University of South Carolina Libraries
Jhj t - ■ *:; i •* ri Sfaw % S itm / H« LMl«f 1TM4. Dr. W«mnft<a «m Okkold ■ in th*' •nd Ool Stone wm ubo oi Km mriilikinort. Jt wm ihe ewtom to •upplen«nt the min- itt*» toedeNto wJiijy vith preaents Jinci 4 I\ ia itie fill hmist-oUatiin^ U>at tllto the ttr«A((th tA t woman * pow%r of aa- durance and a man'* patienoa. No :»attar how hapny htwband ah 1 wife inar hft Uihre ia awaya danger ttf a dlf- IhrAnha 01 opinion. Or Of veritable quaf rahng over fall hotwe clennin*. "" ia called i raw had and, parmmage mime hi* nine It wan a m ff. Uoln««Sa?Jf^2.*g’„ ; ^ | n»glo> tfc. brt*M tw» ray, jAROfcfl c0U THUR8D3 to tha morclng bouia wlwra Um rad raaa lay, purpla, oa tha My*! briMt ra Uia haarta, ttiat aoTt Iky day— , rad roaa ka* pona to ita not. B*PT3BMtia*a i 1 otcoor^ta ia Official .from the I a very dark ng drank and or three ward* for the best Twal^laMvw Lien Uw * wl Wes at tbt* MMtdn offloeof Couh»1**‘« ,! traneferrad lt» dtiUi —^ ^ , of A K r1*ulvure. It wi«y > Paddy waa a ram- ^>w a«>d«dh>*t rn oB t< ^^ Burgeaa an oqnal- TAnChri*tui»» ll, Sve observed the Maine Before Tbe l’»o rL,t carefully, gentlemen,” ■ fitenda the ^‘‘and you wouldn’t be ^world fickle.” jattbere, what’a that?" inquired .should have obaerved the Maine i opened hi* mouth from oar to an immnse cavern, and gave , vani ty a guffaw that almpet brought down the ceiling. ' ■ “I gollv, Judge, that’* whit we done / gone an’ done, ahuah t” . '<*♦ “Be dad, and tlie naiger is right, yer Honor, This Maine business has been too much for us entirely,'’ added Teddy. “’Bore deLord, Judge, if we’d a wont •n’ foliated dat Maine huiness to de eend, we’d a bin planted out dar in de grave yard shuah an’ sartin,” still further ex plained Burtrcea, “How’s that?" inquired the Judge. Teddy acted as spokesman. “Well, yer Honor, and this is the whole trutle of the matter. Misther Game and me- self don’t agree in politics. He’s a Dem ocrat and I’m • Rcpubhoan, and we work together. The day before the Maine •lection, I sex, aes X ‘ Bargees, mo bye, I'll bot ye a quart of whisky that the Republicans in Maine whale hell out of the Fuaioilists.’ * It’s a go,’ sez Burgeaa, W<dl, yer Heuor, the ne*t morn- lat the papers, and there, I enough, the Fusion late had got away with us for good. ‘Coma on Burgess, : X ‘End we’ll go down to MeGnah s and get the whiaky I owes ye.’ We got it, and Burm-Hs said he’d be social like, and we’d orink it together. Well, ye sea, wa just purchaaad it, when. begorrH the pews Sanaa that tha Republicans had wrm. ‘ I’ll be afther doin’ the square thing,’ sea Burgess, sex he, 'andpay yon the quart hi f whiaky I’ve He paid it, var Honor, and I axed him to ^•kelpme drink it krfke. Well, yer Honor, ^"fliad 'oeaa to tha aewspaix-ra. No more had we got that down till the news came that it were the Dtaaycrata aa had carried Maine, and, as Wd paid even hata, I had to get iuiother quart of whiaky to be one ahead. Tha next morula' who should I meet cm the Court-House Ixmle- vard but Burgew Gresn, and he set, sex ha: ’Lok hara, Taddy, Tm stuck for that whiaky afther all The Republicans have got it in Maine Either all' WaO, yer Honor, wa started ia to pay that bet on tna next day, and it kepi < \ ■> back and forth till qy got away with ta. And that tha Main# atyla, bean dotn it, yer Honor, and bore *e are and the divil only knows when tha hat erfll be Judge Kill* sent them to jail to get eeber and ‘ ‘ * [Orth till gy got awar atyla, iak? Be mbt ing to the hardwood. It waa a good oa-loed—two oqids or so. As he was geins tofths the common with it bis brother, Ool Ephraim caught sight of him from the ajore, and was surprised at such a great load. “Heitor nays he, “why don’t won take your minister a load ol totod while you’re about it f’ * . f ^ / “Now, look bore," aays Ool. Leonard, “iVe been sawing out lumber down’t the mill, mkI there's any quantity ol slabs. Ill give the minister aa big a load a# you can take!” ■ ' Ool Ephraim was a man for fan. Hn instigated the