Downers Grove Reporter, 16 Jul 1896, p. 2

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‘Do nun-nae- and names to necr- m m vhnt 'e mists with 3-10 "rod” or "blue" I- the lane - “amt Individuals. Similar in- W "surfing she and m.- ‘ “common nwmmnlbhc “an I- a. may. Ill daring the current year. Ir. Olnta. fellow In psychology. In been lave-tuna“ the psychology of the vending m "in main attempt- In" been to ascertain whet W help to make one I rapid reader and in. for the ease of comprehension In rotted to the quichnesa of reading The march has not gone tar enough to me very definite results no yet and vii he continued "other year, but 3 Inner oi very dgnlflant caggeation: have been ruched. Ilr. Bolton, n gradu- m “Udell. Ina been invedlglfln the relation Mn mention and nuan- tian. or. in other words, how far nhot '0 no is determined by what there in thcein-eeorhy whatnoluppoao la mt. A .numher oi ingenio- mods of studying this influence have he. donned Ild n paper In In prepara- ihl on the subject. Another inventin- thn rel-tea to the question of how far to non the me thing by the an. Ma. The investigation begin: with A eon-iambic number of regards nan been plug on in the psychological lghtptgy of the University oi Waco.- Int onpln, In the ported nut-m. Ail noun upping the pm: ubltmy -,_- _-- vâ€"., k a. 0m Int“. m an I. an “Imam-an. hfuhbmâ€" m n In M an m an“ I“! N can: undo 51 Initial m pond can! to In don-n And an mmu an] to 15 cans. about uh: they no now worth In lethal (muc- non. A. to weight: and rue-sures. m mum: Inn-I. In one I. all conn- 010-. but In [In United smu AMI am- u In. net I. mun. all". Inn. cu. The minno- an that III mu. 0( winds, Alum. men I“ MM:- b wry cunt-none. m pedal] GM. .9le (o tho Min gilt, cad that (he dot-Illa! Inns 0! and um and In mm 7m. A conne- ot the chub": at com- “ or 1» ”run oupln nu 11m bu m In lotion. England. 0- a. In: any of the It.“ a minimum In Adopted that In ham to we put Into o’er-(Ion both no (Ir a u Inn” to lulu“ and to the United lute; XIVutovthdoluI-uotmm at cm menu e! «um “B." and the other women with tho mat-Ito tnlllal- wlll furnish the text for the other twenty-tour latter; This utnordlunry nlpbnbeual army of m- «an talent wlll naturally center nbout do letter "L" The report In dlcnt, u to who it" be “I..." probably beau” tho tntonmtlon would ho mpcrtluoul. 1n the nrrtod ml: at Kun- women when name- butl wtth L. In ouch I also In this. than ta no need to an. “m L!“ Whu L could It be but Inna. In. lane, In. Mary mmboth I Mull: nmlmoul election '- to the presidency of floueo h m than he ama- m- Ill rubbed ”Mum and the van- fiieh he has worked for m- r). My volumes confining a million mum In favor a! his minutes were pro- 1 to the convention that pn- The great American novel is thou: (o be issued to the great American pub- lic on the neat American inanllmen! plan. Twenty-nix women 01 Kansas In to write it, each writing I. chapter. Ilia Atkinson's chapter will begin with “A." In. Beekmau will look after The Rev. Renard I). Worth, n Bap- tist preacher or New York. has been granted a divorce in Oklahoma. It apâ€" pears his wife objected to his leaving home on Sundays to preach, and even "spoiled his Sunday coat and filled his Sunday shoes with water." These are somewhnt novel reasons (or divorce. but they are also novel methods or anâ€" noyance tor a woman to employ. It is evident that Mr. Worth, being a‘ preacher, was forced to preach, and it is also evident that he could not preach ‘ with satisfactory results in n spoiled Sundey coat and wtih his shoes full of water. It is I unique matrimonial complication and Mr. Worth must be commended !or his resolute stand against permitting a wet blanket to be thrown over his religion. a; um a: subunit to call it, needs a. shaking up. The New York Herald says: “The price in New York for atom; also coal is just $1.80 per ton over the price of one year ago." Is there no redress or protection to the people from such extortion? Hurrah for the trusts! An every other commodity is lower the advance in the price of coal during the hot months is without precedent or reason. The eombinntion, or trust, or conspiracy. or whatever you choose The woman who In attempting to prove In early marriage with Jason Gould is evidently trying a golden fleece glue. " n. man-thin of nu. ammun- II and to luv. scarcely owned I. penny El 1800: _ Now they pretty nearly own tonne GROVE : [1.1.180]! hm :- ter- figure-"m “‘4!