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"Sorrel Sue-1' At Batesnlie, Ark., a recent shooting aifrav brought into notice a woman knowtfas i4Sorrel Sue."' She always ap peare^in jpubiic riding a >orrel horse. It was believed she belonged to a gang who stoltf horses. A surgeon who was summoned to at tend one of her "pais" who had been wounded in a row, mistook his way and wandered into Sue's cabin. Before he coutd be hustled out he .saw things which roused his suspicions. These he reported to Sheriff Timcoe, who, with a posse, jpaoaged to surround the den of Lors^ thieve?, capturing Sue an i two of her gang, He found that Sue had ap plied the means of bleaching her own hair to tl:at of her hor.^is. When the Dosse entered, they found a horse enveloped in s a jacket made of rubber coats, being treated to s sulphur v^jor bath. The ap ^jlKances were very ingeu io:.B*,ind worked very well. A black -or bay horse woe Id be ste'cn.aud run into ti.e bleachery. After its co^or was changed and its mane and tali trimmed, the disguise became 30 pronounced that without aay great risk the aniCiil could be taken in daj light through the very district from which it bad been ftolen. It wa^ Sue's business to not on t y superintend the bleaching, but also to ride the animal out of th< country.? The Spokesman. Btnt of All To cleanae the sy-.tcm ia a gentle and truly beneficial manner. when the Spr. uptime come\ vho the true and perfect remedy. Syrup of Fitgs. One bottle will answer for ad the family and coitnonly ")0 cent-*: the larxe f)lzt\ S > . Try It and be pleased. Manufactured by the California Jr'ij Syrup Co. only. ? Thk Germanjleicbstag appropriated t250r (XX) for the Chicago World's Pair. "I HA TK 8B fOi ATTUtTTKV with an affection of Ihe Tiirtrfit from chltdhocvU caused by diphtherial, and have used various remedies, |b at bare never found any:hing equal to Bhows's BhoNcniar. TkOcbk-h."? /Irr. G. J If. F. Hampton, fAe'on, Ku. ^oid oniy in boxes. Thk srtncfactare of beet sugar is attaln 1 9? large proportions in Nebraska. ~ ... %;? Baowik's Iron Bi ters cures l)yspepsia,Maia ria. Biliousness and General ftebility. Rives Strength, aids Digestion, tones the nerves creates appetite. The h^?t tonic for Nursing .Mother*, weak, women and children. /> Th* trouble on the Sfexican border ooa tinuea. Mrs* W. S. Francis Is the w i/e trf ?>o?? uX tfco bc*t known phar macist* in New Hav^n, doin~ busing at Ml Diswell Avenue, an 1 ex-Provident of the Connecticut FfcarmaceuticaK Association. He say*; *\tty w J-'e wa.? for several years in bad health, <iiw to u eomptteattont of disorders. Yrltrtut* MbtBulj l ht?r t*? fake Hood'4 SarsaparlUa; tike i? certain*? a wood deal Urtt r aim:* every way." ! r- For Isadies, food i Sar*ujiuni;a Is esp?-< lally adapted, and care tfifllcultics recuLar 10 the sex. Head thU^For ?Ter2y?*rs I suffered witb a ~o * Complication of Diseases till I was a confirmed Invalid. bfcxxt poor. appetite gone, bowels out of or ter.an J wiM-raMr i:? mind and body. I read i f mirh woc.:?-rfui ourM per formed by Hood's SarxapariOa that I thought I would try a bottle, u, U it didn't make me better, It ?oa id doc make me w >rse. ft did Make Me Better ant?<m my ihicl bot ie I found myself almost & ?e?r w?aai. I will giadiy cor,rtnee any lady, as I have pr-rceii myself, that putif> in? and enriching tbebi^od, *-Mch ' Hood's Sarsaparilla 4oes to perfection, t* the te*?t 4 onMitutional TrMlaf?(< K*d la m-iuy cases d<*s away with ail Lwcai Tfeutioe u in tkdunady diseases with which Women ar? aiflferied.** iNs. M.umu Rked, 1MMU??*y*3tgeet, Raltunore. Md. I^Wtntl Coutti:atioa b cared by Hood's Pills. $ * CHILD BIRTH ? ? * * ? ? made easy! ** Mothers' Fk:sj?d " is a scientific ally prepared Liniment, every ingre dient of recogmzcd value and in ccpstant use by the medical pro fession! These ingredients ire com bined in a manner hitherto unknown "MOTHERS' WiLL DO all that is c-aimed f* t HAND MORE. It Shortens Labor, r Lessens Diminishes Darker to r Li&e of Moiher ird Child Book ! \*f Motm2*s " mailed FREc, con taining valuable information and 1 voluntary testimonial^ ?oatbr eatne.T* c.r receipt of price il CO per bottle WtAOnClO RSCfUUffl CO, Mfeata. Sa. Isoto rsv t :.L oRuaoisra. Wwrphine Cored In lO to so da;*. Xi> pay till cure?U DR. J. STEPHENS. Lebanon, Omo. !wil? 1M;h UL lil t *al T*S CiW Wlttt jioanr cocfffci.lxitatbr nsbes ?wd raert Wnw trm- Tarntory. ?r. 333 E" w*y. X. f. IV A V' TUTV' -TOU Jwr? any spare ttme and J* ?> V ? OL/w&at to makn. money, ad ?re** II- U. B ISSQN, IW Ceater Art., Chicago. III. THE KISS iff TS? DARK. ? ? -SetwPi^nwi; soajt. Price ."i-S 1'eata, JftHX Kt KCH CO., CladwuTSito. ' DO YOU INTEND TO BUILD A HOUSE? ?i ^ ? aOosterv Sewei*, !tad 411 kinds m Turned in) Flnkiieti wood work from ns. We sre ???oraotarw* and ba?e the ianrest plan* in the sSiLsgift Pu> Cafcrandi vod Vrtwu ?y Bkxxi discus and th?r :.7^jtUT-_r^L?**> 6p*< for 1*M *lao rvJMTRl HK$XVT3 "Use. fttBTM 1lU\ '?"? Uk P .wrter -j cuoi, Mir. sample -.,?(>)ic (v?rnaktoioiry (Kg, gf, r/l>i?wt7llM? : LITTLE LIVER PILLS loo BO *0* CRIPS SOftSMSB. 8? ??r? lw SICK H?AO> ACHK, bnpeirtii dt^nc^a^condfi L J*to?,l?ci,!4 gland*. T'njtitnm ?u?rgafi*, vtnxm smbml > ??** on K oram. E cst k wr*i X>SJX< ACTIO*. FABX AND GARDEN. ^ WATCS THE OOLT'? FEBT Keep sharp watch of the ftet of the i colts. Have them :*asped or pared as often 48 once a monili, and be sure that they ire leveHod so that the coroaet on each 3ide of the heels will be at the same distance from the bottom of the hoof. I See tliat the tees are not allowed to be come too lop?