The Syracuse Enterprise, Volume 1, Number 35, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 September 1875 — Page 4
OU* JUrßlfllM Jt ffomirr rfc». IwMderwiw The white Honda «Uy up in the aky! The biida HfM low that «y ao fast; The downy UUetle falb at laat; But the fair Honda are always high. I wonder why! Iwoodtrbow The little bird din«a to lb bo«Kh! SoaaeUnea at night when I awake And hear the treedope moan and ahake, T think, “ J»w steep the birdlee now?" I wonder how! , ' 1 wonder why We leave the fair earth for the sky I I wtah that we mhtbt alwaya atay; That the dear Lord might come aome day. And make It hearan! Tet we snout dh. I wonder why! a ■ —lktrif A. LatAbwry, St. .\ichtAa» for Ikoeko a<Mf the Deer Bocko was a dog. He had several brothers and sisters, anil they were all little chunky dogs like himself. But they had high opinions of tiiertaelves. Bocko was the largest, and the rest looked up to him, although, to bo min-, that was not much trouble, as they did not have to look very high. One reason why they thought so much of their big brother was, that he was always talking of the great things he had done and the great things he intended to da One day the family was out of meat. I The mother dog proposed to send the j children out to a neighboring town to , prowl about the market and bring home what they could pick up. But Bocko opposed thia plan. “I am tired of bite and bones,” he said. “ There is no reason why we. should not have the very best meat. We liave gone ’ on in thia poor wny long enough. Now, my idea is this: You all stay at home and take a nap, and make youraelves as ' comfortable as you can, and I will go I hunting. I will go into the forest and kill a deer. Thea we can have the very licet meat, and all we want of it A whole deer will last a long time.” “Oh, that will be delightful!” cried his sisters. “ But do yon think yon can kill adiwrl” “ Kill one I" cried Bocko. “ I should ! think so. Do you ace those teeth I" a " Oli, yes!” said hi* sisters and the , small brother; “they’re perfectly awful when yon open your mouth that —-v •• . way. “ And do you see that leg, and thia one, and the two others I Dili you 1 ever* see stronger looking legs than they are f You can feel my muscle, if yon like. ” ! I. The sisters and the amnll brother felt J his muscle, and declared that with such j teeth and such legs he ought to be able : to kill a deer. And the more he talked and they listened, the more certain they felt about it. - - Bo they agreed to stay at home and take a nap while be was out hunting. > The old mother did not altogether approve of the plan, but Bocko seemed a f confident about the matter, that sh thought she would let him go. So off went Bocko to the forest as fast as his short legs would carry him. He > had rather better fortune than most hunters, for it was not long before he saw a very fine deer coining leisurely down a pathway in the woods. Bocko immediately ran toward it. The deer looked at him, -and then stopped. ■ Bo did Bocko. • " Well f” said the deer. i ■’ Bocko did not make any answer. He * did not think it proper to talk to anftnri* - tliat he was hunting. But he did not know exactly what to do first He hail never hunted a deer before. So he thought' he had better bark a tittle. That came . natural to him. So lie ran , close up to , the deer and barked. The deer put down his bead, and then be said : “ What are going to do I Y ou're a very uncivil creature*” “ No, I’m not uncivil,” replied Bocko, who thought that he must answer this time. “ I camo out bunting, and not to talk. lam going to\takf a deer home for my family to vat “ And you think of taking me i" said ' the deer. • ( “ Yea," said Bocka The deer gave a grin. Perhaps it was not a real grin, but it looked like one. This made Bocko angry, and be ran ; close up to the deer Mod tried to bite one of his fore-legs. \ “ Look here!” said the ileer, stepping ! back, "if yon bite my legs I will give | you a kick that you’ll remember to the day of your death !” I “Well, then, what am I to do!" exclaimed poor Bocka “I suppose I ought to take you by the throat, but 1 can’t roach up." I “ You’d like me to lie down wouldn’t j you !” asked the deer. " Yea,” said Bocko, promptly. “Well, you arc cool!” replied the> ileer. Bocko had nothing to say to this ; so '■ he gave another sharp bark, so aa to let | the deer know that be still intended to j pram the matter, and then ran around to ’ see if he could not get a lute at the di-er’s tail. But the tail was very short and j very high up, and there was no chance | there. Then Bocko felt provoked, and he ran \ in front of the deer again. “ You’re afraid to put your head down,” said he. , “Am I !’’ answered the deer ; and he put his head down so tow that his nose | went between his fore-feet. Thia was ’ not exactly the position that Bucko* wished him to take, but he was ashamed to ask for anything more ; and I so he made a rush at the deer to take him by the throat. The ileer turned around so as to keep hia forehead toward the dog, andW moment Bocko came near enough, be stepped forward quickly, pushed his , horns under him, and gave him atm- , mfiwhww hw that aunt him spinning into the middle of a great barberry-bush, several yards .amay. , For a minute or two, Bocko did not kaow what had happened to him; bat aa aoon as he began to gather his senses | alxrai him. >* peeped out of the bush. Be mw the deer tirattiag slowly »w»y. “He’s laughing!" thought Bocko to >f —then he crawled out of the tomb. Be av—i—d hia body and hia vafoaMe lega, and finding that nothing waa towbee, he concluded to give up for tfott day, and to go home.
and hia mother asfir him coming, they all rushed out to meet him. to the <toer!”foey cried. “We are so hungry! Did you leave it in the forest! Show us wheie it is, and we will go and get some of it. Come, brave Bocko, where is itt” Bocko stood silently, his toil going tar 4 her and farther between hia toga. “What's the matter 1” cried his mother. “Can’t you speak I Where is the deer! Did you see one!” “ Yes,” said Bopkc, in a low voice. “And didn't kiU it I” “ No," said Bocko ; “ho wouldn’t let me.” ' What a chorus of disappointment and > disgust greeted this announcement! Bow-wow! bow-wow! BOW-WOW! bow-teoic.’ j mom moq Wow-wow ! | WOW If | aofl | Moq wow-wow 1 BGWI j Bow! wow ! wow! Bow ! wow-uwu--WOW!! Bocko did not wait to hear any more. He was sneaking away, when his mother took him by the ear ami led him asiile, out of the noise. “ Bocko,” said she, “ its bod enough to boast about things ydn have done, but its ever so much worse to boast of wliat you are going to <la Do you think , you will remember thatf* I “I do,” said Bocka— Paul Fori, St. ' Nivhola* for St.pt. C«te—A t’rrtiHf XrMinltrrnrri of lAv frllttr Onlrr. Cats do very well to git along with until tlia git to a certin size then tlia are 1 only fit to fling things ah Luv ceems : to affeck them the saim wa that colick | does ower Imby. They ain't neer as soft al»wt it ns sister Jen an her clerk feller. I Them two air too much. Cat* dunt lay ! in 1 anutherti lap an look like a caf. Tba maik moar noise abowt it in a minit than Jen an that feller dux til bas past 2 >in the mornin. If luv must be, I think, the cuts wa aint kwitv so Sickenin, th<> ' all kinds is bad ennff. (’■ata are good things to lie in the saim , room wen you nock sumthui upn an | break it, or eat snmthiu tha aint savin ■' for yn, coz cats air dtim broota an cant J deny it 1 Wats the use* a havin em arownd onions tlia can bare sum of the domestic diffe- ■ kulties! Tha hav got to do it in a fam- > ily ware Ime sojonrnin. If you rub a cat up the kak iu a dark ; room it will electricit This is a good tiling to git sum ls>y to do wich has I cum to sta awl nite. Weu I have riame fun tike that kind I like to divide moast nwl uv it with my little plamatae. Ant Hester lias a ole cat which she brings whereever she gose. Unkle Ellick sais tliis is liecoz she is a ole maid an i likes to lie reminded uv her eoartin daze, but he daasent sa it to her face. She is to ower house this summer. Ma rit to her that kolery an small poks wiui a ragin here but she cum Onnywa an brot the cat It is a gra with blak spot awl over it o-pt a little on ith tale an feet. I don’t I like ant Heeti-r cos sin- alius tawks to me ' ofM<w« an Josef wen I want to slip an i go in fiskin, so I git even on the chi. Onatl killed a inowm* an stuck it nwl full jii pins an throdo it out quick bc’fnhrold Hipin which is his nntne an jt grabbed it like a sudden an if yu ever see vniiythiug claw and holler it was him. Then ant Hester snatelMwl the mourn- nwa i an got awl atnek in her fingers, and she Kkroemi-d an the token cnni pileu iu, iui <lad carried tlie mowse out on a shuvcl an then cum an looked fur me. He (owned me. It didn’t do gQod to tell him tliat I exjw-ck the mowae liad et a pin cushin. He tnaiks hisself too dis , agreealiie fur a grone man. Another time I tuk the cat's tale an (Hit a reel tite dom pin on it, which maid him jump like a kaugarue. Dad sed ware is that Sammy, and than- I wuz. I tnle him that I sec that cat a wawkin on the ctoae line an I bet she cot her tale akaidenteily betwene the pin. II dout ceem to maik eany ilefferents whether I tell a lie or oan up. I git wallnped ennywa. Ime only puttih oph I Item a James boy ontil the baby gits big enuff to go along an maik two uv us, then look owt. Forth ov July I dun the offulest trik with old Sip. I shut him up in a boks an tliroo in a bunteh uv fire krakers wich wuz lit an a goih. It wuz fun euuff for 6 boys uv my size, and I sat on the boks to hold the Ud down and last like a r crowded to»w*l dident kno than* wuz sum slmvmti in the lioka. Also I dident kno tliare wuz a big krak in the lid. Tlu> fire cum up an burnt me an the cut cum up in a hurry and acnUchixl ma in the burnt plane. I went awa then to find a cool spot, an wen I got bank tlx- hen howse aa sum feat* wnz all burnt down an<l dad win tonkin fer me agin. I dout know bow he fowned it out, coz 1 kno I iH’vcr hinted it to *eol<*. If ever lie whiqw me like that one moar time ile go Without wattiii fer tlw baby. I tbo* Sip wuz del sure, but he dident. You rant most hardly kill a rat. He ares me in a conior now wrapt up in a big pedtiae an wen Ime arownd be waches me like 2 odes uv fin-. 4 SPANISH KXKCI'Ttt/ir The O/MNioMe Natiwiale has an account of a double execution tliat took place recently at Barcelona. f A maid servant named Georgia Foil, aided by her lover, Vietoriano Urcieta, murdered her master, who had made a will in her favor. The judicial investigation and trial lasti-il no less than three years, and resulted in the condemnation of both the aransed, who, acconling to the custom, wore taken on tlx- evening preceding the execution to the chapel tort-main there until the next morning. There the. two convicts were separated only by a curtain, and the woman uttered such loud cries during the night that her accomplice had several times to impose silence on her. The most distinguished ladies of the locality attended the woman to offer their consolations. The man was surrounded by monks. During aB that time the boys of the choir, clad in red, yellow, or bine from head to foot, went through the streets, a salver in one hand and a bell in thejother, asking for alma to meet the wants of condemned priatmen on earth and in heaven; that is to say, the cost of their interment and the performance of masses for their aoula. The execution by the garrote took place outside one of the gates of . the city, in a plain, to which the victims were uy » lung proccßSXMi of
TH JB MAHLrIBST HOHKHIT ITKWSPAPKKS. It sems Hurt to Itaty foe world is iu- j debted for the origin of the newspaper. Centuries before the Christian era, or, to give the preci-te date according to the best authorities, 691 B. C., a daily journal called the Acta Diurna was published at Rome. It was not in the form of the printed paper sheet that is nowadays left at every intelligent man’s door in the early morning ; nor was it issued in copious editions and circulated among the subscribers for a stipulated consideration. The Acta Diurna xna a public enterprise, supported by government, and the few copies struck off in Latin script upon white wooden tablets were himg at conspicuous points in the streets and the frequented places of the city, and gave to the curious passer-by the latest intelligence of current events. With the downfall of the Western empire journalism perished, and for Upward of a thousand dreary years was one of the lost and forgotten arts. By Italian genius it was finally revived again, and Venice was the scene of its second birth. There are now in the Magliabechia Library of Florence thirty volumes of tlie oldest modern newspaper of which we have any knowledge. It was entittal Oazctta, as some say, from the word Gatsera, signifying magpie or cliatterer, and, acconling to others, from the name of the small coin for which the paper was sold. It was published at Venice once a month by order of the government, and continued to be written in script, even after printing had been invented. The hist number is dated in the sixteenth century. The earjiest French journal, the ClazrttC dr AV-Ahci', a newspaper still in existence, wo Bolieve, was edited by Heniiudot, a pbysteiau in Paris. It apjieared as a weekly, the initial number Iwing issued in A)>ri 1,1<31. It was patronized by the King, Louis Xlfl., and contained at least one article penned by the Royal liand. It also enjoyed Ihe support of Cardinal Richelieu. The British Museum pn-srnes some copies of a newspaper called the English Mercuric, and professing to have been printed tinder the authority of Queen Elizabeth in 1588. The title of one of the numbers reads thus : " The Engtith* Mercuric, published by antboritie, for the prevention of falsi- reports, imprinted by Christopher Rarlur, her llighneijs's printer, No. 50.” In it is an accouiitol the S|ionisli Annada, under the heading: “A jouninL[ of what piuwed since the 21st of this month, between her Majesties ficet and that of Spayne, transmitted by the Lord Highe Admiral to the Lonles of Council.” But the papers were not published at the date and in the circumstances pretended. They liave been proved to be clever forgeries executed alxmt 1766. In 1693, during the reign of James 1., a paper appeared under the title of the London Weelcly Oourant. In 1643, in the time of the civil war, n variety of publications claiming unworthily the office nud the name of newspaper were produced, but, in fact, the first geniune news journal published in England was established by Sir Roger L'Estrange, in 1665. It bore the name of the Public bdelligcwer, and survivtxi until the London Gazette wax transferred from Oxford to London, in February, 1866. The first regular newspaper produced in the United States was the Boston Xr trx Letter, which appeared April 24, 1701. In September, 1698, an prising printer in Boston had undertaken to start a newspaper, but the first edition was suppressed by the authorities, and only one copy is now known to exist. CKNUVS STATISTICS OF JHELAXD. Tlx- final reports of the c-ensus takers in Ireland, in 1871, liave just appeared, and contain some information of interest The area of the island is 20,819,947 acres, from which are to be deducted 600,000 acres covered with water, and 4,000,000 of twigs, mouutains, and other lauds unfit I for cultivation, leaving available about 16,0Q0,000 acres, or 25,000 sqmure miles, ’ an area somewhat less than half of lowa. Teu million ocxes arc,'again, in pasture, so that the cultivated land but little exwwxls one aero for each inhabitant, the ; total population being 5,412,377. Iu 1841 the jxipnlation was 8,175A*), the numlx-r of inhidiited Iwinses being 1,320,000. Now tix-re are but 960,000 houses retained, so ttmt the jxipulation has fallen off 2,763,000 souls, and the number of dwellings 360,000. The decrease in jxipnlation during tin- decade 1861 -71 was, however, only 986,000, and there now seems rvasou to believe tliat the title Ims begun to tuny and tba 4 tiie next decade will iiicrvasi*. Os the 5,412,377 persons in Ireland, 4,150,867, or 76.7 per cent of the whole number, are returned as Roman Catholics. The remaining 23.3 per cent, an- made up of 667,998 Episcojialian*, ‘ 500,000 Frvrfjyterians, 400,000 Methodirfs, and , 50,000 members of alxmt 150 other separate aeeta. Among these are 578 Plymouth Brethren, 107 Irvingitea, 23 Bible , Christians, 15 members of tiM|“ Church , of God,” 12 members of the “Church ( of Chnst,"lo Darbyites, 9 Puseyitea, 6 ( 1 Idimite, 1 Kellyite, 10 , Mormons, 7 Swedeuborgians, 6 Eiclu > rive Brethren, 5 Arians, 5 Moralists, 4 ( Prussian Protestants, 4 Revivalists, 1 ( “Grint of No Sect,” 1 “Protester j •gainst all Priestcraft,” 1 Atlieist, 1 Pori- , tiviri, 1 Socialist, 1 Materialist, 16 De- ( ista, 1 Pagan, 1 Buddhist, 1 Confuciau, j, 1 Mussulman, ami only 49 who are of , “uo denomination," and 5 who are , “ undecided. ” ( BVBMAKIXE K.III.rATH. i When railways land were first 1 talked of, the prujectora were credited ' with' being visionary enthusiasts. What then is likely to be thought of those who seriously propose to have railways under ] the Seal A submarine carriage, of a 1 most ingenious construction, has recently j been invented in Paris to cross the chan- I nel, and for navigating deep rivers and - canals. Hie carriage is made of galvan- i iaed iron, and is hermetically sealeit As i its tightness, compared with the sur- | rounding water, would cause it at once i to rise to Utyrourface, it is attached to a 1 heavy eighKwheeled* truck, which runs < <ra a line of rails laid down under the < ocean. It is not fastened so securely, I howevM, but that in the event of anac- < cident it conkl be at once detached and < allowed to ascend to the open air, when i it would be easy to make for the nearest i
jKirt The motive-power is supplied by two screws driven by mesas of compressed air. An enormous quantity of air is distributed through the interior in numerous pipes, for the benefit of the crew and passengers. We might enter still farther into details, and describe the electrio light at the bows, which is to illuminate both the road and the interior of the vessel; the entrance for the passengers, hermetically sealed when all are aboard; the strong glass windows, out of which one may see the marvels of the deep; the raft earned on the roof, and the divers’ chamber at the stern. GRIHWOOD, THE AIKOyAI’T REPORTER. [Fran tke Chicago Tribune, Aug. 20.) Mr. Wood of the Journal staff, returned to tliis city yesterday from his trip to Michigan, bringing with him the body of Mr. N. S. Grim'wood, who was drowned from the unfortunate Barnum Ixdioon. Mr. Wood has a long account of his trip in the Journal, from which it appears that after traveling some 15 miles by team from Whitehall, he reached the cemetery known by the name of Claybank, where the body was buried. The remains were at once exhumed and conveyed to Benona, where they were placed on the tug American Eagle and taken to Grand Haven, and thence brought by the steamer Muskegon to Chicago. On arriving here the body was met by the father of deceased and taken at once to tlie Chicago, Burlington and Quincy depot and thence to Bristol, where it was interred in the presence of a large concourse of people from that and neighboring towns. Mr. Wood brought back with him the articles found on Grimwood’s person as heretofore mentioned. The watch was found to be stopped at the hour of 11:20, which is, therefore, assumed to be the hour at which the owner fell into the water. Mr. Wood reports that traces of the balloon have Iw-en found; about 8 miles i north of the place where the drowned ; man came to land. Those are said to I consist of sand-bags and pieces of the I cloth of which the balloon was made, i A resident, Mr. J. H. Sammons, found i these- tract's, and has since Ixn-u engaged in searching for the laxly of Donaldsou. This has not yet been found, and the opinion in Michigan seems to bo that it lias been covered with Kind cast up by the waves. The Journal announces that it will pay the reward of SIOO offered for the I recovery of Grimwood’s body to Mr. A. Beckwith, the mail-carrier, who found it. It is not yet known whether Mr. Barnum, who offered SSOO reward, or Mr. King, who offered SIOO, will pay over to the same gentleman or not. ITOI LD NOT TAKE A DARE. Henry Hoover was an old anil respectable citizen of Atvhison, Kansas, and had accumulated some property to contribute comforts to his old age. He lived with his wife, and his son and his wife occupied the house with the old people. Old man Hoover had not been able to do anything for a long time, and was perhaps a confirmed invalid for the re-mainder-of his days. His family seem to have got tired of seeing him around. His wife and children turned against him and conspired to make In's life as miserable as possible. They quarrelled with him continually and abused him in every way. He lived a dog’s life with his wife and son and daughter-in-law, and he got very tired of it; so tired, indeed, that he went to a drug-store and bought an ounce of arsenic and took it home to see if he could not frighten his folks into treating him better. He showed them the poison and told them he meant to take it if they did not cease tormenting his life out of him. Hi plea for peace and threat of poison were met with jeers and dares to take the drug. They would like to see him take it; it might cure him of peevishness. The old man foiuul it was of no use to plead and threaten, so he emptied a teaspoonful of the arsenic into liis month and swallowed it without another word, Ids daughter-in-law saying while he did it: “ Take it, you old whelp, and I hope it will kill you.” No one raised a hand to prevent tlio act, and no one paid any attention to the. old man after it was done. He was not even allowed to go to l»ed to die. So he went out on the porch and lay dowu to breathe liis last A neighbor pissing saw Hoover in agony, and called a doctor. It was too late. The poison had already bee* in him several hours. He died. The jury found a verdict of suicide, but it also implicated the family in tlie cause of death. Th<> verdict wrote' them down little letter than murderers, and Hoover’s friends and neighbore became much excited over the circumstances. A ROY, A RAOOKR. ARB A GOAT. We find this account of a singular triangular light in the San Rafael (Chi.) | Journal; “ Last Friday morning Master ; G. A. Wallace saw in a field what he took | to lie a liare, but as it did not run he went up and kicked it, when it rose and | sprang furiously toward him. He now ; thought it* was a bear, and made good : time for tlie fence, where he got a picket and returned to the attack. Wallace was accompanied by a pet goat, and as he laid on the blows with the picket the goat butted and hooked the enemy, arid they soon dispatched it The creature proved to be a Inulgi r, and weighed 27| pounds. The gnat, t.o doubt, secured the successful fame of the battle, for ; when the boy would strike the badger it | would spring at him, and then the. goat I would receive the charge, butting vigorously. The badger’s daws were over an inch long, and the lad, who is only 12 years old, was fortunate in escaping a close tussle with it” THE COST OE A FAIST. A woman on a steamboat shooting tlie Lachinc Rapids, lately, fainted away and fell into a tub of raspberries. The expense to her husband is thus summed up by a sympathizing correspondent : Edward phid for the raspberries at ten cents a quart, $5.10; Ute Areas was a new one and cost just striped\ balbriggan hose, very pretty by the wraykwere worth $1.50; a, Ince hand-kerchit-fjwith an embroidered cupid in one eonier, wa® valued at $6.00; sundry other things, such as one pair five-button kid-gloves, one light brown chignon, one very long bustle, etc., counted up $20.00 more. All these things were ruined completely, so that the exact cost of Kate’s faint was $132.60. --
crjuunrr items. Moody is only 38. Mb. Boss has not yet given up hopes that Charlie may be found. “I’ll talk it over with Susan,” is the last slang expression coined in New York. Twelve acres of ex-Postmaster-Gener-al Creswell’s Maryland farm produced $2,500 worth of peaches last year. The Suez canal has begun to pay; the receipts of last year foot up 26,300,000 francs, and the expenses 17,500,000. Saratoga water agrees with VicePresident Wilson. He ha? written 200 pages of his book since he arrived there. A Nevada woman has a pair of gloves and shoes made out of the hide of a Pawnee Indian. She says they are soft and wear well, and thinks they ought to be more generally utilized. The number of pensioners on the army roll is constantly decreasing, and about $1,250,000 less will be required for payment of pensioners this year than for the previous year. ? Dvmas, the French author, has writtena romance in which an American coon chases a couple of American lovers up a tree and tries to gnaw tlie tree dowu. He says this coon was as big as a yearling calf. Among tlie London cabmen are to lie found a former Governor of the Bank of England, an cx-M. P., a late Fellow of a Cambridge College, and a clergyman who was one of the respondents in a remarkble clerical divorce. Cousinly love receives encouragement from Mr. George H. Darwin, a eon of the great English naturalist, who has 83ti."fied himself, by collecting statistics, that there is no foundation for the theory that marriages between first cousins produces physical degeneracy. The blue flame from a coal fire has a temperature of 5,500 degrees Fahrenheit; the flame of hydrogen and of oxyhydrogen 9,500 degrees. The temperature of the electric spark is unknown, but is supposed to be about 22,000 degrees Fahrenheit. A patent has been taken out for an invention by which it is claimed that glass can be used as a building material for house-fronts, floors, or pavements, superior to marble in durability and economy. It can be made plain or variegated, and its colors are indestructible. Gen. N. P. Banks, the Hon. Alex. H. Rice, and Mr. A. Worth Spates, of Baltimore, have been selected by 1,000 Massachusetts ladies to present mementoes of the late Bunker Hill centennial to ladies connected with the Southern soldiery from the States of South Carolina, Virginia, and Maryland. The most hideous-looking women on earth an* said to live in the valley of Spiti, which is, a mountain-bound, almost inaccessible place, 12,000 feet above the sea, among the Himalayas.. Their features are large and coarse, the expression of their faces is usually a natural grimace, and they hang huge rings in their noses, presenting altogether quite a frightful appearance. At Eau Clare, Wis., Dennis Powers fell in love with his motly?r-in-law, and therefore poisoned himself. His kind father sent for a doctor and had him restored. Then he hung liimself. His kind father cut him down. As he hail previously eloped with his mother-in-law, and been brought back again, this considerate behavior of papa indicates an uncommonly forgiving disposition. AN AMERICAN WIDOW ABROAD. In his last letter from London Donn Piatt serves up an interesting bit of gossip about tlie beautiful Mrs. Hicks, whose wealth and beauty caused so much talk in Washington not long ago. There were some rather captious people in Washington who regarded the lovely widow with coolness, as one who carried matters with too much of a coup. Well, this lady is to-day a distinguished feature in the fashionable world of London, and is followed, flattered, sought, and smsl in away to startle one, for it is seldom that an American lady, however Accomplished, rich and beautiful, wins such success. It happened in this way: Mrs. Hicks arrived in London a few days in advance of the Queen of the Netherlands. She took for herself all the best rooms, did Mrs. Hicks, of the Clarridge Hotel, the aristocratic resort of the great social center. Shortly after, the government notified the landlord that these same apartments had been select'd for the Queen. Tlie landlord informed Mrs. Hicks that lie must have the moms for royalty. Mrs. Hicks respectfully but firmly declined. Tlie vexed landlord was disturbed, he was exI citetl. He would have torn his hair, liad , Ihe possessed any. As he was quite bald :be appeahtl to the government. Mrs. ■ Hicks appealed to our Minister, her j cousin. Tlie vexed question became a l question of State, and no end of diplo-. ! malic correspondence passed before a I compromise was effecteiL It was arranged at last that tho Queen should occupy the nxyms as the guest of Mrs. Hicks. Thi/Qtieen did so, and she was delighted with our fair countrywoman. Mrs. H. received with her guest; was invited to court and court balls with her royal visiter; and now she is dined and » whied and entertained in away to enj danger her constitution, and many a I male member of the nobility with an ini come and acres somcwhM embarrassed looks longingly at 1 the beautiful, accomplished, and wealthy American widow. IANGVAGB. We are told on good authority by a country clergyman that some of the laborers in his pariah had not three hundred words in their vocabulary. The vocabulary of the ancient sages cf Egypt, at least so far as it is known to us from the hieroglyphic inscriptions, amounts to about six hundred and eighty-five words. Tlie libretto of an Italian opera seldom displays a greater variety of words. A well-educated per son in England, who reads his Bible his Shakespeare, the Tones, and all the books of Mudie’s library, seldom uses more than about three or four thousand words in aetaal conversation. Accurate thinkers and close reasoners, who avoid vague and general expressions, and wait till the word that exactly fits their meaning, employ a larger stock ; and eloquent
speakers may rise to a command of, ten thousand. Shakespeare, who displayed a greater variety of expressions than probably any other writer in any language, produced all his plays with about fifteen thousand words. Milton’s works are built up with eight thousand, and the Old Testament says all that it has to say with five thousand six hundred and forty-tv(o words.— Muller'i “ <Sbicncc of Language. WHO KNOWS? Who knows where pins and needles go—where all the buttons stray ? Who knows where all the pennies go, that somehow get away ? Who knows how all the china breaks that wasn’t touched at all ? How baby gets so black a bruise, yet never gets a fall ? Who knows whence all the fashion come, and, when they disappear, why one brief month should make a fright of what was * * such a dear ? ” Who knows how little bills' can swell to such prodigious size? Who knows, indeed, what’s going on beneath his very eyes ? Who knows just where her husband goes when “business” keeps him out? Who knows when best to wear a smile, and when to weai a pout? Who knows the time to face the fact that she’s no longer young? Who knows how best to sjx'ak her mind, and how to hold her tongue-? Who knows the most convenient day to bring a friend to dine ? Who knows the half of what he spends on clnbs, cigars and wine ? Who knows one bonnet cannot last a woman half her life ? Who knows the woman is the same when sweetheart turns to wife ? Who knows why all the pretty girls are often last to go ? How all the ugly women wed who never have a beau? Why small men fancy wives so large, and large men fancy small ? Who knows, in fact, how half the world was ever matched at all ? DISATCEARANCR Os OAK TiMRER. From statistics recently published it appears that oak timber especially is rapidly disappearing from Europe, although half of the area of Sweden, onefourth of Norway, one-sixth that of Switzerland, and 780, (XX) square mill's in Russia arc said to be yet in forest. Tlie consumption of oak in France has j doubled during the last fifty years. She o requires 15,000,000 cubic feet yearly for wine casks alone, 750,000 for building purposes, 600,000 cubic-feet for her fleet, and 150,000 cubic feet for railway carriages ; gBOO,OOO worth of staves were imj»ortetlin 1862 ; £5,000,000 worth are now needed. Since loosing Alsace and Lorraine, France contains 150,000,000 acres; 20,000,000 of this surface is covered with forest. Holland and Belgium are nearly denuded of timber, and are large importers. North Germany is rich in forest, but within lialf a century has commenoixl to cut down - young trees. Austria has sold her forests since railways have been in t roil need. In Italy no forests remain. Sj»ain and Greece are almost woodless. The southern coast of the Mediterranean is almost forestless. A CAR-I.OAD. Iteaders of newspapers often meet with the term “ car-load,” but few of them know just what or how much it is. The St. Louis Times has taken the trouble to learn, mid says, as a general rule, 20,000 pounds or 70 barrels of salt, 70 of lime, 90 of flour, 60 of whisky, 200 siicks of flour, 6 cords of soft wood, 18 to 20 head of cattle, 50 to 60 head of hogs, 80 to 100 head of aheep, 9,000 feet of solid boards, 17,000 feet of siding, 13,000 feet of flooring, 40,000 shingles, one-half less of hard lumber, one-fourth less of green lumber, one-tenth of joists, scantling and all other large timber, 340 bushels of wheat, 300 of corn, 680 of oste, 400 of barley, 360 of flax seed, 360 of apples, 430 of Irish potatoes, 360 of sweet potatoes, 1,000 bushels of bran. The Steamship IMkvta. Tlie new Williams & Guion steamship Dakota, sister ship to the Montana, of which extended mention lias lieen made in these columns, arrived at this port on Saturday, on her first voyage from Liverpool. She is of the same peculiar, and withal handsome model as the Montana, 325 feet long, 45 feet beam, and 35 feet depth of hold. The Dakota can yteam -sixteen knots an hour, and has accommodation for 80 cabin and 1,500 steerage passengers. She is commanded by Capt. Forsyth, and sails hence on tho 19th inst. The Dakota made her initial trip across the Atlantic in less than nine days, and did not steam at fulLspeed. Three days out she passed an immense iceberg.—-V. K F.ecning Mail. The Great Favorite !—The popular (Tiill Cure of the age !! Compoeed of (rare and Hiruple drug*, Wilhoft's Tonic has long held the highest place in the long line of remedies for Chills and Fever. It is not onlt Anti-Periodic but is Anti-Panic, for it curtails the heavy expense of doctors' visits, where friendly calls are all itemized in the account current. A iienny saved w a penny gained, and saving it in this way adds to health and comfort. Tn Wilhoit's Tonic as a certainty, and you will liever regret it. Whekmx k, Finlay 4 Co., Proprietors, New Orleans. Fog salk by aix OavootS-ra. A CENTT.EMAN in the eastern part of the State, who was abont having hie' leg amputated on acconut of its being bent at right angles and stiff al the knee, heard ot Johnson'» Anodyne rjninu-nt. After using it a short time Uh leg became straight, and is now as serviceable as the other. A great many people have asked us of late. "Howdo you keep your horse looking so sleek and glossy ?" We tell them it’s the easieet thing in the world; give Sheridan's Caeatry ContHiion Poolers two or three tunes a week. . Remington, Vt., has a female brass band. How to Get a Home. See advertisement. Tbebwt tniwtwnt BILVER-TIPPED ■nil *30311] Shew. Ffrs cento UiV out for ■*«**4*( StlwTtp* •'tris •r.<- <1 >ll*r to the laKra worth Os * nsir of iihoee. EUHateahalßra ABO, try Whe UuUted Sotoa. Bound to tu tecum every >»dr gTbLFsCREW WlßEltWfepra Boots Shoes. Thoy ere dur -‘terz/aatw.-i.*. mi 'tl ska Ca-XJXUB ffiSSr AGKMTS, -40 ELEGANT OIL CHRONOS, ■Mxmted. else Oel I for »l: ISO for Lenreet rsriety in the world. National Chmnto Co , rHiui>n.rßiA ififl A MONTH and EXPENSES re»R „Artiele J opidi 5250 yoRTH * Ufll n I ICC * eplend-d New ffioatreted Book FAR WEBT and book on the wild Faa West. Brat* anyOnsuZtt AGBNTSWASTED. ». A. HVTCBmoa A Co . Cmcaeo, Tua. a
O AddremJ^G.B. I ?hrt»U.n.l&toauCiblo. **« " ESTERSGUN WORKS, GhicauO. 1 11. CLARK’S BOOK-KEEPING. ?J' , fS.IJ- t J°vK ,,t e’ kL S*" l for Circular. W. 8. CLARK & CO., 143 Rao.Strart, Cincinnati. Ohio. | Geo. P. Rowell & Co. | DOUBLE YOUR TRADE Druggists. Grocers and Dealers— P*rs China and Japan sealed packages, screw-fop com, boxes, or half chests— Gratters' pries. bend for circular. The Wells Tea Compost. wl Fulton-at., N. Y., P. O. Box 456). AGENTS WANTED XSiS Send fur circulars and onr extra terms to Agents. NATIONAL PUB. CO.. Chicago, HL, or St, Louis, Ma XTSTOXS-K that X’A.'STS! ■ 130 per Month is made by Agento selling onr splendid assortment of skw Maps and Pictures. Catalora. free. R. C. BRIDGMAN. 5 Barclay St., Now York, and 179 West 4th St., Cincinnati, O. THIS Paper Is printed with Ink made by G. B. Kane A Co.. 121 Dearborn Street, Chicago, and for sale by ns in large or small quantities. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, lit Monroe Street, Chicago, 111. EfiD QAI IT Chicago Suburban lads at JlOOeaeh, I UII V MLC I sls down and «5 monthly for balance, within a short distance of City limits, with honrivtrain. and cheap fare. Send for circulars. IRA BROWN, 112 LaSalle-st.. Chicago. 111. SOMETHING Agents coLn money. We have work and money for all, men or women, boys or girl*, whole or spare time. Send stamp for Catalogue. Address FRANK GLUCK, New Bedford. Mass. PENNSYLVANIA Military Aradem) . Chester, Pn. Opens Sept. Nth. Civil Engineering, the Classics, English and Military Art thoroughly taught. Fur circulars apply to COL. TH KO. HYATT, President. > Ilf A Ml RFPR AGENTS FOR THE USf fu kJ a tat best-selling Prize PackIfW &A ■WN S C.B|w in the world. It conWW « Arm tains 13 Sheets Paper, 13 Envelopes, Golden Pen, Pen Holder. Pencil, Patent Yard Measure, and a Piece of Jewelry. Single Package, with elegant Prize, post-paid, JG3 cerite. Circular free. BRIDE A CO., 760 Broadway. New York. Shot Guns, Rifles, Revolvers, .nd Sporting Good, of every description. Large dl»count to Chibs and Cash Buyers. Send atamp for liter trated price list. Address .... CRKAT WESTERN SUPPLY CO. F. H. HILL. Manager, 53 Ninth-rt.. Pittaburgh. Pa. *l. Xji. C-A. ISPSF’X 3ES Xj x>, 67 LaSalle street, Chicago, 111., DEALER IN REAL ESTATE, Farms. Lands and Village Property. Correspond cnee solicited from those desiring to dispose of their real estate. Good lax ms wanted. TOUR MOUNTAIN MEADOW MASSACRE* A JL truthful account of Ulis terrible tragedy is contained in Mr. Stonhonse's ‘ROCKY MOUNTAIN SAINTS,* a full and complete history of the Mormans. ■ Fully illustrated with engravings, maps. etc. This is a great book for Agents at the present tune. For full particulars apply to the publishers. D. APPLETON A CO., 349 and 331 Broadway, New York, HOW TO GET A HOME. IOWA LANDS, *OO,OOO ACRES. Rich Soil, g<x>d Climate, excellent Water, growing Settle ments, <o«m1 Schools. We offer the Lands of the Siou Mty and St Paul R. R. and the McGregor and Missouri River R. R. at $ 1 to |s per acre, on easy payment*. Two years rent will buy a farm. Apply tn DA v; OS ON X CALKINS, R. R. Land Office. Sibley. Osceola Co.. Icwa. OR N. F. BURNHAM’S S 3 TURBINE JL WATER WHEEL Was selected. 4 years ago. ami put to work in the Patent Office, Waah- ! ingtoo, D. C., and has proved to be the 19 sizes made. Pi ices lower any other firat-cUaa Wheel. Pampblrttres. N.F. BURNHAM. York. Pa nWHili Ilagm Speedily cured l.v DR BECK’S onlv known and sure Remedy. S« CHARGE for treatment until cured. Call on or address Dr. J. C. BECK, 112 John St, Cincinnati, 0. Im Gai Mi Y ? A ST by selling our Patent Water-Proof Clothes Line, a- It will not Shrink, Stretch or Rot. Nothing like it in the market. This U'much barter and cheaper than the White-Wire Clothes IJne. AGENTS CAN COIN .MON KY. wUh iu Every family will buy one. Saxtlk t'KF.K. Add res*. HOME IRON COMPANY’, Box 900, Pittsburgh, Pa. -- ' - M Central CHICAGO. ’ EpwffiflP* TTut?»t H> Market, between Wash ‘ -VSwwsMatfiSS incton A Madison ->ts if? $-4.30 pf.r da>. S! MBKHIJIr. PASSENGER ELEVATOR. J. A. Wilson, Fropr. X»rC?TTXXXTE! FOR W.A.DROWN & CD'S UMBRELLAS. PHILADELPHIA nnd NEW YORK.—The | qualities marked with their name are confidently recoinj mended. -tqia. aoifUK m m<u> ixhess! .<V ■ V I.TA’H EI.F.eTKM I»F.I.TSalid I r I* . .'J* Bauds are indorsed by the ! V* X \ n F / mod • minent physicians in i the world for the cure of rheuK\\l// niatism, neurulgiajivrrcomplaint, tbsp<‘p*ia- kiduv) dis*—>7 ■3Jm&* X en<c,n< lv»i.|'Hji»*.iiervvn*i jli.i- : ortbTF.fit . fi*ntah* ci-mplain ts I 'kcr/ nervona and gener»l debility, \ and other chronic diseases of y-HHSk t her host, head, liver. Hhuna/h kid he) an nd blood. Book with IS LIFE particular-free bv I w Lil |’| !T (*n t Cincinnati, Ohio. S.H. HARRIS’ ImprcvrdChiragaFlKE ami BIItGMB SAFES and VAULT DOOHS are she BEST ami CHEAPEST. M» n„r,t< Inry nml balekn»k»«u.sS3a «"»Ea«t Randolph-.*,,< hlvagoWThis new Trrns is worn with perfect comfort night and day. Adapts itself to every motk»u of the body, t etaming rupture under the hardest exercise or severest strain until permanently cured. Sold cheap by the Elastic Truss Co;, NO. 683 Broadway, N. Y. City. Sent by mail. CMI or rend for Ctrenlar and be cared. Ik. aTIIE BEST In thr AVorld. ’ Il Give. Univetwd Satiafaction. JWfiU AVONDEKFTL Eronomy. W We to nv>re bread to bbl. Hoar. WzOlfcCW SAVES .MILK, EGGS, <fce. F ’ One year*. Mr inga wiH bay a eon. rfcSai 1 *<• -»I<»KK MH It BREID. I I ’ aTtfgr 11. -WTiiler. Licbter. Sweeter. Richer. IV&JsE*/?/ EVERYBODY Pmleee It. 1 ix The 1-xdiea are ail in Love with It. SELLS llfca HOT CAKES. IVVtaW-U.LX Xrr'Send at once forCircnlar to LvMygAWMF GEO. F. GA SAT. & co., g t 76 Duane St.. Near York. Selected French Burr Mill Stones Os all and sn|>eri»T workmeueliip. Porlabl- \ I rtf Grinding Mill-. under nuuura. lor Farm t~ or -Werchnnl work. / Uranine Dnlrli An-kr-r llolilngt lotb. Mill Picks. Corn >heiiiT< no.I Cb' «100-..Geariug, nh .flin. > Pullifle. Hanger*, r-ti-,; all v Iwn7 kind* of Mill .Marbirory an.l VW>y-/7B»aM»iy Miller* - etipplo * Sol !■ • Paniplilet. Straub Mill I ■ Cempany. Box 14 31, Cincinnati. Ohio. MERIDEN ----- - *«t>tv Msnufscturo all RlndLs of (inTI.F.R Y UUILLRI f.ffMPANY In’lStlS? by CUTLKRY cx>.. 49 Chamber, Street. New York. EWDEN’S WOOT JACKET CANS ■■. ■x'-’■ ■ . —FOB—SHIPPING mRY>OSKS, ▲re any package ejer offered to the Drug ARK CHEAPKR. S.—THEY ARK HANDIER. . BATUEV ARE VENTED, <5 & IOa.) One of tbeee wood-oovered era, will last longer tbra three common one*. Price About the Mme. WIIBON * BVKNDEN, ChicMo, IBs-
;The Wonders of Modem Chemistry. Sarsaparilliaii ui lls Associates. Changes as Seen and Felt as They Dally Occur aftec Using a Few Doses of DR. RADWAY’S SarsaparilliarT Resolvent, <***- THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER. 1. Good spirits, disappaaranco of weakness, languor, melancholy; Increase and hardness of flesh and muecles, etc. 2. Strength increases, appetite improves, relish for food, do more sour eructations or waterbrash, good digestion. calm and undisturbed sleep, awaken fresh and vigorous. 3. Disappearance of spots, blotches, pimples; the skin looks clear and healthy, the urine changed from its tur bid and cloudy appearance to a clear sherry or amber color ; water passes freely from the bladdei through the urethra without pain or scalding. little or nd sediment; no pain or weakness. » A Marked diminution of quantity and frequency of involuntary weakening discharges (if afflicted that way), with certainty of permanent cure. Increased strength exhibited in the secreting glands, arid functional barmeny restored to the several organs. 5. Yellow tinge on the white or the eye*, and the swarthy, saffron appearance of the skin changed to a Hear, livelyand healthy color. 6 Ttiose suffering from weak or ulcerated lungs or tubercles will realize great benefit in expectorating freely the tough phlegm or mucous from the lungs, air cells, bronchi or windpipe, throat or bead; dimimehitut of the frequency of cough; general increase of rtrer.gr h throughout the system; stoppage of night sweats and pnins and feeling of weakness around the ankles, legs, shoulders, etc.: cessation of cold and chills, senbe of suffocation; hard breathing and paroxysms of cough on lying down or arising in the morning. All these distressIng symptoms gradually and sorely disappear. 7. As day after day the SARSAPARILLIAN la taken, new signs of returning health will appear; a, the blood improves in strength and purity, disease will diminish, and all foreign and impure deposits, nodes, tumors, cancers, hard lumps, etc., be resolved away and the unsound made sound and healthy: ulcers, fever sores, syphilitic sores, chronic skin diseases gradually disappear. 8. In eases where the system has been salivated, rad Mercury, Quicksilver, Corrosive Sublimate, (the principal constituent in the advertised SarsspsrillM, associated in some cases with Hyd. of Potaasa) nave accumulated and become deposited in the bones, joints, etc., causing carles of the bones, rickets, spinal curvatures. oontortMMM,’white swellings, varicose veins, etc., the SARSAPARILHAN will resolve away these de posits and exterminate the virus of the disease from the system. 9. If those who are taking these medicines fortheenre of Chronic, Scrofulous or Syphilitic diseases, however slow may be the cure “ feel better,’* and find their general health improving, their flesh rad weight increasing or even keeping its own, it is a sure sign that the cure la progressing. In these diseases the patient either gets better or worse—the virus of the disease is not inactive.; if not arrested rad driven from the blood, it will spread and continue to undermine the constitution. As soon as the SARSAPARILLIAN makes the patient "feel better,” every hour you will grow better and iatrease in health, strength rad flesh The great power of this remedy is in diseases that threaten death—as in Consumption of the Lungs and Phthisis, Sc~{»J“. Wasting. Degeneration, and Ulceration of the Kidneys. Diabetes, Stoppage of Water (instantaneous relief afforded where catheters have to be used, thus doing away with the painful operation of using these instrument*), dissolving stone in the bladder, and in all casewof Inflammation of the Bladder and Kidneys, in Chronic cases of Leucorrhea and Uterine diseases. . In tumors, nodes, hard lumps and syphiloid ulcers; In dropsy and venereal sore throat, ulcers, and in tubercles of the lungs; in gout, dyspepsia, rheumatism, rickets: in mercurial deposits—it is in these terrible forms of disease, where the human body has become a complete wreck, and where every honrjof existence is torture, wherein this great remedy challenges the astonishment and ad miration of the sick. Ir is in such cases, where all the pleasures of existence appear cut off from the unfortunate, and by its wonderful, almost supernatural agency, it restores the hopeless to a new life and new existence where thia great remedy stands alone in its might and power. In the ordinary skin diseases that every one is more or Ices troubled with, a few doses will in most cases, and a few I Mettles in the more aggravated forms, work a permanent cure. Those afflicted with chronic diseases should purchase a package containing one doxen liottlea. Price SlO per dozen, or ff 3 per half dozen bottles, or $1 per bottle. Sold by druggists. RADWAY’S READY RELIEF WILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE. INFLAMMATION OF THE KTDNKYS. ~ INFLAMMATION OF THK BLADDER. INFLAMMATION OF THK BOWELS. CONGESTION OF THK LUNGS. SORK THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING, PALPITATION OF THK HEART. „„„ HYSTERICS. CROrP. DIPHTHERIA, catarrh, infLuhnza. HEADACHE. TOOTHACHE. MUMPS. NEURALGIA. RHEUMATISM, COLD CHILLS. AGUE CHILLS. The application of tho READY RELIEF to the part or parts where the pain or difficulty exists will afford ease nnd comfort. Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water will, in a few momenta, euro CRAMPS, SPASMS, SOUR STOM ACH, HEARTBURN. SICK HEADACHE, DIARRHEA, DYSENTERY. COLIC. WIND IN THE BOWELS, and all INTERN AL PAINS, Travetars should always carry a bottle of RADWAY’S RELIEF with them. A few drops in water will prevent sickness or pains from change of water. IT IS BETTER THAN FRENCH BRANDY OR BITTKRS AS A STIMULANT. Price 50 Cents. Sold by Druggists. DR. RADWAY’S REGULATING PILLS ■ I - Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet gnni, purge, regulate, purify, clearisn and strengthen. R \ l>WAY’S PILLS, for the cum of all disorders of the Stomich, 'Liver, Bowels. Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Headache, Constipation, Uostlvpness. Indiges- | tion. Dyspepsia. Billottsness. Bilious Fever, Inflammn- ' Ht»n of the Bowels. Piles nnd all Derangements of tbo | Internal Viscera. Warranted to effect a positive cure. Ihircly containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs. J the following symptoms resulting, from Disorders'of the Digestive Organs : Constipation, Inward Piles, Fullness of the Blood in the Head. Acidity of the Stomach. Nansea, Ileartburr, i Disgust of Food, Fullness or Wright in tire Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sinking <*r Fluttering r.t the Pit of tho Stomach, Swimming of the Head. Hurried and Dif* hcult Breathing, Fluttering. i|t tho Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of Vision. Dots or Webs before the Sight. Fever and Dull Pain in tlie Head,. Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of tho Skin and Eyes, Pain in’the Side, Chests, I Jmbs, and-Sudden Flushes of Heat, Bumingin the Flesh. A sow doses of R ADAV AYS PILLS will free the system from all tho ai>«>vc named disorders. Price *43 Cents per Box. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. Read “FALSE AND TRUE.” Send one letter-stamp to RADWAY & CO., No, 34 Warren Street, New York. Information worth thousands will be sent you. Pleasant and Profl falsie Employment.— “Beautiful!” “Channing!”“Oh, how lovely!” “What are they worth?” Ac. Such are exclamations by those whose« the large elegant newChromoe produced by the European and American Chromo Publishing Co. They are all perfect gems of art. No one can resist the temptation to buy when seeing the Chrorooe. It requires no talking to sell the pictures, they speak for themselves. Canvassers, Agents and ladies and gentlemen outof employ men t. will find this the beet opening ever offered to make money. For full particulars, send stamp for confidential circular. Address F. GLEASON A CO., 738 Washington St., Boston, Mass Smith Organ Co., BOSTON, MASS. These Standard Instruments Sold by Music Sealers Everywhere. AGENTS WANTED IN EVERY TOWN. ■old tbroucbOTrt Uw Unitad State. <■ tb. INSTALLMENT PLAN: Tbal K oo a Sjrtrai of Montldj Payment.. Purehawra should art for Uw Smith Ata arum Omak Catalnxnra rad tall particular, on application.
ffl'l TIONAL TREATMENT ■ I ■ I of all Kidney, Urinary .aud I Liver diseases la effected by H 11 I Hamilton' jßncba 4 Dandelioa | M | It arts directly on these orI gene, enabling them to re- | | | | | move those wastes In the ■ ■II ■ blood, which cause Gravel, Diabetes, Bright’s disease Jaundice, Rheumatism, Scrofula, Ac. Kratt Manufic. Ch, Cln., 0. T-spooN-mwsffifflsra BUCHU AND DANDELION, promote healthy action of the KIPS'EYS, LIVER A BOWELS: thus proving the greatest Blood Purifier and Health Preserver of the age, and prevents diseases by removing the cause. It hat stood the test, and Is the best medicine In use. Kress Manufacturing Co., Cincinnati, O. ■ ••• ■ •
it-i
The King of the Body Is the brain; the stomach its taste support; the nerrae its messengers. thebowets. the kMhep-and the pores its safeguards. IndicoeUon creates a violent revolt among these SUacheeof the regal organ, and to bring them back to their duty, there u nothing Use the regulaltng. notifying. mvigoraung. cooling operation of Tarrant’s Effervescent Seltser O. S. U. Ma 35 WHEN WRITING TO please say vnsssr tho advertisement tn thia paper. .... -- -n t ,kndmlMlMMMMMlM>ihaaiSi<n---’ ■ - j--
