McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 15 Feb 1882, p. 7

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, 'iuu^:s ; WTO CBltRtAI. W1 * Dine. • a Tin time for oar crystal waMtaML**3 Said Mr. Front to iuVwife, WHh a Biiddecty sharp expfMrfon That cat lite » tm>^d|al knife. " The North Wind moat be invited To bciug ble friend from Aat DOIM of our f rienda most BE .'Or fail to appear at the f« *• then tbey bogan to make Ifith rpeed, r«RardleaH of coot, ** 'h*' beautiful cry-ata] weddlnc Of Mr. and Mrs. Kroxt. w North and the Kant WlndtltM Mi»« Haow IUI-I o!d Mr. .sleet, And all of that party together Were mire to hare things coB|Mh III honor of (he oooation Hie houses with fringe they drtpe, KMi rnd bogies* of cryatal tMispeuded in every shape, While all the poles and ttar chimneys Were dressed in transparent wUI% And the trees w re overloadsd • With loveliest glared fruits. The Telegraph* were invited, 80 ont of town couldn't go, And the Te eph>nes failed %r>a Whtn any <.ue ctiwl " Hello!" Th« magnates were not forgotten, *Wb<> >tand in serene repoe®, Akd Franklin made hw -pwrt With an iciule 011 Ms no»e. ) were acres on acres of icing. And wonderful rivers and lakes; Matt bmutiful caves and grottoes, And delicate frosted catce«; While cob«eb curtains Buepended Above the soeoe, in nld-air, Lont a charm to the crystal wedding, Tliiit proved such a grand affair. Daranters aud tumblers, engraven With initials of old Jack Frost, Were Rcattered about in profusion-- Ho telling J wit what they cost; And I couldn't t>ogiii to number How icaay from out of town Came iu to thi* crystal wedding, And at the banquet tat down. Old Sol got wind of the matter J«wt as he was going to bed, And out from between the curtains He suddenly popped his head And smiled, as w fch glowing finger* He took Jack Frost by ths ears. And loosened the pearls and diamonds, That straightway dissolved in f Boon faded the lovely pictiire, TTIP limpid and sparkling sheen. That seemed to our raptured vision Like unto a fairy sceue; And some will remember the beauty, And some will remember the oost Of the wonderful crvBtai wedding Of Mr. and Mrs. Frost. A LADY VIOLINIST. There waa to be a ooncert at the little •easide town of Stadgeleigh St Mary, and, through Home local acquaintance I had made here, I had been offered a part in the entertainment. The novelty of ihe attraction to this primitive little place of a lady violinist was the apology lor an offer which was gladly, and even gracefully, accepted. Indeed it was a godsend, tor I haij been offered liberal term* lot my ser­ vices. This sounds very mercenary, but the fact is I was in sad straits, and I had urgent need of the little help that I anticipated from this engagement. I had lost my husband only a few months since, and was left depender.t upon my own tesources for myself and my little son--our only child. The boy was sickly and delicate, and it was for his benefit that I was Bajouruing at this quiet little Bortth Devon watering-place. To add to my troubles, the child had been lately seriously ill, an'd was now 0alv slowly recovering * }>*»{ Tst s?™- ing careful uun*iug» beside many little indulgences, which sorely taxed my means to provide. One of his special wants was some­ thing to amuse and interest him, some­ thing fresh and inspiriting, and whioh he would not soon get tired of. The worst thing that threatened him now was lassitude and weariness, and the doctor had said that unless he could be roused to make an effort to overcome this he might sink under it after all. I played to him upon my violin; that cheered and pleased him for a time, but he was too weak to bear it long, and presently it wearied rather than benefit­ ed him. On the day of the concert I sat by my little Tbeo's bedside, playing to him and telling him what I was going to do, and so on, until it was nearly time to go. Then as I kissed him and prepared to leave I said that if he was good till I came back--for he was wont to be some­ what fretful while I was away---I would go out to-morrow and buy him some­ thing prettjr with the money I should get for playing at the concert. So he ninst make up his mind what he would like to have and tell me when I came home. -p? 'Oh, mammal I've made up my mind now 1" he cried. "I should ao like a little dog." ' A little dog, Dory?" I said. "Oh, that's a very funny thing to want while you're so ill. You must wait till you get well, and can run about and play with it. Xiittle dogs are of no use to little boys in bed." " Oh, yes, mamma; I can nurse him and play with him in bed. I mean a very little dog, mamma dear; a little white baby dog, like the man was sell­ ing on the Bands one day." I knew now what he was thinking of. Before he fell ill we had one day seen on the beach here a man offering for Bale a couple of ladies' lap dogs, little white curly creatures, resembling china ornaments, and equally useless. Dory had wanted me very much .to invest in these canine specimens, and could scarcely be made to understand that the price was prohibitive, and that china ones would do as well. But ever since his mind had run on white dogs. "Oh! I understand now, Dory," I answered. " Well, mamma will see to­ morrow what she can do; but I am afraid the man will have sold .those by this time. However, we must look about and perhaps we may find another, or something as good." This contented him, and so I kissed him again and went away to the concert. I here premise that I had sadly miscalcu­ lated my powers for the trial awaiting me. My late trouble and anxiety about my boy had quite unnerved and rendered- me altogether unequal to it It was my first public appearance, too, as violin­ ist, though I had taken part in many entertainments as a pianist and vocalist. The violin had been u»y husband's lead­ ing instruments, but my proficiency upon it, acquired from him, had never been intended for anything more than our own private diversion at home. ' It was my first appearance, too, since my hus­ band's death, which circumstance, added