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TAR: WASHIN “gu — RELIGIOUS NOTES. Of Course. Seme Fearful Seconds, When The Frost Is'On The Punkin, POROHSUS TRAV EE. LADIES’ GOODS. aaa From Chambers’ Journal. a ‘From the Art Amateur. 5 a == — At Gonzaga college and St. Aloysius church While they sat before the fire, Inthe summer of 1890 I got a nasty squeeze | When the frost ison the punkin and the fodder’s] The arrangement of pictures symmetrically, |Seme Facts Which Everybedy Shoula 20) PER CENT OFF Rev. Fathers Magivney and Brennan will relieve Nothing more did he desire in the shock, x O 80 as to produce a sort of uniformity in size Know. ax ow Fathers Forhan and Ton moe from a big python in the Jardin Zoolozique at ‘ASO dra feat the KT SOP Egle. ct UND aU | acasicedbion, ls alway pleasing, ua is all tras — FUANwer. s ners Fori a Toner. 5 “ in’ Curkey-cock, + +. ITS, ‘ — Rey. L. M. Gardner, of Mount Zion M. E. And hia heart beat Riser and bigher, fol cbeeven tis auke Wine tbent te ieee Aadthe cackin’ of Sie SUlaNyS, ond the cookin’ nage Ina small room the eye takes in| A writer in London Land and Water says: Ane ew = . the ehurch, is at York - — Rev. Father McCarth; Immaculate Conception, rings, Adams county, Pa. of the chureh of the on a short trip to the GINGHAM 8) long, in one of the dens, and from the white ms, whole of the picture at a glance, and rests | Some of our most admired flowers, which we ‘LAW eMorescence about her lips, knew that she was | 4%4 the rooster's hallylooyer as he tiptoes on the | with content upon such a disposition of parts. | should least willingly banish from cultivation, When ge ‘ up close by her, should. rence: suffering from caries of the jaw with ulceration | © it’s then’s the time a feller isa feelin’ at his | 00 the other hand, if the pictures are of all are associated with grpgen leaves of a very . WILLIAN, Then he ventured to inquire sizes, and hung without any regard to thisprin- s 4y24_ 7 Cite Trevise Paris. 907 Ponneylvanis avenue. Virginia springs for the benefit of his health. Ither sister, Jane Mariar, Soutuctnents aut haven petarea nis out cr AF [WHEN Uns Hams sani vo. grOb¥ haat tions avnige or | ee they io0e, Naconareeoe eee erie ric | olooaous Character” ho marrow tong tenves |2 Lehi. | . Father W. Regnolds Cowardin, first | | Aud her mother and her sire Vekemann, the resident director, I obtained his | gracious rest, they were not worth the trouble of arranging | of the daffodil act as an irritant poison; the dell- | Mf BS- J. P. PALMER, Prefect of discipline in Georgetown college, suc- ‘And from time to time he'd eye her, permission to make a trial of an Ointment which | 48 Bete.ves the house bargheaded and goes out to Properly. It is not always that our stock of | cate compound leaves of Iaburnum have a nar- Saskia ceeds Rev. Father Mullaly as treasurer of that As though he would like to buy her, believed { had found efficacious in the early | ynen the frost is on the punkin and the fodder's | Pictures will be eumetently near in size to en- | cotie and acrid juice which causes purging, od STREET NORTHWEST, a - 3 ‘And bis bas'ifulness was dire, stage of the disease among my own snakes. in the shock. able us to distribute them equally. ay with, | Vomiting, and has not unfrequently led to death. —— For a'npell. The four reptile dens in tne fion-house at Ant- are Jndiclousiy arranged, we may do away with | 7 ; ; Having eailed for Europe July 12th to perfect her ees —The retreat of the Catholic clergy of the Werp are not so commodious as those in the | They’s somepin kind o” hearty-like about the at- | the objection ina great measure. If it is en- |The narrow leaves of the meadow saffron. oF | Sigcments for the FALL SEASON, the Summer sto eons he at St. Mary’ whew hie wut ker tak fae ae Lontlon Gardens, notably inthe absence of proper mosphere. joer | | gravings alone we have to hang, it is an easy | autumn crocus, give rise to the utmost irrita- | 5 : 2th inst. To himseit would gladty tle her,” tanks, bat are extremely spretty"-—lots “or | WHER the Beat of summer's ove and the cootin’ | matter to got them In pairs of « uniform size. | ton of the threat, thirst, dilated pupil with FINE MILLINERY aii aad iO aeTAE It she would: artificial rockwork fraining a large mirror at the | o¢ coarse we miss the flowers, and the blossoms | With a mixture of oil palutings and engravings | vomiting and purging. The dangerous char- Might he now go ask her sire? ~ | back, which has y natural effect; so that n the trees, this cannot well be done, but with care aud sd , now on hand will be sold is mueh improved. he thought he would expire, what the poor sna¥es fack in water they make | And the mumble of the hummin’ birds and buzzin’ | good taste even these may'be ao arranged that | ter of aconite, or monkshood leaves, is doubt- aa . When she said, to his desire, fubtorinickinewie Toamsion tie file of the Deon: they will not clash with one another. Jess well known, but each generation of children | _jy14_ BELOW THE COST OF IMPORTATION. morning, armed with my ointment; but the | But the air’s so appetizin’, and the landscape The practice of hanging pictures so that they requires instruction to avoid, above all things, ad betaken herself into a crevice of the through the haze shall project forward at their tops is a question JRLOWEES at Cost. Burtington Havel h hy a ered 2 Of acrisp and sunny morning of the early autumn | of position as to light. When the light falls full | (208° “Ee. Palm-shaped leaves, dark green —< — a 8, where one could scarcely catch sight of y AY 3 days " on the upper surface. Leaves of coarse weeds Our immense Stock of AWAY AHEAD, ere otlial : ease: * to | Upona picture, whether avarnished oil painting | freeing x —- sue atthe” Meee ineue tear aees an Ts a plore that no painter has the colorin’ 0 | CFs framed engraving or water-color, there laa | Provide an abundant quota of danger, but Oe How A Chicago Maiden Headed Oft a | more than five or six: but though they projected | When the frost ts on the puntin and the foader's | glare or brightness which prevents the whole of frequently their strong scent and bitter oF | aiso, great BARGAINS offered in PATTERN nats Commercint Drummer. heir heads and commenced to hiss, they did not in the shock. the pieture from being seen. | This is. common | nauseous taste give thmely warning against "AND BO! L | attempt to attack: and the keeper—an intellt- | qnojasky, rusty rustio of the tassels ot the cora, | Cw*es,fnd the only means of avoiding it is to let | their being consumed. Of ail our Rritish orders THREAD ate | From the Chicago Times. | gent man, whe i 7» Tusty A is 5. poke French—said tliey wou ot come at us if we did not touca them. ittle one jumped harmles | ste ae Fuses golds the picture hang out from the topsothatwe | of plants perhaps the umbelliferous order | Route rushity Of the tangled leaves, as golden AS | o4n geo the wholeof It from any part of the room ont ibutes ne rankest and most wide-spread | _y5 y at my leg as I ple in the turrles—kind o° e-like, | Without this objectionable light upon its surface. | elements of danger. The tall hemlock is medover lia: sVertios - en dr eee eae eee This is effected by placing tie rings of the frame | everywhere known to be poisonous, and it ts hess remained In her rocky retreat; but on the | A-Preachin’ sormons to us of the barns they grow- | low enough down to cause the picture tohave | one of the most abundant occupants ot the There were 49 ex at the reeen' “Ist | tiest girl in the z it wasn't, he | put his sample box in the rack and braced him- | OUR OWN MA’ | se enjoyment. “Pleas y,” said | a avers ed to fll: the desired inclination. It isa good plan when | hedge. A peculiar -‘mousey” odor can gener- STEE _N-Mease, of € |the Garcia aa ae ene eer toecace sat tt cies clinibed Up aa “hrownt | 7 strawstsek in the medder, and the reaper tn | ahout hanging a room with picturesto make a |ally be recognized ‘on squeezing the leave, fcheniel wa a . Denis, Md., has accepted the ca'l from “Most bewilderimg day, | her down. The poor thing's mouth was i a | tne noses In thelr stalls below—the clover over- | Sketch of t he proposed arrangement previous to | wich are deep green’ in color, and trebly com: | 4 fue Freach Woven OOW Emanuel church, Gumberiand. lis “Ye-yess, mise,” stammered the drun. | Worse state than I had anticipa She caine commencing hanging. This saves much after- | pound, iz n down quietly enough, and though nervous, was | O it sets my heart a-clickin’ like the tickin’ of a | labor and vexation. The largest picture should | deeply cut. It issaid that the mousey smell can Fine French Contiile Hand-made CORSET, at $1, habit of playing pitcher | not spiteful, and allowed ine to handie her clock, always have a central position, so that those of | be detected in water containing not more than | THs Corret invoid in other ethenat $1.90, eh and the position of | Now, as ill-luck would have it, the regular | When the frost 1s on the punkin and the fodder’s | less size and form can be symmetrically | @ fifty-thousandth part of the juice. Hemlock in Cardinal, Biue and Brown, at 25c. Wi be at R | siti . =; in the shock! grouped around it. The eye will be satistied by | Is both an irritant to any sore place and a gen- it S50. an er didn’t fit him as tight as his pantaloons. | keeper was absent on this particular morning. e 1 ti 3 dact i DOUG e weather for traveling,” continued the | 2"4 his place was filled for the time by another peas such an arrangement. The character and form | eral narcotic poison, producing headache, im- egea- ss os = S axD i F STREETS > ‘ Z eee : of the frames isa very important tactor in the | perfect vision, loss of power to swallow, and ex. | girl; ‘much nicer than when it was cold. Are | from some other part of the Gardens, who spoke MAKING RUBBER Goons, ‘y imp — St. Peter's M.E. church, near Crisfield. M4., | mer. He wasn’t in th $8 now 100 years old, and its centenary is being | to this kind of a celebrated by a camp meeting. | —The Congr tional Year Book shows in this: country 3.801 churches of that denomination, ate: Benjamin F. Johnson. te < | nothing but Flemish, of which tongue 1am as question. Engravings and water-color paintings | treme drowsiness, with complete paralysis of ———————— 877 pastors, 1,981 acting pastors, 157 li you perfectly comfortable?” “Oh, yes, thanks,” profoundly ignorant as he moat aeee was | A New Village, the Outgrowth of Rub- | $!0uld always have a broad marginto th voluntary muscles and muscles of respiration. K. HUMPHERY, 789 churches unsupplied, and 381 murmured the drummer. # Te- | of the creatures under his temporary charge. I ber Shoes, anda narrow light frame. The ma |The water dropwort, too, a flourishing ditch bers. sumed the girl, cheerfully. 80. | went into the den with him, taking it for — In Madagascar there are now 70,000 Chris- | Let me put my shaw! under your head, won't | grante tans. you? Hadu’t you rather sit next to the window — Calvary Baptist church, New York, has au- | “24 have me describe the landscape to you: — to isolate the painting or engraving, and thus | plant; the water hemlock, fool's parsiey, must Max: conn — Syar ‘T NORTHWEST, of course, that he was accustomed to| At South Framingham station, on the Boston | enables us to see its beauties to much greater | be ranked among our most dangerous poisonous | Ma onto tee porte — teand inatertat, snakes, and gave him the box of ointment to | and Albany railroad, a new village has sprung | 8dvantage. This is more especially the case it | plants, Spe res to the unbelliferous order. | anf hold until T was ready to use it. When I had | up within six months. It is the outgrowth of a | the Wall upon which they are hung has a pattern | The fool's parsiey leaves are sometimesmistaken " t and finest Imported How | “No, please,” he muttered; ‘“I—I'm doing well | brought the pythoness fairl vn to the a uponit. These frames should be alike in make | for genuine parsley, but their nauseous odor Patent Shoulder Braces thorized its trustees to mortg: enough.” j floor, T tipped hee) bard Syne toa cehick new rubber shoe manufacturing company. The | and breadth as faras poseible. and darker leaves should prevent this. The | French Corsets. and I £100,000 to build a new church ed “Can't I buy you some peanuts or a book? had 'the effect—as I intended it to have, | sum ofthe South American eaoutchoue, from | Oil paintings require a different and much | nightshade order ts another, with dangerous | porting Gore for w cnn uae Gallas oak Let me do something to make the trip happy! | and as it always has with snakes—of making | which the rubber is made, comes in large flat- | heavier frame than water-colors and engravings. | and often extremely Poltonous leaves. “Indeed. | can sient g is Suppose I slip my arm around your st! |her open her mouth. I pressed her | tened cakes called bottles. When the tree is | The principal-object in both cases is to display |no nightshade ean regarded as safe; while rench, German and Spanish spoken. 