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Show 7 STOJUESOF IiEX BlTLEIi. I with Hi counsel fop lho roe- fill iim th:,t tluvo iiulictinunts ahoulil Iki nffr-ie- K'JLIRITIES OF THE MOUS LAWYER. quii-ii- four i announcement in the lulled Males District court that the Johnson case would be probably the lust criminal cause that he should ever try. the legal fraternity has irdulged in many reminiscences of their distinguished fellow member's long and in many respects remarkable legal career, Gen. Butler was iwenly-tw- o years of nge alien ho was admitted to the bar in lUfii. As a law student lie had a hard worker as well ns a tuick rciiiilnr. and his memory uml application were equally great Before liU adniiss:ii:i to Inc bar lie hud a ilttle in the police court at lirjci.cd Lowi-i!conducting bulls brought by factory girls airainsl mill corporations fur wages withheld oil one prelense or uiiother, un i glad enough to earn an ii feo uf i'J. 1, a '.vver liuticr entered into pnitucr-ulii- p wilii his preceptor, William .Smith, father of 11. I. it was not long before he neipiiivd a large practice. One of his earliest eases wns a most iinportuut one. U wits an action against the city of Lowell for damages claimed for injuries received by fulling Into n cellarway which opened upon the sidowalk. The young lawyer won his case, and the city paid fiV.IW damages, the principle that cities arc liable for such defects being then established. In another early ease, the audacity which has always distinguished (leu. Butter in court was The ease displayed most effectively. lieing called in court, the young lawyer said In the usual way: "Let notice bo given." "In whut paper?" was the inquiry of the d clerk of the court, orm ' IN FRANCE. G Vrryfutllj ta -- lhrru Is a ibuliflloH, urri(rra l !c tall I to-da- : fter hut American traveling abroad, and especially in Frauen, dot's not liate thecusloinof constant ays a 1uris letter in the Bust'll! Jour-mi- l. The pourboiro is a European in li tution so firmly rooted in the customs of tho people that it will bo diiliruii to eradicate i L Every one Ims to submit to this species of servitude, natives as well ns foreigners, it ! u vnlnn ary servitude, to bo sure, by gratitude and perpetuated by habit; but it now lias all tin) forco of an act, of the legislature. One is not legally obliged to give fees, but custom has made the pruclico a, obligatory as any law. French nut n were able to overthrow tho bastilo lilt years ago. Imt they are powerless against the pourboire" of If natives cannot chungo the custom, liow littlo can foreigners avail? I have often heard independent Americans exclaim, on their arrival in Paris for tho first time, that tliov- would not . , ' I'm, , "!! t they wero Americans, tiiqy would not conform to such customs, etc., etc. Life was soon made a burden to them, and they found that they would either have to give fees or return home. "erC t01itI0, Prlnc,Ple rolu a vo " .Ito 1. Tho custom is money. wrong, but, in tho memorable words of Bill Tweed, "what uro you going to do about it?" The iu is ii league being formed against the pourboiro" at restaurants, and by whom do you think? By the waiters thciiisulves. Yes. that is true, and they have lately been bolding a conference in Iaris with the nvowed objocl of suppressing fees at cafes. The proprietors of such establishments nut only do not pny the waiters any salary, but they take for themselves a portion of tho fees paid to tile waiters by tho consumers. Now tho waiters wish to abolish the fee system and have HxlJ salaries established for them. -- I crc-iti'- Diii-nn- grny-hairu- blLu slfitniJl.D in tho Lowell Advertiser," said the young Dcinocraticjlawyer, naming a Ja kon paper. 