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+ is Ye ee rs = ENGLISH PASSENGER CA @ld Style Stage Conches on the Hails. “Murder Will Out,"? From the New York Times. Dr. Robert Collyer justly passes for a sensible ZEKE’S MAD RIDE. _ Hew a Boy Tried to Count the Hairs Prefessional Barbarity. “How long does it take a man to learn the ‘Trial From his Wash. Letter to Loutsville Courier Journal. Accident rather than curiosity drew me to- NEW_PUBLICATIONS. AUCTION SALES. _ i. oT" THIS EVENT barber business?” asked a reporter while under- . er HROUGH ONE ADMINISTRATION ———__—__ — ae man, but even sensible men are occasionally mis-| !™the Maneefa Fri MReaqe. going @tonsorial operation at the hands of a| Ward Judge Cox's court-rooms, where I spent | *”"T PAY SBHOKERS sare OF UNREDEEMED A traveling correspondent of the Detroit Free | taken, and very good grounds could be adduced | From the Philadelphia Timea. colored professional. “Well, dat depends on | this forenoon. The effect upon my mind A NOVEL OF Press writes: The English railway carriages | for believing bim to be so in respect of hiscom-| Zeke was thought to be the dunce of the strike Americans as being equally odd in ap- how much talent he has for de business,” was ammounted toa complete reversion of opinio! xt Commencing SATU ¥ TEEN. Woh at SEVEN EAL, SEVEN. fortable belief, expressed on Sunday, that “‘anur- | family. He wasn't dull, exactly, but because of | tno auiet repl erally takes ‘bout a year.” | and feeling. I had imagined the trialatarce; It | soctat, POLITICAL AND DEPARTMENT LIFE | ver Watches Dusnenkee ws Se H : . <a tn wanda A 2 4 his quiet ways and his love of sleep he got to be | “jy uct TePly; “gener “Dey | i@ tragedy. I had dismissed Guiteau from Ladies’ “Jewelry, Guna, Pistoln and. other arth heb t pearance. Some are mounted a ler will out.” There could perhaps scarcely be | his quiet ways How do they begin?” aakeil the reporter. “Dey | constaesiitn us a rindde ities eee . aioary and the resemblance to an old style stage coach | a less appropriate place to advance such a| known as the most backward of the bright generally begin by blackin’ boots. Den dey | fool.” He impressed. mie today ae earn IN WASHINGTON, ‘Loan Oftice, 73 a is made more plain by the four compartments, | theory than New York, where, notoriously, | Barnwell boys.” Zeke was so lazy that he stan’ round an’ watch an ole barber P his | acute understanding, and, thouzha blundering, ~ SES MONDAY, DR ‘oF coupes, into which each first-class cartiage IS | within twenty years past so many deaths have | couldn't even count, though twelve years of razah, an’ watch him shave. After a wMille dey | a truculent wit. I sat close to him: could see - Stee at TEN AM ana BREMEN EA? Morus for La divided. The newer form of carriage is longer, | occurred at the hands of persons unknown, and | age. When along about noon his father would lets "em put the lather on. Den pretty soon he every Cera = ne ere, Fosd ee of os siies eebonoe welleere: tilailthelotearesold. ans a has more wheels under it, and more compart- | where scarcely a month passes without a body | ay: “Run and tell me what time it is,” Zeke tries his han’ at shayin’. Somebody comes dat's | Pres" the man ieee excelente ne bas a bre me Garay = Saesssp = ments. Frequently a set of wheels is placed in | bearing traces of violence being brought to the | Would look at the clock and remark: “Little very good-natured, or mebby ain't very particu- capital stage grimace and Inughter. 1 declare ‘Author of **That Lasso! Lowrie’. “*A. Fair Barte- HOMAS DOWLAN 4 aoe critting, Ue Coaels In which case there I8 | voreue from the water,as to which nothing | hand’s a stickin’ stright up!” One day Jerry, lar how he's shaved, an’ dey put dar new man | there were times when he actually captivated ein . TRUSTER'S SALE 0 : | wore is heard. Tn fact, taking tye whole of the | the black man, made fun of Zeke, saying: | on fo’ to try his han’; but some ole barber al- | meby hie well-timed interpositions and effe: Sie Peasants Rapa AND UNDER ; We the ee ciel ce tine | United (tates, i would Se MRE te cect 1G: ng wid ye, ye do'an know yer foot from a | ways strops his razah, an’ keeps an eye on him. | tive by-play. I came away precisely as o1 pCCENTy, NEAKT may be; the sam ot domnont. | that every year hundreds of persons cume to hole in de ground; g'way from heah en larn to | Maybe de new man does fust rate. an” mebbe he | who has witnessed a stirring act in an eccen- ane | ‘ly recorded in Lit Tab edirrepont tne ah untimely end whose murderers are never vy, doesn’t. » It all depends on his confidence. Con- ars add to th known. The case of Eugene Aram is, in fact, count up yer A. B.C What Jerry said made the lad feel ashamed. That night he covered fideace is de main thing in learning de barber tric drama, wherein all the parts were well played. IST8, a t nor SS, i i" nd Hoste ES inncth layed | _This Story was beenn in November number of | eS vats) : an example to the very reverse of the’ doctor's | his vi ; eal himself that | business.” “Do. barbers shave themselves?” | Guitean, to begin with, could not have played | THE CLATURY MAGAGINE coetineee Moen | RL ae theory: Wor what mate that Grime esreaecnanie ead ae Would eaten Nae by the | dueried the reporter. “No, dey shave one his part better. “Of course he overdid It, be- | and will ran theoush the ounine sear, dt eilt bag Taint Siena as that, so contrary to the usual course of | toes and take Kite the bog phases oder, When a barber wants 9 shave he asks a | cause the mimic world and the real world can | special inerst to alae ase fomtnos with Wee ue te eciom D.C the eid intense {iseovered so long afterward. In| Aas he was feeding the horses next morning he | friend to do it, an’ den he shaves the other man. | not be made to harmonics, but, as a mimic ac- | capital. . peices ta as accuse it ace ho haatry the police author- | asked his friend Joe, the stableman, how he | Barber never pays nuthin’ for -shaves, unless | tor on a teal. stawe, he certuitily cute ne ican ‘The Noveniber and December numbers of THE CEN- a Distrse ee eee width to ul bave no dificulty in showing him a | could learn to count. Joe lauched and winked | they’s away frou home.” “Doesn't a profes- | figure, and will go down to history as TURY contain also two Portraits of President Garficld, bearps dibs Renbe apnbct Sof notable murders committed | at a biz horse named Bob. “Why you pester, | ional courtesy exist among barbers ever lotely sud genrris—a sort of weird anid | splendial in the past twenty-tive years as to which noth- | you, why don't t uponto Bob's back and | Where?” “I reckon it does, but I hever heard | apotheosis of dead-beatism. All d | Paper by ing is known. He will collect the | count them rs in b 2” ‘That made , it called by dat name afo’.”—Boston Courier. a personal apps eae = ot ohare i E miurder of Mr. ¢ of fortune, | Zeke's bloud feel hot in ly AIL right,” Se simply brazenly and shabbily an raderick Dotxtans's j oh pile at Bri ill a mystery ram_ st he sald and’ bouncing tram the Hee he Queer Dishes. teel. "His voice, instead of being | een wrod aunt ergs aes oe ty ialien iS, r murde ne; the Harle chted upon Bob's back. Bob was taken by | F*™ Chamber's Jouraal. atural, is both trained and taking: 1 he December nitmber has been. 0 —- wide and th ach a tube from r.the same. Azain, who knows | surprise, He waet't Mm the habst of havi. | _What marvelous variety oftastes, of likes and'| aut like the volce of Voorhees: not caitivated new edition is now ready. Al dealers receive subserip- a resery me eereet® ie > | wha polioned youne Mr Brave due tates ce Dowson iia beck ae Weatieen torte meat | dislikes with regard to special forms of food, | to the piteh of Wendell Phillips bnt a homely, a | Honsendeupyiy mumnbers, or the pubiisters may be aoc ap a i Recpea Sol jt hundred cases might be cited. To | a wild rn. If Zek te could | from cannibalism to current cake, we find | vilear cross between the (wo, with a touch of fan. | yhe toe pater one very notable one. The second Earl of | ride a horse as as try AWay | among people physically constituted alike in | Mulberry Se era.and ea of THE JANUARY NUMBER. ples mal bury was shot in his grounds at Darrow Ab- and up the country ro Winkie. He is no more crazythan some thirty advanties in respect t immunity from cinders open. De rs at each sid e years ago, and to this of light has been thrown periences, ainiy contribute a hand- y ¥ p have two of , the Burdell and ndful of the mane and began | was running up the road at full speed. Ha! ha!” haitooed a man by the roadside, | you doin’?” | “Countin’ hairs,” said Zeke. every respect. This person eats his meat burned at intervals on nothing but oranges; while the | elder Pitt could not endure the sight of fruit, | and neyer suffered any to be brought into the room where he was shot Garfield as the last desperate vent ur pros and cons, T can not see how he could have avoided this ‘droil pa unt. think Corkhillleads the prosecution exceedingly well, and has the case thoroughly in hand. He On the whole, I third installment of and, amoug its mis- | } ‘The February (Midwinter) nuimber will cover, desixned by Vedder, and w (somewhat condensed) of Mrs. 2 ralda,” now so popular in New York. have the new the black threads. | toa cinder; that will touch ou) ie is rawly | life of moral obliquity aiid personal dise ccllacous event leresting paper by Col. Het coon " 8 we shall be greatly three, four, five— but just as he undone. George IT]. preferred fish when it was | ture. pekwell, entitled © i fog om te ih iret fro Id see tie slayers y six" a violent Jerk ofthehorse’s | semi-pntrid ; his successor’s weakness was hot | _ All tho otlfer parts in this Seen a isc rese aree 1O LEEROR® ie revved ieacn Nit Peseecsmea and Lord Mount | head drew the mane from his hand. Nothing | ptum bread, eru pled up in a quart of cream. | £4079 are Well Iinpersonated. | Judge Cox eer. Tin sereotion ofthe Micon det ~! , hid preference is to ri ie daunted, however, the boy began again. Bob | {ord Bacon is said to have lived whole weeks ly presides with dignity, aa 8 ig eit e | rs + i of trust: or all a ns oh 0 What a little fool” exclaimed the man. “He | ~ Tt seems an extraordinary thing to speak of | thinks ‘he is sure ofa verdict, and I agree with iH of $50 rm ea Matcscdi te aiease Frequent tthe tatter hay (@,remain co, | might as well try to number the hairs of my | cating aekunke wed thar woes parton ths him, At is impossible for antbody, to see this Ap the | for lot 3 ithe: Gotes ly locked; when such is the ne Jatter has not yet quite | head, but before he could get througa with his | “int where beef and mutton are infinitely more eon and Gen nt La ee} ore ‘| Gene the: perwencer mak walt until they are | “Tene ora cou ok ucene ia cthe poses Peed te i [lent Cal eben breail s yet, Ab ie & fick thatthe |e oe ke Cat eas ieee eet sed | THE CENTURY MAGAZINE \ Opened at the station. The upper part of the | #ll this we have not been resarding the poison- shing horse and lis bold rider were | Guachos of the Banda Oriental are in. the habit Senay Callan dea Fe E CED AGAZINE | i door lass and may be lowe: co dagigg coh bon Bs eer cree of hearing and out of sizht. They went | of hunting this creature for the sake of its flesh: rovother fate. , yo | rset strap with cyelet hol ea ee know who tats ihed ie steadily on for nearly an hou Zeke had por is this incomprehensible to any one who is | Where Slate Pencils Come From. IS A CHRISTMAS PRESENT COMING TWELVE | Cadena wre The windows on ston in that memorable trial at seman, Sounted a thousand and Bob's run had dropped | acquainted with the true nature of tte skunk | Any one who has children ‘and who, about TIMES A YEAR. ag-ate rer 14th and 1) recta northwest. lowered in the en in orable trial at 2 - | into a swift trot. | The disusting liquid whieh it ejectsis contained |, 4%! ars s dive htc ba hous cies vara A tor, the most eminent of modern | “s-Hold on,” said a entleman whom they had | te’) gland on the back, and constitutes. its | frty times during a term, hears compl Oe ee siete ties DOVE SADE Ty POSTRONED TS CON. vin below the fi ssibly the most eminent whd | met at a bride, “what are you doing without | weapon of defence. Certainly, the eluviam is | about them, their breaking or loss, will perhaps | Sabseripti » $4. te Nuul | ee h of the coach, ai — sit ened saddle or bridle?” 3 ope. | the most horrible and enduring that may be | be glad to know that the supply is just about } wt rt aes be ta cans eae on nowl- ene ere mane.” re- pene hal and man ang peste uray rom it; | inexhaustible. There is not the slightest dan- —— ert = nd to enc suftic Zeke, never lookine up. | but if it be surprised and killed betore i ee ston iV avers Ry =e = ple to cover their tracks, and in his b y don’t you count the hairs of | time to use this, tnd the gland be afterward ex. | Se" that the er Sane ae npee THE CENTURY CO., | [URCANGOM BROK.. Auctionsers. Of the best equipped railr crime was far more frequent than was But on sped Sob widen enema, merriment. | tirpated with eare, the rest of the body Is dest | Pencils. Bie hard, black “German ones) bave | TRUSTEES! SALF oP y trieal communicstion between the fi ad opie pie ol Det pee on fee Bob with Zeke bending closely over | tute of all offence. Skunk skins are larzely Laer Seat cay ae, we the “Neate peat | _QaXDisine sand the van occupied by the | q : c . | his neck. | used by furriers, and beautiful skins th | : a fears ee 3 i 5 SS na cam Seoawiet Site | Rho: Lalstie Paekee ee utiwmbolo Mou. soiiatvermrd the Wigitcneal wore ane Ot and the atilinal ibeapable g 5 | Castleton, Vt.. abont thirty-five workmen pro- vl of trust, sats in. the compart | Cobotsbed the Schuylkill river, Into tie water ne trotted | as it never emita tie secre cept Ww in | duce 50,000 pencils daily, and it is proposed to holas. and soon he was swimming for the other shore. | danger or med. I neyer ate a skunk, but 1 | increase the daily output to 100,000. Beoees er winter's day, This Zeke had not ese oe shock pe ~ | have handled a tame one without any oliactory Ns hen icles Gait Capes a sedan ved SIN STOCKS, BO re, pathetic echt: cold water caused him to forget his count, and | disturbance, v es, split to a ness of neh | = conducted on. eomn were Koomy) cole asd gray; he was obliged to cling to the mane to save his |" "Tsee that tinned pepper-pot is now to be ob- | ald smoothed by a Planer. the block is placed |“ Gontrarts "or eviews wscure at th compartment from whenee the communication | ‘The alr with falling white. life. “Anyhow,” Zeke said, “I find the mane of | tained in London, but cannot fancy that it | Wdera semi-circular knife and after having | obt the Bought and Gariecee came. Th y of £5 for pul } some use.” When Bob reached the other bank | would be much | e the real article. Pepper-pot | been turned over the process is repeated. on Fractional Onder executed . feet front by tts depth: electric butt ding an alarm without | A Wille mesed beggar child. storm: e se aay ts Belore, but seeing that | is a favorite relish for breakfast out west, and is | Tesult Is SS ea lle peters ey tre bape rored ty'n cucatery Frame ieee? Teasonable and suilic j | e1OOR GN ne Ee ree ee ns his rider was more than a match for him he at | eaten with rice like curry; in some ef the old | uartz in the block would break all the pencils. ‘on Puts, Calls and Spreads | s folkows: a the indebted. He looked as it he never smiled, y 2 d, | | e neve: BCH Weaeria last stopped short and negan to turn the head | families i Der i de to perfection. | They are pointed by a grindstone, turned, eet . he ‘the re a | As if le never had been warin. p 1 dewal th amilies in Demerara it “is im to pe ssorted and sent to market in boxes of & PELOW & CO., 48 Broad at., New York. af ‘Telephones and the Weather. foward Zeke. Meanwhile, Zeke had given over | An iron crock is filied up. daily with scraps of hid ee = thicago house, F. A. BEELS & CU., ii4La Salle et. | th 3 ineibad Ghacrve oe fa lonhole eb; f 8 | peppers, chillies and other condiments added, . es $100, Several continental observers appear to have | Trampled and wet with rain and sleet, Procure a bridie. His hands still grasped the | {ht essential one being casaripe, a thick, black, Reiter panied eeepc hole NEW york, wa been lately studying the sounds which may be | Wituered and worthless, there it lay. hair which felt so smooth and strong that the | treacly fluid extracted from the cassava root, ‘veritable \wol sheep’s cl ig app TACKAWANMA + heard in a telephone that is connected with a | He bounded, seized tt with delight, lad decided to try to make a bridle out of them. | The crock itself is brought to the breakfast ta- | have been discovered in the pastor of a Bap- a5 five dave public pot wire stretched, say, between the roofs of two | Stood still’and shook tt free from snow; with Nis jackknife he succeeded in cutting off | ble, and the contents served with a wooden | tist church at Sodus, on Lake Ontario, the Res. WESTERN rhage utiiebed tm Wash- houses and connected with the water or gas | Into his coat he pinned tt tigh' several strands, which he tied and_ twisted | spoon; the mixture is black and fibrous in ap- | H. O. Bates. The facts were brought to light RAILWAY COMPANY, Columbia Law Butlding. : Ses area His eyes lit up with sudden glow. together in a clumsy fashion. A stick of crooked | pearance, and Intensely hot to the palate; but | by nis bringing a charge against a divorced wife FIRST MORTGAG - _ pipes. On the occurrence of lightning more es | oak, whittled emoothly, served as abit. Zeke | tye sine qua non of excellence in a pepper-pot is ging Be a eke sete es SIX PER CENT LADIES’ GOODS pecially sounds are heard, and at the same in- He sauntered on, all Pleased and roud, looked with pride on his odd_piece of harness, | that it shall never be allowed to become empty. of ving to ance Mesa ne pe erongt a BONDS, OF 191. ,. uS' G iS = é stant (according to N. Rene Thury of Geneva) And lingered t At the hurrying erowa and he was delizhted, when Bob, responding to | Tue quantity it holds. is immensely dispropor- | (Ota fetter from the woman mare pseacament INTE FIRST Bags OF Tae OaEy VON BRANDIS, Seles RGN Ws Stes, whatever the Gitence ofthe |) “ann tanance ose et tee TiRnt Zeke steiiy trotted of homeward. That | tionate to that required for daily consumption; | that the divorce was procured in Chicago; that. This road forme with the Delaware, | M™ ~ MODISTE, latter. Even when no thunder was heard, and night Zeke ate his supper in pain in bed, but the | nevertheless, it isalled up every morning and | She did not defend against it. and that it will be Western Hailvced ft | 915 Peansyivania ave..over Demisey’s Stationery Store, the discharge must have been at least thirty- The man who threw the flowers away teange adventure so worked upon his mind | kept perpetually simmering. Rats, for instance, | Sct aside. She then gives an interesting account NEW YORK TO BUFFALO. Formerly with Lord & Taylor, New York, and Wins five kilometers off, M. Thury observed these in- Never one-half such pleasure had; that it resulted in good. He applied himself to Mliev rt ry ’ | of his career. For tifteen years she supported | | ‘The Mortgage is @ first lien upon the equipment as . Saf See J : - . - & PI | Ltirmly believe, would be not only wholesome, fami T * husband, wh fused | Well as upon the Koad. For Ds Evening Dresses: Bridal Trouse & specialty: duction effe He says the sound is like that The flowers’ best work was done that day his books, and now he isa professor in one of but very nice if properly prepared—not common | He? family, including her husban: |, who refused Do em Onin Cloaks, Dolmans and Suite; all made wt the ehontes Swedish match rubbed on the box. The | In cheering up that begzar lad. . i 7 ARLE Properly p1 ‘ to work. Finally he gota situation as a clerk . & C. H. SMITH, notice? perfect’ work, superior ‘fitting: ‘satisfacton of a Swedish match rubbed on t rT the best colleges in the country. sewer rats, but such as I afe, born-fed animals q STOCK BROKERS, ited. maton telephone affords an easy method of saayiee | Ah me, too often we forget, ——_—__+e-___* snared ina hop garden. The flesh, though per- HE EIR TE ee 48-1m. 52 Wall Stree York, | == ci thiseictrcalinfuonce, AE Lalazrate, who | ,ia0bY in thew won tes of ours The Vinegnr Vice Among New Orteansfeclly wie was. dry and) tatolg but then ere supported by an aid society. Bates | ~ a ~ | MME. WasHINGTON, | fase, Serimeated, stuilary for some time | “Glad even of the wituered Howers. HLT. | psn ene now Clore, Womens tothe tire ‘without. any of te elosteras. with Reet move was to Buflale, where he opened a| PRIVATE STOCK TELEGRAPH Wines | MU Fasiixanny STORE, , thoaght to amplify the sounds, and | —_——_—-e-—_____ oe = sched z ? a zag. ft 3 | Saloon, but ed. She received a legacy 1211 PENSYLVANIA AVE., ideo, Oy piecing two microscopes: on | Strategy Versus Strength. Do you know or have-you ever heard why tt | meke BeMufane, Cote enicned Kone ee 4° | $1,000; which he sunk in another saloon in Chic Bue Crus, Cloaks 8c, Tang tm mapa, the plate of the receiving telephone. ‘The ar-| ‘The sand-hornet is the greatest villain that | Is that nezro promen drink vinegar! ” asked 8 | tic explorers, speak Dighly of rate eno orcas | COO. Then he sald he liad a call to preach, and Denia Wa REI NGat in AMG ta Com I's perfect ft yuaranteod. ays rai mtions tre iuaied aealust and the tes on insect wings, and he fs built for a pro- | gentleman of a Times reporter one day last | Ue ¢xnlorer their supply of food in those dreary | ¢XPressed the belief that he would soon be earn- alin are guarded against, and the | ¢<sonal murderes eae le to hear the least sound e or more f: M. Landeret He carries two keen cime- ters besides a deadly poisoned poinard, and is armed throughout with an invulnerable coat of mail. He has things all his own way; he lives | The seribe professed the profoundest tenor- | ance in regard to the matter, but he immedi- ately set to work to find an answer to the ques- | | latitude: pees ees Artesian Well Makers say that water can be found anywhere, the ques- ing a salary larger than Henry Ward Beecher. The whole town is in a terrible commotion over the affair, and a church council called to ordain Mr. Bates has refused to perform that duty.— BUILDERS’ SUPPLIES. W. KENNEDY & CO., H. H. DODGE, Y | tion being only one of depth. ‘This would seem | Aigston Freeman, Deo. Wh Established 1800,9 eon a life of tyranny and feeds on blood. There are | tion. Inthe first place he inquired of several | 1) hy proved by operations in the desert of Sa— Placed on Approval. Bonds, Stocks and Investment Securities Bough tend ‘ieaioes ae sults ina few birds—none that I know of—that care to men if they ever drank vinezar. | hara, the last place in whieh one would look for | ranger enters the store of an obliging old Gn Gomuntssion, sitive ea swallow such a red-hot morsel. It is said that said one, “I drink it all the time, es- hardly not even the butcher-bird hankers after him. The toad will not touch him, to know by instinet what sort of chs Among insects this hornet is the and neal harpy ail of them are at his mer pecia our yard drink it too ly when Lam ironing. All the women in | “Dor tt, do you any good it’s el up a person wondertully. began it—because tie othe hurt meat iirst, and it keeps | t know why 1) did, T reckon. "It made me feel sick at’ the | water. In that desert French engineers have sunk from 7 to 100 wells, which yield 600,000 gallons of water per hour. With this water a | large space has been brought under a high state | of cuitivation. Among the more noteworthy in the United States is that of the ‘Owing to the extortions of the s [have about determined to light my premises with candies; only, you see, I am at a loss to decide what sort to select. I want soinething really good, you know.” ‘TELL, TIN PLATE, No. 539 15rH STREET, (CORCORAN BUIEDING,) | Agency for Prince and Whitely, Stock Brokers, (4 Brospwax, New Yors. Grocei ir! Step this w: - : " | stomach, but when I got over this feeling I felt lain of St. Louie, Mo. It ts 8.848 tect | _ Ghocer “Certs piles Ae Youreelt, “sine | Every class of Securities bonht and sold on commis: | West winds p e | agreat deal better. y good after | deep, and yields _#ulions per hour. The Lights fifteen different sorts of candies and | *onin San Francisco, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Ne | | binowt ioe aca as iene are di it was of esp smoking a pipe and leaves a ki Water is_Warm, averaging nearly I ine pijeinen onthe counter.) ; York, Boston and Washington, Orlers executed onthe | PRALTIMORE & OO RAILKOAD, ometer and 01 ‘y are dis- pdt “bel » same city a sugar refinery has a well of 2,200 Stee ; < wos . t = Seniiaeed Hom aie ats we the Ssueh an incident ; Ra ee i aacon Asya et, yielding about'5,000 Gallons per Tn |. Stranger (after 1 New York Stock Exchange at one-sighth of one per cent | “THe MODEL FAST, AND THE ONLY LINE sularity and ¢ “About two tablespor Tl t dose 1 | Lonisville, Ky., is one 2,086. feet deep, giving Pea en oe Sarieon, Dives sod. Gisect tixsah wine © | sen sice aep mel Eee oT, VIA WASHINGTON. Pretty long in eee fal,but I know seme’ | 14,000 gallons per hour!” Charlesto hand, immerse Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston, throuch | 2 ee : Kidnapping aad the Lottery in Italy. From the Corn. That most immo: ment (if am Thad leit t! spur of the mountain b when suddenly the hornet He imme: ladies” (the co alluded to as ladie associates), fake as much as a quarter of a teac: took that neh it would make me si ly situated for water, and the city council s spent itch money in trying remedies, eom- me ne as far back as 1824. The result has been wn artesian well 1,250 feet deep. yielding rucss on the noon!” prefer gas. (Exit hurriedly.) rocer (hurling a bar of soap after him.)— G “Oh! ——— —_ — Good after- which orders are executed on the Stock Exchanges in those cities and reported back promptly. Quotations of Stocks and Bonds and information regarding the COUPLER! STEEL bate # g Phi 4 = = ‘Markets received wh our wit INSTANTLY di- ‘ON. ment it can be calle a pieat onahead of me 1| ‘How did the habit tirst begin? 1,200 xallons per hour. (In Philadelphia. the Dowpers Iijmnc ae: ae Geek oe — = SEs en, sxe source of revenue to the government, and I t object dangling trom | _ “Some of the ‘ladies’ nsed to take it when | Hotel has, a 206-foot well, 8 incl Cowper's beautiful hymn, “God Moves in a | Rctfrom the S : —— 2 Maat ix petnes ee a ‘end came ta | incumbrance proved too feeling badly, and it did t so much good eter, giving 2,200 gallons per hour. the people, in itlust anecdote, w! solutely of which I will tell an as it may seem, is ab- | ion, To of the middie le for continuous flight, and he 's ain upon the path, a rod or so in ad- eofme. Lovertook him, and on a close inspection discovered a plucky black ant cluteh- ing tightly with its teeth upoa the hind-foot of its captive, while with its two hind-legs it clang desperately to along cluster of pine needles which it carried as a dead-weight. No sooner h that others followed the examp The men | folks can’t drink vinegar and don't like the women folks to take it, but they do it though.” The reporter subsequently saw an uptown | lady who is at the head of a large boarding house. Ip answer to the questions propounded to her she said: “Oh, yes, I have had a number | of colored women in my employ who were great | per and more prolitic well in the mint in that eity. In wells of 600 feet; ‘one in Cotum- , and at Onarga, HL, 85 / within a circie of ng about | ailons per | ado desert | Mysterious Way.” was universally sung in the recent memorial services to our late President. By order of Bishop Littlejohn it-formed part of the service in all the Episcopal churehes of Long Island. No hymn could have been written more appropriate for the occasion. There isa sub- lime sermon in that composition: every verse, tt City, and Way Stations. Baltimor Annapoin aud Way (Piedmont, Btrasiue, Winchester, Hagerstowu, and Way, #1 ay. TURKISH BATHS. NEN TURKISH BATH, 117 @ ( site Rices House): linge pool: good ventilation; Di H. 1. HOVER: Electsicians STREET (OPPO- OK AND BOSTON ALLEY EXPRESS. (eon- : Yocom and at Point of Bi tor inday only, for Baltimore, Annapolis and : e 19-00-00 Si f 5 “ed, B aye, every couplet and line can furnish a text War. i cl ‘ero vinegar drinkers. The way I found it all out | artesian wells are to be found, and also in. the | 2 - r zd sabes shin ane 0 ALTIMORE. EXP? at ‘ttavill gixtainly evidences to warrant such a belief, | ate very little. T always kept a Dottie of vin- | the auxers nsed in boring Aealt well at Balina, | ostion of this bymmn Which ie coe generally UM we Be EE RRR | 0.0 °IFTSBURG CHICAGO, CINCINNATI AND ; take your boy for fora second ant Immediately appeared upon | €ar in my pp hey aun get feeb GaSe eee known, nor have Lever seen it mentioned in UMMM pw,5h Louis Exits. te ‘ o wae | the erg ‘i me day I went to take rom the shelf and | bel e surface. : h i i 5 . MI aS " him back almost : Th lady was the «their Sapir hurriedly from a found that the bottle was nearly empty. Lw salt water caine up abundantly. In California the biographies or sketches of the life of the 12:10—Baltimore, Ellicott City, Annapolis and Way young and wu child eager to go, | Bel: ing thicket of pine-tree moss. He was : A rai 2 author. It was told me by an old clergyman Stations. le was carried off, and in vain the mother | too late, however, for the hornet again souht | Not annoyed at this, although ‘a little bit sur- | it is estimated that there are more than a waited and watched. The stranger woman never brought back her child. The kidnapper Was not a native of those parts. knew who she was, whence whither she had gone. seemed no cine to the mystery. The © mother went more th t the fatt f he came, or child to a . ‘carabin- | red his son ina loft, and just in time from an ‘awfal fate. He was about to be murdered, and an No one there | escape in flight.’ But this attempt was even more futile than the former, for that plucky ittle assailant had now laid hold of another ini pediment. and this time not only the long pine but asmall branched stick also, went z through the air. Only a yard or so red in this flight: and/as the ant still yelled for reinforcements, its companion again appeared, and rushed upon the common foe with furious zeal that I felt like patting him on k. The whole significance of the scene he had taken in at a glance, and in an instant he i taken a vise-like grip upon_the other hind- prised, but concluded to keep the vinegar under lock and key. The next day the se tome and asked me for a little ¥ asked her what she wanted it for and she an- swered ‘to drink.’ She then told me that she always drank it and it did her a ‘power of good.’ Thave noticed that those women who are the greatest whisky drinkers are the greatest vine- gar drinkers.” nt came egar, 1 age ee Hazing Methods at Annapolis. The “Plebs,” asthe fourth classmen at An- napolis are called, haye had a hard time of it thousand arte weils, most of which are flow- ing. France is celebrated for these wells. One in the department Pas de Calais was sunk in 1162, and is still flowing abundantly. The famous well at Grenelle, near Paris, 1,792 teet deep, was finished in 1842, and yields 21,000 gal- lons an hour. At Passy there is. well 1,923 feet deep, giving the enormous. quantity of 62,000 gallons an hour. London has a large number of wells, and they ay be found in almost all | civilized countries. The water from deep wells | is warm, the temperature increasing a degree for every 7 or 80 feet of depth. The water is who was well acquainted with the cireumstance. Cowper, it will be remembered, was of a mel. ancholy turn of mind, and his mind became morbid on the subject. of religion. In fact, at times he had fits of insanity. In London, while ruminating on the usefulness of human life, he was seized with the sudden impulse to de- stroy himselt—to go at once and drown himself. He ordered a hackney coach to be brought to the door. When it arrived he rushed down stairs and into it without giving orders where it was to be-driven. Waiting some little time, the driver ask vhere he would like to be taken to. “To théPhames.” FINE GRADES. TT Witte ASD LAUREL CABINET OAK, Every thicknees, Darn ec aa INDIANA ASH, Pe INDIANA WALNUT, %, 2, 3 Sis Minch. INDIANA WALNUT, 1 inch to 8x8 inch. Fg eat ile Counter Top, 20 inch to 36 inch altar had been erected on which the victi blood was to spurt. The motiv crime was to insure his murderess a pri lottery; for a soc r had ree The manner fl. came the final tug of war. The hor- net tried to rise, but this second passenger was too tauch for him; he could only buzz long the ground, dragging his load after him, while his | usually impregnated with minerals, and few | wells give water that is fit to drink. While their water would serve for putting out fires, for the streets, washing, stables, and look in which these words were uttered convinced the driver, who appears to have had more than theusual intelligence of men of his ever since the commencement of the session. INDIANA CHERRY, Every thickness, The third ¢lassmen commenced the hazing by | INDIANA CHERRY, Counter Top, this purpose th child. The ghastly Priest, for w escaped: she shortly die ‘The priest where not borne a bad character, and the dre guilt she meditated appears to have been the result of a sort of Madness which the fascina’ of the lottery fs said to bring upon its Perhaps it is fair to add that this happened many years +o How Bottles are Wade. The manufacture of giass bottiesis very ‘imple Im itself, thouch for the production of fine work great skill is required. The finest bottles now made are blown, as they were in the earliest days of bottle-making, without the use of a mould, the operation being performed by simply gathering a proper quantity of molten glass upon the end of a metalic blow-pipe, and form- ing it into shape by holding it in various posi- tiens while expanding it by blowing through the tube. and occasionally applying pressure with some tool of very simple form. Generally, ho ever, bottles are made with the use of a mould in which glass is blown, because in this way time and labor are saved. it may be said that all the bottles. Jars, ete..in common use and made in the United States are blown in moulds. Occasionally bottles will show by a seam on the side where the parts of the mould come together. The finer glassware bottles are blown. The mould is usually made and is intwo 's, which are hinged, and can be opened and closed instantly. For makin the smatier bottles a bo: d of iron, hew assailant clutched desperately at everything within its reach, now a dried leaf, now atiny stone, and even overturning an acorn-cup in its | grasp. Finaily, a small rough stick the size of h was secured, and this proved the “last In vain were the struggles of escape. The hornet could do no more than lift his body ground. He rolled and kicked and led, but to no purpose, except to make it for his captors; and the thrusts of ly dagger were wasted on the desertair, | for whether or not those ants knew its search | ine propensities, they cert el is busy Soca How long this pell-mell battle would have | lasted I know not, for a third ant now appeared, | and it was astonishing to see him; with every | movement of the hornet, he in turn would la} | hold of a third stick, and at the same time clutei upon those pine needles to.add their impediment to the’burden of his own body. Practically the ants had won the victo1 » but | what they intended to do with the floui ering | elephant in their hands seemed a problem. But it was to them only a question of patience. | They had now pinned their victim securely, and held him to await assistance. It came.’ The entire neighborhood had been apprised of the battle, and in less than five minutes the ground swarmed with an army of reinforcements. They came from all directions; they ; that hornet with terrible ferocity, plete destruction was now only a question of il in Har- moment iam Hamilton Gibson, per’s Magazine. A Locomotive at LARGE IN THE STREETS OF RictMoxp.—A singular accident occurred in | Richmond Tuesday morning on the connecti track between the Richmot t inly managed to keep | passing an order that whenever they entered a room of a *Pleb” the latter must rise and re- main standing until the visitor departed. | This was submitted to for several days, when H one nizht thé hazers made the rounds and re- | quired nearly every “Pleb” to climb up on top of his wardrobe and sit there for five minutes. By degrees the hazers grew bolder, and men were made to stand on their heads in buel and were also compelled to lather and shave | each other with the lids of water buckets. This latter requirement caused much trouble | and several rows occurred, which, how. | oe. were carefully hidden from the author- | ies. The “Statue act,” an old college hazing pen- alty, was next resorted to. The fourth lasmen i would be hauled out of bed at unseemly hours and made to strip and assume statuesque atti- titudes on chairs and beds for the delectation of a jubilant crowd of third classmen. Rumors of these disturbances of course soon reached the ears of the board, but in such indetinite. shape | that Admiral Rodgers, although convinced that something was wrong, could not prove the guilt of any of the hazers. Finally on Monday a party of the third class cadets went into room 7 t, OC- cupied by fourth class Cadets T. P. Ledbetter, of Alabama, and J. P. McGuinness, of Iowa. The visitors announced that they wanted to have a disappearing scene, and that when the word was given the Plebs would have to get out of sight; when the signal to reappear was given they would have to sonny, and the last man would be “sandwiched.” The “Plebs” thought submission the better course, and when the sig- nal was given McGuinness dived under a table Ledbeti h the bed. The visitors and, placing him be- tween two mattresses forming the sandwich, they sat there for some time.—[ Philadelphia pee ee Se Srx Cexts DaMaces.—The trial of the action brougitt by Michael McDermott aguinst the Pennsylvania company to recover dam- for the death of his son was terminated in jew York , in the United States cir- cuit court, by the jury rendering a verdict of six cents damages. McDermott’s boy while gather- the 8 docks ‘2 hole and 5 McWape, the actor, whose mysteri- ‘ADE, boo in and many | other purposes, it could not be used for drink- | ing, cooking, or brewing. Their value in New York is limited, and it would be unsafe to de- pend upon them in case the Croton should fail. —New York Times. eS eee How Frenchwomen are Loved. From the Anvosy. The Provencal women are the stateliest, most, queenlike specimens of their sex that I have ever seen. Tall, well-formed, strong, with piercing black eyes and bronzed faces, they charm the eye and attack the heart of the lover of the beautiful. There is ever, too, a smile upon their lips, a reflection of the sun’s rays Irom their pretty faces, as they chatter in their rich and Proveneal dialect. In any other country but France’ these faces would photograph themselves upon the hearts of men, and rouse a passion which only its re- turn ¢ould soothe. Men would love, live, fight or die for the women of Provence—at least Englishmen would—but such things are un- known in France. I do not say unknown here only, but unknown in France. The Paris ex- quisite may affect a teste in women as he docs @ taste in horses. He may even spend his time and money in theiz*pursuit; but as a nation. and with but rare exceptions, the love of woman does not exist in France. woman is ht ne tein’ business sapirchs Le Partner of the i is Ia yep Inthe coun- és ‘an, irse-keeper, his adviser, often his master, "Tb the prefes. sional man she is the mother of his ehi dren, the bringer of a certain dot to the family store. politics she is the center around which congregate. In religion, the deputy and sentative of all mankind at church.” But in the eres aFrenchman she has no place and no ome. nraet ee ceneally of France, I say particn- place. all country places—mar- viages are made as. business made, with a due segard to business ments on all sides, nud without any whatsoever to the impuises ct the & few days ayo one of our haudsomest youn fellows lest ‘hose. arrange ‘barat ‘of mbar class, that his occupant was deranged. He drove off. but not to the river where Cowper had ordered him. He drove up one street and down another for a long time while-Cowper sat back in his seat in mental abstraction, which con- vinced the driver that he wascrazy. After a long, .round-about drive, he drove up to the poet’s lodgings and told him he had arrived “where he was ordered.” Cowper descended from the vehicle, entered the house and went to his room. Then in his returning consciousness the truth of the entire transaction entered his mind, and he found that he had not seen the river at all, nor had he drowned himself, as he Intended when he left the chamber, two hours before. In this he saw the hand of Providence and immediately composed the hymn: God moves in a mysterious way His wonders to perform, which will be sung as one ss bamens are sung in religious worship.—John Banvard, in New York Mail. (THERE 1S BUT ONE GENUINE ESSENCE OF JAMAICA GINGER IN THE MARKET, AND THAT IS: FRED’K BROWN’S, All others SPRING, ‘the. wide. MAPLE, Every thickness. é SOFT YELLOW POPLAE, Every thickness, at trains from Washington stop. ater Hor further inforuation apply the Baltimore ang ‘Othces, Washinton’ HARD WOOD YARD, SPRAGUE'S SQUARE. 8 | Sixra Srneer axp New Yore AvENvE* LARGE | Srnacve Square. YARDS. | Nonrwers Liserty Manxer Square. * WILLET & LIBBEY. PA" O18 WINDOW AND PLATE GLass. and’ he eee eee i TISTS’ SUPPLIES m30 418 Irn Srazer Noxraweer. S, » muunny, SUCCESSOR TO DUBREUIL BROTHERS, MANUPACT EET FORRES” SHIRTS 1112 F Sraxer Norrawssr, Wasmmeror, D.0.