The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898, January 06, 1888, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    s
V
i
MR. AND MrtS. BOWSER.
A bom what F.sasiirrstint; fcsusrlsaee
; With Thro Un of I'nlntare.
: Four werks ago Mr. Bowser began
to behAro hi a strnuga manner. I no
ticed him looking at the ontsnle of tho
house from the front and buck, ac
companied by strange, men, and from
my open window I heard tlnem talking
about "modern colors," "meadow
green" and other mysterious things.
It was not until I found a board in the
back yard with half a dozen colors of
fresh aint on it that I suspected any
thing. Then I asked Mr, Bowaert
i "You can't be thinking of having
any painting done around here this
spring?"
! "I think the cornice ought to be
touched up a little."
I "But we had every thing painted a
year ago, and you said it would stand
.for ten years." .
i "If I said so it will, but the style of
color has changed this year, and I
guess I'll have a man for two or
three days."
' "And you'll have us all In a muss
for the next month. Mr. Bowser, can't
von let this house alone for a day or
twoP"
He ave me a look of deepest re
proach and turn away. I had begun
to feel sorry for my expression when a
wagon load of poles drove Into the al
ley. It had not yet unloaded when art
another wagon loaded with paint-bedaubed
ladders diwe up. Then came
a dray on which there were kegs and
buckets and cans and brushes, and I
was compelled to realize that Mr. Bow
ser was going to paint. The cook had
also seen the outfit, and she presently
came in to me and asked:
"Are yon goin0 to have the painters
around here?
"les, Hannah, Mr. Bowser pro
poses to touch up tho cornice a little.
"And he may touch up an intent
gence office while he is about it, for I
won t stars We ve been papering.
cleaning, putting down carpets, sod
ding the back yard, oiling the wood
work and doing something or other for
the last six months, and I m tired out.
It is now thirty-one seconds to five
o'clock. At sharp five 1 leave the
house!"
She was as good as her word, and
when I told Mr. Bowser of her goiug.
and related the cause, he indignantly
replied:
"Mow I'll paint the barn and fence
to boot see if I don't! I'll show that
girl that she can't run this family while
our name continues to be Bowser.
Next morning the painters went to
work. That is, they didn't exactly go
to work. They came and sat around in
the burn and smoked, and some of 'em
feebly stirred away at the paint-pots,
and some more of 'em looked at the
house and inquired of each other when
Mr." Bowser got out of the lunatic asy
lum. Next day the force of painters
was increased by three, and they got
two ladders up, pounded some putty
into three or four nail holes and stirred
up seven or eight colors of paint
Along towards supper time one of the
crowd toiled up one of the ladders in a
weary, despondent way, jabbed at one
tf the brackets with a brushful of paint,
aud the others stood off to examine the
effect and give their criticisms. It
seemed to be a very delicate operation.
Some of them kept walking backwards
to get a better squint until they walked
out of sight, and others had to sit down
on the grass and light their pipes and
rest their eyes by looking at the hired
girl next door.
On the third day Mr. Bowser re
mained at home, and the men dug
holes all around the house to set their
poles got up a scaffold to work on and
almost finished painting one bracket.
They might hare wholly finished it if
they had agreed on colors. Some of
'em wanted the bracket of a lilac
color, with the background a dull
drab, and others stuck for something
more lively or more aesthetic. Mr.
Bowser said he would consult the old
masters, and seven drops of rain de
scended from the heavens just in time
to let the men off at four o'clock.
When they had gone I found seven
windows smeared with paint, a pane of
g'ass broken and the knobs of six
doors "touched up" in the latest Paris
style.
The painters are with fts yet. Not
those painters, but some others. The
first gang lasted two days. Then Mr.
Bowser suddenly asked the man who
seemed to be the foreman at least he
loafed away the most time what they
were doing to earn their money.
"This isu't a job to be rushed!"
calmly replied the man. "If we should
get one of these seventeen delicate col
"mai tTf place of another your house
would be ruined."
Mr. Bowser reduced the delicate
colors to fourteen, and hired a new
gang. In the course of a week this
new lot managed to plant forty-eight
big daubs on the penciled brick work,
break three windows, daub over three
oiled doors and ruin half our clothes,
and Mr. Bowser advised them to turn
to landscape work. The third gang is
still with us. All the scaffolding has
finally been put in place, and the lad
ders leaned up against the house, and
all the neighborhood covered with
paint-pots and brushes. Wlien the
brackets had been finished Mr. Bowser
concluded that the window casings
ought to be touched up to correspond.
Then it was the hoods and porches and
steps. Next week it will be the fences
and the barn. Seven different ladies
have walked up the freshly-painted
front steps to call on me, but walked
down again without ringing the bell.
Twenty odd tramjw have walked the
length of the freshly-painted veranda
to ask for a bite to eat, but went ofl
Iiuiijtv and tired. Three of my dresses
art r"inol. our washings are paint
siot ted, and the sidewalks, fences and
shade trees in our neighborhood have
been spattered and speckled until
strangers stop and gaze in astonish
ment. I was intending to say to Mr
Bowser last night that I wouldn't
stand it another day, but before 1 had a
chance to he went ohI for a smoke. In
-Ins absent-mindedness he walked up
the front steps and sat down to muse
in the frloaminjr. I think he roused
for half an hour, at the end of which
44me he came rushing in. Ee was cov
ered with green and lead color and
Queen Ann and purple paints, and. as
i turned himself ar:und for me to soe
lie v .-ived his arms and shouted:
"Woman, don't vou laugh at me!
You dragged me into this, and If I
don't get even with you my name isn't
. Bowser! Detroit Free Press.
FJTH AND POINT.
Men with clean shirts on never en
gage in free fights.
To find out how old a lady is
Ask some other lady. Danville Breeze.
A tussle with a boarding-house
(Steak is now called a "bull fight."
PITIFUL SUICIDE.
A Terrible Trst-edy Which Furnishes Con-
IderabU rood fur Itsasrtlon.
If the literature of suiclds were com
pletely written oue of Its most singu
lar feature would be the causes which
induce the voluntary shuffiing-off of
this mortal coii. Suicide knows no
law. The only peculiarity which
always characterises it is that year by
year six times as many men commit
suicide as women, which would indi
cate either that they have six times as
much trouble as the women or that
they have onty one-sixth the capacity
for bearing it. There is no other fixed
rule governing self-slaughter. While
the yearly record Includes many per
sons between twenty and forty, a con
siderable number of very young chil
dren and of very jiged people take
themselves out of the world. The
methods of sett-murder include the
oddest schemes that insane ingenuity
can suggest. The causes are just as
unique. While the larger number may
be traced to settled melancholy, verg
ing on insanity, ill-health, business
losses, disappointed lovo and liquor.
there are numerous others, ranging
from the most grotesque, like that of
the woman w ho shot herself the other
d:ry because her husband would not re
fuse a political candidacy, to the most
pitiful, like that of Charles Seidhorf
and his wife, who poisoned themselves
in New York City recently.
