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H 1 ~ hen 'r Cus U : <14+ i 1C Price one cent. Sold and delivered by News- _ JOHNSTOWN, SATURDAY EV v Evinma. LY 26, 1890, JU CbePailyRepublican 1 -K E. BLUNCK, Editor andszfiriet‘or. o Published-daily, except Sunday boys exclusively. ~ ~~ Rintered as second-class mail matter 'at the post-office in Johnstown, Fulton county,.N. Y. (on f‘Traveiliem’f Guide. { . Cranberry Crook _ {. Northville. -. S2. Cranberry Creek... * .. ~ Mayheld.. ..... . \\ © Kingsbore ... © 12 b ‘Chicaé'o' Pacific Express . . Johnstown......... | . .. Chicago Express. .. 6 Accommodation .. . . . O7 10 Special, N. ¥. Express...... ... Li £1 P.“M. v2. c. 30 md Fdhda, Johnstown & Gloversville R. R, \ come nortu. P. AL]: . el ls 12 50 Fonda... 3 80 1 18 Leqve a * Gloversville. .. &rrive Gloversville a_ Leave Kingsboro ..... . ** eld v+ we | Bi wP P | imieto ._.... Atrive '~ comte sorin. Northville... . .... Lea at Arrive 7 17} .. Leave t Gloversville. . Th. - g—lg'gggvflle g 9550 f h own. . Fonda... . Arrivel, 7 551 55 05 48 10 10 ap to anes . Trains leave Fonda as follows : GOING EASE. |. . Utica Accom, & N.Y. REx. 2.2.08 Of C O7 ® 'ew York Express. Accommodation... ... 5. Day Express...... . Accommodation ...... ...... o te ~ aome waret. Day Express,........ Accommodation.. .. i- Syracuse Express .. .' , Chicago E: 3 ... 1. New Fork Syracuse Accom.... ... \* ! New York & Utica Rxpréss. . .... a 5661115\ East. .. 1 ‘GojnngeStl. e dives vere ee ll... \IP 56 SUNDAY TRAINS. ve ae. be. ul eee. rel, L 0 52 * From Albany to Littler Falls. West Shore Railroad. Op - irapipsvlcwe Fultorville as follows : Gong East. : No. 8 Mohawk and Hudson K. Ex. # 33 A. M. -* No.0 West Shore Express.. 'No. # Day Express.... ... .......... 5 B3 \* Gong wEst. - = cued N05 Pacific Expross............ .... 8 27 A.M. \_; No.9 Hudson River Accom.. 0 - 6105) 7:00; 8:00 31103171351 - , No.7 Mo ~ 11:00, and oi 8:15 P. ap | Express,.....00. ... (20... 3 awk and Hudson E. Ex.... € | Jolinstown & Gloversville Street Railroad «LEAYVEJOHNSTOWN. . 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, nda 12: A. M. 2:00, 2:00, 3:00, 4:00, 5:00. | LEAVE GLOYERSVILLE. 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, and 12:00 A. .; 1:00 2:00,.3:00, 4:00, 5:00, 6:07. :00, 8:00, 9:00. P. M. % -\ Oy 4 d WCs 8:00 2. x. 7:00. _ - . «\: >_ Sunday-9:00,0:50,11:00 Sunday -9:30; 11:00 a. Cg \A. MQ; . 12:10 1:00, % 2:00 | m.; 12:10; 1:00 7:00, \ $106, 5:00, 6: :00, 4: i \ $s 00 p. an \_ 00, 4:00; 6:00, . Dante, sole standing on the | Kept silence, and the illro | Of gll the starg was dar In heaven six hundred Fears havo taken? | For hark bare withess wheh Her face was g Pp. x. | 6 431. 13 } 4 np ll, | | visitors were permifi | the chief engineer for 'la o | dies (all English), a in 5 T0 | and myself to make t? h --= - m p [Images ' \N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Time Table. | ‘ 1 rative is challenged, to | affidavit or otherwise, . pened, without attemip’t‘ né uny emb - for themselves. ° Andj,.-'fi.1'st} it is inbe j 1 incident which has ard a | ting, as will be 'ssen glemaftcr. | daiys beforo I had seen ‘ | man feeding the! English sparrows it . Tujleries garder. § ] | 1 : of bread, throw 'the crumbs into thel ai things | ing, as they do 'Ansect i tame thoy would eat | woman's hand. She! w . | worked at some place 1h | north of the Tuileries, and | \~the south; yet sho never fail | bread to her feathored has ¢ - dens on Nov. 8 to try my < apr. h. ¢ | two small loaves of bres ;: gave ten centimés. I cal ' should have time enouleH t fore the carriages came to ever, delayed mo, and 'I ; the bread in tho : meaning to bestow it o? 17319 beggar in-. 9. | hotel; and drove'rapidl | d'Enfer and alif © where we found two BEATRIGE enwardhd . Behold and heard one sag-Lug: \Behold n ' Fom, I am Beatrice,\ (| Tm; and hell | lelight ; best inh 1:1,th | es behold her eyes iagoin, and f m giant). Bifico g: ($111 took: \dwell => i And now that heaven'liaizt'r1 i off earth x‘vh Shines yet their ghadow/as once their | pr shone, - |. Po} To her bears witness for gm ike, as he | No slawe, no hospice no t fdr pie?; but £ From shore to mountainjand from Alp to -Algernon Charles Bwinburne in Athen -THE CATACQ The 8th of Nasfambgr; | ever remain my life. It was the Ia the catacombs of P: 1 great difficulty procured pormiss ~ van ol sisting of three genflemgfgx cle At I an, albc to write, and they aro'read: ‘ tions of which