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Show r , ii J ('.INKER lilTTS. . d. all-rou- , pvvT "UNMANLY BOOK! BEGONE." The day of the consummation of the m'ptlals had been named. They were to he married in October, and Ginger thought it w juld be a good and friendly thing to give an entertainment to a few of his bachelor friends shortly beAs no paper was fore the wedding. Issued on Sunday, a Saturday evening in the latter part of September waa selected as the most appropriate time for the affair. So on that memorable Saturday evening a score or more of us, by special imitation. repaired to Miss Kate's vine-cla- d which waa situated just outside of town, all prepared to have a quiet, sociable, but jovial time. Unfortunately for Ginger, in anticipation of the pleasure of the evening, he had indulged a trifle too much in his favorite beverage during the afternoon. Whether It was the whisky or the ginger that worked the change in him, I never could ascertain, but certain it was that he waa a trifle weak in his limbs, and slightly Incoherent in his speech. Miss Revere was alone In the parlor when we strived and received ua with true southern hospitality. How beautiful she looked! What a vision of delight she appeared! "There's nothing half an sweet In life as a lovrfs young dream." said Tom Moore more than eighty years ago. That sentiment held good In 180(5. and does yet if an opinion Is worth recording. Certainly never before or since have I sien anyone look "half so sweet" as Kate did on th.it evening. She was the very embodiment of love's young dream." Well, the young lady aat down to the piano, and tor half an hour entertained ns with the "Star Spangled Banner, " the "Bonnie Blue Flag." "Ha'I Columbia." "My Maryland" and variotiz othrr patriotic airs. When she conwaltzed gracefully cluded Ginger sideboard, upon in the ol md decanters were which glass-placed, and requi vied us to Imbibe. As one man we art ptpd the Invitation. tien the prospe t've bridegroom raised ".Sh-slio- e ri, p. a-- 1 c j s Karps nude further money, enlisting and tlieinselics nit'.i a posse chasing themselves. Virgil, as ntar-- j slial. would enlist Wyatt, Warren and Julian, tugeihir with Curly Bill, their It waa cotisiu, and hunt the hold-upa great industry, and by thus playing both ends against the iniddV, first rob- -; bing ll:c slave, and thru 'iietendlllg to chase the rubbers, Virgil, Wyatt, Warren and Julian Karp waxed opulent, But it all eauie out ou them. Williams, i:ie Wc!ls-F,irpagent, confessed. ftei fiilbiAlng the varying phases uf tin- feud between the Karps and tin- - opposing faction in the Tombstone war of extermination, as reviewed In tlo Kausas City Stur uf Saturday, "Hail (Juinu" ecu. dudes as follows: liis last public appearance In a gun play was in the middle Mi's, when Mayor Kelly run I. like Short out of Iknlge City, mid the fugitive l.uke Vatt Karp, line Holliday, Charley Bassett, But Masterson and Shotgun Collins to aid him in the re- -. covery of his own. They reinstated l.uke aud he and Kelley divided Dodge City between them. Wyatt Karp must now lie 45 years old. He Is grim, game and deadly. lie never took water. But he doesn't kill as he used to. Age has rooted his blood, many wounds More-- ! have brought hint caution. over, the communities he honors with hie presence won't stand those gay-- I eties which marked Wyatt Karp's earli- -' er career. And Wyatt has grown to a quiet life. Aa a result he has j like not taken a scalp for years. His business just now should be that of a blackleg gambler; crooked as a dogs hind leg. If there are any honest hairs in his head they have grown since he left Arixona. He is exactly the sort of a man to referee a prize fight if a steal is meditated, and a Job ' n Its li.-n- ! j l.ril I tie iln- Throujfhuul Would KliiMif mi ad Alcala Had r--f 'Al iV Tv! il .e' i -- !; f 'uaaril hnulli f a viral anil tig In rrut'x'aliuu "Tin- - lira,,,." tt I' whose ry; ti V l.lfr Y 11 robl-i-.- o k a it p, l re llol.t-- l ; - cell! I Kiiz-- f sliiituiiiii.. the prize- fi g h l e r , o f lu.in'. is one f four the two of brothers; " bum. Julian and Warren Karp, are ' - h ''!:: happily dead and out. The four Karp brothers were abundant about Tomb-atoin 1881. 1882 and lssil. The community in lS.'l assumed a positive attitude toward the Karps and presented a front to that household made up in ihn main of Winchester and Colt The Karps construed this into a lack of confidence ou the part sif the Tombstone public. They resented it by shaking the dust of Tombstone from their fe forever. They migrated to the Gunnison country. They were subsequently nin out of the Gunnison, sad Wyatt and Virgil Karp went to California. The four Karps were named, respectively, Virgil. Wyatt. Wa-re- n and Julian. They had a slater, Jessie, who was with them In Tonhstone. Cf her, as novelists say, morn anon. Virgil was the oldest Eirp. Wyatt the wisest, Warren the uost foolhardy, Julian the bravest. '"'jt- 'V vVtV m sum-tiiuii- , . ) orna-n:entat!