eg A PLCA FOR “OASTLES IN THE AIR? And the wyriad troubles that meets day by WX Yoho v'onild not from the conflict a moment turn rway, And to a ar off fly land, where men no burdens war, Forget awhita on tears and toll in “Castles in the airy When many a brisht hued prospect fades fast be vond our view, Aud hoi which neared fruition prove shadowy and untroe: May ve ie A fa that dreamland, beyond all clouds and care, Poi our paradise restored In “Castles in the rp Qh, there are tonely chambers in every home and hoart- And tn He's song of sorrow each one must bear 8 part, But hark! vist mystio melodies soon hush the voice of care, As parted hands cre clasped once more in “Castles in the air. Then never prow discouraged, though fortune avo not, And we pursue ites fory ot} We have oo hour of victory and lustrous laurels WL Poon Forall aro lings and conquerors in “Castles in the air." ~Jacob Gough. pligrimage unnoticed or b A NCW AMERICAN Making Wine from Oranges—Utilizing the barplus in a Good Way. The wonderful crop of oranges which has been produced in Californfa has led to the manufacture of a new and non-alcoholic wine from that {uit A gentleman who has trav- eled extensively in California, in conversa- tion with a reporter thus described the pro- cess: “In Ban Gabriel, Los Angeles county, Cal., where the sweet navel or seedless orange Brows to grvat perfection and in large quan- tities, the Moxican residents made from it a wine, hot uilike the May wine of the Ger. mans. This wine, of course, had to be con- sumed at once or it would spoil. But the idea was suggested by this practice that good wine could be msde from sweet oranges, and the question was how to make the wine so that it could. become a marketable and profitable commodity. As soon as the souring was SVereome, more money had to be invested, This was accomplished after evusiderable INDUSTRY. kind! but not until they are fully ripe, Oranges when shipped to market for eating are generally packed green and ripen on the way. Not so with those used for wine When gathered, a machine removes the peel, leaving only the juicy pulp. The pulp is placed in a large vat, with layers of the An- gelica grape sugar, allowed to remain together about weeks, when, by the ald of a Jack-sere worked by machinery, the whole of the juice is squeezed out. This is run off into casks and purified every month for about three years. It is kept from souring by the for gencral use. a commercial ment. “2s transportation, especially to a distance, would cause the wine to muddle, it refined at the end of the Journey and the dregs precipitated before it is put into bot. tes, in which condition it is sold to the gen. eral public. The wine has already been ex. ported to England and many parts of Europe.” “Is not the wine fermented in some wav,” “Not at all. It : orange, a simple fruit wine, and contains no alcoholic spirits w after meals ns a take of the pure juice alone for reason. I think it will soem outrival any of the mild drinks of the present day.” > “Thon it &s simply a still wine without any intoxicating qualities “Yen, in its original form made into a spark] don of carbon Juice one-half, equal to champagne can be produced, with- out any of its intoxicating or enervating effects. This bas been dove, ary drinkers have been delighted with it. summer drink it 1 medical men, th ¢ it does not lenve such | I times follow the drinking lemonade, Me New York Mail and Express. It is drawn off into casks of capacity and is ready for ship- hatever. People eat oranges the But it can be fone Ing reas. By dilat the gas, ing and adding Asa lime or lemon juice, as BE SOU i The Villages of the West. mean, who bas been west on a prospecting tour, He said: “1 Gave been astounded in Loe ing through the western count ¥ to note the remarkable stage of improvements which they bave attained. If you get off the cars at any town of 3.000 or 5,000 inhabitants or larger, you will find yourself in the midst of a civilization that is equal to any of the great cities of theenst. You find electri lights, perfect telephone and telegraph district mes. senger service, modern Improvements in the way of sanitary drainage, street cars, fine public buildings and perfoct fire service, Looking the place over you will find buaild- ings of modern eonstruction. finely equipped, possibly with elevators and with all the riod ern improvements. Such a town is as far shead of a New England place of the same sise as anything you can hmagine. It took me sone titne to Tvalize the conditions and to firure out the canss from which they resulted. The real fact seems to be that these westorn peo- plo are getting the benefits of all the improve. ments and (nventions and progress of the older civilization. The cars on the western railroads are more lusurious than those of the older lines in the east. Railroads are built on a sealo of improvement much finer, It would do the people of the east great good if they could be transplanted out into the western country for a little while to see the diferences 1 have noted. "New York Trib ie, Useless Education, A gentleman residing near Kingston asked his daughter to write a short business jet ter for him the other dav. The result woe not particularly ev oaraging vo the man who flattered himeelf that his daughter was “ton of tie heap” in the way of “eddication.” Words were misspalied in the letter, grammatical errors were flagrant, punctuation was ignored, syntax was at sixes aid sevens, and the whole production was more worthy of a child of 6 than a young lady who was nearly “through” school, In rage and indignation the parent asked his daughter what she did in school, “Oh, we didn't bother with anything like that,” heyy; warstudy Shalighot brauhus - fof wets make, begin over again,” said the man, “and iy low. Hore I'm you an education in the hopes that you will be write my letters and assist me in aud here you havens toe first ree Its do soem. ingly trportant branch of a person's education. Kingston (N. ¥.) Pree man, : Helen of Troy wae over 40 when she per potuated the most famous elopement on A 5 Ho IRL la | never had such a one before or since | came from excessive comfort, or what seemed i comfort to us | Miss, the southern outpost of the great fort- The pulp and sugar are | three | w press i two or i | we built a good fire, addition of distilled glycerine preservatives, | and at the end of that time is considered fit | is again | | got marching orders.) ative; now they can pare | same | { would be absolut ly when you are in Rome you most do as the | Andrew Van Bibber in 8 { ican. wine by the introdoe. | OTRAS i a beverage i { the lobby ) large SUPPOses, temperntice | | and made away with, s far better, according to | ff atbar dav atebel other day a salch I had a talk recently with a Massachusetts | — | CAUSES OF COLDS. AN OBSERVER CLAIMS THEY ARE PECULIAR TO CIVILIZED LIFE, A Boldier's Experience in the FieldwNo Colds Caused by Exposure in Active BervicemDmngors of Excessive Comfort, On the Plains. Reading recently an article of Dr, Brown- | Bequard on “Taking Cold,” it occurred to we that colds are peculiar to civilized life, and to our comfortable, warm rooms. I have had colds perhaps as frequently as any one, but | during one period of my life I was entirely | free from them, with one exception, | Iserved through the war in the Fifth Ohio cavalry, beginning at Shiloh, and ending my service with the march to tho sea. We were an active regiment, always at the front, and therefore remarkably unencumbered with tents or comforts. We were exposed to all weathers and all seasons, Many a time we were rained on for a week or more. When the sun came out the next woek or the week after, it dried us. Many a time, long after dark, after a march in ruin and mud all day, we have been filed] into miry woods, where we slept In the rain with the running water washing betwuen ns and our blankets | have seen men wake in the morning with their hair frozen in the mud. But none of us caught cold. Wo swam the Tennessee river after midnight, when the mercury was at zero, and among floating ice, and came out with our clothes, to our armpits, frozen like sheet iron, and then marched till morning In the cold winter of 1563-64, we were in the mountainous country of East Tennesses, where it is as cold as Ohio, We were thers from November until March, without any tents or shelter of any kind, moving every day, and sleeping in a different place every night, with the temperature frequently below Boro, I have, with my comrades, ridden upon the skirmish line when 1 could not lift a cartridge out of my box, nor even pick up a carbine cap. I have been on night pickets, mounted, when the pickets had to be relieved every i fifteen minutes, because if left longer the men could not load and fire. But we neve: eaught the slightest cold, nor did I ever in times of cold and exposure to wet soe a sol money had been lost, The sweetest oranges | dier with a cold. | are selected, those of the navel or seedless i FROM EXCESSIVE COMFORT. But I did catch one cold in the army, and 1 it We were at Camp Davies, ress of Corinth. Having been there some months we began to build neat log cabins, with openings for doors and windows-—no glass or doors, of course. One of our mess being a young bricklayer we thought to surpass our neighbors in style | and comfort, and we sent for brick, and be built us a large chimney and fireplace, and That settled us. Four of us had to go to the hospital with tremen- dous colds on our chests and in our beads. We | never had such heavy colds in our lives. This | was about the middle of our three years of | service, and before and after that | never saw | an exposed