jp??(pw rswn .r- -v - -y . nrjf-K &'i 18 r V., .. tf w-icai4 Tiv n will nnffiMp Wmclf r. 2!ow be beheld himself lying at Kasana's iect, his head fondly laid on her lap while he gazed up into her lovely face. Then it was Joshua who stood before him in splen did armor as he had jnst now seen him, only more gorgeous, and in ruddy firelight, in stead of the dim light in the tent Then strain, all the finest oxen and rams of his herds passed in front of him, and mingling with all these sentences rf the message he had learned passed through his mind nay, lie fancied that they were being shonted in his ears; bnt before he could be qnite sure of their meaningjSome new and dazzling vision or a loud,rnshing sound filled his mind's eye and ear. And on he went, totteringlike one drunk, with the sweat standing on his brow and a parched mouth. Now and then he mechani cally lifted his hand to wipe the dust from his burning eyes, bnt he cared little that they failed to show him clearly what was passing around him, for nothing could be more delightful than what he beheld when he looked within. Every now and then, to be sure, he was conscious of acute suffering and he felt inclined to fling himself on the ground in sheer exhaustion, but then again a strange sense or relief Kept mm up. At last the delirium was too much for him; his head seemed growing and swelling till it was as large as the colossus he had seen yesterday in front of a temple, then it rose to the height of the palm trees by the road side, and at last it reached the mist over the firmament, and higher and higheryet. Then this head, which was still his head, was as wide as the horizon, and he pressed his hands to his temple end held his brow, for his neck and shoulders were too weak to bear the burden of so huge a head, and possessed with this madness, he shrieked aloud, his knees gave way and he sank .-senseless in the dust. To 6e Continued Xext Sunday. ATOIDIXG HER OWK LIGHT. A British Ship Tries to Steer A wot From Bcr Own Lantern. Qfew York World.: The question of the carrying of lights, tand changes necessary for the benefit of navigation and the avoidance of collisions, "brings to mind an incident that happened some years ago, when a British frigate, homeward bound, and an American man-of-war were lying at anchor in the same port The Captain and offioersof the English vessel were invited to dine on board the American chip. The dinner was a long, jovial affair, and the toasts were frequent Finally, about 10 o'clock, the visitors were bundled into their boats to return to their vessel, which was to get under way as soon as all were on board and the boats hoisted After a short interval the vessel was seen to be moving, and from the American conld he heard a number of orders given to the helmsman, first porting the helm and then heaving it hard over the other way, repeat ing this operation seveial times. As the course was a fairly straight one, the reason for this vast amount of maneuvering was not at all apparent, and the mystery re mained unsolved for quite a while. Several months later one of the officers returned to the station aboard another British man-of-war, and he stated that, owing to too much Americanism or too many good-bves, they had neglected to give the order to haul down the vessel's stay light as the light is called which all ves sels hoist forward when at anchor and, being firmly convinced that it was the light aboard of some other ship, they were shift ing their vessel's course in vain endeavors to avoid it, and bring it to bear in some other direction than right ahead. It was sot until they had .taken up the greater portion of the anchorage, and had come within an ace of running down various craft that someone cooler-headed than the rest discovered the offending lantern and had it hauled down. THE F0BMATI0N OP GUERBILLAS. "Why Qaantrell'a Gang Was Organized and Equipped. Florida Times-Union.: In 1661, just after Price had captured lcxington. Mo., seven of his men bound themselves by an oath to stand by each other and kill all those at whose hands they had suffered. They were Quantrell, Haller, the Little brothers, Hampton, Kelley and Busham. Many others soon joined them. All complained of terrible outrages on themselves or members of their families, and it is more than probable the charges I,. "were true, for that was an evil time. Men were whipped, robbed, murdered; women were insulted, outraged, driven from their , homes. Each army contained its quota of bad men, and at the beginning of the war '- always happens in snch cases, men with no j, feeling on either side of the great contro- versy robbed "Unionists and charged it to the Secessionists, and vice versa, and in i inch heated times each party believes the worst of the other. The region in which the James and loungers grew up has had a singular ex perience in lawlessness. Prom 1819 to 1854 the western line of Missouri, from the site of the present Kansas City south,was the border between the whites and the semi-civilized Delawares, Shawnees and "Wyandottcs that is to say, the line where criminals were safe. The white population of Jackson, Clay and adjacent counties had increased to a few hundreds when the Mormons came in 1833; a year later the "Mormon war" began and raged at intervals lor four years 'till the Mormons were expelled. Eleven years later the emigrants to California made Indepen dence their gathering point and life be came generally reckless. Soon followed the Kansas troubles, from 1854 to 1857. Hatred burned in the hearts of the people on both sides of the line; hundreds of "Javhawkers," "lied Legs" and "Border Bufnans" were longing for a chance to get revenge. Oat of this sanguinary chaos of blood and fire the Quantrell gang was evolved. JDST LIKE HIS GRANDFATHER. A Mississippi Congresiiman Tells a Good Story on Illmielf". ew York Stir, i Congressman John Allen, of Mississippi, was the central figure of a pleasant group ot Southern gentlemen at the Hoffman House yesterday. The witty Southern Representa tive is always at his best when telling an entertaining story. In talking about the amusing incidents connected with political campaigning in his Congressional district, he related several stories in the negro dia lect, among the best of which was the fol lowing: 'I had just returned from making a polit ical speech," said Mr. Allen, "when I was met at the door by old 'Aunty Allison, an aged negro woman, who nursed me in child hood. With her big, black, good-natured face all wreathed in smiles, she said: 'Bless ma soul! Mass'r John, but how yo' don' re tnin me o yo deah ole gran'fa'r. To walk like him. talk like him, act like him, an' am jes' like him in politiks, too." "Whv, aunty, I never knew that my grandfa'ther had been active in politics,' said I. " 'Oh, 'deed an' deed he wah, Mass'r John. He wah jest like yo'seli in that pa'ticlah.' " 'In what way, aunty?' " 'Oh, he wah all de time a holdin office.' "What office did grandfather hold, ftsnty?' " 'Jes' de same as yo' candidate.' " The Smallest Republic In the World. Trobably the smallest republic in the iworld is the one which declared its inde- Lpendence on August 9, at Franceville, one fat the islands of the New Hebrides, and Eficlected M. Chevilliard its President The glnhabitants consist of 40 Europeans (includ ing a solitary Englishman, a missionary), tand 500 black workmen employed by a iTrench company. The new flag of the re public having been duly hoisted, the iTrench it'unboat Saone landed a detachment and Xsiluted the flag. WOMEN AS LAWYERS. A Member of the Chicago Bar Be hearses the Eeasons Given WHY WOMEN CANKOT PRACTICE. Single Ladies Admitted to the Bars of Some States Bnt - HATE0N8 ABE ALWAYS DISCOURAGED rwamxx roa tot pispatch.1 For the actual administration of justice, particularly in courts governed by the principles of common law, a learned bar is almost as essential as a learned judiciary. Judges very quickly after their elevation to the bench appreciate the fact that the facility and accuracy of their judicial labors largely depend on the legal training and ability of the lawyers. Hence it well be comes courts of justice to be ever careful and extremely solicitous for its bar, its rules of admission and the requirements of its candidates, with the view of fostering in its ranks the highest possible order ot profes sional excellence. In most of the States, in order to promote the "proper administration of justice," women have not been permitted to practice in the courts from which the common law excluded them ever since its adoption in this country. It might be well to state that by expressed provision we have adopted the common law of England, and with three ex ceptions, ths statutes of that country passed prior to the fourth year of the reign of James the First, so far as they were applicable to our courts. In a few of the Western States, however, the bar has among its practitioners some women lawyers married as well as single. In 1869 Mrs. Arabella M. Mansfield, the wife ot Prof. J. M. Mansfield, of Mount Pleasant, Iowa, was admitted under a statute provid ing that any "white male person" with the requisite qualifications should be licensed to practice by virtue of the statute that "words importing the masculine gender oalv mav be extended to females," and the Court held the affirmative declaration that male per sons may be admitted does not imply a de nial of THE KIGHT OF FEMALES. A few years later, in 1872, Mrs. C. H. Nash, of Maine, was admitted, and I believe this was the first case in which a woman has obtained full standing in the legal pro fession of New England; and further, too, we have no record save hers and that of Mrs. Mansfield of any married ladies being ad mitted to the bar. In the January term of 1870, Mrs. Myra Bradwell, the well-known editor of the Chicago Legal 2Tews, a lady of remarkable ability and the wife of Judee Bradwell, petitioned the Supreme Court of the State of Illinois, to be admitted to enter upon the practice of law. Her certificate of qualifica tion and attainments were ceitihed to by the Hon. E. S. Williams, Presiding Judge for the Seventh district, and the Hon. Charles Reed, then State's 'Attorney for Cook county. The petition was heard, hot was refused bv the late Justice Lawrence on the ground, partly, of her disabilities as a married woman, and as such incapable of making contracts. A few years before Mrs. Belva Lockwood was a candidate for Presi dent ot the United States she was refused admission to the Court of Claims for the District of Columbia purely on the same grounds as Mrs. Bradwell. A few single women have been more successfnl. Miss Barkalow, of St. Louis, Mo., was admitted under a statute providing that "any person" possessing certain qualifications "may be licensed," which admits women to all the Courts of the State, including the Supreme Court Michigan, too, admits a feme sole though not a feme covert to practice. Miss Char lotte E- Bay was admitted tn the District of Columbia on graduating from Howard "Uni versity. The Federal District Court ol Il linois admitted Miss Hewiitt in 1874. The Federal District Court of Iowa has also ad mitted a woman. KO EUCOTJEAGEMENT FOB MATEOJfS. It appears while some courts have admit ted unmarried women to their bars they have given but little encouragement to the married ladies. It looks as if there were some good grounds for a distinction over and above their disabilities as married women. They would not be bound by the obligations necessary to be assumed, where the relation of attorney and client exists, by reason of the disability imposed by their married condition. If Mrs. Bradwell were were admitted, she might, and very likely, too. appear in court before her husband. Judge Bradwell; and as the law in most cases looks upon man and wife as nearly as poisitile, as one; Judge Bradwell would virtually occupy the dual position of judge and attorney in the same case, overruling his own objections and sustaining the ob jections of his opponent, and in his capacity as Judge he would disregard the well-known and never-disputed axiom of law: Nemo potest judicare in sua causa, that no one is able to judge in his own cause. Notwithstanding that the admission of women to the bar does not harmonize with the common law nor with manv of the State constitutions, nor meet with judicial sanc tion, many are the reasons advanced by the advocates of their supposed rights. They hold that a class wholly unrepresented in courts of justice can never obtain full jus tice in such courts; that a union of the pecu liar delicacy and conscientiousness attrib uted to women together with the decisive firmness and vigor ot men, are not only de sirable bat necessary in the promotion of justice; that a great injustice is done to one half of the Community by shutting them out arbitrarily from an' honorable and re munerative field of industry, for which many of them have a decided taste and ability. AX ATTORNEY'S POSITION-. Webster says an attorney is "one who takes the turn or place o( another." Bou vier, in his "Institutes," is more explicit in his definition. "An altorney-at-Iaw is an officer in a court of justice who is employed by a party in a cause to manage the same for him." Attorneys are simply agents. They transact business and appear for and act in place of tneir clients, who have not the requisite learning, experience, time or desire to appear in suits for themselves. From time immemorial female attorneys were unknown in England, and should a lady ent Westminster Hall either in the capacity of an attorney or barrister, she would create just as much astonishment as if she had just ascended the Bench of Bishops or had been elected to a seat in the J Mouse ol Commons.- 1 cannot but think that the rule adopted by the common law and our Supreme Courts is a wise one. The profession enters largely into the well being of society and to be honorably filled exacts our best efforts. The law of nature destines and qualifies the female sex for the bearing and nurturing of the children of our race and for the custody of the homes of the world and their maintenance in love and honor. Surely the profession of the law, above all other callings, is inconsistent with those radical and .sacred duties, and in consequence a departure from the order of nature, xis true tbe ups and down of life, together with its cruel chances, may leave women free from the peculiar duties of their sex. These may need employment, and should be welcome to any not derogatory to their natures. It is a matter of public pol icy to provide for the weaker sex, but not for its superfluous members, and above all sot to tempt them from the callings of their nature by opening to them duties peculiar to ours. There are other and many employments in life sot unfit for the female nature. But the profession of thelaw can not possibly be one of them. The, natural QXTAXTTrES 07 WOMANHOOD, its gentle graces, its quick sensibilities, its susceptibilities, its purity, its delicacy, its emotional impulses, its subordination of hard reason to sympathetic feeling are surely not qualifications for forensic strife. She is as little molded for the mental con TEE flicts of the courtroom as for the physical conflicts of the battlefield. She was de signed for gentler and better things. It is cot the saints of the world who in the main employ lawyers. The profession has to deal with all that is mean and malicious, knavisn and criminal, coarse and nasty, re pulsive and obscene in human life. It would surely be revolting to all female sense of innocence and modesty, and shock ing to the faith that man bears toward womanhood, on which bang all the better affections and humanities of life, were women permitted to mix professionally in all the nastiness of the depraved which finds its way into courts of law. Take a glimpse at the catalogues, of crime that are felonious under the statutes with which the profession has to deal, and which go toward filling up judicial reports, and it will be readily seen that no modest woman could read them without pain and self abasement, nor so overcome the instincts of her nature as to publicly try them. I hope we hold in too high an estimation the sex as to volun tarily commit it to such studies and such occupations. We must not depend on such assistance, nor get our defenders from their ranks. T. J. Fitzgerald. THE PBICE OP CHAMPAGNES. What the Xpernay Grapes Cost The Snn cerro Crop. The following extract from a French pa per, relative to tne price of some cham pagne grapes of this year's harvest, may prove interesting in these times of a talk about a champagne trust: ''People are often astonished when tbey hear of the price of a bottle of champagne of some high-class brand. But it is known that in the Epernay district a basketful of Cramant grapes was sold at the rate of 3 francs a kilogramme (two pounds). This has put up the price of a cask containing 200 litres (about 200 quarts) to 1,400 francs, or $280. It has-been calculated that this year a fine bunch of grapes, with big grapes, is worth to its pro prietor 1 centime (one-fifth of 1 cent) for each grape." So much for the true, genuine grape har vested in the old province of Champagne, or rather in a small portion of it, around Epernay and Ay. But all champagne wine, which is drnnk by hundreds of mill ions ot bottles throughout the world, could not be produced in this French province. For instance, one reads in a review ot a wine crop, published this year in the Jour nal Des Debats of the 8lh instant, in regard to the crop of white grapes in the district of Sancerre, some 250 miles distant from Champagne, that "a large portion of the crop has been sold, before harvesting, to the makers of champagne, at the rate of GO francs ($10) the hectolitre, or 100 litres, just as it comes out from the press machine." therefore containing a great deal of froth. now different this price is from that of the Cramant or the genuine grape of Champagne. Still those white wines from Sancerre and other districts give a good champagne after having passed through the making process. It must be kuown that it is due to that process that champagne sparkles so strongly, much more actively, indeed, than the natural sparkling Burgundies. The Champagne wine, previous to its being treated and improved, is a quiet, delicious, still wine, with an admirable light rose tinted color the wine for home, the twin brother of the champagne of restaurants and official banquets. A CHICAGO BUSIBODI. Queer Contrlvnnce to Prevent Unwelcome Vtnltors From Entering;. Chicago Herald.! In front of a second-story window of a store and flat building over one of the Westside thoroughfares is a curious contri vance which has long excited tht curiosity of daily passers-by. It is a slab-like affair which stands out from the building on brackets, and its use or utility is not ap parent to the most careful observer. Peo ple who see it have wondered what it is, but in vain. One day, not long ago, a young man whose curiosity regarding the mysteri ous contrivance had been piqued regularly twice a day, resolved to find out what the tbing was. Accordingly he left his car one morning at the street above the building and walked slowly down the street gazing at the object as he approached it. In front of a house near by stood a good-natured looking old fellow, and the young man stopped and asked him if he could explain the object of the arrangement in question. "Yes, sir," grinned the man, "some peo ple call it a 'busybody,' but I think it's a good idea. You see there is a mirror back of that slab, and it is set so that a person in the window can look into it and see the face of anyone who may be ringing the door-bell below. It saves many a trip up and down stairs, for a woman can see if the caller is a peddler or some one she doesn't care to see. If it is, she lets them ring until they get tired. Good idea, eh?" The young man opined that it was a "corker." COFFEE FOR A PENNI. Blot Boxes might be Turned to Good Ac count In Winter. Philadelphia Inquirer.) "1 was thinking just now," said a gray haired man, who stood with his coat collar turned up near where one of the drop-a-penny-m-the-slot water cooler used to be in Independence Square, "that it would be a good scheme to have hot coffee in tanks placed about town in cold weather so that a chap with a penny or two could warm up once in a while. You know there are cans made to keep coffee hot for 21 hours. They have thm in Boston. They use' cork, I be lieve, to pack around the can. "Well, the coffee tanks wouldn't need any more attention than the ice water cool ers. Then on a cold morning a fellow could drop a penny in the slot and get a cup of coffee. Don't you think it's a great scheme?" COULDN'T SEE THET0INT. An Englishman Unable to Understand Tale College English. Sew Haven Palladium. A Yale student returning from abroad is disgusted with the slow appreciation of the English people. He says that on the trip home he had occasion to make use of the phrase "in the soup." As it was new to British ears, it provoKed the curiosity, of one old gentleman, who begged an explana tion. The embarrassed yoifng man began with a cheerful and homely example. "If," said he, "I started for America, and my trunk by some inadvertence was de tained in Liverpool, I "should be sadly in convienced, would I not? Well, then, my trunk would be in the soup, and so would I." "But," broke out the Englishman, "I can not see what your trunk has got to do with an article of diet." The Toqnrro. Let me linger where the gramma grass Is grow- When tbe sun Its scarlet streamers flings on high; Let me roam where countless prairie-flowers are blowing And tbe evening clouds are blushing in the sky! In the winter when alone and in tbe stirrup. Through the drifting snowflakes pushing on in haste, ' The thought of someone often makes me cheer up As her tender kisses on my lips I taste. And in summer when the verdant boughs are nodding In tho breezes gently sighing Ver the plain. Along tbe langhing landscape slowly plodding. Her glances greet me lovingly again. And now tlje moments seem to me but Idle When someone is not nestling oy mr side, I toss upon my broncho's neck the bridle And like the wind across the pampas ride. The deepest wound my bosom has to carry Is in the inmost recess of mr heart; It bleeds afresh when nightfall bids me tarry, And I wonder how we ever live apart. Let me hie from where the gramma grits Is growing Toward tbe sunset's golden glory in the sky; Let me hasten where the buds are ever blowing And tbe love-light flashes in my dear one's eye. David Graham Adee, in Washington Pott, PITTSBURG DISPATCH, THEC0FFEEWEDB1NK How the Favorite American Bever age is Adulterated. A FEW VERY SIMPLE TESTS. Benefits Derived From Moderate Drinking. Coffee WHERE THE BEST BERRIES COME FROM rwEirrxK roa rax dispatch. In order to keep awaks during the long-drawn-out religious services of the fifteenth century Mohammedans the Arab of this faith was accustomed to drink large quantities. of black coffee, and it was for this purpose that coffee was first taken up and welcomed by these people when it was introduced from Abyssinia. But in spite of the fact that it enabled their hearers to keep awake during services, the Mohammedan priests were op posed to its use by the people; they held that it was an intoxicating beverage, and conse quently forbidden by the Koran. As is usually the case under similar circumstances, the people went right on using coffee for its arousing effect, and gradually it came into use as a common beverage among the Arabians. From Arabia it wended its way of favor Westward to Constantinople. Here also the Mohommedanipriests opposedj't bitterly be cause of the number ot people that the coffeehouses took froni attendance at the mosques. To remedy matters the Sultan placed a heavy tax on the product, notwith standing which coffee spread in favor until, about the middle of the sixteenth century, it was introduced into England by a Turkey merchant, who was wont to give his friends a sip of the beverage. Soon, however, too many visitors began to bore him, when he started his Greek servant in business by setting up the first coffee house in London. After that coffee soon became a popular household beverage, though not now so pop ular in England as tea. In America, how ever, much more coffee than tea is con sumed. The first cargo of coffee landed in the United States in 1809. A short time ago there was in the neighborhood of 100,000,000 pounds of the product in this country, and afloat on the wav here. BIO COFFEE SBINKEBS. Of 11 leading countries, Holland heads the list in coffee consumption, about 21 pounds for each man, woman and child being annually consumed there; European Bussia stands at the bottom of the list, averaging only a little over an ounce per capita; while the United States is rated fifth, consuming annually about eight pounds per individual inhabitant. As with all vegetable products, coffee varies in quality, according to the district where it is grown; some parts of the world having belts of country, usually small in extent, where the chemical constituents of the soil and the climate are such as to pro duce a berry possessing a delicaoy of flavor not to be produced elsewhere. The principal American localities at pres ent growing and exporting coffee are Brazil, Costa Bica, Guatemala, Venezuela, Guiana, Peru and the West India Islands. From the East we get coffee from Java, Ceylon and Arabia. The latter country furnishes the celebrated "Mohka," or Mocha, which is probably the most popular and finest flavored product of its kind. It is said, however, that but a few thousand pounds of it ever gets west ot Constantinople, the bulk of what is sold as Mocha coffee coming from India and the various American coffee growing districts. All genuine coffee of commerce is obtained from the coffee plant which is an evergreen shrub belonging to the same natnral order as the quinine yielding plants. It is about six feet high as cultivated: is covered with a beautiful large, shining leathery leaf, and bears a berry greatly resembling a com mon cherry. Within this berry, and cor responding to the cherrv-stone. are two semi-globular seeds, having their fiat sur faces in contact. Each of these seeds make a grain of commercial coffee. They are tough and horny, and, before roasting, are about as little suggestive of the rich aroma of a delicious breakfast cup of coffee as one could well imagine. They possess neither the taste nor smell of coffee in any degree. These qualities so delicious to our senses are developed in the roasting, and are due to the formation of a certain aromatic, oily product called caffeine. This is very differ ent from caffeine, which is the active prin ciple of coffee, and which gives to the latter the gentle stimulating property that makes it so popular. TOT "WE DRINK COFFEE. Few people perhaps are aware that they drink coffee for its stimulating effects, and most persons, if asked why they drink it, would answer: "Because it tastes good of course." But that is not the reason, never theless; it is for its stimulating properties that people drink it The active principle, caffeine, is also the active principle of tea, in wuicu piaui it is present muouDietne quau- 4.1 a..4.... ... nflaa nn.1 . .nll.il .!.! tity existing in coffee, and is called theine. A remarkable thing in this connection is that man, even in his wild state,should have selected for his everyday beverage tbe only plants of all the earth's flora that contain this principle, caffeine. There are, besides tea and coffee, two or three other plants that contain this principle, and they are also used to make beverages. When taken into the human system, coffee does not act as a food, but it lessens waste of tissue, and thus acts as an indirect nutrient When drunk as a beverage it has the effect I ol removing mental tatigne and unrest. Medicinally, it is used to overcome drowsiness,-especially that due to opium poison ing, in which the active principle, caffeine, is often used, on account of being more con centrated. Caffeine is also prescribed for nervous headache and other nervous troubles; it is a stomachic tonic, promoting appetite and digestion, and has been suc cessfully used in the treatment of spasmodic asthma. Probably no other article of diet has given rise to the discussion that coffee has; some writers have claimed that its effects are pernicious, others that they are highly beneficial. As is usually tbe case, the truth lies between these extremes; the moderate use of coffee (one cupful at each meal and none be tween times) is salutary, promoting, as it does, the appetite and digestion, and caus ing the mind, when not too much agitated, to rest easy. Of course when used to mois ten and prepare a mouthful of food for swal lowing, and thus take tbe place of proper mastication and in salivation, coffee drink ing is pernicious. Hut this is not the proper way of drinking coffee. Drink It with your meals it you want to; but do not take it into your mouth when your mouth contains lood. HOW COFFEE IS ADULTERATED. There is a popular idea that coffee is some times adulterated. To ascertain to what extent this idea has a foundation in fact, 21 samples of roasted .coffee, ranging in price irom it to 3D cents per pouna, tnougn chiefly of the lower priced grades, were examined microscopically and to some extent chemi cally. The lollowing adulterations were found: Chicory in seven samples. Turnips in two samples. Bye in four samples. Acorns (T) in one sample. ' Beans or peas in three samples. Sawdust in three samples. Pebbles in one sample. , Caramel in adulteratlve quantities in four samples. Chicory, with one exception, was only found in the ground coffees. It is the ground and roasted root of a plant of the dandelion family. In some parts of Europe it is largely cultivated for use as a substi tute for coffee, a beverage being prepared from it without any addition of the latter. This fact might be used as an argument in favor of allowing the ground root to he mixed with coffee, the mixture being sold under the latter name. "It does so harm," it might be said, "and it stakes 'coffee . SUNDAY, NOVEMBER cheaper." Such arguments have no weight, however, and for these reasons: Chicory contains none ot the pecnliar constituents of coffee; and it has not the latter's beneficial and gratify ing effects on the human economy; indeed, it has almost nothing in common with coffee but color. The cheapness of a mixture of coffee and chicory is no argument in favor of the sale of such mixture; if the consumer thinks.he cannot afford to buy pure coffee, let him buy the chicory and coffee separately and mix them himself; this will be cheaper still. But it is by no means advisable to do this; it is better by far to drink the old fashioned "cambric tea," made of hot water, milk and hugar. This will be nourishing, and soothing to the stomach, while the chicory infusion has been demonstrated not to be so innocent as had been supposed. BEWABE OF GEOUND COFFEE. The turnips, rye, acorns and beans were with one exception only found in ground coffees. They were in each instance ground and roasted except in case of the beans, which were in one instance present entire in a sample of whole coffee. For these adul terations not even the argument that they nre nourishing is tenable, for the starch, nthinh id thai,. Hnn.!.1SHi. ninnlnla la OT1..W. -- tut... liUUIUUlUj; ..lw,.v, .o largely converted Into charcoal in roasting. Some of the "coffees" (?) adulterated with them consisted of little else than the adul terants, and contained bnt little coffee. Possibly they might not do much harm it anyone chose to buytbem at from 16 to 20 cents per pound; but tbe chances are that good beans, rye, etc, were not used, it be ing more likelythat old, mnsty, worm-eaten or rotten products were made use or. Good or spoiled, their use as an adulterant of coffee is a cheat and a fraud, and ought to be suppressed. The sawdust was probably that of walnut, though this was not definitely determined: It certainly was woody fiber not derived from chicory root. It added weight and bulk to tbe coffee, and probably some color and taste to the infusion. Pebbles probably do not hurt anyone, be cause they are not soluble, but they are dear at 16 cents per pound. The writer is told that green coffee often contains a con siderable quantity of pebbles and other for eign matters, which are usually removed by the roasters, but as the consumer is not di rectly interested in this matter, it was not investigated. Caramel is burnt sugar, and was added to tbe coffee containing it probably for the pur pose ol making the infusion prepared there from look dark and strong. It adds to the bitterness also, and thus gives a further diminution of strength. Sugar in small quantity is said to be added to coffee before roasting by some -roasters, who claim that the caramel resulting improves and con serves the aroma of the coffee. Be this as it may, caramel in the fonr instances men tioned was present inlarger quantities than required even for this purpose. A portion of it may have been developed in the roast ing of the chicory. A GLITTEEINO DELUSION. Some of the samples were highly glazed with a mixture containing as jts chief ingre dients, sugar and eggs; the latter probably more or less in a state of decomposition. To drink an infusion ot these semi-rotten eggs might not be particularly harmful, be cause ot the small quantity taken, but the idea was not pleasant. A good glaze un doubtedly seals up the aroma within the grain and thus prevents loss, but the eggs entering into its composition onght to be good. Fifteen of the samples were of ground, five of whole and one of powdered coffee. Of the 15 specimens of the ground article, all but one were adulterated. This one con tained dirt and many suspicious looking particles so burnt as to defy recognition; it cost 20 cents, and was the best of the ready ground coffees, though that is little recom mendation. Of the five samples of whole coffee only one conld be said to be adulter ated and this was with pebbles, beans, chic ory and caramel. Oneother sample, how ever, was dirty, containing burnt coffee grains and what might have been the sweep ings of a coffee bin. The one sample of powdered coffee examined was pure and clean, of good aroma and strong; but it de teriorated rapidly when keptin the labora tory for a week, even though tightly boxed in tin. Apropos of the adulteration articles that have recently appeared in The Dispatch, the New York Sanitarian says that these articles show clearlv "the necessity of a rigid chemical police by tbe health author ities everywhere." "Undoubtedly this is the only effectual remedy for adulteration, and eventually it will come; but in the mean time what is the consumer going to do to protect himself? First, buy no ready ground coffee; get the unground article and grind it in the kitchen immediately before use. In the present state of the market you must not expect to get a good conee at retail lor less than 25 cents. Your grocer will tell you the same thing if you ask him. As a rule grocers do not care to sell the lower priced coffees, for they know their poor quality, and suspect their spurious character. WE LIKE TO BE HUMBUGGED. But, as a grocer told the writer, the pub-l jic in gcucrm win not ueeu tneir aamoni tions, and suspect interested motives when the grocer advises them to buy a better grade. Truly, the public insists on being humbugged. If the grocer had his own way in tne matter he would sell only first class goods at just prices, he would make as much money as now; bnt the buying public rushes to where things are offered at the lowest figures, and for this reason retailers make a demand of the wholesalers, and they in turn of the manufacturers, for low and still lower prices, till a poibt is reached far be low what a genuine article can be furnished for. Then, in the coffee line, comes in the chicorv, beans and burnt sugar. This is the history of food adulteration in a nut shell, and, as is seen, the trouble commences with tbe public, though this of course does not lessen the crime ot the sophisticator. Adulterations, usually foreign matter and damaged or burnt coffee grains in any speci men of coffee, may usually be readily de tected by a careful inspection of individual grains. A good test applicable to the ground and whole article, is to spread out a few grains on a glass plate and moisten them with a little water, when any foreign vegetable substance will swell and become sott, while coffee remains hard and unyield ing to a needle or knife-blade. If ground coffee coheres or cakes in the paskage'or when pressed together, it indicates with reasonable certainty that foreign vegetable matter is present Again, if when a thim bleful of ground coffee is placed on the sur face of a glass of cold water, some particles almost immediately sink to the bottom, leaving colored streaks behind them, which give decided color to the water witbin a half hour, the conclusion is certain that the coffee is adulterated, probably with chickory. Genuine coffee will float on the sur face of cold water for a considerable time, and will be hours imparting much color to it. If you want to see this test, bny a pound of 16-cent. readv-ground coffee. and a pound of the whole atticle sold at 35 cents. Have the latter ground and perform the test ot each of the two kinds in separate glasses. In 20 minutes or a half hour the water in the glass containing the low-priced article will be markedly- colored, and a portion (consisting chiefly of chicory and other foreign vegetable matter) oi tha "coffee" will have sunk to the bottom of the glass; while the water of the other sam ple will be but slightly if at all discolored, and little or none of the coffee placed on the surface will have sunk. Care should be taken not to shake the glasses during the test. This experiment is practical, inter esting and convincing. Chetaliee Q.Jackson, M. D. A Femlnloe Characteristic Norrlstoirn Herald. 1 A woman may have one of the best mem ories procurable, but when she is learning to play whist, ihe.forgets every two minutes what's trumps. Tickling the Pnlntr. The only trouble with Hamburg figs Is that tbey are so pleasant to the palate that children are apt to eat them when not absolutely noces sary. If they can get hold of them surrepti tiously. They wlulnjure no one, but medicine should not be taken unless needed. 5& cents. Dose, one fig. MackDrugjCa, M.Y, XTST7 3, 1889. WHIT WE MUST WEAR Shirley Bare Gives the Ladies Some Suggestions for COEEECT COSTUMES FOR WINTER. Fashionable Fall Fabrics Every Color. Coming In THE YEET LATEST AGOHI IN BANGS rwBrrTEX ron Tins dispatch. It would be easier to say what is not to be worn this year than what is in style. Everyone to her taste, is the motto of the season, and let us hope that everyone may have taste, or some friend for her, enough to be saved in a becoming sense. Every fashionable rich woman can order gowns Hoven especially for her, an extravagance of Oxford undergraduates 40 years ago. Wit ness the bills for Tom Brown's waistcoats of gorgeous dye. The more moderate can be satisfied that not more than two or three other women on the planet have gowns like hers on, for the pattern is destroyed after a limited number of yards are made. By tbe unlimited samples of patterns and fabric shown on the desk before me, it would seem as it every Jenny and Jessamy through the Union might choose something distinct from every other girl in town, and something becoming, too. The materials in best style are the soft fin ished India cashmeres and camel's hair, twills and serges, in plain goods, with many silk and wool mixtures of the finest sort. fancy wools and plaids of dark, rich, often indistinct shading. French cashmere, woven in the figures and soft, gorgeous colorings of Eastern shawls are among the most expen sive fabrics, doubling the cost of rich silks; but these are the choice of the few. The colors best worn are Burgundy reds, Java brown, the shade of perfect roasted coffee, grape shades, which include the deep purple and the blue bloom of ripe clusters, bronze, pine green, besides all the grays in a sea gull's wing. One thing is to be remarked of the colors now in vogue that never since the days of Magenta and Bismarck browns were so many trving shades offered in one season. The Eiffel reds, the dark blue greens, tbe cinnamon browns require artistic sense to adjust the one right shade to each complexion which makes the toilet fine as an Indian embroidery, all others being hard and pitiless and unbecoming. A HETV VOCATION FOE TVOMEN. By and by women of perfect taste will find a vocation in going from house to house to tell each person in it what to wear that suits ner best. It would be the best money spent by most women, even in moderate cir cumstances, if thev could for an addition! 55 on the tost of their wardrobes each sea son secure the ideas of a person of infallible taste to tell them just what to wear, in a ladylike way The trouble with most of the so-called "artist designers" is that they let their Greek or mediaeval ideas run away with them. Their chiffons and chatelaine robes fit neither climate nor duties of the times, and are dramatic rather than ar tistic, so that commonsense keeps shy of them. The new flannels, plaids and cloths are pe culiar in a felt finish, dull and fine without perceptible threads. Most wearers will wisely prefer the smooth cloth finish, which wears best. True broadcloths, glossy and fine, are among the higher priced wool fabrics in the darkest shades. These and the Amazon ciotns of nnest twill are about $3 a yard, 52 inches wide. The only trouble with such gowns is that they last top many years, and, like old houses and upholstering, gather a smell of wear, with all the care taken of them. Heavy gowns and cloaks want to be kept in airy closets with plenty of cedar chips and balsam fir or vitivert to counter act the woolen odor. Camel's hair cloth at $3 is more wiry than anything of the kind. The chuddah cloth is lighter weight, and varies from $1 50 to $2 50 in price, with a difference of fonr inches in width. There is a pretty range of suitings at SI 25 a yard, double width, which seems the limit even good dressers usually care to pay for wool dresses. For this price one may have a nice henrietta cloth, winter weight, or a fine brocaded wool in self color, delicately woven on thibet ground, which will wear well, or equally fine armure, tricot or serge finish in softly draping cloth of substance. Of this price are the best plaids in dull rich shades, which draped on the bias as they are to be worn, offer instead of striking enects, sucn penect Dienomg ot late autum nal colors as no sunlight can ever accuse of being startling or even gay. A two-inch plaid of Java brown is crossed by an inch bar of hunters' green warmed by a few threads of the Eiffel red, just such shades as one comes upon in nooks of November woods among brown leaves and dull red lights, and a cedar's rusty greenness. AN ARTISTIC COMBINATION. Of similar tone is a grave, mist-dark blue, crossed by the darkest brown, like tree bark, snot witn a tnreaa or two ot russet, and a mossy blending of darkest bronze and ser pent "green. For those who lore red, and would wear it artistically, a dress that might warm a wintry dav has a plain block of the finest Eiffel shade, terra cotta with more crimson and life than the old shades, barred by blue-black, interwoven with the red, and stitches of blue-gray, a combination learned from the choicest ceramic art A woman of almost any age could wear these plaids com bined with plain wool of the graver shade. The gayer plaids in marine crossed with bronze, russet, gold and red, or fancies on the Stuart tartan, are distinctly faithful. At $1 a yard are some sott substantial fabrics, which m ght be styled fancy woven thibets, as they feel like that favorite old fabric, in black and colors, in tape stripes and broken stripes of alternate serge and rep, or armure and rep weaving. A most desirable choice for a quiet gown is a silk and wool in black and white thread mixture, lustrous but subdued, at SI a vard. which, with side pleats or panel of black brocade, touched with gold and gray, rough Elush wraps of black gray, with collar of lack feathers, and a little black and gold bonnet, would make a stylish toilet at mod erate cost Beside these quiet and always desirable fabrics, the novelties ot the season, not in tended to outlast it show pattern dresses in parrot colors, a pine green cloth with figure and border of poppy red, and the same in coppery yellow, red cloth with canvas bor der of marine blue and copper threads, or wine pnrples with coppcrv red and russet. which somehow look intended for landscape effect, and wbicb buyers for profit will con trol themselves with" admiring on others. It is the penalty of being a rich woman sometimes that one will wear such gowns. At sight the novelty recommends them' to those who like such things. With plenty ot money in one s pocket, one buys an jsiuei red cloth with modest pattern of plush peonies in brighter red, and having bought, as it isn't the tbing to give away to one's maid or poor relation, tbe dress is made. Being made, it is a solemn duty or an in evitable fatality to wear it, in the eyes of a satiric, staring world! Such a dress is enough to give one an indigestion. Purple is said to be the choice color, speci ally in grape and raisin shades, which are exactly what the names imply. But, to be a little vulgar about it, there is an evident attempt to paint tbe town red, in accessories, of toilet at least CRIMSON SHOES. A French maker fills his window with red shoes, in undressed kid of an amaranth crimson shade red boots with black patent leather tips and foxing red house shoes with tips, toilet slippers all red, and tbe black shoes and slippers had red ties of broad silk, or small bows In red. In the dull kid tbe effect is not glaring. But the next window bad Nottingham curtains dyed red, the same shade, ana very well they looked, too, and a table-scarf with ends in carmine silk crochet, which outdoes silk patch work and Kensington, Corduroy dyed this dull beautiful red is exeelliat tot ? & street and country gowns. It is extremely chic to find the shade which becomes your complexion better than anything else, and have all your belongings died that color. The gray and mouse-colored gowns and jackets are in procession to the French dyer's, who returns them ever so much pret tier than they were at first Nothinjr could be more charming in style than a dull gray blue corduroy, dyed an art shade to suit a young girl's fair face. The dress and jacket with Shanghai silk facings a little deeper color, blue born buttons colored by hand to matcn, and student cap of corduroy, and blue astrakhan, also dyed en suite, with gray-blue gloves of deeper tone, was dan gerously pretty, although the white cordu roy to begin, was only 60 cents a yard, and the dyeing in all a matter oi S3. That shows what it is to have an artistic mamma to plan for one. The last agony in bangs, to write of an uglythingas it deserves, brings a rolling curl down the middle of the brow, very much in a fashion to which sporting men were partial years ago. Fashion though it is, the younger brother will not lose the oc casion to chant on its appearance the old refrain: "There was a little girl. And sha bad a little curl Bight down in the center ot her forehead. When she was good she was very good In deed; Bat when she was bad she was horrid,' In place of closing the dress collar trimly with little gold and pearl-headed pins. fancy now thrusts Jong- gold bodkins care lessly through the lace of the cravat, having an inch or two of heads and points ont, from three to five such pins appearing on the lace of a waistcoat and the lapels of the dresses. With the white chemisette and the shirt front worn on sunny days, women adopt the fashion of jeweled studs, one fair creature, of 170 pounds, more or less, seen shopping tbe other day, wearing a cluster pearl and diamond "bosom pin," which would do credit to a steamboat clerk or a Mississippi gambler. Beally the freaks in ladles' wear suggest archaic reminiscences. THE CIGAR TTE FAD. There is a fancy here and abroad for col lecting yellow cigar ties, the ribbons which come around bunches of cigar ties, which serves various uses, to tie around a pet cat's or terrier's neck, to hold back a muslin half-curtain, to work into embroideries on net, or weave into draperies like silk rag portieres, tho idea being that a young lady must be popular to have so manv cisrar rib bons given her. Now yon know just what it means when Carrie and Blanche sweeten on you bo unexpectedly, and a shrewd youth will hold a cigar tie worth at least ten min utes' delightful chat on the -corner sofa not a second less. A certain gay youth of my acquaintance single himself out as an ob ject of particular attention from the demoi selles by appearing evenings with the dis creet gleam of yellow and gilt ribbon in his buttonhole like a French order of merit He knows his worth, does that long headed youth. It won't do to say that this is the origin of the yellow garter which is passing from friend to friend through every mail nowaaays, or mat it nas any connection with the women's rights badge, which is a yellow ribbon, but something wilt have to be done to discriminate. The distinction made between dresses for house and for street wear Is a sensible one, even if it serves as excuse for an extrava gance or two in the way of open throats and bare elbows. The cloth, gowns for out of doors are too heavy for the house, and too sober, sometimes, and they wear out more, sitting round the house, and getting tbe back draperies tumbled than in seasons of promenade. As well, wear your cloak al ways indoors. The house dress allows pretty, bright gowns, with the full, empire waists, silk blouses, and large sashes, and high puffed sleeves which are out of the possibilities under any wrap but a peasant's cloak. So the street gowns are tailor made, plain as riding habits, with coat sleeve, and drapery only ben.a jacket or short wrap is worn. joor tne long, comfort able Bussian cloaks of nlush or soft fcm. caded wool coming to the feet, straight I skhrts are made with only the front I trimmed to show at the opening of the cloak. I if at all, and no steels or pads are worn, as tbe cloak gives all the fullness needed by its large folds in the back, below the waist. Slender, supple springs, .are worn with the soft draperies and half trains ot house dresses, and thin silk pads give flat hips the all-roundness desired in the present style of a Dutch-churn, which supposes the female figure to be as wide., through from front to back as from hip to hip, so the London dressmakers say; hut I fancy the artists in dress will make short work of that But it is very nice to he able to wear the lovely brocade designs, the crimson carnations on gray, or the shaded velvety red roses on dull rose ground, or the fine oriental cashmere patterns indoors, where thev belong. SlflELET Daee. OLD LONDON BRIDGE.. When It Was Boilt nod Who the Architect Was. St Louis I'ost-Olspitch,! The first stone bridge across the Thames at London was commenced in 1176. The architect was Peter, of Colechurcb, who died in 1205, one year before the structure was competed. The stone platform was 926 feet long and 40 feet wide. The coping stones 60 feet above the level of tbe water at ebb tide, and the bridge was formed by 19 pointed arches, with massive piers from 25 to 31 feet in solidity, having a drawbridge on each side of the river to protect the approaches. The chapel inscribed to St Thomas a Becket consisted of two stones, and was familiarly known as St Thomas of the bridge. It stood on the tenth or great pier, that is, as nearly as possible- in the center or the bridge, the lower portion being the crypt, paved with black and white marble. In this crypt the architect, Peter of Colechurcb, desired that his bones might restand there, it may be presumed, they peacefully remained for centuries. But in 1737 the premises came into the occupation of a-Mr. Baldwin, to be used by him as a dwelling and warehouse. While alterations were being effected under the staircase of the crypt the remains of "a human body were discovered and removed, but no inscription was fonnd to afford a clue as to whose body it was, nor were any records of tbe interment forthcoming. A PLUG HE COULDS'T CHEW. Hotv a Railroader Was Tansht Not ta Bor row Other People's Tobacco. Chicago Herald. 1 John Aspel, of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Bailroad, is known among his friends of the rail as an inveterate beggar of to bacco. Even -when he has a good plug of his own in his pocket tbe habit bad so grown upon him that he will ask for tobacco any way. Last week some of tbe boys put up a job on him. They sent out and got a square of tough sole leather, covering both, sides of it with a layer of tobacco, and piercing the whole with the regulation tin tag. The pre pared "plug" was given to one of the con spirators, and ho filed it away in his pocket During the day Aspel dropped in and asked for a chew. The fixed plug was banded to him. He bit away at it lor awhile, and then be pulled out his pocketknife and tried to cut it He saw the deception intended and tried to say nothing, but his friends gave him tbe laugh. It is a pretty sure thing that he will never again beg a chew of to bacco. Love-Lighted Eyes. There was recompense complete and sweet For every pang I have ever known Last night, when we chanced for a space to meet; In your low and tender tone. But on. more precious than drink to one Who thirsts for a sup and, thirsting, dies. Was the look you gave me when all was done, With tbe love-light la your eyes. Wh ea you took ay sand I whispered low, The want, se-tt cfatep was aetarasee sweet That all the doubt or the long ago Was erased lumbal heart-beat; Bnt oh, mere dear than all else sMl be. And treasured as life's most valued prise, Wm that one lfcKloek as tfceta wsllea tree. With the love-IHEhtta yew eves. -XirfKaSheHtiiChiafTfmH.' THE FIRESIDE SEHM3? k Collection of EnlmaM Its for fins CracHng. Address communications for this department to K. B. Chadbobes. LewUton, Mrtfffl&M 796 A BEAD FltOM THE BOSABT OF Tiaa& i in..15als nPn unawares; V. , !ik?.? ,rtar " his prayers. He tells them not In beads but jeais, M.nMAnd ,tra advances; Meanwhile we cast our caps at cares. And miss our chances. The sinner, himui.. -r RW?S?nS ?e' ehwee ana yet be savedi Forgetting In his state depraved, , How tnat a certain place Is caved ,S with good Intentions. - ,tf-SS!!53 ! '' - v . ..c ui equal size The root nf each to my snrprise . Was ten exactly; . ,$ The year now past-whoeler tries II May nnd directly. T.fBIOS' 797 A BUH CH OF KEVS. 1. What key will admit vnn i,.iVjtn 1 1 2. What kewlll let yon ont agal3 after vow 4. What key will tn t.if jsfel n&ESt&Si .P to "" "S a nrt1 stLsBsJ owuatia mo Key to the Southern qneil Hon T E-nrrtTi 798 SCMEEICAT. ' "' T VAIf WATlM K... ........ . ,t ... ' As bread that's mixed with leaven. , i "ic Ti MJLX. ""- " ? j There standing in my father's, barn. Are horses half a score; I like tho very best of all The dappled 3, 6, 4, U. .,VU V. M., feU.0 RCA.J UIU, , I every day must delve - From early Mann of day until ', 9, 10, 11, 14 i , All those who have an easy Ufa And have no need to delve. I would 1, 4 a. 4, 5, e. 7,8,9,10.11,12. f f. 799 THE, COMPOSUOB'S QTTAXDABT. A compositor who was settiner mi tvoa for an ?. tt.l r all M.1....H...I1 " arithmetic, pied tbe solution of, a problem , in multiplication. Unfortunately be had mislaid the copy, and all he remembered. was that both multiplier and multiplicand consisted of two t figures. Tho scattered type rtpresented thefj following figures: --53 1.433,4.6.7,8.8.9,9. ' JS With the aid of a pencil and a piece of paper; , the compositor managed, after a while, to re- """' h"t inures uu mru- proper places. rruanTiia moproDieinr J.il. JTCZAnDIX... 800 CHABADE. What helps us to communicate witninenas.inongnra another state, . ,, And is to us convenience trreat? f , , The primal. ' ' 1 What is this word wo sometimes say In substitution for "awayf We hear It doubtless every day. ! The secontt. ' What is it gives us such delicht In winter time or summer's height That we esteem it needful quite?. ZbejlnoL What seems to be the only goal Of many an office seeker's soul When rulers new assume control I The total. Ethti 801 double acbostic. Words of nine letters. 1. A lash. 4Books appended to the Old Testament. 3. Tbe day hef ore this. 4. To un load. 5, The state of bednniDg. , Primals and finals each give amnsleal com- poser. aethcs tULisxa. 803 DECAPITATIOir. A pert little chap named DeFriese, Took sick with a final disease; This total yoaofr lad Grew exceedingly bad Till death his victim did seise. ELLA Mhjttai. i 803 A2TAOSAMS OH- T.A'TTKB-PAg.pglZB. , 4 BOTES, , X Fallen jDryden, so torn.- 4 A Sampson! lovew aia. .ur am Kreen Dull- 4,jX0 carnal report 6. Fate nearM him. 8. Clever.? lad, govern, 7. Men ran an Irish job. 8. He j ouij uoro joj in. tv. niiso. 804 EEM0VAL3. A girl that wears imported bangs And says 'tis her own hair Thereby attempting to deceive With this will well compare. Curtail this word" and yon will have A Dutchman's better half. A bnxom dame whose broken words Will sometimes make us langh. Tbe final letter now remove. Three letters may be seen; A member of a royal class is wnas tnese iciicra mean. ,-j Enm.j HASDSOME PBIZESJFOK 2TOVEMBEB.1 1. "America Illustrated." a Larre and elerassl quarto volume of,Ulustration,and descripUeaaJ oi prominent ieaiures oi our country. 4 A fine volume of poems. 8, Bayard Taylor's "Views A-foot" wiUT portraltlllustratlons. These line prizes will be irlvea . resseetrrelT for the best three lots of answers to "The Fire side tsphinx" published in November. Tbe so lutions must be forwarded weekly, asd. nose snouia oe witnneia on account ox seemlac nx- ness, m Bnuuiusomwiiinu. , j A2TSWEB3. ., ' 7S8 Boycott (Bo- 07cacehti TSB1. Bul-bul. iilnm-hnm.. 3." Tar-ta-r.W4.-r Paw-paw. 6. Tom-tom. & JH.OS-H101i-7.-r.iaaw-; haw. 8. Uon-bon. TOO Brlarean. 791 St A W TAG X. A It p a o B A C P X X MAI, b x r HAW O A it GAL "&. d-R-i r. t '& t TO-B. A O jX1 KSX3)& x-8-w o ,a'i5 Iz-H-O TJiiJttX X.-E-X o, ahc x-R-t.i jrso D-M-A'.If fa- 8 P-A-2CI X X A-N-T-I Jt X 792 Yreka Bakery. 7B3 Eels, rise; sire. 9 13 15 I I I. 31 37 39 I I as ml I '13 Ivory Bngar DateaVa buss. , ass. zias.fc-,'1 T ...1 jw ..! ..1 I. & . rj?T& that the arms of a seals beam are levers, so? that tym nnwnp mrrrimA k. .ha Wl 1 ..? Iwiw. m& the fourth division from the point of susaea-rl Inn Afth. .Ml. -n -nt..t. .'. A .1 A .fi 130 Its on the first division. The ivorv, there-f iore, requires a power or weight ol uo ss oa tne S vp uusito nui ua, uio scaio 10 oaianca is. xmai weight is made up as follows: 5 fts of sugar on j the third division. ean!nlnt tn s times 3. nr u 1 lbs; a as of dates on the fifth division, equivsri wuw i uuca u, ut jim jes, total, iMtipounos. ' Too Macs Caharo ! Kansas. Kansas City Star.? Eight colleges have been built in X&bmJ during the past year. This sort of tiiaSl will go on until the Sunflower State will have J to import all of its farm hands and kiteMal girls lrom Missouri. H First lsve. How does a woman lover Oace, no moM,-'4 Deep in sorrow or deep la sin. One King relgneth her heart witsia, One alone, by night and day, Moves her spirit to curse or pray. UUBJUWO VIHJ CW1 HU1 uvr soot f J33C. iruoi we Krap oi ueatu a cntiwe- Thoneh lovers beset her. or friend derkta. Yea, when she smOeth another raaa's btMv? Once Is forever, aad once alone. How doefaman lover Once for all. The sweetest voices of life may call. Borrow dauat him, or death df-may, Joy's red rases bedeck bis wj r Fortaae seaile, or jest, or frown. The orael taasaB ef the world tara 4mn Lea beaav hiss or lore delicht Throngh stern or sunshine, by dwrer aiaaaaJi Wwdertec toUlae. asleep, awake, j ABWBCB was any maaoeo, or btcmv Better the wWe. or child, or mbC Oaeo ad frw, loves ajsujtf. ,,J Iff-i .. ?j ssgnff ig r