{ title: 'The Johnstown daily Republican. volume (Johnstown, N.Y.) 1890-1912, July 24, 1890, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042216/1890-07-24/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042216/1890-07-24/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042216/1890-07-24/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042216/1890-07-24/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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T and mteresmng Stan-finer in a little speck known as imation,\ it has developed: m.: . 'The system is headed by ! ', and footed by journeymen ere 'ate tipsters who have Fortunes. They don't call. fithselves tipsters. Neither does any- - ut the irreverent ones. But tipsters, 'or they have been. And tipsters who aro worse off now: Jami morally, tow—them when., am busmess. To bea success-. x lreqmres many accomplish - The ong who travels tranquilly he road to fortune IS he who is\ &nd Wwhoin he j preso é tipster is to give 1 mformatlon as to able course of the price of stocks | secure an inferest in any purchase ile made by the moneyed individual parts the information. a righ t oftener than he is repeated TH his 171135 are bad ottener than 'they ate goloél why, he is despised and ¢ d, and, instead of truffles, he and cakes, and 1saprophet pstler reqmzres no nnanc1al capi-} is what he needs-a hard glehty 'of its Whether the rbutat or whather it is acquired - rlxfiehence. Many a timid, some cause of another, and lag cultivated a facial de-, h would crack a paving ; d ame in collision with one. He: has gone info Wall street-and he . has staid , lbhere. 'No genuine, simon pater} éver ratired from the street, 4 .they grow old they never and the old man with, the scythe. <1 th ch ek thele must always be 0 respond to the call of j Profes- ‘quahty is not known as -ealled \a good business But it is. check, Just asmuch on to the great riagjor- f- 'And the crack tipster well developed faculty | ° - défeat. ° He must never ' That Would“ ong snd he must valiantly 0 it.\ If his check is property nd serves hirn well, the dis- [- prmcnpal will listen to h1m 'and accept more tips from him. | - 'Itisnot a profegsion that can be master- - ed Thy 'bodks.> . Experience only brings | \- Chere is a certain zest awhout: f: fascinating uncertainty. The in: gets vhat he thinks is some iformation regarding the future third preferred. ts 'Phat a certain mah once told | 'if hé ever happened to hear of good to let him know. Perhaps: rer told. \him that, and perhaps 5. p hls mmd to go to & stmnflfert pleasures £ hope are ins fora, few mo- eents. > easy; he starts for the lair of, the capl— hi 'HOW E33 PROCEEDS. ‘ * \His'récepfion is not enthusiastic; it is 'not -encotraging, The bloated bomb holder merely nods at him and grants. ~ \I think, siv,\ says the young man, . \“that I have some very good. mformatlon l im: JHOhokus thirds.\ hdve;y bey?\ growls the man mt}: ( Vell; What is it and where did. theme is is 'good for an eight point \tise answers the callow tipster, v Vlfll much. confidence. - ~\ j 1s, 1s1t‘9f Where did yon find ster asks of the capitalist a f' secrecy and the capitalist. h ghmlyé 'Then he tells how A his is g-elerk in the office of the firesflent 'of the' Hohokus railroad, and ° this friend has bhappenell to mention to | {fhe old:man and his friends | buymg Hohokus thirds. on } have..been every litfle stump, 'and he has ov erhe‘ud advising its purchase.\ The 03415 talist Grants and says h’reha T c: good Aiafiy times;: He observes that he . “does n't tad e much ste-k in that kind of (= mformatl n.. The tipster who is being + descnbed now. is a student of huinsn' \ nature, anf has discovered as time has | passed that this. capitalist isn't such a e-emment 1nd1wdudl after all, and he ag become so absolutely certain that] /b Hohokus is going up that he begins to. \ .-\ feel independent., ajh '. All right,\ he says; \1 only wish I. 't pag money enoufrh to buy if myself, But: an get Billy Blobbs to buy me. [=_ The capztahst bates Blobbs, and as the\ upster ls about to feave he calls him | ~] back. .~ f .- ‘i‘WeIlj he says, “lf you are s6 sure E few hundred on' joint account.