soldier with a cold. {Of course a few days after our cabins were finished we I believe all old sol diers will bear me out that in active cam- | paigns where there was great exposure to the weather, noone had a cold And come to | think of it, in my experience in Colorado and Utah in recent years, | never saw an Indian | with! a cold, though they stand more expostire i purely the juice of the | i givens our colds than our cattle do. Mt is our bot rooms that IH a poreon would camp fout from fall ull spring, exposed te the weather of a severe winter s be would never take either a cold, pleurisy or poeumonia, and ly frea from thems, But Romans do, and take warm rooms and colde ntific Amer Losing Parcels in the Lobby, The frequency of persor \ here is greater It celerity with which artich Thos with intent fo seoure und and watch for an of the owner's back Is turned for a moment iw building we ask him to move The tho BO waa left on one and of 9 heating coils at one of the windows | ticing it, I picked it up and was about to lay it away for sale keeping until called for, Just as I was going off with ita Indy rushed in at the door and suid, “Excuse me, sir. that is my satchel.” Of course 1 lot her have it, aud she and ber goutleman friend, who stond at the door, walked awny, Shortly afer. ward two other ladios came in and asked me about the same satchel. I told them what | bad done with it, and at once saw that 1 had been duped by a sharper. Fortunately it contained nothing of great value —Postoffieo Watchman in Globe Democrat, Embalming tn Ancient Egypt. The surviving fragments of the early litera. ture of Egyptare mainly of a religious char. acter; their doctrine of the future state leav. ened their national life in almost every pare ticulag, To them the body was an integral part of the immcrtal humanity: therefore iL had to be presrved from corraption that it night be a fit receptacie for the soul to dwell in through eternity. Although it was sored, under the special protection of the god Thoth, though each part was under the guardianship of a special divinity, yot this sacredness did not preclude careful ingpoction and the pro cesses necessary for preservation, for all parts had to be perpetuated. The organs re moved from the bodies of persons of the bet. ter classes wore not returned into the body, but were preserved in vases of alabaster or stone. A, Macalister, Canses of Bald ness, It fe rare that a bald head is found NOUR mien under bo ov 60 years who sper eight of ten hours en day ab the avtban's bench. How much the strain of wodern rasid Hie and business worry and harry is responsible for this physical deterioration is a matter of dis cussion. The opinion is general, however, that the cosmetics, hair restorers, tonfos and shampooing fluids used by barbers tend to destroy the hair follicles and produce bald toes, Men who shave theenselves or visit the barber only ones a wok, and thos who wee nothing ba water as a dressing for their hale as a rile have a lnxurious growth, «New York Mail and Express, The Fashionable Disease. Rlmumatism is the fashionable disease this winter. Pneumonia fs left out in the cold, : ugly nose pat out of loss dangerous, INNUMERABLE RUINED CITIES, Valuable Relies Which Awalt the Coming of Venturesome Explorers. The ignorance and indifference of Hispano- Americans on the urchwology of this country surpasses belief, even taken into account the natural indolence of the southern races and the fact that during the last fow hundred years their energies have been mainly ex- pended in uprisings against an ever changing government. But since Stevens, M. Chaz. ney, Dr, Lo Plongeon and others have ree cently made important discoveries the Moxi. cans have awakened to a lazy conselousmess of valuable possessions, With a dog In the manger spirit thoy bave enacted rigorous lnws against the exportation of relics, fdols, otc. which would enrich the museums of the world, yet in which they themselves are not sufliciently interested to bring to lizht, There are innumerable ruined cities buried deep in the wilderness of Mexico and Central America which still await in silence the com. ing of the explorer; there are hundreds of deserted temples and crumbling pyramids which were built so far back in tho twilight of time that no traditions remain of the builders, In Yucatan alone no less than sixtys seven prehistoric cities have been discovered, despite the fact that this wildest territory of Mexico presents almost insurmounta’le ob. stacles to the traveler in the way of warlike savages and trackloss deserts, whose hot sands outrival Bahara. Ewen the aliconquering Spaniards never succosded In making much impression upon the Mayas of Yucatan, and to this day there are aboriginal trilies in the Interior still Bourishing as before the cone quest, but so powerful and bloodthirsty are they that no Ewopesn who bas ventured story, By the way, a modern M: has lately made a new attempt to prove that America was discoverad in the Fifth coutury a. d by a party of Buddilets monks 1 Afghanistan, of whom one Huu name-—returned (0 Asia after nn + forty-one years, A short as which he visited, supposed to included in the oficial hi There is proof that Hwul Bhan net visit some unknown eastern recio also true that all the treaditio Mexico contain an account of th some monks, who came fn the days of the Toltecs—the preceded the Aztecs in this ot Philadelphia Record fromm Hurry and Dispateh. Among the many causes of poo efficient work is the habit of | 3 takes possession of somes busy peop’ or imagining they hb be don ve Bin given time than enn grow confused, agitated amd under this pressure they procs work in hand without requi and care, perhaps omitting ing at last an imperfect smd mance which can satisfactory, There is hardly a ment, {rom the simplest manus! most complex and difh pa noither be por ss 14 ui n | that does not suffer from | dwelling house in process of | finished at a certain time, | thought and system it would have been do | but the time approaches and the work fs still | | incomplete, | men are driven, the work is burried through { and annoyance, discomfort, | danger orsue and | Decessary | | { {| ORD Manag i i { ries on his picture to « i Of | foourse if we notice any one loafing around . but ong | | man can't watch all who come in bere and repairs are fou found Hon The ba da man undertakes more than he . the davs ng for his needs, be Is agitated Ny. pressure, driven by business suffers for the was tant ooo! head, his health suf and unrelazed exertion, from bis deterioration, and general diester | ones with many the and th The physician, eal make, hurries rh visit 8 wane anporiant s faim nt dies; the lawyer | homes hills on the 4 repmralion Lo make an {nila impression pert | hurry and drive wh i Ha ia efrrtamd of the labor performed, - Life on the Texas Border, None of the houses hel CRE are very oxtengive, the veriest bovels, in some of them is a mydery lives in a cave near the creek Une old man He is appar persuing that avocation eny longer man is bleareyed and deaf, wears sandals in piace of shoes and owns an immense straw His hoarse voice frightens the ohildron, and kis poor, thin blanket affords but little pro tection from the biting porth wind, Never having known anything better than his present condition, he takes it as a matter of course, and scorns the « oper cents which are given to him in charity, If kis countrymen eannot do better than that be prefers has ing nothing, He ordinarily emrvies a bag over hiv shoulder, into which donations of every Kind are poured without much referencs to congruity. In his day be bas been a great which, with the belp of a cane, he 10ers along, was in tore for ber. when comparatively little was known of the interior of Megico ~Chibcabua (Hex.y Cor, Chicago Tinks A Rose Rapersiiiing, It has been declared, on the wane tout author ty which osdzinates rw OT of wvery sort, that it is highly vnlucky (oe a | rows, whe worn on tw person, 10 scatter ty leaves on the ground. 1 venture to guols en illustration of this fram the “Life aud Corres spondence of M. 0. Lewis™ Tho ludy to whom this portent happend was Mis Ray, who was munlered at the piassa entrance of tho Covent Garden theatre by a man named Hackman, When the onrrings was announced, and sho wis adjusting ber dress, Mrs Lewis remarked on a beautifel rose which Mis Ray wore in her bosom. Jar as the words wore uttered the flower fell to the ground, and when Mie Day down to pick is up the leaves wa themselves i the ground, the valk only remaining in hor hand The poor gird, evidently affected by this fuel dent, snk, in a slightly faltering voles: “1 tot 1 an not to consider this an evil omen.” for to duden, | Ame ¥ ~ A PERSIAN AT HOME. | AN AMERICAN AMONG THE 8UB- JECTS OF THE SHAH. Grooted by the Wives and Thele Babies, The Evening Menl=folace of the Pipe. Music on the GuitsreA Visitor Are rives, Rayza Mohammed is my servant, He ua good Mussulman, although not strictly ortho. dox, belonging to the sect of Dawoodees and believing that strong drink wes given by Allah to cheer the heart of man. Being a Jolly fellow and a good Moslem, he has three wives. It dows not take much to support threes wives in Persia, hardly more than to upport one, that is nmong the poorer classes, Tho first wife be married when she was 11 and he 17. Bhe was his cousin, fair Mayrich, and ho lords it over the other two, being a rela- tive. Its 6 o'clock, and 1 have dismissed Rays for tho night. As he enters the low door of his little house by the Dwazelh Kaswin he greets his women folk with: “Peace Ix with ye," and they veply fn chor: “With you A —— ass GREAT SPHINX, A INTERESTING ACCOUNT OF THE WORK OF