- it p>ays to look after th<_-se littte thiols. Neglecting to do so may result in ruining i valuable youngster for life. ? American Horse Breeder. TEE KEO.YESS OK BUBKED SOrL. Ai. soil contains more or Jes* iron, } And when new laud is cieared tae ground ; under the 1 04 heaps is often quite red . frem the iron contained in it, and which 1 has b^en oxidized by the burning. There j are cs^jes ;n which burned earth is used ! f ? i a? manure with b?nclt, au i the reason is j that tue burnicg oxidizes some ofthe In- J soluble earthy nfttter and renders it i available for phvnt food. Genwally these burned patches contain so much potash as to kill vegetation, and keep barren for years until the potasa has txen washed . out by the rains. If the burned soil is spread over the land and fresh soil put in its piace, these um.ightly spots oane.v j j kind would be prevented. ? New York ; | Time.?. bioht war to xrLL busties. I The ancient superstition that bushes may 'ye kiliei in Aug?ist never dies, writes Arguaide. A neighbor, an old mm, Las cut the sprouts in the old pas I ?uri every year daring my decade of neighborship, and now tne roc^s are ruufe lirmly fixed tban ever. Ke will | leave the job to his children and they to r theirs , and the pasture will grow Worse ail the ferine. Uf way is lo &>ar taeni out of tho ground by foroc of a paif of cattle or steady fcorses. I have a strong grab :3ook with three claws, which is put into the root, and wiien the pull conies, any rx>t that holds is severed by one blow of an axe, a>ad tho thing is done. An o^ergrotvn field that ca'ue iato ray posse -sion is now being cleared at a cost of $2 50 per acre ; it would cost nearly as mich to grab it in the usual way by cutting in August and leiving the living roots to gain eqartl strength the next year. When the old field is plowed next spring 1 c*n put the plow eight iache* deep, and m*ke a thorough job if it. ? New York Tribune CttOWIXG HSX3. As soon as a bei logins to crow, writer Mrs. A. E. C. Masfcell, she be come:; of no further use? ^jets quarwl so:ne, ceases to lay, and struts around a lau^hing-stocfc for everybody. One tried to crow and la? too, but the ejys she merely dropped where she was walking;/ they .vere so.'t-sbeHrd -at that, some ot them shaped most curiously; one of tbem looked like a gourd with a crooked handle. Some pouitry people think crow ing might never occur if good roosUr? were kept and the heos fed with shell producing food. Lime and ground-up oyster or clam shel.g should be kop? j witbii ea3y acccsj; feeding pounded eggshells might teach them to eat their owq eggs. Soft-shelled eggs ar* rarely found in the nest, but are dropped arouud in the hen-roosts at night, k. lady in Jersey found an egg witk too muchs'.;ell; inaide the first was another smaller but perfectly-formed egg, shell and al), containing the yolk and white, while the outer shell was filled with white alone surrounding the inner Tshell. At ?Tiis ttnSe 61 year if hens are. well fed with cooked food and kept warm and comfortable they will soon lay; and It is the chickens hatched out in Februarj and march that pro? so profitable. My mo&er thought her liens laid better fed on waeat screenings, but als-> fed out to them potato and turcip parings, together with icrapa from the table, boiled up and thickened with coarse cornmeal, whiei she gave smoking hot. Of course a hec must be kept comfortable if she is expected to lay in wi nter ? and when so kept how her looks show it! How her \ ejes glisten. How crimjon her comb. ; How smooth and glossy her plumage, i Be sure she is infested with no vermin, j especially the largo, white head -louse, j whictl t?aps all her strength, feeding abouii her head, under her ear* and arotwid her throat. Catch the 4*var j mint'T and kill it if you can; if not, grease her on the head and around the thros.t with sulphur and lard. Cleanli ness avexts many of the diseases that makt! such fatal ravages in the poultry yard ? Xew York Tribune. BUTTERMILK. From different farts of the world come the common praise of buttermilk as a beverage. It lact it is becoming O n quite a fad all over the world to drink < buttiTmilk. The physicians recommend it, while its price is adjusted to the tin in cci^of the most unhealthy. In all h<5t i^hntites it is drunk at meals and be tween meals, whilo now the northern citie? of the United States hare numerou wag and stands s.long the street where buttermilk is sold by the glass, often as j io v is three ceuts a pint. The material that goes by this ntme, however, is not ; whau in warm climates would be called I the j*enu;ne axticle. There are severa' j grades of buttermilk. The real, ricb | article cornea from the chum that ha? but I?if done its duty and thereby left little lumps of butter and any quantity of ci earn globules ic the buttermilk. Tc this is sometimes added a third of a glssj of ricb oreotB. This makes.a trul? delicious drink. The next grade of but term Ilk is the- pure article, but taken fronj- the churn that has done its dutj and ijot out &U of the butter fat front the cream. When it. is fresh it is verj pal# able, with a c'iiunk of ice in it or a hot; day in summer. This is the gen nine articlo of the farm, and makes t gooc drink in the hay field or while- at other hard work on the farm. The last and worst quality of buttermilk is th< article usually sold in. large cities, where the : nhabitants do not know a butterflj frort. i bumble bee. and are in no sens< exjtt-rcs on cow products. This third class article is nothing but old som milk or clabbered milk worked awhile ic the churn to thoroughly mix it. Thi article sells readily on the streets and it restaurants for three cents a glass on hot day* . When ?ufficientiy cold to numb the .-ense of t-aste it is a good drink, harmless ard wholesome, and by som< peojjle, not exactly cranks but peculiar, it i* though to be ?;oed. ?liere is one point in selling butter- : m% at which we wish to draw the line, ao&jfcfeat ?s selling colore! buttermilk aTe kno^jn ftr?t -class establishment* do vhis, and it is a creat mistake, because , there.cer:jKal? a bad taste <bout rt. I lbs color ootids <*r i u the an u a to use .1 in coi >nng the butter, which always, w< btuere, give* a reddish tingle to the but terciik. Wbilc tiis si^u gives assur I ance that the article is genuine batter ; milk, that :s all the virtue it has.? j American Diicymai. , FAR If JjpX> ?