jajtyae "sjy- SI 1 si a tl ai f t oi Ji. V- S si in tt li i tv tv re ) di Ti g 1 L : iu. Jl c ii i i 4G0D FOR VULTDRES. a Straac Burial Bit. the Parsees JMspese ef the Beats ef Vkeir Dead-Flo wan for the Earth aad Braes for tao Air The Hease ef Prayer aad the Priests. .There recently returned to this city a list missionary who twenty-three ago sailed from these shores for says the Philadelphia Prat. The tr day ho visited Laurel Hill, and there. ;the monuments and graves, he told at the sacred burial-place of the Parses I upon the heights of Malabar Hill, some ftta&eo out of Bombay. ' I Uiad heard so much about the Towers 61 faience,'" he said, "that my curiosity VIM aroused to know what it was like. Bat M Silence,"' he said, "that my curiosity Iras aroused to know what it was like. But oon found that it was impossible for one yt a follower of the great prophet Zo frosster to ever gala admittance inside of these towers. 'This strange sect, the Parsees," he con tinued, "are so scrupulous in their cere taoaials and custom, and so strict in the servance of their rites, that yon cam eadily see how reluctant tbey wouldbeto allow an outsider, especially one who was teaching the doctrines of Christ, to observe tab ritual tbey practice. 'I had been the means of rendering a favor to an intelligent aad well-educated twaeu whoa and myself there sprang up 4)ttite a feeling of friendship. When I -thought I could safely make my request I asade known to Simmy desire to visit the flowers.. He said he would see whether she could obtain permission for me frets the wiests who guarded the sacred portals. feberatae matter dropped. I did aot hear from him for soma weeks, until one day he came to me saying that permission had Seen granted, and that we mast be ready to Mart the next morning. 'I shaU never forget," continaed he, "the fcet, cloudless day that we drove in oar cfcsely curtained vehicle, or gharry, out of Ypeausty, noisy streets oi Bombay to tae S'iSSSiSSfSSSS Hill. The whole place seemed a veritable jardenofthedeai Here jasmine, crimson tybiscus and beautiful roses were spread in Dpwiidcring prolusion about the walks hading to the entrance. The heavy, languid air wa3 Qiled with the most fragrant odors and the sweetest per fumes. I canld hardly believe that I wasiaa burying-ground. After alighting from the gharry tve ascended the low, stone Seps, which led to a dosed iron gate. My iettd showed our permission to the old and sanerablo Farsec, who threw open the gate, Sd within a tew moments we were within s sacred precincts. One of the first things ebat 1 noticed as I ga:ed around was some Are or six solid-looking circular buildings, aferhans eighteen or twenty feet in height The walls of these structures were built of heavy blocks of6toce and covered with a send of white cement or plaster. The build Bfgs themselves stood in a shallow moat, surrounded by tall noln trees, heavy bushes a various kinds, amltcrbago growing wild d UTiuiiltivatea. These, then, wero the nou1 'Towers ot Silence. Truly, they were well named. Save for the clicking of j our shoes on tns s-2otn stone, the fitful foraying to and fro cfthe branches of the sail palms, and Mia occasional Happing of rings by crows and vultures on the trees, opt a sonnd was liear 1 in the languid, breath less air. The fact trar.icalsun beat heavily 3wn on tha baro white walls, and evory hcre stfllness and silence reigned su preme." "How do the Parsees bury their dead!" When you reach the top of the Tower ru will find that tha entire circular surface divided into tLrco smaller circl?s, and bo tsveen each circlo is a narrow pathway. The eircles are again diT'iIodintoagreat number . h'f8malL, shallow snarc-s, or receirtacles, as Boyfriend called tueni, also separated by Barrow pathways for the bearers of the body Ip pass. The top of the Toivcr' is sur , sounded by a sort or parapet, which hides she surface f rosi outaido view, fow comes tie strange part