u y . ir it I: t. i -4 if , I 1 I s I THE JOURNAL. WEDNESDAY, SOV.i1. lSitt. Z:tor:l2t tie resieSsa, Csitstrt.Stb.. istasisi el:: aii::r. J NAMELESS HERO. Ttris is thi son- of a namelcw man. Uaten a while till the deed U told Of one wh ventured bis Ufa to'aavw Another's, but not for fame or sold. Winter hal been both bars and long; Spring set tii, and the brooklet ran. Swamping the meadows and breaking tM eo - - . Into mlghty.biocks. Then the flood be gan. Hod and roaring, tho rushing stream On its bearing bosom tho ice blocks bore; Stemmed at length by a bridge of might. It foamed and crashed with a sullen roar. Crashed and dashed on the piers of stone; They yield at lust to the fearful strata: The center au-ch, and the keeper's house And helpless iuraates alone remain. Fiercer and fiercer roars the flood. Wilder the wind in the stormy sky. Tho kecier springs to the rocking roof: 'Mercy, have uiorcy. great God on high! Help for my helpless wife and child!" They beard him loud o'er tho torrent's roar: Help, alas! there is none to tiring: No boat could live if it left tho shore. Whose steed conies galloping hot with haste. And stops by tho river rnglng wild? Count Alfen. who offers red gold to him Who'll save the keeper with wife and child. ears, a thousand, the offer lieurJ, Heurt". a thousand, with grief are sore: They look at the Ice, the flood, and the sky. But never a boatman leaves the shore. " Boatmen, then, are ye coward? all? And in net they parish within our sightr" "Try ltyouiself! Lord Count," they cried. Alas!" said he, "for my strength U slight." )Ht from the crowd a wagoner steps. A boat is launched with the speed of thought: Twill save but one with his uilghty weight. But his arm is strong, and he cares for naught. Thrice lie guides her with giant strcugtb. Thrice hath he brought her safe to shore: Scarce had the last foot touched its planks Wneu with an-iul crash the arch fell o'er. Who wa this valiant man of men? A simple laborer, bravo and bold: Grand was the deed," I bear you say, But still he did it Tor goods aud gold." Listen, then: "Gallant the need you've done. And well." 6ald the Count, "have you earned the prize." Frankly and modestly answered then The valiant man with the fearless ey-s: " My life, I-ord Count, U not for gold. Your money all to the keeper give; ioet in the flood is his little all. Yet ho and his wife and child must live" With a careless smile he turned and went. This man with the frank and the fearless We sing of his fame, but what was his name Is known nloneto the Lord on high. K. il. Tiaqualr. in Harper" 1 ouny Itoiir. THE NOltAL VALUE OF LAUGHTER. Thero is a sober side to the subject of laughter, though sober-sides do not usually observe it. Nor is it without a positive moral value, as might be pre sumed, from the fact that no other nat ural physical movement of the human frame is without its assigned purpose. Laughing is not to be sneezed at any more than sneezing is to Ihj laughed at, as an established function of nature. We should rather inquire what is their definite design aniid the intricate move ments of life. A medical writer of high authority is publishing, in one of our scientific jour nals, a series of articles upon "The Remedies of Nature.'" In suggesting relief for certain diseases, especially asthma, he declares that "next to out door exercise, the best corrective is conversation, laughing and singing." He adds that "laughter is a peptic stimulant, while silence and brown study favor dyspepsia, asthma and sleeplessness." "A piece of good news is worth bushels of asthma-weeds, " And 50 say we. Send ou vour barbels of good news. "As cold waters to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far country." Now laughter is evidently desigued to wake up things generally, ami set everything to moving lively in that im portant region where the main physical operations of life are going ou. There is evideutly a little engineer stationed somewhere" under the fifth rib, on the right side of the human frame. When anything striking or funny meets the eye or starts in the mind, the bell-rope that goes down to him receives a sudden jerk from the pilot-house in the braut, and he turns on the steam. At once the chest begins to blow its bellows rapidly; both sides have to join in whether they want to or not, even until they ache; the heart receives au impulse and wakes up throbbing rapidly; the lungs expand and contract with considerable violence; the bronchial tubes lose their stringency; the eyes twinkle; the mouth draws back and opens; a gurgle and a gasp or two follow; then the air is filled with many a merry ha! ha! and the asthmatic patient finds his breath agaiu. All the arts of the human system have been et out for a run, like "the boys at re cess, and after having a good romp and cheerful, active e.rcise, for a few minutes, eome dowu to regular business agaiu. Now we can not see why it is not everybody's duty to lnugh, just as much as to cat and drink, and take any other kind of physieal excrcie. Indeed, the liver, the spltvn. and other mysterious organs, eetn to have the function of laugl.t.-r appointed for some special use in their healthful movement-, and its negle.-t entails disorder and disease upon them. For laughter oils afresh the wheels of the bod, with its stimu lating eilcrt. chases away thai terrible enemy of t renal hand peace, dyspepsia: and if physicians are true, dispels sleep-lessnc-s, with its painful and dangerous consequences. To "laugh and grow fat" is an old proverb that in'ght suggest wisdom to us, for we are made to laugh. But there is a class of morbid I'hari-ees who affect a lofty contempt of laughter ami mirth as undignified aud trilling, and unworthy the character of sober-minded men. Their multiplied sorrows have deadened the euergv of their vital pow ers; life's burdens have outweighed its pleasure.