>A*DE5 50t*S. - TSte best wpmm maxe poor mothers^ Small he:} tttrkej t bring the best prices at 1 his season. | Hie willow, tfme poplar or, locus ?bo old never be p anted ck*r io well* or <fcUDft? ' J r -; Professor Bailey says that tomatoes do j QOt mix in the field?. Feather pulling is largely the result of idleness with the hen3. Too much corn and too coki quarters j will often be the_ cause of no eggs. The best way of feed! Dg oats is to scald well and let them stand over night. Linseed meal added to the skim milk i makes a good ration for calves or pigs. In winter hens must have materials j supplied to them to make egg shells, as j well as materials to fill them. When the hens appear droopy it is a j good indication that th*y are suffering from lice, indlges&ioii or coid?. Ducks will bs?>n lajiag when about sir month* oid, but, as a rule, the eggs should not be used for hatching. Keep the chicken? In the broods grow ing rapidly by supplying them with a good variety of food and feeding regu- j larly. Look out for sctiy leg*. These are caused by an insec? that gets un'ier the scales. A bathiug with kerosene and milk, or rubbing with kerosene and lard, will cure in a few days. If a'"t<ir the action of subsequent frosts the ground in the orchard is harrowed fine and a top dressing of manure put on, we may consider that we have nearly done our part to secure a fruit crop. A good lock on the henhouse door, carefully fastened nights, often has good tflect in increasing the profits of poultry keeping. It prevents the other people from rasing so mauy ? oil the roosts. Henry A. Dreer says that Alphonse Bouvier, cne of the new cannas, is a vigorous plant, but of dwarf habit. The foliage is deep green and the dowers arc very large and of an intense crimson hue. The French tigered aud spotted and some othtfr good strains of lioxinias come true from seed. Defiance, scarlet and Emperor Frederick, azuro blue with white throat, are both due varieties that come true from seed. Felch estimates that one bushel afcj corn or its equivalent in other flesh growhig foods will produce nine to elev en pounds of live weight in poultry, and one has ouly to weigh his fowls to approximate their food cost, for coat of cad e must be added. A good mutton sheep will always have a good lleace, but those that m^ke the\ most and the best wool are not always - the best mutton. But to get either at it3 best req>res such feeling as will keep up a steidy growth, aud the more rapid the better the result. Feather eating among chickens can often be prevented by putting a small quantity of salt in their soft feed, enough to give a moderately salty taste. Three heaping tablespoon fuls of common salt for one hundred tens is not Jfoo 'much every day. This should fer tried. There is good common sense iu the injunction to increase the feed gradually when preparing a cow for a test. A month is not too long for preparation. If too rapid increase is made, it is almost certain to cause indigestion, of which the least bad effect is waste of food. It is quite an item in purchasing an incubator to get oue that is, in a rnauner, self-regulr.ting. Being obliged to o;>eu the drafts to reduce the temperature will 1 not answer. When the temperature gets j too low the flames of tiie lamp must be controlled by the heat in the incuba- j tor. When it is time to take the pigs away from the sow, stop giving sloppy food and roots, tli3t hor milk may dry up. It is better to begin this as soon as the pigs have learned to drink milk at the trough. They should have a trough so arranged that the sow cannot get to It, and should be given sweet milk, iuilk warm at first. The Heaviest Metal Known. The metal tungsten hitherto has had no use in the arts, and has been merely \j one of the curiosities of mineralogy. But recently it has been discovered to have pome verj useful properties one of which is that when added to steel it imparts an extraordinary elasticity to it, and on that account is new being- used in the manufacture of heavy artillery. It is a curious fact that some of the most sur prising discoveries now being made arc connected with warlike purposes, and not in the arts of peace, unless we inny look upon the preparations of year. as neces sary to secure thepeacej>t the world, aud thus properly and usefully advance the practice of the useful art-?. This metal is one of the heaviest knowD,\having a specific gravity of 18. GO. gold having a pravity of 19.26. ft has been a very scarce metal, probably because of the want of any practical use for it, but now it is being searched for it is being dis covered where it was not expected. It ha.T hitherto been found mostly in Swe den and in the States of Connecticut and Maine. But recently large deposits of it have been, found in New Zealand. It is found in combination with lime, iron, and lead, aud this ore has been called wolfram. As it has not so far been of any use in the arts there is at popsenfc no established market price for it. The most common ore is that known as wolfram, which appears as a soft yellow ish or greenish eart.i that is very heavy, yaud contains 79.3 per cent, of tungsten and 2u.7 per ceut. of oxygen. ? New York Times. A deadly Weapon. ' A Captain of Police of Portland, Ore gon, has in his possession a very unique and formidable weapon lately confiscated ou the person of some wrong-doer. It is a folding sword thatcaa be used either as a club or a s;vord, and when opened is about two and a half feet iu length. It blade is made of heavy steel, tapering j to a point at the end, and both edges are ' sharpened. The weapon is heavy enough -j to take of! a head at a single blow. It i can be opened in an instant by pressing a small spring at the end of the hilt, : which lets a heavier spring throw out the blade. ; Captain Cox says the weapon is an historical relic., having been found on the field of the Custer massacre, but tra- : ditioa and Jai'.er Hudson say that it was once the property of Turkish brigands. j ? New OrIean? Picayune A ' Oar National Statne of Liberty. Tha bronze Statue of Liberty which ha* crowned the dome of the Capitol j. Building at Washington for the past ! twenty-nine years is mneteca feet six ; inches! hig'.i and weighs 14,965 pounds. Tl^e fiirura was cast in flve,jMti ? "v fyravrei* l>ein* 4740 p.wijhk ^ The statu? was nil cornptetedTexcebt tfeo "tical(?icce prior to Decemben2&1863,th? j finishing beini reserved for mat day. Crawford, who designed the figure, sub J mittei his mo iet adorned