< k BEV ML TALMAGE the Brooklyn ramcs DAY SERMON JSftS SUN Subject Our Departed Still My Jns Text And when he saw the wagons which Joseph had sent to curry htm he spirit of Jacob Uieir father rented And Jsraclsaid Hitenough Joseph my son it M alive Genesis xlv 2723 The Egyptian capital was tho focus of tho worlds wealth Jn ships ana Lanres there JiaabeenbroaEbttoitfrom India franfcfn conw cinnamon and ivorv and diamonds jrom tha North marble ami iron from Erria purpe and silk from Greece some of the finest horses of the world and some of the most t nlliant chariots and from all the earth that which could best pease the eye nnd charm tho car and frratify the taste There were temples aflame with red sand stoneentered bv gateways that were guarded by pillars bewddenns with hieroglyphics find wound w ith brazen scr > entsand adorned with winged creatures hmreyes and boils and pinions glittering with precious stones There wero marble columns blooming into Jrhite flowerbuds there were pillars at the top bursting into the ihapo of the lotus when In full bloom Along the avenues lined with sphinx and fane and obelisk there were princes who came in gorceouslv upholstered palanquin carried by servants in scarlet or elMWhere drawn by vehicles the snowwhite itrsesgoden bitted and six abreast dashing at full run There were fountains from stone wceathed rases climbing the ladders of the linbtv Yon would bear a bolt shovennd a door of brass would p alike a Bash of the sun The surroimdbjg gardens were saturated withbdors UVW mounted the terrace and dripped from taa rfcots and burned thelr geJnthoBgyptSan noon On floors of totMiaraoh were spelled rjfcaud beryl and r twisted from embossed with Jiert e precious stone noned out of a raze There were Mn yKn the sleek hide ot leop BroarNThere wore sofas footed with the claws ot wild beasts ami armed with the beaks of birds As you stand en the level beach Of tha sea on a summer day and look either way and there are miKs of breakers white with the ocean foam dashing shore ward so it seemed as if the sea of tbeworlds pomp and wealth in the Egyptian capital for miles and miles flung itself up into white breakers of marble temple mausoleum and obelisk Tbis was the place where Joseph the shep herd boy was called to stand n xt to Tharaoh in honor IV bat a contrast between this scene and his humble starting and the pit into which bis brothers threw him Yet no was not forgetful of bis early home be was not ashamed of where he came from The BisboD of Mcnlz descended from a wheelwright covered his homo with sprirs and hammers and wheels and the King of Sicily in honor of his father who wa3 a potter refused to drink out of anything but an earthen vessel So Joseph wa not ashamed of his early sur roundings or of his oldtime father or of his brothers When they came up from the faminestricken land to get corn from tha Kings corn crib Joseph instead of chiding them for the way they had maltreated and abused him sent them back with wagons which Pharaoh furnished Udea with corn and old Jacob the father In the Tery same wagons was brought back that Joseph the son might see him and Eire him a comforataMe come all the rest of his days Well I bear tho wagons the Kings wagons rumbling down in front of the palace On the ontsido of the palace to see the wagons go on stands Fharoah in royal robes and beside him Prime Minister Joseph with a chain of gold around his neck and on his hand a ring given by Pharaoh to him so that any Umo bo wanted to stamp tho royal seal upon a document he could do so TVagon after wagon rolls on down from the palace laden with corn and meat and changes of raiment and every thing that could beln a faminestruck reopla One day I see aged Jacob seated in front of bis bouse lie is possibly thinUng of his absent boys sons however old they pet are never to fath r any more than boys and while be is seated there bo sees dust arising and be bears wagons rumbling end be wonders what is coming now for the whole land had been smitten with the famine and was in snence But after a while the wagons have come near enough and he sees bis sons on the wagons and before they coma quite up they shout Joseph is yet alive Tho cJd man fainhv < tdeaiLawAyJdo not wunderat it Jhf TSjys telftWratBry Jrnrttiat ffie 3y rn longabsent Joseph fras got to be the firs man in the Egyptian palace While they unload the wagons the wan and wasted creatures m the neighborhood come up and k for a handful of com and they are satis fied One day tho wagons are brought up for Jacob tho old father is about to go to see Joseph in the Egyptian palace You know it Is v at a very easy thing to transplant an old tree and Jacob has bard work to get away tma the place where he has lived so long He bids goodbye to tho old place and leaves his blessing with the neighbors and then hu eons steady bixn whTle he determined to help himself gets into tha wagon stiff old and de crepit Y onder they go Jacob and his sons and their wives and their children eighty two in au followed ty herds and flocks which the herdsmen drive along They are going out from famine to luxuriance they aro going from a plain country home to the finest paiaco ubucT the sun Joseph the Prune Minister gets in bis chariot and drives down to meet the old man Josephs charioteer holds up the horses on one side the dustcovered wagons of the emigrants stop on the other Joseph instead of waiting for bis father to come leaps out of the chariot and jumps Into the emigrants wagon throws his arm3 around the old roan and weeps aloud for past memories and present toy The father Jacob can hardly think it is his boy Why tlte smooth aew of childhood has become a wrinkled brow wrinkled with the cares of state and the garb of the shepherdboy has become a robe royally bedirened But as the old man finds out it is actually Joseph I sea the thin lip quiver against the toothless gum as bo cries out Now let roe die suv I have seen thy face behold Joseph is yet alivef The wagons roll up in front of the palace Help out the grandchildren and take them in out of the bot Egyptian sun Help old Jacob out of the wagon JSend word to Pharaoh that the old shepherd has come into royal apartment Pharaoh and Jacob meet dig nity and rusticity ths gracefulness of the court and the piam manners of the field The King wanting to make the old countryman at ease and seeing how white bis beard is and how feeble bis step looks familiarly into bis face and says to tfc aged man How old art thou Give ihe old man a seat Unload the wagons drive out th cattle toward the pastures of Gojfien Let the slaves in scarlet kneel and wrlfctbe f tof the newlyarrived wip Ingsfam on the finest linen of the palace tVo Bases ofperfume let the newlyarrived t ind refreshed let minstrels fcruxison and thrum Sp > lstaA jingle down ft this i and isara a woijdby sin iKingIs bk constant ilea with us his wagons coming and g3ngrJ < Pefealy and in the rest of my ditcoanRI1 wJH shew you what the wagons bring and what they take back In the first place like tbcee that came from the Egyptian palace the Kings wagons now bring us corn and meat and many changes ot raiment We are apt to thDk of the fields awl the orchards as feeding us but whomakes the flax grow for the linen and the wheat for the bread and tbo wool on the sheepabackl Oh I wish we could see through every grain field by every sheepfold under the trees of every orchard the lungs wagons Tbey drive up three times a day nxTuing noon and ni ht They bring furs from tho Arctic they bring fruits from the tropic they bring bread from the tenperate zone The King looks out Ki 7 JSP There are twelve hTfi pioas of people to be fed and clothed So many pounds of meat so many barrels of flour so many yards ot rioth ana linen and flannel so many hats so many socks so many shoes enough for all save that we who are greedy get mora shoes than belong to us and others go barerootod Nonobut a Ood could feed and clothe toe world Kono but a Kings corn crib could appease the worlds faralna None but a King oould tell bow many wagons to sendand now heavily to load themand when over the frozen ground today Do you not bear their rumbling They will stop at noon at your tabs Oh iffora little while they should cease hanger would come into the nations as to Ltica when Hamilcar btsieged it and as in Jercsalem when Vespasian eur rounded it and the nations would be hollow eyed and fall upon each other in universal cannibalism and skeleton would drop upon skeleton and thore would be no one to bury the dead and the earth would be a field of bleached skeletons and the birds of prey would fall dead flock alter flock with out any carcasses to devour and tha earth in silence would wheel uround one great black hearse All life stopped because the Kings wagons are stopped Oh thank God for bread for bread I remark again that like those that came from lie Egyptian palacethe Kings wagons ItSiSZm A bring us good news Jacob had not heard from bis boy for a great many years He never thought of him but with a heartache There was in Jacobs heart a room where lay the corpse of his unburied Joseph and when the wagons camethe Kings wagonsand told hun that Joseph was yet alive he faints deid away Good news for Jacob Good netrs or us The Kings wagons come down and tell us that our JosephJesus Is yet alive that He has forgiven us because we threw Him Into the pis of suffering and the dungeon otshame lie has risen from thence to stand in a palace The Bethlehem shepherds w re awakened at midnight by the rattling of thi wagons that bipught the tidings Our JosephJesus sends us a message of pardon of life of heaven corn for our hunger ral mnnt for our naktdnesa JosephJesus is yet alive to the village 3 does Mary 1 go to hunt up Jesus I go ot Bethany and say Where lit el They say Yonder Mary lives I go in I sec where she rat in thesitting rown I go out where Martha worked in th kitchen but I find no Jesus 1 go into Pilates courtroom nnd I And the judges ard the p dice and the prisoners box bit no Jesus I go into the Arlmathean cemetery but the door is gone and the shroud is gone and Jesus Is gone By faith I look up to tho Kings palace and behold I have found him JosephJesus is still alive Glorious religiona religion made net out of deaths beads and crossbones and undertakers screwdriver but one bounding with life and sympathy and glad nets Joseph is yet alivel w I know that my Redeemer lives Want comfort this sweet sentence gtrci lie lives lie lives who once was dead lie lives my everIlilng Ueadl He lives to grant me dally breath He lives and 1 shall couqner acata lie lives my mansion to prepare Be lives to bring me safely there lie lives all glory to Ills name Me lives mj Jesus still tbe same Oh the sweet Joy this sentence gives I know that my Iledcemcr Uvea The Kings wagons will after awhile un load and they will turn around and they will go back to the palace and I really think wiflnotSstX rtiiliaSnesUll4en world The King has ordered that we be lifted into the wagons and that we go over into Goshen wherathereshallbe pas turage for our largest flock of joy and then we will drive up to tha palaco whero there are glories awaiting us which will melt all the snow of Egyptian marble into f orgetful ness I think that the Kings wagons will take us up to see our lost friends Jacobs chief anticipation was not seeing the Nile nor of seeing the long colonnades of architectural beauty nor of seeing the throneroom There was a focus to all his journeyiugs to all his anticipations and tbatwasJoseph Welltmy friends I do not tbmk heaven would bo worth much if our b ler Jesus was not there If there were t o heavens the oie with all the pomp and paraphernalia ot an eternal monarchy but no Christ and the other were a plain heaven humbly thatchetl with a few daisies in tho yard and Christ were there I would say Let the Kings wagons take me up to the old farmhouse If Jesus were not In heaven there would be no music there there would be but few people there tbey would be off looking for the lost Christ crying through the universe Where is Jesus where is JesusP and after tbey had found him with loving violence they would take him and bear him through the gates and it would be tbe great est day known in heaven within the memory of the oldest inhabitant Jesus never went off from heaven but once and He was so badly treated on that excursion they will never let Him go again Oh the joy of meeting our brother Jo scphJesusI After we have talked about Him for ten or fifty or seventy years to talk with Hun and to clasp bands with the hero of tbeazes not crouching as underlings In His presence but as Jacob and Joseph hug each other We will want some new term by which to address Him On earth we call Him Saviour or Redeemer or friend but when wo throw our arms around Him in everlast ing embrace we will want some new name of endearment lean think of what we shall do through tho long ages of eternity but what we shall do the first minute I cannot guess In the first flash of His countenance in the first rush of our emotions what we shall do I cannot imagine Oh the over whelming gkiry of tho first sixty seconds in heaven Methints we will just stand and look and look and look The Kings wagons took Jacob up to see his lostluy and so really think that the Kings wagons will take us up to see our lost kin dred How long is It since Joseph went out of your household How many years is it now last Christmas or tbe fourteenth of next month Jtwas a darknight when he died and a storoy day it was at the burial and the clouds wept with you and thewinds siirhed for the il T > A h ll nt GreWsi bnt your bcrt has been toiling tolb ng < ver since You have been under a de lusion like Jacob of old You have thought that Joseph was dead Yon put hii name first in the birthrecord of the family Bible and then you put it in the deathrecord of tho family Bible and you have been deceived Joseph is yet all vis He is more alive than you are Of all the I ixteeu thousand millions of children that statisticians say have gone into the future