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Image provided by: Essex County Historical Society
·:n·· ' :. ' ' ' . -BY- A T:&Ul!l TlU.GEDY. In an upper room of & dwelling in Philadelphia, a month or two ago, John :M:--, long known in the West and South as the great Mississippi gambler, lay dying. He was the foremost type of a class fast becoming extinct. , LIVINGS'.fON, AND GAZETTE. In appeal\lmce he was a quiet, modest gentleman, unobtrusive, but fastidious in dress (M--'s clothes were made for him in London for twenty years), cool, stoica.l as :a red Indian, no matter what the emer- gency ; and his profession, tbe.t of ruining other men. Eo· uw. VOL. 4. ELIZABETHTOWN, ESSEX COUNTY, N. Y., THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1879. N0.1. ~~~~~-~-=-'=··==~=Y==============~===============~========~====~========= Poetrzj. I to bear the sight of their own as the compliments she wa-~ apt ~~-le-d-he-r.-S-he opened_f_o_r ::·~mo~ ~:~of my guffe;'ing and you know W. T. CLAY, CABINET MAXE:& AND UPROL- STE:B.ER, Elizabethtown, N.Y. IIL\l'iliF,\CTOBt l;i L.li!IBOl¥'8 DLOe&. All kinds of JOBJmm Promtly a.ttonded to t•lUCEI:I REASONABLE. Hotels ~Dd Summer Boo.rdl.ag Hoosea having a large amount ol repalnng to be done, ann wake spocl•l nnd sotlofaotory oontraota. Elizo.bethtown, Jno. 21st, 1679. LOOK HERE! ~.~ FRIENDS & STRANGERS ============== blood. rooe1vo. In a word, I had for my mont her lBrge, dark·blue eyes look· how much your opera~ion relieved loDCil ms DAD. \It is unnecessary! On the con- wife an innocQnt child, who hnd no ed at me with astonishment, then me. Bnt o.s soon as the wound trsry, it is I who will indicate how thon£ht bnt for me, and who would closed them and died. She died beals the pain comes back. It has deep down yon must out.\ confess her dreams to me ae enor· without struggling against me, as if aome now for the third time, and I I he\r his m ollher\s chid!IJg voice: \How oame your trotllm tom ? And black!'& mk, sir, Is thatohlrt You pnt on olean thls mom. ·•'l'on leet &re wol, too, I dM!A!A: You're IJ\llcldy to yonr luleca; lt> iB t.QO baa,; ;fO'tl o:cl;r CIU'e Your motho•t, air, to tca1e. \And thoaenl.oe shoes -your Sanda ybe.t, Tbat but tb ree times you've worn. A.re eore.tohed and ooroptd and all rnu down, - 'l'he heel of one Is !!One. •·Yonr hair Ia twiste•l in a on..rl, And j nst lo10k o.t tbat bo.nd ! It looks as tbtongb 'twere nover waaheu-. How dart you say 'tl• taimed ? uYoutvo b•e:q. ~·fie bing, sir, l gueaa- What? beet• to aee tbe mMcb ? You'lllmve ~ flt nf eloknou, air; A pretty cold you'll oatoh. •• And tllue ehta~lalko for ball ~n bour, And onlJ&ItQjla to sa.7, ''Your tlltlllll\ll beAr of Ulia to-nliibt; I wonder what he11 \\'Y 7\ In faot he watohed the operation moll8 crimes if she hnd not dreamt falling !lB!eep. She was never ~mgry have no longer the strength to to the end with tne greatest possible of me. with me, not even when I killed her. ~;h•ugg!G n.gaiiJst it. In 9ll hou? I compo1JUr6, ind!catmg how lar tt 11 0M dny I know not what damon One drop of blood fell from her ehall be deBd. Olle thought con- Wll!l to f!O. The open hand did not whispered in my ear, •Supposi.Dg mouth on the back of m;r hand. soles me-as she has avenged her· even tremble In the dootor'e hand, !Ill twa were only di~iimullltion T\ You !mow wbere; J: did nQt 'p.,.-ceivo self OD =<> in t.hiH world. she ... w., and when the little piece of ruuud Men are ma.l enough to saek how it on iil tha next de.y, when it ..httd perhaps, forgive me in the next. I £!.eeh WQJ!I on~ ont ha hMved e. deep they can torment themselves in the dried. We buried her without any. thank you f01· yoru· Q\OOd oflic.es. lligh, like one who experiences a midst of the greatest happiness. one snspecting the truth. I lived May G-:>d reward you for them. feeling of immense relief. \My wife had a work table, the there in complete solitude; who was A. few de.ys after the newspapers \The burning pain has ceased?