DISINTERMENT. The Sand Carried Away in Large Tas. ketseAstonishiing Resalis from Appar ently Inadequate Means Viarions Exe vatlons=Restorations of Women Date, THE The last occnsion on which the Great Bohinx was cleared down to the level on which the | paws rest was in honor of the opening of the Suey canal In 1800, The ever drifting sands had, however, reburiod It almost to the hroat when Professor Maspero, during his last year of offices ut Boulak, bogan again the work of disinterment, This work has now been going on, somewhat intermittently, for more than twelve months, and is at the present time in active progress under the direction of Fro fessor Muspero's sucoessor, M. Grebaut, A tramway Las been laid down from the Bphynx to the edge of the Pyramid plateau, passing close under the west face of the granite bolid- Ing popularly. though Incorrectly, called the temple of the Sphynx, Along this tramway {| dips his flugers ins brass basin and within their domain has returned to tell the | i xiean historian | { tiful to look at by saffron and Hite shreds of { mutton from | an ] lime jules and containing bits of | helps hin | his slooves i Laing : Jreces of #1 | of his hand a good de wang hit { women and the child 5 bling wn proper fore | The future oc tupants are jm- | patient, the contractor is ancious, the work. | i erally kind and sonsetinmes | F enouelh | A ] other | its monotonous mirarad ks { women at once throw their face veil over and i at that moment enters All 1 IR . ns in “Thou them are quite comfortable, while others are | How they manage to live | litely bows to his guest, inquiring at the sau " | health, progress and temper ently very aged, and during his whole life | had been a cowherd until age prevented his | The old | i friend to wit d i his own ghalyan (water pipe} to his guest. or gual) ¥ bat, which he has apparently used for years, | dering at the same time a new pipe { who in banding it to Rayza whispers some | The two friend horseman, judging from his bow Jegs, on | Graphic Ones 1 saw a little girl with him, sud | conid tot but reflect what a life of poverty | This old san has sen | many vicusitudes, stretching back to the time | woul get good and try to make the rest of us Looms ap © their ideas. You see, when time { bung savy on our hands wo would while f away our leisure bY an indulgenos in the nape | i whoa we alo be peace and the poodnvss of Allah! The babies, however, sre not ite wo formal, They clamber up on his koe: as soon os he has squatted aown befors his real, served on the floer and arranged sround him in a num ber of small tn platters, each covered with a cone shaped dish, THE EVENING MEAL. Their respective mothors bear the litle mischicls away, though, und the papa gravely which thelr contents are discharged, the and all ages, who carry the sand upon their honda in large fiat baskets, ascending and de scending a below to the tramway above and vice versa, ABSTONIEHING RESULTS, The means look curiously inadequate, but the results nre astonishing through the form of the relipic Then he reaches ¢ ut for the In one there is the succulent rice ve mage Dea them, and the platform upon which they Fost, are onos more open to the light of day, Nor is this nll edee of the Pyramid pl also been cleared, thus flight of st in flavored with ment, He good things iu turn In another there Is ronst lah, unnothisr thers is sour so H to all thes bing no knife, fi width, Were une I SOM bucked Ly i instead Habby, flat bread which he tears up Wo the elbow, hare descr "inv. ia in 1815, but Lt for nearly seventy years remains o found by might to lizht re in his direo OF spoon, baat ¢ 1, bu hinve from a slice as big i BE KR sheet #4 « BIE RE ¥ and in the midst ¢ iad arnphithe atre hewn out ores be Y eas i” the oldest monument in Egypt nthe Jevel of the aren below the great HR y | ug ri wh plies sky JOO fot nbove BETWEEN THE FAWS iy MWS 3% thirty five Space Was sanctuary of which Tel Me how the g expedi fay the pil peleen i Beaewp, order and the water makes $s ud at regular intervals as he “Kioub ot.” Rayon says, whi expression of approval on his part Mayvich, for the moment, 1} other wives' jenlons eyes talkative with b the smoke mAs & wiven alti indul®ent to y inGuident Ww mn fin fons nw baving dered nll Oo fhe ming 4 these 1} detail, ther in usy and wrangling win wives and bout y pod had nswded The paws of tee sgdiinx, as they s Be or, ry ber right ore Bot strictly respected » ¥ THE GUITARS TIXELE StaryTwErEY a ts BOW appear, "nv is HA . * ie €X~ the apr Hy and silently stokes aon | hay frie ™ woslorn ear, hat when the ta HIWEYer, understond, de i* i a 4 ald Bi Ana Qos twang twas At the moment there is a shed valione are 1 dd A IRD ES Coming an all turn heir backs to the door, through ot y been discovered Zadar, & friond uw i he ¥ris pyramid, and to yea, emnployed ax a scribe in the house of a | westward the face of the Libyan cliff has camest propitiously,” says b it the natural inyua, rises from his sitting posture and po- | boundary of the Pyramid plateau. Some | good egrly rockent tombs, with bails fore a in the face of this of which the walled reccunes alled “serdale which the safe keeping of it statues, are vot intact with London Times, whic hwy 1 where forms with extreme minuteness after bis grt. Bave been found All this being sali uy anwwered and the women hav ing meanwhile retreated backward into a | smaller room ad} Rayman invites lis | rary portra WH alo im and vields time up ab da ou via Oh Bditor Grady st Home, (drong, raw liquor In May last a Memphis reporter, who was brought by the veiled Malek, | swinging around the southern circuit in : vol of a newspaper that could not exist at Lis services, chapoad to visit Atlanta 1 upon Mr Grady ered a Juxuriously appointed ante fronted a bandsorwe young man diamond pin and a deli This ttle of Are a WTROCR and a Ix mimdde of 1 io ear, to which be mockingly | moon The emoke and drink now for some time, occasionally interrupting thi WHEL aud Con with sone quotation from the poots illastra tive of the fact that happiness is fSoeting and mist be made the most of while it lasts, Thus an hour bas passed Cor. New York thing into his replies: “Not before the Fine,” less until 1 seek the presence,’ be said, solemnly, and disappeared through an tuner door, “By this time nerve was as soarce about my person fa the price of board. “Peosantly the handsome yong man re tured awd said, ‘He will see you.' “f followed bim and found myself in Mr. Grady's audience chamber, It was furnished with Oriental splendor. There were fous eons In the rooa--the governor of the Soldiers Betting on Flies, “Yen, we usd fo have a spasm of goodness in the army overy now and then,” sald an cid soidior yesterday. “That is 0 say, the officers > wl of chineka luck, or Inseven up, | a gs pons 1 seas seeking, The great jour. or by wa ocoassonn] poker game, 1 remember | pallet was santa on a rich divan, dictating to wore lt Meda ippl™ see the sbooegropher, white the others hang “OV hat be choca luck i? srontliesdy upon his words, | owls lian to “Morey alive! Didn't you ever sow a lot of alout 40 years old. Ho is thick st and follows mark off numbers pypearnnce of a man whose stormmch LBB peeve peta belt 1 be knows it. His head be “put the mousy on the numbers and thvow | round aud covered with a short growth of dice, and the fellows numbers turned up sake | 100k bai, his faces slow, smooth stn venan the pot! Well, as | was going on to say, the | 1 -bted Ly a pole of cold, piercing black eyes officers hind i spas sid decaded 10 break up | 1 vise bowel modulated, but pesetmting, bling. They took up every card and dice | It went thiroush me file a knitting weedls oo in the camp. What did we dot Why, | and stuck in the wall beyond, Hie your sul wo wont om gaabiling, A Jot & Va hie, Lio said to the shorthamd man, of fellows would ench get a Little piece of | f have my eye upon you, and if Gordon doos bromd and woo on 6 bit of syrap aid Jay | not get a wnjo ont the spromd, and then all sit and wait. | your county There wero a million flies about camp, and in | ering on, ‘what do you want? a mute von would soe a fly Hight on a pices of treml and go for the syrup. Well, the ownor of that plecs of bread wonld take the pot. That and other devices for evading the orders of Ww offlowrs Suvi i Sh that they could uot oad us off ¥ gue us Back or eards and dics, and wo rest Mo See and tricycles are wed in tha si of Parts thet polio seguintinn wicked Sum has tly red ah, Nothing eleo occured toe wis praaly ed, “Yon find him down at Mis allyl re plied Mr, Grady, aod somehow ln shout a rodnite I found myself on the pavement ois. side. "wBemphiv Avalanche, Fposriphabin dpe grb Luh om hari will movce ive thie natmen in tho di ey, i i / 1h ho Ha anited 00 | Various | an United Ptetes senator, A stenographer | Great Reduction * Hght trucks convey the sand to the point at | trucks being loaded by Arabs of both sexes | il day long from the excavations | Already the en- | tire fore part of the great stone monster fs | laid bare, and the huge chest, the paws, the | space between the paws, the altar in front of | Lam now Prepared to Give Between the Sphinx and the | pall val space has | ing to view un fine | These | been | i huge arty | the solid | tha | Mis i boing caved | | Hose from 3c to $1 per p wr sinbs | of tho delwration feom | sir, suddenly disco. “of thought Uncle Remus wis bers,” otany. | donee in New Nek on BIG BARGAINS. * DRY GOODS, Dress Goods from 5c to $2 per yard, C7IONS, GROCERIES Lower Tan the Low, est. Give. us a Call We Guarantee Satis faction. » ~ Countrv frodvce On band, and Wanted at all times. C. U. A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers