The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 20, 1882, Image 4

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Here's to Our Starry Flag.
Here's to our atarry fag (Nu mutter where it
fly,
Over fhe polar snows, under the trope sky,
Qut on the silent prairie, or on the restless
wave,
Over'the lonely camp, over the marching brave,
Or in the busy oity, where'er men fling it forth
In the East, or the West, or the South, or the
North,
Here's to the starry flag,
The flag that flies above ve!
Here's to the land we Jove !
Here's to the hearts that love us !
Hare's to our starry flag! Over our homes it
flies ;
Oh, dear is it to our hearts, and pleasant unto
our eyes ;
Over the little
children, over the maiden
sweet,
Over the toiling men in the city's crowded
: .
Over the court and market, over the rich and
PO0T,
Fair ts our flag of freedom, beautiful every.
where.
Here's to our starry flag,
The flag that flies above us!
Here's to the land we love !
Hure's to the hearts that Jove us!
If you would know how dear, wander away
from home;
Far, far east to other lands, just for a season
rom,
Suddenly wake to see, some lovely autumn
day, :
The starry bunting flying free over New York
bay ;
Oh then with fhrobhing heart, oh then with
happy tear,
You'll say: “Dear flag of my country dear
flag, so doar, so dear I
Here's to the starry flag,
The flag that Ries above nal
Here's to the land we Jove |
Here's to the hearts that love us |
— Harper's Weekly.
The train was approaching Rhinebeck
Miss Barrow raised her eyes from she
povel between which and the river, the
olondless sky snd the green banks
opposite, fresh in all the freshness of
early Jane, she had been desultorily
dividing ber attention, and her maid
began gathering np her wraps. One or
two passengers in the same car did the
same for ‘heirs, and among them a
young man of twenty-eight or so, with
a fair mustache, who had traveled
posite Miss Barrow from New York,
bed in a scientific magazine. He
was a handsome fellow, but more dis
tingnished-looking than hardsome, and
dressed with quiet, unimpeachable
correctness. These two qualities Miss
Barrow had noticed in a casual way
when her eye happened once or twice
to fall on her fellow traveler, for she
thought a great deal of both of them
The latter, indeed, is a subject to which
women pay more attention than men are
aware,
As the youog lady alighted on the
platform at Buincbeck an urbane servant
met her and announced that Miss Ham-
ersley’s carrisge was waiting and that
Miss Hamersley regretted not feeling
strong enough to drive down herself.
The man remained behind to see to the
luggage and the caniage drove off. In
rounding the corner to the other side
of the platfurm Miss Barrow saw again
‘her fellow tr.veler with the fair mus
tache; he was speaking to Miss Ham-
_ersley's man, the latter having possessed
of his teau, and as they
Passed she heard him say: “Never mind;
1 take wagthet yohidie." 4
Apparently, then, the gentleman was
a guest of Miss Hamersley. Two or
three years before the knowledge would
probably have afforded Miss Barrow
some gratification, very natural under
the circumstances. The prospect sug-
gested possibilities whieh would cer
tainly have added an unexpected zest to
her solitary visit to an elderly maiden
lady in delicate health at an isolated
country house. But a disappointment
which Miss Barrow had experienced not
long since, through a man to whom she
had been engaged, had changed all such
fo:lings. Asshe herself had said t> her
¢ld friend, Miss Hamersley: “1 not only
feel as if I never again wonld cure for
anv man, but the whole sex has grown
ind fferent to me.”
The drive was quite a jong one, and
sun was shooting rays of slanting
light between the trees and across the
lawns of the well-kept grounds when
the old Famerslay mansion came in
sight. On the vine-clad porch stood
Miss Bamensley parcelf looking like
8 pictare of Revolationary times with
ber small, delicate face, her gray silk
dress and wealth of puffed white hair.
“ Well, my young friend,” she said,
“go I have you at last. Let me look at
yon.” Bbhe raised Miss Barrows veil
and kissed her cheek. ‘As preity as
ever. Now let me take you to your
room—why, what'sthis? Jack Travers,
I declare!”
It was Miss Barrow's fellow traveler,
whose vehicle had followed bers at a
little distance, and who now drove up
und sprang to the ground
“1 expected you to-morrow,” said
Miss Hameteley, laying her hand aijos:
$ionateiy on t oung man's shoulder.
“1 should A telegraphed—"
“Never mind You're always wel-
come. Mand, let me introduce my
nephew, Mr. Travers, Miss Barrow.”
A few minutes later, when Miss Ham-
eraley had joined Mand Barrow in her
room, she said: **I hope you will like
Jack Travers. But I know you will
He's a splendid fellow.”
a Surety I shall like him,” replied
the young lady. :
‘I know, of course, that you will
not except in a friendly way, and that's
just wiv { asked him up while you were
ve. The fact is you are very similarly
situated. Jack has not gotten over an
unlucky love sffuir, and if I bad him
meet some girl who would have fallen
in love with him it would have been a
bad thing for the girl, as it would be a
bad thing for any maa who Ishould in-
vite and who would fall in love ’with
Jou. As it is, you sand Jack are both
inerable to the tender passion, and
can be the best of friends accordingly.
You will get on nicely, snd your visit
will be less of a bore than it would be
in the solitary society of an old woman
like me ”
A little later Jack Travers came upon
hisanat and asked: “Who is this young
lady have with you, dear aunt ?”
" See one,” was the reply, *‘whose
heart is full of a memory—though,
really, why she should still think of
that brute of a man who treated her
80 outrageously is a mystery to me—
snd who not only will not expect you to
fall a victim to her charms and begin a
flirtation instanter, but would think
anything of the sort a great bore. Bo
you need not exert yourself.”
* Indeed ? Toate a somfors. Bat
what a singular " and if he had
i his mind he would have added,
“snd what a beautiful girl, too,” for
just then Mand entered, having laid
aside her traveling drees and thick veil
for a long dinner dress of pale blue,
which showed to remarkable advantage
the brillisncy and the piquant charm of
ber face; the warm fairness of her
skin, and the light glossy brcwn of her
soft hair.
Miss Hamersley’s explanations to both
her gne«ts had the effect of putting
them thoroughly at their ease with each
ther, and the dinner was a gay cne.
y the time it was over they had dis-
hat they hai aly ideas in
'ommon, many points of sympathy.
The long June twilight had = oi
: and Miss Hamersley suggested
her nephew should take Miss Bar-
to the parapet to see the view.
wn eaid, “I can’t go about
aod you must entertain each
view was extended, for the Ham-
stood high. Jack Travers
the pwapet, while Miss
AY her. Suddenly
ip and osught his eyes
it. She fits the place, and the place fits
her.”
“My annt is a charming woman, It
is a pity she never married.”
“A pity. Idon’t see that her condi.
tion as it is could be bettered. If she
had married she would have run the
chance of getting some obstivate man
with not a thought in sympathy with
here, who would bave been putting
down his foot eternally and making her
life a bore,”
“You dou't take a sentimental view
of marriage,” remarked Travers,
“No. Iam notsentimental, Perhaps
[ am hard.”
Travers glanced at ber, with the black
lace she had thrown around her head as
a protection from the dampness oling.
ing about her soft, piquant face and
white throat, and thought she did not
look so.
But Miss Barrow did not seem in
olined to pursue the subject farther.
She turned to go back to the house. Iu
doing so she brushed her fan {rom the
parapet. Travers stopped to pick itup,
and noticed that it had a large metal
ring attached. Instead of laying it in
Mand's outstreto ed hand he slipped
the ring over her wrist, The wrist was
very pretty, aud so was the band, and
[ravers experienced a subtle pleasure
mn OOTY this familiar little aot.
He glanced up quickly; but the youug
lady's eves were averted,
The nest morning Travers proposed
to take aavantage of the cool, fine day
for a horseback ride. Miss Barrow was
willing, snd a couple of hours later
they were under way. The roads were
in good condition, the air was exhilarat-
ing, and Miss Hamersley's horses were
capital. The color came into Maud's
cheeks and her eyes shone like stars,
As for Travers, it did not seem to him
that he had ever enjoyed sach a ride
before. By-and-bye, however, be suid:
“Don't you think we had better turn
back, Miss Barrow! It may be too
muoh for you."
“0h, I am not tired.
though.”
Travers looked around him, “]
think I could get you a glass of waterat
that little house on the top of that
siopa, but I don't like the idea of
leaving you alone.’
“Ok, I shall go, too.
change from riding," said Maud,
can tie the horses here.”
The climb proved to be a rougher
path than she had imagined, but she
would not be persuaded totake Travers’
arm.
“No, no,” she laughed, and stepped
quietly to one side. In doing so she
stumbled over her habit and uttered a
little ery of pain.
* Miss Barrow! what is the matter #
favorite nephew. This Miss Hamersley
noticed, as well as that, as the week |
wore on, her young niece grew very |
restless and nervous. Bat, whatever |
counsel,
After Travers had been gone a fort
night Maud came out of the house one
evening toward sundown, She was!
slowly crossing the lawn, with her long |
raised her eyes sud saw him standing |
not six feet from her. She stood quite |
still, not startled; she was too over |
whelmingly glad for that. She had jast |
been thinking of him—indeed when, |
for days had she not P—and saying to |
herself that of course he would not |
come back, that she could not expect it |
when she had dismissed him so summa. |
rily; and now there he was be'cre her, |
Still she spoke lightly as be came for. |
ward and took her hand,
‘‘You reappear like a ghost,” she |
said. * Did you spring from the ground |
or drop from the skies
Travers laid the hand she had given |
him on his arm and led her toward the
parapat where they had stood together |
on the first evening of her arrival. |
Whea they resched it he said: ** You
know why I have come back, Mand. 1 |
love you with my whole heart and soul |
and strength, and I have come back to
tell you so; to tell you that I cannot |
live without you— Stop," he con-
tinued, as she was about to speak, “|
know what you will say, that it is too
sudden, that 1 have not known yvouleng
enough. Well, I don't ask you to ac
cept me now. I will wait—only let me |
think that you will care a little for me |
by-and-bye. Will you, Maud |
He leaned over her and looked iuto |
her eyes,
Alas! Maud conld have said that she |
cared much more than a little for him |
then, But she was wisas aud knew that |
a man should never be given more than |
he asks for, but rather leas. 8) she
only murmured, * Perhaps I may," and |
['ravers, with his eyes fixed on her!
sweet face and the roguish dimples at |
the corners of her month, was content.
Presently he said: |
“Am I pardoned my misdemeanor of |
the other day? Yes? Then you should |
It will be a | let me repeat it to show that I am for-
“You | given."
Bat this time Miss Barrow drew her-
self away with much dienity. |
“Net at all. For shame, Jack. Give
me your arm and we will go back to the |
house. And, mind you, let me explain
to your aunt first.” |
And she did: Bub, to her surprise, |
Miss Hamersley was not surprised at |
sll. Indeed, sume months later, when |
they were both talking about Miss Bar.
exclaimed Travers, row's approaching marriage, such a
“ I—I'm afraid I have sprained my | vleam of mischief came all at once over
foot. Let us turn back,” she murmured | the older lady's face that the younger |
faintly, She took a step or two, and | one suddenly raid she believed Miss
then stopped again, flushing and paling | Hamersley had invited Jack and herself
alternately. to her place in June with an ulterior |
Travers looked into her face. motive. *‘ Well, frankly, I did,” owned |
“You meant,” be said, ‘that you | Jack's aunt. * You were the two nicest
can't walk a step. You must let me | young people I knew, and it was my
carry you." | opinion you should make a match of it.
“0h, no, no.” | As to the fact of your both having been
‘‘ Miss Barrow, this is really unrea |in love before being a barrier, that was |
sonable. I must insist.” And withcut | absurd, of course. All you needed was |
more words he raised her ia his arms | a Shanda unfold a shunning Hele |
and bezan descerding the slope again. | idyl, and new no better place n |
Maud erimsoned ee faint Bo { this for such an idyl."” |
in Travers’ cheeks also. The wind blew |
a stiay wisp of her hair against his face, |
and with it the faint perfume of violets | Secret Marriages ia New York,
she had on her Laundkerchief. When { The Badger case (which has just been |
he reached the foot of the slope ard | geitlad by compromise in New York), |
lifted her on her horse his heart was | says a letter from the metropolis, is very |
beating rather fast, and Maud was | omarkable in its character, the faots
trembling a little. .. | being as follows : Jacob Badger recently |
** Does your ankle still pain so muh?” | gid in his seventy sixth year. He was |
he said, softly. She shook her head. |, Hoy old bachelor, and had for many |
They rode slowly home through the years been at the head of an opulent |
green fields, almost in silence. Travers, shipping house. His heirs proceeded |
While constantly watehfal of bis com- | divide the property, when a claim |
panion, seemed to be distrait. ‘I sup- was made by a woman who asserted her |
I am thirsty,
i
pose he is thinking of that girl he was
in love with,” said Maud to herself
and for a young lady to whom the mas- |
calive sex had grown indifferent she |
ceriainly allowed the supposition tc |
give her a considerable pang.
Mtss Barrow, for the next week, lay |
on & couch which was wheeled from the |
house to the grounds as she felt inclined |
to sit indoors or out. Miss Hamersley |
and Travers took turns in reading to |
her, bat the latter's cflice in this respect |
was rather a sinecure. He always found |
after a few moments that it was much |
more pleasant wo have Maud talk to |
him, and to be able to look at her |
This tendeucy, indeed, in a few days |
grew into such a distracting wish to be
always near her that Travers might |
have been alarmed had he chosen to
qaestion himself wod hisfeelings. Bnt |
he did aot choose to. |
Ouae warm afternoon he came into the |
library, where she lay on a lounge near |
the open window, with a cluster of red |
moss-roses in his hand.
“ They aré the first of the season,” be
said. Mand raised her band for them, |
and he stood looking down at her. She |
wore a thin white dress, and looked |
prettier than he bad over seen her.
Her cheeks were a little flushed, and |
ber hair tossed abou: a trifle as if she |
had just been asleep. She seemed too
listless and comfortable to move, but |
thanked him witha bright glance, and |
{
pressed thefrosesagainst her face. Pres- |
en'ly his persistent gaze appeared to |
embarrass her, for she said, not a little
uneasily:
“ How hot it is! Why don't you sit |
down?”
Travers sat down mechanically, still
dower right as his widow. For thirty- |
held connubial relations, their home
being in Brooklyn. “Baker” pal]
always condusted himself in an exem- |
plary “manner, providing liberally and
enjoying the respect of the neighbor. |
hood. Every day he went to New York |
and returned at night, and this uniform
Iifs was only terminated by Lis sudden
demise. It was then learned that “John |
Baker, 'of Brooklyn,and Jacob Badger,of |
New York, were the same, and the!
woman was allowed a dower of £42,000, |
New York contains many such instances, |
which find protection in that mantle |
which a great city throws over society. |
[ well remember tho flour dealer, |
Daniel Angerine, who always passed for |
it was learned that he bad a family,
which had only known him under a!
false name. I was also acquainted with |
another bachelor business men (the late |
H. N. Ferris), who kept his residence a |
secret from even his clerks. Every morn- |
ing he appeared at the store. and at |
he went, and his employes became s0 |
accustomed to this mystery that it]
ceased to be a matter of comment,
Eventually Ferris was taken ill and |
died, and it was th'n discovered that |
he had a private establishment in an |
obscare street, far uptown. R. G. Sehuy |
ler, formerly the noted railway con
tractor, also passed for a bachelor, until |
bis failure brought out the fact that he |
nad a wife aud family in which he had |
long been known by the name of Spicer. |
I could mention a man of wealth and of |
high family who passes in the Fifth |
| avenue circles as a bachelor, but his
| friends have long been convinced that
{ he has a wife somewhere in the eity.
{ Some of these secret marriages occur
| in the following manner: Young men
| see the impossibility of supporting those
without speaking. Miss Barrow glanced
at him, and her eyes began to sparkle
mischievously.
*‘ Perhaps I should not have asked
you to sit down, though,” she said
demurely. “You might have been con. |
teraplating a speedy exit for the pur- |
pose of smoking a cigar.”
“1 assure you, I was thinking of |
nothing of the sort, Miss Barrow.” |
“Not thinking of smoking ? I fancied |
there was no hour of the day a man did |
not think of that.”
“He may make an exception when he |
is in the society of ladies.” |
“Indeed he does not, or I have yet to |
learn it. Oh, women are not of as much
importance as thst to men!’ Her tone
bad changed, and she spoke the last
words bitterly,
* That is what that brate of a man
she was engaged to has taught her,’
thought Travers. ‘I should like to—"
He started up, and completed his pious
wish with regard to the said man at the
window,
But Maud was in a strange mood this
afternoon. When she spoke her toge
was quite different again.
*“Are you angry ?" she asked, softly.
Bagly mo. he replied, coming
back and standing before her. * How
tantalizing you are to-day,” he broke
out after a pause.
8he took no heed.
“To show you I did not intend to bs
rude, I will give you a rose,” she said
—*ghall T?”
“Yes,” he whispered,
‘Stoop down,” she murmured. He
knelt beside the lounge, and she passed
the stem of the rose through his button-
hole. Her little white fingers ware very
near his face, and he saw that they
began to tremble. Suddenly he caught
theta both in ote of his, and before she |
conld stir, without knowing himself |
what he was doing, he threw his arm
around her and kissed her.
The next iastant he was on his feet
Maud, crimson aud palpitating, stood
before him, supporting herself against
the lounge.
“Yon have insulted me—"
“Miss Barrow—Mand! Forgive me!
Pardon me! I did not know what I was
doing, I love you so!”
“Itisan insult,” she eried again.
‘ Lizave me —leave me!" And throwing
herself back on the lounge she burst
into a passion of tears. Travers, curs-
ing his folly, left the room.
That evening he told his sunt he
should have to go to New York for a
few days. Maud heard the announcs-
ment calmly and took leave of him very
edlly. Daring the days that followed
she never spoke of him to Miss Hamer:-
ley, except once when, in an slaborately
careless way, she inquired whether the
girl to whom Mr. "Pravers had been
engaged was very pretty, On the other
i
i
i
hand she did not seem at all averse to
hearing her old friend’s eulogies of her
helpless, high-toned city girls who want
a fashionable establishment, and hence,
going from one extreme to another, |
they will sometimes marry the danghter |
of their, washerwomen, simply because |
the latter can take care of themselves,
As such a marriage wonld distress their |
friends, they keep it secrot and pass for |
bachelors, being thus enabled to retain |
their position in society. Sach are
among the strange features in metro-
politan life. No man, however, can say
he marries below his station if his wife, |
however humble, is of decent character |
and possesses intelligence. That false
notioa concerning men marrying be-
neath them has led to a vast extent of
mischief.
A Remarkable Adventure,
The mail steamer Curlew, jast in from
the west cuast, brings an acconnt of a
strange and unique adventure. A seal-
ing captain, named James Babbitt, a
native of Buergo, M. F., who had been
somewhat successful among the oil
flelds the past spring, went to Sydney,
C. B., to purchase 8 fishing schooner
Having secured a vessel of about sixty
tons burden he looked around for a
crew, but could not succeed in getting
a seaman for love or money. He then
boldly determined to put to sea alone
and navigate bis vessel down to New.
foundland. He left Sydney on the 3d,
and all went well with him till the
morning of jthe 9th, when, requiring
some refreshment, he lashed his helm
and went below to boil the teakettle,
He had not left the deck longer
than three minutes when he
heard his vessel bump, bump
heavily against a rock. Rushing on
deck he found the schooner's jibboom
clean over a'rock. Startled at his posi-
tion of peril he went out on the jibboom
end ool dropped himself on the rock.
ITe had scarcely landed there when a
puff of wind struck the vessel's head-
sails and wheeled her clear of the reef,
leaving the captain behind. The
schooner was soon lost to sight in the
fog that hung over the ocean, and Cap-
tain Babbitt was left like a lone seagull
on his rocky perch, amid a s'lent waste
of water. He had no food and not a
drop of water to drink. The whole day
passed and night came on, but withont
auy sign of approaching succor,
About noon of the next day some
skids were off from the shore for gun-
ni g purposes. The strange sailor was
discovered on the highest peak «f the
rock, and was rescued with some diffi-
enlty and br ught sufely to his home in
Bunergo. No tidings of the derelict
schooner have yet been learned.—S¢
i i
a——— es AAT
LADIES' DEPARTMENT,
of
i
Matrimonial Superstitions
There is no period in a woman's life |
3
an at |
Shang )
fast becoming a something of the past, !
ery few women who will not |
hesitate before making Friday their
wodding day, or will not rejoice at the
sunshine, for ‘happy is the bride that !
the sun shines on.” June and October
have always been held as the most pro
pitious months in the twelve, a happy
result being rendered doubly eertain if
the ceremony was timed so as to take
place at the full moon, or when the sun
The Romans were very superstitious
about marrying in May or February; |
they avoided sll celebration days, and |
the Oalends, Nones and ldes of every |
month. The day of the week on which
tha 14th of May fell was considered |
England, and in Orkney a bride selects |
her wedding day so that its evening may
have a growing moon and a flowing |
tide
In Scotland the iast day of the year
is thought to be lucky, and if the moon
should happen to be full at any time
when a wedding takes place, the bride's |
coup of happiness is expeoted always to |
be full. In Perthshire the couple who |
have had their bauns published at the |
end of one and are married at the be. |
ginning of another quarter of a year |
can expect nothing but ends.
The day of the week is also of great |
importance, Sanday being a great |
favorite in some parts of England and |
[reland. And although an English lass |
would not marry on Friday, the French |
girl thinks the first Friday ic the month
partionlarly fortunate. Most of us
know the old saying concerning the !
wedding -day :
* Monday for wealth,
Tuesday for health,
Wednesday is the best day of all,
Tharsday for crosses,
Friday for losses,
Saturday vo luck at all”
In Yorkshire, when the bride is on the |
point of crossing her father's threshold, |
after returning from church, & plate
containing a few square pieces of cake |
is thrown from an upper window of the |
house by a male relative; if the plate |
is broken she will be happy, if not she |
will not expect to escape misery.
In Sweden a bride mast carry bread
in her pocket, and as many pieces of it
as she can throw away, just so muoh
trouble does she cast®rom her; bul it |
is no luck to gather the pieces. Bat |
should the bride lose her slipper,
then she will Joss old troubles, only |
in this case the person who picks it up
will gain riches. The Manxmen pat
salt in their pockets and the Italians
blessed charms.
It is an unhappy omen for a wedding
to be put off when the day has been |
fixed, and it is believed much harm |
will ensue if a bridegroom stands at the
junction of crossroads or beside a closed
gate upon his wedding mora. In Eag
land it is thought to be a bad sign if
the bride faus to shed tears on
the happy day, or {if she |
indulges herself by taking a last glance
hand ongloved. To look back or go
back before gaining the church door,
to marry in green, or while there is an
open grave in the church-yvard, are all
unfortunate, and the bride must be
carefal to go in at one door and out at
another.
When the bridemaids undress the |
bride, they must throw away and lose |
all the pins. Woe to the bride if a!
single one be left about her! Nothing |
will go right. Woe also to the bride-
maids if they keep one of them! for |
suntide or till the Easter following at
the soonest.
If the bridal parly venture off dry
land, they must go up stream. The
bride must, to be lucky, wear
* Something old and something new,
Something gold snd something blue.”
If she should see a strange cat or haar
a oat sneezs on her wedding day, then
she will be very happy; and if on her |
wedding morning she steps from her |
bed oun to something higher, and again |
on to something higher still, she will
from: that moment rise in the world. For
this purpose a table is placed beside the
bed, and if it can stand near the dresser
or something higher than it, then she |
must step from the table to that which |
Bat woe betide her shoald
she full!
In leaving the house and church, she |
must be very careful to pnt her right
foot forward, and on no account allow
any one to speak to her husband until
she has called him by name,
To break the wedding ring isan omen
that the wearer will soon be a widow; |
but
** As your wedding ring wears,
80 will wear away your cares.”
Fashion Faveles.
White ostrich plumes are worn on
Manila and Panama braid hats,
Student blue is a lovely shade of pale |
gray blue, much in demand for light |
woolen suits for country wear,
Dressy suits for children are made of
sateens, plain and figured, and trimmed |
profusely with lace and embroidery |
‘Hats and bonnets of white dotted |
muslin are shirred on white splits and |
trimmed with flowers, feathers and |
lace,
Dark blue or gray blue guimpes or |
yokes and sleeves ate worn with pale |
blue and pink gingbam dresses by chil
dren.
The fashion of to-day tends toward
watering laces, according to Harper's
Bazar,
In spite’ of the effort to introduce
Children wear Mother Hubbard and
Kate Greenaway dresses of Tarkey-red
calico, with white muslin pokes or |
guimpes and sleeves,
Among splendid novelties sent over
from Paris are embroideries of metallic |
bullion and imitation jewels, incrusta. |
tions in relief upon velvets, broeades,
damasses and satine,
The latest French fashion is to wear |
your flowers in a round clump or clus- |
ter, and right up on the top of the left |
shoulder, instead of in a long trailing |
spray along the side of the bodice. |
Sometimes eight or ten roses are clus- |
tered together so as to produce the ap- |
pearance of a huge rosette, while double
narcissi and large bunches of azaleas
are in great favor. In fastening on these |
flowers, it wiil be found well to use a
gentleman's scarf pin, as the stulke, be- |
ing thick, cannot be encompassed by an |
ordinary pin.
For skirt trimmings one wide flounce :
beaded by several small ones, two uar- |
row knife-plaited frills, headed by a |
wide, falling bouillonne, and several |
small flounces, or the skirt covered to |
the knees by alternate narrow ruffles |
and puffirgs, are the favorite styles. |
Above these skirt trimmings, set on in |
whatever ranner they may be, is the |
inevitable scarf, draped arcu.d straight |
a Is Espagnole, or shirred in the center |
and arranged en panier. In very rich |
materials the skiri*s usually plain, the |
only trimming consisting of a full wide |
garniture around the bottom, three |
puffings, with a fluted edge each way, a
double box pluited flounce lined with a |
contrasting color, or a coquille ruche, |
feathery aud full, being three popu'ar |
modes of forming this trimming.
Two young couples of Coshocton, |
Ohio, thought it would be a romantic |
idea to elope down the river to Mari- |
etta by moonlight in a rowboat. The |
trip was only half made, however, when |
the men were arrested for stealing tho |
boat, and the girls were sent home
alone and unmarried, |
harm ————-s
The United States has over 400 insti- |
tutions known as college or university,
NEWS OF
Hastern and MiddleStaten,
wearly 5,000,000 Lushels,
Asour 30,000 workingmen were present in
Union square, New York, at a reception to
Michael Davitt, the Irish agitator,
Witniam Kuwames, of Philadelpis, fif
yoars old, was flogging his sixteen-year-old
stepson In & terrible manner, st the supper
gable, when the boy seized a earving knife and
plunged {4 Into the man's peck, inflicting »
A "National Educatiomm] Assembly * is to bs
held at Ocean Grove, N, J., on August 8 and 0.
I'he President and his cabinet have been in.
vited to attend. Senator Blair, of New Hamp
ehire, chairman of the commities on education
and labor, in the United States Senate, and
Commissioner Eaton, of the bureau of educa
tion, will make addresses
Tur census burean has fssued a special bul
letin showing the extent and value of the fish
ing industries of New Hampshire, Rhode
Island and Connecticut, as follows : In the flsh-
ories of Now Hampshire 414 persons and a capital
of $300,465 are employed, and the value of the
products is $176,654. The Rhode Island fish
eries employ 2,510 persons and $390,678 capital,
and the value of the products is $880,918, The
products amounts to §1,458, 866,
Or the five thousand striking operatives for.
werly employed in the Harmony Mills, Cohoes,
moved away or found other employment.
of more than 100 cars, became disconnected at
the center while descending & heavy grade. The
rear seotion followed the front part with con.
stantly fvoreasing speed and finally plunged
into it, wrecking thirty cars,
Tux Vermont State committee of the National
Greenback- Labor party have issued & call for a
State convention at Waterbury on August 15,
South and West,
Particvrans of the Fourth of July disaster to
an excursion boat on the Ohio river showed
that the catastrophe was of an appalling char
excursionists on board, came in collision with
near Mingo Junction, Ohio, The Scioto sank
broke a large hole in her bow. Bhe sank in
eighteen feet of water within one minute, asd
went down like a lump of lead, leaving about
five feet of water ou the cabin floor,
lision was entirely unexpected, and many
over-
None in the engine.room and lower
deck had time to escape. Men, women and
children were all straggling together in the
water crying piteoualy for help, and it was at
first supposed that at least 100 lives had been
loet; Lut many of those reported missing were
found to have escaped. On the day after the
d saster fourteen bodios were recovered, and
about thirty persons who had been on board
were still missing,
At the North Carolina Democratic State con-
vention in Raleigh a full ticket, headed by
Thomas Ruffin, the present incumbent, for su-
preme court judge, was put in the fleld,
L. P. Buznmax, internal revenue collector,
and brother of General W., T. Sherman and
Senator Sherman, of Ohio, fell from the roof of
his house in Des Moines, lows, sustaining
Grezxnaoxens and Independents of Alabama,
at a convention in Dirmingham, nominated a
State ticket headed by J, L. Sheffield for gov-
ernor, and it was adopted Ly the Republicans
tho same day,
Taz Arkansas Republicans have nominated
Colonel W. D. Slack for governor,
A wouax and two children were found
starved to death in a looely place in Van Ba.
It is be.
lieved that the woman foll sick, and the chil.
dren being too young to secure aid for her
perished miserably. A third child was stil
alive and had gnawed a plece of flesh from the
arm of one of her dead sisters.
after the discovery was made,
A crcroxe in Arkansas killed twenty bead of
cattle near Van Buren, and of three men who
were herding them one was killed outright and
the other two fatally hurt, -
Nean MeAllister, Indiso Territory, the Rev,
W. J. Bpaugh, a Methodist minister, who had
incurred the enmity of same young Indians
It died soon
in school, was set
struggle, killed.
Arren all the missing had been accounted
for it was found that the number of lives lost
by the sinking of tlw excursion steamer
Scioto in the Ohlo river, was not far from one
Guy Sxrrn, the thirteen-year-old son of a
St. Louis, quarreled with his grandmother
about his food at the breakfast table and threw
his
Guy
Alter
into
father,
went
by
spell
®
his
orying
grand.
double-barreled shotgun, and walking up to
bis father he deliberately placed the muzzle of
the weapon within a fow inches oi his body and
fired. Mr. Smith sank to the floor and expired.
The boy was arrested,
Disparones from varions points state that
the Western wheat crop has fulfilled all expec.
been grown,
A warkmsrour in Taney county, Mo. ex
tended over half a mile in width and swep!
away many flelds of corn and wheat and much
Sevier county, Ark., was the sceme of a
‘ragedy recently which resulted in the death
of a guest at the hands of George and West
MeCravin, they killing the man for his money.
In stresting the murderers Constable Hetherly
was accidentally killed by one of the arresting
party and George McCravin was shot dead by
a deputy.
Industrial Exhibition.
A syarn boat capsized on Lake Michigan
off Muskegon, and two sailors from the steam
barge Hilton and three other men were
Krom Washington
Tu advices of the agricultural department
character from overy saotion of the country.
better than was expected a month ago. The re-
ports in regard to corn are improving every
day. In the main it is coming on rapidly and
most favorably in spite of the backward start
The returns of the grass arop show it to be un.
usually heavy.
Dunixa the flsoal year just ended there were
46,652 agricultnral patents issued from the
general land office. This is an increase over
onte
Ax official account has been given by Dr, D,
8. Lamb of the post-mortem examination of
Guiteau's body and brain. According to an
agr ement with the Rev, Dr. Hicks, the custo-
dian of the body, the brain was to be removed
and examined without being out into, and then
taken, “properly guarded and protected,” to the |
Army Medioal musenm, where it would be pho-
tographed and a cast taken. Then the internal
structure of the brain was to be observed and
parts of it set apart for microscopical examina.
tion. The entire operation was to be com-
pleted as far as possible in one day, and notes
were to be taken in duplicate. The examina.
tion waa conducted by Dr. Lamb, assisted by
Drs. Hartigan and Sowers and Mr, Schafhirt.
Dr. Lamb said in his report that no disease of
the brain had been discoverad by the disseo-
tion.
Founrnen nominations by the President
consul of the United States at Smyrna ; Stephen
H. Smith, of Tennessee, to be consul of the
United States at Nuevo Laredo, Mexico.
Tue Senate, in executive session, confirmed
the following nominations : John Davis, of the
District of Columbia, to be assistant secretary
of state ; John M. Francis, of New York, to be
general to Portu-
gal; Eugene Bohuyler, of New York, _—
minister resident and consul general to Rou.
manis, Servis and Greece,
Sronwrany Coawpren has telegraphed Engl-
| neer Melville, of the Jeannette, to return home
| from Biber ia,
Tur department of agrionltare will hence.
. rates for the lnformation of farmers,
Tux census bureau has issued a special bul.
letin showing the number and sige of the
| fare in the Upited States in 1880 and the
| kind of tenure by which they were hold. The
Of these,
257 wero rented at a fixed money rental, snd
10 and 20 acres, TH1.474 bolween 20 and 80
1,008,988 between 100 and 500 sores, 75,072 be-
tained 1,000 acres and upward,
Tux secretary of the treasury has lssued a
bond-eall for $16,000,000 of the 6 per cent
1881, The principal aud secrued interest will
be paid at the treasury department on Beplen-
ber 13, and the interest will cease on that day,
801 to 800, both inelosive ; $100, Noa
6,501 to 6,500, bo hh inclusive ; $500, Nos, 8,601
10 4,150, both inciusive ; $1,000, Nos, 19,001 to
21,000, both inclusive ; $5,000, Noa, 6.401 te
6,900, both inclusive ; $10,000, Nos. 12,601 to
{ 14,650, both inclusive,
Foreign News.
Latest advices report England and Egypt to
i be actively preparing for war,
Fous men of the laboring class were arrest.
od under a warrant issued by Lord Spencer,
the lord Heutenant of Ireland, on suspicion of
having been connected with the recent murders
in Dublin .
Tux principal leaders of the insurrection in
Uruguay have been killed, "
Tur English Amateur Rowing association
decided at a meeting that the Hillsdale (Mich)
crew, champion American smsteur osrs-
{ men, were not amateurs in accordance with
the English definition of the term. The Hills.
| dale crew went to England expressly for the
Tux archbishops and bishops of Ireland have
| prepared a circular to the priests directing
them to discountenance the Ladies’ land
| league, and forbidding females from attending
public meetings without the consent of the
parish priest,
Gexgnas Micaaxr Sxonererr, the famous
| Russian general, died suddenly at Moscow of
Skobelefl came prominently into notice during
Russian war with Tarkey, in which he dis.
played the most reckloss bravery, and oonse-
quently became the ido! of his soldiers.
AN Alexandria (Egypt) dispatch says that
threo thousand Egyptians under General Yuse
suf have attacked the False Prophet and have
been defeated, They lost 2,000 men, four guns
and 3,000 rifles. The False Prophet, with 7,000
men, is marching upon Sennsar,
Tux weather in England has recently been
injurious to growing crops.
Tux Dutch ironclad Adder has been lost at
sea. Beveral bodieshave been washed ashore,
Ar the Marlow regatta, at Marlow, on the
Thames, the Hillsdale crew from the United
States defeatod the Marlow crew with compar.
ative ease,
A Loxpox dispateh says that 288 outrages,
of which five were murders, were committed in
Ireland during June.”
A mannoap collision st Cork, Ireland, re.
sulted in injorios to thirty persons, twelve of
whom were not expected to recover,
iol at Tredagar, Wales, between
the Welsh and Irish re-idents, many houses o!
Irishmen were sscked and & number of persons
BEV rely hart.
ALL the consuls at Alexandria, Egypt, with
their stafle, went on board of vessels in the
harbor
Anam Bey, the Egyptian war minister, re.
fased to obey a formal summons to Constanti
nople from the sultan of Tarkey,
By way of San Francisco eome reports of
rrible hurricane which visited the Friendly
™ i1 25. Al Vsuvan the bark Don
Guillermo, Caplain Johnston, went down st her
anchors, The captain, officers and six seamen
were lost with her. Five boys were saved
The burricane was accompanied by a tidal
wave fifteen feet high, which swept over
the land and did serrible damage.
All the natives’ hooses and many of the Buro-
pens’ houses were carriod away, and eocosnut
trees were suappsd off like pipostems. The
island preseots a scene of widespread desols-
tion. At Tongates all the churches were de.
stroyed and 2,000 houses were leveled, and the
copra houses with their contents and every-
thing near were swept sway. A schooner was
earried inland sud the German bark Oassilis
foundered
is
England and the Egyptians.
War between England and Egypt began by
the bombardment of Aexndria oy the British
fleet under command of Admiral Seymour,
I'he uitimatom sent to Arabi Bey, the Egyp-
tian leader, was the surrender of the forts at
the mouth of the harbor within twenty-four
hours, ar the bombardment of the city at the
i expiration of that time, The Egyptians having
refused to surrender the forts the British fleet
opened fire at sunrise, From dispatohes sent
to England we glean the following particulars
of the manoer in which hostilities began: °
‘** Early this morning the remaining British
subjects embarked and, save a few Italians and
Greeks, the European portion of the lation
‘hose who
remain are principally shopkeepers, who prefer
any risk rather than Abandon their roperty to
the mercy of the mob, They bave caded
their houses and will resist to the last any at-
Sp on the part of the mob to break in when
the bombardwent begins.
“At 11 o'clock the Invincible, Monarch and
Peuclope moved out and anchored outside the
harbor. The scene now was impressive in a
high degree, Slowly all the foreign steamers
moved from their berths and steamed out of
the harbor, The merchant steamers presented
Inting as they passed the admiral’s flaz. Bands
played national airs. Scarce a breath of wind
overhead, the deep blue sea, the white clothed
crews clustering on the rigging and the knowl.
edgo of the change which would soon take
place rendered the stately procession of war
The merchant
steamers were all crowded with refugees, those
who had held on to the last in hopes that mat-
ters would not come 10 an extremity, Bv
one German alone remained.
“At 1 o'clock asteam launch towing a large
boat full of Egyptian officials was seen ap-
vroathing the English flagship. It contained
They were re.
ceived by the admiral ‘and the Hon. Mr.
and a guard of
being fired,
as they came as a
had not received the admirsl's demand to sur.
the reason for the hostile preparations, Ihe
greal courtesy
bat the Egyptian officials
indeed upon the admiral
on
both sides,
blank
The members of the
Apparently
what Arabi wonld say to the demand» They
soon after returned to shore, and at 7 A. u. the
first gun was fired,
I ———
FORTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS,
Nennte
The Honee joint resolution to allow to the
employes of the government printing office pay
for time lost during the Garfield obsequiod
was passed. , ,, The Hollins bill providing tor a
commission to juquire into the subject o
congtrueting iron or steel steamers for oom.
mercial purposes, convertible by the govern.
ment into ships of war, was reported favorably
and placed on tho calendar. ,.. Messrs, Hawley,
Miller, of New York, Hill, of Colorado, Bayard
and Hampton, wers appiinted to attend the
Newburg, N. Y., oclebration.
A bill was passed authorizing the trans.
fer of the property of the Nati nal Roldiers' and
Sailors’ Orphan home to the Garfield Memorial
hospital... A joint resolution was introduced
proposing a coustitutionsl amendment prohib-
iting the abridgment of rights of citizens of the
United States on account of sex, Referred...
A bill was introduced for the appointment of |
a commission to inquire into the condition of
the ehip-building and ship-owning interests,
and to suggest methods to restore the foreign
carrying trade of the United States, Referred,
Nonses
On motion of Mr. Hiscock, of New York, the
Senate joinl resolution was passed, authorizing
the payment temporarily of cortain employes
of the war depariment,,,.The speaker an-
nounced the appointmout of Messrs, Beach,
Ketcham, Curtin, Burrows, of Michigan
Knott, Townsend, Ellis and Ranney as the
lect committe on tho Newburg centennial cele-
bration,
Several amenaments were reported to the
House bill reducing internal revenue taxation
+++. The House bill was passed authorizing a
publie building in Brooklyn, N. Y., at a oost of
$800,000,... Tho river and harbor bill was
or discussed, without final action,
Story of a Bedstead.
It was night.
The boarding house was wrapt fu
tenebrous gloom, faintly tinted with
an odor of kerosene,
Baddenly there arose on the air a
voll, followed by wild .bjargations snd
fur ons anathemas,
Then there was a clanking and rat
tling, as of an overturned picket fence,
and another yell, with more anathemas,
The fatted boarders listened, and,
ghostly clad, tip-toed along to Baffum’s
room, he of Buffam & Bird, second.
hand furniture dealers. As they stocd
there there was a whiz, a grinding, a
rattling and a baag, and more yells,
They consulted and koockel on the
door,
“Come in"
“Oen it.”
“I can't."
Convinoed that Buffam was in his last
agony they knooked in the door with a
bad post,
The sight was ghastly, Olasped be-
tween two sturdy though slender frames
of walnut, Buffam, pale as a ghost, was
six feet up in the air. He counlds’t
move. He was cought likes bear in a
log trap.
“What on earth is it?” they said,
‘ Bedstead —combination. ' New pat.
ent I was tellin’ you about,” gasped
Buifom, |
His story was simple, thongh tearful. |
He had brought ithome that day, and |
after using it for a writing desk, had |
opened it out and made his bed, He |
was going pescefully to dream land, |
waen he rolled over and secidentally
touched a spring. The faithful inven-
tion immediately became a double
erib, and turned Baffam into
« squalling wafer, Then he struggled; |
and was reaching aronnd for the!
spring, when the patent bedstead thought
it wonll show off some more and
straightened out and thot np in the gir |
and was a clothes-horse, Buffum said |
he didn't like to be clothes, and he
would give the thing to anybody that
would get him out. They said they
would try. They didn't want any such |
fire-¢ xtinguisher as that for their tron®
ble, but they would try. They inspect
it cautiously. They walked all around
it, Then the commission merchant laid
bis little finger on the top end of it. |
The thing snorted and reared as if it |
had been shot, slapped over with a
bang aud became an extension table
for ten people. When they recovered |
from the panic they came back. They |
found the commission merchant in the |
corner trying to get breath enough |
to swear, while ho rubbed his shins, |
Baffam had disappeared, but!
they knew he had not gore far.
The |
invention appeared to have taken a |
faney to him and incorporated him iato |
the firm, so to speak. He was down |
underneath, straddling one of the legs |
with his hesd jammed into the mat-
tress. Nobody dared to touch it. The
landlady got a club and reached for its
vital parts, but could not find them, |
She hammered her breath away, and
when she got through and dropped the |
club in despair the thing swung out its |
arms with a gasp and a rattle, turned
over twice and slapped itself into a bed
again, with Buffum peacefully among
the sheets. He held his breath for a
minute, avd then, watching his oppor. i
tunity, made a flying leap to the floor
just 'n time to save himself from being |
a folding screen.
A man with a black eye and cut lip |
told the Wasp editor about it ye ter- |
day. He said he owned the patent and
Baffam had been explaining to him how |
it worked.— Wasp :
A Leap for Life,
The citadel of Csiro, Egypt, stands
on a steep, rocky bluff shove the city
the relative positions of the two being |
very much those of the capitol and the
lower town at Washington. It was the
favorite residence of the famous Egyp-
tian dictator of the last generstion, |
Mehemet Ali Pasha, who strongly forti-
ed it and kept a number of heavy
cannon covstantly pointed from its walls
at the city below to overawe the disaffec-
tion which his iron rule inevitably pro-
duced. The walls are stiil in tolerable
repair, and might give some trouble to |
a force noprovided with heavy siege ar-
tillery. Above the ramparts are visible |
at a considerable distance the tall, slen- |
der, white minarets of the Muabamme-
dieh mosque, built by Mebemet Ali
This is one of the principal ornaments
of Cairo, its interior being decorated |
with a richness of coloring unmatched |
in the world, except. perhaps, by the |
Alhambra palace at Grenade. In front |
of the main entrance lies a vast paved |
quadrangle surrounded by a low colon. |
vade, which has acquired a tragic histori-
cal renown as the scene of the famous |
“massacre of the Mamelukes” by order |
of the pasha. Mehemet, finding in the
turbulent independence of these war- |
like chiefs a formidable |
obstacle to his cherisned |
schemo of absolute power, invited them |
to a banquet in the court-yard of the |
citadel. They rashly accepted the |
treacherous courtesy, and were saddenly |
fired upon in the midst of their revel by |
a detachment of soldiers concealed in |
the encircling colonnade. All perished |
save one, the son of the priccipal chief, |
who, alone preserving his presence of |
mind, threw himself npon tke ground |
and succeeded in reaching his horse, |
which was tied to an adjoining pillar.
Springing upon its back he cut his way |
through the swarming assailants, and,
finding the gates shut against him, took |
a flying leap from the top of the wall, a |
height of eighty feet. The horse was |
killed on the spot, bat the daring |
Mameluke, escaping with a broken |
limb, crawled away aud hid himself be- |
fore he couid be overtaken.
After trying his hand at many things |
in various parts of the country, James
Harris one day took it into his head to
plant a fow orange trees at Ocala,
Florida. He now owns 75,000 of the
trees and has an annual income from
them of £30,000.
Rubbing it Out.
The editor of the Courier, Mr, W. F.
Cook, was seized a few mornings ago by a
terrible pain in the left shoulder and neck.
Having been favorably impressed for some
time with the virtue of an article recom.
mended for all sudden paine, and especially
rheumatism, we rubheT the offending pari,
and in less time than we can write it, relief
came. That article is St. Jacobs Oil.—~Cyna-
joharie (N. Y ) Courier,
Deaf men make queer mistakes some.
times. * Were you born deaf?” asked a
man of one whose hesring was dread
fully affected. ** No,” was the reply,
“I was born in Penn-Yan.” * Shut the
door!" yelled the grocer to a deaf man
who had just stepped in. ** I'm a bore.
Well, if 1 am I'll do my trading some-
where else,” and away he went in a haf
“1 believe St. Jacobs Oil to be the very
best remedy known to mankind,” says Mr
Roberts, business manager of this paper —
Milwaukee ( Wis.) Sentinel
India exported $35,000,000 worth of
* Inthe Most Positive Manner.”
Deecxenrowx, N. J., September 15, 1881,
H, H. Warxer & Co: Sirs—1 am truly
Ind to be able to state that the uso of your Sate
tidney and Liver Cure has proved to me mo-t
sitive
mauner to its efficacy. lev, Janes N, Keys,
Tux cultivation of mushreoms isa paying
branch of gardening in France, where this e:cn-
lent is consumed every year to the value of
$1,800,000.
MexsnMAN's PEPTONIZED BEEF TONIO, the only
tious properties. It contains blood-making, force
generating and life-sustaining properties ; in-
valuable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous
prostration, and all forms of general debility;
aleo, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the
rosult of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over-
work or acute disease, particularly if resnltin
from pulmousry complaints, well, Haga
& Oo, proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists.
Frazer Axle Grease.
One greasing lasts two weeks; all others two
or three days. Do not.be imposed on by the
humbug stuffs offered. Ask your dealer for Fra-
ger's, with label on, It saves your horse labor,
and too. It received first medal at the Cen-
and Paris Expositions, Sold everywhere.
One remedy for $1. There is but one way to
cure baldness, and that is by using Carbol
a deodorized extract of petrolenm, the na
trolenm hair renewer, It will itively do
0 work—~tho only article that wilh
* Dre
Dr. R. V, Prenor,
My wifo had suffered wes knessos™
for nearly three years, At times she could
hardly move, she had such pains, We
often saw your “Favorite P * adver.
tised, but su like most patent medicines
it did not amount to eny hing, bat at lest con
eluded to try a bottle, which did, It made
hor sick at fist but it began to show ita effect
in a marked improvement, sad two boitles
cured her, Yous, ee, ’
J. Ht KY
Berweex fifty and six ysicians sre em.
ployed in the United a Indian service
Sudet the authority of the secretary of the
nterior,
Mulelde Mude A
Let your liver complaint Owl 0OTTES
snd pow'y take Dr, Pierce's * Golden Medical
Discovery.” Bold by druggists,
i
aflalo, N.
with ¢
*
maa
A —
Tur whole town of Mineral Ridge, Mahoning
county, Ohio, is caving in from three to five
foet in coosequence of the removal of the
conl,
Dr, Pleres’s “Pallets,” or mgar-coated gran.
ulesthe original *“jirtle liver ili} (boware
of Insitations) - enre sick and bLilious headache,
c'ennuse the stomach and bowels, snd purify the
blood. To get genuine, see Dr, Pierce's
ture and portrait ob government stamp. 25
equal to the circumference of the
Liss saved seventy Awe lives,
horses, i
uid by New York N
treet, New York,
Clears out
bedimgs, sk
Droggisie.
The Science of Life, or Salf-Pressrvation,
medical work for every man--young, middie.
sged or old. 120 invaluable prescriptions,
235 Cents ‘will Buy a Treatise upon the
Horse and his Diseases. Book
v samipe taken.
Bent postpaid by NEW YORK NEWSPAFER UNION,
130 Worth Btreet, New York.
Ner Debility, Weakoess,
Home cory » simple Berk " or
ust how wo enre hetmeelvcs 1 ATTY
SIT ae orbs ™
EACH CURE, Nowark, New Jersey,
© THE MARKETS.
vy
EW YORK,
Beef Catlle~Good to Prime | w ny 15
Calves—Com'n to Fil. ¢ Veals,
Lam .
Hogs— Live
Dressed, city :
Flonr—-Ex. State, good to fancy
Western, good to choles §
Wheat No. 2 Hed 18
No.1 White,......... 1
Rye—State, i
arley--Two-:
1
-
owed 81:
Yellow BSounthern
Oats White State. ......... -
Mixed Western
Hay—Prime Timothy
Btraw--No 1, ity
Hops
Pork—
Lard—City Steam
iefined
EERE ES
ad
Butter—State Creamery, five, ,
Dairy
we
2orsuny
pd
ee
Fotatoes— Early Roed, State, bbl
BUFFALO,
Btoers—Gnod to choice
Lambs... Western
Bheep We tern
Hogs, Good to Choice Yorkers, ,
Flour—C'y Ground N. P oxes,
Wheat—No. 1. Hard Duin,
Corn—Na. 2 Mixed............
Oats—No. 2 Mix. West
Barley—Two-rowed State
BOSTON,
Beef—Extra plate and family. .18 00
Hoge Live TH
Hogs—City Dressed 9.6
Pork —Extra Prime pet bil. 17TH @18
Spring Wheat Patents... 70) @ 8
tring ©
“Eo@mom-a ©
op oe
BRURELERE Elava
CORROP 60ReLeee
S eae
well BEEEERE.8 ESIRSERER
Flour—8
Corn —Higt: Mixed
4]
eeese
EH]
it
—
Byo—Btate .....cdkecsoscsss »
Wool Washed ool i Delsine
Unwashed * "
WATERTOWN (MASS) CATTLE MARK
Beef—Extra quality
Bheep— Live weight
Lam
Hogs, Northern, d. w
PHILADELPHIA,
Flour—Penn. Ex. Family, good 575
%
4
w
2
Wheat--No. 2 Red
Hye State
Corn-
Oats Mixed
Butter Creamery Extra Pa. _,
New York Full Cream,
Petrolerm—Crode
por
52a
3
A CRABBED CREATURE.
I pr ——
That nature cares for and enterteins hat
own has become ancoestablished fact to al
observers. Who does not Jove the sound of
. the brightly scintillating waves
leaping from the phosphorescent
sea. gs they break against the rodks
jo the summer night until Nature
ersell, weary ¢ Spemion
turns the sounding surf towards
the oppposite shore, eating
stranded some badly-mutilate
snail, which wanders solemnly
= ; ocean edible — the
crab whose chief
a
seems (0
its ability to
ishadelectable
moal 10
bipeds. The crab being covered with a hard, im-
phetrable shell, it is not easy to molest or mak
im afraid; therefore he wages war in his wate
world unceasingly when once attacked. Althoug!
tiny, be cannot be sald to be devoid of understand.
ing, hav ing ten logs to assist his Jooomotion ; this,
however, avails him litte, for, when vered,
he never turns his back to his enemy, starting
into a bold run, but, like many politicians during
election time, slips off sideways. There comes a
time in the life of this pugnacious fellow when the
years bring him more bone mi n he
can dispose of with comfort, and he finds him.
self in a very tight place; his sh inch him
and he begins to realize the pract! ity of ap
piring to Dame Nature for more room or 8 house
1 proportion to his increas! Nature
slowly responds to the call; but in her own
time provides a new home, so that the center
Jrising little creature does not wader about
romeless, but is provided for suitably, as was the
old sailor, who dropped his rheumatism end
erabbedness when he applied the Great German
Remedy, Sr. Jacons O1L. , however,
and to such we would reply in language too plain
to be MISRdeIiood~ 1g wor ls ifustinting facts
that even the waves of time cannot wash away
or scaly epithets affect. St. Jacors Oli today
has rendered the lives and homes of myriads of
sufferers brighter than ever the electric light oan
which people pause tosdmire the way. suil
more happily served than the old saflor wes an
invalid, who wrote thus Lis case:
“CROOKED HAERTEL™
“ Accept a thousand thanks for that * golden
remedy.” I suffered for many years with rheu.
matic palin in my limbs. My legs were drawn
toputhir. and people called me * Crooked Hae
tel” 1 used 87. Jacons Orn and was cured, and
now feel so well that I think I could dance, as in
my young days. TouN HARRTEL, Fremont, JR.
NY NU—37
It is the concurrent
0ST testimony of the
public and the medi.
H CILEBRATED eal profession, that
Hostetter's Stomach
3 Bitters is a medicine
which achieves re.
\ TH © oon of
»i a x ng
oases,
R STOMAC S d specific
J by Dru
ITTERS 5
vi wr Ve Xo —
An English Veterinary Surgeon and Chemist, now
travali inthis country, saye that most of the Horse
and Cattle Powders sold here are worthless t , He
says i ute
at Sheridan's Condition Powders are
iy ure and immensely valuable. Nothing on h
will make Hoh .
. Sold
hens iay like Sheridan's Conditi
ders. Dose, one teaspoonful to one pint of fo
evervwhere, or sent by mail for § letter stamps. 1S.
IN & CO. form e.
bs, Good Black or M r 81.
bs, Fine Black or Mixed, vor 8
bs. Choice Bint or Mixed, for 3.
i pa clips’ Cholcast ‘Tea In a
varfety.— Sverybody ~ Tea
NO
StuN. You P.O. Box 1287.
for circular,
ixed, fo
business. — Value
ROBT WELLS, 48 Vescy
ogra Tw onetle rane.
0 PImAD, Cincinnati, O,
&
Raton FOE i oor
write Tus AULTMAN & TAYLOIt CO. Mansiioh. O.
Morphing it Cured in 10
days. ti red
OPIUM = J. BTEPHENS, at Cured,
- — A A—————————
AMONT NTSWA best
BE Ya mre
Colston? EE BASSE, bodies SF
bot tie,
LA
weli before using,
mal flesh
As these is
ily for all
hake
.
JOHN HODGE, Sec'y.
REMOVAL
The Wilson Magnetic Clothing Company
beg to announce to the public
that in order to accommodate the
tly increased demand for their
agnetic Carments ney have re-
moved their principal s
and offices from 4685 Fulton St,
Brooklyn, to 206 East 14th St., New
York City, where ali
tions should be addressed. and
all checks, drafts and P, O. orders
be made payable.
WILSONIA
MAGNETIC CLOTHING C0,
25 EAST 14th STREET,
ERTS Try EY.
AGENTS W -
DOUGLAS BROS. XN. 7th St. Phfladelphia, Pa.
Payne's Automatic Engines,
: han
Engine : with an Automatic
Send tor Hinsty sowed,” Jor
Prices. EB. W. Pavsk & Sows, Box 868 Cormag, XX.
AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
to Agents, Address
AL PraLisni®g Con Pulladelybia, Pa.
im)
drei
Ts
i=}
E
a
Pumsative
¥ change
three ey ey
g
as
E
§
B
g
g
ol
pe _ SG MORPHINE © rede
A Treatise thelr
OPI goody cure SENT vo EAT NG
OFruan. P.O. Box 138,
YOUNG MEN }' zon want to in
wit addons Yolenting Dron ugeiin LN
situation, adden Velestine Bros. Javesvile, Wis,
ONE MILLION COPIES SOLD
EVERYBODY WANTS IT!
EVERYBODY NEEDS IT!
and Physical Debility, Premature Decline in
isan indispensable treatise for every man,
young, middie age? or oid. -
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR, SELF.
Man;
J PRESERVATION,
3 comparison the most
LT A Le
ver that the or single can either re-
#4 to —
re or wish to know but what is fully explained.
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE: OR, SELF.
PRESERVATION,
Instructs (hose in health how to remat and
invalid bow to become well, Contains na
and twentr.five invaluable prescriptions for
4 arte and chronie Aistaacs, for each of hich a
~cless phy sled charge
London ae an » Hom Hite
THE SCIEXCE OF LIFE; OR, SELF.
ada 2 PRESERVATION,
Contains . fine steel superbly
bound in French muslin, a a ties
marvel of art and uty, warranted to bea
medical dak 5 Syery sense than can be AR
alsewhere for double t i money will
refunded in every instanced ha. be
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR, SELF.
2 a PRESERVATION,
s so much superior to all other
= shat on all o Tr tines an madieat
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR, SELF.
PRESERVATION,
1s sent by mail, securely sealed, postpaid, on receipt
illustrated
samples, 6c. Send now, .
The author can be consulted on all diseases re-
quiring skill and experience. Address
PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE,
or W. H. PARKER, M. D.,
4 Bulfinch Street Bos ass,
CIDER