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The home-m Sphinx. ('vun mm! to u cat. I dug in vet, nin plc m 5 trust ate-at creature. Sane tlnu. hula-11.1w in guilty «I act. at de upfluu 3nd hypocrisy. but they unnum and inurnuuuo comp-zed tn tn: unfnth omllvlt' In" M I cut. It. Ruth's dug. for nut .n-r. aim ate the pigeon out u-l the [lit .to-l notiwl up the ltnte wuth .‘lr. Sun“. Ink -p»ngr, Ina nut nu s-inpt in the Mt ..: llnil. nn-i a in trmrr mth whom the 'llt‘~t‘ltl Minn t'hJ-ita the inn misty --l a r tlulltl‘n ll~||llrhwlni ho Ilia gun-«i lmrwll' it." lut I’d-eh by ulnal w:-.tnal intents .url pimp-m». a in; when a little tll-‘lt‘ s-tutem-s- would hm... shown her the lutiltty of fsl-ehwuim the face of an alibt. She had IK‘t'll lt'af— ing up paper and strewinzit ab .m the floor. with tim- literary trerdorn. uhrn the servant whose duty it nuts to clean the carpet naked her. with tiiagisterial H' verity. "WM tore thme letters?" The culprit lmlkeilal lint terribly Ilnuhed, and hung her head and tail in exlxwts tionol~ chastisement, till her Illi‘sltl'nl, as I trial. observed, "1 Minder did liyp do it!" ttiyp being the oti'ender's usual companion and fellow-sinner, but as it chanced. two hundred miles elf at. the moment.) Instantly the perlidiout little wretch pereeiwd a way of escape from the penalty of her own misdeeds, by throwing the .Home on her friend, and looking up briskly, shook her tail t'run tically, and almost nodded. “You are right. It was that wicked pr! As for me. I am quite incapable of touching a piece of paper." It is as useless for a dog to attempt these dcceptions as fora good honest Eng lishman to prom by the counsels of Macchiavelli. But the case is quite dif ferent with a cat. She is a domestic Sphinx—whose countenance is solemn as that of her stony prototype who has fined for sixty centuries over the field of death at Ghiza, and whose tail is not, as George Eliot describes the tail of a dog, a “vehicle for theemotions," and never betrays her, except in the case of leo nine rage. No philosopher, we are per suaded, ever yet got to the bottom of a cat‘s mind. No one fathoms her implac able resentments, her deep, unspoken suspicionsot her enemies, or her unalter able confidence and gratitude towards her friends. Few people attempt to study her; she is rarely even given a name, but is spoken of, like a poor work house orphan, by her surname, “The Gat“—or in the vocative, “l’uss"—-and treated a little better by one. a little worse by another, but rarely watched with any attention or sympathy, such as many of us bestow on our dogs. Yet there must be something really profound in a cat‘s feelings, since there are num berlcss instances on record where they have perished and died for grief at the loss of their masters or mistresses; and the following, which occurred last week, affords touching proof of a sentiment still more rare in any animal—pure friendship. A correspondent writes to us: "Colonel C—‘s little black-aud-tan pet dog ‘Flo’ died last Monday morning about three o'clock. He had had her many years, and she had long had an in ternal complaint. She was a dear little affectionate, intelligent creature, and had always been treated as kindly as a child. lie buried her in his. garden, and over her little grave the