TI ~~ 20" a — hollow where, distressed, T ave sought a moment's rest? » ‘Where the tortured waters race ! Downward, downward, to the sea In an effort to be free? Roaring from huge stone to stone, Grumbling in a monotone ALL THE WORLD ! any difficulty. He could Pay and his business instincts : 4 5% . th v predomi- VANITY OF M Maid, do You. recall the place | 1 2 frien colieidoscostbot Ie nant. S{ntiment had faded with the x to Maid, do you recall where you Sat and watched the varied hue Of the waters and the skies? Did you know that in your eyes Shone each tint of sky and stream? Ev'ry evanescent gleam Of the wild uncanny glen Shone from out your eyes again. They were there, the sky's own blue, \ Little flecks of sunshine, too; | Ev'ry deep and grumbling pool, Umber-shaded nooks and cool, Bilver-banded swaying birch, And the thrushes bending perch; All were there; each vale and steep, All the torrents rush and leap! Thy were there—I know they were— Ewv-ry slope of pine and fir; Ev'ry foam-white waterfall, For I saw them, saw them all! And I never looked away From your dancing eyes that day! All the world, my world, dear, les ay, it may have been a coincidence at Mr. Latimer said to him, as smoked a cigar together after kfast that morning: “You ought to marry, Potter.” “Well, T can’t say I haven't thought of it,” answered Sir Humphrey. “I feel at times I want something to cheer me up—to take my thoughts off the work when I'm at home.” He spoke as if he intended to buy a banjo. “You want to find tha right girl, and then you'll never regret it. And you won't make a mistake—that ain't your way, we all know, Potter.” Sir Humphrey had money in Mr. Latimer’s business. “You can hardly realize.” continued Mr. Latimer, “the rest and pleasure a tired man can find in woman's talk, if it's lively and chatty.” Here Mr. Latimer artistically lost bimself in reverie, emerging presently with a sigh. “How 1 shall miss my daughter Flo In the deeps of your blue eyes! —J. M. Lewis, in Houston Post. cennaaRy | x: Sir Humphrey Potter's ¥ First Love. 2 x A 232 vw RRARARAARA RRRRVIRVR that the M2 people considered time had comz when Sir Hum- phrey Potter, with his wealth and his title, should take a wife. Some of these had daughters. They were only anxious for the dear girls’ happiness. No one, however, cared to speak to him on such subjects as love and mar- riage. He would have thought them | frivolous. | He was never frivolous. It was only possible to interest him | in serious matters; business trans- | actions for preference; politics, on which he had decided views, in his lighter moods. It was dificult to conceive of him as a lover. His tall, i portly form seemed always to require | about it the red mahogany and shin- ing leather of his office. Laughter, | while in conversation with Sir Hum- phrey, seemed out of place. It was, said an irreverent person, as the crackling of thorns under a Potter. Mrs. Latimer had described him as “portentous.” She owned that the exact meaning of the word had escaped | her for the moment, but she had an in- | ner consciousness that it contained an exact description, and she was not to | be moved by any dictionary person. He was a self-made man. That was evident. No one else would have trou- bled to make him. Iowever, he stated the fact constantly. He was enormously ric! tained a knighthcod by ji ious phil- anthropy. He did not pav iarge sal- aries to his clerl's, b:! when a fund was started at the Mansion house he rressed nohly to the front. Pressing nobly to the front—people can see you when you are there—had made him what he was—Sir Humphrey Potter. Young ladies have been wont to call him, in the course of private conver- sation, “a fat pompous beast.” The course of private conversation does not always run smocthly. Now he was “dear Sir Humphrey.” He was on the market. He had wealth and title, althongh the goods were a little shon-sciled. It was on a boantiful, warm morn ng in July that Sir Humphrey cautiously lifted one lath of his bedroom biind and peered out. He was not anxious to be seen. He was 2 man of great dignity of presence (his tailor, to whom he paid cash, had often told him £0), but he felt he did not look his best at that particular time. His hair fell in a fringe over- his forehead— which did not svit him—and his face shone with the perspiration engendered by a hot July night. It also reguiged the refining touch of a razor. The fa frowsy man in the long white shir , and had ob- 1 Flo to "would, he decided, strongly advise a i just clear of the when she gets married! So bright and jolly—such a capital companion! We're always together.” The feeling of a doting carried him away, with Lis daughter. She saw to that. “It needs consideration, Latimer,” said Sir Humphrey, and then, a little abruptly, turned the conversation to other topics. " But by lunch-time Mr. Latimer had calculated to a nicety the minimum cost of the transfer of his daughter Sir Humphrey Potter. He parent had ITe was not always quiet wedding (had not died within the year?) but he had strong misgivings that that young lady would like the thing done in style. She would be sure that dear auntie would not wish any difference to be made. In the afternoon Sir Humphrey sat with Miss Latimer on the lawn, until she suggested the summer house by the river as being the coolest, darling- est place, and providing awful fun watching the people in the boats. “They're all in love with each other, and so funny to watch! Do come, dear Sir Humphrey!” Clarissa had been sent to the shops to match wool for Mrs. Latimer. Mr. Latimer had thought the walk would do her good. ‘ The thermometer registered 80 de- grees in the shade. Sir Humphrey passed the time pleas-~ antly by instructing his companion in Flo's aunt { the method of making money on the stock exchange. She understood every- thing, so wonderfully did he explain "things. She said so. He had endeavored to enlarge Clarissa’s mind on the same subject on the day previous. derstood him. doubt of that. She had made a foolish remark tg the effect that she preferred thy methods of burglars. They, at least) took their chance of getting caught by a policeman or shot by the man they were robbing. In the evening, when the moon was tree walked down to the river to meet her cousin. It was at the urgent request of that young lady she did so. “I've promised Gus to go for a moon light row, but pa must think you'r with me. He don’t mind my bei late, then,” she had said, as they le a the dinner table. “Be sure you're therj, at nine, so that we can come in-t4_ gether, and don’t let pa see you alone.’ So while pa sipped his port in afte dinner contentment, Clarissa wanderdg in the rose garden and dreamed of thio lover that was to come. | She did not dream of the lover th was coming. Sir Humphrey finished his cigar a then went out into the garden. Latimer said to the sharer of his j and sorrows—but not his porti—t he hoped Clarissa would have sense to come in. Her health was delicate for the night air. It was a maxim of Sir Humphr She had not un- Sir Humphrey had no (he clung to the old fashions), with big, bare fect and rumpled hair, was as ridiculous and unpleasant to the eye as Sir ITumphrey Poticr, an hour later, would be dignifizd and imposing. It was not for the nnrpose of observ- ing the beauties of nature that he thus delayed his toilet, but rather that he might watch Miss Latimer, the daugh- ter of his old friend and present host, that, when your mind was made up to ! Aa certain course, it was best to act promptly, He went in search | of Clarissa. : \ i i He came behind her as she stood on the bank of the silver river, lost in sweet dreaming. The sott, whita gyen- ing gown, made in the quaint, beaytiful fashion of a past generation, s the lines of her graceful figure. and her cousin Clarissa, who were walking in the garden. They were en- joying the fresh morning air; Clarissa, for the sake of the thousand delicate scents that mingled with it and the sweet, glad song of the birds; Miss Latimer chiefly for the sake of her complexion. She did not care much for the songs of the birds; she pre- ferred music from the comic operas. And as for the delicate scents of the waking flowers She had been known to purchase patchouli. Miss Latimer's whole attention was at that period of her existence en- grossed by her numerous love affairs. Nort on diCr talk was of young men. Her great purpose was to obtain a hus- band; if young and handsome, so much the better, but the only indispensable adjunct was wealth, She was little, plump and pretty, with beautiful eyes that she could use effectively on very the ancient carved-oak furnitu had bought in Tottenham Cour He was standing at her side she recognized his presence. He very big and imposing in his ej | clothes. A large diamond spar | his shirt front. Was this the 10yver of her dreams? When he had business in hand,{it was not Sir Humphrey's custom td beat { about the bush. After remarking on | the beauty of the evening—so/ much was customary even in strictly busi- ness conversation~-he asked hejr if she would be his wile. off his balance. He felt he wanted to take her in his arms and kiss her. The matter was getting, beyond. the strict young men. These walked with her, talked with her (she would giggle at remarks tkat should have been re- ceived with a cold silence), and flirted with her. She was called “Flo.” It seemed a necessary consequence. There are many noble, stately women in the world named Florence, but it would seem an insult to address them as “Flo.” However, the name suited Miss T~timer to perfection. And Clarissa? A tall, slender girl, bearing herself with a natural grace and dignity that tittle Flo, push herself out and pull herself in as she might, could never fmitate. Miss Latimer's young-men friends (she called them ‘the boys’) thought her cousin Clarissa stuck up. They told, each other so. But a smile from ha would have brought any one of 0 her teet. To be favored of one + Wall the others consider stuck up ‘Md standofsh appeals strongly to masculine vanity. Besides, she was really beautiful, and as nice as a girl who loves to be a lady isto a man who loves to be a gentleman,! But she could not be considered ‘good fun.” When the two girlp disappeared aiong the path that lefl down to the river, Sir Humphrey dfopped the lath of the blind and procecfled to build up his dignity of Jpresencq He had made’ parry Clarisg he precq ind. He would his life had d he regime of business. He had never wanted to kis any one before. ' It could, of course, be only a mat- ter of minutes—a little maidefilivesita- tion—before he had the right 0 80. Minutes? Clarissa was spegking— “Do you know my father!Sir Hum- phrey? “No, I have not that pleasure.” He anticipated no troulle in that quarter. Was he not Sir Humphrey Potter? “I think you will not-—annot—re- new this proposal when I tq] you that ~—that—" “Yes?' urged ir Clarissa paused. “He is in prison,” she gaid, In a voice scarcely audible, aid turning herself away from him. “In prison?” gasped 3ir Humphrey. There was silence. fire breath Hunphrey as stirred the rushes and diedaway again. A wakeful corncrake creafjed once and then subsided, as if he Vere alarmed by the noise he made 1, that great stillness. Sir Humphrey was [hinking. He could not decide on the instant what he should do. But the yoonlight still exercised its power overhim. He still wanted to kiss her, Latimer should hav was monstrous to have d him; it ced him to this girl without a bk to her father's disgrace. Sh e sup- posed, living on the of the Latimers. There woul crime in her blood, a it would in hrible. A tressed in tops, Clarissa ( \ had said, For a moment she did not reply. Sir Humphrey recognized the fact that she was very beautiful and that loveliness and the moonlight threw him a little | taint of ps if he her moonligh He wondfered how he could have hesi- tated. Suclh a marriage was impossible. | “I am Wwery distressed, very dis- ! eed, to learn you are in such ate ‘an unfor when the must see, cumstances§ I cannot repeat the offer that I mad@ yesterday evening, an of- fer that I $hould not have—that is to say, had 1 i have been the circumstances, I this painfil position.” Sir Humiphrey spoke at civie ban- quets, “I hope you will let—er—bygones be bygones, and remember me as a [riend.” Clarissa heard his speech to the end in silence. She had expected it. Now it was her turn. She had long ago realized the perfect self-coneeit of the man. He had thought that she was ready to throw herself into his arms, should he choose to open them. She had decided that to be tricked and de- ceived by a girl would be an invaluable lesson to him. She was only acting for his good. She raised her eyes and looked at him steadily. Then she told him that her father was indeed in a prison. He had been there nearly ail his life. It was one of the largest and most important pris- ons in Englani, He was the’governor of it.—London Sketch. N¢ Sinecure. Two subway ahorers were sitting on a doorstep afte: their luncheon and looking out on tne life of a fashionable have—er—put us both in | Those Who Are Growing Want to Admit It—Wa) Show Agility, “They may talk of the dof Women all they please,” said car conductor of the Indianh fine the otker day to a New Yq ald reporter, “but 1 don’t belj are any worse than men when to concealing their age. ‘I think vanity a female trait weeks on the car changed my when I fbund a man was willin take the chances of getting a pad for the sake, if he was getting old, trying to make it appeer he was stil Spry on his feet. Many an accident for which the company has to .pa, damages is caused by this masculin vanity. “A man gets up and I Put my han on the bell rope to stop the car. This is, of course, in the crowded section of the city, where the car has to g slowly. Well, sure as I put my han; on the rope, two out of five of the men whose joints are getting stiff wit] age will look sharply at me as if i surprise that I should think the needed to be stopped for, and say raspingly: ‘Needn’t stop; I'll