Evening Star Newspaper, October 30, 1880, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ker, the organist of St. Aloysius, . and Prof. Gloetzner, who succeeds ze & new chotr. Siephen’s church the 49 hours’ devo- menced on Sunday morning and Tuesday morain sydn’s Im- eing sung at the rneement, . oss being celebrated at the close. Rev. Thomas Harrison, the noted revi VWalist, bas sume his labors in Pailadelphia at the Sc . BE. eburch. —A Way suggests that a sultayie opening for many ch nid be, “Oa, Lord, have mercy On Us mt ‘able singers. —The revival of Carlist ultramontanism in Spain ts said to be assiste1 by the arrival of dhundreds 0. Jesuits and friars from France. =—The New York Sunadvises the Untversal- to « Uind. the opposition to their ular te) -< having practically dled ou: in orthed >. churches. —Anecenttic Dut pious man has ballta house on posts forty feet high tn Oregon, t:\ crder that he heaven. —The Ce tral Methodist, a southera paper, Geclares 1) +i it will not exchange with any Paper tu the south that “habituauy abuses the Moth, TO wilt any paperin the north whica habitualiy «vases the souvh.” —tThe company appointed to revise the autho - Bdversion of the Old Testament had fin J3hed thelr first version of Job corr odthit uf Proverbs far as the twelftt chipier Piymaton, “may lve nearer When they early this month. —The fit tent makes fun of the New Fork Overrer for saying that Bishop Watttingt Maryland fs in aitenlance at the Ept ¢», eneral Convention, and ¢xlls attention ©) the fact thatthe coxd Bistop has deen dear fr more than a year. The ‘+o Fork Observer says that minis ters are 10’ deadheads, and that they do not ask for des (2 -4d tekets on ratiroads or stean. boats. if udits that “if free passes are offered ihem it i; Weeause agents belteve It will pay to Offer ther. It ts, therefore. purely a maiter of taste whet er to accept them or not.” —Dean > ey is in favor of permitting Noncento + ‘sts, under certain restrictions, to ches for thelr own religious ours which would not interfere service. He hag aszertained +! not be IMegal todo this, and he stuinster Abbey. nee, published tn Chicazo, with great earrestness for a “new respect to Sunday services. It necessity of adjusting the methods of dof religious instruction in the segue, especially In thts country, tances of tae time. ‘To matntaia ‘vance of the Last Day of the Week ts fou. to be next to “impossible it says —The encyclical letter of Pope Leo XiIT of th 20th of Sept., contains the following decree:— “We ordain, therefore, that on the 5th day of the month of July, fixed by Pius IX of happy re be Inserted fn the calendar ot ond Universal Church, aud annually J, the feast of St. Cyril, and Si wh the Ofice of the Double Mmor «: Mass proper, Which the Sacred oon ofthe Rites has approved.” hist'mo.d Keligious Herald reates A Virginia Baptist f-w Sundays ago, aft r asklaz two t bers to lead in prayer, and their heads, said: “Well, itwo sit at the doors with your canes a keep the dogs out white I And they did £0. d Sankey are Dow on their way to ype. When they returned from they were invited to go ‘0 >, and they promised togo some ir Way out they will stop in salt aot perhays Cheyenne. ‘They expect s:u Franeciseo by the 1st of Noveabor. vi New Orleans have urged o there, and they may do so tes part of the winter. me knows that Charles Kingsley to carrying church stareh into When be was te this country of a Massachusetts Eotscop2l ho wore bis pulpic manners to nigned his grace before meat as if litany. In the morning as the Mr Kingsley’s partly open door, 4 out, witha most caurehly tntonins. ear Brother So-So—I havelost my Yazor str.» —W hat ts a poor fellow te do? —be :ecent complaint of Dr. Morris in the Episcop 1 coavention that young men were not fortheoa. \o carry oD chureb missions at the wed by the Catholle Review to importance of a eel:b 1 \ reis ought not to marve! the dearth of missionaries, siaca it xpected that a man with 2 fam- y in prospective, will long to elf inLO & Femot+ Section where a fair chance of growing up in al wildness. To ask 4 man ‘d woultt be as cruei a3 to insist ter. with a wife and children, oner dying of the s:ail- is argutr ¢ departure The the following incident: mmon observation ta regard to the 1 convention that there was Party divisions, as between " visible t7 aitarian element, ifested itself im a milid effort Litany so as to have the word “Trinity ~ omitted, but it was unsuccessful. A Yemarkable dep irture from precedent was visi- Die in the fact that nothing was sald about Titualism f'om which it may be reasorably inferred thet that element is no longer in the €ategory of the “things that disturb our peace.” —Bisho) Da Hamel, of Ottawa, In Canada sending of Romin Catholte ntestant Schouls, and carries ota so fat a3 to threatea Catholic patronize such sehools with the Sacrament. The report on ed- be to weatio read before’ our Eptscopal Convention exhibited a lke hostility to all Schools wi.ich teach other than its own re- It even went further, and practice of sending the sons of o colleges where no religion is sedthe establishient of a hall of the, doctrines of the Epls- ules not ‘eport, children instructed oaly at ols. It will be seen. therefore, viian Roman Catholic Bishop and padans oecupy sudstaattaliy the r this school questica. Exch o control the education of its a. ot of using Isolated bits of Scripture 4S texts for sermons without regard to the con- textis bad. It makes the Bible merely Addie ou which any tune can be played,” and done more than anything else t> make the whole matter of preaching contemptibie in yes of many persons. A gross example of rsion of language is noted In a . Where aSunday di tet Their paramours were desirable young meu.” The designed public reading. was “roundly applauded.” e whole ehad been quoted, would have not been acceptable. » of Revelation upon him who takes its to, the Word of God, should not The use of “motio texts” is legitimare where there 1s a striking congrulty, Mthess 2.2 beauty; Dut, then, the preacher lat the words are’ taken out of relationsilp, aud used by ac- - The frequent use of motto , !8 perilous, and the pervertion of ated in the text referred to s Inexeusible.—Phila Tunes. nh Sunday has been attacked In its Oa the 1ith of October a meeting *y Society” was held in the Roya Hasse, mtats- t . presiding. opening the proceediags, sald utmost sympathy with the present nh asa Church of Scotland. The ciety was to make the Sunday ne Dest welfare of the community. i} Umat society was cpposed to the ‘the church on the observance of "he badlooked up the Confession } could ad nothing that interfered sence af the meeting. When the ent to have gardens and galleries 8 to the pubile tt was with tha these places our tofling mititons their ‘bearts elevated above the ( their daily existence. and in his tld not interfere with the Sunday ‘w-openers of one of the city “ould really be more in number than julred to keep open the museums of Edinburgh. Tratiss Dr. Kur EATMENT OF Vaccine MATTER.— * to @ valuable method of preserving ‘irus, Dy means of which tt retaing its Active py perties for weeks and months, after having ters: collected In capiilary tubes. Ac- “ts cordtny splan, the tube. when filled. 1s laced j: 2 quill, and surrounded by = foe ‘d sarc seh agis used for drying writing, and then © aled up; the tudes are depo- @:mu phal, whieh is algo filled with fork 2 Se: ted a sani the y the purposed = in question being at- oe the te to the equable temperature it usually in am Italian medieal journal. calls | EXPERIMENTS WITH THE GASTRIO JUICE. —The Want of occupation ap) The Census Fiends of the West, {Boston Post.1 Thank Heaven we got back from the west alive. We stopped at Chicago fitteen minutes to walt for a train and were put down oa the sts of three different census men. That svae | bight we arrived at St. Louts As we stepped from the cars we were surrounded by a crowd of wildly excited men. So was every Passenger that alighted. We roared out thit no power On earth Could Induce us to hire a hack, but that didn't beat them off. They madiy de- mnarded our name. We couldn't understand it, Dut thinkiug we had better pursue a con- servative policy, refused to give It, and at- tempted to force our way through the crowd. They resisted, and it was only by suparbumaa exertions and the lea’ of our coat tails in somebody's grasp that we got into the street. Then we started cn a run up the street aad they pursued. We observed other men flying, as we were, before howling [3 of pursuers. Terrified and breathless we reached the hotel and the clerk, whom we knew, to pro- tect us. Heexplatned that they merely wanted our name on their census list. On hearing this we consented to be counted. We gave one man our name and he left. Then another steppod up. “What do you want of our name?” we ask ‘ that other man just took it.” “On,” was the reply, “he’s the noon census. I belong to the 1 P.m. census crowd. We were telegraphed that. C.le go had star.ed a census at 12:30 10 beat our noon census, and so we started another, later.” We gave him cur name and then another man tackled us. He was the 2 o'clock census man.and was one of a corps working to beat a census be- gz inChicago at 1:45.He thought his corps wou d e able to show an increase of three per cent over the 12 o'clock census. Seveateen men, each working to beat a census started half an hour ahead of himin Chicago, took oar name before supper. Six tackled us at the table and four when we came out from the feast. Driven to desperation, we retired to our room, and 88 Soon as We were alone a fellow cra vied trom under the bed and demanded our name for the census. We were pretty mad, but gave ivtogetridof him and gotinto bed. As we drew the clothes overt us we heard a rap at the door. Investigation proved the rapper to be a census taker. We profanely answered eigut of them at Intervals of twenty minutes and then refused to notice more. Three men came in on us over the transom and then we nailed that down, and six got ladders and came in at the window. At last morning came, and after Sesing nine more census men we got to the depot, to leave town. They swore we shoulda’t go, and a crowd surrounded us. But we were desperate and fought our way to the train. They followed us into the cars and begzed us to Stop till the next train, so as to be counted for the ¥ o’clock census. But we refused. As we left, we asked: “Do you expect to beat Chicago?” And the reply went up: “We'll beat it If it takes 7,000,000 Inhabitants to do it! Every hourly census 1s showing 10 per cent increase over the last, now. The Medical Month. (AN ODE FOR OCTOBER) "Tis October, Now the medical young students ali xet ready For the session, not 80 steady as perchance they ought to be! But with neither dons nor proctors, the} turn out expert concocters Of our physic times loved a ‘ul doctors, thouzh they some- spree.” They will learn the bones and muscles, and have stout mnemonic tussles, As each word another husties—ah, those anatomic naines And they'll study meningitis, measles, fever and bronchitis, For your medico’s delight is to know all about owr frames. From their studies when they atart’em, let us hope _ that nought wili part em, Till they've learnt secundum artem to doall that in them lies 3 Though ars /onga vite brevis, yet to win a short re- vrieve is n ficy' aii at, to relieve is what a sage physician preparations for the stiif exam- inations, May they win congratulations on attatnine the M. D. Perici, Some Physicsl Fruits of Idleness, [Chamter's Journal. } The mind should be always occupled: it ts Strengthened and preserved in a he wihy s' at: by work; whereas It decays or becomes impov- erished by disuse; or, what {seven worse, since it 1s impossible to keep the brain ab3alu aly at be profitably employed, Tise to the it is to women ‘especially that the plies. Young men are forced to get their living whether they like tt or not; but a large number of young ladies in a family have absolutely nothing to do. Those Drought up in the country have this advantaxe, hey may always make work for them- ae the village children may be tauzht and otherw on them, but ahealthy Douy aad benefactor. ise cared for; bringing notonlya Dlessing miod to the in town the condition of middle-class girls is to me pillable. They are too genteel wo foilow auy cccupation; they are often too many fa a family to assist In domestic duties; they have returaed home from school with some very poor accomplishments; their knowlelge of French and German Is not sufficient to allow them to converse in those languages; and muste just enough to indulge in a doleful song or piay badly on the plano. They dawdle thrjurh the gay in a Ustless way, and fall victims to a thousand Htue ailments which the doctor 13 Supposed to put rignt by physic. And tha most curlous tning is that should the instin sts Of the girl force her to put some of her enerzies Into use, she 13 as likely as not to b3 thwarted by the mother. I am a dally witness to this; and when young ladies are brought to m2 for advice, the invariable story 1s that they are overtaxing their strength; the maternal in- stinct being so perver.ed that it his become with many the oelief that every movement means fatigue, and absolute rest 18 the way to iosure healih. It is against this very erroneous view that Iam now preaching. These mothers do not come to the doctor for advice, but come to dictate to him; and they say: “I want you, doctor, to in- Sist upon my daugoter not playing the organ at church, for {t ts too much for her: or haviag that children’s class once a week, for she 13 always ill after i; butorder her to have her breakfast in bed, and a giass of port wine about llo’clock.” It is ais fanelful care on the part of parents which is so lufurious; for tas very energy of young peopie would command tham to occupy themselves. I do not know that girls are worse than boys in — Of idleness; for probably the latter would not work obliged, and even for them an oceap: goed quite apart from that at which tn: their dally bread. They All Know. (Detroit Free Press.] Once in a litetime you meet a man who will admit that he doesn’t know all about a horse, but he may come around next day and ciatm to hhave been temporarily insane when le made the mission, AS a Tule, every man knows exactly what ails @ horse, whether anything ails bim or not, and can’ point out a dozen Instances where Nature could have improved on ber work, no matter how well she did it. Yesterday @ horse which had been looked over by the Fire Department and rejected on account of size, was tled to a post on Griswold Street. He was as sound as a dollar, not even showlng a wind-puff. Pretty soon along came two lawyers, and one of them remarked: 4 By 4 Such @ nice animal as that is foun- ered.” “Yes, and I can see that he is wiad-broken to boot,” was the ready nse. Then the cashier of a bank halted and took a Hie was golug away, look at the horse's teeth. when a mail-carrier asked: {How old do you call him?” “Some men might buy him for 12, but they oo ‘"t fool me. That horse will never see 16 again. ‘the best judges had called him 6, and his dpe had — a partie a month older. mali-carrier fei animal’ Lis spine, and observed: Sige “He's got the botis, or I’ eo 8, ‘mM no juige of ‘Then a merchant halted and surveyed tne horse's leg’s lifted its troat feet, plughed its MisBeen & preteen be: bretty good stepper in his day, but to the crows nome ma ie bes ‘The next man was a r. It took him mind that about five malnutes to make a tis sweeny was vading it, although poll- Pal heaves and glanders, were resent tat a bai “What is sweeny?” queried an innocent bo0t- black who had made up his mind that the norse had liver SENN ae “Sweeny?” repeat bookkeeper —“look at the way he carries his tall and learn what ‘sweeny Is. ae Oh, no,” putin another—“sweeny affects the ea” i. not.” sald an insurance ih @ guess Sweeny affects the lungs.” se: Fa in cried a broker,—“you mean the Aud they were jangling over it when theowner Of the horse oun an him away. ‘on the acidity of the gastric juice in man, and of his observations oa comtnuntoated oy Me to "ne Froncs ‘She Freac! Academy of Sciences. M. Richet has found that the mean acidity of the whether pure or mixed with nts to about 1.7 grammes in 1,000 lguid; that the quantity of fluid ia tue. Ug tee Joaquin Miller in Wall Street. THE POET'S RISE AND FALU a8 a sPavcuaToR. (The Novemer Californian. j Last spring I received a letter from the editor of the chief London magazine asking me io write him an article to be entitled “A Week tn Wail Street.” i knew nothing whatever of Wall street than, I resolved, however, to oblige my friend. I went 1uto Wall street at once to get the desired information and experience, This was six montus aga. I have just got back. I have not yet written a line of that ar Ucle. But I have material enough to write a book bigger than Macaulay’s “History of E.g- land.” I know alii want to know about Wail street. And, if you will pardon the digression, I may add that | am getting bald-headed. Finding but littie interest in this great mael- strom of excitement without taking part, I, under the adviceof my broker, bougat a little Wabash. I bought Wabash because it wa3 the first stock on the list which I could distinguish from the mass of two hundred names. And I came to remember it because I had been bora on its banks, asit were. Indead, on the very ‘S$ Of the Wabash River I have seen my father furrow the field for corn tn the spring, | while my mother followed atter, dropping the corn in the furrow; while three little boys tod- | died after, myself of the number, and covered the grain that lay in the little squares of the mellow earth. And so it was with a touch of tenderness that 1 bought Wabash, and became one of Sno eager pariy holding on to the tape, watching, waiting the turn of fortune’s wheel. She did not betray me. My stock began to move upward from the first. It was not so dull now. How interesting it all was! Icailed the Click of the “ticker” the pulse and heart-beat of the nation. If the land was healthy and prcece cas the pulse beat high and buoyant. f the land was threatened with drouth, short crops, or misfortune of any kind, the pulse was low, feverish and dull. It was like a poem. 1 had now an interest in the prosperity of the land beyond a sentiment. I was a part owaer in rhe one hundred thousand miles of raliways in america. From that day forth I studied the ography of my country as never before. My ite uptown room in the fourth story was lined with maps of American ratlways. in le3s than a week I could quote the opening or clos* a es ot half the stock on the list. ow patiently I held on to the tape along with the otber timid and hopeful little lambs! We would exchange opinions, encourage each other, and lay great plans for the future. We becam3 very coufidential, our little knot around that “ticker,” and when one of our set lost money he had our honest sympathy. They were Pleasant days, these first, for stocks went up steadily, and it seemed at last, when and where I had least expected it, I was to make a fortune without either careor toll, Iam perfectly cer- taln that in those few weeks I grew to b2 a bet- ter man, At last I closed out. I had in my hand more than ten thousand dollars. I had not invested s0 many hundred.» What scribe had ever been so fortunate! Stocks stilladvanced. Itseemed as if they would never stop going up. Isat down and tried for days to decide what to do. Coolly, deliberately, and after as much and immature thought as I am capable of, I went back to Wall street with my money, Ihad no use for ven thousand dollars. I had great use for fitty thousand. J hug myself in satisfaction now to remember that I thought not so mach of myselt as of my friends at this time. I could get on with that sum well. But away outon the great, gold shore of the vast west sea I wanted to build a home—a city. I would gather about me the dear spirlis of oid. In some sweet spot where there Were woods and cool waters,a warm suo and pro- life sol!, we would meet and build a clty—acity of refuge—where every Bohemian might come and have a home, rest, peace, plenty, so long as he or she should live or care to stay. I even drew up 4 plan of tay clty, and framed a few briet laws for 1g government. I named tt Utopia, On returning to Wall street I chose three dit- ferent brokers—one a “bull” house, one a “bear” house, andone a “conservative” house, By tunis I hoped to get all sorts of opinions. 1 got them With my “bears” I sold St. Paul short. There Was talk of rust, grasshoppers, ralas, floods, St. Paul would tumble to the ‘center. It ‘had already advanced from eighteen to sixty-nine. sold at sixty-nine, seventy and seventy-one. With the **buils” I bought Pacific Atal No danger of grasshoppers on Pacific Matl. No Grouth, no floods or rust! Pacitle Mall had fallen 110m sixty-two, and would surely go back up to eighty. I bought Pacific Mail, and sat cote to wait for it to go up and St. Paulto go own. Things began to move my way. I began to Work visorously on the plans for my city. I had arranged to bring my dear old parents away from the far west wilds of Oregon, where they had dweit for a quarter of a century. Taey had never seen the great city, Now they Should see it, hear the mighty preachers, and sail on the Atlantic, How lite widened out! I had an interest now in every ship that salled. The flow of money to or from the land was to me of vital coacera. All commerce was as rich with inter: to me now as the poetry of Homer. At 10 o'clock sharp I found inyselt holding on to the tape, waiting vo see if I had grown richer or poorer througa the night. All day, Ul the hammer fell, [stood with my fibger on the pulse of comme Hiow did 1 come out? On! i, 1 was of St, Paul and long of Pacific Mall. I ex, Pacitly Mall to go up and Si. Paul to go down. Tuey did, and I had $21,000, But that was not enough to build a city with. I neld on. One day It was ramored that the rust was not So bat fu St. Paul afterall It began to start up: Pacific Matl began to shoot duwn. It was Said the Chinese had established an opposition line. 1 tell you it takes a big mau to sit oa two. benches ata time. Ten to one he will spill himself Uetween the two just as sure as he at- mots it. I ome St, Paul and yougnt more Pacific Vall to no purpose. They kept rigat ‘n I got out of Pacitic Mail at the lowest figure it touched, and bought Wabash. [ began to flounder. and got frightened. I sold and bought, and bought and sold. 1 frequently saw in tne papers that I was gettlag rica 1a Wall Street, and kept on working like a beaver. Tag end wes only a question of time, One day my broker took me by the sleave and led me like a lamb as 1 was aside. My fun was Over. Acd Utopla ts indead Utopia. No one with so little money ever eatered Wall Street under better advantages. Allm2n were Kind and good. I thinknoman there ever at- tempted (0 mislead me, But it is simply tm- Possibie to make money there, 1ud keep it. Let Ine Mmentlou here that daring my s!x months there I patd my brokers in commissions eleven thousand four hundred and twenty-ilve dollars! ‘Toese commissions alone will devour any possi- bie profits. Of course, itis not a pleasant thing to adatt One's seit Deatea., But if this briet iitstory of iny venture in this dangerous land wili dimta- ish at cll that tired and anxious army of tape- holders who waste tueir shekeis, their days and their strength ia vain walulag—wiy, I wililngly bear the reproach, And. after all, L lost bu! ilttie, having bat lit- tle to lose. Anil learned so inuch, having so much to learn. ort ted The Genesis of Clothing. Clothiug was derived, no doubt, partly from the development of ornaments, beiag originally entirely oraamental, a8 a large proportion of it sullis, even among ‘ourselves, and partly from gradual modifications of belts and such aczou- Uements, which served a useful purpose waen ut round the body as convenient appiiancas ‘or hanging thingsto for carriage. A pozket is @ luxury which a savage does not possess. He has io sling his ittle necessaries to his belt, or sccure tliem tn the lobe of his ear, or carry them, to his embarrassment, fn hishand. Even in Japan the men are obliged to sling their to- baceo pouches and pipes from their dalts by Iueans of silken cords and the beautlruliy carved Lvory buttons or netsukes 89 well known in European coliections. They have pockets only in their sleeves, and these are insuifisient. ‘Tae ctinple ciacture is the sole clothing of the Andamen Islander. A bunch of pandanus slips is added tu front in a further stage, and eveat- ually a complete encircling fringe 13 reached. When paper cloth (tappa) has been invented, or woven material, Unis 1s sudstituted for the fringe, and a klif 1s the result. In som> parts of Great Britain dress has not advanced beyond Ubls stage, or rather the primttive form of dress has been adopted as acuriosity. Tae sporran robabiy represents the original dre3s, tue unch of gruss of the Andaman Islander, now worn over the kilt instead of as originally next the skin. Ata further stage, the kilt belag found uncomfortable, iL was fastened togetner at one spot between the legs. and hence arose the idea of trousers, which, through the baggy Turkish tnexpressibles, gradually developed into their present form. ‘The simple cloak of skip or tappa developed gradually into coats and various more convenient tight-fitting gar- ments, but in all robes of ceremony the savage gradual develop- e forms in vogue in dif. ferent districts, by means of the abnormal growth of the gs, CrOWR, OF front, of one Simple type.—Nature. or Leon caps, shot RRING SmaTs IN A WSSLEYAN CHAP3I.— Western Mail, an English newspaper, ie Ta The RESUSCITATING THE DEAD. Some Rare Cases, Narrated by Dr. Juv. ©. Bennett, “Do the Medical men ever resuscitate peo- ple who are apparently dead? ‘This question was asked by a reporter for the Bennett at the New York Star of Er. John “ge one day last estes Hospital Medica! C. week. “Yes, sir; such instances have taken place, but they are exceedingly rare,” was the reply. “ Will you tell me whether anything of the kind has ‘n Gone in this college?” “Yes; Iwill give you all the information in my power. I do not suppose a singie really dead person was ever mace to live, but when there is the smallest vital spark rematolag it can sometimes be fanned into a flame.” “ Piease relate a few instances,” “About five years ago I was called to attend a sick man in Astoria. When I reached his bedside he was sinking very rapidly, and had me SO weak that there was scarcely a per- | ceptible flutter of his heart, and his respiration Was so faint that it just moved the down of a feather and that was all. Well, the man to ali appearances died. The undertaker was notified to come and lay him out, and I started for my lodging in New York. I had not walked twenty Todas from the man’s house when a little boy came running after me with @ message that the undertaker wanted me to return forthwith. I Made all haste back, and the undertaker met me at the door, exclaiming, ‘My God! Do you wat me to prepare @ living man for the grave?’ T asked what he meant, and he told me that the supposed corpse was warm, and that in his opinion the man was not dead, I was inclined to believe that the undertaker had lost his beste but I immediately examined my late patlen Sure enough, the body was slightly t course did you pursue?” for Dr, William Halsey, who at that ni ded in Astoria and was the owner of a small but powerful electric battery. He came bringing nis battery with him. We applled the electricity to the corpse. It was in the winter ttiue and there was a hot fire in a parlor stove in the house. We called for some woolen blankets, which were brought, and after heat- Ing them upon the stove we wrapped them about the patient. We also chafed the patient’s hands and feet. After a few minutes we helda mirror before the sup} dead man’s face, when, to our great surprise and joy, there appeared upon its surface a dewy moisture, which was caused hy the slight respiration from the patient. Well, sir, to make along story short, f will tell you that we worked all of that day and night, and the next morning the undertaker was informed that there would be no funeral and conse- quently no need for his services.” ae the patient enjoy good health atter- ward?” ‘Not very good health; he was weakly for about a year, when he died, and this time he was So very dead that we thought it would be a hopeless task to attempt to resuscitate him a second time.” s “Now, Doctor, as you have given mea history Of a case where a man was supposed to have @ied a natural death and was made to live again. will you tell me about criminals who have been hanged and then restored to life?” “T have-read of such cases, but never had one come under my own personal knowledge. Did the professors or students of the Belle- vue Hospital Medical College ever bring a hanged murderer to life?” Not within the last twenty-five years at least. I had beard one of the old Professors say that the body of a man named Jackson, who was banged at Trenton, N. J., in 1539, was brought w New York and given to the medical students for experimenting upon. Tie body was put into a box and taken to a room overa Stable on Second avenue, where it was sub- jected to all the methods known to medical Science for Intusing Ute into a Supposed corps: Was the vrougui td fe?’ “Well, yes, and no,” “How Was that?” “1 will explain: When the electricity was ap- Plied it caused the muscles of the subject to Contract and his limbs moved. The doctors {led artificial respiration, such as is brougat into use for remo who are nearly drowned, They had an idea that they made him gasp two or Ubree times, but If they did actually bring the man to life at all, he died again right away. I believe that the skeleton of that murderer now cccupies a glass case in the Anatomical pee connected with the Albany Medical Coll ge.” A Storm on the Sun. (Providence Jouraal.} Observers of the sun found indications of in- tense commotion on the Uth, 12th and 13ta of August. The sun-spots were many, large and active, and protuberances shot up thelr rose- colored tongues with increased force and velocity Troi the surface. The earth made instantaneous response to the solar storm. A magnetic dis- turbance suddenly began, accompanied by an unusual exhibition of earth-currents. The mag- neile variations were frequent and large, and the earth-currents continuous and strong. It 1s years since the Greenwich observatory has re- corded etic disturbances of equal magni- tude, and it sends forth a timely waruing to tel- egraph engineers, and especially to those con- cerned In laying submarine cables, that earth- currents may now become frequent as compared with the quietness of recent years. A superb exhibition of aurora accompanied the magaetic disturbance. An observer at the Stoneyhurst observatory describes 1t as recalling the mag- nificent displays of 1869, 1870 and 1ST1, while the play of the magnets was one of the most viclent ever recorded at that observatory. The auroral display was extensively observed in England and Scotland. Oae observer describes {Cas an outburst of streamers, appearing like wavy, swaying curtains from the zenith to near the horizon, with the loveilest green tints near the zenith. Another writes that the streaks ex- tended from horizon to zenith, the color belng principally pale blue with a dish tinge. An- other ee the display as a Urilllant bana of Waite light followed by streamera, each streamer fading away before the succeeding one became very bright. Still another records a glowing celestal picture of the northera horizon skirted by a bright white haze, terminating th an ill- detined arch, from which sprang a large num- Der of broad streamers, stretching toward. the zen: The same phenomenon was seen by Ameri- cen observers, although it did not receive the attention bestowed upon it by European ob- Servers. It lsevident, however, that the epoch of grand. auroras and magnetic storms has re- turned, and that our northern skles for months to come will probably be lighted with auroral flames. More earnestly than ever arises the Guestion of the cause of the sun-spot cycle and Ms intimate connection with electric and mag- netic phenomena. No one doubts that tue Commotion in the solar orb Is reflected on the earth tn the flashes of auroral light and the er- Tatle movements of the magnetic needle. We can see the cause and note the effect, But no che, if the theory of the disturbing influence of the great planets is rejected, has found the clew to the secret of sun spots. ‘We can only grope in datkuess while we wait for persistent Searchers to solve the problem, and admire With mingled reverence and awe the migaty ewer with which the sun sways his retinue of Worlds, and the stren; of the sympathetic chord by which each planet In the system re- flects in auroral light and disturbed Magactism ae abnormal condition of the great central i A Terrible Sitaationona TizhtRope, ‘The persons who went last nignt to witue: the tight ro; performance tn front of the Academy of Music were very near being specta- lors of one of those horrible accidents which, ot Tate years, are occurring too frequently. The showers had wetted the rope which had been stretched across the street uatll it was a3 slip- pery as if woven of glass, Notwithstand Unis fact, When the hour arrived for the exhibi- tion the performer appeared, and announced Unat he Would attempt his perilous feat. Ths crowd cheered hin ‘for his pluck, the band struck Up a lively alr, and, with a bow to the audience, Mr. Harry Lesité stepped upon the Tope, and in a moment was standing in mid- air, with nothing but his own herve between him and death. At first he an to walk slowly, but gradually increased his ace uatil, When he had reached the middle of the rope, he | allempted a short run. Then the rope slack- | eed, and the horrified crowa beneath him saw him reel and stagger like a drunken man a3 he attempted in vain to keep his equilibrium. Be- fore the crowd could eaten its breath ‘sufiicientiy to cry out, he fell, but dexterously caught the rope by one hand, still holding his pote, how- ever, tn the other.’ It took but a second U9 con- Fince bm that the pole was too heavy. He ré- leased 1t and it fell among the ‘utemed mass below. Fortunately no one was hurt, The crowd now Expected that he would re- turn, but instead or doin; s0, Leslie remained, | Siving an e xbibition of his agility and skill. It ‘Was eviden eee nt, however, The Terrible @ctopus, {London Telegraph.) The ferocity of the octopus is undentable; but Witch reprecent this apieasnt creators 9 Be while: Lthis un} Te ing in the habit of setzitg and swamping boats. It is admitted by scientific naturalists that the hidecus thing, Known to the ancient world as the polypus, and to modern boatmen as the cut- tlefish or squid, attains to a portentous size and Strength in the warmer seas, and is very power- fuland even dangerous, Its voracity and the pecuifar violence with which it attacks and Tends its prey are well known to those persons who bave seen it, weakened by captivity, and rendered less eagerly ravenous by the abun- dance of food to its thousand hands. To Speak by the card these number 900 In ail, and are rather to be called fingers than hands’ But what fingers! Each isa powerful sucker that expands and contracts with rapid and ever- chur geful motion; there are 120 of them to each of the eight long, writhing, restiess arms. With eyes fixed on its adversary, and with parrot- like beak advanced for the encounter, this most unsightly of all living cng inspires awe by its loathiiness not less than by its actual power tobarm. That it will turn and fasten upon a human being, if angered or menaced witha cap- ture, is a well-established fact; and a recent oc- currence ted delaide goes far to re- repo) from A vive the ola belief that a polypus will veature on attacking the hull of a boat. A telegram frem Port Eliiot, published in the South Aus- tralian papers, states that on the 20th of Augus’ last, ‘“Trooper Bruce and aman named Eiwa d were cut on the bay near Lipson’s Island, ex- amining a piece of wreckage, when their boat