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JOHN H. SEALS, - Editor and Proprietor
W. B. SEALS, - Proprietor and Cor. Editor.
MRS. MARY E. BRYAN (*) Associate Editor.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, SEPT. 7, 1878.
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Country Clubs-Mental ilinprove-
■lieilt ill tiic Backwoods.—Sometime ago
a young girl wrote to us that she was living in
the ‘dark corner’ of the country, among people
uneducated and coarse, and that her unconge
nial surroundings made her thoroughly unhap
py. ‘What shall I do?’ she asked, ‘my lot is
cast here. It is impossible for me to get away.’
In the first place, it seems the duty of one so
situated to suppress any exhibition of contempt
lor the ‘dull tillers of the soil’ who have never
had her opportunities for culture. Then let her
try if she cannot impart some of her own grace
of thought and manner to those among whom
her lot is cast Let her accept it as her ‘work’
to be a missionary to the ‘dark corners,’to elevate
their tastes, to enlarge their range of thought,
give them new ideas of life, draw their atten
tions to the beauties and wonders of Nature
that surround them, but to which their uncul
tured ear and eye are deaf and blind—the gran
deurs of sunsets, and mountains, and great
gnarled and many branched trees; the mnsic of
brooks and waterfalls and birds, the habits oi
animals, the curious, cunning ways of birds and
insects, the ‘sermons in stones, and good in ev
ery thing.’
Something of this onr correspondent may im
part to her associates in a thousand delicate,sub
tle and unobtrusive ways, and she may as qui
etly raise their standard of taste and induce
them to adorn their homes with flowers and pret
ty, graceful articles of handiwork, to read books,
to take magazines and newspapers and to con
verse about what they read instead of wasting
time in silly gabble and useless, and often, wick-
rad gossip. She may get up a social club that
shall meet' weekly and replace romping games
and childish love-making, with readings and
recitations, and talks about domestic and agri
cultural science in its simpler every day forms,
interspersed with music, singing and lighter
conversation that shall still have some purpose
of improvement in it. Our young correspondent
can inaugurate this and other means to refine
the society around her backwoods home, and
she wilUja < 3Ls.ary.p > nrg i pleasure in thus doing
-t, . — — — —”7*7 ***** dootare inner
Kai.se them with her finer thought.*
and still be friendly, pleasant and merry. No
for othew! 10 Sh0Wlngoffo1 *«»^nocontampt
Since writing this, we have read in the Phre
nological Journal an article very pertinent to
our correspondent’s case. Writing^ of the nn
cultivated families and communities that are too”
often to be found in the country, Mrs! Shove
Thousands of such families live-evcr, tu-
era of cheap literature and free schools in
coa,lest ignorance. To most7 ?C.e
Loving ail Ideal.—When Miss Dorothea
Brookes accepted Casaubon’s offer of marriage
with hnmble gratitude, Bhe was loving, not that
heartless mummy, all the sap of whose life had
been drawn away by his fruitless studies, but
the ideal man whom her imagination had erect
ed as the object of her heart’s worship. Nor can
we say that she was any the less under a delus
ion when she enthroned Ladislaw as the recipi
ent of a more intense homage. The love of all
women is very much like the love of this most
finished creation of George Eliot’s brain, in be
ing rendered to the ideal rather than to the real
man. It cannot well be otherwise in a conven
tional state of society; for there women can know
very little of men. They see them only occas
ionally—only as it were upon dress parade. The
parts of their lives which form the real indices
of their characters are passed beyond the sight
of the gentler sex. In the humbler circles it is
not so. When Nisa follows Damon as he drives
his flocks afield, and reclines with him while be
tunes his silvan pipes beneath the grateful shade.
lUlloO 11 I PS PllVali UCLiUtabU LU D OUOUCj lUfj CUV UUbU uunu, AlAj uiUl/uv*
there is little room for her fancy to make him a^when I was six months old, and they say she
hero. If, when she becomes his wife, she loves
him with a devotion that survives many a sour
look and many a harsh word*, she has not the ad
ded bitterness of reflecting either that he has
deceived her or that she has deceived herself.
To this we may attribute the fact that there are
more family denouments in the higher than the
lower circles of society. Farm laborers and me
chanics are not always good husbands. Many
of them, we suspect, vary the monotony of life
by the agreeable pastime of wife-beating, and if
they do not proceed to blows, they subject them
to cruelties none the less hard to endure. But
the poor creatures who become their wives ex
pect nothing better, and Nancy never thinks of
appealing to the laws or to public opinion to
protect her from the brutality of Sykes. These
endure with patience and if their sufferings are
brought to light, it is not often by efforts of their
own. But when the woman of elevated station,
posessed of talents and endowed with a lofty
spirit, finds that the man, around whom her im
agination has thrown a glamor of glory, is but a
cultivated savage, the warm passions of her
heart break out in rebellion, and pride does not
always restrain her from calling in the world to
witness the spectacle of her humiliation and
misery. Sometimes her delusion is not rudely
broken, and she continues through life a Titania
innocently and happily coylng the cheeks of her
hideous Bottom. But woe is her lot if she finds
that the idol which she has worshipped for gold
is but poor clay; nor is her sorrow less sore that
she otters no cry, nor lets the world know that
the fruit so fair to the eye has become ashes on
her lips. The pride that enables her to repress
every expression of anguish and causes her to
smile when her heart is breaking, lessens not
her sufferings, nor for a moment brings back the
delusion which reality has dispelled. *
Care lor tlie Ageil.—We suspect that the
feeling of Mrs. Gnmmidge that she was ‘a lone
lorn creature’ is one very often experienced by
the old. When the time of usefulness has
passed, and the days of helplessness have come,
one is apt to conceivo himself a tax upon the
patience and kindness of those with whom he
lives. Would that this were always a figment
of the imagination. But too often do the young
feel and show that the old are in their way.
Sometimes the heir-apparent thinks his prom
ised inheritance too long delayed, and he treats
with as much contumely as he dares the aged
parent who keeps him from the coveted fortune.
Winsn If and nee-
heart was lately pained a* P8 ' ° nr
an, feeble from sickness
Hereditary Disease and Consump-
tioil—Dr Wilson’s series of articles on this sub
ject published in the Sunny South, are so true
to experience as well as to physiological theory
that we hope our readers will not fail to read
them. Sometimes these hereditary tendencies
may be overcome, and Dr. Dio Lewis writing
from California, famishes the Scientific Press a
true and romantic instance of where such a con
quering of transmitted malady was due to wo
man’s devotion. He writes:
“While I was practicing my profession in
Buffalo, N.Y., Henry S—, a slight, pale young
man, presented himself one morning, and asked
me to examine his lungs. The examination
over, he scanned my face with eager solicitude,
and in a trembling voice, said: ‘Nothing there
but a little bronchitis or something of that sort,
is there ?’
I did not reply at once, and during the silence
it was painful to watch his face. I asked:
‘Are your parents living ?’
‘No, they are both dead. My mother died
died of exhaustion. My father died of bron
chitis. The doctors pronounced it a combina
tion of dyspepsia and bronchitis, bnt they all
agreed there was no consumption about it. And
I might as well tell you that I had a sister, and
she is dead. Her malady the physicians called
marasmus. So you see there is no consumption
in the blood. I don’t know as there was any
use in troubling yo i with my little ailments. I
shall soon be all right again, of course, but I
have a friend who is sort of fidgety about me,
and I promised her that I Would drop in some
time, when I happened to be passing your of
fice.’
‘Poor fellow ! my heart ached for him. I sup
pose that during my thirty-five years of medical
experience, I have met a thousand victims of
consumption, who, like this young man, tried
to shut their eyes so that they could not see. I
resolved to he honest with him, and as tenderly
as possible 1 said:
‘I am sorry you are trying to deceive yourself.
You must learn the truth soon; why not see it
now while there is time to do something ? You
are probably mistaken about the malady of your
parents and sister, but nothing can be more cer
tain than that you have gennine consumption
You seem to be a person of spirit and courage.
If I am right it is, perhaps, not too late to turn
aside the shaft. At any rate, the only chance of
escape lies in clearly comprehending the danger
and with your eyes wide open, boldly meeting
it.’
I may here inform the reader that he gave me
the name of the physician who had attended his
parents, and I wrote for information. The fam
ily doctor assured me that both parents died of
tubercular consumption, and the sister, he pre
sumed, died of the same malady.
I advised my patient to take a vacation and
come and see me daily. On the following
morning he brought with him a pretty, modest
girl, who told me, with many blushes, that she
had a right to be interested in anything that
concerned Harry. He had not told her my opin
ion of his case, but had brought her to hear from
me the dreadful news. It has been very rare in
my experience to witness anything so touching
Yellow Fever Yotes.
Yellow fever rages with undiminished viru
lence in New Orleans, Memphis, Grenada and
Vicksburg. 2G deaths reported in New Orleans
on the 30th nit., from noon till G o’clock, 274
new cases. On the day before there were 7H in
terred in Memphis. Vicksburg 160 new cases
and 13 deaths on the 30th.
Granada is a pest house, whose air is so laden
with poison that physicians and nurses who
have passed unscathed through previous epi
demics are taken down and die. The Howards
and other charitable associations labor inces
santly. Help pours in from every quarter,North,
South, East and West. The epidemic, coming
as it has done, in the time of great financial de
pression, has proved the benevolent spirit of
our people, and their readiness to respond to
the call of their suffering brothers,
A reporter of the Democrat penetrated the fe
ver-haunted slums the other day, and reports
them frightfully filthy. He found fever patients
groaning on the floor with the atmosphere of
the close, small, unventilated rooms further
heated by women cooking in the sick-chamber,
until the temperature was ninety-eight degrees.
In the row of old, crowded tenements at the
corner of St. Joseph and Tchonpitilas Streets,
ho found five of one family down with fever.
Tne heat of the building was like an oven, and
the reporter emerged gasping into the street.
He says the houses in this row were constructed
with no provision for ventilation, but as if for
the purpose of becoming a focus for all the filthy
emanations from the neglected back yards. *
Hot mid Cold.—A Xew Method
of Treating Yellow Fever.—Dr. Black
burn, who has practiced through fifteen yellow
fever epidemics, favors the sweating treatment,
close covering with blankets, hot teas and no
air-draughts. This is the usual treatment, and
we heard a Shreveport physician say that the
only patients who recovered during the terrible
epidemic in that city were those whom watchful
nurses never permitted to be uncovered for a
moment. A learned Doctor of this city recom
mends an opposite method of dealing with the
disease. Light covering, free air-draughts and
plentiful sprinkling with water he says is the
remedy he would try should he be ‘fortunate’
enough to have a ye'low fever patient fall into
his hands. In Wednesday’s New Orleans Times
we see this cooling method is being tried, thus
far with success at the Chantry Hospital. Dr.
Choppin picked out a fever patient thought to
be dying, pulse 105, temperature 10G degrees.
The man had not received any medical atten
tion and only taken a Seidlitz powder. He was
as her grief when I told her that her friend had strip p ed nake d, placed on one of Dr. Kibb’s fe-
consumption.
‘Is there no hope?’she cried. When I said,
‘There is still hope, if certain things can be
done,’ she replied with startling energy: ‘Itoan
be done ! It shall be done ! No matter what it
is ! Nothing shall stand in the way !’
It does not matter what ftur discussions were;
it does not matter that difficulties sprung
up;' it only remains to itV'nrm the reader that
extended such i f mese is never «rauie aame felt
r»‘
of Regan and Goneral, and doubtless that 1
trnd ^ «bout tasks
ver cots which has an India rubber receptacle
filled with water beneath it. He was then
sprinkled with ice water until his temperature
was reduced to 99 and pulse to G8. He fell into
a gentle, natural sleep, breathing easy, skin cool
and pliant. He was covered with a sheet, and—
well, he had not waked when the Times went to
Fashions, Amusements,
Watering Places
Notes, Etc.
The beioht side turned to us—Fashion has
once more turned her bright side and frowns
upon black and sober hues that she lately pro
nounced distanqne. A Chicago Correspondent
of the Baltimorean writes. In the way of dresses
we are having a carnival of color just now on
our streets, red, pink, blue, yellow and all the
buffs. Never since the war has that refuge of
the destitute and sorrowful, black, been so
completely in the back-ground. Gay bonnets,
and brilliant hose that were made to be seen,
and nobly fulfill their duty, give a festal air of
gaiety to our promenades. Shoulder capes of
white lace, are worn on the drives, with elbow
sleeves and six-buttoned kids, of a creamy tint;
over these naughty silver bangles, hung with
seguins, that ‘tinkle as they go.’ But the
crowning glory of the toilet just now, is a won
derful hat. It is immense brimmed affair, made
of white straw, and the brim is escallopped in
the back, and banged in front, and turned up
at the sides, where a coquettish feather rides in
triumph; a sort of King Henry of Navarre style
that is simply crashing. These hats are to
wear to the races.
Costumes at cape may—The costumes worn
by the bathers are of all descriptions, everyone
suiting their own fancy, and some of them are
hideously ugly. Almost everybody wears a
straw hat of a very grotesque pattern. Some of
the ladies wear stockings, but a large majority
prefer to go without them, which is not consid
ered at all vulgar.
Yesterday morning a young lady made her
appearance among the breakers clad in a ‘Dolly
Varden’ suit. She attracted considerable atten
tion.
That wonderful ‘congress water.’—A bach
elor, correspondent of the BaUimoeran sojour
ning at Saratoga declares that the effect of the wa
ter at the famous springs is wonderful on some
systems. Married men have been known to
lose their memories, and forget all about their
wives at home, and sail around with pretty
girls on their arms, as in their bachelor days,
and married women seem, in many cases, to be
equally unfortunate. From the time their hus
bands leave for New York on Monday morning
till their return on Saturday night, they appear
quite oblivious of their existence, and to haye a
realizing sense only of the presence of some
other masculine. Things get a little mixed, but
the tangles will doubtless all be unraveled in
the fall, and everybody will return home bet
ter for his summer’s recreation.
Bachelors and widowers of eighty dash
around here like youths of seventeen, and there
is a widow who has been here, it is said, for
seventy-five summers, who, by the aid of plum
pers and hair-dye, still holds her own, and is
anxious to confer her fortune and herself upon
some aspiring young man.
An exquisite from Baltimore is here who
drives a landau and chadges his dress four times
a day, and wears different jewels with each suit,
diamonds with one, turquoises with another,
amethysts with a third, and so on to the end of
the chapter. In white flannel with turquoise,
he looks just swaet, especially when he gets
his three nairs carefully arranged across his
bald pate. Navy blue is quite becoming to his
blonde complexion, and when he turns back
his sleeve and shows you his diamond sleeve
buttons, and tells you, ‘they cost $1500, don’t
you know,’ one is quite dazzled.
into
one
sent to convey the ‘benefits of the cosoeP
their midst; and district schools, taught bv
to instruct the rislng ?“? “1*™*’
i=S-=KsSs=
ters of toil of your welltW- dangh '
manners, and imuwt frl? , g aud ^arm of
womanly knowlaicra Q m y° ur abundance of
and ennoblffig^theH^less 1 fbrtnnaf° r r
not these girls be tan&hf tn tn , na f e * lves ? Can
elsewhereUian in thevulgar* rabbi* 11 r , ecreatio11
tendant upon the nnnm-lj rabbIe always at-
well known ?n the backwLd?riH and play8 ’ 80
the chief elements are coarse wbere
1 , . oil CUM LL1 m
less ohrid is the greatest ill that life can bring
Such cases as the above are not so rarely exeen
tional as we could wiek at ^ cep-
»ith kind, loving iaet be innin ?, ”°‘
their minds and beaniifv n , gb * to mi prove
der them more attract S7 r J 100168 and ren-
than the village tavern and gr^-shop*V*
ful surroundings exert a „ Jj 5 ?,P. laste-
over the nature g of mankind » fnI , 1 ° fluence
the coarseness of unrefined toXt "°*i hirds of
bare walls, absence of books and ntt* 0 ®.*® the
of beautiful and tantefnl things fa 5,‘fr' ho “,‘, h
Another Sacrifice to Vaniti-Acor-
respondent, noting ton Chicago, „„
lady Miss Latimer a teacher and highly thonoht
Of, who kihed herself the other dt ”f„g
a poisonous nostrum that had been advertised
as effective for reducing flesh. Miss Latimer
was intelligent, amiable, and good-looking but
rather inclined to over-plumpness, not so much
however, as to make her flesh a burden to her.
But she wanted the ‘slim waist’ that Fashion
pronounces essential, though artists and physi
cians denounce it as abnormal, and so she pur'
chased from the patent humbug-vender a nos
trum called ‘Anti Fat,’ warrented to reduce her
waist to the fashion-plate measure of beautv
and render her next dress the coveted eighteen
inches in circumference of the waist-belt Her
next dress was a shrond. She adds one to the
victims of vanity who lose health and some!
times life through the use of complexion iotions-
whose basis is white lead, and hair dyes contain
ing poisonous elements, while others swallow
arsenic to secure the pearly Circassian complex
ions, induce weak spines and consumption
through tight lacing,and court typhoid fever bv
; hiding under veils and in darkened rooms from
ftbe healthful, purifying sun. *
“ uuai “ could wish. But there are
chamber where the grandmother sits is regard
as a consecrated spot and each child esteems it
a great privilege to be allowed to enter there
and recieve that sweet placid smile and listen
to quaint stories of days long past. Those whn
™I e f!, Ver known a grandmother have missed
one of the greatest pleasures of life. Eecolleo
tions of the hours spent around her arm-chair
rom the richest treasures in the store-house of
memory, while if we have ever treated her with
neglect or intentional rudeness, the remem-
brance of such unkindness must furnish the
minister. re ’ >r °° f o» id.
ent organizations are risking hY« a benevo
wTreTblVg°eTtoadd U two the ““ “"SStte fevfr-strffiken'wL ^in“heir attend°.
rived t an^ ^ tbey a - ! P - arents ’ ^ 5’Jfiff A
months and twentv 1% abse . nce of eight j Cltlzs * of Memphis were taW. -?? P r °minent
horseback about y 4 ^ y ?’ ridden °n in g absence T^e Howt i W - ltb fever ^nr-
brownes^ndroughesUni“T W6re the g r aphed for bi “- a “d rSw^ 8 ^ 11 / tele ‘
v«n g, 1 aQ d toughestyoungchuna of mv family ’ fri.„ Piy was. ‘Take care
press, but we are informed that strong hopes of
V e snail ioo k ror tn6"r4puit'\ v an(i a as3ured that i — -
a kill or cure treatment ' j wn; My dear, what is that you ve
luient. . suhioet r * ^"‘m^renev Jones: A water-
t *. n '’ bls Howard, and other benevo.
youever sawjnofhow^nVof th^° nngChap8 w “f L miIy/ The wife died 6
with the assistance of old frLn J D * V0Ung men > tak * n ^ ^ " 1 ’
formed into a bride wi?h - " 6DdS ' Was trac «-
were taken to the 1118 °bildren
them has since died 0 Where 0De of
•• The nfme expect *d
to recover, xne name nf „ t ww o ^F e ctea
should be published His P. rominei it citizen
ervation is so well devtioll/ IBC ° f:sa «-pres-
at once in command of ‘Our Am sbould be P«t
an frontier. ur Arm T on ‘be Indi-
Ali ownl ^ idea ’
J “sCg, g S,?e“ £”£ I aIan d that if a wife
jumps out doors and Rere 61 sbe at once
husband!’ ams, ‘P lzened by nay
nette, wear those of‘a yeUowish’h 1 Bru ‘
.hlcMto.’bfir™>»
nette beaotv formeriv of o f. ““'"P' a bt0 -
groom was Mr. HoracJKenif altl “?° re and tbe
prietor of the American and SstedSi ^wT'
—the beao’tifOb istftielv ‘cant^t~ i ‘ a,i aoie ltoee
the water a. Snllogl*
meothib“fo*r?^how‘th T‘ ha ‘>P i “““
IJe " « >8 an old and oft
quoted addage that‘Figures do not lie.’ Per-
haps when the saying originated it may have
een true; but m these days figures are as
false as words, and many of the most stupen-
dous lies of the age are told by well-adjusted'
columns of digits. Your official for instance,
h °, 1S C arged witt the care of public funds
has his accounts so arranged that every sheet
detect th 7 8t bea !* ti£ully ’ and yon caa nowhere
own nse at Y r be6D 8 P- Dr °P ria te<I to his
him livi 6 m tbe faC6 ° f a11 tkis yon see
him living m a style more splendid than twice
h-h^Uv"'^ Ho drive.
faithful wife ieot oo^o’d** U “ r - v , S ~ his
Thi, story aa told b, Dr. Lewis,, we giro as a
binJZT™ Wh ” e °” e ‘ b “" ed
A PESTILENCE PICTURED.
.p h A Dr v Tayl0r ’ m bis dramatic romance of
f‘‘; P T" AH «- Ida .’ «»» describes a plague
“ Gbe t Dt dDnn g tb * fourteenth century and
the picture is one that in many respects can be
and Memphis 6 : fGVer StriCken CiUeS ° f Gmiada
N Y ID Cha°\ TaE , FEVEE Smitten Cities Th I <>« the15th adSd
tothA ba ^ er ° f Comm erce has sent ■ e Pnma calls her fete daV^r^ 8 day ’ w hich
}£li b ^ 6 Southern relief committees Th' \ 4 ° b I P res ented her friend a? ? ame da y> she
Mississippi cotton
for three hundred a
cities. ‘ mmnt ““‘^“th to tdTA.7
Carl Granel, the N
suffering
turer, who was*~umW ®* lea . n ? Ie g mannfac-
strangled his wife, forestalled 1 * 1 ? 11 - i°i f havin g
the fever and dying in TffospUaf 1 ^^
lout ianie, with a beaufffni ^ 9 * L
surrounded by leaves f bud of rubies,
amends, of wb T th °,f 0l<i ' with di
nombe,: As she ,„S /t frm',’! f ° tt J- a ''ght fa
and pinned it on the breait S if™ , owo bo “m
».d ‘See, „„ ae t,Z7L£ Z / m “ d : 8b »
the Maries in France ^“if. 8 . ’ J° a r °se.’ All
gust as a birthday. elebra te the loth of Au-
Hickeiis* Unflnlslied Novel -The
gravia Magazine for An&naf 1 * I>©1-
2 k ° D zrr° d f ? - ^ !
before it. oompltafad fare d < ‘ M "'
Th*;' J p. a "wfa,fan , fa“"' h f‘ C " re -
the use of op,uni L a m 7 " b,
the practice seems to b° l ontl,T'“ b “ 1K &C1 *“ d
oompieternfa, m.nfai, Tba ‘
use of
novels Ti Lot, v. beanti ful of his many I the drng is established bv the e™ •
novels. It has been said that the published one who h«« ^ V J i. e ex P e «ence of ev-
a home furnished with every
‘It spreads apace.
comfort, and almost every luxury, where he eu-
tion n , a bonntifnl hospitality. In addi-
n to all this he invests in a few farms or pur
chases stock in some factory or railroad as a^-
this are° r a rainy day ' Wh9n yon look at a11
„ ’ yon not obliged to confess that the fig-
most egregiouHl V y? hlm 40 U “ honest man Iie
-iSStfVSRt- Wben repelIin 8 tbe charge
nothing-that heT H ? re r y ° U that h e is making
profits^n the form^ 0 ff orklng for nominal
bis capital is passino 'Papers, and that
es and deeds which . 1Dt ° / be form of mortgag-
which the, LltrmcT-71 WOrtb peper on
•..h.wyn.hi.h^fa^^JiHP^
TI,e‘'StSnSKS t l““™'i-SSu"’ “ ^
Then shift toe, 1?. l h h fucking pains.
Dejected, restless , he 18 still
IudiUerent to all ’incldemflnd^h”' 1 ’*
Or in his understandiu 9 «“ d objects,
To see or apprehendtheimfl«t n fh Se ?
Is red and flushed win. k nrst tb e lace
Then is it dropsical anddiatnlvn 1 d | flery e - ves :
Sometime such simiLiun. eat “ ^
That the bed shakes benl ?h ff 1Ze u P° n the frame
The breath is checked win, wit b that I
Then comes a thick dartcruttmJSpii? from c old,
And tongue aud teeth; the fata?h?c the . u Ps.
Some die in struggles anti sfr?i b cou ? h next.
Some in lethargy whilsi agonies;
As from adream.’sCke off b^awake
Aud with collected senses 3 °° k round,
Tell the by-standers that thel h' m s P eech
It’s a dismal malady.’ 1 tneir hour is come.
by»w“pu“nr“"^"7? 1 , ,, »» d - dd «ll«
the benefit of the yellow f eT fr * n i r ertammen ts for
raelitM of Ihe cUv b',[ Ite Is ‘
atic entertainment at the n ^, a dr4m ‘
enough to wipe ont «n u- lc r are dead-heads
his allegations von b $l 8pr ® fite * Bat despite
splendidly San y anv b ® "l** far “ ore
too that year by Zr ibITm C l D do * Yoa *««
men have put m^ledne J. n * i* omes tha t poor
their families pass in prodnce supplies for
Considering all this can v<m 6 j* 4 **? 4 ' 8 clutches,
figures lie? ‘A falsehood y<m doabt that their
lurk in a syllogism m well ° ne ’ ‘“ ay
• ta *—■ - *“JssL 8ft -
uc enienainment at the Conardia Hall
Z Ed ™ Br< "> d wold prove in h.
in r i° W 6 wonld be discovered. The writer
m Belgravia think, fa, wa, the ,t„ r , „ „
h.ve ended fa ils geneta| featarM J js ‘‘‘°
-7«d to ‘JZSSS 01 Bi0 w “ d 1
that ‘The Mystery of Fdwln ii V1Dg Doveli sts
below what Sickens had Lf °° d ’■ Was far
seems to me, on the ^ written. It
average of his othMwritingS/-? above th e
any, inferior only to onfl^’n^.l inferior to
of his leading works %vL at - the - most tw °
fragmentary form it is’he^ 60 ln lts P res ent
careful study and nrL b t ® r ^ orth close and
delicate delineatifons^f c^r 1 f° re trut bful and
tions of Bcene^L n Cbar f t f r d S a P d descrip-
VoSj,^ * ssyssarf
G.^ y G^VlMgu“2^ t ad » : Onr friend,
Youghiegheny River nf Sat “*day, m the Big
be had been < J akl “ d » Md., wherf
member of the fish famffo $ - da ^’ , a curious
length, has four i eR8 y * 13 inches in
and an eel tail andTs a . Cfttfish moath
something like an alligffo?^color, and looks
book in a deep hole ¥& caagb ‘ °n a
a'demandor a “a ring t the* T °‘ ith °8«»
ally becomes a veritable disea^l^ f ‘ hl ° h , fiD *
time it was thought there was no rf 7 * J ° ng
but our fellow citizen, Mai Won „ ® dy for i4 >
« -d complete
fectmg marvellous cures all over n; ly f *
We begin this week the public! U i C ° Untry -
of astonishing testimonials from reaooL^r^
reliable persons giving the name aud post !ffi
address of each, a P 0st ’ 0l bce
This -T, he Iady Midslli PiMaii.
files of the kst'for^gn mail^F r °“ ance in ^e
ago a good looking Irish Llri FourteeD months
old took it into her head 8 in’ 8e T en . teeD years
Wales or Australia. She ar! g0 to Nq w South
as an emigrant to QueensW?° rd i Ingly went ont
ed a situation as bar-maid^sheobtain-
ceived a letter from iff d * While there she re
return home and indo/in^mn 1 begging fa er to
Passage. With this she bon»^ ® y . to P»y ber
obtained a situation , men 8 clo ‘bsand
the steamer making ^horf * d steward on board
castle and Sidney. 8 S heVemT J 3 *" 6611 New *
two or three months and then thtf °“ th,s vessel
like to go to England and ^h«r £ ht8he wouId
well work her pLage 0 v d4hat sbe might as
sought and Obtained asknaH Pay for il - She
Strathdon, a clipper shiVnuin” board the
ney and London." The f« P y g - bet ween Svd-
It ^bwn d p^^2 t i day,rft "it8 0 aJriTM , hw? Witb hcmg^woSa^ She 8 d PP ° 8 ® d
exhibition « «ow on \ ^^!^ k ““ t * ab “doned the fo^ff
changed^her uniform’and^ ‘a®! oreca 8tie,
| like a lady. 80(1 burned to Ireland