" Whu hue on ulod ‘1" “ 0h. ovary lug. Glycorine. Bottom, who. and Morphing; but they um per- in In nmflnin brown tad npottod." “Bu. you I ed wuor ?" :‘good Mom! _ Want an idea I" ““3 than mmy nuou places in ‘ho " v “ lonly know of one more, and thtt’a in Nuuu street. Well. good-day." And the quuulous old wife-humor started up town for tho matrimonial bureau. Mr. Suugono M thorn, utarmrd. saying he would all up“: Quinnâ€"New York Journal. 3m â€home on trial, but none of them “Did you merry them ‘2 " “Oh. no. Jnet hired them ï¬rst. to see lithe oonldwork. If they euited me I won] hove men-ind any one of them.†' Where do on live ?" “I’ve got e no term out in Trenton. N. J. When I leeve here I am going to e Monte] hnreen at the corner of Eleventh street end Sixth avenue." " Can my one go there and get 3 wife 7†noted the reporter. "Oh. no. You must be vouched for by eome one who in known there. They run it u en employment agency." “ An than on...“ .n-.. -I---- 2.. n“ The new-comer nid his name was “no! Menin. He is 52 yeua of age. md we. merried once. and bed a temily of men childrenâ€"nix sons and a denahter. m. wife died shout ï¬ve years ego, and since then he bee been travelling shout latching for mother wife. "Bow hue you euweeded 90 hr ‘2" uhdthere rter. "'We_ll.l eve hadAtwo or three Indies About 4 o'clock yesterday efternoon e Meal “porter entered the bureau and Bnugone naked: “ Heve you broken with Nellie ?" “Well. gee; I gueee I heve. I think III. II 0 little too naughty for me.†While the reporter wee mu speaking with flhnpne e thm. negvonaJooking men enteeed the harem. and, sliding up to flatten Boyle. naked : " Heve you got a wite for me yet ?" __".No. Mr. Martin. I have not," ehe re- Ed his muse With the girls pruent. y .u laughed at him. No one appre- dlted the odor of his hand and heart. He then took n mt on a bench and united Manny until mother ehip came in und 3 "all lot of young girls entered tha Lnbox Biron. He met with no success. how- mm enume- {mu Mold-onhl Intentions. Daniel F. Shugone. the farmer who has Open. oonaidmhle time and money in his efforts to free Ella Lnnbeo. me pretty young We burglar of Brooklyn. tor the mpoao o! mulling her his wife. hoe lg)- yuan given up all hopes of euooese. a “may“. Lnbor Bureau in Castle Gor- donynkrdoy morning. and approaching Hunger Connolly he and abrnpfly: " I won 3 Villa. May I speak to some of the; lmmlgnns girls here and see it ony of then would lllre to get married ‘I I om not 5 poor man. I hove got u snug lime ï¬rm on the outskirts of Boston, and con Ill It 5 wife comfortably.†. Connolly gove hirn permission to by no Vegetmi m except low. cling- ing vines end the New England blueberry. Four of the ielende are in- Inbitod. the lergeet, the Appledore. beers nhotel end 3 lew cottages. Sm.- inland hunnother hotel and camel] settlement at ï¬shermen; 3 third has a few flahermen’c hut-,tnd the fourth has a bold, white mm springing out of its oreet. They mlhoovered by Capt. John Smith. the iriend of Pocehoutee, who in 1614 explored the New Englend count in an open boat. and spent eome time here making repairs and rooting. 01: Star inland stands the only monument erected to America to Capt. John Smith. It is a. rude affairâ€"n prie- antic Iheped ‘ehelt of unable. upon _n _-j--n,e . mm ot‘undetone. inscribed in angth with tho record or his vulorons deeds, and some oy-lopodiu say he 13 burned here, but 3h» in § misuke. nhle then e rusty cutlsss or e hursted Nnnderbuee was I'Vul' Iouud. The grand- dunee tell how Capt. Kydd esme here olten. " II he sailed, us he seiled."end there ere legends of other plutleti quite as ï¬erce Indira II he. The Star Island used tobe haunted by e beautiful spectre with long white robes and golden trusses reaching to herheele, who u~ed to eorne out or some undiscovered uveru at dawn. and abiding her eyee with e hand that was no white end healthful es s lily's bosom. gaze oï¬ upon the see in hopeless expecteuoy of the return oi u clipper that sailed Owe, end never oems buck sgein. The story oee that a bloody-hearted old‘ to. ng pursued by a. cruiser, brought1 beeutitnl mistress here and left her whilehe went out to battle. telling her thet bydewn he would be bueh sgsin. but he eerne not. not even till now. She died of Ihrvetion, but her feithtul spirit still comes to the enmmit cf the island on the an thee eeeh morning. to meet the oorseir whenever returned. There ere eight of the blends. the smallest being es large, or nther es emnll. es as city building lot, and the est containing only a couple of hand horseâ€"nothing but bare. lifeless weaved by the Iuoesssnt waves into ghnge groteegueuess, one covered; omeley end gloomy wrong. The pirem need w eome hero to divide and hide their hog, end melt up the nilvetphte they up. 1mm “10 ooluuifld blah“ “1° 00“.. Poe e long time n. WAD supposed the. huehele o! douhlwun were buried in the â€ingenvleea of the rocks, or the [flue u'vu um have bum eaten out o! the lodge-by the res-(Mm tide; but the plus wa- thorouahly numbed by seven! gonor- {Boa-‘0! Manna-z, and yotbing mogo uln- Ida-d ol reunions-s. During the troublusowo “mu bolero and Iuhuquout to the revolution tho lulu d 8m. 03 the mm". at New ENDPINN, won the town and landing plan of the “n vhu haunted mo northern not. Ind thou uncut rocks. it oh? could I“. «my! to]! many a “11.0 moody 1'.- uonnu 0F HI‘AB IILAND. The Only lion-nun: Io Jot- l-llh, the WIVBD WANTBII 0N TRIAL. Was not Sophocles more than ninety when, to prove that he was not in his dot- }ageâ€"as his heirs claimed, in order to get his moneyâ€"he wrote one of his greatest tragedies? Did not Humboldt do more ‘work at tour score than many bright men do at torty ? Goethe. as every one knows. died with pen in hand at the age 0! eighty- two. You Banks. the toremost ct living historians, has just published another volume of his Universal Histor ; he will be eighty-nine years old next cember. Carlyle and Emerson lost none of their vigor until they reached three score years and ten. And. today. who imagines that_01iver Wendell Holmes, already on the verge of seventy-ï¬ve. isol‘d? Longfellow did some! at his best work shortly before his death. at seventy-ï¬ve. and Whittier is now two years older than that. _ The vast energies. whose sum in many directions areknown es Victor E , show no signs-o! decrepig tude', altho II is more than eighty-two, years since ictor Hugo was born. Histo- rians, it may be remarked. have usually been long lived. Voltaire died at 84. Thieray and Mich- let at 76 ; Mignet and (hint at 87. George} Bancroft is now 84, and George Tichncr lived to be 80. In public like we have had several recent examples 0! eat men whose power for statemanship di not diminish through one. Gladstone is nearly 75, and Palmerston was Prime Minister at the time of his death. two days beiore he had completed his 81st year. Benjamin Frank- lin. in the last centuryLlived to be 84. 1W0"; Preserve. the Health, Idle-on ‘ Weaken- It. ‘ Errieeeon.the veteran inventor, wae 81 we old recently. He is in excellent ealth, and works. n is said, sixteen home a day, tune proving an exoeptmn to the general rule. like many others than are received Without a question. thet hard work kille ie a fauaoy. Perhape it might be fairly asserted that easy men live longer man idle men ; that work in, alter all, the true elixir of Me. Many noteworthy instanoee where longer ity coincides with remarkable mental activity will easily ooonr to the reader. maloeeea on their melone. A good many People, I believe. olwoye odd a squeeze of emon to the trait. A Boston lomlly tho! deal with me are alwoye particular to hove their melons ï¬rm and just ripe ond don’t hoggle about prioe when they get ’em to ems. They have the melons out into httle etripe and eat ’em with cold baked beans. put, on I eeid before, for my part I like ’em hlnin H ,7ï¬ _~ w.â€" _-â€"_v-.vu â€" mwuauu Runw- “ Any new ways of preparing the melon for table “ Well, I've been eating melons tor forty years, and I still prefer em plain. Some of my customers. however, like ’em mixed. One of my beet boarding-house customers has watermelon salad every Sunday in the season. She prepares it, she says, aeehe doee lettuceâ€"cute the red part of the melon up into bite. adds pepper. ealt, vinegar and on. It ought to mete ’em sick, but ahe‘ does say her boarders just ï¬ght tor it. Another family that I know of ponr‘ molapeeg on their melons. A good menv Agood many times they supplement the nude With their am. The hoardin -honte and hotel trade is a pretty s y one. You see, twenty oenta’ worth 01 melon will make a big show and go a grea wayaa dessert." “ Any new varieties this year ? †"Well. we have the vanilla and the lemon-flavored watermelon. They are got by injecting the vanilla flavor or inserting abit of lemon into the stem while the melon isgrowing. The-flavor is taken up by the pulp and makes a delieions oom- bination. Only spiouree know of this wrinkle and we therefore have few of the dootored epeoiee on sale. You can get a tootheome dish by plugging it melon. in- jectinga little ï¬ne claret. reatoring the plugand allowing the wine to be taken up by the trait. But. beware. the oom- binatlon in as seductive a Roman punch." in Ann ..-__ _,â€"~ A. and Rate- Wlth lease. 7 “ There'e no ten: 0! e wetetmelonjnmine this eeeeou."ee1de deder at Arch etreet what to e Philadelphia Prm reportet. II he sued upon e ile of the lueoioue. een- ‘ ooeted hunt. " hey on coming in y the host loud. They come meet! Item Jeteey ‘nnd Muylnnd Jun now. ‘uly in the eeneon they come as fer Iouth u Georgi. end Floride. They tense in price team 02 to 016 n hundred." “ Where do they so moetly 7" " To hotels end bonding-heme; to hummer-renew hotels in pettieuln. A few ere bought for ptivete temiliee. Buti they oen’t be relied on to mehe no every- day trade. The poor people buy them n good deal on Betnrdeye tor dundey dinnere. Young people buy them to: whet they on]! water-melon parties. Attel’ they eat out the red pert they enjoy themeelvee by hnnging the nude on _one mothet’e hoods. A _‘n) Flavored um. Van-mi. um um um “0'8 la'l‘lll IN WAT-IMLONU. LONGBVI'I‘Y AND 1.5.03. why that â€panel me from the "mic, ivy sound chum. pinion; 77,--V V...... r“-â€" snow-v othtn proï¬t. and. u the very be». gnu mum to «limos the Month Ivy lewne ere known to but few emong the meny who ere intereeted ingerdening economy. The eon-int, en the neme implies. oi ivy only. end they oï¬er eome peonlier edventegee in oeeee where greee lewnu ere ept to oooeeion more trouble then the ere worth. An ivy lewn mey be well m e inï¬onetlemnin ad it tllie primery opere on o p g proper y performed the lewn will mete iteell; it‘ will went no cutting, no ewee ing, no wetering. no protection iron the thet set the greee eeede to~dey end to-morrow eoretoh up the tender plente, on though it wee their mieelon to mehe greee lewne impoeeible. And when mede. beln . eeit were, eelf-mede, en ivy lewn will e oere oi iteell for my number of yeere; hut iiin need of repeir or trimming. the knife. the eheere or the epede mey be uedwith unekiliul hende, end with the leeet imeginehle ooet oi time. lor itil uoten eeey thing to kill. or even to eeriouely injure. e lewn ooneieting oi ivy solely. Buoh lewne ere unï¬t for gemee. end indeed should not he trodden on. They will not, therefore, supersede green in e country gerden, which, rhepe. in e mutter for oonuretuletion ; ut they will give us the moot delightful hreedth o! verdure in thoueende ol pl_eoee w_here greet ie more _I-_.- A neee. their lowly dooility o! heert, their eptitnde to repoee on e superior mind end rest on e b er power. their childlike nim- pllcity 0! action end feeility ct forgive- neee. In ell these they will exhibit the highest tom: of the peculierly Ohrietien lite, end perhepe, ee God cheeteneth whom He loveth, He heth choeen poor Alrbe in the turnece of emiction to meke her the highest end noblest in thet kingdom which He will set up. when every other kingdom has been tried end teiled; for " the am shell he lent, end the lost flret."â€"R¢oord. perhaps allow {6611‘ Minaâ€"o! “YER“ REE moat magniï¬cent revelation of human ““- WX,,‘P'!.'1!1.-_ “31301! sem- _ A__ A‘â€" .S._ ‘pesslon for ell thet is splendid. tich end encitnl ; e peseion which. rudely, indulged by en nntreined tests. drew- cn them the ridicule of the colder end more correct white rece." If ever Ahice ehell show en elevated end cultivated recsâ€"end come it must. some time. he: turn to ï¬gure in the greet dteme 0! Damon improvementâ€"life will eweke there with e gorgeounsse end splendor of which out cold western tubes lelntly conceived. In thet fer-cit mystic lead 0! gold. end gems, end. spicee. end weving pelms, end wondxone flowers. end :nirechons tertihty, will eweke â€10“!“ of ext. new styles of splendou‘ end . tine negro recs. , no. louse}; -__‘ A_,3; despi â€"-â€"-â€"- nee-convu- eptitude, that mskee this lend s very hopeful. fruitful soilinwhieh toeow the seed of the gospel. And then we must remem- ber that the typical Afrieen is not to be tonnd in the eleas that hes been reduced to slavery and brought to other dunes. The orsdxe ot the grsndeet civilization of the ages pest was in the “key or the ere; and the heart of the Derk Continent to-dsy holds some of the wheat specimens 0! the homes nee. And then the Atrioen is ustnielly aesthetic. “ The negro." says Mrs. Stowe, "is en exotic o! the most gorgeous and superb countries of the world, and he has deep _in_hie heart I. __-_.IA,, 5 may be found there.and theâ€"rev} no '33.; of lruit or vegetable which could not be grown somewhere in its vast area. Copper. Iced, iros, coal, gold and diamonds abound ; and as to its timber land, its toreets are so thick with all kinds of trees that they are now an impassable jungle. Fitty thousand elephants are supposed to be slain annually for their ivory tushs ; India rubber. hides and gums abound. and as to ostrich plumes. the proï¬t 0! one grown ostrteh is $55 a year. More than one hundred and ï¬fty books have been written in description of this grand conti- nent; but the hall has not been told. and in fact not yet known, [or God's providence has for some wise reason kept this continent veiled tor thousands of years, and even new it is only the corner of the veil that is yet hlted. When we think what historic events were wanting to ï¬nd in America the theatre of their transaction, and what wonders ct development followed ‘ the discovery of this hidden continent tour centuries ago. who can tell what may yet be the glor of the civilization that shall1 robe the flank Continent in the lustrous garments of enterprise. education. and. above all,Cnristiantty? Here are mixed peoples. Arabs and Turks. Moore and Jews; various r ' ~ontoâ€"Mohammedan. Papal. Jewish. he po ulaticn is estimated at 200,000,000. 'ca's sable eons _ have a peculiar reunions is one o! the riches: countries on we globe. in vegetable and miners! resources. l‘here are nudlosdons lhu it is yes to prove the world's granny and â€usury. Already when. angst nsue. canon. silk. wool. olives. dstes end 9“?“ uppiesl fruits m-.. L- l-___j AL, _ _, . . .â€"~â€"vâ€" -â€" -â€" It“ WCII“ i .u“ ihia is 11mm nonh and south by obom 1.000 miicu on each side lying in the tonic peruse unto. is thus pronoun within us not are. the moat delightful variety of olimoio. The oonuol hall 01 this are» loud could teed halt the world. The nou- aona are no {Avenue tint. crop. moy be ‘grown throughout lhe your. and dandy you ï¬nd here the ï¬nest rice. Indinn com. sweet pontoon. henna. pannu. melons. aquuhoa, tomatoes. ginger. popper. unaw- looi.ooiion,onguonno,yomn,ooooo,omodo ‘ etc" while month-n ooï¬oo «nine! the palm. “Attic: will you be iho arousal notion. coffee and sugar country " on which the sun ahluoa; |he_world’o mull». Attica Gnu Pan-Dulut- .3 II. 7m Land than (mammo- l- mun. to Control The gun Duk Cum-on! continuo- to “mos the “ï¬xation o: the union. md Chuxohu in in inouulng 003m. Our readers will b. Intforuud in tho touowmg brie! â€count 0! m turltoz'y and . Anion in union tn Inland. ban; to M1. by the nurow inhuman! {in (not. the Sun Cunt! mm- is now tn island. In laugh in shout 6.000 mil», 1nd in gun“! brudth 4.600. It contains nn mono! nearly 13,000 tqunn mile. Ind its no. count in no nun-no than to all uound it wongd be aged so two-thirds the circumuwgnion of tho aloha. It lies in three zones ; m mud oontnl belt; 2! 8000.110]? in in tho â€Rid; sud! THE DARK CONTINBN'L In Law-- High in: “Which M of the nth 3:] you “hi Johnny ?" {hon I'll an Ion-mo, gum. ' “ o nomeâ€" Whuldo you man 2 ' " Tho upâ€: put. 0! mm.â€" m. " H _-._- â€"- vanâ€"uw escape. .Yeetexday a guard happened to leave the grated doon of the hospital unlocked and Cline coolly walked out. and by the aleietanoe of a board eoaled the fence and cleared ofl towarde the vent. He in a German. about 23 yearn o! ace. treeh oomplexioned, with brown hair, weight about 150 ponnde. and height 5 feet 9 inohee. Ha ha- been a thief from his inlanoy. and has been in many of the prison 0! the United Btstee. " I win): I miï¬hifiu tho ad [upon-o; " but he belong. to my wits. I um «king him mm to the hub.“ to hue hit but " Who. no you going to do with the 633‘? â€dull?! o â€ammo; on modulus“ of o son 1! own our) oun poodle under hit an ; " uh Men down to the ring Ind drown him ‘I " moon for bone eteelins in Bunilton. escaped from the Centnl Prieon between 12 end 1 o‘clock yeetexdey. He hed been in the prieon hoepitel for acne time pent under treatment for dieene of the heat. He bed been in the prison about 3 you. end come time ago made on cdront Attempt to empe Igniting ehole in the floor of e carpenter op. A guard heppened to kick may acme of the ehevinge with which he had covered the piece of hie concedment, end seeing the merits of the new. liited the piece end discovered Uline lying iece up in the lining of the floor. Since the. time he bee evidently bc‘en wetchinghie chence to nun-o I line, the III-mo- Ilene The! Walk. on at the mm A prisoner nnmod Hugo Cline. under sentence of 23 momhn in the Central Prison- {or hqno, “ï¬ling in Hamilton. ...- _..._ v. wyu. 15 wen u Aahleree, cicee to he memo! the virgin-l. the immuonlue Seine. -' Augnetne," she exchimed. “duling Augmmm. do not venture into thet hon. You know you might drown. my dear. end thenâ€"end ehcnâ€"" " 0h! pehew. Clemen sine, I'm need ‘0 it. I ehen’t drown.†" Well. myhow. leave me your wetch end chain. thee'e e deer.’ - A end t edy happened ct Beulah in Alsace. A tuner had returned from the ï¬elds with e load of dried clover. Hie lime eon tell eeleep mong the hey. which cov- ered mm from light. The tube: did not know 0! hie presence 9nd .proceededï¬o by the tanible cry which followed the ace. The untonnnete child was pierced ehmugh god through. and died um: immadinmv- and through The “that's. Inning] and died dime; immodin-eT; “swims my on only be A ooneepondeut of the London Lancet says thut he hue practised to: t you-e ou eteunen running between 'vetpool and America: ports. During this time he has hed change 0! 50.000 people. end the deaths weto leee than one per 1.000. Five of these were emoidee end the nmelodor mostly occurred mongohildreu. ' The Pane pepon. though dull. under- etendejohe. They eey “ ThoAmerioen nuthoztues must mueed he hightened about the oholeu. They threeten. unord- iug lo the newepepeu. which olwoye tell the truth. than u Butholdi'u Liberty uuivoe this summer one shell he quuu» tined and hen in the lower buy on the ground that she comes trout uninfected oholete district." . Ten days ago oriare ten through the streateol Bethune.me eell‘ unenâ€" poperextte whoh gove- de ‘ eeeouot of on Orleeniat coup d'etat end a revolution at Pan's. Generol do Gelliflet. . to the deepetohee. hed out-rounded the WW". the Fouhourg Beint Bonoréwee e “9°90 0‘ the meta“ exam-m... “a ton in dud.x W ï¬'féi'aB?-"-§,'T mmt hive been var old indeed n century since use “In 0! W fought.†purer. in aid to be seriously I'll. 80 ha menu! pun] sis and in My uble to wax. When at his mum in 01311306 to parlour: an most on] cloa- to: him. He in guduully tuning to 3 com:- to»; .“I? om ohm ' wo onign no "on Which." : “ Very ltd. inï¬ll)?! l use by this morning's pa re the Duke 0! Welling- ton in dud." " on don't W.†; why. he mint hung in... ...._.- _-_‘ ,- lac-«Io- I- . nuuflenl on... London ha been. ninm an. m Admin! MoOliutock. the “do explorer. deuiu u] we wanton: 0t Dt. Rum- nug the cumiwuu ot the mention 0! the Fruuhlin upodmon. Admin! MoOlintook wit. 1):: 1M 9:. up! binds. A 00!! 710']! ISCAI'IS. An Unpleasant Tank ‘deédâ€" is" :15th 0t Wueuao wu- ..... ..â€" .mmnuu no mine â€man-u m Im- A:- venue-ut- nd conning me 0! than man All on." Canadian son- A Mad. llhummrudenoflhem ADVERTISRMENTS 0! "Farms tot 81!.†M "hum ' ed 1 or "Seed M51080: "Warned" low In Ant ""3!“ " rm; WEEKLY MAIL. «mm pamdc Mr: ml: pa void {0'41" minim-n. or Iï¬mv "Al I. m and a Mllawlr p" word cuhhul‘flfl. 4am.â€" TIM MAI]. Tommlm mm at “was Poi ï¬t...;“ “Fm mum" Coma. Sore Throata Bronchitis. am} all disoraao of the Throat and Guest. as also (-‘uut. Rheum» ism. Scrotum, and every kind of Sail! Disease. Manufactured only at Professor HULLOWAY‘B Establishm: at, 18 New Oxford St. (13:05:13 Oxford S:.}London. and sold at 18. 15d. 23. 9a.. is. 6-1.. 19s.. 9);" gm! 333. each Box and Pot. and in Cunmm t :..'. cents. mcenta. and 81.50 cents, and tho larger size: in proportion. ' wwuw. ma $1.00 cents, and tho larger size! hi proportion. ' L? CAUTIOXâ€"I have no Agant in the United States, nox- are my Medicmes sold there. Pur- chusors should therefore look to the Label on the Pots and Boxes. If the address is not 638 Oxford Street. London, they no apnrioun. 959 _LG_s,om wnunns, cuucns‘ win bofouud invaluable In every household I; the euro of 0pm Sores, Hard Tumours, the nervous system' mid throw into the circula- tion the mmst Elements to: sustaining and re- pairiug e frame. . Thousands of persons have testiï¬ed that ' their use alone they have been restored to heel and strength. after every other means had proved fl ‘Iuvinnnaa Ilium the secretory powm of the Liver. lbnoo I m haw-van- ...mA-...n _._ , A‘ , , . . .- cured for itself an ’beriiahnï¬gfame fhrouEhJEt “35" work} for_ {119 _a .eviaï¬oxg 9m} err-o of most urif , late and improve the quality of the 5:003: Tgey assist the digestive argue. clause 0 lime: to which hulinï¬iiti inï¬hiéri‘r.‘ -_v---vâ€" -w .v-r‘v' I'll- it pmmomigï¬'e toe and improves she hupinm o! munlnnd. v uwve euv que- dlere. who had eome teleht thet wey. end he geve me e â€pir‘mh hie eutogreph on at. Another em yo ertiet et Bhoebury nee: wtehed to mehe e pleeter bust of the young Prince. end eooordlngly they errenged the send end mud to (eke the mould. end he got down on hie hneea end hrevely puahed hie gnu-Bed hoe into the mud. but not (er enough to euit the ertlet. who put hie hende on the young Nepoleon'e neek end pushed it still turther in. When the pleeur oeete wee telxen out there wee e noeelihe e gourd equeeh ehout e foot long. ee the pleeter hed somehow Ioroed e ehen- nelteriteelt. Thie remerhehle buet now etende on e pedeetelju the meee~room et Shoeburyneee. end ie merhed Nepoleon IV. To think or the breve. bright young men ee I knew him. full of life end ho ieh eerneet- urea. en heving died ee he di . mekee my heert eohe tor him. end more tor the mother who loved him so. After my vielt to Ohielehuret. I never eew either of them egein.â€" Olive Homer‘s Reminiscence. Worth their Weight in G060 '1‘H_I_8 I_NCO_MP \RABLE MEDICINE has so- l-puu luv-lo and lo- I... I burn noon the u-Emprou E suit: a “No perhap- o (loan “mu. und never any any on m to ma. “I“ loomed to be in a good hunt a uh. did. Her son (9002 boy I). wt. nude up to: her. to: no bud u an «May me. While a Shoo ‘ ' on Milka-y on! he bud new. It! pho n “ken by onoot the 901- dion. who In some Neat um way, and h. unu- mg - --__ Â¥ _-_ ...... DAILV_AN_I_>WE;KLV MAIL AND OINTMENT. aroma: and. nowmns, YOTT Tun? MAIL rust-em Examine the Inlhe