\ drawer of which she kept cn.refnlly there to control my actions t She of Sz--- recorded that one of our \lt has quiw gone,\ B!Ud the locltcd. I hnd noticed this several had neither relatives nor protectors richest lanued proprietors had blown stranger with a emile. \The pain times. She never forgot the key, to question me on the subject and on t his brains. Some attributed haa entirely ceased, as i1 it bad been and never left the drawer open. I designedly put off writing to my the suicide to grief at his wife's taken away with the part cut out. \Tho question r11n in my bo!ld, friends, BO that none of them could death; others, who were better in· The sliglit pain ocoosioned by tho ,What can she be hiding 'from me bleeding is, ae compared with the there! I had takenleaveofmysenses. other, like a refreshing breeze after I no longer believed either in the in- lUI infernal heat. It does me reo.lly nocence of her face or the purity of sood to se\ my blood B.ow. Only her eyes, in hor Mrooses 01' in hor let it fiow, it d06B !llll HO muob kiaeea. Suppose a.ll that were noth- good.\ ina- bot hypocricy T arrive in time. formed, to nn incurable wound. Those who knew best said he was a monom11niar, and his wound, whicil could not be cured, exiRted only in hie imagin~tion. You oan aotyoor W11tobcB Oloonod and Repaired for leas than yoc can at e.n;r oth- er plaoo In 10 Eaaax county, by sending or leaving them at my residenoe on Water My friends 111 compl!montary way Street, wboro I will be found ready to do D lA b • The stranger looked with delight \One morning the countess came \On eoming back from the vaul I did not feel the slightest weight on my conscience. I had been erne! but she deserved it. I did not hate her; I could not forget her; I hard- ly thought about it. :Kever did a man combut a murder with less re· morse than L ROW THE ANCIENTS ENGRAV- ED GEMS, all kinds or Fanoy Work, snob aa aklnlr' a~ re to me I ay soe Solid GoM and l:liher Rings, Broaches, A claae resemblance -very mnrked- Badges of all ldn.J.s to order. Also neQtly Between tlie boy and ~ne. Repair Jewelry. Old gold nnd silver tak· en In exchange fo1· work. Gold and !lllvor Plg,tiog _dose l't a. prloa to suit ccstomere. 13n~ notblng th~>t they see In blm In either fto.rm or fo.oa at the streaming blood. The doc- again to fetch her, and after much tor was obliged to insist npon dress· entreaty succeeded in deciding he~ \On my return, I found in the ing the wound. to epend the day with,ber. Our es· chateau the Countess so often men- While he was binding it up the tatea were some miles apart, and I patient's face changed completely. promised my wife to go and join tioned. My measures had been so well taken that she also arrived too lnte for the funeraL She seemed l:!ce Watch tll~n on Wator l:!trect, Ellza- betbtown. N. Y. OEOROE II. AUCHAMBEAU. - -- -·------ DAVID A. CLABX WESTPORT, N. Y. BUILDER, Jllespeaka my 1on a& do bls pranks- In these my own I trace. ~\.nd wby e'bould I at tattered clothes Or dirty omea repille? In him I live m;r youth ag•m- God .bless the boy I he\• mlno I - BtMton Tt'!llllorlpl. The expre!sion of pain pe11aedaway 1 her. he smiled on the doctor with a look 11 A.s soon na the cn.rringe had left full of (lOOd-humor, and there waa the courtyard I gathered together no longer any contraotion of the a.ll the keys of the house e.nd tried features, any look of deepa.ir. He them in the lock of the little drawer seemed to have taken a new lease One of them opened it. I felt like Jt!Lscellany. of life. IIis brow cleared; the color a man committing hiB flrat crime. I ~~=~==========· retttrned. to his face; his whole per- WM a thief ElhOUt to surprise the AN INVISIBLE WO\OND. eon underwent o. visible tllansformu.- secreta of a feeble woman. My much agitated on seeing me. Ter· ror, sympathy, grief-! know not what--r;nade her speak so confused- ly tbnt I could not underst11nd what she B!Ud to conijole me. \Did I even listen to her T What We muat rem.£!n as yet some' lit. lie in doubt as tOfthe methods em- ployed by tho old artists to perfect these miracles of taste. We have, however, the absolute certainty that the~e ~ncicnt masters were familiar with the U.i~mond, and that their -A.ND DE.u.xn '\ nlS One of the most celebrated prao- tion. ' banda trembled as I drew from out · · • p th, D '\ --\ Wb '-'- '-·-d •-- d · the drawer, prudently, carefully,one Dressed & Matched Lumber, tit10ners ok es r. ~.was cu.u- l!n lllH lliW was rep'-\\e m The man, it is said, never played for less than thousands. He con- fined his operations to cards until a favorite boat, the Natchez, ran a race with the R. E. Lee from New Orleans to St. Louis. He bet ill he was worth on her. For five days and nights, the ~mbler rem~>ined on deck, betr~>y ing his excitement in no other way. The Natchez was beaten, and the - man was ruined. He went to the bar and took his first and last glass of liquor. M--'s wife, an innocent coun- try girl from Ohio, died of a broken heart, after a wretched,shamefullife with him. She left him one child, a boy, and this boy M-- sent away, that he might never know what manner of man his fath.;,r was. The lad was educated in the best schools in Europe. But when the hardened, cold-blooded old man came to die, his heart criec1 out lor his son. lie found him a practicing physician, lold him his story, and was nursed by him until his death. But the gambler neither repented nor al- tered. Even when the death-rattle was in his throat, he cried, \I lay you 1l ve to one thu.t I last until morning,\ A similar story was told in tbe reports of the New York police courts lately. A lady, young, well- bred and modest, the wife of an officer of the army, complained to the public of a drunken, clisrepnt- able woman who hang about her house watching it. Tl- ed upou o 11 u, mornin!J to receive at the sling he mn.de nsc of the one by one, the objects contained there· need had I of consolation T I was not sorrow-stricken. Fina.lly she took me fnmilisrlv by the hand and said in a low voice that she was obliged to confide to measecreland that she counted on my honor as a noblenmn not to abUBe it. She had given to my wife to keep for her a p..cka3e of letters that she could an early fuonr a visitor in great the.t remained !rea to shllke the doc- in, BO that no confusion ahould be- _!_ll~NGLES, LATH, !-._c~ _ haste, who while waiting in the ante· tor's band warmly, saying to him tray that a strange hand he.d ran· •• }3 L\H YJ:;AH ~!LE~~ \JHI\blrl.Jo\Ul nlulmbllr, gent in wort1 by tho foot- with cordialitr \Accept my most sacked them. Mr brai!.Bt heaved; I man that delay for bim wae diiD ger. sinceTC thanks. You !lave positive- wns wall-nigh still'OM!.ild. Bllhold. dd nl b th f 1 I not keep berseli, and she begged of best work was made !by osino: this the hardest of substances, as a tool. A splintered fmgment of the din· mond aerved as a scraping tool, and they were well acquainted with the drill. Prehistoric man worked e. drill at thQ very commencement of his existencB. A. Phcenician gem- a lion attacking a bull-shows how the drill was used. A number of circular depressions are found in the gem, which runrk the extremi- tiOQ of the figums. This was done not only for tile s11ke of effect, but to show the artist the limit of his The woman was arrested. Brought face to face with the complainant, she cried out in an agony, \Wby child, I am your mother ! \ The lady, greatly agitated, stated that it mis\ht be true. Her mother, sho said, ha.d placed her in a private school when she was an infant, and supporteci her until her marriAge, but had always refused t() 11ee her. H o must be received immediately. ly cured me. 'l'ha small remnner· su 8 y, enea a mass o ace, h ·-\ '·· .1 '-• d k me to give them back to her. While 'I he doc~or threw on Iris dressing- s.tion that I offer you is in no wise llU pwcsu my WlD on a pac llge of ki • I t 1 f 1 if \· she wn.s spea ng I relt sever- gown hasitily and bad Iris patient proportioned to the service you otters ' 6 t na a .... ab of light· al times that 1 shivered from head shown in. lul.ve rendered me. During the rest ninfl\ had pnssed from my head to my PI tt b h d s N y ha to foot. With appnren t coldness I 8 s urg an aranao, . • He fonDid himself in the presence of my life I will try by what means heart. Alns! one glanc,.told mew t . d h th 1 T queat10ne er on the contents of over ll3 Year• Experience In r•• of n. m\\ utterly unknown to him, I can discharge my obligation.\ ese etters were! hey were nrmarlel, HoopUale, Collei\CII ~ ~ these letters. A.t this question the and Home PracLlae. but who to J\udge by his dress !lnd The doctor, however, would not love letters! lady started and replied with indig. Dr. HnyneslsasanllynttbeOomberlnnd manners, l~vidently belonged to t!Ie consent to accept the thous!lnd flor- \The packet was tied by a pink Honee. Plattsburgh. N' y For oonsulta- nation. EAR~ INFIRMARY. ~~~EYE& 71 PBoPRlETon. work as to depth. After the holes were sunk, the artist united the var- ious portions of his work by scratch- ing. Now the use of the dia.mond point or splinter, fixed in a atyle or 1ron socket, allowed a certain flexi- bility of handling, which our mod· \ I did not want you to live like me.\ OWING TO THE WEATHER. tionllnd opemtions in disease~ of tile eye, b\lat so<Jiet;r. ru .. pale face bore ina placed on the table. The stran- ribbon with a silver edge. ~- ear end for qntarrb. d ond 4th Tueedays traces of ...,.ea~ physical and moral ger on his el.le relll8ed to take them 11 Aa I tonehad thB ribbon the or •laoh month. l'allonts b!lve found • .,. bome witb Dr. Haynes, for operations and suffering. lie carried his right back; but seeing that tho doctor thought occurred to me; 'Is true u 'Sir, your wife was more gener- ous than you. When she took charge of these letters she did not nak me their contents. She even ~ve me her word never to look at them, and I am convinced that she never even glanced at them. Her's was a noble soul, and she would hnve disdained to break in secret her given word. ern processes of IDem-engraving do not permit- To-day the work is done by means o£ a minute rotating disk of copper, which is whetted with oil and diamond dnst. On the least apphcation of the substance to A. big newsboy was yesterday doubled over a bench at the City Ha.ll m.a.rket, too sick to move and too discouraged to care what became o£ him. Two or three of the moth. erly market women fixed him up doses of pepper, and when he was a little better one of them said: trentmeot, more than 5 yeara. Artlflcial hand in a. sling, and lD spite of hie was beginning to grow an~P\Y he nght 1' .Is this work worthy of e.n - - Proprietor. Eyes, ot\-n.oy color or size. and n.rtiftoial \Ear-drums\' supplied. For particulars efforts to :restrain himself from time begged that he would bestow them honest man ! To steal the s!c ts .address to time a mtiiled sigh escaped him. on some hoepitn.l o.nd so took his of a. woman! Secrets which bel ng S. HAYNER. H. D. 1:\arnnac. (JJinton Coantv. N.Y. Seeing tha poor man stagger the leave. to the tiwe when she was a g Proprietor. PROPBlETon. Propr!.otor Company, -- - - - -- -- doctor invited him to sit dowa. The doctor informed several of girl! Can I ask her to render an CHAIRS! CHAIRS!! th '\I am tired. I have not alept for his colleagues of this singular case account of e thoughts she had be Tile undorsi~nod ha• rou•tantly on bancl !I week. There is somethin 0 the and each formed a di£1'erent opinion fore she belonged to me1 Can I m fl.Ua.ntity of Bplint Bottom b '-~ 1 f ' h h did matter witt.h my right hand-I do on the subject wi£hont, however, e JeruOUfl 0 !l UlnO IV llD 8 e B. itchen, Office and Rock- not. know what. Ie it a carbuncle' any ol them being able to give a not know mo 1 ~uo could llnepec~ ing Chmrs, bit cnncer1 A.t first the suffering plausible explana.tion. Toward!! her of e. fault? Who' I was base ·' •It is well,\ I replied, 'How shall I recognize the pa.ckage !\ \ 'It was tied by a pink ribbon, with a silver edge.' wldoh he will sell very cheap. All orders' was sli~h1t, but now it is a burning, the end of a month Dr. K. received enough to do so,an<l the devil again horrible, continual pain, increasing a letter dated from his patient\s res- whispered in my ear, 'Supposing \·r will go and search for it.\ pr·Jmptly fllled. in intensilty day by day. I can bear idence. He opened. it. It was that these letters were of e. time \1 took my wife's keys and began it no lon11;rer. I jumped into my closoly written nnd ho ea.w that hie when I hnd already n. right to a.ll to sear\h for the packet; although I Ctlrrillge l~nd herli I a.m. I have patiant hAd written it with his own her tho\l)hls risht to be jealous knew where it ws.s, I preten.led to Dated Elizauut!Jtown, :Jol'ewbcr, 1~7R. LEVI BULLAHD. -~ -· ------ come to bteg you to cauterize it, or hand, from whioh be concluded that even of her drenms. when she was hn.ve some difficulty in finding it. Edgar !III. Darn~s to cut out the painfnl part, for one the pain had not retnrne<l, for he already mine!\ I untied the ribbon. \'Is this it r I said, handing it to H•lreby giv•s notice, that he is ready, at more houll' ol this dreadful torture could hardly hn.ve held a. pen. ~ 0 one saw me. There we.a not the Countess. ~n times, to Ret up, to put into orern· would drive me to perditlon !\' The letter ran 118 follows: even a mirror in the room to make .. ·Yes, yes! See, the knot I made tion. and tn ropo.ir o.lmast nl ......_ b! h f J · kinds of Tne do.otor asked to see the band, \M\ DEAR Do=os: I do not wiah me us or myse f. I opened one is still there. She never touched it. R P which th16 pn.tient pot into his, tha£ either you or medical science letter, then another. nnrl read thrml \1 did not dare to lift my eyes to M:1chinery, Water a.ms. umps. &u., &c. shin hi t th hil #- h uld I f d b to the end gun g s ee meanw e uv~ s o be e t in oo t as to the ~ , her. I feared l<'st she should read If any of bis friends require auy ol that the intensity of pain, while the phY- mystery of the strange Jiaea.se !'Oh! wl.w.t a foorful hour that I' iu them thnt I had undone it, and kinJ of work. they will please give him a ~ •n.ll. !ils obnr~es will be r•••onabl•, and S1cia~roceeded to undo the bnn. which will soon bring me to my was for me ! What did thooe letters i that I had undone something else h>~~~~t.~:!~~~n;.:. Y. f:levt. 21 • 187 s. de.ges with every possible precn.u- g?av&-and even elsewhere. contain 1 Tho vilest betrnyal of J besides. I took leave of her baBtily; . . . . ~ _ tion. ''1 !lm nboot to dcecribe to you whioll a man wns ever yet tbelvictim she got into her carriage and drove be cut to the disk, it is the disk which bites into the stone. The difference in manipulation is, then, that to·d11y it is the stone which goes to the tool, and not, as in old- en times, the tool to the stone. It is more convenient, then, in 1879, to bring the cart to the horse. It can now be readily understood why, in modern work, time and labor being spared-ths art coneoptiou not en· tering for the present in to the sub- ject for this work of to ~day is infe- rior to. the art which is past. purely a mechanical process for a rotating disk will no It is now, more draw lines which hav\ feeling than will photographing- processes paint pictures. It has been stated that we are not entirely acquainted with the methods employe<l by the old glyptic artists. This becom~• quite eviden l from this fart, that their Eilli~rd. Ta, ble FOR SALE \Above 1111, doctor, I beG\ of yon the origin of this torrible malady. and they were written by one of off. Poor. woman, she ho.d her ex- not to ~ttach any importance to It broke out a. week ago aod I can my most intimate friends! A.nd in cuse. Her husband we.s brutal nnd best work BCClll~ to have I.Jccn buth wbat yon will see. My complaint struggle e.gainst it no longer. A.t wh11t a strain! wbnt passion! 'vlul.t dissipated. If I had been like him cut and polished at one and the • is so strange that you will be sur- the present moment I can only man- certainty or biB lovo being shared! I Bbould b1.1vo deserved u. wife like prised, b111t I boeeoob you to take 11go to tTa<lC tb<;lse lines by placlnjj; How he spoke o! secrecy' 'What her. Oh! but my wife! Her h<>art sa.me tllne. To-day \Ve hayo nu tool, no substance, whicu will ac~ complish this uu!J!Jle feat. ;\Jr. The •aid Table i• in excellent condition no notice of that.\ on the sensitive part a piece of light- counsels he la·.-isheJ on the art of was innocent, her svnlangelic! She Tbere Is a ••I of ivory bail•. Pin-Pool \\'· Ohnnd•li•r. J;o. w;u be .old very \Wherte is the painful epot 1 It ed tinder, to eerve tiS 11 cataplasm. deceiving a husband ! And all luved her husband even in the mo obeo!J. For terms address is surprising. 1 I see nothing.\ As long Ill! the tinder burns, 1 do tbCHe lett-era were of\ time when I ment when her husband killed her. JOBNELllllibERbTY. N y \Nor I neither; snd yet the pain not feel tile other pain-flild it is was married and perfeC'tly happy. I du not know what I did during za ot town, , . _______ there is so dreadinl that I feel us nothing in comparison. . Shall I tell yon what I felt 7 Im- the first hours that followed. When tempted to knock my bend against \Sn months ago I was still a agine the intoxication cn.used by a I cn.me back to the consciousness of FOR BALE OR TO RENT. King. dwelling on the di>LmOu<l point, say8. \its extensive nso i\ the great distinction between tho an· ti<JUO and mudern work the wo.ll.\' very happy man. I lived. without deadly poison. I drank deeply of the horrible reality I was in the The doctor took a magnifying· care, on my income. I was on that poison. I read. the letters; vault, beside the coffin. I saw the -A.s two Iowa girls were dis. H 0 T H 1 glnss, exuunined and shook his head. friendly terms with all the world, all. Then I refolded the111, retied lid slowly raised IL!ld the dead wom porting lhtmselves in a secluded THE HX~HANGH \The akin is full of life. The anditookpleasureineverythingtbat the ribbon, replnced the packet, and un within rose noiselessly before me. poe! of the Maquoket.a one after- A~ Wadham's ~hils, N. \Y. Fully rur- blood cirouln.tea Vf!rY regularl:y. Un· oon interest n. man of thir~y-five. I shut the dmwcr. I was stretched stiff and stark, be- noon last week, 11 tramp uppeared nlshed. derneath there is neither infiAmma- had married a year ago, married for \l knew that if I diJ not go for side the coffin, one hand on its edge upon the bank and bore steadily 1 ~!s.A. Cbappa:r tion nor cancer. It is liB healthy aa lo'le, a most beautiful young girl, of her nt 12 o'clock she would c.-orne and: the other beneath her hen.d. and surely down upon the garments -------- any other part of your body.\ cultivated mind and with the beat back from the countess's in the The lips of the corpse were white; hea.peq upon the shore. The Ia· OTICE Is hereby given tbat al • -d t •t to •'--t · • • -d t h d Sh persons nro furbldden to Shoo!, \AU ye 1 eoems me w= 1t heart in the world, who had been everung. .t>.U so 1 sppene · o one drop of blood hung from them. dies were appalled and helpless. FiSh oT Hunt on any of the proper- is more ~ed there than elsewhere .. \ companion to a certain countess,my got down hnatily from tho carriage She bent slowly tow1.1rd~ me, openetl Duwn swooped the intruder, and as lcU':~!dack Iron and Steel Co. \Whexe ?\ neighbor. My wife had no fortune, and ran towards me as I stood wait· her eyes as when I murdered he1' several shrieks rang out through Situated in town•hip 45, 46&47,1noludln~:. The s1tranger took n pencil !rom 'S!ld the love she had for me wo.a ing for her on tho steps. She kiss· and kissed my right hand. T-be the stili evening air he hastily gath- !be \Old M!li!aT'IJ Tract.\ In the County of k b k d d hi d · h te d · 1 Essex, State of N. y_, and are forbldd&n his poe .at- oo an trace on ·a not only gratitude, but alsotb.e gen· e me Wit extreme n erness unu drop of blood fell again on my ll.esh; ered a bundle into his arms and to trsspaoa tbcrcon in any way, nnclertbo biiild a circle aa large as a teu-csnt .aine affootion of a child. Six months seemed to be very glo.d to be with her eyes shut once more, she fell qnirkly disappeared among the penalty of the law. All peraone trespasH- b\ · \' ,_ J tb \ ' I J t thin b lng tb.,eon, £or the I>W>t><>s& of SMillln!1. It, Wit\ tile remar .. , \ ast Ell;a.: pas11ed in BllCh n way that the mor- me ngam. e no g e seen back on her cold pillow 9lld the cof- trees. Tile fair bathers slluk upon Hunl!ny or Fisllin~. will be prouenntod The dlootor looked. He begun w row ww~vu seemed w me happiEll; on my face. We talked., we sup- !ln closed over hel' dead bod_v. the gl'!1!;S in u!J]·ect confubion and thgrafor. ., \Boy you want to let ha~est a.p. pks alone!\ \ Harvest appl~s T\ be sneered- .. do you think mght or nine harvest apples could double up a big boy like me'\ 11 I saw you eating cherries,\' put in a second woman. ·' I know yon did, but hain't I used to cherries? Humph ! Why, I'm fifty times as big a.B a quart of cherries.\ 11 And he bought two cucumbers off my stand an hour ago,\ sqeaked a. little black eyed woman. ·• Yes, I did,\ answered the boy, but they didn't make only a mouth- ful. T'other night I ate ten all at once and they didn't hurt me a Lit.\ \A.nd I saw him eatino: tomatoes and turnips!\ solemly remarked !1. tnll man with green glasses on. \ Sposen you did!\ wailed f;he boy as the colic got a fresh grip, •· wasn't tomatoes and turnips made to eat 1 Don't yo11 folks want to ~ivc n boy any show to get along T • I toll ye it\H this here storm what ef- fects me, and if you women bad any mercy on me you'd bring me some plntns and green corn and bologna and pears and a dish of ice cream to take this pepper taste out of my month 1''-_Detroit Jii•ee Press. -The world owes us all a living, but the only way we can collect the debt is to pull off our coats and take it out of the world's hide.- White. hall Times. -Eat onions. We once knew a poor unfortunate who was the prey uf eve1·y one. Poor peuple borrow- ed money of him, rich people run over him, book agents clung to him; insurance agents fullowud him from morning to night. He commenced eating onion§ .. Now nu one goes near Lim.. JAMES R. THOMPSON, Proeidont, ti.ink tl:natJhlsJ pahien~ waa Cfj\l(v. !han t.h& eve. If 110met.im!!!l I Wru! pud togctbur 1md then retired to ··A Ghort tiwe after I was awaken- distregs. N u tiruB wu~ lo be lust; Adh·ondnck Ulub, Incorooratod. \Remllin here,\ he enid. \In a few obliged to go to l'cstb and leave my onr separate bedrooms. I did not ed by a pain as shn.rp 118 that pro aoothm· man might appear upon the -A Chica.go ale m~tnufacturer, is March. 6. 1877. 3431 W\d ak I n d l Th\ days I 'IVill cure you.\ The doctor home for s. day my wife hnd not s close my eyes. ' e aw ·e, counlr duced by a scorpion's sting. I scene, and more embnrassing situn one vOO more lY name. IS J;Dlll~ -·- B~- o· OT_S_ --an-d- SH-0~-B- s·-.- aaw to Ibis !llltoniehmenh that his moment's peace. She would come ed every honr. When the clock rushed mto the open air. It was tiona ensue. Tb.e ladies begaD to should remember that, Eve aleOOIII,- u strange visitor epok\ sariorudy. Ho two miles on tho road to meet me. struc!k a quarter past midnight I early morning. No one saw me. rummage among the remnant of the mnni\\:tions cor~·upt Goo1mo.re&l~ • . took o£il' his coat, turned up his I1 I was belaUld she would sf.Bu got up nnd plli!Btld into hor bedroom. Tho drop of blood boo diHappeared w11rd:robes left,and fortunately found - Wh•tehall T<tnes. . ;;\i,.~ ·'•' E. T1\11<lean baa on baud a lorl!o lot of ' \\ I£ b d d 't h k ~1<&.~ aonrss-tlne boots, made at bia own shop ehirtslel\lvea and took a bistoury in awllke all night wniting for me, and There was the beautiful blonde htn1d and there was no outward sign of that one skirt belongin!:\ te> one suit some o Y on t 0 e 1!-.b from tll hia left hv.nd •. A.11aaond more and if, by dint of entreaty, she was pre- bnned in the white pillows. It is tho pain, and yet the spot where and an overdress of •mother bad Times man, we'll ilave to stopPl(i!:ti.i~. BEST KJI\ LE& THEil~ ~ steel would have !pade & deep vailed upon to go and see her form- tbns that angela are Jepicted in the the blood had fo.Jlen burned as tho\ been left. The shoes a.Iso a.nd one in g. We can't stand it, overy 4-!t•, ·. . They are warranted to be as represented, Incision. in the J'leeh. er m1ahesa, who we.a 11rill veey fonil midst of white eloudB. Whl\t II being oaten II WilY by 1\ corroding poi stocking still remained. The hats -A. nine year old girl of ~- . and he will sell them \Stop I\ cried tho' dootor, who of ~er, no power on earth oould frightful lie was this on the part of son. The pain.gavemenorespite and and light shawls they.hau huDg on water, discussing Bible 'f'Y~IIS F r \a b t $3 DB p • was Rfrllid that his patient through. k9ep her tbeae more than hnlf a day Nature; ;-ice with a fn.ce of such increased from hour to hour. I a tree, and so, forttlllfttely, thsss could not see how Oa.in cou~d t,4ll·~ ,, &c. 0 u s ! a r llll unskiW 1 ~(!11S might open somo im- and even. then her l'egtets for my innocence I My reeolution was talc- conld sleep ·SOmetimes, but even were stillsMe. Equipped in theBe wife in the Ja.nd of Nod, 'peJ!ltt~e\ ALL KINDS OF porta.nt,-.-em.: 1 'S~cec you Sndge the absence put the others ont of tem- en. I had the stubborness of the then I never lost consciousness of odds and en de, and well covered by she said \He hnd no lice~,;;.J, ,. F' W k oped!i&n bdisi;>imsab!e. so h'eJt.\ per. Iter lon.lneu lor mo went so mnilmnn haunted by 6 fixed iuea. my suffering. There Wl\B no one to Ule l~p robes of the buggy, the two vlerk Bennett ought to inqniili-~F<> : :: l.Oarse or me or He took the bistonry, and. in his far all to make h01' gl'fe ttp dAncing, The poiion lmd convdell m;y Wblllll whom I ooultl mPllliiiiJiplaint, p,nd crestfallen adventurers &tar ted for this matter. If there W8B =)'-in- ' !lade tio Ordar Promptl:v. left hsrnd the right hand of the p!r 10 Ill no~ to b11 obliged to p\\\t }ler sonl. for that m!l.tter there was no one home, wbieh . tl,ley contrived formality in Cain's ma:rriage;itsi~Q:!!l 1!11111 at his ahop In W!llial!]l' balldl:ng tient he begiedhim to tum \\\1 ban~ inw, llkangll.r'l; ,lllld llQ~ ''J. plaped my right. hand g~mtl;r who wonld hp.ve believed. my story. reaehin tha daepo~ WLtlAWS.~II-V~!lle·l··:b• liiiiZ!Ibetlltowu, Hln'oh ~; 1879. hi11 head, 11omo poople being unable .cir.nsecll:ter ~ch pn disp~e 'IUlder her th:ros.b and hastily strang- You have hem witness to the inten· mg. . . In And direot reooivers of BOUUON & RYi wmsm8 I lo. II llurtlf II., , NEWYOR:S: