Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, October 13, 1888, Page 4, Image 4

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mjj-LmEOEK. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1888.
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WL
R MAN'S CniEFEST STAFF. 2
PROSPERITY
OWED OV
ALWAYS FORESHAD
DIQ WHEAT CROPS.
tteir UitftThttit Railing Districts of llie
World Are lltrlbiitrl Otrr llie llnrtli'
Surface and Heur It In Ral.nl In Dif
ferent Lnnilt.
II
nud rll
nv otlier
feed grain, nud American
formers liave lately re
alUed tlie fact Hint they no louder held
the controlling forcei in tlie wlicut mar
kets of the world, lltitsla nud llungnry
they had long recognized ns standing
rivals iu the markets of western Europe,
but between 1678 and 1831 enormous biiji-
F'lles of the great cereal began te pour iu
retn India nud Australia, northwestern
Cannda nnd the Argentlne Republic. Of
all these India excited the most astonish
Burnt. The western world had long looked
upon It as n worn out land nnd Its peeple
asolTete; the expert of JiiO.OOO bushels of
wheat ene year was noted In the Ameri
can papers ns n curiosity, nnd that of
1,500,000 bushels iu 1873 ns n phenome
non. Hut the next j ear India's expert
was 4.000.000 bushels, nnd then, save la
p wW
VS.K fmum.ll HEAT is produces I
f' Wf lW inore count
& 1
the fnmlue years of 1878-70. it doubled
Mid trebled j ear by year, till inlHS'JIt
reached the enormous aggregate of !17,.
000,000 hnshel.i, completely Betting at
naught nil the mailed calculations uf the
western world. v
i. - , The American farmer had nlieadv hnd
' puzzling cspcrieiiLe villi wheat. Down
"e 1810 that cereal had followed tlie
usual law of being cheap when the crop
was large, nud vlce crsu, nud be much
de habits of mind control most men that
It lias taken forty yearn' otpericneo te
show that whent is n marked exception
te that rule. Ouly ene )enr bIiice 18IU
baa an enormous crop in the I'nltcd
Gtatcs coincided with a very low price,
and only ence n very peer crop with u
very high price, In every ether case the
best crop ears liave been the best price
years. The explanation la ulinplu: iii u
rule when there Is n very futornble nca
seu en ene blde of the glebo, there Is u
rather unfavorable! ene en the ether; nnd
olnce 1810 the price of wheat in western
Eurepe has fixed the price in America.
Of this paradox, that increased supply
docs net decrease prices, n few Instant os
way be cited. The year 1831 was mumor mumer mumor
able in the Ohie alley for the largest
wheat crop evor produced down te that
tlme and ter a drought that reduced the
corn crop below the demand for home
consumption When, therefore $1 a
bushel was offered in the west iu July, it
was naturally attributed te the tonicity of
corn; but wheat went en rising till it
reached $2.G0 lu New Yerk city and rt
corresponding price in the Ohie vnlley.
In 1853 the rauge la New Yerk was f rum
1.9(1 te $0.80, and the Crimean war wns
popularly assigned ns the nole cause. Hut
7T
v
'4
"WHEAT COUNTISIUU 01' Till: Vl Olll.ll
The wheat dlitncU nre ludleatnl liy n V
lu 1837 the nwge wns $1 S3 te !f 1.03, mid
in 1838 1 20(e $1 GO. nnd the decllue uiih
curiously coincident with the declining
yield per acie. In 1801 there was a crop
exceeding oil iirovleus experience, et
prices rose; nnd In lb(l3 nnd 1815(1 ful'rly
geed crops sold nt the highest piice ee'r
icallzcd. Even en a. geld basis prires
wcre phenomenally high. The lurgcHt
crop, proportioned te population, eer
produced In the United States was In 187U,
yet prices ranged 20 per cent higher than
the preceding year, nnd higher than lu
any subsequent year witli ene exception
The repeal of the llrilish "corn laws"
lu 1810, of course, gnve nu Impulae te
Amcricau expeits, nnd by 1M30 the foreign
niarket became somew lint Impeitant, jet
the total of nil agricultural experts Mas
but $12J,823,809. Tlie gre th thereafter
was remarkably regular the Crimean ar
making no such dlllcrcuce as Is generallj
supposed and the American eh II war
iery Ilttle till 18711. then the
sport from the United States be
fcicrcase with a rapidltj that Bet
calculations nt naught, rising
lume exceeded Si00.000.000 nor
jear, risiujj till iu uiiie years the tetnl ex
cceded that of all previous j cars hlncothe
renublie was established, uud the "fnvor "fnver "fnvor
able balance of trade'Mhus created went
near te $1,000,000,000! Iu 1873-82, in
clusive, oue-feui'Ji of the total oxjierts
from the United States vere of wheat
aud Heur, nnd the grand nggreg.Ue mny
be set lu round lsumbera nt 1,200,000,000
bushels. It was the rimers' wheat Hint
made Bpecie resumption easy nnd created
the "llush times" of 1870-83. And thea
began that extraordinary dovclepmeut U
ethor countries which must new be care
fully studied.
India, for the purposes of this luqtilry.
means British India, and In thut depend,
eucy the British liave constructed benm
10,000 miles of rnllwuj nud many canals,
both for navigation nud irrigation. KM
a surprise. Indeed, te loam that there nra
lu ene tract about 00,000 cquare miles el
land capable of producing wheat that can
be mada productive by canals new In pre
cess of construction, and that at the ery
tlme there was n famlue en ene ttde e'f
India wheat and rice en the ether bide
went te waste for mere want of transpor
tation. It is clearly demonstrated that
the laud already under tlio'plew in India
can fumlsb abundant feed' for the teta'
population and wheat for expert te the
Yalue of $100,000,000, nud that the British
ire fast supplying the incaus of '.ranspur '.ranspur
tatien, which was all that was lacking
Add te this tlie fact that 125,000 bquare
miles of geed land in that country arebtUl
undeveloped, and the posbihilltfes of Its
wheat expert will be plain.
Other statisticians estimate that wbe'i
the proposed canals are completed, Indlu
cau tasily expert ever 200,000,000 bushe's
of wheat all that produced en n ferti'e
bell by men who work for tight cents pur
day, and transported id England at a cost
but bU cents a bushel gi eater than from
the American coast.
