McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Oct 1880, p. 7

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MTVa KEFEKTAHCE. . :W< em knocking, gently 1 At the portalp of ray heart. And beserched me thcftr unlocking. For » nccret h< '<1 imiwrt; Bat I laughed to scorn his greeting--- And regretted not the fleciing 1 Qt bii battled steps retreating On tlieir way. fhra aga In a message brought he, Knocking gently as before^ And with courtly" tones besooght B»-- Yet 1 opened not tho dow. Mildly chiding niv denying, And iay cool reserve decrying, with low and mystic sighing, Turned away. Soon the little tyrant shyly-- Without warning as tiefon?-- FtaUed the latcli-Htriuz, ;ind then slyly Pushed aside the loosened door. Though my heart wax near relenting, Aad I felt'twould bring repenting, Ye* I would not, by consenting, Love to-day., Gould I ratch hiin and securely Tie his litile wicked wanga, Iw«uM kneel to him demurely, Tho* I kuow they say he sings-- That if) IM*. 1 kninr his knocking, I will hasten the uuloeKing. All, the little trifler, mocking. Flies away! JfijmliHf, A urc-i BT J. W. BILEY. Tberel little ^.IH; dnn'tcry! Tney have broken your doll, I know, And jour tea-set 1 title, ^nd your jiluy-hOus", too^ A®e things of the ions ago; BeU childish troubles will loon pass by. There! little girl; don't cry! TJierel little girl; don't cry! They hare broken your slate,, I know; And the glad, wild ways Of your school-girl days Are things of the long »i;o; But Lie and love will soon 6oton by. There! liitlegirl; don't cry; fheret little girl; don't cry! They have broken your h<?srt, I know; And Ihe nrinbiw gleams Of your youthful dreams An t hings of tne long ago; Bui heaven holds all for which you sigh, There) little girl; don't cry! - huliaruipolis Journal. she is disengaged for it ? Yes (this time qnite warmly). An hour later the deed was done. Some capital champagne, a dark avenue (I believe there were some Chinese lan­ terns there originally, but a kind wind ' ; had blown them out), and a soft little j 1 hand slipped into his, did the work ; and ! j Miss Katie had promised bashfully, but! j with unmistakable willingness, to be the j | future Mrs. Snooks. Whether it was t j Snooks or the property pertaining to | Snooks she most ailected, deponent say- ; eth not. When, however, her betrothed' fotuid I what he had done, and remembered his | former words, and all the aw fulness o1 j parental wrath, his heart tailed him | He went, as he usually did when in sorry ' case, in search of Wilding ; and having ! discovered him, took him into a side I room, and shutting the door, confronted j him with a rather pale face. j " So the eyes were t<x> many for you ?" i said Mr. Wiiding calmly, after a delil>er- ; ate examination of the disturbed face be- | fore him. " I told you how it would be." "That's the sort of thing any fellow | might say," returned Snooks pathetie- ! ally. " I didn't think you would have been so aggravating. And just when you | see I'm down on my luck, too. Yes ; ! I've been and gone and done it." [ " 'Mother will be pleased,' " quoted j his friend and law adviser with a shrug. | "So, by the bye, will be your father. ; They both regard nothing so highly as I birth. I suppose Miss Browniig can lay j claim to some decent breeding ?" i *'The old chap is a conichandier, you | know that, at least, lie used to be,' said | Snooks, with a heavy groan, i "O, indeed ! And a very charming S business, too, I have no doubt. Leads ! up to quite a train of ideas. Corn, j wheat, staff of life, quaint old mill, and j rustic bridge in the distance, miller sit- ' ting on it I wonder," dreamily, "if ; Brownrig ever wore a white hat f And I if so, why? Don't all speak at once, j Well, well, she is a very pretty girl. I Such eyes, you know! I really congrat- and, taking Wilding's aim, drew him oat of the house. "Well?" said the latter interfoga- tively. "I don't know whether it is well or ill," returned he gloomily. "But I fol­ lowed your advice and proposed to 'em all." '*And they accepted you ?" „ "Most of 'em. Bat Lilly, the ynmig- est, she--" "I always said she was a sensible •girl," put in Mr. Wilding, sotto voce. "Did you?" with much "Well, she refused me ; sort of said she wouldn't have me at any price. So you see you Mere wrong !" " I always knew she was one of the most intelligent girls I ever met," Mr. Wilding repeated, in a tone so difficult that his companion for once had suffi­ cient sense to refrain for demanding an explanation. The next morning, as Katie Brownrig turned the angle of the hall that led to her father's sanctum (whither a sense, of filial duty beckoned her) she almost ran into the arms of her three sisters, all con­ verging toward the same spot from dif­ ferent directions. Simultaneously they entered Mr. Brownrig's study. (He called it a library ; but that word is too often profaued for me to profane it, so I shall draw the line at study). But to re­ turn. Miss Lilly, being the voungest, was of course the first to raise her voice. " I had a proposal last night, and I have come to tell vou about When m|. Wilding heard of all this, I regret to Ray he gave way to noisy mirth •f* Severely Dry Times. An interesting record is that of severe in the privacy of his chambers; and was j droughts, as far back as the landing of actually caught by his washerwoman, the Pilgrims. How many thousand who peeped through the keyhole, per- " forming a wild dauoe in the middle of lite ikior. . ̂ THE FAMILY DOCTOR. Paper Barrels. A company in Connecticut make bar­ rels, kegs and cans from paper pulp, which is done wholly by pressure by screw or toggle joint, or both combined. The barrel is made on a shape or form • to make the inside, and outside of this j is another to make the outside, the inner i Such high winds or calms," etc. Read j form being hinged in sections to admit 1 the ! tames are observations mode like the | following: " Such a cold season!" I "Such a hot season!" "Such wet wither!" or, "Such dry weather!' HOW HE GOT OUT OF IT; OR, Engaged to Three Girls in One Night. " If you will take my advice," said Mr. Wilding, making a last noble but futile effort to balance the ivory paper knife on the tip of his first finger, " you won't go to the Brownrigs' ball." " And why not," asked his companion irritably. "Well, I really wouldn't, you know," said Mr. Wilding, giving up his struggle with the impossible, and laying the re- ulafe you, my dear fellow.' i "Wilding," desperately, "can't you do | something ? I--I don't know how it hap- • pened. It was the champagne, I sup- \ pose, and of course she is pretty; but I j don't want to nmrry any one, and I know I the Governor won't hear of it" j "HT> will have to hear of it now, won't | he ?" asked Wilding unfeelingly. | "He would go out of his mind if such a thing was even hinted to liim," de­ clared Snooks wildly. "Try to help me ! out of it. Wiiding, can't you ?" "I don't see what there is to do, ex- j cept marry her. I only hope Lady Snooks and Miss Cornchandler will get fractory paper knife upon the table, "for I on. And you should think of her beau- a variety of reasons. Girls play the very ; ty,,you know; doubtless it,will console mischief with you, and you know what j you when Sir Peter cuts you off with the trouble it gave me to get you out of your : customary shilling." ioc* * T> ! "I suppose I had better cut my throat last scrape. There are four Brownriu girls, aren't there? And they are all ; pretty?" " I don't see what that's got to do with ; it," said Snooks, sulkily. " There's safe- ; ty in a multitude. I can't marry 'em all, i ran I ?" ! "Happily, no! Though, if the laws «f your land did not forbid it, I am in- j dined to think you might try to accom- j plisli even that. Still, be advised, i Snooks, and be conspicuous by your ab­ sence at the Brownrigs' ' small and early.' Papa Brownrig, when incensed, is not nice, and yon know you are decidedly ; intimate with Miss Kate." "No, I am not," said Snooks with de- ' cision, " not a bit of it. Though I allow j she is a handsome girl, and lias,.lovely ; eyes. Hasn't she, now ?" "I don't know. As a rule I never i and put an end to it," said Snooks dis­ mally ; and then, overcome, no doubt, by the melancholy of this suggestion, he breaks down and gives way to tears. " I say, don't do that, you know," ex­ claimed Wilding indignantly. "Weep­ ing all over the place won't improve mat­ ters, and will make you look a worse fool than nature intended, when you go out of the room. If you have put your foot in it, at least try to bear misfortune like a man. Look here," angrily, ' 'if you ore going to keep up tins hideous booliooing I'll leave the room, and you too, to your fate. It's downright in­ decent. They will liear,vou in the next house if you don't moderate your grief." As the nearest house was a quarter of a mile off, this was severe. , . "I shouldn't care if they heard me in look into a woman s eyes. I consider it the next town," said Mr. Snooks, who ft rudeness as well as a beastly,"^ said was quite too far gone for shame. Wilding earnest^', telling his lie without j "'l'here is just 'one chanoe for you, s blush "Never mind her eyes. If," j an<j only one," said wilding, slowly. "I waruingly, 14 you must go to this ball, at j have an idea and you must either follow least tryjto forget that she lias any eyes j it or--go to the altar." at all. If you don't, you will propose to her, to a moral." One would think that I was a raw school-boy," said young Snooks wrath- fHlly. "Do you think 1 can't look at a woman without committing myself ? Do I look like a fool V" Whatever Mr. Wilding thought at that moment, he kept it to himself. Before he spoke next, lie and his conscience had agreed to dissemble. "My dear fellow, do not let us even hint at such a thing," he said amiably. "I only meant, you were slightly--very alightly--susceptible, and that Miss Kate has a certain amount of pleasing power, and that--I positively would give up this ball if I--" "Are you going?" broke in Snooks im­ patiently. "Well, yes, I dare say I shall look in about 12.' "Then I shall look in with you," said Snooks defiantly. "Fact is, the fellow wants to spoon her himself, and don't s<*e the force of being cut out," said he to himself complacently as he ran down the steps of Wilding's stairs. Beyond all question the Brownrigs' ball was a decided success. The rooms were filled to overflowing, the staircases were olioked, the keat was intorable. Sir Thomas and Lady Higgins had actually put in an appearance after all, and the supper, if uneatable, was, I as- * 'I'll follow anything, eagerly. What is it?" "You have proposed to Miss Katie," i solemnly. "Now go and propose to the i other three!" I As Wilding gave vent to his idea he I turned abruptly on his heel and left tho I room. "I'll do it," said Snooks valiantly, dry- i ing his eyes and giving his breast a I tragic tap, "whatever comes of it." j Going into the hall he saw