"j , s: **$- • iv . ! • * • * « tj£5 -..'t ;£ * " *„ " Pledged but to Truth, to Liberty ind Lawi No Favors Win us slid no rear Shall Awe." £5£S± """*" j^te1"1 T'-. Published Evkby Wednesday bt T A N • J ^ Y K M i XSITOB AND PBOPBEETOB. 11^OFFICE IN THE NICHOLS SLOCK. Doora K orth of Perry A Oww'iStew, TEftMs or sussemrnoK: Ki-,; ni»lfc« wr »%•»«•» In the them ae i&saa%» + •.. •0 */l . , ..«; * 1 f ' *' *"• k , » T ' «t • -- - •- At the A JfttM.M1l ft as thnj rtMffNMMpU will to* charged Week*, and eo on. , wllll* 11 bOrAlln eeek&wTheuee of ift TOlemM™5»r%«iBl»ry Hia. BUSINESS CAJBD8. a h. moans, x, d- wi A y A i -- - -- -- -- - iMc* At Residence. jpgniqiAK anp bubqson, M*H«a 1 } a J. HOWARD, M.D. I10XAH AHD SUEGEON. Otej »| „ , ,j» mMMM of B. A. HoWArd, V«t loHenry.IU. ft - • : •• -. • •• ̂ PR.A.X AUBIHOER. T>HT8IOIaNAKD8UBtt*0«. OlMla Dr. Jtohllds building. West *eHenry,M. tendedto, ̂ f.O.OOLBT.D. D.ft. T\S3fW8*. Woe 4L.«?umm IIL SpOclAl Atten- ehlldr<m'< at tm f n» jt il|pi'Wsw to th Parties eoming from AdHtAnoe wonlddo wel to giro timely notice by mull. Office, KenriAl block, corner Mim street And PoWioiqutM a F. BAJWS8, A **OBKBY, Solicitor, And) Counselor, J% OollectionsiA speeiAlty. WOODSTOCK, lunoHk JOSLYN *<OASKT, A TTOBHJKTS AT LAW, WoodStookllL A All bueiioas Will MmIto prompt Atten- KVIQBX A BBOWN, A*SESV£Hf!£&S3rS -^ •,, osioa«4 IU- ; OSb'S •J-- V, S. LWMLST. ; AT LAW, Wd MMMr la OOD8TOOK, ILL.. OflM in tlrfc House, first floor. H. C. MEAD, Justice of the Peace and General Jn- MMHiee Agent jnoluding Accident amd IM* Jnmrantt, W. P. ST. CLAIR. Jktttteeof the Peace and Notary PubHc. heal Estate and Insurance* , Nil***. HI* ^iiJI'.m 1 rUU"' 0 --••- -' .• A. RA. OHUUCH, Wntohmaker mm& Jeweler jî grKSss^ ̂ v W A t o k M A A d O h r o n o m e t e r e . a»-a run AMorttiwat ef Qoodi tm m»iim I, m Hiatal - Surgeon. - - QgleevUh Dr. Auringer, W«H McHenry, JtL Grown, Plate And Bridge Work Art'etlcAlly executed At mmmmbaMo flftices. SpeeUu Alton tto^Von to'Xw'l ̂ SildrenVToetto. tlrtreiri wm*k: MoHENRY, ILL. / JOHN P. 8KHTH, Watohmlnr &£' Jeweler MeHCMKY. ILLINOIS. ,̂ Kinc«no vS amm* ijjjjiiji n i nw'ipujujiki i ii i ii i^t]i KY, ILLINOIS i on Band with tk» Matt Boer* i--.-: JOB* *. UUTBL , Leek Here. "nndotoere. €!»U aadMe tbeee mAking AirangemenU OlM- jr. S. COLBY, MeHenry House, , MeHJSNBT. ILL. |KM. MM1MXH. JiUiiilHWh on tM bulu of tho Vox of i|cBe«ry. meetel m% , tolfonterMiiHMvi •M rleMuro Boekera |Ml«d wl|h Com HEADQUARTERS WMtarna & Son, MOIliif AND CARHIACK PAINT KRS, XoHmniT Iuom We ere propered to do All work 1» onr lino on abort MtUOAttd gnAMntM MtietA^tiea FA.PES HAHaiMQ A SPEOlALTr. PrloM iomnmaMo And work promptly done. 'J-? WESTBBMAiH A SON. MeHenry. Jwonry 30,1894, DiiW States WarCki Aiacy I,. -OF- WM. H. COWLIN, Woodstook Illinois* PfOoooitooAllelAMMAnd kinde of i . mmmI. »• Silted stAtea tor ex-Soldlere, tfietrWidowa, Dependent SelAtive* or Helre. A epoelAltjf 1a MAde in proeeonung old And icAtlona promptly Answered if iiosed toi Car reply. WM, B. COWUM OSeoAtBMUIOAeo, Mtdleon St. WoodntoeK '• " ' J '-•! •'••-\L? f" ' 10c. "v t> \3, l®c- Does Anote from your cigkr arise Like inoenae in the air? Or doee it only cause a smudge And make yottr neighbor a wear? Why will yon stick to cabbage leaves And drive your friends afar, When you can purchase for a dim® "Our Monogram" cig«*T; . ioc- too. BARBIAN BROS. «"it HAKSKB OF| Choice Cigars. We eAn sell you on* or a tbouannd--retail or wboleRAle. DO YOU KNOW --.WHO iBLUN Boy# cape Overcoats $160 Men's chin Overcoats 4 50 Men's wool Suits 4 50 Boy's Suits f 125 and 2 50 Men's wool Shirts and Drawers...... 50 fl.Ro Buck gloves only 1.00 leavy lined gloves and mitte 55 8 pairs handsome socks 25 Best beaver can 75 Hundreds of goods at these prices. ' f ̂ E. LAWLITS. Opposite Riverside Honse. vyr lt • ""ViSSt'-liii tESt lNtBK WORLD. 4- ;<'<%**%• COAL & FEED Good Supply,\:j - - • For Spot Cash. Only. , t • r f J -t j J Prices Reduced;;AccordinQly. t% I'lVynKinl,!! ll will pay yon to inrestigate. W. A. CRISTY, ji WJSST MoMENMYt ILL* iZr,.- ""Vi4 .. " " - • SHOCLD OBW W» IW Thatto what wearesat- l^iled to malce« *• The Beiti *• «»<i tlkinlc we can sio demonstrate to yow if yow will 0*?# w lfce opportnnlty. OsU ln *nd see th* Coeds and Im H ,̂ oonvlnoed. \ : OUS CARLSON. MeHeuy, Bl., 189& -' A-Eaffela's AND wtmm McHCNRY, ILLINOIS. r ?£$ '•At*'*. mth§" i Jm* * "*m 'm k •* Eina Kentucky Ufoon, French Bittiri, --AND-- J. Seklttz MUTankee Bsttls Beer. In any quantity from & Snitz Qlass to 1C0 barrels. At Wholesale or Retail Beer in bottles kegs or casa, as cheap as the cheapest. 5 I b«y none but the best and sell at reasonab'e prices. Call and gee me and I will ns use you well. ANTONY ENGELN. McReury, III. , NEAR THE DEPOT* X MoHENRY, OX KSepe op«n tor the seiwiMlstW oftbe Public a rlrft-Olwe Salonl sad Restanrant, Where he will at all time* keep the beet bjfmfd* of Wines, Llqnore and oynM. Jpl!™ to be found In the market. fV-s' PAB8F8 Ltgtr 8mc At Wholesale and Retail* Beer In Large or Small Kegs or Bottles Al- itajs on band, cheaper than Any other, qnAli- ty considered,. Orders by suil promptly Attended to. GOOD BTABLimr^FOB HOJUSS «e. Robsrt Sohlossle. ""SS^SSf8 f\ade a Wall f\ao of n«» 1804. th* MoBwOatalegeesl Uklouinmn. "Contains 112 pages S x 101-2 In., with descriptions that describe, not mislead-, illustrations that instruct, not exaggerate. The cover is charming la har monious blending of water col or prints in preen and »blt<\ with a gold background, -- t. dream of beauty. 81 pages of Novelties printed inSdiffcrrnt colors. All the leading novel ties and the best of the Old Ta- rieties. These hard time* you v, cannot afford to run any risk. .{/ Boy I i ON EST GOODS whfie ' you will receive KI'I.L MEAS- JJBE. It is not tseeeasaiy to ad vertise that Vlek'sseedagiw, this Is known the world over, and also that the harvest pays. A Twy lit tle «pent f ir proper seed will Save grocer's and doctor's t ills. Many concede Vlck's Floral Guide the handsomest catalogue forMt If you love a fine garden acod ad dress now, with 10 cents, which may be dedurtod from ftist order. |»S0 0Mb i*rl« % for Fot»to«. J"*"®1*. JMSES VSCK'S SONS. VITAUS TBMM FRENCH REMEDY K^^SS^^w^Aii ̂ nli Toong men wlU regain their loet manhood. •ndoldmoi will Hwover their youthful yiKor by ualngVITAI.IS«. It quickly And swrely re •tor^TlIeri"WMMe^Yjoet vitallty, ta|0»ncy, N^AttyXaslMripoa, Lost Power, »Wll5g Mein- ,Wasting Dlaeiaaes. And All eSgmof self or omn and Indiscretion, wlitoot {rrssrSrSnasss Addran in. Stoty'sDrngStfw^ 1ECHSIU7< ELECTWC Sold to City, Kg-feSaBr-- «g .̂_ nwnhbors. Fin. •ajwhere, any dUteoeg.^ b ̂ om when shipped. Can wgaWgJWHi! never out of ordar, no repa««b time. Wurrnnted. AmMMTSM^r. Write. W. P. Harrison & Co., Cleni I iliimbus.C. P A T E N FOR PWJTECTIM, ROT FM ffrite DUBOIS A DUBOIS, Pitoatlttewji. Inventive Age Building, WASHINGTON, D. C. BY Otd> N®6DAY, APRIL 4, 1894. .vV \ 5=-. ikr fit II R. lngs month AUUttT Snow, Itljutan The ladies of tbeG. A. B. of Chicago have does nobis «frk the pul three miMiths or iaon ia^pî jlag food to thousMds ont at<emp)$ymen&. And now besides Atlanta, Ga., aad St. Paul, Minn., Looiaville, Ky. is men tioned by several influential papers as being iu« plus is* sexfe mtfaml mpment. The Dak» Vetorea Oab, of Chicago, is the jbcgssfe old MUdln organisation in the ooontry wtth the eou t̂km of the Oraad Army of the Republic. The Union Veteran Club has a membership of over 2,000. Much ths best *a? to disteftwte the sdguiort ̂is to pay it ont to the vet erans in settlement of their just claims. This will at ones asatter it among the whole people where it will* do inconceiv ably the most good. Why should this government take more than 29 years to settle the claims of the mm who fought in the war of the rebellion ? The other claims growing out of the war were settled long ago. No Musibie excuse can be Riven for longer pottering around the pension claims. On the Mexican Pension roll there are the names of 15,215 survivors and 7,282 widows and something over 3,000 cases were pending at latest reports. This makes a total of 25,497, or several thou sand more men than the United States had in Mexico at any one time during the war. These all receive either |8 or $12 a moatfc. __________ Major Nevans, of Chicago, the fa* mous band-master, died Tuesday night, after a protracted illness. His fame has become world-wide as a musician, and universal regret is expressed over his death. He was among the first to re spond to Lincoln's call tor troops to put down the rebellion aad served all through the war. . On last Friday, fiL A. Sutherland, who reeidee at Saugus, Mass., coughed np a bulled from his lungs. It had been lodged there since Oct. 11, 1863, when he was shot in the neck by one of Mosbv's guerrillas in the battle of Cul pepper Court house. For years he has suffered but did not know the cause of the hemorrhages which troubled him. A visit to' Custer's last battlefield which is now a National Cemetery, is extremely interesting. Here, seventeen years a ago, General Cutter and five companies of the Seventh U. S. Cavalry, numbering over 200, officers and men, were cut to pieces by the Sioux Indians end allied tribes under Sitting Bull. The battlefield, the valley of the Little Big Horn, located some forty odd miles south of Custer, Montana, a station on the Northern Pacific Kaiiroad, can be easily reached by stage. The G. A. R. boys have engaged a pro fessional decorator from Chicago to put the city in holiday attire for the encamp ment in May. The Nelson hotel, 6. A. R. ha.ll and opera house will be handsomely decorated and a mammoth arch across the street be constructed at Porter's cor ner. Doubtless many of the business men will engage the decorator to trim np the exteriors of their stores for this occasion. The members of the G. A. R. will make an effort to have the decora tions excell any display of the kind ever made in this city.--Rockford Star. The largest aggregate of pensions paid out by any one agent of the United States government has been made by Sidney L. Wilson, who is located in Washington. The let of March marked the ninth year that Mr. Wilson has held his present position, and up to that date he had paid to old soldiers exactly $69,777,917.59. There are other agents who have been in the service as long as Mr. Wilson, but none other occupies a field in which so many veterans reside as is the case in the District of Columbia. Pension agents are among the highest bonded officers of the government, and Mr. Wilson has had to secure his employer from loss by a bond of #435,000, which his splendid reputation for trust ncrtuii«s5w wloii him to get with little trouble. In May the 133 old battle-Hags carried by Iowa regiments during the war and now stored in the state arsenal, will be removed to the capitol and hermetically sealed in big cases, now under course of construction. It will be a notable event and will be observed with solemn pomp -by the G. A. R. and National Guard of the state. As near as possible the men who carried the flags during the war will carry them to their last resting place at the capitol. In the many instances where these men are dead, members of the same regiments will have the honor. Several companies of the National Guard will be the guard of honor, and several posts of the G. A. R. besides the two local posts, will take part in the event. For the last time the flags will be carried to be sealed up, never again to be touched by menial hands. We am making an itdvaaoe safe of wl#e goods, embroideries, lacee, table liases and towels. Fbbbt & Owax. ntfcy. Foisted and Pertinent. Coxey and his deluded followers are not the first men to discover that the road to Washington is a hard one to travel. The woman who deserves the sympa thy of all, in connection with Brecken- ridge-Pollard scandal, is the present Mrs. Breckenridge. ̂ Senators Hill aad Gorman are said to he jealous of the boom of Vice President Stephenson. Tut, tut, boys, why this foolishness ? Don't you know that the Democratic nomination in '96 will be a very empty honor, not worth losing your tempera for. At last the trimming of Senator Brice on th«> silwr and tariff questions is ac counted for; he is up a Presidential Ughtning rod. The Repubtieaa who puts up a nickle with the expectation of carrying Ala bama is, Ii sporting parlance, a "sucker." As long as our newspapers print the entire testimony in such cases as that against Congressman BrecSenridge, Americans have no right to throw stones at Zola, the French novelist. Zola never wrote anything M #tj as that tes timony. Congress will have to hump itself to keep public attention, now that the circus season has opened and the base ball season only three weeks away. Secretary Herbert is said to have been snubbed by Cleveland at a recent cabinet meeting. He isn't likely to resign, how ever; |8,000 position* are act plentiful in Alabama. Congressman Beltzhoover, of Pennsyl vania, a Democrat, told his constituents: "There are many iniquities in the tariff bill, and I tried my best to correct some of them, but the free traders fairly howl ed at me and had I persisted would, I believe, have mobbed me." What a charming measure this tariff bill is, any way. Congressman Breckenridge'* plea, that he was led astray by Miss Pollard, may possibly be true, but it certainly isn't plausible. According to Col. Breckenridge 'twas merely a modern version ol Shakes peare's Venus and Adonis. One of the unanswerable conundrums is why the real estate agent is so darned anxious to eell you the property which he knows will double Its value within a year. Why doesn't he borrow money at six, or even ten per cent, and buy it himself. The Washington police authorities are not sympathetic; they have announced their intention to arrest Coxey and his army as vagrants should they really get to Washington. President Peixoto, of Brazil, appears to be quite as blood-thirsty as Mrs. Dominie, of Hawaii, was when Minister Willis was (Jangling a battered crown before her eyes. "Gen." Coxey would be nearer where he belonged in a straight-jacket than in a general's uniform. It would be just as well for some people to remember that a cause which cannot win success in this country without in voking sectionalism isn't worthy of suc ceeding, and, what is more to the point, will not permanently succeed. Cramp, the ship builder, says the Dem ocratic free ship bill, now pending in Con gress, would wreck American ship build ing. Well, Mr. Cramp, the Democrats ars doing all they can to wreck all other American industries, why Bhould you suppose they would be disposed to spare •hip building? * \ A color study of "By the a full page wood engraving of "His First Catch," a number of "Sea-Coast Sketches," soms drawings of "Goldfish," and a group of oysters arranged as "A Study of Still Life," give rather a marine flavor to the Aprif issue of The Art Amateur. The number is by no means all "water,̂ "however-- The Art Amateur never suffers one branch of art to domi nate others in its columns. "Easter Lilies" makes a double page illustration, "La France Roses" form one of the color suplements, and there is ' A Study of Narcissus," besides articles on Flower painting, Landscape painting, Hints on Sketching, etc. What Hubert Heakomer has to say on "Portrait Painting" wilt perhaps interest the general reader as much as anything, though the colonial book-plates in the Ex-Libris Department and the continuation of the papers on "Christian Iconography and Symbolism" will also appeal to many who tire not themselves artists. The new Metropoli tan Club House in rsew York is criticized Mid some views of Mr. F. Hopkinson Smith's studio supply the illustrations for an article on "Some Studio Corners." The frontispiece is an engraving by Baude, of Clarin's "Pierrette." All of the regular departments are, as usual more <*«•*» abundantly represented : Painting from Still Life and on Tapestry, raiinfi, and Glass, in Oil, Wate^color and Pastel, Modeling in Clay, Pyrography, Embroidery, etc., etc., and the large size supplements of Practical Working De signs in pretty nearly every department of applied art. The pungent comments on the art-interests or the moment make the "Note Book" assentertaining as ever. (35 cents ) Montague Marks, Publisher, 23 Union Square, New York. fAX BACHELORS, IN aSAtrtmonlal Market Wowl* B* .Boomed and Commenw pwwlttd. We commend the suggestion recently offered by a Baltimore woman to the ef fect that a tax should be levied on bach elors. Then is scttastihfag in this prop osition that commends itself to the judicial mind. It does not, for instance, attack a social olsss. It makes no dis crimination between the rich and the poor. The idea is to tax every bachelor who cannot show that he is to marry because of having to support de pendent relatives to the extent (if $16 per annum. The estimate b that there an 6,000,000 of marriageable bachrfors itt the United States, and that at least 4,000,000 of these have no valid excuse for their selfish and useless condition. A tax of $10 pm capita, £hsi«fcffw, would yield #40,000,000. It could be col lected without much expense. It wonld do no great harm, and it would have the merit of providing its own remedy far those who felt unwilling to pay. If it accomplished nothing else, it would oom- municate a powerful boom to the matri monial market, and so, for every $10 +>»** the government lost, put at least $100 into general circulation. It might, to be sure, divert some of those thin but noisy little rills that run to ice cream, soda water, steamed oysters, theater tickets and philopenas, but it would turn loose whole torrents into the coffers of the butcher, the baker, the grocer, tiro apothecary, the family physician sad the wet nurse. And though under such a dispensation the American youth might put on the yoke of Hymen rather than be taxed as a renegade to that rosy deity, and though government might thus be compelled to seek elsewhere for a revenue, the revolu tion would so fill the land with new ac tivity , so load the *air with the perfume of paregoric, and so throng the parks and sidewalks with nursemaids that the whole nation would feel the Impulse and all mankind be made the happier and better through its influence. Either the treasurer would get a revenue or society be purified and population stimulated. The real cause of the commercial de pression is want of confidence ̂the hoard ing of money, stagnation in trade and dearth of investment, but with 4,000,000 of yonng brides moving into new quar ters, setting np independent establish ments and preparing for the responsibili ties and the consequences of wedlock, the wheels of industry would once more begin to hum and the pulses of business go to beating with fresh force and vigor. --Washington Post. ; j 80UD SILVER BATHTUB. Freddy Gebfcard'a Untune Gift to the Z*dy Who Xs Wew Bis Wife, A New York correspondent says that the last antenuptial present made by Fred Oebhard to the lady who is now Mrs. Gebhard was sent to Baltimore two days before the wedding. This present is a solid silver bathtub. The corre spondent continues: "It is not one of those common everyday German diver affairs such as Albany legislators ars wont to lave in. The white metal in this gorgeous antenuptial gift is without alloy. The vessel is as commodious ss the workmanship displayed on it is in tricate and ingenious. Tall and beauti fully proportioned as the lady is, she will be able to disport herself in this lover's gift without fear of stubbing her pink toes at one end of it or abraaing her scalp by sudden contact with the other. "This little piece of boudoir furniture is beautifully embossed. The exterior resembles a perfectly laid ont flower garden in miniature, while the interior is delicately chased. On the bottom of the tub are engrossed Mrs. Gebhard's initials in huge letters. It weighs 200 pounds avoirdupois weight. The market; price for silver at present is 88 cents an ounce. In this double decked and triple riveted vessel suggestive of female syba ritism there are 8,200 ounces. At 88 cents an ounce this amounts to $3,656 for the metal alone. "Silver workers in New York who were allowed to feast their eyes on the beautiful vessel before it was swathed in tinted cotton and soft tissue paper, preparatory to being sent to Baltimore, say that it could not possibly be made for less than $2,500. This brings the cost of the gift np to $5,156. The interi or of the bathtub is fitted up with recep tacles for soap, brushes, sponges, etc., and near the head of it is a dainty silver box attached to the side, in which is a silver manicure set. There is also a com fortable headrest, with an open space for a rubber air pillow should the fair user desire to take a dolce far niente bath. Altogether this little piece of water bric- a-brac is decidedly Gebhardesque. BUCKLEN'S ARNICA SALVE.: .1 <1 The best Salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sons, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 eents MP . ,J U L f yL,y w- box. For sale by G. W. Besley. "T0wk» ̂ Lovers of Art Anxluaa French lovers of art are becoming anx ious over the distribution of many price less treasures in the past year among English, Gferman and American collect ors. The original gallery of General Hacqum, the .Napoleonic general who sacked the city of Pavia, has been bro ken up. World renowned originals of the early Italian, Dutch, Flemish and French schools went, most of them, to London and Berlin. Hie absence of any national reserve fund for the purchase of gnch treasures is much regretted. The annual subsidy allowed to the govern ment galleries is only $80,000. It is urged that the unused fund of nearly $3,000,- 000, the product of the sale of the crown jewels, be devoted to this purpose, A. small admission fee at the Louvre is also" advocated for the double advantage of keeping out loafers and raising revenue to purchase additions.--Art JournaL Chicago's Alleged Blarney StoM. Those who took the trouble to kiss the alleged "Blarney stone," in the wpBaof the reproduction of Blaraeg? oastls* in the Midway plaisance, will be delighted to learn from an official report of Depu ty Customs Collector J. F. Ralph that the object of their osculations was a limestone paving blocks dag ont of the streets of Chicago and palmed off on the customs officers and public as a genuins THEY WILL OiaM aad Oonrko Are Dying, i sky la Breaking Down. Nicholas deCHen is dying I burg. JosephGourkoiai in Warsaw. Peter Wi sought to restore his ahsttered l the south shore of the bat he has returned to Ml 1 as he left it, a brolmn dowai of these three rem half aototuryintheservleSofl fay. Each has exercised a adfl sacs on b--pntw ̂stnofH Btch approacfaes lde covered with attyiag that he has safiqBiNl toi the full oaafidsooa and even the i shipof his sOMceis It is a trite saying in Berlin I vest Soon farg^S te Mottk»sharpaoed!t,sikdl it from its sheath. I&SnL : might be said with squel WannowSky forged -the l|SSi.̂ Gourlroaiuupenedit,andGieraksptiti its sheath. Wannovndpy has , Gourko hsa threatened it, mi^im de Giers has averted it. On tta nent the statesman wi&oat awar | is usually condemned to the < the virtuous woman. M. de forts to preserve the psaee hate IMHp evident and so successful, howevel* f the ebbing of his fife is. watehsi | the keenest hopes and fears from Berlin, Vienna and Rome. Giers, Gourko and Waimowsky are the last of the celebrated ltosstiMt ~ 1 survived the Bismarckian ropean politics. They wettt rariesof Gambetta, MacMahont,] Gladstone, Moltke, Roon, Benedek and Andrassy, altl of the three came into to Ai|is@ long after the names of ̂ oame household words rope. Of the fRmousstateaasistt i erals of their day, only ] the Italian prime minister, is' fice. Of the sovereigns of gBM|t4 only Queen Victoria and Emperorl Joseph still reign.--Exchange ̂ UP LANGUAGE. • Hew Wmi Which la Now IT»4e* atonlnCnelAnd'eUMPer' "Lip language" is 1 latest erase which will ooooî 'thsll time of society in the place of playing and skirt dancing. onoei When meet star eras flroon still more main And >».y tttl ̂ There's hat oaa langaMpttve ana ifreek-- "Tla brief, hnt rather west at. Perchance we fcevaall «f us had i it is quits a different kind of! that I am now alluding to. ftisreaawg1;̂ : and understanding words shaped bytfaa lips without arttcaktion. , That this is poesible is well known the efficient manner in which deaf i have been able to take their pert on 1 stage, and if people bscoaiiei the art it will be surprising society will bsootnew' be somewhat dull, but*at shaUbesparodthatperpetaalJ which ofttimes msfaie ̂ party so wearisome, sod we fchaft i of the roar aad buxs of anmhljiw, U perfection is atfadasft to with a couple of good opam pie will be aide to ooaveras wis* rli siderable distance i -- ̂ ™ tioers of the art ' to shave, and it will be a aioi ] law to find whether slander veyed by this silent -- tionable or not. " > Probably the only people who IP ject to the new pastime will be,- perpetual Jabbers, those exercisers, to whom nothing m the sound of their owa * don Graphic. THE HONtSf INJUN. ' It would be interesting to know what the enemiee of the red man have te say: , about the case of Nathaniel Jaigfcial^p Nathaniel comes from down Law^S^^t way, and Tuesday he was dark brown sassafras on the at the city. Now Jamison is a man. Having disposed of many j bundles of sassafras, he went tor in firewater and bought a< rare whisky. This he took with htafcta': the reservation at night, and to his**! brethren of the forest he disposed flf )| at retail prices. So he made two prdtt* / on his sassafras. The red man that it was contrary to law for hist sell whisky to his people, but in his ows '̂ heart he felt no sense of guilt. Day before yesterday he wen| tf|| firewater man again, and whiiS hs ̂ buying of him a United States ; arrested him and took commissioner. Contrary to custom, he pleaded gnitty. ThSM sioner, knowing him to of a] ltfHwing K'*" to bo djCiiSStt; < best not to enter that pftesa* dian cried out: "Fm guilty! who pleads not gni%wpH|] is a d d liarf* Of < answer to make to thifltaad ̂ Injun had his way for Courier. •I I. II •' .Hi j Oataead mm Kpldanale, flnwyi niXtttlpipAt S!ptiK)p$!iBB xv ^A. ai.^ ,--* * - •••• '•-A tot# tM tinvrami on of lag epidemic of typhoWtewr. *lis were not eoAy oovereft sS ' thrown by tha Clearing away the flimsy the city nearly $10,000, besides young foliage.--Paris Herald. . tts gfawt Miriilas ; : The Kuarfsn papers ffcw tlisj project of choosing Jerusalem f-*1 meridian. H Russia -- Uaved that its exampfc by Prance, which wsa^ -̂ refusal of the geogrsjpWcsl Washington to accept*-®" anaatheflrgt.-4iew- . 1*ai> the Now i