Pike County Democrat, Volume 9, Number 23, Petersburg, Pike County, 17 October 1878 — Page 4
WJluF«qtatftf.Adaifimp»*oa.Aa«riMn ttAfl to *300 per month to agent* eanTtaains; JlW# tor Taylofs Cowing Heme, Rochester, N. Y. AR Rmcr Cards, with name.lOc., plain or gold. U jAtonpC outfit. 10c. 150«ty toaHull nOo.,Badsm.M T fiA Mixed Cards, with name, 10c. Agent’s Oy Outflt. 10c. Frontier Card Oa.irnmSlln.Tt. Particular* of Stnlthoeraphy. Agents’ Directory, copy Ag’tg’Uenld.eta.fieo.X LiunSmlth.Phna. Ja. Ilea to one year, to begin mrt at once. Salary air. Business am ga "orttoa Glass Wosru,CMcrttrari,i WANTED." ■ o.-.uui articles in the world: one sample ’ Jrtt. Address Jay Bronson, Detroit, Mich. for 50c., a nd iro ■ ib»t. KIDDER’S mtHiS^SSSt OPIUM I Habit * Skim lMseases. Thousands cored. Lowest Prices Do not an to write. Dr.F.E.Marsh.Qulncy.Mlch Dr. Foote's Health monthly. 1« royal-octavo pages. Edlied by Drs. K B. Foorn. Ss and In. Sent on trial to 6 months to FODR 9.««at STAMPS l Murrey HU1 Puh.Oa.U2X. 28th St, KT. squares—Arrest uprights In Americo-omr 12.COO In use—regularly-incorporated Mf'g Co.—Pianos sent on trial—48-page catalogue tree. MKNbKLSSOHN PIANO CO.. 21K 15th St. New Tort
A.c Great Mercantile College, Keokuk, Iowai i at Iffalf Prices. ne for $3; $9 on© for .-JGltlO on® for $5-50; SnsUsh steel barrel and cylinder: nickel-plated and r\ju H- Shot-Guns, ©tc., —‘-*“ - REVOLVERS^ bore. Also wmm_. Btfie©, i i _■_, prices. AOE\TMWA9iTKl>. Cat»lo*«©free. K«w York Pistol Man’f’g. Co., J. H. Littlefield, at greatly-reduced ciaa .tuitA i uiuu in.1.1 i v w., *• u> ui* a i West* q AgX Ogden B’ld'g. cor.Clark & LaRosL.Chicago ► want an agent In each county In the U. S- for _“ NOTED GUKRR1ULAS!” byMaj. John N. Ed wards, containing the Lives and Adventures of Quantrell, Bill Anderson,the James and. Younger Brothers, and a score of other NOtED GUERRILLAS OF THE WEST! illustrated. The moet interesting and exciting book ever published! pr Agents never had such a chance before! Write for circulars and special terms, BRYAN. BRAND & (XL, Publishers, St Louis, Mo. s WANTED Cram’s Reversible Maps of th< The best-sen tag Goods to ling for i . and World: State J) N(«Sl<_._ Circuits free. Address Geo. V. Chau, 66Lake-st, Chicago. 111. THE HICHEST CASH PRICES Bones, Hoofs & Horns, _*r*f ««il Pork Cnekltan. ' Delivered at my Depot, in Philadelphia or Chicago. DR. JOHN BULL’S Sits Tonic Syrup FOR THE CURE OF FEVER and AGUE Or CHILLS and FEVER. The proprietor of this celebrated medicine justly claims for it a superiority over all remedies ever offered to tiio public far the SAVE, CERTAIN, SPEED 7 and PERMANENT cure of Ague and Fever, or Chilli and Fever, whether of short or long standing. Ho refer, to the entire We.ternand Southern country to hoar him testimony to the truth of the assertion that in no ease whatever will it fail to cure if the directions are .trietly followed and carried out. In a great many eases asingle dose haa been sufficient for a euro, and whole families have been cured by a single bottle, with a perfect restoration of the general health. It is, however, prudent, and in every ease more certain to euro, if its use is continued in smaller doses for a week or two after the disease has been cheeked, more especially in difficult and long-standing cases. Usually this medicine will not require any aid to keep the bowels in good order. Should the patient, however, require a cathartic medicine, after having taken three or four d oses of the Tonic. a single dose of BULL’S VEGETABLE FAMILY FELLS will bo sufficient. The genuine SMITH’S TONIC SYRUP must have BE. JOHN BULL’Sprivatestamp on each bottle. p.&. JOHN BUfiL only has the right to manufacture and sell the original JOHN J. SHITE’S TONIC SYRUP, of Louiaville, Ky. Examine well the label on each bottle. If my private stamp is not on each bottle, do not purchase, or yon will he deceived. I3XT BTTIjXj, Manufacturer and Vendor of SMITH’S TONI© SYRUP, BULL’S SARSAPARILLA, u BULL’S WORM DESTROYER, The Popular Remedlea of the Day. Principal OOee, 818 Mala St., LOUISVILLE, KT. Vegetine I Will Try Vegetine. HE DID .J AND WAS CURED. Delawauk, a, reb. lft, 1877. MR. H. K. Stetkns : Dear Sir—1 wish t# (tire you this testimony, that you may know, and let others know, what Vegetine has done forme. About two years ago a small sore came on my leg; It soon became a large Dicer, so troublesome t_ consulted the doctor, but I got no relief, growing worse from day to day. 1 sultered terribly; I could not rest day or night; I was so reduced my friends thought 1 would never recover. 11 consulted a doctor at Columbus. 1 followed Ms advice; U did no good. I can truly say 1 was discouraged. At Dais time I was looking over my newspaper; I saw your advertisement of Vegetine, the “tireat Mood Purifier” for cleansing the Wood from all impurities, curing Humors, Ulcers, etc. I said to my —--- -llS family, I will try some of the Vegetine. Before II_ used the first bottle I began to feel better. 1 made up my mind 1 bad got the right medicine at last I could now sleep well nights. I continued taking the Vegetine. 1 took thirteen bottles. My health is good. The Ulcer Is gone, and I am able to attend to business. 1 paid about four hundred dollars lor medicine and doctors before 1 bought the Vegetine. 1 have recommended Vegetlne to others with goed success. I always keep a bottle at It in the house now. It Is a most excellent medicine. Very respectfully yours.
wiuuni. Hr. Antbonl Is one of the pioneers of Delaware, a He settled here in 1834. He Is a wealthy gentleman, of the firm of T. Antbonl A Sons. Mr. Antbonl Is extensively known, especially among the Germans. He Is well known In Cincinnati He Is respected by *11. Impuek BLOOD,—In morbid conditions of tbe blood arc many diseases, such as salt-rheum, ring worm, boils, carbuncles, sores, ulcere and pimples. In this condition >t* of the bleed try the Iniimt, and cure these affections. As a blood-purifier It has no equal. Its effects are wonderful. VEGETINE CURED HER. Da STKTZNS: Doncmsmat, Mass., June 11. Deor Sir—1 feel It my duty to ear one word In regard " e of one to the great benefit I have received from the use o of the greatest wonders of tiie world: 1; Is your Vegetine. I have been one of the greatest sufferers for the last eight years that aver could be living. 1 (lo sincerely thank my God and your Vegettne for the relief I have got The Kkemtatitm has pained me to such an extent, that my feet broke out In sons, For the last three years I have not been able to walk; now 1 can walk and sleep, and do my work as well as ever I did, and I must say 1 owe It all to your blood nurlfier^|gto«^^| rM Yxsmjit.—The great _ cleanser and purifier of tbe doubt by the great maul — solved Immediate relief. Vegettne as a i^r** Is Better Than Any MEDICINE. . . HEtngRSON, Kt.. Dec. 1877. 1 have used H. B. Stevens’ YegeOne, and like It better than any medicine I have used for purifying the blood. One bottle of Yegetine accomplished more good than all other asedldneel have taken. THOa LYHE, Henderson, Ky. Yxegmo Is composed o» Boom, Barks, and Herbs. It la very pleasant to take; every child likes It VEGETINE IE D.’a. H. B. 8T3V1NS: fiawESstsi«a_ a A. & UK VEGETINE Prepared Dy H, B. Slerens, Bostoi, lass. VfffliH l* Said ly All Or«f*»rt*
The^emocbat. W. If. KNIGHT,Editor and Prejlrktor. ~T E5TDIANA. PETEKSBUBG, G e:s. X^r-locust makes a noise by fiddling on its irihgwith its leg. , Protestantism made a thousand and four converts in Japan last year. Nearly all the prominent naturalists give the bobolink different names. Tut gorgeous color of the autumn leaf in due to the regular process of ripening. A miller in England beat his wife; whereupon forty women formed a vigilance committee and severely chastised him. “Richard-Roberts, the inventor of the se f-acting mule, was a re markable man.” So says an English biographical dictionary. —: k In Europe there are only 4 0 trees that attain a height of SO feet. North America has over 140 trees -that grow over 30 feet high. A Manchester (Conn.) mill is using a superior paper-making machine, invented by Jonathan Hatch of South Windham, who says that he was directed by the audible voice of his departed son in its construction.
Five able-bodied Englishmen at Buxton, looking on unconcernedly while a little girl was struggling and drowning in the river Wye, in water two feet deep, is as disgraceful a picture of indifferen ;e as has been recorded, for a long while. The Bank; of Bin gland does a very comf irtable little business. Its report for the half year just close d shows its net profits during that time to' have been; $3,447,974. This makes .the amount of the surplus $17,470,425, which, taking the times into consideration, is not not an uncomfortable little sum to have on the correct side of the ledger. - A dispatch from Calcutta quotes the; passionate words of the Ameer of Af-i fhar istan, uttered sometime agq before is Court, as proof of the hostility to too British which exists in Cabiil: “ I have sever crores of rupees by me,” said the Ameer, “ every rupee of which I will hurl at the British Government, and I will roll the border tribes against them like blasts of fire.” TaE regal splendor in which Queen Victoria travels is evidenced by the richness of her railway carriage. Its* windows are shaded with green silk curtains, trimmed with costly white lace; its ottomans are. covered! with creamcolored silk, embroidered with the royal arms and monogram in purple and gold, and a carpet costing over $500 covers the floor. The entire wortteof the vehicle is $30,000. Merchants in Amboy,, China, say that, they have discovereduthat the last bar rest’s tea has been adulterated beyond all precedent. Leaves of the willow are prepared for the purpose, arid mir ed with true tea. The consular body has laid the matter before the Chinese authorities, and the Governor of the province has published a proclamation ofie ring a reward for information leading to the conviction of the offenders. 1 he Rev. Dr. Bartol, who was well nigh killed by a thunderbolt, thinks that if the stroke proves fatal it must produce one of the most agreeable of deaths. To be stunned, however, as he was, is very unpleasant. His recovery of consciousness was instantaneous. He was for an instant terribly oppressed; an irresistible weight seemed passing through him, and he felt as though he was in wonderland. His recovery was attended by a neivous shock and aneadaohefor a week. I n a flood in Austin* Eexas.j-% man “found himself left on"a swiftly dissolving bank. He called to his son, who wss on high ground above, to throw a to pe. The boy did so, and theold man, as he took one end of the line in his hand, said: “Now listen to me, and dc as I tell you. If you find you ean't held on when I commence to climb, let gc. It’s no use for both to drown, so don’t let me pull you down. If you find you can’t hold the rope, drop it, run down in the flat, andgrab for me as I float by.” The boy braced, and the father was saved. A TRIAL just ended in Portland, Me., revealed that Joseph L. Clement, who had his life insured, for $15,000, started with a friend in separate vehioles for his home. Near the river h:is friend heard a splash and saw Clement’s team strugg ling in the water. Clement was missing from that ’time. His wife applied tor the insurance money, which was not paid, the ayerment being that Clement w as not dead. The insurance men obtained Clement’s mother ’s affidavit that he pretended to be drowned, and fled, to til© West, whither his wife was to follow with the $15,000. e
