St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 12, Number 19, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 6 November 1886 — Page 4
<Tfegaph, THE NEWS CONDENSED. THE EAST. It is stated that all ths electrical companies iu New York have agreed to put their wires underground. The Erotheihood of Locomotive Engineers, in convention in New York, have divided the $3,000 I.fe and accident policy into two policies of $1,500 each, the assessment to be fifty cents on each de ith on a policy of $1,500, Age in taking risks is limited to forty-five years, and only to me ml ?rs then. The change will go into effect May 1, 1887. Catherine Taswell, aged 30, the colored wife of John Taswell, coachman for George Phillo, President of the First Na- ' tional Bank of Philadelphia, was found • foully murdered in an old spring house near Haverford College station. She was assaulted on her way to church. There is no clew to the murderers.... , James Russell Lowell is to marry the dowager Lady Lyttleton. She is about 40 years 01d.... Mrs. Stewart bequeathed her estate, after the payment of several gifts and annuities, to Charles J. Clinch, her nephew, of Paris, and Judge Henry Hilton. A codicil revokes the bequeathal of one- I half the esta e to Henry Hilton direct, and bequeaths it to him in trust for several ob- I jects which are named. . . .In the New York Custom House, Louis Bieral, a discharged inspector, shot Mr. Beattie, Surveyor of the Pert, two bullets inflicting painful but not necessarily fatal wounds. Bieral. who made a dash for liberty, but being hard pressed rushed into the arms of a policeman, served with distinction in the war of the rebellion. THE WEST. A passenger train on the Wabash collided with a freight at a curve near Edwardsville, U!., the engines being wrecked, the baggage and express cars telescoped, and several box cars ditched. William I Ballou, the express messenger, was crushed to death, and a brakeman was fatally I injured. The conductor of the freight | train disobeyed orders and caused the disaster. Subsequent reports in no way miti- i gate the horrors of the catastrophe on the ■ Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway ' in Wisconsin. The number of lives lost , and the names of most of the missing will never he known. Sisters Alphonse and Dionesia, m ns of Winona, with a candi- , date for nunbood, lost their lives. Liabilities of the broken bank of Dustin & Co., Lincoln, 111., now foot up over $200,00(1, with assets of only’ $67,000. i It is hardly possible that depositors will receive 25 cents on the dollar. Dustin <t Co.’s dressed beef works at Miles City, M. T., were closed on attachments aggregating $25,000, Illinois citizens putting in claims for $18,000... .The amount tauen by the robber who recen.ly rifled ti e express safe , on the St. Louis and San Francisco train j is now said to be SBI,OOO. The defectives i are busily at work, but the utmost reticence is practiced bv all concerned, and no information is riven to the pul lie. The best evidence attainable fixes the ' number of the lost in the Rio (Wis.) rail- ' way horror at twenty. C. H. Wells, the , brakeman alleged to be the cause of the ; disaster, has surrendered himself. He tl rows all the responsibility upon Con- : ductor Hankey It is conjectured that Joseph Heath, of I Tort Austin, Mich., worth $3,000,000, has been robbed and thrown into the l ike, having mysteriously disappeared from the steamer Alaska between Sandusky and Detroit. .. .It is now’ stated that the money stolen from the Adams express car on the San Francisco Road was nearly $120,000. ....Samuel S. Payton, a degenerate grandson of Commodore Perry, of Lake Erie fame, has just been discharged from .the Michigan Penitentiary, where he served five years for burglary. While a convict he fell heir to an estate valued at $250,000. About 3,500 men employed in the beefpacking houses of Nelson Moriis and Swift & Co., at the Chicago Stock Yards, struck against a return to the ten-hour system of labor... .A fire at Rockford, 111., originating in the Johnston Oat-Meal Company’s Mill, extended to adjacent buildings, causing a loss of nearly $100.600... .Mrs. Libby Sager, aged 34, wife of Dr. Sager, committed suicide at Celina, Ohio. S.a left a note stating that she was tired of life, and that the Lord wanted her. THE SOUTH. Eight persons were burned to death in a log cabin near Flat Rock, Ky.... At Lebanon, Ky., Captain N. R. Christie and William Mills quarreled and began firing at each other. A ball from Christie’s revolver Lit and instantly killed Wiiliam Turner, an innocent spectator of the difficulty. Killing frosts are reported from Mississippi and Louisiana. Several parties of mining experts sailed from New Orleans for Honduras, to examine the district in which discoveries of gold have been reported. .. .The Governor of Louisiana has notified Colonel S. L. James that he can not transfer to an out- i side syndicate his lease of the labor of the penitentiary convicts. Six United States prisoners have been I sentenced to be hanged in Fort Smith, I Ark., Jan. 14, for murders committed in Indian Territory’. The Sloss Furnace Company of Birmingham, Ala., have purchased of Jacob Reese the right to use his basic process, and will at once erect a plant for the man- 1 ufacture of steel on a large scale. WASHHGTOX General Sheridan has set aside the finding of the court-martial in the case of Captain William S. Johnson, found not guilty of duplicating his pay accounts.... Another call for $10,000,600 three per cent, bonds has been issued by > Secretary Manning... .In the course of: correspondence relating to Mormon im- ■ mi-ration. Acting Secretary Fairchild says that there is no provision of law for their exclusion.... Commissioner Black desires to correct the general belief that the last Congress passed a Lill pensioning veterans of the Mexican war and their widows for mere service. The measure was defeated by the efforts of the younger class of men who served in that campaign. An opinion has been given by Attorney General Garland that national banks must deposit interest-bearing I onds to secure circulation, and that called 3 per cents can not be used for that purpose. A post-mortem examination shows that Martin B. Casey, the Treasury Department clerk who died suddenly at his desk in Washington, committed suicide, poison enough to kill two men being found in his stomach. He was a sufferer from heart disease. For the last fiscal vear there were 14,433,153 money-ord<.rs issued, representing $132,716,317, for which fees aggregating $1,214,506 were received. President Cleveland has selected Ihujsday, November 25, as a day of
national prayer and thanksgiving. The official proclamation reads as follows: It baa long been the custom of the people of the United States, on a day in each year especially set apart for that purpose by their chief executive, to acknowledge tl.o goodness and mercy of God and invoke His continued care and protection. In observance of such custom I, Grover Cleveland, President of the United States, do hereby designate and set apart Thursday, the 25th day of November, instant, to be observed and kept as a dav of thanksgiving and prayer. On that day let ali our people forego their accustomed employments ana assemble in their usual places of worship to give thanks to the Ruler of the universe for our continued enjoyment of the blessings of a free government, for a renewal of business prosperity throughout our land, for the return which has rewarded the labor of those who till the soil, and for our progress as a people in all that makes a nation great. And while wo contemplate the infinite power of God in earthquake, flood, and storm, let the grateful hearts of those who have been shielded from harm through His mercy bo turned in sympathy mid kindness toward those who have suffered through His visitations. Let us also, in the midst of our thanksgiving, remember the poor and n edy with cheerful gifts mid alms, so that our service may, by deeds of charity, be made acceptable in the sight of the Lord. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to bo affixed. Done at the city of Washington this Ist day of November in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-six and of the independence of the United States of America the one hundredth and eleventh. By the President: Grover Cleveland. T. F. Bayard. Secretary of State. For the month of October the public debt was reduced $13,201,619. Herewith is the statement issued on the Ist inst.: INTEREST-BEARING DEBT. Bonds at 4’y per cent $250,000,000 Bonds at 4 per cent 73/,776,400 Bonds at 3 per cent 86,848,700 Refunding certificates at 4 per cent. 194,500 Navy pension fund at 3 per cent.... 14,000,000 Pacific Railroad bonds at 6 per cent. 64,623,512 Principal 81,153,443,112 Interest 8,993,-61 Total 81,162,436,673 DEBT ON WHICH INTEREST HAS CEASED SINCE MATURITY. Principal $12,316,435 Interest 232,492 Total $12,548,927 DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST. Old demand and legal-tender notes. 8346,738,391 Certificates of deposit 7,140,000 Gold certificates 8 4 ,201,969 Silver certificates 100,306,800 Fractional currency (less 88,375,934 estimated as lost or destroyed)... 6,953,702 Principal 549,433,862 TOTAL DEBT. Principal 81,715,193,409 Interest 9,226,i 53 Total $1,724,419,463 Less cash items available for reduction of the debt 217,283,315 Less reserve held for redemption of U. S. notes 100,000,000 Total 8317,288,315 Total debt less available cash items? 1,407,131,147 Net cash in the Treasury 52,783,199 Debt less cash in Treasury Nov. 1 1886 81,354,317,947 Debt lees cash in Treasury Oct. 1, 1886 1,367,549,567 Decrease of debt during the month. 813,201,619 CASH IN THE TREASURY AVAILABLE FOR REDUCTION OF PUBLIC DEBT. Gold held for gold certificates actually outstanding 888,294,939 Silver held for silver certificates actually outstanding 100,306,800 U. S. notes held for certificates of deposit actually outstanding 7,140,000 Cash held for matured debt and interest unpa d • 21,542,4 r 9 Fractional currency 4,057 Total available for reduction of the debt 8217,288,315 RESERVE FUND. Held for redemption of U. S. notes, nets Jan. 14, 1875, and July 12, 1882 8100,000,000 Unavailable for reduction of the debt— F'-actrnn"! silver coin $26,300,335 Minor coin , 2D, >2l ” otal Certificates held as cash 54,469,760 Net cash balance on hand... 52,783,199 Total cash in Treasury as shown by the Treasurer's general account.. 8151,068,033 The Government re eipts during the first four monihs of the present fiscal year ended Oct. 30 were 8127,814 377, being 814,168,891 in excess of the receipts during the correspond! ig peril d ct last year. The expediti.res during tho same ■ period of 1883 were 882.254,035, being 811,918,451 less than tho expenditures during the same period of las year. THE RAILWAYS. The Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw Road was sold in Chicago, by a Master iu Chancery, to an attorney of the first mortgage bond-holders for $4,790,000. At a similar sale in 18o01he property brought $6,000,000. A. H. Lawrence and associates have secured at Springfield a license to incorporate the Chicago West Division Elevated Railway Company, with a capital stock of $10,000,000. A syndicate has purchased the Marquette, Houghton and Ontonagon Road at sllO per share for the preferred stock and *0 for the common. GEMKAL. Grand Master Workman Powderly has interviewed Cardinal Gibbons, and it is said was assured (hat the Catholic Church will not interfere with the Knights. Failures for the week in the United States 196, in Canada 19, making 215 in all. They are mostly very small ones.... A ruI mor comes from Ottawa that the Dominion ; Government intends soon to construct two or three fast cruisers, to be added to the fleet now protecting the fisheries. Canadian merchants are clamoring for an extradition treaty with the United States. The heavy losses by the Rothschild failure at Toronto are the cause. A disastrous fire, hard to subdue, broke out at Chicago in the building occupied by Knight & Leonard, printers, the Goodyear Rubber Company, and Salisbury & Cline, which created a pecuniary loss of ' $225,000. Arthur C. Papineau, of the fire J insurance patrol, lost his life, and four : other members of that organization lei ceived serious injuries. Fire at Des Arc, I Arkansas, destroyed six stores and two churches; the losses aggregate $150,000. Marshall’s foundry, Pittsburgh, was damaged by fire to the amount of $25,000. The Canadian Minister of Justice informed an Ottawa correspondent that he had several times tried to arrange with the I United States Government not to make Canada a dumping-ground for boodle aidermen and the like. He thinks the Americans will now accept the draft of a treaty which will work a reform, but will not be retroactive.... The oleomargarine law went into effect on the Ist inst. The demand for stamps has been very great, and the indications are that a large | amount of the commodity will be put on I the market. The production of oleomargai Hue for domestic consumption is estimated i at the rate of 100,000,090 pounds a year, and the amount exported is a’so believed to be very large. Vincente Recendez, a Mexican, killed his wife on the train between Laredo, Texas, and New Latedo, Mexico. It was a sensational and tragic affair.... In the Cathedral of Notre Dame, at Montreal, Father Steetenne condemned the rules of the Knights of Labor, and advised such of his hearers as were members of the organization to withdraw from it. IWKIIIGV Chadwick’s thread-mills at Bolton. England, were damaged by fire to the amount of £40,000... .The rentals on four great estates in West Clare, Ireland, have been reduced irom 15 to 40 per cent j IT e Bev. Hugh Reginald Haweis, Episcopalian, has been forbidden to preacii in a dissenter’s pulpit. It is now said that the reason the Czar killed his aid, Count Reutern, was because he suspected the Count of criminal intimacy with one of the imperial family. I Gen. Kaulbars, the Russian agent at : Sofia, has a very bjutal way of trulldozuig
Bulgaria. He tells the Bulgarian Foreign ! Minister that the Russian fleet at Varna is I there “for business.”... .The districts of Maremma and Ferrara, Italy, are suffering disastrously from floods. Great d stress I prevails among the peasants. Bulgaria is stiffening its back and looking the Russians in the face. The Government has ordered that the Russian : language be no longer taught in the public schools, substituting German therefor A treasure train was captured in Afghanistan bj’ rebels The police of Pesth found thirty persons, nearly naked, sleeping in a warm-water drain Teemer and Hamm, American oarsmen, defeated Perkins and i Godwin, British representatives, in a series i of double-scull rac-s on the Thames. Over one hundred severe shocks of ; earthquake were experienced on September j 10 on one of the Tonga islands iu the Pa- | cific Ocean. From the bottom of a lake I of marvelous depth arose a volcano to the ' height of three hundred 1 eet.... China ■ will send a high person to Rome next , month to present to the Pope the re- j spects of the Emperor and the imperial j family, and to notify him that the Emperor | has attained his majority... .Hungary’s finances are in a critical state. The opposition papers bluntly talk of bankruptcy, and estimate a deficit in next year’s budget of 60,000,000 florins. The Ladies’ Man. But better than all the fancy work at a watering place, says a writ r in the Cincinnati Commerciat-Gazette, is “the ladies’ man.” l adies’ men are getting scarcer every year. People of a melancholy frame of mind think these useful, ornamental members of the human family will soon be extinct. According to an expert authority the ingredients that go to the making of the ladies’ man are: A good face, white teeth, a nose that has neither sneers nor snuff about, a very moderate share of sense and an immoderate share of nonsense, mixed according to the Gratiano recipe (that is, in the proportion of two grains of wheat to two bushels of chaff); a voice that sounds agreeably musical in “How-d’ ye-do ?” iu the ante-room, in a quartet or conversation in any room, or in a “good-night” at the extremity of the hall stair; a back which can bend like a willow, a smirk that does not displace the hostess’ confidential maid, hands white, long-lingered, and acornnailed, if convenient, legs with some probability of calf, as much superior to the Apollo Belvedere as possible, two eyes of one color, whiskers and hair of his own growth, with washes, essences, lavender soaps, toothpicks, and powders, tight waist, tighter pantaloons, etc. He is of an agreeable temper, lightly pleased, and not lightly displeased. He is as cheerful to-day as he was yesterday; his boots and his wit were equally brilliant yesterday and to-day. Being independent as to property, he may be considered as a sort of toadeater —a toad-eater without the venom of one of these reptiles. If his host is disposed to be profoundly axiomatical and says that mock turtle is real turtle, he does not dispute it, but swallows his host’s mock turtle and his real opinion at the same tone. His hostess asserts that Chaucer did not write “Comus,” and he confesses that his hostess’ assertion has s aggered an opinion he has held to the contrary. If his host is witty be always laughs in time and in tune. His laugh is long, loud, and peculiar. His other duties are to hand young ladies to carriages; to hand old ladies to their seats on reception evenings; to quadrille with young ones; to wait on lovely Miss So-and-so between the dances, and serve lemonade, ices, and jellies with a page’s precision and a pr.nee’s politeness of Lack and body; to say handsome things to the beautiful one; to shop with them at the jeweler's, and admire their taste when they prefer i xench filigree to American real ty and sterlingness; at the opera to crybravo lor weak-voi ed elderly friends when a favorite tenor sings, and dap no louder than the same when tho fa ryfooted Ancona dances. These are his principal amusements, and all together they make up a very harmless sort of nice being, which no one can more object to than one can to bread and honey for breakfast, honey and biscuit for luncheon, and honey and rolls for dinner. In short, though in ontestably a “sweet thing,” there is great sameness about him.
Solemn Saying-. He who would avoid sin must not stand at the door of temptation. The Homan spear did not make so deep a wound as did the kiss of Judas. That which the fool does in the end the wise man does in the beginning. Many people are busy in this world gathering a handful of thorns to sit. upon. There can be no greater mistake than the stopping to worry over a mistake already made. No 'man is more severely punished than he who is subject to the whip of his own remorse. Help somebody worse off than yourself, and you will find you are better off than you fancied. THE MARKETS. NEW YORK. Beeves 84.50 @ 5.75 Hogs 4-00 & 5.75 Wheat —No. 1 White 8i & .85)2 No. 2 Red 81 @ .86 CflßiN —No. 2 45)6 fj .46’4 Oats— White 35 .40 Pork —New Mess 10.50 is 11.00 CHICAGO. Beeves —Choice to Prime Steers 5.00 @5.25 Good Shipping 4.00 @ 4.50 C0mm0n......... 3.00 @8.50 HOGS—Shipping Grt.des 3.50 © 4.25 Flour —Exira Spring. 4.00 @4.50 Wheat— -No. 2 Red 74 @ .74’2 Corn— No. 2 36 @ .36)4 Oats —'o. 2 26 @ .26)2 Butter— Choice Creamery 23 @ .2> Fine Dairy 16 @ .20 Cheese —Full Cream. Cheddar.. .11’4@ ,12 Full Cream, new 12 @ .12'g Eggs —Fresh 17)6@ .18’2 Potatoes —Caoice, per bu 40 <ai .46 Pork- Mess 9.00 @9.25 MILWAUkfiE. Wheat— Cash 71 @ .72 Corn —No. 2 36 & .36)^ Oats— No. 2 28 @ .29 RfE—No, 1 52 @ .52)2 Pork— Mess 9.00 @ 9.50 TOLEDO. Wheat— No. 2 77 @ .78 Corn— Cash 33 @ .38)^ Oats —No. 2 26 @ .27 DETROIT. Beef Cattle 3.75 @ 4.59 Hogs 3.50 @4 50 Sheep 3.25 @4 25 Wheat —Michigan Red .77 @ .77)^ Corn— No. 2 38 @ .39 Oats— No. 2 White 30 @ .30)$ ST. LOUIS. Wheat —No. 2 74 @ ,75 Corn— Mixed 34 @ .35 Oats— Mixed 26 @ .26)£ Pork— New Mess 9.25 & 9,75 CINCINNATI. Wheat— No. 2 Red 76 @ .76^ Corn —No. 2 36)2@ .37)^ Oats— No. 2 27 @ .28 Pork -Mess 9.25 @9.75 Live Hogs 3.75 @ 4.25 EiUFFALO. Wheat— No. 1 Hard 83 @ .84 Corn-No. 2 Yellow 42 @ .43 Cattle 4.25 @ 5.25 INDIANAPOLIS. Beef Cattle. 3.25 @ 4.01 Hogs 3.50 « 1.2 > Sheep 2.10 @ 4.00 Wheat —No. 2 Red 73 @ .74 Corn— No. 2 31 .34 Oats 25 @ .26 EAST LIBERTY. Cattle —Best 4.25 @ 4.75 Fair ; 3.75 @4.25 Common 3.00 @ 3.7.5 Hogs 4,25 @ 4.75 -Sheep 2.50 @ 4.00
DANGEROUS DRUGS. How to Control Hffectually AU Such Horrible Habits. Rochester (N. Y.) Post-Express. A gentleman who has spent La summer abroad said to our reporter that the thing that iuiprersed him most of all was the number of ho idays one encounters abroad, aud the little anx.ety the people display in the conduct ot business affairs. “Men boast here,” he said, “that they work for years without a day off; in Europe that would be considered a crime.” Mr. H. 11. Warner, who was present at tho time, said: “This is the first summer in years that I have not spent on the water. Been too busy. ” “Then I suppose you have been advertising extensively?” “Not at all. Wo have always heretofore ciose l our laboratory during July, August, ana September, but this summer we have kept it running day anil night to supply tho demand, winch has been three times greater than ever before in our history at this season.” “How do you account for this?” “The increase has come from tho universal recognition of the excellence of our preparations. \\ o have been n arly ten years before the public, aud the sales are constantly increasing while our newspaper advertising is constantly diminishing. Why, high scientdic and' medical autliorit es now publi-lv concede that our Warner’s safe cure is tue only sciemilic specific for kidney aud liver diseases, and for all tho many diseases caused by them.” “Have you evidence of this?” “Abundance! Only a few weeks ago Dr. J. L Stephens, of Lebanon, Ohio, a specialist for the cure of narcotic, etc., habits told me that a number of eminent scientific medical men had been experimenting for years, testing and analyzing all known remed.es for the kidneys and liver, for as you may be aware, tho excessive use of all narcotics and stimulants destroys those organs, aud until they can be restored to health the habits cannot bo broken up! Among the investigators were such mon as J. M. Hall, M. D., President of the State Board of Health of lowa, and Alexander Noil, M D., Professor of’Surgery in the Codego of Physicians and Surgeons, and President of tho Academy of Medicine at Columbus, who, after exhaustive inquiry, reported that there was no remedy known to schools or to scientific inquiry equal to Warner’s safe cure!” “Are many persons addicted to tho use of deadly drugs?” “There aro forty millions of people in tho world who use opium alone, and there are many hundreds of thousands in this country who are victims of morphine, opium, quin ne, and cocaine. They think they have no such habit about them—so many people aro unconscious victims of these habits. They have pains and symptoms of what they call malaria anil other diseases, when in reality it is the demand n tho system for these terrible drugs, a demand that is caused largely by physicians’ prescriptions which contain so many dangerous drugs, and strong spirits, and’one that must bo answered o v silenced in the kidneys and liver by what Dr. Stephens says is the oniy kidney aud liver specific. He also saythat moderate opium and other drug eaters, if they sustain tho kidnoy and liver vigor with that great remedy, can keep up these habits in moderation.” “Well, doos not this discovery give you a new revelation of the power of safe cure?" “No, sir; for years I have tried to convince the public that nearly all the diseases of the human system originate in some disorder o: tne kidnev* or liver, and hence I have logically declared that if our specific wore used, over ninety par cent, of the«e ailments would dis appear, the liver aud kidneys seem to absorb th.-se poisons from the blood and become depraved and diseased.” “When these eminent authorities thus publicly admit that there is no remedy like ours to enable the kidneys and liver to throw off the frightful effects'of all deadly drugs and ex cess.vo use of stimulants, it is tin admission ot its power as great as any one could desire; for if through its influence alone the opium, morphine, quinine, cocaine, and liquor habits can be overcome, what higher testimonial of it< specific power couid lie asked for?” “You really b Jievc, then, Mr. Warner, tha' the majority O' diseases come from kidney ate. liver eomphiiuts?” “I do! When vou seo a person moping and groveling about, half dead and half alive, year after year, you may surely put him down as having some kidney ami hv r trouble.” “The other day I was talking with Dr. Few ler, tho eminent’oculist of this city, who sai l that half the patients who camo to him fur eye treatment were affected by advanced kid ney ihse ise. Now, many people wonder why, in m ddle life, their eye sight becomes poor. A thorough course of treatment with Warner's safe cure is wliat they need mor than a pair of eye-glasses. Th/ kidney poison in the blood always attacks the weakest part of the body; with some it affects the eyes. with others the head; with oth ts the stomach or the lungs, or rhenmati - disorder follows and neuralgia tears them to pieces, or they lose the powers of taste, smell, or become /»i---potent in other functions of the body. What man would not give his all to have tho vigor of youth at command?”
“The intciligen’ phys cian knows that these complaints are they are not the disorder, and they are symptoms not of disease of the bead, the eye, or stomach, or of virility, necessarily, but of the kidney poison in tho blood, and they may prevail and no pain occur in the kidneys.” It is not strange'that tho enthusiasm which M '. Warner displays in his appreciation of his own remedy, which restored him to hea’fii when th ■ doc'ore said he could not live six months, should become infectious, and that tho entire world should pay tribute to its power. For, as Mr. Warner says, tiro sales are constants increasing, while the newspaper advertising is constantly dini n siting. This speaks volumes in praise of the extraordinary merits of his preparations. Stopping a Cannon Bail. “I remember, ” said a physician, “th\t one of the most daring and strongestwilled men iu our regiment was much given to laughing at the poor fellows who went down under disease or who complained much of what we called mere scratches of wounds. For two years ic seemed that he was proof against all troubles incident to army life, but one day ae> he stood in line of battle, as fine a specimen of soldierv spirit and courage as I ever seen, there came bounding and rolling toward the line a heavy cannon ball tired from one of the large guns of the enemy. The temptation to stop a spinning ball of this kind was so strong that most soldiers nerved themselves up to the point, of resisting the inclination to give the apparently harmless ball a kick. The only man to yie d to the temptation was my superb soldier. He put out his foot with a smile on his face and went down a shattered, maimed, and helpless man. His foot was cut off as if by an ax, and the shock made him on the instant as helpless as a babe.” — Chicago Inler Ocean. J. T. Jelds, of Hot Springs, Ark., is emphatic in making the statement that in case of spasmodic or false croup a napkin wet in cold water and wrapped about the throat (covered with a dry towel), is more successful in giving prompt relief than is the use of any medicine he has ever tried.— Dr. Foolers Health Monthly. Scavengers of Importance. Next to the bowels, or rather in conjunction •with them, tho kidneys and bladder aro the most important scavengers of the system. They purify the b’ood and carry off its refuse, preventing rheumatism, dropsy, Bright’s disease and feibetes by their activo cleansing work. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, when the kidneys evince a tendency to relax the activity of their important function, renews it, and thus averts renal maladies, the most difficult t > cope with, and which superinduce a frightful loss of bodily tissue, stamina and flesh. AV lien tho renal organs exhibit the slightest symptoms of inaction they should at once receive tho needful stimulus from this safest, surest and pleasantest of diuretics. Chills and fever, dyspepsia, constipation, liver complaint and debility are also remedied by it. Book-worms aro o- uso to fish in the forgotten streams 01 knowledge, tit. Paul Herald. For a slight cold, a hacking cough, or lung troubles, take Ayer s Cherry Pectoral. It is noticed (hat men of small caliber are sometimes great bores.—A< York Tribune. A uniform and natural result 1.3 produced by using Buckingham’s Dye for (ho Whiskers.
Important. When you visit or leave New York City, save baggage, expressage, and $3 carriage hire, and stop at the Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot 613 rooms, fitted up at a cost of oho million i dollars, $1 and upwards per clay. European । plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied witli the j best Horse cars, stages, and elevated rail- j road to all depots. Families can live better for , less money at tho Grand Union Hotel than at ■ any other first-class hotel in the city. Last year M. Strobaut, a Belgian astronomer, made numerous observations of the relative brightness of the stars. Knowing that special attention had been paid to similar work at. tho Harvard College Observatory he offered to semi a copy of his observations to Cambridge lor discussion anil publication. This offer was accepted anil the manuscript was sent, but uniortumitely it was curried by the Oregon, ami was supposed to have been lost by the sinking of that vessel. After remaining under water for fifteen weeks it has been recovered and forwarded to the j observatory. Although somewhat stained it is per ectly legible, and a discussion of the results to be derived from it has already been begun. Mr. A. Fueger, 606 Walnut street, St. Louis, Mo., suffered for two years with lumbago, and was confined to his bed for several mouths. He was entirely cured by the use of St. Jacobs Oil, which ho says is also the best care for spr fins aud all other pains. The word aryau, as far as can be made out, me.iLs, “One who plows or tills.” Mrs. F. W. Ingham, 472 West Madison street, Chicago, 111., recommends Re i Star Cough Cure, a few doses of which gave her entire relief from a violent cold. Price, 25 cents. __ _ The old miracle play was a scene out of the Bible, or the life of a saint; the actors were clergymen and acolytes, anil the theater was a church. 1 his was when the practice first began. After a time, in order that more people might see it, they would have a stage in a churchyard anil act it there. A New Way to Pay Old Debts. Shakspeare tells how this can bo accompl’shod m one of his iinmor'.ilplays; but debts to nature must be paid one mind unless days of grace be obtained through tho use of lir. Pierce’s “Golden Melirnl Discovery.” It is not a “cure-all,” but invaluable for sore throat, bronchitis, a-thma, catarrh, consumption, and all diseases of tho pulmonary and other organs, caused by scrofula or “bid blood.” Scrofulous ulcers, swellings and tumors are cured by its wonderful alterative action. By druggists. On life’s journey, without a destination, the traveler is sure to gel lost in the woods. — Whitehall '1 linen. Dr. Pierce's “Favor.te Prescription” is a most powerful rest . alive ton.,-, r.n l coin'' lies the most valuable n■:vi e properties; especially adapted to the v .icts ot del) tafedlad.es suffering from weak lui ’k, inward IT v, r, cong, stion, inflammation, or uleerat on, or from nervousness or neuralgic p mis. By druggists. The song says; A boy's best friend is his mother.” >mm tines he piefe.s to go to his uncle. Philadt Iphia t all. Deserving of Conitdence —There is no article wh eh so richly deserves the entire confidence of the commuu.ty as Brown's Bronchial Troches. Those suffering from Asthmatic and Bnmchial diseases. Coughs, and Colds, should try them. Price 25 cents. An actor may be another actor's enemy ami set tak< hi- part. A Great. Kewaril Will bo secured by those who write to Hallett A Co., Portland, Muno Full m.'ormation will bo sent you, tree, about work that you c m do and Lvo at home, wherever you are situ ated, that will pay y m from $5 to sy> and u; v.ard3 a ay. A number have earne lovrßs >m a day. Capital no need I. Hallett A Co. wiL start you. Both sexes; all ages. The chauco of a lit. time. Ail is new. Now is tho tm •. Fortunes are absolutely sur. for tho workers. •‘HOUGH ON KATS” Clears out rats, mice, reaches, flies, ants, bedbugs, beetles, insects, skunks, jack rabbits, sparrows, gophers. 15c. At druggists. “HOUGH ON UOKNS.” Ask for Wells' “Rough on Corns.” Quick relief, complete cure. Corns, warts, bunions. 15c. “HOUGH ON ITCH.” “Rough on Itch” cures skin humors, eruptions, ring worn, tetter, salt rheum, frosted feet, chilblains, itch, ivy i>oison, barber’s itch. 50c jars. •KOI GH ON CATAKKIa” Corrects offensive odors at once. Complete cure of worst chronic eases ; also unequaled as gargle for diphtueria, sore throat, foul breath. soc. For dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of spirits, and general debility in their various forms; also as a preventive against fever and ague and other intermittent fevers, the “Fer-ro-Phosphorated Elixir of Cabsava,” made by Caswell, Hazard A Co.. New York, and sold by nil druggists, is the best tonic, and for patients recovering from fever and other sickness it has no equal. Bronchitis is cured by f requent small doses of Fiso’s Cure for Consumption. npUQinys? OTOT-K iqitj-upav,Bounty, LitCiUisO, etc. Write for circulars and laws. B A. W. McCormick & SON. Cincinnati, o. “DON'TPAY ABTGFaiCE’” on 4 o Pays for a Year’s subscripO>3 'uPCzlilo tion to the Weekly American Kurai Home, llocliest r. N. V.. without premium—“the Cheapest and Best WeekL’ in the World,” 8 pages, 48 columns, 16 years old. Eor One Dollar you have one choice from over 15) different ClothBound Dollar Volumes, 300 to 900 pp., and paper one year, post-paid. Book postage, 15c Extra. 50,u00 books given away. Among them are : Law Without Lawyers; Family Cyclopedia; Farm Cyclopedia; Farmers’ aid Stockbreeders' Guide ; Common Sense in Poultry Yard; World Cyelopedii; Danielson's (Medical) Counselor; Boys’ Useful Pastimes: Five Years Before the Must; People’s History of United States; Universal History ot zA.ll Nations; Popular History Civil War (both sides). Any one book and p iper, one year, all post-paid, for 81 15 only. Paper alone. 65c, if subscribed before the Ist of March. Sitisf .ction guaranteed on books and Weekly, or money refunded. Reference, Hon. C. B. Parsons, Mayor Rochester. Sample papers, 2c. RURAL HOME CO., Ltd., Without Premium, 65ca year ! Rochester, N.Y
iSSSUCra® S Ww A The FISTI BRAND SLICKER Ig warranted wat-rproof. and will kuep you dry tn T O FT « the hardest Btorm. The new POMMEL SLICKER 1$ a perfect ridin< coat, and 3* 4 i?) H K Di h* covers the entire saddle. Beware of imitations. Nene genuine without the “Fish I 11 r® Brand” trade-mark. Illustrated Catalogue free. A. J. Tower, Boston, Mass. 400,000 Copies ready Nov. 10th of tho Double Thanksgiving Number of tho Wi’s Compiion Elegantly Illustrated. Mailed to any address for Ten Cents. | 0 New Subscriptions sent at once, H If'dll I will include the Companion 0 3“ FREE from tho time the subscription Is received to Jan. 1, 1887, and a full year from tha* date. This offer includes the Thanksgiving and Christmas Double Numbers. Please mention this Paper. Address PEHRY MASON St CO., 39 Templa Place, Boston, Mass.
A Terrible Fire* What a thrill of terror passes over ns when ' we re id the record of some fearful devastati m , by :*e, ami yet it is a fact that thousands are daily being consumed by the inward fire of j fever caused by consumption of the lungt, ! which could be subdued by Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery.’ A clerical error-—a sermon more than । twenty minutes in length. “BOUGH ON PILES.” Why suffer Piles? Immediate relief and complete cure guaianteed. Ask for “Rough on Piles, (Sure cure for itching, protruding, bleeding, or any form of piles. 5-c. At druggists or mailed. SKINNY MEN. Wolls’ “Health Renewer” restores health and vigor, cures dyspepsia, impotence, nervous debility. I'or weak mon, delicate women. 81. WELLS’ HAIK BALSAM. If gray, restores to original color. An elegant dressing, softens ami beautifies. No oil nor grease. A tonic restorative. Stops hair coming out; strengthens, cleanses, heals scalp. 500. Another Life Saved. Mrs. Harriet Cummings, of Cincinnati, Ohio,writes: ” Early last winter my daughter was attacked with a severe cold, which settled on her lungs. We tried several medicines, none of which seemed to do her any good, but she continued to get worse, and finally raised large amounts of blood irom her lungs. Mo called in a family physician, but he failed to do her any good. At this time a friend who had been cured by DR. WM. HALL’S BALSAM FOB THE LUNGS, advised me to give it a trial. We got a bottle, and sho began to improve, aud by the use of three bottles was entirely cured.” Catarrh Is a complaint which affects nearly everybody, more or less. It originates in impure blood, and Is aggravated by taking cold. Disagreeable flow fr> m the nose, tickling in the throat, offensive breath, pain over and between the eyes, ringing and bursting noises iu the ears, are the more common symptoms. Catarrh is cured by Hood’s SarsapauT u which strikes directly at tho cause by removing all impurities from tho blood. “I had catarrh nine years, and suffered terribly with it. Soon after I began to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla the catarrh troubled me less, and after taking three bottles I was entirely cured.” Jane Hiney, Lumberton, Clinton County, Ohio. “I have taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla for catarrh and think it has done mo a great deal of good. I I recommend it to all within my reach. Hood’s Sarsaparilla has been worth everything to me.” Lvthef. D. Robbins, East Thompson, Ct. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. Jt; six for $5. Prepared by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. too Doses One Dollar ••Tho Best Magazine Published.” •—Middleport Y.) Mall. PETERSON’S MAGAZINE. I EVERY LADY SHOULD TAKE IT. i Petf.uson’s Magazine is tl e best and cheapest 1 of the laly’s book*. It rives more for the money, | I and comb.ues greater Hunts than any other, it gives I THE BEST STEEL ENGRAVINGS, BEST 4 <>LO::ED FASHIONS. Bl Sl’ ORIGINAL STORIES, BEST AND LA TEST DRES- p UI’TEKNS, BEST WORK-I MSI.E l’A I TERNS. BEST ( OOK-BOOK, HUSH . Etc. Iti Immense circulati >u md long-established repuI tatiou enable its proprietor to distance all competil tion. Its stories, novels, etc., are tha best published. MAMMOTH C9L9RE3 fASHIWS! ’ “Petruson” is th • only magazine that gives these. I Th i are z 'ri ■■ th z,o ,unequaled for beauty, , the 1 t -st Pan - sty les. steel plates, colored by hand. , । TERAIS (always in advance), $2 A YEAR. UNPARALLELED OEEERS TO ( LI BS. 2 Copies for §3.50 5 w >th "B™ l * °t remtv,” 1 - i splendidly illustrate 1 gilt 3 “ “ 4.50 ! book, as a premium tor gett ng up the club. 4 Copies for §6.40 । an ’/’r, 1 <?'py of th « „ P ~ „ nr) M igazine tor IN5< as a premiO J.UU ; um 'or getting up tha club. FOR LARGER < LI Bs STII L GREATER I MH l E H EM S. Address, postpaid, < H MILES J. PETERSON, 3 fl G ( liestnut St.. Philadelphia, Pn. Specimens sent gratis, if written for in good faith. u CATARR HI CREAM BALM Cleanses the Head. Allays Inflammafion. Heals the PIAYFEVER^^ Sores. Restores ['W qls the Senses of Taste, IMSmell, Hearing. A f-AAtlX''’^ j Quick Relief and u.s.a. Positive Cure. A mil i !e is applied into each nostril and is agreeable t>■ use. Pre ' .ue‘ s . by m ail or at druccists. Send for rin u.ar, Ei.Y BIIOTHEJIS. Dniog -is Dweao. N. V. Habit Cured. Treatment sent on trial. V F iUhl Humane Remedy Co., LaFayette, Ind. Ty’iCfa A Learn Here and earn HELa™ S& N®? bA. a S 3 B good pay. Situations m furnished. Write Valentine Bros., Janesville, Wis. S nR d Morphine Habit Cured In 10 to ■ »>O<Lys. Refer m 1000 patients cured । Va inallparts. Dr, M-rch, Quincy,Mich. I to S 8 a day. Samples worth $1.50. FREE, i I.iues not under the horse’s feet. Address | BJarCJr I’.r.-wster's s mdy ip-m Holder, Holly, Mich. R 3 E w S3 Morphine Habit Cured in IO ire ? 1 ’ ’ <’iys. No poy till cured, ’i'’J C'ySpVq Ur. J. Stephens, l.ebauou, Oiiio. WE WAftIT YdUT e m-energetic man u- SS? I C 'Lea,? . or wolnan need nfi profitanlc employment to represent us in ■ cry county. Salary $?5 per month and expenses, or a large commission on sales if preferred. Goods staple. Every one buvs. outtit and particulars Free. BTANDARD SU.VEI.WAKE CO., J3OSTON, MASS. or others,wnowish toexamma w ^>sa S E W this paper, or obtain estimates oc advertising space when in Chicago, will find it on file at LORD &THCMAS.
‘PENSIONS. WVEfIY SOLDO f l bill'd Sintis gets a pension. The x jes- oi a ilrgnr, or the use of a tinker, ' < ran> r r.u.-ho' wound or other inju--1 ‘y- invci i । ension. A rupture, it but II •■■lisilit, will eive a pension. Ruptured y veins, o-diseases of the lungs, if vou are ent tl. d to a pension, don't delay i lb, • mwl Neglected i < lamis 111 hands ot p.tlu r Ag’ts fz a s in’cially. Send or a circular ot Pe’ sion and Bounty Arts \ddress FUZGERAi.D A POWELL. U.S.Claim Agency for Western Soldiers. INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Lr? > 0X^1? /Jmpl 1 (Wm J i Jfyl
W O E tl! I luOrmitlea peculiar to their aex, ahouid t* I® f EM I 3 -S I SiT'bloß- I' ® BOTTOM I Tins medicine combines I: .-i with l ure vegntabla J S U.nics. and is in valuable for Diseases P-wubar 1( | Women, and all who lead rcu.-iitary lives. rieiien and Purlhcn dm Bhmd, MmmhH.. ■ ♦he Appt tile, MrciigHienn the .Husc; lN W Nerves in fact, thorougnlv i nvt^uniteM. WB 01 ‘ ( iloars the compleiion. and makes the skin smorq. M U# It does not blacken the leoth, cause IteaiUehe S W produco constipation—nd odor In.;. j,' M Mi:s. E.w. Bkkt. 107 W. 13th bt. Chicago 111 ■ 1 used Brown’s Iron Bitters as a tome wliilenim.jkl H .«>“ a Strong. Imalthy liabv, and w.m Kmuiy b» nefit e ,i »• (fill Mr.s A P. OALU • Kt.t. I rawi' ldxvum, h v.;i, 8 ' , ■ •• I uno.l Brown’s Iron Hitters f. r n rv t t; . EP , , • i W m f. m- lo tvoaknnwt. and was greatly Umelited. 1 r.byei ■ used anything better.’’ M Mite 8. A. Conn*. Lansing, Mich says: "Ibay. . ® been f roublod wit hwe iknm’sen pecnlinr to fcmal— : ■ for years but found no permanent, relief until I ■ 0 E.r.>v. n’» Iron Bitters v.lnchhasci mpu : -lycurwlin-» J Genuine has above Trade Mark and crossed md Ii nM M Mi on wrapper. ho ou’y | y Kitou N CHEMIUAL 4 HAl.TrdOKu LiGMC STUDY. S' cure a Ih’.sun-s I'tlueatioiTby H nuwlt mail. < I't.i.Kin: or Bt uiniiss, buffalo,N / W WANTED GOOD MAN I; energetic worker : bi iness in his section. Salary -T ■ 7-’ 'ijo. References. Am.M'l’g House, N Barclay st, N.Y S IS B B 4 •« fjilM 8 M li.struct'ons aud opinion. M as to put nubility ERLE. ’1 i years’ expeiienn No Ropo to Cut Off Horses’ Manes. H ClcbriKcil ‘Lt bB’SS.' ■ at:d KKWS.IE <l, raa- || lift IxiS.ipped by miy 11’ I’.-e. l amplo > *5 Halter to tiny part of L. S. mv.oa yr K J receipt ot sl. Soi lby lilDSad.U ry, JR ■ W Hardware and liarw’-s D alers. AT V Special discount to Hie Trade. Scudt ( M ■JK for Frlce-L’st. NgwSL T Is m J.CLlGHlliyrSE.Thuhostei’^^ ■ H MENTION THIS l’At’EU WHIN WEITIMO to auvskhibi*. fl nßi^yiM<iy r G. ^fl| Tho b< st übistie bone in the worl 1. Fuaiherbonelm iB c ine. Wlnileb.oiie must inn J eat lierboiic is com* W ill" into general use . ver,, wlu re Absolut ly unbreak- fl ’ nb]e. Srn.t anti pUuble. L.id.< s -a ).o wea fl Waists, an.l cors- t« are oe memd w.th .t. parectioni^fl for ua\ Att tub dire, uy to the npeu seam by aewing B through the Feutherbone. try it. C hOhMhlafaffll UN Ri VALE^ ORGANS I Ou the FA'-Y I’AYMEN'i syst <m, from 53.2 J ■ per in. nth >.p. idbly-mUlt" Send for Cat* ’■ alogue with fall particulars, mailed free. ■ UPRgQHT PIANOB, I ConstrneteJ on the now method of stringing, onsiiib fl liar terms. Send lor lie.-criutive Catalogue. 81 MASON A HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO. ■ j Boston, Now York, Chicago. | O I’- J northern |> I ® Rlh© wiscaasu. r Ga 500.000 ACRES 1 Ik naa ol Choice Hardwood Farm, i “ gg j,,., j, anl ; s for Sale at $5 0) an aert I ' on long time. EXTItAOUDiNARV induce. It merits offered, NO DROUTHS ot 4 jl CYCEOMiS ! Full Particulars, with good Map, l : FREE. Address C. 1.. ( 01.151, Land Cora. Wis. Central K. 11.. Ulihvaukee, Wis,
' Z■ 4 The BUYERS’ GUIDE 11 Issued Sept, mid Xiarch, caeii year. 312 pages, S ’ 4 x i 1 ’ , inches,with over 3,500 illustrations-* xv hole Picture Gallery, GIVES AVliolesnlc Prices
direct tn consumers on all goods for personal or family use. Tells how to order, and gives exact cost of everytiling yon use, cat, drink, wear, or have fun with. These IA"l AI.U ABLE BOOKS contain Information gleaned from the markets of the world. We will mall a cony FREE to any address upon receipt of 10 cts. to defray expense of mailing. Let us hear from yon. Respectfully, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. ' 227 JU 22'.) Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 111. Sure relief acmnwi K^ER'B PA3TILLEB ! v mail. Stowell A Co. feYV > ; m ****** ■ fra m a na Dr. WiHivms’lndun I’ ;, » Omtmeni PMSB-e^r -s maihd. y WtLLIAMSMFG. CO., U.eveltmu.o. a am £ la Haw IT di'Coveii.‘< for nvirne ior stngl* Bn <iy w HQ s- nring health, w. tilth ind happi- ’ ss to all. ’1 his bands me book of ICO p ees maiiefl 3 fi rid . ts. by the Union Publishing Co.. Newark, N.J. j (•per t. ri orbus ness delav: thouunds < ure(L Coo* 3 su't tioi free. At St uvbshH-u<e, I> t oit,Mirh..lh7i j &(' ni >tiore : i‘ n I. < hira'jo, Bto last of each month* J MENTION THIS PAPER whin wmiting to adt'MIHK CThe OLDEST MEDICINE in the WORLD is 9| f probably Dr. Isaac Thompson's O elebrated Eye Wahfl| The article is a carefully pr'-pnrv 1 physician’s present t: n. and iris 1> eu in coimta .t use for nearly > centur'.a id notwi u-tindi' : the man .• otherpreparations tin:* have b.-e:i mtn alive i int • the market, the sale of tliis article s c..nsta t.y increasing, if thedirecti, ns are f lliw. dit will never lad. We particularly invite the attention of physi i ms to its merits. John L. Thompson, Sons X' Co., TROY, N.Y. L ' Imptd.st I’icnfi mi.. c e9ei2S>.Wirn- nisweeDStr.ltes Irennur.i at, the Great 1. reheren Show of tM I Ills. State Fair, held in Chicago Sept. I’B6. Property ol AV. L. ELIUVGOD, IMPORTER AND BREEDER OF PEl®ra tOSES. The Largest Breeding E ablishntentof rnre Blood Ferch- rone in the United St. t s. Five hundred .teas ot Dure Bloi d and Gt ades now on hand, a large ntun* her of which were imported tn Jul v, 1886. and imotMl large import it n of ft. m t Oto 200 lead will azny* about the middle of October. Visitors clways w“‘ I come-come and see them. I handle nothing out tn» best, and take piido in showing stock. Location, Dili KALB. IM* Is 53 miles west of Chicago, on Omaha Div. C. & N.j Ry. 4S“Sendf.»rCatalogue. I DROPSY I>R. IT. 11. GREEN & Specialists for Thirteen Years FastHave treated Drop y and its complications with “ most wonderful success: me vegetable reiuem™ entirely hai mle s K< move till symptoms of dropsy . in eight to twenty d lys. ’ n f • 'uro patunts pronounced hopeless by the best physicians. . „. From the first dose the symptoms rapidly nu r ; pea-, a d in ten days at least two-th.r.ls of all synur I toms re removed. minr 1 s mte may cry hum’mg without b lowing anew aEmt it. K. inemb-r. it does :?>r c>t ' atiyt.un. i 1 realize the merits of our treatment for yoyrse ,r. I ten cays the difficulty of b vathing is rel' yea. J" ; iu!« r. gnlar. the urinarv orcaiis made to dtsiua 1 . > । their fu 1 duty, s’ ep is rest .-d.the sweihn?”*.. | । t early cope, the strop :th im r . -ed. andappetite™”! 1 I food. We a>-e con tantlv eu-.n r cases of long«■ -. my—cases that h ive 1,. , u t..pm d annmberof 1 and the patient declare unable to live a wee.- 7 j full history of case. Name sex, h>w long a ® st ' v e I h< w badly swollen and where, are bowels <ose have legs bursted and drip cd wat r. Send tot pamphlet, containin.- testim mials, questions, ew. i Ten days’ treatment furnished free by mai • Epilepsy (Fits) positively cured. , o rs It you order trial, s. n i ID cents in stamps 10 v postage. 11. H. GRL«N & SONS. M-D’d 55 Jones Avenue, Atlan£^• yi— ■ CURES WHERE All ELSE FAILS. Hi Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use Ka J J IS! in time, ~ Sold by dr'.icgisO^^^J^i ~ | । . j I C. N. U. No. ‘ J WRITING TO APVEI^ISE^H I < !. > it'-t-e say you saw the udwrU I*' 1 *' ; iu tutu paper. ‘
