Evening Star Newspaper, August 8, 1885, Page 3

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RELIGIOUS NOTES. CHURCHES HERE AND ELSEWHERE, HE SOUGHT REST AND QUIET. THE ART OF SHOFrING. “Dead eats” of Sectety. Col, Stewart's Recollections of [me | ae a ee ae ith Gen. Grant—In- | But @ Ball, a Ground Hog, ThreeRenrs| We aro all satisfied thgt gentlemen have no | 4 EAS OF YOUNG MEX Wid LIVE ON THEA teresting Incidents, and a Dog Censpired Against Him. genius for shopping. They are not equal to it. | prom tho Suvpanancsyeeep nameeoes HOW THE GENERAL PLANNED HIS CAMPAIGN | rom the Christian Union. Fee Gs Hew York Onn, ee te tee eee In America, living on HIS WONDERFUL MEMORY—HE MADE THE| | The frst time I met Gen. Grant was the 2ist | Ruskca, Pa., July 27.—Young Dr. Bidwell, of | Particular. They can write books and make | difficult matter. An Ainerioan tradesman doom (CIRCUMSTANCES THAT MADE HIM. of October, 1863. The Eleventh ‘was then | Philadelphia, came up into this Speeches, and all that sort of thing, but they | not take his customer's ancestors into oonmldere at Bridgeport, a placo on the Tennessee where | Busbill egion last Week foray a eee ak | are DOE up to shopping. It takes the ladies for | min gas Ustomer s ancestors Into considers From the New York World, August 7. ‘the Nashville railway crosses the river, and my | brought with bim his collie dog Bruce, The | 3% Men go toa store, select what they want, | swindled because one of the swindler'’s fore Among the many men who braved the | headquarters were in tents near the bridge. | doctor went home on Friday. The dog is some. | ®™4 buy it, But that is not shopping; that re- en came over In the Mayflower, For ell danger, and shared in the victories of war side | Early that morning, taking a return supply | where in the neighborhood yet, but his where. | Wifes no genius. Men pretend they do not ows the Mayflower carried steerage pas by side with Gen. Grant was Col. Issac Stewart, | train, I went up to Stevenson, some ten miles | abouts is not known with ‘any degree of cer | Uke togo shopping with the ladies, I wonder | seng me. He considers himsetf bis —— of Washington. He was with Grant during the | distant, to pay an official visit to Gen. Hooker. | tainty. The doctor came up for rest. who ever asked them? What lady would have | {azhuly enough, tov), and demands —Rev. John Cavanaugh, formerly a printer ‘and street preacher in this section, is now @ minister of the Free Methodist church, located at Liberty Fails, N. Y., and 1 about closing his irst year. —Rev. Richard Griffin, a well-known local minister of the M. E. church, living near the Wesley Grove camp ground, on the Washing- ton branch of the B. & O. R. RB... died Sunday, the 26th ult., quite suddenly. He was in good days itary such an incumbrance on such occasions? Men Hence a y American, in dealing with ae = ‘when the commander was opening up the | While there Hooker said that our new milli ‘On Wednesday he was chased across a fifty- in their places, “Young gentia. | the trad . pee Biderable vigor, nwt nt breached wi Com ae Mississippl, and entered Richmond almost on | division commander was en route from Nasb- | acre lot by a bull thav abjsctea to ie tren: micces ae anea itn teie eameiee oak \es f course, as there is no entail : fety, which his heels. The colonel sat in his room in the | ville to Chattanooga, that he was expected on | 19g iu the pasture, and got over the rail ience | tee us home irom church, and bring us bouquets | Of estates, bank on his remove. prospects —The Pennsylvania Bible Society, c= a just in time to save the bull the trouble of hel a sand. husbands fal to pay the diy having lands and. moneys celebrated its 77th anniversary on the 17th of D= Baggage. Astor House yesterday conversing with Grand | the Incoming train. Hooker had made prepars- | {ng'him ores “On Woks ee Bilin aor at bor chemtng encersin teay ore] Watch’ the utters “NainE be meee May, Is eight years older than the American ij B= a: Army men and fighting his battles over and | tons toreselve, the general and have him con: | dug a ground hog out ofa side hil, When they | Dutt €*., but tor ashopping excursion they are else, come to him, And) yet there Bible Soctet. orit agile. Gucted to his own quarters." Grant was reputed | reached the botiom of the hole the ground hog | {ute out Of Place. De sou wuuden nility that | Rumber of young fellows who live ‘Antone ta questions to be brought before 8 F = Compariy B. i> Gar teetart looks very much as Gen. Grant eared ne and, suifering trom the i oe | tamed and set his teeth through the Heshy part | way? Not at all: Tonly. speak of my sex. In | #/PArently like the sons of mitionaipes on the be = ° 2 e ‘of his coe a sloore Cine o1 doctor's leg. m3 5 y .S non hy 4 the United Presbyterian Assembly in the ses- Re Company 6. Laz id half a dozen years ago, He has the same | beiore in the streets of New Orieans, Hooker | “Gn Tien ie thought he would liketo go | But my friend, Salle Ie, Is a model shopper i oy ae boolng sions to be held in Topeka, Kan.,{s the pro- iy 2 = Gompany D. sharp eyes and short, thick, ron-gray beard of | sent a spring wagon and an officer of his staff | huckieberrying. He took @ ten-quart tin pail | pusmy friend, Salil of ber, and hope to be per make enough money to union with the Associate Reformed I=Banda. <*> the dead commander, and his frame resembles | t the station, but for some reason he did not | und Bruce, and went out on the fdge'a mile or | fect by thelime Tam married. Afew days aco ‘ How do. tnez do Eynod of the south, py 7 = Gaard: =| that of the general a few years ago. ‘The colo- | EOANPST:, axe tho same train, south bound, tg aitsrnoon, barcheaded and without te paik | *ugfmrsted me zo go with her. "said iy —The Richmond, Va. Young Men's Chris- 1} nel has a soldier's admiration for hls dead com: | eget tuck to BHR ET, Lees ee eee | ae nop a barehended and wit nll Wish to 100K at the new siyle of silks,” sa x tan association advertises for plans for their H =) game to) Mount MeGregoP it carried off one of | Tival found me there, in waiting. I had pre-| the following story of the huckieberry expe-|""iyny,do you want toget anew dress?” I new association building, offering $300 for first the most brilliant Imilitery mon the world has | Sumed that Gen. Grant would remain over | dition is related by Che natives eae eee asked.” po beg Snag Ff choice, $100 for second, and $100 for the third. a e ty etree: iret! night with Gen. Hooker, but this presumption | of its high literary qualities, took pains to have | Atay, said Sallie, “If it was not impolite, | WHO Jive com- Peeking and tat sachboryasecet & i : [=| ene was Sari e eR nNe © piers thet Gch. | Stepped Into the iorward pactar tha gar” Gen. | tong about noon,” said the doctor, “I had | Norden the aout that’s no reason why Tshould do, go into society and belong toa swell w Or thesswett legacy of $160,000 devised to i! ‘— Of course he might take nglass, just as youand | Grant, sitting near the’ rear ot the oar, Was | my pail nearly fail of the biggest hackieber ene No Sallie and I sallied out, ‘The first store we OO Od tine nee Dr Eins tate — Of the Swett legacy o 5 . 