world there is not one of them dead and the Kings wagons will take you up to seo then You often think how glad you will bo to sue them Have you never thought my brother ray sister bow glad tbey will be to see vou Jacob was no more glad to see Joseph than Joseph was to sea Jacob Every time the door in Heaven opens they look to see if it is you coming in Joseph once standing in the palace burst out crying whea ho thought of Jacob afar off Ami the neaven ot your little ones wuf not n fairly begun until you get there All the kind nesses shown them by immortals will not make them forget you There tbey are the raidiant throngs that went out from your homes 1 throw a kis3 to tbe sweet darlings They are all well now in tho palace The crippled child has a sound foot now A little lame child says Ma will I bo lame In heavenf No my darling you wont bo Iam < i in heaven A little sick child says Ma will I bo sick in heaven No my dear you wont be sick in heaven A little blind child says Ma will I be blind in beavenf No my dear you wont bo blind inhimven They are all well there In my boyhood for some time wo lived threo miles from church and on stormy days the children staid at Homo nut father and motlier always went to church that was a babi they bad On those stormy Sabbaths when we staid at homo the absence of our pareits seemed very much protracted for tbe roads were very liad and they could not get on very fast So we would go to the window at twelve oclock to seo if they were coming and then wo would go at halfpast twelve to seo if they wero coming and at quarter to one nnd then at one oclock After a while Mary or David or DeWitt would sbout Tbe wagons coming and then we would tea it winding out of the woods and over the brook and through tbe lane and up in front of the old farmhouse and then we would rush out leaving the doors wide open with many things to tell thorn askinz them many questions Well my dear breth ren I think wa are many of ns In the Kings wagons and we are on the way home The road is very bad and we get onslowly but after ft whilo we wdl come winding out of tbe woods And through the brook of death and n in front or the CT < avenly home stead and our departed kindred who have leon waiting and watching for us will ruth cut through the doors and over the lawn crying Toe wagons are coming the Kings sragons are coming I Hark I the bell of the City Hall strikes twelve Twelve oclock on earth and likewise it Is high noon in heaven Does not the subject of today tako tbe gloom out of the thoughts that would other wise be struck through with midaightf We use I to think that when we died we would bave to go afoot sagging down in the mire and the hounds of terror might get after ns and if we got thrcugh into Heaven at alb we n ouU come In torn and woundedand bleed ing I remember wbem my teeth chattered anil my knees knocked together when I heard anybody talk about death but I bave come to think that the gravo will be the softest bed I everslept in and the bottom of mj feet will not lie wot with tbo passage of the Jordan Them that sleep in Jesus will God bring with Him I was reading of Robert Soutbey who said ho wisbed he could die far away from bis friends like a dog crawling Into a corner and dying nnobserved Theeo were his words Be it ours to die on a couch sur rounded by loved ones so that they with us may hear the glad sweet jubilant announce ment The Kings wagons ere coming Hark I hear them now Are they coming for you or met He JonN Hjzzlb of Jersey City 1 ot that Cleveland Tvonlil bo olecteil Tho majority was against John and as a penalty for his deficiency in jndgment he sat for two honrs on a sharppoint ed iron picket fence Then he mizzled Tom Satees belt which was given him after his fight with ITocnan in 18C0 l > 7 George Vilke3 is offered for sale U Sayors death tho l > elt was pur chased by Glen his trainer It is oi massive silver inscribed and would form a fitting ornament for some mod ern barroom A Miners ATrfnl Experience It falls to our lot to record an incident that causes a shudder in its contempla tion A week ago last Sunday Ton Ryan well known in these parts lefl Williamss ranch for a prospecting toui for tho day For all that Ryan is giver to bibulous proclivities this day he wai himselfas we have from Tellable author ity and bad been for several days Attir ing himself to suit his intended excur sion Ryan struck out and that wa the last seen of him for six days Queries had been made regarding his nonappear ance but no knowledge of his existence could be obtained Last Saturday TYilliam M Cann and Frank Cavaanugh were in search of the missing man A few hundred yards above the residence of John Williamsin Old Womans fulchthey passed anaban doned tunnel At tho suggestion of one to search the place with the possibil ity of finding the object of their search with lighted candle they entered Cau tiously they grouped their way into the tunnel when suddenly they found them selves on the brink of a shaft Feering over tho edge with their lighted candlo they could see no bottom They called out but no answer came Listening they heard a sound as of some one breathing heavily Again they called and an answer came Assistance was then called and by a rope Cavanaugh was lowered to the bottom of the hole where lay Tom Ilyan Hello Tom caid Cavanaugh Hello answered Toni have you come to stop to this hotel too Ihave been Tery badly treated here On being asked how he was ho repliei that he was all right The man was out of his head but when told that he had better comeout while ropes wero being put about him to hoist him up he agreed but was unable to stand without assistance He was broughtup andiared for He had been w thout food or drink for six days The tunnel into which he had wandered by ictual measurement was 123 feet in engthat the end of which was the shaft ivhih measured thirtyfive feet and down which the man plunged I pon examination he was found to be consid erably limited on the sides with a con tusion in the back of the head at the base of the skull At last accounts he was improving About twentyfivo years ago a man by Ihe name of George Bush tell into the same shaft but was fortunate enough to Dnd an oldshoielat the bottom with which he dug footholes in the soft lava and got out But since then the shaft has caved in considerably at the top thus becoming too wide to straddle it It wa3 only by mere chance that Ryan was found Jfildumms IliU Chronicle NotcI Mode or Keeping Fish Frc3h On the river front of the Fulton Market little olfices are portioned oil for the use of the marketmeu Visitors to these offices should they happen to look out on the river water between the piers enclosing the slips in tho rear of tbo market will be puzzled at the scene that greets them A score or more of small loops or schooners lie a stones throw distant from the river front and between them and the rear of the market are doens of rjuecrlooking contrivances something like big tomato crates so Submerged in the w aicr as to only have their