University of South Carolina Libraries
1 Ifcrtf OwnlOng.f!sO*iij TUT . >Uncaa?r aod Its Ow* I ? IlL > {Cureus Customs } [ .*?afSffiS2ssZ fTHE MAIN 8TRBET OF TOBY. RENT England bat another war on be: hanrii. She is maklnc DreDaratlons t< t reconquer the is ind whose Inhabitant: hare a King of (heir own and who re fuse to pay tribute to King Edward. By a strange peculiarity of fate it ii known as Tory Island. It is a bleak desolate strip of land nine miles fron the storm-swept northwest coast o Ireland, and contains a population o: about 500, who have their own lan guage, their own Government and their own costumes, as well as the! i own King. Being In their own opinion a fr? [ and Independent people, they refuse t< pay taxes to England or rent to th< ( landlord. In fact, they have paii f seitner rent nor taxes ror nan n cru tui*y. That Is why England detailei ft gunboat to visit the island and hel] * regiment of Irish constabulary evic the obstinate inhabitants. It will not U> the first time that ar expedition has been sent against th< Tory Islanders. Seventeen years ag< r England decided that a separate Gov ernment on Tory Island could not b< tolerated, and the gunboat Wasp was sent to uphold the majesty of tli< Crown. But the Wasp wns wrecket on the treacherous southwest coast and all her crew were drowned. Tor? Islanders regarded the disaster as at Intervention of Providence, and gav< thanks accordingly to their pntror Mint, St. 'Columbia. The King of Tory Island Is a be Whiskered, unconventional individual and very prehistoric, but be bat* re lsted the British Empire nuecessfullj for many years, aud his people have a line disregard for everything EnglNh. The present King is a slant in size. His name is McLouphiln. So strous Is King McLoughlin that he can kill an os with his Act. according to popnlsr report The Tory Inlander* are cbl: ay tubermen. A Sligo steamer calls once n week to bear away tbt-ir catcb. There no cats and no rats on Tory Island. Nor are there any policemen or pawnshops. But tbe Islanders bave a public bouse. or hotel. According to tradition, tbe island was once Inhabited by a race of giants. 1 One of the giant* erected a tower on the Island, wblcb stands to-day In a fair state of preservation. It is built ?J? a mnll. Ui uuuirosm uvwiu.is, ??uu wuiw iuui feet thick at the base. Tourists seldom visit Tory Inland owing o tbe unconventional actions of the natives. The latter resent intrusion from the outside wor.d. A favorite trick of the fishermen is to run alongside a steamer or sailing v:sse! and aak the lookout to beave them a rope. When a rope is thrown tbe fisherman hauls In as m^cb of it as be can and then cuts tbe line. In this way the fishing fleet is kept supplied with rope lit s minimum cost.* The Tory Islanders are evidently a healthy race, for there is no doctor on th? island. SWORD AND PISTOL Vw? Weapon* Combined roc the Cm ol Oflcm. While the place for an officer is at the head of his column when going Into battle, be is severely handicapped ir firing at the enemy with bis revolve: by the necessity of carrying bis sword OrriCKRg' COMB13IAWQ3T WgAPOK. In one hand, and It has occurred to Domenlc A. Rlcco that a weapon like the one Illustrated In the picture might be useful at a critical moment. The gun in this combination is so mounted that while the officer is waving bis sword to his men Le can at the same tinn busy himself firing at the enemy in front picking off men ready to fire a I ithor himsolf or lame o? his men. Tin entire actuating mechanism for operating the revolver is located in the handle of the sword, and does not dlf fer materially from that of the ordi * nary repeating firearm. The barrel and cylinder are pivoted on the nsnal bandguard of the sword, and can 1m tilted downward to expose the interim for ejecting the empty shells and re loading. The Inventor makes provl* Son for attaching this weapon to th< sabre, rapier and cutlasti as well, am tates that any one of these blades cat t be used In conjunction with the gun. Cnku Pmldnt m Mother** Boy. My atber died when I was a boy and 1 was left entirely to the care am training of iny mother. Every tru< son has the highest respect and lovi for his mother, but I have a specla cause for gratitude, as my mother wai one of the truest and best of women What little I am, and what little i have done for my country. I owe u her. I was the only child, and *h< lived for me. 8he taught me the pati of rectitude, and my love for freedou he breathed into my spirit from hei patriotic soul?Thomas Estrada Palmu in Success. In every 1000 British n en there an thirty-five widowers; In 1000 Britisl Women there are seventy-eight widows WONDERFUL TSD\ND 01 1 y SHOWING MANSIONS THAT ARE j FREE. 1 The Search-Light i The adoption of search-lights in the lit or is gradually establishing as a means oi i against tbo Boors found to he of congit! 1 are pi evented. and the enemy's movent taloty. The upper lisjht is Ufed for long diate vicinity.?From Harper's Weekly. fencing is tl)e German ?fo SABU1 Froflciency with the sword is often dc ( in one of the big universities far more tl ( arts. It is with the sabre that the (ierm: . of with his lists, and the student whose I is held in higher estimation by his fellov. tinction Is his familiarity with the el; engage frequently in bouts together, as si TESTING SILVER COINS. j Tb* ConprchiadT* fjr*tem In Vojof at ibe UlAnot Mint* of the United State*. ( Out of every fresh batch of silver 1 dollars mude at the United States 1 mints half a dozen arc sent to the < Treasury at Washington to be tested * :is samples. If they turn out to be of the requisite fineness aud weight It is taken for granted the whole edition Is correct For the test the coin after being weighed is rolled out in a thin flat strip more than a foot in length. Then the strip is placed beneath a row of punches, which punch holes in It. so U>at after passing beneath the Instrument it has the look of a colander. A great many little silver disks are I thus obtained, and of these a dozen > or so are taken and asshyed, to find out i how much silver they contain. Being : obtained frou various parts of the > coin they represent fairly the average fineness of the dollar throughout. If : / - > -Jfc- : HOW DOLLABS ABB TESTED. the weight is too little, beyond a very J . tiny fraction, the whole batch of coins I must be molted and made over again. and the same thing must be done if the fineness Is not up to standard. Other1 wi*e the assaycr indorses the mintage i and the dollars. | By the New Zealand census of 1001, j Auckland has a population of 0?.?!C, . Christ Church 57,041, Duredin 53.SI0 j and Wellington 49.344. The whole j population of the islands, including r Maoris, was 815,820. i ' I There is no wild breed of fowl to i which the Brahma or Ctycbln can Ik* ; i traced. The gamecocK seem* to l?e i i descended from the Cingalese jungle < 11 fowL 1 ? " r ; TV"\DV -J11 Know? 'I \ JI\ I ?1 ? tctic* P?wns.VjpsM>oe-, | i tors. Cats or Rati.( THE SWELL HOTEL OP TORT. a the Boer War. b^E"ilfA\ \W*Rte^5^>'^Wfc5:^,^ SI m^SS I i r^TO i jcof blockhouseswhichLordKltchcn' offensive aud defensive warfare lerable advantage. Xight surprises ass c:ioe learueu wan soiut* wrdistances; the lower for the lmiue11 j ideqts' pavarite Pastime. 2S. j ?sired b.v tlic Cor in an youth studying > lan knowledge of the sciences or in student defends himself. Instead face bears the scars of many duels 1 -WU# -1-?? 4i. s luai uutr wuum' ruii'i iriaiiu tu uw issics. For pleasure the students town in tl'.e above photograph. I : Mont Ktmtrkablo Flower. According to a Loudon special in the j Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune, the i nost remarkable flower of the coro- j iatlon year will be a quaint introduc-. ion from Central Asia. According to | 1 ; EE51AIIKABLE FLOWXB:be Importer*, it Rro". a on a saucer, ivlthout soli or water, and, -without showing showing leaves or roots the mlb shootr. out a red-brown flower, vitb red and yellow tip sotfTetlmes two 'eet long." When the flower is off it irefers to retire into the soil and to be K-ell watered, when it follows up with i three-foot umbrella leaf. Money la M?pl? Snc?r. The income from the maple product jf the United States in a single season tins reached $1,250,000. It is impossible for the farmer to make money more rapidly in four to six weeks' time In uny other branch of bis occupation. Even with 1000 or 1500 maple trees he becomes a business man with a big business. bargaining and shipping a high-class product, and feeling as proud us when he sold bis autumn [ ron of wh??ut. In the case of tho : production of wheat be tills and fertilizes tbe soil and sows tbe seed, tbeu reaps bit* harvest. In his maple camp be reaps only. His ownership of a -ugar bush makes him, in a unall way, n capitalist. If be pimply loo!~s after that which accrues from his capital of trees be cannot stop making money, j -Country Life In America. \ GOD'S MESSAGE TO MAN I PREGNANT THOUGHTS FROM THE WORLD'S GREATEST PROPHETS. 1 Poem: I Never Knew?Every Discovery of Science Shows That Infinite Wisdom Das Worked Ont an Infinitely Complex System of Machinery For tbe World. i I never knew before, the world So beautiful could be Ah I have found it since I learned All care to cast on Thee; Tin- scales have fallen from mine.eyes, And now tbe light 1 see. I never knew how very dear My fellow-men couJd be Until I learned to help them with A reaay syuijHunjr, Their inner lives have made me know A broader charity. t, r* I never knew bow little things A? greater ones could be, When sanctified by love for One Who doth each effort see; But now a daily round of care May win a victory. I never knew; and still, dear Lord, a _ il L . .1... I AH inroujtu a Kiura i KV, And perfect light can only coine When I shall dwell with Thee; When in Thy likeness I awake For ail eternity. ?Living Church. How Scloaeo Discovers God. A French naturalist declares that if there were no birds man would be starved out in nine years; for in spite of all that he could do the insects and slugs would mnltiplv so rapidly that they would destroy ail vegetation in that time. We owe our very existence, therefore, to the birdi ?-- ?nim tirin? fjrstrnv wnicn in ??wuun ?uvU v? ? ...... # daily myriads of these destructive creatures and no make it possible for plants and trees to lire. This is only one of a multitude of mar- j rclous provisions by means of which the force* of nature arc adjusted so as to make possible the existence of an infinite variety of plant and Animal life on our globe, and more especially 4,o fit the world for man'* habitation. Every new discovery of feienee brinps out more and more clearly the fact that infinite wisdom has worked out an infinitely complex and mnrvelously beautiful system of machinery, if one may call it to. in this world of ours, that every vclve and I pulley and belt, every bolt and rod is aa- i justed to the particular work assigned to , it, and that s!l work together for the accomplishment of one great design. Man cannot hope, however, to find out I the ultimate purpose of the Architcct of J Nature by studying nature. We need to . look upon the Architect's own plan to gee [ what His purpose is. That plan, which i> I spread before us in the Bible, is so trans- I cendantly glomus that it is worth while j even for God to spend thousands of years in working it out. | All trutn has its origin in the thoughts of God; therefore, any truth when fol- j lowed bark to its source will necessarily i lead to God. If the researches of scicnce ! seem for a time to lead men away from 1 God, it is only because a half seen truth j usually points in the wrong direction ana j the true remedy for the evil it to pursue J the ttudv which has led to a falte concln- ; ; tion under fuller knowledge on the sub- : ject with which it deals corrects the false ] impression derived from partial informa- I , tio?*. We find a very (rood illustration of thii ' in a book called "The Influence of Christ ; in Modern Life." by Dr. Xewell Dwight j Hillis, published by the Macmillan Com* j pany. Dr. Hil'is says: "It it said that when Jscquard first ex- ; hibited hit loom to the wondering specta- 1 tors, and the streams of water, by meant of the belt and fly-wheel, started all the : spindles upon their task of embroidering I flower-* and leaves upon the tilk texture, j the onlookers were so entranced with the i wonders of the loom as utterly to forget j the inventor. The myriad spindles toiling ; on without any help from without made ' Tacquard seem sunerfluous. But soon the j mechanism needed repairing, and then the | i spectators came to feel there was no ' ?TMtnr??9 in the loom that was not first in ! 3acf)rard'fl mind. "Thus for a brief period this earthly meclnnism (nature with it* forces and their laws) seemed to abolish God. But afterward, with knowledge, reverence grew until the time has now come when biologists. physicists, historians alike confess I that there is no theory of evolution which does not demand a God to make it workable." Dr. Hillis ia a particularly able as well as aggressive exponent of the school of theology which is in the ascendant at present?the school which appeals to reason as the supreme judge of truth and accept* the teachings of revelation only as far as they are considered reasonable. The adherents of this school believe in God because they find Him in nature, and in Christ becaufc He satisfies Iheir ideals with recard to the possibilities of human nature, j Well, it is better to believe even so thn not to believe at all. But that sort oi^eilef will ^ot satisfy the needs of our spiritual nature. We need a God concerning whom we can have definite knowledge through a direct revelation, which we can feel to be authoritative and trustworthy in itself and superior to and therefore quite independent of any discoveries or impression* concerning Him which can be obtained from the ratiocinations of the human nind even in its highest development. ?Xcw York Witness. Life Indeed. Cod hn* been wrestling with you p*? | tiently and lovingly for many years, lie has /ought by the prosperity and happiness that He has sent ycu to make you conscious of His tender love and care, and to draw you to Him by the cords of gratitude. And when you failed to perceive Him in the daylight. He has met you in the darkness. He has thrown His strong arm around you and still you have not known Him. lie has wounded you?He has had to wound you?because you struggled against Him. Can you not now see that it is He? And is it not idle to resist Him? Ob, if men only know that God is not their encoy, but their best friend! If instead of holding Him off or trying to break away from His embrace, they would cling to Him. as Jacob did, exclaiming: "I will not let Thee go, except 'Ihou bless me!" As ??v?n as that nraver is offered the blessing comes and tW morning break*. There would have been no need of the long struggle if the soul had onty yielded soouer to Him whofe one supreme desire is to ble?4 and save it.?Edward B. Coe, D. D Only the Spiritual SarflvM. The destiny of man is bound vp with tbo spiritual life. The physical must be ?oon abandoned, the mental wiT survive death, the moral will always be valuable, but our future weal or woe in a spiritual world turns on our present use of the spiritual opportunities. ? Rev. 11. Francis Very, Baptist, Eoglewood, 111. Heaven. Hearen is not a passive state, where ona only sits still and enjoys. Eternal lite it not eternal sleep. but it is eternal activity in the wrvice ot uou.?nev, v.iiarir? Byrd. Methodist. Atlanta. /% Family or Amrnnin Fighters. B. I". Mii.