Evening Star Newspaper, May 17, 1873, Page 2

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all . . E DAINTY WARDROBE. He asked me if I would like to know the kind | for it, some twoor three pieces of Always Count Onc Hundred. Profesor Tyadsil at Niagara. Cireumstaace_The Orange. SUMMER RESORTS. ; = = Of character the man bore: Treated that { | er nine ftom the pri gontioman’s wand A Danbury man nam-4 Roubens recently saw testared at Royal + reripenca by the river banks, a = hamber, wou'd like very tode so; although Lhad - toward my feet. I natarally stoop d astatement that counting one hundred when ‘London, on his American experi- cre, mask and moonlight aiding, | Y42eS > iia heard a:read hofhim. He then wrote | —— to look for them; he thanked tempted to speak an, ‘angry word would save a gn ary he said that the Don Juans played thetr pretty pranks, i resort, sistas "Phat my daring shall n-ver wear the waiter, called tor a petit verre, and | mara deal of trouble. This statement | general deserij ‘of the’ deafening roar eee Dark donna serenading. aud surrounded by. the B. ‘sare wanin | araily commenced talkit er. little ‘but the more ted, inasmuch as there, while the hout~ are waning, | ; sounded a singular at first, but Mak the bones tent et cet, . | Guriously enough the conversation f upon | he read it over the more favorably he became | the noise experienced e, Devil's Bridge in | By Moorish damsel it was plucked, Tit, and fanc by the rng toad detecting persons who wished to . impressed with it, and finally cencluded to adopt | Switzerland, wicks uae ante its plunge, eneath the golden day there, Piatra im nt a Gisgnise themselves, the old gentleman main- jt. Next door to Reuben: ives a man who has | was by far greater. This was dae to the sur’ | By swain "twas then in Londomsucked, fr n wilt sien a@ sound was heard through & | taining that, as individuals, so with na- made five distinct attempts inthe past fortnight | rounding mountains, whereas the great Ameri- ‘ho flung the peei away there. Layee a An eine f Geasben, anh aan Eel ceeushe Gere hie caster eae speaking-pipe. The chief then opened the lift, | tions, no could hide his peculiarities, or | to secure a dinner of green peas by the first ot | can cataract has no’such acoustic advantage. | ec STs Ser cae oavemanstettan of Sardar, ong was White bis mystic it was throbbing” took from its slip of paper, and read out the | the pecularities of his race. “For instance,” | Juty,and every time has been Fetarded by | He described his explorations beneath the so- | 14 conld not know in Pimlico, Mhowster Fequited ‘Those desiriag to spond. the Under my throbbing heart few words which were written as the character | he went on, ‘‘let a m litary,man dress en bour- | Reubens’ hens. The next morning after Reu- | called Horseshoe Falls, by far the most formid- As littie she in Seville, 2 summer iu the country will ad res: And often my h dreaming of M. Treves: geo civilian put on @ ‘uniform, a French- | pens made his resolution this man found bis | able or tne two generally comprised under the | ‘Tbat I should reel upon that pee! A_O WRIORT, Beceke in a little song, A menes-lender.” m: his ¢ a fifth attempt to have miscarried. Then he | name of Niagara Falls. Wrapped in several And wish thematthedevil! pa Tl P.O oudoun Go. Va Ribs Gee partons of tithe at brooding, «Haas dealings with young men of good fam-* n go to a Parisian tailor; there was | tailed on Reubeas Be cok woollen garments, he bad to cross torrents of BE new rei’ Oo ite the aoe, nartewent. Sor there Seen Se Geers Cuts and bon ity.” : t that men of an ordinary obser- | «What in thunder do you mean by letting water, and to pass over the slippery ground — -s0-- | tiem te = I fimished the dainty wardrobe, Vsurious in the extreme. vance could coatly distinguish what the individ- ° your hens tear up my garden? | whence he had a view of the green masses over- The Queen's Drawing-room. TEST END HOTEL And the drawer was almost fall ted of receiving stelen bank notes | ual really was. Thus," he continued, ‘noone ” Reubens was prompted to call him a mud- | head, the contemplation of which gave him one | London looked as gay and flourishing as in its | WEST ED EL, « With robes of the finest masiin, from England.” a could mistake Monsieur to be anything butan snoot,a new name just co: into general | of those agreeable emotions which he had been | best days when the streets of the Weat-end were | Aad robes of the whitest woul. «Never brought to justice.” ishman, and one who has most probably ‘use, but he remenibered his resolution, put | told liberated nerve currents and assisted in the | filled with carriages laden with fair Ladies in | Rgeieee them all togethe “(A character tarnished in many ways.” itary employmentinhisown country. down his rage, and meekly observed: stimalating of the system better than the | court attire, hurrying to be present, or pre- aT | Ane ‘Has been twice bankrupt.” In the same way. I,” meaning himself. ‘‘could «One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, | chemical preparations used for dispelling | sented, at the Queen's drawing-room. ‘The | sy ve “Now,” continued the Chief of Police, “I | not pass for anything except a Frenchman, a eight—” bodily discomforts. He said that, except the jace from | Queen; who bad only arrived at the p Vindsor ©: soon after Il a. m., was all in fall court trim, rested, refreshed and accoutred | by 3 o'clock, and_entered the throne-roo signed to the suffering which Her Majesty her periodical torture,” with as composed know that you ——- like to take Cg ad fancur, and an unmistakable frequenter of the ‘hen the mad neighbor who had been eyeing | gorge through which the river rushed, the you in ! thing by storm. atempt to do this boulevards. this answet with a great deal of suspicion, | country around was a table-land as far as Paris you will never gain your ends. Youdon't | He was such a chatty, genial old gentleman joke in again. Queenstown ridge on the one side and Lewis- e know what the word detective (police secrete) | that the time passed away imperce; why We “Why don’t you answer my question, you | town ridge on the other side of the river. means, although none of your novels or plays | talked about the success of Schneider in Lon- yaccal 9” . Here the table-land suddenly descended into are complete without one or more of that oceu- | don; about the Em "s health; about the Bat still Reubens maintained his equanimity, | the plain towards the Ontario, and he drew at- LONG BRANCH, N. 5., WILL BE OPENED ON THE 19re OF JUNE. : calm a countenance as the horrible pros Applications for rooms can be made Lay him, so sweet and helpless, pation among its characters. You had not bet- | French elections, what not. I accepted &® and wenton with the test: tention to this fact because it explained to him | would @dmit of. Her Majesty was attirrd in 3 yoene ts No on paneeoe’ ‘There. close tomy throbbing heart. ter be seen speaking to any of my People bere; | pinch of snuff from him, and he tried one of my —«. Nine, ten, cleven, twelve, thirteen, four- | the existence and history of the Niagara Falls. | less mourning than usual, the deep black train | 8/2 cite’ pores ee but give me your address, and one of my best | regalia cigars. At last, asthe time drew near teen, fifteen, sixteen—"" Many thousand years ago the river probably | wasentwined by shining feather trimmings, and PRESBURY. . ae ee eens om evening men” (he called them employees) “shall call at | when Bergnet ought to have made his appear- ‘The mad neighbor stared harder thanever. |ran along the table-land; and the falls then | the white crape ape with diamondsand pearls. | tr ule <3ueu) Saying. “= What do the ang: your hotel to-night. Leave the matter to him, | ance, I n to look at my watch, and to «Seventeen. eighteen, nineteen, twenty, | were exactly at the escarpment of the tadle- | The Princess of Wales and Princess Christian |? = — For he died with 1B tell him all you know, and if the glance round to see whether the police agent twenty-one—" land. The érosive power of the sand and boul- | also appeared in mourning, but the M urchio- SHE OCEAN HOUSE Sit while the hours are waning sited, depend ithe will do so. had taken up his quarters on any of the chairs «You are a mean skunk,” said the mad neigh- | ders carried by the river, however, excavated | ness of Lorne shone forth in a violet pe Tue aA SE, : And the house is all at rest, continued, “in France, three branchs of secret | which were then filling very fast with the usual por, backing toward the fence. and cut the extreme end, and thus caused a | coat; profusely ornamented with Honiton lace. And fancy a baby nestling police—namely, the political, the criminal, and | atter-breakfast coffee-drinking crowd of well | “Keubens’ face flushed at this charge, but he | retrocession of the locus of the fall. The contrast thus atforded excited some com- | ig ae sansa pane 1. Your affair comes under the latter | dressed middle-class Paris idlers. Seeing Twas | onty said: of the river, having the greatest excavating | ment, but the apparent “eccentricity” of the — see- and I will send you an individual who | jcoking for some one, my companion said: recy pag taetraie ple S| oe oro ve os pte: “Twenty-two, twenty-three, twenty-four, power. —— to keop Shona of the aa sae ‘al to you in i uch more | «Perha) lonsieur is expecting a friend?) twenty-tive, twenty-six—” that is, in going backwards—: thus the EXPERIENCES WITH DETECTIVES. | ‘ectai than any of your policeman’ detective, | Vee.” T replied, «1 made an appointment with | “aye figure the neighbor got up on the | horseshoe form was produced, The extraord': 2 — in London, even if you take him there with leman to meet me here about 1 o'clock, | fence insome haste. but suddenly thinking of | nary whirlpools and upshots of masses of water Cuartrr I—Tur Loss. you.” and I am afraid I shall miss him in the crowd. | jis peas, he opened his mouth : t one of the bends he ascribed to the interfor- Not long ago a ‘oreign firm in London asked |" The Chief was evidently too polite to cast | «Perhaps Ican assist Monsieur,” said the old | "Gu meat) low lived rasesl, for two cents T ¢ of the central and latitudinal eur que to assist them in recovering some bonds, the | ridicule upon anything English before me, but | gentleman: ‘Is Monsieur’s friend a short srlct | could knock your cracked head over @ barn thousand years people would be * Jess of which would embarrass them very much. | from his manner, more than bis actual words, | {ittle man’ 7 departure from the general court mournin, | NEWPORT, RI was accounted for by the tact that her Roya Highness being an artiet, her artistic senslbil- | | | ity refuses to admit the fitness of mo} Zon the occasion of worldly di<play,and many other people, besides those fond of artistic effects, are inclined to accept her opinion. T Junr, 1873, - is his name Bergnet? because if 80, | and T would—” inly if this theory were corr disregard of the comfort of the g ciremstances un ler which these dsc u- | I could see that he did not hold our secret police | hy is at Monsieur’s disposition.” “Twenty-seven. twenty-cight,” interrapted | predicted that in time the American Fail w by her Majesty to pay their resp ments had been taken from them were very | in very great estimation. With this the old gentleman took off his hat,’ Reutens, “twenty-nine, thirty, thirty-one, | be abolished, leaving a whirlposl, and the e of their high birth, their distinc’ jer, #0 much so that they could hardly z eS eae bringme away with itthe gray fais> side and | thirty-two, thirty-three” 2 | Horseshoe Fall would have receded still far y other claim, is really more WEAVERS & BATES. move meselves without injuring SHAPT! TILL SEEKING. pack hair he wore; he ened himself as ight for the house, and | ther back, at the same time narrowing the bed rt of the Lord Chamber! the credit of their house. The son of the senior | That evening as Isat im the court of the | he sat in his chair, and, behold, Monsieur Berg: | efcre the Meighibor broke tor the othe titer being ic, tae eee : - hity af the o entering it, violently slammed the door behind | of the river behind it. The tunrbling over of OE es tna dmenty-five years | Grand Hotel, drinking my after-dinner demic | net was before me. 'I had ‘actually sat and | him; but Reubens did not dare to let up on the | the barrier had been and woubl he hastened be enumeration, and so he stood out there alone | the disposition of the strata of the table-land, in his own ya and kept on counting, while | in which limestone rested on soft shale. The his barning ch and pe greg yee lecture was illustrated by photographic affirmed his judgment. When he got up into | other views, and by experiments showing the erghties his wite came to the door in some | erosion caused last of sand impinging ou volves thefupho!sterer’s responsi! The crowd of ladies assembled at th before the moment of enterin ee ee a zoom ce is in i inatior ua ery low of no atuse or presure to the front, | = LOUDOM INSTITCTE. whic mt by And when the barrier is opened you shonld see | [2 Teadivess by the firet of Jane, Phe bath the strength and power of arm possessed by the partner, a you! y ‘Of age, was employed by the firm, and acted as | tasse, and smoking my after-dinner cigar, the | talked to him for upward of an hour: without ‘of confidential clerk or secretary to his | card of Monsieur Scrgoet was brought me by | having the least idea to whom it was that I was The