3 i! T would, but he was not Ey any meansa man | Polnted out tome and I passed on at once,as|Tcversaw. Twas thinking about starting back | entered she asked whether the snerehatt had a Moe a ewell club they the Massachusetts Home Mission society, 3 1 dadigied tay danwes not by any means a man | Was proper, to pay my Reopects to hina, home, when I heard Bruce barking avdeck, ING Bie See ee ee ale ee ce | exuasliy com thus get SOR RUS bee Sete tie Oh the Siioaes ||) Hi (2) certainly no one ever knew it, Ho was always | , maging iny surprise when I saw film. He | ing ia singular way dif in the Urusi, and Z | fore ed ene es Sete ee sald | : fala thei tne ey — O will be applied io. new evancell Sy} tt enim, quiet and eelrporsosed, whether in the | Bd beeu for some time Uerore the ‘public, the | went ed my alt eyes nee Tae UD entant. LJ “Show me your new style dreas goods.” aatd | Wid thelr income, (Aman, of good manners rey ° t i : ier in tant carried my pail with me, The sight that met Sbernge Ubek, nnd Inee COE: wo can get ere “ fashions FiSO.000 wit be ¢ g 1 Socldter falar eee He wis Ded | the papers bad sald much forbim, and several my eyes would doubtless have exrried joy t0 | handsome Striped plaid: allies: bRscndes” and | SAHOrs can hy ~ outside his Pesan Shtoagh the ational society tm Gea} cb him use a profane word in iy life.” Firmlent sheets much against im, and go, judg: | the Beart ot one of your bear hunters, uit it | changeable ike arenot much worn this spring, | $8, bath eng ofave ieee, art of the field. “ ; accounts, I had concel ze IM, , and my was at fever beat deciore. ng ths ay “Tuo Congresational cia, ot New Yor, nas |S i Sa are Vieleburs, sald tee cede da yihe puede fu | Of latxe size and rough appearance. “The actaal | atihat” A beak thatese edt see ey ea ost of Uh he Congrega A pheelicnie ts Sy bis chair, “Perhaps you will recall the adverse | 708 Was quite different—not larger than Bfc- | ut least cight feet stood on its haunches: ava with goods, She cxatined and tossed them | am borates Senieas. ebimnw, of the Memoctal = criticism’ that. wae heaped upon Gen, Grant | Clellan, at the time rather thin in flesh and | kept dashing savagely at my dog as the dog | about, making various crease feng opseied Nleen Dr. Chaciens. tobinson of the Memorial | hen he was digging. tha lg trench before the | Yoty,PalGin complexion, and noticeably self |cireied around hit. ‘When Brave saw me it | whctlcr thes Would soars oat nck be rae seit prope Aten cei paso city. “f rth. i ts etiring. Tan to me und got r etween my legs, from. n ape T never Knew king pastor Golig todo wit te eat GH, garth, 1 he | “Without rising, heestended bis hand as I mich anes Soy ueut etmeen my lege, from | bing. enid Sallie to the clerk. sante peopl opera and vterian church liturgy as Ro ene Rie a eet one or aie c Was presented, smiled pleasantly, and signifled | with renewed vehemence. This display of re 5 | the theater, From his box he can look his work, It seems to ¢ to come en- 'y Ly rand the professors in theo- Went to the general and asked why he was dig- | Very Urleily that it gave him pleasure to meet | cowardice on the part of the dog apparcutly | than aay Miners POLMPly more plaid stripes | Gown upon’ people far wealthier. thin he—per . "Do ye a offi- | me. He then permitted me to continue the | emboldened the bear, for it caine siashin Have y. . 5 haps one of the partners of the house whict spand to mean a lethargy in- ging the tretich. ‘Do you think. one ofthe oft | Be ereatigne Fight towrd ie like «locomotive. es aaeutk | qaqhat® 208 Hy with cheno strtpest” inquired | MAUS i nie "piflanee of & salary is ae =e that trenéh?” “I have done it, Gen. Grant re- | , Gen. Hooker's staff officer came with the ten-| Was wide open, aud 1 tougll my time bad yes,eome very fine,” and a number of | #¥_ {% summer divides | mn his a plied, and at the same time gave orders that | der Gf the conveyance and the otfer of hospital-| come. I couldau't move to suve my. life, pieces were produced. ° | friends’ yachts and country | places A : A ; your soul | {ty. The quick reply, made with quict irmacss, | but when the bear got almost close enough | Pcs were Dr | cruise costs him nothing; a fortnight ut New ‘They Failed to Cirele. he trench Should uo ied up, Bless yout 00! | ae ue time aavinicheg hers ol sets Honees | ee er eae ot ,must, slows Gnourk | FW nit SAY. afler all that T Uke the | Sort: only his, travelling expenses, there aud 0 iston ( he was only keeping his men at worl ish . Ls th my es | chene stripes; the green is very pretty.” ind o hes « a neome and do were Joints wouldn't stiffen In their tents and they | Wishes to see me he will tind me on this trae.” | and breugit It down over the beasts | Cuebesuapes: the in various lights, rubbing tt | Fra. If he, has « small Income and does aca cenae Sake ee Would go upon the fleid hardened. soldiers and | 1 bardly need say that Hooker soon presented ; hot have to “clerk,” so much the besten, for int Sund: 1 Lake Auburn was told to himself and offered bis courtesies n person to tis bees Ueulieaied oy ae ee erates dee he can apongeon his rich society friends all girl Sunday around Lake Auburn was tol not weuk from lassitude. = SI . a very, ys “Well, it don’t erease much,” said she; “ sas eae iss alan ell. ove penn Seater pat PLAN OF CAMP WASHINGTON. yuu Know there wis, another general who | EDEN COMMIT iy naan. mands | Suter teeyhily, ts. bear kept ony and in ty | wonserwlicten Snead’ Wey | ag coulén't help cireling the lake and ultimately — = — wished to supersede Grant in cominand of the , ulld, ruddy, med the battered paildown | “No, it is boiled silk; and we find that the ris desperation 1 army of the Hennessee, and it was be who gave | SMe, tien in the very prime of bis manhood. { | over its bead, “1 striking the pavements of Auburn. The young pe pail fell down and: caught | plaid and stripes wear very well.” ee Sivan iaasovae sano meets, Sane ey = no gaye d at the contrast between the two men, | in under the ani hiv. This the bea ‘ iripes wear very well.” his club—presupposin ourse, Unit he does CAMP WASHINGTON. WHY THEY LIKE CAPE MAY, birth (8 the criticism: One of the general's | Wondere u under the an| ’s chin. took the bear Your silks are very preity, and yon » Yan ~ or hein chen eee See eee tee ae eoasy mae Siew Se Stee at Both the residents of Cape May and the mem- | fre i: "You should get that ma out of | 12d Rendered upon the manner of thelr meel- | yy surprise, aud it dropped on all tours and | offa sumple I pou plenee eco inaad eae [ocugniste tor koone get bie cee SED flaring on. the wrong side of the lake | The Temts by the Sea Where the Light | ters of the Light Infantry corps cherish pleas- e Will "ride over you, Gen. Grant Ussert HIMSClE | He acres ae tee easton ae | led Wo senipe the pall ou, Bruce took courage | This the iuerehant was forced to der th . be Feewede sn bss un f mingnbophroroneoly eoateh os ey Will Encamp. ant recollections of the eneampments of the ly dear sir, when’ { deternsined to 2 ever he necessity fF | froin wy apparent acceptance of the big brute around the lake. Betore they were aware of with rather a bad grace, as most of bis goods Pape berg Bocoonenens wea ululug # proper asceadency over subordinate | éhaileuge uud atuicked it in the rear. “The bear - : liis club connection has, moreover, the gene “ corps $42 and 1883, Col. Moore, | enter the army I did so'with the determination | && : ceuden¢ se we = she were in patterns, and he Teared spoiling te River pone waen © their situation the horse was iloundering knee | THE PLAN OF THE ENCAMPMENT—PROGRAM TO | © ein ts Pare reporter today, wild that | todo all could to pat down the rebolion. 1s generals—where it was Ukely to bequestioned~ | abandoued its effurts to get the pail off its head | plece. ral utility of enabling him to get credits He can foep in send, aud no doubtresolving, as tar axa | BE FOLLOWED DURING THE STAY AT CAFE | {he'‘hembers of the corps generally prelerred | & secondary consideration, in ny mind, who Se view. mauifested only | and turned on the dog, wulch iuimediately ran n, toswim the lake, Iewashalfan hour's | May, ETC. . zo to a fashionable taflor and dress far beyond pe be eamp- | comm roops, 80 long as ss. Will you be kind enough togive me sam- | f),'0.8 {ashional ; . 2 : ea @ quiet firmness. to bus old place between my legs. ‘The bear ad- | plos or Use cond ae his meads, and yet Keep the duns at bay by aed “qorke: betes the, hiees was tarncd and Cape May to any other pie for the encam) ands the tro Jong as the great end | ® Quy! Grant and Ishared a common wall tent hi pi y legs. we bear ad- | ples of tie solid cloths? vapeed ton, : aor small payinents on account. The same tactics ment, both on account of the hospitality of the | 1s accomplished. : vanced towurds us, the pul still on its head, | They were ull furnished, can be en des people. 1 "drive. ‘Phe Tot ied | camp Washiogtomiatoe occupied bs the Waane | Pecbigaa ubeereut varity of pleasures which | Col Stewart iGoked for a whtle out or thewtn- | UerneeP, Ut ade, 8d, &, Bunorous expres | and corked touno side iba vay tha gavethc | “yi ald owsey Gd.O7. Ya that the tow: |S aetualiy get along and be in good stanQiag drive. The road led | Camp Washington,to be occupied by the Wash- | Could be found there, including bathing, tish- | dow before he spoke agaim and then he 1d) | banging against the tent withio, “Nhat flask | eee lg Ost Soldier Minhtloghatoee ee Sony eee mendes Breese re oe ening ington Light Infantry Corps at Cape May. The | ing, yachting, steamboat excursions to various | briskly; “The assertions that Gen. Grant was 2 er Wight look wk. lown, and by and By the lake lay way be Yes: Ste 4 with tailors, haberdashers and florists by paye od we can — less, = ing for about 16 per cent of what he parchases, ete in the pattern? ‘There is another class of howling swells, vi hd rather have elzhteen; perhaps 1 might bend fr tne ge or ay Sy them, shining man Where the road they kept on it wou! It was growing nizh ve % ron e, | 8 not mine,” I quickly said. “It was left here “1 wi yiuily seared that J ua vé * - Erelin s ance, bi ‘as 30 aw ly scared that 1 badu't moved e distance. “They asked a | site of the camp was selected and tho lines laid | polits, and the social, entertanments given in moleale sellout aro wesient ings of mnan than | by an Olllcer to be returned to Chattanooga. I] a toot out of my tracks, but I bow. suw that J to, and he said that if | down by Col. Moore and Quartermaster Brelt- | enthusiasm among the members of the corps, | the general, Treeall_ now a Joke he told me | Reyer dry MG le res toe Deompe something must be done, I gave Bruce a ki oe —— De ore barth, of the W.L. I. corps, and Capt. F.H. Har- | and he expected that they would go to the en-| once, and thought it was a good story, but it | TeP sport; he was free | and rapidly, and the stable- than the eredi conclude to have flounces, Well, Lil take the | {2peamanes - cs w from every appearance of drinking, and J was |" sick him! Sick him? A a he | debis which they hover expect't ; " visit | campment with very full ranks. strikes me that it proves the kind of wap he | fol ev pearance of drinking, and I ¥ sample and show it to my mother, atid Uhen | for sale a a eee eee pe ston was getting ‘worried. The | *!)gton, of the marine corps,upon a recent v t 7 : appy indee nd in his cleareye and clear] “Bruce started tw run, I picked up a stone ke up my. . es’ eot- | It y Yoube tehiow had tromisal usfetuen At7 pobe | to Cape May. It oceuples about half of the spa- THE PROGRAM OF THE TRIP. dozen nies oka Ins home, ke budocenon to | Ace an Unmistalcable testimonial against te | and thsew teat fhe cosa PCG UP. stone | make up my mind, “Have You aij Coates eut- | Seiutar eee It wus 2:30 u. m. when the horse passed the | cious lawn on theseaside of Congress Hall hotel. | ‘The corps will, in accordance with the orders many Give ine a spool, No. valent falsehoods which envy and reads bles—doesn't pay when hi borrow a barrow trom a neighbor, Before he brevals y bruin alongside the head, and made the animal tis was han she puid five cents, and | fine to collect. whos he win ‘The guard tents, marked “J,” are near the edge | issued by Col. Moore yesterday, leave here next | had finished using It the nelgkuoe eald he must Peer ae ioe, im motion, especially afer the | how! like a mad Vull, “Then Bruce came buck | we leit. T looked ar ant ede We ee ils and couatabinen: bck te Rian: of the bluff, which rises trom the beach. The | Stturday night, Augist 15th, at 10:30 o'eloc have it in a very short time. The general saw | DAC Of Sito in o ise breakf: aud pitched in axain, but ran for my legs as | there exactly one hour! him well enough to put up with kis lack of pe- z * ‘a the beach, | The corps will arrive at Cape May the follow: | that something ‘must be done. in order to Sow. ne es morning, afters sunties read fast, Soon us the bear turned on hin. I get «club, |“ Whata cheat! Ican buy the spools for four Fics tis Eomton ten Tes ont ein cot a ee (home tig | ig morning about 7:30 or 8 o'clock, and be re- | and harrow Inthe required tine. He tarew. a | BIS chief of statt, Gen, Rawlins, who in subse: | and as the beat come wittibe of me ay: Seri tage Ae Ly out; | UBky responsibility, and wil lend him @ f ved by Company H, Sixth. regiment, New | sack of sced weres oe quent years becaine Secretary of War, lifted his A pmfound sensation has been excited in| sea, The municipal authorities of Cape May | $ived by Company H. = Sack of sced scross his buck and) jumped upon. gave it a whack. aud then turned aad ‘ra: esides, we forzot their shawls.” ser gm too te oe ‘i “ ‘Suite gee i * », We fol eit ful me ply pas Jersey mitiita coinmittees representing | the borse, the seed before the horse as | genera, then “lame aud sullering,” asf he had | Lruce followed ‘wie, and. Wookie eke tay ~ Berlin and Vienna by the appearance in a| have arranged to lay gas mains and the gas-| the citizens of Cape May. For every day due | (e,orse, throwing the seed before 3 ent to another si 5 : Bs ee ‘hild, into the saddle. ‘The direct | that the bear w: Shiy. Mient to an 7 ing him for The ladies know it walked and harrowing it as the animal pro- | been but a el ss hat the bear Was not only following Bruce on Have you any Stella shawls “s 3 Lisht company will supply gas to illuminate | ing their stay at Cupe May some entertaiument | ceeded. Certatnly ny fd think of | Fute across the Tennessee wus beid by confed- | u tigiit juup, but that terrors bears were Ye: a oes i sratising of thi Welkknewn German newspaper of what pur- | che streets of the camp. There will be fourteen | iE thelr stay at Cape May vit | ceeded. Certainly a mah who would think of | Tuite Bo athe river seed Stet Seats a 1 Pe AOE, Renutitul ones just opened. | ing in society is not in = Tal . Mo t_there will york rat rugs, an he river road on our side was | lowing iu Uke processiot The tw ew k e e che s iaies Musas Geaden) tue areanens |e en ee ee hea ballin thelf honor at Congreso Halt worel | Soce,samiaue way to do his work is a man of | Cra eee ater cgroane, on, Ou side a8 | low ug tu Uke Sib waseta 0 like ‘to eee ‘the roche borders or = Prince Frederick Charles. This asserts camp. location is ¢o1 t grown cubs. if I was making 2 - Ideas About Drews. . ‘Tuesday night a reception on the pier; Wednes- | “te was an acti inan, say what you | bank, and to Wheeler's spasmodic rai Lime bei@re, I simply flew when I discovere a ae in plain terms that the Rea Prince did not die to that of Camp Sewell, occupied by the | Gay a. excaralany tooibae Deliaae tele Hig tir iens Het Goon ase ni almost without escort Grant risked the Journey | the arrival of these reliorecments T hada WHITE BEST FOR WINTER AND BLACK POR but that he was shot dead by his 18s. Then the catap was pitched | water; Thursday morning a rifle match; | nights whem we would he all ecke p, the gen along the river, through Jasper, across swollen | goue a hundred 1eet when Ttripped In a vine, I makes the following | (eohett Soctiane Cth of the Rotel’ BOF 8 | Hetween teams from the Infantry and Company | Would be sitting by his lamp witit his wears bee streaing, through deep mud, ahd aiong roads | Sud tumbled heels over head. 4 foiled over and Inarecent article published in the Coniments a the narrative: S| Haeted section south of the hotel. H, of Cape May; Thursday evening, a ball at the | fore him and his bead full of marches and bat- | thal Were already “deemed tov wretched "he THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE TI Ver and came up on my fe “The Hea Prince did not live on good terms Stockton; Friday, a grand clam baie at} without making t occa ec leans Medical and Surgical Journal Dr. well’s | tles. A great many people have sid that the | 204 too dangerous for the wayous. This | any stop in my couise, but my fall rather con | Herb ints out what f i 4 r , ger : jerbert points out what he believes to be @ me- of the large size, | Point, and Saturday night, a farewell reeeption feral waa Why, we Who iuew him. on | Toute was strewn with the wre of army | fused my dog, wud he stopped’ in an undecided eee ee eee mae ek eons | mags os taeemniad (ate pitas. hve teenber: | oe ooarees Hal ate Corea iltare wie | © the work of the war was going | Yellcles and dead mules which our indetatiza- | way, wisich gliewed the pens Ce et p with | “We can afford you that for $9; same style | TUS popular fallacy concerning summer wear- Place scened soserious, in fact, that the old em- | Known | » PI : oda. | them the Wilson Post band) of Baltimore. | on knew that he was one of the most indciate | Pie auartertoasters had been forced wabundon, | hin? “In the wrangle Unt enswed in owhicn | sole for $1 onths azo.” ° “ | ingapparel, “We have been taught,” he says, a taunted caste for his, wealdcnter tt hava | 22 thought, will afford ample accommoda | During their stay the corps will appeur in dress | Couto teat ne, Was One Of £ Spealting ot the | Jt would have been an awful journey fora well | three bears and tue dog were ilixed Up tg printed borders were pnt up for $. “that white bodies reflected heat and Sincenee te oe es Tesldente, Ht Was | tions for the corps. ‘The tents of the officers | parade both on the Congress Hall lava and tne | Storles that Gen. Grant was made by circum. | BaN— a Journey of more than forty miles. At | Very promiscuous ianuier, Lucan ate te ‘0, L prefer broche: buteant se tale te beorbed it. ¥ Dart where hie pres hed et, Horm the | will be entirely tlored with pinks. The tents | awn of the Stockton ‘fiotel, which hus been | sretles,that, Gen, Grant wi really pushed into | He tS reo the soldiers. cated eneral from | tree, und, although 1 never elunbed a tree in| Leave twinkle tn tie marcha ans, | Absrbod It, fourt, where bis presence had caused scandals | Sceypied by the privates will be half floored— | placed at its disposal. Col Moore nas received amond, Cal. Stewart sald: his horse. The soldiers carried him in. their | my ile belore, 1 wasn’t ten seconds in reachia ade me think he kuew she was only shop- RR me uh the severity of morals there | that is, only hali the space will be floored, mak- | formal invitations” froin. the proprietors ro show you how clear military mind he | 87S across the roughest places. ¥ eldiug to | ue Uranches Of thut one, and 1 settled myseit | piu 5 Coser ae ews ago the princess wanted | ing y platform and leaving exposed the'green | of Congress Hall,” the Stockton! and. the had, and how carefully and accurately he plane | 22 Wearlness or suffering he pushed through to “alt an absolute divorce, aud wished then to retire | award in the other half, Such arrangement 1s : to her brother's honie. The emperor was obliged again toenterfere, aud axembance of @ recon- ciliation took place. But their troubled mode iron pier, to the ‘entertainments mentioned, | ped’ theres anncde ane aee rat is | Chattanooga, reaching Gen, Thomas the even- considered best and_most conducive to cleanli- | and a formal response will be made to each. Lt ihe minute engagement so that U ; Ing of the 23d of October. It was this remark- hole series of battles stand togetuer lke so ness. ‘The corps will take with them thelr bed | js expected that about 110 of 115 uctive mem- | Mocks Twill jock cei and together like solid ule, ‘Now,” said he, “if, you won't mention it I'll | ¢ vd iu some way to get out of | let you have it sor $4 | je with tue bears and followed me to for the opposit 3 Salliv looked surprised; she knew the article | . ich pul Grant en rappert with rhe aie ah % p e e article h has grown into a perni n blocks, I will just tell vou of a little si ish | ble journey which p ipper The bears came forward afew steps, | Was selling at $9. habit, Ti “ sacks, which will be filled with new straw ut | persof the corps will go into camp. willbe | on Champion. Hills, There was a bri Hooker and Thoiwas, gave practical shape to | und then, upparcutly suuistied that ames tel | osis dallas that y ost? wus habit, The temperature of the body, as still e ed, and “po er | Sacks, A a \ n amplor 5 a 4 tion * BP pUTE! = your lowest? | y the the et, is aba >. dav, when; aiter a Soeme more violent ‘even | GuPe Mas, {bach member also will carry his | attended Uy a lange numberof frionds aud bot Fee ee attoratia tue Unlon Marces needed | gratvou tue verde of slarvation, luau cacti, | HOt WHCiE eves, they Cured and shunted | “Well to oblige od, will say $4," sald the | ne” BS, ue thermometer, A ahout wy ol Bain : “ 3 ne a lanket and ov y meni e COFPS, for’ transportation purpose. Gen, Grant | 20% FAL sapped eon o nie +) delibusately off Lowards the woods, As far as 1 | merehadt, ‘ Proverbial,” steack the "princess, who: ig | == eee ners | 16, {05 tansporiation purpose, | Gen. Grant eatthful, well supplied, Conquering force: | | was concerted, 1 was uot Inelived tolsy ania | oa punarensucd. ‘ 1ov%, , pempably secre, Sow, Troment of rage, seized a pistol and fired, Jeave bere, get to Champion Hills by the morn- | 4, hug with te, general duri Fe speaiing of | Qusicie in the way of their retreat, but the old. ‘hen you think $4 is the lowest?” & parallel with outside atmospherie Prince Frederick Charles’ fell. “mortally | Bucking and Gagging. ‘The Great August Rain. ing and athuck Feinberton: not sivugely, Uut | Steed of raul who were dismatiait witb | boy seemed WO suddenly take possezsion ofthat | “Alicia! fave w lerce lot wad went to dispose during the greater portion tf the wounded.” WHAT AX INDIARA OFFICER OXCE THREAT-| THE IMMENGE QUANTITY OF WATER WHIT carefully. He(ore tho skirmish is bult over Mo- | Cicer Or tank whe were dl had no sympathy | Bldiwe fool dog of mine, an ai dees he do | Of them; Pil say $2.50! suminer, with a —— ENED GENERAL GRANT WITH. FELL OVEL A WIDE ALEA, Phersou will have hed tle to come to vour | Vit. guclt grumnbiers and ag Hole et ay | But bristle up and start’ after those bears rst-rate plece of zo0ds? ‘ + and this ney Bob Ingersoll’s Foxhound. “Tt was during the ‘Seven Days’ Struggle in| From the Hartford (Conn.) Times, Aug. 5. catgta ce. oe pees Rae ete sellishly aunbitio ‘He sald, In answer to a ea een eS eno! Aatrant it all silk and wool,” said the a xereise. In the sun, how- IF IS REFUSED AIMITTANCE To THE ORIENTAL | the Wilderness,’ sald Col. Taylor to the La-| | Itis not easy for anybody to realize, or even | (00,1 hls was to prevent the rebel leader Femark of mine to the ellect tat It was hard uuisty any dog that ever 3 peter may register 100? to HOTEL, CONEY ISLAND. fayette, Indlana, Courier, “just after the battle | to correctly imagine, the vast amount of water or an oflicer to pass from a higher command himself Te worked ike a Ze pebreating bear jamily paid no attention t6 x ma rr crossed over to Pemberton, attacking ‘ wer, t a uc dog until he caught the old bear by th ive 14 3° o . . ‘From the New York Star, August 2 of Spotsylvania. My regiinent—the 20th In-| which is poured out of the sky ina great Au-| and in the middie of the conlitey MeVierson | t? ilower, <1 do not think ‘Sry diviion | sels. ‘Then shetarned on hit, and brucestart. | "ldo wish [had brought some mone; Side host may bo greater than that of tie Itisa rule on the Manbattaa beach property | giana—had made a long march that day, and | gust rain, like this one whtch during the first | caine down with his men. Champion Hills was | S44 ng more. Whi, Lbelieve Lshoutal bo fereg | cl iu retreat, The old bear stood @ second and | then, uddressing the merchaut, said, human body in repose, But at other periods of Token ce tical anaey trespass, Col. | we had come tow halt in the evening on the| three or four days of the present month has | po,Juot as Crant had said; and justax tough | iy Ue race of Providence to acekee seated | | eee SO ee ee ee roe bat eee ee ee Robert G. Ingersoll arrived at the Oriental | cage of the woods, by the roadway. It was not | deluged so many and so widely separated parts | heip binwimarere Gone the general made the | Bigber than that intrusted to ms. reat iaaice | "Ain't got enough, hey? Well, then, Fit just | fore, for the clerks had gathered. s, | the same degree. in whort. uring the aremher howl Thursday night. He kad with him his | at all certain that we would remain there longer | of our country. It 1s not easy to understand | circumstances before they marie hit. Hie bogatinane’y goutidenes wine oe ‘od | Settle this fool or wdég, Once and'for all.’ seeming to a * portion of the day, even in the hottest sum- Wis, two daughter, a gentleman friend and an | than a very few moments. 1 told the inex to| in the “reallzing” gence, however fully we may | © !This was the way all We littleskirmishes that | He begat in mew conlider years and | “With that sho dashed after Bruce, and the | Weut home, Irish foxhound. After his name and those of | Make their coffee and get whatever rest and re-] comprehend the fact intellectually, how so | were the foundation stories of his victories were | ¢Sperience es ‘i in My friend was caught, Turning to me she hottest perlod of the da iP er, the bor perature in some of our ; S : : < For an interview with Gen, Thomas, then | pro Zug bears followed close at her heels | my returning with her to the store tor the | organs atleast ik above the surrounding tome the, family, had been registered’ it was discov- | ffme “The guar nad been inatracted v0 Let tee | ae ee ea ae the form Retped the gencial snore dikes aorine wer ity | commanding our Army of the Cumberland L Wviten the bear Pame up he ase Hee ae | Dut the shawl wast use eonaee SOR": Vers, | perature, ‘These remarks do not apply “to ‘the ered be had a doz. oneon horseback through the lines, as it was | longer invisible, when it has been condensed in | wondcrfully retentive memory.” And here tie | Web the Lata of November, 1863, from Louk- lowed, aud he led them a chase In acircls | Sallie, too, T thought, We went shorpiae an | SN, bconle who work inthe sun, but to the look politely Pt Bm 88 a guest,” said the | the ‘habit of stray artilierymen, cavalrymen | the form of heavy ruin clouds, but it was all | Colonel had another aneedos to Che oie es | out. Valley to Cuattancogu, Inthe evenng | lowe ti the treo for atleast five ‘minutos “ine | more that aflemnoan” Y° ee ee eee eee eee clerk polite c and mounted orderlies to come dashing throngh | there, invisibly somewhere In tho wide realm | like this: L way paymaster, and had. Just paid | SeYeral officers were siting together in an upper | around t Snln'bgetany clas slanaboutone * eee mat cay coon eear ousity colonch | MAY Me” Fsponded the | the camps whenever they could save Ume by | of air—belore It beeame. thus. condensed, | the Gth New. York heavy atilicey sat hive | room when Gen, Shermai aeriv ng left | ood juip of the dog. and the two soung bears Genius sanity 2 will say that most Of um, daring dougity colonel. 2 sodoing. “Thad but just seated myselt near the | Take the ending purt of that great storm, for | Point, and bad been given two month® leaveto | Nia imarchiug column byck at Uridseport. Le | goed Jump of the dog. and the two soung bears " oreise, wear wht ext w the skins an dit Sorry, but those are our rtles,” was the | roadway, when a rider In an oid. bi an example—what must have been the actual | go east. ‘The general sald, ‘I suppose you would | C8 Lounding in after his usual buoyant man- | followe As, ct on thi pollowes ab about ie) sane, pee beliind | MENTAL ODDITIES OF GREAT PROFLE IA.0s- this exercise, wear white stuffs next to the skin ouel 1 8 ike aeer ithe vq | Her. Gen. Grunt, whose bearing toward Sher- | her. She tinally tired of the chase and stopped. | TRATING THE STRANGE ACTIONS ov TuE | Yet such garments will reflect heat from out This, of course, had slight effect on the | MUched hat, with acigar in his mouth, rode| amount of water that was poured down, from | like to be one of the first to enter lichmond r : é 7 i ers, | She growled snd gnashed her tecth for afew | BNALN. bodies m: bee Ane passed tire guard the lntter turned | Chicago to Muine, from Maryland and the Obio | when I take it, wouldn't you, Colonel? Tsuid 1 | {#80 Gifered from thut with other onicers, | Shi ry <n propane rata hore for the rextof the | Meigaiutad hin, I shgated tothe guard: | tothe Whip mogniaine? iz rained seemingly | genaialy would, and would be bck to°Chy most cordisityy ee" tumuediaesig | olf for tho woods azain, driving hes cabs ahead of fe = fo y hat were your orders?” as never before, in all those regions. igh- | Pe in two mont ord ume 5 . Der cate ae seen, and think my stay will be profitable yt'to let any one on horseback pass the | out the greater purtot thomiddiestitesit ade | "Buty brolee tthe general, ‘that won't do, Tages pene nord Leh Se oer ey eee TEASE, So Ste Rete) to permit an exception: 10 | tine. destructive river foods. In the region about | because I shall take Hichinond tu less than two ays Doar had gone a long aie 2 . “Men Ii sce Mr. Corbin,” remarked Inger- | S48 aha ” N : 4 » A «| ping his ready flow early words, and not | JUS 2 4 i as already hinted, all intense preoecupation \ fabric “SET Choo hd eaaplatena gate | lien He ace sort ot an otter, | fea drenching’ Hiern soutners Sew Eng. | ar VEAke eit,” Fauat to Rnsetan og | Leh juan tv utr HG seine ike ut | nic ‘doagain Sur oyrmg up and stare |°Sleady ‘ated. all Gutease preoseapation | tiie coro ti ew ray mi di MM, Corbin told him emphatically that he | sin't her? ‘| ind the downpour was such as was never | one day a passport to enter Richmond’ was | uiinated boy Just in from an exeiting out | ufter those’ bears “as fast ag his les ter things and givi chin, tuunpereenitug oeameaiien eek tales hes teleueaphd to Lone Bescht winced bg | “Then turning to the intruder I satd: “You | exceeded—if indeed it was. ever equated. | handed to me ik may odes: Ra ond, Was | door game. Would carry him. T yelled at him to come | outer things and giving a dream-like appear. | skin, thus preventing evaporatloly aud comme Pek saeeaned fo Long Reach, where he had | are an officer, are you? Well, don't you know | In. this. immediate. region the ‘rainfall in | treats prone tattee clty who knew that Rich. | Grunt arrested his attention by some apr | baci. but he paid no more attention to me than | ance to the mental state, isapttoappearsympio | quently retrigeration. Besides, What. retalns Cobtayeroll secared his: toome at Lome Benak | better than to ride through a.camp oftired and | One continuous Tain, from “Monday ‘utter: | mond hae fallen. Nothing that Lowa endties | remark, aud then sald, “luke the chair of | te wind yerch again to await the rosule or] Mai iehasttermnes jae Mea , ut in order | wolsture retsine heat, and list retains both Soden nmemaeek swith hie tora nity ehis dog Weary soldiers like these are, splashing them | noon to three o'clock | Tuesday” morn- | impressed me so much as the sending of that | honor, Sherman,” indicating a rocker with | OM my perch again to await the result o e when the temperature outside is From the Popular Science monthly. greater than ft is inside ot them, and to our The lowest grade ofmental disturbance ts | /odice more when thre excess of jane ot come seen in that temporary appearance ofirrationall- | terefore, we put on such garments preferably. distance I thought I could | ty which comes from an extreme state of “ ab, | in summer, when they generally serve as re ee me a ey & Ot | that it might tnd a place among distinc soe ee ee eee ae von b , oF b . : g ss 1 ba his new attack. “Bruce caught up with | normal features this, absence of inind Mm white Hnen clothes operate. There ure me and lis indignation. Way? I've a good mind to Goce and gag een | OMober ralnar the ge want Sam Cotcmee, FeeR, | DMROrY, to me, and I lave not yet ceased Gt | lle elitr of honor? Oh, no; that belongs to | the bears, and the next 1 oaring “once mors | ube certain depth and persistence. Tt Of the wan angtiting tigiberin weiebee coer 2s b you | Octol a 2a , 1869, er how # tha ended one iS norah and the ¢ rs Wer ore | story of Archimedes und amusin; of the sun, anythin, le "ight oF cole Faith Healing. Pepe ee rene (eueaiy Oo aie IR Ee | oe a tomecaimed nantly Sie PTR once ae eCopt ment | ood the vents bringing tp thio rea Taos ae | ake ene tans Hil ACouthentic, snie ee | os vedas oplit wood sanding salted pamease Dr. <ewman Hall, of Christ church, London, | , “Tlie horseman made no reply; only looked | tion on the Second day,) did not exhibit sueh a | tau a pleasant cominon place tal teen wee rman: EIVE Proper |/ftras order. The sais citcus was gone Chiongh | betwotn a normal and an taoroat coe | ie copper akg. tney Go bot compan te a atme and smiled. I was incensed at his inde-| steady und tremendous downpour as that of | “Every one,” Col. Stewart added, “knows reas with around the ‘tree, and again the bears re- r y winter nature Wears a mantle of spotiess white, hes sways been identified with evangelical | Tonginco aud fired another volley at tin, | Taesdar, ACUI 1SSD, Hota en he benny oe | ther ee Genel Cos nota demonstrative man, ve ehee foe put is on) that ground) T | read tn disses Nunes tines ceed T | eo I err egg rion acy geen grey foci mp eer ag ween te wey isin, bat always with evangelicalism of the | when he passed on. The colonel of the Thir-| 1and 3 o'clock in the morning. ‘The volume of | Even shrewd, cleatmeut Jolce te tec ey | must aceept. riod 10 leave that tree, and every time Brace | ages that of Beethoven, who coul ear? But the human creature has one qui healhier sort. What he says is never the | teenth Maine regiment was sitting on a log | this August ruin isshown in the flooded streains, | read no secrets in his lace, Hexeeured paste | Tit night I had the 2 docs ae a testine | Would rush aiter the beats and fetch them buck | Mage,te, understand why, ‘bis standing in his | bear? Hut the human creature has on Ag Fesul of any excess of enthuslasm or of | Rear by lauzhing Bt to Ki Lasked tim what | whlch every where continue 40 be flonded long | fees, and yet once I saw him ery. ike a cllld. fore! Sherinun spoke guickly, botevinesd res | again and have ‘hecirousin, under the sree. | Menlattireatan open window shouldattract the | ment atinosphere around whic may be any disturbance of the intellectual balance. | that want tis asked. ‘Nor dont care ote | ee Crane ee a ae ee Pear. Up to West Point to'see some Mende at che | previous thought. Grant aild sherman would Piven sessed die tae that Ib was not the | wo hayes ton Incapacits Lelow acts, Wilt seach tne hast inom tale howd Som few days ago, in a sermon at Clifton | 2M 48") I Grant’ 1 thought | @ day and ahalfafter the storm, the rain having | railroad station he was swept under a passing | “bone” (Lc. study bard) hls campaigns trom Dut that my own dg vas the animal that wos | (CHOr, objects and their relations, and a perature. His ‘vital furnace is sot s-foatl PETG, Be chew Jor bis text AL, Corinthtans, | that he was playing me and wouldn't belleve | added about G fect to Its helzht. It wasn heave | engine and Inaagled vo death. ieee ans | morning to hight on his horses, Gen, Thomas | Pepoustble for way perils, Ted bed heed a ne | ipeapaclty, ofa like nature cl “ “ supply the losx. Exhaustion L210, and expressed himself freely on, the ; : : : : : Ms rarnishe m Of kno ible for s XiL,1G, and expressed himself freely he | him. Genelal” Gy rain in the White mountains, the gauge at the | ington at the time, aud the morning after tie | furnished them the ammunition of know iver ['d have pita bole through hian burt | aoe ane sand a tp cistlied to tus om wer suit of faith healing, ‘10 was sudmiitted, he Birnes's headwuar Signal service station on the suminit-showing | actident the Genofal came to me witty u paper ing sabuntalnous replony of ict Teanewee oe | hadn't, and so my only hope ofecape was that | Uri wane ee ne, moraind Manan in, and, by the same iaw of equilibrium, the id.on the istlan authority that ‘ision eo! 3 ey, » inches, in his hand ani : “DI e: K ee — a e beurs wi evel y i ee ? pve xed organs m: ellort Tinwcies wer ure of the Apustoliechureh, | “what regiment Is that just: down tne | _ fis great rain came inland trom the Guit of | Son en ei ton ee reed OF Poor | i hota mua Peston of List Tennessee and Make short shify of hin,” Powe Duce and | world, betrays lisclrin many of the cocenteie | Overtaxed onsans malke « tremendous = and that tn er of working miracles re-| road theres indicating with bis fitece: tne | at 3 und now and then | tke short shrift of him. inained in the cnurch lovg after apestolle tines. | Sid Tey 1 tieth 2 % 4 en wi ease et habits attributed to men and women ot ge remedy the trouble by reacts ti ois. poy # scent Mon niid jude Laie trail of the bear they whed the edge of | His inconvenient habit of suddealy breakin - i See, Well, te was pete ee tee Gol Pp pe mrp ered apis Sas Ene Grant Femity, eine atlaw, ceeren Gee The DrHilen anata | the woods, Tiey disuppeared among the teen | Lue yimgmwenient ba Lord's Prayer in a fashiote | Thad sworn to bea bachelor, she had aworn to bee ‘ell, he was going to buck and | the a ssippi baat mee ve At hone seaboard— | MRS. GRANT TO REMAIN AT MT. M'GREGOR te, and Grant, renderi his verdicts, like an and Bruce dashed in after them. I waited ten | able assemb: iy marksa distinctly dangerous maid, Ir it was the good plessure of God why Pike cee clk ce diciete for | coon tent of net a ek NST OGROBER: intelligent jury.” aaa aes. risigas did not appear. Hope grew | drifting away ot the inner life from the firm | FOF We both agreed in doubting whether matrimony ii not be so? What fe had doue He | ney told me of the ccna ahawOe alton. contr. = Mr. Henry Clews, who is an intimate friend of | “The 23d of November following the conference | 80Strong within me that I let myself down out | anchorage of extertial im pal r the tree : ‘i Resides I had my higher aims, for sclence filled my Pete ear and un | ward. The next time I met Grant at close | _ It ix impossible to estimate any such quantity | the Grant family, has stated the future plans of | above referred ton reconnolsance bad been ore | Of the tree and took to my heels, As Bruce | “In Gne cases just considered we have to do oe pean Ae or ave ing the case of is own | Quarters was in Lal 1 ined by the Waidensians and the Motwians, not to speak of the Catholie chureh, | thatmiracles were performed in auswer 16 | < Sia! od. Gen G 3 oe |- | Basn’t turned up yet, I dare say he is either fol- | with a kind of biindness to outer clr i fection w: and tered mete Qntlvs house, | of water. Even of the wnount that was poured | the family toa reporter in New York as follows: | dered. Gen. Gordon Granger deployed one di- | basn t turned up 9 Yet, by casy stages, or has | ta outer cir-| And she sald her young affections were all wound up 2 ewer to his tather's prayer, | aiter the war. As I entered to pay iny respects | Out upon our own little state It is impossible to | The whole family will ret to Me Mel vision of the 4th army corps into line in umharmorerien Co S. A turtber advance along the line | in her art. ht back mireulously { jawset | te! . aoe 5 : * 4 eee iy turn fount MeGre- | front of Fort Wood, and supported It by his | #!ved as refreshments for them. it : pee | So we laughed at those wise men who say that friend- ’ Grail nis one etme wicion roo teie | Ge ‘Arta of Counceticut. 10 bes pene ene | gor on Monday and remain there untll October. | hey two dives ane epee corps, under | | “Under. the circumstances,” sald the doctor, | sistence of vivid id i SS of the Twentieth Indiana.’ A si H c ‘Whe Use of Sunflowers, From the prmantown Telegraph. This pidpt is av extroiled \s a preventive of malaria di: vmmonly antici ship cannot live t * he packed his trunk on Friday, “Iain afraid | Oyevil of some kind, Which have ne bac Twix! man and Woman, unless each has something lie ed over | level surface, and the average amount of rain; | They will then occupy their house on east G6th | Palmer, supported. the right, and the Lith, | 9% = e , © no basis ee she extended his hand and | for that one storm, to be not five, but hot quite | street, New York. Alva, Surtocle wil return to| massed, the left. | Gens. Grant and ‘Thomas | (het fils ncighborliood ts not as pastoral i its | ternal reality. Johnson's dislike to partic We would be friends, and friendsan true as der wore rope fone: Gene e Terie be; | tree, inches whut, then, would be the aggre-| Englind, where she will stay until spring; she | Stovd bY the parapet within the fort, and their | auictude nor ars les. gileys in his London waiks,and Madame de aan and man, before, General,’ T replied, and | gate quantity of water that was emptied from | then iuténds Wo return to thiseountry and spend | tif oflicers and orderlies were near at hand, I | ig sylvan charms as my nature requires.” Stael's bizarre idea that she 'would suiler. fro 5 a “4 bea second David, and she Miss Jonathan, ‘That ts all there was to it, but the | the clouds uppn our area of not quite 5,000 year with Mrs. Grant. U.. Grant, Jr., will | Could see both generals from my point of ob-| | Since the doctor went away three hunters | cold when buried, may be taken as examples S never tired of twitting me about arresting | square miles" a ss 7" ‘ed like cach other, that was ail, and quite enough ri * | cotac . 2 | servation, "I was curiousto observe them in the | Bave been out after the bears, but at last ac-| of these. prinil delusions or dees aa cre c ly ging ‘Saftuirs, ‘There are a great collie. enter ide mentee ceonces e shared onr sorrows and our Joys, together hoped of feed t Health, give | ISHUMAN FEROCITY OF MEN—THETR FrENDIsu | little spot In the area of the actual downpour! | many matters which will require his avlention | Felsof the guns, flashed In the sublight. “Skit ep auberiog culet aa “ aud feared: © them Hive! WORK AT NEW ALBANY, IN Connecticut, compared with that area, covers | and ‘will take until fall to settle, Col. Grant | mishers sprang to thelr places with: gladsome mastering that he had to be fastened With common purpose sought the goal which young untlower, e sae Jess relative space than a dinner plate on a big | then intends to devote himself to railroad in- alam and soon the whole front was covered Summer Complaint in Children. tw keep him from leaping forward. aun seared. Ing haifa pa night and moraing. “Ith From the Louisville Courier-Journal. dinner table. It was almost as if the great | terests and thinks that he. willsettlo in the | With them, and the buglers sounded the ad- | From the Medical and Surgical Reporter. +99 We di, Cigether of the Gays, thedreama bright i For several years there has existed In Har-| lakes had burst thelr bounds and simultane. | west, He says positively that he will not enter | Yauco, all ds if on parade. | The confederates | ‘The child must receive no nourishment, with An Overproduction of Mauna. We were strictly confidential and called each other ison county an organization of mep know! ously emptied themselves upon the country on | the army again under avy circumstances, It ls | 11 OUF front doubtless thinking it Grant’s re- | me exception of small quantities of rice-water | Henry George, in # recent address ou “Yhe Crime of Sauoen “The Knights of tue Hickory Switch," or “The | ™astde. padersiood ‘that he has had offers of a position | View. Of troops, many of them stood “lisplay, | fOr the tirst twenty-four hours, At night, be- eee grec f corm pint een gyn ag arg rn a enn in the arm; ve wi is = i I seek: a Het p Whip-Ups.” This body of men pretentiously How to Travel With Comfort. Ars, Grant is still at MUMcGregor and id not | The. men seemed to ‘Oy over the space | fore going to bed, the child ts placed in a warm | , Even if God in answer to prayer were to send mia Tee an S aulck Gre is dent claims to be “an organization in the interest of | From the New York Graphic. attend the funeral ceremonies in New York to- sapeerentile to Orchard nob, ean course | bath, and afterward wrapped up in blankets, down outof the heavens those things that men | And rustic bridges and the like, which pleturemakers bay nnn Jaw and order,” but it is, in fact,an organization | Avoid railroad tood by carrying chicken, beef, | @#y. She at first hoped to accompany the re- | Tesistance soon came. Skirmish | against a juire, who would get the benefit? In the Old | Ph ismishe When the perspiration thus caused has ceased | Te4' ‘To run in with their waterfalls,and groves, and sunny Ive an agrocabie traztaney, to | OF the promotion of Lawlessness, and many | hard-bolled eggs, bread, frait and salt, Doineie mead pagyang to Albany and thence | ore at’ last, awakened, “and was ie De | the child 1s carefully dried, dressed in is | Testament we are told that, when the Israciives | 7°74!" the air direction In th AE | Shantet to disstace reac tie dita, ‘atamous | Arrange to statt quietly after aplentifalmeal, | thet} tutt rece ned ee Mentally and phy. | {ull of missiles. ‘Tne eras | Doweveh, 8 | acer Of whlch; an well Ge anes OF tee ah | conn ee ae enact att, Shey were | nt to mais wale, crepes, a hours f Cel edense, wtitvation of sale isthe and “Aranahoes.. They have taken helpless | Take overshoes and waterproot in your hand-| sically. She has hardly been able t leave ber | this time surprised, and luis outer works tate one a ned renee ee Rowe ont <i the e iy | must be twice daily, or oftener. In the (wees, Yulee “We avpocuftgcu'staried ts talay | Hom Melt naked. backs {il dey sunk es-| “agage wuuay seoey uptwo flights tn aa-| Rene woendure the journey Siwy Yoru ae | clted and ordeflescouid not keep quiet Grant | early morning the SHH Te ee ait a nd they all teas Trad a alto | And Em long eration tom the pete the Enieeaton, ands they: grow the leaves sees | Busstedl ou the ground from the terrible puntad: | vaaee*Uaseased Somers une eee WP ts | Grunt trom the Mive Hrmiy believed tbat het | 804, Thomas stood sido by side “without ex: 5 or tereil, cool Whit tie sulimer skies and my cigar burned slowly But, supposing that desert had been heid as pri- my ‘ husband would recover. h time he railied | changing » word. Grant quietly smoked bis | possible, in a boaé on the water, or an iskind'in | But, ry, asthe soll ofGreat Britalu arin eeeaa AOeeth, thetic i : : ment. The case of the young girl, who, a few | weather be only billy, still have a small fire. hopes. | cigar and Ti ressed. lass: the middle of a large river, or, best of all, kept ew T titcies to tain bdeaus, but whaghe eifect will be upon themte | Jeahs seo, lor having lai a that a than in| | dn railway traveling ide guly in the last car | When he Was Drostrated tins ins aie ane ee: | eae Senlaat his teed to get Ercarer views. ap the veashoreToterally, snail doses Sf sul | Pela’ Supposing Gass Gncor Coe Lereeitas ees | But through Wall no whispered word o tell-tale lok mans to be seek The roots must tax the teed- e hood sin, OF get ne neat Thee oO te ae il™ | evod, he would again rally ay belore. $0, al- | At last the Orchard Knob is crowned and Huw: [Teo Te pa ions = ware mile,and au other one had. twenty | Told aust of warmer sentiment than friendly aympe- Dacgeies bonne bee Tight: tied toa tree Sd ee Dee aa aiid: | trata, oF get as near these points as powaible, °" | tkyeg, ne Would Again rally A# DelOre. BO, a ee Te oes ee tn eat: | Beatty cinta diartan ‘ofaqua chlorine | $41 on eu ss — ight, tled toa tree and lashed by brutes in the | Eat boiled milk, salted to taste, and ove Bape’ erie Re are adininistered, and if the little patient has | *d¥are miles, and another one had a hundi oP Mesthene oe imecrmom [iy emda ni | oe eps das ny | ren ww inane” Abcee | ee a nla | apie it ptr Te | my an tein | Wego cw ryt te ; x en by i ey had gained, “It will have @ bad effect to | 5 8 le, while . ‘wares. Prem the Omata feral. Which she fell in a faint on being released by her | passing trang, > therefore, notwithstanding bis rently back ‘agaln.” | arti math necessity consists in | thelt fect upon, which they could call theirown— Col. isgersoliqwalle sitting in a Broadway | barbarous torturers, was a crime agaiual hu- | “Attekd tothe dally functions, else travel will figs foc note aos ene nae of StETgUEG: | Wien the desired moment hed corne Liens | there UalGg ae ones removed to tae comsere ee | what eof cig mannat | What good | “Welk, sond-tr, old tellow.” X took her hand, fur hotel, xezing idij into the street, saw a row be- | B/nity that sent a ‘shudder through the heart | derange them, Ou-wartn days’ Hide backwart toleave Me Meanie cae belndnced | said guictly, “Intrench them and send up sup- seashore. If such children | would It have done tothe majority? Not a Span reg tween seabiarhnd bootblack. The boy was | grower at tee may aad woman who read the | by an open window, thus avoiding cinders and | #2,/¢8%0, Mt. MoGregor, unless for New York. | sid gulctly, “introneh ther and send up supy | still Ye SE Ae | eh dar ait that rk kd ee ene | MY ove, menat oar cna age Arrestet, aud Infersoll deeming the prisoner in { woinun, not many months eee es eee co trips take abundance of outer gar- | Ber UnU! she returns to her old houge In New | Could observe the peri pierre peer ponrapee mae would T had lingered long and said farewell with » very Banger Of injusfee, went to the police court to © dangetate witnae he rus guapected of} ments and fannel bedgowns, Walk the deci or | 4or, , Mart. Grant intends to live {a New York, | Chir yanabllity of our leaders, “Grant's equa; oss | Feuplay ed some of the others, perhaps, to gather | wos shear, we're (yet fiends, you know, ‘istand pee draes iufeounselor. ‘The ease was dis | (igs quotes witness in o pending lawsult, | exercise, ese first days ashore will be fatiguing. | Reever husband ts buried; for the reat of het contagious oxeltement of battle. the most | it up in heaps for them, and would have sold Yo part. 3 [ites auiety ad's discharge, that | Wass “bad woman. oe eocners was that ahs PAU Migat i ticeek deat Nie ok tha with §orby her two sisters and a sister of Gen.Grant. | ; in Washington, Sete ren Gas ent ee Pee ais cal or tine | chaae, and onio ction onl nekecceasee ney Sait Siege yoke Bieny be Feat or oO} , sk — y johnson une ag yy CS I Ba few wrecks ago a, citizen was taken | @ bit om bread and rest thitty iminutes be- | trom ner prostaneton ey ire liey toward the southern white this belng the reason ofthe many deaths among | UBUL the majori gome day, wucn you've lots ot tme, Just drop a find lis attcidiow to cult were dugersoll | tied to a tree. was switched neatly todeatie | easily. Hetice the hentai as Seger? | of great yntotl eeeng ed eee givae, there wore foes aie eee onan eee Poe Wat tent co er eaaestnenaienstge ce of imaaner were Indeed | sovare wit eed was ordered toleave the ie ewe Ifscasick | _8¢0- Johnston's Tribute to Grant. Rose upwird with a story of quite a different kind: ven ; enty-four xhausti seaaicl then ‘she raived her eyes to tube, great tiguld fest wrade, and he had been | StS, because his terribie punishment confined | keep the deck; lle upon the back Hear the sax, | Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, who officiated as one certian me mens grade, aud ie had beet | film to his bed for many tas {er of the ship; eat ih spite of nausea. If vomit- | of the pallbearers at Gen. Grant's funeral to- capi to the brit and running o'er, like violet cupt 'f seem "powiile. that he has su atom of | ony ee hune NEN these “Knights of the Hick-| ing follows, eai again at once. ‘This s the only | day, passed. through Chieces Thaedey, om hie ring with dew: sens rial fis besptly make,” commented Inger | nmed William Froter went Meee pe Thee | eek: way to New York. Hoe is reported as having from. ‘One tong: Jong look, and then I did what I ‘The justice arked the Woman where the pris | took itm our bed, tied him to a tree and wit iy sald while there: “The first time Iever saw ‘bit her, and she sho h mt ge choose si is back of ‘her head, remarking: “ite arwase | RICKOFY switches wit Gen. Grant was during the Mexican war. He a ‘He always | back until tx rea of the brutal roo hal pa Tati pte GPO tas | when ne was cect uty uct ineemnati | fag na alto eboolate ver |rat® fame ef bag Pena: pangeioll burried to the | nore dead than. alive. “While this Was got pepper. | tobe. I beg your pardon,” said. hie, “but the ous mob hield the wre ped, wap sald you never hit any of the walttosey iren as witnesses of the tor ie [oon omger oe the head. ould soa ture. Xothing tn the history of © 1 ures this: uP asennad | MP OAM Met te oy ae ; i u io uate thats | Beate arse fmt aad face and you have to Keep ‘em Eintinnee of this iawless asekt ath on is hts week —eatiny their cused heads | doing Harrison eouste oy ed i dt anh, | Sages ine pe el rt, “cause it's unted down and to ‘Then Ingersoll mused as he turned aways cies ned away: | puulshinent at every hazard wore) ay eer ae meee - Be iy i j i i | z i i

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