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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1882)
""SrS'jSr -, r& r .A jT-vj-"- 1 11 fcav .i. -::awaasa5Xi,' V--SS,r- - j'Jl.-; , r aaaiaaaafTV 1 Gr"Si " I . .-.. n? - --. .- vytfsj S fs?, crS r .n. N 1 J -I. I: t i'-jf1! vi 3"i- r . &?.,; k. .- Z--. -fcT. " -' 2-t- S '-?? .- Vi 2 THE RED 6L0UD -CHIEF. M. l. Thomas; PuWieher RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CADIS LOVE SOSQ Oh. 'Isten to me. darkle. 111 t-ll yiu r llttlo atorjr: "Tl nil atxint my true love. Do Flat Crock mornln'-jrlorri eb! n'cs a any Jetr-lrap InHo le open flower; Ebo' aoPcr 'fan da rmotuhlne. An' 1 luba bt-r eb'ry bour! Ciioncs Mor I Bunflowor, Majf I a Ulr: Mini do verya-al Toruu a nljrftT cnucyl Iff rhra'J in llko de full moon, II r lip In b woct -as a cherry; Her furnifl'K ntn'jovmn a lookln'irUrM An' flick a a huckleberry; Her face I like a p.ttflr. Her teef J wh't? on' pcarlr; Her eye Is bright as a IlKBtnln'-bujr, An' her ha'r Is 'mazin curly. I llko t chop do 'backer patch Wld MajtrJpbt rlrn Itcfalixl me; I'd llko to Imj n'tracker-wuni Ef Majr would only And tnc; I'd like to Iki a flnck o ncep Kf Mcjr would drllo mo 'tout; I'd IIks to Ik- a 'tnteriillp Kf Meg would net mo out J I wed bcr for d f ui" t'mo In Jlilmiln' (nit 1(-corn; She. made my fnvlitt'n flu Horn to, An now my heart l jronu: Oh. I tub bur llko do nilochuf, J'a I'oundtotell hrr minn. An' I'll cote hrr at de nhucklti' On do en tujrin' ob do moon! -J. A. ytaom. in Century Majaxint, THE LAWSOF SI'ESDim it would seem as if, when the income had Im'cd earned, no Jaw should bo nl - lowed to limit or check the direction in which itshouldgi, and yet the most law less are hound, and in spite of them selves have V) meet certain obligations entailed by (he very fact of possessing an income. Chafe as one may the actual nccc-sities of daily life are inexorable, ami he wlio would have a quiet mind for work or enjoyment must plan for . them .wisely. Here, as in everything else, the law, recognized as just and accopted deliberately and with clear cohmmou'ics3 of wfiat such accept ance implies, censes to be a burden, and becomes rather an inspiration and stim ulus to" continued and better effort. The laws of spending arc simple, and yet confusion reigns in man' homes be cause they have never been presented clearly enough to compel understanding and action. The same wise man quoted in a former paper on "Earners and Spenders' dcl.ncd them as "the law of choice, the law of amount and the law of method," and though different ar rangements could easily be made there is no better summary for the speudcr of any income, large or small. 'i ho " law of choice" has a comforta ble .sound, .seeming to put one at once on an independent footing, yet when dolinitiou is attempted is simply that as wo cannot have everything wo must give up some things for the sake of having others." Then arises tho (tia.tion of what to give up, and hero oincs in one of the greatest differences in capacity, among both men and women, that of j-eoing things in their true order. For many, great things aro made always to wait on little things, and tho Miuillcst accident is sufficient to spoil a day and make a whole family uncomfortable- and unhappy. So in ex penditure, a small need is allowed to rise up and dwarf far greater ones. The law. and the only law that can hinder Mich disaster, is a distinction possible for nil. that things which end wholly or mainly in privileges for tho body hhould bo limited in favor of things which tend to tho higher joys of mind and heart. Self-indulgence has grown to be so irnh a part of our easy and prosperous -American life thai wo arc very apt to recent the necessity of ending it even in slight degree. Yet often n -ood might be accomplished with ease if we were willing to do without some small luxury. A .set of books, a picture, a microscope, anything earnestly desired by some ono in the family to whom its possession would mean progress in a larger intellectual or spiritual life, could often bo had if some table luxury wero sot aside Cake, for instance, or deserts on any day but Sunday, could bo dispensed with, with no real loss in comfort or health, and their cost will be found a largo portion ui uiu ncuKiy lauio cxpciues. xo go without is not agreeable, and yet with limited incomo tliis is one certain means of obtaining many coveted, and uulcss one will go without, unattainable pos sessions. Tho "law of amount" is even more bindintr, and implies 'not only "Live within your Income." but "Livosofar within it as to savo something every year." It is tho fashion to sneer of small savings and economics, a fashion that makes us one of tho most lavish Nations on tho face of the earth, yet tho only road to real independence lies here. And because money will bo spent for many things, each ono of which stand ing alone seems perfectly reasonable, and yet sums up in tho total as ruinous extravagance, the final law becomes roost essential of all. The "lnw of method" then, meaning not only the accurate keeping of ac counts, but a fixed determination be 'forehand just how much shall be spent, is the final essential of all incomes. It is not easy to settle upon what are cssen. tials and what non-essentials. Still less is it easy to decide before experience nas given mo necessary lessons just what portion must go for food, fuel, light, etc. And because food at least is bought with less calculation than any other household necessity there is a popular belief that calculation b impos sible. Where it is attempted an im mediate) suspicion of meanness and skimpiness seems to at:ach itself at once. Even when the calculation is -made there is constant temptation to break through the self-imposed bounds. Tho temptation, becomes stronger where there is promiscuous hospitality, a simple meal seeming an oflenso to one's guest, and thus the point of al most inevitable loss and waste is made by custom and false feeling a still more troublesome and almost hope less one with which to contend. Out-of all such entanglement the "law " of method" will sooner -or later lead. Decide once for all. and then be ada mant to all undermining of resolution. -Jit wiUmeaa-inUio beginning Uiscomfort aa probably mortification, eve,n when good sense assures one that the course ui tfce only- honorable obc. But with -rery month of continuance it grows easier. Wants will remain, but more aad more they take their trae place aad bcraMM subsidiary to .higher seeds. Th conscience aad resolute will applied to one phase of daily life have iBsenaibly ennobled aad strengthened the whole character, and small as were the begin- nines there is incalculable rain In the ' end. If prosperity comes there is lest chance of its bringing with it the sel- fishnesss and insensibility to others' - needs often found in its train. If it fa&rat least the higher prosperities re- "WkttltcMeiMt As Qoi Mrs, is nsrawiit " OntofaUthe dredging dhwipTine the towl may com finer and toner nr even Infer, and the day of wnult tfclnrs mean a Inal and feller enpnettyinc the Immv Ma rlur " - -4 -i-JTm "rrinnm .Wla mu. T jib. 