{ title: 'The Northern tribune. (Gouverneur, N.Y.) 1895-1929, November 19, 1895, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-11-19/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-11-19/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-11-19/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-11-19/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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H- \ >-x- fe * :* Z 1' .T» i * * frOBTHBfrN TJ&iBUtp; QOI|y|»yEUR, N> r. DESTINY REVEALED. HOW THE FUTURE IS READ BY CHI- NESE SOOTHSAYERS. .-A * I J I « ^* V.-*\ -*£ - V*' :} mg >pU War of TelllDf rorta*** With 1^ a fuat of 1 Cent tfurt Klah- tt* and I*roporUonat*ly Mori Cip«Q- M*tboda. << In every ChJUt^e corumunity there <HilI be fumj'l fiie or iL-.-re t- «jthhayers kr furtuue teller*, vhu, m return fur a pmall coin, wil* »\'iiJ \ fate seeking Chinaman uwav eitjer happy or miser- able. The C'h:ne>e rjuart«-r in New York •txpj> rt* three >f thtfe f rtune ;ufiK^r*», 'bo manage to make a fairly g^ H *i lif* tit of their patr- ns. hi this conn try the soothsuvrr is ii\t **o injj>or?ant a j>er§i>Jiii>re amo^R L'b:iiaiti»'U as he is in China, f-»r th»« lisflueLiiv .if \Melican\ man Las afTts-usl ev» n *t< hci John. Many of theuil«4i«t cf t.M-ir indiffVreuee to the aujrunes of the \luck\ Anki. In China the lower clashes never take any M*-p <f importance without .©OOFDItiu# their favurite b< « th*aver, BO that he eierciM** c< n*i durable influence imoii^ bis cn>tuuiers. The Chinese fe»- itival on their New Year'a day is the {great day t*» take a j»of»p into the future, and the C'hmefr*\ come into New York from all the neighboring tuwru* which are not Ft run j? enough in Chinamen to •npport « fortune teller. Ooe of the aocthsayers plies his trade on the side- walk in hot weather. Another has hia Isead quarters clc*e to the Chinese the- ater, while the third is in the jotishonse In Mott strevt. Evt-ry j<. chouse has its fortune telling appliance*, which are kept in from uf the altar ready for the nae of the wur?hi]>CT?. There are sev- eral kinds of apparatus u>ed t\ tell for- tunes. One uf them con>:-t> of two pieces of w.-<«l. which are round on one aide and fl:it on the other. When soiiie { .ujKT i -nrii>nh China man de- eires to have hi.* f--rtune told, ):e pays 10 cents to the s->oth*ayer, and a>k> the Feer What pruspwt there is KT Id in in the is\ lam L'/\v l t'.'iut' to mean i L:ke a j?r»*at m; \v ;t* fe tar ted air the infancy <-i riVputcbcd were future. The man cf fate mumbles an incantation ever the two piece* cf Wood, and then throws them up* n the ground. rpD their position dvj\'iids the fate of the anxious customer. It they both lie with fiat fide r,p, it i*- a mod- era tely bad feign and calls fur preat cau- tion on the part of the fortune meeker in ' hiM oondnct during the ocming year. When ooe is round side up and the other J****** 6 up, the acgury is extremely «vorable, and the Chinaman goes on ^^V rejoicing. If both turn round ILJL 0 ^ **** ontlooJc is exceedingly tfocanjraiid gomething terrible mar'be •^ected to happen toon. The idea is to ao frame the qutation that the position «* the sticks will give an anrwer one way or another. The customer a*ks, for instance, whether tomorrow will be a good day or not to open a laundrj busi- ness. If the answer is unfavorable, he Barnes a month ahead an-d awaits the verdict of the sticks upon that proposi- tion. He continues until he gets one tip round and one i!.»t and make^iis plans accordingly. THE TELEGRAPHIC ••THIRTY.