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FinnyOWli'c. ? -«;Lav melqmelp\ Is the Pfljmo Of 0 ae- coy used by the -naUve &shormen,. of •\ Hawaii. It is made of -the hararesf: • wood to b e found ,on the islands; and, is -•carvedand.iuhbed.tlll it aswgesjgifi. shape of a club with a little knob- af the smaller end, to which tho Jlne» is tied. - _ * yUeidub Is from one to throo'Ceet long. A village sorcerer perfows Cer- tain ribs over it owr a sacred fire, ' J&m tills is done the cittfa lBnjasic. and th° fisherman must be extremely careful of it If a woman should »*<$> oyec.it at enteufl caapo In which, It Kes, the club would Ipso nil Its power and •should bo BselesB evor nf texwnrfl,. After the club has been -charmed the fisherman mixes ea'ndlcnu* anil cocoa,' nut meat, bakes i t and ties tho mixture la a wrapper of coconnut fitoer, At tao ashing -grounds tie curt* -ia. covered .With the oily Jciee of the stuff and is then lowered cavofully to the bottom. The scent oX tlio bah^d •out meat attracts certain kinds of fish, which soon gather and begin to nibble at the olub. As soon as enauglidHh are around the decoy a small hug ahaped -not Js lowered very gently until its mouth Is Just ovur the cluh>. Tho latter h» then pulled up carefully and cun- ningly till it la within the bag, The fish are so eager for the stuff with which tho club l a covered tlint tlaey follow It into the not without fear. Aasocoa as ajl ,thQ (l«h are la it a llsberainn dives and close* tho mouth of the not, where- upon tho rest haul It up ijalekiy.— Washington Post. WE MUST GROW OR DIE. Conataut Hotly ** Neeeaiaawy to XCc«p PjMjo Wttb (he TIMM, .4, pwlon for growth, a yearning tor *. larger life. Is characteristic of nil great souls, A x man Is measured by his power to grow, to become larger, broader, nobler, The Intensity of* his dartre to reach out and vxp dcllties his. capacity tor dcvlopment. Any on*, young or old, possessed by j^pMilptt for growth la constantly add- ing to his knowledge, always putahlng Ms hotteon a Itttlo further. Everyvday he gains additional wlBdom, every night ho ^ii* Jlttlo larger thun £10 wns in tho inoralng. Ho keepa growing as long as he lived. Evon in\old ago ho I s still stretching Ottt far larger things, reach- ing Up to greater heights. , We of tea And plants aajd trees that are not fully dovclopod, but have wmebed tho limit of their growth. Thoy cannot bo made,to respond to tho woo- in* of enriched soil or copious water- ing. Tho power for tho extension of «ell Hfo seems t o have departed. Them arc rniny human plants or sim- ilar nature. Early In UJTe they settle into grooves, from which* nothing can displace them. They ore «3ceil to enter- prise, to advancement along nny lino. How movements, now systems of busi- ness, larger conceptions at llto.nmi sim- ilar tillage In tho lftlng, moving present do not appeal to thera. Immovably bound V tlio past, they, can step only just so far this way, only so far that way. There Is no further growth, no more progress for them. Thojr have reached their goal, Employees often think that they are kept •back designedly and that othora less deserving are puafacd nheacj of them, when tho real trouble Is with themselves. They havo ceased to grow. They continue to move In a circle. They have not kept pnee -with tho trend of the times. \Forward!\ Is tho bade call o* the twentieth century. The young roan or woman or tho old mnn or woman who has censed t o grow Is to be pitied. Life holds nothing znoro for cither.—Suc- cess. ,WH^iNG\Wl^^0T'SVSTE] tratiohlM Jfftfiil, ^ rahn who.dpeS:fd^clble Wofk ifluSt .aisaaisa a 6uhject.ftomhia''aiih:d*b;W 1 Jie is done Mth it: QDhSs: iaerea'feesme grasp a«d power Pt th4:nil»'d arfd-ueer-a it--cJenif fop «bHqenn'4tiba.tnloh the^ tbjag nnder consicteriitlbn.*, Notbina gan be accorapllsh§d w|th httlf aihtadf yon mustconcehtfitte wfocusrftliyotir powers upon the thing you are doing, ffihis you can never do when* thliigs hy ,tbe score are halfgettled in your -mllttd: continualty obtruding themselves for consideration,,- and hindering the thought of preaeht problems. When yoa-^awe anything in -bamL; fiotae',tt, EfiS^ot look at it, lay it down, then look at somefhlngelseatfd lay thrown, also, but settle things nsyongoiaong, it is e-thousand tinier better to niafeo an occasional nilsfaSe than never to settle anything, but be- always balancing, > Weighing and* con- sidering many things at a time, I It is vigorous thought Which 'counts, A subject which is handled, so to spcah, with the tips of themental fin- gers, never amounts t o anything, -Xon must seize and grasp with all your might the thing you,, aire attempting, and do It with vigor MO. enthusiasm, if you wish to bear the stamp of su- periority when completed. Another defect in roar work, which arises from tho faults I have mentioned. Is failure to complete things. YQW work bear* tho impress of Incompleteness, end seoras always #lncl£ something. If you could\ overcome these defects your might ho successful, for you really possess grcatabll.lty. but lack deflnite- nesa. Mvidently your mind has not been trained to exactltudo. There has been carelessness In your educatidn Bomowhore. It may be partly the fault of yonr teachers or your parents in not calling your attention :in early life to these deficiencies, if this bad been done the task of correction would havo been easier than It la now, hat the faults may still be overcome If proper diligence be nsed. I hope, for your own sake, that you will set about It with, determlnation.-Sncce33. PICKINGS FROM FICTION. Later In the cs«m<>. \Ah raq,'J sighed the drug clerk, \how Women do changol\ \tybatfe tangled In your wheols now!\ asked tho boas. •'When I was doing tho courtship Stunt with Cordelia,\ ^sald tho d. c, \eho declared that If I should pass hi my checks she would also die without delay, And now\— * ,l Woll, What now?\ queried tlie boss. *Wo have been mos-rlod' only six month*,\ continued the aBshnjmt pill compiler, *'and eho Is chopping hints uround to •tho effect tlurt I ought to-got, iny life lnBurodV'-Oblcago Nowss. Oaor* of Slelcncmi. In gout tho skin secretions take a special odor, which Sydenham 'com- pares to that of whey. In Jaundice the odor Is that of musk; in oppllatlon, of vinegar: of sour beer in scrofula, of worm bread hi Intermittent fovpr. In diabetes, when there is perspiration, tho stnell Is of hay or, rather, of ace- tonoftbut,' according to llouehardat, midway between nldelaydo and aco- tone,, being due to mixture la variable proportions of these two bodies. A Bashful Han's nunc. A bashful young man -who wns afraid to propose to his sweetheart induced her to Are at hun with a pistol which ho assured her was only loaded with powder;- and after she had done so ho fell djbwn and protended to be dead. She threw herself wildly upon the body, called him her darling and her beloved, 'whereupon he got up and married her.—London Tit-Bits. Tlio Co-nr. '\Johnny said the tesicher, \write a sentence containing tlie' word 'con- Santa;*'* After a. few momeats' , *ftVa. labor Johnny,submitted the following:: \The contents of a cow i s milk?'—Chicago Ne^s. Sho took on mtghty few aire for a per- son In mourala'.—\Lovcy Mary.\ One cannot bo happy until bo h»s learned bow, and for that one must ftaorer.-\One'i Woaienkuiu.\ If wo could only take chloroform for difficult task* and wnko to find them dono!-\H!8 Daughter First\ Thero'u no hope this side of tho grave for tho man who knows it all. On tho other side tho devil doesn't want him— the Lord won't havo him.—\Adain Rush.\ I Some of us seo tho rosary of life only as separate bends, not touching the di- vine constraining thread, and nro taken by surprise when wo como t o the cross. —-Sloth and Uust\ Our thoughts, our opinions, are like apples on tho tree; they must toko tlmo to ripen, and when (they era ripe how, easily they fnlli A mere nudgo brings them down.—\Literary Valnes.\ ' Tho only ghosts, I believe, who creep into this world are dead young moth- ers returned to see how their children fare. There Is no other inducement great enough to bring tho departed back.~\Ihe tittle White Bird. 1 ' HOW DOGS FIND THElft WAY IC-v-ldencc Tbat Titer poaaeu Pecatl- tar Foitir to Guide Them. ' 3tn the old days of tho James river canal a fine aotter was taken by hi* master on a packet boat which was so crowded that the dog was put In the captain's cabin to bo out of the way, says tho Now Xotk Mail and Express. His owner reached his destination aft- er nightfall and hnd taken so much wino by thnt time that he was* carried off the boat, and no one remembered his setter. .Next morning the captain took the dog on deck with him, but was much afraid he would jump off to tho tow- path and try to return that way, and so handsome an animal would have been in danger of being stolen. Carlo, however, lay perfectly quiet, but with ah sir of listening that at- tracted notice. Toward noon he heard tho sound of the horn of a packet com- ing from tho opposite, way, and as the boats passed each other he made a leap and was next heard from as having got off at tho place T^here his Blaster bad stopped and aa«iavlng gone at once to the house where he Was a guest. Could human intelligence have- sur- passed that! Tfhls same dog lay on his master's grave and refused food until he died' from starvation. But I do not give this as a cose in point . ' A gentleman who lived a hundred miles from ft city moved there with ail his possessions, including a bulldog jWhich had been raiBed at his father's home, where he had hitherto resided. He was locked up l a the car with the furniture and fn the bustle of unloading disappeared, and two days afterward he reached his former home, coming by an inland route, as whs-known, by par- ties who recognized him, so that he evi- dently marlttid out his own path with out reference to tho rajlruad on which \he hnd been carried away. • _._:':__„ ._„ ^u'lun, A NorCU Carolina congressman re- lates an amusin* Story of an old Ju»- ttce of the peace In his eolijuy. It seems that two y6ttng attorneys were trying a»ea*6 before him. After, the ar- gume'nts 'hadfoudwed me-testimony of the witnesses add the case was closed the old iellow, awakening from deep reveries into wldcuilie'had fallen, said, 1 addressing bno of the. lawyers: \Xou iea not tottch fun \ fenow, Hahk, I. ga'vetfOU tho^deeision in the last tw> eftses,-io I will give thla one to attni. Xo^.can'it fcttect'to get *hom.ah>..,\._. _vl2Sr* , ^ , .°;i*.: •-». . FRU ; t# v A^^b-OW£R^. '•>•' The peach blossQmsTjgfore the leaves appear. Tho applo, pea!r «ud cherry put oiiti their ieavesibetore blossoming, Itiafcessjjijypar netwo^orraspberries to reach theh' hesfe bearing condition. Plants wanted especially for flower- ing should never pe allowed to produce seed, To prevent thlscut of! all the old flowers as soon aS they Wither. * Repotting plants* becomes necessary at intervals tfrom two considerations. The plant Uses up the available fertility In-the soil and ntis-tbe pot with roots. In repotting plants it is well to shake 6ff whatever-earth can bo separated without breaking and Injuring -the roots, i'hen water and shade for a few days. The yew tree, almost destitute of branches or bark, grows in the Cauca- sus to a height' of from 50 t o 60 feet and-a diameter of a little over £:feV5t. It is .considered superior to«mahogany and is almost indestructible except by fife. .\\\ MAN'S IMPOTENCE, It I » M*ae StrllcUgly MftttUent ^?>e* *a Eartka«*U«s C^nien. A-traveler gives this thrilling account sf an earthquake In the far east: \The one occasion I saw a panic was in Calcutta in June, 1897, It wns a (Saturday evening about B o'clock. It was pantlngly hot. and I wns one of a party of p'njama clad men sitting on tho roof of a high house having tea. \We were in tho midst of a merry chatter when the whole building began to tremble. Wo wore Instantly hnshed end looking at one another with blank faces until a feeling of terror toot pos- session of us, and homebody shouted, •My God, an earthqunkoP \We stampeded. There were three flights of stairs to go down, and of course the fattest and elowoBt man Was in front and blocked tho way. Tho Walls were cracking and yawning; the plaster was falling In chunks. \Wo wore nil barefooted, but that didn't matter. In Trout of the house was the meldnn, the great opoa space la Calcutta. Wo ran there. A great part of tho adjoining honso came flown with a roar. The whole front of a news- paper office crashed Into tho street. The top or tho cathedral spire camo otr and fell through tho roof luto tho chancel. \Horses were stricken with madness and wero careering furiously beyond ell control. Tho natives were shriek- ing. Europeans, blanch checked, tore from their houses, and mauy of tho wo- men fainted. \Tho thing I will never forget was what followed. There, was tho crunch of ripped walls, and tho whole cardi wa* heaving and trembliDg very mnch like a ship that has banged against a pier and taken time to recover. The awful sensation was tho feeling of Im- potence. \The earthquake lasted only five minutes, though at the tlmo It seemed like hours. Men could only stand on .the.heaving, seasick ground absolutely helpless, unable to speak, but staring Into each other's white countenance waiting for the earth to yawn. That was the terrible thing; crowds of folk reduced to muto horror, helpless, just standing with big, wide open, affright- ed eyes, and tho brain cramped In con- templation of what might happen next moment\—Exchange. Wot KteorJiir So Stony Tallin \Now-a** day* a;« ^i»cfce Vne& io-flo. <* Brides sire*probably just as beautiful now as ever-t|ley were,\\but they are not nearly* BO <an*clous. t o Jreeoi'd -their • postnnpttulflOvelih'eaa^y'means'p^ph-o- tographs,: M&sfc photographers SB y they are glad of it '* • \I never did enjoy falsing the pictures of brides,\ Bald a> photographer. \Like all the rest-of the world; I love tlie dear Creatures, but wilea 'it wmw down to ?4 a dozen commercMltsm they do not satisfy n))T afUstic histliicts. Few brlcles take a goe-dVeture. Somehow then- togs are hot becoming, A bride Is sup- posed to look superlatively lovely on her wedding, day, but'Jf anybody dared to tell the truth on, the subject that su- perstitionsoon srould'be exploded and the sWeet thiugis ! would» realize thnt. In- stead of looking their best on that oc- casion, most of them are apt to .look their worst. It is tho same. Way when they come to be photographed in tlaelr wedding flhory. They are either too pnle Or Joo red, and they have a nerv- ous, anxious expression that robs -the face of all gooc^llhes for photographic purposes. , \The time* was when no \bride consid- ered herself really married until she had arrayed herself in spotless white and'had^er picture taken. Qonerally <he' cao|e with h'er, and 'he' looked 3nst about 8B foolish as she did. Goodaess, the trouble I have had posing brides and bridegrooms bofore tho camera! Instead of tolling thorn to look pleas-. ant I always felt like saying, 'Don't look idiotic if you can possibly help It,' and then 1 would ha've to think up some device to keep her from scrouglng down too close against his shoulder, and to keep him from responding wltU an equally inappropriate embrace But With all my precautions I never fnlly succeeded in preventing their acting like lunatics. Tho other day when look Ing over a lot of old nejgaUvcs I camo across several hundred of thoso senti- mental combinations, and I thanked my lucky stars that nowadays few newly mated couples have tho camora craze ,'»_Ohlcago Itecord-ECerald. POULTRY POINTERS. Stale bread soaked in milk and squeezed dry Is a good feed for yonng ducks. Only medium sized eggs shoul«3 be set Extra large or small ones are apt to produce deformed chicks. Turkeys are not BO sure to como home as otlior fowls: hence It Is a good plan t o mark them In some way. Feed tho yonng chicks often If you would havo thorn growing rapidly, but do not feed more at a timo than they will cat up clean in n few minutes. Destroy the old nests as soon as the hens como off with the chicks. The safest and best plan Is to burn oil of tho old material. Efcalthy fowls pick up. their food quickly and relish It. When they go at it lazily, pick up a groin or two and then stop something 1B wrong. Never shut the fowls up in such close quarters that they cannot feke enough exercise to promote digestion. Sens treated In this way will soon become too \*'«. tj> ;\. gBeiUWiitri Commencing at 2 p. ml, Tlw'rs- duy, x\u£. 13r'h, ami every afternoon and evening thereafter until Th'tfrs-j day, Aug. 20th, inclusive, theltShaCa, Concert Band, the band which made such a popular hit at flie Pan A.rner- tean, will give two qoncerts daily at Ontax-io Bench Pari, Saturday and Sunday Excursions to Rochester and Ontario Beach. Every Saturday and Sunday, Hay 30th to* September 27th, the. Nfew York Central will sell one-day ex- cursion tickets to Rochester and butaxio Beach, and return at ?ery low rates, Ontario Beach'opens for the*aason oa Decoration. Pay, May 30th Everything bright and new at this famous resort. Music and vauder vilio entertainmeniu^hroughoufc the season. Plenty of out door amuse- ment to suit the taste of all. E»rlr Time 8r<teia=. The gnomon, tho predocossor of the lundlaS, was probably ono of the earli- est devices for the reckoning of time, tad it may reasonably be concluded that tho Egyptian pyramids, wlth their great altitude, formed part of a design tor timekeeping by the shadow thrown on the desert sands. The ,obo- Usk, too, in all probability served the purpose, for as a matter of history an obelisk at Borne was actually used for * sundial in the time of Emperor Au- gustus. If we could Step on Ward of a Malay prao, we should see floating in a bucket ef wstsr 8, eoeoannt shell having a small hole i n the bottom through whlcn the water by slow degrees finds Its wo? Into the interior! The hole In tlie shell Is so proportioned that the shell wlU sink In an hour, when the man oa watch calls the time and sets it afloat again. The Chinese hare a water clock In use at the present time, which Inven- tion they ascribe to Bwangtl, who lived, according to their Chronology, more than twenty-five centuries before, Christ JThg time system of early EoMe was of the rudest character. The day and nljht each wereVdlvldsd mto four watchss, the periods of which wero roughly determined by observations oi the course of the .sun and stars. The Lhnlt, Mr. Cribbs—Mrs. C, I have bora* with rcSlghation-'-nay, even cheerful- ness-r-ahtique chairs that wabbled, jm- tiqufe clocks that were always thirteen hours behind time, antique rugs that Borne prehistoric Turks wove* antique china, antique bowls, pans and kettles. All this I have smiled at, but when yon give me antique eggs for breakfast i draw the line, madam—i draw the line. JTattva AvitrKllan Tre« Climber*. A black nover uses his knees •when climbing. If the tree i s small in girth, be sometimes uses a vine, passing It around the tree and holding on to it as he ascend*. The most common way, however, is to ascentf by means of notches cufr Into tho tree or bark about one and a hidf Inches deep nml about three feet apart llaving fised upon tho side he intends ascending, the climber cuts a notch with his toma- hawk about the height of his waist nnd another on a level, with his head, trot a little to the right or left of the lower notch, as the case may be. Xhese notches are made by a few tnps of the hatchet, first horizontally nnd then down at an agle of forty -five degrees. Having cut the Jjyo lower ones*, the ascent Is made by standing on the ball of the foot, with the great toe ta the notch, while the climber cuts n fresh notch level with his head, and so on until the lower branches are gained. Often the gum trees run eighty- feet from the ground up to the lowest limb, the trunk of the tree being perfectly smooth. These notches are cut With great regularity, for, measured on a fallen tree, the distance between them seldom varies half an inch. Iu reas- cending a tree fresh cuts are made for every fresh ascent N,Y,G;«.€ipiiii«§: lei Mils Tempi Grani, Willi Qn.abQve dates tlie ile% Yorlf Central and ' West ?5hore \v\Ul pell-, reduced rate .tickets to Buffalo .anil- return, good going on above dates,, gnojl returning on or before Septem* ber 5th. See ticket s agentB for par- ticulars. j On ibrj«e } 4*p' ^4'<;M^ : w<ivh ;#• JSiagara Falls And retur^ ty reg- \ Tar ; t&in8,le#^g>#^na;^^|7:0, ^40'.;an^,,Ttl;5|.^. ;m, vt , je^imlng ff:3Q jpv m,^ tare for the round, trip ptolyi^C'.,. £heje, la* »o:,vP.or,tipa'oi tW glbh^that h$j,,sQ .many attrac- tions, -hbteil 'for theii' suolirnity, grandeur *hd '•'histosic'al>•associa- tions, as th.a$ ofr.Mstgama.n.d yieiaifcy, Manitou Beach Excursions Every Sat- urday and Sunday, May 30th to September 27th. ^ I The New* York Central will sell one-day excursion tickets to Manitou Beach and return every Saturday and Sunday, commencing Decoration day, to and including Sunday, Sep- tember 27th. Manitou Beach, eight miles from Ontario Beach, is reached via open airs of tho Manitou Beach line) passing Long I'bnd, Braddock'a Bay. Cranberry Pond and Crescent Beach. This is considered one of the finest open car trips in America as it skirts Lako Ontario's shores the whole length of the line. See ticket agents for particsalara. Buffalo and Niagara Fails Every Sat* urday and Sunday, May 30th to September 27th. The New York Central will sell low rate excursion tickets to Buffalo and Niagara Faljs and return every Saturday and Sunday, coinmBaoinc Decoration Day, May 30th, to and including Sunday, September 27th. The Buffalo Zoo is open for lie season with excellent attractions, Niagara Falls, the Great Cataract, is the beat resort in America to epend tlie day for rest and recreation. See ticket agents for particulars. * of two to -five days'' dufatibil, are i offered by the (DM Opditaiort Liifts _^TO~ - NORFOLK, OLD pomt toiiWirr Richmond and 'Qccoif Vie\f,*Va. WASHB^ON, D. C. c \ro«t Steamers will datljr, oxeep* Birad»y,it*8 n, from Her W, KorthBlver, foot of B&icli Bfr N*$w York. For full information apply- to Old Dominion j^tetomship Go. a BEACH awter, NEW\'STORK ii.y. K.U WALKER, J.J.Bsowx, r.p.&r.ir. o.r.j. I omorrow w*e*rft%oindalliittdrof re- pair work. My different re- pair departments are t h e •most'oowplete and up-to- date in town, ** ^ AUTPMOSiyB.DErn'rtA.titoiwrta | MdTOp^Mftu-niaEdonshortnotice. OonUUmi a conlpl«B>na» o t txj good*. . GEPT. np-i<KUt« | Uf reaiwlar of jronr i Tro-dlilea and Joy*. The trouble with moat of us Is that our joys seem to sink out of sight in some inner quagmire, and our pains seem to take.root on tho thinnest soil and flourish like the proverbial green bay tree, What Is the matter with us that a- little irritation today can wipe out In a moment all the recollection of yesterday's glory? \Practical\ Arithmetic. A teacher who was trying to instruct her class about the mysteries of addi- uornantt'auhtractlon explained that one could not subtract or add unless me numbers were of the same denomhia/ Bon when a little girl sold! \Teacher^ can't yon take «Ix peaches tomfottf t!W?^ Tlio Oldeat Lfbr-nrloi, The oldest libraries of which w< have any certain knowledge are thos« brought to light by excavations among the rotas of the east. Among theaj are the Babylonish books Inscribed on clay tablets, supposed to have been pre pared for public instruction about 6SC B. C. It Is\ said by Aristotle thai Strabo was the first known collector of books and .manuscripts. This about the year 3S0 B. O. Bishop Goltdn's Reception at Buffalo. Big Torchlight Parade Excur- sion, Tuesday. Aug. 25. On above date the Kew York Cen- tral will sell excursion tickets to Buffalo and return by special train leaving Medina at 6:00 p. nx,. at the low rate of 85c. for round trip, re- turning special train will leave Buf- falo at 11:45 p. m. The big recep- tion and torchlight parade to be given Bishop Colton, the new bishop of Buffalo, will be the great- est demonstratin ever seen in' the city of Buffalo. 100 bands in. the parade. v wai '.:•<* ?; ^^^(Mbm^lPMi Onr Common \Voe, \Beg pardon, sir,\ remarked the man who wns hanging to ^strap No. L. \but 'do you get off at the next corher-2\ \I don't see that it is any of youi business,\ replied his fussy nelghthor. \Well no,\ admitted the mild gentle- man, \but I was merely going to re- mark that I get off there and Si yon will be s o kind as t& lift I'd Ilk? to tak« that foot With mer'-Balumofe'News. Smol} DKs o f Cold. ; Gold Is so very tenacious that a. pieco of It drawn Into Wire one-twentieth, of an liichin diameter will sustain ft Weight of 600 pounds without_brea!t- ing,; Jts malleability is so great that a single grain v tiiay he \divided into &;00O,O0O .parts and a wiblc thchi into 9,523,809^0 parts, each of whiefcf may he distinctly seen by the naked \eye ' Q. & B. 10 GENT CIGARS Grow in favor every day. They are made from the Best Stock, and by first class workmen, s They are a rich smoke, and are making customers every day. Sbld by till The Heading Dealers. Wearehowlooateiat,' ..J ^'~ MainStrati ii Orlr S^eiiiaitite'sWe\ '' MUSIC, MtJsicAii'ti&5b^ ' : andSTADiONSliEiif; / 8REUA PEPT.- ioofjp»r»for«M» real pletbfrs LAWN MdWkft order uM deUrwedwtthbiit unnecM- ««7 delay. Kemember: today, tomorrow fchftovery othtt dayehr tndt- tohB \ToploMeouccnitom- en.\ MIDINAGVCLI WORKS 669\touth*SJWn St. ^— ^ fc rlUDSQK BfVER B. R THE FDUFMR1U5R TRUHK LIHE. nr tamm xom u.ieos. Tralnj pass Modta* ntollow* : JSABT BOUMD. 5S^'%-Smt.!»j».>.Bi-. HIT. i^? •9^8 \ \ aMp.id, •« -Z'M >' \ *6S» \ » •739-« « ~ fctatdKyS only. Train H«Y&Buff*ro at 11 A) p.m.,»rnrt*-toV«lh» a.*Bnf^m'rataK- h:» tiis \ HIS - \\— 6» - as» •- *•£> \ 1-JUa.m. T:* '• *2 Ti» 'vh^BOlftj^. \ i hliffla.m. •TfO \ar. Buffalo 8 S3 *.», m. *«30 tias S;*7p;m. •7U0 \ VM ao sae*\ 10:5£ ni. N.Fallil:»a.t \ B»« \ U» \ i :10p.m. *a •' sao \ RoChi p. ra.| KM 'lagara SandayBOnlr* JTraln lea,vca S^a^pi?^^ 1 ^ •Indicate* trains ran-dally, H-IUBKy,,CleaBHdJ&ent, ^ ^w-i.u? 77 M »hi St., BnHaro, N. Y -«ar>e ARRIVAL A!^ DEPARTURE Of MAILS, Office htiurs, M\erlina Post Office, 7:00 a. m. t& oiOO'p; Hi. Offibd hours Sttfiday, »:D6 to 10:^0* a. m. Mail arrivgs\^ 7:08a M. front -tie West. 7:30. «« \ east. 9:49, \ \ » . . ll';52. \ \ » 12:35 p.m. 6:20^ \ « ^J:10 «« jMail 4epartB-?- 7$0&'S. hi. cofeo i 7^48 ; M6ils \aooye traiii time. >( west.' 'it: east, west. ieasfe weSt. ,0asfr. •west! •ffaBfc. imkutes\' w< \ V<L p^ff i ^fH 5b :v.-.„u, ; -• tt-.. i i-.-j % '*' if -^ .---.•'-' ' li i • A'l'u jgijpsissf! $£A$0N. or& -Actual (Of- fclflB- Beybn Frontier VlvWl produced by , Pirtlcipantsan ' *ory Makers i Indian \^«rrl , BrUIUnt NsUvi tumei. .Coaaoeilfor thisS Greatest of all^rf from ,taian t teqtr PERFORMAN , . x ,. AT? A' •SiVtlSRiEOflL\* Csatolaa Fc Vn Army ol Cawho tt«Arial-e»ottlia Kx>ME*mba Plrst Toar of tl • CO B »NLY WHITE ! Mec a%V%%^« i J hi\'- \ • - \ \ ;*u ; m-t M A. J. General!