Transcript

bLNIFICANCEOFDREAMS

An Intoruting Lsotuaw by a NotodEgll"h L~entiat

mpewtItlaes Abhet Visleus During teeu•'! ,.,dly Mealat With -L Phlaysl

Ills tos Most (sees Areto Blwan

"What the actual scientific view d"dreaming now is may be interred froma lecture which was recently deliverldon the subject at the royal institutionby Dr. I. WV Richardson. In the poet'sview." says the L•odon Telegraph.dreams arc visitors fr.,.a the ivory gate,or. as Sha:csp,'are ."ali them. 'childrenof an idle br.in: but science is moreprosaic and to. : that dreams maym, after all, I thig c.:,ru than the

Common i)iwaLtns of terrestrialmedia acting upon a cororealvibratorium.' like the sound heardon a wire intcnsion long afterit has been struck by the musdelan. 'All musical inst.- ments dream,'says Dr RLiardmson, t"-,r we cease toplay on then' and if we bring the milcrophone i•o use we can bhear thedream. This is as near poetry as s iencewill permit us to apprsaeb in explain-ing the ilhe:uom'cln a t:hought going onduring sleep; for the a-, .mplishedlecturer pro sed•d to inform his an-dieunce that dreamus are all explain~ble(on p'1y i, al gronds--there is no mys-tery u., :ut them save that which springsfrom b.indness to facts.'

"After dividing dreams into 'sub-jective and objective, and mixtmures ofboth. he went on to class among thefirst splcies dreams produced by indi-gestion. pain or fever, while objective Idreaus are those s1:,r:. I by a i,.'s ,rother events g<. ni u :'ide tL.*.:,ep-r. Thisis • a fa: m,,,eof the rtetiless

wav in whi.:h .. u•,roses of isuper•Lit:•!a.' Aga'r, the in:Lzluative view

of the signitia...e of 4.-rams men ofselence protest, and .will probably eon-tUnue to protest as long as there areany men of science left They quote Ithe old lady in the Spectator, who be- Ileved that the earthquake at Lisboahad some mysterious but quite unex-plained connection with the fact that afew days before she had happened tospill some salt at table

"Perhaps the moat practical lessontaught at the royal institution lecturewas one which may nssi:t us to k:•wvwhich of our dIreamn a•, - ,e ; tLatsomething is wro.u;- " ith ,nr ,,.ily or-ganzati".n As a r'.-, s.ii •t,' lr 'turer,it is Ltttr n:,t tL, ir, .: . t all Dream-lesness is uLt..1y a symptom of all-round health. A 44ild's dreams are in-variably signs of ciAiturbed health, andshould be regarded with anxiety Foradlts it is a good thing to know thatour brains are being overstrained whenour nightly dreams relate to events ofthe day, ald it we actually seem in tsleep to be continuing our daily workthis is a danger signal which nevermust be disregarded. When we feel "wearied in the morning very likely itresnlts from dreams we have forgotten,and then the best thing to do is to takeeaerciss Without coming to any do.eided opinion as to the supernaturalammanng attributed to dreams, we canat least proit by these practical hints

"Considered as products of bad digesion dreams cannot be reasonably ea-

pected to tell us anything of a ushdefulcharacter or to supply us with any warn-lag, except one direeted against theeoatlatlon of depraved dietetle hab.Its If it is true that the sleepoft healthis dreamless, then it becomes dimfelt tobelieve that the only persons to whomvlsloes in sleep are vouchsafed shouldbe the victims of indigestion. It is .a.ways a puzale for persons of an unim-aginative turn of mind to understandbow the future, which does not yetedst, esa be supposed to have any de-

eet on the present, and it must be ad-mitted that dreams of warning aremuch harder to believe in than the'brlin waves' and 'thought transfereaoes which membc the psychicalSsearhe society t as mat•ersqulte la the ordinary coarse of things.Thee isa considerable ma4 of testi.many in favor of the power of the mind *to prde mresults at an enormous die 1tames by aome system of psychicaltelegraiphy of which nobody has yetdiscovered the aeret * A an whogoesto sleep and dreams datt his brother isbeing killed by a wild tribe in cntralAfrica, ad who afterwards hears thatbe didmeetwith that fate at the preelse time when the vision oocrred, •eednot fy to any sup~ratral explaatiOnot thepbhenomenon It is quite diie .eat whe•a a dams -tells of somethingwhekbhistohappe In a few meatho'time In the latter e mast peoplewill prefer to join with s•ioese Inattributing the fact either to a lawot oenoeLdenos or to a aimpledesmln.

