Bloomington Courier, Volume 10, Number 1, Bloomington, Monroe County, 3 November 1883 — Page 3
CURRENT HISTORY,
Waahiivr on Special. ,
sti ppeD3eteTy;mvU'Tiht8 act wae
under ODiidderaKpn from January -to
a.. MnmL 1875. -and crannff tne considera
tion of it oomrred the protracted dead-
look in the House which has become his-
thrioa; Mr. 'RandaQ was the leader of
the oppoaitiotL The bill was passed in the House by a vote of 148 to 11& The Republicans who voted against it wese Bntier, Harrison and Thorabtw, of Tennessee; Hyde and Star-nari of 3Caeonri;
w xiownjee, or maryiana; dotoc
bier Smith, of Virinraa; Walter Phelps, i; i of New Jersey ; Bay, of Illinois; Si John, of New York and Thomas of Virginia;
and hi the Republican press of the day their?:aame9 were often printed in black lettem under the captionY "The BepuhEcan enemies of cml rights." In the Senate, the tin was i passed yeas 38, nays 26, al sent 9. The affirmative vote was wholly Republican, and among the negative votes were these Republicans: Carpenter, of WisnBin; Feriy, of Opnneed-
Vmfc If Himlirm. rtf Tatm! Tjwi8. of Vir
ginia; Sohurz Spragne, and Tipton. Mr. Carpoiter made an argonient in the Senate against tbe constitutionality of the law; declared that all its provisions were
in conflict with the constitution, and pre
dieted that the Supreme Gourt would hold :rt invalid5 and void.- Edmunds, on the other hand, was the advocate of the
constitutionality of the bilL He insisted that the purpose of the bill was to protect
the people against discriminations found-
In the eight
t X
JACK.
BTt GXOBCHB B. PABKIBH.
B
..i
l&sV
, ed ex(ilusivelv noon color.
years smcetne biU passed it nasrauea to ? justify the expectations of its friends or
The first
r the predictions of its enemies.
ludicial opinion under the new law was
V delivered by Judge Emmons, of Tennesv see, w ho, in a charge to the grand jury in " reference to the civil-righte bill, declared 'J it to be Constitutional; maintained that the United States could not interfere with
hotel,3roprietors or common carriers,and asserfejd the rights of the States to take care cf their own private affiairs. " ' i THE TJKN NOVKMBRB STATES. :, Ten states will ote on the 6th of November of this year for different Ideal
offioera. In view of the result of the list election in Ohio, much inter, st attaches to these approaching contests, from their bearing on the presidential contest next yearj " . ... , For comparison with the. coming retarns, we have taken the very Jast eleetions in each State: . Connecticut voted for Governor in . 1882 Democratic majority over Repub- ' h'can, 4,161. Democratic maioritrpver , . and Temperance combined, 3,127.J " "': Maryland: Congressional election 1882 i Deinocratic niajorities over Republican,
MBssachusetts: Governor in 1882 Democratic majority over Republican, 18,9. Democraaic majority over Re-
combined,
publican and Fnobibitionists
J":
-5
' Minnesota: Congress in 1882 Republicar. majority over Democratic, 40823L Mississippi: Congress in 1882 Democratic nmrity over Republican andFort Pillow Chnhnera, l.604. : . Ktrsaka: Governor in 1892 Republican over Democrat, 27,070; Republican
,v New Jersey :' Congre's in 1882 Damoemtae over the Republican, 2,03, :
Sew York: Governor in 1882 Demo-
cra; over Republican, 192,4: Democrat
orer Republican and Prohibitionist 187.J;. flemisylvania: Governor v m 1882 Democrat over Republican, 40202: Re publican, Independent' Republican; i: (Jr eenbacxer, ;v and Prohibitionifit over t fmderati-a23C ' - .. 4 Virginia: Congreseman at Laje in
38B2 Coalitionist over Democrat, 5,808;
rr'i :. -r- Coalitionist over Democrat .nd ojlored
Rpuhlican,,l,4fr5. f . I-"'
T 'TfiA.Mmnrttt fit rh nffirw n
... the
state
1'V auuiiur,' uini u; mukum AtxNnuwwv
S3
The graveyard taainess
," . : J :tM SLL m -n ; ' mL,
S - reports show thai 144 persons ninety
v y iars old are ins ired and thai between tliesges of seventy and ninety overoOOO 5 psrsons are iosured on this plan. The I aaditor says the act passed by the last Iiegialature wiH have no effect toward " yapprcsaing fraudulent companies. He say the mutual assessment companies themaelves ewmred the nassatrerof .that
i .5.T- i
1 ;
KTTiTtTO BT .DYNAMITE.
A terrible disaster occurred near
Brooks Tunnell, Pavn t he R. & O. road,
- Mod day morning. The railroad company
has been strengthening and widening the
m?',: ;i' : tunnel, and some distance out a magatP V.: - zine had been-erected, in which mis stork&f r ed 1,2C0 pounfls of dynamite, which was P .-f toifce used Ibr blasting. About the hour shrf named a frtiight train had just passed i throagh the tunnel ;and was sid-traJ&ed
to alki9eaasenger train, overdue, to
a.
it'
y the vicinity of the magazine and was en-
s4i 8flgea 111 MwerBaticin wnrJa .to e watcn-
Is'' i. . '..'M mi. '.'r. 1 ; .
. uoiB ior nneenimwB aroana weie fBhaken to their foundations, and win-
dows at a distanced of nine miles were shattered. Horror stricken, people ran - frm their houses, and upon inveetigaI tkm it was found that the dynamite had
-exploded with terrible effect. Everybody in. ita vinmitxr mva AvirlAYiA ' iif thA tftr-
rifle force of the xnloaion. .Trees were
uprooteL huge rocks torn asunder, and
telegraph poles for half a mile prostrated, i i Nothing remained of the magasine,whtie J the live men who were present were also , missing. It is thought they have all been
No, ray lady, ner did aoldterhands plaoe flowers on that strave. Bat I aoattered those roses apove it. in honor of the brave; The soldier mounds are yonder; where flags wave
" in the air, ... v. And bat for one heart that lores him, Jacks ' grave here would be bare: . For althoagh he bore noaugket, yet I know his heart beat true. , As well beneath the oil-skin) as if fhe bora the r blue. ,. ... ...... -. r""' ': Aye, Miss Jack was a sailor, born within sight of .......j.. the see, ' Andnade his first voyage, with father a baby scarcely three. Vonlove the sea, do yon, lady? Ah, yes: Miss, I : understand, Yon think of it as the poets, "silver s waves and golden sand, BtttlknowitB'haBsbvoioe better, for many a stormy day Have I tried to peer out yoauder , throagh a mist of blinding spray, k . .