\ uy it, and Hohokus does ad-, ~ Thereafter the tipster is a wel- 4. come guesp and, he continues as such so long as his tips are right. hn foe © The nnsiccessful tipster is a man: W110 I : would 6514676 syinpathy if it were not .. iseeds ‘vhxch are llke black be' f for his um arying ~coniidunce that he is | going to ell) tain 'a point some time that will put tim on his teeth—New Snark a Tues The eta ment ls made that exghteen { cruelty of life and the beauty of h icompassmn as the trite stozy close b 8 | mas, \ was dead. oung man has gone info Wall | He re- [ + man\ tasted an hour or two of intfy Then, a'little bit rattled and un- fp zrsmall doses,. cause & person u} | becomes exhausted A SORROWFUL AND SOLITARY The Pitiful and Touching Story of Joseph * Merrick, the Elephant Man. | ~ Wa chn remember no invented : that speaks so to the heart at once of the that Joseph Merrick, the “eke? . Imagine a human soul clothed hody 80 unspeakably frightful the ing it men tumed gick with loathing women fainted; a being who had to be conveyed from place to place in sbc ot; 'who, hardly dared to venture abr ad 'even. by night; who, finding his gel ow creatures ran from him, grew terrified \by the terror he created, and shuddere in dark corners like a hunted beast Imagine him driven by starvation {to ao— cept a showman's offer and be exhibi 'to the most 'brutal of audlencesilt a} 'commonly enough shrieked and ral lg 'was drawn. i | Early in 1886 Frederick Treves, one of - the surgeons of 'the London hospifal found Merrick in a penny show!, in ‘room off the Whitechapel road, crot ch- ing behind an old curtain and trying t?) warm himself over a brick tha heated by a gas jet. Mr. Treves WI); . up to him not only without fear orio th- 'ing, but with sympathy. For thd | time in hls life of twent) four r years I mell from the tent as soon as the c -like a man. The éffect was umo S.. | made him afraid at first. He 8111\me af . ordinary, man. would from eluuetlnmg canny. 'Then, as he began to realizeit! p truth, he broke into gobs of grate de. Days and even weeks passed, howe ef, -{ before he recovered from the shocl <1 bearing a ' compassionate word. . 'The police prohibited his show onithe ground of public decency So he: out to Belgium, where again the polace‘n; | terfered, and where an agent | dee with his money. - Merrick was lef d sti- tute and starving in the st¥outs of : [eign town, where the ignorant thought him a fiend. . tw 'He came back to London—h | no one quite knows. At every sta. Join 1 and landing place crowds dogge | Steamers refused to have him on ho rd But he came 'back to London, bees ugo in London livéd the only man who hdd ever given him a kind word. Hen 'his way to the London hospital, fo ($1 Mr. Treves, who had him lodgedif -| time in an attic in. the hospital, and termined to find a permanent shelter him. {non would receive him. 'The royal. pital for imcevrables and the British h for incurable alikedeclined to take 'in unless sufficient funds were fo Acommg 'to pay for his maintenance life, 'He himself begged that he Tbe placed in a blind hospital. It is har ' to match the pathos of thisgplea. 'Then in November, 1828, Carr C \chairman of the London hospital . to 'The 'Times asking help for this fJ and the British pubhc responded. room was built for Merrick on [ ground floor in a remote wing of the pital, and there, surrounded with ibe flowers and a hundred tokens off I kindness that is really qmok in the lic heart, be Hved. ~He had’ found many friends | Piince and Princess of Wales, Mri stone, Mrs. Kendal and others. ' ' Kendal is due ths happy suggestion Morrick Should be taken to see) the Obristmas pantomilne at Drury] I She engaged the royal box; she h brought to the theatre, and took ewory precaution that no strange eye should see him. Hiddon froin the house behind the certains of the box. the \elephant Hafl- Erg. ing happiness. <Tt was all real to him- . the fairies, the splendor and the jewels. Merrick, in spite of his hidedus terior and terrible experiences, wt ‘lns way a gentle sontimentalist, fand +[ gushed forth at tires, under theh m’p) . conditions of his life at the hospital, tn yorse modeled on the hymns of| Dr.: Watts, in which he gave utter imte to feelings of gratitude, the sincert which rone ever questioned. If iy l & . ‘ \tender heart thut was beating benedel} a miask more hideous than that of , Above all, it was a heart\ that wa | with love for the man who was If bis saviour, who first spoke kind ; him, who resened lum from a : thousand times worse than death,{ | the 'end was both his doctor a \] friend. [ Recently, it was only Mr. who could thoroughly understa poor creature's maimed utterances; ; 'to Mr, Treves. he clung to the las the wistful trust and affection of | animal. bpedkbl‘ JFEOn. ~ How to Plant Seeds. ' Startug seeds in boxes in the h | not lwcnys a sucee ss, bat 1 lmd t . approbetlon of these to uablul wit long in germtuating and damping heat soup stomos quite hot twice al .and place:. them under the boxes. Biri or flat stones will do. The seeds, th - this treatment, spring up quite as } ly as in a hotbed, and soem to do ly. The seeds that Esowed, coverif 'with sand, never allowing it to (ll‘{’;v | up sooner than where sod was used. 1 is admirable for parnsy seed, as 1 ; the place of moss as a shade. succeeded bemre in: stxmmv the | sowing. A shallow box, about tw { deep, one foot long and six inches As nseful for starting all kinds of famlusfly handled, and can be! pla« cCupn the reselvmr at might whic 1 b ter than a stone, I vuntll near ly mm 1:10‘ these, dried and powdered and abous and behave like a lunatic and fallsga leY When he awakes ho has not the smialle { remembrance of his ridiculous bgh: vior. ' ..Tho plant is called a ~ln ghing at ar a . for nmi | whent | and, opr clilGren are to go abroad next . from ee Te | My, yife can't turn them away with was ‘ougb | gene pwmute poverty than many a secretary | of some associated charities can do to. la‘l“ | cle- ' £gr But now 11; was found that no insfity- | her -A carry p the | [apt - lane. . thiim , {y, egat- 6x- ~ 8 In | y 1{Of ' { she : Arg | Just fy | moxy | his Iitde fiuger for * | of alerowd and I hate crowds. | tike] 3 f men y max I 3110 didn't exactly see, but he caught a J - 111mm gliiin Annoyances of the Openhanded. Frefjuently I have expressed my pity 'h poople. My pity was renewed a goutloman said to me: \My wife to eYou've only just got back Rurope,\ I said by way of surprise and interrogation., e¥ es, but my wife is just killing herself, - Every morning week. 5 | before we sit down to breakfast there' are from five to a dozen men and wonten : at the house, telling pitiful stories of nt qverdue, of hunger and what not. V0; {she bas nvither streugth nor time to investigate each case, and she qsu- | \ ally gives them what they, cant. \Blit sho knows that such giving is bad. | She is so hemmed in by this circle of beggars that she must go to Europe. It's pretty hard.\ he added with a sigh; | \we'te been separated but liitle since weiwbre married; but 4 don't see any | other| way than to close the house, and for|tHem to go to. Dresden, and for me . to go[to boarding.\ I! wanted to tell the gencrous man that if he ?o mendlmnte to me, I would investigate - and them|several thousand dollars a year and J the npovssity of going over the ocean to . eport to. them, that I could savo eschpo the ery of poverty, but I thought it w uld seem dmpertinent, and 1 de sisted, But Mr. and Mrs. Opehand to have strength of will as well as genellusity of heart. I huow that such ous and unwise peuple do more fo. pow en) —-(,mwgu Advance. 4 Not to He Qiutdone. 1 spltahty is the crowning virtue of furk. He would scorn to bethought dbhand in this respect when com- paged with any other race of men. Mr. Pathley tells a story in his 'Bulgaria | Befo e the War\ VVlll(h proves that the the vineyards at Rustohuk when 5’ ‘s‘stopped by an old Turk and told ; espassors wore not. allowed, and - er of man are wm' [Inn shot in ing said to me, amd today I have passed { over|many miles and spoken to many | owingrs of vineyards, and you are the | one who has raised the slightest ob- only The vineyard is yours, and you jk‘dt‘l pn. halav 'so I shall leave your ground, but I never received such treatment from an 05m inli before.\ The Turk, who, up to this time, had | beent | up, 4 squatting on the ground, jumped iy} began protesting My good fellow,\ he eried, \youshall ay sof Others havo shown you hos- ity, and I will nout be behind them here you like, cut what you hke ya'fl'dqe yours to do us you like with.\ THe Englishman thanked him, and it f ‘efillul in the two squatting down and | - havipg a feast on grapes together. F [Are Women Carcless of Money? N woman, ut least in America, has any ing [money. beligves to be beauty -for raiment, books jowels, decoration, furniture, pic- turv marbles-rarely for what does her bi‘I’lt us hatin. vices, for the things that host him great- i he is apt to speculate. i> bring evil mfg)\ hers from his love of pleasure or of galiul . Ho will get rid of morse money in a mtixfilllh thin she would in years. She wipu d, however ignorant ef it, tbe ap- pail¢d by the sums he dissipates. She is colhtxtutlmmllx censervative; big stale mounts of any sort are likely to alarin henjnUnlws despenst eat frenzied, invaftiably stops short of estremes. trgll of egoti- ia, moves 'N wrlx aril the talk of woman's care lesstfiess of noney is really idle. ownfon cannot be sustained. | Itis amuin- l~y§tllle echo of ful: prehension. #20 (r in'its use. Her temyevamental tendency is tothe opposite of car- dlessness. —Jumlh Henhi Browne in Ladies' Home Journal. With One Arm. Im the awwhols,\ said the one armed mit arm} I gr: cnull have sene, but T did not want to dg if. | Isn't thnt good reason enough? Lam not softy I lost my arm. even if I don't get a pension for it. | 111181“s me culfs and sleeves and lots of | off dr taings yout t. Hows have to Tuy. Do llm sit? Yes. you [would think. ing fvithout it, and 1 am quite happy. i wisfsin de when I Tost my arm. I had been jilted by a girl through the mill and maimed 1 | phi] court to another girl, and she took Since then we have mmlu ' ols P was. , and hadseialit healthy childrsa Ad he spoke he teached to the top of tiefdoor and lifted himself up, eight tiinds in succersion. - Then he held by Thers is ne' ene pina hak} 1}ch x*. LP A Problem. l is going crazy over fills problem: xd vuu go to the cirens?\' some one ingqifive.1 of hin ou Thursday morning. \No he replied; \tuero was too much oneithird ouf the puuple aweat that go now Pd 530 myse H. \Xos said the ether mim, \but did it - vir uccur to you that the majority are yon are, and if only one-third as went now, ten times y wenld go as go now? - Heo?\ nevi ds yo mer, and trying to soe ds wln’f isn woud “lug lus ini balunce.- W’ mmngton Star. i [ 1 [ | and Mrs. Upnulmu 4 would send the | vineyards for years withouga word - the right to object to my being | gud, with a mary dons dxspla) of en- away all you like, and all the vine- buch talent us a man has for spend- { She spends for what she { He speuds most for his . 4, thing he she | 3 she ip bles and tarus pote where he, inthe | The V here s even pamum exnlightenéd on the | - subject, she is proue to be very cautious | , refectively, \I am glad I lost my « pever in any war in my dlife. Io Qut not so much as | Ihave sotused to du- { Alter I got | two minutes and a in 10,000 . wiflfl two hands who can do that. -Bos- a | fon Ef only | as | «Ob, what is this tumult anduszylr and commotion? And what are the sparrows all tal in ; about? Bay, why do they beckon aud nod t » each other? Do. they fear that some on» their. . et will out? 'Twas early this morhmg I meta gay party __ All busily chat'ring way dow by t - Each Lird to the other soitmme i. ows war . it 3. And they never so muc! as .me me & lo k Oh, do you not: know, an; and cannot you say Why each little heart's ina whirl of eme\ And throbs as a leaf on a mad, winey c. \Tis that they'roekp. bing alhesti or L '8, AlbDbright, merry cousins from woo i and mere, And.str.ogers from ovcr the suri ©cccan, Bo biihesome aud chipper, cheer. Pow Is ghd when the leng, dreary wurtler iss /cr, | For spring on her wings bears tlie tropics; And scatters profusion froin bid to » 1 »eshore. --—P.lulmlnlphw. « eiephone. Shoes That Must Not Be Won.. wishes to ger lcte in his 1 ' nation to \have at hir\ cudgel that ecuros to biel ot him wenr shoes in which toere are ugh nails. A | non- yachting vacter Bas Cq opinion that the chief occ llpdfitm of a yacht's erow 1) Cant of holystoning deck Certain it is t- 1 they show a Som cf labor and are the especial pride 7 Le owne The right shoes to wear are Tow ones of canvas or soft ith: . with bat p er less sore O7 Cruised, cruising white flannel able and mo- For southern clothes may be | une. Nice for the Patient. about the distinction being very strictly 1 kept up between physicians and surgeons, and would not trespass on one another's | ' ground for the world; but this delicacy | . of feeling has a rather disastrous effect on the patient's pocket sometimes. A Chinese gentleman was «truck by an ar- row, which remained fast in his body. A surgeon was sent for, and, inodestly the arrow, leaving the point inmmibedded in the wretched man's body He refused to extractit. \because hegaid, '\med- ical etiquette forbids it. The case is clearly one for a