Newspaper Page Text
«uir
, .•„
e*** 9 ?- *~T^T7ZC1 the figor*« tb*j iL wotud be
Sx~«S^£SE, __—^
xstj •* 8 * tj g g * tj!
oomptarive s£.da“-the worth has grratty takes v»r.f! k»l
.tremor ,1 the
«..•» tii»* very "h< chi^f of jewels, bat it lia*
T,,t.l.'»v 9 t ttretf ertroo. Before
e skri of tl e l.n.Ww which now
sj?ss£ * 55 %*jss? a-tremond.
r.-.rth correideraWT more than
Thus, $1,500 has sithOTTp iieen giVenfora dretnoml rub y
T.rt&re?rsSrSfo 7 a for
the- same weight woiii*l sell no more
than *500 ia Londim. Bat it re very
difSiiuh to find a perfect ruby. To luaht
• t. • • i wi, h-vr* t - - i
in Talunno matter how gr«U >ta *>ni
Haney nor how frt-e it may be from d»*
t'.-cts and flaw.. nt nst b.v the precree
--------r-r. '
“'The ™tung diamoiida into regular
„n m Amsterdam. Of the 28.000 He
brews living in that <aty, it ia eatimetwl
• ii .t ly.iSW are dir.srtlyrwiiHlirecUyJe- iraite diamond cut
IK-ouent ujx. 1 . the of
tfog ,Ll Althougb the greatest still is re
v is the cutters, they are which poorly dia
paid. The three forms m
moudsare cut are the table, the rose,
and the brilliaiiL The last baa toper
stded the first two except for infanor
stouea. The brilliant » a double
oTCiim.1 oi oomnv.t i.; at the tb P.p by s
,-T --fjfod st f
U the collet.
,_ < 1 »ann.is.a .-eicaiafrel a* fob
.
lows :■ Four grains - one car.; HI*
be carats «. that one ouace diamond troy. gram .Jt^fbus is lewthan
seen a diamond
on ordinary troy gram ; five
grains net quid to f-ur of the troy grsnre.
T*ki! 3 advantage Precious p stones .
ed in a article on
u the Bnti*h
supplementmg them with °~f r ®' *j
wul give ta hmto^ o so o o. ni
,amou« of t}ie»« jeWflH, First, as U> tn ^
pea* diamonds of the world, wh ch may
be thus enumerated; „ "A* A
, „
, ore ».ai,..bu.ioi»j"" a -’ M
fcirew .
i sru,:.,,, .v:. are -
aSSirJUires* ’ «s s
-
BSWU. ,fc
. %
;K. 2 6 * 8 55, ^
. ......
., SfM«reWd»*'re..»d" g
The flTst of these, the “ Hvaganza, ,
al.icli vw foun.l in Brazl m 1T41, m
about the size of it lieu s egg. the and, if it
is u diamond, .it is by far largest iu
v xi a t e noe . JButaa t n r P o rtugu ese 1 goV -
ernment, to which it belong#, will
suffer it to lie examined, many
HeUeve it only a white topaz. Its
ia not given, but if it is indeed a real
perfect diamond it ought to lie
*8,000,000, for the “ Mataii " not
quarter.its sire* m appraised by
at $1,350,000. For the “ Orloff . a
diamond, now sit in thetop of the Rus
-Sian imperial sceptre,Whsnne 1:1.
450,000 roublre (8337,500) and a
Ilf 20,000 roubles, aud gave the Jew
whom she The.-V; bought Austrian it ;i patent iff
us well. or Orand
brilliant," also called tho “
of 'fusciny,” vtiluefl hasra slightly $w)0,000. It
line, autl J 8 at
(W0. The *‘»Star of the 8 ontb ie
»»» »
the province of Minas tleraei, BrazU,
IH-ff. Its value estjwuile is not given, neith e
famoun lmvu we any tf Koh-i-noor.” hi thejaluei The “ 8 or hah,
presented to the Emperor of Russia
ChoeroeR, non ol Abba* Mirza, i*
fvwtal prism, and i* engraved with
Persian inscription. The end <• Tigott laat '
nM by lottery, at the of
Turv, for §150,000, and afterward it
bought by tho Pauli* of Egypt for
*iu»e pruse, it meantime having
..btait.n l by RumlcII ilSrtack
Tin'
was captured from the Peishwa of
. Maliratta* hy the Marqma of Hasting*,
and waa afterward purchased The by
Marquis of Westminster.
iu the list is s very large
diamond, which was found in Brazil
few year* ago. The thirteenth an
•MM stone, is now offered for sate at
000. The unowned “ Haney ”
Hupposed *5 to have been worn -heu by
Bolii Of Mr he
killed'at the battle of Nancy, though
story ia doubted, was, after
through sever;*! bauds, * old in 18(15
Sir Jamsctjee Jojcc-hhoy. of
4 ur $ 106 , 0011 , It thus, alter euoiv violas!
tudes, returnisl to sold India, it*
home. James II. the “ Saucy
Louts XIV. for $125,000, so the
purchaser seems to lisve made a
bargain. fnesefnmouadianiunils, tlie s Pitt .
Of
and the “Koh-i-noor” have the
interesting histories. The “Pitt" is
most perfect brilliant m existence,
is without a rival 1 U shape and
It weighed tohuve-beruifound 410 carafe in therengh,
is mid tn I7i>2 m
mines of Partes!, India, by a slave,
concealed tt tn a gash he cut for the
pose m the calf of his leg.
iiwfty from .bis master, he offeral it
Kaildr 60 condition that he assist him
escape. The aailor lured the
slsiard the ship snd sfo-t!,rm :
mto the sea, sold the stone to
lor *5.000. Thomas Pitt, governor
Fortst. merchant George, t»ught it of this
doo for $62,500, and had it
into a flue briilittut. The catting
pied fragments two year*, and o.jst $25,000;
the cut off were worth
or twenty thousand dollars, so Pitt
not oiit heavily for the improvement
The poor man found the posaes*ion
hi* treasure far from enviable; for
fearful was he of robbery that he
made known beforehand the day of
coming to town, and uever slept
sesutively Thefame two night* iu the same house,
of tlie diamond spread
Europe, uf and many pemoa# tried to
a sight it, bnt m vain. AU sorts
tt-riKs were told about the means
which Pitt olitained his treasure, ao
bo was at last teroed to defend
m a. pamphlet. But pope wrote:
a-: - i> And uak«*«l a-auiodiwi l*y.
An bonont fai'tor Kt'il** a ffem away:
H & pledged e P U, iamon to .tbe kni^tj the rogue knight bad Jlt
-
As we have said 1 itt sold the stone
iu 1 ilia V for °®^? SW-yKKb- S .l5 eg -It T? t ' was ° f Fr tH
rlurmg theR^:gr of Terror, but was
—■ - ‘rod in ft lmstenuuB uiiutuei-.
l*ym T. found it of inestimable value _
rim for alter the IHth Uumaire,
pledgmg it te the Dutch, he
Vne iuuda'that were so indispensable
t.ie consol idati on of las power, it
; .iterwarr \ ■rrdcprr.r■. aiv .^ms»?rtenteu
! > 0 r?I??J JilSt® f??! r 2“ ^ S Pans ror,i exhibi
jsnb !32 , 6 ' io ^ 1850 by lbs TTri Bnhsh ot tbe
t was stipulate,! presented hat the" the
sSionVl lie to qn«®.