to a long and wearisome delay waiting-- to go on--for the management, regard­ ing me as a kind of " best goods," kept me in reserve to near the end of the pro- gTamine--was almost upsetting me. Thoughts and memories, past and pres­ ent, came crowding upon me, ending in nervousness and tears; and when my time came to go on, my eyes were red and swollen from weeping. I looked more like breaking down than anything else, and during my performance I scarcely lifted my eyes from the strings of the instrument till I made my firm! obeisance to my audience. I may say, with a pardonable pride, that I did pot break down, but won a a very well-marked applause that at any other time would have made my cheek md my eyes light up with pleas­ ure. But just now I wat> dull and apa- St etic, and in acknowledging the ovation aly directed ̂ downcast, half-dased look at ihe audience, nfcde a languid oourtesy, and retired wiii a wearied, un­ certain gait. j I Mi better when alfwas over, and I bad packed up my inntmment and pmt on my wraps ready to go home. I was Waiting for my escort, when the waiter --it was at the hotel that the entertain­ ment had been given--entered the room to announce a "part* outside wanting to speak most particularly to the lady as played the fiddle." ! He was followed My the "party** In question, who proved to be a stout, florid, agricultural person. He came up to me and shook me heartily by the hand, and still held it while he spoke. " Most delighted, my dear," he Baid, " with your playing. Never heard any­ thing like it--me and the old woman too. We re both very fond of the fiddle--play it myself, but bless me! nothing like yon. Ton must come and see us, if you're staying here. So sorry you're--" here he let go of my hand, and touched jhis eyes with his fingers--•" so very stfrry. But here. I've brought you something that'll be a good friend to you, and very useful It's only a little one yet, but that sail the bitter. Easier to teach, you know." He thrust into my arms something soft and warm---something that moved --and backed oat of the room with great precipitation, nearly upsetting the wait­ er, who seemed to have been a seafaring person, and used the most dreadful ex­ pletives. I looked down at the small animated object in mv hands, and be­ hold ! it was a little white dog--a beau­ tiful Pomeranian pnp. What a singular gift, and who" on earth was the donor ? And what could he mean by bolting off in that wild way, without giving me time to say a word? The seafaring waiter of the stormy lan- wa« appealed to for an elucidation ese mysteries, but he was morose and obscure. Requested to call the-eo- centric stranger back, he became hoarse­ ly explicit, as follows ; " 'Tain't no good. Gone aboard the shay, and well away on the home'ard tack by this time. Name of Fubsey. Thought you was blind 'cos you played on the fiddle, and give you that there dorg to steer you about with a yoke-line. Bought it off a party at the bar a pur­ pose. Called it Fi-dow. Take it 'ome and stick to it. Avast 1" Take it home and stick to it! The advioe was simple and easy of adoption, if not very choicely expressed. But was it strictly equitable? What right had I to this dog ? It had clearly been given to me under a mistake, and, if the owner should presently discover that I wasn't blind at all, and did not want a dog to lead me about by a string, what would he think of me for taking advantage of his error and keeping the animal ? But, on the other hand, since he was evident­ ly a good-hearted old gentleman, and no doubt meant well, would it not be kinder to leave him in his mistake than to cover him with confusion by the dis­ closure of the facts ? It was such a nice, dear little creature, too, and already so at home curled up in my lap, and I felt it hard to resist the gruff counsel of the stormy waiter. And tken there wss TH? Ii^t.10 fsllov? to be considered, too. Of oourse I bad been thinking of him from the first; but yet I was striving to put away the thought of him that I might see better to do what was right. But it would not do; my maternal instincts would have their way, and so the morose waiter's advice prevailed in deciding me that I might, at least, keep the dog for a few days for Theo to play with, just to see if it would do him any good. There was no saying how much good it might do, for it would be the gratification of a sick-bed fancy, and a relief to the tedium of his confinement, lor picture books and toys were not everything, and these could not play with him as Fido could. Then, when he got well, and I could tell him all about the dog, we would go to­ gether and take it back to the kind old man who gave it, who would no doubt be pleased to hear that it had been of some little use, though not in the way he had proposed. And I would take my violin, and, playing to the worthy Fub­ sey and his excellent "old woman," make it speak my gratitude for the gen­ tle sympathy that would have served me, and the impulsive kindness that did. Dory was asleep when I reached home, and the nurse said he had been a little restless and uneasy during the evening. He had expected me home before this, and I, not thinking that.I should be de­ tained till the concert was over, had promised him I would not be very late. The consequence was that he had fret­ ted a little, and there was just a fear that he might not be so well in the morning. I placed Fido on the bed beside him, and sat down and watched, that he might not wake and find me still absent. But he slept on--slept so Boundlv that I at last followed his example, and lay down by lus side, quite tired out We woke together, and the first thing we saw was the little Pomeranian sitting up at the end of the bed, regarding us both with grave attention. Dory was in ecstasies when I put the little white thing into his arms, and told him it had been given to me last night for playing at the concert How he caressed and fondled it, and how it frisked about and amused us both ! and how we laughed together at its gambols, and at the account, which I invented to make Dory appreciate it more, of its presentation to me! I pretended it had been left for me at the door by some good old man who had been pleased with my playing, and who must have known through some kind fairy that it was just the very thing I wanted for my little sick boy. So I said he must make haste and get well, too, for if it was a fairy dog it might disappear any night, if it found it wasn't doing him any good, or wasn't being well treated. In a few days Theo began sensibly to improve. He and the dog soon be­ came last friends, and, in fact, the hap­ piest results quickly followed from this new source of interest and pleasure to my little invalid, But the days were slipping by, and I Began to think of Fubsey, and of what he was thinking of me by this time; and yet I could not fiud it in my heart to separate these affectionate compan­ ions/ Each day that passed made these difficulties worse, but a solution of one, at least, was in store for me. Theo was now well enough to go out and run about with Fido. Walking one mnming through the town, Dory trot­ ting on in front of me and the dog every­ where, so to speak, the latter suddenly darted off the pavement under a horse and gig that was standing by. The child was just diving under the horse to pick him up when I stepped forward and re­ strained him. "Why, God bless my soul!" ex­ claimed a hearty voice behind me, "you ain't blind after all, no more'n me." I turned, and stood confessed in my enjoyment of the sense of sight before the genial Fubsey. " No, Mr. Fubsey," I said, picking up the dog: " no, my dear sir; I am not, in the sense you supposed. But I con­ fess I have been very blind to every other consideration bat a mother's solic- r itode far a sick and lonely child. I know, sir, that I ought to have sent this : doK bac* to you directly--before you : discovered the mistake under which yon so kindly gave it to me--but,my little boy here was just then recovering from a long and troublesome illness, and, thinking it would amuse and interest him, I took it home for him to be plei great the little fel- ITEHS OF im to play pleased to use in with. Perhaps you will be hear that it has been of 1 cheeling and stimulating 1 low to take exercise ; and they have be­ come such strong friends that I have not known how to part them. But now, sir, I think we can spare Fido ; and if you will take it back I will resign it with pleasure, and with grateful thanks for the kind intentions with which I am ! sure you bestowed it" I "Tut, tut!" said the farmer, "who's talking abeut taking it back ? When I gives a thing I gives it, and if I gives it in a mistake, more, fool me for making of it, and a unfeeling, blundering old brute beside, to go and take you for a blind woman. My dear, I'm as pleased as anything to find as I was wrong; and j as for taking back the dorg, why, I wish 11 had half a dozen more to give jaa for that pretty speech of youra. "Oh, thank you, sir, but I don't, | really," I said nervously. " One is {quite as much as we can manage, isn't | it, Dory? " I And then I made him shake hands with this estimable Mr. Fubsey, and told him he was the gentleman who had brought us Fido, and that the fairies were not going to take it back again ; so we would take it home and keep it--I had nearly said " stick to it"--and coma day we would go and see Mr. Fubsey, and take him something for his pretty and interesting little present. "Jump in now," cried the old farmer indicating the chaise. "Jump in, both of you. I'm going straight home, and the missus will be as pleased as Punch to find we've been in a miz-maze about you, and that you can see as well as either of us. She's often talked about you, saying what a pity it was, you so young and pretty, and clever too. But come, jump in, and we'll just be home in time for dinner." " Thank you very much, Mr. Fubsey, but, if you please, not now. It is so sudden, and I am quite unprepared; and, beside, Dory must not be out too long. I really will call and see you, sir; I have your address, but when I come there i* something I must bring with me that is just now at homo." "Meaning the fiddle?" cried the old man, catching brightly at my meaning ; "that's right, bring the fiddle and play to us. Come when you like, or let's know when you're coming, and we'll send the shay over for you. Bring the dorg, and the boy, and all, and we'll make you comfortable." To end my story as briefly as may be, Dory and I soon paid a visit to the farm­ house, and I took my violin and dis­ coursed sweet sounds, with all the art and skill that I was mistress of, for the gratification of my homely but most ap­ preciative patrons. They were delighted with my performance, but much more with the curious circumstances leading up to our present acquaintance ; the old f»r73i:-r -aughing se heartily at his blunder concerning me that I was constrained to laugh with him, loth as I was to turxi to merriment the sterling goodness that had foiled so quaint but touching an expression. Queer Ideas of Curative Oils. Some people still hold to curious old superstitions concerning the curative properties of the oils of certain animals ; and to hear the druggists tell of the strange articles called for by some of their customers is to be reminded of the vagaries indulged in by the aboriginal medicine man in his native wigwam. For instance, there are persons who pin great faith still to the virtues of rattle­ snake oil, and who believe it is a specific for rheumatic afflictions. A traveling quack, who announced that his cure-all was partly compounded of rattlesnake, reaped a Dig harvest of silver com from crowds on the square not long ago. There is a frequent demand for pickerel oil, which is said to be a cure for deaf­ ness, and which is fried from the livers of pickerel. Mudturtle oil is also fre­ quently called for by people who have stiff joints. It has been but two or three years since all these oils were sta­ ple articles in drug stores. Pickerel oil t-old for 50 cents an ounce, and turtle oil $1 a pint. These oils are rarely found to-day, and probably from this very reason are accredited the more wonder­ ful qualities by the oracles. --Jjewioton (Ate.) Journal. Twitting on Names. A good story is told of the late Ed­ mund Burke, of New Hampshire. When in Congress he had a controversy with a Mr. Arnold, of Tennessee, who spoke of New Hampshire as a State whose chief pioducts were ice and gran­ ite, and sneeringly suggested that its Representative was less like his name­ sake, the English statesman, than like Burke, the " burker." In his response Mr. Burke said he was at a loss to know whether the Tennessee Representative was like Benedict Arnold or some other Arnold; and, referring to the products of that gentleman's district as consist­ ing mainly of dogs aud hoop ' poles, brought down the ti< use witu the sug­ gestion that, while the hoop roleB were sent westward and down t ie Mississippi river, the dogs traveled eastward toward the national capital. This was the last ever heard of poor Arnold.--Bonton Commonwealth. \ Seal Need. Amusement in itself is a real need, which always makes itself felt, and in some way or other is sure to get sup­ plied. It is not, as some suppose, a sort of superfluouadtuxury whicii shonld be patiently waitej|for till all other de­ sirable advantages are secured; it is rather a deep-seated necessity, which, in all circumstances, must aud will be satisfied, if not from fountains pure and sweet, then from sources unwholesome and corrupt The young need it more than the old, the busy more than the idle, the poor more than the rich; but ail need it, and all in some form obtain it VoiiTAiBB was once affected with some­ thing which he called decay of the stomach but which- would probably ba better termed debility of the stomach, or paralysis of the digestive function, j For nearly a year he took no other ; nourishment than yolks of eggs, beaten I up with flour and water, and thus waa | cured. This diet is thus prepared: j Beat up an egg in a bowl, add six table- j spoonfuls of cold water, mixing well ! together. Then add two tablespoonfnls j of farina of potatoes, mix again j thoroughly, And add as noincli bouing } water as is necessary to convert the whole into a jelly. It can be taken alone or with the addition of a little milk.-- Dr. Footers Health Monthly. If yon would not have affliction Tint JOB twice, listen at once to what it Two million barrels of salt an an­ nually exported from Miehigan. THE flesh of the manatus or sea oow is used for food and resembles beet THE fruit exports of America have in­ creased a hundredfold in fire years. IT has been calculated that a single eat will devour twenty mice in one day. IT IS estimated thai » quarter of a billion pounds of tea are used every year. IN Liverpool, the only public eleva­ tors are those in the grain docks at Liverpool. OALUNIB of the Court»of Louis XTV. pulverised diamonds, to prove their lav­ ish magnificence. TitB animals of the opposite sides of the Pacific Ocean are entirely unlike, no species being common to both sides. XANTHTJS, the historian, says that a man killed by a dragon will be restored to life by an nerb which he calls balin. THE Ojibways pulled down the house in which any one had, died, and chose another place to live in as Car off as pos­ sible. IN Great Britain there are three sheep on every four acres of cultivated land; in the United States there is bttt one sheep on thirty-four acres. ON THE Laramie Plains of 4he*Bocky Mountains there are, at an elevation of 6,OOC to 7,000 feet, fresh and abundant pastures, often well watered. iNShCTS are proportionately stronger than animals. A cockchafer can draw a load fourteen times greater than his body; a bee twenty times; an ant thirty times. Snow* have been aeen as small as a grain of sand, and these spin a thread so fine that it takes four thousand of them put together to equal in size a single hair. PUMICE dust, ejected from volcanoes, sometimes floats out upon the ocean ana makes so thick an accumulation that boats find it difficult to force their way through it THK digestive process erf a mosquito's stomach la so slowly performed that! when the insect has dined on a huqianS being it continues forty-eight honrs to exhibit blood corpuscles. "L'EMPIRK ^TSARS," M. ANTOIK LKBOY-BEACLIKU, sayB that the weight of a woman's brain in Slavonic raoes is greater than that of a man's, while among the Germanic people the brain weight of the sexes is equal. GENBBAii patent laws have been lately passed and promulgated in Turkey and Liberia, in which countries iuventors may now, for the first time, secure their new inventions. The Turkish patent law is subs antially a copy of the French and German systems. THE simple decoction of onion peel is said to produce upon glove leather an orange-yellow superior in lustre to any other. It is also said to be suitable for mixing with light bark shades, especially willow bark, and as a yellow for modulat­ ing browns. The onion dye is said to fix itself readily, even upon leathers wincn resist colors, and colors them well and evenly. THE horse is capable of exerting a stress of only sixty-seven per cent of his own weight in his daily work. The ox about seventy ; the mule seventy-five ; the ass eighty; the goat can draw more than his own weight; the lion has been known to drag a slain ox a considerable distance. A fox gallops away with the largest goose at a rapid pace, Monkeys are wonderfully strong for th<|ir jgze. A turtle has been known to move 'with a man standing on his back six times ita weight • Popular Jfames In New York. The city has a variety of localities whose names sound strange to unfamiliar ears, and hence are among the peculiar­ ities of the metropolis. There is " Mack­ erel ville," and also " Cowboy," and many other spots noted in the police reports. Among the more notorious it "Hell's Kitchen," which was brought before the public by the Rooney murder. " Hell's Kitchen " is a series of rookeriee inhabited by a class deeply sunk in misery, but notwithstanding poverty they always have money for whisky. Rooney only beat his wife to death-- which is so common a thing here that it hardly calls for more than passing notice. " Hell's Kitchen" is no worse than " Murderer's Row " or " Devil'B Eelpot," each of which has ita record. Then, too, look at the fanciful names enjoyed by an important element in our popula­ tion. There are the "Short Boys," the " Dead Rabbits," the " Man Eaters," and others, who not only vote, but often control elections, and also do their share to fill the penitentiary. ' 'Hell s Kitchen" is a richly remunerative investment to the landlord, for the poor always pay highest rent, and the tenements of this city are immensely profitable. This class of property holders claim respectability, and' may live in elegant style, while their wealth is wrung from the most miserable of mankind.--JVcw York Let­ ter. a--* TMs Raw «r Hemr. The very best remedy ever invented for the cure of general ill-health, especially dvapepwa, bad blood, nervouaneM, universal liumtnde, weak kidneys, liver troubles, etc., is Dr. GUY- eott'B Yellow Dock and Saraapwilla, It will not hum the most d6lic%'e invalid. Ita use wonderfully revive* the mental fwmltiee, in- areaeee the power of physical endurance, and makes the blood rich, red and pure, enabling it to counteract the * ITt ot of exhaustive &ud debilitating disease*. In localities wh. re thin remedy ia beat known, druggist* find it difficult to supply the demand. It contains Yellow Dock, Barnaparilla, Jnniper, Iron, Buchu, Cele­ ry, Cali9*ya, ctc. Every phyaioian knows the me^efaneh iugrodienta. A Hereto Physician. A We of almost unequaled self-sacri- fioe comes home from the Transvaal. Dr. Landon, of the Army Medical De­ partment, was wounded at the Majuba Mountain on the day that Sir George Colley was killed. The bullet struck his spine and paralyzed his lower limbs. Knowing he must clie he called to the orderlies near him, and caused himself to be propped up against a boulder. There, in the very presence of death, he with his own hand forced the morphia solution into the wounded arm of Cor­ poral Farmer,. and thus, frightfully wounded, and suffering most acutely, he died. The story of this gallant devotion is vouched for by the best authority. "DO LIKEWISE.*1 Da. B. Y. PIERCE, Buffalo, X. Y.: Dear Sir: " Five years ago I W&B a dread tul sufferer from attaint; troablt g. Having exhausted the skiU of tUrec pbyffic.ana, I wae completely discour­ aged, and so weak I could with difficulty cross Uie room aloue. I began taking your "Vavor- ite Prescription,' and using the iocal treatment recommended in your 1 Common Souse Medical Adviser.' In three months I was perfectly cwr«ti I wrote a letter to my family- paper, briefly mentioning how my health had boeu re­ stored, and offering to send the full particulars to any one writing me for them ami mciotituj a stamped envelope for reply. I tuve received over lour hundred letters In reply I have de­ scribed my case and the treatment u*ed. and earnestly advised tbem to ' do likewise.* From a great many I have received aeoond letters of tiusiika rt-nting that they had commenced the treatment and were tnucii tatter already." Mas. E. F. Mosoax, New Castle, Me. A EMEND sent a man m Texas an ostrich. As the man did not know what to feed it on, he let it ran. In a short time it had devoured oyster cans, a broken iron pump-handle, a pair of and­ irons, an old ficythe, a small coal-oil stove, a rolling-pin, and a joint of stove­ pipe which stuck in its throat. The stove set fire to the rolling-pin, and the neighbors seeing the smoke called out the firemen, who poured the water down the stove-pipe, completely drown­ ing the bird. "••Mtr Dssaorsei (wit* PiaylM) la Adorned the If von desire a fair ocmplexion free from pimples, blotches and eruptions, take "(kidan Medical Discovery." By druggists. BETTER a cheap coffin and a plain funeral, after a useful, unselfish life, than a grand procession and a marble mauso­ leum after a loveless, selfish life. Da. PIERCE'S "Pellets." or sngar-ooated granules--the original "Little Liver Pills" (be­ ware of imitations)--cure sick and bilious head­ ache, cleanse the stomach and bowels and pu­ rity the blood. To get genuine, see Dr. Pierce's signature and portrait on Government stamp. io eeuw per viai, oy cruggista. A Punishment Worse Than Death. An execution to whioh more than pass-" ing interest attaches will take place in "Windsor, Vermont The condemned person is Em el in e M. Meaker, of Water- bury, who was convicted of the murder of an orphan girl thirteen years old, Alice Meaker by name, April 22, 1880. The wretched woman protested her in­ nocence on the occasion to set aside the verdict, as she has always done, but was sentenced to be hanged in the prison at Windsor on the last Friday of May, 1883. The crime, for which a son of Mrs. Meaker, Almon Meaker, is already under sentence of death, was one of the most horrible in even the criminal his­ tory of Vermont The child was a half- sister to E. O. Meaker, husband of Emeline, and was an inmate of their household, where she was Beverly abused and maltreated, being treated, indeed, as a Blave by Mrs. Meaker aud Almon. Almon was a half-witted, pliant tool in the hands of his mother. Mr. Meaker is believed to be inuocent of all complicity in either the abuse or the murder of the child. The child was taken from bed and dressed, a sack was tied over her . head, and she was taken in a wagon to a 1 'lonely spot in the woods, where a dose I of strychnine was giv^n her, and she was jleft to die in a swamp. The crime was 'conclusively fixed upon the two wretched 'prisoners, and nothing can now save [ them from the terrible consequences, i The time allowed the condemned to pre- | pare for death is so long that the execu- tion will undoubtedly be welcomed as a A Good Family Remedy, STRICTLY FinOE. Harwlew tm *!»• Mrnm stotleas*. Sj Mthfnl nm f«Maapllaa hu k«a when other sad Pl*ys daat taw to effect « cor* JKBUIAR WHISHT, of Marion comity, W.VA, as TU&t uis wife HAD I^T.MOKABT * oyitntTllun •••* pronounce INCTIUBI.e by Ihefr [Tn it hi. i th > use 01 Allen's Lnn#t KNTHaci.T CTTBED wi-.te* that he and bta Deifrbbom rmnk it re In t worM. C. DUIGF.S. Merchant, of Bowling wri'e-* Apr i <tn. 1881, th t tm waate Q* toku** Li^a BALSAM HAS CURPJ> KIB MoTHtor i TK'N «!«?• tfte'phytirbin had her ttpati __ lie Hays other* knowing her ease have UwSthe 1 ami '-ten cured ; be thinks all so aflictad a tr al. Oil. MJ-REDITH. Dentist,of Cincinnati,* rein last 6tauis OP CoK&rxpTioivndi by Iiis friend-- to try Allen's Lnnjg Balnai ft] m«i i was shown him. We h ve ma that It at <MCS cu.-pd his cough, ud th»t he waa t,l> • to IMMS, pr. ct f*. T Wm. A GRAHAM A Co.. Whnlomle Dm^a Till*. Otiio. wr.t<-« us of the cu e of Mnth an J~ well kftiwn c t r.en. who baa b«en curia in ita wont fo-m foV twelve faint BaJaam caiod him, sa it baa ma n j »th«n, of 1 Consumption. Coughs, Asthma, Croup, •:* . i of the Throat, Lun fcs Pslmonu]r OrpaMb O S. MABTTS, Di-.rri'f. it Oakty, Kj„ mrlUia tfcat I Indie* think there ia no remedy •qnal to LOME TT I Imaiifc v ' ' taw €ROUPand WHOOPING OOOGH. ,, Mothers will fici It a safe and tare remedy to wive Uadl . children waen afflict <j with Uroop. It It bvailan to th« moat tfedcato eMM! ' It COStairO M OpflHR ill Wtff «Mrit ' (VRsennsmended by Phjratdataa. MlnHters aatf- Xarsta, In fact, by ftrctytood* who haa( Ten Hi a mjf-' trial. It " Fttlia to Brt»f lAlct „ termination of the feeling of terror that , As ai EIPECTOBABT It to ga Ewajg •OLB av Alt MEDICINE KALCR. Diary Free^8^ _ ' J • «*C. Sent to am addmo on receipt of two Tkm.CF«l mtsajw. IMIMI " CHARLK8 K. HIRES. 48 N. Delawaio Am. Ptailo. will possess them. Hyperbole #f the Plaiat. tLaramie City Boomerang.] We flit through the dreamy hours ct summer like swift-winged bumblebees amid the honeysuckle and pumpkin blossoms, storing away perhaps a little glucose honey and buckwheat pancakes for the future, but all at once, like a newspaper thief in the night, the king of frost and ripe, yellow chillblainB is upon us, and we crouch beneath the wintry blast and hump our spinal column , .. up into the crisp air like a Texas steer ! th™ * t'l that has thoughtlessly swallowed a raw * NOi FAT __ Masai aud •Jr'n8 » pannaaeMowo, «t rlak of ftrilttro or expenM, natU a on. oactus. A HON of Brigham Young Btrnutor at West Point. is an in- LIT it be understood onoe for all CABBOUHB, a deodorized extract of petroleum, will positire- ly restore hair to bald heads, and there u no other preparation under the faoe at the son that can aooompliah this work. Omt greasing with Frtur Axle OrttW lud three weeks--others three aaya. Ths Fraxer is the oheapeot Try it fox Rheumal Cncte Barn's Nerve all druggie to. rains and Bruises, ass Boos liniment, oold by MOTION! lor IhtitmliBtuti tts MT toe wont kind and at imm Iadeed.fO atrow la my MS itw? nding 1 been eure-1, ua efBc.ny that I will send1 (tandin In i together with > VALUABLR *••• sufferer. Give Kxpreaa and P.O.addr. DR. T. A. 8LOCUM. Isi Pearl ht . New Toil THE OFFICIAL HISTORY OF THEr GUITEAU TRIAL Tlda is tho only oomplete and fully-llhMtrated " Ub ODdlSrlalof Gntteau." it oontaina all the tastluniiuj af the expert" other noted wtneeaeo; all the apeedMO Buule to t he rannhur aaaaMtn In Uacroat aftorta tn aOO^S ~ ittows by feigning insanity. Beware of eatehponv-. &!i )].•?>' »1 people are waiting for thia wot* Afrnts Wanltd. Circulars f ee. Extra term* to A«aagr NATIONAL PUBUBHISQ OO., Chicago.» AdUreaa TO PROVIDE FOR 1882-SIKD A «-«Vnt MnaepftM- BABYt.AIfY * for LITTLE 1 AM fully convinced that the sonl is indestructible, and its activity will con­ tinue through eternity. It is like the sun which, to our eyes, seems to set in night; but it has in reality only gone to diffuse its light elsewhere. VaqoMttonable GnMltnde* WAKBEN, Ohio, July 30, 1881. E S. & Co.: fHrs--Your Safe Ktd- ner and Iiv«?r Cure has relieved me of a severs >kidney difficulty whioh canoed me much trouble and suffering. P. W. SDTUFF. WITHIN A H'anif for ihe •I"- A B-true >taaap WEEK FOI.KS* KINDER. . - r, . Three 8.1 vnt Btantpa for W1SB . From Date! AWAKE. - To I). LOTHROP A CO . Boston, for samplao of thMa , . Beat M gaiiftea la the World tor Ot>i%en. •» ProepecUu, Metn. of Prixes, Abd Illustrated CatakufM ,i free. ' ' *"* Orer , ur J kcrtu -- ~ THK daily prioe paid for intoxicating^ drinks in New York is estimated at $270,000--or #98,550,000 every year. There is said to be an alarming increase of drunkenness among the women. WHT raffer such distress from piles and OOD» stipahon ? Kid oey-Wort will cure you. WILDNESS is a thing which girls can­ not afford; delicacy a thing which they cannot lose or find. On Thirty Days* Trial. The Voltaic Belt Co., Marahall, Mioh., wm tend their Electro-Voltaic Belts and. other Elec­ tric Appliances on ttial for thirty davB to any person afflicted with Nervous Debility, Lost Vitality aud kindred troubles, guaranteeing oomplete restoration of vigor »nd manhood. Address as above without delay. N. B. --No risk is incurred, as thirty days' trial is allowed. VN Sfete fe; tte h f l R J s r i f i C o Mir RapMc, lorn. -ire » . • < A BOOK on tlM proper treatment of the Threat aad Bvoir weak Solid SUnr Hantlng^aaa Wj A. Longa.bjr K.Uanter.M J),103 State bt .Chioago, Aw |ina away with The Sara' Itanln. ' £79 A WKKK. $11 a day at home easily made. Ooatljr wit outfit free. Addrasa Tau* A Co., Augusta, Me. SILVER WATCHES FREE [nUnrOw Watebea are CtisttlMmi. Thensaaao (ties away with The Bayi' of tfaoaewhn get watehaa are lathe Boat Boys' Paper in the aaaaipta aopy to IIT A TPU L'Q wiMngnim. aaaress, Btaaoato WW I V P. Mhf American WalchCo .PUUtiuvh.ra. • DC a weak In yonr own town. Terms and §5 ontflt • 00 free. Addraes H. HAULBTT * Co., Port.and. lla. CBAHriODf PVBLI«RIXfl CO., r# IferM. ISA Wtlllaaa St., Se« JS E;#6N2WT?T*0#£S T , THE tfRZAr /iTTKTQ Bowalooifc Ostatsgae free. Mli^ M UXlO flrtai Wast. Oaa Wsrka. rtuatank. r*. fee #9f) par day at home. Samplea worth St free. W Ml VCII Address STINSON A Co., Portland, Mo. A ©KKVp WANTED for the Beat and Fastaat J\ Selling Pictorial Books «n<1 Bibles IVioi-s reduced •8 per ct. NATIONAL PUUUBHIMU CO., Chicago, LU. YflllNfl II Pi £f want to Inarn Telegraphy In a I uuns BIM few montlH, and be certain of a ait. nation, addraaa VALENTINK BROS., JanesTille, Wia $ 7 7 7 I*** r rr A• ii S O L D B Y A - L - f - ' ' > > " PEKK'A.SAlT MP r. CO f M.<_ and YKAR and arpenaaa to Agenta. Outfit free. Addraaa r. O. Vlckory, AuKQataaTM*. MONTH--AGENTS WANTED--@0 lling articles in the world; 1 sample Addnai Jay Biuutuu, Detroit,! SEEDS! fkts. in'w aorta free defy competition I will not he undersold Beautiful BOOK ait free to all TTSSnTlrut uaraenl liiiustr'd with team \ ofei Swd STONR»* HA It I) V BJ.M'KKHKKY. Tho hardiest in cnlt-v-tion. For description nnd roota, igravtnn PRBK to I rmh. chenp. rrtlaUfe. 1FOKI), UXINOI^i^ Ha. B. R Rot >LAm>, of Corington, Ky., •trfcn up ever finding relief from the ills, that affl.cted me. 1 suffered greatly, both mentally and physically. Pimples and boils were all over me. The Hinallest cut or wound would cause a sore. My digestion troubled me, and my back and kidneys paiued me severelj'. A friend rtooiumendcd Dr. Guv- sott's Yellow Dock and 8ar>taparilla. Thanks to its u*e, I am again iii sound condition, and I never can grow weary of praising it to my ac­ quaintances." AMRBT OF SAXONY is an odd sort of a fellow. He is a devout Roman Catho­ lic, who rules with great circumspection his seven millions of Saxons, five mil­ lions at least of whom are orthodox Bo- man Catholics. Saxony is a vivid and entertaining illustration of the mercurial motive of mankind. For many more hundred years than the readers of these scraps would be interested in following, Saxony has been the spoil of war, the creature of intrigue, the sport of chance, the plaything of ambitious captains. To go no further back than Frederick the Great, the romantic philosopher, the petulant adorer of Voltaire, the liver of ^ strange lives, Saxony has been the scene j anxiety in all his innocent life !' of Oriental diplomacy, poetry and song, j The General--"Ah, he'll soon be It was Saxony that gave brain aud func- j wanting to marry the lady's maid, or tion to Luther's mighty ravings--an elec- j Something of that sort. See if he tor of that staid and regulated Gascony j doesn't!" gave Luther the arms and the rock that j j jfv Lady -- "Good Heavens. (To made his salvation, even when tha 'footman, who entert.) "Adams, where 44 Bachnpalba.n Quick, complete cure of urinary affections, •nidrtuig. frequent or difficult urination, kid­ ney diiseaHea. $1 at draggitits. Prepaid by expretw, $1.25, G for #5. E. & WILU, Jarauy City, N. J. Ten Yean' Eiporiosce. CMJARVILLE, Ohio, Dec. 16, 1881. Have used PWO'H Cure for Consumption in my family for ten years, and want nothing bet­ ter as a cough remedy. J. A. HABEKD. Da. Wncnu'i Teething Byrnp hi failed to give immediate relief when uoed ii cases of Summer Complaint, Cholera-infantum, or pains in the stomach. Mothers, when youi little darlings are suffering from these or kin­ dred causes, do not hesitate to give it a trial You will surely be pleased with the charming effect Be »uro to buy Dr. Wincheli'n Teething Syrup. Sold by all druggists. Only 2§ cent* per bottle. Itaadypspda, ladte--HML aspwhwf spte- aud general debility, In their various form*; also as a preventive against fever and ague aadt other intermittent fe¥efs, the " Ferro-Phoaphor- ated Elixir of Calmm," made by Oaowell, Has- anl & Co., New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic ; and for patients recovering from lever or other Biekness It has no equal. m FATHHTS •onthine BahllCnrMl faa N tawdays. Wo pay till Cawd. 13K. J. STWVHBNS, Lebanou. Ohlt, R S. Jt A. P. Laoey, Patent SoUei- tors, Waahington, D. C Oar val­ uable Hind Booka, " Patenta" aad " Hints and Kecipes,'* *»nt frm. AC TS WAWTEDtotoflths LIFE, TRIAL and EXECUTION of ^ TheAwt„lB. Complete history of bis shameful life; full record o' the most notorious trial in the annals of orim*. Frofnsely Ulustrated. Low priced. Outfit HI rnih. For cirealaio and terms, addruaa HUBBARD BROS., Chicago, Ul. PENSIONS" Are dne AM, SOI.DIERA wholly or partially dla- abied by wonnds, injoriea or diaeece received or oop- traetet! in the U.D.reiTice in line of duty. Pensions are fmid for loss of finger or toe, chionir diarilioa. disease of urj(s, heart or ^jee, rupture, varicose veins, total or naitial deiifness, et«. Widows. Oiphrn Chiiilren and Dependent Parents entitled. Thnusi iidsof pens oneia are • n'it ed to hirrtand Jiatm. jv.o/.ctrd m-d HrjeHtd Claims taken up and collected. For blanks and infonoa- tion address H. « . WKIOH'I , INI IANAFOLIS, UiD. Reference. Indianapolis (Indiana) Natknal Bank. &> H HHUM\VAV. ROCKFOKI), "JUST LET ME SHOW YOU' l>lt, POOTVS HAND-BOOK OF HEALTH HIN#; AND KEADY RECIPBS. Worth SSS. Coat AOfi. By the aothor of 'Plant Hons TALB" <n C'OSMOH 3r»s*."* 1 QQ PAiiKS of Advice aboat ... JL llal'itti, and for Coo < Common Aliments; a va uablt Book i Keferenc« for every family. Only Ola The tiamUWk conuiiv chapters oo gk'tie fur a1.! Common kNK ta. Common lis. ll>K.unicCuraUveMeaaor«% K Worth Koowing, bints oo HatUM^ on Xurging the Sick, on RmerKeodea, getlter with isome of the Private Ft "oraala . .f toZ repute, and forprepturiiu: food for luviift A<«~AUAN1M WAMKL). Murray Hill Book Publishing 0*, itt KAST tsn Stun, Naw TMaftj^ TRUTH Z MIHRTT. fhs a&4 I n v i n I U A T t K U U * a i M l mi W*mM wrn fcr m murn »Mfc liUM. **Ur af ijm, u4 latk teir. mm* a r i v r v f t a a ^ r a u r f t t t w * t a a l . . . . F •ym, u4 l««k ^ bair, m KIT fatwa ar wtte. uaa, «Ha» aad pUo* at wafisc, aa4 TITIIEN WtSITINU TO AOVEKTlSKit% Ifknse Mijr ww the advertia«wicMB la thia iia^cr. '; - j m i FOB Headache, Constipation, Liver Complaint and all bilious derangements of tho blood, there is no remedy as sure and safe as Eikrt's Day­ light Liver Pills. They stand unrivalled in re­ moving bile, toning the stomach and in giving healthy action to the liver. Sold by all druggiatu. Home Inflaences Developing. . My Lady--"No, no, General. Do not talk to me of school and college! There's nothing like home influence for boys. My precious darling has never left my side since he was born--just twenty-one years ago this very day, General--and he has kept the heart of a child, and never given me an hour's mighty forces of the potent Charlee V. stood in his path like the lion that af­ frighted David AN ex-State Senator of Colorado, while in New York, rode up to Central Park to see the obelisk. He immedi­ ately understood why the Government brought it here. He said it showed that the Egyptians had recorded on it the fact that they used the same kind of cattle marks that are employed by the Mexicans. GAIII HAxmxoif haa only two hate* She hates a man. with a white face ana a woman who has dyspepsia. Outside of these she gets along quite peaceably with the world. is Parker?" i The Footman --"She just stepped j ont for a minute this mornin', my Lady, !to git some 'air-pins, she said. But ithey do say down stairs, as Master George were waiting for her round the corner with a four-wheel cab and a small porkmanteau. Leastwise, she never come home, nor Master George hasn't ;neither. Lunch is waiting, my Lady." --London Punch. HAVIKG used Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup in my family for the last three years, I find it the best preparation I have ever used for Cough*,, and 'H1*. giving immediate relief. % B. WAUOCB, BaUo.,Md A tombinaHon of JfVo- " " toocide of Iron, iVrMrino „*?l i JtarkandPhosphorumi•' a jMilatable form. I%e i t? otuj/preparation )/<rm . that will Vtaekrathe ' i" "• teeth, go cli-ireU rittie mf other iron prepqration*. JliOV TONK* i:i my practice, and in an t xpem'Tice of twenty-flve rcara in mcdicluo, h;u>3 never found ap.vthiiifr to give tlu' results that Die. IIAKTER'S IRON IVJVIC does. In many cases of Nervous Frostralion, Female Discuses. I>yspe|>sia. and an Im. poverlshcd condition of the blood, this peerlePB reniedv, has in my hands., made some wonderful cures, liases that have baffled some of our most eminent physicians, have yielded to this (rreat and ineompap. able remedy. 1 prescribe it in preference to any Iron preparation made. In fact, such a compound I Dfi. IXAltTiJi's I HON Toxic IS a necessity in my practice. PB, ROBERT SASlt'ELS, ST. Loris. Mo.. Nov. fcth. 1881. ay S •vi" K --..R It {fives color to the blood,\ naturalhealtiif\Utone tn\ the digestive organ* and I nervous system, making \ ft ap»lioable to General! Debility, Ix>sa of Appe-1 tlte, l*rostraHon of Vital I Powers and Tmpotence.! MANUFACTURED BY THE OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. *13 i.BAIII ST„S /mm/c. SONGS, One Cent Each. i - ~ . ... . * «m w*- wimm V/mt- Tiarliyif?. i 2S8 LOTS imoBt thm ftmi i'Jt ' ^ t, ^ t & m KIM Kt. Kiss Tour Darlia& XSS • Flower from Mother & israve, 1S4 The Old Lot? Cabla on the H1U. r 1 Baby Mine. • The OKI Cabin Hom«. * j I • Tho Liiiie Ones nt Home. It 8eo That Mj Grave's Kept Orceau It Grandfather's Clock. 18 Whuro Was Moses waen the Wffhfc t4 Btveet Br aud By. [Went Oat. M Whaa, l^mrna. IMagjla. M When you ainl X wersToun^r U When 1 Saw riweot Nollie lioma. 48 Take this Letter to My Mother. 4» A Model Love Letter.--comic 69 Wifa'a Commandments.--comic. M Husband's Commandments. M Little Old Loj? Cabin In tlieLano. M MarchingTiiriiiigh Ge"r,rl:i-•0 Widow ill tho Cottugo by ti-o Sea. OS The Minstrel Boy. to Take Baelt the Heart. 1* The F.ide.l font of Bine. l*fct. »T My Old Kentucky Home, liood •4 I'll be all Smiles to Night Lave. a* Listen to the Mockins Bird. •g ller lirikht Smile Haunts Me Mill 04 8uniiity Niirht When Uie r»rU»r » •6 The liypsy s ffamiiisr. f^ulL 10J *Tis Bat a Little taded Flower. 104 The litrl I Left B«hiaU Me. 105 Little Buttercup. JOT Carry Me Back to Old Vlrflnny. 118 The Old Man's Krunk Again. 11* 1 Am Waiting, Ksjto Dear. lit Take Me Bach to Home A Mother ISO Come, Sit b* My Side, OarUug. Va vlllMnd by mall, pott paid, any ten of thino»oofa tor | O »oU : aay tmotj-ftio --mm IS «*•»: >> Rftw ter 9S eenu. Or we will iwnd all the ut*»vn isti. hundred songs, jwat-ijald tef 40 casta. Hoatorabwr, w.mUt lSOCominifTiiro'the By©, ^ Ul Must We, Then, Moet asStruifWt lit T!io Kiss hehiad tb« l>o*>r- 139 1 11 KexuomUur Yuu, Lov»\ In My iPrajers. IM Ton ifayLook, but Touch. U0 Tiiere's Alwayi A tie*t In til® rar- lor for You. . • IU pit no Mother Kow, I m Veepln* l^§ Massa's in de Cold, CoiU UruuaJL Siiy^KSiiil Word When YouCaa. IM I Cannot Sin^tiioUid Socgm. laeKorah O Nvul. 16T Waiting II.- I>arl!Dr, for The*. 1S» JviiQio the yi.»ttorof Kildare. j;0 I'm Lonely Shuv My Mother Pled i;| Pno't Y - ISO Willie, We have Mlssod Yoa. l«t Over tho HiU* to tho l'iH>r House. ISA I>otrt be An^ry with Md, X>«rllA^a 131 Khrtatt >n of tho Kan. 194 Why did She Le*vo Him T foth«r. 194 Tri u Uikst Lv'sruod. to Love Asx* tot There's Nonet Llko a Mother. Were Koiso, but I'll Korfftm f0» Mother's l>yinc. Sit Will You Luvt}M«» Wh«m ^ukOld. 190 Annie Laurie. Mft bherman "s March to the Sea. ! COINU. BINILA, COME. :5s lows Amoair tb. Bam tii Old Arm Chair (aaanncbr p.„....... «» Tho Sailor's Urav*. [latheUaniaa t« Farmer's Daughter { t*!..' Oil! Pe:n Gei jen SllpperV. Poor, but a Uendamaa Still. 14S K.>bo,!v'.-< UarllngbM Miaa. *•... [ "i sit Put sty Lii'ig tii»aaa A«ajw ••1' . Bg lis Darllaif Nellie b'tq, .-aS-i-iii Sii LitUe Brown Joe. " i?S<i P 154 Ben Bolt. .^'s- Z37 Bye SwettMaa^ tr» Tl«ITake. *:s Tba Hat M; Faijt, r Yar» ^ I'il'lN FuiSffi. ••1M» lyFal •Ti 1'T.Ontj Seen ITT Klaa Ma Again. 1T» Th» Vannt Chair. 2^0 The isuui; S.s3 Cotue Ka; I.tiuo Maggie SM Molly E»wr;.. Sally i a Our Hhfc toy Poor Old He<L^ *-i MatituthaMoanblaokMe. t . tt'i Br..>ki*a Down. SCO j(T Llul.OB.'airaitlBKMrlhk . si't I'ilCJo Back tomyOUl^**<taNai ' sot Tha Batcher Boy? ' M l'»aO<rtne Back tolH*!e» ; IM Where la Mjr Jhw . ju 510 The rw. Cunt Shave, Tf • #*&• Jl» Linger, Not Darllnf. * aM Haaclng la tba Sajilght lot vend ten Uii

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