Evening Star Newspaper, September 5, 1885, Page 3

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“THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C, SATURDAY 461 MBER 5. 1885—DOUBLE SHEET. ae jOUNTAIN. POISON BY THE TON. MR. SPURGEON'S TABERNACLE. ‘The Age of Forest Trees. ‘The Evil-Eye. CITY AND DISTRICT. OYSTERS OUT OF WATER. UNDER NORTH ™ ra res ws RM TURTINS Tu Dmione i tecsce of] Pan mapeomee Liewoen, Suse, Doong 5 How Long alves will Live if| The Great Cave that Joins Two West | Enoug! reenic Imported te Depopa- ft the Gront Londom Preacher | two white oaks and the grave of athird, which | We find that in many countries there has BLINDS, FRAMES AND HARDWARE ARE VERY EAMUSEMENTS FOR THE INSANE. Properly Kept. Virginia Counties, 5 = HIS METHODS, MANNER axD cHURCH—ruHE | told this singular story by circumstantial evi- | been, and there still is, more or less, a belief in . th In a recent bulletin of the United States Fish —— xp pr | From the N. Y. Herald, PEOPLE WHO GO TO HEAR HIM—SOME OF HIS | dence so strong that it could not be doubted: In | the evil effect of certain eyes. The malignant tow Now. Bris ipo acbem ments Given at the |<. ymission 1s published the following state-| a prr or ixFERNAL SCENERY AS REVEA) There areimported annually into this city) ®4¥iNGs, the year 1502 an acorn fell about one and a | Power supposed to exist is not said to be due to eto ment by Prof. A. E. Verrill, of New Haven,| Tux yirruL FLARE OF LANTERNS—DOMED AUDIENCES LARGE AND ENTHUSIASTIC, IF Not | Con WHITE PINE STOCK 1/'X19/'—168, par Looo: from Cornwall, in England,and from the mines half miles from where I am now writing (Rock- | any particular color, size or shape of the visual a. CHAMBERS AND VAULTED GALLEBIES—BATS, -A London correspondent ot the New York #1750, of Austria, Hungary ‘about one . Ville, Indiana,) and by favorable chance | organ, and In fact even those who most fnmly ficient sar ert) ntememe wameutgate wea] Sito seo sete metermm | Seon Len atnman| Sei gata ras at te | et eae serene canted airer, eres | Sunes Som menor rLe RNISHED FOR THE ENJOYMENT | I. Townsend to a large cluster of oysters at- mas pounds of weighteach. Pin ssay that a| who-doces snother scorn sprouted als renty ecu although Bogack aitrmeed thet eer. |, se poanen 268.perienem, Ov THUSK OF SHATTERED INTELLECT. tached to an old boot which had been hanging | Correspondence of Tre EvENtvo STAR Soas et wo anna lai? dager ea ae loes” the city thoroughly falls to pay & ay have grown on the tree | cerers hi pup yes, y. Va., August 31. Visit to this “institution.” ‘The Taberable is in in the front windows of the fish market of Fort SpxixG, W. iu e ss the Eastern Branch, located upon | Charles Reed, in this city, for alongtime. This| I wonder how many of the readers of THE rile stees to prove fatal. A eee the Borough, as the part of the city on the Sur- net eininences about the city, {8 | cluster was taken from the water In the early | STAR know what wonderful bits of scenery | figuring crefore show that if the imporis- | rey aide of the Thames Is called, and faces the Se puuldings surrounded by ex-| part of December, 1884 (about the 10th, It a | these rugged mountains near the White Sal- | tions of a singie year were divide up 1nt0 | street called Newington Butts, I suppose the Attractive grounds, The visitor | said), and when I examined it on February 25 | Phur bide behind their rocky Chapin Hb es Auber SPL ee his aces arte range ewe ee eee ee pasws through the iron gateway, and as he | several of the larger oysters were still alive. 1 | KNOW the secret, I imagine, else loi oy ere ites in Kone of | set ne iaresnane, naenbornogd,t could ng the winding graveled roadway he | am told that they continued to live for some | would t have echoed to the steps o each man, woman and child too! pol ire sul. there, sented) ualer the tues | Gave utterwertn’ Vie inter coos euea eee exploring parties, and the cliffs would have | those portious on a given day, human life | Made inquiries of several persons who ought t0 iked to Newington Butts from St il alive were of about the size ordinarily sold ‘ist’s um- | would on that day to exist in the terri- | pay ng net women who appear per-] Tne marked Most of the sale ey £0ld | bristied with artist's easels and tour hs LY cease to e: ul’s, going by way of London bridge and the et. Mo ry Now covered b; ta a str} in ope (and many of the larger oues, of which | brellas, ‘As yet, however, only stray specimens | }Ory n¢ red by the stars an Borough High street. The most direet route Fear old. Tr 17S 8 tndo fee eee eee oo ey ee ete ines gees old. a ado the nortl they i be ie - - west blew down aatill older oak, which in its | kept thelr eye fixed on them. WHITE PINE DOORS, inch and a-half, ati regular fall struck against and greatly damaged thetop | In Italy there were sorcerers supposed to de- sizes, — one Does. a “ quhere is today be your with one jook the Beart of gman. The $1.00. well-mari ve of the: len giant, the dirt | Grecians firm! leved in the erd~ye, te piled upon ‘the southeast side ofthe hole, and | in Spain there were ple much feared because | GEORGIA PINE STEPPING, kilo dried, dremed, ® long depression in the ground where the | their eyes could distill polson into Those they #35.00. trunk fell and rotted tll not a vestige of its | looked at. Oye Spaniard, it is reported, had Wood can be seen to-day (though some traces | such a powerffil bad eye that he could shatter | NAILS, per keg, Of the bark of the roots can). ‘This depression | every pane of giass in a window just UY 100k lag $2.40, Over one of groups of men ly happy. I inte to the stump of the dami d oak. | at it Another wasemployed by thg king to - years the linportation has rapidly 10- | would have Been tee Bree ney Leritee ad | Phe two younger mud beet Treat eee Goat, | St ft, Anollier (was emplored by the Klng to | ODD SIZE FRAMES, SASIL, DOORS. « spectatyy, Ings and one mects mbers of people, some | the edges had been broken or chipped, were | ofeither easels or umbrellas have found their creaved, and the fact that the numerous cases | Blacktriare Goda. ar I was curious to go| When I examined them. Their stumps were | for his luok sufficed to kill the: 4 | LUMBER aetiy any part of city free of. Wandering aimiesly up and down the eorri-| dead and dried up when I saw them. "Those | way here, and my initiation into those | of arsenioal poisoning erpens from: time to time | through the neighborhood of the bank and about four {eet across and there was not an | |The people Scotland also havea great dread panes oar dors. others gaying forward Into vay eit i ee ee et dow nee qth the | mountain‘mysteries was due to an artist- | on the police records and before coroner's Juries | contsss ie sue! ay quiet with the week-day | $nc yO eae Grane a camgers, though | of the evit-eye, believing that the look of cer | jsT IMATE furnished free ot charge. se stare, and others en. | {fubt eilge of the shell downward and the hinge | jountaln-m out such enticing | fonder au Inquiry desirable as 40 the Purposes | bustle in that crowded quarter, In the streets | inety-two years difference in their age ¢ | talu persons produces very w rch iia + astolid and meaningless stare, upward. They had been hanging In the show who threw nd colors, |£2,Which the enormous shipments 0! ybere @ day of two before I had found it almost | Younger had a large, healthy vop, no broken oF | suchas turning the ’miik sour, making th -LET & LIRBRY, gaged in or spations and amu: window, attached to @ gas-burner, during the | hints that I packed up my brushes an fa the | deadly mineral are applied. dangerous to attempt to cross, only now and | dead limbs, and it had puton rings ot growth | goats barren, etc. At Plaudern, near Lande ry Chik oni ents, appre ed with their lot. | whole time (over ten weeks), freely exposed to | and left westinp ton broiling placidly 1m tia. | 4 teporter of the Herald visited several of the | thea bus ore occasional hansom was to be | from the beginning of more than average size. | neau, in Brittany, {f the left eye of acorpse i eh. m. Fhe visitor i Seutireplaceaud | Meyait and Ught The room was, of course, | July sun, Ofeliff and valley and mountaln | goad. ‘dra importing houses and consulted | seen, "The contrast was almont startling, Thq older ote had boon injured in its branches | not close, oue of the nearest relations is threal 5 en Hes the entire