1851 it w« displayed attbe first
hair at London. The stone was
recat at~a coat oi $40,000. A
btory is told of the danger it wa* m
fins period.- The Loudon jeweler
t mated With the recuttmg of the
• r wa, displaying Ins ffnikbed work
tq" ,-srtthy "inpery paw, and who accidentally
pfi'f’Sngcrt and weighty fall gem
The 1 on the
withate «*ta^dS* ” on ihe point of
“ iOD recovering
ioforsfonav 0 ^ 1 ?^e rame state,
ihfallibly^ha^25^ the ‘r Ur 1 .* *b* n ,e »tone «
«
The
sssboKj-jJ sss'isssi^SiSra
[iu struck !12iW t.v e*cb of AtinfL the sever*! nreriooi voi«r- t«
BJBzsz
vSdt. to be derived, a* the merit of his
,„yer or offering with ill the rert of
The Meoguon t»U is oitaited .m the
rich' i^%tta£?& i.wok of the Irrawatldv almoet op-
2 £&
tssjaftjssSaTSf an.l >»re«ath
fog. gta it* attreme height <i tl fthnf
.that i.to reaw, II.., ln M lil ani i lsn i
beH proper) are respectively twenty- that,
one feet and eighteen feet; bo as
regards siae and weight, it ranka amongst
the meat remarkable bell# in the wtwd,
It m on three maaurve round
logaof teak, plac*l horiaontaU.vaud their ion
^tndinalW, the one over the other,
r ,-»-mg on pillars of v«t size, fold large com
- T’.rrn. 3 tSTrsr tniioWy
Arming drlaphlat
spe J’t akiu*. it wilibo Keen, “ taken a list,"
t„ port, hot amidshirs. and sensibly burden
^nowjfdge the stuptmdous which they
nn< i e r, ’ ..r rather above,
!aW ... seventy-five
Ttre hell was cast about
veers ago, in the time and under the
, n porinteuilence of King Bo-Do-Piysh, “J
tlie grcat-graniHatiie- of the B»-l>o-Piy»b present
fog sovereign of Barmah. s
re ign is famous in the history oi Bar
m al/as IjsViog eifonded over a period still of
thirty-six years; and his memory is
reveAd aa the aoveieign during whose
rnhie the Burmese empire, gekml f«andwide
j flourished under the effects of
, p the !ent virtue ifnl and of wht»e abundantlrerve«ts,_«md almost snpenwtnrwl
power it* hmito were extended to dre
tances Near never the beliIn Moiw.attaiMd. ISfesrch
size also erected by the same monarch,
*t .Umt the ^ toettatteirte«tod
hiaiself 111 the castmgof the fmaoualwU.
solid The pagods is a«juare and n • length ,
uiawmry, measurea in
j on each sideone hnndreiland fi-ty with yards. al
It rises in this square form, and
®«"t imperceptibly dummriied propm
r7to/ fifty feet, , 0 » H Jr when ,K iio°wortr the work R Jk^^fiudden seem, suld
y to have arrested ^.b** whnli, not escaped from
I the effects of Mrtliqnakes, to
tunc to time, have been so raiuous
Several largecayernous flasuree appear
^'Uhno’tifmttto^
road to weaun, h- P ^" tnat wiosay, tow if lx creSoiwS creaence ng
is to be placed m the aueged tact lit
i within the solid masonry ofthe bill U g
be. entombed one bundled .
solid gold, of life 8ize '““b uuage orKnig re
; prawntrag ™; f ' “ > f the biemlierH
] | >y»hafmiulv. members of the Th e8 roval ‘«7
that the daugiitera
f <m.*t probably sons and only
amounted to mnety-nme, and that
kmg woa obliged to adopt one clitld into
his household, fo. make up the rouud
numlier of one lmndre.1.
"
- y Son’s Horrible Crime.
Oneoftlie most horrible mid . unnatural r
crimes ou record has just l»*n tried
at the Assizes ot the Eure, m France,
Tbe prisoner, a yonng man of twenty
four, was accused of murdering
mother iuwldbliwd, and then
up the Iwwiy into pieoee to get nd of it.
saw
8 he had two other children, another
• rmti tietwfHe*--, --w usTauii $$**- * »»■» • ■« »**!«■ »i -
I some distant who rarely
f On .the 16th of March last she
: ly di*appeared. The neighbor* paid
particular attention at first to her
, semie, eepemaUy naher non sadd ebc
left home iu her Sunday clothe*, and
1 probably gone to see one of her
Bouen. Some daya passed away,
still no news wan heart 1 of the widow,
The neighbors now began to feel nneafly,
‘ H ad adnscdilm son to writo to hie
toius stismt
, had all along shown the utmost ludiffer
i e „ce in tbe matter, at length wrote
hi* uncle at Rouen, professing the
e*t anxiety at the disappearance of
mother. But the tonalo had not
her, au-1 oould not imagine what haii
, come of her, Presse .1 by the neighbors,
Modesto resolved at last to inform
authorities of her disappearance, but
fore they had time to open *an
au unexpected fftho discovery mastery. led to the
raveling named awful by
A man Gowct, in passing
old marl pit, remarked that
fiati made the hole larger. His
being areas.ff. he approached the spot,
sl! d discovered spots of blood and
i niarks on the brink of the pit.
j fqrther. lie found the track of a
barrow extending to within a few
of the house inhabited by the
,; .Lpnchari}. _ He informcil the police
his diaooverv, and it was decided to
scent! into the pit, whieb is about
fe et •yi deep. g, t thing the searchers
19 8
a Cr0 Ss was a hnmra arm, then
arm, niaindef then two the hisly legs, and finally tho
ot of a woman.
the over, identity in spite .of of these the victim fearful
was soon
tablished-the remains were those
. wifiow.
Tlie trial followed, and the
Modrete Emmanuel, was condemned
death. He will to, guillotineit
ftn ,i in the cobtnmeaainimed ton^shirt to
parente-viz a * and a
veil around his head.
■
, „ I omeroy, tlie . Child Murderer, ,
eeruing Probably the there prison is more curiosity of
career
tnan any other convict in the
*ett* State Prison, says the Boston Globe.
This singular phenomenon of A fiend
1 murderer is even life more In siugdlar lonely cell siuee
incaroeration for a
: he was in tlie palmy davs of hi*
i ties. He has, in fact, become quite
exemplary young man, and is evidently
determinal upon mvjuiring a
classical eanoatiou. He is away by him
; self in- a cell in that part of the prison
known aa the “ upperWh,” out of and the
; »ight of everything and everybody,
the only sound* which greet hi* ear* are
the whistles of the pacing loooraotiVes
ami rumbling of the trains. Three
• times the a day only is this solitude broken
by meals, app<%r*nce of a keeper with
and then not a word passe* be
' twei them. It should be added in
* n
qualification, however, that the
mother and brother are allowed inter
view* with him every three mouths,
Tui»-i» iu ’accordance with the general
roles of the prison, all of which are ap
; pficable to Pomeroy, with the terrible io
exception tiia t hi* co nfinement ia
■ M.Titurj‘-luring ins natural-life.
the regular working hours he is employ
ed in making shoebmshes.
1 — ___
.warare.
.
larK,] f ln r r f, lT n *»*?.«* r re
ftg» planted - with this cenal is not
large! A new hybridization, variety of maize,
suit of earefu! has
i,rough! into the market, which, if
: that is said is true, will materially in
crease the product of this grain per acre.
The stalkB average from eight to ten
m height, producing each from four
ten well-filied ears, averaging from
: to ten inches in length. It is called
improved prolific, U ol the white
ties, and is susceptible of being
into a flour resraibling in taste rad
.stance that made from the i*st wheat
It ripens earlier thmi theordinary
I ty, and from tee extraordinary
of ears produced on each stalk, the
Uere per acre is cultivation put at one hundred bushel#,
the ikwhrt it
j»-~•»•**•<-•>«• “£.«»».«._ “
—«»*
“isr-jrxj. m-PH * -*™* »»*-**» ?■* .*».
Sharp and intelligent numb are i»ore
i«P«ctw "£. by the world tixasi virtuous
... - -* **.
k»“ , ” ! - — “ “ “'
^l, Eatm = j, „ g^, for which the ouiv
t re worto pleasure re only i
n*lli*iive p ‘
He who tree no tumre ^ to improve ^ upon
asssittA^.
