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A FRENCH HARNESS. '
When a judge has once had to deal with
a case involving patent rights, he ta apt to
retain forever thereafter a firm disinclina
tion to hear any fiw of the sort. B hap
judge managed to defer each one os it
came up and slide it down the list. When
th? end of the ten# wm well within reach,
the patent practitioners began to demur a
little at this procrastination, and finally
the leader of-their bar wqs deputed tosask
the set aom<of thtoa toss* for
hearing. Hr carried Wit* hhnVailKof
the cases, with a side memorandum to in
dicate what class of machinery was in
volved. ' M i
The judge looked down the list, hot at
all anxious to hear any patent case, but
recognised would have to do so
in the end. a»i therefore prepared to yield
as graciously as. possible. He noted that
this case involved an ore separator, that
the next had to do with some electrtc arp
paratus, that almost all to them promised
to involve him in the deepest physios and.
the most complicated mechanics. At last
hit eye rested on case 6287, against which
was made the mamorandtan “Frenchhar
ness. ”
“There, I’ll take up that case,” he said.
“There isn’t much time left in this term,
but y«ra tontot te| ? g optoeif,
long/ lAMtojlni
I hate-had thete liter - T kfiWaH
about a harness to begin with, and it
won’t be any trouble tp plok up the French
twist to it. Well get that ease out to the
, way in short order.” f - s ‘ !
The trial opened at the time appointed;::
The opposing briefs were volumes crowd
ed with 'working drawings of the most
complicated sort, the letterpress was filled
with equations and mathematics in gener
al, all necessary to elucidate some of the
most Intricate processes in the arts. Qlfi J
addition the courtroom was filled with
working models until it took on the ap
pearance of a factory or an industrial ex
hibition, and t>is was font the beginning. r
The counsel cited q host of decisions in
conflict upon every essential point. AB‘
last the case was submitted. After the re
cess some one congratulated the judge on
having but one ease unfinished.
“Bon't speak to me, I’ho 1 ’ho groaned. “I
told those patent lawyers that I knew all
of toy vacation. It took Up twomratiis
before I could make head or tall of It, and
then I was six weeks writing the deci
sion.”
A French harness is an appliance in
connection with the weaving of figured
cloths, the intricate ingenuity of which
has made it possible to employ the loom in
the reproduction of any design. ,In com
parison with It ordinary machinery Is as
simple as a grindstone.—New York Sun.
; v . **ii.
WMfe ahaU Be Witb C&MMMir $
The care to Gockswata Cteusan to.
cruiser New York.apd later wMHUtegiil
mately of the stopper Merrimac, will re
quire the attention of Captain Chadwick
and of Admiral Sampson as soon as the
young man gets out of the hands of the
Spaniards, by exchange of prisoners or
otherwise and returns to his duty.
The cockswain has committed an offense
which baa some parallels in naval history,
but which never loses its Interest, however
often repeated. It would have rejoiced
Marfyat's heart to tell about Clausen’s
sin. In leaving his own post without or
ders and stowing himself away upon the
Merrimac, so that he might share the glory
of an expedition which seemed to mean
almost certain death to all concerned,
Clausen not only violated diadpline in an
unpardonable way, but he was also guilty
of gross unfairness to the 4,000 men or
thereabouts In the fleet who had volun
teered for the shme perilous service, and
were jusfe as crazy as he was to go along
with Hobson.
This latter aspect of the case is that
which will principally strike the blue
jackets and others who volunteered to sac
rifice their lives with Hobson for the sake
of their flag and were not accepted. Clau
sen state a march on them. They and be
had .th* terne courage to go, but they had
what he lacked—namely, the courage to
obey orders andxtay behind. He is a brave
Clausen in one all'lmportant particular.
Nevertheless, whatever martW Jaw may
say on the subject,« 'ls written that no
man’s life shall be put In jeopardy twice
for the same offense, and the insubordi
nate cockswain’s life has certainly been in
jeopardy once already for his offense.—
New York Sun.