'neverleema nmnohnnn. be did at thetreefmw ofthe ,3me to the of eternal 'tsnth. 8h aaL'J: Mrat Frem (be Writ. Tho high price of meat has led to a supply of enormous quantities of fresh meat from the Wct, whi-h is now a Ecculiar feature of the New York mar et. The businos naturally grew out of the operations of the great Wotrrn meat-packing houses, which have sought this oportunity to dimc of their choicest pieces at higher pricts than could be got for canned meaL. When the St- Louis Reef Canning Companv and Libby, McNeil & Libby succeeded after a long content in the courts in breaking the patent by which it was nought to maintain a rnonojKily in put ting up meat in cans, there was a natu ral increase in the business, and. as tho price of meat advanced, there were more choice niece to be disjHrted of. Armour & Co., of Chicago, kill about &00 cattle a day. The St. Louis Reef Canning Company packed 209.000 ani mal.s last year, and sometimes kill 700 in a day. Libby, McNeil & Libby, of Chicago, also do an immense bwin-vs, and these three linns are sending for ward the bulk o! tho frpsh meat tint comes to New York. The hiipply is stead', and several firms in New 1 ork make a business of supplying retail cus tomers with fresh meat "killed Jn Chi cago or St. Louis. Not only arc choice tenderloins sold in this way, but even infer.or cnU are sold nt lower rates than meat killed in and near New York. It is admitted that the Western meats are not of the very finest quality, Mich as is sold here at fifty to sevehty-livc cents a pound. Rut it is claimed" that the meat is much better than that of cat tl starved and thirMy that are brought to this city alive. There has been complaint among the Western dealers that the New York butchers have formed a ring to keep out their meat. Mr. he Fevre V. Styles, of the St. Louis Reef Canning Company, said one day lait week: "I had 1,00 J pounds of nice beef tenderloins yester day, nice enough for anybody, and I was glad enough to sell them at sixteen cents a pound. I have no doubt but that this meat is fold at retail for twen ty or thirty cents a pound. The com bination against Western meat was S3 great last winter that they got the prices down to sixteen cents a pound. Rut we nut ours in cold storage, and kept it until we got eighteen cents a pound, which is a high price for us." The growth of the trade has led to tho building of great refrigerators for both storage and transportation, and the cold storage business in large cities is rapidly becoming immense. Mr. Styles says his firm is building a refrig erator that will cost $100,000. Another firm havo immense refrigerators whore they keep the Western meat ready for Jailv delivery. Although tho railroad freight for fresh meat carried in refrigerator cars is double that for live cattle, the actual freight of the consumable meat is less. The prospects are that the keen compe tition of husim;h-mcn to secure profits from the present exorbitant price will continue to supply the New Yoik mar ket with increasing quantities of West ern meat. Ar. 1. j?i. Testimony of Experts. An action was brought by an attor-liey-at-law against his client to recover $2,000 for legal fcorvices, and in proving the value of these services he put upon the stand 's witnesses live fellow-altor-nevs, who estimated their value from .:"-! 10 to SI, 00,). The plaintiff recov ered a judgment of $l,h00, the Court having charged the jury that they should find their verdict on the testi mony of tho attorneys, and the defend ant carried the cise up to the Supreme Court of the United States. Jn this case. Head vs. Hargrave. that court, in April, reversed the" judgment. Mr. Jus tice Field, in the opinion, said: "Tho evidence of experts as to the value of professional services does not differ in principle from such evidence as to the value of labor in other de partments of business, or as to the value of property. So far from laying aside their general knowledge and "ideas, tho jury should have applied that knowl edge and those ideas to the matters of fact in oidenco in determining the weight to be given to tho opinions ex pressed, and it was only in that ;ay that they could arrive at a just com lu moii. While they cannot act in any case upon particular facts materia to its disposition resting in their private knowledge, but hhould bo governed by the evidence adduced, they mav, and to act intelligently thev must, judge of tho we'ght and force of that evidenco bv their own jrencral Knowledge oi mo suojeci ot inquiry. If, for example, the question were as to the damages sustained by plaintiff from a fracture of his leg by the carelessness of a defendant, thejury would ill per form their duty, and probably come to a wrong con fusion, if, controlled by tho testimony of the surgeons not merely as to tno injury inflicted, but as to the damages sustained, the' should ignore their own knowledge and ex perience of the value of a sound limb. Other persons beside professional men have knowledge of the value of pro fessional services, and, while great weight should always be given to the opinions of those familiar with tho sub ject, they are not to bo blindly received, but are to bo intelligently examined by the jury in the light of their own gen eral knowledge;" they should control only as they aro found to bo reason able." BraiUrccL The Pictaresqiio Side of FeTerty. Poverty, as we must all own, need not of necessity be squalid. Cross the Channel and tako a look at tho conti nental towns and cities. There the life of tho lower classes has its picturesque side; the result, or possibly the cause of a natural taste for the beautiful being developed eyen in the poorest peasant. The fisher-girls upon the opposite coast deck their persons as well as their houses and go about their daily tasks unconscious models for the artist. The blue-bloused peasant working in the fields must supply his bit of color to complete tho landscape; and the bour geois condemned to town-life would not suffer about him the sad-colored houses and sober surroundings which we allow under our