HUMORS THH HICKMAN COBB, COURIER GEORGE WARRETS
Transcript of HUMORS THH HICKMAN COBB, COURIER GEORGE WARRETS
THH HICKMAN COBB,PUBLISHID ITUI Fall) 4 T >T
GEORGE WARRETS .
C Ll* TOW STREET
71
GEOROl .Editor.
Prlo* ol 8ub»orlpUon, : : »u
—
COURIERTlio OI(l.-«,i Nowipopei1 In
DHATfl Or THK lAltlltl li
IM»t. J \CK.«
by rev. <.: i. . .. or.A»r, D. D.
I miii iu niy atiuly,
Hm;n i- t.ac» ni.l tli iiiuht .* ruuady,K»erj nrrv* to on llw rack :
Faiii «.m!«| I write (rlib an.1 RlaUlr,
Slit «a all ara f.rllug '••»".''.
»> ar* nieiirnii.K »flr"- and *«<*I J'.
M.iurtiitiir faltUl.il Jack.
Jack l« ilra.1 I the « oil olfl fellow,
lin/ile I, rinl and white an.l T-llow,
r'uc to foe* aiu! fr.eiui to friciiiU;
Tint-. h>- liail a tr.ck "f i>u.«.plujr,
Noatuu romi.l, an.1 aom'tuni* awoofilngI> amnuK the ben*, then atooplng.Crouching meek to make auicuila.
It waa Sunday be waa token.\.l .Uj li.u« lie l.xiki .1 foraakan,Scatcely uWeiaiK a round;
\ . : al.
I .i.»-ie!
lit «iitw
ESTABLISHEyp IIK'KMAN. KTC.LTQN COUNTY, KKNTOt'KY, FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1882 VOL. \ VfI.»\0. 15.
she put forwnril with renewed confidencein the conversation given above, after afresh display of the unholy phenomenonas she calletl it. This was the occasionthereof. Mr. Briggs had boon
gize
left
'for ]tavmg anus abruptlvindeed
engagement," A strange
andyoung
coming up the walk iu great glee with, a; t<
parcel 11 udt rh is arm. T\ ; aJ *•"What has h.> cot there?" uHWhat has he got (here ?" sn»l gnnie
one."All the works of Joseph us for ten-
pence," replied Mr. Gregory.Immediately afterward Mr. Hriggs
entered the room and said to t lie eoiu-
p my :
"What do yon think I haveIwught?" to which tbef.iieral re
was :
** All Joseph in for tonpenee." a
It tamed oat that he h id jmlt f«r-
teel it out from a s.>eond-lkMid book-
man, indeed !" we thought, and we were ;
still Uityy surprised when in about au 1
hour he returned, and asked mv uncle 7
:<> I* allowed a short private convcrsa-im wiih- him. My nnele -em. >l
startled at this request ^and bo, by theway, did Lily ).but after a short pause heled the way into an adjoining apart- 1
ment,Llui ooiiV! r.-at ion which ensue!, *u» uc
1
siilisequentiy learned, was asfoiiows :
"lam about, sir," sai.l Mr. Gregory," to refer to yonr private ml. in s to an ex-tent^trtiich will surprise you, but 11 i peto be able to render you a service whichwill be an ample excuse Xor my intrusion.You are, I lielieve, returning to town to-
ui< irrow ?•• V.
after these events Mr. Gregory againrequested a private' conversation with
my nnele ; that he had again somerevelations to make concerning a con-spiracy of two, male and female, in
tins case also; and that shortly after
the first pair of conspirators had been" aebtenwed lot life" by oue of herMajesty's Judges, a similar sentencew ; is pronounced npon the other pair
by the Rev. Mr. Briggs.
iOSSIP FOK THK LADIES.
A Poetess iu the >anctuin.
"Could lisee the literary editor V" iu-
imred a very pretty gttl as she openedthe door of the editorial rooms.
••I expect you could, mi-s,"' repIiejLaj
A Hint Tale.JuMnjii nf ll tb«> lattice,here the miukt-- •!..«!•>
•W ' 1 for her gratiaVliat Uie brmsBre nuut; and sighed;
End the cjainty ten^-i !;»..-*t Uit» aunTx-ania on her t.-ea«*»a
eft her traced in Uie. cirrnwnOl tU«g. idei. Bornlng tide.
jie 'iimeto were a-rooiuM,bd tlie di l|»Bail been a-w > K.incr.
» • liu dewa wWf lnt. rMi'»:n^1 11 thx- flowerw* v . i r
,
a youug until.
diste vicinii f,
"Oh. 1 iu
if you are in his• ho is not a fairy,
ait w as lie' m In re
iminel
nivf !». rious
I
When I n|i
1. ole t al
That heThat I roiYet I kueiH< lllen
d atruck anddog and aunued him- -
it in atf^iny.
le li. n • .1 t.. s-i me.I tr:i 1 mi tiaid to ah m uieeeoo|tnl/.e.t ma »ttt'.
Id Bi • lie p >>ut pity,r, iu all the city.
u:.
q ...»er,
< >r ax Ik lia.i-
With the .'ret full In hu face;He «a» p u-e.ll. it. Done isiilld doubt It,
N me whoi-aw bin writhe wou.d ecollt It,
but I did not want to d ull It.
tVi » hat mat. i ould be M baee?
I'..; ;•• d.>({ waa grow iiijj weaker,\\ Mi >
I ins kimbr, BJHNLot k whicb cannot be f. rg.rt;
Yet, ae BOW lM fa>t WBB faliintf,
And aa hope war iiiaavallmir.Though it c.i'ivd a wcrat •|ualiing,
I, reluctoi. t, bad bun abut.
So he died, and ertuae<iuent:y—for we |i| not keep hire -jrentlyHo \va» btitie.1 with reirr-t:
I. <ne o.d .j.l the coachman »h»e'cil inm,l'nr ntiM I ii i man c<>uld w.eld bini.And where- natlng oak tron aJutud blui
1 h. re waa builesl Jae k. Ihe pet.
Do you wonder we are lonely !
Where he ketm« ed n <»' i« onlv... iiudi.tlil U o and .1. p;
lie waa aiwaya glad ;<> greet u»,Alwaya waiting MB| to meet n»,A id. wl.t r.w '.if to beat u»—Beat u> and ulna.1 would keep.
but no mora will Jaek attend us,M r.-Ti f i. ly no ruoie defend ua.Pay and aianl Iran |*
1^>ne now J:e hard I
\lway. then- when he >< i
Iraated Iroiu lus n.aeter'k tabic
—
lie la goue and »t m gr-ef.
Kan well Jack, wbo Of attended,r^rewrll tiow, t!..v dajra are ended.Now wlib all 0:e world at peace;
lilt-re Uo pr»t Wl.i . . r uici-t Uie.-,
There no fo- wil 1 i-'cr - et t!
i here in peaceful BtaboJ er re»t thee.Till eternal agee r-ae-
1
Winn^
Tery serions, and gave no information
but changed the subject as soon as fjoa.sible.
I u consequence o| all this, interest,
enrit'sity, utu -asicess, a i t even alarm,wore in varying degrees eiuitfcd in tlio
breasts <-f the s<*veral members of ourcompimy. AIo.^t *d the lathes declaretl
that thev wore* dailv experting m >n ...
Doubtful Acquaintances.
"It la very rt>niarkuble,*' said myuncle, as Mr. Gregory left the rood:*-"
" It is very mysterious," said Lily,with strong iiiiinlneii on the adverb."Tome," observed an elderly huly
Imartler, "it appears to l»e somethingni-rso thau niystejrious ; ant', withoutmaking any assertions, I would at least
caul ion you, my dear, agaiust any closerintimacy with on who seems so often to
be past MSG 1 of information in a mannerof which there is no conceivable naturalexplanation."
" It reminds me most," said the Rev.Mr. Briggs, "of certain cases, un-doubtedly well authenticated, in whichthe existence of the st>-ealled 'secondsight " ha -t been demonstrated in a verysingular manner.""And," added my uncle, "although
many of the professors of Spirituuh-Mhave lieen proved imjiostors, it by nomeans follows that all
"
"Yes, yes," broke in our lady friend," but we all know that people once haildealings with f miiliar spirits, and I nevercould find any proof that this kind ofthing has ever ce ise I, and therefore, asI said liefore, 1 very strongly cautionyon "
" Hush !" cried several voices. "Herehe comes."My uncle, my Cousin Lily and I were
staying at a boarding-house at the sea-side, and among a somewhat numerouscompany was a certain Mr. Gregory.We hail mathi his acquaintance on thenight of our arrival in a rather conicalmanner. He was passing our room justaa Lily was calling to me in a tone ofwoful desiiair that she had broken thekey in the lock and could not get out.Through the key-holo he had voluu teeredhis services as an amateur lock-picker,and released us from our imprisonmentThis introduction had served quite as
well as a much more formal one wouldhave done to inaugurate what promisedto lie a pleasaut seaside acquaintance.Now on first sight he certainly present-ed very little ap(>earanco of lieing a sus-picious or dangerous character. He wasa young man of some 25 years of age,with a bright, frank expression and agleam of mischief in his eyes. He wasexceedingly intelligent and well in-
formed, and, though rather retiring in
the mixed company ot our establish-
ment, could, we discovered, sing well,
read wed and talk welL VVithout in-
truding himself upon us, he had madehimself very agreeable to us two girls
;
and we had surmised that ne was a
tiling serious to happen. That thoseexpectations were no. altogether unful-filled will now be made plain.
There were twe> new arrivals on theday on which oar r.tory opens. Ourcompany had hitherto been pleasant an I
select, but the ladr and getntleman whonow came among us, ami who wirenamed Mr. and Mrs. ( trice, were excep-tions to this. Fhowily die—eg,anaload
.in their conversation, they made greatJ eil'orts to mix w'uh ease in oar company,and for some inacrutable reason seem dto make special endeavors to becomeiutimate with our own party; Mr. Grieeattacking my unci -, and his wife devot-ing herself to us.
We were at no pains to conaeal ouri aversion to their ill-mannered and often-i sive intrusion, but they seemed deter-mined to accept no rebuff. Lily said that
|ae had met here the most pleasant and
the most imp! ;isat:t p. r- -::s whom wehad ever s« en iu our travels. Theformer class, I iiresunic, mainly
I aia braced Mr. Gregory.liver siuce Mr. Smith's visit on the
previous day, my uu do luul seemed to
bo unusnailv worried and anxious.
Something had happeired* at the office,it appeared, which . used him very
! great uneasiness, and iicjtept a constantwatch for the post. Ia'lv and I weretroubled aboat it, bat wi pe hardly pr<-; I ft it Ins sndd'Jii au.rauuncemeiit at
i lunch next day, upon receiving a letter
•from town, that we inn-' \. ; up at
Lonce and return by the first morningI train.
i we Baa HO objection t*> escape fromthe Giices, but, mvapite Mr. Gregory's
,ill-repute for his mysterious arts, we
' were very sorry to leave him, to say,
nothing of the abrupt and unexpectedtermination of our hoiida.v.
The Grices were sitting next tonswhen my uncle made this anutsuus<«-=-
tuent, and I saw a peculiar iook of sig-
nificance pass between thetu. Mr.Gregory was sitting at tlio other end *>f
k long liming-table, and quite out ofear shot, but he e;inje itlV immednctolyafter we ro-e fr. :.. !avU' . . d said:
"A-v. ry -ad thing, Hi:.-, sud leu 4epajrt-F Yours !
"lire
"Mr. Gregory I r< plied, u nr.-
perhaps awa^Mi. at yn|}UuunuV-i gr.iv>-
suspicious "UtT ! -• iiu; iu league \i/itli the|X>wers of ^darkness, and titis is anotherproof. 11. i
. i^aJu yon p»vs.-;bly know?"tifta trawl fant," ht said.
Hut it. is .i very h«"»t after-
come down to re-
us ' health. Rut we are often
warned against judging from appear-
ances, mid he h:ul during the past few-
days manifested a very remarkablepower of clairvoyance or second sight,
or whatever else you like to call it,
vfliich ha<l created a great sensationamong us.
On the previous day, for instance, mynncle had met a g> utlemau at- the sta-
tion and had brought him homo to din-
ner. We saw them walking slowly upthe garden toget her in conversation, andLalv had exclaimed
:
" Who on earth is this ?"
Mr. Gregory looked anil said ?
" His name is Smitli, and he is return-
inir to town by the midnight train."" You know him ?"
"Never saw him in my life before,"
was the answer.Sure enough his name proved to be
Smith, and ho returned to town thatnight after a long private interview withmy uncle ; nor had he, lie told us inanswer to our inquiries, ever seen orheard of Mr. Gregory bdforo.
On Saturday morning, also, the Rev.Mr. Hriggs, taking a walk on the beach,mctlitating on his Sunday text, had en-countered Mr. Gregory, who volunteeredinformation as to the aaid text, withchapter and verse all correct, to thepetrifaction of the reverend gentleman.On another occasion, when our elder-
ly lady fnoutl mentioned that she hadbeen out making a small purchase, Mr.Gregory informed us sotto tx>oE tbnt abottle of hairwash constituted the pur-chase in question. This communicationwas very unfortunately overheard. Itscorrectness was not at the time definite-
ly established, but it was shortly after
this that she first propounded her owntheory on the subject, which
if
He<)h, ill
laughing.noon, what do juU s iv to » little read-ing?"
Lily he>c squeezed i: ;. . rm vigorously,but! answered,.** I leur my uncle wiiL
not let u- go out of his _;hr. He fc rs
it his duty to k.'wp rtpetiai Ufi d over uswhile we" are in si^h dangi-runs corn-
panv,"" Never -rrAul, ' he said; " 1 w :!1 read
to him as werH*^We were nrrt\• 4* the ftorner of the
drawing-room, near ss wii.dow lookingout on to a covered lialcony wiivoh over-lookedthe garden. SiyajBcle . ii..-*upand
returned Mr. Gregorv 's t^uirte >us gveet-
ing in a manner which was, i tear, notvery gracious."May 1 trouble you for the paper
after you, sir?" he eaid.
" Certainly," was the answer. "Rutmay we not enjoy if all together? Witli
your pernaissi i I w ' ul oj< iul tci th
oompnny."My uncle looked comaderably aston-
ished at this uuiumal or .|- • ai. l.ov
looked np with open eyes and curious
eipressiou, this bwiiqj not ejuiclly the
kind of retuling sin ha I inte nded. Rutthe offer was seriously m.idti and re-
peated, and my trncTe, who donrly liked
being read to, gave a dubious consent.
Miss Lily, w»th liKnl affection, madehim particularly comfortable iu an arm-chair, and Mr. Gregory commencedreading a long, prosy article on Frenchpolitics. He read with anything but bi»
usual spirit, and in a soft, low, monoto-nous voice. The consequence wae—as
had possibly been not wholly unforeseen—that my uncle was soon enjoying hisaocustoiuetl ivlteriKM.u si.-Mn. Tlw rva I-
ing, having become gradually slower andsofter, now ceased, and the reader, ltx>k-
ing up, suggested by a sligjit gesture anadjournment to the garden.
Lily and I tried to «motl»vr our laugh-ter and look shucked, but we adoptedthe suggestion. A book of poetry wasuieklv produced, and I iound thatere is a difference be-ttwvn hearing
French politics read in a stuffy drawing-room to a midiTJo-afljgd, g-'Utlemaii, uu 1
hearing " Enocti Ardeir reail m a cool,shady alcove, to a pretty, dark-eyeel,lovable maiden, with tender bosom heav-ing in sympathy with i>oor Enoch's sor-rows, especially when the reader is ahandsome young bachelor, with an ex-qnisitely-mtKlnlated voice, able to dofull justice to the harmonious numbers ofthe Laureate.At the end of half an hour I was
startled by an exclamation from Lily.Looking up, I saw in the garden below,sitting on a scat under the trees withtheir faces toward us, onr dear friends,Mr. and Mrs. Grioe.The gentleman was keeping up, ap-
parently, a desultory conversation withhis wife* They waved their handscatching onr
not
1 Mfi ^Snso ufjoin return is, 1 l»e>-nt: 'u*
[ flefe. Connected with the forgery of ace-rtaiu check iu your name.
"
"Sir, how can yuu pot>eibly know-that?""That check « as brought to y<m for
your lusjtection three days ngo "by oweof tin- clerks fruu the bank, a Mr. Smith,and it is now in your posst ssioii."'
My iiiicte waei'Si.NMuthkvs.s." Hc.tr me further. Tlie accuracy ot
my statements hitherto utay claim cre-denee for what l am about to ailirm.Unless I am greatly mistaken, there arenow in this establishment two personsw ho have b. en employed to reguiu pos-S4 ssion, at all costs, of that forg- d paper.They suspect that you have it, and al-
fQady ymu-room and your daughter amtniece's rtx>ni have been s. arohet^ aiid .it
only remains to search your person."My uncle turned pale." It is known that you are leaving to-
morrow morning, and the attempt will
be made between now ami then. Willyou allow me to offer you my advice ?"
I will not attempt to describe my re-
spected uncle's condition of body andmind at thi< parjj of the interview. Suf-fice it to «=:iv that the proffered advicewas ultimately adopted.On that evening my uncle declined to
accompany us when, an hour after din-
ner, the house emptied on to the prom-enade. Mr. Gregory also was missing,ninl had not appeared at dinner. TheRev. Mr. Hriggs took us under his care.
My uncle wa-s already nodding in his
chair as we went out. Twenty minutesafterward two of the company softly re-
entered the room. This 1 had from aneye-witness. Their names were Mr. amiMis. Griee. Mrs; Once stood at thedoor and her husband advanced gentlyacross the rloor to whuav my • nnele lnyhack in hi* cluur, snoring audibly, his
handkeiehi' I over his head, his coat
thrown open, and a pocket-book just
showing :n his breast -po.-k. t.
Mr. Griov crept up to him, nhfttracterl
the book with n practiced hand, put it
iuti i his ow ii pocket, and turned to go.
Now. as he re-crossed the room, he hadto pass before a large lounge, with longhangings in front, and he was, per-
haps, somewhat surprised to find Ins
auk lea s- ize.l in the firm grip of n pairof bunds -thrust out suddenly from un-der the lounge. Ashe fell, his amiablepartner turned round—into the arms ofa detective officer. At the same mo-ment Mr. Gregoryentered through thewindow from the bak-oiiy." This is your poeket-L>ook, sir," said
one of the detectives,i "Thank you," said my uncle. "It
I
has nothing^ in it, but I am^g^ad to haveit back again."Mr. and Mrs. Griee were r> hiovt d at
once to another public establishment in
I
the neighborhood, where ~^ie company'was very select, the hours vera' regularand maintenance very cheap r t\l. ofestablishment which'tt was subservient-
ly proved they had frequented in m r.
than one part*of the country.Amid con*adcrub!o excitoir.. >,t we
promenaeled late that night. My unclesard -
K
" You have renderotl'me a -erAe. sir,
which lays me under the . pt.-le/wdiga*'
tion to you. I lUOre no douiji that tno
original delinquents, of _yhom the-c
creatures are «mly the, toads, will bebrought tt> justice, ^hiding tiiat weare ou Uieir tnudw.they have made this
effort Ui >'. u •;• tiieir g . .. i .• •
'
us ftioui subira|tting it to experts.
Thanks to vou. thev have failed. 1 cant_ i_ i :o 1. . ,
At the piet-ent movnent." was tlie re-
ply, "the literary editor is attending achicken dispute, but 1 am ke. pMig aneye on whab-ver pearls of thought comehi during his absence. What is yourpacket ?"
"I don t think I quite understandvou, sir," said the girl.
"Are yon a poet ?"
Yes, sir, tnst is—""Oh, I know you ain't a good one;
they all Bay that. Hut if you've got a
poem ju t stand over there m the cornerind read it. 1 can get onto the gate ef
thaataaajai Better that way."The young lady seemed somewhat
surpri-e.l at tins method of receivingpoetical gems, but tripped lightly to the
plana ind. eat.nl by the young man andre:ul ns follows :
1 wnd Iked tuti k Ibh lUStaS bund of gold.1>oh» n «r»k< n SicaMMieaoi EotMn m>M '
(Mult thou tbink niv s.,u! bath aunk -o lowVfUn I NmiM w.nr tliy tin;; :ind know
•'that to anal her wan plltrtite J thy troth ?
Nay —'lirvuid trrpufi ill IhmIi.
• That'll do. Dal you write it your-self?"" Ve.-, sir," wi
• It's tough,"Man. "I canpitches around
it'.y from tie- ,,;.<,
-. :. ie and -ingle,i.i .utertuingle• «f-€Utang led maze.
.mina.there,i;iche* a ti nirpi nft,
,!> a druOimiBg*
you at yonr t
qu:tht
liortunity of making any return to you,however slight."
" 1 sha'l certainly tu!-:e
word, sir," was the answer."And nnV, Mr. Gregory," continued
my nn.-le, " will you ward- >n our curiosityif- we bag yon tcv tAU-^js the means bywhich you were able to divine the in-
tentions of our departed friends V"
"Oh, Mr. Gregury," cried Lily, "youmust tell us. We are cu thorns to know,and will do anythiug in the world youlike to mention if you will t.-ll us.""On WifBsrtenus t consent," said he,
with a curious look at Lily, which madeher suddenly blush very much, as Icould see even in tlie moonlight."You may have iiotic«d," l*>gtt,tl Mr.
Gregory, "that I am somewhat' d. if.
and I have l>een much more so. Inconsequence of this I have ae.piired theart, which I believe almost any one canaoquiii , rA reading the mov.'nionts of
the lips in the same way that the deafand dumb are taught to do, so that I
enn always understand what peopleshyif only they are within seeing distance
;
ruid mv seeinir is verv ncnte. I needhardly say that 1 avoid over-seeing con-versation, if you will allow the expres-sion, as much as I would' over-hearingit ; but I frequently s~e peopley s)>enK afew wgrds on accidentally glancing atthem. I think that what has mizzledyon will now be plain. Perhaps Toughtto confess that I have yielded a little to
the temptation of mystifying"IheoHH?pany during the last week, especially in
the ease of Mr. Rriggs, who has, like
many people who have lived a good deal
alone, a habit of talking to himself as
he goes along, which he is scarcely awareof. This afternoon, however, I watchedthe Grices in good earnest. I was very
much astonished at what I saw. Y. >ur
sudden departure had disarranged their
plans, and they had a full discussion of
past and future operations.
yo.ii just bring your verses to me, aud—
"
dBlv saV'ho^a7wer«>mTwi ,^ ihe 8irl *P" IWr Cfcfeqan Tri-
The Egg Story.
It woldtl violate all precedent it thestory of Columbus and the egg were to
be spared the renders of this volume. It
is briefly an follows : Soon after lusreturn to Spain he dined with ( -ar. linal
tie Meudozu, an eminent clergyman witha talent for dinners. An objectionableyoung man who was present, and whoundoubtedly had taken more champagnethau was goexl lor his fellow-dim ire,
asked the Admiral ii he did not thinkthat if ho had not discovered tlie NewWorld some one else would have veryshortly discovered it. He was unques-tionably an impertinent young man, buthe was undoubtedly right iu assumingthat sooner or later the Atlantic wouldhave been crossed, even if Columbus hadn. ver b.-.-n lx>rn. Historians t.-il us thaiColumbus, in reply, asked the youngman if he could stand an egg on its little
end, and when the young man, after
rudely inquiring what Columbus wasgiving him, was constrained to admitthat he couid not perform the feat in
question, the great explorer simply flat-
tened the little end of the egg by knock-
|ing it against the table, and then easily
] made it stand up. The whole companyinstantly burst into tears, and exclaimedthat Columbus was the greatest and
| noblest of mankind. If this trick of
; flattening an egg was really regarded as
| a brilliant repartee, by which the imper-1 tinent young man ought to have been! utterly withered np, it gives us a melau-
icholy view of the state of the art ofrepartee among the Spaniards. The realfacts of the case are probably these :
Cardinal de Mendoza, the dinner and theimpertinent young man doubtless ex-isted in the manner specified, and theimjiertinent young man, in an advancedstate of champagne, probably said some-thing insulting to the Admiral. The
It was not latter, disclaiming to notice the affront
at all a bad idea to hold their delibera- by words, and reluctant to cause anytions before your very eyes, so to
on
keep up their watch on your movements-had ta
tchiug onr eye, and beckoned to usto come and join them, which we did notdo.
Mr. Gregory, instead of going on withhis reading, continued to regard th^mintently, and asked us whether we knewthem.We said, "No.""Ru*»they
said.
We explained howus w ith their attentiipointment, he couldgo on with his reading, bnt he continuedto stare at the couple liefore him; andwhen at last they strolled off in differentdirections, he said that he must apolo-
and disarm suspicion, but they J
no precautions against being
The rest you
to know you," he
•hey had favoredins. To our disap-not be induced to
takenoverseen.
know.',' r
"Rut how about the purchase of the
hair-wash, that sad proof of occult art ?'*
I said.
"Oh, that had nothing to do with it.
I'was in the shop, being shaved, and I
saw tlie transaction in a looking-glass."
Later still, when my uncle had gone
in, I heard him quietly say: "So youwill do whatever I like to mention?**
But these words were not addressed to
me, end I judged it best to fall into the
rear, and, having no gifts of clairvoy-
ance myself, I cannot tell youthe rest • of the conversation. I
can onlv add that our re-
turn was 'ptBtponed, and that shortly
is tuc reply.
aid the affable youngsee that it dives ami:><jnsiieiabie, although
I'm neit a coiiii.K./.er iu p.n-try. He.si.le-,
-he doesn't rhyme like she ought to.
F*ojc iusbuiee, take these lines ;
That t" another was pli^ln.-l thy truth!Nuy — 'lamiM wroiii; us both.
"Now, 'troth' and 'both' don'trhyme. We'll have to fix that. Howwould this do
:
Tbat to amam-ther was J.lighted tliy troth 1
Tby love's more thin than elc ken broth.
"That kind of cases her up a little,
doesn't it?" and the young editorsmiled affably in the general direction of
thegrt" go you think VOU can print it next
Sunday?" asked the younglady, lookingbewitchingly pretty as she spoke,"Oh. you bet well print it. Stick it
into .i bang np place, too. Any timeyou grind out some slush just bring it
to iue, nud I—
"
At this point the literary editor camein, and the young manwho had beentloing m> much talking indicated to thegirl by a series of violent winks that thenew arrival was the person she wantedto see. Fxplaining her basiness, i hehuiidert-tnin her jineticat efirrrt. He readit carefully, and then said :
"I readily perceive that you have tin-
gem of ponfti tire in your heart, and t hat
it need< only time and car.- to bloss .mforth into afiowert.f re-pleudent beauty.The effort which you have handed me is
crude. It lacks the finish which cultureand experience alone can give. I ail]
reconstruct thetir.-t stanza iu accordancewith the ideas just enunciated.
"
Alter writing for a moment or so thtliterary e.litor read as follows :
Take hack, <> perj ared. heart, this golden tiand,No longer thai! u abiue "Ii Ipe.ini j S haad
;
To depth", ft low 1 never could descend;This a,tonishiti^ heart-hr. ak I will end.anutb. i ha* your love, full well I ku.iw;Be Hot oi..1.1 : for at urn yuu are loo In*.
"You s.-e that gets in all the h'eas,anil somewhat improves the language.'.-aid the literary editor.
"Aud willyou print, it SundayV"Certainly, ami in a prominent posi-
tion, too. Now, whenever you haveauvpoetry just bring it to me, and—
"
'•.Never mind these ducks, sis," saidtlie trot'.ing-horse editor, who enteredthe room at this juncture. "I'm theboy that takes a crack at the poetry.Why, neither of these fellows knows' athree-em dash from a fore-and-Hftschooner. Wneuevet the Muse troubles
unpleasant scene at the Cardinal's table,merely threw an egg at the offender'shead, and pursued the conversation withhis host. Subsequent writers, deter-mined to give a profoundly scientificcharacter to everything the Admiral did,built up from this slight basis of fact theegg-balancing story. In point of fact,
any one can balance an egg on its little
end by the exercise of a Tittle care andpatience, aud it is rather more easy todo this with an egg that has not beenflattened than with one that has.— II
r. L.
Alden'B "Christopher Columbus."
The MormonB had an id< a that Presi-dent Taylor was stealing from them, andwhen he got a hint of it he replied :
"Let me seethe man who said so andI'll hang him inside of an hour !
" Thaisettled the question of his honesty.
•Hi::.'.; ' 3t,f 1 t.e-.
•rthe «..r.1i« that thrilled her;a vlli.-re, you Jane Yfalilder—*\ el»^-ilid knuckle Uiem ar clothea !
'
\SJIJH>' o Wbo Follayti die 31 on mlv.
Tfon.f*: the hunt. The Doehess d'Uzeskeep, a pack of hounds and follows themfearlefsly. The Comtess TAgle i- aniiitr.-j« 1 horsewoman, and has notmissed, save on rare ticcasions, Wing in
at the death of the sta~, and Madame,in theth(-ir
and c<
abIn
m.
Reiioi; Ohsmpy one dof her husband frommounted on horsebackthe park of boar houndsShe give the huntsman ohouink on, and followedthe start to the finish,
When the wild boal was brought to bayaud killed by a bullet by the head keep-
neeail,
tedt.
ders to lay thethe hunt from
ing pres. ul
Whom • ns : I otliortls.
It isw. ll that no occasion should l»e
lost of test ing theoonuaenplaee that menare harder than women. Irish tenantsare sail to have found that the r< verseof tlnsis nearer the truth Speaking of
the eaies settled at Hallina, the Tim s
eoRespndenl says that they were ex*trmnelaseat, and the fact that the landhas betu in the possession ><f a lady diddid notdimiiiisii the risk of rack-rent-
ing. On the contrary, it may lie said,
withori any disparagement of the gen-tler sex th it, iu many innrnnoon, theyhave Men found the most severe andexacting of all proprietors, who enforcetheir iBiuis w ith uncoMSB,
Ipromisingstriot"
\ P—UlBal ISitiitl.
A betntafnl hand is an excellent thingin wonan; it is a charm that nev. r taii^.
it is a aOSlin of fascination that n. v.-r
tlisnpji^irs. Women carry a beautifulh ind w,th them to the grave when abesatifU face has long since vanishedor ceastd to enchant. The expressionof the hand, too, is inexhaustible; iindwhen tie eyes we may have worshipedno longer flash or sparkle, the rin-l. ts
with which we have played are coveredwith a cap, or, worst-, a turban, and the
\ntnishe4 the hand, the inim rl d ban 1,
defyinguike time and care, still v.m-quish. siud still triumphs; and small.softand lair by an airy attitude, a gentlepressure or a new ring, renews withuntiringgrace the spell that bound ourenamorVand adoring youth.— DiwctoU.
Western Women.Perhaps the most striking charnoter-
istic of tiic women of the West is tho"\e;i i mill" import-anee they place onthe inteleetnal life. It is a natural re-
sult of the early deprivations of thepaxentajho, in going to a new country,reUhqumed the cducutitmal privileges
of the &ist, and to whose recedingvisions :he opportunities of schools,libraries art galleries and social culture
Were battings that brightened as theytook tlmr uigtit. As an almost invari-
able atanenoe, their chiUlren werereared t> consider these the very essen-tials of .ife. The mother might neces-
sarily l>« confined to a life limited ill its
NalisatSM but infinite in its aspira-
t: .lis. mil out of this grew the feeling
that tin daughter should enjoy thoseprivilege denied to herself. Thus thepresent generations of the women of thoWest art the ones who recruit the intel-
lectual links.—ItoxUm Tram lit r.
tlomnii'* Ncll-Nfi« rifit-e.
"Oh, to, he never beats me," said
Julia Cojtors, tryiug to look the Judgestraight in the face. " Martin gets fussyand noiiy sometimes, and lx-riiaps he.
pushes i»e around a little, but never anyassault, er.
"
"The officer says he saw your hus-band stake you on tlie thoaldei andthen vol struck him in the lace withyour l'i>t,'*
The vvinp.u dropped her eyes, tiugen 1
her shawl nervously for n moment andthen looked up, tixeil her black evescalmly i,»<>u the court and said: "Theofficer ii mistaken. Martin put his handupon mfcjirm and spoke to me a little
cross aldhv - imetiling, and then I pushedI might have struck him,pot strike me. He neverr plead guilty, but he hasShing. He* is only a bit
^. i n I dle, but I don't chargeult."
2 wife's story. She pleadedve her husband, while heguilty and 1 t her take npon
. he blame without saying aword f<* her. The woman is ever readvto sacrifice herself to save the man, andthe moroihe is abused the closer sheclings to him. The man stands beforethe Judg» uud savs as plainly bv his si-lence as Adam did bv his words : " Thewoman is the guilty one, she temptedme," and the woman shares his punish-m. i.t.
The court found Julia and MartinConnors guilty of mutual assault, andfined tlie woman 81 without costs andthe man $10 with costs. The womanpaid her.fine, spoke an encouragingword to the man, and went out from thecourt room. She went home, drew forth-the little .tore she had pnt bv for coalbills for the winter, took perhaps nearlyall her earnings, and came back quicklyto pay his fine and take him out of thedock, it » way D{ womerj) RD,i menwill let them have their way.—/fWonGlolie.
hie I.arty W nitres*.A correspendent who has been to
Mount Washington discourses as followsof the Lady waitress :
A scornful young person thrust the bill
of fare before ns, ami stood in a protest-ing self-eoosciom, to receive ourorders. She wai a " lady waitrets," aschool-teacher from Rangor. Portia insome way, being native to this sort ofthing, made her answer questions ; butBfie did to always in the same high andmighty maaner_
"Are there manv ladv waitresseshere?" asked Portia."Yes ; there are ten school-teachers
in the dirung.room> twenty studentchambermaids, and the head laundress
and under-housekeeper are Boston doc-tresses."
Think of having one's disgust at slop-
py coffee or an overdone steak Observedcritically by the light of German philos-ophy and Greek culture ! Think of ask-ing a creature who may V>e a contributorto tlie Atlantic Mun'hly to bring youthe toothpicks 1 I couldn't do it. TheBcornful young person, who leisurely,
carried iu our breakfast by such ea.-y
loads that no two viands wen. eatable attlio same moment, received no commandfrom my lips. The wffee went downwithout milk or sugar : the butter wentdown in a pellet, all by itself; the mi-perior one hail forgotten to bring thebread, an^as for tishbulls instead of
•teak, why I swallowed them without amurmur.
i ;.i--... ... mum.ter. d in, took a seat near mine, andcalled Out to our lb-lie: " Heah I Ah, 1
say, waiter.M You should have te n the
Scornful. She sniffed the air, shebounced, she flounced and flushed andbit her iips; the angry tear.- v.eie in le-r
eyes, an. I she banged down a bill of fare
before the offensive stranger ns if it werea barrel of lead. The astonished mancurtly and sharply gave his order, andHebe sauntered down the room, andu is t videutly agitating her wrongs withthe it st of the culture that posed Sl)OUtthe pantry door." I'm afraid you have offend.-d that
young person, sir," said our professor tothe Emglhthman.
" Offended .the servant '! How ?" tlie
dull creature asked." Why, by calling her 'waiter.'"
"Oh! l»eg pardon; should it be• waitress?*"
" Neither, sir."
"Well, and what should she be failed,then y"
Even the professor couldn't answerthat. The funny man suggested "high-toned youthful individual" as a namethat might go trippingly on the tongue.Hut how the huly waitress is rcalh to b>addressed remains for Congress, or pos-terity, or some other great but irrespon-sible power to determine.
Peer Rnjs Who IfsTe He come Pr-ps-hleuis.
J lie so vial ^esMhnt of the UnitedStates, John Adams, was the son of afarmer of moderate; means, who wascompeil. .1 tV worlWBiistaiitly for thesupport < f i^a fingry. When at theage of twenty-one,-
Il .i vartl C d lege*, hi
owu eap't iklor his i
Andrew Jacksonin < xlreuie poverty.]
a. oils of N.n-th Cai.oMo- of a relativt
worked to s ij^iart
|e son grailuated ateiliicatiou was lna
*irt in life,
w lx>rn in a log hutHe grew up iu thelina, living in thewhere his mother•self and her three
childrenJames K-
spent his i
in the wilHis futli
born iu a smallMountains. Hishis own ax built
lernesa, Whenhi he was placeds latter entered
he graduated
The Karl j kinga.
I belaeve, upon a good deal of evi-
Senee, that aneieutKings were itinerant,
traveling, or ambulatory jiersouages.
When they In came stationary they gen-erally perished. The primitive Kings of
I .•. "mniiinities confined within the walls,
the old Athenian and the old RomanI Kings, soon dropped out of sight. Per-haps, as Mr. (irote has suggested, theybv. .1 too much in full view of their sub-]• - for their 1. limbic stab* to commandmuch respect when the belief in th>-ir
sacredness hail been lost. Hut the morebarbarous King of communities spreadvera wide territory was coustiiiitly mov-ing about it ; or, if he did not, he, too,
perished, ns did the Kings called therot'sfetifte/zntt of the Franks.
If I were called iqxm to furnish theoldest evidence of these habits .o f theancimf King, I-"*SfH3tlld ref«?r I* StMhtr*
Irish r. eords, of which the value is only
beginning t<> be discerned, lor, whatevermay be said by the th-»ori-ts w ho explainall national characteristics by somethingin the race or the blood, the most ancientIrish lawB and institutions are nothingmore than the most ancient Germaniclaws and institutions at an earlier ttage
of barbarism.Now, when Englishmen like Edmund
Spencer first began to put their observa-tions of Ireland into writing— at the endOf the sixteenth century— there was oneIrish practice of which they spoke withthe keenest indignation. This was whatthey called the " cuttings" aud "eosher-ings" of the Irish Chiefs—that is, their
periodical circuits among their tenantryfor the purpose of feas'ing with theircompany at the tenants' expense. It
was, in fact, only a late survival of com-mon incidents in the daily life of the
barbarous Chief or King, who had notax-gatherers to collect his dues, butweut himself to exact them, living
as a matter of right, while he moved, at
the cost of his bubjects. The theory of
the Irish law was, though it is impossi-ble to say how far it corresponded withtho facts, that the Chief had earned his
right by stocking the clansman's landwith cattle or sheep.We find a highly glorified account of
the same practice in ancient records of
the life and state of those Irish* Chiefs,who called themselves Kings. "TheKing of Munster," says the " Book of
Rights," "attended by the chief
Princes of his Kingdom, began his visits
to the King of Connaught, and presentedto him one hundred steeds, one hundredsuits of military array, one hundredswords, and one hundred caps, in returnfor which the King was to entertain himfor two months at his palace at Anachan,and then escort him to the terri-
tories of Tyreounell. He presented to
the King of Tyrconnell twenty steeds,
twenty complete armor, and tweutycloaks, for which the King supportedhim aud the nobility of Minister lor onemonth, and afterward escorted him tothe Principality of Tyrone."The King of Munster is then described
as proceeding through Tyrone, Ulster,Meath, Leinster, and Ossory, every-where bestowing gifts on the rulers, andreceiving entertainment in return. I sus-pect the entertainment is of morehistorical reality than the royal gifts.
The practice, however, described withthis splendor by the chronicler orbard is plainly the same as the cut-ting and coshering which Spencer andothers denounce as one of the curses of
Ireland.— AVr Henry IS. Maine in theFortnightly Review.
ildki tliefleventh President,n.rly'yesrt on a new farmb-rutps o* Norlh Car. lina.
ia<£i .. I >re, with_ enter mer-
c. utile life; but his disliKa for businessw as so great that, at the age if. eighteen,be was sent to the MurfreciboroughAcademy to fit for college.
Millard Fillmore was the son of • New^ ork farmer, and his home was an tum-ble one. When he was fourteen yeuaold he was sent away from home to Ientuthe business of a clothier. Rut fivtyears latter be entered a law office, amiat the age of twenty-three he was admit-ted to the bar.
James Buchanan w astown of the Alleghanyfather was poor, and byhis home in the willJames was sightTearsat school, and six yearsDickinson College whenw ith the highest honors,
Tt is well known that Abraham Lin-coln was the son of parents who werethe jxx>rest of the poor. Till he wasmore than twenty-one his home was alog cabin. His" attendance at schoolwas limited to a few months. Fromearly life he Was Compelled to dependon himself not only for his living, hotalso for his success in his business andhis pn fessiou.
At the age of ten An.hew Johnsonwaa apprenticed to a tailor. Previouslyhis mother had supported bun by betow n labor. Ife was ic ver able, it is* said,to attend school. His education hegained by his own efforts at night, afterworking all day at his trade, and by thehelp of his wife.
'Ihe early home of Ueneral Oft t.
idsoon the bunks of the Ohio, more Thanfifty years ago, was Without many of thecomforts of eiviliz 'tl life. Till he tottseventeen, when he Waa u '-nt to WestPoint, he lived the life of n comfhon hoyin n common home.James A. Garfield, like so many of
his predecessors, was born iu a log hut.Wheu he had hardly entered Ids teenshe tvas doing a man t v. ork in the har-vest field. Ho learned the carpenter's
t u the Oliio Canal.1, however, to havecaving his plane audhis way through theand, with some help
'» bio to graduate at
trade. He workedSe was determinenn education, ami,scythe, he workedpreparatory schoolfrom friends, wasWilliam* C.ll. tai.
"Trie lrW-sr m~«nv .if the Presidents
Irove that no l>oy is so ps>r but that hem q hope to attain the highest honorswhich the American people can give.
HUMORS OF THE DAT.
"Jci,ice, seize her !" said Sambo, ssJulius was contemplating a fat pullet inthe moonlight.Domestic troubles come bunched, like
oelery.
The only thing in this country that is
not injured by bursting, is applause.When you see an act committed are
you not necessarily an nigh witness ?
" Htsband and wife,1
' says some sageperson, "should no more struggle to getthe last word than they should strugglefor the possession of a lighted bomb."They don't. The wife gets it without astruggle.— T/ie Jurlye.
" Save Ono Little Kiss for Papa," is
the title of the latest song. If this re-mark is aimed at a Chicago girl withfour steady beaux the old man's chancesare pretty slim.
—
Ohivago Tribune." What a contradiction a watch is !"
said Timmius. " How so ?" asked Mrs.fiuiuiius. "Why. because it alwayskeeps perfectly dry, although it con-stantly has a running spring inside."
Will the "coming man" shut thedoor after him ? ' He will in this office,>r the going man will go out of thewiudow.
—
Lowell Citizen.
Blosde—" They say Carrie is en-gaged." Brunette—."Engaged! why,iu- married a month ago aud has justsued for a d vorce." Blonde—" Howromantic! Isu t it splendid?''
—
liontonTransnri/>(.
"Yes," said the Denver editor, "Ithink I must have got out a very reada
-
ole paper this morning. I've been lickedby three prominent citizens lo-dtay, an-other chased me with d gs and a gunand the police had hard work to keep amob from wrecking my office."
—
Chi-cago Tribune.
Dr. D— has a bright little girl aboutf. air years of. age, who is very fond ofdolls and he buys a new one for hernearly t»very day. • He brought her anew one the other evening, but it didnot appear to take her fancy at all.
"What, don't you -like the new doll?"ho asked, after watching her a few mo-ni '.its. "No; Is tired of stun* dolls.
I want a real meat baby," she replied,carueat ly.— The Judge.
" I can wtdl remember the time," uaidMrs. Marrowfat, leaning over the fencerail, in confidential conversation withh.-r neighbor next door, " when Simp-son's wife was ghul enough toget a plainwoolen shawl to wear. Now she always.pp. ars in a sealskin saeque. " *' Ah,you forget," was the reply, " that Mr.Simpson's brother has become a bankcashier."
A Detroit man calls his wife Vesu-vius, b. cause ^he is a holy terror.— Chaff.A Burlington man calls his wife Coto-paxi, because she spits lire and won'tlava the neighbors alone.
—
Jiurlington
X. J. I'ii'- rprtot . A Jamestown mancalls his wife a Tool because she has not.Etna thing since the winter bonnetshave made their appearance.
—
Leader.A Stubenville man calls his wife after
lie gets up and builds s fire, for shewon't get up iu the cold.
—
St'dimHlltsHnald.Darwin acknowledged himself match-
ed wheu lus little niece asked him,seriously, what a cat has that no other
animal has. He give it up after maturedeliberation, and then the sly pussanswered "kittens."
Sausage Fritz, of this city, is anaesthete. He says he now has a "go. dquality of home mate sossiches, with dertlog coll u s all picked owid. Dcy vash«!oo utterly py go-h a goopie of dimes,
aid jron pot ray life if J dokl you so I
bite'mine het oS."—Larmic mil Xye.
Woman's Exchange in New York.
I must mention the Woman's Ex-change here, which is now accepted as
an established success. Only threeyears old, and starting with but ten con-signors, it now has 2,'2o0. Tlie sales
this year amount to S26,o35.37, an in-
crease of 85,001) over last year. Withall expenses paid, and without debt,
86,000 has been put in the bank towardthe building fund, and, encouraged bythe example of the parent society, nineothers have been started in different
cities.
Few people have any idea of theamount of good accomplished throughthe Exchange. Only the other day I
came across a young girl, rendered acripple by a painful accident, and unableto move from her chair, who supportedherself by making pure molasses candy,which is sold in the restaurant attachedto the three rooms of the Exchange.Another instance is found in the Englishlady reduced by misfortune to poverty,who supplies all orders for English plumpudding, aud dresses herself from theproceeds. There are very few womenin the world deprived of the gift ofdoing some one thing well ;
and, whetherit consists of making good ginger-bread,a set of baby clothes, painting a screen,or carving a piano, she can find nn op-portunity to make profitable use of it
here.
—
Letter in Chicago Inter-Ocean.
Borrow In;:.
/> <ir fiirla—Let me entreat you nevoito forma habit of borrowing—borrowingiu season and out of season; liorrowing
dresses and wraps, riblxins and pins,
scissors and thread, dimes and pencils,
until your friends will expect to heatyou say. " Please, may I borrow," eachtime you look info their rooms. Lend-ing is a real kindness, and betokens an
obliging spirit; bnt borrowing showscard s-- management and no proper re-
gard for the rights of others. To besure, it is sornetitlits necessary evenwith the l>est regulated household,wardrobe or work-nax. Still I have a
real regard for those who will dcni them-selves a pi. asure or put off a time ol
enjoyment rather than borrow. But ol
all things. n< r, r ask the loan of clothing !
Some persons are so sensitive that if
they could afford it they would rather
throw away a garment another had wornthan appear in it themselves. Althoughyou may think this foolish, you mustbear in nrnd tliat the garments belongto their friend, and by asking to liorrow
them, yon forcehertochtK.se betweenpunishing herself with complying or
offending you with a denial.
Perhaps the girl readers are not ad-
dicted to this exasperating habit, auddo not need this talk. There is, how-ever, among my acquaintances a maideawho makes h. rself one of my greatest
trials. She aaks for my scarf to wear to
the city . for my shawl when she visits
her aunt, tor my hood when she goesskating. One of my dresses figured at
her cousin's wedding ; one of my neck-ties is seen in her photograph ; she pro-
tects her hands with my mittens, walksdry-shod in my rubbers, and warms her
fingers in my mufi. Yet she is so help-
ful, and sociable, and amiable, and re-
turns so readily and neatly each article
borrowed, that I seldom venture a re-
fusal, especially when I remember that
her wardrobe is scantily funiishe.E Still
I often take myself severely to task for
allowing a girl with si'ch excellent traits
to pass into womanhootl with this disa-
greeable one. So full of the hope that
sho will see this talk, I send it on its
mission, trusting it will help somemaiden to become a more agreeable
woman.—"Aunt 01^' in < uantry Gen-t/t tiian.
A Dare-Oevil oflhe << orgia Mountains.
There are few m^i id < h-orgia, proba-
bly, who have given the officers moretrouble than Jack Phgh, and we doubt
if any one has been more successful in
elmling them. Catch Lini and surround
him as they would, he always managedto slide out from nnd r their thumbs.
Long, lank, lean, end w iry, and possess-
ed of unusual act • tor one of his
build, he has kepi up his dare-devil
car. er with the fearlessness of a border
ruffian. Tugh will fight a circular saw,
and has never been afraid to meet the
liest armed officers, always beiug ready
and on the alert His wife, too, is a
tough customer when^ on her muscle.
Some time ago one liawls said some-
thing to her "about Jack at the hous-,
when she took up a board and with true
Amazonian courage cleaned him com-pl. telv tip, making him bite the dust in
a jiffv. Pugh says he hasn't slept inside
of a 'house in three years. If all his
exploits in evading the law and swindling
the government were dished up in dime-
novel style, it would make the hair of
the average boy stand wildly on end.
Being an illicit distiller of the ardent is
not his onlv reputation. He is said to
lie a clever counterfeiter.—Griffin (Ga.{
.Y< trs.
Simple Tales for Little Children.
1. Here we have an album. It is full
| of pictures for little children -with dirty
I rirjfrem to look ot. Were are two picture*
of papa. This is one of him before hewas married to mamma. He looks like
a two-year-old colt behind a bond of
music.*
H.-re is a picture of papa after
he ha 1 married mamma. Vow he looks
like a government mule hauling a load
of pig iron. See if you can pnt yonrr on the nose and the eyes and the
mouth of each picture. Turn down sleaf when vou come to a pretty picture
you like. The baby is eating bread and
molasses. Let him take the album andlook at the pictures, too.
2. This is a lamp. It is full ot nice,
yellow oil. Can you light tho lamp? If
there ie too much oil pour some of it in
the stove. Mamma will not miss the oil
if you i>our it in the stove, but she maymiss you. A little oil on the carpet is
not a bad thing for the oil, but it is »bad thing for the carpet and yon.
3. Do not make a noise or yon will
wake the policeman. He is sitting onthe doorstep asleep. It is very hard on
him to have to sleep out of doors these
cold nights. There is a bank being
lobbed around the corner and a womanis being killed in the next block. If the
policeman waked up he might find it out
and arrest somebody. Some people be-
lieve this is what policemen are for, but
tlio i>olicenien do not think so.
4. Who is this creatnre with long hair
and a wild eye ? He is a poet. He writes
poems on spring and women's eyes andstrange, unreal things of that kind. Heis aiwavs wishing he was dead, but hewouldn't let anybody kill him if he could
get awav. A mighty good sausage-Btuffer
was spoiled wheu the man became a
poet He wotdd look well standing un-
der a descending pile-driver.
& The girl is at the gate. A youngman is coming down the lane. The girl's
papa is sitting on the lroiit porch Heis very old. He has raised a family of
eleven children. What is the poor old
man thinking about, and why does ha
gaze so intently at his right boot? Maybehe is thinking about raising the youngman who is coming down the lane.
—
Denver Tribune.
The finest railroad station in the
United States is said to be the new oneof the Pennsylvania Campany in Phila-delphia, It stands in the heart of thecity, and is described as a "magnificentspecimen of Gothic architecture."
How Do Tou Keep Yonr Room 1
A look into the chamber of a boy orgirl will give one an idea what kiud of
man or woman he or she will probablybecome. A hoy who keeps his clothes
hung up neatly, or a girl whose room is
clean always, will lie very apt to make asuccessful man or woman. Order andneatness are essential to our comfort as
well as to that of others about us. Aboy who throws down his cap or bootsanywhere will never keep his accountsin shape, will do things in a slovenly,
careless way, and not be long wanted in
any position. A girl who does not makeher bed until after dinner, and sheshould always make it herself rather
'.ban have a servant do it, and throwsher dress or bonnet down in a chair,
will make a poor wife in nine cases out
of ten. If the world could 6ee how agirl keeps her dressing-room, some un-happy marriages would be Baved.—Con-Qregationaliat. »
An exchange has thes^ truthful words
to boys :" The boy who spends an hour
of each evening lounging idly on the
street corners is wasting, in the course
of the year, 365 prescious hours, which,
if applied to study, would familiarize
him with the rudiments of almost anyof the familiar sciences. If, in addition
to spending an hour each evening, hewastes ten cents for a cigar, which 'is
usually the case, this worse than wasted
money would pay for ten of the leading
periodicals of the country. The grati-
fication afforded by the lounge on the
corner and the cigar is not only tempor-
arv but positively hurtfuL You cannot
indulge in them without hurting your-
selves. You acquire idle and wasteful
habits which cling to you with each
succeeding year."
"loo against my Will," murmuredshe sweetlv, a* she fondly leaned onWilliam's arm, as they mesndered to the
theatre.
FARM VOTES.
A xrirBEB of farmer* in Arkansas aro
engaged in the cultivation of figs.
Sjc.vFi.owER seeds fed in small quanti-
ties impart a beautiful gloss to the plum-
age of poultry.
Atim.ks keep U tter in damp, moist• Mars than m dry oues. In tlie latter
ili' y bMMM dry and shriveled. Iu the
6 rmer plump iu:d juicy.
In 1SS1 the acreage of cereals in Man-itoba was: Wheat, 3,4o8,47r> bushels ;
yuta, 3, 52 1,728 bushels; barley, 080,000ti-h.K Average per acre: Wheat,
28 bushels ; oats, 56 bushels ; bark y, 4'J
bushels.
Wild birds are uniform in color. Do-me.-tication causes a lin-akiug up vf ooli t
mid a variety of shape. When au indi-
vidual e< >mmences breeding to a standard
by selection, he secures uniformitylg:UU.
A veterinary writer condemns highmangers for horses, claiming that theyirritate the throat and create a tendencyto iu'avt s. He says the manger should
hfl on a tevd with the feet, as that b m•i< rdance with nature.
The weight of hen's egsrs ranges from1 5 to _ 1 rmnnf per dozen. A weight < 1
JJ .unees may titkrti as a fair av.-r-
•ig.- f >r giHhi sized eggs, although a
weight of ueaily four ounces Ls not un-known for single specimens of eggs.
It is the opinion of many that a fowlI itti-:icd quickly will moke a fur more|tiiey and toothsome meal than a chick.
Due thing is certain, a three-year-oldfowl will make much l>etter hroth for aninvalid than a six-munths' chicken.
Or fiO.OOO.nOO acres dev. t d to thegrowing of hops in this country, O.twe-r.ii '.unity, N. Y., had 7,570 acres, Oueidn' .'.ml a:al Madison <<,'>.", making in all
-'M27. The annual value of the crop in
kheee three counties is upwards of 8700.-tK):>.
It is said that Mr. Leopard de llotlis-
child and other Eugli.-h owners of racehorses purpose purchasing A mcrie. in-bred yearlings to race in England. Therepeated victories of the Americans haver .used BngKsh owners to greatly respectthe American breed of horses lor racingpurposer.
Btbr r:ird family that has a homesliould have a few hives of K-es. N.dlt-ing of so littje. cost will yield so large a, 'i "tit. Notlung id nicer and morehealthy thau a dish of honey on the ta-
ble at meal time. It is a luxury and aI uVtstautial which may and should hefound in every farmhouse.Thk largest cottoM-pivducer in the
world is Air. E. Etmhardaoxt, of AIi--: r
sipjii. He had Bt,O00 acres of lane, andraised last seasou lli.iKM) bales of cotton.He presses the oil from his cottonseed, obtaining thirty-live gallons from aton worth 812.25, while the cake sells atfrom 8G to 87 per t >a.
Staple manure is preferable to anyath—1 fertilizer. Xo farmer can afford towa-U« !iis manure. All of it should beHived a:;d ti'iiiz • 1. In many essesfarming would be more profit.d>fe if less
land was cultivated, with higher fertili-
sation One acre highly manured shouldpay better than three but half- manuredIM fa lf-cultivatcd.
Wiiy will grass not grow under ourtrej :' AI. Paul Bert has abown thai
i light hinders the development ofplauts. Plants inclosed in a green glassframe wither and die as though theyWen in darkne ss. AI. liegnard finite
thai plauts specially require the redi ays. If sunlight is deprived of the redrays, the plants soon cease to thrive.
Professor ToaXtCSXB says: "limesHi Mm first manure which a farmer (U :
ally bnyi, and which farming comma-mties demand. Wherever ugrieultureis iaaMcwed throughout the world thelirst lack of the farmer is phosphates.The easiest source of supply is hole s,
and not uutil that lack has ham sup-plied ;n the soil do. s he begin to searchtor KHttnOOieca] manures."When young poultry has been allowv I
to <• m tract the habit of rousting in theI re m no time should he lost in breakingthem of it. Oonfioenient to the p ui try-
house and yard for a day or two will gen-erally effect a cure. Band and finely-sifted cotd ashes, with apitiud of sul-phur to e'ich bushel of toB mfxture, is
the b'St fordust box»-s. This should beput in large boxes and kept out of therain. Whitewash the houses, putting ma gill of crude carlxilic add and a pint ofcommon kerosene oil to each pailfid ofslacked lime.
Danish butter, perfectly worked l<;i:
in ver receiving a particle of salt, provesthat salt so. far as battel is concerned is
not a preservative agent. Xo amount of-alt will preserve butter where properworking has been neglected, neither is
washing of butter at all requisite totfie preserving of butter. Washing saves
working, but the bent butter is madewithout washing. The great object in
working better fade eztaaet the butter-milk, and we tabor to extract the butter-milk beeawe it contains cheesy matter inwhich pot ret tction soon commence*, aid-ing the production of rancidity iu the fat
of the butter.
Piwitt growing is one of the mostpr. Stable industries of Virginia. T'i"
return never fads below fifty dolls rs anicre eveu in seasons of drouth like thepeat one, and sometimes rise as high as
1300 per acre. A lisfht sandy soil is
••ee%i The nut must have plenty of rainiti August in order to reach perfection.There are three grades in mnrket. thestrictly prime, the prime and the me-dium, the latter of which is sold to theretail buyer. The l>est are sent abroador used by makers of the finest gradesof emdy. The peanut candy sold atforty cents a pound is made from thelow grade, tho wholesale of which is
two OSheJ per quart.
Ar.oVfi the marshy borders of theScheldt, in Height m, osiers are exten-sively cultivated ; the rods are for basketv. ... u. «,„ \>arv, the TwUnjrs, tinlately wese made into cords, much inr. quest among fishermen. Of late thesepeelings are sported to England, wherethey are subjected to a process for ex-tracting their palieine, of which thoycontain four to five per cent. This sali-cine is presumed to replace hops inbrewing. The Ara'w cure the tcrtainfever by inhaling the fumes of burningleaves and branches of osiers, and a de-coction of that plant is properly consid-ered efficacious against rheumatism.The refuse of the osiers—that is to savthe peelings—can l>e mnde thus to yieldfour times a greater profit than the rods,
estimating salicine at its current price of85 to $6 per pound.
IUHSEHOI.I) HELPS.
them all the time they are cooking.Thev will t ike abont half an hour.Garnish them with fried parsley, andserve with a tureen of bread sanee.
Short Bread Xo. 2._ One cup of but-
ter, two cups white sugar;put two cups
of flour in a basin, then throw in thebutter and sugar, rubbing it thoroughlyin the flour, then turn ont on the cakeboard and work in all the flour youpossibly can; this takes some time;some nse a very hAtle water ; roll out aninch thick and hike in a large breadpan; bake a light brown.A Nice Strppan Dish. A nice little
supper dish easily mad^ is as follows :
Heat and grease the muffin irons ; take adozed egg*, l.reak an egg in each muffin
ring; pur pepper, salt"aiida lump of
butter on each ; then put in the stove; as
soon as it is alightly browned removewith a folk, dish an 1 send to the table
hot. Egg muffins or shirred eggs you
can call them. It is simple enough, andI believe original.
AIarmai.\di:.— Quinces make the best;
but crab apples or any sjn: apples are
also good. Poor qunices, uufit for other
uses,, can ho washed and cat in small
nteees, coring but not paring them. Al-
low ^hree-quarters of a pound of sugar
and a teacupful of water to a pound of
fruit, and boil slowly two hours, stirring,
uid mashing it fine. Strain through a
solendar, and put in glasses or bowl".
I'each marmalade is niadein the sameway.
,
COeRABD SsAFi r.r -Take two scant
j
abl. sp. oiduls of butter, tw> tablespoou-
:uls of sugar, two of floor, ofBcup of milk,
iud four eggs. Let tl.eisu'>* boil, beat
he flour and butt. : i. ,;. thrr.add to them
Jrmdually boiling milk, coo!; e ght min-ites, and stir often. H at sugar and
»olks of eggs together. Add to the
ooked mixture, and set away to cool.
When cool, lK-at whit.- of , ggS to stiff
froth, ami add to Iheeaai .rd. Bake in
i bntt red pudding dish twenty minutesin moderate oven. Serve immediatelywith cream sauce.
J.emon Peel.—Oneof the nicest flavor-
ings for c u t-rds, stewed rhubarb, pudLings, etc., is made from the brandy mehioh lemon peel is scak. d. A widemouthed bottle sliould always be kept,
j;n which to put all spaie lemon prel;
pew brandy over to cover it and keep it
• uk. d. This is always ready for use.
! toother bottle should be kept for someI >f the spate peel, which shoul I be chop-
|
,>ed very fine, and a little salt put over
t, to be used for forcemeats or meatI lavotittga. Also dry some peel in a co<d
j
>vi u. and nae this, crumbled fine or
rrated, for apples and various other
I things.
Game Soit.—Two rabbits, one-half
pound of lean lamb, two medium-sized
[
'iiions, one pound of lean beef; fried
Ibread ; butter fox frying; pepper, salt
vul two stalks of white celery cut into
inch lengths ; three qnaits of water,
feint tie eat:.,- n atly; cut the lamb au.'l
•nions into small piece?, and fry all in
butter to a light b >wn. Put into a soup-
pot with the beef ; cut into strips and add
a little p pper. Pour on tho water; heat
slowly and btew gently two hours. Takeout the pi. oea andoorec in a bowl; cookthe aoap an hoar longer; siniu, cool,
drop in the celery end simmer ten min-utes. Pour upon fried bread in the
tureen.
Roast H\ri: ob RaMBT.—Have the
bare skinned and wed cleaned, stuff as
you would a fowl with a fore ; meat of
bread crumbs, el • : i 1 fat p»irk, a little
sweet tiiai g. r im, pepper and salt,
iwt moistened with hot water; sew uptho hare with fin.i cotton, tie the legs
closely to lhe body in a kneeling posi-
tion ; lay in the u.ii ping-j
permost, poor t wo cups ui 1
over it ; cover wilhanotbfll pclosely covi r< i, • xeept wh.it with butler and wat;r.marters of unfreely with tfi(
browned ; dn .
with butter until
tho surface. Tali
hot dish aud kemake the gravy,left in the pan,browned flour, stir
currant jel'y and someboil up ; pour a few V]
the hare ; serve the res
Clip the tbrea la andrant jelly around it.
Cam'Ied Oravoi: Vr.r.h.
into quarters lei !-; hwisepulp and put the p eU uand wattr for two .1 1_\ -. ll
out and soak for an hour
GLASS HOI StS.
:i back np-ilin r water
.1 and bake,a you baste
nad 'water, for three-
ooar. Uucover, basteivy nntvl nic ly
v. tli Hour and anointa fine froth appears on• np the hare, put on a
•p < tvered while youStr i; n and skim thatseason, thicken with
. good apoonfal ofi] pea pursley
;
oonralfl of it overt in a gravy boat,scud in with ear-
—Cat the fruit
, take out thedo strong salt
ten take themla cold water,
afterward pat them into spreadMeg ket-
tle with fresh and cold water, and boil
till the beelsare tend r, w h. n they shouldI >•• put on u sieve t i < \: r i i. Afuke a thins\Tiip of a quart of the water in whichthey were boih-d and a p n.ii of sugar,and simrjer the peels in it for half anhour, wlieu they will look clear ;
pourthe peels aud sy rtip i a bowl togetln r
to staud till the n< xt day, when you mustmake as much sv rap a-, will cov» r them,of the proportion of one pint of water to
a pound of siii^ar. boding it ti :l it will
fall from the . spoon in t reads; put thepeels into the syrup, stir half hu hourand take them out, .ir i to on a sieve, and
dries, transfer them to a
i in a warm place. Whchilry. store them for nse. This recipe is
rt8l-fal for any lemon, i I >Bg% or citron
|>eol, and perfectly wholesOBM.
Irllllr *ub>tanrr llrtlrr for rtolld-ln« Purpnin ili.in Sioae.
[Piltaburg DUpatcb.]
Perhaps not on builder or contractor
in ten, if told that the common gradesof glass made at the glass factories in
this city have a crushing strength nearlvfour times as great as that Credited byexperienced engineers to the strongest
quality of granite, would accept thestatement as true. Yet it is a fact, andbeing so, the query as to why glass hasnot received more attention from archi-
tects as a structural material naturallysuggests itself. A reporter had a talk
with several prominent glass manufac-turers on the subject, and in answer to
an interrogatory as to whether blocks of
class could be made in suitable lengthsand sizes and so annealed as to be util-
ized in the construction of a building in
place of 6tone, they (aid it could bedone. Said one of these gentlemen :
•• This question has been considered bymyself u nnmlier of times, and, althoughI do not want to advocate the absolute
abolition of brick and stone, yet in theerection of art galleries, memorial build-
ings, etc , a structure composed of
blocks of glass iu prismatic colors wouldbe a unique, Imailliflll and lasting
structure. With the numerous inven-
tions which have come into use of late
years in connection with the productionof glass, the cost has l>een graduallygoing down, while the quality of the
fabric ia steadily becoming better." One objection which would be raised
to the durability of a glass house, in tholiteral seuse of the words, might be that
the blockB would not take a bind, or ad-
here together with common mortar.
This objection can Ik? readily set aside
by the use of a ginnl cement, and whencompleted the structure wdl stand for
agea, barring extraordinary accidents.
to the c *-t of a glass house, it can be
k. pt down t> > a small percentage abovetin- puce of our cut granite. In build-
ing with stone you have'to pay the stone
iqairtrnB. and when it comes to elaborate
. \ uuples of carving in Coriuthiau pil-
lars, collars, capitals, etc., why the worki- rath. r costly ns eompaiel with g!a.-s,
when the latter cuu be molded into any
shape or form, and the work eeeonv
1 Uahed in much less time. I am con-
rinoed that the time will come when wew dl see such a building erected. Scarcely
a day passes but w hat the sphere of glass
as ail article of use becomes widened.
Iu parts of Germany and on oue hue in
Emjland glass ties "are l>eing used onrailroads, and thus far have given satis-
faction, combining all of the requisites
of wooden tiea with the virtue of l>eing
susceptible to usage at least twenty-five
percent* longer thau wood. Then bythe Pastra process glass articles are nowb tog made for common use which can
be thrown on the floor and will r.-boundlike a robber ball. Progress is also
l>eing made towards rendering glass,
w hich has ever l>een characterized us the
brittle fabric, ductile, and to-day threads
of glass can be made that can he tied in
knots end woven into cloth. Were onedisposed to give play to fancy and fuse
it into fact, a house entirely composedof glass could l>e built with walls androol and flixirs fashioned from melted-and. Carpets of glass could cover the
Boom The most altra wetbete, sitting
on glass chairs or reclining on glass
. ouches, arrayed in glass garment^ eat-
ing and drinking from glass dishes, sucha one could realize that the age of glas.-.
had come. Yet nearly all of this fifty
years ago would have been clBBBOd withthe then iuq>ossible telephone and elec-
tric 1'ght, and this statement would havelikely found its place in the 'Catalogue
Expargatoroa.'
"
Xear-Siglitoiln, «s.
Education may create discomforts aswell as secure great advantages. The(terman nation is threatened with acoliar trouble of the eyes, as a penaltyfor reeding badly printed Uh ks and for
Dhwia method! of study, A careful in-
vestigation of the schools by competentphysicians has revealed the unpleasantfact that near-sightedness is growingcommon, and may become universal.
In children of rive years and under, it
was rarely found ; the vision was quite
perfect. In the lower schools, from fif-
teen to twenty per cent, of the scholarswere effected ; in the higher schools,
from forty to fifty p-r cent. In thetheological department of the University,
seventy per cent, of the students weretroubled ; and in the rue.lierd de partmentthe misfortune was almost universal,
only five per cent, not being thusafiheted.The physicians .ascribe the difficulty
to the practice of holding the books too
near the eyes, and the practice is due in
a large measure to the poor print ofcle ip books.The trouble is increasing in our own
country, and it might b.i wise to have asimilar examination of our «fwn schoolsby skillful physicians, iu order to call
pubhc attention to the evil.— Morgan-town Preas.
as the candy
di.-h to ftni
Trom lh» Detroit Fr«« Pt*m •• Hn.ia*held."]
Sural) Smoked Beef.—Mince it fineand sprinkle it into a salad, or mix italso with potatoes and eggs for a break-fast di*h, or use it with a spoonful of(lour and eggs for an omelette, or heat itby steam through and eat it with a canof warmed-up peas, or a dish of stewedonions and potatoes.
Cftejwe Cajcws.—Turn a quart of milkwith a spoonful of vinegar over the fire ;
drain the whey from the curd ; rub thelatter dry in a cloth ; add ten eggs, wellbeaten, with three quarters of a poundof butter, and the same of sugar ; flavorwith lemon, nutmeg and rose water.Lay some puff-paste in your patty-pans,fill them with the mixture, and bake ina moderate oven.
Roast Piokons.—Wipe them quitedry ; truss them, and season them insidewith pepper and salt, and put a piece ofbutter the size of a walnut in each. Putthem down to a sharp fire, and
The Idol of Hindoo Women.Hind. io girls are taught to think of mar-
riage almost as soon as they can tulk ; in-deed, they are often contracted iu mar-riage at six or seven years ol age, andgo to live with their nnsbands at twelveor thirteen. Before this, at the age offive, Uicy are taught to propltate thegods in order to s cure a good husband,and t licit little minds are distracted Bythe idea ot what a model husband oughtto be. Tin orthodox conception is ahusband likethe god Siva, who was holy,austere, advanced In yeari, (uid faithfuland devoted to one wife, the goddessDoorga. Good little girls revolt at theidea of a husband marrying a secondwife while the first is alive, and will con-sequently confess their anxiety to marrya faithful spouse like Siva, and theylearn from their elders to utter the mostvindictive speeches against their rival
wife. But, tor all that, Krishna is theidol of Hindoo women, nnd he was any-thing hut faithful to one wife. Ho notonly kicked over her milk pans, ranaway with the clothes of the milk-maids,but danced and flirted with other men'swives, eloped with royal damsels, andmarried an infiuite number of beautifulwomen.
Will a Railroad Kver Cross the Sahara.
Some years ago Victor Hugo made anafter-dinner sjieech in relation to thepossible future of Africa, which wa>rklicnleu even by jieople possessed of anintelligent imagination. The groundwhich the great poet took was that, per-
haps many centuries hence, Africa woulddevelop »» civilisation of her own as
wonderful in its way ari any civilization
that has yet existed. Surely, it ir. not
more remarkable that in course of timehighly cultivated race should develo]from negroes than that human beings lie
, rolv««d from the miadrnmana—and th<
latter is a theory almost Universally ac-
cepted at present by the scientific
world. It is not known whether th.
proj-ct in contemplation by the French,of l.uilding a railroad the Sahara,will have nnv effect in hastening therealization of Victor Hugo's dream. Theidea is to construct a road of this kindfrom the Lend- waters of the Niger to
the French possessions in Africa, andthen to form a union with another rail-
road running east from Senegal. Thereare numerous obstacles at present in theway of this project being carried out.
It lias long been cherised by the Frenchnation, however, and there is everyprobability that it will one day be fully
carried out.
Origin or '* Smother Evening."There was once a wicked king who
hired a wicked murderer to smother twolittle princes iu a great big tower. Sothe wicked murderer w.-ut to do hiswork with two fine goose feather pillows.The little princes tried to melt the ironheart of the wicked murderer, but theyhad no fire to put theheurt in, and coulduot do it. and he got readv to finish hisjob. \\ hen he came to them thev weptpiteously, and cried, "Ob do not kdlus Not this evening." ' Then thewicked murderer laughed bitterlv, andsaid. Aha, not this evening? Smotherevening y" And the little princes notknowing what a pun was l>ecause thevwere good Sunday^chooi children, bothcried, "Oh, yes, dear, good, kind man,some other evening." fhen }w langhedloudly again, and repeated, " Smotherevening and in a few minutes theywere both ready for the undertaker, whowas standing at the front door kickinghis toes against the brick wall to keep hisfeet warm and swinging his silver-mounted tape measnri in bis hand.Tlane doweees history repeat itself.
-
A Rev York Preacher.A New York preacher, iu a sermon to
young ladies, repeated a few of thepungent things that had l>een said abouttheir sex. One writer he quoted as theauthor of the disrespectful proverb:" There were only two good women.Oue is .lend and the other was neverfound." The Chinese say that woman'stongue is her sword, and she never lets
it rest. Dr. Payson wrote: "A weddedI man is like a bird with a broken wing.He may flutter, but he never can fly."
Among the Amazonians candidates for
nuptial honors had their hands tied in apaper bag filled with fire ants. If theysurvived the painful ordeal they were
jconsidered fitted for the trials of matri-mony. The following are some of the
pertinent similes employed: "Womanis like the snail because she loves herowu house best; and she is unlike thesnail, who carries all he possesses uponhis back*. She is like an echo, whichspeaks when spoken to, and unlike the
. . ho, which always has the last word.
She is like the town clock, which per-
forms its w»ork regularly, and on time,
and unlike jt because her voice is not
heard all over* the city."
Thk shovel-makers in the United
States manufacture about 12,000 every
week. About ecne-half of themare used at home arad the oth?r half are
shipped abroad, mostly to Panama and
Despotism of Fashion.
Au eminent English writer says thatAmericans enjoy less real liberty, outaia .>
if political rights, than the people ofnny country in Euroi>e. He sayr Wt.
accept our fashions in everything fromEurope in a blind and slavish acqui(
.s .
cence iu marked contrast with our jeal-
ousy of political interference and <fe..,.
potism. Even in politics, he says, thesame disposition i- apparent, for a laud,or independent purty, is impossible,
Germany and France there are manyparties, but in ureat, free America thereis only room lor two. Independence inthinking is rare, and more rarely takesshape in action. The icsthetie crazehasnot developed any American standard ..1
taste. From somewhere comes periodi-cally a dex-ret? in fashions, against whichno American woman dare to rebel.However ill-suited to climate or com-plexion, the style is inexorable. Theconb st is simply as to precedence inacquiescence. No one dares to revilt.
Thus upon the American people 4reforced fashions in dress for men, womenand children, house furnishings, andeven house architecture, often most pre-posterous imd barbarous. The cart-wheel stylo of bonnets occurs as aie<>f tho abominations in dress, aflagrant violation of good taste as well
as of the rights of others ki pullicass. mblages.But somebody must originate t-v •
never-ending novelities. Some ^nhas been tortured somewhere to i ^j^ t
something startling. The woinh r
the decree is accepted so amo •>
ingly. However prep >steroii> • i .i'
there is no remedy. It is this
subservience of Americans to theof fashion which mak»s the bir*j^
growth of any real standard of tai?
js.ssible. Toe • spirit of disco:. t.yit
rebellion must precede every Btfces
revolution. As in China, the inhspirit of obedieuce stands square 1
the way of every effort at progrj
There was a people once who ha.f, in
dr. ss and architecture, a standard wlichhas pass, d unquestioned. It did aotfluctuate at the bidding of milliues or
clothiers. It had a foundation b loa-
the question of dollars and cents. Notlpngmore plainly evidences our singalarbackwardness in some of the higher at-
tributes of civilization than the f«-ct that
we must dress at tho dictation of someimperious and invisible tyrant whoseexact location, tenure of office, or extentof power no one knows. Th. re a r* na-tions yet which have a natiomd co-.tnm'\
Any one who lias ever attended a fall' at
Buda-Pesth has seen men aud womenfrom provinces dr. s^e.i in most grotesqueoutre fashion, but just hs their ancestorshave dressed for agea. The effect is
sti iking, novel and sometimes beautiful.
It is a question whether their never-
changing fashion is more iuimica] to the
growth of correct taste than our ever-
changing styles. Alw.nt as much liberty
and discretion is allowed in one as theother. Th.-y accept their grandparents'clothes because th.-y were the fashion,
and we often do the same thing becausethey will be. The authority is equally
shadowy and doubtful ill both cases. Awoman on the Danube has no more no-
tion "f making a diess to suit her in-
dividual taste and complexion, shape or
stature, differing from her set, than onehere. Th go.id- s- tie le is as ti vjai. l
changeless as Brahma. Here, like theRomans, we naturalize all the g«sli, noBlatter how inconsistent, only stipul»ti.ig
that any new ones shall come in like
terms.— IncUanapoH* Jim runt.
Women for Canada*
Newspapers, like all other embodi-ments of enterprise, can occasionallyindulge in conclusions in predicting thatthe BBaaifeat di stiny of at least one-halfof Canada s population w as to emigrateto the United States. The foundationfill 111 is BSWHI.Imwi i> found in the adviceOf the Marquis of I. .rue. who pressesthe necessity of English women eraf-
gratin.. to Canada, The Oovernor 0en-er.il, like a wise Canadian, suggeststhatsuch emigration should be encouraged.Although English womedlof the easswho would be likely to emigrate of flieir
own free will Would find the FaitedStates a more pTOmiaii gd< st - nation thanCanada, they will undoubtedly in Canadaexert a favorable influence on the popu-
lation, for they will not only keep at
least an eejuaJ number of young menfrom straying South of the St. Lawrence,but they will cause many Am. ricar.i t<>
make excu-es for visiting the Dominion.Canada may not for her own sake beparticularly attractive to Americans, butif ship-loads of marriageable Englishwomen are to laud ther \ young Amer-icans may be depended upon to lie tkere
in force to look at them. Canada never
made a wiser move.— .V. 1*. Jfzrald.
The Nonistown (Ta.) Herald ii a
recent issue r. h ired among others to
the following oases of special iuteffsr.
They are their own commentary. Mr.
Samuel C. Nyce resides at o08 Marshall
street, and holds theresponsible position
of journal clerk in the Penusylvinia
Legislature, nt Harrisburg. While Mr.
Nyce and family were in the country
recently, his l>oy". aged three years, fell
and broke his leg. He recovered, bat a
very troublesome stiffness set in and hecould scarcely use the leg. The injured
iimb was nibbed several times wita St.
Jacobs Oil, nnd the stillness w as so ouchreduced that the b..y was able to use his
leg freelv. Pr. Knipe said it was theuse
of St. Jacobs Od that cured the <iff-
ness. Mr. Nyce himself used the Great
German Remedy for toothache with good
effect, and also for a sprain and pains of
rheumatic nature, and always with gfxxl
effect. Mrs. Nyce also says she thinks
the Od is a splendid thing, and *he
always keeps it on hand.
An olt> darkey who was askedhis experience prayer was answer.1
plied : "Well, sab, some pra'e
sud an' some ain't—'pends on w
axes Ri*. Jest arter de wall, w'omighty hard scratchiu' to* dcbredderu, I 'bsarveddat w onblxde Lord to Ren' one o' Marsofat turkeys fo' d« ole man, derenotice took of de partition ; butpray dat he would sen' de oh- lu
de turkey, de matter was 'tendedfo' sun-up nex' morniu*. dead sart
lis l <|ii ii !• I nknonnA Lowell ( Mass.) paper, so we ol«erve,
cites the case of Mr. P. fL Short, p o-
prietor of the IVlniout Hotel, that t.y,who suffered with rheumatism for set. n-
teen years without finding relief fromany of the numerous remedies employed,until he applied St. Jacobs Od : "Ir*verfound any medicine that produced suchremarkable nnd instantaneous effect as it
did," says Mr. Short. — Lyons (Iu.)Mirror. -
A gilded youth, who had met w ithmisfortunes, entered a fourth -class res-taurant. He there encountered a iraiterwhom he had formerly seen in the luxu-rious establishments which he himselfhad frequented. "What 1 " said thewaiter, "do you dine here, eh-
9"** Well," returned the other, glooznilv,"yon wait here, don't you?" '«T r \atrue, sir," replied the w'aiter, with con-scious dignity; " but I do not eat here."
P. T. Barnum announces that he willemploy all curious specimens of thehuman race, including giants, dwarfs fat
people aud freaks of nature, for his greatshow. Parties interested should write,inclosing photo's, to Barnum, Bailev kHutchinson, 40 Bond street, N. Y.
How fortunate beyond all others is
the man who, in order to adjust himself
to fate, is not required to cast away hiswhole preceding life.
Um cBre.
BOKEBODY'S MoT HER-IX-LAW.
A Tra(«I.T In tin- *n«-< of fmrim. «u<lII..n .1 »tl«-« t».l « llumorou. Ilwknian.A Paris cabman was brought before
the correctional tribunal charged withassault and battery. His account of theaffair, given in all seriousness, is worthreproducing."You see, this is how it came about.
I had had an old lady in my carnage,driving her about for some four hours,
and said I to myself, ' I'm in for a goodtip,' for she wore jewelry and diamondsami all that. Well, and so at the corner
of rue Aboiikir the old lady was getting
out w hen—vlan ! up comes an omnibus,knocks her down and kills my fare deadas a herring. 1 tell you, it'll make youlaugh."The Court—"It is rather ludicrous,
perhaps."Jarvey— " Not yet, but it will be by-'
and-by. Well, and so I jumped dowu ;
a crowd gathered and I gathered with it,
and says I to myself, ' 1 his is all verywell, but who's going to pay me for four
hours?' At that niinute a gentlemanaomea running up — ut'll make youlaugh)—and looks at the corpse audcries :
' Great heaveus, it's my mother-in-law- !' and says I to myself, 'Thatmakes my four hours all safe," and so I
t >ld the gentleman that it was I who badl>eeu driving the old lady. All right ;
we put her into the carriage and t«>oU
her home, and 1 helped him to carry herup stairs, and then I hung round the
room, for says 1 to myself, ' The soii-in-
law'll settle with me, and as he com. s in
for the property he won't be apt to beatluedowu.' Well, aud so be Is-gan to
say, ' How on earth am I going to breakthiB to my w ife when she comes in ?*
and then 1 withdrew into the ante-room,not wishing to i itru.lo the rabjael ofthe fare on him ut that moment. Justthen in comes the s rvant girl scream-ing, 'She'H coming !'— (it'll make yonlaugh)—and stud I to myself, ' This is
all very well, but if they'd pay me I'd
just lis soon K<>.' Still I thought thetime I waited W uid be charged for.
And so then she comes in, his wife does,and when she sees the long faces shescreams out. ' What s the
the matter ? Oh
tl!
mutter ?
it's nia !
nd says,
ig room f?
\i>*r, and:ie—it'll make youlit down along sidend shrieks, • Whyjf you had only seen
Heriu th.
d he f
What'sWhere is she?'' She's on the sofaand she runs in, anI follow him, and s
laugh !—she flops ri^!
of the dead woman, :
it isn't ma at all " I
her husband's face —he didn't come intothe projhTty—aud mine T on i U1Yfour hours. Naturally, Wca .se, as it
wasn't his mother-in-law, he didn't oweme anything."
The Court - "Weil, if he didn't oweyou anything, w by did you insist thathe should pay you ?"
Jarvey—" Well, you see, I wantedhim to pay me for the time after he puthis fahe mother-in-law in my carriage,
and for tho time I had h.-cu waiting at
his house. Thereupon he gets mad andasks me who had told me to wait?Thereupon I tell him that I had lieen
unwilling to ask him for my fare in his
hour of bereavement, Then upon heabuses me, and offers nIT- thirty sous.
Thereupon I ask him what he is givingme— besides, we charge more for acrpse than for a living passenger.
Thereupon he says. • What do I want of
that body hero 2 Take it to the police
station and I'll give you forty sous.'
Th< retljM.il I wouldn't i' d so -'
The Court instructed the prisoner thathe should have cited the complainantbefore the,/'////' </< /"//x, and not to havestruck him, and Bent bin lojaO fur threedavs.
fevering Boilers with Silk.
It is well known that silk is an excel-lent non-conductor of heat, and somerecent experiments in
s. em to indicate that
Reward of Industry.
A poor friendless lad might have beenseen wandering along the streets looking
for employment He presently haltediu front of a butcher shop, and, walkingboldly up to the proprietor, asked for ajob. There was something in the youngman's frank, honest countenance, whichstruck the proprietor favorably,
" Not afraid of hard work !" he nsked." No," respuenled the lad with a
trembling voice. " I have supported mymother and two sisters for live years byhard work."He was put on trial at $5 a week maul-
ing leathery beef, and his sturdy frameand healthy <s institution came in goodplay. Oue day an old lady came in toget some beef, and the proprietor told
him to attend to the customer,"A tenderloin steak, if you phase,"
said she."Here's a cut thatnoholy but the
lirst families get," responded the boysmilingly as he sliced off tour pounds of
tough round and cast it with a heavyhand on the scales, jamming it downwith a quick, dexterous movement, until
the indicator marked six ev. n pounds.Th.'n he snatched it off before the deli-
cate machinery, used to weigh beef, hadtime to recoil.
"Six pounds and a half, madam," hesaid, looking her square in the face withhis .dear blue eves.
The proprietor of the fetal] calk d himin that night, and remarking that he hadwatched his course carefully, added that
as a reward for his quiek, comprehensivegrasp of the business he would raise his
salary to $'•!."> per week. This shows the,
advantage of doing every tiling well, andwhen the boy's mother back in New Jer-sey hears of his success there will be joyin that household. Tonngown starting
out in life should b urn to adapt them-selves to their surroundings and neverlet an opportunity paaa.
—
SoU ItOktTribune.
Timber in Europe*
Some European countrj a are almostas bad off, as far as snppbj >t timber .is
concerned, as is the United States. Re-cording to a French a gricnltural jou.
the oak of Sw. . i and Norway ia
about exhausted, and thev arc oooajto buy their wood in 1 olund. am
b la]
of Bussiiin Fiuh
tn
iy tl
The>f the: herninued
T
incase ltoilcrs iuIn one trial threesize and make wvr<covered with the t
with a floating of
af the thickness .
Germany wouldhat it might pay tothis costly material,boilers of the sameranged in order, onerdinary felt, another.ilk only live-eighthsf the felt, wbdo the
third was 1. ft altogether uncovered.They were all tilled with water having atemperature of Uki decrees Centigrade,and examined nt intervals. After thelapae of three hours it was found thatthe unprotected boiler had lost twelve
degree s of heat, and the other two eachtwo degrees. After a further lapse ofthirty-thr. e hours, the felt-covered boilerhad lost thirteen and a halt degrees, andthat covered with silk only fourteen, bo
that there was no appreciable differencebetw een the protective powers of the silk
and those of a easing of felt nearly twiceits thickness. With regard to the etist
of the material, it is said that in all silk
MHMieeeesnea there arc waste scraps
which it would be difficult or irnpoaaible
to utilize in the trade. These can, it is
asserted, be made up into bands androlls, costing comparatively little, andsold at a profit to the makers and usersof boilers. As to the lasting and wear-ing powers of silk as compared with felt,
nothing is said, and there bus not, ]>er-
hups, been time Ut apply an adequatetest ; but it is, at the least, possible that
in this respect the finer substance maypossess great advantages over the coarseraud cheeper.
The Baggage Act.
A lady writing to the Chicago Tribuwmakes the following confession:
Sitting iu the New York an.l RostouExpress in the old depot at New Haven,a man boarded us and askelif a Mrs. —was on board. An old ladv, directly in
front of me, trembling got up, read thetelegram the man handed, and in greathaste left the car. She stood crying onthe platform, gathering her baggage,when I spied a bttle satchel and um-brella on the seat in front. The carswere in motion, but with officious pri >mpt-ness, the window being open, I chuckedthe two articles out ujiou the platformand leaned back like one who ha- done a
noble deed. Presently a dapper youngman came in and began poking aboutfor his umbrella and saehel. The pas-sengers who had seen my haggngc-uctnever betrayed me, but we all laughed,and some one said the young man hadbetter "telegraph buck to New Haven,an some accident had called a traveler off
the train, and a great deal of baggagewas carried out to her ?"
*' ft4-«-ui..r» Konn.1 and Well."
Hatcher's Station, Ga., March 27, 1876.
It. V. Pierce. M. D.: Dear Sir—My wife,
who had been ill for over two yearn, an.l hadtried many other medicine*, became Hound andwell by lining yonr " Favorite Prescription."My niece wan also, curod bj its use. after neveralphysicians had failed to do her any good.
Tours truly, THOMAS J. METHfIX.
A stock-kaiseb of Texas narrates thathis Chinese cook came into the house in
B perturbed condition and with an odorof serious trouble about him. " Whttiu the world have you been doing,John ? " exclaimed the master, as hemade for the door. " Me catchee labbit,but me let him glo agin. Melbcan lab-bit smellee like hellee. Oh, my gla-cious .'"
pinef Test'
Baltic.provinces, havtthat the forest .
only one-tenth.I are well cared for, and there are now in
that empire about 34.OQO.OOO acres of
I
for.-st (over half of which arc iu Prussia/)valued at alnuit $100,000,000, and pro-
ducingan income annually of m arly S50,-inh),h<m. The g: eat. st effort is made to
)
preserve the. forests of < I. rmjiny an 1 to
Iincrease the for.-st acreage (about, .<»00,-
(MK) being annually expended iu replant-
Iing by the State,) and the imports exceedthe exports by oyer 2. out) tons. There
I are about 43,000^000 acres of forest in
IAustria. Austria, however, has so reck-lessly cut her forests that sh" is obliged
' to buy most of Ik r tinils-r in Itosnia andMontenegro. Servin. it tunania andPortugal have good forest . but the fine
forests of Italy and Spain ar so situatedthat they cannot reach a market wh< Dcut. It would seem that tho. UnitedStates mi^ht profitably follow the exam-ple of Germany and save her forests.
South Australia ia at pr. .-> l.t SUf II i .'.
this work and planting tic s on an ex-tensive scale.
—
Jloti'iu Ololh .
The " Don'fc-foa-JtBOW " Young M m.
Oneof the most conspicuous objectsin certain circles of society at the pres-ent time is the "Don't yon know " youngman. He ranks along with the youthwho carries his coat nu las arm andsmokes cigarctb s on the ba.
Cropping the Hair.At length it npjiears, says an exchange,
that a radical change in the fashion ofarranging woman's greatest glorv, herhair, is really to take place. We hear
jrumors of impending innovation from '
headquarters — in other words, fromParis. It is probable, though, that theywill here lj« simply voices in the air andd ..thing more for aumo time stdl. Firs.t,because a new fashion never gels fairlystarted, with us until it is almost an oldone on the other side (this statementmay sound both unfair and unpleasant,but it is literally exact, nevertheless),and then become the close, prim, de-inure little coiffure o CAnglaisr. whichis now worn, and has l»eeu for the pasttwo years or more, Is exceptionally-ui tod to the small, delicate head andslim face of the average Americanwoman. It is not s>> well suited to thepiquant, irregular-featured "minors" of
I'arisieanes, however. ThereforeI hey htivo begun to adopt a looser, softer,
U s- severe style of coijfunt.The hair wUI, during the whiter, it
seems, lie worn lower on the neck in'.oils, braida, or curls, and in the even-ing, when flowers are added, they willi... mounted in trailing sprays and gar-lands, to fall graealyon the raid **~*,"_
braid% or curls. The latter (the cnrla)are apparently destined again to most
l»eei.'il fav..r. And th iv have been re-
cently a numlH-r of young ladies seen
abroad with their hair cropped short
iike a boy's, and curled in dully rings
ali over the head, after that same fashion»o very much in vogue about ten yearsago.There are faces to winch it is an un-
icu/ai.ly becoming COlffurt, this. Butas fo its being generally beooming, or. .. ii luauiKly *» that is not. assnr. dly.
\ blonde, rath, r small and delicate Stiod
vivacious, with eyes soft, silky hair, andrather a chdd-hke face, j* rhaps. looks
most ehorming with her sunny halo «>f
lusteshg rings, quite a cherub, andprobably ten years yOuhger than she is.
We knew a Polish lady some few
vears ago, with >i pretty, pale, spintu-
elle face, aah-blonue hair, dark-browu
•yes, and a mole on her 1- f t cheek, who[ado ted this coiffure, with a black
•. Ivet and blue ribbon passed across the
•ccasiouallyi and it suited her to
tbaotsjfc perfection. lint then there are'
ta of women who, »iU r they have
made tie- sacrifice of hair for a passing
of fashion, look anything but well with
erop|ie.l an 1 curly beads -in fact, look
quite Uccidcdly the opposite, from well.
Ami it is no small sacrifice for a womanwith a fine suit of hair to have it cut off,
|
. tther. The r. suit should pay very well
to make the performance at all satisfac-
tory. It is <>j:e of those cases in whichthe" fanmortal Shakespeare's counsel to
look before we b ap may be pondered •
with g.jod eflect.
Bwnanos says that when you meet amad dog yon should never argue withhim, unless you are sure of your logic.
It is better to get out of his way; and if
anybody calls you a coward you need|
not call him a fool—everybody knowsthat.
A REGULAR CIRCUS.
lit.. npntchu it* tu>f> ia k hc.ul.j «*u.)
A STANDARD REMEDYIN MANY HOMES.
t- Couch*. * olfla. Croup. Ilrunrhtlia »u.l .11
otl*-r »Si llu .Mi I I.I i >uuiiilvii.'U tod ativiiv bvT. »ll .•u.i»i>ttr.tj«ju.
IN CONSUMPTIVE CASES" xth
.*•:...<•*
.i.-flve" peribrarsiaM »r«
iter ID-
AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL.
IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM.
J. H. HARRIS &. CO., Proprietore,. IM Ml l II. O.
FOR SALE Br ALL DRUGGISTS.
NTS '>htw< Ik. M»lf an.l Fern
I!
OPIUM AND LIQUOR- ^iflVi^.a and wholly
uicli uAb-l.l fur|.n-|...r.
ri, i-kok: LKWIP, »Utrr»
MRS.LYDlAE. PINXHAfri, OF LYNN, MASS.,
LYDIA E. PINKHAtVTSVEGETABLE COMPOUND.
< if street can.niormi.p he gn'• This is a flu.-
His Ift^t mltitati
oh Third str.-i t jn~
Ioh broker to " h'i;
don't von know."
platformsum in the
it
'' n
lit is t.
veryHe I
It mattersdon't von
the .-licet
mod even-d< ram
ii and tells
Wabash;tint wherelow" c-oe.ihe po< -
^, his
witli him. fie beams down ttpoa his
partner tit tho ball and us bo places hisiirm ground the bntterfly's waist, re-
marks: "I'm very fond of waltzing,
don't yon know.-
' Be bows gracwmidjto his friend in the jh w behind braafter service is over on Sunday an.)
thinks " the sermon was father to. lions,
(lou*t yon know." When his fond our. nt.-
conclude it is about t!in«- he honors s. .'i
ety and some millionaire's danghter "by
getting married he broaches the matterto the girl in question by informing herthat "I love you, don't yon know.
"
Everybody knows him by his "don'tyO0 know," and those who are sensible
of the ludicrous, as well us ridiculous,have his expression for a by-word ati.l
get lots of fun ..ut of him. But he is
oblivious to it all. • He .h ems bis phrase,
very neat and very faahkmabkl nixi
would not <lr-.p it " for the world, .Ion t.
you know." So lie dools l is <-tlt.-h..i-
backed rIov.s, twirls his natty little
I cane, and starts out everyday to see what.
z in all th<« worldhat allures the average Ih.v ainl do-
iKhts people genera 1 !)', il "is a wellruinuire.1 ani thoroughly .-.pilpT^
• i - um. The. blldreiiot'a city orlewn. in to kii'.w of in coinintft.v a kindf intuition, and prepare. 6< crdinnly.l he pennies, bJuerto dmpiK.I intohe mtoloniy-beai w ith MoaetaitaV.us riijiitarity, are n<.w fitithfully .11-
! int. i mi !:'••< -p. t In the'!..r • .Mi.-r f.r p"' s ' ''•*' and
ieuL oM pap. r. etc- da buU-'untiHl lervfce in the way of ur:nirheami.tint ofan adraiMjon fee. But• >r aH that, we Trf-lieve fully In the.mjierly colidurte.l circus a* a meansifamusement and diversion, an.l aroinppy to state the cratifyinz fa«-» that
rets—or ratl.'-r it's !>•'• pri. I rs
tie-
thumid employi
pro-cx|icriuicntally
licve in ST. JACOM Oil., the o r. :it
l'uin Reliever 01" the age. IIlh. V. T.Bumuin'sGrea;. -tsliowon Karth andCoup's Monster Miowran be taken aa• rjdesl caaaji The I. rmer *uy> :
" Welake great pleasure in nntimr that St.
Jai oos *-'Jh is in ttce t y many nnirur-tl'tsnow Fmragud with ?.T. Uar'niim's Greatert
. ..n I-irt:i. uir.'. d with the Great Li nd nfir.'as, Sanger's Royal llritis-h Menaprie and thoI utcrnatioua! Allied Shows. Fr> units happy effect
upon those w bo have oeea.*ion to employ il, wohave no hesitation in pronouncing Br. Jaiobsi ii u tho best liniment which has ever beeaI
i i tbtto our notice. It is Wonderfully tfliea-
rious ui »uloluinic is.ia.
(signed) Rai'.si m, Tt ..tt.F.v A TTt Tciiiv'ov.*'XmIVm Agent ©ifCoup's ItouaerSlxow s..y^-.
"In rases Of rheumaii-m or compUtnts of thatkind ourartisls know h.ov to eiiretheruseive v. ry
far all thote I'ot..0.1 Toinplalot* and WfikmHrmanin toourbc.t IVmal.- population.
It will curt entirely tho worn form of limale Com-
rlalr.ti. alloT»rlantronl,Irii,Inriiinim»t!.)ij und rkmtloa, rallbUT and Iiij-plareruciit*. aoJtlie eonBeqneni
Spinal Weakness, and Is partk-Jarly aila^cd to ths
(aanpe of Ufa.
It will disMlre and erpcl tumors from lhe uterus la
an eaily sta|» >>f dtvriopmrnt. Tli'.- t. n.tenry to can-
cerous humors there ta checked ttry preedly hy *•*
It rmnoTeafalotness, flatulency, d.i.u..ysaU craring
for stimulants, and relleTea weakness of the stomarh.
It cures Hloatlnn. rteadacbies, Kerrons Pr.^t ration,
General Debility, nltreplessness, iJsliresalon and lndi-
pcntl. n. ,
Tbtit feeling of bearing down, faulting pain, weight
and backache, Isalways permanently cured by Its asa.
It will at all times snd BDCV rail clrrumstancss act la
barm'.iiy with the laws that gorern the female systsm.
For the care of Kidney Complaints of cither sex this
Compound Is unsurpassed.
I.VDIA E. riMillAM'" TrtiETABLE COM-rOt'\Dta pr.parod at 23 and SJi Western Arenue,
Lynn.Maas. I'rlre $1- 8lx bottles for $S. SentbymaUIn the form of pUU, also 1 n tbo form of Ion-ages, oar, Ip* of price, $1 per box for either. Krs. Plnkham
freely answers all IrtUrs of inquiry. Bend for pamph-
let. Address as above. J&mfion f '..« Fajtr.
No family should be without I.TI'IA E. I'lKKUAJfa
LIVER TILLS. They cure constipation, bUiousnss*>
and torpidity of the lircr. 55 cents per hex.
fg- Sold by ail Ilrugjciaia. ""wa
1^"^ II you enjq_>' a laugh heartilyI Ja 'J i in s r-.ni a—In * n Saiuiui Tut i.-an.l uih.Si^'.i-^,
Jjt. ! ' - V I- V. >f .l.key;•lhe ...
: i. r. 1- B. Fo .-. U. D.tBaMMtad .
ntent!" free.
Rut if you're fond of lots o' fun.Just t.u tl - I'oliopil. oniFor Mam. l.-iiit.-rn- an- outdone.
?^The Pol>-. in»t.i.:turo-gun'For pholograiiba of nnv one.Ml.HrI.tV II 1 1.' PI B. CO..
boli.la.'. s^n 1 tora.'mk rrzzi.i;
sneedily. Br. Jacobs Oil inn very popular rent,e.iv among our people for BbeumaLicjssnna,AUpjaalont; asihef tangct Itthey won't MitTerniucb.nMr. Frank 1. Frayne aays: "I have suflered
terribly fn>ra rheumutiMii in my right shoulderand i.r*::i,tind at the wime time I had M?vere painsin n.y che-t. Sometime ninee I read yomeUjinc
er about the remarkable cures of
town,>f the
don't
f.
vouB of
Sick »nd bilious headache, and all derange-ments, of stomach and bowela, cured by Dr.Pierco'a " Fellota"'—or aiiti-bilions ^raimles.
23 ceuta a phial. No cheap boxes to allow nat>te
of virtues. By druggists.
•* I didn't call, because when I passedthe house I noticed there was no" liuhtiu tho parlor and I thought you wereont," apologetic illy observed the simple-minded Chicago man who had an ap-pointment with a Cincinnati merchant.•' Never be such a fool as that again,"angrily responded the disappointed porkpacker, "yon ought to have known it
was only one of my gals receiving com-pany."
Yor>"0 men. and middle-aged ones, suffering
from nervous debility and kiudred weaknesses,
^end three cent* for Part VII of Dime Series
Hooks. Ad- !!••!• * W hil's Tijm fnsart Mf.ui-
cal aaaoenwaaa, BnHalo, N. y.
is "going on downknow." He is onethe times and must be recognized \D anysummary of the oddities of hnmanity.The "don't-you-know" young mnn niu-^t
lie heard to be appreciated, and Be i-.
sure to be appreeiatcd, in one way pi
another, when he is hoard. For be is a
character, "don't you know. "
—
PQnn-f.i/h-ania Times.
Do'st thou love life? Then do not s.piander
valuable time, for that is the stuff life is madeof : bnt procure at once a bottle of Dr. Bull's
Cough Syrup for your cough and he cured.
Your druggist keeps it,
There are 4,404,000 head of cattle in
Texas, and their value is estimaUu at$39,640,320.
DIPHTHERIA
!
jaioKvvn im iivvi: iiMHiXT *iii
nfitiTcIy pr«Trnt this ten Ml Skx sm . ai„« will P,^,i, T»ly
ear* oiue cases o-.it of wa. Ii.;. rtattoa Uiat trill sasa
many lirr», «ar.t fr. e by ina.t. Don't .le!:ijr a muuicot.St. Jacobs"o!i, and I thought I would try that riwniii.u u. b«u« ih«n uara. L I^assoa * Co.,remedy. I tell you 1 am mighty glad I did, foraft-r tiMntr one or two U.ttles of that preparation1 fclt no i*in whatever, nnd have bnd none rinsStI am firm believer in ST. JACOBS On., and I wanteverybody in my coinpuny to keep it near them."
l\ve
KHEIMATISM,
DirilTHEKIA,
>KIRAUJIA,
SOKi: THUOAT,
SOKE EVES,
KACEAl HE,
TOOTHACHE.
Ac.
B.'^ton, M.i^»., forrnni ly ii iiic- r, M.,n..-.
APOiWut. $12 a •! ••••
i easily taada. OnatlfCO 4 A2o.ii.jt frs... Adilr^"-. Tl.-i ,t ' >.. Aagaata, Me
l.ir f HMaa, with itnprosDiary FreeThrse-I'ei.l Slamps. Addras
Bitei • Tnt.l^, ' .ii",.i:.lar,
P. i.t lu aiir adtlra"
W< BAaLES K. 1IIKKS, 4t X. IwUnn A»a., Tbila.
^urivalled IU-medy
BIBXS,
SCALDS,
BRUMS,IMI.ES,
INSECT ItlTEf),
FEMALECOMPLAINTS,
as,
$5toS20
OPIUM
<l;t» al t. i - pi.-* w- i: Ii S.', fiaa.I I .-r:\..,» ,t-
i o , I-.,rtl«...|. M.iinr.
n..rpl.in«- lliabit Cursxl la IOo, .•.».!. .» a \<>i>i..i mi Carsjsl.Itn. J. StCMMS, Ix.-banon, uhiu.
AHEATTY'tO'lA NOfllltTES.— MauDlSreni• lioiMarpr.^nts:»flusrr uran^ pi .nufort >-*.f«iur very
halt. is. .rue loural eorurrs, i.wwHni tares tbtee ualsons.lleatlv's marcti!e>H iron frsmes. »ro.i!,tiook. rover, box**,
75 t >^!»7 ill; i it. prk .-».»»mto$lo00;satibfartiou i:tiaraute.'.i ot tnooef irfunde.), after onevear'suv; I'prialar l'ianolorle«. *12'i to ti'i ; cata-logue prVes *-Viotot.*Ki,,t*i.^ar(l pan. fortes of tbe ual-Terse.asia.>iKanJnt<.alify.writa for mnuimoth list of tes-Ua i sis. ii. ., 1 1 . - . i.: . o :: < . \ s
.
•
church, cliapel. pari. r. K.'tO upwarU. Visllo s welcome;fr.'.- .-arTtai:.- in. . is j.
'1
1 - 1 rit,.- 1 . uial..^ue (boll*day e,juit>u) free- A.Uo or call nitonDAN I F.I, K. BEATTY, W Nf.v Jir-et-
riiT-sn ians use Kidney-Wort iu regular jirae-
tice aud i.iououncc ita action perfect.
Whkm painod l>y an onliind w.-rd ornet, ask yonrself, "Have I not done aslmdiv r
T. .. HIATI5CT0V, Oilraarr.—" I have rerolrad prma.mtrsuojfrenioseollric titrac'.." iltir.umraatrrT rtlwaee )
YF.AR sn.1 eTpen»es to SfSBUOmni lr-e. A.idress1". O Ylrkerv. ...tm'-.ns.
On Thirl.- Da.V Trl»l.
The Voltaic Belt Va>., Marshall, Mi. h.. will
send their Electro-Volt .ic Belts an.l .ther
Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to
any person afflicted with Nervous Debility,
Lost Vitality, and kindred troubles, irnaratitee-
ing complete restoration of vigor and manhood.Address as above without delay.P. 8.—Xo risk is incurred, aa tliirty days'
trial is allowed.
N. V.—"A boussbel.lnoceaaitj la my I
JCSTI- D. rt LTOX, tl. D. , Brooklyn, K, T —" rrorlng: Kn . In mv huma '*
SAHI T.h B. JAntS. Schencctadfny family. "
luelftoboaBSccuity in my bums."
i,—POND'S EXTRACT is sold only inbottles with the name blown In thoglaaa.
C ti" It is unaafe to use other articles with oar
directions. Insist on having POSD'a EXTRACT.Rtfuso ail imitations and substitutes.
Prne Con Livrn On. made from Feleeted
livers, on the soa-ehore, by Caswell, Hazard «fc
Co., New York. It is absolutely pint; and sweet.
Patients who have ouee tal.< n it prefer it to all
others. Physicians have d> .'tiled it superior to
aiiv of the other oils in market.
BflEBmVN < AltK<H.I« SH,\ I:
Is the BEST riAI.VK for Cum, llriieH-a, >,'r..-.4, ri.^frs,
halt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Haii'l*. Chilhlalria, Coras,aod all kluds of Skin Kru|.ttonM, Kreckl.* ;.n-l Pimples.Get HENKT'P CARBOLIC S4LVE, u all others are
counterfeits. Priee 2-". eeuij..
Qt'AI.ITY UNIFORM.Prices, 5()c, Sl.OO, S1.7S
st all rsspsctablo Druggists.
Prepared by POND'S EXTRACT CO.,U 'Wen Fourteeatb Street. New York.
P[NTS WANTED FOR THE
$7771L \ .lilt Brim, OBl1.>i!«cr»i"/^ i J.^i.i i » an .rC o I)
a.'"'."^ Write frr C«-«io«ue larr.le1CAN WATCH CO
uid Mckle. Cbaias, As.to te examined.sta a :m aa amib-
I'lTTllUUOII.PA.
.lie..*-. Bl.KIt.M^ ,.
!
I'nraona' Pll r« liveBlood, and will completeljentire sistcm in three mrlntbs. Anv person
w RiHelmnco the blood tn th*
3 whowill tukaone pill each nicbt from 1 to 12 works may berestored to sound health, if siieh a thing bo preafble.Sold e»enwhi re or a. nt by n.ail for 8 letter st«
I. 8. JOHNSON A CO., Ilonton, Mformerly llnuiror, !>le.
CRN rM WAMTEIIBn
HISTORYo?™eWORLD ftTJWS
iii.i Ilible^. Priees reduced ,\1j
.1 i'ubl.»hi.i^ Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Aaeoieers. C»talorae free. Aesrsast
Ore*. W.,t Onn Wnrtt. •*t?l,P>«rt»i. T*a
Krabrseing full and autbsalic sceouais of t.u; ustioael ancient aod medera ttta. «, and Including a history sflbs rise aud fail of the Oraek and Roman Km pi res, lbsmiddle ages, the crusades, ths feudal system, the refor-m*tion, toe diacoreiy and settlemaat of tbe >'sw World,etc., sic.
It contains S73f.ne hiAtrr cal sngrATiags, and ia tberooet eonjpUL Hiatory of the World trir puMiabed.aeud for apeclmea pasresai.d ex.ra terns to Agcats.
Addle.a JfATioaat. Pc»i.i.hino Co., Pbiisdelphia, Pa.~
It I I I I ItVl>lt. (iREi;> S *>XY*3KrTATEDIs tbe best remedy for Dyepepsia, Blliomnew, Mulsria,
Indigestion and Dieeases af tbe Bleeat, Kidney, l.n.r,
Bkin, etc
I>CRNO»8 CATARRH stM KPenres ali afTecttousel the
mocuous membrane of the bc-ul and thu-st.
DR. HOTTS LIVEB PII.I^ aro tbe beat OM
SSIV- W3T *A8TK let mm. •* «*4.1' *ad. . Laiuriaa. p.'jiucl.. Se*m|
IT | S «r • t>**.T rrvwu. «f Sale aa Saw-Z- ~Z 'SfA'A •» •• THICK fc> . ^^Rr^oTHl^ aa<
MriGOSATS.I,. HA!*, aa.aaar. o.« • aa huaib-.ri.<.T.j ." 0*" Spaa. .A a.n-,.,, aklaS La, MVIR TIT»AI1AI1, Saa.loMt SIX CSJvrs u Or. J. ..OMZA-
GREEN CORN PACKERS ; ;i,,' u ;,..
r
V»a.Ac It I ne. Tw.. thr.iwand mni |*r day. Write for
VOUIatT BAKKEIt, l ore r-l., rrrtiand, Me.cssdeircul
VnilalP MCBI ,; I'•• • .1 learn Telegespby ia
lUUIlll IflCri . t!. t I>...-• tain >/ a sllo-
atioo, address VALKXTI.NK I I:...'., Jan eaTille, Wis.
Price lisotaJ| Surs relief spMsajswa
KIDDER 8 PASTILLE"™
Chariest -iwa. Mail
I . 1 lu.. «» Oue. -Ha.
KgmmmCOUGHSIfRUP
»>| J / J a r»r«k m your own iu*t. Trims snd »o uoiai•„ t »' t free. Add tin H. H*m ktt A Co., Portland, Me,
"PRSCESlZO.-NSf^, TtiiJ N.Y..'inir»rr S**lnx M»clilt>rl*
' ibe U:~i, cv.t msxle— a«wa t**t, run*e«ij, tixt b^tteosnc, quiet* durable,
im'plc, ron%enietii, siod powerfuLWarm Tittd A lKora. 8*mt ajarwbi-re oa6 dav- trial. Paw if § P1*'*'**-CMmM of ihli modrt m»rbia«hsve Nru «*j:d. Ask forcirr*. »ii u4tMtitTHMiiala. Istrw itrtctr* toclnl**. Mo
pi l<> trr us. ThuuBaotls do rverj rear, and tbaak oa*r :be HO to #ttO uvedl In boytog dtreet. Cut tbtoct.'. «od whrn Toq ourate a"
PENSIONS.ARE PAID erere ...tdierd cabled by aeeideaj„r ntharaisa. A tt.HMI f any kind, loss sf
Dnirr.lMorrjr, I; I I"Tt'KK. ' I LutllifbtlSiseasss ofLanna ar \ aricoae Seta* fire apension. Cader nt« law tbouAAnds sra est*
tilled to aa iacr«a»e of pea.ion. W idows. or-I.hans and dsp^o i..ut fathers or mothers elsoidierieetsprnai.u. ."tod» stamps for copyl'-..Mon snd If. untT Aola. Address
P, H. Fitzgerald 4 Co., ^™ kA«tD,5«
! l,,.nai.o!.A. In.i. TleTsr Io Ind. Ilank'ng Co.'. IT., t ( catral Baak.bttabsf laiiir—
a fri'nd need a Sewlnl Machine be
A»l A Co.. tl Third A»..CLicag,.UA
WfiNTED-»Obs»«»«world: "
Address .lu) it. on. ok, I
atf A MOMTH—" ^Crg^lcleiTlith rVgtear^g
IMPROVEMENTS—HEW STYLES-MEW CATALOGUE.
THE MASON 6l HAMLIN ORGAN CO.Wbo.e cabiust or parlor ergans hare won aieaasT aoseas at srsasT oira of the oaiat wosi.b's tSDOSTaiAL r xaistnossfor sossTcax rasas , being the only American orgaas which haee been found worth? of such al any , hare sffeclednoes and eaxATes raA^rtCAtiT tai«a»i.» larao-esKaers In their Organs ia tbe i-aw nil tuan in any similar parlorlines ths firs: introduction, ut this Ustrament I
MMBUasn and sstAiosr eapaenr: also popraieaj i
gjo t3l)j ^ ^ h , , , [lWar<ii. A SI1S»1 .fully desctibtci; and Kuntrating more than I0«armuch information st^.it o, gana generally, wbich will De usefru and nojin-.a*. Address MaJo.v A IfAMLIN UROaB tf>
» si, ISA Wabasb Ave., (
IU . ..... ^'"a -— , ' , „«™ .un,, iu mm j ........ , i ' ,
twenty year.atnee; snd are &ow offering oaoassos Bieasam aa J laai i sB sTTT.cs of isrsoriD «r»i itt. and at L«wea
MAjOJ k H. caicAao.
*
THE FjlCKMAN COURIER-
FRIDAY.
gg*U.Short communications on publicquestions printed—but not responsiblefor semi me cits or expressions of corres-pondents—except where we refuse to givename of author.
Local Items.
Mr. and Mrs. Dr. 0. [I Hubbard left onSaturday last for Florida.
Misses Blanch and Ophelia McQebeeare visiting friends in the city.
Mr. Wm Frent, of Milan. Tenn., spent
several days in the city last week.
Dr. W. T. Plummer snd wife left for
Florida, Thursday morning, to spend the
winter.
• brUiitiH. Mary—Brief.Saturday—Many drunk,. aud one fight.
t Satnrday Nj§kl—CkrtsHaans tree at the
JAN 6. 1882 iEpiscopal church, which the children enjoyed joyously.
Sunday— Chrisloias exercises by theMethodist Sunday School, which were ofthe finest musical selection and arrangement, and regular service at 11 o'clock at
that church.
Munday--\:i fights, all told—that manycases before the city court, and severalmore to hear from.
Monday .V,gnt—Tue scholars and teach-ers or the Baptist Sunday .School pariici-
|
pated in a delightful sociable at the Bap-tist Church.
Tufdjy—No excitement save the nu-merous trial before the city court.
Tuenday Xight—The young men of Hick -
men gave the only fashionable ball of theholidays, which was largely attended by
Miss Ida Adams, of Louisville, Ky., is the beauty and elite of the oityvisiting the family of her brother, MrMm, Adams, of this city.
Dr. Jo Luten, member of the Legisla-
ture, visited Hickman dining Christinas
holidays. He voted against the Atlanta
•proe. Good for Jo.
Mr. F. F. Uholson and family, of Cairo,
111., accompanied by Miss Loula Powell,
of this city, who has been attending
•chool in Cairo, are visiting their father,
Mr. J. West Powell.
There ate 5J Sundays this year.
To the Public!
our customers, and all v
libentlljr jiatrouiz.-d us in tke past,
and raapmtfbily ask all of our old
friend:?, and as many new ones as
will, to call on us when they wantto purchase Dry Good?, Clothing,
Groceries, Hardware, <>r anything;
in our line, and we will guaranteeentire satisfaction in price and aual-
1
ity. We are determined to ki<|>
first-class j; 1-, and will sell a>
cheaj) as any house in the West.
Wishing all a Happy Newwe are,
Respectfully,
J. AM8ERG SONS.jaC-lt
Boots
!
Best Roo's ami cheapest Boots, bestBrngtns mi l eh.- n.e<t El*Og*na at
ja-5 ALEXANDRR ft M \ X w F.l.L S.
Interesting Item*.
week; andsngiag.
A neirro exodus from South Carolina to
itrUii.ii bait begun.
State.
Read our list of aooouoceuirnt* for
couuty offices/
ST THOSE owing FORTL'XE J" CO.,
•Itber by note or account, will please
come forward and settle.
Tbe aid aJjge Mint a greet) cbrist
mas makes a fat church yard is proven!.ct true by the statistics.
The adjourned term of'the Fulfoncounty Court of Claims meets next Mudday. Get your claims realy.
Mr. Mart Ovey, a saloon keeper in
The other days of the week the everyday routine of affairs was resume).
Mr W. T Buckoer and family havedecided to looate at Charleston, Mo., and
I
will remove their carriage shops to that
point. It is a valuable industry, and still
prove of advantage to Charleston. Mr.
.lames Parker and others will con lue* the
business at Buckoer a old shops. Hickman. ,
Gui ""»"'« closes this
The Hi:km<in Lodge, knights of
Honor, Friday night last, elected the fsf.
lowiog ofbeera lo aerva the next twelve
pths:
Dictator—W. L McCutchen.Vioe-Dietator— A. M. bellow.
Ass't-Dictator — Wetarau.
Guide—Jas. C. Wearn.
Chaplain—Thompson.
Treasurer— E. T. Gardner.
. Fin. Reporter— H. C. Becktuan.
Reporter—T. M. French.
Guardian—Geo. Douaherty.
Sentinel—Chas. Kare.her.
Trustees—Chas. Baltter, R. T. Tyler,
and Otto Hertweck.
Mr*. Minor Merri wether, of Mem-
Tlie* AtiHitiu Esrpt»wlflo».
The Atlanta Cotton Exposition, alter -an
I
enthusiastic and successful existence of
We desire to return thanks to i three months, was closed. Merely as an
vhu have SO exhibition it was note worthy, but it had
another and a more important signMcawec
i hub attache 1 to tho exhibits of maclnu-,
ery, agricultural products and such thing*
os go lo make a show for the curious and
to build up trade for energelio advertis
fri. If this were the Hill meaning ff the
Atlanta Kxpo-iliou it would have been
a thing of no more, perhaps of leas initior- i
lance than any other of the huudrelsof]exhibitions that • re male every year in
every proaperom part of the world. But •
in« idit on to Ik* usual loc .1 benefi t s I hatj
follow all soceesaful enterprises of the|
kind, this has had two good readIta, or atj
lea>t il ha* given hop.- of two rettilts thatj
will prove in the time of their tonnes*baldly less than national b!e*sines- Theylit ihese; The undevelopel resources of,
the South have been truthfully and tan-,
gibly ma.le known, so as to qaickea all
kinds of industrial improvement in the
unfortunate region, and ih"re has been an|
interchange of ideas and courtesies by the\
thoughtful men of the North and of the '
" ~! South which certaiulv will tiring sorial
Boots! Shoos! Shoes! » • most likely political be ue tils to bothpat t irs.
The undeveloped res'iurces of theern Slates have heretofore been an un de-
termined possibility in the industrialworld. Between the too general an I to •
enthusiastic representations main bySouthern men and the depreciat i v e de-
scriptions given by Northern tourists andprosp-'ctors it has been an rxeee lianfldifficult mailer for husinass men lo .-n.-er-
tatn j.isi what the outlook i*. The apeet-m-ns of ores, woods and agricultural pro-
ducts at Atlanta have now spoken for
i hemselves.
* \ xouwckn r.* tm.
fou cftuxrr judge.
H,aiithoriifd to announoe Mr
«'i iUSi' l'r* !,*nt Incumbent us a can-
di-ftte J8r the office of Con ol* Judge ofPnlf.n eouuiy, „i u.e ensuing Augustelect loo.
h
*u:boiired to announce Mr. JW. Mart, as a candidate for the office ,.t
County J u ,i ee 0f Ful,OB county, at theensuing An K u,t election.
FOX COUSTY COUB.T CLERK.
ear,
We tre nuthorixed to announce Mr. J.T. Brs»n, as a can.lidHie for the office ofCounty? Court Clerk of Fulton couuty.at tue|ssau i ng August election.
N p ire authorized to announce A. M.Dxliow as a can li late for the office ofI'ouulj Court Clerk. Election Augustuext. T
W e are am tiorized to announce W. P.TsTi. e as a candidate for Clei k of theKuli'H County Court at the ensuing Au-gust tteetion.
m '>tre authorized to announce M IBSHALA. MiDxmikl, as a candidate for Clerk ofthe ^^llon County Court, at the ensuing
_\ugj< election.
ouih-| ", \
FUK ./.l 1 1. nR.
OFFICIAL DIRECTORY.
t. S. OOTtB>Mt>T.
Tresident— Chester A. Artlur.Viee President— DasHd Uavi*.See'y Of M.ite—Tbeo Frelino-I^ivaen.^eerelery Treasury—-Jamee Folger.Secretary of W&r-ll i'.t. Lincoln.Secretary Navy Hunt.Secretary Interior—S. J. Kirkweed.Postmaster General—Timothy O. Ho«C.Attorney Cieueral- Brewster.
•»tatj: «>rtk r.KN.
Governor— I.ulie P. Blackburn.Lt. Governor—J. S. Taiitrell.
Secretary el State—James Blao'<burn.Assist. 8cc. of State—Thos. O. Harris.St.ite And!tor— Kayetto Hewitt.Treasurer—lames W. Tate.Attorney Oeneral—P- W Hardin.Register Land Office— Alpb. Shelden.Bap>. .'uh. Instruction—I. D 1'iokett.
H.Hl; Ptiutet— S. I M. Majo .
J<
anx-aboul the ice
phis, delivered a lecture in Hickman on
Faducth, was shot and dangerously the sutj?.-t of Woman Rights, Thursdaywounded by a young Mr. Allard one day night, Dec. 29tk, to a highly cultured and
V N Owing to the mild weather greattety is being felt in Canada about tl
supply.
The authorities at Washington are taking steps lo prevenl the spread of smallp..x at various Western points.
A phrenelnist, to ascertains the thi'-k-
ness of a man s skull puts a ban 1 on theBute s he i I a« k s and hi in his a£«. A I in oat invariably the person asked clears his throatwith an •ahem' ' and this, reverberatingalong the skull, enables the phrenologistto determine how thick it is.
The Cabinet as it now stands, is; Fret-inghuji sen , secretary of State; FulgT,Secretary of the Treasury; Brewster, At-torney general; Kirk woo l, Secretary ofthe Interior: Liaeola, Secretary of war;Hunt, Secretary of the Navy, and HowePostmaster-General — Pear new men, andthree of the Garfield Cabinet.
COURT OF Al'PKALS.ph Lewis, Chief Justice; Thos. f.
Hargis, Thomas Uiues, and J. P. Pryor,Judges.
< ITY tllllt 1 ALN.
WE DESIKK I < »
1 authorized to announce Mr.v Knruorii as a can iidate for thetiler of Fulion county, at the
u isi election.
uihorized to announce Mr. R.hub, present ineantbesta as afor lUa ottico of Jailor, at the
lugust election.
>( <i: <.! !: MAMMOTH -T< )( K o.
pro|]
(
\\T i r*' nntnorised to announce J. II
I'u if h* a candidate for tho office of As-Eteotion next August.s e s w
last week
.
inlelligeut audience. She is a la ly 0 r,
The Speak er of t he Housa of Rspresen-THE LADIES are respectfully invited one of the best families in ihe South, a tatives is anxious to knee tke public know
that his name is "Reefer," not - Kyfer."being evidently afraij that he in i v besuspected of having German bloo I in hisveins. Mr. Reefer is true to the tradi-tional belief of the Ohio Republicans soleree'y formulate ! <n the phrase, '*D —
n
the Dutch!"
River Impi in tfsifiil[Washington special to lbs Inter-Oceau.]
The friend* of the proposition lo im-
prove the Mississippi river recognize that
the fight to be wage 1 against that measurewill ha fierce anil determined, and art
maklug'arrangemenis accordingly, line
of the difficulties is that people kiio* very
little of the merits of the case, and one of
the first iklttXa to be douu is to educatenot only Congress, but the people aa well.
It is understood that sir. Dunnell will
take eirly occasion to present the fact to
the public in the form of an elaboratelyprepared speech Tears is hit little hopethat the preposition now before the Cora-
K " !
r:1
'
•••'»** "•»'»;•" ! ,:" _A JVC. IB • «»»» " &c CJu., mnke
Mississippi River Comtuiss.oti, leaving,
~ TT.out the word 'Sovees." and lo authorize • "pH^1*/
" ! r *"" lX *nJ r
them to bring in a bill making eppropri- ries, Provisions, &c.
BtieAS to pay for Lmprosentente, will he'
A t AKJ>././ i.'-irt-.r.— Having sold my entire
lock »f diy goods, clothing, boots, shoes.
,sc, it Messrs. Alexander Maxwell, I
hereby beg to commend Idem lo my o'dfrienk au.l patrons as young men every-
way worthy, arid Solicit a continuance ofpatronage to them. JO*. SOUN.
snd, to accomplish this object,
I'L L REDUCTIONS in the price u
a well-know it fit«-t that tve keep th<
i'ittivrj lino of Clothing in the Purchaapderstand rhat vre mean BUSINESS.lining anil "!>low" very bard about outtalking to a conunnniiv of sound sense and judgment, we wYll just••-lam" down a few figures, and you can bet your bottom dollar thai-we
*c to i. take some WONDER,
ery articW in lurjitock. It is]
-t, j:/at SriixUd 'Hid 11, -l
\ 1 v. «• rrr -li ...H- fi icml.^ to
We migjft write seVeral col-j
joods. but as we think we are
'layor— Alcn. A. Faris.City Judge—George Warren.City Attorney—0. H. Wilson.Oily Marshal—1 t >. Barnes.City Clerk— R. K. Millet.t'iiv Treasurer—T. P. fortune.Mark hi master—.1. 0. Harries.
City Tax Collector—It B. Millet.W l. ai fm i-ter— J. O. I'ornes.Sexton— Petes tleorgi*.
Councilmen—Chas. lia'tzer, John W.f'owgill, Jas. W. Curma.ii, T. M. ITrenoU,Otto Hertweck, aod 11. C. Ramage.
Dig :. Bwfeoot Trustees.— II. K. Millet,
li C. Reckmati aud S. V7. Lauderdalo.
Mens Suits; Ovsrssats:Regular
Local I^otices.
amine their stock.
H be excelled.
to call an the "Boys" (A. & M.) and ex- beautiful speaker, and keeps her audience
The quality and price
jnfl
If fliokmsn improves as much in
18*2 ae in 1881 or lfSO, it will be well.
Let the ue w city govcrumc ul have an eyeto this.
The Qatoa
well interested throughout. There are
some very worthy ladies of Hickman whofavor what is known as the "WomanRights, but a lar^e majority earnestly
oppose the movement. We think the.
women will vote whenever a majority of
agreed lo. ThI he proposit ion to i
with all the out rig
will come before <
finite harm with pi
B i' e 1 on t he suhjet
ill: usi classification of
prove the Mississippian I c irrupt jobs that
ngress will do it In-
pie who are not edu-aui who. in eenee-
< ton Seetl Batril !
d for Ci) iking purposes, and preferredlull', for sale ai J. W RO0BR8'.
prici
u$18
1G
KJ cut to $15 UO
;0 cut to 1-J 00
15 00 cut to 12 00
12 50 cut to 10 go
10 00 cut to 7 50
!» 00 cut to 6 "v
»
Rpgular pries, % 1 5 I
X
1icut to § i - 1
1 1
" " 14 00 cut to 1 1 5<i
" " 13 50 cot to 10 U0
" u 13 00 cut to 1100" « 10 odr.it to 7 50
" u 7 00 cut to 5 0(1
IE ABOVE ARE A PEW ITEMS TO SET YOU THINKING.
We want to
the women of the Unite I States earnestlyCity MtQStrel troupe Jesire to vote. At present a majority
failed to perform in Hickman, Wednesday evidently consider il a burden they do j^Toorn, by com* means got a grain in
i
her ear. Physicians were applied lo,
but they did not extract it, aud alvised
C.allatin (Tenn i Examiner: About five
years a»o, while Mr W. P. Jones WltS
living in Kentucky, his little daughter,then three yecrs old, in playing with some
quenee, will be readily 1
uuhearj -uoply becausecompany.
1 to condemn it
t is found iu badAt
."> c Viit, Counter,tl.t Hardware itii Tin ware Si ore
L. W. SCOTT Tl CO.,del* Cliutou Stre-l.
of
night, as advertise!, owing to the lack of not desire to assume.proper hall arrangements. „ j ckwnQ merchBOU who keep pow
Jake ifilvertdoth is announced as a
candidate for jailor. He is a clever mander for sale shout I real Se
t he parents to let it a lone. A few ill
Art. 9, of ago the little girl pi eke 1 the grain of corn
Ihe city ordinances. "Any person selling
nnd we believe would make a (too l officer gun powder lo any child under It', years ' n8°-
He was next strongest man four years ago' of age. without the written consent of
the parent or guardian of suoh child,
shall be fined not less than S I nor morethan ?!>;, for sush offense.' We supposethere has never been a case uuder tkiS
ordinance, but it is law, and if warrant
is obiainel under it, the Sue must be as-
and it. was as sound as when placed
lO Cent Counter!Wonderful variety of Choice Articles, at
• L W. SCOTT a CO.,del'i Clinton ."street.
Hiclcnaaa JIarkete.
and goes in to win this time
COST! COST! COST !
Heavy winter Clothing at «4<ic/ rosf, forf jrty days inly.
JSA ALEXANDERS MAXWELL.Mr Frank Thorn t«s in is announced
asa candidate for re-cieciion to the office 9e «* e d. There have been numerous com-
of jailer. He is as clever as they makethem, accommodating and hespitabie, au 1
will wake a strong race for re-electtju.
BjUkNSSS, S.toof.KRV. &c . ic — FurHarness, Saddlery, and all kinds of repair
work in that line, oall on Thos. J. Kirk-Patrick. S N. White s old stand He is afirst-class workman, and thoroughly re-
liable. ja6
"11 Est" Ruim L's."—We are pled towel
come the Paducah iVeSM to our table again.
This office was destroyed by fire some weeks
since, but il is before us again printed on
bran new type, li is a goo I paper— al-
ways cU tec au i gentlemanly— a correct
reSex of us propritors etiara -i eristics
.
The following ticket was elected Mon-day Ust, lo manage our mauicipal affairs
lor the next IS months:
JU,yor—\. A. Faris..
fliewq'f— at T M frsnck. Chas. Uilti-er, James German, Otto Bertwrielt, U. C.Rentage, Jno. W. Cowgill.
5 and 10 Cent Cigars.A fine selection, just received direct
from New Vork. at
jeO FORTCNE S DRCO STORE.
The Ohio, Mississippi, Misjuuri.
Cumberlan I aud Tennessee rivers have
been falling the past several days, but
the present rainy, damp season bids fair
te change this programme iu a few days.
There is no immediate prospeer of a dam-aging overflow, but the river is at that
high stags which the least change >a the
weather makes it dan gerous at this lime
of the year.
Our new Mayor and Council sre
clever gentlemen, an J each of them have
had ihe benefit of experience by service
in former council*. Wears satisfied they
will manage city finances prudently, aud
give especial attention to the improve-
ment of the streets aud the sanatary
condition of the town. If they they will
do thia and uot bother about too manynew ordinances, they will win the ap-
proval of the people, barring the average
cussing which attach to all Couueila.
Mince nrntH!The finest, at * J. W. ROGERS'.
Alexander & Maxwell is the style
of the new dry goods firm, the successors
plaints about little hoys killing dogs, hogs
chickens, kc, and LaOSS who have autfer-
i ed are casting about for some way lo put' a stop 10 il, and some have hinted at
It will surprise a large number of goodpeople of the nit-ek and humble stripe to
i letstn that the adtui nisi rat .011 of theamiable Itrother Hayes, of (IMo, was oneof ihe rotienest the country ha I everseen. We have pad au inkling of this in
the Siar rmte expose, end the Sherman' invest igat ion. now under full be 1 I way.1 will show li iw one of BrotJter Haves'greatest adestrers and firemost friendscarried on a system of petty larceny i 11
the treasury department.— Chicago News.
A little boy put an end to the Christ-mas frolic of one man at Troy 011 Setttr-
I iy. Th e n. an 1-e f , 1 r- I t * s o 11 ler theprosecuting iU.merch.mia for »HI>t | utl<ie««..r .bun, „„1 ua.l.riouk i.l.»»such children. As the law is probably I'some fun with a crowd of little fellows
known ta but few, we thought it well lo .w1"' were P>PP in *" crac.ers, when one ofIhe party exploded a cracker in too close
J
proximity iu his face. The man gathered' the boy around ihe peek aud attempted to
choke him, but the little fellow was loo'
{iiick for him, and pulling eat a knife, he
|
indicted a terrible gash uu the inau's
,
'high.
Cleveland. Ohio, is ahead of all the• cities in electric ll I u mi ri ai liu . A mast-til) feet high has been erected in the pub-
jlie .•juare. supplied with four electriclights, having an ill umiuai 1 n g power of4" UOJ eastStoe. This will ligm au areahalf a mile iu diaiueier. Tins is the onlyway to get llie full effect of the electriclight es a public illuminator. The shad-
'
ows from awnings and ot ker obs'aoles iniow ligliis aie very deep Much e x perineetatt— aad reaJJnetwsenl are necessary .
to make ihe electric light a first-class
publish it.
JUDICIOUS ADVERTISING
Creates many a new business,
Rescues many a lost business,
Revives many a tltill business,
Enlarges many an old business,
Saves many a failing business,
Pit -erves many a large business,
And seeuressuooesa in any business.
i i i_ i i
For COUNTY JvtSI — Id this issue
we announce Judge H. C. Bailey and Eso
Jas. W. Mayes as candidates for the office
of County Judge at ihe ensuing August
election Judge II. C. Ilailey is the prss-
ettt incumbeut, and has made an ellicient.
pains-taking, correct officer. The county
business is kept in business shape which,
together with the fan thai be is a good
electioneerer, will make him for ni lable
for a re-election. E-q. Mayes is an old
and highly esteemed citixen, has served
the people of this county for -'il years as
a Justice of the Peace, and. therefore, has I
by I leem when re-ulvtng to go. profit by, 1 , t r«_„ 1 the trip, we have no manner of doubt —large experience tn the duties of l.ounty P '
Judge. We hear it that slated that dur-
ing the 31 yeara service as a Magistrate
never was a single judgment rendered by
him reversed by the higher courts. This
is certainly a good record. We wish each
caudidate well.
Corn— Hickman buyers are paying <i~c:
on the river bank tii.i cash.
CoTTua— No receipts.
Eons— Eggs will reaiily bring '20 ceuts,
and some families are paying "J'ic.
Cuti-KlcNs -lYaKLYs- I't.i keiis brisk at
$J isj a dozen. Turkeys .Vjc to 7"ic.
li'lmr articles of prasieMC slaud as fd-
lows.-
MEVT.S — Perk S to 7c. Hogs on fool
•j lo -ijc.
PBOAN9—Will find ready sale at from
7c to 8c.
FURS-IIUiES—Coou. 30aoOcts
20a-M cents.
m:kd (mitd.n- ;: i5.
(oriON BBBU—$12.
IRISH POTS I IBS —Hickmanp iy ?l '!') per bushel.
DRIED K.il'IT — Dne 1 fruit in
mand: and prune app'.es will readily bring
6 to BfC; and peaehes 0 to 10c.
PBATHBRS—40e prime, live goose.
HIDES—Oreeu, o to o'c, dry tliut, 10 to
Id-; dry salt, 8 to 1-'.:.
MK\TS—Clear sides, 15-: haras, 15c.
Miuk,
buyer*
1
Attention!If v»u are hungry au-l want lo eal, go
to A M. BMO II .V | CO 3 and get Kraut,Piokek Bogs-feet, Beef- tongues, Sausage,llernsgs, Urie I Reef, Cheese, aud a fullline of Caune 1 Qoods.
Blection jN"otice!An election will be held a: the City
Halt, in the City of Hiekman. Ky.. onMondiy, tke 2ad .lay of J muary.to eleel a Mayor and eix Councilmeu toserve fir the year 1 s •<•.».
By order of the I'ouneil.
R. E. Mililt, C C.
25cts Lower than the Lowest.I hare no clerk expeusss— no store rcn I
—and pay cash for ail my l.roceries, and,'•• i ef'ere can sell as eheeo as the cheap*
est. Best 'm i i I- "i Wittenberg and Eone>'ar Flour, 'i't cenls ckeaper t ban the low-est. JOHN WIT! I SO.
I % 1 ' f I
BAlfiAINS! BARGAINS I
1 1
rE MEAN Jl rs T EX. \ ( TL \
CLEAX OUT i
co-
ll'//. 1 T W E 8A Vot oi g""ds, and
-H^M H* K 3K' Jl
HEM EMil Ell, THIS
SLAUGHTER SALE
\ Y S.
toiMv ommu._ i
Couniy Judge— H. C. Bailey.County Clerk.—A M. Debow.Sheriff— W. C.Johnson.i'.i .it Ci 'iit t let k— T. M. French.Assessor— Jas. Cooper.County Attorney— A. D. Kingman.failer—Frank Thnmasenn.Master Tommissi .ner— II. C. Bailey.i ' u:,iy Smvi'jur- Robert McCounel.Coi oner—Circtnt Judgr—Jaesei Campbell.Commonwealth s Atterney— C. Thomas.
€OI .M l COCXtTS.
Fulton County Court— H. C Bailey,
ledge, held every I'd Monday in eachmonth.
Fulton Connty Quarterly Court— H. C.
BailsJ, judge, held 4th Monday in Jan-uary, Apni, July and October.
XI a IS f BATHS 101 hVS.
1st District— V.'<\ Donatio, 2d Saturdayin March, June, September and Decem-ber. Bsq. HamtuonJ, 1st Saturday in
saine noutl.s.
24 Distri. l— Bet}. Coar, 3rd Salut lay in
March, June, September and December.Eta. , dtb Monday in same mouths.
:ird District— Esq. Reed, P.rd Monday in
March, June, September and December.Esq. Mayes, 4th .Saturday i u same months.
4th District— Est). Dickinson, let Mon-day in March, June, September and De-
oember. Esq. IJayncs, 4th Tuesday in
same months.5th District—Esq. Coax, 1st Wednesday
in March, June, September and December.Esq. 3rd Wednesday iu same011 1 Il8.
(itb District— Esq. Joaes, 4 1 li Wedncs-d.'.vin Uaroh, Jane, September and Dc-einber. Esq. Teos. BraitskmW 2d Wed-nesday in same months.
THE NEW STEWART
I ; SewingManager.
6E& WHA T WE OFFER :
m1 n
ON' account of the warm season,
we arc determined to reduce ourStociof Goods, snd will sell, for
HEAL—90s from wagons, but supplyj &JJVTF />.! }'>' from thw d:Ur, our
generally fillel by home mills.larj of DRY <i' K)DS and
t»ur f-rraerecau depend npsa setting CIXJTHING ree&rdleSe ot OOStabove prices.
delS-4t ./. A itHEWi S'fXS.
1IAEP.I3D.street illuminator.
N'» Ahbilascks —The statement, by NORTON—-MILEs—1)„ tbe •.Mth inst , Mr.Tom Corbeit that backs and ambulance* • B. Norten to Miss Corriuue Miles,had already been hired to meet our jjlori-
1 bath of this county.
RITER—PE A Ri'll A RD—On the 221 inst.,
Mr. C. C Riter to Mist Laura J. I'ear-chari, both of this county.
SEXTON—TAYLOR—On the 2Mth inst.,Mr. IT'. J. Sexton to Miss Rosa Taylor,both of tint county.
T INK BK8LET — DICK — On Christmasday. iu Mississippi county. Mo , at theresidence of the bride's father, Mr. F.
S. Dick, by Esq Bryant. Mr. Jas Tauk-ereley to Miss Nancy Dick.
ously '•' lejrinlaiort at the Jupor up-
on arrival at Atlanta, seems to have been,to say the least, a little previous. Ourrepresentatives, nearly two huu Ired iunumber, were not met at the depot and
; nor were they ableuns at the hotels for
iipanyiugthe party,
es. Iu short, theirptiont, and wiie sup-women and gallantniously knocked intohey will, as slettBed
welcomed by anyou<to find accom modat
]
even the ladies acc.i
much lets themtehdreaaisof gran I rerr«
pert and beautifalmen, were uuceronva cocked hat l:u
A FRESH lot of Fancy Confec-tioneries, vrbieh we wi\\ sell verycltcap.
dek>-St t. AMBWBO SO.VS.
CHOICE new crop of Sugar andMoIfBses, the cheapest aud best in
the town, at
deloot ./- AMBEHO SO.VS.
J. A MB ERG SONS.
i
DRUGS,PATENT
MEDICINES.
PAINTS,
CiLS,
VARNISHES,
DYE-STUFFS, (^,. —
- MACBINi,TOILET
ARTI.LES,
PERFUMERY,
GREATCome one] Cosm
all. "Cheap Joeall ! and give
is dead andus a c
"Tit..-
What boys? Whv I)i<-k A lexanderanil IIt)\v:inl If. Maxwell kre doingbusiness at the old Sohm stand, and
to Jos. Sohm. These young men. Dick I oOMHttHT invite their t)ld friends
Alexander and Howard Maxwell, nre
clever, capable, and popular, and there arM J ^ee thetu. .More DOIltCare Dot two young men in the rounry teutive bovs never stoodheller liked by the trading public. Their
service as clerks in old established Hick
man houses gives them an extensive
aci|iiaiutancc and an experience andknowledge of goods and trade that will
be of great value aud profit to them as
businessmen. May they enjoy a splen-
did euccess.
bo!
and the nubKs generally to -ti j) in
md at-
und a
eOUOter. Did you ever see their
beat? No, never. They are all the
time on their feet snapping uj>
goods and waiting on estttosaers.
The codden H^a'hs of Owen WMiles, Esq., and his son-in-law, Mr. Jas
|
Murphy, of the Jordae precinct, this
|0rMOW is the time lo get bargains county, last week, was a terrible ebock to
ia Clothing. Hoots and Shoes; also. Dry ,|, e ir acquaintance-, far and near. There.< i- ~. . a u DD/ra e«iuo ul _ i i I
1
have been eight deaths in this immediate
family the past several month
pneumonia. Toe Miles family it U qc ot
the oldest and largest in this county, andclosely identified with our pioneer his-
tory. Owen W. Miles and hie brother.
Dr. O. S. Mites, who died a few weekssince, were always prominent factors in
Goods, at A M UKKO'8 SONS. We intendto reduce our stock and prices in all lines
in order to make room for our new SpringSlock.
fejMi J. AMBERQ SONS.
Tap nyoam is, hy authority, to
uounced in this issue as a candidate for
the office of oounty court clerk. A larce
majority of the people of the county
know Mr. Byiium— he ie a clever, upright
nan; and was once elected circuit court
clerk of this county. Duriue his service
rs clerk he was found competent, accom-
modating and correct, lie ia at present
closely engaged in lustaess, and will not
have the opportunity of canvassing the
county for aome months. Bear in mind
that he is a candidate, and will be uutil
the polls are closed. He is backed
g*1 * I fr.sads.
A» s regular SMftissj of Breckin-
ridge Lo Ige K. of H., Jordan Stat ion, Ky .,
Saturday night, Dec. 17, the following of-
ficers were elected for the ensuing year:
Dictator—W. L Alexander, Jr.
Vice D —31 P Chamners.A «s i D —J. 1 MoSabbReporter—J. tV. llran«ford. Jr.
Fin Reporter— K B l'ralber.
Trees - - A M MeCenstell.Oao—W. B. Kennady.«l>ii.t.-—J. S. Itrourn
liuardian—Sam 1 Trout.»-ntitiel— W. A. Shuck.Med hx.-A. M McConusi:.
rice** Prsttllrfttsssa lor Jatmai j .
1st and I'd, clear or fair, and cold; 3rd
to Otb, cloudy, threatening weather, with
heavy raiu or mow elnrats, according lo
la'lilii le; 6'h lo 7th. clear or fair, andvery cold; Sth to 1 1 1 h. cloudy, ending in
rain or snow fall; I2tk and 13th, clear or
fair; 14th lo ISik, rlondv. and heavy snowor rain fall: l"ib and I Sth. clear or fair,
an 1 cold; P.I h ta '2id, elon Iy tkreatSvtiwgweather, with rain or snow storms; 211lo "Joth. clear or lair: 2">th to V^th. cloudyand threatening weaiher. with heavyi>torms; to SI el, clear or fair, andvery cold, if heavy storms have occurred.
The comparatively warmer days will b»
about ihe 'nh lOtk. l&ttt, 20th, J'li h, andSOth. The comp irat i vely colder days wili
all from *>* about the 1st. 7th, 12th, 17tii, 2 ird and•_".»th.
DIE D.In this county. Dec. 26, 1881, Mr. O. W.
Milks, aged SI years, 1 mouth and 20days. He died iu lull hope of eternal life.
On Dec 27, 1^1, Mr. James K. Muarur,aged 42 years and II months. He w»j in
all the walks of lifo an exemplary chris-tian.
Special ITotices.THAT HACKtSa CO0QH can be so!
quickly cured by Shiloh's Cure. Jno. W.Cowgill, druggist.
CALDWELL'S SCHOOL
GljtLS AM) BOYS.rjs,n£ NEXT SESSION will commence
.Tfoiitla.v. .St-|»t. ft. 1SSI,IN THE GERMAN CHUUCU.
For lame Bark, Side or Chest useloh's Porous Piaster. Price 2S cts.
sale by John W. Cowgill.
CAI'.UIKH CUBED, health and sweetbreath. I'ricc-i) renli. Nasal Injectorfree.. For sale by Jno. W. Cewgill.
Pr.
la l
Aiu,at
•K-iexter•as
I
bates rriTio\:
SOMETHING NEW !
SCW 6KOCEST «
a t:« <.<»<> i>s :
;
xr.w sron:: : i•
> XV 'I AX!!!!
EVE ilYT £1 1X 4; A K \% !
MSjbj I'upils, per month, S3.00 ' respectfully solicits a share of pal
^lyJiale ....
I
a.
ll c
4 005.00
B. C. CALDWELL.Hickman, Ky.
R. sROBERT NoLEN, amioonces to
ihe public ihat he has opened a brannew stock of
FAMILY (3- B O C B ft 1 E 9,
at the Metheny stand, Clinton St., and'fiaije.
Cigars,
J. W. ROGERS,SLEEPS alt kinds of staple and fancy
G R O C E1U E 8an 1 Conrectinneries. Will b" pleased 10see hi" old customers, and will both suitthem in price and quality. Call and seeus. "Ouiek Sales ami Small Profits."Won't be undersold
r
[jaultf
A speciallyCoffees and Sugars.
stand, Clintontakof Toliavcos,
1- OF ALL KINDS,
Cement,<i.
*MESTELBRINK,Groceries.
CROUP. WHO UMNO Cnugh, and Bron-chitis immediately relieved by Shiloh'scure. For sale by Jno. W. Cowgill.
v o I
ndJ I .
r \ce to name all articles, but nof'lhle to show goods,md sec, at the corner of Troycow Avenue, East Hickman, Ky.
iy'
BHILOfl s COUGH and CONSUMPTIONcure in sold hy nson a guarantee. It curesconsumption. Jnu. W. COSfQItL, druggist.
WILL V(»U SCFFBB with Dyspepsiaand Liver i'oinplaii.i ' Shiloh's Vitalizeris guarantee 1 to cure. Cowgill, druggist.
Vmtrm :«« >« *.f»t|»«»n.
Cairo is preparing lo «iv« the Missis-
sippi improve .:ent sclieme a big boomwhen ihe «prin* freshets Met. About
the fiest of March, or aa soon ther-after
aa the stage of water will permit, ft sea-the public all airs of this eection, and going steamer will eo-ne up the Missis-
sippi to Cairo, tak* on a bijr lot 1 of grain
and start for Liverpool direct. The Chi-
si, EE I'LEss NltJHTS mad- miserable byihe terrible cough. Shiloh's cure is theremedy tor you. J W. Cowgill, druggist.
SHILOarS VHALUElt is what "youneed tor consl 1 f it ion. loss of appet ite,dittiness and dyspepsia symptoms Price10 and 2i per bottle. Cowgill, druggist.
Stniyert or Stolen
!
Fioej my fnrm, near Fulton, Ky., on.saturiajr, Dec. 3rd, IS.Sl. one dapple, oriron-fray, H t » K> K lti bands high, and 7yearsslJ, with collar marks 00 shoulders.I will Bay a liberal reward for the returnof said horse, w. T. CARE,
del(} Fulton. Ky.
POWBLl & BKIITIiilU,HICKMAN, KENTUCKY,
UEAI>gl-ARTKRS tOK
GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, FLOUR,11:11., ii.tY.otrs. « «>ti\. Kit v\.
i ll. 1. 0 s; 1 n«s. AcDealers in PKODCCE, SEED AND LINT
COTTON, FABM MA t '11 IN EB VAND I.\il*LE\IEN IS
tOcfr Flour, Meal and Draw kept at our I
Xlill to sell, or exchange lor VMieal orCsrn.Terms CASH, or its equivalent.
£and-ipiaster,aTAI'LE Sk
F:r:t — Sztrems Simplldty.There is absolutely nothing complica-
te 1 need i <> i 1 1 const ruct ion , I fa e 1 h ief ai in!:ing to produce a machine that will,when once put together and adjusted, re-main in working order as long as the uia-ebine lauts.
Second —lurabiliiy.All wearing parts are made of the fin-
est Steel, rase hardened, ami the wear,tbrottj justable bearings, ran he ta-ken .st as may become necessary.
Ihiri-—L:f?ht Running-As a result of its simplicity of construc-
tion, we claim it to be the lightest ruu-Bing Sewing Machine in use.
Fourth—Bea~ty of Esz'gn. and Finish •
In outline and ftaiek it cannot he ex-celled; in oru.ftuieu'.ation, artistic andbeaut iful.
In addition to t h e foregoing, it has thofollowing advantages:
Loose PbUsy.l'»ed for winding buljbitiB. The M(»-
cbioe, during lis use is disconnected bya thumb screw, which dots away withformer necessity of removing the work,or attachment in use at the lime.
Relief Tension.This simple device, in use npnn the
Ni.» STe w au r only, meets a want longfell by (be Sewing Public, nnd gives avery imporluut advantage over competing.Machines.
J4>!B> w. ( on;. Agent,CLINTON STREET, HICKMAN, KY.
Walnut Wanted!Parties having Walnut Logs lo sell, in
small or lurge <>uantiliea, will do well loapply to JAS. 8. COALDER,
Hickman, Ky.
1 pay from918 00 to 925 00 aud measurefrom bark lo bark. de2S-Sm
mch4
I"A X C V.
BOJIDURANl
nk DREWBY
21cw ! New ! ! New 1 1
1
V. 15. C-VSEIlelall Dealer in
Stni^le and Panov
MANHOODHOW LOST, HOW RESTORED
!
J" 41 fo!.IUh—l.
we.e ever recognized as worthy, in t el li -
cent, ami of the very best class of c.ti
tens. Mr. Jaraea Murphy wis also of anold Tennessee ta.uily, and was a man of
rare moral an 1 curisum wvrih. He was,
without doubt, as nearly a true christian wharf ready to load her to the guardswith grain from our elfVa'ors. There is
nothing mean about Chicago, and be r
business men would as soon load* "a sea-
• at St
In tJie Whule -Hilnrv t»r VleillrineN't> peeftaSatSSa ha* esse perrurmeil tnrh mar » -Hi. .in
j
cum, or asalatalassl sassss%aSea>««sMea> as Arm'*.'oi KKv Ckct. kal, thlnh Is isruwalasa1
as ins aesKr-r?if.ly for all ili«ea»r« of Iks tliroat
;'""K ••tiriti.-i ^ries of womlerful core, in all cli-
ssatsa asa ma4s It aalvitraalty kaowa as a safraaslliable agent' to eni|.lny. Agaio«t or.linar) eeMt)
eagO tapers Will please note this flCt.— 11 hi. li ar* lie- for. i nun "r. ..| in,rf ..tioim llior.t-rs
St. Ia>uis Globe- Democrat.
Just let u* know when she tlart« nr.
and ihe will li 11 I a Chicago man on ihe
man as we ever knew. At tin* writingws ars not sufficiently posted as to the
by personal history of the JsoeassJs u> write going steamer at Cairo" as a barg
|more. } Louis.- [Cbioago Inter-Ocsan.
it eetajspaadUjr and «urfly, aU-aya nlifvini; -ulTer-i Hg, an. I <.ft-n saSuta lif" The [ir-it'ctioo i: aft-ir.l«,l)> its timely un.- ia thr.wt au>l eh-nt <ti«or.|er<niakev it an invaluable rsnie.lv to be kejit always o« I
hand laevafy home Ko aersoa eaa afford to beWilli..of it, aai Hi HM> «!,„ have uae.l it nerer will. !
FSSSS tlwir kn iwleaSjs of ita saa>p>Milioti aiel effe.-t*, I
phjatdes* assth- < i'kht rr. ,ok»i. exi.-o*lv«Iy i«.
their pra-tite. an.) rl-ri;vineu r~ om'o.-:nl it. ftl*ahsolately eertala la Its rsiacilisl effects, aui willa'.»..»« .:ur« wh"re riirm am |-wv!,|«.
Foa S*t.i sr »li D&--(.<n>7S.
_ .. « aew - lltl o, of I>r. folver-m« ii ateleliraieil ESMMtjr nn ih* radi si I ur*..f .
i >«a»ToHiLii.£» or Seminal H'eaknees, Involun- <
'*P|^J*»aI L-«.»e., lap..TE*< r. Mental aud Phv.i- ''
cat 'aesnwity, hapetlimonts to Marriag«, etc.: alao, !
J"**l a»nai3t, Ern.ir>t and FiTa, inducaal bjr self- 1
•I «. the world's ! "th f«5!.or •"•»'«»' evtravagaaee, fte.
,„„„ ... ,
T"V «*»brat-d auth -r. in admirable F.Mav. !
Sad lOBgS. It. cl,»r'2*»Slon«tmte«, fr .m a thirty v*.r.- .urrea,ru |;
'',r*
l"**%>">t ""' "larming cooanqoence* of eelf-
""T radically cared; polnttag out a mods ',
" | ,ur, *» <>uc.. aiatple, certain, and effectual, by I
incaiKaf winch evrrv .ufft-rer, no matter what bis !
''""', "* mar t>e. may cure himself ch>apljr, pri-'
radically.m*r •aiv Lactare .hoald be in the hands of every >
youth as, .vpry ll aIi |(l t|ir Unil""eal Sader wal. in a plain enrelop*, to any ad-
tire... taat-paid, ou let-eipt of Six cants or two CHJSt-a;c maoi,.
New Grocery
!
IttegalVa Old St.u..l.\ Ul.o|/l(lM U V
U.ot.o, Street.)
H IbK <Yl A 1 J , l\ Y .
Mrs. E. Scliarfe,I/EAICK I.N
STAPLE AND TANSY C-HOCSP.IES.My Slock is New and Fresh, aud will
be sold at prices that wili be es-pecially attractive to buyers.
all KIKM or »»noi»i t :: BOVattCV.GIVE ME A CJ.LL.'~&n
The Hickman L. and Mf g Co. pay cash: for timber delivered ou their log-way, asI follows:
Poplar, J*00, $7.00 aud $o»).Ked Gum, 95.00.Ash, $t).0O.
Ouk $7.0(».
Parties desiring to deliver timber must•pply lo Superintendent fcr epecificatione&* to lengths wauled, end oih-ir pariicu-
lars. oci.-tf
Ecase-Keapers Emporium[Moulton Street—oa the Hill.]
J. 71. 'I'ho 111 «>*»<> II aV < <»"«».
is head ( nan ers for buying the freshestFamily Groceries. Choice Teas, Can-ned Goods, Oysters, Tobacco, Ci-
gars, Nuts, nndevery thing to
be found in a first class City Grocery.The most certain place to fiud Butler,
Chickens, Bggs, etc.
firaT" All kinds of Country Produce1 bough t aud sold.
i nl"2if J- M. THO.MPSI'IN & CO.
Hickman Saloon
!
C. L. KISTN F.R, Psopsietor.
TJnion City, Tenn.
Keeps in «lpck at all times fresh andchoice Ciocerics, Provisions, Canned andFresh Pruts, &o. Country Produce bought
and kept for s*l<"- nov7
CHOICE FAMILY
~~
ROCERKYMES & MEACHAM
Announce that they have in store a well-
-elee-tc i slock of CHOIt.'K FAMILY GRO-CEBIES, v.hicb they will sell as low as
inv regular bouse. All their goods are
fresh Cay* They nill also pay full map.j
kel value in cash, or goods, for Country i
Produce. Te'ronage respectfully solicit-
' ' - - STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES,
The Culverwall Medhal Co.,
4 1 Ann St.. >*.w York, M. V.:
F»»^3-. Box, 4S">.
R. C. L. KISTN' CR, formerly of Hiek-man, announces that he is now the
owner and proprietor of the Hickman Sa•loon— Heini old aland; and will keep in
stock the finest brands of Iddoers, Cigars,• Liger Beer, &c, &c. Give him a call.
oot7.iil-3in-
J1SES E£05^2:Zf,UUKUA.N. HE5TCCKT.
ri'RFHEVTI.NO
B. S. HH3A & SON,
Tennessee,
Family Grocery.
H. O. JHB6E,(FREN/. SjQLL) STAND.)
All kinds of
Nashville,
IX
*T 1
ustially kept in a first-class house, at bot-
;
lom prices.
FA Ntif OA n t> ' ? DA TES..v/.v- ... IT. PICXr.FS,
CRAXBERh IlOMlJfy, OR1JTS,
ECs JS- enJ O 3L*9ug*r9 CoflTeM* Noaps, ajtc
BrJCV.'ill not be undersold.
m * Will pay fall prioe Pot Uutter, Egi», £e-J
i
THE HICKMAN COURIER,mil* AY BYt rVBLtonCD ETRIIY
hickmas, : •. i
KEyrccsr.
Ornrs—Uelnxe BiiiUinit. Clinton Street.
J k$ Q'Jiit yeieiptprri* Wtitrm Ktntitelty.
George Warren, Editor.
Price or Wnt»«crli»iIon, 82.
FRiDAfTfn": I
• JAN|
'
EddtVills is to have ths branch peoi
trotiery. _
Tb« Kentucky Legislature res'sembled
Urt Tuesday.
Paiscs Victor Bob*i-a»t« ia to tWl
th« United States (Ui year.
Cot., n. S. Ik-Comb, the (treat railroad
u .gnat. Ji.d in Philadelphia, lest Fri-
day.
The « lerkatilp.The Democratic State eonventioa to
nominate a candidate of Clerk of the Court
of A ppeals, raeen in Frankfort Wednee-
day, Hie lltb. Tbe nomination i« equiva
lent to an election. There are 13 can li
dales, and the Bounties have expressed
their choice as follows
Hewitt, '•?». Wolford. °7; Ilenry. M(taines. .".OJ; Voore B2j Davis •*! Jones.
4S: Poage, UU, Bell, 14; Mo"'f»r*. 17;
Revill, 13; Ashton. x: Norvell. Ml Turner,
10; Darneal, 6; De.ha, <«;Taylor. 5.
This will be the vote on the Irei ballot,
except ihore are thirteen counties and
the city or Louisville w bieh expressed no
choice, and no one can tell bow '.be tote
will be cast. Some of tbe candidates
hold 2nd and 3rd '-TltUutlfr* %ni *r,er
the 1st ballot there ie ne tellinc
turn affaire may take. At present tbe
race appears to i>e between Wolford.
H-nry, Hewitt. Poor* and Qainee. Hur
rah for Poore.
uiak, i
all perStates5«i ales,
euormoirerj i h i i
tor thewalls of
ttll'l
Tt.i
40,01 KStale
Tile "i«»a nl
The new road law for tkeeountiee of
HL'kman and Fulton, which will here-
after be knowu as the L«i« D roaJ , 'w -
we think wise and good it'** main P ro"
visions We are not adviaed » l <> >*
details, end, of course, itsa*aci» n,\v l» r8»
ly depends upon the nature of the details:
let. Tbe law divides tia county into
road precinets; and kAa^ejacial road sur-
veyors in each.
2d. It provide* an advalorera tax of noi
less than 5 «or mere than 10 eents on tbe
$100 laxaVte property of the county, to be
levied, collected, and set apart as a special
Thk stnall pox scare ie rapidly growing,Jroad ux. We are not certain, bat ihink
and the dieeaee reraaine unchecked. The.it provides that, the road tax collected
larger cities are suffering now, but the ia each road precinct shall be used for ihe
towns will soon catch it. e> roads in the district in which collected
Nashville- wants to get rid of the State
penltentary by having it moved from that
city.
Tbs Territory of Alaska ebould be ueed
by tbe United States as a penal colony,
and do away with all tbe State penv'en-
iiaries.- - — asMgO - *$bbi»**-—
Tal Brat work before Congress is to
apportion the number of members to each
State. Kentucky it certain aot to loee,
and may gain one.
{From the Fultcn In.l.v]
For Hie ej e uf Get*. Hai rrii.
EntToa Index:While our Legislature is in session, the
[Hickman Courier conceives the idea of
agitating; Ibe emigration theory, and aug-I gesta that our p. -pis lul l mass eettBgs,Iaud eeud drlejratas to a convention to en -
courage emigration to one Stale. Nowj the Courier man dues not tell us exactly
|what his idea is lie makes rather a ran-
:dom shot at generalities, without commit-
! ting himself to any particular class. Hejleaves the gate open, «o that if atesfleidemand*, he has a chance to dodge. Coses
jnow, friend Warren; come out of thebrush, and tall us when* you stand Doyou want to bring forei z ners, ai! t settlethem down among us here, or wmil I youbring those of our owu country, from theover crowded districts, an t give themhomes in our manufacturing establish-ments, on our farms and jur mine*? lie-
fine your position mure clearly, an 1 let \\n
eee where you eland.If you prefer (he latter, we are tngeib
•r. It the former. I ratber think youmight find some slight opposition to y mrtheory. Hut 1 shall not anticipate, until 1
know where you stand.Yours, Kestc<-k I AN.
If the correspondent of the /aoVz will
use tbe word immigration instead uf mi-gration, he will more accurately repre-sent our position. Dut no matter; weanswer with pleasure: The Coubiebwould welcome wub one band the for-
eigner with bis rich Irish bro^joe. or his
sweet German accent, whilo with the ) treatment which obtains in
other we grasped thoee of our own conn- * ,a,e peni uni iries. ilioy wotry rroui ine 'overcrowJeJ .iistrlcis.'
Wbo is ''Kentuckiau? " From whom arewe, who bonat of being Kentuckiau* an I
Americans, descended' Who were our
forefathers' Who was Lafayette, Steu-
ben, DeKalb an 1 Montgomery'' Thesv
rn*n helped to win the freedom of this
country with their blood, and who now'
would be so selfish aa to denv their chil-
Abulliit Mil- Pen I l»a»l lurlf-i,[Fr -ui th» recr1er-Joori,«!.j
Before any definite disposition | 8 ja^^of Alaska, it would be well for Coisgnaj*;t*j take into consideration the proprisiv-f
e Territory a penal colonyftf
ie convioied of artese iaTerritories »f the UbI^jS-aies would be »a» eJ kuu'al expente. building t0 , t
liiemiariee and provid|n' cunvicte now wi(|,i n i n ppenitentiaries. They w 0tt) ,i
ipiy be required u> pay ihe expeuseofIranaportation of cuovicis to Al\,jH
'
Then the (jovernment would take cb^Esiof i hem under a sysiem which WoullVl/a<ue promotion upon vet jrm and good be
"
b*Si«r, Four or hve cenvict aeitlerassiso.-uld t<9 plained in htlereut parts ofn, 0Territory, each tnuler charge of a comp»„ vof soldiers. The men couid be set to *4rkin the nines, cuttiug down limherfurships and tu-.lding purpossr, in «grioii-tural pursuits, in uiunu&seiuree. T!n s ,»
who serve faithfully for ten years mlgive evidence . it: rm could be failedIn the land permanently. Ihe couv c is
could be In ouiilil under religion 4 intlu-n-cea in Alaska as welt as in the Stass.Thec'.imaie in Souihern Alnska is tenik'-ed by the Japan oceanic current sail v .1
very healhy, nc;M ling to those wiiomost exhaustively i n vesiigat e I the nojsct. Through the convict labor lliu^yerument nould noi only pay expe:.-< 3,
have a surplus, and a gi 0 w i uj:
How " Tndo Tnm'!* Cabin ** Came to
be vTrltdi'n.
Mrs. Jnco O. Swiaslielm, in betLook entitled "Half a Centnrjr," Rixestbr, £oUotvin<> ficoorint r>f the orifrin of
"Undo TomV Cabin." Mrs. Swbw-hHrn, frivinp nn woaawt of her first
journey to Ws^hingtoB, na>-s:
"I htui lettcrn t«» tho MOptietot of
tlio Irving Hom*B, vrboro I t'«>k bOstrdL
Hwl oth.-ra to OjI. Bonbon, Heaxy Cluj ,
ami otLor frroat mon, but bo irLomost'int. riaU>\ mo mi.i Dr. Oiuuali»l Baili;r,
editor tA the National lira. Tbe gr^at
wunt of an fuiti-rduverr pnpi r at tlu*
ctijutiil had Iwc-n nuj>plicd by 85 ab-Bcri}>tii)ns to .1 pubUcution fiunl, uiul
Dr. D:iiloj callfd from Cincinnuti bdee
ch ir^-e oi'it, and few Envn ham ki-nt
a chargs witb more care and skfll.
and the £"rti bad just passed tba ordeal
of a frightffal mob, in which he wasconcdiiitorr, unyielding and victorious ;
and he just then gravely anxious
that the Era should do yeoman service
to the cause -which Lad called it into
life.
LACLEDE HOUSErpm> HOCSP. Has BF.BN RflCCMTLT BMLABOED, ItEPITTKI), nF.FrjR^TSHED.j >ind thoroun hi s- 1 eiiovni e I Convenient 10 river nud railroad, and attentive
watch kept; and, altogether one of the best appointed hotels in this section.
n.sy.t 7i» nr. J. IX It \ Kit. Prop'r.
HICKMAN WHARFIJOAT!
W. T. Flusxmer, ]
OFFEHS HIS PKOFESSUtNAL »Klt-viccs to ths citrzerrrsf Hickman ar.d
vicinity.Office—Corner room in Laolc le fT^use
n,cliU
::::::::: J. A. OVERTON & CO,:::::::
NE OF THE SAFEST AND MOST SUBSTANTIAL BOATS ON THE RIVER.Consignments Solicited.
Hair Special and prompt attention Riven to tin »bipsaent of all kinds of Coun-try Produce, Live Stuck, elc. may9-'79
o1 1
——
each year. Tbe convicts cotilu 1 ted by the produces of the soil, ...
1
would not be subjected 10 the.
man
re''4
Tbs reception of the Kentucky Legisla-
tor! and Editors at Atlanta was cool. The
boya bad to shin around for plaees to cat
and sleep, and their arrival was coneider-
eJ of no importance.
Drs's Commercial Agency, from actual
Statistic!, clause! 1881 as a proirerou!
year in tbe United States. In the South
and South- weet, however, the failures are
put down aa largely in exces* of last
year.
Co»oae«»ii*M Joe Blackburn and Gen.
Uurbridge, both of (bis Stafe, are involv-
ed in personal unpleasantness. Black-
burn denounced him as a murderer, for
•ome acts during tbe war, and Oen. Bur-
bridge demands an explanation.
Tnc political exottement ia Tennessee
will be high ibis year, Governor, Con-
gresamen, Legielature and a UnitedStates
Penator to he elected. There is a strong
probability that Senator Harris may be
defeated by a combination of Bepttblicans
and low-tax men.
CoLfMucs is favored with another news-
paper enterprise Tbe Br<ton, published
by Mr. Ed. B. Walker and Mr. Osoar
Home. We don 1 know Mr. Home, but
we hare a high opinion of Mr. Walker"!
journalistic ability, and if be has a good
Horn(e) he kuowa exacly how to blow it
editorially.
Wc tee that there is a bill before tbe
Kentucky Legislature to permit pereous
cbav Bed with high erimes and miedemeaners 10 testify in their own cases. As '.he
law now stands in Kentucky, all persons
are competent wi'h some judicious re
strictions, except those charged with
crime or misdeaeanor.
whose heart is as cold as tin ice aud snow
that draut the brave Moutgjiuery's
3rd. It demand! road service from all1
( , r , a a hora „ MT B{d,t1 Po;Bt t , Sllch
citiiens now subject to road duty, anJm mkQ ^ w- wi„ point yQU ,a oni>
falling to work shall be chhrged up eo
muc'i per day. Alio, tax payers render
ing service, ae require 1 by overseers, al
towed to pay their lax in this way.
4tb. It deecribei tbi character of coun- i
ty roads which shall bo built au 1 main-
tained.
fitb. The law goes into effect from and
after it! passage.
It is estimated that tbe o cents tax will
be ample to keep np tbe county roads in
good condition, though the p«wer is given I
the eounty court to make it ly cents under '
the idea that it will be more costly to,
begin witb.We think ths law good to begin with
and shall have more to say of it when we !
see the law itself.
"Couio out of the brush, and test us
where you stand," eays the correspondent,
and yet fails to write under hi! own
I proper name. We know there is an tin-
Ifortunate sentiment, founded in preju-
dice, shared by some good aud worthy
citizens, against foreigners laastiafj in
our midst. But it is wroun, narrow, con-
ler withtheir moral reformation would .
much accelerated !>y fresh air.
Outside of the econo.-nic fealtitj
sented by atoltslni g the peniuni.
it is a li v ing shame for the law | 1.. .- !
country to permit the no-pay lubr k of
penitentiary facloiics to casus in CO*Ape-j
titiou with tbe honest lubor of htuest I
mechanics. It U ihe custom these days t
for the keepers aud lessees of peisten-j
litries to work the convicts at meehafica] ,
trades, and some of them run lergj fnoj
lories. The Alu.-ka proposition nii**er»
all these DoUt*. It nhould be doue
"Thu rra haul a large circulation,
and lugh liu-rary bbtuding, but Dr.Biiiley wan troubled about the difficulty
v or impossibiUty t>f prociiriiig anti-alaveryh>» [.tales. Mrs, Southwoxth was w-rithig se-
rials for it, and he had hojiod that slie,
a Southern woman with Northern prin-
eiplea, ooald weave into her Btoriea pict-
ures of slsverv- which would call damag-mg attention to it, but in this she hadfoikil.
"Anti-rlaviry tales, anti-slavery talew
was Nvhut the ^'-Kul doctor wutited. Tem-perance li.w.1 its story-writ«r in Arthur.
U only nl>..liti. .ti had a good writer offil'tlon, oil-- *!.•• > , iil<l int.-r.-nt 1111,1 i-.ln
Oats the young. He know of but onepen ill ile to WTito what he wanted, anil
;iln-s ' tlie finances of the Era could in >t
HEUTVVECK, BALTZER & CO.,MANUFACTURERS OF
i
W AHickman, Kentucky.
point
%*/SflSBRsSltBirM 111 %»«il»»S»!.
Girls, stand up! We foci as if »i |onld
like to -::ap you fast to some of lh RC
heavenward lowering tir» Don >"'i
know dial the w»y you beud over as* lilt
Pacwarel and hang your hands likt !he
p»ws 01 11 kangaroo is a disgrace ol this
land of siruiglit arowiinf graml oil lor-tracied, and injurious to our cumiuen I of al! the people 111 the worll our
wustein girls ehould stand flat on theaoles
Tux Kentucky Legislature is trying to
fix np a law to relieve our Stale Supreme
Court. It ia said the docket la so crowd-
ed that I'lmi cases cannot be even reach-
ed for leveral years. The most practi-
cable idea is lo stop appeals on suits
involving less than J-ViO at 'he Circuit
Court. Let Cirouit Court deciaiona be
final on such caaea.
Itlatiop IMeiceon Isanrlnsr.In a recent sermon. Bishop Tierce, of
the Methodist Episcopal Church of theSouth, denounced daneing as tbe silliest
and most nonsensical amusement thatrational beings, so-called, ever engagedin. He aaid that it bad its origin inheathenism, being a past-ime of savages;appealing to ihe lower iustincte of hu-manity, sssd being tbe chosen sport of ihevilest and most imbrute 1 of the humanrace.
Tlie Coldest Place on Earth.[St. toast Oleel PUpau-ii
]
Now that everybody is stadylag themaps to see what an I where Yakoutefc is
1—the place from which came the informa-tion of the loss of the Jeannette—it is ofinterest to know that town hat long beenheld by meteorologists to be liie coldestllace on earth. Vakoiush is sitajtted inNorthwestern SibeKs, on t!i* Liinx river,let Tatltaete eixty -two e> ctj^^ "••ith.itii'ieoue hundreJ and rVwaiy-nine 10
greee, forty-four minutes east, su l is altown nf about ">,O.H)inhabiiatits. It is thecapital of an immense province of ihe
|
same name. The average temperature of
tbe region in winter is thirty-six d*gi >- - 1
below zero. Strictly apeaking, howeverVerkoyansk, on the Yana river, ia theAsiatic pole of col I. the thermometer there
j
going even lower than at FakoeitskThere is a correspondent cold point on
j
the American side of ihe globe, not far
from the Parry Islands.
cjuntry. We want to era licate that -entiment. We want honest, industriouscitizens, no matter from whence theycome. We hope "Kentuckian" under-stands us, and will let tly hn oppoMiiom.
91r Tlldru not a caatetttaite.
Hon. John G. Priest, of St. Louis, re-cently sp*nt an evening with the Boa.Samuel J Til len, un I his coacluaioa is
distinct that Mr. Til Jen will a61 be a can-didate for 1 he demoervtic sosnt oatios for
the presidency in Mr. l'rie*t de-|fool. Don't SOU deny 11! Tii* ohoe«»kei
clarea lha. Mr. Tilden reads everything.,to! 1 j* all about it wlien you purfcaaed
He is aa well posted on what is going on your ^hora, and it's ail ever ihe city,
in the world as the secretary of state. No t'ott kat* }!a bavt basa in saartai liisry
part of the country escapes bit notice, and ever since. Hon t you aupposs Mopl*ho is jutt as woil posted in sjcial matters
|
know about bow lar^e a fool | Hlh a
as polii icai—that is, such as become pub-j
physique like yuurn.' And do you s|pj
ooiunand it. If only he could linageMi-. HtOWe. I had not beard <| her,:
and he explained that she was thej
titer id Livniati BeeehatT. lwassur-jBe i, ;^iid exclaimed :
• A ii:i;i^hter id Lyman Beecher!
n rite aljolitioa storiea. Saul among the
propheta F'• I rvroinded the doctor that I*rnsi-
dflUt Keeeher and Prof. Htowo hadbroken up the theological department•t LsM S-*iainnry by suppresaiuir theauti-slnvcrv agitation nused l>y i'heo-
JeM W«.l t. a Kentucky student, andthrew their iuriuetn-e sgtuiuet disturbing
tlu- Couc relational churches witli tlie
new isnatiei.-'m ; that r^lward H*-echerinvented the " organic Rin-devd," behindwhich eli ir, lies and individuals tookrefuge when called upon to "conieup:•! the help of th« Lord against tlie
mighty." But Dr. BmQcj said be knewin u«T*onallj, and that, despite tlieir
public record, they were at heart anti
E. II. WILSON & CM»
Cotton Fa n
GEN'L COIVIIVEISSION MERCHANTS,No. 73, Carondelet St., NEW ORLEANS.
DK. A~ A. FA lilS,PHASICAN AND SURGEON,
HICKMAN, — _ KBNTDCKTOTFKRS his Prof«sional Service* to
the rii »,,,* of Hickman end vicinity.JsnlO-M
Dr. A. M. PARKER,DENTIST,
[Office in Millet Hlock.JALL opcrotione performed in the roost
arlisuc manner. Special attention giveato the regulation of children* teeth.jnlys- 79
H. A. & R. T. Tyler,Attorneys at Law,
HICKMAN, KENTUCKY,ILL ATTEND TO ALL BUSINESSentrusted to tl,eir care.
>e— M»,i«ii muc».Iev8-'"
Iiiboral Advances made on Consignments.
C. L RANDLE.ATTORNEY AT LAW,
C ollector, Real Estate Agent,HICKMAN, KY.
(ajr W ill attend promptly to all b*sJ-n»s t euirustol him in Souihwesieri*KeniU'-U> and Northwestern I'eanesscc
.- peci a) attention given to the invsstigstion of Land silica, aud the purchase an.,
e ale sf Real Estate. fjanSil
THE OLD RELIABLE!
of their stioe., throw their ahoulderahaek
and «t!t us if they were alive AseHhen -laverv, n/i.l that prtnleneo alone dietat-
just listeu how you talk! slang ii h »d
fi.uu^h, but the ciinperiag. leeuring.
fawnlag lestiessatadiaa »hich rejuires
yoe. t<> skip ihe Uil aud of a word lest it
suaud nut aiil uucult iired, is loo ds?ust !
iiij; for suythiuK' Aud, theu. winttit the
use liohtdiii^ on the street, as if voueori-
deformed, when the who!* liuih i. you:havs a i> iiul>er slue on a numbs- four
lis.
Population of hrtiliirhj.Census bulletin, No. 871, gives the
official figures of the populition of the
several State* asid Territories of the rm-ted States, in 1881:
The population of Kentucky is. .1,649 69 1
In 1*7J it was 1,1121,0] I
ie.you cauyon d j get 01
bS changed for
i In 11 g* 1 1 this wrasassaber ih«i
loves wonaBli
ive
athe shoemaker.' VS lien
11 umber 1 soou. Now, j.
rid hare their
» lU'lll HOT' ll
SSS^ nil I Inn*
>so beat ted it
is 1 fourUs someam; andt! lului,,1 pit ia
1 aai 1 i ,1 -
ialakisig1 nd re
ad tlieir coarse. Mrs. Stowegraphic itory-teUer, bud lieen iu Ken-tucsy, t ikeu in tlie situation and coulddescribe the pacttliar irntitation aa uuoue else) ooold. If ho could only eulis-t
her, the whole family ssonld moft likely I
fullow into tho alji.Uttou nu-is, butthe boost; uouey, yJus, where c^ulil
he reise it 't
" Where there is a will thcrw is a tray,
and it *rss bat » tew months afu>r that
eonversaiiaD vhen l>r. Built-y foirwurdeil
$100 to Mrs. St iwe. a.H a retaining Ie*
f. .r her Mrrioea 10 Inn rananol tlie slsve,
and 1", the .-••«;. t!t. ' Uncle Tom's Cabin.As it progressed hesent her another andthen aiK th r 3KK). W.uj evor money sc
well expended?"
Sale and Livery Stable.
B. Plummcr,KENTUCKY STREET,
KEEl'S constantly on hand for hireand aale
HOUSES, BUGGIES and IIACK8.Thankful for patronage heretofore ex-
tended hiai, be solicits a continuance «f• nine
IncreaseTV all '.Ion eub.Jiv'nle.l •
M*>eFemalesNative .
Foreign"biteCateredChineieIndiansThe pc
(.680,173.. 69.5 IT
1 877,179. 271,451
1"
A » i
and strung, a
talk without
iru.
So » j
1 ti 1 at aul.eri n £use she w
. I * nn 1 uuii i -i*r\ und
>f tbe 1 1 e l States ia
60 1A."> Tsa— white 18,-402.970, colored 6,.
6.^0,7'Ja. The excess of males la 681,867
The people and newspapers bad com-
menced to condemn Judge Cos who pre-
aidei at the Guiteau trial, very severely,
fer allowing the priaoner to ao 0 ,::»•
gousl r tniult the Court, but Judge Cox nowtates that he allowed ths priaoner full
ecope at tbe euggestion of the Iawyere lav
tireit!d. to the end that tie expert! might Count
Kfiif uf k t '* Mllllla.[ Train tho Curi^r-Journal 1
The Adjutant ileneral, in his annualreport to the Governor,, expresses tbsopinion tint our active and efficient Sta'emilitia force can not be kept up withoutlegislative action. Gen. Suckoi* refer-to the provision of the fun lemental lawthat ail persons between tbe ages «f eight-een and forty -five, except those especia I-
ly exempted, belong to tbe militia, and he
TIip l« Hal If r.
Maj. Win. J. bavis, al the lime the CoA-
federscy went Jovrn, Gen. Brsokinri lev's
aljutant general, and chief of •taJ. nowsecretary of the l.ou'sville srhool h ird
and Capt. J. H. lliiigs, formerly assist-
|
aot quartermaster general of Dibrell'l
t briga le, and now a member of the bank-|
ing and milling firm of N. L005 A Co . of
. KussellviMe, con'ributo to the CourierJournal very definite informal'
tf/xsr tr«i I « NOSjaSg
IPest tMefwfa b •
The Asssriean srai abip Kearsar|e, nowlyleg at New Orleans, is 10 comeup the
Okie r .--r is 1 u as the stasis of waleiwill permit, an I eubsl yoniiij neSjfor the
•asjr. If a 6rst-elas« pilot ia tsaloysd
the hoit will rind no liiho-iity in (jellies:
up as far as Cairo, and possibly to 3. Louis
or Louisville.
In Knnxville, Tenn.. the sale of parlor
matches has been strictly fnrhnieti bj
and in Ubei 1^'tot. S. C,-old lucifss" are
;ti v
all matchrs except ihe
condemned as daexeroue.
fairly judge as to his alledged inianity.
n as 1
0
•uggests that the Legi»l»t ure shall pro-, what became of the remnant of Confedvide for the correet enrollment, h» the ' erate treasure that was moved from Rich
y Assessors in the several counties.! mond by order of Davis. Maj. Dan.
person! owing military service un- 1 shows that the bullion was exchange I
atloa, and the collection of i with Richmond bankers tbr SlOti.OllO inifty cents a head, to be
| coin and distributed in eq ia! shirrsheriffa. among tbe officers and soldiers of ltreck-
one ;
iBridge's command. Capt. Brings detail-
ed the distribution of all the money under
of all
der tbe const!an annual taxcollected and accounted for by theHe thinks there ought l«be at leastcompany organize I in each «'ongre*sioaaldistrict, and a regiment of infantry, a Mr. Dav
The Tennenee bribery inveiligation re-
veals a fearful a-nonnt of rotlenncn, which
muit be humiliating lo Tenueeseans. Tbe
State debt question has been made a spec-
ulating job to tbe bond dealers, andj
b*' ter7 °! » r '
'
"' TJ a ,r"°P cavalry;pe-sonalfy or
tt.m ...k th.m _;,». „.m I
ln Louisville snd Jefferson county. "What ( .fr: .-ers and pthrough them corrupt practice! with mem- 1 W(f netj ,.„avs QaB< Nuekols, '
ii to pre-bers of the Legislature. The bond specu- I pare to keep the peace. To do this weletors resorted to getting member! drunk, |
must place the militia on a footing to mestand even to getting presoiptions of psiieo, thsdomanis of modern eleiliiattea."
to control votes. It will be a happy day T|§e |ct) Cri ,
for Tenn..... to g.t lb. que.tion eut of A ^ ^ p „ per bkia„ lh , ctnillspolitic
Ma riLTiiiarosD B. BaVfts ha* been un-able to lubscribe to tbs Garfield monu-ment fund, or to the fund for the benefit
of Mre. Uarfiel 1, on account of bis pover-
ty. Inasmuch as it is a mailer of notorie
ty that during Mr. TUdeo'e term of office
Mr. Hayes did not spend any money whenaway from tbe White House, and spent
very little when he was th!re, and babit-
e.in'rol. and says Ihe I'reei lentdere-l him to '-pay all alike,
ers an t privates." This is very defi-
nite and specific information, and thor-oughly disposes of anything that may belefl of Geu. Johnston's charges.
Collector, there will be some curiosity
manifested to know what became of his
salary. Can it be possible tbat tbe goo I-
iihly goody good Mr. Hayes, unwsrnedby the fate of Icarus, took little flyers in
tba blue empyrean of Wall street
'
authorities for not making an investiga-
tion and report of tbe ice crop of the
country, an 1 makes aome incidental ob-
ligations which are interesting enough
to quote-
"There ia no country where as muchice ia used aa ours. In Europe peoplemanage to gel along without it, but thereis no part of the United States where peo-ple able to buy it will deny it to th*meel-ves. It has become a accessary of life in
;
summer, and its consumption ia not s is
1. pea.ted uvou in wimer The gatheringof ice in tare northern h ilf of tbe countryin winter is scarcely less a harvest thanthe gathering of the wheal crop in Bum-mer: and in some regions laboring menrely so confidently upon it to supply them
Wnat l>»«>s t!t« 4tl:tula Trip« mi tin- Btatel
[Fl-unngnLurs (Ky-,) Democrat.]
In regard to an item in our last, cen-
|
suring the Legislature for receiving pay' while on the Atlanta excursion, we havereceived a letter from Frankfort, frum
,
which we cull the following: •The facts !
are not understool. There has ho»n no 1
vote to accept pay. The constitution;
;
gives a member of the Legislature jf.j per ,
jdiem 'during the session.' The point was •
: raised years ago and derided, while Ju lee|
Harlan was Attorney iTeneral, ss state. I•
So that I ihink ihe question of i
pay is settled beyond any controversy.!and a vote even of Ihe Legislature to re.
(.rovrtli of lh<- Earth.
The millions of aerolites desciuling
ni>on the earth as an everlasting .ho-.wr
over s-1 ita purface pr'.v.- that tin earth
is provtiii^; the gradtUkl l of itsmvans
prove the fa r. Bind the gr at trntl i« also
aesnotssteasVed by the bottoms of all
tii '•*». . e -a!!--, aee. r • : 1 1 1. ' to tin ir furious
lifptliM. constsaitlj getting nlleqnp by;
i.rimury forinatioLu. In short, tie nui- •
van '1 law nf terrestrial growth is de-
monstrated by every shell upon the
shore, which, by its formation, ia just
that mueh permanently a«lil«sl to tho
bulk. But sinking into the bsWels of
the earth as deep as man i-sn reaVh
proves tlie growth of the earth fir morestrongly than nil the facts and wordswhieh are available on the ruoBeutous
ipaestiou; for no matter how fat down,every inch of the descent was race thesurfaee.liowever low it may nowl>e outof sight, by the ssjfiiiiilwttor offreoiiveincrease over it since the time. Thus,so far aa we have la-«'n enabled to pene-trub-, and the rule holds gixal owr every
part of ita surface, ae rind tht strata,
however deep we may descend, ill lying,
as to time, in the order of ther"lorma-tion. They can not be other\vi*/as noconvulsions of nature «'ould r4gr)Uttheposition 1 f one stratum by ;?"s
uu; it apon another. If u "f"1 nthrough t • *fft' 1
a thotissud vm-ds, we 1 ..1 -flL™.*^. th.
KIs«.tng in I'aria.
At a pnrtv of ytaasg pe<iplo in Parisconvei-s.it i> in happened to turn on the.Slti>jeOt of Li-smg, and the question wasCHropoonded who of tlie young men !
present ooold boast cat hA*inf| anvea awj
beinaf able to giv.t " Ids Kirl" the mostj
kisses. Varions were the n-plies tliis
'
question called out. Finallv a youngman and : .. --.rl towhnni fie was !>•- •
;trot! i !»i 1' o franca that they could! .ki--.-. ID. 'unis in t.-:i hours, prov.ded ^there wuold ie Jloired to take an oc- ^casaoaal glssa "between." Two persons jwere app anti 1 u oonunittee to count tlie *TJ
Dumber of kis^-s, and the work began. ^During th<- frrat hour they ci-unteil 2,000ki-s<-s. Lltiriiig the second hour thekisses were not nearly as numerous, for
the ooenmittee only counted 1,000.
After ti:e third hour, during which they
n"*fj d to .->•-. .re but 1,750, fnrther
operations won brought to a suddentsitdittfll. Ihe iii>-. os the young manwere >. i >\>th S cramp, and he wasc arried off in a fainting condition. Thegirl, a lew days later, was stricken withbrain fever. Win n the i>eople wlm hadwon the Let i"<-nifind<«l their money, thoparents at ths) girl refused to pay hershare of it. The matter was then takento tho courts ; there it was decided that
the bet must l-o paid.
HI I AS. A. 1I0L€03IIIE>
DRUGS, MEDICINI(p1H1!L8, DYBrSTUPFS.
R. B. Brevard,wholes a i. a abb acrAii. btutit in
STOVES, HARDWARE, TINWARE,PISTOLS,
RAILS,CASTINGS,
TOOL? ic.
t&T JOB WOSK done to order, surh ae
Ka^hDi;. tiuttering. Spoiiiinc. Ac.S.'sof the Gold Stove, Clinton Sires',
"ickman, Ky. ja7- 81
pREscRirnu ss CA R RFC L 1. 1 COM/'" V S I > ED!
\«. c\ r* i or i m « i i:mt»Ti:im 9
X
eeive no pay could not atTect the richt of I works of nevernl peolo^iiMvf ."TKany memtier to draw pay. In ray jodgraent, the visit of tbe body to Atlantawill he productive of good results, bothim-n* li*te an I ri-Hex. Then, you see, the
with a living in the winter, that a mild LegU!r»ture loses only three days more
Aa the following ainall-pox treatment
la foing the rounds of the prsi!, we will
give it to our reader!, as it is possible we!poriation of these supplies forms no small
winter is regarded as a serious r.iisfjr
tune. Nearly all the oities and towns inthe country below tbe latitude of St. Louisare wholey or partially vipplie I from theNorthern lake; and river?, ami the trans-
may have the undesirable opportunity of
trying it, and that before lm;. Here it is,
and coming fron a bin Ion nv?Iical alvi -
•or, be says.- "I am williug to risk myreputation as a public man if the worst
case of !ts*ll-pox cvnnot ba effectually
cored in three days simply by ereaai of
tartar. This Is a safe ant never failing
remedy: One ounce of cream of tartar
dissolved ia a pint of boiling water, to b«
drank when sold, at abort intervals. It
can be taken at any time, and ia a preven-
tive as well as a cure. It never leaves a
mark, never causes bliuiness and always
prevents tadioua lingeriue;."
X»thla« Short or I'aavUtakable Beurflt*OosfornH upon t«n» if thouaii.h <,t eSBBBSSM could
originate ant aaatostala th« leyeBaSfaai ottsa artaa'i
SiiUHiiu i *i>jr.v». It it a t-nintionn4 of «h» b~tT*s*t«l>l» altaratlVM. with th» I <.li<l«« .>f i'otaouii n•o.» Iron. ai>.| ia th» aaoai «ff^m»i of aU fsssfdlesfor scrofatoa*. ntercarial, or i.|.m.1 diaorrfrr*. I ul-Itormlv *err«i*fiil an t .:»rl*in iu iu rnni stul effucta.It j»r...|iico» rapid ami <-->inpiM- inr.-n ..f Srr.ifula,Sonw, B.iiU. Hoiuora, Er.ipti->n«. Sitlu Dl»^n«r« amiall di»or.t«r> rl.in* fr .m imp iniv ,.f Of U*»M. IU4 t» ,
i. .ratmie rtfaru it always nBa»e* and ..flrii
can* U».>r Uoiupiante. r*o.uala Kiakimm aud tr-r»jal«iitlr«, au l la a potaut roaaw«-r of vitalitvFor purifying th« bloo.1 if ha* no equal It tos'eaup tha SJraSSSa, rMturus and prv~*urv«a tta h'attliaad 1'iiparta vigor and auargy. F ir forty tmi, it
haa batn In ritanalra uaa. aud is lo-dajr tli* moat#vailaWe aiadlclo* fur iba i»J«iu< atck. anr»b»r«
p>* #»..«*i asa Baeaeist*,
feature in tbe baaineas of tne railwavs.Ice is one of the cheapest articles of con-sumption; itseoit of gathering it in place!where ths best facilities for handling it
are provided ia only twenty-five to fifty
cents a ton, and tbe rivers and lakes yieldit to all who will take it. It is probablynot worth more than seventy-five centa to
one dollar a ton in the ice house, in midwinter: and yet this cheap necessary oflife affords a living to hundreds ef thous-ands of pertons. In fact, the ice businessrepresents one of the aaosf important industnes of ihe eoaatrv, and a report ahow-'ing its exieat, tbe number of tons gath-ered, the distribution of it. the nuui her ofpersons tud the amount of capital enzag-ed in it, and its comparative growth, wouldba an intereatiag feature in our national Committee <?n Commorc
than they would by an adjournment onthe 20tb, aa would otherwise ho the case,
j
It costs the Stale nothing, in fact, al- !
though I see by the papers that some ofj
them ar* of tho opinion (bat it costs the.State SlS.000."
Iinpoitsint N•»«arsiara*e
Among the important measures whichwill be early presented for the considera-tion of Congress is the Interstate Commerce bill, which bears the name of Mr.
,
Reagan, of Texas Mr. Kea^au s lys that i
be became a member of this <'<ngressehiedy for the purpose of urging his bill
|
-relating to thia euhject. lie has alreadyeeintreduced hi* Interstate Commerce hill,
|
and ita counterpart has been introduced I
in the Senate by Mr. Coke, of Texas. Mr.l'age, of California, Chairman of the
j
House on Commerce, has announce I him- <
self in the Worl i as in favor of this IBSa!
ure. and several of his associates in Use ',
ar» known Is be :
essentially •
tir>t one that on wfi
deluge rests, the latest
lnext—if in the sinking tl
: ing link—a step in time earh! on in HaOoessiou, until we n-u\est stratum at the <!• pth men
' oldest one in the aeries. Tinwhere it was deposited, then <
ie
thethe
.li.^tf-
v
^e loW-thejust
tie sur-face of tho earth, perhaps inm-e thiui
1,000, (KM) years ago, wlnle all tV othershave been in latter times sujieriniposedin th. ir n spoctive geologica] epochs, npto the surface. There is another suchepochal formation going on and iwttiiit:
thicker under all ta»(;ans since the pres-ent continental features of Ibo globearose, whieh will yet lie dry bmil, fii>d
will be the latent formation furthe geol-ogists of the remote future Vulburn *Mat/azine.
Ocs State Aulitora report, juat out,
!howa ths deficit reported to the last Leg-islature was $679,»1-J 35. During the
last two years the receipt* have increased,and ihe expeoditurea have been dirain-
iabed to tbe extent of about $200,000.Tho Auditor tbiaka if the Assessors ranba made to do their duty that the debtcan ba paid la four yeara, without anyincrease of isxatioo. There are 7tf paupercountiea in ihe 8tate, and ba thinka under » s ,, r ts exist! ia Congress, sho jld be e X .rIs fstr swifiamssji t h*r« should be no*e. ,' ciaed.
also favorable to the passageof the Keag.in bill.
Tbe fundamental provisions of Mr.Reagan's bill are first, tbat the OBBStttBtional interpretation of "commerce" in-
cludes interstate traffic, and that whilefreights tnd paaseneers transported withiu Ihn Stale are solely under the controlof the laws passed hy Slate I.egisla* ures,freights; pasaengera, flte , waieb are re-
ceived iu one State lo be delivered in auother subject to regulations prescribed hyCongress. The bill is lengthy an 1 ex-plicit as to the manner iu which the au-thority over interstate tra!fi\\ which it
I havf. endeavored to state The higherand more abstract argument^ whichthe Study of pnys.eal srieraj, L.v b-shown to be in<hs,M>usible tTtCcomplete trauung of th- hum^^I do not wish it to In.- supprs.efthat be-
« devoted to raolv oc 1 t
not wiscause I niuvabstract andinsensible tc
be
For applying to wounds made by ro-
DlOving largo limbs in pruning fruit
tr.-os nothing is bettor than g'trn shellsc,dissol ved in aioobol to the consistency ofpaint
Painty Food in a Mciiajrerie.
Ni \t in point of hea>v feeding com*tho elepJUUata. Idieir cfiief fcKxi is hay,of whieh it takes about four times sa
Btueh to ke. p sn elejdnuit as it doea to
k< ep • h .rse, the olejihaut eating alxmtltHl poonds of hay every twenty-fourhours. And in order to keep up his ap- .
petite the hay must lie the best going,j
lK?ing invariably timothy of tho bestgrade. Other animals that eat hay are I
tbe giraffes, the camels, the deer, zebra,
and different animals of the cattle spe-
rton. Kost sQ these are fed ou what is
known ius mixed hay, timothy and clo-
ver, which is cl>out Ji> pec cent cheaperthiui the timothy alone.
There are 101 other creatures requir-
ing, in many cases, much more delicate
and costly food. Tlie sea-lions have to
be fed on t;>h, usually fresh and salt
mackerel, each animal taking twelve b>fifteen to each meal twice a day. andconsuming all together 100 pounds of
fish daily.
Next in i>oint of delicate livers comethe polar la-arA, whose regular diet is
bread soaked in milk, with fish now andthen for a change. The black bears arealso given bread, 100 pounds lieing useddaily. Vegetables of almost every sort
are lad lilicndly to the diffeisnt animids—cabbage, potatoes, carrots, onions andturnips. The elephants are great eal>-
bago eaters, in addition to their standard
diet, hay. Tlie giraffes singularly
enough, uro great onion eaters, whilo
the deer and goats, and animals of the
cow specie*, eat carrots and turnips andpotatoes. Bran and oats and corn are
also liberally distributed—mostly once
or twice a week—amoi g the hay-eatinganimals.The most delicate and expensive
feeder in the place, perhapn, is theourang-otang, which gets beef, potatoes,
bread anil honey. As there is only onein the collection at present, the cost of
keeping this grinning satire on thehuman species is not multiplied. An-other delisacy whieh must not ba omit-
ted in the diet oi the jsjlar bears is ti>h
oil, of whieh thuy get several supplies a
week. After tho hay, the oats is per-
3
>
3
[sext t»ooa to ABB****'* »tcnr]
CLINTON ST., HICKMAN. KY.
Having jnai fitted up a neal SI/A V/SQS A f.t'ttS in the room, nest door to J.
A tr.be rg Sons' Store. I am j r<-f are.l to a c-
cecmiodaie every one in weed of rihavinp;.
Hair Cutting. Uycicg, Bhampeoiag^ orin anything in ihe lon.-orial line.
< lllldreli'a Hair CattlsiSE n <t[>e<*inIt.T ;
Having bad long experience. I fi-eloou-fi leut of giving sat iufnct ion, and solicit ashare of public piuronag*.
Bhnviiif, ICcta: Hair CSBttissar, SSctB.oct8 CHAS. I; KLw \ h I).
Hickman, Cairo & New Madrid.
TUT MlA'dfR
5
W. J. TURN bRJ. K. MUSB
Leaves Hickman fnr Cairomediate points, Wedimstlay
,
.... U ««T£ KI'LtBil
anil inler-Pridaj and
Sunday. B o'clock, p m; relnrning, leaveaHickassa far New Madrid. Tuesday,rhorsdal and Saturday, k o'clock, r. m.apnll- 81.
g HICKMAN MARBLE WORKS2 tllCK MAN, II
V
rMftS-
AJID JIAXTAITinr.Rfl OK
COPPER, TIN, and SHEET-IROJJWARE.
DIALER IS
Italian and Amkricas Marhi.kMONUMENTS, IOUB AND ORAVb
STOKS8.AVING receiver! a flue lot of Amer-ican and Italian Marble, I aro pre-H
SOUTHERNBUSINESS SO
1 to fill all orders. Call aud examinerk
tjes^OrJer* from the SOUatry promptlvm Bjr2«
"
pa
filled.
Practical Book-
No Text Rooks.OVER 23 IKilW A PH4€TIC:A fa AttOl.MIXT 1
Endorsed by all the Prominent Merchants of Louisville.
]R9e~Scod Stamps for Circulars and Specimens of Tenmanship. -^jaSJ
BEN. C. WEAVER, Principal. S. H EsSOLLAB, Secretary.
Wilkrd Hotel Lottery.
THE DfHWlNG wn.y. OCCUR OSTuesday. F*?l». 1 Ith. ls«a,
OR MONET REFUNDED.
NEWAKER
— AM)
IJONFECTION ERY»BENNIE MiTNTOSII announces to tba
public that he has aldod to his Confectiooery estaolishmcnt
A. New Eakery,and keeps a good Baker emplov»d.FRESH BREAD, ROLLS, CAKES, *c.
tinpraithe
ft£^ Person* eivin* Dininz*, Suppers,haps the next chief source of expense ui
, Wed-linRS, Receptions, F-Mivals, ic, snp-n-iil
iglktbe attach. ,1 to that which haal,,.",t B ttM ILiglish conception—namely, ' — ,ia
l 1llrsnit«, 1 iniwiuej ,,ught t
sn; i
, , 'arn<li"<efiotting ou. N„w fl .^n ..
of b knowledge of physical^ as nmeans ,rf getting on is Bjinbitable,There are liar.Uy any of otirtr' i. a ex-cept tlie merelj hncksterin
science maywhich some knowledge of ^ ones\
the wav of uiiiinal food. Aa for th«j
fowls, the largi-r onea are fe<l on corn,while the small birds are fed on canaryseed, and all of theJB now and then get
B small chunk of meat. —PhiladelphiaTimet.
plied on reasonable notice. dlO
not be directly profitable to^^Jrof that ocxniiiation. An inda,trv
l
RttHi,^r-vgher stages of its develop *™ it .
roceases liecouie m«re conjhli.,.,,^1fined, and the sciences 3E£rf"r
Katle is a red-headed, black-eyedbaby, just too cute, for any use. Theother ui;»ht she closed her iittle prayeras loBows : "Dod please mate mo a
dood little dirl"—and then, forget tin.?
for whose sake, she a<ldetl—"for pity's
trBy-"
—
Htult\,
An undertaker g<»t8 his H Wrtg wheremother man dies.
*>< IIltOKltKK,
FASHIONABLE
SHOE MAKER
E. T. Gardner,{ BBBftBB is )
lll.llt-0
«.00t6,000•2 61)0
ft, OnO6.COO10,0001.000
ft(K)
100
SHOP—North West corner of Moscowind Troy Aveunes, Ea^t Hickman, Ky.
ttlg~ Satisfaction guaranteed.mayfly
II ii vti t s> I Ilarne*.*) ! !
Harness, Saddles, Bridles. Collar*. &c,at J. W. ROGERS'.
FURNITURE.COFFINS. MATRASSES, <tc
HICKMAN. KENTUCKY
John G-. G-rinln,Merchant Tailor.HAS JCST RECEIVED BCTTF.RICK'S
Report of latest Fall and Winterrashions. and a large lot of sampleaofFrencb. Encliab and German poods.Gen lemen are invited to call _and ex-
amine.
LOWER and LOWER.All itinds of Groceries—hams, sides, ic ,
as cheap as tbe cheapest. I will not be'inderseld. JOHN WITTiNO.
rpl!E drawing of this Scheme haa been-s- Anally settled upon, and will certain-ly take place on Tuesday, the ofFebruary, 1S*:2, by assent oT tbe Com-missioners, nud ibis, will enable me tosell all of ihe remaining tickets.
All persons, therefore, intending to la^vest in (bis scheme, inay~that there will be no further delays otpostponements.
LIST OF PRIZES.The Willard Hotel wiih i rr fv fwrvra
ita Fixture*f
-£ f> I l«U ' t\.f
One Residence on Green Street $15,000One Residence on Green Sreet 18,000.Two Castl Priies, each »5,IMH)."Two Cash Prises, eaoh *a.OH0..Five Cash Pri***, ear), $1,000..Five Cu«h l'rixea, ench $600Kifty Cash I'rixes, each $100One 100 Cash Prites, ench $60..Five lOOCash Prixea, each «20..One Set of Uur FurnitureOne Fine PianoOne Handsome Silver T«a Set400 Hoxe- Old BsuthSB W hisky. »3«i H.4t)i>
|0 Muskeia ^hitmpagiie, 3."> 300Five 100 Caxh Prizes, each *10 6;000400 R..xes Fne Wiass, 80 lv»,000
i»00. Boxes Roterlaon Couniy Whiaky. *80 ; 0,000
400 Boxes lUvan* Cigars, $10 4,000Five Hundred Cash prizes, va<-li fiO 0,000
AvlOVMriMd rO$$C0,fl60,Whole Tickets, SS; Halves. $4; Quar. $$,
ilemitiancea may be made by BankCheck. Expreas, Postal Money Order, orRegistered Mail.Ke.ponaiMe agents wanted at ell poinia.
For circulars, giving full information andfor tickets, address.
%v. r. n w"iii*«.Willaril Hotel, Louisville, Ky.
RiverFarm for Sale.<<)(~\f\ ACRES—bsl ween Bfi sa4 90^\ f\ "acre« cl--ir-d — or her improve-ments, 4 milea below Hiokman, onMississippi river. Addre»e.
. COURIER OFFICE,fliektasn. Ky.
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