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—IA.
t z i
. t
1
OF
HcJ’s III Sarsaparilla
You smile at the idea. But if yon are
a sufferer from
Dyspepsia
ABd indigestion, try a bottle, and b
fore you hare taken half a dos<
doses, you will think, and no dou^ ,
exclaim “ That just hits it!” “ That !
Hood’s I 8ana pariUa - ]
^
soothing effect £ || f /\r »
Sarsaparilla
gently ach and tones and strengthens i he stom¬
digestive organs, natural, invigorates healthy
the liver, creates a
desire for food, gives refreshing sleep.
Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient.
CURRENT FACTS.
When the daguerreotype was a new
invention the face of the sitter for a
portrait was dusted with white pow¬
der.
Connecticut has 30,000 farms. The
tobacco product in 1880 was 14,000,
000 pounds.
In almost every country the greater
number of divorces is granted at the
petition of the wife. \
The East Indian shipworm will, in a
sisra. t&s rt* Z :
«md J planks. • , rm They wiU -11 , be 1 left a mere
shell that can be shattered by the fist.
In Atlanta the police raided an old
shanty in which fifty negro men and
women had established a Morman
temple and were conducting a service
of the rankest blasphemy. |
Hidden shoal* Wreck Strong Ship*.
The good baric health, .with the brave marl
net hope at the helm, ia’drifting on concealed
reefs if yon are troubled with inactivity pf
the kidneys, shiftyonr couree by the aid of
Hostetter’sStotoachBitters, which will pilot
yon into the harbor In safety, and save you
from Bright’s disease, diabetes or dropsy.
The* Bitters nd cheeks malaria, rheumatism,
dyspepsia a liver complaint.
—^
It is more blesseq to die happy yourself than
to make others happy by your eying.
Dr.Kilmer’s 8w amp-R oo-Tcures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
5 Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
On the sea of matrimony I s frequently heard
the moan of the tied.
Hall’s Catarrh Curie
Is*Constitutional Cure. Price 75c.
|^ Q mm! puree constipation. -* cte., 50 cts., It
Portable Hay Presses
$60,00. Address, for circulars, C. B. Curiee,
Kieuzi, Miss. ? _, .
If afflicted with sore eye* use Dr. Isaac TTiomp- _
eon’s Eye- water Jiruggists sell at 25c per bottle.
Slf Aprrows are heavy enough to be drowned
In liquor. ._
0 ^3
.!• >
KNOWLEDGE
W j 0 q comfort and improvement and "
te nd* to personal enjoyment when
tightl y used. The many, who live bet
tersdan others and enjoy life more, with
laos expenditure; world’s by best more products promptly
adapting the to
.
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the braced pure in liquid the
laxative principle# 6m
. "E&StSStoK. Ipas- ting
in thf form most
ant to the tastqj tl ruiy lax
luuijt#irn 'and fevers
titrisanfrntfy satisfaction rn^"|r constipation, millions and
■t Beet hasdven approval of to the medical
Erofession, with the Kid
because it acts oa the
r yiw Liver and Bowels without weak¬
, and it is perfectly free from
ening them
L every objectionable substance,
k Rfetsin50cand$Ibottles,but &mf at ytesas for mfo by ati drug
Hisman
EoTonly, Kfactared by the California printed Fig Syrup
Kaekage, whose name is on every
also the name, Syrup of Figs,
-
For Bowel Troubles
V ’
Royal ftermotiwf 9
• -Z-tm - - — —MM,- - r. \
pen IHtis thing, Btti we nis »i tt
tht *er name’s North, Vs ? an* :
th’t she draps off strain jea*! ore she
sights Ted (’r him, her). Ifoaut’, sj she
•That little heifer was a
sho’ was, an’ tva'n’fc more’s" two daya
’fore we-all was ready t’ do *most any¬
thing f’r her—me ’n* Ted, ’n’ oT lady
Parry (th’ boss’s wife), an* all th* rest;
an’, ’f I don’t b’ljpve we wa’n’t real
glad, ’stead o’ sorry, when we fill's out
they don’t seem t’ be no one lookin’
f’r such a maverick—’cause we adver¬
tised, o’ course, ’t git ’er folks. But
we gits no word, not a bloomin’ shout,
so Ted jes’ bran’s th’ kid f’r bis’n, an’
pr’ceeds t’ raise ’er (think o’ Ted,.
which th’ same never raised nothin’
but rows b’fore’raisin that little, ten¬
der gyurl!), Mrs. Parry takin’ care of.
’er f’r a while.
“Well, Ted was jestth’ funniest cow
hand I ever bucks up ag’in. Ye
wouldn’t ’a’ kuowed ’im. Ted was a
(iowIin’ wolf, a reg’lar o’ hyena b’fore
that, but after th’ kid comes, he
braces right up an’ gits good, none o’
th’ gang objectin’, it/ ’cause they savvies
why he does
.“After th’ kid was ’bout nine ’r ten
years old, we-all don’t get f see much
of ’er, ’cause Ted, havin’ laid up some
dough, sends ’er off t’ school, ‘She’s
a sho’ ’nough thor’ughbred, she is,’
says Teddy, ’an’ she gits no scrub
trainin’. Sabe?’
“That goes, o’ course, an’ th* kid
likewise goes t’ school, cornin’ back
onct everf a year, lookin’ sweeter ’n’ pnrtier
an’ we-all, mostly Ted, Willin’
f Iay rig ht down an’let ’er tromp on
our measly ol’ frames. Oh, she was
jeB like Ted prognosticates on th’
jump—a sho’ ’nough thor-’ughbred.
“Tell ye what she does one .time
’bout two year ago. They was livin’
’t th’ station, her, ’n’ Ted, ’n’ Mrs.
Bell, th’ woman th’t give Eastern th’ gyurl les¬
sons, an’ one day some folks
gits off th’ train, lookin’ f’r Mister
MaoLonnan, which is Ted sence he gifs
intuh business for ’isself. They was a
real nice-lookin’, fat ol’ girl with
spectacles with handles to ’etn, an’ a
dood with one o’ these yere f solish lit¬
tle caps ye sees through th’ winduhs
o’ th’ sleepin’-oars. deepo
“Ted an’ Norah was at th’
lookin’ f’r some sohool-fren’s o’ the
gyurl’s, when t^ese folks gits off, an’
some one pointk Ted out, an’ th’ dood
braces ’im. A
<< • Aw, n\e good man,’ says he,
takin’ sight at Ted over th’ end of ’is
nose—-‘aw, are you Mister MacLen- •
nan ?’ "
“Ted’s a good man—no disoount on
that—but ’e does sho* hate t’ be called
one, moreover, by a dood, whioh crit¬
ter’ is quite rousin’ t’ Ted’s killin’ in
instinc’s—but ’e gives it out th’t ’is
brand is sech, an’ th’ dood springs ’is
game on ’im, which is th’t he ’n’ th’
ol’ lady iB lookin’ f’r Norah Sometbin’
’r-other, which is th’ name o’ th’ kid
th’t falls off a train one day ten years
’r so b’fore—our Norah, sho’ ’nough.
'They was a su’prise all ’round,
they was. Then Norah takes a hand
an’ flies’t th’ ol’ girl an’ asts why she
didn’t find ’er then, an’ they gives it
out th’t they never saw Ted’s adver¬
tisement, an’ all that, an’ never learns
where she is ontell they lately runs
ontiuj Mrs. Parry komewlieres out
W6st/~'They likewise makes-a BrcHTlgdy nlav
th’t Ted had stole th’ kid.
■was goin’t’ fall ton Norah’s neck an’
weep a lot, but Norah don’t like that
style o’ play, so she give* *er a chill,
an' moreover gives it out hold th’t she
don’t move a step—th’t she fad fjbys with
Ted, th’t’s be’n a reg’lar to ’er. •
“An’ ahe stayed, you' bet, ah’ Ted
was th’ tiokledest ol’ stiff in th’ conn
try, t’ think she’d rather flock with
him th’n t’ train w’ them howlin'
swells/ They makes no'further play,
thinkin’, mebbe, th’t Norah’s temper’s
pretty high up. W*
“Ev’rything’s real lovely ontell a
a little while ago—last it year it was.
Things got a little exoi tiaOround yere
—real excitin’ f r some i folks, I may'
say. They was a few gents in these
parts was gettiu’ quite, frisky careless with
brandin’-irons, an’ was real
’bout drivin’ off beef-crittera. They
ple, was they real retirin’, modest ef they l^ind talented o’ peo¬
was, even was
in th’ brandin’ line, an’ we-was quite
anxious t’ meetup with ’e% miJr but they
Jays pretty low; we gits t three
of ’em strayin' ’round; but 1 keeps
savin’ wood an’ makin’ us tired,
so we goes f work an’ organ i; a vigi
lance c’mmittee, with Ted**
man.
'They was a young Harwood, feller’t
turn then, named
come fr’m somewhere*, an’ givi
•iielf-be ’e was a doctor, a tittle out o’
didn’t look it, tfeou„
in’ a big, dusky sort o’ chapJT He
hangs out ’is shingle an’ gits a metis
acquainted, an’ then- makes a deed
play ft Norah, lettin' W’idi seems t’ go’ aS
right; plenty. Norah Oh, but oa t’ he tiketh’ ipek
quite her. Th’ wust was wefinM mcr
on was,
i’ th’ did gyurl sho’ was give stuck on pAy pun,
too, ’it us a
’cause we didn’t want no bio
oh-nrtrp friakiu’ ’round Ted’s com
tia’ out Norah. An’ still, this
idler White an’ decent, an’ ’twae
Annate onpo—ifoie t’ hate Tn^ done
whatever. So, when be offers V jfan
W e’n mitt ee , we —ys yes; o’
tenderfootJWe IM
• had sand.
“Well, we keep, up $h’ j-o
’ Tfan, VvevM jfodght,^Sl wfaiff ff
*
.
: U
•ol
th’ ho- h*
5 Inc’s Tiff
MIMQRCKQJUt
the flowers their bold bees to Woo
the im;
The brooks have their fresh rains to feed
them;
The nights havw their stars to o’erstrew
thhnw;
The dawns their pure dews to bead
them,
Yet my steps go darkling.
With but the dim sparkling
Of memory’s lamp, love, to lead mem!
The sea hath its waves to make sheen with ,
The winds have their musio to sigh with ;
The groves have their boughs to be green
with,
The birds have their fleet wings to fly with ;
But I, in my lonely
Allegiance, have only
This deep-wounded heart, love, to die
with!
—Edgar Fawcett, in the Century.
UNCLE TEDDY’S MAVERICK.
BI LUSTER KETCHTTM.
# AGEBRESH and
sand—sand and
sage brush—sage -
' brush and sand
agaiD, before,be
f; hind, on either
* side, as far as the
eye conld reach.
All the afternoon
Jm the “overland”
y f , .__ 'I
iflg across the
.
disliked cards, were too h nervous to
^ didn’t.pare ^ drink-the
jonr gjr WAg growia *, rj tire80me .
jj. rea iiy seemed to the more imagina
tiye oneg) ttat the re f r ain " of the oar
wheels was, “Sagebrush and sand,
BaRe brush and sand—”
The weary afternoon dragged slow¬
ly hy, and the conductor of the din
ing-car came through , , td announce
dinner.—a diversion, at least,
“Ah 1” remarked one tourist, sudden
]y r in a gratified tope; “there’s a
typical scene for .V you, 5- me boy.” %
Against . ... the red background . made , , by
the rays of the setting sun, a short
distance from the track sat a solitary
horseman, motionless, one handrest
ing on the pommel ed his saddle, the
other in the aot of pushing back from
his forehead his wide-brimmed white
hat. Then, just as the rear cars of the
train apprpached, he suddenly took
pit the hat, waved it, jammed his spurs
into his wiry • tittle bronco, and
started to race with the train, yelling
at the top. of his lungs. At the end
of a quarter-mile or so, he slowed up,
drew his-revolver, and fired a parting
salute intp the air," accompanying the
volley with more wild the howls. Pullmans
The occupants of were
amused ; they had not seln anything
so interesting for a long time. The
tourist who had first observed the
horemsn sighed, and declared" he en¬
vied the oowboy—he really did.
“How they must enjoy it, this wild,
free life of the plains, without a worry
or a care—nothing _ to do but oom
mune with nature—when they feel rest¬
less, to be able to" indulge in a wild,
reckless gallop suitable- to the mood
—and—and—er—all that, don’t you
know?” .
But it did not strike Teddy Mac
Lennan, oowboy, that—er—way at all,
don’t yon Know? He was just think¬
ing how oppressively tiresome that
"wild, free life of his was getting to be
—with '
• * •
^
“Nothing Nothing to do but work.
to eat tffit food—**
tnd
“Nowhere to go but out,
1 Nowhere to oome but in— 4 ,
And, for the rest, nothing to do but
amuse one’s self like a howlipg pauiac,
as he had just beed doing for the de¬
lectation of the “tende^feet.’'
“Hit’s sho’ tiresome,” he reflected,
as he continued beside the trgck, giv¬
ing the “bronc” a “breather”—“hit
•ho’ is, kn’ I’m jjood ’n’ tired, I am >
but what t’ do? Seema like weall gits
ihiTless, hit does; jes’ playin’ piaggin’ along
an’ workin’ hard -an’ bard like¬
wise (ontell the stuff gives out), an’ no
sixthly reason f’r bein’ alive—
“Great sacrificed Waah’n’t’nl” he
ejaculated % suddenly, jerking tip his
horse, ‘I’ll swaller a snake, I wiiir
I heard the story from Jerry Mad¬
den, Teddy’s present couple partner in the
cattle business, a of yean •go,
— we sat in the shade of the ranch
house one afternoon.
; -“Why, Teddy don’t drink, an’ like ;
wise swears quits few?” be.. faked, in
response to a query of urine. “That F
Sho’, he hain't tuk nothin’ fz most
twelve.’r thirteen year, ’ooant o’ his
kid. ‘Married?’ Oh, no, none what¬
ever. They hain’t no gal gits Teddy, Mebbe
not much. ‘Why?’ Givftitap.
yon e’n tell me? . >
“Ted was ridin’ along one fay—’tis By
thirteen year ago—ridia’ dost th’
railroad track one evenin’, feetin’Triad
o’ * dfogusted-like, when, all oi
• s n dd e nt , he se— somethin’ funny
trottin’ along fh’ trade. Ted stpps ’n’
wip— ’tasy—an’ gas— a hull lot
’can— what ha sees wa’n’t nothin’tika
finds ’round this fa re patch
Moreover
WM
1 inNf
wouldn't, to we tftkw ’im intuhtV
house an’ brings *m ’round, not so b«1
hurt, after all. He wants us t’ fia|d)
th* job, ‘fraid, mebbe, we’re savin’ a*
’im t’ string up some; but Ted on
grins a little, sort o' sour, an’ teliir
him V keep quiet. Ted hoi’s raeetin',
“Next day me’n a
night we does, an’ settles t’ th’ th’ c’mittee case, an’ tha|
we goes Ted
at .Teb Barlow’s, where gets tip tw
makes a game o’talk, Sgyshe: Mr,
44 C •Gents, I an’ my pardner, techln’ dis¬
Madden, has made a real
covery. I hain’t no great talker, but
I jest wants t’ say th’t we find th’t Doc
Harwood, a member o’ this yere hon
’r’ble body, is one o’ th’ gents we
wants mostest, an’—’
“Eight yere they gits exoited, but
Ted cklls ’em' down an’ goes on, tellin’
’em how he gits Doc an’ so on. Then,
says he: *
“ *1 wants t* add, right yere, th’t
Doc Harwood is at my house, hurt
bad, an’ as long as he’s there I
over ’im an’ keeps ’im fr’m harm. Ah’
F adds farther th’t I don’t do this b’
cause I’m stuck on Doc, but b’cause
him’n my little girl iff stuck on eacfe
other. Now, gents, I want t’ make a
offer- Ye can’t have Doc ’thout gittin’
me an.’ breakm’ little Norah’s heart;
but I agrees t’ pack th’ galoot off t’ th’
States an’ guarantee he stays there,
ef you all let’s ’im go. Does that go?’
“It went O. K. after some rag-chaw¬
in’ ; so, in a few days, Doc glides back
t’ th’ States.
“Nope. Norah didn’t go—not any.
Ted goes t’ her an’ gives it out th’t
Doc’s be’n hurt by hoss-thieves an’ has
got t’ slide home—does she want t’
go?
“Eight yere Norah gives ’im th’
merry ‘ha-ha!’ Not much, she don’t
wan’t t’ go. ‘Not with no hoss-thief,
anyway, Uncle Teddy,’ she says.
“ ‘Hoss-thief?’ say»Ted. f ‘Whatd’ye
mean b’ that?’
«< < Mean what I say, ’ says Norah.
‘Never mind, Uncle Teddy, I knows
what I’m ’lludin’ at. ’
“Ted sees she’s on, an’ it sort o’
razzles ’im. ‘But, look yere,’says he,
‘I be’n thinkin’ you—you $ort o’—
well, liked th’ cuss a hull lot.’
it t None at all, Uncle Teddy,’ says
Norah,. real promp’; ‘I was jes’ only
havin’ a lectle fun with ’im—it’s dull
out yere sometimes, ye know.*
“This yere makes Ted feel a hull lot
better, ’cause—well, ’cause, ye see, th’
ol’ fool was (he tells me all about it)
sort o’ havin’ aspirations ’isself.’
“About a week after Doo left,
Norah comes t’ Teddy one mornin’,
smilin’, and blushin’, and kerryin’ a
letter. Ted was settin’ lookin’ out th’
winder, real solemn an’ sad, wonder¬
in’, jes’ that minute, ef ’twas a gquar’
deal, 'an’ right an’ straight, f’r t’ ask
that leetle gyurl t’ marry him. That
there proposition was what’d be’n
.
keepin’ pore ol’ Ted awake f’r nights
V nights, an’ he was sho’ puzzled.
’Bout yere Norah bounoea in on ’im
an’ makes ’im jump. ,
n t Oh, Uncle Teddy,’ says she, ‘J
wants ye t’ do somethin’ f’r Norah.’
“Ted loc$s at ’er real solemn a
minute, and then says, more solemn:
“ ‘Ye know they haiu’t nothin’ t’
ask fer th’t I won’t do f’r ye,‘” he
says.. ‘W’y, see yere, Norah, darlin’,
can’t ye onderstand th’t I—’
“ ‘Oh, I know, ye dear ol’ goose,’
says Norah, break in’ of ’is talk off
short, ‘hut hain’t this great? I’ve
just got a. letter fr’m Alec—’
“ ‘Who’s Alec?’ says Ted, ’most
bfoke*up, an’ gittin’ out o’ th’. chair,
tremblin’.
• “ ‘W’y, Alec’s—you know—Kate
Clark’s brother, an’ I met ’im at New
York when I was stayin’ with Kate,
an’ he says he loves me an’ wants me
V marry ’im, an’, oh, Upole Teddy,
ye hain’fr'CToss, be ye?’ And she falls
oa Ted’s nook ’n’ weeps a lot. »
“Ted stan’s an’ lets ’er weep quite
plenty, him chokin’ down a big swell
in’ in ’is throat all th’ time. Then,
says he, very quiet: tbej
“‘Didn’t I tell ye, darlin’,
hain’t nothin’ ye oan’t have? Iedon’l
know this yerq Alee chap, btlt ef ye
wants ’im, ye sho’ gits ’im, ef I has t’
rope ’im myself.’ does. Oh, * they’#
“ ‘An’ so she •
nothin’ Ted wouldn’t do ft that there
gyurL ’’—Argonaut.
■ J
f ‘
Hi Ecooomiral Use ef Artificial lee.
ne of "the newest plans for
•Co no mi cal use of artificial iee ha# re¬
#ntly been paten nted. by Van der
Veyde, of Holland. The invention is
Meed on the foot that two smooth sur
fices of freshly out iee when brought
Uto oontaet at a temperature, bdow
thirty-two degrees will unite firmly.
M a higher temperature the junction
wield! Uf a. blow, and the ice breaki
mto the original psrtsi Fan dei
Weyde oaete blocks of ioe into small
linbes, Hfok. which are stamped joined with a into farad*
The— cub— are •
pSMez fa—out cube for of any The desired mark weight is guar¬ and
use. a
antee that the iee is pqfO, and the
faaall cub—, weighing an ounoe each,
jure easily sepanAed into * shape con*
venient for use. —New York Tti btinsk
Hypnntfan. *
“There h— been a great deal of stafi
id nonsense written about hypno
, fa if it were something phytickn. very pb
^" eaffi as Arch street
' is an every-day p ie — oi
►'j jfafacticn. Any minut—by <—e may
ftwr a himself Cr i3 in a few
- directing the— in
Wfni
* ■%>
The Royal Baking Powders m
ptageJisable to progress in cookery
and * to the comfort and conve¬
nience of modern housekeeping,
Royal Baking Powder makes hot
bread wholesome. Perfectly leav¬
»*<
ens without fermentation, ual
ities that are peculiar to it alftne.
■ WALL NCW-YORK.
w Summer Drink.
■ An English dairy paper tells of a
new use for skim milk. After the milk
has been creamed^by the centrifuge,
the skim milk is sterilized by heating
to destroy all bacteria or germs of fer¬
jury ment, or its other keeping. possible The q^ans milk is of then in¬
to
charged with pure oarbonio acid gas
at a high pressure, and placed in sy¬
phon bottles, from which it can be
drawn at any time. The milk so treat¬
ed, it is claimed, -will remain sweet in¬
definitely. The - medical carbonated profession
have taken hold of the
milk and are prescribing able it former- digest
sons who have not been to
whole milk. It is said to be very val¬
uable and most easily digested. furnish
Now, if the scientists will
some cheap and simple means by which
the farmer can charge the milk with
carbonic acid gas, this discovery may
be made valuable. Milk as an article
of human diet is not nsed to the extent
it should be, and if some one would
compile a milk cook-book showiflg the
various ways in whioh milk may be
made up into nutritious and appetiz¬
ing dishes, it would have a great eoon
omio value. —. Western Plowman.
Steelyard,
The last syllable of “steelyard” does
not signify a measnre, but owes its or¬
igin to the “yard," or oonrt, in
where traders sold their steel, and whioh
■was regulated by the “Merchants of the
Steelyard.” In this yard, or court,
there wonld stand some kind of balanoe
for weighing the metal, and this mean¬
ing soon supplanted the original word.
- An English exhibitor st the World’s
fair has returned the medal and diplo¬
ma awarded on the ground that they
are without value. All exhibitors, they
say, received them, and amateurs,
whose exhibits were of a trifling char¬
acter, received awards equal in value
and merit to those made to the largest
and most important exhibitors.
Southern Recipes.
“The Cream of Cook Books" contains the
best recipes of the old books, and many never
before in print.
“The New South Cook Book” ie beautifully
bound, and will be sent to any address upon
the receipt of ten cent* in postage.
B. W. Wrxhb, G. P. A.
E.T., V. AG. R. R., Knoxville,Tenj).
Here" la the Seathl
done One in can the get North, Engravings and at equal much to anything cheaper
a
rate. Whenever yon wAnt any kind of out to
illustrate patents, books, don't plans, catalogues, North,
letter heads, etc., why, the South, send where up
but keep it? the Why mouey right In in Atlanta, Ga. can All
you get have the En¬
you to do Is to write to Atlanta will
graving Co„ with at 8 R all Broad Information. St., and Their they Half¬
furnish you 'Photographs
tone Engravings are equal to
A Guaranteed .Care 9 ,
roH . Habit. -
Jhe Opinm to
W. taarantae to oar* the opium wife diMM* boart.
any form la fifteen day*, or ao
matment or attentioa. Saolurium at Ban
ns*.near An*tell. Go- OomepcmflesM
as. Nuer Gcaxa
Ocas >.. or ock Box*. Aovrsu I A.
Bn jets of. JJacltey, Attentioa!
Deal dtrectl j Vlth^pM mafM tarer* and
engines, boilers, haw mills,
Grist Mi Ills, Cane Mills, Cotton
Gins and Pr ess —,
And anyth!— wanted in th» machinery Una.
SCHOnUD>S IRON WOUKS,!Hu«.,e..
t ftf Mwleli awarded u» oa oar Iron
SIX GRAVES
Diamon a ^ - - - -
ARM THE Bl
ALL T1U LAI
MIttB GRABS
.* ■h $kh
mm
WHAT ■
18
II WM
A ‘M
.
. mmm
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Our Original Troy Pound.
In 1828, when Adams wasp
of the United States, odngroM
ized or appointed a commiji
bring to this country a troy pound When Ad¬
justed to the British standard. ”
the commission returned the president
received the paokage and broke the
seal in the presenoe of the distinguish¬
ed men of America. This original
weight standard ia now in the mint at
Philadelphia, and is not regarded as
being of ideal acouraoy by any quality means, of
It is made qf a very poor
brass, is rough in texture and hollow.
Avoiding to a law now in fores, each
state is entitled to a copy or duplicate
of this standard.
Thomas Edison thinks a |
of time is but wasted while in sleep, lp*j rw
be true, a pstn n ■MBb
he is harmless; something he is
always be said while I
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