- INDIAN DIVORCES. Thi A Court I'lujlng Havoc with Cantom of MurrlNfe With most of the plain Indiana marriage consists simply of picking out the maiden, leading her to a cabin or wigwam and Installing her as mistress of the house and corn-fielsometimes with the necessary preliminary of paying the father a pony or two or an installment of blankets and occasionally with some slight ceremony performed by a chief or medicine man, says the St. laniis And when the brave grows tired of his partner he can get riil of her as easily as he won her. The people who are now flocking to the Dakotas or Oklahoma to get divorces would he supremely happy if they could throw off the galling bonds of wedlock as easily as does the reservation Indian. The fact having been formally announced by the head man of thp clan the divorce takes place when the tribe la gathered at a dance. When all are assembled and the circle formed, the discontented warrior strikes a drum used by the revelers, gives away a few presents (ofttimes making a present to the squaw he intends to take next) and then in a short, bombastic speech he stigmatizes his wife by giving her over to tender mercies of the other braves, while they look upon him enviously and consider that he has performed an act of bravery in his desertion. Often as many as half a dozen divorces are thus obtained at a single dance. No tedious waiting, no courts, no lawyers and uo trouble about alimony or the custody of rhlltlrrn. And the squaws thus cast off, as a general thing, seem to tal e it as a matter of course, and befoie the close of the dance are using the wiles known and used by women the world over in an effort to repair us speedily as possible the break in their hearts and matrimonial experiences. With the taking of land in severalty and putting on of citizenship, however, the Indian finds that he has cemented the ties that were so loose before, for the courts everywhere are deciding that the tribal marriages are legal and binding upon the Indian who becomes a citizen. And If the weight of one legal marriage wears somewhat heavily upon a white man, how must it lie with the red man, who has contracted two, three, four or even more alliances which the court now declares legal and at the same time takes away his former avenue of relief? d, Globe-I)pmocr- Strange llarlnl Custom. The Greenlanders know a thing or two. In the belief that a dog can find its way anywhere" they bury a living dog in the same grave with a dead child. The ranine Is supposed to be used by the child as a guide in the other world. The Australians pull out the corpse's finger nails, and then tie the hands to prevent its digging lte way out of the grave to engage In the vampire business. The primitive Russians put a certificate of character In the dead persons hand, so that no quest inns might be raised at the gate of heaven. old-time- ne. II1S PHIZ. WYATT EARP A BAD MAN AND HE LOOKS IT. Wh-whrr- 's high-spirit- i AT LOOK "N-no- III! laborer: It was in Newborn, N. C., that I first locked hands and swore eternal friendship to Harry liutts. Thirty years ago he and I worked on the Times of that city. 1 he favorite drink with the lads in that locality was known as whisky qu.cz The gentli'ni.in behind the bur having poured out us touch of tin liquid hardware as he thought it prudent to bide behind that woodaway, the en structure would, with his dealer hand, force a few drops of lemon Juice in the glass and your whisky squeeze was ready for the sacrifice. One night Harry Hurts changed the order of things und requested that a few drops of the extract of ginger be deposited in liis glass instead of the customary lemon Juice. This modest request of Harry's tickled the lads; and ever afterward he waa known as "Ginger liutts. No man ever drank aloue In that town. Southern hospitality demanded that everyone should wait until his neighbor was accommodated, and the man who treated would shout; Show your glass," when every glass would be drained. I have seen a score of typos outside of the bar of the Gaston house, which, I believe, was situated on Pollock street, aalt with true politeneea lor the cry of show your glass," at which command each tumbler would he emptied with precision. Now, Ginger Butte was a handaime fellow, and half the white girls in Newborn were in love with him, not to mention a few of the ones. But Ginger fought aby of the fair sex until he met a young lady in the name of well, just here I'll call her Kate Devere. Kate was a typical southern beauty. She had the dark luiir, flashing eyes, ruddy cheeks, coral Ups and the tall symmetrical form ao often met with in the daughters ot Dixie. That she was and imperious, will be seen later on Now, there wasn't a lad on the Times but would have given his whole week's string for a smile or a tender word from Kate, and for a time a certain individual who shall lie nameless felt that he was making rapid progress In her good graces until Ginger fastened his blue eyet upon her, and then that nameless person's stock began rapidly to decline. One night at a little social gathering Ginger confld ntly informed us that a week previously he had said to Kate Win you?" and that the young lady had blush !ngly replied, "I will." So It waa hands down and eyes off with all the rest of us after that Some of ua, the nameless person above alluded to included, felt rather sore upon the receipt of this information, but it was only momentarily. Ginger waa such an favorite that It was almost impossible to bear him malice, and in the course of a half hour we were all "showing our bottom" at Ginger's good-nature- M gen- - i gh.s. and stuttered: MICHIGAN IDOLS. gentlemen sbwhow your Thrw We wire about to e.nptv when my eye iirangm luu(ri ual a Mab Which Wrrr Krrvuil) llu( Ip. restid on Kale, and I robed my hand A remarkable find whim seems to inwurulugly. matter?" persisted Gin- dicate that the neighborhood of the g.rat lakes was at one time inhabited ger. but hot turn!" by a race of nborvir.es o.lier than the Instincra sed iny Agalu by two turtle'll toward me, and Iml :ui:e, was reie.ii'.y u:u-ltively every hunters near Newbi Mich., rays the from ne to Kate. She stood ere.t, her tall form tower- New York Journal, la digging out a ing to its fullest height, and from her wild animal they uuiurtbcd a large black eye. II;., bed forth a glance of stone tablet six iiuTe . thick and eighl-- : ecu by twemy-tiv- e scorn ii rrurf-pinches in size, the ' T'limanly boor!" she cried. "Is this entire siirbup uf which was carved with Belanguage fit for a lady's presence? Be- curious symbolical characters. gone!" and .die haughtily pointed to- side the tablet were three stone images. The largest was that of a man In a silward the door. As If by magic the recreant lover ting posture and m arly life size. The stood before her completely sobered. second image, presumably that of a "Kate, lie rrle piteously. Bui the woman, was three fe l lit height and haughty mm hem bloood within her the third Was that of a child in a sitwas nfire. That blood which overcame ting posture cii I aiiout tlm-- feet high, us at Bull Itiiti and r'hancellorsville j All three of the im..gi were found and nearly timed the tide of battle at placed with their bum toward the Scientism who have examined Gettysburg, was boiling in her veins east. like a volcano, and she again pointed ' the relics rigar.l ibis as an indication to the door. j'that those who nude them were sun Broken hearted, crestfallen, humiliworshipers. I'pnn the slab were cn-- I ated, Ginger seized his hat and de- graved Inscriptions, each set In a square inches. There parted. Sllen ly w followed in his of about one and one-ha- lf were 140 of these figures carved on footsteps. Poor Ginger! We tried to comfort the slab. Those who saw the statues him, but he was inconsolable. A few say they look like Kgyptian idols, days afterward he endeavored to ex- though the heads were those of human plain and affect a reconciliation. But beings and not of the sacred animals 'twaa of no avail. The Imperious with which the ancient race of the maiden, who should have been born in Nile waa wont to ornament carved Imthe middle aea "in the days of old ages. These works bear a strong rewhen knighta were bold" refused, semblance to the work of the Aatee most emphatically, to harken to his and the even more ancient Toltec race, frantic appeal, and preemptorlly or- remnants of whose craft are scattered dered him from her presence. Within eo about southern Mexico a fortnight he left the Sunny South and plentifully the Central American states. The for the rugged hills cf his native New trick of lengthening the eyee, noticed Hampshire. in the Michigan finds, was known to A dozen years ago, while touring the the ancient inhabitants of Mexico as eastern states I met Ginger in a coun- well as to the Egyptians and is noticetry town in Massachusetts. He waa able In the carvings of Ixmal and othgreatly changed; presumably old, and er ruins of the Mlzteea, Toltecs and suffering from melancholia. He made I Aztecs. The strange figures engraved a confidante of me; told me he had within the squares are alt-t- not without never forgotten his early love; she waa found upon the still his ideal, and that's why he never parallel, being of the sacrificial altars of married. Central American ruins. Smallpox Oldest llltnw. One uf the oldest of actual specified diseases would probably be small-powhich, on the authoiity of Masudl. attacked the African tribe who made exx, cursion into Arabia and laid siege tn latter half of the sixth Mecca in the century A. D. Ili'CXin Vhi Are Hlch. Several beggars In Pcra own a large amount of property. One man baa a house wur'h lO.ntHi liras, and yet la to be seen begging in filthy rags. well-kno- In tne United States there are over three million unmarried men. REPUTATION FOR ONIONS. The OdoruuH Itulb li) I hiporteil to Kgrpt. ITEMS OF INTEREST. es e a going into the water hole to drink, he stole cautiously up and seized the fawn by iU hind legs. In the struggle that ensued be lost that grip, but managed to obtain one on Its tail. This he held during an exciting chase or a quarter of a mile. The underbrush that the fawn then run into compelled him to relinquish his bold, and he had the satisfaction of seeing the animal rejola the WYATT doe. ' t'ltlM Iurlcd by KamUtorn. Sven Hedin. the Norwegian traveler, has discovered on the north side of the Kuen Lun Mountains, and in the edge of the great desert of Gobi, the ruing of towns which he thinks were bulled EARP. s about 1000 years ago. hy The largest town was nearly two mile put up to make the wrung man win. and a half long, and a canal connected Wyatt Earp has all the nerve and dis- it and surrounding country with the '. honesty needed to turn the trick. The Kerija river. The houses had walls of mere name of Wyatt Earp as referee plaited reeds covered with mud and shows that Fitzsimmons was against then coated with white plaster, and a hard game." on these plaster walls were well exe-ci'paiutlngs of men, animals and flowers. Poplar, apricots and plum-trc-c- -s A STORY OF LONGFELLOW. had evidently flourished there beInvualon of the san, fore the Mr. Field Tell an Interest lug Auee-duof llie Author. A merle an Women. Speaking of Lingfellow, In her reWe bear," says the Ixindon Athencently published volume of literary reminiscences, Mrs. Jane Fields says: aeum, "that between forty and fifty His kindness and love of humor car- ladies, mostly Americans, have their names in the register of ried him through many a tedious interruption. He generously overlooked the University of Berlin, although the do not countenance the adthe fuel of the subterfuges to which Doei-ntemen and women resorted in ordei to mission of women to university lecget an interview, and lo help them out tures. At Zurich the number of stumade as much of their excuses as pos- dent inncit has risen to 15 and they sible. Speaking one day of the persons have already begun to agitate for the who came to see him aL Naliant. he acquisition of the same rights as belong said: 'One inan, a perfect stranger, to the Ktiiilcuteu and the question has csine with an omnibus full of ludlc. actually sprung up whether the latter He descended, introdii'txl himself, then term should not he considered aa com- -, returning to the omnibus, took out munis generis." ail the ladies, one, tso, three, four and five, with a little girl, and brought GEMS OF THOUGHT. them in. I entertained them to the best of my ability, and they stayed an What men want Is not talent, It ! hour. They hail scarcely gone when a purpose; In other words, not the power forlorn woman in black came up to to achieve, but the will to labor. Bul-w- er me on the piazza and asked for a dipLytton. per of water. "Certainly," I replied, The knowledge that will hold good and went to fetch her a glass. When In working, cleave thou to that; for I brought ft she said; "There i annature herself accredits that, says yea. other woman just by the fence who Is to that. Carlyle. tired and thirdly; I will carry this to It Is moro honorable to the as her." But she struck her head as she well as to the heart, to be misledhead, In out window passed through the and spill- eagerness In the pursuit ot truth, than ed the water on the piazza. Ob, what to be safe from blundering by conhave I done! she said. "If a had a of it S. T. Coleridge. tempt floor cloth, I would wipe it up." Oh, To believe without evidence or prowno matter about the waier," 1 said, "If ls an act of ignorance and folly. The have not hurt yourself. you Then I credulous man loses himself in a labywent and brought more water for both of contradictions; the man of and sent them on tlieir way refreshed rinth sense examines and dlsciiKscB, that h and rejoicing.' It would lie both an be consistent in his opinions. endless and unprofitable task to recall may Volncy, more of the curious experiences which popularity brought down upon him. CURIOUS FACTS. There Is a passage among Mr. Field's notes, however. In which he describes The flags to be hoisted at one Urns' an Incident during Longfellow's Inst In signaling at sea never exceed tour. visit to England, which should not be It Is an Interesting arithmetical fact overlooked. Upon his arrival, the that, with eighteen various colored queen sent a graceful message and In- flags, and ncYr more than four at a vited him to Windsor castle, where she time, no fewer than 78,642 signals can received him with all the honora; but be given. he told me no foreign tribute touched In Persia, among the aristocracy, a him deeper than the worda of an Engsends notice an hour or two bevisitor lish who came up to the fore calling, and gives a day's notlc carriage door at Harrow, and asked if the visit la one of great importance. permission to take the hand of the He la met by servants before he man who had written the 'Voices of the reaches the bouse, and other consideraNight. tions are shown him, according to relative rank. The left and not tbs Truth has nothing to fear from tks right le considered the poaiUon of future. honor. sand-storm- and Jessie the most loving. As a result Wyatt and Virgil lived to get out of Tombstone and the Gunnison in advance of public opinion, and the bullets that expressed it; while Warren was killed in Tombstone and Julian in the Gunnison by Ike Clauton, who lutd married bis sister Jessie, and whom Wyatt and Virgil subsequently killed at Socorro and Jessie, the loving one, wedded Ike Clauton, with whom her four brothers had a blood feud at the time. Wyatt Karp, and, for that matter, ail the Earps. were gun light pra and men of prompt and bitter couris credited age. Wyatt Karp bimw-lwith ten men; one. his own liroiher-in-laClauton. Every one of the Karps hail killed his men not man I and were famed in Tombstone and in the Cochise country round uboul as qualified to pull and make a center h of a secshut In lesa than ond. They had all filed the sights when I knew from their them, in 1881 and 18X2, and, eschewing the intervention of a trigger, were prouc to that prowess known as 'fanning' their pistols la a fight, whereby becomes for the a Colt's nonce a miniature Gatling. In the early 80s there were two factions in Tombstone. Virgil and Wyatt Karp led one the Stage Robbers. Johnny Behan, Ike Clauton and Jack Ringo led the other the RustlerH. The Stage Robbers were In politics republican and stood up stages and plundered express companies for a livelihood. The Rustlers were democrats, and devoted themselves to cattle stealing, murder, whisky and faro bank as steady pursuits. In these days Johuny Behau waa sheriff of Cochise county Bud Virgil Earp was the marshal ot tombstone. Behan, as stated, belonged to the cow thief democracy party, while Earp robbed stages and voted with the republicans. The Karps Wyatt, Virgil, Warren and Julian had treated themselves to many a kiiling. But there was no money In murder; nothing but relaaation. So they devoted themselves to holding up the stage. Virgil Earp had a combination with Barshet Williams, then the Weils Fargo agent at Tombstone. When big money went out on the stage, Williams tipped It off to Virgil Earp. The hold-up- s were then planted tn a convenient canyon. When tha stage came along, at the word, TIande up! Warren Earp, who waa a stage company guard, meekly put hie hand over his head. Then the hold-up- s went through the express pouches and boxes like the grace of heaven through a camp meeting. There was never any shooting; it was from all standpoints a family affair on the part of the Earps. Often they got aa fSfi.000. After a robbery the high f one-tent- county, Arizona, la Infested The with millions of army worms. Wallapal lnlip ns make soup of them, and find them very fattening. A fortune of $2,000,000 has just dropped to Richard Pilkey, a young man of 2H, who for some years baa been employed as a laborer on the Erie canal. The Mosque of St. Sophia, at Constantinople, was built over a thousand years ago, and the mortar used war perfumed with musk. The musky odor ia still perceptible. It Is asserted by Lrell, the geologist that at a period comparatively recent all that portion of the United Stater south of the Black Hills was undei from 600 to 900 feet of water. A funny election bet waa settled bj a gentleman In Philadelphia, ii. vies of a large number of amused spectators With a crowbar he pushed a peanut four times around the city hall. Love entered the hearts of a coupli of Inmates of the poorhouse In Delaware oouuty, Iml., and they eloped. The groom la a cripple, aged 60, and the bride la an apoplectic woman of 27. A nervous gentleman In Bath, Me is seeking a divorce from hla wife on unusual grounds. 4e declares that he ran not obtain sleep, because hla wife "persists In eating dry crackers in bed." 11. T. Brooke, a wealthy rancher In Tonkawa, Okla., ia a dead shot. Five desperadoes attempted to enter his home, lie shot two of them dead, wounded a third, and the other couple fled for their lives. A board on the aide of a house at Forbes, Me., waa removed the other day by the owner, ee It appeared warped. He found a hive in the wall, and 125 pounds of honey. The bees had entered through a knot hole. Mohave Au jHipnirmirnt Whlrb It I ('llan Mill lli'ielop High Speed. A new bicycle improvement makes the cyclist Join hands with the wind, says the New York Journul. The combination, It is claimed, develops exceedingly high spped. The inventor. M. DcuiMiigc of Commercy, France, tiiat by his plau the tycllst may rl.lc ai a speed of from twelve to fifteen miles ua hour with no e( rtion al all, except that required in gui ling the machine. Tin contrivance is in form a sort of a turbine arrangement, something like a gourd hollowed out, cut in "gores," mi1! the "gores" turned a litThis turbine is tle on their axes. P bleed on dual rod, vertically au ached lo the forward wheel of I ho bicycle. A. bar projects from the ernter of bars outward, and to this Is attached the top of the turbine.- - Th turbine revolves on its axis and calche enough wind to give the forward wheel an added impetus. No matter from what direction the wind blows the turbine catches it, and by attachment with the hub of the front wheel communicates some of the force of the wind to the wlitel. The turbine practically neutralizes the effect of a beam wind. The twisting of the turbine In Its rotary-motioworks on the rods that attach it to a ratchet wheel, which revolve about the hub of the front wheel. These rods work up and down like the piston rods of sn engine, and in that way accelerate the motion In great degree. This Invention Is a marked departure from those designed to give motion to a bicycle without the rider' aid. Gasoline, electricity and petroleum have all been Incorporated In the different ideas which have taken shape as blrycle Impellers. The sailing bicycle la also an adaptation of the same Idea, and has lieen fairly autr cessful when under the control of A skillful rider who ia also a master ot the art of handling a sail. On the western prairies where the wind blows strong and steady the sail on a bicycle has been utilized with fine results. Nr May to Catch llrcr. A Wisconsin man recently undertook the novel feat of catching a ileer by the tall. While hunting he espied a fawn at a water hole. After it bad finished drinklug it luy down by a log. The furmer resolved to capture It alive if possible, and taking advantage of the noise made by the cattle Eur-Un- d English imports of onions have increased from Egypt and it is acknowledged that this country is at present the most active anil aggressive competitor in the i..2ion trade, says a writer in Chambers' Journal. Egypt has been regarded by some people as the land of the pyramids and mummies only, but it has from time immemorial had a reputation for onions. Ancient Egyptians swore by the onion and regarded the plant as sacred. The Inscription on the pyramid of Cheops tells us that the workmen had onions given to them and from the blble we learn that the Hebrews, when slaves under Pharaoh, enjoyed these bulbs, and that when far away they remembered the leeks and the onions and the garlic. The trade with Egypt for onions is now so important that four lines of steamers are engaged In the traffic, bringing consignments from Alexandria to Liverpool, Hull and London. The Egyptian onion la a handsome and useful vegetable, and by selecting the best strains of seed the quality tends year by year to improve. The Egyptians know two varieties the baali" and the miskaoul" but supplies uf the latter kind are seldom sent abroad, as they absorb so much moisture from the frequently irrigated ground in which they are grown that they iln not stand a sea voyage well. The baali" onion is the more popular Kgyptian onion and is grown in yellow soil, which Is sparingly watered while the hulbs are maturing, in order that the unions may stand a lengthy sea voyage with little risk of sprouting.'' So excellent in quality are these onions that efforts are, it Is said, being made In other countries to raise onions from Kgyptian seed. WIND TO AID BICYCI IFTS. u od te bod-carri- A |