tops projecting above the surface If these crates or boxes aro watched igns of life will be seen within them Close inspection will reveal the fact that most of these crates are blled with lobsters green turtles ocean cod sea bass or other denizens of the deep The crates are designed to keep certain kinds of fish alive until they are wanted for the market The average crate or car as it is technically termed is about e ghtcen feet long by fourteen wide and about five feet deep It is made of slate nailed to a framework jnd placed so close together as to prevent Ihe escape of the fish imprisoned within but at the same time sufficiently apart to free circqraiion of river water through the sides Tbercarescoresor these cars moored in the slip in close proximity to one another The frame of which they are con structed is very buoyant and the cars are used by the markctmen as a sort of a pontoon bridge from their stalls to tho fishing vessels Ladders are suspended from the rear of the market stalls and the marketnian con clamber down to the floath underneath run over the cars to his smack in tha slip and the back again up the ladder and in his office in a few minutes time Several of these smacks may be seen in the slip at any time when the river is navigable They are for the most part small affairs ranging from 10 to 7j tons burden and ate worth from 130 to 000 or S OOO The fleet numbers about eighty sloops and schooners the halibut boats being schoonerrigged and tho larger number of the others beingsloops Most of them are owned by commission ah dealers though some belong to their captains iVeir York San A Philadelphia Ilercule Philadelphia can boast of a modern Hercules in the person of George Sopt man a giant in muscle and stature He stands G feet li inches in his stockings measures > 0 inches around his chest and weighs 273 pounds scarcely an ounce of which is superfluous csh His propor tions arc admirable and he has amazed inany an athletic expert by his displays of strengtlu Soptman recently paid a ishort visit to a gymnasium on Arch street and gave an exhibition of what he conld do The pupils eyed him curiously when he picked up the 10U pound dumbbell and twirled it between his fingers as a dude might do with a bamboo cane When he stretched out his arms and a ked all who possibly could do so to jump on his ba k arms shonlder3 and head to take n ride eight sturdy acistrong men complied with the request and holding on to his ears hair and collarbutton they bore their weight upon him He carried them without much difficulty and the gym pasts who saw tho performance wero al tnost inclined to think contemptuously of their own comparatively puny phy siques A ot satisfied with this the young giant went to tho strengthtesting scales and pulled up the 2000pound weight with ease He then wrapped two straps around his shoulder nnd back and fasten ing the ends to 00 pounds of iron he calmly raised the weight and took a promenade around the hall with his load As his last art instead of wrestling with a Numcan lion an Hercules of mythologi cal fame did he caught hold of a bear which a friend had ciprcssly brought and hugged Ihe animal so hard that it ftrunted for mercy Soptman has yet to perform seven more dillicult tasks and then he will pose himclf as a modern Hercules nnd the hero of twelve un paralleled feats of strength PhiUtdd pliii ll > Cirri A Scheme to icmudel the norse A Northumbrian agriculturi t gravely proposes to remodel the horse which at present appears to him to bo too ftiltcd So ho always appears to me and unless he gets much nearer to the ground than he stands at present I shall never patronize tho horse again The method seems to be very impeand beats the clfoits of evolution into fits The task he would suggest to breeders is to shorten the cannonbones about one half and to give whit you take off them to increase the length of the thigh and shin bones hcthr this is to be done with a hatchet or some other ingenious instiumcnt he does not tell us but sup posing the operation to bcsuccc6sfulcan it not be applied to human beings I Iknow heaps of people who are far too stilted and to whom any alteration on Ihe lines suggested would be an advan tage At present except an endeavor bete and there to take them down a peg or two no improvement has been ittcmpted JScw York Independent WOMAFS WOULD PLEASANT IilTEUATCRB FOR FEMININE HEADERS A ClgarettoSmoklns Duclicss Mrs Hamersley now the Duchess of Marlboroughwas always an inveterate cigaretto smoker and she has not abandoned the practice upon ber eleva tion to the peerage Just now the shops are showing little ladies smoking jackets said to be patterned after the one worn by the Duchess when she joins her husband in the smokingroom after dinner for that is her customI am told bythosowho have been to Blenheim under tho new regime Chicago Xcut Sirs Shaw the Whistler There was a great throng at Chickcr ing Hall on her opening night in New Ybrk City to hear Xrs Alice Shaw the whistler Seven numbers wcreheard be fore Mrs Shaw apneared To most of the audience she was a novelty and not even Josef Hofman was looked upon with keener curiosity at his debut than was she as sbo walked from the waiting room to the footlights Sho held a piece of sheet music Mia Piccirclla by Uome in her hand just as though she wero going to sing from it lobody knew which was to havo a turn first the whistle or the piano It was the A short meaningless prelude egan tho affair and then Mrs Shaw herd np her head and put out her flexi ble lips like a pretty school girl under the light of the moon The sound that followed was not suggestive of the moon lit scene It was a soft silvery trill that hung for an instant at the samenoto and then darted away in liquid melody and it High and low presto adagio went now blustering a forte likcTnrfsrpwsw winter wind around a house corner and again waiting sentimentally after tho portamento fashion of a lover tenor It was au interesting performance and when the piece was finished the applause was genuine and hearty Of course sho was recalled and the second piece was as good and as well done as the first Then there was more applause and after com ing out to bow her acknowledgments four times Mrs Shaw whistled a third piece Mrs Shaw was a sensational pouting success Chiago Timu The Toilet in Ancient Egypt A few words may be said about the dress of the ladies in ancient Egypt They noro a gown of brightly coloted and patterned stuff secured by a sash at the waist or by a belt over the shoulders Above this was a large loose robe of fine linen with full sleeves fastened in front below the breast Tho sandals were usually pointed and turned up at the toeand people of position were very particular about them Tho hair was wcrn long or plaited iu the triple plait the ends being tied by a string uf the same color as the hair The back har in plaits reached to the bottom of the shoulderblades while the plaits at tho side fell down to the breast Ornamen tal bands were fastened over the head and