lotlc iHtmtincr. ltahod every Saturday at Heel, acd ho HARLOTTE, N. C. feather to br, _ B y _ farmer a pock p, •SiTvrinrn himself upon nor crab gras, übscription Bates. agricultural ] Alway* in Advance) . the lead. Tc : : ; ; _ 50 vated with m 40 than it is in at once of all failures of this produce eh you on time. proportion to * must be sent by Register, Money , ‘ .. , ■tal note to ,hlm 80,1 h™ w. C. SMITH. fertilizers. 1 respondence on subjects of inter - nrtf mblic is solicited; but iiorsons area of JO,OOC ? disappointed if they fail t > see wheat 40 000 sin our columns. Yve are not . . ’ . for the views of correspondents, tensively cult communications go to the waste bacco, hay, it live stock. J RDAY, JULY 81, 1886. I noticed the ----- ~ ■■ ■: —•- walnut, hickc 'o Our Exchanges. Pine lumber i harges will please direct to sells readily f n: Messenger. ” There is a f eet> undress, n'Sion! iShCdh " e - ThiS Western p are iron, copj I omitted s nr Industrial Fnir. this State in r— ... .... nuia» — 1 L.ho'vever, a m nesday VW at net Col. George discussed the “industry of the The middle 'l f pie.” The court house was Tllis ■“Wdle f a large number of ladies were hcrb:l 8 e knov were well pleased with the “ uins S reen » 1C Colonel is well educated, a Statcs labor i a polished speaker. He told P (?c ially is thi, the natural resources of our ~le diversified * wealthy colored men among ra ilroads, min tilled mechanics, artisans, cd- lend an institutions of learning. He Imrncd hands the great advancement made £> of d field ban in the last twenty years and s ls and hoard ■ight future before us, all of $1.60 a day an i encourage us to greater es • railroad; cc Ii the highest possible stand $lO to sls pe n - receive $1 doz, •lift the eolored man is a sections white lan inventor. That it is to the place of th, educationally to exhibit field and dome, to the world. That it may however, is doi the shaping of legislation provii.g his coi: thereby benefit not only our- ally and intell ’ entire country. lie spoke own large farm institutions of learning m from debts, am vliich are employed eolored In the cities md it is remarkable to note Waco, Fort We rn North Carolina we have °wn splendid Ic and seminaries all on e n e nnd are sitting n less than a hundred miles, fig tree. There we have colored teachers, for colored peo) a Wesley College—is man- alio the State n< by colored men. summer normal m’s course here 1.11. ' J’’-—■ ...... . > # Cl)arl (KM CH w. Su (> 1 year, « months, r. J. T. W *s his professional service §LH ANSWERED DAY ■o, Fourth street l»etw. h. rear of express otfic- CO TC & A.] FOR KS AND ST, AND CIIMM ,11 S course Here has create ' * * j* and enthusiasm than the canal - | wn. A local organ iza s A - p - Smith ’ f;,r ' i, id the people took h-‘ 10 Ba * s ,hat he has 1 waikeu ,-r the whole course of fifty- \ four miles. The portion of the canal ; completed is upon the eastern side, and is eleven miles in extent through a level country mainly of clay formation, Here is a specimen of the work done, in Mr. j Smiths words: “One of the many stupid expedients which the canal com pany adopted for holding the mud was to put up an ordinary wooden fence, fastened with bamboo withes and stakes. Os course, in a little while the pressure of the half-liquid mud became too great for the weak barrier to withstand, and down came fence, mud and all into the cinal again, to he once more dredged out at an enormous expense. A yet more curious state of things exists at places further in shore, where other cuts have been made by several different contra-- 1 tors. There have been no specifications ' ia these contracts as to what si,all be done with the earth after it has been excavated. What is the r. suit of this ! , emission? The contractor simply load j it on hand-carts and mn it back a little way in the cut which they have made . 1 and leave it there. The con sequence is , that all this t a-lh, all these stumps and 1 •stones shall have to be excavated all j ' i ver again, to the tinmen c profit of the , j :ontractors. j, • I ,311001 OUppi 1 to 1 cxns. I O--.v —provcTln westing read al home dec s especially memorials! iy at 11.05 o’clock George ,*£. to he 1 lun o cf l in ‘lie jail for a crimi of the* ‘f 10 " ,lis own daughter, lie exists s innocence after the rope was to col js neck, but the court said he when gran its ployeCriole Literary will meet next now t l:Ve ”ing at Mrs. Ed. liutler’s. Iy for ers arc: i*. O. Held, president; churr- ,lz a J- Houser, vice-president; Me%euietra Grier, secretary; Sirs. |{. \ tikis i 1 ' 1 ' tr< as,,r< r ; James Foster, chap sion extra session of the A. M. E. miri'iiec of this State will convene in i ' itUigli next Wednesday. We are in r. Jy-’d the trouble is caused by the JJpfer of Northern ministers to all the ; churches in the conference while ‘,'young men are crowded out. , I lie Democrat ie nominating con vent ion sill meet in Columbia, 8. C., next Kcdnesdny to nominate a State ticket. til is said that Capt. H. It. Tillman leader f the farmers’ movement, will control le convention. Old time Democrats teem much worried over the situation, (ban any good come out of the situation ■or the poor laborer? knew what a hydra-headed, Hus RU inster crab grass; is to a Tar i, aw the use of guano proves a Hke snowy teak the camel s buck (the i/kedcwd ket) he would congratulate Likofros i having no guano bill to pay Bo vanish 3 ss to murder. Among the 80 beaut. pursuits the cotton takes Lfkebloss} . ..... .. Thus run exits is the best cotton grow- » the Union. Cotton is culti- Like foam nuch less labor atd expense la ’ te Bun! , the Carolinas. The land Over the i more cotton and corn in go swiftly o the acre without fertilizer Hopes, pi ■c in the Carolinas will with Alone wo r The cotton belt covers an Thus run )0 square miles, and that of Os friends ) square miles. Corn is ex- We’re, dt Itivatcd, also sugar, rice, to- The spectre indigo, potatoes, fruits acd Love’s cha Among the trees of the forest We sing 1 ; oak, cedar, ashe, palmetto, Forlorn up, :ory, sycamore and the pine, Thus run, ■is a great commodity and __ for $1.50 to $2 per hundred THE sed. Vast herds roam over plains. Among the minerals iper gypsum, salt, coal, &c. BOW BTLVU speaking of the climate of “Grampa! the proper place. It has, lo ®? rn * > his mid healthful climate, been pillow, rttiania t f° r ' ts cattli. n» the hig] pran.. I,*- , ..i fo, W e fellow;'] prairie is covercu arm-chair.*' wn ns mesquit, which re- p " as a w all winter. In all the new is in great demand, and es- over the es is the case in Texas, while These—the i d pursuits farming grading « ara ning aod the rearing of live They woul n inducement to the man of care; but she > and sterling industry. A 8c # e » ®bo ■ld can readily command „id‘‘Litchfiel' d a month; railroad hands, think still st nd board, that is for grading most cranny , looks in private families, ?' he .. folk ‘ icr month; washer women where—exeer zen for washing. In some kith nnd kii ’ laborers are rapidly taking ,n dlicr heart .e colored laborers, both ns estic servants. The negro, as one, and, I oing passably well, is l’n- like one if sh, edition, materially, mor- . J ' ,Kt now , h llcctually. Many of them ns. well cultivated, free men in the w id arc regular landlords, sober, of Galveston, Houston, „ he 0 orth and Dallas they also C oe!) n lots comfortable dwellings, “Why, who : under their own vine and Sylvia replied, ■e are also good colleges , “ Put i iple. some three or four; * “Most°giner lormal school. There is a interrupted. 1 for colored rar-i... “Was a-tal v . " -WJ*! night a strO'ng a i al I kept and we made ready against a sur- J prise. After the first four days we be -1 gan bartering for pelts, roots, gums, ; woods and the like, and everything was plain sailing. It was on tl.e tenth day | out-, at abcut mid-after tiwou, that trouble came. We were towing the schooner i ahead against a sluggish current, in a por j ticn of the liver split into several chan nels by bars. I was ordered into the ; small boat, along with James Keys and William Price, sailor men, to sound a channel and pick out a berth for the night. While the schooner was being held by the yawl we forged ahead around a bend in the river, and the thick forest shut out the craft from our vision. It wasn’t two minutes after we lost sight of the schooner betore three canoes, each holding five natives, dashed out at us from the mouth of a creek. The black fellows made no noise, but pad dled full at us. This put us in a fix, you understand. There had been no hostil itics as vet, and it would not do to fire upon them, though, on the other hand, we c ouldn't understand why they were making for us in that manner. -We didn’t have more than four or fire min utes to spare. I was sounding, while Keys and Price were rowing. Price dropped his oar and raised a musket, but we protested, and he laid it down again. Next moment, we were surround d, and a dozen of the I feliows had their hands on our boat. 1 They were armed with bows and arrows and old British muskets. AVhilj offering us no violence, we could plainly under stand from their gestures that we were I psisoners. They took the oars and ; muskets from our boat, and in the course j of five minutes we found ourselves in the •ii#* t1...- ...» .-. i up-on an equal footing with the members j of the society. Os course the business and social meetings of the society are held privately. Once a mouth or once in two weeks would lie often enough for public meetings here. Short programs j with one interesting paper and plenty j music at each meeting would do much ! toward entertaining and bringing out the j literary and musical talent among our ! people. Our citizens are not aware of I the talent that is among us. Our young people want an opportunity to exhibit and cultivate their talents. We know of no better stimulus than public literary meetings properly conducted. When will we have the first public meeting? Web-Footed Cows in Nevada. The cows down at Empire, on Iho Carson Hiver, feed on the numcroiu •mall, low, flat islands at that point, which divide the river up into many meandering sloughs and branches. A ihort time ago, when the river was high, these islands were completely sub merged, but now they are above water again, and covered with short, sweet grass, which the cows eagerly seek. They are spdlsed to wading and swim, ining from ono point to another that Iheir feet have become broad, with i strong thick web, like solo leather, formed between the toes. Any one of those cows can out-swim a rowboat or an alligator.— Virginia City (Am.) Jin terprue. LINS the WORLD away, r-xyers, Gran biting Sylvia ry lilies fleet ee fine, “Good-by. fragrant course is run, * ou'ro queen drops on the eglantine, in S*” >st-work in the sun ;’ 4 *‘Queen! youth's delightful dreams, “Queens dor ity’s charms decay; ( St °. < ;f‘i l "*,’ ‘j’ 1 nms strewn on sparkling streams, T ao ” I *' ns the world away. •gu s , some b;:by s stecrf! 1 upon the billows bri .tat, ? ori? about it, nset’s gorgeous dyes,' Sylv a look nbearas shedding silver light, 1° se( e jeweled skies; ; make hei jus r from our vision glide * basket, with plans and projects gay, co.ner 4 and a roam at eventide; ) * ‘Good -bj% ns the world away; j ‘Good-by. Tim dishes i whom ruthle-s timO destroy*, S\ I'i i took iay by day, bereft; \ milk. Ove res of our perished joys, s cows the comrades left. , The tinkling x n is broken link by heard ; the mournful lay, ' , • thr ta ie did care very much, ‘ tbe c ills. ,out something else. °S gray Silvia weal in Cornwall, amono ths I who was liar.l -•id Hills, that stood— t3 tern- sec ned in c stand—in the norlhwe 1 * hou«e; but h ' of Connecticut. from them, of Cornwall are Bo f f -l but “Supper's i night to be, of course 1 * own “Don’t say ipt among the reader"'* r<^ler ’ say as I am, q ;in—will you find sti bt b° of down a first, t rts? Where? And w°' lvia? “Please cor icr, sweeter than after sapper,’ s pine knot she was 1 T° r «P After suppt lam sure, could flare' 1 firelight, -'ft: ie got a-fire. n full But soon- no however, her eyes were -^P a asiet '|>. Inai s with happy tears. GraiP' th « " is l -• eyes, det her laughing, although 8 ,her about got aslc woods thought him ra f I bps when the; , , ' , nee ’ forgotten the «sked, pinching her k’ n P a they were ash missy want out’n GraiJ Towser were t ~ _ S‘ the fire—whit o said I wanted anythin ber cvcn i n „.. n, an eager quaver in ! 1 a under its grai I_do. Mrs. Cotter wa; When Sylyi ’rally kinder always is,”' ha id beating' likin’» -i storming. SI "k'n, continued Sylk.l '‘ a i. i . K** : I me, ana a Utile time ago he made a break ' to get away. I think he must have ) wounded s >me of tho native, and that;, he gave them a sharp fight, for thev,., tin shed him off. I saw his dead body— as they brought m? here.” (1 “The chief was not a had looking fcl-Jj i low. lie hd a droll and cunning lookr I about h s eyes, nnd ho watched ant( ! listened attentively while we were speak* i ing. Near him stood a native, whd proved to lie an interpreter. He had evidently been in the employ of the lish, for he could speak fairly well. At a sign from the chief he asked of us: , ~ “ ‘You write?’ . “Keys shook his head, while I tqid yes. He then placed before me paper, ink and pens, and after a confab 'with the chief he slid: “You write Captain. One of you | dead. He buy others. Want Riuskets, powder, hatchets, beads and cloth. He buy you in two days. No buy you, you no get away. Write,quick. Canoe take him down to Captain.’ “I caught the idea at once. We were to be held for ransom. Sailor men use tbe pen so little that none of them can boast of their scholarship in that direction, but at the end ctf half an hour I had finished a letter to the captain, telling him all the circumstances, and , i entreating him not to leave us to our j fate. It was no sootier placed in an | envelope and directed tto him than a J native seized it and li/imed away, and* i Keys and myself were taken back to our* separate huts. This \Aas about 8 o’cloclJS in the morning. By noon the felloi#! I was back with an answer, which rcaw j j “You must try tr/escape. 1 have no in- 1 j thority to trade off the goods. How nufleh j tie .a Him otate. ‘ * \ equipment that is required is a knowl edge ofhow to erase brands and a brand ing iron. “A piece of wet blanket,” he says, “was wrung out after being dipped,, in water. A common frying pan was' then heated nearly red hot. The wet | blanket was then applied over the brand and the red-hot pan pressed hard against I it. The steam generated scalded the hair clean off, and the job was done. The J same plan is adopted by horse thieves. ! Then, again, these fellows had a i j kind of branding iron with which they | could change a number of brands. I once heard a Texan boast of a man in Presidio County, Texas, who started in , twenty years ago with only two cows and a branding iron and is to-day worth SIOO,OOO. I told him that 1 knew half a dozen men in Now Mexico who started in with nothing but the branding iron j and are to-day worth SOOO,OOO. The branding iron has made the foundation of many reaper table fortunes.”—Aim Orleant Timet Democrat. A Lame Excuse. ' Colonel AVithrrspnon is well known in Austin for the meanness of the dinners to which he invites his friends. One day he said to Gilhoolv: “I wish you would come and dine with me.” “When?” “Well, say two weeks from to-day.” , “I’m sorry I can't come on that day, ’ for I’ve got an engagement to atttendtht ! funeral of a dear friend. ” — Siftings. Fortune shows her beds to the man ' who wooes her, but advertising is the gun that brings her downV \ ' indpa ahouldered his ax, and “Safe! Y a to kiss her, said: 18 J on . Take care o’ things. “Now take s, n .now of the whole mount- u Jfgj fgj The Dearie me!” replied Sylvia, heart, and it in’t wash dishes, and darn Safe. And s nd”— ■ - tnow,” he answered. “Yes, s queens’d want to darn th ii HI tin's. We’ll ask Queen 'Vtc t, when we go to see her.” To stop the ked sober. Any queen w mid f ine powder o ee Grandpa, and she would n , . :s’ the prettiest little work- _ . . ' i a piJk pincushion in one coffee to clear n rustic “V” wc r keil— Soothing n •, liit’.e one!'* said Grandpa, ounces of , ounces of pea swashed and house tidied, licorice root; lur pitcher to go for the water until r» er this old coal-road Mr. \ two ounces o s passed to and from pasture, wineglassful i $ of the cow-bell could le cough is t If vaseline t wlked along she looke 1 far 6kin immedial h<- valley where lay her home, there will be i ite, with petals of the white time as poss: g frem it like snowflakes. elapse from tl sh,” she said, when she had cation of the ’ milking awhile, “pl-aselct person came ilk?” projecting iro t’ know l” h, exclaimed, pain and a lar e jour fingers. Ohl them Vaseline was i. They—why old Gem’d the end of an uz fly legs, and kick.”’ the injury. 1 ease let me try,” she replied, lie ved by witc and succeeded so well that j) r> g. b ay, Mr. 3)lirsh said, she*» states in the 1 er milkin’ right at her own found a specif tion produced morning, when she heard ivy so commoi of the bell, she went out old fences. ’ t for old Gem and milked bromine, whic it:her full. ing succoss in od life! But it came to an uses the drug it in this way. moline or gly< is ready, puffy white biscuits from ten to tv farsh, and brown slices of the ounce of able, the tea simmering on gently on the ; times a diy. nt to call her Grandfather, that the solu \l at it felling a tree that svery twenty-1 danger of falling on the never extends he could make it fall away plication, and within twenty ready!” she called. tion is persiste y !” he replied. “Well,can’t quite like to get this tree missy.” Tote >mc now, an’ finish choppin* . w .. „ Sylvia answered. A Washing icr he rat down in the red &* 1 " d * scrl fur just a minute,” he said. , Blenaer » od. nod, nod--he was fast 2 - n hour he started up with l ,er CD „° 8 daring that he had “nigh noon. He wi leep,” and pinching Sylvia’s upon his hea< ey smiled. They had both brotidcl J collar grasper e half-felled tree, and soon black-rimmed leep in bed. Mouscr and upon his ves asleep on the hearth, where lady at his ichthcy usually needed in sparkled anc! —drowsed slowly to sleep beamed over ly ashes. th e conversa via awoke in the night the stopped and I ing of the trees and the jump to his fe ’of the rain told that it was dorr. As m she listened a while in a lit- rested upon a it soon slept calmly again. on crutches w ycrash awoke her. She j the car. She A falling timber had struck and the body Itli heart choking with fright j that body co •orn the bed. I dwarfed out < ■ i it —r i !!■ ia r it ~i.,^,i trmeirmyiito 1 saw Ls the river whjfc i divides British from * 3 Butch Guiarja, and, providentially, at ! j the camp of Butch military officers | who were ota a hunting excursion. It was month! after this before I reached Georgetown, while Keys never got there at all, beiiftr carried off by ’ingle fever. I hunted Captain Larkins, who had long ago Aiven me up for dead, and I was rightjf treated in the matter of wages and aid£[ to secure a berth on a brig about tQclail for Liverpool, He had re fused the natives any ransom in advaneje, and after waiting for three day» without hearing anything fnrthcr from me, hfa begun the homeward voyage.”— New f York Sun. Photograph Gallery. | Tpfe Photographic Times contains an : article about one of the most ! ui|J|tc photographic galleries in exist- * eiW The gallery is a car built aftei tlVfashion of a Pullman coach. It can lLefattached to any express train, and in jpthe photographer travels all over the jßountry, ]>rincipally on the Northern ijflracific Railroad, of which he is official ! M. F. Jay Haynes had W the car built for him at a cost of sl3,- ! I 000, while the fitting cost $2.0 )0 more. I Ti e landscapes he takes for the railroad are done by a camera, making pictures | 20x24 inches. The car contains an op ' | crating room, sto rag; rooms, dark rooms | I and all other appurtenances of a first i j class gallery. - j passes ovil Fy,> an r.iie*. • | dino plain, oiirtivatcd in sp its where ■ , water is available, but for the most part V sterile and desolate. Suddenly ono i reaches a slightly elevated plateau of j j land and enters at once upon a series of I | orange groves, which stretch along in ! unbroken succession for about eleven ! miles. No tran-ition enu be more start i ling than this leap from the dusty and wind-swept plain to the highly-cultivated I mesa land above, with hundreds of valu able orange groves and its evidences of wealth and culture on every hand Mag nolia avenue—which, by the way, is I lined with pepper trees and eucalyptus, and not with magnolia—furnishes nn ad mirable drive for eight miles. On either side are handsome villa residences, each . surrounded by its orange grove or vine- I yard. And the orange trees of ltiverside I are wed worth looking at, with the deep green foliage ami the straight, smooth trunk, as large as a man s leg. Every where, too, are signs of that careful cul ture which the Eastern farmer would consider almost too painstaking for liis onion bed. What one does mbs at River side, however, are the flowers and bits I of green lawn which make I’asadcna so j charming to the eye. Very few of the I Riverside people seem to have a lastc for flowers, if o:io may judge from the j chary planting of roses and other flower- j ing plants in their front yards. In 1 ’ nine-tenths es ihc places the orange trees J j conic up to the house, and, a ido from j the r foliage, there is not a bit of green to be seen. As the soil is a dark, heavy ! loam, the contrast is not pleasant, and one feels that tile sacraflceof a half dozen orange trees in front of most of those houses and the- planting of flowers in res, little one, nnd tule*? m U W. * • [0 fcc*broke from about bes DEL tie saved him. —lndependent. charlo EALTH HINTS. ie bleeding of cuts, bind on of tea, or u-e a cobweb. UrUI fl safras instead of tea end (lkt* inse the blood. mixture for a cough: Two s two ounces of raisins, two a l bailey, half an ounce of r£d TO p FL ; boil in a pint and a Mil of f AMB educed to a pint, dLOBE, WHI of new honey, and drink a . f()RF j night and morning, or when TOP GLOBE, troublesome. GLOBE, Rt L or butter be applied to the SOUTHERN PI ately after a blow of any sort ino discoloration. As little sible must be allowed to he accident until the appli- A I e remedy. Only recently a mm mm in violent contact with a on rod, which caused great /.\xX' r T?C irge red spot on the cheek. xlik. s applied instantly, and at i hour there was no trace of The bruised feeling was re- tch hazel. Brown. United States Navy, ( Meii'al Record that he has u l ific to the troublesome erup- If a me 1 1 by the poison oak or poison Dll# 1 on in our woods and along (J v This specific he finds in ichhc has used with uuvary- C llcll*! in at least forty ca-es. He * dissolved in olive oil, cos- ” ycerinc, in the strength of ; wen tv drops of bromine to oil, and rubs the mixture DU rtTf : affected parts three or four U The bromine is so volatile ution should be renewed in the l -four hours. The eruption s after the first thorough ap- _ . id it promptly disappears y-four hours if the applica :ed in. to any size from s u send them NORT cran anti Cripple. . Just as good » . «... annd his country do most of this milk business. While we were wondering ft w many of these pack-animals are needed for 400,000 people,and how much advantage the Basque takes of the i nnoj oly, down the cross street comes a native leading two cows, and to the tail >f each is tied the calf. He stops in ! fr°nt of n house, a servant comes out wiih a pitcher, Ihe man turns the calf ibout, gives him a moment s hope and a ante of reality. These cows are so noihcilr that they will not give down tlicir milk except for the calves, which must always stan Iby their side. This nu t he in tile climate, as cows brought from North America and trained to more fcnercus habits soon develop the same lomestic purpose. The man shuts off 'h**» as, tills the pitcher, and goes hit way. ® Civilization Marching Westward. The civilization of the East, says the facetious Estelline (Dakota) Bell, is rap. idly penetrating this country. Nowhere is it more noticeable than in a certain Dakota town near the Montana line, in which the leading hotel has the follow ing posted conspicuously on the head*of the bedstead in each room.: ? a : -2 uert *Are Requested to ! i ; REMOVE THEIR BFUR3 •’ . BtroHi Ketiuxo. • * Wilson &Co UGGISTS, JTTE, N. C. [JIST’S IROP rURNIP SEED, LAT DUTCH, GOLDEN HER GLOBE. WHITE IITE NORFOLK, RED POMERANEAN WHITE rABAGA. SEVEN TOP, >RIZE, YELLOW ABER FRESH —ANI> AT— ST PRICES, lie and Retail. WILSON & CO., CGIS TS, •lotte, IV. C. rOGRAPHS latest styles and finish. aphs Enlarged i email pictures. No need to TH. work done right here at home in New York. : Guaranteed. Call and s.*e us JMGARTEN. HLOTTE, N. C. . CALVIN DKAXRR IN — GROCERIES L'ountry produce always on KENS, EGGS, BUTTER Is of VEGETABLES and awte—■> —*WB| tir U. -a-mi part of Italy. A piece of linen is spf’.fl with melted bee's wax—the purer the better—and then rolled tightly into cornucopia shape, the small end of which is introduced into the patient's ear as hi lies down. The cornucopia should not be less thau three, four, or even flni nches long. Flannel cloths are thee laid over the head and face, the cotAu :opia is set alight, and bums s!ow/y as long as the patient can b-»- Against Arguing too Mr/’o' ,'j Here is an illustration of IZ n fZ “Striving to better, oft we /£2 S k well!” f-?I, After defendant's cov' = 2 I, eluded his argument. t l Zz* 6 plaintiff s, advocate. ," ?" ®|| “Mr. , the Cou Ucad of resumioga jr the argument, b' Oc. f g “Yes, your be with me for nou lie jm u :ully. II bei^a«ft t M “After heariA* - counsel co'i 7 tiff. Bp* •be \JHOU ~ 1 o «r -1 M * 0 “4. cn thing worth a million of dollar-alfi * ■ ! th; » little gill has. she has iSSL I rerey rings, some h< autilul brooches and bracelets .ml even ,ul monds Her dolls’ wardrobe alone reprel tent a large expenditure, w h o her own! clothing is as a i ulc the finest that can b«l ! procured She has now with her orerll I f H ? dred dre '‘«’ Her hat, are particu 1 larly cute and different from the common 1 and ai e most Iy 1 rench. Yet anyone sit I tmjr on the Beach Ho isc *.-a decks and 1 and piazzas might see this wonderbd 1 nine wkhVh P! ? tin,; ‘ n th * ■» n ' l or run 1 nu g with the dogs to the wood- and 1 the oVr? thmK “ orc inller ll >re »nv of \ the children around her. she is fond of 1 plavand is never so happy as when en \ ga„ed in aome sport with children of her I M “*jr George C. Boldt, Jr I I the hve-iear old son of the I : proprietor of the place ha. Ttiw. , i of ,tock y Mountain goats. The oth£ j day he got a cute little wa-on and ( prescntcl with a S4O sui "f h? *! *" out el, fo tfd A- br The hum n vertebra fonmLa! «re regarded bv 'Sasa/gfeiiigsg mote period. ; -