Tlie Argentine Republic is a new ex
porter of wheat, though Chill has been
known iu that line te Amerlcuus iuce it
supplied the first miners in California;
but the IJcpublie contains 000,000 square
miles and less thau 3,000,000 people, uud
is increasing Its graiu product with listen
ishlng rapidity Between lb50 aud 1870
the experts increased mere than four fold
In quantity and blx fold lu vulue Yet
wheat was scarcely mt-itlened in them be
lore 1675. Then the development becume
Burprisingly rapid. Six extensive ruil
read lines are Iu operation, and the bceues
as they advance ujieii the plains are much
llke these Bieu in the epeuing of forms
aud building of towns along the various
Pacific railways. Over 100,000,000 of
British capital have been Invested In a
few j ears, aud 40,000 Scotch nud Irish
liave located lu a single stnle of the Ile
public. In a report te the home govern
ment en their londltlen the Irish, seven
years age, returned the sheep owned by
them at 30,000,000, '
Australia's possibilities of wheat expert
are equally undetermined, but kuewn te
be Immense. Of northwestern Canada, it
i hardly possible te ejsI.vu a limit that
vUi eiu reasonable I'&at ear line
JSUMUK
whe e:
gnutaj
nil lerrmN;
till itsve1
nncne was grown in tne vnney of l'oace
river lu latitude 50'; the plains of the
Saskatchewan liave long been proved
capable of n heavy jleid, and in the
smnll proUnce of Manitoba are 20,000
square mllci of land net surpaed in
the world for unbroken fertility and capa capa
bie of producing ns high nn nvprage of
wheat ns the best lnnds of Mlnnosetn nnd
Dakota The wheat isef the hard "Scotch
I'yfTe" variety, greutlv Bought after by
the millers of Knglnnil nnd u mi ally bring
ing n few rents inore per bushel thau
wliat grown farther south. In short. It
may confidently le stnted that with the
Introduction of American plows nnd reap
ers, the present wheat growing countries
of the world could, In a erV few years,
lucreae their experts mere than flve feldl
Aud this leaves entirely out Of the ac
&fi Sj J I'll ii- Va '
Miy.yv'
WIIUAl IIA1IV1MT IN INDIA.
count many countrlet net usunllj thought
of ns even possible exporters of wheat
incidentally It may be wr II te contrast
this with the very limited nrea for corn
(maize) Iu nil l.urope the nrcn Biiltnlile
for mal?e Bcarcely equals that of the
Binallest western stale Indiana. Iu
America the area of corn growing, with
nuy geed result, is certainly less than
half that of wheat. In India corn ran be
grown, but only under favorable rlrcuin
stniicci Of Australia nnd the Argentlne
Itepuhllc the muiie may be said. Wheat
U grounwlthcnse nnd iu enormous qiiiin
titles, without Irrigation, iu such it'glens
ns California, whcni net a dreii of ralu
falls from Ma j' till Octeber, but corn,
neer. In short, It mny with confidence
lie nlllimcd that tlie possible corn lands of
the world nre net one fifth (probably net
one tenth) the posslble wheal lands, nnd
that the gient central belt of American
btntes, from the line of southern Tonnes Tennes Tonnes
heo te that of northern Indiana, have in
this nu advantage net threatened as nre
the wheat growers te the north or the
cotton growers te the Houth of them Tlie
expert of cotton from India has already
i inched 1,000.000 bales.
In the burly burly of American politics,
from the panic of 1873 te the ' boom" of
1870-81, nnd the hentid discussions of
"neft money" nud "hard inoiiej'," no ene
observed the tremundeiis forces working
in Ktnope te "help out" the Americans;
vet it Is n fart thnt in thosejeurs the Old
Veild was literally compelled te let urn
much of the geld exported during the
civil war, nnd a moiety of thu bonus ox ex ox
ierted after the war, lu payment for feed
supplies. It was fact, conclusively proved
before a parliament my commission, that
the live jeais of 1 8711-711, inclusive, weie
thu worst llve jeurs ever known in the
history of British agriculture, nnd that
Knglaud and I'runce together hnd te im
pert In that period ever $1,500,000,000
worth of gtnlnl Sir Jnmes Calrd BUiiininr
ires the testimony taken by the cemmls
Blen very carefully, nnd demonstrates
that the British furmeri lest $700.
&
i2a5:..
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. j.rT
fKW.filWV?'
5HCr.naS&:s
s-
a" r ' Tr
'
TllltI.BUI.Ml WIII1AT IN KdVlT
000,000 by excessive nud untimely
I aim. Se coiuplete wns the dis
ceuiiigenicnt thnt the wheat ncie
ngn of tlie I'nlted Kingdom decreased
from t),a'10,707 ncies in 1871 te 2.U07.050
in 1H81 mero thnu 32 per cent In many
lnstmices farm laborers hnivestid wheat
in lubber boeU, and nprc.ul the linrvest
en hummocks and sralTeldlng te dry be
tween showers Tlie lusults te the
United Stntes nre most eloquently told lu
these llguies
l'lem 1H.10 te 1H0 tlie I'nlted Stutes
exported 05H,3SU.OUJ bushels of whent,
and of this tetnl. ('.07,.r.,l),801 bushels,
mere than two thirds, worn exported In
the ten je.us ending 1890, nnd two thirds
of that, ueaily half of the whole, -1 III.
110,125 bushels, were sent in the last llve
jean Iu bheit, the exiKiits lu these llve
jeara were moie than 60 per cent, greater
than iu the forty jears from 1830 te 1870.
Though British crops Improved, the urea
of wheat gi owing had been se l educed by
the disreurngid fanners thnt the im
mense American expert ceutliiued soine
j ears longer.
It may Interest American farmers te
leai li nlbe thut they have net uttnlned te
nujthliig like the possible jlchi per ucie,
fur even in tlie notably bad jenrs the
British uveraged n fraction ever eighteen
bubhels per ncie, ns In erdlnaiy ve.us
they nvcia,';u thlity. Seme of tlie states
of (iettnniij average thirty two, onevcai
with niiother, or enough te bread Blx'pcr Blx'pcr
Benn, assuming nu ordinary aupply of
vegetables J. ll. Ilnvtii r.
Muililiie ulu for Nervrt.
It has iH'en suggested that the nolse of
lunchluery has n beneficial ellect upon the
nerves of glils nnd women empleved lu
factories, l'er the first few weeks'ef her
werknmid the ceaseless clatter the em em em
ploye generally has headaches, n tendency
te deatness, uud buffers considerably from
insomnia Later, when she has become
accustomed te It, the headaches disappear,
heai ing is ivmarkably acute, and her ner.
veusiiess is much ubated. Tite icsiilt U
the jeversoef what would be expected,
but statisticians aud hyglenists bay that
it is what is found iu the majority of
cabes. Chicago Neus.
lalliU Chimney In lUlitt-nre.