j ad | rs her cout, ax such shops us iy are in winter, torrent, the canvas of myself Paes eee core chemists | in reference to this matter. a ~— The great preacher's tabernacle is @ solid-| by the fall of the still older one betore men- | ened by death. iain of Dea oe weer Moesr Ase Wir Be Sou ment. and the window space, although open freely ter than m; n, but, mitted that the tity of arsenic uses look: se governme! the shop. was doubtiess still cooler, especially at | future summer wanderers, send the sketch of qnedical quantity ing structure, with no claim to be called ‘Cor: Vioned (in 1781) and for fifty-seven years had | “ In the love ut on very small ringsof growth (about twenty- | quainted with a good old priest who was & pose d that the ° Senet Rr Handsome, ‘There is a large portico, in front, iive to thirty years to the Inch instead of twelve | posed to be the unfortunate possessor of an ev! bulk of the importation is used for manufactur- night, but the air must have been dry and the | acave that lies about two miles distant from su] = ‘The window faces | the furm-house where we are domiciled. OUF | ing preserving dione aed ecutitving | tPbOrted by alx massive columns, The even temperature quite variable, THIS MONTH WITHOUT REGARD TOCOST, VER iz ing service begins at 6:30, ‘When I arrived it| {0 fifteen as it should), when a new set of | tye. An old lady, a near neighbor of his, sald to the west and would have direct sunlight In | explorin; starts early, the ladies well | purposes. Some of the chemists, while express 45 branches developed to take the place of the | to us, in a most finpressive manner, “When the the afternoon. ‘The remarkable duration of the | provided with wraps, and the gentlemen. tairly | Ing n desire wot ty be canted: testy admitted | Wes, 5: Sldatale ay Poonle were seseubliog | Qvanged cues, and thosings Depa ie ineeees | Sen eae anything, it Is’ Just as well Al Low Quarter Shoes and Odds and Randa, Lig gethese oysters is undoubtedly due to two | bristling with lanteris and heavy alpenstocks. | thar health and iife were being endanxered by | Che tte St gates ‘Were thrown back and the | !usize@nd gradually attained to the average. | to give it wo him at ones, for as sure & you keep a eases: {he mistress of the farm-bouse speeds the part- | 4 too iree introduction of the poison into articles people were allowed to take places in the | I examined their tops, which coincided with | it {t will die,” ‘Come early to secure Bargaing. js he [rotator hoy of she, edges of the ng guests oy saying. with ger See of every day use, Portico, Some stood in front of the oak doo! bat has e before: There were ae Poona a. The Sete man vee 7, Fieve meee We re taihing fo paints esheslis Atenas Fe PAGER . ‘3. | shells, which allowed them to close up very ‘ou ladies ‘I find the roa . ‘nots in ie older one where de: has eye, and said to us: “f have done all the x the old ules ‘e pore be : aoe zon tghtly. Rough! Well, yes—slightly so—after ‘about160 DEATH FROM THE DRUG, While others sat on the steps or the pediment of The position, suspended as they were, with | yards of comparative level, the road dwindles} A chemist who is engaged in the service of Means ety eater nen aie: SEES caperts Tifabormian will roads" recogaies iacun} foteeve the Moor’ who could nok pay me, yet I | Gulf for $6.00. We front edge downward, Is the most fv town to a mere sheep-path, that clings dizzily | one of our leading importing houses, and who | puvay'me by"a side entrance, By 645 the | During this delay the younger oak caught up | have an evileye, though 1 do not know how tt | keod wearing Shoes, tie position pessible for the retention of water | to. steep hillside, oF plunges other, until the | 1880 acknowledged authority among his breth- | portico was pretty well filled, there being $00 with the older one tn size. ‘The size of a tree is | happen One, Gay I walked through © yard | ” Gar pamousG3.50 Chose are worth 94.00 noel Sea CL Coe ate |e ee ee ete ean une | ren;said: “At te noseorer that the easeless and | or 400 men onc Soren walting, The doors | ® very uncertain indlaalion of its age. || without ¢ lancing to the right or to the left, | Our Famous $3.50 stows are wee of the mantle would closely pack agains Cver, alice much seranbiinge we reach tie eave | Unskilful handling of arsenic and. arsenical | were not opened Until seven minmtes laters and sined of the oaks (the Oldest toes of the forces | At nea mtely Se ae ee neo | isan Ga + Ay StirnlL TERE ae CST Le eee nine we Teno cca e, preparations results in serious iliness aud in Dyphat time the crowd had nearly doubled. | | amined of the oaks(¢he oldest trees of the forest | after ‘me, saying: “ou. Senor “Cura, you have i ‘he tn ‘the’ ‘meat favgrable, position. 10 | dilapiates ta Ropmerstue: ea theretare rather | beury lose of Iie every year” Fe Se ae Lee eae Cu toe POND | Curabhs discovers Roan ther neeaes | ee ir it te worth six om. W. RICE, taten the gilts, even after part had evapors: | incllned to rece weer ne heroes and | Is it uot.n fuck thal graetite In one shape or | were thrown back or ine wees ome by Jar the largest Iever saw, and was Over sit | dollaras uw hace je {OFM IC is worth six Wed. fete aise peesibie thae when Ie ts neck | leicies “Tie eeu is are ee ee Monte ean iae targets into maehionsbls Lease e0sh pushing ana Josting, but not much, | hundred Yeats old) about wiew the age ot the | to? Thave not even seen the Uigety. clased, to prevent the lnecat waree | the Bacal wiice Sean eh ted The ieee | “tule canner be dirputed Arseuloscid whe | "rien or ee aiee ate hoo far | other largest ones. i Seat the ean T een et | eet ne ‘ala inode of transporting ofsters and clams, long | ward threateningly, the ground gives place to a | colors, and itis but natural that decoratory | sald another, meaning near th the chureh iit is | Seven teet in iameter, and forked about sixty | ‘Then he told us another ease, “One of my minds of | Uistances, | Pertect shells should, be; selected, A YAWNING HOLE, Our fashionable mansions the bright colors on | Only a chapel hers, however, in spite of ts pre. | feet up, and each fork was as large as the other parishioners, who, had 4 very pretty little pig, sscments are prescuted | oy nward, aud kepe moderately cool Ina crate | Diack as aight, and whence lesues an tcy breeze | the walls are made fast oy arsenic; the. sane | Ceutious mene sete ele Cake ord eae riod luniber, being wast in iis region is called | Steg ae oe Atay and sald: “I wish to offer their Interest. “Cards, or sone such receptacte Which will allow a free | that makes us shiver even under aJuly sun, | may ‘be said of the carpete and tapestries, and | -eated had an Opportunity to glance about me. | noe A Ste eiaee mind tuLbony; you will please cele- are furnistied, hose , hever refusing | Calf Shoes in any Hs with iron doors, a straight chains, past, Kept now mostly as dre not brutes, bat intelli aim to-carry out the human nthe physicia amount of freedom ot ‘autiful grounds at wil. 3 nt is nd both physicians and ed the evi fPr > ots y, tinted robe: ine The ang “doughty,” a state between soundness and rot- | brate mass, and the pig is yours.” So at four : fuetiued wil anand “reulation of air. | Under such favorable con- | But down we go, the gents first, the ladies some- | of the gaudy, tinted robes which have a fascina A ee tenness.” It had been down a year before 1 ox: | Siclock mot mersie eases mass, and , dnucmcainast “uring the win. | “tions selected oysters ean doubtless be kept | what shaktly after them, creeping on hands | U2 the presenee of arsenic in an apart- | windows are auisesens Gad winia To as von | amined It (being out of the county when tt was leaving the ple where it was, sent corn’ to it foe It eas been the e he past ten OF | Holy che quabaug, oF Found ciate, whieh. hes a | Aud knees for about ten yards; then the rocky | ment neceatariy Wapiy (earl ESHUSt bo Oy Une | gtd bee ee eee eee eee ee ea arse a neon, when It was | leaving, the pig whe Dig had taten more than 2 . eet hts inthe | #vly the quahaug, or round clam, which has a | Ceiling lifts a little, and we crouch hali-double healthy place of abode?” the building is the pulpit. It is@small piat- | 1 bave mislaid my memorandum of it, but it | a bushel of corn, aud ‘was weil fattened, the very best | Fe tly closing shell, when periect, can be | until the foremost man straightens up sud- “Not of necessity; still, myself would not | form built out on a level with the bottom of the | Would be about as follows: At the age of about | neighbor yald me another visit. Said” he: Fticipated | 4p Hy long In the same way denly with a sigh of relies, and we all do like: | 4. Seep Sai oat To this Mr. John A. Ryder adds a note in | wise: for the arche These perk The hall is more ec ranged than any root F XTRA PALE BEER Arie hich | “Senor, I will pay you for the corn used and for = care to sleep in such'a room. " Odors may be | first gallery. A railing extends around it, and | tWo hundred years it bad some ilJ-fortune w! % ay : which he says: “Ihave had oysters live in the | Yio’ ‘ Merete ene nee given out That are sure to sicken the stomach | a stalrway russ us on each nla Wine ae caused it to torm about one hundred small the miss, as also asad one X wish to FOR SALE EVERYWHERR = yl odious and better ara | “cit sor two. weeks, where the temperature | wove Us aa the walls are lost in the sur-| Frthe work is uuskillully done, Tu my opinion aerate aaa gaara Cluatt: | ee: Gir tien regained is teslds and wormed should tike to keep my ple” Ol coures Thea. ad Wilt at | Po nived from 35° to 40°F. at nleht toowee nose, | eunding darkness. “The ball room c Bios | this accounts for # good deal of the debility and | Underneath this pulpit-platform and extending | Dormal ings for about one hundred Ett | Should like to keep my pie. gourme I bad no mount of | Tn the day. tying ont chelvey eke Caen iain power nee! fh eri i 7 ts paises heryous ailments that prevail Jn fashionable guia ultic distance 18 a sinall Platform, gome = ees = & sae oujects on, ‘the man I was perfectly andsome pipe | It iy. . a a el ctly level, e where. Quite recently feet above the ground floor. I at firs sare, st i Fete kets | Work rooni, exposed the whole time to the ats | ous’ the: wall depend niaiucifes exsouy se | cele here and elsewitore,” Quite recently & posed that rad the place for the choi bet | Was pulting on fair growths again. ‘this tree | "Next morning when [arrived at the church ven diguified bY he | Wy pose, every specimen: Gon eat ee ey eae | Semoling bu ches of grapes; at the further end | cleaning a carpet that was found to bave its | I found thwt there is no ebolr. Neither ia there | Was about one and 4 bait miles southeast of | I found ‘a man waiting “outside the door with ing Hquid in its mantle cavity, The position of | ytte, Tem Ws a stand for the musicians: | Chiors fastened with arsenic. To hot, believe | an organ er any other Instrument. ‘The sing- | Rockville, Indiana, and, was note pong | pwo dollars ‘to pay for the mass, Just as the Wiur Do Y. T T the shelis I did not notice. "This wastabout two | Zonder, Focky ledge along the sides forms | Soy physician would maintain that it was | ing i congregetional, belue ied’ by chee junters and woodmen: It was o disagrocable | Delle were being rg the owner of the pig ov ‘Liunvx or Tum is nay ak | vearesince: and ehemen G10 ohio ee the stalnchtos aod Stalag tiiae Wextera corner | proper to place such a carpet for use in any | young man who sat next to fae called 'a “pre: | showery day ‘when I examined ites Tushed upto me. Oh, Senor Cura, the pig has name of ST. ELIZAEETH OPERA HOUSE, and those who perform on its bo: that reason [ did not exumine its top to see | swolien and dying! What taulthad I? Well, or Ways be certain of larse and enthusiastic andl- | ine to hav¢ any practical bearing, as they now | spaclouralesee We de coe eae orm ® | room. oe pare | a Wienlione the chair | It dead, and lost, and healed-over ibs coin- | that man. did ‘botpay for the corm, and eves: si ar cpa pr dS by Bebe verre on | guapious alcove, We do observe, all we are re the dangef$ of using arsenical prevara- | When I looked at the pulpit again the chair i — Sone coe Be rathenal | Stiking observation whieh fmade at that time, | {2 t ; le re < OVER 700 RATS LED IN Nigut Hons fully Tecosnized Ly the “manufacturers | was occupied by astoutly built man with iron- | cided with the small rings, but have often done | accepted the two dollars that I offered to return KHLLED Is OMB ded, I believe, in the sketch | forany length of tine: 8 We ay ones | who use them?" ER PAU fd Srulakers, rather closely cut. | #a tn other cises, and Gandebem tocoinciae. || tobi aS : name | AT THE MADISON AVENUE CAR STABLIIG ed, I believe, e sket for any length of time, so we move on, now | Vio use U y ; cuse | When he arose a te or 0, he | Last May x “On sinother occasion I wanted to purchase ¥ of the oyster prepared under | and then hearing @ Unkle of falling waters, oF | qa ley certainly should be; there is no ex : AS eae ‘ : = c : BASTIMORE, MD, ney ee sind. Itis our | wasseen to be above the medium height and | Water eltn tu the Wabash river bottom, the for- | some fowls trom an old woman Due she dtaa Tes aifection for the annual report of the geo- | 4 smothered roar, dulled by rocky walls inter- | {oF gnorance in a matter of this ki a ean cle jogieal survey, was the following: Ings, recitat and voeal while af otners i or a dran and otherse G and which I of the life ly my direct business to import and sell our goods under | well proportioned. He wore a black Prince | mer six feet in diameterand the latter five, each | ¢: re to part with them, uid not oblige | WITH STONEBRAKER'S RAT AND MOUSE RX he spect- | vening. Finally young W—'s curiosity grows roper sates 5 sponsi- | Albert coat butt i int the | one hundred and eighty years old. They stood | her, nor did I wish to, $0 dism| tier sesoutesd red ‘are men which sérved me as my ‘model’ trom | too strong for iin; swinging bis lanterns and inte end ee eee ee eae ie Ohi Eee earnest prayer, The | about one hundred aed Arty feet apare’ ‘They | fer my mind. I chatted with her awhile, TERMINATOR ind Buckstone: dramatic Grarts: Published U6 that repeat any aiecne | trollkig m merry snatch of song he makes @ | We, CPOs. aangors in the preparation of the | Revica itech oret pus corm simpl sincere, | Were standing on the upper end of a newly | then tok my leave: but before I reached the . a Impression was | made bottom (mean new as compared with | xarden gate the iowle Teltdend: fewest STONEBRAKER'S HORSE AND CATTLE POW: ngthened as the service proceeded. His | the higher and older bottoms a litte more in-| Then the woman said: “Ah, senor, youre DERS MIGHTY GOOD AND ALWAYS loved | voice ix easily heard throughout. the huge | land trom the river, say two hundred yearsold). | ey@ has killed all ‘my. birds! Whiydid 1 ot RELIABLE, their | building, and yet he speaks without apparent | This was the largest sycamore Tever saw that | sell them to you?" What fault had I The host 5 ol 9 - mean term of life runs from thirty to thirty-five | effort. te announced a hymn, reading the | Was sound to the heart. I have seen hollow | of the sun miust have killed the birds.” FRANK HUME, the ventricle was touched, it began to Slowly | light. Luckily for him he catches himself on years. They are compelled to avoid alcoholic | first stanza and repeating the Hrst two lines; | Otles nearly eight feet in diameter. This tree | The topic was so evidently painful to the old | guzome ‘Wholesale Agent for District pulsate, and didso under this stimulus a num-| the frocks ere he has the full benefit of the | > ‘sand to live principally on leguminous | when that was sung he reads the second stanza’ | Seems never to have met with any mishap till | gentleman that we told hin to dismiss it trom ma the: pack of a mutlined Clea ee eee’ | basin. “Nobody laughs when he comes back, | UTInKs and to It plenty of butter, taking very | and soon: reminding one of the frontier preach. | the log tau came along, as the regs of growl, is mind, and join us in a game of euchre, ‘“ OT m the partof a mutilated bivalve is pretty | and his best girl is there to pity iin; so he little meat, and that ‘fat. To each man two | ers who used to “line” the hymn, because the | Were all unusually large. eee Cu Rurrenr, excel tor incredibility; in fact, had Tnot | doesn’t mind it much. Clambering over the Hi " y break-neck dive over some slippery rocks, ne forte ott straightforward taan;and fie Bdar, withrene valee end open fOr | and—goes with a sounding splash straight into | Mule forthemarketr” 1 i, | strlen ity four hours, with one valve removed and | a dark bluish pool, whose edge Is wondrously | ,¢ 26.2% Sis ae nee ott parts exposed to the alr, fof the witole | scalloped. and, diained with a hundred | bazardeus occupation, The workmen ne, aud yet at the endof that time, when | brilliant hues, that flash back the lanterns rz Je performances at St. Elizabeth's | rzanlztions have also contributed | to the enjoyment o: the patients, | Amon the notable entertaimments At this opera house may be mentioned that of the Joe Jetferson Dramatic club on November 2.1875. when “All that Glitters is Not Gola” Was performed with the following east: <trthur Lassei, Thad Sailer; Jusper Plum, J F. hen Pum, Walter Dennis e Boll are stered da congregath FY ied with bymn- | | There trees very probably sprouted twelve to | Fert Drivii = wih ene ed the fae Save le treacherous boulders, we skirt the cige of the cial ra PRGkrne Aenea Tooke” The ‘solone “lyme Rowense har. Bftcon feet below de resent. suriace of the bot- yeh a cae SOA. 408 AND 405 TTHreT. 5. Saba: oF pore sine! ept the: ale- | pool, while the dull roar heard some minutes ORT TL LTANCY. Spurge a : third he|tom, They generally begin life on the lower a Eauherori fia | ment or the truty previous deepens. into the rush of mighty | “To what extent is the drug used as a medi- | THO gee Dy wanes Pi ais by the | end’ of river sandbats, aud as sedimentation |. Attention has been again called to the evil of ‘Headquarters for the mdleigh, Miss Ada Moxen waters _careering between clayey banks, out of | eine?” Way, is a favorite and familiar one in’revival | builds up the surface they put out uew surface | furious driving in Paris, Last week the widow ions, and Miss Lot- Saturday Sm whieh filter tiny threads trickling down to join u WHITNEY CHILDREN’S CARRIAGE COMPANY iy poor poser playets, A. | ree preety, whroade tek i ‘aay | AA Very small fraction of the tmportation ts | meciings. ‘Before reaching the third or fourth | T0ls at every, two to three fect of elevation. | ot an Alsatian pastor, Mme. Ellen, who had just ud ohne cere waiter with two trays things he has'a full hand | Wo" nding lis tongue at lasticnl ad deossige | used for that purpose. Tt is used as a. tonte oc- AST, ROTC Ny ete een tS | sonia antonio meer piles, and also still | @'rived with her daughter in search ofa situa- | ~wianemaeing i DF ecievtaimanent te en Soe every ta Lowell C4 the guide; “how in the dickens do you expect @ | casionally, and actresses use It to a pretty con- Sonia, terefore Ie ean eatne Rca tortie | Rtandlng Senniher venee Gta steer riee Deon | tlon es roverneal for the latter, was run over by | MOLLER SEATED revorrs, W. Bicchott and Misc Elia Culven save somees: | They say that sweet Emma Abbott is really | fellow to cross that piace!” cranere’s a crossing | siderable extent, to tinpart a bright hue to the | women alone. After the first hyma come a | Where one side is exposed. by the erosion of the | # cab in the Rue Castiglione and died aw lrowe VELOCIPEDES, WAGONS, IRQ ileeit intrie antic ieee a Phredete es ine tae. ine c tn -| higher up stream, sir,” is the answer; “but,” | complexion and lustre to the eyes. When once | ¥! . river. Thelr roots ‘are often hollow like their | #flerward. The daughter was a little in ad- lle Messrs John Eweedaie and | getting fat. “Tne cunning thing!—.tdanta Con-| bizher up stream, ‘glance at the — la-| used for that purpose it musi be. taken. right | Sctipture lesson, with plentiful comments. The ipl furnished effective readings | stitutes : - | used | stb t or never hesitated for a word, and rarely | trunks, the hollow (and root too) decreasing in | Vcc, and, on turniug round to sce why. hier | Wanting more rqpm for the fall gooda, Calla and recitations, The Boston girl never refers to, deliriom | TW ing ‘how Soeik mane Tee Weeranens | Mong OF ihe youne Hady will find that not ont Kelected swrong One. The setend’ tore wen | diameter downward ull it tecmatvates te spain | mother had not Jolned her wae mentor eo ae riages will besold kt come oe hee TT, the Buel 2 1 dunno how you'll make it” We .“dunno” daz i 7 ich ‘wae a d im- | like # cone standing on its point. 1n the suuth- | her bleeding and dying in the roadway. On Mareh 16th, 1877, the Buekstone Drama- as the jim-jams. She drops decorously | }, 4 you'll rn - : b pea will | tollowed by a prayer, which was long and im- , ies ; way. 7 ub furnishe ite se es ie . "i er, but any way we follow him’ to “the | melt away with ineredible speed. Horse deal: uous, Mr. Spurgeon at first leaned partly | West corner of this county is a hollow cottou- ore than a century ago foreigners com- See eet seem at, coe Bice by calling it the tight squeezes ala | Cer iy halt dozen large rocks worn nearly | ers know a thing or two about arsenic and they | Bona, Bihar ear rasp It with | Wood stump on what is now a high bottom of Piained of the dangers of pedestriantam in Ger Taz Box 3s Sur Hae ae ts RANE weit atari.” That is not | ladies unanimously declare that they “never | | “Take an ofa railroad, horse that has become | Giblo “amens!” dud aiiallar aaculstions hots Intelligent observing. mas, gn whowe land te | a infiuedee, Atiacked individually by, sour. THE CONCORD COLLAR =" ; ne Ww: s put it They ne could get ac 2 : - | emaciated in the service, or a broken down om a ah ue core | stan ca silt ver t jous newspapers, ass by munic lard point with alarm.” ‘They'view with alarm” | {ng tisy dechde te tee ang: eee ea, r, and doso him with arsenic under the a and there in the congregation, which Was is Rathies ene Ene ide’ uplang | Councillors, they ‘areattald ot showing olet| ‘ROWS ana @aTcHEte of the Best Makes tm t nd “point with pride."—Louisville Courier | the splashed-up water, and deafened by the roar 1% veterinary surgeon fora few weeks, | Poped y respect peop! trees, or those that grow from the seed on the | 8nd strive to efface themselves as much as pos: Journal. of the stream, we reach the opposite side and ppetite will come to him, his old_ hair will G Great Variety at very Low Prices, After th t traific, A lightning artist has secured a photograph | stop, breaking’into one genera o-h-b-b! of ad- | drop olf and a new coat. will come out, and the tinea hymn the preacher pat on his high bottoms.—John 7. Campbell in American | sible. They have no control over st fter tl . bin | Naturalist for Scptember. A policeman, for instance, 1s stationed at the LUTZ @ BRO, fo chtel a shadow lor 4 say tteeull nest try | miniton, then subside into gazing silence. For | animal will beconte as frolicsome axa (worvear- | Spectuctes and read his text, Then helaid them pall aeons IE Intersection of the Opera square and the Boule. 4097 Pennsylvania Avesua, to eateh dow of a man’s week's salary | no swinging of lanterns or flaring of torchés ean | old. In the horse market he 1s, bound to bring to talk Ina simple, easy fashion. ‘There waeno The Dress of Women. Nard, but he calmly sees cabs and carriages | yoy) ‘National Motel, us of a new fall bonne, | enable us to measure the height of 8 fod price and the countryman who buys him | ting” itis gine wore carphate oer tne | From the Lawton terest pass by the crossing at full speod, or draw Adoining her possession.—Cincin- will be proud of his Largain—at least for a day y x el e 5 x CLUE nati Commercial Gazette. gee Paar eeisepintal or so." When the effoct of the drug dies out ine | Bumereus, and In good taste, ‘The obly man-| The Queen publishes some useful remarks by | *y4,{nierseet the crossing, Whes {trains tie | Gus Cooxme S Presented “The Swiss Cottage” on March 14th, | "the work om above us; in front the way 1s swallowed up In| horse falls away aud he never regains his i Lady John Manners on the subject of the dress | dangers of pedestrians also, he takes shelter 1S7®, which was very ¢ siven by Jno. | monument in New ork Is progressing iene | Cumimerian darkness, the walls near our lan-| vient’ and ‘seemed to push buSe ‘his bait ‘Histaue | Of women and their personal adornment gener | Under the eaves of the houses. “As for stepping 2. Gisturne, as Nats Tuik; Hubbard T. Smith, | Enouzh has already been secured to pay ths | tern-bearers flash back a thousand gem-like tactic 2eld used Mlegitimately by manu | Piage was plain and easily understood, even by | ally. ‘The article in question is characterized Ting in scarcely toe neiaes Coane 2 eer pes Fee es ee Pe ee Me ee ctine titer Sraioanceene (meet Mriltcted ere auathere Una Geceeeeity || On itis. Question x (hime die can weno Worl predbnrinated Send atl eee een Cazah | by good sense and pure taste, and will be found, 2 Taber, Second 3 Miss. Ic ‘ s.| Prospecting Bridgroom (to. prospective bride} te hi yarn I. aan ; wort i + The following season the Buckstone Dramatic | to postpone our wedding until Monday? ‘o Areas vet tt a fide apenvies ea me “T hate oratory,” said. “I go down as low iderable dey the bearl fall cl t | From the Savannah News. €lub gave ‘two performances: the first belay on | amin receipt of a dispateh calling mete But lost to Sight g dover June tennicnset Upparcl aha, tecknieally spenteing, there mag | 88 Lean, High Uylug and Ane fanguae seems | Coulderable degree the boarlug of all classes at | Prva wesevannah News | Talons, Tiled octane tae err iar peanabla Saree en. | tla.0n lunportent balinese: Prospective Brid=— | those oi cat's eon nts ee nee | Seen Te ie pretty | said chat large numbers of peoale. Ie Condi | the alms of good taste in dress rather than dis | pretty young ladies ‘They had spent the day John Te Randolph as denry Pie tae | presente vou hog ee OMe Tense MetatNs | don't quite know whether be means the gisi oF | peustally unused: beer er tad enprety | said that large numbers of people in London play, may be said to form the text of this timely | at Stonigomery fishing and crabbing wea CONFECTIONERS Tenens Beaee Frere Cree Peer a | eee nts oe Ea Are OB1Y TREO Un Ee ee pat SenG To eae a ee [eae ee coloring | Sgn vaFar she uieeanine ne ee ee paper. Zhe essential connection between Per | haa ote of fan, Allvot thecute won an Mo bersatit ety sar absense lap cl a Bip bobs Acord aie y head’ as vigo i heir goods, and this is certainly a most serious : ; | Sonal cleanliness and healt! 130. Wel : Seep: HE Leach. Juco Rarring: Miss Cor-| | Handyt—Ruy a trunk, sir?” “No, thank'ee; | Wp head 8 Vigorously as fo eaplaly ies aes | lene Canoe or ele aaa cron up iron tare iris Pe i ca eoon ized English | brought out. It is satisfactory to note that | small basket when the party left the train at ‘TINNERA a, delta Levy, Mixs Mooushine: Miss Emilie L Tye got no clotives but these ‘ere.” “Well. what | cave extends 12 miles under North mountalis, | to. thine, many of which result fatally, but [| They ought to use the good old Ang ‘on | some stress ts laid upon the fact. that the Anderson street depot to take the street-car. Miss Pruiliy’ Moonshine: Miss Hattie Tow: See Gan Exe Jock “em up In It an’ Ue | forming @ pertect tunnel with the other mont; | know of nu Instance Iu wich, the offevder re- | Mother tongue. Bettie Jenkins, "The second performance w avbed a Sunday?” —Judy. April 16th, and the ay pied the post of honor, with th Mir. Walsingham Putts, Jas. F stnek, HE. Leach; Mr. ~ Miss Lilli : those who value their ‘appearance should | 4’ brother of one of the voome ren opening in another county.” Young Wim. | celved the punishinent he merited. | Arsente 18 | g-h\va trou everyday Iliee He seed ig | Make much of the freshness ‘common in | A, brother of one of empty Touch horned of | STOVES FOR FAMILY USE THAT WILL COOK : epee umn rome. eene tele time | mediately propotes to “lege on and come out | also used WiUh Gungerous resulta tn painting | Crost vivid manner the reading of a wht vorne fonth put often spoiled by the usages of an arti-| the ‘erdstacea.. The mid-day sun had Kissed = shop} (Rey. Sam Jones.} Then they must | on the other side”—a proposition which the | toys and In coloring trimmings tor ball dresses, M eiul life. 01 cf y | rather too ardently their “sweet f a | FOR ONE PERSON OR FOR FIFTY PERSONS Joven: Mr. Job- | find Sbargalns® there—Bostoy Paste Eulde flatly vetoes and declares that the lights | All these things suould be stopped by the board | Hélts and relatives of a dead man; and later be { ‘Meo aces, an ined, and late hours and the atmosphere of | {welve {uit checks cen ’ ~ told how he had stood not lon under a | 4?! “ sores twelve fair cl s reflected a ruddy glow, sug- ‘Funny (het | A Beadiord man says he saw another man | Will hardly last until we return, So we are | of health. The Peereanaye cinouel to engage | beech tree, in which he saw a squirrel, and cou, | Heated rooms deservedly and unreservedly con- | grsting “at, a ~% ng it On” followin; So pplication of sour cream at ni , blown U0 fect luto the air by @ nitroglycerine | Obliged to retrace our steps, recross Millicent | their attention trasted bis feelings toward th WED those | ee eatticle Ts thee cponpant point touched on | Mey were chatting and laughing merriiyall | POR gan On this occasion reiiaiius | explosion, ‘The man who went up thinks te | ereek and clamber up the cpposite wide, pe an ve Hes of Austr Lo hich he Polen or the squirrel ko made bishee titreae: | sale rue: de the Weleht of dress, which we | the way down Whittaker strect past the park baie were also uiven by Little Eva ltenderson amd | ¥4% 900 feet, and now there is @ prospect of & A LULLABY, aera ey Ay veiuable agent If handied with scl | Tiveqon'the nuts, His only classieal silusion | S&TC° dotng the erase ea alow of the | extension. Just as the car was nearing Gaston WASHINGTON GaS LIGHT COMPANY. EB. Hay, and songs by Miss Mira Lucas and | Quarrel between two old and ‘close ussoclate | Before we reach “ihe ballroom” two of the | &Bliie skill : way to wiysses and the sirens. He used one | Tre eust pomible atige, There ls alsou stroke | pitect, an unlucky Jolt sent all the passengers Mr. H.E. Lea . Hars.— Pitsburg Chronicle-Tetegraph. lights ‘are out and we stumble along with no The Plancts in September. gad word, con vingement and ones he reversed | £7" arsous Kins of “dves leentorere ana ceees ponpiog seein: Srontaiies tee hoes eee Wee fhe ny yeu le 4 el 00] jel-| Rev. Dr. Newman, it is said, is going ~ the usual mode of expression, remarking quaint Ss Y et ee shells ele aR i Nl hrc ra Nerand | turn to the west, whence he was called by the | little damage to shins and temper when W—— THE MOVEMENTS OF THE PLANETS AND Moon | ly: “Say Lthen this’ much and I bave does Upnataral Dut fashionable deformities, We may | went spiuning out from under the seat, and the played the amusing comedietta ealled “Two death of Gen. Grant. It is also said that the | Suddenly breaks out with Fritz Emmet's lul- DURING THE EQUINOCTIAL MONTH. He pronounced “filled” in two syllables—jul-ed. Mion thee Mr Roskig see bee Tr ladgehip, | {2b cover rolied off, strewing the floor with two 88g 900 REE n - Fists and a Sharp,” himectt playing we r Keye, nd doctor ts known among the Indians | lably. Great heavens! Pandemonium let loose | prom the Providence Journal, to, Impress thé polnts of his sermon on bis | init what 19 required’ Is sdesoucy aid oie, | 1ozeR Snapping, "businesslike crabs. They go HL z - ith Mrs. J. 8. Miller as Mire | as The-Pious-Man-W ho-is-Never-Too-Late-f or | could not equal the legion of unearthly sounds Mercury is morning star after the 2d for the | Hearers he found in his text aprecept, a proverb | that what is required’ nly good in sub. | sated to hunt for water immediately and | “883 0 | HHH k Bajor Key E Flat, and Mrs. A. B. Ander- | Breakiust.—Chicago Times. that echo buck from the cavernous depths howl- | _ Mercury . ps and a promise—certainly easy things 1D Te | renee Mitton fer dalle ee Decdining to rauk | Rusted along pretty lively, snapping viciously Sgg8 SoS HH | + &s fon as Mrs. Muior, 2 Sharp. Dr. G. F. dobas whispered Featherly, “was | 10, thundering and reverberating, while a | lasttime this year. On the 2d he passes be-| Member, He also urged his people to hear at- | Stance, fitted porn with onler and dignity yank | at six pairof dainty shoes that were in the ston, Mr. CE. Kice and Mrs. Dayton S. Ward | your sister pleased to Teome thar te “calted | Colony of bats, startled from their holes, tlap | tween the earth and sun, and on the 15th rises | tentively aud retentiver: SRA ile, Sud wom With onfex And digalty: aisle. rendered vocal music, Miss Johnston being the | upon her?” and wheel around our heads. Atter that W— | nearly an bour and a half before the sun, On| _ Some of his expressions were singular, but no 6 ‘tins. Six piercing shrieks; but before the last note | MILWAUKER LAGER BEER accompanist “Nes deed she was,” repiied Bobby. “When | subsided, rather scared at the elfect of bis own | tne o7¢h ho is in conjunction with Jupiter, and | doubt characteristic and well-suited tofvle wud Lewiston (aie. Journal Rasen girls weet Manning ae eaten ee ‘These ms bave been sele “4 atrandom | mother told ber that ‘Mr. Featherk y lina called | Music, and there was very little said until we fe is ¥ tore. May qiod's spirit come to home grips sey Sassi apg tee oe teers ini ha beat aie from the large ni t have been rendered | while she was out she said ‘Thank heaven!’ ”— | Feached the upper alr as travel-worn a party as | On the 30th he Is at his greatest distance north. | With vou." at St. Elizabeth, a: 7 “What you fish for youshall catch.” | _ While riding with a friend through a town in | they got there is lost. An expert with ¥ Sun eer the sun shone on. Iiow we struggled home | Saturn is morning star, and wins the second “The best preaching of the Gospel is when the { Lincoln county, not long ago, we came upon a areca p= tuned tom. The ‘were | ain we never can remember yery clearly, our @ i s ha beautiful reacher enjoys it.” He said there was “a cor- ¢ = ig! Bras) skirta, » furnish amusements | go! h@,sgung ladies at the watering places are | strongest_recollection Ueing of tumbling into | Pisce for being at present the most beautiful of Pins tthe Gad or usd eee ‘Spoke of | ll shop curiously decorated with waves of ——— eee Institution, whieh is re, | 52, laudsome and attractive this year, that | hed and dreaming all night of mysterious cay. | >I! the visible stars, as Jupiter ts hidden in the | MTC ea way trom preaching. Heber the | paint of different colors, The front looked as ‘The Royal English Piate. most perfect of its kind | Bets often a mosquito gets “mashed” oh em. | erns,of stumbling over ‘rocks aud Of hearing | Sun's rays, and Venus hugs the sun too closely expression, “Hun in aud get a suack,” and ad-| though the occupant of the shop, whenever he | rasouchere in Londoe Trask idding, the chief of the | \2/7wn Herald, W— shout his lullaby to an audience of bats. | to be seen long after his disappearance. ‘This | vided his people to “take their regular spiritual | wished to test a newly mixed color, dipped his gm of the foremost | Lawyer—*For the life of me, I can't see what Mason. || wonder of the system takes no active part in | meals. No soul is fed on music,"ete. “I have | brush Into itand thea wiped the brace oc tha | A large amount of very valuable plate was the treatment of the insane. ‘The | @ttFaction people find in this stupid game of = * | the events of the month, great pleasure in obliging le wlio want to | outside of the building. In. this way or some | sent to Osborne from Windsor Geste tre the every departinent of the ie | base ball. Some day I think I'll go out to see Comparing Rival Yachts. Venus is evening star, and relgns supreme in rude rainbow, the hues find fault with my preaching,” he said at one | other he had produce He encase viens Her sate Sietbemselves.” Merchant— | coMMENTS ON THE SHAPE AND size oF Tix | the Western sky, belug the only ‘visible planet | Umer “It por mane are presented to show the | NV character of the entertainments given aud what efforts are made for the patients at das one of U stop- cturtsan royal wedding. The necessity of bringing every. to you ean find plenty of | dissolving Into each other where one brushfal “ bly secomied BY | ching. esas to me in Seteiion sone Lash rere month, about an hurler the sum, out how | “teens tasted : r ‘ Th olpgln ind encroached ponte mgt ot ta Secor abcmuaaad ebponcteetectanrcesecn et DeWine ee ping. Seems to me the lootkiller 1s ba month, about an hour after the sun, but is now | “The sermon minutes, The most tiresome and expensive matters connec BecaiOnt sca ek te a een SG eaties | Note GOCE GATET Thea DASIY| veo the New ork Suk atn lak so. bright that she Is visible almost’as 8008 as Vaimued up until ateonieiie Preuet ie ss employes we perfect harmon humane methods now recoxutzed beneficial in the treatin ; as was not turued up until five minutes before | “That isan undertaker’s sho} ¥ with the | Poene: the grand stand at the base-ball grounds. | Just after the English cutter Genesta left the | the sun disappears, her increas in'size and | f; mye o P .” said my | with the affair; but as to the plate, the lord the most | Lawyer tossing his hat in the airand yelling predener a oven it had grown dusky end the | friend, “and those are the colors in which he | steward onght not to have allowed ie te y brightness being plalniy perceptible. preacher's fuce could not be distinctly seen. 1s coffin: splashes these sam) ns here gill He insane. When | Hike aioux bray diown, come aiong! dad | $96.04 for her anchotaie off Towne neon and | Prunus is evening slat unt tne, 26th, ana | Preenee,s, ace, could Spurgeon -suld: “1'will | bn tue outside of the bullaing in order that ie Gusts atrancemeats for its saisanenee fee the conveution of charities aud corrections beld | B&hg ay American heart, why don't you FD lees. ehea pec ge OF Tompkinsville, the | then morning star. On the 26th, at 2 o'clock in | give You a enediction,” and did so while the | may see how they look himself, and also the | 24s! shat pints to the value Of £80,000 wees eee its sessions bere last spring many of the mem- | Mulligan?” | Merchant—“Shoot the “umpire! | Yankee sloop Puritan, impelled by hidden the morning, Uranus is in conjunction with the ple bowed their heads instead of standing. friends of the departed may pick out the color il Seethed from Windsor, The plato bers visited St. Elizabeth. and all were loud in | Cut bis heart out! Let me get at him.” Po- | screws, arose out ef the water at the foot of Mar- sun, passing beyond him and reappearing on Bite elosiiy Appeared ratber abrupt. ‘The ser-| they want.” + Thee ie ware ik round figures, neath — thelr praise of the excellence of ts management | Heeman—“Say, you old duffers, we don't want | ket street like a falry through @ stage traparon, | his westerns sae vice occupied an hour and a half, and the con- | “hate” 7 iy two ud the ability of Its chic any of this here hoodlum business here; I'll Hundreds of ple, includin, % , and it’ is all crown property—which, many er-| Neptune ts morning star, and pursues his far- | gregation’ slowly dispersed, sole staying tes | = carl million, an . a : Hee 208 out Mf you don't shut up.”—Mempis | ous-looking’ eltizens, all of whom walked an: | away. course withoul eucountaring any. otter | Eine tented ey eee Teele nn | we Hane eee aaa Gels litle town, Son il ocimato epee erotaen ee THE SOUTHERN NEGRO. Times. Questioned into the'dock yard: looked at het, | planet or large star, seeming just Row to| Mr. Spurgeon {s a thoronghly “wide-awake” | been buries ‘In tolarsd wohiny 5 steed , : “Philander,” said a pretty girl to herbashful | and pronounced her a truly American | wander ina region that is ull lis. ows. Tie ts ins. Light blue is | to be replaced by thequeen, Full lists are kept tan, ahd It would seem Impossible for any one | the iavorite tint here for children and orange a ord, ate A Vigorous Answer to Criticisms of | 234, “I wish you'd tie this ribbon at my throat, | sloop. To the onlookers who were favored approaching Ui is nearest point to the earth, and nge | by the lord chamberlain and the k veward oat ss ‘ F to go to sleep under such preaching. I came | the prevailing shade for old le, You see, ef cl 2 furni BLE i i . His Manner of LifeMis Seeming | 1,02! 3° How to doit without @ glass,” “of | with @ view of the Genesta on Wednesday, | if he could change places with Mars would | away font Sete eee Sues te aS rel the posh palnets which pekne ne uraiuure at | 4 VOUKLE DISTILLATION UF MANY OF ca said, and ai ic easion o| bernasis prose! this Is one of the most ret lages in the | the royal palaces which belong to the crown, as CRM AN, HIBS, course, I'll only be too glad to,” he sii areope the Punters rene ceedow, of & Teason, | Create a great excitement among thé terres- | impression of tho Tabernacle preacher. Earlter | sate, and nots te rely wate tale re wn, Worthlessnews Attributed to the Faet | once grappled the strings. acces: ng ink are omer onaestakce, = Bat z 5 distinguished from the private property of the | Making this the most clinble ‘Tonic ever placed be Afier an unsuccess- | except the Puritan's long overhang, for calling | trial star gazers, he day Thad gone to Westminster Abbey | near'here. ‘The people have got used te Ling . i fore the public for the care of DYSPEPSIA, WEAK ‘That He Is Not Given a Chance. {ul elfort of five minutes, during which he got | her cuttersuggestive. The delaration of Mr. | Mars is inorning star. He ts now atthe com- | and go Se. eeaage one Mwy cstminster choice | tions, aud now they rather like the painted ing i wawroe wee coe Donen eee | REx CESERAL DnbiLTY, MALaiCAL Dis as red as a brick louse and perspired like a | Beavor-Webb that the only difference between | mencement of his period of visibility, and his | among. the three again I should certainly cross | coffins, One old fellow got disgusted and took a. memorandum of the fact is registered, in order | “Mee wuhirs of the Mr. John W. Ewing, of this city, has written | pitcher of ice water ona oy, window gill, he her and an English cutter was a, ths ropor. | counie ma: P eas lly Gaetby {howe who are | tho Thames, solemn oath that this undertaker should never | that in due course it may be reclaimed for the quuvted tals premeention born sone Ra lartiord Time eply cle | Stammered: “I—I—don’ nk I can tle a re- | tion of beam in tO fal- | 1 y ———+or-—___—_. for him. ve to i e wi jeanure Wo the fol Stated te tad payee eae | epectabiy ua Mise Ras oe See PEE eee ‘considerable, the | the amall bours of the morning, On thehret he Flowers im Japa: walle be was. OF the living ana | Palace to which it properly belongs. Pietures | We refer with pleasure to the follow! MOKKIS WALLSK ugust hile he was yet in the land of the living and ften transferred, but, nd Zepublished | jander,”'she whispered, with a pretty littie blush, | Puritan being 03 feet in length over all and 22} 18 seen in the constellation Gemini; on the He red fe rhe « oe ip Tues outhern Colored | “suppose you cull Ina preacher to assist” Like | fest 7 inches extrene beame end the: Cncere | cen, 1 ke, constellal Castor and Pollux;on | "#0POSING MARRIAGE THROUGH THEIR Me-| had himself measured for acoffin. The coffin = jade and he carried it home." He r Youth,” iu which serious assertions were made | the unveiling of beautiful mystery the sltua- | 96 4-10 feet over all and 15 feet extreme beam, | the 24th, ue may. be found in Praesdoe a clics, DIUM—HOW THE LADY REPLIES, Med a eee respecting the morals of the you! a: ‘Sth district Oto, mply endorse your “Dr Petaoid's Germs, Sure cure for Diarrbos, been a sufferer for years ut sald complaint, One soe itherto the crown here a tiene Be tnde tng ws | fot” asa ere Is a state banquet at the Castle, the plate ° his hav. " : er genera- | tion unfolded itseif to Philander, ind he feels | Another big difference is in the Araught, the | ter of small stars in Cancer. F. W. Burridge, in Gardener's Monthly. t to fi wife to have her coffin made, | on the tables is usually worth at least '£250,000, | of our ters gnve me more fale? nnn all te soe he said it was ridiculous—th ofhay- an orm prescribed. ‘Lsuallelways enoanwer tion of culored people In th b better now.—Detroit Commercial Advertiser. Jankee drawing 8 feet 6 inches and the Briton | | Jupiter is evening star until the sth, and then | In houses wherein reside one or more dangh- | {20° She saldit was ridiculous Pimps na as peg ey go poten preted fy oy fey Sehalleds vlored people in the south on the 13 feet Ginehes. the Bib, ALS Oelock In tits anernen. tats DOL | ’Mofamarriageable age an empty fower-pot | aud ‘plumply refused to be Measured. This | Mewes, im these day slovenly arrangements as | Tuists to certify that T have no tn recom auth: who had recently dine, nigh, bilges and stralght, sides of, the | the ott, ato o'clock in the afternoon, thls bri: | Of an ornamental, charselor Is cectrcled Ger | Pee tei Renawed te be, measured. | This Charneterized the recent wedding Tie fe caus | mending i the peusmaion Sod pubine = De Peete waveled through the south. Ewing pro-| Height of Waves. Biiges and ‘carving sides ens Geneees high | Hant planet isin conjunction with thé sum, die-| oy and suspended “tom the: winter caer | Coes ae ea ant pe, threatened that the Windsor crown plate was actually de- | Herman Bixters” nounces the sweeping stateme eee tied (CT repr pre cenonh pode et aie alee Percent keel nna besten eee Deity iat Oo eee eee cue ae guda by three light chains, Now, the Julletsof | had many a Jar after that, although they had | posited in one of the tents im the Osborne | sxx, rmow ait tak OR, BE Dy Baximees. ee, falehood. “I know his remarks: e" ¢ height of the waves pi atseaina er- a zs ¢ | Japan are, of course, attractive, and their Ro- | previously live and content old | grounds. writes: Having fou relief fro *| Bir. Ewing, “of a larze clans of negross it Inuigs | storm depends mainly on the swo conditions ot | 3"¢ 5 the Paritan bese long. neatly sence | Sera tte anes, piece omong the Fislble | toc as analogs se taoeet ether Iante. tes | wae partis eothain tae hese nen aot ie ——_~+2___ Fetaold's German miweret t choral oman Whose path to hems c a Shite Weople, the depth of the water through which they | £e¥i"s'wide, guamey sande wad the Lael aes | moraine stars, ax Pinta apr pars bern ering pecans recente radial ar eptodnd Wil! Have His Drink. fe atiy one nifieriug rom Diseases of the Seousncl! Mot ideted ‘by pecjadiee ae yy beTaults 18 | travel and of the length of “fetch” or unbroken | her ternpost is inneh leas ‘she Beptember moon fulls on the 24th, On | O11 Tete ees anne an mapresiion 10 i tone ae istocoudemn the sPace which extends from the shore. It follows |. Workmen dashed pails of water against the | the 3d. t the dwelling of his lady bearing some choice | coffin and an endeavor was made to put the old KNEW HUMAN NATURE, Md., writes: “Dr. Petzol ; Puritan's black bottom, and scrubbed off the | in conjunction with Saturn, and on the 5th into i dt that mis tod: eral use of this’ sad that the most gigantic waves are produced lant in his hand, which he proceeds to plant | gentleman ini ‘hey foun Yy | wrom the Atlanta Constitat of “ad | lore the sea rushes for the longest distance | 26U% that had accumulated there since just | with ‘On the 7th she is in close conjunc- | Pi?" igeeatertns | after ail wae oo locos har ht tect noe Oe tien, je day of the last quarter, the moon ie | ¢Hauetie for the Japanese lover to approsel | The yellowcyed beans were turned out Of the |THE PHILOSOPHY OF A GEORGIA MAN WHO | “DiC TAA, DOMMAN, Manchester, Carri eats belore the trial races. A new galvanized fron | on with Mercury, and on the 8th, when about | \0the o Smother ana | sucneaed Into theccdin. thes hates Two tipplers of the moonshiner’varlety sat , theh and immorality’ among the | and at the greatest depth directly on the shore, | band, thicker and wider than the old ‘one, was | an: hour old, the new moon is in’ conjunction nd nor pee rf ty ex-]on ‘custom house 4 tore true nor more senaadi™, 42 | In the long duel between man and nature we | put on the tip of ber bowsprit, ang Other | with supling jen Cee en aoe jupiter’s | Gaughter nd 1 need scarcely sey | ize thelr ondertaker In spite of the enmity ex et meer ceries Coomty at that nelth at all conscious that | isting between him and the late lamented. | the state house. One was an oll mon ahee re arrive at the term of human power, At | changes in her Iron work wera ‘made. She wil | coujunetion’ "with the aut, Os ike Bea me See Rey bribe to wot hin aoewan ber Orkin eins Camtstantes. Fits en tae sobre: in like cle- | Wick, with @ tetch of about 600 miles, waves | be saad-papered smooth and blacs-leaded Le | eee very close conjunction with Uranus, ~~ TRoweceen unin tee Sin ee. F the old gentignan's Augie purchase: tne | #US€EY, gray beard and the other was a young COSI Esaite fitlncetins Sec obsepvtd tant the breakar” Cone | Sa seaay Re Mouuns Tae is | Sheag as Ur en tao ta | Een hat'e Suuae Tote op" eungsa ha | tie Who aBaantea sa accu dowa for ig | “I say, Unk Mink,” sald: the youny mer en observed 1s re Come & x “4 . See ad tne hen w2 | mander Dayiman observed. that the highest | Genesta did not leave her anchorage Of Tome | caleak ween ne eid, moon Is partially | never been seo Ye Hedy oF by her taarame | Sm <8 being ae Q vg tive) negroes than with the white peopl either on the s & in this act of sacril 4 any rate, m: coffin,’ Mquor saloos bern towns and cities, | WA¥es off the Cape of Good Hope rose 20 feet, | Kinsville yesterday, Soimmences at 1:15 am. end ends at 4:22 a.m. teils me that during fa long realderice depen Gfjnkin' uy ther dramsr’ “at MB stop Zolkwes whi : Mfucd it ieatose tijacteg | te gaies which produce them extending over Gnome About four-fifths of her diameter is in the | ne nover heard of say one being detected lac ‘Thirst and Pulque. “Naw.” ie. If this man is anxious to | 4 thtance of from 300 to 600 miles. Tn the Men's Full Dress. Ce ee aiatuiiiacielaed act or interfered with In 7. The fact is, | From the Inter-Ocean, “say, Unk Hank.” arn the truthabout the negroes, let | AUantlc ocean Dr. Scoresty meusured the | SLIGHT CHANGES ONLY TO BE MADE YOR THE iplember is richly freghted with active and | this act of placi retty plant into the empty | Tne stranger in Mexico always complains o| “I hears yer, Jim.” him be zood ehuush to vielt the clewke tece | Waves with great care and accuracy on difter- COMING SEASON. stirring events among the members of the solar | nower pot'is equtvatent tm format CPs 5 ao aeakes kes “s'posen they makes it a chaingang ease ter homes of the hundreds and thoueandsarhonect | CBE occasions. In Mareh, 1548, he wrote: “In | From the Boston Herald. family, in which the sun himself deigns to par | the young ‘who dwells within, and this e rapid evapbratic throat | aint dram?” sedan es eggs poatodkrin ‘the afternoon of this day I st sometimeson| The evening full dress suit of the coming | ticipate. Two great planets, Jupiter os ce eastern fashion is, as I think, a most delicate | and tongue very dry, As the water is poor and “Won't be wuth ashuck.” € Gatnere of propereys eaueaae ieee Pee ere sce oe) Coa yok watching the | season will vary but little in actual appearance Pit cognitions! Maccury dite bet and harmless way of proposing toalady. ‘The | unhealthfal, pulqae shops, ® substitute for| “Well, Unk Hank, s'‘posen they make it peni- dren. und are Very anxiou the waters. Tain not aware that I ever saw the sea | {Tom that of preceding years. The coat, as a uthful sas tortit them to successfully dise ‘the earth and the sun, and then oscillates tohis | ¥° gardener havin, Jhis plant to | beer saloons,are frequent. There are said to be | tentiary fur lifer” arse | more terribly magnificent” Looking from the Tule, will be of fine diagonal worsted loth, al }extreme western limit or elongation, when ismind fetires, and the iady ts free 1 act as w 34,000 Hoensed pulque shopsin the cfty, or their duties ax gout ¢ltizens, with honor to their | More terribly saz SE Sound ott leset feqimnier elderely, gentlemen broadcloth is | early risers may behold him fora short time | Sue pleases. It he is the right man she takes | Sa.000, Jceneed palaus chops ip, the cfty, or gounte andy theiaselves Let thove | Ralr Br'the wares wich overtook and paca | equentiy worn, he fronts. of, the garment Gefore his mifurlight is quenched in the sun- Pally’ with bee eae Maree, that ail thee sonte; | ous barroom, where other beverages are sold: thesis fail ith iein, “anne aeeersemuee | the ship were tar above the level of my eye, the ends of the roll will meet, tho well pooled Beams, The sun reaches theautumnal equinox, | may aoe, in a word, that the donor is secepted atiuk! ands toe lormehted ik ofthe soa rears ertain their | Ee neece 3 = Bima, hopes and purposes, as weil as the grave pb peed a ereneng a brn ince cat | iacela are tobe eceead light, with five day and night ene, Sree he wor ‘pole, A fav- | %#4sultor. But if he 1s not # favorite, or if stern ay 2 ae holes, pare! tort from tke | Eighty thousand gallons are said to be sod im sad @isheartening ubstacies "which comtene ue roe, perhaps, 00 | tion! a trifle below the third ‘of which | ored few Will beled Wee clea of inis Fa inte object, the poor plant is. ibe | Mexico day. and double that amount on. amc along, the Mae of development and | fur cealy heht cit hin tate Kine cen | ay are manae to ene Sill facing covers the | diant face, and gaze with admiring eyes Upon Yase/and tbe next mora Hes limp and with- a ee Rhee ate rill the writeteda this Be aud | the visible Lorizon ‘as to form an angle esti; | }4pels to the buttonholes. The collar 1s to be | ine peerless spectacle as the silvery corona | eed randa ‘path below. Soren nts aye. it ie 8 sort of com ut tll then, will the writers om Simple teat | mated at two or three degrees, when the dis. eee te in width then the. top of the | springs into view and See sony Soe fig Time on Lake costs but a penny a, or two conta ES sec © transmit the simple 6 ¥ edges ‘Constance. Watered kim milk, and tasics tke yeast Sucrage! poopie, Noone ian kaha eek hand | from the ebserver. hls measure of shevation | he outside edges or the "Bao edgon are | Wille Th ciara wdc ook, We SOlRACR, ud | Prom the Pal mall Gasate ny wo cent a er'y syinpathize with the negress “a fob | was by no meats uncommon, occurring, I | bound about one elghtn of an in Feach 7 reap) fo that ists z shrouded | ‘The Lake of Constance te only some Any | sriten’ and hs drinks test sone nis corners are slightly rounded | fx funereal "gloom, pe gee ‘be- Torey u : noe should think, at least once in’ halt a dozen | 42d the f ‘moon. not miles in length, but any one who travels from | Five conte worth will make a peon (as all the ee ae Sian ee Oe Bieter and | waves, Sometimes peaks of crossing or crests dp has been stated, the garment should be ‘superior m rabers ine taal, Se Pler toplor and wishes to Know the right time | natives are called) as happy ws a ‘and ten. Tshed homes and social circles of tine tesuh | Of breaking seas would. shoot upward at least worsted, and the trowsers and vest of the Partial eclipse and the of day at each ought to carry five watches. Itz) Cents worth will send reling into the Classes, and. in this way, only Iearm the plain | 19F 25 fect higher.” The mean highest waves, | SAM0 matérial. Should the cout and vag, how- | of a bright steer Moser ben ee a ein ate — aa} Sims _of © policeman, who secures him an en- truth. "The great “mascs’ of colored people-are | Rot including the broken of acuminated crests, | €¥er. be made of broadeloth, the trowsers are to | lite croWns the fret ee tren onthe the | Waters wash the shores of five different states. ‘work for the government for tea Erin” am atv. cla clstney, ne | RE SeOmmaby eatimaies ae rising about 4 test | made of doeakin. chore has been a ude diterenge tn the umas ot her | Swi Poaotadioa” t'you" ade et tones | wactatte te tae meena, ttt, eaves na explanation of this seeming worthless | Toment by the ont gradual but marked change in the cutting of 80 that the leuser orp appears in the east- Ragate or Char | healthful. in tee mole, cesses might Resson the partof the negroes is in the fact y ip. trowsers, The ‘is for the pps re ee ee COee | Beales tn ee ml bey are almost absolutely excluded frou pNP 23. 0H ‘“ cheees, wi scan after the larger Cees e all any honprable competition in’ the trades with An Aggregation of Worms. iow Yearsate the he eae Sheena ee rth wideatrery iighand mak: Bethe Boden enor ts Lisaes | bade: are hare in Ga ait their white brethren irom the ‘making ‘of @ | From the EawsniPes Racres August 37 covering ie stil tote ; that is, neither falas Rdream\of tite land where ‘The Austrian is not eee sn tan Clearly se they motive. Apy | William Spangenoerg, the janitor at 8t. John’s | verging on ner tightness, “the trow: een o dust person can cloarty sre, whey are without® | rotheran ebaron: deere ‘what he supposed | 8°70r full dress will follow Tale, ana auiehe mor clemenitef navaral minutes from fair chance, or even living wages. wi 3 a forced to general idleness by « people whoa | t be a huge snake lying on the west alde of the Sorieg anh us Tone ond with. s. Het (orld, when ‘the sunset crossing over Pessewsed with an almost iniuman, unchristian, | church this morning. A closer inspection re- | be sewed on the sexes at the aides. Thee vent at, and the harvest moon, Margareten most GounIG pRirib and then ridiculed and con” | vealed the fact that it was nob shake at all, | varies but slightic hose theme Keeotofors worn, ie cast, looks tact r Genined for not doing better, when it is this | Dut that it was a macy of small worms, each | The opening berg Seteaeon te oon aod pipe, Sor the harvest. a salen Fai Bom eee rere ween cu cuates, these unjust | about baif an inch in length, thatelung together | be somewhat of the sheovat a abield, ‘The bul. ave no desire to weoan venlence, to the ee ae ea ace causes this sad, | and kept moving successively over one another, | tous are four haute and ae about, two the voyage with powers hindrance to gloomy, unebristian, unmanly condition of | sud in pot benpoeenm. to move over thé | twches: ‘The is finished with » th Mi fe 52h ith Wve are in thu or of Smenpents

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