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-· :c~~.r~ t ~ e ~ --· , -·. ~Wit 1 v FF LORANO TK ["orSC EICs ý rtiý ins - t~ ~· ·· 1~'"'Y~ ~- j~bno ;6 "'` ,X~t- ,.T R r L S L .-P 0 .4Y ;S R -AT R A ,OE E Rý Viz, vv.: Y t . .tas the Pt9 ' -wvam heisr'h ft 41 rtsas all to d payrty-and h S p 'Thes. was a S maver- l out-a p runuuciamn to. which was n the sweetest of silvery so es frgm the top of dpak.M -M oe tage b hr day, and every one hat a * ob e twent4j'Ihdbdlgrlt P m o St they ehoose. W "A teagsmrade!" said Marian Ramp- I -kel eHow delightful!" '"eC we select any dress we please?" ri dd beaetiful Mirlas Holley. s1 "Would it be etasm Lee regles to go with-. Out any especial dress, if one has a Lb Iredh white muslin?"' timidly asked AliUe Appleton, whose mother was "1 paoor. a who earned her own board m and toltion by giving lessons to the y. " sasgstes conseut?" breathlessly di soeLouise Hay ward. 4'l aesme wilt coneent to anything Pi .1,ell Evans chooses to ask," tri- a tPLat tly announced Ida Colton. was one of madame's graduates, b Sknow, and a pattern damel in all al And if Nell were to request w we should all attend the masquer- tI d estumed i pink tinsel, and walk id e our heads. madame would say: $1 4aitu right, my dear, a very sensible la i[yens. I shall be delighted to hoe ey goung ladies go' " Ihm e was a general lategh atihs med commenoed the joyful tanks ·l tling personalities, studying up ysstumes in old engravings and ~tisiI fashion plates, and turninga M~ re c@ombined stores of the whole J ebOel in sash ribbons, artificial @wer", jewels sad plamea For at, tdiough the graduating class, which sbae was invited, consisted of only younar ladles the interest con eWe Miss Evans' masquerade party tue disseminated through the whole eboeol to no measured degree. And Alice Appleton's gentle heart in lar beat with innocent anticipa for she had sometimes fancied Jingo Erans, the brother of the pretty bhotesa, had looked upon her with a tenderer glance than he vosch sede o tohe ether young ladies of his seisaintancc To be sure she had no party dress, but the indivilIuality sag eastd by Marian Solley, "A Snow- t ake," would be suficiently inter preted by her simple musliu gown. with afew starry white flowers of the d Cetaloilan Jasmine in her hair. "But you're not going to let those girls go alone," said NMse Polly prout. who was Mme. Morla i' cou-sin, house leeper sad ehief consellor. e "Certas my I am," said Mmne. MiorinL e *'Why should I not? It is only to dear t Nell's house." I "It woldn't bhe at all proper," said Miss Polly, pursing up her thin lips. and the hearts of the eight young girls I peank simultaneously into their boots. "Mech a party of giddy girls with no responsible companions! mie. Mornial Swonder at yoid It would not be al- 3 mowable, unless, indeed-" "atnless what?' said .Ime. Morinil and the am aie Mitemne kMeet eanly for Miss Polly Prout's replyi I "Unless I set to go, toe, a 4heir obaperone." said Miss Paly. " "')b, that wouldn't be according to ' etiquette!" oried the girls in chlornus "'Nell didn't invite Mliss Polly l'rout." And Mme. Mor4ni, who was an amla - ble, essy-genglady, Woverued is most maes b1 her sems energetie wsil!, dually gave way and announced her *A wnfl retueIr .E7ID ren as-Ias" envarictilon that Miss Polly Prout was right~ '! can put on my green gown and a tiaUell eevered helmet, and go as Mi nerva." said Miss P'olly Pront: "and tbhe Ien keep my e.yes on the y.eg ladies the whole time "*What have we dlone that a spy should he set upon our sctionar?" said Id Coltcn, indignantly, when they were by themselves. ".Hateful. forward thin:" sputtered Loie Ilaywarv ""hy, she'll speil every bit of our fun:" "Wow dare she obtrude bhrself. aSia uit, cpos poor Nell Evans"' said liria elity "eh ha't come.- aid laughing Iie ikeeler. "She shall evrer cross Nel's thrshold"' • 1~ow w ill yo help it?" esl Alie Appleton. " We't sFee was late's eeimaeetle * ie aot week was a week of gtId f the forthcoming ewent S as em was mor diSeclt to pblse, p l. m a c a is her slection of :--b4 sher easaueles enil aus S-1a apin7 "aý! " ,' _-' hair fbi t occae Seet if It Iead her beck braids madeby the , illage r tpole ids d Id g Emter by the pletare. "rame s i "Oe 1 ta rve all th niace Stls."'atSed iawI > while Il her mid- V a admd snaep e idea bt eiat r n t ar some attraetion than the I t lash graees ao the bave happened," t a -m ttmiYd. ti lty. is Polly. aM a Sabe sattebed sa at the * eatn swetes th uStt re her green a s ret in her precat" ioul`y the m raat sigh- m of la lag gi e I r. wan I "RWhatc a ' Miss' sPout, u 'y' a1tla ait? . What right bd they It 'o Ta wlhoto - - notifying me?- a - YllDo't tnd. Polly." said Maie. Mo- I rini. soothingly. "Eight was all the a sleaigh could carry besides 4be driver. I r Michael says his orders were to bring a the cutter for yeo." d Orders" shrilly repeated Mis Polly. c a "But whose or4eraT Does Kate Kei m 1 d manage this losinatson. or do I-and a a you"? Me crow to a cutter, indeed- 1 with a surde s the rslike Miebol t 1 Sdrive? A pr But, in spit e er idiggnation. ase I olly Prost w saemplled t nally to I i- accede to the obseslous plan. I L "Drive quickly. M ehael," she saictok 1 ,her young Jeho. "Ser it's getting dirk t already, and i deatlike the woods that I t we have to go through. Why on earth 1 r- thoe girls could'S have waited-" e- But the jingle of the sleigh-bells and : the sudden start of the horse hrongh ll Stred toughe "loom u'ou.abot otr ures lnered. S "Brlars" rieked i Polly t the nw. "A Masked orobbers! Oh, kind netlemne, spare. wpare my lifeo. and al mthey Jewentlry is the foursen ' And tearg hoer. Jol-platd bracelete e drom her wlimist she a them and her Aherah the sarplts bet duk us and astill roenta" sqenence to , tae Irish Idolgred in te oow p fithe bottom It, trMid na the gloom oa tbsoluete nihtov L of the siohor d. h. er tiarll hidden of the drooenoodever gaed boughth a llttlo gofou of other d figures lingrt" uttered. deep dltrs" shrieked Miss yoll Is Prot. dropping Minerva's gilded spear A. into the snow. "Amassins! MaskedL no rohrs h. reind gentle gen, stterea. ji. spare my life, and all my jeweat tlry heis Sfrom e wrists, be s flung them anret!d he w!th fauine the r Mdi institute with a rso the saints bet ofus and all ir olly ' asu" s byq t . te Imarishvel lmdow bel uoweld frAm Se the bottom to of thI roaslwgrh. "us aeeeeud-and depsrtrr uttered a; deep vitaat. "Louok bel d st your Is peril:" "1t'h-where shall we go?" stuttered tre br the plae whence youh caef." , all that the reply. "And at the ''b blf anh hoot ter d , ith the luckles pair tarraed, oer oits ide where heat with fdrtited at the ol institute.ow. with a grtesote tale of naving been Proreted by malsked rolent ri aiond ha, to leae eeaed by the at marvele gheetod luckhen the o n modred outerd rigthet. Tdouble gaeih to return two men fro s Poeghllborlngt tranformed herelft IN oace detailed in p areaft of tha, rohhers, bu in t heroine they reached the ne a sc tioa all that they found * 1a 1 old)Db Slter turned adver on hia e i here ho ad dragge so yd it into dwerentp stow.ped?" a ,sThe eight yoirlng "ot ee molestedn rthinks mlevol hadnt made rvch sion. rad. stranue to any. exprhaessed no rrof suprayy at her non-ao ular ane aue the lee manyt tomya tk good there?" i shersctly oquestoed cate emoa tley.rd "FIi- isty at leastr" smod Mid Polly. ag td their eyes r enred b ks: "Dear er.ea, how dresiagul: cried ally AI thin e rht fair yoseg ucnpih rarse looked archly e t re other s Mcsrrd wred nn ay by man cre in lautrhin te thor so: kO od is 'l i "a- 'lHat a very ius r, there' i-! Atheir est over by