1 don't know such u paper," said the Whig clerk disdainfully. Don't interrupt the court proceedings, Mr. clerk.'1 said the lawyer, "for if yuu begin to toll us what you don't know there will bo no timo for anything else." In ixii (ii'ti. Butler was counsel in a rase concerning the taking of Lake (.ochituale water. Ho was tho counsel of mill owners. Tho city of Boston bad constructed at great expense various reservoir to supply ns compensation to thi mill owners an amount of water equul to the amount Liken from them. (ien. Butler objected before the court that, having taken tho water, the city could not compensate iu that way. This position was sustained, and the city later sold Its costly reservoirs. in another case in which a person was indicted for stealing a key to a house, (len. Butler nrgued that a key could not bo subject of larceny, being part of the realty, and tho prisoner was discharged. During his long pructicoGen. Butler lias been associated with or opposed to such men r.s Webster, Choate, Fletcher, Everett, Cushing, Curtiss, Kan tout and Abbott. There were two cases, differing widely in character, however, in which Den. Butler was opposed to Kufus Choate. One was a suit for damages instituted on the part ' of tho crew against a captain who had neglected to supply his ship with antidotes for tho scurvy, (ien. Butler conducted tho rnuso of the sailors, and Mr. CLoulo defended the captain. The trial lasted nineteen day. Con. Butler's chief points were that the captain was bound to procure fresh vegetables if ho rould: and that he could. A most remarkable amount of evidence was submitted by the sailors' counsel. Before 1'no trial was over almost every loading physician in Boston, and nearly every sea captain and liip owner had appeared on tho wi'ncss stand. In snilo of Mr. Choate's skill uml eloquence tho jury gave la thi Firsl ght Tho Arc upon the hearth U low, And there Is stillness everywhere: Like troubled spirits here and there The firelight shadows fluttering go, And as the shadows round me creep, A childless treble breaks the gluom, And softly from a further room Comes: ''Now I lay me down to Bleep." And, somehow, with that little prayer And that aweet treble in my curs, My thought guvs back to distant years, And lingers with a dour ono there: And us I hear the child's umeu, My mother's fu:th comes beck to me Crouched at her side I seem to be, And niothor holds my bands again. Oh far an hour iu that dear place Oh for tho peace of that dear time I Oh for that childish tnu.1 sublime Oh. for a glimpse of mother's face! Yet, os the shadows round mo creep, I do not seem to be alone Sweet magic of that trembling tone And. Now I lay mo down to sleep!" Eugeni: 1 Hot a Site Hals. Among the many sage observations found in the writings of tho bard of Avon is tiiis: Thera's no art to liud tho minds construction in the face." Person who havo inado a study of physiognomy nro most willing to confess that it is a ditlicult matter to discern tho chnractcr of the mind from t10 gjiaprs, shades and expressions of faces. A character in tho play of Hamlet" is made to say: O villain, villain, mulling, damned rlllaiu ! Mr tables inert it ii said I set it down, Tisat ono iiai smile, and smile and be u villain. At least. I'm snroit may he so in Dciim-irk- . Aud it is so tho world over, is it true there uro sumo faces that strongly indicate certain characteristics, but as a rule it would be nn unsafe proceeding to tuko men at what they to bo. iM! up-jic- ar Fccnlisritias of Epiders. Spiders differ from insurts in live minute particulars; their eyes nro plo instead of compound, they havo eight legs instead of six, they do not pass through the metamorphoses which are characteristic of insects. they havo nn nutennn', and their bro tilling is accomplished by means of organs which combine tho functions of lungs and gills instead of by won. Ccn. Butler's gift for springing out j tubes pervading their bodies. and taking advantage of every toehni-- , D Wen t H entity was fully illustrated in the famA und an aristocracy wont man connected republic of caso ous aresportably in Boston, who, being affeclod with a amalgamate. A country must be for stealing, was brought to j erned by tho one principle or tho trial on four iudlctments. Gen. But- - other. But give, in a republic, an ler was tho prisoner's council. If the aristocracy over so little chance, and inIt works and plots nnd sneaks and prisoner was convictod on all four dictments ho would be liablo to im- bullies and sneers Itself Into place, and you find democracy out of doors. prisonment for sixty days. As the Thackeray. court wss