\ B*w thm Ciph+r, WhU* U Vmm CtlWiil, Had Its Otigitu I atteodtsd a tun**ml the other day ahera thtre wau* a lovely flower piece ' with the figures \80\ in the center. The deceased had bern fa in i Mar all his bfo with that »ignal, having Unui con- i Dected with telegraph or newspaper , biwine** fur neaxly 3U year*, and yet I duubt if ever Le or any one who con- tributed to the flower piece knew or dreamed how 3'J came to mean any- thing, efiivioUy fiui?, or the end. f A- a part :n i».t-gntph hi*tory I will .;> ^ig^uJ I wiiicn has : tnnch, had its on^-n. , !iy ocher expreasion?*, it .iriitally, as it Mere. In t:.e telegraph bu?ine*a bt-nt laid ur c^llivt, many of tlem abbreviated in telegraph- jLg. a:ul all nrw>paj->er disj^atches were n<. t only ab::rvvi;*:eti, but ^ j nt coii«ct. There w • re LJ Lews ag»-ncu-ai then, tm Cow, and lepers Uad frien'ls :n all the town?*, WLJ WLTV auth rized to se-ud , them dispatcher to he called f^r. ( Kvtry beginner in the- ait of teleg- raphy wad given a U> k. uf abbrevia- te ns and signals, which he had to com- mit to memory and practice till be be- came expert in their une. Among those signals that of iJU was fiund, and it meant \colUvt pjky at the other end.\ Whether a news dispatch or common buhiuess xnet»sttgf\ if not prei>aid, the signal SO was attach^'d. As all pre<sa ' dispatches were paid fur where received, they ail had 30 at the end. So when news agrncies began their work the sig- nal was retained, f- r they were still paid f r where received. Tins signal has come in these days to be a universal liuis to all press d:s- paUhes, jTivate, signal and general, and a ^o ndary muinin^, or jwrhaps, better, a h-gendary meaning attaches ) itself as \the uid^aiul is a j roper aDd ; beauti:'; ! telegrai I: w-i nal d> great c* to estim \coiiecr L-.ni« V DOCTOR ALBRIGHT. A BROAD MINDED PHYSICIAN WITH PROGRESSIVE IDEAS. Believes in Recommending: Any Medicine That He Knows Will Cure His Patients. Thinks Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a Great Discovery, He Cites Some Marvelous Cures. J*om the MUaminrr, Lancaster, J*&, \ AEEOH, Pi.., April 24th, % Da WlLUAMS' ilKPlCINK CO.: GmiticTTisn —Whils it is entirely contrary to the custom of tht medical prufeation- to endorse or recommend any of ths »o-calW proprietary prep*ratiooa f I shall, nevenhe- ltr«A, five you na aocouot of some of my woudrrful experience* with your prepara- tion, L>r. William*' Pink Pills for Pals Peo- ple. The fact ;• welUkaowo thai medical prmrtiiionert do not a* a rule, reeognii •imply aitoBishinf. tier attack* becomt lest fVequeat and £*o let* in teverirj, until by their ost ha a period of only two month*. ahe wu tht picture >f heahh, ro*y-cheeked and hnght-eytd, a* well as erer, and ant has continued so mntil to-day, more than sat year tiuos ahe took any medicine. 1 havs found the** pll)s a specific for chorea, or as more commonly knewn, St. Vitus' dance, as beneficial results hare la all caaes marked .ic recognisa, their u»e. A* a spring tonic any one who, much le*a. u»e preparation* o/ thiaiud, from overwork sr aervou* strain during a JT of them h*Te no defi- OVER HOUNTAINS. • i • • Uj be«rt went rwunin* and flyUaf Wbrre **«* oae wwwt was> Tin* day was londly dyu>g. A VJW wind »i«u«*l, ' AU»?\ There WII ao bird at all CHU of hi* ne#t -u warm. OvwX th« mv>untaio wull My htmrt went miw th« »u>r». jLad whra th«? night w *» mirk, juxd on tht* fchn>'kiai( m* Tb« wind wan <t«*iim '«* wurS My l**J**^t cir.lL.