housekeeper's chil dren shed many tears. Yesterday I heard from him as follows: Another of my domestic pets was an old black cat which came to me a kitten years ago, a few weeks before I brought ‘Flo‘ from Oxford. They grow up together, and were very road of each other, eating from the same plate and drinking from the same glass. I have often seen them stand side by side before my tire, and oc casionally put their mouths together, as though they were absolutely kissing. Well, the poor old cat seemed very mis erable all day yesterday (that is, Monday, thcday on which ‘Flo‘ had died early in the morning), and we could not in duce herto eat. She could not be found last night when the house was closed, but us this occasionally happened, not much was thought of it. This morning she was found stiff and cold, stretched out by the side of ‘Flo‘s' grave! I could not have believed it, if I had not seen it with my own eyes. Whether it is only a coincidence, I will not pretend to say, but I would rather believe that the poor animal died from grief at the loss of her old friend. But if so, how did she know that ‘Flo‘ was dead? Such a fact as this leads to strange thoughts, or what Would be called strange, by those who can see in these creatures ‘only a dog’ or ‘only a cat-3 )1 When we reflect on the amount of thought and tenderness of sentiment which this story reveals, does it not seem as if, in our usual treatment of cats, we must be stupidly. ignoring something very Wonderful and beautiful, close be side us all day long? A more painful impression .is the re membrance that on creatures like this have been heaped for ages back every sort of cruel treatment by thoughtless peOple—by brutal boys, or wretches like the one convicted last week of skinning cat alive; and last and worst of all, by vlvisectors, of whom one in London avowed to the ltoyal Commission that he had destroyed nimty poor animals in one series of painful experiments. Mere carelessness causes annually at the and 0f every London season tie misery of multitudes ofeats, left to starve when the owners of their homes go out of tOWfl- As a cat has proverbially “nine lives," and survives the most terrible im‘FdSbips, the sufferings of many of them from this cause must be shockingly pro longed. A friend has described to us the case of a poor puss which, in Its star- VMiOD, poked its head through the bars of. cell-r shadow. ad hing lublo to ‘ilhdnv it. h'llillld in an Imp tot Ina, day: an! nigh", uf com. um“! fun-doc can. A! In! amt-d, not heal oi in noun. ad a blacksmith I. went {0: In Innu- the but The ul ob viumly (en-Junk.“ lnrrfeflly that In Mug no: Int be: relic-f. ml when u Int «O [m lizcnlly taped vn the Mk ul' ufriemlly took. no cums—l ha mama-k nod jay by uuch Mum-nun. u. hitly dru- tun In». the time.“ u! lhe lilllc Deane.— buu Specular. Dr. Franklin': Investment l'ianaiin in Int \t-v) tttmly tn the run Horn-. 1 that It) a tirut-M'fnilt‘ Mite “.l't't‘ ought to In- 111 Ilfliu- ut prrlit. and ac tmrdingiy lt°fill|lth‘\"il’|i Ollnly In l'femlr den! 111 l'-t' Mile ..| P: itnlylt‘alrls in ”ll‘ uni-tam e of rhun ilv'rl, ( ll!i(‘gf\, -t:l.u.:._ and in similar din-«norm. when hr (’ullu' to make his uill, a port onol' lill! salary. alrionntmg to norm-thing ovvr two thou aan-l pounds, was still due, and lit-direct ed that it should be expended upon a plan for making the river Schuylkill nav igable. But a year later he had pleased himself with a tine scheme for the pub lic benefit, so he revoked this bequest, es pecially“ he found it would be some time before it Could be used, and direct ed two thousand pounds .0 be paid over, in equal portions, to Boston and to l’hila delphia, to be used by each town in the same way, and for the same purpose. The thousand pounds in each case was to constitute a fund from which loans were constantly to be made at an ordi nary rate of interest to young married mechanics, who had been apprentices in the town, and could produce two respect able securities. Franklin‘s tirst inten tion in his investment was defeated, not so much by the inherent defect of pro viding aid for those who could not help themselves, but by the gradualdisappear ance of the class that came within the terms of the provision. At the outset, when the fund was only about $5,000, nearly the whole amount was loaned to twenty~seven persons. From 1791 to 1811 the number of loans was 104; in the twenty-five years following, it was 91; in 1830 there were thirteen bonds out; in 1800, when Boston had increased im mensely in population and the fund was twenty times as large as at first, there was but one bond out, for SBO. The numberhas indeed increased a little since that. Last year seven persons received assistance, this year nine. It is not im possible that ingorance of the fund pre vents some from applying, but it is also true that, with the rapid increase of pop ulation there has yet been a decrease in the number of young married artificers, who have been apprenticed in Boston, and can produce two respectable securi~ ties, if they would borrow the sum of two or three hundred dollars with which to set up in business. The apprentice sys tem has been dying out, part y through a wider social distance between master and pupil, forbidding the oldfashioned mode of having the apprentice live with his master; partly through the breaking up of the trades by the introduction of ma chinery into subdivisions of trade; part ly through trade unions which discour age apprenticeship; partly through a dis inclination to enter mechanic life, since it ofl’ers less chance apparently for a rapid fortune, and partly through what some one has called “a constitutional aversion ot' the race to being bound to anybody to do anything." It is interesting to calcutate what the chances is of the fund reaching in 1892 the amount which Dr. Franklin ciphered‘ out a hundred years or so before. A writer in the Boston Advertiser in 1850 made a calculation that at. the then rate of increase, the amount would fall short of Franklin‘s estimate by $151,200, which looked rather sorry; and he proposed that higher interest should be procured, and also that some public-spirited per son other than himself shouid add a do nation of $3,720 which would suflice, with its interest, to bring the amount to the desired point. But it has turned out better than the writer then feared, for there was a rapid increase in the princi pal investment at the close of the war; and now, if the present rate of interest continues, and there is no loss of princi al, the year 189'.) willsee the total about $525,000 or say $50,000 less than the amount calculated a hundred years be fore. There is a little doubt that this de ficiency would not have existed, but that the sum would have exceeded Franklin‘s calculation, it' the managers had given prior to 1810 the care which was be stowed on the investment after that date. Still, considering the chances that the whole fund would be frittered away early in the century, the present showing is not unfavorable—ll. E. Seuddem‘n S. S. Times. A , Tlls dill'erence between a conference and a congress has been the subject of considerable discussion in the English and Russian newspapers. It has at inst been decided that a congress is a meeting of sovereigns in person for diplomatic purposes, or of Cabinet Ministers sent y their respective Governments as pleni potentiarics, provided they are not obliged to refer to the home Governments for inLtructiou; and also, that congresses can only discuss weighty matters and make tlual decisions. Conferences may be held {or the purpose of arranging and preparing subjects for discussion in a cong.esa sitting at the same time. Ilwropomuusss are down as low as $5,000 apiecc, and n menagerie man says this is dirt cheap. But. until they come down to 85.50. they will be classed among the luxuries in poor families, who will continue to worry along with two or three dogs. The t‘anadian Indian. [lot-we the ('anmla lndians and our one there is all the «Inference lwtwu-n all I and tame, lN'hidt'l the "at oluparity "1' numbers. When the ('onlim-nt nae tint column-l by the French and Enull‘il. tun dictinct line: of;- licy m-rv observed in tic-cling with the lit-liens. The French ri-innl-tn were more adaptable than the ll- git-h, and iv“ prn-uil and curling. The) Inn-la Lul little atom of taking lmlil nt thw i-i-nntiy. They came a: mission aura :in-l trulvrn, and an": the" forts the amwarum- oftelupurnry lodginc-ntu 'l‘hey eat: rr‘l immediately upon trail.- in the prinuiml article the Indiana could utter in Mattie—fun and peltry. To pintit by tin. article oi trade it was niece-nary to [”110ch the Indiana in the country. with in little change of habits and pursuits as p-unhlr, and maintain at lent the friend shipol‘ trade. Trading~poeta were rap idly «mtahlishul, which became the points of contact between the coluniata and In diana; and the settlements of Quebec and Montreal were scarcely begun before the whole extent of Canada was dot ed with trading-pirate, from Belle Isle to Lake Superior, where Frenchmen. attached to the posts u factors, clerks, laborers. and voyage", lived from year to year. There poata became the homes ol‘ the Indians and traders. and points of settlement, where Metal-civilization was established; and the French mind, led by the zealous ini-sionarioa who always accompained the traders, moulded the civilization and religion alter the French idea. The short term of a generation antflced to establish a race ofhalf-hreeds, of no mean propor tion to the native population, born to the use of a common language and common faith with the colonists, and trained to a civilization advanced to the requirements of their condition, who naturally yielded i'ealty to the colony and loyalty to France. They were adapted to the country as it was, and did not require it to be