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About Southwest Oregon recorder. (Denmark, Curry County, Or.) 188?-18?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1884)
f7 A TRAVESTY OF JUSTICE. OSXMS3 AND PTJSISHMEJTTS AM02TG THE MOOBS. although he may have many thousand, NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. ; omf 0F nrnri I I AM gold pieces hidden away. Frequently . m ! lHh 5" I THE lltEStLLlUN this does not prevent the government of- A pretty engagement ring is a large j ficial from discovering the hiding-place pearl held m place by two any diamonds of his treasures by fearful tortures. If The new spiral ruchmgs are of tulle BY ALLAN PINKERTON. Who was Chief of the U. S. Secret Service. Dorrible TOutilation under the Sal tan' Eye The Bastinado Confia eating the Goods of Offender. A letter from Tangier, North Africa, iys that no words can describe the cru elty and the barbaric manner in which justice is administered in Morocco. Like Tunis, there are in Morocco some days in each week when the lowest and most humble of the emperor's subjects vmay step before the despot and demand from him justice against his neighbors or against government officials. These public receptions are the most interesting eight in the capital of Morocco, for they are always attended by the entire court, the army, and crowds of people. The army, several thousand ragged, beggarly fellows with, crooked old guns and brok en swords, is paraded in three lines in front of the imperial palace, forming a square, open on one side. The sultan, surrounded by a crowd of courtiers, gen erals, and ministers enters the square, mounted on a magnificent white horse in gorgeous trappings. An attendant bears the celebrated blue umbrella, surmounted with a golden ball, the insignia of the sultan's imperial dignity. The soldiers present arms,the official and imperial serv ants prostrate themselves, and the cere mony begins. One after the other, the poverty-stricken, humiliated subjects are led before the sultan. He rarely speaks to them. After listening to their stories or to that of the police authorities, he makes his decision, or prescribes a pun ishment which is iustantly administered by a chamberlain. Until quite recently every subject brought into the presence of the sultan had to bring him a present, according to bis means. Sometimes great quantities of gold, jewelry and precious stones are offered. The poor Bedouins from the desert bring him sheep, dates, cheese, large pots of butter and other articles of little value. For the la-t few years the sultan has not insisted upon these offer ings, but it cannot be said that those who come to him empty handed derive much benefit. There is uo appeal against the judgment of the sultan. If condemned to death, the delinquent will be executed on the spot. Executioners are always on hand, and the most horrible mutilations are committed in the presence of his majesty and the en tire army. .Decapitation is still in vogue, but neither guillotine or swords are used. A common butcher's knife or a large dagger does the service slower and more cruelly, but with effect. Kobbery and theft are still punished by cutting off the right hand of the crimiral. Eyes are torn out, ears, noses and feet cut off, and the poor people mutilated in many still more horrible ways. The detached parts of the body are thrown to the doss. Confessions are forced from the accused by frightful tortures, by slowly roasting their bodies, pinching, .stretching and squeezing, the same as in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. It seems hardly credible that this mutilation can still be Eracticed in a country only a score of ours distant from the eulisrhtened States of the world, where ambassadors and consuls of all the great nations reside. England wastes thousands of pounds an nually in her efforts to suppress the slave trade in Egypt and Nubia, but the car nasre committed daily by the sultan of Morocco and his dignitaries is permitted without protest. The vendetta exists in Morocco. Any murder, committed either intentionally or by accident, will surely be revenged by the relatives of the deceased. Should they not be able to kill the offender the authorities will do it for them. Other ac cidents which may happen to a Mussul man by the fault of another are revenged in a similar way. "An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth" is still the law with these semi-barbarians. Every traveler is shocked at the number of cripples he en encounters in every part of the empire. Mutiny is always punished by decapita tion. This is pracsiced to such an ex tent that the traveler often sees a dozen human heads stuck on high poles over the gates of cities. The sultan is not the only one who in dulges in such cruelties. All his pashas, governors, and caids follow his example in different provinces and districts. As in Tunis and Persia, the bastinado is the most common punishment for slight of fenses. Frequently, however, several hundred strokes are administered upon the soles of the poor offender's feet, caus ing sometimes instantaneous death, and frequently making cripples for life. ' The favorite punishment with the sul tan and the pashas i3 the confiscation of the offender's money and goods. If there is a decis.on to be given between several parties, justice is sold at auction. The party offering the greater bribe will always be the winner. Of fences against the government are always punished by taking from the offender everything he possesses, whether found guilty or not. Should any Moorish merchant or functionary ac quire considerable wealth, he knows that he can live no longer in security. The sultan, master of his life and pioperty, can take all from him when he least ex pects it, and he may consider himself fortunate if his head remains upon his shoulders. This is why the whole coun try appears to the traveler so poverty stricken and so destitute of all progress and wealth. All the money earned in trade or agriculture is carefully hidden, for the least indication of wealth may bring misery and death upon its posses sor. His. house may fall in ruins; he will not have it repaired. He may need a new burnous, but he dare not buy it, lest he should be thought wealthy. He will never admit his prosperity. He will complain of bad times or of the govern ment, and speak of famine and misery, any Moor wishes to destroy his enemy he denounces'him as rich. The taxes are collected in the same expedient and effective manner ik which justice is administered. Whenever the sultan needs money ne orders all his pashas to collect the tenth, prescribed by the koran, and to send him the amount required within a certain time. These with finish of embroidery 6ilk at edge. Necklaces of unset stones of many colors are among the odd things now i n fashion. A little ribbon bow or small natural flower or bud can be worn at the back of the hair. Waistcoats of Valenciennes lace pashas pay themselves for their services j rn under open bodices of black surah by doubling the amount; a policy which j or china crape dresses, is eagerly followed by their subordinates. Short jackets made of jersey webbing The poor, instead of paying the sultan are in high favor with skirts of half -worn his tenth, have to pay another tenth to J dresses or with accordion skirts, the pasha, and a third tenth to the zap- Loops of beads, the same color as tha tich the caids and showsh. This is but ! dress, are worn suspended from the shoul- one of the many taxes imposed upon the der-straps of evening corsages. j Moors. Every date tree, each pair of j L cut la33 smelling bottles are now oxen, every sheep and horse is taxed I carrie5 in cdinal siikpiU9a bags, neatly ' Imports and exports of goods, sales of , fiui bottle ftnd nearly reaching the merchandise, and business transactions ; I of ail kinds are taxed to the utmost. In- i j deed, only a small part of the earnings! . 0ne of the new neck ornaments con of the people remain their own. . j 813tsrof ?atin r 7elve.fcf r'bboa sTtfc. ln a , The interior towns of Morocco are not , muslin band to keep it firm. It is se- ' inhabited by Europeans, nor do consuls . curcd b? a clasP- j reside in them. Nothing remains for i Young ladies are now wearing the the oppressed but revolt. The. emperor graceful Grecian sleeves, which are but- keeps his regular army and his guards ' toned across the shoulders and conceal for the purpose of chastising such rebels, the upper part of the arm. As soon as he gets news of a revolt he Kilt sk rts of flannel are now laid in sends his troops to the town to plunder broad plaits ' from four to eight inches ana destroy. .Prisoners are rarely per- j wide, and have three or four tucks above , the hem around the foot. i Beige color and dark laurel the imsmi &OTx&ic9rc? . Agents Wanted for our New Book. ,The "SPY" is now selling by the Ten of Thousands! No competition. Clear territory. Only book of its kind. The "SPY" reveals msnj -sterets of the war never be fore published. Thrilling narratives of Pinkekton'8 Spies, that swayed the actions o f our gigantic armies; a graphic account of the conspiracy to assassinate Lin coln. Perilous experiences of our Federal Spies in the Rebel Capital; their torlor i hopes and beroio bravery fully recounted in these vivid sketches; it is the mont thrilling wi.r book ever published. En dorsed by hundreds ot Press an 1 Agent ' testimonials. A lanre, hnndsome book ; titKI pages ; 50 illustrations. 12Sold oul y by our Agents. Can not be fonnd in bookstores. Sells to merchants, farmers, mechanics and iv-rybody. We wmt one agent in every Urand Army Post and in ever county iu the U. S. For full particulars and sn.ei'tl terms to anents address G. W. CARLETON A O:)., Publishers. New York. Th.s idvortiseuienl will appear but once cut it out. AGEXTS WANTED tbr Tutto of BLAINE & CLEVELAND & mitted to live. Their heads are cut off on the spot and sent to the emperor, who has them exhibited over the gates of the principal cities of his empire as a warn ing to others. The emperor's army, however, is weak, and the distances be tween interior towns are great, so that he is only able to control comparatively small portions of his empire. The Ber bers or Kabyle3 in the mountains and the Bedouins near the southern desert are virtually independent. LOG AH, HENDRICKS, byT. W. Knox I In 1 Vol. by Hon. A. Baknlm. :ea, Auinennc. impartm complete, me isen ana . The leading Campaign bookt of 1884. Outsell all to 1. rWTfith thousand In prein. Kachvol.. 600 In 1 Vol Authori Vhapet. Diners luioi. I ffiHtu thousand In orein. pa?et, (1.50. 60 percent, to Aeent.. Outfit Free. Freight Void. Arents earn till to 2.1 a dav. Now la the time to make money fast. Bend for Extra 'Term', at once, to UAKTr OKI PLBLISUINU CO., Hartford. Cobb. A gents Wanted for the Best and rastc!t-8!liiig J Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices re iucod o3per cent. National Publishing Co., Philadelphia, Pa. green ; plaited woolen dresses are very fashionably worn this autumn, both in pin check s and large bloqk patterns. i : i. ,i i i i ij blocks and figures in gay eolors. These CATTAIL R H are manufactured for vests, collars, cuffs and basque waists for combination plain gotds. Pretty little dresses for children are ' made in Russian style of veiling, shot silk, cashmere, pin-check surah, or cream white woolen of finest texture, dotted with tiny boquets of flowers. A Quebec woman has applied to th? corporation of the ancient city for per mission to exnibit nerself as a curiosity. mrs& Swordsmen of the Daep. Imagine whales fencing with one another for amusement 1 It seems as if such a thing could not be ; and yet there are whales of a certain species which not only fence with one i she weighs 450 pounds, and her limbs are luur uuu 21 11 a u icei iu circumierence. another, but use their teeth for swords. It is the narwhal that fences. One ot the teeth of the male narwhal always grows through the upper lip and stands out like a spear, straight in front of the animal. It seems as if all the material that should have gone to fill the narwahl's mouth with teeth had gone to the one tooth that grows out through the lip ; for sometimes this tooth is eight feet long. The animal itself, from head 'to tail, is IS 8 A HAY-FEVER druggists; 6.'c. by mail. Sample bottla by mail, lOo Some of the new repped woolens show brocaded figures like velvet, and others i Ely Baoa.. ornggists, Owego. n. y. have large balls of loosely woven silver I or gilt threads arranged on separate j breadths so that they will only be used ' at the foot of the skirt. j A blouse for a little girl is of red adri-' nople. It is shirred around the neck and waist. Below the shirring on the waist j is a deep flounce of handsome white lace, j HAY FEVElt. I can recommend Ely's Cream Balm to all flay . Fever sufferers, it being in my opinion, founded npon experience and a sure cure. I was afflicted with H ay-Fever for cwenty-five years, and never before found per . tminent relief. Web ter II. Haskins, Marsh .ield. Vt. Cream It aim is a -emedy founded on a correct diagnosis of this disease and can be de endel upon. 50c. at Thirty . Tsars Beoord. Xndoreed try gayiloianii seldom more than sixteen feet in length, i The sleeves are short, with long loops of j narrow rea riDoon lamng irom me top 01 the shoulder. j A pretty capote for fall has the edge . finished with j narrow puff of bright red j velvet, a soft scarf of the velvet crosses I il A. !iL 1 i. a I wo iuji witu a jldoi or pretty ornamenr on the very top. The ties are the meres! Of what use such an enormous tooth is to the narwhal no one knows. Some persons say it is used for spearing fish; others, that its use is to stir up the mud in the bottom of the ocean in order to scare out the fish that may be hiding there ; and one man says the tooth is for the purpose of breaking holes in the ice j bands of velvet, with a small made doubl in winter; for the narwhal, like all whales, is obliged to come to the surface at intervals to breathe. Whatever the tooth is intended to be used for, it is certain that when the nar whal wishes to play it finds another nar whal of a like mind, and away they charge at each other till the long tooth swords clash together. They are active as well as frolicsome, and sailors tell of seeing them crossing swords in this way, thrusting and parry ing, and rolling and darting about with marvelous agility and grace. The narwhal is light gray in color, and covered with black spots. For a great many reasons it is valued by the Green landers. It furnishes a very fine quality of oil, its flesh is used for food, and its skin, made into a jelly, and called mattak, is considered a dainty too choice for ordinary occasions. This "swordsman of the deep," as 1 have called him, is a warm-blooded ani mal, and must not be confounded with the saw-fish or sword-fish, both of which are entirely different from the narwhal. John R. Coryell, in St. Nicholas. bow without ends under the chin, A pretty suit for early fall is of dark blue albatross and very light blue surah, the latter forming the soft vest and plait ed skirt. The princess dress has the waist perfectly fitting, the skirt is slashed in deep tabs, a sash of the surah forms over the hips and in loops, with ends in the back. The woman of Capri are described as almost invariably handsome and healthy looking. "What strikes one most . savs e j recent writer, is the statuesque graceful ness of tne girts in all their movements, however mean their occupation. Capri is a great resort for artists, and several ol them have wived with women of the country their former models and set tled down to a strange, half-wild and half-civilized existence. Lepers in India. Lady Lobbyists in Washington. The lady lobbyists, says a correspond ent, have played important parts in the social life of Washington, especially since the Buchanan administration. Some of them have been the widows of officers of the army or navy ; others have been the daughters of Congressmen, and others have drifted here from home localities where they have found themselves th subjects of scandalous comments. A Lepers are met with in every stage ot misery in India.savs a writer in the Nine- teenth Century, They flock to the bor-1 few Gf them have been beautiful, some ders of the Ganges to end their hopeless i haj scorched their wings on ill-lihtcd lives on "holy ground." Pilgrims, they j torches, and they have generally been crowd to Pooree to make prayers and ! vprr rwr it. Vina hn thr hnemoea propritiatory offerings to the idol Loke nauth; and then, failing of their cure, thev continue to haunt the neichbor- to so ingratiate themselves with Senators and Representatives as to control their votes on matters which thev have been nooa, ana iorm iresn centres ot vice as i paid to advocate or oppose. Failing in vile and detestable as the foul corrup- this, they have sometimes managed to se tion that pollutes and makes havoc of ! cure the absence of opponents of the bills their bodies. Often herded bv them selves at night, they are scattered during the day along the roadway and in the bazars begging of the pitiful, and filling with horror the unaccustomed stranger. Special hospital accommodation is pro vided for them here and there; but in all India, with its millions of people and its over a hundred thousand lepers, the asy lums for the leper can be almost counted on one's fingers; they are not a fourth, nay, not a fourteenth part of the lazar houses that England in the middle ages built for these despised "children of St. Lazarus." How TheT Fall. The woman who steps on a banana peel will be down in a heap and up again with a faint little shriek before anybody knows anything about it, while the man will fall the length of the whole block, as usual, waving both hands in the air, kicking with both feet, plunging, throw ing bat and umbrella into space, howling at every jump, until, breathless and ex hausted, he caroms on an ash barrel at the end ot the run and rings down the curtain by rolling downstairs into a bar ber shop. Bob Burdettc. which they have been retained to advo cate by ingenious schemes. They looked at every question before Congress from a business standpoint, and their smiles were for those whose votes were doubt ful. To them the highest compliments and most honeyed phrases were thrown away, for they knew their vanity. They' "meant business." The parlors of some of these dames have been exquisitely furnished with works of art and bric a brae donated by admiring diplomats. Every evening they received, and in the winter their blazing wood fires were sur rounded by a distinguished circle. Some would treat favored guests to a game of euchre, and as midnight approached there was always an adjournment to the : dining-room, where a choice supper was 6erved. A cold duck, a venison pie, broiled oysters, or some one exquisitely cooked dish with salads and cheese, con stituted the repast, with iced champagne or Burgundy at blood heat. Who could blame the Congressman for leaving the bad cooking of his hotel or boarding house, with an absence of all home comforts to walk into the parlor web which the adroit lobbyist has cunningly wove for him? Health and Happiness. DO 1 OTHERS (yOUT4 HAVE DONE. - Are your Kidneys disordered? ' Kidney Wort brought mo from my grave, as it were, after 1 had be;n given up by 13 lest doctors ln Detroit." iL W. JAivuraox, Mechanic, Ionia, Mich. Are vour nerves "weak? "Kklnev- Wort nut-Art dia f mm nervnim tvenlrnps I &C after I was not expected to llve."-Mrs. M. it. B. uooawui, 11. wrtnuan Monitor Cleveland, U. Have you Bright's Disease? "Kidney Wort cared mo when iny water was just like chalk and then like blood." Frank Wilaon, Fcabody , Mass. Suf f erinerf rom Diabetes ? "Kidney-Wort Is the most Bucoessful remedy I have I ever unod. Gives almost Immediate relief." Dr. I'hUlip C. Bailou, Monk ton, Vt Have you Liver Complaint? "Kidney-Wort cured mo of chronio Liver Diseases alter 1 prayed to die." Henry Ward, late CoL 69th Nat. Guard, N. Y. Is your Back lame and aching? "Kidney-Wort, (1 bottle) cured me when i was so lame I had to roll out of bed." O. IL Tallniag-e, Milwaukee, Wis. Have you Kidney Disease? "Kidn -Wort made mo sound inllver and kidney after years of unsuccessful doctorir.tr. Its worth $10 a box." Sam'l Hodges, Wiliiaiastown, West Va. Are you Constipated? "Kidney-Wort causes easv evacuations and cored ma after IS years uso of other medicines." Ai-ison raircuua, u Aioans, vt Have you Malaria? "Kidney-Wort has done better than any other remedy I have ever used ln my practice." Dr. K. K. Clark, South Hero, Vt Are you Bilious? "Kldrey-Wort has done me more good than any other remedy I have ever taken." Hrs. J. T. U alio way, Elk Flat, Oregon. Are you tormented with Piles? "Kidney-Wort permanently cured ine of bleeding plies. Dr. W. C. Kline recommended It to me." Geo. H. Horst, Ca&hier M. Bank, Jljergtown, Fa. Are you Rheumatism racked? die by physician and I had suffered thirty years.' uunutfQ Aiaiccnn, vv est tiaxa, tt&ine. T.aioa era tt. i-i on Wqt.iti"0 "Kidney-Wort cure me of peculiar troubles of several years standing. Many friends use and praise I Airs, t Lamoreaux, iilo la alone, vt I It" If you would Banish Disease i ana gam Health, Take Thb blood Clcanser. HOPE wwmjii " .. -r. f BEAT. Nicholson's Improved Artificial Ear Drums. The only sure, easy and unseen device used to permanently restore hearing. Recommended by scientific men of Europe und America. Write fo r free illustrate 1 descrip tive book toj. II. Nicholson, 7 Murray St. .New York. SUPERFLUOUS HAIR, Moles, Warts, Freckles, Moth Patches, Eruptions, hears, and ail Dis figurements and Imperfections of the ac3. Hands andleet, and their treat ifment, by Dr. John H. Woodbury, 37 N. Pearl St..Alhanv.V V Koniilim forlmnli. PAY Life ScnolatMhip in the Coleman liusinvss College Newark, New Jersey. Positions tor graduates. National patronage. Write tor Circulars to 11. COLKM AN VO. Rend stamp for onr New Book on Patents. L. BINGHAM, Pat ent Lawyer. Washington, D. O. m PATENTS Pensions to Soldiers & Heirs. Send stamp for Circulars. COL. L. BINti. HAM. Att'y, Washington, D. O. Tt ratrltnony All responsible parties desiring eorree i.T-1. ponaentsror amus-ment or matrimony sen oopy "Wedding Bells." P. O. Box 2, 529. i lOo. for oston, Mass. Claverack (N. T.) College. $230 a year: IS Instrac tors; 242 rooms; first-class. Alonzo Flack, Pres't. asked for dm,' i OR'S GUIDE. prmaant cor. Book (raa. at uc,16vFuitoii (it, M.T. PATENTS !hS:PNo8iPT ntil obtained. Write lor IN V EN TO Nervous Debility &1 CUBES ALTj DISEASES OT THB SIDNEYS DIVER BLADDER AND TJBXNAET OB.QAN8 DEOPSY GUAVED DIABETES HEIGHT'S DI3EA83 PATHS m THE BACK lODNS OB BIDE BSnERVOTTS DISEASE DETENTION OR KOH-KETEimOir OP 4 ITSXNE. By the ose of this REMEDY, the 8 torn aehand Bowel speedily regain their strength, and the blood is purified. P It is pronounced by hundreds of the beet doctors to be the ON. LY CURE for all kinds of Kidney Die. eases. It is purely vege table, and cures whea other medicines fall. It is prepared ex. pressly for these dis. eases, and has never been known to fail. One trial will o:n vince you. For sal by all druggist. PRICE 91.25. Send fox Pamphlet of Test! monials. HUNT'S REMEDY CO., f Providence, It. I. -W s-CE HUNTS (Kidney and Liver) REMEDY has saved from lingering disease and death hundred woo nave been given up by puyKmnt to die. SCMiJWirAl! Ilsfr-Hit. tfA Best Cough by rup. Tastes good, pi IM Use In time. Hold by dniggi.m. tfl M YNU-3i LYDIA E. PiNKHAM'8 VEGETABLE COMPOUND . is a rosrrivE cure for All I'.ioso painful Complaint and eakncsst'g so common 0 to our best , FEMALE rOPULATIOX. Trice $1 la liquid, pill or loxeags fom. rf pttrpose it tolely for f,e legitimate healing of disease and the relief of pain, and that it doe all it claim to do, thousands of ladies can gladly testify. It will cure entirely all Ovarian troubles, Inflamma tion and Ulceration, Falling- and Displacements, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is particularly adapted to the change of life. It removes Faintnes. Flatulency, destroy all craving; for stiiuulanti, and relieves Weakness ot the Stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous l'rostration. General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depredon and Indi gestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing; pain, and backache, is always permanently cured by its use. Send Btamp to Lynn, Mass., for pnuiphli-t. Letters of inquiry confidentially answered, i 'or sal-tat druggist. DR. DAVID KENNEDY'8 REMEDY For tha Care of Kidney and Xilwer Com plaints, Constipation, and all disordsrr arising from an impure state of the BLOOD. y To women who suffer from any of the ills pecu liar to their sex it is an unf tiling; 'riend. All Drupgist. On Dollar a bottle, or address Dr. David Kennedy, Itondout, N, Y CONSTIPATION. "I Buffered from Paralysis of the Bowels and Liver romplaint. I finally used Dli. DAVID KENNEDY'S KAVOK1TE REMEDY, and in my opinion it saved my life. Your, etc. A. J. G1FFOHD." Mr. Gifford is the Master Mechanic of the Lowell division of the Boston & Lowell Kailroai, and hi illness and recovery are known to many. GOOD NEWS 12 LADIES ! Greatest inducements ever e fared. Now's your time to get a orders tor our celebrated Tea snd L'o(reeM.and secure a beauti. ful Gold liana or Moss Rose Chia Tea Set. or Handsome Decorated Goiu i,uu mum Kose Dinner Set, or Gold Band Moss JJect rated I oilet het. r i r tnll part-culars address THK (iltKAT AAIKUK'AN TEA CO., P. O. Box m 81 and 3o Veeir St.. New York. Bun fifn&JT$ Save Agents' Profits. TAg New Machines!: for $20. Guaranteed positively new and thoroughly tirst-class in every particular. Warrant ed for & yrs. Can be n tarned at our expense if not as repre sented. Freights puid to nll'WJ points. Established IH1H '- A. C. JOHNSO:., 37 North Pearl St, Albany,N.Y. LP ARM Telegraphy or Short-Hand andTvp CHilll W rituiK here. (Situations furnished. Address Valknusk BkoS., Jwnesviile. Wis. 25 CENTS Every Farmer and Horseman should own a book descriptive of the Horse, and the Disease to which the noble animal ia liable, that sickness may be rec ognized in its incipiency and relief promptly afforded. Our book should be in the hands of every Horse owner, as the knowl edge it contains may be worth hundreds of dollars at any mo ment. If you want to know all about your Horse, how to Tell his Age, how to Shoe him, etc., send 25c. in stamps, and receive the book, post-paid, from HEW YORK HORSE BOOX COMPANY, 134 Leeaaiw St., N. Y. CKy. 0 i