U.J x of lwblicatioii. I 'crv Herald. Jh-' 311C rct j. ,tl In vlv.m.v i.:-'i n If - if. -.tl! nul out c lie u . I..:n.i'. -,'r!'f ncle-tlns ; B.t lukf i'H ' for tli rtit- -'..-iTi i i.R if ..rmr r Hi J i: AT lvw. . i. M law. !. I'a. ;i v VI i-.W, S u.'-e'' I , l'J. -rll 1. i.m v a : i.W. luer.-i'i ,1 !.W. . !' una. t. . U". t, J'.. 1:1 i? v. M. i:: ITU ' !".!,. nv .''. . I S A I iEU . I. A ! l. W. ! i i 1! W. ,N I.VV.T nw ; :!:!.. Mi AT LAW, s. i:icr-' i n: -,! 1,' Willi i Cr.'. - i:n. I. V." I l.i'iV, AT LAW illi.t P. ! ; nit'-: 1 ! , I J. I w, s- .ui.Tn't. r. :i u i : I i 'li.na: c au'ti w;ii lTititii'ti.V iTZ. A 1' LAW, ititiern't, In ., i a.1 ,-.ia.:; cuntlvs. VT LV.V, J ti-in' entrjt - i l t.il. UN I V AT LAW. 1 1 1 S 'iC'-ri t. Pa. -t. nil .'air. Eri'r.nis?, 1 '. e i-.i. mi'!'1, t''jit'-. i. ar. i ail i'lil iaioiiif i.'.!. an t inli.iay. UK i.i l i UK Pf.ACK S miTM't, Pinn a. 11. . KIV.MKI.l.. KIMMKI.L ,V SON !. -'b-rH! si'Tvi'-"? t. thA rli , ; . Itii y. !if I the mw- IDF, : :ii! ltiit-. ufi!?! IT' 1 :. ! u-, . w' t tit-ir , f'. -e, on Mio i Mll.LKlt i:.S :( rtlKl t!if irut t! (f ai r. T'i tl. i i Ii r- lis ti r-'-l !ri:v on Main Mi!.!. Kit. ', ii'iKuN, . In il an, lnT ht i-.t.'-rw if. 1" n 1 1- r. s'iv.: ksiit. pa. i i.i.'!! 1C -k. aiv. ll.jr.ru liras .e. i' i.a ti:t.' I. -U Ii-1 I'T.-JiUf- ic. ''I i i.-ihI If I mtr rca- I nil k.n ic r. .1 i i v ? 1' I. 10 NI! i Nt V. ! 1 : i i. S uif r"tt rajniy. i-u'-f. .iinfv'.r mil cl iiui r -t hil h-.uaiy anil Pi-n- ' i.llU l'lTill. Wi-(.II'IC '..:t- tun at tl: nl'-ie : in's al l j--.i-1.iio; "I'' 7 -' " fF.E P nil !" NX A. ArCTlOXI-El!. if i: --rvi on Ia1 or fr- i I r u.'. .y &iU-rtrJ o. W. K K H NTZ. 'M;r.tii-n, Vn. N! IIOTLL. N. 1 I NN A. ''"'' itttn luKf Ian litriv n.u n v r. tai.tl l;i all nt-it ; 1 ; i i i. aiH'ir it a vrrj li- i I, r O.. lraur!T:ir l.ui-iK-. . r- f oi B..t tur, ariM-l. ail lw. I hitter iLiiij. 1 .il .:t.f-ha A'- Ikn nit r.iuir n'at.lrna- ' ' " - -:-n I. l a.i at tin l.iwt-al mt '' I. i-aj trn ral. -il tl.crsTKH.Prnf. !5. E. i ur. ItinuiuciU. S'...yloir ,,1'4 i;' Th notice. 1 ; o. t li.y , v . """'- ml Hrr litUIM... ' ' - ':XAJuhwx ''(.. tb. ,,.,r t"'t-;';!:,.i!;,''i''- """llitii'i. i.t;,i nai- I llcar.1 "' fci.l WA tT.'f ""l"tl I" turl. '.. Jos ukk, s" T-rx.n PtcWfnt, MTTDC 1 i LulXO JJ VOL. XXIX. NO. 27. WET CARPETS ! i : I'm m til- I.:ite J":re : AT PRIVATE SALE, ;77 niTH AVENUE, HTTSBDEGH, PLNN'A. ! 0.000 Yds. X 000 Yds. OIL CLOTH S: LIX OLLUM. 1.000 Yds. COCOA and CHIXAl ! MA T TIX a. STAiR Hi HILL CABPETSj ! iC:i iCij Cij ! ii. McCALLUM, 1 77 FIFTH AVENUE. i j I A!iiV.' r; 1 Stl'rt. ' FITTSBUr.GH, 1'- j l . l j WOOLEN MI LLS 1:sTA11MS11KI1"-1-2. I Hiiv ii ii l ir lue jiast jrnr it ik" Iiccii in'.lrrlv j ; un.tt.il i.t fu.(.iy ilie iiiti'miii- ilnrnnil t'-rniy : ; k"v ts 1 Ii. i t i.uTit nn Hd.iitl !! in my uiill mi l iut i ; n; a l.iiv- uiouiit i-l j KLiV AND IMPR3VED KACBIKEET I ;in I i '.t-rcl'y olm..!i! iluu i H'v c-ipn ity i'T mrin- , u'.i urintf t-n lian ! a Luae ntnok ( "i. i5".ir.c ol ; HIANK trs. VSSlMKRKS. SATINK1S, .ii:a.n, KtrauMii, klanxli-", i'Vh!!:Li:TS. CARPETS, YAKXS. A.C., -I. w i: it in win i it. I'.ir'iu-r't. i li:e e t :.o kln-l WOOL ! v ru cp UliiilT IN VOl 'It OWN COl'STY, iii, 1 in t.r.li'r t.i ri-.'u ti :t: my rn-;mnr hi Cliif. 1 limr eai'l'il'l I i.f h.-uilP iti-lttF 1 llati j.'..r. Kii-l in K-i.ini 10 .llr..l":(-!i It l.inurtr. wi... Inst i'lir" lii''e'I rn y ii:.-; iii.-tiiy j-artsol li.l- '..u:tTV 1 Kill fin. '. : in tli!" l-ast, i" ivc r-.rs'. clJSS ...;jin,l luU ;iiu In all. ij-Ntu . u-i..t:ir. ..i.a iliutit- ko iiii;'! to tin 1 il i-.tr. w.il j.i mm a.i'irt i .-url 'm WM.S.MOItdAN, I nciii.Ki.'iios, l'a.- Ayr' 1 1 CHARLES HOFFMAN, nn i im i. i AIkiv.' 1 l.-iivy 1 IfiRi-.v" ;OM.IillSET, PV. LATEST STYLES n LOWEST PRICES. rSATISFACTIONGUARAMED.JtZ WALTER ANDERSON C02. TOD LT. AND SIXTH kWEl NO. 228 LIBERTY STREET PITTSBURGH, icM PA. JMI. Hit 10- la err iik k. iCKS N. SOMKItSKT. DA.. And Real Estate Brokers. KSTAtJI.ISHEI) lHoO. Pi n-. bo .lfiir to U. tny it rxfh.iie Ipiktiv. t-r mt will tfj.1 i; tn ihcirilvntKe in r.-ii.;-r t!ii ti.i-riMii'ii ili-r.-nf. a no rliara-f I tua :r oniefii im U t.r rVni-l. Hral ruate busmen uriti-r nly ill in: jm tuitlj m' trm!r! to. s la' S. T. LITTLE tV SOXS, l.ts 1IALT1MOHK STIiKCT, MISr.KKANl), M.l. Mltlft Wl lf.Slt'jUE. H1AM0SVS. (v.-I.Kir.i.V i LOCKS. US1I t I Oi KS, hi Li LR I'LATtlt HAHK, JtiiLLKV, ic HOLIDAY PHESEKTS! Wa.chcs nj Jew!rr Ki j'iire-I l.y Skillo! Wurkmrn an-1 Mijra.vl l.y Eii'tv" Free of harKff. Nn xtr charn f.-r Enitravln?. (ioijs wr- ranlrJ nf rriirrjemcj. -t l "i . : CHARLES J. HARRISON. a-iiii-r ,:i.'i a:.i!:.'-'.-r. ! CoIif.-lKus itKlc :u u!l Iru of th t nue.! Slte. j .titiiT. pa.a.iu.ini., lamia of j.im Mi, ! iward WKLwi . j.,nti.i Z'JXlJ&'VZ. i l.art-l. ait I it bInrf. wt-II umiffrwl. aUrtit 1 ; : S ! r i acrrt ol Ih cltiars., law, l In mii- Thero ara . i.i.'ntit.r tt' ffiai .tirinv. imiiminii. orrl.ard Kw.l two rttirv drilintt honMj. Urire bank baro "rmSsZrSJLr. Trn porciit.ofib.porrlia-ninw'yto t paid klir. nl ly 11 tot nmllnhilli Jl ul nle : fcM4 ,n alx mitt anil the balanro Im ra r. aimit aeiaa . ri.alti.oonfcirdirfl-t.tir.WMin!" "' on ar iM. ooa-lfcira ut luit.t W remain " tt.e iTmi. u. inieM ibfrtxn u biw nno-. ::'lB.Vi,StM Th n..w au... r u. LUciot-il Irum lt W-; l-trrnx, i-cct3 u. b. cr4 ur jaw- ( Eueta buuna. Not VI Atlu'r. ol lirnrU Lobr, tlw'J. !TDni TAILOR II ll U 1 ft 1 ffc lEinUflill IERCHANT TAILOR JN Ji. V IV. !tion of R irnum's disp itch shows i -,,r- "c' jKunt oi view, rxccj.uonaiiy imcr- . i,jnt the onvoloK hfid Uen under in 't the arre-'t and convict.on of , 0,ting personages, ITofessor Virchow : oxaminat-'on On the ii(ie morn-t!l; '"'r would convince him that j the eminent German ethnologist, SolllCretC(UntvBailkJingthatth.-se announcements were i ''' was wrong, Phelp was arrested. , n-ccntly obtained iiermission from a"iu.i.i vwmn-j atuiiN, i ..,. .,, r: .,.,...,1 f:.ir. j 1 he arrest was announced on lhurs- their exhibitor to subject them to a Charges niu'lerate. Batter ami otbrr cLeclii oJ lected ami caalttsl. Eattera la-i WcmrnexcliiKt alway' on hami. Kctclttannt mail with jirooijit- j . . .. ... s . I ti i.v nas n.ii.eeeoe' t, an' i i una, m .....n. . test uisuust .iiio in u.u uuuuu tut . p ' . n. acs.uvj oiidj. turn. On In. lay 1 1 .i t-i.oni.j - T , - , irc Sl;d theh tt. r was Ur,-rit When however he an-' questioner. "1 was n Taris, France, pani, dins t, imfdiM- f. s. 4 pek dispatches from Lvi.n that r.o such ; Jf-" :sla sP'nt. , V i! " f -?u Pt 1 on the lGthof Julv "hesaid "Whit , l . it ' .. i,,i rr. lived i brutal, and so I think. How is lie p roach ed her in her turn with out- on tne lotnoi wuij, nt saiu. nat cent, tvsvku uiAX, i- man a I . Morcy ' hur.tin- the forger? lie has had : Lctchcl hands, the conviction that kind of weather was it there?" .at.iatthLiu.ia. Tb. emr-. - pru ! there, and t l.A a man whom I do not i he was a white sorcerer, bent upon Mr. Devoe applied hw theory that 4eM1aa,ro.M.,.-.oo.nd ic,. lulr wJw HJi still know, and fr what ? For libd in i robbing her of her supernatural forms go around the carthmcir- is a liar, i powers" completely overcame her cles. W e ought to have had that pn.I.n ' SALE. i sllcilt Z u Z j't with i N.W.If every man who calls him a Use of decorum, and she fled from weather about ten days before that," K ,rJi;;f itu' dav OcmW j was to li arrested there would j him around the room Reaping oW j Wkn h s.n,r-t .0ntT,tt.xwiiiirui'i at I'obiic rale, ( 1 ''""'"l l: ., f . . f( ; ' i i.Ha.P he but feAV of us loft. He now up- tables and chairs with astonishing I now, Dooit , J u,y ' ana rend 1118 ...oim t2-5. a fac-s i iu le o f .. ; ,)taid to every manly Dcmoerat to i .piity for one of her sex and age, I Hackensack observation. .Srd-,.v,Wi,rlS,kvs,l, iwaspublsn. n TrvJt. hu, X he f while that it . out tho Wrongest spells It must have been warm and TjJf.' fl,,an,I;f !jar,"V ..ap r a7l ir.. J ; is a fonrery rest uin his unsu p-' she could think of as likely to prove I eWy on the 16th in Pans," he "r," ; "" v i. :.-r ear oi me v e Nanii- tin- li'.-.viv mi all tlii' ttv-.s : Naino tin- n j',,-j mi ail tin' H as Ml tiio M..-.V !y rill lliat li!nw. All tiir nivriml tints tliut jrl'iiv. Win. Is t!.a! wan.fiT tlmm-li tlii-jrr.ivi' A11.I ynu H um- ilie iiaine i.f luw : I.'i' tliiTi.'i in Miiiiiin-r j'-y, A" iM !i:.'lit if mai'li-ii'ii r i l.i-tl-il tl till' f. .11 HI I. . ,r':i!,ili la tin- win 1 that -.-aily l"tams " it tin- tn -a I -i, v. !ic:v, en iu; i:ii .. 1'riL'I.t Ih'i- l.iiiu an.! liinn-!-, -i::;; ; 1'at nf r.iin.h-. , tint -it'-rfai'.i, T tlii'ir s -111'j. v.vof! Invr't t'lr 1 1 11 1 1 1 ' -; l.nve !!-:." i - whi'ra ..'jiliyr -Kii'-. A in l.r.'.i:!i '.i' 1'iaii!' !i's l;j.-. In tli'' i:il! 1 t'Vt'iiiuti i:Inv : Aiiu'il i:ii-.-ri t.il.l t!if r. .; Silvtrtli-.v.- In .in tn la'.!; I 'rim viii --l.a'K'i tn liailnw all ; I! i!y iia: lire vril- in r i'.hv ; I)a::!i i1- 1 i-t iu h- a' i n'.-11 :i! ir.i.i--' 1. it" i; i:i a:i Ii.itir ti.is A- in mm!!i It ; inai'irii's ki-s. n wliftf, thrii.'!' I lie vnl.'.if"- tiij.K' rrij.-i fair I.uti.i'- .-i'v. r lit ; .' I' ar ..!' l.atilii V i;il j t"i: In-lit, '.ikf til.1 tiva I t'f tiic-t v ii ii-ct : Vtr irnin nut t'n- laailii'lit liurtlt ii!;t!m''r:ir.' arrnw - j-!:ni'li:i' forth ; i . ' . i' in a i: 1 1 .i;-'s . tart. A .n tl.rn1' nf tiia'.ili-ii's luait. l.m- '- ' .' i'--i'tic i' nf all th'n;s ; ' l'i fri':i! I'iv.1 tlia' li. at'.ty sir:nirt: 'i'a l.y inv iTiat aa f.rt lut'i pinrliiii-. i.t'iiu liiir-t : 'i iii-il in l".a!'.!i-n' im'ai '-n fail', i tin w t -i i i i ' tin iti hi r. jiiril Mvi'i-t all t'l.n1 iilinve - I..1VI- i- ( .ml. si 111-. I ;.il IS h iVf ' !,.-.-,,!,,, - J..r.': nil! ntr iii i" iii-oj-oiiv. The des pi rate tional Democrati efiiil't" oi l;n X: c Coniiniltce to es- 1 .Ilif i". .r tl,.. ('. ,1- r...l cni'e all re-;oni ."iii 'ii.i 1''; i.t- i.'ii-. i Chin. letter wiil lint be allowed to f-Ueeeed. 'fhe leeurd of their trans actions condemns them uttcrlv. We projuisi: to arra.uge ;n inter ti:e sitCCVS: ive s! oiloh 'iieal bv wnich a ' I 'that ml. minus lorgery .i ioi-tedj .' into i;u!.i!ie mitiec tiid p:trtiaiiV lore- ; cii hv iiigi'iiious fxplaiiatioi. and ; civ - mi l ' Hat fa siiiealions into public i'.e'.iee. 1 t.e narrative is sii: r.nanswt i.itiie. ; The ;'o r-;ei 1 letur was lirst pui'lisli cil iu a rn anted J.i.rm iu Tr:'h on , Wt.lm .-'d.iv, Oe;.,'.Hr S: It attr.ua- l .'- . .. T V. .1 - co nn l.n'.iie v.i.aievii, j.vtii me W'udd ncwsp.ijier refrained from copying it or from making the slight est alhl.-iou to it nil tile follow If!'! d:iy. Aeeiirditig to iheoiiii-lal statt mt'iit of the D'-niocratic National C'.mmiltee. the (.l'i'iin:;! taken to their h.-adounn. lett'T W.iS : s ii'i Wed there eX- ! nesdav ;:!'t rn'ii'li ;tl d wa ' amined by se veral emineiit ieraN, iiu'luding Mr. i.irnum.-Mr. I Hewitt and Mr! Kandail. n Wcd j nesday evening Mr. Hewitt in a : speech at a Democratic mass lneet , ing in Chickering Hall, tvad th-It i : t r and said : I 'Some jieojile may incline to pro I nouuee it a forgery. 1 have seen it. ! I am familiar witlr General Gar j fields signature. I have compared ! it with his letters in my possession, iand I have no doubt it 'is genuine. If it be a forgery it is the work of a cin.-;uniate artist ; but if I thought, after examination, tiiere was tke slightest doubt of its authenticity, I I i ..i i .. f . ; snouiu iiol icn i 10 o. Nonetheless omphalic was the dispatch sent out over the signature of Chairman Itanium, on the same evening, and published the next morning in all the leading Demo cratic journals of the country: New York, Oct. 2".' Tl.n fi.'lotviiiiT t.nlilisliod in Truth morning. The letter is " i i authentic. It is in (ieneral Garfield's handwriting. Denial is worse than useless. It should have the largest circulation among all elascs, as it unmasks the Republican hollowness and hypocrisy on the labor ouestion throiiL'h' their chief. ' He declares j himself adverse to the laboring man's interest, and in favor of the j employers' Union, advising them to 'eniiilov the cheapest labor available. ' W II Piiivru I. 11. l.lll.-i. Here followed the original letter.; . . ,, . U. original letter, ot which to - foregoing is a true copy, is in fru:h e possession. It was rnailcl :itash- ir.gton, bv the Kcpubhcan candidate. lor President, to Henry K .dorey, a liroiiiinent member of the Ltuploy-; ;ers' Union, Lynn, Mass. At his i death, which recently occurred, it j was found among his ttfecL.-. The j envelope inclosing it, the original of ! which is also in Tnith' possession, , is marked "Persoiiid. as careiully as j the letter itsoll is marked "1 ersoiial j j and confidential." - R. j : It was tl.t-e simultant-ous :m. j i nonneements bv Messrs. Hewitt and I i Itiirniim which "lifU-d tlie letter into I public 1 llllllil nin '. Hi.- n-.i' " i notice. Roth gentlemen ft. r thov had seen the letter I onveloiie. The closing i-or- i ?ioke ai i and me i tield'fi denial, denouncing the letter irw n "I:mid forgorv." was tnwdishetl - --i . . in every newspaper m the land. - - ;l sj1VTl(. ' jicWSp.Hter of ' any i standing in Now-iork v ity even on that morning dignified the forgery I with a fin trie word of editorial mcn- .. That r.owsrair drokc its silence , " . ,1. . (..,,. .Mi:; !ar;Vr V,: i V,- .w mlHm.,.s uiriauy , , i i j rrSX nil rime Sing caW to prop it up with a reproduction of; . 1 . iSlVl w tV, CliS-trrW Hall in- Ulorsemcnt UlC Oil IllSO Weill ; ,nra trt sustain th CMd nee lO .uuiui , -. .,.ii;.i, nn the same mrninr. ,t pUDllStlCll ItlUbatcb fmm Utk-a containing the Ijviiw nt'VfS of ' the ' dlSCOVOrV Ot a . . , . j , !Siita - n. If T HfrtrfV . I 11 UL7IIAI. ' i 1 - - ' ' SOMERSET. PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1SS0. ! Oh thw .si me day, Saturday. Oc- DouKK-ratic rally at Terrace Clardtn. ! tuher 'Si, tlicrc npcarod in iill the Tjiat was the day on which Mr. Hart ' manufacturing rcnon? of Nrw .lor- had osoanotl iinpri.sonmcnt for con I fi'y and other States a ilnod of hand-1 tempt of court hy producing, the hills and circulars from the National j original letter and its: envelope. The ; Democratic Committee containing a ' tell-tale post office marks on the en- pvinU-d copy of the forged letter j volopc and the erasures liad been with the bad spelling corrected. On ; discovered, and the fact of the for ; no one of those documents was tin ropery was settled beyond all dispute. ! the slightest reference to the fact j Something desperate had to be done that the letter was published in to offset thi. The next morning I TruUt. The Committee pave it tin ir i was the critical one for the conspira- iiii'l'iaiiiic.i omciai approval. At the same time there also appeared in the rum-shop windows of this c;ty, and in all parts of the country, a facsimile of the letter enlarged 'to the size of a poster marly two feet miu are. Where did that coinefrom? '1 'he Co:nmitt"c say in their address of defence, issued" November 12: "The Committee decided to purchase a reasonable number of the eleetro i type plates of the facsimile which had already been prepared by I i Tfnih. Hut this poster was as large! as a whole page of Tm'ii, and the ; plate was ;:t least four tine s as. large j as tin; on that pap'-r used. Like j ithi; plates which Ilie Committee j sent to the Democratic newspapers, i ! there was on these no allus'o.i to j ! Truth as the author an 1 rcsconsibh; publisher of the slander. bi Sun 1 iv loiiniin''. O .-tober 'l. ; .!cneral (tarii-ld's h-ttcr to Chair i man JewHI. written ns s 'on as t!ie : fic-sin:-!. could reach him f n exam - ination. v. as jiulilished : Mkvtor. t. 'S-, lvi. ' Ti ''if lfii. Mak-'Iiam. Jk'.vki.i.. ' oit telegram of this afternoon i !-' ri re; veil. J iililih mv ! i-pat i, i oi last evening, il you think !est. Within the last "hour the mail j brought me the lithographic copy of ! the forged letter. It is the work of some clumpy villain who cannot spei! or write Knglish. or imitate my handwriting. Kvery honest and manly Democrat in America who is familiar with my handwriting will th iiuuaee the forg'-ry at. sight. 1'ut th' eace in t!ie ha.nds of ablest de- (-t!v s at o'.ve, a::.l hunt the rasi:il down. A. ( Jakfili.'.i. Mr. Hewitt was th next man hctrd Ir.i'ii. In a epe-ch at I.'oches-t- r. on M - d tv . vening. i-T..bor '!'. i:.:-.iid : " I tliough t I knew General Gar- licit viei ; ii. ( "hiucse oUi-stion. but in th i xainin ition of tii.it orig r I found my knowl r.iie l. I huvo coinnarc.l in:. i '..' edge coil its signal t'ire of P'.SS.-Ssi. ;i,-o v. Garfield"; signa in my have thr. e other letters a, and J believe it ti i'eiii wntteii by the same hand that penned the others. First of ail. G.ir lield says it's the Work of oiunisy villains. Here is an exact photo- r.:;i:i!o co-iv n: t. at letter. The body of that lett.-r I never thought was his ; its the signature. If the 'detectives are o-i the track of the villain, as Garfield advised th.-in to do, 1 think they had better go straight to Mentor. He isn't manly enough, yuu -see, to come out and deny the genuineness of the signa ture, but only of tin- letter itself. He says thatvvery holiest Democrat wili derKinii'-e the -forgery. " 1 1 1 1 limv did he lit'haVe wlren asked to de nounce a wrong act of his own? Ho won't do it. This was promptly reproduced in the World on We .lnsdav, October 27, and was accompanied by an in terview witli Mr. Hewitt, in which lie said the Rochester report of Ins speech was correct, nl added, when he was asked about General Gar field's cxntieit denial : What difference docs that make ? When a man opposes his testimony to circumstances on which a belief is .. , , , . . . . , iounueu, ms cnaracu-r musi oven.ai- :irn e tiie lorce oi- me circumsiances, if he is to be believed. Here I have three indisputably genuine signa tures of General Garfield's: tin ir evidence says that the fourth signa ture was made bv the same hand, to thing of the corroboration to I be found in f.entrai (.ar.ield s re-1 cord : to the s-aitiments oi the h - l - ter. No v to oppose mv U m i is the j mere word' of General Garheld-a j ni'in m vh'-m I know there is no truth. , ' ' ojn-.re mnn v,r euc , j'" '"'T7- -p'-ral (.anielus word- ; :is against tliat signature will have ; to he reinforced by the arrest ot j !s0!-.,el,ody an-1 Ins conviction as a I i fr.er beiore I shall be convinced j ! ti.-rit I am wrong m my b. het. j I.i -,i .1 a. . ir. i .. Tii'e statements of Mr. Hewitt j v.erc the only props that kept the i j '.cgerv from sinking for nearly a week. There were a few feeble at-, j tempts on the part of the Worln to; joolh - et evidenco of "exjirrts" nnd; others, but they were nil too silly to 1,0 taken into account. It should!; be noticed that no attention what-1 ever was paid by Democratic jour-. nals to uie oiions ina. e oy i nun I sustain thc forgery. Thc Committee , ii .1 l .' .1 taken the letter for their own j lt: 'l wore circulating and defending i it their own. hithe yery day;ql tlav nioruing, October 2. n the i evening of that day, Mr. Hewitt j measurment of their skulls. While came to the rescue again, and in a he was engaged in feeling thc head speech in Tammany. Hall said: of thc male Ksquimaux, an old wj If 1 had not said what I did s ay I man, named Paicnu, highly esteem 1 would have been untrue to my cd in the tribe as a jiotent witch, convictions. Now General t.?ariu id , ;,,.., - f,..1 .l.irti-il 1 1-tM-rittti.ll rel.'ltiollS r '';.,, 1 , , with Mr. Garfield were always pleas- t. He Is an attractive, man, ami j a.)n. );8 surorior jn jtoint ,.f intellect, but he his not the courage ; of his convictions. This, like all the other statements rid also - went ; oi .ur. iiewm, nas iunii.-in-n m- .',,. i. , , , , , 7 i manuf u tiirin" i next mornin" in the I )omocratic tains a respectful recolIecUon of his ! ing to the shape of the earth, clouds ! for-'ery for i newpar.ors, and was telegraphed all : former faith, grew deadly pale, and disapj.ver below the horixon at adis it published a j over the country as the only offset was hoard to mutter: "The gods of tance of seventy-five miles is a mis- OI MT. 1 lew m, was .u.'.i.-..t-i n . rs ti,- om ci. of" I'l.tdn nnd tiie diim-' a"in"- disclosures which each day's ; Christian Diety. See how the white "In getting the distance of a cloud court proceedings were making. On! magician recoils from Paignu's ; I apply the-rule in Day's Trigonom Fridav evening there wa a final words of power." jetry to the product of the height set Ch'TP ESTABLISHED, 1827. ! tors. 1 ne v .nwi copies ot uie pa per containing me lorgea letter, which Truth proudly announced had been sent to the Pacific Coast hy the Democratic Committee, would reach their destination on that day. Mr. P.arnum did his part of thcta.k by sending out this astonishing lie to all the Independent and Democrat ic editors of the country : New Yokk, Oct. 1SS0. The Oariitld letter is not a for- gery. Mr. Joseph Hart, publisher of Truth, was honorably discharged this morning by the Uepublican Chief-Justice of the General Term of th Supremo Court of New York, the Hon. Nofth Davis, William II. I'.akmm. ; Chairman. Mr. Hewitt attended the Terrace Garden meeting, and was ttx hoarse to be able to speak. J'ut the mo ment was too critical to allow his words on the Garfield slander to be ; lost, and they were printed in the Wudd ot S.aturuay morning as a p;irt of his 'intended address." What lie said was : "Iut whether the letter be genuine or not, it cannot be denied that its sentiments and declarations are in full accordance with the votes of ( ieneral Garlield, and the course of the Republican party on the Chinese question, lty this course they have planted themselves upon the ground of favor to Chinese emigration. They cannot escape the position by any new declaration at this lato day in hostility to it." This was the end. The campaign t was riractieatlv lnnslied. Air. tiar- nuin's dispatch was a worth pinna cle for such a tower of slander. His dispatch reached the Pacific coast simultaneously with the fac-simile of the forged letter, and in all prob ability saved California and Nevada fur Hancock. It could not lie con tradicted until Monday, and every body knows that, a lie with forty eight hours start cannot be overtak en in as many days. We submit the evidence without argument. If any Democrat con cerned can read it without humilia tion and profound sorrow, he can do what none of his friends are able to do. .V. Y. Tribune. A I.ilieral Editor. We wen1 grieved to read the other day of the death of one Michigan's jofliest pioneer editor? almost the last man of a band who published weeklies in the State when a coon skin would pay for a column "ad," ami three bushels of corn dumped oirthe office floor stood for a year's subscription. Never a publisher was more liberal with his space. It was hard work for him to charge for anything except the tax list and mortgage sales, and he measured short even on them. One day in the years gone by his paper copied an attack on a county official, and old Mark was dozing at his desk when the injured party stalked in and began : "You are a coward, sir a cow ard !" ''Mebbe I am," was the editor's complacent reply. "And I can lick you. sir lick vou out of vour wrinkled old Loots !" "I guess you could," answered Mark as he busted the wrapper off his only exchange. "I'm going to write an article call- in,f run -i i.wal li'ir cowiirtl rnr. ,.t.7 .i i..k. Ur,ntM. ,.n oyer lQ i,m;aaff pav five cents a iw tn ll:(vc it j)U!,i;shed !" .jIov?" ucnc,i the old mar. as he whw.lc-a aruuni. .iV, n, ,,.. i:..,, tn ' - i " I"V ' - - j.ave it published !"' -Sav, let me toil you something;' r(,,,ii0j Mark. "I've got SO more ci;.uiation than the Banner, and I'll ,lUbli.s, vour attack on me for two 0(,ntsa ;lnJ t:lke it out in mill fl..1(i ,.. nrn a9 iwt trot over help build un vour own town I 'v, ., ,i t ..n:..ur.A u aiilllv Hll',ll-l IIJ1C IlULUinilV'.l It. word for word, just as he had said, and thrown in a cut of a horse or a slump-puller free gratis, but the of .... i , i ii . -. Haul cooled down. imrmi irrr. IMtln'l Want Iier ftkull Kiamiuttl. As the Esquimaux at present vis iting Iterlin belong to a tribe that nearly extinct, and arc conse quently, from art anthropological scientific inspection, involving the watched his movements with mani- ..iri,t.-int tiiyiiinct. tlii t.rriWtnr d n- ' , . ' , i eromantic manipulations. borne- what started by good Mother Pai- f mi's trvmn.astic feats. Virchow and ?us pvmna his two ass i back wher assistant, instinctively drew hereujion tlie Esquimaux Abraham, who had l-cen converted I - my country are mightier Uian the ; Tfcla Oplalaaa mt tto Wrstbrr ltr. rilOK. VK.NXOR, OK CANADA, SAY? IT WILL TIE COLD A.XD SNOWY MB. DEVOE, OK HACKEKSACK, HAYS IT WILL BE MILD AND RAINY, Mr. Vennor wrote to the Albany Ar jus on Friday : "Snowfalls wiil ho unirersal this season, and will extend, in all prob ability, not only far to the south ward in American, but across to Eu rope. The pnowfall of the ISth was marked in this respect. December will, in all probability, open w'th little snow, but the weather will be cloudy, threatening snowfalls. Dur ing the opening days of the month dust, with the very light mixture of snow why may have fallen, will be swept in flurries, by the gusty wind. There will probable be some snow from about the 4th of the month. With the second quarter of the mouth colder weather will prob ably set in with falls of snow. The farmers will he able to enjoy sleigh rides in the cold, exhilarating air, but good sleighing need not be ex pected until after the middle of the month. There will be a spell ot mild weather about the 13lh and 14th. After a brief interval of mild weather, during which more snow will fall, the third quarter of the month will probably soc blustering and cold weather a cold snap witli heavy snow storms and consequent ly good sleighing. Very cold weath er may be expected during this quarter. The last quarter of the month will bring milder weather; in fact, the heaviest snowfall will be toward the end of the month, and snow blockades may be looked for, the snowfalls extending far south ward, possibly as far as Washington, with very stormy weather around Now York and Roston." DEVOE, THE HACKENSACK PROPHET. Mr. Devoc was found yesterday in his shirt .sleeves feeding a buzz saw in his mill on Hackensack riv er, whore annually he cuts up 2X) cords of kindling wood for tli llackeiiackers. It was about the hour for stopping work and Mr. De voe willingly left his task to talk on his favorite topic. "I find myself disagreeing with all of tln m in my predictions," he said. "Here is the forecast of the winter that I sent to the Farmer's Club in New York, on the 1st of Oc- jtobtT: 'A dry fall; mild in this sec tion. Heavy northeast storms ami snow in the Western and Southern States. Heavy southeast winds and rain over the lake region. Great snowfalls in lower New York as in North Carolina during the winter. The winter here will be compara tively mild. In nearly all storms theJe will be southwest winds with rain. Mr. Devoe says he does not know how Professor Ytnnor works out his predictions. He once wrote to him, but got no answer. He understands that the Professor adopts the theory that seasons come in circles, and that he makes no pretension to a knowledge of meteorological science. Mr. Devoe says that storms travel around the earth in circles, and on this basis he has made predictions that have been verified. He has found, he says, that there are never more than 3, usually only 2 storms traveling between the equator and the north pole. In the present cold snap there are two storms in the Uni ted Suites, one on the southeast, and the other on the northwest. Kvery stonn centre has rain on its lower part and snow on its upper. The upper edge of the southeastern storm has been over New York in the past few days. That storm is now parsing off the United States to the southeast. The next storm will be that from the northwest. We will get the lower edge oi that storm, which will give us rain and warm weather here. The same storm will bring snow to the north west. Mil. devoe's memorandcm hook. In a memorandum look Mr. De- voe notes daily thc range of the ba- .. f,. . , t .' , tionofthe wind, Ac, in Hacken- . . notcs he says he can tell what the weather was in any part of the United States and half across the ocean on any given date. He was at the meeting of the Farm ers's club in this city on Tuesday, and offered to let any of the mem bers tost his skill. "What kind of weather was it at Toledo on the 6th of July?" a mem ber enquired. "Mr. Devoe showed his notebook, in which was a record for Hacken sack : "Temperature, 70; wind north west; few cirrus clouds in south west ; at 3 p. m., light rain for 1 1 hours; at 7 p. in., heavy shower forty or fifty miles north." "It rained in Toledo on that day." said the prophet "That is correct," the member said. Rloodwood II. Cutter, thc "poet f . ... "There was a powerful rain there that night," said Mr Cutter. Mr. Devoe prides himself on hia ability to indicate the weather at points within Hackensack by ob- ervation of 'the sky He says that .. tike. He thus explains ritOPHKTS DISAGRFF-. u u of the the object into the., diameter 'of the earth add the square of the bci dit. nnd extract the snuare root ' oi me sum. .n oojcei io nines r . i . i . : I high can be seen 12i miles from the level of the sea. Ordinary ram sire so easily graimeu. in so many -And he said von wa an olKcc clouds float two miles above tin : d-th-rcnt whv, in Japan. bile 1 i;l,,;U.r - ocean level. If we are standing on an 'm western nations divination is I - h;lt ; viKlt loafer dared make ordinary elevation, and sot thunder j 1'ierelv the subject of rosea ro.i and : t;,.l? .rtion?" clouds ascending iust above the hori-l-T'ulation among scholars, or, at j it made me awful mad, but I ton, it will be perfectly safe to calcu- j is found nt interval m rural j (li,ln-t ?;(V .m ythi Th(.n hr (.aI1. late that we will have to travel ditncts, tar imm the busv haunts!, V((U ;l" hir.d in-r. miles to get beneath them. It is .of men, startling tne apostle ot th-, -Valk-d me a hiuliug ! Whv. I'd twentv miles from the head ,,f a ! ninoteentn . civilization witn m Uko v ,,1V j,.,. cloud "to the point whore the rain j Gvehih century sujwT-tition, here in j fil th(. - t falls, so that it will be loO miles Jn it is a living force, exercising j ..y ana vu was ..:.;;t. lrom us to whore it is raining. 1 nave ireuuenuv muicaicu uxau i ... .i . . i! . . i i ...l showers almost to the minute, by applying that rule. In a clear at-, mosphere, I can set; them further j than that : . , ,. ' DEVOE S IMVIMENT K PI'.imiI. : ,t Mr. Devon has d.K-umer.tary prool j of his asserti.m. On the y,m t , iiorii. ill i in me tneiung. ne sain o'cloek that night. Dominie Du rand sat down and wrote to the Postmaster in Somerset asking what the weather was April 2;'. lie got me ioiiowing repn . , . MMUHT, 1 A., April . Dear Sir : A thunderstorni occur- red here about . :io to . on ..ion - day evening, April 2b. Heavy ram and wind. To AVr. C. J!. Daren't. Hackon.-iick, in llaeken- N. J." It rained that night sack." On thc 2'-th of June Mr. 1'evoe was over in Rockland county, N. Y. He saw clouds in the Fast, and on looking at a map, said it was rain ing in Bridgeport, Conn. He was bantered by friends over his predic tions. He was bantered by friends i over his predictions. Mr. Devuo I l . , 1 .1 - -, nas me correspondence wnn me i Bridgeport Postmasu r that proves j the accuracy of his deductions. I Mr. Devoe says he is - often told I that he foretells the weather by in tuition, but that is not true, lie) has only discovered meteorological j laws, he says, that anybody can un derstand. To prove this he has re-1 cently undertaken to instruct two i lads of sixteen in weather rules, audi his two pupils are needy as adept as himself. Mich' make out a daily J weather luilictni lur iiactensacK drugstores under Mr. DeVoe's su pervision. Here is a copy of the bulletin put up at 7 o'clock Tues day night giving the forecast for yes terday : ' "Barometer falling. Temperature rising. Wind southwest. Weather partly cloudy.'' Mr. Devoe says he is governed by three laws, which he thus lays down: First, the wind always blows toward that point where the greatest iaii m I . a : . .1 .- - l - -ll 1 temperature is laivmg P,::' science to tne contrary notwith standing. Second, all currents of wind descend, or slant downward. We may calculate that a current of three miles high will strike the earth 500 miles away. Third, both heat and cold descend from the atmos phere above. "Within six months," said Mr Devoe, "I expect to be able, by ap plying the laws I hate discovered to my observations here, to be able to predict the weather in France and England." "As to my prediction for this win ter," he said. "1 don't claim that they will prove infallible ; but if 1 was going to undertake anything that depended on Uie weather i would follow my ob-ervaUons. The ice men are going to have a bad year. There will be no long con- Unued cold, and ice will be as scarce iifrTr ur-ifciiiia :i n it n i:iti w iniinipr. Mr. Devoe is a man of .8 or 40 and Uie son of a fanner. He had no lurtner miouu.u -' ""K " i i .i a'. i i uo vv""'u ,e".""4 "V J' ' uao -.-uuui ue niiumi ii.c ", tw -. , ... .- . . i CUl, eul.T ii tJ.Jce. t.Li.u.i a.... j study. He is of slender build, mc dium stature, and has light brown hair and moustache and tu n gray eyes. He talks iluenUy, and has hid calculations and theories at his tonirue'd end. He has dolivi n.d a j I lecture on "Practical Mo.orologv in the neighboring towns, ami his n ,tJ . ... ,1,,. , . ,i , H JL$ i "H I'lU I'll, .. i; ... , J , . i go audiences to hear Ms c reputation draws lar thcor'as lioltt. Germany furni.-hes us with oar ch.eap dolls. The best come from Paris, where one manufacturer, Schimmel, has the reputation of be ing the foremost puppet constructor of the world. He furnishes dolls of all classes of society, from the high born aristocrat down to white and black servitors to wait on her. The dolls cost by U:e dozen, from half a dollar for thc smallest papier mache to a small fortune for the expensive V. ! r.. . " r i. : Xl . , v. . itrins pugnniagewuiprosper; while f , , , ,- ,,.,,,.,,!,.,! i.i im; jtier-en e i-uu. ....v. i.. ......... . j,-,,- J1H lltj ho patrotlS lie porlorill . , ., a,.,,, . ,.,;, w Tl.r.-l- his pastor, of Hackonsack, that there au t.,abor;lte tirttllov, in some , -f Ion i t V "U ,i' t', was a.thunder shower in omersct, ...messing even rJligious s.u.c- 1 ? " ' ' " ' ' ' 11 V " Pa ';() in les tl stant He had een I . i " i- i st;iiul it to hear mi abused ole- . ',. , ' , , , ! tions ot tne most solemn kind, lor . ,.,;;.,,,,,,.;,;, - the 1 "htn in" on the horizon and ; i- u i i the niaugnaiit oj)pu,it'.un . intiinmnm on im, i ui il o i which he is quite ready to accept a u ... H i ,',. ..,,t,,,r i . had eot the boarni" ot the idace bv t i i c i i t Alv son. said the lather n he mu .()i uii iH-aiii n u mi iavi . - ihundred, live hundred, or even a , lr r i .,t, ., ,i o , ,;,!, , . i ... i c.no.-isj mil 5itla ffe ;iiil the i . - leu tor liiUI a tti iil.ir Witli olie'l and compass ami anas, in sain ll" thou-ul vn (u this sub;ect a i - i i- -.i .i .i si.,,,., sh.ov.-r would reach here at H) " 1 S i ' i- i . V i and wiped his eyes with the oth. r. wax ones. A very ordinary wax oi ion mt ms viw, wi.nc in Texan s-K-ietv Is agitated over th doll of any size, . undressed, 'costs another parctl, the wheels of a eartj ...it -tion f f wheUier or not the fifteen dollars. Mechanical dolls al most charge to be looked at. Schim mel is the inventor of a remarkable mechanical doll, a most life-like ba by. A miniature nursing bottle goes with this infant,and if you fill the bot tle with milk.or any thing e!sc,and put the mouthpiece in the correspond ing portion of the dool's face, a touch on a spring sots a little pump msuie the doll m motion, and empties the flask. Schimmel has io end of royal in- ;ry fint work he l aS done to the order X',.-t.- T. ... matte dolls for no fants, but the ve: ever rroduced was t ot a wealthy icw i orker. It con- ... . ... sistea oi a muy and gentleman uon, , witn a iamuy oi cniuiren and a re- tinue of sonants. The set cost, un- dressed, more than a thousand dol - Ian. It was ordered for a little in - valid, who died before it arrived here, and whose parents are said to preserve the crumbling pupputs in tne room uicir utvie owner iouiiu an end to the usefulness oi nu things in. T'Lav-' Greece spends more than five per ' cent of her whole revenue in e.lu-, cntion. fl -n si WHOLE NO. 1535. I rit'ittal Fort iinr-lVllin. In few countries in the world can lit- ntn-tini in iiw wiirf r wnrk n-ij- i rlr iit .-, Icer into in, luiure nave ins ue - "uwiee ...e ......i i. nn. l...... : i-r Till. rniii nnrl pv.m mi rnr. rnnrp i"-."";: , " . , ; love itsclt. Nor is it connneti to I poor and ion ly ; memotrs oi the higher classes, and the wealthy do not disdain to make use ot the di- vincr and he is eu'ial to the task. ' rnr afi'iniwnr ran a no..-), lie will t,.u ,hc KH)r m.iuh.n wh,,lh,.r il(.r , faithful, or the coolie whoth- 1 passage aluit as ajiplieabie to Ja ! pan as to China may be quoted here j ; lrom Dr. Denny's little work on ; i "Folk-lore of China." " Divination is in China as popu- j Iaras, and probably more respectable tIian it was amom, t--10 Israelites in ,,(, tUyg of thc u lt(.h ftf tudor anil 1 j, irf not p(.rhaI,3 r,illi; too far to ! th,,t there is not a 8jn.,le nil,ina re i f.r.fi ,,, ;n ,i. .....ut iir-.i-,.ciiit ling the. imneuetrable veil which i hides the future from the curious of mankind, which is not known to be practiced by t!i Chinese. From "'Pinking the Itiblo" to uing the Planchette, from tossing for odd and even to invoking spirits or to act ually speak through craft v media, the whole ran?! of western snner.tt - tion in this regard is as familiar to : The man n fused to grant Jan."-' r--the average Chinaman as to the j tpiest. and in addition told bun n. t most enthusiastic spiritualists at I to marry until he had a compct. : home. . The coincident 'M.'f prat tioe : to support a w if. These remark' and belief are indetd so startling that ; wt-r rather humiliating to you:!.' many wiil no tioubt sr. in them a' I.i, Vs mide. and with emphasis he sort ot evidence either fur their truthfulness or for common or c il. It is Cot intended ; l pre: describe more than on-- mode is universal among the !-nyi r :ni oi and which can be sii cry day in the templi..- ! work ev 'f t.'c more corrupt or poorer sect of i'.uddldsis The nia- in Tokio and t Ut -wl.- ; terials ar.; verv simpi -mall rectangular or oblong . -,x i - Siiled ' with slips of bamboo, m-i i about; six inches in: length, and having a ; nnndit-r writtt u on the end. These' f'U. he si . -t. ..lit ..in. f tiirough the end of thc box ; arid :i' cordingtothn number on the first "oick the tli vini r sc-hets from a drawer in the cabinet close at hand ; a printed slip of prptr containing tin: enquirer's fate. The boxes vary j ;l(rorau),T to : r sex: but the number of boxew in possession of ,H!o teuit.lt' r.ireJv exceeds sixteen. eight for the various ages and two for the sexes, with corrr rponding drawers in the cabinet. The stock in trade being so small and the di vining priest generally holding some other occupation about the temple, he can afford to sell his wares cheaply. Yet on festival day he must receive a large sum. At the temple between Ka.waski and the soil, the writer has soon as many as2 t) persons draw the divining stick Mdhiji ico Kibi as it is called in an hour, and all of them seem-! ei I to treat the ceremony with the : utmost seriousness and solemnity,! generally stepping out before draw- m; the sticks, and elevating tlnari hand in prayer to the idol. lias torm c.t divination t-ri-ms to be connected with Ruddism, as we find it also us-d in j-s-hous'-s in China. The Ihix and stit ks are , .- . " "'J " "? J a,l: ,j. . ii... i-Miii.ii-,iiu,uii'i porter, or a priest who has been dis- i charged for his m.s ..nduct !nm hi- ., , ' m 'i' lurr)inK fur !.. The man who marries for love hi: is gent rally the vital u mpcrann nt 1 'sor enjoying gotal health ? Par id combative, sagacious and ii.d.s- ;k r's (!lig-r Tonic a'wavs n-g:i!..tr 'ciiiit lit. and takes a genend vie 'of everything. A li.';' id' idolep.e:; ! and i Tgnatmn r.o t liarins. l'.,r! tor.C whose bloed is warm and who" fc:. t - 1 t- ,t I' hopes are h:gh ; he Lias to l,e in tne i ; .' , l. ' . . . , jtLiokost ot Uie fight, giving blows land taking thc-m ; watching fir the turn of events with eookicss a!:d (toresight; pleived at his own ind.-; jitndence and struggles; eager to "i-''J writer in nt,i,i 1. ': show the world what he can achieve, I JUrW. has proven a great blow to and the contest rouses all the i grape-loving birds, for I have new r strength and manliness of his nature. t observed one that was -mait He wins the respect of his f.-lh.ws . enough to discover th.d a w hit by his own worth. Ho often brin gs ; gmpe w; s g..,(,d for eating. home pleasant sun .rises for hisi , . wife and children. You may reivg-! 1 '"' ex.i.-Hratt.l owner ot a cn. nize him in trains !o:b.l with par-i l.r !n AuEUta.Me has put up:. cols, which he good-r.aturedlv carri-s ar'tf'd. th,; lLl- inp'rfect unconcern of what others J 111 t"-n to loaf on re think a now bonnet, music, liKjks, irornor. a jacn-in-tne-oox, a doll or skip- groor!l 0f a woddinshould war h!-pmg-ropc intrude through the paper J rPV,,-:vr . outside cr insidw hi ahd suggests the tnrsory. He never ! tr,, c,v forgets the dear on. at home ; U.e . humanizing influence of the darling : A woman in Kansas, whi : red-chi'okod little M'ow w ho calls I work clearing awav some bushes him father brings a glow of f rapture, ! of the purest pleasure earth holds :! for Uie man who has never felt a ; tiny hand clasp his- will always lack ; something-he will be loss human,. u0 mJLi ti,,n t.. ti.;u the noble, thc honest, the only form of life that impart? real contentment j end joy, that will make a death-b-d ; In'.irumu "nil m-i ar nmp.i t hmiiih l -. II .1 L. gior ou., u. im.- pea. mu . n.. ,. ? - v . , V V, , i ' I - wim i.jr ni-, n.;.. i. .-...'. si...,. . M instincts, ii stimulates men t ; T, . thousand v-c.l wi-e j the best deeds they are capable of. ; Jj'-SupS h I cJ , !y studying how to live, wc must0" Pn the ne' i know how to die; and the finest life j i TP." . is that which ministers to othcri j T,ie ( jin(e Kiuc out of a needs and increases the joys of those j Cojmnori kin, j seaweed on U.eir "-i' """' - - ' and who look to us for support, ,so- kce and light, even-a the earth is j revivified by the sun ; for. feeling id ! life, thc puLsation of delicious ?ym-: pathv, the spring is a desert, the nrj.-' na from the kie. . Hun Along Th" other evening. .1 citizen of De troit l-cokoncd to lii.i twelve year old son t" follow kir.i in the wood-shed, and when thev nrrived tln-rc lie K- ' gan : "Now, young man, you have lt t-n fighting again ! How many tiJi. have I told vou that it is dikrrace iful to fight?" 1 ''Oh, "father, this wasn't about ' marbles or anything f thrtt l.in.1."' ' replic'l the hoy. "Imt he!i it. -X- n t hr:i:.i:: ; nmn it is my tiuty t hriii!j ::iy , children to Visir the J.unh Take your coiit. " Hut, father, the boy I was fight ing witli called me names. "Can't help it. Calling names don't hurt anvone Off with that coat !" ; "He said I was the on oi a wi . puller. ; .-vhatl What was that ?" , K.al 1,,-,,;.,, ; - .. lm do' gracious! but wouid:i' j ik e io ii;ive mo iraining oi mar boy lor about live minutes !" said the old man as he hopped around. "I put up at that,"' continued tie' buy, "and then he said you laid your pipes for office and gut left by a large majority. I couldn't stand i mat, lamer, ana so i saiieu over you may go outand buy twopoiiud- ot candy. Ine Hible says it is wrong to tight, but the Itihle mu-t make allowance Kir political cam paigns and the vile slanders of the other party. I only brought you out here to talk to vou, and nov j y j vou can put oil your coat and r. ii'.'." A I.orr's Il-veni'. When James hick, the ( iilon millionaire, was a young man he fell in love with a miller's daughter iu Pennsylvania. Young I.iek faced the stem old miller and askd for his daughter. Now, J-mum w.m a poor vouiiginan, but hoint and ic- ' ,ln.tn.."i -.i,,l -iit'. .! f,;'l ri.',. 'replied : "Sir, I shall see the dav r . ... -, . .. I when vour !o.asted null wtuud ii". tie- j ni.nk a r --pt-ctable wheat bin for eiittojl shall own." Years pass.-l j.t.I which j. lames F..ick cn-fted in .i.U.i (La. ! isscs, county. California, a mill, the wood work of which is solid mahogany. Shortly alter its erection he Lad photographs taken of thein-ide a:.d outside of his mill, and sei.ttheni t-. the miller who bad refused him the hand of 'lh--i his; i laughter. I'tfMc laoiii" an guid, tiresome m iis.ati lis to aiii causing you to feel scarcely ubl. be on vour fo-t: that constant dr that is taking fr"rn your system nl its elasticity ; driving the 1.1, . from your checks : that contin'.i.t strain ujion your vital furcts, reti ilcring yon iirititl'!-' and fretful. a: e:isi'.v lie removed bvtheuso of II'; Hitters. Irregularities and ohsf ruc tion d your system ar? relieved at once, while the special cause of peri odical pain is permanently removtd. Will you heed this'.' ('inriuiui'i S'lt'.irili'.'t yi'jht. I ltiinntely. A gi l.tlctnan wlio has a bill ;.g.ii:.-t fiilhooly h;is been both, ring that distinguished Galvcstonian for weeks for a settlement. The otle r day he cail'-d on him and said: "Now. Mr. Gilhooly, I want you to tell me when vo'l will pav that bill." "Diiin't I tellyo'i I Wiis going t i pay it Uitimatelv '.' ..v..j I.., I Willlt VOU to Sit SUP:" can make mv cal. u!;.- Id.iv so I tions." "I'll ttfiv it ldtiliintel'.- " "Can't vou he mon- dofinit'.' Wh. i ;n vn ; itir.,t. lv i ;u pay it very u.t.ma . -. -v,.- i .ni... vuii nr.- sat, s u- I t ? Hare vou wer know,, anr p. ; . , .. i. . ,. ... : ID UC vitv iii ftii-iiiiiii a nrKRriuoi- H nr!i ' ach or inactive livtr tir kitliievs': ; And v,ht n thoe organs are in good. : condition d vuu not find their pus i th" important organs, and r. v- ' fails to make th.c blood rid. pire, and to strengthen v-ry lb'' sv-t' tii. Ith.'.s enrol hundred - r 11 t 1 oi oe.-paru.g mva.ids. A-k v..-'.; i . -. .. " i nriuhbor shout it. .: "tw r ... urmi. : . il:e mtrotpieiionoi wiutc graj--. roar her house, was str.nebv a wasp. and the r fleet is such that he h:c Ken entirely paralyzel. . . , . , Some women are afraid of spid-r--. It h a pity there are not more wh-. a"V hen we should not be in so I,:!u h danger from fned food. A , h - h tim-s a . - . .... miiin ? (w cuhic w nlmnt ?r,T hog-hea.is of air per hour 'shore1. It is letter to be a Tighter of wruu than a writer about wrongs. Uiincui. ! a bp Id head. lock to pick One l."m - t I 1 "f '!'