Bloomington Progress, Volume 15, Number 8, Bloomington, Monroe County, 8 June 1881 — Page 4
HOME, SWKaTT HOilE,' AS at unt www wKiars it. Breira oSenJuea, Stranger, I'm Brawn. Oosne nj. this WKnin trem WwBan a-aalibV any vmMhI a stoma. Ban a-teualAi around, For a miu from 8zi Juan,
Kiirbl tnr lie my hoEje lUfrhttbsriti tbercd I could eicfi over, etrangor, fc potry Would afro oat dd ofcakapokoooid Stranger, yoH fieeaa So aha; the.- Bint a kinder gbvpedars Kcr no vartety-ahTW lays onr mm own xw&o. Ma; belt baia'tEOMrla, bat tbXiMO intheTowm o'Lcxuioti Amn(roii.thln'raewcTfortbs hi om tbai on thehjU-side. The is my ok gal V flat Man, V Ik testo at stock; Ibu par BemlrtonhgTma, ml that tharo'U a grW dfe-caka Dtllm far the two w parrl and thau-, I aBow, its Smile mora frtendly-Uh. hea, on aaryofher loo all tj Stranger, nowhere saw I don't no attiafhottcn. tHnroeiny ranch, v bem friendly cad ahanahal
I brung tbe original re!r fa. the Statatla
net
.ft.
Ter pardbig, young mas Bus this landscape a kind Sr Airier I Towtwasa th. rbtiy I thouglit IBs my ays bed (OU bttnA
Take that pop from my bait t . 'Jau ahnma Tar ban'
Or Fr. kill myetOi LixEtl I
Qtmttf withapttrtitriMm! . Mas-. FU quit the da gal An tbe adds run sway t Itedsraodt Howaocnever, nomata, pard The gt lddle-eake db, anyway. --JkrAatraiAaMcjk
Wolf Worses ii Imi. Stories ! wild nnimala that have acted the part ot! anraes toward infanta, accidentally or porpoeelj' exposed, are to be met with in evury part of the world, and among races of the most 'widely distinci character. It was a favorite legendary origin lis s. great hero, the founder of a nation wr of an empire, lite stag, the bear, the ilogtiid many others fignro ic these traditions; bat of all, the wolf is the most remnrfcahle and the most frequently to' be met -with. What troth th"re may be iu the old story t JRo-mri-rna we shiill not attempt to decide. Some n ality, iowevur, underlies the wildest "fistkms, and we have before nc at thia moment : very interesting aeeoont oi obnerrationa EtaJe in Northern India, which softy be worth the consideration of aome future Niebuhr or Arnold. They were conducted by a distinguished Indian officer, whose name, were we at Hberty to nianaon it, would be an ample guarantee for their troth and accuracy one, too, who baa possessed unnBoal opporturcties lor obt,i"oing information from tlie wilder and Iesa-iaiowii parte of the country. Xhefotlowine is from this report, wtueh was published in 1852 v iewclf in. India is iooked upoD,-as it formerly was in Northern Enrope, as a saeietT animal. Almost all Hindoos have a ertperstitioas dread of deetroying or even iiijuring it ; and a village commraity withiB tho boundary of whose hutd cjop of wolf's bkod has fallen believes itself deemed to dtstruction. The natural consequence is that in the districts least frequented by Enropccns these animals, are very numerous and destroctiTe, and great nuaabera of cliildreaare constantly earriad off bv them. Only on class of the wopniitiim, the very lowtsst, leading a vugant life, and bivouacking iu the jangles, will attempt to kill or eatch them. Even these, however, although, they have ne superstitions fear-of the wolf, and are always found to be well acquainted with its nsoal deas and haunta, very seldom attempt iis capture in all probability from iho profit they make of the . anil sQvar braeelew and necklaiss worn ' by ebildxen whom the woljgg " hare carxwd to their deiSj and whose remains ' ' are Isft rta tile entrance. In all parts of India, it appears, numbers of children are daily murdered for the sake of these dangerous ornaments. The wolf, however, is sometimes kinder than man. In tbe neighborhood of Sottanpoor, arid anHmg; the ravines that int:raect the banks of the Gooxatee river, tbia animal abounds, and our first instance of a "wolf nurse " occurs in thai dujtirict, A trooper, passing along tbe river bank near Chnndour, saw a large female wolf leave her den, followed by threii whelps and a little boy. The .bo j went on all-foras, apparently on- the best pocetble terms with hia fierce coiupanionB, and tile wolf projected him with as much care as if he hnd been one of her own whelps. All went down to the river and drank, witho it noticing the'trocper, who, as they were about to ttan bai, pushed on, rn order to cut off and secure the boy. But the ground was uneven, and his horse could not overtake them. All re-entered tbe' don, and tha troopfgr then assembled .some people from Chaztdour with pickaxes, who dug into the den for about six or eight feet, when the' old wolf bolted, fouowel by her three enbsssd the boy. The trooper, accompanied by the lleetest young men of the party, mouated and pursued, and, having at last headed ttteis, he turned the whelps and the boy (who ran quite as fast) back upon the men on foot. They secured the boy and allowed the others to escape. The boy thus taken was apparently about!) or 10 years old, ami had all the habits of a wM animal. On his way to Ghandour he struggled hard to rush into every hole or den he passed. The sight of a grown-np penon alarmed him, and he tried to steal away; but he rushed at a child with a fierce snarl, liketh t of deg, and tried to bite it. Cdokfcd meat he would not est, btrt fie seized, raw food with eagerness, putting it certhe ground, under hie handstand devouangit with evident pleasure. He growled angrily if any one approached him while eating, but made no'objeotion to a dog's costing near and sharing his food. The tjooper left him in charge of tha Bsjah of Husnnpoor, who saw ttebpy inusetHfttely after he wm taken.
Yerfe'iseon. aftrward be was itent bv
i order, to Oapt Nieholstt's.
iltanpoor; Its; although his parents -.U i m --- 'r .
legoacsjawfi nun wnen
oe ef tliA
wegiftsalwcianaataii). .J. .j
He Kted ia the. eharge "W. Oapt. Kiebolett's itervaiits neariy three years : tbtt inoffensive, except when teased, bat still t. complete tmimaL He could never be induced to keep en any kind of clothing, even in the oddest weather, and on one oeeasicn tore to pieesji a quDt, stoffrd with cotton, and ate a portion of it, eottoa aad aH, every day with his bread. Wheo las food was placed at a detaoee from him he ran for it en aQfours, like awedf j and it was only on rare ooensions that' he '. walked upright Hurs an bemga he always shnnned, end never wiUiugjy lentained sear them. On the other hand he seemed fend of does and of jsskala. and indeed all animais, and zeaiiily ariowed them to feed with him. He was never known to laugh or smik;, and was never heard to speak till within a few minutes of his death, when he put his hands to hie head and naid it ached, and asked for water, which he drank, and died. ' Possibly, had this boy lived, he might gradually have been brought to exhibit more intellect and intelligen ; but almost every instance seems to prove how eorapleteJy the htunan natore is supflantod by fl brutal. The next i shQ from the neighborhood of tha Ooomtee. In Maroh. 1813. a cultir).' tor who lived at Ohrrpra, about twei'ty mileM east of Snltanpoor, went to cut xms crop of wheat and poise, taking with him his wife, and a son about 8 years o!d, who had only lately recovered front a severe seald on tbe left knee. As
the father wan reaping, a wolf suddenly ( rusted apon the boy, easgbt hun up,
tWfSajutA
fins)fli Hui
and made off with him toward the ravines. The people of the village ran to the aid of the parents, but they soon lost sight of the wolf and his rey. About six years afterward, as two Sipahees from Singrariow, alxnit ten mites from Dhupra, were watching for hogs on the border of tbe jungle which extended down to the Khobae rivulet, they saw three wolf cubs and a boy come out of the jungle, and go down to drink at the stream; all four then ran toward a den in the ravines. The Sipahees followed, but the cubs had already entered, and the boy was half-way in, whon one of the men caught him by the Mnd-leg and drew him back. He was Very angry and savage, bit at the men, aud, seizing in bis teeth he barrel of one c f their guns, shook fc fiercely. The Sfpahees, however, secured hiin, brought him home, and kept him for twenty days, during which he would eat nothing but raw flesh, end was fed accordingly with hares and birds. Hi', captors thei found it difficult to provide him sufficient food, and took him to the bazaar, in the village of Koeleepoor, to be supported by the cliaritiible people . of the place, till be migat be recognized end claimed by his parents. One market day a man from the Tillage ot Chupra happened to see him in the bazasr, and on bis return described him to his neighbors. The enltivator, the father of tho boy, was dead, but Ids widow, asking for a minute description of the boy, found that he had the mark of a scold on tho left knee and three marks of the teeth of an animal on each side of his, loins. Fully behevLig him to be her lost chrid, she went forthwith to the Koelee bczoiir, and, in addition to these two marks, discovered a third on hie thigh with v hich the boy was born. She took him home to her village, where he still remains, but, as in the former case, his human intellect seems to have all but disappeared. The front of his knees and his elbows had become hardened from his going on all fcurs with the wolves, and although he wanders about the village during he day he always steak 'oack to his jungle at nightfall. He is unable to speak, nor can he articulate any sound distinctly. In dricking, he dips his face into the water, but does not lap ii up like a wolf, He still prefers raw flesh, and when a bullock dies, and the skin is removed, he attacks and eats the body in company with the Tillage dogs. Passing by a number of similar stories, we come to one which is in many, respects the most remarkable,. About seven years since, a trooper in attendance upon Kajah Hurdut Singh, of Bosdee, on tbe left bank of the Ghagra river in the- district of Bahraetoh, io passing near a small stream, saw thentwo wolf cubs and a boy, drii iking. M managed to seize the boy, who veemed to be about 10 years old, but was so wild and fierce that he tore the trooper's clothes and bit him severely in several places. The Rajah at firat had him tied up in his artillery gun-shed, and fed him with raw meat, but he was afterward allowed to wander freely about the Bondee bazaar. He there one day ran off with a joint of meat from butcher's shop, and another of the basilar keepers let fly an arrow at him, which penetrated his thigh. A lad named Janoo, servant of a Cashmere merehanf, then- at Bondee, took compassion on tie poor boy, extracted the arrow from bis thigh, and prepared a bed for him under a mango tree, where he himself lodged. Here he kept him fastened to a tent-pin. Up" to this time he would eat nothing but raw flesh, but Janoo gradually brought him to eat balls of rice and pulse. In about six weeks after he liad been tied up under the tree, after nir.ch nibbing of bis joints with oil. he vT.fflti4cto stand nod walk rarisht Hitherto
ni&iuurgo? e on all-fours. Iu about four
months ho began to understand and obey sfgBu. In this manner he was taught t prepare the hookah, put lighted charcoal on the tobacco, and brought it to Janoo) or to whomsoever ho pointed out. So was never heard, however, to utter more than one articulate sound. This was "Atxxxleefi," the name of the little daughter of a Cashmere mimic, or player, who had once treated him with kindness. The odor from his body was very offensive, and Janoo had him rubbed with mustard-seed soaked in water, 'is the hope of removing it. This was done for some month-i, during which he was fed on rice and flour ; but the odor did not leave him. One night, while the boy was lying under, the mango tree, Janoo s-w two wolves creep stealthily toward him; and, affair smelling him, they touched him, and he got up. Instead, however, of being frightened, the 'bor put his hands upon their heads, and they began to play with him, capering about him, whue he threw straw end leaves at them: Janoo tried 'to drive them off, but could not : and, becoming tench alarmed, he called to the sentry over the guns, and told him that the wolves were going to eat the boy. Ho replied, "Come away and leave him, or he will eat you also but when Janoo saw them begin to play together his fears subsided, and he continued to watch them quietly. At last he succeeded in driving them off; but the following night three wolves came oad, a few nights after, four which returned several times. Janoo thought that the two which first come must have been the cubs with, which the boy was found, and that they would have seized him had they not recognized 'him by the smell. They licked Ins face with their-tongues as he put his hands on their heads. When J anco'smiister re turned to Lacknow he was, after some difficult y, persuaded to allow Janoo to take the boy with him. Accordingly Janoo led him along by a strintr tied to bis arm, and put a bundle ot clothes on his head. Whenever they passed a jungle the boy would throw down his bundle and make desperate uttempts to escape. When beaten he raised his hands in supplieafcon, took up the bundle and went on; but the sight of the next jungle produced the same excitement. A short time after his return to Lacknow Janoo was sent away by his master for a day or two, and found on his return that the boy had disappeared. He could never be found again, About two months after the boy had "gone, a woman of the weaver caste came to Lucknow, with a letter from the Bajah of Bondee, stating .that her son, when 4 years old, had, five or six years before, been carried off by a wolf, and, from tie description given oi the boy whom Janoo had taken way with him, she thought it must be the same. She described marks corresponding with those on Janoo's boy; but, although she remained seme considerable time at Luekno-y, no traces could be found of the boy, and at last she returned to Bondee. All these circumstances were procured by the writer of the pamphlet from Sanaollab, Janoo's master and from Janoo himself, both of whom declared them to be strictly true. The boy must have been with the wolf six or seven years, during which she must have bad several litters of whelps, &rtutr'i Afaaazina.
PARAGRAPHIC POINTS. Tow can never persuade a man that a paper that has his name in it isn't worth reading. There's a hitch somewhere, and it begins to look iw though the next World's Fair would have t be held in the next world, if anywhere. Prop. Obimkeb js the chap who says that withiu the nest ten years this conntry is to lose 15,000,000 inhabitant by epidemic Will jou take cholera in yours? In LEADvrtiLE, when an actor fnils to respond to an encore, tho audience give cmplmsk to the call by opening flro on the scenery with revolvers. This gonerally brings the flushed, triumphant star smilingly to the footlights. ..4ra. DAUPEriiKS: Old Twiggs "Helto, Jones, got your feetsopping wet, haven't yon? Why don't yon wear rubbers, as I do? I haven't- wet my feet in six months." Jones "Well. I should think
l-you'd be ashamed to say so." Uarvurd
Lampoon. Professor (to student who writes, not for the masses, but for the educated few) "You should write so that the most ignorant of your audience can understand all vou can say." Student (puzzled) "What part of my production is not clear to you, sir?" A gentiiKMah has started a cafe just opposite a cemetery. He dedicates his house to "those coming from funerals,' and announces en his sign: "Private rooms for all who desire to weep by themselves. Wines and liquors of the very best" Paris Letter. AtjDen, of the New York Times, sayn that the man who wishes to break off the habit of smoking should postpone the lighting of his first cigar five minutes each day. In tlds way the hour for beginning to smoke wiU be gradually put off until after he has gone to bed and got to sleep. IiEssoh in natural philosophy: "Which is the more delicate sense, feeling or sight?" asked a professor. "Feeling," responded a student. "Give a proof of it, with an example." "Well, my chum can feel his moustache, but nobody else can see it," responded the student Columbia Colf-ege Spectator. A famous surgeon advises one of his patients to undergo an operation. "Is it very severe?" asks the patient " Not for the patient," says the doctor; "we put him to sleep; but very hard on the operator." "How so?" " We suffer terribly from anxiety. Just think, it only succeeds once in a hundred times." Happy is the uneducated man, for naught does ho know of perhelions, pLuiots, etc. He might hear that Jupiter had bounced into Mars and knocked the stuffing out of him, and he would peacefully remark: ' Them niggers is alius a figlitiu', " and never think anything more about tho matter. "Where ignorance, etc." JEvansville Argus. A oty woman recently sent a letter to a friend in a farming town asking the number of eggs a hen would lay in a day. Bhe knew, she said, that they would lay a dozen or more, but she wished to learn the exact; number, as eggs were very high, and she thought considerable money might be made by keeping a hen. It is said that women in boardinghouses are proverbially troublesome and dissatisfied. The most opprobrious observation which his landlady is ever known to level at a paying male boarder is that he is as "fussy as a woman." Tbe highest eulogy w'lioh she can pass upon a favorite female boarder is that "she makes as little trouble as a man." A mavss painter ifiio is at work' on a scaffold three stories from the ground falls from it upon the sidewalk, where he lies limp aud apparently lifeless. A crowd of benevolent folks surround him till his pulse returns and his eyelids begin to flutter, when a good Samaritan places a gloss of water to his lips. The sufferer (feebly) "How many stories has a fellow to f all in this ward before he gets brandy, dura ye?" Irish Balls. There are some good old Irish bulls fhicli are too good to die of neglect Of this order was the exclamation of the Irish gentleman, who, on getting a 10 prise in the lottery, and,, finding that the prize was less than the money which he had paid for it, cried out : ' " What luck it was I did not get the 20,0001 I must have been entirely ruined I" During the time when Ireland had a Parliament of her own, a member of the Irish House of Commons was describing the mordinate love of praise which characterized his opponent "The honorable member," said he, "is so 'fond of being praised that I really believe that he would be content to give up the ghost if it were but to look up and read the stonecutter's puff rra his grave.'" " Contempt of money," was the expression of another. " The honorable member professes to pUy the philosopher. I can assure you, Mr, Speaker, that, if there is any one office that glitters in the eyes of the honorable member, it is that of purse-bearer; a pension to him is a compendium of all the cardinal virtues. All his statesmanship is comprehended in the art of taxing ; and for good, better and best, in the scale of human nature, he invariably reads pence, shillings and pounds. 1 verily believe," exclaimed the orator, rising to the height of his conception.
i " that, if the honorable gentleman were
an undertaker, it would be the delight of bis heart to ' see all mankind seized with a common mortality, that he might have the benefit of the general burial, and provide scarfs and hatbands for the survivors," "Is there any ford there?" asked an English tourist, who coin suddenly to a full stop before one of the little mountain torrents in the West of Ireland. " Oh, to no sure, your honor, there was a ford," said a peasant standing at the brink, and making a hundred grimaces of civility. " When was it ?" stud the tourist "Before the bridge was built," sirid the peasant; "but when man and horse went over the bridge the ford got out of the habit" "Well, now that the bridge is broken down, I snxpe the ford may have got into the habit again. Is it safe?" "To be sure, your honor, all but in the middle, but that is nothing ; and, if you can swim, there is not a better lord in the country. " But I cannot swim." "Than, you honor, the only safe way that I kuow of is, as soon as you get beyond your depth, to walk baik again."
A tottng and well-dressed woman unmercifully thumping her mother upon the back excited mingled emotions of indignations and pity in the minds of the passers-by on a crowded thoroughCare yesterday. A good-hearted but indiscreet philanthropist who ventured to remonstrate at this brutal exhibition was bidden to mind his own affairs, and at last after mcch gasping and coughing, the elder lady explained that she had "swallowed a cardamon seed the wrong wajf " and her daughter was dutifully pounding her between t he shoulders to the inteut that choking might bo avoided. Sorely, appearances are often deceitful. Boston Journal.