assembling Gen. Butler co j j : i gov-man- ia e i j ! n, somi-bnrbar- ic old-tim- er chest-protect- i J safe-gua- rd ol hand-to-ha- ; : ! j : I BIBLE LITERATURE. l:,iU l.ven I W ticcii-ioni- !, fnrri d hack clear through a thick luiitnii on And tlicr.rc had GEORGE KENN AN'S ADVICE TO hii uoli'U lil.Ji'r-ihil- t gone u Litle ti ttiiiii'o lnti tho sain. YOUNG MEN. '1 ho riist:imv of tho Ini: tun h.ij Iku, Awbilluua fur 1'iaw Skill: I J Urrumt Fx forced 11. e soft lend of tho bullet dear o that the bullet plums Th Lett Uuatu Is Talv MrtUr. ill Hum lulni of 1 on tin1 sleinii'r shln Huur ta Fnsir for II. Thus was the life of. the soldier j wire. saved. Mini through tho I'urelcMiin's Traveler George Keiiniin says no of his beloved iu leaving the needle y field offers such flattering in- in the protector. ducements to tho ambitions young tnan of courage and high resolve as arctic JEFF DAVIS AT FORT GIBSON. Look at it," said ha exploration. Tka Dim IU Umplrd Half a f rotary Every inun, from Franklin down, Kllll Ilulk whether ho achieved success, or met An order was recently issued by the y with disaster, ha u world-wid- e war departnieuL turning over the reputation, i hat answers the cry hat MbHllduilod mllit reMrvitaun id arctic exploration is a cruel sacrifice (;illson , T 0 lho lotw.tor (lo. Fpt of Lie and a useless expcnd.lure of tnjm flir dUllliilioII a4 ,lrovilled money, l ame, reputation U.wliat the jaw ambitious man wants, and if he loses JeffiT-o- n Davis ut ono time lived ut his life In the effort he counts it woll Fort Gibbon, wliieli is ninety-liv- e miles lost Tlie guerdon is worth the trial' south cf t'offeyville. Kim., and about There was n timo 1 would have gone twenty-fivn.ilos from Talloquah, tho to search for the north pole if 1 could territorial capital. It is u small place. have had the opportunity. Now I um A railway station, n small tavern, a too old to attempt it. A mail should cotton gin aud a few scattcivd houses be oid enough to have had touu) exidentify it completely. perience uml yet young enough to Davis lived there hi 1s:lX, when it have tho strength, Lho vigor and buoy- was a fort in mure than iiume. llis uucy of youth to undertake such an houso was the ilmt while mau's dwellenterprise. I havo read and studiud eroded ut the place. He was Um subject very thoroughly, und wrote ing of a company of soldier captain an article onro on Arctic Explorawhich wss stationed llioro to pres.irvo tion" for tho Aincriiisn Encyclopedia. the Indians. Thu govThere is no new way to reach the north pence among ernment Lad just been cngiigcd in I If an were such oa to start pule. wars with tho Comanches, Sominules expedition tho most feasible route and Pawnee. Several tribes had boon would tic by tbo wuy of Franz Josef conilnod in tho und the troops Lund, which lies to the cast und north were establishedterritory to thero prevent an of Iceland, almost due north of Europe, now boon Tho fort has uprising. Franz Josef Lund was discovered by abandoned by the government nnd tho tho Australian expudition, and after sLilloucd at Fort Kono, just pushing us far as latitude M2 degrees troops west of Oklahoma territory. Tho fort and was seen to stretch away for still stand. miles to the north. The molbod which Davis being an officer, had quarters I think would be the most successful outside tho regular burrocks and lived would be to go by sieges. That is, esin a small houso some distance from tablish cacheii or supply stations ut forL llis wife, the daughter of intervals as far as tho land re tolled. the Zachariah Taylor, was with him. and Of course such supply points could not sensation of their elopement had be inado on leu tines, bocuuse they the hardly subsided at this time. The would shift from place to pluooi houso they lived in stands yet, but It "This operation would takopcrhnps is in a dilapidated condition. It was two years," suid Mr. Kennnn. ''Then IMuM. in It has never been kept built a purty could wait for a suitable seala repair. At ono timo it was a reson and mako a grand rush for the and even elegant domicile north. Tim supply stations would re- spectable is lieve lho parly of tho necessity of for that couutry. It