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Tee News and Gourani.
Ik. R. IRtMIAV* |; ( |j| nrx „ n ,| | > iil>llftlarrr<
14. V.. lUAPJIA'.f
*Vtt.>CAl ll'l IvIN II.VTKS.
Qm> ¥t <J £*
Hx Moaths
TJuv-j plinths *>
THTRSOA Y. MARCH 2(i, lUoR.
IWO >lo>Si<)Ns FAVOKKI*.
Mr Charles L Davis, represent
ative in the Legislature fiom Meri
jrtther eountv and chairman of
‘he Committee on Appropriations
-,n an interesting talc yesterday,
with, a representative uf the Morn
ing News, said that he favored the
movement outlined in the Morning
News on F iday morning in its
Atlanta dispatches and approved
by p m ar editorial article, to limit
she v.vo sessions which the present
Leg is’tat !a r e is yet to have, to fifty
day- :e first*, to be held in June
at thss \ ear, to twenty days, and
the second. to be held next year to
Mr Davis says that he was op
>-;-ived to the change which the Leg
siamre made in the time of meet
mg. hot that the change having
been made he will do all tie can to
make the movement to limit the
two sessions to fiifty days, thus
'imit'ng the whole life of the Leg
islatnre to ioo days,a success. Asa
matter of fact, the really important
measures pending are ready for ac
tion.the eojnmi’tees having passed
ipon them. These measures are
the convict lease bill, the cnild
labor bill and one or two others
There is no doubt, in Mr, Davis’
opinion that the Legislature car*
get through with all the work it
uriTf have to do in fifty davs, and
hence there is, no reason why there
should be two sessions of fifty
Jays each, and thus put the state
> a heavy and unnecessary ex
pease.
Iffioactotrbt there are many tneinb
ers like Mr. Davis, vho are anx
ious ro keep down the cost of legis
lation, particularly as the change
in the time of the meeting of the
Legislanre is not a good season
iot an. increase in the cost of it,
i>nt will the majority of the mem
bers takethat view?.They probably
will if the papers all over the state
join in creating a public sentiment
in favor of it. Otherwise it is prob
able that it will be considered ad
visable to hold two sessions of fifty
days each. The more such memb
ers as Mr Davis talk in favoi of
limiting the sessions to fifty Jays
the better the chance will be of
saving the state a large amount of
money.—Savannah News.
The cauliflower trust has been
formed. Now look out for the
chxysau then inn trust and next
after that the hummin bird trust.
Some of the rainbow colored
funny sections of the Sunday papers
are seriously tedious.
It is to be hoped that the efforts of
•xttsiaers to prematurely warm up
s>cr seventh district politics will
sot be allowed to go bv without
"jourteous appreciation.
Pointed Paragraphs-
Judge a woman by her questions
and a man by his answers.
A wise man never sets himself
ap as the hero of his stories
The best some people can do is
express second-hand opinions.
A rigid lower jaw is often more
tiiective than a stiff upper lip.
When it comes to helping the
jwaor. actions speak louder than
•words*
A woman lays out an echo by
getting in the first word as well as
the last.
Willful ignorance is an ailment
tbut isn't mentioned in patent
■aechcme almanacs.
A man whose tongue gets him into
double usually depends upon his
Vet to get him out.
Nature seems to have a grudge
against the average man. The
things he prefers to eat usually
disagree with him.
> always keep on hand
PPaitvKiUev
N no kind of pstn
or ache, internal or cxter
lnL that Pain-Killer .will
loot relieve.
) 2.QQA OUT FOR IMITATIONS AND SUB
STITUTES the genuine bottle
t SEARS THE NAME.
> PERRY DAVIS A SON.
| Soft ff
S Harness a,
fk Mh
BO You can ynur bar- /AFjJf/.-.rj-
HI to noli us u glove \fy\] D
Wl an,l in t >u.,h uiwlro 1 y ifc,’/ )'
WJI IU.III i'.I KEK A liar- fi/ /*-•-;
Kj iiofi*. Oil. You <n [V
Vi l>,|r„'ih'V! 1:. life—mako it J® InJiiM
y>a| I .*t pi lona ua it ig%.