-, aud their organic apparatus gravitates toward a suspension of its Fuuctious. The mainspring has lost its tension, aud they are hi ready half dead. All because they are neglecting a fdvysical exercise appointed for the re let of their decaying members and faculties. Let them wake up, take the fresh air in a rousing walk, join in the merry laughter of the children, whose buoyant spirits display the healthful activity of their bodily system, play with the dog, run and junip as much as their old bones will let them, and their morbid ness will take lasting flight on the merry winos of laughter. Or let them take a good horseback ride through the woods and fields, and they will laugh in spite of themselves. Laughter thus possesses a moral quali ty. For our moods are too often the reflection of our physical conditions. No mau can be a free, earnest servant of God, filled with love to his Master and active good-will to his fellow-men, who doesn t keep his laughing appa ratus polished up and in good working order. He will be filled with jealousies and envies nnd all discouragements, if he does not laugh betimes. This is no Joke; it is a solemn fact. We need not indulge iu un timely or uproarious laughter. But there is a time to laugh; and when the time comes, it is our Christian duty, for the sake of our bodies, minds and souls, to laugh to the best of our ability to laugh thoroughly, heartily, and "clear down to our boots. If we don't feel like it, we ought somehow to work jurselves up to it. "Being happy is a talent that can be ukivated. Tke sift of confining the 4tnw mi f Jpa.i f a a ! eagxnt channel, f iweariag roseate spectacles as others would wear an electric belt, jof en joyiar ilife bj. sheer; effort f will force," may db aevwiupea-unui n iu -us oui n tnanv miseries to which both body and mind fall heir. It is not best to tickle others much. In order to make them lauh, especial ly children, who offer sucn provoking temptation that we may enjoy and catch the contagion of their merry chuckling. But it would wake up and revolutionize many a drowsy and for lorn old misanthrope, if applied regu larly and for a sufficient length of time, three times a day for a month. We wonder that the wise physicians have not set up an establishment for the "laughing cure," the same as for the "''water cure." They might at least make it an adjunct to their Turkish baths. The wit who made his exhaust ed wife laugh, when she seemed siuk ing away, produced a reaction und set alFher vital forces into movement to ward recovery. Wit aud wisdom often run togelher,aH iu this enso. It will dispel many a vapor, and lift many (. burden, and brighten it mi lengthen many a life, to give laughter its. legiti mate play. Iiec. A. A. E. Taylor, in Chicago interior. A Biff Oyster Story. "How's that for an ister?" said the skipper of au oystenuan, puiuting to au enormous shell that lay ou the deck. "It ain't not only a big shell." he con tinued, "but it's got a powerful big yarn that goes with it." The shell was certainly four feet long, large enough to serve as a bath tub for a small' boy, aud must have weighed over two hundred and fifty pounds, as the reporter could not move it with one baud. It was one of the largest bivalves known, the tndacna gigas, more properly allied to the clams, but passing as a very respectable oyster. 'Yes, sir," continued the skipper, who was shucking oysters, smoking, talking and humming a tune at the same time, "that ister was fetched from the East Indie; by an old mate of mine, and happeniu' to run foul of me he says, says he: 'Bob, you're iu the ister biz and" oughter have the boss ister: kinder sample ver goods like.' So what does he do but send this ere bal last aboard. Theie was two of 'em: one got washed away in a gale of wind off Pint Lookout, down the Chesapeake, but the two ot 'em weighed over five hundred pounds, and (iillis, he what fetched 'cm. said he eat the ister along o' the hull port watch of the ship about twenty, I reckon and there was half of that istet left. The oritter weighed close on to forty pounds, all solid meat. Ye wouldu'topen many of 'em in an hour. "The yarn? Wall, as I was sayin. Gillis was one o' these speculatin chaps, always lookin' for tho main chance, swappin' knives, clothes, any thin' to make a cent, and cute as they make 'em; so when the ship struck the Hoss latitudes Gil was always on the lookout for curiosities, shells" and such, for to fetch home and sell. So, when the ship struck the Straits o' Sunda and kcni to, off he goes with a couple o' niggers what came aboard to git coral and thiugs. Wall, they was wadin' along, as Gil said, haulin' the canoe after 'cm aud picktn' up chunks of coral and conchs and such, and all to once Gil see what looked like a flower, all pink and yellow, aud not knowin' what it was, up he goes and glvo it a kick with his foot. The next minute ho felt somethiu' close over his foot like a vise, and was gripped as if he'd took root, aud lookin' down he see his foot nipped in one of these ere shells. Pull and haul every way he would he couldn't move, and they couldn't got at the critter, as it was burled in the coral and the tide 011 the Hood; it rises about six feet iu that country. Wall, they thumped the critter with the oars and hauled away for awhile, till to tut puppus, andcurtis enough, Gil had left his knife aboard, .and the only thiug to do was to go for it. So off one of the coons started for the bark, and she a lyiu' two miles away. The other chap stood by Gil iu case he gev out; and there they was, the tide a risin every minute, but iu about three-quarters of au hour the ship's cutler came along. The boys gev Gil a cheer that kind it' bracedhim up, and the skipper had scut his grog. Overboard jumps the mate with one o' these ere spades they use iu whalin', and in about a minute the crit ter was all cut up aud Gil was yanked aboard; but I'll be dogged if the water wasn't most up to his chin. The next day they went at low tide and . got out the critter's shell; and that's the yarn, and there's the shell,' said tho .skipper, in conclusion. Philadelphia Time.. Jack, The Pet JavellH. Jack was fouud iu the wood near Lytle Station, ou the International, south of San Antonio, by Mr Y. M. .McDaniel, some time last summer, and presntod by that gentleman to Mr. K. S. Bellamy, agent tor the International at that station. It was supposed to be about three weeks old when caught. I will keep ou in suspense no longer; the Hon. .lack is neither more nor less than a javelin oryouug wild hog. Mr. Bellamy had the curiosity and the pa tienee to try his training skill on him. and on applieat'ou he found him au apt scholar, lie persevered, and at the end of one month not onlv was in an elli cieut body guard by da. but a l'ailhtul sentinel by niirlit. Mr. Heilann is a very active s'lid accommodating ubit tie man, aud has been a long time in the company's employ, yet iu his varied duties v 011 will find Jack at his heels and he will allow no one to come be tween him aud his body, When seated at the desk he lies dowu at Mr. H.'s feet, aud will allow no one to touch h'm. At night Jaek follows Mr. It. to his bedside, and if he cannot manage bv Mealth or nthi-nv to gel into the bed, he wili lie down be-idelhe bed and there remain ttiiet until morn ing, unless some intruder enters the room, wheu he will dart at him with all the fero -itv of his wild nature. Few who intrude on him unwittingly once never wish to try their hand a second time, yet if not molested he is perfectly gentle. At the table he stands at his master's side and receives a portion of anything he eats, and he is not particu lar what it is. He is a veritable tip pler, aud likes his whisky and beer and atry other slroug driuk." After drink ing whisky he will smack his lips and give signs for more. Any person who has ever seen a javelincau imagino what a graceful figure he cuts with his unshapely body with the whisky glass in his mouth. But a short time ago three coyptes came ou the platform at the station in the middle of the night. Jack jumped up and stood between his master and the coyotes, and kept them at bay until one of'the transportation men woke up and asked what was the matter. Mr. B. said it was only coyotes; that Jack would take care" of them, and rolled over and went to sleep again One day later Jack got up into the bed beside the baby. He licked its face and then laid down beside it aud kept the flies oil. Jack has got mam tricks, but the most important thing that strikes the observer is tbestroug attachment he has for his master. San Antonia (Teas.) Light In twenty-two years ended with 188'.', Massachusetts "had 170 murder trials and,lti hangings; in thirty yean ended wit'i lbS$ Cojuecticut "had:97 murder trials and 7 hangings; in four years, ended with 1877, NewYorkCij had 185 hcoucides iud 4 executions. , ". Times. QUICKSILVER. rra1la riwaatlln f Ma awgt fafcf Art aatf jBcten . . ;Thsaad oicaWs mineral is becoming qnit an important element ' in the arts and sciences, but its real raltie is realized fully in tho process, of extracting the noble metals from the baser sorts, and lowr grade ores can be profitably worked with the quick silver process that would hardly pay to work the old-fashioned way. A sheet of gold foil dropped into quick silver disappears nearly as quick as a suow-flake dropping on a warm stove or boiler. It has tbe power of separat ing, or, of readily dissolving, those re fractory metals 'which are not acted upoti by the most powerful acids. Awa v out among the forest fastnesses of the Western uiouutains immense Quan tities are used by the miners. They pour it into their" machines in which is placed the finely-pulverized low-grade ores, and though the particles of noblo metal are so small us to be impercepti ble to the. naked eye, yet this liquid will search it bnt and carry it away with itself in the- form of amalgam. Another very peculiar property pos sessed by the substance isjta power of reproducing itself,, or, in other words, no matter how many .tiies used if by any means it-cau" W' reclaimed and subsequently purified, it can be used over and oyer again. To do this the niineni distill the mass, volatilizing the quicksilver, leaving the gold or stiver as a residue, both dist'Mato and residue being in a state of virgin purity. In the mining, preparation, and han dling of quicksilver many lives have to lie lost. First, the men "who work at the tuiueti soon become salivated and paralyzed, followed by the loss of teeth aud incitements of the head and jaw. A man in the last stages of saliva tion, as it Is called there, is the most pitiable sight we ever beheld, and he often lingers in this condition weeks aad iven months before death relieves him, cure being out of question. Horses can not st and to work in it scarcely at all. mules being generally used; these after a few months begin to lose their teeth, and after a time the hoots, followed by diseased bones throughout. We saw at one. lime a mule working about the mine, lose its entire lower jaw: dropped out while at work. With those who work with quicksil ver in a small way, many amusing thiugs occur. A few days ago an in quisitive old lady was in the labora tory, aud seeing a small bit of chamois leather lying on the floor she picked it up and afterward wrapped her gold specs in it. The next morning meet ing us on the ferry she very woefully informed us that her specs had melted, and so they had; all the gold had been absorbed by the mercury contained iu the leather, which was a discarded filler. Iu using quicksilver, great care should be exercised to keep it from coming in contact with auy jewelry, watches, etc., foy as sure as itdoes the gold will all disappear, Care should be taken not to iuhalu it aud none should use it save those who know something of its na ture. Midland Industrial Gazette. CHANCE LITERATURE. ---- How Uom f tho SraUst Discoveries IIae ttecu Maul. Many of the greatest discoveries in the era of the revival of learning were characterized' by the merest chance. Cicero's important treatise, "Le Re publieti," was discovered concealed beneath some monastic writing. Part of Livy was found between the leaves of a Bible, aud a missing page in a bat tledore. Quintilliau was picked out of an oltl coffer full of rubbish. The one copy of Tacitus which survived the gent-rat" destruction of Roman libraries was fouud in a WestphaHtu monastery. An original Magna Cbarta, with all its seals and signatures, was fouud by Cotton about to' be cut up by a laiio'r into measures. Thurloe's slate papers till out of a exiling in Lincoln's Intv Many of Lady Montague's letters were discovered by Disraeli iu the office of an attorney, where they might have re mained till this day but for the chance i-it of the great bibliophile. A d un doubtedly mauy huudivds of rare book aud manuscript-s and papers lie hidden away in the presses aud cup boards of old manor houses, whence gradually they may be dragged into the light of the day. to be destroyed or to awaken universal iuterest. No or.. could have read without emotion ' the poor fellows who made up tli struggling remnant of thii Grech .-, peditiou read with avidity the newspa per wrappings of the lemons they ate. Vet, wheu we recall occasions in our own lives when we have been absolute ly dependent upon our own resources for means wherewith to kill time, we can appreciate it. Toward the close of a long voyage, even under modem lux urious conditions, the humblest of chance literature is greedily seized upon; the odd volume of a novel, the mangled remains of a book of poems, a tile of very old newspapers -anything, in fact," which is printed means the dteppsa! of otherwise dreary, mo notonous hours. Subjects in "which hitherto we have not taken the smallest iuterest become fascinating; we learu to love a detested author, we skip not a word, and it may be said that many a man has developed a new taste or ac quired a new hobby-horse from the perusal of chance literature under such circumstances. Hence we find that set-skippers are so often well in toriued on many subjects outside their profession; that lighthouse keepers are sometimes scientific men and linguists: that turnpike keepers are often men of no mean attainments. London Ulobt. Colonial Fishing Grounds. The number, variety and extent of the Ushing grounds with which the en tire seaboard of the colony has been endowed, all lviug within a verv mod erato distance of Port Jackson, New South Wales, afford the strongest en couragementto the inhabitants of the whole colpuy, who may hope to see the markets supplied with finh in a mauner and upon a system consonant with the requirements of the commu nity. In New South Wales the fish most adapted for food purposes do not yet require to be searched for in large smacks or fishing vessels, victualled and equipped for a cruise of several months; neither is it necessary for the fishermen to make voyages to fishing grounds distant hundreds of miles from home. The best fish are very rarely met with more than ten miles off the coast, or in deeper water than thirty-live fathoms. Tbe schnapper, which for economic purposes may be ranked with the cod of the northern hemisphere, appears to ba distributed with remarkable regularity along the whole extent of the seaboard that is to say, over about 600miles; and what ever the formation or character of the coast may be, this fish, the most val uable of "all kinds, and perhaps the most abundant, is never absent, and being essentially a rock fob In its hab its, is not migratory: and tbe same may be said of its congener the bream, and, in a lesser degree, of the flathead, whiting, blacktish, tailors, tarwine, garfish ami other varieties which frequent the bays aud estuaries of harbors aud lakes, rather than the eeau depths, Some of these fisb are, no doubt, not to be found throughout the year hi their iMiiai haunts, but they mav be' I related for all practical uuv poses as regulai inhabitants of the col onial nsfunjf ground. Lonaon , -- -- A lion I Orage.irci. The Agricultural ! arisen) at Washington has a good rim 1 hot-hoas. devoted entirely to the cult valto of orange and ie:r.oii trees. There is ivt much us for any one to apnly for an oration or lemon ir: who !ivs no! live is the orange-grow ng s- '. Tl i; :. perimeutal nursery is sns-nLirncd for the b'n.'iit ol" tiie pra .-tic il growers ol citrus truits, niost ot wlumi l.vc in Cal ifornia and Flor.da. 'f every person who wants an ora-igc tree f r a Hot house ornament was to beratitiVd, ih-j depa tmcut would htvc togrca'l.y en large its .aciiii.j. for towing plante. The ob ect is to iritn.dub thu best va rieties of oraugej that grov iu auy part o the world n o tho rlorida aud'Cali foru'a orchard. Minn ng dow i the tu ddle of the hot house there is u bed caith. prob-iblv four feet wide, in wh.eh Sii.' !! o:a go trees arc gtow u. Thee may be twenty or more of thesa nv.s, and most of them are fifteen or tWetry t:i s old Constant prim 114 and c: tinjf his pre vented t em f:ont g owing tb the usual size, and the trunk of the largest, is not more than two in dies aud a ha f in di ameter. These trees re-re.setit the best rarieties of orange-', and once a year they boar fru-i. whic'i atte-ti the excel lence of the family of which each one belongs. The dipt in a m.i.xim. Kv ery tree is kuown bv in ru t." is the law of this etperimeu :tl i arden. ami such as do not bear go l fruit are sp edily torn up by the roots. Iu thu suui'i er the roof is taicen from thu hot I house, and na ore is allowed to have its own way. As soon as frost is threat ened the glass rof is put baHc iu its pliiL-c. aud t' any b an hes have pushed t e r way above tue. r.'dg.qmle they are ut oJ', io that no tree ever gets to ho nioTH than four ee i feet high." Orange is ees iu lorida grow to a height of foity feet iu twonty-live years. One tree has bin kn.jwu to produce a crop of ID.?) -o oranges in a single seasoti. The prh-t; of orau.es ut the orchards Is about ne cent apiec , so that this ireti r.Jitirhi it- owner 50 a year. Not mauy trees are o pndi lie. but au or ange groe within ca- reach of rail road traii-portatiou is a very Iu -:at"tvo piece of pnperiy. Although the ora:ge is mote apl to re j.oducc trom the see i :he ilistiiietive iitia t es of thu v-srielv to which it be longs .hau any other fru I. -ometimes it does ttot heme the departm.-ut docs not rsk the g ow tig of good oranges fro'ii the need Ali thu little trees are gralta from the big tree in ilio hot house. . ceds are put iu pots, aud when the plant that springs the efrotu e:s large enough a shoot from t'ie b. tree '- gr t'ted itilo i Wheu it arrives a U.r ug :tee it producs the fruit of the bgtree." 'I he e grafted plants irrow ery slowly in pots, aud at three years o. age they are nothing but switches. When planted out in suitable soil they grow much more rapidly, but at best the oiange tree is of very slow trr -wt'i. It vs this circumstance thai wrecks the prospects of so mauy people ho go to Florida expecting to make moticy frcni au orange orchard. .After they plant their orchard they must wait al.-out twelve years before it comes into good bearing. It i not Mirpri-ing that thos-- who are past m ddle l le get tiled waitn for a return lor their iuves. tnent. Aged people should only plai.t oraue grov s for their ch.l run. 'I ii. ttes are hard and live a long time. It is s-iid thai there are orange ir es st It produc'ug fru t that are over UO yeais old. This may be an exaggeration. A y uth, however, whoss parents have planted au orange orchard for htm is l.keh to continue to eal of the ruit through hLs wh de life, even if it bo pro longed through the four score 3 ears al'ottcd to man. There is au impression iu the North that Florida produces a variety ot oranges which diners from the oran'e of other cou trie?. Wheu people ii.sk for Florida orange--, and are given oranges that were grown in t .at Stale, they are .-a'i.stied. and if the fruit turns out'to be so r or wootL' iu its structure they presume that it has Imvii pulled before il Has ipe. ami make uo com plaint about iu Now as a ma ter of fact, the.e a v almost as an varicte- of oranges as of apples, and prett. nearly all tu-j varieties are gtowu in lorida. Some are delicious and ome are very bad. The pauiards bro.iht the orange to Florida more than .' o years a ;o, aud probably for oears nothing was done t improve the s'oek. There is a great teudeucy iu a!l It-nils w' e 1 grown from the seed to run back iuto wil iness, and the Florida ota.igu su ered g.-eat'y from this deteriora.ion. The b. ids arr;ed the seeds abo t, and the wild, sour oranges that grow in the swamps are the I gitiinate descendants of the good orangs of a couple o; ce.i t tiros ao. a good main sour and bitter oranges of the o d stou are .still sent to the iNorlh, mid liml pur -baser because they tome f:om Florda. When Mr. William Saunders, itoeriu tendeut of CarJeus and rounds of th Agricultural I epartmetit. was on the west coast of ! lorida. last winter a year, he was told at 'lampa that the Very beat orauges grew at Mauitee. vt hen the I oat arrived at Manitee a man came ou hoard with a basket of oranges, and Mr. auuders bought a ttoeu. Af'er tasting four or live, and finding them bitter and sour, he threw them all iuto the water. The huckster had evideutly got hold of a very bad variety of the native orange. The le.st oranges that grow in r lorida have been inU'odu. ed there since the war, 'Ihe Agricultural I'epartmeut gets orange trees from all the orange-growing countries in the world, aad piopa fates those that seem to bear good fruit. The be-t orange tree in the h -t-hunsp, came from Bah'a, Brazil. 