Newspaper Page Text
»REI. DR. TAL 1 A 6 E.
_ .
nr]r UH1 ry 1 ■’ etEviNt. DEVIXI"S s SVX- 1
/Ml’ SERMON,
Subject: “ Forbidden Honey.”
Text: “/did but fast* a UtlU honey with
^&%^^x v ^ and
The honey to- is a most ingenious architect,
a Christopher Wren among insects, a geome
ter hooter drawing robbing hexagon* the field*of and pentagons, pollen and a free- >
^^ffirm;d^rrdST. aroma,
y ,i
incontinent“w nr?v^ lov,.r“d nature Vire 1
celebrated tlie bre in his fable of Aristwus,
and Mow*, si araas^s and Karnuol, and s?»j&£ David, and Solo
a
as a Hible symbol. A miracle of formation is
the bee; five eves, two tongues, theoutor hav
ing a sheath or protection, itair on all sides of
knows of the lee line 'hie honeveomli is a
palace the such a* no one but God could plan
ami hot if* y l*** construct; its cells
KrnnetimM sani^r^^' a dormitory, sometimes a store
ami hy their , airj2r5
max, them hammer atitcnme which are to
and chisel, and square and
plumb and line, faslifon them for use. Two
two, these worker, shape the wall.
l^^xtra b^rto^iUf irth^an tbl* dam-'
»gc When alioiit the year attacked inse t
before unknown, in the night time
tho IwiihivcH all over ICurfi|»6, and the men
who owmsl them were in vain trying to plan
something the of to the keep issihivcs out the invader that was
terror of tho continent kr- it
was found that everywhere the U.es hrnl
ranged for their own protection, and built
before (hair honeycombs an e-jiocial n'hir wall of
wax, with port hol<w through n4 h enough^ the
tjSAST* might go to and fro, hut large
lhe
Do you know that the s warming of the tiees
Is dlvlnsly directs If The mother bee starts
tw^o^the'lhi^c'^Tiiit'o raises the heat 0?the hive an^^ih'nu'n^whtch dearer!
and they some four
must dio unlcws they leave their
heated njiai tmeuts. ami tliey follow the
mother bee and alight on the branch of a
plored tree the rock rogiem not ami far found tho hollow of a
or off from a stream of
water, and ami tln-ir they V hero here set Hot. up anew colony,
thcm'-Tves"to vos to the til i m?tiufiwti!!v of h,“k'iL.^.'„!
lino edible. mixture But who can U II th- c hiMiiistrv
of that of sweetness part of It, the
Very life Of the. ls.ee and part of it tho life of
1
M»mtv in' the' i r n,« of"lVitVc*av'ai | mils,™ 11 *}?’
ing woods Jonathan!
time of Haul and Their army w
S;;^u Smmrtivriv^forbid ( ,r:.x^,mb!i j ,,y T;; Ml ;ii'" s J l ,3 n
thinguntl! lscy.1l the rz
thowoodsthey they were a , urs-d. Coming through l.^“
found a cdai-e where tho
stirjKii Itfmd th-k'om
until overflowed upon d in
oljoyed great profusion ord-rs and of touc-h-d sw—tn-ss. All tho S army
it not save
than ftjttstrsiW’Sfflftshs and im not know'iuir th-miltnrv nr,w
scc%tfr^»swi'&a "nd t ‘'for J
have Iss-n slain. T^ial In nmmthm rwouhi
hisawful my text Jonathan an
noiinet-M mistake): “1 did hut taste
nTittle honey with thomi lof tin*rod that wan 5
i t*
Jsrr^^as-Mrss} healthful bis-k is n-ad now thero one’
hu.cdi.-d mad.-up are
avidity. „f rhetorical tmsh eon
minusl with When the lioy in the.
ear neot n ns tli ruuirh with a pila of publh-a
lions l.sik over tn-till--and notice denletin" that nlna
out of every ten of th......... are
and Injurious. All the tirl-mi way from N-w York
to Chicago or New nottee that oh
tionublc- InKiks dominate. Taste for pure
ili-riii - IS poisoi i—d by this scum of tho
rr i virtu KvAry in iNiok in whieh sin
over tv or which n frinttwtr
thrown cm-r dissipation, or which Ic-avos
you at Its last line with less r-sp-t for tho
"larrhige for Instil,........... less abhor.-,-n-e
■ the_iMiramour, is a cl-tiression
5 ,f <’«" jnoral elmroeu-r. Tho
l"H-k . bm-l-rv nmv Is-iitMib “ml tiv- “t^ mul sSkc' th-nlot
ilrainntie and sbutling. of
clio|M-d yyi-iting sw.-ot with ns hb th- h. -= -y th-.t ’Jonathan
wbcfmbid.it" iiii i,«l ut your ls-st jut r
l uir (iod forin vinir It, moral ami safety forbids it,
ad toKti-h Imd s ono taste of it may
r-suits that you may have
to say ut th- -lose of th- c'xp-rlin-nt, or at,
the) c-lose of a misimpi-ov-d lii'-tim-; *•! did
lint taste a little honey ^v with th- rod that was
m my hand, and. lo, f must die!"
■Corrupt liU-rntuii- is doing more to-dav for
', h '‘ nal,y
1 '.S^a^ind a “* hic»|N'ini.|iU, inaritiil iuir'yees, ,4y
*- ■" 1 . :■ .....given at.
dai Parks, lors. and in I'oiijugul i ut I'm ............ am .....uTi^l^ 1 lie
mmlile suits | -I .itii'K-s, are among the
i'. *\ ni'ii u woman, voting
or Id. g Is Ii-t lieu-1 thoroughly sjuff,-,|
with Hu modern novel sho is in 'It
palling heroesm p I'll "■ But some on* will *ay: '
sons Is so W'iti'iiiiigly ndi,ally knavish, an,{ ili»« per
so untrue, ami the turn
.
of the story exqui-ite, 11 nd all the c liar a ..
B-i-s ho eurapturing, I tnuot qtl it them •i
literature My hrolhor, my si-ter. ehariii u can tin- I styles of
imd purify ju.st its mug Hint will devat
mid , mtouie, file. and ('iiri-tiani/.o
while they pleas,-, The d.-vil do, not own
all the lion, i ti-1 nii »r i
liooks houses eon: ling I i Irom our ptiMishin;
tlmt Ic.lV, i.-ire for the choice
that which i- d- l !, mV* IumI j mill,I ai
SOlll, ,
(into sonic j 1 hgent nia i or worn
mul ask for a Ii 1 u hooks tluit will
strengthening condition, | .if.•, lo i sh 'ur t mental and and inor
u your time I
imprnvDinoiit aliluev mlisl 1 hat you can
not iiffonl I- ini up w ith husks mid cmdci
and dcliris. In 1 he iiil. t-sliccs of lmsiui-s
that voun g man is re eling that which
prc|sii Oil lo ti" a mt prince,
that young «■ -ii iul •r mind wit
chief inlt-liigcnct-1 hut will \ ,-t , r make liei
alt mi l I'-n > I a I ii i s home or
her mi iiidepcn l-nr •actor that
qualiij her lobuild I -r a mine and n
tain it in a Imppines- Hi - t- ■- m
mentation from any = s* sex,
young literary man or voung tv, an th- i
and moral inipi-ovcou of tlu-s
ten till III it < s here or I her,* III evi-rv day,
head aud shoulders inpt os|» rity nmt charne¬
ter nnd mllu' iicc above ll I'-Ullgl l's w lie
read nothing, <>r read tlmi s>' Iii Ii Ik dwarfs,
Nee all tin- forests of good mi-ricun litern
honey,•oiiil*, lure dripping that with have honey, 'hv iht pick ii p the
in them fiery boos
which w ill sting you wiih an eternal imUon
w hile you tost - it t )iit* I sink may lor you or
me decide everything for this world and the
next, It was a turning; |siint with im- when
in n yukoop's Insikstore, My recuse, one
day Beauties l pi. k,sl Huskin up a lajok called “The
of ' it was »n!v a issik of
extracts, 1-ut it was all pm mcv. and
I was not satisfied until l had •Iiitse, ( all
his works, at that time exp llsl icy olid an
easy heaven capacity through to own tii in, and what a
went in n ailing liis “.''even
Veokw" lamp* of i* Architecture impowtlile and Ins ".Stones of
it for me to deserils-,
except for good by ttook* saying that It gave me a rapture
and an everlast ing disgust for
decrepit while nr immortal immoral soul looks that will last me
mv lasts. All around
the church and the world today then* are
busy hives of intt-lligciiceoccupiod js-n by authors
and authoress's, from whose drip a di
filiation which i- the very nectar of i-aven
and why will you thrust your r,sl of inquisi
tiventow into the deuthful xaccharino of per
ditiont
Humiliating of timijitatious liquidsaKi delicious come hut ll \to deatliful th* oat4v
g -ry **1 bear the
V"usay: cannot taste of inioxi
eating liquor, and how any mail tu like it is
to me an aiiuizi-im-ut Well, then, it is no
credit to x , H oil tlmt > •qu 1" not taste it, Ho
brag ’ nl„ *tal abstinence, l«
not mt v,n u- t
cause it is not from any priucipa 1 that you
reject alcoholism, but for the sitno re tsoti
that you reject certain sty les of f,ssl— v<>u
simply multitudes don't |s-o|)le like the taste of them. But
of have a natural fondue s
for all kinds of intoxicant. Th, v liU,.* it so
mucb that it makes tin tn smack tlu-ir lips to
livk at it they at dyspeptic, an i tlu-v
t. is - ■ it t" aid digestion or they are annoyed
by in*nntna, uiul tiny tak" it to V I'lMU'-e
a) rep, or they are troubled, au t th take it
to ui ake them oblivion-. el'ebi they ft»-l
good, and they must ate t heir
nnarity. suekisl through Tl»*-y l«*gin with mint julep
two straw* on the Long
Branch piazza and end in the ditch,
taking . , from - - ,
half whisky. a They mg a liquid half kerosene and
all oontuming not of only boJv.unnd like it,hut it i>un
and aftor while luiwn.m have tlu'-y ami soul
a it will, ttmu-h
,me wine glass --ost the temp ual ami et.-rnal
iMructioii of theuiw'lro,, and all their fam
Mire, and the whole ImtHnn iw e. They would
•».r: "I am sorrv it is gn'n - to oust me an ” l
27 my family and X all the u,„ i r, p,, u h,,L. atm. ami
Ut to ..IV
11 v V T torque and
must inspiring, . TO >, grt»l » the thr-wt the -,
«»at m-wt i — irons thing
To ever thrill,si umrtiil s immortal
cure tlie habit I .afore a to
1» loot stag,-*, various plan* a td tr in
olden times This plan w «** i
S'tb^uTinto^r^ in
1
strong ilrlnk—•>!»'• additional shot oc tmllet
roSS-thTll, miLt n!lr'‘i;.st!' '•'"I’D"®* M *» ,ny niuoh *’*'■, '*•*> h >t|,, r
' "f
. ■
the there bullet* would onti'r,*!v*fi|i*ui*th,> for the liquid, Janjt u'at
was no rnotn and by
\Vhlth Ww,mtl 1 'I"’ hiebriat • would l»* i-und.
