IW WW w&?BEm-t($ : C" mrz:rr- ii te, THE IjANGABTEK DAILY INTELLIGENCE!, SATURDAY, AUGUST 11. 188G. .vr. ia - -."-s ;? : V I n? : 'ft iff, te'-i .-i TWO SUMMER BOOKS. cZ3 x.. r iiicrnHii rv r.in ? tka s - ... . s-a ..tnVBT . ' .. ."----- - - - ,S ta" 40 KtBMMrrmv: -.'r fatatleg and TmnB ............ .. 4; iiiiimalMiniinnam reiiini larrrlac Cbatiia. AMrlM of magazine articles ly Illcliaril k- -rfcMWS n English essayist, whose mas- i.stf&irvef style makes anything that ue may DS?."1 .rf-A ."SU i . . a. -t ..-l a .. .1 lu 1.aa 1SWtt JfS&rt&w te sav meat pleasant reading, have been $'; .fathered Inlo a volume under a tltle tliat Ills ,"tit,.-i'", thn nunn wnll. " The Onen Air." The book la epened with a chapter that will deter mini & reader Ireln looking farther, for evident ti given la every line that the Au Au teor 1 trying very hard te asy something pretty. He aucoeeds beyond a doubt, for the portrait el Balnt Gnlde la that of a llttle child in a Geld of wheat who has learned the Ian Ian guajre of all nature, and talka with the blrdf, the trees and waving grata? but when ene takes a book for summer reading and llmis It fairy Uie, when net se labeled, and a child child ten fairy tale at that, he Is apt te drop it with out mere waste of his precious American time, Hee docs he willmtu a rare treat, In tbia case at leant, for the sketches that fellow have II the beauty and delicacy of the first with out Its weakness, and a series el word pic tures mere perfect In every detail, and mere truetollfeln KngUnd, It would be hard te find. Ht. Gnlde has a moral In the lessen that the wheat tries te teach that men de wrong te labor constantly for greater wealth Instead of resting satisfied with a little, and giving time te the enjoyment of all that nature of fers. " If your people de net gather the flowers new, and watch the swallows, and listen te the blackbirds whistling, they will never pick any llewers nor hear any birds' song. They think they will ; they think that when they have tolled a longtime, al most all their lives, then they will come te the flowers and birds and be Joyful In the sunshine. Hut no, It will net be se, for then they will be old themselves", and their ears dull and their eyes dim, se that the birds will sound a great distance off and the llow llew ers will net seem bright" Gulde It a beautiful picture, but It Is a pity that It was hung at the entrance of the gal lery ; further in it might have found a better light and the moral el It greater force. Next we come te a group of Kngllah peas ant women returning trem a day's hard labor In the harvest Held ; hard-banded, ragged aud uncleanly samples of the class that In these modern days has replaced the ancient yeomanry of Kngland. Cursed by most bit ter poverty, these people scowled upon the artist as one whose life they thought a dream of pleasure, while theirs had little te relieve unflagging tell. llul their labor has wen them splendid physical development and perfect health, se that In words we bare a glowing picture that is beautiful, because In nature strength and beauty go together. In the evenlug this group Is found the centre of a drunken crowd in an ale heuse. The tragic contrast of light and shadow glves a charm te this " golden brown " painting that proves it a masterpiece. There is a sunny chapter en the Hrltlsh wild llewers that suggests Jehn Hnrreughs in the weed and Held lore, but the splendid Illustration that our magazines have given te Mr. Hurrettghs' work Is net needed here. We have the pictures all In words. "The stream arranges the sand in the shallow in liars, inhnile, tlxed undulations : the stream arranges the sunshine In successive flashes, undulating as lr the sun, drowsy In the beat, were Idly closing and unclosing his eyelids for sleep ;" this is the light reflected en the vault of an arch by the stream that Hews beneath it. " The smallest of the pencilled branches of the bare ash tree drawn distinctly against the winter sky, waving lines one within the eiher, yet lollewing and partly parallel, re producing in the curve of the twig the curve of the great trunk." Frem mariceld te violet, from a snreadlnr? oak te the faillnc leather of a swallow, the artist passes easily and skillfully until the reader's pleasure is mingled with wonder at his skill. Then be cemes across a passage mm versus be cieseiy upon oatnes as te nsK the marring of It all. Mr. JetTeries becomes ecstatic- ever the eyes or a herd of cattle, tbelr great beautiful eyes which need but a tear or a smile te make them human." Without tnese such eyes, se large and full, seem above human Hie. ei'es of the immor tals 1" Hew marvelleus the inspiration of gen lus that can enable a man te compare with the eyes of the immortals the thoughtless eyes el a placid cow engaged In the manufacture of ruilk I Next Is a plcture or ' Sunny Hrigbten," with Its crowds or visitors and idle tisher men, all living In the open air and winning from it the health that makes the women of lirighten the most beautiful el Kngland. He give us brilliant pictures of them lu the strong white sunlight peculiar te this town, which he calls a Spanish town in Kngland, the Seville or Hrltaln. " Very bright colors can be worn in summer because of this pow pew erful light ; the brightest are scarcely no ticed, ler they seem te be In concert with the sunshine " Aud through all this are constant references te the sea, blue in the ligjit or the sun or Rrand and dark In stormy weather, the salt breeze that blows from ever It, and the white sails el the fishing beats. ' The beauty and mystery el the ships and the magic of the bea." There is sarcasm and humor, tee, in this artist's pen, in splte of his admiration for the yes or cattle. When it was arranged that a military band should play en the Hruns wick lawn it became the fashion te step car riages in the read and listen te it. Fre quently there were Cirrlases four deep, whlle the gale blew the music out te sea and no ene heard a note. Still they sat con tent." He walks thre'igb a plne weeds and listens te the humming of the wasps as they gather turpentine among the highest branches. He notes the mysterious markings en the wines of butterflies. "The antiquity of Kgypt Is nothing te tbese signs they date from un fathomable time. In them the sun has writ ten his commands ana the wind Inscribed deep thought." " Sitting in the garden after a walk It Is pleasant te watch the eve swal swal lews reeding their young en the wing. The uuug uiru ioiiewh tne old one j then they lace each ether and stay a moment in the air, while Uie Insect reed Is transferred from beak te beak ; with a loud uote they part." His portrait of an English farm laborer is Imply horrible, but evidently drawn from 11.8, and we are glad te pass from It te the mere pleasant chapter en the bathing t lirighten. OCKAN UAT1IINO IN KNni.AND. "Te day the ground swell was mere active, the waves cioser tegether, net having had time te forget the force of the extinct gale. Yet the tea looked calm as a mill pond, lust the morning for a bath. Along the yellow line where sand and pebbles meet, there steed a gallant band, In &yn.ViD.1if?Im8' fas!ng th6 waler- Wke the IE?! leSlena who were ordered te charite tojeoean and gather the shells as spoils of Zft ! 00,h? Beamlng in purple and f5j?,(S.tende tue'r front rank-thelr light- rtoEmetall0.ner,.t,,yara-alenK " s'"i Seme win H'iBly !.some tau atu "lender; ir lfe.8enUmattltude, even in the r It were with a blew of thTcam?ran,as Beou.phet()g.phy-when,bme'g', well was en them, and, heavens, lih.t. change! They disappeared. "An ?! i6Cfaere' iwilly a feet yonder jUelsTs floated en the aurface like ea weed, uutbed. Hy they were gene. The whole rink, from nd te end, was overthrown s mere than that! ?.TwJ,.e,lmed' bi,ned' lnrl in water like ltareal'a army In the lted sea. Crush I l" had come en them ilka mmmt.i.. t.. t'k St?? cl?ar' " lutifully colored, ae cool V-c JSJ. "rSl!h ? tad "truck their delicate 5- SSShf. inotei weight Down . Jfme.rn7.iir """" " u with a shot i2itStU,,.,lfun' Down "a0 went, frant- . !2wJtuh'l2gra?p,lntt ulesrepej (SJ, W,J water driven Inte her ncetrila, Kf? erc Inte har threat, choking wmt DM, with the maiM - Wer overhead and the an. V,, 9masn& the beach, each pebble lriavlng Its own mr tlcular bruise, anil the suspended sand filling the eyes." "Then the wave left her, and shoaweko from the watery nightmare te the bright sun light, and the "hissing faun as It subsided, proneat full length, high and dry llke n stranded wreck, l'erhaps her bend had tapped the wheel et the machine Inn friendly way. 1 fancy 1 see ene slip limply te cover; but the main Inxly rose manlully, and picked tbelr way with dellcate reet cm the hard, hard stones Inck again te the water, again te meet Inevllabla fata" Helving en the accuracy el the abeve and the tales of travelers, we hardly kuew whether te commend the pluck or condemn ttje felly of the lair bathers of Great Hrltaln. Te A iiierlcan bathers who are blessed with llrtn sandy beaches, and are exempt from the miseries or bathing machines, the suggestion ofadiplnthe ocean under the dltucultlea described would be treated with contempt. Hair the plrasure of bathing is In the fielics en the lieach, races te warm the bleed when ever chilled by the water, and we can hardly imagine any punishment net described in IMnte's Inferno, that could excel In mlery a Iwth in the ocean en a beach of rough stones, with bathing machine within striking distance ofyeartirad. "The rope stretches as the men at the capstan go round, and heave up the machines ene by ene before Uie devouring tide." . . . "It Is perfectly comfortable (watching them, he means), perfectly Jelly and exhilarating, n prorerable spot te any ether. A sparkle or sunshine lu the breakers, a dazzling gleam from the white ream, a warm sweet air, light and brightness and cbampaglnness ; alto gether lovely. The way in which people He about en the beach, their legs this way and their anus that, tbelr bats ever tbeir eyes, their utter glvo-theuiselves-up expression of attitude is enough In Itself te make a reason able eeing contented, oeouy cares ler anybody, they drowned Mrs. Gruudy long age." New this last applies te all genuine American seaslde resorts, and we can heartily congratulate our transatlantic rrieuds en the mutual murder of Mrs. Grundy. Shehasne business near the broakers. With steady reading Mr. Jelleries becomes tiresome, and tbese essays should only be read as they were first published, one by one with long Intervals between. It is a "book for a lazy summer day, when it docs net matter whether ene drops asleep lu the read ing et it; but ler a man whose life has little excitement in it, aud who therefore wants pleuty of the Imaginary article,there has j ut been published another book, that we will warrant as full of bleed and thunder as any dlme novel; but at the same tlme hUterically accurate and ably written. We allude te KOUKHT LOt I STKVENSON'S KlU.VVl't'I D. There is nothing very startling about the plot of this story,ue novelty in the Incidents, or even In the characters chosen, but the book hai had an enormous sale In England, and we predict an equally large sale en this side of the ocean. Davie, the hert Is a Highland lad, who sets out Irein home In search of a fortune, his lather having died; and the climate having become unhealthy for him ever slnce his unfortunate presence at the assassination of a man who had proved false te the clan. He gees te see an I'ncle Kbenezer whom he finds living the miserable lile of a miser in Uie halt ruined family mausien of the Heuse of Shaws, and who receives his nephew with scant courtesy. In fact his conduct is such as te arouse Davie's mhiI mhiI ciens that all is net right, andene night when there is a thunderstorm a gathering the old man tries te murder him by sending him up the uncompleted stairway of a tower, but a flash of lightning reveals the danger jut In time te save the here from a fearful plunge te death. At his reappearance unharmed the miserable Kbenezer taints and Davie proceeds te arm himself and then te lock the revived Kbenezer In his room. Then ames-agecemes te the uncle the next morning trem a sea captain, with whom he has a venture, and be easily persuades Davie te go with him te the pert where the vessel lies at anchor, that th-v might see a lawyer,who would explain fimlly matters te Davie. Once at the pert It seen happens that Davie, who had never sen a ship, is decoy ml en beard of the brig Cove nant by Captain Ho-easen, his uncle's pirt ner. lint lust before this happens be learns from an Innkeeper that his rather was the rightful heir of the Heuso of Shaws, and that It was commonly reported that Kbenezer, who was a younger brother, had gained the pro pre perty by foul means. Divie grows wary and keeps his uncle always in Mght, but as seen as he reaches the ves-el he is knockel sense less by a blew from behind, aud only revives when tke vessel is out at sea. Revives te find that he has leen kidnapped and is en his way te the Carellnas te be sold as a slave. Many a white man was se sold Inte slavery in America In these early days, aye many sold themselves te pay the cost of the pasge ever llefere we leave that precious uncle we must quote a bit of Mr. Stevenson's de.-H.-rlp-tionerblm. Divle comes down te his first breakfast In the house of his father's and finds "the table laid with two bowls aud two horn spoons, but the same siugle measure or small teer." "l'erhaps my eye rested en this particular with home surpriie, and perhaps 1113- uncle observed it, for bespoke upas If in auswer te my thought, asking me if I would llke te drink ale ter me he called it" "1 told him that such was my habit, but net te put hlmseir about" "Js'a, na," said he. "I'll deny you nothing in reason." "He fetched another cup from the shelf, and taen, te my great surprise, Instead of drawing mere beer, he poured an accurate halt from one cup te the ether." "There was a kind or nobleness In this that took my breath away; ir my uncle was certainly a miner he was ene or thatthoieugb breed that gees near te make the vice respectable." On beard Hie brig Davie is terribly abused by the drunken mates and crew, but at last, In a lit of drunken passion, ene or the mates murders the halr-witted lad who had acted as cabin boy for the elllcers, and Davie, who lanes ins piace, is ueiier treated in niomery el the tragedy. One stormy night the brig runs down an open beat, and all Its crew are lest save ene active little man, who clings te the bowsprit and la brought en deck. He proves te be a brave little Highlander, who is latving money iinrntuecians te their Irlends in the land of France. He Is both well dressed and well armed, but he makes no secret of his mission, and in bargaining who Captain Hoseason te be set ashore in l'rani or Scotlaed, he displays a belt of geld. The captain determines te rob and murder him, ijui luu umn, wjjij.su jjainu is Alien lireCK, happens te lie in the olllcer's round house, where It would bedilllcult for a number of men te rush lu and overpower him. Davie overhears them plotting the attack, and gees at ouce te prepare him ler it Allen Is as lull or light as any Texan or our day could be and lie keens the deer with his geed bread, sword, whlle Davie defends the skylight with an armful et pistols, and together thev conquer the crew. 'then the brig founders In a gale oil the Isleel Mull, but or course Davie and Allen lincic are among the few survivors. Davie, who is of the Campbells aud for the King, finds himself in many a tight place among the followers et I'rince Charlie; liuta button rrem Allen Hreck's coat, given him In acknowledgment of his gallantry iu the fight en the ship, serves as a passport In his journey across Scotland. The trials and the misery that the High landers endured in theso brave days, when they were se firmly loyal te the Stuarts; their never broken spirit, their courage and their tierce revenge; all these elements are worked, most skilfully and pewerlully, into a Btery that rivals in interest and his. tene accuracy any or the Waverly romances. It may be said that It Is butastery for boys, and that will be true, but it is well, In sum mer woatber, rer us te renew our Iwyhoed by a glance at these rough early days when men imperilled life for something else than geld, and life was mere full of healthy pleas. ure, rer It was passed inore in the ejien air. And this is the moral ei both these books : that men of our day should see mere of uaiurtJ. " Who can pilnt llke naturu ilnSS'like herl,OUSt' '""la IU guy cri,attun. Or cau it mix thum' with that matchless skill ? Alter reflection we say it can't I I)urle AmeiiB the Indiana. The Crews are further advanced in civill civill zatlen than any ether tribe en the continent Se rar have they progressed In the ways of the whites that the yeuug bucks and even the middle-aged fellows allect dandyism. There are many dudes among tbese ioepie. bt?. yt?ung ,?n,jan8 ter halrm front, and et It fall gracefully u long braids down the back. In summer, especially ir the weather i,Je,!7i10'-lh8."' wear no clothes te JfflU .f. ex.c?,"K a breech-cloth or clout men?di"b?Ut tUe leiDa- 'm 0re60" arrange! went is in some cafes bespangled and us handsome as the trunks went by a clrcSs Performer. T -.1.1 . .,... H. "" liens meypalnt their bed STirSSSm' lYtt colem and ww no end of eagle'" featberi Kverybuck has a mue case studded wuh brass nails In which are contained naint feathers, a looking glass; and a Tyarietv et breech clouts. The maiden, wear aaert of !!f?H.t.an(i.,r? Metner "uulMU-d costumes. hiii . vJiTir. ::iTrrl " W WW TWO VIEWS OF IT. riHtexa vf.st. avuvhti.vk ( ii rutiKsr i'ui.vm or e.iKnr.riti.v. Hntvn Ynung Weman Saw tl, Wlm Hail (1st Uiit unit Drintril Cavalier; nml linn Her Mrt Mutter el fact A1111I Olil Net See II. One of the clever articles In the current number or the ffmific .VenlMi is entitled "Six Visions ef.St Augustine," Ha. It will be read with special Interest by people who have been te Flerida, and who knew hew dlil'erently an experience there may be re ported without any intention te tell an un truth. The story Is told In six letters from dillerent writers te the same person. The following, selected from them, Mill atl'erd 11 fair Idea of the article Kls. 1 nt. J 1. V,ri .1Vf. Marenrrt Ethrrtljf .lill't'irfl (.r .Vnr Yerk lift j te Mrs. ltulut llill, .IniJuier, .V.il. Sr. AiefsTlM:, February Ji Your letter, my dear friend, has Just ar rived, and 1 instantly sit de 11 te give you my frankest opinions of St Augustine. In the first place the climate Is most dlsagroe dlsagree sble. 1 knew thev tell you it Isn't, but It seems te be a prlneFple of the 1'lerldlans net te tell the truth. The main Industry or the state Is deceiving strangers. Yeu read In the newspapers of the weather we found last mouth. I thought we should perish. My room had a fireplace, anil Kvwdnn's had a stove- -which smoked. My dear, I had te sit wrapped, up In furs, with my feet en the hot het water bag. tooling, rer all the world, just like theGreely party. There was net a sign of steam, or furnace, or any ether kind cf war in tli, except stoves and fireplaces, iu the house, aud the halls were like Greenland. 1 always had te put en my bonnet and cloak te go down te the parlor. Well, their oranges are all rreen, and I think most of the trees are gene, tee, though they pretend they are net And you uoed net think you will get lovely tropical fruit, for you won't nothing but e tangos, and they are either stile t picked before the frost 1 or hall frern. They are rank polseu ; but what de the-m greedy Augustine care that ue are losing our health eating their ihMi lentlal Trult T I expected te revel in deli cious figs dates, bananas Japan plums pine apples alligator i-ears, guavas and all the ether things lhoe remam-ers that write the Flerida circulars pretend you arp going te luveina "semi-tropical climate." I even had visions or eating bread-fruit One man said it grew in Flerida, and I thought It might as well grew In St Augustine as any where ele. Well, my dear, there is noth ing, nothing in this wicked world but peer erauges. Sometime, it Is true, for a few dsys you can get some mean, green little Nassau bananas and once two pineapples strayed ever from the ame place. 1 aw some coceanuta In the pod ( I suppose they call It a pod; If they don't they ought te), aud I asked the man if they were fresh. He said : ' Well, yes'm, pretty fresh. I get 'em 'bout two months age. They ain't for eating, exactly : people like te take n home te snow." There's thellt unless you call peanuts rrult And I think it perfectly ri diculous 1 Hut te return te the climate : all January was b"rrid. Alter the cool we had weeks e'f rain and reg. Tnere Is a great deal el fig here, and a great deal or rain ; and when it isn't rainy or foggy the wiud blows a gale 1 really never saw such a tempestuous placa It gees without spying that you can't walk. My dear Helen, don't delude yourself with any notion or walking here! Figure te ynnreir streets without a vestige or side walk, unless you choeo te call a little rag ged, humpy ruin el concrete, about a root wide, a vestige. It certainly Isn't anything else, and usually there ln't even that They say it is a remnant et the old Spanish pave ment Probably, or the Mound Huilder '. The whole town is built en and mixed with sharp little shells, which cut into your shoes anu nearly urive you irantlc TUls is ankle deep everywhere. e don't walk In St Augustine : you wade ! And the dust Is something dreailluL Hut you wouldn't want te walk, anyhow. The streets are se narrow that ixslestrlans have te retire into the shops when two carriages pass each ether. Yeu always have te walk single file, se as te be ready te save your lite by dodging into a doorway. Of course they drive the horse, aud especially ride the horses at the top et their speed thee negrees would rather run ever you than net ! 