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A BBOKBN EWaAOBMENTCBMENTED BT
A UTTUC BROWN ULOVB.
**Doe« it please you, Katy ?”
“Oh, ft's splendid I 1 should not
have salted myself half so well had
I been left to cboose.”
“But I have not seen the wise tel
Isryel. lt Is • tressore of Us kind.
LrtVgo down again.”
Thsy west down the stairs to
gether, be talking gaily, she with a
troubled look on her face. Alter
duty ■ admiring tile place she pet a
timid' hand on his arm end said:
hor, dear,' let’s hare no
HE TRIUMPH OF LOVE.!
the stars and telling girlish dreams.
“Destiny, my ehild,” answered
K ity, stooping to replace the little
boot she had thrown off to rest her
foot. •' " • •
.. | “But you might hav* been an au-
thoress, or a painter, or a—s book
keeper, on—” • J
• Lizzie's knowledge eT ths world
was rather limited. ' Katy broke 16
upon her:
“There, that will do. I wss not
born a genius, and I bate srichsw-
tie:”
“But you did not slwsys bare to
Work for a living?” said Mary.
Katy laughed a queer, abort
laugh.
* Yes,” alls said, 'land that’s why
I don't know how to gel my living
in any way but this. So behold me
s healthy and honest factory girll”
She rose, made a little bow and a
dourish with her small bands, and
we all laughed, although she said
nuth'ng funny.
“Hilly,” said she, “pleased light
the lamp and get the magazine,
while 1 hunt up my thimble and
thread. Ladles, I find myself un
der the necessity of mending my
gloves Ibla evening. Oh, Poverty!
where is thy sting? In a shabby
glove, I do believe, for nothing
hurts me like that, unless it l>e a
decaying boot.”
She sat and patiently mended
the liuln rents, whito I read aloud,
and when she had flnisbed the
gloves looked almost new.
The next day Was Saturday and
we had a half-holiday. Katie' slid
I went to' make some trifling pur
chases, and on our way home stop-
lied at li|t> big boarding bouse to
sea one of the girls who was ill.
When we eamo out Katy ran
across the street to ge' a magazine
from the news stand and came hur
rying up to overtake me before I
turned the corner. She had the
magazine,' open snd one ol her
bauds was ungloved; bqt it wss hot,
until we reached home that she
found she bad lost a glove. It was
to late then to go and look tor it.
We went and searched the next
morning', but could not And it.
Katy (Qogrncd for It.
“It wss on only pair, girls,”she
said, fianlieally, “and it is a loss,
that cannot be repaired.”
!!?hy T\ honked in surprise.
"Because 1 have resolved if I am
seer the mistress of a bouse there
shall bs no liquor kept in it—no
*aocial glasses,’ lor friends/’
“Why, Katy, yon are unreason
able. 1 did not know you carried
yoor temperance opinions as for as
that. Oi course 1 shall keep wine
fa my beu*e snd entertain my
friends with it loo.”
She raised her face appealingly.
“Arthur 1” she said, in a tone of
voice whloh he knew how to inter
pret.
Arthur’s face grew clouded.
“But you cannot fear for me,” ho
ssid, with half offended pride.
“1 must fear for you, Artbnr, if
you begin in this way. And I fear
lor others besides—for the sons
sad husbands and father) who may
learn at our cheerful board to love
the poison that shall slsy them.”
They went up the stairs again snd
art on the sofa in the dining-room
lor a f w moments, while Katv put
oa bex hat and drew on her gloves.
The argument was kept up. It
is unnecessary that we shouldrepest
all that waa said on both sides, it
sadad at lost as similar discussions
IMfrwdkd- bettor* ' Neither was
willing to yield—Katy, because a lie
bfrfrttktfiihob Itature bsppiness
be involved in It; Arthur
because lie thought it would bo
giving way to a woman’s whims,
mad wonld Sacrifice too touch of bis
popularity with bis friends.
He bad bought this house, paid
fcr it apd furnished it handsomely,
mid. in a lew weeks was to bring
Kate as its mistress. All '.he after
noon they , bod been looking over it
together, happy as two birds with
• new flnisbed' nest. But when
Arthur closed the door snd pul
tbs key In bis pocket, in the chill,
vhnMbg light of the December after
noon, and gave Kate his arm to sec
bar borne, it was all "broken up”
between them, and a notice “To
Let” wss put over the door of the
-jNWtty house the very next morn-
It was the most foolish thing to
do; but then lovers can always find
• something to quarrel about.