1 knnX’n,?/ “.'"’.T* wlv'travel* c, ‘ r ”' 1 *n that way
found that the u i’*
help and him. when a And man there .tore have that U-ea iioiH»K('toi'm
thaa yon ron count whea more i-ax-s
God baa wo heh .,1
<-ounta uf tlu. t* 11 ' 1 * Ooi,|, l
mtire n *°' n ” of
*h*m pillars in the house otUo>L
On* would suppow, that *-,«*» would take
VdroSihSi^ftoiSrooi.*Yrohav*»*«(cSL 01 th* omittou* nauim
i
BSS3SBHS3 ll* moral* to the *ade, and
*’! Mi nrxwperity in
shade, ,fl shade, ami and his hi* wife and duldren in the
Now, I find immortaldeetinyin of the the shade. Hcni
in all cities on tome the liquor
our words: “Old Crow,"
mightily filthy suggestive of a carcass, and the
raven that swoops upon it “OldCrowP
Men and women without numbers «»«t" of
SMsseaffl'jsaSSK r J Jm *>ut unburied, and thiaevil is pecking at
^ ^loriou^v sli^ tUFJJi!?
wns .. ( jj.f 0 rw!r,? ' lhft They^^iak^^nT^hLik^? sIm how°^!^r
s-efe«v2*££^* n0 warni 2*2
P° thi !?« : though hi* statue in the hall craved
1 ttuTnaims the* foMnlfafaMU
utoing hisliands of h w<dk?nS was
thrusUnto v«t
J*'” in "““y infatuation *» man that, of strong though drink his is fortunes so migbty are
crashing, am^fsssssfrsaa and his health is crashing, and his
perils physical, that and await mental, him. he and goes straight on to
moral assawlna
rf® rJ®*K 1 **? *n 1 projiortion ns any * style of aloohol
P eri * awfu| . Hememher Jonathan and
the forbidden honey in the wodds of Beth>
av ^ n ',.
, .
Im’ d^J-U vf 1 haT^’S
oceau eight hus, times, from ami always one of the best
rooms morning till late at 1 night, beard
,‘ n « ,ven 1° ^am !>1 i up practices.
<>f >n ,,, i who wt-nt on Imanl with enough
»no»ey thr Pnropean excunioiM who landed
without enough money to get their baggage
»P *o the hotel or railroad Nation. To many
tl'‘‘iw [« a comi'lcte fascination m games M
huaiard^ *■"** It or the risking; as natural of nioney for them on to poanbOt- bet «s
; ' at » h « ^ U ' r L 06 * U often
t
In
’J 1 "' »nt being willing takingof to leave the
nice table long enough for the food,
tokewittinilJ! li 1 slowing'the'^g«m*",i,el?" between slices of bread, a
, ' " ,,t • two
"'1‘r li uamain d after I^a-d Handwieh. It
]s id - u lor tins-e of us who have never rat
■ i", 1 ; 1 '',"!.’!! , ,■ !S!!i I
1 nn ' 1 w '"'' str..i,-, r than you or I. Down
'»vl«;r tiV.ri't-Vt«Un’in it c |o/-y’r went hiiVi"" glorimw iCOkh-n Oliver tiniefm!! ftold-
1,1 m " “ f t,1( ‘ 1’nited States, who used
to be us nguhcrlv at the gambling house all
night as they werti in the nails oMegldatipn ■
i y i!f!!L who^ll^im with
Htakc iii a ludic-s' parlor, and cmdcsl 1
the Plmyro* suicide's with the pistol at Monte piece* of Carlo. bone They with 1
iti• square
........ nn-l wn-sm .-to sw.s lL i.nll tlie sUkes off
»» lbs side of th- table. last -New York
'‘wmlature .sanctioned the might y evil last
spnug ^ byjcas'iMg - sr^sssjnsa it law for its defense at the
=
i hiH B “' nl “' r ‘ '"id this (all are borrowing
fr,,m 1 »'ils of their employers or (
iY'T? 1 "" I,y ""'!T ut " llse ?! ,tr,ea ‘
tlc-ir d-moniii/.-Mliuuvc-s. , h very man who
'Veil, 1 know g<sil uu-n who play whiat and
and ot).-r styles of game without anv
"''o' V 1 I ha 1,11 -1 ‘i c'i!' " lo P] l l J 0, I ‘.“f,
with his wife mul cluMrcn, an«l then . at the the
fonio, now. TJsrdssssrK ictus have prayers."
r mi
n "“‘lingerie o? an I s.c.v; “Come 1-t us hive a
and h'ame sitting rattl- down sm.l,.s,’‘ or mb. „ -t-.n-b-rv,
by a ...a.-l.le slab, say to
MioKravecligg skcills. tims-ii-nUoiis -rs: (<>me, - h-t usliavou game
ol 1 voung ladies art
silently think c-ar.f saying play to me while do sp-nk: “Do hurinr you |
ing wdi us any
‘^baro not, but lmw will you r-i if in the
LX.T, (eat clay c.f eU-l-n.ty, wh-u w« ai-o.cskc.Hl U
v-mi a--oniit "lour milu-i--. -..mo man
a.l nay i«» von: ■ I \va^ mti«»!u< t*.lto ^
of ftMin •'* ta tli»* yeir l ss <, 1 n Brooklyn, al
your lions,-, ,-ml 1 w-at on ->m that sport tc
s.i.-n-l l , ;n- m u-ij - - .m.g, ; = -l W'-nt on down
ami lost m> s ni. .uc.. llu-hc I*, < limns that ) ou
n - mid I- -t nr- th-- chains of a
gam -- doom, , ami I am mi my way Ac-rna to a
* aa -b‘‘ - •-1 .' II- -, ) at the -tart,
, , * i,t *' ;,,, «’b««“ "•
logu-. Htoel; gambling-ennos ii- - - tin- s one e.ita
It must bo v-r.c - ' lilmatm;; to go
Into Wall sti-.s-l, ,N. w York. ,.r M .te street,
Bi-ston, or Third stres-t, I'hilud-lphia, and
deisisiting «>f taking a small I'orliiuc- sum of imm-y, .Many nm the risk
out u m-uaie do
Ing an honest and sale bii«iitess in the stock
market, anil you nr - an ign--iirons -- if you do
not know tlmt it is just n- ritiiimte to
'b-ul in stock; ..s to d-.cl in c, r. -e. m sugar, -
'>- 'jro r -early «t| tlio csifsidc-rs who
K<; Ib» 3 cm S little fl„.„,-i„l -x-,„>io„ lose
1 r 2 . ’tuAZ % 1 ‘ h'u'cd‘,”1
Hies. 1 had = he .
,li ‘ i hip pocket an I said to m ■ in substaiic-o: ;
“1 llllv « tlu-i-i.' Hi- v.ilu- --I a hundred and !
fifty iuiless. tlioiisi and doll o-s Mi, Isom-is bsday
per st I'l < if the vast mi rJ?*: "'orit'y vvho'ic re victim
i/*d you hear not | c> n .-M|.-al stock
firm goes don n, ms vi IIII ill IS of news
Pt»l» TS discuss till hand or tin-ii
aste r, and we m t ill- d "illi Iheir
features and their u nipliv But where
one such famous firm II slllU-i live imlrcd un
known men sink with ll llie great
steamer goes town and alt tho litth l-oals
arc swallowed in thesam - r tig 11 ifluent. I lam
tiling is gambling, win tlier in k
i alstniis. a- d >r r r betting.
Exhilaration at i! Ian ; ing hr,-tin
mid ii shatl"i'cd nervous si-i-m - id n sac
rilh |-o|K>vly and It destroyed juI at the
last ouug mini, In no lottury tickets,
imivhase no prize pm I c . het on n-> luise
ball games or r ;. have no faith in
lin k, answer no mvstcrii ars pro
posing great ni< Dine f ■ .-mill i-.tmcnt:
slum a wav the I uzzar, l .hut Ii- r at-otni'l
ur hoi r trying 11 1 -'I r t
ut an i = I ■ Have ( I
It v vour -id ml be a can lid for lcav -si
1 iicn il > r nil tin l it if sill o ban!
with (lowers at I ( •t -ml rc ai.
charger plenty of helpful clooi li.m 1> i fet- Hi.* gay
to your nd I stirrm*
while V °to n the"bit in'-i Hl!a.Dfi r Inext'riiK I
filing,-s t honi-v is ,mt lit!.- ,7,at which Jona
than < -ok <m tin- .-ml Of the n-1 and brought
to his lip, Imt Ihut wliirli Ho i puts on the
banquet ing : table of Mer<y, at w hi h vve arc
ult mvit"d lunimi.-tins Nvvu-.c'rTm.V aivmf' '
aim nig i be of ■ !
guiiles. ingmlangeroiH The boy place stopped with his tin-, lather mr4 tii
eiill' and said: There mi |-;e of the
' is a Mower I mean to
inust*get'tIiat" ,. ...... Im ' .ncf lx*autitill 1 o 'a'-- 11 ., •c'r,"'" ■ and'tlic sa V* tlu>
.
II, puli I
guides rush -d toward him to him Pack
when they heard him snv: -I almost
have it," as lie - II 2 ,no i feet. Birds of
prey were «-en r.Z few days after circling
tlio flowi-i-s'on 'i'iaco'wiierc ! — Voi-pse Vnv^'Yvhv'sp-'k whim 'you
tin- edge of n piv.-ipici
may tho very walk Paradise knee deep £ God; nmid tin-full W hen a blooms may of j |
man
sit at a king s ban = et, why will ho go down i
ot'a hlmud’s r * *' gll tL>
bones kcicicl 1
“ Sweeter than In, -vand tin* honeycomb,"
says David, "is tlie ut Ii of God." *• VVith
honey out of the roc would I lime satistl.-d
th<-e, hont»y ’ gathensl snvs(r<sl to tin* recreant. Here is ,
from the blossoms of trees of
life, and with n rod made out of th** wood of
th,-cross I dip it up for all your souls.
