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__ i VISIT 70 A BURIED COUNTRY. THE TERRIBLE vor TION Nic EN JAPAN, — rrvur- ON THE ROAD TO THE SCENE OF THE DISAsTER— DRAWN BY COOLIES THROUGH PICTURESQUE PIELDS AMD VILLAGES—MILLIONS OF TONS OF BOILING MUD MURLED OVER A D00MED COUNTER’ . ae From Tum Stan's Traveling Commissioner. ToKvo, July 25, 1888, On the morning of the 10th tnst. the appalling hews reched TOKYO that an enormous volcano bad exploded somewhere in the north of Japan, killing and wounding a thousand people. Japan is the earthquake country of the world, but familiarity with cataclysing, as experience has shown, breeds anything but contempt, the moral effect of them belag cumulative rather than diminishing, and Unis news was recetved with something like con- sternation, as possibly foreshadowing a general Tenascence of volcanic activity. Among foreigners details were first learned at the legations, to be confirmed and amplified next morning by the Eng- Mish and vernacular press The outl had Sccurred in a group of three mountains, In a Femove part of the interior, forming part of the Sreat yolcante ridge running north ‘and south Uhrough the country, the chief of them being Ban- dai-san, situated ongthe shore of Luke Inawashiro, in the province of Twashiro, in the prefecture or Ken of Fukushima, avout’ two hundred miles horth of Toky6 and inidway between sea and sea, And fuller information did not show, as 13 usually The case, that the rst vague accounts were great- ly exaggerated. On the contrary, tt was certain That the eruption had been one 6f the most stu- Pendous on record and had caused a frightful de- ‘Struction of life and property. Besides the dim culty of obtaining accurate Information, such an event is among the very rarest experiences of life, and a party was hastily formed to visit the Scenes of the catastrophe. It consisted of Capt. Brinkley, RA. the editor and proprietor of the Japan ‘Daily Mail, the leading Engitsh newspaper tn this part’ of the ast; Major- General Palmer, the TOkyO correspondent of Zhe Times; Captain’ Manter, the Armstrongs' repre- Sentative in the East; two gentlemen trom Yoko- hama, and myself, with the official interpreter the Government has done me the honor to attach to me for my slay here. We left at daylight the next morning, and before we came back We had seen things t dwarf the most extravagant Visions of a disordered imagination, and the tnere memory of which is enough to render the solid earth unreal Depeath one’s feet. To attempt to describe them 4s Uo try to draw upon the heavens with one’s pen. ON THE KOAD. ‘One of the excellent lines of ratlway in Japan runs from Ueno, on the outskirts of TOKYO, nearly due north for 294 miles, passing through the province of Fukushima, Nine lours in the narrow-guage cars, ‘Which are midway between the English and Ameri can models iu thelr construction, brought us to ‘the little town of Motomiya, which was the limit Of the itinerary we had been able to determine upon before leaving TOky6. Installed for dinner At alarge tea-bouse, the hovel of a Jay be lage, and our “boys” baving astonished the tn- ight of a foreign repast consisting champagne (it 1s absolutely necessary for most foreigners to take all thefr food with them on an inland trp, espe- Cially over such an Unbeaten track as this pro- mnised to be), We learned that a ride of about thirty juiles in Jinrikishas over a rather bad road would Dring us to the village of Inawashiro, trom which Bandal-san could be reached on foot or om horse- back. “This would have been entirely satisfactory except for the fuct to carry ourselves, our servants, ‘and our provisions, nearly a dozen Jinrikishas Were required and there Was not one in’ the place, A bait of half a day was therefore forced upon us While the Vehicles were procyred from the nearest town. Tea-house lite is feudal in its quaint Dut as unexciting as a Quakers’ meeting, ani Motomtya, with Its one wide street and twenty tributary ‘narrow oues, all flanked with shops Where nothing 1s sold except tue most Inexpensive necessaries of life, offered neither recreation nor adventure. Under such circumstances aa Eng- Mshman does one thing the world over—be plays Waist. Then the six of us slept soldier-lke side by side on the floor under three mosquito nets, and absix the next morning our long procession of Jinrikishas trundied away toward the mountains ‘TO THE VILLAGE ON THE ROCK. ‘The coolle rule 1s fifteen minutes rest every two hours, and from six to eight cur twenty runners Jogged steadily on, their bare legs and bare arms moving With an almost unvarying rythm; encour- aging One another with short sharp cries, or pass- ing the word along to warn against a stone or a hole in the road. The men who are pulling the heaviest man always take the lead, and as our Tatiway magnate weighed something Under twenty stone Our pace Was decidedly moderate, Still, the Toad was good, the coviies were fresh, the morning air Was cool aud bracing, and It Was ‘Just 8 o'clock as We spurted up a Slope and sharply round a cor- ner to the tea-house in the village of Iwantmura, rather less than four ri from Motomiya,—say nine miles in two hours. So far, the country had Ween fat and uninteresting, the narrow road Stretching monotonously through a broad extent of verdant paddy-feids, dotted with men and women bent double among the heavily-manured roots of the rice-plants, knee-deep in the evil- smelling mud, half baked, but sexless, in thelr u savory and unending toil, At Iwanimura, how- ever, the scene changed. A spotiess matted 11 or, ‘two feet from the ground, covered with an exqui- Sitely-thatched roof, from which great white bunches of fu cakes are hanging, and a kettle boll- ing over a brazier of charcoal; a long row of empty Jinrikisnas; half a dozen Engitsumen in White duck suits and big helmets sitting on the Mats with thelr feet In the road, passtag around the inevituble Sask; a group of Lappy, chattert: Villagers lookin; On with delighted curlost seore of half-naked, brawny, sun-browned coolles sluicing theuiselves with water out. side and tea Inside, and literaily pitching the hot snow-white rice into thelr mouths; a pretty girl with bright brown eyes, a wonderfully white Skin, and Jet-black teeth, the sign of ber wifehooa, Which sie shows alltne while in an unbroken stream of merry laughter as she kpeels beside each in turn With the tiny teacup; In a doorway across the street a long-haired buy—uo, it is a slender, sWeet-faced girl in bluuse and trousers, tumidly Wondering and Wondering at these sudden visit ants from a strange world; high above usa little gubled house perched upon ab overhanging rock, wuried In plues—a Norwegian saeter trans planted to another hemisphere; far beyond along the road the cloud-marred outlines of our mountain destination; afew sen in payment and a whole houseboid Dowing with forevead to the floor in a chorus of reiterated alo and sayonara, “Thank you” aud “Good-bye"—that is Iwanimura, sue wilage om the Fock” as we saw it for 4 mo" ment a Week ago. Mo yoroshii, cry the coolies, and we are off. a FIRST INFORMATION OF THE ERUPTION. From this point every mile took us uphill and the landscape rapidly became more broken and Tugged, until in two hours’ time, when we ran into the village of Takatama and repeated the process of rest and refreshment tn anotner