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WHO IS THE TRUE GENTLEMAN!
A l.ron In PoliteiiciM and Hnmtn
Nature to tbe Rising; CSeueratioiv
[Virginia (Nev.) Chronicle.]
IN THE PAST.
“I beg your pardon,” and with a
pmile and a touch of his hat Harry Ed
mond bowed to an old man against
whom he accidentally had his hand.
“ I hope I did not hurt,you. We vere
playing too roughly.”
“Not a bit!” said the old man,
cheerily. “ Boys will be boys, and it’*
best they should be. You didn’t harm
me.”
“ I’m glad to hear it;” and lifting his
hat again, Harry turned to join liig
playmates with whom he had been
frolicking at the time of the accident.
“ What do you raise your hat to that
old fellow for?” asked his companion—
Charles Gray. “He’s only Giles tho
huckster.”
“ That makes no difference,” said
Harry. “The question is not whether
he is a gentleman, but whether I am
one.”— Moral Exchange.
THE PRESENT.
“What kind of taffy is you givin’ us?”
demanded Charlie Gray with a sneer.
“ It’s the true racket,” replied the
noble boy proudly.
“Aw, pull down yer vest,” was tho
rude retort.
“ I’m the gamest rooster o’ my size in
the ward,” cried Harry, his blue eyes flash
ing with honest indignation at the im
plied doubt cast upon his motives.
“See here, cully,” said Charles Gray,
thrusting his hands into his trousers
pockets, spreading his legs wide apart
and closing one eye, “See here, cully;
give us the business. Wliat’s yer game
in doin’the pretty by that oldsnoozer?
None o’ yer Sunday-school pie now, but
biz—the cheese, you know. You don’t
think he’s got any scuds hid away in a
sack that he'll leave you in his will, do
you? Pr’aps yeh think lie’s long on
Serrey Nevady, but yer off. He aint
worth a short bit, and he came out o’
soak yisterday after bein’ in for five
months for petty larteny.”
“ Peel yer rags, Gray,” hissed Harry
through his teeth. “I’m on it bigger’n
a wolf, an’ yer scalp’s mine.”
“ Peel goes,” rejoined the wicked boy,
and in a moment after, Virtue and Vice
were rolling in the dust on Howard
street, with all the boys in the neighbor
hood gathered around, offering odds,
with no takers, that the ear of Virtue
wouldn’t hold out longer than the teeth
of Vice. Old Giles, observing the crowd,
hastened back, and quietly gathered up
the jackets and liatsof his young friends,
and hobbled sadly away.
Closing tho Chinese Lotteries.
The Ban Francisco Post says: Tho
Chinese lottery business, so extensively
carried on in this city, has been stopped.
The nine companies have ceased their
drawings, and the three hundred agen
cies scattered through the city are de
serted by customers who but last week
thronged in and out of those dens in
search of fickle fortune. What caused
this sudden cessation of the wheel of the
goddess will be explained by the follow
ing substance of an interview had with
an agent by a reporter:
“ Hallo, Charley,” said the reporter,
ns he strolled into a lottery office on
Dupont street last evening, and saw the
table, usually covered with blank tickets,
drawings, etc., bare of everything sug
gestive of lotteries. “ What’s the matter
now?”
“ Oh,” answered the Chinaman, “lot
tery all -close up. Him no more run.
Policeman he tell all companies last
Saturday night he go to close up. He
say d—n newspaper makee to muchee
fuss ’cause policeman he no stop him.
‘ Pretty soon,’ he say, 1 no more fussy, he
can play all same as before,’ ”
“ Bo I can buy no ticket?”
“Of course not. How you buy him
ticket no lottery? Wait; may be next
week you catch him.”
A visit to several other agencies dis
closed the same state of affairs. The dis
gust everywhere disylayed was intense.
Certain ones who are interested in the
matter are terribly set back at the sud
den closing of one of their pet institu
tions. The statements made in the Post
have been too much for them, and in the
face of the names and locations of the
companies and agencies there was no
other course left for them to pursue but
to order a general closing up, with no
arrests to chronicle. Due notice will be
given of the re-opening of the games.
Rescued, But For What a Fate!
[French Wit in New York World.]
Yet again Vivier, on going along
the street beholds a bourgeois at whom
a dog is barking and snapping viciously.
Running up, he exclaims: “ Be not afraid,
sir, I will protect you —get out of that,
you brute!” and brandishes his cane so
vigorously that the animal sullenly re
tires. The bourgeois is prodigal with
thanks and goes on arm-in-arm with his
preserver.
“ It is lucky that you are not afraid of
dogs, sir,” says the bourgeois.