townsp»)Ople to take hold with him snd SMept ms brother’s chal lenge. First, they mads tfcb Med. Long trees wore cut for tho fumters. Thuae were unule thirty-orld feet luug and set eight feet sport. The body ol the sleib pivjecterl two foot over the runner on each side. Thus the sled would liold twelve regular cords at one layer. There wore two tongues, one in front of each runner. On the appointed day the men and the oxen from all over town omits to the meeting place. The sled Was taken to tlie saw-uull and backed up ogaiuat the great pile. On went tlie slabs wi'h u will. Ool Leonard stood by, laughing, ehei ring, urgiog them along. When tjley had gotun aaJftoahna-th^rthonglrt I would do, they hit died up the team. One hundred and aixty oxen, four abreast, found it easy enough to puli. They had to go around through Bald winville, because there was not room at the Otter riv%r bridge tor the sltd to turn in. When they had got onto the level ground above Baldwuivillo, they stopped and unhitched. Then with then ‘ Eiy went back to the slabs and pile them on tb« big load. This they kept up tilt there were uo more slabe. Forty cards lay piled up on tbatr sled. And the evening and tha morning were the first day. • The next morning came the reel of tha journey “up in town." Tha school children wire let out to sea tha great sight go oy. One of them, to whoeo home it waa going, says it looked aa big aa a house. It lay unloaded for quite a while oat by tha parsonage, and people came from near and from far to see. It kept Mr. Wellington in slabs for years '. Dome. When the ffifeei sled was taken to pieoea, some of the timlxjis were used in oMMklf Mr. Winch’s bam, and may be seen there in the framework until this dey.—Boston Advertuer. How Taxes Cattle Are Utilisf* are beef-packing aatahhehmeets md FultonT Texas, both of vein the center of cattle in which at least 100,000 beevre ir. Every part is utiheed, even to the tafta e preserved and la<W friaaettea. n# blood flows into tanksand is pressed, aadiaaoid at t cools a pound tor tha making <4 fertilisers. The tooguea and lean beef are boiled and canned. The httman Salted and sold again. The extracted and guee to tal- are bailed to x^silp to c< ■old at 1 md tor The feet _■ Hie h..rL. honw kwee, end tkia is added to ^ andthehcrea ore sold for Every a tool of the animal is ore of tha a jKiaila, wbtakl sold for the making of Tbs woman long* for it and the man dreads It; nny, he detests It from his vary *onL In the spring ho, lx Much more easily led Irt acquired' in the Necessity dt tlid cleans!tig deremony. 'Inc oped win dows arc plcftHant The delude of so3|l and water is cot disagreeable, and hi* thought* de net rest without pletnure <m tiowly-ttrhlflni ug>i. but frhe l October has cottic*, and Ihrlcavea blj# hhontin tlie garden; tUul hd ha* spoken to the i>r0|>ef person* Aboitl IrtokiSg at the heater, tow bdught ids fiew over* Coat, and prepared tflrbe oo».y and com fortable, then to have ‘la oleaiilng^H* almost more than he ran bear. If his wife is wisp, she doe* Cpt coU- •ult him.. She quidtly gtlrrlrtiohx th4 Wfirk-womdn, iaterVievks the kalsom na Innn. aiid begins after‘•he’’ has gone out some day. If ho soys: “What! are ,jou *t it aga'n?’’ when he comes home, Abe must not feel too greatly o[Tended.. Her joy is great when the carpets are up and off to be shaken, the cobwebs all banished, the w’ndows sparking, and the doors varnished. ' - But ho goes about seeking rest tor the ■ole- of His toot atid finding none. Where is the sofa oil Which he idvfcs to lounge? Gone to have the springs set up. Where is the table at which ne siM to read? Turned upside down, while a tnan looks at the castors. Where is hi* shaving-glass? .It i* put aWay in ft pan- Dy. why should he use browh soft]! for his toilet, and eat off of cracked plates-on a pine table in the kitchen, and be expected to like dinners of tea and bread and butter, with a relish of smoked beef? “Cook left because I wanted her to help clean house,’’ explains the poof wife, adding: “And Cynthia Jane fell off the step-ladder and sprained her knee, and has had to go home to her mother's, and I hare to take care of the children myself.” Then he utters the cruel remark: “That cook is .a sensi ble woman, and that he would go also, if he could, and that he «ea see no rea son for sending Cynthia fees up step- ladders ’’ His wife weeps without awakening hi* sympathy, and he goes out after tea and stay* until hhlf-past twelve o'clock, and she is very miserable. She won ders why men cannot understand; Why, as soon a* winter comes, rooms cannot be too hot fpr ihem. not too inussy; why they wotild rather have tbe ceiling lined with jobwebs and the Coor covered with dust, than to see a feather-brush or a broom; why a room that nobody dares to sweep is the areat desire of ev ery masculine heart. To her it is so nice to hws oil about her fresh and clean. * However, she is sorry foe her spouse, who comes to his norma) temper oy «to- ^ greet, as rooms are finished, a ml his belongings found span. And when Cynthia . ane h is got back to ,:hc nurs ery, and x new cook lias prepaiod x good dinner, and “he ’ finds that he has a home once more, be oomes home some evening radiant, with tickets tor a concert n his (xicket. and all is rght •gain. In fact, we have never bean! of a separation arising from a fall houee- cloaning. although every wife will ac knowledge that it is a fearful ordeal. — V K. /.« tore. >ictB fob Til ctmiotra. 4 tfnw tnttsieaP ihe angelica. It ia fanned of fitly piece* Ol crystal, and he* * key-board *a lotto Half-tones can In played, with two littl* hammers; ibtamet ha*kwp prong*; which take all octave; the trebtc.Jbutoper A wid pin vs the melody. Tlie tones rasorfii Alto titnuiTi —It is estimated that nine oat ofrtefl English book* pay for publication. —Governor fitenhen*. of Georgia, ha* hi* fliecei made one Of Executive Mflnsion nieces make Mistress of the & Atkmto. Two their hnitrite #ith Instrument resemble the human of this ketMc Cmi nriiOiD ia lidng tlx&l hi Faris tot making stereotypes. The mold'i* token wttb * special cement, which receives the inspreHsion! and rapidly hardens. Tbe •elmlokl •heet ii then n*ed to ob- totu the iinpiosuoii to M employed in inintuto. Celluloid has also befen used for giving typographical repreaentotion* Of Ukob; the imi'icssion!* being token from the lads Itself. Dm Ekiti Hotra claims tor the Btisk- men a fifirthet advance in art than he has found among anr Other people in South Africa* they shoW touch skill in the manipulation at stdfia ftnd the manu facture of vessels out of wood, bone and ostrich eggs, and have executed with tools of flint drawings, or engravings, and carving* of considerable merit, in the cave* and on the walls of their Lute. Few iieoble are aware that tlie proud of the Engl ' dry of Art emus Ward. to the Provi- wntM Mr*.' l ex- tor tough, mother r said ‘ daughter, ss her tether "i -idol coento- the little ones. TIm- child provoked the and tbe little bead I fear we do not tough ■•keeping is so oner so often trying to the servants me John, kind, eannut utxl erstoudaUl and disoouragpinaDto, end worrnil, we often feel sh for the boaaahold to additiun to all our can-n, as well Yet the and it must Father and cheery, his laugh ring '• tough toils, even tlie as seems to lose much In the sad bat forcible Joanna Baillie’* drareas— I ctttfbt Um took ot i plajitilnex- of the stem ro- >th well Manse, where of all emotioua, even the to have lieen the oousUnt iber well hearing a lady to ne*d that Ui%% I l3Se ob- ^ i a c. mother I used to wish so would lock cheer mother even if you do weary to exert the facial i, and you have to make a pitiful •ch oomes nigh bringing tears T a tough- You will feel better and ao will the children, ^unoonaeiously tovou and i nra eatehing the. very itenance which, wilf go far cloud some future ftomc. mother—parlor, nursery, all feel the effect of your i car frown. iThe cheery tough o* a goes dawn through genemtkms, F*l her frown. And when the Me closed, and lips and there is no sweet er which children aad friends can “She waa always bright and fli home."