%. “Spring Unlocks The Flowers To Paint the Laughing Soil.” And not even Nature would allow the flowers to grow and blossom {o perfection without good soil. Now Nature and people are much alike; the former must have sunshine, latter must have pure blood in order to have perfect health. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures blood trou- bles of all sorts. It is to the human system what sunshine is to Nature — the destroyer of disease germs. It never disappoints. Poor Blood" The doctor said there were not seven drops of good blood in my body. Hood's Sarsaparilia built me up and made me strong and well.” Svsix E. Browy, 16-Astor Hill, Lynn, Mass, ys tC." A complication of troubles, dyspepsia, chronic catarrh and inflammation of the stomach, rheumatism, ofc, made me miserable. Hadsno appetite until I took Hood's Sarsaparilia, which acted like magic. I am thoroughly cured.” N. B. SexrEy, 1874 W. 14th Av. Denver, Col. am — "My husband was obliged to give up work on account of rheu- matism. Mo remedy helped until be used Hood's Sarsapariila, which permanently cured him, It cured my daughter of ca- tarrh. I give it to the children with good results.” Mus. J, 5. McMars, Stamford, Ct. Hoods Sarsapari Hood's Pills cure liver ills. the non irritating and he only cathartic io ake with Hood's Sarsaparilia. PILES “Isuffered the tortures of the damned with protruding piles brought on by constipa- tion with which I was afflicted for twenty yoars. I ran across your CASCARETS in the town of Newell, Is. and never found anything to equal them. To-day I am entirely free from piles and feel like 8 new man.” C B. Kurz, 1411 Jones St, Sioux Clty, Ia TRADE MAAK REQISTERED Pleasant. Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. To Good, Never Sicken. Weaken. or Gripe. Io. 3c, So. «+ CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Birrllng Remedy Compaen, (hicags, Nostresl, Sew York. ue ¥0-TO-BAC Sotd.and Ae bY all drug- Imported Rchnoedn wista to FE Tobacco Habit, snufl Europe's Reliable ATA B # H Cure. Send 13 cents for GA box. RK OmsTRicwss, 51 E, #7th 88. N.Y, Bae 13 Large Private Library. The largest private library in the which contains over 50.000 collected during sixty years. volumes, Books on and among them Col. Roosevelt worked while preparing his “Winning of the West.” ms III sisi. Tobacco Raising. Prior to 1808 Virginia was the great. ast tobacco-producing state of Amer. ica, the annual yield being 122.000.000 pounds. The present yield of Virginia ing annually 225,000,000 pounds. ssi sins ssa In Germany there Is one soldier for the proportion is one to 15; in Russia | one to 17; in Great Britain one to 72: | in the United States, one to 445 : ; There is No Telling. Be sure not to let rheumatism stay fn the system longer then you can get a bottle of Bt. Jacobs Oil to curs it, There 1s no tell. {ig what part {t may strike or how much misery it may give, —— ——— A Parito, beileved to be the last Yaqui Indian = California, Is dead, He was 103 years old. Educate Your Bowels With Jasearets. Candy Cathartie, cure constipation forever, 0c, 3%. If C. C. ©, fall, druggists refund money. On rainy days Governor Roosevelt still doos the old sombrero which he wore at Santingo and San Juan, iso's C for Consum ton has saved me mea Jure Io bill. ~8, FE Hanoy, Hopkins Place, Baltimore, Md., Dec. 2, 1804 Senator Turner, ot Washington, was one of the famous “CGirant 306" In the national convention of 1880, To Cure Constipation Forever, Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 100 or fe, U C C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Itis understood that Senator Depew has planned an elaborate social campaign for next winter In Washington. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing 8 up for chfldren toothing, softens the gums, ue ninfiamma- tion, ys pain, cures wind colic. #6c.a bottle. Mme. Lili Lehman, the operatie singer, is an active worker in the crusade against vivisection. Wo-To- Bae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobaceo habit cure, makes wash men stroog, blood pure. B50c, Bl. All “lruggists BMITHS IN THE HOUSE. Fhey Are Men Noted for Thel: Ability and Afability. There are four Smiths in this house; there will be five Smiths In the next. Four of them will be republicans, and three of them will come from the state of Michigan, says the Washington Post. In fact, Michigan is the state that furnishes this new statesman of the Smith family, The only demo- cratic Smith Is Mr. David Highbaugh Smith of Hodgensville, Larue county, Kentucky, a little man of nervous man- ner, who is one of the ablest members of the Kentucky delegation in the house, although, as he is now kerving his first term. he has not come very prominently to the front. It was In this Mr. Smith's distriet, not far from Hodgensville, that Abrabam Lincoln was born, which makes it pertinent to remark that Represéntative-Elect Hen- ry C. Bmith of Adrian, in the Second Michigan district, has an Abraham Lincoln habit, much noted by his gros- pective constituents, of {Illustrating his arguments with a pat story. He i= said to be nimble-witted and tells his stories, which are sometimes original, in excellent form. This Michigan a farmer, and was born within miles of the city where he now reaides He pald his own way through college, studied law and has bullt up a prac- tice and won a reputation as the lead- ing attorney of that part of Michigan. He succeeds that intrepid old warrior, Smith clambered into the supporter of Michigan's emphatic chief sxecutive, Representative 8, W. Smith $f the Sixth Michigan district who ia the smallest man in stature in the house, but like Mr. Smith of Adrian a very brilliant lawyer, was re-elected. Representative William Alden Smith, a is a member of the house committee on foreign affairs, and who had a bat- tle with Spanish soldiers in Cuba last ber of them with his silk umbrella, has George W. Smith of Murphysboro, IL, representing the Twenty-Second dis- trict. It is due to all of the Smiths now members of the national house to mention that every one of them Is personally a very companionable gen- tleman, each popular to a degree or cles, mm————— III isso. A man named Kobo, who i= sald to bave been 112 years old, bas just died at Vienns. No INDULGENT MOTHERS | Write matters about physical health. irregular menstruation and leucorrhcca. My appetite was variable, stomach sour and bowels were not regular, and was subject to pains like colic during menstruation. I wrote you and began to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and used two packages of Sanative Wash. Youcan't imagine my relief. My cotrses are natural and general heaithimproved.” . Mrs. NANNIE ADKINS, La Due, Mo., writes: “Dear Mas, PINKHAM—— I feel it my duty to tell you of the good your Vegetable Compound has done my daughter. She suffered” untold agony at time of menstruation be- “Dear suffered from profuse and REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Bubject: “Bundles of Life" —fnspiration Drawn From sn Homely Phrase—Life, Spiritual and Physienl, is Divinely Pro- tectodBundles Which Are Blessings. Texy: ‘The soul of my Lord shall be pound in the bundle of life with the Lord by God.”—I Bamuel xxv., 29, Beautiful Abigail, in her rhythmic plea for the rescue of her inebriate husband, who died within ten days, addresses David, the warrior, in the words of the text. She suggests that his life, physieally and In- tellectually and spiritually, is a valuable package or bundle, divinely bound up and to be divinely protected. The phrase “bundle of life" I heard many times {n my father's family prayers. Fam- ily prayers you know, have frequent repeti- tions, beeause day by day they acknowl. edge about the same blessings and deplore about the same frailties and sympathize with about the same misfortunes, acd I do not know why those who lead at honsshoid devotions should seek variety of composi- tion, That famfliar prayer becomes the household liturgy. I would not give one of my old father's prayers for fifty elosu- tionary supplications. Again and again, in the morning and evening prayer, I neard the request that we might all be bound up in the bundle of life, but I did not know until a few days ago that the phrase was a Bible phrase, During the last spell of sold weather there were bundles that attracted the st- tention and the plaudits of the high heav- ens, buudles of clothing on the way from eomfortable homes to the door of the mission room, and Christ stood in the snowbauks and said as the bundles passed: “Naked, and ya clothed me. Inasmuch as ¥e have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren ye have dons ft unto me.” Those bundies are muoltibly- ing. Blessings on those who pack them. Blessings on those who distribute them. Blessings on those who receive them, With what beautiful aptitude did Abigail in my text speak of the bundle of life! Ob, what a precious buandie is life! Bundles of memories, bundle of hopes, bundle of ambitions, bundle of destinies! Ones in a while a man writes his auloblography, and it is of thrilling interest. The story of his birthplace, the story of his struggles, the story of hissufferings, the story of his triumphs! But if the autobiography of the most eventful life were well written it would make many chapters of adventure, ef tragedy, of comedy, and there would not be an uninteresting step from eradile to grave, Bundle of memories are you! Boyhood memories, with all its injustices from fay. mates, with all its game with ball and bat and kite and sled. Manhood memories, with all your struggles in starting—ob- stacles, opposition, accidents, misfortunes, losses, successes. Memories of the frst marriage you ever saw solemnized, of the drst grave you ever saw opened, of the first mighty wrong vou ever suffered, of the first victory you ever gained, Memory ¢f the hour when you wers afflanced, mem- ory of the first advent in your home, mem- ory of roseate cheek faded and of blue eyes closed in the last sleep, memory of anthem and of dirge, memory of great What a bundle! Bundle of hopes and ambitions also is al- the starting. or what reputation he will will win, What makes college commence. see the students receive their diplomas and be Tennysons in poesy; they will be Willard Parkers in surgery; they will be Alexander will Le Websters in the Senate. Or she will be a Mary Lyon ia eduestional realms, or & Frasees Willard on reforma. hospitals. Or she will make home life and magnifisent womanhood. Ob, what a bundis of hopes and ambitions! It is a bundle of gariands and whieh 1 would not take mignonette nor extioguish brilliance, one sprig of one spark of They who start lite without and inspiring ambitions might as well not start at all, for every Rather would I add be because | wish to take anything from and hosannas, Bundie of faculties in every man and every woman! Power to think—to think of the past and through all the future, to think upward and higher than the highest pinnacle of heaven, or to think downward until there is no lower abysm to fathom, Power to think right, power to think wrong, ower to think forever, for, once having sgun to think, thers shall be po terminus for that exercise, and eternity itseil shall have no power to bid it halt. Faculties to love--filial love, conjugal love, paternal love. maternal love, love of sountry, love of God. Faculty of judgment, with scales #0 delicate and yot so mighty they ean weigh argument, weigh emotions, weigh worlds, weigh heaven and hell. Faculty of will, that can climb mountains or tunnel them, wade seas or bridge them, scoepting eternal enthronement or choosing ever. lasting exiles. Ob, what Ij is to ve a man! Oh, what it Is to be a woman! Hublime and infinite bundie of faculties! The thought of it staggers me, swamps me, stuns me, bewilders me, overwhelms me, Oh, what a bundle of life Abigail of my text saw In David and which we ought to see in every human yet immbrtal being! Know, also, that this bundle of lite is properly directed. Many a bundle has missed its way and disappeared because the address has dropped, and no one oan find by examination for what city or town or neighborhood it was intended, All great carrying companies have so many misdi. rected packages that they appoint days of vendue to dispose of them. All intelligent people know the importance of having a valuable package plainly directed, the name of the one to whom it is togo plainly written. Baggage master and expressman ought to know at the first glance io whom to take it, The bundle of lite that Abigail in my text speaks of is plainly addressed. By divine penmanship it is directed heaven- ®t may bo the earthly distance it travels its destination is the eternal oity of God on high, Every mile it joss away from that direction Is by some uman of infernal frand practiced against it. There are those who put it on some other track, who misplace it in some rong conveyance, who send it off or send It pac some diabolie miscarriage years there are foes within and foes with. out. Mvil appetite joined by outside al lurements, Temptations that have utter] destroyed more people than now inhabit the earth, Gambling saloons and rammer. fos and places where dissoluteness reigns supreme, epough in number to go round and ronnd the earth. Diseouragements, Jenlousies, revenges, malevolonees, disap. pointments, swindles, arsons, confingra« tions and eruelties, which make continued existence of the human race a wonder. ment, Was ever any valuable bundis ever so imperiled as this bundle of lil? Ob. look at the address and get that bundle go- ing in the right way! “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and sont and mind and strength.” Know also that a bundle may have in it more than one invaluable. There may be init a photograph of a loved opesnd a jewel for a earcanet. It may contain sa» embroidered robe and a Dore’s {llustrated Bible. A bundle may have two treasures, Abigafl in my text recognized this when she said to David, “The soul of my lord Is bound in the bundle of life with the Lord thy God.” And Abigail was right. We may be bound 2» with aloving and sympa. thetie God, ® may be as near to Him as ever were emerald snd ruby united in one ring, as ever were two deeds in one pack- Bg6, A¥ ever wore Lwo vases on the same sboll, as ever wers two valuables (u the same bundle, Together in time of sorrow, Together in time of joy. Together on earth. Together in heaven, Close com. panionship of God. Hear Him, “I will never leave thes, nor forsake thee,” “For the mountains shall depart andthe hills be removed, but My kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of My peace be removed, saith the Lord that hath mercy on thes.” And when those Bible authors compared God's friend- ship to the mountains for height and firmness they knew what they were writing about; for they well knew what mountains are. All those lands are moun tainous. Mount Hermon, Mount Gilboa, Mount Gerigsim, Mount Enged!, Mount Horeb, Mount Nebo, Mount Pisgal, Mount Olivet, Mount Zion, Mount Moriah, Mount Lebanon, Mount Sinai, Mount Golgotha, Yes, we have the divine promises that all those mountains shall weigh their anchor- age of rooks and move away from the earth before a loving and sympathetic God will move away from us if we love and trust Him. Oh, {I we could realize that according to mr text we may bound up with that God, bow independent it would make us of things that now harass and an- noy and discom and torment us! In. stead of a grasshopper being a Eales, y world of care would be as liZht as n feather, and tombstones would be marble stairs to the King's palace, and all the gisots of opposition we would smite down up and thigh with grunt slaughter, inow, also, that this bundle of life will be gladly received when it comes to the door of the mansion for whish it was bound and plainly directed. With what alnerity and gles we awall some package that bas been foretold by letter, some holiday pre. sentation, something that will enrich and ornament our home, some testimony of ad- miration and affection! With what glow of expectation we untie the knot and take off the cord that holds it together in safety, and with what glad exclamation we un- chase in all its beauty of eolor and propor. tion, Well, what a day it will be when your precious bundle of life shall be opaned in the “house of many mansions * saintly and angelic and divine inspection! wave and scorched of flame, but sil it has within undamaged of the journey. And with what shoats of joy the bundle of lite heavenly home cirole, come that awaits us if weget In atall. We how hear that we are coming. Baoh close thers between those sudden arrival, poet our coming visit and are at the depot be met at the shining gate by old friends now sainted and kindred now glorified, If there were no angel of God to mest us and show wus the way and polat out and guide us to tinl home, bowered arched and {llumined by asun that never sets, Will it not be glorious, the going in about and apsettiogs of earthly experience? We will soon know all our neighbors, king. iy, queeniy, prophetic, apostolic, seraphie, archangelle. The precious bundie of life and scclamations, we have got safely through, They saw us down here in the struggle. They saw us whon we lost our way. They knew when we got off the right course, None of the thirty-two ships that were overdue at New to mest them at Sandy Hook will be greeted Iu the world if by the pardoning and pro- tecting grace of God we come to celestial wharfage. Wa shall haveto tell them of the many wrecks that we have passed on the way across wild seas and amid Carib bean cyclones, It will be like our arrival some years ago from Now Zealand at Syd. ney, people surprised that we got in at all, because we were two davs late, and some of the ships expected had gone to the bot- tom, and we had passed derelicts ani abandoned crafts all up and down that aw. ful channel-—our arrival in heaven all the more rapturously welcomed because of the doubt as to whether we would ever get there at all, Once there it will bs found that the safety of that preelous bundls of life was assured because it was bound up with the life of God in Jesus Christ. Heaven sould not afford to have that bundle lost because it had bean said in = rd to its transporta- tion and safe arrival, “Kept by the power of God through faith unto complete salva- tion.” The veracity of the heavens is in- volved in its arrival. If God should fail to keep His promise to just one ransomed soul, the pillars of Jehovah's throne would fall, and ths foundations of the eternal city would eramble, and infinite poverties would dash down all the chalioss, and close alithe banqueting balls, and the river of litle would change its course, sweoaping evervihing with desoia. tion, and frost wonld blast all the gardens, and immeasurable sickness slay the fm- mortals, and the new Jerusalem besome an abandoned city. with no chariot wheel onthe streets and no worshippersin the temple—na dead Pompeli of the skies, a Hp Herculaneum of the heavens, Lest any one should doubt, the God who cannot tie his omnipotent hand on the side of his throne and takes afMdavit, declaring, “As I live, saith the Lord God, I bave no pleasure in the death of him that dieth.” Oh, I eannot tell you how I feel about it, the thought is so glorious, nd up with God, Bound up with infinite meray. nd up with infinite joy, Bound up wi finit Bound up with in That As PORTO RICAN BURIALS, Im POMPOUS INTERMENT FOR TUE RICH 1G- NOBLE END FOR POOR. Fixed Rent Paid for Vaulls--Faiiure on Cem- cary Contracts Result in a Trangler of Bones to a Common Pit-~Survival of Quaint Medieval Customs, Among the quaint old customs of medieval times that bold the native Porto Ricans in stagnant channels the funeral ceremony and the aristocratic old Bpanish cemetery present an in teresting feature of the life of those peowle, Upon the hill at the edge of the cap ital, just beyond Morro Castle, with its time-stained, picturesque old walls, within the shadow of its mighty para pet, Hes the Catholic graveyard, with its even rows of marble slabs, its great Roman basilica for the noted dead, its chapel for prayers, and then the dump ing ground for the clay bones of jong forgotten souls that have lost thelr identity. The funeral ceremony is certainly an elaborate affair in these Southern Catholic countries, Take, for example, the death of some Spanish general The great black hearse moves slowly down the narrow streets, with {wo priests in full canonicals preceding it foot, and then four altar-boys swinging the incense lamps, Behind the hearse, draped to the ground and drawn by two horses, come the long line of mourners, composed of the chief dignitaries of the town and the especial friends, Mourners are all men. No woman ever takes part in n funeral procession unless she hap pens to be the chief personage of the These occasion, On the other hand observe the fun eral of a lowly pauper. No pompous procession marks the progress of the dead to the graveyard. The naked body, covered only with a white wind ing sheet, is Inid without a coffin on a six-foot board and carried on the shoulders of four pall bearers, who constitute the only mourners and are almost invariably relatives of the dead. Blowly this sad spectacle of the pov erty-stricken unfortunate passes up the hill to the cemetery, to be met with even a more nmattractive burial The Ban Juan cemetery covers six acres of ground filled up with glabs of white marble at irregular in tervals. All along one side is a long narrow vault like a Roman basilica, where the coffins of the more prosper well niches in the wall and sealed up. This is the most aristocratic mode of burial and it costs the family of the bereaved 11 pesos per annum to re tomb it pald the removed £4 bones of annual rent is ile from the tomb and literally shoveled into ground of skeletons ground is the 1 the obo wid are a Common This dumping dumping ty feet high, and open to the'sky., Al most any day the top of this wall is lined] with a group of soldiers dangling dumping ground and smoking and jesting with the most extraordinary indifference to the lime rendezvous of the dead. Just beyond the low brick wall of the ceme tery, shattered in spots with the force of welldirected American shells, w.0 potter's field. This is only a nar inside thu sub lies and 200 feet long, which lies between the moldering walls of Morro Castle and the graveyard, A horrible plague inden rises eternally from that narrow lape. To it the bodies of the very poor are consigned until the dried skeletons can be heaved into the big vat of skeletons outside. This is the only burial ground in the San Juan district. Being a Catholic cemetery, no Protestant can be buried within its walls, And the lack of a Protestant burial ground has deprived several unfortunate Americans of an definitely marked resting place. No steps have yet been taken to lay out a Protestant burial ground. Sach is an absolute necessity, for an American soldier does occasionally shuffle off this moral coll, in gpite of the winter season and the suppression of the fever pestilence. The Day of the Dead is celebrated with great ceremony in San Juan and is a holiday similar in purpose to De coration Day in the States. All shons are closed and business is entirely sus. pended. On this day women visit the graveyard and decorate the graves with purple wreaths, No other flowers except those of a purple color are used, and beautiful large floral pieces of na: tural and artificial flowers are earrizd to the graves of relatives. Mourners odor black veils. ' Both men and women cemetery chapel the crowd cocoanut milk, are a mob of ignorant, bigoted and superstitious children, the graveyard after dark and a strong belief in ghosts and spirits is illus. trated by a most unusual occurrence Juan, A group of young Porto Ricans were sitting one night in a big open cafe on the main plaza, sipping, as is the cus tom here, dainty cupfuls of chocolate or cocon milk, when one of the num ber, boasting of his pride as a Porto Rican soldier and his ambition to bear American arms, defied the crowd to name anything that he would not con. ed palling an American flag on the whieh ro Mm lying in a swoon at the entrance of the cemetery. In his haste to nail loose sleeve of his coat under the nail, fastening bimself there unwittingly, and after a few strokes of the ham- mer, finding himself held there by some force unknown to him, he lost consciousness hmmediately in the at tick of fright which has seized him. Lucie France Plerce, in the Chicago Herald. BUFFALO BILL'S HUNTING, His Remarkable Exploit With as Outfit That Excited Derision. A lively little story of hunting is tola by Buffalo Bil. A herd had been sighted from camp, and the famous ranger at once jumped on his horse in quest of fresh meat, of which he and his companions were in great need, “While I was riding toward the buf- faloes, | saw five horsemen from the fort, who were evidently going out for a chase. They proved to be newly ar- rived officers-a captain and his leu- tenants. ‘Hello, my friend. sang out the captain, ‘I see that you are after the same game that we are!” ‘Yes, sir,’ 8a. I, “They scanned my cheap outfit very clogely, and, as my horse looked like a work horse, ana had on only a blind bridle, they evidently considered me a green hand at hunting. ‘Do you ex- to catbh buffaloes on that Gothic steed? laughed the captain. ‘I hope so by pushing bard enough on the reins, reply ‘You'll never world, my fine fel- fast horse pect these Was my cateh them low! said to do that ‘Does 1t7 asked 1, as if | didn’t know Yes; but come slong with us, for we are going to kill them more for pleasure than anything else. All want the and a piece of tenderloin, and you may have all that is left.’ “I'm much obliged to you, captain,’ said 1, ‘i follow you.' “There were 11 buffaloes in the herd, and they were not more than a mile ahead. 1 saw were making ward the creek for water, and [ start. ed up that way to head them off, while the officers came up in the rear and gave The animals cams rushing past me, not 100 yards dis tant, with the officers 300 yards in the rear. 1 pulled the blind bridle off my horse, and he, a train knew actly started at brought me buffalo. [1 raised killed the animal at the My horse then carried me the and | dropped him at t Thus 1 killed the buff shots, and, as the ‘it in he tnkes a we are Tongues carelessly. they to chase, «1 hunter, He i speed and ©x what to do i the top of bh alongside the rear gun, fred first shot, my and alongside next one, * next fire, lors with 12 last animal dropped, my temember, 1 had been riding him without bridle, reins or sad- : but 1 jumped to the ground, know- ing be would not leave me. “The astonished officers were just riding up. ‘Now, gentlemen, said 1. ‘allow m= to present vou with all the tongues and tenderloins you want’ ‘Well, sald the captain, ‘I never saw the before! Who under the sun are you, anyhow? ‘My name is Cody.’ #1 horse of yours certainly has T Yes, sir: you're right; he has not only the points, but he knows how them.” ‘So 1 neo- ticed.” ™ 11 id the horse stopped. tile like ry 4 43 funning points 10 use A Musk Rat Preserve During the last year the wmembers of the Cedar Point Club have taken steps to prevent the rapid extermination of musk rats in the marsh, and have adopted stringent measures to keep poachers from the preserves of the club, As a result the marsh about the club grounds has the appearance of a veritable musk rat city, so thick are the houses of the animal. The rats are more numerous than ever before, and by next year they will be so plentiful that hunting them can go on without fear of extermination. For many years the awellers along the bay shore have made it a business to systematically hunt “the rat” and kill them off in every possible man- wer, primarily for the skin, and see ondarily because their flesh is one of the delicacies of the season. Owing to the fact that a nomber of people are bwing introduced to the rat as a Gtlicate article of food, the demand at times exceeds the supply by sev eral rate, and the hunters have resorte od to every menas to secure them. This boded no good for the members of the tribe about the marsh, and led the Cedar Point Club to take steps against the miscellancous hunting. action of the club meets the served is one of the finest dishes ima. ginable. Toledo Blade, Big System of Packets. A big system of packet steamers is planed for tha Mississippi river, which may bring back part of the im the river fn the timex whea Mark The plan i= to run 8 line of passenger and freight steamboats dally from St. Paul to New Orleans, tonching only at the most important points. At intermedi ate points tenders will meet the pass. ing steamers, Depots will be built for the convenience of passengers. The passenger and freight boats will be distinct. They will be fast, with steel hulle, and will draw so litle water that the runs can be made on strict schedule Gime in the lowest water, In the pilot system there is a wide varia. Yam Ero hack Twain's ach