junior partner was often obliged | the waiter, who said thata stranger wished to | speaking. Rather than be beaten again—which on the Continent for several weeks to- | see the gentleman occupying room No. 207, | | felt certain would be the case if | continued which was certainly myself. The catd -was | to tempt fortune—I at once gave in, paid M. speedily followed by the owner thereof, whe in | Bergnet the five napoleons I had lost, and begg- Hs e = Ff Wer to thee rma. a glass plate. me stones resembli| flint im- | virtuous British matron. She relies upon her | h Bttice or two on that account, he had | a half whisper told me he had come tome on the | ed that he would rubject me to no more humil- | “!Wiiy Reubens, man, what is the matter | Afmenhlate, , Some stoncs resembling flint im- om the former given. fall consent of his partner, bis | part of Monsieur ic Chicf- At first I felt sure | ration by taking me in again as to his appear- | with you?” she aid. “Do come into the house.” | Hue to thee mare influences, and it was men- ith Washington Son power to sign for the firm ‘“by procuration,” | M. Bergnet was a head clerk, or chief of some | ance atl disguise But he didn’t iet up. She came to him, and | tioned that the cut on the neck of the Egyptian | and left. ‘Then come the surly old generals | Wet as w cak a itis ape Son had, as was only tound | department in the Kue de Jerusalem, but he clung trembling to him, but he only looked into | Sphinx was probably owing to the action of | and sdmirals, with their sharp-ed, 2 Rear alin ek Out when too late, been gradually falling into | quickly undeceived me. He was, as he said, a Cuarren VI—Fovnp. her eyes, and said: sand. An artificial representation of what had | appointment, making sad havoc with face fap- 3 navies, And, unknown to iis father, used | member of the secret police in the civildepart- | ‘The day following that on which Bergnet had | "Ninety-three, ninety-four, ninety-five, | happened inthe history of the Niagane Falls RR BOARDERS.—Pour No mraces, and otherw lo muc! at ment, in other words, adetective. But anythin; twice deceived me by di ing himself, he Lat- | more utterly unlike our English conventional | set to work in earnest to and recover the pots and tulle scarves; then come the cries and | f,OR SUM nine, one hundred—go into the house, old | cluded by saying that, during his recent visit, When I learned ; f, : el © slan- ROOMS, furnished. Also, four uafur- shrieks for mercy, as these heavy-footed blun OT SOARD tne recite penny ninety-six, ninety-seven, ninety-eight, ninety- | was also exhibited. Professor Tyndall con- m iar wiser to have let alow bet be had = creditors ha! been preasing He had i derers tread ruthlessly on the long trains of m very | notion of a detective would be impossible to | bonds of which I was in searc woman, or I'll bust y he had received a hearty and almost affection | the ladies, and pin them to the spot without the | ino beaithy i ally. Geek ecter some uverdue acceptances, | im: He was a bright, dapper little fellow | from him, and, indeed, saw with my own eves, | And she went.—Danbury News. ate reception from the people of the United | power of advancing an inch towanis the place or particulars apply to JOHN W. KINSELL, Which the holder threaten. to tell his father | of, [should say, about fifty years of age, well | that he called upon M. —. he French ————_____—____- States, and in lecturing ind ving among this | for which they have been so valiantly fighting. | Clearspring, Washington county, Md ‘in Er they were nottaken up. tte «lo owed money | dressed in a close-fitting frock coat, with « hat | money-lender, as un Epglish gentleman in diffi- Lovers and the Moon. other English-speaking nation he had felt no | One would have thought on Tu Ae SnG, | Cicersaring. Weshington county. 84. at tm _ to and had even more di-creditable | that must have come from a fashionable maker, | culty’ who wanted to discounts bill ag a youn, IGwes once, and Will may ba the ouster | Exoak or tentionie the Queen's fair friends must-havedelonged to " + Wabilities which he would not for th- world his | good boots, well gloved hands, a morsel of red | Swiss who wanted employment asa clerk, an Highland woawen to ealate the ws the category of those who “have nothing to LADIES’ GOODS. * father should know of. For some time past he | ribbon at his button hole, and ‘xitogether look- | as a German who had got some bank notes | Hig The Artist Dore at Work. ——— Fins ee wear,” and so were compelled to wear it. Surely the Lord Chamberlain, who is so par- miss M mae ticular in his decrees concerning the propriety PENNSYLVANIA AVENU Of costume to be adopted by the ballet girls of = - J jemn eourtesy. English cot used his power of signing for the firm to | ing like a French military man in plain clothes, | which he wished t> get rid of quietly, as being | * *0 ; sign checks fcr sums of £10 o¢ £2) whenever | or'the head clerk in & prosperous bank. My | Molen. property; whee L tae tase Ta woes SS. ee he wanted money. His fatherhad been unwell, | first thoughts were to contrast him with the big, | these dieguises he was found ont, 1 began to be | {Me moou’s apr ; junior partner was to be absect for somé | honest-faced, heavy-looking, bilycock-hat and | lex ashamed for having been taken in. Cer- ‘Those familiar with the pictures ot London lite recently drawn by Dore and reproduced in this country in « weekly pictorial will perhaps God b hei Bachelors f o 1 . ‘ivileged to claim a kiss and a pair of | be interested in knowing how they are con- | the ope might venture upon some miki en- Has constantly on hand a fine assortment of the check-book, as well as the | policeman’s-bootswearing men [ had seen at | tainly, in some matters the old saying in the | ¥¢Te Pf ; 7 oe fe tof di yn the ladies admitted Banker's pas-book, were lefi in his hands. At Reotiand yard. Crimea, “They manage these things better in | loves upon announcing the advent of @ new | ceived. | Douglas Jerrold, the companion of te the presence ef the’ Queen. With th IMPORTED BONNETS had got so deep in the mire of debt and | — Gur coffee finished, we strolled out, and while | France,” holds good. How it was brought | ™0on to the first maiden they met. If, when | Dore inhis London tour, says: As his fellow- STRAWS, CHIPS, & — (| first seen, the moon was upon the right hand, | traveler through the ligh*and shade of London | glarmg in at the windows, the hali-nakedn we. Bim ‘ths one to make a coun breast of, til | Cine tid him the whole sory frm hese iat; | ats {Sor we huateeee tet enna oak | OF directly before the perwon, making her ac: | during two or hee season Lhad'man’ fresh | £tthes ladies in thelr mr-called ult dren done wn anier OARS ont pee Bets father at be bad done, and ask him to'pay | of which the reades bas alvcady liad navetiing: | ote Tat ake eee ee ae ceithin = week | Cusintance, fortune awaited the lucky in- | opportunities of watching the manner in which | Dot find a parallel in any court in Europe, and ¢ newest designs. Ladies CAPS and COLF $ Bis debts; the other to leave’ Lonion ani | He seemed to take in the whole afelr at once, | SM Tretee’ onty clerk ne a cerguet compli- | dividualon the ensuing month; just the con- | Dore approaches a great subject. The idea of ee ee See Et ee mates) S just received md ir Europe, and goto America. In an evil hour he | and torecollect the most trivial details respect | city of fraud in tomething or other. 1 don’t | {rary result following its appearance on the left | it zerminates slowly in his mind." We dweit on } impropriety. —London Rl ¥*D AND SAVE YOUR MoNeY. hose the latter, but before doing so, drew out | ing it. He told me thathe knew something of | think he was guilty, and I am quite sure he was through ‘a glass is ominous of ill. To insure | grasped’ many mornings ever the’ beeaktedt 0 Curious Observations | BY a one pave Eg EN | Bico'then to thecreiit of the rm. Fortunately | more than once tov look up’ the lattce th the | homie mest ose wanking iste eset deat | kood fortune one ought, at sight of her indy: | atic; and thfougi the houre of many excars | The direction of the draft through the Howac | qtatet he Rave Bai Fesured to theie uatarad * this was | . tunnel and the central shaft nas been changed | hate tn. Superior by the warm weather. During cold weather | assornmelt of @1 the draft was through the tunnel and up the | Switches. very — it om hip, to turn over one's money and wish. only a few hundred pounds, as several | way of business. In the work to be done he | as if enjoying a very agreeable holiday. But | ™ : ‘ shad fallen due a short time | seemed to determine at once what was the best | in the meantime M. Treves engaged a voung | , At the inquest upon the victims of therailway ‘mat A addition to this money he took | line of action. Of this mention will be made | Swiss with flaxen hair as his employe, and that Oe Boe wii us by land and water. Before any plan of image had been settled, Dore h of note books full of suggestive bits, made a gigantic album full of finishe ery tong end handsome w is the time to buy at f i sl be pril 2 as mometer MADAME ESTEEN'S Hair Factory, 615 13¢h at. - i 4 man said his son was ina meadow close by groups | *haft. On April 2th, the themometer ! 4 ‘with him bonds toa large amount, which rep- | presently. One of his plans involved a change | Swiss bore & very strong resemblance to my | the time of the collision, and saw the now moon | and scenes; while I had filled quires of paper. reached a temperature of 62°. the circulation near, street. ager ‘firm. These, fag shone on feccign nase | oa that pone Wie were’ mover an the alert | ilend who atten cameos lim at his master’s | Shining brightly; and having a knack of turn- | Petita petit Moiseau fait son nid. We picked | decreased to nothing, and reversed its course, RS. C. B. GILLET, ; 2 “ é ing over his money when he saw the new moon, | up straws, feathers, pebbles, clay, and bit by ible “to bearer,”’ and theretore | would be pretty sure to discover any attempt | office, and who must have been twin brother to | (®4 over 2B h ; zo | y 4 nies that he mast have pledged | made by the satne individual to disguise himoat | s subordinate agent of the police, who was very | he did so, and counted Ee caey Oy Set Bent. | Bit mands the seet. Fon wonder heel ann He had been traced to Paris, and from | in more thanone character. Upon this Mon- | clever in all the blacksmith’s work, and who Sate be ilkanon: Whke ines Park va ot mai eect ate i to Havre, where he had embarked for | sieur Bergnet laughed—iike everything else he | ad a curious fancy tor taking wax i i Legal go e by passing down the shaft and out the portal east. ‘ar Tus This change is taking place according to tem- | NEW YORK MILLINERY STORE, rature every day. During the night the dratt HAS KEMUVED upward through the shaft, and during the from 614 gh street i essions i ‘ 4 - é agg the Mandingoe, he found a ver; ilar super- | ment when for the first time you notice wings 1 as the air becomes warm. the same process NNSTLTA v America, 1 mention these, vations circam: | did, his laugh was genial, gentle and inoffen- Teron the Sriee clot ea eerase.,, Be that as | tition prevalent among them. Upon the rising | fluttering above your windows. ‘But the bird pay eal ae 9 ase hang rl on Gera 109 TSHING TOM Dee ee eg renee ee eee | eve aed ou: “Lack Be ‘fond of betting. #| aweek with M. Treves when I was shown be | Of the new moon, they always prayed ina whis- | have been at work with every peep of day— & Gownward draft give interesting Information. | ont’ nas jst returned from New York with the ts ciae tims arcu tx Gr cecal | San tor eee eee ne SS Bergnet a copy of the indorsement whieh | Pet, spat apon their hands, and then rubbed | have never paused nor slackousd. tis intuo | A light can be see entire length of the | intest styles and novelties in Millinery and Bancy = ir faces with them. The Mussulmans of | Dore gallery, however, rather than in the il- and why it was they requested me to find | within the next forty-eight hours, although he | certain bonds, contained in the safe of the | ‘heir ¢ - “ (pod eyes A eet _— ilgeat, W peraile, whether these stolen bonds | haves waracd of wil me qung to 40,1 | aeney-lecter, bere. This copy se far satistied | Purkestan shake off bo getters gins nar ye ad Hope sigieath sg chgetoreelegeetatag pees rr =e ‘were pledged; if so, where, for what amount, | will speak to Monsieur four times, and for at | me that there remained but one thing to be oa tlenth With thetr fanen tatnba bows rd tas | matthennd: cktee isn Sati it kere ik sy th fad to redeem them as cheaply and quickly as | least five minutes each time, and on every oc. | done, and that was to get hold of the originals. | Seven times a pe bees See ee Se ee lepth of 1,000 feet. The timbering is | Goods. Thankful for past favors, she solic» a con- visible about one-half anes a ing | tinusoce of patronage. a more frightful cast to the notorious ae ever before. The daylight always penetrates to | NOTICE—Bargains are now being offered im ; LINERY F Possible. | casion in aditferent costum:. If upon ons of | M. Bergnet had conducted the affair so very | NeW moon. Berkshire lasses used to go out | has been most grievously misunderstood. Hai | the bottom of the shaft, afact which has never a am : A clue—a very slight one, it is true, but still | these occasions Monsieur recognizes me, then | well that I resolved to put myself entirely in his | ‘tv the feld and cry tothe new moon: |__| the. critics have begun by expressing their as- | Heen hefore recorded. | The. FANCY Goops, ; clue—wasgiven me as to where to begin m: ill I forfeit my one hundred francs!” hands, although I doubt very much whether at New moon, new moon, I hail thet Sennen as ee sagas at he puitee, nad | Or A pcll, 4, wae Ma duet, tae bent: waa By z 00. ane Seats oh Ge cate Sete ae | “acre ee Ee wit a. | ee Bow street. the way I ect to By ali the vistas in thy body, ee le ce Soe * | Geen ths aatl—ity Poor, eae | ee Space, lene bad dcown withens ‘authority in so Saranct cota. “pelloving at. first that he was | work would have been considered quite justi- Grant this night that I may see pity he doés not give more time to his pictures. on the tu ee a —_ — i . oe Lad been traced toa bank where a very | me sate jaktng, aekatintsond Ghathe wastene: | Sabie, He who my true love is to be. his shows marks of haste; that is crude, thin, | Ay Invantion.—A Western genius has in- STAMPING DEPOT, Motorious money-lender kept his account. This | Iy boasting of the faculties he had in his own | Acting, therefore, under advice, and anxious | ,, 1" Scotland, it was only the first new moon of | and in partsscarcely half developed; the other Y vented a little machine for removing the sheils , Sndividual had the very worst of characters, | peculiar mind, But he insisted upon holding to | to get back tne bonds with as little scandal as | the new year that was appealed to in this fash~ | is s mere sketch. But here is the product of from chestnuts and peanuts. It is made to fit , : ad 17 Sevents Sraeer, he — ES leasing him, | possible, I-called one afternoon upon M. Treves | 100. To obtain success, 1t was necessary to set | twenty years; forim all his life Dore has cov- | over the nose, “The breath, fascinate te . Raving, a0 i Oo sr athar sencen, T agwok to poke as | 5d MARSA Co tae the GATE cia Ein | ODAC agains & free and the feet upon a | ered only fifty-three canvases! nostrils, furnishes the motive power’ the nuts Sesh in Lenton not inteed co principal in the | amount he mentioned. ‘At the Grand Hotel we | Swiss clerk at once admitted me to his master, | £Tound-fast stone, an or sant Case! P = Oonidbattion ef Chiaus dropped into the hopper over top, and the meat, | _febai-tr Opposite Patent Office. work, bat as instigator, receiver of the plu parted, agreeing to meet the following evening | but not before I had noticed that in the ante- Ack Poe eke rene ‘y*- | or unshelled nutis dropped into the mouth of | Sgirine OFFI Oy ye caaur have Wika Gateee ae Wik Sone, nd git Tm eer to marry man, Professor Meidinger earnestly advocatessepa- | the eater below. It is noiseless in its working, | SELLING OFF! fie Seat were thee the chiet actor fa the affair. | Atter M. Bergnet had left me, I recollected | monly like an individual I had seen in the Kue His fase thraed thle ey feats rate Chimney flues for each story of a house, | and gentlemen or ladies who have bem debarr- | gy Cost, TO DISSOLVE PARTNERSAIP. » But the accusation could never be proved | that I wanted to purchase a pair of boots, my | de Jerusalem, but who now did not wear his Let me my true love see, SAM | although they may not beas cheap nor as easily | ed from attending opera bouffe or church be- the entire stock ‘ © against him, and the consequence was that he | own being somewhat heavy far the dry climaats | uniform. M.Treves, who wars gentlomante Situniwe built ‘as those which are common to several | cause they were not allowed to “crunch” nuts, OF THE NEW YORE Bazar, | Wasa free man, whereas the clerk who had per- | and clean streets of Paris. I therefore walked | man of about 50, seemed to think l had come | —4,a i¢ gy nis Dl ‘destined to be married | "OUTS In the latter case, according to his ex- | can now experience a new pleasure. 441 Seventh ‘near the had been for some years in | as far as ashop of a shoemaker with whom Ihad | upon some business which would be profitable | ,,And if the invoker wasdestined to aid | Erricnee; tt frequently happens that when fire —_—_——————— wart-tr 0 HUMBUG. Penal servitude. dealt formerly in the Rue de Rivoli. it was | to himself, and asked me in the blandest tone | ‘“¢ apparition of her future guidman wou! started on a lower story, smoke is thrown into | Tae POWER OF SUPERSTITION, still so re- | = 3 F — getting late, and the assistants were commen- | what he could do to serve me. Idid not beat | “#it upon her before morning. Yorkshire girls | an unheated room above, may endanger life. | markable among the black people of the South, tee HOH 87. ENAWEL Cuarren [1.—Tux Scext. cing to put ‘up the shutters. [did not, there-| ong about the bush. I told him that some two berg tescaonaat dee fs’ hailing the first new moon | In two instances he has himself been awakened | is shown in the case of W: murderer | 1. ti! yoy Renn BF . i ; The Ghject of the firm that cunpinyed me to | Soe oor get what I wanted, but giving the | morths previously a young man of such a name | ?*,the year; they take care to see her in s look- | by smoke entering the room in that way. More | just tried at Mobile. After he committed | gthe beets ‘2 beautiful gloss eens acer ponds for thean was tworfold. In | susber of mo narm et the Great Tel woken | bad fed from Europe te dance that be- | [pe plane, and know they will have te remain | rarely smoke may be thrown into a lower room, | the crime he cut off the hand of the murdered | #uslin, It tm he iret piace they wantol to get the doca- | them to send me halt @ dozen palt pf hontas: | ‘s=- vig wo ue uaa (picdged ‘wiih M. Treves | tingle aa int divivers of course wis to'mce as | Hen fe 8 built on an upper story.” Thore is | man and preserved (tin quick-sllver and lime, 2,90. Manufectarere, tendets baat, but to get them back without cre- | Sime ee nai 8 Gosen alt PLP irs | coriath Conds Fepresenting such a sum of | Hatrmomal diviucrs of course wish to see as | frequently, also, a persistent lack of draft for | carrying {tin his pocket, and firmly believing 160 West street, ating any scandal or any talk. It w: Select Areeaee treasing. money. These bonds belonged to such and such | f¥ moons as possibl the upper ‘story, which cannot be referred tg} that the talisman would protect him from dant ) _!an\e-ly Baltimore. Marviend. 2 Py Mette ny SSS.. Seco UMlke | “The next morning, accordingly, before I was | «firm in London, and they had authorized me | ‘he worse luck.—Ch want of altitude in the chimney, or even a tube | ger of detection. He was caught, however, for | =e senior partner's son should not | out of bed, one of ‘Sicee male maids who | «0 pay £300 for their recovery. That if M. ten feet long, the drafton the same floor is all | all that, and is likely to be hanged in spite of PIANOS, &s. bbe known as it was that the missing property | do out of the bedrooms of every French hotel | Treves was willing to accept my offer the little Women Whoare Late. that could be desired. poesia | the tops of | the preserved hand. should be |. Tuis was the reason why | knocked at my door and told me that a person | business could be got over at once; but that if | _Itis related of a distinguished lawyer, who | the chimneys by retry, ym pipes on them ; oe ag oe pet yea an the a — from my botticr had called with shoes and boots, | not, there was a police agent outside into whose | observed that his wife always delayed ten or | does not remedy, but rather increases the above mm | as directed the day before. I , pulled | custody it would be m: a twelve minutes beft she to din- | defects. He illustrates and lains thé : @id ‘mot expect mo to doany ac. | snene iy jumped np. P iy ya iy very eagrocatie duty relve efore she came down in je illustrates and explains the above work m: ing-gown, and admitted man. | to consign him Pending an investigation before | ner, being loth to lose so much precious time | statements by a very simple apparatus, con- self but merely to employ the | He was one of those very decidedly French | the authorities of having received stolen prop- | daily he commenced the composition of a work, | sisting essentially of vertical tube, closed at the persons for the work. and direct, under | workmen that one only sees in Paris; and wore | erty knowing it to be such. which he prosecuted only while he was thus | bottom and opened at the top, made in two s2c- instructions from them, the search. | one of those curious blue aprons comi up At first the money-lender blustered a good deal | kept waiting. The result was, at the end of | tions sliding on each other, each surrounded by almost to any amount were placed at my | over his chest that are, I believe, a and asked how I dare Cry him of any such | fifteen years, a book in three volumes quarto, | a jacket to contain water, with three small Any expense that I should deem | French ve shoemaker. On cp transaction. I am afraid I said that letters had | which has met with a large sale, and is much | horizontal tubes penetrating the jacket to the incur would be metat once. All | the room he called my attention to the + | been received from the young man confessing | esteemed. ‘‘An Old Bachelor,” writing for the | interior tube at such distances from each other ee LARGE LOT OF NEARLY NEW AND &7 The managers of the Cunard line of steamers have decided to adopt a lone route A SECOND-HAND PIANUS, — the Atlantic for their vessels, to avoid | from different factories, now on a... collisions. forsale or rent on East Taras, to make! jut {ssUED— room at Hemoirs of the War with Mexico, REICHENBACH'’S PIANO WAREROOMS, i had en was to —_ — where C3 —— = as oss ne i the — Peryl =. were = a had pledged. emo graye sores this br mere, as to — openness pe a entaney BY JOHN B. KENLY. 423 Hth street, above Pennsylvania avenue, were, what amou nior parti son , Femar! ve ale may, the uments were | #! analyze the disposition which | common e ferent es. It is used by A K hed them, and to recover them for as | wassiow, but that the pendule in hotels never | given up after a ‘very short parley, and M. | leads to annoying delays. introducing hot water into the jackets, and | Published by LIPPINCOTT & CO. For Cusmen's PIANOS i aoe + Tittle as I could, but in any case to recover | went well. I then proceeded to try on the boots, | Treves received from me in French gold a sum | It appears to me that it is @ wo! placing lighted candles before the small tubes | jy? ; ms3-dueien “ _ Shem, But under no circumstances whatever | some of which were too large, others too small, | representing £300 in English sterling coin of (which can be opened and closed at will by - Second-hand PLAN Part payment ‘was the young, man who hed perpetrated the | and at last the bootmaker’s man advised me to | the realm. slides), to indicate the direction and intensity | .HE MOST WONDERFUL DISCOVERY OF | new Pianos. sine te =e fraud to to A’ nor washis | have a pair made, and proceeded to measure | The Swiss clerk disappeared that evening, 't they like to see how long | of the draft,&c. A smaller tube inserted in the THE 19; ENTUBY. XUSTAV KUHN. PRACTICAL PiaNe imi Pema. ‘hat of the firm to be brought tor- | me for them. Altogether, he was about twenty | and was never again seen at M. Treves’ offices. | an unfortunate husband will wait, great. | top will show the eftect of coutraction of the top Gri ee, traetiy ChAT @ F - ward. minutes in the room, during which he stood be- | But cursiously enough his own clerk reappear- | coated and hated, while they are aijasting | ofa chimney. Dr.8.D. Howe's Arabian Milk Cure, ite @ Cortana fee Guinn x os > gy the. rery simple process of going to Havre | fore me, moved here and there, and gave me | ed the next day, saying that it was all a mis- | their bounet-strings; it is not that they take OR CONSUMPTION. pp ing at American steam-packet | every opportunity of looking at him sideways | take, and that the police had liberated him | a wicked pleasure in causing the poor | WHAT Berect an Inpiscreet Doc.—A cou- Cures ordinary C. and Colds repairer of PIANOS and ORG: No. 638 Office, out that the absconding man had | or full in the face. When hehad tinished meas- | from custody. M. Bergnet was seen the sams | man’s dinner to cool and spoll before they will | ple of dogs were having a dispute ou the onps. 7 Semester Nee Eo eeenyenee, Orders left at Race ge — his passage in Bank of England motes. | uring me, and had gathered the various boots | forenoon to enter Lafitte’s bank. and to come | consider themsclres read to come down and | site sides of a slat fence on High street the ae » 629 Peonsylvania avenue; Nairn’ om these notes about half were traced as com- | and shoes he had brought into the bag, he | out buttoning his pocket as if there was some. e of it; is it not for reasonsthat they | Other morning, whom one of them, letting his | Dr. 8.D.Howe’s Arabian Tonic Blood Purifier, & ore, corner Fcnperivania avenue and Sth A ing from the money-lender, of whomI have | startled me by asking me whether I knew a cer- | thing more valuable than usual therein. For | keep the robuster sex dam ling. It is only for | valor get the better of his discretion, ee os Which is purely v ie, cleanses the system of | with pooh anueanon aha ane fa gpeken: (a were traced as coming | tain Monsieur wig mip Betore I answered, | my own part, I can only say that I received the | the purpose of trying their consequence with | his head through the slats, in hopes of nipping all impurities, builds it right square up, and makes | teed. hes an ual in Paris, who followed a | and before I had the slightest glimmering of | thanks of the firm that employed me, and | the hapless lords of creation. It would be most | bis antagonist. That was where he pure, rich blood. Rikeoccupation, and who, uj jm inquiry, I found the truth, the man pulled off a very natural- | with those thanks a check which took three fig- | unwomanish to be ready to go out exactly at | mistake; the head went though nicely, but | For “General Debility,” “Lost Vitality,” and ‘Dore a very similar reputation. further suc- | looking black wig, as wellas ane ually natu- | ures to write. the same moment with one’s husband. He | would not pull back. The other pup, seeing | broken down constitutions. 2 eceded in out that between scoundrel | Fal-looking i beard and mustache, ———— -+ 200+ ——___ would not know he had a wife, if she were to | his toe in chancery, gen A commenced eat- “1 Challenge the Nineteenth Century” umber one in London—to whom {shall give | and there stood my friend, the employe of the An Experiment that Failed. giudy his convenience so far. As for the | ing up the front ot his Road, sad ‘cats: F avacy piste is cok eens Jn Pate whom Paha at gudrel number | police secrete im the civil department. He was | I am not sure whether [did right or wrong. | touble which sisters and daughters inflict, it ie | There was “music in the air” about that time, Price @1 per bottle: or six betes fer 9 Thott Earisg “hom {shall call Mons. Treves— | amused at the amazement depicted on my | tamsure that I meant right. ft wes te cigs | all one thing. , The creatures are only. trying on | and the yelping brought the Javenile owner to | gis v1 Sessoms socaman ods 4 there existed Sremsional dusiness relations. | countenance, but merely said = “Au revoir, | wise. Believing implicitly that the bending of | brother or father the powers which they are | the rescue. He took the situation at once, and | 5) yheicele and rea Pennsylvania ave: Bat whether money furnished by these | Monsieur; you will admit that Ihave won one | little human ¢ igs should ‘accomplished di - | ultimately to exercise in full vigor on a hus- | freezing on to that dog’s tail, and bracing | andatretallby ©” © Hands those docuntents now guotts, ip whose | point out of four toward gaining the bet.” Be- | ing the early stages of theirgrowtiniconstaded | baud. The ‘natur of the critter” is to give | against’ the fence, he Sulled his level Geek Z, D.G.uMax, 627 Pennsytv 4 hands those documents no ng ly , conclu ania avenue, i ni w were, and how I e L could reply he had gone. + | t0 commence on Vieve. My intention was to | rouble to mankind and it matters little on | For a moment it was doubtful which would | W.G.Dvcxerr,corner Pean. and 224 st. Was torecover them, and yet keep the whole os ive her a lesson in firmness. Accordingly { | What particular kind of relative the instinct | give way first, the tail, the head, or the picket; | J.P. Miavmx 40o., near Treasury Deparuncnt, affair quiet, was more than | could see my way Cuarree V.—Tue Wacen within | operates, nt with s final surge, the boy brought away | }\. Davis & Co..léth and L streeta, {o; and in miy difficulty, ax a matter of course, | It may be supposed that I was naturally a box with chestnuts, and placed it within —_______. the pup minus the biggest pert of toth cars, | 3 BM th and H streets. + © Fappiled to Scotlant yard, and got ousor the | somewhat out of temper with myself for having | er Teach, saying, “Now, Vieve, dear, you! ‘Tar rieasant LITTLE NURSERY RHYME Of ‘The first jum) that de 4 1 > : there of the detec ee one OF the | somewhat out of temper yeelt for having | must not touch them without my permission.” | «Tam-Tor tan pie ee oye lamp that thaf dog mate when Joose, | best officers tecti pe er | allowed myself to be taken in so soon after Berg: “Well, den, I dest T'll not,” was the Feply, ‘om-Tom, the piper’s son,’ “Who in the most Tas gumething over twenty feet, and withacoi-, 5 SQ OHOMACKER 200.8 Ye was the first_and 1 hope it will be the | Bead etd Tag or at every | Niile the ‘brown-eyed three-year-old gazéd | pig’ fied is tee exelsva po roame te Coe am bon mel ep a ‘streets south wont oe ly pam hf a By Dd prmined res lution to look closely at wistfully toward the sweet temptation, toate mgt cecal mae ie one its of another Tom. F- rth Bridgewater ress. F. ». WLING, 44 and Q 4 — ee Seas ng | nao wae | one shoul come near me for the next two | her six or eight. —— ish, hana run” off with so: AY. ——— A. HAFHERT, North jol and H streets. GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES. Rats Seonperinece coast ts -_ | days. Not ee me to win M. Bergnet’s *In my dear ‘ittle potit, f% oo!” ly else’s intended wife, went to Bay City ALUABLE Styptic.—Sheets of household D.P.Hictixe, 301 Pennsy ja ere. and Si st ‘Te — es Meat the man sent suc by’ the London police, | bimout in disguise. ‘Bat stil mo Englishes | Went © My work, and labored with alt the | tere got married. The gallant Tom isdescrib~ | paper, of moderate thickness. are steeped ina |W. gerlorty overall other have i although recommenled specia'ly for the work, | likes to get worsted in a wager mane ee tea | cheerfulness of an inventor who is pretty sure Sided Undividesl, six feck ton teeny sans, | sheet inten regnated with t atte my here, Would never carry out the business. He was an | larly when the loss of it indieates thet he is uae | U's machine will be a success. ‘wom "etough: to be his mt tnetul in cases of ae atiegaage OL». old;”” the “woman was old enough to be his | dried in the air. It is most usetulin cases of | NOaa6s PAPERHANGINGS. > Upright fellow as ever breathed, and | so observant as he might bon Whee ae vMTLnE, the afternoon it occurred to my mind | ‘Tnoiher,” and the deserted party atwers te external hemorrhoids, used as closet Tru Sr. Uibete no dost have’ braved ity chambermaid answer img Dell Teena | that thore eight nuts were lasting a remarkable | moter,” and the d diminutive: rakiseclesking | portion being placed In’ tas rete ork | eo NOW OPEN aT danger in order to carry ont a pol - . time. Assuming my blandest tone fur the oc- | ” a him, half . Berg- my i c ach use, =e * apes im, bal expecting that it was again M. Berg- | casion I asked. individual.” The latter pursued the erring ai after each use, also in excoriations around the MARKRITER’'S, “Eigse iT PIA: iP hukos bene gew chasing : is, however, onl: ne on» | errant couple to the train that was about leay- | anus caused by the acid discharge of di ‘instrument out, : fo Amrica, ‘and hal | to be an idea, for the man waa the same ‘ae hal | ..XiCYP,b8¥e vou eaten all your chestnuts?” | fiptor Way City, roaring dimoncelatten tira | imehinarens Thee tes cuscuarge of dia op: | 8°.4397thstrots between D and Watroot, | chasing ie, ect etre Piasis for : name aud photograph | taken my clothes to brash them half anhour| . ‘Come here. ee i Wh is taking away My woman to marry her.” In | ping the bieeding from cuts, and 4 superficial Eight doors above Odd Fellows’ Hall, r : i have no doubt that he would | before. But this did not prevent me, as I went | many me: ere do you get 80 | the evening the twain, made fast in the bonds | €xcoriations from blows or falls. Many other | PAPERHANGINGS of new and stylish designs of | ©; oa Agoat, | FBGR Shed for au Opinion ae to where he | as be was © policengeet use, <cavehd Gate emouto” my petit ou | ceived. with a vociferous welsome'n tho raytor | ert Herald o' Meaioh wat? ecu WO Our Feud | the beet fabri and fab, siccted with due Regard = a ; | 5 a ve you <n ‘coder fo laa ‘ae ae wae tueeee: [eens me. In at first,” J said, ax [examined ber fainty re- | “@ucking im the engine pond. THE YOUNG WomEN who work in the Lowell won | A S4tLRoap elfen 4 . he was asked what would be the best an = ceptacle.’ How A DROWNING MAN PEELS is the subject | (Mass.) mills seem intelligently bent on havi ¥ let ly - means Of recovering them. he seemed quite at | London, which had been sent under cover to ““O Vieve! have vou been disobeying me, get- | of a statement made by Dr. Hoffman, who nar- everything asitshould be. On the ist instan' a lens Wak todo oc what to advise. ‘Then | my bankers in Paris, in which Rouse the young | coma oat Drldgc dante te las etn ed oe ae Deer ea » ltke the rest of his t ® I have. 5 e re] rot su] 3 x er detectives | man wasaclerk. I'am afraid he must have at are you sure?”" Trine Be ‘aeecriytion ar Tae eee | wok pnd th otd thee ee 'y girls out of Proc employment. drowning is curious: “+1 was greatly astonished | Another of its benevolent Tenses ney to a bl yard—at least all these that I | thought me mad, for, instead of 0; Rave saw—be was th= policeman all over. Al- letter ined see stared into his face determined to see | sca Neue feat dressed tn. pi: ‘ e,” Teried, with the feelings of | at at peed tre take care, hours, doubt whatever as to what Kis calito ee | Lorene Ne hs nanee detect any likeness | one who discovers hie invention to bea fatfare, | Mi teiamper of events that Rotuing that | whose mothers aré engaged in the taihac Wanke favorite costume was a billycock Caption, Gesgauma mae eeee eaen fd “this makes poor mamma feel so sad. I do | occurred during childhood was evident but | ing could be better and could artcutaway cout. wwl drab trosene aye apts ot mann re = ughly er | Bottke to punish you, but what must do? I | everything which has occurred since f was more forcibly demonstrate the wise intelligence ‘ mie wel ace ‘sticimct, poy ong = by Be ager lle ed Lo — mast ave my little girl obey me. Oh! what ped —— ears old ap) before me as (ew dol a prevail among the mass of the around his waist. Morethan | that the latter was not again try! = photographed.” When he was reseued, the well operatives, $F Ghce Bs we went along the streets [heard cab- | in. However, 1 wandered forth’ deternivet Tee dinner looked reflective. Doctor The sudden transition from the “rs say to each other, | not tobe caught again. But 1 py * she Presently said in solemn | beatific state in ts wetneree the dry land | “4 BRoNzE Imacx, mammi labeled ‘Benton,’ erected ‘as very s00n | tones, ‘+i dess 'oo had better seemed to have a bad effect upon me, and made | Smo Jcngratfon np the fe oe: ot Louis, in ? Sos Sergeint Henry: who is ue going | taugh that my own mother-wit was as nothing | me’. her sunemain was commeny ‘of the - ‘They are offered st par in currency, and yield © | Repent ecee-dMiars resume: | Tagecmmraredtohatotm Premed tim | oho er afte 0 tle one, | me tneent to what was'gang on aun | srmimurienothe jms Sannin oo mare apy etgaanainemnepap ‘ clothes “I sent him with letter of in- | self was that we were to mect after breakfast, | Stal. J acted upon scision att ft mY | De Quincey out of hie own experience. 5 designer: Mise Harrict ee ge ‘The bonds are s first and only mortgage on the oe ae , , 3 had x ea elds mney variety. made | that be wasa Yorkshire gentleman wishing 1S | Palace itoval ay tot MWhobee ace of the | the frat thing that caught my attention wasa | CARBosic AciD iv tax Homan Bopr.—The request for its removal, “on the ground that PICTURE bein ey Prana enh chem d 4 Nien ent or btw ama Mim lat once, | would wait for the other, on one of the chairs | tones .°f 4 Newspaper, containing this sen- pe A Bet | Acid exhaled in @ given | It is neither the likeness of the man, nor an Biareat Phased everage 25,000 acres to each mile of track. 5 rie o r tence : yression of the idea i = tl been the sub- | &xp! it was intended to com- " So aaake ace of ima inthe | towed Mwhen the hick stack 2" thse'l | quite ght, tHougt, Mattention or megtact | ee ot somo curious researcher by Herr Auber, | memorae:* ior Sale Rite ; ‘Rings, Screw ‘They are iemned to from 919 to j » throws before ai , is, the result of whi it ned ins to is appent being — = a cafe, 8 then, am overcome, eu at “ a iad be Pay: ‘ ope etx aa ith od sae fer arp fae = “4 f ould — Galignani. w the el itis stated, = ‘clams oaks oa —— —J 7, we = oe should | awaiting further hght.—¥% tional Baptist. = which the subject tor ox fan pao was ag = hoo care wed fap Hot Saxp Batus.—A therapeutist of London | carbonic acid, was steadily passing, while the somi-ennwal interest en the often is 1 thinks ke has an infallible cure for | PToportion of carbonic acid in the air on lea vit GOLD S meacrizeae | madtaate ectiatatine etter | Greta tated ayer eamtaaay osm siecteenie at catenin, this mode of treatment. consists, ‘especially, oe asaltof barium. Thus it wou 19-2 All Marketable Btocks and Bonds recetved tn ex- quarters at one of the Ike the hot water bate panppress perspiration this a oe ‘two JREST FOOD FOR INFANS— TH. &. i. | SB8RS*, Without expense to the investor, at thelr ‘omelette | like the hot water bath, but rather increases it; exhaled from the body of a full- Birtoce Vict (apie ti | highest ourrent prices. tI might as well see what could | and cutlet of the waiter, s sce iy very old | 22d another advantage skin, that it must Sood. F dove on the other; and the morning after | gentleman came up and’ seated himself at the | 40es not! wo 5 EH. che rales. al in the capital of France I went to calling for & demie-tasse, and | tent, o Diss Mother's Milt ‘de vm. and sent ap my ese, ingto read a copy of the Fizare which | ts ae °s Higuly bourlehing " asa ular favor to be allowed was 5 f 8 ae & 5 j e i z : Defore Iwas usheref up to the astra iny country. | ot easy r © man who has such power in Parle? of making ma ac. bony fold him, although without giving names, at my Soon t my business was to recover bonds oe EY

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