si gnakswf convince · lullh*kmml«klifblulftllk« tfeftp wltatft hfr duul«d «ya»*. ami ftaa...

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X *.• It it HI p- 4 :ih|w'j«ir OoaVerntnitv 1NV' V# ». a PARKER CPITOII AiraVnor. •r 4**afloo, ttl Taoej tortao will o*t»H erf ** rfpoftiraai. **4 ganswfiiPU SMM* M 4 • t t x o t ftn+ fcuwiiof tao tmftr fnto itftk** ikop OMBfff WSw tao roqeftrn- $*B §**UftYt1V««. jo*** ooainftpio St itorthom no*/ oad tuoW M M lo Sera <**% aloo • M « • or* twit** pfosnr*4 lima nor onV<* oortfcOftto i w m <»** « ouporlurolftoiol print late* & - pork* JMIItW Mr»oot prfcoo All oro>m proatytl.v SsoJ, MM efttlolaolloa s*nrnnto«a n* ITW.JS ».n av^wuS m,;i jrr VOt. I. GOUVERtfEtm, ST. LAWBfeNCE C6UI«tY, N. t., TCKSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1883. t** *n. •^ - » . * .L...fth. /t •vWw ! *& *** Mi ^ii. Y*If1I**e« UftkOft troone* QuiEm* 1 r OPMJ on Wtri>~* utrrot. *j WBC AWOHNKY*. ff.iri.ii,— r ~ sssse gNaKswf Attorno? 0*4 CBtWHiHgr ftt ni»ot„aoerara*at,rl Y. j»mi,". «0*1P KVAIST MOB1IKU, j WMUVmantttt W. Y,» . i %t aisiiyay < ^ **fnan oT&ororaoar, TSaV WHAT HOOO'S iAMti oaatttnoJoofi WILL SOBVlao* |0ll ffe tan weeSorful etmUlrt nVoaortlcs ooinbfoef ta >AFttfLLA,!f « * rOJSftrtlftWft tat* ate* tirttt** *r lift fan *oWr mat* tali topnntoaly ejo**nte*tr Teowftaotaro est** It ** iHikkrtthitfillI I kiss ewe* no W^L Si «- ft* My frtoa<]. tl yo* am sic* or In that con- dlnnetant you oauaot toll yoursnjt ritntt n»korw«lt |0tu4 tots torn:» uf lloouo •AiftAfAniLLA, ami lenlho yotusoll bow Uils teatilolun UU I U rtnnt sH l*n ssSsllanry at four body Into working It ftlWI IVIUI4V JVWIWM "WW CONVINCE PraM ths Rsfktrsrcf Deeds far MMIV. Net "•rv ' , «$Mrr roft t n * a * or GRAND TRUNK R»Y br RAIUIOAD Alttl igruiftto* TlcsKirrt. ruii ftp^f ail M a t e aiaatrtai ^ M ^kjWftat I -4 RCI B.BARNES, s&tiavt t HrxlliHiW riii Ii Mil P»frl cvmiyi, f Iftrtmw tww rtmrrtn o«?f ouiA ULV^k, MmUtK AN!) CUAXlAnV I M * 4 « M «w4 la INatf. Twtt HUMM «<* f«f *M«t*f i*m ritontATCb (ILTIIHI- •HlHtf >•>—1> V «•«»•«>•«, m a t ft«U4li»t< «««%«»«««r. n. v. Canity, Nwthtrn Oktrict.. » W i U l i ana r toai« yfttrf kft « l o o k of At i»t mn aftfti XafY* Mat I ag. anil wftvt at>«r found *nyil»fcu| [my wftatt Nft your aarftftpatiiti, u r^^».\iwft*, it tar pfaahniit baftla»a> waa yii ta lataarday! •• la laa apdag aiy wlfta Jl a*attfli^ajia^ 1* lOaA^AaltLA III Aa>t»dow, AMlgoia aatila. Alltr »aa aad Maa taklaf ttafratli aataftd ft roatmg aratiltt. and it d i d I M I Hood's •arftaparllla. «tt«HWTft.Wtflf«fc tlatat L r i T L H JMMiailAatY. oaafranu, Aad a owiala tubil* oliAnu, tJonyagnot from a«t adonalagft, lUllh*KMMl«KlifblUlftllk« tfeftp wltatft hfr duul«d «ya»*. Amiftaattatkm aaagai bat A* th« Joanioyt up and down Tiroagn 4 « novcr bMdlof (own WRaWtottftt* Yot I know h*r On toaM task ol good fataat* ttftldoa, «bannti you do not oak ft, Aad your modott ayoft ma> wUik I «IStallyour trbat I tainki ' Qaoaat atlaht fladlr aoar you ftwootftoyon. M J.IV. Tat, Life nl ActlJeit • w n u M «9nrr, wmMrccfc x •, mat, am l a v l M to «all aaH aot ralo«, } \m at aoapimaa i' fcgln i i |a«ntan» Qomaaay of tfarta yalanliliiaatu Owaian kvmkm % Wow aamfai w#w York} rtro Aatooaitloa* 4kt ftayal, taflandi tmi ytra OflWo. Ana**** A#rKnH4imi t W^rMi fidilHy aad <WaH* iao4«aai) How t«n%, l^aHabk, 0Uf%l WOOF i orfti fMftoo <r»* Wai. Wla>aoy*t aow dnar fttbf*. flftftdaata i ' ! « " * i#oioi«aaftaifti«l Iba ftftOft «l U m , Mft*,«k«ftW«ofta«iair ftuiy ftft'trothraar oio^tko'Dotr PHia4«r w< atiaaa «r atv niwiniftlim l#y«t« art/ a»*iO>4 f atryita, waha !• tki nuaaa aiftoii^j, ft«4 H^oaafM to aotp oki hay W Yct%t Ptaaafat * VftOi^ MRfiartHNi aaaaaao^ wliajaav^pftai ay tat nmi (4 HHroaft Oikto, (LaiNchlnn Cte,) TPHM dliftA wna Hold, anror« rkUntt^ aali fmh ^loaaod ami IMIoaod wKhmit ktjitfjf to AHa%*tftl Tootti taaMa^d oa Ckdit, Ptaj^pr, rwiiWi Itaakor aad CMMold. |flr All work warranto* ' lfe*iada**y of KUbatr a Morrlft* Now Him*, j, t \ tiovraaaatii* H- Y« s SPENCER k LEGGETT, m UK 'MD ACCIDIKT DfilTIUVirt AOtWTR. r Tao anawjr of tak aaaaoy will bo lo fufnkb tin • A f t AND nitMA«Ut IMPtntANCK. aro arvIM to oaaailao tao aaaaotat at o w avroral CVioapaalai, aaw, to tao Mfi dlottaot airaafoiaHit ftad wipiHt laafaa«o of ant fjlkdio, inalftioi oatmoiod to IM ftkall arooapi aad oaraful anaatioa, Vnlfarai wtt ka arraa lo ad adoanato toa^o radl. ikiMfti ftokl itt ail wiailA WOJI. oAftftft Malft IK*, Ootifomour. H . A . U a a a t i . . m* aadNt^ajLi ^r CUSTOM TAILORING fan. And Winter Clothing) , N T\9*r t BIMI, IUM t ORGANS J ^4 »'i ! fi: ;; !: ••v. THE UltAftON WHY '*r boot only taafao bayt taaa aaw ofaar aoaior laaoiforoaUbMttkoA oata lo par ant ol tao low prion ao tot* t a t RExioK#Ht r; -f t r fkftft^katt^atfrraaiaititaaaaw)ot<4aoraoft^ ara, a taal no alimtf PPipaint to toot thom la ovary roanoc*, waao nla> l»aiko of tao OPo afftor^p raoow^aorpoi 10 fan a nooa \ ytSt RlAlWN tW ftfnauporlor to •• »inv'—- •>—«^#a>*—MI» a »i. > THE ODD 8ENtENCE. 'laWllc^^haaaid with n frown. ••It win papa M b«aw jtwtjr. w , / V a t y walU^ laywaai^ Uto>*»»a# •Jtlav *%roa^hf% Mtifati^ ' t - Ajn4lhai&ahawa^<mimlkAtl7Wiar WatwiDC^iiif abeoMglTn a tarj aaoalt ajgh« Mauraa^ did noi bmr it, ior it waa kiat in Una »oiaa which ka mada wHh l U i«or, n^id Oarria did M i know whaihar hn kad nnnwamd bargodaVbgrwor ootr * ^ -A . And tattn aha wta *km*» (Ban looked rary namtaadpraU^-a^i famJllx did;butterfaoarran raAlMT atdm^Vr. Tht roomtewbiaii at^aal, tkotifh ittiiU, wan in Una rtry n 4 of ownr, tba hwattb oraaii-awapt^ UM lira b«raina; trifhtlr. But wm waj it aJlt Caaraa fait imdinnd to nait ^ataaU. 8ha had hofie< and triad, kod amitad; kwt Mattrion wan junt an ooM and unMnd a* a*nr. Bhnhad aiarriad bhn^nnch a nh«l and yat nach, a loof time afo, it anannad-*bnoatftaa be bad naked bar and b oaoaa abe bad loved him; and U bad never ocoorred to bar until lately that poftibly be might Wnt hate krred her, even thoofhhehad aaked berto mar.y 'But now I know th*t 4 badid net,^ aha nmrmared, aermwfuDy, toberaall "Junt one word—and one look told eontinued, l4 tb|U it will improve 'ail our minda and mako ua tliink\ ajul Uiat wo can never tell who boaidr* our- aelvan may reaa the 4 odd neaitence' for the day, nor where its inftueuco may f< The influence will apmul, atwi so will the example, which I nhall f o l l o ^ fbr one* 11 amid Maurice. . ; , \ r -.• w , And Annie mm delighted^ V f .^. -, Much earlten thatt USUAI Maurice Wan onfainwarn home, IOHI eiideavor* ing 9 a^ he weijlt, to digent thq odd nan* tnnoe 9 "Mmlo \4 tread thoee Oepn with aorvow which heutiight have trod with delight" Ohlyen! it would be jwat eo with him—bo knew that very! weU *-if be did not Jtake eAre; for our iivef, ae be rwmind^d himanlf, are a fc*enA m^: inclined to W a jm^m to nwp kot ftotwwtat WttMk Oftlly P M O Ift ftp! kaiian of tattodno, or aj p |)ftaS(^ H MN*andloa awlnpaaooM. 1 noN n •AoaaaW^aMtftiai <toitiioiil of iu pr*r*m mm*± a H nn4rriowinfakyiii«wtipkj4iiftiMia in* Oat tfttii " It worlM Mko tkona ood o»w ftftay- bwajfart MMlioly tkovoMttoiai •! 9i tat nt*r*A fjmiftnrrkw, vt^ Mtaolrnfty^ftaOtftrtftiitroftka^ OkMoAfaa, noaategiK o2l DtaplftOM n pwaaaftoyooioy pcrnoa or MO II of tat h «nrt« iHkinty, f W fvoUng of wftlftki oaa kfttkookfti It nlwftri krlttom ftiHHfttftMUftWft,afti ftottakarpMay vantkoka ^la^owaa.mta | t pw k^tto or itt for fl, a^tb ftdtaarfttftaonipHajiiiiaiii a>iftaaaftft#a^ft^wkonwi^lwwrMuitntttptrt»ti konakay tko «it of tlw Vt«l«lk lumymnA* •anno •ktalotd ^rftAdmiitem Uim>., wUb vUmp fqr r^ty, ftlkot koaw ki l^nft, HMA ror tiaaiy QiMftplftint of «ttWr m ikki Mojpoaftdti nownum i M iUmiiftt ttoui«ftUi»*kow. -«fft |a^kftoi'tUfOrruift,"wiyti«iiotM«* l ^ftrft aWnoof lo 4ftt IMTM for tko Oftio of Ct»o»U^itlojL ftod l^rpldlty of tko Ir?«n U*r ntooJ ajano wminn to lu m*t\*\ Uoooan Mo»aar a>oftooiiMpoojpo«ft4i»ntpopiiiftritr*' r^pMt Mr ftioo Aftftlof UM«y wkowtok omkMtuo a tooot4 nbnaiipnte.rn, OftftOOAtOOiki Hf»A.ILa IB" MJ'.JIJLLL J I U JL < >JBiI!L l JJJi>lAllttLiUUW IAM9NP ^ Best Ikw Ew aMn ay^r«3t ens, wootn OH corrox.-wk Mtaeta, OOATO, eoAtre, Noooi, taan, tTc^airtoe, OARMY aAoa f {oat? artlolo atauy «i 4 porMoUy ftkndo. nioftfc. ar#wii f Orooa. Mao, iftpHot, eaodtooi a t J. Nory also, n»oL nrowo, ea«o e Yorto Cotto one to oiktr kan ooloro. Wftriantod|rftM*ttnr>«fftk^ Sftilinftoaftaowni ootoroftotoamrlkt.oftooai. Ifronnnvotoror ojodSroilff UJOMOOOO. ToawUlkooollnliton. nold kr arttaitoaitov toad no to omin ana oar n*< _ andnoitornj^cytftrikioiot _ ****** lunvaaftoji ^ ce. v a«ntftaton,Yt. NLD ad SlLVJcRlAlirr. •ronte a>atnt. Artlete* llaolt- f a t atlakNr fnaoy aaftaoto, nnowo, l o a m tjkianrtltw.iftiawftUkiadioforftftOMouaworaS innottanayof taoalok prtaid ItWtft,nnftakoj wau.a» ate 'laiiL.l.iL4il aaoeN A ce, ji>. i njiL , yi i 'j!i i jaa BUTLER'S SAFES! ROJJNIX CORNER, .. •«••• ' " i - , < / " * ••• ' ^ '• •ouo wtvpw AMW THOlf m A H n t f\t% and Burgldr Proof. r HkUoHfrmm4 If IM k*M m*h*r M tft« w«rM, 11 Cimniur, fifwtff, in, iantlosrtr.aYflIar v Woaer,and nad aooan oa aaad nil Uado of n Mwonnrp to a aanad atnao, worth |l,lOn< ft«d noan botb orooao nad atnaci, wane aanlrai oa atoandy laotatl* or rontft^noa^ until tao rant pnyt for wW roadity poroofto T h l RlASON WHY • fATawT AVD MaY FOS CWU1CH 09011a Ainwait o«Ma^YoiA t AUD a , i UfaVf AIUT awr ?<* FUNb ronu »A'hortALec«ooLroanA^o, W.F.3UDDS* MUSIC STORE . . . •T* : 4OUVCIHI0K, H. *»' IffTIA JSCvaK LOCKfi. W.H.BUTLIR ; ' " ' ' ' ' * " ' ' 821 Broadway, New York. OtHtlUL AOWt »0II DIEBOLD Safe and Look Oo. I N D FOR CIRCULAR KIUNEY-WORT QRKAT T3T OURK rnnP*7i KIUNEY-WOPI -4»V^ ^ And letting her work tall on ber lap, abe nat In nitonee, thinking deeply. But presently a little *ry eounded—a tiny, belpieen'wail, and Currie atarted up« a a d a happy, an^ioun eoa^ir flunked into ber face in a moment, ,., , + Bha hurried upMairn. L : My babyr abe utter«f« nofUy. •At leant I have my baby boy K And I will hope on for alltbeeidee." . . • ** : '* Diaragarding all opnnciniicn * atinga, Maurice went on bib way. - He chfjac to think that he wan poof; and' 9 he waa inwardly, at every atep be took, bewailing hin himl lot, and bin dull and cramped and narrow and —an be conaiderod it—ever harrowing exlrteucc, ' And where wa> he going? To aperul the evening with nothel friendn, wbo^were—or ho would have «aid no—far J>>ottor off thkA hir^nelf, He had not yM learned that >4 a jftmn'i life eonninted not in the abunda the thing* which he ponacwacth/ 1 he loat the onjoy merit he nri have taken in what be had in Hid of fomver wirctting nil that not % * # A few mlnutea later ha had take hin aocuntomed place in a large an^ pleanant fnmily nittlngToom, and wad talking and laughing mth hin friend* and their young einters, aa gaylyan poaaible. But*whtle he talked, bin glance wan- derad round the room, and rented again on the rnantle-ehelf. He knew the apartment t well, akdfl had often compared it with hin own J yenmg wife, and a dear little non. Ha bad yooth and health and ttrongth and eany employment, with good p<oa- peat of advancement, And be bad actually been thinking ib hi* heart of giving tip at leant half of thene Wean- inga and going to nbek wealth and imaginary content in a foreign land. , Why, howfbolinhheJiadbeenl He taw it now. That l4 odd nentence*' had been the meana of pointing it c^it to Mrj*« . ; i . ;', : \ , *•.