1 suppose It doesn't aiid much te the perils of the street te have 110 drainage, and te see orange skins papers and every ether kind of rubbish flung Inte the streets rer you te tread ever ; but It certainly is unpleasant As te drives : I think the Society ter the Prevention of Cruelty te Animals "ought te forbid driving horses through thee sandy reads I should want te discharge my coachman If he treated my horses se. And there isn't anything but sand and swamp. And right here I may as well rree my mind about tue drUers They are liars rrem the radio te the grave. I paid a colored man four dollars the ether day te take me te Mag Mag nella grove. One of the things I went Seuth te see was magnolias We drove, and we drove, snd we drove. It was het and aandy and dusty, and 1 inade htm go slowly en ac count et the horses Finally we stepped. My dear, there wasjust one magnolia. The driver flicked the tip or bis whip at the lone magnolia. " Dat'.s ft," said he. " Wbere'a Magnelia grove " I asked. " Hat's It," said he," yes'm." ' Hut where are the rest or them 7" " Dey ain't no res'," he replied. " Hut why de they call it Magnelia grove, then ?" I inquired. " ICase of de magnolia," he said. This same man told me that the old mar ket in the plaza was the old slave market and that his mother was sold there ; and it never was anything mere romantic than a flsli market And he told me that 11 scrubby old cemetery, where lie took me for a dollar, was the Huguenot cemotery, when there never were any Huguenots buried In St Au Au gustine ; there were never any Huguenots in St Augustine, anyhow. Wbafs-his-name killed them all belore they get here, and they weren't buried anywhere, joer things. I read all about it in the guide book after 1 get home ; that man was lying the whele while. 1 liave te squander my meney en thorn still, because I can't walk In the sand ; I'm giddy, though I am net young, and I can't walk 011 the Bea wall ; there is nothing but sand and sea wall in Augustine. Yeu ask about features of Interest ; there's a feature ter you an awful structure, hardly three reet wide, without an Inch of railing between you and eternity, or, at least, ruining your clothes One aide is the bay, aud the ether luoiuemnu 01 Augustine, 11 ve feet below. "Oh. that's net iruiph ni a r.11 Vn,,, .,..i...... say - - - . m .m., juui tiuimvn ays; but 1 haven't the llgure for tailing, nd I leave the sea wall te young Salisbury and and my niece. Hy the way, be is a delight tu fellow, and, carre eim, I luncy Euuny thinks se, tee. J Yeu want te ktiowabeutexcursions. Well, the least objectionable is te North Heach Yeu can get ever in a sail beat, ir you aren't seasick and don't value your lile; or you can take a dreadtul llttle steamer (by climbing a ladder and walking a plank), and then preb. able have te wait an hour en the sand In the sun rer it when you go back. There Isn't anything te see but a beech. Then there Is Mataazas, where you sail forever, and are likely te have the wind desert you, and be obliged te spend the night newhere In par tlcular, And there Is a simply fiendish oxcurslen te Anastasla island. Yeu go ever in the steamer at 'east I dld-and when yeti eet ever you see a tramway built en piles with a ditch en either side, and no room te fall out or the car, just merely a few planks rer the horse te go ever. The rails are or weed ami an worn out ; and there Is a decrepit ramshackle old platform en wheels with a canopy, whicli they call a car; and w !. .i.tin mum invalid uorse te urai? it Ol course they leau that car until it creaks and sways in the most awful manner, and then a brutal buy whips the peer herse along that dreadlully unsaru read. All this sick, enlng perll Is te get te the llght-heuse. Then, lryeu like, you can jump into the bayonet bush, aud scramble ever te the beach. Wheu you get back te the shore you generally have te wait an Heur ; but you will have pleuiv te de lighting sandflies. Then, if the tide is out,you will have te escape te the steamer in small beaU halt tilled with water. Ours had no oarlocks, and the man steed up and pad dled with an ear, and didn't knew hew. Actually, I wonder that excursion didn't "hatter my curves entirely. After we were all In the steamer, towing the beats along, that beat swamped swamiied before our eyes. Think if we had all been in it I Aa te places efjinterest, there are some ri diculous llttle city gates (with no wall), au ugly old cathedral, and the fort The tort Is well enough in iu way, but don't you let them show yen the dungeons 1 you nearly break your back crawling Inte the horrid black holes, and you can't sleep all night for thnklncr of the awful mnriu. ti,.. ,?n " .. about cases and akelelena and the Nmnui. loe, my dear 1 1 read about them In the gulde book. In regard le hotels well, perhaps tnui tee particular. Hut 1 can tell yen eue thing, they charge enough te be geed. Prices, generally, are extortionate. "Well, you sis ma'ain," said an honest tradesman te 1110, "no hae lhrH prices: one forenrsoUo, Uie oeple of the town, that's very reasonable 0110 ler the winter residents, that's net se prv high; unit then we make n sjsvlal price ler tt.e rank stranger 1" Yeu will think thev de, If you come. Uastef all, you ask tn advice iilsiut coming. De you remember '' 'i' te the young man about te marry it is mints tee. don't I Your loving friend. .Mahiiaiikt K. M v n hip. P. S. 1 have Just asked Haw den her opinion . and she says that she can't nnd it In herconscience te recommend a ten u whom theyallew"wlId beasts llke them balllgnters" te be kept in yards and te sntm nreund loose in barrel in the shop windows She happened te notice a big one lusi te a pest lu a yard ouce, and ran rer lier libs all the wav Irein King street lethe S.in Marce. Anether time she saw a paragraph In a jwper about Northerners never lea lug without au nlll nlll gater. New- she regularlv leek under the bed for them everv ntglit. "Most like the 'otel's swarming Willi them Ihl worry mo ment, mum," she savs, "in I'.uul lees and bathtub!" Then she gathered her skirts tightly about her with 0110 hand, and poke with the umbrella handle lu the ether, and gives a little scream at cery (Hike. 1 asked her why she screamed, and she said, "Oh, mum, hit's for the ban billies or It ! 1 cau't 'old in !" I fancy H.inden will be as rolleod as 1 te go, and we leave for Charleston next Mon day. Come there InMead. M. K. M. 11. Vm Mat Krmty Afar"! )t .e rence (' (ic-.i , JU.) (a Jrl. Ii,'ut tlilt, Aiulftir, .V.u. St. At ei sum-, Febrtiarv 2i Draw Mrs. Hill, ! knew auntie f writ ing you, and I am sure that she is saying something horrid about this dear, sweet, quaint, lovely old ten u. Se 1 have treacher ously borrow ed her paper, and a veu were se geed as te ask me te write tee, I "am going te de It new, anil send my opinions along by the very same mail ; Iain hoping that yeii will open my letter first. Truly, dear Mrs Hill, Augustine is lovely! The climate Is delicious seu, vet bracing. There Is a geed deal of fog ; but the elicits en the water are se oxquilte that one doesn't regret It but quite the contrary. Mr. Salis bury Is very geed with ills yacht, and takes us sailing se often that mamma and 1 are both in lee with the bay. Fvery day, al most, we have a splendid sea breeze, ami can make all the excursions by sail. I think there I no place like St. Augustine. I feel a though I vere In Spain ami Kngland and America at the same time. It Is mn.t f.ic. natiug and romantic ; and 1 leel as though 1 could never tire it these narrow, winding streets with their runny little shop, where yen can buy alligator" teeth jewelry, and shells and photographs and the dearest mi ni ette hats In the world. Mr. Salisbury accuses me of intending tenpeii a shop, I am buying e many, and svr mamma sighs and wonders hew 1 am ever going t carry them all home. Yeu peak of the walks and ilriaes There is no cud or them. Inthetir-t place, there Is the town itself I send you muiie photo graphs A rn't they perfect horrors" I took them myself. Mr. Salisbury "supplin.1 the human Interest," as he calls it, by putting himself in the foreground. It is quite lus own fault that his hands leek seglgantii'.and that he seems te have three of them in one el the pictures lie would put them out and wave them while the picture was going en. He said that he was representing "one el Mr. Cook's personally conducted tours-being conducted." Isn't he quite tee absurd, sometimes lwish the photographs were geed, though, for the beuse are se pictur esque : built of this .(iieer old coquina kme, all stained and blackened bv lichens with dormer windows and hanging lauvnnte (why they hang, and don't breik down is a pU7zle te me and reefs that de a Imndrisl fautastic things no ether American root due tode twit themselves into gable, project ever balconies step down ami then project, or hop up and inake the reef ler a stde gal lery. New. don't you plne te walk put such houses ? Why, the very nanus of the streets are tempting. King, St .eorge, Hvnelita, Kuna, Spanish, Treasury, Haye, St Francis Tolomato don't they make you think of Menendezand the Huguennts, undtheMoer and the Knglish real-coat marching in, and Spanish siguerita in black lace aeils, and the Seminole Indians and the Inquisition, and guitars, serenading, and every thing else nice and romantic T Aud isn't it inter esting te think that we are walking en the very pavement that the Spaniards made " There are lovely drives all aoeut: aud as rer excursion, they are countless, by laud or sea. New the wild llewers are coming, and 1 rave ever thorn. Yesterday, mamma, Mr. Salisbury, and 1 went out en the I'lcelata read and picked bushels or jasmine. We left the carriage, and get se IntercMetl rind ing thicker and thicker trees you knew hew that Is) that mamma legan te think we were devoured by an alligator, and was in an awful state or anxiety. Hawdeu h.smtn aed te give mamma her notions about alli gators as beasts or prey. Then, there are all the i-ails North Reach has such a nice beach and the most fascinating shells MaUr 17,1s Is weirdly beautlliil, with it ruined rert nnd its associations Anil there is a delightful excursion te Anastisia ( Island. Yeu will laugh when you see the droll little primitive hersecarand ridiculous shaggy white mux that will meet you and take ami ever wooden rails te the lighthouse. There waa such a lead of us, and of course aunt Margie lilted up her voice in behalf of the beast "Hey," I heard her saying, you must'nt whip him. Hew would you llke te b whipped when you were pulling a lead tee lieaay for yen"" Dear aunt Margie, she quite hates the place. She has tried three hotels, and Is new at n fourth. We are at the first or the discarded ones, ami timi it luxu rious ; but when I told her se, she only shook her head sadly, and said, " My dear, you ere young ; you don't dejnd en your soup." She has ber locked bath-tub and her Vienna collee-pot and ail her traps Hawdon gets out the tea things every alternnnn at lriiir auntie collects all the old tabbies she knows and they drink tea ar.d abuse the place! They snub me, and they are tee old rer me te snub them, and it Is enraging. There I ene horrid old frump who is always flinging myagoatme. " What does nineteen knew of the merits of a place T" she says mean ing me. Well, I couldn't knew much less than she does 1 That is awfully m natural I de beg your pardon, dear Mrs. Hill! and I will talk about something else, quick ' Yeu ask about the places of interest. I am sure ene can't help liking the i-ea-wall such geed walking and such a magnlili-eiit 1ew1, and there are some sweet little city gau (you see them en all the preserve cansj, and the cathedral is a Jey; but the host et all is the fort. Isn't it wonderful te think el all that these towers have seen, -hew inm-h triumph and wiiat misery I They were built ej ei jtiuiHin huu capuves, you knew. 1 declare, when I reflect hew cruel these wicked Spaniards were, I take solid comiert iu thinking or De Gourgues, and or hew Drake burned the lertand pillaged the town. I only wish he had burned up old Menendn. in iu Jim picture mat cruei elil thing wheedling the oer shipwrecked Frenchmen Inte surrendering, and then going nil' and drawing that crens in the sand, with bj lance ! And think of theso peer, unsus picious men, with thelr hands tied behind their backs enmiug ten at tlme ; and then just as seen as they reached this fatal mark, the Spaniards stabbing them dead I Yeu will remember that when you walk along the Matanzas beach. Aiatau zas, "Place of Slaughter," isn't it rightly named ? Did you knew that Oicoela was confined in the fort belore they soul him te Charleston T Peer Osceola, I liked his net letting them kill women and children. And that was Hue, tee, about the council, when he dashed bis knife through the treaty, crying "The only treaty that I will make is witi! this I" Hut you will imagine that 1 am r. Dyson's brook, that gees en forever. 1 will step no, I won't, until I tell you Hleui prices I think them very reasonable, when you ceiiHlder hew short the season is, and that there is nothing but the season te li ve en. Who cau weuuer that they make all they can out el us while they have the chance! low please pardon this long elliuleu, and don't let it prevent your coming. Always, dear Mrs Hill, allectlenalelv jeura, KM11.V K. Uwrksh; 1. 8. There are geed riding horses here, and very geed tenuis grounds. Jt Is sinus! ing te watch the game, even If ene dnes'nt play, se 1 mention it Mr. Salisbury is the host player here. U K. u An Opening Fer Mini. "Yeu aay you were in the Union army during the war T" '.'. Yf',?1''1 1 WM f Gettysburg." At Oettysburg T Well, 1 suppese you havpj written a magazlne article about the mistakes of the battle T" " Ne, air, 1 have net," "Why, my dear air, you needn't beg. Yeu are the only soldier living who has tiel writ ten an arucie en the aubject, Why, man w.,v, jvuwv rw, xeu ean 1 A TRIP THROUGH VIRGINIA. I'll KI..I All ItlltllK roc.tiiexT.m AM .1011 X KM I fit 1,117:11. All I111IU11 M'tlli-inrnl In the ll,l llniuliiimt WI1UI1 l'rerres s,n,i- ,, thel'ittiuiintit the U'lCleat He,l .Sl.in nt the I'mtil, Cheap Uimls In Settle tin. Special Uorivspeiiileiu-o of Intilu'm m Wiiiti: HiM-K,Aug.U Kniuaucoke Station is live mile from West Point, and thirty lour from Hlchinnud, en the Richmond ,V Www lile railroad. It take It nme from the l.ir.nefl'Apt HehI.ee, which I close at hand: and It I Just at tills station that my friend James Hays bought 11 larin or one hundred and twelNO acres. 'I be heuse la clenal te the station, and one hundred yard.slnmi a wharr en the Pameukl, which river it overlooks, giving 11 beautlliil view of e.sil passing up and den 11 for a distance et ten mile. Arrangements nre lien being uiade bar establishing n itnllce nt I s . 1 Oi this place thore I a nev bn- '- 11 e ber grew Ing te uy ler it, nnd 11 ie.st but two thousand dollars Iu the low smily ground of the liver Is't Is't tetn lands snect ist.ii. km uml (sunlit are an excellent paying crop, koiiie growing as high as six hundred bushels el I lie former te the acre. wiiKiit: re 1101 vs i.ivni). Jamestown Is but thirty tnllns Irem West Point, and it w 11s lu this erv country that Pocelionta leamtsl In all ber native frtssletn, with the trll of Iter father, Powhatan. Fer this was the stamping ground and hunting park ellh.it chleltatn, and it was probably iu this station et It Hi t this dusky heroine e nobly ami generously -saved the lite of the redoubtable ("apt Jehn, and Indeed tradi tion jsilnts tea large pnng underneath n venerable looking 0.1k a ihe veritable st This Is only in tradition, hula fact et history it was at this place that tlie Kittle or I'.omau I'.emau I'.omau ekec was teught with the Indians et that naiiuv It was ene et the bloodiest battle fought with Uie ntorigiiie by the airly Kng lish settlers ; nnd many wrroliineu llli sides among them 'ing CeL Henry I la lerne, son 1 f au Ivmlisli nobleman, m burial placa t.salmm a mile trem the railroad station In a grove el -ven walnut trees, and marked by a large slab, sirt of the lncrlt lncrlt tieii of which is illegible, but the d.ite or his deith, IiWh, is plainly ir bio. It Is two hundred and threo ynirsslm ethi gillanlyeiing colonel went rerih Irein merry old Kngland te Initie with ,iv.ie for the conquest of n w Ihlernes. and te die in deadly conflict for glury. Hut what wondrous changes liave thesx two hundred year that rolled above Ids unconscious totnb'wreugbt ! Could he tint ivnkti te sne our marvelous country et tesl.iy with Its lxty millions or lreeme'n. its great eliles. Its railroads, tele graph, steamboats electric llgbts.telephenes wonderful machinery, S ttltug guns print ing presses, te say nothing et the wondrous change wrought in the ciuntry by agricul tural industry, would he btlle it was the colonies or Ids day ' TWO imi w 11. 1. v.. 1 s. A iniloer mero te the east of this tomb Is an old Indian burying greiiint It was long s.nce forgotten, but tu building the railroad through here slnce the war a drop cut was made through it, and hundreds of skull bones and larger bone were found. There are two Indian villages some ten or twelve miles trem this point, nn of wlu.-li we visited and talked with some of thvtriliff. They are the remnants of the ouce strong Peii.atans and were calculated te nutn'wr in the time nr Captain Jehn Smith inu-en hundred war riors We find that up te the year Isj) they still preserved their l.mgii.ie.alttinugli at that time they were redm-cd te a lew families and were stationed en lliu reservation they still held. Hut new the languige lias been for gotten, the I ml i in cestuiiiu laid aside and the (syiple live much as ether ssiple would live in the same rircumstjtiiis Their reserva tion contains live liundre I acres ; thy have their own .school and church, are governed by a chief nnd rami tin Ir land in severalty. They preserve many el the ili-'inctlve marks of the Indian, bait-through Tntrrp marriage with ether rat- the purn blend is te be found in but leu t,r th'iu. They live by fanning, hunting and n-tiuig, and s-ein te 19 contented aad happy. Though holding their land in severalty thf-y nrn net allowed tesell it outside of the trit". Thereare many old buildings te Isi s, .-n in n drive through the country, prts,'iiting all the marks of colonial buildings, liih gi'iins, u!i narrow windows red and black I'-.iiish briik put In checkerboard style. v 1 11 1-in 11 ni-iLT i it :,. Notable among tbese is ,.st l'iut church, built in lTlJ. It Is built or bricl. in the Hha of a cress roered with FuglHli slate, and lloensl w itii gray and wbile lile, preli.ibly from thesimnisjuutry. Much of the original weed work has ii.lded te the prm. of years and teeii replaissl by i.--w, but the whole interior of the i-hiiriti Ihais evidnncn te the fact that in ius day it was " seinn church," and no doubt was the place of worship of many or the ancient men and damns whose names liave filled se greu and iuinrttnt a part in the history of our I ni.iii. Fer this and adjacent countie was the liome or the Handelphs Tuckers Clays, I.- i-sand Curtlus and no doubt n host el ethers of these grand old heroes or the P.oveliiliuuary days, who delled ail the powers or old Kngland and kindled the llreseriilxirtyand independence that blared forth in nil their spl.tmlnr 111 Independence Hall, Philadelphia. A line grove of oak-, prehdily aa old m the church, Hurreiinds It, and by measure ment I round ene or thi-111, n white oak, te girth twenty-olio feet. MANY OI.Ii MISSION. Many of the old mansions which were the scenes or legends and stories or the great men and women that lived in them when the kings el Kngland were our menarchx, liolero Liberty Hell tolled, or Ceruvvallls had bivouacked at Yorktew n, are still te be seen, but ene el them, "i .lelsia," was isited partly through curiosity but mainly through an acquaintance with the present owner who resides thereon. He isa Phlladeltihian. nml railroad in its groed crushed out this private enterprise and started tint monopoly yards at Thlrty.firsk Frederick Tlsliner is ids name, atul In the seven years hi) has owned this old trarnnlcal ostate lie seems te have prosjiered aud lived happily. Thore are many legends and stories con corning "Chelsea." and the great parsonages that liave lived in its ample halls and ex tended royal hospitality te the chivalry of colonial tlinnH, but with tbese we liave net te de new. Hut for a lact it was here that our Immortal Ueorge courted his Martha, rer It was the home et the( 'urtls family, and it was here that the young widow did what all the power of Hrlttanla could net de, brought the here et Vorktewn te her feet and m,b. 1,1,,, sne her favor. The house Is built or Knglish brick, is very large and roomy, Is exceed, iiigly well preserved fur it age and beautl. fully situated en a low biull 011 the Matatieni river, Just where It makes a curve oil te the south and east; a large and shady yard slopes gently down te the edge of the blulf, which is some fifty feet above the water. The heuse Is surrounded by cool and airy perches; inside the rooms are very large, ceilings high, witli elaberate carving en wainscoting ami panels; all finishing is in solid oak, showing that neither work nor iiieiu.v una u,,P...i i ts construction. Anil the fact that new, after the lapse or a century nnd a half, It seems worn but llttle mere than ene or our modern built lioiiHes are In a decade, shows hew well the mechanics or lhat day did thelr work. A IIOlHi: THAT UAH A (J110ST. It liolanged te the Moere family in the early part of the war and it Is said that the spirit of old Mrs. Moere, the liutnivner, still haunts II, and holds nbsolute possession, of the garret, where, it is said, her money is stored, and she pushes down Willi un invisible pewer all who attempt te aseend the ladder which leads te it He this as it may, there Is certainly a mystery about It, and we kuew lorafactneno of the present occupants or it have- ever eutered the garret during thelr residence of seven years The negrees of this section are in thorn, selves a study, and worthy or mere time and attention than can be given thorn iu this Iaper. The larger number or these with whom I talked hail been slaves of old Oeneral I.ee, and llke all Southerners, they make of him a here without a fault; and the yeuug Capt Heb ts net much less beloved. They are strictly houest.ananemaly, atllbja fact) fur farm Implements oeata. harness. Ac., mav ha left en any part of it be f.m aud are never if iiiuuninvMiiinii iu iiiniiv ei my rOOUOrH as lie was landlord and proprietor et the old West Philadelphia yards when they were up at Forty first btreet. Ijofero the l'ennxvlvani . uiatur day 1 long and kuew neither care tier trouble. The negre of llie Seuth ts black, mostly M black ii clsiny, and the proportion or yellow one or tliiMe showing any trace of white bleed 1 exceedingly small, thus proving (also by direct pnxit the slander that wmihi Industriously circulated by alsilltlen papers, nnd yet finds its i-che in the Kepubilcau papers today, 11 sample of which 1 saw In an attlcln in the Philadelphia A'eic.t a few day age. An abolitionist I represented as addressing it axipper-colered brother in this sty Us when he asked him a question ha could net answer, "Were you wlilte you would knew, worn you black you would believe, but you lnr In your race the evidence or the gieatest curse that slavery entailed, therefore you can neither knew nor believe." A sphinx could surely deliver no greater eracle than Hi's Till: Tlll'TIt Allet T Till; NIUIItOKS Thern Is no logic In It, nnd the facts it I meant te contain are badly shattered by this authentic l.iet. l.i the Neilhern states thore Is seventy ixir cent or the colored iopulntleii that lcir ovldeuceot whlte bleed, whlle In the Seuth llie ircontage of the sumo class Is but eighteen: aud 1 should say In King llllaui ivnnly I did nut see a dozen eemxir cnlensl lu several hundred full bred. Alauy have asked me If the hki1e down there were net Hiisplcleus and Jealous or Northern men: I answer emphatically no ! Thev wel come nil genereusly, and are anxious te liave men with means and character te ceme them. Kecegnlzlng as they de new the fact that thev have rar tee much laud and no inenev, that If their country levjrputnn Its het it must Isi with the help of S'ui thorn men. te nil such they extend a hearty welcome, as 1 have shown you. A great many have already gene down and land is soiling rapidly. Of course there are sharpers and ntcal there as here at home, se a man must le careful mid de things tu a business way and use hi eyeN snd net liellove all he hear, or be may get cheated In Virginia as well 11s lu Pennsylvania. The chance te make money Is net "very great butthechance te get a gisxl and pleasant home with hos pitable neighbor and nil the convenience of clviliixl lllc for 11 aerv little money certainly Is great D. F. M. In a Man Who VY1111M Starr j. Seini the girl. A gree wltli the girl's rather in politics aud the mother iu religion. 1 1 you have a rival keep an eye en him ; if lie Is a w idovver, keep two eyes en him. Don't snc.tr te the girl that you liave no bad habits It will Uv enough for you te say that you have never heard yourscltsnero In jour sleep. Don't put much sweet stuff en (vapor. If you de you will hear It read III atler years when your wifn has some ei?c!l purwe in lnilictlng ihwii you llie severest punish ment known te it married man. li home at a reasonable hour In the even ing. Don't wait until the girl ha te threw her whole eul Inte a yawn that she can't isiver w ith Iwth hands A little tiling llke that might caue a coolness at the very lx glnnln of the game. If you sit down en ome ino!ae candy lhat llttle Willie had left en the chair, while wearing your new summer trousers ler the first time, smile sweetly and remark that you don't mind sitting en molasses candy at all, and that " lieys will l twys." He He Mirvnyeur tine feeling for future reference. If, en the occasion of your llrt call, the girl uisaii whom you liave placed your young nllectlens leeks tike au icelierg and acts like a cold wave, take your leave early and stay an ay. Weman in her hours of frccze is un certain, coy and hard te please. In cold weather finish saying grl-nlght lntheheiisn. Don't stretch it all the way te the front gate and thus lay the foundation for future asthma, bronchitis neuralgia aud chronic catarrh, te help you worry the girl te death after she has married you. Don't He atieut 3'eur financial condition. It is very anriealiig ten bride who has pictured Inr herselfa life nt luxury in her ancestral hulls te learn tee I.ite that you expect her te ak it bald hea dea I parent, who ha been uni formly kind te her. te take you in out of the cold. Causes el l.iime In inch nam. The death of the king or Ha varia lias call oil forth 11 great numlwr of essays and treatise en mental Insanity and Its causes In one el tliji the well-known iierman sclentlst, Pro Pro feseor Hackvl, Nilnts out tliat mental disease is much mere frequent among the higher and highest classes of society than among the common people. He says: " M en tal diseases are remarkably frequent among sovereigns The colebrated MpfXiallst for disease of the brain has shown that the proportion of luna tics In reigning famlllcw, as compared te tliat of the population of thelr country, is as sixty te one that Is te sty, that lunacy occurs sixty times as often In reigning families as among ordinary mortals If similar accurate autis tic were taken as te the frequency of lu nacy among the nobility, It would at once ap ar that tills class also furnishes a much larger contingent of lunatics than non-aristocratic humanity. The cause or this Is the un natural or one-sided (slucat Ien and the artifi cial separatum el the ' privileged ' claas from the rest of their fellow creatures, which H0wratlnn causes: many dark sides of human nature te hoenme iiarticularly developed artificially trained, as It were, and by the law el heredities they are mero strongly devel oped In every succoedlng generation." - llunr Many Ten list a, Cat r' This was ene or the questions asked of a curtain class during examlnlng week, and slmploasthe questien appears te be, none could answer It In the emergency the principal was applied te rer a solution, and he also, with n geed-natured smile, gave it up, when ene of the teachers, determined net te I, beaten by a simple questien, hit en the idea nl sending out a delegation or boys te scour the neighborhood rer u cat When this idea was announced the whele class wanted te join In the hunt Koverai boys went out aud seen returned successful. A returning lieard was at ence appointed and the tees counted, when te the relief of all It was learned that a cat possesses 18 teos, 10 en the rrent and a en the hind loot 1 1 JUIflllT IIIVK IIKKN. r'nll efimi In our llvci has cmne a day When, nausliiir wliftrn ivn nn.. .,inar..n. ,... Me pondered, deep and long, which one te cheese. Fearful thai, either followed, we might leso The rare enjoyment of a happy hour, OrKratcful lucoiisuef a fra;; rant (lower, Orglliiipse el soma lair land whtra shines the sun On giant groves and where the rlvurj run Through furrowed Held, an(j through the shadowy ranks Of cypress tree that weep upon the bunks WcfiiirtoliMineiinich ; but knowing net The changeful chances or our future let H'occteut boldly en thn chosen track And then se efien comes the looking back, the mournful, hopeless cry, "It might liave been." Sometimes the soul, when with great sorrow wrung, Itecalls a time, long lied, when llnhtly hung Tliiifniinunl riin,n,..iiKi in -....... ... . And sees hew, all unwittingly, an Influence frail As morning down that en tue grasses gleam Destroyed the even balance of the beam U uknewu 10 us the deep decision Hindu And turned our path from sunnlilne Inte shade. A passing thought, a leek, a trltlliiirflecd ; A word unspoken (n nn hour of need, Or speknn when 't were better left unsaid 1 Heme wrltten line that we by chance have read All theso can shirt the scenu wllh tuiblle hand. And round our future draw an Iren band. 1V0 never think that inch a llttle thing uin evermen tremendous sequence bring, Until tee Inte, and then we backward turn The page that we have illled, und dimly burn The light of ethor days In vain regrets ter opportunities none by, The spirit frets Ourhuarts we mourn rer what no "might have been." Ah, soul I leek upward, trusting ; kits the red. And knew lliem la no " might have been " with Ued. rrem Jllin, whence lowly we draw near, We learn of l.eve that cnatelh ent all fear 1 IV ii find a rnltb that, lu oblivious sea, Whelms every dread and doubt eternally A ilejw uiifaluirlng te u la given 1 A tender Charity, us bread ns heaven ; X lairlvct l'eacv, acaliu untroubled lteut ; Through the.e, nil thing iisjm jight and best Wu rtse triumphant ever death and tin, AU palu nnd Berrow In our Jey forget, And looking backward en our "might have been," Thank Ued that It wa net. wiHV veu BurrEK with Drspe Uver Cem plaint T CbUeia'a Vltail lei I JedtiLeilhaitAa -Vu Ml., ftu kf W MKVIVAI O ITICTHA ItKMKIiIKM. Frem 115 lbs. te 161 lbs. IV) the Cutlcurn UciiiimUm I Onre My Health, My llapplut-sM, anil My Lire. pe,iMndVfV,"r?,t.t'ftl l de net think and ymtVaitv nil or !i.Iuu? Mi'UW. "even nee S I, Vuu.'fr.f. ''" '"""ed en my limiVa ?, 'ili, ,.,r',,ur' 'nlernslly , ihe "ma hmulrl iml inJ.',',; X v 'll'l then one SJJ, " ",," ' "a", "eulh. Vast and Wiet. Te CPjictiu llm, i v u' v urr ! .if,,-?'.,a ?r. l,- A PreinlneiTr.Sew Vmlc ..2f'll,l.VKW, ,no,no ethor dav. " l)i vii . in R.1 h,,,,',,T" y "P'y "." I de, and shall .u1 ' ' have never Vnewn what "Iridic. I, i hIS. t '"Ctlme I sin laughed nt hy praising but ,,i?,ep,r Vet "Kalnst wttlittielritlV. ank i2 i-v iru,r lhpy .TUI ce,u, telhelr.flii.is5 oeien.li.ro whom I have leld. May the iiniii c.mm when then, .hall I a large ut-ri.-1-a" "iirll ply lleuMi in every city In iim wmni inriiKT nlrelv n i .JT. ? ld 'tv.e that there will be rarelj a need or ever eiiturlnua drug .tern. ,. . " Ht'sllANIIS. !,,... 8IB Pulton St, Mew Yeik.N.V. ClTlciav IKu.imii.-i nn, n' itTe euro 'or every form of bkln and llh.Vl li,"ft", fr ,. 1 'linplra U Scrofula. Held 'veryarhern Prii,, IV. "iw'dby the rerr.a D.lu akuUii.mi Sttn iifcSSei"' 8,'nil'l,r"llw te cure Snd for Him te Cure Skin lll.ra.r.." PIM ;-- IllacVhcsda, 8klu lllemUhe and -..' iiuiiuus, uflU itrriccRV deat. Sneezing Catarrh. The distressing nee. snecrn, .necte, Uie acrid, watrrj' dltehiirgi from the nye, nud iinet Iho lsilnful lultuminallnii .alcmllng te thn threat, the .welling of the muceii.ltnlni;. caus ing cheklnii wnsatlein. cough, ringing nelr In the head and .putting heiuUehes-hew fnmllt ir lu .ympathlc. arn te thnmands wlinsiitrcr lcrledlclly from head cold, or tntliimua,nnil who live In Ignorance of the fact thatn.tiigln application of SasreRiCs Uaeical fvaa roatA reatA Tamil wtUntTerd liiiriiiiiinreui rrllr. lly this treatment In cue, of stinpln Catarrh give huts faint Idea of what this remedy win de In the chronic tnrm, where the breathing la obstructed by chektns, putrid mucous accumu lations, thn hearing arTcctrd, .melt mint ta.te gene, Ihnvit ulrcrated nnd hacking rough itnid ully fastrnlngtunr iiin Iho dtidHuted .v tem. Then It U that the lnarvelleu. riirellvn power of BASvoae'a ItaiuriL Crr luaiilleslj, l wir In Instantaneous and erutful relli.f. Curn IwKln from the ttrst application. It Is rapid, radical, permanent, economical, .afe. Sasiteku i:l.OiLCt.coinl.t.et eneluiltln of tlm ltadlrnl Cnrp. ene box Catarrhal elv,'Ut and an Improved Inhaler. Price. Il.ui. I'iTTM)arii A C'lisatCAi. Ce , l'-ires ACHING BHCKS. Weak Itarks. Pnln, Weaknrs nd Intlamma Hen of the Kldnevs.Shoetlng 1'nln. through the 1-elni. Win nnd eide Pains, Ijick of Slrengtti nnd Activity relieved In one intnute and r'1 lly cnrtd by the UUTlUlfllA A.NTIl'AIS t't.AsTKIt.a new, original, elegant and Infalll bio nntldetn tniuttii and Initainiuatlnn. At drno drne gl.U. 'iie; flve ferll.iOi or vxuage fnsi of for- T. llaCK ASIlCllKMlCALCe., I'sMIIIS, JllS. augl llnW.Saw BXII. AUHTKI) VITALITY. EXHAUSTED VITAIITY TIIKSCIK.VCKOr MfE, thn gn-at Medlcnl work of thn nge en Manhood, Nervein and l'hy.lcal Detillliy, Premstuni D.-cllne. Krrer.01 leuth, and the untold inUerim riiiiirnnrni thereon. SO pge Sve. IS prescription, fur all disease. Cleth, full gilt, only 11.10, by mall, anled. Illmtmllvesaiiiple tree te nil young ami mtddln-nged men for Ihn next today. Aildri. Hit. W. If. 1'AKKKIt, t llulfllich Mtn-et. IbMlnu, Mm. inylMycedAw G KAY'H ai'KCIFIO MKUIU1NK T1IK (JURAT KNOtlall KK.MKDV. An unfauingcure rer lmpetency, and all His His nases that fellow Ixm of Memery, Universal iJUAltude, Pain Intheltack. IMmni-a of Vl.lnu, l'rematiire Old Age, and many ether dlsra-es lhat lead te Insanity or Consumption and a Prematura tlrave. ACr-rull particulars In nnr pAmphtet which wn desire te .und free by mail toeveryene. mr Mm Bpeclflc Medlclne U .old by all druggists nlll pr package, or atx package for or will m ent free by mall en the receipt of Uie money, by addressing the ni;ent II. II. COCIIItAN. Druggist, nole Agent, Ne. 127 and 1X1 Merth (Jiitsm btreet, Ijmr.nler, l'a. On account of counterfeits, we have ndnptrsl the Yellow Wrapper: tlinenlygenuliin. lllKllltAi JlKIHCM. I.O., arrSMydAw iiuir.Hie. .v. v. riATAKKH-HAV-KKVKK. "catarrh. ELY'S CREAM BALM Ulvu. Itellef atOnce and Curej. COLK IN IIKAII, (JATAUItH, HAY KKVKU UOSKCOI.I), DK.ArNK.S3, HKADACHK. Net a f.l.pild, 8nutT or Powder. I'nii Irem lu lu (urleu. Drug, and intensive I Mers. A particle 1. applied te each nostril and I. agTeeable 10 uie. I'l-irn CO ctinU atdrugglsta by mall, rnglatured, ecis. Circular ent ln. KI.Y llKOTIlKltS, DrilgglaU, Dwege, N.V. luiraiyeedAtvw QUHK OUAKANTKKU. RUPTURE. Cure guaranteed by Hit. .1, II. MA Kit. JCase at ence j iinopernltniiar delay from bii.l nes. ; tctl by hundred. of euros. Main otrlce, 831 AliCH ST., 1'lltbA. Bend for Circular. fJU-lvdAw CUHK KOK TIIK DKAK Peck's Patent Improved Cushioned Knr Drums perfectly restore hearing and porfenn the work et the natural drum. Invisible, com fortable and always In position. All conversa tion and even whupars heard distinctly, heud for Illustrated book with tstlmnnlaU, KKKK. Address or call en . l!I8CO., sW llreadway, New Yerk. Muntlen this paper. luiielO-tyCeilAlyw M'AKABOLa SV. TOHK HHOH. A IIAHTMAN, $4.00 P5RHS0LS UKDUCKD.Tl) $3.00. - t$3.00. VKItY:UKST HATIN t Al.b flNK SIM. MN 1NUDI The Manufacturers. Rese Bres. & Hartman, 14 EAST KINO ST. upl-emd MOT1UMB. TgJlllHMAN'.sr" OKNTI.KMKN'a Balbrlggan and Gauze Dndershirls. -THK 1IKUT-, White Shirts! NECIITIKS, PLAIN AND i'ANCY JIOSIKItV, BOAU" PINS, BLKKVJJtUUnONH, BUSl'KNDltlW, -AT-
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