Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, July 23, 1886, Image 7

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DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 23, 1886. OUR RAT POPULATION. \„l dll' IMiiimI. Hut till' <}tiiiili'U|K'il—Him ill,,, Ciulunitcil mill ,lii' Ill’s)ri,j-i>il. Xeiv York Mull and Express. In days gone by when Kit Burns was tin chief authority in America on rats and kindred topics, and when his Water street pit wan the great resort for dog fanciers and young blonds, who studied, rat litera ture because that was then the correct thing to do, the appellation “rat” as an enemy of union labor was jilmost unknown. Kit regarded the rat population ns one of those blessings which earn • ns freely as rain or sunshine. They were good for his terriers, lie would say, and what was good for them was good for him. The mantle of Kit Burns has descended on Harry Jen nings, and Harry speaks and thinks in many respects as old Kit spoke and thought. “Have you any misgivings?” Harry was aked yesterday, “on account of the Sixth avenue rat visitation?” “We can clean out hall the rats from ’ere to limbo,” lie answered in a cockney accent. “1 do the rattiu’ for ’bout fifty clubs, stores and ’otels. We kills two 'undred ft week, and can kill two thousand a week if they’d only come to the scratch, but they are sort of shy like of myself and my men.” “How many rats are there in this city?" "There might be 2,000,000 and there might be 3,000,000, sir.” “And possibly not over a quarter of a million.” “I know there’s over a good round mil lion, sir, and they’re gainin’ every day.” “How do you account for this gain'?” “Because the law protects the rats. You can be sent to the penitentiary now for rat- baitin’ just, the same as for bull-baitin’ or badger-baitin’. It is wrong, and if the ter riers ’ad their way, we should have no trouble with them 'ere rats. Folks could not live in London if there were a rat pro tection law there, and the Jaw will ’ave to lie abolished here.” “Do you teniove the rats by poison?” “That should never be done, as the re sult in ’ealth would be bad if they were a! lowed to die in their nest. My men gets the confidence and good will of the cron turns by t'eedin’ them with dainties which, they like. After a little time all the rats in a building becomes tame and attends their mulls when we give the signal. At the proper time we traps’em and kill ’em out side. We make no use of their skins, al though they ’ave a market value. Haftm a few days the wildest rat can lie tamed by “By what process?” “Pm don me, sir, but that ’ore’s a secret if the ptirfession.” Tlie enormous rat population with which this rat-catcher credits Me'. 1 . York may uni be so I'm from the truth as a person would be at first inclined to think, it is lint little over a century ago—177,u—that the first broil’ll rat (the ordinary ’house rat. made bis appearance in Americn. He came as a stowaway on shipboard, cither from India nr Persia, or possibly from some Mediter ranean port. Hats were unknown in Europe until the middle oftlie eighteenth .■ outlay. ill every town, village and ham let in the I'nited States now tiie rat is al most as well known as the dog or the cat, and the rodent population must be far larger than either of the others. So rapid is file increase of the species that a single pair, if unmolested for a year, will have an offspring of hundreds in that time. In dwellings and city sowers the house rat is the ruler, and his black brother is driven to the wall, in the fields and along the marshes bordering the sea coast the musk rat and the cotton rat hold sway. Rats of many species are now to be found wher ever human habitation exist., it is easier to render a building fireproof than rat- proof. A NOVEL INVENTION. A Strom Himim- IVilluml SI cum Clual.s, V.i Jos or Ktvrul rii-N. Iletroit free Press. About five years ago the Free Press pub lished an interview with a description of an eccentric character named Dr. Then. Burr, who was conducting at that time a small machine shop and cutlery works on Woodbriege street, just east of Kighteenlh- and-a-balf street. Here Dr. Burr and his help have made a specialty of making moldors’ tools, sur geons’ knives, butchers’ knives and cutlery of the higher grades. This work was done as a means of livelihood, while a great deal of other time and labor was devoted to the development of a steam engine devised by the doctor (the medical title is won by vir tue of some fifteen years’ prultiee as a physician and surgeon in southern New York , and in the work he has been assist ed by an intelligent, active young mail about 27 years old and fully as eccentric as the father. At last the steam engine is completed, and it has been operated successfully so much so, at least, that Wallace Goodwill hasgone into partnership with Dr. Burr and his ton to engage in the manufacture of the engine. As the device is a decided novelty in the science of engine building, a description will not lie out of place. Technically speaking, it is a double com pound steam engine of eght-borse power, having neither steam chest, valves nor ec centrics. It occupies r space about four teen inches square and is, perhaps, thirty inches high. II consists of three cylinders, side by side, the center one being solid, pistons operating in the other cylinders. The center cylinder is provided with a series of inverted cups, most minutely and accurately adjusted to posts on either side leading to the interiors of the other cylin ders. By means of these invi rted cups and companion posts the live steam is distrib uted and the expansive force is transferred from one end to the other of each 6f the side cylinders, and in this way, _ il is claimed, over three times the power is ob tained in the cylinders than is called for on the boiler indicator. The inventor claims that there is a saving of over 50 per cent, in the first cost of manufacturing the engine’and that the same horse power is obtained with a saving of three-quarters of the fuel now demanded. A NEW WIARD GUN. Jl Will Fsr 11001) I’liini'K uf I’.nvlrr mol Nine Tims ’ iifSiuiliiiulSlu.il IVr linin'. Reading, Pa., July 19.—There is consid erable curiosity among army and naval of ficers in relation to the success of a uew gun invented by Norman Wiard. Tins gun is being completed at Scott’s foundry j here. It is a breech loading, chambered j 12-inch combined rifle and smooth-bore gun, from which great results are antici pated, As, soon as it is finished it will lie taken to Washington for a test before the ordnance board. Jt will be fired thirty times an hour in this test, with a charge of 300 pounds of powder and a projectile of 600 ponnds weight, producing an initial veloci- ( ty of 2000 feet per second. Col. Wiard says , that under this test 9000 pounds of powder j will lie consumed and 15,009 pounds oi pro- j jeetiles delivered in an hour, an amount of j work estimated in foot-pounds "per hour i far greater than can be performed with equal safety by any gun now ir possession of nr contemplated by any nation in t lie world. Snails, fir "Iin’ I’onr Alan's Ipsli rs.’’ The snail harvest has just begun in France. The “poor man’s oyster ’ is so appreciated thnt Paris alone consumes about forty-nine tons daily, the best kind coming from Grenoble or Burgundy. I he finest specimens are carefully reared m an eseagotiere, or snail park, such as the poor Capuchin monks planned in bygone davs I at Colmar and Weinhach, when they had no money to liuy food, " and , cultivated snails. But the majority are collected by the vinedressers m the evening from the stone-heaps u hen he snails have assembled to enjoy the • '1lie creatureR are then starved in u ark cellar for two months, and when they nave closed up the aperture of their shell, are ready fur cooking. According to tin rue Burgundy method, they are boiled in ,ve nr six waters, extracted from the shell, crossed with fresh butter and garlic, then ■eplnced in the shell, covered with parslej nil liread-crinnbs, and finally eitiimered ii. v bite wine. Ms liuil u Title. A story is going the rounds of the Fur pean diplomatic circles relating to one of our present representatives of high rank in the far east. At a dinner given by a prom inent native official, at which the wlioli diplomatic corps were present, the Ameri can minister was seated by the French ambassador, who often addressed his American colleague after the usual French manner, as monsieur. This did not please the temper nor suit the dignity of the gen tleman of the eagle country, and he stood the supposed undue familiarity on the part ofthc Frenchman until Ids patience be came quite exhausted, and then his pent- up indignation burst forth in words more characteristic for strength than elegance, and as reported in about this strain : “By , I’d nave you to understand, sir, that I’ve been governor of the state of , a state, sir, larger than the whole of your country, sir, and i’ll he d d if I’ll tie mounseereu by you or any one else.” t'im'rurki’ri, hiqifirlril iVinii I'lihut. N’tiv York News. Talking with a dealer in fireworks, I asked him how it was thnt firecrackers were not manufactured in this country. “That is because of Chinese cheap labor," lie said. There is no art known to them that we do not possess, but we cannot compete with their cheap labor. They have a kind of paper anil a very fine pow der that give.-, them an advantage. We import over .Jl,000.000 worth of firecrackers every year. Besides, we are importing homos and oilier tilings from China and Japan because we can got them cheaper u that way than if we undertook t*> man ufacture tlicin. Altogether about ?1,500,- 000.a yearly paid to China and Japan for fireworks. That is about one-half the sum expended for such purposes in (his citun- jver this road. 1 can get one any ill want it. ’ President of tile road— unrecognized “Wii! you I.llov me to see it?” ‘'Certainly, ifen'e it is,” “This is a regular ticket. You paid for Still the Good Work Goes On! HEAR THE SCAT!!! SCIATICA I Mi. \.T. LYON. the Best known photographer JN THE TIIRLI! STA LLS uf South Carolina, ( L oigia and Florida «nys: ‘1 l i t. -.u Rerun EXCRUCIATING PAINS from .SCIATIC K>IKl MAT1SM. Stepping on uneven surfaces of a sidewalk would give me J’iuu ixt A son v. Vurious remedies have been tried, but with no efleet, until I commenced the use of Guinn's Pioneer Blood Renewer, which has relieved me of the least semblance of mi in. and given me the kntihk rsi-: ok my limhs. I conscientiously ermmend it to the public. A T. LYON, No. 128 Cherry 8L, Mueon, Ga. A Certain ( hit Ii»i* 4'nfliirrli! A S ii jt e r b llesl’ I* r u <111 r c r mill Tunic Gcinn's Pionkku Blood Renkwep. cures all Wood and Skin Diseases, Rheumatism, Scrofula, Old Sores. A perfect Soring Medicine. If not ill your market it will be forwarded on receipt uf price. Small bottles $1.60, large size $1.75. Essay on Blood and Skin Disuses mailed free. Mitron MriliciiM 1 Co.. HRiicon. Ga. ^ISillSi U A m WITNESSES. A. IFIUSnE Florida Tonic Mr. FOSTER S. CHAPMAN. One c f the landmarks of the Goorgrifl Drug trade, now of Orlando, Florida, writes: "I can hardly select s single case ofthc many to whom 1 have sold Guilin's Pioneer Itinod Keiiener but wluit have been satisfied; and 1 find it file best reinedfor aU Skin Diseases I have ever >o!d. and a Fine Florida Tonic. FOSTER S. CHAPMAN, Orlando, Fla. A Certain Cure lor Catarrh * A Superb Flesh Producer and Tonic! tiuiniiN Ibnueer Itlnnd Union cr Cures id 1 Blood ami Skin Diseases, Rheumatism. Scrofula. Old Sores. A perfect Spring Medicine. If not in your market, it will Le forwarded on receipt of price. Small bottle* ol.GO. Lane 1 $1."5 E«*ay on Blood ayid Skin Diseases mailed free. i\m\ imiii’iM: itimhm. w I' ItOI KKSI «>\A I. VA KIIS. n il. C. T. OSBURN, Dentist, (Successor to Dr. J. M. Mason.) Office next door to Rankin House. Same en* t ranee ns Riddle's gallery. oc4-ly Dentist, 35 L, Twelfth street formerly Randolph street.) fin.,::. - '•' •••• • 0SS He newer* I ‘-Yi’ii.v, of course 1 did. You didn't sup- j pose I .stole it. eh? I l uy one eierv day. I didn’t say it was a free jiuns.’’—l’hiladel- i phia Cali. A MOST Mil EH AI. IH'iFKK. The Voi.ta.c Bei.t Co., Marshall, Mich., offer to send tlieir celebrated Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances on thirty days’ trial to any man nrflicted with Nerv ous Debility, Loss of Vitality, Manhood, Ac. Illustrated pamphlet in sealed en velope with full particulars, mailed free. Write them at once. t&wtf I'l'iith in a Hrotlil'I. Chipago, July 21.- Frank A. Lieb has been arrested for the murder of John Shan ahan, who Has killed in a house of ill-fame at an early hour Sunday morning. Lieb acknowledges the killing, but claims that it was done in self-defence. The women in the house tell a different story. Ii u u Curtis nil Blood mud Skin I.Msm^rs, Klii.'iinmlir-iii. mti A PERFECT SPRING MEDICINE. P'RIOB, $1.001PEB BOTTLE. LAE GE SIZE $1.75 Essay on Blood and Skin Disease Mailed Free. iMacon Medicine Company, Macon, Ga. I V ' Wliolt’salc hv Ui'iiiiinni A' CiH'soii and < lily lM''.iu Hurt’. READ WHAT THEY SAY! h ill hr Suhl In 11m* I’irsl or Gen. Ilriiinn flint < oils This Wny, —FOR— *•>>50 ami $U00. Two vacant lots on First avenue. liiOO, Six room House, out-house and kitchen, First avenue. ♦,ooo. Corner Sixth avenue and Eighth street, x \ acre lot. Store House, Wugon Yard, and out-hoimes 1600. (Quarter acre lot, 1 room House, up town* Second avenue. son. Quarter acre lot, t room House, up town, Second avenue. 1500. Quarter acre lot, 5 room House, up town, Second avenue. •>ooo. Quarter acre lot, 8 room House, 2 room kitchen, well of Rood water and water works, First avenue. Six Houses and Lots 150 yards from lower undue, in Girard. Will sell separate. Hou*e with ; acre lot in Girard. ()m- acre lot and four Houses in Girard. One House and Lot in rhipley. Two 2 room Houses in city. 1 have some fine suburban property which I will sell cheap. A Ho several small Farms and scorn* larice Farms Will either sell or exchange fin city property. roil itr.vr. Several Houses from $l to $20 per month. Come and see and ask questions. We cannot i trade unless we conic face to face. J*. O. ZELJEEIDIT, Rea! Estate Agent. No. id 12th St. TIIK OLD RELIABLE . G.\ , Jul\ E0, 1886. local rates c lil ei iLt* ! 'lett:.1:<>oche<-. Mint and Apa- achicola ri\ ers will b. a* follows: In ir |,t r hanvi 10cents ."t.;'i Seed Mm) per Pm mu cents in;iliti per t**n so cents * ML*; freight in proportion. IVmgc from Columbus to Apalachicola,$6:00. >t her pi'inc in proportion STKAM K«t XAIAI) Will le Abo' ■id’lnnhus for Apalachicola via Bail- •ry TUESDAY morning at 8 o'clock, rc- i;» Bainbridije. ebeduli* will be run, river, etc., permit- For Cash t iuisr ol’ Xt'iiniliriit. It is conceded by the Medical Profession that impoverished nerves is the cause ol neuralgia. When the nerves arc not prop erly fed, it is an indication that the diges tive organs are not doing their work well. SMITH,S BILE BEANS’will surely relieve indigestion, and when the digestion is right everything else will be right. Vigor and happiness \\ ill go hand in band. Dose: One Beau. For sale by all druggists. je21 eod&wlm itnimmi'r Nuiriilrs. Raleigh, N. (_’., July 21. -This morning' W. L. Keister, a commercial traveler for Jacob ileeht, iiat dealer of Norfolk, Ya., j committed suicide in his room at the Cell- ! tral hotel, this city, b.v taking chlor.il.BFor ten days he nad been on a debaueh. JI is age was about !i5. lie leaves a tt'iie and oliild in Norfolk. Cheaper Than AS 1 have to move my stock of goods sot will .sell any amount of same at prices below any thing ever yet otic red in the city: but the CASH must be left with the order. Hinimcns’ Iron Cordial renovates and en riches tin* Idood, and accclc-nitos its action. eod&w _ It is not wlmt \vt* have so much in life that brintfH us joy, my dear, but how wu use it. If that divine fellow