The |svt, llcsiod fi lls of an am
brosia and a nectar tho drinking of
SfL’SSi Rock will give ,Efc»rfA immortal life with asa Go-1.
off tin* you malarial levels sinful
Come of of a
life. Coineand liveon the uplands of grace
where the vine var-Is smi th.-msclyi-s. oh.
tasti. and see tiro 1 r. ’ l . ,''p'}. , * gra< ^ y"*' 1 A','
happy no £ lN l . e tll0
who ink,- a differ, = course the honey will
turn mired to Forev gall Slu-lley. Formally the things English 1 have poet, a,l
great
but I deplore the fact that it wjw a great
sweetness to Inin to dishonor (>od. the i*oetn
“OiKH.il Mat." has in it th - maligning of the
dfity. The intldol poet wns impious enough
to ask for itowlatxl Hill's Surrey chapel that
lie might denounce the < hr1st ian religion 1
He WHS in great g!>*>* ag t Go 1 and the
t i iitli. Mediterranean But he visit.-, with Italy, lrieiuls and Is one < ne day day l I on
t!ie two in m a a oat
wtifeli was twenty-four fret long, he was
''fining struck toward shoi-e whan an hour's squall
the water. A gentleman standing "ii
shore through a glass saw many boats tossed
in ttiis sqi mil, but all outrode tie* terror ex
,vpt Ol le. that in whieh shellev. the infidel
|*»-t. and his two fricn Is were sailing That
never ennie ashore, t*ut the Usiies <>f *
th " entiants wen- wnslusl upon the beach,
them the poet. A funeral pyr»' _______ was
on the sea shore b.v some , lassie friends friend
an , th* two bodies were eonsnmed. Poor
sh lley! He would would have have no no (i,sl while ho
liv 1 and he pronatuy lialilv nnd had no no Hod when he
died righteous,"hut“the I’he t.,ynl knnweth way"of ‘tia'uitV*11 th vdlall
rvrish Beware of the forbidd -it lionet
, ' ,0,,n " " AFK
Cool and clear weather lias prevailed .
furthcr throughout Florida for several days. Xo
‘ a * c « 1,; ‘ vc occurred at Pulatkn,
" ,|, r ,v a Tampa refugee died of sporadic ,
Jt'llow fever t*.vo weeks ago. Those j
frosts, with the raising of the quarantine j
l * ,at * uv< ‘ *rt.*«*n maintained against Palat- ■
Ua.lias completely restored confidence,and
* ,u ". v season is opeuing with great i
promise.' A strict cordon is still main
tdined around Hillsborough county, in ,
w Wch Tampa is situated. A sjK*ciat from
Tampa to the Timcs-Union says: Sis new I
in 24 hours, all light, no deaths;
° Ct °” ‘
A CITY POLICE STATION
ummmina to complaints at
Mj SERGEANTS DESK.
■ Droll Side to Dark Pictures of
Metropolitan IjilV*—Applications
and Visitors of All Kinds.
tfe-asa^™ . .
* n-u,,.
"T” ^*S“‘^ “ ft 6 Sergeant's m 8 to desk, the complaints writes a
OOTrespdndent f to the Albany Journal.
gg *,? C C “ ion#l 8,mdow »» thrown by y some
1 . but thcrei8aridiouloo side
*hc darkest ,
HU picture. Von gel it in
8tatiou "* weH as anywhere
?'"• In an uptow n precinct within an
* * or rehef - A red-faced, "*»»t->.....- pomp
ou , * «« German came m as if to report
an alarming fire on his own premises. 1 I
j' sg 1 ,' Dere vas a vom.tn calling namet
running after me nut de street.
Want 9 she running after you for?” asked
ats what I don't found
«* * n( i speaks turn «•«;««•»» foolishness
Pentad me when I walks iu flout of her
Uense. ‘I cant sec that the police
^ ^hing to do with it as long as she
«•"*£ nf) n.isdemeanor or nuromcc.’*
Put she \as a misdemeanor herself and
must be put a sto|> to. 1 am a doctor
tind she calls ine *Olt Coffins! 1 Mine
name vas Kauftniins not Collins. It looks
i, JJk S- j 1 killed aomeoncs 80 "! u,nts to have Uav< a a name nam ‘
Coffins called , pchind mc
The sergeant promises to scud word to
the offending w oman and the doctor is
renlaced Xta hv a voumr foTn man who hfs hw' wmi« mUt ihe
JKi. nolice P force l ,K>
An anxious careworn woman has been
waiting. The instant she is beckoned
«P*h® be kaping h«rsts out: ‘Mrs. Flaherty must
her dirty water on her ow n
*U». t<hc holy stones her kitchen clock
ivory stovepipe morning,an’ the wather pours down
a asl bole, and strikes on me head
«t«!» round me breakfast table. I I
»'«*t » warrant for her arnst.” “We
cant *chen arrest floor/’says a woman the for washing her
* l sergeant, “your
1 *“ < ! l ° 1 ''. 1 ,n '‘^ S ‘°P. U P V"' bole m the
veiling than , grtjat. Ihe indignation She- abuses of the this whole wo
is
f ? rct i ll bviug witlun a block of the sta
U° n U ? l 8 * 1 <! !'. an t * M ' l ,r °b v b d from
cm ^ lnherty . s dirty water. ‘An’ s|»os
»n me landlord don’t fix me saling, fwat
Sicrty T.7 kSI-het fr , L , , , I " , ’ ,u 1 '
„ n vtst **""?'* taken out ! of } , r lay w '•" inch.w a ' lust , night. , h , t ’ 1 , 1
It had a ticket for a lottery and a silver
sKus,'™,®? c&: r z
- j j ^ , , f t) B ,, .
f k
of °; Bakers) /'^nevolent pist under 1‘rob the e ti left Association c lapel, - , and -
thing of value taken f interrupts .fie
selp4 ;., nt _ • -There was the lottery tic k
et_-” “Hacl ' it drawn aiivtliinof"' “Th
, . T.‘C k •.*
anybody. Ihe tluc-f reached
over the area gate and hooked it with a
can( . ItI1 otr ,i M , w indow
t
"That . s too weak . a case for r us to ofTei „
i-rgeant. you muc h hope of recovery, - ’ says the
-What c= S . 1 clo for vouf
This to a m , P - , n in w ;j„
t wiclcl I i ni> ^ his l-,t --\ji ‘ ^
yon in iirnatf? . Iu* stiucaks; **It
s
very contldeniial matter.'’ 'I'he g. ml
nntun-d sergeant takes him aside. “I ni
here to g-t tl„- law «... Mbs Sarah
_ 1 bee" keepu with . ,
v «* Zi cmm| M iny
hci for over a year, and -t Huiulay she
8 l amui cd the door in mv face, after tell
ing me -he never want-.l b, s-- .iiir-7-n—s ,,,e again.”
i.u - du .,- f .i t . i.,..... -
‘
, hcrc . 'be , M-.g,-al,t • pleasant, ,
- ui a
sympathizing things;'’ yolc-c. she “but must I lose
my “Has got anv of vcmr
property." ' J' “1 <mve !i«-r a si er thimble
onh-oo ‘ ‘ on J h.-r l,in ' ,b,v “ ..,.,1 ! 1 a
. >el:<-w glmcs last , hnstmas.
l' al J °* <
VN e can t make her lelurii vour gifts,
and yon coiildii t do anvlhing with 'em
if «, did. seen.s to “Oh. 1 eol.ld
F™ to another girl, and I don’t w ant
her walking round wiih no fellow and
my yellow- gloves oil it's a sad ease t
says til** •crgc-anl, ''lull yve give you
no 1,,-,,, And the r, sacked
y° u, b is gi-.ulv shown to the do -r
Birds Thai luiprisoii Their Victims,
While out bunting few days ago I
found ii I i.i r stom nearly round,
about 1 inches 11 g bv • BA im lies ill
dimnetc! 1 1 it up, and, as I did
so, it rattled as t was hollow, and had
something insidi It was verv hard, and
of a dark blue coloi Wishing to sec
wluit vv as inside lo make it rattle, I broke
it on another stoii*', vv = to mv astonish
incut, 1 foui’d iht- ske — -ton of a frog,
How it got in-ide of a stone almost as
hard as Hint remained a mystery until
yesterday. While out looking after my
stock 1 no iced ’ some birds ihat looked
like swallow-, hflt larger, carrying mini
to a c,in, and depositing it in holes that
they had dug ' r: t the side of the cliff. I
went to tin-P ~ of thc cliff and elimlicd
down to otic of .* holes, cxitccting to
,i " ,, .‘'i'' 1 «'•*
* leu '.' 1 which 1 found 1,1 the frog skeleton, , lil jc the
® nc in s
J nrokr if, and in this ono I found a
lizard, almost decayed.
1 '"'Veral others, and found bugs
» , n ‘» *»«»h 1I animals, some not yet dead.
^ watched the birtls at their work and
learned how they put their victim in the
stones. Tin y nearly complete the ball,
*
onl v a s,na11 in oni ‘
-
f ‘I 10 * tht '- v »niall get «n bird—and animal—hugs, or in some
ball; ,n * es n put it the
then one stays aud keeps the victim
in while thc other gets mud and closes
to, nb. with the victim alive.
There are thousands of holes in the
bank, and each one is the tomb of some
animal. Why they put the abimals in
the balls is a invsterv; for, after the
mud dries, it is so hard that it requires
considerable force to break them.— St.
Ix»ti* t ilole-/)<ntoernt.
.. _
. _
lost _ of liaising a Boy.
My iaiitcr never did anything foi
me," isan ob«cr>ation which is frequently
heard from the lipsof voung men, but iii
Vince tt: tin sp,akir “it that he is making «*• a
serious error. A recent writer, hearing
the remark uttered by a voting fellow
whose education, as the ithrase goes, had
been completed, and who was look
business, ing around him to find an opening in
took the trouble to estimatt
the cost of bringing up the said \oun*
f e Uow from liis birth, ’, which had been
aefrated of cotirse, ....... > by the „ parent . referred - ,
1,1 8Ur ‘ i a slight in# way. luese are
hia figures:
*100 per year for the first five years... $50( -*~
$150 , XM . vear for th( . ^,.,,,1 vl . Hrs 7.74
r > w year for the third live years . 1 not
fax) Jht per year for the next three years
£500 year for th d next two vearx. lout*
_
Total
aflW ntmli Heat ions, these figures
may be taken to represent the average
expense entailed in raising an ordinary
iy °y Many parents spend several time?
twwuu-li. it would certainly l>c well for
y«» a « '*>«'" «lu. lake all this a* a matter
of course, und think that their fathen
have done nothing for them, to reflect
that tho8e they *- that owe a lu aw ■ debt of gratitude
to luvc brought them up from
helpless infancy and equipped them tc
fight Gold'll for themselves the battle of life.—
.\rgo*u.
W.lerapouts,
It is a curious fact that waterspout*
seem to be attracted by the iron track
and telegraph wires. Recently in build
tag the Guadalajara branch of the Mexi
can Central railway, it lia* l*ecn noticed
by the engineers that as fast as thc con
Itruetion advances rain follows, and they
hold that this is due to thc large quan
tity of steel rails on flat ears, which are
carried forward as fast as thc work of
aonstruction permits. The most notices
ble fact is that thc country ig dry in ad
v*»ce of th* construction trains and also
behind them for many miles. Rains beat
down ta bucketfuls juat where tlie steel
’***"*' but * iew “»h*
PAB* AND GARDEN.
Pruning Peach Tree*.
Peach trees produce fruit next year on
the present year’s growth. Consequently
this should not be cut away or shortened
too much. It is better to ent away a
portion of the young growth wholly,
leaving sufficient wood to bear fruit next
season, and shorten this about one-third
so as to secure perfect ripening before
winter. It is the unripe wood which is
killed by severe weather and the cold
winds in the winter; hence, the pruning
should be done early in the fall, in Oc¬
tober, for instance, rather than later. If
manure is applied it is better to defer
this until late in the winter, when it will
tend to prevent early growth and escape
the danger from early frosts .—Noe Tori
Timet.
Seed Corn.
i, taPOT ^ ««•
corn by careful selection has been
periment preached from time out of date, and ex
has proven tluit there is also a
necessity for care in the storing as.*«< of the j
i. m*m j
seasons have to be provided for, early
varieties may not only be kept early, but
-in two or three seasons be made still 1
earlier, by selecting for seed such ears
as rinen first The importance of choos
mg fair-sized, well-developed ears taken
from stalks which produced at least two
<*ars, is also apparent to any one who has
given the subicct i anv thought " 'i' In * the "
Kcleciinn selection of seed i corn too much care can
not be observed in keeping a well-tried
and desirable variety unmixed. Kemem
ber that two sorts growin" in “ near r nrox- 1.
1 „.:n i • T™ ° f ,hln ^, m,x
hence h-- h • -
' >t .S no. n ,t W„e to save f for seed s„eh
Thcre docs not appear to be any safer
course or better mode of sowin" seed ehrn
than the old-time one of puHing back
and braiding the husks of twenty or more •
ears braided together and then hangin" tluT these 1
strands of corn from rafters
of a corn dr?m.tlI)uT house a smoke house ™Slat the ittie i !
or some T
be kept dry and out of reach of rats and
mice. Dampness and mould will ruin it 1
It is a wise plan to select only well
they ripened do ears. not dry When quickly picked and a little liable green j
are to
mould. Not a few farmers plan to hang .
their seed corn between tnc rafters of
their smoke houses, believeiug that in'•
addition to the dryness there found, the
smoke pernwnting the kernels has an ex
,ls ;l |m ; v<:i ; ,i r U T
I ' Ulhl / ts -;7cr the crop is planted.—„W v ior/.
-
--—
A New Method With Dahlias.
suc a cessfully —.. practiced m.». France, «*.««», is de- s
in
sc ribed in I'.H’s Majatine. / It consists
ju }i„„ in<r t. (] the tems of thc , P )lants ,an,s I
,
"™ r
" t ^ f< ’ r )a, ? 1,as °
l tri 'l A "'a' 1 ' 10 ''’ svt th JJ P'-uits
w i hb a slight : inclination, in order to fa
vor laying flown tho stems after\vitr<l ■
’; 1 ”' s, ™‘ *» "- 1 - - ,s
peg-- are
...........................
Th,-’ 1 1 »“ nnlv Y« ,e , to i
h «<>''< r ^c-ms. to an upright posjt loll
I , hints of strong grow ing varieties will
cover a space *, of a square yard or more,
M1 „ ... ld ik" !, *.
. ‘ ‘T . ■ i n - ,h fuU ,,
« row " r
I he pegs are used . to keep , thc stems id
* at tla* eoiiiuumeeimmt and after
. t . 4 > -md , used ,
‘ again,
,h U' ic-onon.i/ing them
Jlortiurr, ,/V ' from r" ,0 th which , fi .^ r,tyr tlic-si 1,1 ,h notes £ LSjd art
tak t . nt i lis lllode of etiiturc will adapt *,
J . , ir k ^ i......• , ‘ .f”*?* , 1 <nrdersean , "" ,,, , f l«i , f formed ,a,u ? n of V‘
a
•»’ H lort*d flower.or. on the contrary
the colors can be varied, and every other!
„lant * em, lie introduced according to
, i i •
' ” '
In , pan! ing , large grounds . these , ideas ..
arc w ‘‘ 11 wol t by of being put into prac
tice.and the- skillful gardne-r will readily
perceive (he ailvunta<-es ____H fiffercal '
, ‘ A,"cation ot Man,,re
jjg? mm «"!>, "ithiinmmum - .«!«« preser, lo-s \. ma .tl.'\ .. < , 1
great importum but , , , application .. to , the
soil, or to ,m P°r ta, ! t
matter ir* .i*'‘l’'- n 1 * I*'
c-itc cate th-ii that t, to spread I it it upon Ibc soil . pist
before plowing, and then to sow the seed
and have the roots of plants ready to alt- I
sorb the plant-fowl as fast as ■ released by
of •lei'ouiposition. would be the better wav *J !
saving the valuable ingredients 0
manure, but H-n-nt practice of many far
liters would sc. 11 to nflord evidence that
then- are sum things which chemists
have not ycl satisfactorily explained,
since the oidiimrv rotation of crops
so York, generally adopted in Western New
has been practiced, that is, lint- I
nuro upon clover and timothy sod, fol- j
lowed wheat by and barley that and by meadow, oats, those* crops far- by |
have practiced hauling many
mers out during'1 their j
manure at convenient si asons;
«hc winter, sometimes daily or weekly,
when the weather and circumstances •
would permit, and continuing so to i
do until ready to plow lor
corn in thc spring. Many fanners | '
hu vo i » f «™»«*» | us that the favorable re
iul,s 1 ,,f »»*.* course were plainly visible j
m the corn, and that on those parts ol
die fields where manure was spread
earliest iu winter thc corn was best, thc
growth neared diminishing the of as the plowing. time of spread
mg time A Ger
man farmer who watched for several
years the effects of surface application of
manure became convinced that a load of
raw * ""f- nncntcl manure had
quite os much effect as a load of manure
that had been condensed and shrunken
by by fermentation. If. then, farmers will,
the use of absorbing litter and gvi)
sum and compm-ting in the stables'or
manure sheds, do what they can toward
preserving the the manural elements before
will, manure from time is applied time to the soil, and
to through th w III
ter. when the weather is favorable, tin
earth frozen and little or no snow
vipon the surface, haul out and spread
the manure evenly over tho surface, they
...:n .i., ,i.„ A ,i„. ■; ,“7 .i."»
no ." s hed , the subject .’. by . both
upon
science and experience-toward husband
ing ing the the manure of thc f irm and prevent
soil from deteriorating —Aine-i
- »■ •im
Kai-in ami Garden Notes.
Rye sown now will give a welcome bite *
to milch cows several months later.
Feed pigs little aud often. They have ,
small stomachs a-.id great appetites and »
they tion are easily gorged, but their disres
is rapid.
One of the greatest drawbacks to he
giuners in poultry raising is to attempt
to keep fifty fowls in a house or lot none
too large for twenty-five. |
fields, Hogs are capital gleaners of wheat - ;
of clover especially if there be also a good
set in the field and drinking
is ^ ,
water convenient to them.
When the farmer lias wood ashes aud !
charcoal on hand, it is a great advantage 1
to mix salt with them and give the mix- 1
ture to swine a* a preventive of disease
Authorities differ as to Utc best time to
c l „ t hay. A* a rule, farmers wait to..
0U g 1,,-foro cutting, and to strike it ju-i
rijfht requires judgment ami experience,
♦ *® *1 ,hc usc of f «‘ las,er . ln
* - - ■ 1
ciation - with „ the best
manure, . to ,
sprinkle little behind the way is
a cattle every
day—say two or three ounces per head.
Save the wood ashes to u-c as a fertil¬
izer. It is more profitable than to sell
them to the soap nutker. Wood ashes
never come amiss on the ... farm or in . the , \
? arUen - ;
Turkeys bc as well as chickens should j j
not allowed to roost on narrow roosts
while breasts, growing, especially as in the it causes large variety crooked of j
fowls. |
Mixed farming is most useful in keep
ing up the soil to a degree of fertility.
The specialties engaged in should be in
the keeping with the soil and conditions of
farm.
A more profitable crop or a more pala¬
table crop cannot be grown than green
Lima beans, picked in the cool of the
UrnTnoith^ ** M ’* Ued ! fog*" for
Jt
The Suffolk sheep, as claimed by their
friends, have few superion extraordinaty as a mattbn
and Bh«p. They make England. They weights
hardy are popular good in are
aad gmers.
To prevent^ice on fowls, the best
sene should not be used on the bodies of
hens, as it may sometimes kill them.
The opinion is gaining ground that
tho pro tier feeding and care of swine has
much to do in warding off disease; and
this in the face of the fart that the most
carefully fed lots sometimes die in an in
credibly short t : me
At sixty days of age,save an exchange,
lambs will nc-t from to or more * a
1 i "hilt kroner Vs 'Vo" °k i .i ° i
i n ess’ is as tell' c-en t b - m
two l or three vear- cl^ to heA them for the
same pnee n. e per i,T l head , as wethers. we
1 he Iowa Agricultural < ollege expen
ments show that deep culture iu the
middle of the row does less injury than
near the hills. I.evel culture of a medium
depth accomplishes 1 all the «-,u purposes of
..»«»*,w the ........... inj „„
to roots
Hogs are excellent gleaners of th<
wheat -......... fields . We have never observed
any ill effects upon the animals if there is
plenty wheat of clover and water as well as sonic
in the field. Sheep, on the other
hand, we should hardly eare to trust on
the ^tuhhlc«
Horses put to hard , work will almost
mrelv show tmffi «»nt- unrlm- iho hnr
,„. ss which 1 will won ,l,,lke m ike bml 1 ” MI KJ uills 1 ' 811 if
. „ , Cift the harness and bathe
spots with cold water when the team
rests at evening. Make sure that collars
esl , pciallv fit Wl .„ an d are smooth and
hard
Many farmers w ho have an almudancc
of s,raw «»>}«« a,a " lt king
!V I he stac k shou.d be will built, e\en
11 one mtcu< ‘ 9 to rut 1 Jie straw Dry
*traw is . comparatively light and easy to
bundle, and it c an l>e thrown from the
««'k «•>«} s< < l t*ercd over the yard from
suuc to tunc without much trouble,
if Poultry possible,' yards in should be on sandy soil,
order to avoid mud oi
»bish on the ground, as roup is liable to
break out in flocks that arc: kept in clamp
locations. The yards should be well
drained, the surface covered with sharp.
fine gravel, and cleaned off at least once
every two weeks where the flork i« large
Oxford Down sheep attain to very
h,avy *5? r am ilt,hrd • vents ol
age reaching as high , us 400 lake-, pounds, and
ewes :{00. 'Ihey are the of the
dium mutton breeds, and yield a th-ce of me
«*».»: wool weighing c«v« twenty lli pounds
th ^ «t have been on exhibition but 300
pounds is not an unusual weight for r ams
over two years old
HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
To Remove Mildew from doth.
An exchange recommends to first wash
with soai), or steep in a weak solution
of caustic soda, rinse well, and then
steep for several hours in a decanted
solution of chlorinated lime containing
one-half pound to the gallon; then rinse
thoroughly, and dry in the sun It may
he necessary in -oine cases to repent thc
operation file al>o\ methods apply
only to uneolored cotton and linen fab
rics. Great eare should Ih- taken to en¬
tirely remove the bleaching solution by
thoroughly rendered rinsing, or the goods will lie
rotten It would be advisable
to rinse first in weak vinegar (one pint
vinegar to a gallon of wateri, then in
watci For colored fabrics, the use of
good soap rubbed oil the spots, with
thorough rinsing, and exposure to the
sunlight, is probably the safest means.
Sail Ntiickci-cl.
Soak over night a medium sized salt
mackerel Next morning drain and boil
lift hen minutes, pour over ii a little
melted butter and the juice of half a
lemon. "Broiled salt mackerel always
looks poorer than when boiled The di
ret t contact with the lu-at hardens its
surface, ble making it somewhat imligesti
J 8liould you insist on having it
broiled pour over . it a cpiait of hot watet
la fore removing it from the-broiler. This
softens them somewhat and sw ells them
eating to thurnormals^ salt , lonn mackerel, ..i claiming Many object that they to
««’ iudigestiblea.nl complaining of |l,e
long after taste. This unpleasantness y!, is
( , tllM . d thc Xt . w l k |, y
tloialing the food with liquids whilecat
ing. Drink your coffee ami oilier liquids L,
, ’' V , , ?’ ,g f ^en tasting the . fish,
‘ r ‘ '' akfa l-V '“ , l*cr f f «M*Hy t dry. * } Mioveall, re-t f nias- tin
.
j ' unl von will have no
fu "l‘"r troubl,
l -oliil Hints.
A cotton fiaiiucl bag vvriu ut in cold
water and tied over a broom L the thing
with which to wipe floors vv here rugs, not
varpets, arc used
To remove kerosene from a carpet, lay
blotters or soft brown paper over thr
spot and press with a warm iron. Repeat
with fresh pujicrs till th sj* >t is n
move*I.
French toast is made of lliiii slices cut
from a stale loaf and moistened in milk
aud twoe-os .....,,7;,griddle to a pint of milk
alld with a mixture
of butter and lard, or butter ami beef
driimin-rs like " F c-iicn with wi-.-ir or
svriip. * griddle cak
A Ilov ,. 1 dish Take a low gla-s dish.
, i( Ilf then cut
slices not very thick isay, ouc-quartcr of
an inch i of the red and yello tomato
two or three layers in all, more or lc-s —
then a little salt, pepper, ami vinegar, or
the juice of a lime or lemon, and lay some
broken ice over all.
Meats nnd their uceompaiiiments:
With roast beef, grated horse radish;
p*)rk, apple sauce; roast veal, tomato
sauce; roast mutto i, current jelly; boiled
mutton, caper sauce; boiled chicken,
bread sauce; roast lamb,cranberry sauce;
boiled turkey, oystt auc venison,
black cm rant jelly; boiled bhiefish.whito
cream sauce; broiled fluid, boiled rice aud
salad: fresh salmon, green peas cream
sauce; roast goose, apple sauce.
Tlie liuo French polish is said to be
one pint of spirits of wine, a quarter of
an ounce of gum copal, the same of gum
arable, and one ounce of -hellae. This
polish is, used for plain wood that has
been stained in imitation of natural
wood. The principle of action is filling
the potes with gummy or resinous sub¬
stance and bringing the poii-h up by rub¬
bing. The simplest varnish is a solution
of shellac dissolved in naphtha.
Few Knew It
Few people now a lavs if asked who
W as the fir,t Governor of HUnois, would
answer I’at rick II, n r\ Yet this is the
case ties of An Virginia net was in p’as-ed October, by the authori¬
1778, rre
ating the county of I.linois (in the State
of Virginia), which embraced the terri
to; v now forming the Slate of Ohio, In
'liana, Illinois. Michigan and Wisconsin,
organized, making probably exceeding the the largest county ever 1
whole of Great
Britain and Ireland, aud thus the great
u ra,or of the American Involution, Vat
nok . ,Ienr ,hen Governor Virginia,
>’« ,*i
b ‘' ci,,,1,; , “ u Governor of Illinois.-.
Ch t •'ngo yett*.
Our Disappearing Forests,
In a little xvliile this tarth w ill not lx
a decent place of habitation Yn earth
w ithout vast forests cannot maintain its
inland water supply and the proper soil
conditions for the tu*eds of agriculture.
Our forests are disappearing w ith fright¬
ful rapidity In this countrv we have
less than 500,000.0(Ml acres of forest area,
and thc consumption is more than 20,
cubic feet annually. This ____
do ,. s not include the enormous annual
loss.-s from forest fires The forest*
within easy reach will lie practically ex
hausted before any new crop started can
be ready for use, or can be of any tna- i
terial service in maintaining tlie proper j
m inf all .—Mil tea ulee Sentinel
an Stoc&wlttSStta’iS Hcubcu Brifnrs „f Armstrong Mo Iras
three litters of jiigs, as follows: First
litter, sixteen *cond, thirteen,,
and third, eighteen pigs; total, forty
ren.
J A Jackson, Mich., manufactures is j
^ Australia.
:r old gravestones,
-
QUAINT TICUT BPITAPHS IN A C0NNEC j
CEMETERY. *
__ !
! Th *„!";!,“'kr,ro o f ,“s Ne "
o 8a,n i
*
J* Poetry. „ ,
Glancing to the right through the cat j
WI “ dow just before the local express |
jus"®* upon the little bridge over Mill
( .^ ek toth « east, and dashes on into the
yl of N ® w Milford, Conn., the New
' ork bound passenger gets a glimpse of
xJw 0f t iL t| ,5 ,ain t r t |° rd gn \ ve J ar<1 * ia
N F„ England. T Its brown, bat’s-eared
gravestone* road are strewn so near thc rail
track that the thundering express
SCf,rnS to g r nd thcm beneath its wheels.
’ s ° mc of the gravestones have sunk
almost , out of sight. Others, with sides
stained warjied and crumpled, pu-h their weatlier
tangled uoses up iu defiance through the rank
grasses of time’s de
cay. A few lie prone in shamefaced
overthrow. The stranger, particularly j
if he be an antiquarian, will find rare
grubbing Home among these rusty old stones.
of the gravestones are nearly 250
years old. Milford was settled in 1639, i
and the settlers began to die apparently j
about as soon as they got here. A good |
many never received the Christian burial
as thc Indians attended to their
obsequies without inviting the relatives '
or personal friends of the deceased !
One of the earliest inscriptions that is
entirely preserved is on a slab above the
rather pretentious tomb of Governor!
Robert Treat. It reads:
Here Lvetii Interred the Body of Coll.
Robert Treat, Esq., Who Faithfully Serve!
This Colony in the Post of (Jovernour and
Years Deputy Hovernour Near Ye Space of Thirty
and at the Age of Four Score and
Eight! ears. Ex-imnge<l This Life for Bettor.
July 12. Anno Dom. IT 10.
Johnathan Law mother Governor of
the colony, is also buried in this grave¬ i
yard. He was born in Milford on August s
G, 1(112, and died thcre on November t>,
1750. He was Governor from 1742 until
1750. His resting place, like Governor
Treat's, is marked by one of the few flat
tombstones above ground. Several
other colonial dignitaries have simple
headstones. On others the early obituary I
eulogist has left his copious trade marks
Here is a sample
. ... t, ". u y ouol al 1 ant * ,ious Roger
Newton ' ’ '' '
' “An officer of distinguished note in ye ex
of [edition 1709and ITlo, for many years one
ye council anti colonel of the (Second regi¬
ment of militia, judgeof the court of common
pleas thirty-three years, nuti 1 he departed
this life, January 15, 1771 in the s;th year of
liis uge.
"His The mind the returned to tiorl.cntonilied here lies !
part hero left 1-eii-ath the skies.
Newton as steel; inflexible from right.
In faith, m law, m equity, tn light.
Another panegyrist relates that Isaac
miles, Esq., was a gentleman
Genuino “Distinguished by manly sense.
intregrity un i tirnmess,
A!;"t':V 111 e' .-mp!o\'meitt7, 1 '. 1 *•" virtue - ri a
And in pubhe
A life very useful to his family
Ami to the public.
And adds that at last this excellent
gentleman----
• Worn out hv a long and distressing asthma,
Borne with singular |wtiem-e,
He diwl on the I5tli <d November, ltsti,
in the 55th year of his uge.’"
Mortuary about poetry abounds. Some of it |
is as original and as startling as the
most versatile genius in this line pro
duces. Neither young nor old have es
raped it in the Milford graveyard. F.lilni j
Fowler, son of Jonathan Fowler, died on
October 0, 178!*, three years and four
months old, and his untimely fate is thus
graphic ally epitomized:
■ His life n span, the mournful toll
Declares the exit of In, soul!