J&zsxr-zxs: .a*
in« models. ------. _
; —tfewfoUhot endure sohtnde were
not for the powerful companionship of
'hope or of some unseen one,
■ It lg aot Jjfficnlt to do good for the
are constantly *md'i»an<]jiu clustering about
e rerv man's lips
beantifal acacm. that
lil1itaK }££}"** ) nvrai^lv &Ikyto its neighbor
{™T5So* i^ e ^
W.^rell never l~rn to foe. and ».
everythin* ns tnoonshine compared with
the education of the heart.
; The great bleeemgs of mankind are
within us and within our reach, but we
, .but our S ryea and, Uke people in the
dark, we foul upon the very thing
we search for without finding it.
Evils in the journey of life are like
the hills which alarm travelers upon
foefo road ; they both appear great at a
^mfoune, but when we approach far less them
we find that they are had conceived in sar
ra ,„ Ul table than when we
Manners are the ahadowH of virtue,
display of tho« qaaU
tiea whio h our fellow creature, love and
r ^ 5 , S p ect If we rtri\e to become, then,
^ ^ manners may
: oftoo be rendered useful duties. guides to
■ performance of our ,
„ wbUe
beeHifutX this rione re
unshaken, that we ought to be
wftr e of committing ininrenl ami injustice that above rather all than
a
, ought ^ to study not to appear good,
but to do so. both ooin privately pnvaiey and a pub- pu
It is resignation * and oonientment
I . . bsrt , ^bmbtodto , , , . *0 lea .1 ua wife
lv * '
went power tojeudure « nrivatfon* |nyaboiis and and
*”°°T sZrn^f^Sist^inM P emotion—
^f “^fseu»ttive“^»ofhts | 1 __if
Xe^rS^SbMbfk h
: ^ *
n»y may.aunw. suffer.
_
. Bosiness
Fewer Lbuese , wood . __i peddlirsare seen
on our streets than for m«y ye »t«, My»
the. \n«uua hf’Jljw.'ttfv City ‘‘iron!!h?
mg John Md tog donkey from the flSd fleld.
Wood and coal are now told -m v ery
small lota and delivered everywhere John 1 m
the city by white men. Cbrna
ufs ,innkm
' oiTn A>riJ.tlv°nie»HnMmu> and
‘
* f * 1 —• ttw rrom r„.n, oar 8Wte
se nes.
A , f ,, Vj - -
and Truckee railroad ™ ®
atreete swarmed m winter with Chinese
wood paddlers. They were then »»de
*°, th ® T f r *?
W d, by h be oord, te ^
“5s r„r?i«==
»w load''Of hen you ntwAl» fteked Hofftm;!- the pr ftur ioe of^ the ^ weather
■
might be, it was always : “One dolla'
“ z ep h r “
began to howl and storm cloud* wroee,
John cocked an eye to the windward anti
firmly answered : M Two dolla I’
As the Chineae gathered hJla -their wood
in the summer on ttie near the city,
and as they earned about Iwo arm.
fol on each donkey, they had p rich bar
vest every winter vn the tlie retailing busineoi of
wood, and all engaged in
• n»de money quile rapidly. Then they
eifflerteil their wooJ withui a auto or
two of town; tiow they must scout out
for it a distonee of from twelve to fifteen
md^. When the white* first •• Bottled , on the
Comstock the Piute Indians were the
retoilers tae business of wood. rad marie They what mouopoiized to them
J big wage*. The work wiw was generally
done by the squaw*, and as they hills tiled
down ti>e steep slopes of the with
huge bundles of faggots ou their backs,
they were almost ra picturesque aa John
Chmaman When the and Chinamen his donkey. and
came en
gaged in the wood business he drove
the Pinto from the field. “Lo”»cowicd
aud gnashed his teeUi, but ho and his
} squaw could not compete with John and
his donkey. Bat the iron horse came
snorting up the mountain to the Com
stock one tine morning, to tlie terror rad
discomfiture of botli John and his don
key. his Long iron-heeled ami stubbornly rival. While* has tills he
fought mountain wood
rival brought up tire
alone John still had hope, but when
coal began to be rolled into the town his
heart shriveled. The railr oad is abont
to drive him frohifflmfield, as he drove
ont the Indians in the early the davs wliiriigig ; his
stay will be brief. “ Thus
of Time brings in his revenges.”
■
~'
' ff . IMaartrsnO (Jem!Bet-rt, ... . D .
A cloud ourat struck the town of
Camancke, Calrforma, one Sunday alter
noon not long ago, causing the death of
ten Chinese. A correspondent Four of
Stooktou nel-shaped Indejimdent clouds, dark says night, ; fun
as with appar- their
e ntly about 500 the yards ground, apart, observed
apex trailing were direction,
passing in a northeasterly there and
* it heavy wa« apparent precipitation that of rain. waa Soon a very the
slopee of the hill* which werecoveml with with brush tor
rents of water, oarried it
fences, and even rock*, to tlie gulches
below. In a few minute* Camanehe
creek, already carrying its maximum in volume, of
water, wa* vastly increased the fists either
so as to overspread ami an
about side, and fenees, houses hencoops Chinatown the litter
the in began to
move;
While 1 wa* speculating upon the area
of water-way it would beneath.the require to aijuednet paas'thi*
amount of water
to be constructed across Camanehe creek
by-the Mokelamne Pitch and Irrigation
Company; we were startled by shouting a horse
man who rapidly rode into town
Ithat the reservoir had broken. Almost
at the same time a bank o! murky water
fence*, debris of all kinds, cattle,-horses
and pigs: wa* linrlod forward with
momentum. As it struck Chinatown,
built on the creek, the low, shabby China- tene
merit* gave way with ft crash. A
man*...with hia wif e an d child, who had
mounted the roof, were norhe past,
vainly appealing for aid it was imposs
ible to give. In a few minutes another
house yielded to the mad torrent As it
position ^ ihe until ^ out wher of . ehe sight. r
tained his seizing bush
H e was finally rescued by a
^ “ dragging "“L *-—re--- himself ont
. W-Beverage. ' ®
BtmU baa madte » appr^pna
tion for the mteoduction to the peop e
of Europe of sterva^mate, an article
largely cultivated in Parana and nsed m
South America to produce a popular
beverage, bnt as yet unknown abroad.
Mr. O Conor, of the Britwh legation
Wit will be a capital substitute for
the tkt more expensive and too often
: adulterated tea rad coffee, beingmore mueli
fortifying and ahmentery and more
wholesome,.and an article that ran be
| m«te^to p!s« it
■ IM.
jsp.ria-'Tftrvssss ?g»Mgya*iar.i:
? I
Malay ia of an extremely nervous tttrntf tarn- to
peramect and it ia aossicon
assassjarcap* c=“-arff isras
( ! »«rroa» excitement reaches it» cKmai
“ * 1 “ “ “»*- *“»“'• “» «*
the sons of Taimf, the present ruler of
i Perwk. dnnn(?»«tr»ogefitofexeitemeot, etrikiag
^re krre and nrehed off,
sssia^.'S.'&KS y,^?r s
. Hiee kmi the - ** amok m*y be fte
cause of death or severe injury to literally twenty
hunted or thirty down people, and before destroyed he like ia bikI
a
dog. The Malay, speah^ dark, and of amok,
says : My eye* got I ran
on * Major Me>air gir« * t«rnblea^
Jfnptiwol Amok f^amok the acene ia ra^ed, when the«y and the of
4 anb^^thnob^t-rena»-to
»•*« “>« ™“ •J."* «*Y b Y Bnta*
.
to kilted bar. Generally the speiing, the amok
ia though oocamonally, by crowd of bin pursuers,
aa m thecaae of the
Sultan Yusuf, he escapee to the jungle.
Very McSair few are brought telieve to trial. Major
; does not the amok is Uie
result of opium eating, which is an un
ported custom among these people ; he
' holds it to have had its ongin in the
deed of some desperate 1- ay, to have
been handed down by tradition to hi#
then bigfely-sensitrve “regarded suooeusors, the ri ght and thing since by
aa
tho«, who are exmtodtofrenxy byap
washed out in
blood. - The Spectator.