They parted with a cool “flood
evening.” 8bo went up to her room
to cry; he went home hurt and
angry, but secretly resolving to
am her again and give her a chance
to my she was in tbe wrong. But
the chance never came. When lie
called again she had left the town,
aod be could find no trace of her.
* * • *
AU this happened more then a
ytar before 1 saw Katy; but we
three “factory girls,” who lodged
at Mrs. Howell’s with hcr<ufoour»e,
knew nothing about it. SI e came
to the factory and applied tor work.
The superintendent thought her
tow delicate for such labor, blit sbe
persisted: and in tact, sbe improv
ed in health, spirits and looks after
she became used to the work and
aimple fare ol the factory girls.
She was a stranger to us all, and
it seemed likely tbst she would re
main so. But one tiny May Ban.
oom’s dress caught in a part of the
tnachiiury, and bcfoic any one else
could think wlml to do, Knly had
sprang to her side and puilcd her
away bv main strength from the
lerrihiu danger that threatened her.
Alter that Mary and Lizzy Payne
snd I were Katy’s sworn allies.
We all lodged together in the liig
“Factory Boarding House." But
Katy took it into her head that we
should have so much nicer limes in
a private lodging le ourselves, and
when ahe took anything into her
head sbe generally carried it
tbrongb. In less than a week she
had found-the very place ahe want-
ad, arranged matters with the
superintendent and bad us shelter-
ad under Mrs. Howell’s vice and
fljg-tree. We four girls were the :
possessors of a tolerably
' doiib'.c-beddeJ apartment!
arm chair by the window, watching
tbs handsome young doctor write
a prescription for b«r benefit.
“By tbe way, Miss Maggie, do
you know whose glove this is?”
Maggie knew it at once. It was
Miss Gardener's glove.
“Miss Gardener!”
Tbe name made his heart best
again.
“Is she one of the factory
bands?”
“Yes; but sbe lodges with Mrs.
Hotel! quite out of town, almost;
sbe frs* here to see me yesterday.”
“Ob, I seel” ssid be. not the
most relevantly. “And you can
tell me how to Bad Mrs. Howell’s
bouse? I suppose I could go by
and restore this glove to its own.
er.”
Maggie thought this unnecessa
ry trouble, bat the gave the requir
ed direction and he went out, say
ing to himself. “It can’t be my
Katy, of course, but the glove Shall
go back to it* owner.” '
What people call a “panio” bad
occurred In financial circles lit the
spring after Arthur Craig had lost
Id* Kuiy, oud almost without n
day's warning he found himself a
poor man. He left his affairs in
tlio Imnds of his creditors— haying
satisfied IIIrnsolf that they onulit
gaf hey ennffgh from the wreck to
save them selves.
Ho had been educated fora phy
siciuii, though fortune made a mer
chant of him. Learning from a
friend that tliero was an opening
for a doctor in Fenwick, he came
hern and Itegnn practice.
Dr. Swell had gone off on a visit,
leaving his patients in charge of
the nuw doctor, and so it came
shout that on that Saturday eve
ning tie was on his way to vtaii
Maggie Lloyd, the siok girl at the
lodging house, when, Just slier
turning the corner near the news
shop he saw u brown glove lying
on the pavement. He was about to
pass it by, but a mail’s instinct to
piok up any thing of value that
•coma to have no owner mado him
put tt in his pocket. He forgot all
about it the next minute.
But when lie had made bis call
aud returned to bis consulting-
room,’in taking a paper from his
pocket, tbe glove fell out, ami he
picked it up nnd looked at it with
idle ruriosity.
It was old, but well preserved.
It Imd been mended often, but so
neatly as to muku him regard mend
ing as one of the fine arts. It had
a strangely familiar look to him.
Lillie and brown ami shapely it lay
on his knee, bearing the form of
the hand that had worn it.
As ho gazed at it there came, to
him the memory of an hour, many
months past, when ho had sat by
Katy's side on the green seta in the
dining room of “their honse”(also)
and watched her put her small
bauds into a pair of brown gloves ■
so much like ibis ouc.