gjay skies. What a host oi stored-up pictures crowd into tho mind, as memory fills in the pleasant back ground ot a poor man s life abroad! Even the lazy lazzaroni who lounge through lfc under Italian skies ask their alms upon palace-steps, amid the plash of fountains and the scent of orange-groves! Butr what a revolting contrast presents itself when we think of a poor man's lifo at home in Seven Dials or similar slums, tho Augean stables of dvilization, whose cleansing nnd beautifying must' needs prove an Herculean task! And sight is not the only sense grati fied upon the other side el the Channel wear is pleased as well as the ere. Open-air concerts are pat within reach of the people' at a mere nominal cost, or at no cost at alL The German imbibes with his beer a refreshing draught of antic, which elevates him above the mere wnsnal enioTment of tw mnit The nwnntaineer jocMs bis way cheerily sp Ai(i, wm III !. TW everywhere lend themselves almost McxmslT to a "concord Jnf sonnds," whkh cakes the wheel ef life xe?ewe mnoethhr and Jburmmt. The whole Uwn ef Miaeral nadre. ahsninr Conaty. O.. k caring Hi ftea three te ft ve feet in. eonssanenes ef the. I wejiwlei the eeal The Kenr Xetk. leniado Freak at I'rlnarll. Ian. The laic tornado at (Jrinncll. Iowa. diTelopcd aorno wonderful freaks wh'ch are thus related in the Iowa $!ul J!Oitcrt jlie drove of thirty cattle belonging !Mr. A. A. Foster, we a of .rinncil. tl at wens killed were lifU.nl out of the barn-yard, carried sixty rods. 3nd were Mren by ome of the family in the llaih of fire at a Jieight of three or four hun drcd feet. They were dumped down in a gully. In a pile, and all clo c to gether, and looked as thonsh they were dead before thev touched the earth. It is aicrt.'d by many reputable peo ple that in the center of the awful cir cle or loop that the tornado made at Grinncll objects were carried a thou sand feet hiirh, ami one .mall houe was taken u bodily some four or I've! hundred feet, and "then dmpcd in a Iurnn Nimc two hundred feet from its original site. Many people state thai thev saw the balls of lire or electricity uuriiijf me tornado .s time, anil report them to have been of Hires varying from one foot to five in diameter, and exploding with a Mrong smell of sulphur, or more like a smell of hoi copper. Others re port a dense and stilling odor more of fensive than sulphur, and as foul, al m st, as that of putrid flesh. The rain fall was phenomenal, as all report. At the college it was heaviest of all. The earth there still bears evi dence of this. One gentleman says that he aaw Deacon Ford, during a livid and pro traded flash of light, up in the air at least five hundred feet high. The storm of mud was phenomenal. The pouring water made soft mud ol ample nourishment from which secre the earth, and the wind took this up and I tion shall be elaborated, and space for uiieu the air wtin it in places and plas tered it over everything. Everythingtends to confirm the thenny that tho tornado is of electrical origh,'. and that it is the marvelous power ij electricity alone that can apply itself to such small surface and work such havoc. Against its resistless force, a house ol stone walls ten feet thick, or walls ten feet of wrought iron, would .stand no more than a house of frame. Its power is tho impossible made possible. No force that is known could have the power in small compass that this has but elec tricity. We saw to-day several large lumber wagons that were dashed to piece, all the spokes broken out of the wheels, a hub split open, and the tires broken and flattened out as .straight as though thoy bad been straightened on an anvil. J. M. Wishart's horse stood in the liarn. This was a stallion weighing 1, 600 pounds. The barn was broken up and carried off iu one direction, while the horse nnd part of his manger to which he was haltered were carried off in another direction from tho bam. The two lines of travel may bo described as on soxangular sides eastward. The horse was found a thousand feet from the stable, and unhurt. - Georgo Toney's house, at tho north west corner of a square northeast from the depot, was lifted by the air current and dejMMited on tho southwest corner of the square cast, while the house at tho northwest corner of the square in which had stood Toney's house, was carried to the northeast corner of the equare cast. This will be understood by using tho letter X as an illustration, and supposing that tho two housi-a originally stood each at the foot of Ktom of the letter, and met in tho center to be deposited at the top of its own Stem. Tho freakish work of the unloosed devil of the upper air was well shown in one street. On one side a dwelling houso was torn to fragments and left a mass of splintered ruin, while the op posito house was unharmed below the cornice but was entirely stripped of its shingles. An iron pump, with a two-inch pipe, was twisted off five feet below tho level of tho ground and carried off fully tcr rods. The Boy or the Teriud. Jimmie Mason, a resident on a farm near South Cottonwood, came to Salt Lake a week ago. Jim doesn't come tc town very often, so when he was here he struck a good many of the boys. went through the saloons, shooting-galleries, and generally " took in the sights." He went home yesterday and was metal the front door by his dad. "Hello, James, my boy; so you're home at last?" "Well. I should smile," said Jimmie, biting off a big chew of nasty weed " What kind of a time did you have?" said his father, eyeing him. "Had a boss time. Made two dandy mashes; got left on one; just in time to collar tho last one she; was kind of chumpy and toot." "My goodness! yon don't say so," said the old man, looking toward a big apple tree. "Yes; I slung moro taffy than you can get on a stick. Why, you dizzy" old wretch, she's plumb goiio on me." "You surprise me," said Jimmie'i father. "And what else did you do?" " Gave 'cm two balls nnd rolled out on scratches; went broke on two kings and an ace; filibustered on the dark horse; swung the clubs: diced for the brew, and stood off the hotel bill. Dc XQii tumble?" 'Tumble? Oh, yes. I'm a tumbler." "Well, I took in the show paralyzed the girls, you knovy kind of struck" 'err dumb; then was going to shove some oS tho queer, but quailed." "Did you put rosin on your back before you came home?" inquired the old man, as he. broke a big branch ofl a tree and carelessly trimmed it. "Ah, cheese it! You are giving mc taffy! Rosin on mv back! Ain't you getting kind of fresh? Go and sit oe ice." This was enough, for James Mason, senior, made one reach, gathered pari of a coat, an ear and several locks ol hair, and then an uninterrupted wad ol lightning played across the junior, in termingled with cries from the hoy and auuu expressions as: "un: I'm a whole city full of saloons, beer gardens, horseraces and shows when I'm started!" from the old man. and when he got through James crawled to the ditch and sat down, while the old roan remarked as be sat oaa log: You'll be going to town and gcttin asthetic uexLSalt Laic Tribune. " A Batcher en Freten XernL London batchers do not believe in frozen meat. One of them writes to the Times in these indignant terms: The stnpid twaddle written on the above subject by some of your corre spondents is most ludicrous to those who practically know about butcher' meat and its supply. For instance, the Agent-General tor New Zealand say there was no better meat to be seen is. the market the other day than the mut ton from, that conntry. Now, sir. any one who knows anythmg of the mnttax know this t he absolntely matrno. This meet, when it tint maae imta th naarkrtkjokmybrifh nnd clean, is tc urn seven use a meee of stone, when no MeentTed.nftiH awciMiO niiwuaa m aeerme m ween an peoomc wet andtteweC and after being kept a day or twnleeks m Unm' iTamtWen drawn thronrh n heme pond. Is it weeMnnimnhi thetmethebeet ITneWik '??!Kll. VMT.tmTwfA meat? J fee the heih n pilsjlij, tt iSgJS"1 JJ? SSTi' 3 esTne mmh, that fa aaairfr aM "-Tm. . ec" "wmn inn peeper en tsnnmv OTaKafc-r'nOTwvoManmM.ejeeKnve n taavw m nanae eemv m netm) eeeezna net - M . -'m- -- '"-- ' a tarn i . 'I'.""-"? an-. w aaaaavi Tkmimst " - -" "-- Ibe Xeeern Aha ef the Mair. The recent method of drsin the jair, loth by piling on the head larjre uantitic of dead hair with its more or less Injurious contact, the stiffening of band into position, with too free wo of glttlinouf con.cUcj. anil the altrra tlon of color by the application of itrong alkalies arid other agencies, hare irodoced an effect at last, after the x-hion ha. in a measure gone by, by a deterioration of the hair on women's heads that makes a striking difference between trev as they were thirty Year ago and as thev are now. The head has become o ieaUl, the culp lias becomo j"j irritated, the liair bulbs and glands have become so irritated bv chfrntca!, that it I wonderful the result should not be even more detruc- live than it has been. It is fortunate J that the fancy for all thee inj iiinous wavs and means toward beauty was ar rested before the whole generation of women became bald-herdi.d. And as I jl is, iuiiv half of them have a crown where the h-iir straggles thinly over a inmlly blushing skin, have" part.ng.s that astume in their frightened eyes, as they look in the glas, the proportions of the gates of Gaa. and have a stub ble of short, wiry, coare growth, in clined to bru'tle up. and giving an in finity of trouble to keep in decent or der," especially when it is desired to vear the liairlow. Much of this is due to a loss of vigorous circulation in the -calp. whether occa sioned by thy deleterious method above mentioned or by any other means. For the scalp, when In a heal thy state, is -oft nnd thick and warm. with jioodlv blood-vessels able to afford the working of all that delicate ma chinery which exists at the roots of tho hair. As the circulation decrea-es, the scalp spreads, so to say, tho glands and capsules are unable tofultill their func tions, and the state arrives which we have just described. Or, again, the loo free use of jKunadcs and dress'ngs causes the head to catch dust, excludes hair, clogs the orpiratory iorcs, re laxes the skin, and deranges all its pro cesses; while, in addition, tho oils aro frequently rancid, however the rancid ity m iv be disguised by jwrfumos, and when this is the cae they corrode and iritntc everything, and change the nor mal production of .scurf to an excess that becomes disease. The most conumating insult and in jury to the hair, that of dyeing it, it seems hardly necessary to mention, as bleaching has gone so entirely out of fashion that that peculiar form of ruin is not likely soon to be generally re repeate I, anil gray hair has come to bo so much admired that dyes to disguise the gra ness are not resorted to by any body of taste. A beautiful young woman of our acquaintance some years ago had an experience by means of this poison ous custom that" will hardly bo shared by any generation to come. "Accustomed to ndnrration of beauty, her dislike of a few gray hairs drove her to the ue of a dye, and as she continued it from da) to day with gentle applications for some years, she had the satisfaction of seeing her beauty to all effect unimparied. and hid not "the remotest idea that the work of silvering was all the time going on with fearful celerity under the ilye, and that every da increased the "ravages in the" dark color of her lo ks if the truth were known. Rut frvq.ient and violent headaches at last made her physician anil her husband positively command her to cease tho dyeing, and to cleanse her hair thor oughly of the dyes. She went with her detergents into "the rather dark bathing room, where there was no mirror, as it chancel, and spent an hour or two in the process of washing and scouring, and at length came out into the light, pausing Iwforc a mirror as she did no. That first glimpse of herself was a hor rible revelation: she had gone into tho room a dark-haired beauty in the guie of youth; tho woman in tlie mirror had the lonjr gray hair of age falling round her white face. The sudden change wxs too much for her tried and tired nerve, and he fell in a dead faint on the tloor. It is fortunate for others that the fashion of gray hair i likely to savo them the blow of so sudden a chango from the appearance of youth to that of age. Iarjtcr's Bazar. A Light Diet Ter Het Weather. "What shall we cook?" is the cry of the housekeeper during the heated te'rm. CsMik no greasy food! Summer de mands a light diet, with a basis of sweet June butter nnd light, wholesomo bread. Commence a meal by slicing up some cucumbers into a deei) dish and strcw injr pounded ice on them, add a dish of scrambled cygs, some thin slices of boiled barn and another dish of berries, a salad of new beets and lettuce, and there is a meal, lijrht, satisfactory and easily digested. It can be varied by boilsd chicken and escalloped tomatoes or salmon steaks with Saratoga pota toes aud a strawberry shortcake for desert. People who are fond of carrots can prepare a good dish by boiling new carrots and potatoes together the car rots need to cook a half hour before the potatoes are added. Mash them