they | f 'I shall now proceed to telate wh'fatf Hshment, letting the plir facts: sper ry to dwell for one thot P little did; rc la [1 he broke up and the timid gardens, and sparo a A1 Now Ihad planned & y birds, 'and had' provide {D the Catacombs. | Various this part of 'the 'prograim| pocket! stead of the sparrows. j 'We started at ' 12:80 fry “hteyd OP mall party} con- ipgnions I (have :- | dead! y overcpat, *I am glad you think so,\ was tho re- | ply, followed by a sneering, Mephisto phelitan laugh-what the French call rt ~canement. * | were walking steadily onward, some- times walking on loose planks, .our | way. the low ceiling. line, with here and there a pointed ar- passod, about nine feet in height, wore < piled nupas regularly as bales in a whole- | sale draper's, and arranged with that ar- tistlo taste which the French display in ith ' all they do. | _- The walls of bonés were surmounted by a ghastly cornice of grinning skulls. 1 old cemeteries of Paria when nécesslty 'living. The Cemetery of the Innocents, that of Bt. Medaro, of St. Laurent and oth- | of. _ Equality and fraternity! These mausgoletuiin. All the skulls and boues are of a dark @ ] mahogany color, for years' and years | have passed since they weroclothed with | 'f flesh. E] At intervals there are marble tablets, . with inscriptions i1 Latin, French, Greek, Norse and other languages, gath: ored from the works of preachers and posts, speaking of the vanity of buman | pursuits, the worthlessness of wealth, | the certainty of death, the hopo of im-. At one polat of our pilgrim- age we came to a chapel, with tho altar. jJont but eloquent | ' thon remerimbéred the legend of the - Bean- | manoir artns. mortality. surrounded by the | memorials of humanity. Miles of the How emphatic the lesson this' spectacle conveyed! ~ To the right and loft innumerable gal- leries branched off, access being debarred by fron chains drawn across the on- trapees. Thad lingered a little behind my party -] to transcribe an inscription, the man in- | black keeping close to my side. sectned to have taken me under his pro-, tection and patronage. |_ \I can show you something theie hire my me away from all the blessings that Providencé vouchsafed tono, to wander | in foreign lands? 'Then imny whole Hf passed in. review before ine, with its | A dead silence fell upon our party. We | worhis sending up jets of water, but { go+ craily on a dry and solid stone path- The guide held up his flaring torch to. \Observe he said. \that broad, black. sat down exhausted and hopeless. 1 wan | 'almost surprised to find myself hungry. row. That is the clew to the catacombs. | Thon I remembered the bread I had pro- ~ | So long as we follow that we aro safe.\ ° We soon came upon the relics of the . dead. The galleries through which we. r 7 Phe , reader will bo surprised to learn that after - | walled on- either aldo with human bones, - ' 'solf to find that I was nodding. So 1 wrapping myself up in it was seon fast { The mortal remains of millions of ha- | man beings were here gathered from the | compelled the dead to give way to the | must have been missed, and & scatch 'T must be going on for me? - Alast alas! no J one responded to in ers have contributed their quota. Hero, the bone of prelate and prince, duke and: | peor, lay side by sido with thoso of pore | . | ant and proletarian, thief and rag pick- ‘ no longer thought. of escaping from iny ] words wore fully realized in this gloomy | Hving grave. My only cry was for water, ' clous to my pulate! Le f How long a time I passed in my dis- mal prison house it is imposible to ray. f . was not to be had. Beanmanoir!\ was the reply of the: equire, cand \Boire ton seng, Beauma- | noir,\ became afterward the motto of } | the family. Before I died I could open \a vein with my knife, and imitate the ling guides know nothing about,\ he | | said, \for I alonn know the secrets of the e | Catacombs,\ . [_ He lifted one of the ~chaifis which: a | crossed the mouth of a side gallery from: He had now been burned,and I had to work. in utter darkness. - Fronzied and despeot- there, my books, my easel, my photo- graphic apparatus. ‘ Why did the spifit of adventure tempt many vicissitudes, its sins of omission. and commission, and the faces of the | lovedand lost came to. me with the smile and tears of the-olden time. After hours of fruitless wandering i vided for the little birds in the Tuileries: garden. I took one of tho sma loaves