• -■
j t Marti. Amid the FUme*.
A recent fire in a Terre Haute (tod.)
resulted in the burning to
i death of a say?: large number of cattle Wn A
local paper The fire had not
j bnrningtnany work minutes until the men
; were off at taking the chains rapidly^
! the eettle in both the old arui the
new hundred# buildings yard, and driving south of them the out sheds by
| ; Rafter into gettfngtotothtotoo Mlofi
the fire swept over the hay like a flood,
licking ? np the dry boards with a fierce
r.rer. Very had soonit was so outside hot that the
* lock men abanSohed to get to save
newrlyW ^ iLeti^ZlS to their tote
of fh.
to toe solid hsansi rows.’For standing elnssly
1 together in long a short time
Diey beilowed in the agony of the horri
ble pain, then inhaled the stifling gas
and sank down writhiug and dying,
About a dozen jumped out of the wait
side. Of these three were seen to swim
tenn the river 5 afonrth tried to do it,
b#t ^ jj^.re*ai that it stuck fast in the
mud on the bank A fifth rushed back
into the fire and perished Among the
terd ^ the yards were manv which
^ oonspisuous md for their red and wgJkin blia
^ were
atKjut witb t)ie gkin pooled „(f
scorched tattera. One greet steer rushed
out of the south end of the building
I long after bounded it was completely through the enveloped and in
| flamea, crowd
; staggered away, hia eye# burned out and of
their sockets, body nis nose bumeil away
his whole steaming like a hot ket-
1 Ue m bH „„ t ^ j flto t ft e cool air. Another,
. ; ^ the extreme southeast corner was un
fagtened bv the fire and was ttofrad dragged
ont by the tad, but could not
was knocked in tbe head, The ^boie
Kf5- 1 sss’?s r “s«a
Fifty learn -----£ an A „ Hearse-Dr Ivor,
WUIUm phiyle is a mar, butwhS of
' ss hie Wyy well, and whoee hair and csrrira whi«
years nfcill dark. “ I have been in the
kere are
country forty-five yea»t»,” said Mr.
Boyle, who the i» lmhee, Ruppt»« 3 “bat d to have I a tell
chant tor wont
yon my age. Ever since I have been in
{ y,i 8 country I have been driving &
heavenly mail wagon, but the letter* I
f deliver have I oalv one po*t-offic*_ihe for
graveyard. yeareThave drive a hearse, the and
! thirty-one and during been that in
pjoyof attemtolT oue firm, funeral at least time three
times a day. You can tell from that
how many oodies I have hauled to the
grave. JSerira I am the oldest hearse-driver in
«»d I have oarried more peo
pfo \ to the grave than ray living man.
field the ribbons when John Philadef- Quincy
Adams’ body passed through
J phia; I did the same over Zachary Tay
! tor. I drove the dead cart at the m<x’k
; f.meral of Andrew Jackaminthis city,
and a great time we had. I drove the
hearses when President Iiinooln and
Vice-President Wilson had their funeral
eeremonies in this eity. The
funeral I was ever l4ice connected with was
j that of John Wetherill, and that
day I headed 9 procession of three hun
dred carriages. Talk It was ‘Old a splendid tarn
ont. about the Sexton ’ gath
cring them in, it's me that has turned
them in. How old am I, and where was
1 1 born 1 My impression is that I was
never bom at all. but that I fl„ 8 foii
i down the Susquehanna on a log. I am
os old as the hillk,’* — PhilddelpMa
Time s.
! -
-
.
Maxima by Beqjamln Franklin.
A A good good example example is ts the *ne best nest sermon sermon,
Keep eonBCienee clear, tiien uever
few.
good. Many foxes grow gray, tori tew grow
—
Ho th At won’t wou 1 be 1,0 counseled conn, " rt * d «'an’t can 1 Yw be
1 , *®^;"
; Write injuries m dust, . benefits . a . tn .
mwble.
What is serving God ? ’Tiedoing good
to man.
Time enough nlway* prove* little
enough.
'if w A *h»t 1 u 1 hi« p will u
’
. um
* '
; Courage would, fight, _ . . bnA . discretion .
won t let him.
There is no man so bad, but he
ly respects the good.
preeumptiou first blind* a man, then
sets him to running.
Having -Wn JT iwor i* no sham but
K is *
Pnnkckws not drowivcare,.bu , Kll • ae
-
*t aud make* it grow a«ter.
We are not so sensible of the
health a* the least sickness.
Honest Tom ! You mav trust him with
a house full-of untold millstone*.
Se t fi at b Pzii»r,,-v y the'plow would thrive
. j.j r ^iF ^ «,,x C ***** oftmv T
j ^ quiet ®-®®P' !^ lude ’
hut rest and guilt hv far as uider.
He that cannot bear with other peo
pie's passions, cannot govern his own.
! The wise man draw* more advantage
| from his enemies than the fool from his
friends.
--- U- — "
Three Thing*, ■■
The following lines were copied from
s ’
«*. JJSSttri. Three thices to hate - Cruelty arm
.
’
JL 4 Tto-ee ^f thfoirato del-'irht in Frank
"fiK n fr 0 m brantT
.'■ Three thinnw b 1 ^ to wish for Health ’■
fnen^ Md ch<mr . . ..
a u • pin .
6 . Three things to woidL. Wteuess,
, loquacity Three and flippant jesting tend for: Honor,
. 7. things to con
! couutev rad fnends.
8 . Three tilings to govern. Temper,
: tongue and conduct. : •
9 Three things to thmk about: ... Life,
death rad eternity.
.
I A ong lme of fearful tragedies , hns .
ed tee Kratucky Leg s stun- to pass an
| ra^dding the ™g ot rencrahd
****«.
Mfsisaa 5*s;„
Boaixtv te cfcftt wfefefcam* ««* ? ; *
•nssssrtsr' •xxxzsz
ire they too* oo »B* are rtampea
E-ra, of threat red toll;
Aetfca u»at x» oanar cramped,
Wortn* “* always rmtim. abll •
•sarasts'sr
.’srjirii. -
Artret* tiret we choow spsrt
Fre® the few who high an set,
Jaat beoaM their 1 *^ art
enfvre. oer a dead regret
ire they ihoie rtc^mni _v„ ot hand.
Try the veil of .-it* to m*«,
THoofh they knew Uy ^piritdand
Narar roay reward their gaae ?
■ - Ireth , morea ku t j a tom t i. ........—
Or a reddle. tUr« gleam,
^
Wrack at whan mk>0 *
OBsn usdow fertha pare
Dnftmg into d«ysr ton*.
Yokes, reuswal «id sweet,
8 unU» with emotion nfs,
Like the tore* of reigel-feet,
Thrill across our inner life.
j —national Rtpotilorv.
» s are— lb
: TUC IH 6 SOVywET aniiftiiCT «C Wr nUOfcO. Rfl«cc
-
--
,
, rtoppod^fore Walking in my garden the other day,
y low and , tree covered reminded with ye!
