· ht'wuttfthtU t"'tt°'"'"'U. .R p. -"' a;' -"' ;ymft WEDNESDAY, SEPT. !1!11!!!!!*"!'11·-!!_!_!_!_,-z--!A 14, 1887. It is a.a natural to a child to be happy, as But for this they it is to a fish to swim. need a certain amount of "letting alone." It is a great mist<J,ke for parents to hamper their chilaren with foolish restrictions. . We pity the little B's, our next-door neighbor's children, from the bott9m ot our heart. There is a picket fence in front of the huse, and they are scarcely allovred to go near it, lest they should climb a.nd hurt They cu.nnot climb a tree for themselves. They may n.ot skate or the same reason. The consequence of swim or have a gun. this training is that their parents .have made qowa.rds of -them all, with the excep tion of little Bessie, who is the most daring little mischief tha.t ever wore a sunbonnet, and she has learned to be deceitful and plays all her mad pra.nks well out of sight of her parents' eyes. We caught her the other day walking the railing of a bridge that crossed the track of a. railroad a hundred The rniling was not a. foot feet below.wide, and she triumphantly told ns that she had walked it while the train was pas·ing It wa.s enough to make one under it. shudder. Don't fancy your boy is ma.de of glass. Grant a reasonable request, and let him feel that when you refuse, it is for his own Between the Jellybys and the good. Gradgrinds of life, children have a hard The youngest child needs i;ome time of it. sort of agreeable occupation, and a certain There is amount of l_)hysical freedom. ·nothing more pain.ful to young people than to feel that life is one dull routine, and tha.'t "nothing ever happens," as we once heard a. disconsolate lad remar -. Bringing UJf Children Rationally. their na.tura.I hues with silks. These pads are ta.eked on with gimp and brass-headed nails. Bows of satin ribbon are tied on the front legs to ma.tch the plush in color. The rocking chair, figur.e 2, has a crescent snaped head-rest made of peacck-blue plush, tied on with ribbon the same shade. Willow chairs that ha.ve become discolored can be mad,,; to look like new, by staining them to imitate cherry; they will need several coats, arid lastly a coat of varnish. A friend showed me one she had treated in this manncr, and it was by far the prettiest chair in It was trimmed with blue, which the room. harmonized beautifully with the cherry. .?" _!_! diLAB--CA U '-'!':-m.ii11 11 .7 · :- ; -::::::·:= · · · :=:-::::·- - l:"'l l !C'7 ... z:!!! - - !!! --·· - ==:= ==!._ == -= !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!! !!!!!!! !!! !!!! !'!!! !!! !!!!!!!!! !!! !!!! !!! !!!!!!!! ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! , R£CKLESSN:ESS ON DIZZY H.filGhTS. LATE FOREIG.N NEWS. BUY ·PURE . . --· - - - · -·-- --- - -·--- · - - -- - ---- ·- . Cutting Capel'8 over th e pool. Ntagura Whirl· To make good pie crust, take four )1.eaping cups of flour to one of lard, add salt and water to make stiff .,nongh to handle, but Floor Paint. do not mould. "When preparing the upper kitchen floor, especially one ta.t is For a lard, on a little more crust, roll out, spread l u p and roll out rough and uneven, the. New York. Tribune sprinkle with f our, fold re<:ommends the followmg 111 ne p t11nt : To again. For crust for lemon pies i·epea.t this three pounds o sprue yellow add oe pound_ process twice. or two pounds if desired, of dry white lead, APP LE p ms.