The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, February 26, 1890, Image 4

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"NTErBRASKA. !
t
FiMILT : JOUBNAX,
A Weekly Newspaper issued every
- Wediesiay.
32rlelMis of reaiiig Batter, ci
' sistiig of Nebraska State News
Itcas, Selected Stories aid
Miscellany.
"Sample copies sent free to any adclreM.aS
Subscription prico,
1$l a year, in Advance.
Address:
M. K. Tukseb & Co.,
Columbus,
Platte Co., Nebi
A.. DTJSSEL1L,
DEALZB IS
si
Jp2
23
a
ex,
22
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3
PUMPS REPAIRED ON SHORT
NOTICE.
Olive St., nearly opposite Post-office.
ejnn88-y
LOUIS SCHBEIBER,
111
All kiids of Repairing dose oe
Short Notice. Baggies, Wag-
eas, etc., nade to order,
aid all work Giar-
aiteed.
Also soil the world-famow Walter A.
Wood Mowers, Reapers, Contain
ed jfachines, Harvesters,
and Self-binders the
best nude.
"Shop opposite the " Tattersall," or
Olive St.. COLUMBUS. 26-m
wmimxin&rrsBm
iBaCaaaaaaaaffaAaamaVttaBaVaaVI
tWlt WILY?
CPFor sale and satisfaction guaranteed or
money refunded, by
IDATTID
soit6m
Columbus, Nebraska
GOSHEN
FENCE IACEII!
CHEAP. ONLY $15.
Woven wire and slats, cat willows, split boards
or anything of the port, noed; after posts are set,
fence eaa he-made and stretched a the-jrroacd,
in the winter, by a boy or ordinary farm hand,
10 to 40 rods n day, and can work it over any
pround. The man who has one of them ma
rhini can build a fence that is more durable and
afe than any other, and make it at less cost.
The machino and a sample of its work can be
seen inthecity on 11th 6treet at Ernst & Schwarz
hardware store. Willscll mchines, or territory,
or contract to put np fences.
Unaytf J. R. MATHEWSON.
"Newspaper
A book of 100 cares.
The best book lor an
advertiser to con
'UniirilTIUIUPlinlf hn h OTnprL'
ma iciiraBB----' . - r. y?T
It contains list of newspapers and estimates.
1 r or oinerwisffj
loilar. finds In It the in
formation he reoulrea, while forhim ho will
Invest one hundred thousand dollars In ad
vertising, a scheme Is Indicated which will
meet his every require went, cr can betnade
to iloso oir Kjftf cuitfttesnv arrtredat bv cor
respondence. 1M editions have been Issued.
Sent, post-paid, to any address for 10 cents.
Write to GEO. P. ROVVELL A CO.,
KEWSPAPER ADVERTISINQ BUREAU.
::0&m sas BUPrinUngHouae Sq,.). New Ycxk.
PATENTS
Caveats and Trade Marks obtained, and all Pat
ent business conducted for MODERATE FEES.
OUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. 8. PATENT
OFFICE. We have no snb-asenci, all business
direct, hence we can transact patent bnsincss in
lees time and at LESS COST than tliosa remote
froat Washincton.
Send model, drawing', or photo, with descrip
tion. We advise if patentable or not, free of
charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured.
A book, "How to Obtain Patents," with refer
ences to actual clients in your- Btate, county or
town, sent tree. Aooress
8&
Opposite Patent Ofllce,
at'OuTce, Washing
A:
ashinston.
(X
TOiSJfJADH
la, Agents Wanted!
1.009 Brcwrter's Safety Eeln Holders
KhrnswajrtolBtr!uceUicm. Evtir
acnw ewncr buys from I to 6. Uses
asvcrnaderhoner feet, (nils ccats
la samps to sf pestase arcd rckiav
fot Hlsfesl natei dash Uwt sdl fcrss
av JhiittovSUfc.fiKeUt,Bicfc
BiMiiWa6r
Issr aBJanslI ssBaaWI VssBBk
II fSBBBB LaaaaaV aflaaHaVkssaHB Ln k
H BSBBal I 1 3 I wlLsaV -ssaaaY U 1 ass
lew fiber plant has beea discerned
m the Isle of Trinidad which promises to
be aaimprovemeat on ramie. It M
found by an agriealtnrist named-T. J. St.
Hill, who his called if 'maholtine," bnt
whose scientific nomenclature is AbntOon
periplocifolinm. The great thing with
this plant is that the ribbons at nearly all
times of the year are easily detached from
the wooden portion by simply stripping
them with the band, and therefore a de
corticating machine is not required as for
ramie.
When it is known how readily the stems
allow themselves to be deprived of their
coating of bark and fiber it will be seen
what advantage this simple fact gives the
new product over many of the fiber pro
ducing nlants. All that is required is to
"cut the stems, which are fully ten feet
long, split the bark at the larger ena ana
strip off the bark from end to end without
stopping, as fortunately the stems have
no side branches. Samples submitted to
London brokers were favorably reported on
and were valued at from $17 to $20 per ton
The French Woman Sufragist.
lime. Olympe Audouard, a famous
French champion of woman's rights, has
just died at Nice. She was fifty-nine
years old, and bad been married early in
life to a Marseilles notary, irom whom tshe
separated after a few months, and spent
Lome time in traveling about Europe. Af
terward she wrote a book and started a
review, which became so lively that the
imperial- government- inteflered with; a
prohibition of any political writing in it.
She then came to America and was some
what conspicuous here, delivered lectures,
and wrote a book on Utah and the Mor
mon?. After her return to France the
adopted spiritualism as a hobby.
Shearing by Electricity.
Sheep are now sheared by electricity in
Australia, Frederick Wolseley, a brother
of Lord "Wolseley, having inventing a ma
chine for the purpose. The method of
using the shears is very simple, the oper
ator baring merely to throw a friction
wheel into adjustment by means of a
handle, and then push the comb into the
vool, pressing it continuously forward
and keeping it as closely as possible to the
body of the animal being operated upon.
From one to one hundred shears cau be
operated at one time. By this mode the
shearing is done more mcicifully than
when done by band shears.
A Soldier Priest.
Among the veterans detailed as a guard
of honor over Victor Emmanuel's tomb in
the Pantheon at Home, on the occasion of
the anniversary of the king's death, was a
priest wearing the medal of the war for
independence. lie was called upon to
answer many questions by the visiting
sightseers, to all of whom bo expressed his
piide over the part he had taken in Italy's
battles, a part that gave him the right to
fctaud guard over the tomb.
