Evening Star Newspaper, June 28, 1882, Page 2

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N INGRATE BRITISH SCALAWAG. of the Evextxo Star. a ‘The frallans at Vieksburg have asked Con-| Zreasures of a Famous PBucal Flonse SOME BIG GAMES OF FARO. GEORGIA’S INVALID SENATOR. Fortunes Lost and Won at Cards. POINTS FOR THE SEASON. 4 SWEET JUNE BRIDE. Senator Hill at Home—How He Looks | TP° Way in Webich to Bornecitate Perr | sne Seeks Advice of the Horse Reporter tobe Drewned, _ gross to allow them to place a statue to Gari-| Bumped Imto a London Auction | ™t Cyrus W. pre aaa ae eet icine GORGES Rive ko Rie a. and Feels, and what He Sars. . etpeatugiet and Gets it Fully baldi in the National Cemetery at that place. Room. HEAVY PLAYING AND BOLD PLAYERS—PUT- PDH ¢ California State Board lealth e ste fh {| From the N. ¥. Herald, Suns 25. TISG UP A FORTUNE AND THEN a Hovse— | 77M the Atlanta Constitution, June 24. sani a clipe Space Leaallegpens ag a oes Cokes youhg Congress ite it may, to grant the | sseip-Looms WORTH TWO MILLION AND & BALE eee cre) rlenc Pe seis = T called to see Mr. Hill Inst week, and as-every pes Seka weownedye the} “Can I in?” asked a taay youters request, but the query : Why should any UNDER THE HAMMER. There was on exhibition yesterday, at the POLITICIANS AT CARDS, word that comes from him is vas to his ae pies ik a bony: day afternoon as she the door of the edi- body want to place a public statue ina ce: eas z = establishmcnt of John Lafarge, the memorial | yrom the New York Sun. Seoul Tse A a Lewes rae ston “ cope: ce a opened A cometery isa place of sepultare, and | 5, 3. Jenningsin the New York World. window to the late President, which Is to be| Gamblers do not admit that the wagering of ture to reco pressions. feaso leep~ » especiall; torial room. ie buried wi x the resting Loxpox, June 15.—Yesterday and to-day | presented to Williams College, Massachusetts, | such high stakes as those in the Newburgh agi pebncters seagualinep an there has been a great crowd flocking to Messrs. | by Mr. Cyrus W. Field. This work of art, one| poker game have been common. “People will toate Resaptt ais resioetis : Caristie’s rooms in King street, drawn thither | of the best Mr. Lafarge has yet produced, will | oxavaerate and lie about the maguitude of ey es aay at eae siasiegag sy by adesire to inspect the rst part ot the far-| be shipped to-morrow and be placed in the | games of poker,” one of them said, “just as sight. The upper part of his body showed no famed treasures of the Hamilton Palace, now to | chapel of the college. The cost is over 4,000. they do about the size and numbers of the fish intion; bus iis “legs ‘aa thinned conser be dispersed to all parts of the civilized world, | The window is pointed and measures 9 feet 9 they catch. If a fellow wins a thousand dol- a5. Tn talking Mr. Hills a Pian a in obedience to the orders of the present Duke | Inches by 3 feet 6 inches. It is constructed al- | jars some night he will almost certainly be sur- | 19 uses his favorite covtare intent hie haniia’ > of Hamilton. In Rome there are palaces filled | most entirely of opalescent glass. The design Prised vefore the jyeek is out to hear that It | togetner by joining the tips ot the fingers and ribald’ monument at Wicksburs i treasures of art, gathered together century | is carried out to a great extent by the leading, | was ten thousand. Such stories grow in the | tyoey pie Se coeand'Gekune cake ios fer onrh fimomument. itis | “ter century, and guarded with Proud and jeal- | and there is but little painting. In the upper | most unaccountable way. The only really big —— ap has a habit of touching his head mbent on the city to provide « place. that is | ous care by their present possessors. But few, | or story portion, which occupies about two-| paying that I evet knew of myself was at faro, | inst back of the wound every few minutes, and Wthe proposed monument isto be one wortly | if any, of these palaces contain objects of greater | thirds of the space, is represented the angel which is the king game after all, and eyen tapping it gently. The saddest thing about Mr. ofa public site. This principie, too, should be | yale or interest than those which were lately | showing Moses the Promised Land. Aside then it was not,.as is the rule, by betting | it it gently. | The snddest thing atten I is understood thatthe ettzes of in| aeewmulated In the princely houso of the Han | fom ts petoria ponies the att consi | sy “petweea’ denen ‘and. Nayer, batty | 2 faite Aig erenge, ecproROa ie el Ske SEPA ere ts tomieee the eee Cc cuine | ilkcus fel Taneriadilve, ak ‘which 416.40 tits gested bya sermon delivered bythe Hew, Filip | etaoking ap" between plarers. "Suppose the | Penland strange expression of Me eyes Justice Chasetothateity.placethem macemeters | moment In the custody of the auctioneers. | frooks on the late President, The angel stands | limit of ehe gamie 1s'-1,000, which is all the as if they were impelled by some other power baa ners ee me. thei. | Many of the Hamiitons have held high poal- | with Moses ona mountain top at dawn, and. | bank risks on a ‘single turn of card. A, sit- hast Ghat soulch testes die ereeeh oc i : fe Cincinnati monument to Salmon P. Chase | ‘iongin the state—they have been ministers, | looking in his face, points with extended right ting before the bdard, puts up against the bank at wi rect: res. should not be buried in any cemetery. It is to . rd. against ba’ peec gest “ = agal ; | WI does not remember how these plenipotentiaries and ambassadors, and it some | atm to the Land of Promise. He is in the cen- | to that limit, then B puts up $1,000 inst A; | What Georgian C be essentially a public monument and shouid be | PeniPotentiaries lot to receive presents from | ter of the composition, standing slightly below | another thousand, oritive of ten’ thousend mes same eyes were in the old, days _fraty the win- ina puvlic place. So of the effort to remove the | the monarchs neat whom they served, as marks | Moses, who is on the left. The latter stands, ty Dec up by AAU wey wine like eeoene by | dows of is soul? How their Ignts and shadow Fe ad alate Cie aoa cueterits of | of the respect whieh their characters inspired. | with slightly bent head, pensive, and with his | # bra se oh anth they get up all that they | Yarled with his every_ moo 1 How they flag He monnineat for which | An these presents—family heir-looms which | hands half crossed holding his draperies. The | fricuss ‘to bet, alf of which goes on the turn uf | with Hite ind Seal wae tice mee ngress has appropristed $10.00 over them | aimost any man, no matter how Wttle family | figures are about three-quarter life size. ‘The the card between the players, while the bank | melted with his thos! Now they are two great Jefferson's remains should stay in Virginia: 1 pride he might have in his compostion, would | Composition is good and the poses dignified and | ine cand betwe ‘or logse moro than its $1,000, | zray orbe-fixed. unvarying, ‘slow to, mov his descendants cannot place a monument over | consider it something like a sacrilege to part | excellent. In the sky above the pair, placed | tn that way I hay often known of from $80,000 See thelr aul et ross nal n end ly mourn- them, Virginia or Congress should, and here in | with_are now to be kocked down to the highest | there for a decorative purpose, is a wheel | (2 815,000 changing hands Ina mght in the bie | fl ond words; half, questioning but not Washinton, in one of the publicsquares.agrand | iiqder. ‘Thus it. is with so many famous col- | formed of many colored glasses, with cruciform | rames that Ben Wood, Leonard Jerome, E. Z. ae Ts appeal ing ent should go up in his honor. The | jections. Generation after. generation is de. | spokes, adapted from the “Wheel of Law” of | Simmons, John Tobin and John Morrissey played asi inomarvelions springs that’ moved them Ree te atin a they eaye en they dle | voted to the work of enriching them, they | Bastera religions. ‘The coloting is rich and | tween’ Worse sen Morrissey, and | had been palsied. and beyond their impasstve should be buried as they always have been. | jecome like so many visible landmarks in a| powerful. It is much more harmonious than in Tobin were ail interested together in a lottery, | d¢ nt hs = cee iter oe ing = iy. ae among the people from whom they came, and | hation’s history, besides recalling all that is | the Harvard memorial window to the class of the capital of which was in 125 shares, worth | sesture has fee ae ao on Soe there their remains should lie and be cared for | Groat or noble’ in. family ‘records and, then | 1900, and the work av a whole far suspansee that, | e,caDieal, of ¥ pray sed Gal miaet 82d DIAS 1 ee Guanes GuatccneR te tree eee either by their friends, their states, or by the | their comes a reckless, profligate or besotted | ‘hough the first impression may possibly be not | those shares, sometimes twelve or fifteen shares only o ange i comes to nem wi th ough Ration, in a simple and inexpensive manner. | noir, who sets no store by them except | as striking. changing owners at a-itting. When they played | bain or sympathy a cloud sweeps ove We want no Wests h “I suppose you can,” replied the horse ree porter, Encouraged by this kindly greeting the young lady entered the room and seated her- self. bathing being at hand, the state board of health issues the following advice and direc- tions, which may be profitably adopted in case of accident by wning. The; simple, al- ways recalling no rileag herp be] “I want some advice,” she said, “but I hardly know"—and here the young lady blushed vio- effectually practiced by any intelligent person until medical aid can be obtained. Many lives ens the door with great are annually lost by drowning through ignor- | #ttention. ance on vrai of by-standers of the proper “It's about getting married, isn’t it?” asked method of restoration, and many sacrificed by | the horse reporter. the use of ineMcient and impropermeans. The “Yes, sir,” replied the girl. plan of treatment is the “Diret Method” sug-| “I thought so. The hesitating, dont-know= gested by Dr. Howard and adopted by the New whether-I-had-better-buy-ice-cream-or-caramels York Life Saving Institution. with-my-money lock on your countenance told 1. Instantly urn oe ent downward, with | me that at once. What is the dimcuity in your ing case?” a large firm roll of clot under his stomach ? and chest. Place one of his wrists or arms un-| “Well,” said the young lady, “Iam engaged to a young man——* der his forehead, so as to keep his mouth off the ground. Press with all your weight, or “I supposed it was a man,” said the horse re+ with a force proportioned to the age ofthe pa- porter. “Go ahead.” “And he says,” she continued, “that we 0: tient, two or three times, ror four or five sec- aught onds each time, upon the patient's back, below | to be married right away. Do you think June the shoulder-blades, so that the water may be | is a good month for weddings?” pressed out of the lungs and stomach, and “There is no doubt about June being the boss drained freely out of the mouth. month to get married in,” said the horse re- 2. Quickly turn the patient, face upward, Porter, “because we most always have regular with the rolt of clothing under his back, Just | old honeymoon weather then, so that everything below the shoulder blades, so as to make ‘the | seems to jibe right in with the occasion—a sort head hang back as low as possible. Piace the | of beautiful unison of nature and thought. Do patient's hands above his head, where they may | you catch on?” The young lady inclined her be secured by a handkerchief ‘or cord. Knee | head. i with the patient between your knees, and fix “You see in June,” resumed the adherent of your elbows firmly against your hips. Now, | Maud 8., “everything looks pretty smooth, grasping the lower part of the patient's naked | The first blossoms of the early summer—beautl- chest, squeeze his two sides together, pressing | ful harbingers of the wealth of bud and bloom sradually forward with all your weight for | that isto come—are trembling on their stalks, about three seconds, until your face is nearly | the birds are singing as if in very glee from ons relating to it. The inf ,fat jas they supply the means | | The sky. passing from white at the east into | in that way they usually took turns at dealing. | “Tay surface, anda tear gathering beneath the Abies dread ees ee) one hee rete wep iesg oy i op be yr es St. of enabling iim to indulze in his mad | varying and deepening shades of bine, changes | Leonard Jerome once lost $60,000 in‘a nlzii | lids rolls down the pallid cheek. : seconds; then begin again, repeating these bel- | that is as pure ant walny as the breath of a per- kings o passions or to repair the in w eee enous above ts heel whose desist | piaying against a combination game, In which sittio wo ees Sat ave eet one ‘ows-blowing movements about eight or ten | fumed hourl from Circassia white the newly to the people they. as a rule, 3 pady passed him. seems not sufficiently clear—to green. | Morrissey, Charles Walsh and Ransom were in- o hi Geor- ie the people let them be buried. be ordinarily arene feolitie can aaa a under robe of the angel is of light green above, | terested. ’ Colton, Thomas, Daucey and Petti- | la more briltiantiy than I. None ever served | times a minute, for at least one hour, or until | plowed fields, fresh kissed by the dews of Washington and Jefferso | disgust the conduct of aman Ww! turning to darker hues of the same color below. s scr Hines of the same color below. | bone were the heaviest regular performers of pepe unselfishly or defended her more fear- ome of over 2100,000 a year, has overwhelmed he upper one is of white, streaked w @ vio- | that ‘stacking up’ process that we ever had in = himsetf with debt to such an extent that every | let red. The wings of white, with a webwork | this country. Nobody nowadays plays any such |. 1 had nee talked at Hill ene Spares book, picture, plate, chair, or memorial belong- | of green and purple, are very effective, and rival | ames as were common with them. famous Interview wi im against the ‘‘co- the patient breathes naturally. By these alter- | heaven and warmed by the kindly rays of the nate movements foul air is out of the | sun, are holding within the bosom of tae earth lungs and pure air drawn in. the many seeds that ere another month shall should have public monu: erected at the national expense, and fifty years after they are dead is time enous! The above directions must be used on the | have come and gone will spring up to life and folence. So should other illustrious citizens ar utterfly. Moses is somewhat gorgeously. cla PAMES. k . gf : . : ose by pi ie monuments here. A bill we Duke of famitten eee in an ‘ander-robe of madder red, whose huesvary | “As for heavy short-card games in New York | thought Georgia was menaced, and I felt called | 2nd success may be hopeless. Observe that | leaves touched by the blithing breath of the is introduced in Congress for a monument to : i, about art in any form, and that for the relics of | With fine effect. In the out Franklin, and the his ancestors he has about as much respect ax | With hints of violet is the pi Proposed is only gand dollars is little garment green | i cannot say much; do not, in fact, ramember | upon to speak, I knew that I'should make en- | either apparent death nor much delay in the | first frost, are being transformed inte alt the f fault is that the sum ailing coler, and | of any that I would call particularly heavy. | ¢mles of men who were my friends, but I should | 8Ppearance of the signs of lite afford just | vivid hues that tell 8 eloquently the story. of nartes Surface had for the family pictw in the lower portion the madder epprars “ 1.008. One hundred thou- enough for a monument at . have struck the blow if it had fallen on my stounds for despair. Perseverance is often re- | nature's wondrous handiwork, and the very Dene at aceeeees e enee | nee Pen ieee te agian gue aa tera os | | iorban leat ing | cea ah eat aa Wasminetaa, abital to him to whom next tc | seapegrace, “where the plague should he getas_| tIv tt ee ee ee ae eee eager tae ae promptly ‘and. steadily following closely the | be more fit for soune hauneny plight a willl Washington we owe most of all for our inde- | 3. "he can’ ke free wi rn re- | face of the light brown haired angel is very | hands to be bet up to 5.000 or 26,000, E 5 : y fol e it : + ‘Should any less sum be expended | “stance, If he can’t make SUE iy the DENCE pleasing. ‘The faces though rather inclined ty You cannot call very big. At the present time | | “Ihave talked more to you to-day than I have | rules given. Prevent Srowding around the par froth? | Yes, my bonnie, lass, you thoald get ment to Jefferson here; but it should | o¢ the foolish and worthless personage whom: | be Tusset, especially that of Moses, are excellent. | tne high play is all contined to the private rooms | talked since I left Washington. tent toma ahs oy Pa- | mi june, sw june—mont roses not be thrust out of sight in a cemetery. fite has mate Dake of Hamilton. In che of the | The leading about the hair and ‘beard of the tthe Z x al élat din certain up-town | . 2¢ paused a moment, and then said, speaking psec Sete ane on tAergatiey ome ciples 4 gi reir Jeg adap re es: y be good reasons for the monument | cases [saw a small portrait in an old gilt frame. | latter is rather too strong, giving in the former at the principal clubs and in certai I irlendg | Very slowly and distinctly: rope pe ait — Feiews [tone began the glad fruition to Garfield at Cieveland being put inaceme- | ff "is thus aesouben in the catalogue: “Lot 61. | case somewhat the effect of a wig. The leading, | Hotels, and is carried on among personal friends | °°" have-aone this because I feel better than I | be long apart. carefully continue between them | his hopes come at last. Seek with him y. The site is said to be a commanding one. rtrait. ie Le ae 0 y | and acquaintances who keen their own counsel. | have telt since the last operation. Ifeel better, | the bellows-blowing ‘movements as before, | nance crowned chapel, and there, amid the itso, that, In the absence of anv otherequat- | Holbein. | Portrait of 4 Knight ot the Garter. poeret, paren be ee serene: a®® cay | Tt is rumored that a few gentlemen who habitu- Tee better, I look pers sleep better. Uwalk | Aiter breathing is regular, let the patient be | solemn tush that 0 well befita the odcasion, let ly good one, will partially compensate for the | “tatis wre 56. At Deg tal ese in. by 4in.| near the ground, is some purple glass | Slly meet in a private room in ahotel not three | peter, I think better, I talk better, 1 am better. | rubbed dry and wrapped in warm blankets, As |e reatted bishop make you one. mistake of placing it there: but a modest or even , 3 7 ; y : blocks from the corner of Broadway and 27th my ed to | soon as the patient can certainly swallow, lit-| “Thanks,” said the young lady. “Good day.” Presented : hii ms decidedly too strong in color and way but "—and here the’ white hand was litt I A % " anelaborate monument over Garfield's grave, Be The "has baie sentient for wie at nares with. the rest of the color | Street are doing the heaviest poker playing ot the covered wound—“I don’t know whether = sete eS and —— red irl dort Gens clea 2 replied the horse reporter. put up by the family. and a pubiic monument, | Prince and kine” The least spazk of that sen-| scheme. ‘The effect of the robes of the law | the present day, but I do not know it as * fact | this wound is better.” * oy US ore cautiously, =e : patient may oA the ee aaected man cxaered the room. Bo matter how grand, on the finest site in some Tileat which ie supposed to be strong in the | giver is, however, through somewhat unnatural, | ™yse!f,am moe personal Soqunibicd ith th om: Here he paused again, and then said: ea = Z = = dished ion, =A the patient am thinking of taking a fishing trip.” he Public or otherwise conspicuous place in oF | breasts of all gentlemen would have saved this | very ich and elfective. On: the whole the | 0d have no right to be more explicit than “Well, God has been very good to me, and ept quiet and sleep encouraged. said, “and wanted to inquire in what month about Cleveland, would be better, if such a pro- relic of a brave and ill-fated man from the auc- | “raperies are admirable. The left hand of the | have been inmentioning them. And I very much whatever His will may be, I will submit with a The above rules are intended for adoption in | suckers bite the best.” " a | doubt if their game is any heavier than is played heerful heart.” the case of adults. For younger persons the “June,” promptly replied the horse reporter. were practicable. vas | angel, dropped at her side, is somewhat ineffee- at pes cheerful heart.’ _Promptly 1 the hors bp os in Woweverr ai farther reason than the berg ae Meld hee cee en tive, the fingers being massed owing to an acci- ware os ee of the pow aoe phn Some one of the company, moved by the sun- surce spnied eg - reeled wa i Gomip About Authors. one that public monuments should not be placed | yo “carried the sword of state before Kin | dent in the burning of the glass, ether civer saa nay’ aa big chortoara | “ine beyond the window, and the fresh breeze ‘ie ocmae be te dete pcigpetit ied hp | esha teh May Wack Saee im the seclusion of cemeteries, why the Garibal- | Charies I. on his coronation, and who remained | The principal and central object in the lower | DAS lecc ere cok cence oy ‘aid | Whispering through the trees, remarked upon lating bis course ansomianty = f 2 @ monument at Vicksburg should not be placed | true to his master’s fortunesto the last. He led | portion of the window, which In design ts archi. Parcs Bee one of & epore oF xoars ago are sald | the pleasant weather. ‘ ng we accordingly. An irreverent correspondent of the Boston imthe national cemetery there. These spotsare | the army which fought so hard at Preston in | tectural and Renaissance, is an excellent and | t© apt ie Be tacks AG far as my oppor. | 4.28%" said Mr. Hill, “if I were not bias- Mtns Courier has furnished to that paper some frank the resting places of ‘the bones of those who | i643 "and in 1619 his head was cut off In Palace | freely treated medallion profile head represent- tuition, Mes BANS et have cones T oyetn. | Phemous I should say that I could not be hap- Gen. Sheridan’s Last fought and died for the Union. | Already there | yard. It was this marquis to whom the ill-| Ing bronze of ex-President Garfield, oma light | 20 i Story. % ° ded falling on | Pier if Lwere in heaven. I am here in my pleas-| When Gen. Sheridan was fishing at Put-in- | 1sctiptions of the people who went to Mrs. ipencrogchment on the soldiers’ exclusive do-| fated king gave the little picture which I no-| blue ground, in the classic style’ and sur- | “lined to think that there is adecided falling oft | 21°! home, with every comfort or luxury that 1 Stowe's birthday party last week. There was sete as bay, a couple of weeks ago, he told the follow- rs sere. at ecoration «day is not sacred tohis me- | ticed under the glass case yesterday, aiid one Hine oe EEC laren SCN areE ereeaeravale anily=angne eee By ey eae and loving | ing'story on himself to some Cincinnati fisher- | ret elecn peep’ oar ba woes est mory, as nded should be, but : wii ri ri pres nd re- ona. either side, in sm: ane! e A O a ’ . = " = g t e = brisk ness, qent dead, not soldiers, are on that day sure to | 82 easily PERO ae toe te then represented in many colors civic ard. military Stakes that tmercly qouticmanly pastime with | ine, and in dally receipt of evidences of their | men with Whom be became hail fellow: “I was | his fashing wit, and his unfiagging pirite’ Rave ilowers scattered on their fresh graves | Tho at preseat: bears the title has eed upon | trophies. Below the medallion is an inscribed | Stakes that merely furnish a he: f'athonsand | Fe, and sympathy, and this continual pain is | ina Kansas town one day, and the landlord of | Close by was Frank i Sunbor a ielt ena with either by crief-stricken friends, or, if the de-| this memorial of fidelity and valor. But a man | panel of gray, of which we speak further on, | ™° ne north Epes hoe iofepaeg see oe an all that reminds me that I am on earth. the hotel being a clever sort of fellow, I let him | big epee, loose limbs, straying hair, and, as Sat De® person of note. by seekers after NO-| who was the associate of the Pelham-Clintons, | flanked by effective plain panels of light madde bebe ate cIWn CHEN ee Sen have a drink of some particularly fine Bour- | everybody knows, an intellectual organization foriety. It should be considered an insult to| and who was one of the leaders of the set witch | Purple. ‘This whole Gesism ts between pilasters | pet", 406 al ie a that 1d. Commedors | "2+ GARRETIOS GREAT SCHEME. bon that I had with me in case of sickness. | ™@markable for anything rather than trigness. $kery Soldier in the latter case and an indisere- | brongnt the Marquis of Hastings to ruin and | of light blue, bearing arabesque designs jewel- | Yar" bit Gea. te car eae heavy — ‘That's bully whisky, stranger,’ said the land. | B@tind him were to be seen Mrs. A. D. T. Whit- Son in every other. To put a statue to Garl-| the grave, is not very likely even to understand | led and in many colors, which support an en- ads on Ge ae Danks but £ have bee} | Effect of the Jersey Central Election on Avenprergd Ky, et, ee > | Rey, a delicate, anemone-like woman, and Miss ext he se, oly anindecetion to put [Eugeniae” rien el he Margao fo cen | Catre ith a bandbne orange oxen | ald gt ac tanh Uae {hare beet | Hare aac ean Sosnsiaos cud ‘Any pletion te Gem, thesiQeay’ "wat? | apes aes See ee aes en She fe ihe soldier, only an indiscretion; to put |turies and a half ago to be faithful to his trust | An outer border on all four sides 19 of a madder biggest in New ¥ d never saw him | From the Philadelphia Times, June 26, said I. ‘Any relation to Gen. ‘Well, —— the statue of a merely notorious person’ in such i urple of medium hue, while an extreme outer | biggest games in New Syeue Molen nema ks : - I replied, ‘I don’t mind telling you that I am | brings to mind the hectic red of pale New Eng. @cemetery would bean insult. Neither sheald free feats Joe poner of ta a aceton wit foecrune all aroutd the window. (OF oes By on Gere heard oa) Rood poate The election ot the Gowen-Garrett ticket 98 | Gen. Sheridan.’ ‘You be hanged,’ said the land. | land gin slowly dying from the rigors of the be, nor, probably, will be, permitted. it, has apparently scandalized even the most | the upper border of the design of the lower por- oan y bes aon L base, 100 e500 or $1,000 a | “rectors of the Jersey Central railway is an ad- | iord, looking me over, ‘a little duck like you? | climat Not far away sat Mr. Alcott, “a tall A. SOLDIER. | easy-goinz members of the Duke of Hamilton's | tion of the window. just under the story parts | olde and wtlet for en aiilonietetes sometimes, | Yanced step toward a new railway line between | I've got Gen. Sheridan's picture hanging in my | limp man, faded and washed out in = eae Vemma Seren etre rea Ua mmaroiabie: | BRCS ie earl c te st an angie of 45 aoerecn | or apnae knowin tathoe ie pine poker of |New York and Baltimore, and promises the | ‘tt Be tn, Sil Boks Gren (six! feet Mgt 7 — | mt Lone ante a sy ree tage os Nui very sti vi x et "! 3 ing Wis af Nis in M nercial. rs a - ve Fo the Eaitor of Tux Evesise Sean Set ee a brs Ate that used byt the Bene Be Bre eae in en | not. Hs eon, Comclius J. vio shot himself, | prompt prosecution of that important work. | (mati Commercial oa sustjtintulad.” the exter ooanares It would seem that the District Commissioners — te and bem eee SE Ts ae ‘at. | Sermon:—“Who wes faithful to him that ap- ta re bore yon caetae the see NS ro The Reading now has its line trom this city to De Lam’ a Strayin’. “every one of my sex trembles, yet the win- are about to permit, if not encourage. some in- | terly reckless and unscrapulous man has plunged | pointed im, as also Moses was faithful to afl | IY of noe denarve it | He wane ve fact, a cow- | New York, and the Baltimore and Ohio has long | Exhortation at a colored camp-mecting. The someness of whose smile no one of us could re- terested parties to make a corner in stinks. | into difficulties, not one of which is free from | his house.” ' This is in Gothic lettering. The ardly, small player at the game whenever he | been seeking to extend its line northward to the dialect is that of a Mississippi plantation.) sist.’ Your issue, the other day, referring to the sick- | “iseredit, and not one of which might not have | inscription below the medallion, in Roman, ie “ ve Look out, backslider, whar you walkin’? j z had any money to play, but never for high | two great commercial and manufacturing cities * Ss . Ragbag’s Misinke. ening odor prevailing throughout the city as in- | been avoided. | have. pepe es peer aeons eee In stakes." If he lost any big money gambling at | of the Union. Messrs. Gowen, Garrett and Ttslivon wheres cone From the Boston Post. @ieating the work again of the asphalt fiends, | there eannot be the slightest duabt that ae me MES ABR: RFIELD, Fore ee at was among supposed triends. | vanderbilt have now joined hands and possessed | _ Et-you slip up, chile, sousmen The facts were these: When Ragbag lived wp : ighte: MWentieen Panaent onthe ieee ual etter Known as Cooley Keys, was one | tne Jersey Central, aid thelr purpose is uneon- | De road ts {lef stunigs aud seaDble, in ibs Souiatey MERU & esi Ge he eee forcibly suggest some odors that so far exceed | be placed at between two and three million : Q of the boldest short-card players, as wall ac one : sles Ruts an’ sink holes eberywhar', ry y Your asphalt that if brought into competition | sterling... The notorious M. Padwick was one of FORAIB. TERT eed. of the plucklest in facing the tiger, that T ever Tae ee ane pee’ dey'l ip you heap er trouble, Bowers, who was a sort of town fool. Not that with it it wouldn't get a smell. The writer al- | his chief creditors, and the estate, of course, Born Nov. 19, 1831. Died Sept. 19. 1881 knew, but I do not recall any particularly note- | ™ New Yor! vil Rl ele pec 1F you don’t stop yo’ foolin’ dar. he was such @ bilin’ ass, but he had a temper get E holds him in the same position. The sum T have In memory of his Services to the eel porreesls Washington. They will find many obstacles in| 1p dark ez pitch au’ mighty elgtiay, : a fades to the Congressionally allowed and estab- | holds him tn prodigious, but so has been the Cocstry as Scuorar, SOLDIER worthy games of his now. their path, but probably none 80 great as those | Spec’ de debbils walkin’ rout quicker than a widow's readiness to relate a ipo emi peepee peel | ecnp anion Caserorrr i money. How, and STATESMAN, and in token of THE NEWBURGH GAME. which have now been overcome. Fus thing you know hel tell you “howdy” | scandal, and he dida’t care much at whom he ipceepeine tecatien. ok etn aed eo | may oases cae ae GE a the universal Love and Symparay 2S Oy ast Moai c snomt inbimeat frteniig)| 7 re oer ateeee eamlerta erally woberee | apy at en eee area o got mad. The boys used to tease the life out of @ast. “Also, numérous individual abattoirs lo- | CUtred? The fact ts that no device ever yet dis- pa tlle Tee characterized the Newburgh game as the most | #8 one of gran She plies cen On ene Hear ge awrul thunder peal! |” Lhim, and when he got married they gave him @ gated in every section of the rural pat of the i Letaitoue a the onuent ee ne this window Is placedin the ” extraordinary game of poker ever played in this | southern outlet for the Reading, by a new line te packstider teenth —_- serenade that would make a mule want to re- pane phe opto fonse ae wets and other gambling debts account for a good Chapel of his Alma Mater by his country. ‘We hear of fortunes lost ina night | from Phiiadelphia a Buon: a oes for Drap on [orRneos an’ go to prayin’, cite the Lord’s prayer. Bower's couldn't stand ; pmes. How ser eto s YRUS W. FIELD. 3 Bi ing houses,” “put | the Reading from Willi -to the lakes x de 10 he’p You out , and m Yi : ee ea” [yaaa ice ase | rer ET noe | Reena Sam ee ea |e ia teeta ruched | oARatte Gat aman ram moet ate fon aad ea ea PIE Pe which theduke has reared has been many yearsin ar Welap gn oa cate land at poker. ‘The heer | ing to the west from the Cumberland valley abope got os’ an’ stumiin’ "bout. bles and escorted his wagon-doed of furniture Superstitions About Fish. hand, for he was first really “hard hit,”as the |_| Why the Mormons Like Sea-Gulls, | 118 (von on a sinile hand at poker. The loser | to tne southern border counties. ‘Lumina’ an Gem to the next town, the music of the march being Brom the saturday Review. saying goes, at the time when the late (and last) | From the Salt Lake (Utah) Heral 1. in that game was skinned, of course, but if he ++. Yes, "bout ten thousan’ twinklin’ beamin’— furnished by a band of fish-horns and by Bow- In Vedic times, or, at all events, in the times Marquis of Hastings made his final chute into | There is no biped for which the old farmer of | hadn't been a fool he wouldn't have lost so Very Old People. Smack untwell de break er day, ers, who sat upon the wagon and biasphemed which produced a famous legend of the Saia- | the abyss of disaster. ‘The present Duke of | this untry has more genuine affection than | Much. He knew that neither of the two men | pom moN.