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fiend.
Fresen t Cl.arac
i*- ^%,llead. 1 * 8 fblic the poor,
US. me an the [ws
gussian empire,
^t^uWicationscnte^ 1 1 '* ‘.-.-deraription of
ira -
the czar and his
tJ
the man or the boy
.fer to latter)* who the
Gently the etches the sight of
& , irresistible de
is® “tfmeaning v-ggui originally
property may often be
3'vate “No bills allowed
a Y>- pasaoS visit of the
fct iLtothe a sticker as
bill
If &T1‘ of eaution to the
f.jr'M a im
.
-jfession regarding not an read,
for does it
familiar placard, “No
usually exhibited in
appears, after the
to been erased, as a wffi
A imHgein a whiff
L afon to smile
better, so we just
’s been at it again. When
l, e travel by rail the
as ^ to to
L,{ seeais imprisonment he
b to enliven the tedium
K iris his ingenuity a-gomg. the rad
L h! , a in the face is
Lnysbeseeching L requested not appeal to that put
jua and it is not
[t L 0:1 the comfort seats, in removing
finds “not.”
jciionable little word
a par with this is the auda
ice to lie seen in one of the
:: iid Southwestern railway ear¬
ning out of Glasgow, on
eared, “Passengers are par
•nested to put their feet on
Iocs and cat the carriages.”
bto add, tiie company asked
L Lons io forbear putting their feet
or seats of the carriages.
Lot the neighboring line af
Lpting witness' morsel to the heading habitual in
hr, as the
Ues changed from “Cale
yiway” to “Ale on a railway.”
8 be be ever so clever with his
knife, seldom succeeds in hay¬
fork passed off as genuine, ai
:erc is one case in which a
Liter said to have suffered.
Iraman, newly arrived in the
[is, I found himself on a particu
iuor;d:; compelled to ptxtron
I (!;■■. ircle trains of the Metro
fciwa. in order to pay a visit,
pint to alight at his station
King above the carriage door,
[rack the friendly with what interest, appeared to
r the,coin
pin N tie its words, passengers. “Wait Re read
till the
k” and passed his destination
bes before attempting to dis
b warning and venture out,
r a moment imagining tiiat the
P “ )e letter “t” had been the
baking him lose his time.—
’it.Dili
, Ti.e Evil Eye.
loaning of the evil eye, the
11105 vsskanos” of the Greeks,
’ of the Romans,
far! was
in : we find f oro traces * b ' !ari a of vulgar super
it in almost
F atr h notably to this day
N canny Scots who inhabit the
r sof th esea, of “Ulva dark
Ny.” of Skye and the Heb
N among the Turks, who dis
eT i' e f e da of the stranger. But
“ vs the power
nave been - seems
used for the pur
p.i.v..'!;Jy afflicting the live
uisagr, • e neighbors.
find to this day in Ireland,
Scotland and the west ’ of .Eng
we this belief is
•• ia some form or otli
, . mes
• the eye has always
tint ai! y one person,
.^-•-eviianeye, «»nn frightened animals should
®i«nuber is to
ridiculous, and
entertained for a
Journal.
111,1 Rice” 01
l&ir Chinese.
1 f *3 that a Chinaman
the morning
-congee, ”_° r , as he
Irfs is simply rice
Finnish drinkable
allowed to cool, it
Paste. Some c care
h^IieSr ’ae f- 18 d n DOtthe «t
^ rice h eon
fi£??f not the
“ h# Uler - The
<«Cf an cau 4 baaI * D <inde d
s Lr, Ule Jesuit congee.”
Not , lk ol in
' earfare Boston.
k three
^^CL^[ tiiat cents
cannot »ook
; J d d Ul pennies,
* ^^raione 2 ri,.!f u ^,- CU lariy 13 JUade to
pavs mean
1)0 mat
lCoBia, ^U^ coppers
Barge Landowners.
There is only one landed proprietor
in England posessed of more than 100,
000 acres in one county, there being
three in Ireland and no less than four¬
teen in Scotland. In England the
Duke of Northumberland is proprietor
of 183.610 acres in Northumberland.
In Ireland Mr. Richard Burridge is
proprietor of 100,152 acres in Galway,
the" Marquis of Conyngham 129,846
acres in Donegal and the Marquis of
Sligo 122,902 in Mayo.