Charles Seidhorf was a German.
ninety-one years of aire. His wife was
ninety-three. The husband was finely
educated and was a man of more than
ordinary ability. He had taught
school with success. He had trans
lated several technical works and had
been a contributor to pnpers and peri
odicals on scientific subjects, lie wa
an excellent chemist, and his scientific
attainments were such that he had
made some useful inventions. Like
many men. of this stamp, however, he
had little head for business. His vent
ures were not successful. He was con
stantly harassed for money. His wife
was feeble and sicklv and could not
help him. Designing individuals im
jwsod upon him. .Those who owed
him would not pay him. His life was
one long, bitter, hopeless struggle
with an adverse destinv in the midst of
people who were tilt-owing away
money on needles luxuries. The
money squandered on a single swell
reception might have kept this aged
couple in comfort for the remainder of
their days. Thus handicapped in
every direction, he fought the battle of
life even iu extreme old age until at
last 'he only way out appeared to be
the poor-house. They were alone.
helpless, friendless, hopeless, old and
poverty-stricken. hen the authort
ties came to remove them to the poor-
house he besjred for a days delay, that
he might prepare himself for the jour
ney. It was a long one. When they
came lor linn again he was dead, ltis
old and feeble wife, who could not live
without him. lay dead by his side.
Few as the days were that were left
them they could not endure the shame
of the poor-house. All else laat life
had in the way of suffering they had
endured. Rather than submit to this
last disgrace they solved the problem
themselves bv severing the frail ten
ure, en dim? the hop-less struggle and
passing into the final rest.
It is all well enough for people who
have n troubles to theorize upon the
criminality of suicide, but only those
who are driven to the wall like these
two and who can look at life from the
same black, hopeless poiut ol view are
capable of judging the real weight of
the burden and the real weakness of
the shoulders that carry it. So far as
the actors in the tragedy are concerned
therefore, there is no call for pity, for
they are released from all further pain
and distress. But is it not pitiful that
such a tragedy should occur at all? Is
there not something radically wrong in
our social system when two people
with but a very brief time to live at
best can not muter courage to wai
until the natural release? Have we
nothing better to offer people cf this
class than the itootvliouseP The vere
not of the kind that willingly become
paupers. The- felt its shame too keen
ly to live. Is it not possible among all
our charities to devise a home lor per
son s of this kind where they could liv
with no loss of self-respect, and when
they would not le made to feel that
they are paupers? Certainly there
should be. for the suicide of Charles
Seidhorf and his wife is a public re
proach. Chvago Tttbune.
I'llnec, a tine Jersey bull belonging
to a joint stock company, created
sensation one day last week at Tall.-v
hassee by deliberately killing a cow. It
is said that he lifted her on his horns.
threw her into the air, and killed her
almost instantly.
Even to people who have made
. I m a ....
tneir iortunes, or have attained so
much property that they are quite easy
as to the future, the dead town has no
attractions. The evidence of deca
dence can never be attractive.-
from t ranee comes the anuoun
ment of a newly-invented rotary print
ing machine, which is said to print,
superpose and fold publications from
two rolls of paper, if so desired. Suit
able devices are provided there are
four cutting and folding cylinders, two
of which cut and fold the sheets from
one roll, while the other two operate
upon the remaining one. Each of the
two pairs of cylinders are, however,
capable independently of cutting and
folding the sheets t'ublie Opinion,
The Roman Catholic authorities of
Boston, are planning to establish one
great common eemetery for all the
cities in adjacent parts of the State, to
which the railroads are expected to run
special funeral trains daily, the cars
going directly into the grounds and all
expense of carriages being done away
with, the undertaker carrying the body
to the station, the city and the railroad
landing it at the grave. The Boston
& Lowell railroad is said to be ready to
run funeral trains at reduced rates if
such a cemetery is established. In Mex
ico they have special funeral cars over
the horse-car routes to the cemeteries.
The history of the toothpick in this
country has a few curious and interest
ing features. Not many j-eurs ago
man in South America, whose wife was
ki the United States, whittled out a few
wooden toothpic's and sent them to her.
in some way not now known the pro
prietor of a hotel obtained some of
them and, learning who made them, he
applied for a supply. This led to a large
sale of the whittled picks and finally to
the establishment of an agency for their
sale in this country. The toothpick
manemigrated North and inveuted ma
chinery by which he turned out the first
year sixteen million two hundred and
fifty thousand picks, which has since in
creased to above that number per
montfj. . . .
AMONG THE T'UINKITS.
Tha lttght of MTmiieo Among tho Aba
rlittuiU Tribes of Alaska.
Every time :i i uu wa.it to under
take a business transaction hn takes
his wift along with him to ratify or
Veto the barg.iin, an I should sho bo
absent at the time she may nfierward
put in an appearance and upset tho
whole affair, runniest of all, the same
equivalent transactions of the women
are not subject to tho nam superrls-
ng p wer of the men, wh havo notli
ng to say rjgaiillng the bargains of
heir wives and daughters, except to
toot the bill, if any o m-iensatioit Is
promised by the squaws that tho men
are expected to fill, m work, utensils
they can make, or even money, where
they ran get it from whi.e m -n and
understand its value. I have known
sovorul instances where the mon have
closed certain bargains, only to Hud
hem. oponol again when the
absent wife put in an appearance. As
white men are not very liable, to undo
a bargain which they think Is to their
advantage, they seldom acq ilcsee In
tho demand of tho women in canceling
the contract, and some of tho worst
versonal misunders'.amliugs between
tho two raoea havo occurred on this
account. I, of course, do not know how
the Tlinkit man fared aftor lie got
home from such a bargain; but I think
we evi all Imarlne pretty well.
Nothing was more exaspera ing to me,
at times, upon my expodi.ions into
Alaska iu 18S3 and 186 when I
came across somo man from whom I
wanted to buy some trilling article or
to employ for a short time than to
have to start out for the Indian vil
lage, probably a milo or two distant,
to consult his wife about it, or to
bring her to mo to talk the matter
ever.
Then tho succession to the chieftain
ship of tho tribe is a most singular
one, based also on "woman's rights."
or something akin to It. Neither the
eldest son of tho King and CJ icen nor
tho chief and his wife nor, in fac',
any of the sons and daughters sue-
coed their father to the head of the
tribe when lie dhs. but sum one of
the nearest male relatives of the
Queen is made chief when her hus
band dies. It is easy to sie that this
cm Ions and ' roundabout method of
handing down the scepter may trans
fer the crown to anybody lu the trllie,
and that there can le no such tiling
ns a true royal succession or heredi
tary decent of the chiefs power.
hen the parents, or cither of
them, have d:ed all of the effects that
tl.ey possessed descend by Inheritance
on the mother's si le, none of the
dcsce'idints of the father receiving
any tiling out of tho es'ate. O le
wo.dl think that it would lead to
somo curious muddles, but somehow
they manage to keep it straight.
The same as among all savages, the
men have often two or three wives,
and in rare cases even more; but the
women, not to ba outdone in the mat
rimonial liie. have in a few ill
s' ances two or three of which I know
of personally two husbands. They
arc nearly always r'ch women, who
have had a great de.tl left them by in
heritance, or who had male a large
amount th -msalves foe, as I have
said, the women do nearly all the
business. One TMinkit woman, a
Silks, woman, who went by tho name
of Mr. Tom among the white jicople,
and who had already one husband,
bought another, a slave, for alxmt a
thousand dollais in goods and chattels,
and when I saw tho two together aft
erward I think he was the best-looking
one of the pair. When a man and
woman marry they try ami adopt a
boy and a gv. If tho man dies the
loy becomes the woman's husband,
and if the woman dies the girl b.-comcs
tho wifj of th ma-i. Lieutenant
Schwalla, in N. Y. In lenende it.
THE TERRIBLE APHIS.
A l.lttle Insert Thl Conlit Str Oat h
llumaa Ksm In On Year.
Do you see that speck on this slide?"
The reporter closely cxa:ul led the
glass slide of the microscope. The eye.
unaided by the lens, could distinguish
absolutely nothing.
"Now l.ok through this tn'e."
The reporter gazed tlirou;h the long
tubes of the big binocular microscope.
Uu the slid there was plainly to be
seen, instead ot a single speck, a col
lection of monsters, wlio were crawling
around on the glass uneasily, as if out
of th dr natural element.
"See their long legs, peculiar eyes
and ferocious appearance," observed
the entomologist in whose iivtown of
fice the research was being mndt
"Those are aphides or plaut-lico. The
aphis only weighs one one-hundredth
of a grain. Its lifo is 'short and its
habits are destructive in tho extreme to
all kinds of plants, particularly those
which arc reared in-door.
"What is so rc:uarktble about
them?"
"I was coming to that- They are
among tho nmst fecund creatures in the
world. They breed with almost mirac
ulous rapidity. I will illustrate. A
heavy man will weigh in tho neighbor
hood of 2.000.000 grains, two billion
times as much ns an aphis. Well, in
ten broods, if nothing were done to de
stroy them, how much do you suppose
the offspring of one of these minute
creatures would weigh?"
'I have no idea."
"Of course we have no way of abso
lutely determining that matter, but
judging from the increase of a single
aphis in a given length of time, and es
timating what would be accomplished
iu ten broods, we estimate that they
would weigh as much as 800,000.000
mon weighing 230 pounds each or
one-third the human population of the
globe."
"Lurky their increase is checked."
"I should say it was. They would
drtdroy in one year every particle of
vegetable matter in the world, and
create a famine equaled only in its do
striietiveness to the deluge itself."
A". II Mttil and Express.
At the time of the death of George
rV., in 1830. there were 32? heredita
ry peers. There ara n w 477. D i .ing
this perio I 335 new baroneteiej have
been created 278 bv Liberals and 93
by Conservatives. Christian Union.
In a tribunal at Paris the o'her
day the judga su rgested to a worJy
lawyer that he had better be brief, and
that worthy responded as follows:
"He is wrong, I am r'ght. and your
honor is a goo 1 judgj." Then he sat
down.
Not soil alone nor sun alone
gives strength and majesty to the
sturdy oak, but also its exposure to
the changes of the seasons and its bat
tles with the storms and winds. So
it is through hardships and well boruo
trials cheerily met that man attains
, 1 1 a nf illf.nirw tf 1.1a full
nature and the stability of his true
manhood. Farmer and Manufacturer.
MISCELLANEOUS.
There seems to befa general fitness
about the fact that "boom" rhymes with
"doom. '
A calf at West Fallowlleld, Can.,
ale nineteen yovngui keys and wanted
more. Toronto uiobf.
At Yuma, Cal., eggs are hatched
by natural heat, if put in a shady place.
If left in the sun they cook.
Toucher "Hare animals a capaci
ty for affection?" Class "Nearly all."
Teacher "Correct. Now, what ani
mal possesses tho greatest affnotion for
man?" Little Girl "Woman." Oma
ha World.
The Illinois Humane Society, or
ganized at Chicago in 1870, has n good
record. During the last six years it has
Investigated 13,744 complaints, extend
ed help to 6,40:1 children, and saved
from aluiSH over 8,000 horses.
A Kentucky sheep-breeder adver
tises that, living near three towns, he
has concluded to discontinue his contest
with dogs and therefore offers the
remnant of his flock of thoroughbred
Southdowus for sale.
There is a mending burenu in New
York City where bachelors and neg
lected husbands take their shirts,
socks, cuffs, and w hatever is in tatters,
and can have them made whole again.
The only wnya it used to bo possible to
get this work done was to foo tho wash
erwoman for the purpose, or to tako the
work to one of the charitable institu
tions that still make a specialty of em
ploying their inmates at this work.
A watch has been inveuted by the
Sw Us watchmakers solely for the use
of blind people. A small peg Is set
in the centerof each figure. When tho
hour-hand Is approaching a certain
hour the peg f ir that hour drops when
the quarter before it Is passed. The
pirsoii feels the p.'g Is down and then
counts back to 12. He can thus tell
the time within a few minutes and by
practice he can become so expert as to
tell the time almost exactly.
A most reinarkablo imitation of
black walnut has lately been manufact
ured from poor pine, the quality and
apitcnraAre of tli.i article being such
as to defy detection, exs) pt upon very
close examination. To accomplish this.
one part of walnut peel extract is mixed
with fix parts of wntcr, and with this
solution the wood is coated. When the
material is half dry, a solution of bi
chromato of potash with water Is
rubbed on it. and tho made walnut is
ready Tr ue.