Grim Death is come! His life is call’d
7.° ta j“' 0 its tl1 ' means l a scald. 1
Bv Bv deep del?, n iH-n.anee.nuke ?u ( hnst rn P your ur T friend ’ , „ ”
tr T 1111 r< 5 108
r 'fGillit, \f a wife, to Mr Mill
Vo U lt ’ l "" ' w ^° du ' d F ebruary
i's 1 ‘'"enty-nine • . years old, isoneot
•
the , most lemarkahh- tributes in the en
tire graveyard. Manifestly it was writ
ten by her husband. Its orthography is
unusually eccentric even for those days
of arbitrary spelling. Here it is;
“Her Dying Words unto her husband are-,
ltefruin your passions! Why so much Dis
It's tlie pairc
will of <h»d! I h, it’s for the Best
For yon! For me! And my mothers—
less
To n home a<lu i'o (i.sl l 1 Toil
I now ('omnu-ml that care
--I’attoru of Patriots to thp end of lif,
Now Dod, she speaks to every Living wife,
J'eti Such Juels Sliould tie laid ii 1 Dust;
Men are Unwo-thy and the Lord is just."
Drollest and decidedly most realistic
of all tho inscriptions arc those on thc
gravestones of Miss Mary Fowler ami
Mrs Sarah Bryan, consort of Captain
Richard Bryan. Mis< Fowler was in
her 21 ill year when she died on Feb. 1,
17'J2 Phis is the inscription that was
composed in her honor:
“ Wits Molly, suddenly though pleasant in her day
seized and sent away;
How soon she's ripe, how soon she's rotten,
Sect —New to the grave and soon forgotten."
York Commercial Advertiser.
SELECT SIFTINGS.
f\ Nt-v., is raising cucumbers
three feet long and ten pounds in weight,
Surnames w ere first adopted Ior. in the
of K-lwsml
A Washington physician has success
fully performed the operation of implapt
ing teeth.
and Astronomy Chaldea, was cultivated in E fO’l't
2800 B. t Persia ’•*o«i •
India, :>101, and in China, 21*52
The first voyage of discovery was that
patronized Plui-niciuns by Neeho, in which some
left Egypt by the Red Sea
and returned by way of Gibraltar.
In 1087 the sea retired from the coast
of Peru and returned in mountainous
wuvos which destroyed . , everything ... on
thc coast, among other places Callao.
A straight line can be drawn through
seventy-five miles of the Indian River.
Florida without touching short It is
called the straightest river in the world
An Oeont M»ii.) man lias a gander
that follows him around like a dog, a nd
will sound the alarm when a stranger en¬
ters the yard, and attacks the intruder
with his wings and beak.
The first bread was made l*y the
Greeks, and the first wind-mills by the
Saracens the Turnpikes were originated in
12(17, sum of one penny having to be
paid for each wagon passing through a
certain manner.
I lie first rrconl , . have of , coal , .
AV<* l*
about three hundred years before the
«J3?L*5x Si I'm!
Ncweastle-Oll-Tyne.
It is t curious fact that the name of
Daniel W eh-ter appears upon none of
the rolls of the counsellors of the Su
preme Court, nor is thcre anywhere a
record of his admission to the bar of
that court. It is probable that he was
already so distinguished as a lawyer
when he argued his first case in the Su¬
preme Court that if any one thought of
it, it was taken for grunted that he had
taken the oath and signed thc roll, and
no one raised the question.
Could Stand No Fu rtlior Reduction.
A new book on Scotland tells the
story of a Mr. Durham and his servant,
who gave warning because he could not
bear the to be pointed at as “the man who
had hatin’ maister.” His rebuke was
taken in good part, and he was instructed
to thought give his master a nudge when he
a story a little exaggerated,
The story proceeds:
“Not long afterward Mr. Durham was
entertaining when he at dinner a party of friends,
he had proceeded to describe some
foxes seen abroad with tails
twelve feet long. Peter gave his master
lus a nudge when Mr. Durham remarked to
guests; “No, I am wrong Not
twelve? they were six feet long.” Pe-j
ter administered a second nudge. Ah, ;
well, on reflecting, said Mr. Durham,
1 ^ f wcre ^
and S u" addressing g his alternant »‘tcndant, U said
c
‘’Peter if I reduce ‘ the “ tall fuvth.r f rtUer the »t,„
lore's gone ” 4
What do w« liV» for if i
life km ditfieultroeach o
BoGUilfU and thc Pig.
A few year* ago there lived in the
little village of Florenoerllle, on the 8t.
John River, New Brunswick, a little
north of Ireland schoolmaster and petty
great in his own estimation,
jf not placed in some petty office he
was convinood and at that everything district meeting was go
ing wrong, every
and in every hour of every day he would
be loud in his denunciation of the pow
*rs that were. So, to keep peace, he
was usually accommodated with some
“«. one else wanted. This
particular spring he was elected hog
reave There or pound keeper,
lived in the same village John
tieal J?aritis, joker. a blacksmith One day, apd while a noted the honors prao
of lus office were still fresh upon Mo
Oilligau, Reave’s Parkis dropped into Mr. Hog
little shop with the startling
news that a pig was running loose on
the common.
“Whose pig is it ?” asked McGilligan.
it . ought knows,’’ answered John; “but
to lie in pound.”
“Mure,” said the poundkeeper, ‘Til
B, ’o that the laws are enforced,” and in
bis fresh white shirt and white vest and
trousers he sallied forth to apprehend
the disturber of the peace,
lor some reason,probably best known
to the blacksmith, every boy and loafer
aml v< ‘ llow do K iu the village was on the
-
L ' ommou smaI1 , watching the pig, which was a
ver - v one ’ blllok us “ crow and un '
uonsclolls thftt lts minutes of liberty
nere numlHiied. ,
Moth lagan surrounded the pig, but
it refused to be driven into the pound.
Some way, every time it was at the en¬
trance some villainous boy would man¬
age to start it the other way. The old
man threatened, coaxed and chased the
pig until lie was about tired out and on
the point of abandoning the pursuit,
when Darkis reminded him that the pig
must go to pound. “True,” said Mc
Gilligan, “but how the deuce am I to
8 et him tilpro >’
“Why,” explained the exasperated
reev «> “carry him in; he’s but a little
one
Rooner said JoDe - McGilli
gR " , ftlul deposited it in the
! , om,,l ‘ lmtl ie was a sorry sight
I ls s,K, ' v J r clothes , were as black as the
”
pig. The rascally blacksmith had taken
the ]>ig and thoroughly rubbed him
"i(h lampblm-k and oil McGilligan’*
nn-bitum for office was satisheil.
An Unhappy Princess.
A Paris letter says: The Crown Prin
ces8 Stephanie Thursday of Austria came here
quietly and as quietly depart
ed Friday for the Island of Jersey,
where she will remain for several weeks.
She was accompanied by a numerous
suite, several members of which remain
in Paris. She left them here to do shop
ping and other commissions for her
while she is rusticating in the Channel.
^ ^marked by all who saw her that
slie lias changed much for the worse
since her marriage. She used to be, as
I remember her at the Belgium Court, a
plump, robust little lady, always smil
ia K ftud in tho V,, “ Ht of health anti spirits.
She was seventeen years old when she
was married. Now she is twenty-three,
But she looks every day of thirty-live,
and lias constantly the care-worn, un
happy look of a woman the best part of
whose life is long sinco past. The oause
of this is a mystery to the public. I am
even told her own family are ignorant of
it. Whatever her grief is, she bears it
alone and conceals it from every one.
Her marriage with the Crown be Prince love
match. Rudolph Peoplo was supposed she to vexed because a
say is
he spends so much time in hunting and
scientific research. Others say her jeal
0U8 y lias better oause, and that his huut
^ ing excursions are merely i masks, ; under
of which Lu carri on lov affair8
with numerous pretty peasant girls.
Others say the trouble is merely ill
health, and that the domestic relations
of the couple are of the happiest char
n,,tt*r. Whatever be the trutn, Stephanie
; b certainly a most unhappy woman,
At the ball at Oldtown, Me., recently
given by the governor of the Maine In
dians, one handsome young squaw was
fa ; rly dazzling in a very becoming cos
tumeof blue satin and old gold plush,
with an elaborately embroidered front to
the skirt, ami another wore a dress ot
combined bright scarlet and bright blue.
rrofcNNlonnl Klliiuetln
prevents some doctors from advert i sm g their
tional skill, but rulen tve and are think bound tliat by if no sum make ennven- dis
we a
co\ that is of tieneflt to our fellows, ive
ought t> spread the fact to tho whole land.
Therefore land tho we fact cause that to lie I)r. published R. V. Pierce's throughout "Gold
(he
c'i Medical for consumption Discovery” (scrofula is the best of the known lungs) real¬ and
kindred ly diseases. Send 10 in for
cents stamps
I)r. Pierce's complete treatise on consumption,
with unsurpassed means of self-treatment.
Address, W orld's Dispensary Medical Associ¬
ation, tittJ Main street, Buffalo, N. V
Mexico buys more pistols than all the United
States, They are of the biggest calibre.
lame Troubles and Wnmlng
Diseases can be cured if properly treated In
time.asshown by tlie following statement from
I>. Fbf.eman, Sidney: “Having attacks, been a great
sufferer from pulmonary and gradu¬
ally wast ng away for the past if two years,it
Kmp^k'n of ver relief, Oi lwft I 1 cheerfully ime and sSda
has given me great and re
S^"JBj|ftSfSS^a!S«» pleasant to tuke."
Mrs. John Jacob Astor pays her e hief cook
$7,000per annum. She bus dyspepsia
Woman and Her Disease*
is ihe title of a large illustrated treatise, by
Dr. It. V. for Fierce, Buffalo, N.Y., sent It to any
add re sss ten cents in stamps. teaches
uccea sful self-treatment.
The legal latest advice thing in charities Is furnishing
free to tho poor.”
do Unlike rentier other the cathartics, bowels Dr.PierceV'PolletB" after
not costire opera
lion, but on tho contrary, establish a perina.
nently partlouhir healthy action. I required hi mi entirely while reyetahle, using
no care is
lem ‘ 1 r UgglStH
debtors Give slops lo Drs. Sun their & work. Air, d the other
cannot get in
('onsumpilon Wurely Cured.