In Scotland the Duke of Argyll is
proprietor of 168,315 acres in Argyll;
the Earl of Breadalbane, 234,160 acres
in Perth and 204,192 acres in Argyll;
Mr. Evan Bailie, of Dochfour, 141,14S
acres in Inverness; the Duke of Buc
eleueh, 253,719 acres in Dumfries and
104,461 in tloxburg; Mr. Donald Cam¬
eron, of Locheil, 109,574 acres in In¬
verness; the* Earl of Dalhqusie, 136,602
acres in Forfar; the Duke-of Fife, 139,-
829 acres in Aberdeen; the Duke of
Hamilton, 102,210 acres in Bute; Sir
George Macpherson Grant, 103,372
acres in Inverness; Sir James Mathe
son, 406,070 acres in Ross; the Duke
-f Richmond, .159,952 acres in Banff;
Sir Charles Ross, 110,445 acres in Ross;
the Earl, of Seafield, 160,3.24 acres in
Inverness.
Last, but not least, the Duke of
Sutherland, with no less than 1,176,454
acres in Sutherland, so that his grace
is possessed of very nearly the whole
county, the total area of which is 1, 297,-
846 acres.—London Tit-Bits.
Japanese Mirrors.
Some Japanese mirrors are supposed
to possess a magic quality, which lias
rendered them objects of superstitious
reverence for centuries, and, in fact,
it lias even puzzled modern science not
a little. When a strong beam of light
is so reflected from one of them as to
be thrown upon a screen there appears
upon the screen an image in delicate
tracery perfectly reproducing the pat¬
tern engraved in relief on the back of
the mirror, which of course is alto¬
gether hidden from the light. Inas¬
much as the face of the mirror presents
a surface that is perfectly smooth ap¬
parently the reason for this phenome¬
non is difficult to find. Its cause, how¬
ever, is simple enough. The prelimi¬
nary operation of polishing the face
consists in scoring the cast disk with a
sharp tool in every direction.
The thicker portions, whore the or¬
namentation in relief is on the back,
offer more resistance and the result is a
corresponding inequality' of the pol¬
ished surface. This inequality is not
sufficiently marked to be visible to the
naked eye, but it is enough to turn the
rays erf light, and thus the pattern of
the engraving on the back is reproduced
on the screen in the manner described.
These so called magic mirrors are so
highly valued that they sell from ten
to twenty times the price paid for or¬
dinary ones.—Washington Star.
Intlians of Welsli Extraction.
The three tribes on the Fort Ber
thold reservation are included in the
nine tribes in the United States that
have never been at war against the
government. Of these three the Man
dans are the smallest, numbering a,lit¬
tle over 200 , smallpox having almost
destroyed them about 1853. But they
are the most interesting. There is a
story to the effect that they are descend¬
ed from some Welshmen, who sailed
west frefu Wales in the Eleventh cen¬
tury and were never heard of after¬
ward.
The story is that this party reached
the mouth of the Mississippi and worked
their way up that river. Of course I
take no stock in this story, but it is a
remarkable fact that many of their
words resemble the Welsh language,
and they are of a much lighter com¬
plexion than Indians usually are.
There are full blooded Indians almost
white among them.—St. Paul Globe.
1’lie Skoptsys of flussia.
The \Skoptsys, a religious body in
Russia, believe in self mutilation, but
will not submit to amputation, al¬
though knowing that a life may be
saved thereby. They are expert danc¬
ers. Besides dancing and yelling for
hoars without intermission, they add a
midnight acrobatic performance to their
ceremony, many of the tricks and con¬
tortions being difficult in the extreme.
—St. Louis Republic.
I
Honesty aa Essential Character.
It may be that honesty is not a Chris¬
tian grace, but it is a moral quality
which is essential to all Christian’ char
aeter. It may not constitute the Chris¬
tian, but he is a sorry Christian who is
without it. Evidently there is a grow
ing demand for this homely but valu
able quality, the absence of which is
bringing reproach on so many names
and wrecking so many institutions,—
Detroit Free Press.
-
He Was Capable.
First Passenger—Can you tell me
the time?
Second Passenger—Yes, sir (contin*
ues to look at the view).—Jewelers’
Circular.
JONES’ PRIVATE ARGUMENT.
That air same Jones which lived in Jones,
He had this pint about him:
He’d swear, with a hundred sighs and groans,
That farmers must stop git tin loans,
And git along without ’em:
That bankers, warehousemen and sicn
Was fattening on the planter,
And Tennessee was rotten rich
A-raising meat and corn, all which
Drawed money to Atlanta;
And the only thing, says Jones, to do
Is, eat no meat that’s boughten;
But, tear up every I. O. I'.,
And plant all corn and swear for true
Ter quit a-raising cotton.
Thus shouted Jones whar folks could hear.
At court and other gatlierins,
And thus kept spoutin many a year,
Proclaimin loudly far and near
Sick fiddlesticks and blatherins.
But one allfired sweatin day
It happened I was hoein
My lower corn field, which it lay
’Longside the road that runs my way,
Whar I can see what’s goin.
And after 13 o’clock had come
I felt a kinder faggin.
And laid myself un’neatk a plum
To let my dinner settle sum,
When long come Jones’ waggin.
And Jones was setfin in it so,
A readin of a paper;
His mules was goin powerful slow,
J-fir both the lines he had tied to
The staple of the scraper.
The mules they stopped about a rod
From me and went to feedin
’Longside the road, upon the sod,
But Jones (which he had took a tod),
Not knowin, kept a readin.
And presently says he: “Hit’s true,
That Clisby’s heqt is level.
Thar’s,one thing farmers all must do
To keep themselves from going tew
Bankruptcy and the devil.
“More corn, more corn; must plant less
ground,
And mustn’t eat wliat’s boughten;
Next year they’ll do it; reasonin’s sound,
And cotton’ll fetch ’bout dollar a pound;
Tharfore I’ll plant all cotton.”
—Savannah News.
In Mental Kuts.
“The monotony of certain lines of
business and slight use of the mental
faculties consequent upon a familiarity
of a simple, unvarying routine,” said an
observant gentleman, “soon gives a
stolid, apathetic, half idiotic cast to
the human countenance. Take any¬
body who has little or no variety in
his daily life, and in a short time his
face is as blank as a piece of putty.
“A wooden impassiveness of feature
takes the place of what we term ex¬
pression, and the intellectual powers re¬
lapse into that dormant state that
characterizes alike the savage and the
idiotic. You will see the same thing in
the idle, listless man about town, who
is too lazy to work or think, and hasn’t
enough energy or even inclination to
be bad. It is irritating to talk to such
people. The restless, nervous man of
keen intellectual edge who comes in
contact with them chafes inwardly and
sometimes outwardly.
• “Half the trouble and friction that
arises between individual members of
the great, active, hustling public and
officials of various lower grades is from
this very fact. Neither the offender
nor the offended understands the seat
of the difficulty in dealing with each
other.”—New York Herald.
Gypsies as Players.
From their first appearance down to
the present the gypsies have been great
players and second rate actors, and it
is asserted by one writer that there is
not a theater or music hall in England
or America that does not include one
or more persons of gypsy descent. In
this, country many of them conduct
small circuses or traveling shows, which
they erect in the woods where they
pitch their camps, and charge a nom¬
inal sum for admission.—George E.
Walsh in New York Epoch.
A Grewsnme Bit of Office Adornment.
A novelty in office adornment is a
deodand—a weapon with which human
life has been taken—yet such is the
ornament which decorates the private
office of Charles Le Barbier, one of the
younger criminal lawyers of this city.
The deodand is a broken bandied
razor, upon the blade of which is the
blood of the victim in whose throat
the keen blade was buried again and
again. Within the neat frame which
incloses the blood stained razor is a
photograph of an Italian man and
woman. Below the photograph is the
legend, “John Aguglio, tried for mur¬
der, first degree. Oyer and Terminer,
April, 1889. Verdict, not guilty.”
The novel piece of bric-a-brae has
attracted attention, and it is likely that
framed deodands will soon become a
common sight in the offices of criminal
lawyers.—New York Telegram.
Impossible to Transport Mosquitoes.
From the method of life of the mos¬
quito, especially in its early stages, it is
dear that it would be next to impossi
ble to transport them accidentally, ex¬
cept as perfect insects, from one coun
try to another across large tracts of
ocean, .and the reports that are some
times spread of mosquitoes appearing
in hotels in England frequented by
Americans need to be received with
great caution. Probably, in most in
stances, investigation would show that
they were simply English gnats rather
uore virulent than usual, winch had
been propagated in some neighboring
cistern or pond. —Knowledge.
CRAHD PREMIUM ©FFrife!
SET OF THE
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CHARLES DICKXHS.
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BARNABY R'JDCS AMD CHRISTMAS
STORES,
OLIVER TWIST AND CHEAT EXPEC¬
TATIONS, CURIOSITY
THE OLD SHOP AMT
the unconififlca cca i. yriAVT :..cn,
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porchri, t*orU, c*»:ut hor, c . 't o* »-i. , e v
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pf?< • 1 u-uat i -
,
bir<!tv IB! jios atuj inritrcw. with umvli cwrioua iuMin nAu r<jg<4il'
ing their lile au»l iuthits.
J-A 5F. Tri" Mi*MMOT.'i Cmnrj>nr\ U p’-o a rawt’ie*e law
h-*ok. It lliii4 every i-nn how l>s him ay Bo »' Jh i. .ii V w>er, »:■ l
lull „,„i CO mH-f f>pl»M ..to U”. of l.'f! V* *i4-rni 1 H wi
M , }/ j |.j id ).,*••* cf the )«*vrrwl fit «!•** »»'•«>»» nl n-a'nr- which no
hiibjoctto litigation, with ui.moroi.s .form4 of !..g. rtiiiei.U,
LINING. Ppflcnp!5mi«» »t»! « f ... !1«c tre-, ,oi,s rf 1 iri'nsr nf
poM, rHver diamonds, coul, suit, c</pp«r ( Ueml, zst.c, Liu & 11 I
f;n cksilver
V.’ONE^2iB 4>F T TiXu SKA. Tlcrrln t*’id
i5:«.**!rnietf themaii.v woit*iorfiilft?idi>**aiu)ft* , l t H’- g f i-i.d nt h«
In*;tninoflhf»ooeain the i.bn. t . (! >w**r*», Mheil-t, Unite*, «t6., iltfi®*
wine pearl illviiijr, Of« »l etc., etc.
UTATtSTIt’-xf. AM> HWCClXASRorK.' V.-.-n
i»rr\t;ri :: r -r ttrntunl »>f tunlw :»«»! I lit# » . f*r
, iriie „f vthicli p»fHi!tui*>»i of lf»<* of *U;nc-’ ’ rr.*rtc «. Ter--Yu - < a l
*,«{ ola»i- n of ih^c -n’Micitlv atfl
(.’j,. prSivdpirl eanittrfo* nf llus 1 -i.z'b *- r tl I <’ ; .i nl
rivers. Pre.GiPMtn O v- ie for Aki\ r«-nr«. >-!• r-’i.'tl • ii:**.
.
nren ari'i ilt*{vh of m*''S, ’rfic*** o' (Slfft!*,
hxroinoiion of animal- rr-l vehwiry «»1 Ik-*! > • l.t lA
rite?,-s. Kiid •'imeinr «■*. *11 *i »nc**« from V .» U . n. 3! <y
from X* - * York. tf> Un^rt 1 > t pt*i»j..N. ■ ■ > ■>? ol « .jji
ouve"’. ai,(] preqre.^, p.x.iilar Socrifjjs 1 ts <»I t n>- ■<, S
rij '<*«, e'C.. C'»|i:iit'»n <rr;,iimt*«DcAl *‘ Y‘-r< ru »•
* lirtmi ion #•.•! « of c. >j*1 ***»*, V'h >*r« i-t 1
t.f fit* World, cnrioim f;u;ts in rYnr- 1 1 !
ri -in <>f tti■■ t-f ?'•?*••». » ') ' if Ton f
1 . n t < s -
.•liar f.int‘lirr «j*to i aral if
praills. .}• ?*«•» Tft r*7s »-f *' j- r-**
‘■.fullsi>rv* of ibegi'yh.*, ••r***■ ,dir■»
etc. .