Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 January 1882 — Page 2

tx

Djl. (ftARK

JOHNSON'S -g

43

CO

lis Do,

a alivns.

{rC-OK MAkX. l!Jf*pepsia, /J Dim-uses, I ,-r&

vcv

.'ii ma-

A fjv

r,

1»V,

tly.v

Oil (O'fi

Jisea»ef

I

!e frill ty, e£/%

DISOWN

to Mail!

2,000,000 Bottles

snn:

1

KJO.

/Aw Syrup possesses Varied Properties.

IC MtimuliUca the I'tjullnn In th« Saliva, which ('•iiiverlt the Mtnrch i»uH Nugnr off ho food !n»o irludiiM- A lt-l-len-v in l*tyulln"

WI111I und Noiirlux «l" llir I'ouil In 111*

•i/oiniirh. If tl»«" nii'illiiliic In fiiU'-n icnmtwll. ittrly iiljff etilln |bo li'rmcntulinu ot° t'.md .» Vi'fvntM.

It ikJi niton tin- l.lTt'r. It iijin ui»n (In' K.l«lii«*vw. It 1Mb 1 Upe« Hi" .'JtiwciK. It I li' Hln«l. It OmeU tin- Ni-rvou* (I Promi»,"V IHtroMltiu. •It .\«Mirl»LU-«, NI ciutUiriK UNFL Inrlei

u.^-i

Lntur of akin disown ami interim! humors. Tina* ur«' no xpirits employ .! I 'ii it.s iiiunutactur*. .m'l can b» taken by tlio must (iitlicttto lal*, tr I,/ r»il ftn fooble, cuc im'V I"•'«'/ r« •irtd

uttaitioii to

Urln'iu'-st, Carroll Co., Hid.

I hove used Ir. Clnrti Johnson's Indian Blooil syrup for Liver Complaint long standing, ant! nut liuppy 10 fiy it. Ihi- «'Hecied a complete cure Daniki, hi i.. lelanon.Hoo no Cn 1ml.

LoganNpori. l.'ti-is Co Intl.

This Is locert ify that Dr. CJIark Jolinsot) I Iddlan Blood Syrup, has ^urc I rnysoif m.i' most of my family of Chills and Kever. I oau truthfully rucomme.d your valuaiilmedicine 10 all Mitnilarlj afTllctcil.

WRR.I.IAM DONAISO.V.

Fort Wayne, AI Ion Co., Inl.

A f*lr trial of Dr. Clark Johnson'a Indi Blood nyrup curetl me of Scrofula wlirn «l other medicines failed. I have also truiml a Taluable remedy for kidney dlseav

ITKVITY KR. NMI.UK

1 was afflicted with heart disease for 10 '/Mirt. and nfte- everythln?' else failed, I ulod Dr. Clark Joliaso»'H In iian Blood Syrup and it hac proved mom h-tieftrinl to Me. 2MTIJY VIDJ~"

ARenw wantort for th« sale of (lie l7idian Blood Hyrup In everv town or village, in whit:h I have 110 ageni. ^atiiculaivs given on application.

DPMGGISTS SELL IT.

Xaboratorv 77 West 3rd«t. N. City

Ne'fv A 4lvertissements.

MNVw Kiyli*«of«'hroiuO Cords with Name ""(ir .5 Nwvv Yen-s' Ciil'o.s, KJc. iV ussu Cnnl Co. Nas-t: n, X. Y. mmmmtmmmmmnBmrnmmmwnmmmmBbnmumnmwnmmmmmmmm Hit r\/ ^s-''

50 LD MEDAL AWARDED THE AUTH03, Anew A grout Medical Woifej warranted the best and choa p-

\thcn

Mt, indispensnble to every man, entitled "tlia Science of Life," bound in finest French muslin, embosied.fnllsilt, 801 pagoit.containRbeautiful steel enjjravin?a, 125 presctiptions, price only $1.25

I mf

sent by nail-

ulnstrated sample, 6 o. send now. Address Ptabody_Medioal Institiiteor Dr. W.ILParEKii, No.4 BulflnchstUoston.