changed for their accommodation; while they constituted a link between the new and the old race, and a natural bond of peace. This, too, was an open and safe held for missionary operations, where the overzealous Jesuits did not fail to sow seed that has taken deep root and spread far beyond this race—Atlantic Monthly. A YOUNG lady in Nashville remarked to a companion in a conversation, the other day. that she would never pnlut her cheeks again before attending a funeral. “Why not?" asked her friend. “Because," replied the young lady, “I was painted up when lettended a funeral last 8111\- mer, and never wanted to cry so bad in my life, and was getting my handker chief reedy, when glancing round at Mrs. Maggs, I saw that course yellow skin of hers through the tear tracks,nndit looked horrible. I never had such hard work to hold my tears in since I was born. I‘m done painting for funerals.“ AN exchange says that a new way of fastening?! on ladies’ hats is to bore the tops of! air ears, put in gold hoops and have the hut slriugs tied through them. Thus. step by step, we tread the pathway to perfection, and ere the darkness of death cnvelops all the world man will have utilized his nose in holding up his pants or pulling on his boots. AN exchange says: “It is written that ‘Truth lies at the bottom of a well.’ We have often verified this by looking down intn a wall and seeing Truth‘s honest countenance in the smooth wa ter." THE UNIQUE BOON! I ADII-ZS and xentlenlun.mvo your money. AVON J nnmhuggvrf mul the clmnccaur hetnx crlplylcd. All wnu me at“ ctml with Inn-d or soft Corns llnn on». Warts. Mohamtkcuaun.Sl‘llGEUN'S MASS will rmnnve ltloln rolnpletuly and It omm. and \vlthuul knlrc. pnln. nvrl'nt-nn nr nt'urrlllvntmn. (Inc nmvllululnn only re anr-wl. Ih'cnmnu'mlml by IPadlng rnmlllun. I'rlco. rmt-pnld. 8U“. N. Il—l-‘clhl or utl'unnn'c Arxnplta. "OM, Mn. WIIII'II Mlsxn mm lllm'numl pcrnplrnlnry dnrln. 'l'ry tlw lIKItll-IIISINFHI‘TMI. an nctnnl and the nnly rvlnmly ul’llm klnll. I'l'll‘c. I'l. Unlcr» m-nt tn nII IIHNI‘ or tln- (-nnntry nu I’IH‘UHII of price. Address I‘, :. LUI'I-IZ .\I. It. cnre nl’ M. "01'1“! Forth-nun- Ilern‘u S. l". Laboratory, Agent. 1!“! limrny SL. 3. I" THE RECOGNIZED DRAMATIC OBGAN or the I'M-Inc Conn, Cunmlnn Ilunnc I'ruzrnnnnc n! prlnclpnl Tlmnlrcn nml plnuren or Amunmnent of Sun I-‘nnclncu; Then:- rlcnl guunlp and "Winn“ revlvw or current events In the Drmnntlc Wurld. b‘unll lur sample copy. Annua15nb5ur1p110n..............1..............1!3 00 Per \lunln 60 In Advance. AIIIIN‘M FOOTLIGHT PUBLISHING 00., B‘3o Hun-onus In. San Frmn-luco I In Store for Halo M. Loweullnrkot Ran-'- I 5 O O ,O O O FEET ‘ Black and Galvanized Iron Pipe ‘ * ' Full ——~- : GAB and WATER : l Slit-n from M Inch tn 6 Inch. "HIM, Wrought. (Hut null filxtllcllhlu I'ILW tlttlnxs for Gun. Stvnm and Watt-r. W.W. MONTAGUE &. CO. 110.112.114.118 a 120 Bsttery BL. 3. F. INTERNATIONAL HDTEL. “I and cow Konrny ML. Han Franc-lawn. DI 50 and I!" 00 I'l-ZII. Il.\ \‘ 11. ('. I'A'I‘IHINH-I. - - - ~ I’novlm:mn. Two I‘oncord ('onclu-n, wlth tln- nunn n! the llvm-l on. will nlwm‘s he In wnltlnu u! lin- lamllng m cunw-y panwngvra m lhv Hotn'l [rt-v. ;rnc rlllrl‘ yuu wt Into the ngllt ('lmcll; If y-lu LII) nut, 111-t'y wlll WHEAT“- . .. __, _ It. IIUE an ('035 I'IIISEL ’ \‘l'mnh Allll Elqu-r null Slmp finwn. Wnrrnntcd Suprrlul' tn nlI when. It ”we «a ('u.