M TiV"iHH .1 1 ---- . ai-3aa ML- .l-M-,J !.. J r,-,-i .,--. - 'Ixifaess" 4. ,'Vt''- "" -- il X -'4tf :5s-f ? V - - K '0 ,' V - V Ff- , ', - w Ln,ig rn ,iiirrim-ra. 5agftw.OS9qc33Haviii,i' iwiain1! .imri wra- Tc,MJjffn ii in AwWlr 3-.-.: vmb--"- S.'AjK.r-' fs 7 T-v ' ' . i -f .-: if OGEMS JOFj SWEETS; WHERE TONS OF CANDIES ARE MADE DAILY FOR DAINTY PALATES. t Visit to aFaeterjr'WBeTe Deft Fincersof Pretty Girls Pile Up Hills of Bon Boas and Mountains of Chocolate Grinding '' "lae Cocoa Bean. - y, , " 'TTitk fear and tremblimr. and afeeart i sarcaarged with , anxiety lest somebody BhfltiM see" him, a reporter nade his way into acahdy 'factory the other day. He 'took a slim legged dude along with him to swear to an alibi in case of need. A'door opened and shut, and the visitors found themselves in a room which at first sight might have been taken for a machine shoo. "Ponderous rwheek revolved noise lessly, and upon, every side great engines stretched and drew back their long steel arms, engaged upon some unknown but titanic talk. The odor of chocolate was well nigh overpowering. The reporter stepped forward to an enormous bowl of " polished copper and gaml into its depths. A 'strange sight greeted hi-, eyes. Within the interior of this great copper vessel revolved -two large mill stones, while a steel rake like implement, constantly hi motion, directed xa. river of rich brown chocolate so that it( flowed steadily under the wheels. It was extraordinary how this mighty torrent twisted in and out a great writhing boa constrictor struggling to escape. ""That .is tfie grinder," .remarked the uperintej"dont. . "That stuff Jn there js simply the crushed cocoa bean and sugar. It looks semi-liquid, of course, but that is because of the essential oil of the bean." Near the grinder stood a machine some - thing like a great co-fifes mill. The cocoa beans in their entirety were turned into a hopper, at the top and issued in the "form of a liquid into a largo vat beneath. Chocolate making is rather a complicated .process. The beats are first placed in a separator, which dries and assorts them. "Next thej- are roasted. Machine No. 3 cracks them, cleans them, throws out the shells a id the germ, and preserves the ker- nel. .After this the kernels are ground with .sugar; the "half made chocolate in heated in an oven, then passed through three finishing machines, and finally comes into the hands of pfetty young girls, who wrap it in silver foil and box it. In a small room well lighted and venti lated and scrupulously clean as, indeed, was the entire factory five men were at work. The- looked like a band of Brazilian plant ers who had "been lifted up bodily and set down in the middle -of a Canadian snow stormr'They were clothed from head to foot in' spotless cottou cotton coats, cotton aprons, cotton trousers, cotton blouses and cotton caps. A white powder drifting through the apartment liad settled on their mustaches and faces, to say nothing of their clothing. This powder was corn starch. Over a huge 'copper caldron, heated beneath by a coil of sinuous steam pipes leaned one of these queer white figures. In his handhc.held a gigantic spoon, and every now and then he stirred the contents of the great vessel vigorously. The reporter peered over the brink and saw a mass of miow white substance about the consistency of buttermilk. "Try some:-" queried the superintend ent, as he thrusts a ladle into the vat. It was marshmallow, but such marsh mallow! It took two ladlefuls to quiet the dude, and even then he looked longingly at i the copper as the party turned away. Through a narrow passag way past a cu rious machine which husked ulmonds and blanched them at the Yahj of 10,000 a min ute, und through a swinging door into fairy land. At four long tables sat forty girls, and every one of the forty was young and pretty, an J every one of them wore a natty little apron and a bewitching little white mull cap. It fairly took the dude's breath awav. Each cirl was armed with a ! Ivr. 4&fv. plated spoon with a lttog handle, and in '-front of each stood a tiny gas stove sur mounted by a tiny copper kettle. The ket tles shone brightly and so did the faces of the girls as they glanced up from their work. ' Each little can was about half full of colored paste. One girl had green paste, colored with pistachio nits; the next, paste of a violet hue; and besides, there were crushed straw berry paste, seal brown paste, sky blue paste, ydlow paste, and paste of every other imaginable shade. The walls of this grotto of the sirens were literally composed of candy. Tier after tie-of shelves were there, heaped as high as one could reach with tin slabs containing rows of parti colored IkuIkis. Another room, more pretty girls, more bonbons. Again another room containing three enormous vats, copper, as usual. Into each vat protruded an air pipe like the oae seen in the niarshiuaUow room. These cauldrons, however, were supported on au incline of "forty-five degrees, and so ar ranged that they revolved at great speed. Within each, hopping about literally like peas on a griddle, were 12. pounds of sugared almonds. Think of it! Next the cream room. Here stood huge vessels tilled with paste of all flavors. rasp berry, strawberry, chocolate, vanilla, pis tachio, goodness knows what else. These pastes serve for the various sorts of fine confectionary. There were also buckets of "crystal," a compound of sugar used for glazing. In this room men were shoveling 'cream," i.e., sugar, water and flavoring, t with wooden trowels as recklessly as if it . wasn't good to eat and as if young men " were not alive to jay $1 a pound for it. Another large room, and this time fifty girls, positive!- prettier, if that were possi ble, than the tut two galaxies. Each girl , rrasarinedwithaquegr little two-pronged .CJtojrk, aaajjefore each, was a kettle of choco- "iip ioEzVMalpsousod. them in the choco1csflHRHJBsbeni about in it, fished, them put again,. and placed them. on long tin slabs' to" dry. There were many more interesting .sights in the candy factory. 0 the packing department more girls, pretty of course, wrapped the bonbons in paper and the chocolates in foil, and stowed them away in neat boxes. Then there was a storekeeper's room, which smelled like a . grocer's shop with all the red herrings and soap and other ill smelling things relegated to the front sidewalk. In capacious cellars beneath the building were stored away in bins 12,000 bottles of fruit extracts, and these only represented the supply for one year. Then, too, there were the engine aponi and the carpenter's shop, and the chocolate storing rooms, and large marble slabs for cooling taffy, and 101 useful and interesting appliances. New York Star. PAINTING TREASURY NOTES. Why tbe Unite! State Treainry OSclals Object A Late Decision. The pastime of painting United States treasury notts has lately received a setback. A pointed hint has gone out from the treas ury department that if ieions of artistic taste want to test their skill in this liue they must not exhibit their wor in public This is the meaning of a decision by Solicitor He Cue, the full effect of which was not made plain iu tbe brief abstract, given out.. The decision was based on a New York case, where a facsimile of a tf-TTtet; painted on, ' wood was exhibited iu a well known saloon. A secret service agent suggested that the painting was tqp suggestive of counterfeit ing to be kept open to the public gaze and should be removed. Chief Brooks took substantially the same view. The owner of th? picture and the artist who painted it made affidavits that no vio lation of the law was intended, The solici tor of the treasuryaccepted this as a state' ment of the facts," but declared he could not sanction any encroachment upon the statute mmAc for the protection of United States securities. Sec. o,430, among other things, provides that "ever' person who prints, photographs, or in any other manner makes or executes, or causes to be printed, photo graphed, made or executed, or aids is print ing, photographing, making " executing any engraving, photograph, print or impres sion in the likeness of any such obligation or security, or any part thereof, shall be pun ished." "While under the circumstances tbe solicitor would not advise prosecution, -'gested quite plainly that the exercise N. ""-nt so callable of mischief should not -aged. The artist and the owner le panel painting of tbe, greenback 'iJCOO, bot "Chief Brooks estimated -jt 10or$15,- iSome time ago a . imilar painting by a Washing- v? Untaoit nublk: auction? but "V k solicitor of the treasury is made for the henefit of neonle who think there is na harm in makingjMibu'c exhibitions 61 these artistic rejweseHtafloBB of , ,;the raiiTency: J finmff Trv erarlrmnterfeit notes havebeeQ painted and passed for money by profes sional. This is the reason why the secret service thinks it necessary to check the efforts of amateurs, since their work might be too suggestive to those who have a talent iu that direction and might by such an exam- j pie be led into the unlawful exercise of their skill. Chicago Tribune. f "Backet Shop" Speculation. The grain and stock "bucket shop" busi ness is rapidly increasing in Chicago, and there are ten of tlrese blackboard concerns in the city to-day to one three years ago. Every prominent hotel, almost, rents a first floor room for this purpose, and the vicinity of the Board of Trade is alive with them. "Just now," said au imported New York operator to me, "the speculators are testing a new scheme to get ahead of the proprietors of the bucket shops, which isn't so new, either, for it is one that these pro prietor liave long been playing on their -trons. It consists in 'straddling' the market when it gets excited that Is, both .buying and selling a i.tock over night, arid by los ing one deal gaining enough "on the other to more than make up. :I4ue.iarticu3ir; slock dealt iu fluctuates -wildly, succefcj. generally follows, this scheme. , bat "the -way that one eastern proprietor, wKom T know intimately, gets evenwiththi and all other game played by his custom ers and grows nch out of them, is by him self creating wild Jfluciiatious so suddenly as to wipe out the margins put up on one side of the deals, and through some f reww out claa-e in his rules preventing immediate closing of deals between rapid quotation' the other side is left stranded, w ith no .tp preciable profit iu ir7 Why," adde-.I my ; informer, my friend is away stepping-into the main market mid arranging quotation by sieiliiis ?HM en :J00 in siil-Ii a wny a- to knock into hi", hands thrice that amount of margin which he -au see at a glance are backing some-particnlar stock." Chicago" Journal. Kmbarraulng Divination by Palmistry. The present rage for palmistry recalls an incident which occurred half a dozen years since at Bar Harbor. There were staying at one of the hotels a pretty young widow from Baltimore who was versed in the se crets of chiromancy, and a young Kentuck ian who was par excellence the lion of the season. The widow, for some reason or j other, had taken a whimsical dislike to the I popular southerner and hardly acknowl- edged an acquaintance with him; yet ho one day ventured to ask Jier to read his ' hand, as she had already' deciphered the palms of half the pciple in the house. The lady at first demurred, but at length think- , ing, as sho afterward explained, that it was simpler to do as she was asked than to con test the point, she requested the gentleman to show her his hand. Ho did so, and with an involuntary start of surprise, and a i frankness which was evidently genuine, she "Why, it is the hand of a thief!" As tlw interview took pUce upon the piazza in the presence of a group of board ers, the situation of the young man was a sufficiently awkward one, but he did not flinch. A the lady checked herself in evi dent confusion, he responded with the most 'perfect tact and self control: "Ah! Tliauk you. That suggests to me a means of making my way in the world that had never occurred to me; and since the war we southerners have to be on the look out for opportunities." HLs ready wit saved the situation, and he was more iopular tlian ever; but the inter est of the tale is tliat two or three days after he was discovered stealing the dia monds of a wealthy dowager, and although the matter was hushed up as much as possi ble for the sake of the hotel and the people who had introduced the Keutuckian, it somehow leaked out that the rogue was an old offender and a thief long known to the police of New York and Philadelphia. Bos ton Record. Uncolu as a "Military Hero." He never took hU campaigning seriously. The politicians' habit of glorifying the petty incidents of a candidate's life always seemed absurd to him, and in his speech, made in 1848, ridiculing the effort on the part of Gen. Cass' friends to draw some political advantage from that gentleman's respectful "jut obscure services on the frontier in the war with Great Britain, he estopped any fu ture eulogist from painting his own mili tary achievements iu too lively colors. "Do you know, Mr. Speaker," he said, "I am a military hero? In the dayr. of the Black Hawk war 1 fought, bled and came away. I was not at Millman s defeat, but 1 was about as near it as Gen. Ca.-s was to Hull's surrender, and like him. I saw the place very soon afterward. It Ls quite certain I did not break my sword, for I had none to break, but I lient my musket pretty badly on one occasion. If Gen. Cass went iu ad vance of me picking whortleberries, I guess Isurpassced him in charges on .the wild onions. If he saw- any live fighting Indians it was more than I did, but I had a good many bloody struggles with the mos quitoes; and although I never fainted froni loss of blood, I can trnly say 1 was often very hungry. Mr. Sjieaker, if ever I should conclude to doff whatever our Democratic friends may suppose there is of black cock ade Federalism about me, and thereupon they shall take me up as their candidate for the presidency, 1 protest that they shall not mala? fun of me, as they have of Gen. Cass, by attempting to write me into a military hero." Nicolay and Hay in The Century. In h 1'arin Ocmeterj. As I came away the crowd was increas ing. At the gates was a bustling horde of flower venders, makers of funeral wreaths, howling cabmen, men who were trying to sell plans of the cemetery, with biographi cal sketches of the prominent people buried there. Seated on the ground was a little fellow in tears. He was manifestly no beg gar and no trader. Several paused to inquire what the matter might be. He ex plained that his father had struck him and taken from him the pennies he liad been saving 'to buy a bouquet to lay on his mother's grave. The father had gone to a wine shop with a couple of companions. The boy sobbed: "She died a year ago. and she liad ex plained to me how I was to bring violets to her grave on the year from her death." Instinctively every man's hand sought his pocket; there was a voluntary tax levy, and a l.-ouquet was purchased and given to the little fellow. He dried his tears, ran quickly to a poor, bare grave, but just as he was about to lay his flowers down he'heal&tedr,Te1Ime;pl(?nKe7,-he said-to'a- woman who stood near, "do youtmnkI shall be telling a lie? I am going to give a bouquet to mamma. I am going to tell her that I have bought it with my savings. There is no need that she should know that papa has taken them from me, you under stand: it would make me feel so sorry," and thereupon, realizing that this was genu ine, we all beganrto'efy like women." Paris Cor. Philadelphia Times. Iliu'es Wlio i'in? Hiraji. "Prince" Nicholas of MingrvL .ui.iaii... some consideration as tbu man who ..-i,..! the daughter of Count A'dlerlHrrg. But ike Adlerbergs are a very "'new family, und tbe lady i i question had few claims on ad miration. Indeed, she had for years been a sort of "Katlsha," from ivhoiu the objects of her fancy fled in ou-sternatioii, and it was considered a "happy dispatch"' when the young savage from the Caucasus agreed, in co lsideratiou of a round sum of ready cash, to make her his wife and not seek to be divorced form her for a year. The bar gain was consummated, but the year had not long been elapsed when tbe couple sepa rated forever. Now he has squandered all the marriage portion more properly, bribe and all the $T.0,000 for which he sold his alleged princeship. and is now heels over head in debt, so that he would naturally like to get a job in reigning over a country which be could squeeze for his own gain. Princes" in Mingrelia, by the way, come very cheap. There are whole tribes com posed of nothing" but "princes" and "prin--cesss." A goodly proportion of them get a living- by highway robbery, though some are sufficiently regal in taste to seek clerk ships in mercantile offices, Chicago Her ald. "Hoi on dar." said a colored man hailing his acquaintance. "Does yer cross de street ebery time ver sees me to keep frompayin' iatbill.1" ""No, I doea't." "What den?" "Tcr keep from bein' axed fur it." , WHITE HOUSE l &. AS'iT r : o i r-J, . lj , ,, . Ziii--rLcii'AVcr cvp ! i wrwiiv- itis-iwito.- """! OF THE PUBLIC. The Asphalt jDrive aad the Saaaatwe Feet Walk The Entrance aad Yes tibale Furniture aad Decorations Ob tbe Second Floor Cabinet Room. The White House is truly beautiful, aad it should be, for it has cost since the begfa ning nearly $2,000,000. Amid all its mag nificence, however, there are many bits of the commonplace, and in that part of it which i daily viewed by the public eye, it is in places actually shabby. In this letter I want to describe the business part of the White House as it strikes ths average --aller. It is a great white building of two stories and a basement with a porte cochere in its front and an iron railing tipped with brass gilding at the side. It has'a big lawn in front of it and there is a fountain spouting up a sprav in the center of this. The front door is reached by a crecsent of asphalt drive?, in the top of which, lies this porte cochere. This asphalt is cracked in places and it gives back all the rays of the sun dur ing the heated summer months. Along its si le runs a foot walk as wide as ,an ordin "arv pavement, and "the "material of this is plain sandstone in blocks about two feet square. ' c - -' -r -" The landing under the porte cochere is of the same ordinary sandstone, and as you go up to it you can look 'over the iron railing and see the president's servant"ironing his shirts and othr unmentionable family gar ments in the laundry of the liasemeut. Rais ::.g your eyes, you note that Hollaud shades of a cream color cover the windows of the east room, and walking up the sandstone stejs you reach the front. door, and here note th it its step is also of sandstone, a lartof which"' is painted brown. In front of this door lies a big straw colored mat. of cocoa, laid there for you to wipe your feet uikju before entering. The front doors of the White House are of walnut. They are double doors, "and into each is set an oval piece of plate glass with iianels of mosaic glass about it. Through this oval glass the doorkeepers can see who w uh to enter, and if they are objec tionable, can refuse to open the door. In one of them on the inside a card hangs. This card is made of tin, and upon it in black letters are painted the words: 'Open 10 a. m., closed 2 p. in." It was after 2 o'clock when I called and the house was closed to visitors. The door bell of the White House Is at the right of the entrance. It is of bronze and rather pretty. The door-knob was especially de signed for this doogyit is as big around as a base ball, anjWWias an American eagle cut into its brakrface. Entering the White House through these big front doors you first stand in a great vest ibule or hall. This is a conglomeration of the grand and the cheap. The floor is of tiled mosaic, and probably cost several dol lars a square foot. The wall before you was made by Tiffany. It shuts you off from the grand corridor where the guests promen ade at the state receptions, and in which the portraits of all the presidents hang. It is a sult-ndid piece of glass mosaic which shines like so many jewels in the evening. The chandelier in the center of this vesti bule is a beauty and the walls and the ceil ings are frescoed. Thus far the room is lieautiful. But look around you. Two cheap rough cocoa door mats lie upon the mosaic floor. The woodwork of the vesti bule has been grained to represent black waliiut, and varnished, and this varnish is cracked like au old picture. Beside the door entering the hall, which leads to the second story, there is a walnut umbrella stand which would be dear at $3, and in the hall beyond at the foot of the stairs, lies a Smyrna rug which long ago saw its best days. TIiLs hall, and indeed tbe stairs which lead to the president's offices as well, are car peted with au old piece of brusssts, which was good once, but which would not now bring fifty cents at auction. Against the wall sit a couple of $3 wicker chairs, and over the desk at the foot of the stairs bangs a calendar bearing at its top the advertise ment of a railroad. This carpet has been patched to fit It has been sewed and resewed, and at the edges of the breadths the nap is well worn away. A strip of the same carpet, with a six-inch border sewed to each side of it, covers the stairs and this stair carpet Is fastened by silver headei nails at each step. ON THE NEXT FLOOR. Ascend the stairs. Each step is worn threadbare by the tread of thousands of office seekers, and at the top of the landing a white path of the well-worn brussels marks the road to the president's reception room. Stop here a moment and look be fore