Here and There.
Mrs. Catherine Smitley, of Salt
Creek townhip, Muskingum county, Ohio,
is hale and hearty at the age of ono hund
red and two.
Sir "WiMiIam Gumj the eminent
Loudon physician, who died a few days
ngo, had little fnilh in drugs, and didn't
hesitate to say so.
Two centenarians living in the neighbor
hood of Alton, England, have been great
smokers and moderate drinkers all their
lives.
Aunt Mart FiiABErrr, of Jonesboro,
Me., aged ninety-one, has solved the
servant girl problem. She refuses to have
help and does her own work.
A Fremont, Mich., man owns a hen
which lays at night, a proceeding which he
claims is as phenomenal as though she ato
hay like a horse.
TwENTr-ONE tramps met in Decatur,
Neb., and ordered meals at a restaurant.
After they had eaten they compelled the
proprietor to accept 10 cents as payment
in full.
A London confectionery store gives to
every purchaser of a shilling's worth a
ticket entitling the purchaser to have ono
photograph of herself taken at an estab
lishment up-stairs.
A quantity of fish shipped to Heading
from Maryland were found to be alive
when unpacked, and when thrown into a
tank of water darted arouud as lively as
ever.
The chain gang of Bibb county, Ga., is
eighty three strong. The convicts are di
vided into two squads, and the public roads
of that couuty are classed among the best
in Georgia.
The largest shaft in Africa has just been
opened in the Kiruberly diamond fields. It
measures twenty-three feet three inches by
seven nine inches and is to be 1,000 feet
deep.
AN Anglo-Iloman company has under
taken a contract to light Itoine by electric
ity. I he plant is to be set up at Tivoli, it
is raid, and power supplied by water there,
the current then being transmitted by over
head wires to the city itself, and through
out the city by overhead wires for public
lighting, aud by subways for lighting of
public houses.
Many a clergyman who can preach a
capital sermon is very unhappy cs a speaker
out of the pulpit. The Philadelphia Times
has heard of a clergyman who:e duty it
was to iutroduce to an audienco a miesion
nrv from Ceylon anl did so as follows;
"This faithful missionary of the cross
comes from Ceylon, a land where, as you
all know, 'every prospect pleises and only
man is vile. " "
In a court at Droghedi, Ireland, a Mr.
Kenny, being sued for rent due on a house
that ho had leased, pleaded that his wife
had been f rightenod by a ghost that ap
l eared at their bed and threw something
upon them during the night, and that the
place was on that account uninhabitable.
1 he court held that the fact that a house
was h muted was no defense in such a suit,
and gave a verdict for the plaintiff.
Oregon, the Paradko or Farmers.
Mild, equablo climate, certain and abundant
crops, liest fruit, grain, grass and stock
eoiintry in tho world. Foil information free.
Address the Oregon Immigration Board, Port
land, Oregon.
A colored man now has control of all
the news stands on the principal elevated
roads in Hrooklvn.
ONE K:ivjOYa
Both the method and results when
8yrup of Figs is taken ; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yetpromptly on the Kidneys,
.uiver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in ita
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities coos
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy known.
Syrup or Figs is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug?
gists. Any reliable druggist .who
may not ham it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it Do not accept ,
myBUDsuiuieu
CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP COL
umvitu, at..- hew rmc, n.r.
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two "vAiEinats.
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BT TB1NX DBXFSTm KHWitlftW.
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lVove, at your doorvoung Copkl stands
And knocks lor yon to-ceeae r
The frost is In his feet and kaads.
Els lips wttn cold am naaab.
Grant nim admittance, awoatnswrt mine,
And by'yoar cheering flro v
His lins shall loosen as with wine :
Andspeak'iorth'my desire;
He left me not an hour ago,
And when the rascal went ;
Barefooted ont into the snow- -
I asked him "whither benU
Quothbe: "Jo her whoso face Is like '
A garden full of flowers.
Toner whose smiiea'like sunlight strik
Across the.winter hours." '
1
No moro he said, nor need of more
Had J to know. I knew ''
His path layynTraight unto your door
That faco belongs to you.
"Godspeed," I'cried, "and give her this
When yon her iace shall see; .
And cm Ms lips I set a kiss,
A vtlemtino fro m me I
ANX OLD ; VALENTINE
BY VBX.MA CAtmVKIX-3MXVIIXE.
"Oh, mother! isn't "it lovely?" cried
a pretty bit of femininity as sho held
up a wonderful creation in flowers, lace,
mottoes, etc
"Baiph's valentine," she added, turn
ing her blushing face aside.
"It is indeed a beautiful thing," was
the reply, and so different from the ones
sent in my day."
"Did you ever get a valentine,
mother?"
""Yes, dear, many a one." nad the
voung girl been less occupied she would
have noticed au unusual flush on tjie
withered cheek, and a far-away look in
the kindly blue eyes. As it was, sho
thought of naught but the dainty thing
in her hand and the lover who had sent
it.
Lato that Valentino eve the same
gentle-faced woman softly turned the
key of an old trunk in a reraoto closet,
and puttintr thcs lamp down beside it,
lifted the lid.
Ever and anon she glanced furtively
about her, as with faltering fingers sho
lifted out a small, flat box.
"It's dreadful, foolish of me," she
murmured, "but some way Nellie's val
entine kind of made me ihink of old
times; but it's dreadful' foolish."
Slowly she. untied Jhe bit of faded pink
ribbon that held 'the cover on "It's
dreadful foolish," Hberepeated, "don't
see what has come over me."
But tho lid was open now and sho
was nervously pushing aside tho yel
lowed tissue paper that concealed tho
contents. An indulgent smile at her
own weakness llitted over her face, and
then sho relinquished herself to the
sweets of stolen reminiscence.
First sho took up a well-thumbed
yellow card, in the center of which was
a bunch of faded piuk roses fastened,
apparently, by a green gauze Tsnot; and
underneath were the words in a
cramped boyish hand :
"Tho rose is roJ, tho violet's blue.
Sugar's sweet and so are you."
"My first valentine," she mused, "and
from Bobbie, dear little fellow, how
many, many years he has been at rest.
Wasn't I proud and happy when I found
it in my dinner pail wrapped ina leaf
froju his' old copy book. And here is
the next ono I received, Fent from
Toledo by the boy who boarded at our
house one summer. Stinson, was his
name; be got to bo a senator or some
big thing I heard. Aud here is the ono
Billy Shaw sent me after I mittened
him at spelling school. Wasn't he mad?
There is another one Stinson sent, and
dear me!" Her fingers trembled a
little as she picked up a largo envelope
addressed in a bold, round hand to
"Miss Kittie Deane." This she laid
quickly aside, smiling, nodding and
musing over the others till the stock
was exhausted. Carefully she replaced
them all but the big envelope. "It
really seems as if I can't open it, and
yet and yet it is all so long past, and
I'm an old woman, a mother, and grand
mother. God forgive me, I'm dreadful
foolish, dreadful foolish, but it can be
no harm this once, and like as not I'll
burn this one thon, and give the rest to
Nan's baby to play with."
Hesitatingly yet fondly, as one
touches a curl cut from the dead baby's
head, she drew the card from the en
velope, and then, swayed by some sud
den and over-powering emotion, pressed
it to her lips.
"Heaven forgive me! oh Harry,
Harry!"
Letting it fall in her lap, she covered
her face with her hands, and wept half
in sorrow, over some grave of the past,
half in repentance because she could
not forget.
To other eye than hers there was
nothing to excite emotion about the
queer, old-fashioned valentine with its
heterogeneous collection of flowers and
brief inscription, "Mizpah;" but to her
it conjnred up a picture of a fair young
giri viewing it for the first time through
a mist of happy tears. Only the day
beforo she had bade her handsome,
true-hearted lover farewell. They were
engaged, and he had gone West to make
a home for her.
"Yoa will.be true to me, -Kittie, and
not get tiped of waiting?" he had qxie3
tioned for the twentieth time, perhaps.
"I wiii never tire of waiting for you,
Henry,' sho had fervently averred.
And he had gone away, sending back
the valentine and a fond little note so
soon. How thoughtful of him! But
that was all. Vainly she waited for the
promised letters. They never came,
and what added to her misery, if such
a thing was possible, every oue in the
village seemed to know of his incon
stancy. Oh, the agonizing snspense
and uurest. Soon she hoard that he
was corresponding with some one else.
Maddened to desjn;ration, she never
questioned the truth of the rumor, but
blindly accepted au offer of "marriage
from Mark Hazard, the young post- j
master. Thev were married in le3s
than a year after Harry Se well's de-
partnre. A change of administration
about this time threw young Hazard out
of employment, and he, too, decided to
seek his fortune in the West; and
thither his bride accompanied him.
Stopping in a new town just spring-
ing into existence in the lead regions of
Wisconsin, he started a small grocery,
while his wife, kept boarders-cluefly
the rough miners. .
Five vears pass in a ceaseless round
of toil. Well, perhaps,, for the
young wife that it was so. She had
less time to encourage the canker that
never ceased knawing at her heart
Her girl and boy were tho ray3 of
sunshine that had flashed athwart her
J path. They made life worth the living.
juanc nazaranaa proven ine saying 01
his old neighbors, .that, he was narrow
minded and small-souled, to be literally
true, and to no one were "these traits
more apparent than to his wife.
It was on a sultry spring afternoon
that a double carriage paused in front
of the large, unfinished, "almost unfur
nished house known as, the "Hazard
Place," and a well-dressed gentleman,
alighting and stepping to the open
door, asked for accommodations for his
party of four.
Poor woman, she had been washing,
and, with dinner just over, she was
warm and tired. The flushed face,
with damp curls clustering about it,
looked far more like Kittio Deane's,
however, than did the usual pale'oonn-
tenance and plainly drawn hair of Mrs.
Mark Hazard.
"Yes, you can stay but the accom
modations are poor," she answered
hesitatingly, lifting her eyes foe tho first
time to tho occupants of the carriage. A
brief glance took in the well dressed
ladies in the back scat, and iras met by
the startled, troubled gaze of the gentle-
-man holding tho xeins.
One little gasping cry, and the Hush
was gone from tho sweet face and the
landlady" lay in a pitiful heap on. the
xough Hour.
"Poor thing, tired out!" cried tho
ladie3 in unison, while tho gentleman
on the front scat, with an exclamation
they did not understand, flung the reins
to his companion on tho ground, and
springing out, was, a moment later,
carrying tho limp little body into a room
through tho open door of which he saw
a home-made lounge. Tho Jadies fol
lowed, aud a girl of some fourteen years,
entered carrying a slcejiing babe.
In tho infdst of tho confusion which
ensued, one of the ladies cried out:
"Why, Harry Sewell, you look as if you
were going to faiut."
Tho man made no reply Lut his hande
trembled as he sprinkled water on the
thin, up-turned faco of the to tho others
unconscious stranger. Presently the
white lids fluttered, and the blue eyei
opened upon the anxious face of Harry.
Sewell. A momentary flush, a quick
contraction of the features as if in, pain,
then Mark Hazard's wife struggled to a'
sitting posture.
"I was so tired," sho remarked in a
weak, "apologetic tone, keeping her
oyes averted from tho face opposite.
"Here, Maggie," sho continued to the
girl, "give baby here and show them to
tho east room. Take up fresh Water. "
Tho table was set for tho strangers
in a big, unfinished parlor room; and as
Maggie served them they did not 'see
their hostess again that day. Mark
Hazard met the men strolling about in
tho evening, and talked with them! of
the weather, crops and country, as with
other travelers, and passed on none the
wiser. -
Kittie, drawing .water from i;he deep
well in the gathering twilight, heard a
voice and a step beside her. "Let
draw it, Kittie."
jue
4
She drew back as if lie had struck
her.
" Harry Sewell, how dare you cqmo
into rny presence. Is it to taunt me?
To 'taunt' you, Kittie Deane beg
pardon, Mrs. Hazard. Strango words
from ono so utterly false, ono who
urged lrer betrothed lover to go "West
that she might marry hi3 rival."
"Me false?" her voioo quivered, "what
can yon mean ? Did you expect me to
be true to ono who never wrote a single
word, but corresponded wi;h others?"
"Never wrote you? Great Heavens P
During the brief explanations that
followed, the part played by Mark
Hazard, postmaster, came out in its
true colors. Evidently ho had de
stroyed Harry's letters in order to win
his aflianccd.
The latter had received a paper con
taining the marriage notice; and had
been forced to believe his sweetheart
false.
Slowly they walked back to the
house together. In the shadowy
kitchen they paused, and taking both
her little toil-worn hands in his, ho
kissed them reverently. "Heaven help
us both, Kittie, to endure and do right.
Farewell."
She stood mute and motionless while
he filled a pitcher from tho pail and,
without another word quitted the room.
"Why, Harry, what a time you've
been gone," cried his wife as he en
tered the apartment.
"Landlady fainted again"" she added
banteringly.
"We must be off early," was the ir
relevant rejoinder. ,
Breakfast was served as the supper
had been, and Harry aud Kittie did not
meet again ; and he neve? know that for
long weeks thereafter the wronged
woman struggled with death. Perhaps
Mark Hazard was wiser for her wild
ravings during tho fevers delirium, per
haps not. . t
Long years had intervened between
that morning and the i ono 0V1 which
pretty Nellie Hazard showed her-mother
"Baiph's Valentine." The struggling
little village has become an important
Town", amrthc'HaZard hbmrf-nisTsrm-N"'
v ,l.
fortablc and beautiful as money VcaU
make it. Sons and daughters have
gone out from it, and only eighteen-year-old
Nellie the baby remains
All that we have told, and much in'orG
passes iu array before the mind of the
woman crouching beside the old trunk.
Much more, we say, because she alone
can open and read the volume of the
years, to her alone are the pages visi
ble on which are written what she -has
suffered. And how little anyone
guesses that back of mother's and
grandmother's calm, patient smile,
ready sympathy, and all-sufficientne3S
there is a genuine romance and a
woman's wounded heart.
wasted to make sure of him.
George The ring doesn't seem to fit
Terv well. Clara? Hadn't I better take
it back and have it made smaller?
Clara No, George; an engagement
ring is an engagement ring, even if I
have to wear it around my neck.
Judge.
Joel p a shoemakerf three
Qorth Qf p hag . fin.
ga a pair o 6hceJ 14 inches long, 5
inches and weighing OTer 7
J The shoes were made for a
f, , . ., . . . .
. German tramp, who a veritable giant
. b " a-
i Had Eve been a pretty typewriter
( she would have been a match for the
L ahem! snake; and he, not she, would
I have been turned out of Paradise.
s
CoJf Wade, of lifespan, fasdUirly
ka'JwftM "Farmer Bill" Wade,lcsafram-
latea himself on the fact that h6- has,
caievea a .commmee cnairatansmp d-
oaase ae bow nas a clerk to attend to bis
correspondence. .The law contemplates
this clerk in the act of devoting himself
exclusively to the pressing business
of the -committee on labor, but Col.
Wade views him mora frequently in the
act ox attending to tne congressional ai
fairs of William Wade of Missouri. This
relieves tne colonel of much of the petty
drudgery of congressional work and leaves
him free to relate to his fellow members
the side-splitting anecdotes for which he is
famous. ' Col. Wade never had a private
secretary or clerk before he was made
chairman of the labor committee, except
on one occasion, when he" employed a sub
stitute whose performance the colonel has
described in a tearful way to all of his col
leagues. This clerk was a man who lived in Col.
Wade's district for many years, and who
had almost a wider acquaintance there than
Mr. Wade. He volunteered his services for
certain hours in tbe evening to write let
ters. Col. Wade was about to absent him
self from the halls of legislation and from
the national capital, ' with a view
to transacting some private business.
The suggestion came to him oppor
tunely. He wonld go away, leaving
his correspondence in the hands of tho ex
MisBonrian. The ex-Missoarian "would
with much adroitness write in the colonel's
name non-committal answers to the letters
that were received and the colonel on his
return would follow up his assistant's let
ters with something appropriate, explain
ing the pressuro of business which had oc
:asionet the hasty reply previously for
warded. The situation was explained to the ex
Missonrian. He took it in smiling and as
serted' a thorough comprehension of it. So
Col. Wade went away with a light heart.
It was a day or two after his return before
be realized the wreck to which his political
hopes and prospects had well-nigh been
brought. Said the colonel, tearfully, ex
plaining the situation to a colleague after
ward: "That man wrote to all the people in my
district that I was ont of town just the
thing I did not want them to know. Bat
he did more than that. Instead of ad
dressing my warm political friends in con
ciliatory phrase; instead of implying that
I was the dust of tbe earth aud that thoy
were t he people, ho fell on them
and smote them hip and thigh.
Beading between tbe linos of his
letters these were about the ideas
that wonld appear to my correspondent:
'Look here, you d scoundrel, don't yon
know who I am? I am Bill Wade, con
gressman, and I own tbe XHIth district,
together with all tho live stock, two-legged
or four-legged, in or about it!'
"It took me the rest of my term to set
myself right with my people," continued
Col. Wade with a groan, "and it is n won
der I ever got back to congress." New
York Tribune.
Personal end General.
A PmiiADEiiriiiA bon vivant has kopt a
tubful of terrapin alivo in his cellar all
winter, so as to havo them handy.
The Mexican government is encourag
ing the cultivation of rubber trees. A com
pany has recontly planted 300,000 in
Chiapas.
A meteor that cast a shadow and ap
peared as large as tho full moon was seen
by Noblesville, Ind., people the other
evening.
A. S. CiiOUon, of Prescott, A. T., drives
a team of mnles that are 33 and 35 years
old. They are still good workers.
A BOSTON woman has bad ber shroud
made nt a cost of $20,000. This will cer
tainly be a case where a woman is wrapt
np iu her wealth.
Tiik British museum is solittlo in tonch
with tbe multitude that popular illustrated
lectures are to be given on its .treasures
in art and antiquity.
A max in Saratoga, N. Y., who fought
in tho war without being regularly enlisted,
now finds his name on tho list of desert
ers. The congressman from his district
has introduced a bill to relieve him of tho
stigma.
John Ltjxce Talbot, of North Mid
dlctown, Ky., ngetl 110, is very ill with tho
prevailing disease, la grippe. Owiog to
bis extreme age his friends are very anxions
about him, but it is thought he will pull
through.
Tun bishop of Bochcster, addressing
the students of tbo Boyat Female School
of Arts, in London, on tho occasion of tho
annual prize giving, remarked: "I am struck
with the lovely tasto displayed in your
hats, they are so qniet and ladylike." That
pleased the girls moro than all the prizes.
The Essex institnte, at Salem, Mass.,
ha3 received from Bobert C. Winthrop, jr.,
two original deeds from Masconomet, saga
more, of Agawam, to John "Winthrop, jr.,
of lands in Ipswich and Chebacco The
instruments are in tbe handwriting of John
Wintbrop, jr., and aro dated June 28, 1G38.
Two lovers of a young woman in Bir
mingham, Conn., got into a quarrel tbo
other day and went to the railroad trestle
bridge over tho Naugatuck river to settle
it. One hit tho other a stunning blow
nnder the ear and then pushed him off the
bridge into the river. The victor barely
had time to stop aside to let a freight train
goby.
James Collins, who lives near Gales
burg, 111., while searching for hogs in tbe
woods Tnesday, noticed bees flying around
a large sycamoro trco. Securing help, he
chopped the tree down. As surmised, it
turned ont to be a bee treo of tho richest
kind. It was a mere shell, and when it
struck the frozen ground split open,- show
ing a section of honey thirty feet long. In
all he secured 1,100 ponnds. Mr. Collins
thought the bees would have filled a large
barrel, but ho bad no way of hiving them.
A boy in the employ of the Lincoln Dis
trict Telegraph company, at Lincoln, Neb.,
stands out somewhat conspicuously. Hav
ing been sent to tho depot with a message
for a gentleman about to leave on a
train, he arrived just as the train was pull
ing ont. He did not propose, however, to
lose his man, eo jumping on the rear car
he pulled the bell rope, stopped the train, J
ionnu nis man ami gui uu icu iruiu wune
the brakeman was looking for the cause
of the alarm.
March April May
Are tbe best months in which to purify yonr blood.
-forat no other season .docs the system so much
need the aid of a reliable medicine like. Hood's
'Brsprill as now. DuriOR the long, cold winter.
Mood-iome-tiitirsad litmre.-the-bodre.
1 AA-..d wasV n.i 1mi ttiA gnnettta mow tA Incr
liuca SE4S Ul IUIU "U ''-" j w vuh
Hood's Sarsaparilla is peculiarly adapted to purify
and enrich the blood, to create a good appetite and
to overcome that tared feelimr. It has a larger sale
than any other sarsaparilla or blood purifer, and it
increases in popularity every year, for it is the
ideal
Spring Medicine
"Early last sprine I was very much run down, had
nervous headache, felt miserable and all that. I wss
very much benefited by Hood's Sarsaparilla and
recommend it to my friends." Mns.. M.Taylob,
Uld Euclid Avenue. Cleveland, O.
"Hood's Sarsaparilla has corfd me cf salt rheum,
which I have had for yearS. I do think it is a splen
did medicine. I am 40 years of aaeandmy skin is
jost as smooth and fair as a piece of glass. Ihae
six children, and when anything is the trouble with
them the first thins I go for is Hood's Sarsaparilla."
Mbs.IiUXA Cijlbk, South Norwalk, Conn.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
SoldbyaUdroreists. 11; six for 3. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD CO. Apothecaries. Lowell. Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
!
HIRAM C. WHEELER
ODEBOLT. SAC CO.. IA.
in Imported Percheron.
4 and Shire Stallions
Sane betUr imported latt
year. Can sell a first clas .
3-year-old ol eithPr breed j
forSl.OOO to si.zoo.
Best terms and jruaran- '
tees. Come and see them.
Jdebolt is 03 the C. i . w. Kauway, .3 mixes souui
ICECnOX THIS PATER rat nan to imtnui
DENSION
JOHN TV. MORRIS,
TVasluocton, l. V.
Succaaitfullv Prosecutes Claims,
I Late Principal Examiner U. S. Pension Bureau.
lyrs la last war. 15 adjuaicatlncs claims, atty sinca.
Seed your own and addresses oi
i All Hook Agvata yon know
I ard wo will tend yoa J YKEK
t-H-TWr.lCiT.I-:i'Jkr.ti-1lIAAimm BS. Kfl. I HI
nt hid 11KMCUK Ur " MB BB
Bfe CfclCMO. IU. AOIJTM WmiSBMiM
- sEklAJfcZMSBlKjaKA..
r8at-Fntvnaox Abk, reesatly dsjty
,Ni!a.'lsetjre ea ssMkelsis powder at the"
JtoyaliastitatioBiB London. He said that
4b stokleas,pbwtUr bow being taaBzao
Tared ii" Europe w-i a gelatinoas sub
stance shaped into threads and strips ander
fprsssore. Jt is sasde by dissolving gun
'cotton or some similar material with
camphor or other solvent, and forcing the
compound; when properly prepared,
through perforated dies.
Nxw York receives more than one-third
of the merchandise exported from Bahia,
Brazil, but in return it. furnishes only a
million and a half out of a total importa
tion of thirteen. and a half millions. Eng
land, France and Germany supply the rest.
From this country flour, kerosene, lard,
and bine drillings are shipped; from Eu
rope everything else is shipped, even to
Christmas trees.
A St. Louis physician thinks it jast .as
important that the ears of railroad em
ployes, and particularly that the ears of
locomotive engineers, should be scien
tifically tested for natural or acquired de
fects as that their eyes should be tested for
color-blindness. There is a trouble known J
to medical men who practice largely among
railroad employes as whistle deafness.
ATBiAijinthe harbor of Portsmouth,
England, recently showed that a modern
torpedo boat can mount any boom yet de
vised to protect a roadstead or harbor.
The structure tested it was supposed would
instantly stop and hold fast any boat at
tempting to pass it, but the boat,.
driven at full speed, went over without
difficulty or damage.
Put oa tbo Brakes
If you find you are going down bill in point of
health. Failing strength, impaired digestion,
and assimiliation aro tho marks of dcclino.
Check these and other indications of prematura
decay with tbo grand vitalizer nnd restraining
tonic, Hostetter'u Stomach Bitters. Beginning
at the fountain head, tho stomach, tho Bitters
remedies its inefficiency, corrects its errors, and
sets it vigcrously at work. The digostivo organ
is thus enabled to thoroughly sopurate from tho
food its nutritive principles, which tho blocd as
similating, is enriched. Thus is tho system
nourished, and being nourished, strengthened,
and abnormal waste cf its tissues stayed. Ap
petite, the powor to rest well, a regular habit
arealbo re-established, and the various func
tions niovo onco moro in their natural and
healthful groove. Tho Bittors, moreover, is a
specific for nnd preventivo of malarial com
plaints, rheumatism, biliousness, and kidney
troubles.
Thomas A. DEBLOis,of Portland, says
the Lowiston Journal, was ono of the witty
ALiiDo lawyers of whom interesting stories
are told. At ono timo Judge Nicholas
Emery, who was particular sensitive to
jokes at his own expense, had repeatedly
rebuked Deblois for alleged departure from
tho rules of propriety. Ho being specially
pointed at one time .the councilor retorted:
"I beg your honor's pardon. Your honor
is right and I was wrong, as your honor
usually is."
The Old, Old Story.
A Httla cough ; a feeling ill ;
A headache oft ; a daily chill ,
A slower walk; n quickened breath;
A frequent talk of coming death.
No strength to riso from day today ;
From loving eyes ho fades away.
Now lifts no moro the weary head,
Tho struggle's o'er; tho niaii ia dead.
Such is tholntal progress of consumption.
How clton is ropcatetl tho old. old story.
Yet not hair so often sis it was buforo tho
knowl'-'dgo came to mankind that tlioru was
n discovery in inodical science by which tho
dread disease could ho arrested in its early
stages and tho pationt restored to health.
This wonderful remedy is Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery.
Thousands of cures follow tho uso of Dr.
Sago's Catarrh Kemody. 5'J cents.
llENUY Stbatfokd, of Kingston, Oot ,
has received a letter from England which
went into tho sea when tho steamship
Oregon was wrecke 1 aud sunk in 1SS0.
The letter in question was found buried iu
the sauds of the b;a?h near Capo Hattoras,
X. C. Tho mail bag containing the mis
sive drifted 400 mile;; from tbo sccuo of tbe
wreck.
TuEnn is more Catarrh in this section of tho
country thnn all other diseases put together,
and until tho last few years -was supposed to bo
incurable. For a great many jeurs Doctors
pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly failing to euro
with local treatment, pronounced it incurable.
Science has proven catarrh to bo a constitutional
disease, aud therefore requires constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is tt.o only
constitutional cure on tho market. It is taken
internally in doses from 10 lrops to a tcasiooii
ful. It nets directly upon tho blood and mucus
surfaco of tho syotem. They offer one hundred
dollars for any caso it fails to cure. Send for
circulars and testimonials. Address F. J.
CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. 3TSold by Drug,
gists, 73c
There is a terriblo row going on at tbe
Theatro Francais, and though the manage
ment is doing all it can to keep it dark,
rumors of it keep leaking out. The other
actors aro disgusted that Coquelin has
been taken back. They say that he is so
intolerably conceited with himself that it
is impossible for them to play with him.
All who uso Dobbins' Electric Soap
praise it as tho lest, cheapest and iiosi
economical family soap made; but if you
will try it onco it will tell a still stronger
tale of its merits itself. 1'lease try it.
The latest English fancy is to wear
with a tailor-made gown a Email fancy
watch of iron, or oxidized to resemble iron,
with elaborato gold initials, fastened with
a broach on tho left front of tbe basons,
as a medal or other decoration would be
worn.
Sudden Changes of Weather causo
Throat Diseases. There is no moro effectual
remedy for Coughs. Colds, etc.. than
Bbown's Bronchial Troches. Sold only in
boxes. Price 25 cts.
Eli Circles, of Carroll county, Mo.,
won a $35 sewing 'machino by producing
twelve ears of corn that weighed eighteen
pounds eleven ounces.
Bronchitis Is cured by frequent small
doses of PIso's Cure for Consumption.
In Scotland it is said that to rock the
empty cradle will insure the coining of
other occupants for it.
The tooth extracted from a 13-year-old
horse at Towsontown, Pa., weighed a
quarter of a pound.
Hood's Sarsaprina Is prepared from Sarsaparilla,
Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock. Juniper Berries, and
other weU known vegetable remedies, in such a
peculiar manner as to derivo the full medicinal
vahieof each. It wiU cure; when in the power of
medicine, scrofula, salt .rheum, sores, boils, pim
ples, aU humors, dyspepsia, biliousness sick head
ache. indigesUon, general debility, catSrrh, rhcu
maUsm. kidnoy and liver complaints. It overcomes
that extreme tired feeling caused by change of rli.
mate, season, or life, and imparts life and strength
to the whole system.
Blood Poison
'Tor years at irregular intervals in all seasons, I
suffered the intolerable burning and itching of blood
poisoning by ivy- It would break ont on my less, in
my throat and eyes. Last spring I t3ok Hood's Sar
saparilla. as a blood purifier, with no thought ofit
as a special remedy for ivy poUonicg. bat it has
effected a permanent and thorough cure." Calvin
T. Shcte. Wentworth. . H.
"I had boils all over my neck and back, troubling
me so much that I could not urn my head around
nor stoop over. nood'aSarsaparllls cured me in two
weeks. I think it is the beat blood purifier." Daniel
Read, Kansas City, Mo.
Sold by all druggists. It ; six for $3. Prepared only
ty C. 1. HOOD & CO. Apothecaries. Lowell. Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
QRATEFOL-COMFORTING.
EFPS'S COCOA
BREAKFAST.
By l thorough knowledge of tho natural laws
which govern tbe operations of digestion and nutri
tion, and by careful aj plication cf the fine proper
ties of vrell-elcctcd Cocoa. Sir. tips his provided
enr breakfaat tabled with a delicately Savoured tv-
erage which may save us many heavy doctors' tilU.
Tt 4 h-n- h tudieiouB uze of such arti
Jes of diet that
coDstitutioa maybe gtaduaUy buiitnpuntilstmns
out
imt9h in mM nenr tendency to disease. Hun
dreda of ubtlcanladiF!) are floating around us ready
to attack uliililti thrrcls s weak joint. We ma
tarape many a fatal haft by kerpinirour elves will
fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished
frame.' Civil & rvlee Uazrtte.
