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Show IMtLIMis. ! A ChioeMi jai;f.!;!.K Ka-.0 La,s h--ta itarte-l in .Vc1 lorit. Tie cau-i .f Jj-;-.-r C::y, Iowi, Li-f.'ir-Ljrse -.'i:o cars are ; . W T 03 S; U-e C.'-'J 'Jl: in "c Vv.-i. A M!-:f.-:; ; i ce.-ro wears a li-'irty-' rrar o: i hit. It : crowded aii WTu:y-t'.,,ir L:--h. Th (.Vlir Ua;':2i, rec.T A !'.a-'iee lla'!r.i Lai U-ca in.vr;-jr-i'.-.-l ::n v'.mj.wj capuai. Loncl. i iccaa lLii u r.T-.D a ixx ul' stniwL-ernci. r'-orLi.y, aLi cn re-,.JW;.Z re-,.JW;.Z i''f'-t t7 b.x win'.-.-l Eve cvn ' f.ri-" An rl:Lll::i in c.-.r'-'.w allij II-; by a Ujju lio; LcaJ L5 c-uk l-ll it e t!: The iirat ul lliis year's crop ot jea'.L.-frum jea'.L.-frum yi-A-y.Li the roe ha? been harve-'.ci m A'irjn, U. Tie lr.-.'.e girl jaa..';j 4" .' 1 Jo-h BJiinys says in his ''looter:" 'T.aia oriiciuaiiy came i'rotii Norway. : and d jloay wi'A have care t if they hid or:-:nj".y s:aid there.-' A lady t'rienl r?:a:i:s that they still show their gi-i a-way origin. , TLa CLir.eae temple of Qaon Viia Muen in J-an Frunei-co, was lately dedieatud with itupOiing ceremonies. There aie two ''to.-s Jo-ses'"' at the do..r, each twenty feet hifh, and in-i in-i Mde arc seventy-live other Josses. i SeTeral hordes Unve recently died iu ; New York from feeding freely on ' brewers' grain, a chemical analyiis of , which revealed the fa -t that strychnine i was the destroying substance, it having hav-ing been ned in the manufacture of beer. i The loudest piece of Lent glass ever 'made in this country hasjust been finished at Newark, N. J. The plate j is for the First National Bank of Pater-ion. Pater-ion. It is seventy-two inches in length, j The curvature is six inches from the ! plane. The bear known as the Clubfoot, ; which has been for years the terror of the Tejou Mountains, in California, and i for which a reward of $1 ,000 has been standing for some time, was recently found dead in the mountains. Nine deaths are attributed to this bear. William Price is an Englishman. When in London he read that in Iowa land could be bought for from three to fifteen dollars per acre. He came to Iowa, landing at Burlington. He stepped into the nearest saloon and inquired in-quired the price per acre of land in that vicinity. He was told $100 to $160. Price concluded he had been "sold." He determined not to stay in I a land which had been so misrepre-Isented misrepre-Isented to him, and started east on the 'same train, having been in Iowa two I hours from 7 till 9 o'clock in the I evening. |