physician, since the arrow is the body! . Herald. A Tried Cure for Insomnia. . a five grain pill ouf assfetida-be careful to take no strong medicine after 8 u'élock in the afternoon; half anm hour before -_ getting into bed take a hot fout bath. : at first, and add a little very hot water < as it cools. Be sure io keep well covered -a full half hour, ment, under the most gldurse circum- stances, completely cured the insomnia of a friend, who had run 'the entire gamut of narcotics, stimulants, -Ladies I foule lounml prws ‘ ersay Pm try. young fellow wantea? Office Boy-He + &» that he wrote & somuct omith d ~1Dm4iy's Dimples,\ and cit got inte the puper Pimples,\ and th it he wants it explained, Hed his foo Commercial Gazctm A Simple Method of “mung sleep. | fore going to bed. no talk after comin . 6.009 i a ming in, snd «do not retire hifgry. As to Surface Roads that a surface road is a misnomer.\ g» How do you make that out? - rcpurdiny their affairs to the surface.\ New York “olll Not fun ler. ©These interminable newspaper dis- weary,\ remarked Miss Ann Tek. \W by\ asked Mrs. Gazzaimn. that no such thing exists\ -Haurper's Bazar. He Was Posted. < my? Jaminy-After the dog He Came to Term». an [yy wife who was | band, \though I should die for it.\ term» and welcome,\ was his qpilet but irritating reply.-New York Herald. Popular Engilishwomen. ing an election to decide who fire the three most popular women in England, | Miss hllvn Terry, —Lom1u.1 letter. Another Compliment, Gone Wrong: this, isn't it? Ahss Proettypert- Yes, indeed. | Miter talking to so many clever people it's . somebody—like you. 4mm“;- Australian bush, the first literary work be attempted, made him. fainous, is G0 , years old. His name is plain Thomas Brown and he is a police magistrate. THE JUBILEE OF | THE SPARROWS. | | natage at cl ep o Jd q gcd Pray, what is this matter that seoius so fimp ort ant? | ana full of wild éfrectioy And this seems the reason the little brow n spar f i \o fom fff Co wealth of the : If a man on beard a y. cht t in iri li- 'with thoe first} t Voy. aisso d the . cow oal Cpr tea dt al on most pleasure ‘c'raftu \ cealle Los of rubber or felt. b Wet cecks are almost to be compared: 1, and without mn. ber . or felt soles one is sure to be uncomfort- | the for the con- . ventional navy blue.-New York Trib | seems to be ver), bola b> ly <a French invintion for -and distanes Chinese doctors aro very particular . odograph has been given. , In») requesting Ii fee should be paid in ad-. vance, he ree of the protruding bit of. < of order,. ed with ruled paper and Ffevolved by | *-Chicago Every night, at an c: 'trly bed time, take - adapted to special prrposes,} measuring the speed of mldlels on the | ] march, Let the water be as hot us can be borne | up, and to have the feet in the. wate? for , A month of this treat- | poses for whicliseu:. eating before lcfllllll, and tiring himself out | ' glzwfl‘illlg‘, Managing Editor-What was it that fo ect healed “Dolly’s lite t}. cas if get him trouble with some-, th of ~ the (gl‘nux ren isiy.-Cincinnati { appeals. Take a brisk out of door walk just be- [ E the | walk fails to superiimluce sleep, a dish of . ive cream will almost invariably be ar agreeable and beneficial specifie.-Cor. [ | Chicago Trilnme. Coad. - \Hay. jal ter, \I have about come to the conclusion \Because nothing short of an investi-. | guting committee will bring anything } 1 oa ‘ul to them on ory ctissions on 'the coming man' make me f cdo good to tho \Decause my eXperiemes teaches mo Mr. Tomale (to Jimmy, who has been | perinitted to dine with the company)-/ Will you have a piece of chicken, Jint | vanked it al | over the back yard? Not much! -Epocoh. > \IH have the last word.\ shneked an r hus- ad | we nay Tiveasith Prom: ray take it, my dear. on sour own f CC UCC five with them: . moom advances.