Enoch Arden With Tartatioas.
Tennyson has enshrined in verse the
story of the sailor who returns home after
years of absence to Asia mb wife married.
M. Zola has also written a short tale on
the same sort of subject, and k 'yeal ver
sion of the well theme eomes from
the prosaic district of La Chapelle in Paris.
It appears thgtedgurlng the Franco-Ger
man wSr HfotouJa grocer of Vincennes,
was supposed b/hls wife to have been
killed in one of tire battles around the
city. Previously h!8 house had beeii shelled
by the Prussians, and his wife Weybayay
from Vincennes with her ehQd. When
the war was over, Blntoiptarned |o his
suburban town* and, seeing his old resl
denoe destroyed, arrived at the ooadluaien
that his wife and child were killed and
burled beneath the ruins. Drying his,
tears, he set to work again, made money
and remarried. Meanwhilo hterwtfe beard
of his return, but kept awayiflfoin htte
and brought uj3let
now a married-hntlrreatim'
that his father was killed in battle.
Lately the Original Mme. Btaot had a
dispute with one of her frleada. who hap
pened to be In t.ht > rwm)MK <the secret.
The to have tpid
Mme. Btnot’s sob that bis sited'
and living fWMu Gus
tave lilnot repaired an<faa|hdAim®ninß
with the other Mire.
ranie-Paris Letter. '"’’V
- j
-
“Talk abont tthMtatetar ttefo hteW at*
Major Bartlett’s, of the First regiment,
has got more sense and patriotism than-a
whole ■ fol.to Tte BpMkMhsta* :
Robert E. Lee, the now famous private, •
who, after being rejected a half dozen
times, finally got into the Second battaMonr
and was assigned to duty as oetertyta
Major Bartlett. “That h<wre, str ( ” oon
tinued the. “General,”, aa he is known,
“was being curried by arecrult. -13fo.btoa :
didn’t know .his business, sir, and he
didn’t baM do his work. Just as he had
combed out the horse’s tall as a fin ish I
touch and was getting aWay, the horse
shot out bis hind legs, snorting, as the to-,
emit went up into the air, ‘Remember
the mans’ ’’—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
CATACOMBS »N AMERICA.
She Only Bartel Maoe of tire Kted M
Knowing what you expect to see here It
is only natural for you to enter the ceme
tery with some little nervousness and
trepidation, but you are reassured when
F®* do enter the Mg gate; for there is
> Bsthing uncanny or “trtete’* vet tn Fm
teen: On the contrary, this 7 Mexican
“God’s acre” Is all tranquil and bright
and beautiful, and you do not think even
of the square black lettered spaces that
are houeyoombod, one above the other, all
the way around the great wall of the pan
theon. a-Vhese square spaces, fire rows to
***"*,> coitain a vault saeh* and that is
waerethelutermeitoMmaiM I ■
It Is an enormous place, this cemetery,
and well that It Is so, for during the great
typhus epidemic in 1898 It received, so
people soy, «bout & third of the then popuf
lotion of Guanajuato. For a time the city'
council kept some sort to tally on the
deaths, but as later ort thfi council Itself
undmust to ths physicians succumbed to
tha fatal- disease no count was kept, and
interment waaaaade in n cfntoM>r«inh dug
i tht cofilu,
’ Md^t^n 1110 C * PomOny of coB^ S was
Howervat waiving thoreatterof epidern-
Jffcd* Gtomajuato when a person dies
the family at once arrange to rent one of
the boxlike spaces In this pantheon, rent |1
Pte ta advance. Then the
I
to wait the last trump, but to await the
next pantheon pay day. When the day
eontes/lii the fondly oanH rates the |W for
flto you, thO has
sages below in the cata
cumbae. The catacutotete comprise enor
mous underground passages that run all
yvay orotaid. the pantheon, sv . - . .