ci tlio Parscc burial cus tom. It was the teaching of our great frophctand master, said my companion, that the dead should not defile the earth. Accordingly, no dead Farsec is laid in the earth, but his bed; Is exposed to all the Swls of the air, to more quickly return to c dust and the elements frcri which it tame. Here in th3 canter of our Tower you sec a deep well, down which wo put to f ether tho dry bones of all tha dead mca, women and children, rich aad poor, great Bndsmall. For the dead there can only be ajjuality.' Wc nest went to what is known as the Bouse of Prayer a low, stone-arched build fbg with colonnades all around. This is the fiouse where the friends of the deceased re main while the body is placed oa the Tow er. It is hero that the sacred fire burns day and night, year in and year cut, always afatched by a faithful priest whose duty is to feed the dames with precious woods. The ir in this Uousacr Prayer is thus redolent with the panscnt aroma or caudal wood. lhe corpse-bearer:; live separate from the Sjutcr residence, and' after each funeral they go to the bathmg-liousc, change their gar ments, and purify themselves freni the do djenicui, of having touched tho dead. Just s we were on tha point of tailing our leave Isaw a small procession of white-robed fig ures marching over the narrow stone bridge tp one of tho 'Towers' and disappear in the slpiall square opening in the wall. "21y companion must haro seen the pro apssion, for I noticed that hh whole de meanor perceptibly changed as with bowed head ho told mo that a burial would take laee only at sunrise or at sunset. Sudden ly the placo seemed to be astir with life bid motion, motaii paiins sncoic as under st of wind. Tho black bodies on tho 2cs, Uiuicrta raouoniess, raised tneir ads. snread out their wings, and, with n Whir and a whiz, nwooped dowu like aveng- ng furies on tlio top of the rower.' Al Miough I could net sec the dreadful sight, I fcicw that these birds oi prey were doing heir ghoulish work f picking the flesh from ejf the skeleton. Distinctively I put up my lauds as if to shut out the sight, and, tak fc" hold of my friend's arm, wc quietly re iraced our steja to the iron gate through atliich wc had nLafoaa entrance. "Sinco that Memorable visit to the Cower of Silence I have often asked my sfilf whether my first feeling of partial aread and disgust was not oac or senament aithcr than ono of reason. I am frank to any that tho Impression of repulsion has imost worn eft, aad I remember that tho 7?,. 1- ju nnH-lir what decay doc so Sowly; iI"?to tto uunj T 5 -r .nnmVknr thnf .'.C 3 .7 ' ?!, aurfi care, tenderness ivcrenco ly atoctean, white-robed priests j x7mi1.ii ertes carden of roses; when I . TZ" i-kfc-.ainir of my Parsce com n that ftrtno dead there can only bo . - tyfTT , SZZ taSTKirt TKSSS CZ , the hour, while there could boa rsurrec r.ee gentleman Iwiag to Bombay, be- tionoB the ghI p of whoM HIRSUTE ELECTROLYSIS. Destroying Hair by Mesas of a Needle Heated to iBcaadeaeeace. The method of destroying hair follicles in the pores of tlic skin by means of a needle i heated to incandescence by an electric cur 1 test after insertion, has, says the Ekttrical Bttlttc, set many a woman rejoicing in the annihilation of mustaches of various de crees of visibility, or perhaps in the path , made between meeting eyebrows, or even ' in the destruction, root and branch, of a stubborn tuft of hair growing from cheek or jaw like sedge grass in a tielil ; and she has thanked electricity for the removal of at least one incubus to beauty, doubtless re lating in confidence the depiliatory experi ence as one of the wonders of that "great force." ; But is it truly a wonder wheo a white-hot platinum needle singes out the root of the hair that it kills the bair? How could it be otherwise? "Whatistohindarl" astheman saMwneneaucau-xratoaamiroinei'ausoi Niagara as a great wonder of nature. And be gave a description or bis idea or wonaer that the water should flow up the stream and ascend the falls. In this case the method used would be much more truly wonderful if the dermatol ogist should reverse the uctiou of his appa ratus and raise a capillary crop rat HMtum. ! AsCarlylesays: ''Instead of carrying the ; torch for burning let him wield the hammer j for building' . Picture to yourself a gilded youth sitting in an operating chair like those in tonsorial emporiums, having side whiskers or mus- tacho germinated according to the whim of foreheads extend pretty well toward the spinal column. If Captain Gniliver, of blessed memory, gave as bis judgment that the man who f caused two blades of grass to grow where ; one grew before was worthy of the prize 1 offered by the King of Lilliput, how much t more shall be the reward of those who i cause spears of hair to grow where none . grew before that is, since before the war. ! As the locomotivo has not dispensed with j the service of horses, so the second form of 1 this apparatus would not obviate all needs Of its present application. For, in addition , to the purposes before alluded to there l?-f "ear removed, yet & wishing would still remain men desiring more or i cither to shave or to be shaved, and then j there would still be thoso desirous of pos , lug as a phrenological phenomenon, who , would have the area of the forehead ea i larged accordingly. I All theso matters furnish a promising i field for those who can revorso the action of hirsute electrolytic process, and raise j capillary crops. The field may not be en- tirely overrun, for there arc everywhere persons who, hkc the knight in Hudi- . discern and divido The bair 'twixt south and southwest side, and some may yet have their old prefer ences for hair-cut and shave, while others l may be so lost to youthful vanity as to pre-' serve their denuded scalp in all its present ' polish. j MONODY OF A PEN. Tfee Aflectlaa; Plaint of a Castaway with aa Eventful History. I' m but a worn-out fountain pen, my use ful days are o'er; so badly battered up am I they've slung mo on tho floor, begins the poet of the Boston Tra inerfpt, nrho in this instance represents the worn-out fountain pen. A writer's hand has wielded me for more than half a year, and now that I can J mark no more, I'm lying sadly here. Tho janiior may como, pcrnaps. ana ciaun me for bis own, or with the other waste and truck perhaps I may be thrown; and of the millions in the world, not one in all the men will ever give nnother thought to this old fountain pen. The man who used to write with me, before he'd start to think, would rudely twist me all apart and chuck mo full of ink, and then I'd scratch along and tell of some bright youthful bride, who wed the only man she loved, serene and joyous-eyed; and of her dress and of tho buds that decked her fiowine hair, and of tho words the parson said about the "happy pair." And then I'd glide along the page and leave the letters bold, to tell how somo one gathered in a wondrous pile of gold, and all the other little things that go to make a day, and now that all my work is done I'm calmly slung away. I've told of births, I've told of deaths, of joy and dark despair; I've told how vagrants aro run in, how dudes oil up their hair; I've quoted Latin, French and Greek, bad English I have known, I've treated of the loud guffaw and like wise of the groan. 1'vo helped to kick when days were hot, as when they were too cold; I've run in lines from chestnut poems as when "the knight3 were bold;" I've told how in some lonely grave the clammy earth was flung, I've shown how some at eve have wept, how somo at eve have sung. How Richard Roe got thirty days for going on a drunk, how Paddy won a slugging match becauso he'd lets of spunk; how some one, smiling, took a gun and aimed it at a friend, and in a jesting, joking way, brought one life to an end. Of how the smiling servant lit the fire with kerosene, and swopped her apron for a robe whero fires arc ucverscen: of how some stumbling feet went down toward the burning bars, while others clambered up tho road that leads toward the stars. I've told of human misery, of human grief as well, of musty flasks of ancient wine, and buckets in tho well; d gray-haired men and women old, of bappy girls and boys, of groans and smiles, of prayers and thanks, of sorrows and of joys; and now wy point is worn nwaj-, I'll stribble never more, bat lie alone, a broken wreck, upon the o2ice floor; and those j who've read of all I've told, in ail tho ranks of men, will give but little credit to this busted Fountain Pen. A Bad Cow at a Funrrsl. A thrilling incident transpired at a fu neral in Bungree. Victoria, the other day. Tiic pall-bearers and other officials were in the act of bearing the remains of tho lato lamented from the cemetery gates to J-0 grave, and the friends and relatives lol lowcd sadly in the wake, allowing their bit ter tears to filter tlirough large handker chiefs, when a one-hornbd, bony cow, with a fiery eye and an elevated tail, bore dowu on tlic cortege and butted tho gentlemen who bore the eoin into a condition of rags and incapacity: High sho skipped about, frolicked along sideways, trod upon tho procession, and wore holes in it with her olitarv hern, after which the remainder oi iho mourners sought comparative security ' en ton of toaibstoncs and iu other elevated positions, leaving the dead and wounded on the field of action. The gravo-digger sub sequentlv diverted tlse cow's attention with 1 a spade, and ihe funeral terminated with a prayer. . g Kcmrdiat 'oc-::!acIi!n?. Some 'earnetl nrofessors arc discussing in a periodical thrk miltipnt of snow-blindness ami sunburn, friio foi-mer has not much lUfc--' . VUIJ lll'di:Uli iuwi-mii w.-w ust now wa haVc no snow on the grosnd $1,500 in The Chicago Daily News has reduced its price from two cents to One Cent per copy. For a year past its sales have beea over a-aullioa-a-week,w aad U believes k aow sees the way to safely lead ia plating aa ideal Aitf paper pan the basis of the lowest oak of American coinageowa ctXT. TosmccejrfaUyaccwapluhtlujendtwothiajsareesscatial: Kr--To nuke w goods sKwspaper as the best, if aot a little better; secoad to let every ssaa, wosmsm aad child ia 4e KnrthwestKMowifs beiag doae. aad doae at oac crate, day. The Daily News believes that itis caapeteat to take care of the imwfdcoaitiw.adfcnf ao better way of meeting the secoad than by geaersl newspaper adtferbajag. To do the latter BBOSt efiectively k here solkks the co-Operation of all who believe themselves cossaeteat to write aa efiective newspaper advertiseaxat. To iadaeethe best eioit inks service ia this matter The Daily News will reward the writers of the three best advetttfesBeats sabsskted, wkh three cash prizes, aggregating Fifteen Hundred Dollars, divided as follows: First Cash Prize For best advertisement, -------- $1,000.00 Second Cash Prize For second best advertisement, .... - 300.00 Third Cash PrizeFor third best advertisement, ------ aoo.oo Total, $1,500.00 The aflvfrtfsfiftrt any b & Maacesaent, or a series of announcements not exceeding six in master. The space teqnked mnst act exceed tlurtcccnpied by this sdverbsem For the general guidance of all who enter the coaetRion,the fblkwmg ten pomts sre DAttYNlwswmreqnaTtobeBicprcaineiybroogbtoat. TtesdrertiseaKntmustessphasiae: That Tss Duvt Nsws is int. last aad tfcai (Waald he tha ant asd productioa ef aa Aaarliaa Pagy taper. aad hard auks a -That Taa Dahy Nsws aa.daily peatr for bmy aeoel acsaatiyofbMiyaeBy.i the North-watt is it. Mou people htvas't tat Usm or fatkaceu sMtt, tbeyabietetctyasTea'taayaMforit. Newssaacrnadiac, after all, is but aaiaddsatef life, aot its chief entiatss. Therefore Taa Dau-v Nsws is a sfcortsM-to-tar-poiat-papcr aThat Tarn Daily Nnrs is aa laacpeadcat, trath-teHiag aeespaper. jaartJaljoaraatiaato the liikadiag, ef tae retuianea eonucai -aiaaa ' saewthctrathiaaeliticalanttcis: the waafitiainnBinnaMraaauyeies. na the await aaraMeaaUe aaitisaa ataa advene eaiatea,so leaf as he is aMraackoftheeeiaita. It's aot thai aukes troahk. if s the aaafciea daWsrrr ttrmr aa elmr. JTt W0m it wtjrU tktctmfidtnenifiUrtmdriftvtrycliiicalfitk Oat it Aw scircuUtim e'serr " mrilimwttk? d ThstTas Daily Nsws U sawailr faaer. Beeaase this is i the aewsaaaer, a tisae whea etoybedy reads h. aad it is taat that the aewsaaser shoaM be saade wkh direct lefcre aewsaaaer shoaM be saade of aXchcaatatha-sef theauaOy. I so latce a share of the feet ao to be overlooked. The taaral aaeer anut also be ceastaady watched, for chUdrea read iu Taa Daily News is for the hear, aad therefore it follows f That The Daily Nsws is agaiau the salooa. Beeaase "the Itqoor iaterest" arropatly awari to rtnejieitr ia Aaaakaa aolitics, aad The Daily News adieves that it is aot for the coaatnrs gaed that aay oae interest shoakt thas over-ride all others, atachless eae which ataaes as toe reprtsearanreoi auiaasHaMstaa-iissencaa Tsn Daily Nawsu aot the orjaa of efohiaitioa. Itisaotsarcthat prohibition is the best thiae Good eeople who hare Hade this sab iectaUfe4onf stodrdoBOtagreeastothereaMdr. Taa Daily Naws hat bo cutopiaa hope that itb possible to legislate aeaiato good- Other points will suggest themselves to the regnlsrrcaxkrc tie rjaper itself, aod assy be atro the advertisement writer. Outline illustrations and poetry may be introduced if desired, btf thc sre the competition. The prizes wDl be swarded to the three most successful advertisements, the pabutber of The Daily News beats; the sole judge, whatever may be the absolate grade of their merit. All sdvatisemeats awst be received before Septeaer aeaal atnitheawsfdswulbeinadsttheestiiestdate Tntcnding competitors must apply for the rapeVsconpattefeg fttjaatiaTerasementsawstbesabta VICTOR F. LAWSON, Fablisher The Daily News, Chicagax AN INTELLIGENT SNAKE. A Story TVhooe Truth Ia Vouched For fey a Reliable Journal. An American lady from Virginia was spending some time; iu Paris, says Harper's Touna Paplc, and one day was asked to go with some French and English friends to thcJardin des Plantcs. After wandering about for some time in the gardens, it was suggested that they go round by tho ser pent house. The lady from Virginia, who had an unconquerable dread of snakes of all kinds, objected : .-ongly, but findingthat the rast all want: 1 to go. and yet were too polite to leave t.er behind, she at last consented. Once i2- the row of cages, however, she bc.'d the others to go on and see what they wanted to, leaving her to wait for them there. One English lady preferred remaining behind also: so, after some little talk, the two ladies wero left standing at one side of the lirst cage, . where glimpses of a torpid-looking snake I froni beneath the folds of an old blanket I on the floor of the cage had been enough to ' frighten both ladies from soing any far- tber. The conversation until now had been entirely in French, but as the rest of the party moved on, the two left lchind began talking in English. With the iirst words the English lady spoke the torpid snake began moving un easily. As the Virginia lady answered her, and went oil talking at some length, the snake grew more and more restiess, till it finally showed every sign of intense ex citement. "Evidently.'' said the English lady, 'that's a snake who understands English!" They laughed a little and moved away, the dreadful head pressing so near the wires ot the cage unnerving lioth ladies for a longer stay. But as they came out in front of the cage, and looked up to the la bel to sec what the creature exactly was, they read, to their astonishment, VrotaUts Virglniauls, or Virginia rattlesnake " "Think of UP exclaimed the American lady; "he not only knows English, but ho recognizes my Virginia dialect." The whole aiTair seemed so uncanny that they began to think they would rather move on and join their friends. The gentlemen, however, when the story was told, were so Anxious to sec the experiment themselves fhat the American lady consented to con quer her dread again, and go back to her first cage. When they reached it the snake was Again lying torpidly on the floor. Conver sation was begun in Trench, quite rapidly and very loudly, to see whether it would bo aroused by the mere noise. It paid no attention to them, However, till the English lady sjio!:;; in her native tongue, whc.n tho slight restlessness at once began Again; and as soon e.s the lad v from Vir ginia had uttered a lew sentences the crea ture was evident iy r:rioas, rousing itself with such balefi.1 live ia iti narrowed eyes ' that the nerves of ihe :.i t" could bear it no longer, oven in tho inti rests of scioncc. and She beat a retreat. Sho was urged to go to the Garden again and again by scientists ansious to make irery experiment possible, but she found herself utterly i.-.zzi,. to 'ice tho c-er.lurc, even with iron bers and wire between, fiho assures mo thai the wholo party said t was impossible to doubt but that tho rattle snake did recognize tho language and tho dialect. The strangest part of such a thing would naturally be that the ra'ausnuiie, u:.Jfce any domestic animal or bird, could not havo beard much talk frcr.1 Lnir.au beings, owisg to the secrecy of its movements and tho obscurity of its haunts. Whatever reco! lection of the language it had carried with It across the sea when it was sent to Franco must have come Irani that one encounter with Virginians when it was captured, its very evident association with the Virginia accent being one to enrage it beyond meas ure. THE EDITOR ANGRY. KIIs Truthful Xuakn rStory licscribci: .? 1IU Follow-Citlzens. Wc little imagined, says the Greenville Cash Prizes all the ttae, a erstr-seatr. ceatroiUae ceatidcntieB ia the sad k ift always so. It wotk ia to fotbm-ncoste. Beeaase this is is tae easiest sen ot i te read a Mistrt maH dacolsiif dishoaetty overraetv rtaay waats to awst TiolratsattaaadoriVt Aaaasioeaitanaiexai trill rardv take tattiar coafideat ef the ktmutff theagre fret of t ef inuoceritr. Mmkt Mm ttcmu TM Daily NaarsAu the ace of tau-taieor- wkh direct reference to the Woaiaa aad heriatercsts Z mmm A Za world's tlMatat aa te-day a toae aad iaieeacr ef a dailv of Chicago his dry daily. stance. The reptile in question lay on our desk for hours, and was afterward nailed On the front door as a living, or rather a da Sunct, rebuke to the ironical messages of sympathy which arrived from all parts of the city. TTJLs was surely bad enough, but when our exchanges take up the cry and dare to hint as to press conventions, singu lareoincidcnccs, etc., it is high time for us to get mad. We have, therefore, got mad. "M3p fail to see how, beyond tho faet that it is some what unusual for a snake to venture into a newspaper office, this matter in any way eoneerns our contemporaries. Had it been a mosquito, or a hornet, or a common, ordinary wasp, we should never have been troubled. As it is, wc are a persecuted per son, and henceforth the smile of incredulity awaits our report of any out-of-the-way oc currences tnat may transpire in our sanc tum. On a recent social occasion our modest and strictly veracious reference to a famous hunt wherein wc contrived to ehase a fox up a live oak tree was actually received with palpable and inuendous hesi tancy. Under these mortifying conditions wo hereby give notice that stories of birds, beasts, insects, lishes or other creatures will be religiously excluded from our col umns whenever their authenticity depends in any degree whatsoever upon the fje rtdit of any member of our staff. A polar bear, a tarantula or a boa-constrictor may roam or prowl at leisure through our office, but an unjust public will never know of it un til the funeral cards are sent out. We are dumb. Tli Cradle or Liberty. The