Ihe romance of Judge Orson lirooks’s marriage in Denver is of no ordinary sort. Forty-five years ago a Massachusetts maiden promised to marry him. They had a childish quarrel, and separated, he to go west, and ultimately to marry there; she to remain and be led to the altar in her nat ive village. In a few years she had lost her husband and he had buried his wife. Doth were then married a second time, and after a lapse of years again laid husband and wife in the grave. Chance 'then threw the Judge and his first love together and they mairried. He is 70 and she 63. On the 18th of August three travelers undertook to climb Monte Cevedale with only two guides. All were roped together. An awkward step threw Sown one of the olimtors, he dragged the rest, and they all slid 2,000 feetSong the ice till one caught a crevasse. The rope broke and left him, but the other three were killed. Dr. Sachs, a naturalist, who lately returned from Venezuela where he had been sent by a scientific society to st udy the electric eel, was one of the killed. The sea-serpent has turned up off the coast of Norway, where Joachim Anderson, Danish Consul and a member of the jury for the fishing group at the Centennial exhibition, not only saw it but pursued it for an hour. He describes the monster as 6f> feet long, 25 inches through, without scales or fins and having ahead like a dog's but very flat. Thtftmxt day after Anderson’s encounter, tha serpent was seen again and "hunted for about two hours by a fleet of boafcvJuntil it finally disappeared beneath the surface arid was not seen again. JSdvi iwtn Hoyt, of Sherman, Conn,, aged 37 and the father of fire children, has just, been found guilty of murder in the first degree for killing his 76-year-old father. His crime was one of the most fiendish that has ever occurred in the State. He went tc his father’s house on Sunday, June 21, armed with a butcher-knife, for the expressed purpose of killing idle old man, with whom he had had some trouble. His victim being at dinner, he sat down on the stoop and waited till he came ont, and then attacked and stubbed him. Having one hand seized by his brother-in-law, who came to the rescue, he suddenly changed the knife to his other hand, and struck the fatal blow under his father’s ear, partly severing his head from the body. After arrest, Hoyt said: “ I did it, and I am glad of it, and, if yon will fix that rope to my neck and then to that tree, I w ill climb np myself and jump off, and will bless you all the Wjile you are doing it." Two young ladies (rem different dtija who met at Shelburne, Vt„ the 9th
or day, conceived the unique idea of exchanging bonnets instead of purchasing new ones. They were both Weil pleaced with their bargaus and Were quite elated at the prospected returning to their h omes with new and stylish hats, which cost them nothing. Now, on the point of economy, would it not be a good deal for ladies of different towns to hold a sort of convention onCe or twice a year, and exchange hats or bonnets, as ministers are said to exchange sermons? Vesuvius is at it again after quietude for six years. Outbreaks are few and far between; that next preceding 1872 was in 185S, which overwhelmed the village of Cereolo, the stream of lava flowing ten miles. Between ’79 and 1850 only forty-nine serious eruptions are believed to have occurred, and during the early part of this century the crater had .been so long inactive as to justify Sir .Charles Coldstream’s remark; “There’s nothing in it.” The summit had become m appearance a rocky surface, pierced by fissures, whence vapors escaped. In October, 1822, a violent eruption carried away more than 800 square feet, leaving a vast chasm, miles in circumference. The eruption that overwhelmed Pompeii was in ’79. The amount of matter eructed is enormous, .that sent forth in 1737 being over 33,
uov,wv cuoic ieei. As the fall of ah apple is said to have started the train of thought in the mind of Newton, which led to the discovery of the law of gravitation, a similar circumstance led to the use of the pendulum. Galileo, when a youth, standing one day in the Cathedral of Pisa, when a lamp suspended from the ceding having been disturbed by accident, his attention was attracted by the uniformity of its motion swinging backwards and forwards, and? being struck with the regularity of the movement, he conceivedOhe happy idea of utilizing it for the measuring of time. As in the case jof the falling apple, millions of people no doubt had observed the same thiDg, hatit required the fertile imagination of-Newton to turn it to account, as the genius of Galileo converted the results of his observation of the swinging lamp to the perfection of the clock. A Story Spoilt by Figures. At a social gathering of lawyers (says the Philadelphia. Times), one member of the bar relatecha_Edlstaffian story about himself and three other men fishing in the Sinnemahong River, and catching 1,764 trout in eight days. “ Whew! ” went up a chorus of whistles all around. “It’s true, and I can prove it!” fairly shouted the narrator of the story. “ I guess I was there.” Just here, with the evidence-in-chief at an end, drawing a lead-pencil from his pocket, and seizing a sheet of legal cap, one of District-Attorney Hagar’s assistants began the cross-examination He opened with, “ Now, you say you caught 1,764 trout in eight days. There were four of you. How many hours did you fish each dayP” ‘‘About three hours.” After a brief mathematical calculation, the result was announced. “Then, sir, you must have caught fifty-five apiece each day, eighteen apiece each hour, and each of you one every three minutes. Is that the case?” “If you figure it out i that way, it must be so. We caught them all, I know,” replied the now somewhat puzzled witness. W“ Now, sir, what was the average weight of those fish?” “ ThreeyjdSrters of a pound.” Again did the pencil fly over the paper. “ That foots up 1,323 pounds of fish,” came f*bat the cool-headed examiner, as he leaned back in his chair, with a look of incredulity spread over his countenance, which was shared by the rest of The guuhuilagi ■■—*--> —, There was a pause for a moment, and then some one asked the witness, who stood up defiantly, “ What* did you do with them?” “ “ Why, we ate them, of course.” This answer blazed the audience. It was too much. Not a word was uttered for full five minutes. Finally, with a strong effort and a gasp after breath, as if the reply was hard to swallow, the examiher managed to ejaculate, “ You four men eat that number of fjgh in four days?” The blank looks of astonishment all around and about him caused the witness to hedge a bit, and he qualified the statement with, “ Well; we gave Congressman Harry White 400 of them to stock the Kiskiminetas with.” Still again did the pencil come into use, with this result—“Listen to this, gentlemen. Giving Harry White 400, there were still 1,364 left. Now this party of four must have got away with them at the rate of 1704 a day, or at the rate of 42 a day for each man, or 14 at each meal, leaving out fractions. At three-fourths of a pound apiece, these fishermen devour 314 pounds of fish every day. Can this witness be believed?” The witnesffWould not wait for the yerdict. He saw what it would be, and excitedly shouting, “I can prove it!” he darted from tub-office just in time to hear the youthful lawyer’s parting shot, “ If I was you, Isaiah Brown, I’d neVer make a Jury try to believe that fish story.”
The Study of Common Things. Speaking of the grievous neglect of attention to common things and common employments as means of education, the Philadelphia Public Ledger sensibly remarks that uit is in the study of common 'things, that are so plentiful all around us, but so little understood, that an education may be gained of which at present we have only begun to conceive. Schools are numerous, books are abundant, every child is now made master of the elements of learning, yet there is a lack of practical education; the effects of the school are apt to fade away on the farm and in the faatory, and a separation, if not an antagonism, often takes place between study and daily life. We need a bridge which will carry the scholar with his habits of study and inquiry safely into the life of profitable labor, without obliging him to drop what he has token so much pains to gain. Such a bridge may be found in the study of common things. Ordinary life pursuits furnish abundant material for such study. Every ebject we see or handle in every-day life has a history well worth perusing, a composition well worth analyzing, a future well worth conjecturing. However common it may be, it has that in it, and about it, which will forever prevent it from being commonplace. Every employment we engage in, however mechanioal or insignificant it may seem, will escape from all such odfurn if it is pursued with an actiye-ftrmn as ; well.as a busy hand—if its resources are examined, its history studied, its methods compared, its best purposes followed. Such eduoation will make labor far more valuable by introducing into it the element of thought; it will increase the power of observation, and stimulate the curiosity, which is the germ of knowledge; it will invest the world of common things with richer meaning and keener flavor; and, best of all, u will give oontinual occupation to those higher faculties of man which are apt to rust in the tame routine of every day life, when not thus lifted out of the region of eommonplaoe.” * - Da. Bull's Couch Stout has been before the public for years, and Is pronounced by thousand^ superior to all other medicine* for the cure of Coughs, Colds, Influenza and all Pulmonary fLumnlainta.
“A TOURIST FROM DfJIAKUY.* BT BRET HARTS. We first saw him from the deck of the Unser Frits, as that gallant steamerwas preparing to leave the port of New York for Plymouth, Havre and Hamburg. Perhaps it was that alt objects at that moment became indelibly impressed on the memory of the departing voyager; perhapg it was that mere interruptingtrivialities always assume undue magnitude to us when we-Ase waiting for something really important; but I retain a vivid impression of him as he appeared on the gangway in apparently hopeless, yet, as it . afterward appeared, reaiiy triumphant altercation with the German-speaking deck-hands and stewards. He was.not a heroic figure. Clad in a worn linen duster, bis arms filled with bags and parcels, he might have been taken for a hackman carrying the luggage of his fare. But it was noticeable that, although he calmly persisted in speaking English and ignoring the voluble German ol his antagonists, he, in some rude fashion, accomplished his object without losing his temper or increasing his temperature, while his foreign enemy was crimson with rage and perspiring with heat, and that presently, having violated a dozen of the ship’s regulations, he took his place by the side of a very pretty girl, apparently his superior in station, who addressed him as “Ifather.” As the great ship swung out into the stream, he was still a central figure on our deck, getting into every body’s way, addressing all with equal familiarity, imperturbable to affront or snnb, but always doggedly and consistently adhering to one purpose, however trivial or inadequate to the means employed. “You’re sittin’ on suthin’ o’ mine, Miss,” he began for the third or fourth time to the elegant Miss Montmorris, who was revisiting Europe under high social conditions. “Jistriseup while l git it—’twont take a minit.” Not only was that lady forced to rise, bat to make necessary the rising and discomfiture of the whole Mpfilimyris party who were congregatadaround her. The missing “ suthin’ ’* Iras discovered to be a very old and battered newspaper.
ii a uuj viufumany iiwcs, * ne ex-; plained, as he quietly picked it up, oblivious to the indignant glances of the party. ** It’s a little squoshed by your sittin’ on it, but it’ll do to re-fer to. It’s got a letter from Fayris, showin’ the prices o’ them thar hotels and rist’rants, and I allowed to my darter we might want it on the other" side. Thar’s one or two French names thar that rather gets me—rnebbe jour eyes is stronger,” but here the enure Montmorris party rustled away, leaving him with the paper in one hand—the other pointing at the paragraph. Not at all discomfited, he glanced at the vacant bench, took possession of it with his hat, duster.and umbrella, then disappeared, and presently appeared again with his daughter, a lank-looking young man, and an angular elderly female, »nd so replaced the Montmorrises. When we wore fairly at sea he was missed. A pleasing belief that he had fallen overboard, or had been left behind, was dissipated by his appearance one morning, with his daughter on one arm, and the elderly female on the other. The Unser Frits was rolling heavily at the time, but with his usual awkward pertinacity he insisted' upon attempting to walk < toward the best part of the deck, as he always did, as if it were a right and a duty. A lurch brought him and his uncertain freight in contact .with the Montmorrises; there was a moment of wild confusion, two or three seats were emptied, and he was finally led away by the steward, an obviously and obtrusively sick man. But when he had disappeared below it tyas noticed that he had secured two ex lent seats for his female companii Nobody dared to disturb the elder, may be disturb ire roebtf a eer shy reserve which checked aught | the simplest civilities from the ma line passengers. A few days later it was discover that he was not an inmate of the first, but of the second cabin; that the elderly female was not his wife as popula. ly supposed, but the room-mate of uis daughter in the first cabin. These facts made his^xyarious intrusions on the saloon. deck the more exasperating to the Montmorrises yet the more difficult to deal with. Eventually, he had, as usual, his own way; no place .was sacred, or debarred his slouched hat; and duster. They were turned out of the engine room to reappear upon the bridge; they were forbidden the forecastle, to rise a ghostly presence beside the officer in Ms solemn supervision of the compass. They would have been lashed to the rigging on their way to the maintop; but for the silent protest of his daughter’s presence on the deck . Most of his inter, rupting familiar conversation was addressed to the interdicted “ man at the wheel.” \ Hitherto Fhad contented myself with the fascination-'of his presence from afar, wisely, perhaps, deeming it dangerons tbf-jHxue picturesque perspective to alter my distance, and perhaps, like the best of us, I fear, preferring to keep my own idea of him rather than to ran the risk of altering it by a closer acquaintance. But one day when I was lounging by the stern rail, idly watching the dogged ostentation of the screw, that had been steadily intimating, after! the fashion of screws, that it was the; only thing in the ship with a persistent/ purpose, the ominous shadow of the slouched hat and trailing duster fell upon me. There was nothing to do but to aecept it meekly. Indeed my theory of the man made me helpless. \ “ I didn’t know till yesterday who you be,” he began deliberately, “or I shouldn’t hav’ been so onsocisd. But I’ve always told my darter that in permiskiss traveling a man oughter be keerful of Who he meets. I’ve read some of your writins—read ’em in a
paper m injianny, dui * never retatoueti I’d meet ye. Things is queer and trav’lin’ brings all sorter people together. My darter Looeze suspected ye from the first, and she worried over it, and hinder put me up to this.” The most delicate fl attery could not have done more. To have been in^the thought of this reserved, gent ki girl, who scarcely seemed to notice ave/i those who had paid her attention, ww- “ She put me up to it,” he continued, calmly, “though she, herself, hez a kinder o’ prejudice again you and your writins—thinking ’ them sort o’ low down, and the finks talked about notin her style—and ye know that's woman’s nater, and she and Miss Montmorris agree on that point. But thar’s a few friends with me round yer ez would like to see ye.” He stepped aside and a dozen men appeared in Indian file from behind the roundhouse, and with a solemnity known only to the AngloSaxon nature, shook my hand deliberately, and then dispersed themselves in various serious attitudes^ against the railings. They were honest,' well meaning countrymen of mine, but I could not recall a single face. There was a dead silence; the screw, however, ostentatiously went on: “You see what I told you,” it said. “ This is all vapidity and trifling. I’m the only fellow here with a purpose. Whiz, whiz, whiz; chug, chug, chug!” I was about to make some remark of a general nature, when I was greatly relieved to observe my ' companion’s friends detach themselves from the railings, and, with a slight bow and another shake of the hand, severally retire, apparently as much relieved as myself. My companion , who had in the meantime acted as i! he had discharged himJL
self oi * duty, said, “ Thar oilers must be some one to tend to this kind o' thing, or thar’s no sociable ness. I took a deputation into the C ip’ns too n yesterday to make some proppysii ions, and thar!s a miniver of the gosp il aboard as onghktobeipoke to afore next Sunday, and I peckon it’s my < .ooty, onless,” he added, with delil crate and formal politeness, “ you'd p «fer to doj it, bein’, so to speak, a public man.” / Bat the publi c man hastily deprecated any interference with tW speaker’s functions, andi to change the conversation, remarked that he had taard that therwwas a party of Cook’s looristeen board—were not the preceding gentlemen of the number? But the question caused the speaker to lay aside his hat, take a comfortable position oh the deck, against (the rail, and, d rawing his knees up under his chin, to begin as follows: “ Speaking o’ Cook and Cook’s tourists, I'm my own Cook. ! reckon I calkilate and know evexy ce it that I’ll spend twixt Evansville, In ianny, and Rome and Kaples, and everthing I’ll see.” He paused a moment, and laying his hand familiarly on my knee, said, “ Did I ever tell ye hew I kern to go abroad?” As we had never spoken together before, it was safe to reply that he had not. He rubbed his head softly wi h his hand, knitted his iron-gray brow:), and then said meditatively. “ No! it must hev been that head waiter. He sorter favors fou iu the mustache andgei.’ral get up. guess it was him I spoke to.” r thought it must have been. “ Well, then, this is the way it kem about. I was sittin’ one night, about three months ago, with my darter Loueze—my wifofbein’ dead some four year—and I was reading to her chit of the paper about the Exposition. ) She sezjto me, quiet like—she’s a quiet sort o’ gal if you ever notissed lifer—1>1 should like to go fehar.’ I looks at her —it was the first tune sense her moth died that that gal had ever asked for anything, or had, so to speak, a wish. It wasn’t her way. She took every thing ez it kem, and, durn my skin ef 1
ever could tell whether sue ever wanted it to kem in any other way. I never told ye this afore, did I?” “ No,” I said hastily. “Goon.” He felt of his knees for a momentum! then drew a long breath. “Perhaps,” he began deliberately, “ye don’t know that I’m a poor man. Seein’ me here among these rich folks, goin’ abroad to Paree with the best o’ them, and Loueze thar—in the first cabin—a lady, ez she is—ye wouldn’t bl’eeve it, but I’m poor! I am. Well, sir, when that gal looks up at me and sez that—I hadn’t but $12 in my pocket, and I ain’t the dumed fool that I look, but snthin’ in me— suthin’, you know a way in me—sez you shall! Loo-ey, you shall! and then I sez repeatin’ it, and looking up right in her eyes—‘You shall go, Loo-ey’—did, you ever look in my gsu’s eyes?” I parried that somewhat direct question by another: “But the $12—how did you increase <Agt?V “I raised it to §|30v'- I got odd jobs o’ work here and there, over-time—I’m a machinist. I U36<1 to keep this yer over-work from Loo—saying I had to see men in the evenin’ to get pints about Europe—and that—and getting a little money raised on my life-insurance, I shoved her through. And here we is. Clipper and first-class—all through— that is, Loo is!” “ But $250! And Rome and Naples, and return ? You can’t do it.” He looked at me cunningly a moment. “Kan’tdoit? I’ve done it!” “Doneit?” . I , j “Wall, about the s&me,. I reckon. I’ve figgsred it out. Figgers don’t lie. I ain’t-nc Cook’s tourist; I kin see Cook and give him pints. I tell you. I’ve figgered it oukto a cent, and I’ve money to spare. /Of course I don’t reekon to travel w4h Loo. She’ll go first X! near herJSf itMnthe, “age a ship, or in im’oa a railroad. 1 don*tfpeed way grub or clotnes, and now and then T kin pickup a job. Perhaps you disremember that row I had down in the eng ine room, when they chucked me out pf it?” I cou'd not help looking at him with astonishment; there was evidently only a pleasant memory in his' mind. Yet 1 recalled that I felt indignant for him and his daughter. “Well, that - fool of a'dutchman, that chief engineer, give meia job the other day. And ef 1 hadn’t just forced my way down there, and talked sassy at him, and criticised his maeheep, he’d hev never knowed I knowed a eccentric from a wagon wheel. Do you see the pint?” I thought I began to see it. But I couldn’t help askiug what his daughter thought of traveling in this inferior way. O'. He laughed. “When I was gettin’ up some pints from them books of travel, I read her a proverb or saying outer one o’ them, that ‘only princes and fools and Americans traveled first class.’ You s^e I told her it didn’t say * women.’ for they naturally would ride first-class —and Amerikan gals being Processes, didn’t count. Don’t you see?” If I did aostijuite follow his logic, nor see my way clearly into his daughter's acquiescence through this speeci, some lighhmay be thrown upon It from his jeM utterance. I had risen with some /vague words of congratulation on his success, and was about to lea^e him, when he called me back. “Did I tell ye,” he sara, cautiously looking around, yet with a smile of stifled enjoyment in his face, “ Did I tell ye what that gal—my darker—sed to mb? No, I didn’t tell ye—nor no one else ubre. Come here.” He made me draw down closely into the shadow and secrecy of the round
House. _ “ That nighfthat I told my gal she should go abroad, I sez to her, quite ehipper-like and tree, ‘I say, Looey,’ sez I, ‘ye’ll be goin’ for to marry some o’ them counts, or dukes, or potentates, I reckon,.and ye’ll leave the bid man.’ And sheiez, sez she, looking me squar in the eye—did ye ever notiss that gal’s eye?’’ “ She has fine eyes,” I replied cautiously. “ They is ez clean as a fresh milkpan, and ez bright. Nothing sticks to ’em. Eh?” “ You are right.” “ Well, she looks up at me this way” —here he achieved a vile imitation of his daughter’s modest glance, not at all like her—“ and looking at the, she sez quietly: ‘That’s what I’m goin’ for, and to improve my mind.’ He! he! he! It’safaok! To marry a nobleman, and improve her mind! Ha! ha! ha!” The evident enjoyment that he took in this, and the quiet ignoring of any thing of a moral quality in his daughter’s sentiments, orJn his thus confiding them to a strangeBfc'ear, again upset all my theories. I way say here that it is one of the evidenoes of original character, that it is apt to baffle afl prognosis from a mere observer’s standpoint. But I recalled it some months after. We parted in England. It is not necessary, in this brief chronicle, to repeat the various stories of “ Uncle Joshua,” as the younger and more frivolous of our passengers called him, nor that twothirds of the stories repeated were utterly at variance with my estimate of the man, although I may add that I was also doubtful of the accuracy of my own estimate. But one quality was always dominant—his resistless, dogged pertinacity and oalm imperturbability! *‘He asked Miss Mohtmorris if she ' minded’ singing in the second eabin to liven it up, m addqd, as an inducement, that they Widn’t know good music from W said Jack Walker to a», •' And ■
when he mended the broken lock of my trank, he abtholutely propothed to me to athk Couthin Grace if thee didn’t want a"‘ koorier’ to travel with her to •do mechanics,’ provided thee wosld take charge of that dreadfully deaf-and-dumb daughter of his^AVothn’t it fanny ? Really, he’th one of your charac - ters,’’^ejud the youngest Miss Montm orris to me as we made our adieus on the steamer.^ I am afraid he is not, although he was good enough afterwards to establish one or two of mv theories regarding him. I was enabled to assist him once in dh altercation he had with a cabman regarding the fare of his daughter, the cabmap retaining a distinct impression that the father had also ridden in some obscure way in or upon the same cab—as he undoubtedly had. I heard that he had forced his way into a certain great house in England, end that he was :gnominiously ejected, but I also heard that ample'apologies had been made to a certain qniet modest daughter of his Who was without on the lawn, and that also a certain Personage, whom I approach, even in this vague way, with a capital letter, had graciously taken a fancy to the poor child, and had invited her to a reception. But this is only hearsay evidence. So also is the story which met me in Paris, that he had been up with his daughter in the captive balloon, and that an ehrvation of several thousand feet from the earth, he had made some remarks upon the attaching-cable and the dram on which the cable revolved, which not Only excited the interest of the passengers, but attracted the attention of the authorities, so that he was not only given a gratuitous ascent afterwards, but was, I am told, ofl&ed a gratuity. But I shall restrict this narrative to the few facte of which I was personally cognizant in the'career of this remarkable person. I Was at a certain entertainment given in Paris by the heirs, executors and assignees of an admirable man, long since gathered to his fathers in Pere la Chaise, but whose Shakespeare-like bust still looks calmly and benevolently down on the riotous revelry of absurd wickedness of which he was, when living, the patron saint. The entertainment Was of such a character that, While the performers were chiefly women, a majority of the spectators wer£_m$n. The few exceptions were foreigners, and among them I quickly recognized my fair fellowcountrywomen, the Montmorrises. “ Don’t thay that you’ve theenus here,” said the youngest Miss Montmorris, “for ith only a lark. Ith awfully fun ny! And that friend of yonrth from Injianny ith here with hith daughter.’ It did not take me long to find my friend Uncle Joshua’s serious, practical,
unsympathetic lace in tne iront row oi tables and benches. But I beside him, to my utter consternation, was his shy and modest daughter. In another moment I was at his side. “I really think-—I am afraid—” I began in a whisper, “that you have made a mistake. I don’t think you can be aware of the character of this place. Your daughter-” “ Kem here with Miss Montmorris. She’s yer, It’s all right.” V I was at my wit’s end. Haply, at this moment, Mile. Rochefort, from the Orangerie, skipped out in the quadrille immediately before us, caught her light skirts in either hand, and executed a pas that lifted the hat from the eyes of some of the front spectators, and pulled it down over the eyes of others. The Montmorrises fluttered away with a halfhysterical giggle and a half-confounded escort. The modest-looking Miss Loo, who had been staring at every thing quite indifferently, suddenly stepped forward* took her father’s arm, and said sharply, “ Come.” At this moment, a voice in English, but unmistakably belonging to the politest nation in the world, rose from behind the girl, mimickingly, “My God' just. . * ' instant ncle Joshua, lUIIUlv&lfllEiVt JUY VTt*U l i' ua,” ^uu^roreeabaok „ against the piling, his hat smashed over his foolish, furious face, mid half his shirt and cravat in the old man’s strong grip. Several students rushed to the rescue of their compatriot, but one or two Englishmen and half a dozen Americans had managed in some mysterious way to bound into the arena. I looked hurriedly for Mfsh Louisa, but she was gone. When we had extricated the old man from the melee, I asked him where she was. “ Qh, I reckon She’s gone off with Sir Arthur. I saw him here just as 1 pitched into that-fool.” “ Sir Arthur?” I asked. “ Yes, an ^cquaintace o’ Loo’s.” “ She’s iu my carriage,' just outside,” interrupted^ handsome young fellow, with thejhoulders of a giant and the blushes of a /girl. “ It’s all over now, you knouf. It was rather a foolish lark, you coming here with her without knowing—yomknow^-any thing about it, you knowV_Jtat tbis-^way—thank you. She’s waiting for you,” and ia another instant he add the old man had vanished. •’ ]L' Nor did I sca-him again until he stepped into the..trail way carriage with me on his way to LiverpooT. '-if Yen see I’m trav’lin’^fiagt'-elass nowjp he said, “ but gain’ home I don’t tamd a trifle extra expense.” “Then you’ve made your tour,” 1 asked, “ and are successful?” “ Wall, yes^ we saw Switzerland and Italy, and ir I heflh’t been short o’ time, we’d hev goneCto Egypt. Mabbhe next winterT’ll run over again to see Lob^ and doih” “ Then your daughter dobs not return with you?” I continued in some astonishment. “ Wail, no—she’s visiting some of Sir Arthur’s relatives in Kent. Sir Arthur! s there— perhaps you recollect him! ” He paused a moment, looked cautiously around, and With the same enjoyment he had shown on shipboard, said: “ Do you remember the joke I told yon on Loo, when she was at sea?” “Yes.” 1 , - “ Well, don’t you say any .thing about it now. But dem my skin if it doesn’t look like coming true.” /And it did. \
Treasure hunters In Hayti ore very desirous of finding about $30,000,000 buried by Toussaint L’Ouverture, the negro insurrection leader, toward the close of the last century, when he was on the point of surrendering to the Frenoh. He caused the own to be placed in sacks and carried to a place near Port-au-Prince in three wagons, guarded by ten soldiers. He ordered ten men to dig the hole for their reception, and, after covering them to return immediately with the wagons and escort. After the work had been accomplished the party returned, but were fired on from an ambush by a battalion of soldiers under the command of Toussaint himself. All were killed, and the secret of the treasure’s location was lost with Toussaint’s death. An officer connected with the battalion had received intimations of the intended burial, but obtained no knowledge of the spot, The luxuriant vegetation of the tropics speedily covered it. A Foot Pound is often mentioned in modern mechanical writings, but all readers do not understand the meaning of the term. When it is said, for instance, that 100 foot pounds of work is done, the meaning is that an effort has been put forth sufficient to raise 100 pounds .1 root; 1 pound 100 feet, 3 pounds SO feet,or any number of pounds to such a height that the product of weight and height equals 100. The phonograph has been so improved by Mr. Edison, we learn from the Chicago Netrs, that it has sore throat, ear-ache, measles, etc., and has ty pne Instance raised a mustache.
MOMS INTERESTS. To Keep Tomatoes.—Jout before the first, frosts in the fall of the year, poll the tomato vine np with the green ones on it. and hang them under a shelter by the root. They will ripen and taste good until Christmas. Canning Fruit Cold.—A~lady in Springfield, Mass., according to the Union, has been making some experiments in putting up canned goods without cooking. Heating the fruit tends more or less t© the injury of the flavor, and the lady referred to h^ found that by filling the cans with fruit and then with pure cold water, and allowing them to stand until aU the confided air has escaped, the fruit will, if thejMSiflr ed perfectly, keep iniefiaiteiv-'mthoui change or loss of original flavor. * Piccalilli.—Take 3 quarts of vinegar, and 4 pound of mustard seed, a a little bruised, and let it boil; then stand to get cold; take 4 pound ginger and slice it into a large pot with 4 pound of garlic, broken into moves, 1 ounce of turmeric, and a little saffron; strain the vinegar and boil it again; then pour it, boiling, on the spices, cover it close, and, when cold, put into it any vegetables you wish to* pickle. The vegetables must first be well washed, then rubbed with salt, and dried with a cloth and in the sun for a day or two before putting them into the vinegar. * Apple Drspusas.—6 cups of flour, 14 cups of butter and lard mixed, 2 teaspoons baking-powder, enough milk or water to mix. Roll an inch thiick, and eat in round cakes. Have ready nice, ripe, juicy apples quartered; place 3 pieces on a cake sugared and seasoned to taste; add a small piece of butter; cover with another cake; pinch and. roll the edges together till well closed and round in shape; flour your puddingbags (I use knitted ones); tie loose and steam 14 hours. The above can be made iu 1 dumpling if preferred. It: takes longer to cook, and is not so nicely served. Eat with cream or winesauce. _ Roast Veal.—Have ready a dressing of bread-crumbs, chopped thyme and parsley, a little nutmeg, pepper and salt, rubbed together with some melted butter or beef-suet, j&listen with milk and bind with a beaten egg. Take out the bone from the meat, and pin it securely into a round with skewers, then pass a stout twine several times about the fillet, or a band of muslin; fill the cavity from which the bone was taken with this stuffing; and also put some between the folds of meat, making incisions with a knife to receive it; baste it well while doing with gravy. When done, dredge with flour and pour the gravy around it. The cool, bracing air of autumn, weighed down with subtle perfume of languishing flowers, is very nice and cheering in its way, but, at tine same time, it isn’t a circumstance to the sepbyr wNreh meanders from the culinary department to one’s bed-room just before breakfast.—W. T. Graphic. Bism arcs’s diplomacy has proved too much for the Colorado beetle, and the latter has packed its carpet-bag for home.—ifotton Post. It Slaved Ike People of Savannah. Ha. who Used It Baring tire Terrible . Kpldciatf or ISM. Messrs. J. H. Zeiiia Gentlemen—We, the undersigned, engineers on the Georgia Central Railroad, in grateful obligation for the benefits we received from ths use of Simmons Liver Regulator during the yellow-fever epidemic in Savannah, Georgia, in the summer and fall of IS76, desire to make the following statement: That during the aforesaid epklemie, we us#d the medicine Known as Simmons Liver Regulator, prepared by J. H. Zeilin & Co., and though exposed to the worst miasmatic iufiuences of the yellow fever, by going ii and coming out of Savannah at different hours of the night, rnd also in spending entire nights in the city ring the prevalence of this most fatal epi- ■- -f- —-frmti—- 1 us. who was taken sick, but speedllY recovered, ire continued in onr usual good health, -a eirciiiastance vre can account lor in no other way out by the affect, uuder Providence, of the habitual and continued use of Simmons Liver Regulator while we were exposed to this yellow-fever malaria. Respectfully yours, C. B. Pattekson, Jas^4s Maiaette, John R. Collins. MeltSs F. Cooper. | Pouipeii. Excavations «Pompeii prove ithe city to have been one of the most fashionable and beautiful of Roman summer resort s,and but for ■ the eruption it might have remained so to this day. As with Pompeii, so with thousands of people who have beauty tif form and feature. They might always be adnured but for the eruption, that makes the face unsightly, and betrays the presence of scrofula, virulent blood poisons, or general debility.' Theso-fs but one remedy that positively cure^ these affections, and that remedy is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, it is the best-known tonic, alterative, and resolvent. It speedilv cures pimples, blotches, liver spots, aud all diseases arising from impoverished or impure blood. It also cures dyspepsia, and regulates the liver aud bowels. Sold by druggists. Vumorr’s Tonic:—A Safe, Sire, and Scientific Cure !—Tne, unprecedented sale of this world-renownCd hjedidue proves ineontestiblx that no remedy has superseded the use of this reliable Touie. No splte.ii has been found^so hard as not'toyiehTto its softening influence, and no liver so hypertrophied as not to give up its long retained bilious secretions%ifi\d no_C'hiil or Feverhas yet refused to fall into line. Wbeelock. Finlat & Co., Proprietors, New'Tirh; ps. For sale by ale' Drvgoists. The Bess aud moot Economical Housekeepers are giving the cheap, adulterated baking powders a “ wide berth,” and why! Because experience- - lias taught them that an absolutely pure, hill strength, full weight article, such as Doousx’s Yeast Powder, which never fails io produce light, wholesome and nutritious biscuits, rolls, muffins, waffle-, and griddle cakes of all ha ids, is by far the cheapest and most economical. Particulars regarding Electric Belts free. Address Puivermaeher Galvanic Co.,Cincin.,0. THE MARKETS. NEW YORK October 11, SERVES—Native Steers.....* 7.30 « Texan and OheroSree. 5/0 » SHEEP—Common to Choice. 3.30 « HOGS—live....... 3.75 © COTTON—Middling. .... © FLOUR—Good to Choice_ 4.15 • WHEAT—No. 3 Red. 1.03*© CORN—No. 3 .. 47*© OATS—Western Mixed... 37 © PORK—New Mess.,;.,.,..... 8.65 © 1878. 10.38 7.00 5.50 4.00 10* 4.75 1.04* 48 34 8.70 ST. LOUIS. OOTTON—Middling.. BEEVES—Choice to Fancy .. Good to Prime.... Native Cows. Texan Steers. HOGS—Mixed Packing... SHEEP—Native... FLOUR—Choice. xsx... WHRAT-Red No. 3.......... “ No. 3.......... CORN-No. 3 Mixed.. OATS-No. >....... RYK—No. 3. TIMOTHY SEED—Prime.... TOBACOO-Dark Lugs ..... Medium Dark Leal HAY—Choice Timothy.. BUTTER—Choice Dairy..... EGGS—Fresh.......... PORK—Standard Mess.. WOOL—Tub-wa8had,Choloe Unwashed Mixed... 4,75 • 4.50 • 3.35 © 3.00 • A15 « 3.00 _ 4.35 • 3.90 • 85*© S3** a*© 19*© 40*© 1.10 * 3.00 © 4.75 • 8.00 • 18 • 18*© 8.35 © 33** 33*© 09* 5.00 t.65 3.00 3.10 3.40 LOO 4.30 4.00 86 S3 so 41 1.13* 3.30 6.25 9.00 30 14 8.(0 34 v CHICAGO. JthJSV KS—CoranPu to Choice HOGS—Common to Choice.. SHSKP—Common to Choice. FLOUR—Choice Winter. Choice Spring...... WHEAT—Spiring No, 3,New. 3.50 3.30 3-no 5.00 4.50 Spring No. 3. 3 Mixed..... 5.15 4.00 4.75 5.50 5.00 81* CORN-No.__ OATS-No. 3. New, RYE—No. S. PORK—New Mess. . S3 © 18*© a*© 7.70 • S3* 18* 7,75 NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR—Choice Family. 4.75 © 5.50 CORN—White. < to * 5» OATS-St. Louis. 34 © 35 HAY—Choice.. 16.00 © 17.00 PORK—Newness. 9.37*© 9.*0 BACON,*/.. 05*4*-*06* OOTTON—Middling...• 10 50 Sno' Bold Chrome, etc. Cards, name in 10a C. S Card Co., NartMord. Coon. }Ugm *-ton Hay Scales, Rd*; 4-ton, MO. OT Sfla OtroulaB nee. Cbloaso seal* Ca.CMoa*eaiL $ea& WBEX. in your own town. 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A Remarkably SINGING_ Johnson’s Method FOR Singing Classes. Mr. A. K JOHNSON. theoretical works on music. In Price,, g6.00.pQr Dozen. celebrated ter his Johasen's Method forSiijiiii Classes fta simply and Entirely an Kasjr and Intrmllnt Method of TKAt HIRti the NOTES, The Explanations are dlrlded Into 41 chapters, with examples and questions, and constant references are made to 77 tunes, which are arraneed as practice icetons, and also to one or the other at the 40 Hytun- tunes, the IS Anthems, and the 24 (Hoes, which connected wtththe instruction, white they rate music for recreation. Tenohers will surely he pleased with It, will And It o rery cany keek to id they will tin achfrom. anrS«> eta. 1 , ter SUCCIBt COPT. OUTER DirsorT* OO.. Boa ton. LYON A HEALY, Chicago.
EeUkUsked 1S33. MHB.OHjSkTTS Gargling Oil Liniment Yellow WrapjerforAnimal and While for
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ti; medium, coc; small, see. Small alas fef W»ll H01WIK, 8ae»r, K>, S.L* s s N 0-®« wmmr wwartum n /
