Newspaper Page Text
Jffl
•■THE
BEST TOC, 9
This medicine, corabfnln* Iron with pure
K&g&SS&SSS
btMWOfth#
• Dteaw rewlkr %
leedfeaSt
Vow that I come to think of It, I never
wm able to Cud ont what his real voca
tion was. Even to this day I am Ignorant
©fit. All that I can positively assert is
that ha tint made his appearance at my
realdeiSce In the capacity of a tailor, and
one thing I can not deny U that bo made
ma some clothe#—snch clothes.
I had lately returned to my native place
after several years spent in travel, and
waa living on ray uncle’s little estate In
Galicia, which was attested near the chief
en« nqi." it anew man's nos,
tnind Jim! U no hail, I have
afllrin, the whole man nu
more hail than one of bis riba"
"Wlutl that little Abraham-k hiu a tal
ent for poetry, too!" I exclaimed. wlillo all
around me roared with It tighter, anil the
women, and the prettj girl-i whose eyes
glowed like charcoal, wrre applauding the
amiable jeder with their most gracious
•miles.
Xext day I again met my tailor on the
In perl’il
tngka In
““Sr- Itw*«f»nt«tio atwetacleto
W wsn, with his
STlSStoZHOa fZS *J ,n ? 3r <Wvlngthe frail vehicle and
one 1 need to hunt. When It rained I read checkins those flerv hones—one moment
ether grazing the very edg#
n-rnedy for 1
silwho i tftdTvdtnufyTirol
Jo to the teeth, cause he*df?ne.o!
*Ms five iwrimifatfntvof fond, re
i and IkJehitif. aud vtrrtif tl>-
itn niTV*Ttr*^rxaitu(1n, Lack o.
For lnterMlticnt Fevers. F
InergVe dc . K tie* an w|iud.
nr Tk«jcrm>iae k*e slots trade mark and
eroseed red 1Uh» on wrapper. Take no other
■ rttisw't. ra.aiLTfso«k.B»
^LINGmaN’S
T obaccc
REfijEPJES
i HE CL1KGUAN T CSAtCO OIBTLUKi
■in*. Phsptrt*. More* RmU. |»rtcf..«»e lm.
THE CLINQMAN TOBACCO CAKE
CTJ£ 9X&. WSZ'S&S&'l &
l ivliwitcW, BumJFi1<«4 UUe-w._h.trjj. Ht r» i. n
• te Lit-. TlLotf f&niriT.Ttf ‘<U«t "0.4tirT%HyU.
U- dtchWie. Milk U* n»tkm ueS Di« BSrw »..T,
i lirtHi, 4e. In fact »1Jey« all hml Imiaind. ,, .1
THE CUNGMAN TOBACCO PIAS'E?
T'4muvi KVmr, and ia upst-tallf faeoir.iwiHliHt i.,r
• •rngp Wewdur EUkai.f ilm ltmut and lor tint vIaa*
• I Irritant or inltaiM neat try miUdira. Aeh>a mil
I*.lua wbara. fmni lao .Vlicalo a rt«t*id th* •>M» m
Sab imv'UocsM forth *- rw. Jloo. nr writ* !.» tte
CUNGMAN TStfMJCb JURE CO.
DURHAM. N. C.. U 1. A.
DICKEYS’
day. when the weather, although not
rely. WM anything tat agre^ttare predplie, or ’naming deftly between twh
mere nsoally passed in paying rlaita to immense mud pnddies. The trulk* was
such of tbs neighboring families os had j executing a veritable aardance.
the good fortune to porereacosna portion-1 «Abn3amekr I crltamt nhoagh .
Ur attraction at their residences in the iiaej qq other talent whatever you are at
fonn H. pretty woman or . gracefnl j dmdlU tamlr.Sr'driV.fl \vKt“
young girl. In oeder to make such vtolts, pity I hare do carriage and horaaaofmy
* new eult was Indispensable; Abrahamek I 5re|- ^^ 7
waa accordingly .ummoned, and commta-1 K be heard any compliment, he waa no*
OiUKEY & 1'
Be •• . veil apnngs. » atel, lean.
WO M Eftf!
Uteiln up-i .ifo-
pi
X 1ST
CMk I
3900.
i leer ♦:*»>»• ■♦•‘I thn-o ro m
K« * t »*•« r
ril.n tor vegetable i
r, rriiiiuit wow n’ld la g<«Hi
Api,tuJ S. WIL 1 IP’IKt*. It. K
TO RENT.
A files •-1 rw »n» •? His*J .In eXce’lea* ori '*
• M 'r <« j. L n ffU i.iiOMD W. K. », i
TO RENT.
ran four rw»m foisigw* »»"i» own
, mmii lolittif, «*ll m t-Xdellenl «.iUer,ui»«l
cm nilem kiatiwi, o Aplj 1 ^ 1 ?
J. 8.
I.IKORD.
FOR RENT.
A f.mr-niom cottage, good garden,
an>! well witer; conveni«nt to buninem
J.T. ConiRO.
MAGNIFICIENT WATER POWER
, 1 *, dhosl*. tor 10 Miles from Alhen., 4)^
Sw^ssssiwMttw
•he to4 f=r..-.—W Wler.. *-l - -
umh,.. *r billldliip 1^ t..!ll.ii>eiV* | ri<
i h « .‘.Vw?«a.“ p‘ rp~a. • inmeuw)
RGama lew auiea. Awia .III r.. .air at.*
■.IlMtaM Ih' p-npeur.loe A” .IWlnrll,. MU-
* - Iku (.rupert) km For ►s«Icn-
ttrikK rniT i Veal. ka*. »*u- the pi A
sloned to make it for me.
When be come in and bowed to me, he
did not lmpreee me In the least as a men
at all worth while noticing. He was small,
skinny, Insignificant. He had a narrow
face, a hooked note; and from beneath hie
velvet jatnurka some thin locks of black
hair descended to curl about his temples.
He wore, like all Jews, a long, black
talar, and talked through hie nose like
his oo-religionists, who are os numerous In
our little town as ante in an ant-hill.
He pulled from his pocket some strips of
dirty paper, took my measure, listened to
all my instructions without moving a mus
cle of his face, and then sat down opposite
me, at my own table, without so much as
asking leave.
“do you come from Vienne, young nine
ter?" he began.
“Yes, from Vienna.*
"Fine city, ehf*
“Yes, a very fine city.*
“And you are going to stay here now,
with yonr honored under*
“No."
“Ha, hai—you do not enjoy yourself
here?" ^
“That Is not the reason."
“Bat yoa enjoyed yourself better at
Vienna."
“No, not exactly."
“The yonng lord Is studying at Vienna,
of courser”
i lure finished my studies.*
Finished your stndiea! So yottngl
What intelligence! Then the younj lord
is probably Interested in some business at
Viennar"
•No*
Or perhaps he holds some umulsi posi
tion therer"
“Yes—something l*\s that"
“In office! So young and such intelli
gence! The young lord will certainly be
come governor of a district or councillor
of state, if God franta him health. And
then, of course, a bride will be found for
the young lord, a beautiful and wealthy
yonng girl; or perhaps the young lord
has already obtained what his heart de
sire* f"
And this went on, went on—on outpcui^
lug like a cascade; and all the time lie was
asking questions, Abrahamek kept search
ing me with his little gray eyes, which
petiMrunKl, Ilk* two gimlets, Into tin- most
secret reoe*ses of my mind! “Uooduossl"
1 said to myself, “here’s a man who indeed
possesses rare qualification* for t..e office
of examining judge. If he poetesses equal
aptitude for making clothes, 1 will have
good reason to congratulate myself.”
But next day, as I entered a tobacco
sio.e to buy some cigar*, a novel and cu
rious spectacle met my eyes. Abraliumek
my tailor—this tima without his talar.and
lu hi* shirt sleeves, was seated upon a low
stool near the door. Before him a plank,
planed perfectly smooth, wss set upright
against a chair; and with the aid of a big
brush, some pots of paint, and a saucer of
water to riuse his brush In, he was paint
ing the plauk. And what was he paint-
lug? A Turkbh woman, with big black
eyes and an apple-green turban, cmd in a
red caftan bordered with ermine, and
vwoklng a glgantlo chibouk, as she sat
cross-legged on a bine cushion.
“Abrahamek, what are you doing
there?”
“You can see for yourself, young mas
ter,” replied Abrahamek, evidently an
noyed, “I am painting.”
“And what is It for?”
“What is It for? It Is a new sign for
Hme. Barnoka.'
(That waa the name of the tedncUve
widow who kept the tobacco .tore,]
-la thla yonr drat masterpiece!"
-1 palatal Ion. •,<> the .Itfn at the cue-
tom bonce.- replied Abrahamek atralght-
enin.upwitb all the offended dignity of
a Raphael; -and also the sign of The Beau
tiful Polish Girl lu Limburg a treat, and
the sun-dial for the pariah-priest. Say!
did yon aver ate nann more iika nature
than my sunl Or if yon did it most hare
been In Vienna.*
And really 1 moat confess that Abra
hamek had a talent for painting. The
smoke which the Turkish woman allowed
to recaps from her rosy month looked
more like a wreath of grimy sharings
than like mol smoke; tat her foot waa
very dainty; and The Beautiful Pollrb
Girl also was worthy of her pompous epi
thet. Nevertheless the noble art of paint
ing waa not the Unset of all the talents
which had been vouchsafed to this lucky
Abrahamek.
Ou the occasion of n certain marriage in
wealthy Jewish society, I tad n chance
to are Abrahamek in a totally different
light.
He had accepted the employ of Jester
at thla wedding, not, he declared, for pe
cuniary conaldrretlou, tat Jnst tor good
will. And what a humorist ha wall All
the Jokes that had ever been made eeemad
to lire In his memory: he might bare been
taken for Tyll Eulenipltge In person risen
from bis sarcophagus. Ha did not oonflnt
blmaelf to ordinary Jokes; ha respected
custom aa little as he did the rank or dir
nlty of the gneata. No ona was safe from
the shafts of his sarcasms, which Oswin
all directions, double edged and katn.
The least of his rhymed couplets waa •
rentable blossom of grotesque wit. And
how- be recital them! with what vim!
with what astonishing modulation of
voice, Indescribable gesture! and facta!
contractions! In abort. It waa enough to
make anybody hold hie sides. The nit
and luxuriously decorated toon earned
Itsalf to shake with laughter at the Jests
ha sat off Ilka fireworks—which fluttered
through the air ilka so many imps, and
whirled about, and always hit In the right
piece without ever really wounding any
body. Finally ha toned toward the
pretty bride; end all held their breath
eager to hear what waa coming.
