The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, November 09, 1888, Image 6

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$he gjjwatd and ^ducrtisen. Newnan, Ga., Friday, November 9, 1888. THE ELECTRIC LIGHT PROBLEM. A BIG TELESCOPE LENS. Tbe Great Lick Instrument Not Large Enough—A Delicate Under! eking. The other afternoon Mr. Alvin Cl^rk, the manufacturer of the great Lick tele scope lens, received a letter from the president of the University of Soutliern California, located at Los Angeles, ask ing for information as to a forty inch lens, and intimating that an order for a telescope to eclipse that at the Lick ob servatory would soon be sent. A correspondent who was present turned his attention to the numerous lenses of different sizes and in various stages of manufacture while Mr. Clark was reading the letter. lie had just been talking with the man who had made eyes that could read patent medicine signs on the moon’s rocks with regard to the possibility for further advance in as tronomical researches, and lie feared the letter might make it necessary to shorten his visit. Mr. Clark’s eyes twinkled as he read the letter. Then, without a word of comment, he handed the missive to the reporter and resumed the patient ' rub. rub, rub of a small lens glass on the polishing block. ‘•What do yon think of that?” he asked, when the rejxirter had made a careful mental note of the contents of the letter. “I thought it had been stated by som'e savants that it was impossible to finish a lens any larger in diameter than that sent to the Lick observatory, ” the repor- t or said. ‘•I know such a statement has been made,” replied Mr. Clark, “but I do not indorse it. I’ve been ^making telescope lenses now for a good many years, and I • night to khow something about it. If I can get the glass the projier size there will he no trouble in making a lens forty inches in diameter. I'd make a five footer if my life was spared long enough.” “Do you mean to say that there is a possibility in the future of having tele scopes five feet in diameter?” “I don’t see why they should not be as large as that. But mind you, it would lake about one man’s lifetime to make such a lens. In tbe first place, it would be necessary to get a piece of glass ab solutely perfect in every way. The slightest flaw or variation in density would spoil it for a big lens. It might lx> a generation before such a piece of glass could bo manufactured. Then it must be ground and polished by hand. But 1 believe such a lens can be made, and I believe it will be made. ” “Will it be of any practical advantage to astronomers?” ••Certainly it will. Its increased mag nifying ]>ower will be in proportion to its increased sized. Take this forty-inch lens that has been mentioned as an ex ample. Its size would be one-ninth larger than the Lie!: observatory lens, ;::;u it would make given objects appear nine times larger or nine times nearer. Increase the diameter of the lens and you will increase the power to examine worlds that have not yet been seen. If a 1; us five feet in diameter is secured, it will bring the moon so close that we can see every nook and cranny on its surface. As for new stars, there is no limit to the discoveries that could be made. It would revolutionize astronomical researches.” “Had you thought of making a larger lens than that in tiie Lick telescope before you received this letter?” “Oh, yes. I am not surprised at re ceiving this letter, for when 1 was in California a year ago the president of that university intimated that they should want a larger telescope than that on Mount Hamilton. There is a wonderful amount of interest in astronomy in Cali fornia. All sorts of people arc studying i lie science. This five inch lens I am polishing is for a telescope I am making for the president-of that university. It is for his personal use, and he begged me i ) make it with my own hands, so I am •pegging away at it when I get the time. 1 have also filled other small orders 1'rom that state. In addition to those small orders I have received no less than three letters from different colleges asking if I could make a forty inch lens. I have written all those persons that I was ready to accept any and ail orders for a forty inch lens. In fact, 1 was so sure that there would be a demand for such a lens that I gave an order to the glass men in Paris to save for me the first large mold that they suc ceeded in getting out. I may get it in a few weeks and I may have to wait months and weeks for it. 1 heard the other day that they had cut out two extra large plates and were finishing them for the exhibit:.*:! next year. If it’s true, I shall secure them if money will do it.” “What causes this delay?" “It isall in the casting.” was the reply. "All these lenses are made in France, near Paris. They are making them all the time. They melt up a lot of glass, anil when it. is cf the right consistency they set it aside to cool. The glass is melted in huge pots, and after every casting the pots are broken away, leavin ; mass of glass. Then they examine lest it to see if it is suitable m s; .it up into lenses It must be just right or it must be melted over. They have orders for all sizes of lens, but they do not e. :i- sider those orders until they get the IP k of glass. The least indication of striae or sediment will snow that it cannot boused for larger lenses. Then they break it up to see if they can use it for small ones. There are generally enough imperfections • » : th block for large lenses. If none is visible to the eye the block is tested with the polariscope, to see if it is c: even density throughout. If all the conditions are perfect, then they will snlit up the : block and get out a. large lens in the rough. If they succeed in doing that tli. re is still great dung r that it will be trek n in theflrrt hmiohr-r v iget i: 1 wn to the proper sire f. rgiimUi-gs:: 1 ?-. 'idl ing. After that is acc mplisht I t] ' vt rst danger of breakup, i. peti\y.gh cf j course it would require the. utivio i Will and caution not to break it while ; lug cn the finishing touches.” “Do you break many« “irnts ol them. ■ Wo do not break as many now as we did at first, but in the 1 course of a year we smash a good manv. Our experience in the past has opened our eyes a little, ro we can generally tell, before we touch a lens, whether or not it is sound. —Loslux Tor, Nett Turk Sun. How Edison Wrestled with Its Difficulties. A Knotty Point. I remember going to see Edison soon after it was announced that he had boasted of having solved the electric light problem. All electricians'know that this same problem is one of the oldest in the field of electricity. Fiftv years ago sci entists in England and Professor Joseph Henry in this country had made incan descent lamps, which were to. all appear ance very similar to what we have today. There was a little glass globe from which the air had been exhausted; inside was a strip of carbon or platinum, which, when heated by u strong current of electricity, glowed with a white heat. In Professor Henry’s day the electric current was an expensive affair, how ever,' the dynamos being unknown, and the zinc battery alone being in use. When the dynamo offered an unlimited current at a moderate price inventors be gan to work at the glow lamp, again. Its defects had never been sufficiently overcome to make it more than a labora tory toy; it would give light for a few mo ments and would then go out, the oxygen remaining in the bulb burning up the carbon loop. In order to make the lamp of practical use it was necessary to de vise means for making the bulb really empty of air and for making the carbon loop last a reasonable time. Edison went at this work with his customary ardor. For months he tested air pumps, until he found a better form than any yet known; then he worked at carbons until his friends feared he would break down under the strain. The preparation of a new form of carbon loop might require weeks of steady labor, the results of which would be decided iu perhaps five minutes. In his search for a better material than platinum for the loop which gives out the light in a glow lamp, Edison tried 3,200 different materials, arriving finally at a kind of South American bamboo of re markably close fiber. This wood, when carbonized, gives a loop of great tenacity and durability. For two years the in ventor worked at the glow lamp before he dared to say that it was a commercial success. In the winter of 1879-80 he an nounced that his lamp would last long enough to make competition with gas pos sible. It. may be remembered that the announcement caused a storm of ridicule. One so called expert, connected with a well known college, declared that Edi son’s lamp could never enter into com petition with gas, but would remain a curiosity and possibly a luxury for rich men. This was at a time when Edison was inviting people from all over the country to see the lamp work at his Menlo Park laboratory,- and so angered him t hat he declared he would 6ome day erect a statue to his critic, light it up with Edison lamps and make the inscrip tion read: “This is the man who said the' Edison lamp was a failure.” There were many dark days that win ter. After making one batch of lamps that burned splendidly and lasted for weeks, burning night and day, Edison found to his dismay that the second batch, made in exactly the same way, so far as he could find out, and of the same materials, failed completely. Instead cf burning for weeks, the lamps went out in less than an hour. For three days Edison worked night and day trying in vain to find the trouble. Then lie took to Lis bed, seriously ill, while his ex hausted assistant took a rest. Edison has had the good fortune to at tract and retain a number of devoted men, who for the last ten years have shared in his trials and successes. When the inventor believes that he is on the track of something important he com pletely forgets his meals and his sleep. He has been known to work for forty-eight hours at a stretch, without leaving his laboratory, and with no food except crackers and cheese which he ate as he pondered over a knotty point. He can not understand that other men need rest, and is indignant that any one should think of meals or sleep while the result, of some interesting experiment is in doubt. The Edison lamp was not per fected without many such incidents.— New York Star. CLOTHES OF THE DEAD. a large it and t< Take Time to Rest. There are many ways to travel, but if you desire to travel for pleasure and rest, let me commend to you a sailing yacht as a pleasant means cf locomotion; and if you want to getaway from the world’s giddy unrest, from cares of business and from ail the worries and petty annoy ances that make life in the city a daily round of wearying toil, I say to you go and do as we are doing. “Cannot spare the time,” you say? Ah, well, then go on, my friend, and worry and toil, and got worn and weary and exhausted, ana one day you will “spare the time;” ay, as far as this world’s work is concerned, you will spare not only time, but eternity, too, and by the time you should have died, if you had lived a natural life, temperate in labor and indulgent in rest, the world will be whirl- ing around as smoothly as if you had never been, and you will, long before, have been in your grave and forgotten. When the Lord made men he did not in tend that they should be gray haired, physical wrecks at 40, as so many are. He doubtless intended that they should not only work, but rest. — J. Armor Knox. The Old Custom and the New—Second Hand Clothing Dealers. It used to be, among the women of a past generation, a custom to leave their clothes by will in the same manner that they did their “second best bedstead” and “silver gilt teajiot.” They divided their furs, laces, brocades and “body linen” among their nearest kin, and gen erally left the plainer and more worn tilings to old family servants or poor re lations. But these personal possessions, with the exception of laces, are rarely bequeathed nowadays. Mrs. John Jacob Astor kept to the old customs, and I saw a poor, pretty girl wearing one of her sealskin coats last week, it having been specially bequeathed to her in the will. The usual course is that taken by the heirs of Mrs. A. T. Stewart, who sold all her enormous wardrobe to dealers in second hand clothes. Though little was said about it at the time, a good many society women took occasion to purchase certain tilings through the dealers, but generally handkerchiefs, stockings, silk underwear and gloves, which would not be recognized and which they got very cheaply. There is a woman on Fifth avenue who makes a business of buying the ward robes of dead women, and who is fast making a fortune out of the bargains she gets. Most of her customers who pur chase goods from her have no idea of the real secrets of her trade. She is osten sibly a dealer in' imported goods and has certain French and English boxes and cases into which she packs many of her goods and sells them as new. She will take the whole wardrobe of the deceased, new and old, good and bad. and then this goes through a careful process of selec tion. The new things, or those nearly 60, which are really imported or have that Appearance, 6he packs into foreign cases and ties them up daintily and dis poses of them to rich customers. Many a time a woman has come to her and said: “I want to find something—stock ings, gloves or what not—like 6ome I once saw Mrs. Quelquechose have. See if you can find them for me.” And the dealer has in course of time sent her a note saying that she has found some thing very near what she asked for. In reality they are Mrs. Queiqueehose’s own, and the dealer had them all the while. The gowns that are new or very nearly new she 8ells to the dressmakers, who freshen them up a bit and sell them to out of town customers. Then the dealer has a list of customers who. are perfectly familiar with the real nature of her trade. They are mostly women who are struggling to keep their places in society, with lean purses and a great desire to keep up appearances. They keep the run of her place and get some bargains, because though the things they buy are somewhat worn, they are worth the money for the good Parisian cut and style. They buy from her black and inconspicuous gowns that are like those worn by a dozen other women and are not likely to be recognized, and some times the}' have them made over at home and buy them for the sake of the good material in them. There is a third class of the womout and shabby clothes, bon nets, shoes and general belongings which are sold in a lump to the second hand dealers in the Bowery. And so all the pretty frills and fancies of the dear dead women of our households bpcome scat tered to the far winds, worn by her friends, her enemies, her servants, strangers and women whom in life she would have turned her eyes away from as she passed. There is something very pathetic, it seems to me, in such dispersal and use of these most intimate personal possessions of a lovely women. The old way was Lest.—Cor. Brooklyn Eagle. Farm and Stock Notes. Poultry will not thrive in a wet or damp place.' Confine the number of aci’es to your ability to till. Pine sawdust in nest boxes is said to keep lice from fowls. Large growing trees should not be planted in small yards. The secrets of large yields always and everywhere are rich soil, good seed and thorough tillage. The less you disturb the sitting hen, the better she will attend to her busi ness. To be thrifty an animal must be com fortable. This is true in the spring or summer, as well as in the winter. When the wife and children attend to the poultry, it isn’t fair to exchange eggs for tobacco and machine oil. A good crop of both corn and weeds cannot be grown on the same ground at the same time, any more than two rail way trains can pass eaqli other on the same track. The farmer who will succeed the best in growing crops will be the one who will be the best. We now have so many improved implements for stirring the soil that there is really no excuse for plantingland that is not. well pulverized. The manure should be so thoroughly mingled with the soil that no portion of it shall be without fertilizer within a few inches of it. I^THE ONLY “The moon of Mahomet arose, and it shall set,” says Shelley; but if you will set a bottle of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup in some handy place you will have a quick cure for croup, coughs, and colds. The surest way to reveal your weak ness is to hide your motives. The eighth wonder of the world.— A benighted man limping with rheu matism who had never heard of Salva tion Oil. Price 25 cents a bottle. Mrs. Jason—“That fellow out in Ne braska who bet his wife against a cow on Cleveland’s election was no gentle man.” Mr. Jason—“I should say not: no gen tleman makes a bet when he is sure to win, no matter how it goes.” >> Brilliant Durable Economical Are Diamond Dyes. They excel all others in Strength, Purity and Fastness. None others are just as good. Beware of imitations—they are made of cheap and inferior materials and give poor, weak, crocky cqlors. 36 colors; 10 cents each. Send postal for Dye Book, Sample Card, directions for coloring Photos., making the finest Ink or Bluing (10 cts. a quart), etc. Sold by Druggists or by WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, lit. For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USE DIAMOND PAINTS. Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Cents. "MT. 7 f celerT' r ume s -j COMPOUND CURES PROOFS Neuralgia “Paine’s Celery com pound cured my nerv ous sick headaches. Mrs. L. A. Brentnbr, San Jacipto, Cal. Nervous Prostration “After using six doi- tics of Paine s Celery Compound, I am cured of rheumatism. Samuel Hutchinson, South Cornish, JN. « Rheumatism Kidney Diseases “It has done me more good for kidney disease than any other medi cine.” Geo. Abbott, Sioux City, Iowa. AND All Liver Disorders “Paine’s Celery Com pound has been ef great benefit for torpid liver, indigestion, and bilious- ness." Elizabeth C. Udall, Quechee, Vt. THOMPSON BROS. NEWNAN, GA. FINE AND CHEAP FURNITURE —AT PRICES— THAT CANNOT BE BEAT IN THE STATE. A Narrow Escape. Col. W. K. Nelson, of Brooklyn, came home one evening, feeling a peculiar tightness in the chest. Before retiring, lie tried to draw a long breath but found it almost impossible. He suffer ed four days from pneumonia, and the doctors gave him up. Dr. Acker’s En glish Remedy for Consumption saved him and lie is well to-day. Sold by W. P. Broom, Newnan, Ga. Annoying—“The trouble with pa,” siad Mts. Bently, “is that he lets little things worry him. lie was mad this morning because the baby kept him awake all night.” Big stock of Chambei suits in Walnut, Antique Oak, and Cherry, and Imitation suites. French Dresser Suites (ten pieces), from $22.60 to $125.00. Plush Parlor Suits, $35.00 and upward. Bed Lounges, $9.00 and upward. Silk Plush Parlor Suits, $50.00. Good Cane-seat Chairs at $4.50 per set. Extension Tables, 75 cents per foot- Hat Racks from 25 cents to $25.00. Brass trimmed Curtain Poles at 50 cents. Dado Window Shades, on spring fixtures, very low. Picture Frames on hand and made to ofder. SPLENDID PARLOR ORGANS Low, for cash or on the installment plan. Metallic and Wooden Coffins ready at all times, night or day. THOMPSON BROS., NEWNAN, GA, Terrible Forewarnings. Cough in the morning, hurried or dif ficult breathing, raising phlegm, tight ness in the chest, quickened pulse, chil liness in the evening or sweats at night, all or any of these things are the first stages of consumption. Dr. Acker’s English Remedy for consumption will cure these fearful symptoms, and is sold under a positive guarantee by W. P. Broom, Newnan, Ga. Land and Stock for Sale. I offer for sale 180 acres of land, within one mile of Puckett’s Station, well improved; 40 acres in original woods, well watered,, good orchard, well improved. Also 50acres within ilnee miles of Puckett’s Station, and three miles of Gvant.viRe, on the Atlanta and West Point Railroad; 20 acres in original woods, good orchard and good tenant house. I will also sell 400 acres of land in Meri wether county, Ga., within six miles of Luthervil'e and two miles east, of Rocky Mount. This land is well improved aDd cal be divided up into small farms. Prefer sell ing the whole farm in Meriwether, but will stT to suit purchasers. I will also sell 2o head of good young mules and horses, including several good saddle and harness horses For further informafion apply at my home near Puckett’s Station, or to \V . H. Ring | ham, at Newnan. T. N. BINGHAM. Girls at Vassal- College. Freshmen at Yass&r have easier times than at eeiieges for boys, and they ought to. for I hoy are girls and etiquette rules. Every girl in the college early in the school year goes .forth on certain after noons. curd case in Land, to cull uv on the freshmen or other newcomers in ..a* corridor. If the freshman be cut a -_rd is left; if in, the acquaintance is formed. In either case the card must Lo : wi. a week. After this v: as are mere informal and parties are given.— New York Sun. How to Develop the Lungs. The exercise which I have found of most value in developing the lungs may bo described as follows: Standing erect as possible, with shoulders thrown back and chest forward, the arms hanging close to the body; the head up, with lips firmly closed, inhalation is to be taken as slowly as may be, at the same time the extended arms are to be gradually raised, the back of the hands upward, until they closely approach each other above tbe head. The movement should be so regulated that the arms will be ex tended directly over the head at the mo ment the lungs are completely filled. The position should lie maintained from five to thirty seconds before the reverse j | process is begun. As the arms are grad ually lowered the breath is exhaled slowly, so the lungs shall be as nearly t freed from breath as possible at the time I g! A TSW doses tskeil at ths right time I the arms again reach the first position at | | w '|] often SSVe a severe spell of| the side. , jlslekness. Price only 25 cents atr By these movements the greatest ex- | drup store . Be sure and See| pansion possible is reached, for upon m- iE-,. J , n ~ jure pci c U Wtiontto weight of tho shoulders sud , .{£, C. .4cLA, u S CO.E-,' ]sectoral muscles are lifted, allowing the j 1-ipRA 1 L!vn.R * FLEftl ^ thorax to expand fully, while upon ex- !§fl?4G BROS., Pittsburgh, Fa., iSj halation in lowering the arms we utilize i fe nn the box. iNone other is Genuine, the additional force of this pressure upon the upper thorax to render expiration as complete as possible. These deep respir ations should be repeated five or six tin: -s, and tho exercise gone through with lira or six times a day. It is liarcliy neces sary to remark that the clothing must in no way interfore with the exercise. In some cases this exercise is more advan tageous when token lying fiat cn the back, instead of standing. In this position the inspiratory muscles become rapidly strengthened by opposing the additional pressure exerted by the abdominal organs against the expanding lungs. And. cu the other hand, expiration is mere v - feet and full on account of the ; r . ,.;e of these organs. This is an ox.: : now advocated by several iendj g vocal teach- C-3 c* .Cv _ \—J- hi: Davis, I. D. ATLANTA & WEST POINT RAILROAD, WESTERN —“<—dAN Dfoo-— RAILWAY OF ALABAMA. -H-READ DOWN.-w- ‘O'-S-TIME TABLE MO. !4.fo-o=- -k.READ DEv Loeai Mail (Daily) No. 51. 10 35 am 12 35 pin 148 pm 7 30 am 7 am | 7 59 a m j S 25 am I s 38 a m j s 53 am I 9 08 a m 9 32am 9 45 am JO 10 am 10 30 ami 2 38 pm 3 22 pn 3 48 pm 4 10 pm _4 22 pm '4 3V pm 4 45 pm 5 09 pn i 5 19 pn 5 40 pm | 6 00 pn 11 Mail (Daily) No. 53. 3 05 pm 1 20 am 2 27 am 3 20 am 4 00 ai 4 28 am 4 52 an 5 04 am 5 18 am 5 30 am 5 55 am 0 07 am 6 30 act 8 50 am Lv Lv Lv Lv Lv Lv Lv Lv LV Lv Lv Lv !,▼ Lv f ,v. Lv Lv i Vr STATIONS. Selma.... . Montgomery ... .Chetaaw... Auburn .,. . .Colt:minis.. Opelika.... . "West Pujnt . .Gabbetiville.. . .. La Grange.. Hogansville. . .Gcantville.. Puckett’s .. ... Newnan... .. .Palmetto., . Fairhurn.. .. Red Oak... ..East Point. .. ..Atlanta... S, 1SSS. Local Mai! (Daily! No 50. 1 Fast Mail 1 (Roily) No. 52. Ar. 9 40 pm 11 40 am Ar. 7 35 pm 8 45 am Ar. 6 25 Din 5 10 am Ar. 5 43 pm 4 20 am Ar. 7 10 pm A r. 5 25 pm 4 00 am j Ar. 4 45 pm 3 12 am! Ar '2 52 a in j Ar. 4 09 pm 2 30 am | Ar. 1 58 a m l Ar. 1 42 a m | Ar. 3 19 pm 1 28 anil Ay. 3 08 pm 1 I 9 a rn 1 Ar. 12 35 a in j Ar. 12 2(i an. j Ar. 12 03 an ! Ar.l 2 15 pm! 11 50 pm| Lv.j 1 55 pm 1 1 30 am j Accom moda tion. 7 00 pm 8 49 pm 8 33 pm 8 11 pm 5 5S pm 5 4s pm 5 33 pm 5 09 pm 4 52 pm •1 37 pm 4 25 pm 4 25 pm CECIL GARRETT, General Manager. CHAS. H. CROMWELL, Gen’l Passenger Agent. WALTER E. AVERY. (JY'ext Door to Post Ojjice,) -DEALER IN RELIABLE WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, SPECTAC LES AND EYEGLASSES I £Mb=Cime ->-XemcMcs. KNIGHT’S OLD ENGLISH OINTMENT i« guaranteed !o cure ingrowing toe nails, wounds, cuts, bruises, gathered fingers, tel- boils, gathered breasts, corns hard or carbuncles, bunions, anu when caused ipplied in time, even lock- on soft bv a wound and jaw A Ciiiesgcar; at Hunch. That a Chicagoan dislikes to lose ar.y tuuc is patent to an ob.-t-ryt.-r in snv or the down tov.-.u restaurants dtirix the N AsnriLr.i:. 7-:;x 5’. .- ?, 1P8?--I have used Swift’s MK-cliic mv family for -one time, and it t a • lent i ledy fora! ng a rities fhe I id. It i ly oi n -. se. II ieve t a ; 1 tve \v rd 1 ff a ; cv . lack of rheu matism in C ■ by a ly resort tot . t remedy, iall - vhtrt . r- relicf, is it s medicine < ; - mends it«:-l:' fora .-laistirmxua! treat meat _ta:.t thorou.-Uiv eradicates t'ic -••. !•= of in~o-.se a the system. Ksv. W. P. Harsisox. Waco, '1 sx.-s, -fov T * ?• I'seful and ornamen-al novelties, as well as staple goods for Wedding. Birthduv and Sou venir Gifts. FINE STAY! •>'ERY ! Also. Christmas Cards, in season. Watches, Clocks, Jewelry anil Spectacles r-.-pam-i. in lies’ style - r •vorkineusii p Medals and Badges made to oolrr. Letter on rat -■ graving. W. \V. MORGAN. ii Stick by Mail I*repaid. Kuifllit’s Liver, Kidney and Maiaiiai Fad is invaluable in districts where malaria pre vails. It will cure, or better still, will prevent. KNIGHT’S LADIES’ PAD is a sovereign remedy for female weakness PBep'iVd rUleS ’ 1UC ° rrhea ’ elC ’ Prk ' e > each, Knight’s London Toilet Specialties. Indispensible to every lady’s toilet. Sevi> eok circulars Tony a,-.. vt Vl A - N1 Klj - f -' a “ make |5o to fioo per mouth. KNIGHT’S REMEDIED, - IS Gold street, Philadelphia. Pa. WITH FEIY!ALE MEDICINE MUSIC & 0’REAR, sSiHSsisiSfte" che* rfui • tbe ;• <’*"ath.aud Arts cf Former Ages, tome arts of former ages o.ivi lo been ystal t! - it'd that of eugruviii.; : :;es ami granite, Ethiopians Egpy:eta., a cf painting on glass. ] men monkish ages. Dmorem duvet:e • t<v. have been given to the Arts, though each is perfect in its way. Chinese art. Japan ese art. Hindoo art. are each (Lilcrent fivm Enroxs-an, which follows the-Gre; k standard in sculpture and the Italian in painting. — Boston Budget. con has a against while 1: our. .Cm, paper prop . glass or devours I 3t ever-- se ll A \Y HO I.ESA] BETA : I. mirit= • i n Lin lii CL ATI VC Of life ; |.| '1,1 oat IN. . - ■ 5 “ Askycmr Druggist. * i ft anc 1 -a rcsbi a in >' It'cwJtb- veand Unfatting. vours trie news at i: he finishes one s.; 1 down Lis unite rui-i k he 1. expose a rkesn side to his view, when he resumes tne double cseupation of reading and eating. The average Chicago busi ness man can consume a fry without missing a news item, and can keep posted on the ai fairs if the day without- overlooking an oyster. -Chicago Herald. is EC of tl: Treatise on I - Tu-. Switt 5-”. Net Xbrk.’J ■ LLEXDON A .7. E. >L R Jf )., Xe: r: \V< it-;-: to Mo Ga. HAT” D fo b o>rr. for this pajirr he good (hough to scale at your first opportunity The publishers nttd the roodey HI *.M £* £ fR OO sfli 4 "