-h.il!, a #evtnty-vea: -old vet-' fran of the Civil War, living at l^awrenee. Ind.. ban a remarkable family military record. Hi* great-grandfather fought the British with Washington. His grandfather fought them again in the War of 1M2. His father made an ineffectual effort to get in the Mexican War. He. himself, ierved four years in the Civil War, and lis* on ha* just returned from three years' service in the I'hilippiucs. Tonnireat Peer ?t Ivmniiinn. The little Karl of Airlie, who i? in hi* ninth year, will, it is said, Ik- the youngest peer to take in the coronation. 1 he father of the boy earl died leading a cavalry charge in South Africa over a year ago. Aristocrats u Milkman. Tbe milk trade attracts aristocrats. Lord ItaylelgL' is a milkman and owns one of the finest businesses in the Lome i-ouuties. Every morning special trains loaded wltb cabs of milk from bis dairy leave the station at Hattield Peverel for Loudon. He owns a herd of over a thousand cows. Tbe late Lord Vernon bad a large dairy farm at Sudbury Hall, mar Derby, and carried on an extensive business. Tbe late Lord Hampden started and maintained a large estauusnmeni 01 mis son m Glyude, which was known as the "Creameries." and proved highly successful. Not long ago a Mr. Dormer, nephew of Lord Dormer, is said to have joirH the milk trade.?I. ndon Express. A Cheap Adornment. Vanity is tbe chief adornment of witless minds.?New York Press. Bow's Thl? ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Cutarrh that cannot be cursd by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chesky & Co., Props., Toledo, 0. Wd the tradernlirned. have known F, J.Che nuy for tbe last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry oat any obligation made by their firm. Weiit k Thcajc, Wholesale Druggists,Toledo, Ohio. WAiLDixn.KntXAsAMAEYis,^Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tb? system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by nil Druggists. Testimonials free. Hail s Family Pills are the best. London School Board children used over 4,OUO,OUO eiereises and copy books last year. Km! For the Bowels. No matter what ails you, headache to a can eer, you will never get won unui /oar uvwsu ere pat right. Cahcabcts bolp nature, care jou without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cascabets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up In metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. In Germany the yearly number of divorces exceeds 10,000. A Lake of Oil?Millions la It. Colorado oil worth $2.50 a barrel. We own our ground. No royalties. We adjoin Boulder's producing wells. You can buy Lexington Oil stock now for 3 cents a share. ? - * -? 1A YP.? Next week you may nave 10 pay jv. n*?.o for proo pectus. The Lexington Oil Wells Co., 203 Quincy building, Denver, Colorado. LoU of women can't pass a mirror without a puuse for reflection. I am sure Plso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three yean ago.?Mas. Thomas Bobbins, Maple St., Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17,1900. The fellow who has dyspepsia usually makes other people suffer for it. Mtar SrkMl CUMrci Are Klekly. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, by Mother Gray, a nurs?.< in Children's Home, New York, break up Colds in 24 hours, Hnin!ni<hA Mtnmai'h UUiC rviriiPuuvDa, f _ _ ? TrouN^, Teething Dbwrdera and Destroy Worm.*. At all druggists', 25c. Sample mailed Frw. Address Alien S. Olmsted, Le Boy, N.Y. The bote! man has to be inn keeping with the public. Earliest KomIm Millet. Will you be short of hay? If so. plant a plenty of this prodigally prolific millet. 6 to B tons of ricb hay per acre. Price, 60 lbs., $1.90; 100 lbs., cS.00; low freights. John A. Kalrer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. A Even the musical woman may harp too much .a one string. Each package of Per*a* Fadeless Dte colors either Silk, Wool or Cotton perfectly at one boiling. Bold by all druggists. Pla-.inum is worth a great deal more than gold. The UmlrneH of George. "George can be very rude at times. He interrupted me Just as I was going to speak last evening." "How did It happen?" "Why, lie asked me 11 ne coaiua i kiss me. and Ju?t as I was about to remonstrate be stopped me." "How did he stop you?" "The usual way."?Cleveland Plain Dealer. France has 170 echoolcbiidren per 1000 of her population. (Germany 145. Switzerland 210. The United Kingdom has 203. > 0ne may sail the ku and that men of aflkdra, who ' ' ? ? - ?1???i? .. " / Dor IOC UCiUUUUU, niHtyt J medirincs which caasc exce I organs in a constipated ran / lines. It acts naturally, acts < I the Internal orpins and leave / If in nw-d of a laxative rc I when anything more than a la J is to consult a competent pbj I w bich claim to carc all manne r.y': I The California Fig Syrup Co. hi which would give satisfaction '/ sanction and one friend recomme I exceed ail other laxatives combiu I old-time cathartics and modern I I diffusion of knowledge, as to the I into general use with the well-in ? _. I and ever beneficial action, "vl The quality of Sj-rup of Figs ! I the l.exatire and carminative priu 00 1110 system, with agreeable an orginal method of manufacture, effccts one should always note t Syrup Co.?printed on the front < - . "V v? * FITS permanent! j cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's um of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatisef re? Dr. It. H. Knaa.Ltd., 931 Arch St.. Phlta., Pa. There is no fluctuation in the price of wild oats. Health " For 25 year* I have never missed taking Ayer's Sarssparills every spring. It clesnses my blood, makes me feel strong, and does me good in every wsy."? John P. Hodnette, Brooklyn, N.Y. Pure and rich blood carries new life to every part of the body. You are invigorated, refreshed. You feel anxious to be active. You become strong, steady,courageous. That's what Ayer's Sarsaparilla will do for you. flJCatottk. AflfeBOfett. I lik yoar doctor what b? thlnka of AjVf Saraaparilla. He know* >11 about this ffraad old family medicine. Follow hit adrtoo mad I wo will b? satUfleri. I J. C. ATE* Co.. Lowell, 11m OIL MAPS FREE If yon m InUsreatod. write, a^r-lrwlnr two-o<mt , stamp, for Official Oeoloffical Oil Maps of California and Colorado, la colon. Worth two doll an, FREE. Mention thia paper. THE KENDBH'K PROMOTION CO., Effliaayt BalUln, Dearer, Colored*. HD/IDQV HEW DISCOVERT; ?twe O I qalck relief and earn wont nan. Book of Urtimonla^ aad 10 daya' troeuaeol G*M Medal at Baffala Expodtloi. MclLHhNNV'bTAbASCO j B*y<!?a'i U. B. G??lof- J w j leal hurTt-y of the OU Bel fl VfkT I <" \ >how? w- ary right >n tho Vj ^ V 111 V ^r^DMV^^>-Zj before the big boom se stocks are cheap. IXT1 compact stock at i WHr I Bank references ft ' ?Br-M?1-i- etc., FREE. I , ??| J Colorado Oil, *2.3 l|p / cents a barrel. "Hp V* 3*re,"w'?5 - -->11 cooper on ( X $10 Beys f 1 t I A 2* Buys Ef.'fi.0* th? **"*> ?" 