Kvcn since that never to-be for-
gotten day the vision of Ids lost
love, silting there in the fading
light, slowly drawing on her glove,
her sweet eves filling as they talked
—quarrelled we should say, |>er-
Mary and Lizzie went to church
that Sunday morning. Knty de
clared she conldn’t go, having but
one glove. I stayed at home with
her, and offered to keep Mrs. Ho
well's children for .'ter, and so per
suaded that worth) woman to at*
tend worship with the g'rls.
And this is how it came about,
that while were having a frolic on
the carpet with the children in Mrs.
Howell’s room, we heard a ring at
the door, and Bridget having taken
herself off somewhere, there was no
help for it but for one of us to an
s»er the summons.
“You go. Katy,” whispered I, in
dismay. “I cannot.appear.”
Katy glanced serenely at her
own Irizzy head in tbe looking-glass
gave a pull to her overskirt and a
touch to her collar, and opened tbe
door.
Immediately afterward I was
shocked by bearing her utter a
genuine feminine scream and see-
mg her drop to tbe floor, and that
a man. a perfect stranger to me,
gathered her up in his firms and be-
gan raving over her in a manner
that astonished me. He called her
bis “darling" and his “own Katv, :
and actually kissed her before* I
could reach her.
I was surprised at myself after
ward that I hadh't ordered the gen
tleman out, but it never occurred
to me at the time, and when Katy
“came to” and sat upon the sofa and
heard Ids speeches, she seemed so
much pleased that I left them and
losk the children up to our room
feeling bewildered nil over.
Wlial shall I say further? Only
that Katy lives in the pretty house
in the town known as Dr. Craig’s
residence, where wo threo “factory
girls” have n home whenever we
wnnt it. Ani there nrc no liquors
found on her side board nor at ber
table.
One day I heart] Author say:
“You were a sdly child, Kate, to
run away from me. I should have
given up the point at last. I know.”
“But ti'cre would have been tbe
splendid cellarand the ten thousand
a year,” answered sbe. “It would
have been such a temptation. Wo
are safer aa it is, dear."
Fnrman’a Formula.
Take thirty bushels of well rotted
stable manure or well rotted er-
ganio matter as leaves, muck, etc.,
and scatter it about three inches
thick upon a pico ■ of ground so
situated that water will not stand
on it, but shed off in every direc
tion. The thirty bushels will weigh
about nine hundred pounds. Take
two hundred pounds of good acid
phosphate, which cost me $52.50
per ton, delivered, making the two
hundred pounds cost $2.25, and
ono hundred pounds kninit, which
C09t me, by the ton, $14,delivered,
or seventy cents fcr one hundred
pounds, and mix the acid phosphate
nnd kninit thoroughly, then scatter
evenly on the manure. Take next
thirty bushels of green cotton seed
anil distribute evenly over the
piles and wet them thoroughly;
take agsin two hundred pounds
acid phosphate and one hundred
pounds kaiuit, mix and spread over
the seed, begin again on the man
ure and keep on that way. building
THE LOTTEBf KlTtUSFCU
FOSTMASTEROENBBALGREsll AM LOSES
PIS CASK IN COl'BT AT NEW
•ALBANS.
New Orleans, January 5th—
Judge Pardee, to the United States
circuit court to-day, rendered an
opinion in the case of the New Or*
leans national bank against the
postmaster W. B. Merchant. Tbe
case came up on n motion to dis
salve the injunction first issued by
Judge Tiasot, of tbe civil ‘district
court, which was transferred to tbe
United 8 la tea . court, enjoining
Postmaster Merchant from inter
fering with tbe mails addressed to
the bank, such action having been
taken by tbe postmaster in obedi
ence to tbe order* of ‘.be postmas
ter general, on the ground that let
ters intended for tbe lottery com
pany, which bad been denied the
nse of tbe mail*, were being ad
dressed to tbe bank. The Judge
said it scented to him doubtful
whether the order of 1880, t emit
ting tli-- use of the mails to lottery
companies, abrogated the act of
1879, forbidlng their use. The
court held that the scheme de
nounced by the law is the distribu
tion of moneys through the mails
by means of falsu and fraudulent
representations. Tim facta fuund
against the New Orleans national
bank are outside of thu law, but the
defendant cannot be held responsi
ble for obeying the inters of his
superior. The court decided in
favor of the bank, agreeing that it
was entitled to tlm full and freo
use of the mails, and further or
dered that the motion to dissolve
the injunction be denied. This is
ttie case that Attorney General
Brewster came here with other
government counsel to defend.