ono story high, built of logs and covered with weather carrying provisions for the entire trip, board. At each end stand a large, iul it would bj more easily handled, as light cavalry is more readily manip- square brick fireplace. Tiieso firenow lho only substantial ulated in a battle tlinu infantry. The places are of the building. The looking parts only other land that reaches ns far roof many sags, shingles swell tho north us Franz Josef Land is Green- f nu,,,or appearances, Is land, and ll oven a question if that 1,10 Mo of 11,0 does. Lockwood, of the Grecly ox- - i U.aiT0W I,0Kh lon2 houso battered and decayed, doors pedilion, pushed farther north than arc broken down aud windows broken , and although he in. any of his po-tyreadied the 82d degree of latitude the 'ilia house is located on tho military shore had begun to bear away toward the east, a fact which goes to bliow reservation unit tho late order from tho war department turning it over that tho land was rounding off into an to the interior department will probislund. be the causa of its being tom ably The most dangerous way to go down. i north would be from Behring Sea os In Davis's Fort Gibson days there the Jeannette did. There tho tide ' lived at tbo fort a Catholic priest, takes you to the north, snd onoo Fulher Dodson. Among his accomcaught In tho lie thero would be no wss plnying the piano and return, unless a ship could bo built plishments like u log thut could not bo crushed. ho had an instrument with him. lie In that case. If well provisioned, that died so mo years ago and bequeathed this instrument to Mrs. IV. 1. Boss, might be tho surest way of reaching who keopi the Boss hotel, a homely the pole. Tho tides uf Iluflin's Bay trend to tiio south und warmer lati- hostelry of six rooms at tho forL This tudes. Dr. Bessler. a Smlthsonlon venerable musical tncclmuism has still a ronnrk&bly good tone, although scientist, who was on the Hall expodi-tioIt is now over seventy-fiv- e years old. made some very elaborate calculations on tho tides of Baffin's Boy, His Law la Us just t) Woman. and he told me that he was satisfied tho laws of Under that tho tides there came from ilia from which our laws regulaEngland, west, and not tho eabL If this conwere relation clusion bo true it goes to prove that ting tho marringa tbo condition of married wocopied, Franz Josefs Land reaches so far to was one of slavery in everything the north that it cut) off the flow from man name. These laws formerly albut tho east Such being a fact, it would her husband to whip her as be possible to push to the north polo, lowed as he chose, provided he did not or at least us far north as the land often uso a stick thicker than bis thumb extended. They gave him all her property absoths Gas:res. C hones in thi Wcrli lutely at marriage, and denied her tbo Every once in a wliiio sotnn war right to mnke a will or to act us exeveteran, under proper circumstances cutrix, or to nssert any rights or ownand conditions, will toll you how he ership over the money which had been escaud death at such a place and given io her by her own father. They such a timo by tbo queerest chance subjected her to the ignominious und in tho world" saya the 1hilndeiphia disgraceful punishment of tho duckingIf she usod her tongue n littlo Ono or these "queerest -stool Inquirer. chances in the world" full to lho lot of too freely against her female neighbors, and the unhappy creature was who lives in Germannil town. and, in truth, it is one of the doused into the water ogulu and again very queerest. He was about to leave in the presenco of a mullitudo of jeerfor lho scat of war in ISfi l. aud tho ing spectators until half drowned, or girl to whom he was engaged, among until slio would give sufficient promnumerous other things, gave him a ises to thereafter keep her unruly inado by her own fair member In butter subjection. And us bunds and wet by ber tears. It was Into us 1717 tho grand jury of this meant to be practical, mid was of im- - county, in their presentment, which is nienso thickness, that is, it was padded still among the records, solculy reto the depth or an inch or two. Dur- quested the county connnibionors to ing a long aud tedious campaign in forthwith erect a ducking sloe), which, chilly wenlhcr the soldier found it in they said, was too greatly needed. vuluablo as a against colds, IIow would tho educated and intelliand wore ll almost constantly. Ho gent women of the present day deal had It on one morning when plunged with a grand jury that should propose ns a Into tho heat or a skirm- tho erection of a ducking-stoish. Tho affair developed into quite a punishment for women? 1liiludelpliia little bailie and toon the straggling Times. fire on both sides had become rattling And Thin He Diln't hen it was over lho soldier volleys. A Spanish author says in a serial retired to his tent and removed, his story now running: coat end shirt in order in stanch the "Then she looked up. flow of biood from a small flesh wound Then he uiiule a movement os if to in his back. In removing tho pro- clasp her in his arms, lector he felt a sharp pain shoot i "I lies then he drew a cigarette through his cheat, and then ho noticed froin hii pocket, scratched a match ' that the protector was cut all up by on his leg and proceeded to smoko." tho passngo of a bullet An investiAa Obliging YssD, gation developed an awfuily "queer chaneo." His sweetheart had acciMis Amy I dont believe in throwdentally left a needle slicking in the ing kiste. Goalie Neither do I. When you pad which he had tiover noticed before. This ran right through the have any lor mo let me know and 111 doth and a bullet hnd struck it on tbo como sad get them. i:ci-l- , FEE-GIVIN- . Another case ill which (ion. Butler met Mr. I'hoiite is proverbial. Tim former devoted a largo share of Ills Argument to warning the jury to of the magic spell of Choate's eloquence, which caused men to lose their reason and become incapable of judging between right i. id wrong and to uward their verdict ns a tribute to 'oratory rather than as a just decision. The effective warning caused Choate's to scorn the chief issue in the esse. Consequently the grout ora- tor dared not exercise it, and began his argument by saying: My speech all'll bo the speech of a plain old man." But Choalo was not Choate in a noucloquent speech, aud Hen. Butler roiulitiuu lii.it tho prisoner impossible not to admire. h-ei- ) dair.iigcs of mi Pi il.oiiM iiliM.l y.iiitjf to the um which tho theft of tin) treiitpxt I'liai'j.-i-l uiiioiiiit. Tl,i iiriii!u-to his uid:i iiii'iit, wui oi'iii'PL'il ly hiii counsel to liloiul jjiiilty. "S ,y guilty, sir," Saul Uu) general, sternly. Tho man obeyed mid Ilia oilier three indietinenU were not j)robiil. Hut when tho counsel for tho proaer.ilinn moved .fur sentence (inn. Butler pointed out a fatal flair, manifest to every one when attention was called to it. In ten minutes the astonished prisonor was a frea man. It is said the court laughed at the ruse, the cleverness of which it was 1I0W TO GET AT THE IOLE point. The ll r. klllul lur SuJrl uf t.irrjr l'llrrr) It Null Kljlt tf Art. is unfortunate Hint tho word Uiblo to us u expressive uf shat originally was llio law, tho prophet nnd lho sacred writings, says tho Jewish Messenger. For tho term Hilda signifies a book; tbo Hebrew division indicate a literature. A good deal of misunderstanding resiecting Scripture and Indifference to its study can be traced to its being regarded a a book. Wo are accustomed to associate with the word book a certain logical sequence, a plan or plot, a development, a concluoiou, finality of some sort But the ltiblo is just the reverse of a book, judged by this staudurd. It is nut a book, vo iu ineliiphor and tlio phrar logy uf tho unthinking. It is first aud last a literature. Aud what a literature; running the whold gamut of feeling und presenting within tho com (kiss of a few hundred pages what iufiiiite variety of subject, treatment, stylo. has i'i)ii:ii down thought! Hero wo have history, genealogy, drama, the lyric, the epic, tlio n psuliu, tho lamentation, the lovo nung, whose exquisite bounty khini' like a gem in its eastern casket; tlio sober proverb, as fro-- li and stiini.Wting us when first utd tered by tho city's gate; the outburst of tlio seer, tho dry details of tho chronicler, tho lovely idyl