sometimes combs wero worn The short hair at the side of the face was in f CDKIOOS FACTS terwoven with some of the longer hair evolved tcrpsicu a preparation of lob and rice seasoned and made to fall in a little curl just in front of tho earring Tho earrings usually worn were large hoops of gold of a diameter of from one to nearly three inches but one in the shape of a dragon has been found Rings were generally worn on the left hand and particularly on the thud finger they were of gold and were sometimes set with engraved gems Anklets and baDglcs were also worn and bracelets et with precious stones also necklaces of many devices usually with a large drop ornament in the centre The appliances of the toilet used by a lidy were numerous and in cluded a black powder for staining the eyelids and eyebrows antimony or black oxide of manganese being r generally used aimondSTeems a more A carp lives a hundred years Tho total number of Moravians is 10 6S6Tho Tho great New York Orange riot oc curred on July 12 1S71 A monkey in the Zoological Gardens at London has been taught to count up to fiveAbottloof Abottloof tho late Samuel Tildens whisky sold in New York the other day for 1123 An experiment recently made Scotland proves that the tortoise can walk a milo in four hours A Sioux scoutnamed Mahpeahwakosia hss just d ed of lockjaw at the ago of nearly 100 years A Chicago real estate agent smokes out objectionable tenants instead of cm ploying tha sheriff A cassava root weighing twenty Eounds less than a year old is on ex ibition at Bartow Ga It is caid that a lad of twelve and a man six foot and seven inches in height play in the same band at Eastmanville Mich Tho last vestigo of snow has disap peared off Mount Rose Col for the first time within the knowledge of the white settlers An East Portland Oregon fruit grower raised a peach that measured eleven and threefourth inches in cir cumference Anew English gamo called naval blockade has recently been invented which is said to bo as intricate and fascinating as chess tfohn Culliton head porter of the Csdud Pacific Hotel in Chicigo has a f JJLune of 100000 and the reputation of ezllhiest norter in the world James Miles an Idaho man refused to cKp in even a nicklo to bury a fellow townsman and a bolt of lightning killed thirteen horses for him on tho day of the funeral Fortho information of those who like to collect old and curious weapons it may lie said that poisoned arrows are very dangerous treasures It has been found that even at the end of eighty years they havo not lost their toxic power A novelty exhibited at tho New York horse show is the sulky sleigh intended for winter use It is built in the same way as the ordinary racing sulky light and having steel springs but instead of tho wheels a short pair of runners is sub stituted There is a bootblack in the Chicago City Hall who is quite a curiosity He has one arm off below the elbow and wears a wooden limb strapped tightly to the stump To this wooden arm is fas tened a brush and he uses it as adept as the one held in the hand he has remain ing Competition among tho New York oyster houses i so great that their pro prietors are continually cvoU ing no > v gas tronomic surprises for their patrons A Sixth avenuo oysterman has evolved fricasseed crab on toast garnished with Email oyster crabs and another has ster charmingly and hoi cd in cabbage or lettuce leaves then sen cd with sauce bearnaise Around the World In ScTdity Days A Sun reporter asked Mr Georgo Eadc manager for Thomas Cook Son the tourist agents the exact time in which a passenger can go around the world iiter a few moments of thought and study of guide books Mr Eadesaid n these days of rapid transit with vestibule trains and fast ocean steam ships it is possible to make a circulation so close that a person in New York say can decide tho very day on which ho rill return to the city having completed though Jhe bL 1 yjEg ryrqpdll wrM I hnnld rrawdcrBrburnt work itoutHke ths than these metallic material harmless leaving New lork at 050 v In Egyptian tho ° products paintings eye is often represented as much elongated and probably this appearanoe was pro duced by painting A bodkin was used for applying tho black powder okohl and very elegant little boves with various compartments were devised to contain it Some large goldheaded pins have been disco erea which seem to have after tho modern fashion In order to enhance the beauty of the fingernails the Eiak portion of them was stained with ennawhich made the white semicircle at the root of the nails stand out more clearly by contrast Mirrors were made of metal and so highly polished that they were perfectly adapted for the pur pose they were round and were in serted in a handle of some pretty or quaint design Sometimes tho head of some hideous monster formed part of tho handle the mirror thus suggesting the idea of Beauty and the Beast and the ugly head serving as a foil to tho loveliness reflected in the bright surface above The ladies were fond of bathing using both the hot and cold bath but ordinarily preferring the latter San Francisco Chronicle Fashion Notes Feather boas aro more popular than everGreen Green retains its place a3 the favorite color The newest French toques are round in shspe A great many black hats and bonnets ore worn Dark green bengalino is used for street costumes Lace is the favorite trimming foreven lng dresses Chartreuse and absinthe arc the newest green shades The lowcrowned hat and bonnet are coming but they come like most good things slowly Ribbon toques arc new They are in the long English shape tTokindsof rib bon being used jr on Jfonday November 12 he would arrive at Chicago at 950 v Tuesday Leav ing Chicago the same day he would ar rive at San Franci co at 1U45 a m Sat urday the lUh On the same day tho Oceanic Companys steamship leaves for Sydney at 2 r m and ihe steamship 13 due to arrive at Sydney on December 12 s da hc same d b traia la lAtIk 0 th U at315r he would arrive at Mel bourne at lllt i M on the following day December 13 After resting in Melbourne for a day our traveler would leave by the Peninsular Jc Oriental Steam ship Companys steamship on the 1ith for Brindisi calling en route at Ceylon then crossing the 1 ed Fca to Port Said after which the steamship goes through the Suez Canal direct to Brindisi arriv ing there on January 20 The train is then taken for London which is reache in three days and on the following day the 24th ho w ould leave London by Norlh German Lloyd steamship and reach New York on r cbruary 1 It is a wellestablished fact that first class ocean steamships make their voy ages with nlmot the accuracy of an ordinary express train consequently there Is no doubt the journey could bo completed in the time indicated namely eightyone days Supposing the journey is reversed and our traveler goes east instead of west the same ground can be covered seventynine days Taking again tho route through China and Japan tho oyage can bo com pleted in eveu less time We have not worked out the times of arrivals and de partures in detail but may briefly say that allowing six days from New lork to San Francisco sixteen days thence to Yokohama six days from 1 okohama to Hong Kong where the Peninsular Oriental Companys steamship can bo taken for Brindisi the voyage occupying thirtytwo days allowing three days from Brindisi to London and seven days thence to New York the whole voyage round the world csrt bo completed in seventy days ffc t This howeverriad ugriifUu > tM > > iccuplcd for travel and of course the Jlisses evening bonnets are in paicjjravc ler would have to make allowance pink or blue tulle with very long nnd very broad ribbons of the same color Quite new and immensely stylish are tho veils of black dotted net drawn under the chin by a narrow black rib bon A white flannel afternoon bonnet recently seen was trimmed in white cloth with green velvet front laid in loose folds Among tho novelties in millinery aro bonnets covered insplitzephyrworstcds usually white woven across and around tho crown Although coiffures are less voluminous tho hair is still piled on the top of tho head while a few light curls fall over the forehead Ribbon mulls to match tho costumes with which they are worn nro novel and pretty They are made with alternating stups of ribbon and of fur going round tho muff and manylooped bows of the ribbon on the top Fillets of ribbon aro worn in tho hair with evening toilets also half wreaths of tiny flowera which band the hair in two pointed filletlike rows These fillets aro often finished with a perky bow of many short loops Hats of red clipped beaver aro in high favor this season for children and are trimmed with clusters of black velvet ribbon and black ostrich tips A slight face trimming composed of knots of tho ribbon is usually placed under the brim of these hats The number of steels used in the dress skirt depends upon the fabric If this is soft and clinging two steels with a small cushion pad are used Stiff ma terials require but one steel AU steels are short and flexible and loosely lc to fornrtnwll curves ior tho making of connections Xew OVrl Sun Aniils There is one peculiarlittlo fact in re gard to the heavy hardware business said Mr James M Corjritt icePresi dent of the Beck A Corhttt Iron Co in a recent conversation with a Hrpuilic representative which is deserving of mention Wc issue a catalogue of 1000 pages containing a list of every article of iron and heavy hardware which we manufacture or sell Of tho thousand therein enumerated there is only one that wo have to import everything else being manufactured best in this coun try and that one article J3 an anvil Three or four manufacturing firms in England supply tho entire world with anvils and ono especially in Dudley England whose goods are the standard in that line And anvils also arc tho only articles we handle which we do not guarantee Blacksmiths aie so caretul as regards their anvils and there is such a peculiar temper necessary that wo re quire them to test an anvil for them selves or when wo receive an order by mail we ship tho anvils without guaran teeing and as a rulo the standard makes go through all right Why it is that this country does not manclacturo an anvil equal to the English ones I do not know but the fact is that they do not and hence that one article has to bo bought from the English manufacturers St Louis iXtitvblic It was an Ohio man who set firo to his store cut his throat and laid himself down among kegs of powder in the burn ing building yet is in a fair way to re cover although tho building was that tered lYORDS OF WISDOM It is tho last step that costs Never put a gift cigar in the mouth A man is known by the dog ho keeps Never press a favor whero it seems un desired Never intrude ill health pains losses or misfortunes Never unavoidably wound the feelings of a human being A man may wear epaulets and be only a drummer in the band Providence always provides a shorn lamb for the wind to blow upon Lovo labor for if thou dost not want it for food thou mayst for physic Injuries are forgiven only in their ceasing to be such and then what is thereto forgive There is a transcendent power in ex ample We reform others unconsciously wbon wo walk uprightly Selfishness mars tho loveliest actions it stains the fairest beauty it dims tho brightest lustre it blotches the most munificent charity Tho golden beams of truth and tho silken cords of love twisted together will draw men on with a sweet violence whether they will or not Prosperity is not the only state and course of things among mankind Only a very few prosper until they have pur chased prosperity by very severe and longcontinued effort and suffering Always givo precedence to ciders visitors and superiors Offer them tho best seat at the tabic tho best place by tho lire and the first of everything Go farther than mere form and seo that they ire comfortable and happy 11 nil Against Tythons Last Sunday week one of the most re markable scenes on record h reported as having been witnessed in the vicinity of Table Mountain A troop of cattle con sisting of twelve cows and a patriarchal old bull were grazing on one of tho plateaulike spurs of the mountain which is surrounded on three sides by precipi tious ravine and on the fourth side that nearest the mountain by dense bush Some natives higher up the mountain were attracted by the sudden bellowing of the cattle and saw two enormous pythons coming out of the bush and making for tho cattle which had drawn themselves up in a compact group with the bull at its head As the pythons drew near the animals gradually backed till they stood on a small space that jutted out over a tremendous precipice At this stage a sudden rush was made but only one heifer succeeded in escao ing The other cattle bellowing most pitcously gradually backed and one by one fell oier the precipice till finally the bull only was left He suddenly charged at the i > ig python transfixing the reptile on his horns but thesecondsnakc seized the bull in his folds and having its tail around a huge boulder commenced to crush thebullwhicb moaning pitcously struggled frantically to escape The tail of the python lost its hold of the rock but the larger snake which had slipped off the horn lapping its tail around a smaller boulder opposite the one the other snake had just released seized the bull and compressed the ani mal in its scaly fold The other python succeeded in regaining its former posi tion and the bull was literally sus ended in mid air by the snakes The whole scene Iookedlikesomegha3tly triumphal marcb The snakes were evidently get ting the best of the poor brute which was blcedintj profusely when by a sud den effort his struggles forced both rep tiles to loose their hold of the rocks and the whole thce were hurled into tho ravine beneath The cattle were found on the first ledge of the precipice all being dead but the bull and the pythons had bounded from ledge to ltdge and were found 400 foot bolrny tbo coonp of tbo fifeht Tho bull was merely a mangled mass and tho snakes wer < greatly mutilated the larger one having the vcrtebrr broken in nine places The pythons which were of the rock specie male and female measured respectively 4n feet 2 inches and M feet 14 inches Saal > uth Africa M ttncss I sat Eobinson why dont you weal that now derby I saw on you tho othei day Im suro tho weather is fine enough Jly dear boy I will toll yon confidentially that its in soak I am saving np to pay for my wifes Easter bonnet New Haven Kews The tiara which tho Duko of Aosta gave his wife conta ned 1150 stone and cost 85000 It must tiro her to wear it Lowell Courier Cure or rnenmonla Hess IEoad Xiao ma Co NY XlaichSl 1S8G f Aboat a year ago I was taken with a sevens pain in both longs I was first attacked with a violent chai then a dreadful rain and then a cough accompanied by considerable fever It looked very much like a bad attack of pneumo nia A friend of mine procured fii o Aixoocks PlxASlEns One he put nndcr each arm one under each shoulder blade and one on my chest close around my throat In a few hours the cough ceased tho pain gradually abated and I broke out in a profuse perspiration I fell into a profound sleep and tho next diy was almost well I t oro the Plasters eight da s afterwards and have never had any trouble since William A Sawtkh Nevada contain lOtTlJ square miles wai fettled In lStiO at Washoe and was admitted into the Union October 311SCL Shocklnc Accident So read the headlines of raa newspaper column amino peruo with Stating Inter est the details of the catastrophy and are deeply impressed by tbe sacrifico of human lives invou ed Vet thousand of men and n o men are falling i leutns every year to that ter rible disease consump inn scrofula of the lungs and they and their friends are mti < lied to believe the malady incurable Now there could be no greater mistake No earthly power of course can re tore a lung that w en tirely wasted biitllr Pierces Golden Medical D scovery will rapidly and surely arrest Hie ravazes < if conunijki r taken in time llo not therefore dotnair until you nire ulwl thi3 wonderful remedy Calhormas production of dried fruit has Increased from 5rroliO pounlsinlSSS to V 605000 pounds In 1SS7 Genteel Qnnck Yes it pars Faid a big fat physician with a name which is known throughout the medi cal world I havo a practice worth tn0H > a year Women Yes youvo guessed it lirt time They pay 10 every time they come Into my office When one gets on my li > t I tell you shcstatil nnd Dr II laughed lung and loud 1 his is quackery giltedged gen teel quackery to keep ulTemig women pay ing tribute year in and year out and doing them no gootf Dr Pierces Favorite Prescrip tion cores tho peculiar w caknesscs and dis ease of ti omen It does not lie to them nor rob them Alaoama was rttled in 1711 at Mobilead mitted into the Union December 111819 and contains E054Q square miles A perfect specific Dr frages Catarrh Rem edy It was a maxim of Mardial Saxe that every soldier killed costs the enemy his weight In lead A Itrtnnrkabte Inprr Tnn l orrrns Coup imov is a welcome vtsitor weekly n more than 40OU1O families and has won n place in home life obtained by no other publication It is alwavs safe pure Instruc l ive and entertaining llie w onder is how any family can do without it Any ner subscriber eendln 175 now can have TnE Compamon free < very week to January 115S9 and for a full year from thadate Sam le copies free Ad dress The YopthsCompanion ostonMaa3 Inlnrrh Currtt A clergyman after j cars of suffering from that loathsome disease Catarrh and vainly tryingeveryknown remedyat last found a prescription which completely cured and aved him from death Any suITerer from thisdreod ful disease sending a selfaddressed stamped envelope to lrof J A Lawrence S3 War en St X l will receive Ihe reelle free of charge A Itnd enl Cure for Epileptic Fit To the Editor Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for tho abote named disease which I warrant to cure the worst cases So strong Is my faith initiir tues that I will send free a sample bottle and valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give mehisl O and Express addrpHs Kcsnv II O HOOT M 11 peifWNew York If afflicted with sore eyes nso Or Isaac Thonm oneEyewater Urnzgista sell atijc per bottl TeNleht and ToMorrow Mshf And each day and night daring the week you can get at fill druggists Kemps llalsamforthe Throat and Lanss acknowledged to bo the most snccesstal remedy ever sold for the cure of Coughs Croup Bronehius Whooping Cough Asthma and Consumption Get a bot tle todav and keep it always in tho bouse so you can check your cold at once Price 50c and Sb Sampie bottles free Estimates of tho number of dogs in the Uni ted States fix it at 1X10000 and their cost of kceplne at 12000000 per annum IT CONQUERS PAIN IT CURES Rheumatism Neuralgia Backiche Headache Tooths cheSpralas Bruises c AtBraxftJU ia4b fclan brief Ui Or Battles gold And In Every One ACCKC TheChasAVogelerCo riiiiifflnrtua Diamond VeraCura FOR DYSPEPSIA AKD AIL BT0MACH TROUBLES 8VCB AB XaUf iU a SotrStomtch H rtb rB Hmt G1 < 1 < lMa OautlpftUoa r IlB i MUr U f Tool lUalaf la th Untb ia4 dlMfr l t u afur m lif Kmtqcslmi ai LcwSplrtU At VrwKisit nrui Vetera or tent by ma2 tr Tfr eelpt Qf > cU 5 late 11 tfn U ttzmp bavipts tent on receipt < tf 2ecnt Siarip THE CHARLES A V0GELES CO Ba mort 1 U T2TC30 Over 25 Pounds Gain In Ten WeeIts Experience ot a Prominent Citizen Tax CauroKtix Socrrrr roa the EcmiisKioTi OF Vice 8a Fiuxcibco Jnly 7th fffiG I took a severe eold upon my chest and lungs and did not give it proper attention It developed into bronchitis and in tho fall of the same year I was threatened with consumption Physicians or dered ine to a more congeni al climate and I came to San Francisco Soon after my arrival I commenced taking Scotts Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphltes reg ularly three times a day In ten weeks my avoirdupois went from 15S to 180 pounds and over the cough mean time ceased c R BENNETT SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AftiVi hilbe 1 n troatcl in vain with old < y 1 remedies f Jtercnrv nd T lash K tv S nt iilv run the Ulood Itiljon bnt rtistecl tho hluiuna tirnfuich a raal T the ponino i rnKruN GEO D0VtliSI33J Aienne > V Slneyc r iraSCTornlsttickM itn < nl Cren n < l they wer badly UK ed with tlv Ji whlrh renlatM the treatment ot ray rami yphyiciaT Iwar r ual < Kitrus < > hwift < Slclttc t > y rehvran conntr paper Tl nrr e account ot cures In my nwnt waaairai ntfromth firatlewtoeeaadtna mpri rSgSE I Trtf a m jcuimI and well JOIUi WILLIAMS Lexington fcwrrra Srxcrnc in entirely a Tewtable rem ey anil is th only mMicina whieh permanently rnres Scmfnla IJlnoil Unroot Cancer and t ontairtoi Ploori I oiwn fiend for Hooka on l > lood and Lain Dineaws fii ed true Tilt s HI SPECIFIC CO Drawer a Atlanta Ca SOU twlnraXnehine B OnaioB h I 1 5 u i dc trad in al pun b TJj imr oar macamrt Jt and zvtda waer tb pavpla tbm wa nl a nd free ic on > pr an to rach lata Ity tbe