¥. Sun But ef you fall, debbil git you. atrociously. Ragbag hadn't seen him for three patha Brakmana, « fish was regarded as the | Hamilton did not end bis life at that time. un. | Us country ie pith whom he was playing was good foré10,000. ‘alo 9 Owl feet mos! Fixe Sr grape abr! zones, bas Se mines Gay be egal al | mana, was regarded as fortunately for those who are fo sueced hen, | the utterly valueless—in a marketable sense— | Wit! when they bet thelr hands up to $150,000 he | _S. B. Ludlow died lately in Oswego, aged 92. | You'll etl mos'like er grape shot hit you, weldresned gentianan on ieked! emt peckeccor and savior of the human race. It was | fort every year which has passed away sieve Leg | Seagull. This rather pretty bird was quite | bet his money against them, knowing thatif he| Wm. B. Gould, of Hillsborough, Me., is 92| Drapp’d Pom halt way to de fas EI [erp easy neg Bia Be ae ego © teh thet put Manu on the plan of making a | M0 cry year which has pe ities grow higher | abundant ir this valley the present year—in | won he would not get his money. It seems in-| years of age. er eee Bot had prospered and become rich and Bont and so preserving his life in the Deluge | Snd blackerthan ever. He expects to Teer | tact, tt is stated that only once before were | credible that he should not have known that |” Joseph McClees of Wagonton, Pa., aged 91, Evi Results of Smoking. he was glad to see him. He rushed up to him The Celts of Wales had their big “salmon of|am told, at least’ half a million. by” this | thece so many. In the flelds a few miles below | #@ 88, being skinned. And it’s wonder | was killed in trying to board a train. De Dacbempa ta Gcheaiak and said: “Bowers, old man, I'm giad to nee Wisdom.” on whose shoulders the two knights | sale, which is to continue till the’ 20th ie to me that he paid what he lost. I don’t be- you.” The gentleman and a friend who was es i the city, a week or two ago, thousands of them | lieve there is another man in the countn who | , Mrs. Clarissa Raymond of Wilton, Conn., has | wy debut asa smoker was like everybody's. | walking with him stopped. Said Ragbag: “I'm Reece Che Ce ee ees Dadi rae ET ene Fe | Gould bat Sc Thee etoeeoal ta plowman | would have paid it. You have oiten heard of | Just celebrated her 100th birthday. My first pipemade me very ill and it was only | dratted lad to see yon. Haven't set ayes om Se es ee microlens porser es | Oa nak init lin will ant ree eons | Alon tho MTOR Gal Gee ea tame 8 1 80,000 ak a inning OF losing from $10,000} RS. Hommedien, aged $3 years, died in | by degreoa that I managed to become a thin, | sou unos tut day we got up the horribles and & Teutonic belief in a fish which created the | Gr arth part of his debts, if report speaks truly. | chickens. Wherever there was a newly plowed | to 230,000 at poker at a single sitting. The evi- Middletown, N. Y., on Sunday morning. rate smoker—that is, I disposed of eight or ten | 780 you out of tow: Bowers’ friend looked World, and which Is on alevel with the Indian | His creditors will necessarily take the lion's | fleld, there you could see the gull, and as fast | dence on which those stories are basedisusually | William Wrenn of Epotisylvanis county, Vit | vises a day without inconvenionne, Bat when- | #™azed and so did Bowers. Said he: “Sir, either Geative boar, the Babylonian creative fish, the | share of the spoil. but probably the duke will | as aurrow was turned up the birds would fly | hearsay. I once played in a game in which the | ginia has just died at the age of 100. DIDSES any, af you're laboring under a mistake. or this is a de- Australian creative cockatoo, the Gold Coast | get “something to go on with,” and to accom- | behind the pilowman and commence devouring | ante was $100. But such games are seldom it Mary Boynton has just died at Pepperell, everI exceeded that average I suffered from | jjberate insult.” “Why no it isn’t,” said ‘ Greative spider, the northwest red Indian crea- | hlish that object there is nothing which he | the insects which were thus exposed to sight. | ever played in these days. Money isn’t so plenty |. Mrs. fed rounding & century or life ee» | violent sick-headaches, ushered in by indistinct- | Don’t you remember me? I'm the fellow that tive coyote, the creative Thiinkeet raven, and | would not make away with, as he hes moc They seemed perfectly fearless. And they haye | as it used to be. Nowadays a game .in which | Mass., after rounding a century of life. ness of vision, and numbness on one side of the | stole a feather pillow from old Deacon Hackett's Probably is not unconnected with the Romaic | sumicientiy shown. Aa for the hands Inte whiew | good sense tor ho eae e, for the farmer | four or five thousand dollars is won and lost is| Joshua Webb died recently in Madison face, the tongue and one arm, most often on the | house to get feathers the time we tarred and ical formala, “By the first word of God and | most of these treasures are destined to fall, | looks upon them as his friend, and they seem | considered a very heavy game. When sporting | county, Ky., at the age of 90.. He was a soldier | err sige. ‘These preliminary symptoms lasted | feathered your hea word of the Fish.” In Most savage the ossip of the auctionroom is that Americans | to understand fully that he holds them in| men play together now they almost always play | in the war of 1812. about ten minutes, after which the headache the creation and first peopling of the | are to be very large buyers. Teanaot tell on | that light, ‘They fy all about hing ithe nares | what. lene te hedge {able game, Each | Ephraim 8. Durfee of Oshkosh, Wis., died | Sout ten minutes, after most refractory organ, World we find animals—birds. fishes and beasts | what foundation this bellef rests, but Ith; coe | of four feet, and while perhaps unwilling to | Player buys as many caips as he wishes and | recently aged 96 