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THIS WEEKS NEWS. A Summary of Current Events—The World's Doings for the Past Six Days Gathered and Condensed for Our Readers. General. The Pope’s health is unusually good. Embezzler Weeks received ten years in State prison. BALLS FROM THE SKY. An Indian Legend of a Shower of Me- teoric Stones, The Sioux Indians have a legend that is of interest now, telling as it does how an opposing army was put to flight by a shower of meteorites. The legend also explains a layer of stones found on the shores of the Cannon Ball River. This river is one of the many streams of the Northwest that ON TO FORT SILLI The Choicest of Indian Territory Reser- vations Soon to be Opened. After the Cherokee strip, the Fort | Sill countr; People have quite gener- , ally got the idea that the strip affords the last of the big openings of Indian Territory reservations. This is a mis- take, writes a Washington correspon- dent of the St. Louis Democrat. The Fort Sill country is yet to be divided. A FALL OF 3,000 FEET. able Accident to Two Young nglishmen in the Alps. The Rey. C. T. Porter, English chap- lain at Zermatt, has sent some pxr- ticuli gathered from an eye-witness, of the distressing accident that took place on the Matterhorn the other day. 1 believe (he says) this expedition to climb the “Lion of Zermatt” originated with Herr Andreas Seiler, a young » who invited a CHEAP JOG PRUSTING ifty Cents Per Wee} $5 CASH ~~ AND 50c. Per Wee, wv bay you a home CITY OF BOWIE. 30 CiS. PER WEex, 1b the . join to make the Big Muddy, and It is a far richer prize for the home- | man of eighteen ye Prof. Tyndall, the famous English | hows near the Standing Rock Agency. seeker, by all accounts, than the strip. | friend, Mr. Oscar Gysi, of Manchester, The first op pefunity . scientist, is dead. Along this stream, at a distance of four |In round number of acres the Chero- him, and engaged three adall ' PP Offer: The yellow fever quarantine has been | or five miles from its mouth, may be kee strip looks more imposing. But Biner, aged twenty- pe ple te secare Homes raised at Brunswick, Ga. found hundreds pu euuaanuee oe jeheivcstery fuird conn wastes oF a saaet Taugwalder and ne oy Wolly pas Ments ot . -ent, I ‘fino was electrocuted | stones of all sizes. ere is nothing (sand hills. e western half of the | Moser. The ascent was made from «Geek oe Feu Dollare .. gy es Monday. extraordinary in this, the reader may | strip is fit for little else than grazing. | the Italian side, the most difficult and fare per mo a sere poisoned by eat- | think, but the extraordinary part is | With the Fort Sill country the case is | dangerous. The mountaine rs started 1000 {OTS FOR ilf Aue Oe ak Busi ih am 5 d. not in the presence of the stones, but | different. The proportion of fine farm- | together, but after a while young lei the atest & . ee a in their shape and weight. Their sizes jing land is much greater. Prospectors | Seiler determined to push on in ad- city owie, State King Humbert and Queen Marghe- rita were publicly hissed at Rome. range from a marble to that of globes three feet in diameter. This is the who have rcamed oyer the Fort Sill country since the Comanches became vance of the rest of the party, with Biner for his companion. Maryland Only 20 minutes mde rom Washington. Doutle t Andrianoff, who murdered the Mayor | jegend that accounts for the presence jquiet enough not to be troublesome All went well till towards 3 o'clock 22 trains st dail , mee j of Moscow last March, has been de | of the stones: say it is a region that surpasses Okla- | in the afternoon, by which time the - ‘Op Ganly. Pare 9 and clared insane. Many years ago, which in Indian lore ,)homa and the best of the strip. The | travellers had nearly reached the now rem Wasnington, only Six cen Rey. and Mrs. John Alden celebrated | may mean fifty or a thousand years, |Fort Sill country ties in the southern | Cabine de Ja Tour, erected by che by commutation treket. The ina their sixtieth wedding anniversary at | the Sioux Indians ranged supreme all | part of the Indian Territory. It bor- in Alpine Club at a height of 12,- tion of the Battin oy sane Providence, R. I. along the Great Waters from its head |ders on Red River. Just across the | 760 feet up the mountain's side. Sud- nore and Poto. Brazilian insurgents in Rio Grande do Sul defeated Government forces reports no change in Hawaiian aff: Mello is said to have left Rio with some of his best warships to intercept to its mouth. A mighty nation, the Crows, inhabited the land to the west of the Sioux possessions, and between and would eventually become a part of the victorious Crows. One day the