Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 7, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 September 1876 — Page 4
wmsam
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.,
OPERA HOll»
Are receiving daily an elegant variety or Full UrHM Uood* and Silkn at Popular Price*.
NOW OPEN!
Colored Cashmeres!
In Neal Brown, Myrtle ireen, Dark Pinna* Navy Bine, Fawn, Drab. etc. All in variety or prices from 50c. lo&l.eo per yard. Also Alpaca*, Danish Mohairs, Natteen Cloths, Empress Cloths, Camel** Hair Cloths. Brocad. s, and Poplins, together with an elegant variety of low priced goods from 1» atoS*c.per yard.
SX'X
WANTED
jBZsi
The most elegant variety ever shown in this city. Plain Dress Milks. Fall Colors Xew Shades. Nenl iirown, Plum, Navy Bines, FHWII. Myrtle «reen. London
Drab, Silver Cirey, etc.
AI*0 Trimming Silks in all shades. BlackCiros Grain Silks. Oar entire stock is offered at the same price as before the advance.
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.,
OPERA HOUSE CORNER
FINE PERFUMERY.
Lubin's Hi mmeU's, Atkinson, Crown, Lundborg Potaln's and Bazln's
Fine Extract* for Ibe Ilnndkereblef
Genuine Imported Farina and German Co lorms. Fine Toilet and Fancy Articles, Fine Toilt!
Soups,
Cosmetics, Tooth, Hair, Cloth
and Nail Brushes, Combs, Dressing Cases, Cologne Sew, Finest of Toilet Powders, Diamond, Hilver and Golden Powders for the U»n, und all articles wauled for the toilet.
BUNTIN & ARMSTRONG,
DrnnirlRta, Tor. «th and Main
Millinery Goods
AT WHOLESALE. 1000 pieces tiros Grain Ribbon in all the new 8hades. 200 dozen latest styles bats from i,he cheapesi school hat to the finest import- 1 chip.
Cash inert- laces and nettings, real and imitation, the largest assortment in the city at lower prices than elsewhere, at
H. MTR IUS, 149 MHIII Street,
Wanted.
WANTED—AT,!,anyKNOW
TO THAT THF.
SATURDAY EVKNIUCI MAII. has a larecirculation than newspaper published in theHtate. outside of Indianapolis. Also •hat It is carefully and thoroughly read In the homes of it* patrons, and that It Is tht v«y bent advertising medium In western ncUana.
EVERYBODY TO KNOW-
that the Hwiss Ague Core Is a raedleti that never fails. It Rives the best satisfaction of any cvrr introduced in 'his land. Try It! It costs only 50 «ent* wr bottle. Manufactured only by JCLEH HOUIUET, Terre Hante, Ind., and entered accord In* to act of Congress, March 7. 1876.
For Sale.
IXMSUJK—A VERY LARGE AND 8Upcrlor FIRE PROOF SAFE with burKlitr box InMde—auttnblo for a btink, or eonnty ofllces. Will b»» sold at a bargain, MoKEEN A M1N8M \I..I* 28-wtf
OR H\L&-OSK JERSEY OR ALDERny Hull, three years old, very handsome urfee male Jersey liilvwi, from two to six months old two half breed Jersey Cows five years old GOODoues: a few one-half and three-quarter* broed calves. The above animals art* from good imported stock.and will bf sold ehenn. Inquire of or address I PREHTON, P.O. Box687,Terro Haute, Ind.
OR HALE-HOUKE AND LOT-ON Thirteenth and a half street, between Jtaln and Orchard. Will sell v«rj cheap on monthly payment*. Enquire at the northoajrt corner of Thirteenth and half and Orchard stro ts. lnlyl.Vtf
For Rent.
RENT-A HOUSE OF MIX ROOMS In good repair on Spruce street, near ighth. A.C. MATTOX. »-wlt
RACK BOTTOM PRICES!
-AT THE
WESTERN BAZAAR.
White Flannel, lit.} 18c. and 22 l-2c. Red Flannel, all wool, 18c., 22 I-2c,, 2oc. and 3oc. Opera Flannels, all shade#, 40c.. 4oc. and 50c. Shirting Flannel, all wool, 33c., 40c. and 50c. Dress Flannels, latest shades and patterns, 40c., 50., 60c. and 75c. .•••».
