1 1 ' !rs. ., iI ta.ei-i ite cwd hi eye !or bis uxJd Uj iMjt&m. TTAotcripL. CK'tvMZN-d'irjcithecradii. TieTEik the ky .-t-jc .: .. U HrntJ. ISCAf w cercr uvZzs s q-jss.3n, j -ruy-R upon the j-? i. . m. to t u:r nervoiisnes I ft .onjrv. v 'f ;nu.-ini "!4.vs twvn tumit:i r av eragrd. anl pbu-e th- jcrf'rmT on :L( violin in th lev!. ". Tear. Pia-. ' ils com aj. atanavn-ebf tVSyear 1 s niivN r, .i , pvrlormer on the 1- r- i :i. t, duu and i.n.inct'.e at G.t. xa! the s lire- of iat'rs Hat-rs aTeij f years. , .. M7"' " S ' V",1 ls 1-" ' ' 1 , : c . j .-,, . iter were pt:keI N rort iiwt w-r npr ' "Aia througTi jrr -tr.j, ri-ifW rz ' !or.rec'--' t " wtiv-i ! -" '"s J ":. UsI b .: u V fp.--' u,r.i-...i.:. " .".- ttv - J - . trosut 1 4 wy a ff for iim rhrnMtu.-a -X"A i-r 1: , (;r.Nits mako. tc tJ',rvU9 i h rt- i kanJ; txent witte ttiera out at iragtti. somix.a.-. citiut. Soasr'K.Iv ..-1 ti.u J..ng ;; Ul j nns-r si. -iui i oi. twp t um a i (j sr f4r . 5 1 , . a ' ca '!!:: it I -cnu :ur , ,u--v ' ti--. Krat'cr. It f . ;-e i r. ,) r take Tb: s.r - I i in -;trr licxt !-'i rr : i a I thiti .-. lUiii.nVf ; .- 3 -m tir'taji tw tit p' Tu-ia- - hi u!! f, U oatse one .uuli-1 - . drs-- -1 ! r the ti!5 Pt t s i eu MriAAl Dim I'tmy k c ar - j' 6i:r; aso r J i.;rrol. fcrt-ii. ",r. tuber mcilictae uxeurut l-u ii-Aic s bj Jruj5 u. I'.'TUrrti CiJ tors betlr.r rs. ff'.IU UU -i'K: Liu - i.v4.e rnH. taut. e w Truth 1. .MIcbl;. Vv'taDr IVice ..f Uu!T4,n' Y . ot:t that h. Fr .-C I'm .- . n . tin c ire t'i" i .a;iv i i. a . ! ti'.' t- u'aar u ..iitca. a J 'is, " i tinned to:ni l v 'hi.rH i" I fit txsiuir.t (tut tb i.ui.'f I:. ta .-'.. t iiue a. ktinw fJ.r 1 i!-uAt!. f e.iri o.t tUe lAtwitr freicq ji k c:i ijs ..I... v ,.:c,t I't Jt: -i.' A ,rul, m. ,aaIWtlcatt4a t Uttrr U a u ,UHlI,h in a bad 0U. - ' ij tueewui ie e-mrM w-k -aa,- XJZlw, .. r,k hsa:..aiiVlttn nt - U u : "v ; It cure tti- rest eajtMi tn-wtb. BjiUauatidmr I'ttjd. L Aiiz j c,ce i .., , disntr:- wr-r. ,t r-,i ;.t e. k i - r-j-' - tl.e ri . .- arnn Bfterit per ciT JtHt..nJHH il t. jt. ririlr4 n-nm tlrnlll. Wll'lasa J. v.o'1-uUn. ot snnH-rriltc. Mi'i, i ....... ... .- hJlS4 roRTHK 1.CSG1 1 cot a t.l- p. h . rr, u m -ur;rfi-Ioi:iru'-.ir-1 -f '.itrr.ai '-v t trrl tn twttrr -rl's than I harrM. a. imtiu'n I nti- tui- lo, cisibat c' i fcflt, ,; u,tKl ., ,., , ,. :,B1,.!lltr ., .4 lti.Li,BiLsi nrnTiiE I.f.u;. ail !- r l.IUW i'.UlNi'Uni'-i US 1 ( I -WoHSuremMv fort'..!!. mtl;. .-. : ... -"-ct .uJ buux lnccs. xil.l Uj (Jiut..i. Ttrir " trci nf ' ii.'