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Show THE BY P. HOME SENTINEL. Til K J IS. O. tin T. 57, Manager. ilKKIIS, Batl, I". T- Hy-enc- al f - The king of Greece buys his clothes the Hired Girl 4 I'rw WerdeAbeot Wemaaa Waj a and M him Ute. London, while tho queen sends to Paris for her costumes. What is the XWve had mutter with the Athenian tailors. But how In . Iwo Novsl Writer! of the IITKL CO'IMTT. K i was Ontario on a Alexander Kf.il, a Canadian, carried out into Lake cake of ice, but a fisherman pulled twelve miles to rescue him and was rewarded with 50 cents. Marie Bedard, the French girl who elaims to live without eating, is pronounced a fraud by Dr. Mary alker, who watched her and caught her demolishing pancakes and potatoes. Phna-delph- IHaipeInted. a t.ff. -- niv low and I the earth And lowed A monster that would mate me. The mitrratory nature of tlie American lured girl exerts itseit in a particularly forcibly manner in the spring. Slie can no more lie expected to rem.ua week than tlie in the same household a free swallow that 'helps bring summer can beexpected to confine itself to one tected; robin stay in one tree. H a bis Kej.ly mhioh Eve never exited; chimney or airresistible impulse beyond S 18 the STKnt that compue-e- d inane fall. Moved hv an that crawl; her own control, an impulse rooted in T is the Trail leftof byEvecreatures s rush pmceedin , the I'lishot tlie deeiest foundation of nature's eter- I'V is is the Voice that expelled her from Etlen; nal laws, she takes up her kit and walks W'h the Warning tins story conveys; one pay. oil on tlie last pay day before houseis experience, not worth of her mo- X statu-the in all serenity Y is man s Yearning for Adam's first cleaning e indepen-tieucis for Zigzag twixt tree will and fut' nopoly of herself and her utter of the rest of creation. he oierheard the talk tli.it 1 Amt Jaeh Jones had t or th r On seienee, polities, has bail, The markets and tae v eathf r. And, a ,1a k went, she caught my words, I'ome folks will trouble borrow j. boy, Weil, if tile dav prole l.nr, my ! I'll see her sure, From boyhood up, Iie watehed b Toft At night the night's ler play tun : But rare I v hale I seen lodore lLr radiant face by daytime. And then she Jumped, as women will. At once to a conclusion. moAnd Jaw ed until ah con-retor tried to w. th confusion. see w it- home one would come between us; And she was hopping mad when told 'Tivas hut the planet emis. Boston Globe. Hr. Gertrude Atherton. One of the most prominent member of tii present school of hysterical novel-writis Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, the author of Hormia Suydam. She lives in Newr York. An interviewer describes her a a woman of fascinating manner and appearance, tall and graceful, with golden hair and dark blue eyes capable of a variety of expressions. She does not go out much. She hates The housekeeping duties pertaining society, studiously avoids literary reto the whito house have been about ceptions and is never happier than when is a svonly divided among Mrs. Harrison, engaged in literary work. She Mrs. McKee, and Mrs. Bussell Harrison. Californian bv birth and training. According io Mrs. Atherton's own Mrs. Harrison superintends tho work of the laundresses, chambermaids, und looks; Mrs. McKee ha chargo of tho butler und waiters and superintends the china and glass closet, while Mrs. Bussell Harrison sees to it that the applies of food and wine are kept up In proper ac- - After divers desjierate resorts to all tlie source of household help and the realization of nothing but hmderance from seventeen spec.mens of intelliservants, the American gence office liousewile comes to the same conclusion she reached last spring, that if she wants her house cleaned she must do it herself. While she is hard at work lured girls galore with their noses high in refreshing breezes of April are luxuthe riating in idleness, waiting until will springtime bustie and confusion cease and permit them to settle down in sweetened kitchens and attics and resume their poetic duties of washin; dishes and sitting on the back stoop. The human nature of the American hired girl is something unique in quality and quantity. In fact, after the won derful creature was made there wa none of that kind of human natur left for other people, and at no time is she a more interesting psychological study than in the days of spring Philadelphia Inquirer. house-cleanin- A Seminary .HI. She was highly educated, as I've heard it ofttuues stated, vet when soon I came to know her, I believed her learning queer; I neer saw a Yankee maiden, with sueh forladen. 