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Siting for Pardon.
This story is often told, in and about
Richmond, of an interview, said to have
occurred after Lee’s surrender, between
Secretary Stanton and Major Drewry,
commander of Drewry’s Bluff at the
time of the attack upon it by the Union
fleet in Mav, 1862. The Major, who
had been a clry-goods merchant in Rich
mond before the war, and who is a com
mon-sense man of the world, knowing
that all further resistance was vain,
went at once to Washington to see the
Secretary of War. Very doubtful
whether Stanton, always stern and un
usuallv overbearing, would see him, if he
knew Ills name and mission, he went
into the Secretary’s private office unan
nounced. In his presence the ex-rebel,
without any preamble, said: “Mr. Sec
retary, I am Major A. H. Drewry, of
Richmond. I have fought against the
Federals as well as I could for four
years. But now the war is over, and I
want to go to work again. I have hun
dreds of acres of wheat land on the
James; they have been sadly neglected
all this time, and they need my immedi
ate attention. We’ve been whipped.
I’ve got sense enough to know it. Now
that i>eace has come, I want my par
don.”
“On what grounds?”inquired Stanton,
severely.
“First, on the grounds of having had
fighting enough; secondly, because I
have helped to improve your navy by
showing you how p<x>r wooden ships are
in action. After I had driven off the
Galena, Aroostook, and the other ves
sels, you began to build iron boats and
made your navy what ft ought to have
lieen at the start. You owe me a pardon
for the valuable information I furnished
to your cause. ”
Stanton relaxed as the Major went on,
and finally, pleased with his candor and
boldness, invited him to call the next
day at a certain hour. Drewry was
prompt. The two had a long talk, the
Secretary gaining much needed informa
tion about the South, its condition, and
prospects, and handed the Virginian
liis pardon.
The Major kept his word. He went
to work immediately, and has continued
to work ever since, without troubling
himself about politics or political theo
ries. If more of the Southerners had
imitated his example the South would
be in a far better condition than it is to
day. He was, we believe, much blamed
in Richmond for what was called his
precipitance in suing for Federal favor;
but results have shown his wisdom, if
not his patriotism. —New York 'Times.
The Kind of a Fellow He Was.
Avery high-toned-looking young man,
in exquisite mustache, loud plaid
clothes, red necktie, low-crowned hat,
straw-colored kids, and knitting-needle
cane, walked into a tobacco shop, and,
throwing down a half-dollar on the
counter, sa?d : “Well, this is the worst
town I ever saw ; a gentleman can’t get
anything in it satisfactory, and I am ut
terly unable to see how a person of fas
tidious taste can live here. I say, Mr.
Shopkeeper, can you sell a fellow a de
cent cigar ?”
“ Yes, sir,’’said the cigar man, meekly.
“ Well then, fly around lively and do
it. Don’t you see that half-dollar ?”
“Yes, sir. What kind of a cigar do
you wash, sir ?”
“ What kind ?”
“Yes, sir.”
“ Why, look at me, sir, a moment, and
see for yourself what kind of a cigar
would suit me,” and lie drew himself up
grandly and gazed down on the shop
keeper.
The shopkeei>er looked and then took
in the half-dollar, got out a cigar, hand
ed it to the man with 49 cents change,
and said : “1 owe you a half a cent, sir,
but I can’t make change unless you take
another cigar.”
The nice young man looked at the
shopkeeper and then at the cigar, and
then at himself, and, without a single
word, walked out of the shop.—Steuben
ville Herald.
Food for Fat People.
There are three classes of food—the
oils, sweets, and starches—the special
office of which is to support the animal
heat and fat, having little or no
influence in promoting strength of mus
cle or endurance. If the fat, therefore,
would use less fat aud more of lean
meats, fish and fowl, less of fine flour,
and more of the whole product of the
grains—except the hulls—less of the
sweets, x'arfimdari.Y in warm weather,
and more of the fruit acids in mild form,
as in apple, sleexi less, be less indolent,
and labor more in the open air, the fat
would disappear, to a certain extent at
least, with no loss of real health. In
food we have almost a perfect control in
this matter, far better than we can have
in the use of drugs. If we have too
much fat and too little muscle, we have
•imply to use less of the fat-forming ele
ments and more of the muscle food, such
as lean meats, fish, and fowl, and the
darker j>ortions of grains, etc., with peas
and beans.
Pass the Calf.
Mr. James Rice, lately in politics,
now in railroad business, is somewhat
startled at the amount of “gall” dis
played by enterprising grangers in their
efforts to beat his road. The other day
an agricultural gentlemen applied to Mr.
Rice for a shipper’s pass, when the fol
lowing conversation ensued:
“What are yon shipping?”
“A call”
“Where to?”
“To Kokomo.”
“How much freight?”
“Forty cents.”
“What’s the fare?”
“One dollar.”
Mr. Rice ruminated for a moment,
and then announced his decision aa fol
lows:
“I don’t want to be mean about this
thing. Til tell you what Til do: Til
pass the calf, and you can pay your
fare. ” — Exchange.
You may praise a man to the skies
and you can not make all the people
like liim; so you may exhaust the whole
list of opprobrious epithets in abusing
him and you can not make all the peo
ple hate him.
Won’t some chemist invent a face
powder that does not contain lead and
tastes good? Our young men are all dy
ing of lead poisoning, and kissing is go
ing out of fashion.
Romeo and Juliet.
San Jose is very prolific in amateur
theatricals, and, although we do not
qnito believe the story that they have
gotten so now down there that they have
to dispose of the tickets for those enter
tainments by the aid of pistols and
masks, on dark nights, we can easily
credit that w hen the traveling agent of an
Eastern drag-house volunteered to pay
the hall-rent for one of their entertain
ments, the other night, they gladly ac
cepted the offer. All he stipulated for
in return, the agent said, was a chance
to use the stage accessories, should the
opportunity present, with some few ad
vertising references to the house he rep
resented. The play was “ Romeo and
Juliet,” and on the evening of the per
formance the company was somewhat
disgusted to find that the agent had
caused the programmes to be printed in
such a manner as to have the name of
each character followed by an urgent
appeal to the public to buy or try at least
one box or bottle of some indispensable
preparation, thus :
Juliet - - - Mrs. Alvira Giggles
(The love-lorn Juliet would have been
even more beautiful if she had used
Botts’ Complexion Powders.)
Romeo - - - Mr. C. Jumper
(The impetuous lover wouldn’t have
had to wear a yellow wig if had useef
eight or ten bottles of Botts’ Hair
Helper,)
Tybalt - - - Mr. Hay Granger
(Not even tlie enormous pads worn by
amateurs nowadays will keep out
rheumatism unless care is taken to
rub in Botts’ Skin Scalper.)
But they managed to choke down tlicir
indignation until the balcony scene. As
that interesting episode was well under
way, the deeply interested audience was
surprised at beholding an unusual move
ment on the of the moon. Juliet
had just attracted attention to it by the
line,
Swear not by the moon,
when that luminary turned solemnly
around and displayed on its nether side
the legend, in large black letters : “Try
Botts’ Liver Pills ! Oh, try ’em ! ”
The rest of this all-too-sad story is
soon told. Juliet burst into tears, and
Romeo swore like a pirate walking the
plank. The audience had their money
returned at the door, and tlie show broke
up. The agent, however, paid the ex-
X>euses agreed uxron like a little man.
He said that he was sorry the entertain
ment hadn’t been a success somehow,
but lie thought he had gotten the requi
site amount of advertising. He was
satisfied. —San Francisco Post.
New Jersey’s Nancy.
That sentiment, ardor and devotion of
manly affection were more fully devel
oped in the golden age of the American
colonies than literary style or spelling is
proven in the following letter, now for
the first time published. As George
Washington was guilty of irregular or
thography in many instances, the
descendants of the lover below need
have no feeling on account of his celebra
tions in the columns of a neivspaper of
to-day. “Nancy” lived at Shrewsbury,
N. J.:
My dearest and only beloved Nancy:
The enclosed my charming Girl -was
wrote some Time ago, that is as soon as
I got to York, but unhappily mist an
Opportunity for Want of proper Intelli
gence, the outside is got a little soiled,
which I hope you will excuse, as it hap
pened realy thro too much Care, I ex
pect this w ill come by Ralstead, but am
determined if possible not to miss an
other Oy>portunity. Let me Lear from
you my lovely dear Girl by the very first,
and by every Opportunity, let me know
the News of Shrewsbury. Inform me
too whether you have Wrote to Madeiray
and Lewis, and I seriously beg of you
not to forget to send the Measure of your
finger, or rather a Hair Ring. I have my
lovely girl a Strong Reason in short I
look upon it as ominous, do not laugh at
me but dear Gjrl comply with my Desire,
and send me either, your Measure, or a
liiug. I shall think every Hour, a Day
till I hear, much more do I long to see,
arid cfi you my own.
I am my ever lovely aud only beloved
Nancy*
Yours my most charming Girl
Yours with all the Ardency of
Love, Affection, and Sincerity Yours for
ever more thou my own.
George Cutting.
N. York August ye 14th, 1761.
—New York Commercial.
James Bowie ami His Knife.
James Bowie lay for months in his
bed, in tlie city of Natchez, before he
recovered from his wound. He was a
man of much mechanical ingenuity, and
while thus confined, whittled from a
piece of white pine the model of a liunt
ing-knife, which lie sent to two brothers
named Blackman, in tlie city of Natchez,
nd told them to spare no expense in
making a duplicate of it in steel. This
was the origin ef the dreaded bowie
knife. It was made from a large saw
mill file, and its temper afterward im
proved upon by tlie Arkansas black
smith. This is all that can be told about
the origin of that death-dealing imple
ment.—Sen Francisco Chronicle.
“I don’t want that Stuff,”
Is what a lady of Boston said to her
husband when he brought home some
medicine to cure her of sick headache
and neuralgia which had made hei so
miserable for fourteen years. At the
hist attack thereafter, it was adminis
tered to her with such good results, that
she continued its use until cured, and
made so enthusiastic in its praise, that
she induced twenty-two of the best fam
ilies in her circle to adopt it as their
regular family medicine. That “stuff”
is Hop Bitters.—Stindard.
When someone can invent a five
barreled revolver which can be sold for
twenty-five cents, every city can do away
with at least two school-houses at the
end of the first year. It is simply neces
sary to buy a little more burying-ground.
—Detroit Free Press.
Your Wind Will Grow Strong
wad great, not by what you reject, but by what
you cordially accept and believe. Tour health
will improve, just in proportion as you obey
Nature’s laws. If your mind is diseased, re
fresh it with suitable relaxation. If the two
great organs of your body, the kidney and liver,
are out of order, restore them by using Wag
ner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. The mind
can be kept clear by care and the kidneys and
liver by the great remedy above mentioned.
Impromptu Ingenuity.
A striking instance of ingenuity in
taking advantage of the resources of
nature in an emergency is found in Sir
Samuel Baker’s account of his travels in
Abyssinia. His stock of soap had’be
come exhausted; and as he jiossessed
abundance of various kinds of fat, in
cluding that of elephants, liipixipotanii,
lions and rhinoceros, he determined to
convert a quantity of the grease into
soap. For this purpose he required
both potash and lime; and how were
these to lie obtained ? The negleek
tree, he found, was exceptionally rich in
potash ; he therefore burned a large
quantity, and made a strong lye with
the ashes, which he concentrated by
boiling. There was no limestone; but
the river produced a plentiful supplv of
oyster shells, which, if burned, produce
excellent lime. What was next wanted
was a kiln in which to bum the shells,
and this he constructed out of one of
those great ant hills, which rise to ten
feet high, common to Lcae valleys, and
which ]x>ssess a very hard external
crust. Two natives hollowed out one of
those hills ; a proper draught hole was
made below from the outside; it was
loaded with wood, and filled with seme
six bushels of oyster shells, which were
again covered with fuel; and after burn
ing twenty-four hours a supply of excel
lent lime was obtained. Then com
menced his soap boiling, which was
fected in a large copper j>ot of Egyptian
manufacture. The ingredients of pot
ash, lime and fat were then carefully
mixed; and after boiling ten hours, and
having been constantly stirred, ho ob
tained excellent soap, of which he had
in all about forty pounds weight.
A Sure Cure.
“Don’t you know it’s very wrong to
smoke, my boy?” said an elderly-look
ing lady, in a railway waiting room, to
Young America, who persisted in
ing a cheap cigarette, much to the old
lady’s discomfort.
‘ £ oh, I smoke for my health,” an
swered tlie boy, omitting a volume of
smoke from his mouth, which almost
strangled the old lad}’.
“But you never heard of a cure from
smoking, continued the lady when she
had regained consciousness. t
“Oh, yes I did,” persisted the boy, as
he formed his mouth into a young Ve
suvius working on fulltime; “that’s tlie
way they cure xigs.”
“Smoke on, then,” quickly replied
the old lady; “there’s some hope for you
pet!”— Yonkers Statesman.
“Women Never Think.”
If the crabbed old bachelor who ut
tered this sentiment could but witness
the intense thought, deep study nd
thorough investigation of women in
determining the best medicines to keep
their families well, and would note their
sagacity and wisdom in selecting Hop
Bitters* as the best, and in demonstrat
ing it by keeping their f milies in
petual health, at a mere nominal ??x-
X>ense, he would be forced to acknowl
edge that such sentiments are baseless
and false.—Picayune.
The man who expressed an opinion
had to pay charges clear through before
the company would take it.
The increased demand for that invab
liable preparation, Tabler’s Buckew
Pile Ointment, constrained the mana
facturers to advertise for ten thousand
bushels of Buckeyes, which are largely
used in the manufacture of that excellent
compound, Tabler’s Buckeye Pilo Oint
meut. Price 50c. For sale by all drug
gists.
“Live in my heart and x>ay no rent,”
says and Irish song. “Sure it’s Boy
cottin’ me ye are, darlin’, and if the land
lord of that heart, yer father, comes
along wid anny of his nonsense, sure I’ll
sli—no, begorra, that won’t do—l’ll
take the ould man along wid us to
Ameriky. How’ll that do, mavoorneen,
cileenog?” —New York Commercial.
There is but one way to cure baldness, and
that is by using Cariioltne, a deodorized ex
tract of petroleum, the natural hair grower.
As recently improved, it is the only dressing
for the hair that cultured people will use.
KE-(TKI) fkoji i*e th.
Wiiliam J. Coughlin, of Somerville, Mass., eayc:
tlie tall hi 1876 I was taken with bleedings of the lungs,
followed by a severe cough. I lost my appetite
flesh, and was conftoed to my bed. In 1877 I was ad
mitted to the hospital. The doctors said I had a hol* in
nty lung as big as half a dollar. At onetime a rep.vt
went around that I was dead. I nave up hope, hut a
friend told me of Dr. William Hall’s Balsam froa th*
r.rxtis. I got a bottle, when, to my surprise, I emu
tneaeed to feel better, and to-day 1 fee! better than for
three years past. I write this hoping every one afflict*4
with diseased lungs will take 1)k. William Hall’s Bav
sam, and be convinced that covsumpiioji can dk curkd.
1 can positively say u has done more good than all th
other medicines I have takeo since inv aickueas.’’
Indigestion, dyspepsia, ■orrous prostration
and ail forms of general debility relieved bv
tcking Mkn-sman’s Peptonized Beef Tonic, the
only preparation of beef containing its entire
nutritious properties. It coutains blood-mak
ing, force-generating and life-sustaining prop
erties; is invaluable iD all enfeebled conditions,
whether the reslt of exhaustion, nervous pros
tration, overwork, or acute disease, partviuiarlj
if resulting from pulmonary eom GJ
well. Hazard M Ckx. proprietors, New Yr~&
gigSTETTEIfc
jfjj®** CELEBRATED
STOMACH _ 0*
sitters
W Siy .'SnfterjXeettlesslr
Wi ii the couvuleiug, spasmodic tortures of
fever and bilious remittent, when
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, acknowledged
to be a real curative of mal trial fevers, will
eradicate the cause of si much suffering?
No less efteecttve is this belignaut alt era
tive in cases of eonstipati >n, dyspepsia,
liver complaint, rheumatism, and in general
debjli'v and nervous weakness. For sale
by ail Druggists and Dealers generally.
for Dealer*’ Medium Work : la>\7
K. rkH ' tmioeunmet u race.,
UU wUIWU Cincinnati, O. iK-KK
The Golden Rule says Hat “it costs a
community more to suppoi t one
saloon than it does to run half a dozen
churches,” and the Retainer ie a
that “there’s more fun in the one suoi
than in the six churches.
That is the best part of beauty which
a picture cannot express.
"perry DAVIS’
Pain-Killer
11 Hi
§E £2 J
Inj
|K mfl
§7*l m'W
r
|iv TV* 1 ssil
PIJM&t i
t BHa I 'fIKW
BL: -i ! iSlfaj". tt( li j H
II i%jjgygf c<3
11 |i
1(^1
[SfWj ~ ffi; MBPS
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
■ . S Elegant new song ana cnorus, yrtitres
LidCliSS ■ Green Grass 'Heath the Snow , by Jo
seph Skelly ; price 36c ; but to introduce w,l! send upon
receipt of 15c. post paid. fieo.W. Peek, 213 Vf.Jh St.,N.i.
fffM/ms
d£?srs i **sro.*sf^^H?r3/SS6vs*l^®^® ,, S
was not permanently abated. I have used three bottles of the Tonic H nce usiag ii V^ B t be tra nquil nerve
bor that I ever did in the same time during my into doutto the Kthe Tonic has not done the
(The Iron Tonic is n\
preparation, of Pro- 1
toxide of Iron. Peru- I
mm Bark, and Phoo- I
phates, associated I
with the Vegetable I
Aromatics. It servesW
every purpose where V
HARTER MEDICINE CO., NO. 213 NORTH MAIN STREET, ST. 10UIL
A CYCLOPEDIA WAR
An honored publishing house whose history is reputed to extend back into the last eentury, and whose wealth
has been estimated at *8,000,000, is that of .T. B. Lipptncott t Cos., Philadelphia. Thevlargest and most important
tion' wfth°the eatjpulv J Q LipPlflCOtt rffc 00l jishing
bers, of Edinburg, Scot- w OaP a mmP t 1 t H land, and London. Eng
land, that of Chambers’s Encyclopaedia, which many years ago rubhehed at the (so called) low price of *.v),
?S?,3t Chambers’s Encyclopaedia, w^r£
house in consequence (it was said) of the Lippincott* malung cnanfes in tne .American edition contrary to the spirit
wfflle still using the name of Chambers, the w— same Encvclopasdia was brought down to the
still lower price of $25. Now, in the glorious SnOaUUl P’S lfel * mov £ d ’. of course, not bv the
snirit of rivalry, but bv the generous and WBWVB laudaole purpose of placing useful knowledge
within reach of the people, without regard to the question of profit or of loss to tftemselves, they are issuing an edi
tion of this same great work, Chambers’s Encycloptedia, which is mid to be revised to date (edition of lg-sixty some-
with census figures altered?), which tuey are offering at the^ wonderfully low price
of *f r ) for the work complete, in 10 great octa- ft Aff mm. mam vo volumes Even at this astounding low price
they allow the large discount of 40 per cent. %J%# S? TT when purchases are made m large quantity.
The army of the Literary Revolution always W W rejoices at the multiplication of good books at
low prices, and the American Book Exchange , . , , is delighted wtth the opportunity of uniting
with the great publishing house of Lippincott in furthering the sale of this work ; and to demonstrate the earnest
ness of their <*ood-will they propose, so loDg as the Lippincotts choose to continue the manufacture at this nominal
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Considering the munificent ■ ■ ▼ V7B liberality of the Lipnen
cotts’ terms, it lias seemed a great pity that their modesty should prevent them from advertising more widely, and we
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The Literary Resolution
Has net the honor of a century’s history, and its present cash capital is only about *175,000. It was started only so
lon>' a"o as September, 1875, with *7O cash and a few old books, and two years thereafter had reached the dignity‘of a
garretm an Ann street jung-shop, its “army” consisting of one man and a small boy, and from the character of the.
ttSfsmtsi Chambers’s Encyclopaedia
books. But by Jan- W ■■€■■■ ■WO O 3-D IV V ViUpCClt Id nary, 1879, the
Revolution had accumulated sufficient strengtn to print one small volume, which was increased to a product in 1880
of over one million volumes. Its business offices and retail store now occupy entire a magnificent six-story building on
Broadway, and its factories several other build- ings elsewhere in the city, and it gives employ
ment to about 600 bonds. One item of its pres- BJ § f ent large list of standard publications is an edi
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ing at the low price of 86 per set—lately reduced from $7.50. This edition is a verbatim reprint of the London edi
tion of 18S0, instead of that of 18-sixty something, as in the case of the Lippincotta, with the alteration of a few census
figures. Chambers’s Encv- ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ M m e dopotdia, however, is a
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such a work, edited and Will ¥*7ls*ol IV IIU W ICU&U published for a foreign
market, would give as much prominence to American topios as American readers mTght desire. To supply these and
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“ First cotne, fiist served,’ - ’ is an old motto, which we have supplemented by “Lowest prices to earliest purchas
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This price will very shortly be increased.
Of course the 15,000 topics, and 3,000 pages of new matter added in this edition are not to be found either in the Lip
pincott edition, nor in our owns 6 edition. Both of them, however, are excellent works, remarkably cheap, and serve
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AND
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/mm£
CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED!
MALL S
KBALSAM
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It. t'oiisnniplioa is not an incurable malady.
IIAIjI/bs IIALSAII wijl eure you, even
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