‘l I'rlnllnu I'rmwn. a-c. Albnny 4 a . I.uhrlcnl‘llmtl l('illlllkilllll!ll and I ~ I'upu. nrl mm lU'! (‘ylln ‘ ’4,\"NA“* (t‘ dur ()11. Send for Clrculln‘u. 11. LIATL‘M a (Joubl Fremont than. F. San Francusco. May 28th. 29th and 30th, 1878. 2,000 TRAINED SINGERS. 200 MUSIGIANS! I. \L “‘IIII’NIZ". llw I-‘n-nlr-I LIN-Ix Ilnuu. nus. lllLlJ‘uN. tho ('o-lohrnlv-nl "rutorlo Soprano. .‘IIL I‘IZNNENIHZV. Ilu- lu‘mm nul Trnor. .VIINN I'l..\Rl(l>2. clu- laronl ('onlnlw. Thr \ln‘u- 'n-n! Mn 1! I!"'|' "WW-fl "l|.’\L’"-l l’w' t‘rh-hmlml Inmnlm. AVIA DRAIIIIL. Hr” ‘f|’-'~}\'.r;;"i:"-!.r'rlf with! .bllJl'.'0".'ll'l\ll:l1‘);l‘l. mug-4 ( :r HI" an, Hum 31..qu ‘ umprlun nmmblmnuu of HIV “HULK I Nl'K)‘. “ll I'lllh I'IHN 0' CARL ZERRAKN. ‘ho Pamom Director of the Grant Bouton anllocl. SEASON 'l‘l('lil'l’l‘s for the three «lays ....,. .............. ....$5.00 RESERVED SI'IA'I‘ for any day of tho Hextson‘ $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 Acwmllnu (u lm‘ulmn. Ticket Office a! SHERMAN, HYDE 8! CO.’S, San Francisco. SUMNER W. BUGBEE. Manaoer. Ofice. 78 Nevada Block. *9— ‘ ‘ ABSOLUTLI4Y PURE. ‘ —-——2—*-.——-——- ' The ('unmn-asmi (‘umu la In no lenan nu n-nruct or prupnrnlion fromoumvr, hut IllnYly the but cairn. van-fullywitch-I|. mum-li. cruunti :uui u'nlufm-nuni uflor u formula whlvh M nnca ilxmu um penmuently re talnu nll lisexhilnmtinu and rufreshing :Iqu lll'fl. nun-m): whirll urr- mifcnne Ilhe volatile nil ). mm the ankle “(‘ill (or uslrlnft'nt prum-rly; whit-h lum- nmu-Iy if no! unlu- ull lhelr virlm'u harm-c they rmc'i the “ble of llm consumer. 1) any or the all! Illl'lllo'is or pn-plring l'nil'ec for innumlinm mum This fact in wall understood hy cxpvrlvnvml mil’m‘ nu-n. and to nupp'?‘ the lllliu'llltlnllli' «11-ilriunvlo-I. chim'or)‘. mule lirenll. ryl. cortnln hurku and other ion-lg" nulmuuvcs lm'e )1'l‘lllllllil'1l.ill”I" way ”I mlnln-mtlun. until now the peorlo lurce~ ly knnw wlm! pure culi‘w' IN. Ami wlll: llw hvlu-r that dealers uud [he hm! Nhna of ('unaumcrs W! l welcome and nuntnln m - in my vilurtn m lupnly n pure. wlmlvmmc and delicious article. I now off” it direct to [he publlv, n! llw mum- prlm' n» lhv \'.|rinun klmlu ui' pry/mun! mill-v. ’l‘hin mum-o in an ('qllnl mlxluru m” ”w wry lwat. n\':\ and Imm RIM. and in put up In handsome It lc. llllliH‘ llm lmunl nf ".\il)(,'ll.\ t)i'.\l.l’l‘\'.“ umi ilum- wlm nnru use it will l‘l|” fur mother. It i. pun. rfch. delicious and wlmlvsmmn ll nun-r rulln mulvvnmlwl‘m-llon wlwn prnpnerly pn-pured. I: ll lionltllful. it saves mum-y. It In [ml up in c-nn'rnh-m pm-kugeu fur "8". l , 4 ,Va,V ._ r. . . ___._-._. ..-. WA“..- -.A____—_____,. ‘ / .y , l (3 WW ' I ' ' ‘, a / « W? 7 - £13.53 ' . ,_/ , ‘ . l " ' [fl ’ 2 I V ' 4 [f P ‘l‘ ‘ 4122'» all? . ‘4’ “'2' s» i " r ‘ I l il22}. 'f‘ -. :\ Z ‘31:”; k . .-‘.I “. \, f ‘1: . i “-7 \¥V“’Y 3‘ ' 11‘; . M} .2 :’ ' ' i 'l’ \“\{» ’ :4.“ . . . _ \ s\\ 2‘? i . \ «a 2 ‘M f i " l? V W“ \. t | :e‘ \\ . i l 2 , , ,\ 5 w i 2// 2,»: l \l . ,\\ ‘ ),2/_,.,‘42 l .\- 7 «/ ~\2 l \. 4 27/ , . . ." ." \ 2/2” \ z 2/ 2,- , I 3.3;} (V ‘ ‘y _ \ ' ,z, . '- i i , 2 :20] ‘ k '. . a I ,1-2’4 2 l i ‘ l - ‘ i [77": ''l “- V l‘J “ 15' '5, l' ' 2‘ ,0; I, ,1 .h ' ,2’ ‘ i \2% g.j' ‘ i "I \ 2/; 2'22, w; 34‘ I -/- 4”? ((3? “-w’ a 'l , -2 1’57: ’V' . , ‘ ‘ , ////7 r ~\‘r .- 5/ /\ u' /: l 2' -‘\'-\_ A." "‘s‘ ml. - l . ‘ 2% l 1,17" 255‘\ I l ' ;%é"/‘ I ,951 ' "m ; ‘ . " :i ’2. . ’4 ,’ - ‘ , , : . '» . . 2,29. 4: ’ N , " g 2" 2 ' 3’9 . . :1" I; .2.» “\ . ',, .2 it 1"” . . r ‘ ’ l :12 ‘ - ’ .Z_ 2 / l ' m’ 5;: . l . : "'-.. ‘33 35-22:.: I—:_ ’l7 ' I'2, I E: . . ”‘3; 3 ‘ 27.2%??? ‘3 .2: .4 ,‘ , i i 5‘5 "‘\/-milx§‘xf“mf vJ-J .2 i ‘ 5: - Vu.M~/«»Jl "' 133:5: 2". ‘ : f" ‘ Wynn-". 2: ..- g a; l 1 l :3 ~,~.‘HA ‘7 v_—-’——— c;:—o;—::::r:::-V M 2_-—— - ; l ‘i For Sale by all Grocer: and at the Manufactory. 15l FREMONT STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. l l A. P. ADAMS. Patentee and Manufacturer. M ’ m‘g ‘ ’4‘: =§-=~ 1' Mil/WWW” 'I qtml‘l'l‘lllxu NEW. THE lllis'l‘ l.\' l'Sli. EN- L darned by I“ tlrutwla-u lh-nh-ru. l'rln- {rum $6 to flu. Wnrrunml for lliyvnrn. Scull fur t'irrulnrs lo I 1020 Market. Street. flan l‘rnncluco. i E BUSINESS COLLEGE. 320 POST STREET. SAN FRANCISCO. Tllll ‘ olden And most complete (,‘ommerclnl Col lege on the uncut. Elegant hnllu; new mrnlzure; thor oufhlnatructlon; practical teachers; high llnndlui wl h the puolxc. Student: cm commence at any time. Day and evening leuloul. Clrcularl may I)! ma free on Inullcnnun. P. N. I’. Co. (New Series], X .. l 0 7 A \ h ~ Eclecuc Health Institute, NORTHWEST CORNER 7m AND L 3T3. SACRAM I'lN'l‘l ), (‘A L. lh-lnx fully prrmrml Iv) trvu nil I‘anle {.lm-nwun lln: llum'. mnl lll‘ml m-n-mnlv pmmphu, mgvrhrr wltll guml rumm nunl h-mrll. an- un). cnn'Mwm-q- as»: fur puhllc p'umnnm'. Far {unlit-r Jrllr‘lle! ml~ drum I. If. (1. \Y’I‘UX. .VI. 0.. proprletor. AMERICAN EXCHANGE HOTEL, SAN FRANCISCO. 71‘1“? Ivld and pulmlur h tul has torn (gutter 0!. cm wry 1' wml :. m:- wnntn -t be public. 'l‘mu. Hans. nu 11l ('nmnrnlunnnd In experi r‘m-MI yum-nun, maul-nu lho- mule. whlch ll I t mm-lnm 2mm. I|va Léml ('omfm a. "mu! IA vlnu. t'lonnlllul And all! ul-lu-rnl wmllun- ul two-sh wlll M mowed tn wlll 'l‘ho- lululo- wlll In- turn uhed wlm the bolt the market HT: (In. “optimum-y uul nbllulng clerk! un-lcurulul wdlrnlnum-ndn c 9 'l'hluhnasehlhl mu 1 00-mmliy l-vulml u' Any In the our. sum mn- [ms- llw «lnurovpry hm mlnulu. "he howl mm ~h wlil our}? rump-n :e-r- m and [ram the hon“ Ir. uh! r-Dnjl‘gv I'm-w. in)". “5.2915500" day. Get the Best! 4173"“ “4 Simple, Durablo 1 {tiet‘gva AND 1": “#lsl. Ornamental. ‘ . - ‘7, ~ Thll .\llll la "LI-nouuflso. "L ‘ .‘iw . lhercrure cannot be Injured by 1 h- [:2 ‘3 norms. They are mule or the 1 “ 109—5 beat muterlnla. and Wurruuled w 4 f 14%;; glvo mllmcnon. -- 1 ‘ . r‘ . I, '- ' 1-14“: lunfwtory, Onklnd. 031.. L ‘ V. ’, Slmxn Shun. llnomwn I: ‘ ; J: AND Wumxnruos 511. ll" .vd/Q‘f‘vh . ___ -\‘ .-. K " Irrhe Undt‘hhfllm‘ lnu pur ’*";ll.\ ~' “14"“; chum! Hm I'AI‘KNI llluurlur m .1 1" ‘« l a “.311" Pmrlnv (.‘unal. Svml rur I‘lrculun. 1‘- 1. ;, a“ 2111 A l. VAN nmnmu PJI. u»: ‘1; 1 J H} am,mmm..l. «m. air-mum» 'k. u, ‘ , . “”fllfflfll37“"‘H‘i'mfil'lm7 ). . - cm at MAD: “. ' L' 1 t {‘36 1;. Every Day! _ ...- ~,";'. L'aing un- Turn: 5; ' _,, 4 1.1 WELL 84mm) and - um x Dauusoua- I‘IHV vl. The Inhur Is all dom- by horse. Nu Fluent. Hugh! ~l\\ll|llln-. You get your money's wonh ln mwhlm-ry and '00“. l'lrrgllnrl five. ; .m-lrm, Loonls a .1‘ nu. Till. ol- .