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Show 2 TrE r. ti Tt 0 lif- int sud. li nti5- ii i kfjt-- tirr tor, i jl."U.: KC'ii Wrui bj kj - A is-- (. ! W U Sru f the ii:i-k - .!.- fc"- .. M ? t rf .1 U inmrl uwct Wat. Tb DOVE. T ir. "Vf- w-r- iL cf -.' t d- - cjr'UX Will M Af LMlr- t'iuLk Id PtTi; rva c f iia3fc; ju a fery irge pit ta JCew York itie truss fhnrnf a, catA iii-- t Lr. CVra Eisuu. ; "A exli fc a very iiLg to un4 y...a i.i4 rii d Zol lk.t I Li f. :v. ai.1 ir r:ul luf st.!.;,' U iA py iuii ti n.-!.- : tilt;Lil itvuiii'i wwitfii distraugtt. jkd "Bz. how i it aboct ttts iiikT-t- r not piwvtsl to tuv eiJ I, --yoo Lave the two utw-amy ii this fecrt i enough ",ijfcMI-riiiit-Lc replieJ; "c-- an.tber for vctxri-i'.-?- . tbit the I will outvie. y the uf iurtet ptses precis- Lav a bat trll ue yon jner; whom I fchoubl iiiuch like to tuwt Miss Cameron." I w narpriwl that be kbouU have hnard of her, and aid ml r itaiue wL-- b yoo "You iiirutk'U-- l were und the itifiimLoe tf the cryct-J- ," be replied. fSo, then,' said I, "this power is ulV.- -i to that of auitoal tuaguetitiiu?" lt proilacd a laodrwl result by different means But this Miss Cameron, aa I judge from four remarks, tnut be a peculiar character what I nhould call 1 b-r- j i-- il jt c y fuf." tt ma. iju4 Tt f fc (LI 8fcS liar li gml trv JilJ fciaA,- Su, -. nr. uiuu LaMBOtiea u rnnw u Jkbu it Tl I'Ml. ir Lsx farytiaxi It lu juk:i, tiuJ, Yt IUi lLrtiidri Wtl far. taf iutt LtUt fJ.a.tt-- tioa. 1, lu irM ail ml bngtt. Kv is liar MiMki4 LaiKtl, Now tu ilikft4 bt udit. A amu tuft Iiwh fruui ixAven, U aUTTMi tlat liatroii mr, latk A Li"! iii Tt .l u.tieui a - ruuud (jar h a.ieoc. after prater. ppi " fcnbliiuat4r , bird! W Lien itb worslip. ri urpr, .y ud Awi I'uuim to Kartfe drs urr. Awl KarlU U r'amdiee, ry A. lirbiM iu Youth. Conipaaiuo. Many je&re ago I was boarding in a known boose at tbe lower end of Broadway, kejt by a jolly, light eyed, light haired, fat CKrman lady, the widow of a professor," Mme. Steinberg. At for myself, I waa a quiet, 14 fashioned teacher of languages, and the Among my pupils waa jilace suited ui the daughter of a rich widow lady, living in Washington qurt, which waa the height of fashionable aspiration in those day. My department waa instruction intbe German language, and in Ella Cameron J found a pupil bo completely and naturally imbued with the ruysti-ciw- n deemed peculiar to the Germans and the orientals that I found she grasped the intrtinct of that grandly expressive language aa an infant learning ita mother tongue. There was German blood somewhere in the long pedigree , of Ella's ancestors. Ella Cameron had inherited sufficient of the natural Scotch intellectual force to give her balance without blunting the subtle eensibilities of her uiind. : One day there came to oar house a foreign gentleman to board. No one knew his nationality, and to this day I am ignorant of it He upoke English fluently and idomHtically correct, but with snch an accent as he might have learned by being educated abroad; yet he was not an Englixnman, for lie ttuid no. His German whs jterfection, his French Parisian, his Italian and Spanish a marvel. As for his age, he might have bees thirty or he might have been fifty. Naturally enough, with our assimilating taxt, education and pursuits, and through the kind intervention of Mine. Steinberg, Paul Stolberg and I became soon acquainted and then intimate. "Great men," he would Ray, "are but the emlxWliiueut of an abstraction, and aa purely accidental an anything within the meaning of the word." These and similar enunciations he