UNCLE DICK (SLE 53Y. vy Charseteristic Stories of the Genial Ex Governor of [1iinots, . I think it was during the Cleveland. ‘Plaine campaign that «<i-Governor Oglesby of Illinois, ‘Uncle Dick,” as he is familiarly known, first made a stay of any length in New {ork © Be and a companion had a saniptoons Jancheon, ordered of ocarse by the intro ducer, who wemnd tp by inviting the governor to smoke. The clerk at the ¢ Zar counter handed out posse fine Havara cigars [Uncle Dick “mt to take ome, when some th arrested his hand, snd he aed: “What's the price of (hose? “Twenty-five cons’ “Holy smoke!" ofa or. “Put ‘em back! quick!" “Bat, governor, this is mid his friend “Paren’t do it! Daren't "em back [”’ “Yes, but governor’ f- “1 tell you 1 daren’t doit mez, if they éhonld ever find out in II- ; that I smoked & 25 cent cigar in ew York, they'd ture me ont of the church, and it wonld min me politically forever. Daren’t do it! Ten cent cigars are good enough far me in New York and 5 centers at hore.’ Uncle Dick always yrided himself on ‘his snccess in campaigning when called upon to reach a man’s ‘vote through his family pride On ome of his tours Iie passed throngh a country town in Illinois, when he came suddenly upon n charming group —a comely woman with a bevy of little ones about her—in a garden with a high picket fence fn front of it. Fe stopped short, then advanced nnd leaned over the front gate. “Madam,’’ said he in his racst in- gratiating way, ‘may 1 kiss these bean- tiful children?’ “Certainly, gir.”’ the nly gnswered demurely, ‘there is no possilije olbjee- ry . . the reply. ithe govern ‘em my treat, it! Put * “They are lovely dazlings,” guid Un- cle Dick, after he had finished the elev- ~ enth. “I have seldom seen more boauti- ful babies. Are they all yours, marm?” The lady blushed dieply. “Of conree they ans—the sweet little . treasures Fron whess else, marm, conld they have inherited these limpid eves, these rosy cheeks, (hoe prods onris, these comely figures ud “thems mbsica) voioes?{ : The Indy continued hiushing. By the way, mim,” (=e estimable huoshand thar Hic hard J. Oglesby, Republican pandidate for gov- enor, called upon him this evening?” HS Alas sir,” quoth the lady, “1 have 20 basband. ”’ “But these child, malam—you . surely are not a widew “I fear you were mistaken, sir, ‘when you first came up These are pot my children. This is an orphan soylom Exchange. D-ctors ov Fo Doctors. er ——— Take haphazard a pamber of people "of both sexes snd of sll ages. Divide them into communities. Let the doc- sors of each nation have acommaunity to themsebvod—this divigion would be in- ble because rhe difference which | exists between the treatment prescribed, | my, by a French and by an English doc tor, has to be expericaced to be believed. Let the allopathists, the bomeopathists, the hydropathists, the thousand and ome sets of medical faddizts, all have a community of their wn. Give the nos- { Suffer the | tram mongers free hands faith healers to work, unimpeded, some- where, their own svect will, and ld the whole namber of the covsmunit! permit ome to be set apart in whi 3 no “doctor of any sort ¢r kind, regeias or irrgular, shall be allowed to ple a foot or have a voice. If such a test vicre feasible, I wonder what the result wonld be. Or, rather, I do not wonder—1 - should like to have a Wager depending on the issue. 1 would wager that, all thin gs being ; position, climate, circumstanoss, constitution, ages—ih physical history of all those communities we asld be pretty well of a mnmchness. They would all gf fer from the same diseases, woald teat them or be beaten ty them, in mach the same way, and would die at about the same age. Of this I am certain—and in this 1 believe that the physicizos ther selves would be upon my side—that the | medically supervised onnraunities would | be every whit as closely acquainted with , discass and. suffering before the Curtin finally fell ‘as that one commu- ‘nity in which no dotors were. —All the | Year Round : ~ Asam iniam. said Unele Dick, “may i ‘bother ‘fua to tell your AP ASTROXG, back, i Why, | TREADWAY 1 AXGFORD. CROSE THE YALE CREW, The Yale evew that will Captain Bishan] Armstrong, Holeomb, Beard, other for the third year. Strokes Langford snd Harvard willl not meet on the witer in 1596, HOLOONE. nieet Harvard - June UR in Sereely a veteran ove. roms and Dister are now rowing a but 3 good one. Yale i i g £ i ANG “yet 25) FE LA, VISITING AND EMPIRE GOWNS. ent piincess style and with a demi train, sloeven are of d pow di sete with falls of silk moslin. In. and grey brocade with a wait of exspire gown of baby blue It is Ened crepe de bine silk muslin, | oom, | pure tortie ibell tom is wo extremely . they exist only him in eomfort | years wit of Dufferin is extremely partial to white ‘akin to dismay as the mammeth jumped ‘on his knee, which in the comren of 8 “phon is valid br its 3 - % ; . markable wa ws 5 moment ‘ehalw.'" Th : only ar. i ganpowder paaging ? } has ever bern fale to the | ing in the semmer of 1537 Al | Pont, sou of Elenthere, was inc | mixing rooins with scam of his men, try- ORE CAT WORTH $72,500. | DHE Vou Rver See s Puse Yorteles Fhell Tom?—Cots That Look Lie Pulidoge | Tt is estimated that thers are 360 000 eats in England and 67 varietien With , the greator number of thes: varieties the i | average render is probably quite nada . miliar, Torteise ehill and white toms.are very says an English writer, hut a scaron that many pec ple declare thst in the imagination Any one who } happens to possess a feo male rad tabby without any white dots ermld obtain a prices whick world keep for at least a ocmple of emt wink Female red (ald Pe BS TA a8 Port The taste in Persian <5 rans on the deep blpe with or TA fg shell toens Sreut 1 JE 1 © ored eves. Edward Lioyd, the tener, hs ron for which he $150, The luright slate ar LI vorita variety of the Persisn sometimes gi ag as high sn ¢ : : White costs of really herctloan propor- tions readily fetch $300. The Marquis : repeals, pole eats, npward of a dopen 1 thess splendid | erestures being oomfortabiy domiciled | at the British erabassy in Paris Rosrian. eats fetch high prices The Duchess of Bedfrrd owns several of a species extromely rare—a very curions ‘tint of blue. Russian white cats ars als highly prized, but the 1 white variety is seldom long haired Mr. Sam “ odiwiss is the owner of a a | smooth haired tom, Xenophon, of sel gigantic proportions that. when the | writer, after an introdoction, induced the eat to ayproach by calling in wadne- | sive accents he eyroriensd a feeling exhibit nmwmise | and no wonder | r weight. Xeno. rt B13, 500. f sveh ro few moments Yegun to takalle signe of fatizue, £m ———7 23 2 Jn minis ina fa adv da TT A hinted sors of : tx) ; ee bulldog. The va! they pres shes noon thig ger 71 = take 8° Semie and ac | writes in 1884, ° : live.’ a. I get old,” ‘ chise and devil driven England. fre here {at Oxford), but only on the fo a i easily 1 * to do ants Wh EN masEL SMILES. Waen Marri iion my oars bests Sigh, A softer ssure tints the sky, And pepbyre sweet £18 longhing by, With strains arienrd hefiee, Wiaile | ioolk in Ber pesriess eyes And envy not the rid and I. Nor heaveinssd gure with wistful sighs, For hiemwen oun yield so more. When Walwi frowns The world fs roa, Fock trembling ¢ Aeron Wvens B Tene Tw powes droop in grief and fear Ard ese So breasts porfnime, for pie, » monrnfnl swsin, Avimal purest drag in pein, or whe ie bear te meet Dindein Proen lips so full of blown? When Ma nd wt Hew, my her? i prt ihe Rit "7 That dow and pai renet ? Hake Ek naman 2 BOM Extracts Prom Some Eaters of the Subddle and Charming Old C€ ritie. “Talk is impushie to me,” Roskin ‘owing to the state of quiet rage and wonder at ev erything people say and do, in which I habitoally “1 don’t gt be er, which is true spondent be says: ‘Nothing can advance at in any district of this aerursed ma- I lec- E RUSKIN writes some yomrs lat. of the past." gi Je imexpressikly subtle and pene. trating,’ he writes to a young roan, ‘is the principle of pride! How it min tt | iteelf with, and even pretends itael tes, and takes she likeness of, the thi om ! fowlings in the world—and what a ron- stant struggle it needs even to detect, much more 0 expel it! It is Lil oxygen in iron-—the hottest fre will rot expel it altegether—and it steals in with the very air we broethe, tuning oZ our steel into rust.’ “Things that roqpive steady labor," be | writes to the samme correspondent, “there are indesd far all of us to do, bat they | are the coal heaving part of our life and ‘to be dons with a slow step and bent back, poiiently, not in a passion, nol | trying to beat our brother coal beavers, bat only to carrying a8 many onals se we oun ocand. srtably. But the graat things which require genios to do arg done I? you are if yo have the genuine ing that is really glorious, | apd for which men will forever wander Fzar How Cone of 11:0 wer 2k 3 Thus far ns Ima ‘ ‘ i bravery, while more than on his life in ower: {me Sato day even- | exis 1. = na of the § ig 3% | ing to shift a heavy yellow pine box. As | they slid the box along the floce, tel ; frictica canned & spark to strike, and | instantly the rooms was ablaze. Forta- | i nately most of the gunpowder had beet | WHY MRS. B INSY MOVED “ Hello, B Are this " dy Buswy! your meving this spring | 8 grouadhog moved in our left. I strode with horhood ia becamsing altogether too pronuscmons. om our right, ind yesterday s skunk moved im next dour en animals of elas. Last walk “" —Lifs toma of ne OAT ' iin { i of the men t | rocf, which was ; throagh-— | were made of pitch and cement—aund be In obtaining alumina from clay, ac | cording to Heibling, sapposing a clay «I | ‘a known strength in the alumina, fo each molecule ff the latter taere is io corporated with the clay thee moleculs of mmmmoniom sa: huice and an abo ‘equal weight of neutral potassium sv: phate. One molecnle of the latter is . theoretically sufficient, and the whole is well worked up and made into hollow ‘bricks, these to be baked at 270 degrees | to 280 degrees. The aramoniam sulphate is then decomposed into acid ammonium sulphate and ammordacal gas, whic may be collected in a condenser. To acid of the amniuiaig sulphide is fis thrown upon the neatral ‘potassium sui: - phate, which becomes acid sulphate. and the latter at this temperature, | presence of alamina and clay, is na tralized by the alun:iva, forming donb alumintam and potassinm sulphate. e., alum. The bricks are then extract: : by methodic lixivistion, and the sili may be used for cement. The alum : freed from iron by recrystallization, ana the solution may be treated for the pre- cipitation of the aluraina by means of the ammonia which has been distilled off. To obtain the alumina in a grano- Jawad state it is spread out upon stages | tqwer traversed from top to botton = hot moist aminonia obtained oa _ baking the bricks. i | TBE CHALLENGE. - “1 pant Jeet nose now; but if you have the instincts of a gestleman sit doen, £0 ph. ‘var I come back with a step ladder!” — Piek-Me-Up. | oo. realizing the danger instuntly, | and being himself in flames, called to | | the men to follow him, and | of the building threw himself into the | 1 mill rare. | thus, | Alexis, turning toward the mills as he | swam, saw that sparks from the buming | Inspired by his. eourige, t ‘ rallind with a will at the Fock . bat before they bad got fu ‘ the expl 1 the Crying stands, ernch i C ro x Wet in 1 ROE TIER i Not harsh and | suppose, but musical. as is Apoldo’s Inte Cand a perpernal | sweets, ‘| taken out, it being the esd of ihe week, | but the walls and floor were safficlently sprinkled writh it to cause a sharp pall, which set the men's clothe: on fire | awn Lama ‘ng ont) The others did likewis and for the moment, all wera rafe. Bat mizing room wera falling in showers on | | the roof of the press and entting mill knew of the anpeals | which contained, as he sire » pvelwed Yaa ty the point rt a: he ran, “Now, of dager, ealing«r boys, pass mo bueliots of water. Then he climbed fearlessly pin the now newly burned in those devs the roofs sy for gan fighting the flames as boat Feoodld | akmen | ot line, | wing Aleta Da aif nat vee of | ng Ey} st he vo Tae sib came, Blin Pont with fearful force bis longs, Sea in;ariag Eon 8:14 died in great agony a Tr hours Lk YieClure's Magn gine : yiiww ae Court. f tl w Chinega const 1 aed to Inolmle The Ch SOTHO iS Tow en : . ro - : pro|iratod ; gign £0 ny niary a Per rrading the i 8c to do sa trance fond pon fy Lar 243 ] ered ward, thus saving tis rf Biweo ry. —landion Soundare The Fieas ng Part, wddr—TJiow did you bike Hamme tom fu“ Julus Caesar’ last night? Dad Jy ‘ell. I can’t say that he was altogether satisfactory in the : o it was a reall pleasura to we hin 4. ¥— Eston Transcript ming is divine philveophy i crabhend, as dmil fools CBT Ler "How charm feat of pectared where no crude surfeit reigns, — : Whe {| have in England?’ | and louder gro | to the deal eur. of the artiste whi fancied | three huge oo rly started | | silent nen who left the per their sans and grandsons. Thi WOWas my. - father adso He was a silent mun, i | at you, you will do is as a dock quacks because it is your nature to (ro i— $ rains.’ ve you know, Watts," ho askid a friend in 1849, ‘to my mind the anly real painter of history or fhosght we “There's noting ! here like Carpaccio,’ be writes from Venice to Str Edward Burne-Jones “Thers’s a bit of hamble pie for yon. I don’t give up my Tintaret, but his sclntion of expression into drapery and | shadow is too licentions fur ms now.” “I've been gning to the old masters’ be writes to Mr. Murray, “and starag | at the Rir Joshua's My stars, wiu that fellow could do!’ And here fully are sorae fring shafts at certain modern imitators of a “i bave deen now for 40 vears vainly and always loader growling and thandiwing in- they admired Turner: ‘Lead pencil point—pencil, sir! Pencil -— pencil till you ean manage your Slacklend—-— They never at A i tegid to one word that I =¥, hat 70 oo i damh, dan, dash to | pothing or worse. ai Comstion then color if you will ' their deaths, and we Clrens Kitchen. Ar five 2 % the eroveid 1 cates the of ¢ £858 Im aroroach. XAgOns, Ci | | 4 | me How foam pered ] , Sor to another errre- mates past 4 a shong Troan each weigh or 29 tons and drawn n by gx horses Fro | the frst of them rise three chimnors oat of which black smoke is po Th Fh nen mez 7%) | where fires wera started the mo ment ithe wagon wis unlosded fr Already, while roll - £m sgh ag torrard § pris aod Reading Plaid rows P SRD carries the 18 foot eoxiing | i ax at Sanh : a7 ands, the ten cooks have been | en, L the thi row Ww oi na ha dr ta of the still anvmaised © ~r3 with hes o! Waa | IRs Le Set > wer nt. ba i tng 20 large en boxes Laat contain ) inven and countless kitchen aten AR ATEIDG, CL ll orl fefivers Fat #2. BR wITitis t £) Urer, D. D, in The 1 Journal 1 thank still pond a smith as I have . a man who wold forge or steel, with os ft. stead pres, strong and © alter and never wick a member, a’wars at his w fall dead thar dappwith the bu 18 hand. 3 nt oy Father, HOW) ATi kincksmithe, I think, are nox ally silent rien. Theeld Beechors wore, as I have heard, who were Cedi Epes 1 both farther and mother wero a TE I from oomtagicns and infactions ns ¢.¢ And Thea He Went Nene “Mr. Stalate.," > ® you remember when in 1364 to watch the pew your in? “Yes,” he replied raprusmsly “Well—dmm't you—lom’s you “Don’t I what?’ : “Don's you think ve x i518 ¥ pared, mnrn Rie 3 : middie 0’ the ball so lope and © make | sound oaks are and the stars, so thut t) | microbes, when they came in the {ful form of fevers, fou ud po thing: them for prer. i : ana 24 Ba s+ toe diamond staid Mary Jane— Why does © a0 Tages min with the bak? Abpur—Can't yom seel him #0 wad he can't hit it Cleveland Plain Dealer. 1 SOFA, rin . oi the F | sGCTRWARD. Wants to | +R P. M~Traiz ¢ 473 TSA M--Trat ae " oi ho ge AST A IN SFFRCY NOV. & #0 Phil pis and Ree Brit ome Tulile, o . Termine anv Tit wood EARTW A iD ad A hk ww Be A Mo Tmin 8, Gatly wu « Lr Ge Supnory. Hair isbnre sme , fi: Some, wrevieg wl FaladelpTia, eS | New York, 92 Pp. wi Beetimraee 68% au, Washing, "50 p,m, Pallsnee Per oes . } ope Er gwamengcr owsie fram Rare iis 27a TE 4 . mle 6 aN Eee Maier Farr Pg seed Bante e el % img a1 Plibinge pina ox 0m, Rhy Xe e Heng cr ng Bhd dppb wd WN 5 Tid orien gl MEW CREE PEREIRA) spe] Kathi 7; | EE : oi Pr Maow UML. : war EEA 4 AA utero byte Pls paws Arriving Sighs, €id be New 5 osras week ayy und 05m me, ou Sead A (ei vag onre a . Erie and W! 1 azuagy ro an SERGEY In Kawper fo Bali ue wpa ig Lago wl pe irwnel eepur at Bar nn. ais rom Hebe to Phibeled: wn port 10 Bait rors, puts “end Witiims WERT ARD Tear Ln ae nt HH. it io SaenEs eel P. he ay ae Kane snd AY SEs susan, - NROTGH TRAING POR 1d FROM THE EAST AND SOUTH. IN § invves Renovo af 8: except Surday, arviving a. - I JOHNBONBURG RAILROAD {Daily EXoept Sunday 3% RAT i9 'syves Ridgivny 21 = 0% m. Jony sonbhurg Wl wd ea. wn, wrrivi Frac a. * WE wl Leraoot aviog ni dahomsonbeng Lg ray 88 1200 Down Beceh (Creek Railroad. NTC & RRR R Co, Lewes. OONDENSHD TIME TABLE Head Up Head Lown Rap al 1 Bap Hn = He pi “Na i Ne E ¥ Sn wee TSB SAP - A wots EBRON e BW Westover £12 fo = Huntin rh 5 = = : co KATOOY ih By wel | } a U0 He a rss A A. heats wou I Td i ma] Bean BEA Nitiw MOT... WB ais Bw 4 AYN Choate... 68 Senrtedd June. AE Wesel ism J, “} £3 : PCANEWL LE PHELY Bu Sun Av 18 Sh MRE... we # 8 g k § 13 $ | : i i na | fi rE 3 lls ‘ NER HAnE B BusER HER: i Maes boi ht ji > 11 Es 5 Pils : gre Hpmbury {ive Ar. foo ro _-— 3 te LFS ER RR hee BE ! 4 de A | 4 : FER Ji | 1 On me Youngdseie (Way he. 5. Jerry “ame Janctbw . 8 _, At i SRNEBERYSR HEALY Rana @ra ng wn tm iriand By PAgunmeeceB Ee EE Rex wie BR “zp¥: 14 * ~ i 3 Willamette 2d Jv. Pheer pbiln Ary She -N J vias Tareneg, A or his ‘vin Ph A Foot Y Liberty Ean 2 |g whe STEER “yo w ang = i.e “ ¥ 4 "s » Wy eg ~: >i Ri. -— » % #2 Sundsios * oy 8 | ' PW enki vie MBS A WM. Sandee Puaitnean Twit mad} ab wd am vs fruiies Bate egg Tlrwrtug RY fos - 2d 4 Ade ¥ Ww PA IEE, 7 ob boy Nsw York, avd wis mak «13 Fartor Car to ¥ : riamide : leaving WRI amepeaT Wow a. a. 1 Wililkampor! aust Li thers wh thie MW BC ak Bs a Urnationd -iRadinond off Meaney eanie Le Proll peoagey wth Pvimats. 3 FL 5 wees hel ats Bn Be BaiNin, Rochester vi PUrLabiR w way Ar Madslfiey und Partce 9h (Se va ast 7 learn! SEVERN 5 the Pikes TE i AT Wiahmilew w 7h oe Yeppaen sin LYE ANTE Da TW x E angiima so PLM Ei " Sar a “m Fala & Lae lic is Tn to Boimey ion a As - a » (ens Pamerag rr Rus fi ri iphiy GAESTER & PTTSEE ns 2. wrt 4 Namen ma. 4 Lat Arte Prams TOE ERG peel gs i Lt Gepvart. Da Rr Bali ok FA INS DEF LRT. daily FT KAY TRAIN i Pen XAT bw own Pak ie apf rh oe wes nifoon allan wand, Dwg Hess, i AT wien ge Te ~N ¥ . Haig, N.Y Matthews, , Spt RUSWAY AND CLEARFIELL Rw DAILY EX PY SUNDAY STR IN - Too Badge Isbatnd Hu Min Ans wi seh rN, A ¥ gn we 3 9 ed Y i Tr ie Khor MM Ean Bans -. we E ysl a, 50 4 ks x ¥ neva | iw 8 La Treen i Bovses way Vie in Q MeMing Sunmi ia Hervey Hun 6.45 Falls Cree eh Be THAINS Lav «4° - = Ay fe treet Mutagen
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