you. There is a window looking out upon Lafayette park. This is ornamented with a lambrequin of green silk which was fine once, but which Is now faded, stained threadbare, and shabby. It looks as though it might have beeu bought at the auction of a second class boarding house. A Holland shade within it hides its shabbiness from the street. Now walk along the path of the office seeker. Go through those wide t'oors of walnut which are fastened back at the bot tom by live cent iron hooks and you stand in the presence of CoL Loeffler, the man who receives the cards of visitors and takes them in to the president. There are no seats here fo speak of. Loeffler sits on a walnut swivel chair before a flat walnut desk, and the only furniture about him consists of two high-backed chairs, painted red, which look as though they were intended for a lawn or front porch. Col. Lainont has'a v"ry fair room, and it is moderately furnished. There is a book-, case at one side, and at different parts of the room two revolving bookcases made of walnut which probably cost $16 apiece. There are china spittoons in this room and the furniture is upholstered in red leather. Lamont has a chair of state big enough for he fattest king that ever sat upon a throne. His desk is a big flat walnut one and it is usually covered with papers, and the colonel is a very hard worked man. f The cabinet room and 1hat--of the presi dent are, of course, better furnished than those I .have so far described. President Cleveland warks behind a desk which was a present from Queen. Victoria, and around him hang beautiful pictures, and at his right hand blazes a bright .fire. .At his back are windows giving magnificent views of the Potomac and the Virginia bills, and in the shelves of the bookcases, around the walls is the White House library. Frank G. Car penter in Cleveland Leader. PERICLES. 'Newsboys andf Bootblacks la the Shadow - W4ha Partboaoa. A tumultous noise of bugles, braying donkeys, and -barking dogs awoke me on the morning after.my arrival from Corinth. The troops were already exercising on every vacant space in, the city. t"A for the don keys, no doutt they meant to applaud. This incessant braying of donkeys is a cu rious characteristic of modern Athens. If augury were not out of fashion, surely some thing might he deduced from thisuninter mittent, excruciating discord. Without seeking guidance at the hotel, I plunged into the warm daylight of tbe streets, lesigning to find the Acropolis, or lose myself educationally, if that were pos sible. For a moment the glare of the white buildings and white pavements in this Stadion street was blinding. The sky was of the deepest blue; there was nothing more opaque -than a few shreds of diaphanous cloud to tempertbe heat of the sun. . There were tram cars in the street and hackney coaches and produce carts drawn by mules or asses. Both pavements were thronged with pedestrians, military and civilian, mer chants,. Albanians, countrymen, and for eigners. Newsboys rustled their sheets under the noses pf the passersby: "Ultimatum from the powers! More British ships in Piraeus!" eliciting shrugs of tbe shoulders from those who were content to oheaxthe news' philosophically, without paying for it, and coppers from others. At the corners sat elderly women, lean and yellow, with little tables pf confectionery, pens, "ink and paper; and a Greek boy, hurrying to school, would now and again pay hisvhalf penny and snatch a cube .or Turkisv ae lfght" turn tbe crones. Tbe cafeswere opening, and the bakers sending ther carta full of rolls here, there and everywhere. Hydrostatic vans did what they could to lay the rising Attic dust. A troop of ngly Nm bian women, with masmler fraOM, stood in a recess chattering, with much glitter of THE white teethr they had greens to sell, fresh : picked from the banks of the Ilissus all the necessaries, .for the -salad so much be- loved of a true Greek; and at intervals a smart vounesier darted at the feet of the true Greek; and at intervals a ..", .j iwicnl. 1.5m respecuuMunajtiuu, o .o&M ...... . be allowed to clean his boots, for five lepta, or less than a half, penny. Cor. Cornhill Magazine. Aad Be Went Away Sorrowful. A curious story comes from the "city." Not many days since a man appeared at the Bank 'of England, perspiring under tbe weight of a heavy- bag, which he threw upon the counter and asked to have changed for gold The bag contained exactly-100 worth of fourpennybitsof the year 1838 all of the 0,000 as bright and unworn as when freshly issued from the mint. The owner explained that the coins were a legacy from his grandmother, who had-just died, and who, having a passion for fourpenny pieces, had procured the bagful at tbe bank half a century ago and boarded them care fully until the day of her death. The lega tee took his 100 in gold and departed. Next morning he reappeared in a very excited state of mind, and asked for the four penny bits back: "for," said he, "I am told that the jewelers' will give a shil ling apiece for them." He was. politely in formed that his coins had been dis tributed," and that it was impossible fo re turn them now. Thereupon he went away sorrowful. And now everybody who has a friend in the bank is gleefully exhibiting brand new fourpenny bits, which he intends to have made up. into breastpins and other trifles of personal adorr-ment. London Let- . Jockcv Archer'a lodgment. Mr. Easton once said to Archer: "Don't yon come around Tatlenham Corner some times with your heart -in your 'month" Oh. no," replied Archer; i'there is a good ileal of nonsense talked about that corner. I'll tell you where tho great danger iii racing comes. It is gr-tting into a ruck of horses and' going' down."- t. " - .Archer then related t-ouie of -his experi ence. " He said that horses rarely dropped suddenly on the '.-ourse, although it often looked to the public that they did so. When a horse going at a high rate of speed was about to fall he could feel it at once. The horse would usually begin to lean oyer a little, and go, perhaps, forty or fifty .feet before he fell. A jockey with an experi enced seat and eye could always tell when this was going to happen. For himself, he would take the horse by the' head and pull him out of the ruck at once, if possible. -Th horse would then land on his side and Archer would got off safely. That vas the reason he had met with so few accident. In the last 1,200 or so of the nearly 3,000 races he had riddou in, this precautionary lookout had saved him from receiving a scratch even. New York Sun. Oca. Kilpatrick and the Sergeant. Kilpatrick, when a lieutenant colonel of cavalry, met with a deserved rebuke for his profanity. Custer was with him when he rode up to a sergeant of tbe guard in his regiment, and swearing at him furiously ordered him to attend to a certain matter that had been neglected. The man folded his arms and stood at bay, looking Kilpat rick squarely in the eye. "Do you .hear me, you" said the latter; ''why don't you do as t tell you!"" "'When I receive a proper order I shall obey," said the soldier firmly; "the articles of, war forbid you to address me in tho language you have used." Custer "snickered right out in meeting," aud said in a stage whis per: "By , he's got you, Kil." Pol. Kilpatrick saw the point at once and in a very manly way changed his fronts and apologized. "Sergeaut," said he, "you are right, and I apologize; I should notihave, addressed you as I did." Then he gave. Ins orders, the man touched his cap respect fully, and .turned away to fulfill the com mand, and Kilpatrick rosa many degrees in the estimation of Lis soldiers. Philadel phia Record. i 3IisIouaries in Africa. "At table," said Mr. Stanley, "the- ne groes have adopted spoons and knives. I introduced some cheap Birmingham knives made with one rivet. They wouldn't liave them. They said the iron wasn't good enough. Now they use knives made with three rivets. I introduced one dollar knives, and I liave sold' at least 1,000 in one day." Mr. Stanley said that, thetnis sionaries in Africa were doing a great deal of good. Tho trouble with them liegan when they tried to do two things at once, explore and teach. A missionary who at tempted to explore and get himself into trouble with tin lie natives could never teach, ed on violence cannotsfand," "A citv founded was tbe tiibhcai quotation .ni- Stanley made in spuiort of whut he said. Mr. Stanley is known iu Africa as Bula Matari, the rock breaker. The natives have heard of Stanley, but they believe he Is a lieing of another hind. Stunley is considered a gen erous but dangerous fellow, while Bula Ma tari is looked upon as an immense power. New York Times. Market for American Prints. The artistic value of etchings seems to have hit the American public as hard as it once did the European. A prominent print seller avers that the sale of European etch ings is nearly dead. American prints are now at the top of the market. This is the case, he says, on account of the copyright law. hi the absence of au international coypyright. the most costly foreign prints are copied here and the market flooded with them at half a dollar or $1 apiece, while the originals cost from $20 to $150. People object to paying high prices for a picture any one can buy a copy of for next to nothing, and so purchase the copyrighted native work by preference. The publishers of books report much the same exjierience. Where, as at prwent, a dozen cheap editions of a foreign work can be given out, there is no money iu auy of them for the publisher. Annual books are consequently in demand. Alfred Trumble in New York News. Wearing Out Stocking. "Speaking of stockings," said an Albany dry goods mercliant the other day, "I think Albany is the greatest stocking market, con sidering its size, that there Is in the' United States. It is a fact that walking up and down hill wears out the heels of tho stock ings quicker than anything else. I have known ladies to buy noless than two dozen pairs of stockings during a single year from my store, and as for their children, they seem to wear out a pair every.week. Walk ing up and down hill, as any one will notice grinds holes in the heel of a stocking and thrusts the toes through the front. Some body has invented a heel protector made of kid, so that the heel of the stocking will not wear through. A too protector is" now needed also." Chicago Times. ' Time tor a cnaage. "And you say you were not discharged from your last place!" said Mrs. Crimson beak, questioning a candidate for the office of cook. "No, mum. I left, mum." "How long were you in your last place?" "Five years, mum." "And why aid you leave" "I was gettiu' too fat. mum." "Well?" "Oh, sure, I couldn't wear the missus' dresses any more and I had to stay home from the balls. I thought, mum, 'it was time to make a change." Yonkers States man, i Atlanta's Handsome Houses. Atlanta is fast becoming a city of land some houses. More elegant residence were erected in the ciry.during tbe past yar than at any time since tbe war, and larJe sums of money are spent in fitting them up. The interior of pne house Ls now being decorated at a cost of $15,000, and anothe; has just been finished that cost $18,000. kn order for the decoration of one, for a shgle par lor, jast given, foots up $3,500. There are many houses, the interiors of whiii have been decorated at a cost of more thai $10, 000. At least three private resicrncesin t he pity cost over $80,000. Chicag Times. At the funeral of a wealthv New"Yorker reporter was elbowing his waff with as little commotion as possible, imong the Well dressed mourners who paejW the wide balls aud "mac-ions drawingrooins. Ac .resting a fine looking nn, faultlessly - W drosrfaStandinnear the door, the renortinniMri5SltPanie to add tq hfe roll OIIb,! lie Wo the 0nt1otnan ntuduwl. "T "?SPl-iPl f , o-. rT "i - . guess. , want my name, ypwwr. feller: I' common ,cop,J wMSjshii2riTi THraav-jMMCOsV MSWu Sj $r f t- r THIS IS ALL. Just a saunter In the twilight, . " Just a whisper in the hall, Just a sail onsea or river. Just a dance at rout or ball, Just a glance that heart enthrall This is all and this is all. Just a few harsh words of doubting, Just a silence proud and cold. Just a spiteful breath of slander, ; Just a wrong that is not told, fust a nonl lieyond recall Tn!s is all and this is alL Just a life robbed of its brightness. Just a hrarr by sorrow flUed, Just a faith that trusts no longrr. Just a love by doubting chilled. Just a few hot tears that fall This Ls all-ali! this is all. Rosie Churchill. 1 THE RIGHT ROAD. - i l1 have lost the road to happiness Does any one know it, pray! I was dwelling there when the morn was fair, " Butsouirhow I wandered away. I saw rare treasures in scenes of pleasures, Aad ran to pursue them, when lo! I had lost the path to happiness . And knew not whither to go. I have lost the way to happiness Oh, who will lead me bock!" Turn oft from the highway of selfishness' r To the right no duty's track! Keep straight along and you cant go wrong, For as sure as you M e, I say. The fair, lost fleld of happiness Can only be found that way. -Ella Wheeler Wilcox. A GREEK MAIDEN. A vlsloa aad dream of life and bliss; Sweet carved lips for a conqueror's kiai, Li-s with the nal poniesranat.; hrtirt. That somewhat pouted a li'tle apart; llair as a fleck , Of II bloan liouey across the hite Of brow and bosom; cyvs at night. Yea: dark moUteyes with a core of fin-, A wondrous jjlint from the soul's desire. With a stin- in their ray. Beauty that roused an.l tlazed with itssheeu, For,neer a fairer woman I weeii. In tent of pleasant, on dais of queen. Was harbored or housedror man liad seen. By night or by day. J. J. Brilt.m in London Spectator. WHAT'S IN A NAME? Even the Sound is of Coimeiiiicfc Some Names l'atal to Success. Life with a good number is a struggle at the lest, and tho success that attends us i-, influenced more than people soiiietinus think by the name we Lear, liven tho sound of a name is of consequence. "Hur.'di names,' ' says Isaac Disraeli, "will liave, in spite of all our philosophy, a painful and ludicrous effect on our ear ami our association. It is vexations that the softness of delicious vowel or the ruggedness of inexorable consonant should at all tie connected with a man's hap piness or even have an influence on his fort une." Some names, indeed, are almost fatal to success; they simply suggest jokes and en courage familiarity. A man has no hesita tion iu proving "by thumps u-ion your lack how he esteemsyour merit" if youure culled Tw-igger, or Tapp, or Trundle, or Liltleboy, but ho would hardly venture on it were you a moie aristocratic Montgomery, or a Gas-coigiii-. For u man to inherit au ubsurd or insignificant name is ti have a stoiio tied round his v.eck in childhood to keep all hf life in tlio depths of olcurity. It would be dillk-iilt to find a famous character in litera tuiv, urt or anything clso with u surname at least uppinachiug in character to say, Tooth aches, or Bang, or Baby. Who could fancy u Squib or a (ialh'e vi-.iu.-d at any lime by the inspirations of gviiius John Wilkc;: t.., prossotl this idea once in touversatiou with Dr. Johnson. They were sjeakiiig of Elkeuah Settle, the last of the city oets. "There is something in names, " said Wilkes, "which one cannot help feeling. Now Elkeuah Settle sounds queer; who can ex pect much from that name!' We should have no hesitation to give it for John Dfen iu preference to Elkeuah Settle from the names only, without knowing their different merits." Considerations such as these, not to speak of testamentary injunctions and conditions attached to deeds of entail, have induced people from time to time to change their names. The world being as it is, and man's ' instinct leading him to fasten on mid worry the ridiculous, it is often a sensible proceed ing. Cut hi c rt is made to take the place of Cuddy; MeAlpine of Halfpenny; Belcomo of Bullock; De Winton of Wilkins, and .Ephraim Bug is transformed into the aristo cratic Howard. Leisure Hour. Failure nf the 31erv Kallway. The great railroad that was to form the main line of the Russian invasion of India is repoitcd to be a gigantic failure, lioth in a military and financial point of view. This railroad that is to connect the Caspian 'with the Merv aud thence proceeding through Bokhara to the confines of Aghanlstan lias thus far been constructed under military .supervision, and it Is said enormous sums have been ingulfed in the granting of fraudu lent contracts both for material and construc tion. These facts are studiously ignore! by the Russian press, but according to a letter written by Gen. Tchernieff to The Novoe Vreynia the new roail of communication, be tween Russia and her distant Asiatic jiosses sioiis is a total failure. The railroad, itnow appears, is built over a desert of shifting sand, the desert having in fact a movable and moving surface with which no engineer ing can contend. On the first section of the road the sand has liecn coiisoliduteil by watering it with a solution of clay, but this Is iniossibl- near Merv, wlure there is neither clay nor water to be found. The only way of-preserving the line would be to cover it with sheds like the snow sheds on the American Pacific railway, but this is impossible in a country where there is neither wood, stone, lime nor water. As a military line to assist in a Russian attack on India it would be useless, or it would take three years to convey over it a complete force of 200,000 men with their impedimenta, and as it runs along tbe frontier of Persia it would have to be guarded by so many men that the line itself would bo well occupied in sup plying water to the invading forces. The British are also finding almost insurmount able difficulties in endeavoring to connect Cabul with the Indian system of railroads, the projected line in many places being cut in the sheer inclino of the precipices forming the passes, while the roadbeds in the valleys are liable to resistless inundations in the spring months. Taken altogether, the attack and defense of British India on the land side form the most costly military problems of the century. San Francisco Chronicle. One of the l'riit-1 K vents. -Thomas -W: Knox? of-, the New York Herald, did not accompany the movements against Forts Henry and Donelsou. He ac companied Gen. Curtis iu his chase after Price from Springfield, Mo., into Arkansas, where in due season, after much marching, skirmishing, countermarching, maneuver ing, advancing anil retreating, there oc curred the bloody, long contested und de cisive battle of Pea Ridge. There were but two correspondents with tho Federal army Knox and Fayal, of The St. Louis Democrat. These two followed the Federal columns for several weeks; they underwent extraordinary hardships, they witnessed the final battle and then started for St. Louis, writing their let ters as they traveled. They had to travel on horseback for a distance of nearly or quite 200 miles befor reaching the railway at Rolla. The two correspondents, knowing that they were the only newspaper represen tatives iu the field, were reasonably happy. Being from widely separated towns, there was no rivalry between them, and they strengthened each other's letters by a free interchange of facts, so that their accounts were probably as near perfect as a product pf the kind could be. Filled with satisfaction at the certainty of liaving the only accounts and of being, the first to give the record of the march aud'bat tles to the public, they reached St. Louis, and found a New York Tribune that had ar rived the same morning and which contained a full page account of the battle of Pea Ridge! Fancy the situation of these "two men who liad traveled hundreds of mles, had suffered all jiossible liardships, had witnessed the battle, aud whq knew that no pther cor respondent had been on the ground! It was the most cruel event of the war, so far as it related to the experiences of the correspond ents. "Polinto" in Chicago Times. , 'Complexions of Cincinnati Women. Cincinnati women have perfect complex ions. In accounting f or the jmusaal fair- Hess a clubman there said: "it may petnap our wexbmity to Kentucky has something f o do with tho matter. ' Yon.see,Covington is only acrnsa i he river, arid .we arc able to im port haudaomeiwohieii without Jiny. trouble But Ohio is not, indebted to Kentucky alone for'the'beauty of lier women. "She is the oldest of 'what were oncer tenned 'tiie new western states. Some of the best and. bluest of New England blood camchere in early days. - This has been improved from year to year until you see the.result beforeyou." It is certainly wonderful how Cincinnati women can keep or preserve such clear and brilliant complexions in 'sucli a city. The rolling mills and factories so fill the air with black smoke that .yen the sun is obscured. The soot-froni the soft-coal . smoke finds its way into the houses through every open window- and door. ,. The waiter at your hotel covers up the mouth of 'your bottle in order to keep out this all.pervading soot. Ladies when out upon the street, .or even at home, are obliged to exercise-great jare to avoid touching their faces with 'ttieir"hands or handkerchiefs; The presence of a bigrblack smootch on a woman's face is the, commonest kind of sight; butis' not'eouducive to per sonal beauty. New' Yof "eWorld. A "Clean Newspaper.' Occasionally, when we discover a journal that lias too much self respect; to cater to the vicious tastes of readers, we are almost sure to find another proof of the axiom that "the good die young." That a paper can be too clean I have no doubt now, though there, was atime when I thought differently. In the innocence of youth I once edited rf paper, the columns of 'which were never lKssniirched by au item, that, would displeaso the most prudish and fastidious taste. liven now, with more yeara of ' experience, I will not admit that it was a dryl paper, fori know that it was extensively reatL widely quoted and often praised- Jt had a good circulation among tho. lx'st people, but to our requests for udvertisenieuts tho local merchants said: "Yourjmpcr is foo decent; il circulates only among tho most" intelligent people and they re uotthe ones wv are fishing-for. Don't be so high toned make your pajior to suit the masses, the rifi'-ratV cverylody and you'll make money." I heeded not tho merchant's advice, and that paper is iiowinli?avn. William Regi uald Ream iu Tho Journalist. Kflecttt or "3Irxic:ni lulqiif. ''What is it like?" said ex-Minister Nel son. ' "Why I cannot described to you bet ter than tosay that if you would boil a lot of rusty iron in milk und th-ju add a little varui-li "you would have a faint imitation of it in tsstu; its color cannot lie imitated. I could no more drink a glass of it than 1 could swallow a torchlight procession. Pulque is the exudation of the maguey plant. At the average age, ten years, the plant flowers and a tall stock grows up fioni tho colter. The pVons can tell to a certainty when to cut into the bulb, or bowl rather, in the center of plant, leaing it opened in the sliajH- of a basin a foot und u half deep and a foot in diameter. The exu datiou will fill this Ikw1 three or four times a day. It taLcs ulout fifteen days for fer mentation. Tho liquor possesses ubout the sahio amount of alcoholic spirits as lager beer. No one can drink strong liquors in the City of Mexico in sufficient quantity to get drunk. One can easily become crazed by whisky drinking. I remember when I went there I took a glass of brandy aud water 'with Gen. Rosecran3, my predecessor, and tho effect was to givo me a severe local in flammation. Tboro i3 no relief from the faver caused by tho burning intoxicant. No ona was ever known too experience u free perspiration in that city." Chicago Tri bune Interview. A Liberal Corporation. The gi eat brewery of the Guinnesses has always lietii managed with marked liberal ity toward the emploj c, and now that it has been turned into a stock corporation, Sir Edwr.nl Cecil Guinness has cc-kbrated the change b giving ever- woi ker a bonus of three moiitlis' salary. Tins bit of gener osity cost him about 2.10,00t. Chicago Times. A Sign of Convalescence. A sign of conval'..enee from Anglo mania appears in New York, where a "habit maker" anncuuees that he is pre pared to furnish "English clothes with an Amercian tone." Try walking "vvitli your hands beuimi youjf you are becoming IhmiI forward. Kumar has it that small bonnets are to 1k even-smaller. Purify Your l'.lil. Tf your tonyue is coated. If your skin is yellow and dry. If you have boils-. If you have fever. If you are tliin or neirsnis. If you are bilious-. If you are constipated. If your bones ache. If your head aches. If you Lave no appetite. If you have no ambition, one liottle of 15e;s" Blood Purifier and Blood Maker will relieve any and all or the aliove complaint". Sold and war ranted liv Dr. A. Heintz. Senator Sherman denies that his visit to Florida possessed any political signi ficance. Keeping the bowels open and regular is one of the greatest secrets of human health. People are seldom sick when their lniwels are regular. They are sel dom well when they are irregular. When a physic is necessary. St. Pat rick's Pills will be found to lo all that can be desired. Tliej regulate the bowels aud liver and cleanse the entire system. Sold by Dowty ,t Becher. The Massachusetts against woman suffrage. house voted A Circal Narprlae Is iu store for all who use Kemp's BjI :im for the Throat and Lungs, the great guarantied leniedr. Would you believe that it is sold on it- merits and that each druggist is authorized to refund your money by the Proprietor of this woiidrrful remedy if it fail to cure you. Dr. A. Heintz has securnl the Agency for it. Price 50c and ?i. Trial size Jree. An American hospital will lie built at Teheran under the Presbyterian board of iimbhIihih. lo uu Know that Ueggs' Cherry Cough Syrup will relieve that cough alinobt instantly and make expiration easy? Acts simulta neously on the bowels, kidney and liver, thereby relieving the lungs of tbe sore ness and pain and also stopping that tickling sensation in the throat by reiuovTng the cause. One trial or it will convince any one that it ha no equal on earth for coughs and colds. Dr. A. Heintz lias secured the sale of it and will guarantee every little to give satisfaction. 'Ifcl&'J Who is dumb? He who does not know how to say kind things at the right time. . Woaderl'Ml Cure W. D. Hoy l & Co., wholesale and retail drnggiets of Rome,, Ga., Bays: We have beeu selling Dr. King's New Discovery, Electric Bittera and Buckleu's Arnica ealve fort wo years. Have never bandied remedies that sell as well, or give such uniyersal satiatactioD. There have been some wonderful cures effected by these medicines it this city. Several cased of pronounced Consumption have beeu entirely cured by use of a few bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery, taken ia connection with Electric Bitters. Wegarantee them always. Sold by Dowty-oV Heitkanpcr... Cirrally Kxciied. Not a few oi the citizens of Colnm .bus, have recently- become greatly excited- over the astounding facta, that scvarafbf thoir friends who had beeu pronounced by their physician! as incurable aud beyond all hope sufleriug that dreaded inouster Con sumption have been completely cured by Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, the only remedy that does positively cafe all throat and lung diseases, Coughs, Colds, Astbmi and Bronchitis. Trial bottle free at Dowty &r Heitkemper'a Drug Store, large bottles $L Knowing is worth nothing unless we do the good we know. Savin-; the luiwyer. 'The iirst thing we do, lets kill all the lawyers." This is rather a blood thirsty jirotio-iition which we modify by offering lo cure thfc: irrtrfhy class; of people. MYnt of them suffer (in com mon with.a!l oilier of sedentary habits! from the injurious effects of dyspepsia, indigestion, piles, loss or appetite, and other ailments caused by a constipated habit of the body. Dr. Pierce's -Pleasant lurgative Pellets' eradicate all these disord;s in promptly removing the cause theixofmd induce a r..r- de gree or comfort and lialth. The jury hi (!i c;te of the -t te vs. Hoffman the i'tutbir ti-on wnvlc-'r. Tor mnrd-r at Merraskn C'i'y. retiniivd a verdict of guilty of .murder in th' t'nt degie.. Itch. Prairie .Mange. utid Scialehes of cvei) kind cured in "Id minute by Wool Ion! ri Samlarx Lotion. Use no other. This never lail. . i 11 by (J. B. S'illmai:, druyj'-M Co!ui:.lni;. Mrs. i'uchols was !nu :ud d.-atii iiy a lamp explosion :.t Mcadvillc. Pa., th other evening. Tiie l4iinluiia wi'4oluiubu Is. :ihout it.iHIO, and hi- u.nilil -a at least one hall' are Moulded with smut atlecliuu ol the 'lhu:it and I ting-, a thoe com-( plaint- are, .il-comIil- iu MutUlir. mere UUUlcloUs tluu olLri'-. Wt- wultld ttd-VlM- alt hut to iic-tjcri tbe oppul tuiiily fo call uu us and get :t tuttle ol' Kemp's Ital-iuin tor the Throat and Lungs. Price ftUc and f ,H- Vria size free. Kes-pet-tliill, lr. A. Heintz. Avery wielced thief str-l? tha contrt butionsieccJitly at Trinity v.'stthtshal. in Omaha. halt irM'i.ui hi M-znui. Old eoic3 and tikvrj, So.ddhuad and ring.oiin, Pain in the ba'k and opme, Swelling of. tin l.uee juiuU, ijpiuiiisuiul brm-'e-i. 2semi!i.'i and to..thn-he. T.-ndorkct caused by !. anions, c it:, and chilblains Me aurr.iiil L'o-' -:' Troj l.?a! I'll t iviK-w ..ay .in. I .til ot the abuve. lr. A. lU-i-HZ. Reports of drouth aie coming in from the principal wheat iMowiiu? btates. I have iibrd Chamberlain's' Couyh liemedy, in faet. will now use no other kind, n propeily relieves coughs and is uuetpiaied for the throat and luns. RoiiKhi' A. Neff. Comedian, with Peck'a Pad Boy Co.. I'esnvr. Col., lareh I.LHmT. Chnmlierlaiu's Coni;h Remedy is sold ly Dowtv v Becher. Mr. S. R. Callaway has declined the icccivc rship of the Wabash. The citizens; of Council Bluffs it is claimed almost to a man will rejoice over tin-fact that Mr. Callaway is to remain with the Union Pacific. Virtiiry at Uit. Consumption, the greatest curse of the aye. the destioycr of thousands of our brightest and be.it, is conquered. It is no lonyer incurable. Dr. Pierce's "fiolden Medical DUcovery" is a cer tain remedy for this terrible disease if taken in time. All scrofulous diseases consumption is a s-crofulous affection of the lunys can lie cured by it. Its effects in tli.sea.ies or the throat and lunys aie little le.-s than miraculous. All dnuryists have it. A new railroad it is said will soon he complete to Mammoth Cave. The de sire of many will now lie doulitlcvs jreatly increased to visit this jjrand wonder. Kir i-li ti-ii" ai-uit-.-t iitv. The I J S" Silv n I to- u ild tot Gut-, KiuT-'e.-., Sues, lT,-er, Salt Hhi-uiu, Fever Soren, Teller, Chapped lland-i, Cuilblniita, Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and positively ctir9 Pilee, or no pay required. It is jjuar- tiutecd torsive perfect satisfaction, or uionev refunded. Price 25 cents per lw. For sale ly I Jowly A- Jiecher. 17inaj-rLly TEE LAMEST 111 FIIEST STUCK west of Omaha, at- GREISEN BROS. The best manufactories of the count r represented. Not to he undersold by anybody. Come and see prices at GREISEN BROS. Tbls is the most mAOTZOAI BZ(S-Cm SHOE ererlnvented. ItUwTTaXKTMXUfaajySJtaeeTodglnm tbe eameproteetloawabootororersUer. ltJsj convenient to pot ea ssm the top can ba sdjoated la at say satla by simply noving (bo nuUOfe. ForeAlobr - - GBEISE-N BROS. i3tOct.'a-tr- ,35Si5'siiHi PltiCMFNIVn ffLVHsM "sSIBBbssW XLsff k rvtjsstsvsv UBIBB BEAST! Mixican ' Mustang Liniment OTTZUalfll Sciatica, Scratcaet. Caatractei Lumbago, Sprauu. - Majclaa, BheumatiaB, Straiat, Zraptioas, Junu, Stitcass. Horfail, Scald, StiffJaiatfc Utnm Stingi, lackaeat. Wanes, lites, Galls, Bwiaaty. . IruiMt, Sana, SaailaQalls. Bunions, Spavin Piles. Corns, Cracks. THIS GOOD OLD STAND-BY rcompUabes for erarybody exactly what Isclalme J for it. One of the reason forth groat popularity of the Uuttang liniment Is found la Its I versa! applicability. ETerybodyaeedaauchaBMdlclna. The Lasebersaaa need It la case of accident. The Heaeawlfe needs It for geaetalfamlly u. Th (lualer neediu. for his lea sari hU mao. Ths MrrhMic Bead ttSSWiiJsehSirwork bench. The Dflaer need It la'caaeof emergency. The Pleneer need It-cant get along without ft The Fanaer needs It la hi house, tab stable, aad his stock yard. The SleasebMt asaa ar th Batsaaa aeeds It In liberal supply afloat and ashore. Tke Heree-fancler needs U-lt Is his best niend and safest reliance. The Stack-trrsmer needs lt-tt wul save hba thousands of dollars aad a world of trouble. The Kallrsme. saaa needs It aad wul need It sa long as his Ufa Is a round of accident aad dangers. The Backweedentaa needs It. There Is noth ing like It a an antidote for the dangers to Ufe. limb and comfort which surround the picaeer. The Merchant needs It about bis store among hi employees. Accidents will happen, aad whea these come the Xustaag Liniment ls wanted at once. Keep a Bottle ! t he Hease. Tls the best of economy. Keep a Settle la the Factery. ItslasaMdlato use In case of accident saves pala aad loss of wages. Keep a Settle Always la. the Htahle far as whan wanted. Nl BUSINESS COLLEGE. Fremont UTeTo. This institution ir-.aivH yimnu people tlii.roiiulil) fi.r 'IV.ieliintf, for ltmint-r-H Life, tor Ailuilr-Mioii to t 'olli-iv, for l.'iw or .Medical Seluxil-. for lulilir ypeakinir, in Inntruiiieutat anil Yhm1 .MiiHie, in Drawim; nmt I'siintim;, aud iu Kloeutioii, Sliort-lianil uuil T-u ritintf. Iu tlie Normal l)ep.irtinml, thorough in struction N Kiifti in all hmnches requirM any certificate from lliint fSnule to State fe--ion:il. The liiwinet-:. Course inciiul. IVnnmnsttip, ("omm.Toiiil t'orrtMnileuce, Commercial Law aiul lhiok-kcepiia;, with the lt liirthiMle of keeping Farm, Factor. Honking and .Mercantile accotmtt.. i Five premiums v.ere nwnnUn! to thN ilepiirtiin-iit at tin- recent State Fair.) Kxieii-ettnreer) low. Tuitirm, Koom Kent and Tahle Hoard an pla--l at i-o-t, ax nearly a poiille. First Winter Term Ik-gins Nov. 11 In-!; Second Winter Term. Fell. I. i-v7. For iM-rticuIars aildn- the I'n-f ideut of tlfivS-'Mitf N'oltM M. ('OI.I.FIIF-, Fremont, Nel. LOUIS SCHREIBER, i All kinds of RcpaiiiH doue on Short Notice. Baggies, Wag- ous. etc., made to older, and ail work l'nar- auteed. Also sell the world-famous Walter A. Wood Mowers. Reapers. Combin ed Machines, Harvesters, and Self-binders the best made. Shop opposite the "Tattersill," ou OIIvb St.. COLUMBUS. 'JrJ.m TRASH'S SELECTED Jim SHORE 231 a ACKEUrT- IU Ytlltf BAt. "- w inismiii mt m&ki STm-U k? e" -5 W ! 51 Cheapest Eating on Earth j ASKT0VS GKOCUt ffQK THEM. TRASK'Sri THKOmOlflALa!l OML.V CMUieiE Taks) no other Brand IIAIiri"' L"' "'"'. 'ut this out and flllN'L W'omtoii-, ami w-will -ml nllr I '"!1 '"? wnnrthinic of Kivut "si Tnhiennil uniMutance to jou, that will Mart )on in lMi-.hu-.. which will brintc on in more mouify riirht away than anjlhinx in the world. Anyone rati do iheworJc and live at lionn;. hither . all hk.-. Soint-thhur neW. tlmt juj-t coin money for ull workers. We will tan.yoii:i-apitalnoLnv!iiL Thini out. of the Ki-nmne. iu;x.rtunt rhaucen or a lifetime. Tho? who are ninhitious and euteruriMiiu; will not de- lay. Omnil i. lit tit Aiiu.-.ta, Maine. irec. Ail.liw. Tt.uk A Co., dec-Sv WOKING CLASSES AJJJmti.gm ,, , ... . iire.1 ioiurmn all cla-jes with employment at home, the whole ol the time, or fur their spare moment. Uum-n- new. IikIiI and profitable. I'en-ou of either w x Hutily euru Trom Ui cent to $iU r ptetiiu and a proportional Mini by devoting all their time to the bumiiettH. Bojs and trfrl-H earn nearly a much h men. That all who see this may tod their add re, and text the buninew, we maktr t"1 offer. To xuch a-are not well aatisiied we will Head one dollar Ur pay for the trouble of writiBK, 'Full particulars and -outfit free. Ad dres,UK0BOiiTi.V3ON Jt Co-..'1'ortland. iUsine. - decxJ-'s6jr r9ssk HaJH -tflB ' V ''.'' B itc V saHsPal tesit jWHi ia !.r l-r'sT i lassssBBstf alsssB FREMONT NORMAL SGHOOL BlacRsfflitn and Wapij Make le a t 1 Vi i di in- jf wt forW jf t ? IT.- -:i rfotfth 5" ' A- T -- - ',, ' y$3 . t. uM-St' &