Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
bi Apanmone 3 the maid was blind- folded. Then the lrew slides across the mamemsener Ghats Gis window on clther de, producing s twi- “Tis thirty and better light. Indeed, it was more like lass liner a me — "4 grow oo a 3 reeble light surface 1g This mOety mes Netter. ra ind tt * well, pretty hand that wrote it! How calmly now I view i bead and shoulders Kittle more and reve: hole of it; and then it iN-defined, shifting ows, which gathered so thickly as to obscure the , anda clearod, w upon it; it cleared a ed—the undoubted face of As memor} ward rangee— Charles Wilson. © stood aghast in awe- The talks. pale recall, struck terror defore c supernatural jetting Te tion, when su ‘nly as 1e 5 face ba beet yy CF ad fore her became convulsed with an expression of nd Perhaps suspicion chilled D've quite forgotten if "twas mine Or Mary's flirting killed it Fe she ful ex: some Girls are queer things, thatshe preterred € terrible agony. She uttered a little scream and fainted, “3 Fresh air and cold water soon brought her to; fee’d the Yousce'd iim, Mise?” inquired “Yes, and I'll never psy and started homeward. Emma. anyone else, if I die an old maid. But, oh! what can that dread- ion on his face foretell? I feel that adful calamity will happen some day?” A not improbable a re Was One con- solation; fate and Cissy’s secret hit it off nicely. ‘and she had hardly known ‘Wilson as she did. ‘o precious fools, I must allow, In due time he offered and was accepted; and bichever wes the great r; they were married, and went off for their honey- i wonder if I'm wiser sow moon to the Lake of Como. Some seven lustres later? And fats alone remains! Ah, well! These worda f warn affection, One evening Charles Wilson rowed his bride out in a very clumsy boat. “ How serious you are, Cissums?” he said, ‘The faded tok .the pangeat smell, fading ber lew cl atty than usual. “Did that eee pj ang ep cere brayo-looking beggar frighten you? Because his frowsy head shall be punched if he did.” ston! ‘The eer ifarper's Mazacine for November. THE GYPSY’S GLASS. issy Thorne was sitting by her tollet-table ing a novel while her maid Emma brushed her long, thick, silky hair. Some people said it “Oh, no; don’t offend im!” cried the young wife. ‘I'm sure he has got what the Italians call the Evil Eye.” “Hap he? Well, never mind; the Americans « Really!” “Yes, when we return, I will get bave invented a potion which counteracts the effect.” that gentle- | man from New York stopping at the hotel to coneoct us an Eye-opener? that will make it all false, b there was so much of it; | right.’ other Christians were certain it must have been | "Oh, do” cried Mrs. Wilson; and her husband died, seeing that it had the peculiar bright, | paddled on. iden tint which is so often due to art; but | mma knew better. That exemplary took the same sort of pride in her mistress’ that & good groom does in the coats of his master’s horses, and was oe = it. For- tunately, the young took an equ: in her peaaive port of the performance, so both were satisfied. When the spoiled beauty “Tsay, Cissus.” he said presently, resting titious?”” “Ah! any on bgt Pennig hmong I — fault “ase ve any faults. so that would be Soard: ; but are not you rather supers “ And ifI am I have @ right to be,” said she. walar experience?” and he wormed out of her the whole a id not know what else to do, she went up to her ** Tam sorry I told you,” she cried when he Senne took off her dress, and had her hair | burst out laughing: ‘you don’t believe it! You hed; it was a ladylike substitute for smoking | had better call me story-teller at once.” & pipe. “« Believe it, my dear! Iam ready to swear IT wonder that Darwin has not instanced the | to it. You did not see 3 b; you pleasure we feel in being stroked the right way | were looking at me. I was in a terrible con- Ex‘tavor of the last theory. I believe that Clesy | fined position, and that thief of @ WAS 80 Was very near purring, ‘especially in thundery | long her preliminaries, that I got a horri- weather, when her hee crackled Like an ex i- | bie cram pond «9 right calf, and made @ face ment. the fair?” seked which I Montara betray me.” “« Well, Emma, did to the 2” aske ‘The bride out crying. Seahensiins ering dows tor book i And you bribed my ‘maid; and laid a plot “Yes, miss, I ‘dia. - me Ce pzly — wince s “ at did you see?” tened me ;and were jaug! to = me all the time—oh!” she sobbed. “7 saw a horsemanship, where they rode oe and jumped through hoops, wonder- ful!” “And did go on oue of the round-abouts that is abel ie a steam-engine, wl plays an organ?” = miss,” replied Emma, with emphasis. <bene mat moms I should like to, it no one Lor, mies, they are crowded with such alow lot, they are.* “* Low lota, a8 you call them, seem to have all half-sigh. “ And the fun,” said Cisy with « what else see?” i went to a fortune-teller.” ina tent?” “There were little tents about, but it was a verg yellow eart I went into; not in the fair ex- actly; but in the clump, before you come to it. She's wonderful!” “Is she, though! What did she say? Tell : ubled . cried the excited Cissy, who was with yearnings after the supernatural. he told me all sorts of things which she could not bave known natural; a mole on my beck: how long I have been in service - -- -” . but the future; did she say anything it that? ‘he did more, miss, she showed it to me.”” women. ob'oquy an “« All’s fair in love,” said Wilson, « Tt was unworthy of you!” she continued; you have married me tnder false pretenses, I never feel the same toward you; I will never for- ve » nev er!” But she did. Mormon Women. You hear a sheepishly. all ———"___.+e2- _____ What Grace Greenwood Thinks of the deal about that ‘ cross,” from both Mormon husbands and wives, but you only see the shadow of it in the faces of the I do not mean to intimate that they ail look decidedly unhappy. ‘There is rather in their faces a aqulet, bai Hing, ative a negative expression which certainly isas far from hay content as it is from desperate Naturally, they are more alive to the outside pressure of B pwned opinion, more sensitive to the ostracism which their position vokes, than men. Patient and passive as they seem, they feel these thin, telligent among them, at least—and though up- held by a sincere, devout faith in this strange de- lusion, they bave toward strangers a peculiar air of reticence, of mistrust, almost of repulsion. do not wonder at it—their hospitality and confi- negative and ab- rebellion. keenly—the more in- I dence have often been abi they have been « Net? intruded upon by impertinent interviewers, and “ round glass; as true as I’m standing | heir reluctant answers to persistent questionin, here aw him plain.”” pablished abrosd, with startling add Ss an “ Your future husband?” dramatic embellishments. Those I have met « Asis to be; yes, miss. appear to me, I must say, like good and gentle The two girls had been playmates when very | Christian women. They are singularly simple little, and there was much more familiarity be- dress and modest in demeanor. at sad- tween them than is customary with mistress and maid. So Emma had to enter into all the mys- terious details of the cal jc ceremony. UWhat funt” eried Clasy. “1 should like to go: 1 will got The fortane-terler’s caravan is not actually the fair, you say; and there | ¢ will not be many people about If we start early.” us me is their air of extreme qui arie « Lor, miss! what will your pa and ma say?” | wire of a wealthy saint betrays in «don't know; Pll do it first and ask them | and bouschold, they say, no exulta afterward, for fear they might object. We will | <-<sion. 1 go to-morrow morning, directly after breakfast vind. * * Mr. Thomas was a steward; I do not mean an oficial attached to a steam-packet, and in charge of a china shop full ot white basins, but a manager of large estates in the country; a weil-to-do man, who had a small property of his own, which he farmed in the most intelligent and neatest style, on the outskirtsof the market- town of Littlelum. Mrs. Thorne was plump, Jand lazy at proud and } 1 t FS ould not be pa ld course the paragon was 1 andthe ¢ nesses were se with reference to their power of e her meri Nevertheless she was two lovers—I do not mea he brace to . how me which I uldsave me @ world of trouble,” am to take, i she said to herself, with a smile; “but of course that is all nonsense. Yet if she did, I vow that I would be guided by it.” One aspirant was Pendil Fi a landed proprietor in the neighborhood, very’ poor; for though his rent-roll was a fair’ one, his debts were enormous; but very handsome, and well setup. Indeed, he had been in the biues. I don't mean bad spirits, but a man in armor, commandmg men in armor, and his wife would be undoubtedly county. Charics Wilson was the name of the other; he | « was a young London solicitor, who had just been | s taken into s good firm, and was now on a visit | t to his mother, an Indian Colonel's widow who resided at Littelum. Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. ‘Thorne were good friends, andso all was smooth there. Mrs. Wilson had’ murmared, indeed, n she tirst saw her son’s inclination— Would she be a companion for you, Charles! would she be able to take an interest in the same things you did?” “No. mother, that is just what I want. I ife that was clever as myself. u fail to see her merits? She is ce little party!” i ie such a very “ Partie, Charlie, partic; how dreadfully bad | } your French accent is! I grant that she wouid | } not be a bad mateh for you trom a worldly pol of view h Frogmore was the most ha more pleasant. matter for he world of trouble. So the pretty bone of contention thought, as she started with her maid Emma, for Littlelum ine a. m , for Mr. Thorne b-eaktasted | his daughter presided, Mrs. ‘Thorne | ggard. Not a drum was heard, net a pandean note as they stepped briskly along; the gingerbred husbands were covered up from the dust; the merry grounds were still; the clown was mending his dress; the donkeys breakfasted frugally on exch other's manes; the fire-eater a diet of bacon, bread, and garlic for | Business never commenced in the rnoon. But Miss Thorne’s visit was | * not to the fair; to the right, some five hundred | & yards from the common there was a clump of se trees, and sheltered beneath them stood one of those old huts on wheels which act so vividly ir ren. This was the abode of the sibyl, and the | « auiventresses turned aside toward it. o Emma went first on the steps and tapped with | * the bright brass knocker; the door med im- Really, if fate would settle the it would save Cissy Thorne a f 2 some, Wilson the | } « d the country families were | th picion, the gi excitement was raised must be rather uncertain i am assured, fe is seldom taken wit! consent of the first. Not only are the Yoman's religions faith and zeal appealed to, 1 ( her magnanimity toward her t in the cold. rocess. ght that for these poor nxiet { jealou bat they are rtainty”” Utah L tter N.Y. thongh, etude, retire- ment and repression. But for the children around them you would think some of them were women who had done with this world. 1 the wives of even the highest Mormon digni- show little pride in thelr lords. It were perhaps dificult to feel mach pride in the six- teenth part of a man, as men go. Even the first am told that her husband mt joy of pos- An investinent in a Mormon heart and stock fur a that the out the full r sister woman It must be through great sut- fering that such heights of self-abnegation are reached. The crucifixion of the divine weakness ot a loving woman's heart must be @ severe ut there is some sorry comfort in the h lygamous wives here is no wearing uncertainty, no teverish red the bitterest pain htmare torture of sus- nal discov- ery, te flerce sense of treachery and deception. They know the worst. Perhaps it isthe “dead that gives them the peculiar cold, look I have referred to. As the Mormon men whom I bave met; mostly leaders of the eburch, and prominent, well-to-do. citizens, I | must say that they look remarkabl and even jolly under the cross. Virgil, I be- ieve, has Somewhere the expressi times and four times happy!" Well, that is the way K. care-free ion, *U three Times. MFLANCHOLY Svtcipe—A_ Ci de wing facts :—She had d four e—both incinnati Girl Drowns Herself for Love.—Catharine Rothaas, a bandsome young girl, 21 years of age, committed urday by jumping into the Ohio ‘The coroner's inquest developed the fol- lived as a domestic at the residence of Jacob Stifrle on Walnut street, tween Sth and 6th. She had been there about four months. She was born in Armweiler, Ger- many, and came here in May last. Her father ears ago and her mother ten years in Germany. The only word left by is girl wes found on her body, in the following te. The “ lad Jacob” referred to cob Kuhn. mT take w per please tell her so, and al: le of my misfo ne, ther and all my relations, Ly s wife. Her relatives testified that she h: in weral.— Cincinnati C/ an physician, known as in'the town of Wheatfield 4 s threshold by d dispatching t, thus exterminating reaking into «Vidence sufficient to convict was and the matter, after a ti as also my Oh, God?! do not is her cousin, ast thought my lad Jacob, The love th me. Tam the fault for it, could have alone helped myself; but from childhood on I never obeyed my father, nor stepmother, nor guardian, and the with whom Ihave been with for the last four months has shown me nothing but the kindness of a mother. May she forgive me. Oh, bat followed her example! Those who find this woman ~ oO kind Mrs. dear t | condemn me, but take me ub as thy child. My ™m Karat Koramaas.” ‘ide seems to have been hereditary in her 2 . Her grandfather committed ‘snicide, nd her father attempted the same thing balf | dozen times, but was prevented each time by ad been a de- cent, good girl, aud had no more regard for her Jacob Kubn, than was proper between ‘ommercial. TRAGEDY—About 16 years Dr. Stronges, » N. Y., was murdered about a mile away from his use, and the tragedy had been carried across his dwelling is housekeeper and her daugh- the household. A ont y the crime, but though several persons were arrested on suspicion, no forthcoming, 1 ime, was allowed Near the house of Dr. Strom hristian Forbeck, a fis a lived of fil-repute, s mediately, and a woman of ™ race west about five years ie 7 poured Seung, me, as a Spaniatd, | Kelener soon followed as far as Michigan and though her splendid black hair was rather | Shortly after a himselt. A tew weeks ago. coarse, if youcome toexamine’it closely. Emma | Christian Forbeck died, and on his deathbed Snr Wall, tn sy pretty dy. eld tes In complicicy with telaners boss RS Sao “Walk. in ” ~ | im wi “<don’tbe afeared, I asm quits along bere") | tell what thelr motive wae’ Reaseth ey eae Although the fun of the fair did notcommence | P!¥nder it must have been, as was till late in the day, it wasevisent that custom | teken from the house. Since Forbeck’s con- came betimes to sil for traces of tes Se ae remembered, disorder had from the miniature. of which Ii bmn and ‘the tim terior, which was spick and span, neat- and | others «- ; ‘wherein he snide clean; obv! prepared for visitors. The | ‘‘!f all Lhave done were I should have small’ay ‘Was still further reduced by a | beenon tke gallows years Reisner was curtain, which ram on brass rings along a rod, | Te of the suspected he meted out enclosing a portion of the space. od + to himself, ‘it was no better for For- ‘The gypsy examined Cissy’s hand, and «ck nor worse for the world that he lived so. making shots—centers through, most; "s-| long aonb eyes, some. Pubes “+ You are an only child, and your father and Dinan The New York Post gets off mother would give you gold to eat, if you wanted it; when were in great peril fro: corm ‘about their rand poe deg” "A let more to the same couchedin thelr tem take air of m . ¥ be gn ny tae ww eas acy began 4, The std mon coal are presumed two gentlemen ag is gi ae nokiing inthe streets ore eer It seem from the ‘and prices will _be unhappy al {hat the hens are Keeping their for the A a eed ‘There mey (rare) occasions when it is « And how am I to know which of gen- | "The length of time taken. ‘Alexis. tlemen to choose?” she asked in ST sonnaeeieatie called each this enteny — Tenusset. on shows that they are but rushin’ «Ah, that ¥ lady; but you can | ""Depabella, who the look in'the Magic Glass for yourself, and nee If rothing wonderfol thatthe Ring shoud be in ar~ Rees ctl thin,” eald Cissy bravely, tn dsomensaran ai though a feel! of eceapinens —— = he off ten ‘The gypsy sald that Emma shoul ve w7-Eugenie knocks the ashes cigarettes comuvec ee Cissy would not have that, so A per diem. . mic form since 1367. But while a doubt (adds the “Lancet”) must for the mt rest upon the mode of origin of existing diffusion of cholera in Northern Europe, no —e bog an as phy herman on epidemic now rogress in Aral exten- som which seriou a Lang soe Ke t, and ‘ough Egypt, Southern Europe, man- ner ‘ma by Prine tracts first traversed by the disease in 1365, Starting from Meshed Hussein, in the pasbalik ——, a few weeks ago, the —_ has spread to oa in the Shammar, and thence to Khayber, siderable anxiety is manifested by the Ottoman authorities in view of the probable introduction of cholora among ms. About the time, apparently, when this exten- sion of ra trom jagdad ‘Arabia | the mic, already widely ad in Russia in Europe, became increasingly dittustve there. It ey ay in several of is Russian posts of the of Azoy and of the Black sea, especially in Taganrog, v and Khersen—all in the previous Melt the Baltic portion of the Russian empire. While this greater S ceeens cor coneameg inne going lent in the pashalik ot Bagdad, in the en tral jorthwestern provinces ‘ersia, tra < Russia, in several the empire. In presence of a widespread, ex- tending epidemic of cholera which has effected a lodgment in the westermoat of Europe, and is ii ), the danger of the epi- demic Invading Great Britain can hardly beheld to be remote. Battle in the Air. Two Carpenters Fight on Bare Joists Fifty Feet Taeome ee ee Badly Beaten. [From the Louisville Journal, Oct. 26. ‘Two carpenters engaged in the construction of a building at Ninth and Market streets, in which the floors have not yet been laid, got to fighting yesterday while standing on the joists nearl fifty feet above the ground. McMains, one of them, knocked down G. A. Carter, the other, with a large club. He fell across the ani was held there by MeMains, who beat him terri- bly with a piece of wood. He came very near falling to the ground, which ‘would probably have resulted in his death. Atter the fight had progressed for some min- utes, Carter was asked if he was satistied, to which he replied that he wax not The antago- onists then, by mutual consent, adjourned the battle for a few minutes, that they might descend to terra firma and fight it out, when their comrades immediately gathered around and urged them to make peace. Both of them had fought stubbornly, though Carter was considerably the worse off. Arguments and persuasion failed to reconcile the infa- riated men, and they went down into the street, and commenced a pitched battle with rocks. They had huried but one or two mis- siles at each other, when they were promptly ar- rested and placed in Twelfth street station-house by Officer Westby. They were released soon afterward on bail, and Carter went to a physi- cian and had his wounds d. He was aw- fully bruised. The difticulty is said to have originated about the width of’ plank. A more dangerous place for a fight could not have been selected, as a misstep might have precipitated both of them to the ground fifty fect below, and in the fall they wonld have struck against ob. stacles which would haveinjured them seriously if not fatal How A Graxp Dex is Lopero.—New York is inclined to intimate the luxury of Tweed and his satelitesin lodging the Grand Dake Alexis. At the Clarendon, which we are told, is the home of distinguished foreigners, the imperial apartments are gorgeous beyond Seen mee ‘The walls of the Duke's parlor are painted Rus- sian green, and the ceiling isfrescoed with vines in bloom. Moquet carpets, rich full length mirrors, gold pedestals on which repose vasos filled with choicest flowers, bronze statuettes at every turn, crowd the little bijou reception room. In the parlor there is a bronze bust of Shakspeare, raised on a Russian green ground. A costly cabinet composed of seven kinds of fine woods, inlaid with ebony and gold, is richly ornamented with gold and bronze ‘medallions and miniature paintings, and on each side of it are Amphorae, after Benevenuto Cellini. ‘The tapestries used in the sofas and chairs are from the Obelin factory, and here New York has gone fairly beyond republican simplicity, for even in the palace of Emperor of seventy millions the young heir can hardly have seen such reckless extravagance of furnishing. All the paintings are framed in hea’ 1d-mount- ed fra: cerulean bine, is the color of the royal ye 's bed-chamber. The pillows are covered with the finest lace, which Stewart & Co., bronght from over seas on pose for the occasion. Over the couch is the Russian coat of arms, and out of a niche peers the sombre and sober old grandfather Nicholas. Pictures of Venice show themselves modestly in the soft light. From the sleeping chamber there is easy exit to a beautiful little garden, in the midst of which a fountain sings con- tinuous lullaby. Here the Grand Duke will remain, after his visit to Washin as the city’s guest till he starts on his W. tour. _ CHINESE Banres, Kitten Curiets, Porry STEaKs, ONtons AND OPiuM.—Hon. James Brooks, in a letter from Pekin, China, to the N. ¥. Buprese, says:—One of the first things im: pressing @ traveler in China is the babi the countless babies. Maithus, evidently, is’ not read here, or the new New E d native American’ non-pro} mn creeds“ Multiply | and replenish the earth,” in our Bible, is in the le, | Confucian classics, in another paraphrase—“ Be- get. children, to be sure of having your bones well taken care of.” ‘ The more sons you have the better off you are in heaven.” Girl babies hewever, alas for the poor things! are deemed rether curses than blessings, more especially if you have too many of them—such curses, it otten the little lasses are tumbled away to perish—bey babies, never. All the junks we passed, OF saw, were more or less “filled with bables—naked babies, mixed up with the | cocks, and hens, and dogs, and kittens. Fathers were as often fondling them as the mothers. ‘This love of babies it {s that makes up the Chi- nese countless numbers, ever populating the nd, and forcing the poor often to starve, or to live on kitten cutlets and puppy steaks. ‘What we saw people eating most of, on our boat jour- Y, Was watermelons, pretty good ones; they nibble, species of cante! a3 mon- keys would; then peaches, lopes, that they that nol y could eat, they are #0 baid~with Oniows gaicee onions innumerable. Indeed the whole popu: lation hereabout seems saturated with onions and opium. ANOTHER SINGULAR taid that in Mifth _ = Penns: fer singular sect mish. ese people some= what resemble the Dunkers in their religious belief; but their customs include man; culiarities characteristic of themselves ‘alone. They exceed the Quakers in their efforts to attain simplicity of dress. The men fasten their attire with hooks and eyes, and look upon buttons as an abomination in the sight of the godly. The Omish girls wear a blue cotton dress, the waist of which comes just below the armpits, while their heads are covered with close- white skull caps, rene give their faces Sep earemce, They have popeerysnemisssay it is because when one of tl number becomes poor they turn him out of a tovns Fy is & slander, for they are notenly but charitable, never Lange | wi _ They neweene wines ets. They all that gm Pe of Supper in mutton broth. Pre diy lace and Coburn, matched each to come of eithis Orleans on the training, Fhe feteaceney atk 2 constitutions. We aapeanee: tats tremendous a of Faniling the: Indian clube: takes another bets Thee is || and the result ts to see as put an m7-One of signs herself, “Y: | mapiet” at If a railway conductor, or a hotel clerk. or a shopkeeper’s clerk, or any other person whose business it is courteous to the public, puts om airs and suubsthe American customer, it is the ordinary habit of that customer to “ stand it” rather than protest and insist on the treatniént which he Ought to receive. Rogues get into office, and, with big hands in the public purse, help them: selves to its contents, and continue t do this ear after ycar, the owners of the purse all the ime knowing the fact, yet being too casy and er to — even an Pye Every- usy, nearly eve re as, and a9 the evils that would stir the Blood ot wn Englishman to boiling, and arouse all his com- bativeness, are quietly ignored or carefully shurned. It is not a pleasant thing te say, or to reflect upon, but the plain truth is that there is some- thing cowardly and unmanly in all this. We J y iy have no special of the touchiness of an Englishman the sacred rights of his personality. hog is not an agreeable bird, and we have no wish to sce it snbstituted for the American eagle; but a bundie of quills is better calculated ‘to com- mand respect than a ball of putty. The man who stands stiffly im his tracks and ‘says “Touch me not!” ® very much more ble a than the man who him and every othe: encounters in his way. atraid of hurting the fe when we know, or ought to "8 ought to to it, and enco: the rascal ‘he had suffered to make a victim of the next ‘nsuspecting customer. The characteristic American good-nature not a and confers irapunity upon all sorts of usly reacts wide moral difference between the man who commits a crime and the man who weakly tolerates it. ‘The active sinner is, if anything, the braver and the nobler of the two. least manifests a courage which the other does not. There is nothing that America needs more than the bold and persistent assertion, in -— practical way, of its sense of what is fair and honest, and right and proper and courteous, between man and man. If every good man would stand squarely by this, even at the sacri- fice of his reputation for -nature, he would find himself growing better day by dar: he would find that the good elements of society were rapidly gaining influence, and that rogues were growing careful and getting scarce. Corporations tike those which manage our railroads will impose upon the public just as long as the popular good-nature wi it them to do so. Their primary object is to make money. They will furmsh to the public just sach accom- modations as the public will be content with, and those accommodations will be insufficient and mean unless the public demand more and iter. There are more evils than we can count that grow directly or indirectly out of our national good-nature. Our hearts need hardening, and our backs need beer We ought to pos- sess more manliness, and we ought to exercise it. To insist upon our rights in a manly and temperate way is to give a lesson in Chris- tianity. It makes us stron and more self- respectful, and restrains the spirit of law- lessness around us. One prominent rea- son why crime thrives and the public morals go from bad to worse, is that they mect with no rebuke. The good le bemoan the facts in a weak way among themselves, but they refuse to meet the evils they bewail, front to front, with open challenge and bold conflict. Crime is a coward in t greed of courageous virtue, and shrinks and crawis whenever it boldly asserts itself. Now, virtue shrinks and crawls, while crime struts the streets and deals it such privileges to retiring ¢ cy and cow- ily good nature as it can a! Tt even imi- our good nature, and smiles upon us frem igh places of its power and privilege, and laughs over its profits—and its joke.—Scribner's, Sor November. ®7-A San Francisco journal says: “As a rule, it is nota plan to visit the house of a recently married lady to collect’ money loaned her while you were courting her yourself. We lave reason to believe that we are supported in this opinion by Mr. Edward Kelly, of Ents city; but as Mr. Kelly is at the hospital, suffering from five gashes with a bowie-knife, we have foreborne to personally consult him.” &7-A newly-married couple having occasion to economize by moving to @ poor-house in Kentucky are deeply indignant because tne keeper thereot assigned them separate wards of the establishment, and have brought suit against him for violating the marriage ceremony by putting asunder those whom God had joined. qe* BONDS. DURING THE PAST FEW WEEKS THE DEMAND FOR 7-80 NORTHERN PACIFIC GOLD BONDS Has been daily increasing, and holders of FIVE- TWENTIES continue to manifest the fullest confi- dence in NORTHERN PACIFIC SEVEN THIRTIES By the exchange of largeamounts of Governments, called in for redemption, into these securities. The Bonds are seeured beyond all question by a first and only mortgage on the Road, its entire roll- ing stock and 50,000,000 acres of the finest land in the world, We do not hesitate to commend these Bonds to our friends and the public, and no stronger proof of their popularity could be offered than the sales during the first week of the present month, which, notwithstanding the disturbances in monetary af- fairs, EXCEEDED THOSE OF ANY SIMILAR PERIOD. All marketable securities received in exchange. Full particulars furnished by 0¢30-tf JAY COOKE & CO. NCMOR LIAE STEANERS SAli EVERY WEDNESDAY AND &4%- DAY TO AND FROM YORK A¥D sLAseow. N* Yous sourm isp socTawaar | yy, ALARA: AyD CRATTANoOGA Rane | Pad oT Jie | CRiEcescescl ous Wevertvolioreosbameeneees” | for the A : an | See ee | modern improv e : M4"™een | Sree eatery, como, ame of pan cities epee Pr “ _ a, cvlendid condition, and th | To ol kebw Live OL "ND “Wkpon areto bh | Piret Cabin, . location, om Creche an | abie Mer a re tame, = and evcuse he quickest thme ane | "(Ung i" their frieme ihe Old Coauiry can par. Sitention of Freight Shippers } ED ERSON Omi s. " of ts called to thir route the sdraniages {speedy ship freight, and procure bills of lading vis | WTiftcm Reavy, ccna Freight ane ‘Tioke S.SMITR WILLIAMBON & 00. Ew EXPRESS LINE HILADELPH 1 THE Agrat, Chat 3 is SCION Ak GkokonTuwn ba a * oaks py sar eRbA at News bateaatiend SALtinoRs ABD OmIe RAILROAD it, ‘Water street, Georgetown, WEDNEB Waswinoton, December 35, 187 ont any time. between WASHING ame or HIDE, 6s Water stree . TORR SRM rhs ee aoa, WEST are now Fo 0g fellows via delphia. Pees its FO! ALL WaT Sunda: #00 STATIONS. ry, at 6:45 and9:988 YOUNG AND RISING GENERATION POLI® “20 p.m, Netraintoe NDAY. TIMO} The vegetative powers of life are strong, but ina few years how often the paltid hue, the lack-lustre eye and emanciated form, and the impossibility of fe application to mental effort, show their baneful in- fluence. It soon becomes evident to the observer that some depressing influence is checking the de- velopment of the body. Consumption is talked of, WASHINGTON ii NEW TORK. J Sar Wet be Sad nN and ALEX A. y and perhaps the youth is removed from school and Fin serge hlateinhia and Boston see at: sentinto the country. This is one of the worst move- 3. L, WILSON. Sites ned wine! ako ments, Removed from ordinary diversions of the Master of Transportation we disedpsanoeiir ever-changing scenes of the city, the powers of the body, too much enfeebled to give zest to healthful and rural exercise, thoughts are turned inwardly upon themselves. WBE EEE, on LIxE If the patient be s female the approach of the menses is looked for with anxiety as the first aymp- | *T° Pumas Thom oo 7 tom in which nature is to show her saving power in oop Se ~ (except Sunday) at 6:06 3m 18:48 CORES Loan Orion 1003 SEVENTH diffusing the circulation and visiting the check with z ‘OR PHILADELPETA. A —— jew York, —— the bloom of health. Alas! increase of appetite has | , Lesve,tafly (except y) at 5:08 o. m., 19:4 inet liberal termyon auld silver watches grown by what it fed on. The energies of the system Soaks eplene Sak tec neeee | are prostrated, and the whole economy is deranged mo ect Paints | i80S WASHINGTON LOAM OFFIOn The beautiful and wonderful period in which body “4 ‘tate id pp. ae cate Cc AND SALESROOM, and mind undergo so fascinating @ change from child ‘can be had at the ‘Office at all hours to woman, is looked for in vain. The parent's heart | Gthe day. | O24 Fanaa. ove., bet. fh cul 15 oto., aoathaite, Deeds in ansiety,and fanciea the grave bet waiting for schedule between i wits ‘as Sas ors eS, Mover Geb: SROONTE: Avent, Washing jou | for CASH” Oper te * tT. e B i 6 : : ‘Provate entrance from the ball anh Ct. apis 5 3 R. x 2 RE OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M. AND ON SAT. B. M , to arcommodath irobase during the * ‘are Ld Ponsapienain svekus, berseen RADWAYS READY RELIEF D* JOHNSTON, : or TER BALTIMORE LOCK — AL, FFICE,7 SOUTH FRED! " Ms extened im the great H. try, vis and deowhe con = fend eMectual remedy i tbe DISEASES OF IMPRUDENOE. eakness of the Back =» Hericta ee. ABs. iit eral Deity: Norsone Wangeer, Leow om “aa Pripitation of the Inert, Pimictty, cs CURES THE WORST PAINS HELMBO PMEOLSS, iN FROM ONE TO TWENTY MINUTES EXTRACT BUCHU NOT ONE HOUB after reading this advertisement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. RADWAYS READY RELIEF IS A CURE FOR EVERY PAIN. ‘It was the first, and is THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY that instantly stops the most excrncinting pains, all ngestions, whe: FOR WEAKNESS ARISING FROM EXCESSES OB EARLY INDISCRETION, attended with the fellowing symptoms: Indisposi- tion to Exertion, Loss of Power, Loss of Memory, Difficulty of Breathing, General Weakness, Horror of Disease, Weak Nerves, Trembling, Dreadful Horror of Death, Night Sweats, Cold Feet, Wake- fulness, Dimaness of Vision, Languor, Universal Las- situde of the Muscular System, Often Enormous Ap- Ae hy 3 ‘of the Syrens to the Mariners of Dlighting their most brilliant hopes of epticlpatioms rendering marriage, &¢.. impossible, YOUNG MEN. Jaye Infiarimations. and cures detite with Dyspeptic Symptoms, Hot Hands, Fiush- | of the Langs, Stomach, Bowels, or other lands oF ~ ing of the Body, Dryness of the Skin, Paltid Counte- | "#*2# bY one application. 4 waked to ecstasy the living lyre, may call with ‘ IN FROM ONE TO TWENTY MINUTES, : MARRIAGE. nance and Eruptions on the Face, Pain inthe Back, ore MannIAgE. Heavinees of the Hrlide, Freatently Black Spote | no matter how victentor excruciating the pat. the ciage rare of Pipsical Weaknses Los Tt Boseg Flying before the Eyes, with Temporary Suffuston Bed:ridden, Infirm, rippled Mere: | Ske Wosae-Inptencs,) Nerimes Bestrais . ‘ith disease . ration, OF Ww » Nervous Del 5 and Loss of Sight, Want of Attention, Great Mobili. | °C Mewrsialevorprostrated w pare ny ote Dinyualification, speedily removed. ° ty, Restlceness, with Horror of Society. Nothing is ewig places bimvelf under the care of Dr. J. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF WILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE. INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS. INFLAMMATION OF THE BLADDER INFLAMMATION OF THE BOWELS. CONGESTION OF THE LUNGS OBE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING. PALPITATION OF THE REABT, HYSTERICS, CROUP, DIPTHERIA. OATABBH, INFLUENZA = more desirable to such patients than Solitude, and nothing they more dread, for fear of themselves; no no repose of manner, no earnestness, no speculation, but a hurried transition from one question to another. Y oudide iu his honor as a geatleman, Soallacolly say ‘upon bie skill as 8 ply eiclan, ORGANIC WEA ediately Cured. and Fall i yh Sartre aden, witch renders fife mi inti aoa maczlage mporsble. i the pebaity pal ‘time of improper ndulgencne. You a eg a ot a THESE SYMPTOMS, IF ALLOWED TO GO ON—WHICH THIS MEDICINE INVABIABLY REMOVES—SOON FOLLOW LOSS OF POWER, FATUITY AND EPILEPTIC FITS, IN ONE OF WHICH THE PATIENT MAY EXPIRE, During the superintendence of Dr. Wilson at the TOO’ Bloomingdale Asylum, this sad result occurred to | U¥4DACHE, TOOTHACHE. two patients. Reason had for a time left them, and NEUBALGIA, RHEUMATISM, Se cheer They were of both sexes, and COLD CHILLS, AGUE CHILLS, | ne of the DE TOENSTON, al twenty years age. 2 < | Gradcste of one of the most emi; Jal Dyreeeecice Run smamte a | Feo baer Who can say that these excesses are not frequently mesma eg omiechil | seeierespacSe bere: sane of the followed by those direful diseases,"Insanity and | tex "givuts eure CRAES ‘Shishi S08, Pn ey hy Fd Consumption? The records of the Insane Asylume, ate Bi RT Rey EIR. BE stivepy great Bere Dein alert and the melancholy deaths by Consumption, bear Hise Tile SOWKLS wad all INTAANAL | sotnttn, bachfulnem, with frequent blush sore ample witness to the truth of these assertions, In cured immediate)y. Travelers should alwa bottle ARTICUL Lunatic madepa ae nape exhibition wars READY REU Fvth hen A eae PES Spires ae appears. The countenance is actually sodden and | in water will prevent sickuse sr pains from tence | edecccn ames quite destitute; neither mirth nor grief ever visits of Sater. Sit fe better ina Wrcteb brandy or iters Tiptncee ec sou or marriage. it, Should a sound of the voice occur itis rarely ar- Cent tae Te eae ticulate. . are Ane Ae. eer of te Back and Lite, in the Hond FEVER AND A cured for cents. There ight. Lows ascalar “* With woful measures wan despair gneve remind gest tht vet that will care | of the Hicart: By 7 ae weraret te ecktare oe coor aw | PETRA Eee LEVER | Coserneeees rf — While we regret the existence of the above die- | PEE SWYuS! ib it iy to auick, as Al ech tobe Confusion eases and symptoms, we are prepared to offer an in- as, tin 4 valuable gift of chemistry for the removal of the con- DE. EADWAY'S Sernon te Backety Be Gane Ti, sequences, Thonsands Sarsaparillian Resolvent, THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER, drop of the SARSAPARILLIAN communicates: th the a facet enare aan, ‘or 3 with new and sound HELMBOLD's , FLUID EXTRACT OF BUCHU. ‘There is no tonic like it. It is an anchor of hope to the physician and patient. This is the testimony of all who have used or prescribed it. Boware of counterfeits and those cheap decoctions called Buchu, most of which are prepared by self- styled doctors, from deleterious ingredients, and offered for sale at ‘‘less price” and “larger bottles,’ 4&c. They are unreliable and frequently injurious. Ask for Helmbold’s, Tabs no other, Price @1.35 per bottle, or 6 bottles for $6.50. Delivered to any address. Describe symptoms in ‘all commanications.