with a "liberty cap.'' but Jefferson Davis, then Secretary of War, objected to such a head-cover | ing, sajing that the old Phrygian I emblem was a reticof n degraded people. The Secretary's objections wen: sus tained and the well-known Indian heai ircsswns substituted for the cap. Craw ford got ?3000 for the plaster model of | Liberty; Clark Mills got $9S00ifor cast j ing ho* in bronze; money expended for labor ancVmetal ran the total cost upr to r ? . i , . PROMINENT PEOPLE, * "Roblv Hood" is the title of Xjord Tenny I gon's new drama. ! The Emperor of Austria writes to th<J 1 Pope every week. ^ { Kino Hoibekt, of Italy, is an amateur : cook of no mean skill. England's favorite artist of the present ! day, L. Alma-Tadema, is a man of Dutch | parentage. The German Kaiser continues his night tours of Berlin, turning up suddenly in un expected places. Lokd Salisbury has the credit of being the most industrious and hardest working j Premier that England has had for many 4 I year. The University of Chicago has received another magnificent gift from John D. Rockefeller, the Standard Oil magnate, of I fl,000,000. ' Ex-Senatop. Inualls, of Kansas, has an offer of $ 10,0<>-> a year to become the editor ; of a new local afternoon newspaper at | | Kansas City. Bishop Quintard. of the Episcopal Dio- j cese of Tennessee, i3" sixty -eight years old. { His home at Sewauee is noted throughout | | the State for its hospitality. I General Henry R. Jackson is liked by everybody in the Mexican capital, and he is said to be the most popular Minister that ! has ever represented the United States I there. There are only four authors who earn j $20,000 a year with their pens, and these i lucky ones are Wiiliani Dean Howells, Rob ert Louis Stevenson. "Mark Twain," and j Mrs. Burnett. - i Gustave Jovanovitch, the greatest cat- i tie breeder in Russia and called the "Kinz i of the Steppes," owns 000,000 acres of land j and possesses more than 1,000,000 sheep and j 3^000 shepherd dogs. In bis recent wedding in London, England, j r Lord Alin^tpn laid unnecessary stress upon j the difference between his own and his | bride's ages by having two of his grand ' daughters serve as bridesmaids. They say that Thomas Nast, the great cartoonist, "grows younger as the years pile j up their burden on his shoulders. In his Isew Jersey home. at Morristown he is some times seen cantering about on horseback like a boy. j ? Mr. Winass, the State Superintendent of Public Instruction in Kansas, was for merly a bricklayer in Atchison, where he helped to build Corinthian Hall. State Senator Kimbal!, of Patson?, worked by his side in those days. M Governor Francis, of Missouri, is a stickler for "the swallow-tail" coat at his receptions. Colonel Richard Dalton, who wants to succeed Francis, says that if he is elected Governor the people may oall on him in their shirt sleeves. The choice of a wife for Prince George, of England, has gradually narrowed down to two women? Princess Victoria, daughter of Prince Christian, and Princess Victoria of Hesse, the youngest daughter, of Princess May. Both are charming and popular girls. John Marcbant MtrxpY, the blind sculp tor of Tarrytown, N. Y.. has completed the model for a statue of "Washington Irving. He can scarcely distinguish light from dark ness without the aid of an opera glass, but hisjwork has been done almost entirely by the sense of touch. ? While James Whucomb Riley was giv ing a reading at the Grand Opera House, Kansas City, the other night, Mrs. Auianda E. McChesney, of JAcClUre, claimed hinj as her son, who ran away twenty -seven years ago, wrote poetry and and traveled with a show. The poet insisted that he had a clear record of his parentage. ? Senator Pettigrkw, of South Dakota, lived for many years in Sioux City, Iowa, in a log cabin that was his own handiwork. This was not long ago, for the Senator is even now not much beyond forty. He was a Vermont farmer's boyv and when attracted to the West he walked much of the distance. His first investment of money was a lucky one, icr he bought some of the land on which Sioux City now stands, and in this his present fortune had its source. THE LABOR W0ELD, Women work on French railroads. There are .said to be 10,000 Chinese shoe makers in California. The number of men out of work in Vienna, Austria, is 40,000. The discontent and distress among Euro pean workmen are growing greater. TBf, Knights of Labor building construc torsfn New York City are about 4000 in numOqr. Coal rates in England are advancing, and to all appearances the miners have the up per hand. In twenty-four hours a steel manufactory in Pennsylvania recently turned out 1907 , tons of rails. There were nearly seven hundred lives sacrificed by mine explosions in Europe and Ameria last year. Authorities in Austria have frowned upon attempts to relieve the distress exist ing among unemployed laborers. There are 10,0<? teetotallers in- the rail way service of Great Britain, and 12,'X)0 among the sailors in the naval service. In consequence of the printers' strike in Germany about 35,000 union members have been black-listed, among thern over 500 women. Ac strike of longshoremen is on at Nerr Orldftus, La., and 2000 men are out of work. The demand is an hour's pay for fractional parts of an hour. By far the greater part of the accidents that occur in mills, etc., happen during the last two hours of work, when workpeople are tired and careless. The Queensland (Australasia) Govern ment has decided, in consequence of tba large number of unemployed workmen in the colony, to prohibit immigration for th* present . The United Brotherhood of Carpenters throughout the country will on May 1 de mand that eight hours constitute a day's work. They will strike where this conces sion is not mai]e. Governor Makkham, of California, has informed a committee of the Sacramento Federation of Labor that he has decided to declare Labor Day, th* first Monday in Sep tember, a legal holiday-. Statistics from Australia show that there are farms where laborers receive ?13 per year, three c.