«*>•' Groingoh nlmply and patiently in the nafe and right ,waY before bin?, be would tread hit path with* delight But if be gave way to the boat of foqlt lab, unmanly, impatient, tourmpring thought* that bad no boaet hipp u f late, tboneaame ntepn, fair and untrodden before him now, would very probably have preneotly to be taken in bitter re- pentance and aorrow. . j ^ i -No/^ he naid to bitnnelf/an hi Wla Bearing bin oWu door, (l Ckrrie belongn to anei and I to her; and twill not leave her even for a tithe, to ntruggle on alone, When there is no real need. What good wtatd money do it I came back by and by to find home and hearth deeolate! Home fry* need keeping alive—need cberiahing ae well ae winning, I wonder I never thought of that before. How can I be nure that my wife's lore wduld outldat my \ deaertiont How can I tell whether, after earelennly leaving behind mt tbe beat and truant deligbtn which thin world can give, I might not have to wander over the world in lanelinene and regret for tbe remainder uf my ^y»»"- ' ?-••;;/-.)••;.• - i ^ Night #aa drawing r^i; but Carrie itill m% with her baby in ber jam*. By and by tbe little clock on the man- tle-shelf Rtruck tbe halt hour after nine, ;V -.,.ii •.. : .r'- - v •> : -\i ^ ^ftelatef^nhe nUtrniurrxt, glahcing up. "But,' 1 —bending over her keep- ing child and kissing itn little face, noftan velvet— "your mother lias not been wanting tUe time, baby I V . No, for Carrie lmd also lutd her per- plexitiee and vexations to think over and to unravel > and her decision to arriveitt. Moreover, she bad arrived at it >•".. i * }. -. And now the disturbed frown which had been there all the evening cleared away from her brow, and she appeared quite disponed to be cheerful And next nhe ntole up-ntairn with her. baby boy, and quiqkly down again, to put away bier work and to ntir and mend the file and to nwaep the hearth! and make everything look neat and bright and pleaaaht looking. ,. j : t ]/ 4i It in of no una to take notnnch /notice of triflen/ naid tbe little woman whemlf, Man if thin life were all, I must go on and do the beat I can., To And fbult and to fret and to look dull hutdk^ mA J^r^oi%a|urnbledsand fell uiwK(elt inclitiwl to deapair aome- Umea, kept on UM> wh^ie to hin resolu- tion and pernevfwd bravely in %he better way toward which i( th^odd>en- tetice" had been a guiding ftn^r. , - ; And it wan praj^ntly easy to foresee for him a proapa^^ f utut^, for ha (^d not now # tifat* it. Mot in wqjd*) <4 I nee a better enth and 1 ^nr^tow good it In, but l^dloajr everllic woi«e/; He not only new tkagvod path, but he strove daily Rnd.bourly to pureue it. 9 And than, toe* though ho bad been oold and ungrateful to?MO long, he wan one of thoee ponn whom, to quote a well^cnown author. 4, U maken strong •Pd hippy toJie loved baokagatn.^ Heioted Onrria now, and be kndw deal mem in aurliand* than we are 1 1 ^ ^ w h o U y ^ truly r«turn^ j laffection^a^d wrf two workad heart little home, j and hand J o g a ^ ^ building up their tlu4fty t btduairj^ children; and thia halved tha labpr, but doubled Atoo, in their nenr and far happier way of life, be eutw that they both owadnoialitUoto M thnoddnent«nee M which appeared unfailingly on the slate oyer tbe manUendtnlf dajr bv day. JT^*** - Cklaone IraJta. »lf. every article of furniture aud altrloet [^mo^ntortm; but every ornament. At what then, Waa he looking? , I At a nlnte with a very pretty, otnaj y mental frame, which hung In a eoiP nplciounponition over the mantle-dhelf. On It wan Written in chalk in a neat, round band, the word*: "Made, to tread thoee stepa with bor- row which I might have trod with de- light/' Maurice read thn eentance again and again. He oould not keep bin eyen from jit ,'• ^ •: Preeently the youngent daughter of tbe houne— Annie by name—a lively girl of thirteen or feurteen, ran Into tbe room. She waa a favorite with Maurioe, and be with ber. . . 44 What ia your opintoo Uomrlaet now Idaar* waa alanoat bar flmt quen- tion aa abe gave a little nod in the dK rwtkm of Una nl ate. "WaaUtkinkit to , Yelyt ,, • .,. y ^/^>,/.- v . ?• And then, aiaroaW watting lor any reply, aha chatted muently en, giving a. detailed account of M the odd aen* lance, M an abe called it from beginning to end. , h , 4t And no," conduded aba at langtb, 1 overy day, directly tbe dock in Ike kail ban done ntriking twelve, any one who pleaana may write a freak en* tenoe on the elate. Something realaanaibla and uanful, of oourae, or papa will not allow it to remain* I have ehonan nosnetbtng for tomorrow if loan only get the chaiy* of writing it I will abowittoyUr v >, And nheranaway, to rettfrn ike of ex* tiny parlor at home, much to the din-baud doleful whenever Maurice oomea paragement of the Utter. He knew | p will certainly not make him care 1 She paused—for abe bad hfArd ber hunband^n step. And with a glad light In' bar eyen nhe sprung up from her kneeling poaitlon on tbe hearth, and met him With a bright nmile; and be kineed her fondly and (to b^r aecret nurprine) appeared aa cheerful an ber- of her One word and one look" hunband'n, an nho had natd to hemaU, bad opened ber eyen to the fee* that be had not married bar exactly for love. And nhe bad winhed, with strong feetlngn of anger and jealousy com- bined, to inquire further into pertieu- lara. But her dceiaion bad been to nay nothing morn about the matter. v "I am not clever, 11 nhe bad thought to hemelf; "I do noi know how to win love aanily, an acme jromeu do; aud I cannot think and think, no hard and no long—my thought* only get into coofunion. 1 nkall try to bealwayn cheerful, and never to deacand to re- proachea, for if 'riproacben break friandnhipi, * aa they am naid to do, they munt surely break love alno. M So nke kad thought a few bourn be- fore, aa ahoeat all alone with her baby fan her armn, and ao eke waa thinkiraj atUl ae abe stood now by herhunbeod'a next minute with a nchool book trade, in which nhe found and pointed out to Maurice the following! v M If we examine tbe reaultn of for- bearance, and oontraat them with the reaultn of impatience, irritability, and intoleranrje, the balance will be found to be ail oh one aide, fteetrmint in tba expresahm of unpleaaant feeUnga or harah though tn is the foundation-atone on which many a happy home and many near and dear friendnhipa are Madtiee rand every word much mora attentively and thoughtfully .0^^ Annie had expected him U do. "I think you like our idea, 11 nhn laid. # .>• f Miluricereplied that he liked U par- M Papa nayn," Mim Annie onae apra Their oyeb met; be put his her, and the** aa though be hadakanberthoughta ) he told her all be winhed to know. *• - He kad, in plain worcht married Carrie in afitof pique. He had loved and for a abort time kad been engaged td, a girl who had ^noostcernedly given him uptora richer man. v., . But Ourrie had been alwayn true. H e amid ao wit^i his eyea ae well an with his lipn at the end of hin ntory. He and nhe had been frienda from Childhood. :•-. , * *,vjr. ,* v->: And, tn eondunion, he begged bar forgiven ens, which, it la perbapn need- kan to nay, aha gave him freely. And, after a abort alienee, Matorice -brew from hin poSket aetata which he had purebaaed cm bia wmy borne, and, kanging it np over the kttin*lock» be it tbe following: k anal wMt* Uam aaarost^ f ^> avoin ^a^ai^l dfves^ inltdr ^ba^ a^aki ape^earea^ to Bat ^**«^"* thoQaA ha waa tail Mr. fc V. Smalley'a paper in tba February" Century, on "Feature* of tile New ?*6rth-w<*V'yan interesting oonclusioa to bid noteworthy aerien on the North-went region. He dincunaen varioua social and political nubjeota, and, speaking of the Chineee popula- tion, nayn in part: . - " "then Id a mlntnJketi notion in the diet that tbe Chineee are always hum* ble and submissive, and much put Upon and abused by the whiten M the Pacific coaat There waa a time when the hoodlumn of San Francinco mar- treated the* Asiatic umnigrantd shame- fully, but that time nan gone by. Now theQWuamanappearntobeanneearein bid right* of pereon and property aa anybody. Innlead of being deferential and timtd be in often pushing and in- eolent He doen not give way hi the ntreet He huntlen you an Vudely aa an' English navvy. A * b o ^ o f / Chinegl laborer* marching dowV a narrow ntreet will crowd ladien into tbe gutter. Tbe CThinene merchants, doctor*, and others belonging to the better elsnssn, are an polite aa Frenchmen, but tbe maaaen of the Chineee population on the Pacific eoant are rude and brutal The chief thing in their favor in their habile of personal dptnlineen. ] The railroad laborers, who arc tbe poorest and moat ignorant clans, wash them- anlvee from head to foot at tha end of each day'n work. All clansee are fre- quent customer* of the barber, who gives minute attention to their bond*, facea, earn, and ueek» , „;••**• ^ /* * Among the oomtnoit laborers there in little sympathy for nick and injured comrades; If & man is Hkely to be- come a burden, the other members of his gang want to getridof him as soon as possible* It ii commonly be- lieved by the white bonaon on the rail- ways that the Chinese doctors put sick merroutof tbe way* by poinou when they think they cannot b^ speedily cttml. A cane waa told me in Oregon of a Coolie ipilway kborer^who had an arm broken. It -waa net by the company's doctor, and was doing well, but the man'n eomiadea insisted on bringing a Chineee doctor to attend him. The doctor came from a distant camp and gave the patient a doae. In an hour the poor fellow' wan dead. In nuch cane* there is no ipveetigation; nobody caren that there in one China-, man. lee*. The death of a cart homo in of much mo» consequence. One great difficulty the employer* of Chi* nene labor have to contend within the superstition of these people. Their re- ligion worship consists in propitiating the malevolent spirits of the dead. If a Chinese domestic fanciea there In a ghost in thc^ houne he departs at once, and leaves 'an Inscription behind to warn his succensorn. It often .happens that a family will be unable to keep a servant longer than a single day. Mail a|tcr man will come and go with- out giving any reanori for hin abrupt departure. At bit tbe warning mgn is found and etpunged; then there is no mors trouUa. Not long ago two Chinamen were killed in Oregon by the prematureexptosion of a Want on a new railway line. One of their fel- low workmen declared that just before the explosion he saw two devils come to the oppoalkf bank of t6eriverand heard them talking. Thereupon the whole gang of forty men dropped work and could not be induced, by threats or persuasions, to return to the spot V* } FA!tHdK tfOTlfil. * Fur p&shc* are bi great demand. Long prtinfton grow more and more popular/ ,. ;< . .,.., _.* . Cloth in the cr^»«ct fabric for stylish Fstreetnuits* * - > Heavily repped f:rbri<ei are in the as- [ccudant j -.:.-.-.. ••-,./. ^ \ Black stocking* are stylish with dresses uf ahy cplot. Velvet ribtxma arc much tiscd for draa trimmingsk ^ Ladien fond of faucy work knit their owu silk stockings; 4 i. , Feathers and plenty of them arte the leading idea in millinery. v ' - Small capotin trimmed with velvet are tire bonuet of the hour.. . < . Plain linen ^callam and cuffs aire Worn with tattor mode doth drenae*, Kmbonaed velvet flounce* are tlte htteat extravagance indrans trimmings. Ruffe, mcbea and frainen fcir this are full, high 1 and very band- Ceatlet Hunting ffey^tervbttrg l>tl<» bi Lludon dlotia.} ....... ; fa^i son; sos *(W too; 16oo Jfooataia ... .. *..! net SOMSaofr5(^sooo»w i oohaoT ...... ijpsejtfnMpoo^o90.50w•» w CoHy Of 1 i ftdattloaal urlooiSft^n^r aso^coato. , * JtfarKaov a * 4 t**th aottoio. froo. OWtunn notkiai Sro cnoti pet ttao. *— . ^ - *t thoont^ pre- Z<00*t AOI'WfOllHO ncftboSt^inw. %/ > msalgot n*r»Nt»fStt#itio ta bo sain tar forwafaod tea* aa ro*ukur eon* -It wattoaft laoHOe aMtractloanr WIS bo taoor tt4 antfl CoHiin nad c a a r * ^ aooor*la*ibr. Hlberln. \i\ death does hin existence, '4*- & 4. ,xt>: A Ifaaferoan Fnnt The great ion bridge formed at Niag- ara Falln a few day* ago in attracting large number* The bridge extendn from tha hmseabqn fall nearly to the old suspension bridge, and old inhabi- tanta any it in the largest and most im- posing of tha many structures with which the ice king han spanned the river Tb-daya feat never before attempted waa accomplished by two young men of thin place. They erased on the ice just below the old landing wberr the Maid of the Mint in days gone by de- parted an her perilous trips to tlte foot of the falln. The «out» taken by the two adventurern lay within one hun- dred yavda of the great rapid/, over which Blondin performed his astonish* tug featn on the tight ro^ To dispel all doubts an to their perilous passages they planted a small flag staff about the centra of the riuer, from which a email pUoa of red bunting float* tri- k umijbly* There a^e many residents o( Suspension Bridge who wknessed the daring feat **d. ali, *^n poaitive that She river w M P**** onoaned in such dangeroua prwtaity to tbe great rapad^—Oasor^s Pofhdium* / *ep Vdvet nkirtn with plain silk and woolen pverdteasea will be much worn, Oold soutache embroidery appeal on a few red and blue all-wool cos- tume* . . j- . •:•••> •-;•• .«••..- \\ Wf .] Long pile plush and fur cloths will divide favor with fur lining* for cloaks. _..• * - --.*. * t r ^ Fur and feather bands will be used for drees as well an cloak trimmings, India nliawln are onoe more tbe height of fashion for carriage and theater wraps/ ;-. *: v -^ The lateat novehjr in buttons U the bullet nhape, with a llice taken off the top, leaving it flat -^ tfbie is to be a velvet SeaSQU. JEs- thetSc reds and blues predominate among new mixtures. , r . Printed sateen with largeflgpreaon dark colored or tinted grounds are used for cloak linings. v ^ , The New York Tip\e* says that womeb iu Paris and London- import I dresses from New York houses, t _ Ckarlen B. Wardrop Telle Why His * Hair Turned tiray la a Klght Canes are of rare occurrence in which **• in Byron's •"Prisoner of Chillon," one's hairs grow white la a sinjrlo nlnti, , AS inoa^linrft srow* from iao<teroftrs, but there in swell authenticated in- stance of thia kind-in the person of Cbarlen B. Wardrop. :\ •-,.•• f fc tv This Newhall house fire in Milwau- kee vividly recalls an incident in thy enrly life*" remarked Mr. Wardrop to a reporter who dropped into his store yesterday afternoon for a few samples of the fragrant weed. "My white hairs, date from February 20, 1838, and if you oaro to hear the story I will tell it to you. The old Pacific hotel in this city was opened for the reception of guests on Seventh and Poplar streets on June 28, i£67. llic liotd was three stories higli, the first story being occu- pied by stores, and it was a very good hotel ^or those days. I was about twenty-five years old at*that time, and after serving a while as clerk, changed for the position of head porter. The house had been opened less than a year, when, on February 20, 1858, it was swept by nuch a fatal Are a* this city has never seen before or since. That night 30 occupants of the house perished in the flames, and it was by the merest chance that I bad given up my room for that night, and was sleep- ing with eight other*, mostly railroad men, im the name room on (he third floor of tbe houne. About 2 o'clock in the morning, I was awakened by tho fierce crackling of the flame*, and was conscious of fire rolling through the chamber in which wo were sleeping. I rolled, out on tho floor and crawjed along on my hand* and knees under the flames, which filled all the upper part of the room. The stench from the roasting bodies of my dead companions was fearful, and I expected to meet the same fate. Although badly scorched I kept my presence of mind and crawled'aloqgout of the mom, through the hall and to the stairways leading to tbe second floor. On attempting to descend them I fell through the Are which had destroyed them, setting my shirt on Are, and striking on the ban** inter* leading from the flmt to the sec ond story and breaking two riba. From thia place I gained the street and waa saved. Pf theothereight men in tbe room- «ot one escaped. , Among the dead was Mr. Gerry, a newnpaper man. In making my escape my hair wan ringed off my head, and when it grew out it waa an white an nnow, Tbe ter- rible experiences of that night whitened it completely, and altkooglf succeed- ing growths have had some dark hair mingled with them, t my bead is still very white, an you nee. A long inve* ligation waa conducted after after lire, but itn cause waa never fully explained. It waa proved that tbe watchman, who periahed in the flames, was drunk that night and, although some thought tbe fire incendiary, I always charged it to acme swinging lamps in the back part of the house. The night waa bitter odd and the wind blew fiercely. The* Are department, which had re- oen$y been organized, was hindered by frotenfl replugs. From thai day to thin I have never slept in a room that was not within easy jumping distance of the ground, although I have traveled a great deal and stopped in many hotels. Whenever I oould not get a room suiting me in that particular I have frequently spent the night in a chair in an hotel offlce. > sJYorn my ex- perieurJB I have a good opportunity to judge of what the poor people in the Milwaukee Are suffered, and I can tell you that it must liave been something terrible.*—&f. Louis Democrat Sorry, indeed, «?ven wh not come to put an end tq is the lot of the: convict who has sue* ceeded in the escaping from the mines of eastern Siberia. Witlout resources of any kind, he must Leg or rob his way back U> Russia. Tlie alternative of seeking employment! in one which often lias disastrous consSquen&a. The convict of the lowest type regards the Siberian oolonint as ail inferior, and has a saying wbidk describes him an 'blind for three days altir birth/ 7 But the colonist has his* revedge. He works the supercilious convict llk$ a beast of burden, and he gives hint as little rest and an little food a* poAible. Wlana wage* are demanded!™'colonist baa an original way of safsfy tug hi* la* borer. The money is I paid without demur, but before the dfe Vtet cah grjt clear, he fall* dead, killdd by & gullet from, the gun of hiscrjuel employer. This method of payment is sometime* carried out on a btrgd scale. It ia adopted in the case of vagabond laborer* who, having finished their autumn work in the fields, return] to the rteigh» boring village to be paidJiff. The wage* are forthcoming and the laborers allow* cd to depart with their ftardly earned money. But they have no sooner gone than the peasant farmer pnaemblea bin neighbor*, and having provided them with bornen and firs artAs, tbe whole \ party sallies forth in nursuit at the vagabond*. The retiring laborer* «an* speedily overtaken; moil are killed on the spot all are robbed, the lecoretwd money being divided Ibetween the farmer and bin confederate*. The'only renpect shown for authority is the Valent habit where robbery ban the motive of slaughter, bf concealing- the dead. The murdered convicts Sre usually cut up and mutilated, and tbe remains buried in out-of the* way places. This bunting of thfe ^bueebbecke," ae the escaped convicts arJ often catted in derision, had gone on for year*, en- tering no deeply into thelhabitn of tbe people that it ha* encapea the attention of few travelers through easteph Si- beria* "Where are tb« inenf^Awue asked of a woman leftin chaygftof a small villiage adjoining the highway. ,( Goneaty>r tbe hunchbacks" waa the reply. Such is the prevailing demora- lisation in this renpect tllat boys have been heard to ask their dithers to kill vagabonds in order that I they may nee "how the follow will Troll oq, bin hump/' In some of thek|overna|ent* it is certain death for a cinfvict escJped, or still under supcrvisioui; to be caught returning from the nunc] 'Occasionally the soldiers imitate tbL colonists in their exploitation, of tie vagabond. The Cossack, as well Jrthc ordinary colonist, covets cheap laloiyand is in the habit of rewarding \eith an ounce or two of lead the oo»%'ict who de- clines to pass from oift condition of bond slavery to anotherJ During the ?olonizatioji on the Trank- sbaikal l'egion, the hunting of vaga- bonds was one of tho dotnmon diver- sions of tbe nettly atrived settlers. From Tomsk to Chin thdre is a locality that has rendered itself notorious for the pursuit on a large scale of escaped convict**. In tho Tomsk government itself whole villages aae described as living solley by the robbery of vaga- bonds. The river Karaakn has been no filled with the bodies of Inurdered con- victs as to become putrid Near Fingul, open woods are known as a favorite eround for the slaughter. - The- whole of the district U full of the memories and traditions of Siberian man-hunt- ing. Heroes pf the sport are still alive, Bitkov, Romanov andlZavorato were each expert in different ways. Ro- manoy for instance, gained Mebrity in the village of Fingul, where he wan in the habit of lying in ambush close to the highway, and in khdoting down every vagabond who passed. In tbe autumn evenings Bitkop used to pick off stragglers *along the banks of the river Augar. During sbbeeqoent sport along the river Biryu* (there were in* dividual Siberians wht boasted that they had brought dolvn an many an* sixty and in some c a W ninety vaga- bond* Ohly upon one of tbeae man- hunter* do the vagabonds seem to have taken vengeance./ Thty selected one Paramonicb, who had men all hie life engaged in killing convict*. Tbe vaga- bond* assembled together, nnized htm and brought hin caqeer to a cloSS by plunging him alive incandescent metaL on*** nto a caldron Of jCklmaejm- MAMay***** 1 %<&r% •,W^!W! *Cj* > "' *'*;.'", t^-rorflm«mt* Well* BthiA- mm. * Oo., Barjii«t«i, ?t., will mi viand MWgVf uf «U| ootora «f tK*- V 4l Bxample ta better than preeept. It in well known that dynpepnia^ JbU* lioun attack*, headache and many other ill* can only be cured by rnmov- J ing their caune. Kidney-Wort hen been proved to be tbe most effectual remedy for tbeae f and for habitual ooa- tivenaan, which so afflicts millions of the American people. trnprevementla The best chimneys *e made by en- cloning hard baked waxed pipe, in a thin wall of bricks. J Such chimneys will not only draw better than thoee made in the usual way, but there will be lew danger from '(defective flues.' 9 A four inch wall between us and des- truction by fire in a\, frail barrier, es- pecially if the work ii carelessly done oi* the mortar has crumbled from the joint*. To build thd chimneys with double or eight inch walls makes them very large, moi* expensive, and still not as good as when tpey contain the smooth roupd flues. ITo leave an air chamber hetwc*)) them for ventilation is better thai) to open [directly into the smoke flue/ because ii will not impair the draugHLfor Jthc fire, and there will be no daugeVof sooty] odor in the room when the circultftiorJ happens to be downward as it will be occasionally. The outside chimney, if there in one, should have an extra lair chamber be- tween the very *>uter wall and the back of the flreplacl) to nave heat, a precaution thatf remoles to a great ex- tent the ccviumn objection- to such chimneys. A fery Urge per cent of the fires corned froml defective ckim- neys.