HIS FLEETING IDEAL. The Great Composite Novel. The Joint Work of P. T. BARNUM, JOHN L. SULLIVAN, BILL NYE. ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. MaJ. ALFRED C. CALHOUN, HOWE & HUMMEL, INSPECTOR BYRNES, PAULINE HALL, Miss EASTLAKE, W. H. BALLOU, NELL NELSON and ALAN DALE. I.—FOUND AT LAST. By W. H. BALLOU. Illustrated by FER NANDO MIRANDA [Copyright. All rights reserved.] "Happy 1 may not call thee until 1 learn that thy life has been happily end ed." Thus soliloquized young Mr. Henry Henshall as he reclined, day dreaming, against the cushions of his seat in the forward section of a Wagner car. The New York Central train was speeding him on and on, to which fact he was utterly oblivious. He had secured tho forward soction to escape observation. He sat with his back to the passengers. Himself was companionship enough. He desired only to think and to dream. He had but a few days Bince put Co lumbia college, so to speak, among his stock of reminiscences, with hor highest honors in his trunk. Ho had mentally given over his father's great manufacturing interests, which invited him to take immediate posses sion and give the aged sire his desired retirement, to the devil and the deep blue sea. Ho loved his ideal best, his art next, the devil take what was hindmost. Tho ideal was now his quest; art he could achieve between times. It was of her he dreamed—his ideal. As he sat there gazing at the end of the car, deep in the contemplation of this yet unseen but ever clearly outlined celestial ideal girl, with all the glamour of youth, the words of the great Solon to envions Crcesus would thrust them selves between his thoughts and seize him like some grim si>ucter, "Happy I may not call thee until I learn that thy life has been happily ended." "Why need what old Solon or any one else ever said concern me?" he mused. "What difference does it make what people say or who says it? A fact is a fact, and a theory a theory. One man's theory is as good for his own purposes as another's theory. The fact in my case is that I am satisfied to paint, notwith standing dad's wrath and the business he would thrust on me. Let dad earn the money, or who will—l desire only to spend it. "So much for the fact. My theory is, and I prefer it to Solon'B, that to marry my ideal will bo the acme of happiness and will insure a happy ending to my life. If I never find her more or less of my life will be miserable and will end unhappily." Tho young man failed to see that he had exactly conformed his theory to Solon's, that he had expressed the same theory precisely with variations in form only. Youth is deluded and ignores ro somblances, those trifles which made Darwin immortal. Ho continued to muse; "As an artist my preferences run to browns. They are my favorite colors, because to me they are most beautiful, most quiet, most sincero and the least suggestive of either gaudiness or gloom. My ideal, unseen, unknown love Is a symphony in browns—brown hair, brown eyes and a complexion tinted brown rather than white or red. "She is very small in stature, hence suro to be superbly perfect In form. Her little head is beautifully rounded and symmetrical, likewiso hor dimpled arm - and her sweet little hands. Her little * feet aro incased in child's boots, not larger than a child's No. 13. She is" He paused abruptly, startled, for ho saw her. His eye had been wandering among the gorgeous tapestries of the car, the beautifully wrought woodwork, the superb French plute glass panes in tho windows, tho oil pointed ceilings and the blue and gold woven velvets of the cushions. Atjlaat it rested on a mirror in front and above his head that slightly inclined from the top toward him sufficiently to expose the entire car aud all its occu pants in dim image, dim because his curtain was drawn, darkening tho light from the window at his side. He thought several times to change his position to (obviate the annoyance, but he unconsciously seemed deterred from so doing. He was being slowly fascinated by a shadow as yet undefined, but momentarily growing more startling. He stared through the dim light at the mirror until his eyes became accus tomed to tho shadows above, and tho picturo among tho other images gradual ly defined itself. 0 What he saw, that which wound round and round him silken threads of fascination, might have been reflected through a dozen mirrors from Bide to side and from end to end of the car. Suddenly he turned and attempted to discover the original among the passen gers. Failing in this he again sought the mirror, giving himself entirely to the study of one dim outline. What he saw was the head and bust of a young girl. It so exactly conformed to the ideal of which he had dreamed so long that he concluded the image must be a conception merely—a psy chological ghost, as it were. There was his dream face, surely; the symphony in browns; the brown hair, every thread as delicate as the dew catching gauze of a spider; the large brown eyes, in which was the very soul of the loftiest conceivable intellect, the highest genius of music, perhaps; the complexion slightly tinted brown, but cut by the sweetest red lips; the evi / flently small stature and perfect form; tho beautifully rounded and symmetrical head and dimpled arm. He only lasted a glimpse of the feet to complete tho spell of fascination, ex cept of course the realization of his ab sorbing desire—possession. Ho closed his eyes an instant to more completely imagine it all a dream. Again he looked to revel in the picture, but madness —it was gone. Startled, the young man turned in dis may, when, to his almost uncontrollable joy, the girl in all her ideal beauty slow ly approached him in tho aisle. His quick, artistic eye encompassed her form in a glance, completing the picture. She had exquisite feet incased in little boots not larger than a child's No. 12. The girl hesitated, looking at him shy ly, as if in doubt whether to proceed. Why, he could not for an instant imag ine, but he afterward attributed it to the fact that he actually devoured her, so far as one can devour a girl with the eyes. Her hesitation was out moment ary, then she approached a small silver water tank in the corner of the lobby near him. He was on his feet in an instant. He sprang to the tank, his tall form bend ing until his eyes wero on a level with her, and he gazed at her with that eagerness and intensity with which a starved nomad might look through a window on an epicure's dinner at Del monico's. "Permit me to assist you," he said gently, with difficulty controlling a de sire to grasp her hand. "Thanks, you are very kind," ventured the maiden, wondering nt hiß eagerness and intensity of gaze. He placed the silver goblet under tho faucet, letting tho liquid oozo out as slowly as possible whilo ho continued his gaze like one in a dream of delight. "The water is overflowing the gob let," suggested tho girl with an amused smile. Tho man awoke confusedly, turned tho water off and handed to her tho cup. "Couldn't you let it run over a little while?" ho asked half impatiently. "Tho carpet will übsorb it. I have been looking for you so long. I" "Oh, certainly, if you wish," she in terrupted. "But then I am so thirsty, you know." He stared through the dim light at the . mirror. "And so am I," the man said wearily. "I was never so thirsty in my life." "Then I advise you to tako a drink," retorted tho girl with a laugh, and she abruptly turned and left him. "It is not for water I am craving," murmured the wretched man; but if she heard liim she gave no sign of it. He watchixl her move down the aisle and enter tho drawing room at tho other end of the car. The reason of his ina bility to see her among the passongers was now evident. But how could her image bo reflected in tho mirror in front of him? His eye caught a quick solution. The transom over the door of the drawing room was open. Some mirror on tho iu sido reflected the images of the people to soino mirror on the outside and thence into the one over his head. Hnngry and dissatisfied he seated himself again to contemplate tho picturo and schemo to get acquainted. Now ho recognized other people in the drawing room also reflected in the mir ror. There was an old man with a sober, dissatisfied face who looked as if ho might be a disciple of Henry George deep in contemplation of land theories; a woman with a just then unreadable countenance, who might be the ideal's instructress in music or other studies, or her governess, perhaps; lastly, tho face of a younger man, say of 85 years, that bore in it cunning, malice, suavity and other characteristics winch denoted a shrewd schemer and perhaps a villain ous nature. Was sho traveling in security with an aged, absorbed parent and trusted friends, or was her father, if such lie be, oblivious to the machinations of a vil lain, who had an accomplice in tho sup posed governess? He resolved to probe this mystery to tho bottom, if he had to travel around the earth to do it—if he had to employ detectives, hail to squander his whole fortune. Poor man! He little know how much of his contemplation was to be realized in bis future existence. Alarmed by the workings of his brain he suddenly resolved to paint the group as they appeared in the mirror. He raised the curtain near him to in croaso the effect of the scene in the mir ror, but it only dulled out the picture and he drew it down. From his valiso he took a palette, his paints and brushes and a small square of canvas with a heavy pastboard back de signed for use in the absence of an easel. He began sketching on his ideal. It was a joyous task, so much so that his whole soul became concentrated in the work, and the lines in which he drew the lovely face rapidly grow into a fac simile of life. Of course the best he could do during the remainder of the day was to prepare studies for more finished paintings later. Still ho lingered long and lovingly on the face of his ideal until the study, un der tho intensity of his love and long ing, became not a bad picture. The day gradually lengthened until ho recognized that he must turn his atten tion to tho others of the group or miss them by nightfall. They might get off at some destina tion north of New York. He must hasten. With feverish anxiety, intensified by the thought of her possible escape from him, ho put uway tho paints and took to his pencil. By nightfall lie had sketched the group, BO that all its characters might be recog nized by the detectives whom he already purposed putting on the case if he should miss them. Mr. Henshall concluded that in the dining car at dinner he should have the pleasure of sitting at the table next to the group. To his utter disappointment dinner was served to the party in tho seclusion of the drawing room. He entered the dining car on tho last call and resorted to stimulants to urge his brain into some suggestion for his relief. He returned to his section and called the conductor, having evolved no othor scheme. "Can you tell me the names of the party in tho drawing room mid their des tination?" ho queried anxiously. "I do not know tlieir names," replied the official, "as tho room was merely marked off to a party of four. How ever, I know that their destination is New York, and that they have transfer tickets either for some steamer or rail road. In case of the latter they should be bound southward; if abroad, their course is but a wild conjecture." "Find out for me where they are going and I will pay you $ 10." "Very well, sir." But that was the last he saw of tho conductor. When darkness set in the brilliant electric lights of the Wngnor palace in creased the intensity of tho picturo in the mirror. At last Henshall observed somo move ment in the drawing room. The girl took a violin, and tuned it to suit her practised little ear. Soon thero began to float through the car the ravish ing arias of Chopin, Schumann and other masters. If she was exquisitely beautiful to him before, what could describe hor when pouring her very soul into music? It was then that the beautiful brown eyes vindicated his sense of the artistic and his love of their color. In the mystic spell of that entrancing music he could see clearly through the perfection of her fingering, bowing, technique, finish and grace into her very soul, which was mirrored in her eyes. Ho had listened to 010 Bull in times past, to Sembrich and even to Christine Nilsson when she had chosen to seize a violin and charm her friends; but in love as he was the music of the maiden for whom he was hungering seemed to pale the efforts of those great artists. The very motion of the car was in harmony with her time. Passengers throw away their novels and listened. The old man in the*drawing room closed his eyes as if in rapturous sleep. The villainous looking man, as if fascinated, thrust his face as near to hers as he could without disturbing the player, and his looks showed passion, longing, and a malicious intent which maddened Hen shall. As suddenly as tho music commenced it ceased. Tho girl arose and put away her violin softly and with a caress. Evi dently she was tired and wished to seek her couch. Had the young man heard what was said within, his anxiety would have been increased to a fever hoat, but he had not that privilege, much to his later disad vantage. Soon the lights within the drawing room went out; the group had retired. Long in contemplation the young man sat. At hist, merely to relieve the por ter, all the remaining passengers being in bed, he betook himself to his couch. It was hours before his tired brain would rest, and it was broad daylight before he awoke to violently spring to tho floor and dress hlmsolf. The car was stand ing in tho yards of tho Grand Central depot. Tho berths were all made up, and the opon doors of tho drawing room showed that his bird had flown. Ho sought the porter in a rage. "Where have they gone—tho people in the drawing room?" he almost shouted. "Don't know, sah. Don't know nothin' 'tall about it. Train get heah at 4 o'clock diß mawnin'. Do pasaenges get up when da pleases. 'Specs do folks got up when da pleased." Mr. Henshall sat down u moment to clear his brain. He was stunned. Most of the night he had tossed in bed, hoping for an accident, a crash, a fire, anything, that he might spring to her rescue. Nothing of the kind hail hap pened. Instead ho liad gone to sleep like a stone and let her escape. It was now 10 o'clock. Six hours had elupsed, sufficient for tho party to have escaped by European steamer or to the south, or worso, perhaps to their home in the vast city of New York, where one individual is a mere drop in the ocean, a grain of sand in the Sahara, a moth on a great sequela of California. The man arose and sought the quar ters of the cabmen. They could tell him nothing. No one had taken a party of four. They might havo taken a street car or carriage of their own or walked to some near hotel, or worse, taken the elevated railway direct to the dock of some morning sailing steamer. ' There was absolutely no hope. In despair the man wandered away, vio lently clutching his painted portraits, tlie only possible clew in the case. n.—THE CUP THAT SLIPPED. By ELLA WHEELEE WILOOX. Illus trated by PHILIP 0. OUSAOHS. [Copyright. All rights reserved.! "I tell yon, papa, I cannot enduro his presence in this house. It was offensive enough to me at homo, when he came but once or twice a day. It was still more so during oi.r journey here, when I was forced to bn in the sanio car with him; but now that you tell me he is to live under the Bame roof, sit at the same table and ride in tho same carriage with us it becomes unbearable. My hatred of the man increases hourly. Wliy need you compel me to associate with him so closely, papa?" Tho voice of the speaker was of that peculiar contralto quality which in a re fined woman denotes passion and force of character, and in an ordinary one a coarse order of strength. It is a voice which always makes men turn to listen, and which echoes longer adown the strings of memory than the most bird-like notes of more musical and higher keyed voices. The face of the speaker betokened re finement, and this, together with her ex treme youth and pronounced beauty, rendered the voice more remarkable. The elderly man to whom the words were addressed breathed a deep sigh. "My dear child, I beg you to be reason able," he said gently. "You know how ill I have been—you know how alarming my condition seemed ever after" "Don't, papa," cried the young girl sharply. "Do you not suppose I remem ber as well as you the events which killed mamma, shattered your health and ruined my young life? Why recall thorn now? "Have wo not como away to forget them, if possible, or at least to live down the effects? But I do not see how it will help us to have that odious man under tho same roof with us day and night. Let Dr. Ben" "Watson," interrupted the old gentle man quickly. "I tell you, child, we must not forgot the new names we have re solved to use. Remember always that I am Mr. Crawford, you arc Miss Craw ford, your governess is Miss Brown and my physician is Dr. Watson. It is im perative that we use these names among ourselves as well as in the presence of strangers." The young girl threw out lier arms with an expression at once impatient and despairing. "I hato subtorfugo and deception in every form," she cried, "and I have never seen why this change of names— which was a suggestion of Dr. Watson, as you call him—is necessary. In a city like New York or London or Paris, where we are to pass our time of exile, we could easily sink our identity with out living under false names." "Tho greatest city in tho world is not largo enough to hide tho identity of a disgraced name," responded tho old man bitterly. "Disgraced? Papal" exclaimed tho young girl in a tono of expostulation, but the old man waved his hand wearily. "Enough," ho said. "Enough of this, my dear. Tho past is past. Why dis cuss it? Tho present and the future re main. "I desiro to regain my health and brain power, that I may set about clearing our name from the dark stain which has fallen upon it. Ido it more for your sake than my own, as at longest my stay on earth will he brief; but before I go 1 would lift this shadow from your young heart. "Dr. Watson, as you well know, is the first of mauy physicians who gave mo any relief from my suffering. He was the last one to be called by mo, liocause, like yourself, I had conceived a most un- , reasonable prejudice against the man. Some foolish and idle gossip concerning his private lifo, which arose from pure envy, I am now convinced, had warped . my judgment. But from tho hour ho first took hold of my case I have been a new man. I have been like one risen from the grave. "It was he who discovered that old associations were affecting my mind dangerously. It was he who suggested a journey abroad, and, as you say, under assumed names. A disgraced name is j liko a deceased member of tho body. If you have a wounded finger you are in constant fear of hurting it, awake or asleep. If you bear a stained name you dread the effect of it on every stranger j you meet. Dr. Watson realized what this strain would bo upon me during our journey, and I must confess the relief I fiud under my alias is marvelous. You know how I have improved. Tho chill with which I was attacked tho morning of our arrival, and which decided us to remain here a few months before pro- j ceeding farther, js only a step down on , tho ladder of health since I began to j clambor up out of tho valley of death. I Dr. Watson Is my savior. "I beg you to overcome your unrea- j sonable prejudice against him, my dear 1 child. Whatever the errors of his youth I am convinced he was more sinned against than sinning. He is your poor j father's best friend now, and as such you must consider him." "But why need he live here with us? Why can he not take a room a few blocks distant, within easy call?" per sisted the young girl. "It destroys the privacy of our home life—and it destroys ' my peace of soul," she added wildly, j "to have him here." "That is tho extravagant language ot youth," rejoined the old man. "Your prejudice is unreasonable, but I will strive to keep Dr. Watson from annoy ing you with attentions which he in tends only as courtesies to the daughter of his patient. "He must remain under this roof. His presence is as agreeable anil beneficial to me as it seems to be unpleasant to yon. In this matter selfishness is the groatest unselfishness on my part, for the restora tion of my health is the first considera tion for your future happiness." The sound of a key rattling in the lock, like a rat gnawing in the wainscot, put an end to further conversation, and the door swung open to admit a medium sized man in his middle thirties, whose glittering, sloo black eyes rested upon the face of the young lady while his words were addressed to her father. The lips expressed kind consideration for the Invalid, while the eyes expressed insolent and assured triumph in a fixed purpose. Whilo ho talked with his patient ho kept his gaze upon the girl's face. She sought to avoid those glittering eyes, but they seemed to fill the room with strange light. | She took a bit of sewing in her band | and turned her back upon him, ostensi bly to catch tho receding rays of the af | ternoon sun from the northern window; but he spoke her name, aud for some ] reason unaccountable to herself she turned toward him, drawn like the J ncedlv to the magnet, i "Papa, I feel the need of the air. 1 am going out with Miss—Miss Brown for a little walk." she said, rising ab ruptly. "Papa, I feel the need of the air." "I have ordered tho carriage to he here i In fifteen minutes. Wait and ride," said ; Dr. Watson. , "I prefer to walk," she answered ; coldly. , "And I wish yon to ride," he said < quietly. , Again her eyes were drawn to his and she sat down obediently. As tliey took their places in the car riage Dr. Watson Beatod himself opposite Miss Crawford and by tho side of her 1 father. ! The drive lasted two hours. It was dark when they returned, and Miss Brown was startled to hear her young mistress cry out wildly as the door of l their room closed upon them, "I shall certainly, certainly go mod!" und then to see her fall in a dead swoon upon the ; floor. | After she was restored to conscious ness and tucked into bed with Miss I Brown to watch beside her, the old gentleman spoke confidentially to Dr. Watson. "I think you will have to avoid show ing any attention to my daughter for a timo," he said, "as she has conceived some foolish prejudice against you. It J is tho whim of a mere child, and I trust you will regard it lightly, but I am con vinced by her manner during tho drive this afternoon, and by her swoon, that she is considerably excited over this matter. j "You liavo boon very courteous and kindly attentive to her, as it is your nature to be, I am sure, toward all her sex. But I think it would be wise to take no further notice of her for some time to come—until she outgrows this whim of hers." Dr. Watson loaned near tho old gentlo man and laid one hand on his shoulder, and spoko in a low. grave voice: "My dear friend, I do not wish to alarm you," ho Buid. "Yes, I have boen studying your daughter's mental con dition over since I first entered your service. She has a most remarkably j sensitive nervous organization, and it has been greatly shocked by events to which I need not refer. Unless she re ceives medical attention I fear for her. "I beg you to leave her caro entirely to mo. Miss Brown understands her condition, and we have both wished to conceal tho danger from you, but since you have spoken it is better that you ) know the facts. Ignore any whim the child may have; pacify her as best you may for the timo being, and leave tho result with mo. Yon shall not regret it." The old man pressed the doctor's hand and tears came to his eyes. "Nor shall you ever regret your inter est in ino and mine," he said. "Thank | God. I have money enough to pay you for this sacrifice of your wholo time and skill In my service whflo I live, and you shall not bo forgotten when I dio." The eyes of the doctor glowed like coals of fire as ho bade his patient good night and stepped out Into tho hall. At the door of her mistress's room Miss Brown stood waiting for him, fear ; iu her eyes. He put his finger to his lip. I "Do not be alarmed," he whispered. "The swoon was nothing. It may occur i again. Keep cool always, and remem- J i ber our compact iu the Wagner car, i when you promised to aid me. You ' shall bo well jsiid for It." And ho slipped a crisp bank note into j her willing hand. She bowed her head. J "To-uight, at I o'clock," he continued, ! "if your young mistress takes her violin and plays an air from 'Faust,' do not speak j to her or disturb ber. Let her follow her I own will. It may not happen, and yet I such an event iB liable to occur." I He passed on to his room, and Miss I Brown entered the apartment which she ! ; occupied with her young mistress, who was now sunk iu a profound slumber. | An hour and a half after midnight the sweet strains of a violin breathing an air from "Faust" floated through the apart - ; ment house. j A woman who lived across the hall heard it, and remarked to her husband that if over a set of cranks lived on eartli it was the people opposite. ! Dr. Watson heard the mnsic and laughed softly in his room, while his eyes glowed like coals of fire. Miss Brown both saw the player and heard her music and muttered with pale lips, "Is he man or devil?" Just a moth later, a man who had been sitting in Cliickering hall watching the exhibition of Professor Oscar Feld man, the hypnotist and mind reader, rose and walked out before the close of the entertainment. A 3 T oung man sitting near the aisle glanced up at him, slightly annoyed at the disturbance caused by his exit. "I have seen that face before," ho thought, as the man passed on. The exhibition grew in interest and the young man turned his attention to the stage; but the face of the person who had just gone out danced before him iu irritating BuggeetivGHess, just eluding the grasp of his tantalized memory. "Where did I see him before?" ho thought, and then, like a mirage*, tho scene reflected in t!;; mirror of the Wag ner drawing room car two months pre vious iliislio< 1 before the mind's.eye of Harry Henskall. He arose and dashed out < >f tho hall. In the crowds of people hurrying to and fro in every direction it was impos sible to toll whither the man had gone. He hailed a cab, hurried to his studio, made a careful sketch of tho face he had just seen, and carried it to tho private detective who was reno ,vnod for his skill. "This man I saw go out of Chicker ing hall half an hour ago," lie said. "Find his address for me and I will pay your price." It was a few days over a month later when he received a telegram in Boston, whither he had gone the day previous, which said: "Have found name and number. Como home." "I saw the original of this sketch day before yesterday, driving in a carriage,' explained the detective on Henshall's ar rival. "I followed and saw him enter No. 3 West Thirty-eighth streot. 1 then followed the driver to the stables, and learned that the carriage had been rented some three months before by a family named Crawford, of the number and street I mentioned." When Mr. Henry Henghull presented himself before the janitor of No. :i— West Thirty-eighth street to make inquiries concerning a family named CravWird. he was informed that they took their de parture early that morning and left no address. "They leased these furnished apart ments for three months," the janitor ex plained, "and the time would not expire until next week some time, but they left today." "Perhaps they gave their address to somo of the other occupants of the build ing," suggested Mr. Henshall. "May 1 inquire?" But the inquiries elicited nothing from the other people in the house. No one had ever exchanged a word with the family. The woman opposite volunteered the opinion that they were a set of cranks, and no better than they ought to be, in her opinion. "A rich old man, a queer woman, a fellow with an evil eye and a crazy girl who played the fiddle at 2 o'clock at night wero not pleasant sort of folks to live opposite," she said, and sho was glad enough they had gone, and sho had no desire to know where they wero. With these words sho slammed tho door in Mr. Henshall's eager face. That evening a woman whose gar ments bore the same relation to past ele gance that her faco bore to past beauty called on tho janitor of No. li West Thirty-eighth street to make- inquiries concerning a man by the name of Dr. Henshaw. • "No such man livin' here, miss," re plied the janitor, with that air of im portance peculiar to the freedom of one who feels the newness and greatness of re sponsible duties. "Tho only doctor ever bin roun' yeah in my day is Dr. Watson, and he's dun gone today." "Did ho go alone?" asked the lady quickly. "No, tho whole family dun gone, too —Mister Crawford, Miss Crawford and Miss Brown." A steel blue light flashed from the once beautiful eyes of tho faded blonde. "And ho loft no address?" sho asked quietly. "Not any, miss. Gteu'in here today lookiu' for the same parties, but nobody knows nothin' about them." The lady turned and walked away. "Very well, Dr. Watson," she mut tered under her breath, "I shall know who to search for now, and if you are on this earth my vengeance will yet find vou." [TO BE CONTINUED.] HORSEMEN ALL KNOW THAT Wise's Harness Store Is still here and doing busi ness on the same old principle of good goods and low prices. " I wish I had one." H685E30083. Blankets, Buffalo Bolus, Bar ness, and in fact every thing needed by Horsemen. Good workmanship and low prices is my motto. GEO. WISE, Jeddo, and No. 35 Centre St. "FBOTECTION cr IPFFEiIE: By Henry (leorrjc, Tlio lending statesmen of the world prunuuiloe It tho (treatest work our written upon tho tarilt' question. No statistics, no llitures. no ova-ions. It will interest and Instruct you. llend it. Copies Free at the Tribune Office PETER TIMONY, BOTTLER. And Dealer in all kindg of Liquors, Beer and Porter, Temperance Drinks, Etc., Etc. Geo.Ringler&Co.'s Celebrated LAGER BEER put in Patent Sealed Bottles here on the premises. 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