IN THE ARKAN8A8 WOODS.
A Load er Children. Dos*. Tobacco.
Corn Bread and Banos.
[Kansas City Tlmea]
It is tbe natives themselves that more
(specially attract tbe stranger’s atten
tion. There's tbe bead of tbe fondly,
prodigiously tell end ungainly—quit*
interesting objects they are. too. with
their thousand and one mental and
physical peculiarities. Tbe children
ilao, always a dozen or fifteen of them,
ragged, sorrowful-looking urchins, of
ill sizes and shapes. And the dogs—
bless me, I came near forgetting tq
BAB5UH HAKES HIS WILL
THE OBBAT SHOWMAN APPORTIONS
$10,000,000 or FROPBRTT
IN A LIUERAL WAT.
IfffW York TUBfft.
P. T. Barnum seems to-consider
bis life work accomplished in the
obtaining of tho snored white ele
phant from the Burmese King, for
be has Just made his will. In or
der that there might be no ques
tion as to his sanity upon which to
ground eohtcsta after Idi death, lie
had eminent physicians examine
him, nnd secured their attestation
that he was ol sound mind. The
will nnd its codicils c >ver more
than 700 pages of legal cap, closely
written, and disposes of real estate
and po-fonal property of the value
of $10,000,000 to 27* heirs, fho
property is in New York, Brook
lyn, Bridgeport Colorado, and sev
eral oilier places. Mr. Bariiimi val
ues his interest In the B.-mmiu nnd
London sliows at $.'>.500,000. His
bequests lor charitable ptu-po-es
are numerous and large. Among
the beneficiaries nrc the Chapin
Home, Children's Aid Siociely, Old
Men’s and Woaicn's Humes, and
the Society to Asi-ist Males and
Females over Eighteen Years of
Age of this city. Bridgeport Or
phan Assylum, Bridgeport Hospi
tal. anil other Bridgeport societies.
Air. Harmrat also makes provision
for certain worthy charities, liy be.
quea'hiug to them a stated percent-
age of the large annual profits ac
cruing from his share in the Barium
and London shows, lie aulbor-zes
his executors to renew the partner
ship at present in effect with
Messrs. Jsmc A. Bailey and James
I>. Hutchinson upon its expiration,
in 1899. To the oily o' Hi idgeport
he secured the only water front not
already seized by private corpora-
ons,with a dock upon it costing
$30,000, for twenty-one years after
his dentil, during which time Ids
executors are forbidden to sell or
lease it, his objects being, as the
will recite*.“to prevent a monopoly I
of the freight nnd passenger traffic i
by any one line of steamers between
is little wonder the greater portion of
their exiatenoe is spent lying before
tbe old fireplace, never changing their
position except when oompefled to do
■0. A striking sense of willingness
teems to overshadow tbe whole group,
as they squat about tbe dingy room in
all imaginable attitudes, each wrapjied
up in the narrow confines of his own
little self and the quid of doglcaf
tobacco.
Tobacco is their ouly svlaco—a home
made nrticlo it fa, too; the meanest and
rllcat stuff to be found anywhere in the
laud. The men chew it, the women
chew it, tiie children chew it, and even
the dogs chew it. It’a chew, chow, spit,
spit, spit, squirt, squirt, from morning
till night and from night till morning,
aud if you are not cautious enough to
get off at a safo distance yon will l>o
compelled to dodge numberless missiles
of amber-colored jnico that are shot
about in every conceivable direction ir
respective of persons or things. Some
times their jaws become weary after a
long term of service in the art of masti
cation: chewing requires too much ex
ercise for their indolent natures to with
stand. Something must bo donu to re
lievo tlieso overworked members of tbe
hurnau organism, ami the characteristic
jiipo is nt once brought forth from iis
Swept into the Stream.
Tk»»Ml Aero mt f.aait and'
■RlXkl Smart ar Hun '
-Hlght smart of Hears."
