The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 13, 1882, Image 5

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    I———
THE BRITISH ARISTOCRACK.
Life in Londan-The Gilded
gravia-The Avistocratic Tarn-Outs,
begin the business of their lives, that is
until 1 o'clock in the day.
younger, as well as the more sturdy,
soions of the noble houses may have
early as 9 o'clock in the morning rosy-
cheeked and strong-limbed
Jeft their horses with grooms, returning |
in smartly appointed coupes. Bai by |
general consent the official hour of
awaking and coming forth in all the
neighborhood from South Kensington
toward the Mall seems to be 1 o'clock
At that hour, in the height of the season,
the people who find thomselves in the
streets of the West Fad of London may
be excused for forgetting that there is
any want or poverty or hunger in the
world. The bright sun ol the clear
June day shives through the broad
streets upon unpumbered carriages
Hore there is a pony phaeton saneily
dashing past a stately fourdn-hand
coach; broughams, coupes and visiting
equipages of all kinds, brilliant with
fresh polish, gold and silver niountivg,
and trim appointments of every sort
may be seen all about; and now and
then in the throng there noves slowly
but steadily and with beoor ning dignity
the state carriuge of some old-fashioned
owner of great estates, an anc hang name
and many titles. There, high above
the crowd of smaller vehicle - goes
one which is in every way typical
of its kind. 1t is drawn Dy
four heavy horses, with all
style of the best English stock,
and something of weight t and size wh ich
tells of a strong Norman cross, The
harness apon them is heavy with gold
plates, which glitter the sun, and
as they toss their heads in play a lg at
white foam is streaked alo: ng their pam-
pered necks, Far above them, seated
upon a canopy of rich brocade, is the
coschman., He, like tha horses, is
heavy and well fed, His white pow
dered wig, as it flows out from oi 00 is
three-cornered gold-fringed hat, con-
frasts well with the deep red of his neck
and face. Beside him rides a stately
lackey, whose duties are not obvious, un-
less he be kept to display fine clothes,
while on a board far behind stand two
footmen, creatures sll too gorgeous for
daily 1 use, To commence at their feet
and ‘calves —probab ly the most import.
ant part of them—they have low bue kled
shoes upon the former, aud upon the
latter the finest of white silk stockings
which show to the knee. Their breeches
are of bright red plush, fitting,
their long waistooats of light striped
satin, avd tb 1d laced ard wi
cketed coats of darkest green.
like the coschman ard his attendan
wear three-corned hats of green ax
gold, from under which flow their white
wigs brought a cue and tied wit
gay ribbons. So SPP areled they stand
straight upon their perch, rather dis-
daining than maki of the hand.
straps br which th:y sre supposed to
steady themselves, Between them and
the coschman’s Seat ~the y are at
twelve foet apart the most nice ly
adjusted spring oo Mong body of the
coach swings fr ¢ leat her fastening
it is rich with varnish, gold plate and
armorial bearings. It is open, the in-
gide cushioned with the heaviest of
satin, and the door padded w
material.
In this gorgeous eq
above the street, so high,
it seems almost as if she
used a step-ladder to ge et up, there sits
8 woman. She is young and very bean
tiful, after the familiar English type.
Fair, with wide open and rather list-
less blue eves un f light brown
hair. Her , of soft
nun's cloth, 0 a the
finest of lawns. Across her road.
brimmed white hang great pl lame
of white ostrich
andressed white
n
in
close
ir or
10 i
3
i
«Kl
0 g use
least
mn
s th oh
ym NOR
UES,
ih
Avid &
urpage high up
deed, that
n
10¢
must
are
are of the Span eh
fashion and wrinkled almost up to 1
elbow. Sheisaliogether a most striking
figure, and on the theory that all women
are well pleased when they attract a
great deal of attention, she ought to be
very happy, for she and her grand car-
riage of all those in the throngoi g
carriages attract the most attenti
And vet she seems be anything
but satisfied either with herself or the
rest of the world. Between her arched
ug
gra
g
on.
to
NEWS OF THE WEEK. |
|
Eastorn and Middlo States.
fix Zuni Indian chiefs have traveled all the |
way from their home in Now Mexico to Boston |
for the purpose of paving homage to the Atlan.
tie oocean, god of the walters, of |
their principal deities, For 196
supply of holy water from the great sea had not
“the * one
years their |
bo n replenished, and the chiefs and medicine
men were sent the to |
propitiste the Great Spirit and implore his con
They were ax
ocean bx
The chiefs of
rarettes
on ion 2 journey
tinued favor, ampanied in their
pilgrimage to the h by several hun
nied ta the
and filled
dread spectators
smoked sacred
ocean,
sovon demijobhns with water, which they will |
carry back to New Mexico to use in future cer.
monies,
Ar a moeting of the Pennsylvania Greenbaok
State tee PR
doe
termined to hit Greenback.
Labor tick
May 18
Tue New
peso] tins
recall Mr,
pusillanimons condn
commit Harris! it was
mn
nominate a ste
kot at the convention in that city
York bos {f aldermen
Presid Arthur to |
minister to BE
passd !
calling upon ont
Lowell, our
ot
in trea
Earl Granville
and impriso
morgan iu
ture hy a tic
A New)
tigating alleg
Rinw 3
New York which
Union Telegraph
atest rival, the Mut
pany io
aal Union
Prox reports made it i
WANS peach on will be unusually
ranging from 4 660.0
erreen, of Wilkesh
arre
has been made
oted by Cyrus W. Field
Tappan, N. Y.
mi
10 desty
1@ stones form
t thrown down
md son
while
I Was ne
well
hin
abad in a N sl and
WE 08 10 & el, na
han
h Heo was
rs, aged
led an irregu- |
had
DoniNa
ereons sought shelter iv
Pa. While
on a hi
Beadiy 18
resting 2h sap;
TOA Was
ties agers g 3 sted 0 only $12,77 ii,0
iast
he Eastern States, 231,
ter are divid
with
. : and
37, and losses
the &
prominent
ccounts of the
New
IXAMINATION of
rd D.
mecting t
American
the
mouth there lines of discontent
sadly out of
£0 young an 3 80 Arnaud, They do
not belie her feeling. Despite all the
wealth, all the luxary, all the magnifi-
cence, ull the high station which are
bers, she is neither contented nor
ay
ba
The fair creature who sits in the car
riage of state high up on soft cushions
has a story—one of the commonest in
aristocratic England, in fact, a sort of
every-day tale in cruel London—which
is known to most of the gay occupants
of the sqxipages about her. If may be
briefly told. She is the daughter of a
noble dowager of great and ancient
mame but poor estate. By the help of
this thoughtful parent she was married
fo Lord H., s middleaged gentleman
of a sporting turn of mind and a fortune
almost without limit. He needed some
ono to look well at tho end of the table.
his is the excuse he made to his “set”
for getting married.
pleased hin fora time;
"%o0 show signs of affection for him.
Then he tired of her and went alto-
gether back to his old ways, not forget-
ting, however, to be polite to her. For
instance, there was a breakfast at the
elnb and “one of the jolliest sets im-
aginable.” The meal commenced at
the usual hour—1 o'clock in the day—
and had continued until 5.30, not un-
usual. It was still in progress; “the
jolliest” was at its height, in fact, when
Lord H., rising, hurriedly cried out:
“ By Jove, 1'i]l have to ‘be ofl.”
“Nol no! H.; don’t leave us now,’
cried his companion.
“ Sorry, deuced sorry, but I must,”
said his lordship. * Fact is, Iady H.,
my wife, you know, has invited me to
appointment,” and he hurried away.
His friends Tanghed at the joke—they
“H.,” for an old one,
tentive,
differently. She had not yet learned,
as many another noble woman of Eng-
land has had to learn, the habit of
was very at.
band in the whirl of extravagant so-
ciety.
Of course she will in time, or take
feel.
must put a mask upon her face.
appear downcast or out of spirits.
one must know that she has not esen
West End is about hér,
gay like the rest
she tries to smile.
mansion at which she “will be one of the
most welcomed guests.
brighiy of every sort. Thesun shines
brightly upon the brilliant liveries of
‘tke . immense bouquets—*“favors’—
which many of them wear for the oc-
casion. Room is made for ber carriaze.
It speeds to the covered entrance with
a flourish, the steps are let down ; with
greatest deference the servants stand to
do her bidding. She disappears behind
_ the silk-curiained, rose-scented portals
fo congratulate a newly made wife—one
of her own set.
The pub! hers of the Richmond (Va.) Fn.
Quire” heartily recommend Dr. Bull's Cough
iyiup and say: “It has been well tried in our
office and composing room, and has cured our
city editor of & very bad case of Bronchitis,”
. ri
Spe aker Keil
loscoe Conkling
Lo
og, of Massachu
nand other pr
Si Baas read and i
ir unlawfully
mprizoned fellow ,”" it was next de
ingled
Th
flunkeyism
viewed by ns with
‘Das been
rast and
clare i.
for indignation.”
“the
iin ne
TER0 ele moanced
Ang licized
rad that
in eircles in this
“notwithstand-
Amer
Cause,
ich trae
her
of the spirit
y {48108 now ia volv onstitute not an
hh question, but
The ¢ hairma 1
1
tion, nor an at
Were rox jest Of
ions to the Presi-
every
of the resolut
sw. Presideat, to cabinet
every Senator and Ropresenta-
tive in Congress,
of New
over
Garield elub sens to
ingion a petition
containing the names
persons who ask the President
geant Mason for shooting at Guitesu,
South and West.
Groxoy, the county seat of Buchanan county,
most totally
York,
am
Tn
Wes
than
of more 150,000
, bas bean al destroyed by fire.
y, jail, two hotels,
and, in fact, all of
the buildings in the heart of the town were
consumed, leaving but a few houses on the
irta.
A nunrricANE in Georgia, Louisiana and Ala-
death and devastation in its
track. Near Monroe, La, several cotton.gin
houses and many cabins occupied by colored
people were blown down and several colored
persons were killed. Near Loachapoka, Ala,
a number of houses were completely demol-
jehed, there was great destru
and lumber, and two men were killed,
lichardson, in Barbour county, Ala, was
killed by his house falling upon him. P. Red.
ding, living near Cuthbert, Ga,, and Mrs. Pond
and Mr, Martin, living near Brown's Station,
were killed.
Mags, Barrarp, of Lincoln county,
after a quarrel with her husband,
ction of fences
R. J.
Ark.
broke the
four years, threw them into a pond, and then,
taking hor infant into her arms, cast herself
into the water, where both were drowned,
Foaxrraixy J. Moses, ex-governor of South
York, charged with swindling several parties
out of money by representing himself to be a |
brother of Governor Colquitt, of Georgia. Ex-
Governor Moses has been arrested on similar | ¢
charges in New York at least half a score of
times within the past year.
IxronmarioN reached Natchez, Miss, of the |
destrnction of the Ralston gin, near Lake St, |
John, in Tensas Parish, La., by which 120 |
refugees lost their lives, This gin was one of |
the largest in North Louisiana, and was packed |
to overflowing with negroes from adjoining |
plantations.
Many deaths occurred during a recent severe |
“blizzard” in Dakota. At least twenty-five
persons perished in the towns of Redfield and
Ordway.
Poury-six of the illicit oyster dredgers re.
arrested by the State
Virginia have been sentenced to one year's im.
contly authorition of
prisonment each in the penitentiary,
Tur residence of Joseph Yerger, postmastor
at An! Mo,
and when Yerger
tonio, was fired by an incendiary,
rushed from the building he
was shot dead by some concealed person,
Two men charged with oattle stealing were
taken from jail at Denver, Col, bya
and hanged to a trea,
A. Wemsinagr and William Le
Ala, |
a farmer, on December
crowd
dow
Killin
19, 188
oners declared that they were innovcent,
Va “Doo
the m
IOETOOR
hangod at Selma, Tossa
1 We
Plies art
singer,
the
Wrig hit (colored) was ha
Colo Arthur, On Fe
was deel
same day Chatham,
at
mated for urder of
brasrcy 6, 1851, a oase in
ght's brother
Wright
SONS Wi
his enraged
10 were present, ki
Arthur
A Sr Joseen (Mo) dispatoh says that great
excitement was aroused by the report that Jesse
loader of the notorious James gang
i had been killed
h his wife in as
tank robbers,
g wi hanty on the
St Joseph,
members of his gang, were
and
irts of
his compan
James wds were
together alout 9
James took off his belt and |
bad,
i
the two F in the
and room o'oloek in the
id his
to wash himse
' a 4h
iattis On the preparing
sprang up behind him
The
base of
and
through his brai
of his he
out
ball en
ad at the the
ho
what
over the eva,
mes made known
and gave themselves
t that
been on
thev are
Jam tracks
wealre
and
rth
)
bbery
by striking it
n, Cal,
iL
deste
and warehouse, con
amount of graip, and sey
ng an estim
3 house bas signed 8
to give h.m a posi
s00n as Lo is releasad
From Washington.
DOE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL Swain in his re.
wiont tl
eant Mason to
of war, holds that
he case of barg 16 secre
the sentence of the
wvedid by reason of c¢
lities in the proceed.
Tue Pre was signed the co
ige Blatchford to be an
mmission of
‘ate
HERO
nited States sug
ited dla 1]
fore him in New
Par
AgUAY an
[ Now
Yor K, consul
, Mrs,
Sanat
SEN received a cable
wéll an g that,
death of
foreign News.
Epwarp and Clara Petors, on trial at
ills, Quebec, for the mwrfer by
acd starvation of their 1 ehild,
ty. The man was sentenced
Man.
torture
were
10
adopte
and the woman to ten years’ imprisonment,
Tue French chamber of deputies has passed
bill repealing the prohibition of the im-
portation of American pork,
ing Alex.
péare dl on the walls
NIHILIST proclamations condem
ander 111. to death have aj
of St. Petersburg.
Avy the leading English and French journals
have warm words in praise of the dead poet,
Longfellow.
Axenicax residents of Lon
retary to
don have peti.
tioned the English home sec reprieve
Dr. Lamson, sentenced to death for poisoning
his young brother-in-law,
Tie czar has ordered the commutation of all
the death sentences passed at the recent trial of
the
period at hard labor in the mine
Nihilists in St. Petersburg, to an indefivite
8, except in the
Suchanh off, in
s was confirmed,
caso of the lieutenant,
which the sentence
marine
a8 his posi-
tion as an officer aggravated his crime,
of Kieff, Russia, has been shot dead at Odessa,
where he had gone to conduet important polit-
ical trials, Two of the assassins, while fleeing
from the scene in a carriage
a desperate resistance,
wounded three |
Tae British steamer Yrurse Bat,’
pool for Porto Rico came into collision with
the Royal Mail company’s steamer Douro, fron
Brazil, off Cape Finisterre, Spain. Botl
steamers sank. The steamer Hidalgo rescued
seven persous from the Douro and sixty-sever
from the Yrurac Bat and landed them st Cor.
anna, Thirty of { ths Yrurac Bat,
including the captain and the pilot, were
Thirty. five of the
ved. The rest were
annual eight-oared bo
representing
during which they
WTRONDH,
he crew of
drowned. Douro’s passen
drowned,
Al-race
EOTrs Were sa
Tue
Thames
and Cambri
on the
Oxford
nm eamly thi
between crews
Ige universities was wi
vear by the Oxford crew,
Haxrax, the
Boyd, the
race on the Thames,
CoN unsuccessful attempt has been made to
ill William B. Smythe,
county Westmeath,
defeated
a three-mile
champion oarsman,
Englishman, casily in
a wealthy land-owner
Ireland. Mrs Smythe,
brother's wife, who, along with Lady Har,
riet Monck accompanied Mr. Smythe, was
the bullet scattering her
his
ing from church, Three persons—an evicted
FORTY-SEVYENTH CONGRESS,
Senate.
After further discussion the tariff commie
cight yeas to fifteen nays, and then went to
the House,
receive as compensation for their services $10
and other necessary expenses. They are to in-
vestizate all the various questions relating to the
agricultural, commercial, mercantile, manu-
fuctmring and mining industries of the United
States go far as may be necessary to the estab-
ternal revenue laws upon a scale of justice to
all interests, and they are to report to Con-
gress fom time to time and to make a final
Teport not later than the first Monday in Jan
uary, 1883,
Mr. Cockrell offered a resolution, which was
| adopted, calling on the secretary of state for
ard to Americans imprisoned
in Irelawd Mr Pendleton, from the com
[
Mr, Dawes, of the same oom
the minority would hereaf
favor of a elvil ser
that of the bill, The
he Indian appro
My aw
pervice,
stated that
different from
1 was
priation bil reported,
the bill, stated that the
the service for 18583 amounted to
oatimnates
$5. 841. 718.01
elnMng
mount
deflclonsien, wae #8 000 888 NO,
nt b as it came the
was $4, 020 203.91, The additions made
Nenate committee Inoreass 2 the » amount
S00, making the total as or to th
$5,160 003 891; this be 197.11
the hill of 1883 Iho tc tal of the je
of increased appropriation made by the oom
witteo is $316,000, and of deductions $59, 2
Iho Indian appropriation bill w as amends
and passed, | |
ing for the erection of public build
Tumbus Ohio, Ro
and Shreveport,
of the pros from
BO,
Renate, in
OXCUss O in
LY)
The Nonate passd id
»
Hill
at
we
to MN
granting ti
an in sid
On Baturday
Garfield
a
the
May
was
sOlnlion was passe
ontiment
. At M
A ros
aot of the state dep
ppropriatin
grave of
Va My
tion declaring that
artinent in re ation
of
arrest and
and othe
Hu prisoiment
iy
i
i effocta against
ures ;
HIIArY visils
s fe
rs An
and
from dot
gold And
Ai
Hang
BOO awrins of |
in such oases w
PR onfronted wi th
the
t raised
&r Was not 1
The Steamer Disaster at Memphis,
Golden Gate,
nu Appr
1 steamer
n
he Mins iwsippi
the whar{ at
parted aud the
the line §
wn the river
a
oom > e and awake: ing
Bo rapidly did the
minute
1 broke oat amidsh
was all ablaze,
flee in their night
Kk ord save
steamer,
Bryce
lmbiog
fire th
which
within five s after the
re, whi
glen r
f
the
Nearly all the eabin and de
A All ti cers of t
Second Engine \ ly, os sto,
the pilot, made his es ap l
front part of the pil
in the rear. Stowe's aire 18,
taken on board
and six cages
together with
tents and
the
gather a wt and saved,
is estimated that thirty-five lives were k
HeAr a8 Can » » Wore twenty.
three women y two or
whom, so far as} saved,
Brice Purcell, Sr., was the pilot of wat
the time the fire broke The first intims
tion he had of the danger was shooted to hi in
by the second engineer, Robert Kelly, who was
on watch, He catled up tr ugh the trampet
‘The boat is on fire. Head hor for
and, for God's sake, be quick about
The boat at this time was in oh ire, and
Parcell immediately hes aded her for the
Within four minutes she struck the coal
that was moored the foot of Beale street,
just below the Anchor Line compar whar!,
but she came with the engineer
having turned on at of steam that,
striking the tag Orile, sank that craft and
ran foul of several Largos, A line
fast to one of these, but
1 cause it soon parted, aud
began drifting dowa the
int, which is very swift at
touched land, When tl
fleet all of her j
and crew been aroused,
aud many who were to roach the
forward part of the boat made their escape by
jumping on the barges, But there many
(especially ladies) passengers in the cabin who
had been cut off by the flames from reaching
the forward pat, Of these but few
saved. Almost all we
yo
house the
1s
m possi bi ys |
three
WI,
out
the shore,
wig
at
v's
sucl ,
ll
she
coal
from some unknow:
the burning
vessel
she
vossel struck the coal
had
able
were
were
re either drowned or suf
The Golden City left New Orleans for Cincin
out thre 0 bun Ired tons of freight,
lot of jute, 1,200 empty ar bariels
and somo serap iron. A portion of Stowe's
cirons was taken aboard! at Vidalia, La,
was destined for Cairo, 11, where the season of
1882 was to have been soon opened, Ther
six cages of animals lost, to
with three canvas
the ticket and band wagons,
mals lost were a lion, a tiger, two
Albino deer, several monkeys and a rare lot of
birds, A buffalo and a grizzly bear were saved
Ly jumping overbos and swimming as ae
Thre a horses bre long ing to the Circus wore also
The noted circus hors
Selim Pe rished with the rest of the menagerie,
Manager Stowe, a noted circus man, his wile
mong the lost,
The burning ste drifted, down
stream in the (ray of awn 8 mass of
flames, presented a sight awful, though beauti-
to such citizens as had bee n aroused fron
their slumbers by the ringing of bells and bad |
wobinfls, The wreck
floated about four miles below and finally sunk
in the chute near the Tennoseco shore, The
ty of the crew known to be lost ar
and three colored
between the bows
including a
nts
Iho
leopards, an
tu
ware a
r, us she
f the d
Ame
arly
mea
and the
Kelly
could easi:y have saved himself, but he stood to
his engine nati] the boat had been landed, and
it was too lite to escape. Ono of
who were crushed
his post of duty with the fierce flames burning
His form Yseemed a mass of
said the man, “as he sank down nover to
in.” His death was a truly heroic one,
fire,”
rise aga
Felix Lehman, a passenger, savas there was a
merry party aboard, and nearly all the passen
gers remained up until midnight. They had
one or two gentlemen aboard who played the
piano and entertained the passengers with
music and singing, He was awakened by the
bursting of his stateroom door, and he heard
the cry of fire,
next minute the vessel floated down stream,
a
The number of national banks in the
United States is 2,163,
SCIENTIFIC NOTES,
Experience proves that less injury
comes to the eyes from the eleetrie than
{ from gas light,
(lolonel Veninkofl, an Russian traveler,
{a thirteenth part of Earope, still re
{ mains to be explored,
The ineroase of interest in electrical
matters is remarkable, A London pub
| lisher is selling 1,000 copies a month of
| a now work on eleotricity.
The milky sap of many plants con
| tains caoutchoune, suspended in the form
of minute, transparent globules, thes
being frequently small as 1.20000
to 1.00,000 of an iueh in diameter,
Dr, Wm. Hammond finds over
heated apartments to be a potent cause
of nervous irritability, If we would
| preserve our amiability and our tran
{ quillity of mind we should live in well
ventilated rooms kept at a temperature
of about sixty-five degrees,
Of the sense of taste Professor Me
| Kendrick states that the base of the
tongue is most sensitive to bitters, and
the tip to sweets, A substance must be
soluble in the fluid of the mouth to
create taste, but no definite relation has
been found between the chemical condi
tion of bodies and their taste,
us
Stars seen through the tail of a comet
| seem to increase in brilliancy. The
{ French astronomer Ch, Andre explains
| this by an hypothesis that the comets
are assemblages of bodies with solid
nuclei which reflect and multiply the
light, that the average
dimension of these nuelei can be deter.
mined by studying the amount of
increase in the brilliancy of the stars
behind them.
A"
The Substitute Editor,
“ Who is that sad looking man whom
1 saw sittiog in the next room as 1
cama through?” said Mr, Jones to the
managing editor,
“ That? That is Lawson, our substi-
tute editor.”
“ What is a-—what are the fanotions
of that kind of an editor?”
| “Why, you know, we employ Lawson
to shoulder disagreeable
of all kinds: When we ‘go for’
body until outraged nature can
longer stand it, the injured man
and’ we show him in and let him
Lawson,”
* But
how"
" Why,
and asks to see
and suggests
consequences
Any
Ho
calls
kick
I don't exactly understand
you gee, the man comes here
the managing editor.
fire in bis eve, what he wants and he
ito Lawson's room, There
immadge, and about a quar
r later Lawsou saunters in
3 handkerchief to his nose
me nis salary really must be
He is a very useful man, By
concentrating all the storms on him
the regular stafl is allowed to have per-
fect pesce and security. He is cowhided
once or twice a week, and knocked
down even oftener. We have the floor
in there padded on purpose to ma
| fortable as possi He don’
mind an ordinary flogging so much, bu
the man has a strange disinelination to
be shot 3 I sibly because
three bullets in his legs snd a {wo-ounce
slug encysted somewhere in his interior
department,
“ But Laason
nary
think
raised.
ne it
:
com le, t
Ig t
a
mind his ordi.
youn would
don't
as much as
1 We turn in all the bores
him. He commands a large i
use he is deaf as a post,
who would set me crazy lear
a condition of unroftled calmness,
the poets w come here are sent t i
room. One of them'll sit there and
read to Lawson a poem in forty-two
stanzas, and Lawson'll sit there smiling
blandly, just as if he heard it all, and
he'll compliment the writer and bow
him and his manuscript ougwith charm.
ing grace and ease, mekes mis.
takes sometimes, to be sure. The other
a man road him a spece h which t
man wanted to pay for inserting int
paper. Lawson thought it was a poem,
and he told the man, 11 the us jor-
mula, that he was sorry our advertising
wus pre BSINE us now that we
couldn't eblige him, and the man went
up the street and published it the
Herald, A dead loss to us of abou
forty dollars ; but Lawson is too valn
able to be discharged for a single blun
der Ii that,
“ Whenever thera's an excursion
part of a new railroad, or a
trial trip of a steamboat that we are
doubtful about, we always send Law-
gon to represent the staff. He has be
blown up twice on the river and has
been dropped eight times through a de
fective trestle-bridge, besides participat
ing in a coup le of boiler explosions. He
receives all the champion eabbages, gi-
gantic turnips and remarkable eggs
that are sent here by subscribers for
notica, aud he tests all the giant cuenm-
bers and early watermelons that come
in. We could bardly run this office
safely if we didn't have Lawson.”
“ He struck me as looking rather low-
spirited.”
“Bo he is. He has naturally
Siren g constitution; but he is gra ually
bre sing down under the strain, I am
afraid, and is going to die early. It
weighs on his mind, He had a terrific
fight with an indignant
summer just after he had t
ket of rather anripe cantalenpes, and
have noticed that he has been
what gloomy ever since,”
Just then the subdued noise of an al
tercation was heard in the adjoining
room; there was a pis yl shot and
bullet came whizzing through the hy
tition, passing close to Mr. Jones’ head. |
“ What's that?" asked Jones,
‘Lawson's baving a tussle with Me-
Hvaine, candidate for common council,
Wa cut Mellvaine up in to-day’s issue.
I thought he'd call. Boy!” exclaimed
the editor, * run for a polie eman |”
Then the sounds died away and ten
daties
#
day he
i
i
10
@ 1d
$0
ist
in
i8
on
a dangerous
fan
0
a
1
some
| he saw the policeman and two other
men carrying Lawson to the hospital
on a stretcher, whereupon the manag-
| ing editor said:
“We'll haveto let np on Mellvaine
for a day or two till Lawson has time to
recuperate.” — Ow Continent,
National Debt Statement for Mareh,
The
following is the national debt statement
$1,965 886.154 03
13,671,820
070.558, 184
53,201,761 7
TREASURY,
66,423 33
720.369
cash in the
treasury. ...
DERT LESS ASH IN THE
April 1,
March
5,402,046 7
Deerease of a bt since Jane
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Interest due and unpaid, |,
Debt on which interest
ceased , ;
Interest thereon, TY
Gold and silver cert ay
United Bh
rod
dep
Caxh balane ©
12,665,615 26
613,395
522.290
note
m of corti
ten A
amphi ates of
adh sida 11,140,000 Of
available April 1,
154,038,281 65
Supplying a Demand,
A Philadelphia reporter has recently
made a tour of the shops in that city
where modern timber is turned into
| antique furniture for the benefit of per-
sons who long to possess something to
indicate that they had ancestors, One
of the dealers said to him confidentially:
“The next will be old family portraits,
There's a man some vhere in this city
who has been to Larope and bought up,
old canvases with heads on them, He
got two or three clever young men to
dress them up and copy them and make
them up into sets, thus:
| armor, fifteenth century; man in a raff| |
sixteenth century; youth as a cavalier |
or Puritan, seventeenth century; Pil-
grim father, eighteenth century; Mr
Brown, of Spruce street, nineteenth |
| century; set complete in harmonious
frames, say $1,000. Cheap and excel-
lent idea and are sure to take. Qall
again.”
Character of the Chinese Newspaper,
To begin with the ordinary and nu.
decrees noknowledging
“The gover-
i" BAYH
the of November, 1878, ‘res
quests that a tablet may be put up in
honor of the river god. He
(raeelle
rice to Honan, whenever difficulties were |
encountered through shallows, wind or |
rain the river god interposed in the
most unmistakable manner, so that the
transport of grain went on withont
hindrance, Order [.ot the proper
office prepare a tablet for the temple of
the river god.” “A memorial board is
granted,” says the of April,
1880, “to two temples in honor of the
god of locusts. On the last BPpPear-
ance of lecusts in that province last
summer, prayers were offered to this
{rire tle
1880, A decree ordering the imperial
of inseriptions to prepare a
tablet to be reverently suspended in
the temple of the sea dragon al Hoy-
ang, which has wanifested its divine
interposition in warked manner in
response to prayers for rain, 1n another
the director general of grain
transports prays that a distinction be
granted to the god of winds, who pro-
tected the dikes of the grand canal,
whereupon the board of rites is called
upon for a report. Also the river
god is recommended for protecting
a flest carrying tribute rice; and the
god of water gets a new temple by
special rescript. In fact of
this kind, which merely convey public
colle go
un
Cridzella
decrees
state gods, appear in almost every issue
of the (faze! The following degrees
refer to the process of
divine rank “The governor
Auwhel forwards (November, 1878)
petition for the gentry of "Ying Chow,
praying that sac rifices m my be offered
to late famine commissioner in
le,
of
the
the me mory o f his father. The father
had been superintendent of the grand
transport, and had greatly distinguished
himself in operations against some
rebels.
service, and the local gentry had heard
of his death with great grief. They
earnestly pray that sacrifices may be
offered to him us well as to his father,
Granted.” “A decree issued (May,
INT8,) sanctioning the recommendation
that a temple to Fuh Tsuug, a states
man of the Ming dynasty, may be
placed on the list of those at whieh the
officials are to offer periodieal libations.
I'he spirit of the deceased statesman
has manifested itself effectively on
several occasions when rebels bave
threatened the distriet lawn, and has
more than once interposed when prayers
have offered for min” Fut.
nightly Review,
Elcetric Towers,
Among the serious obstacles that
encounter the Pp van of securing 1llumina-
tion on a grand scale by means of pow-
erful eleetrie lamps raised lofty
towers, are the expense ar dd fliculty of
erecting such towers, and the awkward.
ness of the machinery required to lower
the lamps for trimming and returning
them to their lofty position. To do
away with the latter diffi wmity entirely
i to materially lessen th e former are
ects o a light tower invented by
of New Orleans, of
Ame furnishes
heen
aon
Lie 8
ig dispenses with stagings
acninery of tower bu
tower into the air
2h
RINGS his
ons made at the bottom.
a cast-iron eviinder, bu up
and kept de J»
erection and after.
The top sections
i Are perma~
nently attached, are put tog ther first,
and by means of an ordinary derncl
t ve artioally over a hydraulic press
1 Lhe inte wdedfound ation of
The hydraulic lift rai
il & new section, say
underneath,
rning to ad
raised tower
by clamp and
means of the guys
When the new section been
securely bolted on the whole lifted
length; and thus by successive
lifts and additions at the bottom the
tower is raicod until the required alti
tude is attained. Each section of the
tower will be bored out before it is put
in place, and have a diameter sufficient
to allow the casy passage of a circular
platform carrying the lamp trimmer,
who will ba lifted to the top of the
tower by means of a piston operate d by
pressed air supplie J by pumps or a
rotary blower. The tor thinks
that the pressure cl never exceed
half a pound to the square inch. The
cost of a 500 feet tower complete (with.
out the lamps) raised in the way de-
scribed is estimated 8 0,
seations,
ocess of
ans of guys.
lan
to
tO which
Bre se
up
up
HEH
be set
retu
the
y CRO
1ifs
iit is
seotion,
is a in position a
hel
kept verte by
al
has
is
another
com
nvent
at about 30, (
The project of erecting such a tower
for the purpose of illuminating the
crescent-shaped water front of New
being agitated.
e———
A Picture Worth Behoiding.
Hanging
betwee small windows, ane
oppo
{Wo
tht from a larger om
[ the offices of Adams Expres
, al 50 Broadway, New York—the
ipied by Mr Ww. H. Hall, head of
livery dep artment—is a plainly
framed chromo about
is looked upon by
ny of Ww hi in
effect. I
resents a flight of hall a en rough
g from the led bank
a placid lake to tle nt temple wot
red side of the untain which
1a proportions in the back.
covered with a rank luxurian!
folia ge in brush and tree, In the
n door of this little temple stands a half
cealed figure, with an arm and hand ex.
tended, holding forth a small, dimly defined
package, while seated on the sward the
foot of the steps an aged pilgrim, barefooted
lame and decrepid, bears a stall in one
hand, and in the other holds before his dim
whose label |
This label bears the words
bs Oil the Great German Remedy”
Simple as this little chromo appears in it
unostentatious position, it has an infly
which it would be difficult to est
it to that picture and the persuasions of
Mr. Hall,” gaid Mr. Edward J
gentleman connected “with Mr,
partment, “ that I owe my peresent ability |
to perform my work. Some weeks ago |
vas violently attacked with sciatic rheuma-
and hour by hour I grew worse, and
vothing my family or the doctor could do
me any relief. 1 began to think in a
few days that my case was hopeless and
an invalid and
Bat at last |
, On In
aw slntary
doz
stone st EWA
a lit
2 m
rises in stupendo
gro
{
growth of
und ail
ope
con
al
ie eagerly
Hot,
eves a small bottle,
of ad
imate,
helpless cripple for life
looked at with
Me.
me
wat little interest, and then
Hall came to my bedside, and telling |
how St Jacobs Qil had cured him of a
and longer standirg case than mine,
urged me to use the same remedy. I did |
#o that very night, directing my wife not |
to apply it thoroughly ac.
cording to the directions; this she did with
a large piece of flannel cloth saturated with
the Oil, and then bound the cloth to the |
affected parts. The next morning 1 was
pain, and although a little sore
in the hip, was able to dress myself, and
the next day resumed my duties in the
Here | am now
in full health and strength,
touch of rheumatism or other pain since.
Whenever | see one of our drivers or any
other person who shows any symptoms ol
ameness or stiffness, | point him to the
pict ire in My. Hall's office, and then direct |
him to go for St Jacobs Oil at once.’--
New York Evening Telegram
Recent experiments show that the
tensile strength of glass is between
2,000 and 9,000 pounds per equare inch,
and the crushing strength between 6,000
and 10,000 pounds per square inch,
Mr. Traulionie finds that flooring glass |
one inch gquare and one foot between
the end supports breaks under a load of
170 pounds.
ta
Moses How, E«q, of Haverhill, Mass,
strongly indorses St, Jacobs Oil for rheuma-
| tism, ete, from the observation of its effects |
in his factory as also in hisown family—so |
we see from one of our Massachusetts ex-
The production of teain Japan is
ateadily increasing, and now reaches
over 90,000,000 pounds annually.
mmr RIOR EXPE RIENCE.
| & Yroe I'ress puter]: Ww Hus sjnined and lis
{ ures teven .
| (Detroil Free Press.)
| A few months ago au juterview with wi
| nent and well known physiclen, formerly &
resident of Detroit, but pow living in New
| York, appeared in the columns of this paper,
| The statements made by the doclor and the
facts he divulged were of #0 unusual & uature
an to cause no little commotion among those
who read them, ane Te any inquiries were raised
gs to the genuineness of the interview and the
validity of the statements it contained. The
name of the physician wes at that time supe
pressed at his own request, The seal of see
erecy, however, can now be removed, ae the
ip oriant and intorosting letter whic b Appears
below will abundantly show. In order, how.
ever, that the reader may better understand
this letter, & fow extracts are herewith given
from the intervie Ww in question:
After an exchange of courtesies and a few
reminiscences about the war, in which the doo
tor was # promisont surgeon, the reporter
remarked upon the doctor's lmproved sppoar+
Rice, upon which he sak!
Yes, 1 have in
last saw me, and
One thing,
ping and it iso
BLY One, i
proved in health since you
i) wpe alse io many other
however, 1 have succeeded
of the hardest things for |
and a doctor, to do, and |
that is 1 have overcome my prejudices, You |
kpow there sre somo: people who prefer to
remain n tlie ather than acknowledge
the manifest wejudice leads w
bigotry of 1 the ‘Now 1 ams phy- |
#i and of the * lool’ order, 100, bat
have, after years perience snd ohsery br
tion, come to the ( jusion that wrath is the
bighest of all things, snd that if prejudice or
bigotry stand way of truth so miseh th
worse for them--they sre certain to e
ished sooner or later, Why, when 1 knew
Detroit, 1 would no sooner have thought
of vielstis i f ics laid down by the
I f prescribing snything oul
lar order, than 1 would of smpuiating
Now, bh I preseribe and sd-
adapt |
experience has |
Wave
in tie
ERE ally
105
ian,
ii Li
8
you
rol ess
the roan
my hand
vise Hos
ed Cle and which
proven 10 be such
How did you come
ideas as these, docio
“Oh, they are the
sud observation, obtained my
pon the st bjeet, though, m havieg been
ured after ail my wl the skill of wd
rofessional brethren had failed to relieve me
Why, I was as badly off as many of my pati ents,
with & ompdication o f troutdes, InCinding dys
pepsia “snd consequently imperfect kuineys
and liver, and I feared 1 rhould have to give
r months | suffered untold
finite pains In Various paris
a iack of in everyiin
+ a loss of appeti te; headschos; all
reeable symptoms were added to
were both acute and constant,
however, 1 became restored te
wi surprising manner, and in an
hort space of time, and it was thus
& revelation to me, That was the
and my prejudices faded rapidly
ean you, 1 went
read extensively, snd analyzing
extensively, and since that time
1 have discovered many things of real value to
bumanity,. Why, ouly » few days ago ade
vised a lady who was suffering from a serious
WEver,
h 1 believe 10 be
my
things wh
to got such hereto
result of my experience
first ideas
Care
oniee inde
of the body;
&1¢
interest
ind me
wh
Bssiye
| 5
more
red me, 1 saw her this
morning she is nearly well; the pain and
inflammation are all gone and she is around as
pscal, We have no right in the medical fra~
ternity to sit back = there i¢ no such |
thing as lmprovemel
we have a monopoly of the remedies which ne
ture Las given to mankind, There are great
changes going on in every department of life,
and there are great deveiopn
as well Thousand 2 of peo} le
from suppo typhoid fever, umatism or
: i when in reallly
ating poorly-o¢ oked and |
of
sane remedy wien «
4 R SAY
o
rhe
it
in i=
other
trichins, rod ’
diseased pork. Th
dying every year from dropsy as the
#O0 when in reality It is
v which have become
fever they have just
LOY vou fol some new
CR
wands
ies salina
UistRend ineys
ened by
“Well,
uths here,
ble to me
Well wi
have d
they are tr
po matter |
* Rey
doe have
minly,
oer
eth
r 1 joy are reasonable or not, I
{ arate
own pers
suppressing the
Lo uname of
ence of the pul
The above are s points in
terview referred 10
me of the prine yp
aw fort
ken letter from
ich has just been received,
himself,
Linke
w
is pub-
od inf
which be said
ition that
fe SI0LA:
ir years, and tell
looked beck, and
we described by
rons, which
cal
al
ined, 1 determined
ny fellow men,
ends
aired {
was prodoced by a
ones,
med
ea
Als Pro-
famma-
3
i
blood
5
pation, hea
fever; in short,
Tee,
my skill
The mystery of my
traveled everywhere—
expedients— but 10 Bo
none, one of my
i attention
to some unusua res wrought by a promi-
pent remedy an te try it
liv decli retly,
termination that
anybody know what |
began its use, It was anly
you kpow, but, for that malter, all me
treatment i rimental. Well,
long and surprising story short, 1 experienced
a rort of physical revolution. My skin
better color. My liver resumed its functions
I no Jonger bad to aroun
eathrt My headache
ture d id i I reaso
| push the investigat
WAS in active worl
remedy on my pa
nary
rin de
had done, 1
an experiment,
®
sx disappesred, “Na.
. But, determined to
to the extreme, while I
tried the effect
at flicted with kidney,
diseases, watching every de
velopment efully and studiously, Then I
WaE Com} lets iy disarmed, for the remedy
stood every test imposed |
Under such convine circumstances, the
matter of confessing my cure became a qnes-
tion of conscience and ef duty to humanity,
“Here is a remedy,” I mid,
me what the best medical skill of the oruntry
could not accompli aud as an honorable
man I will not suppress the facts, 1 therefore
write you and most unhositati ngly assert that
for all diseases of the kidneys, liver, stomach
Or Urinary organs hie 1 Ale Ame nable to treat
ment, Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cuore
surpasses any remedy | have ever known or
used, and since physicians have so much ill
success in the treatment of diseases of these
organs, I am prepared to sceept all the conse.
quences whe u I say that they are, if consoten-
tious, in duty bound to use this pure vegetable
compound in their practice.
i Yours very truly,
J. W, Sarr, ML D,
Statements so ontapoken as the above and
coming from gach a reliable source are value
able beyond They conclusively
show not only the power of the remedy which
has become so well known and popular, but
the great importance of attention in time ©
| the first indications of declining health, When
professional men of h high standing sink
lice and ely declare their bee
Hef in that which they know to be valuable,
the public may confidently follow their example,
fiver and uri
lish"
a
question,
i i
"1
Indians’ First Sight of the Ocean.
street,
| marb le tower,
the ground,
glimpse of the ocean.
they caught
| surrounds it Mr, Cushing
into the bay, and informed the chiefs |
that the ocean was out there. Amid
many exclamations of delight, they re-
peated, very many times: Show a hal”
| which Mr, Cushing states is a superla-
tive term, indicating the most pro.
found veneration and surprise.
| At first they seemed a little dazed,
but as toon as they realized that they
| were at length in the presence of the
much-longed-for ‘“‘ocean of sunrise,’
they all fell simultaneously to repeat-
polite out |
prayers. These lasted several minuter,
| and during their continuance they threw
to the winds handfuls of *‘ prayer flour”
f they had brought with them—a mixture
| Having completad their devotions, the
chiefs commenced to expatiate upon
what they saw around them, particular-
ly upon the tremendous extent of the
pueblo of Boston,
Pointing to the line of the horizon of
the bay, the chief of the five said:
“That is the black blue of the ocean,
and that is the foam thrown up when it
| is angry. We have waited for many
| generations to see this which our fathers
| have told us of. We now see it. Pass-
| ing wonderful sre the things we see
here. On one side the ccean, and on
the other a world of houses, The whole
world is filled with different tribes of
men.” — Boston Post,
|
i
i
i
i
i
i
|
i
i
!
—
gg
HEALTH HINTS,
Ohevasse has stated these four essen-
tials to a baby's well-being : Plenty of
water for the skin, plenty of milk for
the stomach, plenty of fresh air for the
lungs, and plenty of sleep for the brain,
Dir. Foote's Health Monthly,
Common rice, parched brown, like
coffee, and then bottled and eaten in
the ordinary way, withont any other
food, is, with quietude of body, one of
the most effect ve remedies for trouble
some looseness of the bowels,
Costive bowels have an agreeable
remedy in the free use of ripe tomatoes
at meals—their seeds acting in the way
of the white mustard of figs, by stimu-
lating the cost of the bowels over which
they pass, in their whole state, to in.
creased action.
At ths season of the year one's hair is
lisble to fall out. To prevent it, wet
your hair thoroughly with good brand
| or bay rum, brush it well and com
carefully with a coarse comb, Wash
the head occasionally with a sponge
dipped in tepid water and ammonia ;
rinse it well aud wipe and brush until
One's hair should not come out
if properly cared for and if the health is
| good,
Bome of the severest forms of the
distressing ailment called dysentery,
that is, when the bowels pass blood,
with constant desire, with vain efforts
| to stool, are sometimes entirely cured
| at the time of raw beef cut up very five,
and repeated ut intervals of four hours,
| until cured, eating and drinking nothing
A German paper puts the total num-
ber of publications in Germany in 1881
at 15,101, as against 14,911 in 1880,
The Frazer Axle Girease
best in the market. It i» he most
economical snd cheapest, one box lasting as
loug ss two of any other, One grossing will
lust two weeks. It received first premium st
the Centennial and Paris Espositions, &lso
medals at various Blate fairs, Buy no other,
Is the
Have You tend fre
H. RR. Btevens’ book on ensilage, the presery.
ing of green forage crops in silos, giving his
own experience sud the practical experience of
twenty-five praetic al farmers; 130 pages, ele.
gantly bound in cloth. Price 50 cents; sent by
mail, Address H, RB. Stevens, Boston, Mass.
ALLENS Brain Pood-cures Nervous Debility &
Weak, pss of Generative Urgans, $1 ~all drogrists,
nd forCirenlar, Allen's Pharmaoy, 313 Firstav X.Y,
THE MARKETS
NEW YORK.
Beef Cattle — Prime, live weight
Calves Com’n to Choice Veals,
Dressed, i
Ex, State, good to fancy
Western, good to choice
Ko. 2 Red, now
5. 1 White, new, .
ate .e susan
Two- rowed Bate,
Ur ngrade iw estern Mi xed
Yellow Bouthern,
White State...
M oe Western. .
Prime Timothy
No. 1, Rye, .
le 1881, "choles .
Me a8, new, for export...
City Steam
Wheat
Rye Sit
Barley
{ Com
Osta
Hay-
Biraw
Pork 7 50
Jutter—-State Creamery, .
Western Im. Cre amer ¥ 56
Fas sary
State Fac
Pa
Western, suns
State and Yonn.,., .
re se La
100 we ad po 0 LH CR
1734
50
580
6 50 @
essa D0 ®
665 &
Bloers
p—We torn
ps, Good to Chole Yorker
Flour ire iy ring 678 @ 73
Wheat vo. 1. Hs a 147 @
Corn--No, 2 Mixed 68:
Oats “a 8 @
Barley—Two-rowed State..,.., #0 @
DOETON,
ate and family. [13 0
rT
@i5
&
tra Prime pot bid,
pring Whest Patents,
High Mixed
Extra White
760
£1
6 { Comb Delaine
Onn shed ag
WATERTOWN (MASS)
Extra quality ‘on
Live weight
PIILADELPRIA,
Fiour—Peun, Ex. Family, good 6 124{@
Wheat x
Comn-—Nate Yellow,
Creamery Extra Pa...
Cheese New York Fall Cream.
Petroleum Crude,
Re fined.
The Illuminator.
En a lL
The existence of
feel wn the part £ on
tion for the peo
eo Felis unlry isshown
I the presenla tion of a
colossal bronze igure of
Freedom holding aloft the
torch of Liberty. Beauty,
with usefulness, is com.
i this immense
1. a8 the bright,
ing torch will serve
} irpose of & beacon
gi ¢ inthe harbor of New
There is another
3 will chal
waise and ad
even the
bove reformed
1
» aged and we rth ST.
inhi 8 hs snd that beacon which
sailing upon the sca of life
ind with the shoals and dan
gerous places of sickne us 81 nd disease. The li
it casts is designed to show that § Sr. Jacoms Oil is
the trae ar ang of keeping the body
1 of casing and “righting
cast upon the shoals
er pad au 1 ailments. Thous
al ones throughout the workd have
ue and felt the good of this Great
dy, and are glad 10 recoaanmend §t
¢ the services of just such a remedy
Mr, XK Lh 8 Briges a well
i bh. told 8 newspaper
Heted with an acute
1 Lack. The disease,
upon him for years had
« wn } He resorted to every
remedy known to physicians, but found no rel
he tri od St, Jacons On, one bottle of wh fh
plete and madicad cure. Another
tify reicrence
TERAN Si SANAXS
Ocean, C
infor
QA
ane,
{
=
ih i w
whore 3 waters abot
11
jon
S TROUBLE.
21: 1 send you this,
ion 1%: Inert yo ibe of
benefit to any of your readers. One
18, Captain C. W. Boynton, the
rouse keeper at this point, is
of the oldest seamen in Ameriea,
fwenty=ix years on salt water,
riysix yoars' service his eyesight
{ he kept the Light st Chic
it the Gross Point 14
3 was t wi While = ated in my
store tl ni ng the Captain ve
fol lowing writi n statem “Thi
that 1 have been af 4 with rheum
tweniy (0 years, bot? in mys ide and li
n happy tosay that after
Tr. JACOBS (41, y entl i om
igh still Haph 1 hat when walk-
ng, from long force of habit a Boy NTox"
Referring to the foregoing facts, I migh tallud ¢ ta
numerous similar cases that have o
potice, but “a word {0 the wise is suf
Jonux Goesri, Pharmacist, E vausto ng 11 0
— RYN U—1Y -_—
DFBULLS
HVE;
g that the
material
30
went bul
when b sfors
His 0
wil
rely free fin
In Counting Reve or I aug Setabe
lishments, inhaling closs or impure air, are
pale, and ho on emaciated. A
bmg gf ST
employes, cares of busi.
ness, derive nfatte from Hostetter's
Homach Hitt an - eal depletion a
ng the
boo an application to their
tions,
ap ah &
sisted in, entirely eradicated, when
the Bitters. matic ailments are
asragted by its blood purifying sod diuretis
soi
Woes a man is honest simply Soiseit 1a
Lis policy to be #0 he is al tidy =
money with which to buy his ticket to Ad
ftentiary,
am ain
fay oh rau tt Feb. 26, 1881,
H. H, Wanses & Co: Sirs For tare Rid:
pey and Liver Care has saved me from death
from Bright's Disease, #1 B, Heavixovos,
Even evil is followed by its punishment. It
is as if evil had its punishment inscribed upon
it.
————————————
There is but one real eurs for baldness— Car-
boline, 8 deodorized extract of J ileum, a
¥
natural hair restorer. As recon
Carboline is free from any objection. the Desi
hair dressing known,
Fon vyspeesia, inpioesTioN, 4 “depression of 4 hit
its and general debility, in theta various furine
also a8 a preventive against fever and aghe
other intermittent fevers, the *Ferro-Phosphor-
ated Elixir of Calisaya,” made by Caswell,
Hazard & Co, New York, and sold by all Drag-
gists, is the best tonic; and for patients recover.
ing from fever Sr tbl uss ha 00 aymal.
“ Buch
Quick, complete ne yo bt ney aff
irritation, on or difficult urination. #1
druggists, Prepaid by a $1.25, © for 85,
E 8 Weiss Jemey City, N. J.
The Beience of Life, or Balf Proservation, 3
medical work for every man-—young, mi
aged or old, 125 invalosble prescriptions.
Vegetine.
JUST WHAT 1 NEEDED.
Paveneons, MA. May 4, 1878.
Mz Sypvess r Bir 1 have in the spring of the
your a faint, sinking feeling in the stomach, and {4
Fring Mave Does so weak that § felt the nead
something. A friend whe had peed VEGETINE ad.
vised me to take some. 1 did so, and it proved 4 15 be
just what | needed, It builds the whole systems up,
and mi he feet ike a new pene.
Ours pes
Mi fis. lamer PORTER,
hestnut Breet,
ss
RHEUMATISM, INDIGESTION.
Bavrmwone, MA, April 20, 1879,
Deas Sia--1 have bee suffering from Kbeumatism
and Indigestion for over two yours, and sinoe | have
commenced aking your Vesrrive | have reorived
great benefit, 1 have taken bus two bottles, and 1 i
think with the sid of a few move J will
my health again. 1 cas sscopamend the aS
for what it has done for me,
peciinddy 4
Mux 3
1 Sevth Hah Bisect.
S——
Loss of Appetite, Lassitude
and Ceneral Debility.
Bosyoy, Mass, May 11, 1870,
Mp Josrrn RB Guoss: Dear Sir-—-Your cordial
recommendation of VEGETISE as 3 spring medicine
blosd purifier induosd me to » @ive it a thorough
al, aud 1 candidly admit that in my experiones
is all you have clamed for it v dausliter has
slwars been afftioted with Benofuls Hemor in a very
severe form, and parti qisrdy in sing was
Lalad with joss of appetite lssitndes and @
. The Yuorrixy had the derived foot and
lis sucorss was 86 apparent
VEN
Any
We Are ne ver without 1
u this case that many of my frends and
base also tried i with general satisizetion.
ber information wi ii be cheerfully Liven,
Yours wal
GED. R Willa
Healt teat Oy
an
EE
Vegetine
IS SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISTS
AGEN'S WANTED FOR THE
ICTORIAIL
HISTORY or me WORLD
Embracing full and sathentie ni of
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8 * AL
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o Agents,
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en ———————_——
MAKE ENS LAY.
An English ¥ elerinary Surgeon snd Cb pg
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says that Sheridan" » Cogdition Powders are
Iv pure and immensely valuable, Nothing gi 8
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Tos
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FOR LADIES ONLY.
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Sirs, SAR AN i v AN BL REX
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0 NSUMPTION!
1 have a positive remedy forthe above
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REE ny mac ALUABLE ABLE TREATISE on this
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restored to sound beg ith 3 such a thing be
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i. = Jo HARON ® «ww Boston, Mass,
formerly Hanger, M Me.
RHEUMATISH
Gout, Gravel, Diabetes. The Vegetal Ch Salley Sah
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Ge nuine has red seal and oy Dature of L.A Pag &
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GARFIELD
The ONLY large steel portrait a2 tn: Jane
Supple from a phot oxraph desiy
eld for this engraving; size 18x. be a
Gener al Agents for Co's and States wanted,
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JN IMPROYED ROOT BEER.
IRE Lc. packase makes 3 gallons of a
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& MORPHINE Ti
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PICTURE © ARDS, Send three © one-cent
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$5 to $20 per day at home. Samples worth & 5 free.
A perfect eure for premature debility, Se Send for
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YOUNG MEN It you want to learn Te
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EVERYBODY WANTS IT.
255th Edition (New).
Revised and
A Great Medical Treat-
EVERYBODY NEEDS IT.
Enlarged.
125 invaluable
what is fully explained.
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and invaluable rk.
airly
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money will refunded in every instance,
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Address PEABODY
BY receipt of price, 81.
23.
—
uN