"A colony of rats," says tho New
York Sun. "went driven out of their
resting plnce in the collar of No. 63
Fulton street, Brooklyn. Tuesday, bv
the collapse of the foundation of one of
the pillar of the Kin r County Elevated
road. ilh bale-sticks and bung
starters the occupants of the sahton
overhead managed to exterminate
nearly ono hundred. It will cost the
railroad about two dollars a rat to pay
the damage done liv the water which
Cowed in the cellar.
"I should think you would adopt
safety coiplmgs for your freight
trains." remarked a gentleman to the
superintendent of arailio:ul, as a brake
man with a leg mashed ofl was carried
by on a shutter. "Why so?" asked the
superintendent. "Because you cripple
so many brakemcn by the old method,
wns the reply. "Not much," said the
superintendent. "This railroad only
pays an t ight per cent. di ideti while
my stock in a cork-leg factory pays a
dividend of forty-two per cent. lo you
think I want to go to the expense of
purchasing safety couplings ill order to
throw the cork-leg factory Into bank
ruptcy? You must be crazy t" Aev
man Independent.
m
STORY OF WASHIN3TON.
! lie rrlnit la Win i f.irnly Cull. Ilu
Wm llailly Thrown.
While the l.ov Washington was i
'abv visitor at Itjlliaven, he es ah
I shed iu the villago and its neighbor
tool a r putat'on for iron-liko power
f endurance and a springy vigor
'ecl, an invincible w ill and a knack
of g 'ing straight tluou 'li difficulties.
I'll Ihiv ha I a w onderf .il skill iu the
oMtrolt-f horses. Ho never mot one
iio w is ii f. -aid to mount, aud he broke
h m si liery to hi r.da.
An incidont of his boyhood curren
in tho chat of Ihj placo has escnp t
coins:
Ililph Wormlev. a man of some con
scq once In the Colony, had brought
across th ferry fro n Miry land to
B lliavon n number -f young hores,
a-iiong them a colt tha' had thrown n
scoro of colored jixk-ys. The boy
about the warohoiisj wero all willing
o wager that the colt tould not
throw Giorgi Washington. What
itt may have b.-en the
reason, every !-dy in the nolghbor-
hoo I said tha' W rm'.ey had no goix
blooi for the Wellingtons or tho Ym'.r
faxes, and all hough ho gave out tt at he
would give the colt to George tt ash
ing On if ho could r.dj iu nobody be
licved him. When, however. Wash
i'tgton came to Ilia warehouse. Mr
Wormb-v said: "Now you'ro aspright
ly boy, Mr. Washington, but there's a
colt that s too much for you. If yo
liai k him to M mnt Vernon, hack yot
need n iver bring h'm. Winch mean
If the colt did uot ihrow h'm the col
honld be his own.
S. Mr. W.-rm'ev kept his word: but
when the gro m saddled the cult an
Washington, after seeing that the
girth was firm and the bit and bridle
proper, j imped iu'o tin saddle and
went across Wlnto O ik Swamp like an
arrow, then every lui.lr in tha village
said Worm'ov hatod tho W.vshingtoas
and the Fiirf ixs so that he was try
ing to got young G-Kirge Washington's
ivck broken.
Washington came back next day
wi h the same hor.o, and at the village
inn returned th i colt to Mr. Wormley
"Keon turn, mv b y, you ve won
him." sad Wormier.
N , I have no', sir," replied WnsV
ing ot; "lie threw me in the wo Is
and dragged mo. but I got tho bridle
rou-id a live and held him."
"Well, you may have him, sai
Wormley.
"N:. sir," replied the lal, as he
handed over the bridle of the colt.
wouldn't take him as a gift. I did not
win tho bet, and he is your horse."
"Why," cried out Wormley, jocosely,
"if there was a bet vou owe me a h..rse,
Where is my horse?"
"Oh. no," retorted Washington in a
louder voice than was usual with him.
so that all the by -Stan lers might hear
'You le' your oolt against my hea 1.
i ou ve got your colt ana l ve my
heal it s a drawn bet. Giod morn
ing. sir:" and he went off with the
stride of an Indian chief. Wide
A-Jiakt.
Udh. Tussaud now exhibits Queen
Victoria's first doll, first shoes and first
gloves, and various other mementoes
of Ifoe royal nursery; also a piece of
her Majesty wedding eake.
TERRORS OF POLYGAMY.
Th
KierlfiK- of a, Mormon Olrl m ft
latd by llerafilt.
I have often been asked to marry
Mormons who had wives. I will tell
you about one of them, a wealthy man.
now dend. His name was Franklin
Neff. One day his wife the only
wife ho hal came to our house ami
had a talk with mo. She said sho
wanted mo to marry Mr. NeT. 1 was
only fifteen, but I knew what polyg
amy was, aud I had set my heart
against It. "Well. Mrs. Ne.IT." I said.
if he wants me he II have to summon
np cheek enough to ask mo himself."
1 said this in fun, and then nked
Mrs. Neff what she thought about it.
She said herself and husband hud talk,
ed the whole matter over, and she had
come to tho conclusion that as her hus
band was obliged to take a second wife
ihn knew nobody she d sooner have
him take than myself; therefore she
begged me when he called to give him
a favorable answer. The proposition,
coming from a woman thirty-live jnars
Id, who had been married for years to
her husband of about tho same nge.
and who h d assisted him in accumu
lating his wealth, was at once strange
and amusing. Mr. Neff called that
same night, and. in answer to his
question, I told him that ho must be
crazy to m ike such an offer of marring
to a mere dull. buth insisted that he
was in earnest, nnd ho wont to mv
mother who, on account of his high
position In the church, was afraid to
flatly refuse him. Mother said she
would not go against my wishes, but if
he could persuade me into p'dygam
she would have no objection-, at the
same tune she warned mo not to give
my consent for any oonslderation.
Mrs. Neff came round to see me sev
eral times, and was always urging me
to marry her husband, saying that he
could uot live without me, and both of
them would le all tha happier for it
But the more she talked tiio firmer I
became in my resistance! They In
vited mo to spend a few days at their
country home. I wantod to refnsr
but mother said I had better go. I
sent, and 1 don't think I spent a more
miserab e time anywhere iu all my
life. The husband was continually
asking me to go buggy-riding with him
mid the wife was coaxing me to con
sent Still. I thought I saw that the
woman was unhappy. She seemed to
lie doing w hat sho did against her will.
A ball was given in tho neigh lorhod
and I wanted to go. Mrs. Neff ask
me to co with Frank (that was her
husband's name), but I said no.
would go alone, unless she ngreod to
go along. She agreed, and we went.
That man tried his very hardest that
niirht to dance with me. and his wife
even asked me to dance with him. but
I kept plenty of engagements abend
with tho young fellows and he got no
dance.
Some one then told him tint I would
not dance with him while Mrs. Neff
was present, so he told her and she
went home. After she went he cauin
to me and said she hail gone and he
hoed ii' w he would have the pleasure
of a dance, but I continued to make ex
cuses nnd avoided him. The tinn
came to go home, and I refused to al
low him to accompany me unless there
was a thirl party along. II is brother
Amos accompanied us, and after leav
ing me at the door the two me;i went
to Amos Neff's house. I found Mrs.
eu In her room in tears a more
heart-broken woman I never saw. She
had been sitting there fretting and cry
ing and ruoauiu for hours, thinking
that I was dancing with her husband
and that I was coming home alone with
hint. Aud only the night before she
had sat up with me until twelve o'clock
trying to talk mo into marrying him,
making all sorts of promises, and say
ing that herself and Mr. Neff vrouh
write out deeds for one-half of all the
property aud possessions they had if I
would only give mv consent.
She bejjseil mo not to sav any thing
to her husband about the crying scene
as she said he would scold her for it
but I said I thought it my duty to tell
him, and also to let him know the
opinion I had of him. I told Mrs. Nr
not to grieve, as I would never cause
her the slightest sorrow, and sent her
to bint a much happier woman than I
had found her on my coming in. ex
morning at the breakfast table Mr. Neff
said something about polygamy. That
was all the provocation I wanted
said: "Mr. Neff, if you wero any kind
of a man at all, or had even the com
monest human instincts, you'd let
polygamy alone; you have a wife wh
Is too good for you, and who loves you
better than you deserve stick to her
and let other women alone." Then I
told him tho condition in which I h
found his wife on coming from the ball.
His face grew white, and, laying down
his knifo and fork, ho arose from the
table anil left the room. I went home
that morning, and neither saw Mr.
Neff nor heard from him again. He
never went into polygamy, and I fel
very glad of it "for th j sake of the
heart-broken little woman, to whom
second wife by her husband's side
would have meant a speedy death.
S.yr l.nlef fltl nr. 7 r,i IK. I. I imr.
Cuticura
a Positive Cure
for oVoryform; of
OKin and Diooa
-Disas-
r.X - from
Pim,ples to Scrofula
KIN TORTURES OF A LIFETIME IN-
atantly relieved bv a warm bath with Cirri-
CUBA etOAP, a real Skin Beautifler, and a single
application of Cuticuka. the great Skin Cue.
This repeated daily, with two or three doaea of
CtrricuRA KRHOLVKNT.the New Blood Purifier,
to keep the blood coot the perspiration pare
and unlrritating, the bowels open, the liver and
kidneys active, will speedily cure.
Eczema, tetter, ringwo m. psoriasis, lichen.
pruritus.sca.il head.dandruif, and every species
of torturing, difulgurlng, ltching.scaly and pim
ply disease of the akin and soaln, with loea of
hair, when physicians and all known remedies
fail.
Sold everywhere. Price, Ctjtictjra.SOo.; Soap,
25c.; Kkholvknt, $1. Prepared by the Pottkb
Drug and Chrmioal Co., Boston, Mass
tjTSend for "Iiow to Cure Skin Diseases."
nilTI'I.ES, blackheads, chapped and oily skin
lill prevented by Cuticura Mi dicated Soap.
ely's catarrh
CREAM BALM
0raTnMMV
had catarrh
for 8 years. With
rasas
great reluctance I
began using Ely's
Oream Balm and
after six weeks use
I b: lieve myself
cured. It is an
invaluable Balm.
Joseph Stuart,
621 Grand Ave,
Brooklyn,
1
HA'
A particle U applied into each noatril and I agreeable.
Price 50 cent at druggltt j by mall, registered, 60 oenta
FXV BROTHERS, 236 Greenwich Street. New York.
$5
Ta S8 a Day. Sample worth $1.50, FREE.
Lines not andar the homes feet. Write Bbw-
m ieT R1t HniTtFR On. .ir oil v J!Oclj.
P. S. V. No. il-S, r. N. U. NO 2M.
SEN
-FlmJW tain
. - ... I
1 lie lirltlsli Koernment has decided to i
banish King JsJI. of Oporbo, West ALirm. I
toot, tieieua. liie auiir recently caused
1,0 ot his subjects to be beheaded as a
warnlnK to others not to permit traders to
net into the Interior.
BEAD THI DEATH SOLf,
Which tha bills of mortality of any Urge city
mar bs fitly dealg-nated, and you will And that
renal and vectaal aiaUdiea. that Is to say,
Uioso thst aflect the kidneys or bladder, havs
rcsniarksbla prominence -wa bad almost
aid pteponderenoa. Hrliclita disease and
Ittlx-tee in the chrotilo atare are rarely
iirui. and irrarel. ralarrh of the bladder
id enuresiM, 1T litany. Yet at the
iult. when the troiibltt inerelv atnounta to
mu'tlvlt of IheorifMie involved, the danger
may Im nil lined liy that tileaaaiit renal tonic
nd dluretlo, iliMU-tter a Htomacb Hitlers, wnlch
inpurli llin requiiilln amount ot tons to the
orunn. without oer-eclUiir them, end the
un i of whloh 1 convenient, and Involves do
liilHr'e preiarat ion. I lyniiep -la, a usual con-
'tiniiant or renal rainiiininia, ana aeuiury,
lil' li they Invailebly oduoe. are remedied
r it. Hn sIho are eonsli nation, malarial, rheu
matic aud nervous elhneiita.
Gen. O. B. Wilcox Is brlffadler-sreneral
commandli ft a department in the Missouit
division.
"HOW CAR BBS ZYEft 10VK HIMf
Is what you of leu hear when the prospect
ive groom Is the victim of catarrh, "iiow
ran nhe bear much a breathr "How re
solve fo 'Ink her destiny with that of one
with a diaeane. that unless arreateo. will
end in consumption, or perhaps In Insan-
Ittr I-.et l ha htistiand that la. or la to lie.
irrt Dr. Sage's Catarrh Itemed?, aud cure
himself before It la too late. JIt druKfdsta.
Jefferson Davis bos completed his ser
enty-nlnth year.
ST. VITUS' DA.BCK CUB1D.
Farmiodai., L. I., N.Y., Sept T, 1885.
I have been troubled for several years
Ith an affection of the nervea which no
doctor or no medicine could cure until I
tried BnANURKTn'a 1'iu.s. I would be
taken with a violent pain In the middle of
my spine, and my arms and legs would
twltrh violently. It acted something like
St. Vitus Dance, for I couldn't control my
IlintM. It would come and mo once or
twice a mouth, lasting two or three days
at a time. Finally, at the beginning of
one of my attai ka, I took Ave Uruso-
RaTii's I'll. I j. As soon as they acted freoly
I found my sell almost well. So 1 con tin
uet taking them (or a month one or two
anight It la now a year since 1 have bad
n attack, anil I attribute my cure to
LtKa.NURBTH'S PlIXSw FRANCKS WoOO.
How U Caia Flash and Strength
I'M after each meal IKeatt'a Kaaalal
wtih llrpophoMphttea. It la as pejalable aa
milk. an. I eanilr dla-eated. The raiiiditr with
which deho-u people Improve wita ita aae la
Wfimlertui. l.'ae it ana trv rour weiicht. Aaa
reiuealy for t!toauuirUon. Throat alltootionaaad
Mronctiliia. It Ii nneaualed. Il.aae rout: "1
jied riooU a hruulaion in a child elarht niotith
old with good reeulta. lie gained four DoutMla
In a very euori ume. 1 no. I'him, M. U,
Alabama.
ooHBUatrnox itjuxt crass.
To tho Flitor
I teams inform yemr readers that I have a pos
itive reinarlr turlheahm najravl illniiaen llr
It tintelr oaa Mamaaamte ot hootama nail have
b en permanently eared. I ahall ba Rlad to
emal two hwtlaof my reeaedy pitas to any of
yovar reaoere woo nev eonaannpuon a toey will
i nte their Knpraaa and P. O. addreaa.
linruiecuuiiy.
. A. SLOCt'lt. hi. tX. ltd Peart St.. New York
At Barre. VL. the sranPe Industrv
lurvihliea 1.IHJ men with employment.
ROW YTCXEir WOULD TOTS.
Were women allowed to vote, every one
In the land who baa lined frr. Pierce'a
'Favorite iTeacrlotion" would vote It to
be an unfailing remedy for the diaeasee
peculiar to her aex. Uj druggist.
Ei PnUic Trinter Rounda died at
lila
home in Omaha.
la Nafer llemrdv can he bad for
Cough and Cold, or any trouble of the
Teroat, thau "Brown's Bronchial Tro-
rwt. J rice St eta. Hold only in bajrs.
TrtGermea for breakfast.
CanaeiHoe improve and praamn tha eenptexinaL
IXALL'S PULMONARY
nTia3yvTvr,
k superior remedy foe Caws-fee. 'olaa,
laelpleait aiamplioa. aad. ail
Threat and JLoag Tremble.
old by all Drveglsta for B0 Cent.
YOUR CATARRH
TUB-
arllic Sile
la INFALLIBLE I
Ask Your Druggist For It!
ASTHMA
Haltered la flit aUaatea.
HAY PEVKB.
CaraQnarantssd If Taaaa ta Tlssa
BRONCHITIS.
Vara Warranted.
DEAF.1E8S
Cured tu Three to BU Monibs,
Diphtketia. Creaa, Hesrral.
ala. Uradsrbe, Kara
Ikrssl
Irawii Craaa.
Invaluable Remexiyl
PWn ted April. 1884.
rrioo ef Treatment, tOO; (Smoke B a fiO
Dubollator, for Internal Use, fl-Oa)
CAH00L1C SMOKE BALL CO.
652 Market SL, San Francisco, CaL
C&2sTrx9 ot Hurtful Xmltatlona,
TUfs BKT.T rtr Ref-aerarfr
attavd wmprvaal fwr tb Cr ot
Awrwttaferxi b ta af tb gr irat.y
organs. Tha eaotlaaoar atrvfAaai
f tl-CCTHIcITY rrtrmltB
thtMfk Um pftrts anast ntters
Lbem l aVeliBT fteUoa. Da w
tmlommd tfclawitt. k.rrcrf Bltt
evdfuttd t ar ail Ma from
ItMdtoM. ItUfM Ikt OKI
amactfie Banwm.
Tor etretalara ftrtec fll I
torBatfo. aldrea C be wmr C Vaa-
m Bait Co., 109 WaAuUactoai
DintS V1WQ, AAA.
CURE FITS!
Wbra 1 say core 1 do not mMn mriy to ator tbeta
For a. tint aoa thn haT tbm rotara attain. I nran
-aIirai cam. I hara made th dims of FITS,, KPU
KPSY tr FAIaLIItG SICKNESS a UlVlons frtady. 1
rarrmnt rajr rimdj to ear the wont caw. IWcatMO
xbera bar failed w bo reason for Dot now roMinfr a
jam. Send at oooa for a treatise and a Frea B'ettia
m mj lnfnllble remedy. OiTe Express and Post Ottjoa.
H. . KOOT. 4. 83 Pearl Htu Kew Vrk.
PEtiriYROYAL PILLS
"CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH."
The QrlKinal and Only OrDaise.
r!mea4slvbllahkt. Brwanerwertalees Imltsttaaa,
nrtl,prtiil W t-ADICS. A.ak Orsnul M
Stamn,) tt tt fbr perticvli
vaieaessera baaiisa" &ne vste so oumt. mr iqcim s
Caleheater bfilV.l cZT'
fat a tana aaaara, I'aUaAaPt
eveev ,hwi M Sir Vlrm.
Bold ar Bra:
laaajrraral JHlla, Tin an m ssi
On Hew Store, whlcli wa aowanapr,
Itaa abowt 3 aerea ot CI 00 apace.
TKa VITVERa GUIDE U
uawcel Sep, and March.
, each vear. Aa- 384 paces.
taclca.wltaiover
3.BOO lllnstratlona a
whole Pletara Gallerr.
GIVES WHoleaala ll.
"ree P Consumers t aM a; soda for
personal or fkmUr was. Tells hew ta
order, aad gives exact east of cTtrr
Utn 7ss was, eat, drink, wear, or
h f Wt, Tbeae ISVAI.CAHLB
BOOKS rontabt lBforniaUoB. glean
(rom the marketa f tbe world. A
opy sent FREE apea receipt Of
10 Cts, to defray expense or mallljsg,
MONTGOMERY WARD A Ca
ItlettA Allcbisan Avesae, Chleaaa, IU.
OLD SORES AND ULCERS ef.ieac,
fata. Uj HaU, KM. alki, rjr , p. Aiia, si rsal, atma.
ii ii
THB "OLD Hf LIABLE."
Eureka Printing Co., Timjohib, Oct It 1887.
Having had In constant use for tha nast
lbt mon'h one of Tour einhth.medium
O d Reliable Gordon presses, with throw-
off, we take pleasure In testifying to Its
merits, it combines the Qualities of "Deel.
accuracy aud strength, and runs with lit
tle noise. la short it fu Ir sustains Its
title to the name, as It Is reliable In every
respect. We have printed on our prew
a form of wood type full sfssof chase with-1
out quoins, and obtained a splendid tm-l
(Tension, inereoy teating it strengtn in
ma moat tnorouati manner.
Yours truly,
El'BKICl PRINTING Co.
A London dealer, who bas been fourteen
years in the trade, sells over four tons of
meat, a day lor eats.
TO COKSTJaTPTITES,
or thoae with weak lung, "pitting ofl
blood, bronchitis, or kindred afTectione ofl
tnroat or lun-ra. aend ltt cent in stamps,
for Hr. It. V. Pierce's treatise on thee
maladies. Address the doctor.UuffaJo.N.Y.
The Ilrltlsh ffimlK.at Wun haa t.
cnaiiy iciven up tor lost.
The best COII ah medicine la TMan'a Pnea
tor iousunipiion. bold everywhere. c
fl -m ti MI'S K. V Uifaum fl rn. 1. 1 t. l-...., . .
1 R ITA Hi A, relismiM tltamtura wnl ft mn n..llM
WJiluu.oeurr.iM1ua 1 Siim 11 Ij. Vu. kull, I
Wakclee'a Squirrel and G-pher Extermi
nator Try It. and prove the beat is the
c hea pes . Wakrlee tc Co.. Smi Francisco.
PURE,
Tteemwr! eeeeEaeepiuisw.hmjPltoBV aiiunafja
tkst tiiaa a ejus r off aceatar. I ts ese4 ar n
LaiieistaleaKuvaravent. I ad irsed b the head if the
Or ITolteretUee as taa Kttantm. Parert aa4 .
HailUKul. nr. i-neas sis onis nauns rosmer aa
a-swosaoataia amnaima. iaaiaw auaaL
TRICK BAXIHO PoWDKB OO .
srrw toil ctwuMi ar.
Tho Yon Ilonciscar
DYSPENSARY.
POBTLANH, OB.
aeeay sibVtai fA aaa
siatfW as hmmiiii sasa
Drkaa Co
cianuts leas iw
52? G.OOO.OOO pgQPig use
LFvt P SEFD S
-a9 0.-.FERRY4CO.
are anrrJtud Ssasths
Uwaaat aana
in the world.
C.aLTaAlTACOS
SEED
ANNUAL
f Cardav, F fXhr r sowar
IS E EDS"
0s M. FERRY ACO..Dfrtrolt,rr1lcrv.
BUSINESS
COLLEGE,
24 Post St, a Cal
Aaortliaoit,
Type-wTltlwr, Penmansfclp. Booa-aasptaf
ana 1 eiastapnr au lue a.
SCHOOL
or rRAcncAU civtl.
Meehaoleal aad Mlnlos Id-
alneeriDC, Btirverlea Anal.
hectare, DtwmXag
tns. BASCBorr BUILDING.
723 Market St., San Francisco, Cal
faTBenA tor circular. .
A. V ASDEK X LUXES.
Ii:orLE'S DISPE.A8ARY
Acme Electric Belt Agency
Foorth 8L. be. Morriaoa aivl Yamhtn.
ttK-Uana. uregoeu
AOVtOE AND tslEOfCUtE tlXX.
AH TAseases siiut. nssXiHy tspasad.
petwral and Merrooa DebiUsr. buma Weakness aad
Lo Msnbooasuoreaaly treated wwo the atd of the
oua iruui-es a apeoeutr
Keaeasrav
wuuiwmi tastik waniAusans
ffesual 1 aigijif the eass st roost
aMMSialJa rauat.
Iriuain Iu atteodanee daily
ja. A-aTWca-ia Ai sa aa, nais nnrarl s assaa.
state srnsjtoina as aerutate
iwia ewewr
nA7nnoi DA7nnoi
Hill lin.M rtll I I I n .M
The undersigned will send
George Westenho'.m Razor,
ripe Brand. Fall Hollow Groand,
-a iur asiaae.
For & l.lO.
TIIESK sxxls are my own Anporta Ion. and
are sold ererywhere at from Si to C2.30.
The price 4 -k cannot be met. far less cat. this
side the IShelHeid. England, market. These are
bt-antifnllr clean, k en cutters, and will be
Btadly taken bac and money refunded, for any-
uuh ai an. ur ou cause wnwerer. Aanms,
a1 ixucris aishc, ihia wj, opnnguetOi 44,
V7fi7ZA0
PORTIAM
la twxcstful epentioa since 1S66, patreolttd iron
business men and t-H;nf; cducatorsj,
THE HOST PERFECT LT EOTTPPZa SCHOOL
of ita class on the Coast, It cten private or class
Instruction, day and evening throughout tha year, ia
Anthinetic WritingeorreinoodeDce, Beoksepins;
Banking, Shortluimi,Type-writine, BAainesa and egal
Forms and ail Common School Brsnchaa. Seadeats
ci air arcs aad both sexes admitted say tiase.
raloriw (res. Armstrong and Wasco. Pnipristora.
SELBY SMELTING AND LEAD CO,
San Francisco.
ia 11 '
hcDlCL
VW SI SN0TGUN CARTRIDGES
BUELL LAMBERSON, Gan'l Agwnt.
7 Stark SU rartUa. Or.
jTa,
A 111 A -4
S r iA2 Cos
I - ion. wVaV leaj
mai anA PlaArlui Traabla
IFF
1TJ
I nvaluabeto an.
IMS
REAfHn"EE.iEBY
FOR PAIN.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sdallca,
lumbago, Daekiche, Headachs, Toothache,
Bore Throat, "welling, f ra '"
bpraliMt rujes iiuo,i m.
IT CONQUERS FAIFf.
ZitrytTjUetttsarsllrrw.
Errr tUM &si fl.
"very tKi'-Siidil li tres.
ZiKJ i-7 ataisi
Srery U etrri.
Crtry bsf.lt li rst esrt.
ttrry fetus is U?.ii-
iTtry swsirs krfus Mit
tktfira iSigaaftr.
(tvery jiia l essq4.
trsry bsms will ksvs tt. Ttry dreret
Ertry Inrnii rf i3 it. j Ziry cJuclrt tzit It r
awards ron ct .
. . . . . iut4 ,nlfl ftledai
turl TTl hit. swlBlTlnl'---i,,, ;'''
cik iati mo. r.x roMTinn
CALiruaai ctte ria
UMiiavtixs su. cx rout ion f& jotl I. etui.
THI CHARLES A. V0GELE8 CO.. Battkaera, Ui
CTha OLDEST KiJJICTJTE la tis W0ELDT
la Probably Sr. luu TaompseR'i I J
ELEBRATED EYE WATEll
This artlria Is a earefntl Bena4 tirrtmnfn pes.
seHpOoa, and baa boa In eonMant we f.ir aerljr a
momtt and iolw1UwLittac U ssasi oUk prepara
tions thai aave been Introduce, into mm aaarot. tui
amle at thai article is sr astantiy inemxtng. If Uie rtl-
r enoas are looowea win oevor " . prwe
tarlv brrMe tbe astcatioe of ahvaejaos to Re aenti
Jsha L. TaotaitMB. Boas Ca.. TKo Y. N. T.
The Oregon National Cank,
OF FOKTLAJin.
f faajsteai si as B
eievr . r l a s r if
l 'PMSaoes a uenejw ramxtrs
i ITXO felQliS 'i . on Raa frawiaue and Hew Tar.
t U J Hi rseneawe karma.
iJiiuiltVtt. ". B MAJiKIA J
RHTTRMsg Caaatsr . ' ' " V
CALIFORNIA
Furniture Co.,
m, m, m, m mi u.t
SAN
FRANCISCO.
lavrgeat Btk. lAwett Frtee.
Furniture,
Bedding;.
Upholstery.
Hotel Furniture a Specialty.
TV. i. Cole aSe Oo.
Bis ay Basctvev aaleer'
sal sslhtf action la lba
eajre of OoDerrtKea and
Oteec I prescribe tt aad
leei safe le recommend, f
lag It to aO aflerera.
a.J.ST01CB. U-D
PBICK,1.. .
Suld by imicsista,
f)nft r Reetal llaease. Pllf.
(j'fU aViavraire-a. 'latalM anA Re-eta 1
i Irj reatel sstssfslly. wtlfcoH
ar kailfle. wltklw aast tws tesr.
V lal ta several tarterter taws, a. saesiaV
far rlrealars. J. H. Ptlklvgrtaav.M. im
Mm.m lelawa'asUlaAertlal.r.
CTCIUWAY K KAIICH aft 1UIB,
O I CJn II l I , eabler. Koenlah Vtomm Bar
; det Organ, band iastrnTasits. taaaes atx
of bheet aiokhs aaMi IMxaaa. Hams snppaoQ a-
M. vKAl IU
Oooeh Syron. Taeies mono. Use
a. SoKI rrv ".
r
fai
AU. CHRONIC DttCASta A trectALTY.
SltiS,! eorreapotKienea. mm
ff U.,'BP"J ten ceota ia atampa for our
r.J,Y.trKrk-" wWeh f-lves'ail parUoI
Uars. Address: Wort r a Diuiirl!-,B
CAL A,W(Kjatiow. eiii siaiq fey, rtttalo,
r.
e T T ' '
ohool teaberaTArdmrrZ2
FCm wVaM aa w
'tjefllllilatatl
?f ""r?flf?",8 t?r.tcs. It is not a Cure-all.
K"dt5i7 tulfiiai a Btoanees of purpoae,
fc"" .rr ixweo epwtao for all tho
OwoTArMaeaarM) r,Jeoaea peeoUar to.
woroen. Ttoe treatment of tnnny thousand
l? SJ- f UmJ n vn n ' Motel aad Sure
I " JJf!1 01 tUSTaw fXTVftmw. For
I interaal erat lor,, lstbaaasnattaat
orauva, IS a Kneel fie. IS
la a. powerful orocraL as well aa ut,-r
I sa rul si 1 sasa. h 1 ..A J "
I Irvpus3 proaf-rvtiinn. exbatioEA. wfHtw- mA
irS-2i:.s5K-
I k&Masl in MthaiaA a. ' w
I ' miwaa oatue.
T,tf Ava Msea . ant
8enl 10 oerrfs to stamp ffx Ir. Pierre's btrva
Treatise on Diaeasea of Women (160 pmrls.
Kperxorered). Address, World's Drsnasw
T MtDlCAI. AaaOdAXKOf. A3 kfaln &u.
lluffato,N. Y. -
" am WWlf T .
WAi-YXTOff PILLS.
aSHIUUOCS aael CATHABTT3.
EIt 11IABACKE,
giaa ITendaeHo,
lasiaieaav Const i pa
(ion. ludisreatioua
and BUlousAttacka,
eromptly ourea oy asr
lercea rlf asa
ObnW A tV XirsTaWA.
SsmKor'
H saaaifanot JX5aiDA eMCTB. saf B )
EBXS. kVUtKIxa. JVur soillkn acres. :
Msenptioa sx
ot FLORIDA i
'taaabla tor tkmocea, AaaMaa, OuTsa, Kinaisplea. ?
aassnss. cilrawcarnea and oaly t rrrshtiai. fos
aaleoalonireralit. 1.S tea.00par sera.
REWARD!
tIPflfl he id for ea and every gnta et anas
Alvuu eBuns subataaces fuurni la VinAknuaKabeninej
aekBoaieaed the avfeS otliihtful aat ea r sealli
harmleaa tuile artlcia ever ptudaceft (u leaatAfyoia
and araservica Um oasnixxl teauvtBs tan. saUMira.
r ekWa sad au Mnusn.a aad i:lil.aa at the oa.
Ueit and lndotani bv tha e, at .i-i. ..i
sfaea. tuJvl bv alt ararKltta at e a:s Ter aotu
auaaal ITHMa. kKWNGTilS A Cu ..
Wftebssls lrasjiiulan Fnutaau. Aisba,
A
f jrosrssfaT I
f - TO DT-I
I.I wrtmtrjm
I 'SvsafCaSBfcalX
ad
I Ab
.11 f"
' if SOfv
V
f
C