3URE FITS!

enrn I ilo not moan mere!* to atop thorn

forwin* j*1 U'.cn I.ato hem rolurn uRam, I raoaa a ta«2ic»l caro. 1 U:.ve inuda the dU oaso of Tits, Epilepsy or Falling Sickness a i.'c-'ors otndi-. I vnrract my remetlytoenratho wurr.»can?', lioonuw 5tuers hive lai!o«t i.s uo reanon for /v rocoivinsj ft euro. Son at onco 1", a imil» isfi .a a I'roo Bctfclaof my ir'alliblo remedy. Giro Kx).n« and frati Ofico. It coata you nothing ttw.-aaiwIH.cuvc^Add^

Da. lL ^t„ Kcr. York.

BENSON'S

CAPCINE POROUS PLASTER

Tll3 maunfae-iurot's have

Won the Highest Medals tu», and Praise Everywhere.

•yi

Ileinody more Wldelv or f,.\-btalVv

.•'iiniiwr,. It is vapid in relieving, quiuk lu 3 eurlng. For Lame HhcK, Itiieuinau^ni, Kidney Alteoiious, and nches ami pains generally. it

is

tlio'T'L'I^allcil ''^I'LE'tv.

AGolden

Blu.V?'TUTL iK( -\T. the *S1r.«:tk t' NewstvU No l*200e, 27 stops. 10 ftill sets Tontoe Heeds, SOLID WA LNUT Highly Polished Case, Nev una valuable Improvements just adde'l, Stool. Itook tnuslc. Boxed and detlv«»re«i on board c4rb here, prtce Only Mixiv Dollnra ^et Ca^h. Batisfnoiton uuarauteel inevc particular or money reniuded after one yearV use. .Kveryone'Old felU Wother. It is stand? Irt inir advertl^ment. Order at «a*e* N •M

ing advertl^ment. thing saved by oom^pouttence. ^My netr latitorj just comp eted,capacity 2000Instruments every Vti days, very Intent labor-iwv-

Ing wood-woflelng machinery. Vant capl•tal enable** me to manufacture belter gooda

KT DAN.'EL rTTV,™" Washington, New Jersey.

Vu~MD'^?NI NRCQVCRY.^

:. Ti

zjlsu? WWZIm

*u«M Icp. 7, iSfO.'

Mt

Gives a BriHifiat. WbUe sad Steady iieht, rfquires no trimming and lasts for tnonths. Sample wick 10c. S wicks 25c, Is wicks 7oc, postage paid. Have 3 si zcs^A, padD. A Rents wanted. Address METAL TIP LA Mr WICK CO.. 70 Cortland St, N.Y.

TBIP LSCSII I I.Y

—i-

Trip ifg&tlyover vorrow. Ttlough all the way le dark The aun may shine to-morrow

And gaily sing the lark. fair hopes have not departed. Though roses may have (led Then never be down-hearted.

But look for joy instead.

so

wit1'

Ulul 1 1 Ct»|pi,»S| tnhuj. Cali!t»itnr, eto. SSen 1 it) any address on reeeipr til' 1 wo i'lirwe Oeilt SDl'iips. Atltir. 8H CMAItl.KS Ii. ill li i:.s, 48 X. Delawiifi', Ave Plnlti

9UGRATIVE EMPLOYMENT

•I lor the winter In larmiiiK districts. Very Hlariju roWirns l'ur comparatively liulc lubor. •nal'or ftill particulars midress immediately ••••onAAtJK J11H CO. ?."! Itrt.H.lwny. N.V.

CONSUMPTION

I liavo a pm'ttvt Tcmerly for tho above diHfago by *a DM! thourtfinti't of ihpb ot tlie worRt kind and of long (Undum hn-« IwHin oui id. Indecil, »o htrnntcis niy faith 111 iUtifflcwty. fiat wi'1 Bond TWO BOTTMCS KRKE. lorethor nrlth a VA1ATAR1.K TKRATlSKon tbisdiKOute touny 8uff«rtr. Give 1'iprenn and P.O. adiress. Dr. T. A.

ISLOCIIM,

Trip lightly over sadness. Stand not to rail .it doom. We've pearls to string of gladna»».

On this side of the tomb. While .'itars are nightly *hming, And heaven is overhead. $ Encourage not repining1.

But look for joy instead.

Yet when a

improve«l in-

file, and

181 Poarl tit.. N«w York.

lhtift,'if there be

he told and remember

Jive the instructions

ISA

—fC W Wadley.

A JapaiifoeCircu*. [Japune^e Mail.

That something extraordinary

was

about to happen had been notified we believe in the Japanese papers and by 9 o'clock in the morning the creek from the Grand Hotel to the third bridge, and in Homniura every point .that could command a view of the "hundred and one steps,"

were closely crowded with

specta­

tors, Japanese and foreign. With the latter class the tea-house at the bottom of the steps was thronged, and the orders for beverages issued to the smiling waitresses were unprecedented in the history

of that thriving establishment. "Hut," HAYS the reader, "what has that flight of steps to do with the pony you were speaking of?" A great deal, Sir, for the

beast has been announced to go

up and down them with a rider 011 his baok. And, sure enough, when it arrived at the foot

of

r»tr«.

It cnri'1** nfl'llit- Olil HImmI ,ii) umkew n-\« IT «»I»EII* IHI- |iuitn

of

(.HI- HKTU ontl iiiiiuo'H

'fleallhy P'^i|lfs»tlii». ft npntrmi7.i the hprrrtitsrv tmnt.nr poiwon r» (V d. whit'll Kenurati's Hort.fitln, ^••yuipclas,

the stairs, not without

difficulty, and long behind time, owing to the pressure of the crowd, a female athlete, armed with a potent cudgel,after scattering salt for luck, vaulted on its back and directed it, head on, to the steep ascent.

With a resigned air the patifewt creature began to jerk itself up the steps, every now and then sniffing and

looking

mildly surprised, as much as to say that the getting up the Atagoyania stairs, to which it was so well accustomed, had been intensly stiffened and steepened.

At the half-way stage the poor brute, apparently "half-baked," with heaving Aides and drooping head, was allowed a few seconds breathing time, and treated to a sprinkling of salt, and then urged by the girl jockey to the latter and steepEI• half of its climb. And it went at it .with a will, lurching upward and hogging its back with every alow but

deter­

mined step. Within 20 feet of the summit, however,the horse-flesh beginning to fail though the spirit remained willing, the stalwart rider applied her stick and used her voice with resonant effect.

At

the sixth or jieventh step from the top the pony's friends seized its bridle, its leg*, anything they

could lay hold of,and

it was dragged, ami shoved, and pommeled to the achievement of it journey. At least we thought tiie journey was then achieved, never dreaming that the creature could return to the bottom of the steps direct,otherwise than by rolling down, as one Winter morning years ago a certain sailor did, to be picked up a mangled mass and carried to the grave.

few moments' rest had been

accorded to the skeleton steed, a male uerobat, after throwing some salt at it, 011 the ground, and on himself, clambered on to the pad and pointed the jade's Romau nose Yokohama-ward.

With its former matter-of-fact manner his mount began its DESCENT. A short way down, the rider transferred the fan he carried to the KilVtrimrd of his toes, and calmly stood on his hands in the sad-

fanned his face with his foot.

At the middle stage, again, a few seconds' rest was allowed for the horse to breathe, and for the rider to make fresh oblations of salt. Thence to recommence, and the pair to arrive safely at the foot of the hill amid continuous

plaudits, after a

Memory in Clteas Playing. [Lancat.] I Wonderful as arc the feats of chess players, who can play a game or a series over tho figures yourself."

To TH* "blindfolded" rhosanlnver

lo the blind folded

once mastered

the

rule, chessplayers are mentai-picture-rcader*, and can at PLEASURE call up any DIE of several pictrires of boards as they last conceived thorn.

The most difficult FE^T, and one which very Te.w mental chess players can accomplish, to play two, OF three games simultaneously, the nu

received.£

several. players

AGAINST the one mental player,

adversaries HAM done before

v,

HoffeMtein on Sufcpicioufo Ch«£* acter*. i-«-j

.4 "VN Ftas'coming"down tode STORE dis inotni|ig, Misder Hoffenstein," said Herman, "I met Maurice Grumbach und he dells me dot he haf a lee tie poy baby in his house, vat vas born last week. Maurice Grumbach vos a frent uf mine, und ven he dells me about de baby he vos shust so broud as if he voe vert a million." "Veil, Herman, he von't be broud very long, you know. Dot pisiness blaya out ven de baby makes a noise all de night und you don't can sleep. Ven my poy Abe vas born I ras shust de same vay. I vas so glad dot I vent out mit Levi Cohen, Jacob Heidingsfelder und Moses Loeb, und

ven

band—I was dwice so drunk as a boiled owl. I dalked a great deal aboud de first baby vat I haf for a gounle uf veeks, but I learned better, you know. Abe vas de

vorst

at night I vould put him bedween und my vife so he vould be all right. Vat you diuk, Herman, he vould fall oud uf de bed und howl like blazes. Noding could keep dot baby in tie bed. You could build a fence ten feet high around de bed und Abe vould get oud und yell shust to drouble his barents. Ven he vasn't falling 011 de floor und making a noise, he vould dwist himself around until he got his foot in my mouth vile I vas asleep, und ven I bite it vile I vas dreaming he vould vake up all de beople around. Now, Herman, you vas a young man und dere vas someding you know about babies, und dere was oder dings vot you don't know. Dake my advice und nefer go fooling around mit a baby if you can help it. Ven you dake a baby in your lap und bounce it up und down you find ae first ding vat you know dot you vasn't

you, my man.

of games without seeing the board, there is! And the gentleman demorisfrafied that SHORES of Flint River. The Rev. J. B. nothimr reallv remarkable in them

THE

MONEY A,

«N IN I YEAR3 expended in beer, would, if it had however, that there is such a village in When once inasteied, the trick is not been saved and placed at interest, have THAT remote, secluded region a little only fairly easy of performance, but the yielded him nearly $800 a year, or an in- manufacturing community the arrangefact that the process is purely mental come of $15 a week for self-support. ments of which for comfort and conveurather facilitates than impedes the ac- "Let me tell you how much a gallon IENCE it would not be easy to surpass. tion of the mind of whisky costs," said a judge, after try- The establishment is managed by a

INGACASE*

difficulty of fixing the

mental picture, it i.S distinctly before him. Some players, wlm do not in their common process of inuiiioryu.se picture phantoms, work out tho moves ns algebraical propositions are occasionally worked, by phantoms of

cncs. J.laye two men murderere it made two wives

p.

sound but, A

ME A TIN( WORT

he must

A

what each of his „n

he

for his ^several

younter-moves. IN this exploit the most JN

perfect development of

faculty of distinct'picturing

placement and recall of mental pictures

at

will W exhibited.

gUre

the mental

The prodigious tiif:}

ficultv of the feat can only

in the attempt to perform it. Even the expert blindfolded chess player can rarely succeed in accomplishing the

AN UD

FCJN(J

be realized

per­

formance we have attempted to desenbe.

"1

*"F'*

.--

TTIE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

events.

got

nome I

can dell if I vas a saw-mill

We see

don't

or a

brass-

It is

baby dot you efer see, un

safe,

und it make you dink you vas a fool for being vere you dont haf any pisiness you know. You must alvays vatch a baby ven you haf IT in your lap, because it was a dangerous und suspicious character vat needs vatch ing a gouple uf times closer den you vas able to give it. Some beople knows babies by insdinct und can dell de right time ven to hand detn to some von else, but oder beople can't und dey go aboud vishing dat dey could. I vent to a barty von night mit a bair uf vite bants on, und a baby vas dere vat belonged to de lady vat gif de barty. I set de baby on my knee und blayed horse you know. De consequence

vas I

don't dance any dat night Herman. I vent home before de music come, because didn't dink dot I vould likede barty. und I didn't." ,*

What it costs.

(Dr. Richard Newton.J

A gentleman was walking in Regent S Park, in London,

he met a man

whose only home was in the poor-house. He had come out

to take the air,

and ex-

"Well, my friend," said the gentleman, getting into conversation "it is a pity that a man like yott should be situated where you are. Now may I ask

day?" "0, a sixpence a day, I suppose." "For how long a time?" *F "Well, I suppose for sixty years?

se­

ries of varied and ingenious contortions performed

by the biped associate

of

the

dual company. Wo are informed that the anomalous quadruped will climb and descend a ladder.

cited the gentleman's interested atten- never really thrive. The country forma tion. a ''S men the city consumes them. AU ordinary factory town of Europe or America is a painfully striking illustration of this truth. The MASS of the laborers live a purely artifical life. Many of them, from month TO month, never smell the man said LIE jv,as. eighty yeqir?, sweet odor of the fields, and never tend a plant thaj grows in a larger space or in more natural conditions than a flower-

how old

vou are?" Th old. "Had you any trade before you became penniless?" .. HIM- 1 "Yes, 1 was a carpenter.'''-*T. IWPID you use intoxicating drink? "No, O no I only took my beer never agreeable and salubrious that the kindest anything stronger nothing but my parents would seek places in a factory for BCER-"' their children. Might be,do we sav? It "How much did your beer com6 to a .SOMEtimes is. There are factory villages 1,. where human life is as pleasant, as orderly, as clean, as desirable, as life could well be in our severe climate.

The gentleman had taken out his note

his pencil while he went on talking with enough they could own land on possible the man. -T»

"Now, let me tell you," said lie, as he

A Valuable Secret. (Independent,]

1t

he

ves

related of Franklin that from the

others, at work on a house which was

met. LET

made by their

opponents being told UT£M quence and their own moves rected after all the reports of the pro-

gloomy or sunless,- the liappy smile danc-

oeedinjpi xMheuLop|ui#uita..baTe bp®-! plied. 'Tve got one of the best of wives, iCFIN

Und when

I

of encouragement and

blessing, with a parting kiss and when

hnma skA !i

wire tn

loot to any body."

And Franklin

adds:

Fifteenth day—The child passed the night pawing the air and rehearsing a voluntary in" G. fifth added line above.

Twentieth day—Signs of internal disturbance, with indications of .SQUALLS and the pale blue colic.

Twenty-first day—Fell out of bed without fatal results. Thirtieth day—Began to notice the father, and manifested A desire to become more thoroughly acquainted.

Fortieth day—Thedissipated flush caused by late hours and constant attention to vocal music began to disappear.

No noticeable change for several aaontbs, except the growth of the brain and partial disappearance of the gastric rebellion.

The growth of the mental faculties seemed then to be more and more noticeable, so that at this date the

to

and

know more

1

terms they'lived

URA

I beawtv-

finished his calculations,"how much that \YE SHOULD scarcely expect to find an beer cost

You can go IDYLLIC factory

^.PENCE a day for sixty Harrison, of the New York Tribune,says,

ONE gallon of whisky made fAMilY corporation, the membew of Which

OWN

OUS

"What an influence, then, hath woman "1S over the heart of man. to soften it, and

make it the fountain, of cheerful emotions. Speak gently, then a happy smile and a kind word of greeting after

Walt Whitman says he can now read the toils of the day are over cost nothing,

4,

... and peaceful." 1

1'* «V*"* JI

T" "VT9W+:

1

|Y

to be ready® and, as we chat

evening, I find she has been, doing

many

and the di»

£eart t0

little things during the day to

p1ea96 me

that I cannot find it in my

Speak

an unkind word or give

••••«'.

tomorrow! A beautiful parboiled

child is nestling in a roll of snowy blanket. The father gets a magnifying glass a,nd looks at the features.

The nurse tells

the father

in the presence of nat-

village of half a century's

standing away down in Alabama, 011 the

three thousand

acres of land around

the land of the corporation, and rounded by large gardens. Each dwelling—forty feet long—is provided with

1

window of his office in Philadelphia, he J^RV flowers. Every household po»noticed a mechanic, among a number of

SEsses

be-

ing erected close by, who always appeared

to

be in a merry humor, and who had N kind and cheerful smile for every one cold

the day be ever so cold, JUTENDEUT. The inhabitants

ALU

North

go to work she always givee'ABOUT

detached kitchen, and

a sewing-machine and a

RAISES its own vegetables,

•'!1 IPIW.'^I^PIIPW"*'

1

$ ,: -j*" ,A" *v •*/-*•. '*. .+\v

'A

The Start |^Ll(e. iProple Who Whiae, A young father WRITES^ The. FIN& daj, There

to be very

Floating through onr wiid

or'two after the'birth ollhr dhiid jtfrooi#$7 BO means small, Whose plomineat peor less indistinct in OFTI meoiorjp. IF Sttliaritjr ia whining. Thejr whine bedoeai't seem

mixture t.f

in our mind's eye an

cited young man prancing wildly thxruptr the moonlight down town.|,:The IM hush of midnight seems topervadeevi rvthing. The young man seems to L.IRV^ dressed himself in a hurry, and one suspender is hanging down by his sidK li. rings a door-bell, and a physician CON^ to the door.

There is A hurried conversation, and then all is still. Pretty sooon two men pass up the street.

that the

child is the living picture of him, and the enraged parent brains the nurse with a dccorated wash-bowl.

