{ title: 'The Arcadian weekly gazette. (Newark, N.Y.) 1887-1906, September 25, 1889, Page 3, Image 3', 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/sn88074454/1889-09-25/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074454/1889-09-25/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074454/1889-09-25/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074454/1889-09-25/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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• ^•Ii'd-r cm the mcSt shameful amours, he never failed to observe the empty ceremonial* of the' Church.' His example contributed muitb to %*pre*a.of Skfepti«lsm t for almost aiy aS parture the.re.from alas naturally arid gener^ •Uyaeeoiratea a band of virtue. The civil and ecclesiasaaoourtB had in his ttaie various --* \\ir coafagterand he aiid liisparlla- oentswere in frequent opposition. In the -^lestTeVoltjijg ottns debaucheries he adhered .. to his habit of prayer, with hitri a mockery of devotion, praying with yoimggirig wh om ror MB ,l ljeerPark,\ jritli ^the-deliberate intent to ruin them, peeped in iniquity, he would leap from his rayal , ryriagfi to kneel in the miry street befof e the passing host of a sacerdotal precession; Is it-strange-thpt his outraged subjects -lost r&pect for and faith.in the Roman Catholic church, to which he was so zealously at- tached, arid to whose formal-righte he so rig- Iprously adheredJ That church has for three Centuries Jwsn Besociated, whether, truly _or _7aTselyvin_the mind of^tbe-4ibor«l French with oppression and tyranpyTand'the revolt - •gainstit has been inevitable; Jhere, politics and theology have been conjoined; whence it happens that the Imperialists and Royalists todarare commonly jJathflifcs, and the Re- : publicans, particularly those of the radical branch, are lively toV be rationalists or free thin£ers. The French may not be more ir- ' Religious, in a strict sense, than other nations; but they 'have borne so much and so long cleaved to the Soman church, that •Way themselves against it for that cause, if - _.- for no other. -The people JM mrih-jiT»~not 7-\TggTcai; ftUtoo muchperhaps'toe: , they should be. \Logic is vouchsafed-to few. _! .JJEhfiR iltmik'XVT, . esoehded-the ~tl •very*hing was' ripe for revolution. Only g»ffiP^ - the strongest man made many- concessions to the peopio, secur- ing their lilbprtifs and privilffgesj hut con* cession came too late. \ He attempted to dis- solve the assembly; but it resisted his at- tempt openly. To a court offloiai who <kr manded obedience to the king, Mira,beau made the famous reply; \TeU ypur master iBit^e^ftiere^j^epowei^c^^he-people; and that.^o can bo driven nenco only by the power of the bayonet.\ The, king accepted the inevitable; but be was vacillating and Kasfly ^flueuced by bad counselors; ' He\ banished-Kecker, and surrounded the capital \with soldiers,' His reactionary measuresde-- prived him of authority and precipitated his m \. !•_. '.-- •-' •- -• Restaurants In Sweden. •- • A traveler gives the toliowing interesting description of a raffixiaa restaurant service in Sweden: \Tfe entered a little dining room, around which were arranged, little tables coveredjwitli snowy linen; in the center stood a large table, one end .spread with the usual diversified collection of thift 'imargasbord;' at the other were piles of platesrknives, forks and napkins. J!be soup -W hroughtiBKaud placed on t^e central table; each one helps I himself, and,- taking it to one of the small tables, eats at his leisure. The soup finished, you. serve ybursetf with flsh, roast meats; chicken, and vegetables in quantity and va- aa you choose, and return to your table. The servants replenish the supplies on the large table, remove, spiled plates, and bring tea, coffeer beer or wine, as ordered, to the occupant* of the small tables^ but each one must serve himself from the various courses. from weak ^ vlcio^priiicea^^^ There, was none of the hurry,-bustle and' crowding usually encountered in a rail way couldhaveprev edit, and his 4mnd and head, were nei- ther strong nor wiser He was anria- ble, well intention, ed, a loyal husband and a Rood father r^a • rare. thing for a Frejncli.-'_ monarch |or bplting'yburfDpA^or^ this abundant ken dinner'the charge, was* forty cent*—tea, coffee, beer and wine being extra. which the coffee waVdisn \J.—. Exchange. , , ^-Ani far supemr to anytlm<g^eVeyTiwae~idr\ ^Dyspepsia* Sl«rk H«M«ilacli*», t o>istH|iiiU»n »u(l-Uurlfylii(t the Blood. Sugar coated. ', Would Do So A recent French tale hi grewsome plot: \A lover wl following-t»-i— Ood. the has lost a mis tress by death passes .a night in the cemetery in which she is buried, and witnesses a gen- eral resurrection,' in which^all the dead, rec> litapha, -candidly- tolling the : of the Seventeenth , or Eighteenth cen- $£Qs. tury—lmt' he had totns xV.' little-governing Ca- pacity and kicked decision, a.fatal defect at such anWjM^^ XIV,,ui the fact that his diffidence uiterfered I |j^. ^j, Hiifrh ends missrsW with his pfripfr.self representation, his._lpjce> truth' about themselves, however uncompli- mentary it, may be; The spectator of this scene has tlie happiness of Sqeiujj his dead- love inscrilie upon her owp tombstone, the j confession that the cold of which she died was ysiory. decessor having been egotistic and arrogant to excess. The! country was exceedingly poor; the people had been .taxed to death; while the nobility and clergy had been, exempt. Noth-' •tag. creates inore discontent, TmoresediSbiB feeling, than exorbitant taxation, and, when unequally distributed; tends to open insur- rection. ' Histdiry demonstrates. \ inen will be > deprived of freedom, of most of their natural righto, even of their lives, without arousing the wrath and^ hostility' caused by' the de- privation of money. The Netherlands, after rubmitting to every form'of tyranny and rruelty Jrom- Phil^-Hf seeing hund'rede of their countrymen iuiprisonetl and executed; ..revolted finally when be made another finun- -cj«l lesy^Lauia.XV't intrixliicpd divyrs re: form's; ibolishing some of the most offensive yard, catr only come from a diseased imagi nation. ~K<> one .wants to see sueli sagnts nor hear such sounds,-; If the dead could preach Ltheir'own funeral sermons, ^nd to the face of .. heaven, were compollwl to tell tlm truth, tlvay :-. .. 8pr*§^Hnjt.'8h»it___,:.„.. _ w Previously tol§70no shad were found'in <enoa>-lni\ix^\ni theTaceortnV i«» tributariei protests of the nobles. He labored; in his ' way, to mitigate the condition of his sub- jects; but he was enduring burdens inherited j from others, and was obliged to make vicari- 1 * ous atonement. He even reduced-his houae- hold «acpen)ies. and diminished his guards, to enooorage economy and retrenchment, fak- ing the lead in this, needful and honorable en- terprise. Do what he might, he could not -allay the bitter discontent of the. nation. Seribus riots broke out, and. much blood was 'Shed; Louis showing pnujgiwe, energy'and courage in such emergeneiSi. Her iad, in- deed, fftllsu on evil tiniee. i '_' V • • . THE THREE LOUIS., - When Franklin, Lee and Deane arrived in Paris, soliciting bid for our struggling col- onies, the kjug, though sympathizing with fiha.AfericsnSi was naturally disinclined to. shad is in some places sufficiently abundant to furnish profitable fisheries, and it is dis- tributed along more ^han three thousand miles.of the Pacific coast of North \•America; and is still spreading northward,in such a I way as to indicate that it will, in a few years, ^be found in the rivers\pf Asia, so that the de- scendants of the shad of the Chesapeake bay will, increase the food supply of China.—Once a'Week. • • involve his country \in war on their behalf. - Buthis disiuclination soon yielded to the im- petuosity of his ministers, the queen and the entfausiaftmfof thejonrt and commons. - fle concluded an. alliance with the young re- public in February,. 1778, and the early con- sequence was the declaration of hostilities between France and Great Britain..' The war cost France $300,000,000—an enormous sum, considering her financially crippled condition I —and;materially enfeebledthemonarcby by ' • spreading republican and revolutionary feel- ings and opinions. v The need of money was ~ telt more and more.' -Still the nobles and Uie clergy refused to-subn»it to theirshare of tax- ation uritil the Third Estate <the commons)^** r clareditself The. national assembly, .and wai Joined by parts of the other estates. The as- sembly undertook various^ financial-reforms, which created intense enthusiasm throughout the realm, • . ',•'•- : > The plan of- .a limited monarchy was pro- posed by ifecker; but the -nobles induced . Louis, unhappily for him, to adopt violent measures, and he. -closed the assembly by the power** thearmy. The members met in an adjacent building and unan- Im bus ly retolved never to separate until' the constitu-:; tion of the kini dom was soUdily e»=-' tablished. Louis .would startle the mourners; but it is ques- tionable if tueyawbuld do good. Words at a funeral are'said of the dead by the living and for the living. Sometimes they lire strained. It is a rule to speakno ill of thed i *<l I -.though that is not adhered\ to by amateur detective vultures searching for the cause of a dis- tressed woman's suicide—and the preacher does the best he can with a pad case, j^epi- taphy is. wanted by theiamily he piles it'ont —New Orleans Picayune. _, ' Between 1870 and jfov'fha United>8tates Fish commission Introduced afew young shad into the Sacramento riten l^enumber was very small; but the, little\ fnihes made their way doWn to the Pacific to feed and grow large and fat, and toj-eturh at last to the fresh water to reproituce their Jsind. . ttoroe of them paj)ie back to the same river, butothers, following the warm Pacific current, wandered further north into other^iyerji, until nowtbe The Tw# Shows.' '—!— Following aie the relative lists of persons Who visited the expositions during the first fortnight in June : in 1678 and in 1889- -^ii-r- June. in\I8TS • -in i,......™!™,,^,., «,a» ,. «•*.**!••«••** »«-»^f **•-#-•••#•'•' -ttt71S . 7......«.*#*i*i**i»*»»-**«*«**#* 68,90s I0 r ........«*...r« .a.•.*••,,,. lAlJMtf ll«e*ee«eeae*.*«>*«a«e.9*4¥e>*e*« ' .:88,^1 *«•,.>'«••••*••••••••«.•• tf««^ • ;0RJ9Q0 : , THWlrTrT.»«. '*!TRtTTS....t,l#t,!W -. . Go ^to M. K, Axesy3k for Music. ,, * / , •' lniSW 1M.C15 198,860 W.2C0 *w,oi» Hieo 108, SSS JM» \' 88,454 . «1«,907 •8,778 mm i«*l 100^81 «*«86 ijtmm- Sheet 23w4 -JFOVMeMr, Lome xvx Those Baying dogs' to register can now do so |^y calling at the Town pjerk's office in Newark. The' fee' is fifteen cents. The law imposes a fine of not less than |3 of more than $7 for sh dog um3sgtst(6*ed and any officer is entitled to fifty cents for killing dogs the owners of which have not eotti- -' plied with the-tewfajr this respect. 24w4 i^foiirfeir B V ii umely vfseof AyeiJ'-sHairVii This preparation has no equal as a 7 dressing. It keeps the scalp clean, cool,. and heajthy; and presepr^.the-color,'' fullness, and beauty of the hair, \I-was rapidly becoming bald and grfty pTint- after; ws'Mg two or three bottles ,of Ayer's liair Vigor ~my hair grew thick and- glossy and-the original color was restwedZ—Melvin Aldrioh, Canaan Geritre.'JiF. H. \Spine time ago I lost all my .hair in ny n ERei consequence Of measles. Alter due Waiting, no new growth appeared, I then used Ayer's Hair Vigor and iny hair grew ....:-••>' Thick and Strong, It has apparently come to stay. The Vigbf is evidently agreat aid to nature.\ — J.Jft. Williams; Floresyille, Texas.\. \I -have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for the past four or five years and find it a most satisfactory-dressing for the hair., Jtisall I could desire, being \harmless causing the\~nalr to: retain its:\ natural— color, and requiring but a small quantity \to render the hair easy to arrange^\—*•' Mrs. M. A. Bailey,.^ -Charles street, Haverhill, Mass. \ ' \I have been using Ayer's Hair Vigor for several years, and believe that it has tsatised iny hair to retain its natural celor^'—Mrs. H. J. King, Dealer in Dry Goods, &c, BishopWHe, M*. -; r»r ^ &; tyvHt^ €«., tow»lt, Ma»». •—• -Boldby Draiflstssnd tgttvmmt. \ ' t - —HQllt fii ALL tmi'OGISrSs UABLEGIFT$3 - 4 WlJtvL GIVJE A TICKET OK ^r*AB¥U«EAJr VH08B rBA0( VALUED AT 99T5.O0; A SUIT Of G^IHES, MAEE TO KtDEH, . VALUED At 82S.OO; ^PAff of PANTS, MAM to ^DER, '\•- . -\ ^VAUfED AT.»».00, - ._„.. WITH EVERY FIFTY CENT CASH PURCHASE AT HIS STOBIS t l^pmji||eaber 9,1885, to ftcember 24,18Si^ '. AT WKlCIi TIME THE DRAWING. WILL TAKE PLACE. JTHC-WTH alsu vivp^a \tickei tor every 3bllar fMiiil on accounts made within the alwv-e dates.: and one ticket fo;r every two dollars '~-}~ t«ttd ottH^^UIS* 8 inadeprevioas~to^Sepf. iT,\X8^9. r TR-ItaTKake HI«*O makes Deli -»clous GEMS, Wl'FPI-BlS. and PUDDIWOS. SOWS' $? Mm r^^y Half the price of tin or shingles. Uuaran teed wscer-tiglit on lint or steep surface,.iSid-voja can put it.on, Ssmpfe free, if you mention this paper. STATU S1ZK OF ROOF. . 2«wl3 Indiana Paint A Hoof Co., New York.\ Notice—important to School Trustees. The Trustees, npori receiving the Collector's bond, shall; if they approve thereof, indorse thfeirrapprgyaL there» Oil, aiidfourthwliUdeU^ef (hesatae to the Town Clerk of the town in whrch said collector resides; and «aid- clerk shall file the same in his office; arid |enter lira : boOk tO'8s^ce^T>y\TiinxTS)r that purpose, a ineriioranduio sjiowing the date of said bond, the name of the parties and sureties ' thereto, the amount »of the penalty^ thereof and the \time of filing; the same; and said: Town pierk is authoriied t o receive as a fee for such filing and meiiLoranduui, the sum of Twenty-Five centSj Which Sum is hereby made a charge against the School district interested in said bond. -^ — ..-,..- [Certified Copy | J. B. McbuKMeTT, , 24w3 TOwnQlii-k;. ; Instruction In music. Miss Jjouesa ^1. Hay will meet her pupys, or any who desire- instruction fa music, at berhome Sept. 2, -- --~ 21w« •' > CWWffin Cry for Pitcher 1 * Castdria. When Babr was sick, we (»TB her Csstoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Cattoria,'. When she became Jits*, she elunc. to Osatoria, WhrashehadCWIdreo.s&sgaTetnemCaaieHa. Choice of Ojie leaf's §gt>scriptiou for eitiier ' -TO BE GIVEN AWAY- MONDAY, DEC. 30, 1889, -AT- KINVON'S ^ COItNEB DBUO STORE. NEWARK, N IT. \ You ate entitled to one ticket, by purchasing \28 icents' worth 6ft sroods at my store. I will!also have on my tobacco counter, a -'«! Meerschaum Pipe, To be given ..away at .'jtbo'yc, date. One ticket for -eyjaty. 25 cents' worth of- goods. \H f.1 V$*6LL;M.«»JClJBt,SET f :'-.. TO BE GIVEN AWAY. ON AND AFTER * ^TUBDAY, SEPT. 14, 1889 r •*VKR¥- CAS»-P«BCIMSBR xiE HOODS TQ.TltB' AMOUNT OF 81* CENTS witL\ DECEIVE A TICKET -ENTITLINW THIEM TO A CH4NCE FOR ONE OF TflfE ABOVE PRIZE^.'., ii LACE DECEMBER 31, 1889. THE DRAWINB WILL Druggist,