Crows gathered in force, and the Sioux river are the Texas cities of Wichita Falls, Iowa Park, Vernon and Quanah. The famous Panhandle wheat belt of /people can find homes in the r ;tion. The Fort Sill country abundance what is so often lacking in denly the guides Taugwalder and Mos were startled with what they thought to be the sound of falling g first slipped we cannot tell. Biner and Seiler were roped together. The rope held throughout that terrible fall BUsiNESS CARDS, mac and Pupe Creek Rail, Telegraph aud Express offi Tne b : he best depot on the Balt i and took 1,000 5 cae the two there was constant warfare. | Texas is along Fort Sill reservation. | stone To avoid this danger they At the “BEE” Office, More Secretary Lamont denies the story ! m6 Grows were the most powerful in |The latter possesses the qualities of | dresscd themselves, with Mr. Gysi, z apd Pot .¢ ra lroad, ra + 4 that he and President Cleveland are point of numbers, but the superior gen- |soil and climate which have made the | close to the rock. Their horror can be | 1109 I Street, N. W., near 1ltu| churches an. ldolaalrvads hott, ; \ interested in wood pulp. eralship of the Sioux more than over {former famous. In addition it has | better imagined than expressed when The most bealthtul tr By Michael Hennessy, of Gaylordsville, | palanced this, and heretofore the war |more timber and water. ‘here are | they saw the bodies of Seiler and where you ean get Say t bealthtu Spot in the é Conn., is charged with fatally burning | had been a drawn affair. As time |about 3,000,000 acres of this Fort Sill | Biner shoot past them and within two State of Maryiard. Titie to prop~ i | his wife by holding her in a fireplace. passed, however, the Crows became uy ‘Those quuied to BRE k say | or three yards on tis spotiwaere tes: DODGERS. erty perfect. No Taxes, und fa i aH Y S -remier of Can- nore and more aggressive, and not a a ere is more first-class rming | were clinging to the | din. e PES e : ee a Say re at ee E oavautane to cad passed See great slaughter jland in this reservation than in the | catastrophe might easily have involved TICKETS. a pear will receive tivejy Canada in the new Wilson tariff bill. on both sides. Each day saw the | strip. In one valley, the Cache, is the whole party. af e PROGRAMMES oe Certificate of 5); ¢ H > sonn 1D recede: numbers of the Sioux decreasing, un- jland for 20,000 farms. After the Co- How it happened no one will evel iS, Free an ee ‘tr til at last the old chieftains realized |manches and Apaches are provided | know, as the two victims had climbed i sia dete eS oe that their nation was dwindling away, | With their allotments 100,000 white | out of sight of their companions. Who CIRCULARS, PRIGE if Lon ORLY $10) TERMS OF I'UKCHaSu: Five « 1O« lars cash aud two dollars per e Pennsylvania Company has si af . Then appea et og, | timber 7006 ality, < springs 4 >] seals 5 Ly 7 aa Re Ps k aon the Toledo. Peo Bn Western | een aay wave of te |beautiful ‘running streams. It has | 1865, when young Douglas Hadow, RECEPTION CARDS, oon 10 per cent diseouns; all cash Railréad, which gives it a new outlet | jong, bony arm stilled the crowd, and mountains and mine diversity of | aged nineteen; Mr. Hudson, Lord F. i 20 per cent dise ant. to the lakes. John Fehn, of Reading, Pa., issued he spoke: “Brethren, the Crows have reinforced ‘climate and resources which the north- f the Indian Territory do Ss ern part Douglas and Michael Croz fell 4,000 feet on the other side of the same WEDDING INVI1 ATION SILL HEADS, _ Mouey will be advanced to ties dessmng tu build. par card: is ds wedding Mon- | their already powerful army. Someof not possess. Adjoining the reserva- | mountain. Thirteen lives have now : day. Hadas hehe and is sateen to | our most elena warriors are among tion of the Comanches and Apache } been lost on the Matterhorn. — Mr. LETTEEADS It a busband purebaser dj another fellow. them. They have proven themselves | With whom the Commissioners have | G, with the two remaining guides, i sea before his purebase is con ; It is said that the revenue cutter Cor- | traitors to the blood that binds them sured y, eutereorinte an agreement for Mu ened) of 5 CUE, to descend with STAT’ MENTS, # deed iv tee will be giv a Naleds see SEK ae rans as Sioux. They have betrayed us the purchase of the surplus lands, is their dreadful tidings. : een sh ju me g1ven to his win will leave San Jape eee dea us co die. The crane will about 1,000,000 acres, occupied by | The descend under such circum- CONSTiTUTIONS, widow, if the property as been Honolulu with rile Hite mesenpet © swoop down upon us and destroy 1,000 Wichitas and Caddocs. This stances was at once trying and dan- BY improved, or if not the the State Department. | everything in reach. Death and de minor reservation is nearly ready for gerous, but they succeeded in getting io . amount A tall, dz man, wearing an ulster with a turned-up high collar, is busy clipping the hair off girls and young women uptown, New York. Ex-Minister John L. Stevens pub- lished a reply to Commissioner Blount on the He in question, charging the latter with misrepresentation. President Palton, of Princeton Col- lege, expre his approval of foot- ball, and denies that the game is bru- tal as represented by the press. The trial of Prendergast, the assas- sin of Mayor Harrison, began Monday in Chicago. It expected that it will require two weeks to secure a jury. The wife of Chief Burgess Body, of Orwigsburg, Pa., made a desperate at- tempt to commit suicide by throwing herself in the rapids at Niagara Falls. The Secretaries of War and Navy have been appealed to prevent the foot- ball game between the West Point and Annapolis Cadets, but they will not in- terfere. Japt. Devery, of the Eleventh Police Precinct, New York, has been indicted by the Grand Jury, on complaint of Dr. Parkhurst, for not suppressing dis- @xderly houses. Ktaly has had another financial shock. The Credito Mobiliare, one of the strongest banks in that country, has asked for an extension of time to meet tts obligations. fty ¢ol r mts arrested by a A Ke re the double canalization for water Msgs y ey ‘disorder on Tound stones that are found in such of a nation in its most perilous hour ply and drainage, being more or le: a Rive AF 8 an were in most cases ®bundance along the Cannon Ball was the son of a thriftless and wan- Joa saturated the soil and r: i cP Pi UTFIT. REE! . reprimand. A few River are the relics of the day when dering settler, bred in the most sordid tye spring level nearly to the sur A) sua i HI [emsiemmaasines Wi asscamaamel struction will mark their path. Our only hope now is in the intervention of the Manitou, and I will give liba- | tions that he may help us in the hour of need. Our only safety now is in flight to the river. When the battle comes on, if the good Manitou does not save us, then it is best to kill our- selves, and when the time comes I will give the signal. Red Dog has spoken. Mind his words.” Red Dog’s prophetic words filled the warriors with gloom, and they began to prepare for their flight to the river. Once on the bank, further flight was impossible, and preparations for bat- tle were made. Singing loudly their war songs, the Crows dashed forward, and arrows and spears fell thick and fast among the Sioux. There was no hope and Red Dog was just about to give the signal for the members of the band to kill themselves, when there ap- peared an ominous gathering in the sky. The heavens assumed a greenish hue, a few drops of rain fell, and then there came something harder. Pebbles began dashing down on the fighting Indians, and the pebbles turned to larger stones until they assumed a size that meant death to all that were struck. Down poured the cannon balls of heaven upon the Crows, but, won- derful to relate, not one of the Sioux was hit by the missiles from the sky. From that day the Sioux were un- molested by the other tribes, and the the Manitou answered the prayers of opening. In fact, there are those in Oklahoma who hold that no legal rea- stand in the way of settlers mov ight into the Wichita countr; Yichita and the Fort Si ations are occupied there will be continuous white settlement from the Kansas line to the Red River. great barrier between Kz Texas will be removed. The same re which forced the opening of homa and later the Cherokee strip begun to operate against the Wich- ita tract and the Fort Sill country. The longing eyes of the boomer ready upon these two fairest of the whole Indian Territory. tions of intending settlers have been formed all along the north line of Texas. Around Wichita Falls, Iowa Park, Vernon and Quanah is a co try which raises millions of bush« wheat ard is worth from $10 to $50 acre. Just across the river from this great Southwestern granary is a coun- try leased to cattlemen for about five cents an acre. Before another spring the cry of “On to Fort Sill!” will be heard from all parts of the border, and 't will be irresistible. Picture of Lincoln. From Prof. Goldwin Smith’s new history of the United States: Abraham Lincoln is assuredly one of the marvels of history. No land but America has produced his like. This destined chief poverty. He had received only the inteHigence of the disaster to Zermatt morning, when sixteen 'S at once proceeded to search for the bodies. These they found fearfully mangled, the body of young Seiler resting upon that of Johann Biner. In the Roman Catholic churchyard where lie the bodies of Hudson, Hadow and chael Crez, poor Biner’s shattered frame was also laid to rest, in the presence of a crowd of sympathizing visitors, as well as guides and villagers He leaves a mother and three sisters to bewail his early death.—Londou Times. The Oldest Waterworks. A recent work on sanitary engineer- in the world. most ancie: seen the Roman Empires, of Babylon, Nineveh, Palmyra and Jerusalem. When taken by the rom the Romans the water-works already existed, and it is probable that the latter constructed the works which still exist and supply the town. Damascus lies in a valley on the River Abana, which flows from the Lebanon hills and is lost in the desert to the east of the town. In spite of a copious supply of excellent water Damascus has had no immunity from epidemics, owing to the fact that ing cities, having and the sewers are rar The city itself is the | ‘all of the Greek and | DRAFs BOOKS, CHECK BDOKS, & CAs Hi ofed people of the city ot Washe .T THE LOW FST PRICES. Liberal Discount to. Courcves | at the sep ‘ Benevolent Societies, Social Clabs, '0 & vote and @ voice in thy already paid wili be returned her i be above presents ap Opporta. nity uever before offered the U. | | Jule jibgiou to secure u valuable ig felther a8 an imvestm: t 5; for g ; home on monthly paym time, eo Military Orgamizatious and Labor & Det of the country. ind Trade Unions. ALL WORK PROMISED. We have p READY WEEN nrehesed an eutire oat i> Of N-w Type with the most pproved modern styles, enabling | Those who appiy first, will nave | the trsi choice of lots. Aiready wavy have made th r homes in the “City of Bowie, and lots purchased on the above termus should duuvle in value wir). ip ibe weXt -1X mouths For turther information apply ti 1. toexecute our work with satis- vt CAMPBELL CAKRING st d ction, to all. We invite ven te call and! spect. our ffice, even if you have -othing for us to do, BEE PRINTING. CO.. 1109 1 Street, Norris BREW SINGTrOn Owner, 505 Dsi., uo. w., Wash netou, D ae i Red Dog. This is the legend.—Chicago rudiments of education, and, though Geaned, are not systemati Being fully aware of the e Governor Altgeld, of Mlionis, says he Daily Tribune. he afterwards read eagerly such works Jated, and they pass under many of aaa Woncing eansne ladicsare = FARM AND HOUSEHOLD Box 1. Martford.louw f& opposed to capital punishment, bat as were within his reach, it is won- houses ‘ ET pee yee we have prepared a Come - refuses to commute sentences, on the derful that he should have attained ‘{0¢ Houses. It is not surprising, there- Swulliz, Outiitcontainingso ground that the law of the State pro- Governor Flower on Good Roads. as a speaker and writer a mastery of fore that Demascusils and always was BS ‘A Bias sat tet ate JH. ta. Dabney sian ri ; ; Z a 2 tious . und parchment. Pay : 7 vides that punishment. In his speech to the farmers at the janguage and a pure as well as clfec- Hiiferent, including “Sprays Gov. Lewelling, of Kansas, instructs Orleans County Fair grounds, Gover- tive style. He could look back smil- : of, Golden Rog “Pansies, ~- the police boards of that State that nor Flower confined his remarks main- jp, the day when his he ans Rules for the Napkin, Inots, Thistles Strawberries, n RT Ki \ RIN 1¢ police boards mat St ae A RCSSRIGR VOTER IGTUT EH ge onpthe/ day when iis long (smanke) | os ie a al den ise os eer nine ee SS NUERT K!IR & CABIN the law under which v: ly to a discussion of public highways. appenred bare below the shrunken fag 2S Uh ue CEE Oe VEGA | Spiders, Storie, Scollops oe Vio KER pelled to work | The farmer, the Governor thought, was eather breeches which were his only 28 to whether it is or is not the thing Skirts, "Crazy ‘Stitch Pat 12> KER rock piles is unconstitutional. the chief beneficiary of good roads, pether garment. His frame was gaunt © fold a napkin after a formal meal. y : derse Poad: Lilies Taker tece 441 L Strees ) W The © Boards of Arbitration of | 224 yet it was a fact that he was eas- gnq grotesque, but mighty. He stood If one is staying in the hous nal 3 et i 05-00, ranging Neu York andl . aS 2 ae leaders ily scared when the question of taxing six feet four, and was said to haye knows that napkin rings are in us | a alco 1 Hox Blue Stamping Powder:1 ‘Box White TANRI GHY FOR AR th Lehigh strike ident Wil- him for road purposes was broached. lifted a cask full of beer and to have there it seems reflection upon t and complete duicetons or Kenetreten Siamese } ~ . pa at Bethlchem, Pa., the arbitra- | New York State spends $3,000,000 a grunk out of the bunghole. ‘This made CUStem to fling the napkin down in an Hroidery, Kensington Painting, Lustre. Metallic Plicter “45 ing to settle the trouble. James Roosevelt Roosevelt's will leaves the bulk of her $7,000,000 estate to her children, share and share alik and the residue to her husband. She A i th ras EAMES DliciEe aia ‘the Magazine. Five for $1. was a daughter of William o - views ere was a simplicity which it e or by 2 sive habi : ie ride nace hes ist ie good macadam road. Or, if the coun- had its source in the simplicity of his ® it either by one obtrusive habit ov HOUSEHOLD. Box 49. Ha pa The Wells Fargo E pays the Southern Company a bonus of per cent. of its Califorr a twenty-one-year contract for Califor- nia traftic A fine statue of Roscoe Conkling. by Seulptor J. Q. A. Ward, has been placed in Madison Square. New York. Levi P. Morton, C. A. Seward, C. P. Huntington, Henry Villard, August jBelmont and other prominent citizens jraised the fund. Thousands struggled to gain admit- tance to the exhibition of the prize winning objects of the World's Fair on the opening day at the Central Pal- ace, New k. It is estimated that the total value of the exhibits in all the departments is $36,000,000. telegraphs have be- ch, work on a receipts for Gen. Martinez npos from Melilla that his force gun rebuilding Fort Gu interfere he will att: them from the front and upon the left flank. A cholera expert who was sent to » by the French Govern- request of the Sultan, to The two last important football ames of the season were between Yale And Princeton and H rd_and the year in money and labor for road im- provement, and yet results are very u Uusfactory. This is an average of $50,000 for each county. That amount of money scientifically expended each year would build over seven miles of ty preferred to build roads faster, that amount—less than that amount ex- pended in interest on bonds—would provide money to build 140 miles of a am. “Every farmer knows,” said the Gov- that bad roads sometimes keep him from town when prices of grain are high. Every farmer knows how much larger a load his team would pull if the roads were hard and smooth. Every farmer knows what a considerable item in his annual ex- penses is the repair of wagons and harness. Every farmer knows how much more it costs to keep three or ; four horses instead of one or two, as he might with equal service with a System of good roads. Every farmer knows that his farm would increase in value if by good highways it could be brought into speedy communication with village or city. All these things outweigh the cost of procuring them.” The Governor predicted that the time would come when automatic vehicles would be used for transporting pro- duce. Then good roads would be ab- The Governor demonstrated by sta- tistics that it would pay Orleans County to issue $420,000 in bonds for road improvement purposes. him a hero with the Clary Grove bo He had a strong and eminently fa understanding, with great powers of patient thought, which he cultivated by the study of Euclid. In all his character. His local popularity was due largely to his humor and the stock of good stories, always pointed, though not always delicate, which through life it was his delight to collect and re- peat. At the same time he was mel- ancholy, touched with the pathos of human life, fond of mournful poetry, religious though not orthodox, with a strong sense of an overruling provi- dence, which, when he was out of spirits, sometimes “took the shape + of fatalism. His melancholy was proba- bly deepened by his gloomy surround- ings and by misadventures in love. Bacteria and Colas. According to the Berlin corresp dent of the Lancet, Prof. Schenk has found that micro-organisms move to- wards warm points. This movement he terms thermotaxis, and he con- cludes as. the result of experiments micro-organisms, which move towards a warm body in their neighborhood, is a vital and that this themotaxis property of bacteria. The further considers that in cer cases of “catching cold” an infection is con- and these, finding admission through the skin or otherwise( produce, after a certain time of incubation, the re- sults ordinarily attributed to “cateh- jon- | untidy heap. An elegantly appointed table deserves better treatment, even at the end of the meal, than those dis- heveled piles of napery. Therefore, it s seems fittest to simply half-fold upkin and not attract attention the othe Phitadelphia Press. Superiority of the Cutiery Grinder. fhe German cutlery grinder is a uperior workman, and in razors he has not a peer. The English work- man will not spare the time to do the s well, consequently the blanks it to him from Sheffield to grind. English stand over the work, the stone being set low. On the other hand, the German has his stone right before his face, and can see his work very closely. His touch is very’ deli- cate, and he can grind a blade as thin as a sheet of paper, and make the best razor in the world. ‘The Spanish Game of Quoits. The Spanish game of quoits—rayeula -is played with unpierced disks of iron about three inches in diameter— is stuck in the ground. The larger of these pieces, the pala, is placed in front of the other, the paietin. To strike the pala with the quoit counts one, while to strike the paletin. which combat the plague, was attacked with | Solutely essential. Why not issue ap reter DHGa is more difficult, counts two. the disease Tuesday and died within a| bonds now and let the coming gener- [ed DY bacteria. Thus a person fe few hours. There are still from forty | ations, who will enjoy the good roads, Hey res sass ie Gg 7 eas A Krupp Fair at Essen. to fifty cases a day in that city, help to pay the principal and interest? @¢tema _prese ya Gea eth War material hs developed to such a marvelous extent of recent years that special interest attaches to an exhi- bition which Herr Krupp will shortly sot be bought at retail for less than ARM AND HOUSER agazine devoted i A ee ADVERTISERS nan learn the exact co. af any proposed line o advertising in Americar papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Ce. Cures C hy . B Coughs, Colds. Asthnens) Bronchitis, Irridescent Painting, Colors used and mixing of Colors Ribbon Embroidery, Chenille and Arasene Work, Correct lors of all the different flowers, Description of every stitch sed in embroidery &., making a compiete Outfit that can- Tico, To. introduce LD, the large, 32 page Illustrated ie interests of the Country Home send one of these Outfits complete ‘o any lady who will send Mae. for probably * cane our farmers know, know tha v tejo. The hubs consist of two curved PLISIN % Wwhich led to the first att of the] the sum Seaieseuciaiees aaeee ees with a specially constructed apparatus Bieteg of wrought iron of an oval balipceicsa opts eee meen ance. co Moors. The Gene if the Moors | in favor of good roads would vastly that warmth acts as a stimulant on shape, terminating in a point, which | ow* @em_ ~ oe Pemwe aet <Puy * aes Wniversity of Pennsyly: Princeton ing cold.” The hair bulb sheaths, 0Pe® in his famous works at Essen. crofulous H i ye . I F sheaths, ateM : Get the Genuine Article —The gre defeated Yale by a score of 6 to 0, Ee sweat glands, and mucous membranes The great gun maker intends to illus- of iisbor's Compouad of Usd-Liver Ox bol Linh _Princeton the coll football Correct Parsing. are all said to offer possible points of ate the prog in the manufacture palm O's ainnpte arlicince tute own manafeebeee ‘hampionship. Harvard defeated the | “What part of speech is kiss?” asked entry to bacteria. SHOWIN eOneTGE eee Ee ance Say Enon meteors Doaaiag Caliaec Sniversity of Pennsylvania by a score | a teacher at Vassar College. i showing @ monster cannon as the lat- Sgaemmption, should be exieful where they purchase rity this article. The results of its use are its best recom- “A conjunction,” replied one of the A Cap for the Obelisk. est triumph among murderous weap- mendations; ai id the proprietor has ample evidence on who testified that 5) instructions and were all drunk and disorderly. “Well—er—it is both common and proper,” answered the shy girl, and she was promoted to the head of her class.—Vogue, nium cap, which will be gilded. The obelisk is now being treated again, so that it will stand the rigor of our cli- mate, x will is his official political testament, besides containing directions for his funeral and tomb, and the division of his Jubitee presents, | WV X'S I AM dealers keep it, Si per trade-inack und crossed 5: “Boss” r. McKane, of Graves- | Smart girl & Cleopatra's Needle, or the Central °° » Phophats poses a most arvelous Soa nf Poeas ond, L. y in the] | Ww rong.” said the teacher severely; Park obelisk, is to have a gilded cap. e fis regulariy preseribed by the medical farcien word sontemp: . He | “next girl. It has been found that obelisks were The Popes Will. , by-4. B. Witsoe, Chemist, Boston, and all druggista, er, and sb nade U charges, | “A noun.” put in a demure maiden. originally provided with a top cover. _The Pope has just made his will. | a See ea epee ing bu McKane| “What kind of a noun?” continucd ing. The Park Commissioners have Years ago he settled the disposition of NTS °° BULBS. ithesses about a dozen | the preceptress. empowered the purchase of An alumi- his p nie property; but the present PLANTS Mlustrationz, and