It i i w
HR WWSGSS &ifg
Mfl* iLnkc ft poor loot !n r r bar- ;UEm
■K; ji**sh llitft iitnv. M.iHj of InM
jH pure. heavy bin! led oi iMH|
1i twin! r to wiLii- \(9HI
[/ stand tho v/oatbt r. IWB
Sold everywhere VWft
in cans—all sizes. \vMft
Mad- * T'”V?j 3l CO. \M.
Isn’t it Strange-
Upon what small base a woman
can build up a big opinion of her
self?
What becomes of the millions of
pocket-knives sold each year?
How many men read a news
paper without grasping the impor
tance of its contents?
What little things sometimes
cause a woman to change ner daily
routine?
Upon what flimsy pretexts a
man will oppose another man’s ad
vancement?
How many women create ax un
favorable imoression when they
talk?
What sillv tnings a man will do
in an effort to attract a woman’s
attention?
Upon what a slender thread a
woman will hang a pretty love
story?
How many men consider them
selves wise beyond their experi
ence?
What worthless trifles a woman
will keep as honored relfcs?
In late years men have made
fortunes out of the tailings of gold
mines. The mills in which the ore
formerly was crushed ?nd the crude
processes then in use allowed a
large precentage of the precious
metal to escape, and that loss
amounted in some cases to a for
tune. The stomach is just like a
stamp mill in this respect, that
when it is not in perfect order it
allows the escape and waste of
much of the precious nutriment
contained in the food. That loss
wnen continuous means the loss of
man’s greatest fortune —health.
Science offers a remedy for this
condition in Dr. Fierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery. It corrects
the “weakness” of the stomach,
prevf-uts waste and loss of nourish
ment, and puts the stomach and
organs of digestion and nutrition
into a condition of health which
enables them to save and assimilate
all the nutriment contained in the
food which is eaten. In all cases
of constipation the use of Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets will
speedily and permanently cure the
disease'.
A Loyal Backslider. *
“Brother,” said the exhorter to
the teirful man on the front seat;
“brother. I take it that you have
been led to a realization of your
sinful ways.”
“I have sir; I have,” answered
the repentant one, according to
Judge.*
“I gather,” continued the ex
horter, “from your sorrowful vis
age that the error of your ways is
bearing you down and that you
seek relief.’’
“Yes, sir," sighed the erring one.
“Then come forward and give
your testimony.”
“I’d like to, parson.” confided
tbe other in a stage whisper; “I’d
like to. But you see Holleran has
been doin’ all the exortin’ in our
neighborhood for the last fifteen
years, ah’ he has always done all
my converlin.’ I reckon I might
just as well stay backslid for an
other month an’ then have him
catch me up as usual when he
comes. Besides, he might not
altogether like it f#r you to be
interferin’ in his business, ‘speci
| ally as I'm one o’ his stock ‘brands
from the burnin’.”
More Riots
Distu b nces of strikers are not
nearly as grave as an individual dis
order of file system. Over work,
loss of steep, nervous tension will tie
followed by utter collapse, unless a
re fable remedy is immediately em
ploye I. There's nothing so efficient
to cure disorders of the Liver or Kid
neys as Electric Hitters. It's a won
derful tonic And effective nervine and
the greatest all around medicine for
run down systems. It dispels Ner
vousness. Rheumatism and Neural
gia anu expels Malaria germs. Only
50c, and satisfaction guaranteed by
'Young Hros.. druggists.
Many school Children are Sickly.
Mother Hray.s Sweet Powders for
Children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse
in Children’s Home, New York, Breaks
up Colds in 24 hours, cure Feverishness
Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething
disorders, and Destroys Worms. At all
drugg-sts, 25c. Sample mailed FREE.
Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy.N.Y.
In Reply to Roosevelt- i
San Kraaciseo A r^pnauc?
“An Old Maid, ’ cominenting on
President Roosevelt’s recent re
mark that “the mau or woman who
deliberately avoids martiage is in
effect a criminal against the race
and should be an object of con
temptuous abhorrence by all
healthy people," says in a letter to
the Argonaut: “The man—profes
sional, clerk,’ employe or other —
who on a small salary or income
marries and raises a family in gen
teel inise.y—is a fool. The oid
man who, after acquiring a fortune,
marries a young girl—usually the
case —is a knave. The man who
marries a woman for her money is
a scoundrel! The man who mar
ries to have a cook and servant is
levelheaded, but uninteresting.
The girl who mnrries a clerk or
employe with a snail salary is
ignorant and to fie pitied. The
rich old woman who marries a nice
\oung man is a fool. The woman
who sells herself for money is
despicable. The working woman
who marries the working man to
be his servant deserves her fate.
Marriage is only desirable when
| the man and the woman are intel
ligent. devoted one to the other,
ready to bear in common the
troubles of life and to share its
pleasures; when the man is valiant
and a money-maker and the wo
man a housekeeper. Unfortunate,
such conditions are rare.”
Life Guards.
The Life Guards are two regiments
forming part of the British house
hold troops. - They are gallant sol
diers, and every loyal British heart
is proud of them. Not only the
King s household, but yours, ours,
everybody's should have its life
guards The need of them is espe
eially great when the greatest loes of
life, diseases, find allies in the very
elements, as colds, influenza, catarrh,
the grip and pneumonia do in the
stormy month of March. The best
way that we know of to guard
against these diseases is to strength
en the system with Hood’s Sarsapa
ri f—tie grratist <1 a life guards.
It removes tlie conditions in which
titese diseases make their most suc
cessful attack, gives vigor and tone
to a the vital organs and functions,
ami imparts a genial warmth to the
blood. Remember the weaker the
system the greater the exposure to
disease. Hood's [Sarsaparilla makes
the system strong.
Beyond all Comparisons-
One of the many factors con
tributing to the remarkably rapid
and solid giowth of St. Louis is
the marvelous development or the
Southwest and other territory
tributary to that city in all lines oi
trade. In 1904 there will be held
the greatest World’s Fair in the
world. The presidential campaign
will also take place. To keep in
formed with the whole world you
should subscribe at once for that
peer of newspapers, The Twice-a
week St. Louis Republic. It is
indispensable to the farmer, mer
chant or professional man. Its
telegraphic and cable service exce’s
that of any other paper. It prints
the news fully; not imaginative
occurrences, but domestic ard
worldwide facts. It is Tiemocratic
in politics, but distinctly a national
newspaper and family journal. The
subscription price of St 00 gives
you two papers each week, 104
papers a year.
\Vli;it’s In u Name?
Everythin r;< i ) t w e name v hen t
comts to Witch Haze halve. E. C.
UeV'itt & Cos, >f Chica o discov
ert and. some year - ago, 1 ovv to ma -te a
salve from Witcn Hazel that is a spe
cific for Piles. *-'or blind, bl eding,
itching aqd protri ding Piles, eczema,
cuts, burns, brui es and all skin dis
eases, DeWitt's Salve has no equal.
his has giv. n rise to numerous
wort hie s counterfeits Ask for De-
Witt's—the genuine
L’he best pill ’ueatn tile stars ati i stripes
It cleanses the system and never
Kripes.
tattle Early risers of world repute.—
Ask for DeWitt's and take no substi
tute.
A smnl, p;M easy buy, easy to
tak 1 and easy to act. out never fail
ing in rer.lt -. DeWitt’s Little Ear. 7
R sers t? huse the secretions a 10 act
s a tonic to the liter, curing p rma
nently.
Tragedy Averted.
‘‘Just in the nick of time our little
boy was saved” writes Mrs. W. Wat
kins. of Pleasant City, Ohio. “Pneu
monia had played sad havoc with
him and a terrible cough set in be
sides Doctors treated him but he
grew' worse every day. At length we
tried Dr. King's New Discovery for
Consumption, and our darling was
saved. He's now sound, and welfc"
Everybody ougi t to know, i's the
the only cure for Coughs, Cold and
ajl Lung diseases Guaranteed by
Young Bros,, diuggists.
A Remarkable Case.
One of the most remarkable cases o‘
a cold, deep-seated, on the lungs,
causing pneumonia, is that of Mrs.
Gertrude E. Fenner, Marion. Ind ,
who was entirely cured by tin use of
One Minute Cough Cure. She says:
1 lie coughing a id” straining so
v eakened me that I run down in
weig it from 148 to impounds. I tried
a number of remedies to no avail un
til I used One Minute Cou>. h Cure.
Four bottles of this wonderful rem
edy cured me entirely of the cough,
strengthened my lungs ami restored
me to my n mnal weight, health and!
strength ” j
The Nied cf "the Farmers Son'
■Jam A* Wilson, Sgcretarv of A ifjti'fti 1411 re,
in the n. t
Although the farm keepa the,
balance of trade in the nation’s
fav< r, furnishes two-thirds of otir
expoi ts, contributes to our uiami
facturing supremacy bv providing
cheap food for our irecha ics, com
paratively little has been done to
ward educating the farmer for his
work. To be sure, the United
States has done more for him than
any other country. In 1862, con
gress endowed agricultural colleges
to teach the sciences relating to
agriculture. In 1867, experiment
stations were provided tor where
research might be made into the
operatins of nature.
But considering that Americans
pay more money for public eduea
| tions than any othtr people on
I earth, comparatively small propor
tion of the sum is devoted to stim
! ulating and aiding that half of our
j population who cult’vate the soil.
| The tendency of priifiaiy education
has been to lead the country youth
away from the farm instead of
helping him in the study of those
sciences relating to production. It
would be politic and patriotic to
incorporate into the farm youth’s
education some knowledge that
shall bear more directly upon his
future life and work.
Kidney ami Bladder Troubles.
Kidney, Bladder, U>ethral and similar
trouides are eaused tiv an excess ot uri**,
luetic an<i lithic* acids in ilie system.
FRIi.SOL. the great Cslilornia Rheu
matic Remedy, neutralizt s the acid and
afiM:t#a cure. For book of particulars,
-end two-cent stamp to the Lamar &
Rankin Drug C Atlanta. La., or
l KiOSOL Chemical Cos., Los Angeles,
< al. This is a remedy of great merit
Druggists sell it at SI.OO per bottle, or six
Uott.es tor *r>.oo.
Instructor (of-class in ph\s"’
ogy) What do you know concer*]
ing the sebaceous folicles?
Boy at foot of class (making a
wild guess)—Sebaceous folicies is
the name of the new senator trom
trie state of Washington . —Chicago
Tribune.
Clean out all the waste matter
that heavy winter eating has left
in your body and tone up vour
system by a course of Ramon’s
Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets. A
inon th’s treatment. 25 cents
have been grown by thousands of sat 1
isfied customers for over fifty years.!
They are as good a3 car. be procu-ed any- I
where in the world. At the prices listed in
our catalogue we deliver goads to you FREE
o: express or mail charges.
Vicß’s Garden.
: CSi, Floral Guide :
for 1003
Valuable to everyone who plants seeds,
whether it’s only a flower bed or an
immense farm. It is not a mere cata
logue, but a work oi reference, full of
profitable information. A book of over
100 illustrated pages. Free, if you
mention this paper. Write for it.
J {
Farmer’s HandbooK
A valuable reference book that tells all about
the culturd and care of crops, preparation of
land, fertilizing„spraying„etc. Sent FREE if
desired.
JAMES VICK’S SONS
Rochester, New York
Would You Know
Howto Dress Well?
Toilettes.
The original and practical Fashion Journal
of America. Its styles are recognized
as the best authority oil dressmaking,
fci.oo per year; single copies, 2 5 cents.
Junior Toilettes.
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ers and in the home. |*.oo p-r year;
single copies, 10 cents. Sample copies on
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fVt h-anf one representsrftrr in st fry
. totln.
Of all booksefwrs/or address directly
TOILETTES FASHION CO.
Toilettes Fashion Building,
Y 26 East 22d Street, New York.
BU RPEE’S
mail you get your gkone# worth in the Beit Seedi that Grow— and J 2
hare you i choice of Ra re Novelties for 1903, which cannot be h'ad ,1
i where. Write to-day (a postal card will do) for our complete cabins
—FREE to all who intend to purchase seeds. , f. ATLEE BURPEE & CO., Philadelphia
peabsons wmzm &
Here ate a few of the features now running or soon to appear. Their titu
authors speak for themselves uud insure interesting reading: vines and
The Picaroons -A Romance Roguery, l>v Oku : r Crs-nass and Will Irwin
Sir Henry Morgan Buccaneer, by Cvkis lownsend Hradv.
True Political Stories Include The Plot to Kilim.l mcoln and Tackson’e n ,
Calhoun, by Edward Vallandk.iiam. J ‘- l ' sons k'uarrel wi-.h
People You Ktow -Roosevelt in College, by Evert Jansen Wendell- Mi- First r a
Th'.odore ko.,s, vek. by Akthlk h. Cutler; Torn .Na St C r ? Ua:e '
by Albert Th.elow Paine. -Cartoon:^
Oturtllng Disclosures ot European Courts
t hese sensational revelations of an international spy throw „
25=5 - Dreyfus Mystery; The Peace Rescript of the Czar; Who Reallv txi' 11 *
King Humbert; lhe late Greek-'l urkish War. dU> K!lle il
Mainly About Woman Kt ieiving each month what Woman has accomplished mdr-i t ..
■ and by organized effort. ‘ QUa -y
Joromo vs. Crime- l he thrilling story of how District Attorney William Travers Ter. ~
undertaken, single handed, the desperate task of ridding x e „ 1 a '
of its vice and crime, will create .. Li-haching sensation. It i s r . ‘ '
ble for this Story to be told in it. entirety at once. The t.r-- " "
appear in April Pearson’s, out March 15th, while the’tw,, : 1 •" '
installments will appear in the i.sui*. . , May and June
BOOK BA&GAmS LL: ■
ceptioi.;ii y low prices. This pian i •
practically the entire fiction product of every American Look pt i .uhcr. special bar an - • i s
lowing being specimens, will be otiered each month. ° ’ ‘ c 1 '
i P Sj ’ lscrih - no ' v rTlil '*: et uny \.ume of the g?
fotinwin / iji&7ORILAL riTfefc
1. .Alfred the Great q. Geuipiis Khan 1 7. Charles i. 2x. L
2. Margaret of Anjou xa. F-rter the Great *3. Charles 11. Mabn- r-• ■
3. Richard 1. ix. Xerxes IMary Ot.een <f. Scots 27. Her.rvi V
4 Richard 11. 1 2. li i:;nib:l .0. ljue,-i j v-.0-.j £3. Herr.aiu' C< rt- ■
5. William the Conqueror 13. Julius Casar ex. Richard G*. 2 r } . Joseph l l
o. Alexander the Great 14. Nero 22. Cleopatra 30. Kin* IMI ; U^1 ' C
7. Cyrus the Great 15. Pyrrhus 23. Horteuse 1 r ,yj s \ j\‘
8 Darius the R^uul.i 4. J*.sephii:e V>. ] ous j ;, ;
Order by number, are „.ven only for PKARSON’S subscriixrs
Thes-* i istoriesluve li *r-tfor : i sen sil :<iiu iai •hi b-xti rajular pri •.ji . Io \k , s ,
may it:.it* single volumes at 35 cents, po-uige prepaid by ua. and I y order me in uii wax v. ■ ■, tr . , . r
C >i.i, .ec- tii; set.
j Abraham Lincoln's opinion cf these Historical Ctkbrities: “I ward t. tier’s
a.id your brother tor Abbott’s Series of Histories. ( have m.. education uLudi to u^-fec 5 '•
the profound works of voluminous historians; au.d if I had 1 have no tire ur- ad i\i id
yo ir Series of Histories gives me, in brief compass, just that knoude ••;>;<? of pa-: it.* :. > V
which l need. 1 have read them with the greatest interest. To them i # am indebted L ' •
ad the historical knowledge 1 have.”
The•2adofMaide-L.no, A.E Burr
The Maiing of a Marchioness,
Frances Hodgscn Burnett
The Method3 of Lady Walderhuret,
Frances Hodgson Burnett
Tristram of Blent, Anthony Hope
WolfvilU Days, Alfred Haary Lewis
In the Midst of Alarms, Robert Barr
J&nioe Meredith, PaulLeiccaterFord
Blennerhassett, Chas. Felton Pidgin
Quincy Adams Sawyer, “ “
7fa Grucis, F. Marion Crawford
Saracine ea, “ “
In the Palace of the King, “
r ooud Thoughts of an Idle Fellow,
J K Jerome
Kang Noanett. F. J. Stimson
The Nerve of Foley, F. H. Bpeanran
The Fowler. Beatrice Harraden
Handers. Elyyn Barron
The Bath Comedy, A. and E. Castle
Graustark, G. B HcCutcheon
Col. Carter of Cartersville,
F. H. Smith
Wolfville, A H. Lewis
Forty Modern Fables, George Ade
Mr. Dooley’s Philosophy,
P P. Dunne
.The Wages of Sin, Lucas Malet
Marcella, Mrs. Humphry Ward
In the Name of a Woman,
A. W Marchmont
The Caetle Inn, Stanley J. Weyman
The New R ctor, “ “
Smtimental Tommy, J. M. Barrie
Tae Adventures of Bherlock Holmes,
Doyle
Gentleman of France,
Stanley J. Weyman
1 m-son’s costs 10 cCn-s i co\fy or Sr no a year. The price is never cut with our perir. : - ; --
•ou a prospectus free upon application. Subscrib • now and enjoy all these good
PUBLISHING CGMPANY, - 3 O 3O Astor Place New V> -
... How Can I Keep Up with
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IT P re | t y hard to keep well informed on the
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t ing to send $2.50 for a year’s subscription.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT Bays;
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se to me that I could not otherwise have had access to ;
M C all . earnCßt * nd thoughtful men, no matter how widely
their ideas diverge, are given free utterance in its columns."
EJC-PRESiDENT GROVER CLEVELAND says; J "
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£ ' The Review of Reviews Cos.
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Read The Review of Reviews
FARMING
J THE SOUTH
the Passenger Department of the Illi
nois t entral Railroad Company is issu
ing monthly circulars concerning fruit
growing vegetable gardening, stork
laismg dairying, etc., in the states of
Kentj|eky,West Tennessee. Mississippi
Lver >‘ farmer or home
s Tdress W m m tor T linl his
I nd ’ we Wlli
n, *}f Ur e ’ * 'reulars Nos. 1, 2,4 and 5
FRED D. MILLER.
Trav. Pass. A gt, Illinois Central R. R.
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A War Tima Wooing,
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The Scui of Lilith, Marie Cortlii
The Sorrow3cf Satan, “ “
Zbka, “ “
The Prisoner of Zends.,
Anthony Hope
A Lady of Quality,
Frances Hodgson Barnett
In Connecticn with the De Willough
byCliim, FrancesHodgsor Burnett
Drc-:s, Henry Seton Kerriman
With Edged Tools, “ “
The Sowers. “ •*
The Damnation of Theron Ware,
Harold Frederic
Agatha Webb, Aura Katherine (J-een
Jessamy Bride, F Frankin'- J.-ore
The Greatest Gift, A. W. Marchmont
A Dash for a Throne, *• “
By Right of Sword, “ “
Soldi>r Stories, Ra’yard Kipling
The Gaddy, E. L. Voynich
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FRED D. MILLER,
Trav.Pass- A?’’’ ’
No. I Brownßl.g ATLANTA,^
Kodoi Dyspepsia C
Digests what you eat.
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A Man's Woman, I on, Ncrm
Ti) Lion s Drwd. Dud eld CrU-,
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The WorldLngs, Lcns:d Mt-r '•
In Hostile Red, J. A. Aitshs’.i.'
MoTeague. Frank Norris
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Heart's Tighw-y, MarvE.v'
On ilte Wing of Ccoaciccs.
Jfel Chotile: _
Dracnla, Bram C-toter
Arms and the W:,man, E, KacGr;
The Isle of ths Winds, E. P Cr- -l**.
The Lady of Cast;.'. Kerch,
Owen Khc-scnajri
The Professor's Daughter,
tv a., m ’ Anna Farstha:
A Modern Mercenirv,
K. and He ietl: Pr:t: l e-i
The Black Pout la:-, S R. C:
The Good Red Earth,.idea i’h ,'c • t
The Backwoodsm- . H A f-■; ••
Rood to Front-use, cam it! Me vr n
Joscelyn Cheshire,
So rah B Kenri y
The 'lack To-toiss, Frederick Vi" -
The Cho’- Ifl7isibl- Jam's L. A ; -
The Landlord at Lien % Bead,
W. D Hc-a-alh
The Read to Paris R. S. Stepasns
An Enei-vtotheEing, “
A Gentleman Player,