1 atbmpteil quiek eign to sitow her that her wits were out of gear. She knew everv line of Dantes, every of ( erv antes,every one of Ciceros spcivlie-- , a id the Comeihe Ilumaine She was deep in Schopenhauer, quoted Kant with force ami power; site knew all that Gu'the teaches, all that Schiller doth m IM. stylo. to nolo that John Jewish blood in undoubted hud Bright his veins. The Abraham Bright who went to Coventry early in tho last century hail for his wife a handsome Jewess named Martha Jacobs. One of their children was William Bright, and one of William's was Jacoh IJrigLt, and tho youngest sen of Jacob was another Jacob Bright, the father of tho illustrious Englishman who died only a few days ago. It means inquisitive ig r to ,T isJudi ions would Eve have teen so. good, g l tlie knowledge of evil and food. 1. is Eve's Love tor prohibited a bite; caused by t is the Misery No'' would have kept the word N 10 the riirlit. n means Obedience and also Oppression: p is the Punishment fixed lor transgression: when deQstuiulsfor Quuil Ailum quailed Tlie Hired Ulrl In aprlns, (I Historian Bancroft's condition has no alarming features, bat there is a marked and steady decline in his faculties. lie is eight mouths younger Who was the she that I would I , such treason than the Kcv. Dr. Scott, father-in-labhed he roiengcd on hoi It of -, of the president, but he looks fully ten Ur She would know the reason! older. years She always knew, or soon or late, Moltkes request to resign from the Danish navy addressed to tho king of Denmark is still to be seen at the Danish war oilico at Copenhagen. Moltko gave hs a reason for his resignation that he hoped to get on better in the German service and also asked for three months pay in order to be able to travel to Berlin, which the king, however, refused. Moltke had to go without. 1 s d berate me. there wa- - not on lie ia Is interesting But if Sliakspenres plays I mention I am sure with het intention -- shell get angry, and offend mo, in a way I think too rough; If I speak of Scott and Dicki ns, how iter indignation thickens to a maiden pray commend me, who votes English good enough. Ilva to Her Lover. From Mrs. Chaiilers Latest Novel. I seem to have belonged to you a! ways, she said, with tier beautiful can-doI seem only to have a right to myself through you. Your love makes me glad to be myself, because if I had been any ony one else, no matter how great or good, you would not have loved me and your love is best. No, no: you must not speak;vou must not contradict me. Just let me say what is in my heart. I feet that what is there must run into your heart like a stream into the great sea. It is wonderful to think ttiat I have your love I out of the world! It is as though a great star were to concentrate its light all on some little flower and say: 'I will shine only for this ilower that I love. It is us though some high one in heaven were to refuse to sing in tlie great choir, that ins voice might be heard only in tlie dreams of some poor woman upon earth whom he loved and waited for. All, do not interrupt me! It is so big in niv heart. It strains me. 1 have no one else to speak to indeed, no one that I care to siieak to. You are tlie only one tlie very first the tirst since I was a little child and I gave you my silver book. You helped to form mv life. You helped to make me into what you now love. You were like a song through the silence of my life. Always your memory was with me at tho right moment, never had a wrong thought, a wrong impulse, that your face did not come to me as clear, a clear it was as clear as that white magnolia flower there in tlie moonlight. And your eye looked s? grieved. I longed to ask "your pardon to have you take niy hand and say that you forgave me. 1 dreamed about you sometimes when I was awake, sometimes when I was asleep. When I used to fancy how it would be if you were dead, it seemed to me that my life would never stop going on, on. on, on. And my heart seemed like a tiresome voice insisting that I wa alive. I would try not to listen to it. hut it would seem to fill tlie room. And then I would lie ; quite still and think : After all, it is you who love him, my heart. Beat on, heat on! Oil, do not stop! without you I could not give him my love. t. James Clark, a negro boy of Albaof the wonders of Ga., is one tho place because, though never having boon taught, he is well educated, a good mathematician, nnd write a pretty hand. Ho buys many book nnd say that when ho studios a text-hoo- k and trie to master a lesson he can't understand anything about it, but lit night in his dreams the entire lesson i impressed upon his mind and he never forgets it. ny, A man without legs has proved hima self a persistant nil oilieo-seckany. Ilia name is John V. Coombs and ho hail from Houston, Tex. For twelve year both his limbs havo boon paralyzed and ho 1ms lost the use of them. He travels from place to place in a cart projiellod by himself. On arriving he put up at the Ebbitt house. He had not been in the hot il long when he was helped on his cart and off ho sped to the whito house to see tho er ALTHorc.il Gov. Bigg of Delaware doubtless wear his hair long from force of ancient habit, ho manages to get considerable fun from it, too. lie is a great favorite down in tho peachgrowing district, especially among the young and pretty girls, who rognrd him as something of a universal patriarch and clamber about him with perfect freedom. They toy with his tong, whito locks and mustache, tying them with ribbons and tho like, and the sly old statesman pretends to ho irritated only so his tormentors shall keep their MRS. ATHERTON, count she does not read French novels and protects against the assertion that she copies them. She is an admirer of Herbert Spencer and thinks that he has proved as conclusively as one yet that there is no such tiling as free will. She herself is the authority for the statement that she "has had the creative faculty from a child and that it is a The fact that she did not natural gift. publish tlie manuscripts she prepared mmediately after leaving school was dim "to a combination of reasons. which reviewers Hermia Suydam, have called indecent, she asserts is a In it she "lias not study in sequence. attacked the institution of matrimony. She does not write for mercenary motives, hut because she loves it. She has not studied any other author for style, hut was trained by a California editor. Philadelphia Tunes. Mlm Laura Haintrey. Miss Laura Paintrev became famous hv tlie publication of her first novel, Miss Varian, of New York, which was given to the public iu tlie fall of 1N7, It was considered to he tlie great financial success of tlie season. Miss Duintrey was only 16 years of age at tlie time. Since then, nnd nlout tv year after tlie appearance of her tirst literary venture, lias appeared her second novel, Miss Haintrey is Engentitled, Eros. lish bv birth, having first seen the fun. Daniel Lohinu York owns more bucket-sho- p than any other man in this country. He has about 200 scattered in different parts of the I'nited States, nnd his telegraph bill annually is about $300,000. He is a great believer in real estate, and in vests most of his profits in good New York property. His residence on Thirty-fourt- h street, near Fifth avenue, is a miracle of art inside, and his pristreet convate stable in Fifty-eight- h tains many fine horses. Personally lie is youthful in appearance, with a smoothly-shave- n face, a clear blue eye, ami a ruddy complexion. A. of New The caso of Caj't. Mullan, command' or of the Xipsie, the only one of our war vessels at Samoa not a total loss, is a curious one. Ho has had experience that luck will turn. Only a few year ago Capt. Mullan commanded the Ashuelot in tho China seas. Tito vessel run upon a rook nnd was lost, nd court-martilater recommended the dismissal of Capt Mullan from the service. The recommendation wa not carried out entirely, but for a long time the captain was without a ship. Now lie is know n throughout tho United State a. the comnianjer who managed to beach hi vessel safely and preserve her in a hurricane. The Root llarometer. How tlie Widow Pumpmaler know whether tier lodger comes home at r MISS P.UNTKEY. ligiit ill the great city of London. In all other respects, however, she may be regarded ns American. Site is tall, lias a commanding presence and is a decided blonde. She is a young lady of easv, natural manners. She i more pretty than handsome, i possessed of a clear, fresh complexion, which harmonize well with her laughing blue eve, which, however, are capable of seriouswhen occasion ness requires. She wears a pink morning dress, with a wealth ot Unify lace, und her fingers .'liarkle with several handsome diamond rings. Miss Duintrey has written ever since die can remember almost. It is her passion. She does not write for money, ilthough t lie papers have stated that she doe. She wishes it to lie observed that in "Eros tlie good triumph in the end. Siie doe not believe in immoral Istoks into tlie hands putting of anybody, much less writing them, but site take tlie position that she must write about life a it is or she should not lie true to herself or others. Thi position she supports by quoting the Or at ad hours. HUSBANDS, STAND UP! TwoWsy Thin? Ilonie Com Yo Should Do and Thou Yo Should Not Do, f Acting When Car Sleeping edistraight through asfrom the Pitteburg Pre, conFrom if it torial to market report, A sleeping car porter on tained the secret ofvouth, wealth and eternal salvation! In the same burg and Lake Erie told wav one might drink soda water by two ago that the compil!!T carmels for line, THE t B e Of IBS FILL pure ail thing PUMoa Paintrev objects to being classed the realistic school of fiction. Sue From UV. fore it came into s