—Christian Intelli- Getttfiff • i hargcter. i wary of vour first ocan- a good name, and be it afterward; fgr ’tis Tike *, quiokly oxacked, never , though patched it may take along with ned that Fire, .together ponsulted how t Habit caostaBtly ■trengthsns all active axsrtiuoa ws bpocasa mors aad nsore apt to do. A ■nuff-taksr »>egins with a pinch ot soaff per ilav. and ends with a pound or two every month. Hwearing begins in anger; It end* by mingling itself with ordinary con versatioo. Bach like of too ouaunou notoriety to they ha adduced; hat, aa I before ob served, at the very time that the loa the thing is every day in- tha pleasure resalting (rom it blunted eenoifatlity oTthebodi- ly organ, diminished, and the desire i* UT«in.tible though the gratifieation ia nothiqg. There is rather an entertain ing example of this in Ftokhng’s “ Life of Jonathan Wild." in that soeos where be to rapraaenied as ptoying at cards with tbs OotuiC a nrafcn*tan*i giihlif. “Such,"says Mr. Fielding, “wm the power of habit over the minds of these illustrious penaoa. that Mr. Wild aould not keep ms hand* out of tha Count * pockets, though he knew tluy were empty; nor could tbe Count abstain from palming a card, although he ‘ 1 Mr. Wild had no® well aware that to pay him." nqxnonoy 84. Patrick’* Prayer. The following is port of ft hymn still extant in the Irish language which to attributed to St. Patrick, and bean hi* name. It to said to have been used by him as a prayer when about to attempt the conversion of the Irish monarch MMChariw: ) bind to rnywOf tedxjr, Tbe i^wer ot Ood to guide me, Tbe MieM of 6od to opbcld m», Tbe WteUqi of Ood to teeoii me, ' The Eje of Ood to-nlek over M, Tbe Bar of Ood to beer sea, ~ Tbe Word of Ood to give me **sMh, Tbe Hend of O d to pruteel m, Tbe W»y of Ood to N before me, .- Tbe Shield of god to ebsiter mf, Tbe Hoetof Sod to defend me, Against tho snsrftii of demon*. • of Agaluet Uie lu.U of Iletoro, 11- V—' Afelnet ererj niea who m-dlutee iajary tome, Wtelhsr ter or s*m^ W»»b fee A A gentle Jsaoe (H. L) Sunday Stur, giving rvininisceaces of a day which Artemas Wardspeot in New London. Conn, in 18fll. He says of the day after lbs loo ter*: “Th* following morning wm at rare and sunny ss wm Artemue himreif. Ha ooukl 'Dot resist an invitation to Visit the ‘Young Lad m’ High School. 1 Whilfrwalking to the academy, a street ruaaway ooc irred. A temoed horse went tearing over the pavement, with what Artemas ceiled ‘tbe foreqear- ter* of a wagon clattering at his heels. This incident Artemue ingeniously atil- taed in hto address. ‘The vehicular elopement which hoe jnst token place. ^ todies, has furntobed as with a j topic of disc, hi nte Yeung ladies’ seminaries are ever expoaed to rua-awayx. Once when traveling with my show, 1 came upob a tamale insti tute. There were ladders, and lads. to that, at ever)' window: man ly perpendiculars coming fainting horieontale to the gra nd. *Pire" I shouted. ‘None of that,’ replied a solemn voice from the orchard. • There ainlt no tire; these are only young tal lows running off with their rweet- iicarts.’ There ie moral entertainment for man and boast in title runaway. No home, if attached to a wagon, that is. if sincerely attached to it, will run away with it, but the more a young man is attached to a young woman the more he will run away, with her, leav ing no trace*, in fact'none of the har ness, behind. Young ladies, since I have stood before your beautiful faces I hayc lost something, and if yon or the bqrAjlMt sweep* out should find a red object, looking like a coral breut- pin that has boon stepped on, you may kngW.it to mv uoui Yinsted henft.” Btiehlng late Print. Those* who read the “ wonmn’s column’’ of a weekly paper must i f im- premed by one curious fact : tha fair writer* are far too fond of confiding their domestic troubles to- the general public. One asks far sympathy because her hus band