would give utterance to, not iu any dogmatic or Pelf sufficient spirit, but simply as stating the result of his study and ex perience. Most cultivated and educated persons I have met have possessed hobbies of tome sort, and Stallierg's hobby was the collection of crystals. Hi collection, however, was certainly the finest I ever eaw, containing specimens of quartz, spar and other tuiuerals, and even the diamond in various forms. They were arranged iu bis cabinet under glass, and Besides numbered several huudred. these, he had in another case a collection of magnets, comprising about fifty, and also of all sizes. Such a curious concatenation of tastes surprised me. and I remarked upon it, asking why be had selected two such diverse objects for collection. "Nso diverse as you think, my dear friend," said he. "for I, at least, think that where two powers, apparently different in form and character, produce the same results, if exercised in the same manner, there must be consanguinity somewhere." "The magnet attracts," said I, "and the crystal, excited by friction, will do the same, but so" will a glass bottle r a stick of sealing wax." Ho smiled, and going to his crystal cabinet selected from it one of the larger ones; then he said, as he returned to my side, "Sit easily in your chair while I show yon something else the crystal will do, and mark your sensations." I tjgjk an easy position, resting my hands on the arms of the chair, and waited. Seating himself directly in front of me, he raised the crystal with both hands and at about a distance of six inches from my person, drew it slowly, perpendicularly before me, from my head to my feet. As he did so I noticed a sensation as of a light breeze blowing upon me. The operation was repeated, and this time 1 felt a pleasant drowsiness creep over me, the cool wind still blew upon tne, and I seemed to see nothing but the crystal, which assumed a larger appearance arid became luminous at the angles. A third pass, and it occurred to me that I would mention this luminous appearance, which was increasing; but on trying to do so I found I could not speak or move, and with a dim fancy that I was rude to fall asleep under such circumstances I became insensible. When I became conscious the window was open, and the cool October wind blowing upon me; my forehead waa wet, and my chair had been wheeled in front of the window. Stolberg sat by me, and 1 observed that he looked paler than usual and anxiouB. "What is the matter?" said I. "Nothing," he replied. "I do not care to wait until you should come viaturally out of your coma, so 1 UBed physical wt-- I !; to it.til wciiiit a ease tLry If were ti-- tacks, m to to fulijw Li iittl t io fenocs prutUy lo n-- dvM.eu CJL g-- t brt-- a Lut it itcir ac i a Kiuple thi&g Abd ao cwnrojoo very few pe:2e, tmkss it is a case cf GENERAL BANKING. to a c Id. Xew pay aay York i ou of the places oa tU-r- e t. the Atlantic cuau-t- , Aai El to a C.C-Wrjtt L. W. eHl fclLif f. tA catarrh at I AU LtmL grtt uiAcywhich have J, their crigia in this ceglect of the aioipleBt precAUtioB of everyday life. O.E-Hn"What k coinmoiilf kixjwu a paea-moni- a ta."f. weathef is umply that staM of the AUoosphere condocive to eolda a&4 more liable U reult in Kanrthiiig seri-oo- Commercial National BaEk, The climate, of New York ia But nearly as bad for tboae mlu.piMl to COBAOiuptioo, catarrh And other diteaees of the respiratory organs as that of !! other coast citiet of tbe BortL Aa to A Paid ia Ciiiti cold, tbe simplest And most sensible is, when yon have one g-- t rid of it Stilus k aa aooii as w(&ble. By all means do sot neglect it," New York Herald. H. O. HaskMoa, J. C. I and lr-t- . T. A.Wbaiee. , ml At. feurtaaiit-rTha lather fodoaWiMiaatt, la'.nr Era-jr- , t'o&act. Hrtrj Edward Payson Wnton is still aa vigorous as when he inado his famona mile iu Laaidoo. Butithaabten tDEX years since he walked for money. He was the father of walking eontetta, and during his profdoul career wlkHl OCDEX, UTAH. in all 62,000 milek 1 Aked him what he of the recent contents. kit thonht day "I haven't attended Any of them," he - '1125,000. said. "I tried to elevate the sport Capital FaiJ in, - - There is no exercise like walking, and 1 Snrplus, attribute my present health tflid vigor to the walking I have done. It is a pity that H '. PIOFLCW. rwaidftt. JOHN A. K'YLE, Vww Prveidect the contests cannot be conducted on the A. P. tlbhLOH . t attier. elevated plane they once were. "Aa to the recent records which have been made, you may say this: When 1 Interact Paid on Tin acd aii-- f Fepoaha. was in the businesa a mile was understood to be 5,280 feet. Now, Apparently, it may be anything lees than tdat My UTAH NATIONAL BANK experience of many years taught me that no man can make anywhere near as OgOm, Utah. many miles the second day as he does the first I don't care what tbe records may United States Depository. be in tbe recent contests, I know that on the second day the muscles of the leg are so contracted that one's stride it four . .. lOO.OOO. inches shorter. Tbe second ia tbe worst CAPITAL, . 1 120,000 day of Any honest race. One can make more the sixth day than in the second." loterett Paid on Tim Cfpotita. Philadelphia Ledger. J. E. Doolt, PrefioVct. I Thera A Potato Famlnof W. N. Fun L. B. Adams, famhas been a There certainly Viee Pmident potato CaahWr. ine in the Middle States and in New, Ws. V. Ku.ntirF, England, so that New York city has Wtiux W. Cot, Prwidfwt. ( aKtier, been obliged to depend upon import TiEO. BoBiaoN, and MtLueer. from Canada and from Scotland. I was told a very curious fact about these Scotch potatoes,, which, upon investigation, I found to be true. It seems that the Scotch potatoes, of which an enormous quantity have been imported OFO(DKX UTAH. here, are not Scotch at all, but are Irish. Shipments are made from Dublin and . $200,000. Belfast in small coasting schooners to the Clyde, and there the potatoes are taken aboard the vessels of the Anchor DIRECTORS: and State lines, and brought to this counW. Warren idtspy Ptevf Corey, R. A. Wellf. try as Scotch potatoes. They are con- TlK.'hoon, ('. E. Wnrtele.H. H. not and Ad. Kubn. Tbeo.Kohii.sD signed by weight by measure, S. 8. Schramm, hnd over 7,000 tons of them have been imported since the 1st of December. E. OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. J. Edwards in Philadelphia Press. t.m P!it io coin-mence- d t. jl one-thir- lim. Mb. mtK, " state bank, f suitPbue, lit. Vice-Pre- CITIZENS' BANK CAPITAL, WEHT.B OFTlCtFS. COUNTY CU-r- Attorney L. H. Knwrc. Sheriff ii'.bert K. Kolnap, Coroner Jliirshi;! Alien. Surveyor H. W. Faris. Bnperintendect of Uittrict Pcools At i El'UEFS. EL MOTE vC'M (4a3 a H EEELtS J oti 4 JEOMAD ATTCR-NEY- Cc: Ubi THIRD OODES PRECINCT.' . FOVRTH OO PEN FFFriNCT Justice of the Constable-H-. Peace-V- al E. tteel, fimeoo. BCNTSV1LLE PRECINCT. of the Peace Anpr-- McKay. Justice Constable George E. Fwrin. EDEN PRECINCT. Jnstice of the Peace E. B. Frorer. Constable John tiould. RORTH OODES rREClNCT. Justice of tbe Peace lames Storey. Constable- - James Deamer. HARRI8VILLB PRECINCT. Jnstice of the Peace William G. Eawsou, Constable James H. Taylor, PI.A1N CITT PEECINCT. Justice of the Josiah ', aerxi J Q RICHARD ,ikioA Aw, Og&m, Justice of the The above r aor'u-tj- It Mr.. iw, XI 1 ncx ir lj . H. tirsti9rh A isu.. atrart, C t cn., I' tat. P. Q. a.fcit tLt'V l f 1 aetly-Ivt- r. tie. JIBES K, liHEAJJU JJMEALL A ALLISON. aX'aaI) . J. Fliw T frii!et. ..uiL J. E.Ki.n. ilt fr. Pi Secretary. Am, csa. .. I WW. i ATTCRSEYS-AT-LA- mr. I tan. CvafcB, JAtXtB b ioH tut M, W Acut PaW, m wrij. tjthmw M. ever PteX KatiocaJ Fiii.if. corner of avexiM axd TafL'i-lncr- . ri f hy (AdltwUftM4lt arm. wfcrfirnrr bvm tM- - t Key fct mm B. fcOEEAJaN, AT7CRKEY-A7-LA- Offe, uptaira. No. WaLixfOn HOB ID 5) tirctt, BEWOOD, Y THE CHICAGO ATTORNEY-AT-LA- OfSc, 3t street, Twenty-fourt- h Orden.-ftai- AAKPOU tlllTB A gMlTH 6MJTH, i. A. W. BA1TA. Milwaukee CXEe. poob-- Panii bcilduif. aad M, First NaUoLA 36, 36 - PH Y S I C I A NIS A & St. Paul RAILWAY ATTOR.NEEYS-AT-lA- HPS URGEONS. la the only line rnnnin Solid Vetibnled, 6tani-heate- d d Train Daily and between ( hiao and Omaha, eonposcd of atauitioent bleeping Car and Eiectrir-lU'fate- Tbe Finest Diiief Crt ia tbe World. A. COTTlNGHAAf. Y 'PHYSICIAN AND SPECIALIST. In rotneetion with ierai rractic. jivea attention to diaeaM EVERYTHING FIRST-GLAS- S. , Tial periiliar to femalea Any forther information a to Rate of Far direaMa of tbe cecito urinary organs, diseaee of tin rectum, via. : Pile, tktola, tiscara And etc., will be cheerfully furnished by ALEX MITCHELL, ulceration; diMwtaea of I be oar. cose, threat And 'ommercial Afreot. Cheat, Consultation free. T. T. POWELL, Ctf i 209. PoaUtitic. Telepbooe or Traveling Agent. 1C1 CIVIL ENGINEERS. .w C.A.TCSB. FJTSH PAAJS. & PARIS, S. Maid THE Salt Lake City Street, OGDEN TRUNK FACTORY CIVIL ENGINEERS & SURVEYORS. Plans, sjcilicati ns and estimates piepared and work superinter.ded. , Maps, plats, tracinpi., fclue rriLt, etc., etc., on short notice. eseci.d Kooms 3 and 4. 1'nion t lock. No. Mi TwfLty Pourtb r'treet. tVden. I'tah. MARKETS. KOI'.HKT BKCGHI.MAX i'l Fritz (Kuccpssit A Pr.meljr.an.) OPI1CA-G- O Sausage Works! a Foot ol Twentieth St. at (V?. MAKING OF n C,y Me Market. ALL 2r,r jj ; tion, A. E. Teiej.L-EeT)- KINDS or wire ?. OF pn-e- P O. lioz Wetrekbt. SAUSAGE A sforapt atten- cr.T. L. B. Boston Meat Balch Met, KALL II1ND9 OFm Fresli Meats, Fish, Poultry and Game in Season. taken at yon r door, and poods d to ar.v rs-r- of the citv. a stiecialty. DELIVERY Onr Meat VVaRon is a Market on wheels which calls at your fcosse so that yoa may select yonr own poods. It runs torth of 23d St. on Washington Avenne and the Bench. Order Tel. Manufactures the Rett Trmikp. Repairing promptly attended to. Old Trunks Taken in .".( tiar,pe. firders called for and Delivered to ail parts of the city. KLINE A OPPMAN, No. S'TECIALTV. A YFaAIC! lo brier j frK.ii.f vm:r t.nfe. and who vrk iiiutriou4y, jafter btiuAand how m frn 1hrfi I.itaH 'a ilve-w ill Alcn fnmiih thfirown lemltti.!i the intufttionoremlo,vf.icnt.nt which V"ii5i tnm that amount. So money for mftmims iti t Bliil nr ubuvv. Kasilv and qicki I Irsmed. I ieire bu. mw worker frum mhb din rift. oTrunty. hae already tnuplr nuC provided with enijilovmpnt a im-nuroiMT, who are making over StKH areareai h. it "nIVEW nd SOrillt. Foil lat'tlcularaFHFaR. Addre at once, 1.. C. AI.I.F.X. A n-- . Maine. T :!(Vr!.It iMrh any (aim- sntrili. $300 wi, wiio id and iea 40, deiiv-lere- pkovipt mfKTIa'mfWCAN Wedding Goods, ASENC !2T A pamphlet of Infonni . il t stract of the lw. ol,,,i,, l r vutitain Patents, Caveat, Trade Ailurks, Copyrights, tent free.,'" 361 Brondwav. A PRECINCT. Peace-Const- able INVITATIONS, PEEASANT VIEW PRECINCT. St, Twenty-fift- h PRINTING INKS V Jnstice of the Peace W. H. ('randaU. 270 ! To Printers and Pnhlishers : The Commercial Pt BLisHiNo Company is carrying iurge Rnd elect stock of Ktandaid. Piuo and Superfine News, Poster and Job inks. Holler and Tablet-in- g Composition. Sizes aui VarnUhea also kept in stock. Thoee in neod o 'nkimiil do we11 to buy of Tpf ''wmpho Xt. 1. S31X Washington Ave. Wilson Por.lter. Constable M. W. Vuh. Byron L. Bybes. KANESVILLE .. 4lJ,fcre'd t, Fiat, EE LION LCDCE. SSI. CCEUR X. Justice of the Peace Timothy Ken.'il!. (Nonstable V jaitu SB, OP FT. 6EOEGE. SOXS El-E- ' . W, I Krcax.ES. Fiur. RIVERDALE rREClNCT. CINTAH PRECINCT. K. C. '"" at ntkt, atutid. Carver. Justice of the Tence Eicbard Dye. Constable-Jo- hn Parker. aiiA 0. U. W. rj Taaaday cvmiaky mu-- l UW. AT Wad&aday aacik i- - lXrtuE XO.V A. IhvUt S t. T. K. SECRET SOCIETIES. M Sof mjt (nut .Vn fcua. X Vi.H1, rh V. OUDES, CTAH. will told it awticm ia T B. H E1TE. Ki.vtt J Pytfcuw baJJ. Twraty-ftianf- a iuwt, inter tetabdard buUdu ' ry Thnrtaay evro-ii4At taif BStil fortLer uv w AnCR.EY-AT-UW- , abarp, form may beobtaiaad Itom iter. A PrM-ti- r ia ti Irittrirt t mrt tdJI mil tha lit. PerryI'licatjoo A. Cook, Ktil. W tinj;ti- 1 tirau, rw to wliwrtirsta. brother ronUaUy ia'itad. bujuiiruuif f.n, Peace-Const- able B. wr.i TM?a FiiA, r m. pitEUT A MACUILLAN. A'J oTilcrs hy mail , I. LAWYEKS- - FIRST mDEN FBEC1NCT, A. McIiftLiel. Justice of the Peace A. Perria. Constable D. O. Sullivan. lO A Ottl'EN, SECOND OGDEN PBE1XCT. vt. PBi.cr a, (fjrii. I lJ-- . City OfTee Jof. Pery t u. et , W. M, ' MA xaLcIaivs P. AF.CHUECTS, Justice of the Feace K. Constable E. A. Koch. Justice of the Peace B. Tenies. Constable Phil Ford. esta 4 aaa SO. i. i LAMIEtT. iuw, t. C & Ibua.U R.A.H. fCR KEAESTC5ES A5D KCM.XE.VTS (ia Vu C. P. A. Fri .ira:y 3. f. Ea. 6. I AT. X TAD.X- v Probate JnrtRt A. C. Pishop. men Lewis W SburUiJ, John Pfcecck, FhmI Foy. J. P. Ledwiiirc. ' Recorder John t. Tjler. Edwin I'ix. AsMweor TrPRHirrr Julm A. Pnylp, Collector John V. Kititli. PRECINCT OFFICERS 1 y- t MiPILL. a, Attr-utio- brIthit -- IDiUliK'j;. CCTRACTCRS AND t.k that u i1L.S eeOO.Oon.OO - - Capital. I. : Cv.I, 111. ix. dis- A.F.4 ... '.. titn.4 VZJ.U. aru-c-Ou- "You are right, though I had ne idea of talking in lur iWp, or telling tale I would like out cf school; but with her, converse see and her to you it Silberg exiwwl the pleasure would give him to meet ber, and I prom-i- d to make an arrangement to that end when I gave her lay lesson oil the following day. My dcription of my friend, and my AMU ranee of LU scholarly attainments, roused sufficient curiosity in my pupil to render her eager to see him. So an appointment w made, with the con-n- t of her mother, for the following day. and, punctual to the boor, we entered Mrs. Cameron's drawing room. The ladies apjared immediately aftr, and, presenting my friend, what was my suprise to see Miss Cameron suddenly pause, trembling violently, while her face became vividly pale, I stepi! forward to support her, but Stolberg had already taken her hand and, as be gracefully eipressed his gratification at meeting her, she became instantly calm, and, Beating herself, in a moment she was pleasantly engaged in conversation. Somehow or other we drifted into the subject of mesmerism and I mentioned the crystal. Ella waa inthe affair terested, and begged that Mr. Stolberg would give her an opportunity of witnessing its effects. He agreed willingly, and a future occasion waa promised when the experiment should be made on the young lady herself. A few days later, on reaching our boarding house, I was informed by Mme. Steinberg that Mr. Stolberg had packed all his property, with orders to aend it on board A packet, which was to sail on the following day fur Hamburg. A note to me, left by himself, informed me that he had received letters which required his immediate departure, but that he would not deprive Miss Cameron of r seance, and would meet me at her mother's house in the evening at the hour which had leen named. At that time and place I found him, apparently making himself quite at home; ami presently opening a small box which ho had brought with him he drew from it the same crystal with which he had operated upOu me. Seating himself in front of her as she reclined easily in her t:rm chair he the mysterious passes with his crystal. I watched her closely, and a he moved it slowly in front of her I co;d perceive that she gradually grew pale; then her eyelids dropped, and she How l.omlon Grows. was apparently in a souutl sleep. Her Some idea of the immense size of Lonmother called to her, touched her, and don be gathered from the fact that even used some gentle violence to awak- theremay were registered during one week en her, but without slightest appar- 3,780 birthsaud-2.21deaths. The births ent effect. were X'23 below and the deaths 103 above her at the Stolberg the crystal Pointing for the last ten years. Here drew silently backward toward the dot r, wo average have people enough born into the when, to our astonishment, the sleeping world in one week to constitute a figure rose, or rather glided after him, "city" in the ambitions phraseology of out of the door, into tin) hall, down the western English, and enough deaths in a stairs, and as he opened the front door time of profound peace to render memorMrs. who to called Cameron, Stolberg able a battlefield. But the most strikstood with mo at the head of the stairs ing fact in this table is that not one of watching the results of this wonderful all the 2,212 died of smallpox. London influence: Globe. "You see, lnadaine, she would follow Uio anywhere," and, as though to prove Dying or I'arrot's Bite. Gottlieb Relim, of Reading, is dangerit, she passed out of the door, which Stolberg shut, and, to my horror, I heard ously ill, the result of a bite received ten him lock it after him. days ago from a parrot which he has had I flew down the two flights of stairs "many years. The bite was slight, and into the basement, my brain turning no attention was paid to it at the time. mad," it seemed to me, and reached the A few days later Mr. Relim experienced sidewalk by the lower diwr just in time great pain in the linger, which oecame to see a carriage turning at full speed greatly inflamed, but became better and the next corner. the wound was thought to be healing. Returning to Mrs. Cameron I found He had a relapse, and his condition is her in a swoon, out of which, as she alarming. He is nearly seventy years of awakened to sensibility, she passed into age, and it is believed blood poisoning convulsions and at midnight was a corpse. has set in. Cor. Philadelphia Times. Meanwhile the police had been informed, The late Leonard Jerome's three big. messages sent in all direc tions, but of Stolberg or his unhappy victim 1 have pretty daughters, somewhat to fits grief, never heard since. Buffalo News. chose Englishmen for husbands. H,e never acknowledged Lady Randolph Illustrious Women or Italy. Churchill's title, and the first visit he Italy has a great organization of il- paid her after her marriage he astonished lustrious women, of which Queen Mar- the flunky at the door by asking for guerite is the honorary president. It is "Mrs. Churchill." one of the most remarkable associations of the day, composed of the most etui-KeArrangements will be made in Washwomen in Home, &nd before it ington for the assembling of the twice each week the most celebrated oracongress in this country next tors of the day lecture on subjects of the year. The congress will have one deleeducation ami .advancement of women. gate to its senate for each 3,000,000 of Among its members are the Countess people, giving the United States about Giglincci, for whom Rossini wrote his twelve senatorial representatives. "Stabut Mater;" the Countess Lovatelli, the most distinguished literary woman It is believed that the last census will d in Rome and the only wounui member disclose that nearly, or quite, of the German Institute of AirhiPology of the entire population of this nation (at the celebration of the society this are twenty-on- e years of age, or under. tall, slight and refined lady sat down This means that we have more than of minors youth and children among her gray haired colleagues, a radiant vision in white silk embroidered in this country. with sparkling beads); Signora Mancini, who has translated "The Cricket ou the John Stephenson, who built the first Hearth" into Italian and written many American horse car, is more than eighty romance?, and Louis Karardo, who is years old, but still vigorous and enerdevoted to historical researches. Lon- getic. His mind is yet busy with invendon Letter. tions, and he can accomplish as much work in a day as a man many years his I'mler SiiHitriu, "Somelxxly has picked my pocket," junior cried the Fat Woman. The fastest vessel afloat is said to be "Whom do yon suspect?" asked the the 3,200-to- n English built warship intended for the Argentine government Midget. "That, Sneaking Armless WoutW over She m;Mle 2l.y knots under ordinary there lias a conscious loiAxyi bis face. I draught, and 22.4 knots with forced 4' beiieve it's him." Puck. J f.:tis;j. g re-or- THE CRYSTAL j ikiintTiiivllo.i l.-c- Ad-ri- U it tinted, ud rouul bora Mirrwl, 1t,e praini With - After Like ti ItK-- C lUn - , TiuotrA tt IV.ws be. tH air it cxdB -- tieorfte H. Maycock. 91. 4TER . II.LE PRECINCT. Jnstice of the Peace James Hutchiss. Constable John J. Hmchins. MARRIOTT PRECINCT. Justice of the Peace Pimua F. HalveiBOD. Constable Caleb Parry. & Programmes Visiting 4 hour.1 OonorrlKw an.il uriimrv or.i f liifiuV""0'""18 1 rem ETXNE PRECTSCT. PliUi I''',in3i'rrejted Justice of the Peace Peter L, Sbercer, Constable James Harrop, V t- WILSON PF.EC!CT. - y Justice of the Peace P. P. Kiiighatn. Constable Daniel N. L'rake. ie bySnjital-BIidy- l OajmijIRwiibdUtjueoTiveTiieDce. I - i if A I.I. f ; knriri i (. lif K 80S 1 , New Yortj ht Price WEST WEBER PBECTNCT. Justice of the Peace J. W. Kurt. Constable Joseph Hogge. Ovv lit HOOPER PRECINCT. Justice of the Peace -- Jarr.es Johnson. Constable Braucig M. Belcap. 23CG tarda! Toskg f Co., Wsh. Atc. Pig O is acinowle!p! the leading remedy for t Gineu jrJTolI'tiresinII sB(rrha DAYB.'B The only sale remedy for iyLMa.wd net tc V locrrlwfAorWhits. oredcribe feel i U.K. A. safe in recommendine it to all anrTerers. M. .?Tm A. J. fcH'IstK. TMr'iTTTB li.f m Bt1d hf IrmyKtutA. 1 1KH E bl.its. vneCMtM'rif-. it and J V. I Nov ellv V Washington Avenue. Electric Wiring: and Electric Supplies of all Kinds Locksmiths, Stenc.ila Made, Bubber to order. Stamp IRON FENCING. ' Moileli and Experimental Machinery to Order Ail kinds of Noelty Kepairiug CRESCENT NOVELTY WORKS |