BLACK CASHMERE!
LATEST IMPORTATION.
38 inches wide, ?5c. worth 85c.
40 S, 1.1*0
40
44
100 1.25
JJ 1.25 1.50
BUCKALAPACA!
Our 50c. Alpaca e*n»ot be equaled to this city. Its shade, lustre and durability Is to 78c. Alpaca.
WESTERN BAZAAR,
ri^st *udt:-
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THK PEOPLE.
TERRE HAUTE, 8KPT. 80, 1876.
P. S. WESTFALL EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TWO EDITION#
Of this Paper are published. The FIRST EDITION, on Friday Eveniug has a large circulation in the surrounding towns, where It is sold by newsboys and agents. The SECOND EDITION, oa Saturday Evening, goes Into the hands of nearly every reading person In the city, and the tan en of this Immediate vicinity.
Every Week's Issue is, in fact, "$% TWO NEWSPAPERS, in which all Advertisements appear for
ONE CHARGE
THE BROOD OF CARE. It has been said and with much truth that it is not working that kills men so much as worrying. The* habit of constant frotting fend worrying is one ol the most exhausting that can tax the vital energies. It draws fearfully on the nervous system and brings wrinkles and gray hairs long before their time. Tt incapacitates alike for work and for enjoyment. No man can work at his best when he feels fretful, peevish and weighed down with anxieties, and, it is hardly necessary to add, no one in such a frame of mind is in a fit oondition for mental or social enjoyment. The chron ic fretter inevitably develops into a confirmed hypochondriac in due time. The habit saps the foundations of the nerv ous and vital forces and leaves its victim gloomy and despondent.
Bad as the habit of worrying is and disastrous as it is in its consequences, its prevalence is truly alarming. It is not confined to any age, oondition or sex# Men fret and worry about their business and women about their household affairs. The husband frets himself te a haggard shadow over his cash book and ledger while the wife accomplishes the same object with her dresses and dinners. The rich man worries about taking care of his great possession the poor man, about not haying aDy possessions to take care of. And so it goes. Life is never good enough for us, no matter what be our condition, and so we try to improve it by worrying and complaining. There is nothing more foolish in the world. "Take no thought, said the great Teacher, "for the morrow wb&t ye shall eat or wherewithal ye shall be clothed, for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." These words are as wise to-day as they were two thousand years ago. Can all our anxious care change the evems of the future? There are men who live in constant dread that some evil will overtake them. Such a spirit provokes gloominess and despondency. IIow much better to make the most of to day's sunshine instead of worrying about the cloudy days that the future may have in store. Men love a cheerful and sunny temper. The brow that is haavy with eare and anxiety repels rather than wins men. They who succeed best in life are the hopeful, lighthearted and genial. There are people who seem never to have any grief or sorrow it is only because they hide it from mankind, aye, and from them selves too except in the secret hours.
It is useless to deny that there are many evils in the human lot. Every one has his peculiar trials and and disappointments which no other can fully appreciate or underxtand. "Into each life some rainmnst fall,
Home duys be dark and dreary." Indeed it might be said that human life is accepted on the condition that we endure its evils for the sake of its good. Some grow tired of the bargain and fling the gift away as a worthless thing. And Naturo has shown her kindness by giving to each of her children the power and the privilege to choose for himself. She will not compel anyone to live against his own wish. When he becomes dissatisfied with the struggle the dagger and the hemlock are at hand. And say what we will of the cowardioe which prompts the suicide to end his life rather than struggle manfully through the difficulties that beset him it is a question whether even he does not more deserve our respect than he who is eternally grumbling and whining at his lot and pretending to wish for death while yet clinging to life with the glutftb of desperation.
The fact cannot be ignored that some people inherit a hypochondriacal disposition from their ancestors. The sins of generations of chronic grumblers are visited npon thetn. For such it may be hard to be always cheerful and buoyant and they are entitled to sympathy rather than rebuke. Vet it is astonishing what a resolute will and constant endeavor can accomplish. Even disease itself will ultimately yield if tho treatment is sufficiently vigorous and persistent. Moreover these unfortunates have a double cause to use every possible effort to drive away their gloom: first, that they may thereby contribute to their own happiness and success and, second, that they may not transmit the curse to tbeiroflfepring.
The troth is it coeta no more to be hopeful and happy than weighed down with anxiety and care. If the practice Is bard with some at fin* it will become easy and natural by and by and the result will abundantly repay all the •fibit that It may cost In U*e earlier •lac*1*
Two of the Molly MaguireR, John J. 8lattery and Michael Doolin were convicted Saturday, at Pottsvilie, Pa., of conspiracy to murder William and M^or.
SEVKKAL marriages took place in "Maine recently of a novel character. In a certain neighborhood there resided an old gentleman who had four sons and
one
daughter, and, in the same neighborhood, was another old gentleman who had one son and four daughters, making ten sons and daughters in all. This was odd, but the oddest part of the story is still to come. Tho sons and daughters of the respective families met, and, meeting, loved, every one of them. The parents supposably aided and abetted the course of true love, which so seldom does run smooth. First, a son of one family and a daughter ol another would get married, and then brothers and sisters would do the same thing, until now five weddings havo occurred and the four Bons and one daughter of the first family have been united to the four daughters and one son of another! It ought to be a happy arrangement, with five familes there are but two mothers-in-law, just two-t fths of a moth-er-iu-law to a person and the average tuaii or woman should, with a reasonable display of courage and patience, be enabled to endure that much of the article. The faot that both fathers are still alive and hearing tho brunt of the old ladies' aggressiveness as husbands have to do, renders the situation of the newlymarried people still moro pleasant. No, woman can haudlo a husband and son in-law or daughter !n law so vigorously together, as she can either one alone, and thus it is safe to infer that the two-fifths of a mother in law attacliod to each of the live new families really represents in force only about one-fifth of tho aveage brand. Happy fyoung married people in Maine.
THE New York Herald calls on citizens to lynch train wreckers on the spot, and the Sun virtuously rebukes its contemporary for such dreadful advice. Upon this the Graphic takes occasion to remark that tho Herald is fundamentally right and the Sun technically right. Train wrecking is certainly the most horrible of human crimes, and it ought to have a severer punishment than any other. Every State in the Union should make tho malicious obstruction of a track a capital offense without delay. Law is a good deal better than lynohing, but every scoundrel who intercepts a railroad train ought to pay for it with his life."
THE Messrs. Sanderson Brothers, extensive steel manufacturers ol Sheffield, England, are making preparations to establish a branch manufactory at Syracuse, New York, with the ultimate intention, if the business prospers, to make it their chief manufactory. A large English cutlery manufacturer, of the same city, is also making preparations to remove to the United States. These may be taken as promising signs of business improvement in this country la the near future.
Mit GRANT has just been interviewed by a female correspondent. He said he hoped his sons would not marry until they were established In life and perfectly able to sustain a wife not that he was opposed to early marriage, but be always pitied a young man who bad a wife and the prospect of family responsibilities devolving upon npon him, while he bad no lucrative means of sapport. He spoke of bow obedient his sons were."
Ix ah article on the "Interior Trade,' the New York Bulletin, of September 35 says:
The trade reports from all parts of the country, except the fever-stricken region of the South Atlantic, are of the asms encouraging character with those which we have been publishing ttom time to time since the commencement of the month. The increasing activity extends beyond the mere commercial movement, and embraoes a numerous class of lMOstrtss
WM
TEH RE HAUTE tjAJ.liK.DAY EVEiN ING MAJ L.
v,
,it,
THE blowing up of the obstructions at Hell Gate took place last Sunday and was successful in every respect. The calculations of Geneaal Newton were fully verified. More than fifty thousand pounds of dynamite were exploded instantaneously, yet the shock was so slight that not a pane of glass was shattered. The same explosion iu the open air would have destroyed half of New York. It was the greatest blast ever made, yet one might have been looking on without understanding the nature of the undertaking, and not have supposed that anything remarkable was happen ing. There was no loss of life, nor any damage to adjacent property. It will be regarded all over the world as a great triumph of modern scientific engineering and the same method will doubtless now bebreught into general use in deep ening channels and removing obstructions. General Newton will hereafter be an authority in such matters.
THE art of conversation, which latterly has fallen into neglect, is being revived in aristocratic circles in England, by means of conversation lessons. Young ladies and gentlemen who have but little experience in the world, and who would scarcely know how to keep up a conversation in the manifold emergencies of conversational life, are furnished with professors or lady instructors, and regularly coached, to develop their skill. The news of the day and the general topics of the time as well as matters of art and belles-let-tres,aresupposed to be transfused by the professor into the minds of bis pupils in such a way as to be available as the fruits of graceful culture and knowledge of the world. We have a very high opinion of the art of talking well as an accomplishment, but shall wait until we know more about how it is going to work before recommending the new English plan of acquiring it.e,
ONB man Js ready to believe Tilton's explanation—a clergyman, who tells this story "I was Journeying with a young brother of my fiook, with whom I occupied a section in a sleeping car. In the night I quit my couch to refresh myself at the cooler. Having done so, I returned to what I oonceived to be my section, and, observing that my companion—as I took the sleeper to be—bad moved over to the outside of the berth, I shook him by the shoulder with gentle force, remarking, in the words of a secular song. 'Tommy, make room for your uncle' To my Ineffable surprise and horror, the sleeper I had BO rudely awakened was of the opposite sex. She shrieked aloud and in another second I had bounded into my own berth, and was apparently suoring the snore of the just. It seems to me that thoy might have big canvas numbers put up on the berths, such as they havo on the pilot boats in New York, say five or six feet long then the railway faring man, though short sighted, need not stray."
NOTWITHSTANDING the Centennial Exposition is closed on 8unday to the general public it was open to a distinguished party last Sunday. Among the visors were President and Mrs. Grant, Mr. Sartoris, Secretary Borie, Secretary Fish and Mrs. Fish, Colonol Sandford, of the British Commission, and Robert E. Coxe, of Washington. They visited Memorial Hall and were received by Mr. John Saitain, Superintendent of the Art Gallery. The party left at two p. m., and drove to the house of the British Commissioner, where they took lunch. Sunday evening they were the guests of Mr. George W. Childs. at his residence in Walnut street.
THE Cincinnati Times calls attention to the fact that the Adams Express company deliver, day after day, iu New York papers twelve or fourteen hours in advance of the mails, and thinks the Postal Commissioners should investigate the phenomenon and inquire whether it is expedient to have it continue. It does seem that the wants of business would require the delivery of letters at least as early as the delivery of the newspapers.
THE journalists of Europe are almost speechless with amazement at the^alm, Indifferent and disgracefully democratic conduct of Don Pedro. They observe with awe that he refused the place of honor in the St. Petersburg Congress of Orientalists, and sat in a commonplace chair, and they discuss his condescension in using the equipages of the hotels where he lives, and in visiting schools and scientific institutions. ,A1
THE Indiana State Fair was formally opened on Monday. The display of cattle, hogs, sheep and chickens promises to excel that of apy previous year, and a first class fair and stock show is assured beyond question. Whether the fair will be a financial success is a matter of grave doubt. The price of admission has been fixed at 50 cents during the day and 25 cents at night.
THE Philadelphia Exhibition is not to be extended beyond Nsvember 10th, the time originally set for closing it. The managers expect that the ohilly weather of October will make the unwarmed buildings uncomfortable for visitors, and, consequently that the present large attendance will end with this month. No attempt at heating the buildings has ever been contemplated.
CHEERFUL paragraphs like this have been floating lately before the vision of New Yorkers: "Dynamite closely resembles brown sugar, for which it is doubtless sometimes sold. Jabbing a spoon into it hard will explode it. In the form of nitro-glycerine it looks like poor butter. The only safe way is for boarding house keepers to buy.thejt^t of everything." Vi
IT is said that 9150 per acre can be niade iy the cultivation of superior grades of the basket willow. The subject is attracting attention, a manufacturer having asserted recently that fully five thousand articles—cbair&, baskets, sofas, etc.,—are constructed from willow shoots, and that two thirds of the willow used in this country is imported from Europe.
A hundred ton gun, the largest ever made, has been completed at Woolwich, England, for an Italian iron clad. It is the first of battery of seven,eacn of which will require four hundred pounds of pow der to the shot, and will throw a shell which will weigh two and a quarter tons. It is worked by hydraulic power, and swabbed and loaded by machinery
THE meeting at the Tippecanoe battle ground, Tuesday, was, by all accounts, a monster affair, fully equalling in point of numbers as well as in enthusiasm, the meeting at the same place in 1840. Among tho speaker* were James G. Blaine, Bon Harrison, Newton Booth, Judson Kilpatrick, W. C. Goodloe and Robert T. Lincoln.
FIVE students have withdrawn from Princeton College because a colored theological student in the divinity school, which is not connected with the college proper, has been allowed to attend Dr. McCosh's lectures on psychology. Four of them are Mary landers snd one is from Virginia. Comment is quite unneceeury.
EKOOCRAOKD by the tremendeoussuoof the Soldiers Reunion held last week *st Indianapolis, the Cleveland people are making arrangements to bold a similar reunion in that city on the 8rd ot October. A general Invitation been published. j*
MORS railroads will be built in Callfornia this year than In any previous year of tba State's history.
iliiiss
.s,
A MONO the Parisian houses now un', dergoing demolition iu the Bust lie quarter for the opening of the Boulevard Henri. IV., is that of the celebrated Marchioness De Brinvilliora, the beautiful prisoner, who was executed in 167(1. Underneath the cellar have been found the skeletons of two tall mon and a woman. They are thought to be those of the brothers and sister of the Marchioness, who mysteriously disappeared, and were considered to 'have been among bsr many victims.
BUFFALO BILL doesn't presume to criticise the Generals in command of the Indian campaign, but he very suggestively points out the difference between Gens. Crook and Terry. "Gen. Crook," says Bill, "slept on his blanket, made his own coffee and broiled bis own bacon. Gen. Terry had abed brought with him, a portable cooking range and an extension table. We could not travel fast enough to catch the Indians, as we would break the dishes."
THE proprietors of Booth's theater, in Now York, announce that the theater heretofore known as Booth's theater, in honor of Edwin Booth, will be hereafter known as Booth's theater, by the kind permission Mr. Samuel Booth, printer of 221 Center street. Mr. Edwin Booth will consequently have nothing to say about it
MOODY A SANKEY will open up tomorrow in Chicago. A building has been prepared for their use capable of seating seven thousand persons. The dimensions are one hundred and ninety feet by one hundred and sixty the building reaching on Monroe street from Market to Franklin.
AN earthquake shock was distinctly felt in this city, and in many other parts of Indiana, a few minutes after twelve o'clock Sunday night. It was more severe at Evansville than anywhere else, being hard enough to shake the globes off the chandaliers at the St. George Hotel.
Mn. G. SPAULDINO, who went to the Orient, charged by the Tbeosophical Society to procure a firstclass magician of either the white or black art, telegraphs from Tunis that he has got his fiend and is coming back. :s
THE California papers are telling how a woman offered flOO for the privilege of kissing Edwin Booth, and bow he took the money and the kiss, and then gave what he had so singularly earned to a starving immigrant.
PARIS, it seems, has steam street cars that don't frighten the horses, seat forty persons, run ton miles an hour, can be stopped within five feet by a break, turn sharp corners, and costs but |4 a day for fuel and attendance.
IN the month of August theres'tvfere seventy-eight railroad accidents in the United States, whereby twenty-two persons were killed and seventy-six injured. Three of the accidents were on Indianapolis ronds.
DR. WINSHIP, who developed by practice snch wonderful physical strength as to be able to lift 3,000 pounds, died in Boston, last week at the age of forty-two years. ______________
THE newest thing in the stationery line is a note sheet and envelope all in one piece, which is the revival of a style of paper in use twenty-five years ago.
CLARION county, Pennsylvania, ships seven thousand barrels of petroleum daily and the "crop" lasts all the year.
THE Graphio places the income of James Gordon Bennett at 9750.000. He ought to be able to live on that.
#,
THE Baltimore Bulletin, Mr. Samuel Early's paper, has been changed to an evening daily.
EK SBCRKTARY BELKNAP is going to California to grow up with tho country,
THE plague is reported to be doing fearful mischief in the Turkish army.
THERE is little doubt that peace will soon be concluded in the east.,
THE best feature of the trade revival is that it is gradual. "t*J ^7
Tns New York State lair lost money this year. TWEED is on his way home.
"THERE IS a dismal uniformity," says the New York Times, "in the statements of the Democratic speakers of sll grades when talking of the oondition and prospects of the country. Mr. Tilden struck tne key note when be depicted the universal prevalence of distress throughout the land. His supporters everywhere have adopted the same tone. They profess to see nothing but the darkness of despair as the result of Re publican rulo. Our improved public credit is to them as nothing. They ignore the high standing which our public securities have acquired In the markets of tho world, and which testifies as eloquently to the confidence tbstis reposed in the integrity and sagacity of Republican administration, as to the resources of the oountry and the self-sacrificing •"'th which they have been apphold the nation's faith. With ......clearness, thoy discard evidence which proves that the depression from which this country is happily emerging prevails with greater severity in England and Scotland, ami therefore cannot be attributed to causes connect-
ed with politics. Following out the same wretched policy, they refuse to reoognlze the signs of improvement which are multiplying on all sides, content, apparently, to prolong depression and embarrassment, if these can be
used
as auxiliaries to partisanship. The defeat of the Democratic party may not be essential to batter times, but it will suppress those prophets of evil who take special delight in assailing the credit of the countnr and magnifying the misfortunes of the paopW/\ ^,
HOOTS IN WSONO BERTH. (Brooklyn Aagus.] When Theodore abstractedly meandered through that sleeping car, seoklng where he might most comfortably flop down and sleep the sleep of vr^uh and innocence, perhaps he said to hifciself as he paused before the fateful cou\b:
This appears to be about the thing. Bohold, I will throw my boots i|ito one berth and creep into tho other n\vsolf."
The only trouble was that ho tltew his boots into tho wrong berth.
BURIED ALIVE.
[From the New London (Conn.) Tel£gbipli-7 A horrible story is afloat concerning Mr. Samuel Lester of Shelter l»l»na, who recently suddenly died, as was sipposed, at Norwich, and whose body was taken home for interment. It is to the effect that the person employed to fill the grave while doing so heard strange noises coming from the coffin as of a man trying to break his way out. The: report continues that the IUHII superstitiously fled, to return soon after and hear ihe noise repeated thai lie finally filled up the grave butsaid nothing con. cerning what be bad heard until somj days alter. The coffin was altera whili burned and it was found that the ma buried alive, the evidences of struggle for release from his awful ta( being plainly appareut.
ex was
44
I
THE FIRST MARRIAGE IS Dh'Aj WOOD. fBInck Rills Pioneer, Sept. 1.]
An unusiial attrition WRS ollV-red the theateron Wednesday, the bills/ nouncing that a lady and gentleman Dead wood would be united in marrf at the end of the play. A large and/ pectant audience assembled, and at} conclusion of the first play the cuiP rose and discovered the principal
li
bers of the company standing on sides of the stage. The cenU-r &- oupied by Mrs. McKelvey, the l£, and Mr. Morgan, the grooui, Mrs. Kwas attired in an elegant eveuinAstume. Mr. M. was jauntily drM Judge Kuykendall performed tbe/remony with grace and
dignltynd
omitting the paroxysmal kiss, hewk the hands of the pair, and the ^ain fell on the first marriage in
Deaxd.
THAT UMBRELLA, [Detroit Fr»-O PIV-.K.1
A dozen or more men stood at eastern entranoe of the City tfall y^rday when it began to rain, and alo^'anae an individual with an umbrella,er bis head. As he reached the top ip one of the men advanced and said "Ah! I've Leen waiting fo*u. I knew you had it and it's all rigr
The man surrendered the nipolla in a hesitating manner, and hi^ieepish look showed very plainly tli lie was not the lawful owner of it. Ap passed into the hall another of the jwd stepped out and said:
That's my umbrella, and fcan prove it. It has a \F cut in the liaije." So it bad, and after some £leylng it was bandea over. Tho newwnor was smiling very blandly ns thdrown applauded, wlion a man turi^i off tho avenue to escape a wetting. IV« soon as he saw the umbrella he cal l^oiit:
Well, well, where did yO g^t this "It's mine—bought it a|he store," was the reply. "Not much, sir. Tt
was^tolen
from
my office a month aco, andfou'd hMter hand it over if you cl-n't wit trouble!" It was passed to him, as ho started for home. Only the angelspow whether or not the real
owner
topped him
somewhere up Woodward yonue. •. f~ UNLVNSCIOUS E0T1SM.
With what average persp do you talk tor fifteen minutes make some reference did it." "I think so. done so." Expressions are continually falling Km the lips. Probably no one wbostos
witliotj having him nee topimseli "1 so." should have nions Imilar to this
to
think real
ly believes himself so mch
wiser
than
his fellows as to be capa» of arranging all their lives more wifely than they could do for themselves jbut the temptation to give advice is jirhaps tho one folly from which it is banest to escape. To each one of us hlmsef is, of course, the central fignre in the iilverse. That we should talk of this wonderful self is not very strange. The misfortune is that we are talking to otler selves, each one just as valuable In his own eyes. While we are telling o\r companion what we think, we beiievi, we do, be is impatiently waiting to Ifestow similar information on us. The recollection of this fact might give us a pluse before we inflict on any patient listener too long a chronicle of our own bo^es, our fears, and achievements. v#
THE BOY CAPTtVE on, 1,1 FF. IN THE GUKAT FORKST. A thrilling story, by LKON MEREDITH, will bo commenced in next week's Mall, with appropriate Illustrations each week.
MORTUARY IIEVOKV.
The folowlng is the list of interments In the city cemetery since the last report: Hept.0—Infant of Chas. Jlornu«hos, Jrnperperfect circulation. 10—Mrs. Mary James, #1 years, typhoid fever. lo—Child of IiOtilH Link, S months, thrash.
H. Douglas 88 years «*ongestion. 11—Infant, unknown, slill-born. 11—Man, unknown. 12—Mrs. Mary E. Hall. r«, yi ars, c-onV gestion. It— Mrs. Elizabeth Hud*on, yeatf,
CM-
consumption.
12—Child of II. Hwwe, fi month*, ease unknown. 18—Jacoh Miller, 81 years, general fle billty 13—Child of' Zaehnrlah To.vlor, 1
ear ion. are,
Tesi
ft months and rJdays.eoiws
II— hiidofOcsto Wliwhardt, '.It* congestion of the binln. n—W hurwoll, fong^tlon./ 15—Mr*. Hlte, KSyears,!» month/, scutc dysentary. It-Mr*. Mary Belt, 37 y-nrs,^ disease unknown. 16—Ch Id of O. W. I/jyil 4 3'on nptummcr complaint. 16—Child of James Koeh.fi ninths, congestion of the brain. 16—Child of A, B. Halslch, 11 months 21 days. 17—John A. Meyer, 30 yea ft, gen«rrf debility, 17—Thcmetta MeMnhan, 2»year*, co«-17-a»^:
Watson, months, 12
days,Inflammation Af the bowls
19— Infant of C.Smith, 1 Idays, con^s-
1»—ChVldn'of A. H. llmddle, 1 y*r, teething. i&—Child of Diana Kennecke. 7 yef«, 1 month, dyptheria. »—Infant of John Hchrunds, 12 ays,
a}—Infant of Mrs. Jennie Whte, 3 days, imperfect circulation
23—Child
ilalllSli
.iwira nirmwwiiii ii»Miiwriiaii»iiriiHMi
or Diana Kennecke, 10 'ears, dyptheria. 23—nilf«I of WM. Nawcomb, 7 ivnths, teething. 2S—Child of Fltxputrick, 2 yaw, 4 months, congestion. m—Mrs. flablaa Wolfe. 40 y*r*. 11 ..months, days, sinking hill,„