J .(Tie patoWtaaulukhes back aMg flat
stone over in a-corner of the cemetery and
invites you to step Into a small dark hole
which adroHs one person at * time
and coptainsA small, winding stone stair,
‘ built pretty niUcft- on the corkscrew plan.
Jto®* with more sente of
humor than grace, has pflaced the tallest,
ugliest ahd nnoahnlest (if there is such a
word) of all the mummies at the very bot
tom of the last step, so arranged that as
you descend the crooked stairs you land
right into his bony arms.
R so hfcly a griifiything to see, ontoybw
are safely there. Imagine to yourself tong,
seemingly endless white passages, silent
as only death ean make them, heaped up
at each end with great piles of bones—the
bones to those who refused to mummify—
and lined thickly with mummy after
mummy, horrible, brown, skinny things,
fastened in a standing position against
the walls, many of them with their grin
ning, fleshlete faces turned toWaiti other
niuaindbl, Jti though in conversation, oih- -
era witL heads bowed, as ta meditation or
psayer, and , others with/foots blankly
Staring Up at the Stone walls above! Once
seen;'ib *• a tiring that you do not won
target.
Along one side are the gentleman mum
mies, on the other the ladlqs, and indis
criminately mixed among them are the
pdor baby mummies.
There is not, strange to say, the sllght
eet- htat' to a disagreeable odor; rather
there is a smell of lime. The place is beau
tifully clean and white, and there are
even some birds that build down here and
bring ud their von ng ones among the
mummies.—Dr. Gilbert Cunningham in
Godey’s Magazine. ..
■ i. «« -
ImperfhcOy tTnderstoed.
At a certain east end Sunday school
some time ago the teacher talkedtothe In
fant class upon ti>e evils connected with
strong drink. The little tots of 4 and 5
listened attentively to a long tirade against
the rum demon. Finally the teacher cried:
“Wine Is a meeker!”
The children pricked up their cars at
the teacher’s vehemence.
“Wine is a mocker!” she criedtigain,
Hire one to the prophets of old.
The children looked very grave Indeed.
“Wine is a mocker!” cried the teacher
for the third time, and then she turned
suntence ta big letters on
“Now, children,” she exclaimed as she
whified around, “I Want you to tell me
|w|iAl winetaffllQ fI
The little ones looked about Vacantly.
“Wine Is a mocker!” cried .the teacher.
*Now, WMTIs fltet tittle boy!”
The first little boy looked thoughtful
“Wine—is—a—marker,” he drawled.
“No, no,” said the teacher. “Next lit
tle boy.”
The next little boy looked still more J
thoughtful. *
“Wino -jp -a- -market,” he ventured.
“Ho, no,” fidgeted the teacher. “Next
little boy.” rT'i’Y
The third littje boykmiled- He was a
self confident
“Wine—is— /he bravely
announoeds«*<i'“ ■ -s
Arto then tifoxtaacher gave it up.—
Cleveland Plain tiealer.
I =?, Vitality or the Wild Gooeo.
Fatmer H. of IftwelL Lake
gunning ta the Kanka
kee marote-Yre came upon a flock to wild
geeoeatak b«MS* asveual of tiwna one to
wtach astonished him by having as a
‘hiteAdw#! Jqn£ That
goose, became the wonder of the neighbor
hood And-tifo stndgfot acientlsto: the only
concluslen reached being thta-wherever
National museum tata tire bird and arrow
could have come from no other place on
the globe than the Yukon valky, for ex
cept ta that region no such arrows are
made. Science does not pretend to say how
long the goose had jmroiv to ti
Yukon tribesman until ite death,
from the shot to a civilised guMer down
km an Indiana marsh. The bird disdained
tWofASaMRSIi:
I«ar>MSm-4 Zi« tboonnd.
to miles from its summer home ta arctic
dteeiaStan as It -wee journeying south
—Cincinnati Enquirw.
