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S TiiC ABGUB WEDMCSDAY, JUNE S, 189& ' ' . The womlrrfnl rnr i-tfltfl ltnw fa - miwn M wjr bo meant unusual with HihmI' Sar sapariHa. Tills gTcat medicine has given health to suffering cliildrcn, eren when health seemed impossible. Tha Pewt of its surer is tliat it puri fies, vitalize and enriches tlie blood. MI wlab to teU ( a wonderful euro fceted by Hood' 8arsapar!lla. Flra 7ats ago my little boy was sudden ly seized with a ecTere lameness, appar ently In hi rlf ht knee, which some pby siciaos said was rbeamatiam, while others said) it was hip disease and that It was Incurable Daring the next Inter and spring; ha became rapidly worse. We took Jimmle toa specialist, who said it was hip disease. At this time the affliction became so aerere that we could not move him with ont causing screams of agony. He be came reduced In weight to 33 pounds, and was but a shadow of bis former self. ' We bad about given up hope when we read of a cure ty Hood's Sarssparina of a similar case. We resolved to try this medicine. Jimmle waa decidedly improved after taking the first bottle. He. was even a ft at" the second. We have since nsed over ft dozen bottle of the medicine, and tbechange has exceeded our expectations. James Is now able to walk without the aid of crutches and goes to school every day. ne ba been wonderfully cured by Hood' Barmparilla.n J. O. Rcndexl, Oakley, Michigan. Druggist C. C. Tub be taya he knows the Bundcll boy baa been wonderfully y.rdl by Hood's Sartaparilla and that Mr. Bun dell Is thoroughly reliable. He has a good sale of Hood's Saraaparllla and Hood's IMlls, both of which are giving perfect satisfaction. Ho say Hood's Tills seem to be the coming family cathartic. Jf. C If you decide to Uke Hood's Sar saparilla do not be Induced to buy any other. Insist upon Ilood's, because Sarsaparilla 1 the One True Moral rurtflrr. All drejrclrt. SL Prrperr.1 ty C. I. Hood A Co, UmrU, M.i ea aa rant are ay to take, easy liOOu S PlllS to operate. X cents. JMBUBAJTOM Haoolnrj Ch XXoef. i . AOEI1TD. Bepresentin among other time-tried and well known Fire Intnraaoe Com panies the following: Roche Oerataa las Co.. Wtr orator rice M .. Er rin ixirai .. Syncs' ttordna M M Innu giro M New linmpsllr " Mliveaha Mscaanle " .. stoma, M eKcckvWov19 . How York BaOaM.ll T ...rfeleaelbhla . Peoria, Ill .. Mucaeotort B .Maw Haven, One Office Corner Eighteenth trw and Second Avenue, aeoond floor Telephone So. 1047. J. M BUFORU General . . . Insurance Agent The eld Trv. a 'iMe-trte ratpea ror-Lo. L01.es PrcapU? Paid. a.-s ta as aa mwsie eeanaac a is 1 as'letted. ft -iru LA'Cge. LAirt-nzeu t a a (man jer writes on a r eo. Ha imm: ut I niCCACCC want to Infnrm lout viwa.nwt.whtyour Kianer-V knt bnxlnne frne. It has rurely WORKED WONDERS ta my J re. 1 huvn k:l tr ubie with irvX in nern lor jream. Uadpainala my back. trrr-i:Ururin,wel- VUmoftho Umb and abdomen s fnl kud tried all the HMnev Me ll-'. yr'.n.- I aai prer hran ( ana sorer- J r of th bet Mimlrlana but all ta e a-n,'!Ir'u TneKlilnrTkaraaaanVme thownrkanJIamawcllmmti. Ifthi. f Vwlll bo lntrunotal la alillne otb-V k you an at libertjrtopubUahU." mJ Kidneykura aTTeartneooine iviiioers aaa etoee a I klIBr d'.-eaes and nui wl 'hem to 1) their work properlvj and tbna irartBes the MnmL up1 l.i.wd aeaaa kealta aat rreelum fp m pain. KWn vVura ilnea It. A X'louar furstt irom fln:ji.tr..rmoiJ e-n ee nil WKTKVSia.1 VIS A PsrCTrlO 'KATle)af A1ID DISKASES. iteaj U tree nraU-M.-t,lt baa anaav valoeabla receipts. .is'""pt erTABLJT and treatoaent Qi FOM aearlT all (,W7 J'-r- Ad4rea (Western I loVel it l& 4. KIT Mefllral (JO, 09 to ltbt. Ontaka. Neb. T. It THOMAS. Sole Agent. I TIM HOOATTS FIREMAN. I '' - ; ni TH - -- ' N0' AGAIN. " f T r .s : . . ' ' I P MawawawAfsl tiptfftaBM area Abb ! av aiirl flm lnnllu1v. vlwi vu ! "Tea. sirec," declared the railroad man. fcrjoee days tbut are past are the palmy days. I remember well when I fired engines) that bnrned nothing but wood. I worked with an engineer. Tim Hogan waa bis name, who waa one of the best on the line. I ain't going to giro the name of the road nor nothing no tnmt in teiitng yon thia tale, 'cause Hogan might get in trouble at this late day. "In them days the engines had a draft through the smokestack which heat, the world, and the engine Hogan ran bad the strongwt draft cf any en gine on the road. Many's the time Ho gan baa bad to stop his engine when she waa puffing hard going np hill nn- tu 1 got and pnt a piece of sheet iron over the stack. What for Why, to keep tne are under the boiler. . The draft would draw it nil ont "Well, about the time I speak of the road wanted to introduce niggers aa fire men. Ui course we kicked, bat it didn t do mnch good. Hogan kicked harder than anybody and swore he would kill any nigger the road put in his cab, and, not only that, he would throw his life less body into the firebox. "Oiio day Hogan comes to me just before we was goin out on our run and said, 'Jim, they've put a nigger in with me for this run, but I want yon to go ont with me, anyway. ' " 'What's the use' says L " 'Well, yon como on and don't ask no quest ions, says Hogan. "Hogan was a powerful and deter mined sort of a man, and I didn't want no trouble with him, so I climbed into the cab 'longsidoof the nigger when the train pulled ont ' "Well, sir. I'll never forget that run. Hogan wes mad and sulky, and ho run that old enpine with all the cars behind her just like he was way behind time. The nigger heaved wood into the fire box, mid Hofan kept cussin him and tellin him to keep 'er hot First thing I know wo'd struck the bottom of the longest and heaviest grade on the line. Uogan's 'engine was drawing great chunks of wood from the firebox, and the stack looked like a volcano." s "Finally, when tho niggt r was lean ing over to lift a piece of wood, Hogan hit him on tho head with a monkey wrench, and he fell over just like he was dead. I was so scared I couldn't more, but Hogan got off his seat and chucked tho nigger feet first into the firebox. "I looked out of the window. I didn't want to see such a knocking sight. I happened to look at the emokestack. and I sec the nigger's boots como ont of it, then his sorks, then his pant, and then he como fVet first When ho rose from tho stack, he yells, 'Goodby, Mr. Uognn.' , "We saw him light on the ground and jump np and run. I have never seen him since, nor neither has Hogan, bnt you can't gi t a nigger into Hogan's cab, and that's a fart " Memphis Scimetar. OST aad an s Donkey. When we were boys our first lessons in riding were taken on (and off) the bark of a donkey. Ho was a creature of changeable, but, on tho whole, amiablo disposition. When his temper gave way before the trials to which we subjected it we took many lessons in that gentle art of falling off which is so useful a supplement to the science of riding as more generally understood. Wo can make this avowal without any sense of shame now, for it happened once on a day forever memorable that our donkey kicked off our riding master himself in all his glory of boots and breeches. Joe, the coachman's boy, declared all our theory of donkey riding to bo incor rect and it is significant that thontrb the donkey conld kirk off the riding master, boots and breeches and all, it entirely failed to shake Joe from his seat by any of its antics. Ont then Joe's method was entirely different from that of the riding master s. It was, indeed, so simple as scarcely to deserve the name of method, being contained in the single precept that you should sit as near the tail of the animal as possible. That was the sum total of his theory of donkey riding, and it worked to perfec tion in practice. Our uncle, who was in the navy, explained the mechanics of Joe's style of riding uantically. "It's as plain as a pikestaff," said he, "that when you've got all the weight in the stern the craft isn't likely to go down by the bead. Macmillan s Magazine. Pink Will Reign. Pink in loveliest tints wilL be a Terr favored color this summer, and among the beautiful dyes are anemone, also known as valesque, an old rose pink : venus, a delicate flesh tint; azalea, a soft rose, tinged with silver like the "dawn" tint of other seasons. ShcDherd- ess and Louis XVI pinks are tinge d with faintest mauve, like the old pompadour ana luac sliades, and still deeper tones of this exquisite color copy the hues of too orchid, chrysanthemum and sweet pea blossom. All of these dyes combine beautifully with silver "gray, reseda. lawn color, cream, beige, apricot, mag' nolia. white and some of the pale yel low shades. The latter mixture is like the "honeysuckle melange" of colors used a year aga Pink and yellow French roses, jonquils and gerauinm blossoms are massed upon some cf Virot's round bats of black or dark green openwork straw. New York Post. Oat of tbo Ordraary. Man (at a restaurant) What sort of chicken do yon call this, waiter? The Waiter That sir, I believe, is a riymoath Rock. Man Ah 1 I'm glad it's got some his torical inttrest. I thonght it was just aa ordinary cobblestone. Pick Me Up. How soft the music of those village bells, falling at intervals upon the ear m caiience) sweet! now dying all away. now pealing loud again and louder still. clear and sonorous it opens all the cells wuere memory slept -Cowptr. " "I read a very interesting article the other day," aaid the landlady, who was presiding at tho breakfast table coffee pot ' - "On what subject?" asked tho star boarder as ho took his second cup. 'It was by some celebrated scientist but really I've forgotten his name very distinguished man, though, I assure yon." i "But what did he say, Mrs. Hash- crcft?" asked the pretty schoolma'am. "It was on the subject of coffee drink ing. He said that tho coffee drinking habit was one which grows upon its slaves with all tho force of tho craving for intoxicating liquors." At this she looked significantly at .the star boarder, who was handing np his cup for replenishment ' "I wish I could quota his exact words. I have tho clipping up stairs somewhere, and I'll' try to find and pass it around among the ladies and gentlemen. It was really a wonderful article. It went ex haustively into the chemical constituents cf coffee. Altogether be makes a strong caso against coffee and shows its delete rious effects upon the human system. " - ' Mrs. Hashcroit, said the star board er as he again passed up his cup, "only bail lull this time, please Thanks. I want to ask a question about your sci entist and his article. " "Goon." "What did he say was the effect on the human system cf tho articles com monly used in boarding Louses cs sub stitutes for coff cor Detroit Free Press. A Bit f California Climate. "My introduction to California came in tbo shape cf a deso cf pneumonia, " declared the fat horseman ' from New Orleans. "I camo over tho southern route, and crossing tho Mojave desert it was hotter than tho hinges en the gates of Tophet When I went to bed, I thought I would bo baked like a Christ mas pig before morning. I threw all the bedclothes off and lay per?piring for a couple of hours beforo I could get to sleep. "Some tune in the night I woke up and could hardly movo band cr foot. I thought I was baked to a crisp." After pinching myself alive and working my limbs a little I carao to tho conclusion that I had been locked in a refrigerator car and was on cold storage. I studied the matter for a few minutes and finally remembered where I had ought to be. I felt around for my bedclothes, but some of my neighbors must have felt cold before I did and had stolen them. I had jnst enough senso and strength left to ring for tho porter, and it took the rest of the night to thaw mo ont He explained to mo that we had left the desert, where tho thermometer stood at US in the shade, and had ran into eight inches of snow in Tehachap pass, where the mercury was down to zero." San Francisco Post Dr. Peters, tho Explorer.' Dr. Peters once wrote a book entitled New Light cu Dark Africa," in which he shows us the sort of light that his work has thrown on that continent In August, 1880, he started np the Tana river in BritLh East Africa at tho head of an armed force of Somali. Before the end of that mouth, by the capsizing of a canoe, no lost, among some loads of ammunition and brandy, "tho only load of beads I possessed." Ho continued his journey, as ho tells tt3, "without anv articles of barter. ' Ho of 4 nrse had not sufficient food with him to last fcr tho whole journey, and could not have carried it if ho had. In consequence, as he explains, "the determination to advance without the requisite articles of barter onco for all decided tho character tho expedition was for the future to bear. " As the car avan was obliged to get food and had no money with which to buy it, food bad to be stolen. The subsequent history of the expedi tion is therefore one long story of raid. loot and massacre. No traveler has fol lowed in Peters' footsteps