Newspaper Page Text
, ,A CMJIKOP «OU>. I A R(«r* CUE* *«Un«.
. ”■ - , - . ..iirf ■ i Th* following extract from a rer
*!tw.'.<7n« thing big happened up i „ «•». Mr Doner then Utroduwdl“th«
I bMr . «nfit buiiine and ®* T ' Hopktna of New York," when a
Jh^jpi"”' ‘ h K g ! colored genlleman with a gray chin
*, Tom; I hear a great
I «truck
earthed a nugget
£• :*•. «. « ..a » i ...vma.ig.ri .. whisker stepped to the front, with an
the ion’and un- °P en B *ble in hi* hands, *nd proceeded
nd'.nuV C Lbg«.w,ln‘u n t d “ |f *• •« hi. tea t,_ though "from the
, i *£r, . r,J5\ •* .iKTvoatiarl mT length of time occupied it was feared
•erhap. it. a find, auggeted my , ^ , h( . K>rmon woa f d ^ ,
ivied out of the drift and exhibits
sacrificed in
the proceeding, lie finally gave his
hearers to understand that he would
tire nugget 1 bad juat Uken out. Tl.cn I 'P K ' k f . n » n .- , °}’ x j, v - 13 ' '‘ Isl Jf M
J board the clamor, «bo; it wta like tlm >>y de fuHly secondly thirdly.
«... „/ rii.ft.nf w.rgo. W. .lirvtl' to tlilv an’ fifthly dat de tex’ rest on
murmur of distant wares. We shook
the rope, and, receiving no answer to our
signal, concluded that something impor
tant had happened, as our mates above
had evidently left the windlass. A mo-
ment later a shadow appeared above, and
Bills voice was heard shouting;
• (kune urn bova, and see the big find.”
•Where is it?” I asked, on reaching
the surface; hut I scarcely needed to
ask, l^r it must l>e where the crowd was
collected, seine fifty yards distant from
imr chum. The crowd was large, and
every umnunt increasing, but being
brawny and broad-shouldered, I pushed
my way through it, and was almost over
whelmed with astonishment at the sight
that erected my vision; it wasn’t a nug
get; it was a bowlder. No wonder that
the miners were excited. The spectacle
excite the most phleg
matic individual that ever breathed
It was a solid mass of gold as large or
larger than a leg of mutton, and not un
like one in shape. This was the mass
which has since Wen widely known as i , , , . . . .
the - Welcome Nugget.” A facsimile ol , Jo, ‘ n lo , » ,rcac * ?* ® t W w, \ \ V” 111 *
it may now be seen in the mineral de- j tn volume of de book to do de ‘'HI of
partnicnt of the Boston Museum of Nat- | i - a man ® 11 * . u ie * nea £
thly an’ fifthly
somethin’. When de doctor comes
make a subscription, he fust find de cause
an’ den he makede subscription, an* den
goes ahead. Fust, den, ‘ if a man dio
shall he live ag’in?* Yes, dere’s nothin’
liken unto mail. Bugs an’ inset’s is
nothin’ like a man. ‘ If a man die shall
he live ag’inT Death is your great
inemy. Ev’ry thing mus’ die—even de
birds uius’ die; ev’rvone in dis grove
mus'die. If we git sick we mus' send
for de doctor. So say I. I-et us stay
here as long us God wants us ter ’thout
taken our own life. Glory to God an’
de Lamb. ‘If a man die shall he live
ag in?’ Dan 1 was cast in de lions’ den,
aii w hen dc king comes he wants to sec
him. You hear of Him dis worn in.
Martha said: * I shall see my brudder in
de rizzeirecshun.’ Glory to God an de
l^ainb. ‘ Jf a man die shall he live ag'in?'
* * * Jous was God an'uuin. lie
was God an’ man. He said: 4 L-o-o-o, I
come in de volume of de book!’ Glory
de Lamb.
Ural lllstoYy, where \he weight is given
at 2.105 ounces, and the value at $11,- !
822.70; the further information is im
parted that the nugget is the largest
piece of gold ever found. This is an
error. A larger nugget was found at
Bendigo lead on February 9, ISO ». It
weighed 189 pounds one ounce Trov, or
2,200 ounces.
I had been mentally congratulating
myself on the discovery of a umrget .‘is
large as a walnut, but’the sight of all
this mass of gold took all the conceit out
of mo. Nevertheless, I was glad the
nugget had been found, for the claim
from which it was taken was right in the
direction in which we were working, and
our claim was daily growing richer in
ore.
The ‘‘Welcome Nugget,” as large as it
wan, did not enrich its finders, fi r the e
were twelve shareholders in it, and it
brought them less than $1,000 apiece.
It would have been a lucky find for a
couple of mates. The man who dug it
out fainted dead away before he in
earthed it. When his’pick first -truck
it, he reached out liis hand to pick up
the lump; the light from his candle
shone upon it ana revealed its nature.
To his surprise it did not yield to his
touch. Then he began to feel around it
with his hands, and it grew in size un
der his exploring digits. He gave it a
wrench, but it did not budge. .S izing
his pick, ho began to dig around it. and
as its proportions grew under his eve tiio
spectacle overcame him, and he fainted
for joy.
Early Use of Bells.
It is evident that the earliest use of
bells in churches was to summon the
congregation; but superstition soon en
listed them into her service. It then
became customary at their consecration
to pray that they might be endowed with
power to drive away devils and dissipate
thunder storms, hail and tempests. In.
tin-opinion of those who originated the
practice, the evil spirits were the cause
of foul weather, and being terrified at
the «aint!y sounds of the hells, they pre
cipitately fled. In parish accounts ir.
the fifteenth century, bread, cheese,
ami boor, are charged for the refresh
ment of the ringers during " thunder-
ing-.” Ro late ns 1852, the Bishop of
Malta ordered all the church bells to !»e
rung for an hour to allay a irale. After
the discovery had been made of the po-
teucy of beils in terrifying spirits, they
w< it* naturally employed in all the mat-
ivhieh friends were repuh
Dev hung ./-e-e-sus on de c-r-r-oas of Cal
vary, an’ when de man died dere on Cal
vary humanity died on Calvary. ‘ If a
man die shall helivfe ag'in? llalleluyah!
