{ title: 'Lansingburgh state gazette. (Lansingburgh, N.Y.) 1880-1883, May 05, 1883, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn87070138/1883-05-05/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1883-05-05/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1883-05-05/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1883-05-05/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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trik1 Zljll: venpp:es, deqds Ufcommon, feats of ra~h, ~_11ctn~,e <l!\<mg, 1 Do ;not !ilw~s mark tlie :(»:OB8l)C8 of ~ courage real and t):rle ;; • Bettsr far tho reasoned labors of a hllart no efforts sparing, Firat, to know what act 1s proper, then that net, will> s~rehgtb, to do. Some ~hera•are, both high and lO\Wly who repine not when they're smiltml, Oh1.1crfnl while oileir spmts quiver 'neatl>. 1-.:,<1\Will'il afl!iction 's heavy rod. These 111:0 harotis, brove and tl'tle ones, nnd their nmnes are~r written, Not on :fleeting human records, bnt in vol- umes pe!llled by God. -A. Me1 lil1t in BOlll<m. Pilat. ·~~~~1~~:~·~:~~~~~~~~::~:1lisa~u~onw.~-!r~t~r;~~:~~ plea tou ~,;ri,~~~~:1''t qJlite lll the ma1riao•e venance, ILild Mr. Pierrot, as xm; a.mtlrJ- \ =-~~_:::=~;nr.;~M:::Ad!im&~---~ can neighbors cn.ll~.d him, g,uite aJreed t--= witldtis wife's reHllll'k. In fact, the first suggestion that the man in question, who 1vas 11!l\ Hugh Sherbourne, sl1ould marry\ Miss KatP,\ ·-~~i!~~~!~~~~ 1 ~~~~~~~ 1 r::;l'j had come from u. l'i~rrot; and had, ; after rome familiarizing herself with the idea, comtl to be a fixed fact in the mind of Mrs. Pierrot. WM. O'OONNOR, DE.u.E.R tN ALL 10lro8 OW MElTS, PqDLTBY -AND- VEGET4U3LES ' --AT-' No. 626 State ,Street, GE'ORGE H. 1-EMPE,, 611 S1a1e St., &.lwa.ys has on h&nd a 6no assortment ofgood- ault<>d W the aoason, conaiat'Dg of Gentlemen'• ~r.---·· B'ootii, Caiters Alld Engli•h\ \V,..JuiJg Shoes, L~d1es' B 1tton BIIOts, Gitlters aad s IJ>PBIB, o.n •nd lnspeQi ~hem before going to Trdy. Prices to Suit the Ti111es ! \Miss Kate\ was a lady of ratl1er uncertain age, whom those interested in her thought had remained \ Miss Kate\ quite long enaugh. She lived in a pretty little cottage not far from the Pierrots, and· was indeed their landlady; and Mr. Sher- bourne was tbeir rich and rather cccen trio lodger. who lmd met :Miss Kate once or twice in Mr\. Pierret's parlor, and had become curiously interested in her be~ause of a r('RI or fancied re- semblance which she bore to a former friend of his-which former frlend, as the Pi~rrots had t-aken pains to discover, of ll1l unba.ppy a.tta('h ment. As Miss Kate on first meet- ing Mr. Sherbourne, and being intro- duced to him, she had turned VIOlently red, tl1en equally pale, aud had alto- gether shown s~ch emotion and em- barrd.Ssment that the Pierrots never had any doubt lmt that•she bad met b.cr fate and b.:td surrendered at dis- cretiOn. From that hour tho two mat Jtt. makers determined that Mr.Shcrbuurne should marry Miss Kat~~; and at once entered into v.trlous little con~p'iracics for forwarding their design. But the qbject was gained. Miss Kate ha(l got into the habit of dropping into her neighbor's house q 'lite lilfe one of the famf!y •• a.J!d being there she was frequently begged to remain to toa, and then, as the evenings was short, iL was too dark for a lady to go home alone, even so s.hort a distance as that bttween Mrs. P1errot's house and Miss Kate's. · Naturally then, Mr. Sherbourne be- ing of ::1. gall!Lnt style, notwithstanding h1s Qisappomtmept m love, always accompan1Prl her; and thus a friendslnp, which was aD: excellent good substitute for a more Nmantic passion, according to the Pierwts, gradually sprang up between thcr1e two amiable people. \ From waJk ing home with Miss Kate, l\Ir. ~herllournll. soon came to calling un her of his own accord, and everything went on in a manner to all appearances quite satisfactory to.the Pierrots. And to t'mt remark uf Mrs. Pjerrot's, with which this brief chronicle bPgins, J\fr. Pierrot responded in a tone ot mtense conviction: \ Of cours~ aa 1 have Hl ways said, cheri,' he is the 'cry man for Miss Kate; but l•Ii me, moa ami, ha> he asked her 3 et; ~as she told you any- thing absolute!? ' · \She tells m::! anJthing -everything, I think,\ &aid Mrs. l'rerrot,.musingly, \but she h~~ never said oxphc1tly, m ao ma]ly wonls, that she is going to marry him, or even that he has plaihly 118ked her t~ do so, yet I have got the impressiOn, wmehow, that they ar(l en- gaaed.\ .';'llum-m!\ said 1Ir. Pim:;t reftect- ively. In his country, he could not help thinking, young ladies, ~specially elderly youn.g ladies, were not so myoterious; ltllcllf they hnd an engage- I i)slt~ilcu't&r ··source !)f recognizrd and ramarks of Profe;sor Whitney on this s11bject, as applied to observations made at London, are pertinent a111 ocmvinclng. He s:1ys: \It is a well-known fact that citil's are considerably warmer than the more thinly-inl.abited countl'y, otber- wi~o under biruilar climatic conditiuns Statistics prove this to be true: and there could be no doubt that such woul!l be the effect of an immense ng gregatwn of population within a limited space, even if there were no stattst1cs bearing on this question Many millions of tons of coal are burned In and a~out L'.ln Jon durmg every year, and the \\hole rna's ,,f br.ck of wllich the t1ty 1s built b lleatell durin,.( the eallro llinttr, and more or less Ill th~ summ{ r, many tiL• grces above the nt\tural temperature.' 'l'lle Cure of Di11htherin. A California phyg~eia.n writes: Dur- n prolonged residence in the In- of Chma I became acquaint~d with the fact that the ChinPse pl.1ce rel1ance during epidemics of dip!\ theria on the internal use of the fresh JUice of hmes, and the fruit Itself, wh·c'l they consume in cnormOU$ quant1t1es, in every conceivable form-as lemon· ale, w1th native spirits, cut in slices, etc, during attacks of the dreadful disease, wi~h apparently most success- ful 1 esults, it hardly evPr failmg to aifect a cure The ChinrsA coosirll'r it a specific, and will, m cage of need, do anything to obtain a s11pply. 1::\ince I.have·come back to <'alifornia, as also in Louisiana, I have use-! hmes a11d the1r Juice~ m my practice as a physician with most successful result, in cases of diphtheria, even in the most desperate cases. As soon as I taka charge of a case of diphtherm, I order limes to be administered as freely a' possible, in any manner the patient ea.n be prevailed upon to take them, &pemally in the form of hot lemonade, sweetened- w1th white sugar or honey, or cut m sl1ces '\Vilh powdereU white sngar. Beside lime juice (which I suppose acts by imrurtmg an excess of o:lygeu to the circulatiOn, antl thereby pr-events formatiOn of viHrwnes, etc., and so has almost a spec1fic effect on d1sease), I prrscrihe whatever dru\ 1nay be indicated t•> relieve symptom~ as they dev~lop, nn<l lmpnrt strPngth hy appropriate stimulants and nourish· ment. Jhmtln;r in a Curious lila.• k, .~ Colorado farm •r lla.s Invented a dnck-hm:.tmg outtlt whtch 'li\rounts the C'ahforma mll:!l:s cow. He stripped the hide from a bullock :mu mounted it on a wire sk~lPtj'ln, vrhich looked as natural as a In ing nmmnl. He cut al'l':tY the stoma~h <lf his w1re bull<JC!I for his b<llly, nnrl rua le two holes throllgh the \houlde1·s to tnke s ght through. When he n ants a duel; shoot he qrops h1s skeleton 01 er hi~ head and starts out for til~ tu!ic,o, IIo can walk right into a tlnclc of 1llt~ks without startlmg thrm, and hN on ono or two oc :tSions ntnrncll nome with hi<l hrdiug-p!.LCe fnll of tPl\lcaught with hi~ hands. He nevt>r fails to kill all he wants. ' l1'ISE WORDS, No thoroughly occupiell mim was ever yt•t miserable. lf you would treal\l something you must be something. Snnslune is hke lovP, 1t mal\es every- thing slune w1th its own beauty. The very nature of love is to find its joy in serving others, not for one's own bAnefit but theus, F.clnrahon bPgms the gentleman; hut rPndihg. good company and reflec- tion mn•t tims'1 lnm. In the ltxicon ' )<•uth, wh1ch fate _ nsen e3 for a I fiJht u a 1h JOt!, there is no such 11ortl a• t'.ul. Fo: n ~nan to th1nk that he is going tu du the 11urk uf !.b ltf.; wrtllom ub- :;t,ICle~ 1~ to dream m thel.1p of folly. Ilartl spee~h between those who have loved is ludP.uus Ill tlle memory, llke the s1ght of grca•nes> and beauty sunk mto v1co and mgs. Ho'd fast to the present. Every pos1tion, every moment of !if~. is of nnspeakahlP valnr> nq the ropresenta• t1ve of R 1\ hole e:ern.ity. To know how to say what other pe.r- p'e only !h1nlc is what makes men poefs and s.1ge•, a·1d to rlnre to say what others ouly <l.trc to think, makes men m.lrt}Id or rpf,mner•, or both. A rneuical author it) ~ays \Laughter IS one uf the greatest helps to d ges- tion, and that tile custom of our foreJ fathers (If exc•tLng Jt at lhe table by jestmg a'1rl buffoons WtiS fonnd~;l on true me llc.tl prmciples.'' Fro111 Death to Life. It seldom lm.pp ·m in real life that a young ladythrPe ypars after being en~ vclop d m her 1 ur.al shroud and placed m hPr cotnu as dead becomes a br•ght and happy bride, yet such a. ro- mance IM~ recr ntly developed in Balti-' more, where Jvhss Mary Griffith, a beant1ful young Ia. ly of ahnut twenty- one summer<, wa. married to Mr. V1vian Neale Several ~earJ ago, whrn the young lady was res1r!ing m Cincinnati, she had a terrible fall down a flight of stairs and re~riYP<lmJnn\s which were considered fa' at Several prommep.t physicians fallPd to see her, and pro- nounced her ca~e hopeless. One <lay the young girl grew much worse, fell mto a c.,m atnse state, and, aq it was thought, <liP I. 'fhe hoily WltA prPpared for burml :tn I Pxposod fir two days in a ~asket to the vww of fnPnds. The rlay of thr fnn<>ral arrl\ e 1, anrl, at thlf appnmtP<l tune, t\n r .trriages and· hPar-e rlr >l\e np 1oth<' cloor. Just as lh~ coffin wa,.q h 11g ci >serl it wa~ no- tire<! thnt tho l1fr-hko app\arance of the snppMo• I rm p•e w 11 more pro- nunnec<l, anrl t ll'Ti' were slight signs of returnmg v.ta!ity. ·A phy•kmn was caliPrl, anrl lftrr a.n hour or so MISS Griffith r<tllrll<'d to rons• ion~nrs~. The solPmn gat11ering wa 1lnrnHl into one of joy. The young !tiTl reJovered rap- Idly, and has sinr·P be~n in better health·-·--\\'\{;~ than ever hef()re. Ma.t.y s!Jeriffs of Norlh Carolina re. London te~<t<; sbow that from threoto eeive less than $30Q !\Dnually in fe~s nino per cent oC the furl iu stoves i& lost in ~rmolc<',