- m, 'mM a '' ' w nxi alitor, a a t..iit .-i . lUrxi,'. ' n 4.! ilnt' i I ''w i-iK-tti ! It I'itt new ,!Vr i.i iL.tiiiin Aou.dt a u t .j .s iu t r.. ....... . ! A 1.1. ciMiiilrtes that keei. atni.le Lost (.rtxliii Is ot tbe la'rtu of othr f f..r ehiM!.n for thnr own orktrir, i. the t'iuriir tiak Uaiii a saiiip.o to" iKstof Its kind ever ttiln. : . F. c. .''iciiritr. .i .t.i. t fa mufr I. I" 'I i" r'i liiritTiifi i h'So l! r i4ltT Ik iLTiiamll n.e is...lio ttlltbo. t V ilou, riuuuticr.V. ) . I i..v !;, lieu I A.i i Oiooli ttintiiT are oriiT pAihle nhfH Jf,i hive pooil mat- r !s tocsMtk.aoiHlronTk I a Charter t)b t'lnge tcoik wliU. 9 3 , Cn f. r I. i: Ki - Bitter i-r-r i'- ,-t i.n joar nte-t tiaut c ftlntl It tr ja. .Nu avtil r "utUjIt , li ri.il- j luttrr u ,, Ujj, thnzm"Su ,yw8.when a ... u , r,.,..iU,.m. or bo-irtluin-hoiis- i art..t. J aUrrti-i- tli .t tle-y uie the Chi. tor t'-t I Il.tn-; t: tli tu?. t A lnrlr art rte Is li--tr nt iV f"i-. Ite men.t er th.s an I !.i 1 --."'r Aile ' ate. WEATHER-OB NOT. Wn1m!:M o : .-':i. i'.!i-' -tinf Trs- ..!. .-Ill i . '. ' i n c n. 1, 'VVeJ. i . r. il . -v.-ti:ir ai 1 :-k J j 1 1 tvaticivrit.' ' A ji vc c -r Li . ' , (I. U of a.l ill':' ' . ' !' i' t-.''nl llfht t try t) I- ' r tl.e .t ' i r 1 I ,-,tlU tUil.rlllAil..l -imit , BdU wioeli.!--iv rt.-'t) "i In r -t' i ?' the wet 'her Tlie fi. n u- ' an. c a ' t-"tn I i ' T'rr. of t-L I- i M In rcr l niocrn'.rt.(t itn 1 weatntf J r , .t of f VV. -t ltd i.' t (1 stiiM tl.e wea. r L ! r .. i , m-i!rr inorrt linpnrM'W' iDlhwv on wi-.h't. it ivilii'.l lnt'"d Isli- ' ' t' -day after c mil. linj n.y 1- t 1 " r.jt. u, " - i rv. 1 1 ti. a on t'i 3 f ' f I--, rr !' Immirl -.t :h a . 1 ! n tu. k f t . .-. r . t: r i Tirtt-rac'-i -- 'fttl-sr ti-n ar.d 'r' pcr. .UK r-tf. rig VT put !.-.i -': t. . .mrnie thumt. of the i,h cc- !. - ! a id. ciiir.rry ; ---1 .7 ".? 1 Jy 1 T ne at:."dj.r jJiyirtn rru'A tlon" alas u n 1 ce me. A-r MUJ--? f r t: r.-e I - I tf.-JSr' t -i.I hftVjlxcfl 'tfti;?T J rrB Of! , c sj.1 e'te.'t f.ir rhmai!.t;i .;t- I v-mM try X j I 'il'l A picrc- rf S-itici, lure rrt , t- f-ri-r ray eVrt. u-uh ttvs Oil. awl - -ttt. T r- l.if vri iai ist ln-4CU.i.c,tj. In ' r Ur i I i cntirclr frsi frtn pMn. utd w)d b t.;cii tfclmi-i to.. -.a;iJ43ti-.-rt Uitti'-V. inawHlin-- t i bt I iny Wcnt J.-iA.l-.irae. ..;. ! to. thf!' t"lri I rT . -i.c, ;a St. Loci-, rati Jure t tci tcsmhttjil tiii.e. C70A VFEK- StSsd-.TathotnceilTta'-. Jll lo. outSi Uwm. XZr trw. ton. A j-oil lit i CCC A "iVFFK !BTruro'r'-i1Ji 7n-iJ JUUUkS. A4riILH-.-CiJfii I-vr- 3iW. f I Diary Free ?& -'ism ' tr-y.' T)ir...r.,t su7,. . , j itt.!...S I. h..ii. 4 . tirftAi.fi-J. , AC.ryrr v vnti.i. irn. mm in:.i ITRIAL GUITEAU. .3. t -f- r "v a-HU. it M.vCI CXvIJiJr-i O. NO . MT Tl X.X. ITSH). S.-.-.M tf 5ut,i!tn-t. IAT1RBU4- M 1 ini, p-ata e w j -i -a J . --ft - x-asft, s czzm it rl U-llft ftic Irt rs e..ix. Da. VTV. KXICC. Cii...--. tt. -. m tm -- .. - , ATCi-:hfU Crvlw l-.rr.r Vrv-.-i--irrt--r Ts.rf-w I X fT U-TI4cX UVUSI. Lll Ti- fag . i r . ....... --L--m ---- tw 1 Tntt92ij mlH-iU. I mm- 'I-i th f! f 1-Tt. I j t ikrii ' s I . -s. if. - j-rjr ilia. xtrjKiLXAWA ir ' -rziLCLf VrL SVf I j i v-s p--T ijll' yr ui K t '? !. dil A If' s l,-;.. i i tvv. ", UJ -. i I fc A S I 1 -Js I Mliltj;j ijfi ttd nAT) fi A7ETTT! : ItLiliJXb VX&A UUuua awi 1 ; .M.lf 7nii'';?uT :i En'rincorni' fentl Ivailroail Now. r, s.,t i tt ttr Trt. OPIUM HABIT EASILY CURED! . 4 If 1 & ( 1.(1. u .-. . k- .V M. X ' ' I V Tl ' t c- q a i j jya i Q Orivi l"IL.a per: a Jstr rBMLfeia if 1 ST-- ftli5 4 AF hh cari .; (3hMdCa ft b V aiU ( (be fMi I r j s k a Urn. i " lV J m.W v - t sol ii I i t I v Ui Kl c--a,j;x,c:r J23-m IASTKWJA curedF ji.r'tH llh" ( a r r , - J. 5 2" ? H Si 1 d H F .ioiissoss ivmnvr mumim i. i -- msnsssinnnn PA I nttrmpll'i r ( ft e I kJgrfrfgHl'l 'WUV'll! CHEAP FARMS WEAR MARKETS. ..... . ., .- .l.. .,I.N. w..i.. tMl. oiisumi s.l ion, fiieuaioiila. 1 Iioop- iu; ouli I. tin- IVrr, at 1 "llrusl-s. IMtMltllH.l . I CI l.l Kl M . Tl.! 1 T I , t t f t --1.1.-11 ll I 1 ot. ui-is- SEEDS Mm t4iV&77, " ' 5SS i5rf ft&P "i? !. - 3feV?-;,'&V JfeL "-v' X'TfHA.' $ A xAi&rM,t-. '- W Rr ' ' ' "' - i "', .,',"" t ,,,", . '. -i "- - : fe' . i ii n fenuxw av i.wk' ACCEPT NO OTHER! i . RICHA33SQH S lit. IliEII.OO r fl rCR THE ri&SOFORIE. J. ., . nn. ifMt ttlrilrMn l.nV vr ).'llll.il. v r - ' - I - . , .. t . .if ' - I ! ' Third of a Million r. .' 1 t- 9 1 I 1 , t II r mV. I BOOK WITHOUT ERRORS ' Z T n ' !' - rt h 34 " ' ' . r r .1 t . r ft u Nt. I -t '..! runr, - - - b. ja OLIVER ditsow & oo., Boiion. LYON k IIEALY, Chicago. CENTS KS5 f t a tT r CT T9tB ji i"it irL -r- '.' SZfxt rT.t-X iaC O T -t T.St. f ttr j- f-s-ri. TLr- ess -? -- era T i.mOtt4 ;-v -- T i S UJ. iia! I'tf.f prt 'A Od fa-iuiu tr jeS'CL'-CS tiKXOKfi-Z A I6'x ltn 2lrftW clan rt blifttc 09Ih. S J-., Tri fmr Uft-Oftf T trpstt rBTif. ri-r-t ' ft BIT IYAiJrrs:.'XctcZ. r rw ia. May i-a.-r irtr: saira.-Hi xrr rr r, i.n'i --,. atritz.lr ctsr-sJ r iias. II tM WiitI a msTTC tSi Lrjr. -rSVJj c 2 Ik f mmtstt ,? Jm mhjj-ii . -m Wnmm a &. - ( " - -w. " - -r-.... - -- r K-Tf 'J "V ii-wi sirtrvJa-rntmsir O Kim, r -ft-Vtif a trvz lo tvilrrtJ t CiXSOIXX. vas Si. Snr Xwfc. J ----' Pa. xs. ursxao. r ccr? HTm cTi IM S7 H VSf MALE A ---. ... it l (l 4 f . . j I t, 1 J? 4 ' rr in'. tj g v $ IK-!-" i X) f&ir !iiV F Assy -i.pK,v ifv vtf vK"ak 'i, Attw o fe 0 OTIIKi: JJhDKIM. ..1 1.1. (CICL A IWMI i qncK as nsos hue rou ioNi.Hnn. tw-. 11 SM U no othr-r MMJIrla that Tat m l.oo-l a I'I0 ( I l:h fi P! rOI'. (0SniITIO.V. It J-hoBld I Kept A! Hay Is !H- M K Honv, lyranv It U a rLKTjH5 and MJE KIMIin hr j W nion', AisTHXI. BKON(I!ITIS and Mill!- TflKOU. IJ K It nlll Core C01 MITIOX, conws,,8rRtlj it rtVl rmr 1 uj th lc-r fornplalnL, nhlcii are v otUa the Irrnia' 31 H cers of Ccnsnmptlon. tj.LS.t rMt7 pyn m , -Ttrm "m t tb" tmr m r cy7T5styg;Mfgi gMp g : gc-a s ie sai ttftig5Sj!IB PITS r CURES FITS. 1 f 0 V, y a 'Ai k . SjfC n;. K &&. bfi. ?lgfK k NEVER FAILS. M SAMARITAN NERVINE SAMARITAW WERVUNE - . - . f t -V r f ' - r . . - v " mt- m- " M ax m it it an n En vine t . . V - $ : ?i M t . t - -t - f A NT A R IT A fJ H,R VUj ' ' - - i t - (.!' I SAMARITAN rtfRVUitS . - ' lilt t HI II M'lMI ..( V w, la I r i I i .r. Jk ILi'M. MU. ON 30 DAYS' TRIAL, Vtr l I H I ' ! Ila- f ! iiit.!iu;u:ij:iiiiUT:i) Electro Voltaic Belts a:d sjsp msobies. ELECTRIC P?L!AHCES T. m EN II. 1H MS I .l -. ' n- s ii.' i . i i t . . j i M U.l l fl- a l a . f f . .1... f .m ... l-a Mr .! ii r,sl TKt" :....::..:.: -..-r.'S.'Wfe .. r.l-.ir., THlf , nt . Ms.. knc llUlr ,..! (4I tt. t -. IWalr M . al . UIllrU"lt tl 1, , I M. I . Il...lrnl.rf ramyl.1'1 kl- lllafurm ti tr A ' .- VOLTAIC OELT CO., t f it i i ti ii CQNSU&PTIQft. . IU Cft) .. I .! ... mm lllll I tl. Il r M '.. il it i AbcN l z'r'rxiiwix; . ni.v. iioou liiii'i'mt uwtvi. ft .1 K 4- l m ml MM r k ... . AU M RIC PAH30MS PUaSAirE FILLS ti,i S l . . r e 3ft - is i , tt m TS - ' tit -ft ' A r -K WftSt ltt t 1 J- W a e. TMP I 1 r . n.f bt 'wtmmf'l 'J ft IU c- -. z xr j.-5 i4 rf Mack.vt WArm ORMOHISM UTO TJLX. NVE1LED. tskk ku. c v i.itk o vrrtrT tt KUt i n Koc-sun Ku Maa I trw a3 tftfnat T-c, wijurnjvrj ksu Ttaxc 5xrtutrv I f-JXtfTftlXT lUJ.mu.no. fytUia UU tart. JC S. L. "" ZA t WHE3C WK1TL1Q TO ADTTSCTlaZxi Tlmmtm may ywt a ltft ftWtrtUm-c la tfctU pyr. JLdrrttlrr llk t Lw wrm auut tac UMttx w f i"t vdfiWtrf V s e , 1