The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, May 26, 1876, Image 1

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    VOL. 40.
Iluutingdon Journal.
J. It. DURBORROW,
P;:BLISIIERS AND PROPRIETORS,
Ogice in new JOURNAL Building, Piffle Street
T!E!- HUNTINGDON JOURNAL is published every
F , i•hy by .1. R. DI7111:ullItOW and J. A. NAsii, ender
the firm name of J. R. DURitOnnoW A Co., at 62,00 pt.,
ann.rn IN A:A tNCE, or .$2.40 if net paid for in six months
frela date e:ente , criptien, and f.. 3 if nut paid within the
year.
No paper discontinued, link. at the option of the pub
a„•r+, ow; i al! armirages are paid.
N.. paper, ,inwever, will I,e sent out of the State 1111iCS3
~117tely in a•lvanre.
Tran.i , :ni:Avertisernent4 will be inserted at Twr.i.vr.
A \ c! . .Nrs per line for the first in , :ertion, grxes
Ni , , ENT s fir the second and tivE cENTS per line
fur,lll.,.:nrnt insertions.
!: q:i•tro-rly and yearly business advertisements
'.:•• • F , d a:t the fullownig rate;:
in Iyr
i 1 0.. I': MI 00, 511 iiaj SO
21 4J, 1$ 111, I , 09,17,1 00' 80, 160
Commioication. of
interl , t, all party al111.1111,1114:1111A,
.r.• , and I!,:itie , , ext,veling fire lines,
per lin".
All
~, ot:nT n ico, win charged to the party
havolgtheh,
Ailvo4tisi,g Ag.•nt, rmit fitvl their commi.sion
of thr-oe es-
,111 ad,
iILVTI O I I .
i
Jun PRINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colora,
done with neltness and Blanks,
Canhs, Pamphlets, &c., of every variety and btyle, printed
nt tit, shortest notice, and everything in the Printing
line will he ••t.ecuted in the most artistic manner and at
the I,,we-4 late,
Professional Cards
r E CALDWELL, .Ittorooy-at-Low. No. 111, :;n1 Ktreot.
• iOlico furia,rly c,cupied by ML,si•e. AVoeds & 1511.
[apl2,"il
1 A. ti. P:II.I3.IIIAUG U, oilers his professional services
the e,oni:noty. Office, No s'2:Washington strect,
uce t! ~or east of the Catholic Parsonage. [jan4,'7l
ir C. STOCKTON, Surgeon Dentist. Office in Leister'g
J • bUilditrZ. in the room 11.1onerly occupied by Dr. E.
.1. 4..rceue, Huntingdon, Pa. tapl2B, '76.
B. 01;1.ADY. Attorney-at,„Law, 405 Penn Street,
P.a. [n0v17,'75
(1 1 _ L. Dent ist.olM, in S. T. Brown's new
‘I. Penn are-t, Luntingilon, Pa. [tii.12.271
ji W. IttillANAN, Snrgeon Dentist, No. 22:.'„ Penn
11. t'',treet, ltuntingdon, Pa. [tne1,17,'75
C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Office, No. —, Penn
11. Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [upl9,'7l
j FRANKLIN SCIIOCK, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting
,/ . don, Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal busi
ness. Office, 229 Penn Street, corner of Court House
Square. idec4,72
T SYLVANUS BLAIR. Attorney-at-Law, liontingdon,
El . l'a. Office, Penn Street, three doors west of 3rd
street. Uste4,ll
TW. HATTERS, Attorney-at-Law and General Claim
J . Agent, linatingdi n, Pa. Soldiers' claims against the
Government for back-lay, bounty, widows' and invalid
pensions attended to wito great care and promptness. of
fice on Penn Street. [jan4,7l
J
R. DURBORROW, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa.,
t) . will practice in the several Courts of Huntingdon
county. Particular attention given to the settlement of
estates of docedents. Office in the Jointmo. building.
li.S. GEISSINGER, Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public,
Huntingdon, Pa. Office, No. 230 Penn Street, oppo
site Court House. [febs,'7l
I,A. ORISISON. Attorney-at-Law. Patents Obtained.
. Oftiee, 321 Penn Street, lluntingdon, Pa. [my31,71
Q E. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa.,
S. E.
office in Monitor building, Penn Street. Prompt
and careful Attention given to all legal business.
Laugs,l4-limos
WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney -at-Law, Hunting
, dun, Pa. Special attention given to collections,
and all other legal business attended to with care and
prolaptnes.i. Office, No. 2'29, Penn Street. [apl9,'7l
Miscellaneous
MAR? -y THESE FACTS !
The Testimony of the Whole World.
HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT
LAI) LEG, BAD BREASTS, SORES AND ULCERS.
All descriptions of SOri.-13 are remediable by the proper
and diligent use of this inestimable preparation. Tu at
tempt to cur• bail legs by plastering the edges of the
wound together is a folly ; fur should the skin unite, a bog
gy diseased condition remains underneath to break out
with tenfold fury in a few days. The only rational and
successful treatment, as indicated by nature, is to reduce
the inflammation in and about the wound and to soothe
the neighboring parts by rubbing in plenty of the Oint
ment as salt is forced into meat. This will cause the
malignant humors to be drained off from the hard, swol
len and discolored parts round about the wound, sore, or
nicer, and when these humors are removed, the wounds
themselves u - ill soon heal ; warm bread and water poul
tices applied over the affected parts, after the Ointment
has been well rubbed in, will soothe and soften the same,
and greatly assist the cure. There is a description of
ulcer, sore and swelltriz, which need not be named here,
attendant upon the follies of youth, and for which this
Ointment is urgently recommended as a sovereigt reme
dy. In curing such poisonous sores it never fails to restore
the system to a healthy state if the Pills be taken accord
ing to the printed instructions.
DIPTHERIA, ULCERATED SORE THROAT, AND
SCARLET AND OTIIEE FEVERS,
Any of the above diseases may b y e
cured by well rub;
biug the Ointment three timesa day into the chest, throat,
and neck of the patient, it will soon penetrate, and give
immediate relief. Medicine taken by the mouth must
operate upon the whole system ere its influence can be
frit in any local part, whereas the Ointment will do its
work at once . Whoever tries the unguent in the above
manner for the diseases named, or any similar disorders
affecting the chest and throat, will find themselves re
lie, ed as by a charm. All sufferers from these complaints
should envelop the throat at bedtime in a large bread :Led
water poultice, after the Ointment lias been well rubbed
in ; it will greatly assist the cure of the throat and chest.
To allay the fever and lessen the inflammation, eight or
ten Pills should be taken night and morning. The Oint
ment will produce perspiration, the grand essential in all
eases of fevers, sore throat, or where there might be an
oppression of the chest, either from asthma or other
causes.
PILE:3, FISTULAS, STRICTURES.
'The above class of complaints will be removed by night-
Lv fermenting the parts with warm water, and then by
most effectnally rubbing in the Ointment. Persons suffer
ing from these direful complaints should lose not a mo
ment in arresting their progress. It should be understood
that it is not sufficient merely to smear the Ointment on
the affected parts, but it must be well rubbed in fora con
siderable time two or three times a day, that it may be
taken into the system, whence it will remove any hidden
sore or wound as effectually as though palpable to the
eye. There again bread and water poultices, after the
rubbing in of the Ointment, will do great service. This is
the only sure treatment for females, cases of cancer
in the stomach, or where there may be a generat bearing
down.
INDISCRETIONS OF YOUTII ;--SORES AND ULCERS.
fletehes. as also swellings, can, with certainty, be radi
cally cured if the Ointment be used freely, and the Pills
taken night and morning, as recommended in the printed
instructions. When treated in any other way they only
dry up in one place to break out in another ; whereas
this Ointment will remove the humor from the system,
and leave the patient a vigorous and healthy being.—
It will require time with the use of the Pills to insure a
lasting cure.
DROPSICAL SWELLINGS, PARALYSIS, AND STIFF
JOINTS,
Although the above complaints differ widely in their
origin awl nature, yet they alt require local treatment.—
Many of the worst cases, of such diseases, will yield in a
emnparatively "hurt space of time when this Ointment is
diligently rubbed into the parts affected, even after every
other meatus have failed. In all serious maladies the Pills
should he taken according to the printed directions ac
companying each box.
11 , :1'i the Ointment and Pills slinuld be
ing cases
Cancers,
jam traeted & Stiffl
Bad
F. t Bre:L.4s
Barti4,
Joints,
ilunions, I Elephantiasis,
Bite of nocchetoca . Fistulas,
and Sand,:Hes, 'Gout, pop,
Coco bay, Glandular Swell-
Chien. hoot, Lumbago,
Chilblains, Piles.
rhappod Hands, Rheumatism,
Corue (IWO Scalds,
CAUTION :—None are genuine unless the signature of
J. HAYCOCK, as agent for the United States, surrounds
each box of Pills and Ointment. A handsome reward will
be given to any one rendering such information as may
lent to the detection of any party or parties Coun
terfeiting the medicines or vending the same, knowing
tlicui to be spnri-ne.
*,..* Sold at the Manufactory of Professor HOLLOWAY &
Co., New York, and by all respectable Druggists and De.al
ers in Medicine throughout the civilized world, in pots at
5 Cents, 62 cents, and 8! each.
4.e. There is considerable saving by taking the larger
sizes. .
N. 11.—Direrti.,ne for the guidance of patiente in every
disorder are affixed to each pot. [apr2B,l6-eow-ly
WEDDING CARDS !
WEDDING CARDS
We have just received the largest assortment of
the latest styles of
WEDDING ENVELOPES, and
WEDDING PAPERS,
ever brought to Huntingdon. We have also bought
new funtes of type, fur printing cards, and we
defy competition in this lino. Parties wanting
Cards put up will save money by giving us a call.
At least fifty per cent cheaper than Philadelphia
or New York.
ap7-tf.] J. F.. DURBORROW & CO.
J. It. DURBORROW, - - - J. A. NASA.
The Huntingdon journal,
J. A. NASII,
EVERY FRIDAY MORNING,
THE NEW JOURNAL numING,
No. 212, 1 ,1 !1 , Ti1 STREET,
HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA
:itn .1 , Gin Iy r
$2 00 per annum. in ndvanee; $2.50
within six month, , , and $3.00 if
and colfr-tahle
n.t. mid within-the yenr
00000000
0 REPUBLICAN PAPER. 0
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TO ADVERTISERS
Circulation 1800.
ADVERTISING MEDIUM
The JOURNAL is one of the bent
printed papers in the Juniata Valley,
and is read by the best citizens in the
county. It finds its way into 1800
homes weekly, and is read by at least
5000 persons, thus making it the BEST
advertising medium in Central Pennsyl-
vania. Those who patronize its columns
are sure of getting a rich return for
their investment. Advertisements, both
local and foreign, solicited, and inserted
at reasonable rates. Give us an order
gcl'gggg
JOB DEPARTMENT
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used in the follow.
Sore Nipples,
Sore throats,
Skin Diseases,
Scurvy,
Sore Heads,
Tumors,
Ulcers,
Wounds,
Yaws.
c. ~
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tee - All business letters should be ad.
dressed to
J. R. DURBORROW & CO..
Huntingdon, Pa
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.LTY,
PRINTING A SPECI.
Original Vottq.
Another " Item of News."
BY A SCHOOL-BOY
In the poetic constellation
That illuminates the JOURNAL,
Shines a comet, in whose conceit,
Ills muse is held supernal.
'Tis true, he glows with lustrous light,—
Yet brightens not the skies :
The flame that lights him up within,
Is dimmed by his green eyes.
his inspiration always dies
Down to the dimmest taper,
And his haughty tail dissolves
Into a murky vapor ;
Until some modest star reflects,
A ray across his pathway ;
Like Juno's bird, then spreads his tail,
And wildly lets his pride play.
lie tries to hide its glimmerin: beam
Beneath his murky flashes ;
'•Ile grasps in haste the poet's pen,"
And then he cuts and slashes.
With "Advice Gratis," "Criticism,"
And with "An Item of News,"
He vainly seeks to obliterate
These lights from others' views.
Ms "Advice" is very cheap, indeed,
And worth just what it cost;—
I'~l
give him some, at hi 9 own price,
And I hope it wont be lost :
(Keep in check your proud ambition ;
Indulge more in your keen wit;
Keep your hands from "criticism ;"
For that title does not fit
The selfish thrusts you make at those
Who, like yourself, have flaws :
Those thrusts will turn,aud pierce you back,
When others know their cause.)
Now, for the motive that impels,
This wondrous orb to flicker ;
"The problem finds, in my weak mind,"
No solution quicker,
"Than, being troubled by the thought,"
That other "orbs" may brighten,
And dim the lustre of his pen,
lie tries them back to frighten.
“But in a few quite simple words,
I'll state the deep impression,”
His last effusion made on me:—
It was a frank confession.
This fact, I think, is plain to all,
And most, I'm sure would tell us
It would not take a sage to prove
That the BIGGE BEIILE is jealous.
Ely *tory-Ear.
THE FORTUNE-TELLER.
-:o:-
One day Mrs. Lorrimer's only daughter,
Violet te, was nowhere to be found; neither
was the gentleman, Senor Espanol, who
taught the guitar. The whole city was
alarmed by an account of the mysterious
disappearance of a beautiful belle and a
hard•working, gentlemanly young for
eigner. However, when some one had
discovered that the last gave lessons to
the first, an inference was drawn by some
cool looker on.
''May they not have gone together ?"
The inother at once drove the slanderer
from her presence, preferring the idea that
her Violette was murdered. However,
before long a penitent letter, all blotted
with tears, reached the poor old lady, all
alone in her great Fifth Avenue mansion.
Violette was married to Senor Espanol.
The more one loves a person the more fu
rious does any deception on her part make
one. A less loving mother might have
forgiven. Stung to madness, this one
wrote a terrible letter to the foolish girl
who had so hurt her.
The husband, a hot Spaniard, read it.
It insulted him, and he forbade his wife
ever to see her parents again. To do him
justice, love, and no mercenary motive,
had led him to elope with his pretty heiress.
So the gulf was fixed between the only
two of the same blood who lived on earth,
and Senor began to give lessons on the
guitar for two instead of one. Then for
three, then for four, then for five. If he
had lived a little longer, it would have
been for six. But the day the fourth
child was born a countryman, who mistook
him fur a rival, stabbed him in the back.
lie apologized at length the next minute,
but the poor victim did not live to hear
him through, but died trying to express
the fact that the gentleman was perfectly
excusable.
And so Violette, who had been very
happy with her music -master, was left . a
widow with four babies, no money, and no
accomplishment that had been sufficiently
cultivated to earn a living by. Of course
she took in sewing, and of course a day
came when there was very small "prospect
of supper, and not even a dream of break
fast. •
Not a penny in the house, not a loaf of
bread in the closet, not a dollar's worth of
work to be got anywhere, what was she to
do ? The poor little woman walked up
and down, and cried. .That did not help
her. She looked over the relics of the
past. They were pretty pieces of jewelry,
worth nothing. Valuable things had all
been sold long ago. She glanced out of
the window. A woman with a very large
brand new basket and no shoes, went beg
ging from door to door.
The basket was worth two dollars and a
half, and the shoes could have been bought
for two. This singular circumstance
preyed upon her mind. She began to take
an interest in the ways and manners of
beggars, as the awful expectation of be
coming one began to haunt her.
"I could drown myself," she said, "but
I could not very well drown four children,
like a Jitter of puppies."
Then leaning her chin on her hands,
she watched from her lofty window another
woman with her handkerchief over her
head, going from door to door.
Was she begging ? It seemed not.—
Once or twice she entered and stayed some
time. At last she saw her at her own
door, and heard her goinr , from room to
room. There was a knock at the door.—
She opened it, and the dark hair under
the yellow silk handkerchief, the big black
eyes, the rich complexion, were there.
"Well ?" she asked inquiringly.
"Let me tell your fortune, lady. I only
charge twenty-five cents," said the woman.
"My fortune is told, since I have not
twenty-five cents in the world," said Vio
lette.
e
t
t
0
The woman turned away.
"Stop a moment," said Violette. "Tell
me one thing : in this age do people pay
you to tell their fortunes ?"
"No age is too old," said the woman, to
whom the word presented but one idea.—
"I just told an old lady's fortune below.
It was in the cards that she was to have a
husband, too—her fourth. She gave me
a dollar. Look !" she opened her palm.
"I make money, I do," said she. "I'm
a gypsy. I'm a seventh child. I see the
future. I'll take any little bit of jewelry
if you haven't any money. Have your
fortune told ? But Violette shook her
head and closed the door.
"I cannot steal and to beg I am asham-
HUNTINGDON, PA., FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1876
ed," said she to herself. "After it is dark
tonight I'll go out and tell fortunes."
Then she took two flat irons to the junk
shop, bought a loaf of bread and a pint of
milk, and fed her four children—she for
whom nothing had once baeri dainty
enough, and who had ridden in her own
carriage.
She put the children to bed, and left
the key with a neighbor in case of fire—a
dread that haunts those many storied
houses like a ghost—and then, disguised
in veil, hood and shawl, went forth on her
errand. It was a crazy dream. She had
nut courage to attempt fortune-telling. It
was worm.; than begging. She wandered
along the streets, leaving the ill smelling
ones behind her, and coming at last to the
pure sweet homes of luxury. In the end
she stood before her mother's windows.—
There was a light in the basement and
through the lace curtains she saw a table
spread, and the shadow of a figure she
knew to be her mother's on the curtain,
and there, drawing down the shade, was
Martha, who bad nursed her when a child.
Tears filled ber eyes. It was a paradise
which she never hoped to regain. Had
not her mother written :
I'll curse on you. Never darken my
doors more, unless you wish to hear mu
utter it."
But here at least she had not the terror
of strangers upon her; she could beg or
tell fortunes. She would tell flotunes.—
Martha was superstitious, and always had
dreams of matrimony, and of the coming
hack of a lover who had gone to sea when
she was in her teens, and had never been
heard of since.
She crept up to the window. and tapped
on the panes. In a moment Martha open
ed the door.
The hooded figure drew near her.
'Let me tell your fortune ?" she said.
"Bother," said Martha, "I'm past for
tunes."
"What ?" said Violette. "With a lover
gone to sea?"
"Lord save us !" cried Martha.
"And in one place twenty years," said
'Violette.
"You know more than is good," said
Martha. "Stop a bit. Are you one of
them clairvoyants?"
"Yes," said Violette.
"Could you see where people are, what's
come of them, and that ?" asked Martha.
"For instance, a girl that's been gone
eight years, could yod look for her in a
dream, like, as I've heard they can, and
find her ?"
"Yes, I think I could," said Violette.
"Sit there, then," Martha said, pointing
to a chair in the hall, and hurried into the
dining-nom.
She came back in a moment.
"Come and speak to missus," she said.
And Violette, trembling so she could
scarcely stand, entered her mother's pres
ence.
No lore is like a mother's. Violette
had known that since she cast it off. She
knew it now, looking on the pale face
where wrinkles had come so thickly—on
the hair, all turned gray now—on the sad
eyes, that were so bright when she last
saw them.
She longed to kneel at her mother's feet
and beg forgiveness, but she dared not yet
—bad not she sinned too deeply to hope
for pardon ? She stood silent with head
bowed down. .
They tell me you are a clairvoyant.,"
said Mrs. Lorrimer. `•I have not much
faith in such things, and if the power
prospers its possessors so little, it cannot
be worth much ; but still I have something
I should like to ask you. You search for
persons who are far away, do you not—and
for lost things.
Violette bowed.
"If you can find somethince °
I have lost
I will repay you well," said Mrs. Lorri
mer. "Here, sit down. Perhaps, if you
have this knowledge, you can tell me what
I have lost.
Violette sat down.
"It should be darker," she said ; "will
you lower the light ?"
Martha turned the gr.:s down and stood
behind her lady's chair—and there was
silence. Violette bad cast back her veil,
but the firelight was not briaht enough to
show her features.
"Lady," she said in a low voice, "it is
not gold or silver that I see ; it is nothing
that can be bought for money. What I
Fee is a girl.
"Good heavens !" cried] the old lady.
"A girl of sixteen witsfair hair and
blue eyes, said Violette. "That was what
she was when you saw hqr last. Am I
right ?"
"Yes," said Mrs. Lorrimer.
"You loved her," said Violette; "she
loved you. But she deceived you; she
was wicked—wicked—wicked; but there
was an excuse for her. She fell in love;
she was mad for awhile. You have cast
her off. She is gone. You will never
see her more."
"Hush I hush !" cried Mrs. Lorrimer.—
"She was not bad. I was wicked ; I knew
what it was to love, yet I forsook her be
cause she knew it, too. Lpok a g ain. How
does life use her ?"
"She is a widow, and very poor," said
Violette—'•so wretchedly poor that she
does not know where to get bread ; but
she will not conic to you. You would
curse her. You could not forgive her.—
You will never see her again."
The old lady started from her chair.
"What are you? How do you know
the secrets of my life, the words I most
repent uttering? Look again ! Look !
Tell me I shall see her once more. Tell
me where to find the only babe I ever held
against my breast ! My little one—my
Violette—where is she ?"
And then the woman phe addressed fell
upon her knees and clasped her hand.
"She is here !" she cried. "Mother,
she is here !" and the two wept together
in each other's arms; and all was forgiven.
The good mansion is no longer desolate.
There are little children's voices there,
and mother and daughter are together
once more. And in that other world,
where we cannot believe that wrath en
dures, doubtless the lover of her youth re
joices that Violette's mother's fortune was
told so well.
A ONE-LEGGED Yankee orator, named
Jones, was pretty successful in bantering
an Irishman, 'then the latter asked him :
"How did you come to lose your leg ?"
"Well," said Jones, on examining my
pedigree, and looking up my descent, I
found there was some Irish in me, and
having become convinced that it had set
tled in that left leg, I had it cut off at
once." "Be the powers," said Pat, "it
would have been a better thing had it set
tled in your head."
What a blessing it is to be simple; to
have the body satisfied with simple, food
and the mind satisfied with simple truth.
*tied Niscilian.
Our New York Letter.
Stewart's Estate—A Rather Long Look at
Amusement Matters Business—how
the Evangelists Live..
NEW YORK, May 22, 1876.
VIE STEWART ESTATE.
There is, as might be expected, a great
deal of dissatisfaction over the disposition
of Stewart's money. The employees, it
will be remembered who had been with
him ten years were to receive $5OO each,
and those who had been twenty years were
to get $l,OOO. Now trouble sets in. Sales
men who have served faithfully nine years
and a half get nothing, and those who
have been grinding out money for the
dead merchant for nineteen years and
a half getonlyssoo. Naturally they growl,
particularly as he always worked l►is melt
harder, and paid them le-s, that any mer
chant in New York. Whenever a good
man wanted to leave the house, that he'
might better his condition, he was always
induced to remain by the statement that
while the pay was small, and the service
onerous, all the faithful men who should
stand by the House would be remembered
in such a way as to leave them better off
than as though they went for higher pay at
the time. The absurdly small sum left
these men irritate them. They receive
about $5O each per year, provided
they have bean in the service the exact
time to entitle them to anything. And
his bequests at the heads of his depart
ments were absurdly small. Think of giv
ing a man capable of handling millions,
and as good a merchant as Stewart him
self, a bonus of SJO,OOO for twenty years
of hard, grinding labor ! No man ever
died in New York less regretted, and no
man ever lived who did less with his op
portunities.
THE THEATRES AND HOW THEY LIVE,
Do you know what it costs New York
to amuse itself? There are in the city
over sixty places of amusement that arc
counted legitimate. They are, of course, a
greit, many more than that, but the sixty
I am speaking of are, mostof them, decent
places to whic respectable women may go
with their husbands and lovers. The five
principal ones are Booth's, Wallack's, the
,Union Square, the Fifth Avenue, and the
Park. Of' these Booth's is the largest, and
a little showing of the cost of running that
may be taken as a sample of the whole.
To begin with, the building cost original
ly two millions of dollars, and the ground
upon which it stands a million more, that
is, the building finished for performances.
The regular company consists of about
thirty people. There is the leading man,
whose salary will not be less than $l5O per
week ; the leading lady, who is worth al
most as much. Then comes the walking
gentleman at about $100; the soubrette, I
or chambermaid, the funny woman, gets
$lOO, and so on down through the cate
gory, till you come to the utility, that is,
people who are depended upon to do every
thing, who average about 620 dollars per
week. These people comprise the regular
company. Then comes the supers, as they
are called, the people who do not speak
lines, except as they shout, in mobs, who
are paid from fifty cents to a dollar a night;
The stars receive enormous pay For in
stance, in the recent production of Julius
Crew, at Booth's Theatre, Mr. Barrett,
the Cassuis, received $l,OOO per week ;
Bangs, as Mark Antony, $400; Davenport,
the Brutus, $7OO ; and Levick, the Caesar,
$350. Besides these, there are more than
a dozen firstelass people in the piece, and
none of' whom draw less than $2O per week.
Bat this was a very light part of the ex
pease of producing the tragedy. Over six
hundred men, none of them less than six
feet in height, were employed to represent
Roman soldiers, at an expense of 75 cents
per night. The scenery, and necessary
machinery to make the pageant, cost the
management not less than $60,000, and all
of this expenditure before a single dollar
could be realized. Still with all this ex
pense the piece made money in New York,
and is making great deal of money in the
country. The theatre seats about three
thousand people, and as the cheapest seats
are $1.50, and from that to $2.50, it is
not difEcult to see where the money comes
from, it' the house is filled each night. And
there are so many strangers in New York,
aside from the resident population, it, was
filled every night during its run.
The great actors, in the legitimate drama,
make a great deal of money. Edwin Booth
never plays except for half the gross re
ceipts of the theatre, and the manager
must guarantee that share to not be less
than $5OO per night. Charlotte Cushman
got even higher terms, and such people as
Owens, Brougham and a score of others
do as well. It is every actor's ambition to
get to be a star, and to have a piece of his
own, and every one of them, from the
lowest up, firmly believes himself to be the
best actor in the world, if be could only
get the people to recognize him. I never
knew one of them who did not believe
that Edwin Booth attained his position by
sheer luck, and who would like to vet a
chanc3 to play Hamlet beside hint. ' 'But
with all this they are a harmless, innocent,
pleasant class of people, who have their
uses in the world, and who fill their places
as well as other people do.
There are a score of pretty little thea
tres in various parts of' town, that are re
spectable, and several that are net.
Then you come down to the pretty
waiter girl establishments, which are as
bad as bad can be, only one of them being
even safe. Harry 11111's place, on Hous
ton street, has been notorious for a dozen
or more years, and it is a curiosity. The
regular patrons of the place are of course
snorting men and strangers who want to
see. 11111 gives a variety performance,
consisting of singing, danciret. etc ,by
male and female performers, athletic exer
cises, and boxing and wrestling matches.
But however rough the audience, and
however uncouth they may be in their
d e monstrations, no bad conduct is tolerat
ed. Hill is a brawny man of 50, who was
for years a prize fighter in England, and
he can yet "get away," as he says, with
almost any of the roughs. If a man comes
in drunk, and is noisy, Hill, who is always
walking about among the tables at which
the auience is seated, merely requests
him to "dry up." If the man is wise he
will "dry up"—for if he does not, Harry
simply knocks him down and drags him
to the.stairs, down which he rolls with
great celerity, for they are very steep.
The moment a pickpocket or a thief comes
in Harry spots him and he either goes oot
or is put out. The old fellow is as disre
putable as a man can well be, but be bas a
certain code of morals, and he lives very
close to it.
Negro minstrels, as a rule, get from $l5
to $25 per week, except a few very super-
for singers and dancers, who iometimes
as high as $lOO, but these are very rare.
Acrobats, rope walkers, India rubber men.
common jig dancers, and all of that class
of performers, arc glad to get $l5 per
week, and $2O to them is a gorgeous liv
ing. All statements as to enormous sala
ries paid to these people, are lies from first
to last. The managers mac them as ad
vertising dodges, and the perthrmers let
them go unchallenged, for they like to be
considered as worth high prices. Rut
they live in garrets, and eat at the cheap
est restaurant in the city, and when they
die they never have enough left to bury
them.
It is estimated that in the city alone
there are over 7,000 people. who perthrm
on the stage in some capacity, good. bad
and indifferent. As a rule they are mis
erably paid, and the life is one of incessant
labor, and of great privation. The work
is uncertain, the public tastes capricious,
and altogether the showman, except the
very few at the head of the profession, has
a very hard time of it. If you have any
notion of entering the profession, take my
advice and don't.
BCSINF.:43
Business continues as dull as it can well
be, and say business at all, and there is Do
prospect of an improvement. It is not
the hard times that is troubling New York.
—the fact is. and it might as well be fac
ed, the city is losing its trade, and other
cities are getting it.. The jobbing business
is gone, for the simple reason that (7hica
go, Cincinnati, St.. Louis and Teiedo can
do it a great deal better. Philadelphia is
a better manufacturing paint, and Boston
is taking back its (44 New England trade.
There arc one hundred and forty stores to
rent between the Post-office and Four
teenth street, and real estate has depre
ciated fifty per cent. at least. There were
146 failures last week, and there will be
probably more next week. There is no
rush of merchants to the city, and the ho
tels are empty. In the meantime the
Western cities, and the interior cities in
the East, while not prosperous, are at
least comparatively so, and are at least
paying their way. They are not losing,
if they are not making. There never will
be any one great controlling business cen
ter, as was fondly hoped by those interest
ed in New York, and it is well that there
should not be. Better have a dozen. There
is no hope for any revival here, and New
Yorkers acknowledge it.
HoW MOODY LIVES.
There has been a great deal of nonsense
talked abcut Moody and Sankey making a
big thing out of their religious work. They
do nothing of the sort. Th es e men never
took a cent, directly or indirectly, fur their
labors, except in one way. Almost every
day some parent. brother, sister or wife of
some one converted under their adminis
trations send them gifts, as a sort of thank
offering. Daring their two months stay
in New York, they received in this way
about $3,000, the most of it coming to
them anonymously. Of this they u•e
what is necessary for their expenses, and
the remainder they give to weak churches.
missionary enterprises and other religious
objects Moody has a house worth per
haps $3500 iu Chicago,—Sankey has
nothing. They are cared for while they
a're at work by people who prize their la
bors, and these gifts fill out the balance of
their support. Whatever may be said of
the effect of their labor, no one can say
that they are waking any money out of it,
or that their work is not entirely disinter
ested. They are as honest and as zealous men
as the world ever saw.
The New Tramp Law.
The bill passed by the Legislature, en
titled An act to define and suppress va.
grancy, has been approved by the I :overo
or, at.tl it is therefore a law. We publish
below the full text :
SECTION 1. Be it enart,fl, &e That the
following described persons are hereby de
clared to be vagrants :
I. All persons who shall ualtwrolly re
turn into any district whence they have
been legally removed without brin;ting a
certificate from the proper authorities or
the city or district to which they belong
stating that they have a :settlement there
in
IL All persons who shall refuso to per
l:irtn the work which shall be allotted to
them by the overseers of the poor as provided
by the act of June Thirteenth, one th3n
sand eight hundred and thirty six, entitled
"An act relating to the support and em
ployment of the paor."
111. All persons going about trim door
to door, or placing themselves in streets,
highways or other reads to beg or gather
alms, and ull other persons wandering
abroad and begging who have no fixed
place of residence in the township, ward
or borough in which the vagrant is ar•
rested.
IV. All persons who shall c.lne from
any place without this Commonwealth to
any place within it, and shall be found
loitering or residing therein, and shall fol
low no labor, trade, occupation or business,
awl have no visible means of subsistence.
and can g,ive no re:ls,n,:bl! account of
themselves t;r their business in such pile..
SECTION 2. Ifany person shall b' found
offending in any town-hip or place against
this act it shall and may be lawful for any
constable or police officer of such township
or place, and he is hereby enjoinr , tl and r!
9oired on notice thereof given him by any
of the inhabitants thereof, or without sneh
notice, on his own view, to apprehend an d
convey, or caused to be conveyed, such
person to a justice of the peace or other
committing magistrate of the county. who
shall examine such person and shall com
mit him, being thereof legally convicted
befi,re him, on his own view, or by the
confession of such offenders, or by an oath
of affirmation of one or more creditable
witnesses, to labor upon any county farm
or upon the roads and highways of any
city, township or borough, or in any house
of correction, poor-house, work house or
common jail, for a term not less than thir
ty days, and oct exceeding six months,
and shall forthwith commit him to the
custody of the steward, keeper or superin
tendent of such county farm, house of cor
rection, poor house, work house or corn
mon jail, or to the supervisors or street
commissioners and overseers of the poor
of the respective county, city. borough or
township, wherein such person shall be
found, as in his judgment shall be deem
ed most expedient. The said justice of
the peace or committing magistrate in
every case of conviction shall make up and
sign a record of conviction, annexing
thereto the names and records of the dif
ferent witnesses examined before him, and
shall by warrant under hand commit such
persons as aforesaid : Prorided, Any per
son or persons who shall conceive him, her
, or themselves aggrieved by any act, judT,-
own! or ii.•teriitio.sti , n .•: let; j ca..... • t
th- or a:.iernian in 31.1 neern•-r:
the excention r al/ 3 , 1 Inpy iprral f - P
the present or n•••.tt zeneeal qttartcr • 44t,tr.
of the rity or roonty a triviric• rti••trahie
notice th• r,of. wit i•e • r ler. tii r
shin he final
SErrtuN .f
the ett. , t4 , l::in .•r •.1 iii ~eh
:a•zrint to ma'a - ,•• 1,6:e eif, • -•4 pr• , 7i4e
vt , ,rk for er,ry .rn.rvt•••.i ier
thiA art , 39•11
Li,t3l , v ; an•l -a!o•n•-: r Itto,r!
cannot provile.l in the p 1... • to irthieit
any nirui•t-•1. he love
fill for siieb eiPito4l: in or ens ,, .i• ,e- tn.i
.1••elar•-1 to he 1...
Rilil the appr,va! boari nt i r
overserr.;. r
,he po..r. 1, the 0,4 •611 • ~ 1 7 riet
With th Ir , per toots- •
ship. boroir4ii, rite. efyinty. or o , her p.r ;
Plni, to the any Is , 7k toacoie the
!lie , of 1, ..1
work or !it.or Ail be to the prep
er 11-17!it :and eapseity 4ivelt
ra;:rant, an 1 h • .1)3 1 .i w,ertorite , i in
net suit.•ll 11:0'Ire t'ne ve, r ig
in. ati.l the e.uriltoet of the
and Whrn any int 14 eornini:te.l. winder
the pr .v.4i •o= of t!•14 the envtt•lir
erf the .npervi-or. or =tree:. eiAatn-84 ,,, , , ,,, -
an , l ricer-era of the p.ir of arty t,aro.itip,
h•rnipzh, city or rounty. it 41. ti t.e their
fiery prov isle f 4. him r iniforta ), :e !
ing...T (patter.. either 4 .t3r!on S.er.••
or o!h"r rt •
I,ie man: •.e •••••
.hall he tleerne.l to he 3 mi•ieine - iner.
ani the per4on , onvietson
tht•rrof in the proper row! Yeh.sil he 4•••/
tenee.l t., un•ier_:o an iniprisonment f.r
term n tiateee•linz three- months -innl •ri
ply t fine nit earee , iin:: one hnnfirol
lars. either or horn. in the riiseretion
the court.
Sr.criov I If an:: per.on not beinl
the minty. township. or place in which
he nAmilly lihN or has his home_ +hall ip
ply to any director. ,vver.ver. znarritavo
cotunlis4imer of the pw,r of any cninty.
city. bor..twh. town-hip statin.z
that he is dcsirions t.. retarn to he, home.
but ii p. or an.l hi 4 n. ,t the t
so, the sii.l prird!an.
or c•tnnti,esl. , rser of the poor may eilip!oy
or let not !inch po—r perwin to labor at
!Joule p! C. , . IN! by client Ark—red.
aryl at soeh w:l•_;e4 34 01 3 3 .er T a to thorn
just ; and when in the opinion qf quaid di
reet•ir. orerieer. elmigglippoe
er of the pnor 4neh rtion 01311
h:tve e irrs , ti a AtttEeient torn. •a:.I iireetnr.
overicer. nr ~,n msi ..ion.T th,
poor shall. with th.• m in
with .iieh the r. from rho- terrt._
ury i,f th , :, county. city. bnrwrzh. t. , ‘Prehrp
or fli,itrict as they trily think reamievattte.
num! such perion t r -turned to his
home. whether in ch.:. :-Itate or -i!..wSicrw:
Prw-ide,/, That ..xpett-e not
cceil twenty
SE:c. 5. titat tin, rlL+tn Iran enitieiians
of ~ u ch TagTant m ty at di.teretion di.rhstripe
s‘telt va.zrant at any tint, within the terns
Ott vonst”itinent upon not h•. 4 thin ten
day= g. u l be'navi .r. upon .atoiraelery
‘ , N,urity tit it h.. , 1 1.-61 !He n•!e. Km! 3 eharot!
upon t!t.. pu:.!ie ..vit.l:u one 5e Lt. :roma thee!
date of A ueit
Sve G. That the eo.trtty e
in every e.unty in witieh then. •n.si: ;kg
:4t.tifieient r 4,fe
,)r Mitt ea nn.kr ::1•4 .rt. ar".:
the r.. , :onntnealtr on of tgrin l jury the
COU n y and approval by the e.tvt
hereby • , !LlN.Wereti ant r.-tirstrei 5t.,4,.
snitable pc, , vision by batidinv qtr e3e..
are. , : 1 1 1 ,, r , : 14, That the expense. , re- !Se
same shall not ex:e...l the amount iiei by
the zranfl jury.
PIE NO.
Site. 7. That fiir each arr-4. hear:Jr.; or
e•irntnitnient ua•ier thi.4 act.
shill bs paiil nit thd ciinnty treasnry r.i
the einnusittinz mazistrate an.! Are-s
nrikinz sue' arrest nr enairnitmwst th.-
szviie fevA ant rn:lelxr, ?WI, print-61,4 b
6w fnr like services in •'t her els•-• is,
rest. he:iriw. a&ui etanstaistaamat 272,1
pers rn shall be 'let:tined beyon I the eerie
of his commitment by r•asou of his :Tishri
ity t th • cost of his arreikt. he,ros t r
an.l commitment. bnt c,rthw,th te
l'achar::eti by the officer in wine entsebily
he may be. .lny wilui refusal 1.• m a k.•
sueh arrest on the part nf any e..lt.tahle
,r police ()Seer shill subject btu, to a pen
au ! ~t• ten , lonars, t.) he m 446110.1 3 .1 pe n .
aiti , ‘ ire by law eoleetab:e. and *hail be
into the poor fund of the .1:::net aft
which the officer relittlr,
: 4 EO. S That all poor houses. aiutr h
and other ii , :tees proviiied f-r the !,:esipirrz
rlyi lre her,hy try hr
work hilts,. fir the plarpossio of this bet ;
and is hereby maile the, dairy of the emelt.-
ilians of such buildings to provitin it sr*
for surh vazrants. aryl to e,intrei th , ow
wink ther , in wir , a anlr n .1 titan sit
hours a shy.
Sr. , . 9 ; rhat th , it any v.t- •
grant, upon his disehar4e, and at Isis re
guest. shall r.iye hire a certificate of tits
charge, whi,h shall exempt him frnet any
furthor arr-st for vazrancy fir a period 4'
five illy.. open r mrlitloll that he shill 'elm..
the county wher , in confino,ii. And the
4111 etisrolian he7eliy authniesti ro
give, in his ili. , eretion, to seen ,liSett3r.r.4
reason alit! l'Un 41f M.inej ..qt ha.
or out .if th! tr-isitry ..r th.• town
ship. Imio.-ntrzit. riry 0r r t.. •lefr-ty
hi. 1••nt• n z rh • -
SFr. itl. Thit it' . 4 p-vrt. f
ittc. , n,k;,.tent henr.vith b. in.l .h.• ••invo
hen.by r..rwa'r.!
C:-e of the Ear.
To hi. treati.-eon •• riy4;nolirzy " Mr
Hinton is vice emphatic in his elgiet
make nwler4tanill that the passage at
the ear does not re l .:ire rie.oninl by no.
Nature undertakes the tick. and is a
healthy ear does it perfectly. lier memos
for cleaning' the the was. whieb
dries np into thin se-ales, and peals off. awl
falls away impercepaly. in heath the
pas:axe of the ear is 'eV..r dirty. but an
attempt t clean it will infallibly make it
no. 11 aching the ear with soup awl water
is lxtd; it keeps the was moi.t. when it
on . .tht to beN)nie .lry awl scaly. awl makes
it alwnrb dust. But the nenst hartfel
thin!: IA the introdnetion of the
screwed up and twisted around. This
procecilinz irritates the paseozr. and
preia-ies down the arms aml flakes of ski.)
upon the membrane of the tympanum,
producing pain. inflamtnatine. and denfatin
Th e ', w il l ing shoubi only extend to the
outer ,4nrriee. as far as the Gazers
reach.
Mrs lemonade iy nne of the beet mos
dies in the world fi)r eoid. It setts primp&
ly and efrectivAy. and has no unplessnat
after effects. One Jenson. property "sires
ed, cut in e!ice74. pat with envie and err
ered with half a pint of boilintr wirer.
41111.-
TV! hot and r Cricket
r
eogib Oh+. rem. some, ..seem. 4 awe
of .- . C.
SMIS W
- qt.-ur I -win" am/ .4.4. W ow -.or
mr. •. -now , •+.144 4•4•4. 16. - •
114 • 11•1•.». it or or I•• lime •
*lre ' awe •-•.46.• • 4
S t •••• takor , tilmo som4 fir mod& yet
11P1 .ivippivet rs.s 1.1 1.-4 1111/ ep..Nllpaw vies aloe
'1 oral 11. •••I oe go • Vigor,. se,
ff *tin at' 3s. Nei efts.
fo•-• mike Arnsilbifti • p.m
•.: • I rip,
.t
il. -A1.11.4 "11.1.. •••••••••* 40. ......
SW - swat. -•••••• wer., .4
• - *VV. 10 • elf IVO VI, Web./ *V
I' yr IMO" . ‘o sa-a
aa-Vla. aame Oa I ombe **OM
✓ yr, wawa
4•••• •Nr••• ow* roar. owe,
Tow* -u•Miwt trotttY INN ••••11••
0.1 awn, itrowl pro.
T yr, -ad fl••• • .14. ••••••••••• • ,••••
,%—••• '1•••••••• a,r• 1...•
Goias to Os DINO' It.
1 11100 Pit
Thoro'• •,rtitow Posy w passasse
Avipial, tits fig ••••ftwaw -11 At. ie.
r-owspb..r. erreosse. peppr•-seost. sea 1.0.
:ior•• -I, g T •itirsTo r..E Wearer saw se.is%
Aye. im sirfinlPT
.1 1 rri I Item. kir %war it 4.04 ".•
i • • ir•Si-• •iK etitbr
it ,ro.f ...41 nue •iriPionsinr,
• in 0,•• 0. 1 ..rw0r: i 464iit twee saw
r ve sit-st p4irr..4
Prw •braes 4 , 4 isittief r. 41. r00 di..4
3.lin ' , Le 11** ml 4 Iri• sir eb, r
• 4.: ',squib Ars. sot A-treft-sos tboseg .
Joel ,Itiorr. sitied be. lose +OS for
Or &mites_ it Asoser. Ass
tonth gyms+ if 1 seems • -
bed (ve wet . A' SOUK is s
vt to croosoisi pa dor summa: is
t shim* a prairi ;4.8411111.11Mia Ise
• ramp that sale sty haw .sand op. .1.4.1
x~srtr • ..rt 1r tattiest pens shoe tl.& de
wake Iss ;Iwo* it the Wry. sod slam 41stses
sod 11;14 I
met. easter.. o'4 1111161187;
liar's 1111 tho stri !Ad 44 am( boys
--zits pls. I rot ,tif ill.a akar e. wry
*Wood sperear4. WA my "i' •
the .IM. ss.i 11 word. ss4l:ts. sore
srlse•l .‘thee the shirt treat seigibinsts
&Jo': , its. bytes their bibs per Ivy brim
seri hr.rt-'sera awl b....h.-07.01PINIPT* wow
rostswi -an 'the. tfrotet. I win hoer's*: s
stenaz , r... so.* 1.1.4 I .11read..4 b•
a.y rip•th ost f 3-e oi;e1 ../0 sod time f
ri;rnie.4 sat In I eloper-4 my s a ri "eat?
time. is ..se srterwe.n. and Is lad I sew
The •lorstist was :lad tr. st. TO, 0. awl
!hat if he e 4.1 Ong t 1.4 ling !nosh omit
with.o“ hisrtin: se 11.• •
11111..111. It rig elater as lb.
tab d, sod
e•meitsde-i hot r 0; p 511.4. f *weed
hat s pi'p eased qr. sna 1
rtnelse.l ifteit 11. tripl 6.4 i s
;t ; perhap• =t di.l ant ref rigid* st ..:.
byte b.. e"osi.l ht:l us* aerre 111 ass
flittert h. r 4 stis rn the eherr ?Nape b+
o.ftly :n.ested s knee. Ind eve salty A.
rams 1 10 , 4.-1 irst stt.l -aid *s ,
him. Nrat sir 1.4 B.—immf !h.
alert*: a-a 211 the psi. there Indio 4
He shaily ; ,ant me beset add ire Bs
swath, 104 then he .I;ppel :a his fissesep.
awl erseel throw retool et fonds. -411b
is.r.1..;,•1•40tburthsine.w... I Ras
he • ply as; str-rtr,-, • • • Ile
•he ::4stept.
iet.l :See !te rust ilef. efseenii
hest t it ....en, we if he-t-i -.veer
i t.. .1* zrippl+4 NAN.. Itiello.d.
3-.1 Ant h. 11.44 is? tiN 41 mew. soil
4,1.1 -Thyr.• I rye** r' ." 0.1 IC•ri 10 1
riv , rit To-ippe , l .I..s+* mm 4 SIC." ,
4ira. I r.eit_v-4 lons tee s, : I bibi
Ism to wait, amr hussy iris beer Ihe ann.;
I ht* .1 Iv= w•note. I 416.4 bra& witS
#l . ,rristi4s to thin bier,. err Kra-.
tPuo:ht Oat blare s 4szve rsitS istoos to $
b-in, tn•t it owe 1r • 11.
WV* rI • 5.• air. I Irv. !Psi,"
Lulicress Segni, en a Pulpit_
: 4 —isais :wrst.an .1 , • r :ZIP •
• LII :
a Ner v ri a , mire 4 Th.- ibmit
Nemenord 'aith.hr .rirei.tir ffi moos
•-
pr-..----641 I sok, the 'Li a 'Amit...A
in.ll r. • :mat rirlYe ler,* oir•sit
qfrlis !hat 11 , 4 , Ifro•art••• iittprath
horr,w,gr i eigris A pe eationser aieseart. .
Al lees the press-her eris. 4
Cathe.;i.-4 •140 five ?bet sill ill ker
'twit jet., • in, pet. sod et sleet l evil yes
is W 4 tine amt' tier Print ta,SO re snip ..se
the lent esartrsersea sae tevrell...
sari he e• ernrit the eseebeis elms tit/beet
fell Irmo it. N 4 Ear teem tar pipe then.
e l s see %reerw-sis. sir. rasa s sr-cr. wryest
istit ht.. t ohne h. breb.see. tr. Lie
t!te sp to the pries. whs. perslber.
4.34 sever errs ear dews ewes 4 Sow
Fir lire. Tee wet* , at doe' 1 6 8 308 1 k
.erni am he sensentedl the 'invest 4 the pa
pa step* the elierzjeses immense , ' bag 1111.41
:Its* the Devil nazis sneer sr.' take leine
if w!Ess h.- eseel s=tint the Old evasive..
sal uric ntr Utfloweilb tbilt OMe
pre seher hewed hes liniessem..
t , iresestr r' .& els s hissed 4.pscs
3L-: writ 'pipe imbue.:
- emir at !ties sith !verse. sod.
heiirviel that Ise v , vl4 le tee *Pin ja.
s r in t b ins Assess Steseese, hr
n.st. ir:th tnivabierit snore is us
set-r rl. pur.thle tt".st th.eme luny he c.—'
;wit, the 01.1 esthestie. ' Timm
thee seem' r.. es if she .lepet beet
!See .fiespiersro.4. it nos esperli's
srprnaehesz Th~ pergeereer•e beim me ,
..et breve awl. fell it :eerie hr e.asi,i
: • 'Thor. are s.sey pr•ple
the fig r0h.....-4 7' Dinshirr: leas
re •nl.l nelliew h •ire...l skit
br• liner r r.• ti..ef this the ..hers
eines at bowl bessieeisez heusset, re the
very Fps" et lersose part: y •
the MIT'. 304 lardy In the reiree .- sr'-•r
Le erl.-.1 ust Wl y eh! Devil miss 5...1
tat* :f ail the OW carboorsee Ire ore
better thee ire are The arerbleil pe , e4
fainted frau the frix be semi es rrisnesi ? -r
emir time that be reiterre.4
No Rose Mime Plans.
T1;12 - z 1 ire pretty ilent7Sirl :A i.
w •rin. e. tar at &mei ',weave gnaw wed
belie aw heierve that use awj less
have their intrastate /tot. ',Are ire Mole -
en. serum sre trenhimi •ee Stride are ir.4
at. awn any everywhere Pww 10111”1 . 11
wives owry hemmer tbr , how's
er 41. roe 4 Awes eseinied wish pass?
or they t-en c Aiwa in brr» budge Sob
mew'. wine rw marry beemenie slew prompre •
lint to see she lases pnesere. gar bpaisor
seensimily Snob ftvit bow a perry emits se
trainmen Wont the prey herprne..w mom
grammiss's inf• wrerliebt dank sr hemmer
their help tames sp ssr 4.4".
erne limier.. let *web alia wits Nip irons
near anderefeebre. ream* 'sq. new awn;
serruir. ells aim /he erne 4 saw .se
falirrres iw our two *we 1•11111111 j oie
a Sir sport, men sr. JD Timone," sm. ...wen
Sart
NO 21.
„ 0.,,r.