\ One of the Tocal print» has been hold- } The result is in favor of the Princess. of | | Wales, the Baroness Burdett-outts and - rode 6 hv Mr. Middlings-Awfully smart dance | in printer's ink. qhite a pleasant change to comyg AcrFuss | wiv] creadp, bes Rolf Boldrewood whose story uf the { Don Cameron's TErowing Do One of the dioted oi jects in (umvntecl is Don Catueron's pvrlud of, si- | nearsnce and - Seo h wui'si. bod lert thc al to . pee mx'mtn, of particularly | : Inis given LL jor a ll x of heir valae as they tvu a up t ch bel p dl { Don's «dog 1.9 tun .oug xbred an more ways than one - His pusllmn of mute in- quisitorial ~cCs-om ato is from ‘the mat in the onter ves H oul- at the senator's front does Te oy les wrth his lower jaw orestifig on his pas from cennsylys genator's eallers anpe ir he © oS be. vo vith dignified on the piavemicint . ca 1 Manto ni hoe oat 'P lot Wop ater glance w metioit dad El swine ino + He sectm» to know the \ll’n It uce be- tweeu Leer lars vie [2 5 'a 1nd those | tap. s, gad uraws fo lmo on the latter. There aliafs, w gre recel od wis io M'wj'fi‘. \ho. hies thom at t!. nile 0 jh )and wage a ~ (1.11 of “clenme and Maves um of the s ule'r ation by 3g §l\>!.v;]\g< Tyese wh «cent and < id an gof in are iy M op eoldly He keeps his on the an: ll appai« 1th asleep. inco cy ent to reach ti,0 i poly without :f. ping 11mm the nes {1 coral imal. CV cry fed , he whin oa plimw '. Las (I 1 C.. \tn R l‘Sll't tehos. Teams (ors s \l‘dltll. Isiiad of arc dt oul 10 ~umed ; 1m, ladles of the t= them a spre ap two when they Jeay etllelmuee. < -i lp ala lmlql s A filial te the P} thg com fer 60 u: dormeter, 'The saveled wt); Ill, vehicle. Elm inventor,. E. J. Marey, of the institute of his «devised a very simple machine to “hile the name It {draws or traces a curve on a tHraveling b u 4 of which is a registerct the ysed with | wideh a p. wi 134 of ir ve-lmlv moves. The- recording mech: Histh is not at all «©ormplicated and is nes 1 $1. \ly to get out It consists of a ey linder cover- clockwork.\ Ohr this a stylus ac Auated hv a wheel which triverses the wrouml marks the trace. and tho sty Ins: moves at 'a rute proportional to the wheel, avhile othe paper moves past it at ri; cht angles - with a velocity plopoxtlollal imtho tune The slope of ihe trace is a record of the speed, The odograph is 'such the mm that rv‘rna'l trai s tivel, or the time nad i u the. tmi'k, and it 4s thouglit that in the more genctil use which proinises to be made of this {u<trument it will he | found to meet ager nah nundrous pire nth recorder has leen llutll‘tl —;.\('\\ \\ +k TllllLb Inartistic I‘:€\;';n '. The ba d hilsit w-f “l. ting mm which ret a few -in Hoc ou very one Ln, l heel l, some fran. 21 of of$ fe hs Wibo p. numics of passers by «i'r no gxeuse for tacir a~ us, and Cto net than half anmvihing 40+ it. Butof progress mado in r aurprlqnh andt now many of have becoimero. tum! d by e¢pefdionce that gey ean invent any ef nees in order to be in Af a Po-, <their of Llu otie other- is th. suld be the liftle go des a hi some. in'. All) t Hon.: ba s nies, Wiis yeh ‘h‘n, Gd dual wos.d hecelpected o f llh m:ol¥ s dpesoed nan w hile strofling alone, a side Acs le n'x fomid hls w rm struct- a 1.“ _o cl, evidently Tolowing 1. ing a. ie pive mea pasy to -a rhoestiim.*\* s lune forgetter that the Inel om Were battoned oues, Sho seems 11111 s kl 16 and almost new at that. —Iluf\alo Ex-: lyll‘\~ m Tun lunch. of. Men., | The Arals hia e no Ht+fle lxnn‘\\lwl\e “f tie precepeso c Car Polity, ded mae respect for {hi-m. ldil they nlgllly ious of 11 ~I wasa nolie umnmnrh iof Nazaieth,\ sans eneccod UP ”in... \that mei should love theire nemws, and 'e who hate che ip. ~If iH meu were ghle to {Mow this precept, see there would be nn eneinies for us to love, hor despisers nl ourselves . Man Bd] to whom we could do geed, \lir this werk would wen mv perhaps, <gecceed in «in pne more din ir tliis: to cortrol nnx'lgwnl-gits we i dadenids anole (him cce fades. : \For there be in the workd now two kiu t- of grouen. tb who who love their £19\ nes agore thium i rie their enemies. wot Those Who Tait mv aere tia they les o\ The difet el b: F1) cour ene those rotieuds. ese There dis'thope, end | bot fl} s cend wes\tould fv, as the Bedloitin {j the red man cee e nne - - } Cost ef Poiine sd Tt is suid that o: : lke rudroad con ht l\ «oof mtx t': vpoa the que dos fungi: i at |< fhe uss to the ful kno thia frig. nid goed as that anount of xumu 's: “thl ' A friend told me that, no un (Dustration of how the liflss is oeccn- tored. he hrd for one of {hese eaPs, one day dx -\ pftil.ca trout, a ~ yeme bird an boa bex oof folls, butter und a gl:1~s of milk. 'The meal gost a dolar, and ibs wife told him} she could \ not buy any one uf 1‘1- prins{pat dishes - in fhe markets for t . Chatter. idbes cols. mum often, | tuo - v owhhin thes in and fa.el con oar fne relat aid 34pm; 'fnlness . aregtened by > 4 ~ting speed - beast or | capable ‘nf' being have fation is { of asking f - corner of her Fifth Avonne hote} parlor . this evil is | re quite stylishly | not b years \ she puma “Illl ase - 48 years old. All ats, honor. 'shall love | A4uheit ene. Lon . . 20. 27 . 74 Beriim. curtain of the sky benind which the <1- f = Yom b's companion. { <], dians« is 21,283, As that tl- lulu ‘ i { States is 247, The number of Indiaus living on nnd‘ to vin of : | States who can read Indian languages is | 10,027.-Bt. Paul Globe. DAUGHTERS OF EVE. Rosan Bouheur is (3. years of age and her brush is stil} busy. she recéived $10 U0. Mme. Patti is to receive a casket and the freedom of Swansea, Wales, at the Nation al Imsteddfodd to be held next year. Pl‘OVldellCO, R. I., has a female pastor in & the person of Mrs. Anna Garlan Spencer, | who has charge of the Bull Street church. Mrs. Hnymarker, a native of Bombay, [ after receiving a medical education in | 'I Philadelphia is about to return to her own , people as a missionary. The Southarn Pacitic ocean has a monop- olist in the person of Mrs. Emma. Forsythe, | a rich widow, who owhs a goodly part of | : the island of Yew Britain. goes by the nameé of the White Queen:. One of the pretty Californin heiresses is { Miss Grace lIcDonough who will inherit . a fortune of $3,000,080 from her mother. She is a tall, stately girl, with n haughty manner, but a sweet and attractive face. It is related that the late Marchiqness of - Ely was reuch admired in her youth by . Cavour, who would bave married her had she been willing to leave the British court and her intimate friend, Queen Victoria. : Miss L. Ackroyd of Newnham college, | ‘Eugland has been uonunated to occupy | 1 the university table at tlie laboratory of the Marine Biological association at Ply- : mouth for one month during the year 1990. 4 Miss luluabbth Peabody, whose charities and benevolence have, made her so distin- | : guished throughout New England, is now | 87 years. old. < She is in comparatively good health, but i« waiting quietly for the end. Mine. Lillian Nardica, the gifted musi- éian, uses up-a plano and a gallon of scent: She i« a hard . < worker, a: home lover and an anti-rthlete, | never walking any further than the car- | riage step. . By her will the late Mrs. Emily Pfeiffer, - ed water severy month. the well known English poet, bequeathes, | with the exception of a few legacies, the [ - whole of her' personal estate of £68,000 to charitable and educational establishments for women. | The latest description of Margaret De- land, the Boston writer, represents her as I &. slender young woman plunging through the snow drifts of Beacon other southern woman. and is still bu) ing.. Bertha von Hillern is still an ardent pe- destrian, though most of her time is now 1 ' devoted to work in her studio in the Vir- | ginia mountains. She is a devout Catholic, | and frequeutly walks eleven miles to | church and back again. Frances Power Cobbe, the well known Portugle has a female bull fighter. 1, yet is wondmfull; expert in the arena. ; At her debut in Opotto she Killed two bulls, and a week later in Lisbon she Killed . | two more _: | Mrs. Dorothy Stanley s last act as an un- } 2 married artist was the sale of her picture - of \Street Arabs at. Play\ to a great soap selling firm for a pictorial advertisement. 4 She expressed her willingness that the | . picture should be used for that purpose if | cit were not chauged in any manner. Miss Alitg Proctor Otis, the editor of. 4 Saturday Review, Has her bread-and-but- | Mri. Senator Platt [ ter day love for dolls is another devotee of the dol}, and in one is a small stand, where a group of talking - doll babies sit with staring eyes and part: | | ed lips. ' The Duchess of Cleveland is a first rate | { artist. the owner of a house in , Grosvenor place, London, which contains [ a great maby beautiful paintings which were the “01k of the proprietress. These include a most charming portmxt of the: lute Duchess of Westminster in the lovely days of her early youth. Helen Mathers, the author Ripe\ and ther months and mwde all) 000 out of them. ROYAL FLUSH ES. The sultan is (lesu'lherl as a thin, pale, black haired man with a sharp eye. f mal + : PR - Queen Vistoria has given 2250 to a fund raised for the purpose of putting a steamer 1 on the Vlctm ia Nyanzg. The king of Belgium reqriested the honor | of contributing best man for Stanley's wed- | ding, and named Comte BDaroche for that | 4 pertaining to a building and materials fur- Emperor William has declared that the next birthday of Count Von Moltke shall be kept as a national holiday. The famous strategist was born Oct. 26, 1800, at Par- 1 chim, Mecklenburg f ._ The Princeés Dolgorouki is one of the | [ most uuunplwhed amateur violin players cin Europe. , She is also pretty, hnving a fair complexion, delicate features and the refinement of the best Slav type. ; dresses picturesquely. The prince of thaumbmg Lippe, the | | father of the Emperor | brother-in iw, William's intended is one of fhe richest of the Gernirh - Te possesses a very Iirge fort was 1nd yast estates fu Bohemia, Hungary uul Upper pality, which Hes betwhen Cologne and and it contains an aren of nine Ger- man sqtare! miles. AME Rl'CAN‘ IN DIAN STATYSTlCS- The if m agencies are 61 in number. The - of The estimated Alaska is 80,000. The total Ind{an fon of the United 761. mimber of- in cultivating land is 9,612. There are 10 Indian trainfug schools in . different pauits of the Union. The uumhm of Indian church members In the Unite I States is 28,668. The numer of Indisus in the United . States who can read English is 23,5095. The nungber of Indians in the United States who Avear citizens' dress is 81,631. The nuwnber of Indians in the United For het last picture 1 CaTsSETLL , June 11, 1888. I have found in Dr. Deane's Dyspepsia \Pills a retparkable remedy for Dyspepsia. Speaking | from,. an experienée of four months mltheu‘ use, I have found them to moet in my own case all that I dared to : hope for ih the way of relief. I most hear- : tily recommend thein to any sufferer from fspepsia. _E. Vax SuYkE, Pastor Reformed Church Catsklll N Y Mrs. Forsythe | | you. CAKE PANS. 1 tition. | Wi 'Give us a street with a ; market busket on her arm and her big dog | at her side. | f \_ Mrs. M. Edlth Howcott, of New Orleans, ' probably owns fuore real estate than any | She has in ber _own right over 50,000 neres -of selected tim- | . ber lands in Louisiana and Mississippi, | English writer, was born in 1822, she | | ' writes frequently for the reviews and mag- | . azines on social, ethical and religious sub- ' jects, and is also a promlnem; leader of the as | anti-vivisection movement in England. : Her | ' name is Clotilde Mejstrik. She has prac- ; ticed for bull fighting only since last April | of \Cherry | f successful novels, has f never written anonymously, or empoyed - her pen in journalistic work of any kind;: no inducement will make her take up her | pen when ske is not in the mood; yet she } once wrote two three volume novels in six 4 & He is Scroll $ She I } Nos. 27, Austria, and is the owner of uearly the whole of his princi- | opsin Stolves, Crockery, &c. GREAT! REDUCTION IN PRICES raters and\Oil Stoves at Cost. Ud Our pricks on FRUIT JARS are very low. We are spilling GLASS WALE very cheap. Our pug cs on STUNEWARE‘ will surprise bf Mrs, Van Dusen's: improved:patent 'They are the best. -We are selling THK WARE at pr izes that defy compe- have also a large stock of Try one CROCKERY, { : consistinglof DINNER and TEA SBTS, which | we are selfing very cheap; LAMPSOL all kinds. Wonre gdgents for the All lhght sStcam and I Hot W sitar Heater. Plumbing, Tinning, Steam and Gas Fitting Mi? REASONABLE PRICES. all and be satisfied that we will do as we say. CALLARAN&SELMSER a [31 West Main Street, | JOHNSTOWN, N. Y. Grocerles. NED CHICKEN AN D TURKEY, l Lu’nchl Ham, Plotted Meats, { Imported Sardines, | OLLVB OIL, SALAD DRESSING. .ms & HANSON tfactors and Builders. _ ‘l - \ABLISI—HZED 1856 l E. SEAMAN & CO. -GENERATL, -- nd Builders, DEA-Mans IN ALL KINDS OF d Material, Agents for the Adamant Wall Plaster and Mineral Wool. attention given to all kinds of work nished. STAIR BUILDING, nel Ceiling and Wainscoting, lawing and Turning of All Kinds, Sushi Doors, Blinds and. Mouldings. Fstimatps freely given forall kinds of work. STEAM MILL, 29, 31 and 33 Chestnut Street, Femerly Fonda Plank Road, j JOIINSTO'W'N N- Y- lass F. E BEEKMANV HESE & BEEKMAN, Foul manned h) lu- GENERAL Contractors «« Builders shop No. 6 Cayadutta St., Johnstown,. . Estimates made and contracts taken for all Rrudsfof binldings - {food workmanship guaratiteed. AND REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS Noh ited, und promptly attended to. ‘ Shop supplied with the Latest Machinery, whllch, is run by an Electric Motor.