9B : ate a Methodist church, | Iria tare te eee rae SOE eant oul |head away from me at the same time, to | tapped the sap or gum runs out into a clay pan | tHe Painting to the best advantage. The broad | the deadly nightshade, with its oval, ‘uncut = - a ae ftiei | you'll have to excuse me!” gasped the wretched prevent her catching hold of any-part of my | “PP b i . yp margin does this with water-colors, but the oil | leaves, soft, smooth, and stalked, are in the BOOKS, &e. # he declined to oflciate, be- | drummer; “II don't think you really mean | Clothing, In her effort to. bites Int ner fright, | OF VOwL which is pressed closely against the painting having no plain margin we must | highest degree to be avoided. Henbane and | —————— ~ _ cause he had promised not to dedicate to God | je!” “You look so tired,” she pleaded; “wouldn't | and rage she drew her body up across my back, | tree. Natives takea peculiar nut which grows | depend upon the frame to effect its isolation. | thornapple again, with their large and much | he irerrorsome, 3 Cos bocce Le Gh tin ae You like to rest your head on my shoulder? | and twisted her tail round ‘and round my other | there and which makes a dense smoke but no | In our opinion a great mistake is made In. hay. Indented leaves, are conspicuous members of ley. 141-50; Hopes and Fears for Art. (Mornin) pss: __ Rev. Dr. James Mitehell, son-in-law of the | No one will notice Just lay your head right | arm. All that I now required ofthe keeper was, | flame in burning, light it, dip tt into the pan of | ing these frames too elaborately ornamented. | the “dangerous classes.” Holly leaves contain | the r ly he Graphic Arts, (Hanberton, }€2; Natural late Bishop Scott, of the M.E. church, will write down and Tl tell you stor “No— no. | by teasing or pinching her here and there. or by | gap on a reed and twitl the reed about, dry- | [tis not the frame we want to exhibit but the | a juice which is both nareotie and acrid, caus- | (See'ey,) $1.25; Leome tound Robin Beries, © the Bishop's biography. thanks! I won't to- I'm very comfortable, | unwinding the tail when necessary, to cause her } ing the sap m the smoke. ty : hank you!” and the drummer looked around ! to shift her coils constantly. and prevent her yatchtiir Gay, eye an . The frame surround | leaves vet le: y produce ard Gasce, 3 n —The Presbyterian church at Stamford,Conn., | Your scarf pin is coming out. | resting long enough on one spot to apply undue | uaes {elhing several | ng tat Opeattine ie | iN an oil painting should be broad and com- | injurious Irritation when eaten. With. regard | of Leisure ¢ SS ei “a fi ‘ LAW BOOKS. fix dt. There!” and she arranged it | pressure. My face I could protect for myself | the mouth of a bottle, and in tuat form | paratively plain, as we thus separate and con- | to treatment in cases of poisoning by leaves, If Daniels, on, Negotiable Toate) wow sii street in that city. tt was destroyed by lightning on the 14th inst.; $35,000. at the next station I'll get you | with the left hand. This, I concluded, he un-| the um is imported. Delivered at the | ue the pletare'so that the eye takes in the | no doctor is at hand, produce vomitting till’ all | "= vie. $13, — Rev. Edward Bryan, pastor of the Presby- | and when we artive at our d derstood, as a matter of course. Iturned round | works it is first put to soak ‘The bottles | Whole of it, without being confused or inter-| offending matter is expelled, and when con- | Novelties in Stationery and Fanos Goaite. Gaian’ churéh at Allaitic Clty for the past four I let _me call on you?” and she smiled an | to make a sign to him to be ready and give to| are cut into and fhen passed through the | fred with by any external object. siderable sleepiness or drowsiness has come on, Law Bookseller and Stationer, rian church at Atlantic City p | Anstous prayer risht up in his pallid counte- | me the ointment, when, judge of my dismay as | cracker, a stout pair of grooved cviimicrs re. | Inthe hanging of pictures there are several | give strong tea or coffee, and again bring on | sus 475 Pennsylvania avenue, W Jears, has entered upon the pastorate of the | nance. “I think Fil zo away and smoke.” said | Teaehe seene at nee eae oe, my dismay, as volving toward each other horizontally, whieh | Points necessary to be attended to in order that | Vomiting; then stimulate’ and rouse the brain | >> G oj « eee tik oe | the drummer, and hauling down his gripsack he | dull “impartial interest on it, looking at me | pick aud masticate, the toush gum, Running | they may be safe and easily adjusted. A picture | in every possible mode. N ‘ 7 s many friends in this city. | made for the door knee deep in the grins show- | through the glass in front, and’ the dour closed water keeps gum and machinery thoroughly moulding firmly secured to the wall just under- a ee corporation of New York | ered ardund him by his fellow passenvers. on the outside! He had got frightened by the | wet. Made into long, narrow strips the mast | Neath the cornice or frieze, upon which hooks Betting that Corn Will Hise. | eeggttance,” murmured the girl to the lady in | noise of the other pythons, and had quietly gone | gated gum is hun up to dry. Then it is run | 8% made to slide along, not only affords a Orm | From the Cleveland Press. jfront ofher. “Ionly did with him just what | out again. 5 i Avast nd | Support, but is an addition to the decoration of si through other rollers; compounds are mixed diated ps i S; Just now every grain speculator claims to _ | he was making realy to so with ean big | Twas about to make an impatient gesture, | with it to give it the necessary consistency and | 700m. ahs soul dia may Be mate ae Sree have ® pointer on corn, and 1s willing to bet and strong as he is, he couldn't stand it. Ire- | when in that instant the serpent tightened on i ee y | bY any ordinary joiner, or may be bought al astone spire, | ally think women stronger stomachs than | me so suddenly and. violently that Lmomentae | 2a™duess. tase slhaeenan oe Hatterny | most of the paper-aniing establishments, in | that before many days a bushel of corn will be of ain — During this season the fl hospital has | men. and, besides that, there isn’t any smoking | rily lost consciousness. I then found myself | of overshoes. Then the rubber is cut according | Slt, black. or in various woods in combination | worth as much asa bushel of wheat. It takes A ed ae a made sixteen excursions to the Seaside nursery | car for them to fly to for refuge. 1 don’t un- cori about the den, fighting for life. I | to the patterns stamped, or the plain cloth, cov- | With zilt beads. The hooks also may be Dr0-| about 3,000,000 bushels of corn a day to ran Eerors in the dete Cher Madest uindoe tle ices of St. | derstand this thing.” But she settled back con- | expected to feel my ribs iy y every mo- | ered with rubber, is cut as boot and shoe pat- | Cured from the same source. Brass rods have thi airy. It ia Glalmed by fe 0. John's Guild. of Now York. také | fentedly all the same, and at a convention or | ment, yet my chief fear atthe time was of falling | ferns are cut trom leather, Cement 18 eecceg | been much used for_hanying pictures from, but icant date matte civ or eidenete each trip. fs 'y es et a I va va rd iy . les! shor eX ve e] s' y ie is is 3 “ 7 4 7 ace ¥ (i ae ; engaged, so far as they were concerned, for the | eross my breast, and I can Temeinber catching | Putte Grenee ecthe aaa eaaee after piece is | Ure action of the gas aid moisture in the roone, | Supply. It will, they aver, take 300,000,000 — The Wesleyan Methodists in England have | puniiels 60 z ; put in proper position and held by the cement | \y ts into and destroys the lacquer. They | bushels to tide the country over until the new a lance Of the season. steht of myse ceoy nulberry colored nears, in Hill the shoe is complete. It is ‘then varnished | (ict CAs Inve And destroys the lacquer. ‘They | cop of corn, which te not very promising, comes . ————+e>-—____ je mirror. ew, too, that I was trampling | and baked for eight or nine hours, and then re- nd ttpold* ence they bel 2 ine ‘The Talk of Men and Women. about over the other pythons, who furious at | moved from the last, inspected to see. if it is | ,, SttoNE wire, cord or line, both “gold” and Sens ey Ce ee een ions G From the Cornhill. the disturbance, were now darting about the | well done, and put up for market. Similar pro- - ilver nO made, a pene peed ui Sondthotl'e : nt of the Wesle * | _ To two classes we pay court: women and the | den aboveand all around me in every direction; | cesses are followed with the great rubber boots, for the purpose, beltg very tht, bat oaecuee ct |] IST OF LETTERS REMAINING IN THE | Do Ginetrated erence at I the Right Reverend J.C. | aged. But the superiority of women ts perpetu- | 804 I exerted every enerzy to keep my teet.for I | and the gossamer and ‘heavy: overcoats are Wane Legale NSA Fictive Gada, ot WASHINGTON CITY POST OFFICE, Ashenbroelel, i bishop of Livexpool, sent hire a te ally menaced; they do not sit throned on in-| {welt down it wouldbe all cocrehrg er ithe | Heated as nearly like this as their nature per- | Uearing great wolzits, (All picture-cords, of SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 1882. EE py is tes pista tues the eit of | firmities like the old; they are suitors as well | neat was stifli Tecul bear it no longer the| oon ees the wall upon which they are put as possible, n | gg-ro obtain any of these Letters the applicant must | ™ Seuss ant Dee HAPMAR, that influ ion to which he be- | 4S sovereigns; their vanity is engaged, their | cage spun ma round and round before my Exemption from Vermin. order to cause them to be but little seen, Too | call for ‘‘ApvERTISED LeTreus,” and give the date of | » - CHAPMAN, y y y eS Dee fis loet. Metropolitan Book affections are too apt to follow; and hence much | ¢¥e3, and everything seemed to flame and roar. | ‘The following antidote for fleas, mosquitos, | many ae fase sea eee aan catia nee Sans NS SSVEV ANIA AVERT Foe tickman kas improved upon the ex-| of the talk between the sexes dezenerates into | hack “over me taht sone Coes en atRIY | and other small deer, by an English physician, | Detter to oop the conion to two hooks ao that | to iewed cece Ooo ce ee OE Saye ; sting religions and now detines a new species— | something unworthy of the name. The desire | put did not Inte me and ant oy path Hota is worth a trial: it shall be perpendicular at each side of the pic- LADIES’ LIST. OS AND ORGANS. “august relizion. to please, to shine with a particular engaging | I just recollect falling against the door with| “I have never found the fullowing receipt | ture, and not looped on to @ single hook or | Asauitte Charlotte, Mahony Jennie THAURGET SEDs a please, Pi aging | I j ag door wit au P ie! Ar wtsoos Jon Mitebel Jone pt VHAUNCEY J. REED'S con Fish Pressterianassembly has adopted /luster, to draw a fascinating’ picture of one- | outstretched hands, but nothing more until T| fall, and Ihave traveled in many very flea-| nail, When one pieture is hung beneath another | Atustronk Jove 3 Marehall Mary Cc . Fesolutions strongly condemning the growing | self, banishes from conversation all that is sterl- | found myself sitting on the steps outside, cough- | bitten, bug-bitten and mosquitoe-bitten coun- See eT, be thang from’ tHe one | Aldea Mee Mary Mecatirey Mew MF eee Practice of sittin instead of standing during | tng and most of what is humorous. As s00n as | tnuitinea hot key dome tee ace ee seeker 25 | tries. In Jerusalem, in particular, during the tiplying the cords, which is always objection: | Buineet annua Otut Mire Low o 4 Prayers. | s strong current of mutual admiration begins to | reason. I brought up a little biood and drank | Nelght of summer, Ihave seen my bed pretty | alle “Pictures may also be hung without any | Bele Clara en SPECIAL BARGAINS IN PIANOS AND ORGANS” —The Rey. George 0. Barnes, the Kentucky | flow. the human interest triumphs entirely over | a little brandy, after which I soon got better; | Well alive with fleas, and haye swept them out | cords showing, "by crossing the cords | Bluford Mrs Elizabeth Oliver Mra Marg't No. 1.—One UPRIGHT GRAND, pa “mountain evangelist” is to hold a series of re- | the intellectual, and the commerce of words, | but I was not well enough to walk home, and | withimy hands before going to bed. Inthe ex-| through the rings at the back of the pic- | Baker Miss Ed iy Geng ‘cont tates teal und sear been Ngious meetings in Indianapolis during the lat- | Consclously or not, becomes secondary to the | the bruise in my side did not fade.for many-® | cavations or vaults in Mount Moriah, known by | tute. and looping this into a nail or hook; | Brown Lucy. Por e ter part of thi = | commercing of eyes. Each simply waits upon | day. I suppose the whole affair did not last : es z: ¥ | neither cord nor hook will then be seen. When | Brown Mrs Maria No. 2.—One of those celebrated NEW YORK or part of this month. the other t6 be admired Paieids a L tg | the name of ‘Solomon’s Stables,’ I have seen | U¢ither i : cad ails | Carter Auna. lewaust rosewood case, new, . Le . . tthe ot admired, and the talk dwindles | more than a few seconds, but I found it quite picture mouldings are not fixed, strong nails | Carter Anna “sing —The Ritualistic churches in London and vi- | into platitudinous piping. Coquetry and fatuity | long enough. Fortunately, the snake had only | My clothes pretty well covered with them; and | may be used having earthenware, china or brass Garter Apnic ‘octave rosewood SPEAR PIANO, with einity are steadily increasing. Some 37 churches | are thus the knell of talk. But even where this | a small part ot her body aeross my left side ana | 1 Athens I have witnessed, at the early dawn, | heads to them. These screw on to the head of | Colman Mre verstrung bass and late improvements; $100, oot Poe mow Use jCucharistic vestments, | ridiculous danger fs avoided, and a man and | pack; had she encircled me with a whole goil I | the bugs leaving my bed and crawling up the | the nail, so that the nal may be knocked Into | Gempbell Mra ae he ted eee reas | against fourteen in 1869, Woman converse equally and honestly, some- | should have been crushed like an ezzshell bedposts by the score, *ne dicam’ by the hun- | its place and the head screwed on afterward, | Cooter tillian IRGAN:; $50. ° The Watchman indorses the remark of a | fing in thelr nature or their education falsifles |“ Curiously enough, my left arm was quite par- | dred, and in neither place was I bitten onee. | These are very neat and have a good appear. | Sameiiiaie me gecuine LORING & BLAKE ORGAN, writer in the Congregationalist that the agi- | he strain. An instinct prompts them to agree; | alyzed, and I did not fully recover the use of it | { adopted the following antidote, formed on | ance, and always clean up well. Feeney See ae, ORGAN, with. ‘ati eatnst di Sia treats tor | and where that 1s impossible, to azree to differ: | fora week. I did not know it at the time, but | What I heard of as being done in Hun-| Pictures of all kinds should be kept free from | Doyherood Mise M ct ‘will be slauglitered at $1 fon against Aivorce Is treating a symptom | Should they neglect the warning, at the first | she mast have pressed her tail under my armpit, | £@ty, 4 land much vexed in__ the | dust at the back, for where this accumulates in- | Doteey Mary So > Father than the disease itseif, suspicion of an argument they find themselves | and so compressed the nerves. The accident, | summer time by fleas and so on: I oiled myselt | Jury is sure to result. To effect this two pieces | Emory Netto GEE CYMBELLA DEGERDS? ana —The Gospel Banner refers to Rev. Joseph }in different hemispheres. About any point of | was one of the stupldest and most preventable | # over. from head to foot, with the best sweet | of cork at the bottom edge of the frame will | Fox Lizzie — Cook as “the Boston gentleman who gave the | business or conduct, any actual affair demand- | in the world, and was entirely owing to my | °F olive ofl, and those parts of my back that | keep the frame from the wall, relieve the pres- | Fletcher Mre Mollie on BG Meare cu hand for the purchase of ea, jie tious Wides the calie created his | 1" Settlement, a woman will speak and listen, | taking the wrong man into the cage to assist me. | I could not get at myselr, I got oiled for me by | sure and allow the du: toagreat degree to | Fletcher Mary hand Pianos and Onset UNGKY J. REED, ~* Segusliaed censceat iio: hear and answer arguments, not only with | Tmayadd that I went in some days later with | the help ofa friend or of aservant. Rub the oll | fall down and be cleared away. Gold frames | ExSMeT ay sy22 433 7th strect northwest. qualified personal i sement. ., | natural wisdom, but with candor and logical | the proper keeper, and pertormed the opera- | Wellin with the palm of your hand over the | should never be dusted with anything but a | Gleason Mre Alice A VIS & CO. magali free church of Scotland tas Wet. honesty. | But if the subject of debate be some- | ration, not only without danger, but without Whole body, head, face and a na warm room, | feather brush, and when they eee Gemenet gente emit RESET At one PAG oF the youth of the church committee.” | thing in the air. an abstraction, an excuse for a efore a tire if possible, in cs winter | vants or inexperienced persons should not 1 ioricx.— ‘ e Fi le Sep % One feature ofits work is to encourage home | talk-alozieal Annt Sally, then may the male | wee PACHELE Gay bo disceiatuaticely anew |(tenala yoweny auch ine “perioneetan a Sincere attempt to clean them, as they will | Grae atiiie’® Slocum Mee due a temiver 10 with an unevnlion mecuon ot sae Teading and study among the young. Prizes | debater instantly abandon hope; he inay employ | tlonate tovard individuals, beyond the mere in- | Without tlils precaution I am a martyr to fleas— | be sure to spoil them. In cleaning the glass of Sects mee sa0y devant Pianos, Wait tii 10m of September. Hf. Ee bi <i for written papers on appointed sub- | reason, eee ets Pe sanple, be smiling, be | stinctive absence of fear, everyone who has ay cltier flee, bug on mee atte. It eee water-color paintings and engravings the great- | Grav Rebecca Salkield Mre Lide = ~ = = jects. angry, shall avail him nothing; what the | kept them must know. To those who have not, | Mistake to suppose that olling oneself with | est care should be used to avoid rubbing the | Gardner Rebecca Stewart Mamie EICHENBACH’S PIANO WAREROOMS, PIANOS: —The number of Congregational colleges in | Woman sald first, that (untess she has forgotten | I should be happy {o allow my owt peters | sweetoll Is a nast ‘dirty operation. Theoll sinks | frames. ‘They never should be wetted witt the | Hagan Mrs Emma Simpeon Mts Stary E Re Pee Waa Koes acct weakd ‘Ge couairyis aptist 21, Methodist it) she will repeat at the end. Hence, at the | prove thelr case. Can a snake have sufficient | Into the skin atonce, and does not staineither sponge or leather, or they will soon be spoiled. | Henry Ida L Snowden Sarah Tenowned Pianos, ‘Tuning and iepalting. 5 : -Sclae | yery junctures when a talk between men grows | intelligence to be Jealous? Jealousy is perhaps | Cotton or linen. ‘The only effect is that you feel ee Harris Mrs Johana Sunith Saran 425 ith etreet, above Pennsylvania avenue, 3e8-3m 3, and the Presbyterians | prignt nicker and bes ° set teva rations ibute, | Very lithe and supple (the Greeks and Ro- Saturday Smiles. : Holmes Susie th Sallie — as ae | brighter and qi rand begins to promise to| the nearest approach to a rational attribute, y upple (the ‘s and Ro: Johnson Annie or Cornelit TIY’S ORGANS, 27 STOPS, PIAN pons in {he number of | bear fruit. talk between the sexes is menaced | showing some mental process of logical lu mans knew what they were after when they | —Itis the father of twins who knows what it | Jolmeon, Aut ‘Thomas Fiza SF Bast bo.” Factory rensins tap abd night Goat ries and the richness of | with dissolution, The point of difference. the | ence of deduction, which animals evince. 1 | Oiled themselves before gymnastic exercises), | is to be up all night with the boys.—New York | Jordan Aunes Zurner Mre Eliza etree.” Address DANIEL £ BEATTY. ae. | Point of Interest, Is evaded by the brilliant | don’t press the point, but merely give the fact | aud it enables you to defy the murderous—or at | Trivune. Jones hi Chea: Thommon Kato == “ tional ocketss ft is boidged bythe divereet | pect ceotseeginy oa, ong, Of the gentlest and | Jean the sangulnary” attacks of Your creeping. |” itis sald that the war in Rgypt will rao | fou Teauietine r, — eeemae HS § Tae Pen i: $3 Is bridged by iscreet | best-tempered of snakes, who lives in a cage in 4 : 3 ice es. Pe = johnson Jeoqnel omnes Marys 7th Si increasing number of people who express the | Woman with a rustle of silk, as she passes | perfect prace with two pythons ae aneGe ae ie Roe the price of mummies. People who have not | Jtleon Josepiine Tomsamon Maggie sole auents forthe STIRFE ant ieRitan teacil 3 | emouthiy sorwasd to he aenrest peiue of act V with two ‘iq | Sirteem Miles an Hour Fast Enough. | yet bought their winter stock of mummies will | Johnson Laura Tibbs Scrak, & BACH PIANOS and ESTEY ORGANS. opinion that the Revised Testan sm ly rd te earest point of safety. | rat-snake, a wasp-snake and several others, will ee ; & regret to learn thi Norristown Herald. Johnson Lola Thompson Mrs Stewart ‘Special attention given to Tuning Pianos and Organs. acct het borne | It cannot be discussed, or not in its natural | invariably bite them, if I take them up when | The National Intelligencer of October, 1831, | T&T! lates Jones Sallie Yauchu Emma "Several Pianos and Orgaus now tor rent at low ata sprites connection. It may be returned upon after a | she is on my should contains a description of the Baltimore and Ohio |_—A girl who sets out to look graceful in a | Jackson Misa SJ Wilson Adelia es. The general verdie bs Pater T 4 1, p Jewel Violet We-t Mrs A Mt or wrong. certainly b | cireuit; and if propounded as a probler, with a Sa railroad by Mr. Gales, editor of the Intelligencer. hammock has as much work on hand as the | kine Amelia Wiiliams Mrs ———_——e_e___ os [ - Sales 5 Bert neither party committed to a side, it may then August Planting of Evergreens. i ving | tan who tries to be languld with a saw-log fol- | King Miss L w Watson Filen GENTLEMEN’S GOODS Rew revision any decide 5 be gently, lightly, but, in the end, thoroughly | From the New York Tribune, Thearticle makes curious reading, as showing | towing him down a hill.-Free Press, Linton Mise Annie L Walker Emma = = =——4 —Itisstated by The Lowlon Eo that at a | Pe Sent The August season for planting evergreens is | Ow impossible It i, even toa man of superior |” ancient, angling: Many people think Ana-|T2%Sareee 2 | Wald Macro SIRE DaESS SUITS MADE TO ORDER Meeting of the Kensington Auxiliary of the SS = approaching. If the ground has been well mel- | intelligence, to forecast the possibilities of @| nias was an amateur flsherman.—New Orleans | Lewis Jennie Wet Mrs Mary B eee London city mission recently the re Newport and Mr. Bennett, lowed a month or more in advance, and if the | #teat Invention. It seems that tye Washington | Picayune, rete Lacy (Sendhil ely Bix finest Dress Shirts made to order for $12. assertion was made by Mr. The erection of new dwellings Is being carried | roots can be taken up without violent breakage, | editor madea trip to Ellicott’s Mills, in company Hayne 5 Lyles Mrs Mary Woodland Mrs Rachel Ann | Perfect sit uaranteed. p ze. P ‘pany | _—Happy little boy: A little boy, once a page, | P2/e8 Mu Mt > ‘only 2 per « on ail about Newport, for the owners of the old | and the plants are not to be carried far,or ean be | with Dr. Gwynn, editor of the Baltimore Gazette, : : . ; GEN . Our closing out sale of summer neck-wear and under- the bi cos Have witely let #8 : carried without being exposed to dry air, and if but now in the graveyard, dias been assessed by baits Sadar Sees cimmmences Saturday. aly S24. Yon com Be ye tha i places have wisely let their lovely homes alone the August rains set in opportunely, the. plant. and George T.. Brown, an officer of the rallroad | Jay Hubbell. ‘The little Boy need not