tea-louse un- der the shadow of a high green hill, the country resembled the rolling foothilis of the Rocky Mouutains, except that instead of Leng bare aud brown It Was covered to the hill-tops with bril- ant verdure. Here We received our first infor matioa of the eruption. A terrible nots, the peo- pit sald, iad reached’ them, lasting an our, aud they bad all deserted the vi and fled, expecting Lo be overwheimed; but the noise Was all, and by and bye they returned. At Taks- {uma we were nearly naif way to Inawashiro, ana ‘Over Une best part of the road we had come Niteen imulles in three hours and a half of actual traveling. ‘The mountainous character of the country and its Tesemblance to Norway now became still more Stronxly marked; in front and behind us a series Of striking and picturesque views sprang w little hamlets we passed were idyliie in their situ- ation—tuey might indeed have been placed upon Use stage fur Lue setting of a grand opera without altering @ stone ora tive, Uieir graceful gables peeping through willows and mapies, above wnich Tose the sloping expanse of pines and irs which ‘covered the base of the ascent, while above these again towered the green mountains, Here te peasants Were engaged in the culture of silk; hun reds of flat mat-baskets filled with bushels of cvcoous lay about the houses, and througu every Goor we caught a glimpse of men and women Feeling the slik thread upon primitive wooden spin Ling-Wheels. As We got fastuer from the ordinary Tuads of travel, too, dress ceased almost entirely to differentiate sex; men and women, boys and giris, auke wore the blouse and Ugbt trousers of rouzil Dive cotton. It would seem, thereiore, that civil. zation emphasizes sex—a nut,.perhaps, for some of our snore radical reformers to crack, Given un- ceasing and wholly uu We labor for both aud Uhe sentimental distinctions between man and woman are obliterated. “Segregation 1s asex- Ual,” remarked our professor, seatentiously. An- ‘other curious fact that struck me was the appar- ent great preponderance of boys over giris among The children. BY A suonT cv. ‘The road had now become very bad and hilly nd the coolies labored along, wiping the profuse perspiration from thelr faces. We had been rid- Je for some time by the side of a lintie trigat- ing stream running fast downhill to the rice-fte Soon our men stopped at the fout of a broken as ent and pointing upward told us that there was ‘& short cut for us, while they must road. 1 iuiles long from Lake Inawasuiro, excellently built and With stone and vided with admir- Sie modcrn siuicosgetes ‘hat the remote parts Of the country should Lhus contain pubilc works of tase enytheering reflects great credit on the 2apanew authorities. Long our vehicles for us with his pen and little box of water col- Ours, as deftly and rapidly as only a Japanese can, A PATH AMONG THR PADDY FIELDS. At 4o’clock we ler him with his tea and tele- scope and pushed on round the lake, over aroad so Lad that it was constantly necessary to walk, Until at last tt th elds, ¢ harrow ‘Tsubo-orosht, itteraliy “the pasting down the pots,” showed the remaining effects panic, The inhabitants had fled, ttie little shops were closed, the a ‘or otitside rain-doors, Were slid in front of all the houses, and the place Was silent and fcriorn as though & nce had descended upon it. In the mi next half- deserted village an oMficial from Inavyashiro, our destination, was waiting for us, hat if hand. His excellency," Count Ito, president of the privy council, had shown me the disti ‘courtesy of causing an offical letter to be sent to the Ken- rei or governor of the prefecture, requesting him to afford me any assistance or hospitality. Captain Brinkiey, moreover, holds a high place in the estl- mation of the Japahese government, and his pres- nee would in any case have secured for us all every consideration, Consequently on Inawa- Shiro at last, at the fartuer end of the lake, we found that accommodations, not palatial perhaps, as the village Isa small abd poor one, but muc! the best to be ‘Was provided for ua at the house of Mr. Matsul Ginzaburo, the rich man of Uhe piace, who kept what we should call at home a general provision and crockery store. Our first impulse was toward a bath, and while appreciat- ing to the full Mr. Ginzaduro’s very hospitable inventions, I must say tbat all the forty smells of ‘Cologne compressed Into one quintessential abom- nation, Would rank with the perfumes of Araby in comparison with the paralyzing patretaction which penetrated into his family bath-room from heaven knows where. For my part, after the first deadly experience, during the threo days that we Spent under Lis roof, I remained unbathed. But the principal thing Was that we had arrived, and that we could lle down side by side to sleep in the Diack shadow of deatt-dealing Banda, THE COOLIKS ON A SPREE. During the night strange and many-legged tn- sects—"as Dig as young trout, bedad,” said our Irish member—roamed around our beds, and the morning was marred by the discovery that our coolies had taken advantage of the payment of a ‘small sum In advance to drown their fatigue in sake and that they were all drunk but two or Uuree, ‘This meant ap extra Walk of five miles for us to the base of the mountain by way of prepara- Uon forthe day’sciimb. Then the sover ones struck on learning that 1 nad promised one of tuem an additional half-dollar If he took great care in carrying my cameras. At last, however, We started, coulies, provisions, cameras, and all, led by two guides tbat the’ local police had kindly procured for us. ‘The village of Inawashiro issituated at the base of the voleano opposite to that on which the violence of the eruption expended fiself, aad, therefore, it escaped injury. It wasup Cais uninjured side of we mountain that We proposed to ascend, and for the first hve miles our road Was stnootn ‘and Jeading us turough pleasant ascents and between cultivated fleids Then we struck of into the short green scrub, excellent pheasant cover, by the Way, and three miles of this, along @ narrow track used by the peasants when cutting fodder for their horses, brought us to the begianing of the ascent proper, Where we called the first halt and reunited our scattered party, some of whom had found an elevated aud (as my distinguished Journalistic colleague found to his cost) not very ‘Safe Lransport percued on the top of a huge straw pack-saddle on the back of a halt-broken ‘country stallion, ‘The climb now became really fatiguing; it Was so Steep that an alpenstock Was almost necessary, occasionally hands had to come to tbe rescue of feet; the path wound in and Out round trees and Over torrents and stones; recent raivs had made 1t slippery with mud, and all the while a tropical sun Was beating straigut down upon our heads. For an hour aud a haif, Woo, there were no more signs of a voleaud than there are in Kent or the Catskills; then suddenly our leaders stopped short. We looked about us; there was a sinell of sulphur in the alr; the leaves at our side Were coated With lumpalpable grey ashes, and there, within a few steps, was a ‘small crater, 20 ieet Wide, a conical hole ‘plown out as though a 100-pound'shell had exploded un- derground. “The first burst had, of course, ex- hausted the silght volcanic energy at this point and the bottom of the craterkin was entirely closed. Curlousiy enough, too, the explosion had been in a lateral direction, trees and shrubs bav- ing been blown away, and those left half buried in the wud, while a Me’ tree directly overhead was not only uninjured, but not even bespattered. It was only a small affair, but it was our first sight of the actual operation of the volcanic forces of nature, the most inysterious and dreadful forces that maa koows, and a thrill ran Unrough us as We stood around the taud hole. ‘Then we resumed our climb and haif a mile more brought us to ‘THE MIDST OF THE VOLCANIC ACTIVITY. In every direction were crater-like holes of dif- ferent sizes; the trees had been twisted off and Split and buried and hurled about; five or six inches of sticky grey mud covered everything; we sank ankle-deep In it at every step and every now and then as we still climbed, oue of Ube pariy ‘would struggle back as he found himself sinki deeper, aud Shout a Warning Uo the rest to av tue dahgerous spot. Pools of dark yellow sulphur. ous Water, small lakes, some of them, had been formed wherever the "soll was flat enough for ‘water to rest, aud of all the bright turf and foliage Which had beaulified the spot a few days before, Bot a single blade or square inch of green was left. It Wouid be impossible—so, at “least, we thought then—to imagine a completer picture of Utter desolation “than tuis grey and stinking wilderness, ail the more terribie that the form of landscape was vaguely pre- served in it, just as a mutilated corpse 4s the more horrible because tt cannot mask en- Urely Uhe graciousness of the living body. Suient- 43 and laboriously, pantiug and perspiriag, we plod upward, watching every heavy step. We are in single Mie, a guide leading, and lain third in the line. Surely we cannot get much higher, for the mountain seems toend abruptly Just above us. The guide ison tue top, the man behind him Struggles up, seeking a piace for his feet. ‘Then a8 he raises ‘his head, his body being hait above the edge, ne stops short like a man shot, and slow- ly and in awe-stricken tones the words fall from his lips: “Good God!” ‘Those of us below shout to him to pass on, and in irresistible excitement and curiosity We scramble up anyhow. A TRUNCATED MOUNTAIN. We found ourselves standing upon the ragged edge of what was left ot the mountain of Bandal- san after two-thirds of it, including, of course, the sumuuit, had been literally biown away and spread. over the face of the country. Or, to employ the Lerminology of geometry, the Origital cone of the mountain had been trunéated at an acute angle 1 Its axis, and we were upon the flat. Yened apex of the resulting cone, It must be borne in mind, of that we had of necessity approached the focus of the eruption trom behind, {he volcanic energy having exerted itself lateral ly and not vertically. From our very feet a pre- eipitous mud slope falls away for half s mile or more Uil It reaches the level; at our right, stlil below us, rises a mud wall a mile long, also sloping down to the level, and behind It 1s evidently the crater, for great clouds and usis ot steam are pour- ing over it; beneath us on our leftis a little table land of mud on waich a few pools have formed. But berore us, for five miles In a straight line, and on each side nearly as far, 1s a sea of broken up &. jopean nightmare, « thousand hi weighing hunureds of tons ig reflected in weird tints ‘the pools lakes; one larger lake 18 all tbat Is left of a Duried at a blow. Where the mud has been ‘with ashes it 1s of a dull Spots it 18 dark red. expanse, a coupl aw: remetmver always the colossal scale ton—a stretch of bright green meadows sparkles in the sun; on the other a dark pine forest shows how the sea of mud had rolled up toits foot and actually stopped there almost touching the trunks Of the trees; and straight in front of us, five miles away, We can just discern an exit into along green Talley, being! which again rose the mountains, range upon range, and ‘and solemn, Ul they pierce tie cloudiess sites THE INVALIDS’ GUAVE. But the littic table-land below us on the left— What was that? We knew, but who shall tell tts tale? It marked the site’ of the medicinal hot rings Of Suimo-no-Fu, Where a hamlet of tavalid visitors, forty or more in number, had been taking the waters, and now springs and hamlet and visit. ors le buried under twenty feet of mud and a few foul puadies forum Welt only monument and ph. Eight o'clock In t of a bright, fresh summer day; the litte place busy with the guests taking thelr first daily bath; Hotes, no doubt a8 invalids do, of thetr respective progress toward restored health: tue a of the earthquake; the explosion, Stantly by the darkness of death as the cloud of ashes fills the air; oue scream of utter terror and despair and ere 1€ dies away the fall of the sea doting mud; then everiasting silence. There ho reason for exhuming them, and no humaa will ever look upon them to learn the of their agony. We turn away, for it 1s to watch these puddles flickering In the sun and. think of the poor souls beneath and their awful re- alization of a dies trae—a day of wrath even theologic horrors, ON THE MOD-WALL. ‘To find a spot sufficiently free from mud for us to sit down and open tue tiMn-basket we had to descend a few hundred yards. Then we returned te the same spot and climbed cautiously ‘over edge and down the our object being: the top of the mud-wall L have bed Tiver greal resting Inass Of It beneath—exactly, in {3 sea suddenty solidified. "The walking therein oe H | F i ve EE re slood, sank straight EH realli E a § i aon meee oe into and, part of which was into the air to fail.a’ long distance and then take the ‘square miles of country were thus de' practically buried py this eruption, a Sees an EAE, SIMONE ie ee mpenAee Cm SCENES OF THE DESTAUCTOX. Our first day.was thus devoted to investigating the physical aspect of the eruption. ‘The second DUL not overthrown, Whereas if the momentum had not ceased precisely at that spot) the, wole house would have gone down like a plece of paper in Une track of an express train, We Were now at the edge of the col ea whose source we had previously explored, and its sulid billows, strewn With the monstrous boulders, stretched out before us as far as we could see. Over them We clambered to a spot a few yarus farther on where a force of inen were digging around the roof of an imbedded house to secure the bodies of three of thelr friends whom they knew to be within. Just Deyond this lay one of the smaller specimens of the boulders I have described. I asked some of the men to go and stand near while I in order to afford an idea of Its siza, ment a score of them had climbed up on it and stood on the top. Yet among the rocks that had been shot down like hallstones there were some ag the mud ibis uot necessary to ¥} By and by we had reached a heigut from which We could see several hundred men and women digging hard on the outskirts of a half de stioyed village. At first we thought they Were searchlug for bodies, but afterward we discovered tat they had’ neither ume nor inciination—nor was there indeed any need—for Unis, and that they were working sohard to save their rice-felds, Without water they would be Tuined in a day or two, and the ruin of these would mean starvation and ruin to them. ‘The river Nagase, upon which they were dependent for water, had been buried, and they were making & trencli to some small lakes newly-formed by the eruption. Laver on we earned that several Mghts had occurred tor unese miserable water-suppiles between the inhabitants of the different and that each set @ guard night and day over its own desperate attempts at irrigation. Could any- thing be more pathetic than the spectacie of these poor wretches, barely escaped from the jaws of a horrible death’ by being buried alive, taking one another by the ‘vo wave themselves from starvationt PERSUNAL NARRATION OP THE CATASTROPHE. ‘Two hours’ steady walking brought us to our goalin the little village of Nagasaka, where 0o- curred the most heartrending scene of all that we can ever know anything of. Ninety lives were lost here, and from three of the half doze survivors, by name Watanabe Fusanel, Watanabe selkicht, Watanabe Bubachi, Igathered plecemeai, tnrougt my inverproter, the following personal narrative Of the cat he. A few minutes past 8 o'clock in the m Uhere Was suddenly the most awful noise, Then in a minute, “before a man could run & cho” (a cho 18 120 yards), “darkness darker than midnigat, and blinding hot ashes and sand, as you see them here on the roofs,” fell upon thet. And with the noise came an ‘earthquake go terrible that many of them were thrown to the ground and crawled on all-fours like animals, while the earth undulated like the surface of the sea, Explosion after explosion came in rapid succession, the last one ‘the greatest, and indeed so great and appalling thet after’ that, they all ‘sald, they could not pretend to reinember or think what happened or what was the sequence of events. So much 1s certain, however, that all Who could move quickiy left their houses instantly ‘nd ran for thelr lives across the village, to ford the, shallow stream Mitr, Yards, wide and woeke refuge on the ive, Not a Single soul of these escaped. Aud here, t0 tm Uatuking, 18 the most appailing fact of ail. 'Bandai- Suan Is four rf or ten miles from, Nagasala, as the crow flies. Half of tne mountain side which was blown up was shot into the air and impinged upon the ground ari and @ half, or neariy four miles away, and from that point’ it flowed along in the streain which overwhelmed these people. But the farthest of them was not two hundred yards from the remotest part of the village. Supposing, now, that because Of the ‘darkness and confusion and terror it took the swiftest of them, running for bis iife, five minutes to cover two hundred yards—an ample allowance—it follows that the mud-stream must have six miles through the air and four’ miles ‘along: the ground ie ‘than five ininutes. ‘That is, millions of tons of tenacious mud were buried over the doomed country at the rate of two miles a minutes, or doubie the ‘Speed of the fastest express train! Tne thought paralyzes one’s imagination. DEATH AND ESCAPE, AsI have sald, of the ninety people who ran, men, women and children, all perished; the only survivors were a few old people too infirm to run, and one man, Yabe Sankichi, who had gone over to the hill opposite to cut fodder and was already and arag- a 3 i ¢ i g é i E z 4 i 5 z 4 & Pt & i i 5 LH 5 i : é i ‘seated himself upon a a equa wae ee ube ged Scere a subjective phenomenon. When it was i bewitched— resumed his work, well pleased to have outwitved as waits Sarina ae eit Repair ae arte i Ey 5 g i 4 i G89 H I He t ( ii ul ie i : é H é rl i i # i i | i i lh i fil i i f i FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS JOR SALE—A HANDSOME PAIR OF per ect match, tice : STRANGE ACTIONS OF ANIMALS BELIEVED TO BE FATAL FORECASTS. ‘Frem the Elmire Telegram. ‘Do animals have some mysterious paychological ‘What we ‘Antultion of the approach of death to the family Hamtiwe. Loudoun County ig Maal ng can my oar gu; my ated oa ithe | eg though he were gloating over | “CAN, my dear girl; my sainted old oper, will not she on to sok Tick matt “oie Hewry Nommax, | law's just gone back to Yorkshire, and poor Bolly’s | with. in order to snimais have acted in a strange and excited MAD- | F041 piLiiAk ARLE, MAY BE SEEN all eo ‘Mrs. with | The most agreeable of ‘Ber just previous to the decease ot some member | J ynul Thureiay a 421 NJ. avaee, may be ao. see sips Ea ae = Te 18 not ten years vince the appearance of ‘the use of FORE tonsy. DayTOR WAGON. a Ee not easy to determine with precision where | svove bit of diaiogue and its accompanying hours; above all, of ‘a Sah onbe. KN OE when visiting and invitation cards originated | in the paies of Oscar Wilde | fast 48 an anchor. OK SALE ue MA ts Soop. tn ray hey were nota, | ie rans rc ungated ewe | be poawass SS & matter of invention as of evolution, ‘The first | Srmied into s stolid soceptancs of the tack cf ter. | _ 4 wise man doubteth: parteck impaction. quatie end coum. am prise or amusement, at the rapid growth of | Gent; the novice saiun, Kreat trotting aveed. in a ver) inet weiker and on Women’s clubsadapted to the various requirements | Petter learned answers, Eder sedate’ ined ad tara ta V his friend at home, or to leave a message or invite- | Of various classes, say the makers of fancy ena een ee ty, has an in ‘ulnd, gave her ex- | 2,2 cil: peice low. “Inquire o tion for ‘would, were he known, be eptitied to | that mischievous itical econ- ‘and but s to a reporter, a =a _— the utleot amenities /e know in England | omy, ‘supply. What bas bit ‘been felt it a little, which makes men conclude | ""«y am not ous,” she “put 1 am | J{OR SALE—A YOUNG JERSEY Gow AND CALF, Pray had Chart ortin in che way a5. vague longioe. tne hastily. Experience and humility teach modesty | never called out to nurse ia ‘snow dlase withous | Evers ey Aad ough rade utter cow. Dr. Chariton, in Engulsh Notes and. says | & ‘Tho only medicine iad that there is no cat about the house. | jones Holstein, Com snd Call oe ‘that in examing a lot of old papers be actoas te bonny for suffering, crime and all | | fing it impossible to divest myself of a feeling of ‘ ‘a number Qf such cards dated 1° ‘many of Shape Of 8 practioal so many | $220 Toad nary mankind is wisdom. ‘Teach a | fear that was grounded in me when a child. "Au FOR SALE LEFT WITH ME 4 FINE ORCHES- which Printed from ‘logant ug ‘copper | women of ali ranks are controllers of thelr own | Hatt, #0 te eet Re seen [a sonthes neat bf0, wilhesll tec abe apoee oo plates Dacks playt Fesources, was a great ‘door, 5 5 ‘The visting ‘cards were gail havi In and lecture-theater, office and art ite auolber ster wooiner be ever opens the Sad 8 Erangy cat walked in wm the’ dose was |S ———- deen cut, Chose of the ess ‘and clubbouse alike, women 18 And he is as likely to poison as to pened. Ses, f. great wild-looking creavare, SALS—-CHEAP—FIVE: Northumberland were priatog on us, beck of te 19a sense ot tao sei, | fog art Grug wacom wanna >> TOTS | Shak sree Seay te marti ck | ath GEREN Spoulively. The invitations lo card partien priced Srateeint aie ve peenere Providence thst suk S aee wiee Then it wi ‘By Dowwer said is SALE—GOOD TOP WAGON. Honas SRD Eom copper Daten, mare largocnogh to cover te ‘to the narrowest «Coat ‘abould a who 18 a. fcoough wo | *' Sones: Foe cad ot live,” ee Sy Soe Gratvon’s card ts prints of the back of the O98 of Cy BS ‘Ho made | “what became of te cal?” . ® SALE—A CRANDALL TYPE WAITER, ALSO, bearts, and the Northumberland’s on the # mean, dirty fellow for that very @nd. He | «1, remained with us and we could not get rid | 20 shares af the susudand Gas Machine Gore stock? Deck Of the ten and ten of hearts. At Lp Ot] for | ot it; fore long time it was 4 constant source at Se eee GE apa teeeet ‘bottom added : ‘anngyance. ‘we put it into a ‘wok ALE—AMENICAN CYCLOi “NEWEST SMvichoue hoops ir ageencniene Ine ee oes man who re runily what he Maway. 