-Quarter an d 8r I c e th 01 a p- and mix: well together. Dissolve two ounces I · te, 'Pe, put a. row around the e Jge of the often of g lue m one quar t of wat er, st" nrmg · · · t up 0ver .. e ;indor crus fill l "t then tur th until smooth and nearly boiling. Thicken . , pie may be easoned the glue water. after the manner of mush, Ih1s it a h.ttle va.y. . wit cmnamon, nutmeg, . or oher sp10es, and until it will spread smoothly upon the floor. . . . salt. Sweeten it wit fou tabl Use a. common paint brush an,i apply hot. a little Germans m Russia. · { f spoonfuls ? f sugar a nd one o mo asses i . This will fill a.11 crevices of a rough floor. It Dy recent decree of the Russian Czl.r very ta.rt 1f not, use less-add a spoonful ot w-1 ·1 ed all foreigners in Western Russia are for'11 dry soon- n d 'IVhen dry a.ppIY bo1 ' 'tll an · ut "f ' t very J · cy-th en cover Wl a I few n a. bidden to purchase or to hold land. It is !insee oi with a clean brush. : rt by use to enough also declared that those foreigners who IE -Peel and slice the stalks llOl:!rs it wll be found dry P laying paprs ?r mats to step on for a few : lease or rent Russian land shall be subject. · 1Il sma.11 p1eces, p · 1 ace a. row a bout the edge days. li u suds clea.ning hot it needs e use W · ed to a heavy special tax· . .. of the pla.te, turn up tb e under crust over , , ___ !here is no doubt that this severe decree it to prevent the juice running ou ·add is aimed especially at te multitudes of Bits and Ends. si:1t and seven tablespoonfuls of sugar, . who have settled m these parts of Germans -..sprinkle plentifully with flour cover with und tltcmse1ves affi" u.tany women ,, 10 ted <ath er.ord e on the1r ich b Russia w h" · own. F ' the upper crust a.ud press the edge firmly with rheumatism but never think to look in, land ancl esp.ec1a.lly m that part of it known down. the cellar to find'the cause· .. as the Ba.lIC Provinces. _ . . CUSTARD Prn.- To fill a quart plate, beat , he relat10ns between the two great EmWomen who are pas their girlhood will T four eggs add four tables oonfuls of sugar, be glad to know that gms are hopelessly out -1 . pires of Central and Eastern urope a.re · one as · 1 emon or 'it and nutmeg, i e sa a l"ttl · of fash" ion now-a- days and th.at 27 is the pro- , peculiar, and in view of probable future may prefer and fill up with mi!k. army whole a is consequence The age. per . events are very interesting. For a long , ' · LEMON Pm.-Gra.te 0 the ye1low rmd, of 27-years-old. period a close alliance and friendship have To free the pul rom the white ad seeds. Matthew Arnold, when asked what he con- existed between the reigning houses of the suga. a. u of boi ng wat a d a two This has been the result part· tates. sidered the true standard of pronunciation, f l : r u er, an f sa ' a sma. piece 0 a. itt e 0· answered, that in his opinion the best 1 ly of near ties of kinship, and partly of the th.icken ith on tablespoonful of cornstach ·authority was "the usage of well-bred wo · necesity that, for public reasons, the two . httl ld w er, when cool I men,"-better than the stage or any pro- empires should be friendly to each other. rodded it . · to t e. emo ';it a. b ea n eg. a , The resent German E mperor is great nouncing dictionary. . , I !E. -Fill tlie plate with bernes "If I couldn't have a house with more uncle to the present Czar of Russia, and and add a little alt, and three tablespoon- than two rooms in it,,, said a bright lady, the Czar's mothe_r was_ a German princess, . fuls of u_gar, sprmkle over flour to thicken as she was examining some a.rchitect'd plans, so that not a little mt1ma.zy has been · up long kept a for time up the imce. between the two "those two should be a ha. th-room ·and a. Moc:K: Mrnc.E PrE. -One cup of rolled piazza. " And then, no doubt, she would rulin families. . I On tl1e other hand probably no two neighcrackers, 01;1.e C\lp of sugar, one cup molas- want thiee closets in ea.ch room 'boring people in Europe are more hostile ses two cups of water a little vinegar and w h" 1 g ic The ,en t" · m · iment °f . the 0Id sa :y i to each other than are the Germans and the salt' one teaspoonful' "ac.h of cinnamon, runs : A woman a dog and a wa.lnut tree, · R uss1ans. - mutual dislike · - .. .. The1r shows its: . its of two or three b' clove, and nutmeg, add ... ip ,em t1ie better th ey be , se the more you w h"' .. . If m · 'I'he one peup1 e a. h undre d ways. .. the butter when the mix ture is put m a d Dick ' · was e ·hoed b both Th ck r Protestant, te other belongs to . the plates. . This quantity will make three Both f thes! men held :le heory . Greek Chi;irch. rhe Germans a.re thrifty, Ia.rge pies. . the kind of man most liked by women wa.s ha_rd-worrng and sober i the Russians are the OM that maltreated them with oc-. sh1ftless, molent, and mtemprate. casional intervals of tenderness. ' Useful Recipes. Ra.ch natrnn, moreover, distrusts and fears he other. They stand side ·by side, FRIED POTATOES. -Slice potat oes in nice . · -·- · !both armed o the teth. Ea.ch wishes to long pi!Jces, and put in cold water, take oµt INSTINCT OP AN OLD RAT. , : be the superior powe,r m _ Eurpe, and ea?h and drain, put in a cloth and wipe dry. Willing to Risk Iler Own Ure to Save Fry in hot boiling lard ; salt as they al'C ·looks forward to a war m which they will Tl1ose or Der Ollspring, be arrayed upon opposite sides. taken out. Th I?resenoe of so many Germans in On a. very warm day in early summer . lcED TEA.-For a dozen tumblers of tea use twelve teaspoonafuls of Oolong tea, I happened to be standing near a chicken 'Russia is a constant source of irritation. twelve tumblers of water and about tno coop in a back yard when I noticed the head Many of the officials, high and low, in Russia quarts of broken ice-not very fine. Wash of a very gray a.nd grizzled rat thrust from a' ?-re Ger. ans. There are German officers . the ice until it is perfectly clean, and put neighboring rat hole and concluded to watch n the mi_htary staf!; G?r.man professors nd After a ca.re- eachers m the u m versities and gymnasia. ; it into the vessel in which the tea is to be the movements of the veteran. ma.de, Pour {u the water and then sprinkle ful survey of the surroundings our old rodent and shrewd,_ pusng Get·man merchants in Cover and set in the re seemed to b satisfid that all was right, and all the Russian ct1es. _ in the dry tea. The la e Cza.r, A lexan der II., was very frigerator or some' other cool place for four made a cautious exit from the home retreat.· or, better still, six: hoµrs. The drink will A fresh pan of water had been recently fond of G . erman , and had ra.thei: German tha.n Russian traits and tastes. His mother placed before the chicken coop and the water be found strong and exhilarating. was G.,nan i and ,heh mself received a large Imm TEA No. 2.-For each perron allow looked friendly invitation to the thirsty old rat, which immediately started toward it. 'par of h:s eucatton m Germany. It w me tetispoonful of black tea, pour boiling The rat had not reached the pan before durmg hts reig1.1 that the. Germans went 1.n water upon it and let it stand where iG will such ni;imbers ito Russ:a? an took their Cool it in a five hlf-grown young ones rush<.d ahead n minutes. "draw" fo place_s n resp_onsible positwns lil the army, h ii.t and tried the water. to be t e The· first cellar. the refrigerator, or on the bottom of th m vil service, and the chools: . ma.de leap thereupon a o rat ld immediately _ 'Vhen ready to serve, sweeten, enrich with he present Czar and his advisers, how-· cream, and pour upon b_its of ice in a glass. hke a k angaroo and was at the edge of the I r dish in advance of the foremost of her litter. ?Ver, d<;> not like to have so any Germans SARATOGA CmPs:-Cnt ra w potatoes in Then ensued a most rem!l.rkable occurrence. m Rssm. The:r.__ k i;i_ow that, rn case of a war, slices t\S thin aR wafers with a thin sharp The mother rat raieed herselfon her haunches he Genl:\ans who .. !"e 110".Y the leaders of the . . knife; lay them in ice over night, a bit of and hit and sora.tched her offspring so mdustr:y and commrce m Western Russi!1, alum will make them more crisp ; tht: next and their swa:r;ns workmen, of will German severely whenever they attempted to rea.ch morning rinse in cold water and dry with a. water that they a.I! finally scudded away, go back to their own country, and nter the towel. Have ready a kettle of lard, hotter .: . evidently very i1rnch astonished and fright- Ger a n army: · than fo1 fried cakes, and di·op in the pota ened at the strange and unaccountable be- I. If ther should be war between Germany toes a few at a time. They will brown havior of their mother. When the little ones and Russia, these men would return to the quickly ; skim out in a colander and sprinkle were at u. safe distance the reasons for her places where they are now peacefully workwith salt. extraordinary behavior began to be revealed ing, to fight the R11esians, and perhaps to SPANISII CREAM.- of a box of gela.tine, at once in the intelligent action of the old conquer for their . own their former residence. 1-!i pint.! of milk, 3 eggs, !./;of a cup of white mot,her I The decfep which has been spoken of will rat, sugar. Put the milk into ii. saucepan to 1;)he first wetted her whiskers in the water, doubtless have the effect of driving many, gether with the gelatine and let them boil looked suspiciously about her, then very perhaps most, of the Germa.ns from the soil the in yolks for twenty ·minut.es; then stir cautiously and carefully took a dainty little of Western Russia. It will certainly have of the eggs beaten well with the sugar ; now sip of the liquid. She tasted it as tentatfrely the furt!ier result of embittering still more in stir im and fir!l remQve the'pan from "the and critically as a professional tea.taster, and the feelmg of the two peoples against each mediapely the whites of the eggs beaten to when she was satisfied that it contained no other. through mixture the . a stiff fi;oth.; .now press poisonous or other· deleterious matter she -·- a fine wire siev:e, put it in a mould and set gave a couple of squeaks, which brouttht her wa.nted. till it on the ice young and thirsty broo.d to her side, and aI : The Last Question on .Examination ray. 01v.NOE PUDDING. Four sweet oranges, fearlessly drank to their fill. Does not this We were ranged on the floor in front of one pint of sweet milk, one large teaspoon look very like reason? tho visitors on examination day to be looked ful of cornstarch, three eggs and one cup at, anc). nswer such questions as they or of sugar. Use only the juice of the oranges It Stood for Something. the teachers saw fit to ask. and the aoft pulp which must be cut fine. "Where was John Rogers burnt to "Mamma," said little Susie Thoughtful, Moisten the cornstarch with a. little of the . death ?" said the teacher to me in a commilk a.nil put the rest· where it will boil, "what is a cipher?" " Why, my dear, " replied the astonished mantling voice. Mix with the· cornsa.rch the yolks of the I couldn't tell. eggs and two-thirds of sugar, and then stir pa.rent, "a cipher is-why, a cipher is " The next." into the boiling milk. Cook it like custard naught-its nothing; that is, it means no"Joshua knows," said a little girl at the Sprinkle the rest of the sugar over the thin when it stands alone." of the class. foot , " Well, ma., why I asked was, I saw pa. oranges after they have been peeled and "Well," said the teacher, "If Joshua cut fine;. wlien the custard is done, pour it standing beside the new cook in the kitchen over them and cover them, and cover it with this morning and he put his a.rm around her knows, he ma.y tell." "In the fire!" said Joshua, looking w,ry a soft frosting ma.de of the whites of eggs. neck and said : 'Rosa darling, I cipher a. solemn and wise. Let it slightly' bi;,o...wn, then set it awo.y in a. taste of your rosy lips. ' " This was the. last question. We had cool place untIT'ltla. t im e. liberty to make all the noise we pleased for The Use of a Friend. five minutes, and then go home. Ornamented Chairs "Colonel Brown, come dine with me at' Willow chairs, so convenient for summer my place to-night, will yon?" A young man named Darling lives in use, can be made quite attractive with the "Certainly-pleasure. Will your wife Toronto, and when any one calls to him i:n aid of bri ght plush. The one seen in figure expect me?" ' 1 has pads ma.de to fit the seat and back ; "No; that s the beauty of it. vVe had a the street e\·ery young lady near blushes and these are covered with terra cotta. plush. row this morning about a. New York trip looks around, vently saying, "Sh, sh !" The peacock feathers are embroidered on in and I want to make her mad." Sh: ,Good Pies. STARCH.-Dissolve one dessert spoonfl of ata.i·ch in cold water, and pour into one pint of boiling water. When the stn-rch is turned. clear add a. small teaspoonful of kerosene and a. little blueing. This will starch one shirt, one pair of cuffs and two collars. After dipping the clothes, dry and dip again in starch dissolved in cold water. Let them lie ten or fifteen minutes before ironing. Clothes are stiffer when starched in both kinds. tha.n when starch of either kind is used alone, The kerosene keeps the . starch from sticking to the iron a.ud also ! gives a. I!1oss to the c1othes. This rule is for washing with the homemade soft soap. Put the clethes to soak · !(ht m · sud s wto · over Ill which has been put a. tablespoonfni"of kerosene. This is sufficient · wring for a 1 arge wash . In t 1le mornmg the clothes out of this water. Rub soap 011 the dirtiest spots and put in the boiler with I co d water enough to cover th e clothes. D o not Loil over fifteen minutes. While boilVery ing to.kc them out into warm water. little rubbing is necessary and that only on the dirtiest places. Suda, rinse a.nd dr;y. If blueing is used put into the rinsing water. At thl·s ti·n1e of ye"r clothes whi"ten ni "cely If it ie>necesby. spreading on the grass. aary to fill the boiler again with clothes take out part of the water and fill up with cold water. Do not put the clothes into too Clothes can warm water to soak or to boil. be ironed to look nicely with much less la.bor if not sprinkled too wet, A Laundry Lesson. "They are all used to that kind f work," said General Field, of the Union Bridge Company, pointing to some men who wei·e working on a new bridge in the west, "and have no fcn.r whatever. When we were building the cantilever over the "Whirlpool R1ipids of Niagara, 24'1 feet above the rushing waters, they were just as daring as they are here. I remember when we had the job about completed I was up there one day 'fhe cantilever arms were the .a within. fifty feet of each other, and it was decidecl to connect them temporarily with a plank. This plank was fifty-five feet in length, about two and a. half . feet of each end resting on the cantilever arms: The foremil.n · had i:;sued a strict order prohibition any one of the men from crossing the plank unl thet'l 1 "t 1 was firmlY fas tened at eac h enc, penalty being immediate dismissal. There had been a great deal of talk among the men as "" who wonId be the fi rst one to cross. I was standing on the Ameriuu.n side, looking at the structure when l. saw one of the men walk out on the plank look a.t it a min ute, 'fHEN JOOK DOWN INTO THE WIURLl'OOL BELOW. 0 t ibition may be gathered ·from the fact that er one million persons have now visited it The success a.ttend" 1ng tiie Newcast! e EX· Prince A rthur, the Dnko of Connaught, will contiuue in his present rank of MajorGenera.l qntil hi.s turn comes in the ordillary course for promotion to Lieutenant-General. He has been · Major-General since May 29, 1880, aud stands now eighth on the list . A labourer named J'oseph Newbery, 65 yea.rs old, wa.ssent to fetch somecows upto be · l'a.ul. at Desf ord, \fr. .,, mil ked on the f a.rm of l near f..eicester, and as be was gone a. long for him, when his t1"me searnh was m··de body was found in-a field. He had been gcired to death by a bull. 'fhe Luudon and North-Weste"u ra1 "l1·oad · has constructed a coach especially to carry dogs. Each animal is provided with a separate and roomy compartment and this compartment is largeaud properly ventilated and provided with a place to lie down in ' "ly, convemence for water, etc . eas1 As a menagerie was passing throuiht the . 'rho British Mint authorities have decided uot to issue any 1nore of the new Jubilee six pences. The reason is that these sixpences being s imiln.r to the ha.If-sovereign, can easily be made to pa.es for it by beiug gilded. .. d the average attendance is daily increasipl.'{, Paris Green - · AND - -AT- ;tP· Pa l but I was to far from him to make him hea.r. Re waited a second or two, and then delibera.tely walked out on the pla.nk, a.nd when he reached the middle of it lie stooped over : seizing the edges of the p\a;nk '\\ith both hands and throwing his feet up, he stood on his head and kicked his heele and shouted to the terrified lookers on. He must have been a minute doing it, but I felt as though it was half an hour. After satis fying himself that he had kicked enough he regained his eqnilibrium and then trotted along the plank to the opposite side from where he started, seized hold of one of the iron brnces of the cantilever and went down it head first, hand over hand, to the bottmn.. I never saw nnything like it before. Of course the foreman discha.rged him, ·d 0ff t wo or ti lree d ays, wh en and Iie was 1M I sent for him. He was one of the best men on the job, and I talked to him like a D ntch uncle and put him to work again. These men have no fea.r; they are brought up to he busii:ess, and feel just as safe 150 feet m the air as they do on the ground., Of course I. ca.n see ho_w the people wonder at . such thmgs but we have got used to 1t. is me at the to see them travel The best ti · dinner hour, 01· wh en the day's work is completed." I felt that he was going to cross the plank, streetf of Plymouth recently, a lad lifted the PKnunAR J P I 1 I I ! . Ninety-four Paris policemen recently handed to heir superior officers silver wat . ches, which each of them had found at his home. These wa.tch!)s bore, in place of ni·r of Gen· the numlJe1· the words · " Sou,,e · ' Jul.Y 7 1887," .ng1:aved on the Boulanger,, case. _A?- lllqutry ha.a beei: mstitted a.a to · the or1gm ?f these gratuttous gifts to the . police. It is taken for granted that Gen, Boulanger had nothing to do with the matter. ;iover of one of the carava.ns and peeped in through the bars. In a moment the tiger within put out its paw, a.u.1 struck its talons into the boy's face. He was immedia.tely rescued,buthehad sustained terrible injuries, and if he recovers will be permanently dis· figured · Ub"l i ee f ever very They· have had the J srong in New Zealand. The Herald of th11.t colony contains abundant evidence of the fact. Here is one advertisement; "Wanteu-Two jubilee la.dies waut two' jubilee husbands. Apply 25 Queen street." ffere is another: "Wanted.-Jubilee wives, husba.nds, housemaids, waitresses, house keepers, barmaids, and general servants can be had for the asking. A. Mcleod, 25 Queen street. According to Dr. Berillon, the well -known French spciu.list, the practice of sucking the thumb at night, to whioh so many children are addicted, and of which it is next to impus8ible to break them, can be put a stop to by a single hy pnotiza.tion, accompanied, of suggestion. with the requisite course, The child never by a.uy chance returns to the habit again though his memory reta.ins no trace of the' order or prohibition which ates 80 powerfully on his will· oper' J. BIGGINBOTU:AM & SON'S I / I . £°6 Bl!RRY / I I :::-t l J m I I Tho story of a strange bequest comes from Paris. 1\'I. Ba.reiller, ex-Mayor of Boissise-le-Roi, a country town situated in the Seine-et-Marne, was sentenced to a . year's imprisonment iu 1886 for ha'(ingfircd at and wounded a workman who pressed · him for a. debt of 10 shillings. M. Bl\rclller was driven mad with anger by this sentence, and during his detention this sense of bitterness grew deeper. His constitution became shattered, a.nd the disappointment of not receiving a pardon on July 14 wrought an alarming change in his condition. From that day he could eat no food, and on the 20th inst. he died at the Molan Hospital. _ This ill-fated man was a. landowner of good, means, being worth about £24,000 Latterly1 he conceived an abhorrence of his country on account of his cmmtrymen, and he deels.red that he would spare no opportunity of revenging himself for all the infamy cast upon him by the French Judges. He drew up two wills at different periods, by which he left his property of Boissise to Germany, represented by the Crown Prince, with the object of est ablishing there a settlement of young Germans. An ol · d man of 70, named E ugene Denz01t, wh OCCtpiecl a. garret at 10 R11e de Brosss, Paris, died suddenly recently. '£he pohce commissary who was called in was leaving the wretched room, aft_<ir throwin a glance around when he accidentally overturned an old table, the drawer of which fell out, and with it a stream of napoleons, amount ing, when tt1rned out, to . 100,000 francs. A further and close search m the garret led to the discovery of notes and securities The representing 900,000 francs more. deceased was never known to receive any one, a.nd is supposed to leave no heir. Bach set of the four great locks of the Manchester, Eng. ship canal, now in process of construction comprises a large lock five hundred and flfty feet by sixty fet: a smaller lock, three hundred feet by forty, for ordinary vessels; andone lock one hundred feet by twenty, for coasters and barges of the smaller size· and all of these are ca able of being worked together. Each set of locks will be worked by hydraulic power, tlrns enabling, it is asserted, vessels to be a.ssed in the brief period of fifteen minutes. It is also expected by the projectors of this great undertaking that lrwell and Mersey Rivers -which will be diverted into the upper reaches of the canal-will supply more than sufficient wa.ter for the locks even in the driest season. According to' lie plans of working at present contemplated, the expecta.tion is enterta.ineu that vessels will be able to navigate the canal with safety at a speed of five miles an hour and the journey from the entr11rnce at E11rsthm to Mane.bester will be a.ccomplished in eiht hours· · the near Grantham, . " , At Stoke Gxan"e, 1<' ederic · k M" ot" her d· y a farmer named "r i mt a, ' horses attched to a la.rg tree, ha seven . which had been blwn!Ilto the1ver Witham, B 0 W M A NV I L L E, and was endeavorm to drag it away_. By some means the chams a.tt.. ched to the tree Is prepared to supply all Customers, old and new, with Suits up · became entangled round Mmta, who as in the latest and most artistic style, at Prices that cannot be beaten, thrown down, and the tree rolled over him, The He has a very Fine Stock of English, Scotch, French and Canadian crushing him in a terrible manner. tree had to be hoisted with le"Vers before Gooods to select from. Remember the place, The Star House. Mnt.a. could be released, and he died 10 JEFFERY always at the Door. mmutes afterwards. . B. D. B_umgartner of Munfordsvdle, loved Mary Richardson, for whoso father he worked, an she loved him; bt when he asked ,Mary s father for Mary s hand the old gent'ema.n drove him off the fa:rm a.nd looked Mary up. Bui.ngartner waited . as long as he could stand it, and then, eeemg no signs of yieling on the part ?f the cruel_ . father, wet with eight lusty f:1ends to the house of his sweetheart, beat m the door, and took the willing girl to Jeffersonville, .. · d · where they were marne . Merchant Tailor & Gent's Furnisher got JOSEPH . JEFFERY ' MILLINERY AT REDUCED PRICES. Mrs. Morrison Is o:tfering the Balance of her Summer Milliilery -- · · AT -- , P GREATLY REDUCED PRICES -West End Millinery House. I In order liO make room for fall im portati<:>ns we will clear the balance of our surr1mer goods TO·D C EAR/NB SA LE . l GREA'D -- .A.T-- ROS. - -·- - ",Jennie," said a young lady, turning away from the minor and addressing a com pa.nion, " what would you do if you ha.d a ' moustache on your lip ?" "If I liked him I would keep quiet," was the demure reply. She Would Never Complain. AT COME EARLY AND INSPECJ'". COST. TOD BROS. Follow the Big Boot. "' Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.,'