pay, It me sarc, Mag nce Gein eee span tin foaee sedpens4 39 po and lavished their attention on their lawns. The | ing can be done with full suece and new roots | Company, and in recounting lils experlence con- | He will not lose his place—New Orleans Pica- ‘Munro James, 2 (French Lace Understitrts reduced from §1 to 50. ctu) (Gods operations all over Eenaae fuchsia is now the flower of fashion tor outdoor | will be well established in. the ground before | {esse that “for celerity of transportation of ane) Jains yune. act 1 a a zs road possesses advantages over | —Mrs. Lilly White at work; “Oh, dear,.I| Batlet EH effects, and rows and almost hedges of large | winter. The chief risk is from hot, dry weather, | Ve!Sous the railroad ly pork; “Oh, : anging full of bright bells, are in nearly | and soil so different from that which usually | SHY other mode,” thouzh he ts at the same time | never can get used to housework,” said ayoung | BEwt sane fies ficud rs attends planting in the spring; and only | Cateful to warn the “general reader” that “‘as a | housewife to her neighbor, "I hayen't abit oF that’a fall is certainly a fact in human expert- | CY" Moe rats following upon | small everyreens, which are easily moved quits | Tet highway of commerce” the canal is beyond | corn starch in the hcuse to. do up John’s: cuits ence, individual or national, repeated | the Thododendron and hydrangea rage, quite | entire as to the roots, are customarily set out | Comparison. Says Mr. Gales: and collars. Can’t you lend me a little?” —New. may be the true reading of | Cuttoes the carpet gurdening, and some won-| in August, and of these more stratoberry plants Ne ee pericue: in Nery slight degree the | Haven Register. f > adds: | erful displays are made by the artistic gar- | than anything else. Some set pots in the ground Hapeiealid ee, have nese moore Onan the —Sand in the sugar: “Johnny,” said the thought and experie si ue gt nds v1 vis et cl C vi <2 r| Ne father vi i is i history. as it isto the Bible | 0 Janies Gordon Bennett's place that attract | upside down, in lou of pots; these receive the | W met with no accident of any sort. One of | Now, if your father was to put sand in his ian Union thinks “that Closing out a Jarge stock of Pancy and Balbrigram Har Hore, only 26s, at y23 S, not an ascertained fact; and an “The notion that the Bib human reason Jette Richard J A date gh aguch attention as the famous bronze | Toots and make the planting very easy and | the cows, Indeed, which we overtook strolling. | Mey ou’ re ne yrould be aetinga lle and do- c Hobersoa, Jerry Rey. R. W. Kenmore, rector of Acte, in | O'S that serve as gas lamps on his gate | sure, for the ball Is apt to crumble in taking it | Of srazing sane the edge of the road, cast a | INE ery 1 Johnny, ‘Impetuously, “and he seta |B Hichardeon 17 aes ao. @ 12 | ports. At night crery one stops to look at the | from the pot when but frevhls formed. "Where ET Re ak Ae mmomertary | he didn't care."— Wheeling Journal. Kichard. Str peice ast Drees Spite to coder. pe wae BSCR grewny © | solemn oid birds with their glaring eyes, ¢ distance is quite smal!, and favorably sha ss 3, Rinker Oliver SI ee dhree years by the advocacy of total abstinence | far as the Iluminating idea goed the owls are | hours for the work, Ga he ee Te a alarm lest she should attempt to cross oup path. | —Sympathy: Colonel Folsom was reading the ane) SS Fine Slurts to order........ curate. the Rey. J.P. Hardman. Re- | Rot strictly successful.’ It is an odd and orlginal | move the young plants even without any ball, | BUt, luckily, she forthwith ¢adk @ direction from | morning paper yesterday at the breakfast table, | Devans St C Route et Patrick = 5 hal the audacity to Join the | coucelt, and the four birds of wisdom that guard | carrying them in a pan of water and letting the | te road. a it when he exclaimed, in a horrified tone of voice: Reed San) A rT HOMPson's ood Templars. This act the Rey. Mr. | tl nett gates are more for admiration and | runner remain attached, which should be coy-| _ The Washington editor as unable to con-| “What a terrible ‘misfortune!” “What is it. | German A Rove Willie Sakas Stay maNceaccee could not stand. He commanded Mr. | ttistie effect than for strict utility. A flfth | ered with mould to keep it plump and allow or | Célve that any rational mox¢al syould wish to | somebody got married?” his wife asked, In an Simous a oor - an to give up his membership in the | bronze owl {s perched in a tree beside the house, | {ts serving as a temporary reservior of supply to exceed Sapeon ofthirteen miles an hour, espe- | indifferent ‘manner. “No; but a married wor Sparhawk BE axD Good Templars. The curate appealed to the | #0d many stories are already current as to the | help establish the young plant. If the soil has | *lally at night. He says: t man in New York, in a fit of rage, threw a Swan Dorsey. MEN'S FURNISHING €MPORIUM, Peep azelnst the onler; but the Bishop re. | mustakes and frights these glaring birds have | been wellemellowed a month beforehand, so as | "We travelled in a large car drawn by one | coffee cup at her husband. The cup ‘was shiy- + B1GF Street Northwest buked im for disobedience to the rector. And | ¢tsed to late revellers from the Casino. Mr. | to have had time to compact, and if the ‘plants ideas carrying eight or tea, persons, anc came ered into fragments and one of them cutting his ET BI it KECKWEAR, Row Mr. Hardman has resigned his curney. Bennett is now absent ona long cruise in his | are well and firmly planted, and have been Le suppose, of carrying. suirty or forty. | jugular artery he died on the spot. The re- ince more JP FOOTWEAR, — All Saints church, Episcopal, at Cleveland, | 2¢W Yacht, the Namouna—or the “pneumonia,” | chosen trom the first and strongest runners of a nee i, t peat wae drawn. witheo much ease | porter says the grief of the unfortunate woman magi? HANDWEAR, fe at war over the question of us ented | 8S Souie of the unlettered salts persist in pro- | good sort, they will bear a handsome crop in| that we do not belleve that had it been so | was dreadful to witness. She was frantic with |.. ~ Samual Bese Wamesten untnicheds Tees duidsd, 900, a Ne question of using fermented | nouncing it—and at last accounts had steamed |the next’ June. Clean leaves, cool air and | loaded its progress would kaye been at all re-| remorse and made several attempts to put an Best #. of the L.. unhaished. fined . Wine a! the communton. The rector approves | over to Alexandria to see how the row was pro- | plentiful watering favor strawberry growth, farded by the adaitional weight of the load. | end to her existence.” “Poor creature,” said Boy's Wamsutta, unfinished. 6c. : 750. 510 it, but the Sunday school superintendent thinks | gressing there. His sister, Mrs. Bell, will arrive sé Silke Gasca WE In the distanee between Baltimore and Ellicott’s | Mrs. Folsom, with a sizh; “I reckon the broken ‘UNNINGHAM, “IATTER.”_8PRING it mizht be a temptation to young com:auni- | this week to take possession of the granite villa Fast Time on a Bicycle. Mills the horse was changed once, going and | cup must have belonged to her new china get.” | Jeu 120 CRE toorder. Old ants, and wants unfermented substituted. A | for the rest of the season, as her own house on | From the London World. coming. In going we did not accurately reckon q > Bumber of young women ¢ tion of absenting thems: mntil the change was made. cl i their inten- | Bellevue avenue will not be ready for occupancy from the ordi ‘until another summer.—St. Louis Globe-Demo- Texas Siftings. —_ — Straw Hats of all kinds « te iN The past fortnight has been one of the great-| thirtenchules trae ee the whole distance of | 4 crusty old fellow once asked: “What is | uurcoes pr Manilla a specialty. CUNNINGHAM, "740 est interest and excitement in bicycling circles. | the limit to the speed pacity of the | the reason that griffins, dragons and devils are Geo A < = jain Shop mailer “1 erat, Perhaps the most interesting incident has ‘been horse in rotting Father thes thatsbor be was | ladies’ favorite subjects for embroidery de- SEWING MACHINES, &c. had him removed from office. So not is the | Beer in the Jury it Upsets a Ver- | ‘he Teappearance of the most popular rider ever | tasked to perform. The lacomotive steam ma-|8izns?” “Ah, because they are continually | 1 Wanemace Jon ——————— fatroreay ak Uc cugegtes Sete mY dices Peet ® Ver” | known, the Hon. Ton Keith Ralconer This gen: | chine, inthe traln of ‘whigh caps Joaded with | EMKIng of their husbands,” was the lady's | Famed ATOR WING MACHINE tioned Bishop Bedell to intpryene. 5 mi clans me rsons are occasionally ‘ag well as those » 2 wmat Spriai Lake, N_Jv Kberal provston ie | co uerenee ,GF48» undergoing sentence tn the | years, studing Arablo and Persian in the enst, | Parton witness cry aP commerce. 1s pro-| —Senator Hoar,” says the Springfield California state prison of twenty-five years for | and contracting fevers in Egypt. Daring his pelled at.about the same rate, ant ight be | (Mass.) Republican, “has hurried to Maine to for a cious s *; | the murder of Theodore Glancy, the editor of | absence various unsuccessful attempts have ropelled much more rapidiy if it were desira- get a last hook into the trout streams before man Catholics meet at the “Chaplain cottage.” | the Santa Barbara Press, has been granted a made to surpass the brilliant two miles record But for our part we have no desire ever to | the government dredge comes along.” where mass Is said on Sunday mornings. There which he left behind him, Making a little plea- | be carried by any mode of eonveyance more ‘This is how they raise children fea neat Gothic Episcopal chapel, with rezular | B¢W trial by the supreme court. The case was | gure trip, in the vilest weather {rear Land’ennd han Tate of thirteen miles Se Sng por. Services and preaching. Ina large ail over the | tried in Redwood city on a change of venue | to donno Greet @ distance of nearly 1,000 Tey umaa se te ee the | tions of North Carolina. A man will get hour.’ Post office the Presbyterians meet for morning | from Santa Barbara county, and f iles, by way of preliminary breather, he com- earlyin the morning and after stretch! fervice. with sermons by the most eminent cr ee ene Liss if waking himeelf will ing defendant's conviction of murder in the second | peted first of all in the five miles’ champlonshij Overflowing Oi1 Wells. Ing good ‘Johnnie! Gleruzy:en cbtainable. At the Lake house the | degree. After the trial it transpired ‘that the | but had to be content with second pines te The greed or the Cherry Grove operators has ere “Yes, sir. Mcthogists have fall syay. and secure such | Jurors in the ease had. been Uperaliy supplled | Whatton, the Oxford ine, “On last | overreached itself, and the spectacle ls presented | face in the branch, like # <}en as they can obtain. In the parlors ot e trina}, an t vas | hi wever, was enal ny we " Meamouth house there has been occasional | furnished to them in the Jury room whee thes | nea of the production belng co greatly and suddenly 0 the persimmon tree made for a variety of religious services. Ro- : Rodin =< Ge a at- pi bel erred their verdict. An a Old Lady the character ofa Servant)— ept when the bathing hour happens | was made to the supreme court for a new trial, a oa ‘after ofa. church time. Then the crowd is on | principally upon these grounds. Afidavits act ds, the “Is she an can riser?® secon companied the motion showing that during the | tance, as it well may be. Young “Don't know, I'm ———+e.—_. eight days occupied in the trial of the aoe the; The other bleyeling wonder, H. L. Cortis, has re twelve or one.” How to Erapicate Scans.—Sometimes the | jury consumed four five-gation kegs of beer, two | at length succeeded in accomplishing, at the “Ts she Sears aur cicatrices ieft by disease can be almost ons of wine, two bottles of claret and a nba first cost him a broken arm), | coursing ii @attrely obliterated by the use of a simple lotion pei quantity of whisky. The supreme the feat of the | The wonderful fer which we give formula, and which is | in granting pated trial, eays that in many but @briously perfectly free from an; ious ele- | it is sufficient ground for a new trial if the ment: Borax, ‘4 is furnished with even the smallest quan rose- | liquor, but here it is held that untess the ounces. The way to spply it is to|is ‘sears fre- . @eak lint in the lotion and bathe qnont!y.