without feel ing the ill effects of the distrust of Eu ropeans that has resulted from his ac tion. The harm he did cannot be un done in less than a generation. Satur day Review. Prevontad a Waste of Powder. A good story cf Major Macdonald is told by the London Chronicle. The plucky major commanded a battalion, of Sudanese at tho battle cf Toski brave blacks who were devoted to him and loved him like a father. During that battle they disobeyed him for the first time. The wily dervishes had lain down a few hundred yards from tho Egyptian force and were deliberately drawing the firo of the latter by springing np, waving their banners and falling prone again in time to escape the shower of bullets that followed. The eagerness of the Sudanese was such that they could not be made to see that the object of the dervishes was to cause them to exhaust their ammunition. Major Macdonald exhorted, commanded, swore in his fluent Arabic, and all to no nurpose. The blacks would "loose off" at their enemies. So at last, the situation bocom ing desperate, he ran forward, and walking down the front of the firing line be shouted to bis men, 'Now, if you must fire, fire through me!" That Familiar Clood. "Dah is a cloud on dis 'semblage, I'ze sorry to say," said Dewberry Jones as he held his razor between the pot and his opponent at poker. "Is dah?" asked the man who was reaching for tho money rather nervous ly. "Tassah. It am no biggah dan aman a ban, but when de size ob dat han hap pins ter be five deaces ynh kin jes' bet dat de cloud am chock full ob trouble. Yob year me?" Detroit Free Press. i The geese and cranes of North Amer ica commonly winter in tne West Indies and in the valleys cf the 'Amazon and Orinoco, but great flocks of them have been seen crossing the south Atlantic in the autumn, evidently bound far Africa. Ten sans me a sons'. . Twas the dose of The rear. ' Rjfig pil? I cannot remember the aame Or the wurds. -Tis the same We listen to hear When the window are open la spring And the air's full of birds. One calk) from tbe branch aome iwoet thing, Aad one sines on tbe wing The refrain. Ton sans me a song; . Sty heart thrilled to hear. ' . ' The refrain Baa ran like a fillet of cold Through the woof Of the cold Dark days of a year. Tonight there's a veer at its stark, All the birds : ro aloof. Your eyes hold tho son tor my part. And the spring's in yonr heart Sing again! hcribner'a sfagaxine ENGLAND'S FOOD SUPPLY. And Ilow It Might Be Endangered la Or- I tain War Coataaginelea. Strong as the- English war fleet is, it is very far from being strong enough to successfully engage a possible combina tion of fleets and at the same tune pro tect our sea borne food supply.' If the United States and Russia declared war with Engl&nd, there would practically be no food supply left to protect They would keep the immense supplies we now get from them at home, and the fear of capture or destruction would ef fectually prevent Argentina and other neutrals from sending food to us in any sufficient quantity. What is wanted is that, instead of only a precarious week's snppjy, we should have stored np in this country enough corn to last for at least 12 months. Experts in the corn trade agree that there would be no insuperable diffi culty in gradually accumulating this store of corru It would be for experts to advise as to the best methods and places of storage. Perhaps the best plan would be to dis tribute it over the country in magazines at the military depots, giving tho mili tary authorities charge' of it, but if it was in the country and safe it would not so mnch matter where it was. Al though most of our corn is made into flour at the great ports, it would not be wise, seeing that most of them are so defenseless, to store it there. The entiro control and management of this great national store of corn should be under some permanent gov ernment department Although its exist ence conld not fail to have a steadying effect on the corn market, it should bo outside all speculative influences, the price at which it wonld be sold, when necessary to sell it, being fixed by law. It would be no sacrifice, in tho long ran, for tio country to provido such a reserve of food, as it wonld always bo worth its cost. Other nations accumulate gold for use in wartime. Wo should have a war chest of corn. If we have it what will it do? ' It will give onr navy time to devote itself to tho crushing of the navy or na vies opposed to us. It will give us time, with onr great resources, to augment our fighting fleet to almost any extent and it will give our farmers time to grow three or four times as much corn and breed a much larger quantity of cattle and sheep than they now da Nineteenth Century. A Patent Flycatcher. " A machine for catching flies off the backs of cattle, and so affording tho ani mals relief and comfort, has been in vented by a farmer in Madison county. Ky. The flycatcher is a kind of covered pen or passageway through which the animal must walk to secure relief. A few feet from the entrance there is a cupola or dome in the roof of the pas sageway, made cf glass and arranged as a flytrap. Beyond this the passage is darkness. The animal walks through the machine, and jnst as it passes under the dome and enters the darkened part a set of brushes sweeps off tho flies. which naturally rise into tho lighted dome, and the steer passes ont at the other side free of flies. The flics are retained in the dome trap. The in ventor has experimented with his ma chine and finds that the animals soon learn the value of the machine and know enough to walk through it when the flies begin to bite. The device has been patented. Bernhardt' Debwt, "The divine Sarah" has just been describing the emotions that shook her when she appeared for the first time on the boards: "I can picture the evening as though it were now. The excitement oh, it was so grand! drew forth my inmost passion, for I was very young then, you know, and it gave me zest and fervor lor tho ordeal I had to face. I can see the little theater and the peo ple seated in the audience. My heart for tne moment seemed to stand stilL The first words I uttered fell from my lips with distinct accent I made one grand step forward, and then all my nervousness vanished. Drudgery. The everyday cares and dnties which men caII irnrli?rnr nm rVi rl-if a anil ing its pendulum a true vibration and its hands a regular motion, and when they cease to hang upon its wheels the pendulum no longer swings, the hands no longer move, the clock stands stilL .i. as ui win. ac v Longfellow. Art thou a man, and shamst thou not to beg, to practice such a servile kind of life? Why, were thy education ne'er so mean, having thy limbs. thousand fairer courses offer themselves to thy election. Ben Jouson. Letter writers in Spain receive about 10 cents a page for writing letters. If required to take extra pains, as with a young woman's love letter, they charge 10 cents. Rhode Island over 100 years ago was caiiea uttie Knody, an allusion to the diminutive sue of this commonwealth. Twenty FiRSf street L - TV - " a Jfr X is t " - i I Wl A' r?" ' Biirf tv-f eft 1 4 1 1 " TL2 iiAXrL-J I --L. - i 11th C3 'I . -w f & 9 AWfaa.t I j tea..'! : I -aw. . W & A il K IE!. 5 , 1111 ZSJM I I u a m . w a -l Irrz -dsrr7H I la i A 2 2 i'l p ar I - .. 3 1 I " - " - 1 Fine Residence Lots on Easy Terms This addition is located between Twentieth and Twenty-second streets and Tenth and Twelfth avenues. Nearly every lot in it has upon it a fine walnut, elm, hackberry or other large tree, and is already provided with abundant shade. These lots are In the Tery best part of the city, and are tho most desirable for resi dence purposes. The drainage is perfect, and gas, water and sewerage are fully provided for. These loU an sold for desirable homes and not for speculation. SL 1U. STURGEON, monkix Rn??5 ;BUn.DIHO LEGAJL Notioe of Final Settlement sta'e of Daniel r.nstcrmachcr. Deceased. Public notice if hereby el Ten that tbe under signed, Robert Doonan. executor, has ibis day tiled bis final report and settlement a Bach In tbe county court of Mock Island county, and that an order has baea entered by aaid court approving the raid re port, unleas objection tlieri-to er cauas to tee contrary be shown on or before the roth day of Jane. A. D. 1896, and upon tbe final ap proval or eaia report, tne eata HoKert ooonan will aak for an order of distribution, and will alto ak to he diaeharsed. All persona interested are no tified to attend. Bock Island, 111, Jane 1, IMS. Ro.