and swallowed a few mouthfuls The this I feit sloopy. I1 was astonished my- spread my thick cloak on the floor, and aslesp. I cannot tell how long my sluinber lasted, I woke, howover, to ronew my struggles at eseapo. I lit match after, match,, and called aloud for help, till my voice wus utterly exhausted. Surely I mfg call. - No footsteps but my own echoed through thoso div mal galleries. But now a new craving asséiilled me- | thirst, more.cruel thin Bunger, | Lack of- water kills quicker than luck of food. 1 water! But this want was soon supplied. The sacrifice of a few more matches ro- vealed to me u little stream exuding from the walls I glued my lips to it, and though the flavor was nauseons, yet never in the heat of summer had a gob let of iced champagne 'been more deli-. Days, niglts-who can messure them under such cireunstancer? Finally 1 had exhausted my list cfumb, and sturva- tion stared me in my face. How could I now sustain life? - Qddly enough I just. Boanumanuotr was a gallant Fronch character of the olden time, who, single handed, contundced with & score of En- glish knights. Covered with wounds, he solemnity. It is not' at all likely any . asked his squire for water, but water ''Drink thy blood example of the gallant Paladin. . But first I would inake a desperate at- tempt to find an outlet. Every match u f Levites were not fnuthbered . them.\ - Those who (13d: stund up to be econuntéed numbered 608,550. income. MOSES TOOK THE first ong in THE wiLDS 05\ THE DESERT. How the Citizens of Greece Were Count- ed Under the Dirnétion of Solon-Exact | and Complete Information First Ob- - tained by lAugnstufs Czsar. the Kind is that of Moses in tho wilder ness. That enumeration must have been | exceedingly simple, as shown by the first ' chapter of the fourth book of the Penta ye,\: says this aceount, - teuch. - \Take ‘ 'the sum of all the éongregations of the : children of Isfael after their families, by thoe house of their fathers, with the . number of their names, every male by | their polls from 20: years old and up- ward,. all that are able to go forth to war | 'in Israel; thou and Aaron shall nuimber f them by their armies.\ _ The names of the: chief enumerators are also given, thoso:who assisted Moses , and Aaron being \the renowned of the - f congregation, princés of the tribes of - their fathers, heads of thousands in Isracl.\ - Then . thei enumerators \as- { sembled all the congregation on the first ] day of the second month and they de- clared their pedigreck after thoir fami- Hos by the house of! their fathers, ac-. . cording to the uumber of naines, from twenty years and npward, by the polls.\ This enumeration mist havo been an af- fair sodn over, requiring probably no more than a day's tiime, being merely a . counting of the heads of the fighting mon. | There was no counting of women or children or old men.of cripples, and \the among _ THF CENSTE.IN cura. Theredis record of 'a census in China as far back as the yhar 2042 B. C., and - of onein Japan the last century before - Christ. | Undef theconstitution-of Solon | the citizens of Athc-mvi-rv divided and | registered ihito four classes according to | the amount of their taxable property or ' The Roman census was bur- , dened with more statistics than any of these «sitaple enumetations. - It origi- | nated under Servios Tullius, sixth king of Rome, and was an affair of much man or woman was ifoun‘d sufficiently lost to fear of to make faces at census officers or withhold de- sired information, © Every citizen had to appear upon the Martius and declare upon oath his nameand dwelling and the value of his property under the penalty of hav- ing his goods confiscated and of being scourged and sold for a glave.> There . was no trouble about having such a con- ORIGIN OP THE CENSUS | The Pleasures of Keeping a Horse and # The most nnciehtfitatistical record of | so she smiled a slow, weird smile an consented to the inserflon of an adver- | perior cow and a tractable ; 'Scarcoly a week had fliittel by when | | one day there walked into th» back yard, , ured he was & Bwedv, and neither spoke nor understood the langnage of the land ; of: his adoption. | leave the horse and cow. In vain I- gesticulated, danced, expostulated. Sad- j ly, yet resolutely, he cast off theo leading him to the cornor, LIVING IN THE COUNTRY. | . Ls : | Cow in the Dooryard, | \I'll tell you,\ said the doctor, \we' { buy a cow and make our own butters! { And we'll fence in the adjoining lot an | keep a pony for the children! What's | the use of living in the country if you don't keep a cow or a horse?\ . To this outburst there came no ansvvefi sive a maniac simile, for the doctor's only audience was a fecble minded wo, man, whom sad experience in suburban | life had bereft of hope. h Perhaps she remembered the slow; allenation - of neighborly brought about by marauding fowls, and ; also those lurid months during which 3 ; blithe Newfoundland pup had dovastated . the land, but if so she made no sign. long. experience with men had taught this gentle being that the only way toj | asks. get the best of men and bens is to appear to give thom their own way in the Start-31 tisement in the county paper for s S#ti-| pony. { a strange cavilewdo. First camo s do- . jected dwarf of a steed, w.e-s head hady cvidently beon designed fo: a Normandy{| draught horse, but whose i is had becn, © Elis bust(| measure was all riglit, bo ho presented j} sawed off short in a dream. the general appeafan. of un oik thatf had started with the bost of intentions;} ; from an acorn, but had suddenly changed j its mind and decided to becotae a head j of lettuce, Thero was a musterful look l in his eye that bespoke decision and force, und the way his fore shoftened members touched tho ground was indic- | ative of business Behind the horse | came a wrecked cow, I put it mildly | . when I say a wrecked cow, for she had } A_ 24 292 pgs . no horus, ho tail aud sum-«Ll? any bair. | Orchard and related to the attorney npon 1 honor: An intelligent dog was She had bones, however, and they show- ed and seemed to creak in tho. morning air like a week's washing frozen on the ling. Back of the horse and cow strode a gigantic boy. He wasevidently young, fot he wore knickcribuckers, but he was vety large and powerful. - I soun discoy- Ho seemed resolved to strings from tho two beasts and turfied - thein loosé in ny duuryard. shotgun I should probably bave stained | ' iny fnuocent soul with boyslaughter, but ho paid ho attention to me | his stops to the unknown country from f and retraced whence he and his living menagerie had cota. I went bome in tears and found the afificting . I followed |; __ 29 b NSs e p and if I hado haze}; “grout into water, a smile growing over his RICE ONE CENT. Is the 20th of February a Day? The question whefhk+ the 26th of Feb- ruaty is legally a day or not has lately been presented to the courts of Indiana. [There is authority in that state to the { effect that the 28th and 20th of February are to be counted as one day; but when the supreme court so detided it had not examined an anciont English statute concerning leapyear, passed in the twen- ty-third year of Honry HL, which bears upon the sabject. Accordingly, in the ' case to which we refer, the image deter- mined to consider the question de novo, 'and he cume to the conclusion that the 29th of February must be regarded as a day in the contemplation of the law, at least; as much as any other, and must. 'be reckoned in the legal computation of | time where days aro considered. \Is the man who works on Feb. 28 and 20 to have pay for one day only?\ he ' \Hes a judgment rendered on Feb. 28 no priority as & lien over one { rendered on Feb. 29? Could a man sen- 'tenced to be hung on Feb. 29 be legally 'exzecuted on Peb. 28?\ Of course not. The confusion on the snbject has evi- dently arisen from statutes treating of the entire year as a whole. Thus, there ; is a provision in the Revised Statutes of ; Now York that whenever the term \year\ or \years\ shall be used in any law sentence, contract or instrument of writing the year intended shall be taken to consist of 865. days, a half year 182 ; days, a quarter of a year 91 days, and ''the added day of a leap year and the | day immediately preceding, if they shall occur in uny period so computed, shall | be rockoned together as one day.\-St. | Louis Republec. A Very Good Dog Story. The following dog story is absolutely trme, the occurrence having come under the observation of the physician at Old by fleas. They clouded 'his existence, if we may believe appearances, since four- fifths of the time the intelligent dog was | tied up in a double bow knot fighting | the sinaller and less intelligent but more nimble fea. He had chewed the hair {from his sides, and his eye was lack 'tuster: The mangy canine decided to Itake a bath in the waves of the ocean, land in doing so discovered that as the isea water heightened upon his legs and sides and back the fleas fled before it as 'aver tho wicked flee. {0 ~ Soon after the dog was seen backing l‘conntenance as an idea took possession 'of him. He was next seen with a huge ' {wax} of cotton in his mouth. With this 'lifted gloft he backed out. The fleas 'crawled higher as the séa water rose 'about him. They occupfed bis back and ''then his head, made rincomfortable as “hey were by the salt water. Then at sus full and complete.: It had the bene- fit, too, of mnldng the people to be count- \ ed anxious to find the census man, while he was not put to the labor of going from house to house to find the people. Augustus Cirsar, who had a great head For detail, when he had the population numbered greatly enlarged the scope of horse liad regained his spirits and was .. plage a . | chasing the cow uround the yard. When jg“, ashthxidng S headtgfnk mfiwb he got tired of that he bean to kick at - bENCBtD the ing to the wad of cotton, the ”M1331\ who had gone out to the ‘flggat wé’s‘qflbdfifiigjust at the dog's nos? restile of tho cow, frightening the poor ”The fleas float {2°21 away forev éf on the wirl so badly that sho fell in a fit PPOZ lAekle wad, of cotton while the do the doorsiH, over which I dragged her [CCHS hof, to he forever Im 98 at the risk of my qwn life. wain ashofo, to be forever embalmed in 18 ate, I rughced from gallery to gallery, i leaping the chains where they impeded my progress. At lust I thought I encoun- tered a current of fresh air. I seized | what I conjectured to be a thigh bone projecting from a pile of them and gave it a wreuch. the staples, and moving down the pass-. ago turned and said, \Follow met\ © I have said that this mysterious being had magnotized mo. I was certain of it now, for though I was anxtously desirous f of following my party Lcould not resist ' hig.command. | porsans waiting for the dpening of. { lbw browed door which glives accosy to. 'the catacombs in that quarter of [the] city. - There aro about seventy different staircases for the same putpose seattured through Paris. Hero éach {person fas pnd: 1°_- . Professional Cards. . Ope ._ Smith & Nellis, ' ATTORNEYS and Counsclors at Law, Office #*. Opposite County Clerk's Office, Johus- } town, N.Y. f sou ATTQRNEY and Counselor at Law. Office |** in Kibbe Building, Main Stggctnjulms- I Q PHILIP Ifzfizqm.’ ol Keck & Smith, ~ - i in town., N. i CLARENCE W. i i b pobveer she son atc -A- a - - - Ranking. - fof a pine stick, with 1 , cardboard to serve as a tray and catch ied le] and enjothed bf; ey { provided with a candle 24m d in the very eareful of 'thoir # P wont down into the dark epths belogs, ° the drops of gresso. Edoh ghide fort his party into single C the members to I:eep togeth r, and to ting as t armagll circle, of thenco into other side passages, wiuding and turning. I lifted my torch to the cerling, and saw to my dismay that there to reassert itself. Ho led me away down the passage, and | skulls gnve way, and rolled down. on mo in a thundering avalancho, whiles voice } were no black lines, no guiding arrows on the roof, - In this crisis my will began In an instant a mass of bones and exclaimed, \The intrader who invades the sanctuary of the dead shall porish by the dead!\ | The horror of the catastrophe over-. . paratively recent. the census and improved the method of | < taking it. The census of modetn Europe is com- N6 exact popular , enumeratioinis were mido in the Soven- toenth century, but it the Eighteonth great progress was made in the develop- | After a time tho horse wearied of his - surroundings and started off at a tearing ; run down street, leaping a five barred gate as easily as a wind blown feather skims the air. Where he wont I know not, for my eyes have never rested upon hiin since ho disappeared in the direo- istory by the story of the doctor and the lawyer and the newspaper.-Christ- fan at Work. 4 \Exercise in Heart Disease. \ The fact is well known that Ocrtel, tile distinguished Cterman writer, has warmly advocated for certain forms bf functional heart trouble not rest, but activo exercise, such as mountsin limbing. In pursing this practice, how- - whelmed me, and Lost my conscious- ness. | When I recovered I was lying in. my bed in the (Grand hotel, with the sun shining on the gluss gallery opposite my window. There was a tap at my \Take me back to my party instantly.\ Instead of dotrig so the stranger: snatched my candle from my hand, ex- 1ished it with a breath-he carried Now here dccurred thd first straige} incident of this memordblpday. A. an [ joined our party wearthg| the dress{of | the Urdertakers® compa 5'%thu.f 1s] a fin?“ ¥ e cocked hat like the first| Napoleon's, a | no light himscif-and fung me from him 'black coat trimmed with kilver Info, | with such violence. that I stumbled an: . door, I sprang up, opened it and admit- high boots and a black bypréont with a j fell . ted my traveling companion. £ ain s, . ail large cape. He was very (thin, ind his] - As I rose to my feet I heard his | '*Well, old fellow,\ said he, \how did { a 200 o _| elothes hung about him Hike & shr mid jon | in the distance culling out, \Strange} you sleep after our visit to tho Cata- Gapzital -- $100,000. | a. skeleton. | 1 of l ' _|_ | things havo bappened in the Catacombs, combs yesterday?\ 20 * 2. | . to o >> | I Shall never forget his face as The | sir. Find your way out of them if you | \Yesterduy?\ I echoed, Profits, - $47,000, | turned and looked at me} The skin was | can. Good-night.\ R | «©¥és. I hnd the nightmare.\ e { like parchment, the chee boHow:and| 'Stay!\ I exclaimed in agony. \Do \But how did I escaper\ I asked. ment of statistical scence. In Russia | tion of the lake bluff, but I am told that tho taking of the census in a crude way | after a night's wandering he was taken , begin 11.1700, and in 1719, under Poter 1 llp'i‘andiruttgnedtiu In; (éwnoxg.hp I lad the Great, though impFfovement bad | Turn ng from the window where I had [ R Wd O0. 9 marin been made, fcmzlzfi-a wérf} omitted from | stood spellbound with delight to see the - W3; £16} £111,116“ cage; iié’ound: ecgsgsry F - the enumeration. i gentle beast vault through the crowd of FHC uslaifief‘ If”. $1“; od‘ IN cCoUXTRiES, helpless school children on their way to [\ 3&5??? is to fieigifieé’a the heart _ Censimtaking in Prussia dates from | school, I turned my attention to the - and fomote the cireulation, and . the time of Frederick Williaimn II. The hired girl and the cow. They both 1. Em. A hiefllzvhy arteries can stand, the { Prossian census of today is very exact | seemed delirious, The former moaned train {me}; treatment is of course con- and complete. | It is taken by civil off. | soiicthing about taking the‘fixyt train to ira ifiéi‘cati’ 4 in atheroma, *f in one day by means of printed | town, and the latter was rubbm'g berselt - R ha a l a schedules. The first dengus in Austria | against the side of the house in a way . 6 OanBgm ,, tog A i O © isdrplus and C.. [J. w. Chine, 0 20 L ~. in. w.p6treR, - CoL g! S. '~ (W. B, VAX VLIET, (W. S. NORTHRUI’, - -- Vice President oe , DIRECTORS,. J, W. CLINE, i M. #. Pisxson, F. J. Dorx, JAS. F. MASON, , . ZALMON GLLEBERT, W. L. Jouxson. © A.STREETEX, J. G. ; Drafts on New York and Europea \cities at low rates. _. i { Certificates issued pon special deposits und paid upon the same. tC Dox 1 poo \% - _ . President. ~ Ct‘shwri when he saw thd effectli smiled, disclosing! a set df [yellow técth, - with an expression so stuister, so wehld. | : so fatal, and yet so sad, thit I coutd np { beip saying to myself, \This is Deathi BonroBs Px | | challenge his assumed 'our partys In a word, 1 pletely magnetized and ; What was strange, from the eyes luminous and deep set in cayetn- : ous orbits. 'The look he ' A gaive me thrill; y [bones, afi produced to the very martow of! £ was so overcome that I could! f g lady of our party turn with me, apparently unc black figure and terrible [a no not leave me here to perisht Save me, . if you have the heart of a man!\ \I néver listen to prayer or appeal,\ | be replied, with his hideous, inecring: laugh. \I am pitiless as death.\ the most horible fate the imaytuation can picture. . < f_ What was to be done What could, be done in such a terrible efists? My | : party would iniss we, it is true, and a. | search would be made for me; but a ro z- P iment of men might seek for days in |- And. the echoes gave back the awful [ ] word- -deatht till a more dreadful scene ;: You must have beech dreaming.\ | followed, I was alone in darkness, abandoned tof \Escape? What do you mean by es- [ ; caping? You rode home the carriage } with mo and the lwdies;\ ''But that undertaker who thrust him- self into our party?\ ''There was no undertaker, my boy: Not at all, unless I was dreaming wide awake.\ \People sometimes do that.\ | \You did not observe anything « pueer' about mo in the Caticoumbs?\ \Not ut all. I thought you were un- usually lively and wide awako.\*\ Then I told hiin my story as I have ro- lated it. was taken in 1754, and for 100 yoars was taken cuch three {cars For military pur- | T poses only. . statistics has been particularly cultivat- ~d, and Bolgtum rauks among the first | untions of the world in. completeness of | In Sweden the science of its national statistics. | In Italy the re- | tums of this churactch are very com-. J plete, the range of inqafries having been [ greatly extended. The movement of the pepulation ts determined from civil reg- isters kept by the xuuuigigm\ authorities. - Tu Turkey enumeration 'is fmporfect, the [ chief object of taking it boing to provide a basis for taxation and conscription. : that\ made the windows rattle. I went vutand gave the poor thing & basin of water, which she absorked with one loud inhalation and seemed anxious for more. The better part of the morning was spent in humanitarian service. I do not think the poor animal had tasted ; . food since the preceding Juue. the doctor came homeo at night ho found | the hired girl gone foréver ind the cow nsleep on the garden walk Hkean emact- ated watchdog on guard. \Who brought that rack of bones here?\ ho asked. I wunted to say who I thought had a © “7111511 f ' diagnosis of a heart murmur was re tarded as a grave fact, an adverse con- Husion being at once arrived at. without ufficiently considering the other signs nd symptoms. Such cases, it is found, ften do well with exorcise and ontdoor ife Again, in fatty degeneration, the heart in a young person can stand a noderate amount of exercise and up- be strengthened, but it is in atty infiltration or fatty overgrowth at the judicious use of exercise does at good-the general dict in such ase to be regul@ted, and the general ibesity which usually exists to be re- thoved, by a depleting dict. Some Ger- gammy the « ection by physical hotogxfaphsf DL e if] ‘ ditect hand in ft, but the children styod around too near, so I eontented imyself 1 n In. France the first census of which feo - areesfant Was taken inm 1700. Of course, as in everything pertaining han phyricians in their city practice recommend stair eHmbing when mount- \between us 0 | |_| this maze of labyrinthine galleries with- And again, when the jd | out success. I must try and help imny- R Ho shook his head. 'us gloud he called out fj numher | self. 1 remombered that I hid in my . \\Queer things have huppened in the | . Catacombs, sir,\ he said, \to quote the | in elimbing is not. feasible. -New York C D»WORQEs—‘Spo‘¢dfly; ~* Oliver Chilled, ooo I f 1 £ \ ( po ¢ 4 | _ [-OP THB BESP FINISHED CORN HUSKS forflling Mat - \; brésses.- Sold by Cf Sos n 14> J. G. FRERRES . imicfily. For partios ' inany state. Desertion:; all cauges. Blank Robert White, Att's, 53 ~~ .l6sdf i i : application 'free. Broadway, N. Y. FAMERS‘H you wanta plow that- willgive you satisfaction incvery respect. Buy the Sold only by °J. G. FERRES. 29 * YOU-CAK CET ONE D078 of daylight to this cavern vented our seeing anyt ] to grope our perilous wa icy whisper, wafted o ' ities no such accidents havelocd of our original party. | Heo,! ton, w then as unconscious of stato of mind I began the catacombs. | The stone staircase was down likea petrified serpd sHmy and hurid. Wo B candles, but the changs piral, collin , tong walls lighted‘ 'ou from the glat imam pre g} abd we hal breath, entered my. ear like \Strange things havo e porniard. | slon on the last resting given thot | after the world has violated their firft sanctuary. * Sometimes .the living sharing their va} ? 'them, Bome men who have come dow pleasant lig it hey | insist ! up haird} bed wit} here have never seen the of dag ziggain.” f l ~I believe, sir,\ I replied, i151 as indif- ferent a tone as I could owing to the precautions assume, \t of} th late yam.\ . presence pf . the stranger as the lady to $ gem I have alluded, WasIimad? In is, perturbed - gn | Hegpened in €Ne . catacombs, sir. 'The deal resent intri- pocket two boxes of wased matches. each one of which would burn ten or twenty seconds. I lighted one, and by its feoble light ascertained where I was. I was in one of the gallerics of the quar- | ries, and just beside me yawned a black | abyss of unknown depth, into which a single unwary step might have precip- | itated mo. | avoid this and similar pitfalls. _ Bo I groped my way along. <The pas: sige wound and turned. The horror of another match; but it would not do to be so lavish. - To describe my sensations would tbe utterly finpossible. My brain the fuct that I wus lost in the Cat acombs. enjoyment of healgh and life, sharing the gayeties of Puris, anticipating no evil, and now to die of starvation in this hor- dear ones, my comfortable houso in Bod- ‘ ford square. my peaceful cconmpation vise you to let your fancies run away 'when a fellow gets too queér in his up | down there for medical treatinent; Don't By keeping close to the wall I could Cafe Anglais.\ darkness was so great that I sacrificed. | reeled, and I was on the very verge of. madyess, if not past it, when I realized |- But a few hours since I was in the full. vible cavern! I thought of home and its | words of your mysterious friend, phi- losopher and guide. But I wouldn't ad- with you, for there ds a place near Paris called Charenton -a madhouse=- and: per story his friends feel obliged to pack | bim in a straitjacket, und send him fiimposo the unpleasant task on me. And now come and breakfast with vs at the- This is the way in which the strangest aceurrences of life aro treated by cour Parts,\ whatever othérs may say about my laboring under an hallucination. - New York World: - A Fitting Simile. Kate-Isn't young Dudley do Vero just as handsome as a picture? A perfect | poem of a man! f Jack-Right you are, sis! 'That's just what he is. Ho's been rejected no end ; A Canid to Jack, asel 2 years, of times. -Pittshurg Bulletin. to statistics, work of thut kind is ther- cough in France Theifirst census of . f Great Britain war taken in 1801, and mabrauced the sex, but nirrt. the uge, of all «abjects. The families:mnd veeupautions were clussificd, so us to exhibit the pum- ber employed in agticulture, in trele and - manufweture or handicrafts nud ( . those not comprised in the clusses. Bluwks | ar houecholders=' schedules are now left 'all over the by 'an rmmy of enn- | . merators; and these : filled up on the night of April 8, and are | collected by the enitmeriitors the follow- ratter-of-fact. friends. - For In? part IJ ing day. The police assist in enumern- shall always insist that my gislt g,, gp,. | \UF tho Bouseless popublition. Tho army p . | and navy are returned! by fhe naval Catacombs was one of the \Mysteries of | \\ F (uh P a and | inflftary wmthux‘i‘tit-é.—-Indianapmlih Journal. i - A Wise Y¥ouith. One day T., aged 8 yours and 9 months. Jack, do you know what knowledge{ is?\\ \No in- deed,\ said Jack. ~f don't either,\ was the reply; then after a few minutes, «Jack, you will never Amount to any- . thhxg if you don't Imuw’vavhnt knowledge # is.\-Babyhood. f 1 j are required to be | . half an hour. the boy, the goblin pony and the cow. Kext morping the large and muscular with a fow gentle words, descriptive of rit‘ buy came back ard evidently wanted moner. 'The doctor gave him the cow. . und chased him upstreect with a hatebet, but that did not bring back the hired girl fot festore the lightness. of heart of © which sach experiences are hikely to rob ; an emotional nature. --CiMeago Herald. 1 - | The Champion Orlon Enter. Goofge Thompson, 6f New York, is | | yery fond of wnions, ard would hive an onion any tithe than im oringe. , He recently ate thirty lafge onions in ; He ato neither salt nor prpper with thein, por dd he shed a tear over theinp. - Mr. Thompson thinks that his eapacity for onfons wwuld be sixty; -New York Journal. One of Horace CGreeley's nephows is a | barbér ina little town in Warren county, | Pa. fn personal appearance he is not unlike hisdistinguished uncle. Hethink:® | Horace might also have become a great barber if ho had not Est sWitched of in | ; anuther direction wh n he was young and irnmature. rThuneé. |__ L} _ No Flats for Rent. { Youn: Man-I am to be married in wbout a month, and I'm looking for a hiatus.» What is the rent of these fats? Janitor-lHumt} Did the girl you in- nd to marry ever have a mother? | \A mothet? - Cortainly.\ [\A grandmother?\ { «Of course:\ hoa 1 Hem! Let me see. Did that grand- , mother bave 43 daughter?\ \And did the dnughter havo a daugh. { Qreat smukes! - Of course.\ [\Very sorry, sit; but I can't rent one of these fine faits to people like that. I'm raid having chiMren runs in the fami- if k.si_N(.W Yo k Weekly. | A Clerical Error. Merchant-So you want to attend to. ip correspondence, Have you had much 'élprical experience? Applicant-Well, I've got a brother is a preacher. I'm not a cleric my~ ' scif.-Toxas Siftings