«f. rose., fo;,, whu looking at them re]atf
me . h ,
Two years since. I dropped in to
; .pend my evening with aa old lady
who raredes near my house. She is a
most charming person—amiable, clever,
jYutty ia passionately ai> d charitable fond of in flowers; ail things. and She
rflWh credit you iud
the coquetry
’ gaUantry for 1 expended in making bou
\ h® que*» her, nor bow much I rejoice at
1, surprise vrUou I brintr her a flower
‘ <* the name of which she is ignorant, or
! which is verv uncommon in our part of
One evening, when I arrive.! at her
house, I found her seated with an old
gentleman who had been residing ou hie
property 4 more than a year—a handsome
relate byadretanf the yicinieu whictohai been
Jet* tion him of his taking the reUtive, of on hia Condi- bene
courtly name
frertor; he was caUed Mon
rieutr Descoudraies. He had obtained
wi introduction to my old lady and I
had every re&aori to be jealous of hi* m
• sidaities. They sWist becama warm friends,
said passed every evening togetb
! at, playing backgammon.
| question, X bowed silently, T entered, on not the to evening interrupt in
as
■ the game. When it was finished, I pre
: sented Madame De Isirgerel a bouquet
of ^ yellow roses which I had brought * for
singularly My roses WPre very beautiful, and
to because ta contmued
rains of the season had blighted most of
tho se of fee neigh boring gardens; bail
had taken the precaution of sheltering
mine by a shed; aud they were, perhaps,
the only Madam# ones to be torgerel met with in perfec
tion. De uttered an
exclamation of delight when she saw the
beautiful bou met Monsieur Descou
draies said nothino ft but seemed nreoccu
pied. I looked him with surprise;
not writ j'STiksT.is able to cff;mprebead tho myfite
^ minute or two subeeauenilv Mon
. t" + f
j «n eatir^eDoch of mv f very
i JJjL 9 p rtr flv« u inutDo w&jk
% . ^nation *. twfentv veara of
* -- v j
J® zk uteB b Bbo^exists e
; ^of ... woinan w ». 0 ,#
j L*._ fiuB‘liiWirv « Vm* i
1 tfj 1 • it “ m .???
? 5?* , Ilnu
i ^ u Tmh! fh^ the
”°7' ™ * mm
? 8t > OTett S?®> T h “*5 towslta only
: 2Su2?£?AJ # d3S 1 S^^
was twenty that 1
tad l^t qw»ed .. , <»Ueg«,
j "here young men were kept a lijUe
j '°^ r ““ “Xhinc D mi_ the S *£i
™thout cousu hng .mo-my f^er
c,de<i j^iioimoed on to me *’ lkur one ® monung J f that . e k * he
® regiment, tnenin vne tae garneon g«ri«S
. and desired to ready
! ^ ,v __ er gn®. me ne
! ^.,7®, 10 **? J 1 ^ ^ was not a
taken abacs, * for several rewoBa.
Iu the flirt place, T disliked a military
i p *!) ee f.’ but that objection the sight of
a dashing unuorm wonld soon have oyer
j f° me > utubitioiie
hopes tnicited, and a little ninaic, would,
811 oontbined,.have^msdo eittier a Ciesar
“ r an ." c hiI * <,9 tae. But Twastn
; Nothing tn . the . world eonld have
; mdW. me to utter a word of this to my
I father, whose only rejily to such a coil
■ Men*** cotnmnmcation would have
j been to send me away that very night,
j But I had an rmffe-and what an uncle!
He was then a man of the same age as I
waB * tl11 Y°»W-“ ot
, for noaoeed hanwd^-for no old mra ever re
Satan and all hia pomps *nd
works better than hedid—bnt.^-fra othem
He ioreu toe young, end perfectly nu
derat<»d without being jealons of them.
He dld n<)t tb ° infirmities of Age
a of progress ; neither did he think length
^rive years necessary to be wise. Prom
1 elc gooiliiess rad good sense he
lived in the happiness of othfers. He
i was ever found svmpathiaing with the
! noble and generous follies of youth ; he
waa the confidant and protector of all true
: lovers; of those harmless debts young
men contract,and all of vonth’s hopes and
fear*. I went to him, and said: ‘ Uncle ’
I am very unhappy V
“<I bet twentylouis you are sot,'wan
the reply.
“ ‘Ah.uncle, don’t laoffhl Besides,
you would lose.’ perhaps that
‘ IM lose TR P»y
M ' i
would help console yon.
“‘No, uncle; money has nothing to
{ Ido with my grief.’
“ ‘Come, tell me yotir tale.’
“ ‘ My father ha* just informed me
thnt I have a lieutenmey in
regiment.'- ‘“What dreadful misfortune l
a One
i of the meat gallant regiment* in the scr
vice, a handsome rank.’ uniform, and all the
officers VtJndl are men of
e . I don’t wish lobe a soldier.’
‘“How? Yon don’t wish to serve?
Ho you happen te 1 >« a coward ?’
“ * I don’t know yet; nevertheless, von
Me the onlv man whom I would permit
to put such a question to me.'
“ 4 Very well, then, Oid, my good
friend, why don’t yon wish to be a sol
dier ?’
Uncle, because I want to marry.’
.
“‘Oh!’
“* There’s .do oh in the question. Un
-.IjSS?-a..-a—i
y ‘“Iknowshe ”^ruJd“Vb* , of «»»-• course—it al
angelfd is is
ways an little later in life you
will nime prefers tm“sU woman. Bnt by what mor
W do this ange! uncle.’ ?’
‘She ia ertfod Noemi. Voem
*• * Tl.o* nni o imt I utk von
i* enousrh for vou L I comprehend* BStSSie be
must* U aunei I
must know who « this is and to
what famtly she belongs. tthatisthe
o q-hat^Ster .relic Auielot '
<<• • to* • letter than than an an angel—a rage a bm- ore
T ?.^' I <b>n t at iu PP of Ihe
objectref * * _
your know her renlj
Ah, uncle, did .von
"*
A -
we used to say T Is that atm
’■^sKSiw
jasi.K±s.5a?*r»
««;»*»».»***.»—r
“»°* m » ***** - .w.. **«• 70 a are mistaken; . .
z&£s~ sS*j“ n£S^
* M ? k ?®?> ?= c! ®> 18 *bat **•#
“>«*•■“ O an^she Well. then. reamer, I me
. can tell yon
that there eiret mauv chances against
yonr union. Your father re much richer
“ ‘ Come, come, listen to me. bt a
see; don’t go and commit aa act of folly.
Let us look into the business.'
•• * I am all attention, unde.'
‘“ In tbe first, place, then, you can
not marry at twenty years of age.'
4< • Why not, for goodness’ mke V
«*•* Beaune, I don’t choow yon afaould
SSanfiEtEr- do so. AnJ, wj^ h^qt m« thiw wupinpa
• ‘ O, my Sear, good uncle V
*“ ***
f oar If sh^wHl ^ promise to wait threo
^ 5 mi ^
not at Clermont . I will gM~you er
ehange p.~° .J into J! one a .ii fow ieagnea from
. h
three moutha until the expiration
of the given tiiae.’
Bat how am I to know whether she
loves me*'
" How are you to find it out» By
asking it, to be sore I'
“ ‘Ah, dear uncle, I never dare do so!'
•• • Then obey yonr father, and pack
up yonr portmanteau.’ do know the girl. A A
“‘But yon not
hundred times I wished to tell her I
loved her. timidity. I have bitterly I triirfeverytlung blamed my
self for my
to gain conrage to speak j I learned my
speeches by heart: i wrote pile, armed, of let
t ® 18 ! Bhfi wben 1 thei moment
the .tat word I endeavored to utter
choked something me, else. and Sbffhad.so I beg«. sweet;«^look, «P ®^8 ol
andyetrej stern, that it seemed to me
ilie cot. Id never love. As for the letter^
J it was far worse. At the moment I at
tempted to give them, Ifennd them so
stupid that nothing appeared diminutive
enough to tear them into, leetaword
should WelfTbut appear against me.
“ ‘ my boy. you must demde
at last, and hSdelall for Hus re«»on^ynur-fftther If he sends
0 . to you.
i yon to Chrmonttit is tocaure the colonel
Cf your regiment re * fnend of his, and
ha. destine!! .. daughter, f„r you, ^ Iwcanre this itrWiU daughter., be a
good and safe rich l know bittum. all thw nothing
*w«r , »
when we iova. ’Ti* a very stupid thing
to think thna, an Hove disinterestedly have been ;
but I should he st ny not to
guilty of #0 doing, Only men uf biased
mind* are incapable these iff thelike. but I know who
the old cidl delusions ;
knows whether it .is not they who arc
self-deceivod f The glass which dimin
ishes objecte is not more true than the
one which enlarges then). If she loves
vo«, you should s&rifiee foolish evciything for
her. It will be very ami to uo so,
but quite right; you_ must doit;
but first find ont whether she loves yon
for doing so, They wish to make her
marry, nephew—you tarn pale at this
idea! Yon would to have your odious
rival gaina^little at sword's length. fliis noble W«Ui then try in
and of courage
the presence bf your fair Noemi. They
ynsnt hej to marry ; yon are richer tbun
s? stfas toss.
whereas they. wotil<f be obliged to irnit
for von Now bra^e co and seek bonTtalt Noemi; tell
loro t
ehe always told.
Ask her if returns your Affection ;
and tell her—for ehe must love yoa, I
— you we young, himdsome, and
witty. Ask her to for promise but solemnly write to to
wait three yean you, to
me, and I will keep the letter. I will
then break off yonr marriage I willget with the
oolonel's daughter. ant? you? your ex
thrSfywmr change ; despite eh&l father, in
fincle/l v»m anTjea' -unirry-Noerm t*
“ * War haTe
Let’s it.’
“ • PH writeto her. ’
“«Juat aa yon * plea*©, my boy ; only
n^t fit once ’
_ ^ ,r my 7 an cle, -^t and JrlJS went to
Sort di^cnlt t Tfo.
task. I ha .1 written fifty
letters to her before, though I had never
most embarnMis
, nt? cirenmfitanoe ^ wa* to sond or give it.
rriBiio* there was no time to
he tost, I up my mm dand puri
j. 8 ■^■R loou H «tof vellow rose*.Placed thcnL
nenterof it i»
‘
- ^ y iscem even now to live
, •' ] jt her to
, . .J , ,
m K harms ' and wait three
J . T - j h
, , ■ fo wear onlv
i in . hoaom
,» B 1 .. 1 I d . rB to aoeak r™' to v ou ’ I
, .
. t
’ “Y Uappinesa-I , ^ _ /dare dare not not sav say
,, K*V“® .to, ^f/reere ante-in the Iren
asked Mmlame De Lorgerel. 1
.And ‘hen . heJT 4nted^o
bad had norta rato e mner t»W>m t 1 tj™uw«
^ myself, but my uncle me ,,“
teClermonL He
Almira mv“fr^S
disappointment, by provmgme loved ‘Bn wu
Noemi had never me.
; uncle,’ I said,‘she was—she arnve«\ appeared and,
to be happy when I re
proaelied me gentit lor coming iate.
“ Women ” continued Monsieur Dee
! ooudraiee, “love the devotion of All
the world ; but there are those they
never love. In AhOTt, X ended ny aimosi
* forgetting her. Then I married the
colonel's daughter, who died eight year*
after our marriage ; and now I am quite
alone, for my uncle has been dead a
long time—would you believe I often
(think of Noemi? and—tlist which i*
more serious nn«l aOTurd—I always see
and, a* m m> mv UBeiesam, racle Irith u- tor ht eves y. n like
black velvet! Whereas, if giving, she
must be now anpld ^nau. what has becomeof
‘You doul know
aakea Madame De Lorgeici.
* “Your Jf°* name, then, , is not . Descoud
raise? ' she hastily inquired.
“ No; by that is uncle. the name My of the property Ed
left me my name ;* ,
mond d Altheim.
“ So it is f”
“ J*ow do you know ?
“I.-vill tel! you, she addeJ, without
replying to the question, what has be
come of Noemi.
“Cauyou-' she joyed
“ leap you .
“ But the yellow rose?
ha*ty , « ; She departure did_not caused ***^**±-2:?™ her manytears,
theu, afterward, she married Monsieur
”•-«!». W r
are not like, 4,“ Edmond dAUheun r to a “ d
“Oood gracious ! Who would ever
have thought that a day could arrive each m
which we should not recognize
other?” ?
“Yes.it is strange, is it not
onlv reunited to pis v backgammon V”
“ But the bouquet ?”
“The bouquet ." is here. “I always
P r ^,^ lt
Madame L>« Xsorgwxol went tea
cupboard, ami, opening aboi in etemy,
took wo* out u a faded bouquet She trembled
“Untie it! untie it!” said Monrieur
Descondraies. aud found the
she S untied the Wquet, q ,
I tao Both of teem rema^i
“ssssw-a tvi^'lu g£ W
tstf'm’SyRfrjrvr
*g& wbicb 7«gj viUpccfaftpaiMke S"g«ra fc
sentment m
happy the remainder of anr km Do
!855 ;H“Ss£s 3 ESs?? l sr.* an-t
r 0 *!^ moomtl
getber “LYe^Mhemm!! all the hehelJ minnUs details wT. of STmW t hat lo re
Thejfcnave °a*t£SSSfthlLl^totolto a thousand thing* to tell each ^h
1 sa f^ Mar*
r 3ag iadiee. always natie
Ima . e11 eam im n y .«nopymou» Don
‘
qnet y ou may reemve, tor a lover remote
aglWIMea t t wenty gy at sixty, and
joke. |°??r “ e *P ec “ non “ resil T n0
Jove Bile Hex Perce**
Tna Havribin* rhief J t «*nh
A Y v r
J^^Kie
i iUTeDi ! e
P 11 ^ * Uttle J*f e de :
p«ide.l upon number of heka he got
•
! “^.gl^e^ftoSid^^fa^to gnumng from ear to ear. Both boys
! l thel»«r^d
: mlico^monirsfthe girl?*’
5 e iiow I no
Heed several littleaauawa loo^*abont with calico
hanging them and
down to their feet, which with their
t*ir bristliHR up and falling dovra
OTer appear^ their eyes, gave them a very oomi
• cal Otto future warrior,
»b,mt five years old, was almost bs-t ra a
: i^fcefoed iavalrvjacket. ^ his the collar mid the of
whicb ouae Te ear.
aleovt-s o! which reached hia feet. The
^ o{ bom twe , Te to fifteen
; gportl , ft pair of army pants fitted
; jy ^ to his legs with wide flaps down each
he wears a calico shirt 00 the out-
8ide md delights to thtow dirt «>d
Mowa'
; - - 1
Payal Coronktlong,
pfoanus, a writer of the eleventh cen
t po^ nry describee the eutlironement of the
.«*, election, in the following
te mg , »nd the ceremonies observed
have been since bis time almost
followed^-The sew-rontilir anen.led
the ecclesiastics, proceeded civic authorities
„d people, ‘wj to the Lateran
gnd there first ordained. He was
attired in a scarlet mantle, and a cap of
state being cUr, placed girt on with bis head, belt he from
down on a a
' emblems whu* hong of seven the sevenfold keysaeven of walB, the
grace
Holy Ghost, which was to direct him in
loosing and bindiog. Tire unmoral Stan
wag delivered to him and then set npon
the pontifical throne.” I* 827, when
Valentine was euthroned, the nobles and
senate prostrated themselves before him
„ nd kissed his foot; and when
w8g ctowI1 ed (the first of all the snecea
mn ot st . Pet( , r distingufahrtl Israis, he in paid this
way), the Emperor when
him a visit, not dismounted only went out to he meet
the pontiff, hut as ap.
proached, took hold of the bridle andled
his horse some distance. A similar piece
peror Fr«Icriek to Nicholas Breakeepere
j (Adrian IV. J in the twelfth oratory,
- — .
j Markers'. Moitiir,Metkers: — S^i5 t: Bes’t P
„ lg „! JiWren. Itreli^ thocluH fromptai, andTby t*#th
. curen wind olic, repulatw tbe bowels,
ftruoted dieestion, i» the mipoveriahment of
the blood, and *mce a deteriorative condition
th^MM An st Mnw amw. dangerous
S^SSSSS^SLSSSS^^^S S tbat tire quSdilyof
it Apparent to un l *»we
the blood bv promoting digetttiou and
h<»«* *• l' r y«s«tion, iIoBtot<«r’« Womscb
■ JJaaqaer* those bilious and evacnstlve Lrm
; cesses, promotes assUnilsUon of the food by
the Wood, *nd purifies aa well a* airiche« it
j T £®
LbstaiU S^ S Lfon ri wd’ae&se S ?i^ffSfbSd3y
' sad a retiular perftxim
auoe of wsV.^ every physical f unction.
««Msrrv y tST?^b? w»Ts > cRome^i .'. Her wSuld If it
wasn't for h*r ponfoundsd now.” “Nose !
P a .- bi ' ghat’s tho matter with her noy ?
;!?tt.to«.»burt, too longer reoctod-.hich ;
: B «ifo^'u,i h.re
mra mar to a ohrtming
sny one of thene deformiiies. “ It isn’t any
them, old tehow. The fact in I like Kitty—
H ke to at HT w ‘ t h h * r ~ b ut ft ny
, A .
; dhtefecting proTiertie* of which instantly
*w««teo tho f»twtttli, *nild,-«ootbing. destroying and all healing offensive ef
' ,<5or
i * JSf sm^ZgfiL
1 ' ' ! *®
CHEW
The Celebrated
“Matchlesp”
teres tw pins ^
Tosareo
Th* Pioazaa Toaiooo Coavsst,
, New York, Boston, and Chioago
No man in Us sensesahould buv worthless
f ,l!t uplarg# psekagos. Sherulaii's Cavalry
ConaiUonlWersareputupinsmallpsck- absolutely and
ages hut.are pure we
«ra?«too» ISX~f°l“hs?p* witalbool bikSig powders Kwder.
.fo utg
t|m . drictlv nore. wholesome.and is
on* nt> fall weight. ‘ ; t
uaiug we guaranteed every time.
Johnson'. 'Anodyne Wntm.ni and test remedy to that
doubt, the sate* invented 'art internal
L eVl . r been for and ex
tgriltI oomplamt*. 0 „. „ sndwwiutdly. is.ppitortilo beneficial to a great for variety
of man
«,. beast.. Find out about .it and thank ns for
tne ** •*
~
**.* <;r* n .«ti in«.omv «* ih» am » dt
omntw
tUken iot^u, ;M dcroa P .cjhrooic
HheumAtiun, *or« Thro*u, oau. BmiaM. oid sonw.
aod PltinB in ib0 ynh, .BABk.add ob«*t, Mtsmaiiir.
u hM ,»**«-tourf no funUt win t»* without it
JSSS!?* ©b® Doiur. i«»th*ctt~c< u mut«i uouc, «a»a*ter to «nj
mo fav,
oid b/ ui ora**.»t 4 i o»pot— i o P*rit
»««, »» «•
TURKEY w«5t TAIL
a<* w.« swb-* o-.N.to. »«k« rSk"™ e*i.
(i d ap*i
A Iff $18*75 ^L61N WATCH,
,J^J' k amhas i> ^ar luTYTfM^/t .i' os’/iKiTad */.
A n,»>o 4 u , # ; < .> . t . k.
rftif w«.
1910 PENSIONS &UTJ& 4 &
lUlA of I fa I If "ho Merrr-l /#»• tsir*i v*a» T IA h*v».
and to their widows'y t'.arrtrdfcr/„rs -Mecore
the same, address, with stamp, M* NR1H. ft K1ROH,
WtahtaKtos, Pi O- '- A o /w ww W'l ji s Affie te ra eaid piaasis
show thifc to anyone you m ay think entitled aa ab ove.
NapoleoQ’s Fate Book!
• •
.
FUN! FUN! ’ FUN!! ’
l*e—It tells who and where you wil! marry
2nd -it telia where and how j-ju will marry
fcd—'It teit* where you will nett the fated one. and
.-. n fftf&gkuSwSiS:
I A HQ CENTRAL- nCI TVD/u Iowa
HBB.'SSK
|^rS«S“S«3
s.ivb wr..., « t.al^ 0 «.u tesfft
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FORT X O IS to o E 2 tn CL < -i ui 2 H GIVE
OLOVE-FITTIrlvr
COM UNRIVALLIOCORSCT thre COMP,
on *r»nce» M egmheredby
i/iussfinsffiss. m
l • CO
'ii\ 3
k i/ssssasK
p p m cc M W * rem Trade aed on **rKM every Chowiuti - Corset 15«a: o
| L =» fits THE flCURE pertect.lt *
Tttfc CKltBftAVCS SWISS Wtl
THE ONLY ORIGINAL BMW CALL
<M«sc«Mfcar*d vaSmt MM
TUB BNIsY UENriNI ANf> SflRnFM' TN
a*™ KswgBsgCjattgff.'aB
* •** * wkiifc z^^rsssstssizt mm*A4 a
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E cvrmr th*t tor pm**e-a arnir* u i»s* satjrUM** ana#tt*5 m fat*
moa»htei»a Ii»a-vmpa*wTol telzewl te4«ff»i» ,ra
1. isESra®^®^; :-ne ^teitofaUj «s« mun* **s»*n* O* RBL.
sea.
m F *♦*'*•* W tb» s •! so? <-< jvsvw-4» •wffj' «tes bwd t ialfa* a.te ts, fwrwt, ia Um t** a - : a: re--:. ne
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JKRMm to sw t-ae wi M aoeth »»
' H jaTJ.nr c%n fa* rmt+ n+A m tbs for if dwr».!
; Wi&ovt »fc» le-*t ivevzrwatmatm. ». fon r*n t*ik M well w.tfa Itt
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by m«*B« s saw r»
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mw
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i xc. feivteHafcli* » ci--rate« wtv.cft issri nr*
i b«#n OM>n*d tor Ttumu.m Th*n • chil<f crim.1 oof m
to u rj fros: trite iatmnnr of » Iter** fxwkcteteB. tead »tMMmfiful
t bird cotnmenoted tinting m tfate oorarr of th* room * A*tooi*b
ir.rttt tan»ted to ffowr. aotU * boy. who fated fasten iittib* justly
^‘.Aiiaowntedap all tfaiteVtxnte.toondf tfatet bi« SteaiatelSicfJlteicNiWhj»r^te pr*nltaw#r» bew ’Biir -a »«n
'M»teo»
; H^StatS25r*tft)araiSrCXZ*.
M. WSP M l^teQtsof Stearate* Met-lain Addrara
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tk .a, .are«. ww.. rre~;r......
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Presto-«re YeH
ao 0 f 1 HO ■■ B1D1NO . ** i-w
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NERVO'VITALIZER S
k diviireasM SSiJfSr.JS!J?a5' proe.ee.. .mat. ta«*w
nu«ter imii 1 .re wluptUoa fot to‘ii»diiire«io Vffi1 1 ‘S?Tk.Si!
•u^w>da»
*' t^e
IptPIlV'kN rffl. ' *.''eo”?s'ws'nreM»^!n.2S v > R«iw«ri r --a*vetw. tits*,
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MAnTfl tMlIlUd 1IIA l PII 1711Tfllfll It ft NVRK I
UUlHU iU BiUlDAO •
s.,.,i r .r ire, nms. y.,„, 1,11 .,4 ™h»w.
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?.* roCKWOOD
Km— yit r Jh *~>°ri
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■, — m' l|M ».•»’ —■ flg'a U A mm Ajjj —
Vtl ■ ■ 11 M P4 ^9 M
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W m PIAKOS*
II ■ » Dunham & Sons, Manufacturers,
JQWW W* rerooms, 18 East 14th Strsst,
(Srtablished 1834.1 KKW YOfiU
Ssndfor IlUutratti Cirmtor amA JtTiu Li*.
.
RMTAItl.Hliei) INfld.
ED. H. WEBSTER,
Real Estate and Loan Broker,
602 Main Street. Kansas City, Xo.
Vann*, unira proved and Mineral l.Aixti* bony lit and
•old, ctePi ai iovtsatted. rents coii"ct*d, ttexte* Pteid. tfUtec and
exsuiined. deeds, leases slid att#nded *en-r»l cooveyapcing
notsnsl Par'to btisicev protnpily Attention to to. tb« btttmtetes and
interr.wtffif i*r nlur reSKlents. *iven
n un
B* saivm uTtuthk ,uc ^sBaasaBi DEMON*
Now md? B urning n«^ rmnffr»nnrt-»v*ok-. vr
l Tn*Tiif^”*ir- *{.oof ,, !liiKNTH l ,
? r wanted.
on 5
«#*■*<*!**. t fiKPKys r .H.srre.r.igy n
-— --
HUNT’S REMEDY m
THE CUE *T ,
L NEY medic
; i>s. P .van ^1 nrj
II w* I
| it yonr dru^M -i-'ni kaw ,t, >.r >i,i ordvr , t nnjm. j
------,.......-- ■■ - ■■■ = —
FANCHER'S PftA I filET FLOWER
& *500 - nft Baworrt R0W*ra >'ota«M<»rt naMjews-i
j ftfgy LtbnrsidiAc^mtAr»d«&«. t .*? 1^ wJk.
i*rm>*t>cj m haw
j .ayscaaw^us^^VsKasygg^Mo- ._#«# ##.. h. t vAW.BF.it,turerejyy j to
■ ,
; f pJLre, e ntrnnflRIlHI KVKHh I I QATICF llUIJulL
j ftUUIli UVUUU,
“
1 ^ l'< )n tnm .. Union tt * Square »•.«
NEW YORK.
Finest Location in the Citjr
Enropm fla-Mnat'^Bosnrpiset
KmmxwKAWKA rK*rrr*eru**?±
‘‘The Best Polish in the World”
j Risillr UN
STOVE POLISH
:
j USK THE
j Peerless
Wringer.
IT IS THE BEST.
. . a j .
; H. Y. -Office— lOo Cnamoera owe**.
—
factoh v t ixciNNATL O.
_
“
^ ^
■ mm r
V
iZi,V"‘ S3KSSS r rJ KSSKTJK
m America, a iarge portion of which were grown on mj
si* heed tarma. /Ttura./ dva'tio*’ t’■■■■>■ r-jf>ea(wn on
• each parhm.r. A > seed n<ir v-f fo h* hath /rrthao’S
in»e to name . so far. that shourtt it prove otHtmt
viu -r^p . th* ;.rd*r ■ jfrof Nrw VrReiaWefa «
W& btrt r%m<i
; <if fA» rrry tioain.
JA.HEM l«. A-VaSSS Jf.’tire.
The Standard of the World.
IrATabiTure M
B, |TrkUiPniYJ\aJ FAI R SAlVivS
SCALES.
ti.i;>Ts you
Miles' Alarm Money Drawers.
Oscillating Pump Co.'s Pumps,
Enterprise Co.'s Goods,
The Improved Type "riter.
FAIRBANKS & CO • f
311 Broadway. New York.
FAiBft4*K*. HR OKS Sc **>..
1 US MUM Street, Beaten.
, « »»
ouns asg isaagL ■aaa isaigw?
mix, asa
F MM-^ea BHegSgp
12500 ‘^rSSs^
tm * Pfwttetil* Soda Font
SteBd tor flasngy ttfe, Wa. W*. A Oo. and ll ♦»:!. oe*B)Dltelte
catalog ate to t »di»ofi , lad.
AGENTS READ THIS!
tMH Ad^aipte L. S. SgMiMte* _A_CJf>., MawfateU. Mich,
tJUAPIf WWWlCRi %%#IC BAP A All Irek
Mipir Berto!^ &nmn!KS threM s
SLS^TSVrt^Sgv.’ /* ike Ibsnaotii
^ Plfl ff| ^itv CzR oSS^.“wm!,55'^37SJ!; sisi-^i,
flU IW #flD B%%a“'fflSa
■ ' ■■ » ■■ ■ '
•SSSS^JSSSSBV^^L ^-.—-----
m tlU^MU-WTRITlKE, vitaHi»n» Tonic,
Th* b»*t
Relieving Muntal and Physic*!
rROSTRATION,
HWELVOUSHBiiS. DRBILITT.
FEMAl.H WRAKNBaS.
nd all impairments of Brain
and Nervri
. Devot. 8 Platt St.. II. Y,
HAPPY RELIEF
kMi
New method of UaataUmt. N*w and reliabla mmedies.
Booh and circulars sant free in saaled anvelopm
AdUnwt HOWARD ASSOCIATION, 4111 havinff N Hint}.
Street, Philadtelphia, for honorable Pa , an conduct institute and profeMibna) a hi«h
•kill. rtepntation
P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
ICTORIAL
HlSTOfiYw^OBlU
d, *ATIO«AL PCBLIKBmq Oo., Pfaitad telpbite, Ps.
_
DABDIWC gABBITT S THTlfT TOILET CAR Sf|SP, ftk
r. lM ~» T— W iftvH—-r tng^fea 8
ffre.teel.vt an-l
-IlU wHItT ^ JZ0 ••- tog^£!ci ,w — ?L2S? - ■
fl
W Bomjs ft si jv.-wtei
si,, n. rrarar Teitrr »
.IU... -t.-.r.l + pf ArMr-., ■ c,t .
1 #^? SL*?lTLf«^l 2 ^La "
W VTLBOKte OOMPOtraD OF ^
PURE COB LIVER
L OIL ARB LIME. J
Vli—•—•— y
is endowed by tho phosphate of Um* with a h«aiinff
oronterfy Which renders*he ml doubly ofncacioiw. Ra.
THE
6000 OLD
STAND-BY
MEHCAI MUSTAJG LDIMEIY
FOR MAN AND BEAST.
AmAUSHSD 35 TKAB*. Always cares A!way.
ready. Always handy. Hi* ntwt yet failed. t**n*
militant ha** triad it. Th« Whriite worid approves th
Ctonons old Maatan*—»Aw «*•*» and OhaapMt lAnunfoC
*s-!»**!- -
tnanteffm. Sfft
Dure* wUao wiUiin* •!•• will,
H OIJ3 HV ALL MBDIOIN A VRH DRH*
.....
SANDAL-WOOD
* mlllri iMMdr tor all UtoMMs * m. Kids.,.. inrir.n
Stladdsc red t riaar J Oraaa. t .re a”*
•Iral raaislatata. II o«« mwliire. .lota*.,
Mrreln red .vredr Is it* WUac. It i. tret reswret;.
.uetti.l tMiretre. airtr revrelre mre t" *% w •«
dre* #° otaw Bwdssre res d* tow.
Hirer, al Ireltallaas, tot. oatos to iu ■’*
Bare breo oSmd; reare «« ««t drere
iww ^ .
duMOar mvu Ac «:o .»8 wt
fm,-« »M p aar *»' ff/
wr«. jui jw e**»nr. •* *»* f* «** *® *
wmmttr mr***. ****£*■
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l - /Jv/V y/*jl l r i m i. ■
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i -V«*rk.jre
SCHOOL HDSIC BOOKS!
High School Choir. Emvrson a TfUJSi*
fail V** dt.Ktea
A Sndard. uateful and favorite litv-a
School Song Book,' B ;'^L SH
r«i« Book twOirlTHist red Kntro.. ScUooU
Choice Trios. W S T*LOKW <80 per 4omo.
Three part gone* lor Female< •. l-ices.Seinmanea.etd’
Grammar School Choir.
W. * TlUlt* JSS perdoKteD
Rzeeitent eftOeetion f'.r Hi«h or <irammar S*faoot*.
American School Music Readers.
In 3 Rf»ok», each 33 cen* a. 50 eMti and 50 rente
Carefully prepared for < .raded Hch^.a.
The followinc are favor*** general Cf iLectiona of ffeu;*‘
‘Vicffs fur (knn,u(m Sc hoofs
mm: tm*
|
V. B. Vvw V.rk.
J. R- ITfTHO>' ^ t( ^ >f ww| mtr oot. Phlja^
i » *