Mades&nptywitnboilinirwateror mHk. SoM
enlr In half round tin. by Grocers. laiflleJ thus:
JJJSllU) KFJ1 & CO., HoaoeopaUUo ChtiuUU,
" Jjondon.Knlarii
PEN8ION8ptTffo7?ir!--
Vaisms B'VAsasu, Altr.M I.aw,WMhloi:oB, P.C
English cBBjchawa ro dsUgated otar
a jast-tdla storr that illustrates, they
thiab. the goodness of fie late Bishop
Jjghtfoot. It is tkat in early life he fell
in love with a woman who rejected him and
named another clergyman. After Dr.
Lightfoot became bishop he found bis old
sweetheart and her husband struggling
along on a poor living ia his diocese,
whereupon he took every occasion to ad
vance his rival until the latter and his fam
ily were in very comfortable ciroaa
starces. Flertaee, Ala.
Tho personally conducted excursions to
this rapidly growing city havo been so suc
cessful that tho Chicago & Eastern Illinois
Kallroad (Evansvillo Route) will run ono on
each of the following dates: Feb. 4. 11.13
and 25. For copy of "Alabama as It IV and
further information, send to William Hill.
Gen. Tass. Agent. Chicago. IU.
A dcdish bird that lines its nest with
the down of certain flowers is tho lanceo
late honeyoater. The nest is shaped like
a hammock suspended from twigs, and is
very deep. The groundwork is of grass
and wood.
Claver Seed.
.Medium clover seed, $3.50 per bushel:
sacks. 20c. Sendmonoy with .tier. H. C.
Wheeler, Odcbolt. Sac county. Iowa.
Large numbers of Americans, es
pecially from tbe Pacific coast, are now
visiting Japan. They generally remain a
few months, and thus acquire a wide famil
iarity with Japanese manners and institu
tions. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When sho was a Child, she cried for Castoria,
When sho became Miss, sho clans to Castoria,
When she had CMldren, she gave them Castona
The sanitary commission of Vienna rec
ommend electricity instead of hanging for
executions.
Smoko tho best Tansill's "Punch Cigar."
A New York lady recently had ou her
dinner table 150 orchids that cost $1.50
each.
Copyright, 1SS9. .
"SMSMii:
"TAKEN IN."
" I nsed often to read tho newspaper aloud
to my wife," said Bert Robinson, "and onco
I was fairly 'taken in' by a patent medicine
advertisement. The seductive paragraph
began with a modest account of tho soa
serpent, but ended bv scttinc forth tho vir
tues of Dr. Kerco's Golden Medical Discov
ery, which, it was alleged, was a sure euro
for all Bronchial, Throat and Lung troubles,
and would even euro Consumption, if taken
in timo. Tho way I was taken in was this:
I had lung disease, nnd I Iwught a bottle
of the remedy; I was a stranger to it, and it
took me in and cured me." Robinson's
experienco is identical with that of thou
sands of others. So true is this, that after
witnessing, for many years, tho marvelous
cures of Bronchial, Throat nnd Lung affec
tions wrought by tliis wonderful remedy, its
manufacturers feel warranted in selling it
as they aro doing, through druggists, under
a positive guarantee that, if taken in timo
nnd given a fair trial, it will relievo or cure
in-every case, or money paid for it will bo
refunded. No other remedy for such mala
SIP'S: BTBAPACBIE,
Blliouft Headache, Dizziness, Conntlpadoii, Indlges
tlon, BilioHS Attacks and all derangements of the stomach and
bowels, aro promptly relieved nnd permanently cured by tho uso of
DR. PIERCES PELLETS.
They are
As a
Purely
ONE PELLET A DOSE !
Best Cough Medicine.
Cures where all else fails.
taste. Children tafce it without objection. By ilrtigRists.
B
ryait & Station Chicago Business Goiltgtt
SHOKT-HAHD IN8TITUTK- and ENGLISH TRAINING SCHOOL. IstMBTABBAJ
INtTrrme.1 dd Iha ItiVROXMO1
tloo. Catalogue, MFms.ete.. sent FUKE. Atldresa
iaiead this cvllea aar reatora.
Are the Ill-ST fcr all mill
pmdacuiar everywhere
tnble, llcaitl izui
Flavrer. and large
Farm cmp.
3.j pack.ie3 Earliest
Vjirlfililnri?tf
rulEcient fur a fanuij
-tmrtn.iid-SI.fM.
33 pick" Chnic;
i''lowerSerd.Sl.;
I plcga. LnCrostp;
Seedlinirl :uatc
I00.000 ROSES3
and PLANTS, g
Sei I fir l'r CaLr. j)
rontt!c rttinT f'
!iwn rr!'B e1 una. J
JOIIX A. PALZKKi
l,-l :. I".
ASTHMA.
repliant's AithaaSperlfle
KrlirflnTES.ISUTXS.
munU.bwovttt.;!. I). 1'rUa
iotia.l'a..wril(r3:'I hateliarf
Asthma for 50 jeans f uuuil co
relief until 1 tried jour Srcct
flc, wMch rwlierea me Imtnft
dlatelj. Sold by all Drag
gut. SI per tox.ti malt, peat
i:UL PICKtCE FBES.
Addreaa.T.l'orilAM.
JASTHMASyaRffi-FREE
' bjmzlttommWtnr. Dr.K.SCMyHAy,St.ralInai.
U yoews-nt yocr
Iriiion without
deli?. Fit ya,r
rUhntnttinliantU
ef JfrSEPH
Wasa I fig-Urn,
n. UC3iTEJC Aiwra7
D.C.
r
OU WISH A
tioou tvm
KCYUlifCK
tmrchaan one of the ce.fr
Iratttl SMITH t WESSON
ami. The finest mall annj
erer rraaufactur-d-ac'l the
l.u a1.a(aa rt TI .vr.rt.
Manufacture.; in can ore a. jh ana i-uaa. o.u-
m-'-" y. "--... -i'-rri . .rwi ui.
rleordouble action. Safety Uamcerirea i acu
Ttrgttxaoatis.
Con.txucted ntirely of bett Quel
areoft-.n aolilfor thenninearticaal areuol
mils- unreliable, itut danferoua. The HMITn
WESSON ItovolTers are all aUraped upon th bar
rels with Crm'a name. addrra antl date of PpjU
and are C jcracleed perfect 'SfHV"-
sUtnpon harinir the S'-noine jarUde. and if jour
dealer cannot aupply you an crdpr ;BttoaddreM
Mow will receiTe prompt and careful atU8t.oa.
EeacrlptlTecatalojfUeaad price frjraUhcd upon p
pbntloa. SMITH & WESSON.
it!9.IUirer. 8rJwM. slaas.
aaaaaaaaaanKaaVKci
WFTMFItiIi
jKaaTgasf -TLm
asgSjK'yJyj
aaaaaafafl
fi S3 8 km Sj as ri:-
rcnyft
irfSXSSA
-VMT ! - -VA
- fc-.L-V 4?.
"TC5"TaiiUBV .
VOJ TO
Itjr wraicfet ateel. careimiy uijjt..ci w ",,J
manshipand atock. they are unriTaltd fpr nJ li.
rabiliir nnH accuracy. ronotM;deciv!.l.y
-..11.1.T. ...t.lrfm IHfliailSH WD VM
yjACOBSOIX
CURES PERMANENTLY
EU1
i far Ifeaxlr M Yean.
U7 M. Chealar St. telcimef. Md.
for nearly 39 tssw I tuffm iaa rheums?
Hernia ni TaadtlMeMiefr kmHL aot Uftatz
i taaa two dooms er k. jeeoes oa
WlsLEUSOK.
Of Mamy Yean Standing.
Gadsden, Crockett Co.. Teas.
Ky case was rheumatism of suay years
StandiBf. contracted during the war; tried
most everything without reUeC St. Jacobs
OU finally cared ae. FEED. KOOOE.
At Darccars am n Duras.
THC OUatES a, V CIE1 Cf.. filial w.1
J
UHUUG U0UBH NOW! J
Fop Iff tas cfo nnt It mv Immka vin.
t suaptlve.. For ConsHmptiom. Serofnlit, j
Otmrml HeMlary aad Wmttlu.j liiteaiep, )
were is sowing nae j
SCOTTS
Emulsion
Of Fare Cod Liver Oil and
HYPOPHOSPHITES
Of Iilme auacl aScMSM.
It ia almost aa nalatablo as milk. Tar
1
1
better than other so-called Eiaulaiona.
X wonderful fleab producer.
4 Bll
Nnnira umircmn
wwa av bhiihiwiwu
I There are poor Imitations. Get Me gvitMiwe. j
Ely's Crew Bali
W1IX CURE
CATARRH
rrice SO Ceuts.
Apply Daltu into each nostril.
ELY 1JK03, W Warrca 8L.X. 7.
OPIUM
lloau. Tlie oclT or
and eaar car. Dr. J. L.
KlaaheB. Lebanon. Ob la.
dies is sold under such trying conditions; no
ordinary remedy could sustain itself under ."
such n plan of sale.
For all chrome or lingering Couglis.'Weak
Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Bronchitis, Short
ness of Breath, Asthma, and kindred ail
ments, it is a most potent remedy. AVbile it
cures these disease it nlsoclean,s tho blood,
invigorates tho liver, improves digestion, and
builds up both Uesti and strength. Contains -no
alcohol to inebriate, no sugar or syrup to
sour or ferment in tho stomach and inter
fere with digestion. It is a concentrated,
fluid, vegetable extract. Doso small and
pleasant to taste. It stands alone in tho field
of medicine, and is as peculiar in its won
derful curativo effects as in its composition. '
Therefore, don't bo fooleil into taking some- ,
thing recommended as " just as good." Bear '
in mind, it's the only Liver, Blood and Lung.
Remedy possessed of such transcendent
curativo properties as to warrant its manu- "
facturcrs in selling it under a printed cer-
tiiicato of guarantee, which wraps every
lottIe. "Wontn's DisrExsAnr Medicai..
Association, Proprietors, C03 Main Street,
Buffalo, N. Y.
Vegetable1 and
Perfectly Harmless.
Vneqaaled !
SMA.X.U3ST,
XLAJ3XE&1?
CHEAPSC
TO TAEB.
VT,
Recommended by Phvsicia-13.
Pleasant and agreeable to tho
XIW 'X'AS-Sa WOIUjD! Fall Inforna.
IL U. BKYAXT Jk '. l'rcirit,Cfclcaaaaa
Holloa una poacr n m wiiw.
ajataflRj
acd elimea.
r.nriT wejjc
Music, as a handmaid. Mand ready
to argltt in all focUI pleasures and k'alettea.
SOCiiil SINGIiiG! n.vH52 -ni -r "!
i..i!t r -chl. "lijod Old Holks Wo Used to
Bln-'"tl.W).
Tctsncnsancf
rernnerar.ro CruaadB" (35 rat.
ItKirtLftKifUI-'o
or jaw) rtoz.) Kmereon Mortx.
-T".". ------ -t.-yi.-i. -..... ,-,...
"ieiruerasce liJiijiii; ;oii i-Mcu-.ur-.vjuoz.j
Hull.
iilll Ilt-'I! yUurHJ.?.vn uz.) tme.-Ron. -Aa-Jhei'if
-i I'raiM-( VI or tldoz.) Ecirrnon. "Ameri
can An hem I;o-ik ($l2.nr Jl"i do.). Dow's -J19-Iiontcrf
and Scntenco-." 1 0 tta. or 170 doz.)
ETf'J PSUTflTf CI Pacrrd: Ttulh and Boaz"
AOI bm jrllKal ctl7. d..): "Kebecca
iiilc . rJ'iilnz.I rwcular: "DairKJIaldiv Silpiwr
lSJct.oriJ)i!oz.;:Oarden of Sioiflntf Flower"
(lOcts.erfTildoz.)
Great Success of Gut New $1 Music Bosks. '
T.aso CSasidcs" I Vol. I and Vol. 2). "Popular Mann
Col ection." "I'fpn'ar Dvic Jlutlc Collection."
Voas t lisslca for boor" 'bons: Classics for Alto."
l3a-udc lurltore and Uass Sookl" "Claaalc Tenor
t'on-.." Each Look, $1.
VAILCD FOB ETTalZ. PBICS.
LYON & IIEALY, Chicago, IIL .
OLIVER DIJS0N COMPANY. Boston.
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niUULIl d rWJIILLLJ.byaiaii.6toweUaCo.'
BaaaaaaaaaaBaas-avaa
TO COAL CONSUMERS
Throughout tho Northwest:
Vritetothc CQH. SOU CMl C8WMT at Streamer,
111, for prices on the best grade of
LUMP COAL
i Delivered at your station. 'They
aiakev special
price to uu, lactones ana x.
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