'l- truil it lueditim-sied. thin-skinned, ot ! olden color, autl delicious llavor Many hundred shoots from this tre have hcu grafted into plants aud sent to ( alifo-.ni.t aud l-lorida. and from these whole orciianls have been pro duced by budding and grafting. In alifornia particutaily this orange has obtained the h'ghe-t reputation, ami il has taken the premium at all the faiia where citrus fruits have been exhibited. Another very .o it orauge is the St. Michael's, a variety that is hijrhly prized iu I ondon. It seems to grow better iu Florida than in the tr 'pics. The I-lorida winter gives the rest lhat all fniit trees ought to have. I y far the larger number of the orange trees aud plants in the collection of the Ag ricultural Department were obtained in July. The orange takes nearly the whole year to mature. The trees blossom in February, and the pulling of the fruit begins in November aud continues through Decembor. The fruit does not drop readily, aud will remain on the branches during the whole wiuter. It ought to be taken off, however, when it is fully ripe. The trees in the hot house f the Agricultural Department bserfe about the same order that they ib in Florida. They were iu blossom in February and the oranges arc now as large as" the marbles which bovs call 'conimoneys." Oranges that grow iu hot-houses are as good or even better than those that grow in tbe open orchard, provided the temperature is Eroperly managed. They must not ave too luuch moisture wljen ripeuing. The sarae may be said of grapes and pineapples. Washington National lie publieun. irteslan well in New York City, bova that the East River underflow tha bland- In tbe deep wells lately sunk the'water ebbs and flows with the tide. .V. r. Sun. a . i . . Mildew may be removed by dip ping the stained parts into butterailK. and putting tkeu in the son. C7ta tend Xsodsr. ON BOARD A MGTJAlt BOAT EXPERIENCE WHILE BOMBARDING FORT JACKSON. Tcrrllilr ltn ami Coiicnwiott of Mortar Firing ' Slilphoaartt A !" DmruIso. Destructive Work A Most Miraculous Escape. Oiw or the preliminary movements for the lwage of thu forte ifcft"ndi3 New Orleans was the bringing up and placing of i'orter a mortar (loot where it could shell the fortj. Tho utinibcr of tbevj mortar boat3 was an eveu twenty, and they were diviiled into three divisions, cadi division having a sep arate commander r.nl bein,'; located by itself. : For several days before the mortars got to i work tho coast survey men were bu-ty buoy ' tug out xieilioiis and calculal iug Owtancca, aud tho wonderful work accomplished by tlietti was tbe wonder of at least tho rank and tile of tho flei'l. The distance to each fort whs so accurately estimated by triatigu j lation that tho very first shell killed one mau and wounded another iiiM.le the works. Thu division to which 1 was attached was j anchored closo to the bunk of tho river, with a strip of woods haVT a tnilo wida between us mid the forts. UVyoud tho woods was a j wide iiiursh, uiid our proper distance from I the nearest work was :i,OUO feet. Tho other fort (St. Phillip) vva- about 000 yards further j away, ltisainntter of history that our masts were trimmed with bullies where tboy i V showed nlovc tho trees, so us to bliud tho gunners "t- the forts. 1 was one of the detail of men ;vh cariicd out this movement, aud queer enough our schooners looked when tho worl; was completed. Our proper masts seemed to have lieen replaced by trees taken from thu shore. Hut fow of us had had any experieuce with mortars, aud tho com mander of each vessel issued instructions, which we followed with benefit. Few men, eveu tuo-o Ijeiongin;; to tho artillery service, have any idea or the. terrible din and con cu&iou of mortar Ih ine, ou shipboard. Ou land much of the din secuis to be absorbed by the solid ground, but ou board a vesuel you feel it all. Some of the men. on our schooner who iiejjieeted the precaution of holding a bit of soft wood in their teeth hit their tongues iu a bad way. We bad our, ears stutfV.1 with cotton, und each timo tho mortar was tired ewry mau ioe on hut tip toes. I)i-Miit thcsi precautious many minor accidents Impelled, and nothing could pre vent Us front feeling aud hearing a good thare of the terrible din. After the lleet got to liring regularly the 1 oar ih heard ilfty miles at sea, aud envkery was rattled ahout on pantry shelves iu hoa-.es twenty-flve miles distant. We tired about once in every seven or eight minutes and this kept eight or nine shells ia the air all the time. At each discharge the boat heeled over as if sho had struck a heavy nea, and had scarcely conio back to a level keel n hen we were ready torceat the 0era tion. The strain ou planks and timbers was tremendous. After we had tired tho fifth shot we had to set the piuiis going, and .some of the great spike were started half an inch. Had we lieen aground the bottom of the schooner would have leen driven out at the first fire. While the entire fleet came in for the din, the crews of tho mortars of course suffered most. After the first day's firms, which ceased at sunset, tho stillness was almost as much of a st ntin ou our nerves as tho noise had Ikvii. ami it was hours lie fore we could go to sleep. It must not lie supjiosed that all tho fun was ou onr idc. After our third shot tho Confederates opened on us- from ii number of heavy guns. While they could not see u- on ac-uanl "f Ihe fore-t, the;, know our jiositions, and after a little shot and shell be gan to fall around u.. Ins-ido of one hour I counted eight shells which fell within r.'OO feet of our schooner, and the bursting of some of them threw wuter 011 our decks. Dur ing the first day we hail a dozen missile pass direct I over tis, culling a few iohs, and I witnessed several accidents aboard of o(hr esseN lying ahead and liehiud us. The de structive work of the Confederate tire wan. howeer, more plainly seen when tho big I'-l) pour.d -.hells fell into the forest which protected us. The soil was soft and spongy, being subject to periodical overflows, asid when the great shells sunk into this earth and exploded they would throw mud and water over the tree tops and leave a crater large enough to take iu a hou.se. Scores of great trees