Newspaper Page Text
The Fashions.
Tortoise shell hairpins the size of steel
ones are very fashionable. :
Plain dcrk velvets arc a good deal used
for bali mantles and opi ra cloaks.
Ruches for the neck are finished with a
fell of iace which extends to the waist
line. '
Flounce of embroidery are ufted to trim
white, muslin evening dresses for young la
dies.
ranch vogue for - th, ..
* rose me e are „
edges of white or tinted Bilk toilets cut with
S
Walking hats match the dress in color
and material and are trimmed with narrow
braid embroidery. '
Vert* of real or artificial flowers are the
latest novelties as finishes for dinner and ;
dr dresses. ‘
evening evcn ng scs
Decorated silk hosiery is very fashionable,,
and, with the opera cut slippers gives a
dainty appearance to the feet. i
The short, round paletot, made of dark '
velvet, with fur band trimming, has taken
the place of the long mantle.
Fine white woolen material and dark red I
ZST.ZSZtSS' *1 t frt n exceedingly pretty combi
nat.on for a youthful
Demi-foilets are male of black faille;
they are qnict and elegant looking, always
appropriate and wear as well as alpaca.
Large guipure collars almost covering
the shoulders, with turn down cuffs to cor
respond, have an exquisite effect on velvet,
lsirge and small fur collars are fastened
with long ribbons. The muffs have bows
to ma cli placed in the middle or on both
sides.
A very fashionable material for dressy
home, toilets is cream white serged flannel,
trimmed with long loops ami ends of white
. , 1 |
The Connaught Jersey is made of ribbed
wool cloth or net of light qualily iu dark
colors, and is trimmed across the front with j
wide black braid in hussar stripes,
Swallow trimming for ball dresses is Ihe 1
latest caprice. The swallows are made ol j
pressed velvet en relitJ, and are placed in
different sizes all over the dress,
Alexandria blue is a new tint in the
world ot dress. It resembles a little the
sapphire hue and iR sure ol becoming a
favorite, sineo it is so pleasingly effective
by gaslight 1
Very large silk painted fans are seen ,
sohly at balls or iu the boxes of a theater,
I he most fashionable mountings are mother
of pearl, ivory aud luutaslic wood studded
wilh sletil or bright colored heads.
The tunic or st all to the dress skirt is
shorter than has been worn of late, cov
, ring the upp.,- pari of the skirl only, and
draping iu the back ,n poufs, more or less
drot.ping, but showing a greater portion of
the tr uiuit-d skin lhau formerly. Of course
this stylo of draping is suitable only to ;
skirts cat short.
Flut saclictfi of silk, delicately scented, ‘
arc decuraU d wiih einbroidery or baud j
painting and suspended from tbe waist fly '
a knot and ends ot narrow ribbon. Those
are worn with ball costumes aud hold the
dancing programme. Down tho back ol
the case are fastened small loops of ribbon,
which serve to bold a liny pencil.
Luce (which is worn more than ever. and
flowers arc the two things which make
deini-tmlei ci mi rouei dresses (liessis lank UOK eleirant 1 Ilgam and iiuu refined, rein,en
Flowers are put on in half garlands and
delicate clusters over both skirt and bodice,
, , S’- , ,1'i: i , , , i,
I .Slots ot tips ot culled tcafti is thrawn
Ladelt marten! I t.gtruanric« ghtfebricslueb suet. a. net net, «■»!*•• erZ I 1
gauze, surah, etc.
‘‘Wlusotno Women."
5
B, l e "? , "r h " r , 0 r;r ,J, T b bleHl b ** U “
. , 1 ,
Himpiy to mH>mtntiac« Ui« Uii»K*
— ilaivard Lampoon.
Woman- the crown of creation.-Herder
Woman is a miracle of divine contradie - ’ |
lion.—Michelet.
Ail that I am my mother made me.—
John Q Adams.
Shakespeare has no heroes—he has only
heroine* — Huskin.
..........................
w onut a 1 j .■— U lad ato n f.
............
U-siroys it. Gabm.,,
Jf woman lost Kden, such as she alone
can restore it ~ Whiter.
I wish Adam had did with all his rios in
body,—Bouicicmult,
To b gentletnan every woman is » lady
in right of her sex.—Bulwer.
What in a wouiau? Oulj oue of natures
Rjgretable b'umleni.- Cowlej,
A handsome woman is a jewel, a g.oo<1
woman is a tri-aiiure.—Saadi
A fashionable woman W always in love
with harse!i,—Rocbetoucauld.
All women aro>:ood~) 5 t.Hal iui nothing or
good for something.—Cervantes.
Women detest the serpent through a pro*
lessional jealonsj.- Victor Hugo.
A woman changes oft; who trusts her is
tht* softest of the soft. - Trane is i.
1 here was never a fair woman but she
mouths in a glass.— Shakespeare.
A passionate woman's love is alwar
vere iw*d v fear.—George Kliot
Handec wot’ ien without religion are
os t t perfu -Heine,
Betwt % wc and “no** I
k a pin.—C«r*
VHfo'v
ten
her
* * *
Ui the Dolman Country.
x iuoK. iifco over^rv'wu
*] 1 S *Aistco«ti Mn<l shorter
< with tiuaierotti 1 row^ of
cloth trouw*r« wre full
ompir one eu«s
= At'be c her end i* a wide
brimmed, k * - teh c >r Straw hat, on which it
is iQdi^peoswbfo to wear black velvet trim
rnlug, with two l ■g black velvet tails,
hanging behind. Leather boot* are kept f
for Sundays and fetes, and the smartness
on these occasions appears to run mostly)
into »he waistcoat, the colored braiding on j
which in almost Lantern in its gorg ousness i
The skirts of the women’s dresses are gath
ered into a broad band at the waist, a ker
chief or shawl being thrown over the ghoul-,
ders. The hair ia platted into a broad *
band, which is doub’ed on itse'f; and ff,,, .
muslin cap has two long lappets or ears,
which are folded back on the. head, forming
large loops. As for the peasants themselves, ! 1
the majority of whom farm their own small
^ ^
e?pw;#1|y , be WUB1C1>> The bare !
legged women and girls seem to rake their
shwe iu the bardegt fieId ] abofi 8ljd tht . ir
j ot jg v , rv Ur rftmove ,j frQm what an Kn . j
gii ,h eye would like to see. Many features )
of the country life remind one of Ireland;
but the ingrained idea of the French peas- 1
»o put by franc, seems to carry them
bravely through the.sternest circumstances.
^ ^ rU ^ moiu , h mu f-the-1 ^
^ j he , mugeg in tfap out o
ny vnlaj ,„ g „ rp b(lfU , r th . tn hove i, jn
wb ; c h the cow H frequently get, the |j 0 nV
„bare of the accomn.odotion, with floors 0 t
beaten earth, and old . pen hearths, , lit>
turesque, perhaps, but very smoky. The
article of furniture in which luxurv is
■n-p'orf 1 . ............. .via 1 .
OTa ,i y a p ; ece of ornalBroU , woodwork,
reaching from floor to ceiling, with the bed
five feet from the floor, enclosed by curtains
or sliding shutters. As the family grows
richer, a substantial wardrobe cupboard is
added, to match the bed.—London Society,
Boro-Blycerlde.
-
A barbarous looking name, this, but it is
full of meaning, and if report is true, its
discovery is one of the greatest boons to the
h " nia ' ! ra, ( '- h \ 1 “"" ral M 'l 11 i ‘‘ voh ' )
'f >» . » h “r ,c » :l '" 1
ol hua '»" food ' 1 h,s P' '’P 8ra,,tm an
antiseptic, discovered, or at leant, made,
known, by Prof, itarffof London. By
f r( . hb meat, game, fish, fruit ntul vegeta
b | pg (!KI1 be kept for years untainted. At a
(jinnvr given in London, to a number of
leading scientists, oysters, turtle, fish,meats,
game and fruit were eaten which had been
kepi from three to six mouths, and yet wore
as fresh as if just brought from the market
A London paper very justly declares that
tha discovery is of the greatest practical
value. One is staggered in thinking .d its
possibilities. Iu time it will lead to the
killing of cattle near whore they are eras
mg, for the meat can be preserved and sent
to any part of the world within a year after
it is killed. Hence the cruelly connected
with the shipping of cattle will in a few
years he no more. 'I bis will cheapen '!>"
price of food the world over, and will ,;e u
blow al, or rather modification of the can
ning business. The invention will give »*
»“»*»« borrms in January, and winter
"Jslers in summer. V e can have green ,
peas in early spring, and sailed and smoked
ha no longer a necessity.
Bom-glycerldoia ehenmat^mpound, no seer, t preparation, «
,s a ami is kn-wn in
the nomenclature of that science C 3 lift !
,103 it-cos I, costs won only 13 annul ah ,ut iwenij twenty 11 live cents nnw S
nirnihm. It ran W* med over ami over I
again. It in equally valuable in preserving
butter, mik and eggs, as weU as fish, Ucsh
and game. \ he next step ,it science will I
lie to give us artificially mad.- food.
A Womau’s Ifovios
A , few year* huglmt r , paper. I
ag--, 8 .
"hen ^Vnes w. re more irequvut ,
than at present, , the passenger-' , of a stage l
on it* wry to town, began to .... talk
about robbers. Oue geutlema,., cAeres-mg
much ”1. «,iii,.(v a. |,.,i .I ,:z he sluviul lose
'
( ki . „ , bls „. b .. t R „ d j
^ *bp it into his bo,-l„ which he did in,me- !
n()( , ,„. (nrf thc lt :
0 , , olu ,
was slopped by \ highway man, who riding
up ‘to thrt window on tho lady’s Mi\ do
man,fed her money She declared Ibst she j
!,»,i mm,, but in,,. H ,„w «x «, Ihe L gen
tie ....... find gu. n
fh® t/«'iii!onan submit o l patu'Uily. but
w h«n the robber d marto i bo o.v t d Um fe
nm j e traraliinc c-nup.*niou wah abus », de
her to bo in eoifi d*ra v with th©
highwayman. She eontes-u d that appear
ances were against her. but. said if com I
puny in the stage wouU sup with her the
following evening in town, she would ex^
where . v-,v ,-legan, wa*
When thi - was over, she produce i
pocket book, and »d dressing tbe gt title
man win. had been rohV-1 -i-d. -
' In this book, sir, ara Innk notes to the
of a thousand pounds 1 thought
better for you to lose ten guineas than me
valuable property, which l ha l with me
nitfbr. Aj jou w *4 the mews of saving ;
l entreat jour Acceptance ot this bank
of one hundred pounds."
► t 4
li You Laco, You're Stupid. j
A reason, if not a nooe ity, for some
ot corset may fie found when the form
very redundant, this, however, cannot
with the very young and slight, Init all!
noc^rtsitj could demand, antl that prac
go *<i souse and fitness w mIu o meed*
ouhl bo found iu h tfronj; elastic kiud of i
sufficiently strong, and even st-fl. '
the bust to support it, and sufficient
clastic »t the st ies and back to injure no
and impede n > furtetums. Even in j
ie case yon» g and slight an elastic
under thc false ribs w not be in
but perhaps the wutrary set vi ng
a const Aid hint t > c- ; cst wed
and h ; ut every i
n n v : crushing the ribs i
ly ng the fibre of mu -cle, will
ala ft to freedom of moveiAont
to beauty rce’v too much to
' '• ; ” ‘ * " 4 B U " ’
•,.”i i\ to i ... w . not -n->w t rr.
iu.*^ \lor ov**r atiu ovor agntn warntn *
n ’ »ad to wr>ckc<ines 5 in those
ho do—Nineteenth Century.
IssrarcTtox does not prevent waste of
ot mistake*, aud mistakes themselves
often the best teachers of alL
Mississippi Fog*. j
-
•
“A fog catches sometimes, . , jat
you an, w ;
lb ® n J '
b, ^ RueM p a ' n ,,, ?
’ u we O ~ i
rn0Te E ' ow an ' 5 bave oue har)d °“ ,he f 1 n f'
ae * r ' 8 b " !l al! ,hft time Weuose U P lnto ** {
” us!lps ouce . ' ri a w b‘le, and bacs out ano ,
,uri1 aroun( ** Oh, it s amusing what capers :
a boat wdl cut up in a fog. 1 re call ouce. |
‘ teas on the Alice Vivian go.ng up at,in
foot of the Island, when the fog came on so
fi, ' n - e Son had to brush it aside to see your ;
hatlJ - We chasseyed around there for along
time, now into this bank, now into that, and
b - ; 'ig ?50 worth of the durndst fun that
? ou evar flaw - when a!l at onca 1 fonafi wfc
were in a pocket with a bank on both sid^ . ,
of us and a bank a little way ahead. Yes,
*. wfi w " c m 7 a, ' ,is n P * n Tbree Ml,e
Ereek^having com? down tfo- riser to ac
ro a l ” 1 18 < a ’
' ^ two years ago I was following
Ca P t. Peoples, of the Johnson, in a fog, hs
ening to her escape pipes and steering well
* ut0 thepoint - I thought everything wae^o
ng all right and 1 learned that Capt People?
) ad been up the Tensas River and was go
right, through to the At antic Ocean,
when he beard a dog bark. Knowing there
waR n0 fb>t? P UI tb,w " on ' 1S ‘ ’ rt ,*, e ,l-rn '
beck i awl came down where wa,
,0 P»K by- Somctums l h< ^ we are lun r f >y t. <
11111
9 ' 0 PI'i n 8 fo il, and then by t ern r. ou
see, we ring ihe bell and accordingly as it
sounds with a faint or quick echo we judge
how far we are from the shore. We
sometimes stop the boat ever so often just
to hear the bell echo, and then it is almost
(be bli iw< thing with the whistle and with
, be wheel. When the wheel is grinding
aw , y c . b) u e in shore she makes an awful
roar> but w i ien W e arcjwell out in the mid
««• of -be stream you can scarcely hear it.
The other way of judging the run of
boat and her direction is by the feel of the
rudder. When the pilot's wheel turns hard
know which way she is heading, even
w heri we run not nee the jack staff. Of course
it i H a science to some degree, but for the
most part piloting in a fog is pure
work,’ 1 —Mobile Register.
Red-Hot Christmas.
The people of Australia do not quite for
^ tbat ; g Christmas time, even under
, b( . blaxintc sun of Capricorn, but their en
j 0VmenU partake a little more of the al
, r8BC0 ord( , r tban ,hey are wont to do at
lbig geagon either in England or the United
at8leg When in Australia I happened to
b( , s(RJ ; n g < , r g0 me time on the tropical
|j n(>i alld bir , bH ben i fit of the uninitiated I
, i aj mention that on Christmas Day at
)w ,. b , w 0 ’ cb)c | f 1 looked up a kitchen chim
U) ,^ and gaw tbe flurl looking down into it.
T1i5h was u vertical sun with a vengeance,
aM(1 hf , at WUR in due proportion to the
, iir ,, rlm „ g „ f hia rH ys.
With noTiieg on but a shirt and a hat, ,
wt , moan , ed our barebacked Meeds an(!
took thoM out sea, They did not half -
alld thcru wag Br( . a , snorting and :
. '""' '"T eame in - 1
k ut H f. t jj wliS 0 f r no consequence in the
^ ftm| RO W e forced them to 8 W im till!
, ? tbeir beadg were visible and we were j
baJ rvPli . The only real danger was .
‘ ngly-looking fellow
f roln ^mrk, sud one 1
showed his back fin within a very
yards of me, bu, luckily he was not quite
game enough to attack a horse and his
r ;,u r - ; „.,i* made the horses very I
* ji ,ome splen
dm g.ulops over Mh. tin sanas and an n t up me he hi ni.is Is
‘'riving ,I,„ the L-„nj,irons kangaroos from frmn their their cover cover ami ami
pui-,iiii,g them ns th.-y fled away with long,
swift bounds. there were some craggy
- ***
where, or. landing, we had a huge feast of !
oysters gstheied tresh from the rocks.
Our holiday closed with a long, swelter
ink ™ie home, under a vertical sun, with i
the thennometor at one hundred degrees in
the shade. Iu Australia this great heat -
d.OT not bm-t you much, if yon are careful, the
FroUH. y«»r head and ^.k from .
suns rays. As i lay at night in my tout, j
on the hard, dry friends ground, 1 home, could buried not h©jp in
picturing the at
blankets and eiderdown, or roasting before
gunous fires or generous stoves, but proh* j
ably most ot them Wv'uld prefer the old
fashioned Englislt and American Ohrist-'
m ,JS * Brooklyn Kagle.
«»«’*> -«•“« ‘ -»d npon the subject
°f’'ringing up ghb s e wu 1 s up a "t
of mivice WIth th f fo, i° wlllff blt of 80Und
Mn> f A wom * n 8 8l ' f ‘ « uard 19 k ’ v P a
hands her. It need his .
man'> ott you aaais-j
fence in walking, taka bis arm instead ot
his taking yours. Just tell him in plain
English ban-is , ff.' He may not like it at
the time, but he will respect you in the
future tenfold more. Men will he and do
just what the woman wil! allow them to do
Men will not do to trust. Give a man your
a- m mid you wi: find him very confidential
and he will take a great many privileges he
would not take it be was not permitted to do
He will- give your arm many loving
zo and sly iwists that he could have
opportunity of doing, and opportunity is j
he is after. A few words more of sd
and l am done. K^op vour j^iris off the
except wh*»n they have business
them that it is unnecessary to go to
post-office evt y time they go out. Your
can .in n one a. well as your boys
font allow' vi ■ < if ttev must have a
l**au, to go with boys much older than
theraseive < It possible, ii.snil it into their
nai ur<' a* they are safer in their own
andstha ; ♦ i, y are in the hands of any
man pr achers not excepted.
The Cost ot Retirement.
Fubdicity is •ne of the condition, of
mclern lile, a .d it is assumed that it is
ajore a condition of American existence
. h(ln tha , o( aoy ot Ker peoplo. I-ong since,
,i toreicner ot c -tiuctre-n spoke of that
"full glare of the American eye," in which -
he seems to have thought everybody here
had to live, whether liking it or hating it
But publicity si not au Americanism sim
aud suck it uevsr has keen: and it,
belongs to in, not because we live jo much
further to the West than most others of the
people who are civilized, or pretend to b<
so, but in virtue of our humanity. Retire
meat is as easy a thing to hare in America
as it is elsewhere, by which wc mean, not
that it is a thing of course anywhere, but
(ba( j t muJ t be paid for, no matter in what
j aQ( j or un d er what sky, the lover of silence
anc j q U j et ahd tbe 8 voider of noise and
bustle and confusion, may dweli. Every
, Wog ,ise being bought and gold, why
should no* freedom from disturbance bring
; fg j, lst pr i C e in that market which we cal
the world? That price need not be stated
either in silver or in gold in greenbacks or
in browubacks.—Boston Transcript.
The Crowned Heads.
The following list, compiled from the new
issue of the ‘ Almanac de Gotha,’’ includes
all the reigning sovereigns of tbe European
world, with their ages and the date when
each began to reign : Accession. Age.
Dorn Pedro II., Brasil............1831 57
William, Brunswick...............1831 7 g
Victoria , GreatBritian ............. 1836 g 3
j p reder i cb p ranz jjS chwerin...1842
; Brn8t n _ SftXe . 0obllrg ............1844 g 4
j George, Waldeck....................1845 b 2
Francis Joseph 1., Austria.......1848 j . t
,., h « Netb „,„ d .... l8 ,„ ’
; Frederick, Baden.......... ........1852
Peter, Oldenburg....................1853
; [ Charles Alexander, Saxe Wei
mar....... *.......... .........1853
Krnst, Snxe-Altenburg.............1853 56
Charles 111., Monaco 1856 54
j 'fob 11 1 1 • Bei< htenatein............18o8 42
Heinrich XXII., Reup Gaeiz... 18,81 36
Nicholas, Montenegro..............I860 41
Frederick William, Strelitz......I860 53
j Adolph, Schaumburg...............1860 55
Wilham I Prussia 1861 86
Lou ,1. I or tugal.................. 861 44
- George I., Greece................... * 37
Christian IX., Denmark..........1863 54
Houis H., Bavaria.......... ...1864
Charles I., Wurteinberg— . .1854 38
Leopold If, Belgium........ : ...1865 60
Charles, Roumania........... ....1866
George II., .Saxe Meiningen......1806 55
Henry XIV., Reuss Schleiz.. 1867 55
Milan I., Servia........ ..........1868 28
George, Schwarzburg-Rudolpu
vVilhlm! ......1869 d *
Germany .......1871 86
Fri(ldriob ’ Anhalt ....... 1871
Qpcar n g we(1( . u 1872
A | bf , rt 5 axony 1872
Alfonso '.,.1 XII Spain n'Z'Vj....... 1874 .
‘ ,' ,075
A Mu Hamid jy’ tiesse. .... jk 77
jkmbert i jU( j w -, c ......... ...1877
I Italy........... ........1878 38
b( , 0 xill Pope., ........1878 73
(j bRr | BSj Schwarzburg-Sonder
haussen ..........1880 52
A1 «* Bn der HL, Russia............1881 38 -
1 l,e *« e8 the Empresses and Qeens a
“ . |! ^laToueen 52"^ . 1 the Queen of Den' i
* nr ark £ Victoria aid of England
l ’ 1 Fke pre *f ° ?“ Queen !
Olga of Wurtembnrg , have both _ reached ,1 ,
J while E * Empress Bugeme,
wh . ... A A . , z? _i_._
of ho ® se " or n * ,n m ® .^® 18 ° e ° ^ co . 18 T| | I
' J
onhlLtiCfi t . .
»‘ r ‘^O 8 J 1 wL 'f ’ C 1
f , , rIIh . . .
2 ’ ^ 35 Trid u,e Queen
01 p 1 ; , 5 wbile tbe !hree younge st
ate be ^ Ut * n 0 ’ ‘ ‘ ” ... fhp
' ’
ila,sett 1,1 S,MUn U and ,he litteen of . 8er ’ ,a .
23
_ _ ___
A Leap ill bis Sleep.
On bunday JL. morning, as Ihe express going
.........- *. ~
a passenger in oue of tbe coaches jumped
from his seat and ran hastily along the aisle
to the platform and jumped from the flying
train. The spied of the train must hav,
been forty five miles an hour and those who
Baw the man make his terrible leap thought |
there was .r.ot tbe slightest chance for his
life. The rope was pulled by the brakesman,
the engine reversed, the air brakes put on
and the train backed up to the point where
the man made his sudden exit, the trainmen
being all ready to pick up the fragments of j
what was supposed to be a craiy passenger, j
However, they were mistaken, and the train
was met by the said passenger hoofing it
down zz the track at a lively rate. He was j
^ B „ being ea , e r to know the reason of
his hasty disembarkation.
He said his name was E. A. Cimery, his
age 22, his business locomotive fireman on
(} ra nd Rapids and Indiana Railway.
|j e w#g going home to Buffalo alter a two
year* - absence and had gone to sleep in the
roacb as one naturally would at three
P C ] 0C k in the morning While he slept he
j rta[U ed that lie was in the cab of his engine
al ,d his m ite shouted to him : "The throt
,] e ; s gtojiped ! If you want to save your
Hf e , jump I’* And he jumped as has been
described.—St. Thomas Journal,
Advice to a Boy i
e: , a* ay . ro t , e cro crowd a s little i . wb (’, j
'’ V, ’ r T ' RU ° ne S1 ? R l‘ u
-
zizEzrzzzrszz • |
fellow , ,, Ask , . yourself bard ,
you are. ques
nous about yourself; find out all you can
about yourself. Ascertain from ortgional
«rces if you are realty the manuerofa
man people say you are; find out if you
are always honest; if you always tell the
square perfect truth in business deal;
it your life is as good and upright at VI
o c ock at night as it is at noon; it
are as sound a temperance man on a fishing
expedition as t >u are at a Sunday school
picnic; if you are as good a boy when you
go to Chicago a- you are at home ; if, in
you reality are ibe sort of young man your
father hopes you are. your tr other says
are and year sweetheart believes you are.
Get on intimate terms wit k yourself my
boy, and believe me every time you come
out from one of these private interviews j
wil! he a stronger, better, purer man
Don t forget this, Fafomachas, and it wid
you good.—Buriitgton Hawkeys.
A Lost Balloon.
A short dispatch from Paris announces
the finding of the balloon Saladin among
the moutains of Sierra old Phedroza, in
8 p;,in. Early in thp afternoon of December
10, 1881, the Saladin ascended from the
a icient City of Ba’h, in England, carrying
Capt John Templer, of the Meteorological
Offi- e; Capt A. Gardner, and Mr Walttr
Powell, member of Parliament for Malmes
bury, an enthusiastic amateur in aerostatics
Mr. Powell’s fearlessness in ballooning had
become a proberb among his fr.ends and hi
bad often expressed his determination to
cross the Atlantic through the air. Th«
balloon went up 4,000 feet, and Capt. Tem
pler took the temp'-rature at that altitude;
the wind carried the balloon in a southeas
terly direction, and it was determined to
make a landing at Bridport, on the cliffs
overlooking the Channel. It was late in
the alteruoon when the aeronauts, haviug
cruised about at distances varying from
2,000 to 6.000 feet above the earth’s surface,
began to descend near the cliffs. Here
there appears to have been some difficulty.
At any rate, the Saladin went toward tbe
earth with alarming rapidity, and as it
neared the ground Capt. Templet rolled out,
holding the valve fetring. Freed of Tempter's
weight, the balloon shot up again about
eight, feet, and Capt. Gardner fell from tbe
car, breaking one of his legs as he reached
tbe ground. Templer felt the valve rope
slipping away from him, and called to
Powell to throw himself cut and come down
on tbe rope, but he remained in the ear,
which suddenly broke away from Tempter,
and went up to a fearful hight. It passed
over Bridport in sight of all the town and
over Ihe waters of the Channel, when it
became lost in the lowering snow clouds. At
a distance excited watchers on the cliffs saw
a dark mass falling, and when Templer,
having found someone to take care of his
crippled companion, reaefled the town, he
was told that the balloon had dropped into
the sea. This statement he did not believe,
but nevertheless he chartered a steamer
and went in search of the balloon and
Powell. That day while the light lasted,
and all the next day and next they grap
pled and dragged the waters, but to no
purpose. Meanwhile, the theorists came to
the front: No real aeronaut would believe
that the Saladin had fuiieu ; the balloon
would probably land on the French coast,
between St. Malo and Brest, they said, and
as thcrewc-reno telegraph wires or ra’iroads
even omnibusses in th -t part of France,
it would be days before any tiding ot Mr.
Powell could be^received The tits: tidings
of him have now been received, more than
thirteen months after his disappeaianee.
The wreck of the balloon discovered in the
Spanish mountains settl. s the dispute a* to
the strength of that pride of the aeronaut; it
undoubtedly did not pitch into the Channel,
but half inflated with gas, sailed throngh
lered ' he air ngs for aud man splintered y ^ , But wood M [ h,,e which . ^ form- ta '
' b T ^ ro “* n K » m on * » h “ peaks °
? P " ,D : ho'.es of the intrepid . ttma.-i
^t lhe kngh r ’ sh Cbannel.-New Y York TT limes el
• —- • 7
Tbe Penalty of Flirting. .
Tbe professed flirt, hearless though she
may seem, does not escape wholly nnscath
^ eve “ iu lhe “ idal of ber
triumphs. Thoses, of course, are not the
«“ 0 *t dangerous flirts wbo are pointed ou.
““ soc ‘ al offen ' ,er8 . be « ause tb ^ Uo DOt
8 P are tbeir . powers of drawing men from
allegiance to old, aud perhaps regretted,
lies and ot disconcerting premeditated feroi
ly arrangements; and no doubt th -y must
fo’ . av e , behind , , th-m , some broken , , hopf-s ,
, d d heart8 nieusantnes^ ther _ ath3 0 -
pleasure pleasure and ana wavs nays of ot pleasantness. Bui l>m.
penalties *"«,*"• -n»*-«*■» of the love ebase ; and rr- the men
*Uo may have been even heartlessly jilted
by a flirt do not usually undergo any long
protracted suffering, but are easily consoled
‘ lke wounden heroes, by the confloiencr and
SJ m pa!liet '“ uti ' ctlon of « 0 '» e ten ‘ le ‘ heart -
‘’ d ) r,vab . 1 tbe other hand, rt the rssue of
should go against . the flirt, she < ars a the ,
an d meets with htte sympathy. 1 he
’ ^ ^ ,
, . , ,
,.P ^ ^
, , •
^^her ^ j herTricht |
j ege c ^ ^ tlen forget
, a
«“• » 8 “ dei e “ l ‘ re * or ec,l »' 8ed by a
^
M
The Fifl.
-
Few plants throw greater light on the
early migration of mankind than the fig.
Hanbury, the most accurate of writers on
the history of plants, falls iuto tbe startling
>rror of stating that "the fig was not known
i.i Greece and the Archipelago and the
neighboring coast of Asia Minor during lhe
Homeric age, though it was very common
in later times," the fact being tbat both the
wild fig, errinoes, the^reat wild fi^trt 5 e near
the source of Scaniaudar, and thecultiva ed
gukee, are mentioned by Homer. But the
5g is a native of Kaghan and the valleys j
about Kandahar, and probably spread west
ward with the earliest migration of man
Kusli and Caucasus into al, the countries
of Ae Mediterrauean . The Btury o{ Adan ,
^ ^ ^ c . rrie d along with
^ ; nt0 Asyria
---
W e do not see how tbe blacks and the
whites can be placed on exactly the same
f oting. unless about six inches are sawed
0 8 the feet of the former —Texas Sittings.
PISO S CURE TOR
CCRES WH'RC ALL CISC FAILS.
Bes: Cvxigb Syrup. Two* c 1
Vse in time. So.d bydrusk.
CON SUMPTION-
C A E95
* A]C I »O j t J V- j I 1L.
'
? v w flows mcseAsIe
-- J PATENTS
* pr‘WO.RuD A SOLDIER.'
H W FJTZCSRA^D A CO •
‘•U-BVN.J. x Laci A t j*. Washinfttoii, D C t
Em :7
A combination of £*rr\
fcritic of Iron, Peruvian
/ Hark and Phosphorus in
Va JSL 7 a 2)ebiliiif Powers tite, palatable Prostration it f XjOss is form,> indispensa¬ of of Appe¬ Vital Ssot
wa.'*.. ble.
BEV. A. I. HOBE3 Writes:— PURIFIES KEV. J. E. TOWNER,
After a thoroutrii trial or the S Ind^try,rA-, =der
IRON in stating- TONIC, that I I take have pleasure^ been /• v r,K . t
greatly benefited by its Jr ¥ &JL 18 U KlIS sJ/ /a the most debilitated excellent vital remedy forces. for
use. Ministers and Pub- ,
lie Speakers tviil find it
of the greatest value g f c.
where a Tonic is neces* - 7 r 7/W//J
sary. I recommend it
as a reliable remedial
doubted agent, -possessing nutritive and un
restorative properties.
, ’ lommiUc, K>j., Ckt. 2, 1SS2. CO.. 1 H St..
- P 22 PA 2 ES S 7 S 3 Z DR. HARTER MEDICINE 213 ». KA
ft. TUTE? Hiffilii ■so
^- 1^1 1 fcij %i ■vm.wna*' i rl Si 1 h W $■ "> •*: I ■-» ft ! & 4 n W \4
‘XS9iuiRirg+ sXt**-: a* jWK tBr&ESP'ZW y? : ;*.
-
..
HAVE KO EQUAL FOR
Ele gance of Design,
Beauty cf Style and Finish ,
Purity of Tone,
Elasticity of Touch
/ GeneralCcnstructiiin.
2To Other Orp;ans £ Like Them.
2r---:
MH SEND DIRECT TO THE FACTORY FOR
HANDSOME NEW CATALOGUE
b Whitney & Raymond, O.
T a m JS CULTIVATOR
fk. “3 J
V/ith Cotton and Corn*Planter Attachment.
S3 ■ The Leading- Machine wherever
- - 'V Introduced!
I ’
I fy.\ A Favorite with Cotton and
-JasIII) 1 *' Corn Raisers!
\ .. f' Y ■ yjkM. J 1 vff/d A Walking Perfect Cultivator, Combined Cotton Riding and and
-• - ' - -
-
:Ut Com Planter!
;V:V'fti-;uc - \ Our Attachment for Sowing the
Small Grains can also be used
on it.
| [IS Everyfarmer inthe South should
either see one of our agents or
send to us for our Illustrated
Catalogue of Reapers,. Mow¬
ers, Cotton and Corn Planters,
Seeders, &c.
E&. 1 ES?£- 0 ^, TALC 0 TT & CO.,
\ c o'.e Manufacturers, ROCKFORD, ILLS. )
, ■^tmasmmsmsssmmsMssm^m&isBg. t, , iiiiiwi
<4/ /; •'!!;!
^ Vv ■
- - *--- - I : - 7 ^:,; • ' - ■ .e : . ' I vr -.'b.- A. the
'fflEs*. . * . - ;t;ut ;• score ‘.-t other new Vcip-tables, 1 inv-.te the patroti
. -.y ptj!4i.?. In tl- arrj the fnnm if
1 *A- aijc «»f g:«* :.”s ;
. will 1 found nivertis
tlose v. hot Lint mv seed e ive. best •
■. T. V< nient. James J. H. Cregorv, C. f ifhlehe3 I, .Mass,
a £ An traveling f-.’nglish Veterinary thib surgeon and Chemist, now
fit country, says that most of th«
■: if Horsy aiiti Cattic i'owders sold here are worth
fe* les - trash, tit; says that Sheridan’s Condition
<S Powders ure ab.-olutel.v pure and immensely
valuable. .N ithii./ on e n th will make hens lav like Sheridan’s Condition Powders. Oose.l teaspoonful
tol pint food. Sold every ► when* or t*' hi by mail for 8 letter-stamps. I. S. Joussos <fc Co., Host os. Mass.
----------- 2 LT
■MBB« raii’8
Is composed of Herbal ynd Alucjlugmoub prod*
nets, wliicli permeate thc subiitftnce oft He
JLiasigSy expectoiateB the a<ui:l matter
that collects iu the Htonehmi 'iubeF, undtoriutt a
soothing coating, which relieves the ir
rifcatiou that cauiics the Cough. It cleanses
tbe lanes of enfeebled all luspuritieg, by disease,invigor¬ strengthens
them when the blood, and bmcfestb
ates ihe circulation of colds often en.I in i
nervous system. £13 glit
(onsnmption. Itis dangerous to neglect A
them. Apply tho remedy promptly.
test of twenty years \r<irrants tho assertion
no remedy lias ever been found that is as
prompt initseffeotsasTUTT’S EKPECTCBfi^-! sut/tui*
A single tlose raises tlie phlegm,
i.iflammntion, and its ns. spetoiiy cures the mo t
ohstinate couAi. A pleasant eordta!, i nto
Ilren take It readily. For Croup It Is
invaluable nml should Si bo in every family.
In 35c. nml Bottles.
TUTT’S
PILLS
ACT DIRECTLY OM THE LIVER.
_________ bills and Fever. , Dyspepsia, .
Cures i Colic,1 onstipa
Sick Headache, Bilious
lion. Rheumatism, Julies, Palpitation of
the Heart, Dizzincts,Torpid liver, and
5^!3&!SS!5aa»»J!»sSSKt3S!
VlR fMTT'V, rRE ^."©8
pi*'-—-' s ^ *>'•' ' ' ft*
J J -;l
^-5^^
J
•gasSSti
PLEASANT! SATE! POSITIVE! j
^rtG 0 N 0 hRH(EAI 8 LEET^“^ |
Uso Prc\ -nfs coi' rvpinn No loss of Time or ;
11 ; of 1 4-t O' er whelming sales, unmis- i
;,KM'ie ;ro . nd unbounded satisfaction. Ad
X gei'-t wanted in every city and town in South, i
• nt byexiii-rss ■;-a r^-.-e-ft of price, Address
SOSiKOCSWE CO.,
Wa Arent- - - -a St.-.,e 3 , ATLANTA, Ca.
a >n»rvpcrii, i v cni? th
south! I
- improved * otton.
C L
* ;
f' : 'r * "
-U -V ' V- V- .ST/yvh.-re.'
'
/ JiA . -fit
\
i
' T L-V^':--'■t-Yl r ^ nl!ure '
- '
*. T." 5* p ": -t - ton
fe .
-‘-VK
.'"fov*’• Y *“ ,fK *
H 1 a A MS I a 1.EY i C9..S r;'smen f
jt. 1 . Ud CftSctl *, i
—
3 DYE Is *
,
RISTADORO'S
rtt
IL a% Or
i J1 !rA:r ur-....... * TTi'JliEi .........Mo
street. New Veric.
ELEGTRO-MACNET1C
BatteryBelt!
CURES jH iH l OV7KES
• :■ A
Heart,Lung ano l NERVOUS AND
Liver Diseases, I 1 Chromic Qiseas’s
HERV’US Exhaus* L -W Dyspepsia,
tion, Paralysis, l Kidney Diseases,
Rheumatism. \ I y Neuraum,
ffnSm m %
m V
■
I .... ^ On W'% am
m
TR ADR MARK,
Go
Beit mode, giving primary and secondary currents. Can
be made and so mild Increased as to till be scarcely the strongest felt, and reversed, cannot
changed It. No contact with the man skin to
hold metal comes in and conducting cor«
rode and irritate it. Has electrodes
cords for applying electricity to any part of the body.
Designed for self treatment in complaints named above,
A certain restorer of health and vigor,
MEDICAL USES OF ELECTRICITY
ELECTRO-FAS 812 Chestnut ABIC St., &T. BELT LOUIS* COJ^ K.0
" Jt 814
, , ^.‘^H^.F^r >LT.vFREE !
MASON & HAMLIN
n 16 p; HI ru 3 M * S V 5 industrial Competition
Sixteen Years: uo vihtt Also American Cheapest. organa
iving l'J9; been found *qut i at any.
^Hoctav^s • sufficient compass and power,
with Fcliooia b-.iit qmUItv. families, to- popular only s £23. rn*ti and One sr hundred ular music
in **r ft
styles •• - ; . ^'*7, F.:>. 57S.f:C. »»(is, $114 to
and up. Tue larger style, ore vhclly unrivaled New illus¬ by
other organs. Ai ■ for cbrv payments.
Ca a!osti° free.
the MASON & HAMLIN Organ and TMano
C«>.. lot Tremont St..r»oston; to E. iith St.,Ntw York;
? Wabash Are.. Chicago.
sPlain -siffiffsh hi It
s HI Fi E EX T- KE^Eiy J
j JfjTWiwiA OUR f • ' - CJ"-3‘. :■?. TflLS THE f?ES|
a*. br 'o.— K;«m —I -me 36th, PastJJan** I3B5.
■ - the
be - - „ : l:r about oa«
from t time l c ram^'i : u- them I b Bgaa
to sleep well and I comi; ; i .i- rd - the box «vttk
rg nstant improvement ;• no • ■; ' -it t’ine i Oct. 1881)
live felt like a new men. i iruS -'t- rB»r manr of
the sufferers will find ..-at that r*>' Vi- a FD’iciSc fot
nervous weaken ^ aad he 1 a. * i b" th»;
S.—You Respectful": \ ours.
P. wiil not j nhiv . my - at parsons visit.
Ing you may be refer® - r?! ' ’ lexer them.
To ever:: your y tie •- old man
troubled with nervous 02 y , > i al debili¬
ty or impotence scai- d c f eul';r is sent
tree. Sen i f’ili address on > cstibx card to
HARRIS REMtOf JQ. . ’.OLif. WO,
We , want yo-;r •- v.
s*
ASfentttV.mtH. Thetu!minj-.t*ngTnuin|
llfMAI H V W **. tO I LI IVC V R
Acomp!, : -Cy n»’- •• w-i^fort
*wMfeKee. y—jT ‘V. si.
sir eu . i iv
T f t j THE DISEASES OF
frOUTHand MANHOOD
i Pv A GUIDE TO HEALTH WITH
T\Y OUT MEDICINE.
A PHYSICIAN or 2Sre«r*«
experience. Don't poison
w// u\ system wiih Drue*, but ret
>• this Book And rrold Qu»c**«
free" and Electric Belt Hum
which it expose*. Price 25et*. Address
PUBLISHER, Box 234. Milwauk**. Wm.
FREE K belid t to V 4 fesT >l-.vfa V r »1 Cs. Hsrrr
ne*gfr.-hnt>L 11 r.-'''K :r TU r , ftnet A ’'vv anaal Bust,
.tl «Nin