1 - --
THE sunshine is unusually bright
to-day. My Uncle Tobe and 1 are
- sitting on the balcony which over
looks the broad, fair stream below,
adorned with the afternoon sun's last
rays.
It Is Sunday. In Sunday dress and
holiday spirits crowds are hurrying to
wards the big excursion steamers, pant
ing along the shore.
How I would like to be one of them
I am young and hungry for pleasure.
But Uncle Tobe doesn't understand. He
doesn't care for such amusement. "It's
useless waste of time," he growls.
I might tell him it's just for the sake
of innocent frolic, but he wouldn't un
derstand that, either. He understands
only the serious side of life, earning
money in the sweat of one's brow, and
he says such money mustn't be spent
foolishly. Uncle Tobe is a bachelor,
whom fate has burdened with the care
of two homeless children. He might
hare shaken off the burden, but he was
too conscientious, too honorable for
that. He was the only relative to whom
we could turn I, the daughter of h!s
sister, and Philip, his brother's stepson
We were quite small, when he took us
into his house, two mischievous wights,
for children know little of sorrow. I
am sixteen years old to-day, and cannot
yet be serious and demure. Philip is
more ungovernable even than I. When
we are together we laugh and chatter,
so unreasonably loud, Uncle Tobe says,
that he Is compelled to drive lis from
his presence.
"Silly youngsters! What right have
you to laugh?"
When he took us into his home, he
turned me over to his old housekeeper,
Mrs. Mitchell, saying:
"Take the little thing! Her parents
had no business to burden the world
with such a useless little worm!"
Mrs. Mitchell shook her white head.
"Let her grow up with the flowers,"
she answered. "All she needs is a little
sunshine."
Yes, we needed sunshine, Philip even
more than I. He was the elder by four
years, and full of silly notions, Uncle
Tobe said. He carried home all sorts
of animals, much to the distress of
Uncle Tobe, but when he Infested the
house and the entire neighborhood with
white mice, it was decided that he
should be sent to a boarding school.
Philip was satisfied. It couldn't be
any worse than at home, he mused.
Henceforth his life took on a different
hue. His teachers complained of hi3
careless habits, his boyish pranks, but
they could not gainsay his talents and
bright, active mind. He was expelled
from two schools on account of his un
ruly conduct, and when he begged Un
cle Tobe to send him to college, the lat
ter refused. No, he must learn a trade.
I don't know how many different lines
of work Phil tried, but he never remain-
ed more than a few weeks In any one.
At last he was apprenticed to a drug
gist The work seemed to suit him.'
There were complaints, of course, but
of a different nature. Philip was con
stantly experimenting. He came near
blowing up the house-once. Yet his
employer praised his cleverness and his
Indefatigable desire for study.
Every Sunday Philip paid a visit to
his home, and then he built air castles
1 1 hi luicuiiuus which oe was
about to make, and begged Uncle Tobe
to advance him money. He might as
well have preached to deaf ears. I was
'" glad when he was gone, for the scenes
that took place between him and Uncle
Tobe had become unbearable.
Sitting on the balcony that lovely Sun
aay arternoon I sighed and gazed
dreamily into the beautiful world be
yond. My Jolly companion I knew was
confined to his dingy quarters in town
What was he doing? Concocting some
healing draught, perhaps. Perhaps
selling a Sunday ration of bonbons to
some lucky youngster! What a trial
we are to Uncle Tobe! Why didn't he
get married and have children of his
own, then he wouldn't have been ex
pected to care for other people's waifs?
I lean across the balcony rail to watch
a newly arrived boat unload its human
freight. And there is Philip!
Lncie J.ooe, l exclaimed, "Phil is
here In the crowd!"
"Of course," he growls, "he is always
to be found where he has no business
to be. Don't beckon to him, I don't
want nlm up nere.
But I had already waved my hand to
Phil, and a moment later he stood -be
fore us.
his eyes were ablaze with joy. How
happy he looked. "Aren't you glad that
I am here?" they said, as they beamed
down upon my upturned face.
Uncle Tobe knit his brows. "What
are you doing here? Why are you not
at work?"
"It's Sunday, uncle, and now I have
really Invented something valuable. My
employer says so, too, and all I need
Is a little money to experiment with and
take out a patent. " Uncle Tobe, you'll
help- me out just this one time, won't
yon?"
"Not If I had a thousand times the
amount you want"
"It isn't a large sum, uncle; try me
Just once," he pleaded. And I I plead
ed with him.
"Leave me In peace," groaned Uncle
Tobe, "I am tired of-it all. You forget
that you are a poor waif who eats the
bread of grace in my house. You'll
either go tha way I point or choose your
own." You are no longer a child!"
'.'You are right," cried Philip, with
cheeks aflame with anger. "I am no
longer a child. It's a shame that ij
should take alms from such a hand as
yours. It has been the last time. I'll
go my way henceforth."
"And starve at it!" mocked Uncle
Tone.
I trembled In every limb. It had nev
er been as bad as this before. "You
cannot mean what you say," I begged,
"Yes, I mean it," declared Philip.
"And so do I," added Uncle Tobe.
For a moment Philip stook stark still
looking at me, then he dashed down the
stairs and aboard the steamer which
was about to leave the wharf.
In the crowd I lost sight of him. The
bell rang out sharply. I was alone and
in despair. Behind me stood Uncle
Tobe.
"Let him go, Vreda; he'll come back,
I'll give him the money after awhile,
but not now. Young folks are too im
patient" "You should have given it to him
now, Uncle," I answered with choking
voice.
Philip had not returned. The sun
had gone out of my life. The rollick
ing echo was dead. The days were
gray and dreary, the nights intermina
ble. We had no friends. There was no
one to come to a house that had no open
door; no hand of welcome!
Uncle Tobe wrestled with figures half
the day, the other half he devoted- to
business errands. In the evening he
read the newspapers. I was like a
deaf mute. I
"Take a good, long walk every day,'
suggested compassionately Mrs. Mit
chell. "You look like a ghost, and are
fading away!"
Alas! there was no one, for whom
would have exerted, myself to keep
fresh and young. The sooner I grew
old and gray the better I would fit into
my surroundings.
For Philip I cried bitter tears. Uncle
Tobe never mentioned his name.
"Poor old man, he must be fond of
you both," Mrs. Mitchell was wont to
say now and then when I went to her
room to talk of Philip. "He is workup
himself to death trying to buy this lit
tle house. My nephew tells me this; he
is employed in the office of his attor
ney." '
I hate the place since Phil is gone,
I cried bitterly. "Everything is gone,
the birds, the flowers and the people.
Only we we are chained to this same
old spot" -
"Wait, Miss Treda; wait, later on,
perhaps "
"That's what Uncle Tobe says, and
then it will be too late."
'Not for you. You are young, Miss
vreda, but your uncle, nobody can
make him see what he ought to do."
We lived our "lonely lives and I had
lost all hope that things i would ever
One morning we found Uncle Tobe
dead in his chair. He looked as if he
had dropped into a peaceful slumber.
Mrs. Mitchell and I seemed turned to
stone when we discovered him. I felt
no sorrow, but I was terribly frighten
ed. When the doctor came he said thtft
he could do nothing.
The funeral was very quiet and un
ostentatious. There were no tears, no
lamentations, no flowers, no friends.
After we had laid him away it occurred
to me that the home In which I had
lived so long would now be closed to me.
But the thought had no terror. It was
a relief, rather, to be free. I knew
nothing about earning my bread. Free
dom was all I craved.
On the day after the burial. Uncle
Tobe's testament was opened. Philip
and I were his heirs. He had bought
the little home and had left us enough
money to live in comfortable circum
stances.
May God bless you," he wrote. "I
had no one on earth but you!" "
I sobbed aloud as I listened. "Oh, if
he had only given Philip the money
when he needed It!" I must go out and
find him.
Mrs. Mitchell soon convinced me of
the futility of such a beginning. Philip
would come home sooner or later.
Poor uncle, your happiness was all
A EOY AND AN ORANGE. '
Lanrence Huitan Tells How Be Suc
cumbed to a Temptation In Youth.
The Boy was taught, from the earlieslj
awakening of his reasoning powers,
that truth was to be told and to be re-i
spected, and that nothing was more,
wicked or more ungentlemanly than a
broken promise. He learned very earlyi
to do as he was told, and not to do, un-.
der any consideration, what he had said;
he would not do. . Upon this last point)
he was strictly conscientious, although
once, literally, he "beat about the bush.'?
His Aunt Margaret, always devoted to
plants and to flowers, had, on the back
stoop of his grandfather's house, a lit
tle grove of orange and lemon trees in
pots. Some one of these was usually
in fruit or in flower, and the fruit to
The Boy was a great temptation. He
was very fond of oranges, and it seem
ed to him that a "home-made", orange,
which. he had never tasted, must be
much better than a grocer's orange; as
home-made cake was certainly prefer
able, .even to the wonderful cakes made
by the professional Mrs;. Milderberger.
He watched these little green oranges
from day to day, as they gradually
grew big and yellow in the sun. He
promised faithfully that he would not
pick any, but he had a notion that some
of them might drop off. He never
6hook the trees, because he said he
would not. But he shook the stoop! And
he hung about the bush, which he was
too honest to beat. One unusually,
tempting orange, which he had Known
from its bud-hood, finally overcame j
him. He did not pick it off, he did not
shake it off; he compromised with his
conscience by lying flat on his back and
biting off a piece of it It was not a
very good action,' nor was it a good
orange, and for that reason, perhaps,
he went home immediately and told on
himself. He told his mother. He did
not tell his Aunt Margaret. '' His moth
er did not seem to be. as much shocked
at his conduct as he was. But, in her
own quaint "way, she gave him to un
derstand that promises were not made
to be cracked any more than they were
made to be broken that he had been
false to himself in heart, if not in deed,
and that he must go back and make it
"all right" with his Aunt Margaret She
did not seem to be very much shocked,
either; he could not tell why. But they j
punished The Boy. They made him eat
the rest of the orange!
He lost all subsequent interest in that
tropical glade, and he has never cared
much for domestic oranges since. St
Nicholas. - -
A MAN WHO CANNOT LOSE.
io socome roor, bat Every
Venture JCnriohes Him.
The history ' of John Lawrence'
Schoolcraft who now, broken-hearted
and aimless In life, plods 'uncomplain
ingly through a weary existence, earn
ing by constant labor a bare mainte
nance, Is a sad one. Several days ago
bonds and securities amounting to
? 60,000 werer.fpuhd in the bottom of a
cast-off trunk in the Saratoga hotel at
Chicago, as was related at the time
in the Courier-Journal. The finding of
such valuables has led to an Investi
gation, and the fact has been establish
ed that the bonds and securities be
long to John Lawrence Schoolcraft
formerly of Kentucky.
Chief of Police Badenoch, of Chi
cago, when he turned over the securi
ties to the owner, instead of making
him happy, brought sorrow, and suffer
ing to him, as the bonds recall a sad
event in his life, which he had striven
hard to wipe out and forget" The day
the bonds were found by a waiter at
the Saratoga hotel, Schoolcraft was
earning his living by addressing let
ters at $1 per thousand. It was quick
ly learned thathe was the owner of
the bonds, for he had the hotel check
for the trunk In which they were
found. ' He also had a receipted bill
for his board at the Saratoga hotel.
He, when asked in regard to securities,
he once possessed, gave the numbers
readily. Chief Badenoch, wanting to
be more sure, however, sent School
craft's picture to his old home in Rich
mond, Va. Letters - were' received im
mediately from . prominent business
men of Richmond saying the picture
was undoubtedly that of Schoolcraft
This dismissed all doubts as to the
man's identity and right of ownership.
These letters also explained why
Schoolcraft, with $60,000 at his com
mand, keeps np the drudgery of ad
dressing envelopes to earn his daily
livelihood. He himself declines to tell
the story of his life, but in answer to '
persistent questioning only says: "rto
BEVIEW OF THE YEAR
CHRONOLOGICAL RECORD
IMPORTANT EVENTS.
OF
Month of May Most Conspicuous by
Its List of Appalling Disasters and
Natural Catastrophes by Land and
Sea Kecortl of Fires and Crimes.
A Backward Glance.
Following is a chronological record of
the most important events of the past
twelve months: May, 1896, will be re
membered as a month of disaster. On
the 3d twelve persons were killed by au
explosion in Cincinnati-; on the 13th, 120
by a cyclone in Texas; on the 17th, 33 by
cyclones in Kentucky and Kansas; oa
the 18th, 44 by a cyclone in Nebraska:
on the 21st, 10 by a cyclone in Oklahoma;
on the 22d, 5 by a cyclone in Missouri;
on the 24th, 40 by a cyclone in Iowa; on
the 23th, 86 by cyclones in Michigan and
Oklahoma and 40 by a cloudburst at Mc
Gregor, Iowa; and on tlie 26th, 12 by a
storm at' Cairo and between 75 and 100
by the fall of a bridge at Victoria, B. C.
Otherwise the record is not out of. the or
dinary. '
Jannary.
1. President names Venezuelan commis
sion. .. .British ship Jeannette Cowan wreck
ed on Vancouver island; 12 men perlsli.
2. Six members of Hibbard family die by
fire at Columbus, Obio. ...Four killed, 32
nurt, by exploding nrewoi-ks at St. L.ouis, Mo.
. . . .lii-itisii force under Dr. Jameson at
leniots seizure of territory in Transvaal.
South Africa, and is cut to pieces aud cap
tured by Boers; British Government dis
avows bis invasion Earthnuake in Per
sia destroys village of Jaujabad aud kills
auo people.
4. Cubans Invest the city of Havana.
United States insists on indemnity from
Turkey foi Diundered missions. .. .Six killed
In a wreck near Chillicotne, Ohio. ...Utah a
State.
5. Carlisle offers $100,000,000 popular loan
....Second Persian earthquake destroys city
or uoi ana Kins. sou people.,: - , -
6. Report that Havana is fa'llen; not con
firmed Four miners killed in a Shamokin,
Pa., shaft. .. .Tremendous prairie fires in
western jvansas. .
9. War fever bleh in England. .. .Trans
vaal demands Independence and indemnity
for Jameson's raid Report of alliance of
liennany, France and Russia against ung-
lana to sustain the Boers.
ter at Victoria, B. C. .. .James Dunham mur
ders six people at San Jose, Cal Cr-ar of
Russia crowned. .. .Cairo, , 111., storm kills
twelve.
27. St. Louis, East St. Louis and several
Missouri towns swept by one of the most de
structive cyclones in the world's history:
1.000 reported dead. -
30. Two thousand Russians killed In a
panic at Moscow. .. .Eighteen people die in
a cycloae at Seneca, Mo.
June. '. ; ' ' .
; 5. Excessive heat In Northwest. '
6. Anarchist bomb In Barcelona kills 7
and wounds 4.
13. Death of ex-Gov. Felch of Michigan.
16. Earthquake In Japan kills thousands
Republican convention In St. Louis....
Steamer Drummond and 240 lives lost off
France.
18. Ten thousand lives lost by earthquake
and tidal wave In Japan: .. .McKinley nom
inated at St. Louis Silver men bolt -the
convention Ten killed by exploding yacht
boiler at Little Falls. N. Y.
22. Five killed by collapsing building at
San Francisco Death of B. H. Bristow,.
ex-Secretary of the Treasury, at New York.
28. One .hundred miners buried at Pitts
ton, Pa Six drown in Shawano Lake,
Wis.
July.
I. Death of Harriet Beecher Stowe.
7. Democratic convention at Chicago....
Yale beaten at Henley.
8. Christian- Endeavorers assemble at
Washington.
10. Chicago convention nominates Bryan.
II. Tweutv-eieht killed in wreck at Lo
gan, Iowa $1,750 hold-up at noou in Chi
cago $300,000 Are at Nashville, Tenn.
1. Five killed In week at Chicago Four
drowned at Lawrence. Kan.
13. Half million lire loss at St. Louis....
Intense heat at Chicago.
14. Hot wave sweeps the country; 91 de
grees at Chicago.
15. Temperature drops 30 degrees at Chi
cago Twtnty-elght drowned at Cleveland,
Ohio.
18. Three lives and half a million in prop-,
erty lost by lire at Chicago car barns....
Malvern, Ark., razed by incendiary fire.
24. Twenty-six drowned by cloudburst in
Colorado Serious floods In Ohio and j
Pennsylvania.
25. Populists at St. Louts nominate Brvan
and Watson.
27. Eleven die In a Pennsylvania cloud
burst, near Pittsburg.
28. Indiana gas belt swept by floods; three
killed at Anderson.
30. Fifty killed la railroad wreck at Jer
sey City, N. J.
HOW TO RELAX.
CATARRH CANNOT BC CURED
Cold weather, whether damp or dry, will With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot
produce, even if we are extremely careful. I J?acS the 8eS' f thf ?isease- Catarrh Is a
' , blood or constitutional disease, and in order to
sudden soreness and stiffness of the limbs cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's
and muscles. This is much owing to sud- I !i.Virrl1 C.H.rJ8iften, '"ternally.and acts dl-
j . , . , e leetly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall 'a
aen change of temperature from a warm Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was
room to out-door air. Cold contracts and ' Prescribed by one of the best physicians in this
warmth eximnds or relaxes, and it is fnr ! i?"mry. Ler!' an4.!s ? regular prescrip-
this reason that when one is' nAM '"l. Y.'SW?Z "'. "K! t5n'cs .
from sudden cold, the application of St.
Jacobs Oil briners immediate find sure ro
ll ef, as it gives warmth and relaxation to ' produces such wonderful effects in enring
the stiffened muscles and mob an.!, tko ! Catarrh. Send for testimonials, free.
sore and cramped limbs. With a vigorous
rubbing with this great remedy for pain
no one need suffer with soreness and stiff,
ness more than a very short time. It is
especially the best remedy for - suffering
where we require a prompt cure, and it is
particularly the best bqpause its cures are
permanent.
12. Peter Honirflflrrl. of Chlcaird. kills his
man on earth has suffered more than wire, rive children and. himself by aspuyxia-
. ' Tinn.
13. Sultan forbids Red Cross Society to en-
Retired from Practice.
The Saunterere's friend, the Doctor,
has retired from practice. A few years
ago he inherited a large fortune, and
since then his time has been so occupied
managing his estates that it is impos
sible for him to continue his profes
sional work. Not only has he taken in
his shingle, but he also discourages the
practice of calling him "doctor"; so that
in his neighborhood the title has been
generally dropped. .
However, every few days the Irish
maid of all work, when she answers the
doorbell, has to explain that though the
proprietor of the establishment is a
duly graduated physician, he is not at
present practicing his profession, and
does not wish to respond to calls for his
medical skill. ..' -..........
It happened -that one day there ap-i
peared at the door a caller of a very
I. Had I thought my past would be
dug up in connection with these miser
able old papers, I would never have
made claim to them. May my secret
be buried with my body."
Ten years ago John Lawrence School
craft was a vigorous, handsome young
man of 29 years. He was an enter-
ter his domains.
14. Furaker chosen Senator from Ohio.
15. Government victorious in Manitoba
elections Severe fighting about Havana
....Allison chosen Senator from Iowa...
Bond syndicate dissolves; popular loan assured.
16. Chicago gets Chicago National Demo
cratic ionyontion.
17. Announcement of Harrlson-Dimmick
prising young business man and was a engagement Campos relieved of Spanish
different kind. He was the agent of
some religious society, anxious rather ' it.
to bleed others than to be bled himse'lf; and often, instead of losing, realized
So, naturally, he was eager to post him- ! handsome profits. Taxes on his real
member of the firm of Campbell &
Schoolcraft, of Richmond, , Va. Tha
firm wag a popular one, and made mon
ey fast Schoolcraft had extensive
business ventures outside of his reg
ular business, and all of them netted
him big gains. Mrs. Schoolcraft waa
a beautiful woman, and was one of
the most attractive and fascinating
leaders of Richmond society. School
craft idolized his wife, and his whole
life seemed to be given up to her pleas
ure and happiness. One day be awoke
to the realization that a younger law
yer, named Stein, who had been one
of his most confident and trusted
friends, had robbed him of his wife's
affections. The affair had gone too
far to admit of any reconciliation, and
with a broken heart he left her. He
made no complaint, nor did he utter a
word of censure, but hastily converted
all his property and business interests
into cash and portable securities and
left his once happy home to become a
wanderer the rest of his life.
Schoolcraft's main purpose . was to
squander all his money and scatter 11
in a way that his wife could never gel
He rushed into big speculations
self as to the church relations of his
proposed subject in order to make the
appeal more "effectual.
His first question began in the usual
way: "Is er Mr. Hammersleigh at
home?"
"Sure an' he is, sorr." .
"Can you tell me whether or not be is
a Christian?"
estate were purposely left unpaid and
the property was sold and resold until
it was clouded by mortgages too far
to admit of any redemption. He went
into big mining schemes and all kinds
of wild speculations, and in almost
every instance would win. Finally he
jWas heard from in Albuquerque, N. M.,
where he had Invested in what he con-
To Bridget this was something of a sidered a losing venture, but to his
poser, but she rose supremely to the oc- ntter disgust he realized from It over
cation with her accustomed answer: j $100,000. Schoolcraft finally succeed-
"Sure, an' he is, yer honor. But he's1 ! .ed in squandering all his money, and
not practicin' it lately." Boston Bud-
get.
he worked for!" was Mrs. Mitchell':
admonishing cry.
"He has taken It from me," I wailed
"he has made me miserable, and him
Philip! he may be lost forever!"
I lived quietly on with Mrs. Mitchell
In the little house by the river. - Prom
day to day I waited. The trees took on
fresh foliage and then came the au
tumn and 4he winter. I waited in si
lence. With the spring hope was re
newed within me.
Suddenly, on the brightest day of all
the year, the bell rang with a clang.
I knew the sound and hastened to the
door. Philip stood before me, but not
the rollicking youth whom I remember
ed. The man in whose arms I lay had a
serious, thoughtful face. I cried aloud.
Be still," he whispered, "I don't want
uncle to know. I don't want to see
him. I want you, only you!"
Uncle!" I repeated. "Don't you
know that he is dead?'
"I am pot sorry," he said bitterly; "he
took from me my youth. Want, care,
anxiety were my companions on the
way. After rnany struggles success
crowned my efforts, and now we need
no longer depend upon him. My fac
tory Is far away. . My invention was
worth its weight, in gold."
His eyes beamed down upon me as
they did on that fateful Sunday. He
took me Into his arms. "I came back
for you, my happiness, my youth
Come, teach me how to laugh again !"
We cried and laughed in one. When
he had told me everything I showed
him Uncle Tobe's last will and testa
ment.
Not a cent of this money will I take,
cried fiercely my lover, the companion
of my childhood. "He has made our
hearts bleed often enough for It!"
We were married and moved to the
large city, where Philip had his fac
tory. The little house we turned over
to Mrs. Mitchell's care. Every summer
we came home, bringing our children
with ns. My husband's heart has soft
ened toward the lonely old man who
had driven him forth Into the world.
and on the anniversary of his death our
little Tobe lays sweet violets on his
grave. Sunday Republic.
The Pennsylvania colony farm for
epileptics has Just been incorporated.
Tbe Colorado, Desert.
The most famous of waste places in
America, the Colorado Desert, is popu
larly regarded as an empire of hopeless
sterility, the silence of which will neve
be broken by the voices of men. Bu
the great desert is the life work of tha
Colorado river. .The scientific men o
the University of Arizona have anal-t
yzed these waters, and found that tha
actual commercial value of the fertiliz
ing matter which would be deposited
upon each acre by irrigation amounts,
in the course of a year, to 59.07.- What,
then, is the potential value of the laud
which this river has created in centu
ries? The products of the region in-
elude oranges and the dates of com
merce. The place , is more like Syri.-i
than any other part of the United
States, and the daring imaginations
may readily conceive that here a new
Damascus will arise, more beautiful
than that of old.
With the occupation of the Colorado
Desert, and of the great peninsula
which adjoins it, a powerful impuls,
will be given to agriculture, mining and
commerce in a vast region now little
peopled. One of the Inevitable conse,
quences will be the rise of San Diego
to thejroportions of a large city prob,
ably the largest In the .southern par
of the coast. "Our Great Pacific Com
monwealth," by William E. Smythe, in
the December -Century.
No Danger for Him. ..
A certain doctor had occasion, when
only a beginner in the medical profes
sion, to attend a trial as a witness.
Counsel, in cross-examining the young
M. D., made-several sarcastic remarks
doubting the ability of so young a man
to understand his business. "Do you
know the symptoms of concussion of
the brain ?'asked the learned counsel.
"I do," replied.the doctarv "Well," con.
tinued the attorney, "suppose my learn
ed friend, Mr. Bagwis. and mvaelf
were to bang our heads together, should
we get concussion of the brain?" "Your
learned friend; Mr. Bagwig, might
said the doctor, quietly.
Didn't Trouble Him.
Once, when both were at an advanced
age, Mr. Gladstone and the late Lady
Stanley, or Aiaeny, were comparing
notes as to the effect of time upon them
Mr. Gladstone complained of Increas
ing deafness, but Lady Stanley found
that she was now often unable to think
of words with which to give shape to
her thoughts. "That," said Mr. Glad- i
stone, in reply, with a humorous chuci !
kle, 'is a feeling that I have never been
conscious of."
landed in Chicago about two weeks ago
with but a few dollars in his pockets
and with a determination to earn a
small pittance wherewith . to sustain
himself. v
When Chief Badenoch took the secu
rities after they were found and show
ed them to Schoolcraft he said they be
longed to him, but they were worth
less. Experts. who have examined them
declare; diey are good, and not only
can their face value be readily col
lected, bur the accrued interest, which
will amount to some thousands of dol
lars. Schoolcraft, although being onlv
command In Cuba. .. .Death of Frank Law-
ler. of Chicago.
21. E'ive firemen killed by falling walls
at St. Louis; three people killed by gas ex
plosion at New Haven, Conn.; two at Red-
key, Ind... .Death of Gen. Tom Ewing at
New York.. ..Red Cross delegation starts
for Turkey.
25. American Liner St. Paul ashore at
Long Branch.
26. Cnbau filibustering steamer Hawkins
smKs; !)( lost.
27. Fifty -four Welsh miners killed by ex
plosion. .. .Feud at Palon, owa, ends in two
deaths
30. Five killed, 20 hurt, by exploding
Doner at Houidaysburg, fa.
31. Salisbury concedes Justice of Monroe
doctrine and declares England's Inability to
suppress Armenian outrages.... Murder of
Pearl Bryan at Fort Thomas, Ky.
, February.
L Senate passes silver bond bill.
2. $2,010,000 fire loss in Philadelphia
Tremendous snowstorm in Northwest.
5. Richard Klatke kills his father, mother,
wife, -three children and himself at Chicago;
despondent Bond bids aggregate $508.-
000,000, at a figure exceeding 110.
6. Three killed in Polish-Hungarian riot
at Whiting, Ind Terrific storm sweeps
Atlantic coast; Morrlstownj N. J., inundated
by bursting dam; Bound Brook wiped out by
flood aud fire; many lives lost, immense
property destroyed. .. .Bridge near Bristol.
Conn., swept away, drowning eleven work
men. .
7. Death of W. H. English at Indianapolis.
8. Publisher Dunlop, of Chicago Dispatch,
sentenced to two years and to pay $2,000
for circulating obscene matter.
9. Ten sailors drown off Newburyport,
Mass.
14. Grant Atterbury lynched at Sullivan,
17. -Twenty die In a factory fire at Trov.
18. Sixty miners killed at Newcastle,
Colo. ...Rain of mud in Chicago
19 Bill Nye stricken bv naralvsls. ...Mer.
cury below zero all day at Chicago; three
uie oi exposure uiotniug cutters at Chi
cago strike. .. .Dynamite at Johannesburg,
South Atrica, kills scores; fire at a masked
ball In Lisbon. Portugal, kills fifty attend
ants. 21. Fitzsimnions whips Maher In 1 minute
35 seconds Commander and Mrs. Balling
ton Booth removed from command of Salva
tion Army in America.
22. Death of "Bill" Nye.
23. Ballington Booth revolts against his
retirement m salvation Army. .. .seven peo
ple uie in a Baltimore nre.
27. New York Yacht Club expels Lord
Dunraven.
( 28. Senate passes resolution to recognize
LUUU
0t 1 ftftfl ftflft flpa In TT ullfo. T;,. t-
Barcelona, Spam, upon receipt of" news of
action oi congress; American- cousulate at
tacked. March. '
1. Great floods In New Eneland.
3. Rome in a rage because of slaughter of
o.uuu nanan soiuiers in Dattie in Abyssinia.
( 4. Renewed anti-American demonstration
, in Madrid. .. .All Italy In an uproar over
Auyssiniau ueieat. .. .$2uu,uuu nre at Johns
town, fa.
14. Albert Wallace hanged at Pekln, HI,
16., Frankfort. Ky., under martial law.
18. Five killed by powder explosion at
'xnirteen miners killed at Dubois, Pa.,
Anru it.
4. Failure of Moore. Bros., Chicago, Dia
mond Match brokers, for, $4,000,000 Phe
nomenal heat In Western. Central and Mid
dle Northern States.
5, 6. 7. Continuance of killing heat....
Conference of National Democratic party at
Indianapolis. " ;
9. Furious heat increases: 72 deaths from
sunstroke in New York and Brooklyn: 19 at
Chicago; similar reports from all quarters. .. .
even killed ny trolley accident at Colum
bia, Pa.
10. One hundred and eisrhtv neonle die of
heat In New York and Brooklyn; 60 at Chi
cago; 12 at St. Louis.
i. Cool wave. .. -Thirty die in a Pennsyl
vania cloudburst. .. .Seven killed by boiler
explosion near Alliance, Ohio.
16. Undertakers and cemeteries In New
York overwhelmed with business: hundreds
of -funerals postponed; heat the cause.
17. Death of Abigail Dodge (Gall Hamil
ton) at Hamilton, Mass.
l. Death of Nicholas Croueh. author of
"Kathleen Mavourneen."
25. Whitney-Vanderbllt wedding On
tonagon, Mich., destroyed by fire. .'. .Nation
al Democratic State Convention of Illinois
nominates John C Black for Governor,
September.
1. Twelve killed by Dowder-house exnloslon
at San Francisco.
8. Gold Democrats at Indlananolls. nomin
ate Palmer aud Buckner Slight frost in
Northwest.
6. Eleven firemen killed at Rentnn Rsr-
bor, Mich. .. .Two men lynched at Glencoe,
Minn.
8. Six of a coachine narty killed near
Warsaw, Ind Family of four killed at
crossing at Oshkosh, Wis.
10. Cyclone at Paris Terrlfle storm on
Atlantic coast.
19. Tremendous storm In the East....
British troops capture Dougola and rout
dervishes In Egypt Riot in Leadvllle;
four killed.
-3. Leadvllle under martial law.
27. Mount Holvoke College burns at South
Had ley, Mass.
. Many Southern cities wrecked bv
storm; great life and property loss In Flor-
lua, Georgia ana Pennsylvania.
October.
1. 8. Iowa semi-centennial Inbllee.
, 8. Death of Du Maurler, the novelist.
. Chicago Day celebration.
10. Two bauk robbers killed at Sher-
nourne, Minn.
14. Meeker. Col., citizens kill three hnnV
robbers, and hold a celebration over It.
13. Flight of W. T. Rambusch. from Ju
neau, Wis., after embezzling over S200.06O
during long term of years.
io. virsi snow in Northern Wisconsin -17.
First snow in Chicago S150.000 "fire
at Holland, Mich.
18. Death of Henry E.. Abbey, theatrical
manager, at New York.
25. Eight killed, 20 hurt. In wreck at St.
Louis.... Six drown while boating at Den
ver. .
26 $1,200,000 elevator fire at Chicago.
28, 29. Mercury at Chicago reaches 78 de
grees Cyclones In the South and Oklahoma.
November.
3. McKinley elected- President.
5. Storm of sleet and snow In North mat
and Middle States.
7. Schooner Waukesha and six men lot
off Muskegon, Mich.
16. Mercury registered 70 degrees at Chi
cago.
19. Death of Mrs. Slddons at Paris.
21. Steamer San Benito and five men lnat
off Callforn'a coast. . . .Death of Inventor
Ferris of wheel fame.
23. Death of Camnanlnl. the tenor at
Parma, Italy. .. .Mabley & Co., Detroit, fall.
o. worst ixivcuiuer uuzzara ever known j
11 .uiiunL'9L, IUHU8 Ullll Ht'd II f 1 1 nilll-ll fitwlr
Ktueu. .. .Apparently authentic renort of
Weyler's rout in Cuba, with loss of 3,000
men.
27, 2S, 29. 30. Coutlnued severe pold in
west auu .oria.
December.
2. 3. 4. Alarming Ice gorge in Chlnium
Valley, Wisconsin.
6. Strong indications that Cuban lnmt..
gents will be successful; Weyler falls In his
camnaiKn in x-iuur uei xtio. . . . rt'ive kHiAri in
collision at Waelder, Texas.
7. Congress In session. .. .Renorted
of Maceo, the Cuban Insurgent general
f T X-.-, 1. 1. r , , ,
sr. liw v -iui "i uriumu Ay iu.v u steamer
Don't Do It! '
It is stated that when Boadicea led
her army to battle she wore a man's
armor, but was always careful to leave
her golden hair floating over the steel
links that all men might know that she
was not a only warrior but a woman.
Queen Elizabeth the most shrewd
and prudent sovereign of her day, when
she held Important councils with am
bassadors from other .countries, not
only, we are told, brought all her learn
ing and sagacity to bear against them,
but "tricked herself In her most splen
did apparel and rarest Jewels, using
all little female arts to win them to her
service."
Victoria has laid deep the foundation
of her empire over her subjects In their
affections. It Is not the hereditary
queen, that they reverence so much as
the modest young girl, the faithful
wife, the good, kindly woman on the
throne.
The first lady In our own land has
endeared herself to the nation not as a
politician or social leader, but as a most
gracious gentlewoman.
It is a singular fact that no woman
has ever long Influenced the world as
ruler, writer, or even reformer who
threw aside her feminine weapons.
The charm of a womanly woman Is a
real power. Her gentleness, her deli
cacy, her modesty are real forces. The
girl who dresses like a man, who swag
gers, who talks loudly, discusses risque
books and smokes cigarettes is like a
soldier who has thrown away his weap
ons before he goes into battle.
Her bicycle, for example, may be a
good, useful thing, but she will not
Induce the public to approve of bicycles
for women by appearing on it as an
offensive caricature of a man." She will
not win the world" to her cause, how
ever Just, by disgusting it with herself.
Why should any of our girls throw
away the weapons which God has given
them? Youth's Companion.
We don't see anything so sad In fall
ing leaves. Leaves never fall until
they are dead, but some people fall
while they are still alive.
combined with the best blood purifiers, acting
directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect
combination of the two ingredients is what
F. J.' CHENEY A '0 . Prnm Tnt.iln n
Sold by druggistR, price 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Gladness Comes
Xith a better understanding of the
transient nature of the many phys
ical ills, which vanish before proper ef
forts gentle efforts pleasant efforts
rightly directed. There is comfort in
the knowledge, that 60 many forms of
sickness are not due to any actual dis
ease, but simply to a constipated condi
tion of the system, which the pleasant
family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt
ly removes. That is why it is the only
remedy with mill ions of families, and is
everywhere esteemed so highly by all
who value good health.. Its beneficial
effects are due to the fact, that it is the
one remedy which promotes internal
cleanliness without debilitating the
organs on which it acts. It is therefore
all important, in order to get its bene
ficial effects, to note when you pur-."
chase, that you have the genuine arti
cle, which is manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co. only and sold by
all reputable druggists.
If in the enjoyment of good health,
and the system is regular, laxatives or
other remedies are then not needed. If
afflicted with any actual disease, one
may be commended to the most skillful
physicians, but if in need of a laxative,
one should have the best, and with the
well-informed everywhere, Syrup of
Figs stands highest and is most largely
J8ed and gives most general satisfaction.
FOR PEOFLE THAT ARE SICK or
"Just Don't Feel Wall."
KAlYER PILLS
art the On Thine to use.
Only One for a Dose.
8old by Drueriita at 2So. box
Samples nailed free. Addreaa
Dr. Bosanko Med. Co. Phils. Pa.
QPIUMDRUNKENNESS
j - - ' - Jre iv to V I'uTa. fto Pay till
OuNd. OR. J.L. STEPHENS, LEBANON, fllO.
si
TvEST with a big B. Black-well's Genuine
Durham Is in a das by itself. You will find one
' coupon Inside each two ounce bag, and two opu
pons inside each four ounce bag of
Blackwell's
Genuine Durh
Smoking Tobacco
Buy a bag of this celebrated tobacco and read the sonpon
which gi -'ea a listof valuable presents and how to get them.
,5V. J
Bull fc?L ,.'i
am E . "
39 years Of age, ha"S aged raprdlv, and' y explosion... .Death of Thomas Hughes, Sailer with 275 people, off Spain
the sad expression on his face portrays
a blighted life. -
; Schoolcraft was born in Kentucky,
and lived in the State prior to his resi
dence . in . Richmond, Va. Louisville
Courier-Journal.
Mind and Health.
The mental condition Das far more
Influence upon the bodily health than
Is 'generally supposed. It is no doubt
true that ailments of the body cause
depressing and morbid conditions ol
the mind, but it is no less true thai
sorrowful and disagreeable emotion,
produce disease In persons who, unin
fluenced by them, would be in sound
health; or. If disease is not produced,
the functions are disordered.
Agreeable emotions set in motion
nervous currents which stimulate
blood, brain, and every part of the sys
tem Into healthful activity; while
grief, disappointment of feeling, and
brooding over present sorrows or past
mistakes depress all the vital forces.
To be physically well one must, in gen
eral, be happy. The reverse is not al
ways true; one may be happy and
cheerful, and yet be a constant sufferer
in body. ' -." ' x
MIND READING.
You can read a happy mind in a happy coun
tenance without much penetration. That is
we bin i oi countenance tnat tne quondam bil
ious sufferer ordyspeptic relieved by Hos tetter's
btomach Bitters wears. You will meet many
sucn- "he great stomachic and alterative also
fiu.maiippiUss ior tne malarious, the rheu
matic, the weak and those troubled with inac
viuu me &iuiieys ana Diauaer.
. .Success In Life.
If you wish success in life make per
severance your bosom friend, experi
ence your wise counsellor, caution your
elder brother, and hop your guardian
genius. "
I know that my life was saved by Piso's
Cure for Consumption. John A. Miller.
Au Sable, Michigan, April 21, 1895.
Honey in Batter.
Parisian restaurant-keepers mix 'a
little honey with their butter. This
gives It an agreeable taste and flavor
and makes the Inferior butter more
palatable. - .
When a boy ses a siga, "Taka one."
he takes It
Go to ; any grocer and
ask for Schilling's Best tea:
Japan, English Breakfast
Oolong, Ceylon, or the
Blend. : ; :;
He .will pay you your
money back if you r don't
like it:
& Schilling & Company
few FnuMuc
X
l author, at London Riot at Holland,
Mich., ov-.r Horsewhipping of a sensational
newspaper correspondent.
28. 1400,000 fire at Louisville, Ky. ...Illi
nois Supreme Court confirms Imprisonment
sentence of Bankers Meadowcroft.
29. Unknown man kills Alvln M Stone
and wife, and wounds three daughters, near
Akron, Ohio; cause unknown. .. .Four die by
flre in New York.
31 Storms In the Northwest. .. .Report of
execution by garrote of five Cubans at Ha
vana. .. .upeuing oi late navigation.
April.
1. Ten die by fire In a Brooklyn tenement
....Trains on B. & O. and Frisco roads held
up.. ..Cubans capture Santa Clara.
6. Wedding of Gen. Harrison and Mrs.
Dlmmick.
7. Chicago elections retire 21 boodle alder
men. - 10. S. B. Minchell kills W. B. O. Sands,
his own wife and three children, and blm
self at Pentwater, Mich.
13. Six killed by falling trestle at Bed
ford, Ind President Cleveland appoints
Fltzhugh Lee Consul General to Cuba.
Greater New York bill vetoed. .. .Democrats
observe Jefferson Day.
14. J. W Lehman, of Chicago, kills him
self and three children S1,000,000 flre at
New York $250,000 fire at Fairbury, 111
15. First fatal sunstroke of the vear at
Philadelphia. .. .Phenomenal "hot wave pre
vails. 10. Base-ball season' opens.".. .Tempera
ture reached 88 degrees at. Chicago, breaking
all records for April.
10. Nine sailors drown off Long stand
21 Barou Hlrsch, millionaire Jewish phil
anthropist, dies at Komorn, Germany
Leon Say. distinguished French political
economist, dies at Paris.
" .15: At Rockvine, Ind.,- Albert Egbert kills
five people without cause, and commits sni.
cide: his sk-k sister dies from shock. .
Tl.OOO.OOO Incendiary lire loss at Cripple
urecK, tjufo. .. . miifu unu twenty hurt
In Kansas, and three killed In Virginia, by
cyclones. . ,. .
27. Fatal storms In South Dakota Boers
pass sentence of death upon leaders of the
Transvaal Insnrrection; President Krueger
commutes sentence.
29. Second fire at Cripple Creek, Colo.,
does Sl.500.000 damage aud wipes out the
town.
SO. Illinois Republican convention declares
for McKinley,
May,
3. Fearful loss of life by explosion of a
gas generator at Cincinnati; nearly fifty.
uurt.
6. Street car strike In Milwaukee.
6. Cleveland's sweeping civil service order
protects 30.000 ofiice-holders. "
8. Many points record temperature of 90
degrf-es.
8. IAnse, Mich., has $750,000 flre. .. .Ash
land, Wis., loses half a million by fire....
Continued excessive heat.
11. Eljven killed by explosion of boiler of
rafting steamer Harry Brown, at Vlc-ksburg.
Miss.
14. ' Hold bank robbery at. Buffalo, N. Y. . . .
Big windstorm at Chicago Methodists re
tire Bishops Foster and Bowman.
15. Eighty killed by cyclone at Sherman,
Texas.
17. .Groat los of life and property by cy
clones In Kansns. .. .Five sailors drown off
Grosse Point, III Blue Island, 111., fire
swept. .. .MOO.000 flre at Atlanta. Ga.
18 Xebriska cyclone kills 44.
21 Oklahoma cyclone kills ten.
22. Missouri cyclone kills five.
24 Four of Otto Maiiu's family die bv
gasoline nre at ;iiKrag, .cyclone In Polk
11. Collapsed building at Jerea. Sim In
kills 100 Mine disaster at Hedges Cal
kills eight.
16. Tremendous snowstorm at New York
City, accompanied by extreme cold; three
people perish. .. .Chicago has mild tempera
ture; no snow, and sunny skies Wide
spread agitation looking toward aid of Cu
ban Insurgents.
17. England shaken by an earthnimL-o
$500,000 flre at Pittsburg Death of Herr
mann, tne magician.
21. National Bank of Illinois at Chlcairo
closes.
22. Three banks dragzed down hv minni..
National Two St. Paul banks fail Cash
wheat at Chicago reaches after three
mouths of almost nnlnterriinted iiivnnu
aud market continues strong. '
Odds and Ends.
The sin of a moment- may blight'the
whole life. .
The first English work on anatomy
was by Thomas Vicary, in 1548.
We say that the good die young. As
a matter of fact, it is the young that
die good. Boston Transcript
Some young men would get along bet
ter if they had less point to their shoes
and more to their conversation.
Springaeld, 111., Register.
Dar's so many hills on de road ter
heaven dat some folks misses de place
entirely by buildin' a railroad 'round
'em. Atlanta Constitution.
People expect too much credit for be
having themselves properly, when iu
fact it is really a debt they owe to so
ciety. Milwaukee Journal.
It is said by statistical authorities that
in the brewing-and malting business in
this country nearly 100,000 tons of
sugar are annually employed.
Before 1850, Russia, Belgium and
Holland "produced no beet sugar; now
these countries are important factors in
the sugar markets of the world. .
The first great work on ethnology
was Balbi's "Ethnographic Alias," pub
lished in 1820, which laid down the
general principles of the science.
In the last twenty years the Southern
States have expended $SO,000,000 for
negro schools.. Nearly every dollar of
this vast sum was furnished by the
white people.
Arizona convicts have been leased for
ten years at 70 cents a day, their labor
to be utilized in constructing an irrigat
. in-r canal that will make productive
i 100.000 acres of arable land.
I " At least two railroad companies, one
i operating iu the far West and one in
Cheapest Power
Rebuilt Gas and"
Gas&Iine Engines.
IS GUARANTEED ORDER..
-....FOR SALE 'CIIEA?
i-i H. P. Hercules, Gas or Gasoline.
1-2 H. P. Hercules, Gas or Gasoline. ,
i-2 H. P. Regan, Gas or! Gasoline!' " ..
1-3 H. P. Oriental; rGas' or TSasoline. '
1-4 H. P. Otto, Gas or Gasoline. . .
1-4 H. P. Pacific, Gas or Gasoline.
i-6 H. P. Hercules; Cas or Gasoline,
i-io H. P. Hercules, Gas of Gasoline.
State Your Wants and Write for Prices......::
405-7 Sansome Street
San Francisco, Cal...
Hercules Gas
....Engine Works
'-.'4
Gas. Gasoline and Oil Engines, 1 to 200 H. F.
His LiD Gone.
the South, are-about starting model
and .inspei f'nnntieK. Iowa., kills a score of farms, with a view to demonstrating
people and does tremendous damaee: Chi-"i .u v,:i:n 4J
cngo and su!i-irl.s aio suffer. - ! ' c iu.u"t..yi;.iB -"' U1"SU
ar. -over loo i.iiKd by . ycione in Michigan wmrn tneir lines run, ana tuns attract-
, . Forty-dii at iicUreuor. Iowa. In a cloud- i..,. .ti. -.v, i 4.. ...111 - i.
burst - - I onucia, nuv, ju lulu, , mu Ulttlkt;
2t. OmHbfjadred killed In street-cor dlsas-) Business ior me rauroaos,
Be Helpful.
Help ever the helpless, b it a drown
ing fly or a brother floundering through
the difficulties of life's first tasks. It
needs not vastness of resource, or ex-
M.M. Nicholson. ho lives at"tfae . . ul . """"lr Buca near
corner of Curran and Anderson Sts., At- : uelp as ID? true-neartea can render. I
lanta. Ga.. had a cancer for wars. '. see you the friend , of the. friendless,
It first appeared on his lip and reeem- ta ungrateful, and ungracious; th -bled
a fever blister, but spread rapidly, , raiser of the fallen, though 'perchance,
and soon began to destroy the flesh.' only perversely to fall again; the cheer
His father and uncle had died from cr of the cheerless, though it may be
C-n?er:.?ndh! sought the best medical. they droop agnln when y0ur brl h
SSffSSSTS rl ' Pence has pncd a wayJ
operations were performed but the " can- '
cer always returned. This continued
for years until the partition in his nose
3
WHEAT.
Make money by suc
cessful speculation, in
Chicago. We buv and
- , - . . m m b m m m II ucnt 1 1 : t; U on.
anu niS entire HP- mRi-triiis. Fnrlnno!: hAve htwn rnut An .email
per lip were eaten beginning by trading in futures. Write for
imre All traot. lull
fuil particulars. Hest of re.erence given. Sev-
oniy relief.
"Some one re
commended S.S.S."
he says, "and
a few bottles afford
ed some relief; thus
encouraged I con-
tinned it, and
it was not long be
fore the progress of
the disease seem
ed checked. I persevered N in its
nse. and remarkable as it may seem. I
am completely cured, and feel like I
have new life. S.S.S. is the most re
markable remedy in the world, and
everyone will agree that the care was a
wonderful one."
A Real Blood Remedy.
Cancer is in the blood and it is folly
to expect an operation to enre it, S.S.S.
guaranteed purely vegetable) is a real
remedy for every disease of the blood.
Boots mailed
free; ' address
Swift Specific
Co., Atlanta,
ment having proved Trade, and a thorough knowledge of the busi
fatile, he looked ness. Downing, Hopkins & Co., Chicago Board
npon death as the nek RBnh 6' PorUand, Oregon,
ins
EL
We pay
freight.
Illustrated
Catalogue
rree.
Potalamm Incubator Co.
EVERY HEN
I Hatched In Pftnlnma
Incubators lias start
ed right, and Is better
irepreu u K'v prout
able retttt n because these
m ac nines exclusively em
body the features which pro
dace the greatest number
of rigorous Chickens.
TncnUatnrs from $10 ujx
3 Ptaroms, Cal.
FRAZER AXLE
BEST IN THE WORLD. CREASE
Ita wearing quail tie are unsurpassed, actually
outlasting two boxes of anr other brand. Frea
from Animal Oils. OUT TH GKvuiNK,
FOR BALE BY-OREGON AND
DfWASHUIOTON MECHANT9m
and Dealers generally.
DATA0 For tracing and locating Gold or Silver
tl 1 1 1 lil orB. I' or bidden treasures. M. D. FO W
11VJU ler. Box i)7 Souttaington. Conn.
SURE CURE for PILES
PR. BQ-SAN-KO'S PILE REMEDY. 8P
mmm m mu, wjft, jMKuunaiv ran ra
RCPTURK and PILES cured: no pay ontil
cured : send for book. Db8. m ANfwiEi.n A
Pobtkrfield, 838 Market St., San Francisco.
I fTcuHts mm Aiiass Tails. p
I I Bert Uouga Brrun.Ta.te Good. Cm 1 I .....
- I 1 to time. 8oid by dnurglats. II f.
C ;:ri:.rrj.!
H. N, U. No. B83. 8. F. N, V, 760