First day—The child opens its mouth twice, emitting a falsetto wail that makes the cold chills go all over the adjoining block.

Second day—The child passed a comfortable night. More comfortable than the parents.

The

father

nt

goes down-town

2 o'clock a. in. for a soothing potion for the child. Gets one for himself at the same time.

Third day—Respiration normal, pulse regular, amount of laudable howl materially increased.

Tenth day—The mind begins to develop, and the father notices that his child has no teeth, and will have to be fed on ground feed and bran mash for some time.

child Beems

than the old people. The

mental expansion of the iuvemle is some thing that i9simply appalling.

factory Villages.

Humau beings who are totally severed from our common mother—the land—

P0T. »IF HA Factory life,, nevertheless, might be so

What.was the secret? The people were

N

book, and ho continued figuring with THEY had

'IOSE'IND healthy relations' w'ith the

gardens they

cow, and

The mill itself is large, roomy and comfortable. There are a church and a school upon the grounds. Noliquoris sold

witiiouta wntteiTordevlfro'm1

the

are orderly'

ed like a sunbeam on his cheerful counte- The establishment, moreover, her insane yet, we doubt not that if a ... .. guilty of into White ker God, most of "It's no secret, doctor," the man re-

comiderwhether

t0 P(ACE

mfiptmfl

tUe3*

Poe's poetrv with plenaure, but it used to and go far toward' rnaklnpr home happy maister? Don't thee think they look! tain criterion exists. Each case depend* set him Raven'.

it is not possible

IT where land

with a

forpoor men

there

I

is not too costly- inquiry.

to hivea good-si zed piece Nations aw never sane or insane, but of it The wofrtd is a large place, and individuals are. Bat how are we to

is land enough iti it to give a

licious acre to everjr honest family.

de-

i-M

84 '•ft

Youthful artist (to countryman): "Might I go over there and paint those

vw7 we"

TS.

II I

N I I',

I~ 1

*V~* 'S \'L 1 1

treesf Countryman: "Paint those trees, tin the mind of the community. No cer

thef wf' l«Don its

VI

F.I

-.},

I T(IT **, ^.4. I

•«V

y-n •/. 1

J&A CTA%P! persons in this world,

d^finite or fixed 5au$E they are poor, or if rich because

waste of bruin THE/

there is a chaotic panorama, and IHEI/ seems to be nothing but a

have not health to enjoy their rich-

5S they whiue because they have no luck,and others' prosperity exceeds theirs they whine because some friends have died and they are still living they whine because they have aches and pains, and they have aches and pains because they hrhine they whine, no one knows why.

Now a word to these whiniog persons: First, stop whining—it is of no use complaining, fretting, fault finding and whining. Why, you are the most deluded set of creatures who ever lived! Do Jrou know that it is a well settled

princi­

ple of physiology and common sense that these habits are more exhausting

to nerv­

ous vitality than almost any other violation of physiological law? And do you know that life is pretty much as you make it? You can make it bright and sunshiny, or you can make it dark and shadowy. This life is meant only to dicipline us—to fit us for a higher and puret state of being. Then stop whining and fretting,and go on your wajr rejoicing. fnventigating His Historical

Learning.

"And so you are studying American history'?" asked a fond father of his hope ful. "Yes!" responded the lad. "Good enough!" roared the delighted parent. "Now tell us who George Washington was." "He was nurse to a lot of old colored women," sang the boy. ,U. "What was he first in?" "First ashore, first to leave, and first in the carts of the hungry man." "Look here, you scalawag," said the Md man, riling up, "you want to get this thing straight. What was it Washington couldn't do?" "He couldn't lie!" shouted the youngster. "You've got the right man. What fight did he win?" "He licked Hunker Bill on Boston Common, in three rounds." "What was it he cut when he was a boy?" "He cut his father's cheese, and exclaimed, 'Father spare me 1 cannot tell a hatchet from a liet'"

His father graduated the boy at once, and he now makes a living selling pa* ,pers.

Lady Clementina's Parv^wet. .'•K1 ^[Chambers' Journal.]

ed, grew so

had room

1

o* j...

Lady Clementina Da vies tells of A clever paroquet placed in her charge by its owner, Lady Aldborough, when she went abroad.

The bird became greatly

attached to Lady Davies, and rvhen, on its proprietor's return, it had

to be restor­

melancholy that it

it would die. Lady Davies

Was restored it

was feared

was

requested, therefore,

to come and visit it. Entering the room with a thick veil over her face, the pining bird recognized her in an instant, and tried t» fly across the room to her, but was either so weak, or so overpowered with joy, that it fell insensible at her feet. She lifted it up, and directly

little village of old-

fashioned, half-timbered cottages with overhanging stories, projecting porches and gabled dormers, covered with clustering roses and honeysuckles, clustering around the village green. The pedestal aud stem of the ancient market cross breaks the

sward, and

of

km Tl° Griterlonof Kanlty, [Indianapolis Herald.] "_'A

"What

IA

is sanity?" is about

dous an inquiry as "What is truth?" No man has ever answered the latter, and no man can ever answer the former. The fact is, there is no well established criterion of sanity. I! TAT

Specialists, who have written on the subject of insanity, have attempted to define it, but as a definition

i.industrious the girls modest and in- community will ever dream of thinking

NOT be too many of them, leither the people of

or ^utb. When capitalists are insane.

TObttijd

of insanity

involves one of sanity, they have not succeeded thus far. Who is sane in a given community is hard to determine. A Hindoo mother may

"super-1 'hrow her children in the Ganges as

an

offering to her God, and no one in her

this city would deem her

Why is the one sane and the

a factory, let them *eri- otherinaanef ThoquesUon of saiiity or

insanity must always be an individual

'judge of an individual's sanity at any

given time? The only way it

ean

he

done is to take the individual's whole

., life into consideration, ante and post

Irls said nearly 10,000 persons die an- tal, and from all these facts determine nnally in Bengal from^ snake bites. A' whether or hbt the particular acfi involvgreat many persons die every year in'ed in discussion is in keeping with the this country just from seeing the rep- acts of sane men under the same circumstances, In other words, the acts of the person whose sanity is questioned must

na-

be quared by that general sense of sanity wnich ia supposed to rest somewhere

own

circumstance

©j- m.j I

.•* %iii iiiit

y-i '.a ftfm

y.

•ii

'•W'?

"v '...... 2r

x**x,yi'

ii* ImatiJS

—IK RKSHY STT'ODAB.

Here fc a friend shall flght for thee,' Be thou a jrood fellow and under hao« Where have 1 met thee? Let me see:

But, tush! wha* matter? A jnan'na man. This is a hand has handled nword, So All up thy can and clink with me Out with thy troubles, thou has my word,

Here ts a friend shall flgbt for the*.

Thirty years man-at-arms was I, Trailed pike in Flanaers,rough work there, Htorined forta, sacked cities—pass that by,

Also the women dragged by the hair. There most be soldiers, I suppose, So long as kings and people bo. Marry, sir, tis world of blows

TLLPE.

But here is a friend will flght for I

"Free lance, free hooter," runs the aoug^ Writ by some skulking clerk, 1 wot, I never do )eaceful burghers wrong,

Nor kiss a woman when she would not. Never take a purse bat from the dead, That are loug past studio*, uulilce me, Who seek not ydur gold, but good instead,

For here is a friend will flght for thee.

iVhat knaves be there? No friends of mine. I'll parley wi'h them. What want ye here? The splash on my rutUe? INhaw! 'tis mine

Will draw on ye dogs, if you dare eome near. Have at yon, tlien, without a word.

M:m enough yet for iwo or three. Old fellow, thou hast one frleud—thy sword, For this is thu friend that fights for thee.

whyiik in»N'i i: tiik ii„u,

1 s^behlnd her at tho play (ffiey .said it was "i.hello"). But who appeared ami how 'twiai tlon»*--

Well, ask some other fello

I know an overture was played (Thesame they played last season), A nd, later, people cried ''Encore!" (I do not know the reason.)

I heard a sweet, entreating voice, A stilled shriek, a groau—a Short silence that, I take it. marked

The death of Desdemona.

But tills w.is all 1 simply wiiteThese lines us a reminder To some one, that I lost tho play

Because I sat behind her. (It was the hat.)

it

began chattering to her in

an excited manner, confusing together all its little songs and chatter. It manifested such intense delight at seeing its beloved friend once more that Lady Aidborough was nnable to refrain from giv« ing the bird to her, fearing IT might otherwise pine away and die. —~r

1

was

fii r.*

Bunyaii.

WJ

^J

Bunyan lost his mother when he was betweeu fifteen and sixteen years old. He

not more than seventeen at the

time of his marriage to his first wife, when, without "so much household stud as a dish or spoon between them," the young* couple began to occupy the cottage at Elstow, ever since coupled with Bunyan'S name. Elstow, John Bunyan's birthplace, is a

,r

-I Clci fltwil Ifrruld

BIG RESULTS FROM LITTLE CAUSES "Doyou know," remarked a uian

to

his friend on Chestnut street, a day OR, two since,"I believe bolh Conkling

and,

Piatt had a bad case of skin disease when they resigned!" "What makes you think, so?" iuquired the listener in astonish .i ment. "Well, you TBee they acted IN such an eruptive manner—so rash-ly as it were. Save. "Ohyes,I save." replied the other, they were boil-ing over and merely resigned to humor themselves. suppose" Ifsuch he

tho

cast',

the IS a-,

tional difficulty might have been averted by applying Swayne's Ointment for

diseases.

skin

The repot of the approaching marriage of iss Annie Louise Cary is now den ied.

AMONG THE FOLLIES OF THE AGE which the in'roduction of SOZODON1 L: ng eitice explodod, was ihe use of abru. sive and corrosive tooth preparations, which eitlur contained miner-ILS whi.".tiircratched their enatnal, or acids which dissolved it. KOZODONT, a health promoting substitute for these empirical arli-" cles, is a botanic, skillfully prepared, highly sanctioned preparation, which not* only T.eauii'lcs. cleausts and invigoratiti saflron-coic redftpd defective teeth, but di vests the. breath of an objectionable odor aud tesioresto it that of health.

Tennessee made ?. profit of ."5i28,R00.0FL(K oi. her various crops last

year. •5" _J$&'

I F.H. DRAKE'S SUFFERINGS. I. H. Drake's, Esq, Detroit, Mich., sutlvred beyond all description trom A skin disease, which appeared on his hands, head and face, and nearly destroyed his eyes The most careful doctoring tailed to help htoi, and afior all had failed he used the Cuticura Keeolvcnt (blood purilicr)tottrrially, Cuticura and Cuticura (the great skin cure*) exicrnally, and was cured,andhas remained perfectly well lo this dsy.

I)r. Karl Marx, the noted German socialist,is dying in London, at

sixty-five. FOT

at the. upper end

the green stands the Moot Hall, a picturesque brick and timber building oi he ix I W

the

age

of

WHY ARfc YuU BILIOUS?

Because you have allowed your bowels to become costive, aud liver torpid. USE' Kidney-Wort

to

produce a free S-tate of

the bowels, and

it

will stimulate the liver

to proper action,

as stupen­

cleanse the skin of it*

yellowness, cure bilious headache, and cause NEW life in the blood. Druggists have it, both dry and liquid.—{Zion'S O a

Although chickens are bora in sheila they never become go6d oarsmen. -—_i

Mit. HORACE fcKvviix, of Altooria, Pa. says: '*My wife end I aro upwards of, tevtnly

veairs

of age. Of

late we both

L»et:un to fed the infirmities of old age. Nothing stems to revive, exhilarate and btivngthea IISAI does Brown's iron Bitters. We would not do without it for ten times its.CPTIT."

San Fruiciitoo'S succesrful| cable earn no faster than a horse's GALLOP

DR. KLINE'S 6REAT NERVE RESTORER is the marve^OT the age for all

Nerve Di­

seases. AU flfs stopped free. Send to IWT Arch street, Philadelphia, fenn.

fbeing

Ijong waists t]&e shprt sort

l{

«s

±JL\S 'r* J, *.•'

used

EmbroidCTed kid.i|

small close bonnets. .T. 1 FLIES AND MOSQUITOES.

for

I?

A most remarkable cure for dyspepsia 'Wells' Health Renewer." Tne greatest toBic, best bilious and Liver Remedy known $1. Druggists. Depot,Gulick erry & Co., Terre Hsllte, Ind.

are to be snpersceded by

». lv_

SSII85

of

«3i .—r ... ... .. A pdrk, wholesome distillation witch hazel, American pine. Canada fir, marigold, clover blossoms,

etc., fragrant

with the be&ling essences ol balsam and of pine. Such is Saaford'S Radical Cure for Catarrh. Complete treatment

tor $1.

•J

~L

4f

F,

at