On the AO of a UgXIdMppI atv>l
sa aftS Son*kern i4aatrr. IstUnuiighr a ■««,.
otklaaiai thawalrri Ua boat an. raw,-
hand la a famaf ir Iraai ths Nartki *Wh*a I
nmlw4tojr-ere*M I kitted *T let In* aa ,
new pUntalien aqr father vat iheaeem.j.ut
a fcreel that grew .llreedf aver tlie wafer. <f fti.
bead. That waa s mifhty «oe-l plaa'atiaa, •*.!
than saa r.kl eiaatt ar lain ll-err, loo. 1I U |
that eaa thoaraad acre. •( land ami» ulki J|lt-
•lvippi rranacw"
It i. peulof eo kinie area Uedisre te as,
■hetsnat CwwUof yoe'hfalbopwaeiaai.ly bnu-
— . _ _ , I; and naolr iirmrh are .wept la ihe -am. war
mention the dogs—great they are in mmj yaa. ’lata thoeiwu, ur Sd nmi of h>-
sumbers, sod so this aud bony that it a»«i Lath. T.t it • wtd cat w ». Tkatn
la *• la a Sirfraoe aa waU aa a l~a. Peep's an-
, lairt-l; t—o mra'-M er ha aiapM to d.r«ad ibrtr
1 awBiatrtartr-taeamWpnrljwaef hmUh. That
net, all i» (Oar. lliertar la Wanda. bei »teak -
irram or hwonvee liar rlmptr-l ih'u r* tnlrht a.
well be c -nibVx a< a prataMila-i la ceolo *« .
that*. As rue lia.0 WVrtrri rlv, ,, which 4o or.
ing place in tlio chimney. Aud such
pipes—great, black, filthy things, strong
enough to wreck the constitution of a
Fiftli ward pobticinn. A man who can
stuud before ono of those pipes when it
is in fall blast is proof against anything.
He would certainly need no life insur
ance.
Tbe diet of these people is a remark
able thing in its way, not only in
quality but also in quantity. Corn
bread and bacon constitute tlio bill ot
are, and in tho meagre compass of its
.ifo-ausUiuing qualities it combines all
—and tlie only—delicuciesof tbe season,
never out of * season. It'a corn bread
and bacon for breakfast, corn bread
and bacon for dinner, corn bread nod
bacon for supper; that is all the year
round. To moralize npon tho ingredi
ents of that corn bread would lie ns
hazardous as to attempt to solve tile
mysteries that cluster around that
world famous dish, hoarding-house
lmsh. 1 know- it is a horrible mixture
of corn meal nnd wnter, lmt I mu
innooeut of anything else it may con
tain—utterly devoid of salt, saleratu*
or soda. This is poured into a small,
rusty iron pot, half buried in tho ashes,
where it bakes and dries until it
lioccinoH hard enough to knoek u hole
llii'oiigli a liriok wall, provided the
nforomid wall isn’t more than ten feet
thick. While the linking process is
going in the family squat about the
tlreplaco ill languid listlessness and fire
random shots of tobacco juice at the
lire.
The bacon, too, is an article worthy
of comment, inasmuch as it imparts a
sort of flavor to the corn bread, aud
thereby renders it the more palatable.
Yon first discover it in huge slabs of
fut, with little or no lean in the eonqio-
sitiou, uml almost completely inemsted
in tlm accumulated filth of weeks and
months. One glance at it would make
u health officer sick: bat to eat it! oh,
horrors 1 The corn bread, being baked
to the proper extent, is placed upon a
stump outside the dour to cool, while
the dugs form a circle about, lick their
chops in sih-nt hunger, aud bestow
wistful glances upon tlie, to them, de
licious morsel. Slices of bacon are
then placed in the great iron [nit, win re
they sizzle aud splutter until liuttllv
resolved into a nnmlier of little dried-
up chips llontiug about upon a uiinature
sen of slimy grease. This horrible
moss—grease and all—iu conjunction
with tlio eoru bread, is eagerly de-
vnurod by these rapacious natives, and
on this inoagro diet, strange to say, bat
nevertheless true, they manage some
how to keep tho sands of life in motion.
Tiuly, onc-lialf of t'lu world knows not
low the other ball lives.
tm»m
AsiHl .
tea flowd the cilln slsfnr 'Mr ikons, arl.. la i
rw moantaln •prinva »> all "lit eilsiwi. «.k-
treed ml.npure lila-al and . small group at dh
ordered onrsn,.
TbenoMl effre'ive and Isrlii.l.e remrdr lor li
eu* >. PdRKBR'l TUNIC. Itpuo M He-
soorcesnr pstoaedwiuklMee. la res -si « In Us
action, tlie liver, kidneys elnimck nnd hemt lir.
etn ite'rwnrk nfr ah. an-l ilbewe-1> driven mu.
Tb. Tonleir rot, however, an inmate .ni, but
eureee devtre for strong drink. Have y «i d. .pop
.!n.rtieumttt-m,nr tmiCde. whtca havn rclu.c.i
to vleid to otker Here Is >onr help.
J intnit
Rev. Father Wilds’
EXPERIENCE.
Tlie ltfv. Z. P. Wild*, welldcnown cJty
mUsIonary In New York, and brother
«>r the Into eminent Judge Wild*, of the
MaN<wchi!*ott* Supreme Court, writes
a* follow*:
“7K K. Wh St.. Xt* York, J/hy 1«, IMS.
Mf.ssiw. J. C. Ayku & Co.. Oentlemsn:
Ie»n winter I wm troubled with s most,
uncomfortable Itching humor affecting
more <*pecl«ll) my liinb*, which itched so
iiitolurnLly nt night, snd burned *o lnt#M*
|v. thnfc 1 con lit scarcely bear wiy clothing
.»ver them. 1 was sUo a sufferer from a
di-rer.1 catarrh and catarrhal cough; ray
ftflM'litc was iioor, aud tuy »y»tem a good
l-al run down. Knowing tho valve of
AYKU’s .Sau4mmrilla. by obsarvatloo or
mnuy other cu»«*. and from personal u*o
in former yean, f began taking U for tbo
i!-»ve-mt:m*.l disorder*. My aopotito lm*
proved nlmoH from tbo first dooo. After
i short time the fever and Itehlng were
VtaTed. amt all signs of Irritation of tho
niiiii disappeared. My catarrh aud oongh
were also cured by the same means, and
my general health greatly Improved, until
it is now excellent. I feel n nondred per
2»;it stronger, and I attribute throe results
to the use of the SARSAPARILLA, which
l recommend with all confidence aa the
he'd blood medklne ever devised. I look
it iu small doses three Umee a day, aad
wed. in all, less than two bottles. I plane
Uir»M facts at your servioe, hoping their
publication may do good.
Yount respectfully, Z. P. WlLM.”
The above instance Is but one of tho many
constantly coming to our notlco, which prove
tlie perfect adaptability of AVER'S Sabsa-
fakilla to the cure of all diseases arising
from impure or Impoverished blood, and %
weakened vitality.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
cleanses, enriches, and strengthens tho blood,
stimulates the notion of the stonweh snd
tiowels, and thereby enables tho system to
re*Ut and overcome the attacks of all Sere/U»
foil* Jh tea net, Eruptions of the Skin, Wuw-
matim, Catarrh, General Debility, and aU
disorder* icmiltlng from poor or corrupted
V,ood and a low state of the system,
pnisi*a»ei> nv
Dr.J.C.Ayor&Co., Lowell, Mart.
Hold by all Druggbts; prlco §1, six bottles
AYER’S
CATHARTIC
PILLS. '
Best Purgative Medleine
vuru Court fiiatlon. Indigestion, Headache, and
all Itilkms iXaorders. .■
Sold everywhere. Always reliable* /
Flylnj Hotel yiass,
[San Fi.'uii’.s.M Chronicle.)
New York ami Briil>;p|iurl, and to J „ "*."■■ “ S' 0 * j"‘ v « tbo Bv'k'ian flat*
it reserve to Brldtranori nn.l other.' HoaUiigfroin the staff on the Market
preserve to Bridgeport and others ^’Sidrtttohotei" remark
the advantage of reasonable rates
lor freight and passage between
said eity.”
iluli’t Spill the Milk,
“Then l< no u«. crjiDR ever .pilled
letlk," says the old saw. If ymt an not
only halt!, hot have no lif. la the rools of
your hair, then is no u. crying over
that, either. Take both time and your- |
porter to Manager Sedgwick at tlie
t’lilnrj Saturday.
“Yes, sir; that is in honor of a ilia-
linqtiislted guest, ills excellency tile
Heigiau minister, who is visiting this
city and occupies apartments here.”
"And the stars n:td stripes are flying
from thv after-staff on the new Mont
gomery street front,"
That* flea. Sherman's flag—that i*.
1884. THE (884.
“CONSTITUTION.”
The r«l\ CwnMitniion to* rim* to 1b* i no
Mty to ►very ii.tt lli^cut may iu the iwag> uf iu
cir*ul»:.«i'.
For year it will l« b» t/r than «-vrr.
N#»rty fire non i* nv Mu* ‘uve* rd »*v iu pro*
pnetors in re new Ltii'.rimz, pniteee bu«I e*i»fit, *n
—r.ici, anti *|ih whicli it mu >«ml -«*d i« mkni
f" de.nnnda of ita nrnw'nff rottatilueiicy
T*" I'-stty- a. a Su- .lsj- e.Hnqiutl-.ii 'a.r IWI
-Ifj hv nrftri vtid in !rr ih»u *v.-r, nmi It. rvrry
,wr '* ch ••"" W" ” r
out r.
ef>..
at least six weeks; when ready to
bzul to tbe field put with a spade
or piok axe square down and mix
a* thoroughly as possible. Now
w,' have thirty bushels ot manure
weighing nine hundred pounds
of chemical in the second layer.
and in ! He looked at tbe glove a long j » nd **“■• tw ? co * w “« d
b, Katy made tbe place so 1 time. He hail thought it had be- form
ctermiug that we forgot that we i longed to one of the factory. Airis,! pe***!*® that tho weight is - 400
^‘ffkclorv girl*” when we got I and be found it near the lodging ! pound*.
“ ’ “ #
| bap*—had gone with him a* an
q queer little drcMing-room ' abiding memory of her, until he
led—“aad the liberty of the : bad come to kuow each shade of
phftt to receive caller* in”—a j the picture—the color of the dre**,
proviso at which we all laughed. : the ribbona at the throat and tbo
This w»s “home" to nq after the' shaded plnme in her hat.
borofthc day. Indeed, '
,1. .... I...., I..... III. lk-«, Si-lf hy tbe f. roloclt while lln-re is a fare- i - . ', ■’
up.yonr heap layer bjr layer, until lock i ef ,. Aiylr Parker’. Hair Bal.atn to I “-y”., j”.. t ,
you get it os high as convenient. ,e<ir hair bvfur. uattere eut woise. ft , You must keep a large quantity of
Then cover with six inc.ics of rich : will arrest the f-llingoffof vour !,air anil j ! , K r °! 1 Imud' observed tlie reporter,
earth from fence corners, and leave restore its original color, glow end soli-1 «*,t «ot«*d that whou yon have
$»R> Sbr improvised cunning little! Iiousc. But it did not look
t out of triflee that are usually ; “factory
hand's” glove. He would
AWajr.jta useless, and the ask Ma'ggte Lloyd, at any rate; *o
■nrera growjpg, in broken pots iu he put It carefully iu his pocket
•arwlaaom wore a glory to be-, until ha should make hi* call* the
hbid.MSihaliriys'had a fresh book j next moraiug.-
or periodical on the table, and. bet-1 He bad suflered the glove to be
ter Utah Clits, stt brought to ns the j to associated with the memory of a
larger, cultivation- and ths purcri past that Wat skcredtO btmtbatlle
.Dtste wblch^ taught us bow to use felt bfs.chctk to UUrb', khtlfllW b*
*- 1 ‘ — z ~ *■ , to si
•puortuuitifts wii|ri» oxtr reach. I trembleashe drew Ik for
‘•what made..ymi take, to our it to Maggie, who was lu
stark of life, Katy?” asked Lizzie thee omfort of convalescence, in an
si
ness. It is a perfect dressing withal, a titled guest flout abroad you hoist
clean, richly perfumed, cools and heals ! !"» national colors."
the scalp. jan2-lm j “kVa, wc ltavo qtiitfl a number of
———• flags, and when wc have net the proper
Speaker Carlisle is being talked one we gcnerailT find but little trouble
of as tlio next Democratic, nomi-1 borrowing one front the coaaolate
, ,. ' ,, i representing the couutry front which
nee for President. The Kbcorbeu the guest uuiy hail."
would be glad to support him on a I "Do guests ever furnislt yon with
tariff reform platform. ^oon. ever has yet."