* \jm.k to Luc T»p > P*'d at my window ])tuu\ (>ut uf th* nUtrru *nd din, Out uf th»- uiK'ht aitct ruin, J rv^- a4i«i ivt her in. 4, 0 h-Art like a fn/hti-m-d btrd, Hiart, nk« :t Miiail »rr«T duve, Bay, lut--»t thou H» t u K>T h<-*rd An$ ik.:ix$ uf our lovt ' ' But nt*v»r a word t»h» siaid. ii« r »'Vf was l«*iuli-n an d dim, B» j r br» *u>t had a m^u i>l ri\l, Jshe *t»tike no w«_>rd uf L:tu. And whether fclu k sa*.v hitn not C*vv.r ihc iDvuntttUi-* tray, Or wbtth*r hetau for^.'t, I knuw n«^t t o this day . —JLa'.hann* Tynan Hmk^on in G<JCH1 W^rd*. FISHERMEN'S NETS. •oat consequi r the \n>i long id, _ winter has become pale and lan-p iiue kuowlrVlge of theirVirtue or lack of it, J the Pink Pills will do wondtrr* in brighten 1 P.T i li ^^^iOD of ll.O f:H16 of 0. «. lat^r or u:.y (Jther jn-rscn. iv l>- a .-:-:Lia] to tlie ppirit- '.i: :i a'» i: <.f li br:r::kn f »ul to the I r» w:ir-i> I'.nd n.- a mice ? i.i'i:!' v ]:» D mt'ivfi] and u: :..o uiuvr uid.'\—>:. - T ar«:'ii. but soundly condemn thern all without trial. Such * course i* manifeatly absurd and urjjuat, and I, (or one, pn>I*M€ to give my oaneut-Hthe best treatmrni known tome, for the pitrtk'utar di*eu*» with which they are suffenng. no matter what it is, where of how obuuii'-d. I WM firat brought to pre- terite Dr. Wiiliams'Piuk Pill* about two yea.r« m;o, after having seen some remark- atle result* r>o:n their u>e. lieu ben Hoorer, tow of J>a inir. Pa., was a prominent con- tractor and t»u;M»*r. While superintending tne v,ijrk of ereotmg a larjre buudiug during cold v* rtii;tr. he con:ractt*(l what wu* thought to h>e *. irtrii'a. He having first n«»tice«l it one CiO'Lir-^ :n not beirie abLe to an*e from hii buoying dl IUK the countenanoe and in *p!rit>. bringing rosea to the palli renewing the fountain of youth. Your* retpectfully, J. D. ALBK1GHT, M ths lipi and 1XKOMOTOR ATAXIA SrcCKSSFTLLl TKEiTED. F om <Ae Qtwtffo, X. T., Palladium, T. D. McCarthy, of this place, yesterday rej»orterr hiss experience P'JRITAVCAL LAWS. AfVr the u«uai treatment (or this dis- he fuii'^i to improve, but on the con« Hoi f ur.d iii •t ^fripral'y T.lUli'^T of i *. v o;ir »)0 T'^f?- >».d and b:iiii>M.o The ius^mriic: hou^e UTV those r •consist cf a la: •trips ;E a burial- v.n.'.y o;irv(,i cvli^^.ric- ml bos. E^oh Ptr.p is ab-.ut t*.ri inches long and a quar-r of an in«-h wide. They aro all pol'.shod to a hijih dt-sr^ cf eiiKJOthm ss and p^uarod off atr.no •end, the oth«r end U-itu r»und. The •trips aro all liuxuben-d from 0 n»' up- ward, generally rxinniii? as far as 50. l8ometimes there are 100 in a box, but rarely more. In this ca>e tho an^rnrr «x*ts 00 cenrp, but a fan asd t •ticks are thrown in. The Chinaman wi.-hinR to learn his fate choows at random one of the little •tick*, and reads alond the number on They lloaivd l\p IN-Iinquent Debtor* j In t'ultar«*d lkmiua. f \Jnst wsit till IcatrhLim in Bos- ton. Then Til make him ivme to the ceLtcr,\ remarked aa angry man the other day while roasting a tiicatrical manager who. owed him a few linndred I dollars for services reLtiered. I t.id him I that I .«nppo*-ed h*? wouhl then cljp the .debtor into the Char Its Street jail. (\That's just what I will do if lever | catch him there, you bet.\ And then ' the ruad act or ei] hiined bow ea.«y it ! was to get even with jieople of that tort ' In the Hub. Xa matter what the debt, ; nor whore or how it was contracted, all ! one has to do is to e»tf»r H ccinplaint and that settles it If one who owes is averse to notoriety, he'll hardly take the poor debtor's oath, which releases him for a certain nomber of years, but docs not wipe out his obligations, but will linger in the hostile until he can ; interest his friends or realize on his col- lateral and settle. A I kbow several »w Yorkers who La\e n.n o^*jin.-t creditors in the bean l^rs nnd have FirfTered. t?cnie joke about th*ir iru-urr'eraticn and the qnes- I bod. euae trary cr^w rap-i!y worse, the c*v* develop- ir- it;*.o \\* no; h ^K\% or partial paralysis ot ue fn::re r •; :t > Je of the lx»Jy. Lie**- tr'oi'y. tnn.«*s and ra:t*sags, etc., w^re all girer> & trial, hut ru»thkig cave any benefit, and the pu: niya*.* ct-ntinued. In de>p^ur he wu eompCiirvi to near his physician an- nounce that his r.i>«s was hopeless. Abot*t that tiaie his wi:\c noticed one of your ad- Terr:sem»'nu and concluded to try your Piak 1*1*1*. t«M a Palladium rejH>rte hi w;:h Locomotor Ataxia. The account is of intr'Test because Locomotor Ataxia i* sup- pos«-U to be incurable and yet Mr. McCarthy i* cured. He said : '• In October, 169X I was workinf at my trade, that of ft raachiiu-t, in the Karnes Vacuum Break Works, at Watertown, N. Y. I had been tick for several weeks be- fore I gave cp and qcit work. A tired feel- ing seemed to have taken possession of ime, and rest a* long; and a* well as 1 might I could not jret rid of it. 1 took tonic* and other medicine* prescribed by the physi- cians there but kept jfeitins; worne all the time. Finally I became so bad that I could only walk a short distance, and that with the greatest exertion. My limb* seemed to n;e like *o much lead, and there was S hitch in my walk. While walking I couldn't think of anything, not even the name of an acquaintance whom I might happen to meet in the street Dr. Stevens, of Watertown, wa» my physician, and he it was who informed me'that I suffered from lo<x>mo*or ataxia, and advised me to PO to my home. In the *pri nfr of 18l»3 I came to mr father's home, 6v Varick Street, Oswero, I nad about given up all hope of ever Wine helpless invalid. J couldnl and \He had 'eat dea* fven np hope and !t recnlrftd a ;n^ on tb# part of his wife nersuade him to take them re$rular]y. j my en **He, however, did as the desired, and If; run a* V? ( anything but a helpless invalid. tended dosed me with morphine and other sleep at nijrht, and the physicians who at- opiates. Jbvery oar day I appeared < *o be less able than the everr cay i appeared ro o« less able than th day before. 1 wa* about the worst l«okin Every day I tried to walk, and he wreck of a young man that yon could imairine. It was in June, 1S9$, that I began taking Dr. William* 1 Pink Pill* for iVls People. I hadn't cwd the fir&t box when I bepxn to feel beneficial effects. My limbs appeared to b« stronsrer and better able to sustain ma Gradually this feeling in- creased until finally I w*s able to lay askis crutch and cane. >'ow I can walk or tians pr.t t tin m di tl;0 ring the process cf r'>jr debtur's oath, -tno ¥*?>- a>imiLi.ster.n^ but nioit all »^r» t* that the Boston law is a puritanical provision that should be materially amended. B Etonians who j are dodging xfu.'efrs , Krvers are agitat- . 2n« a change that will permit them to pay up on the installment plan instead j of hem* forced to ca*h in the full 11 as ever. I ha ve for sometime appearances indicate heahh in this man, one pasl engaged myself In litrh't work. I can't would thin*; h* was better- than before hi* , say too much ror the Pink Pills. I hops paralvsis. e\ '^rv mifferer will try th*rn.*' * Wny,» says be, * I began to improve in I l>r. Williams' Pini Pills for Pale Peopl* two days, and in four or live week* I wa* are now given to the public a* an unfaihnt entirely well and at work.' j blood builder and nerve restorer, curing all \Having seen thess remits I concluded , forms of weakness arising from a watery that such a remedy is surely worth s trial at ' condition of the blood or shattered nervm the hands of any physician, and consequently { The pill* are sold by all dealers, or will s* when a short time later 1 wa* called upon to j sent post paid on receipt of pries (50 seats a treat a lady suffering with palpitation of the ! box, or six boxes for &£0—they ars asrar heart and great nervous prostration, after ' sold in bulk or br ths 100) by s^ddrsaataf the nroal remedies failed to relieve, 1 ordered f Dr. Williams' Mooiotns Canpaay. *'\\\ ST. Williams' Pink Pills. Tht rsault was i tady, N. Y. It The soothsayer then goes to a board !f ^ l or f em T a j n * eTncstoi the Charles ~~ .1 u . _. > STTe * 1 hotel If each * u w Upon which are Strang a number of red •lips of paper, numbered in the game way as the bamboo sticks. Upon each ticket is written the fate of the cus- tomer and the one corresponding in number with th\ !'nr*ib*»r ( >n the Btick which be has <: awu ^ .-h<-d from the board. Wi n rran- »-d » Incky ticket will read .- *.a«thing like this: •'Thoogh dark cloude now roll over your ssaad, the fates will ultimately smile wpan yon. All your nndertaitingi will and your path through life will strewn with the flowers cf peace.\ \A Tribune reporter drew one which tntrepreted as meaning: **Riches atnd good fortune will be your torch- bearers throughout your career, and in tka amile of Buddha shall you bask. Tour heart shall glow with happiness smn as the steady glow of the >oss «tick. M It is not absolutely necessary that the Chinaman wishing to have his fortune told shocld be present Many customers result the fee, and the fortune teller 4raws for them and mails the Bttle red ticket which contains the result. The Basalts are not alwsys favorable and the ghastly predictions are contained at the slips, which greatly re- ihle laundry tickets. The higher grade of soothsayers pre- dict fortunes by means of casting a jKSTBKsope, which is something like that employed by a*nrolc*jera. Another meth- od is by means cf an ordinary magnetic coarpasm, which is set in a round disk of wood. Around the compass bttk squares art marked out on the wood containing tstumbers. After giving the dare cf rzvr birth the numbers are shifts around tc :ad w.th yrxr age ar.d hy sooe ' * part of tse the needle :L riay »I;*CL y as d T ary w tif mf-'jn-er. .. t ^^ * law was on the * >ew \ork sUrute books and was en- forced here—well, the Tombs or some otbex prison would be holding hunitreds who new look as if they owned the town instead of merely cwing the townspeople, —New York Letter in Pittsburg Pis- patch. The PECIAL ...IK.... Watches. of Them MSHU> by Machine *o day*—Their Moony Vie*. Most fishermen's nets nowadays are made by machinery, excepting the email round crab nets and dip nets, and bait nets that sportsmen use. These are made by hand, for the machines cannot make anything but a straight flat web. Many larger circular net*, however, are con- structed from machine made netting, cut up. .Machines have been used generally in fcetmaking for about 80 years. Before j that nets were knitted in the families of ' the fishermen. Some fishermen en the | Atlantic coast still make their own nets, 1 and on one part of the Pacific coa*t there is a close union of fishermen using I nets made by hand, but factory made J nets have displaced most nets of do- mestic make. There are six netting factories in the United States, all on the Atlantic coast. Carload lots of nets are not uncommon shipments from this coast to the Pacific, and the same is true of netting twine. Xets are made of various sizes of thread or twine, in any size mesh de- sired, and they can be made of any length, but nets of certain kinds are made commonly in certain len^rthn, and then joined together if greater length be desired. In this way nets have been set in the great lakes in one straight string of 11 miles. Nets three or four nil* > long are not unusual there, ^uch nets are fished with steamboats. A pound net, 100 feet in depth, has been set i n Lake Superior. It was neces- sary to splice the poles for it. The aver- age depth of pound nets on the lakes is 40 feet. On the Atlantic coast the aver- age depth of pound nets is 35 feet. Lead- ers are made lo to 70 rods in length. In the sounds q/ North Carolina very long hauling seines are used, some of them about a mile long. They are oper- ated by steamboats. Formerly, hauling seines were used generally. Within the last 15 years the u c e cf pound nets has increased rapidly. Purse seines are made 200 to 2oQ fathoms long and perhaps }V0 feet deep. A pound net, complete, costs f 200 to 11,200; a purse net, |400 to t*C0; a lake gill net outfit, $2,000 to $3,000, j although it might not all be used at one | time; a shore peine, from |10 to $400. There are other kinds of nets and seines. The life of a net depends on the water it is used in and circumstances. A heavy pound net might get thrashed out in a season. Seme nets and seines last three or four years or longer. ,Nets are made for various uses other than for fishing. They are made for use on horses, in laundries to hold collars and cuffs, for decorative purposes, for lawn tennis, and all sorts of backstops, for banners and for hammocks, for poul- try yards and for fruit trees and straw- berry beds. Some bird traps are made with nets. There are steamboat nets, which, however, are not knotted, but siaed.—New York Snn. RATTLEAX , PLUG TBe largest piece, of Gob al 1ro-bacco ever sold for 10 cents The Origin of \&to«chUm BottU.\ ! Did it ever occur to you to wonder where the expressuciD \Stotsfuton bot- tle' came from? Senator Palmer need it the last time I saw him and 1 asked {him about it \Why said he. \it comes from a certain S tough ton s bitters that used tc be very popular when I was a boy. ; £ tough t on'• bitters was a sort of table ! sauce, very weak and taste leas, and real- ly useless. So when anybody stood . around as use leas as a bottle of 8tough- ! ton s bitters an a dinner table people got | to saying that he was a S tough ton bet- , j tie. until as as expression fur general the Old Customers happy. f shiftlesKneas it oame to be an accepted ' The referou-toa- pu eicelleice. I sell the genuine Amer- ican watches at a special low price to make new customers, and to make term.\—Washington Post Faw Schoolmaster—Johnny, can you tell me anything you have to be tbankfuJ for during the past quarter? Johnny (without hesitation) — Tea, sir. Schoolmaster—Well, JohnnT, what is it? Juhjisy—Why, when you brcka TOOT arm you couldr/t lick us for two months.— Lccdon Answer A. HrFelson, Leading Jeweler, Gouverneur, N. Y, At the new store. YaaBarec block OP NAMES. I *™^»*«*« The subjoined record extracted from the archives of old Paris posasseses suffi- cient interest to warrant ita publication. v A . ^ . Ow readers will aee from it what a ter- ^ot only the rery latest, but the rible thing the capital penalty was in 2S? W S derful \^•°Hime w»er- former days, and at the same time learn «c*>boost ever made. It is just what that the gentlemen who every one wants. Her*, in one alpha- beUoai order, fully defined, arV^ Name* of Pecaoum. —- Author*, Artiats, SUtetmen, Di vinitiem, Character* in Fiction, etc Garnet of Places: | Modern and Ancient Geocraph ical Name*, Iratginary Place*, etc Popular Name* and Epithet*. r—4To Name*of Notable Btreeta, Park* Ani {rcr mala. Ship*, Buildings, Institu To tiona Parties\ Qnb*, Work* of tionera, with their assdatanta and tor- turers, did not labor for glory alone: AX EOfiCTTIOsTKB-* PBK3I U*T. To lieiHas; a wlsfsiini la cstl Toquart^t^himwkiisailT*. T*s£ordJat»c»^sfl pssssssje trcsa ttt* to Te Wseate* tae body csa 1 To ftxiat aes bead apoa a pote. To evsttxi*; a awa Into focx Tossagtsi a culprit , YOUR LAST CHANCE.' Positively Limited to December 24th. Kever a«mia will tbere be aaetber Spterlal Offer ma4r on this srreR* «t«jid*ird rjirtionarr and KDrvrlostfrdia of th e \%'orld*ii K»«vrled*;e. We fuily lutt-tidt-<l to *».%.*: 10? IU-? pniv vn CK-u><*t Slsi, ?K:; i.'ioUKarnds of p*«o[)le in ail w*aik.» of hf*f have reytie»t(Klan ext«i8i\ii \f lime until ChriMtrr.M Afti»r tar?fui ci*onkierati*jn. »•*• have df'CKlt'd toconUntK' mur f-s^rlml CHIrr u ail invshorf cijU*. T: # te dont» «iiiioi.v «nu only ma a nieara of adv^rtlstcts tliin %»<>n«ii>rru! mtorvhmm** «»i' t«rormatl»si. >* «.- <J» Hot exi^-ct to tmUce m<'Qf.r by tlJh»off».*r. o* tt>e x*rr low price on extrviu*;jy litn'r.i! i^rLua J»*ti»' more :! »a pttys for \>HI»T pnnmu ar>.] htrwiintr: but lb* treiu^Oiloos aa*outJt of t*.»t cn»at*«d «fll help to wlrwuf o rs Cio»t tuod'Tn afivi U(wtCMltit«' hear referrace library. Sv adrfruivmcnt can do tu** work Justus: it ••* lu own nio^t e!«K,ueni a*i voc*u. Jlovutly adopttMl *y tr>e school* of Ht. I»uto, M«x,, and many otb^r cttivs, In prvference to aJJ olh^r 'Ucttooarle* and enryciopwdUa. It is eqi»aJ to a oollcirv educatK>n. FOR A CHRISTMAS CIFT NOTHINC COULD BE BETTER, i Y -'ir iuv*:or, UKik-U'JT, frv-nd, parvtiw, or your rhiMrerj w : .:i appr*-c:ate thi* p^at work t#yori^ expres- Si >u. It w \.0 ix;j t. !\i*? usiv and ^iwH.vs give sail* fart ton. No buHUi**^ or professional Uian, t**atber. »to- d*rit, m«*eh*r.»c. hoija^vift* or anv orh**r p<*rsou wfjowlihw to k^-p *t\iixxt of th»- tioin«, or^hol* Inters e*u*d »n chebi'ida't:«*etit4*rr>nspf>f wlf-educatw»n. ran afford lo a!J'»w ih:« rur> opr-«rtat.ity to J-HA.- * nhoot curWj, Jriv.-Ht^-ntw^n riid«-rsiaii<t. ttim jrn«*a work, eairmdies all the ftuturv-s of a ewaipww DWttoaary and a thorough Eiicj ciopjeCia. TLe nt*w and entirf [y up-to-thtvlUiu'* Encyclopaedic. Dictionary Is now offervd hi] rn«I» n» of this pap.-r at the rute of 7c *»er dav. In monthly payment* of ftri.OO eacli, until the «um ufslltf.oe u> paH*. TLl* is hut l;til»- mon than t»i.f-in:rd tbf nvular prit*. This ereat*-»t <d ad L»ctKxiart«w and Kncrrciop»M»»# was *niii^l by *uch w»»r.d r»*oowned sr^lars a» Pr. Robt. Hsster. A.W., F.G.S., Frois. Huxley, Morris. Herrtare, Estoclet, WUUiai, etc, assisted t»y »ccir«5 gf stfijcr apeoaUsis iu vanwua Uaii-Oirt wi kiiovt-ioOtfe. Dont forpl this tsssisl sf- ftr holds gssi only until Christnts In, at which that Ms prist will BtSSVSBttStt $42 tt 170 ptr stt, ni shtt* hrtttv »• Strlt- tits frta tsttt Bjnsts wH St sssst, H Is set sfsrssissstss ssly st tsbiM* ss frtsj ss sr ssr sstssrtMi In o ftnnifinmrTiiir »/S\\f fc rff i ' Ww+kt mbo* SP lb*. %W T* ••••¥»• F**r mmutwe ****** ** a kmmdmm* ease cf ptMst** mood. Weight to* «P IX. W ~T W ——-w- Chmr 1760,000 RsjquIrad to Produo* This MngnHloant SerMduoator. •didoa ef b*ftanoJ»< m bsssos. \*oocm*: rea#^ing cc tr. laoothaayer tbe direcuac ci ideates vnat 'or^i*# yoc The it+* ar* ZKA art:rrkr fxrdmf to toe n?*a^j T* Tbey besria *,: 1 est: f r :*;.* -roond srida xz-i r^z z~ •- t. borosrope.--N*^ Txi ZT.\*ZL*. it a 11 Tins; To flayl&f a lrrlaf BUA An, 8U«^Oonsitellaisonaetc. j S S^Sftt^y - ^\* >aznesi of Books, Opera*, Plays and , To appiyte* the u*tvn important Character* tnerein. , To appiytng u»s thumbs Historical Erent*- .\•* 'C**^ To s^^iyiasi ta# bosklaa. Wara **-Z?~ \T5?TA ' To s4xBiz^s*ert»c the G«s«sstB* tcartera. Esot*, Crvmde* All*auc«a,€tc i( To flo*rix>c • • • ^Z7. A book to Which OOe may torn To brmodiaf wi*& a bot trxm wbe*i in dootb a* to any name met To«miiif c*itb*xMe*,tb»earsortb« «rith in one's reading - 1 —London Lancet Price from $10 to $15, according , ^__ to binding. Bold only by •ubacrip- ^ ., ,r/TT Uon—not n. Ube book-atore*. For HaiJway Bob is the name of a fa- partK»lar* addrea* the pubUahert . »°» ** m Aaatralia. Be pasaes his rcu>r *£D«c PIC- •otaaasa, bas ovti ^4aRSaiseat» Nine OpInkKW—Tlxmsands More EqttaHy Good. wttba^aVSTL 1 *^ fihssMN sVs^Mssbstc*; Pa Tbe tb* pobtte After aa i ibsusstlis O* PREME 0»l KT -Cbtttj of >L ,. » \w*. *»*m+* A Mill*. plaiDbff. !' ^*>rt«# R {±r>rr at^ c4i*>ra. oV/esMiSkOtA. It, -'\r+zAXfr* af a odfzxkect of fo«*«rkira?> in tJbe aicrr^ rttrt>*! sv *K>T.. d*ly mtmrrd latbeaf* 1 rvr» oT t J»e c *+rk A tie roa&t) o* M. Lawressrsi. i rm li* lifh \lay ->• « *r:r>b*r ISSft ib# -U&*r ; »t*Ta«d r»fe ^ ;a ar»<l br •*>*^ >odrn»« | t.t ttvr w .. * ^wbole existence os the tram, hn favor- - Sa,THe CentUrV CO , ite seat being on tc^ of the coa^cx la ^ , •**, i no VCniUrj WUs | this way be has trtTeied many tboo- Unk* P^aareu Sr* York. asd I- - ,^r;*»# *:*»-.; r t«i. w ... a» Wr ^S • thai i rk>t.. a# \r.-# -aw r*-• t z.- ,| .' Pa-**-!-.\ A I*±rt+* i* i Tr*i\ S T . t>t M» oa - a: pi'jue c*uc U^ at nlftn* <4 » '••« t v tbj^d 4aT r K a 2\. . th* iAIX« aiv X Tin+rm KilUoc T>om»d Toe ^-ry -inr»*x «~v.: :» teoo^ziMi hzi TL*%rLr<-\ * Haua ct tl-e Zz:*+d £:*••** O* f^acrte \? ^.s. r*ar ~-e : 1 = r : :*on, K- E. Pr^«»ar Crj*';j :. tea Iasdats cf 7*CZ^K'-J£? jfoOoennf as :ti n;ax:s^= c: .Lesar-b. a* feau wjt±, 4Z &<•*- >i °ri£-rz~r es, sstofbt, Ml«< icabac feet; prooaiis pocada. or T.WC tcea—r^- L»*c-j Jt Mi i. ' * € ?o#. e ;&t. :i z:< :« Hoods Sarsaparilla A., irjt* :rm.-t -j- ;A- tr»t aif • f-\-« \••~z+~. ' ' ar ^ ••a.v **' > •*• \ -»~L < * 'a»t* .J-# • .^.« a a-a* -j-ti h~r\. •z ;t ' ZJ+ » — j * a yroT'.ci-prwVAyr TO A> ORI>CR ^1 erf i«bt A. Vaasm ^rr-ncaoe ^f tbe <*«»- ty ft Sc LawrvDea tad aeeordinc W Use sKanxr* ** «vra eeees aMde aixi p-o^wfr«l No. t>r+ b> berrr*y rress* to aJ. j*>rmyr» sssrtas cianrs aca^ss «a*> e«st> «f Lrd-te Jiicbnf* bate erf Fewier. bj said ct-iz :>. oWvssaevi. ih*: Lbey are r*< 4 <uwr*4 to #sb:K-t :be fMasne. riw U*e w<a^r» tbeevcrf. to tb* pabw-rtbrr A»- d-*w H A.jm.ttMbe vilsas-e o: Gr«T>r»^-r rs •*>. r^^xrj. om or hrftre it» !*• da^ of Ib»n»-tt*»f. a^rt. l.EALLE.VA'ttt'. ;*a^L Mar i4. U*l SInsi 5 - 0rv f^T. -Pwiiwmnt te a* TP^^» -f Jr>fct ^ \ • -,r+ ^*r^5gmJe e»f t>.* T -^. a-r^ *rroMtaf t«H tbe •:JV» aa^ |f*^iassl T«e<ie» ^•^r^.^ s*«-tSSf eJ3U9»«S01 ..-•r H rmr»*»* m£* of - ^ • -»L LbsU tb*7 a*e * *^:jity of *•• a^a'«:e jt «i 1» ?#**^*T #--•* i : **r UJ# mav Fr-»^ ^ m ^ •KXI-V se *i sands at mijes, gciag crrer all tbs lines In South Anstralia He !i well knerarx is Victoria freqweot}y awn in Byiney, and bas been np as far as Bnsbsxe, TjLe most enrions part cf his contact is that be bas no ma**er. bet giery engine is his trend. A: c:$£t be fol- krwt borne the reg-ne drvg: cf ^edsy. arin? h:a cr len^i^ hia act of bis sight us:., t^ey a-* back in tbs ra.:- way statf^o in ihe =3^:^?. wbes te starts d? cs tsMhrr di LJ Jc«meT;nga.—Nt^r T-rk Tr.bcne. PampWet of fto spectsnea pare* freeoa i^ceipt of 6 cts U a*y Syndicate Publishing Co., 3 ,&f£S££ »--r. *•** r.a^r-* a-< r^^i^A. >- * - *• bst>C-*r r. i*. -*cc'a •as a.—•• ~i* 7 T>rsH^*--a \\— P>**»' »:t« • -• '£• ca r- cm* - * y -f »» i a« *-* i*« p^kT* .r^ --&* a»-t W*«*T U.-w -a»*d. b» - .i* «aa# 3Kar» --• b^r »Ui a *^b* r^rb: tr t *%w a- - -waia- 1 ^ _t ib# 6M< »*-ae <m .<*.?•». ».•< •-*• » i rasw-w« sr . ,-r»- S ia-# Set 3 JCT -^nrtrmac ,.s rjprk* ©J£^ >CT a* c &«« aa-i r*a*.t S S^sr*a» v* Aw Ml *f «^-S v~J« SPT *>«£ »<- *« -*£_-** liOOdf P1IU aZT ?A1UAA8> .: -i* -:•»- nf y«vVe. I* *** •*• M .i<b Aaj ef ISmrra am aaJUJS A. HILTS. Ix^e-a 'v^ZlV- „^::^^ «^'?&Si. -