years. ‘He was a coldiee inthe however, was my stomach. After” having Sdinz the parts assieued to gods in more| tainly entertained by the auctioneers then: | submit to Lene Cece eit allow any | Plays for no more money than they represent. " Ry 4 “5 a war of 1812. smoked too muci used to experience the Mea commogonies. Fishes are worshipped | selves, and it must be presumed that they know | other fataillneinete ne be practiced, for they | Hach man is in this game given a show for his ; nelor’s life for 96 te psion rosis or heartburn to a | Miserable creature, myname is not Bowers,” d sand nanians, as thes were by the Ezypt- | something about the matter. But the Rothe | themselves. take x reat. aimee Bood-natured | mones, and no one player can make an oppo-| 4 After living Cane aor Ga, as gust | ee inp eeeee Mhough as any. alkaline | shouted the gentieman., said Razbai, fans, and men make ascrapie of eating the fish | childs were In the Toom yesterday, and they | liberties. They will not touch grain, or any- | nent lay down his hand by betting more money married a girl of 16. water speedily caused the phenomena to vanish you the man we tied up in a bag with a reature) which is sacred in theirtribe | may have a word to Say concerning the | thing that the farmer desires should remain un- | than he can cover. S Mrs. Lilley, the nurse who attended Queen | Idid not care to give up my tobacco. nd hung up all night between the liberty Ai this is very well known, and it is | disposal of the greatest prizes In the col. | touched: they only eat the worms and insects ‘as John Morrissey a heavy player? ereret) equaliy well known that fishing people every- ; onl) sw 3 ehild-| About a year ago, having smoked for some | Poles? Aren't you the aman we rolled down hi : ; e for} | Which are injurious to the soilandto crops.| “Yes; when he played cards there was gen-| Victoria at the birth of each of her nine child. 3 © | ina phosphate barrel? Aren't you the man who ere have many superstitions about fish. | Antoinetter nich. Ie eee oF tee | Youre anes nw ene eset oe tiniiee Ghee ale cane Money won and lost. “He | Ten, recently died at the age of 92. mi aiek ive centres eee cloped with a grass widow and got into Jail for f these may survive from the older times. git or ten thousand pounds—wihy? ‘The to kill one of these birds. The law is probably | was fond of Boston, and used to play it often] Mrs. Lucy Plekett, who died recently at San- the region of tin Gece enone Thad a vioient | it?” “No. sir,” was the reply. “1am Edward vith all sorts of other animals, were | nature on it is ““Relsener fecit, 1791-". But poor | yet on the statute books, but it is literally a | With two men who were then prominent New | gatuck, Mich., is believed to have been 115 | orbs of angina ris. It puta stop to my | ©. Harcourt, a banker, and if you'll wait till an resets that rude nations respected. | Marie Antoinette could not have used this table | dead letter, because. there’ hes boon ne cee oe York Politicians. When they got together | sears old. She was born in Plattsburg. Heking, SA Ehpeeh Tone He Dn inl | hice oopars Wang. IM tase pox tohe tee ~ tie {ishing populations | very much,even if she had time, at that troubled | to call thé law into life. A farmer- in fact, | $25,000 or $30,000 would usually change hands Mrs. Catharme Highland of Marietta died re- | twice, Ihave always found my clar or pipe de- | lunatic asylum.” Ragbag was terribly mortified ‘ in the common root ofall | period, to use it at all. It could only be asa | any person acquainted with the habits of the | before-the game was over. 2 tly, aged 102 years. She had a brother 100 | testable, and. to sum up, am radically converted. | at his mistake and swore he never saw two men sach belie. Men Meclvad ar utitiods | memorial of the hapless Queen that this table | sea-gull—would almost as soon think of wan. | ‘Did Morrissey ever lose S10), O00 at peer” | ecass in, aba nee andtenie also completed a | I do not wish to discuss scientifically the nico. | 00K 80 much alike, information which didn't when the are, involved in circum- | contd be so eagerly contested for, although it is | tonly killing one of his own chickens 9 of ine es; but that was at faro. One of the poli- | Years old, and her gran tinh n of my sufferings, but any-sure thet | seem to please Mr. Harcourt, though his friend : let itd Which | intrinsically a charming example of fine old | tentionally harming one of these queer birds | ticians of whom I was just speaking came into | century. ee ee ee cause—excessive | howled with laugliter thereat. cl understand. The gambler | French marquetrie: Still, there. are always | As before stated, a law was passed by the leg- | his place one night and wished to play.faro.| Mrs. Abbie Graham, a widow of Nova Scotia wa of tee. Deemaaling of the cardiac Coalens hes a “Greek”) cannot contrulthe run of | pieces to be found equally’ fine "The renin | bla making it an offence to kill'a sea-gull; | Morrissey deait the cards and the politician | is 105 years ot age. She retains all her facul- le is often caused by tobacco. So long as Prodan, weahe understand the laws which now | {his fret day's sale whl, of course, be known to | it was meneen fer the eee the sec- | played. The first bet he made was $15,000. He | ties almost unimpaired, spins, knits, and reads fan vet OF fone. Seman 1a goodies Pevduce 4 Tun of twenty ow the red, now anuc-| vou long before you fecelve this leticn ein (ond nen atten the pioneers had arrived | lost and continned to play in bad Iuck ‘until he | without spectacles. ts ee ee ee ot expertencns iaberial jis, Me | therefore, it would be a waste of time to say | herein 1948—the large black crickets com-| had lost $30,000. ‘Then’ Morrissey feat ort 0 tee welong. who died recently in Denniaon, | 195 ort fhe smoker only expes injury done the i kambter is @ devout believer in| more about it here. ‘The second portion or | mon to these mourtainecs regions made | bantering way, ‘I'll play agalnst that house of | 0. was born May 5, 1770. He purchased the Seett seeainn acpercrived maul mee ance, and she replied that she knew him a heap fevery kind, from an inch of the rope | the sale will be going on about the time| their appearance, in this and some other | yours.’ ‘The politician agreed and play was re-| land on which he diéd from the government in tetune nto tener te irremediable disor. | better than she wished she did. "da suicide to a cane laid across his | when these lines appear, and it will consist of Yalleys in the clouds—figuratiyely speaking. | Sumed. In an hour afterward the politican had | 1826. He leaves a daughter 72and a son 70 noe Sronneen ae longed use of tobaons. 