"We m it n dosniae the Jeatsie tomit that if she Lareases the gloodm-Sof line somse directios, asby her

doetrineof the struggle for existence,dereasessit aI other respects, one

wbichisby aidUingr the gradualbaishment of ay ontadee La visions asad iema sad 'weirdems' gen lly."

bhe n udgs bt•ha a storyIof a tsolored a who west Into a ish I

arkst in BlRchmod to hey a diae forhis mas. After ooking shat f•r afew miaases, he stopped before a ple iofehad.

Apparently his mepclons wereaemumd. He took up .me of the ash ad qheld Li under his mass a

"What do youa meaI by llng of athat bhr' asked the dealer, adugasatly. C

"Didn't smell de fsh wbow," a awered the negt. "Only speakai' to a

"Indeed? Ad what did he asyt" b"Ir jm' a him or d. newsat de Qmal -

41)~ ehbbera' be amy he done cleans get, 1 he ain't asen o waterfor ifoweeks Mat's all hbeaid."

Mew a- 'rhug 05 Ist(hn uusksning the other marmbgn

"-" NeLre 'Who lives near Shelby. N C.,e igsh merprhised na seing seven

Wan eabblts huddled together in a eanreofthessem. They had eased the

LACE MAKING.A Sehell ear V•mre Wbom the Asn

A school of about three hundred sadftty Italian girls, wearing the national

costume ald all industrionly ast workon exquisite lace, es a pleasant and in-teresting plae6 to visit So writesMde. de Beret, who visited a -lse-making. eshool at Burano, an islandin the Adriatic sea a few miles fromVenice. The girls, who are from teato eighteen years of age, sit n greatbarely furnished, well-lighted rooms,ea low chairs, holding their lasframes en theirknei.

They wear a short, bright-colo~edpetticoat, a green, red or orange flchecrossed on the chest, silver rings intheir ears, and around the neck beador cora necklaces They have darkeyes, teeth like pearls, smiling redlips, oval faces, fine profiles, and blackhair worn knotted in the back of theneck with a silver pin by the oldergirls, or in longrrgletsby the yongerones.

They draw their needles slowly sadgracefully back and forth, sad gravly except when some girlish jo•meraea storm of smothered laughter.

The teachers auperintead the weekearetully, and the pupils make finsVeaetlan, Brussels. Alenoon and Ar-gentan point and guipure laces. Theysometimes fill orders for vels worthfive thousand francs. A lace draperywhich was shown Mme. de Berst reps,.anted a vast amount of work. Seven

months had been spent in making thefemndation for it.

The prios of the laoes f died amearding to the time spent in makingthem, the rate being a ane a dayte more skillful pupils add to their

ineom• by doing lasn work at hm-also

They all oe the school and thoughthe py seems small for such fe work.

searc he a comfortable living,for a little moey goes a' long way inthes bisd of Durneo. Ques Mabherlt of Italy has bees a gsos

patron of the schooL

THE COLORS OP BUOYS.ank Oe ae.s. a nr "s as s ea

When you enter any harbor In theworld where the channel i maried bybuoys you will find that those on yearright, as y pus il. as palated ad,ad those on youer left blak. I you

should e one painted in red adblak horIsoatal bands he ship shouldrea aselaseto i as possible, beersmthat ladiate the eater se a samchanneL

Bueys with red sad blek verteialstripes always mark the end ofand the eatr and inner eadse ate•aire ase whsre there is a deanet•as each side. When ad and bla•eehecbers e painted on a busy itmarks either a ooeek the opea ma oran obstr•etion in the harbor of smalleatent, with ehamnel all around.

If there are two each obstrastoaand a ehannel between them the buoyeathe sight of you will have red sawhite shebsas sad the nem a yerlef wBI e"l bIeak rod white ebebks

Whem a wreak ibstmets the ehanela groe buoy will b planed ea the p•aisd eof the wreak, with the weed

"wiusi" plalaly palated en it In whiteletlses, provided there is a elear haa.ml all around it etherwise an eaw-mmber will be palte d in white abovethe word "wrek" when the beoy isea the right side of thie heamel amdedd number K the buy is em the lt .

MILK. CARTS IN PRANCE.

o. mattsr hew meok as Ame~-rahas heard e foreign milk earts drawby dogs and oftn by dogsad wenem.i slways seems odd to se h astrange team, says Harper's TeungPeople. The dogs ae pretty hens T ees, and•aw teight grees eart, butthey l sreally unhappy. as it they ;'had nopleeue in thei wor TheyItrot alar wih the•r tonues ot oftheir moth, sad wh they meet a-ether dog they seasot mn stop tobow to him. An Aameeleanehild would

: "Poor doggLel" It is mid thatol soutriLes have made law prohi•i

iting tdoQ s from working as milaesier and in a few years dog millkmea '

may be a slght of the pt. Itis quer'tht there are s many kinds of milk-canms in the world. In Amero milk isearried In glass bottles and in smallrand ti eaa. In England a prettytin milk-palil s mLed, urnished with Ibr•s handle sad a wide brass h ge tothe over. The handsomest milk-anso the world are the great brass erns

which are men in the little Europereamilk earts. They glitter lik• gold, andthe frth of the white milk mak•e pearlrims upo bthe well-flled canm It kibwthed nh eto A aren darttk te'

aers of tbs stadian

Watehs were made in Gemewa aearly as Im, and now that watchmak-Lang h Imesm a ational Indwstry inSwitmerland sohools for the porfoastetoof this proiseio hsve boeen establishedthere. Tb principal one of thes isL'Ecole Municipale d'Itorlogerieo inGeneva A boyseters this school at theage of fourteean and works ten hoursfor eleven months. Sevoen hours out I

t every week, however, are given evarious studies. The second lss a o-quikes a stay of iwD or six monthsthe third si or rem moethbu theIourth sdx months; the Mth--whem ths

work is growrng very nempelated-eighbt months: the lth thirteeammonths sad the seventh and last lass Iabout oe year, making about ve yes rIn all. At theeo ed of the e year hm obIboy has made twelve watches, wmibare his owrn property.

huedes os" Tarts.

Urery Kausmma. boowever hih his Irak. rem thethe ela down to the Lowat dervish. is compelled to hae a 4trade. The grandfather of the present Isultan was a toothpick mhker. Theboaman. porter or gom Is eligible tothe grads of pasha. The btcher ofto-day may be generaasi oof tomo- Iow, sad the ieweseame msy bseeme ird rider.

DESERTED VILLAGES.

Boom Towns of the West ThatAre Now Desolate.

Th.e Rise and Pall f Utblrsg Camsgs Whieb Ones Had Tbhemssad .1 Pee-

ple. But Are Now the Abeds .1Owls sad 8maes.

If Oliver Goldsmith were alive tomake a tour of the far western statesand of some sections of the south, hecould find many a deserted village therethat was once the liveliest if not, likehis beloved Auburn. the loveliest of theplain. in Kansas alone. acording tothe New York World, where it wouldappear that towns as well as idividualshave felt the disastrous results ofphlebotomy, thre are fully twenty muchabandoned villages. and in Nevada,California. Georgia and Alabama theyare numerous. Once thriving miningr camps like Bodle and White Pine thatgrew great in a night; boom towns eachas Fargo Springs, tha sprang up asquickly as if a magician bad calledm them into being, and prosperons and

substantial cities like Sumner, in earlySdays the most important town and

prospective metropolis of Kamas.-scores of these decayed municipalitiesnow lie abandoned and desolate. theirhouses empty of human tenants androtting away, their streets thick with arank growth of weeds, and only a fewold timers, or in some cases only a eol-Stary postmaster, left to tell sma of thepresent generation of their formerSbustle and psperity. In various ln-f stances, as at Petersburg, in Georgia,nothing but mounds of earth and ar populous cemetery remain to testi@ toSthe town's departed glory.

bepecially mournful has been the1 fate of those abandoned towns whose

only inhabitants to-day are the animalsand reptiles that have left prairie ada sand hills to take refuge in the deserted

dwellingsa Time has played one of hisSmost fantastcl tricks with human orttune in permitting owls to fit aboutunder the rafters that echoed all thenight through to the boisterous revelryg of owl olubs, and snakes to squirm ua-

der the very tables at which barkeeperta dealt out biting red eye in exchange for

gold dust; while wolves prowl throughr the forsaken lair of the tiger. t is like

plunging into an atmosphere of gloomi to visit themse blighted cities, for onI every side stand mute reminders of theI feverish activity of the past to intensitya the sad stillnesm of the present

Perhaps the most strikligof accountsof ruined boom towns are those whichI relate the untoward fate of Pierce CityI and Kit Carson. Less than a genera-

tion ago Pierce City. with Its lawlessI population of twenty thousand miners

I and gamblers, was one of the mostI notable settlements between Denver

P and the coast. Its nhabitants to-dayI are a handful of Chinamen. while Kit

Carson has only one hundred left of thes seven thousand restless sols, whotwenty years ago sought gold by dayI and revelry by night

BIG HAILSTONES IN TEXAS.

Lamps a . eIehes I Dimeaser a•s toas e raues In a meest storms.

A recent hailstorm near Gay Hill o.curred about 4:10 p m. About twop heavy clouds appeared in thewest, and a they slowly approacheda roaring sound was heard, such asusually indicates a coming halistorm.Lightning, accompanied by distantthunder, suggested an unusual storm.About six miles distant from the Gal-veston News man's pointof observationthe clouds divided. A light-colored

pload peaed out from the more densecloud toward the southeast, while thelatter continued its course toward theeast, but far above it at a high altitudewas another cloud of a plnl•ih east,whach moved also toward the eask Afew minutes after the rain commesnedsmall hailstones fell, and each momentlarger ones fell than the preceding,SUntil they reached the slas of small Meneggs. After fallig~he naout ifteenminutes the bhail and rain eased forp1obobly two minutes Thea it commeaneed again to rain heavily and coa-tinued for probably ten minutes, with a:higher wind, and It was during this I-terval that the wosderfally large eill-etones fell

This remarkauble hail tell in largelumps, ranging from three to six nlchesin diameter I heard of one piece eightInobes in diameter, which weighed fourpeunds. They were. as a rule, pbherl-aIl in for. but some were somwhatat, and nearly all were eovered withal knols They fellin small Mareas

about two feet apart, while in ether

places only one would fall in a peeetwenty feet equare The average un-der my obeervation was about oeihallstone to every three feet eaue.The esrth was thoroughly saturatedwith water, and usome of the largeIpieces penetrated the ground in emttplacesi about three inchea I gatheredabout a bushel of the largest piemes a-terthe rain eease d inad na very littlewhile I placed thesm inlack, whlaput in a bs and paculmd bay aroadwithout special care. ome of thepieces I ahibited in IBrenha, for theeason thet I preferred to give ocuar

demonstration in proof of the state.ment I made in relantion to the size ofthe bhail. After forty-two hor smevearlof the piecesm were eves hebs in oh

numfereneu At this date (eleven daysefter It ell) about aqart of the bailemasm itsdeltyissogreatohat I

believe it will keep should you wish asample A most remmarkable fet Iieonection with these large alletonesis that mome of them have .ptertles ofdirt in the enter The question eBrow did they get there?

A Yarmouth aptanl thought hmeefa handy fellow with a paint brus Bedecided to put the name of hisehooneron her bow, andu he could not rmacbhigh enough from a oat nd did notwish to swtrasetSagebe leaned overtbhe bow and thus did the lettering. He iwent ashoe safter doing the work on-e eidea to view the efect from a di.

thace, and this is what his astonbshed Ieyes beheld: * "IlOOVN'

THE BLACK OOUNTRY..sceem the seemse eeatams e tt ?,

'sat te rp5,Good hoasewies mark their bread

loaves with a cross, sad housemaids in-are a brisk kindling of a newly-lit

Are by making the same sacred signover the grate. As to fortune-telling,the Black country has for at least halfa century been a happy huntingground for the black-tressed and dark-eyed sibyls who disguise their realealling frAe all but likely customersby the pretense of hawking hand-atelothes-pegs, r• ete. And, moreaudaeious still, in several towns mareresident magicians, who rule planetsand reveal secrets for a consideration.And when a woman mires an orna-ment or other valuable, she his to awizard, or else to a "wlae woman," tolearn who is the thlet One of thesestar students was so seesfutal in on-raveling hidden seerts that his skillwas attributed to his dealings withthe Evil One, and. as hehad a moethan local reputation, he was knownfar end wide as "the Dudley DeviL"While Satan is endowed by the popu-lar magination with a ubiquityscareely less than omnipreseat, he issupposed specially to haut the shaftsand subterranean workings of dis medmaines. And, though praotically upotent, he is invoked by the f0oIUowabsurd spell: A erust of bread aadcheese placed inside a bat, with aerossed knife and fork (always anominous sign). and over this the ree-Itatlos of the Lord's Prayer back-wards. Ye will to this day ad peo-plh who are prepared to make oaththat when as boys they had tried thisspell n a pit-bank on dark nights,and had been brave enough to peepdown the • dft they had seen thevery for• n the Evil One gtah g atthem from th depths below. Nor wasthis idea of a personal visble devilead ed to the ignorant, profane aadeaselees. With the devout and seriousthe conception acquired a still moresomber and traie charaeter. Satanbecame to them mot merely th in-spirer of foul thoughts and the ug-gester of sinful actions, but " realphysial atagonist aftq the sLple etApollyo in Bunyan's eg.

OIL WELLS IN JAPAN.

Ihe Petresemm nads ry ts a This o a.L

Although Ja•an is one of the eidetcountries in the world, it has just be-gp to produce petroleum in largequantities. Two expert drillers of oflwells in Pennsylvania have been inJapan for a year sinking wells for theJapanese government. Oddly enough,these wells are drilled under the watersof the Japan sea, on the northerneoast of the empire. For at leasttwelve hundred years the Japmansehave known of the existene of pe-troloum along the shore, but the namtive wells were dug by hanad, and theoil slowly filled the bottoms, when itwas scooped up in buckets, a few gal-loss at a time. Now the Jasp e gov-ernment is talking of pipe es andrailroads for distributing the productsof the wells which the Americans medigging. Labor is very cheap in Japan,and natives work for seven yeo amonth, and board themselves, s yaboeing about seventy-sis eentse. Theyare not organized, ead haveso seekthings as labor unions. and strikes me

tknown. They have no set time fora day's work, which is practically due-Ing daylight, they frequently begn-ning work at the wells at four o'elockin the morni.ht. In consequene, dig-ging wells in Japan is not expensive.

AN ANCIENT CHURCH.S Wa Zmeted tn the Days e Seae

There still stands in Fairfax onasty.Va., a church for which George Wash-alton drew the plans The reetor hasreently written this description of theeld building:

"The Pohiek ehureh. for whlehorge Wa shington rew plans, is stillI

standing firmly on its fenadetlene.The soliJ walls. el:-ht en inehe thiok.are so well oonstructed that they willdefy for manmy generations, we trust.the inroa.s of time. The exterior ofthe e'.:•rch present,; the same appear- Iance it. • 'l evn :e ' 'i 'teu drove up Ito it r' ,:lrly on ,,"r In his tamonu coaz h. Te i'..--ir .uiered so-erely durinr the latu wTar. All the-woodwvrk was destrov'i exoept theernico., whicn ~s th: ,- ' interior wor•;-till cexi 'ti"z" trm '~S .i:-tton's timeThe roof rw left a rutnous eoodi-tion ar;.er the war. bi.tL the old timbersare still there, well pr itoted by a eav-eringof good hi i "i.; About eighteenyear a~r, the .oeur. wars put in goodre'air. t 'ou',h not restorea to 1tearin•:l interior a,•,,ano. throagh (

the kin.!neas of a s: tt!man thena liv-Iig in New York oity. Muob needs to,

bedone to rentore the church to itsefornmer antique interior. but it is e-sfortable and properly cared for."

Au ObU.Iag Dlp'ema

That t':re am ie all sorts ad I.tions of women n sooiety wm bownit the case of a visitor., wwileispendinI a portion of the soe* inTWnas.ir -ton. att' ).,l a la rge felas Ir~-"pti•n a w t ;. , ' dipomeat'*o~rps wr-s well r ..' M-;. A--gEin Sptly st th,"e "'1 t "' wirhat w-. '..t which t?1.. to; ~,a mnirwitsr nt- vr,-y' r,, ii a tih 8lis(l1surpri•ed Ir. Ye L,- a r,::,~;t that 1.memove ;i., hiedgr .for I: :r more mi,ole in-.-ctiu. 'i'a; novel demaawas ati, o.e oupllo.. with by the mim1.r. e•,,:) Jraveily .t w,. by while t!oruno-s one &lir de. and twitod th.wire r;t over aid orer L. her spromrsti;eioa

The i umran is very religious maWhenever he leaves his cottage or ents its he mil how before the image o-a mint that ivariably has its pise i

* earner at the window sad beforewhtich a lamp is enstantlY kept burn-lng. Never will he touch any food ordrink until he has made the sign of theholyeroas; thst takea the place e pray-r and is not deme without thiskaig ed

the Creates

FOLKIDRE AND CRaIm.

s 7lmer senserse e..aness-TeaDaa essdmanad ae

One of the most curious sand strangephases of superstition is that whicb r-l-te to the criminal claseL Themysc code which regulates the livesof these enemies of society Is in msayeases a survival of fetichim of the old-

t ind. Believing tenacously in thedread eflcasy of eertain ghastly charms

ad i ntations, the malebotor bold-yenters on his enterprise oeosa daly

earrying with him "a dead man'shand"-taken from one who had dieda violent death. Such a chard beingsupposed to overpower with sleep thosewho come under its influence, it is nat-urally an invaluable adjunct to the ta-plements employed by thieves, ays thePau Mall BudetL

Some years agoan attempted robberywas made b by rglars on an estate nthe eounty Meath, and, to quote a con-temporary aecount of the affair, "theyentered the house armed with a deadmen's hand. with a lighted candle Ia it,believing that a candle so placed willnot be seen by any but thos by whomit is ased, and also that f a eandle inadead man's band beto itroducend in ahomes it will prevent those who may beasleep from awakening. The h 1tehowever, were alarmed; the obbeenled, leaving the dead ma's hand be-hind them."

Many similar stories are told ofmse of the dead hand by thMies, oecommunicated by Rev. Baring Gouldbeing worthy of notioe Two me, hav-ing come to lodge in a pubic b•emswith a view to robbrg it, asked perIW n is pa he night by th e,and obtalined i When the b wwasquiet, the ervant girl, ,mpeasg sa.sdis acept downstairs and lookethrough the keybole, wha theo saw themm pes a seek and taleot a dry,withered had. They anointed thelagers with some usngmet, and lightedthem. Each lager named emept thetmb, which indicated that ow om thehousehold was not•eleep.

Grom gives a full aoouat of thisebarm as uedby b rech h6ousbresm,and a variation o the same belief prevaled In Belgim. Not far tfrom sal-ladl. In Wes Flanders, a thief was asptred ea wha m was found tho foot of aman who had been hanged, which beused. when engaged in his robberies, forputting persos to sleep. Similar - Isances arequoted from Spain and Ger-many. and it is noteworthy that Mex-

ean thieves have bee known to arrywith thrm the left bdat and ara d aweoma who died at the biMeh ci herbat child.

Then thee is the earpeeceadye, aweird implement of the tobber's ade,wWhk ahn e oe am throegh

rope, sem to have been more mn-eral in Gma then any other eom-try. Not a long ago, it asy be rem-mbred, o peasants in the south aow

sis government of Intmk muendem agirl ein eder to maed eandes ci herbody, the notion being that ach ak•es light k no enly aonders ths per-peroeates of robberies iavWi betaseemal• threws at victim or vletNsinto a astae of omsoleoas In the Ge.saw eridnal codes of the osevetesethand eighteenth outeles we And em-pres smemtie m pad Sl-aes-a crime the mote of which was themaking at "thieve" or slmeeppe•Oeelad e tdlest" This mpertitin has Ag-ared asy a trisl, a eems tbe,ams to thers nmt day, taptdle•believed in by the ercanl e oses In-

deed, w segmested that sthe Wi- meaders werse ntigatsed by islq-* theory whih the celebrated Dr.lash, a member ci the Aiuteleaneib

math, was induese support, An i.tanea of this pue in eriminal e

oseered drlng tthe troti the Omanthie, Theasm Unger, whe was em-ated t M agderg l lam , whLn Itwas brough out in aviMen tLhat a

gims trade Dnt, Ineed makng

the riminal lnvhible, ths aritm light- mo re them e de tthe reeesad smedm blbeto meuhteo tien

It adds soUmethyn to th se ti e-f om km a healthy aat active han-b rfest tom tlme are peopl e ewlivIh whe meg travel by eamntmm•al fro ope Borate tho topeo ci

am-" •alwfr so eneet the SoutIr sp4as, thmgh C*entral

mr•ies, with the qrma of Moneoad the Unit• States, already werll

ad•aned. Ths ere - esa the Reviwo•a Dviews, to bo ands from theo Gondiu Pa s saway ap t tth Pe* rtihwrsad Kakmns ass, eatd Is notvery hLd sto believe ths thes mayultimately be extemded -mes theRoedmbe tohen Uhami vallep Ia Aisim,aen eutimmt nailyr to h nrow sadshells ebrieg stealis, e wisk seomeldom would b mae with thes1besm read. Gotinums roll tarelehem enSheil be Cem- eore wInmm have bemmesa nommpliehbed bee,ed the la em Cotamelepe is Io

lrpt maUy be m s a -detly. At the prees dats et dvetopme a Arica th •os•ateisr mIareed f.r. aypta is 0th rs.uht bebe realised within t~wetl e peTheeme tL ammat wil, ci mashe- bm bll, and etestelely tor sems

Srmos l a mtnte rese•rwheas supersedned seami a . t theaB*bratla sd " Pugt mnee i denlem

Immasd• S hamt r rm at p m ,these thea agt sars t un s emmaing the p e in Awe a thepdepa m thswn easeI Ian A.Lebmadorr Satta. Kaview e allthat nmbea dose th -i• w e•o .

soelave I7 ties isdely wt•h -

* THE

j-:-TENSA8 GAZEIf.:-

A weekly .ewspaper pub'lished at

ST. JOSEPH, LA.

THE

OFFICAL JOUIAL

-OF TN--

PAIuII

OF

TEI .Si S,

-Of Tl--

Board of School DI'tors

-- AID OF TBB-.

Disfh Levee Board

Reachinar every home inthe Iparish, it is an *xesllenmedium for

ADVE~TISEBRS0

who desire the busineas .

this bection.

1i ~1 O C 0 ATIC

in principle., it will ever advocate what see.ms to IT is tothe best interest, of 8tatetenerally, and the Pariabparticularly:

Blani orevery deearript~iafor Magistrataes Oostableaand ther Olfcials kept eo*-stat' en baud

hyeavtisinRates Re aonae•

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