1 we were ‘stra ot sncner | Achaea suny semanas Adee Vode Fuh at huge pops of impeded access to the World arises trom the lancet teres nes naa = wokinde ane omnes 12 Soon FIERO gape card tabie, woul appar tnt te we of such ‘understand their own alias ‘They havo c arwntn for gems Invitation, cards, eapectally in oonnection with 0 Dulld & tower, and spend no more Star office wot 21> in the ‘fret bait of tao eaguisenn century. Pre- tebor on the foundation than would be necessary child, | JOR SALE THE NOW FAMUUS ANDIMAGNIFL viously, invitations to such parties were wont tO cy & boy of hada pet cat which be Sout Stults & Bauer Uprugut Catunet and Upriehe be sent verbally through servants, The writing Strong ones of theearth, the mighty | raised himselt. He was Out one day when | Fatlor encd Hance weary cellar on soar Pay on the backs of ‘cards Was to prevent mig- when it is who Beow phys ‘the cat walked into the parior and, be. | mente fy Fy ae takes as well as from an appreciation of the syii- (pain and a griet to them; | tore the sofa, mewed pitesusly, It was brilliant tone qualities andestreme Surchilitg meas al Appropriateness tte tes oe Eee carat helt Owe souls to wax | to drive the’ animal irom that particular spot or | pritiabt tone qualities aud extreme durability, “Bact ena ‘48 we know it, had not yet Scamp upon thei teir withering passage, | 2 ity cries A luue tater the child was brought | "'Gid Patios Tabet ih part paymeut apd full value mm 1nveI stom Was found copy ae been drowned—and was jowed. Jent, and 80 was extended to calling cards and De one alla you that auch & person speaks the sofa at the very spot where the cat had cried. | _ See us before you buy, came fashionable, Some thirty-five years a ty a Pues about ‘other | Dave had great troubie with my sick peopie,” re- TRE PIANO EXCHANGE, ous in Dean stroet; goho, the Fesidedce of either ass Se redaa aoe eagnorane OC my other | marked ‘the same wurst, “irom dogs wowing wo- | _7 a2 oh Hogarth (1098-1764) or bis father-in-law, was in der ‘nelr window.” JOR SALE—ONE BAY MARE. EIGHT reant Course of repair, Op removing a marbie chimney- “Caunot that be prevented by chaining up te old, perfectly sound and gentle suitable for obi jece in the front drawing-room four or five play- careful to distinguish ay ye ng Gog?” or lady to drive One haud-wade Phmton, one Tig oaros were Phas ‘on the back of which rnp enti ta rah a “It 1s not always the family dog. I have known ow ert of Carriage Haruens, tovether with Whip ‘Were written—one that of Sir Isaac Newton (born OCeSS Of MURIITY pine the Oe io | 9988 0 goa long distance to sit snd how! under « | able Puraiture he a wy 1642). It has been conjectured Unese were Visit- en oe a oF a UUty gare the occasion. aq | Window where some one was lying UL” emt National Hotel ing cards, but it is really doubtful whether the tas Gaseten a enn ane “tow @o you account for Ubat?”” - - WOE, WEWbiket-laas- uilosopher would have employed such. Might AX ES vi have heard it said by people who had looked | JQ, GALE BICYCLE: NEW) Filet -CLAss) SSS ees Sr ee eae ann ne grog t| aes a aS inoue. i Mite and tie: "ahar ove aaa SS : ae Phen Une ~. C Mode," several uot! ears are represenivea lying FT ng in ihe progross of | another theory that the powerful sense of sinell | == ida COLUM Bong: Saree ee ened Seer Samat tb Sagi “Wy we | me seaman cont cho ces | PY AREA SO SOE, MG ture, (On one, the painter, with his wonted caus. - — mosphere odors noxious to them.” ahs . be clases by inserting one foe" Torowing igo. meenaptucnic, orate a | we brig sant ny Peat en | aa-FIN ETO AMD FT Iously mispelled polite tnguiry: aunt Bamet from the enjoyment, or rather turns t 1nto the na- cnetothung bar the Lervourness ana de ot | Wspeall Grorery Meat and Proviniow Stare. €is ig = ge en! ‘Chat 1 is al aliing | $335 “jae — ia novel called thd “spiritual Quixote,” pub- | Newaham or Girton Cambridge, or at | , With overy anguishot Our carchly part, the sound 10 hear at the dead of night Tharecuows | 20 Rat mw. awe Cw Mshed in Bath in 1700—the scenes being “laid in | Somerville or Lady Margaret ‘Oxtord, ‘under. | Spirit's sig! wie oer pn algo g {he patient to recover in several cases. In one | J1QK SALETFARTIES IN NEED OF FINE Ok OAK that city in the time of Beau Nash, who died in | graduates of any university who have the | Jesus man’ lay. already set in, and it was a favorite Feleowhore, ac uave ancuyed © tarps qumstnr, 1700-8, preacher is, called to scoot, bevause, | examination nextafter matriculation.and svudents Sara = house dog tuat howled ail uight, Even it oue has gn gy easaad roan a a while ually Inveig! ainst passed professional examina- ‘The Hat Eugi Parliament supers causes 4 Lurill of fear bear Guakxk, Joooy ua! he has in his ‘pocket a pack-ot solled cards road? | tion of any mnedical corpordion, It wil be seem, such a melancholy and a = PORK SALE—ONE PATE YF Good MULES Seieiing 1,100 Rortuds. will nell on woconsmgeat: ing erme KS WINDBOK, 1430 F ot howe eae JOB SALE FINEST ABBOKTMENT OF ‘ure Nelicies and Bustncas Wagous ih the hie lowest prices. JK. PROBEL, ‘cor. Ui York ave: and 1230 ne JOK SALE Ok EXCHANGE i for his engagements or pleasures. A note says: “A set of Diank cards has sinoe been invented by Which the above absurdities may be avoided.” This note sooms to date the subecitution ot vistt- ing cards proper for insoril laying cards, must we overlook te passage 1a chapter xit of “St. Ronan’s Well,” in which “the captain pre- sented to Lucky Dodds the fifeb part of an ordi- nary playing oard, much griined with snuff,which bore on the blank side his name and quality.” Whether Ben. Johnson's expression, “You shail Unerefore, that this 1s a club of workers, and thé Working Womap not being apt to have mich spare cash ay her disposal, a guinea (5) entrance ‘and thé same amount suvscription expense of membership. The club own a Dat duntily furaiahed set of rooms on, New street, the center bye London, ‘and simple menis ere provi nonst custom, remains a mystery. At the meetings of The female club-lounger, pocket, and eye-glasses on nose, wure Of imagination. The ciubs mentioned, typical of REALISM KUN MAD IN TOE MATTER OF FRAMING ETCU- 1NGS, ENGRAVINGS, ANDTHE LIKE. The New York Mail and Axpress says: Lovers of art have watched with growing horror the Progress of the picture-tramer'’s so-called art. ‘The thing 1s to make the frame in consonance with NTL SEPTEMBER ‘reat Daryaitis ih all styles of Carriages, Bug- Wagons alec Harness, new and wecund- {oTeduce stock. W. F GEL E. 400 Pa. we SS. Se i. - JOR BALE OR EXCHA’ cartel him,” points to an earlter use of these cards | several others, aro sober, business-like haunts | The custom may have arisen from a trifling cause, | Of Tealism at which artists stand aghast. some SS fn affars of honor we do not take it on ourselves | enough, to which no duuiful wife or serious-minded | as thous sometimes do. Perhaps some of this upholstery of art is “shoppy” to the iast | ~The ‘and bost nneorted stoc to decid». manaen pees ers oe CRerry med ne fering —— member at some remote period asked Mr, van an gna Grocers’, Bottiors’, Butchers’ Mila, Panc above may serve to Indicate the origin and si ¢ professional Woman r fOr jon Lo Wear bis hat on account Net's >for t very, , Expres: acvelopment of visiung cards in Hogisnd: "tn this | club offers tue most seostantiol edvantages What draughts, which are not 1s framed in a and of chestiuty slindod is Caren Coup Ry ay BE 9 caso London seems to Have shown the way to | Woman engaged in art, in literature, in science, | in the and a precedent being once estab- | dusky tints, with an old bell, from which a ‘Top and No Top Dayton Wapenn Parls, for there visiting en blanc (paying visita by | has not felt the drawbacks ot her isolated position? | Ushed—and precedents are every- | coll of rope carved on one side and a figit of bats | PmaL7pe Append Ne. Ton Buggies Dey sou Kans cards in place of in person) did not take root till | Sue bas had to fight her way unknown and singie- | toing—it became the Tule, and not the exception, Retnees chase wings: other, J Brevou's | give, Carriages, Express Wagons and ihoed Carts, 1770, In Venice, on the contrary, visiting cards | handed; io compete with a gulid of craftsmen all | to remain covered during the sittings of the house. ‘Innowing the Grain” has @ like band of chest. | — Washington More and Hamner, Ui:8-040 Were used in the latter part of the sixteenth cen. | more of less known to one another, having easy | A strict etiquetie governs the wearing of hats in | nul, With scythe and rake in dull sliver crowed | Lowsiaua ave. & BENSINGEK ___ Sati tury, and there it was the fashion to ornament | access to one another, bound together by innumer- member who, ignor- | above the head of the tolling woman. A panel of | 70k SALE—ONE SECOND-HAND PEEK & SON them with ings of a high order, the most | able Unks of acqualnianoe and intercourse. It is | aiit or f of the forms of the house, attempt- | Landseer’s dogs, framed in oak for the hall, has Uprucht, @19% one Four Round corvered Squar-, distinguished artists not disdal to: ‘and | all upulll work with her unless she is ere 0d Lo walk to his seat when would be met | Whip 18 lebgUh across the Lop of the Wood, | $185. and for other grest bargains call at HUGO execute their embellishments. A collection of | sister or somebody's wife, or unless she have the | with loud cries of “Order,” although ap ab- | anda sliver chain and padiock fastened trom | WORCH & ©0.'S Piano Warerooms, 925 7th # uw. such cards ts preserved in the museum at Venice, | Power and means of setting 1p motion an elabor- | sent-minded member sometimes does so he has | coruer to corner below.’ Cooman's “Laugnter” | _™911-m Blctures of some of which may te Seon in the | ate social muchinery to, qtaln What every aYar- | never Deen Known vo repoat i. Ho iaust ony wear | shows girl with her head on a pillow. As fained SALE—GLASS OF PURE, SWEET WIN azine of Art. 1884, Page 275. ‘The fashion of | age follower of bis calling has come to regard as @ | his hat when seated. Directiy Le rises be must | and exhibited a receut copy carrics out the idea by | BV°ee aieee OF Book, Se: very lapis lass of co having illustrated cards became wides; and | right. it, though he may only wish to speak to a | enamelling the wood, i Out in silver and ‘Bc,, Julep and all othr ulxed driuks 10c at ictorial cards were common in the last part of @ number of professional women of all kinds | member behind him, or to get a paper trom the and making it ‘apparenuly « continuation of | JOHN COLLINS: Cory Sample oun, tu rear of his the eighteenth century. That of Canova repre. | bas increased so greatly and is still so greatly in- | table. If any bill or resolution for which he is re- 's lace oushion. ay Remnily Sing and Ligne Stace, 725 Tehet. ae, ited’ block of marbi rough hewn from the os a very eg mpeg poy py By speaker, member Carved frames ana enameta frames are theva-| fuaiit and io ane. uarry drawn in ive, with his name en @ great ch other. | raises does rise, same 1s | rieties most in vogue. The enameling isdone 2 -Soriben tn large omen capitals, Clubs for Women are steps in the night direction. | done when another member alludes to him in the | shaded chestnut in white and -g. cody on | FL) re * On the of Miss and her sister—ladies LF SRE Py EP YEATES course of a Or answers 4 question Which be | pink to suit Pouus. tis ARRIAGES, BUGGIES, ROAD well-knowa in London were tWo nym) Strange Fads of Actors. has put. If he is not ‘his hat at the time | picked out in metallic tones by hand. A water- Carta, Pony Carts, Surreys, and all kinds of Bpring in classic drapery pointing to a weed-grown slab, | From the Brooklyn Kagle. he immediately puts it on and then raises it in ac- | color marine view has an ‘frame in whit. SUNS CbUk 05 Ma : Berry.” One ByEiph ioads a lamb (egnus}to type | gifke Cter People, actors have hobbies they tn- con- 3 : fy “Agnes Berry.” “In tho elghversth centuse > | @uige when not tolling at thelr trade, Lawrence ono Barrett studies Greek and is said to speak it with @ nimble tongue. Edwin Booth haunts studios and smokes a pipe. Kate Forsyth collects china, Harry Lee is an expert in bric-a-brac. George Says an authority, “on the continent visiting cards were a matter of taste and art. The society of Vienna, Dresden and Berlin piqued itself upon delicacy of taste, and, instead of an insipid card with the name ald quallty of the visitor inscribed ‘Thecary- upon it, it distriuted real souvenirs, charming | Parkes embrolders on silk, Robert Downing ludi- | tng ts done in intagilo and 1s sometimes darkened. ae —— viguettsa, tome ef Which are mogtio ce cottee, Spends, his summers on a farm and hoes corn. | Grous tect, Wing the effect almost a 5 Ges ‘Wood sketch YK SALE —ON METROPOLITAN BR, HOUSES, ton and engraving. The greatest artists, Cassa. | Helen Dauvray Just adores base Dail. Ezra Ken- | “Of course, a member never speaks in his hat ex- | Soneon the ame, A genre picture of a frog con. | # Lot, County Homes: pe eek eee Rova, Fischer and ‘Baritech, did not disdain to | dail ls an inventor and expocts to make money by | cept on one occasion, which we shall notice pres- | ert has a tracery of carving bu ite wone free oes py ni please fasnionable people by designing the pretty some of his schemes. Painting and drawing are | ently. He rally places it carefully on the seat | showing water Weeks, lily pads and notes of une | 4" a Ubings that Raphael Mengs engraved. the fads of Joseph Jefferson, Catharine and Jeff- | he has just vacated. ‘If he 1s wo make a loog Datrachien music. Harvesters at work in the feids as Fae, s000 FOR NEA’ In Visiting cards, as in'so many other thi reys Lewis, alice Lingard, George Fawcett Rowe, | speech, and his throat requires, lubrication, have carved fraings showing heads of grain. Se Eg FS China waslong ages ahead of Europe, go far | Clurence Montaine, Walden Alexander | hat ts the receptacle for a giass of water, which is | But the most Of all steps 1s taken when | BOTT Gt Suse Shere Addrom, with domoripsic Deck sa the period of the Tong Ca gut-o7) Pane Tae Hote s Bong hcg a Ume w time by an attentive See an cane ie anly Simoes. actually COD | sare - - uch ¢: ere In common use in the “Flower; Gg rs are bp Lana" From theeariest times the Chinese, havo | Weedon, Grossmith, Williaa Havrorth, W. i, Le: | wo remember, when tuef eit dowa, to be casera es | win the puis ow sole nats, oa bomstble | FGI SALES smproved, 2 miles from and in view of observed tne strictest ceremony in the trgard to | Moyne, Carrie Perkins, Tuomas Murray, Mark | remove thelr hate trom ties bosch A jandacape scene shows you a farmhouse in the |g ACHES tinproved, 2 miles from and an view of the paying of visits, the cards they use being very | Sullvan, and Saran, Berahardt., Waulitcn Boll | “Thiets not invariably the Case, however, for an, | distance, « SOUBLTY lane, & plowed feld. The lane Si ange . esigi : jorris rides | honorable meinber a short tim yuired a | runs jects frame, its tom ww ———cor____ horgeback. Louis Aldrich piays poker, It was | universal in, the Rouse as “the member | and is carved Without a Dicak: The ferreee cts | + AGKEA, improved, 156 re Digi Country Bred and City Bred. Seanniies we troe came Nace Se who sat on ~~ ” He had een Sarees gromnd 60 ho seme, ‘The farmbouse itself 129. KES unproved, on RB, 9 miles from city (1 ei cl cl inaiden speech some length, excite- | eucroaches on ‘wood, THE ARM-USES, THE LEG-OSER, AND EEERCIRE FOR Betting. Hoon als colts wk o arial ment of be momeut enuirey forgot ‘tna a sng | and the Cross mic overhang i arewholy Carved, ES, tmproved, on BR, 10 miles from city; rs. § 0 . is chiefly | and well brushed “tile” occupied mis seat. He sat An old bost which'a peasant woman = From the Popular Science Monthly. dabbling in realestate and specu.ativeeaterprises. | down. suddenly, rather ‘more ‘suddenly, perhaps | pulling. ‘Tbe bow is gravure, the stern in| 7 ois Saproved, 1 milefrom Boundary, om B If there is one general physical difference be-| Harry Kuwards of Wallack’s 1s un autograph | than he had yorseen—for ‘maiden ‘speeches are | carving. The waves are half of them carved. The impe. 10 miles fm. city. tween the country-bred and the city-bred man, it | collector, and ts known among his friends as "ue | famous for uncertainties and he sat uafortunate, | woman's right ‘oar in the picture, but ius] 33 ACKES oo Conduit Hind, md 7 gil Mes in the size and strength of the mus-| DUg Sharp” on account of his entomological re- | ly on his hat. We are hot aware that there was a | Diade is caved on thetiome 380 ACHES wail nia. ule tm hho cles of the shoulder and arm. It is almost impos. | Searches, Annie and Lillie Allison devote their | giass of water in it, but theremignt havebeen, and | Of the nature of bric-a-brac fanciers are the G analy imvroved Farus on the Bay, salt water, Tdolg anal Bene! ceo Rhoe ae ea iyate Museuin of | Une example should be borne in mind by rising, or | casesin which the picture is Anished on the Traine | qy200.Scre ouch: €B.500eacb. sible for a man tolive in the country without using | idols and other trophies of barbarian commerce. | perhaps weshould say sinking, orators in sliver. 4 lion's head is shown in a cage. ‘The a bbantiteces ee Tans name ar, more than the average city man. | Pauline Hall chiefly enjoys driving tn the park. | — We nave intimated that thefe is oxe occasion on | Dars are of Oxidized sliver, and they are setin the | 4 ACKER Moment ait unit irom Aq, Bra view of ‘This use of the arm has, 1n both men and women, | Lillian Russell collects photographs and ou | which a member can, or, rather, according to the | frame above and below. A flock of birds are city; $1,750. ‘an important bearing on the general health, sree | the Genevieve Lytton od Joseph Haw- | ruies, must address the’ house'witu his-bat on. | perched on a Wire, “The poirs are ot | FOUR -ACKE LOTS, 2 miles from Aa, Br; peraane i increases the capacity of the chest, and thereby | orth are enthusiastic horseback riders. | Joseph | ‘This happens when the house has been cleared for | silver, one on each side of the frame. ‘his liveriy wii Bin the surface of lung-tissue where the Blood isspread | ais0 sings plays ou the plano and Writes verses. | a division and When a member desires. to Faise a | 18 taken with etchings which subult with puree See aE oon. 108 va. ut in thin-walled vessels through which the oxy. | Hob Hilliard doves on clothing. but he algo gives | point of order. ‘To mark the fact uit the debate | Lo Uhe treatment, Bilver ls also used Tor iectesing | —2°72=4™ = 20.08 ™ rections serving thus the doBble pure ot | Barrymore ts « scene slugyer and wrestcr | clonal tae meter must epee eects aa | Ody SuBEEi Pato» at chestnut oF oak frames, | JO, SALLE ACKDS ON THE 7T4.sr. ROAD, rections, serving thus the dou ot ar ‘OF ether, pear Forest Glee station, a ood tea te Sea ne tating wast and oS peje ee win addition to the uses of hats n the house to el “i a constantly accumulating waste product. The mache { ieneniomanotem - fais richer blood is again “ariven with Francis Wilson likes to study classio authors, | which we have referred there is another and very | "me Change im w: SALE-25 ACRES ON THE RAO RR. tai en cic "She witht orgaoe ae bout | fa MAY Wsidun colle pins aad public |S ent tho pons ofan sa Che out | Thor have bora some curious Entages ot tte | Lesa Gisndlss Hess oe oo elret eo are bewer 108. WAGGA! Te . oF nourished and the power to produce work is in- | tious relating to Peg Woflington, whom she ad- they < = = = creased. Few will deny that a well-nourished body can be trained to do more and better mental work than the same organism in a feebler state, Walk- mires, Rose Coghlan, Marie Prescott and Fanny Davenport are expert gardeners and dairy maids. Billy Fiorence says he is a perfect “fend” for pho- on aneven surface, the only variety of physi- | graphs and autographs, and he is a hopeiess cupy during the situng. an article of serious use. In the frst instance it K SALE—OK EXCHANGE —FOK LOTS SORTH cafencrcise which moot business ead hroeeacen | vicusn of the Oahing Mabie. Lillian Olooe wood es —_—_— 1set in @ round ball, encrusted with smail dia or 20 acre Farm, 5 actos iu the Distekets men get in town 1s well known to bea poor sub- | feuce and swing Indian clubs, Clarence Harvey Young Climbers on Mont Blanc. monds, sometimes intermixed with for with | Qgusutesfrom, two depots Gu Baltumore and Oui stitute for arm exertion. ‘The reason 1s parually | Writes poetry and, Waals more, gets a publisher, ‘or it forms the top of emmeniey pn ESE ==. plain, since walking is almost automatic and in- | Branden Tuomas’ sings, plays, Writes comedies, | London Standard, August 21. my po pk OF Ue Renan e ne Dottie, voluntary. ‘The walking mechanism is set In mo- | Wakes crayon portraits ‘and paints in oll. Ots A Chamonix correspondent, “G. EG.” But the serious watch of every day wear has be. 14 Skinner puts 1 many spare hours among the | gate é Hee attention, much tees, votuon’ and goreeee | wrapezes'aad horizontal bars of the NowYone the mone tnveceating ceomgus: Perhaps one of | comes very practical article indeed. “in old discharges of force from the brain surface with | Atuleuc Club. kmma Abbott, E L. Davenport, isd Rue In Paix the oer bt [at each muscular contraction, as in the case with the | Fritz Emmet and Edward Van Veghten ride on | Chamonix mountaineering took place yesterday, ‘watch enporaie SS ‘of re- great majority of arm movements. |The arm-user | bicycles, =e pe ana | When Miss Flossie L. Morse, aged thirteen, sccom- Emoustig, naa average, 10 $30 por week” How, tna Ae more nary amosatd with ata ac | Kate Forayth arts ou oom.» ogy Pastor ttt: | Pun"Gu¥ nce, Nae, and emo cue gua | inated ofthe decae op outs gio former ry movements. A man’ ma rong, carry, high Tablighment, and makes rather a Blanc in one aay, direct trum ‘It was | 80 as to stand any amount of rough usage short Work ‘he latter muse be executed Wit his cries fu protubera agave ia ga. lta Roe the Bosses dea Dromadaires belng 20 o sirong at crymals has about a change i in te make cA sud ray in which arnvexercise bones ene | Waldron, i aa) scooaplsied nusidagy Joune | te, arty wete, obiged, co petra one Grand | of, watcha, Hot halo toanyNustng cued is through the nervous system. Whether | Yeamans is an expert canoeist. Robert Mantell is ‘and the Peis Molet They lett Ch ines convenient than the opea-taoed oncg sonic {SR due to an tnerensea supply of chet Durer | S4id wo be the most expert Nsherman amnong actor | S05 their way ‘across the Glacter | thick doos, away wich the only real oujee, Dlood, or whether the continual discharge of movor Gene dopeue Nat accdnia Wile aoneed mel se Bossins ‘ty the aid of lanterns, ‘The young | ton vo the latter i some way stores up ai ——_——+er—____ fore, we do not know. One hing is certaly tne | Frederick Faulding. play Gall nme Juch and | AY 1 the Youngest perso of eter sex that hag Parte. Tietin of neurasthenta is very seldom an ind 1ills Lehman colloo: hair ormamente——pins, jowels, | SIS) Do tesnemberea, susoraded some Fears eet i Masriet aves tn Tits che “male of DUrehal tanta eae ee felties | caree hundred nad Frau Lenman allen os tasage mencetns Os sop i Swaire neues Demag the alfore ee reached. It seems evident that arm ratner than a Rio ic SSeS ener GNA NE-+,<. 2a oneal asa tn order to: jog movements aro essential to tnereased produc- ‘The Trefoil. x Ys Predicament, poe earn develop sgn daa AUCTION SALES. bon ‘are neglected —— 5 —=————_____ __ social factor, tes and falls ‘a prey ohis | MB CHARMING FANCIES THAT HAVE SFRUNG ¥EOM | From the London Truth. ton, and to find a trustworthy person to keep his OF FINE BUILDING LOTS ‘stronger feilow-man In the race for supremacy and ‘THE CLOVER LEAF. ‘What is the clergyman to do when, in the mid- | pooks; for the Frenchwoman ry PSH Sho viET eee VT kk roductivenoss It may be remarked that ameri-| A writer in the St. James’ Gazette says: It 18|| ale of the celebration of & service, he : teapot Sea naition blood which causes | generally known that the three-leaved clover Dutcher, linen Graper, grocer or charcutier our ‘cousins pain in the feu and Amen. a cor 48 | finds that the bridegroom ts drunk? ‘This problem man,” Recomes anembiem of the Trinity, the legend being that = cans universal pains and increased irritability, has until her day the ofthe shop." Bhe sits. before c loliger frou ear. 8t, Patrick frst used 1t to illustrate how three sep- George’s, Campden ‘After the cere. otnine to nigh aac ‘figures and supe rin- it and this dally systemat ormansrtines Itis | arate objects, such as its leaves, could yet form pleats we cuesens ation ee ee fending her ayes while ‘ber husband ts per- Piuures vedative, for whlch she charges nothing | one, But, according to J. B, Friedreich, it was | that tne Was, as ho says, “indisputa. | & heighboring cis tee na oman Hie naar Gas rian ives ws sleep instead Of tmkom- | very ancient, symbol, expressing religion among | biy drunk.” ant “anablo ‘9 Tepeat the. words o class may deem herself lucky if she can ‘put up Ajman may, walk in an Rour ¢ mile, on a ety fades‘ rai atan ant aeSphec “aad areeg.” ai Ars ing be eras toon Der suutsers af 1 Oclook on e, Sunday in der to foe, an ur oy fr operand ema | Segue hye superna cps man, | bu ctrl ie Greate tae wa | Sy oS vba na uae Shactimein 6 wen-orames pe spent alt | an reter tothe clover with four leaves, the rariuy | tothe altar drunk, replied that “she could not 1s. ee ee sing | of which gave rise to the belief that it would bring | duce him to come when sober, he proceeded and Mates to Summer Visitors, bath, if he had gs to rapid eke i SPonge- | good luck LO the one who carried it, married the couple. In cases of ordinary con. | Atlo Bates in The Providence Sunday Journal. be would have found his werk nea aa ‘Whon sitting in the grass we see ‘tracts entered into in ® state of intoxication the | From Bar Harbor, by way of a well-known firm color, easier to do, and taking jess tine ~ Wiltiiefour-leaved clover courts dissolve the contract. Surely this otiron and steel men in Boston, comes this briet it “ine view tor tome time held by "Hartwell of 4 a ee ee ae ee and instructive tale. A good looking and well- the Johns Hopkins University, Sargent, of Har- ve a ee aay Greased young man, trig and alert in his carriage, ice say wu nervous rity, Prevents oF | sora tor jhe oan te tho att ot woninn | culty. Si ‘Wished to be conveyed somewhere, and asked the 2 Porter} panna —_+or—___. rice from a livery stable 3 Mental work, has not been ‘suiersnte mie finds the four-ieaved clover on John’s ‘A Court-Reom Incident, “four colar Was tne reply ‘accepted. ‘The remedy for this suate, of Gs | the Passterthal the ta believe that if @ trav- | weom the atlanta (Ga.) News. “Pour dollars?” echoed the young man. “Oh, ‘to cause every man and woman to realize the im. | lier should at ‘Ume fall asleep, on 1 You evidently think Tm a summer portance of arm exercise’ “Make It - Back, by a certain Drone hore" wil Some fying Justice Manning's wife 1s out of the city for a I'm a drummer down here, to sell tron to Schools, and popular after ieuving schod irene | white dove, bearing a {Cur-leaved clover, w fw weeks andin her sbetace her pet parrots | tbe quarries round these parca ‘occupation does not require tt in itself, muscular | !¢ts fall on the sleeper’s breast. Should cage occupies @ place in the judge's office. This ™ replied the stable-keeper, with anew exertion of some kind ought to be taken daily, | before tt fades and at once put it into his tn his manner. 1 gueas we can send Tye te une rogulriy a food abd also, forall | he will aoquire the power of becoming nvusno at | BOTRING 6 caso was trad Detre the Judge. A Jou over tor'e dollar and » halt: is Ser POr ae nT 07 tan ellene Seretagenees 60 | Teer related in Wolf's Zeits. | ‘The judge was listening attentively to the testi-| A Glamce mt the Gentle Camel. Three Get Liguer, Stat wae x pres ending te servis any | MORO T cuary sour none, 1 rom Goun Onsen ew Boo ‘unknown, be h know be | A camel's bind legs wili reach anywhere—over SUPTUE FUILADELFHIA INDIAN SONOOL WAS WOT Ox i ha he bok: tho unlortutateGegyman Wa aia’ aid the vitae laugh trom we | it Dead, Yound Bis chest and on to his bump: Seem patna oe |e aw Ge | ee ee RE | oe re oes esa ‘me Wve got out warrants axrent, When all’ ts over theran tan on Pee ly rast ia cour.” cried the ballif, glaring force posture. His neck 1s of thesame pliancy. He will “Tour.Joa™ will always Rave luck at all kinds ot doce with eer ta snd, renal gent nab pe pm fone doe od ‘erie, or to atnespie At : | Woes and Fours, are doing— ‘It would seem by this careng ees ne eee ot ali fs tts Sac oe ea a BREE ees res meneneee | ee au eee ae 5 won Sat ‘one, while, he ey taongn Pao ‘the result of want a De made mutual love is sure OCeaid Got Mer Seams. ae aes pie anny marta doably b a ‘From the London Daily News, free ‘of mind if we were to: on : ‘the vain