Newspaper Page Text
HOW t.Oki. HAS ATOrDED
Tfc. .1 oia Maa •• Wad a V'
.........„
raMjat lily JTh *■.—j tot one
street TTvee a widow wire
daughter, smly nee, but the irg^
■iuraeg'arrft
tei-iaiw Krtsasdlwss* beloved by Samuel fens, the
‘ ^ iaie’v Bn*
S-SH’S.rJs mtelligeuce Vo
foraiA, end the coming it
him of the rascality of a partner,
became to the OM^SJZ —ii i ■ ■ i _ ——■— aS — With With _. . . ^w,^ Z
teotion to ... hi* affairs . (T„ there. tt,pr. many manv
a tear and many a sigh, and with pro¬
testation* of everlasting fidelity and ail
that sort of thing, the lovers parted, the he
for for the the etorn reel:ties of life in
mines an-* to weep bewail hie
absence. SSssrtKKsaa
iS-^rSSl >,?. rather^-llici to con
CondoUDg with a very
prtttvgirl in twenty, elder israOier Titus a found pleasant it
imsicew, ...ines* and ana the o.e -----
. .
a-aat, -found
calling with condoience. till he
that calling wTth^a#«dt 5 lenoe became a
of*jie«*sitvto ____ _____ him* him. D In brief, he
Gori to
found himself as desperately in lr.e
with the girl as his son Samuel and
he determined ___ to po«wm ‘ her at all
______
hazards. izards. , ,
>vas what excited m her the delight the
hunter feels when game ia in sight
And BO the mother and the ancien
lover worried tliat poor girl into spasms.
yhe was not permitted carefully to write interoepted, to
—hia letters were made nearly
and the poor girl this was kind of thing crtxr. sub
Six months of so
lined her, thai she finally rightful -vmsented lover, and to
»ed the father other
tii<» .luf-A. t.f th#* nuptial* was lixetl.
What had. become of Samuel in the
rneantiTnc i 1 fi-e was up ia the minefr
straightening out his affairs, ana dream
ing dayand night of the happy horn
when be should return ami claim his
darling, and, with: enough to live upon, But
sit down quietly and enjoy letter life.
one morning he got a from a
younger brother who was very fond of
him, revealing the situation; The
brother wrote Samuel everything, evwi
stating the date of the wedding, and all
about it. ;♦ Samuel AM did ^hat whAt 'Any auy decent tlMMHit
man would have done. “ * He T “ dropped ofmwsh his
work, made a hasty collection
things as he hail to have and started for
home. He bail just time, if there
ihouldbe the ^cningjff no delays, tte to wedding rejeh New at ^v York en I
Ne^r^WtrAlLuV of his where* he |
telegraplieil Htogaaol his brother
added. “ I ehell hill the old
HW»-r ” ------------- -.
rue brother got_the_ dispatch at f a
tlemau dcsire .1 it to be aa private» ready, poa.
«iWc), the clergyman ein, was in readineaa to
bride, racrifloed, pale and and the waa father and mother
be i
were as jubilant as could be. The son
read the dispatch i The failing have of a ,
liomlj-shell in the roomoonld not I
“Sam coming 1 Kill mel" shrieked
tbeolAgenttamau. “Yes, he at that it will be
and if stops a
mercy," replied t he son. ‘ ‘There are elder
ly females who have had a hand in this,
who may b© >--------■O'-' sacrificed to to his bi« vengeance. venweaime
A revolver has six cartridges, and one i*
enough for anybtxly.” stalwart in red : |
Visions’of a tall, man, a
f hirt, with o belt full of revolvers, with :
eyes glaring- with rage and a breast
s welling wit h vengeance ro s e in the j
minds wjy-tcligtl of that wretched mother®- man ^Ehe..x and nnib the sfilTj l ing
of a car riage was h eard outside.
rr 'What shall we do ?“ aU rieked the •
father.
“What shall we do?” shrieked the
mother.
The gentle Mary was equal to the
emergency. o_
“ There must be a wedding wedding. to-fiijfht, l
for Mother, everj thing is arranged for a place place; : j
you must take my * ; yon yon ! .
sag-“£rra,W^nli married, to .t, and
or on the way we can
say that Ti t ua mttiying me waa aU a '
mistake. Then Bam cairmarry me.
nil rti is horrible bloodshed be saved. It.
>» ‘I 1 bat can be *•"*■ I ‘“ U “ ^ tOT
death , ! ■ •
Hie old gentleman looked , at the , girl .
and then at her mother- A look crossed
Ins face such as one makes when takmg
mcdimne, and a refusal was on lus lips.
i.„.,.v^ow^ The carnage was at tlie door, and a
on the threshold. There
waviro timo to lose. Wuu ftHgb, lob
• .. J by the grinding of teeth, the old
gentleman took the mother, the dangh
br sat down quietly and when Samuel
/SJfilShWffi jiist finishing the lernark, whom Gixl '
2^5? ”
••’^anM-’tauwt “Onl
^SSftldtoissriaww Then father was not rymg to marry
J 1 ™*— How ridiculous, ... ’ Marys „
was an
kwer. immediately.
They were married Sam- „
uel got an idea of the true state of the
i^sh^m BS «H^.n , Urifatli ltepSotWb!e , ef^ , hS d , hS S t
Tentod p ” h
‘■ w.isnonisl.oiJsuffleictitlyiiow himself ’ he
said to “ to satisfy tlm moat ex
actimr acting. * I will Win leave leave mm in With w bis ms
misery. And he went back toCahforma, taking ...
U The ,e eldor Couple sfflk-t^wdli V pSted P tL m w4k in'
Tho Old ladv was an
hiemny Mail.
**•*■
In the presentation of Christmas gifts
observed. in Norway Thns, many strange districts, customs are
in some the
gift sometimes is hid matrass it placed of. in hayor, bag straw; of or .
is a chaff.
The donator then watches his opportun
the ,ly and door slyly of hi* fixes friend the trass of hay alsive
s room. When
the latt e r e nte rs t h e h a y fa i l a. on him»
the great enjoyment of the kindly con
sp.rators, who are proimbiy watching
close at hand. Then ensnes an eager
and exciting search. The-rinss isTipped
'■pea, hands thrust in and ant through
the straw or hay till the grft is found, at
which moment the donators generally
disclose their presence by shouts of
delight tor anu the expression of good wishes
the seawn of the j ear to come. The
hag of chaff is also a source of endless
and innocent merriment. In its fall
trom the top of the dwir it covers the
receiver with a cloud of dust and small
particles that adhere to his beanl, enter
the fur of his coat, and make him feel
as nucomfortable and look as ridiculous
oro‘^ D 1 e n!raH et 7 hf ' m t f rd T t
promotera ,tora of of practiral re jokes. b Bntaehe n
opens his eyes he at once notices lying
in the midst of the mess around him a
welcome present wh-chhad been secreted
m the chaff. It may well be imagmeil
.
With.what delighteliildren jpin in this :
xyASarisr.- rough play, and how it matenally assists
St
rongh. ,
w=2s£2Si.T.s Consume
**£ ^ bridge of ■
r '.uec?tLe%r'mtL -s^ate-asas Delate, and
•
from fire, ll has also i'SJ$S3 been subjected
i="=5k ^
,
Si&’trjnaw. Sd. It .man Empire 4 in the East It has four a
U extending for shout
gSfaarieajg ,
wxordiag ncGorvuuM hi as-------------- 290,000 .
is estimated at 615,000-viz.: Galata and in
250.000 m Peru,
other Eurm-wu suburbs, »d>75,000 in
Scutan — Bon tan _ .. anti the XeiaSe suTjuI,* ton the
other side of the Bosphorus). About
sixtv ter cent, of the inhabitants are
Turk*; Turks: the the rernmnaev remainder , are are rw Greeks,
Armenians, Jews, Franks, ~ • ate. is
Adrianople, founded by Afcan.
situated 137 mfles W. N. W. of of Constan* Cionat
sakSfMSS?® ____ Comdantinople, Adrisnople the
to is
meat imiiortant eitrm Turkey. h« ;
are a popuiabon Turks, J5." of 1 6 *) JOOO, Greeks, °* ^'Ssf 1.,000 ^ 0
—> *' • -=•'*'""*
_ taken taken , the the ,
In 1360 **«» Adnanople »dr,«„„nle the was was of govern-1 t>j bv
Tnrks, who made when it they seat got pooneoflion |
uent until 1453, Adnanople,
of Constantinople. In surrendered 1829, to the
without resistance,
Russians, but was the the restored 19th 19th _ of of by_the . September September treaty .
signed <ign«i there there on oc
French army landed herein defended 18S4. Popu- the
latum, 50,000. It is <m
land side bv the strong line of Bulair.
The Golden Horn is the principal har
borof Constantinople. capital It separates Pera
and Galata from the
Besiia Bay, lies between the Island of
LnedoH, ami the mamlandof AsiaMmor,
a few miles soutli of the entrance to the
Dardauellas.
Hie Dardanelles, or Hellespont, , is a
strait ioinmtr the Mediterranean to the
Sea of Marmora. It is: about^ forty miles
in length, width. and varies The from one to four
miles in strait* are protect
ed by eight forts on the Euro|>can side,
mounting 383 guns.
The Bosphorus is a strait connecting
the Si-h of Marmora with the Black Bea.
It is seventeen miles m length, and varies
in width from one half toone-and-a-quar
ter miles. At the narrowest part of the
channel, about IKam thwe eight miles from forte forts for for ita
«A«th south tmimru*. entrance, are are two two
the defense of the strait.
TlieHea ofMarmoni extends .
from Gallipoli to the head of the Gulf of
mther Izmul—177 more miles; than fiftv its greatest milee. At brt^dth its is
Y^'utoT RS leugttTlf7W miles,
miles; greatest width 380 and
total era. 172 0 00 square W mile®. All ue
pomtoh A v e pro teotedwitb
torpedoes.
«« BBte :
Queer titles have been given *The to old
editions o, the Scriptnrea. “ B ug”
Bible Nicholas was printed Hyll. in The London nickname in 1551,
from by the following l’salrn kei, 5. arose “ So
:
that thon ahalt not nede to b eafrahl for
en't iiy Bugge, by mgEteT^K. ahalt The pres
reading is, “Thon niglit,” not lie
afrwitl fot the terroT by ©to.
The “Breeches” Bible was printed
1580, at Geneva, and so called from
that word in Gen. iii. 7. I :
The nra.„ “ .. Treacle ” - Tra,._ Bible was-printed in
1568 by Richard Jngge. In Jeremiah j
viii, 22, it reads, In 1609 44 Is there the word no tryacle tryacle ! i
in Gileatl?”
was .-changed for rosin, the “d:ki>. hence Bosin" another Bibie!
edition known as
j n which the pftsaftg
no rosin in Gilead
aotintrodne d until 1611, and the
reading, ■ 44 Is there no balm in Gilead V*
pontinnes nntil the p r esent tim e;
The' 4 *He” Bible, printed in London
i u 1611, by Robert Barker, takes its
nickname from a curious error occur
ring in Ruth iii, 15, “ He measured six
measures of barley and laid it on her;
and he went into the city.” and entirely In the
game year edition (1611) another which j
distinct diatum. edition was was printed, printed in in which
jtfrom “ She ” Bible “He was "Bible, given it, to distinguish j
the
Bib le w a a p nnt . , cr l , in .
1681, .and takes its name from the very j
funny mistake of omitting the negative .
in' the seventh commandment, making
jj rea ,j t .. Thon shall commit adultery.” j !
This extraordinary omission occurred
!M?a i u i„ » German edition of about
1732 , so there is a “ Wicked” Bible in
German as well as Ecdish.
V^ : 1 — Js.se
called because the headline of J.uke,
^aptcr xx, reads, “The parable of the
vinegar printer’ ” instead thif of JdiSon™ the mnovard The
of m one
Baskett ’ ofOxford, and because of the
numerous typographical a. fan Its, it was
. n#.*^**. »,
*s»witaj.««.««* rSS?ktto““ brought^™ fto
toat coul§
___ .Jestinv lhan it ofhealtlfand uossiblv be
while in The Hie lull euiovnunl
mint exomitionerof the establish khl
“^t *jth wito his sharpest, knife ent the
ice-S™t ^Then°the n jerked turtle wrn 'throwi’into
«iu lip neatly The
v^ 8 tS^aTtti n Cto«JrJ-«H'i In ’
ssif be hail been tethered to the North ;
Pole tor a century. Remembering also :
that his throat was out from ear to ear, ;
easily he seen that his sitnation ’
^r not a oomfortable eiseniion one gentleman The next
the to !
for* whose tureen the turtle was intend
'
«1 left the city on business. He notified
packed on and the weeks sped bv pleas- :
antlv After seven weeks a fresh tote
ahnoimcf.’ the purchaser's" return
^^pLked^md^mebe and spoke o' the turtle So w^raMh the turtle
fle .1 in the ice .with his throat cut, and
yet-alive'f-’This- iuicated remarkable toientisls^T fact was
to Te^rifr raveral wS
l“^nimal^UngdSmeiln^ wito hfe%nd the
to
tbe ntmor unread pEmd>meFa{ to » fiensation inrUe‘ A re.
cheerful! flirs
rae We % ff : and moved its flippers ‘ PP6rS I
t gleefu u T
,
T ,!ia ,„ fh hlnnese , and . Necromancy. ______
The Chinese are firm believers in ne
The visions fortune-telling while and kindred !
seen under the
of opium, are by them inter- :
into meanings. Several China
in San Francisco make a profession
tortnne-fellmg. Their method is to ;
a smoke of opium, from the effects i
which they have visions, from which
interpret will *die whether well, eertmn sick whether per-1
individuals or get or
will win or lose in i
games in which they propose I
engage. They have, a small ivory
to assist them in the interprets- ;
which. represents a certain god, i
never sleeps, eatej or drinks, and
dies,. If the seer’s prognostics^
are verified, he is a smart fellow;
not, the blame is laid on the god,
pnreteed in hia rteada
THE TOUASO VESIT1CS. i
-w**»
SS -rrdwn, sondem. The
Wiring the urn, nearly 4,000 feet
above p Uina below, we had a msgnifl
baud Ka^sssn.’S: lsSaples.with l __ ^ JE
sT-Ji?s>‘V&P towns, ggjJ villages, rich vinejania ana
lie tbe marvelon* ruins of Pompeii
The top of the cone is About a mue m
circumference, and of course leas than
one-third of a mile in diameter. Let ns
appryh ,ook down the into verge U.edeep, of the ^ cra “J' ter ^nd
pbur-eoated abyss. The 8 ° P® 1 *
penJicniarly down some 300 feet to a
.mailer one. This is the volcano a cium
aev, and from it there issues, even when
t jiJ 0 id monntain is at rest, a cloud of
asrHjgga&Aw suffocating smoke end sulphurous gas.
.afety-valve. And this is Veravius that
haa for ages been rambling sad roaring,
ggg hn? u r dj t hunde li ug tusamg, and
sm o k i ng and blazing, vomiting
ont its wraUi and spreading desolation
all around. We cooked oar e«gs and
warmed oar coffee for breakfast in the
Lot air that issued from the crevices of
t Le rocks. We descended on another
s Li e 0 f the mountain, running down
through ashes and graTel six or eight
mc Le* deep, up’a taking ____ tremendous tremendous desperate , dmt dust leaps, and and .
Peki kicking n g up g
0 f 0Ter 20.000 persons. In 472 the vol
coveted ffil Euro pe with ohat In
1 G 3 I there was an eruption that lasted
several days. Vast coinmns of smoke
darkened 'the heavens, explosions aftllery re
sembling the discharge of were
freqneotly ^es fell heard, the bnrning sides of stones the and
hot on mouu
tain and on t! ■ surrounding campsgna.
Rivera of melted lava, some of them a
thousand yards witle, ran down to the
^ n -. n un,o ^o*. , .,r
^ A that aubterraneau force and of became fish died, *0
h ot great quantities
D ar mg the eruption earthquakes at fre
q, lell t intervah addfnl to the terrible de
struction. When the frightened pec pie
who were so fortunate as to escape re
turneil to their homes, they found more
tban f or ty cities, towns and villages laid
waHtf 10,000 animals burned worth or
drowned, and at least $19,000,000
() f p r 0 r, er ty destroyed* t, But, more
monn^i than all the rci rest, 4,000 i,CCC per
sons had perished by ^ the lava, the
wat ^ r or thf , faIling of g uef , and Louses,
In 1693 the mountain poured out a stream broail,
Q f j ava fl ve miles long, 300 feet
and moro than 100 feet deep. In 1737
te ashes^anLpum ice fell tour
^^whole'^i elnption.aarinK lown P Jn ofthl 1861 'SSriEZ there £
b to pieces propert” was an
tolge greet l.mol
fearful
that aocomnanietl it. In 1872 the vol
tZnZvZn*™ f-Wrath atowaomeitaS
?IXnt 0 tliM^^art^nS the eruptions becoming * more
trf *l aeDt th *nm paatoentnne a.
«,,, gu Friends.
AH . *‘ nnderrtand, appeared;-' beganlnaHonor. r {hat as
ar you are
a stronger Tl8 among ns. replied
true—tin tnm, the „
. bowjhg and amUmg.
P™qner, I ‘5^‘T informed, continued
«>« ,, «">*. M^J™». have been looking
around town to find two old friends
“I-Ido not see the force the
“‘^ratioii, ... . smiled the Htranger, . . bow
m ?’,
Last ““ night, at “ midnight, .• ~t. * \r. Mr. ivj„ Dodge
I * St v»hfn
the «, th wt d . n l.sw
a«a&5.« h
l ” P a
bother."
44 i)on’t ____________ remember the s.
a r, v T mic L events .ran«l, *» ” smiled .. .t_l the 3 '
bowing Mr. to the clock this time.
thingplanted “ Bodge, g mthehe7rto,mra memory is the sweetest H
...., IM
wam'tfor fo7“offi« memory
, OT office sixteen
treacherous I may be inSSuoZl unC to
John Coin , bus this morning, t^-Lg<M>a but
borrowa a doHgrof-mt? hiB
bail-bond, ^ I may y rememberbimbjnight
aa John mith or Christopher * Oolum
'
k U b ”
“ That’s etnie—that’s strue ’ ’’ museil'
the prisoner. .
“ And in order to fix this case in your
memory * X shall elevate you J for aixW J
' laJ9 - »? ......U
.
elevate me now and continue to earnea'th- elevate
me tor sirtv successive times!” earnestly
T^«'SSLl Last . to
von for the entire sixty no^ days.”
“jt will—it’will doubt vonr
„ r ,
"sassiirrsr
And were such* gorgeous hat’
And all ho said was: :
‘Tra-la, boys!
—Detroit Free, Press.
y — .
Making Pottery.
yaW The ed metlrodaof but little making the pottery different have j
5*^*ML Tile principal among too!
is the pot
Jer-a torneil wheel, by the « revolving foot of the disk potter. or table, Thi
potter’swheel is one of tbeeaiirest Egyptians, ma
ehinea made by man. The
iaM Mexicans, Romans, Peruvians, Ganls,^ Germans, Qtoek% all Assyr- riid j
.
«• (Hder than aU the oldest writings of I
Hebrew®, throngh'aU b»t«y it has ;
delicate and brittle as they are, they
have proved more enduring than the ;
A principal agent in the
manufacture of pottery 'toe c2y is water, iiaybe! which
Plastic usedto and yfton tnorooghly worked that it to uni
consistency. A lamp, larger or
smaller, according to the size of the ves
the to be made, is thrown violently whig!?is down
?n motion; center of the tiro wheel, with set
m and thrower, thumb
fingers^ carved .sticks, ItniVea and
other .simple tools, shapes the vessel,
Other forms are made in molds. Relief
ornaments for the surface are either en
graver! in the mold, ..rare molded separ
ately> ^ placed on the objects, and
fastened with the slip of the paste.
At a very early date (some. four thou
with years agoj the art ot covering pot
enamel and painting was dis
by the Egyptians, and the
of their workmanship has lieen
envy of the potters of modern timee.
blue has never been surpassed, if,;
it has ever been equaled. Ob
made at least three thousand years
retain The the splendor of their displayed.® original
smallest highest art whether was
articles, of soft
deities-were or of the molded sandy paste. in fair style Images!
steatite or,
carved from and
Scarabeens—the with the brilliant blue or green, |
amulet, whirti others sig-i
as some suppose, creation;
resurreerion—was made in pot-j
form. I
'
Kew tffie ttkro the teaw*.
rsSSx-Sfe «
If it amelle/of Ugbtuteg-^a
«*>•* «» rt °P^£ or ^ *° «*«•
°*
“We-upt 4 -*
ilv, and we paid $100 down oo this place.
SSs&riBfiS got that down ?”
you He granted assent, and she contin¬
ued :
'' My name is Alvina Sarah, and I waa
bom in—”
“Ido not care to know where yon
was here, madam , f 1 * be she interrupted. exclaimed;
“ Well, I care deal of difference whether
makes a great
I waa born in Africa or Boston, and I
want it put down. As I waa saying, I
waa bom in Boston in 1838. Put dawn
that J came of a good don't family."
“ Madam, you understand—
you—” Don’t I understand that I of
“ came a
good family? I’d like to kno w Of
Boston family which carried their noses
higher than the Bogersee! the Mexican Put down
that my father waa in war.”
“ You have three children, thing, madam ?”
“Ihavsn’tanysnch killed sir! by Pnt
down that my mother waa an
explosion in a quarry. Her and fattier
- *
“How many children have you raa
t’ ‘
dam
“ Have yon got mother down ?’’
watches were asleep I crept ont of bed
awl took * drink of—” -
“ This is foreign’ to the subject,
madam. How old are yonr children?"
“ Haven’t you put down that I hong
on the edge of the grave ?"
“No, madam. •
“Aren’t yon going to?
“ No, madam. Yon see, I am simply
taking the census of Detroit. I desire
to ascertain— ”
41 You can t ascertain it here, sir !”
she snapped. “ If my sickness, which
least over two hundred dollars, isn’t
enough to ! go into the book, then you
don’t get a line here !”
** Let me asking ask you—” for of photo
“ No use any our
graphs, sir! If you get em anywhere
and put our pictures in that book well
made it hot for you! Good-day, sir—
j 1 good-day!” He stood the step, sighing, t and she ,
on
! ! called exiled. through tbre--L* the * ha door ' w '* :
“ My grandfather was also bitten to
death by an alligator, bnt I won't give
you any of the particulars ! You want
to walk!”
He passed on, sorrowfully wondering
won^^mother
The r, Habits HkblU ef AnK Itt*
■ J«hu Lubbock, a Hell-knom
MientiBb Iecrimal recently >“
on «' e hBblt8 «* »“ t8 ’. T “ conhmiation
TM? intdligence is ones
• finable in eases wliema thincusde.of
8 glycerine ^ bars their ttIread access atte<l to honey
llftTe y rt by a
paper bridge, for when the latter is taken
they do not pile npa few grains of
ea rth an a t hn e c r oss t h e b a rri e r .
of the m observers and plentifuiness
l)f au U’nests, it is still doubtful how
thvlT nests commence. Bir John's ex
periments show that the workers of
F<itia» flanu will not adopt an old the
^ wn anotter neat. But on
h , th0 quwn Ug 0 f Myrmioa
M
'“P lftrT ^
0 tSr' do^Sralri^p! 1 dt««vivcrv of fond he B a"” mnsiders
tWs v
SS^fi£S^S?SfSkS il^senarafe
S liriulto bottles with tS wide
G^X^anda^^t^
Further experiments prove
to positron liter its having been partaken
of, and a return to the nest made. Aute
avoid licht when tlirowu into their nwte,
and they iaking congregate in the darkest cor
ners. advantage of this habit
by a series of ingenious expenmonfcs—
inatancea'ahSlowceUkOMiteiningodltwed wherein strips of colored glass, in other
solutions, such as fuchsine, bichromate
of potash, chloride of copper, etc., were
natal Mir Jntm mti'tm at the ccnclnwinn
of color.' though produced probably in different A predom- from
ESglSS? tile uro^enecr effect prouu w o^tT^fZ o. mull, . 1
bine and violet there appear* to be a
decided aversion. tSStrtSSJt The longevity of ants
Terence Brady will not haunt the
newspaper offices of New York anymore,
writes the correspondent^ the Detroit
Free Prtst. In an up-town street the
other day he dropped to the pavement,
and when taken vin bv a policeman Iswaahur- he
wm found to be dying. life had departed
rie.1 to a hospital, could bnt be done to relieve
before BrilyTas anything of superior lit
him. a man
orary lem/work talent, iii ami had done some exoel
odd Job. on too New Yorkt
press, but owing to a oonflrmed habit of
opium eating which he had contracted,
heeould not get steady employment any
where. He received a goo,l college edura
tion in Ireland and came to this country
several years ago, making his way to
and part owner of a prosperous weekly
paper. An nnfortnnatemarriage then began brought the
trouble and he to use in
him sidious drag that ultimately he destroyed append
About eight years ago
in New York and as an applicant tor hews
paper wah work, the occasional jobs he
able to pick necessaries np served to life" keep him
in the absolnte of The
opium appeUte sramd to increase, day
by^daj, and and for
itated him more more responsi
ble employment. He finally l<jt all in
torest in himself and all regard for his
appearanoe, and those who met him in
the street or encountered him in the
newspaper offices supposed the better class. him to be
merely a tramp of But
the poor fellow had once possessed the
fire of true genins, and had he not ex
tdnguised it with his own hand, he might
have’made an honorable name. The sad
ending of his life recalls that of his un
fortunate countryman, tho brilliant and
erratic Clarence Mangan, one of the best
of Ireland’s poets, who; like Terence
Brady, became a confirmed opium eater,
and went down to the grave an ob
senre, self-condemned outcast. Hear
the terrible despair that moans through
one of Mangan s .last. peenw, .“The -
Nameless One.” Appealing to the spirit
of song be says :
Tea how now. amid wreckaha sorrow,
And wwit and eickneae and houselese nights,
He riirtee in o«.toai»e»*khj That aora. silenk iigh.s. paoi-row
mSSSS’.S”"" TOnerarknow i
*
— *«Tf
Ttay riBs
__
To the dtipptn* wtoduw-WUa.
I we, bio, rata-dK’p*. debt »ad swift.
Through the air they fail and Eft :
Daanag, trippm*.
YSio’ ffia sue.
With thEr thousand awry <•»<
Ewry Made of fttaa around
la a ladder to th« ground ;
On they
With their bear lip and hum.
In the woods, by iwigandapmy.
To the roots they and tbEr way,
Doubling, leaping,
Down they go
To the waiting lift below.
Oh, the briek and merry rain.
‘ Failing, ghnoing,
. --- — TlaVliOgi llaueiug,
AH around
Listen to its ebeery sound f
I —rieta Fomtur, in St. JFj<*oia».
___________
. ——
A LUCKY TUMBLE.
!
When Mrs. Snatcham asked me,
“knowing my nasal kindness,” whether
I would watch the baby in her cradle,
crisis “ just had for half an hour," I leave felt that Mrs. a
come. I must
•ftosteham's.
I say Mrs.Bnatcham'a, for Mr. Snatch
j am waa not uijdul? p^rainent in hi*
all; I might have oetinned to bear it
. nil, hut no, I cmi:d rat take charge of
the baby, even for hdf an hour. I must
bid the Snatohams fujeu.
I was gleornilT when egiiating my next
movement a litter arrived for me
from the only near relative I possessed
—an old uncle, to diem I bod written
detailing mykrotii,’.a,
“Look mind here, H«rv," it ran, “if
voTi’ve Worth a to Itv in peace and die
money, you Wet all about yonr
j^tin and Greek andmeh Fine things
they are, I dare sav but I never saw
that they You turned iiiUmuch beef or mnt
ton. put vour books in the fire
-and yonr pnde in * voir pocket and never
take early it out again, YcB know what I wae
> i„ life, nephew I kept a shop—a
general shop—m a r-an try town, and I
! didn’t do so badlv Weil I*ve just
heard the gtxxl wilfaid stock in trade
0 f a 8 Lop of this k.id in a little town
flftv miles from Londo 4 is for sale and say
! the* word and I’ll hay &t for von And
M voar eduction listen so neglected
that you’d I’ll know and nothAgof such
ness, ti oomo qptil fortune yon aright for
a Therejowj- me , is before yon. ^
|
j ^ under the guidance >f mv irood “nurlo f
Itaowwtawemay«Sto.” And I left theHnatchams
so and the
***** f£S£SSw
^Ldthebabvi amlwrote to mv nnolo
: j l_ °? gi designs g3y/ j ji^L f ga , ___ gg* »__l fg ft,.* ““
M
i „T...r:, r
; ^ooygemakem Bffier ri e nt Inatitn
d^Sj; jo.fo 1 ^^ /to W** dehght)
; ° *“5^.
9 ' 1 u'® ““f J
^ . » , rt? h. &SL ^I ^“f P T«
I experienced ferbrne shopman, in the and determined direction
I folrydOJ new
,
SS!KikS, thoeeplcasant P tcy^ldtheyorkhon^.
And when prospbets came 1
very distinctly to my mental vision, .
Z 'TSS ■ «3 \
I
* he
r j?' L *
[, ?^.7nd ire * ?P 1 m in a ft month « we 7 *“•“ J2Tbe“iB 1U
„P TO? P eet ® .*** °™ r
“ th 1 tronble * J 001
■
Welt, answered T Lucy, __ it is very
* mam “ a “> W
:...........u 5 ”f“V T “
kn> ' w though , I wonder at your tgno
ranee. Itisyour-yonrestabhahment.”
“Slrop, we (renemll, call it Lncy; but
ho „ *
Don t you K know it s v haunted ?
_
| knife. great nightcaj, and with a large^ri^
“A most formidable and disagreeable
*ort of a ghost, 1 must say; bnt how
have you heard this ?”
“ Ah ! there’s the secret, althongh I
cannot imagine how the storv oid of mamma’s
former CMUteebmi with Mr. Jenka
has not come to your ears. Now, listen
tome.. But first solemnly promise yon
will uot repeat whit % I am aliont to tell
you. The®, rff*^ y „„, tongue, and
don hearing t interrupt . talk. Yon Men are k. toad of !
given that yourself are half so ranch
way. I’ve told you the : '
truth, and that is more than you deserve.
Well, the other half, which von might so
easily have known if von had not b«Mi so
Jenks fell violently in love with
and offered her marriage, and
mamma refused him and Mr. Jeuks went
mad. and headed-" one dav he presented a pistol
at his .
“ Good gracious 1 "
“ Would taScked have killed himself, arid but
somebody wentXan.l him down, w’as the
fng pistol skl-e” mamma stand
close by _____________ 7^
44 Was* nearly killed—with fright• i
Then, wi when Mr.'jsnks though came to his couldn’t senses
he so sofrv. sad he
have mamma (for she married papa, and
he lived manv rears) yet he made a will I
in mamma’s Vavoi, leaving positively her every- <
day thing. He told mammaso .poorly, taking one
when he was some !
gruel. Then he ilied: but though search could I :
was made high and low, no will
in be for found,’and a rich And old heir-at-law there’s the earn® rea
everything. cannot bear that place.
son mamma
And, plew what is to badone?” .
It was a curious story, and I had not
heard whSt w«Ttobe a word of it before. And as to
coffid^move done, that but wae where a puzzle.
1 -of course, to, ■
and with what itere'tbeeaate prospectsof of doing removal better, to
and when ,
come from '> Sol ssid lmust argue the
point with M— Barton, and this I did,
and having overcome her scraples, it;
was anreeil the marriage should take
(lt 0BCP .. and that we should aB :
Ifvetneether sts* s"A face the ghost, if need I
‘ ’ j ;
te
t AsJ *> Lucy I *£*£ married, sad.
of asrsftiw^S oourae, were «apransejy happy.and
sent me, aai the gas company had cat
off the gas, and the landlord given me
? note to quit, thai with just a little
feeling of apprehension we began to
t conatoer what next.
One night ate rather a long confer
mice on the state of affairs, wnen Lacy
had apparently fallen into aaeep sleep,
' I roused up suddenly, fancvmg I heard
a sound below. Terr ffefitly rising so
as not to wake my wife I left the room
and looked down the stairs into the shop,
A little light entered through some
the eauirtera. Wm it Mr. Jenk » ghoet ?
The light wae insufficient to show me
j more than the bare outHue of
nod the slight movement of the arms,
I watched with rather a beating heart, I
confess, for a minute, and then I thought
j that before seeking closer quarters with
what might be an apparition, burglar but which in
j ; his much shirt-sleeve®,, more probably I would waa don a
some g*£
j 1 lew wife, ,uo I went uauuuu to upper room --- — and , pro- —J
an
cured some there. Then I aguiu de
soended, and the figure waa gone. I
went into the shop-all in order. So,
much marveling, I went to bed.
When next morning I told the story
my companions were sou ad.
“Let us go—iet us get oat of the
nnlncky place," said my wife passion
ately. “ Whatever there is. Harry, sell
it at an ‘alarming sacrifice,'and then
you must get a judgeship secretaryship in under ool
Government, or a the
oniee, or something of that kind.
Mamma’s sixth ooosin’s huslwindis—is
—well, I forget what he is but there s
Well, now for the workhouse. And
upon- my wotd.-I-do thin k ao roething
dreadful would have occurred, but—
A few nights on—again that sonnd.
1 Lucy," I said, gently, but she did
rouse, and I thought perhaps ^It I had
better not disturb hat. wag q uite
dark as I stepped very quietly out dressaiii to the'stairs. part,
and then on
Agmo, • littte light of vwy smly morn
in ff coming through the shutter revealed
faintly a white hgnre l>ehind the counter
in the shop, it* arms waving to and fro
» nd bead bending over as though
sp ^ Rkin 8 1° ft customer. I strained my
e .^ s » but nothing more could I make
oni th ^ that the head of the figure was
wh ite. ,,
“It must be the veritable . Jenks, T . „ I T
«i J to myself ; 44 and that is his night
■ Where is- the • carving knife,
though ?” ; ■
One would have thought the apparition
heartl me * for if moved aside, took
comcthing and waved^it in the air. It
wa ^ m v gh op car T lD 8 knife ‘
Pretentij - , the i figure and ., began to
rose
aw ' end Jbe stairs. Itwasahard matter
1° fitan a ^ ,un ^ b,lt 1 tkd.and then
,
“l»52to dfUf^bfcu**. JlTk.
Barton . tbe shopman and our small ser
?“* <«? <* f ^ ,“?•
But I was the worst off. ^ heavy had
«dit»2 vriUh Mmediffieuitythat
^bey lotting exirieatol ma. —
mv hands behind me, to assist
myself, amali theytouched what seemed to be
a leather bagTl bag. I drew it forth,
“ A meney declare, and hill of
P oi n s l" —
The shopman ,j and the small maid had
W b wM Mfa , respect for the pro
priefcieB, bnt my wife and her mother
fooked onwith astaniahmeilL
“Sure enough, eohtents money,” the I continued,
jiughug imrt the of bag. “ Why,
have been some secret re
^£ 2 ?tSt 5 aLrT& inYhTworld K
P.!i*is?" ‘^ey ?
bent over my shoulder as by the
1 W X^l^^nertecttYMX^ -nfltMtX>r tieonSthed nroner'
ail his P ^
‘'ffiStn' .. ^ v breath—“A very
Tlm^U w^froved under £20.000.
tWf .
A Learned Pig.
Btett, an humble shoemaker who
?Ted teacher in Scotland, o? animals. was He an selected extraordmary
a pig
to experiment upon. The teaching Bissett’s of
the pig almost Wearied out
patience, and he was about gmng up
the task in despair when he bethought
himself of a ‘aS;. new wav } of taming th©
... . - ;
wearied perseverance bo at last was re- j
wa rdeil by i istilliDr a little reason into
, hft „ nreasonine cranium, onTy thua
-t “ see the
wind ” by common tiehef, bnt that they
can be made useful m “raising tlie
-jj; ssystr-aa
sSSdM^’iSSiShESr^ S,Sbv storm. It trined !
was
to be aa docile and a« obedient an a
spaniel, and was taught to spell names,
cast np aconnts, to kneel and make its
obeisance to the company, and to do :
various other feats. Some petty offi-;
«*, half armed with authority, broke :
into Bisaett’a room, aasanltod the poor, :
unoffending exhibitor, broke and de
stroyedeverything, and drew h.s sword
to kill the wonderful pig. Poor Bissett
pleaded hard tor his pig, which was
but he was threatened that ff he i
the pig again he would be
dragged to prison.
_______
Misplaced Words. i
r 1 ™? Sow ik.!..,. strait things .aSa#™ are I I
to be u . f? ®
£« ^“isj^ PI w ? r *_ TnJShT’sofor’t” «p^Ls iJSwSS? Th«*wnM! ■ ! :
B klSlT 5 ill impta love- 1 ,..i sav
•?“L;“- . 1 P mZ» a;,i
^ at ^rlhice the aoSbittot t
y t f _»i
wirm also^v dav is not that bv fearfuf anv
“Xtol - tSribfe- the Aerator words
and to iv
"SHE* " t M -.’--S. r IrivMani! ‘ terror ’ “ y
r ? KlM ;l | ‘, oppraanvely. i- A A my
y :
flnw^snneA ?“e, superb, e^ etc. It it reoS^ rqiu.u. nice study
nW.wtL^ardTin R , £! l 2* h *uSr„^ fheir wroneorde/ l*n^ ’
® Twfj JtTm™ n _ _.-»h diwrtn.^ TO ^
„
’P~. «_* >,ntn ij.Kont " "(larrM
.-nmrnTun anerteetm ” “k
taiJtt' ro - <u'
“*. A ground J wuTbe^tended ?^.endtowthrori r^r,
to be AimetPh to
i ” These in.
„‘l- ‘ '
*““*** ff° .• ret y
„ v
mon ’
—______ -
- I “/ 0 ’ lt . ^t. ^ * i
overflow, u butut dries up, too Lke the
.
STatJttxrsaaraussr
• ;
Seme grateful Feepk,
auS^s-s-rfEt Who say* that this is as ungrateful
ae several n t for friend* ft lawyer t whom > make a will, and for
to he wished to say
good-bye before dying. One of thaw
V a* a young fellow who occupied an
attic on tb* sixth floor of the same
Loose. After the will had been signed
j every one wee? to the old man’s bedside
to say a word of ^*mfort to him. When
the lodger from the attic drew hear, the
dying j>o man took both hi* hands and said :
“ you remember, young man, when
we met ? It was on the first night
of ‘ Ernsni. ’ I was not weU then, but I
“Given to me by * friend who could
not use it himself,'’ answered the young
-rax. waiftuapologize. “ f know,” said
the old man. “ I also know that, seeing
me without a comfortable seat, so soon
as the act was finished, yon compelled
me to take your stall, while you took my
. stool. Yon thereby allowed me to spend
j 1 Yon the last plesaant all evening of my life,
alone, out of that crowd, pitTed
tgrj h-iiiihi dead. i .... He ivuu.m, had lay me UUI
j m*n was left a parting
message for his young friend, with a
souvenir of their last ftt the
opera, in the form of a check for J20,
000. Kor ts tbia the only instance of
this world’s gratitude. Only Pennsylvania a few weeks
ago a young liandsome girl bequest in re
ceived a for aiding an
old lady who was taken sick in s railway
car. Then there is a young man in
London who helped and an lent old him gentleman
out of an omnibus an urn
brella, and subsequently became his
heir. Another young man m Western
New York, who had remained in a board -
ing-houy; for many yauw, reaeiraJ a
ao tice to Postmaster James, of New
York, ilnitthe package had failed to ar
rive. The postmaster at Fort Gibson
wa8 commnuiented with and he report
back that he knew nothing of lL
; Mra _ Effer8 Mid began to Mr. grow Shaw
patient wrote to a very
strongly worded letter. This was sent
to Postmaster . James, and after very
afligent Poetmaster inqnfrr, Holloway, vm the of 8 Indianapolis, (h of
i repor te<l that he had addreea, found with an envelope
w jtL the above no con
; tente, and that he had since ascertained
: ^at Charles Alderman, described, a clerk, had and
f oan d a package sneb as
tliat the matter had been referred to
Mr. French, the superintendent Cincinnati of the
special mail service, of the
division. Subsequent General investigations Hazen,
jed to an application office to at Washington,
at the dead letter
wb o found and. forwarded the two
switches of blondehair to Postmaster
j ame8 , and they were Ewers, subsequently
traasmitteil to Mrs.
Wreathe Fresh Air.
^ invaluable
Ptepto wto
^blle S P^polarion
ftt ©qnal ages, the death-rate
“e s »me standw^ Uu analyzing td
dl^»we 'hat itTiSrin w^bdestroys the mode the ^‘‘viuK.^Tbe merchant is
pulmonary couenmptiou The cxpla
»»‘>on i» very simple. The grocer hy«
whole ln .'“, Bh day,and ? p i a he fZ is ? alwayaMhvehim- “^2^1
m-buHinrir , the merchant on the
other hand lives m a close place with
Boors ot his shop closed, and in • '
ptoasora ‘-'lose or fttmoephere. business calls ^No on °ne him_to whoee |
*h« majority hnt of .on* large I
goods empenums anil feel u. a po
sihpn to tertify SS to ttw truth o f this de- .
-Skt. u^l e^act” genera!
sufficiently account for the
pallor and unhealthy attemLits appearance of the
and female in them.
SSSi Si ga
welllieds an oily, pleawni inside sort track
ou«S, hut will surely get the
on yon if you don’t'look ont Keep ^JZ away
^Td^be^m^’yonrare, J”" U
f* “
A Cleveland county (N. C.) man has
had throe just and lawful witfea in thft
lastyear. .. ..
fail to procure Mt«. Winslow the 8 period Boottiiug o? Syrup teeth¬
for all aiwtaaes incident to
ing in •iiiliirwn. It relieves the child from pain.
core* wind colic, regnlafo? the child, bowel*, and, by
iriving Se relief and health to tbe giveere«t to
mother- It i ean old and weU- tned remedy.
Pf-caiier People.
,
ti on , comuipatiou and torpid Uver, or ”“bU
mnsawa,” whan Dr. 1 'icrres Ooiden Medical
DiMovery and Pleasant Purgative Pellets .re
“ d — ,or
maide who donot love cat*.
people who have catarrh, annoying and di»
BtUSfiSWas—l "i='S'SiTss-s„«»„..
a»r?fflWSKWSMa Mra. K to be eMrien, ram^y 6
evera an
p,. m ■ ,j u .ho believe their progenitors were
Pvople who will reed about “ Helen’s Beblea’’
and Wife ■ of That Mme," H^eud and “ of That Mine,’and Motherem-Jaw That of
^ffommon jud^Wat^romdaw^Mm^Md
Henro Medical Advtaer."
th.irwa«tolBa«t Chrirtiaoe qtuureUng with each other on
fMhjoE ;
f , R«UMr7w » Wl)
d ” ;
and Rsa'th !
i n «titat», when the maeniOceet Invalid.’I
Hotel, at Buffalo, offer. aDthe elwut em>v .
JSSfiaWSf .itmUSTand |}!m somaot i JStdte-'ISdla the (inert natural
near
S™ plr * g ” ph ‘ “* ,ail *° ^ by
—sc- faraSaiajT Fjju«ebs.—T he
PmSSSH'infMiiMttM Hiostv to msn
“ h^L^.nTrttiherdto *tl^on3dra < wmrt >
nrorort
»«* in hogs, and ttart theywiU ineresM tbs ’
size and weight one quarter. Large discount,
Paraons owning two to three hundred hog..
CHEW
~ “ TLe Ueiebrated
“Matohlebb”
Wood Tag Pidg
Tobacco.
Tee Pxoxxeb Tobacco Company,
New York, Boston, and Chicago .
If there is • perron in the rmtod Steles .ho
does , not too, of Johnson . Anodyne Liniment,
Im’s T’e ^ ^ ft'« ffiltlw rol’IJrireM fS*pJt£ P
more valuable than gold.
,gv^ n, prerfouR \ stones.
■■ ——
uS . re”nrn?“«h . h . ShMt l TV.
ketmirerad %rfac«. ipfer. of tsm- far
truck ii)5 fruit. , t
Acker, Park Plaoe, Ne'
____
bv takins quirks Irish let. Price 25 ’
»?Sij5iSS£rf-«» w asekake. Sold by druggie.
- ‘ Daughter, bee-Ad. Adv’t
n. tnww ot«.err « it. a,. . n.
•haim'oMsftst v > at *tn uoUsmti ■» mmw.
uuj«tu<.a 4 mn»wi»mr. nwbthwni
unin.saSHmm.utwsmuinsUr sp.«
Old
*• * ---------
n i_ tailed So iw»u»’wiii.«TM Ge without « it
•*>« om»inrow a • tairtTWi. 'Fratan u»
TO bias- vaskTiay house uikimkst. m pioi
pw dm rmk. -
MMK. DEMOREST’B
illustrated portfolio of fashions
0
FOE THE SPRING AND SUMMER OF 1878.
A Uqr 1U KrsaUf.l tat *1 M l|nin PUH.
Gecttajstng «rr#c AOO LARGE fLU-'STBATIOBS of th* Latest s*d 8#rt m&m. UoiO'ltao *U th* lender * •»*
useful daaiga# tor Lada# and Cb<4tnm't Draw. with Fr*aea tad <*w*c«pti9M. wont «
tta tak •* rJartoM.**
SUam *ilm Ft:.. Ik
M J 11 ;. nGMOHHfr. IT East Uth sitreet.
MMK. DEMOREST’S
TO WEAR
FOE THE SPEINa AND SUMMER OF 1878.
a book or t«o rauts.
OMUsm, *■“ «ki btioa, p r uTwi y iMnM «
D "“-- C, *J
la Data Mafctw. aae nlsabla iaftnaiioa ter Mi
iUktn. an® bdM amwattr rita, t A
k mr, BEAUTIFUL. EHTEBTAUnffG AHD COMPMK1HSIYA FAULT PAFXB:
The Demores! Quarterly Journal of Fashions,
LT—, I Wmt, nMidlF iUMMtod. mmbiniaa 9m***fiai*g litantaN m
of tb« iMdia* at*iM far LadiM 1 *wl
rmntr, to
’ ftddMM W NI>G8 DEMOBEST, IT Ea st 14lh Htrsst.
_
ixioIct. Yet Powder a little east butter the
gj 2e „ t ^ rubbed in the «our, one pint
«w«t milk, and the yolks ntrrtng of two to eggs ngtty. beaten the
very light nL \n*,‘fS* _ Aaa Iaet. ova^ in
‘
h“ l Break in sqoaree
r the tabi^
»<>.ofo?iuct a* 'iu,"^TWr,
infe ! ‘*' T ”
huU*W p a j NKi.Lis'i ro. e.u.b.r*:], V.
f 'g\ rur nrcy £', FERTILIZERS
, Macvr««i»*o
; j 0 «“«'»■«»««vjjj'’-"« „ c „. u.,;, **
m
|fCRUVlAN| lr»||AHA| a_.,
|yAWUWHjj_ pM, t ura*r dirict 0 *
’
d., Ui m jjricuitnrui aowaaa-n«H,si«iM.
•
TAKE IT EASY.
Common-Senae Chair*
and Rocker*.
if it A nr Without Heading Tnhlt.
For «»le b» tbe trndo. Manafa^
tored by K. A. MINt'LAIK. Mott N. T.
rill*.
Send Stamp for IlluttratMl Price
Every Chair Stamped <r»J War
rantnl
EVERY YEAR YflO LOSE
Mora than one ooet# — Oar* a!way# n«ht~No pay till
tested and suited ; no ri*k, we pay freight: be your own
Agent and save oommimion#. Fire-Ten Hay Scale*’
complete (none better) *50. •tcHrered Send for free
Price TAat all aize Scales and Judge for youraeff.
JONES OF BINGHAMTON. Binghamton. W. T.
HS&S?SS gSf1SSg .^<1 i^SiSSSttoiS!
ras ,jta* jS! > ste ;«gm
Pi* DPI 1 1 3 UtfU .1 WAf
i fag,'|19 v*>u«mk! ^
Hmmm -
m -
BBBVX Jl
e %»
thw j»urv«pf it MM, KoJU| :
""•TVjIAnptTT. y^i, RgwYors r_-_
Aw* citr.
-
TUC 1 " fe
aooo OLD
STAND-BY
miai IWMg mm
FOR MAN AND BEAST.
umijimj .is trim. *i».j. «™. »i..„
~«r. ai w s«s.. a- ~~ w* Wws. n...:
1 ^ 1 *^
- SM * U ' MH.:..
DR. WISTAR’S
Wild Cherry.
Tin* well known ha* affected «o many
mmm VVOUClCrf » » III ■ CtlTCS; o*±
XHli Lirej STANDARD uxxji.vizxi.ltLt __ . ___ , __ _______ REMEDY i.uiUJjLii
i 1 **•* h C#M( _ ^ r4 . Tbr<ml n. n r, rnr *, ’
------------------------- '
IMfHruMv of Breathing, Aatfaain, Diph¬
theria, C’ronp, Pnt a In the Hide and
Breast, MplflIng of Blood, Qolnay
Phthlalc® and every Affection
OF. TH*
fimnif THROAT, v LUnuS nMns A9D ran umina VUuST.
* j
.acaewne ■ ■.
CONSUMPTION.
i
If you hare a Cough , |
USE WISTAR’S BALSAM.
If you hare a told
USE WISTAR’S BALSAM.
VtM tar* a Mere.nuvt,
USE WISTAR’S
*'»•" Bronehitte,
USE WISTAR’S BALSAM,
;
'
If you hare Amfhmtt.
USE WISTAR’S BALSAM •
if yon hare tnfluenxa.
U SE WISTAR’S
If you hare Whooping Cough ,
USE WISTAR’S BALSAM.
If you hare Croup.
USE WISTAR’S BALSAM.
If f/ you „.„ hate f onoumption.
‘
- . ,
USE WISTAR’S _ BALSAM.
,f , n „ «re Hunrs,
USE WISTAR’S BALSAM
far all Mmraare of the lungs.
nor USE uiictsd-c WISTAR S BALSAM. baioaaa
tar a or f >raat.
USE WISTAR’S BALSAM.
For till 0i*ea*e* of the Cheat,
USE WISTAR’S BALSAM.
01 »**tw I
TMX,£ga jgggaasgia
GUNS HlftS-- ^'VXsiSTt
Bgaj yaBKaSSS
feaaaHt fcjggiMaagAaai
*—*—•
S >1 AT 1AWMT FKICtft,
o o >r~ 1> °2 nPi *2
Ulus. Cmtmto gmtm m Xeefwr—. 3 Hooks, Me.
* ISSffXSSr ClRCUI. A*S FffiOTU *S _plTimWAMYiD. 9 tAi
!
The beet vltallzlns Tonlo.
IBeUericg Mental and Pbjaical
PEOmiATION,
end Nerve srstara.
e*0 Oivpa too. * Platt at.. H.Y.
PIASOSlORGANS Si
cIom out pruMBt #took of 500 Now and oecond band
clan# of InatrumonUi. AOKNTS WANTED foe
WATERS* SUPERIOR BKLI. Mailed. ORGAN* liORKilt and
PIANOS, illustrated Manufacturer# Catalogue# Dealer*,
WATERS A SONS. York. and 40
Kul | -ttb St., New Alai General Agent# rot
SHON1NOKRS Celebrated PREMIUM ORGANS.
HI TRADE MARK. DR. BECKER'S
CELEBRATED
EYE BALSAM
IS A SURE CURE
For INFLAMED. WEAK EYF.8,
STYES and SORE EYELIDS.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
. «i BOWKRY ,Mo lu
BY MAIL FOR 3’M.
L_J e I U nSfmpSB* Yliiu!ll 1 UvUvifi SflllCp ^
Fronting __ Union Square
NEW YORK.
X
EUffiMM _ &&SVDISH1
riH~pW««il ululu(l4Am.
KKRKEB Ss WBA VEB, Proprietor*.
TO CONSBiPTlVES.
Would yen lika to know how to roller# yonr diatna#
ing aymptoma in a few hour# ? Would you tike to know
how to dispel, like like a miracle, control the incipient Hugos f
Would you to know bow to the night sweat*
and dispel the ferer? Would sKisrsT^fys you like to knew howto
*treoatU*.i Ktn.’sr:. the , *y«teia «f .n-lard 1 ,r.
to know bow to Wbal op to •
of good health, by a law aimple cure? If remediea, pro
ridad by Nature for Herbal four medication #o.#and --without for charge, my B
page Treatisa on only tend addrea#
without priee. You hare to your on
* D rS MBA’RlftiMni
Joraay CSty. N. J. ;
_ _______ _
USE TtLK
Peerless
Wringer.
IT IS THE BEST.
V. T. Office-— 106 Chambers Street.
fACTOK Y—CINI’INNATI, O.
SANDAL-WOOD
a poatt'ta ramady-for wtl dtaaaaM of th* Httfsay*.
Bladder and Urlaarv Orcaoa; alao good to Drar •
•teal ( aaplaloU. It nmr produoaa atokna##,
owUId and tpaady la ita aetioo. It ia feet eaoermdin
otbar ramadiaa. Birty oapsclaa ear* in #U or aig
No otbar madlsrtna can da tbla.
Beware #f I wUattwaa, for, owing to Ite gr
canning pi la* etc.
DUN DAM DK'R dr C:0.»M Oenmtms 8q/t Cap
stores. Ask for etremlor, or far one to & v%4
Wasstar Straw. Wow Fo r k.
The Reason why
they Don’t Like it.
TUJi CGdT OF ADVERTISING IN AMERICAN
IS TOO HIGH,
ASKING PRICES HAVE NOT BEEN REDUCED
BY THE BIO PAPBBS SINCE THE WAR
THE AMEriOAN NEWSPAPER UNION GIVES
STS
PLAN CAN AFFORD.
The above fact* oopiain the anfrimdlp attacks mads
upon tXs America* Sewepmper Union bp tks M. T. Tteses,
****'”■ aua
.....;■ .......■ ■■■
COMPARISONS i
Tba oaakly adftion <?t th* New York Vine* ie »J&1
circulation for $S8ZSi: 90 lino. U35f Tb*
tlaamattt *,000 Am*rlo*a N««#paper oynU a
Tt*ie* think# th* Untou LLst a
line. Th» Am*rJoao N«wKpap*r Union give# an adwr
tiwuaaist 3,4to cireulatiGn for i*ti# than 3 cent# a Jina.
Ta« /w don't ttiiak serf wolt of the Amarioso Nowe
a line. Tb* A4t*i>>»<rr hee a poor opinion alao of tba
Tbn Bofimn Nampapar weekly Union* t**u»» ' a,«»)
r>t*t copias, ob«rg*a
»<lv»rtie*r» B't* c«nts a line, and *ipr**84» doubt* ot
th* h .neitty of th* American fee- !«** Uj*n N«y*p*p*r me-foarth Unton, which
jf i»«# teat circulation demands, ' th* pnoa
which th* /’<>»( charges I-he for
The Horton Advertise, cent* a ad
Tcrtiffiuff in * weekly' baring zfiud circulation, and
warn* it* reader* to t>c*ar* of an )aat:t>-.t:,rti a*Z which
^1S^ : iSITa‘a:, and charge* -Jf, , 'a.,., Th*
h*^»/kO olTCQ.ation V/r canea a line..
fildfer haa oootcropt the Araencan Ne*«p«par
Union, which gistw circulation hr US cant* it tin*.
Th* Utica Herald pratts »>.4;Si oopi## of a weekly *di
g5.''^i^.'XK.*a»£SSJ£,‘SSi* Union, which for 6o*nta
paper gs»e* clrcuiation a
chant*# The W#r*aw, advert N Y . Orpup-rat Ime. prints When IJ&s cops** and
sere * centa a it waa • »
<«
Tb# -Loot# we*k}y-f’««r**H» ll,»J2 «v>p!e# weekly to
Germanain iO enirroaod and 8h Louia. !ow, ita bat adveitiaihgT- th* tea
are cent* a are »#ry becau#*
SEFifSissS Arnor-.caa Newspaper Union hV‘° r r** ti.Hl'2 wsmklj area
u ‘ a “' k * **
The Loskport, N V , weekly Tones print* oopiaa
HESS5
cojipi.ktk BftFuTl.vri *f.l. i;v
rairoia jto»*thxb witb
riS!nS umSoiSuui-to : ffri rr
BEALS <fe FOSTER, Gen’l
Agt’s New York News¬
paper Union, 41 Park
Row, New York.
If *U Jft