Raw Oysters, Dr. William Koberta( in an interesting series of lectures on digestive ferments, published in the Lancet, says: The practice of cooking is not eqwdly necessary in regard to all articles of food. There are important differences in this respect, and it iu interesting to note how correctly the experience of mankind has guided them in this matter. The art clos of food which we still use in the ur cooked state arc comparatively few, and it is not difficult in inch caso to indicate the reiison of the exemption. Fruits, which we consume largely m tho raw state, owe their dietetic value chiefly to the sugar which they contain ; hut sugar is not altered by cooking. Milk is consumed byiw both cooked and uncooked, indifferently, and experiment justifies this indifference ; for I have found on trial that tho digestion of milk by pancreatic extract was not appreciably hastened by previously boiling tho milk Our practice in regard to tho oyster is quite exceptional, and furnishes a striking example of the general correctness of tho popular judgment ou dietetic questions. The oyster is almost the only uniiaal substance whib we eat
habitually, and by preference. in the raw or uncooked state, and it is interesting to know that there is a sound physiological reason at the bottom of this preference. The fawn-colored mass which constitutes iiid i'uih part of the oyster is ita liver, and this is little else than a heap of glycogen. Associated with the glycogen, but witliheld from actual contact with it during life, is its appropriative digestivo ferment the hepatic disaHtase. The mere crushing of the dainty between tho teeth brings these two bodies together, mid the glycogen is nt onco digested, without other help, by its own diastase . The oyster in the uncooked f tato, or merely wornwd, is, iu fact, s?lf -digestive. But the advantage of thif provision is wholly l:st by cooking, for the heat employed immediately destroys tho associated ferment, and a cooked oysteK has to be digested, like any other food, by the enter's own digestive powers. ,
rhe Ingenious Trlek of an Outlaw. A farmer companion of the notorious road agent, William Le Boy, tells the following remarkable story to a reporter of the Denver (Col.) Sews: "When Billy was sentenced I was within easy call,' and since that time I have not beeu asleep. Some years igo the boy used to be with a snide variety company and played the character of a female impersonator, and he was well up iu his business, too, and if he had stuck to it wonld not have been compelled to go to holding up coaches on the road for a tiring. His old girl, who has been with lii.m from timo to time for three years, and who loves him better, if anything, than I do, lives in Del Norte and we rung her into the scheme with us. As planned by Billy it vras to bring her up to town and get two suits of clotbpH for her just exactly alike that is, dresses of one color, shawls of one color and hats nud veils of one color. Then we were to get a suit of clothes, men's clothes, forBHly, and the extra womau's rig and rami's clothes were to be kept ready for a close call We were to keep a close lookout for the time when he was to be taken away, get on the train i with liim, and then at the first opportunity vlieh offered at night we were to take whatever guards were with him, put up a job on them, and dress Billy like the girl. Then we could go on our way rejousing. "The day came and we knew all about it and when the carriage containng Lie Boy and his guards drove up to 'die train, the girl and I were already on board. They took one double seat aud we took the one directly behind them and awaited developments. Along in the night all the passengers got to sleep. We were in a sleeping-car, if it was not called such, and Cantril's boy got awful sleepy. I felt sorry for the poor little devil, and was glad when he went into the car for a nap. Billy was also very tractable. Cantril was thirsty that night, and I pnt up a job on him. Going: to the water tank, after gauging his drinks aud the ti ne between them, I poured out some eroton oil and loft it in the cup. Then I pretended to take a hearty drink and made so much noise about gulping it down that Cantril got awful thirsty. I had no more than gained my seat till he made a dive for the tank, and without tilting the cup filled it and emptied it To partially kill the sbi nch of die croton I had put a dash of burned liquor in it If,Cantril tasted anytliing wrong in the water he attributed il to his sour stomach, and so said notl ing. It was not many minutes until the Deputy Marshal felt a general weak ness about his bread basket. Whea Cantril left and slammed the door to, we aoted. .All of us were up and doing 'in a second, for none of ns liad been asleep. The irons were off Billy in less than ten seconds and the extra suit of woman's toggery was put on him. When tdl was finished he curled down in my seat, just like the girl hod been, and the girl got up and skipped into another car. . My next move was to pnt my head over on Billy's shoulder, and iu another moment the brakeman came in. As he-passed by with bis lantern I raised up as if awoke by the noise and the light, and discovering that the prisoner was goue, raised the hue and cry. The brakeman took it Up, everybody woke up, and Cantril came out of the toilet-nxun. Then ensued a scene of confusion. He wanted the train stopped and the conductor would not stop it until he got to Hays City, five miles away. When we got there the girl got off, Cantril got off, and his assistant with liini, and Billy and I went on with the train, tackled almost to death." "Where is Le Boy at the present tune?" asked the reporter. "He is safe," was the reply. Judging from the statement mado by the train-recker Lie Boy has gone East for a time, but will soon retina, place himself at the head of his gan(f and once more take the road.
Do Birds Bury Their Desdt You are all familiar with 'die story of " The Babes in the Wood," and remember how the robins, finding the babes lying dead, side by side, covered their little forms with leaves, wrapping them in a winding-sheet of nature's own providing. Did you ever ask the question, " Do birds bury their own dead ?" Let me tell you an incident that same from an eye-witness of what I relate. In a tree near an old-fashioned farmhouse, way up in Vermont, two robins built their nest A lady watched them day by day as they brought straws, a bit of cotton or thread, and weaved them deftly in, to form their summer home. One morning she fpund three blue speckled eggs in the nest, and, on another, three tiny little birds in liheii; glace. How busy f he father and mother irds were, providing for their wants I and how prettily and tenderly they cared for them ! When they were large enough, they gave them lessons in fiying, and herein comes the poin t of my story. While thoy we?e trying their, wings, one day, a cat caught one, and, before the lady could rescue it it was injured beyciitl recovery. She put the poor trembling little creature back in its nest, and left it there for the mother-bird to nurae back to life if possible. It was of no rise. The cat's cruel claws and sharp teeth had done their work, and their victim died. A few days after, the lady, seeing and hearing nothing of the other birds, went to the nest, and found they had built a thatched roof over (die poor little bird, and there he lay on his back, with his claws sticking up through the straws. They hud buried their dead and deserted the nest, youth's Companion, Given Up r .Doctor "Is it possible that Mr. Godfrey ia up and at work, ana eared by ao simple a remedy V" " I asrare .you it is bene that ho is entirely rnred, and with nothing but Hop Bitters ; and only teu da;rn ago hi dootorg gave him up and laid ho mutt die !" "Well-ailay! That it remarkable! I will ?o this day sad get aome for my iwor George know hop! are jjood." Salem Post. t Tin Ware. Tin ware is simply thin iron plated with tin by being dipped into the molten metal. In theory it is au onsy matter to clean tbe imrfaco of iron, dip it into a bath of boiling tin, then remove it, enveloped with a silvery metal to a place for cooling. In practice, however, the process is one of tho most difficult iu tho arts, it was discovered iu Holland unci guarded from publicity with the utmost vigilance lor more than half a century. England tried in vain to discover the secret, until James Sherman, a Cornish miner, made himself master of it and brow glit it home. Drinking to di-own sorrow is a mistake, particularly if you have to borrow money to y (or the fire-water.
Tito ;roatcat Slraalni'i A simple, pure, hirmtesa remedy, that curea every time aud prevents disease by kiwping the lilood puro, Btoiimea regular, kidney aud liver ictive, is the groatent blessing ever vxjnforred upon mm.. Hop Bitten ia that remedy, and ita proprietors aro being blesaed by thousands who havo been saved and cured y it Will j-outrjit? Boo another column. Jate. FACTS FOR THE CURIO US.
Dr. Hbrz, a foreign electrician, has shown that it is possible to telephone 600 miles. Tan huge hunting spiders of South America und Coylon have legs which cover a foot of ground. Neam,v 6,000 different species of birds have been exhibited anulassifled, and probably thousands mom ist Taking that of beef at 100, the total solids or actual nutritive material in different fishes vary from sbtty-twoto 163. ExpKflMENT has proved that sound travels faster in water than iu air in water at the rate of 4,078 feet per second. Tine acorn-barnacle cements its forehead to a rock and remains thus all its life with its head downward and its heels in the air, kicking its food into its mouth. Aoassiz once had an opportunity to carefully measure a large jelly-fish as it lay at the surface of tha sea. Its disk was seven foot in diameter and its .tentoole 112 feet long. The house-spider's web will last for many weeks, while the garden-spider must spin afresh or mend her web every twenty-four' hours. The former sometime lives from six to eight years, J It is not generally known that there is such a tiling as false eyebrows, yet such is tho case. They are made perfectly by the use of "hair lace " and would nova be suspected as a counterfeit. Dr. Noa enskjoij, the Arctic travel er, has discovered that iron is always tube found in snow, from which it may be extrnoted by a magnet It is supposed that these pirtic'es of iron are of meteoric origin. Tee bone of the Archae plery, a rare fossil found in Germany, are very much lika those oi a lizard, and ittl-liind legsore like those of a bird, and it 'wis when olive clothed with feathers. This to rcsiU v a mont wonderful link between the birds and the reptiles. There can be no doubt jregarding the reptilian affinities of birds. Machines in a watch factn.y will cut screws with 589 threads to the inch the finest used in a watch has 250, These threads are invisible to the naked eye, and it lakes 141,000 of the sciena to make a pound. A pound of them is worth six pounds of pure gold. Lav one upon a piece of white paper and it looks like a tiny st eel filing. Tub name of the Deity is ipellod with four letters in almost every known langufcge. It i iu Latin, Dens; Greek, Z-jiih ; Hebrew, Adon; Syrian, Adnd; Arabian, Alls; Persian, Syra; Tmtm.ian, Idga; ligyptiau, Auma or Zeut; Bast Indian, Esgi, or Zeni ; Japanese, Zain; Turkish, Addi; Scandinavian, Odin; WaUa3luan,Zeno; Croatian, lXg.i; Dalmatian, Bogt ; Tyrrhenian, Eher ; Etuuri(ui,Chur ; Morgarinn,Oese; Swedish, Oodd ; Irish, Dich ; German, Gott . French, Dieu; Spanish, Dice; Peruvian, Lian, Thb speed at which some wings are driven is enormous. It is occasionally so great as to cause the pinions to emit a drumming sound. To this source thi buzz of -the (Ly, the drone of the bee and tbe boom of the beetle ore to be referred. When a grouse, partridge or pheasant suddenly springs into the ojr, the sound produced by the whirring of its wings, greatly resembles that produced by the enntnet of Bieel with the rapidly-revolv-ing stone of the knife grinder. It bob been estimated that the common ih moves its wings 380 times per secoud i. e., 19,800 times per minute, anil that the butterfly moves its wings nine times per second, ot 540 times pur minute Thb explorations made of deep-sea boitoms show a novel constituent oi such bottoms to be pumice dust, aris
ing, it is presumed, from submarine
volcanic action ; so general is it, in foot, that it rarely fails to appear when carefully looked for iu any of the dredg-
inga, aad it is believed to be the chief v iL. j -1 . A .1 i :
origin oi luti ueep-oe vtuyi. au wiui tdrmal element, which appears to have been detected at great depths, is " cos
mic dost." or dust formed from aero
lites, Another interesting point ir.
these explorations is the finding of manganese peroidde in nodules inclosing organic remains sharks' teeth and pieces
ot bone, Perils of the Single Man.
The old-fashioned notion that men look with a totally different eye on woman when they want a wife from what they look on women generally can not be sustained. Albeit there are men ever
in cmeat of a connubial partner without
searching for her. Thoy tore very apt to
be surprised into matrimony, or, at least, into matrimonial intonto provided, how
ever, that the matter be not taken out of
their hands by tue woman jierseu. jso
man is so likely to become engaged as
he who is persuaded tnat he will never
be. He is so prepared on one side for
circumstances of a certain kind tnat be is wholly ungarded on the other side for circumstances of au onnosite kind. At
the very moment that he is confident of .. ii ,i a i. - - ;
everlasting ceiirjacy, mas ne is rejoicing over his freedom, a sudden shift in the sentimental environment, a word, a tear, a caress, decides his doom. New York Mail. Congm Dick's Reply. The late Bishop Wilmer, of Louisiana (the Cousin Joe), and Bishop Wilmer, of Alabama (the Cousin Dick, of the following anecdote), being in Italy together, the latter was enthusiastically pointing oat to the former the architectural beauties of a ruin, when his Louisiana reverence rather wearily protested, It's all very fine, Cousin Dick, but nevertheless, a cheerful field, fragrant with new-mown hay, would please me better." The Bishop of Alabama replied: "Well, Cousin. Joe, there is this in favor of your view of it there is not an ass in all Italy that would not be of the soma opinion. "--Harprx ' Drawer. Somctbtna Almoatt IHarveloaa is the ste&dily-iueroaaing power and iwpularity of Warner's Safe Kidnej and liver Cure. A Time-Honored Remedy, "Uncle Pomp," said Col M. to a former slave, " I hear that some of you darkies down on the lower place are afflicted with the itch." " Bein' as it's you, boas," replied old Pompey, hesitatingly, "I mus confess dat de Lawd has seed fit to affliok us dat way, fer a fac'." "Ahl Doing anything for it?" " Yes, sali; on yea, siUi I" "What?" " Why, we er wo sm soratchin fei it" Ukcu! Sam's Cohmtioh Pownssas aro reoommended by i.toek-owners who have used them aa tbo bflxt Horse und Oattlo Hedioina to bo had. If tho animal in Scraggy, 8plritles, or baa no appetite, tbeso Powdeiv are an excellent nmedv, aud overy owner of atoekwill do well to try" them. They am prepared by tbe Emnicrt Proprietary Co., Ohicag.i, IU., a very reUablo firm, and sold by all good drugjrlata. The Pebvextits and Aicnnoi At, Powsa or Br. Homiak a Acvjb am- Liveb Ptc As a preventive of any diuoiwo that atU'As tho vitals, Uio pad is worth many times ita weijrbt in gold, lfcis impoHBiblo to compute the value of adiataiyciT which, wmrorrt hohino, may be auaolntely relied upon to iiievhnt tho moat dangeroua maladiva. Nothing in truer than the old uaying that, " l'roventiun ti bettor toau euro." Only tbe gcuuiue axle grease has the name of Ffiscr ou every package, and wear longer than any other.
has been ubcc for twe'ity yen, and during that time bus saved many very valuable Uvea. Do not neglect a cough rr cold until it is too late. Try Hub exce lent remedy, i.nfl we are aure yon will lie convinced of ita nirrita. Chronic Cough, and even Conauuiptbes, aro cured by ii . ii.. f. i. l.tlln la wan.
lUUUttlUg Ul UUWUUWh ,r,rj uvtbie w
Emiuort Proprietary Co., Chicago. Sold by all good Jruf gUtH.
and all form 8 of general debility relieved by taking Menbhah'b PEFroKiistj) Bbbp Tosio, the only prepare tion ot beet oontaming ita entire nutritions properties. It nontaina blood-making, force-generating and lifo-BUHtaiuing properties; ia invalcKt'le m all enfeebled conditions, whether the rcimlt of exhaustion, narvoua prostration, cvorork or acute (Ctiase, particularly if rcBUltiiiij i'rom pulmonary camplainta. Caswell, Hazard 4 Co., proprietors. Now York.
We en u snrc any penon having a bald boad or trou'jttd witli dandruff that Carbolbio, a dcodorut-d extract of iMtwleimi, will do all that is claimed tor it. 1 will not utarn the moat delicate fabriu and is debgktf unv. perfumed. Iiur tho diamond bottaatulnhoeaandgetyonr money' worth. MadebySogtothalBr's.,Chicago IlKal" Tl'H war aud; descriptlra lrculr4 Iraa. Mew YtkKlaaU Trim U,aW Broadway, N.Y. KK4t-ri: KKOSI I.RATH. William J.roneMln.or Somenr llo, Mat., mj: In U (all of 1S"6 I iraa Uken with Utoatlins of tha !uns. tot.owed by a e"o: nough. 1 lo-i njr aprH!t:t aBfl flash, ml wai (u nllited tu niy bed. 1 a 14 I vrae admitted tu the hoip tal. rhe doctma Mill I had a hole hunr lana big aa a half iloUr. At one time a report went around that I waidt?d. I save up hti,buta friend to'd ineof On. Willum IlAi.i.'a lUidix roit in I,nsaa. I r t a bottlt, when, to irjr surprise. 1 ooiniaeiiced tfi feci better, and fo-d iw i feel bettor tha a for thren reara it. 1 write thi hopttisr ovary one af3 rted w.th dlsweed tang wUl tnke Db William Hixi.'i IUmah, ad bo co.irinrrd lhat OWacMFTWS caw BK CVIUilK I ran pujj-Uvlj-,iy thiad mo mo-.e guml than all itio other Mhwlicines 1 hava t ikea in niy aloiouita.
HOLMAN'S PAD
CURES
Without fTo
MEDICINE i?L) Absorption
TUBS IfUURb The Only True Malarial Antidote. Ok, HoufAN'a Fas la no gueaa-work remedy no feeble lttauVa j:ptrlmmt no purloired hodge podge i soma ati .er inventory idea j tl ia the oirlartnaU and o nly grenalne cnt alive Pod, tha only remedy that hit an turn, tally-acquired right to naa the title-word "Pad" in con nectioa with a treatment for chronic dbwe.au of tha Stomach, Xfewr and Splfn. By a recently perfected improvement Dr. Hoi.. wan hai greatly increased the acopa of the Pad' aaefulecsa, aad affradahiy augmented ita active Canute power. Thl grejit itnprorejnenn glre HoutAir Pa wlth iu Adjuvants) audi complete and unfailing control over the moat penhtent and uayioldang forma of Chronic DlKaie of tha Stonaacai and K.1VC.T, aa well aa 9Xal a rial B100d-Poltoriln8r aa to amply justify the eminent Pnf !Ktr Xoomta' high encomium: "Itis KKAaaa a Univvabaj. Pasacba than ahvtmno lit MrdicikbI" The race ens of Hour.A:'a Pada haaintpircd im. tutor wh offer Pads similar in form and Odor to the arenalutt BOLMAlt PAD. Bewtn aftlicsMB IBoaras and liiolXAttloii Xada, erotUesa op to msU on Out reputation cf fh GESiVi:W, HOUUH PAD. Cwcii Genuine larolman Pad biam the Private Revenue Stamp of ran HOLMAN PAD COMPANY with tbo a!i Trad Mark jrtutcd in green, FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Or ant by moil, post-paid on receipt of SIO HQLKIAN PAD CO., (P . Has artf - -744 Broadway, ;fl, r.
mow TONIC Is a preparation of Protoxide of Iron, reiuvlsa Bark and the I'lioiipnatcs, associated with tlo Verctahle Aromattea. Endorsed by the Medioil Profession, and recommended by them for Dwiia pcpalau Oeneral IseFttUtv, Pcawialfi Dliia eaaea. Waul of VltUty, NrTua IPron. triatlem, Cow.va.le.Maee from Xtsvosw maud CUrooic cliUi. anel Fever. Itacrna every purpose tt hCre a Toxic Is necessaryItaafuferea by The Pf.HarteT Median &. k'l The fbnowtnr la orvj of tho very many teeum-
nuua we are recetvinf aaity;
HMtaux Some three months ago I be M tlw
oso or UK. uaktea in J : -jlumiu, anon uie av. vice of many friends who knew its virtues. I wis
oSerina from Keneral delnllty to such an extest
mat my taoorvraaez(Mseaingiy ouraenaomc um. A vacation nf i; month did not give ma tuacn r ltef, but on tie con trary, waa followed by l creased proitnUoa and sinUnr chills. At thi time I he Kin -.be nan of yottr Ibom Tome, from whlehl rtallrni almost immediate and wonderful results. The old ene rgy retnrned awl 1 fo and thai my natural force wai. not permanently stinted. I have used Uireo bottles of (lio Toxic. Since nsiitc UI have done twice the labor that I ever did In the same Umu during my Illness, aud with double tlaa ease. With the tranquil nerve and vigor of bod T. Jua come aluo a clearness of thought never before aloyed. If the To; ic bu not done the work.! kianr not what. I it veil thecrwltt. Sray, O , Jan. 2, 171. I'sstorOirlMlan Chorea. Far Sale by DraggM and Genera) Dealers ErerywfKm
THE MARKETS. SEW YOltK. Bsevu..... t W 1 Hons .. 00 8 00 Cottok 10XIS H Flows -Suprrfinn, 4 W i 4 lb Whkat . 1 Siring. 1 31 & 1 No. a d...... i giw Coax Unnded 0 vat tW Oats Mixed wetaem. 44 44 Pokk llfsa IS 75 fltl W Lahu 10 II CHICAGO. BVM-Choice Qradntl Stsera.... 6 60 1 ' OflvsutdHelfiira. 9 40 & 4 VI Madiunt to Fair S 30 Horn , 4 90 SIS 1'lour Fsn iy White TMnter Ex... 5 TS A IS Cool to Choice Spring Ex.. 5 00 Alt Whbat Ho. Spring. 1 11 Si 3 Mo. 3 Spring 97 (al 1 la Co Mc. 9 4 til 43 OAta Mo. a 37 B Rti--Mo. a. 1 M . 1 17 llAiner No X M n Hunts Chile Creaflisrv al at II'
lia s -Fresh 19 & liX Poux -Kess M 7 1 CO lam. WJiC MH.WAUKEB. WtiEfT Mo. tn. 1 II g I U: No. a.. 1 OS Hilt
ucsn o. .,,....,,,.- i.... t-OAT8-K0.S...,. 34 A BttE Mre...!?..... :.!-.. lotHta 1
Btlti.EV-So. St, M H tM I'.ma Mesa.. Is 75 &U 06 l.vn 10Jf MM ST. LOUIS, Wheat-No. I Aed. 1 14 1 IS Oowi Mixl t 47 iH 4 Oats No. a 87. 14 sa IlM , 1 16 1 17 Foaa Alexs...... It St i3 50 Iomd 10Jf 10Js' CISOINNATt. Whfa 1 ia a l 13 OOBK 47 , 48 Oats 41 (l 4a itrg 1 as it 1 a PonaMes W a if,10 50 r.ABi io.ft9i lojt TOLEDO. Wheat-No. 1 Volte. 1 16 ml 17 Mo. 2 lied 1 17 . 1 18 Cons Mo. a.. 51 ; 5a Oats 40 g 41 DETROIT, Ftoua OhMce K t 60 Whkat Km 1 White 1 1 A 1 18 Cokk-Mo.1 l 1 47 OATs-aflxid 41 .s 44 Daui.kt fpov cental) 1 to 1;) a 30 Foaa Moss 17 i 0 e17 SO Sbsd Clover 8 $ 4 00 ISDIAMAPOUa Wheat M.).21ted Ill 1 IS Cobs No. a 14 45 Oath 41 4x Pobk Mots 15 00 15 SO BAilT LIBE1LTY, PA. CATri.K-nest . MS am Fair 4 W 5 00 Common . : in 4 80 Hooa 71 SS tinwv '.i 80 0
PERRY DAVIS'
! jLi aBjeaSav .
1 ''
Carl Collectors!
lit. 3nrieTenlrars (lOBBI!i'S ELSCTWI47 SOAP of your Oro-
9d. Ask tiiia to (Its rra Mil ori. 3d. Hall u fata MM a.nd wear rail addrct. 4th. H e will aaatl roIT CttBB MTen Vvcantlful card8,1n alk colon and govd, reprt3antiBK Shak. pearo'a " iieven Agm of HIan.n
I. L, ORAGffl & CO., m South Foarth St., PHILADELPHIA. PA
Bit for Ttrestaii Worth (31. Tar fit for Ceuta. TnaRSns xtrjui'a Booki:xkpxm. IncmdhK nil blaaaa noaded to mika swrtkmaate with easterners, Monay n loudcd J .ttM)nlya. Isfaetory Adaresa
tft. the M'tnu a mum CO., '"""'" aanatW.aSv'td.Oo.o.
. ' 1 . tra.. , mm
1T1M fitg. I JltoWTQ.. hMCtBWf ff $itbfm
CMIK ;ixa.faB, yaj (lliaH , mT WB1J air mm w
u
MANHATTAN UOK C0.UV.HU8U. N.T.
r.aaoxwsa
RUPTURE
<r4:. juid oured, wltliorrf, tli injiirr triMfiM Inftrot, mf Dr. JtA SHERMAN'S, ntibnm, OfSoe, tUl BrvmdwaJ, Nww Ybrlc. Hi bock. wit ptiotocTupliir Itlrmam J
pad emitt twon ana nr i n, mmuma urn we.
.fACTFTTtK.
Hlldl wii tr am n
ft" DIES SATED H
G3
. HOP BITTEES.
II (ABbidleaa, aallreakO
tJBlITAm bops, sdcb d. xuaauuu, DANBUHKy AlTD TBX Prr.UST IdD BSarHaKIAX,4)Va tixs cwaij. oianfitmu. -THK1T CUKE Jn Diseases of tho Itomaeh. Boela,infloa, Liver, Kldiiirra,a: d Urinary Organi, Kar.
Vonsmeas. aieepi aiisnsaaaaa uniaeiang
t COI
8 IOOO IN COLD.
writ hiwfdfop a etise the-win aoeeaTaar
help, or for anything unpen aw Injarloa found In than. Ask your drafgli '. tfor Hop BMen and try
UielA oazore you sviep. . vsuas
D I. C,lsfsVaandrrteslaUblimrff
laassaaBravii ul vpiuiu, aiwcw ajsai iiarootlAa.
ayaWata sairp rem Gnoinun.