100 B ays Itrt Um rnoci Bitllo? ruth, tall wILIvM? V Ccetury Oat u?? HR7 frim u it* w.t? ll Italirr IHU ?f? bred U [ KyjVaEMali/ Africa.Iarfc'.ai?i? tl.a Kkli4?w?l.Mitr'i*mit< Iv Mr ruair? Oar d*' !Wi Cult Ek^/SA. Vmlr nnliUnin cat (rowicc ??d * * rjKROK.lV 7l*Ui la in ruiltf (W?CM U WJf jyHNnk^^V dirt cbrap B? la th? rwl* 1(4 be; BrlllnH T*" B<1<tb4" ,be **'*? faa terwd W&jfk^M Sabrer's meant Whms WMyyf AtB Tte ou:jr (prlcf ?b*u oa ?mr-i tha: will rn jIiAjH tn.) *#tt and la (IMT iti!c in the CniM vj3 ***' 7tc^s* * ** 'uu^^ ^^\yCv^ Tit aM aimUti <*r??: h?j food ?i i(|rila io41 Mi <r tM bi; r" x". W? art ike laifM growr aod ?r ?t?* i fDwi * ""T "Mag Tta*?aMM U B?ra.ou> Hr //.;? mu u4 a# a |n>i Cn?J?^f u:ia. ?S^F p?M eaUVna' conulm fall * < ear pacawe. jI?Uib: **> brnUU ittarw. pr*4atic( ( laai ^Oat with iu < i?a? hay. i ?fpm W4?f par Mr* "?rl> I1? ?M / /WllVUllFS I visit ertry land r.n-l everywhere will find, I are well infor.i. !iave neither the time | t on pleasure bea. or business, to use those j Mire purgation itnd then leave the internal I tlition. Syrup of Figs U not built on those pffectively, cleanses, sweetens and strengthens ?s them in a healthy condition. medy the most excellent Is Syrup of Figs, but xuiive Is required the safe and rlentlflc plan rslrion and not to resort to those c.> Icines r of diseases. was the first to manufacture a laxativ* medy - - iav>tlr? tthlfh nhrsielana could ad to another; ac that today it* sales probably ed. In some places considerable quantities of Imitations are still sold, but with the general best medicinal agents, Syrup of Figs has come formed, because it is a remedy of known value Is dae not only to the excellent combination of iciples of plants, known to act most beneficially id refreshing aromatic liquids, bnt also to the In order to get the genuine and its beneficial he full name of the Company ? California Fig >f every package. * 11 inI 11 ^ RiftVtS The wonderful medicine, Ripans Tabules, cured me in inree wecKs aiici u?viiig suffered for five years. My trouble was dyspepsia, and as I believe came from eating too much sweet stuff. At druggist*. , TL? packet i> enough for srn tmUaary occasion. The family bottle, M oents, oontalns a supply (or a year. Capsicum Vaseline Pat ip 1b Collapsible Tibet. A Smbvtttnta for ud Superior to Maatard or tag otbar plaotar, ud will not bllatar tha moat daUaata Ida. Tha pata allajriar and cuntlv* qua ltloa of thia artl lo an woadarfol. It wfll top tha Msoc% odNllmbMdiektudKtatlet. Weracommaod tt aa (ho beat aad aafcat aifn?1 conotar-trrttaal kaova, ilao aa aa axtaraal fWMty for palaa l? the chtot ud atomarh and all rtmiwaha oaoralric aad ftraty omplalata. A trial will proro what w? claim for ^ ma u wiu bafcmad to be invaluable In tho haOHkoU. Miaj pooplo MX **It to the baot of all y^mr proparattoaa." Prtc*. 1* coata, at all droortot* or otktr toilm or by aondin* thto amount to oa In cootac* Kaon ? vill aa&d yon a tuba by mall Ko article aboold bo aceoptod by thopvbllc oka tho mm oarrtoa oar Ubal. m otbarvtea ii ll Ml imolaa. CHEESEBROUGH HAIfUFACTTOXRG CO* 17 tUU Street, V?v T ork Otty. ADVERTISING Q Bart Court Syrup. Taataa Qood. Coo M CtJ In ll mo. Sold by dnaMt >*1 o Colorado Oil is in. The wise man gats in aarty whilst T BEBTHOUD LAUD, COAL, OAS ATO OIL 5 CEHTS A SHARE. van. Buy now. Sand for maps, reports 0 a barral. Tatas and California Oil, 10 Ll cfc IVewell, ICAL AGENTS, dg., DENVER, COLORADO. - 200 Slum. 500 Shares. mm* 2000 Shares. iiiiiiiiiiiMi ^ ^jg Ut ;ik?. nnlM tm H| roJatt lb* C B. IHpwl ???t?f *T?r WSuaplM *?4 i bnt H?w 4o in Uk* lUI. VflnLj^^W ry 0?t U teu4 I* c?BpWw?T il?ttatMW hratriunfX WW|LW1| r ihla tarUtr UU iprlocto Mil M Vv\iNni L 1> will nntf r*J ;n. ?V?^m^bmk ^?afp?ji????pwSr??i " * ><lt prr acn. w# ilm.trn r ?. [MM. fnn eara ui rrtra* an wry W*. Oalaa m4 to crlpU??*r Mr ItirflM Rarity. uovaw Can. c*tu( MO boiktla; . per m?. ' wr pan u>4 t*'* aifiliMtkl kay; a?r N* vjmQi TtwUu wiik M lui ^aMB ?ili? i [r?! nuxx, ^y^ar Jr /*B I a*Uc (trtrwi u ^ MMQA * 4 ua>l?.?nt'A i miim ;h ?B iJlH u ramp. fTT^ 1 h i ~ /1' | j^/ /.-rVt v I' 1 V /' i > \ \ A '7 \' \ > \ Vw- \ \ \ \ '