-nus for meat and seven o-nts for butter per week, and 100 pounds of flour every three months. The Royal British Commission on Labor has sat for less than a year, but has already spent ib 0,000. The commission is admittedly a farce, but nobody imagined the entertain ment would be so expensive. Less than thirty years ago President McLwx\ of the Reading Railroad, was a rodman on the 'Northern Pacific. He now the head of a SffiX} mile trunk line ana the employer of 100?000 subordinates. Rev. Richard W hkatley, of New York City, has been <k>ing some investigating of the "sweating" business on his own account. He savs that trousers are made at eighty four cents a dozen pairs, sack coats at eight cents each, and frock coats for ten c?nts. The Minera' Union of France, whose members recently struck at Pas-de-Calais to improve their pitiable condition, have pub lished statistics showing that the capital in vested by tbe companies opposing the strike was $52,321,000, while the actual value of the mitx=K is 760. 101. Acute Hearing of Hordes. It is well known that horses ctln heai deep sounds which men cannot. For days previous to the e2rthqunke in the Riviera of Italj tbe horses there showed every symptom o( abject fear, which \ continued ? without any chr.n^e of '.character till the fury ol the coovulsion broke forth. But not till a few seconds before the earth begad1 1? qimke did human beings hear any sound*, while it is extremely probabie that tiie horses I heard tl\p subterr tnean noises for two or ? three days previously.VCbidago Tune?. \ derma IleiiimenUI cilor*. A curious return has just beeu printed *t Berlin. It shows how often German^ 1 1 regimental coloTSwert struck m actum ! Murine: the campaigns of 1364, 1866 and j 1870, and also how many officer?, non commissioned officers, and men were killed while carrying colors. The mem ory of these losses are touchingly pie- j ?erved. Every staff that has been clasped j in action by a dead soldier's fingers js I encircled with a silver ring with the in scription of *tbt man's name and the words: "Died'^ hero's death with this color in his hand.**? Chicago Times. 4 1 What do jod think :of a sum wb< will deliberately tell you thati his baby is no smarter than the general* run ol j babies if" "I tbiai be is ai lax." ? la* | dianaoolis Journal, : ' ' REV, DR. TALMAGE The Brooklyn Divine's Sun day Sermon. ?-f - , A missionary counted the con<?rv. i c circles and found one tree tfairtV^SVA hundred years uM - W ? ??3 Th?^ I"the *Mr in l?uS?-JolS? S1"??* th" to the h!25? ^ e thllt David paw sweeping over I^K. anon; rock to-day over the head of the American travekr. This monarch of the ors?f '?Th ,tS fafy fin?ers. Plucks the hon or. of a thousand years and snrinklm th*m upon its own uplifted brow I? prsat baUelujabofiheavK, hS2^?u2S Ui?n Lebanon ?nd j,t we? rfSo*" ?otok? ?><*?* ?h. raven?Ve'rh >*.wa|[?Tr- sparrow and the fasciuation^Tn 'uai)y ?fus a complete SS I tC structure and habits of h?tnJ}:y n^more of e^rth than neaven ever vacillating between^ two irani^?!tr tliat rAu^l"Jon. with his gun' tramped through all of the American dr ifts in seaich of new specimens. Geologist* iT|. sl>eot' J^ars in finding the track o* a Wrd s daw in the q*w red sandstone. There * enough 01 UoJ i architecture in a srnS bill 01 a grouse s foot to confound all the universities. Musicians have, w.th ciSssnd bai .?? tried to ca tch jthe sound of the nightin gale and robm. Among the first things that a child notices i$*a swallow at the eaves, and grandfather go is : out with a handfuW of crumbs to feed the snow birds. - - The Bible is full of ornithological alln sions. The birds' df the Bible are ?ot deTd and buffed, like those of the mLum but living birds, with fluttering wings ani via. mage "Behold the fowls of the air " ?y8 C hnst. "Though thou exalt' thyself as the eagle a?d .housh ithou set the stars, thence w.ll I bring thee down* exclaims Obadiah. ;"Gav*st Thou the goodly wiugs unto the peacock?" says Job. David describes his desointion by saline <lIam like a peiican of the wilderness; I 'am like an owl of the deserjt; I watch kndlm as a sparrow alone upon the housetop." ^ 'Tea the stork m the heaven knoweth her ap pointed tune; and [the turtle, and the crane, and the swallow observe the time of their coming; but my people know nofr-th* judg ment of the Lord ?so says Jeremiab. Ezekiel in my text intimates that Christ is the cedar, and the people from all quar ters are the birds that lodge among the branches. "It shall be a goodly cedar, and under it shall dwel] all fowl of every wing." As in Bzekiei's time, 90 now ? Christ is a goodly cedar, ami to Him are flying all kinds * of people? young jand old. rich and poor men high soaring jis the eagle, those itec^ as the raven and those gentle as the dove. All fowl of every win; M First, the young jmay^come. Of the eigh teen hundred and ninety-two years tnat have passed since, Christ came, about six teen huudred liave been wasted by the rood in misdirected efforts. Until Robert Raikes came there was noi organized effort for sav ing the young, we spend all our strength ti \ ing to bend old trees, when a little pres ume would have bten sufficient for fee sap hng. We let men jgo down to the very bot tom of sin before we try to lift them up. ft is a great ileal easier to keep a tram on the track than get it on when it is off. 1 he experienced reinsman checks the fterv steed at the first jdmp, for when he gets in lull swing, the swif t hoofs clicking Are from the pavement and .the bit between his teeth his momentum is irresistible. It, is said tnat tlib young must be allowed to sow their "wijd oats." I have noticed that those who sojw their wild oats seldom try to raise any other kind of crop There are two opposite (iestinies. If you are going to heaven, you had better take the straight road, and not try to go to Boston by way 0 1 New Orleans. W bat is to be the history of this multitude of young people around me to-daj? I will ti-:e you by the haud and show you a glorious sunrise. I will not whine about this thing, nor groan about it but come, young men aud maidens, Jesus wants you. His baud is love, His voioe is music. His smile is heaven. Religion will put no handcuffs on your wrist, no hopples on your feet, no brand on your forehead. I went through tho heaviest snowstorm I have ever known to see a dying girl. Her cheek on the pillow was white as the snow on the casement. Her large, round eye had not lost any of its luster. Loved ones stood all around the bed trying to -hold her book. Her mother could not give her up, and one nearer to her than either father or mother was frantit* with grief. I said: "Fanny how do yotf feel* "Oh!" she said, "happy, happy! Mr. Talmage, tell all the young folks that religion will make them happy]* As I came out of the room, louder than ail the sobs and waitings of grief, I hoard the clear, sweet, glad voice of the dying girl, "Good night; we shall meet again on other side of the river." The next Sabbath we buried her. We brought white flowers and laid them on the <'offln. 