“Hope is a fins thing,” said Mr. Stay
bolt, “sure. Wd be a pretty miserable
lot, most to us, without it. And a man
speu on nothing else, without doing a
blessed tiling but hope that things will
come his way. But white hope makes a
light it doesn’t give out very much
beat; if a maa wants that, he mutt dig for
ft. It is a fortunate thing for a manto
make this discovery early, and the man
—New York ti*n<
JAPANESE DECORATION DAY.
The Visit to th* Cemeteries Follewe* by
Sports aad Pioaies.
> Army drill, discipline, Inspection and
parade, with magnificent decorations, flags
r 1 and symbolism ta leaf, flower and extem
' porlzed material, form the flito part of the
( celebration exercises Then follow wor
ship, the ceremonies to religiou, visitation
, to the shrines and cemeteries by soldiers,
, people, dignitaries and prltata’ After W
freshing the inner man come the afternoon
sports, picnics, fireworks and general re
laxation with lanterns, bouts, river joys
' and promenades or moon viewing at
i night. Let me describe on occasion that.
I remember well. It was in the far in
terior, away from the seaports, where tha
true life of the people is seen.
In the days to 1871, when the national
z |pirit was bursting the cocoon of feudal-
Ism, it would be like describing “the Mul
ligan guards” or Falstaff’s company to tell
of the parade to a provincial regiment ta
hybrid transition dress. Uniformity was,
however, gradually established in a no
tional army, imvy and civil administra
tion, and then I saw in Fukui these same
Kchizen troops smartly dressed ta neat
uniform of French style with the mikado’s
crest on their caps. They looked very
promising. In Tokyo afterward, during
r i three years, I saw 10,000 troops at a time,
with their drills, evolutions, dress parades
, and details of barrack life and training.
i ; In earnestness and perseverance they al
| ready showed what loyal soldiers could do
to the Satsuma rebellion of 1877, and
i what, with the uprising of the nation, was
possible ta Korea and China in 1894-6.
On May 4as I remember, tens to thou
sands of peopte visited the new cemetery
ta Fukui, called the Sho-Kon-Sha, or Soul
Beckoning Rest. Among the new tombs
of the loyal men slain ta the civil war of
1868-70 fluttered many colored streamers
and banners .with memorial Inscriptions,
Hundreds came with beautiful flowers to
k , lay before and upon the monuments, In
the afternoons the ladles of the prince’s
household visited the cemetery in their
gorgeous embroidered silk gowns and gir
dles. Then I thought myself back in the
middle ages, when the figures now on
playing cards were realities, as gorgeous
with their colors. Their hair was dressed
in magnificent style in an exaggerated sort
of pompadour, outraying from the fore
head, flanking the temples in a sort of
semicircle or halo and gathered backward
" jinto a long, single tress, which in most
I cases went down to the waist and in some
almost to their feet, the back part of the
hair on the head being held together by a
pretty horn or tortoise shell comb. One
gracious lady, the prince’s wife, who with
her husband did, so much, in my year of
loneliness, when I saw only rarely a white
man’s face, to make my lot comfortable,
was dressed ta a simple but very rich garb
of white and crimson silk.
The flower decorated monuments, the
streaming pennants, the fluttering banners
and tho new and shining monuments,
with the reverent and exceedingly polite
.and well bred crowds of people ta that new
cemetery—which oontpasted ta its fresh
ness with the century old dainties’ ances
tral burying ground not far away, where
the mosses and lichene seem
feeding on the granite for ages, and, on
the oiljter hand, with the large city epme-
S 1 below, with its cremation furnaces
aseending columns of smoke, having
near tty a great mound many rods long
and wide and several feet high, where In
indistinguishable mass lay the ashes and
bones to humanity swept off in successive
and old time periodical famines—made a
scene forever Impressed on my memory.
Tradition locates the burial piece of one
of Japan’s 128 emperors on this hill.
Hence it is a place of much interest.—ln
dependent.
The Ameer of Afghanlstaa.