Buffalo Courts- says: A Buflalonian of Massachusetts birth lias been in somo distress or mind over tua proper pronun ciation of the name of tho Boston hall, which served as tho Cradle of Liberty. In her native State she had never heard it called any thing bst Fan-u-il Hall, but in Buffalo a few. persons who prided them selves ou doing the correct thing when they know it called it in her presence Funnel Hall. Under the impression that Dr. Holmes employs the latter pronunciation iu one of his poems, she wrote a little note to the beloved autocrat, begging for infor mation. Promptly came the following re ply, penned, unfortunately, in the hand of a secretary: Some folks Fnr.ciiII, OM folks Funnel. SlcrpJiiR in a Crave. The strange habit of an aged Albany woman of using the rural cemetery for a dormitory on special occasions has, accord ing to the Albany Jirr.c.l, conic to light. The woman in question is a widow named Briggs, whose husband died about eight, years ago and was buried in theicmetery. For some time she Las been in the habit of making two-day pilgrimages to her hus band's grave. She always carries with hor a sufficient quantity of food to last through her vigil, and blankets to vrv, r.3 a cover ing during tho nibt. She claims that she spends the night m converge with her de parted spouse. I S. n:l oji'Miou Mnntlay. (. C. i'.ryhaker was in tk ci tr it- d... i o.;i rerr:s -tent Mitiaav :i tir t ctt t. ..' ii Vfjtr.1. !fsi:!!f. nur. isiirr in! iiausmter. honid.- iv! r,;ir:tt c; fit Iu-if-t it.-il tas'ii't v it. ('mtiitji's. 1 i.nl.i-, .11-1 1 ;;:n ..- A i i.ir I iiti I ill' . rtti - r aess, bat it has a very aositire coavietloa that it is eatiicly practica ble, aad altogether desirable, te legislate salooe-keepcrs tato their proper place, as beiac eagaged ia a txaftc which hcre.as everywhere cist ia the civilized world, is only tolerated as, apparently, a acces sary evil. Tktre ararf ttmounctrUinumnie tkUfHnt. C That Taa Daily News is a happy paper. Beeaase it bdieres ia the practical wisdoatef beiag good aatarcd: of beiac geeeraHr satisfied rather taaa ertriaatiagrjr dMatkaed. The chraatc foak-aader ia a ayusaBce.aad The Daily News will hare the least possible of hiac The world is better than it ased to be, aad is getting better every day. It's a good place to lire ia let's auke the best of it, 7 That Taa Daily News costs a great deal of asoaeyte asake. Beeaase there is sossetiatea noway of deKoastratiag the raise of athiag; ta some people, se eaadasirclyas by showing, erea at part, what It casts to aukek. There ate aoepeopleoa the regalar weekly pay-roll of The Daily News, aad tkctr salaries range troaiSsjoetefSyaaa per week, aggregating fhaapoo a year. The white paper costs aaotherfcoo.ooaayear. The aggregate capeadJtates of Taa Daily News ibr:8SS win rary beta maeekherwayfiafexvaoo. Aad y aW That Taa Daily News sew costs the reader oaJy Oae Cast a Par. Beeaase this is the asott wonderful thing 'tk awdera jowaabsai,aad deserves teuagecr ana o er. nurt u tttue tamgtr graseftHS ta much 4fthtjmat. That The Daily News is aow EteraOy everybody's paper. Bee heretofore aKtrepolitaa daily papers have beea too ezpeasi re. ri.. wmttaaamm Jk .. . .fc m fc mm t. 2. ! t f 4 UtetarBKrorthcarrtiaK totakcthta. New this is changed. Taa tarastr fnniniTirly shoakt take a daily paper aow that k casta bet little aKCTtltta tae clj leaf witly. and iaceaih aii J so that he caa also afford the tisse to read k. Hel save ks yearly cost over aad over again by knowing the Market prices every day.iasteadef weekly as heretofore. -That Taa Daily News aow iaaagnratcs a newspaper rerotetioa. Be caasesach a coesbiaatioei of values as k aow offers the reader la absohwriy wkhoet paraPel aawag Araericaa newspapers, aad k ia boaadteasake the dry-boacs rattle. Theresokor tha revolatioa ia that every Faghih rridiag persoa Bvingwithai da3y newspaper d- caa aow afford, both aa to price aad tune, to have BON TON BAEBER Shop . Nh BATH ROOM, SIT Hir'OX.v KIHUXL. Props. Fii.