Probably the tallest chimney lu the
world is one that is being erected nt liist
Newark Its diameter ut the base Is 23
feet, imd it is te be l feet In diameter lit
the top. It Is te be of Belld brick lean
altitude of 010 feet. A cast Iren rim 20
feet iu diameter nud n bell will surmount
the whole, making the tetnl altitude of
the utructuie 330 feet. There will be
1,700,000 bricks used in its construction,
nnd its cost will be $83,000. A view of it
can be hnd from trains crossing the New.
nrk meadows. New Yerk Sun.
Xutlilng IJUe the Dinner Hum.
Japanese gongs melodiously summon
guests te dinner, nud are considered u
great Improvement upon the dinner bell.
Of all devices, hew ever, which have been
invented te call people te meals, Includ
ing the bugle, the geug, strings of bells
susponded from thojiertloro red, and tlie
soft spoken waiter, no arrangement seuds
buch u thrill nud awukes such an nppctlte
as the fanner's horn. Chicago lleruld.
Outer of Our L'nllersc.
Considering the fact that many nstie.
uemers are Inclined te regard Alcyone the
chief star of the l'leiades, ns the center
about width tlie univcrse lovehes. It
seems quite curious that many savuge nud
Lcmi-clvillzed tnboshaveglven this group
cf stars nu extraordinary importance.
The iicculiar beliefs which they held con cen
ceriilng it appear te be of great autinuity.
Arkuusnw Traveler.
fil of tlie AValit.
Statistics furnished by the Londen stay
and corset makers prove that the average
I bize ei i no leuiale stay wearing waists has
decreased two Inches In the last twenty
five j ears One mother had ordered a
curevv ei bmecu ineiies te be worn by her
17 year-old daughter by day, und otie of
eighteen luches te be worn at night.
Jvew Yerk Sua.
S I f- -
4$V
TUB POLICE OF LONDON.
6COTLAND YARD, THE ORGANIZA
TION'S HEADQUARTERS.
home I'srt in Itpjjerd Tlirrde Are Rrn
ilrred Tlmrly by Hie Torrllile Munlrrs lu
tVlillrrliurtcl, itrni of llie Ijini-.t Mum.
In tliu (Irrit Mrtriellii of tlm tVurlil,
ON'DON has been
inore stirred up
by the White
r Impel murders
than by nuycrluie
committed lu
many j ears. Tlie
fact that se many
women could be
slaughtered, evi
dently by t li
cinie hand, nnd
llie murderer for
for se long n tlme
el ude the Iindeu
pollcelsasurprlso
te Ixndencrs, who
lielleve that they
have the best police force In the world.
lleivever, It Is the Iiuden dctectlvn
ferce, rnther than the police forre, whose
especial duty It Is te seek out the nuthers
of crime, though detectives nre really but
n higher grade of police. In 1877 the
loiiilen detective forre was reorganized,
slnce when It has been regarded remark
nbly elllrlent. i'l-ovieus te that tlme the
ferce consisted of severnl detectives in
ouch district, under the direction of the
superintendent or captain of the district,
nnd of thirty men at the central olllre nt
Scotland Yard There were, therefqre, a.
number of Independent detachments.
On April 8, 187H, n reform went lulg
operation, the object of which vva'i te con cen con
jelldato tlie forre, nnd te rentrnlize the
authority under which It worked As 10
formed, the control of the ferce is in the
hands of n new department, thnt of crim
inal Investigation, which Is under the
charge of the director of Scotland Yatd.
In ench city division there Is n local in
Bpccter, who hns charge of the detectives
et his division, nnd who Is supposed te
bon lepreseiitntlveef thodliecler, though
really under the control of the superln
temleiit Whether the system Is tee
itimbersotne or tee hjstemntle for prne
tlcnl dntcctive work, Investigation Is cur
rleden pretty Independently bv divisions,
but the Idea of Scotland Yard being the
router from which nil detective weik is
guided Is Btlll kept alive among the poe
ple The Inspectors meet there from
time te time, local superintendents send
there reports of rrliiies w hlch have been
committed during tlie pievieiis tweiitv
four hours every morning, end the ill
rector is nutipescd te issue the lnstruc
tlens regarding them, but practically the
Inspectors me Independent, for the mat
ttr of nuj crluie is usual I remanded te
them.
The delect lve fin c of Londen consists
of .100 men In summer nud 700 iu winter
They nre chosen fieni the police for their
ingenuity In tracking criminals, be far u
this la nppiircnt The Sri ill nud Yntd ferce
consists of eighty men, nenily nil of
whom rank ns inspectors This forre Iiuh
se long been the focus of observation iu
crluilunl investigation, it has been called
upon se often te nsslst the novelist,
especially ene whose plot cevms u crime,
or ene who writes detective stories, that
TUVIMI '10 IUIMIIV 'I II IS WHITKt UM'II.
Ml unr.ui-K:)
Its reputation has become worldwide from
this boiireenlcnie, without considering the
niiiiiy lemnrkuble eriiulunl eases viith
vhlcli it has had te de Novelists, hew
ever, have often taken grcnt liberties
with Soot land Ymd niles The ferce is
used for oiideu iilenu, u Londen detee
tlve being BCiircelj' ever sent iiuyvvhciu
else, let mnny n sterj teller has sum
moned u Scotland Yard detective te help
him out with his plot, te gowhire his
chief would net think of Binding him
But with the novelist all things me pes
bible, the Inspector urrlvcs, und If the
Ingenuity of the leal detective nnd ins
lurk were n tithe of w"liat they are in the
novel, no guilty man would ever eiciipe
The ferce Is under the direct orders of
the usslstnut commissioner It luvesti
gutes notable crimes like tlie Wliitechapel
murders, but its principal business Is em
bozzlemcuts. forgeries und ether similar
mutters. It also does u great deal of
government work, both for the British
crown nnd for the governments of fmelgn
countries. The foice nlse Is expected te
investigate all uiiplicntletis fernatuniliza
tleu nnd uttcrni popular gatherings, bo
bbles hoepiuir nn eye en nil professieiial
criminals wbe may le ut lurge Once
a week a hitland Ymd detivtlve geel
te the city prisons te leek nt tin)
prisoners uwultiug trull nnd hee if miy
uie known te him. The foreign cer
tcsKiudeuie Is nn important item Ter
moil) tills weik was done bv a ferce of
ilvll beivice clerks. New it is nil dena
at Scotland Yard, nud each letter recelvid
is replied te iu the language lu which it
Is vvrltteu.
