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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1889-05-03, Page 3— •-•• • flissommer,,,,IUMpa VeaVer104,00 •11'he, world was Made when man was born. Se mast taStel for himself the forlaidderasprings. •Xfo.ean. never take 'warning iroan old•faahialted things. • .4,1 Pallet tight ,eal heY. bo 0118.4.1114 as a; youth, • • • Be rauat kiss, he must love, he inust Swear to the truth . �f the friend, of his soul; bo must laugh to " scorn The hint of deceit in woman's eyes- Theyve clear as the well of Paradise .And so he goes on till the world grows old„ • 'Tin his tongue has grown cautions, his heart . has grown cold ; Tilt the smile leaves bis mouth and the ring _ leaves his laugh.- _„44e4hteolliiritthe..bright headache you ask him. He grows formal with Men and with women polite, • • And distrustful of beth when they're out of his sight, • Then he eats itfr his palate and drinks: for his . heed, . And loves for his pleasure, and 'tis time he were • dead. . • loan Bortle „ • Letter from :Horne, . Thelhotei 'hue frem thereidnight train . Broughtonly°tie passenger through- the rale; A:commercial toiirnit, weary and midi For Linde had beendaitaed collections. hail. , • Net o.single order was on his hook, The disgust he felt was shown in- his look; With o careless hand he wrote his name • On. tbe page' of a book enitriewu to fame.,: , 41ihe drowsy night clerk the•signature scanned, , • •• Tben a letter placed in the druninaer's hand; See bow- be starts, wnat a smile Of delight 'Coma over his face at the welconie sight. Open: the envelope is qinoklytorn, .„ And Over bis face GO Weary and worn . Now •Oits, like senbeams after a storm, • Stalks of,joy as -the message takee form, Thus blonde of despair that Will often appear , To the travelling Man sometimes in theyear Are quickly obipelied by such simple. means As'one friendly letter -Bow queer it eeems 1 • • " So *dyes, eweethearts, brothers and 'chums, ityou know, where we'll be when Sunday comeso Write 'us if your time will permit,- • ' Itraw,..on •ns weight and we will .reinitkluri TuitSics. • • Dal. breams. • „• HOW they.come and liotv they go,' • „. ,S.tiling up to lid'avAn ; ' subtic„way.werd thinr,:t,„ • Brillie.ut meteors, sparkling rings,. •• Whicifflash, and then ore riven ! How they go and how they ecirne, florae so restful, yearning Home; • .. " Others like wild ' Borne like fragrant, even wind; Seine iike cloutis‘upon: the Wind, ' whicn,later, turn to showers. :Bow, they Come and how they go, , Born in sorrow. nursed in woe! ' Oh, happy, useless drearningi ItainboW tinted, znaue starred.. " :Tear drops shed; sweet fancies marred - 111 all to end in seeming? i • WaN*ED But JIM Finally concluded That He 'Wonietwt be Mormon. • While waiting at a station in Smith Caro-• . lina one day, writes 01.Qoad in the Detroit •.Eice Press, 1. was joined by man who,car- ried old-fashioned 'satchel on his shoulder, and who had evidently walked. . many miles through the Inn& ' He was fully 60 years' Of age, iterawny and homely, and he eimply nodded to mo en& eat 'dole • ,on a•bale of Cotten. •In abinit .10 Minutee. . along oame a women in home -spun, fully Ids age and about as homely. . She had also had a loog.walk. .She nodded to me, andsat dawn on another cotton bale. Not a word was mid between ns for 10 ntinutee. Then as the whistleof thetrain, • was heard in_the dietetico she said to the "-Then, Jim, you ar' gWion. off ' ter jine • the Mormons.?' : . I am; •Ilannah,".he *died. "And you won't take me ?", 'And Pin to be left?" Audit won't 49 no goad to argofy ?" •• " Wall,:then, good-bye to you." • She started forward with extended arm, but pasSed,his hand and seized the satchel • ttztd flang it thirty feet • eway. Then she giabbed, him by the heir and they went off the platform into a mod hale together, , and as the train moved :slay „she watt on • top .andjamming his head into the old gold sell and saying between the, jinn : Want to jine the Mormons, do yon! Want to letiVethe old wife who's dmi lived • with yea 40 years! Want to goo-line-- 'iine, youold rabbit, yon !" , And fittY passengers gave her three eheers and a tiger es she get a new hold onhis atritirehal Whiskers.. V 4 " Boyalty.at the Banes: , There was the emartest,ehrsar of dresses at. Stuidown rites thathas been seen this season, says London Truth. Grays; green .and black, and various ehades, of terra-cotta and brown; eeeined to predetninete, though two or three white costam..ett shone bravely in ,•; tho spring sun,' and one lady, whim Olive green dreee 'watt adorned with a breed • bend of vivid briok-eolor, was as con- 'Bpi:mons as, a lighthouse. ,Soldiers and soldiers' wives, sistere, codeine and aunts,:_ • throned the enclosure, and the air was. fait of regimental " shop?: 'There were many drags; and.nattehkating and drinking .opon and , around them. Royalty was present on both 'daye-=--the Prince and. 7 .Princess on Fri lay, and the Prince alone • on Saturday. • The Princess looked charm- ing in a simple grey -diese, trimmed with astrachan ad contrived to make the • smartly dressed ladies appear very ordi- • nary. I am & Radical, but granting, for Weblike of argument, the necessity for a Qtteeng-nitist 'fief that wdriteit Who ho • perfectly Was the part athe Princess. Ttiq.6trong PnI. • AUe is diesipatedand hear ass. He Vai no idea of finaneM probity. Ile plays garde for money; he is recklessly extrava- gant soil altogether totally unfit to be your husband. / Cannot coneent to the eagage. Ment.'!. • ; "Oh, but think, papa, he* well he tocike in a ciraVving.room.. . Why, he is tlae . most &ken:ling man 1 ever danced with." A111017T CARP• ETS Some MOO *Welt are Y017 Seasonable 4liat. New. • , What do you mean byt,lie standard?" '‘ Look at this piece.of ingrain. You see the threads ere interwoven -across and lengthwise. Now, aa thread running across we call a pick.' Count the number of !. Plats ' an i„ nob. There should be four- teen. That is the way Wa Maka our 'stand- ard.' If there.are oee, twoor three lase than fourteen you Ree the cerpet, is far more loOsely woven and less 'durable, though you wouldn't notice the difference on the stir - fee°. An ingrain, you know, consist!! of several thieknesses or layers of threads woven together-‘ ply,' as we say -that is, a two-ply 'carpet is two thicknegsge of thread, and a, three.ply three.. The three- ply ie the carpet . of our' grandmothers, Mterlaving 'fallen into disuse for many years it by . coining in again. No, I don't think the rage' for the antique has anything to de withit ; people are beginning to believe again hilts servibeability, that is all. So much for the cheerier carpets. The more expensive kinds, the Ertissele and the Wilton's, are woven on arack 'upon 'wires running orosswise. Thastandard is ten to an inch. The wires being drawn, Semi= cyfindrioal tubes of Wool are left. This is Ate surface of ' the Brussels carpet. The Willow; differ in this way, that the 'tubes Of W001 are woven thicker and higher. The wires here have a knife ettaohinent on the end, and, upon being withdrawn by machinery, split directly through the top of the tiny tube. A rich and plush -like sullen ie time foreied. Here you canget effects. And delicacy et tints and shades that you can't have in a Brussels carpet. Compare these two piece's," and he threw on the floor aide by '"side a Wilton and a Brussels. " Now, these are exactly the same - pattern. That is evident, Made of exactly the game shade and hind of wool: That is not 09 evident, for it doesn't seem so in the least; their effect is totally. differ- ent. he plush and velvety surface of the Wilton has a dittoed', a richness, a deli- cacy Which make the Brussels leek flat beside it. Still, you ' wouldn't notice the aifferanceur PR -y-andempa re theinake tly 58 we hew) been doing. This oarpet, the Wilton, is thicker and finer , siva heavier and handsomer than the other, but it costs just about twice as much. An Aiellester Oh, that is the finest Of air "News of Nelson's Victory Caine t" loseph,flutherlatid, wholvas a polvdet4307, "-eitliderd the veiled which first brought to Englsnd the) news, Of Nelsen& :rioter, at Trafalgar, has justettairted his 100$h year At Milton; Sittinghoitine. has good • beat* and has all hie taaalties West,' ; 7- rafAN4aell al STOVES - Solite lPointo on the Ircononar of Feel in • the Nelleebei4t 17..ow to IninlMize the eXpeotie of heating ia question 'of vital importance to the majority **citizens. What was recently whited out relative to the wasteful ass of coal for manufacturing parpoees is no less true of coallor.domestio waea. Yew families get anything like the mann:min caloric neWer out ef, their fuel, itnlahe reason •is largely their own lack of kneffecigis or their carelessness. •Witla the exception. of Ken- tuohY' and. _Arkansas lignite, which. rune very low in caloric power, the differentiae between. various kinds of coal • are, after all, merely nominal, and the question :of economy in coal resolves itself! largely into one of use or '.'treatment; The manage- nient'of fire§ is the one important thing fclr people who wish to economize to post them- selves on. As in factories, ee in. private dwellings, different, fuels require different treatment. 'The harder the..ccial • and the stronger the, draught. the, thicker should, be , the bed of .coalti, or, , in other wordp, the • deeper should be .the fire -pot- Efenes '014e of stoVa. ,height of chimney, supplying of fuel, and. judicious. shaking or Peking of the fire are important factors in the economy of Joel. In a general way the loss of heat results from 'comer other of three or four causes. Whenever the prodicts of combustioe are removed at toe high a, temperattire, or there is a greater inflex of air than ia necessary to keep the fire sufficienty .or warm ashes or cinders are prempittated, too soon„ or the combustion is iii3perfect, there neces- sarily results a great loss of heat. So far e.s.imperfect combustion is concerned, the escape of combestible gases, the fall of coal into.the ashpan, and the precipitation, t.f carbon as spot are the•ahief encases. Now; these are facts that the,inasses are apt to overlook, and in a measure they are all under the control. of the one managing the fire. It will be noticed that the only effort usually made to reclaim thisloss_is. to sift out of the ashes the bits of coal that have dropped down. Why not aim to' save the other lost produets? TO begin withi there is„11.04:jectiael.:10,34.n..„antioltiatoses•As•atn with it large fire -pot can be ran lower in point of , heat and. expense than a smaller. drive. The thickness of coals over the grate can be better adjusted 40 the draught. A greater or lees' eccninulatien. of ashes--on.ithe-obottci,m--ofthepotis all that:is necessary to regulate, this matter. Poking and shaking -should be avoided as Much as possible, and the large !stove re: quires thie less than the smaller 0130. _There • is thus less partially burnedcoal precipitated into the ashpan, and the:heat' of the aches constantly accumulating in the •firepot , is utilized to the fullest. When 'these are poked Or shaken down they cool almost immediately, . and the heat is lost. Another important point is the bare given‘ to the draught.: No stove should be forced any more than possible, And with proper attention the necessity for forcing can be inininiixedr-41oinbustion requires that the constituents of the air and Inc fuel should unite in exact proportions. Too much or too little air will entail logs of ' heat. . As the quantitynfair admitted into the stove in a 'given time increases its velocity is accelerated, and the air Regime up the chimney in a highly heated :Condition and bears off heat in the measure of the velum° end velocity of tho'current. If too :little air is admitted, carbonic oxide instead of; .carbonic acid is developed and passes away in.like manner.' Hence a fire -pot adequate to the neede. of draught, the avoidance ; of. poking out bot ashes into the ash=pan and of distutbing.the peals, sha the closing of all direct draughts Of,tbe stove that *Wald afford egrese for hot air, gatises, andlin- eonstimed carbon in the forth of soot are factors in the economy of ;fit& .more iai- portant than the selection of the Material. Why Are Deserts Barren? . . ' Why are desertil.iockY end sandy? The answer is that . without vegetation there is no Stich thing as sail on earth. anYwhere. The tOp. layer �f the, land in ell ordinary carmine° is comprised entirely of . vegetable- ntotild; the decaying remains Of innumer- able generations of .. Weede and grams.. Earth to earth is the rule of nature. Soil, in .fact, :connate .entirely of deed leaves: And where there are no leaves to die and dopeythere can be no ' mould' or 'Boil to sPeals of. Darwin showeitin his laid great book thet,we owe the whole earthly rioter- ing of Our hilis andplaifls alnioet entirelyla the perennial exertions of that .friend,of the farmer, the harmless, necessary earth- worm. Year after year the silent worker is birsy, every night plating' down Leaves through his tunnelled burrow. into his 'underground pest, and Jhere• contorting them, by means Of his 'endings, into the black mould which produces an the,end'for lordly men all his cultivable fields and pais, tura tenths andmeadotta,, Where there are 50 leaves MA no earthworms, there.can be no soil; and Tinder those eirmitnetances we get what We familiarly know ada deport. When new land risett ihreie the sea ir Bret emerges bare and rugged like a sett ,cliff: No living thing is harbored •011 it naked. miriade.- In time,' as :rain falls ,nperf its jetted . :peaks . and ' barren pinnacles, the rook 'crumbles,' and,,dreame weigh -down &TOES of, sand and Mud into the Valleys end •hellews. Lichenii begin . to spring in, patches on the hare fliee,' of the. Vila; and .ferni, whose spores lotie: been wafted by oFb�rno on the feet of unconecitins birds, sprint; here and there from the clefts and crannies.. These, as they die and I deem?, form 0 thin layer of Vegetable mould, the first beginning Of a l'cichl soil; in which the ieatthwbrin7- imperted in the egg on driftwood or floating, weeds -sets to burrow,. and which increemes by his constant labor, :On the Boil thus de - Posited fielding .'planta and . trees root themselves as fast ail Betide, nutsand fruits; •aro Wafted to the 'island by various acci- dents:: from :surrounding countries.. The: new land thrown np in , the Olaf Of Coyle]] four years *go by the great eruption Of Krakatoa hes inthis.way already clothed itself find head 'to foot with a Instiiiiint sheet of ferns, mosses and other vegetation. ÷Cornhill 'Magazine. , A Thiere Novel Disgialse. The den Who has done .so Much home stealing in thewestern pert of Qacenie county is locked up at Newton. Ho Was apprehended at Trenton, Now Jersey, hay-. ingin his poSsession & horse which Wa9 One of a team that he stole from Peter Lnyeter, of Newton,.last.Sonday night- ' -the other horse was found in a stable in Brooklyn. No trace; however, has been obtained of the four horsee that • he' stole from' F. W. Dunton, .Of Morrie Parks, or the fine animal he took from Mr. Van Peltiof Corona. He , has been ,identified as the man who was seen in the places •narned and bad thei horses in his possession at dil. fared pitted' trying to dispose of, them. On these occasions he appeared- to have two eyes'. When arrested he had but ono eye arid his identification was not easily,estri-b: Halted, A .glisse eye was found in his -Olotheaand-wherk deiced in the socket every person ,tecegnizea him. -Brooklyn Eagle: , • *• Peculiar , BolterSti- Mywife, sister and daugh- ter' 'eloped together 168i nightil Brilterres, sir. Balton -Who Were tho three seenndrels ? he 'wad n Mc on. .• titters Lot. ••• 'A' Very busy Young Mari,ithe Week of wheat' wedding ,had been decided Open; wroto to his fiancee, tin a pastel card, "What day, Tues.?" The answer dune back promptly, Pled on a postal card y" • A. Mau in fielifornie has:played 18,832 gantesuC*hist.dutint,the:iptik41: *dente and he thinlid it in it wanton Waste of time fotitomen to paint king -legged elorkii and *der Midi On' brass plaques. • COAL AND ,iptimarprienaQiiir. --Al2--JkCgmbriolcined-ria-g-gara- • clastolerc .0verweight. • . • Do good by stealth.and blush .to find it fame". may have • been. excellent .advice when Mr. Pope wrote, but it would require reshaping : to bring it into harmony with -Modern requirements. A Yorkehire coal dealer, who hes been doing good by Stealth on quite an • extensive Beale, not has caned to blits,h at finding himself fined by a police magietrate. The philanthropte trader owns a weighing Machine which giVep .hie tomera 21 lbs. overweight on every hundred- weight.' Some time ago hie attention was effibially drawn to the fact, and he received' solid warning tlitit if he 'continued his' sin- ful benevolence he would be attnimOned.' A weighing machine that gives overweight it; as illegal as one that does the other thing, the' law demanding a.perfect adjustment of balance. This oddly Samaritan reftesed to believe, however, that his stealthy benefac- tions Were.punishable, and So/pereisted itt adding the little bonus to every htmclied- weight of black diamonds that left his shop. A fine. cif 6s, and costs is the result, *the bench expressing the opinion that it 'looked nlittle hard to punish a men for cheating himself to benefit Ilia customers, ' It does look hard, no doubt, but what a .splerldid advertieethent„-Looden • •tvash Your Dantis.':'. • Cases Of infection thet•cOulaboaccotinted for in, no Other Way' hate been explained hy'the fingers es a vehicle. , TO 'handling Money,. especially of paper, door •linabB, banisters, pat straps:and a hundred , things that every one mint freonently touch, there ere chances innumerable of picking tip germs of typhoid, scarlatina, diphtheria, smallpox, etc.. Yet settle perecirreactually Fit such things in their mouths,' if not too large! ' Defer° ,eating„ or :.totiching.'lliat Which is tO be' eaten, the hands shinad be immediately and scrupulously Washed. We hear much &beet general Cleanliness eel "next to godliness." It may be added•that here, in particular, it is also ahead of health 'Ana safety, - :The Jews made: no. mistake in that 'except they Washed•they Menet," It was & anisary ordinanco as well as en ordinance of decency. , Uneasy AbOtat "Wife (at bedtime)-pyrUe, : day. is this? , • . • HusbandL.Widlicieday. Wife :(anitioutily; heading si email Pelt of tronsera at era& •length) - I 'am afraid johnuy3liogii„,ws‘flyrtui.VEfe,„ generally has at least two pounds more Of marbles itt hie pickets • at this' time iti the 'Week than he has to -night., , • 00141741119 IN A 114,111C.. paw $‘ member of the Sian!' Venally Ended • as Manama. James Smith suffered some troub e from his :surname. Sydney Sraith is reported to, have named hie sone Douglas and Wyndham, not that he had any etonneoton with these noble familiee,* but to distin- guish them from theiother Smiths. Jafeert Smith; when a trolinitor, says a writer in " Temple Bar" for March, was vary much troubled by_another James Smith, who came to live ill the 'arslie bode°, Deeds and con. Ifidential secrets went to the wrong Smith. James Smith 'determined to put an end. to the dilemma, and told the new arrival he must leave. "Why should I leave ?" said She intruder. ' "Because," eaid jamas Smith," you are ;fames the second, and, Pinot. ahdicate." There is something in a name.,- The Duke of Newcastle, of borough mongering, celebrity, was once asked fa a daVe fishing newly arrived clergy.; man. • The reply .was,:. • "The' Duke of Newcastle" cannot comply with Mr:-/sT6se's request. P. S. --,-Finding kir. Nose's name ie Eose, he is pletteed to grant his reqnest.", ^ A Scotch Courtehii. 1 ktiO a young fellow who wap .very OWE* 013 a Scotch: spinster. She was; a wealthy, Scotch epinster, but if there is a kind of woman who Most ' be.loved economically' and for herself alone it 'is a 13c.oteh spinster. • Scotch, spinsters are warranted to make good wives all the•time. It is awfully hard to be untrue to a *Satoh woman. Site makes: you se very comfott- able andholds you to her not so` much by Your heart es,bY your bank account.", She doesn't always want new bonnets.; ,sloe is rattier liable to object even toyour having a now hat until the old one is quite worn out. A Scoteh wifepan keep her hueband neat and trim and herself and her children its Well at a imaller expense than any other. She doesn't • want diamond . ear -rings •for her birthday.' All yon have to do isto show her your bank aocount and kiss her and tell: her yoli owe the • balance to her, and she is •quite satisfied. , This young • fel- levi did not understand. the Scotch spinster, pl_d_v_zben...he.„.t.hought_to_pteasither,he_sent., hers lovely and expeneiVe basket of flow- ers. He went up to receive her thanks and smiles, and lie was . qititeknocked over :wlien she tolehint that be hadn't a big enough salary, to waste it in buying 1194:Vets ,foi%, her or. itny.body else, and ehe maa_aorry.. to see he was se extravagant, loecatise tither- wiee he was " a Very plf•asin' young Paari," He lied himselfinto her . good grime by saying he had got the flowers 'for nothing, and he thought he could not Make better use of -them, • She smiled* -graciondy and said: " Seein' they did ne.' cost you tiny - thing iVe a great bcimplinient." She was -a woman after all. -an Franciico Chronicle. ' Popular riousia tie Did Not Dance. ,,.. A popular young man . who, despite the fad that he does not dance, is rather.. Pro. ininentin the social life of the town; told 'me recently .hOW he Managed to transform hielnability to dance lutes new elan:tent of . popohrity. • ' I got the idea front. a girt"' he explained., "and I have ' frozen to right along. , I met her. out one night; ea. Observing thatI was not dancing, 'she asked me if I never danced. I 'confessed that I did not, and went on to Say that rwas•con- •,stantly bemoaning that laqt. 4 Undoubt- edly,' she said,' you must find it annoying at timee ;,and yet if you , knot,/ how, ' to make nee of it, do you knoW'. thet, in ' one vhty you • have an . advantage growing out of the very` facit that Yon do not dance?' Of course I wanted an explanation. 'Why, Ws simple enough,' she said. 'Never put your name down for a dance Until toward' the end Of the evening:Then , put , your name down for just one dance with each of the girls in whom you are most interested By the time that„your dances are due the girls will have been . dancing for heinre, and. i*Si have .become _pretty well . *red out. Then as yon lead 'them out ,. i 5. oor -pronto:ie.-W.-promenade-Met: ,,,,,of ..lic-tion and dependnpen it they will Mentally bless you for your consideration-- on will heye gained' far morethan the h you had danced With them; ever . so, gracefully: Well, I've,tried that suggestion "continued -, the youth, il and 'I never knew it to fail. It's s'great ides..9-41bany Express. : . , , tireen the Popular Spring Shade. " What I was most stria& by irt this early display of summer millinery was the pre- dominant color of green in everything: All the hats were symphonies in light Shades of green. I thought perhaps the Winter mind was merely startled bythe whir df ripe native, and that probably theee. hats were no greener than they are every year, but in the next window I was confronted by great assortment of gloves; some of thein nearly a yard long: These were Of the Berne .shade of green es, the hats. ,In another window were etookings .just as green as , the gloves.: Then. there was lovely ,silk underwear, likewise pale green. There Were' green paresold, and I panntro yon that one Window contained Ja' het covered with light green rases. So, you see, the beautiful brightness of nature is to adorn our girls during. the Coining hot season. - The, -Shops are . certainly well Inciolied for tba'gastier trade, and. the Sidewalks in front of•the windows are con- stantly thronged with eager 'pining women who rapturize oVer.this dream of a bonnet .or that love of 4 hat with an enthusiitinn delightful to witness.-Ciora 'Letler, to the Indianapigi$ Journal., • • Silk Dr'esses 'and Ne* ilOnriels„ " I haven't bad a silk dress sande 1WU married, nor's new bonnet for three* sea- ents,'!-ttstoplainfr Mrs. She de- clares she ie bound to have a neW holiest it she had AO wink for it herself,' This is tine grit, but many ladies who would gladly work hard to 'attain a desired- objectare unable, to do becattee they are almost always conatan ly 'aided with diseases Peculiarto their sex: Dragging -down pains, displacements, leticorrhea,and other uterine !disorders are the • bane of 'many Women's lives; but Dr. Pierce's Pisvorite Prescrio- thin will don where , all other cornpotinills fait It hi the ,only medicine for tvonien, sold by druggiste, under a positire.gUarantee froth the manufacturera that it will give Satisfaction in every case, or 'money Will be refunded:„ This guarantee has been printed On the bottle -wrapper, and faithfully oar, tied Ont•for e> At s IMO 5$ costamilalioe • , • rst ..• • ": . . HARRYING •WOti. TlieBz-utaj on the 04,4-, ralcarrint'a. " The pollee having ascertained that the house's had not been fortified left the (bet, tering,'Faro and ,the hull; of their military and .thvil faros in reserve in the village. Only 60 constabiee accompanied the sheriff and his men throughout the distresaingilaY.- The houses Visited were grouped together, rendering easier the Work of the crowbar. brigade. In some instences a feeble attempt at barricading had been made. The tenant„ce of the first two • hanses .faond themselves on the roadside within a half hour of attack: At the third house the painful monotony of the proceedings was varied' by a vigorous attack made upon; the sheriff by the tenatit'e wife'who'• despite the inoumbrance of a Vweeke-oldohild in her arms, belabored the minion of the law with.a dick -until &policeman camel° the , rescue, The poor women retreated inside and clung tensoiettsly to a bedpost, whence she was brutally torn by two burly .the baby being almost killed in the struggle. Patrickrp'Bilen, the risk of being; sent to prison for another long term for obstructing the. police, react:Led the infant and lulled it ..to sleep with matronly skill. , At the fourth house the bailiffs turned oht a bed -ridden old dame despite indignant protests that the 4poeure wouldkill her. , Real redetance was only offered at the last two houses visited, but the defences were, " . eo.feeble that they were peon broken down, and the garrison; consisting all told of one man and ten 'women, weresent off to prison. rourteenout of 70 families were evicted to -day .---,LondonCorregpondent cf the. New York Sun. Wanted to be yeard Trona: If any perm* has ever given .Dr. Page's Catarrh Remedy a fair trial, and has not heen perfectly and permanentlycnred, that person should write the, proprietors of • that. wonderful remedy, for they are in 'dead' earnest and; "men business" when they offer $500 reward for a ease of nasal °insult, • no Matter how bad, or of howlong standing, which they cannot Cure. The , Remedy is mild, soothing, deodorizing, antiseptic, cleansing and healing. , ,the singing -Teacher Dodge. . The following is the latest swindling,' echerion _reportaLA._,Bleek"., party ,rept:e,, senting himself as a first -glass singing 'teacher goes through a, neighborhood and • gets several of the best farmers to sign," their names to a subscription piper. A ' very low price RI asked,' and no trouble is • had ingetting ell the good one: he Wants. , The. "teacher,!' of course, fails to put in an appearance after the names are obtained,. but those Who Signed after a few days find their note at the bank for collection, the , subscription paper being a premiesory riots' payable tolbeerer. The singers'heve ample .. time to sing after the " teacher " has gone, •to look .for More suckers.' • Is it possible that peoploWill ever learn to earefullyread* pipers which.they are requested to'sign " by strangers Then fie clasped her with emotion, Drew the maiden to his breast, Whispered Vows of tine devotion; . ' The old, old tale -you know the'rest. From his circled arms upspringing, • • . With a tear she turned away.: And her voice with Bono* ringing, oTshall not see my•bridal day." •Thio dramatic speech ' broke him up badly; but when she explained that her., apprehensions Were founded on the fact ot. an inherited predisposition to consumption in her family,* °alined her . fears., bought. e bottle of Dr. Florae's Golden Medical Discovery for her; end she is now the in- carnationpf FOr'all bronchial, throat, end lung affections, it isa potent remedy. : served, Hint Efghti, "bit true, Angelina," said a ybunglady fiddr,essitig. all • acqoaintencti,_." that; there . „ has-been- an-ilirtlYe'berw_een-Ydfr-'-s12&10 ence . De Johnes ? " It is quite true." ; . .• • :44, " Gracious! What was the cense ? 41 "He was addicted, to,the use of !gang." " Oh " "Yes, I begged hid to discontinue the , habit, but he persisted in it." ".And the result ? " • 1' The result ie heis in thesoup.'( „ Too Much *anthill:on, California his a new grievance -the dan- delion. . •Some years ago it , is said that a citizen imported from the east the seed, of the °Ia.:fashioned dandelion. wanted • something to remind him Of his early home; Like the man who imported the sparrow, he did worse than he The sparrow is everywhere, so is the dandelion. The , seed drifts in the windlike, that Of the . thistle, the down is built, into the nests. of • • birds, and every Seed Which get; a lodge. ment on a lawnor grass plat will, in due time, produce a Million moro. Now th'e eolitary dandelion ,is 'Very attractive in . bloom, and hardlyless so When after the blosiionns the gitnis globe appears, and a few days afterward pee sailing off beforef the wind _like • a small balloon. But the. citizen who is forced: to •dig .np hie 11Wn because , Minim:1.404410n roots :have strangled the grass will utter no benediction over this rich. golden Fran, , -else° BuUetin. •: •Vidanil 'that' All in ilarmbny. A.1 --What a dude, anyWay 13. --He is the graceless 'eon of t gotisd and Stupidity ; hiS sistere ate Vanity and Heartlessness. There is Only onething to • praise abont himand that is he lives itt. harmony with the rest of the family. D ;•0 16, 1 8. 9 it • $106 ContecIera.te Mn oey far•50c. Send to J0i3N' • W. WATTS, 11.1outgomery, Ala.. • • IMPERIAL PE'14,-ANO'PkNCIL STAMP With voter bonus': to print cards, mark bookq, linen. etc. Single staniti , 25c. Club Of six. 81,00. .easti to aconlir • _pan y order. ii. BARNARD, hubbet, TiOnip Works, ila‘ivilton, Out. • • • ‘bogfairs' THE;comes BET FRIEND