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.. UNCERTAINTIES Ihk boo boasIn Pink tmown gowin barn. printd-al iDt, Hands burnt brown. -" lUmb were all the piping birds, end d -Itgolden brlt~od beien. . Ybtba ma*ug sie on the doorsep, wMg ter soestuu et pw.m sound of scythe and mowlang. Where buttercups grew !lt; Sotnd of red kine lowing And early milkmaid's Cal. -Mae eang on the doostep, with the yoans peen ia her lap, "hi eame whistling up the lase, with the rb hem in bhs cap. "You called me a bad penny That wouldn't be seat away But here's good-by to you, Jeasy. For many and many a day. p ~. There's talk of cannon and killian Nay, never turn so white And I've taaea the Icing's sbilling. I took It last nlght. Sme erty, arry piped the thrushes up ia rta cherry tree, ' dumb she sat on the doorstep. sad out through the gate went he. boent of bay and summer; Red evenitg t ky; Noise of fife and drummer; Nen marchei,; by. hay will be ca.urrd pirsently, and the ch.t ries gntlatr. d nil. LU the corn tjnu yedlow In the shocks, and taks leaves bezw to tall. Perh .p tie evening after. V. n.: no oro Wou ; of thrutsh, The l. !.4 t.1 cea.. It eir lau:lhter - And ti" nr:cas the lr clatter bush; At:.l word of bljod atil bjul: ,l. «':WI rail w th ta s sound of the flail, Aid I wi:t^ of t(.1+ ca l And cz: t f j., nlliIon^ rail; And one n ,.1 road half Iearnol, A 1,..t o: l...11 a nf"`u t And . te. i1lt .r, tearful, Out of tb' Lt:.e crowd. And Sb', pernap, haif diut'.ng. IIaht amuaun, cy t.b. cu ..(-, WJ. ttwd anion: t:1' r p. ut.eg, AnI bear p. riap, his rtume /r1 weep, pe. btaps, a little, as .L, wanders el tbo Lanm. Ys wis'e on. summer morning were all to d again. -Mary Probya in Macmil.n's Magazine. GOVERNMENT EXPER"'S REPORT Omsaer.tg Oems and 'rreclous Stoam eeaud in the InI rd -tabcs. The report of Ceorge F. Iunz, the ex* in gems, which La, jurt [sen issud the geological sure v, contains much htereting giuformatic n relating to the discorcry of preciuus -tone in the United States. The list ci accilental finds Stroughout the coun ry i, large enough bbe inspiring. 1. Ku,. calls them socidental, and the" sa's that at Salida, Alo.. over a ton of garnets have been gloked up during the year. They fnd of the same sort in Lewiston, b. Some of the pure, clear quartz, hben it comes in big chunks, is quite saluable. They found some very large seas in Virginia early in the year. they were reported as transparent aystals of quartz, one weighing 641 tound another 349 pounds. When Am reached New York. however, they not to be erstals, but veins of t quartzite. with cryFtalline mar'inge of a group rather than of a ingle crystal. anal thliclearspaces. which were only oheerved on these cryvtaliano dies, would not afford a crystal bal. more than one inch in ulian:"tor. The hrger part was ahino-t whiti with flaws. 1aeh would do, however, to sell to arists." says Mr. Kunz. naively. Some anmethlats have tMo-t fund dur. ltg the past year at I)A-r I land. Mle.i sloma few amethysts nre foni d at Burr yille, R. I. A pre.pious l: ne of much Merest is an opaque white II droph:mne recovered in Colbra. ,I. u1h finder has manned it rmagic .trne. Ik ue t, at mgnal with this ruinr ., it los*es the property of beconmin'z ablunely trims ýatt if water i. pi,,lh i sIowlyh n it one to three lunkutes. It is no oous that it will ahsorb its own wt ight at water. It <usckly recovers its of-ac. By. A beautiful pink cl:aOk1e.tony has been found at Cisco, Utah. It nom1its ct a high i;dish, but it h: s net yet been ita Boiluced in any quantAy. T. F. Lmrnh nd C. C. II-'i; mined for atimeat the .lountAnatate lcahtv. rear Anhurn. 