mask'' .Rr. dear, ho d edlaalr -ried ids F EIUimek Fatl ~lti' -F-Z I RAZILIAN INDIANWi - aemes .am.e.sd.j ses.eme ar Brasilian Indians are said to be I the .agiest human beings on the be of the earth, not exceptingr "tip ger'" of lower Californlralad tid tdli iM of Terra del Fueg The Boteeos 1+ iwo are most noted advanead Ar to. eutghb to till small pathba of lnl ,. Mil ratets. asea eatesat weae mas" h m sasle. The Portuguese gae them iw etr- alagular name from the wind t botogne. meaning a b~aet-ag their Mabit of wearsIa large, ueAd j51 Sdi5ssef wood in their "resd asid "1 fps. This ashion reed to Iso fir il hto mddlie n1* amay do hled S lder tpa projectig eve or six t Laeh, holding a plg as big as the top A S39aeo ea cup 04 se m . tem is m 1ay dioodtinaed but tho mass still go prfectly nasled., -ept I these living in the mear sighbetheod v Sof white settlements. The en erni . I themselves all over with bright yellow a pialt made from the barlk a. gum ors s i speels of palm; and the women dreai * P up as some elvilized ladies do, by ap II 1 plying a few streaks of white aid Is red to their faces, arms end bosome h " Though many of the Botoeidons ae a n now practi mily civilised, we are ismesd I that those of the far interior re yet i1 cannibals to the exteit of eating their al eaptives taken in war. Like the Oreeks as of the Homeric age, they consider it pt r the greatest of evils to lie unberiel I i atter death; so they delight in making i - Iutes and trumpets of their enemies' as a bones I have the questionable plea- w are of owning one of these ghastly b 1 trophies, which has five holes and is or- ti r namented with tufts of red and yellow feathers attached to the bone by ci o strings; but it requires somebody more c courageous than your correspondent to T t test its value as a musical instrument t s by personal experiment N There is another Brazilian tribe, a 1 whose name I do not remember, who ji b are an almost exact counterpart of the p Pueblos of Mexico and Arizona-sim- tc pie, peaceful and industrious. They n live near the coast, and are doubtless a descendants of those Pinzon and other p early voyagers first encountered. But a unfortunately they are few in number a and rapidly dying out, for among their g fierce neighbors the "turn unto him the other cheek also" princi- i ple is disastrous to life and prop- al erty. There are many scattered it tribes of unreclaimed savages, most of whom are wandering cannibals and all ti implacably hostile. Perhaps the most g interesting among these (at safe dis- g tance) are the ]lundrncus, or "Behead- o era," who, with their allies, are said to d number between twenty and thirty g thousand. They live up the Madura a Tapajos, io ero and other tribute- s eeoat-etamrr ; pat~amt ~ nts a set enaed a central malocca-tho latter a not the dwelling of a chief. as might be g supposed, but rather a grand couneil , chamber, fortress, arsenal, and general t 7 pow-wow room. In it are deposited f if those horrible trophies-the preserved o heads of their enemies-which have e a given to the Mundrucus their terrible a . titleof "Beheaders." Unlike the Jiveros II of southeastern Kcuador, they do not c *d extract the skull, but by some savage i t. process of embalming keep the cranial h k relic as nearly entire as posaible.insert- g ing false eye.s, made of bits of shell or r- polished quartz, the long hair combel r" out and carefully decorate'l with stringsI tr of roekcock and macaw feathers, feath- a er eariangs In the ears,and dyed strings t ly passed through the tongue by which ,r to suspend it from the rafters. .d In peaceful timnes hundreds of e, these are ranged arund the walls of is the molocea or set in rows around the mandioca fields to keep the ghosts away is that might otherwise injure the grow a ing food; anti on warlitce and festive occasions they are trotted out on the ll points of the warriors' spears. Strange lh to say, the Dyaks of loirneo have a sim aI ilasIustom of preserving their enemies' head, and are provided with blow-guns, a almoa identical with those of South ar Americana Like most other Amazonian Indians, ed the Mundrueus cultivate a little man dioca, corn and plantains. They know how to prepare farina meal from the sk mandioea, and also to brew a sort of in toxicant resembling chicha. Theyhave se gourd vessels, some .'f them quaintly at earved, rude pots of halted clay and . utensils of wood and stonme. Their ea rn nwes are hollowed tree trunks, and be Ov- aides the blow-guns for killing birds, l- they have bamboo spears with pisomned it- points, and arrows tipped s ith the en deadly curare. Ily the w-ay. the latter at is now gene.rally eonteldel to ie neither ra a vegetable pison nor the s-ten"im of ,- serpents. as was formerly snpposed. bhut b- the putrid matter fraim de.'ayed huntin he bodies, the arrows being stuck into a he festering corpse and loft until so:takd full of the deadliest poison known. n- Fannie E. Ward,. in(hi.agv, Inter (a,'an. S A PRETTY SLOW TOWN. id. eTho borht ('h,ler Mighlt Wake It p,. of Stat Ii Was o t sora f It on He wore a faint smile of pleasure are when he walked into the downtown ie drug stor', nnbattoned his ea-at and ite leaned with an air of expetsutncy ed againtit a showae. I ''an 4 do arthine for younr" aked a If clerk. I -Well, mybe yonn can and marbe Ivo can't." asawe-ud the other. care i fully removing a spe-k from his coat Ssleeve "I don't know." he ad led, re ly flectively. e "Anything in m:" po-wer I11 be glad d to do," said the clerk. amnilinra nc.nrasg e inglr- . i "'Well. I'll te;l yon." answered the I stranger. '-I live over in Je-rae. . i a town i pretty slow. YVm might almost call It dead. I'mn sure you would if yon Il. went on' there; only we'ree a ne i to ith it that we don't notice it much. !"'O yea" amid the drug clerk. look d iht a little daedl. "'Yes exactly." said thq other with a e flatteriag mite. "Yeo a'e. there is ir never any Err'reitciment v-er ar Wayr; it's i. Just dead -d~ad as a d "ear ail. No-v /g ciiigover on the feryba toaday-. - lty the way, do you know mUth abrnt Far fldtrs." 5a5et e tu 4pr, isiamat stavtied, 'Wha t's gt i o with "Wy, ja. mtn ' m i. ,et the -, agy? Woaldya W to a Theou" he heetm 4.. i aga n, tl . iy, lmrig s itt .aW y a or .- - ..? .Ws I -- I sut4 to .____ t,. I eresp amm lith . X . ile,, "Iok aok. aa- it to- Ia ShI4 Aem eeI M, Mne, -r tle -es s I "i wh'. ima. w" to ao wit mon Wlk toef, ttee Iured tate I s y r. aIo o r I Ithat town y e rs. rd L 'sah. m the ý Tellpe ow tpla ette be wak4e aU tr It wel doe' e do g eas eho'sber ajtble to aeio dead man a hylive we lld e wl * l l retty L, worn W.' have rad - t men-I eamn deed men biry- my Iag live men-I mud that fetbe; di and. w e'ou hao e bobo bbnt g . Swith men the ht to have bee otat ow t I buried oung bean maL every 0thinga m dead t It msee nasora I SThere's .onlt thing Ia the world Sthat will ke That's holera m Now I thought t I'd be willing to ceatch the 'ole tate it over the reai o jut fora the a of my town. I'm a t Spublic spirited .and I'm willing of - to make some e to beneat be o y native town. I found tht thel en Swold not let tch it Can't getto de r people wt ha e cholera-that hola I i a get there, i can'it ovget away r n r again. TOf at woredn't ado ny d, Ir good, would it id it now? " h S "Of course i anewerd the elerk, in' - oady to shoen nde ' at the ebrat d Ssign of tiolwn the prt o the via d itor. e rf Of courpa.n That's mast what ,I , I thought to I e.ughtilaybate gco ld SI it getupa good I :.ution of cholerad an Stake 1it over t - I'd have it break l out an moon as I t nwe 1 into town. 14 gr 0 drop right do n tle street and ha' 4 g gin tohowl. I t n: and tn dig ir, rmy pnalt into h e rsunld and turn l r'a long t'ime e -t w town-e 'd t Sgra"b eversy at htI rusach antd yell il ii cholera.' I . una wold fetch S i o them. The ap a lo chospital a p id forme ntl ge t into it and take rea bi d of me. They'd et more or less inter- d, a ented. you se, hen iC f I knew the t r sy mptoms by he t Id go through the ri 0 whole buiness d b the time I wbU te tt convaleacent It ught that evernd ybood , e in the town tw have heard that i l had the cholera d that would do them u t Sgood. It would k them up, you hae tr ar "Now," added c New Jersey philan- pt '1 thropist. with public-spirited smile. fo y "can you teach ' any thing aeont I eymptoms,? T wat I want to p1 he know now. If an't get the cholera, h Ill have to tsk the next beat thing. t ~' Can't you helpm ut? a I mto afra d t.' said the clerk ol "W1'hy don't y try dynamite? It ulo ie easier." dwa n "Oh. that wo nht do any good. I w know them taoo haIe. Theayd think p C dynamite explo a were a church on ie gan and they'd o right oft to sloop aI me again." et a: "Sorry. but -I nt do anything for F* you in the chole way," . ail the clerk. ci Sg"Well god- then. I'm sourry to p h have troubled y 'erhap' Its jpust p as well to give it p. I ain't sure that oa ne cae would iheh gtood an yway. d I goess. come t think of it. that it el " would take a h e shiplotd. Ill hae a etor wait Maybe a t he a lohns- h Stown disaster at hicago lire and p maybe we' I ha t'tter lack with It ly cholera next c n. Go.e l day. h sir" a hdgand he rebuttone hi coeat and walked e away a ghtful air.-N. Y. Trib.une. ed t.iny-.bt - h'.dot araphi. h Ie Remarcka-le a nfees are behg mnade 6 er in the art of plat rapy. At the ean CT nual exhibition the I'mh.tosgraprit 1 "f ei.'tV ,of lireat tri in a scnsation w:' lt prainvtetbld by a hot.rraph of Mont , SH:ane., taken at rlistance of flifty-six a mies. IalLmev s tclephotographic d lens was ntsel. r lest stop. extens'in i of camera sixty i mhe·s with y-wen min Suntess spuroe. at tL:1k p. n. in windy weather. The s.udesw of the tele'hopie i camera is unqite tbhnathm and opens up I Smany intereslting psihbilities. The secariin of this view of Mont ;ane at n co great a distancefnt.rd- an ipprta nr ndty of intrueti. coamptrisan with an ordinary lenr sa similar and closer "ranib. Anoteher hibit hal s Vme .i entidi-. though lite or n. s-tistic at Stracti.n. Even ae urinitiated have ceased to be astomitshcl at the lightning r euaordl- of the camrmr. Da i uerre f-und ft- seven or eirght hcars eap a ure neces sa ry to proureb a hope oi a landcarM e that may te ohbt4ntel now in an in ad flnitesimnal fr-actiol. fI a second. Not Swithatandina that familiarity witb speed. a picture in th e.xhibtion w-.rth he notheg was that oFi trket in its ftlght Iy frkm the shore ton I -h p in distress- St. ioiL s Raepublic. to . Her Aeadmiet. Flremsa hatd sei s,tthing on the k- street which grealtly amused her and when she had colraadel talking of it to a her mother she drew a long breath and is exclaimesd: ' weldh bOst " 'liracln my, Floa-i'.' 5sa the hoe t ele merter. "you mtst use Ahem ele ga laugunge thea that" a "Well. ten. ilak open,. she said, H / paogetkaly, alb the awmendment was toagpteaL-DAbaF e Irea. " -1-U' + As.MM .43 ` * aNer M raas al tes as to Lese Only a 'tWr weeks es ass e suib s pat.tr e ih a txn EW tf h Yae York tdea seu d s at at Sdeath' ht, iw otAo the atm ..rverareti.ms puen.ta t Msed s opiu he ittrades hmeeeu lie. O f ,th Lst Ir Morulse -oe 1 -rCme to cover the traces athdr e h taklrg thlM Isende ms tetisere tm c tedref. Anrse aed dWrstmek ad h re eetca, o¢ .tb*e o stateaeh h tdhe vict he ew d O ffagtais, but the togenet hte The poisoners of atiquoty had. is deed, to eoatead wti a far move sart- -, o dfu- via: the resnastames are itensely bitter, so