she wroUs of A stand for Adam, the gardener old: islet,, e or before she had ever heard , the book bets- - the sli.ry t the little local currents ,,t thea Cli mis the anv receive It; crowd who us is She world. H t" beve New York literary t Ml do who doubter of II i the th-- n a wt.e; member of the Society of Authors, ana E st.imls lor Eve tirst a nl. li e. . uhuhlxird TennvsU ls president E is the Fruit thut embitter-- d her founder. the arc Mr. Walter Besant (5 is the Garden of Eden satirical H,s-11 is the seris-nt'Times. know: To the tverse. Yen There is so much excellent ml vice riven to wives, suppose, for a change we turn around nnd read tlie husbands a nice little manual of correct behavior. It is high time some one took them in hand; but, although I bavehadniy eye upon them for a good while, I have been bothered to find a ripe opportunity. In the first place, to plunge right into tlie midst of things without further waiting, how do you go home to your wife at night? Chapters have been written as to how she ought to receive you; now let me say a word about the other side of the question. When you find, a tired little woman who has been so hard at work all day with five babies and an incompetent girl, callers, and miscellaneous jobs of mending, pastry making and pickling, that she had no time to curl her hair anil put on her best gown to meet you, what do you do? WHICH IS YOTR WAY? Do you, like a dear old sympathizing fellow, take her worn face into a warm embrace and whisper in her ear: Never mind, dearie; I have got home, nnd we'll share the cares for the rest of the day. You go and rest yourself while I put Johnnie and Do you Trot nnd baby to bed? see that she sits in the easiest chair you skip around and minister to her wants? Do you keep silent while she reads the evening pa per to herself), and are mindful of draughts and slamming doors while she takes her ease in slippered content? Do the stars dance the Newport, and does the moon sing psalm tunes? Just about as much as you do all this. You expect the hushed home, and the siesta with the paper, nnd the slippers for yourself, to be sure, and if you dont get them you think you're terribly abused, and ten to one flounce off to the club to escape the noise and confusion, but you never take it into your head to consider that the day has been just as long, and just as busy, and a thousand times more full of petty cares for her as for you. You bolt into the house, and the first thing you say is: Why isnt supper ready? I'm as hungry as a hound! Great Scott! Can't you keep that child quiet? or, Whats the use of burning so much coal? Turn off the damper! You are enough to ruin a Yanderbuilt! Thats the keynote of the song you 6ing, and yet you think it is dreadful if she ever makes a remark harsher than the bleat of a lamb. Suppose you had been a hansom cab driver, a board of trade man, cook in a restaurant, cash hoy for a dry goods house, a kindergarten teacher and a hospital nurse all combined for the whole day long, wouldnt you be more tired, and wouldnt there be more excuse for your irritability than when you have simplyattended to a single systematized branch of business. A woman is required to be everything from a reception committee to receive calls in the parlor, to a nurse in the nursery, and a chief executive in the kitchen, while a business man devotes himself to a single trade or while ( profession. DONT BE AFRAID OF SPOONING. And next, how do you entertain your wife evenings? If you were in- vited into a neighbor's house to spend a couple of hours with his wife and daughter, how would you entertain them I wonder? Why, you would puta posy in your buttonhole, and slick up your hair, and blow a little perfume out of the atomizer all over yourself, and throughout the evening you would overflow with bright anecdotes and be so racy and charming that after you had gone away every body would say: What a perfectly delightful man Mr. Perkins is! YYhat good company! Now let us see, sir, how you entertain your wife. You stand in front of the fire and pick your teeth with a wooden toothpick until she starts to put the children to bed and every now and then you make a few cheerful remarks about the scarcity of money and the general cussedness of children who run through shoes nnd clothes so fast, n lien the time comes that all is still ana every thing nicely adapted for a chat or a game, you draw out miserable newspaper nnd beginyour to read. And you read that all paper to your self, word for word, and line by the pailful, or consume the ton! husbands in Newspapers, read by scifish solitude, nre answerable for mo nv wife v heartaches. How many racy anecdotes do good stories and you tell your wife to make herhmgtu How many roses do you pin on y ott vour coat and how careful are even-ineof vour appearance in tlie long when there is nobody by but her to be captivated by your charms beau-t- v and bewildered by your manly much ns There is just exactly excuse for her (and a little more, it and may la, lif her dress isslatternly her hair untidy as there is for yu, and there is precious little for either of you. , You excuse vour inJineriinoe mul fond of neglect and the withdrawal and foolish attentions, just as dear to her nt forty as at twenuy, withI the thought; O, well she knows love her; whats the use of 'spooning at our age? By and by there will ier come a time when you bhall a lying in her coffin, perhaps, and oil would sell your soul that day to be able to shine away long years of cold of the neglect with the manifestation love that was always in your heart, ice. certainly, but carefully kept on or if you like, Call it spooning, I any other name of contempt, but tell vou there is nothing so sad in life's history as the vanished oppor-tunit- v to manifest n, love lor which some friend went hungry through slow years of undemonstrative and stupid reserve. Amber iu Chicago s. Tribune. P ktma Cn out of de draughts n wife wants her husband ways with her is a proof, more or less, of a certaian inconi patability of temperament and thought. Probably it is on these and kindred grounds that the American forms her opinion of the average English girl, and, until she gains more experience of English habits, imagines herself strictly correct. On the other hand, for a fair and impartial opinion of the American girl, one must rather to an Englishapply man than an Englishwoman, for he is more on a level with her in thought and more in touch with her in idea. It is no secrect that the unprejudiced, educated Englishman is a general favorite with American women. If he has a particle of discernment he very soon discovers that American freedom is by no means a synonym for license, and when he has fully assimilated that idea he finds his relations with the nice American girl most charming and cordial and fascinating. But in the matter of propriety of behavior he discovers she is inexorable, nnd that, so far from more license of being permitted speech or action, ho in reality enjoys less. The National Review. that no al- if dey Every one knows that Mrs. Stowes Dinah had occasionally aclarin up time, when all her possessions were brought forth from their deepest receptacles, put sedulously in order, and kept so for a brief interval. Dinah, however, was not very wise; she had not learned, like a certain oth- 111 "ill "in Vj- - this conn duced to can only sometime vertising Wlmt tended tl world of remedy Safe Cun to know i restored tors pro He com-- l of it and I dunno bout dat in n,. But dey say dat every r gits it in cose ob time' stays on de road longenoig yer see, de night dat he be de very trip when you is ger. Den you git, too. s For a real hopeful charait,. a cheerful views on ghastly coinmend me to the Ruling s sleeping-ca- r porter. 11 The extent of onr Rainiest, jt inituu The vast region in th? of dollars Hi me States, where the rainfall sometime ticient for successful but they a- ' comprises about tire area (exclusive of Ala aggregates about l,200,0(ji 1 miles, and is about equal bined areas of Great ltritair land, Belgium, Denmark, t Germany, Italy, Sweden, and Austria! This arid region embraces tlie public domain, and of supporting a populatJ least 200,000,000. It is I larger than British India, f having many similar physi j and suporf aetertistics, 200, 00 1,000 inhabitants irrigation. In solving the how to utilize this vast an so as to make homes for tt we have tlie experience of ti of years to guide us. The r . ulous nations of ancient th pied the arid regions of AsL Europe, und subsisted ture prosecuted by irrigateestimated that there are (' acres of land now cultivate.! gation in tho United States j in value from $40 to $1,01 and yielding a net income J the interests on a much lr than this valuation. Senat art of Nevada. to- s is a la v e ; ; by ? j s I Producing Dream, The narcotic properties members of the vegetable 4 have caused many supersti" Brazil it is the custom amo;.; dians to the present day to. eotic drinks to childern, in the resulting dreams, toga ation about the future. I.f parts of Europe the four under the pillow will cause dreams. The somniferous ot the hop pillow are wellkh the Russians go a step fur ourselves in the use ofap1. nontrava, which induces F sumed to be prophetic. I" dream ot white flowers has posed to prognosticate 4 which may be compared that, If a white rose' forth unexpectedly, it is death in the nearest lioue omens, in many cases, of daily life q of Plants. f o ; ! But m cured a ft thus expt remedy L the millic ndverti.se: Ten vt Warner telligent which tin with the worth of experietif specific fi eases gro ments. Mr. W pie want, their sat limiter of Secret a r who uses A Ho Jac'fson (MI Mr. E. 1 fortunate No. 93,8! Louisiana second ca placed liia Bank of promptly ?o.000. Mr. Boc tron of tl the past t in each dr direct froi Lh. Mr. Boc native ot 1 liree yeai desired to wtiich his mit. Hi make tlie native la few montl son and ii If . I Remarkable Engineering F Mr. Le dislike nl never sav Mrs. L Hie count I shun bouses fo around t New Yorl If you h bins Elec experienc( 24 years i trial will ( it. Take There is colored pt The e Colliery Engi neer. Omaha cents, rei service si I the most reins; to gineering feats appears ' in the achieved in China, traordinary physicalstrf namely, the successfulseven steel-wircable of ; I? , m j ; , -' ; K ( : , " i For two e & Tho I)ui eighty-sec- across the river Lunarni having been accomplish1-Danish engineerDeliiide.it'' ly by unskilled nativetiu' cable extends between a distance of nearly 47( er, shiftless person, to let nature the height of the first ht , do her cleaning for her. feet above about There is a family in a thrifty New level of the river, nnd F England town, which respects law, about 740 feet. Thecabk but has no regard for order. Dur- is said to be the longest ing at least half the year. not only with a single exception. their house, but the yard is littered cable across the Kistna, with objects worthless and out ol some 3070 feet. Thre' place, but, with the first snow, comes cables across the Grate?5 . a clarin up time. and 2830 feet respectiven-I do feel so pleased soseethesnow coming down, said Mrs. Slattern, The Czar and the G.Tf one winter morning, ns she stood at had The Czar of Russia her door, tossing tin cans, bottles, years old boots and other rubbish into told some twenty the door-varIf 'twosnt for hav- Gypsy woman whom hf . t!I ing it a few months in the year. I cident while out shootindon t know as I should ever feel sy, totally unaware 0 cleared up. exalted rank, ( he was M hat difference does the snow parent), examined Die make? inquired the neighbor ad- hand and prophe! dressed. j to him among In0 Why, you see, would not outlive he explained Mrs. Slattern, so many useless It is stated that all collect in the house, that Ithings casts have been rea1' V know wlmt to do with them all, dont so I another, greatly to just toss 'em out doors, and the snow of Alexander Alesam , supef .4 CiTtrS 'em UP as niee ns .V'i please. notoriously But they are there in tlie Czar entered upon ms spring! "Oh, of course, a terrible e the 10th ult., and h; , they are. but then, 'tisn't long be- suffer from a more t fore th snow comes again and hides ton. Youths Companion. eye-sor- 1 ( Binnsh-npa- ner elinuC' There i are not si hood, btc poverty c to cross densely tit ion dt-luting " methods. But tie prove tlie those " in can furni other cu True - One of Under tlie Snow. X10 dere feet an laigs ntav heiai but lere head an Lodv niaY hurt, an so dere lives' i sa'u Very nice, I observed you think that a ' ly on an ordinary night joar, you must make up the be,is! pecial reference to such a c ; kuutrs tli chance. Tlie er in tlie U jived "in I!ute two-fiftliS- o The Tame Cat C.irl. The reproach aimed by Americans at the English girl, viz., that she is of the tame cat order, and that her husband will trust her with his hills or the darning of his socks, but not with his ideas, is as great a misconception, in many respects, as the woEnglish estimate of American American the from point but man, of view it has some foundation in fact. YYeneedonly look at the life of the ordinary Englishman to discover the foundation upon which the exaggerated inference is based. He always retains a tenderness. for his club, where he can ventilate his ideas among his fellow-mepolitical, moral, and social, to which, it is quite true, he does not, as arule, treat his wife. If he has a male friend he can pass hours in his company without being bored, which, unfortunately, does not always happen in :he case of his wife, and the very fact that women are the first to declare lj lor easy p leu i'Ot the Lori Church a Uleukillg our jnUHsioutti in de night, a smash-uv0 far shuab. Some genelir,, dat dey won't want to t. chances, so dey hez dur f the engine. tlie St Vt him to ask eachpassongejV' lie would like his bed mu,j or feet to the engine. Wlmt difference does itr asked. Well, y see. Loss swer, if yo head is t0 t is y - crus-iu- you one tile count) A Bosto iating a pi Student Ciereymen employ uie P. Jobnso mond, Ya. they have money. ploy odd The Ge which i t Ihilndelpl In Frani with car c Out in I yer w hose It is uni horse at a Without ron. Oregon "Mild, eqiis Bot fruit, worn!. j 1 11,1 iaimigrsiiuii Dip fish will come A 1,000 captured 1 There a: in tlie Uni A fine n called the F.J. Cl prietors o reward foi not he ci. Cure. Sen By Druggi |