So sufferer from any acrofnloM disease. \ , 'o'-' ksd the flag of the Grand Mas-
ho .Ut fairly try Ayer'. B.rsapsriiia. \ ^
can't l««ttd. | bto^ d o7SnmpBrittel. Lib?*1 ■ wlta;'t
Ajreta Cherry retora , aa provrd by , ing g#nM £ rom whJch „nib,!, is de- j J aw having it laandried, and intend
forty yasre eipetienca, will core thu dts-r j T rtop^j i u d will iafose new life and iJire^ utiogittoPait Grand Commauder
when not dlreajy adrmaeed bayoad .iga. throngbont tb. who), physical ^ _ ,
th* mob of mediealanL Even then its nixMj0I1 J l h<- n-|>ortur fnrtlier learned that the
me Atlord’i very greRt relief, mml invir«* ’ m 9 I «’U*tom of Hviog a Hug from the hotel
***”*“• - f» “'<""8 j-- »ri,srr.!.“utScrfVrSk
presents eighty-seven counties., [ or Ul ' 11 "“"J 'J°®» imi»rttot pewmag. from ttTooSn^
Sivcral of which are larger than the ! ' e 8* n lo I 00 ! 1 ** I? protection, docs I slusiguated by the flog is domiciled rt
entire 8tate of Massachusetts. ' not somehow protect just now. "* Ik* hotel.
*lo. « .1W*. #A. 3 Utmth.
*SJO. / Jlmelh AH
The Weekly Constitution
suns th*n#w yc«r with I3,00n stWri^ who
pr'Iioubcf <i tl.oint8t.il, Uft ftntl ch'ftpOBl pitu-r
will'll* ib.*ir re.ii-h. •
n cunvtot- «r 8.10 nr 1J wr-ipii (*. Ihr •Umnml of
It* I.UBior^s nr i»hj ik*w* msy il.roct) flll. U with
mailer of the K'cttim: iuteredt io Ht«* farmcf.
At Less thftu 3 rfnia • iVstlc
Ill's bn.l^et of now* mi l 2it*sli» *.vil
|o your l:rvni.!«cnterUiu ev. i v f
lionitiiold.
On* Y*ft-. no
Hix MimtSw J INI
In CIuIm of Teii. iboii I
»*» ClttLq »»f Two ity, nioh J i»
w iih an cxir$ f Rjier to Ui« rmu-r up of CIhK
THE YEAR~OF 1884
wntteMe'ertteiMB Im ariantlsoar.lii>tm-.
. “"u4u-,4-i,-ii. Senator., Oov -raoi ,
le-eWunre-ore si) le he elect- it
Very "aporta" 1 Ixtm are lo be 'red la tth-
N'atl'-nil amt 8t-.tr ctr-tkws. Tha Con.tlied. a In
«r*^ki.v Hiriun will entry Hi* lulhrt
«R4 frisbtU kc«b in Um nh»j>* to th* oahlia*. mwl
WM rtftna M as earnest eh.un! f ju of O.’oturi«llr
pnneipiML
i*ab»crib* now nnd h**i« with th« tv-w von*.
.Vi*irr*?, TUB COStTITUTIOS.
Atlsftlf | Us.
JAMAICA GINGER
CORDIAL .
IS A SVLEKDLD TOSICt!
Corn Ifyspepaia, Indigastiun, Cramp
Colie, fain in tbe 8toaiacb and Bowais,
Colda, Cbitls aad Fevar, Diarrhoea aod
Dyaentary, and all Malarial Diaasaas by
atimulatiog tbo stomach aad bowala Into
a healthy activity. Try one Uittl*.
Sold by Dr. John E. Bali, Amarfeua,
Ga. aprilfO ly
HISTORYr-BS^
* M * Orm'i KrodsiKt.
fL*klll*rtoThlrtv Y<sn‘ Wwr «*•; frrwy'* Ki
two i>cri«!v* Bit:to*,40e;C* irto*. Knm h IUt.
elation, sac; (irvro, Hdiili*', Crrwy «t^ Cnriyto
in oie, t So; Kmru'k't Anetom Rfffp* 1 0»; Itoi
!!»'* Ardent H story, t.70: Oi bison's Rww, !.7« v .
Hrrm's K ifftoni. fi.;*; Fhfis artVt*hr *n c v, Ijfft.
I ftlftlaint 500.000 vslnskts trmo.
JOKMV ft, aLDBST, PtblURffr.
1* 0. Ba 11.7. U V«jsij ii, ffriw York.