Hetty stand­ ing near an entrance: a little M ay beyond her was Kate, conversing with a tall • and lanky youth. Not daring to glance I in the direction of the latter, who plain- i ly expected him to come straight to her j on the wings of love, he turned and asked Hetty to dance. They danced, and then (it was custom j with the ball goers in that mild suburban | neighborhood) he drew her out tinder the ! gleaming stars and up the dark avenue j that a few minutes since was tlie scene j of her sister's happiness. j There he proposed in due form, and I was again accepted. Hetty's conduct, ! indeed, was perhaps a degree more pro- ' nounced than Katie's, because she laid I her head upon his shoulder, and he felt ! by all the laws of sentiment bound to 1 ki*s her. Her nose looked lovely in the j pale moonlight ; so I dare say he did not I find the fulfilling of this law difficult. After that he had some more, a good more, cl.ammp.e; amiI tboi ho money had lieen spared : everything was what the mistress of the house called "rug regal;" and all the Miss Brownrigs looked as charming as any one could desire. There were four of them. There was Katie, the second^ daughter--Snook's friend, and the possessor of the lovely eves. And they were lovely; large, "and dark, and true, and tender," like the North, according to the Laureate; "black as sloes," said her fond if slightly op­ pressive mother, and of the languid, melting order. Then there" was Hetty, the eldest girl, who, if her eyes were not dark as midnight, had at least the dearest little nose in the world. A pure Greek feature, perfect in every respect, ignorant of colds in the head, that made one long to tell her (only she would have blushed, they were all nicely brought up) about Diuln, and her Phidian appendage. Then came Georgie--" George the Third," as she was playfully termed in the bosom of her family--who, if she had neither nose nor eyes like her sisters, had certainly a prettier mouth than either. A sweet little kissable rosebud of a mouth that pouted and laughed al­ ternately, and did considerable execu­ tion. And finally, there was Lilly. A tall, pule girl, witii blue eyes, a finely cut j awfidly horrid, you know. In fact," clun, and a great deal of determination warming to his work through sheer gra- all round. I titude, "you have made me miserable for- Katie's eyes were larger, darker, and ' ever; you've broken niv heart." (when she looked at Snooks and thought | " Dear me, how shot-king !" said Miss of his thousands) more melting than ever ! Lilly, frivolously. "Let us hope Time that night. Her dress, if slightly bizarre, will mend it. I'm not very sure you did was immensely becoming. Snooks, for j uot speak the truth at first. I really be- the first half hour, kept himself bravely t lieve it is kind, my refusing you. And aloof from her fascinations, declined to now, Mr. Snooks, if I were you, I should posed to Miss Georgia, who also con - j H<tntcd to be liis. There now remained ! but one other step to be taken. He I crossed the room and a-sked the youngest ! Miss Brownrig to dance. He was get- | ting rather mixed bv this time, and was i on the very point of asking her to marry ! him instead, so custoniarv had the ques- ; tion grown to Inm now. Miss Lily, ! however, declined to dance, on the plea ; that she was tired, and could exert her- j; self no more that night With question- 1 able taste he pressed the matter, and ; 1 icgged her to give him just one. At 1 this she told him frankly she did not ad- 1 mire his style of dancing, which, of [ course, ended the conservation. So he i \sked lier to come for a stroll instead, | and having arrived at the momentous ! ?pot, delivered himself of the ornate 1 jpeecli that had already done duty three ) times that night. I forgot what it was. ! but I know it wound up with the declara- | tion that he adored her and wanted to i many her. | "It's extremely good of yon, I'm sure," j said the youngest Miss Browning, calm- ' ly. "But, uncivil, as I fear it must j sound. I don't want to marry you." "Don't you, by Jove!" said Snook, ' hastily. "Well, that's awfully ki--No, j no!" pulling himself up with a start; "I \ don't mean that, vou know ; I mean it's I said she, in a tone replete with triumph, j It was so sweet to the mind of youth l to outdo its elders. But "on this occasion ! only" the eldeis refused to be outdone. : They each and all betrayed a smile of in- ' ward satisfaction, and then they gave way to speech. I "No!" they said in A breath. They; j did not mean to doubt or lie impolite they only meant surprise. j "The curate," said Hetty in a com- ! posed but plainly contemptuous whisper. | It was a stage whisper. | "Old Major Sterne," said Miss Georgie i promptly. ! "Perhaps Henry Simms," suggested : Katie, witli some sympathy. Then turn- | ing to her father she said,* with a con- j scious blush, "It is very strauge, papa, ! but I too had a proposal hist night." j "And so had I!" exclaimed Georgie ! and Hetty in a breath. * "Eh?" said papa, pushing up Ills spec­ tacles. He was fat and pudgy, with sandy hair and flabby nose. He was a powerful man, too, ancKone uupleasant to come to open quarrel w|th. Proposals in tho Brownrig family were few and far between--in fact, curiosities--and so much luck as the girls described falling into one day overpowered liim. "One at a time; my breath is not what it used to bo," he said addressing Katie. ( If he had said breadth, it would have been equally true, as*his mother-- if she was to lie 1 relieved--always de elared he was a lean baby). "May I ask the name of your lover ?" "Mr. Snooks," said she with downcast eyes and a timid smile. She took up the corner of a cherry-colored bow that | adorned her gown, and fell to admiring I it, through which she fondly thought was j bashfulnucss. I "Impossible!" exclaimed Georgie an- | grily. . "What a disgraceful untruth!" cried Hetty rudelv. "Mr. Snooks proposed to me, last night, and I accepted liim." "What Is it yon say ? Oh, I aiv going out of my mind; my senses are de­ serting me," said Georgie, putting hei hands to her head with a dramatic gesture. "Or is it a dream that he asked me to marry liim, and that I too said 'yes'?" "I seldom visit the clouds," said Lilly, with a short but bitter laugh. And I certainly , know he mad* me a a noble offer of his hand and heart; both which treasures I declined." " Where ?" demanded the other three, as though with one mouth. "In the laurel avenue !" At this they all groaned aloud. "Perfidious monster!" said Hetty from her heart. "Am I to understand," began Mr. Brownrig, with suppressed but evident fury, " that this--this-- unmitigated scouudrel asked you all to marry him last night ?" " If we speak the truth, yes," replied the girls dismally. " He was drunk," said papa, savagely. " I can't believe it," said Katie, who was dissolved in tears--in fact, ' like Niobe, all tears'--by this time. " Noth­ ing could be nicer than the way he did it. His language was so perfect, and so thoroughly from the--heart." " He addressed me in a most honor­ able, upright, and Christian fashion," said Hetty. " I am sure he meant every word he said." j She was thinking uneasily of that kiss j in the moonlight. Coidd anyone have seen her ? Was old Major Sterne any- I where aliout at the moment ? "I certainly considered his manner j strange, not a bit like what one reads," I said Georgie, honestly, "but I thought | of the title and the property, and I said ; yes directly." ; "I thought him the very greatest mufl i lever spoke to," broke iii Miss Lilly j with decision. I refused him without a ' moment's hesitation, and told him to go | home. I'm mu'e it was well I did. I | daresay if he had stayed here much i longer he would have proposed to mam- : ma next, and afterward to the upper ' housemaid. I agree with you, papa, tho 1 champagne WJIS too much for him." j "I--I think he is fond of me," said ; Kaiie, in a low and trembling tone. Her | fingers are not'playing with the cherry I colored bow now, but her eyelids have borrowed largely of its tint. "Don't be a goose, Katie," said the youngest Miss Brownrig, ldndly, but ' scornfully; "you don't suppose any of us ! would marry "hiin now, alter the way he j has beltaved? Do have some little i pride." j "Perhaps he is mad," said Hetty, j vaguely. Just at this moment, as a slave to her wounded vanity, she would 1 have been glad to believe ltiin so.- "No, my dear," declared Lily, calmly; ; "he has no brains worth turning. " ! "He said something to papa about calling to-day at 4 o'clock," said Katie, I very faintly. ! "Then I shall »it here till 4," returned | Mr. Brownrig in an awful tone. "I | shall set here until 5; and then I shall J get up, and go out and rind that young I man, and give liim such a horse whip­ ping as I warrant vou he never got be­ fore hi all his life. j "Don't be too hard on him, papa," | entreated Katie, weakly. "I shan't my dear, but my whip will," said papa, grimly. So he waited until 5; he waited until half-past five; and then he took up a cer­ tain heavy gold knobbed whip that lay A VERY simple and expeditions way of cooking a little bit of chicken or fish for a sick person is to butter a paper thickly, surprise, j and place the food to lie cooked within | the paper, and place it on a gridiron | over a clear fire. A very short time I suffices to cook it thoroughly; and I j have often found that to be eaten when I all other modes of invalid cookery have | been tried in vain.--Chamber*• Journal. ! TKETH are destroyed either by the j action of acids or the development of ' vegetable parasites. The former is the ) much mo.f frequent cause of decay. It j has been demonstrated by actual experi- i ment that even very weak acids may I suffice to decompose the teeth sub- j stances. In forty-eight hours the juice . of grapes will render the enamel of a j chalky consistence. Most vegetable sub- | stances are inert until fermentation takes | place and acetic acid is formed. Animal j substances exert no deleterious influences | until putrefaction is far advanced. WHEN cold affects the head and eyes papa] > sm<* impedes breathing tliraugh the nose, t it " great relief is gained by a wet napkin spread over the upper part of the face, ' covering the nose, except an opening for ' breath. This is to be covered by folds | of flannel fastened oyer the napkin with ; a handkerchief. So also a wet towel over the throat and whole chest, covered with folds of flannel, often relieves op- • pressed lungs. So says Miss Bucher, j and trulv. In addition, use a hot foot- - | bath ani take a glass of hot lemonade on ' * ]lfe' ! retiring at night. This is the best time ! also for the hot foot-bath, which should j be followed by the lemonade. j INVALIDS should keep the refresh- ! meiits covered in their sick-room. The i jellies, blanc-manges, and various liq­ uids used as cooling drinks, are more or less absorbent, ana easily take up the impurities which float about a sick-room. j A glass of milk left uncovered will soon i become tainted with any prevailing j odor, as can lie proven by leaving it in a ! room freshly painted. How important, I then, tliat the lxiisons of sickness should , be carefully kept from all that is to be j eaten. IF a person swallows any poison what- i ever, or lias fallen into convulsions from I having overloaded the stomach, an in- | stall taneous remedy, most efficient and I applicable in a large number of cases, is i a heaping teaspoonful of common salt, i and as much ground mustaril, stirred rapidly in a teacupful of water, warm or ! cold, and swallowed instantly. It is j scarcely down before it begins to come ! up, bringing with it the remaining con- i tents of the stomach ; and lest there be any remnant of the poison, however i small, let the white of an egg or a tea- j spoonfid of strong coffee lie swallowed : as soon as the stomach is quiet, as these articles nullify a large number of viru- I lent poisons. the following list, showing the number of days without rain: In the summer of 1621, 24k days. In the summer of 1630, 41 days. In the summer of 1<>57, 7f> days. In the summer of lGfi'2, 80 days. In the summer of 1674, 45 days. In the summer of 1688, 81 days. In the summer of 1694, (52 days. In the summer of 1705, 40 days. In the summer of 1715, 46 days. In the summer of 1728, 61 days. In the summer of 1730, 92 days. In the summer of 1741, 72 days. In the summer of 1749, 108 days,. In the summer of 1755, 42 days. In the summer of 1762, 128 days. In the sumfner of 1773, 80 days. In the summer of 1791, 82 days. In the summer of 1812, 28 days. : In the summer of 1856, 24 days.. In the summer of 1871, 42 days. In the summer of 1875, 26 days. In the summer of 1876, 26 days. It will be seen that the longest drought that ever occurred in America was in the summer of 1762. No rain fell from the 1st of May to the 1st of September. Many of the inhabitants sent to England for liny and grain. The PleMDras of Hope. j \Vlien the body is bowed with pain an intense | louging for relief brings hope. This may bright- I en the suffering but it does not euro. At a time j like thin how welcome u such a friend as War- i ner's Safe Kidney and liver Core, bringing hope, health and happiness, and the joys of IF a thing is worth doing at all, it is j worth while to do it welL Yet the world is full of work badly done and half-done, j It is always a bad policy to do work in a i, I poor, half-hearted and slovenly fashion, j Good and honest work will always be of j tho greatest "ervice, both to the serving I ! and the serv<«d. The worker will ever I I find it to his best interest to work con- ; : scientiously and carefully, and hi do his ! j very best. I j Arc You Not in Good Health ' j If the Liver is tbc source of your trouble, you : . can thul an at solute remedy in Da. SANFOUU'B j ! LIVER INVIUOHATOR, the only vegetable enthartic j which ads directly on the Liver. Cures all > | Bilious diseases. For Book address 1)R. HAN- I : FOBD, 1G2 Broadway, New York. ; ! VEOETINE.--The great success of the VKOK- j > TINE as a eloaus-cr and purifier of the blood ia ! I shown beyond a doubt by the great numbers ! who have taken it, and received immediate re- j lief, with such remarkable cures. ( I The Voltaic Kelt Co., Jlariiltall, tflch., | Will send their Electro-Voltaic Belts to Ihe af- | I flicted~upon thirty days' trial. See their adver- : j tisenient in this* paper, headed, "On Thirty j I Days' Trial." To HI:T the best that can be had, secure a 1 Jn-actical education at H. B. Bryant's Chicago ! i.isiness College. " j of its folding on itself for the removal of the barrel; the outer form contracts by ! the action of screws, self-operating, | during the process of shaping the bar- | rels. One machine is capable of pro­ ducing 200 barrels per day. The heads of the barrels are produced by similar means, but on a much simpler machine. These are disks with a rim slightly pro­ jecting on one face. In some cases both heads are cemented in and straightened by an iron hoop at each end. When removed from the machines the barrels, kegs, heads, etc., are placed in a kiln or drying room, where they remain from three to twenty-four hours, accord­ ing to size and degree of heat admitted to the room. The barrels are coated inside when required by a resistant varnish, and are painted or varnished outside. I They are adapted for flour, sugar and J any dry substances, for kerosene, lard, ; or any liquid, and kegs are made for | powder, and cans for other materials. | The vessels are said to be practicably {indestructible, cannot leak, are light and i easily handled. | A MAN is astonishing the people of Milwaukee by walking on prater. He wears shoes resembling coffins, and goes three miles an hour at a swinging gait, j THE Presbyterian Church of Canada j reports 740 pastoral charges and.659 i ministers. The pastoral charges em- | brace 1,350 churches and stations. Con­ nected with the church are 63,843, mak- ! ing a population of 300,000. There afe j 107,871 members. During the year 10,- j 748 were added to the fellowship of the : church, thtf ^t increase being 8,<il9. [ The entire income for the year was $1,- : 162,154. fcRlABt FOB RHEUMATISM A B S O L U T E L Y C U R E D . BY THE ISE OF DR. BOSANKO'S R H E U M A T I C C U R E . THE GREAT ALKALINE REMEDY. Why y.vu hav»> Kh (Miniatiom ! lU-ofuise voiu is with .1 fu.is.m.xi* Vrlr AcM. You ran In* Cored nrutr.ih*im; tlusncid- lty with l»r. ltn«Mik»'* Rh*>uinnllr Cars^ n chemically pn |«irtil AlUiltm-, « S|.eatic for Rheumatism. Will wild St poof pkld. PRICE, 78 CENTS. ASS. YOUR DRUGGIST FOB IT, Address THE DR. BOSANKO MEDICINE CO., » (Trent!** ft Free.) PIQUA, O. : New England Personal. I [From ihe Hoctoii l)a:ly U.obi'.l Edwin A. Wadlcigh, I sq„ Clerk Stijierior Court, Boston, Mass., adds liis o:inie to the ] joyous army using ami recommending St. Jacobs Oil. Ho certifies to a cure by the Great German Hcmedy of neuralgia" autl rheumatic puins in his family. V ECIETIXE will regulate the bowels to healthy ! action, by Humiliating the BCcretioiiH, cleaming I and purifying the blood of poihonoiw hiunoro, i and, in a healthful and natural manner, ex- j pel* all impurities without weakening the body. W II.HOKT'H Fever and Ague Tonic. Thia old reliable remedy now sells At oue dollar. C OR&KCT your habits of crooked walking by using Lyon's Patent Metallic Heel 8tiffenen, Tlie Miner's Water-Inch. | A miner's inch of water ja a quantity that will flow through an incli aperture- i with a free dischnrgo and under a eon- J stant prcHSure pf six incl|£*4tj pbovc tlig I top of the opening. aperture l'2}x j 15} inches under pressure of six inches i above the top of the opening will dis- 1 charge 100 inches, and is the basis of i all measurements where water is retailed ! | in small quantities in the States of Cali- ! fornia and Nevada. A miner's inch will j discharge a quantity of water equal to j i 2,250 cubic feet, or about 17,000 gallons, J i weighing 139,500 pounds, in twenty-four | hours. Water will hold in suspension or i solution 1,670 of its entire volume; /. c., | an inch of water ( miner's inch) having a j | grade of four inches to the rod, will ; I cany off in twenty-four hours, a distance j j of ten miles, ten tons bf quartz, sand and j i iron. At one gravel mine in Nevada | ' County, Cal., twenty-four cubic yards, i ; or forty tons of detritus or tailing, as j the washed material is called, are moved • | from three to fifteen miles every twenty- j ' four hours. One hundred miner's | inches of water conducted through iron ; j pities and falling three hundred and tif- j I teen feet, vertically, and applied by ! ! means of a nozzle against a hurdy-gurdy j ; wheel sixteen feet in diameter, will | : furnish sufficient power to run an eight- j stamp mill, besides carrving off all the j ore which it has furnished the power to crush.--San Franriwo Pout. } [From the Akron Beacon.] Oi n well known lc.low-citizcn Mr. E. Steinbacher, one of Akron's oldest mer­ chants and the leading druggist of this sec­ tion. informed the writer that without ex­ ception the sale of the Hamburg Drops was the most satisfactory of anything he had ever sold, and that the unprecedented de­ mand was due solclj' to its merits. Such emphatic expressions n<-ed no comment on our part. N PW V»rk Wltiirna* Nnbbntb KriidlRC and liciue ol' fortrjr nre eiwlrut Get sample*. SeaadT. Gil ilQimtk. 911 a day «t home eaeilj njfc Omlly «/* Outfitfre*. Addnn TBSI ICo.,ingiih.lb. 70,000 SOLD YEARLY. Tlie iron liw popularity nttd mufaluit •> CAIir\KT or IMKLUR OHt;ANN i« iktwa f e y t h e T a r t t h a t S e v e n t y T h o u s a n d a r e M U yearly ia the United Sintn, The brat are the USHUBULOI O R G A N S , j which tare Wn HIOBwrr DISTINCTION* rOB ' DEMONBTIUTKB BUPKBIOWIPT at EVEUY ONK of the URKAT WORLD'S Industrial Exhibition* Ifcthlrtl-- j»am.*W"ir"' •«< tinglr exception. ! NEW STYLES ' ready this wurnn with important improvements. I FOB LAKOK €HUlU'HKS.*i>l»iulul organo, with great i power and vnru t.v, ftt $570, $480, $39t) and less prices; ! FOR SMALLER i:HUR< HEK. SCHOOLS, Ac.. $84 to , (tN and upwards. 8UPKRB DRAWlNti-ROOM STYLES at $2(0 to $510, and upwards ; A (4RKAT VA I RIETY of .SMALLER ORGANS of ui|uol ei«-«-lWn<H>. I though less rapacity, or in plain crises. At 451 to $3U0 and 1 upwards. Also furnished FOK MONTHLY or qUAJtTRULY j PAYMENTS, $5 and upwards. Thru* or:jan4 arx mtaiuly unriraltil in exr^Ururt, tchile are not mifh higher than thone qf' mry inJrriui instrument*. Before purohaaina any organ send for latent llliutratttt Catalogue (32 pp. 4to), containing full descriptions and j price', including new styles, and much useful informa­ tion for the purchaser of any organ, which will be Mat ( free nu<t MASON A HAMLIN OROAN CO.. 1M Tremont BOSTON; W Knst 14t.h Stretit, NEW YORK ; 1<W WiU>a*h A v.max, CUICAUO. CELLULOID <st«k EYE-GLASSES. ~ representing the choicest-selected aTortolae-Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest and strongest known. Sold by OpUclans and Jewelers. Made by Sl'EKOEB O. M. CO.. 13 Maiden Lane, Maw York. Heura/giac Sciatica, Lembaoo, Backache, Sontms of the Ch Bout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Sao/f* Mf*andSprains, Burnsaai Scold*, Genera! Bodily Paine, ;-v Teeth, Cap and Headache, FreHt§' , Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Mches. FCWARATTA « Murth equals 9R. JACOB# OB •a a »a/e, IMW, sttmple and thtttp Eztetaal Bcmdy. A fri«t efitau* bat the comparative* trifling outlay of 60 Cents, and every OM nOHtajk with j»t» can bays cbwp ami porittw gnat aflS elalnM, Direction* la Klsven SOLD BT ALL DRUQGI8T8 1XD DEALflft R| MEDiaUE. A. VOGELER * CO., BAMAWRW. IHL. V.M.A* Percy Davis'Pain Kier II BKCOIIliERBEB By Pkfticiam, by MiMsiMmrim, bf Minium, bj IM» ('«, bf JVwr.'M in HotpiM*. BTf BVKBtVBOBT. MIR KILLER ^ VZLFTSJZ DiRfrhra, Dnenicrj, Cramps Cliil- «m, mnd all B«w«l GaaiplalaU. niiu mi I rn 19 THE BEST BEW- Back. Pata ia O M Me, BbaanuUltB mm1 NenralffUu V>QIJGrnO!«ABLY TOT at T.jtf nlment « week la rowtown. tawaadtlOvtti $00 free. lOVm HAIV OR OLD, i ftt • - & InmIMM WMOH* «»*9 M (bUTTiimk M. UOSZJ iSAi.es, oar* to engage in other b Newspaper Uuiou. I ElJUa. »,«• {MM MB <• UMsPwum aiiTiiiQ JJESTEY8, C2 Brajtleboro VX PETROLEUM Grand Medal at Phi ad«lp'la Kx position. VASELINE JELLY. SttmlfaM at Parts bpoiitlsa DO Not Fail Ui »«5nri tor our Price-l^tt for 1880. FllKK to any A(idrt*M upon application. Contains do^criptions <>r everything re­ quired tor Personal or family OM, with over !«S2CIO Illustrations. We sell all goods at wholesale* prirt^s in quiintitien to puit tlie purobasar. Tbi onb institution in America who make this that! apecial bu^ine^g. Addr^ng >It>NT420.UI K V'WAHD it CO., CUT and 220 Wabaub Avenue, Chlcags, III. Rich in Nourishment, Heal h and 8trength. Do not confound this Matchless Renovator of Feeble and Exhausted Constitutions with violent cnthartics, cheap dwoctions of vile drugs, nnd rumoun intoxicants Innocently labeled " hitters." MAI.T HITTERS »p|»eal to popul i r conlideniv because prepared f rom I'" fermented Malt, H >) .i and ('ulirayn,aiid other precious intcrodients, SccordinK to the pn>ccss of Liebig, and arc rich in tlie elements that restore to |»!rmanent health tlie Weak, Convalesi ent. Consumptive, Overworked, Nervous, Sleepless. l>}spe|itic, KiliuuB, Fickle in Appetite, andinr all tormf of Liver, Kidney and Urinary difficulties. Be­ ware of imitations similarly named. The genuine bear the COMPANY'S S!(!NATURE, as above. Sold every­ where. HALT BITTKRS COMPANY, BOSTON. for full particu­ lars concerning our notice her reproachful glances and lan­ guishing aeillatles, and for reward was wretched. Finally, being driven into a corner during a fatal set of Lancers, he met her eyes and was conquered. She would dance the next with him ? Yes (coldly). And ifeuttvV And go in aud say good-niglit to mainma, be­ cause you have been having a good deal of papa's champagne, and it u trying to the constitution." Snooks took the hint, bade farewell to Mrs. Brownrig, who, to liis heated im- the next ? Yes (more I agination, appeared to regard him al- the ninth--he can see I ready with a moist and motherly eye, A Clergyman's Salt. ! A clergyman in Homellsville, N". Y., has excited much hostile criticism by suing an estate for S50 for officiating at a funeral, and securing the amount. It turns out, however, that he had. pretty good grounds for his course. A rich man j died, and the family wanted the funeral ! to take place on Sunday, and also wanted I this particular minister to officiate. He gave up his appointments for the day to oblige the family, hired a carriage, and went. He waited sometime for renumer- | a tion, and at last sent a bill for $25, ' which was refused, and so for the bill and ' damages he sued for 850 and got it. The dead man never hired a pew in the church i nor paid for preaching, and the question ' naturally arises, Why are not ministers . entitled to pay for extra labor as well as other men? A MAN may work twelve hours a day for fifteen years on a morning newspaper without taking a vacation for the benefit of his health ; but should the same man ! get a position in one of the Government ' departments at Washington, where they < commence work at 9 o'clock a. m. * and < quit at 3 p. m., in less than a year ho | would be so "overworked" and worn out that he*would want a six weeks' holi- | day to recuperate. It must be in the j drinking-water.--Norristown Herald. j A NEW YOBK medical journal says that | some of the cigarettes which are smoked __ to so large an extent are said to lie dan- stretched on the table as though in read- j gerous articles. A physician had one of iness, and sallied forth in search analyzed, and the tobacco was found to be strongly impregnated with ! opium, while the wrapper, which was warranted to be rice paper, was proved COO perdayath-ims. Samples worth 81 free 3>D 10 vP4.U Address BTINBGN A Co.. Portland, Me BIO WAG KS, summer and winter. Samples free. National Copying Co., 300 West Madison St..Chicago. s-%, infoldeiven away.Send3c. *tamp • II •• Ifor particulars. "The Messeu- CJPnc^^^^^^^ircr.^iewisburgh, Union Co., Pa. AArn A MONTH ! A*ents Wanted ! \ 4III TS Best-Selling Articles in the world: a sam- y WtlU pisJru. JAY BKONSON. Detroit, Mich. $M) |M Ml * YEAR and expenses "T Meats. Outfit Free. Add M A M O T V I C K B R Y , Book Agents £ Augusta, Mains. Mail as a Postal with your ad­ dress. It will pay you. A. tiORTON ) A Co.,531 Commerce st. .Phlla.,Pa ^ff|)«sgg Full pr.rticu-Bfui K. THIFKT. kr Sl.r^Vr'FOR^&^oOc# V O U N C H f i i E N • mnrt.h. K.vsrv fc?radi2ilt© fftia L@arn Telegraphy and ^ earn Djf40 to »100* morth. Every graduate ffiiarsnteed a pajiiif; situs, tion Addrass K. V^LBMSISX. Manager. JanesviUe.Wis SEND 20 Cents for one month's subscription to the Great Illustrated Story Paper. The _ _ n r«'klv t nl*. Like N. Y. ledger. AddressT.G.MOBHOW, 155 4 1S7 De<irt<omSt.,('tiicigo. Suooks' rooms. And he found them, and Snooks, too--in bed, suffering from a severe catarrh, caught, I presume, in the laurel avenue. And no man knows what he did to Snooks. But at least he gave him an increased desire for his bed, because for a fortnight afterward he never stired out of it. to be the most ordinary quality of white paper, %liitened with arsenic. LIFE IN short at motrt, and our duty is to pro­ long it. Use, therefore, Dr. Ball's Cough Syrnp for Coughs. Colds, Bronchitis, Honrseueue, etc. bold everywhere. Pric«» only 25 rente. THE IIEKNIIEY SCHOOL OF MUSICAL ART, Herhfiey Music Hull, Chicago, III., Educates pupils for any position in the musical profes­ sion. Endorsed by the Press of New York, Boston and London, sir Send for new circular. 11. t; 1.1KK-Vl ii KUIIY, Urneral Director. IBODTiEETINGS AT MTHFIELD. Kifonded repoils of the ten days" me^tintfsat Jforth- ficJd in S* \ . WITX Whand 16th S#pt. Both papers g«nt, postpaid, for ten or 13 topics of «*achfiMjstpaid,foru JOilN DOlHiALLJi CO., 7 Krankfort St.. New York. CilC.US OK k H\ • A bcautilul new tuiall ei^ht-pwige Weekly, containinic choice Belectiom* from celebrated aathors. Only 7«J ociiIm a yenr. tsii'.opiM wat aa samples for iO ct'lll*- KABH.4TII UI AIMMi. Week y-Cont«inin«a Bwaion, S. S. Lr<4on, and Relifioaa matter. aO cem# a. year. Samples free. SORE EARS, CATiRRE Many pgsc-pl© as® afflicted with f.hc^r loaths^m® dls- Ms», but v«i> fi'W ever get from them • tas*! i:s uv, Istf to improper treatment only, a.-, they are readily curable If proper.'y tr«st«d. This is ns idle boast, huts fact I Hun proven and oser a^rai'v by my treaMneot. Sand to? my little Boot,/r<> to all; it will tell you all aboel tliw^ matun and wbn I am. Mjf J.ags Book. >;• p«as^ eetaTO: price, 9S, bj mail. Adilrses ssm C. tlHUUIA liim, Aoral Snncsoa. AGENTS Eitraorliiary Offer! "iSSSr-SWNDll BOOKS. Address FOItSlli:!'. A M.-MAklS, 1HS West Fifth Kl„ Cliu'lnnull,Ohio. 20 YEAR'S USE hsi tiro red oar Celebrated No. Naples Ktriugf to be tlie most durable, (iroduce tb« finest qu.ilitv of torn? ntnl are the whit« i*t.raoit It^autiful ami transparent Btrings la tbo world, Bott ptayeni and grout artltls ur--c them exclusively. For iutr<vlucti<>o ,o«ly, itrhig 25 ct*. Full for 'VioMn "Set*. f«-r Banjo 90 et«. for Ouluir .SO, prepaid* Momjt itfuaM if uomti«fhctorr. LYON 4 UBAI.T, Hi Butt SMH, Chtoaf. in. P E H S TO N Si Jfew Law. Thousands of Soldiers and heirs entitled. Pensions date back to discharge or death, IYSM limited. Address, with stamp, SWMB K. LEHOXf P. O. Drswsr 8U. Wasklsftea. D. O. The Koran. A curiosity S® every on", and i» aeeemilty (S pll atudenta of History sr Kelltflon i TBI KORAN OF MOHAMMKD;translatedfnjin the Arat ls by <»60 ge Sale. Formerly published at «a.<5. a njnj. beautiltil v cloth-hound ediu cent®, and <1 cents for postage. Catalogue o! mftaj standard works, remarkably low in price, with estra to olube, free. S>; where y<>u saw iliie advertisement AMSMIIQAII BOOK S£&CHAJ»UE» Tribun© ISUIIAIOGE I» DANIKI- F. BKATTV»8 ORGANS! »ril-HASS A. OCT. COIP 0NLYS65 This woadsrfal cnbetanoe Is aekaewMasd b; nines, slans thronctaout the world to be the best reme4r^f»> severed for the «ur» of Wo Made, Bsru, Kkcawh tlsm, SkU MMMIL PlleeTCMurk, «S. Mains, Ac. ?f; order that vnmtfom» maj try it, M4e put op In 16 end 36 <wnl bottles tor household see. Obtain it from your d ragcist. *<><1 roe will find it siiiiaslss to nythin* "-on >tas» erer «w). NATRONA"* Is the bsst In the World. It Is absolutely pat*, ttfcths best for Medicinal Purposse. It Is til* iiest for BIHM and all Family Usse. Sold by all DrooistB ao4 Otooeie. Peno'a Salt Manafacfiiut Co.,Phila. A MUSICAL WONDER o the pia no und organ, vpan which at sight you can form at> perfectly as any ptofessor upon the instrumsme mentioned V Then send lor owr illustrated cat jlogoe of the greatest musical Invention tiis a«^. Tlie Me. chan <'iil Ofsalnrttr, noon tvhkh nny limn, vroimaa or tihild con iilay correctly all the popular, i-l.issio. oper­ atic, stMsr«d, dance and other witsio. Amuse .wmseH your family and y >ur frienda Prices: «iULML Soxw, (76.00 and 1 ISj.Cfl. LVOM * 1ULALY, State sad lonroe Sta^ Chicago. You h»v*> vend this notice sfcsat l»< tlmn before, liut did TOU ever act upon the TOgg* tion so often made, namely: To ask any t ;.sd Am dealer for IANXS with bssdrlek's FnU at Ke«ee> mer Ntcrl Kivet Protected Sole* Suiv-anlet* to outwear any Sole eTer made. If yon hare not, do se the vety next timo you wnt boeta or shoee^ with rill ..^ilrs^ and dont |e> buj sny oiner. My references <«•<• any Sewing BCaene* • " - - in ttijs .nuntry. H. bOODKICIV, that will we.tr like iron save aepal buy anyotner. My refers Company or their agents t» Church St., Worcester lftss Tand 441 Hoyna A Chicsgo, 111. 14 NTOPf, Ki ll- I1ASS Jt OCT. COIPL8K. Font HUT R E E D S P I A N O S 91iidu|>. ... „ Kent on Trial, \» nrrnnlrtl. • Htiil€»«ur I- r«*e. Address OANltL F. B£ATTY. Washington. New Jeney. k i d n e y -WORT Th« Croat Remedy For Thl LIVER THE BOWELS, and the KIDNEYS. These gnat organs are the Natural cleansers of thefivstem. 1* they work well, health will be per­ fect. If they become clogjred, drsedful diseases are developed because the blood'ia poisoned with the • • -- • -- B b v e " . . . . . . MW FOR CHILLS AND FEWM AHD AI<Xi mSSBASM CACSKD ant ; Malarial Poisoning OP THE BLOOO. j I Mmwfi tarti Price, SI.00. Vros uu n tu> WllHllllt Jtk M, niAkcHlsi's UflRIUI _ catmoliooM FRAZER AXLE GREASE. mfiiu «n positively oars Fieili Wj^a»nsss. sneh as e# the UUrus, LseeotrheM. Ohjmde *-•-- Ulceration af the Uteres. iMsdeeMl Mf-pe,s»"sr3affi£3. eanf for a pamphlet. With. fcsat»anl^«W«s, "SiiTD.'saorr'Sw'iK O H. U. •a U Bewt In the World. JIaile onlv by Ike MT Lskrlrstsr t ompnuy. at Cklca Y e r k , w l 8 t . L e u l e . holv e y k r y i nrup WHiTiaKi w TV pie nee say ymm ww Use a*i«rtlM bs tMs pa»(r.

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