-e tDook, By C. J. Sr.RL. Attorney. Master's Sale STATE OF ILLINOIS, 1 HOCK IflLtKD COCUTT, ( In the circuit onrt, la chancery. Foracloeurc, General Mo. 3909 J. F. Kobinson. trinee for Oncar A. Barnbart va. Howard Chaodler rod Mary C. Chandler. Public notice ia herebr elven that la pursuance of a derrae entered by aid court. In tlie above entitled can Be, on the ls tiay of May, A. U. 189. I. )win E. f-amenter. master la chancery of the a:d circuit conn nt Heck Ixland eiunty, w n on Saturday, tbe 7th day of June, A. !., ISM, at the hour of 1 o'clock la tbe sfu-r&oon, at the north door of the eonrt houae. In the city of Rock Ialaud in the aaid county and Hate, eel! at public vendue ' to the blKheet bidder for caah,a'lar-d singular, the following described premises and real estate lnatd dTee nwationed altnsted in te county of Rock Islerd end sttle of Illlcoia. or to mach thereof as snay he im cea asrvtotatlsfysald decree, to-wlt: The west half (i,) of the northeast qarrter (M '. and the northwest quarter (! of tne eontbea-t quarter (hi), sli tareetlon thirteenth li, town ahlp alateeo(Ifi) north nuge five (5) weat of the 4th p. as, cootainins 1J0 acres more or kss. 1 ated May i 1S96. kiwu JC. PaMBirrra, Master in Chancery. Pock Island county. 111. 8. B Keswobtbt, Solicitor. Publication Notice- STATS Or I IXIM OI8, I M Bona IauD Ootnrrr. 1 la the (Xuty court. Jane term, A. D. IW. Cnar'-es U. - Brandea&urg vs. Mary A. ilU widow, Jennlo De'Os, Jaeh W. UHt, MaHlda Phillip. Sarah Adams. Calvin fclti. John R. t lo, flora gllia, Ida Ely. Will ra tlitt ant Oeotre A Wbrgtas. adaiinwtralur of e.iate of iisaeta Hialey. deceased. Petition tose'l real ettate to pay debts. To the above rasa t defendants, Matilda Phillips Sarah Adams, Calvia tint ai d Witliaa Gitt. Affidavit of the non-resldecce of yoa. Matilda Phillips, Uarrin ttltt and William Ollt, and affida vit that yoa. Sarah Adaaas, eanant he ioand. so that procese can be served upon yon. and that at on dl Imnt Irqairy year pi tee of rea-drne caaaot he eaarr ataaa. Bitira a hereby- green to yon and each of yoa that the above earned aeti ttnaer has Sled la the (aid court his pe tition agatnet yoa for leave in set real estate to pardehta; that a aamasnas aaa- heea Issued la said caaee asanwt yna, retarnshle to the Jane term, A. D IM, of . aaid ow l, and that aaal eaa e waa oa vbe first day o Jaae. A. T. tSSS. my aatd court con thtSMd to the Aatest teraa of aaid roerttobe betmn and atndeti at the coon Ixinse ia tbe city of Beck Island. M sal county of Beck Island, on the Sr t Moaday of SBKut. a. O. !. at which time and p ace ?ew win appear sad Pisa, ajiaaaserdemarf-sa d vetttloa t yoa aee at. Dated at Mock Island, 111. this 1st day of Joa A.D., ISM. ' Bjaf.aaaEosn.SB, Clark of said Oeautv Ussn. waansv A VaxKBS, Bulicltora for ritiimaar. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla JTl.JIl.S'FliRGKeNS eflBBITiesN - w S-l mm WLa.a mm e- . - aa. J " 12 w rr I i I t ! I j i lot .. r jfcx.riit,L f4 l a, m,.r. tH.fi pCraaaaafltau . Li I J JaiUa. Z.2 ,T rv. r a r- ia.s JSB LUTHY The LIST - FOB WILSON UOLINE BUGGY CO. LUTHY LUTHY THE PLACE TO BUY Vall Paper Room Mouldings, 'Pictures, Picture Frames and Window Shades is at the Adams Wall Paper Company, 31a 312 and Twentieth itreet wiaaoHaaMasawashaocordlngta dlrestloas; srevenatrsasmlaassa ef based aiaeaaea. akia die e. "eata and chraelc a leers, stretar. asaare ef the head and feet, Ecaasoa, Tetter, Salt Mhea matlam.tofitaaattoaof the Bladder, Msaaaea of OVs aeaea, )ataB aad masclia.apbunic laaaadty. Scarry, Sck alA ta toma. Htm above aad a haaarad ether fesass of diaeaa are traceable dlrecUy or taxirectly to Syphl-ttke Blood Poteoa for Whtch the Dr. Jacawee-a Bngllah Safety Tab brts a a sere prereatatrre, aad la a safe Oavm BUler, reaaVrinc cewsagios) aanUy aoealbie, hesc Ua value. If aaajaetedeech tioahlas reaaB fatal ty. Mailed any whaxa, seated tl ; aix hoses for SB. A. t. Belaa. Jfoarth aee. and Sard St., Beak Island mC 1S" .i. ff -- 3 :rii 5 f2 K lift F- n t - t til - cC - - E- . '-4 3 ak. a. 1 I ,1 ., at LUTHY Luthy $150. SALE BT -: LL II. BRIGGS, AND HOUSES TO KKHT. Offios 1608 Sooond Ato., Book Islaad. save ea hand 0 lot la Boarrh b asal am IB I l ft W -a- j i 4 4 5.U j 9 i;i - -mm i i m i aTuy.: h- ? it l - ll i II - - ssayteraM; )t eartsAdw the etty ttaU'a; goad watr:low tares, amd caeam hksaraoca. laa la eaTfcirty-ebTeiB auaut and nrtsta sneaaw. Aaemberof slacee of asupeftg la She chy la