There is nothing to that slatternly un
tidiness, combined with lavish expendi
ture, in the ameer’s establishment that
characterizes the residences of Indian
princes. Except on state occasions, when
he dresses in a sort of European uniform,
he wears a long, loose coat made of some
lovely pale colored French brocade or sat
in, lined in winter with fur—sable, stone
marten or red foxes’ feet perhaps—and in
summer with the shot glace silks that
come from Bokhara. Harmonizing with
these, but seldom matching them, are his
skullcap and handkerchief, the whole
making a chasmtag moss of color with his
ooudh, which is draped in the most elab
orate style and is constantly being altered.
In summer it is generally covered with
silks and stdins, and in winter with cash
mere shawls, furs, ete., and has a velvet
valance bordered with a massive gold
fringe.
, r I have constantly seen him throw off a
shawl that offended his eye because it did
not harmonize with the rest and order in
another, and’when he chooses his handker
chiefs for the day (never less than three or
four, for he snuffs, os do most Afghans)
he mechanically, as it were, holds first
one and then another up against his coat,
and if he does not fancy the shade throws
that one down and takes up another, and
so ob until he is satisfied, talking all the
time as if he were hardly conscious of
what ho was doing.—Pearson’s Magazine
The French Red Crees.
According to the Figaro of Paris, the
French Red Cross has recently opened a
subscription for the benefit of the future
wounded to the Spanish-American war
and has headed it with a contribution of
60,060 francs. “To speak frankly,” says
the writer of the article, “we owe this ac
tion to foreign nations, for they all showed
an admirable generosity toward our
wounded during the war of 1870-1. The
United States sent us at that time 600,000
francs; Canada, 800,000; Spain, 20,000;
Italy, 19,000; little Denmark, 160,080;
the Argentine Republic, 260,000; Chile,
100,000; Peru, 60,000; Russia, 60,000; In
all about_B,ooo,ooo francs.
“Our Red Cross, having spent more
than 12,600,000 francs for our wounded
during the fatal year, had stillremaining
ta its treasury more than 2,000,000 franco.
At present tho society has on hand 8,000,-
000 francs. It sent to Spain 30,000 Banos
for tha wounded? in the Oarlist war, 297,-
000 ta the Turco-Russian war, 90,000 for.
the wounded ta Tunis, 530,000 for Tea
quta, 816,000 for Madagascar—ta ril
8,000,000 francs since the war with Ger
many. Tho president to ths sbeisty is now
General Fevrier.”
___________ •
Cuba and Jnata.
A woman who speaks Spanish tells me
that we don’t even pronounce the name to
the island we’re fighting about correctly.
She cumfs— that she has heard “junta’.’
pronounced “hoonta,” which I believe is
the proper pronunciation, frequently, but
she declares that even those among us who
say “hoonta” eall Cuba “Kcwba.” It
isn’t “Kewba” at all, she says. It’s“Koo
ba,” and hereafter let us try "to pronounce
It correctly.—Washington Post.
THE MOHAMMEDANS.
The Q«Mr Manner In Which They Mta
Up p.eltaton aad Marder.
The month at Ramadan, ta which the
first part to the Koran is said to have
been revealed, is observed as a fast by
all Mohammodans. The fast extends
oyer tho whole “month to raging heat”
and involves extraordinary self denial
nd seif control No food or drink of
any kind may be taken ’ from daybreak
until the appearance to the stars at
nightfall.
She rigor with which aMotapnmodon
obsesses this fost und the great gulf be
tween its obaervdnco and obedience to
the moral code are both illustrated by a
story told ta the life of one to the he
roes of India, Major J< hn Nicholson.
While Nicholson in 1854 was deputy
cenjmissioner in Bannn, a native killed
his brother and was a/reated. He was
brought before Nichobsou on a very hot
evening, looking relied and exhausted,
for he had walked many miles, and it
was the month es Ramadan.
“Why,” exclaimed Nicholson, “is it
possible that you have walked in fast
ing on a day like this?’
“Thank God,” answered the Ban
nuchi, “I am a good faster. ”
“Why did you kill your brother?”
“I saw a fowl killed' last night, and
the sight of the blood put the devil in
to me.” >
“He had chopped up his brother,
stood a long chase and been marched in
here, but he was keeping the fast,”
wrote the commissioner to a friend, that
he might know what sort of blood
thirsty and bigoted people he, Nichol
son, had to govern.
One day a wretched little child was
brought before the commissioner. He
had been ordered by his relatives of the
Waziri tribe to poison fopd.
“Don’t you know it is wrong to kill
people?” asked Nicholson.
“I know it is wrong to kill with a
knife or a sword, ” answered tho child.
“Why?”
“Because the blood leaves marks,”
answered the trained poisoner.
A Pathan chief, who fell by Nichol
son’s side in a skirmish, left a little son,
upon whom the English officer lavished
care and attention. One day the Lyear
old boy asked his protectonto grant him
a. special favor.
“Tell me first what you want ”
“Only your permission, sahib, to go
and kill mgr cousins, the children of
your hnd 'my deadly enemy, my uncle,
Faltri Khan. ”
* ‘ To kill your cousins?’ ’ exclaimed the
Englishman, horrified at the answer.
“Yes, sahib, to kill all the boys while
they are young. It is quite easy now; ”
“.Joa littU wtaNjrf WbtiM yre
murder your own cousfbi?”
“Yes, sahib, for if.l don’t they will
certainly murder me. ”
The little boy wished to follow Pa
ttani- usage ami thougffb ft vrefr- hand
that; his guardian shorita prevent his
taking so simple a precaution.
DID THE GIRLS PAINT?
How the Qaeetion Was Decided aad a
Bet Paid.
Two well known, society swells went
to the Imperial theater one afternoon
when “East Lynne” was the bill A
few evenings before there had oe«i dis
cussed at their dub the subject of 'wom
en-painting their faces. Several girls
were mentioned who were suspected by
their admirers of wearing an artificial
carnation bloom. Others defended the
young damsels and said it was natural
How to find out and win a wager
that was laid then and there was the
subject of the yonng men’s visit to the
Imperial
“East Lynne” is a play which ought
to make all women cq/they seasoned,
fOT it makes even men’s throats grow
thick. They sent tickets
seats to the girls under discussion, beg
ging them to invite whomsoever they
pleased of their acquaintances, as they,
the donors, would not be able to escort
them.
The ruse was successful In an upper
box sat the young men ready to win or
lose the wager, and right below, in the
parquet, where they could see their
faces and every move of their hands,
were the young women. There were six
of them, two of whom died copious
tears and hesitated not to wipe
them, away with their handkerchiefs,
while the other four never winced.
Among those who did not cry were the
girls suspected of laying on the red
pigment, and it was on just that evi
dence that the bet hinged. That night
the wager was paid with a supper at
the University club.—Stj. Louis Repub-
She Will Teach Bennet Makins.
Mlle. Valentino About, daughter to
Edmond About, the author, is going to
open a “class in hat and bonnet mak
ing. ” Everybody in Paris is surprised
at the necessity for it, as during his
lifetime About kept open house in his
hotel on the Rae and a fete
that he gave to the Authors* society in
tho chateau he had just bought at Pou
tqise is remembered as a&nost princely.
By what reverse of fortune About’s
family were left destitute nobody seems
to know. Although he himself began
life humbly as the son of a grocer, his
daughter was a brilliant young society
woman brought up ta luxury, and every
body is admiring the courage with
which she has’undertaken to solve the
difficult problem to the “struggle for
Bfe.» Rostan HiiMV'
Her Ducky Day.
A* North Carolina paper aya:
“A negro struck hiZwife two terrible
blows on the head with an ax. The
negro escaped to the woods, and his
wife soon revived and said: *1 mighty
glad he done it, kase now he’ll stay
cl’ar er de neighborhood en I won’t have
ter soppo’t him no mo’. It wua a lucky
day ter me w’en he hit me wid dat
ax!’ ”
Very few to us are as thankful as that
tor these little blessings ta disguise. -
Atlanta Constitution.