'fhere was in all that, crowded church but one really happv and delighted lace, an 1 that was the face of Fanny. Oh, I \v &h that now my Lord Jesus woulu go through this auaJieuoe and take all these flowers 01 Joutu an ls^rlaud them 00 His brow. The cedar isa fitrefuge for birds of brightest phinaje a'il swiftest wing. See, they d> ! thi-y fly 1 "AH fowl of every wing.' Again, I remark that the old may come \ousay, "Supple a man has to ? 0n crutcnes; suppose he is blind; suppose he fa S 'Sr Th nine- tenths of fds life has '* wasteu. Then I answer: Come wim crutche? Come, oid men, blind and deaf come to J<$us jf you would sweep yoUr hand around before your blind ejes, the first thing you wouUJ t^uch would be tho cross It is hard for an a^iSI-maa^r woman to have con" U Th W'th0?It re,i?ion- Xuere taste is fh"r^TorP3Thi.v li6* have , ; ih*y say that somehow fruit does not taste as at used to. Their hearine gets defective, and they miss a great d?al that .is said in their pr^ence. g ft seems "^r,-7ldS h*Vtf^11 ^oue and ererybody , ^avr^n rlf"^ ,Tr W$>rId to go TheZ hL th*y are left all alone. Ihev be, in to teel in the way when vou come int<) the room where they are. and t'hev move their cuair nervously and say, "1 hopl lam not m the way." Alas! that father ed mother shouid ever be in the wav When >? "Z* S,Ck an4 the-vsat UP ??! night rock v. 11 diH* th"'10, k t(|J ^OU* a^m'nistering to wav> Ar I t7 !lnk> wer? in the -? Are \ on tifed of the old pejpie? Do * Vv^n fDap the,m l,I\ Quick ani sharp? You iUrs'. to the bone tor your inerati tu*.e and unkiu-Jijess! nil?b' T'if dearo,d folks Jesus has thnr . ve rp? "0W sTeetlv He has closed " . gen tly folded thei r arms ? henris' a&n hand 0,1 their ?lent earts an I satd: R?it now, tirei pilgrim It is all over. The tears will never hfvJd slee!" ^^ th0 '!' 80 He s'ves H's be" iect m r,h; most beiutiful ob ject on taith is an old Christisu? the hair ue? 11 '<? with the frosts of winter but the blossoms of the tree o(. life. I neVer feel sorry for a Chrfotian o'4 man. Why feel sorry for those upon w]jom t'je glories of the eternal w.>rM are about to burst1" They ?hpir*w?nJ?rtb,' ROO ,,y C?ia"" 'rhou^h xneir win#, h viw with age God shall 'f5i' o" .X e crinr eiJCoiiragenoent to ttj f ?n,r: Hoa much better it would be to point to our own'case and say. "If Goi savel us He can ?ave any^ iy." There may be se ere wao ower ha l on*1 earnest word sail to them aoout ttieir souls. Consider to vcu yT' < ^1 has go->d Inhere thu niU0?' i*? a ho3ae'- Havo you ever - f(lr ^uur home- you 22ft?- il,' '^aTe y?u eveMhanked /^v ^xrJour coildren! Who keeps them safe. W ere you !evej* sick f uYot^ **Whn H""e TOU be? feed ?<rr day. , ho fewls yoa? Put your hand on your pulse. Whv ?T->>ve3 it throb?" Listen to tne respiratr.il is; your hmgs. Who helns you to breathe:' .Have you a Bible in tfe bouse, spread iagjbefore you th 3 future fife* *> bo gave vou t2m 1 " ; ; , Oh, it:' has ?v?, a story of gotfnassani m^rcv all the waj,- through. You have been one of Goo s pet ?hil ii-en. Who fondlwl you and oare^sei you. an i iovei vou? And when you went astray^an I wanted to come back did He eler refuse? I know of a father who! f nr.JS Hk the *?ortb timj I/or^av7^u three times, but I will^ever forgive /you again And the son -went off an 1 dMd. But God takes back ,Hb children the.tifcusandth time as chew i??r Ti? A5 eisUy M with my h^dkerchief X sjfike the dust off a boo^ yoiir ^ ' A0^a|! thenynuc wm tiad their nact in HMS gDodly <xdzf . ft Is cruel to destroy a bird s nest, but , death does not hesitate to oestroy one. TH*ro was a beautiful ne*t m thenext str.-et. l/ovingly the parents r^^ uOV*,LiK two or three !l nest- Th? scarlet fevtr tenEt jtehaodsjmto the nest, and the birds ?P? com. Onlf those are tt&vho bate , ; . 1: ?? 1 1 i. ill; aw nests m me goodly cedar. Tbey have over them "the fathers of the Almighty." Ob, to hare tfeosa soft^ war c, eternal wings stretched over act Let the storms beat and the bra&che* of tbo cedar tote on thft wind? no dancer. Whau a, a tor a i cornea, you see the Wrds flying to the woods, "ire the storm of death oomes down, let us fly to tbe goodly cedar. Of what great varieties; heaven will be made up. There coius meii who once were hard and cruel and Qcdperatte in wickedness yet now, soft and change li by grace, they oome into glory, "All fowl of every wing/' Ami here they came, the ehildreu who were rearsd.in loving home circle* flocking through the gates of life, "All (fowl iof every wing." These are white, and cams from northern homes; these were black uuii aaoendied from southern plantations | tti-ise were cooper glared and went up front Indian reserva tions? "AH fowl of everv wing." So God gathers them up. It is" astonishing how easy it is for a good soul to enter heaven. A prominent busmen man ia Philadelphia went home one afternoon, lay down on the lounge and siid "It istimaTfor me to go " He was very aged. His daughter, said to hmi, "Are you sick?" He said: "No, but it is time for me to go Have John r.uc it in two of the morning papers, that niy friends may know that I am gone, j GooJ-hy;:' and as quick as that God had talteu him. It is easy to go. when the tira i comes. There are no ropes thrown out to pull us ?shore; there are uo ladd?re let down to pull us up. Christ comes dad takes us by the hand and says, "You have ha I enough of this; come up higjher." Dovou hurt a lilv when you pluck it? Is there any ru len-sa when Jesus touches the cheak, and the red rose of health whitens into : the lily of im moral purity and gladness? ! When autumn comes an i the giaut of the woods smites his anvil and t.h? uy on wie autumnal gai?, tnea^plrd win be thousands of birds gathering Th the tre* at the corner of the field, just b ?fore departing to warmer clime*, and they wilt call an! sing until the branches drop with the raelodv. IVre h a bett.-r clime for ui, and by and by we shrill migrate. \Ve gather in the branches of the gooily c j lar, in prep aration for departure. Ynu hear.l out* voices in the opening song.' you will h-iar them in the closiii.; son z? voices good, voices bad, voices happr, disire.-sfu'.? 1 "AlTtowl of every winsr. ' Uy and by \vy shall be gon:?. If all this au lieucd is sived, as I hope thev will be, I see them eutering Into life. Som'j have bad it hard, sown have had it easv. Some were brilliant; som'e were dulf. Souie were.rocked by pious parentage; others have had their infantile cheeks scalde l with the tears of woe. Some crawlei, as it were, into the kingdom -on their hands ani knees, aud some seemed to euter in chariots of flaming fire. Tho?e fell from a ship's mast; these were crushed in a mining disaster. They are God's singing birds now .Tjlo gun of huntsman sh^ll shoot them tdown. Tbey gather on thb threes of life ahd fold their wings on the branches, and fat\ away from frosts and winds aud night U?py sing uu til the hills are flooded with joy, ahd the skies drop music^ aud the arches of pearl send back the echoes ? "All fowl of ovefy wiug.M Behold the Mints, beloved ef God, Washed are their robej i? Jesus' s blood. Brighter than an-ds, lo! Itey rhino, Their glories splendid tni tut>!bne. ? Through tribiilation (real they ante: Tbey bore the cro*s ?ad ?o r net! thu shame; Now, In the heivcoly tetnple bie#X; ?With Qod they dwell; ojHlaitbey rest. Wljile everlasting nngels rfcll Eteruat lore ;>h&H least their soul. And scanes of bliss. forevfer new Rise In succession to thelrjvlew. She ? "Promise rae if I die yotf will never marry again." He ? "What! And let people think my d?ar; little fir3t wife was euch a terror that I ididn't dare to! Never." ? Brooklyu Llfcj Master ? "Mary, I wish y6u would bfl more careful. I am vcrj sorry to heai my wile lias to scold you so often. " Mary ? "Ob, don't you niind me, sir. don't take any notice of it." ? Comic. ; Only One Ever Printed. CAN YOU FIND TH? WOHD? Th^fe is a 3 inch display advertisement la this paper, thl<* week, which has no two words %!i e except one word. The: same Is true of esc h new one appearing each week, from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This hou^e places a 'Crescent", on everythinc they make and pub lish. Ijool; for it, send them the name of the word and they will return you b<>ok, beauti TOt. LITBOOHAPQS or SAMI'i.nS m KB. Tns grip is spreading throughout the East. COPYRIGHT MI Therms nothing left of Catarrh, when you use Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. With the poison ous, irritating muffs and strong* caustic' solutions, a good deal* is left. They may, perhaps, stop it for a time, but there's danger of driving it to the lungl They work on false principles. But Dr. Sage's Remedy cures it, no matter how bad the case, or of bow long standing. Not only Ca- j tarrh itself, but Catarrhal Headache, Cold in the Head ? everything catarrhal in its nature. The worst cases yield to its mild, soothing, cleansing and healing properties. So will yours. You may not be lieve it, but the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Remedy do. And to prove it they make you this offer: If they can't euro you, they'll pay you $500 in cash. It's a busi ness proposition from a responsible house. I Bflfc do you think they'd make it -if they, and you , couldn t depend upon their medicine ? Before the cause of con- i sumption was known (that was only a few years ago) we did not know how Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil did so much good in consumption and in" the conditions that I ! j lead to consumption. The explanation is inter esting. We send it free in a book on careful living. Scott St BswMS.ChcmU'.s, ljaSouth $th Amm, New York Yourdntoj^t deal's FjHuImob of cod*ilW ?fl- all diuge&u tvci y ? bete do. ft, * m m k mm wirn mo, Bfcamete, wrd Paints which itatn the h.vi<i*. io)nre the irp>'< asd *>tirn fl* The Rht?n< S?:n S:or? is Brilliant, Odor less. Durable. and U>e container pajs lor no tin or glass package with ertry potcmse. ^ha>i KEEPS THE BALL A biS flat dinces freef^fc aid-air vitteii: Stnr.jfs or wire*. AT>anrl tA fnn and 4tn'tM*roent, a scientific puz zle. Htervbxfy wanuone, they tc\\ at first jigjbt, And quick. Sample it otuU postpaj^. One dozen Jr. xo WiiWiyQjtiw.YjiUBlfc MX "Scniwk! Scrawk! Scrawk!" Shovel the snow from jptxr broai sidewalkf Wakoup the neighbor who sighs for a snore; Rest for a moment; then give him soma more "Scrnwk ! Sera \r k ! Scrawkity ' ?Scrawk !*' Heed not the whiriwiui of "wild wicked talk That answers each bur?t of your snow shovel din, JPiJing up volumes of records of sin. vMit when the dawn is beginning to pe<*p, * Ju$t when we fee! the true value of sleep, Get out the shjvel an J all slumber bnlk With a "oorawk! Scrawk ! Scrawk !*' ?Lewiston (Me.) Journal, ITiere is more catarrh In this section of the country, tban all other di heaths put together, and until the last few years was supposed t* be Incurable. For a groat many years doftor* f>ninounced it a local disease, and prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly failing to cune with local treatment, pronounced it in curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on ths market. It la taken internally in dosea from 10 drops to a teaapoonful. It acta directly upjm the blood and murous surfaces of the system. They otTer $100 for any ca*e it falls to ctire. Seod for circulars and testimonials. Addresa F. J. CnssEV Jt Co , Toledo, 0 0T Sold by Dmggista. ?5c. Katubax gas has been found near Salt Lake City, Utah, \ The worst cases of female weakness readily yield to Dr. Snan't Past i la*. Samples free Dr. Swan, Heaver Uam, Wis. iuah caspar, vTyuanug, a~vaiuable vela of coal he j been found just beneath thegraa ronta BtWHAM's Pili* will cure wind and pain In the stomach. iriddiness, fullness, dizziness, drowciness, chills and loss of appetite. - nsROK fires, heatiug the <iarth white, have bten found near the surface near Warrens burg. Mo. ! At all times, in all places*, on all occasions, under alt circumstance", tor all headaches, ISO Brady crotine only. Fifty cents. ? ?. * , Influe.nia. Is interfering with the luocaw ofthe$ea?*on at French and Italian winter resort*' : If your Back Aches, or you are all worn out, good for nothing, it is ueneral debility. Brown's Iron Bitter's wdl curp you, make you , strong. eleiuse your liver, and give a good ap- 1 petite? tones the nerves. ~ " Ir you would be correct in pronouncing Manitoba accent the last syllable. FITS stopped free by Dr. Kl.ura'S GlliT Nkhvc RK?TOftmu No fits after first day's use. Marvelous cure*. Treatise ar?d S2 trial bottle trea Dr. Kline. 981 Axoh BU phlla.. Pa. If aftlicted with *ore eyes use Dr.Tsaac Tbomp son's Eye- water .Druggists sol) at 25c. per bottlo vl^ara ready to testify am that if^it had not been for Flower I skduld have died this. Eight r^sars ago I was sick, and suffered- ~~ a dyspeptic can. I of our best doctors - ? . no beuefit. They told me (hat I httf heart, kidney, and liver) trbubfc* Everything I ate 4istressj6d Uie so that I had ta throw it up./ August Flower cured me. Theneyis no medp iciue equal to it." liORBNfcO P.\ Sivuphk, Appleton^Maine. j +, KEYSTONq HAY LOADER B3SS KEYSTOSEH'F'B C8., Sterling, IB. Ptao'a Bn*, B tor Oktorrb la tb4 Km** to Vm. and Cbwa^ bold br irutflsU or wot by mall , Mc K.T. Warrca. Pe. ...ara llBOWB tion?Up?H*1? J t*rath. H?-vtocb?, ,____ . or tut* pcsTssJt^asBS to rvrfor-TTi thc<r iroo?r fuorU??n*. Tw, -cmluifurf teadltad by laklkrATlHlif PrW. ir mail. I rroaltt I botfWl d r?s? TO K ft 1 1 'A CH ? M ICALOr} imguruZ AgtmU W nnlrti KICIITV 9? ??*p If too h?w IWirtaj i urlifl, Cofttifr* BeweU, Uuiub A*vf> ?T ( if your food |Ioc? ? Iwllrt^ L Tuti's Tiny Pais; will care tk?M> trouble#. J?nee cnUll, ( u Offlce. 39 i'fcrtrPtooe, M.Y. Price. 35c* 8 N U 10 The Best Blood v- 1 * IS SWIFTS SPECIFIC, bccnuse it never fails to force out tjie poison; it toil* Bp Um ?ystem with new rich blcxvJ, and it is harmless, because entirely vegetable. Mrs. E J. Rowki.l, No. ii Quincy Street, Medford, MasJ., says that her molHcrfctfi been cured of Scrofula by the u*e of four Iwtlljs of S. S. S., having hadj oilier treatment and being reduced to quite a low condition of health, as it w?i the cpgkLnut live, Suffered much from contagious Blood Poison, after u$ing half a 4oien of Sf>e<ilic I was restored to perfect health, and all ertptivc >ore? dis J. Crosrv Byron, :c>S Third Avenue, Pittsburg, Ta." H^TrcalUse on Blood and Skin Diseases, mailed free. SWIFt SPECIFIC COMPANY, Atturt A, fib f / -ELY'S CREAM BALM-Cie?nw U.? ffaaal I'mnum, Allays Pain and lalatnniaUan. Heal* th? Soret, Kf tore* Tuta and Small, aaa Cprt* Gives Relief at once for Cold In Hi td? Apply into Iht Sottrilt. It it Quickly Aboorbid. 60c. frraggUta or bj cuil. KI#Y 8BQ8., 5# Wirrea fiolibyal! dralrr*. Accept tio mibntii*"* w SHOE FOR S3 GENTLEMEN, Is a fine Calf Shoe, made seamless, of the best leather produced in this country. There are no tacks or wax threads to hurt the fest, and is made as smooth inside as a hand-sewed shoe. It is as stylish, easy fitting and durable as custom-made shoes costing from $4.00 to $5.00. This shoe has been en sale throughout the United States over eight years, and has given excellent satisfaction, as the increasing saJes show. We are now selUng morefshoes of this grade than any other manufacturer in the world. Try a pnir? you cannot make a mistake. One trial will convince you that it is the \ ! ' ' \ i ' ? 1 '! M Best Shoe in the World for the Price. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES W. I~ DOUGLAS FI\K CALF HAXD 8EWE!) and *">.00 SHOES for Gentlemen are very stylish and durable. ! Those n ho boy til is jrrade pet a bargain, L as sin*-* ??f this quality are sold every day from ?<>.00 to $'.*.00. W . L. DOUGLAS $1.50 POLICE CALF SHOE is made with three heavy Roles, Extension Ed ire ; it pive? excellent satis faction totho^e who want to keep their > feet dry and warm. If you want to j walk with ease, buy this shoe. One' pair will do for a year. W. L. DOUGLAS ?2.50, $2.25 and1 $-.<*) SHOES are excellent shoes for every day. orkingmen all wear them, i W. L. NICOLAS $3.00, $ZsO and $2.00 SHOKSlfw Indies arc nia4c of the best Donpola, The/ are very stylish, durable and splendid fitting. I b? > n?e*?t the wants of all classes. Kt<*ry U?'ly who buys a pair of these stove* pets a bantfin. W. L. DOUGLAS $?<W> anil $1.74 SCHOOL SHOES are wor^ bv tjn? Ik??? everywhere. Th^r arc made strong, stjliih and durable. CAUTION^ W. L. DOUGLAS' N AW. L MO THS PRICE Is atampcd on thofcottom of each shoo. Look for it. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton. Mass. It is a duty you owe to yourself and your family during these hard times to get the most value for your money. You can economize in your foot-wear if you purchase W. L. Douglas Shoes, which, with out question, represent a greater value for the money than anj- other ?alte in the world, as thousands who have wom them will tf<tiJN% - **??> !n j-ncr r'.rir,ity wlio W. L, DOCOT.AR 8R0E8.tl?*n ioni dlnxrt to (h#? factory bv .vfrerl ar* ?*nt to all fAru of the country, po?ta*? fr. * ? ISO^f T*> U^Air.. P'<.rU.ntl.-r*..<r? ? :T- ? OMJally v,..r?. hr hrr or Common s-n* t~- u ntii-tJuT *V>n;rrf r ir ,?iirr<. J. far. .?f ami wit . sj-oaJly *..rn vhr h.>r7>7.?^? v wowurwl. ' Sho,- V.^.-.ndr:?, .rrnl M rr h ? ? r . of ?.L7t , 'k-?? "? ^uminoQ >nv !? i lori br IV, i.. I)6i <H^AS Ml O ES^vher" Yh??r"^CM?i5CfriT''r"rt. *?e?ef iit . by applying at ?Mt. I}SUr. ,.M-S!; tkHr ... .Iir >?, t? ... IM, ann r?u Df N<1?rrtl?*f locr.l r*Ji>?r I rep. by applying nt once. llt? tare f oeod for Special List "i),"c?al?ia* tag lull iolarmatlaa. ikat fraa. W. L. OOCOLifti Brackxaa, Haaa. p.v:- L ? '* ?.?H - t-t'fVI -!i - _[? **