To the Editor:—Please Inform vour r eaders
that 1 have a positive remedy for tho above
named disease. Bj its timely use thousa nds of
hopeless cases have send been permanently bottles of cured. remedy 1
shall be glad to of two readers who my have con
to any they your will their Express
Stll j nption if send me
aiid 1*. O, address. SLOCUM, Respectfully, M.O., 181 Fear 1 St, N. Y
T. A.
KVEHY
faj
IS S
uno it hh directed, and you will always be tflad
you reftd thU item.
—- -
JsHItiSaHjKaa.Ss.lHxs „
LtiJ ana,va. XiiKM Sr "
Talleat People Uty. *
ar ^>' J^j^'t'M^roS’nhey^r- colds, will be there
i P ,.t tln-ir coughs Use or Taylor’sCherokeo they Remedy of
still longer. Mull j
Sweet <*um ami ein
Dnnghlers, Wive* and .Vloihert,
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases B
securely v sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica
Sick Headache
who Isoneot It* tbs victims mostdlatressin* destr.u sympathy. affestluat;and But the people reet |
ere f
success HoihI's Sers«r*rlll* has had In curiae sick
effect upon the <lig©Btive orgaus, h<xmi b Martaparina
readily give* relief when headache arises from lndl
*e»ti,m. and m neuralgic oooditiom by buUdioc up
the debilitated system. Hood's Sarsaparilla removes
the cause and hence overcomes the difficulty.
"My wife suffered from sick headache and neu
ralgla. After taking Hood's Sarsaparilla she was
much relieved.” W. R. Btee, Wilmington, Ohio.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggist*. SI; «ix for *5. Preparad onl/
by C. I. HOOD * CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Maas.
IOO Doses One Dollar
uathkk profamk. j j
--
George Venable, a well-known young
^ <oan of Columbus, r’a Ga., was charged raj
>"g PV bl > c worship. court recently He with arose disturb- in the, j
Salva \‘° a A rn ^ °? a Sunday night and
“Our J Father, !° , who ,ngprayer: art in heaven, 1
Hallowed be Thy name;
Send u* down a jug of rum,
Aud we’ll get there all the «*m«. ! ’
Mayor primes non honml
“I Car* Fll*.»
This heiullnx Is a familiar night to most news
,1°
has a world wide reputation os a successful
specialist In this distressing disease, and has,
no doubt, cured more oases than of all other doc
tors combined. As an evidence good faith
the doctor sends a free sample bottle of his rem¬
edy to all sufferers who write for it If they give
their Express and Pestoftlce address.
MARVELOUS
MEMORY
DI 8 COVERY.
Wh«!lf aallkt artificial lyitem*.
Aay b«#k Uarned la one reading.
\: v *$ amcntal ^ngm#nlcs iPLMofthe in Loisettian Conception, Hygtem Pro
tn<l ll. mode The in powerful. neural Memory rrtv RentoreU to it* right use
Scientific i>clv aw the Microscope fuid
relMOopfi K/Mlfbt, oonatltute U ■ extension of the Nut
iral to the Solentlflealljr tralnetl Memory
in axtenflloa of the Natural Memorv.
in. Tbd power of Continuous Aitt jntlon growime
with the M Memorv.
IV. Memory and Attention being strengthened to
Ihe hlghoet degree by the five lessons, the System Is
&o longer used, except In rare cnees at ilrst and after
ward In noue at all.
*rof. lioisettu gave me a new memory" -Hon.
Jud ah P. Benjamin-“It has greatly strengthened
py natural memory”—Hon. w. W. Aftor, late U. s.
Minister to to to Italy—-‘Prof. the Loisette’s system apjiears
me warrant strongest endorsement*’—Johu
C. Minor, of the M. D.-**I regret that It did not form a
part Rand, Esq., Paymaster curriculum of our schools”—Stephen
of the U. S. Navy "There Is
not one Institution of learning in tho land that would
he without Its aid If Its worth were known" Rev. A.
J. Mclr.erney, Hector of Ht. Mary’s Church, Annapo
llB-"I have formed ono class by correspondence;
and have decided that hereafter 1 shall try to induce
all my students to master this system before they
engage —Hev. in tho linguistic studies under my direction*’
Francis D. Denlo, Professor of Hebrew In the
Bangor is Theological boom Seminary---“Prof. only Loisette’s
system shorthand, a great but the not to tho -\V. student \V. Wll of
to veteran reporter"
son. '’Since Stenographer learning
your System. I ftnd I can toon learn
to play any piece of music without uotes, a feat im
l>OHAtble to me formerly”--KUta t'awthorne fhethml -"No
man has a memory so jnior tl at this will not
greatly aid It; nor has any oue a memory so good us
not to stand In m»ed of thc help which ft can fur
nlsh”—-Prof. ni Wm. H. Harper, of Yale —“By his Hyg
tH m I have already lenrnetl one book in our reading
and I intend to learn many more In the same way"
Sir Edward H. Meredyth, Bart,—"l confidently rec¬
ommend your system to all who desire to strengthen
their memory and cure their mind wandering" •
Bernard Ellis, Esq.--"It Is a perfect memory sys¬
tem”—Wee sly Budget—"Ido not say that i made
myself a walking Hume or Macaulay, but I do
say thAt what I had learned, t knew perfectly,
thanks to your system. The result whs full inn ark»
(ISO)”- oft Reginald Bursnry E. Murray. Eeq.------"I have Just «•< >n»e
top lu a examination, and 411*1 I owe mv . MIC i
cess i lu lu great great measure incasurc to t the general prill luiproveiiient
which wnicn your your s»t«iu svbtein had effected In mv relcnthcuesR
and and acumen* acumen-- — Thoma Thomas recomnieniiltiK Tnlt, Kmi. “I huve e no no hcM- ht»M
tat I on In thoroughly ighlv r« the nvht •tern to nil
who are In earnest lent In m wIhIiIiik wiHiiing to to train train tliel tneir n lemo
rie» effectively, and »n<1 are are thereforo thereforo wlllliiK w illing totAke re.i
soiiable pains to obtain obtain no so UHcful useful a a result result" r. Mr. Rich
ard A. Proctor, the Astronomer----"Prof. onier - Lolsctte did
not create a memory for or me; me no, amounted nothing of the
kind. And yet he did for mo what to thc
name thing, for he proved to me that I already Imd
a memory, a thing which I won not aware of till then.
I had before been able, like moet people, to store up
*n d lose things In the dark cellar of my memory, but
he 8lh. wed me how to light up figure the cellar. It Is the
difference—to chunge the collect between having
money where you can’t It, and having It lu
your pocket. The Information cost me but little yet
I value Twain)--’‘There It at a prodigious figure ’ S. L. Clemens,
(Mark Is this all inqiortant differ
ence between other systems and that of Prof I/S
sette, that while the former are arbitrary and artl
flclal and Psychological the latter Is entirely principles" based The upon Peoples Physiological Friend
—-““I thus wood twenty hours out <*f twenty four in
learning the two sermons”— Hev. s. II. Lee.
Class of 10U Columbia Law students: each *J*■> at Meriden,
350 at Norwich; College two classes of ’.!>*> at of Yule; 400 at
Wellesley an<l too at Unlvorslty Pennsyl
vania; 850 at Oberliu College mid three large classes
at Chautuuqua. sent POST FREE, with opinions
full Prospectuses of emluent people In both continents. In
(ireat Inducements to Correspondence Classes
Address
PROF. 287 I.OIHETTK, Fifth Avenue New York.
nnicKLv I. Bitters A5H
IT IS A PUREiy VEGETABLE PREPARATION
j i PRI
j ISENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCKU
| AMD OTHEll tgUAUy Ef riClEXT REMtOIES
It has stood tho Test of Years,
Lin fefc^BLOOD, Curing all Diseases of the
LIVER, STOM¬
ACH, KIDNEYS,BOW¬
ELS, &c. It Purifies the
Blood, Invigorates aud
BITTERS Clean ses tho Sys tem.
dyspepsia7con8ti
CURES PAT10N, JAUNDICE,
ALLDISEASESQFTHE 8ICKHF. ADACHE, BIL¬
LIVER disappear IOUS COMPLAINTS, at once under &c
KIDNEYS its beneficial Influence.
; STOMACH It its is purely cathartic a Medicine
AND ties as forbids proper¬
BOWELS, its use as a
j bevera fits, It is pleas
ant to tho taste, nnd as
i easily taken by child¬
ALLDRUGGISTS ren as adults.
sm PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO
j IDOUAR St.Lolih Hole and Projtrie Ka? nsa tors, urr*
j ~ nurru QUEEN thaSOUTH or cniiru
j
PORTABLE MILLS.
SELECT FRENCH BUHRS,
For Stock Feed or Meal
for Family C»e.
Sit 8 Iim, PaU*rartloa <XiM*flnt#r(1.
| Write for IlMerlptlff-Urrulur.
Me ntion . Straub Machinery <’o.,
till* itaper. CINCINNATI, OHIO.
KIDDER’S
I
A Rl’RR cure for
INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. I
Orw 5,000 PhjfllHttUi hare Bent hb their approval of I
DIOESTtLIN, Baying that It 1 b the bet t preparation
for IndlgeBtlon that they have ever used.
We hare never heard of a case of Dvspeppla wbia
DIOK8TYLIN was taken that whb not cured.
FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM.
IT WIU, CUBE THE MOST AOfiRA VATI'.I) CASES
IT WIi.L STOP VOMITINCI IN PREUNANCV
For Summer I
Take DYOE8TYL1N for all pains ami disorder* of
Ihe Btomech ; they all come from Indigestion. Ask
your bottle). drufflftt Ir for DIOE8TYLIN (price fl per lur*e
lie does not have it Bend one dollar to us
and we will send m iwittle to you, express prepaid.
Do not hetltAte to teud your money. Our ooum In
reliable. fiBtahllBiied twentv five year*.
WM. F. K11)1>KH A ( ().,
MnnufociurMis ( heitiiai*, S.’f Jolt 11 St ,,N.Y.
YOI' WILMS AVI! AIONF.V,
Time, Fain, Trouble
and will (Till-;
AY-FEVER CATARRH.
HV L'MINCI
8KA Ely’s Cream Balm.
laiy Apply Bulm into each nostril
u *s Brus.,gU. OreeawicU »t., N.Y
§L/PERJ0R^ tSTyiB. rQUAIxITY
(x33%Sonsi v?/Aui\
PHILADELPHIA* SEHO
I QIIBC CITG i
r»dicklcure. I m*d« th« disawe or FITS, KPIL
EPHY or FALLING SICKNESS* lifelong study. I
( J - 9--BUL’K A OO , K) UrugiHald Wt rBoston. -Man.
LAND OWNERS! W' i.i •
^ If rheam Senufull description ana term,
y “ ! * de i g** l a U* ?•
— - .
WflPy FOR ALL. $R0 a week and expenne*
tl IlnlV free’ l'.V| l '‘viCK l Kny‘‘ n hl l sl| r sta.'\’im
Pefi»ions|iSSSM
OPIUM £3HiiK£ 2LtK£
VC i, worth »I WrlU M FREE
IPV u n am under the horse's feet.
Brswsler Safetr Rclu Holder Co.. Holly, Mich.
------- - ------- --------------------- -- h—
A A MOUTH. Agenti Wanted. 00 best soil
~™ WWAaar “’ JA r RRUAiaty.veiruU. Mien.
SSLICKER WaterproolGoat Is ErerMale. Tlie Best
■not hsvs tits "viiii SKt.D".»snd lor<ls<crl|.iivocstal»vii» to A. J. TOWElt. 8') SimmonvBL. Uostnn. Maw
Reducing the Stock.
ftdvei Customer tisc ‘sell,ng < in drug of?at store)_“I see you
. cost.’”
Druggist_“Y'es sir”
Customer -“What arc you getting for
Dr . I)rops y’ 9 Killcmnuick cure tor con
sumption, large bottles?”
d « uar -”
Customer—“But that* the same old
Druggist—“Yes, . sir. We
ou [ one aud two cent postage are stamp selling
W e are carrying a larger line
ton
'W <«•'<*
| . p R* IBg wv
a a w pA
©\\©\B PILLS.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. ALWAYS
ASK FOR DR. FIERCE’S PETT.ETS, OR
LITTLE SUGAR-COATED F1IA.S
crFulViSioutVirtuUian^rm^^st^di^ or occupation. Put up In gluas vials, hernwtt
tally sealed. Always fresh ami reliable. As
SICK HEADACHE.
Bilious Ileadaelie,
lion, Dlszluesa, Indigestion. ConaUpn.
Bilious AttackH,umtall
derangements of the stom¬ m
ach and bowels, arc prompt
ly relieved and permanently
cured Pleree*s by the use of I>r.
Pleasant Purgative I’cllefa
in explanation of the remedial power of-these
Pellets over so great, a variety of diseases, it
tho may truthfully universal, lie said tlmt th-lr action upon
system Is not a gland or tissue
escaping tln-ir sanative influence. .Hold hy
druggists, Chemical Laboratory 35 cents a vial. Manufactured at the
of Wohlu'h "ispknsahv
MtmcAi. Association, Buffalo. N. Y.
.$ 598 ™
is offered by the manufactur¬
ers of Dr. S«Ko’s ('utarrh
## - Chronic they Bt-inedv, cannot Nasal for cure Catarrh a case which of
, heavy SYMDTOitlS OF FATA Him. Dull,
headache, discharges obstruction ol the mc-al
passages, into tho I'r’.llng from the head
and throat, sometimes profuse, nut- ry,
a-rld, at others, thick, tenacious, muci -us.
purulent, pu Irloody and putrid; tho eyes arc
wen we a, wnt-ry, and 1 inflamed; there is ringing
in thc ears, d-aftn css, hacking or coughing to
clear the thr ■oat, expectoration of offensive
matter, voice is togot changed her with scabs from ulcers: tin
offensive: an 1 has a nasal twang tlio
breath is sun 11 and taste tils an mi
paired: there is a sensation of ill/. dizziness, wit h
mental depression, a hut-king cough mid gen¬
era! debility. Only a few ot (in- aho\ ua m-d
symptoms are likely to i pies-nt in anv one
ease. Th< lusands of cases annually, without
mariif esting half ot thc above symptoms, re¬
suit h in consumption, and end in tin- grave,
No disease is so ►- common, more deceptive and
dangerous, or !-ss understood healing by pliysieians.
Dr. By Sago's its mild, toothing, and pioperth*,
Catarrh Iteim-dy cures the worst
r asesor Catarrh, “ cold In the head,”
‘orjza, Sold and t'atnrrhnl tt-adache.
by ill uttgista ever} u Ii 50 cents.
“I ntolil Agony from Catarrh.**
l’r of W. II V sx r:a. the famous tm-smerist,
of /(hard, ,Y. 1*.. _ wriios: “Nome leu yearsn>io
1 suffered untold agi.iiy j'liysieian from eliro’nie imsai
catarrh. My family face me uj> sis
incurable, and said I must Ui->. Mv ease was
such a bad one, that every da;. towards sun¬
set, my voice would beeome id ih.art.i- 1 c-ouid
barely speak ahovi-a whisper, lit themornimr 1
my eoutrhiug and elearins of ritx tii vat wnu
almost strunitii- me. By the use ot >r. Say- a
Ciita rrh Beim-dy, he in has three inonlhs, I -as a wi ll
man. and t cure been permanent.''
“Constantly Iluuking and Spitting.”
Thomas J. ltrsiuvo. K«q„ ?:«-■> pine Shot,
St. Lnuix, catarrh Mo., writes: three “ I I was a great sufferer
from for '( years. At times 1 could
hardly breathe, and was constantly hawking
and could 8 spitting, breathe and for through the last the eight months
not nostrils. I
thought nothing could be done ' for me. Luck¬
ily, I was advised .o try Dr. Nasro’s f'utarrli
Bomedy. and I un now a well man. Iiniiov.
it manufactured, to be the only un-1 sure remedy bus only for catarrh now
one to give It n
fair triu! to experience astounding results and
a permanent curt
Thrco Bottles Cure Catarrh.
F.li ItonntNS, Runyan dautfliter P. had 0„ Columbia &
Pu., says: "My cutun-h w
she was live years «>!,!, v.-ry badly. I pri-.v Dr.
Sane's cured Catarrh bottle for Iteim-dy lu-r, and mlveiliNed, and that pro¬
a soon suw it
helped her; a third bottle effected a perma
nent cure. She is now eighteen years old and
sound and hearty
Pf£M MARK ^
CG-^7 ^SLiUHE d0N' HOU0 T ( <
Gone whnra the Woodbine Twir.eth
Kata are smart, but "Boron , n Uxth" 1 i*nf«
thi-rn. ('iaars out Bats, Mice, Bon, hes, U n(,-r
B'i»;s. Flies, Beetles, Moths, Ants, MoEmiitoca,
bkunlts, Bea-bug*. Weasol, lus-:cts. Potato Buxs. S't..-irr, Voles' ws
Mualt Kars, Jack (lonfiers, Bab bits, Chipmunks.
Kquim-ls l.'r *;'o
ROltSBIRT
Wash! ing and 8tarch!na Powri ar. A 'TV,-! ft.
tion in lx>u»i‘kf*epin*. A now tlihco', **r v is-r.Ui
the world How to Wash and I . ron.
made Dishes, clear Glassware, Windows,
as GIRLS crystal with Boi rl, I : r g
erisrjsia?* 71"!;,,',!K!...... Wfeia <li»uc- i.rli t no s
w'IshI'no and ut arch’Iho voul!, L',',
: 1 f "- m
finest fabric: i-lcara bh-neh-s, yt'liuwiicrfnjiax |.|(, iho ho
only article that h" w ns. -|l.e
COiCi> can mill, il to Mur, h i -it
plt»S8', to. give a i — si body ami I co.nful
ill? sist on J our I'nigglr'i nrdrraer i-, t
bur fifor yoi 1 .10 -So. K 8.Wells, Jersey ('ity
ROUGHSCORNS for ■ hard At or I soft iiittdsti,. Corn*
‘a
it* s
Solid Rolled Gold Rings almost
GIVEN
i Xj\
L “
Engage went King, tOe. l.adj et oldshldfl, Id,
ILv.
8
’r
T*. ”u.^r a
m
juip V
Popular Ulamoiul FUt Rand, Ilandiome ( our*,
Bi’lllng, 80 <*i*uto.
i h«abort cult raprcuf ut of tb* lots.; it >d ,, r r, iar d» a*
ir*anuraclur«4 In th« ring lino. Th« |.n- r .»u,* htt* w«
» Oifly lo Introduc# of our foodi. .1 W* fU Br* >• «.*„!* of tht kbor*
ba Dta.lB Ho] l-k. K-.il.-d Oikrr dralrrt
rl.B-tfifrom|].00 (o fi.tu f. r rli.ga u. t i.alf a. food. U'*»lt|
chp*rfu 11y r**luud tL* u. r ty to any «;M*t «bcJ euiU-rner With
•* Lh rir ‘| w# M,,d “ ur r 'Ulrai.d < ttologu* of WoUbro,
1 .alru, Chtriu. *-)d i-tbcr l Jewelry. U • l*k* | <>• t«ru iUn i« iR*
•Ain* Hat0« MC^h. bat nottoCoiiadA. K ng* »eut >.»t MentUnth p | p> • w*p*r. my S*?*d e ) u th* tridrwg t olwj
Tho Domestic Mfg. Oo. Wallingfortl.Oonn. vour in
J.P. STEVENS &BR0.
JEWELERS. Atlanta,
Ga,
lor ( ntnlouiio
—
&lu44H€dd/ //f 7 fl*
Education BUSINESS
A ao«ioi 4 ltv at uiiiiim
tKifn wmtid
I B. r Ho'os'a-'' rV^Tolcilo
i . 000,000
Kcllfvt* Nervous Hcodurli*' 1 uml the difK'omfort tiftv.i
caused hy all other hairpins, sample Ik»x 1 Oi*.
Addres* • U. E. M. CO., Vineland. New Jvthf
ni a * ' r | D'll Great English Gciit and
5 Box, ■ Hheumatiu Remedy,
Oval J 4 ) raui.d, 1-1 Fills.
-
PyX5Jty5.‘tK5!i&* HElB.tAMO FU* TH , WHEEL. k
liaprovemeau IILRBKA.SI* <0., Fremont, o.
• *— ■■ »
1 0 1,1) in worth $ViO per lb Vi tt t n kwiS decVri*
worth #1,00(1. but is e ild s't *c. a b.ix^y
T~jw *. N. t i r«iil}.|»irr<','S7
ADVERTISE
--IN
tout lltlli MPlill.
The best medium in this section. It
will pay you.
5 “'
,.