{ title: 'The daily leader. (Gloversville, N.Y.) 1887-1898, January 04, 1900, 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/sn88074616/1900-01-04/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074616/1900-01-04/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074616/1900-01-04/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074616/1900-01-04/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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L o o k Y o u n g . tfair.H ealth is warranted to restore gray, white or bleached hair to its natural _ ^ ____ ^ cojpr. nair«HeaIthisahair iopd,'restoring youthful color and beauty to gray and faded hair.. Retnoves dandruff and stops falling and breaking of the hair. It is no t a dye. It positively will. not. discolor the skin, scalp or clothing. It acts on the roots, giving tliem the required nourish- nrsht and positively produces luxuriant, thick hair on bald heads. Keeps the scalp clean and hea\ \ not rub off or make the hair greasy or sti use cannot be detected. Good for men an< HaiNf^ealth is a dainty dressing, and LONDON SUPPLY CO.. 853 Broadway, N. ^ DEAF NESS & HEAD NOISESGURED PM ’KiOk;lV’soutli Main % ? D . OSTRANDER, 7 Norffi Main street. jiA(\ JACOBS PtJrest streets. O. A. GORE, 1, 37 North Main street. ATHLETIOS AT WOMEN’S CODBOES In reopening the regular gymnasium ■work for the year at Smith College, President Seelye took occasion to em phasize his well kno-wn position with respect to the value of such work in college life and placing i,t upon an eanaiity with intelleotual training. To it also he attr'ibuted much of the im proved health of American women in the last twenty-five year's. This Is no fact. The gymnasium work alr-- would hardly account for Eie impro’ physical 'condition of college ivom hut taken in connection vyitih the s When he settled permanently in Lpn- don, fifty-five years ago, he accepted humble employment under the late Mr. Bohn, the famous bookseller, with the avowed determination to become In time the first bookseller in Europe. Step by step, by perseverance and re mitting toll, he built up a business which made his name and reputation world wide. Looked at from the point of view of the ordinary book-buyer, however, Mr. Quaritch was really not a bookseller, He did not deal in cur rent publications, and his great repu tation was due, not to the greatness of his sales, but to the limited number of ** them and to high prices. His exertions were devoted chiefly to supplying li braries and a few private collectors with bibliographical curiosities. He dealt in missals, early Bibles, illumi nated books, manuscripts and similar rarities, wherever they might be found or in whatever language they were printed. He was always found as a competitor whenever a Mazarin Bible or a first folio Shakespeare o r a collec tion o f Alduses o r Elzevirs was offered for sale. Mr. Quaritch would scarcely so much as look a t a modern collection of first editions, and very few books of the present century had any special at traction for him. He was especially attracted toward early America, and in 1890 he sent his son to New York, with a noble collection of old books and manuscidpts, to dazzle the eyes and gladden the hearts of American bibliophile. It is related of him that, while still a struggling youth, he formed the first determination to buy for himself, at whatever price, if he should at any time have the opportun ity and ability, a copy of the “Book of St. Albans.” It was only after forty years of patient toil that he had ac quired the meaus and a sale at Chris tie’s presented him with the chance of carrying out his long-chemshed re solve. Then, amidst restless silence, the hammer fell to his bid of 600 guin eas, and at last h e bore off his long- desired prize.—Philadelphia Tel6- valls at almost all these institutions has made a noble record. ,* The time may come, if in fact it is , not already hereL, when instead of fearing that the daughter of the fam ily -will be broken down by over-study and graduate with a mental equipment gained at the expense of a weakened body, sQie will be sent to one of these institutions as much to strengthen ber physique as to improve her mind. Bi cycling, srsvimming, skating, tennis, golf, basketball, boating and other forms of healthful out-of-door exercise that keep the muscles firm and the nerves well braced are worklnd won ders for the present generation of young women, and this influence is -ex tending out from the colleges and hav ing its influence upon less pretenlilous educational institutions and upon the social life generally. Wa are inclined to think that the women’s colleges fur nish th ...................................... . ■ 'is to ba DROPS OP WATER. The Orinoco river Is 20 miles wide at s mouth. • over 1,200 miles the Nile does t sin^lG tri'butfiry’ str-G^m. rain and snow water all or less alcohol. Only .vater is free from it. --est lake in the world is _>.e Baikal, in Siberia. In some pants is o.iox leet deep; its length is 397 liles, with an area of 15,000 square .i_..s., Jt is the largest lake in Asia, and the sixth largest in the world. DR. DAVID KENNEDY PROVES HIS IDENTITY. Kennedy Row—^A Statement Under Oath Before the Mayor of Kingston, N. Y. County of Ulster, ss.: Dr. David Kennedy, being duly sworn, savs: I am the discoverer of Calcura Solvent; my only office and place of business is in the Kennedy Row, on Broadway, Rondout, City of Kingston, N, Y,, where I am a practic ing physician and surgeon. What I am advertised as saying of Calcura Solvent is what I really do say now, in the light of many years of ex perience and practice as a physician and surgeon. I am the only Di-. David Kennedy in Rondout or Kingston, N. Y. For some years previous to 1898 I was connected with the Dr. David Kennedy Corpora tion of Rondout, to which I had sold the right to manufacture “Dr. David Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy.” In 1898 I was deposed from the management of that corporation and have not since , had any control over its affairs, but have been engaged in the practice of my profession in Kennedy Row and in ■the preparation of the new medicine, Calcurd Solvent. Its manufacture is under my personal supervision. But the corporation bearing my name and manufacturing the remedy I dis covered over twenty-five years ago, procured from the Post Office Depart ment an order that all letters directed to me by my proper name and title, that is, “Dr. David Kennedy, Rondout,, N. Y., should be delivered to It. I then asked my friends and patients to ad dress me as \David Kennedy, M. D., Kingston, N. Y.,” and the corporation then procured another order directing all letters addressed in that manner to ho delivered to it and is now using those names and addresses in Its ad vertisements. For that reason loiters dlvoctod to Dr. David Kennedy, or Dav id Konnody, M. D., Kingston, N. Y., or Rondout, N. Y., are dollvorod to tlio corporotloii, of which ono Augustus J, Rbillipa is tlio president and from tho management of which I nm excluded. Thoroforo, I Imvo boon compoUed to aoU people who want my advice and my modiclno to ahvoyo inoort \Kouno- rty Rov/\ In my addresm and homo di rect theJr lotlors as followo: David Kennedy, Physician and Ourccon, Ken nedy Rov/, Kingston, N. % DH. DAVID KDNNDDT. fliiherrlhed snd sworn ts heforo jno tlilP 27th rtav of hV.vrmh-'v. j m WIM.UT.I V BOOK OP HIS DREAMS. It Took Quaritch Forty Years to Make Money Enough to Buy It. Bernard Quaritch, tlie celebrated London bibliophile, recently deceased, was the son of a German officer, and GAINJIESH An Absolute Necessity in Many Cases. A DECREASE IN WEIGHT FREQUENTLY INDICATES A DECLINE. Our Modern Rel)uilder, Vinoi, Will Help You Do It. THE WAY IT ACTS ON A DE PLETED CONSTITUTION IS SIMPLY MARVELOUS. Trilby’s face, £ - . . _ her a smart ,slup. Trilby’s specialty is b.athing. Incredible as it may seem, .this icat regularly gets Into a bathtub, waits until -the water is turned on, rolls over and over until thoroughly soaked and then jumps out and shakes hei'seif dry. CHARM'S AND WITCOEICRAaFT. The 'Malay is a Firm Believer In Their Efficacy. The Malay is a -firm believer i n the efficacy of charms. He wears amulets, places written words of magic in bous es and sports a tiger’s -craw as a pre ventive 'Of disease. If he Is specially primitive and backwoiodsy, when 'he enters a forest he says; “Go to the right, all my enemies and assailants! May you not look upon me;let me walk alone! ” To allay a storm he says: “The elephants coHlect, they wallow across the sea. Go to the right, go to the left, I break the tempest.” ’ When about to begin an elephant hunt, according to Thompson, he uses this charm: .“The ■ \ e wallows across ils, the pan bioils to the left. TRAVEIERS GUIDE IfONDA, JOHNSTOWN & » .,0VE: VILLE R. R. COMP/ lY. To takeeffect 12.01 a. m. L mday,: vember 19th, 1899. I l l i i HE WAS BORN SO. Troubles of a Young Man Who Has a Genius for the Inopportune. “There goes a man,” said a Canal met him at luncheon in this city REV. JOB TWITCHBLL’S STORY. The Rev. Joe Twitchell of Ilartford, boon companion of Mark Twain, is a good story teller. A few years ago I is city and I .’ks: « S S street philosopher,” who has made a found him a most agreeable compan- failure of life in spite of exceptional ion, says a Washington correspondent, equipment for success. He is honest. He had just returned from Europe and ids to purifying the g reat vital cur- | wibfficraft.^^'The^^ th^bottle rent of the human system, the blood. I the Polong, which- feeds on its Vinoi contains the active curative ' * ' ' \ srtieS of Cod-Liver Oil in a hi; MISSING PEOPLE OF A YEAR. Detectives Say They Amount to Eigh teen or Twenty Thousand. The police inspector said: “About ten years ago I was watching some workmen pulling down a row of old rlv-erslde houses that had a desperately bad reputation time out of mind, and I can recollect what a start it gave me when they showed me that nearly ev ery house had a g reat trapdoor,through which anything could be dropped into the race of the tide below. Many a poor chap had gone to his death that way. I ’ll go bail. But 1 can tell you a curious thing that happened only the other day. A man had been drugged and robbed, but he told us that before he became insensible he had managed to lock and bolt his door ,and locked and bolted it was when he came round again. How they had got in and robbed him he could not Imagine. Well, v/e :hed about and finally discovered the door v linin anothei with an( bolted the inner door enough, but then the frai was only another door with separate hinges of its own.” “I suppose the list of those reported missing is quite a short one in. these days, is i t not?” “Some eighteen to twenty thousand i year! But don’t look so startled, dore than three-quarters of them turn up again in some way or other . You see, the list includes strayed chi) really two doors, one He had locked and see, the list includes strayed children and runaway hoys to begin with. Then there are the men who get locked up at night for something or other, and ei ther are too careless or too ashamed to send to their wives, with the result the result off to the nearest station in the morning to make inquiries. Quite a number of men go and hide after quarreling v/ith their wives. Why, I came across a case the other day where a man had lived for four years within half a mile of the wife he’d deserted without her finding him. A big town is the only safe place for a feliow that’s ‘wanted’ to hide comfortably.”—Caswell’s Magazine. TAUGHT BY A CAT. Her Perseverance and Self-Sacrifice Saved a Man from Despair. Near the Bo\v*ling Green, at the foot of Broadway, a dingy side street leads off toward the river. All iday during the week tlie street shakes with the thunder of heavy drays, and the ele vated trains roar overhead, but on Sun day all the life of th'e .city has moved up town, and this old portion of the city is quiet and deserted. One Sunday morning a man turned into the side street and sat doavn on the steps of one of the buildings. He looke'd as if he had walked the streets all night, and was hungry besides. The quiet and the morning sunshine had evldjen'Wy tempted him ‘to rert. In a little while a I'ank, yellow cat poked her head out of a hole back of the steps and eyed the man. Satisfied, apparently, that he had no designs on her life, she crept out and ran. across the street in search lOf her breakfast, finding here a b it of bread in an' ash can, there a scrap of meat from the j ami tor’s table, in a garbage barrel. The man watched her Idly a t first. When she came back to the hole under the steps he .spoke to her, but she gave no heed. By and by, however, she re appeared with a puny kitten in her mouth. Another and another wore bro.ug.lit out, until bor little family la; huddled together in thele sunsh'ine,unshine, Thoihen alhort s T her and began to she igalhored 'them to her and nurse them, purring happily. Tho sight Htlri'oil something In tho hi'iii't (tf till' mail wlileli ho ilUI not know' w aj tlu'i'o. W eak, hungry, tlrod, aiijcourarjca hy the fruitlcos ucaiTh for work, ho liafMong blnro faith In tho kUi'lncho of hla teUowmcn aud bc- Ritn to doubt oven tlio goodiiCMi of Uod. But w hat power had plaulcd m.i- torm l lovfl in tho bream r-d tblo poor, huiuofl, liitlMiiarvcd < rc.tturo whoso hand, like Inhmacl n, was ngaiji.it cv- Miiin rrfngo hoJjlud ilin ntongo w n U Ih n kept talilifal st’hnn b I ki properties of Cod-Liver Oil in a highly concentrated state, and is the most wonderful tonic t h a t we have ever had anything to do with. ' ♦ Vinoi acts upon the stomach in a beneficial way, enabling i t to obtain for itself the necessary ingredients from the food th a t is taken into i t to build up the pure healthy body and in crease the weight. Air. H. M. Stufell, who is a well- known passenger trainman on the Boston and Maine Railroad, suffered, as many railroad men do, with kidney and other troubles. He writes as fol- returned from Europe and I affable, highly educated and as' Indus- ' kcraft. ■ There is the bottle i S , | s ? a n f / c S n T n^m J T m rn ln New °/apJln5d to S r t ' o f e ‘'ofthtse*Srvers Polong, which- feeds on its own- Orleans who possesses a kindlier dis- evidently had seen better days, I K S i r i a f u s T S - «■“ ■■ there is a horrid thing, the Penanga- erybody who knows him. Ian, which possesses ,women.' Fre- “The mysterious part of Ml;: n i l ; III' S S i M m s r r i i l i i § l i l l l i l l L I M M l i l g l M I I p l i l N i troubled me a me a great irregular, I ___ „ ________________ -tomach, suf fered with bilious headaches, had no appetite, could not sleep nights, and was lo.sing flesh rapidly. I began to take Vinoi, I am now on my third bot tle, and it is doing wonders for me. My kidneys are better, my bowels are again regular, m y stomach no longer troubles me, and no more headaches, and as for appetite, don’t speak of i t ; I sleep like a top and have gained thirteen pounds. You can count on me always to recommend Vinoi as the king of medicines.” With many such testimonials as the above coming before us, it is not strange that we endorse Vinoi as strongly as v/e do. We unhesitat ingly agree to return to any one v/ho has taken Vinoi and is not satisfied that it has accomplished all that we claim for it every cent that they have paid us for this remedy. HOUCK & PATRICK, Druggists, Littauer Block. self? Gould it be anything less than the unspeakable love of God for His creature’s? again, this time with .a paper parce his hand. He s a t down 'on the sit and cal'led the cat, and when her nose appeared a t the hoile he omwrapped the p-arcel and dropped a piece Of meat. He smiled to see horn suddenly it disap peared, and then he went away. The next Sunday he came again, and the next, until at last the kittens 'Were able to shift for themselves. It was the janitor who told the story. He was sweeping the s'teps one m orn ing when the man appeared. They fell to talking, and in the conversation tbe man told him of that first time he had sat there; of how the sight of the lit tle family had given him a new fa'ifcb; a new sense -of the Father’s love and the completeness of His plan. He had tq.ken up the search for work wiith new energy, and a t length he had succeeded. And even the janitor considered it a pleasant story.—^Youth’s Companion. TWO EXTRAORDINARY CATS, Dulcinea and Tril'by are the names of a pair of cats distinguished in their neighborhood. Dulcinea’s specialty is the. c'atchiing of small, green snakes, which she invariably brings home, mewing persistently until some mem ber of the family appears. Some bf tho ladles 'Of the family rather recoil from these gifts of friendship, but Dulcinea is certainly sincere. Thfe cat alw'ays goes to a pond, and, sitting on thd edge, very frequently whips lOut a fish witlv her paw. Another of her feats is fight ing for Trilby, -who .is a great cotward lERE Is a coftalu si Lect a b o u t ffariitettt ______ _ S from- these Celebrated Pat- S S tenia that is not attained by the 5 i: use o f any other patterns. MSCAUi M S G A L U S ^ M A G A Z I N E W shape it wanders around. Such beliefs'may perhaps have their i origin in metempsyehoS'Is, which in other ways has so the common peopi phants and tigers times to be cred, and special charms are used fishing for them. One such, given Alaxwell, is ,as follows: “Oh, Dang- sari, lotus flower, receive .what I send thee. If thou receivest i t not, may thy eyes be torn out.”—-R. Clyde Ford in Pop-ular Science Alonthly. LINCOLN AT GETTYiSBURG. Account of How He First Wrote His Famous Speech. UAUixai <a*u v.* *3 .1..** . Lincoln’s famous address delivered on that occasion, Nov. 19, 1863, Governor Curtin began by saying that there -had been much discussion as to hov w'hen that address w'as written, £ continued, s:vys The Independen'; “I can tell you all about that course I was there, and the pre and his cabinet had arrived and were at the hotel. Soon after his arrival, as we were sitting around in the parlor, Mr. Lincoln looked thoughtful for a moment or -two and then said: “I be lieve, gentlemen, the eo-mmlttee are ex pecting me to say something here to day. If you will excuse me, I will go into this room here and prepare it.” After a time he returned, bolding in his hand a large, yellow government envelope, on which he had -written his “ ‘Here, gentlemen,’ he said, T want to read this to you to see if it will do.’ And, sitting down, he read it to us and then said: ‘Now for your criticisms. Will it do? W hat do you say?’ “Several spoke in favor -of i-t, and one or two commended it in str( terms. ‘Well,’ says the ‘haven’t you any cri Seward?’ leward bearii _ !s, whicl incorporated. “ ‘Now, if yo men,’ continued . _ „ _______ copy this off.’ And he again i and made a copy of the addres “Ah,” continued the governor, “if I had had wit enough about -me to have begged of him that yellow envelope, what a trophy it would have been! How much it would have been worth to some of the ladies’ fairs which a little later began to be held to raise money for the hospitals and the soldiers. But I did not think of it then.” rea8h the There is cnly ness, and edies. D(eafness o one -way to <ure that is by the ear. c deaf- by constitutional rem- l is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous linin§ of the Busctachion Tube. When this 5d you have suit, and unless the inflammation can be 'talcen out and this tube resfcortd to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases but of ten are .caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for auy case of deafness (.caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Ssen-d for circu lars, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills 'are the best. A - c o m p e t e n t w i t n e s s . United States District Judge Wil liams, now holding court in Topeka, tells a funny story. Years ago he was a district judge In Arkansas. At a cer tain term of court a murder trial came !oro him, and the most imiJortant tnesa for the prosecution was a col- >d boy only 10 years old. The law- for tUo dpfonso sot out to sliov befc wit! “He never gossips or tattle: mere fact that lie has seen tl oughtn’t to see and heard thi: .................... ■ !S hi! THE CZAR’S REVOLVER. e assassination of Czar out of doz- bedside, the idea haunting [es but the daunted his mo-ther and still things he young wife, that whenever the fated assassin appears (as appear he will, they all firmly believe) he will s S M i s p i s s for the inopportune. Aly wife loathes ______ him because her false frlz*s blew off in the street one day anOTlanded on top of his umbrella. He had nothing too doo withith either tlie frizzes whatever t d w or the elements, but no him to come to my hou: be under such a,curse, Orleans Times-Herald. Terrible luch a,curse, isn't if?”—New GETTING AT THE PACTS. “Is that your offspring, madam,” askpd the Misouri judge. “N m ,\ replied the elderly female, )’s me oldest young ’un.”—Qiicago To Core Headache in One Daya To Core Neuralgia in One Day^ To Cure Nervousness in One Day I To Cure Sleeplessness in One Day I An Oswego man tells a good story on his wife. I’ll not give the names lest there be family troubles to reoord to- - morrow. It was the first time he had taken his wife to New York, many lov-uremeepiessnessinuneij years ago. They went shopping and N er - v & ene Pii visited one of the big stores. Having to keep an- appointment with a business friend in lower Broadway b e said to his wife, “when you get through here take the elevated for uptown.” The good woman thought he said \take the ele vator.” So when she flnlsh.ed she calmly walked to the elevator and took a seat. She rode to the top of the building with other passengers. The elevator boy called the numbers of the floors, b ut our lady paid no attention and rode down again. After 'making the fifth trip 'the elevator boy stepped over to her and said, “ where do you wish to get out, madam?” “At 114th street,, please,” was 'the reply, and the Your Cough ( worries you. A soothing, [ way of stopping it is by usii healing < ing J f l i i - g f : i\ I H H I i i S; P i ; I ■: ii S r t B i l i a i l i l S E i I? * |:i ISiiiigiili?. l i H S i | 5- FAMOUS CRIME DEFINED. Philadelphia Satii This is his latest; A friend who had been reading the daily paper with painful slowness looked suddenly up . “Tim, fwhot is that newfangled crime in Germany they call lease majesty?” The bystanders, aroused by the words, looked inquisitively at the lead er, who, with a mild expression of condescension, replied: “Lease majesty, Mike, is a foreign crime and Is talcing the lease of a Iiouse without the emperor’s consent.” LORD BRASSEY AND THE SWAGMAN. The governor of Victoria’s party, says the Melbourne AustrallaUf had a terrible shock during their visit to the ' Watts river. They were camped on the aqueduct, when a picturesque Bwagman came down the track. In good fellowship Lord Brassey asked him to have a glass of wine and some chicken. “No, thanks,” said the nomad. “I ruined my digestion wltli that sort o f f ' bu't WILLIAMS’ NEW ENGLAND COUGH REMEDY. No. 68 Utica acc< No. 64* Oneida a N°' V>ay sota,.,o,„ach_coa..J„=..«opium. , No. 72 Aocomm^djtgo.. „ No. 28* N. Y & Boston exp. ..10:43 p.m WEST BOUND—Leave Fonda. express .. Lccommodatic idatlon.,6,47 a:m. :commodation8:31 a.m idation ....... 11:04 a ain s u o opi I WILLIAMS & CARLETON CO., Hartford, Conn. No. No. SS: WEST BOUl 37* Pacific e 41 Accommod! 43* Buffalo loc .(]yMIIVAijDFLAVO.R UliSURF^m (PINK WRAPPER! INULA CHOCOLAl M£AIlNaD{UNK»»;ilCOOKIN& ertoems EVERYWHEnL umo ‘S 63 Accommodation ............ 11:02 No. 65 Accommodation..............12:40 No. 45* Syracuse express ........ 3:01 ^ __ No. 7 Day express ...................... 4:00 p.m No. 47 N. Y. & Syracuse acc’m.6:58 p.m No. 67 Oneida express ............ 9:14 p. m No. 78 Accommodation ....... .11:39 p.m *Run Sundays._________________ WEST SHORE RAILROAD. In effect Nov. 19. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. CO., Lessee. BAST BOUND-Leave Fultonville. No. 6* Atlantic express ............ 2:26 No, 8 Phila. and Wash express8:22 No. 2* Boston & N. Y. e x p .. ..10:21 No, 4* Continental express ..10:59 No,,18 18 Buffalouffalo & Albanylbany local.4:00ocal.4:00 10 B & A l p.m WEST BOUND—Leave Fultonville. No, 5* Pacific express ............... 8:53 a.m No, 9* Albany & Buffalo local.9;38 a.m ‘c Valley express.C:26 p yers for tho dofonso sot out to show that the hoy was too young U) umlor- Biaml Uu' uiiUU’o of lui oath, and tlu'i'c- fore v/ftD not i.-ompetoul uo a, wiiiips). \Boy rinld one of them covoroly, “ih) you know whai would bappon if you fiwei'c to ii Ho?'' \Yo.i will. Mammy would lick mo.\ \Would anyUiiiiB olso happonr ‘Td like to catch my Imnlmnd huok- \Dccfl do;v v.ould, cacc do devU would ing com!\ oxclqlmcd tho proud daugh- Blt mo.\ tor fit tho humhio farmer. At thio p!)im JurtRo ’wiUlftmn leaned \WoUi m to tho hurdtin' hco to-niRhi, over lilo deni! and oaid with pretended dear,\ replied her mother. \Perhapo liternni'Ba: “Don’t you know, hoy, that that'o tho way yon wlU catch him.'’-* I v;nuld nrt ymi. too?” -------------- - ------- \Yt J, rah. fru n w h a t 1cald,\-\ Kascart City Juivuak OPPORTUNITY. lunlmni that'o tho my yon youlicro CtatUfman. For «U ihu swi admlnlptratoro aforccald. No, B P i ’ od - pcct otreot, 111 tho city of OJoverovlllo, in eald county, on or before tho lot day of .luno noKt, ^gDfttcd thlo 16th day of November, MAY lUNNCEfl. OLOHOD fliLknnpin, AdrdiMlttvotersit fiuuui', ana creaun ot naia no- ccaccd, a t tho law olllco of Majondlo Jolinoton, Bnq,, In city of Glovorovlllo, In Raid county,lid onunty, or boforor tho 20th co on o (dav^of danijnry nnxt. ...... uinry 'ftted thlo Bth day of ,Tulv, 1809. HATTII3 RtVEATW\ MA'TRMmn .TOnNBTON,' ^^AMjJjr^AdijjiBlutrotrlx. WEATMAN. dminlttratrlS'