The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 2, 1891, Page 14

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At Break of Day. When our darling passed away It was near the break of day; And the birds with one accord Sang their praises to the Lord. ‘What a burst of melody! Just as uf there could not be In & world so fair as this Room for anything but bilss. 2th& MAIN STS Slower drew our darling’s breath; ‘Then the peace which some call death - Folded down; and al! around Still the birds made happy sound Was tt only birds that sung? On our hearts amusiec rung As of praises hymned at morn ‘When tn Heaven a child ts born. Hoye and believe; but still, O beart, In What remains take cheerful! part: For all the pain that loss can bring, Thank God for birds and hearts toat sing! moan ee TAIS CHRISTMAS! , IF @ There is a man, a carcless man, That people all deplore, It is the one who comes and goes, And never shuts the door YOU ave, istrations of the latest : and want to s¢ Lu Bince cold and eoughs walk in bis wake, They rate him o’er and o'er, Bot still tac laggard oever ivarns r our catalogue. ‘l ¥ jp wesbenieeitioee oases bs a 4) ge catgiag Games 08 ALL KrNDs. / On bis besa brimming vials of wrath: YOU v.aut to solve that per- ha vgn Tog Senge plexin juestion, “What svt Books IN ‘Yet small effect it has on him, | plexing I yet fer father, or mother, o T He will not shut the door. Dolls “ IF POC wi-h to buy of ua house | fe | Ob, Woods and hills and all things sweet! ‘Wes there no room amidst you all that caries the anest varied, | For two more feet, so soft and small? ‘| », ‘Didat envy me, whero thousands sing. { snd most complete lines of} \ ~ Phe one bird that made all my spring. My dove, that had eo many ways Of making beautiful Life's days? most desirable things, send ENDLESS VARIETY, THE LITTLE ONES. That man the druggist's truc friend ts; By him we set great 3 Here's to his health—long may he live, ! And never shut the door. —Pbermacentical Ers. FOR brother, or sister, or wife, or| husband or friend.” send for til ‘THOUSANDS our catalogue. Two Little Feet. Ob life, so prodigal of life! Ob love and destiny at strife! Ob earth, so full of busy feet! Surpasses Anything In the Wesi. OUR PRICES holiday novelties. send for our | No room! Or rather, it may be Catalogue. ‘Are conceded by all to be absolutely ‘crvtpalepda ot fe fete thee. , below all competitior Make your Thy sweet caress, thy loving Its: YOU want to save from 10! seleetion and order while the y 1g Kiss, ‘The patter of thy dear smali feet, ‘Thy hand in mine through lane and street; While all that now remuins to me Is just a precious memory. | Two littio feet ‘neath earth's brown sod, | ‘Two white wings somewhere safe with God, Laura Harvey, in Chambers’ Journal. assOrtinent is ut to 50 per cent von what you; sure to get what you order. quote the prices of a few ar- sand rarest; ticles to give you an idea of buy, i nd pet, at the same tune \ the choicest thi how The Swinging Gate. | novelties, seud for The twilight 1s full of sadness, | And the wind in its coat of gray . jmuch we can save ye our Cata-} : 7 Skulks like a wolf thro’ the shadows, :Milton’s Paradise x And will not be seared away. PERV man acd woman in the! Lost, 1 ' Down at the foot of the garden ae : , ' a ‘The gate is swinging slow, Uuited States ought to AS if invisible footsteps Were passing to and fro, ABN seems to me, mn my musing, Ped are feet of my coming fate, a And their way to my threshold **% pale’ ithe the wate O say. do yo bring good tidings, Ye unseen messengers? Or is it sorrow and boding Of future griefs and cures? -argatory & Paradk >} Pargatory & Paradise, sy oq Usual have itas a book of reference, | Dantes Inferne, Lo matter where they buy | Bible Gallery, all pro. nels? mer doin IT" worth can't be re | dothas and cents to buyers of eal dry goods, yet we mail it free} fusely illustrated by | Rue 1 | } $4 ta $5 $1.25 il.) FACH. } Wath 83 Dore, cloth bound, ‘The gate swings slowly, slowly, And the shutters creak and start; Tait in the glowing lamp light, But e shadow fills my heart Florence K. Pratt, in Harper's Weekly. Sialenanas 2. to any address iu the United j Shake pave and By Sit rous works, com States plete. profusely | A NUTHEK point gained by deal} lustrated ing With as is, in addition to} y, | the low prices ut which we sell lumes of . popular | SOME CURIOSITIES. | fs | fiction, by prominent | A CALF in Doylestown, Pa, has o| goods, we deliver all cash or | z ! @ouble mouth, four complete sets of lers of $5.00 or over free of| authors, paper - Jaws, with teeth to match, and two! Yongues. » Turret is a street in- Mexico: named “Love.” It is said to be the favorite | Residence street for newly married gouples. » A meteorite found a few weeks ago in the rotten roots of: a willow tree at Denmark, was seen by the finder to fa)l into the tree in August, 1843. charge to apy express office | bound, 2S eent series { in Missouri, Kansas aud Ne | braske. And if what we send | you is not satisfactory, or in! your judgment fails to be as wo sell at 24 cabinets, Y8e. repreuted, you can return it back, if and in like Por 32 cabinegs, silver ornaments and get ur and get yor and cheap, 81.23. money retarned promptly w(Tmeae isa dog in Philadelphia «who | conditiou as when sent out.| For 48 eabineta, rick gold filagree appears a. “ oe ae for You take uo risks whatever, |ormmacnts, $1.48, ali of them 73x16 smoking. le is frequently ‘seen for rches South Ninth street with a i poms seeenenerye So:hie month, and, ae = Wi PROTECT YOU in} Send in your orders at-once. We ee, seems to enjoy : — every way. | -aarantee satisfaction. Umoner the death notices in the Mel- Dourne newspapers are funeral notices, imeerted by the undertakers, respect- fully inviting friends to follow the body t the place of interment. The under. takers add their business addresses and | “son ravcoamn (, BERNHEIMER, BROS. & CO. Kansas City. Mo. The Popular and Progressive Dry Gaods and Millinery House. ‘PERSONAL PARTICULARS. Presext Winuiam Henry Harnri- son, ninth president of the United States, lived only thirty-one days after | en to the office, in March, | Mr. Pamir Armour has started a day | ————--—— - = mareery in Chicago, which he frequent- | ly visite, and where, it is said, a friend | lately:foand him playing beanbag with the children. ee ne ee a a ~~ Banker Evcenr Ketry, of New York, who is worth $5,000,000, earned his passage to this country by driving a | ting car in his native place, County | 1 Ireland. ‘ | Tae late Herman Melville was the grandson of a patriotic’ Boston mer-| chant, who, disguised as onc of the “In- | dians,” helped sink the tea in the harbor | atthe time of the famous Boston tea party. Cor. L. L. Dexstnc, of New York, | enjoys the honor of being the child of Parents wedded by the poet, William C Bryant, when the latter was a justice of the peace in a Long Island village. OF BUTLER, MO. CAPITAL, $110,000. Receives Deposits subject to Check, Loans Money, Makes Colleetieme and does a General Banking Buginess. DEPOSITORY FOR COUNTY FUNDs. In the Real Estate Loan Department. Make loans on Real Estate on long or short time at lowest rates without delay. STOCKHOLDERS; & CORNER OF CONUNDRUMS. Way does a squirrel go up a tree? Allen, Mrs. Levina Hayes, John. Slayback, ka Chestnuts. Hoalware, TC, Physician Hardiiger. WN Farmer smith. GL Livery: man e ” es ark, Monroe Farmer man , urnitare dealer Smith, TLav you, has acat in its tail | atlet. Edmund Farmer Kinney. Don _Ass’t Cashier wkDetin Bryner Margaret Chelf, HB Farmer Coleman, Sam’l L Levy Sam Dry Goode & CiothingTyler, W B Farmer Morrison C H Farmer Miller, Alf Farmer None, they are all outside. Voris. Frank M Farmer Way was Eve not afraid of the mea- Vaughan. J M Capitalist Carathers, G A Farmer MoCracken. A Farmer Wyatt, HC Lamicer dealer sles? Because she'd Adam. nes hes sinter! open Robt Farmer Wells, Wiley Teacher a * . ciats, Robert Parmer wen y Farmer G Farmer Waar is worse than raining pitch- | courtney, J MStock Dealer Pharis, John Grocery Wolfe, Pattie forks? Hailing omnibusses. Waar is the difference between one yard and two yards? A fence. Wr do carpenters not believe in | Deerwester, John Farmer Pharis, U F Grocery Vavis, J R Foreman Times officePowell, Booker Farmer Duteher C H Prof Normal Seh Pigott, H H Bank Clerk DeArmond.D A, M ¢ Rosier, J M Farmer Reeder, Oecar ight TJ Capitalist Weiner, Max Roots & Shoes Walle, Wm Farmer Walton, G W Farmer ans. John Farmer \ sveringham, J Physician Radford, Chas R Farmer Walis, 5 T Physician | stone? They never saw it. Freemam, Caroline and Eliza Reisner, J W Insurance Whipple. NL Physician t Wnar is the cheapest feature in the Fowler, Isanc Sule L Banker Williams, 8 V Farmer face? Nostrils, two for a scent. Wnar is the greatest surgical opera- Yion on record? Lansing, Michigan. President vice-president WM. E. WALTON BOOKER POWELL J. .R. JEXKINS DON KINNEY cashier asst. cashier KANSAS CITY,MO) ARE You Goingtomake AnybodyaPresentof Anything OUR STOCK OF Longfeilow Plush Albums, holds} FACTS IN FIGURES. Sratistics prove that only one man in six who emigrates does so with ad- vaitage. te? are distributed by postal clerks in | the country yearly. Tue world’s hors® power represents a | billion men, or double the number of | workers in the world. For New Jersey is reported a total of $4,307 farms, with 813 abandoned farms, | and an average value per acre of $65. | Dvgrne the nine months since Jan- | uary, 1891, 469,276 immigrants have | come to the United States, as compared | with 381,399 during the corresponding | Period of 1390. | THe budget for the ministry of the | marine of Russia for the year 1892 esti- ;}Mates an expenditure of 40,890,372 | rubles, 5,500,000 rubles more than the expenditure of the current year. From April 1 to October 1, 55,000 American residents crossed the Atlantic in the steamers plying between the ports of the United States and Europe. Arough calculation has been made that | each passenger spends, after his arrival, |about $1,000 (of course many spend mek more), 50 the 55,000 tourists leave lon the other side of the Atlantic $55,- 000,000. ON DIVERS TOPICS. Tacosa, Wash., has a well one hun- dred feet deep from‘ which the wind {blows continually. As there is fifty feet of water in the well the source of the wind is a mystery. | Or the once powerful tribe of Tonko- wa Indians only seventy-eight members | remain. They occupy a reservation that was once the home of the Nez Per- ces, embracing 90,000 acres. AcuvtEcH in an Arkansas town has this legend in conspicuous letters in the rear of and alittle to the right of the pulpit: ‘The Lord Will Provide.” To the left, and equally conspicuous, fs {the request: ‘Please do not spit onthe | floor.” its best, and you! Oxe of the popular superstitions of | | the negro of antebellum days was that if a honeysuckle had forced its way | through the chinks of the cabin and was | growing inside, a8 it often did, it was a |sure indication that they had not led upright lives. | A PRACTICAL joke which the best man | at an autumn wedding perpetrated was to deliver to the porter of the parlor car in which he sew them off a sealed ! telegraph envelope with instructions to deliver it at a certain station. The darky duly did so and the groom broke the seal'to have’ a small avalanche of | rice pour through his fingers. | BRIGHT GEMS OF THOUGHT. | i ‘THOUGHTLESSNESS is the curse of the j age. A COVETOUS man never owns anDy- thing. WHENEVER a map gets madhe kills himself. ALL people are “peculiar people” to} witr an X ot the end, spell Su; somebody. A GREAT many people pray most for the things theydo not need. AN empty gum that you thinlcis loaded will scare you as badly as one that.is. ‘Tue world is full of lion fighters, but nearly everybody will run from the hornet. | keeps a good many other people from ! wobbling. A ria’s idea of a parlor probably is ter of it. Tur man who swears at his children Ram's Horn. WITTY AND WISE. LF you would lift me up you must be on higher ground.—Emerson. Errorts, to be permanently useful, must be uniformly joyous.—Carlyle. “Money talks,” but to most people it says good-by.—Chizago Inter Ocean. HE that collects his thoughts is com- pelled todun his brains.—Pexas Sift- ings. SEEK the good of other men, but be |not in bondage to their faces or their fancies.—Lord Bacon. Five things are essential to suecess in life. One is a good wife: the four others | are money.—Richmond Recorder. | ; He that allows himeelf Bae ap ar sf ‘that is permitted is very near to | which is forbidden.—St. Augustine. ; Wuen things go wrong at home the small boy is never at a loss to put his finger on the seat of the trouble.—Dal- las News. AUTHORS OF MANY LANDS. Prince Hexny of Orleans‘has entered the ranks of journalism. If one of the last issues of the Paris Soleil the article on “China and Politics” is from his pen. Witt1amM Morais, the English wall- paper maker, poét and artist, wears an old slouch hat, rusty sack coat, baggy trousers, a bine flannel shirt and no necktie. ‘THE boak of poems written by Mr. Frederick Tennyson, the brother of the} MATERIALS OF ALL KINDS poet laureate, contains ten long poems im blank verse, of which the ‘‘Payche” is sa&l to be the most philosophical. Baroness von EsN@R-EsCHENBOCH, the foremost woman nowelist of Austria, has also such a practicail knowledge of watchmaking that she is often called upon to repair the antique timepieces of ber friends She hers:if has a col- lection of watches which it took years to gather. PEOPLE OF OTHER LANDS. | OurveR Goxpsurta’s grave in the | Temple churchyard, London, bas at llast been given @ little stt:ntion and {has been renovated and repaired, the ‘old lettering of the inseripfion being recut. THE newest acrobatic feabis by s | London cyclist named Minting, who, | after the manner of the artist who used ‘ to roll a ball beneath his feet up a long : Spiral board, rides a unicycle ap a spire ; but twenty inches wide arid one "dred feet high, He has nets stretehed below. ABOUT 8,000,000, 000 pieces of mail mat- And it was gingérdread— hearts of the young, besides hundreds of illus- SUNG BY THE POETS. trations by leading afuete will ine to sa | make Harper's Young People for Iss? and ir- Tommy in Disgrace. | resistabie repository of pleasure and informs- @hey made a cake—twas long and wite and tion for toye and girls +The best weekly pnbiication for vouag peo- 2 wook a grest piece of it, and tl at We In existence It is edited with ecrtpuless iswhy[moowisbeh 8 j care and attention, and instruction and eater, : = : 5 | talnmment are mingied in its p in jogt the shouting loud and er thi they skim. te = dare pate down to Edward's mili ‘To Bail on logs and swim; And then they'll eat, beneath the apple tree, Green apples while they rest; And then they'll! stone fn their unbounded glee The hornets, swinging nest. Tbough I must stay in Ded till after tea, | right proportions to captivate the mind- of the | yonng and at the same time to Cepelep their ; thinking power —ubserver, N.Y. TERMS: Postage Prepaid, 82 0 yer Volumes V., VIII. and Xfi. of Harper's | Young People, bound in cloth, will be sent by | mail postpaid, on receipt of $3 @ each. The other volumes are ent of print Rolled in a sulien beap, —_— TU show them that cannot punish ma Single nambers, Five Cente each. Specimen I will not fall | copies sent on receipt of two-cent stamp Remittances should be made by postefice | money order or draft, to avoid chance of joss. } Newspapers are not to copy this advertise- | os ‘without = express order of Hanrand i ens. Address: | Baornats PEM 2 BROTHERS, New York. NA asleep. -—R KE. Munkittrick, in N. Y. Independeat. Where Memory Sleeps. Where memory sleeps the sou! doth rise, Free of that past where sorrow lies, And storeth against future ills The courage of the constant hills, The comfort of the quiet skies. Fatr is this land to tired eyes, Where summer sunlight never dies, And summer's peace the spirit fils, Where memory sleeps. Safe from the season's changing cries Ana chill of yeariy sacrifice, Great roses crowd my window-sills— Calm roses that no winter kills; ‘The peaceful heart all pain denies Harper's Bazar. | ILLUSTRATED. al for thehome. !t with regard to the illastrations, P. ie alike to the heme-dres and professional mediste No expen is Tue man who walks straight himself | 7 inches high and weighs 210 pounds. would want to hide his head forever if | to stands seven feet seven inches in his he could know jest how mean he is.— | slippers. Where memory sleeps. | ~Charlotte P. Stetson, in Harper's Basar. spared to make ite artistic attractiveness of the highest order. Its bright st musing comedies, and theughtful essa: afy all tastes, and its laat-page is famous as a budget of witand humor. In its weekly issues every- thing is included which is of interest to wo- men. The serials for 1~3 will be written by Walter Beasant and William Black Mrs. Oli. hant will become a contriputor. Marion Har- jand’a Timely Talks, ‘**Day In and Day Out’’ are intended fer matrous, and Helen Marshal North will specially address girls. T. W Higginson, in“ Women and Men’’ will pleace acuitivated audience. HARPER'S PERIODICALS PEuU YEAR: He Foand It. He was rich and he tried to be happy with this And that and the other fn vain; | There was something continually going emise ‘To worry the heart and the brain. ‘Thea bh aid to himseif: “All my efferts but Tha: happiness cannot be beught.” others he tried to make happy, aud lo! The happiness came that he sought. } N.Y. Press. ‘The Circus in the Bara. “Only three pins!” cried ttle’ Ray, Bill Jones wil! sell it om the gras, I'm going to be the ticket maa, ' T want to se!l ali that I can; } One for mamma, one for Bess, { And siz for al! her dolis, I guess; j And then, you know, Jane must come, toa, “ To get into our barn to-day, HARPER'S BAZAR . ow And see o circus with a clown; HARPER'S MAGAZINE . 4m A dareback rider, Jimmie Brown, HARPER’S WEEKLY. ves 40 Bae enon ase Dk Se eee | HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE a0 e free to all eubscriberes inthe United ‘anada and Mexico ‘The Volumes of the Bazar begin with the 3 3 fret Number of January of each year. When And little Ned, and Grace, and you." no time ia mentioned, subscriptions will begin Ta not a pin, and so f went with the number current at the time of receipt To mamma's cushion—some were bent And would not.pass, and I had quite A time to make the change just right. Then when we all got to the door A downcast look my 1ad's face wore; ‘The cirous men could not agree As to whe the ringmaster should be; ‘The trapeze boy bad hurt his head And should mot act, his mother said; ‘The clown’s Aunt Kate forgot that day The circus came and went away, And did not sew the silver stars Upon his trousers, nor the bers Of biue and red. 1t was too bad. i And so I told my little lad. He ead be wished he was a man, | ‘Then he could carry ont each plan: | But | wished much that | could be | * A lad again, and once more see Harper’s Magazine. ILLUSTRATED. ‘ of order Bound Volumes of Harper's Bavar for three | years back, in neat cloth binding, will be seat | by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 00 per volume. Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, en receipt of $1 60. | Remittances should be made by Post-oftice or money order or draft, to avoid chance of loes i }.Newspapers are not to copy this sdvertiee- ment without the expresa order of Hanrar & Brorners Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. Those good old days when pins were made The lawful carrency of trade. —Doll's Dressmaker. | The Magazine will celebrate the fourth Cen- teneary of the Diacovery of America by ite re- discovery, through articles giving @ more therough exposition than has hitherto been made of the Recent Unpreceden! Dev ment of our Country, and e+; ty io the Great Weet Particular attention will also be given to Dramatic Episodes of Ametean His- tory. The Field of the next European War, will be described in a Series of Papers on the Danube ‘'From the Black Forest to the Dead Sea, Poultney Bigelow and F. by Mr Millet and Aifred Parsons. also will be given on the German. Austrian, and Italian Armies, illastrated by T. De Thul- strup Mr W. D. Howells will contribute a new novel, ‘‘A World of Chance,’’ characteristic- ally American. Eapecial prominence will be 300 | Bi¥en to Short Stories, which will be cotribat- ed by T. B Aldrich, R. H. Davis. 1 What's a Speller to Do? j Man S and an [ and on O anda U, nd oo E and a Y and an E spell I. Pray, what is @ speller to do? Then, {f also an S and an I andaG And an H E D spell cide, There's nothing much left for a speller to de But to go and commit sion-xezecithed NATURE’S QUEER DOINGS. A Ggoraia boy of seventeen is 6 feet A vearon exhibition in New York city weighs six pounds four ounces. SquasnEs weighing from 250 to A. Cenan that it has a big mud puddle in the cen- | pounds are common in southern Cali- | Doyle, Margaret Deland, Miss Woolson and orni other popular writers g a Among the literar: . features will be Person- A LitcHFIELD man who is looked up | a! Reminiscene: thaeiel Hawthorne, by his college cla and life-long friend, Horatio Bridge, and a Personal Memoir of the Brownings, by Anne Thacaeray Ritchie. Deviance, Ia., has a man five feet six ight who weighs but sixty- ue By wd oe” i | HARPER'S PERIODICALS. = “ __ | HARPER’S MAGAZINE, Per Year. ....0¢0 ii ani 7 HARPER’S WEEKLY, “2 4m —GO TO—— HARPER’S BAZAB, oo 400 FIARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE, ** 200 Postage free to all subscribars in the United States, Canad: CG. A. VAN HALL, —SUCCESKOR F. BERNHARDT & CO. The Volame: the Magazine begin with the Nambers of Jun id December of each year. When no time is ified, subscriptions will begin witn the Number current at the time of receipt of order Bound Volumes of Harper’s Magazine for three vears back, im neat cleth binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on releipt of $3 00 per volume. Cloth cases, for binding, cents each—by mail, post-paid. Remittancec sheuid me mede by Post-oftice money erder er draft, to avoid chance of lose. Newspapers are not to copy this advertise- Ment without the express erder ef Harran & Brotngrs, Address: HARPER BROTHERS, Now York 1892.” Harper’s Weekly. ILLUSTRATED. illustrations, and a greater number of ar- ticles of live, intense interest than will be foand in any otaer periodical. Among these latter will be a serise of articles on the twenty- ase bepiy eleserbed cooeet ee ffive = hondre rations. e Columbian Expo- NINE CIGARS, sition the Army and Navy,great putlic events ARTISTS ro— —FOR— PURE DRUCS MEDICINES, TOBACCOS AND re om land and sea, and the deings of rated peepie of ¢ y will be iiuetrated im attracti od The Department ef Amateur nder the direction of Cas- modern writers will contribute short stories, and the most distinguished artists will make the illeetre- tions. The editorial articles of Mr. George pealigas Curtia will remain as an especial at- Prescriptions Carefully Compounded —— o = 2 A liberal Patronage of the HARPER S PERIODICALS. public ia solicited. Per Year. — HARPRE’S WEEELY ......... oo HARPER'S MAGAZINE . se 1892. HARPER’S BAZAR....... 40 HABPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE ... 2 anne Harper’s Young People. AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY. | ‘The Thirteenth V. { Peo col e Free to all subscribers in the United nd Mexico. The Voinmes of the Weekly begin with the firet Ramber or Jemnery of each year. When ne time is specified, subsoriptions will begia with the Number carrent at the time of receipt of order. iume of Harper's Young le began on Rovenber 3. ise For the year this it and most compre- » i censive wackiy Sache worllifocveuramatne: | Boast Volumes of Harper's Weekly for ere offers s varied and fascinating programme | three years back, in neat cloth binding, wili In serial fiction it will contein * Diego Pin- {be sent by mail, postage psid, or by express. zon.’ a story ef the frst voyage of Colambue. | free of expense ‘provided the freight does not by John RCorveli: ‘‘Canoemates: A Stery of | exceed $7 per volume) for 87 W per volume. the Florida Reefs and Evergiades.’’ by Kirk | Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for Mo nether story by one of the best binding para sent by mail, post-paid, om nown snd most popularof American anthers: | receipt o an ries in three and four parte by Thomas! Hemittances should ve made by Post-ofice | Ne Page, E H. House, Angeline Tea! FE) | Money order or draft, to avoid chance of loss. le Redman Charch, and Mary 8 MeCobb Mor F Newspapers are Dot to copy this sdvertise- j than two hundred short stories by favorite | ment without the express orderof Hagrae & suthers, articles on travel, out-of-deor sports| Baroness Address: pacer games. and sj! eubjerts dear to the} HABPPE! 4 : R & BROTHERS, New York.

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