McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Mar 1877, p. 7

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in a moment was on the lounge with the child in her arms, her painted cheeks pressed close to the tear-stains left on the little fellow's face when he had cried himself to sleep. Her hair hung in a •eil before them, and hid the guilty and innocent alike from sight. " I had one like you once," she mur­ mured, after the hush of a moment, " but he died. That was so long ago that I thought I had forgotten it--there has been so much happening since--so much I wish to God had never hap­ pened !" A moment longer and she looked up --as sober as ajnother by the hearth­ stone. many, many weary days in the past. being found in the agonies of death, tuld the story : > Mr own true name in M. M. Wishard, Late Superintendent Orphans' Home. Knight# town, Ind. I am paying dear for my 6in. Opium i* the CITY LITE. tNIl ea the Folly of Y< Ifomen L*M»vinjj; Their Home* in the Qpuntry for Life In the City. Prcrf. Swing, erf Chicago, has begun, in his paper, the Alliance, the considera­ tion of the fatal attractions of city life for the young men and young women of the country. The vice of city life is what ministers and moralists are accus­ tomed to dwell upon, but lectures and sermons on this phase of the matter are not so apt to discourage the natural tendency of mankind to aggregate in large communities as the dismal outlook of failure, which is the only perspective city life presents to the majority of those who seek it without experience or prepa­ ration. Prof. Swing has been wise in recognizing this fact, and by continually pressing it upon his hearers and readers he may make it more effective than whole volumes of abstract moralization. The key to his position may be found in the following paragraph : That young men and women are ruined by vice is well known, but a great number are drawn away from some good life purmrit be­ cause they would rather drive a Htage or feed a horse in a city thim do a good year's work on i new farm 100 miles away. There are thousands of young men who are anxious to live where they can wear clean cuffs and nice black boots e\erj day. And then one want* to go to a concert now and then, and to hear the j great singers, and ^actors, and orators who j travel along. This is the universal argument, ] It is often poor, childish blunder. If the j country offers one good labor and pay all these j other things can oome alon^ rapidly enough. Once a year to the city will give the rural youth all the art, and opera, and drama he will need. A week a year will dp, and there then remain fifty-one weeks for country work and country education. Mental luxuries go out to the country man in these days. As men do not need to go to Jerusalem to worship, so neither need tbey go to a city to find all good. Books go . out to the people. Music loves the country too. The society of many country tpwnn is as good as any metropolitan group one can enter. The longing for city life, says the Chi­ cago TVibune in commenting on the sub­ ject, that swells the bosom of nine out of every ten young men and women reared in the country grows out of a misappre­ hension. It is like the desire of a stage- sfruck amateur, who sees only the brill­ iancy of the footlights and the glitter of the tinsel, who hears only the applause of the audience in front, who knows only of the momentary excitement of public life, and has no conception of the bitter trials and the hard work so rarely re­ warded with anything but disappoint­ ment and discomfiture. The great mass of poverty-stricken clerks and day-labor­ ers, of starving seamstresses and shop­ girls, and of the idle and unemployed of both sexes in large cities are those whose ^ youthful training contemplated nothing I about%7i^hryearn' since? but plowing the field or milking the | have little hope, I wo cows. They might have been contented ---end this is the highest and most last­ ing happiness--had they not abandoned a peaoeful, quiet, rural life for a struggle in a crowded community, where they are brought into competition with skilled hands and superior training. To enter upon the struggle of life in a large city without trade or calling can only be lik­ ened to embarking upon a stormy sea in a boat without a rudder. As a rule, death is the only relief in either case. It is not vice alone but failure that threat­ ens, and, though not so immoral, it kills 4 ae surely, and drags along a wretched ex­ istence without the glamour that vice sometimes provides as a sort of compen­ sation. Happiness, like all other things, is only relative to the condition, and the tastes, inclinations, and temptations that city life develops for those who can never hope to indulge in them only add to the stock of wretchedness instead of the stock of bliss. But it is not the inexperienced youths alone who suffer from unnatural contact with city life; the city suffers as well. The unemployed classes, the pauper classes, the vicious classes, the bummer classes, are swollen by the aimless and frivolous that are furnished by the rural districts. With millions of rich acres in this broad land, and resources that are as yet limitless and open to strong hands and ready hearts, young men and young women flock to crowded cities to live in squalor, to starve, to steal, to plunder. The mass of foreigners who oome to America have been reared to agricultural pursuits, and know nothing else. With land so cheap and fertile as they find it here they could enlarge the patches to which they have been accustomed in their native lands to great, rich farms, and dairies, and plantations, and stock­ yards. But they are lured by the ignis /at urn of city life, and relapse into nar­ row alleys, and dirty hovels, and crowd­ ed tenements, and a general condition of squalor and disease. They infest the politics of the day, and acquire all the vices without any of the virtues of self- government. They prostitute themselves to the uses of the demagogue, and de­ generate into a sort of political machin­ ery, manipulated for the benefit of public plunderers. They are largely responsi­ ble for the abuses of city government, but get small share of the individual ben­ efits that accrue therefrom. The only hope in recurring to the subject is that, by making these and all other people without the education or preparation for combatting with city life on equal terms understand that the suffering more than outweighs the gratification, and that fail­ ure is limitless, while success is micro­ scopic, some of them may be deterred in THE TELEPCBP. Bnad-Kcw Invention--How a WM Bent Over the Wires. [From the Operator.] A good story comes from Norwalk, Ct. One day last week a gaunt, slab- Bided chap, with particles of hay-seed on hie coat and in his tow-colored hair, stepped up to the telegraph office at the railroad depot and asked if the boss was in. The operator assured him that he .was, and his rural friend went on to re­ late that he lived up in Danbury, had oome down from there that mo^niiag^atii^ intended bringing his brother's dog, " May I liim in the oeil | ̂ hich a man in Norwich wanted to buy, nil .1 1 I I < . ' lv*.l 1. » .1 1 nn/1 rt'O rvf i/l she asked, In a low and gen -with me ? tie voice. They said she ikjght, and the poor, forsaken woman sat down on the stone bench with the sleeping child held close to her bosom. The tears that fell from , - - . her eyes were as balm to her bruiBed ; occurrence. Ail that is necessary heart, and the little one lifted her soul to i for 7ou to do is to give me a description purer heights than it had known for I of do?. 80 no m,st^ke but had forgotten it, and "wanted to know if the dog oould be sent down from there by telegraph. The man of lightning, seeing a good chanoe for a little fun, at once answered: "Certainly, sir ; that is a hiatter erf * God Pity the Opium-Eater.*' One Wdnesday morning, at 6 o'clock, a man was found weltering in gore in one erf the closets of the St. James Hotel. He was borne to the hospital, but, ere many squares had been traveled, he breathed his last. The following letter, Written only a short time previous to his ^succeeded in made ; call again in about half an hour, and the dog will be here." " It iB a yellow dog, with small ears, and is about so high," said the Granger, placing his hand eighteen ijsches front the floor. He then took his departure with the remark that he would call again soon. The operator then sent his mes­ senger boy to look for a dog as near the de&eription as possible, which he soon finding. It was at once m X 0 brought to the office, and secured to the j operator's desk by means of a piece of j telegraph wire. After a little coaxing ' the dog was made to lie quietly down, ) and everything was in readiness for our I rural friend. Punctual to the time ap- ! pointed he made his appearance, and Ik. Ar.HI.rr, S.r," MM IM^. -M. iw,.. 13.75 of Choice New Books for One Dollar! bTfre *w"for^nt wSuu" f?"" ".'5 Livin! A"1!"!8-i" Book fon» i. O es. nut are sola tor only UNfc DOLLAR in the popular Unabridged and Illustrated '• LAKESIDE LIBRARY " Editions. cause of it ay. Write Dr. tlannaman some one, : asked if the dog had come. please, when I am gone. , j " I will see," said the operator, and } God onlr knows how I have fought this ter- , . . , ' A, . , , , rible habit", but whenever it get* hold of the : stopping up to the instrument he topped system it is too late. I am expecting every mo- J a few times on the key, at the same time, ment to be arrested and taken to jail, where I inserting his leg under the desk, he man- ! shall never oome out alive. God pity the j aged to step on the dog's toes, which 1 °Pp" b.T4 5*877^MtPMt«ou«now. ; caused the canine to yelp. "Ah! he's I T , , 4. , . ., ., coming," said the operator, and then, ! In Uu, imuleof the sheet , endently „ ^ more tlaimSj on the key, he written while nemng himself to commit; ^ ̂ Uie from under the table, who, not relishing The Man Without a Country. By 11 Hale, trar«i with over SO tine engravings. Prioe, 10 cents; by mail 12 cents. " " Daniel Deronda. By George Eliot. So. 69, Containing! suicide, were the following : Oh ! that I had been wine in the day of this vitritotion. I have a faint hope of forgiveness. I then began to fight it with the desperation that almost crazed me, and, when nearly well, would become discouraged and go back again. My dear family is mv regret. Oh ! that I had been wise in time. No man ever had a dearer family than I had. A better wife and children no man ever saw. How cruel I have been. If through Jesus' blood. Although I have been a great sinner, I wa« HO much intoxicated by opium that I thonght I was a Christian, but, alas, alas, when too late, I fear I find I was not The opium habit was contracted more than ten yearn ago, though not confirmed until I live, of which I would cheerfully nerve them. I fear my wife and little dead or inaane. life. The hotel employes say that at 6 j o'clock, with erect bearing and deliberate movements, he entered the hotel and straightway sought the closet. A knife and a pair of. surgical scissors convey the rest of the chapter. He first cut his throat with a penknife, and then, insert­ ing the scissors into the wound, tried to sever the main artery, but, before he ac­ complished his purpose, he fell ex­ hausted to the floor.--New Orleans Times. this kind of treatment, barked furiously, and ran around the office with the wire attached to his neck. "Fifty cents, sir," said the operator, turning around to the countxyman. " Uncommon nice dog, must be worth $50; but he is the hardest dog I ever received over the wires ; he is so muscular, you see, that he broke the wire, in fact a piece of it is now attached to hig neck, which he broke off." During the whole of this operation the countryman gazed on the operator with eyes wide open and full of surprise ; but ,, ,, T , „ are when the dog came from under the table God known I cannot recall my ftnd wa8 ^ * by ^ oonnirymmXt that Seven complete stories, and illus (Ordinary price, 12.50!> No. 01-63, SSS-64. "The llterarv event of the 19th century." Complete in TWO large nine l>pint» a noiiur «,-< _ volumes, unabridged and unaltered, each nnletework• tvmK'r^nN ^l'e Library." Price 90 cents each volume, or 40 routs for the I e work, b>_n»ail a0 cents. (Ordinary prOe, in usual book form, SI.50 each volume, or $3.00 for both! No. 06. With 38 fine illus. Price 10 cts.; by mail, 12 cts, (Ordinary price, $2.00!) No. 67. With 88 line iliustra (ions. Price 10 cts.; by mail 13 cts. ( Ordinary price, $2.00!} No. 60. His last uew book. Price 10 cents; by mail, 12 cents. (Ordi­ nary price, $1.50!) No. 60. By the author of "John Hali­ fax," etc. Just ready. 9 lllu*. Price 10c. by mail, 12cents. (Ordinary price, 11.50!) No. 68. Just ready. Price, 10 cents; by mall, 12 cents. {Ordinary prict, $1.25. > '• A tale of rare excellence. "--JournaL SOLD RY Ml I NFHf^nFMt f0C If not convenient^o a News Depot, cut out this ftdver- «. .-"v" tlaement. and send to the publishers with ONK DOL- entlro set will be sent to you by return mall, SMmtpaid. ».*? secure for yonrself and family enough of the very best'and newest Books, to afford entertainment ui-- " '• ' -- *" - - ~ au ceius. (ordinary price, in usual book form, ®J.5) From Hie Earth & Moon. By Jules Verne. Trip Around the Moon. By Jules Verne. The Two Destinies. By Willde Collins. The Laurel Bush. By Miss Muiock. Rose Turquand. By Eilite Hopkins. End pleasure In the Song winter evenings for months to come, remembering that this entire of 8 volumes • coats jests than any single cMir of them would cost in ordinary book form, at the stores! Interest jour nolRhhor, also, and persuade him to bur th© set i»t right hand of this advertisement, while you buy the IKKMCR named above. Then when each HAS read his own set, you can exchange with ettrh other, and so really have the benefit of two set** at the price of one ! O^Where two sets are ordered together, we send one copy of" HAROLD," (secbejpw) FREE of charae! Any single book will be sent at prices named li!!' V* a but by ordering the iw whole set at ohe time you save the p©0t«j«rs% eents. which we then pay ourselves, This is the cheapest and best reading ever offered. Address, Important Notice. DONNELLEY, L0YD&C0., Publishers,'CHICAGO, ILL S-C Ready this day, Wo. 78, "HAROLD," the famous new poem by Alfred Tennyson. Price, 10 cents; by mail, 12 cents. Tou can mark out any one of theabove books, and substitute this, if you prefer It. ft If yon have a|. ready read any one or more Books in above list, you can select others in their stead froni the following lead­ ing New Boofes. And in this case draw your pencil throusrU the books not wanted, leaving only the books you do want, Cntout tninAU^ yertlaemgmt and return to us with 91.OO. Of" Kacli book, as published, is nmnliered, tor < nnvenlence in ordering, as 65. 40, etc.. am! for one dollar we will send nnv t«-n numbers postpaid! For example, the list in lnree type contains 10 numbers, viz: <jj». 61, 6*1. 63, 64, 66. 67. BO. <i*>. <»8. and Uie list below, in small type. ;i!><• contains 10 num­ bers, vU; 8ft 40. 42. 44. 51. 52. 54, TO. 7-J. 73. Kither set will be sent entire, postpaid, tor one dollar,or a selection of ten nuiii~ bers can bftnade from both sets, at same price. Any ONE Book in the .foUoiririg List. 10 cts.; bp mail, 12 cts.: except No. 14-15; a DOUBLE number, prise 20C./ by mail, 25c. THE NEW MAGDALEN, by Wil- kie Collins. (Ordinary prict. $1.25.) 40. DROPPED FROM THE CI,OlTD». by Jules Verne. 8 illus. < < >nl. prirr, $2,} 42. ABANDONED.by J ules Verne. {Or­ dinary pric*. S2.00.) « tine illustrations. 44. THE .SECRET OF THE ISLAND. Julea Verne. S Illus. (Orrf. pries, 52.00.> 1. A TALE OF TWO OITIKS. by Chas. DickenH. (Ortfinti ru pricc. $1.00.) 58. MISS HITCHCOCK'S DRESS. WEDDING SI.25.) 54. A NEW GOD I \ A. by Stanley Hope. "A rarejcood storv." (Orcf. pritf. SI.50.) TO. THE LOST SlU MASSING HERD, - by James I'ayii. prise, 91 »5.> 74-»fl. JOSHUA HAGGAKIVS DAUQH- TRR, by Miss M. E.'Bmiidoh'. large Double Nunih<>r, »nh 1 j» ft? Kstra • !!V.ir.- >rations. |y Her las', new work. t<>r<iin«ry |nict, $1.75.) "It Is one of Miss lhtuhlon's best novels, and Is literally fascinating.'* A Rich Man's Heirs. More work for the lawyers, over the will of Isaac M. Singer. Some of the heirs are not satisfied with their allow­ ance out of the estate. Singer left al­ together about $4,000,000 to be divided among his several families (he was mar­ ried five or six times), and among the many heirs, it appears, there are some who think they were born to purple and fine linen. One branch, named Math­ ews, consists of mother, two dau#& ters and one son, tlue children all grown up. Their shares of the great estate were $200,000 each. But the bequests are so tied up that only an allowance out of them can be had. This does not suit their ideas at all, so the mother is trying to have the allowance increased. She thinks each ought to get $500 a month. They cannot possibly live up to their position and expectations with less. They must* really have $500 a month each, at least; or there will be hardship and, possibly, loss of caste. Another heir, a young married woniau named Foster, who has been receiving $500 a , month out of the estate, now wants $1,000. She also wants $2,500 for a suitable ; turnout. A beggarly $500 a month can't: begin to support her in the way she I ought to live. Singer himself lived in ; magnificent style in England and France for some years before his death, and why should not his heirs, who never \ helped him to earn a dollar of the great 1 fortune he left behind, live just as luxu­ riously as he did ? One of Mrs. Math­ ews' reasons for demanding $500 a month for her son is that he wants to travel. Singer traveled a good deal in his early days on much less than that. He and his wife made the rounds of the country with cheap shows and third-class theatri­ cal companies, and did not see $500 in a year. But things are a good deal changed since that time, and rich men's heirs have mighty big notions nowadays. struck with amazement. After looking at the dog a moment or so, he said, " Say, mister, he ain't so big as he was, and he is darker, how is that ?" " Oh ! that is easily explained," said the operator; "you see the chemicals employed in making electricity of course darken his original color, and the veloci- j ty with wliich he passed over the wire oaused him to contract in size ; but after : you expose him to the air for a short j time he will soon assume his original size and eolor." " Du tell," said the countryman, and, • after placing 50 cents on the counter, he | picked up the dog, and walked out of the | office, remarking that " the man who in- I vented them telegraphs must be a very I knowledgable man." I The Slare-Trade. It will be astounding news to many American Christians that the slave-trade is still carried on to such an extent as to involve the loss, annually, of at least' 500,000 lives. Such, we are assured by the Missionary News, is the fact. From the same source we learn that while this large number die o^ are massacred in this inhuman traffic, only 70,000 Afri­ cans reach the coast and become slaves. | The News states that there axe five ' routes by which slaves are taken from Central Africa : "1. Through the Sa- i liara desert to Tunis and Morocco. 2. * Down the Nile, via Khartoum, into I Egypt. 3. Down the Nile, turning off before reaching- Khartoum, for the sea­ ports on the Red sea. 4. Direct to the i Zanzibar coast, for Zanzibar, Pemba, etc. 5. Two routes from I^ike N'yassa to the Mozambique coast/'for Ma<la- : gascar and the North." And it add '"The treaties with Zanzibar do no ' j ; really prevent the traffic, as the Seyid has no power to enforce these treaties" ~~~ i The English cruisers capture only a ' jraction of the dhows engtiged by the Arabs im the slave-trade. It has now | become necessary to seek directly, by all justifiable means, to abolish slavery i» Egypt, Turkey, Persia, Zanzibar, Mada­ gascar, Tunis, Morocco, Cuba and ! Brazil." i / Qualities of Fire Wood. | It is a great convenience to know the | comparative value of different kinds of 1 wood for fuel. Shell-biirk hickory is re­ garded as the highest standard of our forest trees, and calling that 100, other Twenty-Ninth Annual Report or THK Pei Mutual Life Insurance Co., OF PHILADELPHIA. OFFICE--©31 Chestnut. Street. Aapete Jaanaiy 1.1876 RKC'KIITS. ..e5.msB.3B Premium receipt* Interwt received Deferred payment*. bictMM) in value of itocks, ate. Accrued interest. Total .•I.IM^HO.44 . Sln.14K.16 -«l.W»>S28.«l lno^ai.,6 UMi.Tatl.M DISBFRSGMKM Lneae* and endowment* i>nid i$K7;,n:j9.63 (7««7^rni.6H Dividend* bi policy liuii!«is.. Surrendered policies RfiriMirance, etc (lommumUinp. Salaries, etc... TkJtiv, advertising, etc Jfcif.741 .M i*~>.{>;8.;4 ai.XHn.fi3 £V<«i.<ii RE YOU GOING TO PAINT? Then Buy the N. Y. ENAMEL PAINT CO.'S C H E M I C A L P A I N T , N. Y. ENAMEi. PAINT CO., 103 Chambera St., New York, or MILLER BROS., 109 Weter St, Cleveland, 0M*. Agents* Guide on trial a mo».iPot«.ji>»«»P.Hoou,yil»ta^> • k in roar iiwn town. Term* «ad It wMflfe H. HALLKTT * CO.. Portland, Mala* -91.107.341. ANSKTS. t5.MU.UMS.87 United States J and 6 p«r cent, bonds, Phil- «(l«ll>hln, wnd city loan*. 7 |x>r cent, niort- K»tf, ruilruad ix>ii(ir, bn 11 k and utiier i#l.»W.744.48 nil first lien* on |>n>|>orty vaiuod lit jftiJUUNKI 2,si:i.titffi.68 Prxmiuin oetriiivd b.v |x>iiciue .iCS «in PU' lt>.,n4.'I.H4 viito' IHI1HIU'«» wH urMl tiy iKindH at.fel .yc Pivmluin* on polic.k«N not refuted, net 62^tl!i.4tl 1VI«*HIMI pnjiin-nt* due in 1«77, net lnleroct due «nii *ccr>n»<l on loans iV.Wi.if > ii Imnd niiii in iinxt conip.itiius 122,HO .01 KIMI FstJih* owned I>y tin* onnipany 4<H,8hl.S5 Kuinit lire at tioiue ottii o? und iitft iicies Total. lAAItII.ITIKk l6lUi.796.00 »o^*)AMJ.87 4,636^82.14 4,737,086.14 D< at.h loniie*. etc., not yet dim... Rtunaiiranctt ri*servt», 4iy percent; Actujiry's table, >tu #gt»«'pl«* for p<Hi per cent, liasls $1,SK!.V78.J8 Nunilier of policies in force lU.t>43 Amuunt of risk ^31,056,730.00 •Tiie P«nn hae the largest ratio »[ Hiirplur to liatiiJUtiee offlfty Mutual Llf» Curapunjr in th« c.'ti-.(ry. SAMUEL V. litTKY, Pivsident. BAMUKL K. RTOKKS, H . K. STKVRN8, Viw President. 2d Vioe President. JAS. WK1R MASON. liKNKY AUSTIK, Aottmrj'. Secretary. HENRY O. BROWN, Ass't Secretary. IREDELL, Jr., Gen. A^t., 88 West 8d fit, Cincinnati. MUSIC BOOKS For H Orps. CLAMKE'8 NEW METHOD universally known * one of rare merit. VK»th In Uu< instructive cuurte und Ui© wtll-cbo^n nin lor pmctioe. iETIE'8 fiCHflni PARLOR ORGAN. .h »wi.«7 °WnUUL ($2 fill.) The sale oi more than -AMXK) copies is the best pruuf of iU TFREAT KKIUU. hiritv. EMERSON'S NEW METHOD 'iSSf ts woik «tii fwo dtotiniruifthed mtu^icians, and U equal IUM ROOT'8 SCHOOL !S5 TjSS.rtfKrS^S oldest and best mnthmls. Widelf kn<»wn and nued CLARKE'S $1 INSTRUCTOR Is AN ABBI^VITTJ^NI SMI V<*RY UOKKI METHOD FOR BF'KINNERS, WINNER S NEW SCHOOL H,R CAB,NKT $66 5 OuSoe^^lffljKTOMR^lID^ * Umy. MOW TO MA UK IT. WKilalU. odk |12 IM FO.V<?« IF 00..&. M A DAY at hone. Ageata wanted. OatAt I Brum I# en8it I1LWULW CnWMiiH ora woese.Obieew.ii6. A \VERK. Catalogne and sample fit KB. . If ELTON A CO., 11U Nassau St.. New York. . Sfi5 2 H77 e^eek •<' Agents, $10 Outfit mr.X ^ * p. O. VIUKKKV, Auauetel Mnir. OUTFIT FltKK. Best ciiance yet. WH<«' e> . tJPtJ jmhw to F._N ASON, 11 1 Nassau Street, New York.. MTHMAT" roe eniy inre reiatd?. Trial pasirMn. U SMlTHNIOfaT.OleTjUri.0^ tli fn 4S0n P*r 4*' mt l>eme. 8«aplei erertM §>•> yp U> Cell lr»» STIWON A Co.^ Portland, li) K W .SO v' t'lliTj »<:•» vent for Xly. &*> liy lU'S i'Et) ,'U !•(>.. V.MX1U, V. Jr l*l'.l»l I > I .VCi fur in p!,n:» «f nlax'or Beud lor oix'.ulnrnn.) s-tnsples. O..T. FAY.O tinden, N. jl * 1 s ' - . p . « j f i a . is the enexi OROAN (TiicliO llent ea».v instrnolion in*4c. ORBfiN AT HOMeKS îKSiCT" r.-n OLIVER DITS0K & CO.. Boston. , G. H. DMMMI & Co., J. K. DILWM A; C 711 BHOADWAT, Seeeeesojw v» I<«e * V^iksr. P «»**«« '"1MIJIIII, rintli igl: KVIII p wtiHtui im renfipt <>l priu«k me. put'l'.s. W Wn,tiinK>"iv.-.t.. (Jiiicaso New York. 1 PhiW wo [Established tC^S.) I»r. <». W. Sitertm'G COKSU?1^LVL]F IKE Ker all diR«a«.»R of the Tiiro.it nn.,,. t ure i* unrivaled lor i(« «ie«t cura*'1® alwve dioeuees. Price, St and f J Y1UIP. i tor the A Boy of Mettle. On Wednesday afternoon, in Capp street, a lady and child had just taken time from rushing into" a whirlpool of j their seats in a buggy, to which two ' ' 1 ' 1 ' 1 ' ' thousand I horses were harnessed, when the animals J.E6TEY & GO. Brattloboro, Vt. trees will compare with it for real value £3^Seild for Illustrated Cfttalogiie. as fuel for house purposes as follows : trials from which not one in a escapes, A Woman Still. The Cleveland Leader tells the follow- iug pathetic story of mother's love : A young wornun, with draggled dress and a flushed face, with her hair loose over her shoulder, and a hard look in her eyes, followed a burly officer into the Central station just as the clock 'was on the stroke of midnight. " What's the matter here ?" queried the Lieutenant, looking up as the ill- mated couple came trooping in. "Same old charge," said the officer; ,, she's been raising Cain around the hay market." " You bet your boots I have," said the girl, with a hoarse laugh that showed there was whisky behind it. " I give 'em as good as they sent." They were leading her into the recording room, when she stopped at the door opening into the Captain's office. " Whose kid is that V she asked. " That if Oh, one that was. picked up on the street--lost bv somebody." " Lost, is he ? Well, I've found him. et me aione, will you ?" She pulled away from the officer, and Khelli<ark hickosy.. Pignut hickory White oak White acli Dogwood ! Scrub oak White hazel | Apple tree ; Red oak Whit'> beech \ Black walnut Black birch . 100; Yellow oak 60 . 95iHard maple 5«t 84j White elm 58 Redcetlar 56 Wild cherry 55 Vellow pine 54 Clieetnut 52 Yellow poplar 51 1 Butternut 43 [ Whits birch 43 : White pine 30 PACTS WANTED FOR HISTORY a I UNTEN'L EXHIBITION It contains n<»nrly 40Uline enfrrnv of buildings and •cenes in the Great Exhibition, and in the only antheutie and oomplete history published. It treat* of the grand Cuildings, wonderful exhibit*, curiimitieg, great eTente. etc. Very cheap, and KelU at aight. One Agent sold 4K oopiff in one dny. Send foroni-extni term* to Agent* and 11 full <ie*cription«-f <he work. Addreci NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.. Ohiwt.;,-. 111. riATTTTmff' Utirelitliie and Torthleiw Itookr on vtt w livlii the F.xhibitioyi n.e b -inif ctroulnl«d. Do not be deceived. See that the i><x ti yon buy ountAina took fright and went down the street at ! full speed. The lines had fallen over ! the dashboard, and the lady had no means of controlling the team, but she had presence of mind enough to retain her seat and tightly grasp the child, i It is worth bearing in mind that in Several attempts were made by persons 011 woods of the same species there is a j over 900 page* and nearly 4INI tin* "-gntilnn. the street to stop the runaways, but they great difference, according to the soil on only served to increase the speed of the , which they grow. A tree that grows on frightened horses. At length a boy on a wet, low, rich ground will be less solid horseback appeared on the scene and and less durable for fuel, and therefore galloped after the fugitives. He headed • of a iess value than a tree of the same them at the corner of Fourteenth and ' kind that grows 011 a dry and poorer Capp streets, after tliev had cleared two 1 soil. To the ordinary purchaser, oak is CHINES, COMPENSATION LIBERAL., BUT n,l ninflinimIP^ lntfn, i VARV1NC ACCORDING T O ABILITY, CHAR I>r. O. W. Siirdru'H PCLlt' . Wf. recommend the Pulmonic Syrtliein con. section with the OonF.umptive t'are. . Vwv tt ntmttln. Httinit to A. U BKNDKR, 37° WOM)KHKi;i. KI;CCICSS! 05 000 ,,f t!le I»I>t'ltinKW AND II.l.rsTKATI.b hold inollilm k. It liwonh/ imiililt'lr hm-iirirt >*<rk (< 4 onl v S'i.iO). training of tin- rutin biMrory, uri:itil IIIIIIIMIIUN, Wiiiidfrliil T-vliibltit, cnrioMtii'H.vreitl iluvs,etc.; illtiNtrut<'d»ftnd S( cheaper than «ny other; everybody mint* it. One w agpnt et fared in 4 «•«•#&. 3,'CMIO ht*nd quickly for proof of «'»<*r<».opinionsof officials, olerjrjr and Rumple pftvre^, tnll de^rintion hik! rjv.a term*. HUBBARD HKOS., Puhn.,C'Bic»RN, III . and Cincirm.I»iJ>. fj A TT^PT AXT B^wiirp ot f*U«ly.«lttiuied olticitti A and worthlesshcx>k&. S«nd /or pivot. "IT 8JEL.IVS AT 8I<illT." Frank Leslie's Historical Register or THK CENTENNIAL EXHIBITION IB the only oomplete Pictorial History of the Centennlaj published. A luammot !i p.itioratua, I .OOO large cnifmv- inirs, iu;iny of tliein b?iri(T I4V hv fnchee. .AWCIIIM ^QODVS Rmn1es.t SScCI EPIIPMV 57 fits curwl hr Dr. Rosa* Epileptii •' LUROI RAM<.'it";K. TBIAI. VAOKAOR HRST FKKE. Addreag, KOSh BROS., RICHHOXD. l\p. BCIIQIflNfi No "Utter bow illchtly diuiblKl. Id rtnoiuna oreaana new p»id. Ad*ice und eireolet free. T. McMiCHAKt.. Atir..1Q1 tUnaom 8t..Phil» .Pa. WATCHES. A Om« SmhUUU Sl.4 Watch mnd Outfit frtm to lonii. Better tba* »ddrn» A <V.HTI.TRR A 00..»:htp^#o $350 h. Month--AteaMweitMd. WMMnH tag ertiolou to the world. One eMapl* tl«a YOU can secure « exclusive for your CF^T. AV> RSTWRIRTICE ro(juired. Pleasiiot addressing Ja.^ T, 600D pa> iiijt l>tii*i>M>te. county, at a Bra*lf nnd small capital .., ..... BJid liomiratifii, h.v »tlUninitoa, Cincinnati, Otikv ®HJCOJC Y } cur^d, fuel MTftd, and heat lnez«n». f^fTTTyTOPVfi ( o the Spiral Draft. ULis L19 )Send stemp for cirenlar (with teati moniala) to Henry Colfoni, *20 Sanaora St., PhU*., Pa. ;505$IQ0 ihed. Ad'r»H N?\v:Tel< a month rac'd by onr Krndiijitee. Siudenrs wnured. SnUry pidd while practicing. Situiitionpftir- lelewriiph Institute,Jane8villa.Wia. VVKhaveaUnter sale for Uatch'e Universal OOB*II „! », than (or nny other medicine ot the kind. We hiw* t..r side all the old standard remedina. Nton* We an in audi demand. N. V. Sold by J. BLT'KI A standard remediee. Nton* R L.iNr TK DAVTOS. FI iendship. Co.,'i/'hienKu, 111. u week net to Agent*. The New Work indispensable to F. A. M. Send for De*criptif« <':it:iii>»!Ue. RKlfl>INi; A CO.. Pt'liLIHHKna Mwionio Works, 731 Broadway. New York. Ha Address AUENCfV DUPARTMENT, 11ANK. LLSLIK'S PUHUM1LNO llOUSK, 53? Peari Street, K«w York. Uliil. FllAJ ^rii.ucNs of Tree* und Plunta. beat A LUCRATIVE SUS!£ESS. V/E WANT 5OO MOa: r:R6T-CLAS>. SEWiNC MACHINE ACCMTC, AND SOO MEN CF ENERGY AMD AS! 1_!T TO LEARN THE BUSINESSOFSHLLIKCC-WiKCMA POMONA NURSERY! Cupiiiiti .fitrk uliil iirriit Anifrican. th Str»wberriea. Ten m-res of liltANDYWINE (Suxipieco) Rn*[p|)Hirie» yielded la«t mitnmer ><4,33S. Send tor Cataloifue. WM. PARRY, Oinii;tuiin*on, K.J. T7T / \I) TTl 4 Hori'la At/rii ulturi*C J LiVMlll/A, Weekly. $3 a j wr. S«.nd 10c. tor specimen. Pn'ceeduitre Fiorldu Fruit-Onswers' A»so>'ist.ion--meetinc ot IH76--35c. Climatology nid Re- •'•nrct-s of Kloii'l.i toe. <»nlle«io'sTreatise ot) tn-- it.ui Family (tmnslHted trom the Fivnc'i), 411. Gui<!- Jl .j.x»f Floiid". .Vic. Aiidiesa WALTON Jc CO., dtu kMiiiviUv, Fia. t3T~&ay wtitra you aaw tiiia. SYNDICATE " O>ini>in.ition of Capital." Jttm mode of operating in stock* Ijoes tinpowiblr. Pralilsikn. . . Kipl ui.itory cironUr sent Krte. MoitKAM A Co . Brokers.38 Broad St., P.O. B01 a538, N Y. , DR. ti. E. BKIiriT'S Universal Cuif for FITS or EP11.KP8Y Has never imen known to i.iil wljen the directions ha** been strlctlyfoJUowed. Pru.;-. Sl.i". and a twJL. A60iit by P. O. urilt»r or Utt»»r to A. H. BKNDKR, 3.6 Bovery, Naw York. _ A FORTUNE Oatuba made by & unv sHi.'irt n;eii u ho can keep Ofl •oanMl. Addrass J. R. botoi. N. J. $10i$25;i ROSE GROWER'S COMPANION' AND F10KAL GUIDE 1\ 1!' you hov.' to pr'jw OtTanirunj*, -ialt** foy y A i n\tm-" * K. V" Ifa?»! A MS, Suecaasor to IbniW **- " '• ° ' :<*-tr,nd. Ind or three blocks, and, by dexterous hand- oak, und pine is pine, but for home use i ling of his own horse, managed to seize ; the tree grown on dry upland and the lines of the runaway team and bring i standing apart from others is worth a them to a standstill. As may be im-1 great deal more.--Our Home Journal. agined, the lady was greatly agitated by j -- ---- -- the adventure, but was not too overcome I PROF. FRITZ, OI Zurich, has recently to speak her gratitude to her deliverer, shown, from a comparison of annual The name of the little hero is John j meteorological statistics, that the years Flynn. He is about 12 or 13 years of j distinguished by a maximum of solar age, and is said to have stopped other I 8Pote coincide very closely with those * " - eitre marked by exceptionally severe •storms, and an unusual average runaways in much the same way.--San j ye«rs Francisco Call. i liail-e A CALIFORNIA!* has projected the long­ est railroad in the world--to run from height of large rivers. The special pe­ riods occur at intervals of eleven years, ( and the law ie in accordance with obser- San Francisco to the edge of civilization j vations made during the past century in in the South American continent. all latitudes. ACYEH AMD QUALIFIOAT'ONC. OF THf: ACENT. FOR PARTICULARS, ADDRESS Wilson SswiiiE Masiiine Ci. Chinsgn Si7 ^ 04? jj-ttuA-uwAl', Ke?7 Tort, nr l^ev Orleans Ls. m. WARNER'S Ilt ALTII CORSET. W Ith Skirt Snp|iorter nnd Iik'lf-Ailjti»tjiig l'nda. Sccures UKALTU und ('OHFOOTof Body, wn h Omace and Beai't T of form. Thrtc Our ment a in one. Approve,! by all t hypiwatiH. A « K N T S WaNT li I). Sam pies I .v mu.l, In Coutil,$2; Satteen, '.5. To A gent p at 25 cents l r«. Order nze two lDches emnller than v.'aiet mea­ sure over the rtref^ Warter Ere*. 7C3 Iroadny^.T. lltAWTCn MEN to tri)T«l and sell to Dealer* HIHn I bll oar new unbr«ak»hlH class cliitun«f« W nnd lamp K°ods. \o P»d(lliiip, Salary liiwnL Business pennsnent. Hotol and traveling pipt-nan Cc.. --"i "..iu s>t., uirictnnnti. Obk)k . Prof. Hull'* Ma vie Cnmuoua* u Ibe (inly pnpknKiob.uu, paekiijjt ut wtueb will lorct- the Ix-ani to :ruw thii k mill heaTT on tlie tact (witlioul ii,jurv> in II d.iy* "I ever? cut*, or nmnry ch.crl'ulU re- Itind̂ d. c«-n'» per pncknjje, piiftpi.irl; .1 for SOopnt*. I-.. W, JONES. Axliiund, Mnu. A UTCIV--" ' rn w •o'tctt orrtor* tor our Rood*. rtfl rtu pi'mutiiriK eiiMilovmriii; |wd salanr. Trovelirur eipMi^B* paid hr Oonjp*n». Cniau !»»«' •.atrial Wurkih Ulactcn&u. O l&^AA A Vcur nnd Kxpranrn to good Ao r.vn <IJUv' V' who *re w«nt«<l «v«rywlit-re, tn a •trictlf lecitiniate und pl«as«nt buBin^u. Pnrtlcolara ti AdditM J. WOllTII «l*v dar*' m.hv wJi'nj; ur .v, I Chr.mi.' <.'nr.lv f •' M p!-». W. •« I' t IW n.w«. . J. a. isL'Hi.;a>' shixs. \tv«. EASTEHX <»IVK<,'ON I,AM>S.-aoaiNN> A<-re«i. 84>i! nrti, titJe j*>rfe»-t, cri.(>»<-/rr(ii»«, rll- muto unsnvpas««i. v.«- mil-- ft troin $1.S0 to f S M pt* ver*>. Terms eni'.v. For f^rcolar. Mnp, At-., rnpiy ti> K. MARTIJ{ (X),,*i®I"rv>nt St.,S.in t-'r..:," t'.-i'i. mi*. A BOOK for the MILLION. iVii£R!GAL ADViCk StXT 1 KJC£ on iwii|| »wrw»n*-.. »* l*N t. S-. Im-K M* • • AOtWTi WANTEO IBv ok *y Slrljiham Vou->jr*j [Wire! No. IP. -j Duttln, Catarrh, Huptun . Oj' ANN ELIZA YQUS'G, kmm tofMUnt* Ul» a«rM of Tb» llhM- W**kly ix>?or» datonaiMlBa ... apeo jo u work iaia fill and wt» tor. Th* •oinbinktSda for thU eeeecu « inn««r» inytlllaj k*r*tofore »tteinpt«Ki Taraa mnt free. Addr <3T OW., St. I^UIM, >IO. CHA& CLL'l C. N tT . OO. H ffuiw.ai.Nw T«| No. 9 l|P/'\'FTT IJ* V ICSUULY made WIUJ oor M«<>u. •«>•> t WRiTiiiO 'l^.APVKR TIWI, 11% ilLUil Hi X Krj CUcit OulAt. OiixaU™ fn* I plea* "y IMWWlkl! airUtlMMW H. K. A ABTtroa STArroau, l(Ki Fulton St., JJ»w York, j In t&la p*pcjr.

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