Al! a.. . aaMWifcaaaHla,
Her Mm Mix- Co., aiaSartar, S. If., ATWi.li.OaA.
Tlc Tzavcloi- vrlio winely amv1a against tho eonungeaey of Ittneea by taking with Um Hntetter'i Btomaoh Sitters, baa oeeaaicm to aonerttn. la UluwM'f 011 blafoiee'xKt when he aaea others, who hf.venegleijtedtodotio,BuerlBgfom aome one of the maladies for which It is a remedy and preventive), Anongtheeearefevor and ague, buiousnatf. eonsttoaUut and sheuiatism, diaeasM often attendiott uptaa el lango of ollnute or snwomtod diet, far- For ml by aU tmgsts and Dealers gsnarall
BIO WAI SKS. amnroer and venter. Sainplea Ira. Mtlo3llouyhigOi,ll)WeatlUdb)onil..Otiloigo.
410 A vrKKK. anaoratJioiMsaaityBiale. OojUy wlaCouUicfraa. AildMH Tauil A Ot.. Aojnaia, Ma. DK. II IIMTKR. 103BteUst6UcaatrdsBeoeeafvUy Throat nod Lung Da,eo oyllnbalation. STBM-Wuidar Ameikan Wateh for a sung, Oatahgo foratiup. TaAicaxn A SattTB, Roobarter.K. V. $5 to $20 Klrdor JS'K
SALBSMEM wnteHi;llonoomlrton. Kn4atiiaa tortseiae.auieL PJKUNIX PUB. CO Wum, Pa BGC a tissk In your iwn town. Terms and OS otjtiH $DD tVttrAddrees K. Haujit A 00, PoiiUnd. ate,
FREE,
WrNKRVC) Jfl DKBIUTT. htmt Manhoori.
tod lupaJrAd kwni corwJ try MATHEWS
lUaprovfrOl kmu rc-MlasncrM oral ana Atmowtm Pad oombined tit of Pad. 7U0 Kn)hM--ftHir
tttatea iacvor th in tjUtan. Do net poroaxaa nL1 atvla Bit) Ht lit whan Tffil oan avc tha latMaL
Itttproradforti. " KiMrtrtc UrlU," alviHwaoin
par, urnai im n noiwa ; mmmo. vc. D. 3 D. MATHEWS A CO,,
ei, m ana w rum atbdu. vniesco.
An Open
The fitct l well anderetood fihst tho 1EX1.CAN MUSTANG fJMXKNT Is by tot tbe best eKtemal knowa tut tarn or UmsL The reason why Neoiaes ou "p secret" wh m we explain that "lusbuig ' penetrates aUa, flesh and i i oaele to the tery bone, ranovinff alt disease and trorenes). No other Hnlatent does tkta, hence now other is mt Utx&ij need m does WKh ri48 of good.
A SATE MO SUftE REMEDY FDR Kamafca.
Cii.l&rt,
Spraitri
ANT)
IHln1 lrt for Deslen.' kfedlnm Wot k : Hiw MUUIJII.U Ciacloaatl. O. Catalogue FitElt? .ineil a MOltTII -Ageate Waalell v, J rail. v6 BeatailiiUf ArttcUa In the wer 4iaim ifdliW .UAiTjAY BaORUOX lleaswa.etait.
guaranteed juabweOmw. Adlress A'AxviRTjia 8x0 Jaaeivulcf fto
JflKNIPK WANT I) for the Best and Fsstwit. L Selltlii; Pictorial llool j and Bibles. Prior, reduied peret. Naiiomi. PaauSHmu Co . Ciloro, III.
AOENTS WANTED OUIOKtoMUta REVISED HEW TESTAHENT
now rfottj' rur Ageaia. jiimi oaair f,rt:ed. if Kf'oiu at-e w aula for It. Cratw Aors rl or Aaemi. Parilrulwn Jttt. Outfit Ao ulaku Address UbMlARD BB08.. Chlcsso. Ill,
Hiia Bicycle.
A namunentimatitfalMiad vajhlel.
atth wlilch a person ean ride tlirao ailleK as easily as hs could walk om. Send t-nt stamp (or si. page oate. THR POPB H'FH OO, K4M vTashiBfloa Ut, BiMtoik Ma
BiHlSH,
AKH Scalds, Tootbacbi AND
FOB SALE BY AM.
anuni nvuruT I4CAX. or. Tiv.
imrLUIinCn I Utate Wfcle ,,fJ
A'so ?A LaKi rrmoniai. in .-...
. mMM.. xfat.,.-iuaiaalttlvmald
ok ... 300aWr..WBeia)aIi
rftltaug.
ror oaxivllaa and Sesur ":! AKt ALL DISCAtMt Camaaa hy Maialal Potaorviag f the , A WAIi R A.NTHID OUBE.
Tor sale by all I
AfSiSXTM WAMTKD T4UI OOK
win 1 LniatfiL uaikisila
DA 11
wtunle fa bam
do wit, Kiel it. Prac?3s. Ales our Itemamtlo ClXflS
ml. nneotftiiLv 1
w eTw a ihw aaynipen aaaeaaej aw aeavaw (.fferexl Agvrrta t inaft. una ay.
Kne oer nnncBMiay ooewaiser poMgiTlOsOALK CO, 1
n h ruwa OV.UKi:KUaau. 1
T WASTED FOR Bible REVisioir
Th taat and ofatiapvat iU.atratd adl Jof ttRo-
Isfertor d Uom. ttoai tlw 490117 ym 1 imf 4ranate
tWXawTuUutttMtt. Mf lovii of mlaai-awittefir It. Do not be decald by (bap Jot 11 MMtrof
lfiO fins iaiaTKVinffi on at4 antl vro. A-nta M
colnlnK moiMtr wlaltia: tijia otJiiimi. Sind it ctfvwlmm.
Ail.
CELLULOID tf?K EYE-GLASSES. f ttoproaenting toe 0wtoa-wlead 1wtnaa Shell and Atubsr, The) tbrbteat, aacdiipmawt. and strongest known. Bold bv Optuiaaa, bb Jewelers. Had s by the HFIINGSaV VSflSOUt ITFO CO.. l$Uaiden Ijuae. Now rttk. .
HICAGO P1TTS1
JjrtT-alxth o.rfJheoajTVfWile "Miwm.
itnaau ynom. mmo aioa:
Mrnrnmt ILnaerN i ar atv Ifa.ir.aw4l-
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BEST TI1BESHEH Qgl WHEELS
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