Many a night have I faced the sea, ray own heart
cold with fear, "...
Knowing that Jack mastv, , afloat and may be
drifting near.
Have you ever seen a storm. M iss, when waves
ran mountain high.
And paint with crests of whitened i bam a black
and angry sky.
Until they burst in thunder high np the butting
rocks, ..
While wind and ram come tearing down in front
of the Equinox?
I mind of the time when.younder rooks, now up
so tall and brown,
Was smoothed in the water 'twas the night the
. Maine went down,. I was back in the cabin, JfuU;a hundred; yards
, away. . vnn,0i oiroT-naf.th a window the stronff wind
HIV IUUU , . . . . hurled the spray.
Vov A wifTi the ooastretard and no one there
wxthmei.
Attd many a nraver I said that night for sailors
- on the sea; Sudto wild, black ..... night. . -v With distant boom of ;goni and my woman s hear took fright. -' Ah, girl, 'tis a sight to sicken and make a strong . heart fail, . - To see some brave ship. drifting in, before a ' ... northern gale; . To watohher wood and iron tear routi before the ...'.sea,--And her struggles, like a living thing, to cononer and be f ree, Tosee her white sails rent and torn, by every .. . lightning flash. , And hear her booming gun peal oat between each thunder crash. , We saw it all that nightind more. The motions ' . of despair.
The crowds upon her sinking deck, sommgcry-
ing, some in prayer. And we were helpless! A s we looked there came i a aridintr shook:
It told the tale! That living ship hadjStruok you
. mass of rock! rbS) coast-guard, did you say; Miss? They did what men may do: . . . . ..
They loaded the heavy mortar and swtftthe long
line flew .
Far over the stranger's deck, until it came out
taut v
And I cheered with them, when twe saw the end
wascautmt; -. . .
Then out want ;the Ufejarwe watched it take
its way, ,:? . - -
Nowhighalwye the water, now mut-buneo: m
the spray. .
So twice it went across. Miss, along that sli ght
rope track..
And every time its shelter brought some ship
wrecked seamen back, i-'
Then once aaiu it starteibut whe bait from
shin to shore, " ? - - -..
Somehow the rope gpttwisted, and thelinewould
move no more.
Vaintly we wprkedand harder: striving to break
itfree, ..."
TfeiU clan the oar, scarce; showmg laoove www
raging sea, ,..
Then over the surging water, blown to us by the
aale. . -.--
One feeble cry fbr help swept in; and BEss; a
. babTswaiL
There are brave men .aigmm.ss-1 glanced
to st night Along the sturdy coast-guard; every torch-lit face was white. .... H6od help them the captain mattered, as he stoooloeeto me. " :" istherehot'oneman amoung us: who dares to 7 face the eeafV Hat nevera man made answer; while each looked toMsmatei ."... Togo along that , swaying line seemed merely ' I : , tempting Fate. crU gbifndelse.wiliraud the surging crowd feVback, - . . - And, half in a dream of pride and foair, I stood
there racing Jack.
en!" he cried as he saw. me, and . a tear sprang
to his eye, .-..-.
fTou must take care of mottter 111 saye the babe .." or: dfoVf: v ''.. " ' . r... . TSey tell the world ot mothers. who, never a sob- . bing breath, . , ' Watch sons marchforth-to-battlertuiy boy .went . out to death: ' ,r .. And I watched them lash Mm to ,the. line, then, Kke a bird in flight, ' , . , " Swunghigh in air; todrop again and: sink beneath .... my sight, .. , :- But Jack is moving onward, inch by inch, he won his way, , Inch by inch the car draws nearer, where , it tossed among the spray, "flow the rope sways," "Noble fellow,", MCan he stand the awful strain?' . Many a white lip tremblinK murmurs Jas we face the driving rain. .. Stand it? ...Tea. Those, hands of -iron""never lose a single stroke. . His heart is with the baby JackTB sailor heart of oak... .v. ... pNow he has reached it, and high tabove the mad waves roar, We can hear one shout of triumph, blown in up- ; :.. on the shore; . -.One instant and they draw the and as he is lashed fasti '.
I see my boy move with it,enrely landwarffboond at last: ""r .... ... MS under the swirling water; fall a , dozen times times he sank, ....... Until one last great monster hurled him hard
upon the bank; v
Bomenow I anew, my.iaay, tnat jaoK was gone
' from me,
Somehow I knew his honest hear t had sunk be
neath the sea:
Bat up the rocks they bore him, and then the
, captain said, . . .
The babe was safe with its mother, but Jack, my
' -;, boy, was dead, :".
No, lady, Inever.faintedi' but 1 kissed . the wet,
. . ' ooldface.
And even the women turned away, as if to shun
the place. :..
They knew I oouldmeetthe sorrow, for I was a
; sailrswifB.
And they had no words to answer my own heart's
saddened strife. .. . . . - -
So they bowed their heads before me, and silent-
ly drew back,
And left me alone in the darkness, i lone there
with God and Jack.
And this is his grave, my lady, where the roses
. . .. grow so free,
Here by the rocky coast-line and close to the
,: aeoniingasflv .
They honor men who have fallen in the arms to
s.. -fu save aetata, . . .
Sly boy died for a baby, but was not his soul as
, great! - .
4
. 'vLi
hands and heada were picked up half a wile distant, bnt they were bo badly dia-
, fijruxed "M to be unrecognizable. More than 10,000 men areat work on , -xthe Panama canal; 'n Choler a has appeared at Mecea; Six deaths oeenrred at Alexandra on Sun
day. V . -I:;;
A cyclone at Waterproof, Jklisa, Mon-
a,JMji I ky caused great destrnction. One house ; fwas lifted from its foundatiori and cari :f 'P4 ried half a mila Reports of destrnction i : come from several other points in the
4fiif- South and Wit Tn BonrlwTn rnnnhr
lolled, by tailing
PHIL'S FIFTY CENTS.
BY JENNIE' I. WABBXN,
Si6
4
mm g-
fe1 Pi
Chicago Inter Ocean;
Dbnham Martha against Btehard B.,
for cruelty. J
Many there were who, if they saw the
names at all under fixe head of "Divorcee"
in their Chicago daily, had no time to
give to thoughts of ruined homes, dead
hopes and broken hearts. The world be
comes used to the daily record of misery.
Several months after the above names
found their place in the papers, Richard
B. Denham s divorced wife, with her
three boys, boarded the care, bound for a
thnftv Mirthicrnn town innntoti on f ho
While a citizen of Buj?by Tena, was I Michimti nonfml TAilrnnd ThA nMt
r? wu m boyPhit was a lO-year-old blae-eyed,
7 W mnmmgi ma I brown-haired, honest-faced, sturdily.
dduit lacij OLt for ins years, aud showing
Ky fouregroes were J f buildingt . ' ; J ; f .
- -
when the man returned to eonsciouness
there was nothing to be foni of the bar-
row bat the tire of the wheel. T I
--. .: m: 1
thought, for htV rao her in caring for his
i-year old twia. prothera, Harry and Wil
ly. Through many a weary day the only
comfort Phil's mother had found was in
his cheery "Never mind, mother, wait un
til Tm bigger, and' then you .shan't have
such times as these:" The town in Michigan was" chosen as their home because Mrs. Denhara knew
that the minister who had married her was located there, and she hoped that through his influence she might the more readily gain means of support for herself and family. She would never go back to her girlhood home in the East and to those she loved best, she told herself.' She had brought some f urniture with her, and she had a little money enough
to rent a small cottage, wnere- Bne open
ed a select soho 1. She wjis a woman of
good education, pand through the influ
ence of the kind minister a good Jinany
children were sent to her school, so that
the first year, by exercising strict econo
my, they led eomforlably.
The next vear was lees briffht. The
minister, whose influence had been so
helpful to her, went to Minnesota; many
of the children she had taught the year
before entered the public school, and she was not successful in securing new punils. At last she was forced to abandon
the little school, aud every other attempt
at making-a living failing her, she resort
ed to the weary plan of going from house to house with her basket of silver polishes, washing fluid, stove blacking, sponges
and'toothpioks, leaving Phil at home to
take o re of the twins. s .
One July morning basket in hand, she
rang the bell at a spacious brick house.
The door was oneuel bv a vounff and
nretty blonde woman, attired in the daintiest of morning gowns. "Oh, Mrs. Benham," she said with evident disappointment, Ktt thought it was Cousin Buth whom I watJ expecting." .. Mrs. Denham hesitated an instant, but the pretty blonde did not say ''come in," So she told her errand standing on the porch.. .. f. ... ,:. ......... '1 can't trade this morning, thank you ," said the little woman, carelessly glancing at the articles in the basket. "But I want to spek to you about your youngest boys. They were in my Sunday school class. I have not seen them there lately.' Wo," and Mrs. Denham's sallow face flushed., "They hava no clothes fit to wear to Sunday-school; as soon as I can earn the money to get them some they
shall go. You can't trade this morning?'
"No, thank you," airily, "but I do hope
you will get your boys back to Sundayschool. Children of their age should be
in Sunday-school. Gtaod morning." The
door was shut. "?hat luck, mother?"
Phil asked, that night.
She answered by laying 65 cents on the
table.
Tf a tramp should come to-night I be
lieve I would feed him,'! she said.
"It has almost seemed as though I
were a tramp to-dav."
"Never mind, mother,1 Phil answered,
in his old, cheery way.
"I don't suppose folks can always buy
You must stay with the boys : a few days and let me see what I can do."
To the amusement of the boys a tramp
appeared as they weire seated at the table
eating hot griddle-oaken and molasses,
and,true to her word, Mrs. Denham baked cakes for him until the batter was all gone.
The next day Phil was fortunate enough
to secure a job piling edgings' at" the
mill-yard. Some fine hand-sewing was
sent in for Mrs. Denham to do, and the world looked brighter to the little fami'y
"Mebbe it's because you fed the tramp ,'
Phil said to his mother.
The next noon Phil came in from his
work, warm and hungry. "Mother, ' he
said, while they were ab the dinner-table
'iihere'fl a man dewn by the mill on a
pile of boards ; he's sick and tired , and
his boots are all worn out. He tol 3 some
of the boys that he hadn't anything to eat
since yesterday noon, and he's walked all
the way from Augnsta here trying to get
work; but nebedy'll give him work and he's out of money; but if he can get to
Chicago, he says he kno ws he'll get work. Mother, Will you lead me 50 cents to give
him; to help him along a ways towards
Chicago on the cans? Pll pay you baak
Saturday night when I m, paid for my
work."
"Why, Phu, 60 center his mother said.
rnight take your money and.get drunk. '
"No, he won't mother, I know he
won't,' Phil answered earnestly. He's
got a good face, and he didn't beg. The
boys questioned Ms story eut of him "
"But it seems a little strange,Phil, that
he can't get work this time of year."
"Mebbe it Beems strange to folks about
us, rim answered: "out l do wiBfi.taoth-
er, you'd lend me fifty cents."
"I haven't fifty cents, PhiL" "Then borrow it, mother' Phil urged.
"You're more used to berrowing than I
am."
"No, Phil, I can' t do it." Phil said no more, but his mother no
ticed that he earned his slice of bread
away ..with him instead of eating it, and
at night he told .lier that he had borrowed 10 cents of a boy down town, and had
given it to the man who had so excited Ills sympathy.
"I hope you don't oare, mother," he
said. "I'm sure he's a rood man. he was
awful grateful and tears choked him) np. Anyway I'm glad I gave ifc."
Another year rolled away, r.nd during
the time Phil and his mother had naid
the house rent promptly, and none of
them had gone hungry. The last of Sep
tember came, and Phil had saved enough
to take him into the Chicago exposition.
"Is it awful mean for me to want to go,
mother? he asked one nierht "Hadn't I
better give you the money and stay at home?"'
"You have worked hard and faithfully,
my boy, and have been a great help, and
comfort to me," his mother fondly an-
swerea; "ana you aeserve a Jittle recrea
tion; but, PhiVTm afraid to have you go to Chicago, You know if your father should see you he would take you from
ate if he could.' '
Bnt Phil was brave, and he quieted his
mpeners rears, ana tne next morning
started for Chicago on one of the early
excursion trains, expecting to come back
at night But be did not come, and Mrs,
Denham feared the worst. The following
morning brought her a postal card. It
read:
Dear Mother : I am safe and well, and
I hope you ain't worried about me,though
I know you have. I am having a boss
time, i ve seen my tramp, rm gomg lo
stay two or three days. It won't costume
anything. ' It's a surprise.