was encircled by the tentacles of a large octopus and age over tillit was half full of wa'er, andin great danger of being swamped. Tu” occupants escaped with the utmost diMfcnl Old-Fashioned Roses, (Hoosier Dialect 1 ‘They ain't no style about ‘em, 41d they're sort o' pale and faded: Fit the doorway here, without "em, be lonesomer and sh ded, For their good old- like ‘em, ‘cause they kind o* Sort o' make a feller like And J tell you, when I tind a Bunch out whur the sun kin strike ‘em e thinkin’ it use to xrow. And peek in thro’ tl i " the cabin, don’ And then I think o' mothe; And ho used to "e%em, When they wuzn’t any other, ‘Lees she found "em up aboy And her eyes, afore she shat em, Whispered with a smile and said We must pick a bunch and put em In her hands wheu she wuz dead. But, as I wuz a savin’, ‘They ain’t no style about ‘em Very candy er displayin’— But L wouldn’ be without ‘em ! *Cause I'm happier in these posies ‘And the hollyhawks and sich ‘Than the hummin’ bird ‘at noses In the roses of the rich ! = (Vanes W. Varnish on the Church Pews, Peck’s Sun.) ‘There was the queerest scene at one of the churches last Sunday, It seems that during the vacation the seats had been newly var- nished, and somehow the varnish was not right, as it was terribly sticky. You know when you pull anything off of sticky varaish that it cracks. Well, the audience had all got seated, when the minister got up to give out the hym: and as the basement of his trousers le loose o! the varnish of bis chair there was a nolse like Killing a fly on the wall with a palm leaf fan. ‘rhe minister jooked around at the chair to see if he was all present, and that no guilty man’s pai‘S had escaped, and read the hyma, Tne chotr rose with a sound of révelry, and after the tenor had swallowed a lozenge and the bass had coughed up a piece of frog and the alto had eG abd Lhe soprano had shook out her polonatse to see if the varnish showed on the south side, the audience began to rise. One or two deacons pat up first, with sounds like picket firing in the distance on the eve of battle, and then a few more got up, and the rattling of the unyielding varnish sounded as though the fight was Li ig more animated, and then the whole audience got on its feet at once with a sound of rattling musketry. The choir sang, “Hold the Fort.” When the orchestra had con- cluded the people sat down gingerly, the ser- vices were short, and all went home praying for tye man that painted the seats. Actresses? Arts. (New York Mirror.] A great many tricks of stage costume spring from personal defects. In whatever cut of waist Modjeska Srp, there is always a bunch of flowers or a bow placed at the left of her open corsage. When <his device ts not resorted to, a little strap of silk will be trailed acroas dlago- nally, or a little fan of lace will suddenty spring from the ieft corner, in order to hide a sear on the breast that looks as if it mignt be the result of awound from a poniard, a “souvenir” of a romance. Poor Lucille Western was afilicted by a birth- mark. She was regular female Esau. About her waist there was a thick growth of silky brown hair, which ran up toa point in front.” Where come above tue tops of her dresses it was care- fully shaved, but the skin always remained blue, So Luciile wore a huge cross dangiing just over that portion of her anatomy. Parepa Rosa had a deep vaccination sear tar down her robust arm, and when her sleeves were very ribbon or a trail Of ilowers used to cover if, Before she grew so extremely stout she wore a golden band above the elbow to hide it, but when her armict had to be as bie? a3 a walstcoat she abandoned the oddity. One night, speaking of this scar to an American yirl, who sat in her dressing-room the Yankee offered Parepa an immediate aad ef fectual concealment Of the offending spot. She took one of the candles off the toliet table, and, holding it above the arm, letone drop of tne Inelted wax fall upon the place and there was no further need of concealing devices. A dash Of flesh-tinted powder completed the cure, and Parepa’s make-up box forever after contained a bitor wax cancile, Cub Hunting. TLough fox-hunting does not come in with the fine weather, 1t commences, in the form of cud hunting, long before the autumn closes, ‘Thetox may be hunted, according to the old au- thorities, ‘from the Nativity to the Annuncia- ton of Our Lady”—that 1s, from early tn Sep- tember to hear the end of March. But the mod- ern buntsman !s not tied strictly to these rules; and 88 soon as the cora is down he commences cud hunting, which is, as 1t were, a kind of un- dress :¢hearsal for the full performance, Most people v ould, perhaps, think that Reynard ts an enital v hich trom its earliest infancy shows a wecocious skill in taktog care of himself and Ming bis natural enemies. There could not be a greater misiake. A young fox is one of the most playful aud simple antmais in the world. The innocent-looking rabbit is far more shy aud wary. ‘here no prettier sight in woodland life in the summer than a Iltterof young cubs at play around their dam in some qulet glade as the evening ts falling. The Irish expression, “Cute as a pet fox,” refers plainly to an auimai who Las had the, benefit of a liberal education. ‘Whea they are fist confronted with their foes, these silly young foxes absolutely do not kaow what todo. They are frightened, of course, by the unwonted nolse of men and dogs, but they seem almost unconscious of their danger, and itis not ull many e promising youoyster has been ignominiously “chopped covert,” from mere lgnorance, that the rest learn to clear out when hounds appear.—The Telegraph. cca i id A Delicate Questio: (Detroit Free Press. ] A larmer living about forty miles above De- troit felt that it was his duty to drop the Lime- kiln club a ine to the effect that he had lately discovered human tracks 19 inches long ina clay bank on bis farm. Some of his neighbors argued that they were relics of the mastodon period, and others that some circus giant had nade his escape and was wandering around the country. His own private theory was that fseme member of the Limektin clud had passed that way on a hunting expedition, and he wanted his suspicions verified or put to flight. “Ousser Cha’rman, I regard dat communica- shun as an insult to dis club!” sald the Rev. Penstock a8 soon a8 he could reach his feet. “I support de insult!” added Giveadam Jones, “Gemlen,” sald Brother Gardner as he came forward so that his feet could be platuly seen from ail parts of the hal, “It’s no use concealin’ Us Ge fack dat No. 12 butes am a clus fit for mioas’ of do members of dis*club. 1 doan't zactly believe dat any of us leave tracks ad inches long, but turone I am allus ready face de music n de am called into play. Some! ade tracks up dar. It’s no use votin’ dat GR, Slowly to climb back to the academy, | letter an Ad cn he came to the point nearest to tua’ Toll, an’ if any member of dis club has bin Dullding at witcn one ot ‘the three nets of stiy | Up dat way let him riz. up a8 his cognomen am Topes were fastened he became completely a3- | reached.” Tope his whold fort quivered Sad saan wick | ni Cees oupoe Ine es or monte, Pera i oul excitement form quivered and shook with “Bijah of Central Station famo, may be able gla SUPE sang, rca | Wet ae \e aC. , and eac: 3 rE his extreme nervousness and perllo: ita ee ave an account ately oe fendered him unfit for the attempt But at last, | Odzctte des Hopiiaur gave an account, lately. apparently g that the effort must b3 | & singular case, of complete od Made shortly or he would fall, he strung his | ®¥¢ 17, who had always enjoyed go in, nerves for a final attempt. The unbappy maa | 8d, one Oe eiving y Hoel clung to the rope as atin man can cling with | Crushed by a floor giving a but the tenacity of his grasp to save him trom | PAS Very much frightened and the satae night anaWul death. ‘As ie ‘neared tho end of the eft moraing aD on Syattr, efforts became feel feebier, aut When he wag within a few fect of the butiding | of the scalp: ware & rope was thrown to him, which be clutch ftenin Gun aay. in combing her she no- id. to as if this we ticed that it came cut ites; three roe aap; (ne last etiort of pen the crowd | @ays later she was perfectly Her fer general be bene oun ‘of the mo- | health was but head conttt Mext. But ashe was drawn over the edge of | nd was till so When seen two Years later by Hg Toot, euch a yell. want a8 for many a day has pot echoed ‘the old St. Ciaries street. ‘The Criminal Law Magazine says: A long- New Orieans Picayune, Octe 11. |] Winaea lawyer lately defended @ criminal un- . coin om || Succeastully, and during tue trial the judge r- A military guard socom Cape Ed phate cipeeers Fete cooncct “The eh eat ‘station a guard is drawn up under arms on the the couns «1 for the defence be counted tn his HIS BRIDE’S MAUSOLEUM, ‘The Memorial Charch Erected by Pennsylvania's iron King. ALMOST FINISHING A COSTLY MANSION FOR BER HOME, BUT ON HER DEATH LEVELLING IT TO THE GROUND—THE CONSECRATION CEREMONIES. Lxpanoy, Pa., Oct. 15.—A new church edifics, the princely gift of a Pennsylvania troa king. Was consecrated in this quiet back country borough to-day. There ts quite a romantf> chapter of fove and sorrow connected with It. The new edifice cost a very large sum of money, and it ts gene! known that ever} dollar was paid by Mr. Coleman, one of the leading members of the “house of Cornwall,” founded upon three mountains of iron ore he in Lebanon county, about 140 miles west‘of York. The chi is in the borough proper. Cornwall, a few milies distant, is the home of the Colemans, the richest iron family in the state. Monday, being the festival of St. Lake, Was chosen for the consecration of the magni- ficent edifice, and it was dedicated with all che rites and ceremonies of the Episcopal church. Several years ago Mr. Robert Coleman met a young lady of very Ing appearance in a tour he made of New England. She was the daughter of a respectable family of Connecticut in moderate circumstances. A mutual attaca- ment followed, and not long afterward the cou- ple were married. A short time after the mar- Tiage the young bride was suddenly taken ill, anda tripom the continent was arranged by her husband. It was thought that the cli- Mate of the south of France, Italy or Spain would be best for her. Ali that love and bound- less wealth could give was furnished with a most Mberal hand. The husband was com- pelled to remain*at home by business engace- ments. It was contidently believed that the bride would soon be restored to good health, nd very soon after her departure the husba'< sct about preparing a surprise for her. He sup- yosed that she would be abroad about a ye: and he determined to erect one of the most costly residences she had ever secn and have t all finished and fuin'shed in time for her arri~ val ho She was to know ni until the carriage should drive her to the door from the raflway station, Mr Powell, a Phila- deipria architect, was instructed to’ prepare the plans. The ‘structure was to be in the Scottish baronial style, and Mr. Coleman cared very littie about the cost. A flue site was chesen, dd and level and elevated, with a commanding view of along stretch of the Deau- Uful Lebanon valley. The Coleman estate comprises about five thousand acres. In one partof It 1s a brown Stable, containing some thirty thoroughbred horses. The most valuable animals are quar- tered In rooms having mirrors on the walls and Brusseis carpet on portions of the floor. Five monstrous furnaces are smelting ore night and day on the estate. Three hills contain an in- exhaustible supply of ore. These furnaces have mace millionaires of a dozen families or more. Kobert Coleman is the youngest of the iron kings of the present line of owners. In- terested parties and heirs are scattered in | many climes, but Mr. Coleman remains in com- plete charge of the vast estate. Everything ts conducted in princely style. every employee lives on the place, rent free. The cottages are models of neatness, cleanliness, and conve- ience. A church, store, Sunday school, and other necessary wants are fally supplied.” The great farm supplies employees with wheat, corp, potatoes, and CS gered at far below market fprice. Splendid family mansions oo- cupy prominent places. Tally ho coaches, crawn by four-in hands, convey the membor3 of the Coleman family and their many visttors to the neighboring towns and ratlway stations, Hence the new mansion that was to be erected by Mr. Robert Coleman as a surprise to his bride, itcan readily be imagined, was to b2 something exceedingly ae The founda- UoLs were massive, and built of granite and Isestone, The underground divisions were commodious, and finished in the most modera strle. A cement door wag lata. The frames of the iarge bay windows for the first floor weighed several tons apiece. The super- ‘structure was to have been of marble, iron, and granite. The interior was to be fin- ished In hard wood. The work was proceeding splendidiy, and some fifty men were steadily employed. Car load after car load of material was arriving and belng put ip place. All efforts were made to rapidly push on the comple- tion of the work. Every detail of furniture and upholstery had been decided ape The garcener had received his special instruc- Uons. In fact, everything had been fully ar- ranged looking to the rapid completion of the mansion, when a tel came over the sea that the young bride was very ill in Paris, uickly followed another dispatch that she Was ead. Every tool in the new house was ee The young husband, stricken with ict, Was for a time hot to be consoled. He or- Sered the workmen on the Lew mansion to go to the office and draw their pay, and then to remewve their tools and other property. Ina few days orders were given to tear down what had been put up; to throw in the excavatiol and eg the place over. All that remaine. of what was to have been a palace was ordered to be obliterated. The construction of the beautiful church dad- teated here to-day concludes the story. The remains of the dead bride were embalmed aad brought back to America, and were then placed ip @ Vault until the construction of the chursh Walls bad been sutficlently advanced to rec them, ‘The new edifice is cruciform, 96 by 75 feet. The floor is of Spantsh tile from Valencia. ‘vhe woodwork is of olied oak. A massive ‘ower twenty-four feet square rises 100 feet in the alr. The structure is of gray stone, even to the window silis, A hydraulic engine in the Saye the air for the organ, Tae Style of finish ts old English, with massive granite columns. How Lovely Woman Stoops to Folly. (New York Letter to Cincinnati Enquirer.) Wide mouths have come into fashion for wo- men. This is a change from the prevailing style of the past year or two. The proper mouth of the bps season 1s worn in a con- Stant but mild smile, the corners be! drawo back horizontally, with the ag left closed. The expression is one of amiable, quiet satis- faction wigh all the world—as though the mind was free fom sorrow and the feet free from corns. Care should be taken not to broaden Uils into an active grin, except on mirthful oc- casions; bor,should the lips be compressed. All should be in repose. The may be reddened if the natural color be too light. A practice of epee the exposed membrane of the upper ip broad and bright Miro at the center has crept in, but it is bad, for it gives an artificial and sensuous look. The fashionable belle has cut the puckering-striog of her mouth, and no longer murmurs, “Prunes, prunes, pranes.” She can kiss two men simultaneously,and give good satisfaction, where betore only one could tind room at a time. ‘Tbe reader who supposes that the above is fanciful, and not “plain, straightforward fashion news, is very much mistakea. Wo- men Can Change the style of their faces, if not at will, at least conziderably. The hair over the forehead can be arran; to produce any desired outline for the upper part of the face; the mouth can be made to widely vary its ex- pression; the eyes can be kept pertly wide open or languidly half-closed; the cheeks can be rounded by using “plumpers;” the eye-brows can be arched or straightened; the color can be controlled to a high degree. ‘Tnus itis appar- ent thata woman can, if clever, have to some extent the kind of face she wants. The nose is about the only intractable feature. It sticks right outin unalterable independence, defying all efforts to shorten or straighten it. Let me interpolate the fact that not one woman in 10 ever laughs or smiles naturally, Kuowing fuil eli Our defects Of teeth or expression, we try hide or reform them. I know a girl who will never go to the minstrels, or any other Tunny show, because she isn’t pretty when she Jaughs. If inadvertentiy caught by somethtt comic, she buries the laugh in a handkerchief; but wherever possible she does all her laughing juternally. THE NOTION THAT ApPEtirs is a low degree of hunger, and hunger an intenstiled form of ap- ing about it | CELESBY. As a Remedy for Nervous Diseases, What the Medical Profession Say About It, AND The Good HResults Attending Its Use I” Headache, Neuralgia, Nerrousness, Indi- orstion, Bleeplessness and Paralg CELERY has only come into public notice withia the last few years as a nervine, but acientificexpert- ments and experience have proved beyond s dou! that it controls nervous irritation and periodic ner= vous and sick hea@aches to a marked degree. Brown-Sequard says that Celery contains more nerve food than any other vegetable or substance found in nature. Celery was first discovered and used a8 a nervine by French physicians about 180 But a combination of the EXTRACT OF CELERY AND CHAMOMILE, which bas been tmt recehtly: introduced to the profession and the public by Dr. C. W. Benson, bas produced such marvelous re- | Sulta in curing nervousness and headaches, and especially nervous and sick healaches, neuralvia, paralysis, indigestion and sleeplessness, that it hay excited public attention and newspsper comments, and many physicians have tested the merits of this preparation with the beet results, as quoted bolow from afew WHAT PHYSICIANS SAY. Dr. Benson's preparation of Celery and Chamo- | mile for nervous diseases is the most important addition made to the materia medica tm tho Isat quarter of a century.—Dr. J. W. J. Eaxlar,of Bai- timore. Dr. Benson's Pills are worth their weight in gold in nervcus and sick headache.—Dr. A.H. Schlicter, of Baltimore. Dr. Benson's Pills for the cure of neuralgia are a succces.—Dr P.G.Holman,of Christiansburg, Va. ‘These Pills are a special preparation, only for the | cure of special diseaces, as named, and for these diseases they are worthy of a trial by all intelligent sufferers. They are prepared expressly to cure fick headache, nervous headache, dyspeptic head- ache, neuralgia, nervousness, parsiyais, sleepless- ness and indigestion, aud will cure any case. Price 50 cents; postage free. Sold by a'l Drugsists. De- pot, 106 North Eutaw et., Baltimore, Md. oct29 hi ta caters ecttcreabt cece a ) Fpiesapmnems STATE LOTTERY. TAKE NOTICE! This is the enly Lottery ever voted on by the people of astate, and under a late deciw f the Us 8. Supreme Court at Washington is the only Legat Lottery now in the United States, all other charters having been repealed or having no existence. A Splendid Opportunity to Win a Fortune, ELEVENTH GRAND DISTRIBUTIO! L, AT NEW ORLE z , CLASS: Nov This institut: the lewislature ones ie term of ‘five years, to which contract the in- ith of thestafe is pladsed, which pledge has been renewed by an overwicluine popular vote, securing its franchise in t constitution adopted December 2d, A.D. 18° with a capital of $1,000,000, to which it has since added a reserve fuid of over #350, 000. ITs ND SINGLE NUMBER DISTRIBU. Rol =m take place monthly, on the second ueaday. It Never Scales or Postpones. Leok at the following distribution: CAPITAL PRIZE, 830,000. 100,000 TICKETS AT TWO DOLLARS EAOH. HALF-TICKETS, ONE DOLLAR. 28 pry BEEBE aan S53 FSSSSS5253 1857PPrises, amounting t0....0v-veveeuseess«$110,400 Responsible corresponding agents wanted points, to whom liberal compensation will be paid. For farther information, write cloarly, giving fulladdress. Send orders by express or Hegtsts letter, or money order by mail. Addresse’ only to A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans La. Or same person at No. 319 Broadway, New Yorks. Or J. P. HORBACH, 605 14th st. n.w., Washington, D.C. All our Grand Extraordinary Drawings are under the supercixion and manayoment of GENS. G. 1, BEAUBEG aba EARLY. PGAKD and JUBAL A. E. ([SE MILD POWER CURES. HUMPHREYS HOMEOPATHIC SPECIFICS. experience an entire snoocess. ‘Bun efficient, and reliable, they are the 1. vers, 2. Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Ovlic . oe 3 ‘Oolie, or Teething of Infanta.....- 135 Dilerhoss of Ontiaren oy Aa "25 —e B “2 225 4 : “25 9 1T. Piles, Blin‘ 8 ‘ : "60 60 petite, not seem to be borne out by facts. rhe two a or = Sue ee their nature, Appetit cra’ apparatus of taste, and sometimes of the di- gestive 01 wi hunger is the demand of 0 as a whole or of some of its parts Dow ‘nay, there are wo heeds to bs expressed, abd much mischief arises from con. in at the matter from a 1. is difficulty to see toe digestion to Ee g | eee a a “ ea FOI on receipt of .ddress IGENE 0O., 109 Fulton st., N-¥. Specific Manual on Disease and Its ee eseemae = sp8-eoly —25TH— Porviar Mowruty DRAWING OF THE Commonwealth Distribution Co., AT MACAULEY'S THEATER, in the City of Louisville, on SATURDAY, OCTOBEB 30, 1880, LEGISLATURE OF 2808 AND SUSTAINED BE for Period N B.—This band s large serve fund. Mead the list of prises for hee OCTOBEB DBAWING. (wast

Other pages from this issue: