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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1882-12-08, Page 7relay world would be this earth The there no little children in it; . The song -of life woutel lose its mirth Were there no drildren to begin bro beim within our arms to leap; No- littlefeet toward slumbertendlng; No little knee iii.prayer.te bend, • Ourlips. to theirs the sweet words lending. No rosy boy's,at wintry Merl, With satchel to tile -schoolhouse hasting; No merryshouts as home they rush; No precious morsel for their tasting. Tall, grave. grown people at the dor; Tall, grave, grown people at the table; .The men on busineos all itsteuti- The' dames lugubrious' aa they're able, The Sterner soul would get more stern, • Ilt.feeling naturet iniore inhuman ; And men to stoic coldness turn, And woman wouldlie thall Wb1/18,41. - Life's song,..incleed,,would foie its charm Were. there -no babies to begin it; . A doleful place this world Would be Werethere no little people in it. QUEEN OFI OUTLAWS. Lynching of MarySullivan in Caldvtell . County, Kentucky.. •Fatelttit, Stories _ or Itatleitry, Etveediegt the Deeds- or tht. Jews lirothert. . The following strange story of lawless love and lawlesS hate connected_ with the . hanging of Miry 'Sullivan . by a iiiibb in .0aldweil county, Kentucky, is -given,- in`the Louievilie Con/Item-tat t • • - i Abut ten years 'ago there lived• in the. bottoms, along Tradewater River, in the northern . part of Caldwell county, two ' :families destined to,inost terrible ends -the: Carepb.elis at& the Sullivans. They were considered neither - better nor . Worse than • those .about them; They .were :ignorant, andrathershiftless, but, so Were many others in the ,neighborhpod. Soon,_ lOwever,-the country 'people round about. • began to, say strange things- of the girl Mary. Sullivan. _ She wes.a.briglitt. quick girl of 20, with light hair, light bine . eyes,. and a • . little above the: medium. int. eiZet No man -. for -mile& about could - outlift her. _With gen or pistol . Ishii was a dead shot.. Oa -horseback there- wasn't et bey in the county : who: could ride teeter over rougher country o.r -Whodared tocominithejf the dare -devil • pranks that Mity.coustantly. delighted in-. - The effect of all this in it quiet country . neighborhood. „cart . hardly . be. imagined :Mary Sullivan's_ name became the by -word ...- for all that was infamous, and- the staid -country .reatrocie lulled their babies to Weep, with stories of -the horrible Mary and her midnight rides. and. -crimes. Then. • - ruiner turned- ta other things. - Mary was. _ often seen, with the CaMpb-ell hope, and Once or:twice she. Was seen .with -thein and her brother late at night, dashing it her usual break7neckspeed, over . the country . roads.. About this time the most daring robberies began to be. permitted in .the northerrt . end of the county. ' Farmers - found their smokehouses open night after - night. • Several stereo _were- brcilien into and robbed,. and, strange to say, no one- kuew whoecimmitted the crimes. One old farm.er began to talk very- freely, saying :he: .recognized Mary - Sullivan at the- heed. of. •the. Canipbeila breakitato his smokehouse. A day or so afterward Mary:gailoped up to. his. house,, called biteout, and asked him, what he meant by saying What he did. ' • .• "Did. you.seeine and the Campb.elhiat your. • Smoke -house rt. asked: she, at the - tame time pulling, it big navy revolver and elievingit tinder 'his.. nese. The old. Mali. stammeredout an apology, and was never . afterward heard to bey.a word against the. Campbells. •• Among the 'most bitter- deneuncers of the gang, was an old-mait inamed Feilters, who lived a fewmiles away from them, on the,Traclewater. One night, just threepears, ago, two men, afterward discovered to. be Tem Sullivan and 'Reilly Campbell; rodenkto old roan Felkerst took him snd. his oldwife out,andbeat them severely.They then rode off.. TWO affair caused, the most intense exeitement. A nielt was, hurriedly organized, and .some ferrymenrode over to the Camp- bells'. . Mary 'Sullivan. had in some Way. heard that . they Were coming several bows beforelistelt She and her brother To went over to the, little log hut of the Campbells- and barricaded themselves. Fire - was Opened', by the mob„ and the Campbells( . and- Sailivans-promptly-returned it -Atte . alittie the besieged made it SO. 40for the mob: that it had, to retire. The only men . hurt in: the -melee' was:TOM-Sullivan, who was shotin the breast, but who awl), reciov- .. t„ • ered.• . A RCIMANTICtIllSotkE... i - - • _. Thegaug beam:ale more', bold after this, and robberies becamenaere frequent. At VesALth' : tint°, an event liappetiedtwhich was tieed. to. cause the entire destruotion of iie band. Mary .Stiilivai.n. met -Crockett- - Jenkins: . The, meeting itself was romantic enough- to merit being told. ' Mairy,Wiie riding along the. Tradewater one spring, • - day, two, years_ ,ago, When, she saw a_ man - on the other side preparing to dross over. Themater was_ deep, the littletriver having been raised: by f requent rains, and slie cried 1.2.416-Win0A.ilitu OftWiLtnr2.,!tielr.t ' -*AS - top: strong for the horse, and he soon threw' hierider off and tried to BEM him- self. - Then, with his winter clothes • on, Jenkins -would most certainlY have been, . . drowned bdt for Mitres. cleehieg out. into • the stream with hr' horse and rescuing ' him at th.e peril Of 'her lite.- She took the 131all uitto her brether Tom's to let. hire dry his cloth. . A. Mama admiration •soon . - spgiing up, Which q_aiokly warniedinto_leve. - that, time on Mary Sullivan and . Crockett • Jenkins were Warm lovers: .0.enkins,,, who lived wine miles away, - molted over to Suilivante, . and the love. of leol.t1VO, %VAS the talk. of thebounty.: "]j will kill Crockett Jenkins if. he dares to:betray me," she .has fetid. to more than. • - One. One, night about a month ego. Mary . &Cense& Crockett of infidelity. He laughed . at -her. She Was -tea exdited• to get her, . pistol,: but she sprang at •his- throat, A struggle; tollewek:and: Mary. would. have . strangled -him- then an.d.there but for inter. fennel!. Crockett left the hoUse. Some time before this, the band; Moved up from - -Tratlewater bottoms, and had hired- a little grocery some four miles,. away on a publio: road leading to Princeton. A day or so. , after; a Orowd. a men front Princeton were riding:. by the little grocery, all drinking . very freely-, when elle of them ins moment: painless fixed off his pistol.- The Campbells, thinkingthe incib was on them again, rushed.- out oftthe grocery -and. began ,firing. The. Men returned- the -slots and 'then gallopped on to town. This created another tempest of exiiitement, and the .next day a mob was got together extert rainate the Campbells. THE CAMPBELLS' DEATH, . The next night forty raki,-armed to the teeth, -with masks on. theirfsese and hatred in their hearts swept down the road toward 'the hole- log- cabin- where the Campbells kept their grocery. In the housewas a family named Pilaturt3r, an ' old man:and borne Brasil ohildten. The only other in- • mates were Reilly Campbell:- 'and his brother Bad. The leader of _the mob_ calle& out to , the Monurtys to leave the house, -whieht they instanty-did, stauding, out in the woods shivering and, wetting for what horror they hardly knew. Preparatioes. were iestantly made by the two men ha the. house for a fight to the death-. Quartet • was. neither asked ..nor given. The mob opened fire and the Campbells answered them. Then. the • firing became fierce and fast. 4 groan: came,. frorathe_ outside, and a little group hurried a. Mau off in their mins. It was Him) Johnson; a.well-to-do, respeetable farmer. a ball through his. breast; and bled to death Out on :the road, with the pistol:balls flying over his head: singieg his requiem. Then came a groan from within, and Reilly Campbell fell at hiebrother'efeeit. But Bud steed. to his gime, doggedly' firing awayinto the night whenever hesave- the flash of an -enemy's gun. The next morning he was dead. THE END(20F MARY SULLIVAN. . Nobody knew where Mary Sullivan was all this time. More then -one of the mob afterward confessed that if Mary had been there the job would not have been *inch an easy one.- A night Or two later some men returning from a visit to a neighbor's thought they' heard a man'il voice pleading with some one for mercy. They weretnot poeitiveAnt thought the person addressed. was called "Mary." The next day the life. leas b'ody of Crockett Jenkins was found swinging from the limb of. a giant oak at the top of a tall hill: The moral prod that Mary 'Sullivan committed- the . crime, assisted. by her mother and sister i seethed to be conelusive, but there was no positive proof. • And so-, when Marp.and her mother and sister were arrested, nothing could be done to the. - They were all -discharged, and when. Mary went back honie she found death's headnotices glaring at her, warning her to leave • the neighborhood. . All the rest �f her friends - were, either dead . or wounded, or had kft. Bad Campbell was dead ; Reilly Campbell was dead ; Crockett Jenkins was dead; her brother Toni hail gone sway. to recover from his wound; her Mother and sister had fled,; she was an outcast and alone. 13ut in: spite of all this the woman's in- domitable courage never failed. her., .She went off to Make arrangementeebont sell - tag some cows, primed -arid oiled her pistols • and then wrote defiant notes to ter enemies. 'Oa the 29th of Septeraber she :vide over told Farmer Hubbell's ,inid asked. for lodging for the night. She :had .her little 5 -year-old child,with her. About 10` o'clock a voice called her to the door.' Her usual prudence -seems to have deserted her. She did not even take her pistols, which for flit) years had never left her hand day or night. She reached the door, opened it -and peered out. The night was • dark and. windy. Heavy rainy clouds hid . everything, and she failed tO see the five men with pistols in their hands standing within, a, few feet of her. She opened the door and. stepped out. Three Strong pairs of arins reacihed out from the darkness, • and in an instant. she was whirled away out to the public. road. She knew whet • fate ley in store for her; but uttered neither • threats tier entreaties. • She said never a *Ord, but walked along • qnietly with her captors. They bound her • arras and feet, and, tossingher over a horse as though she Was a meat sack, they joined the mob- which was waiting for thanon the road. . They rode on tilt Mary:recognized with a thrill of horror: that they Were approaohing the place *here Jenkins was hung._ -They halted under the verykree, and the.leader, taking a rope from behind it, solemnly fastened the noose aboithe , woman's neck. She never ilinehed. They "took her -off the horse, dragged her to the 'foot_ of. the tree, 'threw the rope .ove the =same limb from which Crockett je kith; !had dangled a week - before, .and die ' the . woman up. A convulsive„ horrible sh dder :ran through her frame, but She spoke.iever :through the hrtinchesof the wood, whipper. a weird. The wind Moaned disly, ing to the trees as it went that a. wornan's body, bold and stiff in death, was swiiag frem- the tallest branch of the old oak tree. 1 MATCH FOR,THE TURK. How Lord Dufferin's Departure is Regarded on the Bosphorus. .• • HIS LORDSHIP'S ODD WAYS. • A, Constantinople ooriespondent says : Lord Dufferints Egyptian mission is stil the engrossingsubjeotof conversation. The Turks were led to believe for a long time •after he had arrived- that they had gat kold of a green hankand Hie Majesty fairioied he might safely -visit upon the British Ambassador the dislike and anger he felt for Mr. Gladstone.. What could thepeciple :out here-, accustomed to regard, the great Elchees" (Ambassadors) as sinall kings in their way, think of one Who might lie seen anydaystepping out ascontmon street cab or trotting along on -the back of ° a hack picked up at the nearest corner. His Lordship was probably not aware of the leeks of amatiemeut which followed his course as the natives recognized him thus • rushing shoat without any of the usual surroundings of his high rank or the hideous appearance he sometimes presented to the European eye. I recollect on one - occasion being forcibly reininded. Of Don Quixote as I met His Lordship coming atoitg through Pera, his spare form seated --the beck of veritable Itoeinante." Its tail had been tied Up in a twist to keep it clear of the .mud, and the owner was working it along at high pressure by the. application of a " Sairey. Garnp " Umbrella to itti hind quarters. With all his absence. of pretendelhere is, however, n0. twin. with • greater pride than Lord Dufferin; and, having a -fine old -Irish temper. of his own, he can -comedown properly at times Upon auy one that may chance to offend his • dignity or thwart his purpose, as the Turkish Ministers have felt on more than one oceasion. Seeing His Lordship, as I have said, casting aside all the traditions of anibassedorial life itConStantinople, reapi- ng aboutunattended in the streets and in :society instead of maintainiag the dignified reserve . of his colleagues laughing and flirting with all the girls and dancing away like the youngest bachelor militant, no wonder the Turks were -led to depreciate the diplomatic force that lies behind this careless manner.. They found out. their •naistake, however, in the recent negotia- ticins on the.Egypthin question,. when Lord Dufferin So cleverly beat them at their own genie. His.Lordship speaks of returning by Christinae, and Lady Dufferin says that she still hopes_ to give society the promised theatricals at the. embassy before leaving for her 'spring trip to England. Her Ladyship is a wonderful mottoes, •and the perforniancesr an the embassy. Stage are real treats to the 'British colony. The mother of grown up BOOS anddaughters She has naturallyreached a certain age, but the youthfulness of her figure carries Off a great deal, and her getup is. so wonderful that I. have heard an. admiring critic of the male sex declare more than once that it is: well for the peace of Mind of her friends that Lady Dufferin does not always lOokas sbe does upee the stage, Both Lord and Lady Dafferin- are extremely popular ..in European society, and deservedly- Se, for. they are exceedingly kindhearted and ever ready to join in any scheme for its &mugs- ment. tieMarhable -Fact. • Although the foot is .tworthy of remar. the explanation is easy( The fact. -Al- though the dealersin Dr. Wilson'iPulmon- ary Cherry Balsam are authorized, to return ,the money in every case to the purchaser when that wonderful remedy did not give satisfaction, not One application of that nature has yet been made notwith- standing the number of years the remedy has been before the public. The explain, ation.-The Balsani is prepared with the greatest -care and is represented as just what it is. This being the case no one OEM • possibly be deceived in regard to its merits. The fact iethe mote remarkable from the consideration, that diseases of the, throat and lungs for which the Balsam is a sure remedy are 80 Common and SO generally considered incurable that many who have been given up by physicians have resorted to it with better results than they hoped for. • HOW to Pronounce Egyptian Names. . --Mr. Stanley Lape-Poole,'than whom it would be difficult to find amore competent authority, has addressed to L0114012 newspaper some much4eeded instruations as to the pronunciation of the Egyptian proper names �f Which 1Patriotic poets, in Engiand are making such a sad hash. "It may be laid down as a general rule," he • says, " that Egyptian narnes of. places and people are much' better kept in the middle of the line, Outof the waP of the rhyme. Te neglect Of this rule results in such mistakes Tel-el-Kebir rhyming with sabre,Lwhen it is really pronounced '4 Tel -el Kelitier "and. would - rhyme with 'severe,' Arabi,'" again, does not agree, either in accentor in the sound of the lait syllable' with lullaby,' but rather with aharpy ; ' and Kassassio iS no rhyme for sieassin,'though it inigiit run with.' as e. Scene Ismailia, with the. iitittant on the penultimate, Port Said and Zagazig accented on the last .syllable -are generally mispronounced in the verses Which the warhae inspired;" • Mr. Line -Poole ,-..doei3 not •fail to notice thatLAenn-ysciii-- .dicl. --not trouble him -- self about • accents when! he made the Caliph Haroun Er-Rischjd into Haroun al-Raschid, and he concludes his 'letter With a Pradtioal remark the, pregnancy, of Which Anierioan newspaper readers will lie quite as prompt as their British brethren to recognize as follows : "Our various and complicated modes of spelling Oriental names are certainly to bliune for much of the confusion, and vihen the seine plebe is spelt in SilE. different ways by. six different maps or six different correspondentstto say nothing of theldiosyncrasies. of individual - Orientalists, it is not surprising that the general public wrong.- If the Offieial cantor:of telegrams had taken the ortho- graphy of the seat of war in 'hand he might have enjoyed the privilege of exercising a permanent influence On English literature. But probably this read to immortality did — A New Excuse tor Intoxicatkii. ' . - • • . A. French lady . herself the. Baroness de Saint-Eetrapade, who lately • appeared -before the correetional tribune- of the Seine on a charge et ivresee manifeete--:: ;in brutal English, drank and dieorderly7- in convincing the - President -of that court that. the wearing of a fur cloak may produce an eodentridity of behavior • as deoePtivein its way as that produced. by liberal a -consumption Of salmon. Spnte• , a journai that the surest Ivey- bf firesem 'lug furs from the ravages of moths was' to stew them away, man empty VIM -cask. She accordingly bought. one a month. or. two ago, and to its. safe -keeping she con- fided her far cloak. A week ago; having to brealifitat at [Noel's, and the day being very 'cold, she put on this garment, vrtutia, as she declares, once out Of doors the coda - lowed effect a the cad and the alcohelic fumes emanating .itoni the cloak made her giddy and prOduced all. the . appearances of intoxioattion. The ".iiginit" Who took her up deposed that "she "emelt of alcohol at fifteen paces,"4 piece of testimony rather in her favorlhantotherwise ; and her bonne deposed to the purchase a -the cask and its employment as a wardrobe,. The judge, after remarking that if every lady adopted this.line of defence to the partioulartlarge brought against the baroness' conviction would be impossible, acquittedher.• - Lady Florence Dixie has arranged for a hunting expedition in the Rocky Moan- . • ea r- • • tains. The wife of James Rtiddy lost her life in • a fire at Providence, Pa., while trying to secure 01,000. • , ..••••,“‘ 4+e_k • A Costly Crad.'• It's nide to be a boy in tsurotah, that is, if one happens to be a royal baby. The infant whose royal papa spends a.millien dollars on a cradle for him is surely. to be .envied not a littleby ordinary babes. At this en- ormous 'cost King Theebaw provided a cradle for his Olive branch. This extra- ordinary receptacle is described as first framed with mango wood -and then encased with sheet gold inside and out. Over this . bloodhounds to Egynt tit.' hunt Arabsby is ornamental gold work set with diamonds, - - Y rubies, sapphires, emeralds and other predious stones. How sweet the infantile slumbers must be; rooked in the embrace of close upon a million's worth of gold and precious stories; how good King Theebaw ut to, his little child, and how happy his little child must be when he reflects that, although no one's head is safe for an hour in the -court of Burnish, Theebaw does not forgot . to see that the infant prince is -cradled Comfortably -milting as he lives. • - • • -Now the horrible suggestion_ is -made that the custom of wearing the hair short, which prevaileatriong- London ladies, was set by. Mrs; TugWilson, Wife of the pugilitt. Two Arms- Restored. • tIrs. Syyret, Of Mal Bay, Gaspe,P. Q., is the author of a very interesting. letter in Which she recounts the restoration ef both her arms whose use she had lost -so cone -pletely that for two years she douid not do, a "band's turn." . Sole remedy was Dr. Dow's Sturgeon Oil Linirnent, whit% very soon limbered her arms eci that in a short time she could do her Werk as well as ever before. In her letter- she refers to the astonishment Of her neighborewhe used to •gaze other in wonder as she performed her household dutiea. Her's was. unanimously pronounced a wonderful cure. In that dis- triot Dr, Dow's Sturgeon Oil Liniment is recognized as the niost Wonderfal remedy in existence, which, Undoubtedly, it is., • -The time between shivering for the want of -an overcoat and the date when one can be 'worn without attracting ar crowd has passed along and_mankind are happy. THE KOVAL ACC017NTS. Strict intim Royal liouselsold Ilarms.--44111. K. M. the Dike et Baia. - burgh, Dairyman." ' It ESOMS that a very strict system of account -keeping is maintained at all the royal establishments, with the exception, perhaps, of those of the Prince and -Princess of Wales, who have no time to adopt the habits of supervision which prevail at Windsor, Osborne, Balmoral, do. &mord, ing to the. Stroud (Eng.)- News the pur- veyor of ,the Royal Household _buys everything that is required in the shape Di iouitry, milk, bitter, fruit, vegetables, ete., from the royal farms precisely as - he would do from strangers. The steward: of each home farm.receivesthe money, and in his turn accounts -for it to the clerk who audits the books. Certain things are given away by the Queen's own orders, but nothing on the authority of any one else. It was at first' thought very strange dist the late Prince Consort should sell the produce of his farm to the Royal Household, but people SOMA got accustomed to it. The Duke of Edin- burgh, who is said to carry thrift to a Obit approaching to an occult science has an elaborate system of account keeping at Eastwell Park, and:bills- are furnielied to the families who deal with His ROYal Highness for dairy produce with the printed heading "H. R. H. the Duke, of Edinburgh." We have in Wheeler's Phosphates and Calisaya proximate Principles, ready7niade tissue elements, agents of cell growth, the source. in the brain and Spinal bird of phos- phorus,- the Motor' power. of the nervous system, perpetual in their . activity and maintaining that "constant imptilse on nutrition se essential to - the ,suotessful treatment of chronic wastingdiseases. In consumption, scrofula, and all other mani- festations of. errors " in nutrition, its protracted use will demonstrate -a. muoh. greater percentage of radical improvement than .any other term of phosporous .com- pounds in existence, whether in, pill, solutioa, or hypophesphites: -When a man-hunis to Me for ad , I find °tit- the.kind of adVide he wants and 1 give it to him, this satisfys him hit he and I are two az smart men -az there- is Billings. If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have sallow dolor .of skin, or pelloWisli-brown spots on face or body, frequent headache or dizziness,.Pad tastein Mouth, internal heat or chills - alternated with hot finthes, low spirits an'd gloomy' forebodings, Irregular appetite, and tongue coated, you are suffer- ing from " torpid liver," or A' biliousness." manY. oases -of "liver.cemplaint "only pert of these symptoms are experienced. As a remedy for all suchoases Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Dlicoveiy " has no equal; as it effedteperfect and. radii:el cures. At • all drug stiireS. . -We have often wondered why it is that ",the Oldest inhabitant". in any city or, *Matte is always ei man, never a Woman. • IY.imnig or middle :aged men suffering from nervous -debility; loss .of meniory, premature old age, as the result of-- bad habits, should send three stamps for Part .VII. of Dime Series pamphlets. Address. WORLDS DISPENSARY BIBLICAL ASSOCIATION, MASAO, Ni Y. - The Magistrate:- " You say your -wife •gets -Mad and raises a row . 4'1 should say ohe did. She makes enough fuss to run a freight train forty miles aa, hour." "But if you knew that she ,was in the .habit -of getting mad why did yeti marry Becauee-if -I had held-beeik she- wOuld-have gcit madder than ever." , Imagine for - a moment the thousands upcin'thousands of bottles of Carboline; the deodorized 1 petitleum hair renewer, annually sold; and the fact thaf not a single - complaint has been teceived.f oin all these thousands, . and you may have- some- idea of its good qualities. • The most devoted ntIrile the Royal Hospital at Berlin is a patient cured of a dreadful and disfiguring disease. She is employed in the isolated department for diphtheria oases, and lately assisted at the 5,000th operation (tracheotomy) in her department. Sind words are brigbt flowers of earthly existence; usethem,, and especially around the fireside circle. They are the jewels °nd Pkioe, :and powerful to heal the demi heart glad. • He Has Sad Bones Broken. Elihu Stevens aged 81, of Middletown, . last week •dieloicated his hip. Eighteen years ago he broke ,btth wrists. and alntost broke his neck, which was seriously injured.. At another time one of his legs was. broken,: and he has twice broken one or more ribs, besides his nose. In all he hashed twenty- six bones broken, and yet he is &temperance man. -New Haven Palladium. And all points :4n. loiVa, Nebratga.Missouri, Kan -- Ne* Mexico, Arlions. Mon- tana and Teksik • -The SHORTEST,: QUICKEST au, _ BEST line to -St. Joseig4. - Atchison,Topelta, Dint- sou,Dalles,-Gale veston, Universai- iy conceded to be thc best equipped Railroad in the World for all cliSses of ttavel: This Route•Le,Ilan; in ha te P :la! ler yes 1 r edi spSrut t eP1 berte .being the Great ThroughCal Lino to lc; NSA.,-$: - ._ All connections made In lItilon Depots. " Througli .TicketS via -this Celebrated Linefo gal:.t at all officesin the' S. and Canada. • All infermation about Rates, of Eire, Sleeping Cars, etc. cheerfully given by - Tty and you wig find traveling a luxury., instead of -a. dis- comfort • 3d nCf Preet (lb Gael Manager. Gen.- Pan. Agt.. T. POTTER. a. slincp,8::::EAVIIAeLnLt.0711.1. Chicago, Ill. - • 28 Front Street East, Toronto- One • How well our old dyspeptic friend B— is looking. What is the- reason? Oh, he uses- Dr. 'Wilson's Anti bilious and Preserving Pills, ..and he is as well and hearty as need be. • The Bombay Gazette explains the story that the English took several packs of the statement that an inexperienced 500 0! De Lesiva saw a pack of foxhounds at Suez, en route to India, and imagined all the rest. • • Bad teroPet Often proceeds from those Painful disorders to which women are sub.: jeot. In 'female 'complaints Dr. R. V. Pierce's " Favorite 'Prescription" is a certain cure. ' By druggists. - Count that day as lost in which you have , - - :TUST 21[OU NT AIN s FREE -ROME 9,000,000 ACES. of -Fertile Government. Land in-, .0 R,T H K_ 111 In the Grand 'Forks Land •_Distriet . Sectional, Map and Atli itiformatiOn .Sent FR,Et- to any -address iit the World: „applying „for Pubhcation.Jo to - 'FL Cs OATLS, Assk General Vassengery-Atent, • : St. -1°844 Minn. _ . _ :1•ve-disease; bylts.. • 40,1kind andof long 2111:inhtrill.°41:aellfiry7ti-Perhatn'•-cIevulill?..-Ln.rt:b'r'vrwo°81:ostrongls - ffittart.1.1. at:.VALtlapresw.andzsip:owth fal any Fer.--at,ie•-•-*BMTSBA -44dre ei,t4 , , r:the -*the• tS When Lee. Whit ie tinder -Bent°6°.° ' ? ' t. ,tenspertiant to litiaveilers I t :not had a good laugh,—Camfort, • - ,. death for the Murdertet Maggie Erowlef :10 - ----..i.---„, Nspanee WEE naked. -a :Jew: • der' age.ttgiPecial ixducententit itteoffeted you- b tespotidedettll tether swing:. - -• where in -this -issue. - whether he would prefer being hanged or the-. Burlin on route. It will pay you ?Or . An ounce of real mother wit is worth going to penitentiary for ye, he , promptly read their advertisement to be found eke- d f book „ poun learning. -•- , Esarcureldo-notmea inerely to e P neneatidtbeabaciathemotetaigalt4Iznetutaradjeal_'clret. Al.ha*a.:bledethe'dlisteeacfpIT%-,EPILEfelr.orrwaladln.- - 4310.1K1f2SLallieiloatetudy.z',Iinatitait-,iiirtemedt toetnee- hete,baire,fal,104,1.e,treineenOrolefealitilae, , _ Free iottle :of Eirlafautble_remedifiz-Ghiegepreeealal-1140" - • TOUM MEN - ityortvottioeArnmelegioby,."- -s and be eertain 0 neethiteeelnl%7!YeZe_Eateti-ittliet hfleTIIW • •,•