mucn so, in fact, an Invisible trace can le tasted it the air o stikeig a small quantity frosm a ue .paper into another. Belladonna, e digitalis, stramonim, hemlock and Sootehim are either acrid or so naes oes that a deawly dias cen be swallowed only with difiathy, eves, by saicdes. In an admixture with mast articles of d' food'regetable poisons can generally be detec ted by the protest of the hman Certai b mineral poisons, however, Smake a remarkable exceptiaon front that to rule. It Would almost seem as if a. re are had not thought it worth her w s a to' warn our instincts against -^tch oatt g of-tht-way substances as sugar of lead Sor arsenious acid. Common white area y enite is odorless and almost tasteless, Sdeceiving even the vigilance of such Scautibus eristres as rats and foxes. SIn small dos its taste i as difficult to deteet as that of a few. particles of wlt. c echalk or powdered alum, but be iaw m rather insoluble sabstance the deadi drug might betray itself to the eye. 'If 1 should see fit to take a short line trip to tCe other world," said the Swiss philosapher Haller. "I would no a more think of shooting myself than a Sman would dream of getting himself Stired across the river from the mouth of a cannon if he coul tead nstead use a com n modions ferry." He alludes to the en tw thanasla of. narcotie poiss. d his had lived to witness the ape me d that have made prussic acid and cyan eI ide of potassium the favorite drugs of lch suicidea A single drop of the acid ep I plied to the tongue of a full-grown rab re bit has been known to produce instant er death, and the failure of suicidal at ho tempts with drugs of that sort can be `he often explained by the fact that ama teur chemists are apt to use absurd E dy overdoses. t A young drurgist of my acquaintance em came near getting himself into serious a trouble by accommodating a friend who an- pretended to need a lot Of cyanide le. for photographic purposes. This cus at toter intended to take a peep through to the camera obsceur of Davy's ra, Locker, but miused the heance by Ig.I wallowinZ the whole of his purchase, a quantity sufficient to kill a regiment rlc of soldiers. Under the circumstances itas of the case in question it merely pro duced a vomiting fit, and a few hours' I work with a at ,ma-h pump put the re ink pentant sinner on his legs again. or A similar ase occurred a few years sp ago in western Texas. where a disap pointed railway contractor attempted for to avense his wrongs upon the employes *rk. of his snccesscr, but betrayed his pur to pose by filling the whole camp with the aP Ist olor of bitter almon ls. hat Ity good ltek prusaic acid and its ay. derivations lose their portentous prop t it erties by a few days' exposure to air ae and even the sunlight, but the criminal i ns- history of the last two decades seems to and prove that criminais bgiu t master . ith the difi ulties of such circumstaoees is r," a way which threatens to make discov ked cry next to impossible. Y. Besides, there is reason to believe that the gvpsies of the old world, like the abrrigines of our own continent, ,. have preserved the recipe of ugly chem- e ade i,-l trade secrets. Austrian newspapers, an- -ome fourteen year's amn. reported the Strial of a gvpvy rirl who had gratifed a :' caprie ,if j-alusy by pisoninw a young t 'Ot man with a cup of drnugevl enoree. six Analytical tests failed to identify the phie an, but the prisoner finally con fien ~ amed that she had usedi a suatatece in- known to her people as "drei." or udy ,r",,-." nnl prrpareeI froTn the mnlder Pic in;. wst' i-- f -certain ted-s.t An autopsy "p prve that her vitim's lungs 'w-ere The perm.entel with " stran1rne whitish Sat Igowth resembling the. ramification of wi- -ertain mwses while his stomach. sith throh somewhat conesteid, revealed Sno tra-ce of ay known poison.-ian ci i'rancid'-i tlihrnsi -Ie. e -In the early ml Idle ag glove's be came ,iite c ,mmon Knights. priests ind and ladies use I them and they reteived dfif-rent symbnlial sigRiticatios of iv.. chsllenge. sabmiisaion, et- It in- was noR . however, until the ege of Ot. Louis Mi1. that they btcame part of it eAlirant l ai in generi During this .rth prenh kini sreizn, the gloversof Paris icht i -ams very important community. ' Iher were stylvie maribsnda. maitres. ra iiers. p.irfummeIOs and alone had h1. i :ht to sell or prepare gloves. EBe tw--' n lr$44 and ltes., T,"uis XIV. Issned i ,the screr idicts prc hibitinr the use of and rlier emri derd with fld or silver. it to t unaemen's gloves at this period were and made s r th gauntlets throse worn by tadies. cis crcdi the rrmat -" Well, I wonder what will teng hir- enratin of the wekte qne,¢ted t sele tlecrph editor. "If I may be per mitted to spc a k." ventured the hete said, editor. "it is likely that te s eeeties Swas of the "-earI will contie to te that tir , feeling.--ruiseapWAB Jar-an s iiwr~rwrjt r ai+ " . Tý1{I 1Iý ý L ·''ý -1mo 1 L W C. L A W U. lt~tokasamyr t I~rW maza XONTGO~smY. Notary :-m Public, Vw ..% I.I SA a , A. F. u lOW, i. .Physician and 8surgeon 1. ., Is laarL, s J. W. LEA. M.D., Physician and Surgeon, JACKSON, LA. Ueeldeuce at Mrs. West's, NiMth Wait West Feliciana. W. H. TAYLOR, rapha, laps Id her, . r NU*JiCV4L- e L& - DR. JAS. KILBOURNE, - Physician and Surgeoa, CLINXOW LA - Oses: At smeme... DR. JAS. LEAKS, Physician and Surgeop, I U'. PAItXNCITIVLL, LA. DR. CHAS. F. HOWELL, Physician and Surgeon, E LAUR.L SILL LA .:n: lb mofmwm:1. i.r lc s as E tb medl avd wilbIa nne partab. TM3IsAU S3 IO'.llI --Ou AND AtEUR TTS DATE ALiL bIontloiioo the .An'a. ei!eel@W. nl amd Lake he limeI pllantr .tI thim F at wll be conidered trmaaraaog. and ani s* edere. pele ted ter.for. . L JALIM OWN AWn ArrRR THIS DATE ALLI ha l1.1W of any klnd. etteer with rLd dog n. on either the ,om Toe or lrown C(. "-r plantatUons. in this parih. wI I be es Steredi ire psln. and i f lator- will b. proiiugted u.lleOl tnt te6 ailew. SltrmSTt)N FOi.KES. Ageet. 11 %-Iva OANY KiNfl(NTWHflRRRS IIwnd plfnt...' In this pri rih. with l- *t gum I lwIe.? prohlntlo Ani- fendetea wll be prrea uted te, rlCe btule-p osee Tty. :t H law. CHaP. H. RItPD. Ageet. 'IZRoU AR!) AlTER Till IigTE ALL n bustlnh witb pun or otherwlie. on gh-L lad planiallon. will be onidredl trletei ' Ino. aud ,,i!ndora will be proseeuted to the uillest eltent of the law. n ItS. EILEANOR L EAHR )W. VlTl¶ E IS iHKItEfl Gi;IES THAT FlROM Sand after thie date. oil twepsieLat 35o5 nt t.1n my set real plaaetln te in Weet Fel t-ana. will bIe ptroae'te to the tulla.t exteat of the law 1HtS. I. L IA'IT,4IEW$ 1 bAKIttt i'iNCEIttFif ARE HiEtti RY no'ltIed that the atherlning at ewers end sbrtlhirht free the gardens na Trot petnte' Lion. in thti p rlth. without the pertnelnn a the und, *igned. will he r ewrded ae trepeas lag and pi'osmtte.) aeoeedngnt F ANK E. 1U LLJ Agent. Ij 1 T? T 4) (N THE tltHEtMi`TN ANU Hazew rise . wisll afwer this dae tie one .leered amgrespasalng. JA A. F. 30B IAtu. OTCE1 HRPtBY IVEN TEAT urnl 110eeeiaml'blbttea. ·leletio etC wl Yepeam w anmfm U as" ofe the law. J. W. DRosauCi. NOTI(EISIlERFERTGI'FrN THATHUact itt no the itatee and .lswood palmthlsiO In this pansl It rrolhled. VkOjUt4W will hl proteciit totle aull estnt of tile ItORT. II. 3 AUPOW.C) HOTEL WINDSOR SLVUGHTEt, LA; ekt·lra "mum -M UK a i:.. NOS.A0. * ?. ~ -- --- ; rww " "y 1 . Vaf ti'4 i *' -r -urw ·i - Shav.."........ -4 lo~' I spatU sptw. t p. burag ~ · & o. . GEO. AZNCSVKL ShBampoo....... V.. I. 'aU S t fo pouts s .I n I-- i ·Ul testa toel~ a sa soam+ `i Ju! / - L - Aor - 51 , bas. ~L N Ir. f.Y e A cLL P~lTINMA Ak v. IND1' DA"m -Y tha th - * CEA Uu, .ii)tl:tqrrao UST~ a emua'ss-I