3ie., and found tourrmaline g'ms 4md minerals to the value Lf > J)O. This beauty wial Lo further work) d. Quite a lhrge nunlx-r of the yi llow, ren.n and whlte her) Is found in Ltcht ld county h ee been z.ic( I) cut rtA ::t' .p ivclv sold. The cut gcms sr41 dnrinn the' Last year am valued at t h 000. hut a liroe a:,rt of "lsum !,srob;:i:. n' ris. nti the cutting atd other nre s.ary isrMen es. The M1a slon Bullion compiiar'y, at Marion, N. "., Ices n.t malon a Iu ii,.-s of digging foe ians, but (i4. Deming has found so =any garni t' there that it paid him to ail them mr itiua!titu"i to manufacturing Jewelers. There .... 'so one line ame* ebyst of a mnamlicent purple color 4,.4 wer one in'b acro 3t line aquautarinas boum one to ..ix c:rrats in weight and spma beautiful chloritic inclusions in qrtz, wth . wiss: poishied. show very d landmo.- effects.-Washington Cox. New York Sun. Fluctuations of Ralufall. Of all current meteorulo ical phe. *gmena, rainfall in the mwut Irregular, 1oth a% to time and piace. The ramfall of one year may be douLie or to blu that d the year before or the year fullowing. At any one station these tluutuati.,s are ordinarily so great as to thorou hly mask my secular change. It mnay vary greatly hom place to place. even tuough the dia tmce be ,'mall, while the chauge of the bastion of a gauge from the grural to fw top of a house may mnak" it give very diferent iflications. For thew. reuasons I Ih apparent that reliable results. in re ari to a general increase or decrease of galafall, are to be obtained only by gom Idobg a large number of (bdrvatiofns smattered over elany years and over the -& apossible variety of conditions. Gannett in Science. rdsit from Mre.. Water. Philadelphia. next to New York, v. wag more fruit from scrm the ocean an any other port. When the rrgular soon begins two or three steaume lire every week, each ountz ning from $0000 to 30,000 boxes of oranges and ueos., making an average of 60,000 natof fruit received weekly.-Chicago WeshIug Wow. h a mmi a to think Volapuk is a a legumss The brakemen on pm ttin hMisnY y hrem a.d .d . ýhmn'lý wr Mi MENTAL FOOD FOR BOVS As Expoet Teos NeW askmtismal Uteest Are Put Tegether. "The writer of 6ction for the young has become an important branch of liter ature," said an old writer whose charm. ing stories have tickled a generation of young people. "It seems simple enough, doesn't it, to draw a little upon the im agination and spin out a lot of stuff about 'Jimmy the Safe Cracker,' or *Ilob the Boy Dwtective,' but some of the best newspaper writers in this city have seized the story writer's quill with a sort of holy enthusiasm-and have failed. One of them whose heartrending tale was pub. likhed had the happiness of hearing him. self called a -chump' by a gamin critic who had just finished reading the effort. "I guess this faculty of writing fictit.ft must come voluntarily to a person. I have tried my hand at other branches of Miterature, and have immediately and with great unanimity been pronounced so good. Shortly after this rebuff a story, telling of the almost superhuman deeds of a young hero, appeared. and ever since I have not been able to turn out manuscripta quickly enough for the pub. ushers. "On some days I can't, to save te. write a single hue, while at other times I may worry through a paragraph, but on readhing Ut a second time I tear it up in disgu-t. Nothing remains but to wait for an 'in piration.' This does not come from albve, a gift from the gods, as is vulga i.1uPlxw)d. but is brought on by a knowibige of the fact that the ruh libhtr is waiting imhpatiently fqr the ve.t chaptn r of my story. When I once 5e1 started th.- thoughts oome almost tot Quickly. *I)o I ever correct my copy? Wcll, not much. I put the story together in my crao.iunm and then spin it out. I sometimies read it a second time and change a word occasion aly. then of! she goes to the printer. We are not very pricular. anyway, since we are work for boodle. not for undying fame. If we were to follow the advice of Horace and lock up our manuscript for nine years and th 'n take it out antI revie it, I am afraid that bootblacks, mn.ssenger boys and t: e ioung in gent ral would go without intellectual food for some time. That. however, might not prose a serious blow "o the community, for messageb would then in .d: probability be deliv. ered promptly. Why. I have s'en a mes.-4ngter Lpw. on whose fleetigest of fool a fortune or pirolaibly a life depended standing on a corner for half an hour in tensely alsorbed in one of my comitosi. bons. Quite flattering to me, was it not? **You think the increasin; drain should ZhIt.2st my storehouse of ideas. do you? Let me inform you that it douLk >e would d.d I not learn something new every day. I always make a note of everything strange I see or hear, and hooks ani n)per& give me any nuriierot ideas which I mold to suit my re..,:ers not my rea'lers exactly. hut the pubt ,l er's readers. We write to plee bu: t It, perren. and he is that all ix(verful indi eidu:"I who can take the story or return It with tialnks, W.Yon waflt to know how we are paid? Well. none of us ev r Incone million. aires, yet a Iarson with ordinary talent can always make a good living at the busine'". -1 d4 all my wridw: in two or three days of the week, and can make 050 or $60 without exerting zuirelf. The most mono. I ever received for a story was $5'") for a little thing I lili-hoiN in four day-. It was for a celebratud comedian who. wUI!I my permissionf. 4 raied my name from the title lag' and inserted his own. I don't know how much he re ceived for his name and my story. "1 think I am coim; as much good for the your;; :., many who make "er.' pre tea ina. .i.t of my Iturizs a:' founhd on hitnorv. and prolshly imnpr' I"-t101 on y(.asdful minds mnore foremlib tr 1 Somr of the lirofefirs who atT-it to 4h* sdo- our profestion to much."-New York Pre-+. -. ntmlation of the Capitol. ),r. Ldward Clark. the architect of the Capitol for some years, and cc ho. I he liNve. is a N'v Englanu man. has done woJn'rs in heatin. mni vtntalatinmg the building. which had not the nmalie-t tr foratimu for either heat or %ontilation. according a the modern plan. Great fans in tau cellar pump up many thou sand cubic tI et of air into the house and senate chambers. A network of piles conveys heat where heat was never meant to be. The only provision made for heating the building was big open fireplave: and to this day in th w corridors may be seen the long. high wooden boxes in which the oak and hickory logs were kept that hlared up the chimnneys in the days of the fathers. There are yet many vast fireplaces at the Capitol in which a generous wood fire glows and sparkles. none of your little piles of kindling wood, but oil time back log<. supported on large firedogs of thrwe generations hack. The committee rooms all have open fires, either of endal or wood. as the chairman of the committee selectn.