I
--- -■ ■ . ■ . ...
1AJ ■<*
Wlldli 19
a wk ’ Mr Mr ' J® A
A IH ■ ■
Ml " St W S ba
Caatoria ta D& Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infonts
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine a.»r
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless sulistitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups and Castor OIL
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty .years’ use by
Millions of Mothers. Caatoria destroys Worms and
allays Feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour
Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria rellcvcfi
Teething troubles, cures Coustiimtion and Flatulency. *|
Castoria assimilates the Food, rcgnlatca the Stmuacli
and Bowels, giving healthy and natural bleep. Castoria
is tho Children's Panacea—the Mother’s .Friend.
Castoria. | * Castoria.
•• Caatoria to excellent medicin* for! •■Cuxtorln i» «o well rZ-.p'.td to child, r-u
Children. Mothers here repeatedly fold ma that I recommend it aa superior tv any .
of ita good eflfcct upon their children." . scription known so me." ; >
Br. <3>. C. Osgood, Ixnrell, Mass. I 11. A. Ascunn, M. %, Brooklyn, M. V. ' ||
"The use of Castoria Uao universal nod its ' “For several year* I have rccommen.’. d
merits so well hpown that it seems a work j Castoria,. and shall always continue t • •*.»
of supererogation to endorse it. Pewarethe so as it has invariably produced
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria : rUMlta.” ’
within easy reach." V Hdwtn F. Pakbk*. M. D-, New Votk Cijy. -.--'O
Caxlos Makttx, D.D., New Vork'City. ' ”
■ . "We have three vhildeen and they ’ Cry for . .fc
" J prescribe Castoria every day for ehildrott . pitcher’s Castorih.' When we give one nxfo.«, =
who are suftring from constipation, with , the others cry for one too. I shall nlwnvs
better effect than 1 receive from any other take pleasure in reootmnendlng thh best
combination of drugs.” ' child’s medicine."
Dr. L. South Ambey, N. J. Rev. W. A. Coorsa, Newport, Ky.
Children Cry fer Pitcher’s Castoria.
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SHOES, - SHOES I
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IN MENS SHOES WE HAVE THE LATEST STYLES—COIN TO«8,
GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALF TANS, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
1 AT f 2 TO |Bfio PER PAIR.
( LN LADIES OXFORDS WE HAVE COMPLETE LINE IN TAN, BLACK
AND CHOCOLATE, ALSO TAN AND BLACK SANDALS RANGING IN
< PRICE FROM 7Sc TO |B.
[ Also tan, chocolate and blackusandals and oxfords in
CHILDREN AND MISSES SIZES, AND CHILDREN AND MISSES TAN LACE
SHOES AND BLACK.
TT7 T=s I— 1
\AZ . . -ESLt*!-EX,-LN JEu
' WE HAVE IN A LINE OF
SAMPLE STRAW HATS.
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I —,-r^—, L . .
GET YOUH —
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JOB PRINTING
! DONE JLT
The Morning Call Office.
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I t
We have juat supplied our Job Office with a complete Hoe ol StaUnnuv *
i
I kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way or
;
; LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS
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STATEMENTS, - IRCULARS,
!
> ENVELOPES, NOTES,
I
I MORTGAGES, PftGCRAaIS
1
t CARDS, POSTERS
! DODGERS, _ ‘ ETC
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; We p*ry toe bret ine to FNVE)/'FW'. wi : Ibis trad*.
An altracdvt PObTEA c! aay sue can be issued on short notice.
Our prices tor work to *ll kinds will compare favorably with those obtained vow
any office in the state. When you want job print i*g oQany [drerr iptk,a nya
eall Satis&ctio* guars ate in.
I
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ALL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch. W
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