vrty tt aawttifniacbiaa tcada in wotlt mtb all tba altarbntata Wl l ua Bdraeerotirta 11 acofoar roatlj and eltah an Iwntplaa In rat ea w atk tba < aw w bat wa aaad to tho w na tyra atypnrboma and altar 13 1 month all aball bocoira ur own jiioprty Th piml ma hina ta fmado nw lb htR rr pattata Lwhcbha ranout htfurapatrnTa ran oat it o tiler SDH wi nth > a larbnwnt and now arl a for S iOBoat atrooftai muatn a Paiul machine in tha world A 1 t frea No capital ratuirrd PUin Iboaa wbownto to aaat onracanao enro free tba tet acw > oa > machln m lb w r J and tba ttnet o gfworka of htab art arrr abjwa toethrr m An > ncn TIttlloVCO MloK 11H Aucu U Mialne YOU 11III MU1IOMV Time Inin Trouble nnd xiMCllti CATARRH ItY rMM ELYS CREAM BALM Apply Balm into each nostril CIA BUGS IG V rrt n t N iriva fT tnTi ta rllrur m > l it srnra JTTn the wiiii jl 1 t UMltrtutr jir r nan fr la our lin In ttrcuiimp Wag S3PerDay lcm n nt i ittf u 0 poits s ukwcTfiI li > ur j > diit tl for ssr l r i c rlc Centenn al Manufacturing Co Cincinnati Ohio WOHEN BLESS ST Fr30 cent and M llr mail Mar tjr t < female i ompajitS6Uil tir tleat4e j Jos ° ifiiuginrtst JfeyrityTs J RACCOOH MIM SXUSK and al II 1 ur l i l t It r ash at hMw > Pnees relal h hii aLoII nt rn jn t fraipera tuile t rr 1iltllVirflVyslIonttJ < r e rJ orU 1 ej FIDOs Core for Con T I ramption ta Till U i for leeims tw roico I clear iOceats rroof that glCO a month b > jniarte e llin ir Sicwhook XGV 3J Vr tnlronReAlM Motbcrllomcnucl Hravrn i ww < dd Edttrd eltlblo iHtrodn tton I > Y J ncent D V J t tinted 2 l l TItEATruJaiili rrjroadway > y Brairs Pills SSK Oral Jox li nii1 1 I PHW ORAHOt EAISIN and TEtTlT LAHD 9uuoacre man > size tracts Just the place torn lolonv Srntial inducement to settlers Jjlfv term SIGKOS FEKT SELOVEX Sab Dler C l rr Iv nookfe KpnrIta inr < i F < rrn HfiUF l < nnianbfp AntJntH tn Miort htttxlta then iijhJ > taiKbt y SI ML mil rn fr > JIrTniiiM t I1ocr > > lain St 1 ullilo N 1 h5l HfiH T i tii i > cntn rrJttt nHDil lJays Sanitarium or il n i nt iralire No ur < No l > Tin tin ii it ot Ufiinlr < Ia 1 nTelli In to S a dnr Samples worth flJOlll j Lint not under the bnr > s fr t V nto UrewnterSafttilUUiUflderCoHollfiM South Florida Ifnmrc No frost orfiTur CHEAP r rfr OM Cro bytorranalmbL > 1 CADMC I TVe want to tuy aevfrsl in this locality rAniilO CCBTlsaBlcur ji3Uroalwaj N MONEY IN CHICKENS IP YOU KNOW HOW To keep them but It fs wrong tolct the poor things buffer and Die of the ta rions Maladies whkh aillict them w ben ia a majority of cafes a Cure con hi hare been effected had the owner po sefscU a littlo knowl edge inch as can be pro cured from the ONE HUNDRED 80ZI > ETTJSLQUisr who hare TL e1 Pi os Core for Consumption Fay It Is BEST OF ALL Sold everywhere 3c PAGE BOOK J Wc offer embractn tho IBICTICAL rxPSIUXlSCZSOr Ttt GHEAPEST FAMILY ATLAS KNOWN OKriaY 2G CENTS 191 Pages 91 FullPago Maps f > lorM Stare or each Btate nrt TrrttcrT In tto TnltwlSUt a Alo Mar of errry Country la tat World Thelttr pre i tha aqnare mllaaof ta h btatc tlroa of M > tt amrul populatcn cote ntws arerase IMnprnuurf lr > t omdals and th princiial > oetina l < T n tk Bute number of farina with their pmlu tloot ami tlu alu thereof differ nt manufacture and nujil r or tni lore rlc oto Alaoihf ai of each P > VSS5SE formofCTneraiu rt population ri npalprodncta valui mount ° ufl0 ° amltlirnunr > i lekTrn num n of inm tu of railioid and V ujU a aatamitatcf Information lerofh re rait i p formation Talualle to all EVERY FAMILY SHOULD HAVE ONE All newspaper Traders are > natantly nedtnr an Atla f r rn nr in onl r to ittelh nlr > Hind the am e thr a r n nir It U MUrnam h m u h informant n i tnue r d awar intj n innr > andhow x n op l ti fatuuUrTltB theihu f nta tone rum a tl Natcna ot tfca Word Po tinlill T J5 rente 1 O > K 11 II HOI 1 t T C T FDR CONSUMPTION best medi Pbos Cure la our selling cine I have a personal knowledge of Its beneficial effects and recommend it S Luiuy Druggist Allegheny Pa Want tn Trarn all abowt i Horse ITow to IU Ic Oi t a Good One Knowirapcrfeo Mens and so Guard asalmt Fraud Detect Diseasean < X Effect a Cure when taineli r ble Tell the ace bj tLe Tevth > tt lint to tall the PUT rent Parts ot tbe Aoinal Ilowtoblutc a none Properly AUthl and other a uatle Information can be obtained by reuoB our lOOLACC HMJVrlLATED IIiiIIM IIOOU which we will forward poU iatlonrecilitof onljJ3 cent In tamps BOOK PUB HOUSE 134 Loonard St Hew York City ELECAF1T LADIES KNIFE FREE This cat represents oar fjodtej KPlle anA Glove Uuttuiier combined wiLh Elegan t tort cm handle pirea ttita ono jvmT s iubwnrtuin Cath AmncaaUiiraJilomo for 8110 poiipaliT uiroam totieitr oa seoamt ns two eub Kaiptionsto tbo Amer Warranted fin est steel Sat siaction Guar anteed NoL icnn IXnranioTie at S3 rent inh withont premliiro Address all orders to 1M iiL H > HECO UnitteOt UOChcster NY Slentur thu papfr WHY WEAR EVEGLASSES W K Eye Restorer RESTORES m DISEASID SIGHT Sg EES At nil Drufjgmts S = = nd lor Circulars EYE RESTORER CO ALBANY N Y MIIXKV wetoOATARRH SENDFOH be where a nt tut rrmerflesf OW method of ui t nnd conUnooa whole nwptra mwucattoi < f tin Qf gltCiatafc p ILL > rmDMK > K m lnrtn3 particulars jreeup < narpUw Uon CCK Bil SJiSE UTlSBr AIRS C3 Mate SU CblcsLgo IU NORTHERN PAOSFBG 1 LOW PRICE RAILROAD LANDS FREE Government LANDS n MumtfnU North ftj li nirtnn ami Orrgon Ill Msj I w ribiliefth ilnird izmrand Xim rtlr l itlfrrr AddreM Dtr Mwimm i CHAS B UMB0BH aiTSfiii ES PAYSthsFREICHT S Tin Wnxon eealea ir 1 vri BaarUct fixaal Tara i < > < IWtn Rax far sso r l l < < torfrrtprwflljt tl and avMrrM Bicati ia pmrwT jnsnoF bUghahtm HIN < ilAJlTUN W T 1 w0 by Its d frnjiUadiiu i in it > eSIcacrthavC er w Ui a laUuAbla ASIE GREASE srr MpU Every MI ItOPIN irrn H xlrlrcaicbr luiail iUPT inn rJli l r t n tjn hi i rnw CiJalKha V U I fc t IIH Hin s I hicagetlll CHEAPEST AMD BEST GERMAN DICTIONARY OF 624 PAGES FGH OHLY OHE DOLLAR AFIRSTCLASS DICIP A YaUKV fcOiALl IJ niYeTHr tntiOtdPv7 B un Ar Lv III Lv Lv 5Io am 5oo am i i ijy between Gahcslon and Kan nrtirCars between and ard Inclctwil Temple g CAKK Genl Pass Agen criSU fcj ildtbwaite Texas BOOK 134 Icon ard Stri WtauJ is T r Coin lnt > ur > iri > r r Tiie Best Waterpof 2 > > Coat jraanaa DetecliTe Bnreaa tuwAf FnT LtaatfhatMurflnantkemorativm wtrrLi U S9t > taa5tht rl < hitiityr C ThES T > nu4 I Aiiira rxt a Co AngiiaUaC r t a man who devoted 23 Tears of m hie toCOXPlTTING A POULTRY AltD AS A IlCbCEsi not as pas time A the Iivmj of hlm fei and familr depended on it he cave the tabject tnth attention as only a nerd of bread will com mand snd the recult was a prand ouccen afar be had mh nt mm h mono and lort hun < n tl of ojliable chicle cm in t MH nmenliug What he Wnii d n att there years ic < inbodied in this book wlui h w tend postpaid for 25 cents inetsraps It uatheo j on how tolDctect and Cure Dueate bow to Kecd for Eggs andajsofor rattenmjr which Fonts to Save for Itreedmg Purposes and axrvthing indeed yoa thonld know on this subject IJOOK PUB HOUSE 134 Leonard bU 2f Y Otf