-Washington Cor. Bkoton Transcript. The Llama of youth America. The Ilaiaa is eovt.red with a very fine silky hair or wool. which is not *.h d like that of the carmis], but when properly cared for grows to a length of from three to four inches. The linest is on the legs. The animal rarely prdluces more than one young at a time. the p;'ri'wl of gfrta tion b. inig ix months, unil it colE to maturity at three years of age. The In dians arn very fond of the meat, enteem ing it l yond that of any othier animal. They dry it in qmantities, and they ritard the eoup made from it as a asvenre'gn remedy in nearly all cases of Mekness. At ordinary labor the Dlama will lrt for twelve years, but those which are uwnd in the miner do not live longer than three or four years, in ccmaequenoeof infirmity caused by the sulphurous exhalati0on, Consul Baker's Report. The Comie Acter. "What cornlo actor," writes Auwelies Scholl in his preface to a volume of Ns .memNtean by Galip su. "does not do pod to a great eateat upon some. Oj~hsof pirson? Hacinthe se Wnse; RBail on hii curious ofgare; gee had an hmpmdenemt ia hIs speech, wWshk wae worth 00,0W francs a yeear l apenh pa nothing bnri bbe w06 s 1n and momk mu ui teowe." Sattwlyi igaaks by Trhmpe . The blasts of the trumpet on railways aa means of giving signals to engine drivers, pointimen and others engaged in shunting operations, which are now ex tensively used in large shunting yards of the Caledonian railway in and around Glasgow, are, it is stated, about to be in troduced on some of the great railway systems having termini in London Ac cording to the code of trumpet signals for shunting in operation at St. Rollox goods yards, Glasgow, the various signals are represented by long blasts, short blasts and *'crows" of the trumpet. the repetition of each varying the directions; for instance, a long blast of the trumpet means *move forward," and two long blasts are a sagnal to "move hack." As a rule, the goods yards of the principal railways, if not quiteclose to the termini, are situated usually in thickly popula ted metropolitan distrtcts, and it is be lieved that if trumpetaignaling should be introduced to them, discordant sounds of continuous and diversified blasts of the trumpet will create a nuisance-es eially at night, when people are in bed, night being invariably umilized for shunt ing--which Iondouers will scarcely put up with. Under this novel arrange ment each shunter, and in sNmue cases the signal men, are furnished with a horn trumpet eleven inches in length, having a reed inside the mouthi;iece, time whole ibeing of very light contrumt:on. The trumI t is carried by the -hunter slung over his left shoulder with a piece of cord, and hangs 'cros's the Imght hip. It is not at Present stated whether or not the use of the trumpet as a smanal will enable the railway authorities to dispenso with the sounding of the enmine whistles, which have already been the subject of so much objection.-London Dailr News. IeItertenes Efret. of snow. A recent article by Herr R. Sendtner In the "*1eteoroloiiche Zeitschrift" tends to prove that the works of art in the streets and squar.e of cities ate more liable to decay than those in the country, and that this decaying process is more rapid nowadays then it was forty or fifty years ago. The write r attributes it not only to the changes of temle: .aure in general, but more especially to the variations of temperature near the freezing point. the freezing of the water in the pores of the I work of art hastening the decay, in con Naquence of the sulphurons and sulphuric I scaIs, arising from the increai' I use of coal. These deleterious inzredients mix ing with the rain, log and dew act like diluted sulphuric acid on the surfaces of statues. monuments, etc., be they of stone or bronze. Worse than all these, however, is the effect of the snow, which absorbs those acids to a remarkable degree. Fresh fallen snow in Munich. for instunet eon tained seven to eight mihligrammes at acid to esh kilo of snow; and the same proportion was noticeable at For-tennrid, about eight kiloitieters from the city. The same quantity of snow, after having re niained on the ground a fortnight. siowed in luni h sixty-one mii i rannu' . while at Forstenried the prj pirt"tn had rot altered in the least: hence the snow in the city must needs have a more delete. rious effect than that in the country. This also is the reason why the public monuments in Berlin are always covered at the rapjroaeh of winter.--lorliner Tagidatt. The Origin of a Cnateso Saying. "The dvintity student's broke out again."' sail t he youn:; tian that boards on tiuth Diiviion s:ree t. "Weo were sitting at Oiniwr toilay. and Mins FNag-9 she up and ,an s one of her pu:i!k will never cet the river on tire. The iivinity stud tit uloked up and sail: *1 coo that von. iL~e other gp l people, at, is error o:eueioaltv.' 'What do %(,u mean(' said Mi-, ý ;:ettui; re I it the f.co. 'I mean.' t;11. the div't~y 'tdnt that when ul tallk ahn'tt setrn1 Ith rien r ni. fire i (u are uwing n oli s.' ing that's got off the track. It usui to is. **"IUell never wt the Thames on fire." and ieoplie when they said it la'l in wind the ricer Iham. : on the contrary it ne ansa nail r'a ,eve. called a !ne. t jhilh was aaIi i & 1l old wiinl and water uill clays. This teinse had a wiioilen rite, which slid back and forth in a wenien frame. If the wan that worke d it was nerL'et i in his work he iuomais ; - t the tiwou on fire front friction. Hleiui it wai said of a dull, 'in' lMrson that lie woubl never set the tein- on tire, and the .a i ng has been corrue ted to its prebeuit firm.' '' Buffals ('ourier. The 1'enestelta'a Natlonal Weapea. The machete. a broad sword or knife, about two or three feet lonn. and carried without a sheath, is the unis ersad arm of Venezuela and Central Ameri a. In the southern states of this count ry the prin cipal use for the machete is for cmuting sugar cane, but in South Ameriea it re places the pocket knife, the axe and the sword. The luanaeo or l:'irinndero is never been without it. lie cute bread with it, pjels sugar cane, cuts bananas and other fruit from the trees, chops wood, cuts his way through the primeval forests, slaughters hens or pi's and de fends himself against the attacks of wild beasts and serpents. There is no better arm aninst the serpents than a rnachete, for with a single stroke the native will out them in two.-E. Ie)1 JI..e Wartogg. The UVnmalflh Japane.e. (lo where you will you un flBed no where auch a bright, good tempered, !auw-hter loving and innately wite people as these Jals'. They are full 't jakes and are as untmlikh an human nature can he; generous, tru-tful and failhful. patient. gentle and brave. They have a strong pride, teo. that is nowhere more clearly shown than in the fact that thoeugh a Jap seldom Ipu.k+M a beggar without giving himsomdthing. }et there are conmpares tively few in the country. If %,u are sanoyrd by leiing followed aluet by a nrious, but note. a respectful. crowd, yy have only to hold out a eiin sad they an' It away like shekels at a church fair; they fool hurt at bring taken for mnsdisants. -Tokle Car. New York Trl ba.e. ue..tre.sI Dad Bey. "Why. what's the matter, Johnny?" bqulrvd a fond Montreal mother, as ler .1sr-oId came late the house Url b ittrly. Siba aA o FOMANAD BEAST,, Mexican Mustang Linimeni Yb. Lumb...uab moe ft Ia.c. .t .a.Uasat The Eeeepwlo.ItfoD pai It ttn~.alf auuf Thek Pine sd tm u ým ih .u It. Th. Farmer need. M Ia hh ha.e. histabla amm kb sock yard. Th. Ike~ambat ma. evib. Dleeima.a ab hi. Ub..al mpp1i seat sad sakes. Yb. U.me-ieueer mmmd. i-It .is kubag fiend sad sumSs NI~aa. The sleekh-grweer ued. ft-4t will ..v. km Ibeassad. at doles. ad a wrlid aft sesabe Lyon's Kathairon keeps the Hair so soft, glossy and natural in growth that it stays in any desired style or position. Lovely! Lyon's Kathairon Purges awaHy I ai BARUFF. eep .yon s atha - ron always in your toilet. 'Tis harmless, cleanly. Preservesthe hirsute by perpetuat ing its natural vigor! Lyon's Kathairon IOOTlkES AND COOLS THE NCA 1.P. a ness Is nmpossi ble if Lyon's Kathal ron be wisely used in time. It cleans and fertilizes the scalp skin. Try it! tI 2p w Send for 78-Pa.-o LUSTIRATE'1 CAT;1 I al f-a Th'wAA t s*t' lb. I tiled - trtvsA, i l pi.i ' Cmro eau titl t ' -,ý p-el IMPSi Iý I1 ait' I fl.ntianp '.1all oit ,r ,," eav.ce a asejusied ad sLad.r t, t... ar. L . tr paV rd. Iraslarn ant apwrifi' ins g.p ii.s. 5.4 l 'se il r 1. I ts fit f l r.. Ia it 1 .t ~ res. a, sh *. 1 * ta P tf r in n"14 .).1 sndels r, d.4 ."r A i. ts p .d 1 a ltt tw('l KI'IPIE 4itWiIIII 4%*' S ".,lagsa o1 such a notine*iferl 1abrles u br e an.yt(ndly illttintad newapi Mt .1r 1%' :Klt atL a ma n*ar.said s 6.t,. t p' . I r mi t at proat e pat. u. t Iss, t siMgns.lnui wo.itA* 4 * , , * . ,' f , i ' ndu-v.'' pro*rrsi pult l r ILA~1,,11.emati natue r~ ':.,' o1 evry inventton plantee Ir. i , "i.r rsuathA lot tine do.Iar bM A ip o 1~a Maadbnb 1 b&,. pakalS uskiSS LIFE REnEWER 'Speats-, rfu." anwa th. in le townt)1 durablo ol porf.. I hAin lieter In slte world. ('1ren., w}ithout needtrin., hMrvouss rwbility fs"PaIi lbhe lark.Kidnw Ili sass 14. "{" a Rhumatl am, Hi sne*i- of Meansu .n4..n liy mu l foI au.h No.t r1IPT : 77 fillfl 74Mn¢ramentost rnlN ! YEIN EP AY T u !mill SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE. haypx tu all 5 :- kId Chrta ink The holiday issue, now ready. In complete in itacit, containing no meii matter. The rover is enrilied lby an ornamental border printed in gold. The price is a- usueal, uiefnil. It conleins the moit delightful storiee, poeisa, a0d essays by dialiguiashed writer., aced superb lllultrationu. Amieng the imaportaut articles to appear durlug the year 181us are tbe followune-Stiad fir proq~wctu-: ROBERT LOUIS 3TEVENSON wll contribute regularly to each cumber durauMt tot, ar. He will lit no anany tlipc... old and new, and in a faml. ter aid perslnlal way, which will tot ti new bond- utf iilend.hip twwean the author ard hi,, Ihou-ands e r adieri. In the firms paper, entitled ''A Cbaptes oi Drevum.," appearing in the January numier, he relates laridently, in eam riqeliii, with the Setieral eih)j vt. misle InOtere.tlng facts conherning lbe origin ar tIeh now fin'.us conre '"8'ite.ge Care of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.* RAILWAY ACCIDENTS, by W M. CHAPLAIN, will be the firs: of an se reeially iailpot ilel anld iniere..lit series of paplera ..n railways, thor. adnsiaj. iatious and mons t ,iirucn. includaensgrelt e*aineerimg 'rals. famous teusael and pa..e., and, ilmledel. Ihoo.e urain.,e of the suhbjeew which In this day em. gage the alt* n fnit "f the wholeu'wntty. the IIlst atliis whihob will a&.eva I...ny ,thi. *.ere- wt I lo very elaranate,original lstil b'acntilul. The autheg tint th 'lit' a.f *hi Iii ire ariirle will h .rinniinerd later. DR. D. A. SARGENT'S p ua. r- on Pahvical Pr'ap irtlion and Physical Tralm aug will in eaiui I i niu.' I eversial of iii reaming inlterest,wit h as rich and unique IInist' at 1c1. t hi... '. huh hiieve aireadi apgeared. ILLUSTRATED ARTICLES -t -,weetal I stere.t will lie ths..e on the Campal It %ut to.. h.. .14 Ju)N I. IOh'E4; tin ''ITe Slan at Arm.,"''y E. l , BLASHl'IELI); swa ap'peapsc ELi ARIl) L WILSON. Illumiraiint results of reiets E *ý lulau rest-uarh; a furtilr a.lel. by H ILLIAM F. APTHORP, emn a subjer( u.ente.i with hi re. ei.t .'intrtilou aun Wagner, and maay PROFESSOR WHALER'S article.. on the Suir are of fihp Earth will be cor' ti ,u'*i; an I- aitwis- wi'ow ut ole hiio"t larteratiii gri.upa of eonte..miporary Eran.. a'e wrel"r.. will he aitinip .nt'l ly reft arid novel port rail iilultration& ELECTRICITY its 1r+ verii14 l iimiltrI i14 IS a liVe pi wer, exulosives, ete will h.* Int -i "je-at of aoih.*r gr it af illustrated art iles of eq .al pracoti Ulttras-I by Ile -clin antho~riti*- ulaon there* (f'lt'. MENDELSS)HN'S LETTERS wri'tep' to his friend, 1e'i*iheleu, at a peculli nrly inter.". ing it*ne i i atu iii 4*e. i'er, wlfiiili-h Ih- sublan,.er ufseveral rtlcleg 'f rcreat inters'r- to mikt*i..al rendcre.wtiah will beiliu.srated with enartraitl and drawinar fron tI raindl..-..hn', aa ii hlnid THE FICTION will b. -trunir, I. i ioly in tie work of will known-writels ti ill that il few i t* Utti, . ll* 1 .eitir i t( F vtiO.B l-ia-g ration the I ugagsagine has lite., it,' ftirtui,, te 'lii la t- firist vnar "' taih 'tiotilil. A aerial novel. entitled " Fir-I Harv.at." hii FltiDl(lII)I' J SrI %ISON, will t. Peoitn ia ti... January nuiih-r. a i rir t il lt.% iemr nelett- w ill t.* iilli.lIn d by H lNRY JAM 3d andi H. I', H' N N IR. l'hi -hurt .tone' are of niti'ehale qgrengtb and freahn ip-t. ILI.USTRATION<. The Mairezint will 'how increau~d exoellence is, its ilium rataihoi. The't' will be tare'e o 1-1 i'iand mi elitiarst'e il', Ii ever. It I. the Is tentaon of thie il* 1.1iiblrs to ret.eii..ne the tlutt waoik of the leedina artists, aod I's irlouti e all - ito.".r the alls1 -killful nl,-thi.."l of mtuat .,n'lrsvioR. SPECIAL NO I'l'E.-h1'.. ithil" reitaera ti n ...i - the Mingrztie from the fir.' nu , bin hJaniary. 1't7) i fip f 11"t ing indh'iiniimntt are ofiered. A year's a.al,..rint.li Il and the nitliih,"r fi"r 1St(7, .$48 A year'...iihri tion and Ihe urnelanlera far la7. Iiiuid it two vualumns c(loth, gilt toal, . 0. S $3.00 4 YEAR, 25 CENTS A NUMBER. Remit br bank wherk or money order to CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, NEW YORK. PROTICY YOUR HOMIZI MARLIN DOUBLE ACTION REVOLVER. A GOOD These revolvers are an exact REVOLVER duplicatetf the celebrateJ SMITH & WEMSON. so longer costs .*8 Caliber, using SFortuneCentreFi & FO1lll8Cartridge. 81f.Cockig, Automatle FULL NICKEL PLATED, RUBBER HANDLE. W&3tBmTED IQ7.1 IN STEST BaUP*CT TO TUB mass*aws e wagsoinr. For sale by Iardware and Gun Dealers everywhere. Msaotuzamrdl by TIE KAILIN FIES AIMS 00., Iow &Tea, Coas. BEST IN THE LDI SWAinTTw Magazine Rifle. 1w lte....ge a... uiI w.. Ti. equ. i ...t shleg s rife u s" e. w e eaed a ind e5 e ' ** .'.h.,l, s.. rb o le mrit . "ALLARU oALL ts. sPoRTt' ANT) TARO;T RtIPLr wv.14. ..mea. 1el f. alar..ut (c'we*e. ýARLIN W RE ARMS (t.. hew laves, Cees. IDEAL RELOADING TOOLS WILL SAVE ONE*M4LF THE COST OF AMMUNITION. ade for all slrs of l'srtrvdges wtl,4b ar gev4 to any of the falle [i1n .s or I s.lols: M.rtin. 1 0 t's. N hoebewte, /allard, bUreas. R Lg .t n blaq.sya..d e. SmiUt A Wseeon 1 sI O for .igaluges .ad Makes U SMA81N mSULLU, PANS A£3 SEAUS. heer sad better theu as, otBel. lead bAe iet liS of these eelesb to ders in . ..a.g Ocmmp-p- , "asse"". asw a£&m. Caou. IMPRERqS~ 4~4 ~~L JOBBEER c HRDARE ea NZhl. 11mI GOODE. G00n8. 24, is, Z6 8, 30 J82 Link. 8t3~, ut. W tWTAULIUHED IS?7. .TAB Xo m IrN k& CO., PROPRIETOR8 Of TUE Minneapolis Sheepskin Tannery, AND DIALRIS IN UNZIZLTS,7 VUWOOLTALLOW Ginseng Md bem*** R.*t. IREEP PmLS a mU A UIUOULTT. M1 w e, ass am UsinG. Us.wie