-t ! ' ticprl. tt C'i: ilulcery, r- :it.l nit.! ti.i.. uglily equipped. We . i-ti'uliv xolieit your patronage :ir:inferu ?:tisfa'ion in every ca?e. i-i! Motti: Will !' to 4. v ., tl''ir :riif; ' . : ;i :ij-l-i".:t- : -.1 rttfiMWV' 'f: r - ' O c O zn 5 3 " fry . , ruion Itp. rais -r. t- vmily an: I n-v. t..k ii;. .it my 1 jwnr . in! iikriiiwt- : ..f If.' . hi! wLi i-.iwuu,i:f. ii i r Uii.il it"' a'- :.i.-e-a:n ;y . ";: .-d -Hf.ifisrrh.-.rj ifM r :! i-" 'iii i-p 'ifSU f . .-.-. .'! .fl at--: tTibt rdi:iv.ir ,-. . t:.. - l..i j;. Xi-tlrf ii Jli-cliy u rt y's.-'", tttv Tilt.-, in tfca t . iMijv-; :i::it i- ;;. vktiiiiji t'lf -lir.Vl. ' l ; i '-v.!!-' t AI K. :rJn-i .. -. o i iri- !,! ii i TBTt Xh 1 -"- - .laTfi - : -.-ni . V-MKi iiiA:r - ,.-- mm i - -t3aaS y 5cj : i' r - Sal 'wBmWL' m -- - - 'sMiizm . , '"-iQ5Xssar7Mijv--9''c.aa '- - - - "; :J 1 n'-.vcr tc v. . ww. , '- i '.' f Sc-.vc: i;- L-!-. ,j c cv, -t - i - Denver xo Cr.-.-:.:-, t '- if Oif!ai::.i to StLou:s, 5 '. J ! i "fEST TO KAST! r "- r O . ! CALIFORNIA (HE LAND OF DISCOVERIES i i i f i BEWARE OF IMITAITONS jSee tint rr.r tr;il. nmr. SAXTA AB IE, is mi ev- ry t -ttie i- is n every j Intuit "('tiri' plr;i-:iiii Ctlif'-niia rem edy. ' it:i.i Unit t,-tr,ni'u or.iu.in cv refunded t I i 1 1 1 -. Ok IKtiMPT! tObSS ASTHM-ColiGlfS, Vv-t . - 4Jii spier ccTiIpn aT .VL LUNC-S -Soihn (wviflq fSe?lcTfflr cicutjr.3rwmt3 jtrQ 2-J lAHlEnNEMmcaLflianffijrfAL. MAJCK NO M'TSAKK By tiNpc'ti- i Ttu' -v!Mit'iii. nii-tafcrn for pu: -:nm tii.n. ABIK h;t iiront.r j-i.t.'n- -liiu-,'!ii!ii :nI Iiv ir-ii',, i; t-'-'' !: ;:! " :!il t.lirlt dfwl r M,t" :iiat !i:;i! ! S' "t'fen SANTA ' many a l-reai.ing; tint 'ten :Pn.-r wt ii' time v Vt'l svvi- Hi it- . :pttt gr:i' Y't'l IJ i'" keeping :i bottle n! h' ily nlw:i in the hou- n:i iuk-':ke by '.! tut reniF- r. uar lLY-I JtE1iar4V TUP Q ,qUAANTiDI isgi m. 5' 'CURE Oil .c.Tjwwe.citcucAi; flBIETINENCD XATARR1 'ORQYILLLCAJ CALIFORNIA rAT-R-CLTE Tsi ill miar-U'te ii eir- fMr.':i'.irrli, fo'ti in th Iip:it:. bay .-iter. ..--.n'd ea'ar-ihrt! "ic-i!:es :it.J -u;ir .-., re !( the -:. : .it .;! rineil rni'ivol Tf t-t :l.,. iu-.!::tnt - :itl. ri.ttlti .; fr ::i c:it:rrii. Fi-How I section :tmi : i-..r--1 w'rrat'iti by :i!i iitnci-t-. i":l !,.r eiri'niiir to .4BIETIXK ;-IKIMr.:. -;o. Oroville -,c in u!'." :ri-.tt"!(nr for s; -- : ii-u t. .si to ' s. :-:ta a hi :: a n i m : , i - ii- :v: ;: t- -:Ie I,y Jli-my i;ok. Atrent. II. T. CLARKDUISG Co WhoIesaleAgcnts Lincoln. Neb iURS coftu: 1ACCAC' CHZCilZO TrVGUt:;:l. Tlirough tickets over the 2ur!ing :o. Route aro Cor - .c :if tho L'r.ion ''ctciric, Denver : r,0 Crnnd:' nnd nl other prii.cirjal rcilwzv:. nnd by ali cgonts o; tr?, "Eur' --.nor? cgu:o.: Fcr f:irthr nln 'metier, o;:p.y tc -ny osoi. or to P ?. Z'JS r:c, ccj. : t vt ... J.Vl-iUA.XE3 ., iiJ:.-e to CrrtlUar, , .i.iivi.'i .fi'r;-i,::. rimii'v t,?urf n V.Vh-ter tl;ces;:tN: I ilium.-, in r.i);u... j iin.,:,;t.i,.f t-i .i.i.ii-i uaislo::-l.(iHt:. JailiiiiiiLstraUir. Jullti II. Willcot t .i.':.v:si:..r.-'-y '.j-, :.(j ,...,-. iiSfinjC i-.-i:ii- -..mi in i. !.., "-.i-.r J:u . i svait ;;vrj,. :;;:.; :-'-,:'?"i'" rihn.- ....:.Vii.:v . : vr . .,?"c ' jx i'1J ' fr..- .e- -lt, t:V !-'. AH ir il.ums f -ilil toiul iu . ITMHlN.Jt- : VI. Ilf, I, irt-v tm .. ! ui'ittlit: v. x.-Iir-.. ; .. .y: Iji-iiiRw-r in iU n VC ;: ' ..I. i..-in a!! claim. :iiirH ?H. ,Mjri . ...... ..... ni i.i t-T-'4I-. MV' Li fcniarv . '-.aurfe-rfU -ii. f "i , V'-TH.IN-- I ;,- v af red 1 -t. day i . . '.'. fmfcjr. " "., l 1CW. - t ;.av -!.- .tate t var-ml-r.w-M Snr.iis!:- , i,i ' f l i it: X( 'X, It I- I.tl SBRaBSBBBaKaam bbbbbCM Ffik ' ''TaBBBTC7V.,rT-- ' r--.v.-A-.iS --4BbbTb9s -' ----- aaB -27"tBBvipv-.Sr " .,- 'II BaTkaVik t.-. .''.' -4B 3 Mr?. V ? jbbI All work ' j $ fe : . i Jj irf - S 111 i.-ltt-r :sn; 111 tin ' "i- XSi - -iBTBt 4 a I to Sad Straits. rnf. when iu our guileless innocence I li.t- ff 1 5