Bloomington Telephone, Volume 7, Number 46, Bloomington, Monroe County, 29 March 1884 — Page 3

Bloomington Telephone BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA. WALTER & BRADFUTE, - I - Pobusbool

The modest frame house is which Gen. Grant wis born is still standing on one of the principal streets of Point Pleasant, Ohio. It stands some little distance from the river, and no previous floods have ever reached it. During the last flood, however, it was entirely surrounded bj water, and for a time it was feard that it might be swept away. But it is still standing unharmed, and the family who lire in it have resumed their occupation of it. Soke idea of the magnitude of the business of raising sweet-scented flowers for their perfume alone may be gathered from the fact that Europe and British India consume about 150,000 gallons of handkerchief perfume yearly ; that the English revenue from eau de cologne is $40,000 annually, and that the total revenue of other perfumes is estimated at $200,000 annually. There is one great perfume distillery atC annes in France which uses yearly 100,000 pounds of. acacia flowers, 140,000

of rare flower leaves, 32,000

Is of jasmine blossoms, 20,000 of

tube rose blossoms, and an immense

quantity of other material. Mb. Wixxiaic Reesk, 70 years of age, living at Orangeburg, South Carolina, believes in exercising his authority aa a parent His son Andrew, 35 years of age, was bad boy, and the old man ordered him down on his hands and knees and proceeded to whale him with a big whip. The boy endured the punishment until he thought the old man should be tired, when he jumped up

The spry old chapAggede 1

and the ferrf ?-j u - John Green, who was standing by en joying the scene, and hilled him. Andrew was convicted of munder, and eenteneed to a life term in the peniten

courtesy of the act could scarcely hare; been surpassed by Beau Nash himself, as we learn from his epitaph in Bath Abbey, mDe vita hand indecore decessitn The police authorities of course made prodigious efforts to hush up the affair, and the Count's body was smuggled out of the hotel at midnight. Lkwistox (Me.) Journal is responsi

ble for this bear story : "I came suddenly upon a very large bear in a thick

PISA.

The Giant Old City by Moonlight.

Few travelers journeying towards

itonie along the railway that borders th lovely coast line of the liiviera pass the old City of Pisa without pausing

mere 10 view its nome uuiiaings. There is hardly any building the form of which has been made so familiar to us by models and representations as the Capanile or leaning Tower of Pisa, and few travelers gaze upon it for the first time without feeling that they are but

ge Dear in a uic. lookmff ftt m ohmiA xrhioh thv havA

swamp, lying upon a large hollow log j been familiar with from youth. But

across

a brook fishinff. and he was so

f much interested in his sport that he did not notice me until I had approached Tory near to him, so that I could see exactly how he baited his hook and played his fish. He fished in this wise : There was a large hole through the log on which he lay, and he thrust his forearm throughlthe hole and held his open paw in the water and waited for the fish to gather around and into it, and, when full, he clutched his fist and brought up a handful of fish, and sat and ate them . with great gusto; then

down with the paw again, and so on.

The brook was fairly alive with little

trout and red sided suckers and some black suckers, so the old fellow let

himself out on the fishes. He did not

eat their heads. There was quite a pile

of them on the log. I suppose the oil in his paw attracted the fish and baited

them even better than a fly hook, and

his toe nails were his hooks, and sharp

ones, too, and once grabbed the fish are sure to stay. A Washington correspondent of the Boston Advertiser says that four ex Senators, Kellogg, of Louisiana; Poland, of Vermont; Eaton, of Connecticut, and Pryor, of Alabama appear in the lists. Dingley, of Maine ; Curtin, of Pennsylvania; Stewart, of Vermont; Long, of Massachusetts, and Kellogg

Air old woman named Robinson, well

jkmy

wn as the Qneen of Oostermongers

all over London, waa buried there the

other day. She had been for years a Vender of cat's meat, and made a fortune in small usury. By direction of her will, her remains were borne by four men wearing white smocks, followed by twenty-feur women wearing taolet dresses, Paisley shawls, hats with white feathers, and white aprons. The corpse was shrouded in white satin, with a famd"" wreath around the head. Free drinks send pies were served at public houses named. There was an ft1" attendance, including numbers of pony carts and donkey barcows crowded with oostermongers.

v.m Obosvkhok, the eldest son of the Duke of Westminster, who has just died was chiefly remarkable for his great, and, for his age, immense size; lis habit, which probably occasioned ibis sjze, was staying in bed until 3 in the afternoon, and his passion for engine driving. He had been subject from osie-and-twenty years and upward to epileptic, but when on the engine Wild Irishmen" was always accompanied by the usual driver and stoker, so that the public suffered no risk. His young pridow is one of the beautiful daughters pf Lord Scarborough, and their little oy, Lord Belgrave, who is destined to inherite the vast estates, is a fine little follow, called in the family "Bend Or," After his grandfather Derby winner. 9 The Nihilists are reported totoe hampered in their warfare against the Russian Government by the lack of money, end the numerous recent raids upon

the cash boxes of the mail coaches are ascribed to 'them. There have been five attempts so rob the mails within a period of seven weeks. At one that occurred on the road to Nijni Novgorod, two of the assailants were captured by a company of soldiers who were despatched after them and surrounded them in a patch of forest laud. They refused to disclose their identity, but from their clothes, appearance and language they are supposed to be students. Papers found in their possession are said to show clearly that they belong to the revolutionary party, and that they made their attack as part of an organized plan designed to replenish the Nihilist treasury.

Kmaa X , New jersey, and Curtin have represented the

country abroad. "Bichelieu" Bobin son is the most striking-looking, and so deaf he can hear but little of the proceedings; Abram S. Hewitt is tho nervous; William Walter Phelps the most precise in dress ; Belf ord, of Colorado, the wildest;, Lyman the most scholarly; Randolph Tucker the most difficult speaker; Poland the most be: nevolent-looking; Kitt the slenderest; Dorsheimer the largest ; "Sunset" Cox the smallest; Kasson the most diploma-; tic; "Phil Thompson the most inno-., cent looking; Floyd King the bravest; looking; Washburn the richest; Geddes, the most like George Washington inj appearance; Bingham the handsomest;; Wadsworth the most aristocratic; Beecf the most sarcastic; Horr the dry est; Blackburn the most eloquent; Carlisle, perhaps, the ablest; Eaton, certainly, the quietest; Keifer has the largest neck; Anderson the shrillest voice; John W. Wise the biggest lungs. Cincinnati Enquirer: W-R. Sprague, the living skeleton now on exhibition at) Harris Museum, underwent a medical examination yesterday in the ampbi theatre of the Good Samaritan Hospit aL The room was crowded with physicians and students. Dr. Dawson, who had made an examination of Sprague; some years ago, delivered a lecture onj him. Mr. Sprague was placed on a; table, divested of all clothing except aj covering of his loins. The Doctor, called the case "progressive muscular, atrophy." The only other case of thejj kind in which the man lived for any length of time was one of twelve years existence. The skeleton's skin looked as white as marble, and was drawn, tightly over the ribs and bones. Thej impression of every bone was plainly visible. The Doctor said that it would be guess-work to say how much longer

the remarkable man would live. Thqj

muscles, bone and skin were all there.

He could talk freely, and when doing

so, or in breething, reliance was placed upon the abdominal muscles In time

the face would ossify and become just as the body. Electricity was applie4

to Sprague, but he said that he did no feel it- A stronger current was pht oq neat Ttift Arm. This made the sket01

writhe and twist.

and down like ajumrS jck wit

string to it. A mpanaim irbetween SFe's arms and legs and the bones of a human arm and leg, and if any thing Sprague's were the smallest.

most people are not aware that this remarkable structure ia only a feature of a combination of buildings, which for beauty and historic interest stand unrivaled; and the stranger who enters the famous piazza for the first time, where the tower, the beautiful Duonio, the dome-like Baptistry and the solemn and peaceful "Campo Santo," or bury-ing-ground, are grouped together, can not fail to be struck with surprise and delight at the wonderiul sight. Standing in silent grandeur, in what has fitly been called a "sacred corner," apart from all other buildings and habitations, and distinct in character from their surroundings, they seem to form a city of their own, and to awake in the

mind of the spectator a profound sense of the great past. This was eminently my experience as I stood on the piazza ene glorious moonlight night in the month of December. I was traveling to Borne and had arrived at Pisa by a late train intending to rest here and resumd my journey on the following morning. The night was surpassingly lovely, a night that indeed seemed, as Byron says, "not

sent for slumber" soft and still as I had imagined Italian nights to be, with the full moon shining clear and silvery from a cloudless sky in the white marble palaces and the stone-flagged roads, bathing the city in marvellous beauty. Tempted by the glory of the scene I wandered through the old city, through quaint, narrow streets, darkened here and there by deep shadows, over the marble bridge spanning the Arno river and on to the Piazza,, where the venerable monuments of Pisa's an-

x iuuuu,uitl nn&jaridftjremain. Or.OnlinM .1AHa - j.1 -"-"-

amid a stillness that was profound, they seemed like specters of the mighty past rising before us. , WJulrmr old 'SSLrflMBK : and these great buildings have changed in nothing. It seemed but natural to expect the great Italian astronomer Galileo to come forth on such a night, and those grand old masters who once paced here, but whose footsteps now are "echoing through the corridors of time." Who treads this square to-day may go back in thought hundreds of years and picture the gorgeous pageants of ecclesiastical pomp and military splendor that must have been celebrated around this Cathedral when Pisa was the gateway of the East, and her colonies of commeroe existed in Greece and Asia Minor. Here came the people in their splendid processions to obtain the holy church's benediction when Pisa equipped her mighty fleet of ships and assembled her brave warriors for the crusade, and when from warlike expeditions against Turks and Genoese the Pisans returned, crowned with victory, it was to this Piazza the exultant citizens flocked to celebrate their triumphs. Full of sftch pictures of the past I oould but muse and be still. About the city "lehabod is everywhere written. 0 "Every monuent the stranger meets, Church, palace, pillar a mourner greet." - Yet time has not dealt cruelly with her. Her ancient ways are quiet and her once thronged and busy squares now green with grass. The Arno flows peacefully through her, as of old, to the sea. Her white palaces are still fair to behold, and every scholar and lover of art who visits her must feel that Pisa is

lovely and beautiful in her old Cor. Detroit Free Press.

sense that it is noble to labor, that every man has a duty to perform, is be

ing destroyed, it produces a dream that it is ignoble to labor, that the pur-

pose oi uce is to be a grand gentleman. All education that aflbrds no moral training is incomplete. With all possible training we all know how difficult it is to be good. Monsignor Capel. The Softened Passenger.

It has bean said again find asrain. of

late, that England is walking rapidly on the highway that leads te a republic. This may be so, but the prophets forget that thousands of Englishmen are still living who, like Tom Moore, "Jove a lord." The following anecdote, which we condense from a London magazine, indicates the reverence which the average Englishman yet pays to the hereditary aristocracy; One of the passengers in a first-class carriage on the Great Western Railway

tfqok out his cigar-ease. Looking around with a glance of inauirv which

Said, "is there any objection?" he lit a cigar and puffed away. Ia the course

of a few minutes, he noticed a look of

irritation on the face of the gentleman opposite to him.

I am afraid, sir," said the smoker.

apologetically, "that my cicar annovs

you?"

"It does., sir: it annors me exceed

ingly " answered the gentleman, snappishly.

"I am sure I bear your pardon." said

the smoker, pleasantly, as he threw the

cigar out of the window.

"That a all rerv well." m-owled out

tho irritated gentleman, "bub I mean to

give you in custody as soon as we get

to 15ath. You were perfectly aware

that this was not a smoking-carriage, and I mean to defed the rights of nasa-

- - - j,engers. "lam really very sorry, sir; but I took it for granted "that there was no objection.1 I have made up my mind, sir," said the irritated passenger, doggedly, "to give you in custody the first opportunity." "Perhaps you will take my card ?" remonstrated the smoker. "I happen to hold a public position, and should like to avoid any disturbance." "I don't wan't your card," said the

1 passenger contemptuously.

said the smoker, ana ne handed nun the card of a Royal Duke.

im--irtxrtxr was said anmn;

gens' rights19 or "giving in custody.

The aggrieved man became almost sycophantic in his demeanor. "I hope that your Royal Highness, M he said, as the train stopped and he left the carriage, "will not think that I acted wrongly?" "'i?hat is a point which we need not discuss," answered the Duke, bowinjj. Youth's Companion.

A Character. iliere is a certain type of Arkansaw man that hurrying civilization is not likely to jostle. Ho is not exactly the old squatter, nor is he the small farmer, but he is the wild and wayward child of circumstances over which he does not caro to exercise control. He went to the State in 1846, and settled on the left prong of Dry Fork Creek. He married, as he expressed it, "a rite smart c'lunk o' a gal," and began housekeeping on a floor made uneven by the burrowing of moles. Unlike the squatter, he does not withhold information. Bless you, no. He'll stop work and talk to you all day. Hell tell you more lies in half an hour than you would think possible for an unskilled, uneducated man to throw oft in a year's time. He

won't tell the truth, and it is safe to say that he never made an effort in that direction. The scene of his career now changes, and the incidents of to-day can with certainty be looked for to-morrow. At morning a kind of patched-up cow stands at the semblance of a fence surrounding his house and hooks a ragged, sharp-featured hog. The performance is repeated at evening. "Why don't you clear up more land?" was asked by a representative of en

lightenment.

"What fur?" "Why, to make a living on. "I make a living on what Fv already

got clard."

But you could make a bettor livincr

if you would clear more."

"Jko, recken not; it rud take ;o much

timo ter tend ter it that thelivin' would

step outen reach."

"Do you ever kill any game around

hero?"

Ah, then he received a touch where

he lived, and throwing his head up like a man who feels that he has suddenly

awakened to a new and higher purpose of life, he replied:

"I reckon I do; killed thebiffsrest bar

day afore yestedy I ever seed. I want

1 ? M 1 1 1 1 1 . 1

iuunm iur oar, out naa tuc my gun

SUtittESTIONS OP VAUUL

Mirroks with plush frames are now hung iiat against the walL Some of the newest are embroidered in gay bunches of flowers, not painted. Marble floors are going out of style for halls. They are being superseded by hard wood in several harmonious colors, laid in some pretty design. Lace curtains are not fashionable except for bedrooms. They then liave a lambrequin of dark green or dark red, which colors harmonize with almost everything. If a bedstead creaks at each movement of the sleeper, remove the slats and wrap the ends of each in old news paper. Thw will prove a complete silence, and is well worth the trouble

Sponges which are to be red in the bath-room may be softened by boiling for a few minutes in three waters. After each time of boiling rinse it in cold water, and put on the stove again in 4 pan of cold water. One way to prepare- onion flavoring for a vegetable soup is to take a large onion, remove the outer skin, then stick cloves into the onion and bake it until it is nicely browned. The peeuliar flavor thus gained is relished' by the epicure. Before beginning to iron, sprinkle the table plentifully with water and lay on the ironing blanket. This will hold it firmly iu place and prevent all wrinkling and shoving about. Never try to iron with a blanket halving wrinkles or bunches. An economical and appetising way to cook very small potatoes is to first wash and scrape them well,-boil them, and the instant they are done drain off the water, dry them off, and then in the kettle, right with them, make at. milk gravy. This is a nice dish for breakfast or supper; There is no purifier like fresh? air;, and the whole house, every room in it.

used or not,

1 be opened every d . Many

..-ukuumuu uuunr. j w housekeepers who are faultier in every ilme1 thar lie was gone, and I sot 0(:ber resecfc Defflect the proper. airing

age.

fiandyfunk. The sea cook prepares for the sailor several dishes which are rarely met with on shore. "Dondyfunk" is the name by which one of theso compounds is known. This is made of ship-biscuit and molasses. The biscuits are placed in a bag and beaten with an iron belay-jng-pin or a hammer until they crumble. The adamantine qualities of the biscuits are such that much physical force must be called into play in order to crumble them. As. this work is more than the cook wishes to undertake, he usually delegates it to one of the ship's boys. The fragments of the biscuits are mixed with molasses, and the compound is placed in a lrgo pan and baked. It is immaterial to the cook

now long it remair a in tne oven, it ia, naiiolW covrtul mi f. fv fha anil rT--.--13311 I

per, and when the houses oufc of fcbe

rives the darjrttioredigGstaDiewuen

lLAr nudl burned than wlien

avu '

Paylug the iraitor. Men use treachery and despise the traitor. Their moral sense revolts against the means which their cradng for success persuades them to use. The fact shows that faith in the moralist's maxim. Nothing is expedient which is dishonorable' is not strong enough to remove this moral contradiction. And so the world which makes success a duty, will continue to pay and despise the traitor. The late Count de Chamboard's birth occurred after the assassination of his father, the Duke de Berri, in 1820. His mother, a woman of great courage and force of character she offered to lead the royal troops against the revolutionists of 1830 plotted to seat him on the French throne as the only legitimate Bourbon. In 1832 she landed near Marsei lles and appealed to the French Legitimists to rise against Louis Phillippe. The appeal fell upon deaf ears, and the duchess was obliged to hide herself.

One of her suite, named Pcutz, agreed to self to the government, for 50,000 francs, the secret of her hiding place. The betrayed duchess was arrested and imprisoned. To M. Didier. the secretary of the Minister of the Interior, was assigned the disagreeable duty of paying the traitor. At the appointed hour, Didier called his son into the office, and said: "Look well now aS what passes, and never forget it. You will learn what a scoundrel is, and the method of paving him.H The secretary spoke to a messenger, and Deutz. the traitor, was brought in. M. Didier stood behind his desk, on which were placed two pacbages, each containing 25,000 francs. As Deut:; approached the desk, the secretary made a sign to him to stop. Then with a pair of tongs, he picked up the pocltnges, and dropping them into tho Pelx hands of the traitor, pmntecl' th door. YoviV- X BarK"

down with my back airin a tree. All ct

a sudden I seed a monstrous bar put up his paws on a log not fur off, an' stretch up an' take a fair look at me. I drawd ,1in TT1V rmn nnnuHipl- f j i I 1 " ' ' heerd sich a squawl in my lifeiumned ui. run about two hundred

I"'; 1 moifawar iJjJnvfir. Oh. he was a

that ne was from' to snow nsrht, but

without openen9 his jaws airter bein1

Bhot, he grabbed a hickory saplin', went

roun and rouir till ho twisted it up by

tne roots, an' then he dropped dead.

The neighbors all said he was the big gest bar they ever seed. Wy, when I

seed him in the tree I didn t know

whether ter shoot him or not, fearin1

that he mout fight me airter bein- hit, but he fell like a log an9 didn't move. It tuck me three hours ter skin him. I sold his skin fur ten dollars an' his meat fotch me I don't know how much. Bar huntin is a mighty ticklish busness. When I first seed him wadin' up the branch I thought he was goin' ter show fight9 but when I drawd on him, an' toch tho trigger the work was done. I never seed water fly so in my life, an' a deaf an' dumb man coulder heerd him holler. I had ter get a horse an' drag him outen the water. Thar ain't nigh as many bars here now as tharuster be, an' I think this here one was sorter outen his line o' business, fur when I seed him up 'mong tho rocks, he bobbed around' like he was afeerd, an I jes did get a shot at him as he dodged. Ben living here now fur I don't know how long, but I never seed such a pante? before He laid on a limb an9 was jes about ter jump down on me when I shot him. The dogs grabbed him as he fell an9 we had a mighty lively time don't be in a hurry stranger. Well er good day." He would have kept on this way for three weeks. No, he has never made an effort to tell the truth. Texas Sitings.

oven.

m . flTTf n I if. lw',' t tim lnffpr state It 13

xne dop " "wiaeraone. " LT..i, A

somewhat trying w -

VAVT hungry sanor vm very uujJ til , . Tfi

dandymnK, aiwiuuu -Vw, dih as a ltixury. But there

ia something about Jack's countenance d in masticating dandy-

TLT -wv, would lead an observing

-TSinW infancy that if the choice

lerl given Vim he would prefer to eat

g3rnhingeise.

A wAk or two ago a French nobleman fchot himself in the Hotel de Paris

at Monte Carlo. Before, howexer, com

mitting the "rash act" he pecl a grace

ful tribute to his female friends -which

showed that not even the near approaIWI. inn.tr A btm

, , a -ard for the

n&uonai poutenres snu r - . . - fair sex. Some tw Iadie9'1 f the grade and demi-monde, reoeiv . ed handsome boqnet with the Comfce de compliments ad regrets taafc Tinroidable circumstance prevented him from further continuing thew eharm. g acquaintance. Shortly afterWards they heard thenewa of his death This Freschmaa certainly knew how to die becomingly; in fact the whinMrical

What She Did

itti i,4i;i ia oflored as a witness

in a conrt of justice, the judge tries to

T Ii iUA i;ttlA fnfl KTP1

discover wneraer u there that it is wrong to tell a liment the is a glimmennojy receiVed. child's ejTe Judge's questions proS(V?et&e queerest sort of replies. vrA little girl, aged ten, was put on the stand. Before making her evidence, TnadPA Parle asked her several ques

tions about the Catechism, the Ten Commandments and the Lord's Prayer. Hnvinff received favorable answers,

he said he hadjuafc one more question to put. "Jnst tell us, little girl, the last tiling you do before getting into bed?" Bhe was silent; the question was repeated in an encouraging tone. At last she said, confidentially, amid the breathless idlenoo of the court, "I put off my clothes and put on my night-cap I

Marriage Permits. "I think I can tell with tolerable accuracy whether a marriage will be happy or not simply by studying the expression of those who walk up to the marriage-license desk." said a middleaged man who hangs around the Cook County Clerk's oflice in Chicago. "Some countenances look worried and sad, as if their owners hadn't quite made up

their minds or were about to do

respect neglect the proper- airing

of the house, and the gemna of diseaso are developed and sickness which cani

not be accounted for evertakes

wjiiik One &Utwpruniui ui wiu starch - let them boUi add yelks of two lm 7 wgarvM,i.1 .kat5voofnl of lemon essence plaoa in pndding dish. It will bake ins few minutes. Beat the- white of two egg with two heaping speoaafal of sugary spread over the top; let it brown. There is mo reason? why underdone meat should be considered more nutritious than that which is moderately and properly cooked, with all its juice preferred. The chemical elements o uo derdone meat are- net sufficiently acted upon by heat to be either readily digested or assimilated. Unless piuracian orders raw or partly cooked meat for some special dietic reason, it is far better to give an invalid well-done meat, or that which ii only mediant rare,. Vasious are the dishes that em be? made of the oyster; here i oae not very well known : Take a small loa! of bread; cut off a slice fsoui tb top; then, with a spooa, venove the inside of the loaf, leaving the crust nearly bat not quite an inch thieve; make veiy rich oyster stew ; poor a little- iato tho loaf to moisten 'r then pxdt in ft layer ol oysters; then of bread carafe writ salted, and peppered; put tb top crust on, and set it in the oven ia a dripping pan; wet the ernai wrftk t&e yolk of an egg or with sweet milk

in which yon have pot a little sagar;

serve hot; let it venxam m the oven

from fifteen to twenty-five

some

thing against their will. Others, and I worset doiuR nothing, andfcefore he is

am nappy to sav tne majority, are so

full of joy that their faces fairly beion with it, their eyes twinkle, their Hps are pretty with emiloa and a beautiful pink blush suffuses their cheeks. This applies to both sexes. "How do the young men act? They usually look very sheepish. They are really the most diffident applicants that come here. If any one is near they glance at him sideways, and seem to

'VlkJbey were in some one else's loots.

to think a wtnsu or ten tney forget tne their own. The middle often have

a oxr

an

Boys, be Systematic No great work was ever accomplished

without system. Did yon ever atop to

consider how much timers lost in this

world for lack of system? A housekeeper will for lack of system foofraway the morning hours and dinner time

comes before the breakfast dishes are

washed, simply because half a dozen

things are under way at the same time.

and no one thing accomplished. Yon

sometimes ask a young man whom yon know ought to have plenty of leisure, why he did not do such and such a

thing, only to be answered : "I didn!l

have time." Why did he not lave

He was idling with a few mends, may

be, tellinff stories or what; may 1m

aware of it his spare time was up it

had been wasted. Yon have no idea how much work can be accomplished in a day if there is only system and application. A few moments wo?rk at a certain time each day on some upecial object will accomplish that object before the worker is fairly aware oi it, and t the same time will not interfere with the regular duties of the hour. Every moment is precious and under some systematic plan oan be utilised for business or pleasure. The merchant who

(does business in a slip-shod way is not

The Question for debav-

Bewickley Colored Club was : w VVIiicd

is of moat benefit to man, the steam en

The horse orator grew i are uie nt. vv.t lr "What tha widows are

oppomp '"xt w. "f r. T f., Wa Iran thore be

am de lioss, MTWBy r , um . - oi an, "J " A 7 MtM

steam ingme. uia my -1 "II ore- V1U r?i 7' T ZTJ, 1 nlr.. l,i nf rv minute of time Mid

n aoi rm n Ortlll QftV HOW UO nAVAV more HU fci x I

steam comet- out ob his nose? Keep wllose aggregate age

rfnt HT,(ftra i ii a n i u " uc wiwh -w x-a

VU " " I . - . -T" .

Chicago Jews

like, but the widows are the best posted alwa iUimo and lacks '

. . 1 .11.. T 1. jfc A VvV Vh KT

ana titters, ana it can ue maae mucu trnmci. wj

Km of "

"An' when we come to die.w said the orator. 4iiowVl w look Roin1 to de

a cifAnm imATse? Dat would

Ut3 H lOlvl . 4-

Calvinism and Gunpowder

Dr. Mutchmore, editor of the jfYeslf-

systeuiizing your operations acoortling

to the time you nave ana ne ww ua

hand. You can t let up on a joo tngun

without danger of compiiqatm anaira and increasing your work. You can t attend to half a dozen different things

A Wanting: Element of Education.

Some say train the intellect and life will become better and purer. But experience is against them. Learning does not beget virtue. The worst crimes of the past twenty-five years have been committed by men of the highest education. You must present

virtue to tne mina aay aicer uay m brightest light, so that the mind will become enamored of it. You must endeavor to make the practice of virtue a habit. What is done for the hand aud the intellect must also be done for the will. Moral training begets the one great thing wanting on earth the thought of duty ; duty to God and man. Is the education of this country teaching men to be servants, to drive horses labor in the street? I think not. It

is largely without a moral aide, and the

in

Heron Courtship

An observant young man while

Timulft. was struck with the human-

flirt heron. 'Che fe-

1MB. I I II I I UQ HI I r V

malfR stand in a

"Oh, mamma! I heard papa say bis prayers last night.

" v ny, wnen aia yoa newr

11. DmIJh

tufw After a nerce nuowu t-n 1 oujecii j vu xtw w-r-

shook the house the Doctor wert out to Sun.

remonstrate against sucu en mwiiis Q Sunday Lessons- At Home.

eharces, ana saw to mo wiwcu

tw and look iincon- utKq: nrA vou about I At this rate

i 1 v. 1 no ufuvifnrwl rlmiPA I .Cll Klrtw HQ All llltO llie Ull.

v,vy , - 1 f Z

and prance around on uie ssi

Saratoga dudes. j? mat y. un ur w on tUat powuer - - - , remember r

1 wniiM smiiA on a auae iin 1 vantea iu uuw mo 1 . - . 1. 1

:r "CT'JZ A fl v. All . , M. Halvinism could do."- "UerUmiy not ; you v-

neron,anu awujr yw. 1 nauuu ,7 '

tliose left invariably began 10 cacKie souui jersey num.

and chatter as soon as a match was announced, and sometimes a rival would pounce upon the lucky awajn to wring iiU k Trou Times.

en.

his neck- Troy

Mrs. Mollie Htot-McOalbd-Odou

is the name of a Texas poetess-

Oh. nolaint either. I heard him

Narrow silver and gold braid will be BaT m just after he found out I put

seen sparingly used on spring costumes red pepper inhis pipe. Mo prajy

of dark green ana orown. 1 pa awiui nam, ww.

Now' York

A whiskt saloon named "The Morgue

in

is

Surplice waists are to be fashionable

for young girls.