around there in Thomas’ orchestra should use his harp for a lire screen, wo would never know what heavenly sounds were in it. But when lie sweeps his hands across it and brings out those tinkling heats of melody, we can imagine how Saul lost hi- evil spirit while young David played, and over our memory for many nays the bright notes fall again like twinkling drops of rain upon the grass. lt\s the way we use our harps that brings out what is i/7 them. Chicago J ournal. PAINTS & BRUSHES OF ALL RINDS. GUILDERS' HARDWARE. THE BOSS PRESS Is Without a Rival. LIDDELL VARIABLE FEED SAW MILL Is Die very )>o - ! Saw .Mil! in Iho inarki-l. il fnok Hit’only medal of Hit’ Ii i\sl class a I I lie New Orleans Ex j ids i I it a i. For tliu above, and for all ol liter macliim ry. address. FORBES LIDDELL&CO., Montgomery, Ala. X. R.—Our slot k of Wroii“lit Iron. Pipe. Fillings and Machinery is Hie largest in this part of Hie coimti y. Sbip|>ei\s will please have their freight at boat by s a. m. mi day of leaving, as none will be re- j eeived alter that hour. Boat reserve- the right of not landing at any , point when considered dangerous by the coni- | niamlc-r. Boat will not stop at any point not named in lisi of landings furnished shippers under date o ! May 15, 3HS(5. , Our responsibility for freight ceases after it has ' been discharge.: at a landing where no person is ! there to receive it. SA.M’L J. WHITESIDE. Pres’t. GEO. B. WHITESIDE. Sec’y and Treas. I Iebl4-tf ! People’s Line OF STEAMERS! The Steamer Milton H Smith Will leave Columbus every Saturday at v a m for Bainbridge and Apalachicola. Leave Apalachi cola Monday at 2 p ni for Baiubridgi and Coluin- bii'v Connect with evening trains at Chatta- hooclue Sundays going down and Tuesdays fog. \v.. |i(-rmitting. The local id pasvage to all points on the inf Apalachicola rivers will be •oming up. n •ates of livigb 'hatuiho-.i lie i •> follows . till |M • ioldwfim I, L GRUZARD Wesleyan Female Institute, Rates and schedule subject to change without notice. Passage from Columbus to Apalachicola $6 00. Other point • >n p” portion, 'i'lirougb tickets sold bv this Ii* ' » tnuali, Jack’to,vide and all points in ...i-i Florida. shippr” \ !'l please have thei b\ s;00 . 'lay of leaving, : Boat rosei ves the right of not landing at any |K.int when • • dered dangerous by the pilot. Boat will it- ji at ans (>oint not named in ;bc* pub!/ 1 , .d d'knnlings «'•• t.slicd ship- "Ladies Do you want a pure, hloom- ing 'C'omjilexiou l If bo, a fnv onulications of Hagan’s MAGXOliiA BALM will grat ify you to your heart's con- tout, 14 does away with Sal- lowness, Heilness, Pimples, Blotches, and all iliscascs ami imperfections of the skin. Il overcomes < lie flushed appear ance of heat, fatigue anil ex- eitement. J t makes a lady of THIHTY appear hut. TWEN TY ; and so natoral, gradual, and perfect are its eil'ects, that it is impossible to detect ils application. STzvxjisrToisr, va. Mtmnk mi: " - sibi'ity for freight censes after it has li.scharvd ;it a landing when no person is T. H. MOORE, Agent, Columbus, Ga. there to itcei ea«ly to write insurance agaii by lire. Rates guaranteed as low olfercti bv iinv reliable stuck companv. S. T. ( OLEMAN. President. S. R. .1 \Ql'F>. Vice Lo sideut EDGAR S. WILSON, .secretary TOOMBS CRAWAORD, fMlice 1*215 Ifrixui Street. ADMINISTRATRIX'S Local Agent. •«•». eoillf SALE OKORfilA. Ml'MC'OtJKK I'DllMV. Whereas. Wilburn McGovern. Executor of Jonn McCarty, represents to the Court in his petition, duly tiled, that he lias fully administered John .McCarty's Estate. . ,, , Tills is. therefore, to cite all persons concerned, heirs and creditors, to show cause, it any they cm why said administrator should not |>e dis charged from bis executorship and receive leb ters of dismission oil the first Monday in oep- le jer!oaw5ni' F. M. BROOKS, Ordiimry. IY I > r r/ I? Send six cents for postage and 1 1V I A Pi. recceive free a costly box of (roods which will help all. of either sex, to niake