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AMONG THE CUFF DWELLINGS
I*rorallnit Klrtili '•till Inr plorrf
( 111-l)ivrll#ra a* I'TTf* ■-4 • -
union* Srurc U for *1 aau mtr—lir-
14miu of f lin.pHi llrr * Iforar.
Aritona Lfitn In N w K 1
A petit km l .-at.
•:n ptLpie ©iil f*> i ;• © t.t©<l IO
Cor)K:ii at Its i. %i Uw:
Hie ranon <m t*© d*fT ***
f>xri of th< 111 r * bt - ■ • “’***• r,-
f t>i* i t \. i, i ■•t r■ u soon
throw* I'OMMSoir >fn about th©©©
yrU afctxli aw > up In !h# p©rr©ruiicu-
Ui , jtjt* u( if.o 4 an-i.n, th* most inter
e*ttng rt ! fa wonderful mysterious,
prafelxtor r will b© rulnod arxl cam©i
mwmy pin *y tounsts and cur.o
--s • k .4 i ' l .* * it .
finest t - *4v©vl !.<4inf of a king tr chief
•in* *:4f th© Jiff dwelling race— a *r©at
e- fa ho* peic bed on limestone shelf.
t 4 nv 1 :**> !©• t np pcrpemMciUar wail
Irj Han J4ijp’ e.rnon In this county—has
|©*n pr 't!c*!|jr ruined for BdestiiL: ol>-
M ra on iy 'urtous tourist©.
T 1 *i • • >t numler anl the most Ir.t* ?
tutlitg* 1 if? dwrluruts yet found In the
T mo 8 ••%© are In w hat D known ns
in© SDn Ju.ifi Riser region—that where
the F ♦.* of Colorado and t’?h and the
Tftrrfcurt*-* of Ansnna and New M* xv o
• r*©l at I) CCMUMmon p**> ■*- Kei of the
southern-moat cliff d-wliliars. In the vi
cli.ity of F; igatuff. nwy *• **©■ from mo
car window* of the Atrhteon. Tojafka and
Santa K© Railroad Th©
aeftlcmef ts of the great rnc. who built
th<w* strange eyrie homes long be fora
the Christian ‘‘tw. and th**m i*
lan: SOi vr rs a:** ©••!*: #—.•asli*‘hed in
i uuitu In I’ta! /.d (\>lrra ! drained I *Y
tie- H*f Jiii’ Tt’vr The most ©;intern
•atriaum.* tt - r r eeoma to have
of l l II
?n N#w M©xt < about 12‘ nub a
we.c from <it • F© The westrrnnost
t.bod© .f the Iweilers a* found In ?h*
Halt KJv ; va. near Arlx.
Vaotlgoa of •eukmtnts of the rare are
*o*tt©r©d t.<*rthwird it In'ervals from
Vuontan and M •.!,-o. but fb* large©©? and
lest-bullt • *; ? . nt* of cliff dwelhfiipt
ere in ifc- S<i Ji *n River I'ountry.
Min \ •* *■•#■ Ihiclllns*
The \li!nf-i o" the in ns of • e Mes \
Varda in i- u hw**- • m ('olorado h ive b*en
most thoroiK'hly explored, as have th<
lr Walnut Snr<n rear Flagataff. Arlx.
The run* In t.n- Cnehltl dUtrb t in N# w
Mexico and In t o Canon de <‘he ly tn the
Navajo Indan r- aetAatfoti are among the
tineset In exUtei.ce. but they are remote
from •stahltshed lines of travel, and are
cctr.paratively unknown except by name
A few partl a of scleutlflc explorers nn-l
local have lately visit**!
th*m. blit no ays * math* work of exm*'**-
t>(,n ha# ever been undertaken within
tf * r ifnbb ! sn or hoti* nM n- i
e*f • -;rger cl ff h* : -es. An i<]tialljr fer
tile of exploration, unknown to the
general tmirlM, nod unvisited save by
th* m >et f.ardy students of prehlstorio
• remain!*, lb s al-*ng the upper valley of the
H 4 Verde In Alisona. aiKiit eightv miles
•outhws** of FtagrtafT. Here, where the
Intermittent fl*w of the stream winds bo
tipn preclp wnJls. rising sheer fr-'ern
•he narrow l>*d of th- canon, the cliff
dwellers’ diotvsea hang midway In air. like
• wallows* hast-*, on the narrow shelf of
MlKlllatW
So more fitting place of refuge from
which to with (and an atta>-k from wlth
t.'it be discovered l*n this cllff
-I)waller a rnSjr'k of \ntkge It was a
w.itch-tow* r frm which to keep lookout
for a stealthy foe, and a citadel fortified
sfffllivM the of*n onslaught of an
enemy. Provisioned with wnatsr and foot
the paacsCid farmer of the valley co\ld
here c* conflict with the predatory
tka cliff-dweller Wxs an urrt I e
his simple way. and mslntainel sn estab
lished abode. The patches of ground
whi'h h“ cultivated are still traceable
l
refuge In the rokf In fact, nowhere
can the cWfT dwelling* be found far re
moved from tillable land. This theory
d*rs no violence to historical I? 1h
further corroborated by the present cus
toms of the tUndrad trlbis, If Unf N
tmt the lineal desrstidanta of the cliff
dwelling people, the Mokl*. Zunls. nnd
Aromas who lived by farming
( !l-llnrllrn •• Vmrmrrm.
Why, then, I* it not reasonable to be
lieve that th* cliff-dwellers, wHo re
nt .Una show mo mu li In common with
these living people, followed thf IBIIH
practice®? The evidences of their occupa
tion ot> farmer* atvound. fom, I v ne.
gourd*. and hi to of hard-shelled squashes
have been found in *>or<* of their room*.
The cliff-dweller of the Manros ('anon.
In southwestern Colorado, of Walnut
Grove. near Fiegstaff. and on the Hlo
Y.rde In Art*.*.*, undoubtedly mmle nl*
chief habitation In h! rock house* on the
ledge* of the bluff*. Th* oot on th<- wall*
oked there, and the bone*
of atvmai* nrvd the remain* of food mater
ial* prove that ha ate and lived there.
I’.u: why dl l ho leave hi* dead there? Ko
.'d>d mummlea, not enib.ilmed after the
l’.Kvpi lan fashion. but dead, dried bodie*,
, aiefully -.warned In gras* matting, have
tar* found not infrequently In the eltff
uwelllngr. Moat of them have suffered
fr-,m exposure, and are Imperfectly pre
ferred. The dust and refine of year* have
cover- 1 them, and the mice have gnawed
away the cloth wrnpings Detached hu
man N>r- * weio not rarely unearthed, and
lit* of htnliel coverlet*, but the entire
body, n* ; retired after death. In It* fur
> ral habiliment*. I* a prtxo of value. Two
of the one-, poifect specimen* of these
mummt •* ever recovered we-re brought to
1 l.t P Die Cl.ff dwelling* of Kan Juan
r. ■ iv I v t |*trty of amateur archaeoi
r.yiata exploring for Iceland Stanford I'nl-
Vctilty. A whertlburrow oad of done wea
ihui, ml household rtlclca wa* foil n.I
i lorn:aid. me rr.tiTntnle*. The rltff dwell
In* In which there uncommon prehistoric
find* were rna le wa* tea. hi*l by the ex
plorers, who w-ie lowered over it cliff bv
a rope It wac a hnaard-nw eiperlence.
for the riHT dwelllrg stood on a narrow
b Up- of nek aoir.c 7X> feet above the bed
of th' i . n and prehUtorii dream b--
low Hut the discoveries the Stanford
eluilent* made repaid all the rt*k of life,
ar.d the pi i kv. h-trd work Incurred In
reaching the on* lent home.
•j t— particular apartment In which the
mummies wet* dug ut> had t>ern closed
by walling up the entran*. <>f a shallow
.at-, ecouied out by the action .>f Nature
m the -offer etnrtum of llmeetone that
traverses the fa of the high sandstone
cliff The rock wall towel* 130 feet straight
ahovo Its* cliff dwelling, and Ute ate.p
slnfie of crumbled rock fall* away lo the
rreek-lM lin re than 10b f- • * below By
~ r amhltnr upward on hands and kn *
over the fallen slab* of stone and slipping
•and the face of the main cliff wa reach
ed Then, ten feet of straight rock bluff
Intervening between the top of the room
wa, over.. me by ph klng tn the sandstone
shallow hole* for tho hand and toe*.
V t lllf.lfnellrr - * Home.
The foundation of the outer wall had
been made level Willi a mortar of adobe,
upon which we* imposed the maeun
wnrk of thin Hat samletone alabs. un
dressed on edge and aurfare. making a
wall about flfte. n Inches thick from the
floor to ihe poof of th* o.pve. Over the
rough surface of the stone wall. Inside
and out. a smooth coaling of mud had
been plsstired, which showed the plain
Imprint of the builders’ hands The six*
of these handmarks upsets the theory
that the cliff-dwellers were a race of men
of diminutive iirnportione Kntrance to
the first rhamtier was had by a smaller
aperture, three by four feet, deatgned by
the original oocnpont a* a floor. Through
this ope ring level with the floor within.
O'Toole crawled fnto a rectangular room
masumting eight feet by twelve. Inside
the floor wa* burled upder three feet of
e*nd. rubtVsh. and guano op Mrds and
bt ,! which ahowed no evidence of former
sgploraUan.
After vl.ggdt.g to Ute flour umu the door
wo- th i>4* at rpfuw< m carefully
rukwt over with amall iiooiu. of hoop
:: ... but r>o*lil/u. ln|rrnuti( wrus unrvner
.l mil wrhln iwo or chr*e foot of iho
ruttural lux k wall Haro four miinimo.
.iiMr.vi wrr* fount! lylnr on th* fl(*w
two of Ih**tn flat on their hark* ih.
otiion. t urMil on th,ir art* Tfltr* waa
r.- t-v ki* rti uniformity of plan In tftoir
dlv;n >n aa to tho point of tho r.en
l< mi. ftn ••>!. tho done thx othr* lay
In dtvera On t->f of ona My a
imto'li tlat rook, w.-taui r.K fifty pounrl*.
huh plarotl. anh hah u.ha*t tho
yioidinrf body to fit ita un'l*r atirfa'*
Tho iartt'iti mummy ni.lnol tho horly
of a cl.il J übout aev on yt-ara of nso, tha
nott ono waa prol .biy not mtai than
four yoar* 14. whll* tho otl.r t-o woro
It.fant*. Tie lai l are in a very Important
ta*o of pt•eorvatlon. tho tamo* are da
ta h<el, ~t,! tho 1 h wrapplna* hava
rottoil Into du.*y rasa. Aloai tito two !
lantrit one*. tikToforo, tho main intoroot
i-entfie
When fi'Ttaole found them they wera
erv'-L-ea! in .| n-lvattome.l am ka <rf lanars*
miitlmc ti,a<lo of 'in.ll t tear irraa.,
ii , ur .•> n i-arta of Artaona to-.lay
Tie: lantl had t—on unaSlaUirb
ed /> -tat by ruttlne oyer, the mulling
awl purtiaU) e*fa>UMr tho hr.i'l. In orlor
ia *how ih- th - k covering of hair and
the moiithlul of well-ahapod teeth. Th
■ ij pi . of tho other taaly ha'l taen
par tai’a removed, revealing the ahrunk
en ari-l hrtvell*d akin **n the han la and
f<-< • Al eut tne hit* I* tied a laioaoly
•Alfred trend of cotton rope, for tha
; ■, ■ of holdlr.fr the tiody In ahape.
Th*' < nclr. Int teidy from head 10
f. nt i wiapmel a l.ne, dark-colore<l
clorh. whi.-h ahowa a pattern of well-ex
• 'utetl t awn work of trlanytiiar dealgn*
awt flgurev. mu h resembling tho Trojan
wall Another covering of .of ton material,
of tho texture of gunnv ijotti, l wound
about with narrow rtrlpe of tha eame
mJT. rtirloualjr w ll hemmed ae to the
. !g \ third and 1 narter cloth envoloi*
t . u hole 1,. ly. which l. finally protected
r\ the bar*h bear-grase matting All
th.ee cover!twr. of cloth .tin* plain ovt
di tco of having ‘tone previous aervlce by
ihetr threadbare appearance. Tho worn
etrand* are roughly darned with long
••oartM threads itwri'd In one direction
-i.ly it 111 tit arv app".renl do,|gn to re- (
ftroduce tho orl-.rial texture.
fleior the hea I. of tho two larger mum- 1
mb * are jetd.l I liberal ,"1 ot looaa
Piratic of colored cotton yarn, which ap- ,
p, ar to have hen a, pillows (
The harks* of th* ekulK an la common
•A.tn the rtnriliir of cliff-dwllev found
In Coiorado mil Now Mexico, are greailv
pjtteood. up if bv light binding to the j
headboard When the children were nulla
your o' The hen l vary potnewhat Inaliape.
crept ua to tne chara trl*tb .Uly low
narrow foretoad an>l raftT full crown, i
Th" chit .itvel n* In which iheao four |
fpnmmlc 9 w re founl w;*a one of a mlle
l<mv porle.p of detached house*, that airing
|ot;g the mid-air ledges of th* rocky wall* |
of the catoin. K-mie of theae were ptngle
root!.-, while otherr contained three or
four chambers. Cl nneotrd. hy a small en
trance level with the Poor or aet half-way
up in the party wall In no Instances waa
there more than one exterior entrance.
Although nearly all throe room* were
carefully examined, no other than t.ieee
four dried bodies described were found.
Weav.ng Implements of wood and horn
and bone were not uncommon, and rjuan
tltlrs of sottish rind* and mlcc-eaten
peed*, com shelle.l an<l on the cob. thou
aun'ls of corn-c ihs. beano, end bean-(>ods
I’ ••• rv was rare and j
fragmentary Two small figures of burnt j
(!-y <n which the Indented markings ,
faintly resemble the diamonds of a tur- j
ties shell, were lying near the fireplace !
In >M e room Smoke stains and soot cover
ed the wall*, and pllea of ashee were
everywhere.
THE OYSTER’* tit IROIA*.
Tiny Crab We *.,metmea In
Ptrns-I lirlone IMorl** dbont If.
From the Scientific American.
This llllle crab, which wc know a* the
I oyster ciah, Is nhout the slxe and shape
uf a pea. resembling somrwhai a hleach
id imil spider, in Europe It Is called the
pea-crab, where II 1* rarely seen except
by naturalist*, for there tt ls not eaten
by t trt.se who like oyster*, while In Ihla
country it Is well known, as wo offen sec
It floating upon the surface of an oyster
stew. It la common on oor coast, not only
In oysters, hut also In mussel* and soal
-1 !• tie
The name "Washington crab" has been
tJiKgested by some for the oyster crab,
as II waa considered a great delicacy by
our fleet President.
The crab has been known to naturalists
I fi.itn the earliest tlmtst of history, and the
: l.vely Imaglnatlona of writes on natural
history have woven a curious network of
. MOrtcs about the life ami htne of this
. modest little ammaJ
Arlsiotlc, the Greek, ami Pliny, the Ro
man. naturalists, isdlcved iliat a detinlte
relation or nnd* rwtandlng existed lietween
I tne shell fish and its little lodger, ami
' even went so far nt* to say that death
would be the result If the crab should de
:crt Us hoet The watchful crab, living
within tho home of the dull and stupid,
i oyster, on seeing small flsh approach,
v.oukl wait until one more bold than the
rest of hla companions ventured within
'tlio open shell, then gently nipping tha
oyster, tly doora would be closed and the
j !'!>h held i prisoner. Thereupon tne two.
I the host ami his gm si. would feed at
leisure upon the body of Iho venturesome
; fish.
| Avery beautiful irrr.ingement between
tlieso two—llio biiml anti the lantt —and a
very pretty compact—but the cold eye of
science saw ilmt bivalves do not feed up-
When tlie
(lain r.rt]|n tun* on the skin,
llull Id 110 * orc lhro * t ' ro H ,er
BfITRII ■ colored splotches.
Fhuf swollen glands, aching muscles
■IHI and bones, the disease is making
v ** rapid headway, and far worse
aytnptom* will follow unless the blood is
promptly and effectually cleansed of this
violent destructive poison.
-*i. S S. is the only ssfe and infallible
cure for this disease, the only antidote
for this specific poison. It cures the
worst cases thoroughly and jxirmanenUy.
Mi| Ctlfliiitß Cculd I contracted Sl-'S
, W#n. I tried
nave tec* Me Worse. £~ r gSJ3
did me no good . 1 wa, getting wotae alt the
time , my hair came out, ulr* appeared in tnv
tht —I and mouth, my body waa almrxt covered
with copper colored aplotchet and offensive
sore, I suffered severely from rheumatic pain,
in my shoulders and arm. My condition could
have teen no worse ; only those afflicted a* 1 wa#
can understand my sufferings. l hsd shout
lost all hope of ever being well again whew
1 decided to try S S A,
tut must confess I hstl
little failh left in any
medicine After taking W
lhcihm! tauUe I n-'ilced
a change in my coudi- wttFflW# 1 -g*
lio-j This was truly en- fl —a : *OI
coiragmg. and I drier 4
mued to give 8 S. 6 a \ ft T fl^.
rough trial. Prom £l. ’iMWK
nnnt.-ve
mrnt wa* rapid . 8.8 8. jfyl ■ i Ay.
n.i - ty i^^^k
ulcer, haale-l was
won frre from all sign,' ) “ . ;
of Ihe disorder. 1 liave ' " ’
been strong and healthy ever ainc*
L W. Smith, Lock uox #n. Nohlemrilte. Ind.
ia the only purely vega*
*, ’ table blood purifier
known, fr.oooia
‘ offered for proof that
it contains a particle of
mercury, potash or other mineral poison.
Send for onr free book on Blood Poison;
it contains valuable information about
this disease, with full directions for self
treatment We charge nothing for nt*di>
cal cure yourself at home.
IMk SWIFI SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, A.
THE MORNING NEWS. SEN DAY. NOVEMBER IS. 1900.
on fish, but up*! microscopic animals and
plants, which t.ve und fl at in the water
.nd mat tha little crab, wtanee l.n.bs are
so soft and )leldi.’.g. could have neither
the strengh’ nor the power to tdneh off
ntt,reels of focel froir* an ordinary tlsh
Aiiotlf'f story, which held Us ow 11 until
late in lh laai century, * that tins lit
tle crab played the pan of the "Kltig
Jackal," Who huntisl bv night for I .a
majeaty the lion. It would sally forth to
hunt and bring fttod to the helples* mue’d
or oyster, end on ramming from the
bum. should It find Ihe hous - clos, I
would give a ry, which wa* rccogo 1 .
by Its hast, tne dtor Instantly opened,
and 11 waa allowe-1 to enter Btudy has
shown 1 heit 1 tie crab never leaves Is horn"
and caimoa ary. hut a# with iha Ivor, w to
In fan, often gete the f 'sal for the Jackal.
s Illa lhat Ih* little crab feed* upon Iho
substance* which r -wept in by the
current of water m-d" hy the bivalve. In
order to bring In Its own focal and to
freshen th* water for Its respiration
Again th* crab was said to warn its
protecting hoat from 'larger by a tlm-dy
pinch, eo that the door* -oukl l"- ios*-1
ugulnai sewn' crafty octopus or Insi boue
star flsh. and for whb h acm e the erkh
waa rww.vrded by board end h tgmg
Tnla leia’ton beiweeu ih# rab <4 1 ’
blvafva was used by the arudents 10 illus
trate how helples* Is man wlihou’ .v
friend Even Cicero ! s tld to have used
th>s simile, and we And the same Idea * x
p res sett by the Egyptains In their hieto
glvphb writing*.
The oyster -rah. It Is true, may act In
such a manner that 11 warn# the oyster
of the approach of danger, but we scarce
ly believe the' It I* anything hut a i-er
sonal motive on Its par' We nineteenth
century folks do not that any In
telligent understanding exist* between the
two W* have all seen how a crab will
hurry hack and forth on the appro* h of
•Unger, will dart Into tne tirst crevic- to
• scape tta foe. and when in safety brand
ish Its formidable claws with the greates’
► how of bravery. Ho the l.ille Pinnothere*.
rjsyr. with the same Instinct run back
and forth wjihln the *en*Ulve mantle of
Ih# oyster, and re treating push agalnwi
Its soft body, which will Indicate to Iho
slothful Intelligence of 11* host Unit mmi -
thing la wrong outside, when It will dis
creetly close ll# shsll. a* the better part
of valor.
The oyster crab Is about the slxe of a
large pea. the body Is globular. Ih" leg*
small and weok. and It differs from nearly
every other crab In having a perfectly
soft yielding skin In fact. It was always
a "soft shelled crab "
The Pinnothere# aie found all over the
world, wherever we ilml oysters, mussels,
or s eilope. from the Antarctic ocean to
the froaen North' but ft seems that they
►re only u*d as a table delicacy bv |h#
American people In the West indies there
I* an oyster which attaches Itself to the
long roofs of the mangrove tree*. When
Columbus firm saw them !w was greatly
astonished to find among the many won
der# of the Western World oyster-bearing
trees, and having read that pearl* were
formed In oyster* by drops of dew falling
Into their open mouths, reported to the
credulous Europeans that the mangrove
oyster must yield an abundant harvest,
/or the dew was *0 heavy in these tropica.
1,1a,,1s l>r Patrick Browne, however,
tell* na. in ITM. that the oyster crab I*
very common In the mangrove tystcr.
and such • cat them do not think them
n Mt the worse for being accompanied
wlih some of these crabs, which they
swallow with the (siielli llsh.
These crabs ere quite common b in*
true pe*, 1 oyster of the Indian and ■
I tic oeswn*. and ’here Is a specimen or
one f UWsc shell# in which a male U
Imprisoned in tho eulmtance of the shed
and covered over with a Uyer of mother
at pearl The little fellow prolMdly en
tered the oytder In search of his mate,
nnd. not flndlng her, wandered about and
i finally passed between Ihs mantle of th"
oyster and th* shell, where he was Anal
ly *n*hrmKlrl In mother of r**n
There are -bout 75 kind* of crabs be
! longing to th# oywier crab family, oil
mors or less related All of them are
I small and of a retiring dtffiosltlon. Home
do not live within Uic shells of a protect
ing bivalve, but hidden within tunall
hoi**. Natural!*!* can. by the atudy of
■th*f animal*, trace th* differ*!'! st'-p*
from the tree crab. I idlng In " r ‘ l
•-revtree to tho#*- which enter the open
mouth* of oysters, where, being pr‘* r ‘-
rd from the attack', of enemies nnd hav
ing it* food brought to B by the exer
tlons of tta heel. Il ■pend# Its entire flfo
But perhape the in.*! curious Imblt
found In any crab Is that of a near ro
tation of th# oyaler rrah. which w may
••all the "coral *-rah." This v<-ry m.ill
animal after tho free Zoea Ufa ccminoo
to moat cratja. settles down 111 the fork
1 „f growing coral nd wOU for a home
t„ be built up around It. As 'hecorul
grows, the crab Is slowly surrounded by
the hard skeleton of the polyp*. A very
wonderful equilibrium l# n<*w formed.
The crab must grow Just as fast and no
faster than th* > for 1,11 ,lld no l
keep pace with the growth of the coral
It would be soon walled In and no rv*• m
nllowol for Ita future growth. So, unill
Ute crab haa reachal Ita full site, alseit
one-quarter of an inch. It I* In • “P
--► limped hollow, with It* opening on a
level With the corn! polyps M hen the
(Till growth of the crab has been attained
the roral-iwlypa '*>ll "OW *'o*l •
deal* In over the Itttla crab and mk*
It a prisoner, a* did the pearl oyster
but the current* of wwier mode by the
crab in breathing fore* the polypa to
amw slanting fnxn th* mouth of her
cave *0 that In lime a long funnel-llke
opening buds ist the growing polyp*
to the body of the little crab.
We have here a beautiful adaptation.
The crab chorwee Its own pla e among
the coral branches, end then gently forces
ip# workmen to build It a safe and com
fortable home.
HUE FOOLED THE WIWI MAN.
••Son of Aolnmon anil Ornndson of
110x14" Doped by • Negros*.
From the New York Time*
"I am the masterpiece of all reality,"
sold D. H Jenkins, negro, a so-called
doctor, to Magistrate lirann In the JefTer
son Market Court yesterday morning He
had summoned to court a negreso. I-Mlth
l,ee. whom he accused of swtmlllng him
1 by selling him a spurious madaton*.
"I am the son of Solomon, aial the
granlaon of King llavld." oonllnued the
"doctor." "My mission on earth l* to
complettfy the tMrty-fourth degree of
Masonry. I havo nine thousand w rrls In
niy room at home."
Jenkins live* -vt : Sixth aver.ue He
says that the X>ee woman, who t* a pri
vate detective and ha* a license, sold him
a piece of Iron ore pnd declare.l it to be
a magic stone, that lie |*ld her Mon jc.
counl. promising another ISO, ami that the
woman slipped th* stone out of lus hand
| mid refused to give It back to him until
ih* remainder of t!> cash was t>aid lie
►uceee led In getting the charm from her.
but when he tried to use It curing hi*
patient* he dtsiovere-l that ll was only
ordinary Iron ore which had ben mad*
to l(X>k Hke a peculiar * ton* by some blue
I*'nt smeared on It.
[ “What are you. anyway?" asked the
magistrate.
"I am a curlst." w.vs the reply "I know
th* ancient Secret
“Whet do you do with them? Do vmi
blow them away?"
"No. I follow the method of the first
doctor."
"Who wa# he?"
“Hs was the levrd." answered .tankin'.
“I have discovered this secret 1 need no
medicine*. Medicines #r. only ♦) year*
old 1 know that because lam a ► ten
ner# Ih* Me woman !nierrm*d ’*H
Is a fak* doctor." she cried "The Coun
ty Medical Society Is after him."
Whereupon Jenkliw’ counsel a-k- ■! th"
I Hocused If *h* had a Mi ense a- a pnvat
I detective, and sbe In reply threw op.u
t.'.* ini of ■rr coat t)1 to
\ w a h.*vl as Me .0 n pOsinmsn’x
Th#n h*s Ceti.Oa! her wttnes*, to
• t.c tn t. k .* il<i
IVhit’i >ouc i*aiin**?“
“WiUiftfn M Kinlry rrp ;•! wU-
Deo Ur. VVtl.um il ’Klnwy M Ho can*
iinM io Ulk ’Th. roan U m
*■4.. if U*l nnd n to* l H'* It a him*
twiosier .**
! ii* 8 as •ha ityi h
U** tho riMuvlira?*
•‘Jankln? Is ab#o!i)lHy nnd
nothin*.”
And are yoi faith do* *w. to>T* In
*l i\ *-i • v ('t f h<* lawyer?*.
I houtd pity h H n •*.” Interrupt and
Is a Wsat
•noufh
”1 take that aa * eaxxioltoui rocnpl*-
K | K wSf
aa W *i*t Indian !ie*iCH*ire genie.”
Tfa*n Jer kin* told or* ramhlin* t l*
cf r. h h- had i*-*n rh-at*d In r*.*r l to
i t nu<l't ne lie l. trap:, during the
n ocoUaMori* for the charm, tho i>*ma o
•>!h Ha- had him a i*>atai card that
read a.4 follows:
“Kin* hoiomon, Care of Dr. Jenkins. 24)
Kixih Avenue—l will break the arilc** r\t
12 j*. m <\*ll -r:oa and cio* • bit*
deal. Will txpt* ( you. lac.**
After tout, ar or.)li.w’ t> Ms rtory. many
missive* j-*issad hatwren He
th** fifone Hhe slob* it iack aflrsln.
“Why. Jikip, pistpc* Your liuno;," i ill
: > plalntlfT. ”1 tried * very way In he
woikl to gel ll ba*‘k. I e ven mad** love to
•his woman. 1 told het 1 would jump ••R
the higher** house in New York for her.
Ir. McKinley testified that Jenkma had
■sid he ess xolns to rut chip* otT the
for • .it 1 them at |rU'es. to a*
to mow Th* m*tia:rate dbrniss and
the see #*litfifT Jenkins that. If wan •
el i remedy, he eouUi have o litetaut
a civil suit.
It kmn i**irnel that Jenkins* h*ti*e, at j
J4J Kixih avenue, waa a very remarkable j
pU •• In his efflre. NO ailed, ther* Is a
mantel that lias the shape of an owl, j
and bark of the man el, uxainst the wait,
. large Utter < of . ctbiMsti* mold
behind the G is an obelisk, in which the
m**n says he keeps bis V.ODO set rets. My
hirthda> ia in May b— •>*. **so I am
both a Mavson end a Mason. *
Recently Dr Jenkins wrote a letter to
President McKinley, 1n which he demand
ed of the Treasury Department a biibon
<)•: are for work done by ncg(o slaves be
fore the war. and threatened, in case the
ITr- lent refused the demand. u> turn the
earth upside flown and l ave it hurled into
tne !un. The text of the letter I*:
Dear Kir In obadlenc* to an order and
decree Issued hy Kin# David and King
Ko:om>n that I should forward to you
this, their social on lynching,
1 ink- pleasure in offering s n>e ty your
Exceilency and to whom it may concern.
Wf jn uowfr assembled this day. June
5, 1*97. do hereby, herein, heretofore, and
pmafter condemn, damn, dunkcon. nnd
dfsTj this unlawful spirit of degradation,
scandal, and hypocrisy practised by *ht
bloodstained haiui* of a prejudicial ele
ment of narrowed minds upon a rac# to
whom we bdonc, and we do now affirm
t-iar if tho head of such * spirit is not
abolished, hammered. n<! crushed by le-
KHI force and lawful means now In th*
bands of Utoes In ‘’charge” that the
Ilamn*cr of lef*nse sl.ll fall w.tn such
for? © that the cowardly, sly-handed mon
ster that wielded Its arms shall wine© un
der H black seal of coniaalon.
By this d*cree, lssu**l this lay, we ha%’e
t*et our hands and fiusel our srreat seal
to be affixed. King David an-l Kin* fl*lo
mon Evermore* of old David Hill Jerkins
Our Medium. I also tke pleasure In stat
l!4r that if there Is any doubts as to my
I heritage In connection with the Royal
Family and Mobility of Kings David and
Solomon of Old. I am to prove
I It in a thousand ways
President McKinley did nt* an-wer this
srrange communication
iOYI' QI OBH D1 TICK.
\ Cuntrart %\ Ith %ll ldea of Mfr-Tk-
Ing • are of n l oper.
From the New York Evening Tost,
i The boy who lias to shift for himself !n
a large city deserve# great credit If he
grows up to be "an ornament of society,”
und this applies with p.irtleular fore# In
! the case of the uniformed messenger lad
He sees servlet by day and by night, and
there Is scarcely any jiku'e. from the
palacea of th© rich to the tenements of
• the i*or, from churchrs to the lowest \
, haunts of vie#, io which sooner or later j
j his duty- or his necessity—doaa not take |
| him. .\ fr the thing he han to do. they
are bwilderlns; in the multiplicity; and ,
as for th© characters with which he comes :
, in contact they arc as diverse as human
uaturv. Not even the newspaper rcjorter
j at many side# of life a* does the
| The former, moreovsr. Is
! seldom more than a re?*onler; but fre
! quently the messf nger-boy is a participant
and agent In what goes forward.
Borne times he Is a benefactor In a queer
guise Fr.der eu h headings would com© 1
| that hoy whom an aged and Inveterate
toper p©rl>.d!oally employed to accompany
him when h** started out to enjoy the
delights of tippling without becoming
hopelessly inebriated. The sole business
* f the boy was to watch for tho moment
when It should become evident tpat hD
patron was "going,” when It became hi#
function rudely to ©trike down the next
glass that was raised. The shattering of
the wine-cup proved almost Invariably an
effective signal, the old man consenting
to be led home and compensating the boy
with heartfelt thanks. Very similar, but
more depressing, was the case of the wo
man who wds a victim of drinks, and
was a< -ustomed to rent a room in a
hotel—“not so far from here." said the
i down-town superintendent who relate*]
’ the ©lory—whera, locking herself in, she
would pour down liquor until intoxicated.
A# a guard while in that condition, she
always employed a messenger-boy. who
watched th© whole proceat of Inc bra lion
and remained until the woman had slept
oft her stupor. This wa.* dull pastime
for the boy, and tho same or© never want
ed th© job twice.
Not seldom in tha discharge of offensive
in i a m I H frill one wa#
recently employed to obtain ovidsnee for
a divorce ault, .uul iwing suspected, was
badly beaten Another was engaged to
follow on his bicycle the carrwg© of a
newly nmrrlel pair whose destination
rudely sportive frDnd# desired to know
•The ol>Jet*t uf the trailing cyclist was
somehow divined, and t.ho Indignsnt brklc
groom. assisted hy the coachman, demol
ished the wiieelmnd bruised the rider.
Messeng rs have been smmomed to t;ik*
pampered pet dogs out for an airing. This j
v# regarded ns delightful occupation, hut J
it is otherwise vv h n n baby Is committed
to their charge, which has happened But
th© lad - prefer even this to the t*k of
leading a blind person about the park As
general guides about tho city they arc !
not seldom employed, and som* Women
hire them ns e rts and guardians while
on shopping tours There is an authentic
incident of i woman who. liavtng preying
need for cash—being a visitor whose "re- ;
mlttanre had failed’ -gave a m©ssengr
: bov whom she met on the street a aU- |
mond ring to isn for her. ll© turned up
at the hotel with the money.
In the commercial and financial world
the nv senger is a factor. A firm In keen
competition with another desired tc know
VO whom and In what quantities Its rival s
v.ares went, and hit upon the plan of trac- j
Ins d.llv rlrv In tbw city by means of
messenger hoy© About h do*en lads were
engaged, who loafed In the neighborhoo.l.
w*tched the loading of the trucks, male
memoranda of th© goods, followed the
wagons to their destinations, and brought
back full data The representative# of the
enterprising firm called immediately upon j
Its competitor's customers. At the Stock
Exchange three has been need of 300 boys
. ver slnet election day. hut the comtwinv
.an supply only ISO It cannot get th**
right material. To he of value In Wall j
Street the boy must know the region j
1 thoroughly, b acquainted with its Jargon,
ami have all the natural hrigntr.ess po*-
#J* . Kvoty w*-ek hc Ran*m- Steamwnip
Company serin ro**#*nftr boys t. ( 1 -
no r. tuiiy m dte: nsrge X • banana
eaigo This is really clerical work, an i
•over bo> a are ludetMed The buitk# mi
P*oy lar**? number* of boys to code*'
coupon#, and u i* r msrkatda new- few
have been the lossew
• The mea#enr*T hoy who travel# for on
errands of grew* or l.ttie vnoma nt ha.- be
come rat .er familiar. Km.th. tho Anurican
District bry, who Journeyed to Pretoria
.n*l delivered a more or les# comforting
nv'svag© to President Kruger, who r-•
catvrd him in state, as tf#ugh sn u *
credited representative of th American
nauocie has h>i an international notoriety
He is a lad with an open, ingenuous, and
even rertrul f.. e. and ls now a clerk
for ih© company at No. 136 Broadway.
But th© messenger boy who ha# be* n
mads mart of for W*ng journeying
William Dav • sent frura Don ion to Chi
cago with an e.igagemenl r tig Jagsrere
was fetsd and phi<ogrsph©d from N©w*
York to the Western m©trop<dis and hack
again, and b** won on his merits, for
he was universally pronoun ©vl wn ex
traordinarily "cute” little Cockney
fie was only thirteen—two years young-'
er than Struth. S.c© then Henry M -
Cglmovtt M I* nn*! rating maengte. has
•'•iwpatched acros# **th© pXKI." with a
mersagw to hD sister in this country’,
Jam#-** Ele*y, No. 1.111. of London. He
wus ni©kr.sm©d “Jaggcrs II.” The chair
man of th© London company In each of
thc*e Instance* wrote an autogTaph Je'*
ter of rfiank* for attentions to the lal*
to the manager of the Amerkan District
Messenger Company her#*.
••We’d Ilk#* to protect our boys from
uns uknble mtd fiujvertn
teiwient fikelton. manager of the mo
tu-nger department of the American Pin
trlct •DU graph Company, "but it ts
Impracticable to set-up any safeguard.
When a messenger boy is wanted, wo
can only fumi#h him Any one can ap
preoiate ttxv? we could not question
applicant# Bert!©#. they would, of
course, deceive us. If they had a motive."
DO A vr* TALK f
Owe Scientific Frenchman Deelnre#i
lhat They 110.
From the PhlUdelphln Times.
Sir John Lubbock, as well a# many
other scientists, ha# of course studied
the ant. but it has been given to n
Frenohmnn M Ferel, to nuke a discov
ery as regard# tints tha* proves them to
be posKM ss’xl of mi inte!llgen* e far greater
then has been hlth*ito supposed.
And this overy I- nothing mor© or
le#e than that ant© nr© capable of pro
ducing sounds lntellglh|© to their fellow •
and evon oudiido to our eire-ii; other
words, that they converge with on© an
other. ,
Th© way M Ferel proved this was a>
follows:
11© mad© a glass funnel, one end amnil
er than the other, which he placed, the
small end downward. In th© center of a
square of plain gla som© six inches wide,
fWting Close!v cfiouih to prevent th© lit
tle insects from crawling out underneath
He then took number of tints in a
bunch about th© *dx© of an ord*nry hor.©
chestnut, free frxtii any foreJgn sub
stances. an*l lifting up th© funnel, drop
ped th© cluster of insects inside.
JWhll© th© ants were still In n state of
bewilderment, and before any ot them
oould reach th© edge of the giass. rh© ex
perimenter covered it with notn©r square,
similar to the on© alteody in use. nI
w’hich had l>een surrounded h short dis
tance from its ©dgo hy n rim of putty.
This ©ffe©tually confined th© little In
se*ts Aral prevented thetr rs ing crushed.
The two plates of gla#** k©r© then prew
©>l ti*ft©ther to within, approximately, the
thickness of an ant's body, but clo*r •©
on© sld© than on the other, so as to hold
some fost and incapable of moving, while
others could move about in th©;r narrow*
prison where they lik'd
On applying this bo* of anta to the esr
as though It had Imen a watch, M Ferel
was astonished to hear a regular and
continuous bugging noise, somewhat sim
ilar to the sound made by water when
boiling In an open vessel, though some
time* a higher note would be struck hy
on* or other of Iha ant*.
Further study of the bo* of prisoners
revealed many lntcre*:lng farts. Th#
free ants were seen to advance to the
side* of the one* that could not move.
an<l to endeavor with all their strength
to release the prisoners. It was then thJt
the sound* made by the ont* became loud
er and more strident. It tv*a evident th.i ‘
•ties* sound* conveyed some meaning, for
a palpable difference wa* to be found In
the minute utirrances. which must have
been Intelligible to th# tiny captive*.
Then came the problem How was the
sound made" M Fcrel proceeded lo at
once make minute Investigation*. and
submit-ed live ante to th* ecrutlny of a
very powerful microscope
Hare, again, an Uiter-wtlng discovery
was !t store for th# investigator. Th#
sides of the little insect* were found to
be In on* particular place rough and
scaly, resembling—though, of course, on
a tiny scale—th* teeth of a saw it was
hy rubbing this thsn the ant made the
•wind that had rewarded the. scientist's
research.
M. Fere! then took a couple of ants and
confined them In the glass t*>* already
described. Imprisoning the one aid giving
the other liberty to move.
The ant that had free use of his limbs
became at once Intensely excited. It
rushed shout, making what must have
been—taking Into consideration the com
parative s.gw of a man and an ant—a
terrible noise The modulations of the
Insect's mode of expression were plainly
heard by the sflentlst.
Then, having apparently eghnustrd an
exceedingly copious vocabulary, the ant.
in despair of liberating Its companion,
flashed at It and killed It Thin was evi
dently to the Insect the only course lert
open.
(OURtIIV IMMtItTE THINGS.
Depraved f oliar Huttons, host Spec
tacle*. anti l imit* Thai Collapse.
From the New Orlean* Picayune
One t>f the mysteries cha-t nobody has
ever satisfactorily explained Is the de
pravity of Inanimate things. Wo need a
kind of moral Sir Isaac Newton to take
this subject up and discover what I* the i
attraction of gravitation towards Inlqut
ticse that always prompts a collar button to
roll under the buteau ami that make*
bread fa I on the buttered side. It look*
like It ought to b* ju.-t dead easy for a ,
chair or table or etool to he good and
keep on doing Its duty In tho sphere of
life fo which It has pleased Providence
and the furniture maker to i ail It. with
out any human lapses of virtue by m*
way, but It Is't.
Everybody has had experience with de
ceitful chairs that lured them into sitting
down on them jut In order to collapse
anl bring cogfuston on a bashful man;
cf tables that went out of their way so
they would trip you up; while a three.
hg*ed stool, as a first aid to profanity. ;
has no equal on this sinful earth. A clock
will sit upon the mantel shelf, with a (ace
so open and honest and Innocent It would
take In Bherkvrk Hclmee h mself, and lie !
lo you -hy the hour We all know house*
where we got *ld hard and a warm
"welcome" from the dcor mat ar.d the
marble heart from the people who owned
It. and on whom we never ehotild have
dreamed of celling but for their hypo -rill- I
ral door mat
Nobody will prefend that It Is anything
hut temper that make* chimneys smoke.
They will behave like angels for months
and month#, and then suddenly, without
rhyme or rev son. they heg'n spouting *oot
ami sulphur until they turn every thing
Into a realietlc study of the Inferno Tou
send for a m.m. who come* and pricy
and poke* and breaks the elates on th
mof and sends you In a bill for |3.M.
but nothing does any good' until tn*
•*.Tu f ß them ovtr and see how thsy'rs roads.
ffiKl Ah scams rua around the body."
There is only one kind of C' rxet that can be made thi* wxy. Our
R patents protect us and keep THOMSON’S
“Glove-Fitting”.Corsets
*-p_ in the lead, because they are as different
rotn th ' o,i,er * *’ <I*V is from uiflht.
ft A 1 / ftg/ Our new Straight-Front Corset is
L 1 JgTjf called the M MILITANT.”
|rßrtfc *I Paris ahape our specialty. For sal* every.
, ?' Handsome catalogue mailed /rtf.
Geo. C. Bat.;better & Cos., 34.S B way, N. Y.
For sale by all leading Prv Goods Stores.
chmn©> g ts ovtr its #ulks and resume©
business on it# own account.
sowing mu bin©* r© a# subject to
hysteric# a.** a woman, and have "spellf."
w*h©n th©v can n©th©r b© rea#oned with
nor coerced Into doing th©r duty. There a
ro us© In sending for a doctor. Just lot
>m alone and they will have It out by
th©ma©lve*. and bob up serenely th©
r.rxt day, ready to go to sowing again
Rixor# go on a strike, as any barber will
tell you. and positively refuse to work
unv longer than a union day Only peog>l©
w*b<* wear spectacle* can realix© th©
flendi' malovenf delight they *ak©
in hakng themselves away in oacrot
places, where you never pu them, and
wo ild never dream of looking
In this wick© I world of things how
ever. there hns been ©n© artP'*e that b*.-
Alw’avs been looked upon *© beyond r*
proHi'h and above suspicion—the payar
satis peur ©t san# reproch© of Inar.uno •
things This i# the hairpin Humble and
in onspicuous, yet invaluable, b# modesty
©•#• ine<l only excewi'd by its worth, and
s • It Is a distinct shock to find It figur
ing In the police new# at an a?c*#sorv
to crime, and to learn t:;a' a tolinted
youi man who was orr©s©d last week
- Ft Louis for robbery attributes his
<l/ wnf ;l to the evil influence of a hair
pin In his early boyhood, h© says, his
mother locked him up in a closet. In d©-
l dr he threw himself on the floor, where
his hand cam© In contact with a hairpin
The hairpin suggested to him to pick
•h© lock. He did so and eacaped. but.
he had foimel the lock-picking hohlt
that has now landed him in th© i*©n
i-rttarv. But for the corrupting asaocia
.ii of the hairpin he is confident he
w uld have b©en an honest and honora
ble citixer.
METISES YEARS 03 A\ BRRAYD.
Wlille lies .Inst Returned With the
Tina of Floor.
From the New York World
Svrxcus*. Nov. 14 -Fr*4*rtak Whll*. at
Coventry. h* r*tum#4 to his horn* after
,n absence of sixteen years. On* rtsy in
• n# surtax Of ISM hls 'lf sent him *o Hi#
stotv. a short way off. to buy a bag of
flour, saying:
■ Don't com© hom© without that flour,
daar.”
Whit© p?v*mts©4 to do as ©h© requested,
and started off That was the ksat #©©n
of him until y©s*erday. when he rmumed.
arrying • sack of flour on his shoulder.
"Here** >our flour. Marla,” he said. "I
didn’t forget it.”
Whit© had been suppoeed fo b© dead
Nit It seems tha? h© hvl be©n In th*
West, where he has acquired considerable
p?op rty. H© will return and take his
wlf • back with him.
Color Fine and Mill* Motel.
New York I/©tt©r in Baltimore Bun
Hartwell S. Green, colored, a shipping
ierk, sought to recover FtfO fr©n D. O.
pnopriettir of th© Mill© Hotel, in
Bieerdccr street, on the allegation that
h© had been dl**crimina?©'l against be
*us© of hie ''olor on Feb. 14 last, when
h© entered th© hotel restaurant. Evi
dence was introduced denying that any
discrimination was irindc again*? th©
young ninn. arxl Justice Roeech, befot©
whom U'* case was tried. In the B©ven:h
D. ‘rt* ? MunFipal Court, decided in favor
of Mr Mill©.
Green is
State College and has been one year in
th© N©w York law School He intends
to return South and i ■? law. ainY
until he can complete Mm studies he ls
-nrnlng n living as shipping clerk H©
•vent to the restaurant with lula C.
li©ttAilat© n th© dale mentioned and
after hls plate of soup wa© brought Mrs.
Mary Rusaall. the head waitrem, removed
it to another table, over which hung a
sign. "These tab!'?# nr© reserved for em
ployes only.” Green protested that he
wo© no* an employe of th© place and
would not sit share, whereupon he was
told he could Dave. He had ©om© words
with the cnshler and testified that h©
was pushed out, while hls friend W'as per
mitted to finish hi# m©al. if© admitted
that nobody refuaad to serve him at any
other sal*'.©
Juyti •• Roesch ©aid he was convinced
that Green ©osild have been served there
If he wanted to. that the failure to servo !
him was du > to hi© ow n behavior.
Ilovr I hicngn Women Walla.
Front the R.iltlm re Bun.
“Why do club and society women walk
ungracefully?" was asked of th* Chlcaso
Boutn Bide (Tub, and come of the an
swwrs were:
"Only one woman in twanty-flva walks
wall." said Miss Susanna Cocroft of the
university exien.-ion of physical culture.
"They stand at such dr"adfnl angle#.”
•Only one woman In filly, and It Is be
cause thev do not know how to wear their
corsets, they cannot sdjust them to their
forms," came fr.m Mrs. Frank L 00--
don. ,
"Only on* woman In ten." said Mrs
Frederick L. Fak" 'Wom*n, eapwclally
club and society women. Imitate to Thay
btir.##qua the artistic.”
They can't all walk like Mt# Potier-
Dilmcr; why. h" Juat gll.iew " whispered
a pretty girl with auburn hair.
"They're .eieloea. Pomerlmes I think
they're almost ;.iz>, they tnjik Ihev a.*
mote comfortable If they walk with sunk
en chad* and stomach# thrown out," wa*
put by Mls Bessie Case.
"Women—nearly all of them—wear Im
posslbl" r-lioe# and wa k on their heels.”
declared Mrs. John D Sherman.
Mb* Crovrof; con4lnue*i: "Fh'rago wo
men dmi't use Uie right muscle* in w 'lk
ing. It *cms na If they are prop*tad by
windmill gcsiufcs with the anna. Thir
necks are • raned. their china cxlerdcd. -
..of |
P. P P . a wonderful me<llc|ne; It gives
an appetite; It Invigorate# and strength
en*. P. I* P. cures rneumatlsm and a'l
palo# In the side, back and shojldef*.
knees, hip*, wulaui and Joints. P. p. p.
cures syphilis In all It* various stages,
old ulceia, #oie# aid kidney comp alnt p
P P cure# i atari ah, e rma. enslp-la*
all akin dj and mercurial polnsonlng’
P. P P- cure* dyspepsia, chronic female
complaint a and broken-down constitution
and loss of manhood. P. p. p. trtr b*#t
I tne gv, has madv m ra
perma er.t cure# 'han all other b.ood rem
edies. Lip. man Bros., sol* proprietors.
Savannah, Oa.—ad.
Abbott a East India Com Paint curaa
every tmi". It takes oft th* com; no pain
cure# waru and bunions and Is conceded
to l>e aw, nderfui core cure. Bold by all
druggists—ad ’
For Over Fifty Year#.
,' V ’ r 500,r,ln * s >tup ha* been
lie • dldren teeih.ng, Ii soothe, in*
2rT'lL.!'’* • po"
ooi L ■' I* the be* remedy
-wd! * * rrb °**' Twwnl *’ ov * cent* a boulw
I T. 5 L OF H R 7 UNO C. JB. R’f
■HMUI ICIIKmi.E.
For lalo of Hope. Thunderbolt, Montgom
ery. Cattle Burk and West En I
Hubject to change wub>ut notice
ISLE OF HOPE AND TENTH BTRKET
Lv city for I. of M 1.. l-> H
•• am from Tenth 915 am for"Te'ntlT*
1015 am from Tensh ;I0 IS am for Tenth
U<U am from Tenth ,11 Ul am for Tcimm
I<W pm from Tenth 100 pm for Tenth
*W pm from Tenth ?no pm for Temh
IJO pm from Tenth 2Mpm for Ten'h
•00 pm from Tenth j 3at pm for Tenth
330 pm from Tenth 330 pm for Ter.’h
4on pm from Tench 4W pm for Ten'!,
4JO pm from Tenln ;4Ju pm for Tenin
600 pm from Tenth |5 00 i-m for T*t ; '
sjo pm from Truth \ sso pm for Trr
*OO pm from Tenth Sun pm for Ten'h
■ *Jo pm from Tenth I SJo pm for Ten'o
7Ot pm from Tenth 700 pm for Tenth
7Jo pm from Tenth ►OO pm for T-ritti
SJO pm from Tenth 900 pm for Tenth
F> pm from Tenth (10 00 pm for Tent ,
10 SO pm f r4tm Tenth ,11 uQ pm for Tenth
ISLE OB HOPE AND BOLTON ST
VIA THI'N DER BOLT.
Lv city for I of 11 l.v i. of H for |: tt
trie Thun & C. Park via Thun A C. park
300 am from 110 Inn V .im fW Both
?S0 pm from Bolton j SV< pm for Bolton
I# pm from Bolton 430 pm for Bo;>on
4JO pm from BoMon s*> pm for B'.itan
530 pm from Bolton 8 3fi pm for Hoi ion
*Jo pm from Rollon 7 Jit pm for Rollon
7JO pm from Bolion gSo pm for Bolton
MONTGOMERY
Lv ciljr for Moiitg r> Lit Muntgom, ry
10 16 am from Tenth 035 am for Tenth
lOn pro frdin Tenth 12 15 pm for Tenth
SOO pm from Tenth 230 pm for Tenth
i 6SO pm from Tenth 545 pm for Tenth
THPNDERBOLT AND ISLE OF Hi'PT
Commencing at Km p. m car leu.e,
Thunderbolt every hour for lale of Hop,
until 3:00 p. m.
Commencing at 1:30 p. m. car leave,
I!e of Hope every hour for Thunder
holt until 5 30 p. m.
THT’NDERBOLT BCHEDI’LE
Commencing at 700 a. m. enr leave,
Rolton xtreet Junceion every Ft minute,
until 200 p. m . after a-hlch time car
leave# every 10 minute*.
Commencing at 730 a. m. car leave*
Thunderbolt for Bolton #lreet June".'tt
every 30 minute# until 2:25 p. m . after
which tim* car leave# *v*ry io minute,
The 10-mlnute #chedule ta maintained u
long as travel warrant* It.
WEST END,
Th* flr#t car leave# for W##t End ,4
7 20 a m and every 40 minute# thereafter
until 11:00 a. m . after which a car rune
In each direction every 20 minute* until
midnight.
TT M LOFTON, Oen Mgr
I I'M
Thi* is tho Trado Mark
| of the Best Builders Hard
ware : that made by the
Yale&Towne Mfg. C \
Those who contemp!i:e
building should send for our
• artistic brochure "Artist and
I Artiian:" free.
| H.H.PEEPLES & SOUS,
125 CONGRESS ST. WEST. f
B R Near. F. P Miu-aao j
President Vic* Praatderi j
Uxkht Blow. Jr bee y and Treas I
NEAL-JIILLARD Co.|
Builders’ Material,
Sash, Doors and Bilals, !
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
. Class and Brashes, j
EI’ILDERS' HARDWARE,
i
Linif, Cement and PlasUi.
•-.y „i Whl laker Sir** la.
*
uTuua, u.
►ABBOTT'S
; EAST INDIAN
•Corn Paint
P Cure* Cora*, Banion* and Waru
► Speedily sad Wilkout Fain.
t fOn UU IT UI DW66ATS.
LIPPMAN BROTHERS,
w Who*#ale Druggist*.
Block. Savaanab 0*
CUKE rOUMEin
/ /oCtM\ I r <* • tor
/ /iliiMifA I dlrfcwi#, •
L \l irnuiion* or
fctf Ml •• urtMW. of ‘.l u •••-** V r - Ml,a
[_ ,7rrr..u FtinM. n*l '
t.y-rrkCTV
UictUx Ml • *•*■*