togeth er with cream and butter, and cat with meats. A meat and potato pie is a good sum mer dish. Chip some sweet roast beef or veal mutton is too strong into a line hash, mix it with cold gravv or make a gravy for it; fill a tin pan'half full; add some hot mashed potatoes cooked for the occasion, making a crust of them to cover the pan to the top; set it in the oven and bake half an honr, or until the potatoes are well browned and the meat heated through. New apples make a good sauce and delicious boiled dumplings. Make a light rich biscuit dough; pare and core the apples; cut out rounds of dough and shape them about the apple to make an average thickness; tie each dumpling separately in a square of cloth and drop them into a pot of boiling water which must not stop boiling until they are cooked, which will lie in half an hour. Eat them hot with butter and sugar. Avoid heavy feeding or over-eating in hot weather; drink lemonade freely and if possible eat alemonwithsugar before, the first meal. Use pienty of salt in food; take salt baths; never bathe with in four hours after eating a hearty meal, and be scrupulously carefnl not to check perspiration, and cat at regular intervals, and without haste. A Lon don papers gives some good advice Dn this point: "It is a mistake to eat quickly. Mastication performed in haste must be imperfect, even with the best of teeth, and due adnuxtare ef the salivary secre" km with the foed cannot take place. When a erode mass of in adequately crushed muscular fiber, or undivided solid material of any descrip tion, is thrown into the stomach, it'aeu as a mechanical irritant, and sets n a condition in tse mncous membrane lining of that organ which greatly im pedes, if it does not nhogether prevent the progress of digestion. When the practice ofeating quickly and fllinr the stomach with nnpreenzed feed is aaottnai, tae digestive organ m meapante of netiofnung na proper fnnctkms. Either m nmnm Inrger qeantity ef Jaed then weeMbeneees- snry muter naenral imnsMmnii at i ecured, or the te the MiwieViwMn net ne fnrnmhed, end ft it that hm -araa faXaaaa'aa' la aa alaaatar w aw otm aavvvai vai aaiat aaway ' ae&SSsft3- An Aran hfeew. Imagine a crfol v shaped boat, pnr tially coTered in. high in the atera and low "at the bow, Ctin to a aervosM miad a treacherotu parpoc of diving beneath the first adraaciag ware, TJwrv iii very hrarr lateen kail Md up by rotten ropes, which occasionally ttarth the crew aad pA.enger by breakiar aad letting their whole harden crash down upon deck. The water Irak in at et cry poiat indiscriminately, requiring foor men to bale night and" day. Tbrc are eighty jia.sengcrs. where arxortimg to rslcm notkm. thirty would be a t pentbtmdant cargo. From tem to tern there rises a embmt,oa of abominable uruelW truly sickening, the ntting wood of the dhow. thj acctimu-J la'ed grea.se and tilth ox cars, the bilge-Mater, and the effluvia from the perspinng ktn of the crow dd negro-! all contribute their quota to an rdVet which words cannot dccnb. uch were the horrors hlch awaited me as the dhow left Mtklndany behind. When at list my Usual attack of ea-icknrt laid rac low. I really fell that that o'.h- crwiMi unwelcome sen a lion rn ghl sometimes be reckoned a boon and a blessing. The worat. however, was ct to come. A night set in I crept wtth some difficulty into my camp bedted. which we had contrived to atow under a !ort of after-deck (there was only about eight inches btUwen my noo and the llooring overhead.) 1 had just begun to doo off when an uneasy em- aciotisness of strange ncusalioaa dawned uoii me. Soon I u as made onlytoo pain fully certain of the pre-Mjnco of some of the most objectionable companion of man in all lands. One uell-kuown spe cies .swarmed over me w th pertinacious puqMe; another kind of a more lively nature, in thir exc.tement at the dis covery of a thin-skinned subject a de cided variety from the leathery nigger integument skipped about with play ful glee, pro'peciing here and then a tho humor suggested; then, lo crown the whole, before I left that wret-hed bunk, a creeping sensation fct in atout the roots of my hair, which at first made me imagine it was about to stand on end with horror of my situation, but which, alas! turned out to be a still more real aggravation of my tortures. OoOil Moni. The Wonun who GiiTxlrd. It is a singular fact that some jieoplo find it very dPlicult to be serious and solemn iu churches and at fuuerah. aud at other places and occasions, u hen pro priety demands a subdued expression of countenance. Mrs. Milo Stephen, an Austin lady, U jut that kind of a per son. Whenever she attends a funeral, she gets a giggling lit, and brings dis grace on herself and confusion on every body. Not long since, accompanied by her" husband. Colonel MHo Stephen?, she attended the last oW'quict of a prominent Texas official, hautig ol emnly promised not to emit a single giggle until she got back home, but sho was hardly in the house of mourning be fore she saw something to excite her risibilities. "For heaven's sake, Mirandy, wait until the funeral is over before you be gin vour iufciual giggling." "Ho! ho! he!" gL'gled Mrs. Stephens. "Think of something serious. Think of j'our uncle, whom Governor Roberts refused to pardon out of the peniten tiary. Ihe only response was a partially suppressed giggle, that attracted tho attention of nearly everybody in tho room. "I hope none of the children will go near tho cistern while we are away, as I left the trap-door open," whis pered poor Colonel Stephens In des, pair. The only response was another sup- iiressed spasm ol laughter, finally, n happy thought struck Colonel Stephens-. He whispered in her ear: "The milliner on Austin avenue told mc to tell you that sho could not get your bonnet trimmed in time for you to wear it on Sunday." Tho look of unutterable woe with which she responded seared him. Dur ing the rest of the funeral ceremonies strangers who were present supposed Mrs. .Milo .Stephens was the widow, such an appropriately sad expression was there on her countenance. Sb even shed tears. Texas Sijlitvjs. Toe Many Generals. A Detroit saloon-keeper who spent considerable money for decorations and. worked his patriotii) up to the top round, was heard wondering if any oj the General w, u!d be around to se him, and this gave one of his acquaint ance's a clue to work on. He went ofl and put up a job with a friend, an I yesterday morn'ng walked him in tha saloon and said: "Allow mc to introduce General Alpaca Smith, tho hero of three wars and eightj'-four battles." "Shencral. I vhas gladt to ce you," said the saloonist, and hesct'em lip for three. In the course of twenty minutes th deceiver returned with another stranger onhis arm and said: "Allow mc to introduce General Com missary Jones, the man who fired tho first etin in the war." "Shencral, I vbas blessed to shake hands mit you." said the man of beer, and he set 'cm up aga:n. Then the friend went out and re turned with General Hard Tack, ami after him came Generals Debility and Rack Pay. The last one received a rather cool greeting, and the beer- flases were not quite full, and after he ad departed the saloonist turned to his friend and said: "My frent, I vhas mooch blcaed to see all dose great Shenerals in mine saloon, but you needn't bring any more to-day. From now until night we'll let der Shenerals go und look out for der fighting roan. Doss men always bay cash for beer!" Detroit Free Press, fheUeahs ef Heroes in Xetlen. The method by which these photo graphs have been taken the result of years of experiment is substantially as follows: At one side of the track w n long building arranged for photograph ic work, containing a battery of twenty fonr cameras, all alike aad standing one foot apart. On the other side of the track is n screen of white muslin and a foot-board. The screen is marked with vertical aad horizontal lines, nnd the foot-board bears numbers indicating sep arate intervals of one foot each. The instantaneous shatters of the cameras are operated by electricity? and their movement is governed by each power ful springs that the expowre is esti mated te be about one nrc-thonsandlh ef a second. The contact by which the shatters are sprang is made by the breaking ef s thread drawn across the track at nhont the height of the hone's breast, there be'ng one thread fee each camera. In his flight threes the air. therefore, he brings each of the twenty four cameras to bear apon him at the moment when he pases m frent ef k, J nnd that remra represents has ntthntinsteaU Xae series ef the eo nee entire at each ef the tweaty-fenr feet er the instmmenta, in n nnerte nrettmr at taste tee ef mttSttsty te the usee ef ssaewiaynnecte tromeg nt speesi tne awmneef heteeeMihntnnt: amnflrheemt ihiief tmestJay are shewn m die- aMnerssinW lewser eehmef htetnaM hmet lanes emite to theftSee ef the sn ll' irfm in 1 ,1ft n iimill an ta fTjLL-!- v vSy i??55? ?f PhmytT 9 ?y?.etehhBe n) " ; nee eiesnvrmeasel.' -Gearys j.v W5sf hnrtmnn namm emn? nenj hmt hhehmnt? rtnmjxh i5 utmuit. OacarWBdeS a falrere eft fth platform.' declare the MempkU .1 ptL. "aad i nly reKeved from tie odlnrn ef hHmhsiggerj by hw apparent ramerfaeW Miss Anna Itichiaaon aad MU $ R. Aathoey are to play. It la wh! pcxied. in "Mach Ado Arl Nothing." Mjs. isan U to be Mwh Ado aad Mt Aaea Nothisg. Jut before Carhl mxrri! h real Kant's works In ordT to trnkri hit Berrrs. A Itr he wa married Wn awr lv talked hts poor wife death, aad to miict her smn he ed to acrub the Boor. Dr. O. W. Holmes mii that the toon:: nbblrs who end htm .their vcre hate no more right lo do k ihan thy have to slop him oa the strert. how him thwr tongue, jmd ask what remedies they shall take for their tomarh' sake. Tho late Governor IVnaUoa. of Ohio, built a rehlcn'sj! In Odurubua. O.. alxmt one tear ag. at a eot of $i5,WX He was preparing to jcnd hU lalicr dav in ease aad comfort when the fatal sickness came Ho leaves n 1fc aad seven children. One of his oas prac tises law in thb dty .V. J". JVL - According to Mi Cordon Cum mng's A ladva Cno on a Frvnch Maa-of-War," the Wadeyan mlMiea arics on th Friendly Islands are doing all Ibey can to cruh out all p!ctureqt:c ne.s from name life, and t Inlrotluee black cuaU and Parisian bonnet as an Integral part of the Christian religion, -V. F. OrajtAie. Mr. Corcoran, the Wa.hIogtn phi lanthnqiUt, though very 111. did not for get to send his annual " treat" of traw berrics anl lce-cnam to the varioe charitable Institutions of that city the other day. This treating Is dose every June, On Christmas and New Year dava dinners aru served in the Institu tions at his exeute, Cftici'o TYmrj. Mls Clrrk. aslntcrof Edwin Hoot h. In her ork, lately publihed, "Tho Elder and the Younger Rootli," tell an incident in the life of her father, which gains interest from the fscl thai It I un doubtedly true While on a trip South, on the steamer Neptune. Mr Rooth (J It.) had on one of his fits of depression, and tin illy jumped ocrbarti Tom Flynu, the actor wh accompanied Rooth on tho oyagu. took a small lat. in company with other, and finally uo ceeded In rccuing tho would be mil cide Almott tho first words uttered by Rooth after they drew htm In were. "I say. Tom. look out! You're a heavy man; be steady; If the boat upseU wo'lj all be drowned."- Ckienqo Journal. HL'MOKUUS. Doctors and mackerel have this In tomuiou: thov are seldom caujrht out of their own schools. IhiyUm iW. Tho person who stand and holds tho spring-screcn-door half ojien is abroad In the land. We trust tho flics will get tho best of him sometime. .Wir Haven Jlc'jistcr. "Am f hurting $ ou badly? ' aken a Roston dentist of a lady wbosu teeth ho was fixing, and who was emitting horrible groans. "Oh, not in tho least, but 1 love to groan," was the reply. liotiun Uhbf. A Denver pajier profcse to think It marvelous that a man whoo brains were kn.cked out is still living. If hu were out this way he would not be only living, but ho would be holding om important office. Lnmsrillc Courier' Journal. Writing of tho death of an old and paid-up subscriber, the editor of ono o! our cxchnni;cs says: "Our hands and heart and tho foreman arc all too full for us to express our tumiiltuon grief as we cheerfully otherwise wouldsL ' Laramie Boomernnq. "Well, well." said Rllltngton. majes tically, "we mun't bo too severe on the young fellows. I sup'ioao I was as big a fool as anv of them when I was young." "Yes.1' replied Fogg, "and you are not an old man now. Rilling ton," Hot ton Transcript. "Mamma," said a wee pot, "thwy sung 1 want to be an angel.' in Sunday-school this morning, and I sung with them." " Why. Nellie!" oxclaimcd mamma, "could you keep time with the rest?" " I guisas'l could, proudly an swered little Nellie; "I kept ahead of them most all the way through." A. Y. Triburw. An East Roston father discovered that his daughter, who ha a oul for rotnince, proposed to elojx?. and he didn't sit up with a bulldog and shot gun to waylay the fugitives. Oh, no! He went to his daughter and told her he deired ber to marry a young roan, naming her lover, and he would set him up in a good-paying grocery basines: and the young lady at once declared sho'd die rather than marry any man just to please hr father. The "preliminaries" of the occa sion had all teen settled- That is. John had asked Julia and she had consented. They were sitting on the front verandah watching for the sable curtain of night to part and give them fust one look at the new comet. "Oh. by the way, Jn lix" said he a little nervously. " My income is Is W50 now. Do von think we conld live up to It?" " Why. John, vou precious. I can live up to an income twice as big as that all by myaelf." The farewell kiss that night was a mere me chanical bit of oomlatlon. Seta Haven Btguter. At a ball in Paris n gentleman un dertakes to introduce a companion to n young lady who eems to be plalnr for a dance. "No. thanks, my dfar fellow. I don't care to waltz with a cart." A cart, be it understood. Is Parisian for a partner that doesn't do her share of the dancing, but has to be drawn aroond, A few eveniags later the young lady, who had overheard the conversation, beholds the yoong gentleman seeking aa Jntre- doctlon and aekiag if he may hare the honor, etc "No. thank yon." the re plied sweetly; " I may be a cart, bet Tni not a donkey-cactr' Detroit Free rVeas. An "Ineher." "Yes. I west te chnreh yesterday." seid Job Shuttle with n yawn. "Pretty good sermon, pretty fair; bnt whet pleased me meet eras the antics ef an Inch worm that was roaming abent the hat of a lady who tat in frent ef me. That Utile, pale green incher renmmded me to mnch of the way we hennnsi worms get on in the world. Yen tee, he was en the rane of the feather in the het and he wenM get n good hold, nnd then ranch nn with his heed nnd feel aronndand loeh: the neM orer tetee where he conld make n teed jnet Kke rnna leekinsr far m then he wenla threw hn bed j em te n etnri ef the ' ereejadhend nnd iKhtm down with n thnd. Jnet Mm n man wh has annee n tpsrmtTinn; men ne wimwwrngae twint nnd feel ntnemd far n mw t n men trrhmr to -in &' with his ereemen: then he to the eer- nndsstincaJI i pi ni t jeat hnn n nesnty. 0r !$ Wmim. ii " OXASDrSS CLQTHKS OS SCAXXCKOK . . - - - MltallH ta esjtrfv a i rv H lstt. r la aa sr W ereiv ti i li "rf ' pwa. a4 5 -JL't T t4 rers$ i Nrsi Wita tal4p torf rra ?., .- . ..-.. t-- k iwwl H Tis-Utr aaiaB .4 -, . luk.kMfrWM Cff4 wa j - arifr1 M' TVavrtarttrf ? , rr fc trtr Hm bf f w iVu Mt swutwrt tis 4. Hut TU aK cats Uf a . TVHbi mtrir ar it ,. - Well baU-1 a srrerosr, ,. aarraa tlUiaS aikiAMt aTe-.f.s. I Aal, t4 u a ih t r ks l'b)lk altM ttwst ls-T m i smiM tor la ws rf eryine-i Tien attdiM 9et4 al s,attt. There. , a arr emt "r,y Wtfcc-rtr4 luos1i5rleK'a'e tlwsf rnwa II tiwl-a. R Tx Urr la tK v H rrt l , Hi am uw u ttrtini air. Wav.ttxa lfcftstrla! aras In W. Waaid4llKirrs la'ra jsar Ui at iltrrta ettrVr wsJ' 4. Ue Uirrrwl " '. . Hmakfslrrrlr -iw.ws,." ,tt ml Ki ia9 sb tssft trca Maltcsl la llsrr4 llsn Wact. ficrctJk iale -f wwt friC Xrter a lhf UX aurit WifclJ Rul Utt la atk eama, r tfUr, Tu t.t k Jfsttuw Vi-orM Ur Xo hit 04 le aawcy rrralur rw Fur th toa Uo carww st mrvl la a.r. OM-Vicm pMeJ v" iif mfl, TkPM(li( their war MBH4t rhetwM-t-fs-t; 3ae4 Murh . Tl. Afft, at ll - tritl tienr '-Mi I anisr- If waolwt U i-r ta crow. W hiuUa'l hto Jsit im tJi rMiMsr , -Jtfr.. tini Xrf ltit. trwt .wsite. TIIK UKrOSE OF THE lSK..M When I was a ainall youngster, J ear ago, we Uya ul to Us told thrilling iilone of what was called "The l-l War." la thye later dajs; wo have had a war on our own U. winch ww. let u Iioih!. the last war that we hall cer be cnjjagtsj m a hmgntheAiu,r can RepubiW Iat.s. Rul Ixi ; of an older gvucratiou than this kuov 'lhj lit . War" to be the warletwceiitlnf I'tntrd States and (.treat RrtUin. now geneRiU called "rho War of IMS." llappih, though thn c.iilet wa not a long one. Americans can look with pndn at the j 41 i e Aincricai navy oi uiai. peno-u .nc names of Ralnbndge. .lull. Decatur S 1 . ft STa . ,m.. . ...... ......v M,v. ,.....,.., anilon. will oe reiucuiLvi I aa long at the traditions of tha Ciiltcd Mutes navy etnltins. In lftl.1, tint frigate "Ee." rotn mnndeit by Captain David Porter, after committing much havoc uinjh the RritUh marine olf the Atlantic coast of "! " " South America. (ape Horn hit IViit ur lisiil ri'S.ittr'jl In tMtii mil Inlj-t i new neld of operations, and. carr big Into the Pacific the find American lUg that had floated from tho mast-head of a man-of-war. hn wi.i)H;d down iuhjii thn Itritlsli Itif-n-liarttmeti atil wlinfrr oitii.lmr tmmnn.tm. ,M.f-r.,, i, V.v. . .""e "" .' "":"' .'"" ""' ik, . l-ulr 1.I .tr.t.....i il.nf tl... V...V.... wmild daretoend a nniiHf.war Into built no to a lerl. butno the m .Is this distant ea. and tho RntUh frigate. "' mi , ,( H J"sh w,t, , , . were making th.ng very uurtiiiifiutaiil ,,4,' n, cilnn cloth & ttre. K. I for the few American merchantmen en "Vrr lh l n, ,Mf t,M t- ..- gaedln the Partite trade. Tlie arrnal rmlllrtjc Tlie dwiratnms ' of the "Ee" unm cliaiigvd all that. trwiwly Korgeoiuan.l grolesMw. tr Within a year ahe had captured four ' on,,,-B nd blue wero the pi!....'.' thousand tons of Rritijih shipping, and ! ,t,,"ra ',on2 !t,fl l',, u ' hail taken four hundred tirhuiiier. Mc ' K ,ul hlt Imnnrr. wtth Us may beaaid tohaseitbiated uiKin the Chlnee le'tnr iik. them. 1 bijr a.. 1 cnemv, a the trwl was not only ''"tcni wrr hungaWut Jn varW j supplied wilh everything needed for , itJ'". "' t' "I"'" ' e repairs, ringing, arnnuinitlon. etothlng . "''' ,,f iUv rionly arnitgis.1 l and provinlous taken from the enrtin 'a urr- rtoral deeorathnis wwi ptVw ' i cnpturctl shja. but the men were paid cnr,f J" ,,"! ')' oul lretloH U tiW with money found on boanl of one of i ,m' ot ,,M' rP,? lv dppr her pnwa." They were not made In wreath 1 Ortier were Riven that the " Kex " ! " but wrr of erv eiirJ tnut be destroyed, at all harard. by n'An' an'' 'vldently ignifiifattt tti any Rrltldi man-of war that should be Ch'nnmrn fortunate enough to catch her. Rut the Th crowd commejiredioarrJv es American frigate was fleet, and diltlcult In Ihe morning, and th at in to catch, l-iiially. In February. 1111. city were Jammed all day with - the frigate, accompanied by a Hiall ;:ht-eer. ImjiIi Monuitan and l craft called the "Emcx Junior." a ctwlan. A jud of iIee km tu. cruicr nude over fnmi one of the nrirs ' to prervp onb-r and keep Usk. i captured from the RritUh by 1'orter, constantly iHrmuIng crowd. A cast anchor in the harbor of Valpintlw. . eleven i'clfM?k th Mlemn pneui t Pern, The Permian ovemm-tit was - nuuirneri and the srpMj arrie.l It not then independent. Peru being whs plsrrd on a trnml-w ber al hvh I province of Sna'n. Rut ValnaraUo km ' of the tent, KI-ht bearer et.fa-l -. a neutral Jiort, alftiouh tho' people of whlt with whit rhHh sbil e ' Peru, and the Spanuh. alo, were mmw , brad atatloned themere at la ' what uafriendlv to the American, S of the eoflln J iRd njt leae u 4ir ., when two RritUh men-of-war. the the e;efe,.. The mourner e a "Phcrbe" and the "Chrmb," eatertnl chilli! in white, bnt in addltl-n tlie jwrt, it was tolerably certain that fetm of "ik rhth" ab.i fc r there would l a fiht, Umll Uic " K-' heaiU and walt- On rnferjng th tr sex" dare to put oit u aea. , ihey :hrw tlicinele upon the r The hnglUbrnen bail the redoubtable faciag the vnm. and rwrn-UnM tf "Lex" ami herllulectnartlaatnip. ltXn ihroo-hwl Ut ulMeitent ' tor rix weeks the two Rntuh veel mon en. tin the fable w ( kept a very c!oe watcii on the Ameri- of Chinese ronfrth?n and j.tr4 can, sailing up aad down the the con. For lack of roam ih lh table .it ,. iuit outside of the entrance Ut the har- lK ami two roa.H Ismln were tdaee.1 ,m bor. Finally, on the Hh of March, f the Cr. d1m?il2a nrW in black JoS stvl J?JjJt7,m f1 W-'W-JthtUwiih tnrneS up hnm l ? .r',t iVc' Mddrewr, Friend of the deeel. after i.g F n i '. .r,cbof ,?'J-Wiegaeirance with dlnltr thrUr!, fLm:. - choral three aafle- trn- ,lLT. JZ7 -" .i I -a.s w,.a-a ,nn finnTlM. MU int. I about the iiiae td -ZlLj1 """" 'n. anti tmwing u Ikn atlendaa. STshorl ThT iiS?itf2" rkfct " Wllw thHr war a,Tr .ltk.k.i.ir:T:ZWe'..ll? cn:,,,Pr wt ch new amrs- t.-r7t;7"w'"w:MWFr'utP thelnWe Jnc4 w, amlr The "Phbe" carrie! thirty hmg cTghti-en-ponadera and sltteea thirty. '""r?"' v3mmMiva jor ner arma tewrs aesen Chemi' carried tweatTwVi.i M.'.. .JU "' To meet thy fcmnidable farce the "Eaex"hl 2i4 . anlWaW meet cosUed of twentyjg thtrtr pceders and sit long twelre-fwenderc - S7 wmur. Wfttcn VHL fii Pn lae ngat turn twenty gMM and zsitir s VmmWu. n. . aolve4 that he wotdd neTer twrrender a f Jong as he had men caongfc u work hU gmm; 4 riarbt nmnfetty dad he hxJd u hi reaulntjrin. Tbe nterbe ejamed in at far StkKk. m the nflerneon. hetoe then "Esex." The leng eigasM ef the Mrgninman ei greet da mere en henrd tka a laww hiLi a. - . it the s-a "Smm. VKnTH. nerdeJTnnfaw. frtamd tka. nW rafiaMrra apirk. The -Cra4.; La w immm en tan aiariard new of she - tVeex." neat epened ireaaa.. het wee v-a -SS-... 4 asa awjejen iJd!?" ?? Asawrfaan. 2?!?slrf f nln f and peeved " " seen lemU eneet thet aee, tee. tras hnnfed eC far ret .aim, many f theahjet aaavaas; a-aw e9sr ue Seth the atritiah the vntmis new etoaaJ "g" fv4 anto her nafotegrdmvfJmtiatoMeam nnd -. 23.rJ?l ' mfT ehmn MJteim?rSa2Z: -T . -. . . ... " -tfc- iHaKmaitHiBL - - - . emSmnWllltS SS nmmmnJ sanaWnw eantmmnal mnf nantmr lannnamn nnnnnnntmnV anammnat . J " rwJhmv. enRtl n annnnmnnnhnt nmnnnhto .ennmnf -- mntl is ' M"" "anrnW eWnanmrni Wm- annatat hnnnnnnnt sannf nnnhni nnaanam. i . aL- 4bmet. Ti,1toa1tomyeenmn nmahrhv ILaah r rmm, t a j bv en tmenr aHshsrtt fxftre rotiMar l Jh-3btr with .a !?-' Wry hoily'af. th ver r A . a4, U eret th iral 4 as K-Trntwl hero, tijp i. a- krH-d; In thi trMitj. -, or!rf ttd t& tea t tiaaai M ht lfcT OHjJt Sua thr I else iflto kf w s4 ww t I .m9 trr UroL 4 aaae . rksl bjn whPe rtaa;tn: Iwrtsjk. by th Jst of lb m a lAfpr Jrt f th etw Ma! hr ihirv m! rofttinw! tn ? eaetiy l the ntl l l nasa- . ? fiaist. Finsdlv. Um as- sa s - thde-l, ami rn eaaaet hsrt' 4 ef h " I w1? keft a) a krvis IHK lannr r,' w1 taly eventT-fiTi we i i dt. the rtniJsf Sim( X avtHidesl. r rnsjt IU n ngyw&enl th.J hd Kl rm v anvl a hair, itm-ut. m ! heart. haukl dnn ih AMMtWsHa 1, and tbe wreek of th jtlnl l- ra attrrvntiensii io w na r- ih Iwt fiir kdle! nI "-- tm t " itriehe. and Uti.t i three woundpsl i ihe ' Cnisa . hlf wer badle ertppl. Umm - and risyn U4n rilta4. ! llltrW h! reevilMmJ 4fr . behw ater-ina xrm Ws m i tf the Kfts. ' ' Thse!nU ml I tor crowded lh hr fa gaaw j i UUaKly enotunler The famnn- roy u lulr rntreSai isa a. ran Consul to lnit nfm th a nanrct of nt-wtralUy, He rer I u i teri ens. Thn cadrl one of h nav t bl nval eogare4uelt Rloret. .. It endol in llAter l th Aaawf CAHMiv Rut the beruk deteat Kei." u UU?h tleer ! vil llli one anmnT m vm llotl not U RUc Up th hav awt I1 i fresh enthtiiAm all h MMi torv of ihelr bra and fciie . Anf. Mhn th oong ) i mtblle la!5 ceJehrato e - ! deeds of the jwlnoiw dtensa ! American HejHill. Jet tm t 'hearty cheer for lald lKt i. t i crew .Vwt rs4. .. .NMdh Xm OrirnUI Fttarral YestcnUv Chinatown ai8' inetit Celestial aud whtrt from all part f the vtly e'jeejt' I here, fthd the lre)t war m must confusUtu. Tim Mrnfcw a hubbub was te eehiwntn 4 l. miral ' ote jule of a thtt f . of high lanilsiv. who dlet IaM I d.tl at hi rtldne in thV eMt I I ... ... t. 4. . ,..., .. ...--.-. .-.- . Illnn atwlftJ? ,, ii. , , f . u fwf , , y, ,hd fftntl(.r ,.uan he skt b toaesel iU're than lh ! i tia, ahtl to ha o been ben reil a-l dlcd, lie I aU re)Hit .' lieen scry wealthy It ! h two thousand .HHvHe ln on at ! Wnrtol Iho Nl. V.,.i e.m.y.n. tatlou in nit -name jaui u . i. f t M t' I elt- , Wnb-prate preparalbms had Vooa m '" his funeraL harly In the in-, b . j I Mneae eaHK'ntrr ..... Uteir laoor. sift i omiiorl east of DtiiKnt. a larv tavimMt - . event.y-IHe teel u Jeiitftlt atil tw-a le'l nroaI wa ererlel It wn i f... . .. . ... i: i ." Irtonamnair - nWrh wr 1 Kt?"mm:m ."7'iTOSM.Ilnj:.Jfw tw-irawf . hnmlng; and faeftiy.dertri mnm were snttt and glring a ceftar apfearaAre thj weiri eee At ee end ef the Umt ttrm it tewa- :. l.. m. The etmnm tywtiawed the greats Ptif the day; Je llkJ! vl fe&rwed by a pr9eros of mrr t we hnedred eMnage w4 irmotvuf dsted In the rtcefriaje timh at L retHdl eeesefery. 'J-, fvmaia h been emhnhned and he eat to Ch- the neat jensmn Sw Fn" MtdifUm Clear, iMfrtmm ef mekatg IV cWcr.-. eJh lw VfM emaatemurm m m-tm 9nn s sna3 a aw s-"? 7 . ?7r- l Jsv th noil w c-rcwjMf tbe aeisy 34 orttmr and '-av nd tr .--,,- ,l- , . st 'h-a - aw 4aav--.. jm KmerWeaate4.ee the trade. lia HC ndsutre- which awy ernmrnaHtejeinderdwhryieap eaA f gr wp5 Wt lrnnW prr tril4,nndthe nrafasr tt MMteaiawC and n dark. ae lnklz JWient wtafrr i4eWj and ?hv Z" ,rnnd it. nnd the ehrar neatly pMwetheen ef the Kjt. M naM Mannrismtn W-aUaaman fan m i t masVaat snjrf. Z "",-- 1 " ij ismin 11 1 JVeWainannl sanhnatnnnnm naji n tTL J Va. . anwJ - - --- hnnmml nath amanaaalanertt mat aan wzF eepcnamw'rn w earn whe 4 n wbe&emfa wbe at Ewannr-ave frl.lW;irat the rate ef tw9 Anreee- nf thneiamew in hhn Vary jnet when wee feaaaaetka ee w- .;" .V-n -i-jr- ...2s.-'iy' ir 73 i .; . w .:;yt -"-ST K-3 JxsSi? &&&.? Sl&?2&S2rz3& W JfcfiV? 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