more money right away than anything else in this world. Fortunes await the workers abso- lately sure. Terms mailed free. Truk & Co. Augusta. Maine. d&wtf Of Valuable City Property. (ik<)RGia. Mt’H< (u;i:i: c()rnty : l'n<ter and by virlue •! an order from tlu court ordinary of .Muscogee county. Georgia, I will sell at public oute^r: . on f be first Tuesday in August liexl. betwei’ti llu- legal hours of s:Ue. in front of 1 lie store of F. M. K now!es’& (*o., corner of Broad and Tenth streets, in the city of columbus, Muscogee county. Georgia, the fol lowing described property. belonging to the estate »•( Orplia Hogan, deceased, to-wit . All that part of city lot No. -ini. in llu* city of eoliim- bus, said ( ounty and state, on the nort h\Nest cor ner of Thirteenth street ant) Fourth avenue, fronting on Thirteenth street ninetydect, more oi less, ai.d extending north on Fourth avenue eighty-nine feet, more or less, and on which are situated two tenement houses. .Sale for distribu tion among the heirs of Orplia Hogan. Terms cash. MARY K. HOGAN. Adm'ryofthe Fist ate of Orplia Hogan, deed. jytioatv iw HomeSchool ATHENS. GI.OKGIA. Mlas A C. ! Sospjowski'* 8K1 * } Associate Principals. flMIE .Scholastic year re-opens on Wednesday, | September 2‘id, 1886. Best educational ad vantages offered to young ladies. For circular of information apply to the above. jy8 dtsep‘22 /pens .September 22d. issij. One oftlie First Schools i\>h Ydi'nj, mi's in rni: Lnuin. Ad Departments thorough. Biddings ckgant. •am beat. Ga> light, ^.unit.on Leantb'ul. climate -pb.-mii.i. p.,pil. ei nine; *en State**. \ : ii ij ortant advantages in < ne ^reati\ red i<. ti •eve. Beard. *Va*b: lg. Lights, English. I.itin. i-'rer.ci.; Germ.-i’.. uic. for Sein lastie > ear. from September to .June. WHO. No Lxn..-. B. F. COLEMAN. Jr.. UNDERTAKER AND I>LAi.Kit IN Patent Metalic Caskets, Wood Cases & Caskets, Cliildrcil’s (Sloss tVljile Casos uml Caskets. ('Jiildivii'.- (iloss While Mdalic Caski’ls. Burial Unites, all price.- 1'nnii sl.oD up. Personal attention given all orders. Tu'eUlh .Street, four doors west of Tims, (albert's Printing' Oftice. THREE DfSREPSiA. SICK HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. It.> I'. M. Knowles A Go.. V net ioneers. BY V i Rl’t ‘ E of ail enie-r issuet! by tin « Ourt of Oj dinai \ ..f Museogci . (ia.. 1 uill ,dl ill to.nt oftlie auction home of F. M. Knowles & 1 ".. L. i.id -tn*et. <-ity »d ('oluinbu**. Muscogee c< *'11:ty. on Tuesday. (In- 1 ith day of .July. Isa*;, all in. iMijiai properly oftlie estate ol' Patrick .M<*.\j’dle. de< • a-i-il. consisting of Gron ries and i t lie i pi'ri-hable gooiL belonging to ibe estate of said dec.-a-.-d. Terms cash. The sale will be continued from dav to day until the stork is dis- pos...i of. .1. (I. IR’RIll'S. 1 e*»<ltd Temp. Aiiin'r L-l. P. MeArdle. FOR SALE. » -;•.11i ti» a< iv corner lot on lower Broad - t i ’vLh in w o-o'ioiu liotwe and 2-room )• bo-ne. $P 1 . r v.tc.iu* lot, corner of First av- mu am! Fifth ^Peet/ $'.! M. If 1! II..i.se on. S'ore and five i'wi-i■■•oi:i llou-es, ».ojner of Fifth avenue • ■ • n;!i -treet. Rents for $-to per «>!■•* Iieautif’ul Building Lot fronting the i- .ok. ne.ii ."Jade'- seliool. T.vo new j room Houses in Browm ville. Money |o I.onit. I li:uv hud placed at my disposal $>>000 to be Jo im on real t-tate at S per cent, fur three years time. \V. S. t.JGMX. Heal IN I a t e Agent. eodtf A Ftemedy f.* r .»U Disea-ea **f th«* Liver. Kid* |ney>, Mtomiifh and Bovu*U. \ u .-.-ive cure f r Pjflprpnla. Mick. Ifrnitiirhe. • - ____ w- - — — Con»lIl,iUii.i, uu.f, one t» t w* im-i; .. nnine Crab Orchard Salts in sealed packages a* 10 and i>' ts. V> geiudue su.t*> sylu in hu.*. CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO.. Prop^ra.^. aiMU.N >■ JONt-S. M.nwr. LohI.tI))., Kr-J Drab Orchard Water TH£ PATENT MICE & OUST PROOF 'Bookcases,Tables, Office Chairs,letter Presses, Fine Cabinets, &c. TYLER DESK CO. Suo N. Fourth at., St. Loci* Stud to tor SO l.t>, CuUloat*