of Biilli. the profound philosophy of Job, mystic rliaiwudy, precise statutes, wailing ecstary, the problems of life und of life beyond death, thoughts of God and a wider humanity than ono race nnd people how vnried is the literature embodied in Scrli-lurCull it nut Scripture, cull it sculpture ralher, for here surely It is not written, but gravon ly the Hand divine. But tho Bibln is not only a literature In tho variety of its subject, from tho cosmogony of tlio jwnlaleuch to tho prophecy of Mulurhl. It reveals ns wall tho genius of literature in its style, language, literary method. As if to stump it with jieculiar power and invest it with a charm that was to resist nge und cliino. Illustrates almost every variety of literary composition and figure of rhetoric. Compare the simple slvlo of tlio author uf Goncsi with the vivid of nil Isii'ah, the easy narrative of tho books of Kainuol with tho rhythm und swell of tlio IVtims, or Bulb nnd ite with the dirge pictureitquo of Koiioloh or the florid wealth of tho Bong of Song. But more than this- - would you havo humor? Whut better example than Elijahs appeal to tlio priest of Baal or .lolbmn's fablo of tho ulivo tree? Ciiii pathos of David's sorrow nt Absaloms death bo supnssed?. Is it satire? Tlioro nro sheaves of it in lho prophets. Is It slinging Irony? Why, Isaiah sarcasm still cuts tn the quick. Would you have examples of tho sublime? Job supplioi it in similes that possess all tlio majestic elements of primeval forests, of nature in it immensity. And to descend a step to mere mutters of form, tlio literacy artist will find many a hint in the parallelism of lho psulmist, in tho puns of lho prophet But for and word-pin- y the finer appreciation of these points no translation will suffice. The original text alono must bo consulted. Its dew and iqmrklo, and goulus of tho Hebrew language, cannot always bo translated, any more than you can translate perfumo. Its metaphors lose much of their forco, its similes becorno exaggerated whon translated from their ouster n clime. heart-broke- ipns-slone- tVlirn you Ijiivii overexerted yourself by o: ukiii;, there I noth running, in.: that sill relieve the vorciies of your u quickly snu efiectually joints ami i. Culratiiiii Oil. Ibe jrreu-cure uo csrlii for puin. Frier Si mils. Nn, Kn'i Jcrikt. tliougn you uo minder Ibe Gciiimii iaujiuugf, you are Uu mu-ie- 1 1lls cerlifip Hint I bate used Dr. Bull's Coui;li Ftrup and found it to be sbatiti rri.icniii'd. 1 can of civ any that it bal licljimi my coiil'Ii (wbii'li I might ray was flii'uiiici ami 1 cbecrlnilv rr minuend ll' to all II. W. Dosxei.lt, ibotu alHirlrd. M Fust VlUt btrret, New lark. 1 he dalle aurplna of births over deaths In I' idled Kingdom Is ,!iUJ. the Blalna lias bought t03,( 00 bouse In Washington. It cort U tenta to run a train a mile la Englsud. Daniel Bsndinsun, tbe actor, is rauchlng in - Montana. Even the dlasy walls It It lore that makes afalried go round. the New York snd prouklvn consume daily about sixty thuurand chickens. Fehmxrv tieala the days of the week ililn year. There will be four and bo more of each. bsngea of 4 1 1 male Kill nuuv miile Hum la generally known. - this the ea Iu InsUnom In-llis roUHiiluliua is and nmomr our Immn n pur-liothose new home in igrant population u( the Went, and wln-malarial sin! typhoid feiiT iwriall at certain seaMUM of lls) year. Thu bert preparallio fur a rlianim nl climate, or fur dici and aal. r whli'li that change mwesailnti, la lluali'llcr'a Klnmarb lintcro. which nut only fr-tiil- u Hi sysiAiu aguliiat malui la a variable damp, and Ihn di'lulllailiig effift of Implral hell, but 1 a lo the leading remedy for ei.uaiiiiailun. ilyspepeii, liver complaint, lustily Iniublea Svlnlly apt lo attack emigrant and violluh Iu regiou near (lie equator, murine- - and tourUi). H'hei her uacd a a nafeguard by an tuyagrr, traveler by land, miner, or of ngrlcul-tur- ii is newly aipulati- -l dt.lrieU, till Ann specific hue ler liod ll imwl faiurnhl ttnlimony. Eli n il lion orn and mid of deed letter si old 1'Sxt Iu are annually Washington. e! word-colori- ugo-mn- rk Ibs Chinas Psop'.s- - "Every traveler," says Iresidont Angcll, of Ann Arbor university, In a lecture before Hie art Institute, who wanders to China nnd Jaiwn, goes ilh the conviction that tho Japanese are tho superior people ho comes back with tho knowledge that tho Chinese arc. They havo tho staying-powe- r, tbo long, strong pull of the Anglo-Saxon.