Theio Is, doubtless, niuih variety nnd
excitement lu the work of a detective
He must take what clew he hits, If uuv,
mid fellow the dic'tates of his own iii
genulty. Often he Ingratiates himselt
into the confidence of the buspectesl crlm
lual, und detectives liave been known te
livewith n criniianl for months befere
getting the proof required for conviction
Heeeutlv iu Chicago at an anarchist tunl
ene of the pi iseuers, w he w as being pi eucd
tee haid bv the questions efnluvvjer,
stepped uslde from among the criminals
and began te chat familial ly with the
prosecuting ut turner. He proved te be a
detective who had Veen se familiar with
the accused ns te be arrested and tiled for
the utleiise they had committed
A Hint for Clllei.
Nothing could be better than the asso asse asso
elatien icceutly formed In l'hll.ulelpliia
eallyd tlie Open Space association, luvv lug
for its object the increase of small parks
mid ether openings in the mass of houses
ns n sanitary measure, and nlse for the
comfort nnd refinement of the people.
This Is better than sending crowds of
children out for open air during u month
of summer. An address befere the Mis
beurl Horticultural society, bkuie jears
bluce, recommended n bj stein allow lug fur
nuepeuiug every fourth of n mile In nil
streets, lu this wny u city would be
thoroughly bunny nnd nt the b'uiie time
be prev Ided w 1th shaded spots The bame
plan included drinking fountains lu each
opening prev ided three times a day with
Ice. Old cities can only be improved.
New cities can be laid out en the liotter
' principles, bucli cities could net easily
J have portions Hint fall Inte degraded
j physical habits nnd become both v lie und
unsightly. Te reform meu we must re
form homes. New- Yerk Oraphlc.
i
I A Had ."Meinerj.
I When a Cincinnati husband wn3 nsked
lu court if bu drugged his wife out of bed
by the hair he said be ceuhlu t really ic
luember, a that was n very busy meru
lug with him. Detroit Trte Press
fAL. ) r ' tiM
WlUTri!
ALL THE VAY FROM PERSIA.
HndJI Itnmlrn Kell Klinn, MlnUler te the
L'nltiMl fatalcs.
Hadji ILi&slen Kell Khan, minister
plenipotentiary and envoy extraordinary
from 1'crsiate the United States, Is the
first representative the Persian govern
ment has hail lu this reuntry. In Mny of
this year he wns notified that he would
be sent te the I'nlted States, nnd en the
-1 tli of August last he left Teheran en his
wny thither with u secretary of legation
nnd n prlvnte Bccietnry, Dr. W. W. Tor Ter Tor
rence, who Is also Interpreter. The party
Btepped for twenty-four dnys In Constan
tinople, te attend home religious ceremo
nies there, the minister being a Moliam Meliam
tncdnii. A long stny was nlse made lu
Purls, nnd the pnrtv nrrlved In Washing,
ten Oct 1 Hadji "Hassleii Kell Is about
40 years of age, nnd Is the beh of a for
mer Persian prima minister.
l'er twenty jears he has liecn connected
with the Persian foreign olllce, nnd for
t hrce j ears w ns consul general te Bombay,
no is u prince ny
birth, but is thor
oughly demo
cratic In his ideas,
as he wiys him
Belf, "n verj1
slmple man." Ills
wife is a Persian
princess, and It Is
possible If he re
mains in this
country that she
will Jein him lie
Is n smnll man,,
with the olive
complexion of his
country, i,pnrk
ling eyes, n quick
wit nnd n leady
ItOM KHAN
tongue He spenk3 very Ilttle Kngllsh,
but is lluent in French, which he learned
In India. Tlie picture given In this
tkelch, taken by Merritt ft Van Wag Wag
ener, of Washington, Is the first he ever
had taken outside of Persia, nnd his
dicss Is much simpler than he wears en
state occasions The prince will liuve u
house iu Washington und hcltle down te
housekeeping in n plain, unostenta
tious wiiv, but he will nevertheless
be n Beclal attraction, nnd his glitter
nnd jewels nnd rahhmere und silks will be
given nn opportunity te dnzle the eyes of
society lie has nlready begun te go te
the theatre nud his capabilities of enjej--uiPiit
nppcnr te lie well developed He
lll.es America very much ns fur ns he has
gene, nud ene thing which plenses his ex
lelleticy especially Is the telephone, nnd
he hns uliendy expressed n detormlnntleu
te put ene in his liouse ns seen ns he gets
the furniture iu. Hadji Hasslcu Is pro
gressive nnd his residence lu America enn enn
uet but lesult iu geed for ids own
country.
THOMAS B. BAnrtY.
IIU Iti'ilsnullim Tretn llie Ftecutlve Heard
or llie K. uf I.
The rehlgnntieu of Themas B Barry
from thu evecutlve beaid of the Knights
of Laber, though for sonie tlme expected,
is ene of many signs that the order Is
undergoing u sort of transformation. Mr
B.ury has long entertained feelings of
hostility te General Master Workman
Pevvderly, und In his letter of resignation,
dated Oct 5, ut Last feuginaw, Mich, he
uuncus tlie man
iigemeut Hiivugcly
uud predicts iniu
te the eider if the
prevailing meth
oils continue
1 hemns B Bar
ly was lMirn Jul v
17, 1852, nt te'
lines. N Y , und
ut the early n' of
H went te work iu
u knitting mill for
iJO per month, nu
experience which
made him nu ear
nest ndvocute of
THOMAS II. llUlltV.
trades unions us
seen ns he was old
enough He quit the mills at lineally
age mm leiuned the trade of n maker,
lu Ihflll he joined an attempt te oigaulze
that trade, which failed, nud he was
blacklisted by the imiuufnctuiers, nnd
this made him nn ngituter nnd labor io ie
funnel for life He has lieen in rested live
times for organizing and leading strikes,
but has often triumphed Once he was
put under $150,000 ball, nnd was sued by
n luuibi r dealer for $10,0(10 damages, the
trial lesultiug in a verdict ngalnst him
lr $2 00 Of course, all this only
htieiigtlicued liim with tlie organized
werkingmcu, und with the lise if the
Knights of liber he became irenilnent.
He sirred the order well In all luuliH up
teniiuilier of tlie executive beard and
ether etilces of tlie general nsseniblv lie
has the "gilt" of an lush Ameiican nud
tin liujieliliug tenacltj of purpose.
Auk ill n ll.iul.em.
The American Bankers' association hns
just Ik en holding its annual meeting in
Cincinnati, nud veij- weighty weie tlie
discussions that were earned en. But
there was plenty of brightness as well as
pmfuudltj in the papers read by the
limuiciers who were
present. Hew could It
lie otherwise, vv lieu the
officers of the erganl
zatien are as alert in
tellect ually us Ixignn
Murrav, president;
Jehn Jay '-.nex, chair
man of the eeeu-
ti v e committee,
nnd Kdwuid 1
Baker, treasurer?
Of the tluee
IllllVN Ml ltltVV
1 U W 1' II VM I!
Mr Kun Is bet
known He was for
beventeeu v e n r s
'(
JOHN J KM)
deputy comptroller and comptroller of the
United btntes treasuiy, Ids bervice iu that
ca parity beginning iii 18(57 and i losing In
18M Vk lore he was made comptroller he
had ehaige uf the mint and coinage cone cene cone
bpendem e Among the most notable in
cldeiiis iu his elliei.il eaieer was the dis
reveiv of n large defalcation at New Or
hails lie is n native of New Yolk state.
An 1'ikUtI.iKi i Centrivaiue
A Pint lluferj, Mich . undertaker has
had n luige tent muds. Whenever he has
n funeral en a laltij daj' he will place the
tout ever the crave be that the service
may .be held with but little luconven lucenven luconven
Unce Cliiiage Herald.
A liln nnd 111 AV11I.
De Litinay, Italiam ambassador at Ber
lln, fcerved ler a tlme as the private fiecre
iiirv ie v.iianes Aiecrt, King or Sardinia
und lifter bis rnslmi-itlen u,w 1,1a .
la.
panleu lu his letlremcnt nt Oporto. A
lew dajs befere the death of Charles
Albert his trusted frleud approached him
und said, "Perhaps It would be well for
jour majesty te give j'eur last wishes iu
wilting, and make jour will." A melan
choly Bimle passed ever the luenuich's
fuce ns he nubwercd, "My villi j en ure
light; I had net thought of it to te
morrow." On the following day le
Iiunav appeared in the nutecliambcr
with the proper perseus. exiectiiig that
the klnj would dictate his will te him.
He knocked at the deer of the bed
chamber. "Is it jeu, mv friend?" in
)ulred Charles Alliert. "Ahl I had quite
lorgetteul My will CIose the deer be
that no ene slmll hear us. Come te my
iMidslde " The king then vv hlspered into
De launay b ear "I de net own a single
coutebluio. hat tort of n will shall I
make11 1 have livej in poverty, and iu
iKiverty I shall die. Thus It behooves tlie
kings i( the Lou-e of Savev." Heme
Journal.
A Clvdcslale colt has bet u J.ld ft. 7
3,000, the higliSit price ever paid for a
draught Uore.
0
jmimrJ&'miKf?
fff7P
fe31W
II if l , JfAK'f
1 Abf
FEEDING VERSUS FIGHTING.
What It Mrsni te Keep the Arrnj'i Im
mcne Slemncli I'lUfd The Glerj-.
"There is ene feature In active military
operations," said an old Union veteran In
the ceurse of a long war reminiscence,
"that the general run of pcople Ilttle
realize, nud that Is, what it menus te feed
nn army, und especially an army pushed
far In advauce of Its base of supplies. An
army is n lerrible creature te feed. It
lights occasionally; It feeds all the time.
It is an lmmcnse stomach with thousands
of mouths nlwnys crjlng for mero. It
can't be put off or ordered net te be
hungry. With 20,000 or 80,000 men in a
thinly settled, mountainous country an
enemy's country at that nnd with that
enemy In iiosscssien of a part of the only
rickety railroad running through It, and
his cavalry gallivanting nreund, you knew
net exactly where, between you and the
plnce you drnw jour tens of Buppllca
from, your only means of gettlug these
tens en tens of bread and salt beef or
perk mid ether thlugt Is te have them
huulcd ev er this half made mountain read,
which a man brought up in a finished
country would hardly dure, te travel ou
anyway.
"Yeu have creeks te cress or rickety
bridges, or you find the bridges destroyed.
Yeu liave small rivers te ford, llable te
be swollen at any tlme la a few hours by
rain. Yeu have only a slngle wagon
track te travel en, running up nud down
bills and mountains, or along their sides,
net kept In repair, nnd if a wagon breaks
down your whele precession of vehicles:
is stepped until it can be get out of the
way. Yeu don't knew at what moment
iu this country, new nnd slrange te you,
u squad of guerrillas, te whom every read
and pass has been familiar from their
j euth, will sweep down or llre from an
nmbuscade upon bome portion of your
long drawn out, BtraggUng train of
wagons, all of which, from tlie narrow narrew
liess of the read, it Is impossible fully te
guard. Yeu must drive nleng, also, pos
sibly, a herd of half wild, half starved
cattle, who will dash off or stray off in
the weeds through whkh they nre pass
ing at every cunuce iney can get.
"Yeu liave sixty or eighty miles of this
rt of country te pass through before
you can reach the 80,000 hungry men, liv
ing new en a cracker per day. Yeu may
ndvance ten miles n day. Yeu may
twenty. Yeu may make only five. Dis
tances in nn up nud down country llke this
nre very uncertain. Y'eu enn't go nt n
gallop with a wagon train. Andjeu are
tlie elllcer in charge of this slew, lumlwr
ing, leiuj drawn out, clumsy precession.
iYeu are responsible for its safe delivery
te the hungry nrmj Yeu've get your
hands full and jour head full, aud when
jou've beS3ed read repairs, built bridges,
pushed overybedj nud everything te keep
them moving, nnd then, half worn out
nud half dead through care nnd the (.train
of the respenslbtlitj', j-eu get j-eur train
through in safety, and for n few dnj-s
mero li ed this collective stomach which
iiitherwlse would have starved, hew much
Ijlery nvvalts jeu?
"Well, search our pictorial military an
nals nnd see hew much of the pomp, elr elr
cumstance und sensation of war jeu find
illustrated about a wagon tialn. But
Hociety would tumble te pieces today
without reeks, kitchens nnd beef cutting
men with white frocks and cleavers, nud
all the epnuletted figures ou horseback
about nn army tin hullo down, man and
beast, te very 'peer critters' in a vcrj' few
hours if tboy've no crackers te nibble en
or hay te chew. I tell jeu, war means
feeding ns well ns fighting, nnd there's n
great deal of unrecorded glory due the
quartermasters nud sergeants who had te
leek after the bread and beef which gives
men strength te stand en their legs nud
pull triggers." Prcntice Mulford lu New
Yeik Star.
Tlie Chinese lu Cillirernhl.
Speaking of the variety of work dene
here by the Chinese, they nre employed
In many of the factories. They nre the
porters nud cleaners of the city te n large
extent, nnd they comjieto with the sewing
girls nnd the chambermaids. In the
l'alace hotel, vvhere I am stepping, the
Chinese seem te de the greater part of
the work, nnd I see quiet, almond eyed,
V ellevv bkinued men in blue gowns clean
ing here, scrubbing there and brushing lu
a third place all ever this big house. They
de work that nn Irish survaut girl would
lofusetodo, nud I baw a half dozen of
thorn today creeping along the narrow
ledges outstde the great galleries of the
rotunda washing paint. A misstep would
have Biircly killed them, nnd you could no
mero get ti negre or nn Irish servant girl
te take such n risk than j-eu could llj
I visited several of the Jess houses here
nnd watched the Chinese at worship.
They de net bccui te be n severely re
ligious race ns far ns theso in America
nre concerned, and the richer among them
have nu Idel or be of their own whom
they praj' te iu their own houses. There
ure, liuvvevcr, half a dezen big Jess houses
here, nud each uf these has its idols by
the dozen. One Idel especially worshiped
is the god of racdlcine, who Is rcpro rcpre
bcnted as holding u golden pill und who
is supposed te be nble te cure diseases,
nuduuether also much worshiped is the
god of wealth. The god of wealth is
named Tbel Poh Siting Keun, and as all
of tlie Chinese in this ceuutry have ceme
beie te make their fortunes, he nevcr
lacks votaries. The worshipers bring
him offerings of feed, tea and wlne, and
tlie incense ulvvays burns liefore him.
The Clilncse worship here without cere cere
nienj. They chat together ns they prnj-,
nud often de net take thelrclgars or pipes
out of their mouths wldle celug through
their forms of worship. San Fruucisce
U'ttcr.
('(rollout Culture In 1'lerltl.i.
It Is probable that the cultivation of
the coceauut for profit will nlways, in
Plerldu, be confined te the region en the
Kej's uud mainland south of the Caloosa Caleosa Caloesa
hatchio liver, though the palm will con
tinue te be grown ter its great beautj', or
n chauce crop of nuts, iu protected spots,
eveu ns far north ns tlie latitude of Tampa
and Cnpe Canaveral. The cocoanuts pro
duced iu 1'leridn are n trille smaller than
theso of the tropics, nnd nre net con cen con
bldered se valuable for teed, hence most
of theso used for planting nre procured
from Central Ainerica, mero especially
from the Bay Islands (Utllln, Bouace aud
Ituatan) and mainland of Honduras.
The nuts that have net sprouted en the
voyage are bemetlmes planted In nursery
beds and transplanted when a jear or
eighteen months old. Only n small per
i cut. fails te germinate, though some
times the bpreuts are ujcar or mero iu
appearing The distance epart at which
they nre planted vnrics from fifteen te
tvvcutj live ftet, twenty feet is the usual
distance The only cultivation given ou
tlie Kevs is the occasional cutting of the
weeds und undergrowth in spring nnd
fall. There Is n popular baj'lug that a
bearing cocoa palm w ill profluce ene nut
for each diy throughout the jear, but
this is a little overdrawn, the best trees
producing about 200 nuts per jear.
American Agriculturist.
A Nevel Secial I'lilertaliuuent.
Anether novelty in the line of social
cntertulnincnt is what might be calletl
iiiereiuiuisceui. lecture, it was invented,
I bcllev e, by a lady of excellent family,
advanced lu jears nnd Impoverished by
financial misfortunes, but whose social
position Is beveud assault. She lias
added considerably te her income by de
livering drawing room tnlks upon her re
collections of American society In the past,
te subscribers, at $10 n course, out of the
ranks of the society of the present. New
uud then, when she steps te take a breath,
n pianist plajs an air adapted te the oc
casion. This performer is her only ex.
iieuse, nnd us pianists nre cheap just new,
he cannot cut deeply into the lecturcr'il
profits. At nuy rate, her gains during
tlie past w inter seem te have beeu tempt,
ing enough te Induce ethers te enter the
lists, aud boveral nre mentioned who will,
durlug the season te come, inform tis
vvliat the autocedouts of Mr McAllister's
select clan used te say uud de iu the geed
old times before tlie war. Te judge from
the ctuiple of lectures that I listented te
last w inter, society in the past was neither
njlinlj iiur ns interesting as that of to te
day, th. ujh It was certainly dull enough
te be mero i-espectalle. Alfred Trum.W
la Pittsburg Bulletin)
ewrrrs srECirie
! tntlrelr a Teccttbla prepi'Mlen cea.
Ulnteg no ItircnixlVtuh, Arsenic, et ethtr
(oIkuieui nlrftAnces.
swets srEcnrce '
IIm cured handrail of tiut et Epitfecta
m or Cnrr of th Skin, theui&ndt of cue
ef Ectema, Weed rinmeri and Skis Dltcun,
and huedrMi of theutandi of cuel of &.ret
nit. Bleed Toltea and Bleed Taint
liwirrs snscine
Hat rtllercd thetuanda et eMti et Htm.
rtl Poisoning, lleeamaUam and SttrtncM of
tlnJelnta. w
Hix-rlfle Ce , Atlanta. da. aetlcmen i In lhi
early i art it the lirMitt j.tr, a ud ran of
hlned ilten appearad upon ina. I began
taking a. S. a, under adrlee of another, and
te-daj I feel preatlr Improved. I am atiu
taking the medicine and thaU continue te de
no until lam iK-rfectly well. 1 Ixllerelt wtu
effci I a perfect cure. Your trulr.
Dec. P. Hewihd,
111 VVcit sixth St
Cmpniii, a, JuIrT, lS-Th9 Swift
CpeeiAa Ce , Atlanta, Oa. Oenilemeni I "ni
a grant eufferer from inuieular rheumatljtii
for two yean. I could get no permanent re
let from any rnedlclne prefterteed br mr
physician. 1 took erer a dozen Leuie of
yours a S, nnd new I am at well a I erer
wai In mt lire. I am lira veur tnMjIrlmi
eured me, and 1 would rnoetnmend It te any
one lulterlnc from an Uexxl dlae. Teura
truly, O. K. Ill-enci.
Conduster C. t O. IU fl.
Wace, Tifwit. Kay , 1SS Oentlemen i Tha
wtfe or ene et my ruitemere wan terribly
amicted with a loathsome ekln dlteate.that
peTered her whela body. She waa rennne.1
le ber bM for lereral yean by thu affliction,
and reuld net help herself at alL She could
net ftleep from a violent Itching and stlngteg;
of the skin. The dUease hAfflM the skill of
the liTitclani who treale.1 II Her husband
becau finally Klrlna his wife Swift's Spcclfta,
and she commenced te Improve almost lm
medlalt ly, and In a few weeksshe was an.
parenUy well. She Is new a lieurtr St.s.
looking lady, lih no tiacaet the nffllctlea
UK. 'Veiini very truly, J. K. SAs,
VVLolesale Uniculi.', Auitlu Avenue.
TreatlsA en Bleed and Skin Qtseasea malted
free. Tint Swirr Bricirie Ce., Drawer 3,
A.lanta, Oa.j New Yerk, 733 Broadway.
H'lffKH A.ll I.1QVOKH
AUK OWN HKANI).
SPECIAL;
t:
OUR OWN BRAND"
roil BALK J1Y
H. E. SLAYMAKER,
Ne. 20 ERSt King Streot,
I.ANOASTKU, l'A.
11 KA TINU.
c
KULAK HKATKHS.
FLINN & BRENEHAN'S
Cellar
Heaters
AIIKTIIICIHSTIN lilt: MAlCKtT
AND
PMOES THE I0WBST.
Al.l. W01IK llUAUA.NTr.hU.
FLINN & BRhNENAN,
U(l.NTUc!IOIt3 Or"
Plumbing &c Heating,
Ne. 163 Netth Quen dtreet,
LANCAeTlUl l'A
AHI'HALT III.OUKH.
A SPtlALT PA VINO iL(K)K.
Asphalt Bleck Ce.,
orace-901 ChOBtmitHt , I'nlla. I'b.
Works llridKoiert, i-ii , A Oamd.in, N, J.
MANUKACTUUKUSOKJ
Standard Asphalt Pftv ing Blocks
81KS4x5lU AMI lV4xlil'i
In Kfliienil ube ferBttTOtimvltiK.atdt'walkH.rfar
Hen paths, mill yard a and 1ilvuu)is, hiiiuth,
cdlari, vain and aetv walla AfivantaK'es ;
NnUrleaa, auatleaii, strictly sanltivry, prucll
cally lndH9tructlt)l una cheap
ret prtoeg and lurtter Information naeivas
R. S. OSTKH & DRO.,
Aent
I apcasur Ce . tu North l'rlncti st.
i.eRitpieir. ra tuliind
Njcrn.Ki.
JlL'YrLK.S.TUUJYCLKS, TANUKMN
COLUMBIA
Bicycle, Tricycles, 'randems,
IMIKAIIL.K, rlMl'UK.
liU VllANlKKtl IllUllhbTtml)K,
II. I UiTUATf.DCATAl.OliUK KUKK.
POPE MF'G. CO.,
Ti rKANKl.lN ST UOHION.
UKANClt HOUSES -J2 Warren SL, New
erk 291 Wibuh Aye., cblcaue, aug-lydeei
Wr" 'II
US' 141
K '"si
I
aHsHaKliBaUH
I EXTRA.X1HS: r
TKA VKL.EHB UOIDM.
READING A COLUMBIA K. H.
ArranKvment of I'atientfer Train cm, an
alter, SUM) AY, may U.lR
NOUTlTvTAlUi
I-AVn .. M a. M r. si
yuanyvllle e.4) 9.S ll
Kluaj Btrpet, Lane 79) lsv S
rhRSRI.,"r 7,w 1143 sv
cmciciea... , t 73 liie 3X
Colombia. 730 12ae ji,
Ueeaing....! iS & ',?
SOOTH VVAUU.
'iS" 7. iue rif'
A rrn ve at . .
,"t?iXi;JnncUen i.w
CMcktflg 09a f 04
V2'u'ni -...IU .0U a.
lancantgr 020 14a gtsj
Kin 8trcel, Lane 9.10 H.MlvSJ0e B.-A.
cjuarrrvllle 10.20 jj 111
hUNOAY.
Leavii
OnarTyvllleat 7.10 a. m.
KIdk Street, Luna, at 8.0B a. ni and S.M . re
Arrivnat
Ueadinp, 1010 a m , ana MA p. in
Ixiave
Head Ins;, at 7 M a. m., and 4 p. m
Arrive nt
RlnvBtnint, I,ane.,at920a. m., and U)i ti.
guarrrvllle, at 8.(i p. m.
.nf5r!i,2i.?'nn.ect at Keadtnir with tralna le
ViH-plill2lelPhla, I'otuvllle, Ilarrtihnra;
UeuSi. Mew lerk' yla- 5enna Broe
I Ian ever, Uellyaburs, rrtiderlck and BalU
inore.
.1 Ma.rt2J,a J"ioUen with train te and
from (lhlrklea.
At Manhetm with train te and from Leba
non.
At Iantiastflr Jtmetlnn, with train te and
from Laticaauir. Oimrryville, and Chlcklea
A. M. WlLnON Hnrjertntnndent.
PENNHYLVAN1 AilAILHOAD
8CUEUULK.-In effect Irein June II,
Tratna uiti 1 aucabtm and leave and ar
Tlve at I'hllaaclphla as fellow :
I.nnvn .
lMCTIl
WK9TWAUI1.
raclfle Ezpreest
New Kxprustf
Way PaaannKerf
Mall trnlnvlaMt.Jeyt
no 2 Mali Tra!nl...
Niagara Vxprcaa
Hanover Accem
Fast l.lnef
Ifrcderlck Accem....
Lnnraoter Accem....
llarTlbnr Accem...
Ce'iimlila Accem...
llnrrtnburK Kxpresi)
Western Axpress)...