“ If that had ventured to lay his teeth
upon you he would have sealed his
doom,” says Vivier, coldly.
“ You would have killed him?”
“ I would have bitten him.”
“ Bitten him? I don’t exactly under
stand.”
“ Then in from sixty to seventy-two
hours he would have gone mad and been
knocked on the head.”
“ Really, sir, I don’t grasp your mean
ing”
“I mean,” says Vivier, griping his
companion’s arm, -while a fearful con
vulsion distorts his features, “ I mean
that I was bitten eight, days ago by a
mad dog and I feel that the crisis of my
disease is approaching. 1 must bite
something. You owe me no thanks; it
would have been a positive relief to
sink my envenomed fangs into his
quivering flesh!! What—(shivering)—
is that a fountain over there?”
(Bourgeois vanishes upon the wings of
the wind.)
Chloroform for Figs.
The Louisville Courier-Journal tells
of a certain doctor, who, when he runs
short of food for his pigs, gives them
chloroform. It is reported that they
remain under its influence from a week
io ten days, and that when they recover,
instead of having lost flesh, they exhibit
marked signs of improvement.
Harriet Hosmer*
Harriet Hosmer, who has gained more
reputation as a sculptor than any woman
in America, is the daughter of a physician,
and was born at Watertown, Mass., some
forty-nine years ago. Naturally fragile,
her father encouraged her to lead att
outdoor life, and to take a great deal of
exercise. She was taught to ride and
shoot and develop her body in every
way. She grew into a hoyden and was,
as may be supposed, rather masculine in
her tastes and feelings; but she was
physically strong, which was far more
important. She went to school at
Lenox, and there met the daughter of
Wayman Crow, of St. Louis, between
whom and herself a close friendship was
soQn formed. Miss Crow afterward be
came the wife of a nephew of Charlotte
Cushman, the actress. Harriet early
displayed talent for modeling, fitting up
a rude studio in her father’s house, and
filling it with clay models. She went to
Boston, received a few lessons from the
artist Stevenson, and then visited St.
Louis, to see her scliool-girl friend. Tho
medical college there was then the only
one in the Republic which admitted
women, and she entered it to study
anatomy, so essential to the prosecution
of her art. resided with the Crow
family, and for their social position,
would probably have been tabooed by
general society, mainly French, very
conservative there in those days, because
of her studentliood at a medical college,
her attendance on scientific lectures at
night, her going home without escort,
and generally independent ways, which
were regarded with amazement and gen
eral disfavor. Through the generosity
of her friend, Mrs. Hosmer was e nabled
to realize the dream of her art life in
Rome. She there studied under Gibson,
and her first regular works were the
ideal heads of Daphne and Medusa,
purchased by Samuel Appleton, of Bos
ton. She then made the statue of Ben
ton for St. Louis—it stands iu Lafayette
Park—and theZenobia, in tbe Mercantile
Library of that city was ordered by
WAy man Crow. Her other works are
well known. Save a brief visit to her
native land in 1857, she has lived in
Rome since she first went there, and her
studio is one of the first places to which
wandering Americans wend their way.
“ Samantha Opinion.
“Thomas is as determined as a rock
about one thing, that when he and
yeaggie are married they are going to
keep house by themselves. The first
Mars in married life is a precariou slime;
make the best of it; a dreadful curious,
strange, precarious time; and if ever a
woman wants a free room for meditation
and prayer, it is then; and, likewise, the
same with the man. There never was
two persons so#near alike but what they
was diffident, and had their different
ways and eccentricities. A woman may
think she knows a man just as well as if
she had been through his head a number
of times with a lantern; but let her
come to live with him from day to day,
from week to week, in sunshine and in
storm; when dinner is ready at noon
and when it is late; when his boot-jack
is on the nail, and when it is lost; when
stovepipes are up and when they are
being put up; and in all other trials and
reverses of life. I tel). }'ou she will come
across little impatient, obstinate streaks
in aim she never laid eyes on before;
little selfish, overbearin’ streaks. And
the same with her. He may have been
firm as a rock in the belief that he was
marrying an angel, but the very first
time he brings unexpected company
home on washin’ day he’ll find he hasn’t.
They may be awful good principled, well
meaning folks, nevertheless, but there
are rocks they have got to sail around,
and they want strength, and they want
patience, and they want elbow room.
* * * There is another moon, what
you may call the harvest moon of mar
ried life, that rises to light true married
lovers on their pilgrimage. It may not
be so brilliant and dazzling as the honey
moon, but its light is steady and calm,
and mellow as anything, and it shines all
the way down to the dark valley, and
throws its pure light clear across it to
the other side. * * * Then, if they
want to take in a few infirm, or even
bed-ridden relations on his side or on
hers, let’em take’em in; it would bo
perfectly safe.”
An Inveterate Hater of Frogs.
[Norwich Bulletin.]
A dog likes company and when exiled
from canine society will often find
amusement in foreign partnerships
Recently.. man carried home
a dog. There were no
other dogs in the neighborhood, so lie
broke the monotony of the place by
playing with toads. He actually became
an adept in discovering their haunts,
and when they hopped he would hop,
and when they were at rest he rested.
He showed every symptom of delight
over the fact that he could leap farther
than the toad could, not recognizing the
disparity in length of body and limbs in
his favor. One day he nosed out a bull
frog in the wet grass that proved £o be
the prince of tremendous leapers, and
trying his jumping powers with it he
was defeated. Astonished, he looked at
the frog as he leaped away, but before it
had got off of the premises, as if in a fit
of jealousy, he ran after it and killed it.
He still noses out toads, and playfully
touches them with his feet to make them
lump with him, but from the day he was
beaten by the frog at leaping he has
insisted on killing every frog he meets in
his travels.
Poor Girl.
“ Mother,” saida spirituelle creature,
lounging in the kitchen, “ I don’t think
I’m long for this world. I know I ain’t
very old, butl’vegot a presentiment that
I must soon die!”
“Nonsense!” said the mother, as she
wrestled with the pots; “ nonsense, girl
—don’t be foolish!”
Just then the bell rang, the supposed
to-be-dving creature leaped like a fawn
to the front of the through
the blinds, and discovered a young man
with a buggy in the street.
“Sal,” yelled the girl’s brother, “yer’d
better hurry up and bang yer hair. * Bill
Wilson wants yer to go out ridin’. You
girls got a regular circus on us boys,
havin’ fellers take you out!”
In just seven minutes the girl appeared,
her hair banged, her cheeks roughed, and
dressed, in the language of her brother,
like a “daisy.” She didn’t feel much
like dying just then, either.
Talmage Visits “ the Below.”
The Rev. T. De Witt Talmage is print
ing some characteristic sketches of Eng
lish scenes and life. This shows how he
came out of a coal pit:
But we must say good-bye to these
Underground workers. We get into the
“ cage” and prepare for asceilt. The
guides warn us that as we near the top
and the speed of the “ cage” is slackened
the sensation will be somewhat distress
ing.
Bure enough! We get aboard, throw
our arms over the ’ron bat with a stout
hug; the signal Df “All ready” being
given we fly upward. Coming near the
top at the slackening speed it seems as
if the rope must have broken and that
we are dropping to the bottom of tho
mine. A lew slight “ Ohs!” and the de
lusion passes, and we are in the sun-light.
Bless God for this heavenly mixture!
There is nothing like it. No artifice can
successfully imitate it.
You neetl to spend a few hours deep
down in an English mine to appreciate
it.
In the contrast it seems more mellow,
more golden, more entrancing. You
take off your hat and bathe in it. You
feel that the world needs more of it.
Sunshine for the body. Sunshine for
the mind. Sunshine for the soul. Sun
shine of earth. Sunshine of heaven.
In the words of the old philosopher,
“Stand out of my sunshine!” Look
here! Why do we want any more of
these miners’ lamps! They might as
well be extinguished. Their faint
flicker is absurd in the face of the noon
day. They were useful to show us where
to tread among the seams of coal. They
were good to light up the genial faces of
the miners while we talked to them about
tlieir wages and their families.
Lamps are valuable in a mine. But
blow them out, now that we stand under
the chandelier which at twelve o’clock
noon hangs pendent from the frescoed
dome of these blue English heavens. So
all the tallow dips of earthly joy will be
submerged when the Old Belfry of the
next world strikes twelve for celestial
noon.
Horrible Story From Mexico.
In Chihuahua, a woman went into a
shoe-maker’s shop, in front of his dwell
ing, and was measured for a pair of shoes.
The son of the Crispin said to the
woman:
“ You have a very pretty foot.”
“ Do you think so?” said she.
He replied: “ Yes, that is the pret
tiest foot in Mexico.”
The woman was to come hack the
next day and leave one dollar, when the
shoes were to be commenced. The slioe
maker’sAvife," hearing all, said nothing.
The next day the shoe-maker was out
when the pretty foot called according to
agreement, and the wife got her into
the back room and stabbed her to death.
The woman then cut a steak out of the
dead woman’s leg and packed the body
under the bed. The shoe-maker came
home and ate his dinner. The wife
asked him how he liked the meat. He
answered that “ it was the best he had
ever eaten.” The wife then told him
that he had eaten a part of “ the
tiesHeg in Mexico.” He asked her what
She showed him the body
under the nkdand made a dash at him
with a he escaped and ran to
the palacio and told the Judge wliat had
happened. The Judge summoned a
guard of soldiers and went to the house.
He asked the wife if she l%d committed
the murder, and when she answered yes,
and attempted to justify the act, he or
dered her to be shot <u# the spot by the
soldiers; and were promply
obeyed.
Adam’s Fall and M r omnn.
The account of Adaims fall, as com
monly received, is not toPcomplimentary
to woman, but, on the other hand, the
reasons given for her creation are suffi
ciently so; but the Zoarites, or Sepa
ratists, who have long had a settlement
in Tuscarawas County, 0., have a theory
of Adam’s fall, which makes woman’s
creation a consequence. They formulate
it thus: “That primal man’s imagina
tion was thrown away on earthly things
—that is, lie wanted a wife, and hence
lost God’s image. Therefore Christ has
come to restore what Adam lost, and he
is for this cause the Savior of the world.”
If man lost God’s image by wanting a
wife, and if Christ came to restore what
Adam lost by wanting a wife, it seems
to follow that when man has been re
stored to this primal spiritual state he
will cease to want a wife. Thus the
Zoarites have an understanding of the
words that in the resurrection they
neither marry nor are given in marriage.
Then the question remains, What be
comes of woman?
Peculiarities ot Speech.
Every one has some peculiarity of
speech. The Yorkshire man is known
all over England by his curious accent,
and the cockney has for centuries been
the butt of ridicule for his unkind treat
ment of his “ a itches” and his transposi
tions of V and W. Our Southerners call
us all “ Yankees” above Mason and Dix
on’s line, and accuse us of saying “ I
guess and calculate,” and we retaliate by
saying “I reckon that’s so!” I have a
lady friend who has a weakness for say
ing “I say!” and begins most of her sen
tences in that manner. One day some
person was asking a mutual friend what
Mrs. “I Say” called her husband when
she addressed him familiarly. His Chris
tian name happened to be Hezekiah, or
Ebeneezer, or Jehosaphat, or some other
Biblical name hard to shorten into a pet
name, as for example, “ Ebby,” or
“Hossy,” or “Phattie.” This friend
made answer, “ Oh, she merely calls him
‘I say I’”
In l)i(ririi eornmlj Ravioli
By fever and ague, immunity from the dread
ed scourge is enjoyed by those who have
rendered their systems malaria proof with
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, the best pre
ventive and remedy. Quinine canuot com
pare with it in efficacy, and is anything but
safe. Physicians commend the bitters for
its remedial and resuscitating properties and
the closest analysis reveals nothing in the
composition of a deleterious nature. It does
not deteriorate, is an agreeable cordial as
we’l as a potent medicine, and when mixed
with brackish or unwholesome water neu
tralizes its hurtful properties. The denizens
of malarious localities, not only in the limb
ed States, but the tropics, legard it, as an in
valuable protection, and in hosts of families
it is kept constantly on hand. As the tide
of emigration spreads farther westward the
demand ior it among ihose compelled to cn>
counter the vicissitudes of climate,constant
ly increase.
major Boaliy’s rHiios ami
Your attention is called to the advertises
mentof Hor.Dir.iel F. Beatty of Washing*
ton, New Jersey. Mayer Beatty’s celebrated
pianos and organs are so well known
throughout the civil sscd world that they aca
quire no commendation irom us. Lowest
prices, surperiot workmanship and complete
satisfaction have brought this promi
nently forward, until to-day he stanas the
ouly man in his trade who dares to ship his
instruments oti test trial, and if unsatisfacs
tory, refunds not only the price but al.
freight paid. No fa’rer offer can ever be made
or even suggested. His s ties, now are lery
large, and when it is taken into co isiderA
tion that a few years ago he was only a
plough-boy, it must be .evi ieut to tverv
leader that Mayor Beatty is the p'.ssefcsor of
rare talent in his vocation.
Perfect Purity n res.ored to the circu
lation when con tarn in - ted, if Scovill’s Blood
and Liver Syrup is taken. Scrofulous, syph
ilitic and mercurial disorders are complete
ly vanquished by it, persistence in the. use
of the remedy being alone required to ac
complish a cure. Eruptions of all k’nds,
sores, chronic rheumatism, gout, liver com
plaint and goitre yield to its remedial action,
and it not only puri ties the blood but vital'
izes the system. Soil by all druggists.
Coughs and Colds are often overlooked.
A continuance for any length of time causes
irritation ot the lungs or some chronic throat
disease. “Brown’s Bronchial Troches” are
an effectual remedy. 25
Among American manufactures, few have
done our country as much credit as the. Ma
son A Hamlin cabinet. organs, which have
been acknowledged best at all great world’s
exhibitions for many years. See fdveitise
ment.
Walking made easy with Lyon’s Patent
Heel Stiffener . They keep your boots A, thoes
straight, and make them easy to your feet.
For ecomcny use C. Gilbert's starches -
Crew Jackson'* -■***-•*1 '•<>'vy foiiacro
Paniihlcr', Vi ivea and .7loli is.
Dr. Maichisi’s Uterine Catholicyn will pontivdly
cure Female Wea*nrßp f £ uch aa Faiiin? t f the * omb,
white , Chronic L 11 maatu n or U ceration tf the
Wnnb, Incidental He t errna.c or F1 >o!u g, Painful,
Suppressed and 1 1 regular MeudiU uion, it ; An < 1
and reliable u m3'ly. ?tni post I ciro /ora )mn
polet, with tieatim ut, cares and certificates fr m
physicians and pitients to How. r h & Hallaid,
U:iea N Y. Hoi 1 ttv ail druegids $1 50 v*r bottle
if aby mi veil.
VV r e ae ad thankful to say that our
biby was permanently cured of a dart'
gerouH and protracted irregularity of the
bowels by the u-:e of Hop F> It* rs by its
mother, which at the same time restored
her to perfect health and strength,
[Buffalo Enpress,
Do it Favor to a Mck Friend.
If you have a friend suffering from any
disorder of the Kidneys sei.d them a
package of Kidney-Wort, and you will
make them happy, Its great tonic power
is especially directed to these diseases,
and it quickly relieves tire distress and
cures the disease. Have you tried it?
AGENTS, ol I or young, earn -ft) a day at lionm.
“•Hinplos worth ssfree. Rene & Co.Lebanon, N.II
* vs cels in your own town Terms and $5 outfit
•XOGOtreo. Address H. Hall, tt & Cos. t’<*rtlaml, Me.
I will pay fg/Y for a few days work.
Address, with stamp,
W. V. ELY, Jackson, Michigan.
rfp i- (h i nqrt t !>■? m\Y au-sne-ieiocky
VplU lu tpLubUtoi tunes. every monte, hook sm
f-ee explaining cv-srytbiiig. Address tSAXTEK V
PO.. ttanhern. S‘ Wnii S ew Vorl*
Employment Sifcate which preferred.
Also SALARY per month. All EXPENSES
advanced. WAGES promptly paid. SLOAN
& Cos. iJOG George St. Cincinnati, O.
p pREWARDfI^
'III II | I thaGbdiiuK’s Pile
* ii f rel icf, cures cases
JP i WwimiiTSnN JVo ” e gwnte
' - II r ■mm (I 5wL 1 VlllfSlt 1/elloiO
wrapper has printed on it, in black a Pile of S'ones and
Dr. J. P. Miller's signature, Phila. 81 a bottle. Sold
by all druggists. Sent, by mail by J. P. Miller, M 1),
Propr., S. W. cor. Tenth and Arch Sts., Philada., Pa.
POND’SSXTRACT
Subdues Inflammation, Acute or Chronic ,
Controls all Hemorrhages , Venous and Jlueous
InVALUABLE FOR
Sprains, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, Sorerets,
Rheumatism, Boils, Ulcers, Old Sores, Tooth
ache, Headache, Sore Throat Asthma,
Hoarseness, Neuralgia, Catarrh, &c., &c.
i’ll V bid ANS of all Schools use and recommend
l*. #* xtriK i Ni family should he witliou
it. as it is convenient, sale and reliable. Tuvalu
able as a Tain Destroyer and subduer of all int
flatnmatory diseases and hemorrhages
FARMERS, Stock breeders and Livery Men should
always have it. Leading livery and street-car
stables ill New Fork and elsewhere ulw. ys use it.
Kiiruiii ', Karneos and satnilc fis (i .
* '<. sm h hes, tißellhig-,
ete., are all controlled and cored by
U‘ J^ ri)ur sp ei 1 preparation, VETER IN A K V
EXTRACT, is sold at the low i rice of S'i.riO per
gallon, package extra.
Prices Pond's Extract and Specialties.
POfflUS K\r \tT 50<*. SI.OO r.mi $1 75
Mian li Cure 7lst* asiis.i(>j':Glass, sii 1 no
MLdineiit ROc Kaal 'Syainite S5
roaster a.-e Medlc tled *hi>V,3s<*
Any of the above prepara ions will be sent free
ot charges in lots of $5 w orth, on icceipt of money
or P. O. order.
rACTH>M.-P( n d’< Fxlraft is sold only in
. uXxt®, 3 ,',u ’ n **'wrappers, wi li l he words
PONDS FXILACr blown in the class Jt is
acvemultl In inlw. No one can soil it except
in our ow n bottles a* above described,
Send tor our new pamphlet to
POND’S EXTRACT CO.,
IN Murray SI., New York.
G E °-1P Borne & 18.
10 SPRUCE ST., NEW YOh It,
Printing House Square, opp. the Tribune Building
Newspaper Advertising Bureau.
Agents for all newspapers in the United
crates ami i auuaa.
Advertisements forwarded duilv(as received') to
every section, from Newfoundland to lexa , and
YorL ‘ Br, V h A!so to all New
York citv dailies and weeklies.
Eight Thousand Newspapeis kept regularly on file
fo r in sfection by advertisers, including all the great
irJ ,r^ u \ Boslon t 0 Sau Francisco, irom Mon
treal to Galveston.
P( its. of AMERICAN NEWSPAPER DIRECTORY
PTIDI? m? AC- /ivuts "anted everywh re to
I 11 nPI 1 l* Hll 8011 to families, hotels and arge
X. Wiiu xajxau consumers; largest stock in the
country; quality and terms ilio b sc. Country store
.list. H"Z 'Tjt'Av't'l
I In has been before the public thirty
yea>s and used by all classes,
nillffltirfT with and without the adviceol
HUM! 01 ( ' HEHEIVY
i-wlirllXl if/ X has saved trom lingering disease
, and do,th hundreds of well
known citizens. Bl’ft’l’- kknciiy cures
ni Pa y ’ blravel, and ali diseases of the Kidneys,
madder, and Urinary Organs. Send for pamphlet, to
_____ VM. E CLARKE, Providence, li. 1.
MILITARY
land Baud I niton,: : - * 1 cicpt.
I ' aps, >;<•,, i,..ido ‘.y M, f'. f.dh ;/A' Cm.
I COlUinliU •, <hiO. Skn.l l>, I'n bio/ ;.
j Firemen’i Caps, Belts, and Shirts.
NEW OPERAS*
Carmen. op?™ byßizt $2.00
Carmen "is anO, ora that has gradually and
snreiy won its way to a great popularity, Al
- the book is large, in fact wh it one might
Jan a ‘-four dollar book,” it is got up n elegant
Style wit - music and all the words, English and
foreign, for $2.00
°p?’ a By Buppp .$2OO
Splendid new opera that is u decided success. A
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and the opera in every way complete, tor a ow
price.
Doctor of Alcantara j
famous opera, now brought. i y the popular
price, within the rca h ot all. Orchestral parts, Slo
Bells of Corneville. By
Piauquette, i. nearly ready).. v >rl• 1
A great success T. is, with the Pocter and
“Sorcertr,” ($1 0 ! 0 are well worth adop ing by
companies who have fin sl ed Pinafore ( till sell
ing well *or 5 1 cents), and who are looking out ior
new r and easy operas.
Remem' er our Singing School arul Choir
Bnnks. V> C3 o WoriiSup aud site 1 eirpic,
each $3.00 per dozen or *1 00 each Send fg copies.
A'so always rcinembe • tn Musieai Sioe r<*.
putdiihed weekly, itke-p-tyo.u well routed o to
musical mvtters, gives <i or 7 piges of musi ■ p r
week and costs but $2.00 per year !
OLIVER DITSON & GO., Boston,
C. Cl. S>l<o*i Cos. '!■ K. S*ll-n * Cos.
>U3 Broadway. N Y. 322 Chostmit st.Plnla
'll PERPETUAL
jj Sorghum Evaporator,
, : $l5, $2O. $25.
CHEAP AND DURABLE.
r. L_ Si-ncl for Circulars. Address
r CHAPMAN & CO.,
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THIS NEW
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i cup-shape, with Self-Adjusting Ball
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**CNa IBLE cH 0 f body, while the BALL 1° the
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THE FINBER. With Jignt pressure
the Hernia is held securely day and night, and a radical cure cer
tain. It is easy, durable and cheap. SCSI bv mail. Circulars
,re<u Eggleston Truss Cos„ Chicago. 111.
ce In rer day at home. Samples worth Some
•cl *u ’ Address Stinson & Cos., Portland, Mo.
If you are
Interested
In the inquiry—lViiic'i \a Uk?
best Linunent for Man and
Beast?—this is the answer, at
tested by two generations: the
MEXICAN MUSi’ANU LINI
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a UUUO PLAff. {’mul>iu and opera tit*g many orders
j|M iii ,nn' vitf t mini lias uvt-i v :nl VHiUagu id capital, witli
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“ i uvi Htnii'iiis "I ?2‘> tn tin.out). Cirrulrti . with full ex
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|,A "’ltKNi'i' X. CO., r.r, Kxei'uiiye Place, New Yoik.
Makes a delicious diet, can tensed with or without
mi .k. makes custard . pudoi kr.&c.,—highly a; pres
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\\riW- . Rleh Squ ire. W. V.,
tV Inventor and Manufacturer ot the lioau< ke
Cotton • less, Chieftain Press, Chain Lever Press
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Also a N w Process of making Wells any depth in
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Circulars free.
V GENTS WANTED for the Best and Fastest
selling Pictorial Boohs nd Bib'es Prices res
duced 33 per cent. Address National Pubjashing
Co-., Philadelphia, Pa., Chicago, 111., St. Louis,
Mo., or Allanta, Ga.
First lilsfaHiehoit 1 33<st Suecosefal!
THEIR INSTRUMENTS ba\c a standar,
value in all tlie
LEADING MARKETS
OF THE WORLD;
Everywhere recognized as the FINNS')
IN TONE.
OVER 80,000
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Es)* Scud lor a Catalogue.
tent SL epp, Wafa SL Boston, 8
PEIROLEUM. II :nrl j U T JELLY.
Grand Medal UuArllNr Silver Medal
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Exposition. Exposition.
lids wonderful subs anco is acknowledged by
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rut up iu 13 and 2 cent bottles fo. household use.
Obtain it from your druggist, aud you wid find it
superior to anything yon have ever used
A / A L "XT r J 3 Q for a live Book
-LA.V.X J -_i.v| 1 lO that sells fast.Cnance lor
ali to make money. “i.lFia <>s
- BILL,”
Thdtamom Scout, Guide, Hunt rand Actor—writ
oy himself—is the liveliest and • a iest hook to
sell that has appeared for > ears. Agents already
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cure territory. For circulars and liberal terms,
appl, to
FK4KK F. HI.(V*, Urn <fo|-<i. L, *i n.
&f|TS I Oursis guaranteed to be the
fw *•*--*> rHJwh.SSi cheapest and best in the
world. Also nothing can beat our SA VVINCJ MA
UH INK. it saws oil a 2-foot log in 2 minutes.
Pictorial books free. W. GILES, CTiiowgo, 111.
Uorvf. v ~
€< > U<VV'i :
(V l7o it work sl2 a day at h mu)Y7iT^“7:~r—^
f ee. AddretwTßFE4k(Jo
frtnr7 A Mouth and exp n-r
IP / / Outfit frec< Shaw Sc Cos., #
<t? r 7^7 r 7 A vear and expands to agofaYm' '-M
LP/ / / ddress V. O. V'cksry, A ii.: U £
SHAKSPEARE’S Health Monthlt, one
Samplecopy/ree. Murray IlillPub.Co., 12‘JE.V 1 I
1/1 AAA An( WniitHl th-..
i l /\ fi } and western states f or the
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S3 outfit free. Geo. A. Lawrence. Loiii.vili r ‘‘M
YO U N G~ME N =
month. Every gradnat'- gnaraiii.'ed *
situation. Address R. Valentine. Mar. ?•.. ..., l t " A
irAf • witt .
§Kfla ots. sells fapidlT for V* f t v :i ; m
S. M . SpXNCF.ft,, 11. Wash 1 s i..firf
BA B 1 & 9 Cl 1 9^ *F*i 1 1 and Min Da ••• 7' 7*
IIFIIISIW cured- Lowest rriers. |
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We will |>:U u- ■ ''' t
aj , ‘I i W 0 .0? L'F lA • -*•
iiA Xitf. I** 1 ’fll: ! ! 1 ''i f
s 2.5 001 fisprisFiia I
things for agents. Over *OO agents are j .> 1
fro nt $2 to sla 1! a y So adsfa m p G-r p< ;; 1 3
Rev. 8. T Oilck, Milton,Horthi mdCo.pJ
pnprofits on 30 days' inveatmem >.■ - ir J
4)iUDU— in Western tJnign, Ju: r 7 -. .}! |
proportional rot r.:s every week ti- stock
#o. SAO, &v. 1
Oflic’al Itenorts and Uifculars free, A s
T. POTTER WIGH r & OO..Bc.ol:' rs. r, Walts 0
P.iwili
f\ Newspaper Advertising bureau, h* Spth )
New York, can learn the enact slof ai
posed I rio of \dvcrtibitig in America 11 N' " j
If *) I -sO-su* i*- ibuttphiHl, ill.'. T
ro:re rlir . l
BIDDER S WSTiLLcS. 1
Tg sT”rW^ l TmTllTMllßilll l'i |lir r I
yVm, TKCiTIt in Mir.m ,
\ 7'" 1
\ ~tfrWT fkill F!st I-I'l ll' i'v- of na* r a **. s jj
A'L!o*i I’r- f. * 7
usual cost, host j lan ever ottered to < :
and large buyer . ALL EXi.ULh’
PAID. Few terms FREE.
Tie Sreat Aiericae T* ;
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P. O. Bo* IW.
MASON * MIWII.II* CABIMEI 08G-. ’
DeiKOtiMra'ca ncs. S' U.GHEM (U \ I
WOULD 8 EXI’O>ITIONB ri !"i < ' < <
fiz: at I’aris, ''<>'< V • knna -7 ’7
Mhil\i)R! i'iua, Paris- ’ .8 - Gba? r iv.l
isn Goi.c Al k.d.a ! >')• ( ***.'? ' n.er>* " I
i.wardi'd highest l oncrc <*taist u ‘ - :
r jet ta'lrnei la f llustrai- and 1 anOctfw '■ '•’ and
J p.FtVI , !*•] :|H 'iCF r -. ** I l T- ■t\ <
J? L'PO** *5: IpASTOm S V.w ; . ~i
PE IS I-01 Si
. I
Si'w l*avr. Thousand*of Soldier* *•:* * n ; J 1
titled. fVnsions date bach t > disci: r_■ ■> •■■:* tl'v a
Time limited. Address with stump.
CiJSOKUK ft. B.rjT3N, |
P. O. Dmwer. <1515 WiiUl;u-i, t.j
For Scanty of roll sli, Savin": Labor, Cl* I
fdurJibiiit/ and Cbrutp ice?, Unefjcaied L
‘i\m / 1 jV l*F .’S.. IToi riot Dir O'M.--.
CURED
B An infallible and *
|§s or Slm 1
|§ :> $ i'ieUf- rV 1
B i B \ a aowned specific
* * * Treatise sent t £u;
s?f ace t * "ost-oilSc*! an*.; .‘"Tp. -‘‘a
T.fJPvo H . i.Jf r 1 ' |
. i
L'sl vvarser bkO'S cu:a- ,
• wsß kljtiW p\kis txriPd- ’
Wltwf UIK <1 , J
‘f|.L\i l*.S-: *s; ■ ‘ _
1 ”20 lot.*s is V AJo AV ‘*■;> • r
£# H’!!/PWi iown.-v-! ill.-lift*". '
- s * ;
WARWRU **••“' —i IS road wav* ‘ 1
A large, eight-page papr, of 56 b ■> ? i
will be sent postpaid to any addres ui:sf i.5 ■
ry Ist, iSSO,
FOR K,LF A DOLL A' 1 ®
Address THE SUN. N. Y. <’*’ I
JUST l’U BL TSH ED—A v onde: fnl bo ik r* 1
dren, bsing the old fashioned 111 other I
dies with Magical Changes. Printed in 1 o -• i
folding Picturei. Six different books in 1 1
covers. Price 2r> cents each. ***A!.soal _
bound in one volume, cloth. Price **, in. Sol M
<*very toy snd books ore. IJ
G. VV. CAKi.K lON & (!()., Publisher-, N. A B
ORGAN S Soft S'S 1 ; 1
Vi, lii Si Ilf Paul'. J
Stool and Book, ' H
SI S.'t 7>. Latest litsisn--e<f Lev. • |
free. A ddr rs .PAN a S', 8. JSA Bit * eT\- T
ns*sn<ißioii. I
MRUJER’S JS.V COD-Liyg? . j
Is (.rrloru. i
est medical atithorities in the world. Given 1 ■
award at 1 2 World’s Expositions, and ai •'
Bold by Drnygista. W.H.SchicSjdiu &■.% •
SAPOWFIS^
Is the Old Reliable Cencen' rated Lye I
FOB FAMILY SOAP MAKISIIij
Directions accompanying e vch can f- r a J
'lard, Soft, an t Toilet So in i i*s I*sl x H
IT IS FULL WEIGHT AND STKLSGTi
The market is flooded with (eo-calb and 1
tiated Lye, which is adulter ded with f* l J
resin, and won’t make soap.
sa r/-; moxi:y i;.
Sapoimifi X
MADE BY THE |
Pennsylvania Salt Msnuf-g iC y
PITB 1.1811 tSUfti* li atM>!t, TbAA I A 3° *■
• --■ n