abuses her. and another deplores her husband’s profanity. Other* .it tempt to be witty »nd smart at the ex pense of “old maids.” Then the “old maids ” retaliate; and so it goes until wiser people •» disgusted. What com fort can be In bringing one’s family woes before the public through the me dium of the newsmapere is to ns incam- Nothing to gained by so the troubles ere none. the less d little r few or nth many. -r | Population of tho Wort. At the beginning of the century the population .of the great West, which is nowg|bout 20,000,000, wm a little more than M),000. ■ no following interesting table shows the growth of that popula tion : Ar sestet far. • T»e Mm MlA........ 298,1OB .«*«•« . . ee e* • • * e » «ss,9.vr 5®.- I,*10,473 Mft x-wu s** grievous, and 1 sympathy is given to fortitude —ten i no re- 1 AMt.ua UMu interesting That table to a It to one of ores in tin* the remarkablo people who have not sufficient| to endure them without murmuring. These are the women who complain that they do uot have t|mir “rights.” But when they say their literary work to not treated with a* much consideration a* that of men, they say what is not true. Any one, by glancing at the list of contributors to our ablest and most papa, tor periodicals, will find nearly, and in some cases, quite one-half, the names those of women. There orO said to bo itt the United States Other MH^P —Walter Besart i* writing » ** novel called “ All in a Gftffa a <‘re*n. ’ In the humble opinion of the New Or leans Picayune Walter toast be propor- ihg ttfgire hto readers the cholera. rvQ —The author novsl which has ot "Vice Versa,” * made more of i COTB- 1 Jana boast huver sets on equally api Instead Of Union, Sari 1 that the sou feiatfire is le to the United States, the Western limit erf the cisctt is only about mid- to e stirring mutdc x, --1 conai book written by a tion written by a man. it neceaasrr to rooogni- !y as one no longer find masculine norm - Tkat i while there was a total lack of any “pitch "being * to dre plumes, in order to repel vs attention I But there is a vast dif- from the world. f^dprr. Thu hones!, meotorifui* quernlaiw complaiu- mnst ex- ■^CJttrodJO . , or. .. way l»etween the furthest Aleuliou isle, acquired by oar purchase oi Alaska, and Eastport, Me. Our territory extends through 197, dOgreeB of laugitnde, - or setenreeii degrees more thin half way round the glow. Tlie Jflochj Moun tain Presbyterian, in Commenting on this fact, say*: “ When the sun is giv ing its good nightkixs to our westernmost isle, on the confine* of Behring’s sea, it is already Hoofing the field* and forests of Maine with Hh morning light, and in the eastern pati of the State is mare tlian an hour high. At the Very moment when the Aleatiari fisherman, warned by the approaching shades of night* is pulling his canoe toward the shore; the wood- chopper of Maine is beginning to make tho forest echo with t of bis ax." At a level of the tea, or where the mercury stands in a barometer tube thirty inches high, water boils in an open dish at S temperature ‘of 219 degrees. For every 550 feet we ascend it bous nt one degree less. Thus, at an elevation of 1,190 feet it boils at 210 degrees, and at an elevation of 5,600 feet at 203 de grees. At the City of Mexico water boils at 200 degrees; at Quito at 194 ; and on the summit of one of tbe Himalaya moan tains at 180. Darwin was not able to cook potatoes by boiling on one of the mountain* he ascended in Patagonia, and Humboldt oould not cook beef by the same method on the top of one of the Alps. In mines below tbe level of ths sea a greater temperature than 212 degrees is required to cause water to bail. 11 water boils at a very low tem perature, the beat is not suilloient to melt fat in meat, to coagulate nlbamen in eggs, or to decompose ttseaee in other articles of food. Cooking most there fore be performed by caber means than that of batting. The circumstance that water boils at a certain place does not show that it ora tains sufficient heat to cook food in a reasonable time. The leas the pressure of the air, the lower the temperature required to bott liquids, toer." y 1 ■ » A Roma*tic IsrldesL One of tbs m<s* striking incidents that ever occurred ia my expeneoos here was at ane tizaft that I had prepared boxes of fancy paper with s fancy initial, or pet name embossed in it, and pat tins uj> at a dollar a box sad advertised it widely. One dev I had an order from Oalifur&ia from a\fbs ttnaie — The box was dtme up, addressed to her aad toy about here, when a young Englishman came in and wanted to write a loiter I gave him the materials and a place, when his eye caught the ad dresn on tlie Imjx. “Have you the order that came for that box uf paper?” he asked. "Yea,” I replied, “it is about here somewhere." “Would vou mind sending it up to mv hotel ? If it is what I think, I shall leava for California to-night ” 1 found it and sent it around, sod heard no more alxiwt it for perhaja three months, when ose day the yonng man, with a lady on bis arm, walked in. “Mr. Loring, I want hi prewnt you to my wife,” he said “We could not leave this country till we had thanked yon for your part in bringing us to gether.” The denouement was quite a romance. The young man was the son of aa aristocratic family, and the girl tlie daughter of the gardener. But love levels all distinctions, and the young man felt the girl to be tbe chaeen com panion of his life. To bmik off the at tachment, his father had sent him to the continent, and dispatched the gardener and his pretty daughter to America, where the young man hail followed them, ignorant of their address, and nt last finding it through tbe chance of the box of paper.—Interview with Loring, Boston I'uhhiher^ The Author of “Old Grimes.” There con be no harm in speaking of Mr. Albert G. Green. What oould ho do? I hear the ill-infbnned reader asking that question, which I at once answer tri- umphantly. He wrote “Old Grimes’’— that little felicity of a poem which got a grip upon the memories of a generation. Children redtipl uftite good old man and how he “wore not right and lefts for shoes, but changed Lis every day. ”• School boys declaimed the piece, and waved their hands in front of their waist coats when they announced that his coat* was “all buttoned down before. ” There was nothing specially original in this small epic; but somehow it had an im mense success. I hod the pleasure of meeting Mr. Greco occasionally and tliia later pleasure of ramereberinp him os a pleasant talker and most amiable man. Can onyliody tell me why such clever; HODS, 08 ho was, do not get on? throw out a fine thing or two, and then they subside into sQense. I know noth ing like the fine genius which writee no books, which challenges no obsevation, which cares not a farthing for fame, but which stiU goes on dreaming much and folios and listless way, and gmsp not caring to grasp it The verdict of the world to ••laziness," of that agi nation, * fid thought possfp upon itself. Doubt less Mr. Green might have written a long poem or fifty abort ones, only he did not please to do il To inquire into hto reasons or those of any man who sees fit to keep himself to' himself, might be Miaiething like impelti)sence. — (f. Limgdon. \ Furnox k Bntreoa, tfce London lit erary auctioneers, lately offered-for sale nMMm on two film a fchufe «« grflftt a* that of the la mented Charles DicMttl^Chiengo Bctmli*" —Ths Writings ot President Garfield, in two 750-pitfPr^ftinef. edited by Prev ident Hinsdale, of HinuJf CoRege, to be published by a Boston trm, are oWned by Mrs. Garfield, who has exclusive con trol of thf ivi>tk. otitis the plates, and v ill receive whatet’Sr f ;offt arises from the sale of the books. - In his history of Powdoin College, j kMUtt Prof. A. 8. Packard says he remembers sy-sr HaWthorne as he looked-in the reoita- ^* - tion room, with * the same shy. gentle S jariUff. Mat*, drooping. ftflL viuquid- vk ftye; ana IpW, rinwieul toldft that he hvor had,” ftnd Loffgfelidw silt ng tWo seats iehind Hawthorne, a iftif-haired youth, blooming with health and early promise.i- Tleraid. —Mr. S. Cj Hal*, ft veteran n-ime - to iitcratitte, announces f£>? publication In March next “A Retrospect of i Long Li'e,” in which he promise* to give es- K ciftl promiucnce to hi* re ollection of slanct sifay yoaW ggo, when he say* ho “frequently bought •ight'for a penny and chickens for eight pericC ft coupK There were no markets except in largAtowns, and there was no mode of low!motimi. M —A SofrefpOndfthi thua describe* Mme. Bcnlftdaki, itaf in f Russian who aspires to bk known as the most beauti ful woman in Paris: “ 1 saw her at the bpera. lookirig the very type of perfect, if soulless, lovfiliries^ The kyes are of a deep blue, the nose aqlilline. the mouth small and shaped like Cupid’s bow. The exquisitely shaped head to ■<•1 tii perfect on on the White, rounded throat, and the shoulders in mold and covering wodki put to shame the most artistic form ever sculptured in maM'le. If her face were only expressive it would be divine, fehe will Le next season one of tbe queens of Parisian society.’’—JV. F. ItUhsme. _ THE GREAT (SEMIN RSMIDV FOR MIN. lUltcva sad ewe* rheumatism, Igeuralffta* Soisties, Lumbago, HlADACIlk 'fOOTBACBl, vSOMTHSfrrr, OrTNBY.SW'Kt-L'WaU. rnoonirns. •vmim. Anesn^hwtedur FirtYcmUHTM. MsySMKft n* ChsriM *. Yststor Cs. —wx <*>■ — »*» I OkMteaM, no, c. a i. lerthly. I MOV •• n mm* Nssc Volume with Noomksr. hend f*r three months; Jt mil yak Sail tubtmbe Two Dollars and get tm times Uieakte (19) oommenern nrn cents A CATALOGUE COHTAUHXO MDPBIttlOF MTflits, m AH* SIUERWRAE ■m* team sfaft— ^ j.r.mwiB»co, satisfy fen that Han for n frnr Maun t IBM •a. red h,^,. »m*ly I n»Ti.r ai.'sav. z&dvsA. ■■■ RAFQ) MOSZl KASflM Cooperative: SPECULATINO Weekly 8ttt. 1 is**. Moolhly DlvttanAs $1,000 Inrasted"" —— ssisssfasE! _, M DID. T. WQLM AOOl, Swta?.. tv* a me* , Si. Yteu r 'l/tet M Also for •-‘•T ATKD CAT A- So’ciSc^na. wtib f»u □c tu J.OCO-.J aMAMltette nrmt selltw# a^ti i. tw UWtal Sum. W rita, »»d Oil of (Wftloui In an action that was recently tried when the question in dispute wm os to the quality and condition of a gas-pipe that had been laid down many yean lie- foro, a witness stated that it wm an old pipe, and therefore out ol oaoditiau The Judge remarking that “People do not necessarily get out of condition by being ohL” the witness promptly on. •wemi, “ They do, my Lord, if buried in the ground ** A Hetrd Msn’» Lock. Mr. J. G. Tytar, chief clerk at th« Union Depot Hotel,Ogden, had rhenma- usni in the muscles of the cheat and left ihoelder. By applying the Greet Oef* man Remedy three days be realited xwnplete reetoralion, and be to of the pinion that there to nothing equal to the fit Jacobs Oil for pain. Tbe Great German Remedy to also a epenflo for barns and sprains—Sad Lake (Utah) THbeme. O O K SS l*C tel MB w« oftrf. «nd axnmiswo* U) th« PaT£|(TSRM OONSUii’tlON. g^Triuh.VAi.rVWAtoxarut«it*.*.» -r —left. EVERY MAN »fao 1 Wja‘«. ?A m N nnhv vMMMt ■ NeSV7n«^ THE UR. It A. R1CHMOWP MjnptCAfe HEALTH IS WEALTH! p. a. C. Wa#r-| Naava am p**i» Tm*r * Cfil SLV’ fmt ■wol, tisaemi MALL'S KB A ISAM £ eiM«ia t mte.ye Mta ww- *Waa Mteru., Ir«a SO-m* n «•»“* ~ te, asamS te taipraamt bate*, m —M*. wndl M -W. AMf-IU« >1 <S b> ra-aluag la *•.»»«• Prl*il«-T Zbfw a. riMrUM m rssmATVnn nt< «v S«a |«k. Na OR. STRONGS PILLS W eLLTRlVoil ONDEfVFUL H Jack Etsomax, a bank-burglar, toft $5,000 at his death, in Philadelphia, He made no wilL and Ins natural heirs refuse to touch the money, beeauae it » the proceeds of robberies. The legal question anoea whether, there bring heirs, the Htate can take the property. EALTN ONDEfUFUL ■■ RtNEWW® HEMEDiC*. r.en i na s. C a «aiia— r«il»(a, • \r • >. J Wm« te Oa«ii*s«^ um m FALLWeilcaSHia Ma-lteewA OalWm, s**ark. Owe pair •( boots mvm! rvarr raar bv asisg Lyos’s Patent Metelii « RarI 81 fl, s an —Tbe latest odvioee from Japan re port the Mikado sick o.’ "tlie j ecu liar Japanese disease called kakoke.” < >ur stuttering contributor wonders how he “t-toek the kakake.” — NorriToicn Herald. t elek. [« a plate i iladdarand Urir Pos thick beeda heavy i nate—Wells’ May Apple Pills ““SiSaSraSS i» SlV r-^TTiffisrairt- i«a HILL »nd ?ACT0BT StTPPUIB OF ALL Enn>3. BELTING s:si aad PACEuro, oils, fumfi all mn»8, IEOH P1F1. nmilOS, BRASS GOODS, 3T1AX GAUGES, ENGINE GCVE1N01S. Sidney ho. Send tor Price lift. W. E. DUr LINGEAN S 00., Ii3 Xoin Street. LOUIS- TILLS. KY. Ires I salioo s it* lha l UiariWR TURK. eoltiaya berk in proper coml i MJS t phaap bites, have long bean ST L’-r.riCz. erper- They raicardad aa t*« parent remedial srant for dyapepsis, genera! debility, sad ihe lom« train of ilia tbnt fellow n weakened phyaieal nstnra. Da. Habtu’i Iron Tosie **■ proven tbe anperler valsa of -ea* a eotebi- netion. Il ia a remedy tbat ho* ooma into gonoral naa or tho trouble* indineted, ted no piominoat druggist throngboat th* oonn try ia withont it, 10 wide apresd ia the pab lie deman 1 for it. Ir-n of itself sad Mli •ays bark aa well —tha tw* great apaeiftea ao much naed—are very diaacaeab!* mad lain** to toko, sad phyaietant often cieliko to giv them. In Da Harter’s Toxic they ate eotnbinei in s pelat bl* preparation, sed one that doe* sway with the nee.l »( doctor’* prescriptions sad doctor’* bills for s large alaaa of diaeoao* that aBiet tbs human fam ily. . OS dyspepsia, Indigestion, ( oirta sad geaeral deWlity, in tftrir rarieM f .rm <; also as a pnvoatativs against fevsr acd ».ne %nd ether iqtermittent /erers. the “r>rro Phosphorated Elixir of Coliaara’’ roads by Caewall, Hasird k Co , New York, and soli by all DrnggtsU, is the bvat tonic,; m d or pfatifnis reo ve iog from fever or other s-canea >it htv no -onal Dr. Rewer’a ▼«**table Worm Nlyrwp U ooe at the mwt p eeunt or pilaiaU* pi epara- tlona or warm* wa bare tr-r known. It ia tbor- oagb'y rfBevetoui, an* MVfT rvqotrea any o bar medicine to earry It off after ne'ng lx Hew to Rbertoa Lift*. Tbe receipt la aimple. Ton bare only to taka a vt<l nt cold, and neg'eat It Abernethy, tbe great English rergeon, aaked a tidy whs lold Mm iba only nai a eouab. “ #bat would yen bavet Tbe pltgoef'* Peware of ‘only congbt ” Tbe want caaae enn, hoeevar, be am ad by Dr, Wn.Hall'i Bab am lor th* Lnog*. In Wuoopini Obngb and Croup it imteadlately allay* inrltalion, and laeara to p-aeti t a fatal tonalnatioo of tbe diataae. Bold by a(l droaflrta and daalen In ■>> dlctne. HULLERS^Hg?^ wrttaf AUtinuJI S TATUmoa Mamtetea v W -are W avT* »• Or the beet and Paateel- ...tiii, • ffctnrml B.mk« »ud b ble». Prteia redoced 3 per orut. Xitioni. reitaama ro., AllaatapUa n.ummtati m T R U TM 1 ste&n/JPJ} BUCGIESS5r^£3i3 MMtttt milU< SAW te um iw* YOUR link Uaf , IM Motaal IAlJtiff.fr Mi rrM uiaaMvi aiabias rv.-mar auaiblp im ITTlw io_*iSteW iSTI Tateokaiff temi. iii—ia Ma OPIUM HABIT AND druwkenh: .wiaw«sirtj^e*. no form of Opteni. Trath la vitae lav* fteferaaoeff boat in tbs btela. Per tana leu aad proofa, addram, W. C. BELLAMY, M. D„ 71-3 RratMl HL. AUMto, «• cured by ■costal else aviMleawto /7. r m/m A rotmMnmiioaa of JVa- ifaBitU ef Inm, rervaslma bmrkand f'AoepAaatea tia Uio, PrveSrmUonefftsml fswmre id BMMMMHI m *tatln(r that sr^isSiW, lie flpaakars will And it of the grsateet value where a Tonic la neces sary. I recommend ift aa a reliable remedial agent, possessing un doubted nutritive and roetorattve properties. Lcmtmak, A>„ CM. 1, UBS. SEV.J.IaTOWm. “1 oonqjder it most exoaUent remedy tor tha debilitated vital forbee. m/ m/c. nsizssnm dr.haxter medicineoo., nsv.iunn..K.ism & Development of Southern Industries I NEW DRESS, NEW WRITERS, NEW ARTISTS. FULL of NEW LITE AND 7100* FOR BEST SOUTHERN Writer*. •enrHE cheapest journal in the world.* ftlld ELASTIC TRUSS Uw oftheEdl wfll HUff md a^ssrisfA* 1 wum. 1 I OfttiCkkawa. UL > rean!mbea. Farming mA Oartortni. and to tha protiuu. mwla* A $8 RDU FOB M dti u bv Buruo, written by uu ol gltwsa, which ynoe lormed port Liiinmr huuoe. ~ i .iXn. *« o*h. T i at * 4UI s*t «N*s MBnawsm tieMtoa BMa fma ae Ml COm Ufa. 7»t imfawfayp .msn : jMti ■ *.