“Woman la sour, yes; 'da a proverb ol
ancient times which Is often repeated ia
our own. All aril coma from woman
in/ Abrahamek may have been
called In ufler days; and 1 still keep ask
ing mys If what waa real y l.L «po- lal tal
ent. Mu»t assttredly it did lint lie lu the
art of making clothes 1
Next day he delivered my suit, tluuiks
to file Influence uf pretty' Veigele, no
doubt. But alnsi there wua one thing she
could not prerent, namely-. That, aven
while he was cutting and stltchlug, her
hualiaml'a mind should have been occu
pied with a thousaud golden or roee-ool-
| ored reveries, or absorbed by some Ingenl-
seated. The vehicle shot by as quickly a* f oua poetical composition, or lulled into
~ j Area ' day-dreaming by a host of touching and
harmonious melodies. Tho frock coat was
wrinkled In the most awful manner, be
sides being a great deal too lung. On the
other band, the pantaloons did not even
reach my ankles; and I found it utterly
impossible to button the rest.
And nevertheless, my good Abrahamek,
I do not wish to pick a quarrel wllh you.
If it Is only for the sake of that adorable
little wife of yours, whoso smile la so
gracious, whose eyes are so lovely, and
■whore dainty hands are eoft and smooth
even aa the softest and silkiest of velvet—
Times-Democrat Translation.
Bba ia more to be dreaded than Are or the
sea. When the rabbi la on LU .. ay ta
teach his dea, ha must not gnna on any
temslsfsca. Yas, ladies, however beauti
ful you are, however passiouately lovvd,
aneape'tta toraenta wSta awatl Mmj
pity him, and why! The question seams
important: b It bacansathls reputa
tion glvtn to woman ia wool I to? ^
And lam going to (tore It to Foatortlj-
wltS. tem tore the weresn fMfitbi
to be nrrentiy gretatol y***^
wucmtrf««*oMo< MMrtittNM*
' disconcerted by it ia tb« least; for be
^ merely nodded his c-ur.'y bead to me, with
a proudly dignified saluta of recognition.
On the Sunday following I found a to
tally different Abrahamek outside the
city, at one of the luburtmn villages. It
was in a tavern where some peasants wen
having a dance. This time 1 saw none of
the eerloas calm of the painter, none of
the wild gayety of the wetMIngdeeter,
none of the grand style of the nut-driver.
Abrahamek was evidently suffering from
some profound melancholy. Not a mus
cle moved in hie faco—it was rigid as mar
ble. There was no perceptible trembling
of his eyelids, yet hie tears were falling
continually; not always streaming, how
ever, down his wan cheeks. They also
dripped, bitter, dolorous, and as if mingled
with harmony, from the surface of the
cymbals before which he was seated, and
which he kept tapping with two little
drum-sticks covered with greasy leather,
tapping sometimes gently. In a caressing
way—as if coaxing a petted child; then,
again, strongly, furiously, os If punishing
some scolding wife with a good drubbing.
The other Instruments were shrieking,
rumbling, moan lug around him, like a
menagerie before feeding time; and the
heavily-booted peasants jumped about un-
couthly In the dance, and peasant-women
with them, la one great whirl of petticoats
and plaited hair. And all this In a cloud
of dust, smelling of garlic^ brandy, and
new sheepskin.
Abrahamek was wholly unimpressed by
Ik with set lips and glistening eyes, he
noted nothing except the melancholy tones
which the plaintive cymbals were sending
through bis very soul. He was at that
moment an artist; and God knows what
celestial harmonics he wss hearing In bia
dreams! A supernatural harmouy as
suredly, for his face was lighted as by a
red lance from above. “The deuce!” I
•aid to myself. “Abrahamek a musician
too! And whataeoal of fire he has in
that apparently Insignificant little body of
his!"
My Abrahamek thus continued to paint,
to drive, to compose farcical rhymes, to
play music, and my clothes were not forth
coming! I had no choice but to coll in
person on Abrahamek, and see J>ow mat
ters were progressing.
The pretty little hetsee he occupied, and
In which he had opened his tailor's shop,
belonged to him. It had come to him aa
part of his wife's dowry. He himself had
began life as a poor Talmudic scholar;
and he still preferred to hold scholastic
-Usqulsitions with his old fellow-students
than to make frockcoaU and uniforms.
When 1 went in, I found him sitting
cross-legged ou a big table, arid sowing
away with furious seal. .
“Yoa* see I’m working at It," lit cried:
“to-morrow I’ll have It all ready."
“Well, 1 should say It was high time!"
“High time! Why, have I not got the coat
already done? Veigele, where is that
coat? I want to let you see It Veigele!"
1 was curious to see this man’s wife.
She cam* In. A brunette of modlum
height, quito plump, with features adora
bly sauve as those of the wife of Ahas-
erus. whose witchery proved mighty
enough to bring wretched Haman to the
scaffold. She wore a little jacket of red-
fire velvet lined and trimmed with black
rabbit fur. and a Jewish diadem of gold,
sparkling with jewels, whoss brilliancy
and color could not vis with the dassllng
splendor of her eyes and the satlnv fresh
ness of her couiplexioa Her round whits
anus as they protruded from the soft,
fur, seemed chiseled out of Greek marble.
She saluted me with a mischievous smile,
and walked directly to her husband.
“What do you want now?” she began, in
a quick Impatient tone, like a little queen
disturbed in the midst of some highly im
portant occupation.
“The young master wants to his
ooat."
Sheweut for it, unfolded it before ms
with an air of satlfactlon, and exclaimed
with a triumphant smile:
“There’s work for yon, eb? That’s the
way that wretch can work when he wants
to; but, good God! when does he want to?
He devotes hJtn»elf to painting, poetry, to
music, so many fine arte which never bring
us iu so mnch as a crust of bread! Ws
might be able to rida in our own carriage
if he wished, but—"
“Has man need of horses and of car
riages?” said Abrahamek. "If God desired
that man should be driven in a carriage,
He certainly would have created him
without legs *
“Now you bear hlml* cries Veigele in ex-
superstlon, putting her arms akimbo, with
her little fist* propped upon her rounded
hip* under the fur-lined Jacket. “That If
the way he is! All daylong be goes about
like a man In a dream, talking about fol
lies of some kind, each worse than the
other. I suppose I ought to keep his store
and sew for him; but God knows I won’t
doit! I’ve enough to do to look after the
bouse. You will have your suit, young
master, even if I have to Mat Abrahamek
like on ass to keep him at work.”
She gave him a violent thump in the
beck with her little Cat, and ran out with
a great flattering of petUcoata.
“Pretty woman,” l remarked.
“Yes, she Is pretty, that Is true,” re
plied Abrahamek, speaking U if to him-
Mlt
Frank R. Stockton and His Wlffo
The wife of Frank R. Stockton, the au
thor of that tantalising story, “The Lady
or the Tiger?" is one of thoss women of
whom the world hears little but who docs
not an Inconsiderable share of these ab
surd and delightful tales. She wasaXJss
Ms rum Tattle, of Amelia county, Vir
ol literary critic of her husband’s
work. A youthful a^lrar of his quaint
fairy tales and children’s stories ones
wrote to ask if it were not trot that Mr.
Stockton had a Urge family of children
who heard the stories before they wen
written oat, and gave the “inventor*
Although our hands may never riasp in
greeting
With warm, foml prcaiur-, waist de
light bcMpcuks
The bearttj too sudden and t*M counciout
beating
That sends confessing hlu*?i*t to our
checks;
Although my lips drink not in draughts
•Uvbnt'
The lovothat tremble* iu thy fearful
eye.s,
And destiny with wondering, liar*h do-
rislou
Doth sever oil our deal remembered
tics;
will rel
IWiW .
Toward th» end _____
. . _ bio
nlnutcs’ walk from on ijid »i II,
»mt for mV. Kurly lc i a .vi !»> «-. t.i*
co}jjfe)«,d abstained fra u m tr.-yi u n mil
In order to devoto hit entire Aim to
ttie edaSdUnnof his only aneg'
- _
On my arrival the com to rec*Wod un
with a dej *cte I air.
•“.Myjojr doctor," said hi, *
foro-you one of tiie most Wr ito
You know that I have bran to
«■»«*» «*>*
A* night enfolds me with iU bitter of w * 11 - U my r>
AlthogS. reaches out with cruel Zt S2SJ £
And .,!?tWn. t ° W " r * f ‘ r '" ,,r0m “'^rSvKD T4rnu:-t.m ebon, to
My hear, with tola, ia erery *H,f ,„11 IZlZZZ
Thy heart wilt answer .very Joy of 1 to reek to conceal irha* I uoir
. cannoTres^’aailtaroflKlflei/to^tarote
Warns, at a Watart.g-Pla««. my hf» to Him. It waa the wish of my
Bat the 18-year-old maiden to ,rr pan>4 ’**•- ■alme I mother, and the Lord haa
ta for the marriage f«aeL Her robe* a;, otaijneil to tn«plre me rrltli the will to
of allk or satin, her oowii. are cut low In otrrywi btr ilc-Irn.
the neck, diamonds gUsti-n in her ears, *< therefore tog you to Rire yonr con-
tad item, .hint oo her Itng.re, 111. motto my Ueconihn» Carmelite non.
younger one eita placidly with on (,l >r short dgparatlon here will no doubt
the plats, arid (axes willfully at her si,- J* painful, but tho prayer, of the wife In
tartweapinff by oath, arm of a yonng heawnaial ihoeeof thadanghtaroaearth
tack Ju.tea-aylnga mtutocha. In tho will reu.l.r certain onr reunion hereafter
Although our paths through alien land,
are turning, '
Thine toward the anurias where u new
light gleams;
JUho tuiv.nl the inniet where nil hope
burning
points at to the things children In irtimtl tftornoon the Mender, halt-grown elder among tilt elect, where we will lore each
would or would not like. But Ur Stock. to bandied info a can toga wltiir other, world without cad. Tiitutsg
“And what was yonr reply, ray deal
Corate f-
bed-roora. At night tun youngar <
would nr would not files. But Mr. gtock- «•. to tandtod Into a can logo
ton has no children, end hto wife to the .irotoiffffMlaaJwlillathe wonuraly youugei
peraon who holds the place of Jurenlle I “i “net read noreto to mamma In the
oracia She writae erery one of then ' “ '
down, too, at hto dictation. Thetrcum-
mere an roent ia the Virginia mountains,
at -Lego,* once a part of Jeffenon’i es
tate, and not many miles from MonU-
oeilo. Around a great cherry tree are thret
■takes; out and of a hammock to tied to a
tree and the other end mortd
*1 answered that I would nerer be a
waltzing sweetheart. .