5. Your Fhzij. Phil came home the third day and after the first greetings, when his mother kiused him and cried over liim, and the
twins pulled him about in "boisterous glee at his teturn, he told his surprise. ,fIt was while! wan in'Maohinery Hall' at the Expoi?i;tion,"h3oommfmcel, "I waB looking at the diffepent maohinds, when a man came up to me and said, liook up here, boy, let me see if I know you, and I was a little Mt scared mother, for I
thought right a war or what you said about father, but when I looked up I knew it wasn't i tether. Then the man said, Tea, I thought I wasn't mistaken. Boy, do you remember that something over a year ago youv gave a piece of bread and fifty cents to a tramp?' And then I
eaw that he was my tramp; but he looks
diflerent now,beoausa he's well and dress
ed up good. "Amd, mother he was awful good to me, and he went all through the Kxposition with me, and told me lots about it
that I never could have learned alone, aud he. took me to a restaurant to dinner, and io Lincoln Park on the street cam to see the bears and alligatcns and everything, and to the North'Side Waterworks, where there's a big engine, find then he took me to Pullman, where ho lives, and nis wife and two girls were just an good to me,too They all do sewing, and he works in the oarshops, and they liy in a real niosj place, a 'flat" they call it; and Mr. Andrews that's his name said he'd come and ses you as soon as he could get away a day, and he knows he can get a plaoe iter, me there to work, where I can livet with them, if you'll let me, and oh mother! am' t you glad I borrowed that
fifty cents for him?" Phil was almost breathless when hie story was finisher1, he had talked so fast and exoiiedly. His mother answered him by stroking his hair and smiling her eyes were full of tears. Mr. Andrews came to the little Michi
gan home one day. He told Mrs. Den
ham his story of sickness and bad luck
that had brought him to the condition in
which Phil had found him; of his discouragements aad the timely help Phil's fifty
cents proved to be, and of subsequent success. Etejhad found a good place for a strong, trusty boy like Phil. He bought; Harry and Willie good warm clothing and Phil went back to Pullman with him, dressed in a new gray suit. I
Phil is working away induBtriously,and
looking forward to the time when he can rent a flat and have his mother and the twins with him in Pullman. :
THE OLD SETTLER. He Has a Thrilling Fight With a Bear and a Wild Cat
Milford, Pa., Correspondence.
"I d'no w't I'll hev nex," said the Old Settler, without noticing the County Clerk. "But Z know w'at I wan.ter hev. I wanter hev an ole-fashion b'ar fight, that w'at I do, b'gosh! I wanter hev jis sich'n oter rasael with a b'ar as I had in '46, over on Focono. w'en I fit fur morn two
mile with two biguns, an' a 'speotin'a
third un up evry minute to take a hand
in an' help 'em, but he didn't come, an'
laid the both on 'em low. O) ef I can't git up sioh a picnic ez that. I d take a
leetle play spell sioh ez I had the very
nex' fall, w'en I oum across a wildcat an
a b'ar hawr.' a rough-and-tumble twixt
theirsaifs in the woods back o the Knob,
oiook. Tnen strain, aa l tue juice of a
lemon, and white sugar to taste. Keep
it on the back of the stove where it will
be warm, and give a wineglassful at short
intervals,
an I pitched in w'en I see the oat gettin
Around the Farm. Farmers in-New Jersey use goats to
protect their sheep from dogs. Two goat 3
can drive way a dozen dogs, and two are about all.each farmer puts with his sheep.
as soon as a dog enters a field at night
the goats attack him, and their butting
propensftifis are too much for the canine
who finds himself roiling over and over.
A .few repetitions of this treatment cause
the the dog to leave the fielfl., limping and
syellihg. I'ormerly.Jwhen a dog entered
a sheep-field at night, the nheep would
run wild and ory piteoualy. Smpe the goats have been used to guard them they
brm in line behind the goat, and seem to
enjoy the fun.
A Baltimore an who has just returned
from New South Wales says that some of
the ''sheep stations" there have from 100-
000 to 300,000 acres, and as many as 520 OOOJeheep. On Alfred Hay's farm 2,000 sheep were shorn before breakfast by about seventy-five shearers. Kangaroos
arc numerous and troublesome. They
ruin the sheep pastures, and the Govern
ment has been constrained to offer aboun?
ty of 75 cents a head for their scalps.
Hundreds of thousands are killed an- .- .j. j ...
nufcUy.
The Ceaohmakers' Magazine says that
laifl should never be used on wagon-
wheels, for it will psneKate the hub, anl
work its way out around the tenons of
he spokes, thus spoiling the wheel. Tal-
ew is the best lubricator fbr wooden
axleferee?.
An experienced correspondent of. the
Germantown Telegraph believes that
early autpmn is the bast time to trim
fruit trees, - It is easier then to tell where
:o cut, te distinguish dead and blighted
hubs, than after the leaves have fallen.
The wounds will become sound then, if net. too large, If cut after the sap is flowing freely, in spring, the wound decays to the heart, bleeds and often diss.
He thinks all kinds of trees and
should-be trimmed as soon as the has ripened.
vines fruit
About the Fair Sex. Many a young man who works hard
during the day allows his hands to go to
waist during the evening.
hPull down your Jersey," is a bit of
Ne w York girl slang that happily has not
followed the Jersey south.
Boston girls never giggle. They merely
express their delight by a dreamy, far
away, north-pole smile.
A good bourgeoise with his wife on his
arm, cries out to a cart man: "Why do
you beat your horse so cruelly?" Because I haven't my, wife'
A young man in South Carolina only
29 years of age has been engaged nineteen times. It is seldom that a youth of
his age has been the hero of so many
narrow escapes.
"Pittsburg Telegraph; "Dear me," said
an old lady on Fifth avenue, the other
evening, "now tne craze ror onina is
growing! Here's a New York club that pays $ 53,000 for a pitcher." .
Ethel oant see what Maud can see
in that ungainly, awkward Captain Heav-
itree." Madge "My dear, it's becoming
perfectly absurd. Only think. The gar
dener told the cook yesterday that he hoped the captain would1 stay for another fortnight, for positively there was no necessity to rol the gravel walks while they
kept perpetually promenading up and
down."
Tins is a story of Mrs. Brown, wife of Buchanan's first postmaster general: She had been married before, and so had Postmaster General Brown, and each had
a daughter left from their first marriage. Then they had another daughter. Mrs.
Brown used to present them at her recep
tion in this way : "This ib Miss Brown,
Mr. JSrown's daughter by his first wile;
thin is Misu Sanders, my daughter by my first husband, and this is Miss Brown,
our joint daughter I" .
Anything to Oblige. Boiiton Jou rnal. ...
A Chinaman who was called as a wit
none in Q ueensland was asked how he
would be sworn, when he replied: "Me
no care, clack 'un saucer, kill im hen,
blow put im mate bee, smell 'm book,
allee saraee. He was allowed to "smell
im Ijooict"
The Chinese are aofcively pushing forr
ward the defenses of Oantou.
the best o the b'ar, an' jis pulled 'em apart an tol 'em to call that a rcun" an blow a little 'fore they went at it agin. Bn b'gosh, they didn't blow worth a cent, and didn't wait fur me to call time, but both on 'em squar'd off and buckled inter me. 'Course, twan't none o' my bizness to interfere in the muss, an' I tried to back out and let the b'ar and the oat settle their difficulty 'twixt 'em, but they wouldn't hey it, and the fust thing I knowed I were mixed up in the row the pootiest kind, an were rollin' round in the scrub oaks chawin' dirt, and sheddin hair, meat, an' hide jis ez proper ez ef Fd ben a b'ar or a wildcat. "Now. PI a ini'ved the recreation to
the top notch ef it hadn't ben that I kep a thinkin that I'd sp'ilt the little game o one or f other o' the varmints by diggin in whar I had no bizness. I says to m'self, now; this yer wildcat either b'iongs to this yer b'ar, or this yer b'ar belongs to this yer wildcat, an' the thing fur me to do is to jis drop out, b'gosh,an' climb a tree an let 'em chaw one 'nother
till the bes' one wins, an then Pll come
down and settle him By this time you couldn't a-tole me, the wildcat, the b'ar, or the scrub oaks apart. I was durn keerful, though, not to hurt either the b'ar or the cat, 'cause I felt so delicate 'bout interferin' with pne or f other's o' their meat, an' pooty soon I see an openin' to git ouft an' make fur a tree, an' I did. The wildcat had his teeth socked 'bout three inch deep inter the b'ar s skoulder, an' the b'ar had one paw roun'
the wildcat, an' were jis poundin it Inter him with t'other. I never thort they'd mind me arter that, but jis ez I were shinniu up the tree where I were goiu to look down an' see the fight out, an' then come down and tackle the winner.durned ef both the b'ar an the oat didn't let up on one 'nother an' fasten on mequioker'n s'oat. They yanked me down off 'n that tree in sioh a hurry that my heels a'most broke my neck, an inter it we went agin, the three on us, till the dirt an atun an pieces o' scrub oak flew 'roun like chips off'n a planin mill. u :fWelltM says I 'ef you durn fools, don't un'erstan' Vat's right, an is boun' ter have a circus with me,' says I, 'all friendship erases,' says I, 'en' the circus is in. "An so I took a han in the fight fur sartin. I hadn't no knife, fur that had , fell out'n my belt long ago, an J'd laid ; my gun down when I stepped in to part the oat an' the b'ar so'a to hev the fight out'oordin to squar' deaiin', Oonse-
kently, t knowd I'd heft to kinder git
away with them varmints arter thtirown
style, or else watch my chance an' git a tick at 'em ez'd st'in back so ez I could
git my gun an' knife. Well, b'gosh,
Freaks of the Lightning.
At Higginsville, Mo., lightning struck
the hen .house of J. P. Fulkerson, and of its sixty inmates not a whole hen could afterward be found. The poodle of Mrs. Walter Reynolds of Orange, Mass., was killed by lightning as it lay in bed with her. while the lad v.
herself was not hnrmed. The eighteen months old child of Mrs. John Tucker, of Salem, Ga., was at its mother's breast nursing when hghtning killed both mother and child. An apple tree was perfectly portrayed on the window pane of the house of Col. Armstrong, near Atlanta, Ga., before which it stood when lightning struck it. Eugene E. Brown of Katonah was orad ,
ling oats when lightning k'll ed him. Not a scar was on the body, yet his hat with the rim ripped off was twelve feet away. .
The nursing infant of Mrs, Mary Sata-
white of Winfred, Gra,, was taken from
her breast aud thrown across the room
without injury, but the mother dropped
dead.
Light ing struck directly in front of a
team at Pascoag, B. I., killing one of the
horses, while the other changed m color
from a mahogany bay to a jet black.
In Whitefield, Me., Charles Ware, his
wife, and child were in bed together.
Only Mr. Ware was killed, and the others
were not injured, A girl in an upper
chamber had her hair set on fire, but sus
tained no other injury.
A Baby At Ischia. There was a haudsome young man
about 24 or 25 years of ago, a peasant, who
when he heard the , earthquake shook at
Tsohia, got his little three-months'-old
baby in his arms, and with his young wife, tried to escape but still protecting bis baby, he struggled on, leading his wife. At last she tell. A great stone rol led over and buried her. He straggled on, and faint, bruised and bleeding reached the place called Calvary, holding in his arms his baby unhurt,but crying pitifully. During the leng hours of that fearful nighi he tried to console aad hush its crying, not thinking once of himself and his bleeding wounds. At 3 o'clock he sat by the great fire with it in his arms, swaying backward ' and forward, singing softly, a singing that was by far sadder than any crying. The baby's dear little face and white nightgown were all bathed in the blood that flowed freely from its lather's wounds. Worn out at last the little one slept. He passed it, without a word, into the arms of a poor woman whose husband and seven children had; in that dreadful
moment passed from this world to the other, and whose tearless eyee alone
showed the intensity of her agony. The
poor young man could not yet feel his
bodily pains, but threw himself on the
ground, crying, "My wife, my poor wifel"
we
tore 'roun' in thar fur more'n an acre,
en' to save my gizzard ! couldn't git
the top -holt on neither o" them varmints,
an' I b'gun to feel ez if I had jes' come
through a sausage cutter. Bimeby,
though, I got to my feet:' The b'ar nz
up on. one side o'.me on hia ha'nehes, an
he cat nz up on t'other side o' me, with i mi a
ner paws on my snouiaer. xne d ar s
month were open a foot wide, I see my chance quicker'n a secon'; I grabbed her
throat with my right han1, an' 'fore he
or the b' air had any idea o what I were
goin'ter do, I rammed her head kerplunk inter his throat He closed his jaws.
What was left o the oat on the outside of
the b'ar wriggled -an scratched. Her tail went 'rouia' like fireworks, an' I 'most split m'self laughin' to see the b'ar try to spit the cat out. 'Twa'n't no us. Thar
she were, stuok fas' in his throat. The
nine lives o' the oat went all out to wunst soon arter the b'ar closed his jaws on her but the b'ar war in a wubs fix th'n a cow
with a turnip in her throat. I run fur
my gun to put the finishin' tetches on
the b'ar. When I got back I had no use fur it. The b'ar laid on the groun', with
his eyes bulged out so ye could a hung
yer powder horn on 'ems He were deader
than a 'Gipshun mummy. The oat in his throat had shet his caloric clean off and choked 1dm to death.
"It's a real ele-fashioned i ass el with a
b'ar that I want to hev nex'," concluded
the Old Settler, turning tooths County
Clerk, "an' if I don't git one it'll be durn
discouragin', an ifs'none of your concarned business whether it's discourag
in' to me or M?riar, b'gosht 'Imighty!"
SuMott.
Flaxseed as a Medicine.
San Francieco Scientific Pross.
No household in the country should
ever be without a supply of flaxseed both whole and ground; for there is scarcely
any thing which can be used with great
er succijss by the amateur physician. At
least half of the ailments of little children may be traced to cold,or to some disturbance of the digestive organs : and in
either of these eases a flaxseed -poultice
is a sovereign remedy.
Poui' boiling water on the ground flaxseed, siirring briskly at the same time, till it is the consistence of mush: then put it into a flannel bag previously prspared, apply it as hot as it can be borne, and cover with several folds of flannel. Let it remain until it begins to cool, when it may be replaced by another. In oases of cold on the chest, hoars en ess and ooughiit acts like a charm, and also in attacks of diarrhoea, and pain in the bowels. C I have seen a little child in agony, relieved in a few moments by this household remedy, falling into a auiet sleep, and awaking the nextoorning quite well. Its great reoommeudatiou is, that it can do no harm, even if it should fail to do good, which is more than can be said of many nostrums confidently prescribed for family use. Flaxseed tea, if properly made, is excellent for colds and coughs, and is pl eas
ant enough to necessitate no coaxing of the little ones. Put two table tablespoon-
f uls of the seed into a quart of cold wa
ter, set it over the fire, and, when it be
gins to boil, allow t two minutee by the
"Old Fritz."
PaU Mall Budget. The vitality of the German Emperor is a source of unceasing astonishment and admiration. He is now well on Ms way to 87 thirteen years older than his great ancestor, "Old Fritz," when that monarch's. tough constitution broke down under the weight of years and the cares of government and his life has been one of the most wearing aotivity. Yet he was on horseback last Saturday, des pite the weather, for three hours, and the next day he was busy all. day in disicharging various formal functions of royalty. In
i face of this marvelous and sustained vig
or it need'? the Emperor's own words in his touching address to the Fourth Army Corps to remind the world how close he necessarily is to the end of his extraordinary career: "It was a joy and honor to me," he says, "to Bee the army corps once more. Probably ifc is the last time. At my age one makes no plans.- Yet the
event, which th? Emperor looks so steadfastly in the face, will make the greatest changes, perhaps, in the foreign and cer
tainly the domestic relations of his em
pire. By no career of our time has the immense importance of the personal element in politics been more clearly -.illustrated.
. The Tower of London.
American Register. .
Some ourious ceremonies are still kept
up in that grim old pile. That of locking up the tower p' nights is them OBt ancient
and certainly the most stately one. A
few minutes before the clock strikes 11,
the porter, with an attendant, appears
before the main guard-house,, carrying a
lantern, and calls out, "Escort Keys.
The guard, supplied always from the
Queen's household troops, then turns out and escorts "Keys" to the outer gate, called the "Spur," each sentry challenging as they pass his post, "Who goes
there? ' "Keys.'' After the gates are securely locked aud barred, the procession returns, the sentries exacting the same
explanation as before. When they come in front of the main guard-house the sen
try stationed there gives a loud stamp on
the ground with his foot and demands Who goes there?" 'Keygi." "Whose keys?' "Queen Victoria's keys." "Pass,
Queen Victoria's keys, and all's well."
The porter then oalla out, "God bless Queen Victoria!" to which the main guard responds, "Amen." The guard then presents arms, the officer kisses the hilt of his sword, and the keys are deposited in the lieutenant's lodging. After this all ingress and egress is impossible.
sta-
Science and Scientists, Funds are wanted for a zoological
tion in Java, Iron, says the Ironmonger, is rapidly giving place to steeL An Indianapolis inventor is trying to perfect en electrical headlight for locomotives. A new rifle capable of dis charging three projectiles at a time, has been made in Francs'; Some German chemist is at work on a substance which he claims will supersede gutta-percha. It is stated that a Paris firm has patented an invention for the instantaneous formation of steam. Engineering is responsible for the statement that a vessel constructed of paper has just been launched at Si Petersburg. She is driven by steam, . English newspapers give interesting acopunts of a series of experiments of rendering soldiers' uniforms waterproof bv means of liquid alumnhi.
CONDIMENTS. 'Ohio Was a little behind time, but
better late than -never.' extr'-Island
oJ! Java. V :
There is a Btamnede of people from
Connecticut. Two Khode Island -editors are going to fight a duel, and both states will be swept w?th bullets. " C A certain rich man says of his wealth: "This is wha1 1 have often sighed for even cried for, sometimes- lied; for, and nearly died for.,. What should I let" it slide for?" " ... .-. , : : r The difference between the business o a circus advance agent and a druggist EcemB to re this: The first spends much of his time in the posting of his bills, the latter in boasting of his pills We see that there is to be a conference of capitalists at Vienna to discuss u pro; posed extension of the Servian war loan. We shall not be able to attend, but that need not delay the conference. A man named Gasbill recently applied io the Arkansas Legislature to change his name because his girl always objected to his figure whenever he-d metre. She said he was too high and turned him off. A young lady writes to a paper asking bow she can geWid of her beau. Did she ever, try dropping a red-hot file down the back of bis neck? ThiB will frequently discourage a young man when all other means have failed.. Almost a hint: "How's yer comih on in yer ntw place?" asked Uncle- Mose of Gabe Snod grass, who has recently accepted a position as porter in an Austin hardware store. MIse not cpmin on very fas Uncle Mose. De boss tele me something die mornin', an' ef be don't take it back
he g winter lose me, suah yer born "What did he tole yer?' "He tole nieto consider myself discharged." Abraham and. Joshua had been invited to a splendid dinner. It was impossible for Joshua not to make capital out of such an opportunity; accordingly he managed to slip a Bilver spoon into his boot. Abraham was green with envy at JoBhua'e success, for he Bad not even manipulated a saltspoon. But an idea struck him. fMy frents,'' he said, "I will show you some drioks." Taking up a spoon, he said: "You zees dees spoon? Veil, it is gone!" he cried, passing it up his sleeve. "You will find, it in Joshua's bopd." It was found. Two summer idyls: (1) An humble boy With a shining pail Went gladly singing Adown the dale, To where the cow with the brindle tail On clover hay her palate did Begale. An humble bee did Gayly sail Far ovei the soft and Shadowy vile, p where the boy with the Shining pail, Was milking the cow With the brindle tail. (2) The bee lit down on the cow's left Ear, Her heels flew up through the Atmosphere And, through the leaves of a Chestnut tree, The 'bojj soared into Eternity, "K'7
SAiiTMAusH, Alb, Dr. Jaa. B. Mills, says: "Several of my patents have used Brown's Iron Bitters for charmer indi gestion with benefit," For aged men, woman, weak andsiokly ohidren, without a rival. ; Will not cause headache. Brown's Iron Bitters, DabrdanbsvitjIiB Abe.' Dr, M. M. Croom, says: "Brown's Iron Bitters is the best meiioine in the world and is ef footing miraculous cures." " : Padded hips are the -latest feminine fashion. ' ,: .; Anybody can patch a cold now. Tie trouble is to let godlike the man who caught the bear. We advue our readers to keep a bottle of Dr. Bull's Cough Sy-
GENERAL MISCELLANY. . Tn 1870 Mr. Sumner advocated one cent poBbage, uniform throughout the country. .;.. ,. ,jv, ,f ; ; Philadelphia bankers and merchants employ more than 1,500, private policemen. There are more than 32,000 miles of und erground telegraph wires in operation in Europe. Samuel Wilson, of Washington Coun ty, Penn., picked the second crop of pears this season from a single tree.
The total outflow of all the mineral
waters of France is estimated at 10,334
gallons per minute.
Mr. Ho wells used a whole volume to
tell a woman's reason, when everybody
knows it is simply "because."
A Chi oaman says of his race that they
are inveterate gamblers and very indus
trious in cheating each other.
The cost to the postofiioe department
for the maQufacture of the stamps is nine
cents for a sheet of one thousand. Dakota Indians denied the privilege of buying whisky consume all the vanilla and lemon extracts they can buy at grocery stores. , .
Only half the number of trains enter and leave Paris stations that enter and leave the London ones. Two thousand two hundred trains enter and leave LpndoB each day. - I'he Mormon settlement of Stringtown ' in Idaho, extending from Clifton to Oxford is five miles long. The homestead
ers' residences eye within 300 feet of each other, and the farms are mere strips of land about 250 feet in width. The laud was taken up in this manner to give every settler a frontage on the public road.' The Mormons are building a temple at Logan, Utah, for which the sum of $515,000 has been raised. The donations for the temple at Manti amount to $476,000. The temple at St. George wa9 completed several years ago. Work on the temple at Salt Lake City still progresses.. Early marriages are the rule in China, Parents deem it a religions duty to provide matches for thair children as soon
as they are of marriageable years, and the
young people go to the altar in much the same way they go to school n other
lands. - . ... ,
rones & Johnson, of Charlotte, N. 0.,
are settling the estate of MoWilBon Mil
ler, who died in Mecklenburg county.
leaving $1,500 in personal property and
g50 acres of land. He was a bachelor,
and made no will. He had eleven broth
ers and sisters, only one of whom is liv
ing. Tueir desoeniants, wno sre soan-p
tered throughout the Southern States; number 150. The arithmetical problem in Charlotte is, How much will each of
the 150 get after all the expenses ; have
been paid?
Over two-thirds of the Grand Army-of
the Bepublio Posts in this country have
been supplied from the Government's
colleotiou of Belgium and Austrian muskets used during the first part of the war.
These Posts and numerous military com
ponies have also been equipped with old waist belts, plates, bayonet scabbards
and cap boxes. The above equipment
complete, with guu,is sold at $1.40. When new, the same guns cost the United
Slates from $14 to $15 each. - l-
WW m wjf BLBBBk.BB iBaBlSR SL B' '''7''
For the Cure of Coughs. Colds J
Hoarseness, Bronchitis,Crpup, Influenza, Asthma, Whooping Cough, Incipient Consumption arid for the re
lief of consumptive persons in advan
ced stages of the Diseased : Fpir Salel
all Druggists. Price, 25 Cents.
13,bQ8 Boxes sold in a year by OJff 1; -i .-- ':'' Druggist or ti-r
Act Directly on tfie Liver, Cubes Chills and Fever. Dtspbsuu
Sick Headache, Bilious Colic, Ccnstis-
TION, KICK UMAT ISM, Jr'ILES, PALPITATION
of the Heabt, Dizziness, Torpid Liveb.
UOATBl) TONGUE. KLEKl'LE&SNKSR. AND A1S.
Diseases 0.1 the Liver and Stomach, a
you do not feel very well." & single jflU at bed-lime stimulates the stomach, restores the appetite. Imparts vigor, to the system.
R, E. saLERS & CO., Pittsburgh Pi.
sp -
5
RRSELLE
KK r- riroody New- Tn!lorSvt-mot 1 AgiJJlJDressCuttlqy MGQDX k w.6dwi. a
Vf." V f it
RUPTURE
vg, . umy genmna t Electric Truss In ' the World. Sriennfl w
applied to Huptnre. ' . k'
I hereby cheer-
ullJ wauiy w ine great etncieney or r. Home's wor v
uwwuwmiio itusb. it tits like a Ida glove, and
Kwj,ivnaujt)uuucanu.ozxaoie: aiso.a perreoc reran ot my DalnfulrnnturA. I urmtld nnt roi t. fr,r i e
and do without it. Yours rftsnpt-tfiifir. V.AvAm J. H
easy, reliable and comfortable: also, a
'eat retainer.
1 i
Address Dr. W. J. lloise, 191 Wabash AfillMMt ' ' ' i
L M. VANCE
V.: -Zip-
Fishing TacMe, Bffirol
Hunting and Pleasure Boats waift $aa Sporfcino; Goods of U Kinds; v i . o. 5 Vance Block, Indina otisiS WHY LOSE HOG OR GHJGICt$
"' Insure your hogB with ma " ; V-
DR. HOFFMAN'S fc;
your stock in good health, groww.
i the moi eased weisht at slaughter- r.;-
tne cost or ta ; .
fit.
-..
Send for it. Avoid Counterflts. Use H;---II-.. -1 jit. '.W k .k' ? Mfc!'.
, lime, oeuure ine genuine, rrunvi ; your stock. Reap greatest profit.
It will keep
and thrift, an
xng wui'more tnan tenfold pay
It is Not Only a Cuite Tnt alfioa PreveiitJ ve
w nen my remeay is usea as a prevenuTe i vhm z
contract to insure yonr stock by. ike head for a... ' year, making a deposit of money ilajHir-l,'w cover all posble losses; and where my servicea. j. are paid for, will visit herds of fifty or more head. of hogs, and arrest the disease, or forfeit the i;4 market valae of such hogs as may die i- tT l.-yj, This remedy expels the poison from the systemv;" iv pnta the stock in fine condition for fattening,., f ? economizes the food, and at slaughtering brings:
the greatest profit. I Quabantbb it wiu stop isnry$-..
uouGHl ifo nor aeiay, out use nwiyanamumsi?.'' As a Preventive. Cureor Condition Powder, Jir
IT IS "THE": LIVE STOCK REMEDY, rjj and cannot be recommended too highly. I wish.: , to clearly and distinctly assert the origmaiity.ept -i:?. periority and excellence of my Bemeoies to any f- -': . others offered. They have been fully tested u thousands of cases in the United Htatea England ; ' '. und Canada with invariably ben efioial rosnita -and need but an opportunity to demonstrate? s . heirworthndeflScency;11 '.V "tp-".' f r : . - 'V- ' - -; PSIOE LIST. ' ."r"v-i ' "
ffog andrPonltry Bemedyand Prevtativa , Hog and Poultry, loose or in cans, 25 pounds.-i,v
uorse and uatue jsemedy or uonouuon jroworra
, A sir vour irnmnsfL or nnnd for' them bv P
orrlfir. rLnfltflrtMtfltiifir or exnress.andvour order.
shall have prompt attention, Active agents! . , wanted in every comity. Address,? ., GEORGE -HOFFBtA V; SL ' Or. depot of supply, ;: r - 1 rVy STItZit HOFFMAN, 69 E. WashpitSt S ' Tlrttggist and Chemists. V : v.-'iy
By permission I refer to "she Indiana. National Bank; Ingram Fletcher, of Fletcher & Sharpe bankers: and David Macy, Esqn president, ridian National Bans:, all of Indianapolis.
THE SUN
NEW YORK, 1883.
Toe Son durhig tha
Moral- people have road
yaar instnow passed, than ever oerore since i& was first printed. No other newspaper pablislv
on thin side of the earth has oeen Dougnrw u .
read in any year by so many men and women. . Wft f am nrAdiblv informed that people buy. MMbbi'
and like Tax Sox for, the fetipwing. raasKcV. : : v among others: . '.: ;-' v.i ;V-V ' Because its news coiumnii present jnatrracU v;; r f.rm and with the greatest possible accuwUfcr " whatever has interest for humankind; the syenla.: the deedi and misdeeds, the wisdom, W&vmas ophy, tie notable folly, the solid sence, m imp proving nonsense all the news ot the, bastet. . tj
Because peopienave learneaiaaiiniss tbsbussi .gu v.
hi
concerning personB buu munra ion aji mw - j... r practice ef tolling th.em the 'maAzttiia-W-'-i:--' bast of its ability throe hundred and ,aixty4i8 v v. rl.ivi in the year, before election as well 8-nnarf,t -
about the whales as well as about the. ''small BWJSftT
in ths. face of dissent as plenty an f eariwsiy; as , when supported by general aoproval. TaE c Kii, anlnhiW Tin numftWW to Rrv4. BATS the '
formation of its readers and the fnrAeraucoii.
i
44
Rorn it is evervDodya newspaper au man
is so 'aumbte that Tna Suk is indifferent t Ids" fi welfare and his rights. Ne man is so ner that ft?. ; ;
Can BUSW injOSUO K U w unu, ws ... association of men, is powerful enough to beerempt from the strict application of its principles' 9i rij-ht and wrong. - -rfc .; . . r- V, p? : Because m pohtin it has fought for a nosec. v
almost alone among newspapers, the fight thst-v ; hsa resulted in the recant overwhelming popular
vsrdRot against Robesonism and far honest .flsvj! : ei-amentTHo matter what party is in power.. iaat?".p; vV; Sun stands and will continue to stand like a roc ; . A tor fie interests of the peopleagainst the ampi- i, ,a
and lihe dishonest schemes of public robbers. :- - All this is what we are told almost daily by oar friends. One man holds thatTancSuK is the.bSf ' , raliaioas newspaper ever published, bacause UaChnstiauity' is undiluted with cant. Anottar ,; holds that it is the best Republican ripW90px prin-feed, because it has already whipped half af; , the lasoals out of (hat party, and is pro 'coding agauist the other half with undiminished visror a third belisva it to bathe bestmagatinc for geeeral literature in existence because its. readats p miS: nnthinr worthv of noboo that is current SB'1
the world ofthoughts. So every friend of BrV! disbcTors one omts man? sides that annetM witiii
particular force to hi individual likin sr. ; ; s If you already know Tun SOT, you will observe v. . that in 188 it is a littlebstter than ever baforo, : If you do not already know Tsas Sot you, willfimt it to be a mirror of all human activity, a store . , house of the choicest products of common ssnsi." s ana imagination, a mainstay for the caus "
honsst poTemment, a sentmeiror genuine J dncr -
soman Dem corai
everr species, an
ment for the present
- :" Term to Mall ShbscHbcrai
The seTsral editious of The Sot arc sent by
mail, postpaid, as foHewsi : w--. v -J:--- ;? DAlIiY o5 cents a month, $0.00 a yea?vritii i vunday edition, $7.70. ; ;Sfat SUNBaX-Bight pages, J1,0 a year, .- v ? , W15KaXT-$l ayear. ght pages of the best .S matter of the daily iasuea; au AgrioaltnraJ XPSw ' ' partsaent of nnegaalled merit, market reports " andlitsraryoientificanddomestaointalUsw VI rdakeTa Waxaxt Sot the newspaper for the . 1
farmer's household, Te elubsef ten with flO,
.n exsra ccpy free.
oy, asoQurge for wiokeduees Jfe' '-"i' -i id aa nn commonly good irfes :4 ent year. , . -; J v5 ' ; . . 9b 5
4 -:t i.
io :;.v. .ias
acMrsss' . m mm9immmmmmm$
ti. ...... "i. .'XiiA. iU kS2: j. Al ibi ; . JUw'ti, i --- yJLO- ..-.-.. 40&k s ?A'.A:TaJ hifoi-$S&hM SSSSagJBttKISCT
zv;s;-:friii : 1 1 1 1 1 in i la i'iii 11 iisassia