—S<rt>nf|^ Amiricax, . . :—4-i-n. 'BoraH oxRATs^+Clears out rata; anfe bed-bug*, gophers. - 15c, mice, roacbef, skunks, chipmunks, Druggists. ^ ' *>.. *Mi £r/'>&vt*, &$f*'<it *t~jtfs< it v't^. I- } •*& y \ ^*v %i>- mem* INOWLWGH. To relieve hiccough at once, talwf a lump of sugar saturated with vinegar. '. Hemorrhage of the lungs or stomach ma/ be quickly stopped by small donee Of Salt ,.-, .... ,,..•.:>.. .:v : ,.-:.:..;i;.. - To relieve a neveue headache, bind the temple tightly with a handker- chief or cloth. * ' •*';••• ,•**••• , For earache dissolve asnafastida in Water; warm a few drops and drop in tbeear, then cork the ear with wooL ^ A good powder of snuff which will ouraoaiarrb iamadeof equal parte of gum arabic, gum myrrh ami blood «><*•" •: ;.• •"•:-,' / ;. "•^;r- / V For a npald or bum, a«dy imme- diately pulverised chareoei and eiM UrnpoUwUldo,butKoseed at better. Tbe effect is nstraculou*. - /. ^ It iantatad by a medical writer that enrbolieacid diluted with water, and for For iibaa*a*1^fH*kilwlw^<yHm^wmT fain of dariflaji kssmy with a few perfume, and anoint tke lipa fraq^iSprV To remove wartn, gat a little bullock gelUnd keep it in a bottle; rub a little on ike waHn two or three thnen a day, andTin a abort tjpoe they will luventors of patent i^adieines like Ayer, Hehnbohi, and others show tendencies to craxiness after a while, though Lydia Piukham is anid to be still cm deck.' ? ^ ^ ^ b ^ . ^ In Texas tho faahion^ble coat for thin winter will be out no tight across tteba^tha)ttkebuttQ(apiatel ntkk- out of the>fmd pocket will lode like the hump o/a circus camet \ Lovera of genuine sugar from the cane will be glad to Isara that #11 the gltscoae factoriea in Iowa* entablUbed at an aggregate eoat of mors than half a million dollar*, have proved financial fatlnren, , r i.^-'- i*, 4 **•'••''"" Tho men who bought t^e f Philadd phia enOubiUon buUdjng for $7,000 have aaMU^inmaiot^ for enough to minak move than rapa^ the jnvent^ meat and JWUI ckej* abo^t $100,000 ou i.. y ^ i ± weremaking> tpur & It '*.-/•£ i:..te. be usefttl to teow may^ be relisrvad try uaing tbe whiSn of ajtegx thoroughly beatan, ntifeed with ksnoe^uioe and sugar., A in the $&; To dnatfoy bleak b^dn waah tbe face tbotoughly at night up tepid water and rub briskly with a Turkish towolf then apply a mixture of once ouooe of liquor of potaana and two ounce*of cologne. .,.••&>:*.* .^^ To atop bleeding, K fTopi * cavity in the jew aft*-a tooth haa been extracted ahape a cork it tho proper form and nine (poorer tba cavity and long enough to lis kept firmly in place when tha mouth is doead. _ ^ \ l M Dr. Bhearar of Berke ocxmty, P^m., ckuma that he kon*employed a d d wa- ter sponging and ic* bagn to the threat' in eevere caeeeof acarlet fever, during twenty yearn, and with nuch good re- nultn that be considers the iceatipcht not only permianablc, but actually nc rranary where the nymptomn are alarm "s, * , * ' * r.Deokerofftt. Petersburg treAhl diphtheria by first given the patient a laxative, and when itn operation ha* ceaned he gWJ* odd drinks acidulated with hydrochloric acid and then a gar- gle of lime water and hot milk in equal parte every two hours. His method has been very successful. f T Artists WnielntaNew York., ! .ft ^ • • .• ? * : :* i - Under thio^ beading Miss CharioUi Adams contributes a richly illustrated article to thCiF^bruary Centwy, which gives much curious information about artists' models, including the follow- ing: *•-.- -j Among the Academy models some time since, was the son of a backer in Wail street who bad failed during a financial cirsils /Later, the young model obtained a position' in a down- town hank, but such was bis pride in his physique and his interest m a r t that he continued to pose in the even- ing claanss. Another model, valued for his fine muscular development was a blacksmith by trade. Another wan a hounc-pamter who, during the winter monthn, when all of his trade are thrown out of employment sup ported biineolf in this fashion. Still another, also noted for his fine dovolop- ment wan a German athlete. One model, well known in bin day at the Academy, wan a half breed Indian em- ployed an coachman In a wealthy family* In hin leisure hours he poaed at the Academy, and became a popular model, but one day hin employer din- covered his aftiatic bias, and forced him to desist. He his* since returned to athe equine. sphere he adorned, and rankles in an inland city. Another temporary model waa the eon of a prominent artist in another city. Many studies of Arabs executed to New York during the peat few years have bad fbr their model a negro at tacbed to the Academy, wboatfhead and figure offered a perfect type of that race. A prosperous manufacturer of picture frame* in an interior town, having failed in buainea*, became a mode) in New York. * * ">, * Afewartists In New York bate, fhelr j models acting alno an domeetitia or studia retainer* Thin in a foreign custom imported by artists who have received their echoding abroad. Under tbeae circumstancee, a sort of comrade- ship arisen between the artist and hie faithful model, which ha* itn pathetic an well as itn grotesque side, since the remuneration of the model is apt to depend upon the nuccesnen or failures of the artist There us a colony of young artist* New York which pos- sesses a retainer kpown to the world a* "Semmy"r-a youth of muscular type, with blonde mustache and hair, and a freah complexion. His face and figurefithim for all spheres of model life. One day, he pones as a stalwart fisherman, in a pea-jacket, a disreputa- ble bat, and high sea*boots. Another week, in a dress-suit borrowed for the oceaaion, he. figures as a ball-room gal- lant, with one arm encircling the waisf, of a bald-pated lay-figure, artayed itlr| silken robe*, likewise borrowed, into whone glass eye* he gapea with an ex- prenmon of tha deepeet tendonites. Be' ha* even appeared an bold horseman seated ailride 4 * wooden chair, which waa placed on » table, tightly clutch- ing two pieces of clothes-line for reins, with bin body inclined attbenngle necessary to imply a furious galloping oil tbe part of his fiery,*toed, and hi* coat-tails spread out and fastened to the wall behind to illustrate the action of wind. In additiontohis accomplish- ments ana model, thin young man does everything an artist's henchman can be expected to do in the line of general usefulness. ? Kaweh," 1587, not that in Y wfrnto.abaMcoaalotSn ajad aUsoimfortn «htw at Jtabaecq, **d ,gU % The nikmfamimtiitolllulf tmA irMlolit ttint there waa not enough |p divide." En« raged by tkinaet, h»nnurderod tho of', manner*;.V. 4 L.*..^.. ^ -L^&<'4&&-y M- A. New Vol* ma* desiring to oom- mttanicaia. akat at kimnalf tout time* wklMMtli|tfMC fevJUmtotfy be tmm 4h| wail mtarmtmml «hoo^ ; ing'Snapsiti^ *&,*'->& _,.•<.„ $&*•<*,•••,/.' ~ : -i aVjynw|>wt< atasitraofpAlywept row- ing nriik a small poodk. ^he boat capaiwri, ilbeanob wa* drowned and tbe poodkjnwam atdmra, a^ad we are longing to[know if tkia is %eksnof the aurvival of the fittest *,^^. u . :... . ;'t ,; ^ ^ Tbeftrlgla of Gates. ; ^. -. ^ It is weA knoWn that the ooffee plant to not indigenous in Arabia, but wan, imported from Abyssinia at a data, which cannot be accurately given. - The taste of coffee Itself bad a hard etnqrgl* at first tofinda, general wal* come among tbe mora nelect circle*. Apart frodi the oldest legend concern* ing Shaded* drink, the Me^i^Bheik^ Abd-d-Ka^er is the oldest historical' authority j^n the use of tbe/*brood red-.' tbe Tunisian flm Waki r beverage. Itt the year yearn ago, be tells ua people made u«e of a drink which ao lightened the night- watches that theVaithful of the place were nble to sing the praise* of God more fenfently wd cheerfully than ^ oould be done anywhere else, Accord- ingtohint the Mufti Dhattani was tko first to faitroduee the ius^hificant 1H* tie bean on 'Arabinji sofl, having' draught iti with them* from Africa. Certain it Ss that the dWricts of Shoe, Kaffa (whence tbe name), of the Abynstniaiiighlandn, : 1 h<5me of the coffee plant. Dbabani wan of a sickly nature, and since he belonged to the order of the Soil (UUra-Pantheists), ^o be v lieved thai everything on oarCH and. all bstng ^maiiatal from the Godhead, j regained aj meai^Tof excitement of (his'! kind a piovideatial gift 'The Hedi-j nose and faithful Meccans hud their, turbaned neisds together in the jpublifj places wb#n first they heard the news;] a pious shdk in Aden wax tbe first to drink thai 4 'black juice' 1 as a sort of public apebtade. In Mecca itaelf, vio-1 lent strife taroae aoon after its introdisc- tion as to the propriety of using it There wet* great meetings of learned and pious Ijhen, who at last, probably ef|er extreme pressure fram the Mar- meluke governor, Khair^Beg, declared 1 thatcoffe4 "disturbed tbe brain and intoxicate like wine," But their op- ponents wiere of another OpljHL, and adduced Ithe authority of ^•cele- brated Bagdad * physician, Anemia, in tbdr Jefense^which, however, did kot prevdnt the transgressor of tbe edict forbidding the use of coffee from "> ,r ! > : # Euarara intbesoui form the 3 k - m >*4 m w ; ^ •KV faaing pubpicly whipped. At Hie name time tbe tealots of tbe Hedjas pro- claimed that.all coffee-drinkers would; appearbelore the All-meidfiil on ihej resurrection day with Mack facea, While tbdgreat anathema was -being' pronounced at Mecca, die brother* of the order at Cairo, the very Ma me-, lulree thethaelves, were already ieyd- : ling fn the newly dweovered luxury. A confirmation of the Mecca degree, waa, therefore, not to be expected from/ tbe sultan, and he, Katifu Alguria, quaabed tie order of bis governor and aent the Utter into exile. Then many h d y nbeikhs (for example, the cde- med Harifc, founder-of fot4 orthodox sahoolsof Is-j t^Wideclf the coffee-drink- wan the precious beau fully in westen\ Arabia at Times. * *•£ m fc'' v : : OiO m to Test kerosene. * If you ]whk to test kerosene oil this' is the wav the suite board of health in- K** spedorddes i t : **A lajWajif quantity of oil it J>laced in an oil cup which is blackened on tbe innide to yravent t re- flection. IThe oil cup i| then placed in a largerciipwhidi infilled with cold water up io the mark on the Inside de- noting tht height of the oil. A ther- mometerfcplaced in the oil SO that the bulb is Covered, and the water is heated. When the Uiermbmeter in-1 dicates a temperature of sixt>fivedej green, the flash jet is held a designated distaucefrom thetopof tbf oil. Teat-j ing* continue every two degress untii the temperature of ninety-flvw degree*, when the;lamp is summed and the tost _ in made for each degree until my buj^T } ;i dreddegt*>en in reached. Aft^tburf^S || lamp may be replaced if •nei^aaiy a4d ]: the tentmge continued for each two degrees ] The appearance of a slight bluiak fiajne shows tliat tke> flashing point ha* rjeen its*, in si. f 8rnort»lttti.-' l W^ii r H«Hh Bfr- tww«r" H«tore« vigor, brnlA *nd eniw Djfipepd*, Impotence, Sexncl DebUity. $1.00 * ,: $*&" ^-i *£j> : 1 Wl l f

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Page 1: Si gNaKswf CONVINCE · lUllh*KMMl«KlifblUlftllk« tfeftp wltatft hfr duul«d «ya»*. Ami ftaa ttatkm aaagai bat A* th« Joanioyt up and down Tiroagn 4« novcr bMdlof (own WRaWtottftt*

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i t

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4

:ih|w'j«ir OoaVerntnitv 1NV' V# ». a PARKER CPITOII AiraVnor.

•r 4 * * a f l o o ,

ttl Taoej tortao will o*t»H erf * * rfpoftiraai. * * 4 ganswfiiPU S M M * M 4 • t t x o t ftn+ fcuwiiof tao tmft r fnto itftk** ikop OMBfff WSw tao roqeftrn-

$*B §**UftYt1V««.

j o * * * ooainftpio St itorthom

no*/ oad tuoW M M lo Sera <**% aloo • M « • or* twit** pfosnr*4 lima nor onV<* oortfcOftto iwm <»** « ouporlurolftoiol print l a t e *

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pork* J M I I t W Mr»oot prfcoo All oro>m proatytl.v SsoJ, M M efttlolaolloa s*nrnnto«a

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I T W . J S » . n a v ^ w u S m,;i jrr

VOt. I. GOUVERtfEtm, ST. LAWBfeNCE C6UI«tY, N. t . , TCKSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1883. t * * *n.

•^ — - » . * .L...fth. /t •vWw

! * & * * * Mi ^ i i .

Y * I f 1 I * * e «

UftkOft

troone* QuiEm*1

r O P M J on Wtri>~* utrrot.

* j WBC A W O H N K Y * .

ff.iri.ii,—r~ sssse

gNaKswf Attorno? 0*4 CBtWHiHgr ftt

n i » o t „ a o e r a r a * a t , r l Y. j»mi,". «0*1P

KVAIST MOB1IKU,

j WMUVmantttt W. Y,» . i

%t a is i iyay < ^ * * f n a n o T & o r o r a o a r , T S a V

WHAT HOOO'S iAMti oaatttnoJoofi

WILL SOBVlao* |0ll ffe t an weeSorful e tmUl r t nVoaortlcs ooinbfoef ta

>AFtt fLLA, ! f « * rOJSftrtlftWft

tat* ate* tirttt** *r lift * » fan *oWr mat* tali topnntoaly

ejo**nte*tr Teowftaotaro est** It * * i H i k k r t t h i t f i l l I I kiss ewe*

no W^LSi«-ft* My frtoa<]. tl yo* am sic* or In that con-dlnnetant you oauaot toll yoursnjt ritntt n»korw«lt | 0 t u 4 tots torn:» uf lloouo •AiftAfAniLLA, ami lenlho yotusoll bow Uils teatilolun UU IU rtnnt sH l *n ssSsllanry a t four body Into working

It ftlWI IVIUI4V JVWIWM "WW

CONVINCE PraM ths Rsfktrsrcf Deeds far

MMIV. Net

" • r v

' , «$Mrr roft t n * a * or GRAND TRUNK R»Y

br R A I U I O A D A l t t l

igruiftto* TlcsKirrt. ruii

ftp^f a i l M a t e a iaatr ta i ^ M ^ k j W f t a t I

-4 RCI B.BARNES,

s&tiavt t HrxlliHiW r i i i Ii Mil P»frl cvmiyi, f

Iftrtmw tww rtmrrtn o«?f ouiA ULV^k, MmUtK AN!) CUAXlAnV

I M * 4 « M «w4 la INatf. Twtt H U M M

«<* f«f *M«t*f i*m ritontATCb (ILTIIHI-

•HlHtf >•>—1> V «•«»•«>•«, m a t ft«U4li»t< «««%«»«««r. n. v.

Canity, Nwthtrn Oktrict..

» W i U l i ana r toai« yfttrf kft « l o o k of

At i»t

mn aftfti XafY* M a t I

ag. anil wftvt at>«r found *nyil»fcu| [my wftatt Nft your aarftftpatiiti, u

r^^».\iwft*, it tar pfaahniit baftla»a> waa yii ta lataarday! •• la laa apdag aiy wlfta

J l a * a t t f l i ^ a j i a ^

1 * l O a A ^ A a l t L A I I I A a > t » d o w , A M l g o i a aati la. A l l t r »aa aad M a a t a k l a f t t a f r a t l i aa ta f td ft roatmg a r a t i l t t . and i t d id I M I

Hood's •arftaparllla. «tt«HWTft.Wtflf«fc

t la tat L r i T L H J M M i a i l A a t Y .

oaafranu, Aad a owiala tubil* oliAnu,

tJonyagnot from a«t adonalagft, lUllh*KMMl«KlifblUlftllk« tfeftp wltatft hfr duul«d «ya»*.

Ami ftaa ttatkm aaagai bat A* th« Joanioyt up and down Tiroagn 4« novcr bMdlof (own

WRaWtottftt* Yot I know h*r On toaM task ol good fataat*

ttftldoa, «bannti you do not oak ft, Aad your modott ayoft ma> wUik I «IS tall your trbat I tainki '

Qaoaat atlaht fladlr aoar you

ftwootftoyon. M

J.IV.

Tat, Life n l ActlJeit • w n u M «9nrr, wmMrccfc x •,

m a t , a m l a v l M to «all aaH aot ralo«, } \m a t a o a p i m a a i' fcgln i i | a«n tan» Qomaaay of t farta yalanliliiaatu Owa ian kvmkm% Wow aamfai w#w York} rtro Aatooaitloa* 4kt ftayal, t a f l a n d i t m i ytra OflWo.

A n a * * * * A#rKnH4imi t W ^ r M i f id i lHy aad < W a H * i a o 4 « a a i ) How t«n%, l^aHabk , 0Uf%l WOOF i or ft i

fMftoo <r»* Wai . Wla>aoy*t aow dnar fttbf*.

flftftdaata i

' ! « " *

i#oioi«aaf ta i f t i« l I b a ftftOft «l U m , Mft*,«k«ftW«ofta«iair ftuiy ftft'trothraar oio^tko'Dotr PHia4«r w< a t i aaa «r atv n i w i n i f t l i m l#y«t«

art/ a»*iO>4 f a t r y i t a , waha !• tk i n u a a a aiftoi i^j , ft«4 H^oaafM to aotp oki hay

W

Yct%t Ptaaafat

* VftOi^ MRfiartHNi aaaaaao^ wliajaav^pftai ay t a t nmi (4 HHroaft Oikto, (LaiNchlnn Cte,)

T P H M dliftA wna Hold, anror« r k U n t t ^ aali

fmh ^loaaod ami IMIoaod wKhmit ktjitfjf to

AHa%*tftl Tootti taaMa^d oa Ckdit, Ptaj^pr, r w i i W i Itaakor aad CMMold . | f l r Al l work warranto*

' l f e * i a d a * * y of KUbatr a Morrlft* Now H i m * ,

j , t \ t iovraaaat i i * H- Y«

s SPENCER k LEGGETT,

m U K 'MD ACCIDIKT DfilTIUVirt AOtWTR. r

Tao anawjr of t a k aaaaoy will bo lo fufnkb tin • A f t AND n i t M A « U t IMPtntANCK.

aro a r v I M to oaaailao tao aaaaotat at o w avroral CVioapaalai, aaw, to tao

Mfi dlottaot airaafoiaHit ftad w i p i H t laafaa«o of ant f j lkd io , inalft ioi oatmoiod to I M ftkall

arooapi aad oaraful anaatioa, Vnlfarai w t t ka arraa lo ad adoanato toa^o radl.

ikiMfti ftokl itt ail wiailA WOJI. oAftftft Malft IK*, Ootifomour.

H . A . U a a a t i . . I» m* aadNt^ajLi

^ r

CUSTOM TAILORING

fan. And Winter Clothing)

, N T\9*rt • BIMI,

I U M t ORGANS J

4 »'i

!fi:;;!:

••v. THE UltAftON WHY

'*r boot only taafao bayt taaa aaw ofaar aoaior

l aao i fo roaUbMt tkoA oata lo par ant o l tao low prion ao to t *

tat RExioK#Ht r; -f t r f k f t f t ^ k a t t ^ a t f r r a a i a i t i t a a a a w ) o t < 4 a o r a o f t ^ ara, a taa l no • a l i m t f P P i p a i n t to toot thom la ovary roanoc*, waao nla> l»aiko of tao OPo afftor^p raoow^aorpoi 10 fan a nooa

\ ytSt RlAlWN t W

ftfnauporlor to

•• » i n v ' — - •>—«^#a>*—MI» a »i. >

THE ODD 8ENtENCE. ' l a W l l c ^ ^ h a a a i d with n frown.

••It win papa M b«aw jtwtjr.w, / V a t y walU^ laywaai^ Uto>*»»a#

•Jtlav *%roa^hf% Mtifati^ ' t -Ajn4lhai&ahawa^<mimlkAtl7Wiar

W a t w i D C ^ i i i f abeoMglTn a tarj aaoalt ajgh« Mauraa^ did noi bmr it, ior it waa kiat in Una »oiaa which ka mada wHh l U i«or, n id Oarria did Mi know whaihar hn kad nnnwamd bargodaVbgrwor ootr * ^ • -A . And tattn aha wta *km*»

(Ban looked rary namtaadpraU^-a^i f a m J l l x did;butterfaoarran raAlMT atdm^Vr. Tht room te wbiaii at^aal, tkotif h ittiiU, wan in Una rtry n

4 of ownr, tba hwattb oraaii-awapt^ UM lira b«raina; trifhtlr. But wm waj it aJlt Caaraa fait imdinnd to nait ^ataaU. 8ha had hofie< and triad, kod ami tad; kwt Mattrion wan junt an ooM and unMnd a* a*nr.

Bhnhad aiarriad bhn^nnch a n h « l and yat nach, a loof time afo, it anannad-*bnoatftaa be bad naked bar and b oaoaa abe bad loved him; and U bad never ocoorred to bar until lately that poftibly be might Wnt hate krred her, even thoofhhehad aaked berto mar.y

'But now I know th*t4badid net,^ aha nmrmared, aermwfuDy, toberaall "Junt one word—and one look told

eontinued, l4tb|U it will improve 'ail our minda and mako ua tliink\ ajul Uiat wo can never tell who boaidr* our-aelvan may reaa the 4odd neaitence' for the day, nor where its inftueuco may

f<The influence will apmul, atwi so will the example, which I nhall fo l lo^ fbr one*11 amid Maurice. . ; , \ r-.• w,

And Annie mm delighted^ V f .^. -, Much earlten thatt USUAI Maurice

Wan on fain warn home, IOHI eiideavor* ing9 a^ he weijlt, to digent thq odd nan* tnnoe9 "Mmlo \4 tread thoee Oepn with aorvow which heutiight have trod with delight" O h l y e n ! it would be jwat eo with him—bo knew that very! weU *-if be did not Jtake eAre; for our iivef, ae be rwmind^d himanlf, are a fc*enA

m^:

inclined to W

a jm^m

to nwp kot ftotwwtat WttMk Oftlly P M O Ift ftp! kai ian of tattodno, or ajp|)ftaS(^HMN*andloa awlnpaaooM. 1 noN n •AoaaaW^aMtftiai

<toitiioiil of iu pr*r*m mm*± a H nn4rriowinfakyiii«wtipkj4iiftiMia in* Oat tftt i i " It worlM Mko • tkona ood o»w ftftay- b w a j f a r t MMlioly tkovoMttoiai • ! 9i tat nt*r*A fjmiftnrrkw, v t ^ Mtaolrnfty^ftaOtftrtftiitroftka^ OkMoAfaa, noaategiK o2l DtaplftOM

n pwaaaftoyooioy pcrnoa or M O I I

of tat h «nrt« iHkinty,

f W fvoUng of wftlftki oaa kfttkookfti It nlwftri k r l t t o m ftiHHfttftMUftWft,afti

ftottakarpMay v a n t k o k a

^la^owaa.mta | t pw k^tto or itt for f l , a ^ t b ftdtaarfttftaonipHajiiiiaiii

a>iftaaaftft#a^ft^wkonwi^lwwrMuitntttptrt»ti konakay tko «i t of tlw Vt«l«lk lumymnA* •anno •ktalotd ^rftAdmiitem Uim>., wUb vUmp fqr r^ty, ftlkot koaw ki l^nft, H M A

ror t iaa iy QiMftplftint of «ttWr m ikki Mojpoaftdti n o w n u m i M iUmiiftt ttoui«ftUi»*kow.

- « f f t |a^kftoi'tUfOrruift,"wiyti«iiotM«* l ^ftrft aWnoof lo 4ftt I M T M for tko Oftio of Ct»o»U^itlojL

ftod l^rpldlty of tko Ir?«n U*r ntooJ ajano wminn to l u m*t\*\ Uoooan Mo»aar

a>oftooiiMpoojpo«ft4i»ntpopiiiftritr*' r^pMt M r ftioo Aftftlof UM«y wkowtok

omkMtuo a tooot4 nbnaiipnte.rn, OftftOOAtOOiki

Hf»A.ILa IB" MJ'.JIJLLL JIU JL<>JBiI!LlJJJi>lAllttLiUUW

IAM9NP

^ Best Ikw Ew aMn ay^r«3t e n s , wootn OH corrox.-wk

Mtae ta , OOATO, eoAtre, Noooi, taan, tTc^airtoe, O A R M Y aAoaf {oat? artlolo atauy «i 4 porMoUy ftkndo. nioftfc. ar#wii f Orooa. M a o , iftpHot,

eaodtooi at J. Nory also, n»oL nrowo, ea«o e Yorto Cotto one t o oiktr kan ooloro. Wftriantod|rftM*ttnr>«fftk^ Sftilinftoaftaowni ootoroftotoamrlkt.oftooai. I f ronnnvotoror o j o d S r o i l f f UJOMOOOO. ToawUlkooollnliton. nold k r arttaitoaitov toad no to omin ana oar

n*< _ andnoitornj cytftrikioiot _ ****** lunvaaftoji ce.v a«ntftaton,Yt.

NLD ad SlLVJcRlAlirr. • ronte a>atnt. Artlete* llaolt-f a t atlakNr fnaoy aaftaoto, nnowo, l o a m

tjkianrtltw.iftiawftUkiadioforftftOMouaworaS innottanayof taoalok prtaid ItWtft,nnftakoj wau.a» ate

' la i iL . l . iL4 i l

aaoeN A ce, ji>.injiL,yii'j!iijaa

BUTLER'S

SAFES! • ROJJNIX CORNER,

. . • « • • • • ' " i - , < / " * • • • ' ^ '•

•ouo wtvpw AMW THOlf m A H n t

f\t% and Burgldr Proof.

r

HkUoHfrmm4 If IM k*M m*h*r M tft« w«rM,

11 Cimniur, fifwtff, i n , iantlosrtr.aYflIarvWoaer,and

nad aooan oa aaad nil Uado of n Mwonnrp to a

aanad atnao, worth |l,lOn< ft«d noan botb orooao nad atnaci, wane aan l ra i oa atoandy laotatl*

or rontft^noa^ until tao rant pnyt for wW roadity poroofto

T h l RlASON WHY

• fATawT AVD MaY FOS CWU1CH 09011a Ainwait o«Ma YoiA t AUD a ,

i UfaVf AIUT awr ?<* FUNb ronu »A'hortALec«ooLroanA^o,

W.F.3UDDS* MUSIC STORE

. . . •T* : 4OUVCIHI0K, H.

*»'

I f f T I A J S C v a K LOCKfi.

W . H . B U T L I R ; ' " ' ' ' ' * • " • ' '

821 Broadway, New York.

OtHtlUL AOWt »0II

DIEBOLD

Safe and Look Oo.

I N D FOR CIRCULAR

KIUNEY-WORT QRKAT

T3T OURK

rnnP*7i

K I U N E Y - W O P I -4»V^ ^

A n d letting her work tall on ber lap, abe nat In nitonee, thinking deeply.

But presently a little *ry eounded—a tiny, belpieen'wail, and Currie atarted up« aad a happy, an^ioun eoa^ir flunked into ber face in a moment, ,., , +

Bha hurried upMairn. L : My b a b y r abe utter«f« nofUy. •At leant I have m y baby boy K And

I will hope on for alltbeeidee." . . • **: '*

Diaragarding all opnnciniicn * atinga, Maurice went on bib way. -

He chfjac to think that he wan poof; and'9he waa inwardly, at every atep be took, bewailing hin himl lot, and bin dull and cramped and narrow and —an be conaiderod it—ever harrowing exlrteucc, '

And where wa> he going? To aperul the evening with nothel

friendn, wbo^were—or ho would have «aid no—far J>>ottor off thkA hir^nelf, He had not yM learned that >4a jftmn'i life eonninted not in the abunda the thing* which he ponacwacth/1

he loat the on joy merit he nri have taken in what be had in Hid of fomver wirctting nil that not % * #

A few mlnutea later ha had take hin aocuntomed place in a large an^ pleanant fnmily nittlngToom, and wad talking and laughing m t h hin friend* and their young einters, aa g a y l y a n poaaible.

But*whtle he talked, bin glance wan-derad round the room, and rented again on the rnantle-ehelf.

H e knew the apartment t well, akdfl had often compared it with hin own J

yenmg wife, and a dear little non. Ha bad yooth and health and ttrongth and eany employment, with good p<oa-peat of advancement, And be bad actually been thinking ib hi* heart of giving tip at leant half of thene Wean-inga and going to nbek wealth and imaginary content in a foreign land. ,

Why, howfbolinhheJiadbeenl He taw it now. That l4odd nentence*' had been the meana of pointing it c^it to Mrj*« . ; i . ; ' , : \ , * • . « * > • '

Groingoh nlmply and patiently in the nafe and right ,waY before bin?, be would tread hit path with* delight But if be gave way to the boat of foqlt lab, unmanly, impatient, tourmpring thought* that bad no boaet hipp uf late, tboneaame ntepn, fair and untrodden before him now, would very probably have preneotly to be taken in bitter re­pentance and aorrow. . j ^ i

-No/^ he naid to bitnnelf/an hi Wla Bearing bin oWu door, (lCkrrie belongn to anei and I to her; and twi l l not leave her even for a tithe, • to ntruggle on alone, When there is no real need. What good wtatd money do it I came back by and by to find home and hearth deeolate! Home fry* need keeping alive—need cberiahing ae well ae winning, I wonder I never thought of that before. How can I be nure that my wife's lore wduld outldat my

\ deaertiont How can I tell whether, after earelennly leaving behind mt tbe beat and truant deligbtn which thin world can give, I might not have to wander over the world in lanelinene and regret for tbe remainder uf my ^ y » » " - ' ? - • • ; ; / - . ) • • ; . • - — i ^

Night # a a drawing r^i; but Carrie i t i l l m% with her baby in ber jam*. B y and by tbe little clock on the man­tle-shelf Rtruck tbe halt hour after nine, ; V -.,.ii •.. : .r ' - -v •> :-\i

^ftelatef^nhe nUtrniurrxt, glahcing up. "But,'1—bending over her keep­ing child and kissing itn little face, noftan velvet— "your mother lias not been wanting tUe time, baby I V .

No, for Carrie lmd also lutd her per-plexitiee and vexations to think over and to unravel> and her decision to arriveitt. Moreover, she bad arrived at i t >•".. i * }. -.

And now the disturbed frown which had been there all the evening cleared away from her brow, and she appeared quite disponed to be cheerful

And next nhe ntole up-ntairn with her. baby boy, and quiqkly down again, to put away bier work and to ntir and mend the file and to nwaep the hearth! and make everything look neat and bright and pleaaaht looking. ,. j : t

] / 4iIt in of no una to take notnnch /notice of triflen/ naid tbe little woman whemlf, Man if thin life were all, I must go on and do the beat I can., To And fbult and to fret and to look dull

hutdk^ mA J^r^oi%a|urnbledsand fell uiwK(elt inclitiwl to deapair aome-Umea, kept on UM> wh^ie to hin resolu­tion and pernevfwd bravely in %he better way toward which i(th^odd>en-tetice" had been m» a guiding ftn^r. , -; And it wan praj^ntly easy to foresee for him a proapa^^ f utut^, for ha ( d not now # tifat* it. Mot in wqjd*) <4I nee a better enth and 1 ^ n r ^ t o w good it In, but l^dloajr everllic woi«e/; He not only new tkagvod path, but he strove daily Rnd.bourly to pureue it. 9 A n d than, toe* though ho bad been oold and ungrateful to?MO long, he wan one of thoee ponn whom, to quote a well^cnown author. 4,U maken strong •Pd h ippy t o J i e loved baokagatn.^ H e i o t e d Onrria now, and be kndw

deal m e m in a u r l i a n d * than we are 1 1 ^ ^ w h o U y ^ truly r « t u r n ^ j laffection^a^d wrf two workad heart

little home, j and hand J o g a ^ ^ building u p their tlu4ftyt b t d u a i r j ^ children;

and thia halved tha labpr, but doubled

Atoo, in their nenr and far happier way of life, be eutw that they both o w a d n o i a l i t U o t o M t h n o d d n e n t « n e e M

which appeared unfailingly on the slate oyer tbe manUendtnlf dajr bv day.

JT^*** -

Cklaone IraJta.

»lf.

every article of furniture aud altrloet [ mo n tor tm; but every ornament. At what then, Waa he looking? , I

At a nlnte with a very pretty, otnajy mental frame, which hung In a eoiP nplciounponition over the mantle-dhelf. On It wan Written in chalk in a neat, round band, the word*:

"Made, to tread thoee stepa with bor­row which I might have trod with de­light/'

Maurice read thn eentance again and again. He oould not keep bin eyen from jit ,'• • ^ •:

Preeently the youngent daughter of tbe houne— Annie by name—a lively girl of thirteen or feurteen, ran Into tbe room. She waa a favorite with Maurioe, and be with ber. . .

44What ia your opintoo Uomrlaet now Idaar* waa alanoat bar flmt quen-tion aa abe gave a little nod in the dK rwtkm of Una nl ate. "WaaUtkinkit to,Yelyt,, • .,. y ^ / ^ > , / . - v . ?•

And then, aiaroaW watting lor any reply, aha chatted muent ly en , g iv ing a. detailed account of Mthe odd aen* lance,M an abe called i t from beginning to end. ,h,

4 tAnd no," conduded aba at langtb, 1 overy day, directly tbe dock in Ike kail ban done ntriking twelve, any one who pleaana may write a freak en* tenoe on the elate. Something realaanaibla and uanful, of oourae, or papa will not allow it to remain* I have ehonan nosnetbtng for tomorrow if loan only get the chaiy* of writing it I will abowittoyUr v >,

A n d nhe ran away, to rettfrn ike of ex*

t iny parlor at home, m u c h to the din-baud doleful whenever Maurice oomea paragement of the Utter. H e knew | p will certainly not make h i m care

1 She paused—for abe bad hfArd ber hunband^n step. And with a glad l ight In' bar eyen nhe sprung up from her kneeling poaitlon on tbe hearth, and met h im With a bright nmile; and be kineed her fondly and (to b^r aecret nurprine) appeared aa cheerful an ber-

of her One word and one look" hunband'n, an nho had natd to hemaU, bad opened ber eyen to the fee* that be had not married bar exactly for love. And nhe bad winhed, with strong feetlngn of anger and jealousy com­bined, to inquire further into pertieu-lara. But her dceiaion bad been to nay nothing morn about the matter. v

"I a m not clever,11 nhe bad thought to hemelf; "I do n o i know how to win love aanily, an acme jromeu do; aud I cannot think and think, no hard and no long—my thought* on ly get into coofunion. 1 nkall try to bealwayn cheerful, and never to deacand to re-proachea, for if 'riproacben break friandnhipi, * aa they a m naid to do, they munt surely break love alno.M •

S o nke kad thought a few bourn be­fore, aa ahoeat all alone with her baby fan her armn, and ao eke waa thinkiraj atUl ae abe stood now by herhunbeod'a

next minute with a nchool book trade, in which nhe found and pointed out to Maurice the fol lowing! v „

MIf w e examine tbe reaultn of for­bearance, and oontraat them with the reaultn of impatience, irritability, and intoleranrje, the balance will be found to be ail oh one aide, fteetrmint in tba expresahm of unpleaaant feeUnga or harah though tn i s the foundation-atone on which many a happy home and many near and dear friendnhipa are

Madtiee rand every word much mora attentively and thoughtfully . 0 ^ ^ Annie had expected him U do.

"I think y o u like our idea,11 nhn laid. # . > • f

Miluricereplied that he liked U par-

MPapa nayn," Mim Annie onae a p r a

Their oyeb met; be put his her, and the** aa though be

hadakanber thoughta ) he told her all be winhed to know. *• -

H e kad, in plain worcht married Carrie in a fit of pique. H e had loved and for a abort t ime kad been engaged td, a g i r l w h o had ^noostcernedly g iven him up tor a richer man. v . , . But Ourrie had been alwayn true.

H e amid ao wit^i his eyea ae well an with his lipn at the end of hin ntory. H e and nhe had been frienda from Childhood. • :•-. ,* *,vjr. ,* v->:

And, tn eondunion, he begged bar forgiven ens, which, it la perbapn need-kan t o nay, aha gave h i m freely.

And, after a abort alienee, Matorice -brew from hin poSket aetata which he had purebaaed cm bia wmy borne, and, kanging it np over the kttin*lock» be

it tbe following: k anal w M t * Uam aaarost^ f ^>

a v o i n

a ai l dfves inltdr ^ba^ a^aki ape earea to

Bat ^**«^"* thoQaA ha waa tail

Mr. fc V. Smalley'a paper in tba February" Century, on "Feature* of tile New ?*6rth-w<*V'yan interesting oonclusioa to bid noteworthy aerien on the North-went region. He dincunaen varioua social and political nubjeota, and, speaking of the Chineee popula­tion, nayn in part: . -" "then Id a mlntnJketi notion in the

diet that tbe Chineee are always hum* ble and submissive, and much put Upon and abused by the whiten M the Pacific coaat There waa a time when the hoodlumn of San Francinco mar-treated the* Asiatic umnigrantd shame­fully, but that time nan gone by. Now theQWuamanappearntobeanneearein bid right* of pereon and property aa anybody. Innlead of being deferential and timtd be in often pushing and in-eolent He doen not give way hi the ntreet He huntlen you an Vudely aa an' English navvy. A * b o ^ o f / Chinegl laborer* marching dowV a narrow ntreet will crowd ladien into tbe gutter. Tbe CThinene merchants, doctor*, and others belonging to the better elsnssn, are an polite aa Frenchmen, but tbe maaaen of the Chineee population on the Pacific eoant are rude and brutal The chief thing in their favor in their habile of personal dptnlineen. ] The railroad laborers, who arc tbe poorest and moat ignorant clans, wash them-anlvee from head to foot at tha end of each day'n work. All clansee are fre­quent customer* of the barber, who gives minute attention to their bond*, facea, earn, and ueek» , „;••**• ^ /* *

Among the oomtnoit laborers there in little sympathy for nick and injured comrades; If & man is Hkely to be­come a burden, the other members of his gang want to get rid of him as soon as possible* It i i commonly be­lieved by the white bonaon on the rail­ways that the Chinese doctors put sick merroutof tbe way* by poinou when they think they cannot b^ speedily cttml. A cane waa told me in Oregon of a Coolie ipilway kborer^who had an arm broken. It -waa net by the company's doctor, and was doing well, but the man'n eomiadea insisted on bringing a Chineee doctor to attend him. The doctor came from a distant camp and gave the patient a doae. In an hour the poor fellow' wan dead. In nuch cane* there is no ipveetigation; nobody caren that there in one China-, man. lee*. The death of a cart homo in of much m o » consequence. One great difficulty the employer* of Chi* nene labor have to contend within the superstition of these people. Their re­l i g i o n worship consists in propitiating the malevolent spirits of the dead. If a Chinese domestic fanciea there In a ghost in thc^ houne he departs at once, and leaves 'an Inscription behind to warn his succensorn. It often .happens that a family will be unable to keep a servant longer than a single day. Mail a|tcr man will come and go with­out giving any reanori for hin abrupt departure. At b i t tbe warning mgn is found and etpunged; then there is no mors trouUa. Not long ago two Chinamen were killed in Oregon by the prematureexptosion of a Want on a new railway line. One of their fel­low workmen declared that just before the explosion he saw two devils come to the oppoalkf bank of t6e river and heard them talking. Thereupon the whole gang of forty men dropped work and could not be induced, by threats or persuasions, to return to the spot

V * }FA!tHdK tfOTlfil. *

Fur p&shc* are bi great demand. Long prtinfton grow more and more

popular/ ,. ;< . . , . . , _.* . Cloth in the cr^»«ct fabric for stylish

Fstreetnuits* * - > Heavily repped f:rbri<ei are in the as-

[ccudant j -.:.-.-.. ••-,./. ^ \ • Black stocking* are stylish with dresses uf ahy cplot.

Velvet ribtxma arc much tiscd for draa trimmingsk ^ Ladien fond of faucy work knit their

owu silk stockings; 4 i . , Feathers and plenty of them arte the

leading idea in millinery. v ' - Small capotin trimmed with velvet are tire bonuet of the hour.. . < .

Plain linen ^callam and cuffs aire Worn with tattor mode d o t h drenae*,

Kmbonaed velvet flounce* are tlte htteat extravagance indrans trimmings.

Ruffe, mcbea and frainen fcir this are full, high1 and very band-

Ceat le t Hunting f fey^tervbttrg l> t l<» bi Lludon dlotia.}

. . . . . . . ; fa^i son; sos * ( W too; 16oo

J f o o a t a i a . . . . . * . . ! n e t S O M S a o f r 5 ( ^ s o o o » w i oohaoT ......ijpsejtfnMpoo^o90.50w•»w

CoHy Of 1 i ftdattloaal

u r l o o i S f t ^ n ^ r

aso^coato . , *

JtfarKaov a * 4 t**th aottoio. froo. OWtunn notkiai Sro cnoti pet ttao. *— . -

*t thoont^ pre-Z<00*t AOI'WfOllHO ncftboSt^inw. %/>

msalgot n*r»Nt»fStt#itio ta

bo sain ta r

forwafaod t e a * a a ro*ukur eon*

-It

wattoaft laoHOe aMtractloanr WIS bo taoor t t 4 antfl CoHiin nad c a a r * ^ aooor*la*ibr.

Hlberln.

\i\ death does hin existence,

'4*-

& 4. ,xt>:

A Ifaaferoan F n n t

The great ion bridge formed at Niag­ara Falln a few day* ago in attracting large number* The bridge extendn from tha hmseabqn fall nearly to the old suspension bridge, and old inhabi-tanta any i t in the largest and most im­posing of tha many structures with which the ice king han spanned the river Tb-daya feat never before attempted waa accomplished by two y o u n g men of thin place. They e r a s e d on the ice just below the o l d landing wberr the Maid of the Mint in days gone by de­parted an her perilous trips to tlte foot of the falln. The «out» taken by the two adventurern lay within one hun­dred yavda of the great rapid/, over which Blondin performed his astonish* tug featn on the tight r o ^ To dispel all doubts an to their perilous passages they planted a small flag staff about the centra of the riuer, from which a email pUoa of red bunting float* tri-k umijbly* There a e many residents o( Suspension Bridge who wknessed the daring f e a t **d . ali, *^n poaitive that She river w M P**** onoaned in such dangeroua p r w t a i t y to tbe great rapad^—Oasor^s Pofhdium* /

*ep

Vdvet nkirtn with plain silk and woolen pverdteasea will be much worn,

Oold soutache embroidery appeal on a few red and blue all-wool cos­tume* . . j- . •:•••> •-;•• .« • • . . - \\Wf.]

Long pile plush and fur cloths will divide favor with fur lining* for cloaks. _..• • * - --.*. * t

r^ Fur and feather bands will be used

for drees as well an cloak trimmings, India nliawln are onoe more tbe

height of fashion for carriage and theater wraps/ ;-. * : v - ^

The lateat novehjr in buttons U the bullet nhape, with a ll ice taken off the top, leaving it flat -

tfbie is to be a velvet SeaSQU. JEs-thetSc reds and blues predominate among new mixtures. , r .

Printed sateen with large flgprea on dark colored or tinted grounds are used for cloak linings. v ^ ,

The New York Tip\e* says that womeb iu Paris and London- import

I dresses from New York houses, t _

Ckarlen B. Wardrop Tel le Why His * Hair Turned tiray la a Klght

Canes are of rare occurrence in which **• in Byron's •"Prisoner of Chillon," one's hairs grow white

la a sinjrlo nlnti, , AS inoa^linrft srow* from iao<teroftrs,

but there in s w e l l authenticated in­stance of thia kind-in the person of Cbarlen B. Wardrop. :\ •-,.•• f

fc

tvThis Newhall house fire in Milwau­kee vividly recalls an incident in thy enrly life*" remarked Mr. Wardrop to a reporter who dropped into his store yesterday afternoon for a few samples of the fragrant weed. "My white hairs, date from February 20, 1838, and if you oaro to hear the story I will tell it t o you. The old Pacific hotel in this city was opened for the reception of guests on Seventh and Poplar streets on June 28, i£67. • l l i c liotd was three stories higli, the first story being occu­pied by stores, and it was a very good hotel ^or those days. I was about twenty-five years old at*that time, and after serving a while as clerk, changed for the position of head porter. The house had been opened less than a year, when, on February 20, 1858, it was swept by nuch a fatal Are • a* this city has never seen before or since. That night 30 occupants of the house perished in the flames, and it was by the merest chance that I bad given up my room for that night, and was sleep­ing with eight other*, mostly railroad men, im the name room on (he third floor of tbe houne. About 2 o'clock in the morning, I was awakened by tho fierce crackling of the flame*, and was conscious of fire rolling through the chamber in which wo were sleeping. I rolled, out on tho floor and crawjed along on my hand* and knees under the flames, which filled all the upper part of the room. The stench from the roasting bodies of my dead companions was fearful, and I expected to meet the same fate. Although badly scorched I kept my presence of mind and crawled'aloqgout of the mom, through the hall and to the stairways leading to tbe second floor. On attempting to descend them I fell through the Are which had destroyed them, setting my shirt on Are, and striking on the ban** inter* leading from the flmt to the sec ond story and breaking two riba. From thia place I gained the street and waa saved. Pf theothereight men in tbe room- «ot one escaped. , Among the dead was Mr. Gerry, a newnpaper man. In making my escape my hair wan ringed off my head, and when it grew out it waa an white an nnow, Tbe ter­rible experiences of that night whitened it completely, and altkooglf succeed­ing growths have had some dark hair mingled with them, tmy bead is still very white, an you nee. A long inve* ligation waa conducted after after lire, but itn cause waa never fully explained. It waa proved that tbe watchman, who periahed in the flames, was drunk that n ight and, although some thought tbe fire incendiary, I always charged it to acme swinging lamps in the back part of the house. The night waa bitter odd and the wind blew fiercely. The* Are department, which had re-oen$y been organized, was hindered by frotenfl replugs. From thai day to thin I have never slept in a room that was not within easy jumping distance of the ground, although I have traveled a great deal and stopped in many hotels. Whenever I oould not get a room suiting me in that particular I have frequently spent the night in a chair in an hotel offlce.>sJYorn my ex-perieurJB I have a good opportunity to judge of what the poor people in the Milwaukee Are suffered, and I can tell you that it must liave been something terrible.*—&f. Louis Democrat

Sorry, indeed, «?ven wh not come to put an end tq is the lot of the: convict who has sue* ceeded in the escaping from the mines of eastern Siberia. Wit lout resources of any kind, he must Leg or rob his way back U> Russia. Tlie alternative of seeking employment! in one which often lias disastrous consSquen&a. The convict of the lowest type regards the Siberian oolonint as ail inferior, and has a saying wbidk describes him an 'blind for three days altir birth/7 But

the colonist has his* revedge. He works the supercilious convict llk$ a beast of burden, and he gives hint as little rest and an little food a* poAible. Wlana wage* are demanded!™'colonist baa an original way of safsfy tug hi* la* borer. The money is I paid without demur, but before the dfe Vtet cah grjt clear, he fall* dead, killdd by & gullet from, the gun of hiscrjuel employer. This method of payment is sometime* carried out on a btrgd scale. It ia adopted in the case of vagabond laborer* who, having finished their autumn work in the fields, return] to the rteigh» boring village to be paid Jiff. The wage* are forthcoming and the laborers allow* cd to depart with their ftardly earned money. But they have no sooner gone than the peasant farmer pnaemblea bin neighbor*, and having provided them with bornen and firs artAs, tbe whole

\ party sallies forth in nursuit at the vagabond*. The retiring laborer* «an* speedily overtaken; moil are killed on the spot all are robbed, the lecoretwd money being divided Ibetween the farmer and bin confederate*. The'only renpect shown for authority is the Valent habit where robbery ban the motive of slaughter, bf concealing-the dead. The murdered convicts Sre usually cut up and mutilated, and tbe remains buried in out-of the* way places. This bunting of thfe ^bueebbecke," ae the escaped convicts arJ often catted in derision, had gone on for year*, en­tering no deeply into thelhabitn of tbe people that it ha* encapea the attention of few travelers through easteph Si­beria* "Where are tb« inenf^Awue asked of a woman leftin chaygftof a small villiage adjoining the highway. ,(Goneaty>r tbe hunchbacks" waa the reply. Such is the prevailing demora­lisation in this renpect tllat boys have been heard to ask their dithers to kill vagabonds in order that I they may nee "how the follow will Troll oq, bin hump/' In some of thek|overna|ent* it is certain death for a cinfvict escJped, or still under supcrvisioui; to be caught returning from the nunc] 'Occasionally the soldiers imitate tbL colonists in their exploitation, of t i e vagabond. The Cossack, as well Jrthc ordinary colonist, covets cheap laloiyand is in the habit of rewarding \eith an ounce or two of lead the oo»%'ict who de­clines to pass from oift condition of bond slavery to another J

During the ?olonizatioji on the Trank-sbaikal l'egion, the hunting of vaga­bonds was one of tho dotnmon diver­sions of tbe nettly atrived settlers. From Tomsk to Chin thdre is a locality that has rendered itself notorious for the pursuit on a large scale of escaped convict**. In tho Tomsk government itself whole villages aae described as living solley by the robbery of vaga­bonds. The river Karaakn has been no filled with the bodies of Inurdered con­victs as to become putrid Near Fingul, open woods are known as a favorite eround for the slaughter. - The- whole of the district U full of the memories and traditions of Siberian man-hunt­ing. Heroes pf the sport are still alive, Bitkov, Romanov andlZavorato were each expert in different ways. Ro-manoy for instance, gained Mebrity in the village of Fingul, where he wan in the habit of lying in ambush close to the highway, and in khdoting down every vagabond who passed. In tbe autumn evenings Bitkop used to pick off stragglers *along the banks of the river Augar. During sbbeeqoent sport along the river Biryu* (there were in* dividual Siberians w h t boasted that they had brought dolvn an many an* sixty and in some c a W ninety vaga­bond* Ohly upon one of tbeae man-hunter* do the vagabonds seem to have taken vengeance./ Thty selected one Paramonicb, who had m e n all hie life engaged in killing convict*. Tbe vaga­bond* assembled together, nnized htm and brought hin caqeer to a cloSS by plunging him alive incandescent metaL

on***

nto a caldron Of

jCklmaejm-

MAMay*****1

%<&r% • , W ^ ! W ! *Cj* > " ' *'*;.'",

t^-ror flm «mt* Well* BthiA-mm. * Oo., Barjii«t«i, ?t., will mi viand MWgVf uf «U| ootora «f tK*-

V4lBxample ta better than preeept. It in well known that dynpepnia JbU* lioun attack*, headache and many other ill* can only be cured by rnmov- J ing their caune. Kidney-Wort hen been proved to be tbe most effectual remedy for tbeaef and for habitual ooa-tivenaan, which so afflicts millions of the American people.

trnprevementla The best chimneys * e made by en-

cloning hard baked waxed pipe, in a thin wall of bricks. J Such chimneys will not only draw better than thoee made in the usual way, but there will be lew danger from '(defective flues.'9

A four inch wall between us and des­truction by fire in a\, frail barrier, es­pecially if the work ii carelessly done oi* the mortar has crumbled from the joint*. To build thd chimneys with double or eight inch walls makes them very large, moi* expensive, and still not as good as when tpey contain the smooth roupd flues. ITo leave an air chamber hetwc*)) them for ventilation is better thai) to open [directly into the smoke flue/ because i i will not impair the draugHLfor Jthc fire, and there will be no daugeVof sooty] odor in the room when the circultftiorJ happens to be downward as it will be occasionally. The outside chimney, if there in one, should have an extra lair chamber be­tween the very *>uter wall and the back of the flreplacl) to nave heat, a precaution thatf remoles to a great ex­tent the ccviumn objection- to such chimneys. A fery Urge per cent of the fires corned froml defective ckim-neys.—S<rt>nf|^ Amiricax,

. . : — 4 - i - n . 'BoraH oxRATs^+Clears out rata;

anfe bed-bug*, gophers. - 15c,

mice, roacbef, skunks, chipmunks, Druggists. ^ '

* > . . * M i £r/'>&vt*, &$f*'<it *t~jtfs< it v't^. I- } •*& y

\

*v %i>-

mem* INOWLWGH. To relieve hiccough at once, talwf a

lump of sugar saturated with vinegar. '. Hemorrhage of the lungs or stomach m a / be quickly stopped by small donee Of Salt ,.-,.... ,,..•.:>.. .:v : ,.-:.:..;i;.. -

To relieve a neveue headache, bind the temple t ightly with a handker­chief or cloth. * ' •*';••• ,•**••• , For earache dissolve asnafastida in

Water; warm a few drops and drop in tbeear, then cork the ear with wooL ^ A good powder of snuff which wi l l

ouraoaiarrb i a m a d e o f equal parte o f g u m arabic, g u m myrrh ami blood «><*•" •: ;.• • " • : - , ' / ;. " • ^ ; r - / V

For a npald or b u m , a « d y imme­diately pulverised chareoei and eiM U r n p o U w U l d o , b u t K o s e e d at better. Tbe effect is nstraculou*. - / . ^

It iantatad by a medical writer that enrbolieacid diluted with water, and

for For iibaa*a*1^fH*kilwlw^<yHm^wmT

fain of dariflaji kssmy with a few

perfume, and anoint tke lipa fraq iSprV

To remove wartn, gat a little bullock gelUnd keep it in a bottle; rub a little on ike waHn two or three thnen a day, andTin a abort tjpoe they will

luventors of patent i^adieines like Ayer, Hehnbohi, and others show tendencies to craxiness after a while, though Lydia Piukham is anid to be still cm deck.' ?^ b . ^

In Texas tho faahion^ble coat for thin winter will be out no tight across tteba^tha)ttkebuttQ(apiatel ntkk-out of the>fmd pocket will lode like the hump o / a circus camet \

Lovera of genuine sugar from the cane will be glad to Isara that #11 the gltscoae factoriea in Iowa* entablUbed at an aggregate eoat of mors than half a million dollar*, have proved financial fatlnren, ,ri. -'- i*,4 **•'••''""

Tho men who bought t^ef Philadd phia enOubiUon buUdjng for $7,000 have aaMU^inmaiot^ for enough to minak move than rapa^ the jnvent^ meat and JWUI ckej* abo^t $100,000 ou

i..

y ^

i ±

weremaking> tpur &

It '*.-/•£ i:..te.

be usef ttl to teow may be relisrvad try uaing

tbe whiSn of ajtegx thoroughly beatan, ntifeed with ksnoe^uioe and sugar., A

in the $&;

To dnatfoy bleak b^dn waah tbe face tbotoughly at night u p tepid water and rub briskly with a Turkish towolf then apply a mixture of once ouooe of liquor of potaana and t wo ounce*of cologne. .,.••&>:*.* .^^

To atop bleeding, K f Topi * cavity in the jew aft*-a tooth haa been extracted ahape a cork i t tho proper form and nine (poorer tba cavity and long enough to lis kept firmly in place when tha mouth is doead. _ ^ \ l

M Dr. Bhearar of Berke ocxmty, P ^ m . ,

ckuma that he kon*employed a d d wa­ter sponging and ic* bagn to the threat' in eevere caeeeof acarlet fever, during twenty yearn, and with nuch good re-nultn that be considers the iceatipcht not on ly permianablc, but actually nc rranary where the nymptomn are alarm

"s, * , * • ' *

r.Deokerofftt. Petersburg treAhl diphtheria by first given the patient a laxative, and when itn operation ha* ceaned he gWJ* odd drinks acidulated with hydrochloric acid and then a gar­gle of lime water and hot milk in equal parte every two hours. His method has been very successful. f T

Artists Wnieln ta New York., ! . f t ^ • • . • ? * : : * i -

Under thio^ beading Miss CharioUi Adams contributes a richly illustrated article to thCiF^bruary Centwy, which gives much curious information about artists' models, including the follow­ing: *•-.- -j

Among the Academy models some time since, was the son of a backer in Wail street who bad failed during a financial cirsils /Later, the young model obtained a position' in a down­town hank, but such was bis pride in his physique and his interest m a r t that h e continued to pose in the even­ing claanss. Another model, valued for his fine muscular development was a blacksmith by trade. Another wan a hounc-pamter who, during the winter monthn, when all of his trade are thrown out of employment sup ported biineolf in this fashion. Still another, also noted for his fine dovolop-ment wan a German athlete. One model, well known in bin day at the Academy, wan a half breed Indian em­ployed an coachman In a wealthy family* In hin leisure hours he poaed at the Academy, and became a popular model, but one day hin employer din-covered his aftiatic bias, and forced him to desist. He his* since returned to athe equine. sphere he adorned, and rankles in an inland city. Another temporary model waa the eon of a prominent artist in another city. Many studies of Arabs executed to New York during the peat few years have bad fbr their model a negro at tacbed to the Academy, wboatfhead and figure offered a perfect type of that race. A prosperous manufacturer of picture frame* in an interior town, having failed i n buainea*, became a mode) in New York. * * ">, * A few artists In New York bate , fhelr j models acting alno an domeetitia or studia retainer* Thin in a foreign custom imported by artists who have received their echoding abroad. Under tbeae circumstancee, a sort of comrade­ship arisen between the artist and hie faithful model, which ha* itn pathetic an well as itn grotesque side, since the remuneration of the model is apt to depend upon the nuccesnen or failures of the artist There us a colony of young artist* New York which pos­sesses a retainer kpown to the world a* "Semmy"r-a youth of muscular type, with blonde mustache and hair, and a freah complexion. His face and figure fit him for all spheres of model life. One day, he pones as a stalwart fisherman, in a pea-jacket, a disreputa­ble bat, and high sea* boots. Another week, in a dress-suit borrowed for the oceaaion, he. figures as a ball-room gal­lant, with one arm encircling the waisf, of a bald-pated lay-figure, artayed itlr| silken robe*, likewise borrowed, into whone glass eye* he gapea with an ex-prenmon of tha deepeet tendonites. Be' ha* even appeared an bold horseman seated ailride4* wooden chair, which waa placed on » table, tightly clutch­ing two pieces of clothes-line for reins, with bin body inclined at tbenngle necessary to imply a furious galloping oil tbe part of his fiery,*toed, and hi* coat-tails spread out and fastened to the wall behind to illustrate the action of wind. In addition to his accomplish­ments a n a model, thin young man does everything an artist's henchman can be expected to do in the line of general usefulness. ?

Kaweh,"

1587, not that in Y

wfrn to.abaM coaalotSn ajad aUsoimfortn

«htw at Jtabaecq, **d ,gU % The nikm famimtiitoll lulf tmA irMlolit ttint there waa not enough |p divide." En« raged by tkinaet, h»nnurderod tho of', manner*;.V.4L.*.. .. -L^&<'4&&-y M-

A. New Vol* ma* desiring to oom-mttanicaia. akat at kimnalf tout time* wklMMtli|tfMC fevJUmtotfy be

tmm i» 4 h | wail mtarmtmml «hoo^; ing'Snapsiti^ *&,*'->& _,....•<.„ $&*•<*,•••,/.' ~:-i

aVjynw|>wt< atasit raofpAly wept row­ing nriik a small poodk. ^he boat capaiwri, ilbeanob wa* drowned and tbe poodkjnwam atdmra, a ad we are longing to[know if tkia is %eksnof the aurvival of the fittest *,^^.u. :... . ;'t

,; ^ ^ Tbeftrlgla of Gates. ;^. -. •

It is weA knoWn that the ooffee plant to not indigenous in Arabia, but wan, imported from Abyssinia at a data, which cannot be accurately given. -The taste of coffee Itself bad a hard etnqrgl* at first to find a, general wal* come among tbe mora nelect circle*. Apart frodi the oldest legend concern* ing Shaded* drink, the Me^i^Bheik^ Abd-d-Ka^er is the oldest historical' authority j n the use of tbe/*brood red-.'

tbe Tunisian flm W a k i r

beverage. Itt the year yearn ago, be tells ua people made u«e of a

drink which ao lightened the n ight -watches that theVaithful of the place were nble to sing the praise* of God more fenfently w d cheerfully than oould be done anywhere else, Accord­ing to hint the Mufti Dhattani was tko first to faitroduee the ius^hificant 1H* tie bean on 'Arabinji sofl, h a v i n g ' draught iti with them* from Africa. Certain it Ss that the dWricts of Shoe,

Kaffa (whence tbe name), of the Abynstniaiiighlandn,:

1 h<5me of the coffee plant. Dbabani wan of a sickly nature, and since he belonged to the order of the Soil (UUra-Pantheists), ^ o b e v

lieved thai everything on oarCH and. all bstng ^maiiatal from the Godhead, j regained aj meai^Tof excitement of (his'! kind a piovideatial g i f t 'The Hedi-j nose and faithful Meccans hud their, turbaned neisds together in the jpublifj places wb#n first they heard the news;] a pious shdk in Aden wax tbe first to drink thai4'black juice'1 as a sort of public apebtade. In Mecca itaelf, vio-1 lent strife taroae aoon after its introdisc-tion as to the propriety of using i t There wet* great meetings of learned and pious Ijhen, who at last, probably ef|er extreme pressure fram the Mar-meluke governor, Khair^Beg, declared 1 thatcoffe4 "disturbed tbe brain and intoxicate like wine," But their op­ponents wiere of another OpljHL, and adduced Ithe authority of ^ • c e l e ­brated Bagdad * physician, A n e m i a , in tbdr Jefense^which, however, did kot prevdnt the transgressor of tbe edict forbidding the use of coffee from

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Euarara intbesoui form the

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faaing pubpicly whipped. A t Hie name time tbe tealots of tbe Hedjas pro­claimed that.all coffee-drinkers would; appearbelore the All -meidf i i l on ihe j resurrection day with Mack facea, Whi le tbdgreat anathema was -being' pronounced at Mecca, d ie brother* of the order at Cairo, the very Ma me-, lulree thethaelves, were already i e y d - : l ing fn the newly dweovered luxury. A confirmation of the Mecca degree, waa, therefore, not to be expected from/ tbe sultan, and he , Katifu Alguria, quaabed t i e order of bis governor and aent the Utter into exile. Then many h d y nbeikhs (for example, the cde -

med Harifc, founder-of fo t4 orthodox sahoolsof Is-j t^Wideclf the coffee-drink-wan the precious beau fully

in w e s t e n \ Arabia at Times. *

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m to Test kerosene. *

If you ]whk to test kerosene oil this' is the wav the suite board of health in- K**

spedorddes it: **A lajWajif quantity of oil it J>laced in an oil cup which is blackened on tbe innide to yravent t re­flection. IThe oil cup i | then placed in a largerci ipwhidi infilled with cold water up io the mark on the Inside de­noting tht height of the oil. A ther­mometer fc placed in the oil SO that the bulb is Covered, and the water i s heated. When the Uiermbmeter in -1 dicates a temperature of sixt> five dej green, the flash jet is held a designated distaucefrom thetopof tbf oil. Teat-j ing* continue every two degress unti i the temperature of ninety-flvw degree*, when the;lamp is summed and the tost _ in made for each degree until m y buj^T } ; i

dreddegt*>en in reached. Aft^tburf^S | | lamp may be replaced if •nei^aaiy a4d ] : the tentmge continued for each two degrees ] The appearance of a slight bluiak fiajne shows tliat tke> flashing point ha* r jeen i t s * , i n s i .

f 8rnort»ltt t i . - ' lW^ii r H«Hh Bfr-tww«r" H«tore« vigor, brnlA *nd eniw Djfipepd*, Impotence, Sexncl DebUity. $1.00

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