And who een doubt that all them tljc >“w gave me as a father to prevent lu
women dram and poae for the admiration tonaummaUun; that ou coming of agt aha
that, attar ail, they an .lire to win. Out “hid do as ahe plearoJ.”
u Ufa co a »» eye down any one of tta euonnuiw hall- . l ! r daughter, my dear Comte, has
from .take 1 ®*f* of »>e We»t Knil hutel, end uoie i t.o fmlen in lor. wlih religion anil a rellglonr
Itlon of the t * c * that opposite each room are from one Uf. for want of any oth«r object upon
to tour tranks. Glauce into the ruum. a. which to expand her affection. Uonntan-
you pus by In the murulngs wher the tagimtoe her tdcaa, au.1 leave her nemo-
doom are open. CurUlus hang aronud —“h this love, which can hate no
the sido walls ro talked oat wllh ilia earthly conaninmatlon. aud whichcaa not
diOMM they an meat to rover and con- .entirely satisfy a handsome and latolll'-
ceal that only two-thlr.U ol Hie original ««“ ** Hhe Thercro whose heart U a.
room to left. Then condition, are tlo- 11™* unaffected.*
qnent. Rte the women promviiwllog no * * * * * *
the piaaaea and aquecxeil In tho amido , Yl** vr - r broke out. If grief over hto
haUwara Such tacm ta wuetrr, ! daughfer'e reroluUou had not greatly
•neb fortunes in Mlt, an I tow. cue'll »ged him the comte, who had beenaeap-
heautiful faces and uncml. awrlllng bo.- toln of iancen ta hto youth, would tare
oms, rochehar^ aud wraps, .null artl.tio again sought service. The eccounU of rfur
heinlreasiug. such p-e(t» p«" ! u-fu* -and -ncoemlro disaster, wore, however, not
dainty specking and w -ll-iralned care calnculatod to excite hto.enthnsns.ni. j
rings of the body In walking - It It t Guo day the German cavalry made its
nut all for admiration, a lut e fur mutual npDearaniie. A rqumlron of Uhlans mtar-
admiration and a great dc .1 for wlmlra- to™ 1 theuiselvM upon us and anoured the
tlon by tho men! And'don't wo nlmhu surrounding oouutry. The emntnunder
Ut Can we help Itr-lkiug Bruucli Cor. and flv.onio.rs wore lodged lu thj chat-
New York Suu. oau.
’ • - 1 ■■ ■ t On* mortilng abnnt 10 o'clock I arrived
Legsndarjr Wrsptmu in th«* '*>»»«. on my round ot vucts. Th# comte hod
Carious and loterudiug purCcnlitMtii evacuated the ground floor for th* benefit
the actual coastruu.' * ‘ ' k ‘
weapons are found lu
and tba coinuieutar't-* u>i the uuuis-ni
writings. The bows v r »(l lu lvug;h (iu'.i
the length of a man’* arm tu 4 c-ub’iit *u
fifest, of which tha Litter (liii eimi.-ii \v a
considered the liest. i itcj. were in* m o(
metal, horn, or woo!; t ut theie
sutL^^ ml i *° ^ Mir trunk*. Glauce Into tile rooms a« which to expend her affection. l*)o not on-
wife, who follows him patiently from ona
•take to another, with har writing table,
pencils and papers, and scribbles ener
getically, only looking up ones In a while
to disease a sentence that she does not eo-
tireiy approve.—New York World.
Servant* of the KsgUih Arlstoeraey.
The children of the farmers are proud
to be taken as servants of the hall; the
gamekeepereload bailiffs and head gnrdeu
ere are the grandees of the Inferior world.
All this class of dependents, by far the
most comfortable of Ihe laboring people
in England, live pnly to serve their bid-
tore, to coutribote to their oomfort and
grandeur. Their very numbers are n part
of the pomp of the aristocracy. They
come to look upon themselves ns tho ap-
pnrteiuinces of rank, wliiif (ha humbler
Fort, those whs live In the gardens and
stable* and keunsls of tho lords, or the
house servant* who para their existence
cleaning their elver, preparing their
viNtwiM, whitening their hunting brs«chsi,
and dressing their hair, have no concep
tion of a state of things _ in which
man Is equal to man. They <?o their
work, not as self-respecting peop> do In
other oountrles—for hire, as a matter of
buduera exchanging labor for pay—but
for the honor of it; for love sometimes,
and always because it is proper, because
it D their duty and their place to
the lords.—Adam Badeau*
icir place tojflteJM^
l FlMtaffMlPP
oeatd and the
»nd set off * the top
tally forgetting their j
Tho comte and I eU..
hour later ineeareh of
arriving at the Anbury's ■
that Pierre kadhai.li. taken to rid
himself ot the cassock when he tale her
*^Voii 5 what ilia he say to you!"
-That ho was carrying information i
teagnss from here, ana when I inked him,
if you are the toarerof dtopatcliev, what
have you dona with them! ho
laughing: ‘According to custom, I
them by h ■ — -
I have <
of icgvuil^ry of ihe enemy aud taken refuge In the firel
story. Too weather hull b.-en exceed-
Iniflr mlurfor It four <tn«M miuI I found him
ruadlug in his arm chair near an open
window.
The Prutslan officers hail finished break
fast and had had a table placed tutors l
veranda, at the foot of the flight of steps
•nV.'hoW him that I
God with alt mjr ifml to
him?" I*
“And
and looked down. -Thank, .
»MIy, Ar to die without aooing y
would be to die twice!"
The comte glanced at me.
“Would you like to bet,* I a
in a low lone when X wai ‘
after we had roaeliod the .
-that the overpowering
religious Ilfs has not
yourtlaug War's heart by*
nephew and me-in *~ t:
plan!* i i
“I can only hope you are right *
-An'. 1 waa right," exelalmed the doo-
tor, eamiaa mm‘ awvvr ‘ "7W4 “ SmZ~j£i‘- r ~.
lid Comte do Brassy this morning riding
•n the forest with hto three grandsons on
*eir ponlea^They m the children of
'to torn- -
were constructed from th. baiutoo cut at leading to tta lawn, on which coffee and
the end of autumn. The mnows also viu llqueuere had been set, and were smoking
ried in length from 8 fvrt tu 5 or 0. Thry thulr cigars. I could hear them chatting
were tipped with sUei point* variously andUughing.
shaped, needie or luac* |N)iutcd, M*tni- ! Thefcse came in hurriedly.
*1 router, 4*irtlfnnu. ita dila-fclirvil . i r -“AM nVon Qi*ii! unt Jirktenc, ttte n|aa
jagged like a saw, ami -fonr** /or,
points are to-day toln- (otatnn tin
rows of many of the nUhr.y.u d trite* «-f whom tliey have bound and are bringing
lutlte. The ahafte w*re xreaMNl**or an- here."
to fnrilltate thu.r tliv-Ut; but t^ry While sho waa speaking two cavalry
never appear to bar* l««u polsuiw i. men came through the prlncipaj eatrauoe
rhercko aud of the Comm
Nrimao. nurisod eon!—New
Importance to what women say, nor worth
nhils to boar them any ill-will for it. Bat
with har it to different. Stacan not be re
fused consideration. And, yon know,
when n man allows himself to to Ill-
treated by a woman, that woman m tut he
worth tho trouble of it, Veigele to
worth itl- ,
“Then yon nr* quito coolant with you
wtfef*
-Why should I not be content! Who to
happy in this world! Only the man whole
content with hto lot. And she tosgo l
wife! Kven Count Sknrhsk always ktowo
her toads; wall, why should to notktos
Uwm! ShshnsopnU of llttla handsss
soft m vvlvst and a. wuHs as srmlns.
How the man ever managed to woo ana
wed such a little tors of n wife, I enn ns*
fmngfnr, tat m I left Ahrnhnmsk's koos*.
UMld not hMpnfisetlaa that this greatly
tad Tsrhmsly filftod artist was also a
tS&JSSSSSUBSt
how, with sack n Xantippe as that, 1 fail
should ta v>«« •yrr -w-i 1 . -.
Printer* Ink nnd
For the benefit ot thoso persons not
familiar with proceesea by whlrh
photography, ia used In connection
with printer’s Ink, It mriy be well
to dricribe It briefly. A sheet of
glass is covered with a film of sensitia- d
gelatin#, upon which tbo light ct mlng
through a photogrnphlo negative Is al
lowed to falL Whenever the light comae
through unobstructed the gelatine Is male
insoluble: elsewhere it will absorb water
like a sponge. After being washed In
Water au Ink roller is pasted over the
gelatine surface, and It la found thd
where the gelatine Is hard and dry the
ink “takes,” but w(iere ft is spongy a id
fall of water Itdoip not take. From such» , i>tw t ( _ iwv> ^
plate pictures In printer’s iuk can be made j Tl.ora of Bengal and'* Mehar were pmKH .which had no doubt born senolrel whll"
s ( n/I. a. d avrauwa UuUarm.
tovkuiu Mou-i'lerr 1111 jne VwU ' f Hi*. An officer rose and listened to t‘ie re-
best siae mud l*»*e •.« a |*.rt nfoue of tho soldier* Ifo thoa pulted
weapon, as It w<»* tt-v ti.»vis tuiu, m»i. oil the prl*uurr’s cap. I stifled an t-xc|a
a hilt guardetl by an iron .vi.lug, pr»»bi.'
resembling :*»-• rnatej ;>.h.a, «r i v l
kanda ul Uie lUlpat.—Us.ickwort'i Lag
Some went altogether to.idu of Iron, m„l driving before them, with their wooden
It is perlripMi thijse tu widen Curtins m- lances, a man with his hands tied behind
lades when he says t**t noma ot th * In- him, with a halter, vaa end of which one
dten archer* shot wit. arrow* v filch were of ld« capture kept firm hold of.
toe heavy to ba very nmnagMiMr. Ills treast-r* were stuffed Into hU hunt-
One characteristic u; t.«e sivlwry of the Ing boots, which were covcr.*d with mad;
ancient Hindus seems t>» have been p- cu- he wore a pea-ant’s vevt of eo.vrso cloth; •
Iter to thru aiooe, which coud»t«d in whtsile hung from a cord thrown over
shooting a amber of *rruwr at once, shoulder, aud a cap woe palled well down
from four to nine at a time. The »w»rds over his eyes.
to. ra, aa in later days, of various shnpes HU fees was hidden by the cap, but he
am! sixes, aud many loc.dllk* were cred- was evidently a well-built lad, wlthi a
1 te’d with pradneiug tits lest bhule*. bread chest, and with that erect bearing
with an ordinary press. The same p-
•uffices for thousauda of copies someui.itf *,
and gives a delicacy of tone which prom
ises to drive wodd and steel cate out of fell
fine books. Carefully made picture by
this process are unquestionably finer than
photographs.—New York Post
The Qmrm Theory la 17S1.
It has been found that Pasteur’s 4vnn
theory wm anticipated more than ittvifo
tary and a half ago tqr a physician of
Lyons named Golffoa, who. In writing
about the origin of the great plag ir. In
1781, mads the following itetemeuti
Minute insects or
a. from
inaMon of surprise and stepped b:tc;
test,, tlu window.
“Pierre!" I matterol
—. “What Pierre?” asked the comte.
w ' ^ . . 1 .7“ .. . “Pierre Brissac, my god-son and nrj'hrw.
Nsw Tvte^rupu lnRira-Ma-ui 1i1aNjt.1t oub uccordliqi to Brittany customs, lltiwoh
A new telegnipd. Instrument, colhaf tbj fortunate."
has bee-i brought out. It ••• # *s*o«{
M. do Braseey nnd hi* daughter watched
- 4 ... , *. , *ceue with gnat interest.
M.ISS uf touoli. L.»t. iM of i.y Hie ear a. I, HC| |.i elTe , tu*) hi. B reU birok s>ss on
Oibrra ire ||„ f.llow ahutad taken off tils nap. With
VI- VI- ..II . - A * .
alephanta Nootisr
hypotheMs nan explain tta facts, Netl.sr
tbs malign tnflnsnes of tta stars, nor ter
restrial exhalations, nor muumata, nor
atoms, whsther biUng or tarnlag, acid or
Uttar, could regain theft vitality
they tad loot It. Hon tta other kind.-are
admit tbo existence of minute living crea
tors. sro understand how Infection can be
conveyed In a latent condition fromow
place to break out afresh in another.*—
TtaCsronV.
.- intelligent* »9W
•She to very Intelligent,-
•But tad tempered, ehf*
•That depends taw oh looks at the
question,”soldAbrshemk. -AsagonsnM oU
rale it tonot worth whils to attach muck Uttar substance, which a few year, ego
‘ was employed as fertiliser and oocaatua-
drrlvss lu name from tu* fart tlpu ti.o
mows gels mrelred o» tta Itr-er by the thusesu; with great Turerrei'
re-is. of touch. ictt.-ud of by the ear aa I. n c i>|rrre, fixed his great t
, alone oau eg- the Kti'. kuown -round.r.* Otberwhs fire fellow whohad taken off InseaD. nun
plain there dimm. Iltotrne they are l e apireriios I.M01I ar to a -roui.ier,- hl.clnw-cnt hair, hi. proulUr BgS.-.awl
not visible; hot it does not therefore fol* an I couskte of an t <cctric m.tgtsc., which 1 u dark mustache tliuru was uo m stak
low that they are noa-existent. It Is o .ly Is traversed by the signal current* irom bighliu '
that onr microscope# are not at present thr trlcg ap'i line, mol attracte anarmn- H Yoa are a soldier ” snld the officer, “or
powerful enongb to stow them. W.can ture/ Tho annatnre opstatre a small » n eareptd prisoner, or a franc -tireur who
rosily imagine the existence of oreainrw ' proto or style, which rots ngMusts tta i, „i. r jn.. u„. aur . bearer of ilis-
whlch bur the same propottlon to ml.ee finger wllh Ms point ami pre-re* Into It so patches.’ T
ire to bo f.lt by the receiver The attrro- lie shrugged hlsshouidera. They had
tlon of the armature actuating Ihe probe muhedhlm forward and ho was stand-
to Interpreted by tlu receiver, an I Is u-rlt- Ing heron the table Th. other, while
tan down as lit* mi resge. Of . 00roe. the ri “, l0 g thMr coffee, eianuued him at-
mi vantage of Uu pirn, I. that no ronn-l Is tentirslr. The cavalryman had dls-
IrearJ, aud therefore she telegraph to a M- f "-.Js 7
lent tree.- A person tnay al«> write ilnan The major said something in German,
sd the men searched him thoroughly.
He smiled.
- - ■- ... I “What are yon laughing ett You won't
A tta o,.M eolooe U °* h Wnch Whl,n X °“ ‘ to0 ‘ l
l -M.vlIwhZ against the wall befuro a firing party."
!?.^Au^ ri thfra l V^. 1 ^taTiMv ui?! -I am laughing because yog m-o spick
two iirairtiiS^rSf •'• r f wh,rt - I am the son of a wldowand
irew^i^il’h^’d consequently was not drafted Into the
* n,1 f- 1 w »» ordered by yutir people to
for adalteraHng the gold dust, and • Jen gri,, some cattle fifteen league, front
itaM>t,™J* f where I lire to tta corps of l*rtnco Fred-
erick Charles I have made a lung ilclour
slan troop., hopirr thereby toirml ‘I'wn morder toslslt a friend ot mins who
MS. ?we7.ya.v, l n“tare^ iHta SX'" 1 "* ^ **
^sa^ssas^rJ;
gold fields, which ere twonty-fire miles W Ita in wththVfran‘ureurawith that
“ "ter rorny perroiTtoould tare bren
bo wry rich.-Chicago Times. ,hot as « of your spies.*
y, M yn- 1.IS, 0.4 gklagie 1^'— : -True, but not having it now ws win
During June gsginaw river port Mreat you asonsof ttatre;
tipped tm,vnm fret of lumber, 8,000,- * °
Dptores of, Utlnand >0,0a>,00i> Mngles
From' BsyCItythe shlpmenU were n, cca rS
tOOJBOO fret of lumber, IW,000 shingles. n P «™* hb “ nntr ?
ssrewyiikt- — Exchane*. WSS llivailcd."
- | Then, turning to Ms companions-*
NSW Treatreoat at she Wtuwplag OaasV “Notlca tta cut of hto board. I bet h»
Dr. W. T. Greene snggreta an earUy ^ .
available tmnrorement on tho oM plan ol -Gentlemen,* said the major, -the col
•ending children ta rtMts to gas worts, onel wlU ta taro to-morrow. Lst him do.
Hto plan to to attach a Mere£ rubber cUe. What to there Ifiluat tower.-
ng ta a hornet, the tubing being hm* Two soldiers etnorol ou ..1 tho f.rar
•“.reach tta floor. The gu to toyen which Maud at tta a...: ..it tire
cheeolat* aad IU Adjltaratleas.
Cbocolat* is ooe of tta articles of trede
most snscsptlblc of adulteration, Mncea
very email quantity of the cacao bean Im
part taste and perfume to a mixture of
mate loss and not always harmless mailer.
Unscrupulous manufacturers (and espee-
alaily to this applicable to the small
producer) introduce into tta pacta
floor, ground corn and beans, stale entire
g. ounds, real or mutton tallow (to supply
tta Moresarf oily substance) and tho
dregs of groaad nnts (1 —— -—• -
ally made into cakes as food for dogs, to
now profitably converted Into chorolats.
Add to tho above ingsdimta cacao stalls
tod ground brick, tta latter to gin
weight, and the components parts of
clasp chocolate era given.
Chocolate manafaetarers admit, with
refreshing artless sees, that adnlters'ed
chocolate to very little used iaFraace, but
to profitably sxportsiL It Is dUBmlt
to dbilngntah good choeotsta frogs
fabricated, from tta sppearanni
Ike tablets- Good ebooolote poses
the following qualities: It U oUy, poa saw
Inga faU and nndenishts flavor of cacao,
breaks regularly and smooth. It to slightly
. rttggtofltotgp,
cooksd with a little
comes only moderately
thick. Adulterated chocolate, on tho con
trary, breaks irregularly, is somewhat
gravelly aad porous, to whltttoh In color,
thickens considerably in cooking nnd gives
Urthaaodor rerembUng that at glue.—
part tbsy
more In that war. Every
th. curt in to eommemoi
by an anulrersary parade
which these veterans pi
being a Keneral holliii
iiunx These old
hearty In appearance,
S3;
sldertbls s
temperance q
cause going so far as to demand a
pruhlblilOD. The reporter of the Every
batnnlny, who did not sympathise with
movement, accordingly act out lu
search ot public opinion, and among
others interviewed wero thrne Old De
fenders. He found that every one of
thera-Mr. John a Morford. aged 60;
George Cuss, VJ: 6smnM Jennings, SO;
John I'ediiecord, 00; Nathenlel Watts, no—
haJ siways been lit the bsblt of taking a
lltlle stimulant ot soma kind, aud since
the discovery of Duffy's pure male
whisky—an article from whlche
of fusel oil is eliminated by a s
MVS—this was
tbs words of tbs
sir," said he. “ia whs
cle; that Is Duffy’s pure malt whll
That's like they use to I
An eminent London physi
Gnrdner, >1. D...whore »p*ci,
ea.es of the aged, 1ms written
hie favorite, topic, aud tbo result c
search Is, that the only sure und abiding
•treiitfUi which old aat. receive* is a
Cal UvsUuent. with pur* whiskey.
DLEOTALAV .
A* mnoiiih .iwaih slsntlspre-eminent.
No other such preparation equals it in
beauty of color, in effectiveness in henl-
inx the mucous membrane of tho mouth
ami throat, in thoroughness in cleansing
orinantisepticqualitlw.Qivo U*atria'. It-*
use becomesogrcc&bte and resolves itself
intoanoooaxftr. If you have a sort’ mouth
or soro gums Deloctalave will heal them
ff w ou wish to save your teeth IMcc-
talivo will aid you ami impair its fragra
nce to your breath. There can b
of it’«.va!uc to yon when! t> us<
hy such eminent men as Re
l.lnscomb, D. IT.; A. W. C.
tiie eminent Ocull.it; the late Dr .
•Johnson, ami twenty of the
physician* oml.Dentists of Allan!
Uw minutes ml a time, ns often a* con- ^»
Yenlenk—Medical Press.
is only one room lighletl by
•AU right. Take the
uutle him: give him a
1 <a he can sleep, and ph
Tte Oaljr IV»<m X«w U*Ir|. jw #tw ,
Thomas Brown, aged 00, living awh> rfojr."
op In the Adirontlaclw, New York. rulsRi And tho prisoner disapi
hie feeble voice to claim tluit he is tho om j joxvr.
penoo now living who has talked with i •
George ' Washington. Thomas was s': j ws--
younjprter^offlre summers at tiie time.— \ -What are