w-re uprooted bv these explosions, and the shells which exploded in the tops of others created far more havoc than the angriest bolts of lightning ever hurled from Jove's liaud. We planted over 1,:!H) bombs inside the two forts on that first day, burning tho cita del and everything else which would burn in Fort Jackron. driving most of the men to shelter and damaging tho magazine so that it could not Ihj entered during tho night. Outside of thirty or forty shells which ex plodid in the air. owing to bad fuses, not more than u dozen out of tho great iiuinlr fired fell outsido of the works. We fired entirely at Fort Jaeksou, which was a mile and a half away. We opened fire again at daylight ou the second ih-y, and the reply from the forts was just as vigorous, although we knew the enemy had suffered a great deal and must be eouid-jrably demoralized. About mid forenoon, jiiit as wo were ready to fill our mortar for the fifteenth time since opening, a great rifie shell, which I plainly saw before it fell, and took to lie a bird of some sort, descended upon our deck with an awful crash. It disappeared through the heavy planks as if they had Ucii in(ier, passed down through the magazine with its dangerous contents, aud ou down through the bottom of the schooner and into the mud of tho river bed. The fuse was burning brightly when it struck the deck, and the men saw a trail of sparka as it paved through tbe magazine. In a mo ment it was known that we were sinking, but the craft around us hastened alongside aud helped to remove most of the stores before she went down. That tho shell struck with out killing auy of us was considered miracu lous. That it passed through the magazine without exploding it was one of those unac countable thiugs in war which admit of no discussion. Carrington Smith in Detroit Free Press. Other Big Named Men. Secretary Lucius Quiutus Cincinnatus La mar is not the only big named man in tbe de partment of the interior. There are also Lucius Quiutus Ciuciunatu Lamar, Jr., pri vate secretary; William Andrew Jackson Sparks. land commissioner; Martin Van Huron Montgomery, patents commissioner; John DcWitt Clinton Atkins, Indian affairs commissioner; Nathaniel Harrison Randolph Dawson, education commissioner; aud John James Jones Scipio Hassler, appointment clerk. Chicago Tribune, Forgot Illmaelf. Professor (who told tho young men to bring In au essay on an original subject) Well, Mr. Saunders, what have you, got t onlay? Collegian (who spent the summer as a waiter atone of the mountain hotels) Erroait beef, roast pork, fish and corn beef hash. TulBitL European Education of Girls. The system carried out in Vienna for educating girls is entirely worthy of notice. They are kept at their studies until they are 15 'ears of age. Then they go through a course of leaching in the pantry ami the kitchen under some member of the family, sometimes under trained cooks, for a year or two years. Thus they learn to do everything thera sclves and to kqow the value of thiugs long before they commence housekeep ing on their own account, aud though they may never be required to cook a dinuer, they become independent of cooks auu servants. Ihe Austrian worn en are most aflectiouate wives and mothers. They are accomplished as at English governess, are as witty in so ciety as a Parisian, and are among the most beautiful women iu Europe. Cor. in the Buffalo Courier. IS 11 Among the excellent pictures that have accompanied the advertisement of a certain soap was one of a doctor ad vising a patient to buy this soap. The other day an Albauy. N. Y-. physician bought a number of papers containing this picture, and explained that it was a perfect likeness in form and feature of a doctor who was bis tutor in the old country, and of whom there existed -no j6Xtrait. Cnckoo Clocks That Are Worthless. In bis report-on clock-making in the Black Forests. Consul Ballc.w has the following in regard to the clocks the Americans buy. aud how the travelers are sometimes fooled: "The United States takes trumpeter and cuckoo with painted dials, also many regula tors and musical clocks. The" exporta tion of those clocks to tbe United States is steady, and will aggregate $50,000 per year. During tbe summer months the Schwarzwald clock region is visited by many Americans, and nearly every visitor purchases one .of these clocks. They are very attractive and appear to be cheap, but in many cases they are made to be sold onlyand an attractive exterior may induce many to purchase an almost worthless article. One can not be too particular when purchasing one of these clocks, for when the cuckoo will pot coo any more aud the trum peter will not blow another blast, then is their value as curiosities gone, and when, after a few months, they become valueless as time-keepers, then are they very poor stock indeed. I have heard so many complaints from people who have purchased these clocks in regard to their general poor quality that I deem it my duty to make this fact public, and also to inform would-Ihj purchasers that, if they wish to avoid disappoint ment, they'should be very particular where and of whom they purchase, and in no case to purchase ot irresponsible Sarties. A few inquiries will generally isclose the required facts. Baltimore American. Mexican Carts. One seldom sees a four-wheeled wag on anywhere in Mexico. The carts are ponderous vehicles, each with two enor mous wheels of solid wood, which look of themselves a sufficient load for any pair of animals. Iron, you know, is a greater rarity there than silver, and the import duty on such articles of foreign manufacture has hecu not less than $10 per wheel. The carts are usually pro pelled by several lean, oxen driven four abreast, three abreast, tandem, haphazard and always with heavy wooden yokes fasteued" upon their fore heads by ropes around the horns. The poor creatures' heads are thus bowed nearly to the ground by the weight of wood upon them, and their eyes wear a look of suflering pitiable to behold. The driver amuses uimself constantly prod ding them with a sharp iron spear stuck into the end of a long pole; and not in frequently a boy is employed to run alonside carrying a bag of stones with which he continually pelts them both driver and boy keeping up an incessant racket of psth! pstb! a harsh sort of hissing sound which to Mexican beasts of burden signifies all the gees, haws, and "swear words" kuown to other cattle. A Boy's Essay on Cats. Cats, unlike the other insects, don't have no stingers. The bumbelbee has. I onc't cauzht a bumbelbee, an1 give it to a cat Cuts don't like bees, espeshly them that has splinters in their talzes, which this had. The thing stung all the way down, and half-way back again; that cat run about seventeen miles, an' then dropped down by the shuddy side of a haystack and quickly, without warnin', he hastily died a sud den death till nt once," for want o breath. Ouct wheu Jack an1 me was playiu' nshin' iu our well with a tom-cat tied to a string. Jack got hurt. He had the cat down in the well, waitiu' fur a bite, an' when his back was turned It crawled up the brick curb an' clawed the sap outen him. After that Jack didn't fule with cats. I once kuuw a man who was wicked enough to throw a Move ltd through a big tom-cat at night, and the very next day he heard that his grandmother had broken her leg iu New Orleans and several other places, which proves how wicked and sinful it is to disturb the critters; aud that's all 1 know about cats. A Judicial Miracle. Two Chinese women claiming to be mother and daughter were brought be fore Judge Hotlhian on halicns corpus Tuesday iu San Francisco. The elder claimed to be a former resident, the younger to be a native born. The Judge remanded the mother, implying a doubt in his mind as to her former residence, but admitted the daughter. How a child could be born in a country in which her mother never resided is what now bothers medico-jurists or judicial medicos; but that such things may happen has now been legally decided. The Judge's decision may be founded upon tbe claim of the Irishman to have been a native of Dublin, al though he admitted having been burn in Cork; he happened to be stopping in Cork at the time, but belonged to Dub lin! There are those, however, who im agine that the circumstance of a Chinese girl of 17 being worth about ten time as much as a Chinese woman of -10 or 50 hud something to do with the de cision. All such persons should be hauled up for contempt of court. Sun Jose (Cat,) Tiiifs. The Seon-li Girl. These Scotch people are very line looking, aud their faces have" great strength of feature and at the same time much refinement. The Scotch girls are exceptionally fine looking, and even among the lower classes you see very many refined faces. In filestores there are lady clerks who would pass muster as well-bred girls anywhere, and many of the bar-maids in " the whisky-shop's are beauties. The women of Scotland do a great deal of work. A white-capped, middle-aged, rosy-cheeked lady usually preside; over each of the largest hotels, and nearly all of the railway restaurants are managed by women. Both sexes in Scotland have," as a rule, good, healthy physiques. There are more tnll men aiid women than in America. They have better complex ions, a more r.ctivo walk, and are, as a rule, stronger and healthier. Edin burgh Litter tu Cleveland Leader. In India the farmers' tools are of thu simplest kind. The plow is a triangular piece of board. IS inches loug and six inches wide at the base, aud simply roots the ground. The yoke for the bullocks is a straight stick and is at tached to the beam of the plow by a grass cord. The cattle :ire the Brahmi ui species white, slender-bodied, long logged and very lean. The only food of tne cattle for months is "choosa," which is the wheat straw and chafl from the threshing floor. They cost about 1 to 4 per pair, and tho plow costs about Is d, The land is plowed at least ten times, and frequently thirty, as tbe plow scratches the soil only. The barrow is a log or slab of wood G or 8 feet long, drawn sideways across the Geld to scratch the lumps." 1 1 m She Wouldn't be Ruled. "Clara, I don't think much of that young Slobkins who keeps coming around here," said an old gentleman to Uis daughter. -DonHyou, pa??" "No, I don't. Why, ho smokes cigar ettes and drinks soda-water." Ves, I know it pa." "Aud be wears collars that come up to his ears, aud carries a Na 17 cane, and spends bis evenings at a club." "Yes, so I understand. By tbe way, I have promised Mr. Slobkins that I would, marry him this fall." "Wha-a-at?" "Yes, pa; I have always had my mind made up that I would never be rued by any mn." Merchant Traveler. thi: CHICAGO SHORT LIE OF Till Mil MHe ill St. Fan! Railway. ; THE BEST ROUTE From OMAHA and COUNCIL BLUFFS TO THE EAST. Tws Tnist .S1U7 tatwiti OniSi. Ccm:U BIsIj, Chicago, and- Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Cedar Rapids, uiinion, uuDuque. Davenport, Rock Island, Freeport, Rockford, Elgin. Madison, Janesville, Beloit, Winona, La Crosse. And all other Important l'oint Knst, Northeast aud Southeast. For through tickets call on the Ticket Ageut at Colutnbui, Nebraska. Pullman Slckpkrs and the Fi.mcst Dinim; Oaks in the World an- run ou the main lines of the Chirta&o. Mil waabte Sc St. Piaaal Ry, und every attention is pnid to pn-seucrs by cour teous employe of tbe Company. K. Miller A. V. II. Ctarpraater, General 31 an 151-r. flcn'l I'asa. Ag't. J. V. Taacker. Uee. H. Ueataterd. Asi't (l0B'l Mau. Ass't 1'asM. A't. , J. T. :iark, (ten'l Sup't. Feb. 17-1 LOUIS SCBKEIBEK. 11 All kimls ef Kepaiiiu done Short Xotif'e. Buggies, Va oils, etc., made to order, and all work Guar anteed. till Also sell the world-famous Walter A. Wood Mowers. Eeapers, Combin ed Machines, Harvesters, and Self-binders -the best made. 'Shop opposite the "Tattersall.' ou Olive St. COLUMBUS. -tf-ni TRASKS SELECTED SHORE ipest Eating on Earth rTTKT GKOCEK VOX THEM. THKOUKMNALam! ONLY OaTNUINC! Take no other PATENTS CAVEATS, TKADE MARKS AM COPYKICDTS Obtained, and all other business iu the U.S. Patent Office attended to for MOD ERATE FEES. Our office i opposite tun t'.S. Patent Office, and V can obtain Patents in leas time than those remote from WASHING TON. Send MODEL OU DRAWINC. We advise as to patentability free of charjre: and we make NO CHARGE US LESS WE OBTAIN PATENT. We refer bere to the Postmaster, the Supt. of Money Order Div., anil to offi cials of the I'. S. Patent Office. For cir culars', advice, terms and reference to actual clients in your own State or countv, write to V. A. NftOW Si. CO.. Oppnaite Patent Office, Washington, !.('. THE Chicago Herald AND COLUMBUS JOUKNAL. The COI.IJJIIIi;. JOIlK.t'Al.. once a week, and the Chirayo Herald, onee a dav, for one vear, .&. The JOUKTHAI. and the Wilti Herald, one year, 94.73. Aildrex-, M. K. Tt'KNKi: A- l'o.. l'.'inav.I-x Columbux, Nebr. TTpT Xfor working people. Send 10 rl III 1 1 1 i'tHl" postage, and we will - ' ' mail yon free, a loyal, val uable bample box of goods that "will put you in the way of making more money in a few days than you ever thought pos sible at any business. Capital not re quired. You can live at home and work in spare time only, or all the time. All of both ae.xes, of all ages, grandly suc cessful, oi) cents to $" easily earned every evening. That all who want work may test the business, we make this un paralleled offer: To all who are not well satisfied we will seuil il to pay for the trouble of writing us. Full particulars, directions, etc, nent free. Immense pay absolutely sure for all who start at once. Don't delay. Address Stinson .t Co., Portland. Maine. OMAHA WEEKLY REPUBLICAN CLL'liltlXG KATES. HKKKAFTrcit we will furnish to both our old and netc subscribers, the Omaha Weekly Reiublicaj3Md Jour nal at the very low rate of JJ5C.73 per year, thus pbteniir within the reach of all thi" best "tate am! colli. ty weeklies pub lirhcd. givitg the reader the condensed, general aud foreign telegraphic aud state news of the week. Try for a year and be satisfied. niayS'Wl-tf Newspaper . AbookoflOOpsgeg. . The best book for an advertiser to con- jsuir, be he experl- Ijkfisxwl s"fc ntliorwiaA flEKBTOIHCi It contains lUts of newspapers and estimate.- twwv stress ttrei-flal ncr T i h ml virtf Mr wlm of thecost of advertising, the advert Iserwho wants to spend one dollar. Amis ia it the In formation lie requires, wmieiorniui wno win invest one hundred thousand dollars in ad- vertlaing. a scheme is indicated which will meet his every requirement, or a suxe to do to by slight changes tmilji nrrlrtdiit by cof respoiulrnre. 149 editions have been Issued. Sent. pot-paid. to any address for 10 cents. Write ta GEO. P. HOWELL CO., KKWSPAPEK ADVERTISING BUREAU. UOSpruceajt-Priuting House ijq.), New York. U OBXlatnPkinUalBklk etCB,Xwspsear Adrer tlsliig Ageacy of Uemn. AY l,CBrsiiTinuTen sgaTTTi, BlacksfflitQ aQQ Waaon Maker BpH iSstoaaa. UZi&JiM Chei in iwnnwt SLaWi FREE LAND! -VOK- FAKMEKS & STOCKMEN Just beyond th Nebraska line on the i'latte Kivcr. The Country is Wonderfully Productive. o (heap Laids fur sale in the vicinity of the livelv tewa ef Sterling. Grand Openings for all kinds of Bnsi neat. Present population of Town 500. 2r."end Tor circular to PACKARD & KIIO, '.SS-y Sterling, Weld Co., Colorado. ESTABLISHED IN I860. -THK- U'ASHINMII'OX, 1. c. Dully, except Sutnl.-t.vs. Price, $tf.0) per year In advance, postage iroi'. THK WEEKLY 1AT10IAL niMI. Devoted in general news and original mutter obtained from the Department of Agriculture nna other Department ot tlif Government, relating to the friulu nnd planting intc reifs. An Advocate of Republican principles. tr it-win;; iVaileH-ly and fnirl the net of i'mii;rr autl the National 'Adminis tration Price, $1.ini per year in advance, potat;e free. 'E. W. FO President and Manager." The National Rkpubucau and the ( oi.tTMBU3 Journal. 1 year, $2.S0. 32-x Cures Guaranteed! 1 t utc. wakdi 0 arncinc wo. 1. A Certain Cure Air Nervou-. Debility, I Seminal Weakness, Involuntary Kiuis I mious, Speniiatorrun-a, aud all iliie.-i.-ei of the gcntto-urinary organ-. caued by self abu.se or over indulgence. Price. $1 on per box. m'x boxes $.1.00. DR. WARNS SPECIFIC No. 2. I For Epileptic Fits, vental Auxietv". NATIONAL REPOBUCAN Loss of .Memory, Softening of the Rraiu. and all those diseases of the brain. Prlu $1.00 per box, six boxes $.1.00. DR. WARNS SPECIFIC No. 3. For Impotence, Sterility in either so. Loss of Power, premature'old age. and all those diseases requiring a thorough in vigorating of the nextiiil organ-.. Price ?'J.0U per box, six boxes $10.00. DR. WARM'S SPECIFIC No. 4. For Headache, Nervou- Neuralgia, aud all acute dit-eases of the nervous system. N Price .10c per box, six boxes $i."H. , "C DR. WARNS SPECIFIC No. 5. For all diseases caused by the over-ue of tobacco or liijuor. This remedy is par ticularly efficacious in averting palsy ami delirium tremens. Price $1.00 per "'ox. six boxes $.1.00. We Guarantee a Cure, or agree to re fund double the money paid. C Tliiicate iu each box. This guarantee applie to each of our five Specifics. Scut by mall to auy address, secure from observation, on receipt of price. Be careful to mention the number of Specific wanted. Our Specifics are only recommended for spe cific diseases. Beware of remedies war runted to cure all these diseases with uuu medicine. To avoid counterfeits aud al wavs secure toe genuine, order only from DOWTV cma. DRUGGISTS, I'M Columbus, Neb. Health is Wealth! Da E. C. West's Nkute and Braix Tmut anorr, a guaiasteod specific for Hysteria. Diczi doss. Convulsions, Fits. Norvous. Neuralgia. Headache, Nervous Prostration caused bythausa of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness. JMental De pression. Softening of the Brain resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death. Prematura Old Ag. ilsxrcnness. Lom of powsc in either sex. Infolantary Losses and Bpormat orrhoea caused by over-oiertion of the brain, self -abuse or over-indulgence. Each, box contain one month's treatment. CT.09abox,oreixbozaa fur 13.00. sent by mail prepaidoa receipt of price;. WE GUAJIAXTF.E SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received bya for six boxes, accompanied with 9SJ00. w will seed the purchaser our written gnaraatee to re fund the money if the treatment doeanotetfect cure. Ousjantewa issued only by JOHN O. WEST & CO., M2 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO, ILLS., Sola Prop's West's Liver Pills. -2 ' ' z - -s a PI 5j3J2r -33gf:-na : 15 it. it --3 5 ' L5S- S. , - 2e '2 c COO PBS in presents iiven away. Send us " cents postage. lUUU and bv mail vou will sfet jree a package of goods of large value, '" imniiui, vuu iu wors mat win ai i-nce bring you in monev faster than any thing else in America". All about the $'.21)0,000 in presents with each box. Agents wanted everywhere, of either sex, of all ages, for all the time, or span time only, to work for us at their own homes. Fortunes for all workers ah solutcly assured. Don't delay. H. Hal lht & Co., Portland, 3Iaiue. S500 REWARD! WTwtUsTthaklwanl foraa ru.T LItotC ryn-TT-lB1fHiiriiln tnitlintlini. rimilfnnnni Twilim. a aaM nn with Wnt'i Vr(tUU Lim Fllli, whra U tftrw. uoaian mcuy complM wttft. Tb7fpanl7teM.BJ uw&U latin MUitectloo. BitrCamtmL Lrf boiM,is UialicS0(Ul,lSmti. frmUbytH duggau. Bmro UiwatMUulosi. nMteaau.a&cm4!rkr JOHN O. WEST CO, HI tWW. M4koa St. "TiIiSji w 1 1 1 mii.Migc pit acMII o A.llt'BJEI.E. A CO. DEAI.KKS IN Ras and Iron ! The highest market price paid for rags aud iron. Store in the lSubach Luilding," Olive st.. Columbus. Xeb. lG-tf COLO fields ara warra. but tboas abo witta (a -. 11.. ..w.,. mi !..., j,w.wnincm frra, foil lorormttiuo bout work which the . .Ia aul 1iA a Sa.t-m a l..a a-Ita "J - vaacuv UVUV,U1MUI VW - uiu uvui eJ vM fmt imj ruiv uew earned or$3i9 In Jay Eithrrr. yunof o!L Capital Dotrulretl. Yoaateslan! ftre. ThcwbiUrt atoocs afftSsbuIllslIw aura tkr au lltf Isa fiiatnrwai All I nssi. ."kS.t "ITTTTVT more money than at anything IW I else by taking an agency for" ,.a-J-, the best selling book out. Be- ginuers succeed grandly. None fsil. Terms free. Haismit Book Co., foil. land, M-Xco, 2-y VJH rS at I PaSMaPswgCiMaBlfLT.Xg'S a $90(1 nnn