- August Flower For Dyspepsia. A. Bellinger, Propr., Stove Foundry, Montagny, Quebec, writes: I have used August Flower for Dyspepsia. It gave me great relief. I recommend it to all Dyspeptics os a very good remedy. Kd. Bergeron, General Dealer, Iauzoii, Ievi.s, Queliec, writes: "I have used August Flower with the best possible results for Dyspepsia. C. A. Barrington, Engineer and General Smith, Sydney, Australia, writes: August Flower has effected a complete cure in my case. It acted like a miracle. Geo. Gates, Corinth, Miss, .writes: 1 consider your August Flower the best remedy in tbe world for DysI was almost dead with pepsia. that disease, hut used several bottles of August Flower, aud now consider myself a well man. I sincerely recommend this medicine to sufferd ing humanity the world over. Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. & A. G. G. GKEEX, DRINK A Trus Combination of and RIO. JAVA MOCHA . Picture Card Given With avery pound For package. Bala every where. lutes liaC.TiUi. BOILING WATER OR Cl MILK. EPPSS GRATEFUL-COMFORTI- NG. COCOA LABELLED LB. TINS ONLY. " GONSUESPTION. Hero are a few facts gathered from the address: Dru.ikcnneas Is almost lhnaapnrillnHoiiilr for Bril unknown in China, There are tew bm thnmanga uf eama of Ihu must kiwi aodufluog Mudiu bars hum eand. Inlsdsarqibiwhilh charities. Thera is the most intense wlii.lficacT, I lut I will Kid tho butt lm ruu.uil ll ThfJATIKB ua llna dmaaataanjrauf. ignorance as to currant events: there faj.nrwbow.11 acad mu) P.Ol aMm. no telegraph were no T. A. Kluno, H. 1. 101 i'rarl KL, N. Y. of is Chincso tho roliteness lines, part STurw vnv Ocamtaa sanaraur religion, but tlio average Cliinamun is CAHLCTriVCA, COLDS, an unmitigated liar. Filial obcdicnco MEASLES, CATARRH, AC. avTHi vaa ottmi invisible is a Chincso virtue. The Coicstiuis SOUND DISC LTAicfc la fmwmutd to are great believers In signs," 'thoua torygr 'nLs(( luivo no riM- -t sands in number. They fliiMiftHM ton ,w f Fstfwoiiaryn. r trtwlyto- fm vMU. Rni wsiftfi whtoil nrmiI straight streets or walls, because they &J.WAUNklMpfMiUaul in devil travels a believe the straight Mm end Womw toekfii FTW7 line. They wnnt no foreigners. I nPTC "fIiUfUimr I W rttoni?, lift to IIM tovntltly; said Mr. Angcll, rADbH Tha Chinese, Henl for cmr i'Jtpj rlulited method ' Md are docile, they nro not a warlike ifcrtiMp yhiir tfn(i nra'lury. llfffpiv forrmr I'artlmlerp frr. THIAurwr hrpm home. AldUK,')', stCOUIfell L'XIvX, MBW YUUK. race, and yet once aroused, with their unnumbered millions, they would n.CAH fl ACR FAKX, MU Atl'fitto Kiiie make a tremendous amount of trouble h(h( rnli guii; mwetoot fruit, Mr Ihm nilriNdij kitf mronntrjr, to any nation on the face of the enrth. KWWWtll Of WifDil IB. (.'ish or iHlfdlRFBl. Iff. lt.li rirrvt, llilitutelpiiie. g. The couutry is grndunlly succumbing Gviffttijr, to Western civilization, but slowly, How lo win at Cards 0k AdflL very slowly." rlh AMfFikinifiiHiinMtitf th.llm-.iUM- a.; nwUu-irEm- r t - Esitbeaiih Bitsi. An interesting heuthonish usago exist among tlio Ioliusliooks (a Rutben-in- n tribe) In Votylinin. A brido being led to tho church to be married must pass through the fire. A small fire Is built for the purpose oil tbo ro.id. aud tha relatives of thn groom dlsposo themselves in files on bulh sides to see the bride p S) over it They believe that if the girl Is not virtuous tho fire must harm bor. 1iirmFMivivlilBfta.iUinMila liNMUwA AikJivtw nr ewii m uerMuu.l r itoJI Hcmi, M t'bkto topiMUb Jl. Y. POTATOES19 rd mi Uti bm. Moexperlenrp inquired. Pirrctton for sp routine fNt. iddrato T. J. SKINNER, Columbus, Kansas. TOTHIVKh UflHTCni'IK" m filial VI Nil I CU W pay amonttunclvxpm. IV la milMikW ULIhUTVX.qadiMB, GARFIELD TEA .okCofltt tiaa aauAina at ail dnnuiuu w Ut W. 4Mb SI, Jf.r. amallav fm. Build ILAUlmDamfwi. A hlCQ Mn bare PauiiibM fruL MairVi ark. pa pq, Mw Tha radio It. |