Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 6, Number 50, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 June 1876 — Page 4
iissiitias
SUMMER SILKS, We have Just opened another lot of Striped Silks, at the popular price of 75c per yard, worth 90c. Suits, Over-Dresses,
DUSTEBS, ULSTERS In great variety i&r traveling and street wear. "Look at our Ccntenni Si Ulster." Summer Dress Goods
We are continually displaying Novelties in thin Dress woods for Summer wear—Laws, Organdies Grenadines, Linens, etc. also a great variety at 10 12,1-2,15,18, 20, 25, 30, 35. 40, 50c and upwards
PlARASOLS AND SUN UMBRELLAS Elegant variety—low Prices: Parasols at 25, #5, 40, 50, 75, 85c, 1.00, 1,24.1.60, 2.00,2.50 and upwards. lo not bay before jou gee oar large assortment.
about
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.
OPERA HOUSE.
FJIHE MOST
Seasonable Gkods!
Qjnuinc Turkish, Russian and Cash BATHING TOWCIH, Prince of Wales and Sandritigliam Bath Gloves, also Friction Gloves aid Brushes for dry use. Fragrant Magnolia and Florida Wat am for the toilet and baths, and Colognes of the best imported bramlK, and their own unexcelled "Ihlang Ihlang" and "Hodyosmla." The English
Plate Cloths" for cleaning china and re jvlng tarnish from silver plate, gilt orna mentn, etc., etc.
BUNTIN & ARMSTRONG.
BmcKiiU), (cr. 6th and Main itnctft
Prairie City Emporium Is now in receipt a large and complete stock of Ladies' Furnish ing Goods and Notion to be closed out in the next thirty days, very cheap. E. B. COLE.
gJMillinery Goods, LT WHOLESALE
ft
v«oandlng
8
SIR
V"
i-V
im
1000 pieces Gros Grain Ribin all the new shades. 200 dozen latest styles hats from the cheapest school hat to the finest imported chip.
Cashmere laces and nettings, real and imitation, the largest assortment In the city at lower prices than elsewhere, at
S. L, STRAUS, |149 Main Street. Wanted.
WANTED-ALLanvKNOW
TO THAT THE
SATURDAY EVENING MAILhas a lare.niiiinn than newspaper publwh-
jorouahlv reau in
the homes of it* patrons, and that it is the very beat advertising medinm in Western ndlana.
For Sale.
1X)R HALE—ONK OF THE PLEASANTKHT SMALL HOMES IN THE CITY. Rev E. F. Howe offers for sale his residence on xnutb 7th tOre^Lbetwcen Demlng and Paik'. The tftuation is unsurpassed for boautv of location, convenience,and health tx»lng Bufllcloatly near the business portion of the city
for
convenience and far enough
«ut for pure air. The house is a two story brick, with eight rooms, and cellar nnrter entire house. The lot is 75x 172 feet, good wood sited, coal lionse and cistern 10 peach tree* pear vlnrt, apricot, quinces, apple and plum tret*, blackberry and raspberry bushes, Ac. All the fmit is of the choicest varieties, and the trees are bearing. Price very reasonable and terms easy
Fshorn,-thirds
RHALE-FOUNDRY
AND MACHINE
In Rockvllle, Ind. I will sell for
two
what they cost. They
have been in nsealnmt 18 months and are now running on full time. For term* addraw ISAAC McFADDIN, RockvHle, Ind
For Rent.
r*R
RKNT-THE ROOMS ON THK SBComl snd Tlilni
floors,
over .Sendder's
Ctrnfeeiloncry verj' deslmb'e ImUm txwirdlo* house. Apply to W. H. 8CUDDBR.
Found.
Fthepen
.UND-THAT WITH ^EBTROKJCOF yon can rtNUSh, with a« Mvertwemeat In the Saturday JCrentng Mall, •very reading family in thIsS the resident* of the towns and ooontry sorthe residenu
Terre H«nl«.
$v-
4 ...
P^l Mailt* the mist widely circulated Newspaper in, t*«
|OlU.
State outside of InStaaap-
DANDY
IS!
UOMK-MADE CAN DIBS
Fine Mixtures, put np
"Preaents. Agpecl^ty. B.
ID
A Fancy Boxes, w»»'*We for
OaKEB*«
p. O. Lobby, ftn»HMts, lad.
N
OTICE TO tXNTRA CTOKS.
aioMMto will be recctved br the com-
»??Snn5f3u»edty of torn Haufe at their regular tneetf*Jtmttiv. 187*.
t^rth amTiMuk* three hundred feet. *^»i5r7i be doSHndwthe dl^Hiouof the city engineer, accordlu* to the plana and gpcdflcatloos on #le atW* offlre. ^The contractor required *5 {{J? frithfnl yerionmnw o| Mi contract, ana ine ^SJ^unt^rSw^Ttibi light to
Jtf onwr "WCIIABp .8TROUT JOSF a*»Sflaesr.
fTrPTP"RTP.
HOBERG, ROOT, & CO. OPERA HOUSE,
Continue to Offer E A A 6 A IN S Tkroighot TMIr Entire Store. SUMMER SILKS,
BLACK 6RENA0INES,
BLACK GROS GRAIN SILKS)
COLORED GROS GRAIN SILKS,
SUMMER DRESS GOODS.
LAWNS. ORGANDIES. I
DRESS LINENS, SUITINGS, WHITE GOODS/
READY MADE SUITS, OVERDRESSES, DUSTERS, ULSTERS,
ETC.
Through our ability to purchase these goods from
4
First
Hands," we are enabled to offer them to our patrons as low, and lower than tne same can be bought in Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis or Indianapolis. Please examine, at
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.
OPERA HOUSE.
THE MAIL
PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
P. & WESTFALL,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TEBRE HAUTE, JUNE 10, 1876
COL. FRED GRANT is a father.
THK plucky Blaine is again triumphant. ,yj Now let us each one resolve to do our utmost to make the celebration a success. ____________
TRULY a nice set of candidates for Supreme Judges, on the Democratic State ticket. -.
THREE hundred thousand visitors is what they expect at the Centennial the Fourth of Jtily.
J. C. AYER, the patent medicine man, was sent to the insane asylum of New Jersey last week.
THE Jarrett A Palmer fast train reached San Francisco twenty-six minutes minutes ahead of time.
ON next Wednesday the National Republican Convention will name the next President of the United States. Perhaps.
THE Senate will not meet again as a Court ef Impeachment in the Belknap case till the 6th of July. And so it drags alone.
1
V*'
THREE thousand three hundred and seventeen miles in eighty-four hours, or, nearly a thousand miles a day. How is that for fast traveling?
THE old Democratic brass piece of Indiana," is the pet name Judge Petit used to go by in his party. It is just possible that the party wish he'd go off —from the j'
DR. CUMMING has again prophesied. He holds that the hoar approaches, that the Son of man will soon appear in the clouds, and every eye shall see Him. And yet, the price of board hasn't ooine down a cent. 3
/*Jf'
WE are patiently awaiting some thrilling news in reference to the appearance of the inevitable sea serpent. The seaside reports have opened for the season and it is high time the old fellow, was putting in an appearance.
OSGOOD and Drew, a speaker and a singer, have formed a co-partnership for temperance revivalism on the Moody and Sankey plan. They have started out in Massachusetts and the first meetings Drew Osgood as was expectod-
THE Cincinnati Times very sensibly remarks that "to start an infernal slander upon a man, and then, when he proves it to be a He, to charge him with being a weak candidate because he is always explaining—that, we take it, is a kind of argument that might make an honest man profane." 1
JOHN WALTON, who styles himself a young novice pedestrian, has just completed a walk of a thousand miles in a thousand consecutive hours, at Wrexham, England. At the finish he deolar ed himself quite fresh, and walked an extra milo with a child in his arms.
THE Fourth of July will be celebrated by the American residents of Paris with unusual display, a subeeription having been started tor the purpose. Among the most interesting features of the occasion will be the placing of a marble slab,with a commemoration inscription, on the tomb ot Lafayette. „.
Jomt W. MADDOX explains that he published the FUahugh letter for two reasons—first, becauie Fitahugh had committed fraud in obtaining goods, and, second, "The public were billions, and being of a philanthropic turn of mind, I desired to give them an eflbcilre tonio." Kind oPhim.
ONE of Blaine's strong points la tint he invariably does precisely the right thing at precisely the right moment. His splendid nerve and presence of mind under all kinds of circumstances Is wonderful. He Is the smartest public man in America to-day- but we dont believe he can be rre*id»nt.JB| SlflB
AN exchange aaya, In an obituary Ballot "H* was honest to a fault." Wo b*r« b«ard of men being genarona to a fault, but never befqra of a wan who was honest to a fault. But we suppose that la these days of roguery the rarity of hoqetfty makes It a crime, on the principle that custom makes tbo law. There are persons who consider it a dire of* fenao not to be in the fkahion, and since honesty has become obsolete, ho who praetlcea It rests under the ban of the majority.
BY all acoonnta, Daniel Drew must have been the best known exemplification of the proverb, "a fool for luek." While he was worth millions, and operating to the extent often of hundrods of thousands in a single transaction, he had n» ofBoo, kept no accountant and ggamly any aoooants, took no receipts for the. collaterals he deposited with bankers and brokers for secu: ity, carried everything In his head or on a loose memoranda of which he had no special place of deposit, and had not even a safe in which to preserve valuable papers, bonds, stock certificates, note* and mortgages from fire or robbery. —as—as-s
THERE is at least one man in the world who as a speech-maker must take a place after President Grant. That m»n is Field Marshal Von Moltke. He is sometimes spoken of as the man who is silent is seven languages. Recently he delivered an elaborate -oration-at the banquet of the Linoei, at Rome.* -Sfgnor Sella paid elaborate compliments to the veteran warrior, and coupled his name with German science. In response Von Moltke arose, drew a scrap of paper from his pocket, adjusted his spectacles and simply read one sentenoe in Italian: "Gentlemen, I ask you to drink to the health of His Majesty the King of Italy."
THERE is a possibility that the Great Unknown, of whose coming so much prophecy has been made will turn out to be our present Minister to France, Elihu B. Washburne. He has the prestege of previous good luck in poll tics. The increasing rancor between leading contestants for the Cincinnati nomination, with other considerations point to him as the man, if the Unknown is to appear as predicted. The New York Tribune says of him: "He was a Republican from the first. He was al ways against railroads, against subsidies, against land grants, against jobs of every sort and description. He made his long Congressional career one con tinual campaign against corruption and in favor of economy. He discovered Gen. Grant. He won the hearts of the Germans by his devotion to their coun trymen during the siege of Paris and when he goes in he has a habit of win ning. Altogether the political speculators make a strong showing of it—for a man who at present is without a delegate and there is getting to be a good deal of talk on the subject."
A PETITION has been presented tQ the council asking the city to take six thousand dollars stock in the library Association for the purpose of helping to establish a free public library in Terre Haute. The matter has been referred to the Judiciary Committee, consisting ofcouncilmen Glover, Dowling and E M. Gilman, (the same who reported in favor of permitting cows running at large) and it is to come up again at the next regular meeting of the council. Every good citizen must hope that they will take an enlightened view of this matter and that their report will be favorable to the petitioners. It speaks but poorly of a town of the size and pretentions of Terre Haute that it has no circulating library of any kind. It is a fact that none of us are proud of. Many persons are beginning, to feel the disgrace of it, and the feeling in favor of the city's assisting in the foundation of a good library at onoe is general. The couhcil must decide the matter and it is very earnestly hoped they will do so intelligently. If tiiey vote the appropriation it will require an additional tax of about a half mill, or, say five cents on the one hundred dollars. We are quite certain that nobody is going to seriously object to so light a tax as that when they understand the good purpose to which it is to be devoted.
THE Philadelphia Press thinks that James «. Blaine deserves credit for being the first public man in America to defy tho storm of defamation against our political leaders which has set in ever since the demoralized Democratic party, by an accident, gained a majority in the House. Other men have yielded before the Jury which Mr. Blaine now braves, trusting to the intelligence and integrity of the masses, who would not willingly see the characters of their most eminent servants blackened by the breath of irresponsible and unknown slanderers. The President him self has been silent while the gravest accusations against him were banuied from tongue to tongue throughout the land. Mr. Robeson for years has allowed professional defamers to attack bis reputation, which is now being vindicated Henry Wilson, who was the noblest work of God—an honeet man— (who wasted the midnight oil, and wore out his life by efforts to support himself) made no answer to the insinuations and innuendoes hurled against him. Secretary Flah, a gentleman of the old school, has without protect permitted at least
one journal to chaige him day after day with having been bribed to espouse the cause of Spain against Cuba and we might continue the list almost Indefinitely. Now, ws do not believe the charges wnlnst any of these gentlemen, but we blame them because their silence has sanctioned the growth of the monstrous system which Ess made the assassination of the private character of publio men in America profession, and suffered a practice to grow Into a precedent which la more dangeroua to the institutions the Intelligent Christian and conservative elements of this Nation bold, alter God, to be most sscrsd, than are the forgeries, fraud', snd tbeOs of a thousand Tweeds.
TT ATTTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
KNOTT, guilty, Proctor'a case.
la the verdict In J.
IT'S plain that Blaine will be the leading man In the start.
Tna hydrophobia scare, the millenium and the Fourth of July approach.
DON CARLOS—remember him ?—is understood to be in the City of Mexico.
FORTHan proceedings in the Belknap case have been postponed to July 6th.
NELLIS SARTORIS' baby died on the second anniversary of that lady's marriage. "v
IT is leaking out that Bristow's regiment, the 25th Kentucky, run at Fort Donelsou. ____________
THE Washington Gazette Is authority for the qtatemqnt that Abdul Azis is Dutch for Orvill Ulysses. »«. 9SE=9K=9ISaS
IT would have been delegates in Bristow's pocket If Carl Sburs and the Cincinnati Commercial never had been born.
THE attendance at the Centennial is improving, the weather being extremely favorable. The last reported figures are 60,000.
THE Old South Church, Boston, was sold Thursday at auction for thirteen hundred dollars. Revolutionary relics are ooming down.
THE gentletnan from Maine has a most suggestive name, Tarbox. His mrrreptitous use of Blainespeech proves conclusively his perfect right to it
JCDOB PETIT, of the Supreme Court, has been indicted by the Tippecanoe county grand jury for his late disgraceful assault upon a street preacher at Lafayette.
THKY have a fog horn at Philadelphia, which toots at 6 o'clock p. m., and is operated by compressed air. The voice of the musical charmer is estimatd at about 40,000 cow-power.
DOM PEDRO has inspected the Washington monument, contributed a shinplaster to its finances, and expressed his unalterable determination to donate a stone for its completion.
MR. ROBESON'S position in the Cabinet is supposed to be worth from fifty to an hundred thousand dollars a year to him. There area good many patriots heavily standing around these dull times who wonld take it for half the money.
CROOKED whisky has broken out extensively in Brooklyn and a brother-in-law of the late Attorney General is im plicated. It is curious that the more religion there is in a place the worse its morals—that is religiou of the Brooklyn kind.
THEBE are prospects of a lively quarrel, involving a rich harvest for lawyers, over the estate of the late A. T. Stewart. Since the decease of the late deca-millionaire his family has increased, even as the kinsfolk of Ulysses multiplied after his election to the Presi dency _________ 1
THE superiority ef man to nature is continually illustrated in literature and in life. Nature needs an immense quantity of quills to make a goose with but man can make a goose of himself in five minutes with one quill, as has lately been demonstrated by "M," a 'substantial" correspondent of the Journal.
THE Buffalo Sunday Leader heads the marriage notices in its columns with the words "Outward Bound," while over the death notices appear the words "Homeward Bound." If one half the strange stories told in the local columns of the Leader are true, the latter class must have a warm home awaiting them, y-t
ABDUL AZIZ, like Abdul Ulysses, was a man of few words. His instrument of abdication is the briefest State paper on record: "We Abdul Aziz, conformably with the wishes of a majority of our subjects, abdicate." We'll wager something cheap that Webb Casto can't decline the race for the Legislature in as few words. __________
A DRUG STORE boy in New York read Tincl oppi for Syr. simp, in a prescription and the dose killed the patient, and now the question is up, which was to blame, the doctor's chirography or the boy's stupidity? A skillful druggist once said that if he had .put up all the prescriptions ever brought to him as they read,|he would have killed more people than Napoleon.
THE emigration from China to the United States, according to the report of the chief of the Bureau of Statistic?, during the year 1875, wai 16,467 of whom 16,0o5 were males and 382 females. The emigration to China (that is, of Chinese returning home) is not stated, but may be estimated approximately at 7,700 leaving a balance in favor of the United States of 8,737. This would give us an annual Chinaman to about 5,000 of our population. No wonder our bishops and other clergy are alarmed at this incursion of heathenism.
TH«
reductions which It la now cer
look at the great show.
tain will be made In the railroad farea to and frem Philadelphia will place It within the power of all persona of average to visit the centennial. The tyMMUmi is pronounced by all who have seen it the largest and finest that haa ever taken place. Whoever can go should do so. It will be money judiciously spent. And there Is little to binder the prudent man or woman, however small bis or her eatarr, from. saving enough to enable them to take a healthiest novice ttot ever came from
WB SSS that a pstttkm Is bslors the oouncll for the repeal.of the ordinanos respecting the soliciting of psswngwi by hotel runners, hsckmen snd others. Similar petitions from ths parties —the proprietors of ths Bronson House, the National House, and other interested parties—have been before the oouncll before and bars Invariably failed, as ws have little doubt will be the fate of the present ons. The fact 1s that ths ordinance now In lores Is a good one, probably as good as could be devised, and it would be a great misfortune If it should be repealed. Under It the runnera ot the diffei ent hotels and the drivers of hacks, omnibuses, and other conveyances are required to atand In line in one place, and only speak to travelers when spoken to, and then only in a moderate tone and in answer te questions. Each one wears badge on his hat to dsslgnate the hotel by which he is employed, and It is undoubtedly a great relief to travelers to eseape the annoyance that beset them from this class of persons in moat places. Any citizen who goes to the depot and sees for himself bow this thing is now working, or hears it spbken of in such complimentary terma by strangers, must at once congratulate himself on the good order and the pleasant contrast it affords to some other cities and to what it was here during the time the ordinance was not in force. It might be a slight advantage to one or two bouses to be allowed to solicit passengers, though we doubt it, but no matter what the advantage to the one or two individuals,, it would be a serious detriment and inconvenience to the gen eral public, and they, we imagine, are tbeonee for whom laws are made.
DOBS it ever strike#the average reader that a good part of what he reads in condemnation of the extravagance of the times, and the wise counsel pre scribing parsimony to the rich as means to relieve the country of its mo mentary embarrassment, is sheer non sense? Does it ever strike bim that profusion of expenditure is about the only atonement the rich can make for their acts of engrossment? If the wealthy people of the country were to become as narrow in their outlays, through avarice, as the poor are through necessity, would not the amount of suffering be about twenty times greater than it is at present? In a country where there are vast estates and great wealth in the hands of the few, where the contrast between the opulent and the laborous classes is strongly marked luxury, display, indulgence and extravagance on the part of the former are the terms upon which the latter survive and the man who counsels parsimony on the part of the rich in such times as these has made poor use of his eyes and his intellect
THE visit of Dom Pedro to America has occasioned much inquiry as to the country over which he presides. The Baltimore Sun says that the territorial extent of his dominion exceeds that of the United States, though its population is only ten millions. Of this population from one quarter to one-third is white. Less than a million are slaves, and pro vision has been made for gradual emancipation. When inquiries were made of the emperor on this subject, he said that he desired to bring about emancipation in such a manner as would not inflict injury upon either race. No person born after September 28, 1871, can be held as a slave. Public education is promoted the public debt is 9500,000,000 the cost of government is on $41,000,000 the revendes in excess of the expend! tures. The exports of Brazil to this country are said to be three or four times as much as the imports from us. She sells her hides, horns, and Rio ooffee here, and buys her cotton goods and manufactured ware in England.
SKEPTICISM upon religious things has broken out in Harvard College. There are several who have strong doubts of the historical accuracy of the first chapter of Genesis who suspect the truth of the story touching tho completeness of Noah's menagerie, and the length of the rainy season that year who fail to com prebend why it was necessary for, Joshua, when ho commanded the sun to stand still to command the moon to follow suit and who cite the testimony of the chemical profession to show that the transformation, in less than thirty days, of Lot's wife into a pillar of salt, was impossible. The remedy proposed for this charming state of things is to print and distribute a large quantity of tracts upon the doctrine of election, the obligation of the Sabbath, and other lively and cheerful points ef theolegy.
THERE is a law of Congress which provides that the election for Congressmen shall be held on the same day of November in all the States and the constitutions of Ohio and Indiana fix the period of Congressional elections in October. Hero is a conflict growing out of the In-ter-meddling of Congress with matters in which it had no legitimate concern. It is clearly the State's right to elect her representatives to that body when sbo seeafiw Mr. Morton is of the opinion that the elections in the two States named, in order to be legal, must be held In October, and they will be so held. It would he an excellent thing if we had fewer elections, but that la a matter to bs settled st home, and net 1B Congress.
SS!BSgs!SS
^sl
THBY must have a peculiar kind of lager beer in
Vermont.
It haa juat been
on the testimony of physi
cians and others of large experience In ita
consumption
that It does not Intoxi
cate. Well guarantee that four glasses of Terre Haute lager II throw the
1 the Green Mountain State.
THB Senate has confirmed tho appointment of Wirt Sykes as Consul t» Cardiff. Cardiff is a city on tho south ooast of Wales. Sykes is the "husbandt of Olive Logan. $
IT IS stated from Washington thsfc* Bristow's resignatian has been in tbf* hands of the President for about a week, but that Grant refuses to let himmsko martyr of himself till after the Cincinnati Convention.
THE laat request made by Piper, th» amateur murder, before he was worked off, was for God to havo mercy on him. The Washington Gazette thinks he must have bad sn awful mean opinion of the* party to whom that petition was addressed.
BRISTOW might have been tolerably* popular in Indiana, Ohio and Illinois, if he hadn't been "supported" quite so* much by the Cincinnati Commercial The "rule or ruin" policy of that paper, so far as iU Influence extends, has killed B. H. as a candidate effectually.
THE first ballot at the National Republican Convention in Chicago in I860, stood thus:- William II. Seward, 173 Abraham Lincoln, 102 Simon Cameron, 50 S. P. Chase, 49 Edward Bates, 4S, with scattering from 14 downward. A few additional ballots followed, and, it. beoom ing apparent that neither Seward, Chase nor Cameron could be nominated, some of their supporters broke line, and,t rushing over to Lincoln, secured his nomination.
IT comes to light that Mulligan's enmily to Blaine not only arises from his religious prejudices, but from a difference that arose between them during the settlement of the estate of Blaine, and his brother-in-law, Warren Fisher's partner. Mulligan bought a claim of |50,000 against the estate but Blaine, as executor, would allow him only 915,000. Mulligan carried the case to the courts, when Mr. Blaine was sustained, but Mulligan has ever since cherished hii resentment.
THE City Clerk asks the council to allow him a deputy. One has been allowed for the past three years, but the new council in its recent economical fit decided to dispense with his services. This is all nonsense. Anybody who knows anything about the work imposed upon the city clerk these last two or three years knows that he cannot do it without help. It is simply an impossibility, and it would bs mere becoming in the council to recognize the fact ancL, act like a sensible body of men.
As WAS expected, ths Judiciary Committee, Messrs. Glover, Dowling anilGil man, (who keep cows,) reported^ against the ordinance for impounding cows found running at large after nighty In their report, however, which was', adopted by the council, they stated that if there were wards which desired such protection they could have it by signifying such desire to the council. It remains now for the people to ask for it by patitions from each ward. Let those be started at once, and let the council bo held to its promise.
THERE is something touching in the' accounts that come from New York respecting the case of Daniel Drew. The World says that during the past few days most of his pictures and the best of his furniture and ornaments havo been disposed of at private rale. Tho walls of his once elegant rooms now look very bare, and Mr. Drew seems to4 take matters sadly to heart. All of thefamily, with the exception of Mr. Drew's son, have gone to their country residence, in Westchester county, but Mr,: Drew will remain In what he terms tbe old homestead as long as he can. It isno light thing to be stripped of every comfort in one's old age and wo do not envy the man who can joke and sneer aU even Daniel Drew in this hour of hi* trouble.
THE English committee that is revising the New Testament has struck out as unquestionably spurious, the latt seven verses of the last chapter of St. '$ Mark. It has also struck out as being false interpretation, averse in ono of the Epistles which is frequently qnoted as pr.-of of the existence of the Trinity. The verses tn Mark referred to read asr follows:
4
fy
14. Afterward He appeared unto thefe? eleven, as they sat at meat, and upbraid--, ed them with their unbelief, and hard-^ ness of heart, because they believed not them which had seen Him, after lie wan risen. 15. And He said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. 10. He that belleveth, and is baptized sliail be saved but ho that believeth ,• not, shall be damned. ,,,. 17. And these signs shall follow tbeui that believe: In my name shall they cast out devils tbey shall speak with new tongues. 18. They shall take up serpents and if tbey drink any deadly thing, it shall
not hurt
7
them they shall lay hands on
the sick, and they shsll roooyer. 19. So then, after the Lord had spoken unto them. He was recfived up int.) Heaven, and sat on the right band of God. 20. And they went forth, and preached everywhere, the Lord working with them, and confirming the word with signs follow ing. Amen.
AND here comes the wickedest look* ing woman In Paris—Cora
Pearl-—old.
faded, haggard looking, faultless dressed ina quiet toilet of silver-gray foulard, with berdyed yellow hair pulled low on her forehead, as though to •hade her hollow eyes. Last year she used to drive out In a landau, drawn by two magnificent horses that stunning equipage has been replaced by a plaic. vfdMil with one ordinary looking •teed She is on tbe downward track, that Is very evident. She is said to be over bead and ears in debt, her hotel on the Rue de Chaillot is mortgaged for its ftill value, and, some day, at no very distant period, there will be a sale at the hotel Drouot, and then a final disappearance of this detestable, vlcloua creature.—[Lucy Hooper.