KASTVVAUI),
Phlla. Rxpresil
Knst I.lntt
Harrlfburs; Kxprensl
I.iincnater Accem....
Columbia Accem....
Atlantic Hxnivii.it.--
Pntladelphla.
I.ancaiter,
:.r a. m,
0:tsa m.
6.30 a. m.
9 si a. m.
9a in
9-..V) a., m
9-Ma m.
2.-C0 p. in.
2.10 p. in.
2JW p. in.
9:30 p. in.
7 40 e. in
7:50 I), w.
4 30a. m.
1:101. m,
7 m a n
via Columbia
7:40 a. m.
via Columbia
uiuia. m.
via Columbia
via ail joy,
z:isp, m.
4:40 p. m.
B.Mip, m.
.O.BOp. m.
Leave
Lancaster.
2:?0a. in.
(1:03 a. in.
8:ina. 111.
S.."iVa- in.
O.Cfi a. m
l!:Wa. m.
12 OS p.m.
I.ev p m ,
8 (Op. m.
4:1 p.m.
G-ISp. m.
11:10 p m.
Arrlve at
rnlla.
4:41a. m.
8.2ft a. m.
I0 20R. m
vUMt Jey
1 :. m.
1.23 p. in.
3:15 p. m.
BOO p.m.
6'lB p. m
cm p. m.
9.45 p m.
Seaahore Kxprcag ...
i-uiiuueinuia Accem
Punday Mall
Day Kinross)
Harrlaburg Acceui..
tThoenly trains which run dally. On Sun
day the Mall train west rung by way of Cel
nmbta.
K .1. IU WOOD. Ooneml I'anannirer Airent.
- UHAB. K. 1-UniI. tiencral Manager.
LEBANON A LANCASTER JOINT
LINK UA1LUOAU.
Arranirement of rassoncer Trains en, ana
latter, sundat, Mat 13, 18S8.
r"iNOUTUWAKD.
tuave a.m. p. if. P. x
Sunday.
a.m r.,
unarryville. r 1,8
niiig oireH, cunc. 7.00
1 ancaateir 7.07
Manlielm 7:13
Cornwall 7.59
Arrlve at
Lebanon 8.11
12 3.1
12 43
1.18
140
LBS
B B4 S 05 3.M
C.W S 13 4,04
G 30 8.45 MB
G.B6 9.17 5.44
7.10 9 32 6.8
P.M A M. P.M.
7.30 7.55 S.4A
7.4fi 8 10 4.00
8 15 8.40 MB
a 42 9.1 J 5.43
OUUIIIWAKU,
lAivn
Lebanon 712
Cornwall 727
Mnnhelm 7.N8
Lancaster, 8 27
ArTln nt
r. m .
1230
12.43
1.14
148
King 8 Heet, Lane. 3 SB
l.BH
8.50;9.20
Uallread.
A. M. WILSON, HupL K. O
8. B. NEKr.8upt.tJ.ll.il.
yALL AND W1NTEK OOODH.
M. HABERBUSH & SON.
Fall and Winter Goods.
Our Stock of VM and Winter Goods is
new complete. We have the Largest and
Finest Stock in the city of HOUSE
BLANKETS (All Grades )
Lap lilankets, In ritish, Weel and
Felt. Black and Grey Geat Robes.
Hudsen Bay and Prairie Wolf Robes.
Buffalo Robes. Siberian Deg (Black)
Robes. Fex and Uoen Skin Robes.
C5T We consider it no trouble te show
our goedn
A 'I
M. Haberbush & Sen's
8ADDLK. HAUNK8S,
-AND-
TRUNK STORE.
Ne. 30 Centre Squere,
l.AMJASTKU. VA.
1H)1f&lB)rt.?!llHrrg lvuni
QALL AND HUM
-TUK-
ROCHESTER LAMP
Sixty Uttnaie-LlgMi lleau Ifiutr. all
Anoteor Let nl OllltM (jl.lllIKi ler uaa an'1
oil stove.
thb PHRPBarle "
UKTAL MOULUINR A UUH1HU CUSIUOH
WF THER STRIP
lseatstteL il I'tilsstnpotuwbursulietiieis.
Keeiis out the cold, step rattan et windows.
KTClnde tbe diibt. Keep out new aud rain
Anyone con apply it no waste or dirt made
inapplytiiicIL Tun he (ltUwl anywbure-nn
bolus te bere, ready for me. It will net split,
warn or terlnlr a cnabien strip Is tne mul
purfftel At ihe Slnvn, Heater and IUn IUn
8tera;i -or;
Jehn P. Sehanm k Sods,
4 SOOTH QDBKN ST
..ANeiATa:ii. I'a
MA Jill I, ti H'OltliH.
M'
AKHLli AND UUAN1TE WOKKH.
CHARLES M. HOWELL,
MARBLE AND GRANITE WOBKP,
he. I39NOUTI1 QUKENSTKEKT.
llavlnir special f icllltles ler manufacturing
Uratilte M(inuiii('iL8,Teiiit)",UriiV( stones and
Ceiuxtery Weik et ail kinds, rc-speetliilly te
IliltthMpitrottaKuef Urn pnliltc.and Invite all
te call andumlnuitieextuii!itvntockef ilar
ule Mennmeula, tlravt-blenta, etc., new tin
Istird anderectid at iry werkn, which I offer
at gruatly reduced prlcnn. Practical eirxr!.
euce, with taslu In tba arranttmntuit il erna.
niem&tlen, lUerlUK and uxm-utlen of deslv-nj
with Kroat care. U a Kuaranty ttat pertect
a itlnfactlnn will lie glven te the most eiactlmr
el my patrons. H
- lliitieerx ar-Invited te call for eaUmatealer
building work.
urdent rilvcd ler all kinds of Mantels
U.A ,a,KSJ?na?,Ver OI ""'shed Sand and lirewn.
Btone lioer-SlIU en hand, at low prices.
v ,, .. ,. UllAH. M.UOVVKLL.
,. 1; J 'S'nh Qat-n Street Kaat Siao.
auivlOM,lV,s
WASm
OLD HKAt-S WANTKI1 THK H1QH
i'Ht rash pilce paid for old llrasj and t op.
I r The n neat brass castings uada te erdr
Mt-tal pattern wera flulsn d at reasonable
rate. M. w. rualU'd Leck work,
Hear Lecher'i lianklnz finildlnir.
13-Tu,ThSUa
5.68