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ALBANY WEEKLY ffiRALDi SATURDAY, JULY 9, 189*
5-
HOW IT FEELS TO BE HIT IN BATTLE.
A Soldier of the Lnte War Give* an Ac
count of HI* SenNMtlon*.
When the lieutenant hod disap
peared from view I turned my face
to the front, bolstering my trembling
hopes with the thought that this Inst
victim was a shining mark, as I cer
tainly was not. Besides, I believed
that the sharpshooters could not get
the range on our end of the line.
Then followed a “thud" close to me,
and my next sensation was that I
was prostrate on the ground, pierced
through my left arm, heart und spine
with a rod and pinned to the earth.
This was the physical sensation,
but of course was not the fact.
Then through my brain there flitted
quickly a vision sueh as the thought
of a battle most commonly brings to
mind—masses of warring men strug
gling individually for the mastery.
I seemed to be in the midst of the
melee, and with all the Indignation 1
could express was shouting to the
men in gray, “There, you have hit
me I”
Next I was being lifted and sup
ported by some one, and a voice said,
“He isn't hit, but something is the
matter." “Yes," said another voice
sternly, “he-is hit and as good as
dead. Take him to the rear.” I had
so far recovered as to comprehend
these remarks, and instantly con
cluded that I was the subject of a
practical joke. In another moment
I was seized with the keenest pain I
have ever experienced in my life, in
the region where it had seemed in
my swoon that I was run through
with a rod.
Now what had happened was thisi
I had been in a sitting poBture, rest
ing partly on the ground, partly upon
my legs doubled beneath me, the left
hand holding my weapon, the arm
well braced Across my chest so that
the middle of the upper bone pressed
against the heart On my arm were
two shirt sleeves, a jacket sleeve, an
overcoat sleeve and the overcoat
capo, and a musket ball moving in
the direction of my heart and spine
—that is, obliquely to the front of
my person—had ticked-the limb of a
bush a few feet away, keeled over
and struck flatwise on the arm, im
bedding itself in the flannel and the
flesh.—George L. Kilmer in Popular
Science Monthly.
A True Story.
In the upper reservoir at Moun
tain View cemetery are planted a
large number of German carp—the
Ashes now ranging in size from four
to seven inches in length. The res
ervoir borders Blair park on the
west, and the menagerie at the park
consists of a big Tom cat Tom
1b an expert fisher cat. He creeps
along the margin of the reservoir,
and when a carp [Kikes up its nose
into the grass at the edge of the lake
to feed, Tom deftly pulls his carp-
ship out and eats him. This is a
true cat and fish story, and no dia
gram is considered necessury to
prove it—Oakland Times.
V.nttliatlon of Xtooma.
To offset the constant exhalation
of organic matter from the skin, as
well as from the lungs, occupied
rooms should be so arranged ns to al
low a constant change of the air con
tained in them. To meet this con
dition properly, an exit for air, as
well as an inlet, should be provided.
A fireplace is perhaps an ideal out
let as it has a constant draft which
assures an outgo of considerable
power.
As for a test of the quality of air
—its purity or impurity—nature has
provided us with a most useful one.
and in all ordinary coses the only
necessary one, in the senso of smell.
If this sense is offended by character
istic “stale" odor of an ill ventilated
room, there is no appeal from its
verdict, no matter how mnny venti
lntors may bo in operation. This
test, it should be stated, can be ap
plied only by the olfactories of ono
just entering a room from tho out
side.
We have heard from the lecture
platform advice delivered to an in
telligent body of students in a pre
paratory school as to just how far tho
windows of the sleeping apartment
should be raised each [light to assure
a wholesome air to tho occupant.
The distance given was exact, no al
lowance being mads for variations
of temperature, wind or weather.
A single window opened at both top
and bottom, but at distances varying
according to the temperature, the
presence or absence of winds, etc., is
a suitable provision for ventilation.
It is safe to say that if the air in
any room seems os pure to a person
entering it from out of doors as the
outdoor air itsplf, that air is well fit
ted for breathing; such, at any rate,
it should always be, and such should
be the test applied by an intelligent
observer.
With such an ideal before us, no
hard and fast' rule is called for.
With this ideal in view, and with
the homely quality of common sense
in exercise, it is well also to remem
ber the following facts:
A room is best for most of us at a
temperature ranging from -05 to 70
degs.; a guard, be it of the most
primitive construction, should be be
tween a draft and ourselves; the air
is not necessarily impure .when
warm nor pure when cold; tho
smaller a room is, and the more oc
cupants it has, the oftener should
the air be renewed.—Youth's Com
panion.
SOAPING GEYSERS.
PUjrlng Trick* ott Them to 2U»k*fl
Spout Between Period
Tourists in the Yellowy
tionol park got into the ha
years ago of soaping the t/i
make them spout, and the
thorities were compelled to
the rule against throwing obji
any kind into the springs, r
some of them had been perm;
injured by such treatment '
of Boaping geysers'was uccidi
discovered by a Chinese lnunc
in the Upper Geyser basin
summer of 1888.
One day he threw some sea;
tho hot spring ftom which hi
accustomed to draw water, laud,
greatly to his surprise, he prdlueed
an eruption resembling that it i true
€*rrler Pigeon* for the Nnry.
When the United States practice ship
Constellation sailed on the cadets’ sum
mer voyage Monday afternoon it had WHAT
aboard a number of homing pigeons,
to be ueed as means of communication
between the ship and points ashore. The
birds will be liberated at intervals, and
are expected to bring official messages
from the practice vessel to the naval
academy, where a loft or oote has re
cently been established,
She who would always appear
stylishly dressed must be constantly on I
the alert. Dame Fashion’s fancies are I the c * paolty of
as fickle as they are eagerly adopted., , .
To keep up with her whims requires 1 . a««v» v wn uhi have
If the experiment should prove sue- olo *« watohlng of the markets and devjj , had „ not for the
cessful the government will probably (what Is more essential) a purse well I lnv | te(1 interference of the law.
find it profitable to the navy to encour- filled with shekels. So many fads r UBf „|„ h , _ hnn ,
age the homing pigeon service with the sweep through the ranks of Fashion’s I I,U8t night " bont 12 0 olook ’ 0un(lm ’
geyser. Tourists who had comp long
distnnees to see oruptions 1 ei
small appropriation needed to carry out I devotees that a woman with a slender I tor iL*,''-“t’ J,'" '
the plane of the projector! of the enter- Dlirge OAn not keen tin with them who run8 n traln betw
prise. At present the facilities for I ona very smaH I Albany and Thomasyllle, appronehed
training birds at the naval academy are I Officers Kemp and Mooney ami rv
limited, no government appropriation nmount ofmoney may appear always t d t , t at onoe to tho dc
being available. At Fortress Monroe, well dressed. However, she must| M
tho first stopping place of the ship, It is eschew novelties,
possible several trained birds from Bal-
g lysers
111 that
Frogs »ml Snake*.
The common snake is very fond of
water. Its food consists exclusively
of frogs or fishes. All suukes eat
either living food, including eggs, or
creatures they bave themselves
killed. When pursued by a snake
the frog seems to be half paralyzed
with fear, leaping less and less pow
erfully as the snake approaches it
more nearly, and uttering feeble
cries. If a stick be so pushed through
the grass toward a frog os to imitate
the movement of a snake the frog
will exhibit the symptoms of terror
just noted.—Quarterly Review.
The Pain from * Corn.
The exquisite pain caused by corns
is generally due to the presence of a
small abscess beneath the indurated
skin which constitutes the com.
The pressure of the shoe irritates the
flesh beneath and causes soreness
and a small accumulation of pus,
which cannot escape, and so induces
a pain that is often intense. To cut
away the com is sure to relieve the
trouble entirely, but piercing it with
a needle will often accomplish the
same result.—St. Louis Globe-Demo
crat.
Collecting Colored Politer*.
The latest fad in tho line of collect
ing is the collecting of colored post
ers—the bills with which the enter
prising poster adorns boards and
fences and dead walls about town.
In France and in several of the Ger
man cities this new mania has taken
a deep hold and is spreading rapidly.
In England the fad is frowned upon
■by dealers who have other curios to
sell and who fear that this new rage
will harm the “lecitimnte.”
A good thing has jnst leaked out con
cerning a church fair held in Utica not
very long ago. When the booths were
being put in position two men had a dis
agreement os to what position in the
hall a certain booth should occupy. It
was a small matter of ’bourse, but each
disputant was sure he was right. There
was a war of words, and one invited the
other outside to settle tho difficulty.
Those who witnessed tho settlement said
that it was unique and amusing. Which
party set the ball rolling will never be
known. There was a swish of fists in
the air, two angry grants, a sprinkling
of blood from two damaged nasal ap
pendages, a whirl of arms and legs, and
the booth builders rolled over one an
other in the mud. Two sorry looking
pillars of the church they were when
separated and sent home to recuperate.
The booth went up. but whether its po
sition was mutually satisfactory has not
been learned.—TTHna Observer.
A Sjtnp.thetle Parrot.
A friend of mine had a parrot that
was forever getting into mischief
whenever let out of his cage. If it
wasn't flying around the room
knocking down tlio ornaments, he
was down in the kitchen annoying
the cook (who, by the way, was red
headed) by calling out, "Where’s the
white horse?”
One day when the cook was get
ting dinner ready, Polly hopped into
the kitchen just as she put a bowl
of cream on the table. Flying at the
edge of the bowl it was overturned.
Cook became enraged at this, and
seizing a dipperful of boiling hot
water threw it over Polly, scalding
him so badly that all his feathers
dropped off. For a long time Polly
went around lamenting the loss of
his feathere, but he noifer bothered
the coolc again.
One day about throe weeks after
ward a clergyman came to dine with
my friend, and Polly, noticing that
he was baldheaded, seemed to pon
der over it, and just as they were
sitting down to dinner, Polly, who
had been sitting on tho back of a
chair, hopped up on the table close
to the clergyman and, gazing sorrow
fully at his bald head, exclaimed:
“Poor fellow, poor fellow; did the
cook throw hot water on you?"
After this Polly was kept covered
up in his cage whenover there wore
visitors.—New York Recorder.
experiment on the larger
with some success. They fc
they could coax the unwill n gey
sera to perforin, and if the p octice
pt (balile
; before
had been continued it
that the geysers would loi _
now have lost much of theit Bbectac
ular value. / • If
Mr. Arnold Hague investigated the
curious phenomenon. By a series of
experiments on the action |of soap in
stimulating the eruptions pf geysers,
he found that some were Much more
susceptible to the treatment than
others. He found tftat nony of the
hot springs and gey sort! were quiet
even when the surfi ce tbmperature
of the water was al ove jthe boiling
point for that altitu e. Any disturb
ance, therefore, wat likely to cause
the ebullition to beg n, of the water
was in a state of unst ible equilibrium.
If soap or concentn »d lye was add
ed, a viscous flui< was produced
which seemed to ca 1 Be the retention
of steam, and in th case of super
heated waters, whin thu tempera
ture stands above the natural boiling
point, explosive liberation must fol
low.
Mr. Henry M. Cadell, tbo English
geologist, who visited the Yellow
stone park and gave some attention
to the soaping of goykora, says that
the famous Old Fair ' '
seems to be proof against I such un
dignified treatment, but 80710 of its
more fitful and fickle brethren, thnt
have eruptions at uncertain inter
vale, pay more attention to 1 the art
ful dodge to set them in action.
Among these is the Beehive, which
has no fixed period, but is susceptible
to the action of soap. In general,
however, it seems doubtful whether
much reliance can be placed on that
method of producing eruptions.
In a paper on soaping geysers,
which Mr. Hague read before 1
scientific society a while ago, he said
“Outside of a few exceptional in
stances, which could not bo repeated,
and in which action was probably
anticipated by only a few minutes in
time, geyser eruptions produced by
soap or alkali appear to demand two
essential requirements: First the
surface caldron or reservoir should
hold but a small amount of water,
exposing only a limited area to' the
atmosphere; second, the water should
stand at or above the boiling point of
wuter for the altitude of the geyser
basin above sea level."—New York
Bun.
A TALK WITH THE LADIES. iaboemv fbom a
*«l
BEING WORN.
! A Nrgr«’« V*mel*ns Appciiir
Into Trouble.
L'rls Him
It Is s fact that has been Mpeutcdly
proven by actual test, that a Negro
has, as s general rule, double nr treble
a white man.
Of oourse there are a few exceptions
another in-
Slie watches the market for goods
pot and arrest Louis Edwards, one of
his train hands, who had, Mr. Wbeat-
timore, Philadelphia and New York will Juston the wane, that have Just turned !/, ’ , .
n. .Wni later ithmatohed 1. »n._ , it of a lot of watermelons,
ley said, broken open a car and robbed
The oflloers went at onee, and, foro-
be taken aboard and later dispatched the norner 0 f the height of fashion and ,
with information from the oralsing t |,eyserveas her stock in trade always. . -, ,
grounds. The headquarters at Wash- * . . . ... ... ing their way into the cab, found Ed
Ington will also be posted of the where- || ® , . . wards and eight very large melons,
abouts of the vessel through winged feent trimmings and fnnoy vests The darkey dldn . t attempt to deny
messengers from that city. A loft of serve her for three dresses. And her , , taken the melons, but did deny
birds to acoompany the ship will no bonnots, always becoming, arc so quiet “ . . onon .....
doubt be sufficiently trained toward the and modest that they will last tor . .* — '..—.J? nni ,„ 1T ’| rt . „?
close of the voyage to be useful in con-1 weaP , wlth various suits, a whole sea- < ttat lt WM slrel,Uy ° po "’ He ' 1
voying messages ashore. — Annapolis
Cor. Baltimore Bun.
the leauers U1 uu gviiunu uu nnmuin I turn ,iiny uu hb uaeilll Ml Her II,,ll
places this summer a bit of fashionable 00 unts her pennies as she spends fn lull and Cnndun
intelligence which I know will be star- them. a. well a. to her more fortunate . He was lodged In jail, and Oonduo-
was Jos’ a little sharp set, an’ I thought
I could niebbe eat a few melons."
lie didn’t seem to think it Impossi-
I am about’to give society here and I we have olipped a few Items of fashion I u' d t “ h J^ * t „* k ^Jay*n°a olosetoUho
Mo "Reversing’’ In Faihlonnble Dnnelng.
She Is the woman in whom dressing I
I beoomes an art. From various souroes |
intelligence whtoh X know will be star- then)i „„ woU t0 her more fortunate “"7““ “ ,nV’. w«rrnn tl,U
tling in the extreme. The fiat has gone te»r Wheatley swore out a warrant this
tbs* bumf. T.nnrlnvi «nil fVmflnanfAl I tnnrnlnir nhnririnif him with limuMiv
out in the best London and Continental
society that the “reverse" in the valae
shall no longer be permitted. This re
form seems to have been originated by | buckles,
the Prince of Wales, and of course it
was immediately taken up by the small
er fashionables, in London. The ill na-
tured say his royal highness never did
dance well in his golden youth, and
that since he has come to a liberal ro-1 able surah,
tundity of belt, or, in other words,
grown fat, his dancing is simply exeora-
ble. He always had great difflcnlty in dresses,
“doing the reverse” in the waits, and
now that he cannot do it all he puts the
WHAT 8TYI.ISK WOMKN WKAII.
White kid bodice belts having silver
morning oharging him with lim-i-ny
from n car. •
Tim residence of Mr. J. A. Romney,
on Pine street, that was, partially -!-
Large 10 tic id raw lmls trio l| ( r ,iy,-d by lire nllj. i* heing re-
with wild flowers. built. Mr. and Mrs. Rumney are si op
ing at the Mayo for the present, imi
Removable blouse vests of ohango-
they expeot to have their homo ready
for oocupanoy In a few weeks.
Fanoy silk mitts with evening
•H-
Black or lavender -lawn
dresses
ban of his disapproval on it. Hereafter trimmed with blaok I’otnt do denes
there is to be.no “reversing” at the state and rosettes of baby ribbon.
IA FEW QUESTIONS
balls or at any dances which are hon
ored by the royal presence. The fact is,
the “reverse" was hardly ever seen on
the other side of the water at any time,
and now having the positive disapproval
of “the first gentleman of England” it
will disappear for good.—Lounger In
Washington Herald.
Short velvet jackets of every design |
-Zouave, Eton, Figaro, Mikado, etc.
FOR YOU.
Short oapes of black laoe worn with |
lace .toques.
++ .
Bands of black velvet on the arm in-1
stead of bracelets, for evening.
Did you ever see a board walk?
a horse fly? or such
Gold and silver removable slipper
toe and heel naps.
++
Pink and blue ohambery petticoats
Valth la Witchcraft,
Belief in witchcraft is still fonnd
among the people in many countries.
The wife of a rich farmer in Styria,
Austria, had been paralyzed for years,
si"""”:*-
a soothsayer, who looked into tho mat- 1 " ~
ter and pronounced the patient to be be
witched. She pointed out another
farmer who had also been sick for years
as the wizard, and prescribed that an
old pair of pants of the man and a few
NECKWEAR
as we are showing to-day for 35c?
CAI.A DAY IN SVnifEB.
. - . .. , . , Sumnxr, Ga, June 80, 1802.
drops of his blood must be Placed over a H |a , to th , IUBtI , D .
dull fire and slowly burned. The pa- 1
tient must be held over this smoldering
B« Fooled Ula Pother.
While at the university Labou-
chere used to boast that he “never
allowed his studies to interfere with
his pleasure.” He used to run up to
London (fifty-eight miles) with re
markable frequency simply to get
his hair cut. On one occasion, it is
said, young Labouchere met his
father in the Strand at a time he
was supposed to be deep in his
studies of the classics. Much to the
old gentleman’s astonishment his
son blankly denied his identity.
Jumping into a cab he dashed off to
the railway station, caught a train
in the act of leaving for Cambridge,
and when his father arrived by the
next was found almost buried in a
mass of abstruse volumes, with a
wet towel wrapped round his aching
forehead.
A dinner at the hotel and a ten
pound note were tho reward of tho
delighted parent to this promising
son, but to his dying day Mr. John
Labouchere was often heard relating
this wonderful instanco of the re
markable similarity of two persons.
—London Cor. New York World.
AllUtary Store*.
Military stores are now made as
far as possible to uniform patterns,
and the components are interchange
able, not only in each service, but
also where practicable between the
various services, so that, for exam
ple, a ship might in the event of ne
cessity be armed with fortress guns
or might fill rip her ammunition
from stores intended for the land
service.—New York Times.
WMtcb h Child'* Hunt.
Let the parents watch the bent of
the child’s inclinations and judge
from them only what calling he
seems most fitted for. In the vast
majority of cases, where it is essen
tial that the child should be a bread
winner as soon as he attains years of
discretion, it may be necessary for
him to do much work that is irk
some and for which he has no special
adaptation before I10 run choose a
calling of his own.
Tho man who is compelled by pen
ury to carve out a career for himself
acquires a rugged strength by the
means that often enables him to out-
distnneo Ids rival who has molded
his life from more plastic circum
stances—New York Tribune.
fire
which she would recover. The pants 1 . , .
were obtained and the old sick man one pie had gathered at the sohool house
evening, when stepping into the door- building, where they were entertained
way of his hnt to get a breath of fresh by the Knights and a short speeoh
air, was attacked and thrown down on from Mr , w . A. Allen, editor of the
hisface to make his nose and month Looa , The Knights of Honor at this
The blood was carefully scraped ap P'“ 9 “
from the ground and the fumigation oure speakers for the occasion, but
made, but of coarse without the prom- without avail, from the faot that tho
ised effect of curing the woman. The Knights of Honor all over tho United
old man was terribly shaken dnd has States celebrated the 19th anniversary
died since, whether as a result of the 0 f the brotherhood, and speakers were
outrage committed against him is not no t sufficient to supply all of their
*nnn«to,1 At VnHUn flnaln a fnrinor I
Why Soma “Fireproof" Building* Burn.
Tlio heat units in the many cords
of pine wood partition, sheathing,
etc., in what purports to be a slow
burning warehouse of heavy mill
construction will often be found suf
ficient to supply charcoal enough to
melt a large charge of pig iron in a
puddling furnace. It thus happens
thnt one.ofton finds in the papers a
record of tlio complete destruction
by fire of what has been culled either
a fireproof building, or a building of
so called mill construction, or a slow
burning building, freo from hollow
spaces and free from many of the
faults which infest the common ex
amples of combustible architecture.
—Engineering Magazine.
Electric Locomotive* for Steam Bond*.
There are signs that one of the most
startling revolutions of the centnry is
approaching. Steps are being taken in
the northwest toward the laying of an
experimental track on which many
points bearing on the substitution of
electrio locomotives for steam locomo
tives on trank lines will be determined,
and electrical engineers throughout the
country aro on the qni -five for tho next
developments. The three eighty ton
electric locomotives to be used in the
Belt line tunnel, Baltimore, will push a
freight train of 1,200 tons, including lo
comotive, through the tunnel, np an
eight-tenths of 1 per cent, grade, for a
distance of #,000 foet, at tho rate of fif
teen miles an honr, or a 500 ton passen
ger train, including locomotive, at the
rate of thirty miles an hour.—St. Lonis
(vlnhft.Deiuocrut.
KalgliM of Honor Celebrate the llllh
Aanireraarr of the nelered Ilrotlmr- |
heed.
At 9 o’clock the people began corn-
^rtKgiar^^^i' D *! n, f 1 to : n , r om * u d,reot,on r nd
ih she would recover. The pants by 11 o’olook, a large oonoourse of peo-
A Model Shoe.
reported. At Velilla, 8pain, a farmer wantB>
You begin to find out what sort
of a shoe you have bought when
woman'in the* villagethat rajoyed'’"^^ I ' rhfl entertainment of the Knights I YOU ’ ve worn j t a little while. The
reputation of being a witch and do-1 wa » ver y K“ od * n<1 interesting. _____ I test of a shoe is the wear it will
manded of her to restore his father to During Mr. Alien s speech the large
health. When a few days later his school house building was crowded to | stand, we can our
father had not improved he went and | its utmost capacity.
At about 12:80 dinner was an-1
nounoed, and after all had eaten their
fill there was a sufficient quantity left j
to have fed a good many more.
A largo number of the Third Farty-
Ites of Worth were In attendance;!
dozen of these emissaries
shot both the socalled witch and hur
husband dead.—Chloago Herald.
$3.00 Shoe a Model.
Divine Snrvlco by Telephone,
Tho mayor of Nottingham, accom
panied by several members of tlio corpo
ration und other loading men of-tho town,
recently attended divine service in a I About a — . .
novel fashion. Tho meeting honse^wos | tackled the writer, but he stood Ills hut it keeps its good look
own ground, and will continue to do) If you’ve ever seen anythin
It is a handsome looking shoe,
hut that is by no means all that
can be said about it.
It is not only handsome looking,
tlio local oxchango of the National Tele-
%£ they'porticipated^as^onthioted 80 "J 0 "* “ , th n e I { °° M y ° U ’ Ve MK
at Christ church, Birmingham, fifty-one has the P enslon and railroad P ,anks experience that we’ve never
miles away, the communication being I in it. ' | joyed—the big in qu l i mid th
of courso by telephone.
Th* melon crop does not last long
They sat on each side of the long k u t it brings in good receipts while It
table on which thirty receivers were doe8 la8t .
placed, while at the church end were
eight transmitters—two in the belfry,
Some of the waterworks pipes are
two In the choir, two In the reading I , nr(fe enoU gh for a good sized boy to
.1 A... n 1— it,/, mvlviil- n *1,1 t/il, A ,1 I ™ 1=7
little in price have never bee:
more happily combined.
This same happy combination
also found in our
desk, and two in the pulpit, switched on . throu „| l .
and off as exigencies required—an or- ”
rangomont which has been in operation
Exoubsionb are being run less and
for some weeks for the edification of I less by the railroads. Times are too|
$4.00 Men's
Birmingham subscribers. The Notting- i la rd for people to patronize them,
ham congregation were able to hear
the bells very distinctly, and the ro-
They are the greatest
vue ue..» very , Thk 8„ F. & W. road continues to
spouses and other musical portions of run a freight train in connection with earm lor tne money,
the service, while tlio preacher, having | the passenger between here and Thom-1
asville.
a clear voico and deliberate utterance,
was very audible, and his sermon was
listened to with close attention.—Lon
don Tit-Bits.
Coin, of the Mogul Emperor.,
Mr. Stanley Lano-Poole has finished
his “Catalogue of tho Coins of the
The largest melon brought into the
city up to date came from the Newsom
plantation and tipped the soaies at the
50-pound mark.
MDSE & COX
The framework for the tower to be
Mogul Emperors of Hindoostan in tho I erected on the union passenger depot
SEE HERE, LADIES
... BS ■ 9 Preparatory to removing from o
British Museum,” from tho invasion has been raised, and it improves, the present quarters to the store owned 1
looks of the building wonderfully.
of Baber to the establishment of a
British currency by the East India com-
panv, in 1585. It contains descriptions
Mrs. M. A. Randall, on Broad street,
will sell our entire stock of
Thk freight agents say that they ex-
MILLINER'
afitotfps'iSu’nitoiw" hti^ieas by this, time, butUj [VJ EW YORK C
... .. . _ . .. . .. , . flint rlwi olilnmunto cnnmnrl tn lira in.
this anthor’s description of the entire I that the shipments seemed to be in-
collection of Mohammedan coins in the creasing instead of decreasing.
We have in stock all the latest s
in Millinery and Fancy Goods.
| Jilll JilUri lriUIl Id Keeping oil hllll LI
AmtegglW" >«« u. <«> >»»'• •»"
Bill Morrison is keeping so still that | y ?" lu,vc ' 1,1
8»3?«B»3S:a* CASSEt * SISTa
• •• ’ — IJB ield in Chicago News-Record. >
into it and were unable to escape,
- *
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