Glory to God an' de I^amb. You kin
bury’one rightchus man under one hun
dred sinners, but when de last trumpit
shall blow on de nr-zerrecsbun mornin'
callin' de glorylied ones to gender on
dress parade in de streets ob gold befo’
de throne ob dc great Gineral, de right
eous man will iis turn overall march to
de t rout rank while de sinners ama-gettin'
dere shoes on. ‘ If & man die shall he
live ag'in?'” At th’is point the speaker s
euuneiation became so indistinct that
nothing could be understood but his *»n-
repealed ami emphatic ‘ J, ” and - ....”
l*|H»n his retirement in an exhausted
condition, the collection was announced,
and while several brethren were passing
the huts the congregation sang-
Mighty u
1 know win
Mighty c
Rriiu :ubcr delay-
InJcprom
A Terribly Practical Joke.
The Countess de St. F is a lively
voting woman, with a bed ridden husband;
she nurses him like a good wife during
the day, but, for to make up for the
weariness of constant attendance in a sick
chamber, gives a party once a week. Her
n ivptmn* are jolly—more jolly, indeed,
11. ■: n absolutely it roper— and remind one
of the society shown up in the “ Age
Ing rat ” at the Gvmnase last winter;
still although^kitt’ishlv inclined to kick
j °. vor 11,0 ‘ r »«^ 5hc is v 01 ,le -
St. Anthony fought the lotion of demon. c “ w ’ nml ’ '^"'gre"insl
who tormented him during his long reason to any one for he out-
eremitieal life, and in the figures whieS | r a "' 0l ' s I:™ 1 '™ 1 J oka 011 " n 1,0
drawn of him during the middlo la *, t *“8’ v . h «" *»“»* »»g *»t
bell out invitation* to every fast w.-rnim
“1 man in I’a.i-. Fifteen hundred per
il kn< ‘
▲ Girl With « Buttermilk Cow.
Miss Winterblossom, of Murray Hill,
has seen the summer roses bloom and
fade again at Saratoga, Newpoit, Long
Branch, and other fashionable summer
resorts. She herself has bloomed until
there is ths faintest trace of fading.
“The doctor told ’ma,” said Miss
Winterblossom to her bosom friesd, Miss
Kntawba Jones, “ that I needed increased
oxygenation. A farm in the country
was the place to get abundance of fresh
milk, butter, eggs, and the other things
that grow in the country, you know.”
This was one day of the present week
when both ladies happened lo be in
town for the purpose of shopping. Misa
Katawba Jones at once noticed that her
dear friend waa badly sunburnt.
“My!” she aaid, “ain’t you tanned,
Emma, dear!”
“Do you think it becomes uie? Chaney
says it does—just a- lovely brown, he
says. You know he is always raving
about the olive skins of the tunny
South.”
being
of the fact that Miss Winterblossom had
a beau, a luxury not jmssessed by Miss
Jones, the latter lady promptly refused
to make her friend happy by asking who
and what this Charley was. Miss Jones
•hanged the subject.
• Do tell me, Kmma, about the life on
tL farm. Did you learn how they made
milk and all'those things that papa
insists are so much bettor ou a farm
than anywhere else?’’
• Yes, dear, 1 saw it all; it's not
much.”
Miss Winterblossom was not pleased,
because her friend iguored the exbteuce
of her Charles.
i saw them obtain milk; eggs grow, I
suppose, for they had to look a good deal
to find them. The only thing l did not
see was the buttermilk cow. 1 suppose
you have tasted buttermilk?’’
“No, I never tasted it, but I suppose
it is a compound of butter and milk—a
sort of country desert. I have always
heard papa say that milk was obtained
from cows—he was from the country,
you know—but I never had the faintest
idea of the process; something simple
enough, 1 presume.”
“I don’t think it is so simple, cither,
for while the girl, Mary, was able to pull
a whole pailful of milk from a cow, when
1 tried, with all my strength, nothing
came. And more than that, tiiAsavage
cow struck me a violent blow with one of
her limbs and then ran away. Charley
said it was a wonder the brute didn't
turn and eat me on the spot. He said
the only safe cow for me to approach
was the’buttermilk cow.”
•• Well, did you muster sufficient cour
age to attack that animal also?”
••Certainly I did. I desired Mary to
show me tiie buttermilk cow as soon as f
had recovered my feet from the attack
of that other cow. The girl laughed
and said I had better wait till some
other time when the gentlemen were
not around, but 1 insisted upon being
shown the ^uimal then and there. The
gentlemen all laughed because i was so
courageous. I felt certain the animal
could not be as vicious as the other cow,
because Charley had intimated as much.
However, I didn’t have an opportunity
to do so, then, because, as Mary said,
the buttermilk cow was not then with
the others, but was at the house. The
n<*xt day 1 asked Mr, Filbert, the farmer,
to please permit me to pull the butter
milk cow. He stared at me, and said he
guessed it must be tafly. You have no
idea how much afraid those country
people are of being guyed by city folks.
But when we return in September 1 shall
be able to tell you everything about this
mysterious animal—the buttermilk cow.
Good-bye, dear.”
“Good-bye.”
The ladies kissed and parted. Misa
Katawba Jones, commenting on Miss
Winterblossom, reached the following
conclusion: “i$o she has got a beau,
and, goodness knows, she has been long
enough about it. 1 wonder, now, if that
buttermilk cow isn’t some iokc they
have been playing on her ? I'll ask papa
about it when 1 get home.”
And she did; but she wishes now she
had not done it.
Tb
i his hand,
ented as carr
r suspended froi
s staff, i
passing bell, which was formerly 8onSf 0 A , . , , .
1 for those who were dving or pass- : '•'■bven oy sight, resjioiiucd to the
..lit of the world, M well .1 the peal » u '“ nujn5 ’ am > a!i 'if/., a ‘“f, rlment " i 11 nok
which was rung after their death, (trow told more than 200, the overplus of
out of the belief that devils troubled g"vs s filled up the stairs, got mlo other
the expiring patient, and lay in wait to I people’s rooms, blocked up the entrance,
afflict the Soul at the moment when it | end. nndmgout the my,tiAcation, either
got into a rage and became vituperative,
or else joined in the spirit of the thing,
and acted like cads. It was Bedlam
broke loose. Yells and screams and cat
calls rang through the corridors; some
body who
caped the body, and occasionally
to battle for it with guardian angel*.
The Bishop ot Chalons christened a
peal of bells in 1822, and in a sermon
which he delivered on the occasion said:
“The bells placed like sentinels on the
towers waten over us, and turn away
from us the temptations of the en- niy ol
our salvation, as well as storms and tem
pests. They speak and pray for
crackers, the concierge interfi
*, the police
our troubles; they inform heaven of tho P® 1
necessity of earth.” “ If tills’ lie true.” cecdmcJea
says a writer, “ there is mor<
in* the clapper of a bell than
tongue of a priest.”
Tiic first actual fire hell was hung
the church of Hherlnirno, England,
1G52. It had upon it the following :
scription:
“ Lord quench thii furious flame;
▲rlao, run, help pul out iho tame.”
other
lodgers vociferated.
for, and could not do any thing, and
only at 4 in the morning, after live hours
rsecution, did the poor lady sue*
n clearing the premises of intruders.
a j 0 Funny, some of the newspapers were dis-
the poaod to call it; other persons thought
A Census of Centenarians.
It is suggested in a Western new -r «•
that there shall aeeompany the po/j .
Lion of the next returns a list ••
sons in tho United States who have .i’-
their hundred years—the centenarian* to
be hunted up by the Postmasters and tlio
names to lie preserved at Washington,
uld this be done it will be found that
It cowardly, as the count's health de
prived the wife of a defender, and foi
another champion that the legally re
sponsible editor to interfere would have
wen compromising. However, somebody
did, and although tlii* is not the cause
assigned, the two or three duels which
have recently come off, or are still ou ths
tapis, are its consequences.
What Two Women Did.
Justice Matthews remarked this morn
ing to a reporter as the latter approached
His Honor’s place of dealing out justice,
“ 1 am intoxicated, sir,” and ho laid his
i, nm u« iui.hu i,i«t ^ back and sighed. The reporter
almost every village has its Metho d;;!), knowing the justice to be a man who
Bailey, an English writer on old age, ; ncvcr Hunks that which intoxicates,
gives a list of 4,000 persons ascertained ? tal . e oc ®«Mpns being excepted, at once
by him to have lived bevoud a him-> bc 1 t! |' )U ?!»t himself of the Paulus Hook
dred, but he counted in ihe antediiu- • „ Oration, and intimated that if His
vians, and that wasn’t fair. Vespasian ! j < i nor ,nuat , * it was well to do so in
had a census taken of the old people of “donee of tho principles upon which
his empire, and found 30 who were 140 i . ,! } n /‘U on - s ^ ol,m o<1 ,?J l f “ ,s Honor
▼cars old; 40 who wore 130; 20 who were f, u< : SIr »* woman did it—or two of
125; 14 who were 110, and 54 who were ! ! hc,n » *l athcr - ? ,U T have been talking
100. The Cincinnati Gazette has found j to . ®, e for tv ™ i houra ; 0n « was of
a family in Lexington, Scott County, j ttn “, , other gin, and their
Kentucky, who live up to the natural mixc ® breaths have had such an effect
rule that tho lives of animals should av-1 J*P° n °\ c , really—and you know
ersgo five times their growing period. ! rY, * ec ; rt ‘iy>Hcr denied tho
The presentheud of the family is Kinder impeachment, ami His Honor having
Furgeson, who was boto on Sunday, ! B ? !Ilclcnt, y a l»o‘ogized for his insinua-
August 28, 1771, or 108 years ago. His ' i lons » Proceeded to state that Mrs. Bran-
* - • — ■* **• ,i. don SUd Mrs. Bark lev Moor* wrrn “ni is
motlier lived tobe i07, his grandmother don . aad Mrs : Barkio . v Moore were “at it
- 6 again ” on the plunk road. By dint of
hard questioning it was learned that by
this liis Honor meant that they had an
other fight and had come to him together
and had each imparted to him their
story and their breath until he was in a
quandary as to which of the pair most
deserved punishment. He will therefore
wait until they fight again, when he will
listen to their respective stories through
a mosquito net.
He Ought to Have Known “SuthinV*
OTO B*gl
106, and his ereat-gnimlmoUier 104, fur
ther than winch the genealogy is lost.
He was married in 1792, and his eldest
child, Mrs. Nancy Priest, u now 87.
Kinder has a great-great-great-great
grandson living. Kinder’s fafter lived
on the York U*ver, in Virginia, and he
hcArd Lafayette’s troops march .’Wit ihe
house. Ho served through the war of
-1812, and is now drawing a pensiot. He
is in good health now, and attribute;; it
to having been a moderate drinker—
brandy and gin—all his life.
A Baltimore inventor has a patent
for a suit of flying clothes. By working
tht arms the man in the clothe* nmtnta
heavenward. Waterproof paUtaloms
sad jacket* are in one niece. To this is
fastened a reservoir of oiled silk, and
•Wtehing from shoulders to waist. To
•OteaHalB Attached a wing made of xiflr,
with steel ribs. After the mortal has ,
•smysd UiO flight of a bird, and is high
i* ■»,!«• hoists a mil. A mast four
IfMoined U> his hack, aid a
r Mil is set 10 as to be worked
f
“Do you know anybody that’s buried
V} in that cemetery?” aaid an elderly
passenger to a railroad conductor,
poinfthg to a resting place for the dead
“V*™ were whizzing past. “ No
ma am, I Wt,” “ How long have you
been conducting on this road?”
MOB of extrem. dugart •tof.V* r P he7
*»»«»*• po* doifB her porut*
A Jesuit Catechism For Indians.
From the papers of Father Brugas,
printed in the Magazine of American
History, we take the following extracts
from the Jesuit catechism which was
taught to the Iroquois, Hurons, and
other Indian tribes some two hundred
years ago:
Of the paradise the Indian proselyte
ks:
i paradise, is
A Leadvllle Washerwoman la Luck.
| Booion Bar US. |
But it i« not alone in mining opera
tion.* that tortunes havo been made.
Mrs Sarah Kay, an old Irish washer- j
woman, who was among the earliest seD
tiers, has a somewhat romantic history,
ller stock in trade when she came con
sisted of a pair of tubs and a washboard.
She began business under an old pine
tree ou the hillside, having no means of
hiring a house. She soon, however, got
together, with her own hand*, a rude
c/.biv.. *>nd as business was good at $2.50
pi» dcAci. :or washing, she gradually
began to provide for her wants. tSlie got
a camp stove, and after furnishing her
cabin comfortably, began to accumulate
money. The town began to grow in the
direction of her cabin, A :;*i if; v *t /. while
she employed laborers to pui uv t log
house. As there was a great acmar.d
for m ners’ boarding houses, Mrs. Kay
concluded to abandon the washtub and
start a hoarding-house in a now edifice.
In this idea she received great encour
agement, and the house was opened with
flattering prospects. In this venture she
proved to lie very successful, made
money, and finally saved it. By the
growth of the city her house got
to be in the very center, and, as tho
streets were laid out, it proved to occupy
n location on the corner of Harrison av
enue and State street. Business was
g*>od, mid she continued to make money,
which she invested wisely. She built
another log house and rented it. Then
she put up a frame building, which she
rented before it was finished. About
this time some of the land-grabbers dis
puted her title to the land, and tried to
dis|K>sscss her. But the old lady lmd so
many determined friends among the
miners that the effort was given up.
Several months ago she refused un offer
of $10,000 for her projierty, and since
that time has built a two-story block
fronting on Harrison avenue, ami us de
sirable a piece of property as any in
Leadville. t*he still lives in her log
house, but she now intends to tear it
dowu and erect a two-story block in its
place. When her improvements have
wen completed she will have un income
of more than $1,000 a month-a pretty
good record of business success tor au
old washerwoman.
A Detective Story.
Mr. Baron Huddleston told the follow
ing story at the Flintshire Assizes, Eng
land, where a question of identity arose
in a charge of horse stealing:* We al
ways ought to be very careful, his Lord
ship said, in cases of this kind, because
mistakes might be made by the most well-
meaning persons. When I was on the
Oxford Circuit, there was a friend of
mine at the bar who went on a fishing
expedition in the Principality. He had
a horse with him, and during the day ho
took it to an inn in a town to bait. Mean
while, he walked down the street quietly,
inspecting the shops. He was closely
followed by an inspector of police, anti
all at once he found himself the object
of attention at the hands of this official.
After walking after him a good way down
the town, the officer at last went un to
him and said, “ It’s no use your making
any nonsense about it it. Yon are Flash
Bill.” The member of the bar and of the
Oxford Circuit was horrified, but tho
police officer said. “ It’s no use; 1 know
you perfectly well,” and lie pulled out a
Police Gazette, in which there was a de
scription which, I am bound to sav, fully
justified the officer in suspcc ing him.
“ And,” he added. “ there is the very
horse you have stolen up at the stable.”
And it was with great difficulty he was
taken before a magistrate that day. He
always mentions the story with very
great gratitude to the magistrate who
was induced to leave his dinner—lie
thought first he had better he remanded
for a few days to get witnesses down, but
ultimate!/ did leave Lis dinner—and ho
was convinced by the earnestness of the
gentleman that the policeman had made
a mistake. The next train brought his
friends from the neighborhood, and they
satisfied the magistrate that there was a
mistake made. To this day this gentle
man tells the story. lie now holds the
dignified position of Deputy Chairman
of Quarter Sessions, and he says he lias
occupied every position in the Court;he
has been a juryman, a judge, a witness,
and a prisoner.
Janinn.
.Tanina, the modern capital of Epirus
which is now becoming a cause of quar
rel between Greece and Turkey for the
second time within three years, has been
a source of disquietude to the latter
from time immemorial. Its formidable
prominence, however, was attained about
half a century ago, wkon tlx? famous
Albanian chief, Ali Tebellin, chose it as
his capital on renouncing his allegiance
lo the Sultan, in the hope of making
Epirus an independent State. But
i Turkish intrigues proved more than a
Praia* loir Wife.
Praise your wife, man; for pitjds sake,
;ivc her a littlsencouragement- it won’t
Q. How is the country
it line?
The Father Jesuit answers: A. It is
very beautiful; there is no lack of every
kind of eatables, of all that is necessary
to clothe yourself, you are happy in
every respect: if somel>ody says, I would
like to be dressed in such a dress, there is
the dn» before you in an intuit; if be I f 0 ‘ r "hVm. Tire citadel of Jumna
desires to eat anything, Jesus Clirist ! was surrc^nclcrecl by treaelicry, and Ali,
brings it immediately. | with |, i8 favorite wife and a handful of
V' ( Wl ? rk ,n \ iravon • followers, took refuge in his island palaco
A. Iho.v do nothing wbatrter. They | oll thc lakC| which hc i ln( | previously
fur they always find the wheat ripe
plenty of pumpkins ami Indian beans,
Q
A. No; to
xtremelv be
tiie trees the same as here?
tlx-
paradise arc
always
and
tiful; they a
bloom, tueir leaves always
they do not fall; the grass never dies.
Q. Is the sun the same as here? Does
it rain? Docs the wind blow? Docs it
thunder?
“\. No; it is always fine weather, and
the hkv is never cloudy.
Q. Have they fruits’ in heaven?
A. That 1s not ill)possible.
Q. H »w are the fruits made?
A. They are fine fruits; each tree is so
loaded with them that, although people
may gather them every day, there is
never an end of it, for as soon as you
have eaten 6ne, another grows in’ its
phu-e.
Q. ]*» it cold in heaven?
A. There is no winter, but au eternal
Q. Are there many inhabitants in
heav< n ?
A. Yes, a very great number.
Q. Do they know each other?
A. They know each other, and are,
brothers and sisters; they grcit each
olio r, and never refuse or deny anything.
Q. Arc tho inhabitants of heaven
handsome?
A. They are beautiful; for people
who, when dying, were misformed. are
straightened; there are no blind, no
deaf, no hunchback people; for they uro
nil made new in heaven.
(j. Then there is no sickness in
heaven.
A. No; people there live very quietly.
There are no diseases, no famine, no war
and no death.
Q. Is it not rather tiresone in heaven?
A. No, for one hundred years arc like
a day. People have a great nleasi
looking at each other.
to fire the train,however, deceived by an
assurance that thc Sultan had pardoned
his master, allowed himself to be over
powered, and Ali, after a desperate re
sistance, in which he kilted five of his
assailants, was struck down and slain.
His head was exposed at the gate of Con
stantinople, and Janina became a Turk
ish city ouce more.
A Newspaper Gotlcn up by Lunatics.
Here is a hint for the superintendents
of American mad-houscs. Thc innova
lion has been recently introduced in the
great Vienna establishments. A litho
graphed newspaper, published in the in
stitution, is contributed to by the inmates.
Those patients for whom this slight nu n
tal exertion can only be beneficial send
articles and essays on questions of the
day, and it is only fair to say that it
would be a comfort to readers if some of
the matter published in the Vienna
newspapers, by people generally consid
ered sane, were as clever and well wriU
ten as some of these letters. Those who
arc afflicted with any monomania may
ventilate their delusion ami support theii
convictions by argument and example in
the columns of this extraordinary paper.
The logic employed in un article in n
recent number (says a correspondent) bv
one gentleman to disprove the belief of
another, that his beard was of heath,
and required constant watering was
faultless and incisive as to have do
credit to a Regius professor of rut
philosophy. Alas! he him.-elf firmly I
lieved that his nose was made of siigs
and to prevent its getting wet, and en
soqucntly melting away, always drat
through n straw. Had lie only In en al
to apply logic to himself he would ha
bc«a cured.
A Boy’s Vacation Letter.
(Botlon Glol>«.)
A small boy was sent to thc country
Ur board a short time ago. He promised
his mother that he would write a good
long letter, describing his trip and hoard
ing place, etc. A week went by, and
his poor mother was nearly distracted
when she got the following inferestinj
letter from him: “I am here, i,nd
swapped my watch for a pup, and lie is
the bow pup; and I went in swimmin'
fourteen times yesteiday. and a feller
stole my pocket-hook, uml I want som
money; and I shall bring my pup home. 1
HAlmks, like a good apple, is growing
mellow as he ripens with the gathering
New Worda.
• While many words once in common
use are now nearly obsolete, few person*
are aware how large a number of new
words arc constantly coming into our
language. The supplement of llie new
edition of Webster’s Unabridged Diction
ary, recently issued, contains, among
other attractive features, an addition oi
over 4,600 new words and meanings, and
yet it is but a few years since a general
revision was made and great care taken
to insert all the words then properly be- „ , .
longing to the English language. Whe*e mellow as he ripens i 8 K
these won), came*from <m<l W Ih.V rexr. There .re few more he.mur.il
are is a surprise to persons who have not i ‘ ,ne * , -b ,in ,n the lanpiingt .
examined them. ^Thet ther hero nnt , gSi.uVhV'.V# nil '
Bo Um tired iplril, wsHIhk »«» !"* fn'H,
On Ilf#’* la*t leaf will) tranquil «*v«**.lin
. 11m pal# ffltmiucr of the Ion n n-rni
but Um sod of voluios (Utt.
hurt her. Bha has made your home
comfortable, your heart bright and
shining, your food agreeable. lM>r pity’a
sake, tell her you tliank her, if nothing
more. She don’t expect it; it will make
her eyes o|K*n wider than they havs for
ten years, but it will do her good for all
that, and you, too.
There are many women to-day thirst
ing for the word of praise, the language
of eucouragcmeut. Through summers
beat and winter’s toil they have drudgod
uucomnluingly; and so accustomed
have tueir fathers, brothers, and hus
bands Income to their monotonouslabors,
that they look for and upon them as they
do upou the daily rising of the sun, and
iu daily going down. Homely every day
life may be made beautiful by on appre
ciation of its homeliness. You know
that if the floor is clean, manual labor
has been performed to make it so. Yon
know that if you can taks from your
drawer a clean shirt whenever you want
it, somebody’s lingers have ached in the
toil of making it so fresh and agreeable,
so fresh and lustrous. Everything that
pleases the eye and thc sense has been
produced by constant work, much
thought, great care and untiring efforts,
bodily anil mental.
It is not that many men do not appre
ciate these things, and feel a glow of
gratitude for the numberless attentions
bestowed upon them in sickucss and in
health, but they are so selfish in that
feeling. They don’t come out with a
hearty “ Why, how pleasant you make
things look, wife,” or, “ l*m much
obliged to you for taking so much
pains.” They thank the tailor for giv
ing them “fits;” they thank the man in
a full omnibus who gives them a seat;
they thank the young lady who moves
along in the concert; in short, they thank
everybody uud everything out of doors,
because it is the custom, and they come
home, tip their chairs back and heels up,
pull out the newspaper, grumbles if wife
asks them to take the baby, scold if the
tire has gone down, or, if everything is
just right, shut their mouth with a smack
of satisfaction, but never mj to her, “ J
thank you.”
I tell you what, men—young men and
old—if you did but show an ordinary
civility towards those common articles
of housekeeping, your wives; if you
gave the one hundred and sixth pari of
the compliments you almost choked them
with before they were married; if you
would stop your badingsabout whom you
are going to have when number one is
dead (such things wives may laugh at,
but they sink deep sometimes); if you
would cease to speak of their faults,
however banteringly, before others,
fewer women would seek for other
sources of happiness than your affection.
Fraiso your wife, then, for all the good
qualities she has, and you may rest as
sured that her deficiencies are fully
counter-balanced by your own.
Hovr Much a Menagerie Costa.
It may be interesting to a large class
of readers to know just what a menagerie
would cost them. There are, no doubt,
says the Detroit Free Press, many deserv
ing people in this country who would
like to add a tiger or hyena to their list
of household pets, if ’they only knew
where these docile creatures could Ik
obtained, and what" tho expense wouu.
be. England docs a large trade in wild
animals, and they are rather cheaper
there than in this country. Still, the
unhandiness of getting them here more
than makes up thc difference. Don’t
expect to get snakes and such thiugs by
mail; they dislike to be.stamped by the
active clerk, and the clerk generally
feels embarrassed when the package
breaks open. A tiger at a lion can be
4ad for $400 each; $15<^ct.s a very good
aiticiR of Icop.ml, altliuugli $100 will
buy an inferior kind; black panthers cost
$750; clouded tigers come as high as
$1,500, pnd economy would suggest a
aring investment in animals of his
iss; a Ivnx in England costs $50, but
they can lie had for nothing in Canada.
One hundred and twenty-five dollars
will get a polar bear, and $50 a brown
bear; a brown bear is just as satisfactory
as the others and much cheaper; sloths
cost $50, but you can get plenty of them
in America sitting arounu groceries and
talking politics; $25 gets a good wolf,
although many persons can get them
cheaper—in fact, they have hard work
keeping the wolf from the door. Aard
wolves cost as much as $500, no doubt
because they arc sc Aard to get.
Monkeys cost r>»m $2 up lo $500. Of
course for the Fatter price a regular
Darwin can he had. A zebra will cost
you $500. Be sure and get one of the
right stripe. Kangaroos cost from $50
to $300. Feed them on hops. Every
family needs an elephant, and will be
pleased to know that one three stories
nigh can be bought for the trifle of
$1,500. A two-story elephant costs$760,
a cottage elephant costs $000, while any
amount of shanty elephants, for parlor
pets, can be bought for $300. Now we
come to luxuries. A rliinocerous should
not be indulged in unless the purchaser
has a good bank account. A very or
dinary rhinoceros costs $2,000, while a
pretty desirable article comes to
$5,000. A person must have the rhino
to indulge in a rhinoceros. Now go
ahead anu make your selections. “ You
pays your money and takes your choice.”
Influence of Greenbacks.
He looked like a man who might have
had fifteen cents last fall, but who had
used the last of it weeks ago. When ho
•at down in thc restaurant the waiters
paid no heed to him, and he rapped
several times before a colored man
slid that wav.
“ I want fried oysters,” said thc man,
as he looked over thc bill of fare.
“ l>ey is jist out, fried oysters is,” re
plied the waiter.
“ Bring me a chicken, then.”
“ Dere isn’t a chicken in de place.”
“ Got any venison?” inquired the man.
“ Not an inch, sail.”
“ Any ham and eggs?”
“ No, sail.”
“Bee hero,” said tho man, getting
vexed, “ I want a square meal. I’ve got
the ducats right here, and I can pay for
my dinner and buy your old cooxshop
besides.”
Hc lifted a big roll of greenbacks out
of his pocket, shook it at the darkey and
continued:—
“ Have you a chicken?”
“ Yes, sail, I guess so, sah ; I have de
biggest kind o’ belief dat since we com
menced to talk a chicken has blown into
lie kettle an’ been cooked. And now
al>out dat venison and dose fried oysters
—dey has also arrived.”
Milk for Bl ight’s Disease.
A physician suffering with Bright’s
disease, and weighing 155 pounds, began
in June, 1878, to restrict himself exclu
sively to a milk diet, taking one quart at
each meal, or three quarts daily. He
reports that no trace of his former
ailment is perceptible at the present
time, that he has gained thirty pounds
in flesh, and this notwithstanding con
stant attention to professional duties,
both day and night
Next to a klear konshience for solid
comfort cuins an easy boot Try both.
family, $5 s&'ja so; cnoiee to fancy, $5 6(XS|
6 15. Wheat: No. 2 rod fall, «$115£
Corn: No. 2 mixed, S5Xo.
LOUlb VILLK—Flour Rxlra, $3.2 <;do. (am
uiiv, iwc, miiau, -o^c.
CINCINNATI—Flour: family* |5 25ft
6 00. Wheat: Red and white, ...@$1 15
Corn, 42e. OaU 25X327c.
NEW YORK—Flour: Southern, common
(air extra. $5 5006 00; good to choice
extra, $6 10@7X5. Wheat: Ungraded win-
red,$1.23®$l 31; No. 3 do., $1 24; No. 2
do., $1 22® 1 33 K; No. I do.. $1 32®
* 83J<j. Corn: Ungraded, 54®55)4c.
pnovsuosa
ATLANTA—Bulk meat: Clear rib aides,
c. Bacon : Sugar-cured hams, 10%® 11c;
shoulder*, ...c; bright «uiall aides, Sc: plain
bama, none; breakfast bacon, 8@8&c.
BALTIMORE-Mean pork. 10 00. Bulk
meats: Loose, shoulders, 3 ; clear rib
sides, 6c; packed, shoulders, 4*tfc; clear
rib Bides, 6^c. Bacon: shoulders, 4%c;
clear rib sides, 6Jtfc; hams, ll@ll)^c. Lard,
refined, iu tierces, 7c.
CINCINNATI—Pork, $9 60. Lard. $0 10.
Bulk meats : shoulders,3^c; clear rib, $4 75
@5 00;clear sides, $5 50. Bacon: shoulders,
$4 25: clear ribs, $6 37%; clear sides, 6%c.
NEW YOUK-Pork: New mess, $9 00;
Middles; Long clear, 5 He; short clear, 5 He*
lone and short clear, 5.75c.
LOUISVILLE — Poik, *!). Lard : choice
leaf iu tierces, 7%c; do. kegs, S%c. Bulk
meats: Shoulders. $3 :b; clear ribs, $i 00
cear sides, $5 25. Bacon : Shoulders,$3 87 %
clear ribs, $5 38; clear sides, 5%c; sugar-
cured hams,9®10>4c.
rUI NTKV a»UODl)CE.
ATLANTA—Kegs: Reliable selling at 17c;
ordinary lots, 16c. Butter: Choice Tennes-
, )6®14c; medium, 12@16f; low grades,
9®16c. Poultry: Small, 9®12c: medium,
12(u)17c; large, 16® 18c; hens. 20c; ducks,
1559...C. Sweet potatoes, 60c®...c per
bushel. Irish potatoes, 90c®$l pet bushel.
BALTIMORE—Butter: Prime io choice
western packed, 13315c. Eggs, 15c.
BOTTOM.
ATLANTA—Middling, 9>qc. .ow mid
dling 9%c. good ordinary 9c.
NEW YORK—Cotton: Middling uplands
10%c; middling Orleuus, 10%c.
GALVESTON—Cotton firm; middlings
10c, low middlings 9%c, good ordinary
9%c.
NORFOLK — Cotton quiet; middlings
SAVANNAH — Cotton quiet; middlings
c, low middlings 9Xc; good ordinary
9%c.
AUGUSTA—Cottou quiet; middlings at
9Mjc; low middlings 9-%c, good ordinary,
NEW ORLEANS — Cotton fijm ; mid
dlings 10%c, low middlings 0%c; good or\
dinary 9%c.
CHARLESTON—Cotton quiet; middlings
10'Ac, low middlings 10c, good ordinary
9%c.
MOBILE—Cotton steady; middlings 9%
low middlings 9%c, good ordinary 9 l Ac.
LI VC STOCK.
ATLANTA—We quote Choice Tenner
see cattle 3c. common Georgi:
Spring lambs.... Sheep $1® 2
per head.
CINCINNATI—Hogs: Common $2 60(g)
3 20, light $3 40(g)3 60, ) acking $3 45(S>3 65.
butchers $3 65<S'3 75.
LITJIRKR.
ATLANTA—All undressed lumber, .
per M. Flooring dried, dressed, tongued
and grooved, $16<?>17 per M. Weather'
boarding dressed and edged, $15 per M.:
dressed on one side, $H(®15. Shingles,
4 -inch, all heart, $1 50; shingles. No. 2,
$2 50.
NEW OPERAS!
Carmen • op.r.b, »..t
Oaruiej) is »u OjM-r* Hist bn# jrrsiluslly sml
surely won IM wsr to s great popularity. Al
though the Imok is Isrts. In (hot wlist out* might
call * “lour dollar book " It l« got up in flesaut
►l lo. with nude sud sll the word*. Engtidi and
foreign, for *3 ou
Urge, flue book, wlfli Kugllah sud foreign word*,
sud the opors Iu every wsy c omplete, lor s low
price.
Doctor of Alcantara *
A fsmous o^riki now hrougiiti iiy' the popitlsr
rice, within the resell sf all.Wheitrsl parts
Bells of Corneville.K*
P[su*ii«ct«, (u early ready I. t(..v
great surreal. This, with the "Doc lor" sud
"Sorderor" (gl.Ou) are well worth sdouttug by
>panics who have finished Plusfore (still sell-
well for to cents), sud who are looking out foi
POND’S EXTRACT
Subdues Inflammation, Acute or Chronic,
Controls all ittmorrhagcs, Vcnoits anil Mucous
iNVALUABLg Fob
Ituras, Kcalds, Bruises. Sorrueas
XlieumnlIsas. Itvils, Ulrrre. Old Som,
Tooth arise, •Irsdsche, More Thruiu.
Asthma. Hcwiiesew.NrursUIn,
Catarrh, drr., Ar.
i Districts Former I y Kavsrn
n . .
dri ed their systems
tetter’s Stonixoh Bitters, tiie "best preventive
and remedy. Quinine cun not compare with
it in efficacy, aud is anything but sufe. Phy
sicians commend the bitters for its remedial
and resuscitating properties aud the closest
analysis reveals nothing in the composition
oPn deleterious nature. It does not deteri
orate, is an agreeable cordial as well us a no
tent medicine, and when mixed with brack*
r unwholesome water neutralizes its
localities, tint only iu the United States,
but the tropics, regard it us an invaluable
protection,and in hosts of bun'Mes it is kept
conilantly on hand. As the tide of emigra
tion spreads westward, the demand for it
among those w*ho are compelled to encounter
the vicissitudes of climate, constantly in*
crease.
Mayor Itcniiy's Cihuu* huiI urgsiu.
Your attention is called to the advertise*
ment of Hon. Daniel F. Beatty, of Washing'
ton, New Jersey. Mayor Beatty’s celebrated
pianos and organs are so well known
throughout the civilized world thi.t they
require no commendation from iu. I.
prices,
satintaction have brought
nently forward, until to day he stands the
only man in his trade who dares to ship his
instruments on test trial, and, if unsatisfac
tory, refunds not only the price but all
freight paid. No fairer offer
or even suggested. His rales now are very
large, and when it is taken into considera
tion that a few years ago he was onlv
plough-boy, it must be evident to every
rcmler that Mayor Beatty is the possessor of
restored to the
lation when contaminated, if Scovill’s Blood
end Liver Syrup is taken. Scrofulous, syph
ilitic and mercurial disorders are completely
vanquished by it, persistence in the ure of
the remedy being alone required lo nccom
p'ish a cure. Etuptionn of nil kinds, rnrer
chronic rheumatism, gout, liver compiuint
and goitre yield to its remedial action, and
t not only purifies the blood but vitalizes
jhe system. Hold hy ell dtuggi
Corcill.s Asl> Colds are olten overlooked
A continuance for any length of time causes
irritation of the lungs or some chronic throat
disease. “Brown’s Bronchial Troches”
an effectual cough remedy. 25 cents.
... _.. the
Mason Hamlin cabinet organs, which have
>een acknowledged the best at all great
world’s exhibitions for many years.
$3300^ A 5|. ,, rvS^v,'w
|72uutflt fissTiddrew TSUB MV
A UJCNTH, old or youag, sfrn #j» s d»v St bo.n**.
8sB»lf»worth S'. fr*<*- BownaOo.L«*us»iou.N.ll
siimim tstttssi. s; & ay,:
SsupIsoopzAM. Murrey lbll Pub. Co.,lgV K. anlul ,MTr.
$10 to $1001 Maks* fortaabs *vsrr mouth
YOUNG MEN^'Vli'CVi'.r:
month. Erory gradual* gasrsuto* d a tazb*l
•Ihretfoi,. Addrea* B.Vsl*urine.M»n.Js!i*»vm« Wl»
OLIVER OITSON * (JO- Burton.
C. H. muon A Co. J. K. IMIsomA <*•.
I Urosdwsr. M. V. <*» ObMts.it at..Phil.
IY8K
romily tlmuld I.
with..
stable** Iii Now York aud .*lM>wli«rc slwu>n use It.
Np. sins, Ms* ih*h und Huddle d ttoflttg*.
call, Nrrnlrbt*i. Hwelll.igs, Nlltfbte**.
r, etc., are nil com rolled and * iirel by
r special preparation, VKTKUINAKY
KXTKAUT. is sold at the lo’
SO n»W.-Fort
POND’S EXTRACT CO.,
WELL-AUGER. 0
till.US. Clll«X.I, ill.
PERPETUAL
Sorghum Evaporator.
*15. *20. *25.
CHEAP AND DUHABLE.
astotaotsas
i ‘SIHPL0YlWENT-K, c A^eir.V.»
t (iKNTS WANTKD fr.r^U..* ( Rest an.l^Kast.st-
? l *’ h **"**+'. *- «•*
Heel Stiffeners. They keep your boots A shoee
straight, and make them easy to your feet.
For economy use C Gilbert’s starches.
CHKW Jackson’" West Mweet Navy Tobacco
DautH-pra. lVIvsi nwt ttother*.
Dr Msrohbl's Uterine Catholiran will potltlvelv
cuve Fenule W«skueu, such a* Falling ol theWomb,
Inflsmmntlon or Ulceration of thi
womli, lncldont.il Hemorrhage or Flooding,Talnfii!
2uppreMed and IrreguUr Menatuialion, Ac. An ob
snd reliable remedy. Send postal card (or n u?m
phlet, with treatment, cure*
LATEST MARKET FLOTATIONS.
n.Ol'It. «KAia AND NKAL.
ATLANTA—Flour: Bur.erfine.$4; family
$6; extra family. $6 50; fancy, $6 50@7 50,
Wheal—The following prices are millers’
buying prices: Tennessee choice white, $1 14
fri)l 16; Tennessee medium, $1 05(^t 10;
< ieorgia choice white and amber,$107; lower
grades, $1. Corn: Choice white, 70c,
mixed, «5*8607. Oats, 45@75c. Meal, 70c.
MT. LOUIS—Flour: Double extra fall,
ti 7604 90; treble extra fell, $610#5 25;
Rabjr Saved.'
We are so thankful to say that our
baby was permanently cured of a dan**
gerous and protracted irregularity of xbe
bowels by the use of Hop Bitters by its
mother, which at the same lime restored
her to perlect health aud strength.
[Buffalo Express.
Do a Favor to a Sick Friend.
package of Kidney-Wort, and you
will make them happy. Ita great Ionic
power is especially directed to these dis*.
eases, and it quickly relieves the distress
and cures the deaease. Have you tried
it?
BlYw*. Address II. II a
I TLX
i. Mtchlgss.
PORK TEAS Agents wsntwl^avarywhwjt to
«I o 'porV. *'<TiTc*" "o r s r?re TI Tk K i. i'Vt K A
OOMPANV. :n| Fnlton "t.. N. V. I‘. <)■ II * iv.*>
Geo.PRowell&G-
IS Srailt'K NTHRKT, NKW TOHH.
Printing House S*,u*re. opp. ths Tribune Unlldlug
Newspaper Advertising Bnrean'.
Nrw Yosh Aubnis roa
United fltHt p snd fsnads.
to pverv*Ii?t,on"”m° Newl
(torn Florida to IU Irish t!ol
York rlty dslhre snd wsekllee.
Rlsht thousand bewspapani kept rer'il »* u ( » •»■**
for Inspection by sdvsriftsers. Inc I nil no uli t
V est dallies from noe'*.n to San Fr*ut..t«.u, lior -
ontreal to OslvtstonA,
n*... ASSSIVAM SI^VSI'AfSIl UlSttIUUi
If yon are
Interested
the inquiry—Which is the
best Liniment for Man and
Beast e —tills is the answer, at-
tested by two generations: tho
MEXICAN HUSrANU UNI-
MKNi. Tlio reason is sim
ple. It penetrates overy sore,
wound, or lameness, to the
very oonc, und drives out all
Inflammatory and morbid mat
ter. 11 “ goes to the root ” oi
tho trouble, and never fails to
euro iu doublo quick time.
K Wicnv 1
has been before the public thirty
knew*, cllUent. HUNT'S HKNKOt cores
Rropip (iravel, and all diteases of tl.e Kldueys
Bladder,,,d Urinary tirgans. Send for pamphlet lo
WM. I. < LAIIKK, “ *
ik smiii nm a.
* IO% jrd
cable In nil Iho
LEADING MARira
OF THE \70RLD!
Every whore recognised as tho FIH ChT
IN TONK.
OVER 80,000
IH.<lr nn.l In uiw. Nc. Iv.lr>« co.M«i>tl,
tmm Su epp. Wiltion Mofeto
ftAPONIFIER
l« ths Old Relthbli Con«*atmUd Lye
FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKINQ.
Hired Inns »ocomn%nylng c*qb can for mskln«
Hard. HoU, and Toilet A>%n S«Mly.
IT IS FULL WEIGHT AUD STRENGTH.
irket Is flooded with (so-called) CVrnceiv
-| / v / t/VX Agent* Waalcl Iu th«* Honth. rn
IUaUvHJ sud Western States lor tlie t.raud-
eslTiiumphof tln-HK* pltrtiper mouth ami «*xp*-i»-
se* »! outlit tree. Uto. ALswiencv.L. uisville. hy*
4iertisers.a., rl ,.Ge^. P. Howei 1 & Co’?,
* e< llwo^pwre*'****w»H»lc«. iQf.' K "
S2.500 A VkA« «S.l54?fSa;.fe;
mum PA8nui8.HIS™'
royortlons] returns ° ■
TfroTTKffwiOHT *! tX?.\ l Msnkw*s.XtWall st.N.V
A“
MMLVIL’L'L
eet'rtiodioll sutboriU -
award at^ l'i World'rt^F.yx)mttons^si|tl aM’ariH.bv
i- *-:su»i».lahe«l I
Pensions
ew Uw. Thoi
ted. Address with stamp,
UKOKtiE E. LEMON,
arer. SOS. Wniklollnn. I). t
1,5(S0N ft HAMLIN CABINET OBP*NSL
»V,. :,.«.Yn/ed otH t J alGHEST HONt* - V Al.',
WOttlab'K KVlUMTlfN' tot T\\
WARNER IRff'S 00S8E IS
IMPROVED,}
WtRVKIi RUBS, zr.t Rrnnd’i
The Weekly Sun.
FOR HALF A DOLLAR
Addres* TUK SUN, W. Y. City
BUFFALO BILL.’’
TEAS!
direct fr,*j
UL eTTmIKSS '
Rl land U Veiry Atrce
ORGANS?-*". k";.
Wslnul (Vie. warrant.-'
*ll»7». Latest lUu
Address DASIKL V. tahATl V.
CURED FREE!
0 li.'.sim ie and naete’.'-d i«mfdy f..- fits
MEvmltr. .
**A Free Hot tie rf r.-.*
Fits
tttcskli
his l*s»l clflcssnd X>pra«ssddct*.t
DR. Y-I. Gr. ROOT,
ree wv - Tw -Xu
nhUshera. N.V.t'ity.
PETROLEUM. II A Ofl III T JELLY.
at <, ?hWs?ejphia VAulLIN t
This wonderful suhstanre it scknnwledged i.y
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