Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Dec 1881, p. 7

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t.e4 &OMC ACA. He pa* me hi* promise of changeless tratfc {m* '*ii ;n the wooa where the ivy clings); AuA tlie air breathed rapture and love and you til (And yea tr«-e * it in bud where the tbrwtltjslins). be wi;e ftolng scroes the sea JrSr frnhn'thr- V.KVI where the ivy oliMgs), * ? And w.-.vi it briuK t>aok jewels and richM for DM; (But bru* ii ieav<* htiake where the throstle tfap), made life like a summer morn ;» (8w»et w»« the «w<} where the Ivy cling*); Sow my heart ie coM, and Mtbapeci, 0Bd Wi>rt>_ • (And tlie bough in tare where the throstle rings). Day* are dreary, and life is long *<Yet down in (fee wood tlie ivy clings), . ' nd the winds they moan a desolate song 4'°? ^ biJU£k where no tixrostis ) • ' Spring will come with its btids and leaves (Back to t!ii' wood where tbe ivy ciinga); But '»* wi'it. r co!d lor the heart that grieves (And X hear not the sotig that tlie tliroetle sings). My Wedding Tour, I wi« oijly 17 when Charlie married me, and I wrote myself for the first time Mr3. Charles \ ail, ifr., and saw the ini­ tials of the same blazoned on the end of my new Saratoga trunk, when we start­ ed on our wedding journey. My wed­ ding journey ! I can spoak of it calmly now, but tlie time was when it harrowed up my inmost soul. To this day, Char­ lie becomes wroth when it is mentioned, and says it is my " confounded imagi­ nation;" but he knows, and I know well, that that is only one of those conven­ ient little loopholes through which big masculinity can crawl on emergency ; and, tlie facts remaining unchanged and indisputable, I shall defy Charlie and state them to the world. Imagine, then, reader OP listener, whoever you may be, that the last silken train has swept itself out of Trinity Chapel, and the last note of the inevitable " Wedding March" shud­ dered itself out of the big groaning or­ gan, and that Charlie and I are mar­ ried. Also, that the kissing and crying over is achieved, and the voices of my husband's sisters and my maiden aunts, hailing down blessings on our heads, are happily l<jst in distance--that the qply sound we hear is the rattle and jqbar of an express train thundering east­ ward, and • I am looking out into th« golden noonday, watching the fields •and roads and villages and woodlands race past us, and sweep back into a stream like running wpter. There we sat, two blissful young fools--but it isn't of our bliss, or our foolishness either, that I am going to tell you-- only of the single adventure of our wed­ ding tour. (Jliarlie hadn't tdld me where we were to go, and I rather liked being left in ignorance, knowing no more than that we wiere being 8 wept away to some little PatadiBc of pur own--it might be an irftfpd dt' thtv Hesperides, or Miagdsin, or feden itself. We I patient. "Ton can't sit here all day, I you know. Where do you want to go ?' | "I--I--don't know," I stammered, i "I was told to sit still, and I---I must I w%it till the person comes back." 1 The man stared back at me now with ! interest. " Where's your ticket ? " said j he, extending a dirty hand, i "I haven't got it," I answered in a j meek and conciliating tone. "My-- ! Char--at least, the gentleman who is i with me has got them both." » "The gentleman! Pretty fellow he must be ! Told you to sit still did he ?" I made no reply to this unwarrantable lack of reape t in referring to my njisent lord, "but drew myseit up and looked severely out of the* window. " Well, you can't go back to New York," observed my tormentor, sum­ marily. " The best thing for you to do is to get out and look for your gentle­ man, miss." Saying which, he jerked my bag down from the rack, turned the opposite seat, which Charlie had in­ verted, back into its place, and, by a species of moral suasion, caused me te • pick up my shawls, parasols, etc., and follow him in abject submission to the door. " Now, where did the gentleman go?" he demanded, aa he handed me out on the platfrom. "He went to fat DM some lunch," I replied, almost ready, at this crisis, to disgrace my bridehood and cry. "And told you to sit still, did he? Well, you stand right here and keep a lookout for him. There's the Boston train over there, goes in fifteen minutes, and he can't get into it without your see­ ing him, if he ain't inside already; and my advice is, stiok fast to him if you find him, for he mast need looking after." With which remarkable words the set down my bag, and winked at a by­ stander. " What's the row ?" inquired the per­ son thus invited to participate in the enjoyment of my woes. Then they whispered--about me, I suppose--and everybody turned and stared at me. Poor uttle bride! There I stood, holding fast my parasol, with a shawl on one arm, my own small aachel on the other, ard Charlie's bigger one at my feet, feeling like a very " lone, Jorn crit­ ter" indeed. There stood three men in a knot, contemplating me, and any quantity of the same species coming and going, who all looked at me as they passed, and then turned round and stared again--and there was no Charlie visible in all the range of surrounding country. Diro thoughts began to be born within me, and to turn me cold and damp with ex'reme terror; the nightmare of my infancy--" being lost"--came back upon me and crushed my 17 years and the new dignity of Mrs. Charles Vail, Jr., with a fell swoop. What was to be­ come of me ? Supposing there had been an accident, and Charlie knocked down and awfully mangled, or that he Crusoe's We stopped , „ at a good many stations by the way,- ! had just vanished away, as one occa- that looked anything but Paradaisical; j sionally hears of respectable gentlemen but I saw everything through a glass, j having done, and never would appear udsily, as I sat there demure and mute, by Charlie's side. The shadows were growing short, hnd it was just noon, when we stopped at some " ville " or other, wtioae Ming, low, straggling buildings, crowding close upon the track, and the broad, dusty village street, branching off at right angles, are photographed upon my memory. Not for anything intrinsically remark­ able ; there were only a good many teams and farm-wagons, and open car- ruiges, and light carryalls standing about, with the lazy horses rubbing their noses against old wonn-eaten posts, under the tow of drooping green trees, and plenty of people on the platform, crowding together for greetings and 1-bys ; it was a commonplace, every- »y picture enough, and not even a pretty one, except in fragments. There was a general exodus from the car, and a rush dinnerward, as we supposed, toward the swinging sign* of some " House " or other down the lazy Uttle country street; and Charlie, looking at his watch, said it was 12 o'clock-- didn't I want some lunch t * Of eomass l didn't, but of course ha said I must have «ft, and immediately started up. He wouldn't be five minutes, he said, and I mustn't move till he came back. I was to guard our two seats, and let no pne come nigh them, and, above all, I was to sit still, and not be led astray by any possible warnings to change oars. " We're going through," Charlie remarked, "so just keep the seats, and tfrm*t pdynny attention." I nodded obedience, and Mr. Vail marched out of the car, leaving me to peer after him in tlie Crowd and catch the last glimpse of Bps str#w hat vanishing down .>• street. 1 watched the crowd, when Charlie was oat of sight, and mused and won­ dered over the faces, and built up all sorts of dreamy speculations upon them, as one does in a crowd when they have nothing better to think of. Presently the door banged open, and the voice of some unseen functionary shouted, " Change cars for Bos--ton !" '^'Everybody began to scramble their bags aud bundles and canes together, and there was a rush Among the few who remained my fellow-passengers. I watched them go without emotion, and merely settled myself more comfortably for the solitary journey through which Charlie had indicated--wondering a lit­ tle where its terminus might be, out in no wise disturbed or anxious thereat. I stared out at the people for five minutes longer--at least so said the fat-faced clock in the " ladies' room" opposite my window, though I made it. fifty at least by mental calculation--and then the door swung open again. This time a head projected itself into the par, roared "All outevidently at me--and van­ ished again. "I won't get out," I re­ plied, defying the empty air. " Charlie told me to sit still, and I'm going to. Oh, Charlie ! whv in the world don't you come back?,f But no Charlie came fc» anstre* nfo and I began to stare out in the crowd with rather more anxious eyes, and to grow a little hot and uneasy, and to thinlr, with certain unpleasant thrills running down my back, what would be­ come of me if the train should start, and Charlie shouldn't come back at allI At •.his awful point in my meditations, the locomotive gave vent to an unearthly screech, which I took for a premonitory symptom of departure, and I was so ter­ rified that I started up from my seat, just as the little door swung back for the third time, to admit of a last warn­ ing, like that of Friar Bacon's brazen head. This time the face reajspeaved-on a big shaggy suit of dothes' so&ie six feet high, and was a grim, not to say irate, visage. -- "the son gruffly; "I told you so rwi fore 1" "I'm to.sit still," I replied meekly. "I'm going through." j thought .this was the right thing to sax,, bei Charlie had said it; J»*tlSt tLifltaJt the right effect. "Change cars then--there's the Bos­ ton train over there. This runs back to New York;" '*> I simply stared at the person, in a dogged way that he seemed to take very ill. "Comer' he.exclaimed,,waxjjg im- # t' * v# ... i ? **«" * again, or be heard of at all; supposing I were just to stand there waiting, the ^ trains shrieking away in the distance, at some " ville " or j a^d night coming on, and all these strange men staring and whispering? Pretty soon I should begin to cry, for I couldn't stand it much longer ; and here I began to feel for my pocket-handker­ chief, and that reminded me of my pocket-book as a slight resource. I dived to the utmost corner of my pocket before I remembered that I had confided it to Charlie, with wifely duty, at the very outset of our wedding trip. At this alarming discovery a oold moisture broke out upon my entire frame. A night passed under the lee of the depot, crouched among my little possessions, now loomed before me--un­ less I could deposit the same posses­ sions, or pawn my diamond ring and my gold bracelets for a night's lodging and a ticket back to New York. I suppose the horror depicted on my countenance was a sufficient challenge for inquiry. I don't know to what extent it must have reached, but somebody appeared to find it moving, for a benevolent voice presently saluted my ears. 44 Are you waiting for anybody, Miss? I turned around with a gasp of alarm, which subsided a little, however, when I met an elderly face, spectacled and be­ nign in the extreme. " Excuse me, Miss," said the old gen­ tleman in a sympathizing tone, " are you waiting for any one ?" « " I--I--yes, sir--Fm waiting for--" 1 came to a dead stop. For Charlie, should I t*ay? "My husband" was a step beyond utterance just now. _ I only turned scarlet, choked and twisted the handle of my bag in silence. " Is there anything I can do for you ?" " I--don't know where to go !" I burst out, quite involuntarily. "They told me to change cars, and I didn't ex­ pect to, and I don't know what to do." t My new friend looked bewildered, and came a step nearer, as he inquired, in a solemenly lowered voice: "Are you alone!" ' " No, no," I said very quickly,*under my breath. " Who is with you ?" said he, with a kind of confidential compassion that a little confused me. I did not under­ stand it ««My--a--a gentleman," I faltered out. " He went out to get me some­ thing, and he told me to sit still and not move; and a man came and made me change cars--and I don't know what cars we were to take--and--I--I don't see him anywhere." Here I choked, and fell to biting my lips and winking my two eyes hard to wink the tears down. "A gentleman !" repeated my friend, solemnly. By this time two more men had drawn near to listen. "Yoflr father ?" "No." "Brother, then?" very mysteriously. "N-no." I began to get very red and uncom­ fortable, and to wish that they wouldn't stare so. "Where are you going, my dear?" aeked the first Samaritan, after a solemn pause of some minutes. " I don't know," I answered, faintly. " He didn't tell me ; he just said, when he went to get me some lunch, that I wasn't to move if the man said to change ears, for we were going through; and I told the man so, but he made me change." " That train's a going back to New Y >rk," said one of the last arrivals, grinning. " Going through to Boston, " Went to get some lunch, did he say? Well, now, can't you tell me what sort of a looking person he was, and then perhaps we can find him? Was he young or old ? " " Young," I murmured, still behind a barrier of cambric. " W-with a yellow mustache, and g-grey clothes and a straw hat." "Pretty bad business!" one of the men muttered aside to another. "Sharp fellow ! " responded a second. And then there were some antistrophesof " What's the matter ? " " It's a shame !" " Left her, did he? " from a small crowd that had by this time started up around me. " Well, now, just come in here and sit down," said my old gentleman, paternal­ ly gathering up my bag ; " and compose yourself, my dear, and we'll see what can be done. Don't cry! it'll only flurry you, and won't do any good, you know. There, that's right!" For I wiped my eyes with the remnant of a sob, pulled my veil down, and was turn­ ing to follow him, when, behold! as I sw?pt the landscape o'er with one last look of desperation, there appeared Charlie--grey clothes, and straw hat and yellow mustache, and all, coming from the dim distance, with a brown paper parcel under each arm. " There he is !" I shrieked, dropping bag and parasol in my ecstasy, and rush­ ing down the platform with extended arms. "There he is? Oh, call him, somebody--tell him I'm here! Make him look this way!" "Where? which? where is he ?" cried half a dozen men quite excitedly. "Him in the straw hat, with the bundles ? Halloa sir ! Halloa! Stop him !" and three small boys aud one man started in pursuit. Poor Charlie! There he oauie, hurry­ ing along in our direction, rather swiftly it is true, but quite at his ease, and with a smiling face, when my four champions f jave chase. And just as they had up-ifted their voices, iihd just as Charlie'® eyes, sweeping the surrounding scene, appeared to light upon them--just then did the locomotive behind which we had been sitting fifteen minutes before, and which had been backing and snorting, and advancing aud backing again, after the manner of trains, chose its time to set up a siiriek and a violent ringing of the bell, and to go puffing off on its way back to New York. And Charlie first started wildly, and then turned around and chased the locomotive, and the three small boys and the man chased him, rending the air with shouts of "Stop him 1" But Charlie couldn't keep up with the train very long, and the impotency of his efforts seemed to break upon him suddenly;'after fie had run himself very hot and dump, and shed all the hot buns from his brown paper parcel for twenty yards along the track, He turned and faced his pursuers ljke a man at bay, and figuratively speaking they all fell upon him. "Stop there! where are you going? " Come back after your lady, you scamp!" " Ain't you ashamed of yourself ?" shouted the small boy in ectasy. Wanted to run away did you? Didn't do it that time, old feller!" "What the d -do you want?" said Charlie fiercely--only he used the whole word instead of the initial. " Where's Sarah ? Where's my wife ?" " There she is!" roared a dozen voices, with appropriate action of as many un­ washed hands. " Ain't got rid of her so easy yet!" I will draw a deoorous veil over the embrace that followed, and the profanities with which Charlie punctuated it, and the compliments exchanged by the populace, who evinced the wildest joy at what was supposed to be the discomfiture of vil­ lainy. I merely will observe that the whistle of the Boston train cut short our little scene, and that I was hauled up on the last ear amid the cheers of the by­ standers, greatly multiplied since Char­ lie's appearance on the soene, and speeded on my way by a parting roar from one benevolent personage to " keep a tight eye on my young man, for he wara't to be trusted as far as you oould Bee him!" Also that Charlie shed bank notes as well as buns in the excitement of the chase, and that my point cT Aien- oon parasol with an agate handle, the wedding gift of my beloved Arabella, is probably marching round Blankville at this very hour, poised in the Lislethread hand of some village belle. •mm A Hamlin Organ Company. At the great Italian Industrial Exhi­ bition just closing in Milan, Italy, the highest awards for musical instruments, a silver medal and diploma, were taken by an American manufacturer, the Ma­ son A Hamlin Organ Company, whose cabinet organs were judged to be so superior that they were the enly reed organs of any manufacture, European or American, which were awarded a mAflal. It is a great honor to these makers that in Italy itself, the very home of music, their organs should receive such dis­ tinction. They excited much interest among musicians, and were by special order repeatedly exhibited to the royal court by Carlo Ducci, the distinguished artist of Rome. fcaudsome round corners, rosewood c^iees. three BeaUy's matchless iron frame*, stovl. tK«k,cor«r, boxes, I Vf££.75to$49? 30; catalogue pnas. f"<OtoflOOO; ! tiglacUon guaranteed or money refunded, after one 'gtise; (jDricht Planeforte*. I125 to f556;cat«- | e prices fsnoto fsmt. standard pianofortes of theunfr- ! verse.as thonsandis testify; write for mammoth list of tes­ timonies. Rrntty'ft ('nttinft OK<; A NS, cathedral. Church, chapel, parlor.gSO upward. Vislto-c welcome; Tree carriage meets passengers: frustrated catalogue (Iioll- da>' edition) free. Address or call noon DAMEL F. JBKATTY, WasHUGTov, Nsw Jour. Mark Twain's Antique Humor. - There has been recently paraphrased and calmly appropriated by Miirk Twain an-anecdote of a Scotchman who enters an eating honso on Holborn hill and calls for a penny loaf. Then he says lie has changed his mind, and that lie wiil have a penny- worth of beer instead. This process he repeats twelve time*, and he is then going on this way, rejoicing and full of beer, when the cookshop keepei demands payment for his beer. " I giYe yon a penny loaf for oach mug of beer," answers the canny Scot. "But you have not paid for tlie loaves,"' continues the inceu-et Bonifice. "But I had them not, "replies the Scot. This story is to be found in an old cheap book pub­ lished iate in the seventeenth century, and it is very probable a survival 61 some medi:eval joke current among the sehool-men, since its humor hinges on a false premise in logic. For the l'est the original jest may be many thousands of rears old ; and mav be one of Julius H10 ioSi; The old lady seemed dazed. "Why, of * Inch Bacon m the introduction of j ^ not Lomse's voice," she said. "I hisown "ante-Joe Mulensm," so pae- j see voll. bnt thfl v'oi^ ^ thetically deplores. 1 here is nothing new under the sun--especially in the matter of jokes.--London Tt ltgraph. THE DEAS CJMVtOT BE RAISED, nor if your lungs are badly wasted away can you be cured by tbe u*i> of Dr. Pierce's "Gold­ en Medical Disooverv." It is, however, une- qu»led as a tonic, alterative and nutritive, and readily cures the most obstinate cases of bron- chiuM. coughs, colds aud incipient consumption, far surpassing in efficacy cod liver oiL Send two stamps for Dr. Pierce's pamphlet on Con­ sumption and Khidrt'd Affections. Address WORLD" 8 DisrsKsutx MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y. COUGH A Happy Meeting. Wjere are surprises of joy as well as of. sorrow, to earthly affection, says an ex­ change. An instance of the missing and meeting of kindred by the turns of for­ tune was presented recently in the Chi­ cago home for the friendless. Says the home visitor: < A short time ago the parlor of the home witnessed a pathetic soene. A pleasant looking lady, who had just ar­ rived on the evening express from dis­ tant parts, was making eager inquiries concerning one of the inmates--an old lady who had been in the home for five years. After a few words had been ex­ changed with the superintendent, the lady sobbed out: "I am her daughter." "Her daughter?" ejaculated everybody I present, and Mrs. G exclaimed j that her children were all supposed to j be dead. : A long explanation followed. The i lady had lived in California, had not | been in communication with' her relat- | ives, and had received intelligence ofhei | mother's death. For fifteen long years j *79 A WEEK. $1S a day at home easily made. Coctly } the mother and daughter had been lost j OUTFIT FREE. ADDREW TBI-E A CO., AUGUSTA, M«. j to each other. j Mrs. Grant at once summoned Grand­ ma H to the p&ripr, and the poor old lady,who is newly blind, was brought into the presence of tlie stranger. Some questions were asked about her children, and especially concerning the daughter Louise. "bhe is dead,"repliedgrandma H ; "they are all dead." At this point the 6trange lady could no longer repress her emotions, and throw­ ing her arms about the old lady's neck. she cried: "Don't you know me mother? Louise iB not dead! I am Louise!" A®®ATTY'8 PIANOFORTES.--Maxntflcent [ • week ta your own town. Term* and Si Mflflt : 54lu5r(' «'*!><] punofo! te.sfoiir rety ! wOO free. Addraaa H. Ratxrrr <k Co., PortlagMklMk JJR. HjTNTRR. f OS Statejt., (Akyo, kMltM ' Throat and Imxm Diaeeeee bp bfhaJatio*. KAKHACTAX book co-, te w. lttit st. n.T. r-.a la REVOLUTION PKTOES. I1.WS. c. library book* for 5 eonta eachi |!.M temperance for 5 > enta ?, fur 2*c •'.'•O ry of 11 i«»ok»for Als.' fn;i line a . banners, p!"d«re roll*. Band >f ll -pecei 'iftcaten.cbro- mos. wall n.utUiea. ate., at price* that wi t axtonlnh. Testament* at 5c. and upward* M-st eotii. ipfe teach­ ers' Billies only #1.30. I5e» lo«ae free Ji d each, holils IV rkg*. reward <-ard« , > ' * for lOe. '! • i 11 •l--worth "ingle b oks lOe. r eh. B. bun Mating kind of good* !y 11.30. adr reiigi-ms press. Cata- f goods DAVfDC.COO^ 146 M;%<ii5on St, Chicago, pensions: ARE PAID eTirrioldierliiibtd fifteeideit <>r otherwise. A 9T0(?NDof any kind. In«s of fla(«r, t^e^reje, KCPTIRK, if butilight; diseases of Lung* or V«ir!ee«« Tefmi (rivt * pension, TTnder new law thousand* are «n* tilUU to %n increase of rrn»jnn. Widows, or» pVtr.s and dependent rarhrrs or mothers of <?rs £yt ft^pension. Scad 3 atampa for copy i and ! r.tr Ac Addrp*. Rf*ldfnt Agent* wanted im »r«ry town. Forpftr* ticulara address Dr. Fuller, 429 Canftl St.» N.Y. Iff A rnPTTTFC AMfHi,Btaadft* WAX WliJM A nerteaa Wauk C*. .Pi ttafcartk. Pft. BsTQlvm CiutefM fN«. i44r«| •nat W«rt- ««a Warks. PUMan*. ft, P. H. Fitzgerald & Co., Claim Agent*, n \ianapnli*. Int. Refer UJ Ir.d. Hanking Co* t tVeavr-kl. li-iiit, tgiaet' iadiftAftpoli* Over, Half Milllea Acres (RUNS -AC i. n & 13) A per day at home. Samples worth $5 free. 90 to 9/.U Addrese SriNROS A Co.. F mm A r' p Portland, Me. Mors>hln« Habit (Tared ta M teMdays. SopaytHI 1'artd. DR. J. STKI'JIKNS. LEBANON, Obit . For Sale by tbe tevsR.R. Land Co Cster Rapids, lew*. CJENTS WAMTEB for the Bert and Faeteet- . Selling Pictorial Books and Btblae. Prices reduced !p»r8t. XAriONAl. PoBUBHmoOo..Obtoaco, 111. VniiltG MEII I' 7°* woald learn Telegraphy In JWlin IT! Eil four months, and be certain of a stt- utiQH, address VALENTINE BROS., JaseerUle, Wto. Unequaled Sport In Louisiana. Jim Young, the moJern Nimrod ol the Southwest, while on a hunt in the Soda lake bottom, was told by a plantei of the neighborhood to kill a hog of hit if he came across one in his mark. Jim j killed the hog, and, not being able tc I "go the whole hog" at one trip, hunf ! up part of the deceased, and on his re ! turn found one quarter gone and beai j it I signs around the place. Leaving th« ; rest of the meat ou tlie bush, he re | turned that night ainl lay in wait fo: j bruin. Toward daylight the bear came j and Jim tumbled fier. While engage c can't see you, but the voice does not sound like my Louise's." "But, mother," the daughter said, between her sobs, "I have grown much larger since you Baw me, and my voioe has changed." Gran din a H at length became con­ vinced that the speaker was really her own child, and they retired from the little group of interested spectators which hail gathered around, to renew old-time ties. Next day a carriage called for Grand­ ma H and she was whirled aw.iy to new scenes, under a loving daughter's protection. A TEAR and ezpaneee to Agents. Ootflt free. Address P. <K Vlcksry, Angaita, M*. S 7 7 7 MO«TH-j!GE«TSW*HTEO-®0 b««t \ celling articles m the world; 1 samplo>V«<k V tWFmTjf Addr«*a B reason, Detroit, lllek WiPPTAA'CQ MADE without fail. Address At Ailiiil Au £lO for circulars, inclosing stump. UNION' AGENCY. Postoffiee Drawer 1*1. Buffalo. N Y. DON'T KKAIt THUS--12 of the best-selling article# out sent prepaid on receipt of 80 cents. 300 ]>er rent. Brotit sure. Sample and circular* 10 cents. * " " W: ' " .. . ... - ~ .- H yna enjoy ft timgh kMBtfly Tt*u read onr ScxxaoCni-Sroxn Of Sarnm r Tobbs ana hl» f e Boy Doctor Is 1 s author, E. B. ] Unstrkied coateB' -at tf you're faa# of loto tT ttm, te nlreftlemi iMtem are nut It Hf w Tork w York atl. WILLIAMS A HAOKKTT, Menden.t't. Addroee P.O.KoiNo.m Set Back 43 Yeans " I wis troubled for man; years with Kidney Complaiut, Gravel, etc.; my blood became thin ; I was dull and inactive; could hardly crawl about ; was &u old, worn-out man ali over; could get nothing to htlp nie until I got Hop Bittern, and now I am a boy again. My blood and kidneys are all right, and I am „as active as a man of 90, although I am 72, and I have no doubt it will do as well for others of my age. is worth a triaL"--(Father.)--Sunday Mer­ cury. ! •. •ou-.' IN:.... md will vjiji- .-banpo tlie blood iu • ir.ri' •>stem iu three monthii. Any j.on«.,u <vk« 111'. take one l-UI each night from 1 to 12 week« mav be » letor^a to found health, if such n thing be t iva/hla. »ld everv wl:ero or dent by mail for 8 letter stampa. •?' pl* CO., BSMSI, IH«-- ^riierlr Bauwor, Ale. FLORIDA! Atlantic Coast Can., Okeecho Land Co. of id Gulf al and obee ANOTHER. ROOM FOR AGEJfTS. MARK TWAIHSS The Prince and the Pauper Will outsell all his previous works, and offers Ttm Ike best chance of your life tc make money rapidly. Old a«ents will act promptly and aeenre eboice t«rri*o«y, and we advise ym to do the same. Outfits now nsdj 8**d mt once for circnl&rs nod terms to H. II. HI.M KLEV, P-bllsker. 14 H. Canal St., t kleam BL M W 1 wiffirri Kill * String Mm 1 the be«t ever made -- fa . CASY, TVC7 BATTDSOOM, QXIIET, DURIMK •irar!?, wnr^oieot, and powerftil Warrctttgd £p€4r9. Sent aoj 5 Javs trial. Pay \f it flem of this model ss&chlafc h«vf Nx-n fold. Atk fbr cirofllwi aaA tesclmonia'.s. Low prices t«> • rfak to trr ne. Thousands 4u ercrj year, and tbaak Ml-* flbr the $'tO t<? #80 !® bcffeg direct. Cat titaf Mt, and wheuivwi or m ftrtemt need a Sewing K«chlae M Arc ii address 0&.t4?Tbir4AT.l€ixkacaJQL Fla. Six Hundred Victims of Whisky. The Corwin during her voyage to . Alaska landed on St. Lawrenoe island, in butchering the bear, a cub approa«he c j having orders to investigate the whole- and met the fate of the old one. Hear i Bale starvation of the natives. At the ISSUE OF 50,000 SHARES OF $10 EACH AT PAR, With bonv* of 40 (W-rM fr.r rach lO *hare*.froin choice htnrls of tht "/'t-.-'• "i purchtl**1. OfPlCKS-i'hlrd nnd t'hvstiiul Site.. Phila­ delphia! 115 BronUwiiv, \, ¥,, Rooms 111.118. Detailed prospectus with deecriptire maps mailed free to applieante. ing the hounds coming in full cry, Ji n: took a stand and soon had a farno m large btick at his feet. Very soon afte r- wara another cub appeared, and h« killed that one also--thus having killed, in one morning and at oue stand, one large bear, two cnbs and a monstei buck. Jim says he at the same time and place killed two wildcats and three wild turkeys, but this must be taken cum gran0 talis.--Shreveport (Z/a.) Timet. •TKMAIE eOJIPHIMTS." DB. R. V. PXEBCE, Buffalo, N. Y.: J*"or Sir-- I write to t«ll you what your " Favorite Pre- aeription " has done for vte. I had been a great Btifffcrur from female oomplainU, especially " draggiut; down," fcr ever six yearns, during much of the timt unable to work. I paid out hundred* of dollars without any benefit till I took three bottle« of the "Favorite Prescrip­ tion," and I never had anything do me so much good in my life. I advise every sick lady to try it. Mas. EKILV UHOAUO, HcBrides, Mich. Husband and Home* {The Housekeeper.] Happy is the wife whose husband re­ gards his home as a plaoe of rest. The drawback of home life, its contained possibilities of insipidity, sameness, and consequent weariness, is never present to such a man. He no more tires of his wife than of his own happier moods. He is no more bored with home than sleep. He is no more plagued with his children than with his own lighter thoughts. All the monotony and weariness of life he encounters outside. It is the pleasure- loving man, the merry companion, who requires constant excitement, that finds home life unendurable. He soon grows weary of it, and considers everything so very tam^that it is impossible for him not only to be happy, but to feel that he is less unhappy there than elsewhere. We do not mean that the domestic man, in the wife's sense, will be always at home. The man always at home has not half the chance of the man whose duty is outside of it,for he must sometime be in the way. The point for the wife is, that he should like home when he is there; and that liking, we contend, be­ longs, first of all, to the active and not to the lounger, or even the easy-minded man. The husband who when at home enjoys mental repose, is the bast partner in life a woman can chooaa, Oatragc by a Policeman. Sam Johnsing was up again yester­ day. " What brings you here this time?" asked the Recorder. " De p'lice- man, sah; de same one what brung me heah de last time." " 1 mean what did you do ¥" " I was jess passin' a grocery store, when I struck my head agin a ham what was hanging by de dore. I tuck de ham down to put it eomewhares whar it would be safe froon folks bustin' their brain* out agin it, when de fust I knowed a p'liceman tried to get de ham^ away from me, and bekaoe I wouldn' let de ham go he just brung me along too."--Galveston News. first village at which tbfey lauded all were dead; so also at the second, where fiftv- four dead bodies were counted, nearly all full-grown males. At another place 150persons--men, women and children-- were dead. At the next settlement, twelve dead bodies, and at the following thirty were fouud. AU the inhabitants on the north side of the island, where whisky traders sold liquor, are dead-- net one escaping. The general starva- : tion occurred Wo years ago last winter. ' Since then the presence of the Gcrwin j in the Arctic has broken up this inhu- man whisky trading. The empty whisky | kegs are seen strewn all about. The I total number of dead bodies found oa j St Lawrence island was over 600. The ! survivors say that white traders from j Honolulu sold whisky, which the natives ; bought and got driuik, remaining sc j during the season for laying in weii winter supply of walrus ana seal. --San Francisco Alia. Uaritef'S Safe BMasraad LIVWCBM BALLOT'S Montlly Magazine For 1882. ILLUSTRATED. 100 Pages Entertainment a Month (1,200 a Ytsr) fw $1.60 per Annum, Postpaid. Ckaralni Romnnrea. Humorous 8ket«fc«a I.o ve '8V;«vein smbs! Adventure* fey- and Sterns, Mtiata, «liivrn!lo llrpitrinit'ttl, Drai Puz.r.U Ladioni" ihkpartm<*nt, Houae* IlegBjeB-trm-B?!?;. iBUi^lratloa^ Ac„ all f'ormlnir A Moat Complete and Popular Serial and Oldest in the Country. Bo not tubscrihe (or any publication vmtlt toil h&tf mm 10 cent* to the piiblialn-r* of thi* popular monthjs and roeeivod a oopv of thi1 lamio for tFanuAry, 1^2, will it« mnny UTS KW IM 1*ROV KM KX'iTHe Th«» if jou wish to continue, it will only bo xiectw«jiry to reii| tor the babtnoe of 1ho vear. 83F™No notwv t^ik^n of poat&l cards calling foranmplt^ F«rtale all Xcwadealeraut 15c. a cops THOME! «* TALBOT, I m Hawley Htrni, lioiton, MM| a.ooe Affeato Wnttl tor UA of GARFIELD Reaatalns the full hletorj of his nokle end erentfnl 1 •ed dastardly sieassinatton. Surgiosl treetmeoi, di Itaienlobseqiiice.eto.Thebrait chsnoeof yoorlifatoi money Bewnwof "cRtchpeniiy"hnltattons. Thill •df authentic and folly illustrated life of our mi Resident . Fine at«wl*>ortra\t<i. Extra terns to i Okenlars free Addrew NATIONAL FCBUSHEKO CO. OhteemB. WANNER'S SWISS BALSAM! YOUNO and middle-aged mea suffering from nervous deMiity. prenir.tiire old ape, loss ol memory and kindred Fymptomn should send throe Rtamps for Part VII. of pamphlet H issu< tl bv World's Dispeusary Medical Ascociation, Buffalo, N. ¥. was you?' "•1 don't know where I was going," I answered, very shortly. " Let me see your ticket," said the old Change cars, I "•> said fche^ pe*-^i ^entleaaaii, feelingly, told you so twice be- He had a compassionate way of look­ ing at me over his spectacles; and he looked queerer still when I answered faintly--"He's got it--and--and--my money--and--Oh, why don't heoome? • Here I cast loose all ceremony and burst into tews. " Oh, don't cry now," said the old gentleman, soothingly. " Don't now ! it'll be all right--you'll be taken care of. 'Where did the--your friend--where did he go ?--which way ? " , " I don't know " I sobbed from behind my handkerchief Digestibility ef Different Kinds ofFood. A London paper publishes sonae in­ teresting statistics showing the length of time iood of different kinds takes to pass through the process of digestion. The results may be more or less correct­ ly obtained by any one with careful watching, but they were, it is stated, ob­ tained in the first instance by a series of experiments on a Canadian named Alexis St. Martin, who was under the care of Dr. Beaumont for a permanent opening in his stomach, the result of a gunshot wound. Through this opening the process of digestion was made visi­ ble, and Dr. Beaumont noted the results. Rice and tripe are the quickest digested, only requiring one hour; a light boiled egg two hours, whereas a hard boiled one requires three hours and a half; roast beef three hours, boiled beef four hours and a half. In mutton the case is reversed, boiled mutton only requires thrfee hours, and roast mutton three hours and a quarter; veal four hours and a half; lamb two and a half; salmon four hours. Pork is the most difficult of all meats to digest, taking five hours and a quarter. From this it can be seen what variety of food is most suitable in vari­ ous conditions of the body. O'MuiiitiGAN--"It's drink, sorr's, ths aorse of ould Oireland. Drink I Drink!--that makes a man 'bate' hi* wife, starve his children, go out to shoot his landlord--and miss him, too, bf dadi" Mistaken. An American who started to ride from Colima to Manzanillo, in Mexico, was stopped on the highway by a well-armed bandit. "Pardon, senor," exclaimed the lat­ ter, " but I perceive that you have my ooat on. Will you have the kindness to remove it ? " The American produced a six-shooter, and, cocking it, replied : " Senor, I am of the opinion that you are mistaken about that coat." "On closer observation I perceive that I am," the bandit answered, and disappeared in the wood. --, Boms Certlflcates. It ia uo viie drugged staff, pretending to to made of wonderful foreign roote, barks, eta, and puffed up by long bogus certificates of pre­ tended miraculous cores, but a simple, pure, effective medicine, made of well-known valua­ ble remedies, that furnishes its own certificates by its cures. We refer to Hop fitters, tbe purest and best of medicinea. Bee another column.--Republican. A CONSPICUOUS increase of suicides among the officers of the Austrian army has led to an investigation, and it is found that pecuniary embarrassment is the cause in 90 per cent, of the cases. The cost of living has greatly increased in Austria, as it has everywhere else in Europe, within a few years, and at the same time the manner of life among the army tiificera has become more extrava­ gant. To offset these larger demands upon their incomes there lias been no proportionate increase in their pay, Which was always notoriously small. « Hough oa Rats." Ack DntgciMts for it. It clean out raU, mioe, roach ea, bed-bugs. 15 cents. Not Bad to Take. C>>i)Kiiui(itive people and those suffering with v i nk htugn. coughs, colds, sore throat and asth­ ma hh- eaiiiMUly recommended to take Pico's Cure. U.t- !*.pt and most pleasant rt-medy for tb'w-- do-eftM-a. H. M. I3augs, of Chatsworth, 111., writes : '* I'l-o'a Cure for Consumption is the bent cough fi nit ely iu tbe market, without any exception." Mfely applied to tii* youngest chiM. y«i worst eruption in two weftke, rendering: r poison. Care* permanently iln uit< *e nor ^ ltd fckln. It may M eiuM, yet will remove UM the akin smooth velvet. It eradieatrn ItanthuJT, Falling the Hair, making it soft and silky, and prodaoti grawtn. St Order through yoar Druggnt. WA.WKH & CO., Proprietor* • Barclay »t.. Jf. T. Til SCHAACK, STEVENSON A CO., Kortllww^ mm A««ite,CUMCQ. IU- Lay the Ax9 '̂ t to the Root If yon would destroy the CM* leering worm. For any exter­ nal pain, sore, wound or tame* ness of man or beast, use only MEXICAN MUSTANG UNI MENT. It penetrates all mus­ cle and flesh to the very bone, expelling all inflammation, soreness and pain, and healing the diseased part as no other Liniment ever did or can. So saith the experience of two generations of sufferers, aad so will you say when you have tried the 44 Mustang. '1 . V -M It i -j\ . hetfhi, eate? of cjgs, and feck nS hair, tend nerval icur futur® h-.ubai d or wife, psfdwlogieailyJ Bradiete4, o-.th esnse. time ami place of n>««tiar, an<f • 4ats •arnitf. Mensy to all not »ati»ti»d. ADDWM Prrf. L HIMM. IAIUOFY PI. B»»U>n, Mass O.H.IT. Ho. SO VA \XTHEN WRITIJfCJ TO AD?EftTlt<EiM, , , ,",n»p '"T yon aaw tke ajvertlseiuM ; fit sliiN , <lsr**<aadi mrHday (AMI MU pt's/essfoN, Usnsral] ItrbUiTy, FrawUs M*- «un, ITaiU mf Hfrt "y, KmrvumJS mmti m- tion. OKKTUUCEDT^I was saflertnv from Ml of . Tin.' \«. uaic utsii t o., jnarsuui., ancn., wui st-iid tlii-ir Elect! o-Voltaic Belts and other Elec­ tric Apj'ltnncts on trial for thirty days to any (K-rrioit »fllicted with Ntrvous Debility, Lost Vitiil-ly and kindred troubles, guaranteeing compK-to restoration of vigor and manhood. Address aa above without delay. N. B. --No risk is incurred, as thirty d*ys' trial is allowed. On Thirty Day*' Trial. \\ Itaic Belt Co., Marshal'., Mich., will The Cost of Weddings. Now that the season of fashionable city weddings is once more, upon us, it may be interesting to know that some enemy of the human race has prepared and printed the following table of the average expense of such a festivity. For a wedding of 1,000 guests, with ushers and bridesmaids, exclusive of bridal dress and trousseau: Da. WINCHBLL'K Teething Syrup has nevei failed to give immediate relief when used it cases of Summer Complaint, Cholera-infantom. or pain« in the stomach. Mothers, when youi little darlings are snffering from these or kin­ dred caasef, do not hcxitate to give it a triaL You will surely be pleased with the charming effect. Be sure to buv Dr. Wincbell's Teething Syrup. Sold by all druggists. Only 25 cents per bottle. IKDTOESTIOX, dyspepsia, nervous prostration and all forms of general debility relieved by taking MENSMAJT'S PEPTONIZED BEEF TOMC. the only preparation of beef containing it« entire nutritions proportion. It contains blood-mak­ ing, force-gfeneruting and life-sustaining prop­ erties; is invuluabk' in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous pros­ tration. overwork or acute disease, particularly if robuitiug from pulmonary camplaints. Cas­ well, Hazard A Co., proprietory New York. I«very »ur)MM M Vtessee is MM 'MtOfChrtoMu Quith. TIT. O. Ssnsnw to ma. A vacation of a moat Ssereiwd prostration and sinking chills. almost immediate and wonderful rseiute. I beold energy ww not permiuieatly abautd. 1 bare used three tiottles of the Tonic. Sincf> usirvgit I have d;.-:®twlea th»"l»- bor lhat I ever did in tbe same time during- a>r iilaass. and with duubie the ewe. With tun toaaneU nei HI @Bil "rtforof bodr. haeoome also a clearness of thoucotnerer b«(ore erycywd. Ktba Toaio haa net i " work.Tknow not whai. I TIN it thecredH. J. P. WJ»TSOK. Pn -- . . _ . _ ( '£%& Iron 4* <i\ ^t«e|Kir«W®TO mf f*ro-IsarMr mfSrmm. JPert*-vian Aarft, atssl P>s« pkstes, asmrtolMI with ihm teprtntO* Aromatirm. /(serves wksrs t.f •ai«r*Clllil Sf Tin OK. NARTER MEOICIMK CO.. 10. SIS MMTK MAUI (TIUT.ST. iwts, KSTABLISHED 18M. JOSEPH^O. TOIDD, Eu.gin.eer and Maohinist. Ilai Hesiip. Jut*-, Rope, O.ikum. B pring Macfainen, Rte<n Eiuinat. " Steam En, " ~ f<n W.t>h^v*s New Patent Act Also, owner and exclusive manufacturer of n«me and Fare* The New Baxter Patent Portable Steam Engine. These eraines are sdminibljr adapted to all klnda «l powv for print ine pres^s. pumping water, fnwinc wuod, grinding cosee, gfnninf cotton, and all Winds of a gr. cultural and mechanical puriicses, and a:e f urnis hedStl* lollowinc r pricc 1-hor pnees: '<rse power a horse power S-horse power Send for deaeriirtira airaolar. •1G0 Mfi 13 -̂horse power SX-bors« power • horse power 1 following J. C. TODD, Paterson, N. J.# Or No. 10 Barclay-st., New-York. Cards Matrimonial undertaker Ushers' scarfs Ushers' pius Minister's fee Sexton's fee Dinner given by groom Bridesmaids' dresses Caterer Mutic Florist.. Organist Miscellaneous ...f 200 tof 8M .. 100 to 900 13 to 20 to .. . 100 to 25 to U 60 eoe 60 M 60C •00 to 1,000 60 to 60 SOOto 600 60 to 100 100 to aoc DB. HOLMAS'B AOVM AKD Lrvaa PAD ahrays eures btcaut<e it acts upon Dr. Holman's ab­ sorption theory, now universally acknowledged to be scientifically correct Its. imitations fail because they are imitations, and of no value whatsoever. SQ to 400 to Total $1,887 to $3,493 People about to incur such an outlay may either take Punch's advice or imi­ tate the Wall street bear who recently caused a man to put his intended son-in- law up to eloping on the express ground of economy.--New York World. No KAN knows what a ministering angel his wife is until he coves home one day, suffering with a dreadful Cold, and she happens to have a bottk of Dr. Bull's Cough lyrupia the house. FOB Headache, Constipation, Liver Compiaint and all bilious derangements of the blood, then is no remedy as sure and safe as Eilert's Day­ light Liver Fills. They stand unrivalled in re­ moving bile, toning the stomach aud in giving healthy action to the liver. Bold by all druggists. CABBOLINE, a deodorized extract of petrole­ um, cures baldness. Tnis is a positive fact, attested by thousands. No other hair prepara­ tion in the world will really do this, besides, as now improved, it is a delightful dressing. FOB a Chris* mas present buy one of the Mass. Organ Co.'s Harptttes, and your children will be delighted and pivc vou music in your own home these long winter evening*. Foa Rheumatism, Sprains and Bruises, use Uncle Sam's Nerve and Bone liniment, sold by all druggists. D'METTAIIRS Dr. XHETTAUR'S H nAUAtm; PILM cur* most wonderfully ta a. Short time both SICK and NERVOUS HEADACHE; and wMIe mmUmg «Sk the nervous system, cleanse the stomach of excess ot MJe» imdadag S regular healthy action of the bowel*. HEADACHE A fall «Im box of these valuable PUJLS, with fell directions for aswa- plete cure, mailed to any address on receipt of nine three-cent portlfi Hamys. If or sale bj all druggists at 83c. Sole Proprietors, BBOWK CHJEHICAJL C030TANT, Baltimore, *1. • PILLS . 4.- ; IMPROVEMENTS--NEW STYLES--NEW CATALOGUE. THE MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN GO., TKAa in any T****11" period ainee th® Bt-; tntr liuctien of this IrsMrunjvat bf tar. ^ofltertnToMANS or BIOHKB KCETI.K.VOE and KKLABOKB- CAPACIT* . <sl* popular twenty years staae BOW offtofaf OIOAKI OF BIOHEI FMU of IMMOVKD QUALITY, AN 3ATALOWK, W op . 4to, U tiowr«*< t with msi ] to •wrf one thin IM Tramwt 64 ̂B< en. and clre •r pare it LOVU Faic*s--AN. S3U,«^>4, UPWUDA. A KBW IWJSNUNO) dj (Octobar. 18»1). faUjr descrttiing and UtaMntiaff aon tk«a MS stjtos *4 rv alais containin« ssach Information about haauu, wilt b« sent frtt and postpaid 46 Bast 14th St, NSW TORK; or. 14» Wabash

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