“ Hater 8m In. 0. 3. any, or nmpdon, Gum can”, Ohio. in s can a! lulu m ml. 11 tic spring of macâ€"mt (Wynn-co. lei-unwound load u out. A bone dealer In West Woodstock. VL, hm med 425 horses during his ms and In; never told u lie about 3 home. One man who dealt with Mm was so impressed with this remark:- ble fact that he recently gave him a hatchet. A. Am 0...". In. L. A. “(301101, of South Wood- stock, VL, in the owner of a singing canary 21 year: old. which has on: m It: "to an! now, though no mm m an um u mac: met: It: perch orcltonnwm phcedthomnlltl onthefloorotchoagaund pounce! the clear. sweat strains of long from morning until light. _ Atlanta-bespoke to her-hone" the city behind him. his hand cloned over SLâ€"New York Journal. The nuance the man became “an the old may vu managing Ila be whipped the pipe out of his mouth. An old m. flabby nd Ihlky. can. up as! Inked Mn ho' to get to Can! urea. Ho tun standing on the corner 0! Bleach" “reek. when the Italians live. He bad on the connect clothes, Mo hoe us may. II M- mouth van a dirty clay pipe. He II! smoking a cigarette that, Judging by the mate of It, had coin from Russia. When they not he took M- M: oil In"). Talking to her In I tone of condo-canton. he pulled the blue smoke out constantly. the cigar- ette never luvlng his lips. Re In Immaculate n to omen-la, and he wu cooling down nm. "em. SM '3: I char-all; on of felt-lac My .- New York an offerâ€"which in 5: Ln; s cm: dell. Dellcato, dunty, It In. and powerfully “Imam!“ to (be planted urn-la. no “plunder: drink A (rut deal of .olod not II!" I“ on of m nun-u drill- ol the Tmlnm I- track lam will cmclcu' blood. The "It van“ «3me In couplets "than: (M Ill- uoa o! Ila-lathe. "let my bu culled the "no“! uplmnm am! 0! Prince. H I: n lemme compound of nkohoi. ulna. cot-mun Mano]. tonn- wood. Indigo Ind mlphslo of copper. It :- strong, my nd a than! no play-Jul pol-on. About no Avast. An 0! n. O! the Bunny onuordnury drlnh maul-fly consume the blood of flu hone- Inu be wider“ tho most In. Him Polo and lepllfl were the Inc to all the world 01 the mum. of tho Tamr- and Mongol- opcnlu the "In In (bolt hom' non-n, lulu | drink and clean. the wound min. A. In u can be an all In ban the pru- ne. from um lam-norm. Than In I II" habitually confined In China which II and. m m lab at lash unload io pal. with all! or hut-M Into 9qu with rice m (In tor-0mm. n In “Imam, um. ud “mam Judkln flushed and Inflated with pride. The two jolly rogues went out to‘ethcr. Belore the evening wu over that ball [and been knocked nearly n quarto- ol 1 mile Into the country beyond the river And that bu I‘ll fit- mn pounds Ill-on; What nahermnnvcould resistrsrl‘nch I temptation with the beaulllul llo all framed [or him? The old gentleman turned a little white About the mouth but rallied wlth Inllnlto mneralshlp. "Yes. of course. you were there, and it was a day of miracles. for you went down to the river and caught a tenypound has: that was served that night at the hotel." "Yes, the last time we mét 'Ivaé in the game you Just descrlbed." The whole thing is nothing more nor less than an animated mechanism. Then we had 1 live hall and I used to swing a hickory hst pretty nearly as long as a rake handle. You can imag- ine what came oi! when l mule a hit. The crowd would hear something like the shriek of a shell and then the mn- pire would toss out a new hall while I chased two or three runs in ahead oi me. Now, Just. to illustrate," sad the retired veteran of the diamond began making a. diagram while his hearers grouped about him. “Here's where we played at New Castle, 1%., with the old Neshnnnochs. Charley Bennett was catching. Hers runs the Ohio river, way up in the rear of the grounds. which lay open to the high hint; which marks the bank. Now, Bennett was doing some mighty hat- ting and a fellow from a college nine was giving him I. tight race. Each one of them rolled t ball over the hint! ‘nnd I began to fear tor my laurels. But the third time up i saw one com- ing that just suited. l settled Well on my (set. concentrated all my strength {or one supreme effort, swung old hickory, and when the ball quit going it struck water half way across the river. Why, they stopped the some to try and take measurements, while proâ€" iessionsl msnsgers were altering me all kinds of money. I was the hero or the hour, the king of batters. the- hello. there, Judkln; delighted to see you. It’s more than twenty yearsâ€"-â€"â€"" I'll m "Oh yes. I pluyed In those dun. Baseball was Masha]! than,” and the old gentleman sighed over what he re- garded as the decadence o! the amt national game, my: the Detroit Free Press. "Now they get nine men 10.. gather and make a machine at them. 1"- old Baa...- on m" III 7" RM. 0! many. Jtmulun Dunk.- nix coco ow out. was a, covered bridge at Flat Rock. about one mile above Mansyunk end ‘ nearly the some distance below the wellâ€"known dam tuned for the blood- less bottle of General Wagner with the Canal people I few yesre since, when the doughty lender marched his police- men into Montgomery county end waged mmbet ’with the «tits who dared to presume to remodel their own property sud thereby imperil our preâ€" cious drinking wntc. This bridge wan one at the esrlieet built outside of Phil- adelphia, being erected In 1810. In 1824 it broke down, and in 1850 in: wuhtd l' hridgee between Norristown and Phoe- nixriile. The ugly one at Port Kenâ€" nedy. built in 1849. is en excellent spe- cimen of the hideous affairs which can never become picturesque should they lust for centuries. There was once is chain bridge st Pewling, built, it is said. before the Revolution, which was washed away about the beginning of the present century. A new wooden one was built later on, which broke down in 1819, and another met with like sud lute. The present structure ‘ he: been standing many years. Thebridne st Phoenixville is notable wns s covered bridge at Pint Rock. about one mile above Manayunk And nearly the same distance below the wellâ€"known dam. famed for the blood- less battle of General Wagner with the Canal people a few years since, when the doughty leader marched his policr- men into Montgomery county Ind waged mmhat ’with the «tits who dared to presume to remodel their own property end thereby impel-i! our pre- cinun drinking water. This bridge wan one of the earliest bum outside of Phil- These early bridges began to disav- pen a good many years but. Them [ TM cowrod wooden mm: over the ‘ Schuylm In doc-ed. On by one the Int-lam "melon: pu- uny. deing up "Mr existence by In, by flood or by the man won-Io mod: 0! demu- Ila. 0f the bridges um wan the river Mice]! Pbllndelphl. and Polls- vme cod-y more than oat-lull are hum of use) and “one. and the change (mu wood to Iron II" he nmrny mm fluid In the exlulng wooden stmctum decay with the now or years. The Inn ‘ covered wooden bridge on the Schuyl- klll «mm the city Nmm has gone. Ind for many miles above could; but nggl In In use. Interim con-Mn for highway Hm brunt. no prunes of anew-In. and confirm (Mu natal umcmrea hn mum, «and. lodcrn brMn Imm- oru econ at be old Man that a bridge nhould be “closed to proud I! Iron the womb I. pointing out (he tut nu! tho In; unbroken "no of board. a!- len the arm: road-nee lo “moo-u and floods. while the duty "mm" In a “culm- tlnda box lot luau. The covered wooden bridges which yet span the streams in many parts of this country belong to an epoch which may be said to have passed away. Many years have elapsed slnce the last. covered bridge was erected hereabou'o. and while irom motives of economy. timber is yet used occaalonally in the Philadelphia Letter. H0 does not re- m e m h e r s o m e quaint oid covered wooden bridge of his childhwd,span- ning the stream which bubbled and gurgled through his early life. a companion w i l. h whom doll mo- me n t s were un- known. The long, dusty tunnel. full‘ 01' great beams and arches. cool in sum- mer, sheltering in winter, whose dark nooks caused thrills of enjoyable curiv oslty. not altogether unmixed with fear, as one traversed the passage, darksome and gloomy even in midday. How the old bridge shook and quivered as teams rattled over it, and how, when the circus came to town. the elephants must need ford the stream lest their weight might cause the valued struc- ture to collapse. Ugly and unpainted, gruesome and mysterious, the old bridges live in the memories or the lads and losses who played dronnd them, when even the recollections of childish homes are eilnced by time. On- by On. The, Arc Paula; Awarâ€" Floodn Curd-1| "In, or the lot. Ill-torn on“ Awayâ€"flu Ivan-turd Bud... Mow Kora-town. QUAINT OLD BRIDGES. WOODEN STRUCTURES THAT SPAN THE SCHUVLKILL. THE LEBANON VALLEY THE BWEDEBP‘ORD BRIDGE AT NORRIRTOWN. BRIDGE. AT REA DING. Tb owner: at then» toil bring" ob- tnnliy ohm to the ntmoot the do forts undo to extinguish thoir rinbtn. and a combination 0! bridge com- panie- hnd n iur ”and by tho auto insulator. back in the 70's prohibiting the emotion of a highway bridge with- in 3.000 foot of an existing toil mid". This In done no unietiy that ii ex- cited no attention, but whon the poop!» of Noni-town almond for the "wing of the Do Knib stmt bridxn. or. in lion of that, the building of a borough bridge cioto by, the owners brought out their trump ran! in the shape of the new inn and laughed at the npposi- ‘ ”on. 'ltinmtoiy, however. the to" rights were condemn“ and bought all by the counties of Chester and Mont- I Mel”. "nub and cm! ”1.200 whrn a“. With m odd gamut-y (or root Inv- olns In the center. I "om-y Inc! on can “do and I narrow drlvmuy on are other. this brhln Ian-mu a an. at nehltocmn an": autumn from tho nun-I models. It in Inn-lo the In "N. There Ire now no unworthy About a mile above the SWedosford bridge ls the De Kalb street. bridge connecting Bridgeport wlth Norris- tawn. lt ls one of the oldest standing structures across the stream, having been erected in 1829, although nearly every portion has been from thus to time renewed. It is over 1,000 fact in Every traveler along the Schuylkill knows the Swedesiord bridge below Norristown. It. is a noted landmark hereabouta. combining in one a railway viaduct. I. wide driveway and a. most pleasant promenade. There is another fact which leads to its remembrance. Toll must be paid, being the only re- maining barrier along the river for miles to free and unrestricted inter- course. The toll bridge cannot be ex- tinguished. tor the bridge is owned by ‘ the Reading railroad and hence cannot ‘ be condemned by the adjoining conu- ties. It is by {ar the best wooden bridge across the Schuylkill from i source to mouth, but the present super- structure is or recent date, having been built in 1883 to take the place of or: burned down. The former was built in 1851 at a cost of $40,000. A: the name indicates, Swedes' Ford was a crossing place many decades before the bridge was built. It was well known in 1723, mm! in 1777 Washington con- structed a temporary bridge at the ford composed of wagons and fence rails, over which the army passed en route to winter quarters at Valley Forge. The flood which carried away the Flat. Rock bridge likewise engulfed the structure at Mauon’s Ford or Collabo- hocken, which had bene bum in 1880, about the same time as the one at Man- uyunk was erected. The Conshohocken bridge was rebuilt or wood, which was changed to Iron in 1872 and In yet in active use. memory. am by 3 Met which brought havoc on mam in anon]. It wa- never rebuilt. and so for nearly halt a cenâ€" tury Flat Rock bridge bu been put I an forth and look upon that face oh, with what tremendous, mistlet- eloquence It would warn, plead and en- "cut you to keep back 1mm all evil and Inspire you to ascend to the null- tlu of eternity Honor- Plum Trenton all.) Sun: Young man, am your mother's picture vith you. Bind it to your bosom. and when tempted to do some evil or so to some place of evil concourne, consult that silent monitor. A mm The shun-u. ‘ flan In said to he the only creature (Int shaves. But this I: not no. A South American bird called the “not- lnot" actually begins shaving on an"- tng at maturity. Nnumlly adorned with long bin. ml feathers, It I: not satisfied wtth them in their Ilttural state, but wlth m beak ulna all the web on each side for a space of about two Inches. leaving a neat little out tuft u the end of each. A Strange Footol' Mother of avian: oi the (Dc-nun. Portland (Oral Letter. F. A. Stuhr. on First street. is the own- er of a baby sent that has the strangest foster mother that ever seal had. It is nothing less than n curly-haired re- triever (log named Hello. that has taken a strange fancy to this llttle ocean waif, and.la giving it tho nourishment that it denies its own offspring. The strange attachment is returned by the. baby seal. which has known no other parent. and when it is hungry lt bel~ lows for its foster motlwr and flops its way across tim tloor to the dog. Mr. Stuhr has had the two! slut-o. lust Blou- day and the sw-ctm-io of u bin wtrlover dog nursing so curious a baby lu-cps a crowd of spectators wutlnmiliy hung- ins about the~ piucv. The crowd does not mm to bother oithrr the dog or the uni. thoonh. and the latter appears to be getting bigger and fatter every dsy. Wbrn ilr. Stuhr first received the little fellow he dupalred of being able to ruins: it. but a happy solution of that dilllcuity mains to bore been found to tho satisfaction at all parties concerned. with possibly the uccptlon ol the fatally of pops that llcllo has 40-] ‘. rcrtrd for her new baby. When Mr. titular. Ibo la a bird fancier. min-d tho ltttin follow inat Month! from one at the collectors lu- c-tnnloya to gather spat-inno- ior bis colloctlon. It was not morn than n day and n hail old. The collector. a Frenchman. bad coma nrroas thr little soul and It: mother on tho twat-h our Astoria tho day lat-ton. iipon sot-Ina tho nun approaching tho I i in tooth" not that alarm and and 0' 0 into the tutor. leaving no baby to shift rt for itself. 'l'hla the ltttlo oval mun-d . to in nhlo to do and was lust fitting into drop out" when ttu- l-‘rcnrhman Hourly hcndt‘d it ol. and after much troublo captured it. He brought his prtao to Portland the out day and turned it or" to hta vmployrr. Dir. atuhr at Int did not hoow I“! to do with the litth- frllov. Prom certain tn- tllcnttooa ho saw that the anal on only a tow bonn- nld. llo first trim in food it with fish but tho ml was loo: young to out. Tho-n hr triad it with n ' bottle. to which n rubhrr nipple was at- tached but not with no better comm. ' By this llloo the "at was cutting hungry. for it had hurl nothing to pat tor twenty-four hours. and its onnor was afraid it was going to alone to death, when Belle. the retriever, rt- tractcd by the persistent bellowing oi the little animal. loft im- ltmr of porn to see what was the matter with the [strange object that was mutrrntng’ I around in the middle of tho, floor and a: seemed to be causing her master so m. moch anxiety. No sooner had the «in. on I!“ «I ‘in‘ come mar rnounh to the little mi 2; than it began to flop ferhly in her dl- I Dr rection. The dog stood still and out. Sc etly watrlml the stranger approach her, until it was so near that it he. go to lift its little hood. and then 1 something about the baby seal must Ca have appealed to the mother's heart, wtl for she lay down and begun to nurse “.1 the little one as though it was the moat Pill natural thing in the world to do. Hr. ext Stuhr was delighted. though he found out that after nurntng the seal the dog would not return to her litter. which yeipcd tor her in rain. The seal b a pretty little ieilow. my to color and with numerous black spots about tho size of a email coin. its coat is nigh to the touch as velvet and shines in ch. sunlight like the finest satin. E'Ez'ii i There are no noteworthy highway bridges above this point. although numerous structures 01 the Port Ken- '1an type disfigure the landscape. The handsome atone viaduct or the Reading railroad at Black Rock. which cannot be seen from the car window, and the lofty bridge of the Lebanon Vniigy I’oad. “rout of Reading, are notable ex- ceptions to the dull succession of use- ful if ugly structures which spun thv Schuylkill north of Phoenixvllie. Phoenixvme dates from 1782. but long before that settlers were numer- ous heteabouts. The mineral deposits were weii known at an early date. am: in 1683 Charles Pickering mined {or sold in those bills with what result history mm to state. The bridge was built in 1845, and is therefore 50 years old. It is very ancient in appearance, and is one of the most picturesque ob- Jects along the river. tw may mum. It oocupiol the site 0! : very old ford. which existed nearly two centuries no, and where Lord Howe crossed the rivet after his battle of Brandywlne on hls way to Philadelphia. A Britilh battery was erected where thoReading railroad suaâ€" tion stands. and solid shot were flung across the river at the Amen-loan forces beyond. Many a soldier of both forces {ell hereuboulu. Directly above the bridge is one of the old Commissioners' damn, built in 1193 to improve the river channel, consisting a! pile: of Ions») stonel, the object being to divert. the ‘ current. A DOG NURSES A SEAL. On the first and third Tuesday of each month tin October about half rate: for round trip will be made to points In the south by the Loulavlllo In Nash- ville railroad. Ask your ticket taunt about it. and I! he cannot sell on no cunion tickets write to C. P. “no". Genaral Pasaengea' Agent, Louisville. Ky.. or J. K. Ridgely, N. W. P. L. Chl- cuo, m. The Missouri Pacific Rail", and Iron ”cantata route will sail round trip tickets on July 21. :1 one tare plus 82 to certain point! hr Kansas, "chunks, Wyoming. Gol- orudo. Utah, muourl, Arkansas, Tenn and tantalum. Tickets limited to :1 days tron data 0! sale. with stop- over privilege; For particulars, Id- dress Bluen Wilson, I). P. A“ 111 Adam: street. Chicago. Where loyalty In, Jude. The: tuture town rmiclonce of Prince Carl of Denmark and Princess Maud will he a flat in the mince in Copen- hagen. In the meanwhile, the English papers say that the prince has grown extremely fond of Sendrlngham and it: environments. and has made acquaint- 1some vith all the favorite haunts oi Princess Hand, who is never so happy In when the is in Norfolk. The gift by the Buckingham tenants of 1's handsome "grandfather" clocks he: greatly delighted both Princeec Mood and her fiance. and it in their inten- tion to take all the presents of thin kind to their Dinish home, so that they may have round them constant remembrance: of the home life at tho princessâ€"New York Tribune. Dr. “'"Hflm" Pink l’llis cnnlnln. I1: I cnnrirnsvd lnrm. all "m ok-manu nrmsmn' In qiw new N!» .111 rlrhmw In tho b.0011 Iii"! rminrn ”hallomd non-as. Pink rm: arr mm in but" (norm- m Innen mm" at so cents a box or nix hnxr-z hr 3: m. and may be had M all drugzisls. or «lirorl by mull {mm Dr. William! hit-divine Company, Schenectady, N’. Y. Fl? "‘0"! hv‘nz m'llrlll‘dc 00 run)“; mom! Hw- rumuw- nhhh "Ill Ink" Inf” 3 load at misery from Ma Ma. In his gramudo Ms maln- lnr II In un- Mlnlod nml nnvoaulng. Am! from M} own animal-M am my anally arr "ml when M- drws mam to plug It. virtues u «m bn in answer the Ins! mustorlng In. Nr. Warn In now rnhylnn "u- fmllo of In "mummy lnrxr Inn-Inns, mim- ogmc wvlu-Iy Ivy him-nu. um! muting nlmm-l "w onnrr vnnrm mruun n! "R Maw. .‘lr‘ rim-«o L- uL-m zm Ivory (-mv‘ «r of markwl nt-mu. whit-h ln- fnlhvl n-IM)‘ for MA mun [-Irnmnv. "any "I "a "Ink-“N. rnrrml Ivy "w llthl "f "N "yup-firm nth-t M.- nlm In um direc- TM- ln hm «mu 0! IM- mny can: If which I'll"; mu- have (nkrn Ilwh o ivmmm run In the Mallory 0! Im- mnuMy. “I her-n lo I" “max. I mam: up In M. and I went tum-I: tn my mm- nm with In tho- vlgor and Hm I»! a you"; man. 1 Hum: ru-ryum- whn Moonr- rm cm "I! you I)!“ u am In! mo. Pink I’m- In "no nnmlnc nun"- dno Ovrr alum-and, and if m nn'urn- mndulnn will do I! In)‘ um» I want you to ma- ". l horn- nlhanl will MI «I u and he ham-mm n l run-9 hrv‘n Errrytm» nhnuld hrar M IL I rnu‘I my In" rum-h 'ur (hrmk‘ llr. flc-nrr n1- rl-lmnl. onllmulnuflmll)‘. In umvlw “on. "I loll you. l mu nlml In nun-w day- lo lwnr lnylhln‘ Hull coum ulw um any hope at all. YI‘II. I In! (Mm. um! bflnm l hml (then two Imu- "ml pain [w n In loos-c mr. Why. I rnul-ln'l un vutnnd It. I muldn'l Imxlln- my- ml! bring cured. hut belon- I had when l hull-dour: "I "moo hour- I III vunwl. TM sum-ring vah hm! mndo my me llama! uni-rural.» [m in long had dluppcnrvd. l wu n mu (Mm: but sum-rim: ln It. Cum-s? I "ha! own- su-vnllwl rlu-umnllc run that want N'or luwmwv. l mu'u- all 0! "um I: not»! "In! bu-lvro l llama-«l luk- Iu: them. My rmmxn um! In-Iuhlu .19 rvwonm ‘1' n-mmly - u-r n-mmly Hun tin-y hrllrd 0!. but my rhv-unmllum W0"! nn Jul! the man. “1-“. "MN I had nlmum )md "II' M:- Iortun-d out of me. I rum.~ «mm a wu-nlmwr ac- (‘OIIM II! hr. WIIIIamu‘ l'lnh Mllu. um! 1 thumb! I might an m~|l add muothot Mme lo the Mn In not. no I urdrmd some o( my ulruxuhn. Anor hla honorable discharge. June 4. 1805. Mr. Scare returned to Albany and sotlk-d down once again to his buslm-ss and sac-ml inu‘rosls. He has realm-d In the city ever slnce. It would seem that now. or all times. his [mace and happfnvam wnnld have been uninterrupted. Such was nut to be (ht' cash. for rnur yours ngn. whlle en- ‘Sflm'd In suyy-rlntvndlng the rnlsmg of the lmmn-nsv smuknsmck of the Al- bany }‘Jl't'll‘ll‘ [mm-r homw. the lo'uer of a 1mm nml n-lndlAss struck hlm 1:. heavy bluw “Club"! the back. The ob h‘l‘t of the blow was not at llrsl ap- parent, he ln-lng ul-k- to Ivan.- his hml In a. few day». But the worst was tu l‘olluw. {or without warning ln- wnn scum] with m-lnlh- rhoumuumn In H" Mu \‘ll'ull'flr Unluhl nanny fulluwwl. Saul Mr. (11, “I could not slurp fnr tlw pain. . um- wlll knnw (In.- lur- luros lhu I'hvumallam gun- m(-, I bc< mum- lllllv more than ukln :Ind bunvu, aml lt soc-mm! Mk» Illn- dlcln't haw uny- Law In. [rear-Iona loath. Mr. Scam: Is a member of Bvrkahlro Lodge No. 52. l. 0. 0. F. He cnflslcd In the army In 1832, In company A- ‘Furly-nlnth Mnssachum-tts Volunteer Infantry. Horvhu: Illhirl‘ Cuimwl “2 F. Bartlett. First Brlgnde, [first D1- vlslon. Ninetm-mh Con-s. with which he partlciputod In home a! the honest battles of the war, including Port Hud- Fon. Donaldsunriuv and Flu!!! Store. where he was wounded. His llme be- lng out. he was discharged. but soon ro-onllsted as svrgt-ant in Company A. Sixty-firs! Regiment Mnssnulmsfls Volume-Pr Infantry. He was In the battle of Butcher's Run, the fight about Potorsburg and the battle at Sailnr's Cn-ek. ‘ John B. Scare. lhe widely known con- tractor and building mover 0! Albany, N. Y.. has had an unusually interestâ€" ing 11f», and when seen by a. repurter recently at his home. No. 15 Bradford atreot. told of his many experience. and udventuws while servlng under the old flag in the late war. Although having endured all the hardships and privations or iii», in the ranks. Mr. Scam lwurs his more than half a cen- tury of yours with an oinstlo step and u. kmn mind. taking an active Interest in private and public affairs. John I). Scum Spank: ton Rama:- 0! Gnu-In; Susan-«~8wupcd with A Slight Would. but. Like (ulnar \'auuu.. flu Sulorml Silviaâ€"~A 8101', Till "I.“ mm a Paco fnuu Ulnar}. SCENES AT HATCHER'S CREEK AND PETERSBURG RECALLBD- A WAR REMINISCENCE “ 3 mn- run hank-I. From the Albany. N. Y.. Journal. £331

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