drop oft all right’ They drop off, and some- times drop hard, too. “Once when the cat was moving slowly past the post office a man who was not a day under 60, even if he as well preserved, Bot up to get off. I'm a pretly good judge of age, reached for the rope. “What do you tt —a cripple? he as *“*No," I answered, ‘I'd (: { and I I am, anyway thoroughfare. “Do you know_miu wor worth $14, pay you $60 a “Sure,” repli ye want me t wsald Pat, “if 1 $0,000 I'd hire you and eck. d Bill, “and what would do?” u see, I'd buy a $2,900,000 se and you'd come around in the ning at six o'clock and wake me That's easy enough,” Bill answered; after a moment he said: “And is rt all the job?” Now ye'er getting down to the fine po int. You sce, when you woke me up | six o'clock I'd kick you down the sy 5 and holler after you, ‘Git out er i I don’t have to git up! I'm a ..lionaire!’” : Before Bill could accept the position e whistle blew.—N. Y. Post. Misgquoted Quotations. «Everybody knows the phrase, “All e world loves a lover.” Dut very few eople know that Emerson said it, and hat he said it in a slightly different ‘ay—"All mankind love a lover.” Six eople who were tried with this quo- tation said it came from Shakespeare. nother case of pcpular misquotation Ss pointed out not long ago by Mr. insworth R. Spofford in a paper on The Folk Lore of Popular Sayings.” ie reminded his audience that the phrase, “In time of peace prepare for war,” is usually attributed to George | Washington. What Washington said i was: ‘“T'o be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving | peace.” But ages before Washington | became first in war and peace, Horace “In peace, as a wise man, he ! should make suitable preparation for war;” and one of the maxims of | Publius Syrus may be translated: “We 1 should provide in peace what we need in war.”-—Youth’s Companion; TROLLEY HOMES. | Car Corresponding to the House Boat a l'osxsible Development from Present Conditions, | i | Now that parlor cars and sleeping tars on trolley lines are established we may be privileged to speculate a bit as to what will come next as an annex of the broomstick train. Sup- pose we hazard'the guess that it will {be the trolley house—first cousin to the house boat, says the Boston Tran- script. By the building of spurs and side tracks in delightful spets at ccuniry or seashore at a fair and far distance from the main lines resting places for these moveable dwellings couid be comfor- | tably managed. ley house might remain for as lcng a! time as contentment was the staying | power and when this burning out the trolley pole might be put in contact with the wire and the trolley house trundled away to pastures new. Of course, thisis merely the roughest outline of a possibile development of the electric car, but it is the pleasantest part upon which the lay mind can dwell. Details of it, like the securing of suitable drinking water and the training of every tenant of one of these dwellings to be his own motorman way as well be left to the conisderation | of those whose business it would be to perfect them. ARAPAHO AND SHOSHONE. Indlan Tribes Have Distinctive De. | signs foi''the So-Crlied Par. fleckes Made by Thess. The slight differences of styles which occur are well exemplified in the style of painted rawhide bags or envelopes, , the so-called “parfleches,” writes Prot Franz Boas, in the Popular Science Monthly. Mr. St. Clair has observed ‘hat the Arapaho are in the habit of laying on the colors rather delicately, in areas of moderate size, and of following | jut a general arrangement of their mo- itives in stripes; that (he Shoshone, on |the other hand, like large areas of solid colors, bordered by heavy blue bands, and an arrangement in which a central field is set off rather prominently from the rest of the design. This difference ‘1s so marked that it is easy to tell a Shoshone parfleche that has found its | way to the Arapaho from parfleches of | Arapaho manufacture. In other cases the most characteristic differepce cone ' gists in the place on the parfleche to | which the design is applied. The Arapa- bo and the Shoshone never decorate the sides of a bag, only {its flaps, while the tribes of Idaho and Montana always dec- orate the sides. ——————— Canal Is Profitable, During the month of July, 3,307 ves- sels, measuring 454,673 register tons net, used the North gea and Baitie canal, against 3,217 ships and 413,466 tons in the same month of 1902. The dues col- The “sola” of Intia {sn small tree from 6 to 10 feet high, with a ering stem. The leaves are consumed as vegeta and the light spongy wood serves for variety of purposes, one of the latest be. ing sun-proof hats or helmets, wood {is cut into thin bands are stuck together and molded shape. Another recent use fo D0 At one of them a trol- | ‘8 you for a Yale student, of cour | “I gave the rope a g 1g nd _ the blak, he gave 1 hil got off at | Thirtieth strote” st 4 he resented any insinuation, tho in one’s line of duty, t as young as he used to he” tight be vas not PRICE OF HOSPITALITY. People of Netter Social Than Finan elal Status Can't Afford to Accept Invitatious in Luglana, The question of tips is perennial. It | 1s especially at this time of the year ' that it forces itself most prominently into notice, and the awful truth has to be acknowledged that there seems to be no way out of a difficulty which alike besets hostess and guests, says the London World. Hospitalliy is bought at a price in thes¢ days, for the new order renders it possible to open the doors of every great house with golden keys, provided that they are heavy enough and are attached to massive chains; and when guests . in- clude millionaires of transatlantic and oriental extraction, how is it possible for hostesses to exercise any control over the tipping system? The re- sult is that everybody is mulcted alike. The poor must follow the lead of the rich, and in consequence it often be- comes as great a difficulty for men and women of better social than financial | Status, to accept invitations as to stay at expensive hotels. Yet how is re- form to be instituted? This is a so- cial difficulty that it seems impossible to overcome, but at the same time it is one which stands in the way of many agreeable people of both sexes, who dare not in existing eircum- stances accept invitations, even’ where they feel they would bae'most welcome, and w.ere a delightful time would await them. THE GREEN MORAYS. Very Able Contortionists—Thelr Tank One of the New York Aquar- luw’s Attractions, “Them fellers must have India rub- ber backbones,” said a visitor at the | Aquarium, gazing in as he spoke at the tank of the green morays, which were twisting and contorting and tying themselves up into knots, in a manner { that would have made the India rubber | man wari to quit the business entirely, says the New York Sun. Seven feet long, the biggest of the three here, and five and six feet, respec- tively, the other two, the big green mo- rays always attract the visitors, even | when they are quiescent; but when, as at fceding time, they begin to squirm, { then so many people gather around the tank that those at the back can get only | occasional glimpses of the giant eel con- { tortionists as they rise high in the tank, to be seen then over the heads of the people in front. They are doing well, the green morays, oll of them feeding well, and they are probably as comfortabie here, in their spacious tank at the Aquarium, as they could be anywhere away from the coral caverns they were accustomed to fre- quent, in the waters of the isles of Ber- muda. They are certainly a great attrae- tion, SPORT WITH KINKS IN IT. Queer Things That Have Happened to Players of Golf and Cricket in the Field. It is a gorgeous story that comes from the golf links of Cairo, and every good golfer will herafter carry a gun in his bag of clubs if he wish- es to overlook no fine points, says the Illustrated Sporting News. er a splendid drive, a Cairo player, = tched the ball roll over the distant turf, when to his horrified amazement, a crow swooned down and carried it aloft. The goli:r and the caddie put off in chase, the caddie cursing in fluent Arable, The to the delight of the golfer, the cron dropped the bal! on the and he loled out In two 1 roles put Col Bogey out o n he op= porynt was threat y popiexy. n the case « fan football of sticking t ! jer- there was every i fa e In thi book, except one t \ © unex- ted, and the golfer d, ably as- ed by his erowshiy, | and, ny years ago in Eng QLe a rule as made to fit a sim veney in | icket, it related 1an |fnocked a bai™into a eit (Pdged in the crotch of » limb, There a8 no climbing the tree, and the near- {st ax was a half mile eft ‘could be obtained and i. red lown, the man with the bat + nore han 700 runs, hurtin; ¢ ‘Ickets lke a human shuttlecock. He topped scoring rune then, only because ie ran himself of ngth and lected amounted to 211,601 marks, breath till feeb against 162,719 marks. trying y - i ———— | weary ‘ The “Sola 1TT%e of India, oppo; EASTWARD—WEEK-DAYS STATIONS Harrisburg, Leave... ....; Middletown Flizabethtown .. 17 Stops on signai or noticeto Agent or Con- ductor to reeeive or discharge passengers. “b™ Stops only on signal or notice to Condes tor to discharge passengers, For time tables and additional information n quire of Ticket Agent. W. W.ATTERBURY, J. R. WOOD, General Manager, Pass’ Traflic Ngr. GEO. W. BOYD, General Passenger Agent. 3 White Mountain Baking Powder Las the Only Powder on the 5 Market that & Free From 2 Alum and deids. adain- © 8 ufacturediby SEHOULLLLILGRTIGESE IRIE 1 81 EAST MAIN ST. 9% 1% © «I J FLORIN PA. Ce ¥ RISEL 2 always mm nand Also Funerals Supplied at Short Notice day and Saturday Ch Tes! Oh Yes! GEORGE §. YOGEL, AUCTIONEER Telephone Number 851. NOTARY PUBLIC. ATYTORNEY-AL-LAW, 48 West Muin Street, Mount Joy, Penna, Days at Lancaster, Monday and Friday. at No. 52 North Duke Street. { All our Rooms are Heated with Steam and we Make a Special Effort to Please Jurymen 1 LaNcasTER fount House ! uz E. King $t., Lancaster, Pa. 7 Y A pry”, . W. H. GANTZ, Proprietor. (Formerly or Mount Joy) RATES, $1 A DAY TO EVERYBODY GOOD STARLING FOR HORSES WANTED! Ji Onterpiliing farmer in this section to canvass during the state fall end winter mong the farmers In his vicinity, Must be active un Work witl prove profitable t ( an and can be made a source of regular and e isily earned income each year, To it may be devoted as mich or as little tine is desired® 11 Interested write at once to I’, M, G.. Box74, Albany, N. Y. 2009000000000 20¢ 900090002 Cameras AND ALL KINDS OF Photographers’ | Supplies 9000099060000 40000 . Le ese W.B.BENDER / Shaving f Ask Your Grocer For ¢ BROT LILLLLLTLINRLSSS BRUNE SHETN0S SLOSS § EW.GARBER 8 § & 3 MOUNT OY, PA. 8 Empire Bakery S. 8. GIG RICIT, Prop- Bread,Cakes, Buns, &c. Graham Bread & Doughnuts velivery Wagon to Mt. Joy, Monday, Wednes Post Office Address, Florin, Lancaster Co., Pa. Rates Very Reasonable for AllKinds of Sale W. M. HOLILOWRBUSEL Mount Jo paper, which 13 ful of Up-to-q tion. address eal w ble Remarka A year's Suscription to PEARSONS, ..... 0veiines » Your choice of any one of the following books originally is: CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY OR LOVE OF COUNTRY ** An intensely patriotic tale,” says the Outlook, One of his best, Fr THE ADVE} “His best wi GEORGE W. CasLe JOHN MARCH, SCUTHERNER A celebrated story of the South FRA] THA Ano EDWARD EGGLESTON THE CIRCVIT RIDLR™ ~ “Fresh and vivid! portraiture,’ says the Christian Union AF ' A vigorous E. W. HORNUNG 3 THE ROGUE’S MARCH ** A noteworthy additivn to romadtic literature,” —C eago 4 NB and popular . Harrison Re Tribune — - THE IN BLANCHE.WILL!IS HOowaRD THE GARDEN OF EDEN "A novel of renarkable power, *A fascinating, powerful novel. —5oilon Beacon RICHARD HARDING Davis § ) GALLEGHER AND OTHER ON STORIES * Gallegher "" is the story that made the author : famous Moly ELLior ROBERT LOUIS STEVEKRSCN THE HOUSE OF | ST. IVES $e Romancegfiiled H the twin His last and onc of his finest novels We Joyaliy and love THOMAS NELSON Pace ¥ OcTAvE THANET PASTIME STOR : THE HEART © 1 * The old Virginia flavor could not (used to * Not only good, but excellent finer effect” NOTE: —The acceptance of this offer not only secures the pu books mentioned, but it also entitles you to the privilege of buying for oi at discount prices. As this plan includes practically the entire fiction American Publisher the magnitude of the proposition is readily apparent. A FEW WORDS AB T PEARSON'S MAGAZINE | PEARSON'S MAGAZINE appéfils to every member of the femily a subscriber, ** It is the easy-to-read Magazine.” It is differdat fre zine, and by that quality, although less than five years old, has ta the very best sellers. Its field is a general one of wholesome ei instructiveness, Following are four of tlie special features for 190g: : WALL STREET METHODS TOM NAST ¥ OF “FINANCE"™ By ALBERT BIG! 4 | Illustrated by the cho By HENRY GEORGE. Jr. cartoons of the man who A number of al greatest solder of fx . st Street * de: re &f the Wall s off the many 2 : crayings of the Read these artic il realize fhe wisdom of the advice of the late Governor [Roswell P. Flower to a party of his friends to money in your pocket." ‘The biography of : ture of Ee thao when h making. 5 The Overthrow he Civil W Slavory—Th Le G gf thi MODERN INDIAN By CYVRVS 70 WNSEND A brilliant and thrilling history o frontier of the past forty years, giviy the public service of such men as Mi Crook, Forsyrn, CUSTER, (§ MoKeNzr, Howargo, Wieaton, D Bakker and others;—taking Indian the category of boys’ story books anf them with their proper place in the h nation. A series of six or eight artig Subscribers to this combi can add 49 cents for each book Send your orders to Opium, Laudam permanently for drugs or other stim prepared by an eminent Confidential correspondence, Xe X ho A ulants, their natural condition be ured, withou? 1 hysic WE GUARANTEE A Manhattan Dept. A DORI IPI LIP THE BEST LAWN © SWING MADR 4 YN (SR f=