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WHAT FRIGHTENED. BEBE. © | SENATOR HILL’SAUTOBIOGRAPHY. LL®1 OF LETTERS REMAINING IN THE SEWING MACHINES, MATTERS, CHE PLEASUSES OF THE COUNTRY es gates — — BUY ANY Shwe ‘The Terrible Vengeance Visited by the | rarest Production of One‘ef Chicago’s | His Struggles ucation—How RDAY, AUGUST 2%, 1882. pay pak a FS BOSENOLD apoRSuesT—pIsixq Roo yasn-|The Mam With the Watermelon, the Chatficlds Upon the McLoys.” eer prise Nodamaher Das toschins a ubnvomosace’ oa ee ppedn mong | fA HAGHINE btore ou : asd es haa ee aa a Peaches, and a Wife. pon . hes giitfon “Abvenrise Perienand give Wee date ot Positive ng gente emloyed, eee ehieek Sacre From the Cincinnati Gazette. From the Cincinnati Enquirer. From the Chicago Inter-Ocean.”* The following briet but interesting gutobl- | gy-z¢ not calied for within ¢uemonth they will be sent | _T sell ali kinds. Fepair. ct te ton x i ee He came panting-Into the car, a tremendous| ©" Monday, August 7, the day of the election, ‘What Is it, Bebe?” ography of the late Senator Hill was written | tothe Dead Letter Ofice. THE LAST BARGAIN SALE OF THR P You ane Baxtxo bread turn os soe tand 4 | Watermelon polsed upon his right shoulder, and | ® old feud, originating from childish quarrels. | The cool summer zephst floated into the win- | and given by him to his friend, the late Dr. W. SEASON. fon momenta, Tile lit nite ‘the crust very | held with the greatest dimeulty in position with | Poke out in East Kentucky, and the result | aows of a pleasant apartment, while near at | H. White, in 1879, and it was found among his | SJ" Amelia Sehnson ‘ oe tender and they will cat cantly. one hand, while with the other he dragged a | Ws the killing of one man tn self-defense and | hand the golden grain was waving in waves like | papers: Aten Fixe pe tees Wasit 4 Sinx handkerehfet In water in which | bushel box of peaches. Quickly throwing his | the cold-blooded murder of three others. Tite | the sea as faras the eye couldreach. The breeze | “I was born in Jasper county, Georgia, Sep- | Atkinson Julia, Lacie amie the best ca been Isthered. ‘Then | load Into a seat, not even pausing to wipe his | SCene was at the polls at the mouth of Black- | made the leaves on the grand old forest trees | tember 14, 1823. ee oe cn a | eeaere aan Miler Mec 8 Victor” 3: snay een th until nearly dey. Po | fevered brow, down whfch poured the perspira- | PeFy and Pike county. about Seer Ro Tate, {20d and whisper to one another, and softly | ctlldren, and the ftth Owning but afew slaves | SUxon sie CB ‘Muler Mrs Francis S Grover & Baker > : Rot fron it, but fold and press under @ weight. | ton tn a young Niagara, he ran to the car door, ilies, the ‘Giatields ant te toe ‘rith na. | Waved the ears of a couple of mule colts in the Only.” All Kis sons, therefore, did all the farm | Best Marek: WARRANTED IN PEREECT ORDER, Mica Stoves when sm s readily | shouting to a mild, inoftensive young man and | merdus relations. The Chatfelds are the most | back pasture, who, with an impulse of youthful | york. and all his daughters did all the house- Pa a at OPPENHEIMER? taking It out and theroushly wash- | modest maiden dressed in gray, who sat in the | numerous, and physteally are the larger, the | glee trisked like mad to tae foot of the hill and | hold work. My mother cnt and made the! Brown Lune Matison Mrs Susan = th ebaculneck & Gaek i alittle diluted. If the black | seat just behind the melo MeLoys being small in stature. | On the day | plunged leg deep into the sparkling stream. It | clothes we wore, and most of them were spun | Boyde Mary a, de ‘Sincdicnes: eeked aud Movatces does not let it soak a littie. i . of election one of the Chatfleld clan ap- and wove on the plantation. I worked in| RooMie Mocalloc — — ee aime may be gotten up by | ,,/l! there. mister, don’t let any one take that hed ung man of the McLoy family, | W43,a0 Arcadian scene. the farm from the time I was eight years old, | Campbel Alice Nothey Alice EW BIG BARGAINS IN me sro P US | seat in front of sou. I've got to go and get my | Proached a young him, eald: ‘‘Shn> McLov’ hat is it, Bebe?’ and black and white camo and went alike in all | Corcoran Alice Paxton sare Annie SEWING MACHINES, bonnet wire—a flat | wife.” and, swaggering up to him, sald: ‘Jim t 40) Within the fine old manston a young sirl sat | on. “Sto ither was a manot ‘common educa- | G2tin Cornelia Parker Mrs M At Conner Tru AND H Straeera. The door slammed and he was gone. In a| Y°U,“lon't vote here to-day oe son rote. ae 4 | Heat the window, drinking in the beautiful scene Eon botwan cxtarmttis ead caine ooo | ese Mew Catherine Reo One now, latest improved Singer, slightly used... moment, just as the whistle blew, and the first | 40;" The yonng man answered that he did | anq mending a palr of her fether's socks. Her dacnos in bs osighborkuot Whoa tens tn | Coane Reseuce i rey Jerk prepatory to, starting had’ imade the pas- | N&k want any trouble. and would not vote at all. | golden hair hung rippling below her waist and | Aueuce in hls nelghborhiocd. “When 1 was ten | Ges Bre ma Sire side drawery cover and a atiachinents compiooe red, beari and an this, « ne 5 . | look of purity, such us is worn by the angels on | COUntY y siped cles Gonrte Mrs Ekzebot Smite Mrs AR eccond- " S Meike ene | before t aoe if you don’t vote as I do to-day | cinaay. Opposite her sat an elderiy woman. re 3 se eiew onda sete Aen ere Golitus Stes Mass th a ie Dele One segond-hand Sine Dae Ga is warning the bully swaggered off |, out lait, Beber inquired Ay eeaee dat: | new home, over 100 miles, helping to drive the | Deis sie Dery Rive Mim Carrie. Statins and Wapesring, tre visible on top. he other y wont o . et r B, 6a alone 'm pale’ Tacedl womans who pd Maaco Weald aa as cupted the responsible position of mother to the eras Tether would civapa have ’aveciocl Sutheciand Mrs Elza C. AUERBACH, Cor, 7th and H sts, vis wife, and who was bending : Pe: ae cund | Beautiful Bebe. : iS Lets parante SORsEy door to Auerbach's Gent’ nb Ss wife, and w ens bene Me | fi red, looking tor MoLoy and found Bebe raised her hand to her head in graceful Rone caste sn) eae a Smith Mrs Jane Next door to ai W's Gent's Furnishing and Hat j peach box on the top of the stove, dot Cay. Meloy,” Me said’ shave goa | 32d ever-varying curves and axitated it gently, clastleader and steward in the church, and = : laid the melon away in vox, barricaded t vy 7 YoU | Her eyes took in_ their erystal depths a startled president of the temperance society. Some of PROPOSALS. fhe way Fe hs pe re nswered Mel Sadan Tee Cities petulant nor Toe | iny eatliest and sweetest recollections are con- | = = — — blocked th ket. ‘Then taking no hcrcamers q| Suddenly. Then witha petulant motion she | MY Cree ates inctitutions and we father's | Ete Mee Auta B PARTMENT OF THE 1 a r old his wife to alt | or, Meteo and vote quick, then, and | stamped her little boot-tieet upon the floor. Zeal in theth.. ‘The black people alware attended | Sees? 2 wi - | Vote as I tell you. “What Is it, Bebe?” asked Mrs. Algernon Mac- hee P Lidice : Sealed propor unearth, wash anote By and | 4, Xeune McLoy. straixhtened Mimsett up, and. | snneaitdy at hes evarine daushtne” eaten with the whites: and all of us, Diack and | 1 Eos Tatty Lk al Ae ing tie occupants | @# Yolce trembling with rage, probably min- | "<r don't know, mother,” shereplied, in.a voice | White, ¥ rages. The role for the elildren was | Hasskwes tie Seat ior Ge grenct Bet gore ne ee A butter | is caze free on the young | Sed with fear, said: “Chatsield, you've made | trembling with emotion, “but from the spot on Se Cronin tub Caria: caitil the cuae eran doacet| treme ate Anes ‘Instructions to bidders will, be furnished on applica when put | siting beiind hin, aad re- | We €o down on my knees and grinid apples for | the floor I think It was & potato-bug.” 0 work in arm ‘until the crop was made | Hum tion th enetioenmente teem. ment it could a ao you, as you said, and hoe corn for you, but you = fe ie x ve eet go to) 8c eet aoe acco nan cama ek | cet = ae re pe uct ast pie ie toa Tie Rugby Colony. abil plontinr time for anotver Gnop. ay ROPOSAIS F <T OF VARIOUS . 4 and a motion as thoas 1 "| The Rugbeian contains the following state- |“ “srnis was my life until Twas sixteen years | Hf Ward Katio STREETS IN THE CITY OF WASHINGTON. : ur wifes” with a jerk o7 the thumb In ier ie ments about the fortunes of the new settlement: | old. [was then continued at scliool all the time | i vite Nips Lucy A ESS th ‘on of the modest young lady. “The future of Rugby will not be assured until | with a view to a colleziate education. My | 3ocsTaunse ——— Wasntne to the Jands around it are clear and cultivated. | father, was not able to.send all his children to)” = "°° GENTLEM! There is no fault to be found with the soil, for it | Pellexe : on one graduated. After I was | Buck Pat bel f is adapted to most forming eheretlons and all | pronounced prepared to enter college my q we fittes ot spr het a of its flesh from the r garden purposes, but there en a singular | decided he was not able to send mi Se oe hing to housekeeping whes | Then wi : he siasied | absence of azticultural colonists, and the board | consultation was held. My methe ted on | Hrnseet ee ae Goghemeyaee Chatfield across the & of ald has been most unfortunate in the past in | my golus shad Poe rae called | Grown Sas Fr ing tones. Praaets aod nati nthe Otter dire not securing suitable persons for the pioneer | s hands when not necded | bene Werwington | «No? Then, it are a happy man. | trou clothineand ileal ct : work it Is so necessary should be placed In patch bad always been my Willie Proposaia and specifications can be | Free to build your nest where you like. The | herore Catileld fell, es a the hands of men of grit and staying powers. ingirom $50 to £100. | coments" infartection ond tite hme wing table- B th ae Where ain. Rovers eae ¥ fled a short distance, a fusillade of bul- | The feeble colony started with an amazing | My mother said she would contribute this rine will alone be considered. to let the binds tine end the eee ing him, but he escaped unhurt. | gmount of steam and laudation and promlseu- | college expenses, and would make my clothe of pyre is reserved to re'c age dee with Ce ee the Chattields, wi ous circulation of al notes, with a | at home Uestdes: ee ee . E . i 01 g 81 rt, though well i ed, “An old aunt of my her's, sw ; to rear thy | tutleve f was EI Dont ELS MOWAT STE DEREs OE INE CHG. cae lamall Louse ia caveetines vacd, mane ten cone and in the invigorating, life ve myself up. son i those who would | means (small) and no child zreed to con- the children grow ee ae sa terrible crowd to surrender himself, ‘ up of a colony in a | tribute as much more sstasaslecl a can d to such him were of the Chatfield ‘Went elsewhere, | the bal to u pinte, 1 i {tatle, Think of aS aie ee 4 Aaoded tenner nen Veetennuns “Tope nother I would » would have EE DRE RT HAE Cera GAL ceGuee tac sohen wets to sthat T had | a to whom neice ibe ta nd blood, taken the first honor in ss andall the | peunclavoliee ; a art, with niuch | honors cf the literary Soviety of which 1 was a sty Disu. quiet the country. | ag TBE EhOre IE NG Tent Gr Lhe clogeia | WaRTIOAT TION AGB Rho AED Gaieod “ning ChE Hentare a qouse: le off the outs K ure of vigorous | Fn disarmed | u failure if those who la¥e care of its | dren—just fhe nnml ur Wee One DINE he cen th? ; nabbed I hvog rays | of the cook's children from birth y ENITSE, eit ap not | The blushing bridegroom ad.nitted that, to Aire is Sialic Gene hee m our iby the Hund Systene Yor a stew pan with three | the best of his knowied lan ‘ oe his e : tive polley will not | childhood we playe sd together vetht eae s haif- | ok at ny w ; healthy, i r Me on; but anarrow-sauce | and would fight for cach othe! all the | #. DENTIST: } image of woms you im- | ‘ : ord liberal | world. Stronger ties than th i see ee! iE who was just tinge 0 alls struck } t f is | tr an agent | formed. It was an 439 9TH 8 in the front seat but teven for ti re &| in the centers of overcrowd d - | Slaves, large ani CAPITOL PARSONS, T T, — tel sow ¢ fart triets, woutd as to | who died when she v Bieckons at ; wen ie ane, Balane 2 ets of tife shar f the | gan Ife with eight slaves « Gas ad oS . sir, the p ae fraid, the thing | mother died the slaves ‘selected ma tree Jens | e help it, m them.” | among the children. and Thad ee oe Ong house 16 2 | Jaw than thos would o with no eter era nso J on the tire or the : ja : with ‘her. He married severa we sa Ciar Mayors Miss Dolley A : gmaddy tn winter vo brothers, : Haye tie Ger Lemans Marans, did, and determined not to k a. a J Mollie nator.—To | and dusty mildiy inquired the The second U ; It is curious to notice:distinetions In naval | They were not willinz to. io ¢ es 02 Datictey. Milla young man. einrina tiveuieniie arch’ of | ner Offence tl fare between lawful and unlawful methods, | and I bousht Tnov Sea eee ane wont Will be improved. Tn twenty | Killing occur conspicuous on land. Suen pro- | I was a professi 1 eer ® ASSOGTATION. “No. 2 : Drond sidewatt | Oly Hot present, but polntaull atou , | not need them. ee ‘extractious» under : oud bet ween the list of thi out. ‘The ms cach sddidoum tooth se teeae tints wach ai bors in plenty then. ree boys, the party | may be used in good war, and the declaration of | told the Perey tetera 30 contw-cach, tooth, fifty or seventy-iive cents. oo omy hing more w St. Petersburg condemns explosive bullets as | tection. The slaves TOF LETTERS REMAINING IN THE GEORGE- nthe bottom, and | M2 <5 e er allowin: iter ch on one element as-on the other. Un- | wives and hi tOWN, D. OFFICE, Here we are, wife.” said the country resi- | 0) 176m © S KeaRS Pane a sop thein toretlie 2 e Sau! 0G : t sels he bezan to gather up his various be- | Y°#S° nee 2 be wreake founded eharzes by one bell & p thems Coxeter T ben ht then Sarunpay, aney T 26, 1882, ie OF Aes 8. With infinite Inbor and difficulty the | z other are, however, always lixble to bring tMe | \\n5 selected ine as thelr owner. tres Se ate aaa The lee does | POX lees Cer cn, h illicit method into actual use on beth sides under | my sinall place was Ginnie sae: Diver ween sil the | node wese got tecthen ack ete the pretext of reprisals, as we gee in the foilow- | rather than part with c rf melts, | fou lead tho couple bk the Gaeta oe d Ping order of the day. issued at Brest by the | plautatign in the county and placed them on It, | nd Asa A rs decane g pe ty Freneh vice admiral, Marshal-Conflans, Novem- | and removed with my family back to to: : | anda halt walk Bi ns the m a Mt ’ ‘Ns : ‘OR THE SUNMER The device | bose se he aay eae > two sapl ber, 1759: was thus va! skeveltoller from 1845 to 150 Be en succeeded in wedging himself and tox through | they coula vere-| “It is absolutely contrary to the law of na- | twenty years. “My slaves increased from cient | eave Use Ov? Minx anp Corree Stary: vatermel . 5 benediction is | tions to ¢ bad war, and to shoot shells xt | to sixty-seven, during allthat time there z E : Fe OE ata neg on panemiation’ te ils the enemy, who must always be fought accord- | were but. two AMERICAN “Young man, If you ever expect to be happy, | Of Unarmed men. As i King | ing to the rules of honor, with the arms gen- | no profit from th GINGER ALE. y Litw@in the caunive’ xP PPYs | down a steep ide, they wi vad by | erally employed by polite nations. Yet some | that I cared better for t ns ies they | live coum ‘ one shot each in tains have complained that the Engiish have | been able to care for themselves ‘since freedom Retail Price One Doliar ($1) Per Dozen, ning them with a mix-| _~‘Julia,” whispered the bridegroom, when the | Comins ont at th d such Ww inst them. It is, there- | came.’” cerine, nine parts water and | train had again started, “if that is a sample of | £104" : ou {hese cmaplatuts, and with an 6x AS eee 0: = pe serconte | Tele, abcure) eee ee aye we dromibe it, feet to head, and a mound heaped over luctanee, that ithas been resolved to | _Chmracteristies of Mr, Gtadstonc, u For Sale by Dealers and by the Manufacturer, ods by means of a brush, and she sald, fervently. them sufliciently to give them fuur incheg of | embark hollow shells on vessels of the line, but | Subtracting what we may from the sum of WE ARE NOW TAKING STOCK! ‘ “« = boot Bas men (ore Device for Cooling Air. oe ‘ it is expressly forbidden to use them unl the | Mr. Gladstone’s greatness, en and more SAML C. PALMER, the molstening.) J is time = hat or the next day the father of the boys | enemy besin.” So the ish in thelr tral ¢jan‘enough remaineto constitute ‘him oné of pleces are presses A simple way of cooling the alr of aroom 18| came into town, Heinquired of the successtil | ciameoa tie i he Uadiwarl The [rea Cay cne ae iat oe hanna 1224 TWENTY-NINTH ETREET, sad eee venice ww a cts described in the New Orleans Picayune of a re-| candidate what he should do, the tea wound received by Nelson at Aboukir, on the | {t¢ most eininent men that ever held office In) GREAT BARGAINS est Wedktiagien bok arp egiolnlming on Sula cent date. The composing room of the Piea-| ing down his cheeks as he spoke. He received | forehead, was attributed toa piece of iron or a | this or in any other country. nd pallid as in odds ana ends. i : ments yed with delicate eaters: yune is situated in the upper story of its publi- a sy ate ae he wens out ridge anor ae w cunts iat oe he looked w! hen fi nines hs Seat entered due es §B~Teiephonte connection. aT ant # ee a Pe * and with the proceeds boug! Spencer | crew of the Brunswick received from the | parliament; frai! and worn as he often looks at n aa eeey eae Be ue ene beets bret te estes eae Fie mdammunition, To some one he sald, his} Vengeur in the famous battle between | present when deeply moved or profoundly a GREAT BARGAINS - “ parts glycerine | mer is extremely hot. is season an inspira- choked with emotion: the French and English fleets in June, 1794, are | tated, what le vizor and vitality there in all the different dept's, Quarter part of ammonth wileds Bent une; | tion seems to have come tone of the oppressed tothe old woman and the | said to have been peculiarly distressing, at the span of life allotted | _ o. this mixture if chowlt, be teed on mete Usitet | oeenpants, and in accordance with it a vertical | I've robbed them to buy this, and this | owing to the French’ employing langridee y the Psalmist has lone been over {7 4 House THoRovGHLY onts where it cannot be noticed, in | Woden box was constructed in the corner of | is my sole dependence now.” He afterward | shot of raw ore and old. patie. and te tele steppe : dney tierbert ETL BY USING ce ifthe mixture will change color. If | te Foom, with openings at the floor and eell- | dleappeared in the brush, andit Is fair to be sup- throwing ‘stinkpots Into the partholes, which | to a friend some thirty years since, ‘about | nowsoid at reduced prices. : = . should be added, | #4, and ‘turntshed with a pipe for supplying | posed that no relative of the Chatilelds will pass | caused most painful burnings and sealdings. It} Gladstone's mind—it is nothing to. his bod: RICHARDSON, BOYNTON & C0.'8 a ’ we takes ip | Water at the top, anda pan and drain at the | him ana live. is safest to discredit such accusations alto- | The serious working portion of Mr. Gladstone’s -TIG! be rege ce takes place. oF If, | pottom for receiving the flow and carrying it| ‘The fend of these families arose from chil- there 1s no limit to the barbarities | lite bezan when ke was, an Eton boy, and 1ay GREAT BARGAINS ee Above mixture is applied witha soft Leech, tk | Safely away. The supply-pipe was bent over | dren’s quarrels. Raised on neighboring farm y come into play, In consequence of too | therefore safely be said to have extended now inoatsentenan, DURABLE FURNACE. ieetagit to: vem stains for six or eight | 2@ Upper end of the shaft, and fitted with a| they t «i fought when gathering nuts, ready a credulity. Red-hot shot, legitimate | over some sixty years. In the opinion of those a is 2 Sbed with 2 clean cloth, | 208¢ like that of a watering-pot, so as to de- | and ducked each other while bathin: for the defense of land forts against ships, used | who know him best, it is doubtful whether any = otioreiene sand bgnnd”loopns ; | iver a shower of spray instead of a solid | ried on their animosity until, as they grew to | not to be considered good war in the contests | man ever yet lived who during so long a time LADIES’ SUITS Embody new 1682 improvements not found in othe ~ stream. On connecting it with the service-| manhood, the Chatfields, being larger and ‘other. In the three hours’ | has allowed fewer minutes to run unpro‘itably Sitsit prise: goods. Contains more practical and usefal features, ipe, the movement of the water was found | stronger men, had conquered the McLovs. They reen the Lively and the Tourterelle, to waste. The truth is that, fragile and ex- Cost lees to keep in order—use lees fuel, will ive more use An active circulation of the air in that | made them slaves. It is said to be literally true | a Freneh privateer, the use by the latter of hot- | hausted as he often looks, Mr. Gladstone, ke heat and x Langer volume of pure air than any furnaoe tread of the room, which was drawn in at the | that they made the MeLoy whose defense of shot, “not usually deemed honorable warfare,” | many other light and sinewy men, hardly knows mace—Cheapest to buy and use. the finish. a | 8PPeF opening of the shaft and issued again, | himself brought onthe murders grind apples for | was considered to be wrong. but a wrong on | the meaning of the word idleness. His capacity TRIMMED HATS @ucmaxvsox, Borstox, & Co., Manufacturers, ny cases | Covland fresh, af the floor level. The most eur-| them. Catching him one day while they were | the part of those who equipped her for sea | for work equals that of Lord Bacon, who, ac. atany price. “290 & 234 Water St, N. ¥). ita, ther ded mee be about the experiineat seems to | grinding for cider in an old-fashioned mill with | more than on the part of the captain who | cordingto late Lord Campbell, “allowed no seg- : fal matt al have been the effect of the water in cooling the fi ), they took the horse ont and made | fired them. The English assailing batteries | ment of time to pass without emplo: i. Sold by . annip alr toa degree much below its own tempera- | him get on his knees and push the sweep around | that fired red-hot shot against Gluckstadt, in | {s he undeservinst of the encomius bestowed CHAS. G. BALL ture. With Mississippi water, which, when | until they grew tired of the brutulTun, whipping | 1813, are sald to have resorted to “a mode’ of by Cecil upon Si Aigeld es A eee i ie gd , r—In Our Continens | UAW" from the service pipe. indicated a tem-| him with rods to make him go faster. " They had | warfare very unusual with us slice the siege of | he can toil terribly & Bos AAU OU Maer is ¥ pe) ol ii ees, the a 1 ly a OV ds sibraltar.’ le Treatise on Tact A is understoo ver) our, xh an ane - PEE NES 1 eras f 84 degrees, the air of the room, in compelled the McLoys to yo into their fields and | Gibraltar.” The “Treati Tactics, It i derstood that every hour, we might og 3 BAAAU UMM M 1337 Eet. n. w., Washington, D.C, tmann) has an ar- | which the thermometer at the beginning of the | hoe their corn without pay. The McLoys were | Emperor Leo VI, carries back the record of the | almost say every minute, of Mr. Gladstone’s co BBA A UU MMM y Ps y 4y29-c, tu&th, 3m : the majority of | trial stood at 96, was cooled. in passing through | cowards, of course, or they would neyér have | means employed against an enemy in naval war- | 47 i$ so methodical and disciplined 3 the length of the shaft, to 74 dexrees, or about | submitted to this, but one Chattield learned that | fare in the ninth century. The things he recom: | that he gets the most out of Its and the teswite REET. : 5 i ge 3 au7 416 SEVENTH STREET. ny one sa si | 20 degrees below the temperature at which it | it will not do to corner even a coward. mends as most effective are: Cranes, to let fall | of this vast industry, it is said, are turned to oreven the faculty of selecting and | entered, and 10 degrees below that of the water Wee awe aack wise heavy weights on the encmy’s decks; caltrops, | aecount by a system and recularity which have patterns, it isan matter to | Which was used to cool it. Of course the ab- io AwOT MACK ML OZ- with iron spikes. to wound his feet; jars full of | been brought to absolute perfection, and whieh, N THE WHOLE HISTORY OF MEDICING pls and tastefully, or to | sorbtion of heat by the evaporation of a portion | To the traveler through Texas oxe of the | quicklime, to suffocate hiin: jarscontaining com- | as we know from their memoirs, are most un- Lr : : fs Which will meet with a | of the water accounts for its refrigerating effect, | strangest and most peculiar features of landscape | bustibles, to burn him; jarscontaluing polsonous | Sawa among public men. “If you would but | (REAT SACRIFICE IN FINE CLOTHING | Xo preparation has ever performed such roarvellous ty years T have made a | but the result seems to have been so easily and | jg the razor-back hog. He is ot Swiss cottage | reptiles, to bite him, ‘and Greek fire, with its | buy.a tew yards ot red tape and. tie up your pa- G vg 5 cures, or maintained ro wide a reputsion, a6 use of the de | imexpensively attained that the experiment | style of architecture. His physical structure is | 20i8e like thunder, to frighten as well as burn | pers,” said Grattan to Sir James Mackintosh, AYER’S CHERRY PECTORAL, : would be well worth repeating in other cases.— | STVIC 0° nell retpaneie ide of atext | im. Many of these methods were of imme- | “you would be the ereatest. man in England.’ a which is recognized as the world’s remedy for all dis American Architect, Snghlar tog degree unknown outside of a text | morial usage, for Scipio knew the merits of jars Having paid a visit to Beaconsfield, William 7: eases of the throat and linge. Tts loug-continued scree = ee book on the science of geometry. The country | full of pitel n full of vij 7 a of wonderful cures in all climates has made it univer- Egyptian Soldie ‘y v of pitch, and Hannibal of jars full of vipers. | Wilberforce returned to London, exciaiming, Fy ais eale ind elias agent t : Ge Tretanee nies razor-back prowls around in the woods and lives | Nothing was too bad for use in those days, nor | “Burke's papers are in greater confusion than MISFIT STORE ppeienpseeterd burr igar torgpongrenspryton! = ‘The ox ol. has much to say concerning the fight | on acorns. pecan nuts and roots; when he can | can tt be ascertained when or why they ceased | my own.” It is notorious that Napoleon, par- , sea Serf S acacteapentiay’ man ceamre ad kin provides | Ing capacity of the fellahin, and seeing that he | snare timehe crawls under his owner's fenceand | t0.be used. Greek fire was used with great | ticular as he was tn rallitary detaite rarely an- ‘cov relicvinyaniintes, and tees cocina cop we ered Wook the | speaks from experience, gained both in the bar- | gkaists in harvesting the corn crop. In this re- | *Hect in the sea battles between the Saracens | swered letters, and left piles of thein’ unopened protection itaffords, by its timely use in threst and wood. And. ie ng | Tc and the field, his strictures possess at the | spect he is neighborly toa fault, and when his | "4 Christians, but it is_a fair enuse of wonder | when he evacuated the Tuileries. Mr. ‘Glad CORNER TENTH AND F STREETS, chest disorders, mzkes it an inveluable remedy to be vor and | sresent moment a more than ordinary value. | duty :ohis owner's crop willallow he will reedits | that the invention of gunpowder should have | stone, on the other hand, it is stated, never ve. kept always on hand in every home. No person can all that man presen! more than ordinary value. :. prenicty Pp tzhb. Ki ¥ | so entirely superseded it as to cause its very | ceived a letter of the smaliest importance dur- afford to be without it, and those who hav foes, pear aeeed wan called His estimate of the Egyptian peasant’s soldierly | turin and assist the nelhbors, spoll for want | manufacture to have been forgotten, Neither | ing his half eentury of public life tgon which he == ever will, From their knowledge of its composition worth! but now it has a | aptitude is very low. Though gifted with a | Of Ment rat Crossing the faaee bat with blue | (es history record the date of, ner the reason | cannot, if necessary, lay his hand. His libraries, and operation, physicians use the CHERRY PECTORAL and for fodine. And, | wonderful power of physical endurance, and @ | piooded stock makes but little im ovement. | fr the disuse of quicklime, whith, in the fa-| both at Hawarden’ castle and in his London | _ ‘The balance of stock of fine clothing at the Misfit | extensively in their practice, and clergymen recommend ulustration, let me show | docile and a good campaigner.the fellah is neither | Mie ‘only eifective war to ipiore him isto | mous fight of Dover, in -1217, between the | house, are said to contain no book of which he } Store must Pe eee crace, ea eee mae room for alter | it. It is abeclutely certain in ite healing effects, apd will an be done w the tin cans which | combative nor intelligent. has not a spark of cron hina with a ralltcad train. He then be- | French and English, contributed ‘so greatly to | is not cognizant and to which he cannot readily always cure where cures are possible, Fown sak (ouEd on every lot around every | patriotism, dislikes and distrusts his officers, | Cross lim with @ rallroad tral ‘Poland-China. | the victory of the latter. - turn. af you want bargains in Summer Vests, Flannel | For «ale by all drumwists. 241 town. and indeed wher 2 . | and hates soldiering with so intense a hatred Roe aaa if pa Bait not knock the train of the In short,he has carried to > perfection that regu- | Sui | Facer bagels Sot Zouth, Bove.cr Children, Lght- GINGLETON & HOEKE, Most people know that : that, In order to avold it, he will often ent off | POS, and if he does not knock the tratn off the Put Clergymen on Bicycles. lated and ‘systematized industry of which the | Bu Flannel Suits st $9, wortegis ee > HORS soak. in one of his fingers or put out one of his eyes. Bony Pay thos : late Sir 1, his Gamaliel in public life, | Nuns Clotn Coats and Vests at $6, ‘worth $10; ~ i ge PI y rate of €1 a pound, for which they are allowed | From the New York Herald. 801 MARKET SPACE. Nery soit indeed. In this state it may be worked | When Col. Dye was in Ezypt the artillery, as the mournful privilege of shoveling the remains Herald to was his first exemp! Nobly ind has that | Fine Cassimnere Suits at $12. wor Mee ad fiom OE: —— - ot ne Paty or paste. When it dries it | well as the cavalry, consisted exctu- | the mournful privilege of shovel country razor- | 4, (lcreyman has written, the Herald to sy | ithe and flexible body served the imperious and | Be, Lined Case Suits st $15, rs reduced from $20; | SPECIAL OFFERING FOR A SHORT TIME TO becomes hard azain, retaining any marks which sively of fellahin. The gunners were taken back is more juicy than the hind leg of an iron: that the bicycle is the best means of recreation | restless mind which, so far from “‘fretting it to | Boys Suits at $5, $6, $7, have been essed on it. Ifsoaked in alum | from a ciass superior to that which supplied re- fire-dog, but not quite so fat as a pine knot. within the reach of mémbers of his profession, | decay,” has found in it an apt and ever-ready Garne, Longs Coste at ‘$1, $1.25, worth | Fine Fancy Matting 35c., former price 59. - Now, if we take | cruits to the other arms of the service. The oo — and he is right. The axe and the wood-saw are | minister. “It is the ‘vivida vis animi,’” wrote | double. - 40. S sheet of leather, soaked and soft, and draw ! officers, moreover, were better instructed than Wine on the Lord’s Table. good antidotes to d: ‘a physical relaxa> “ "Manas ° upon it a pattern, and then indent the back- | their brethren of the line, an advantage which . lyspepsia and physi watching him spring to his feet at the end of a a Brussele, limited in guamtitien Son wit al cutee, Rotate OF Punch, | they owed to the exertions of the commandant | ‘The Pacific Chureh News (Disciple) calls atten-| tion, but they are nothing more, unless the |)" debate, “that conquers or nerves his phy- Eee pattern will, of course, be in relief. while | of the artillery school, a highly educated French | tion to the recent.address of Prof. Durham psciee cannot afford to hire men to cut his fragility, dealing harshly with it at times, einer ‘Tapestry Brusein, ‘at 75 cents. ee cmnerouns 3 ssed a officer. To the teaching of this Frenchman | before the State Sunday School Convention at | firewood. Food and care fora horse costs as ed only too clearly at intervals in an have stamp be row 1 probabl , the stout defense made the other day Napa, on the subject ot “Sunday School Tem- | Much as for a man, and the first cost of the horse manner indicative of profound ex- , to any | by the forts at Alexandria is in some measure » h he alluded to the | imself is more than that of a bicycle. Some It is not many years since Mr. Glad- ordinary pannel carving in wood. the ground of due. A great drawback to the efficiency of the | Pefance Work,” in which he allu he | kinds of boats are cheap, but notialf the cler- | stone took for the first ‘time to spectacles or Which Is generally indented so as to make a dark | fella as a fighting man ts the shortness of his | striking fact that while Mahomet prohibited gymen in the country haye boating-water con- | magnifying glasses of any kind, and he was able relief to the shining and elevated pattern. sight, resulting from ophthalmla. So defective | wine and ordered his soldiers to destroy the | venient. The bicycle, on the contrary, involves | to read the smallest print—even oe ‘She Uproarous page the Star Mouse is the vision of Egyptian soldiers, says Col. Dye, | vineyards, this “spirit of the devil” has been | no outlay after the first cost is 3 It can the figures of “Bradshaw's Railway: » that hardly any ot them can see further | for any centuries used by Christians on the | make its way over any ordinary footpath; it the naked eye, long after his sixtieth t 1 a through a rifle-sight than a few rods. The | Lord’s table, and its manufacture and use as | incites its rider tu active exertion, and by > | had If. ‘Brom the Philadelphia Ledger. eyes of the black soldier are better. Under the | a social beverage detended by Christians from | ing him through constant changes of sce Mr. MeSweeny's extra horse made a deal of fun | same conditions he can mark 30 to 40 eént.| the alleged example of Jesus at Cana. He\turns his route defense. It was indeed a sub- | more hits than his Egyptian le. This/ sald: We want to educate our Sunday school a mneee Cant Fos gas dep bed cee shooting may, however, be in part di children so far on this question that wine and s ‘s 10 @ negro’ great for tare i sce wheat was known that only two | eagerness to excel. The theese sea baaae | branay shal! be driven from wedding, supper purpose and EACH PARERSI Wee Neatad aml weed, The gly joker of the de- | Gmcered. exciusively. by espe aoe eek | aud tea parties, and that the ples and cake pote oa P : way better organized than tie other’ regiments "rit, Deca fhek of sharp APPLE SLICERS!! albeit, the negroes being inured from childhood ne The COMBINATION; AND petly steal by all the parties int in | to war and the chase, they make far better formal- zs = and muittoly the practice of petty pilfer- | fighting material than the fellahin. With the goes off for a 3 mente or ane ae ae ppt eS exception of a few who have risen from the “learns more of dy else. Bat the star Bong h raaks, the higher officers are the descendants juman action @ucei to the defense that “It was a little i i catled E penary indulgence, in other words, golng into Popletal ce convey” afterwards he § is not patented by Mr. Seeeonsto have sumeves cinae 4