2 ack. The fisher ‘in eetaie guar to turn | marvellous and unique collection of old | They did not fiy, but came hopping down ths | Won back what he had lost aca, had Morrissey’s | years of age, - eee 2 “Wire the Gentleman.’ the Uk. The fisher is equally dependent on | Gninese enamelled porecinin, and. n tembe | mocntain aden ic myriads. So vast were their | Check for $100,000 in his pocket. The first brick house built in St. Louls was | soning $12,0000m m= Pairer Deuces, |. The new verbs which the rush of the presence ot als of fish which he cannot | of rare objects in precious metals—such | numbers that the mountain were black and POLITICIANS AT CARDS. occupied by Mrs. Nancy Van Bergen, who died ed brings into use are often stumbling-blocks to bring into his waters, and whose arrival in his | 95 q large oval cup of bloodstone and_a jug | Seemed iiterally alive with the great big. black, “Politicians sometimes play heavy games ot | recently aged 85 years. Her grandfather was| It was a pleasant fall night in Savannah, Ga., the simple. The fun comes in when ignorant manc™. = governed by laws beyond his knowl- | carved out of a solid mass of aventatrime Jasper, | ugly things, each one about the size of alarge : colameheaa A one of the men who helped to dump the tea | whena party of five gentlemen met by agree— rsons get frightened at them and go off with- the fisherman, like the | of Byzantine origin, and dating back to the | man’sthumb. It was at a time whenthe crops | POker, especially in Washington when Congress into Boston harbor. ment in one of the private parlors of the Scre- | 2 The reliable by iecentie eonnown and the | eizhth or minth century. Then there is an In. | were promising; everything looked greets tha | is in session and in Albany during the meeting | “Joseph Greeno and his wife of Swanton, N. en house to have a little “draw,” which, by the | Mt king what they mean. Loulevilie Shanntroliable by inventing magical processes, | comparable collection of old Sevres, and another | future outlook seemed bright, and the heart ot | of the legislature,” an old politician, who spends H. are aged 101 and 90 years respectively. | hs ena Commercial says: Two young and by abstaining irom ill-omened words. of old Freneh faience, and still another of _Lim-| the sun-burned and toil-worn pioneer grew nearly every winter in Albany, sald. “In Al-| They have celebrated thelr diamond wedding, | Sf0Fesald agreement, was to be no child's play, | an intelligence offies ana savage hunter does precisely ogesenamel. The old silver (or part of it) will | lighter as the prospect of a plentiful harvest and bany members have been rewarded for vctes on | have twelve children, and have had eighty-four | but a game for all that was in it. Three of the the same purpose. In Scotlan: | be sold on the 27th of June, Y nation inthe ine | promar comforts grew more and more tangible | b@0Y Reea EO eee igrnaoilanea ot gentlemen were large cotton merchants; one 2 fone “The Manne. of the tae nar ase | of articles “an oval-shaped rosewater dit” the But bincker than’ the. clouds: of eealinek | Tweed and hie scociaten Contselioy ss logisis | Sally Simvail of Shelby, Ky., has just died at |Wwas an extensive manufacturer of fertilizers % me of the s grave i lacker than the clouds of | eed nounced: perhaps the custom aro pg parered Melveratt emote, pesigirr H ou which came hopping down the woun. | ture that. practice was more common thee it danghter were | and the third wasa genial hotel proprietor, who ish belief that the fish would hear - | cover,” ornamented with numerous medallions | tain slopes in countless numbers, leaving Murren- | OW is. But in those day @ great many sena- u was blessed with ‘a superabundance of wealth. and make track: E . Mr. shat | Of Classical subjects, with heathen gods and | ness and desolation in their wake, were the | tors and assemblymen played poker. Tweed married her. | The whole five were ‘solid men,” whose bank no fisher utter e . goddesses of the most minute and elaborate | clouds of despair which filled the heart of the t hand in a game, is living in St. checks were good for any amount, and often that, or si work; this piece is dated 1580. There is a| weary husbandman as this new and unlooked. | but E eve night — player. | mother saw her only once after her marriage. | ai the game these same checks were group of silver of “St. George and the Dra- | for carse came slowly but surely toward the| Harry Genet, who was then in th : ready money and zbn,” said to have been presented by Francis 1 Pride, the Joy, and the promise of the early set- | ste, was one of the best Provident Rats, band. to Henry VIII on the Field of the Cloth of Gold. | tler—his fields of waving corn and The | an to e ‘3 & 8 . grain. From Chambers’ Journal. ~ One of the players, to ote E But it will not do for me to begin recounting all | foe was utterly unconquerable so far as human Rats are very provident, both for their own | beat, on account of un-| “Now Why ‘They Do it. the objects of interest in this sale, or a page of | efforts were concerned; there was mad ial bounded pluck, ‘un- from the Albany Argos. your paper would soon be filled. hbeart-sick farmer could do but stand i by and see the labur of the season destroyed. How Sunstroke Can be Cured, Lobb gazed ob ee, and ed women From the Boston Herald. looked with eyes of tears, ant ng men For an effective cure for sunstroke the follow- | Watched with hearts of despair. It was an ing is especially commended:—Remove the pa- 5 tient deo Ss shaded fh Nearly every girl gets married some time or other. That is what she exists for. Half of her early life is spent in fixing the points of the wed- @ing. and the young man in the case is of but : secondary importance. After the girl has de- ¢ided that she will some time be married, and bas poked fun at the wedding of every other girl she ever knew, and has informed everybody Just how she will_have matters arranged when her turn comes, she is ready for the young man toappear. She has a variety of tastes, too. and ‘there is no accounting fer some of them. Now ‘and then she is apparently contented to =~ eberch and have a minister tie the knot. & ing like that is too tame by half, and Kequentis she goes up in balloons, or down into oF ascends high L to Then Z ES. le i Bry rE i ee A i FRe i Hf i i FEE Bs ak al le iE if ge Et BE Ey 34 ? i if j é 7 i aT] it ge tr if i } i E B z | i g ? : ! oh &

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