{ title: 'The Elizabethtown post and gazette. (Elizabethtown, N.Y.) 1879-1884, December 28, 1882, 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/sn92061912/1882-12-28/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061912/1882-12-28/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061912/1882-12-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061912/1882-12-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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xpes -JM bigb groaad, b « Oat ELIZABETHTOWN, ESSEX. COUNTY, 1SLX* THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1882. * e .s< Car is. THE aOBSS AND THE GOOS& In suatoer wfcen the grass was tfreen And aU tbe woods were gay, A borse, good-natur'd, somewnat lean. •• • - - a truss of hay. \ TeU me, poor torse, hov can yon be Cones* to s»eb* lot? To dally plod the sandy sod satdht : Minevilie. Essex County, N. Y. I Repairing Done With Neatness j and Satisfaction Guaranteed. \ Z H0LLEM3AEK, ;v a BEOWX, • OSBOB OSBdBtf OSBORK w&at ©f any Had of want of any kind of want of any kind of H AKNESi A*.— \ -COIT BB0W>'. J>? k HICKET. TT StAFFOlfD, 5EICX C HALE. 'ill R. KELLOGG, JND C. KELLOGG, TEAM TEAM • HARNESS ' HARNESS FARM And pleasui And pleasure Always on han.t Always on han BOTTOM PRICES BOTTOM PRICES Westport i Westport ii e plaoe to buy e place to buy J. C. OSBORNE. ERKELEY, WHENCE COMBS TEE UNBOUND- ED POPULARITY, OF. Allcock's Porous Rasters? Because they have proved them- selves the Best External Remedy ever invented. They will curt asthma, colds, coughs, rheumatism neuralgia, and any local painB. 1 Applied to the small of the back.j they arc infallible in Back-Ache, *™':•:':L£ n F;\ 1 H ir?1 -i 1 ' F ^ rt! pi,i i r j-^ ervou8 -Debility, and all Kidney _--__..• .-J *- .--. troubles; to tho pit of the stomach they are a sure cure for Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint. ALLCOCK'S POROUS PLASTERS ar e painless, fra- grant, and quick to cure. Beware of imitations that blister and biirn Get ALLCOOK'S,the only Genii} ine Porous Piaster. TPORT. N. Y. R. POTTER, .nor, >on Lake, N. Y. ,-T ADJACENT TOWNS. 3EGANSREGULATE: .D REPAIRED. RS AND »ORE !UEL HAYNES ELIZABETHTOWN- UNIONFREESCHOOL Elizabeth town, Essex Co., N. Y., JOHN W.CHANEER, Phi, - Principal. I 80ho< IUBL HAYNES. I Sarauac, N.Y. AT LAW _.DISON AVENUE, BANY, N. Y. ; enslon Notary Detect- ce and Tax Land ess a speciality. ice CrownPoi n t.N. Y The Fall Term, 1882, of tbii ill oommeuoe September 11th and eud: j December 8th. There will be a Teachers class duriDg this term and those wishing to join it should apply immediately. Location admirable; Instructions prac- tical and thorough. Terms as reasonable as in any similar school ia Northern New York. The three departments will bo conducted by able teachers. Instrnotions will be given in instru- mental music 1 to pupils desiring it. For oirculars containing furtbor par- ticulars address the Principal. By order of Board of Education. R L. HAND, Presid ent CJEO. 8. NICHOLSON, 8eo'jr. OGR APHER, : oirjt, Essex County, New York 11 1 can spread my wings and sweep O'er spaces large and wide; Swan-like bathe In waters deep Wnere sunbeams glance and glide. Three elements I proudly claim. And yom, but one, poor horse, wn*t steme i Tne teogaty goose more would nave said No* grown superbly vain,. When patient horse raised nji nte head With look Qf cold disdain, Saying: li Better far ft would ftppea n choice to me would tan. To tx perfect in one spttere, Tlian be a goose In all.\ Miscellany. FOR Ifs a sttsfortf tfta : afra!a; bbf ft ia o tainly a trne one,- and my heroines are hi poor girls, Ellen and Kate, who worked in neck-tie factory when I nrst knew them, through visitios their father on MB death- bed. The father li»«ewd a good whjle jpai fore he passed sway. Heiiad been hurt in falling from a buildtng. The mother left this world yean before. AM I was ?«rjr glad when Ellen and Eats, having near. ly cried their pwtty eyes aHA, began to oheer up a little, and finally married two hand, some young men—good, honest mechanics, of sober habits, and making fair wages. I had known both since they were boys, and they were worthy of saoh good and pretty wires. The young couples went to house- keeping on the same flat, one front and oae ' ik, and, as a friend of the family, I djopped in often, for I had patients in the neighborhood. It would be hard to say how many new dishes \ oat of the cookery book \I \tasted\ in those early days, or how much adrice I gave about matters 1 was snpposed to undertand, for they looked on me as a kind of onwle In that house. I confess to have had Bomethiag to do with making up those matches* and I was proud of it. They had never had a difference of opin- ion, as far as I knew—the four of them— until one morning, when I stepped into Wright and Wheeler's to speak about my oarriage, which needed repairing, and, go. ing out, stopped to speak a word to Will and Silas, who were working side by ride. \How is the world nsfngyon, boys?\ said And Will lifted up his head, and an. swered: Well, we're r first family \Good morning, Doctor, rather out of sorts. We had c Mtown, N. Y. 1S8EX LOUNTY, N. Y. TERFIELD, Prop'r s n 5ri a ldh?£o f v?ir h \ M irrlngo drives, Onxmo Miss ELLA L. LAMSON, cher of Piano, Organ and Har- mony. i« $10,00 for 20 losBons of J honr wifo upon tyomselvea, -tnces -EDEN TOUBOBX. Profs. JT. O. T) , *?) mi, a. A. EMEBY, K. M. DUNHAM 'A« last, England Conservatory of MUBIO this morning. 1 41 Eh?\ said t \Fact Dootor,\ said Silas. \What was about? you'll ask. Well, Will has got il i his pocket.\ \Here It V said Will. And he pulled rat of his pocket a pretty gilt paper box, lirking lady's face on the cover, »nd underneath it, in blue letters: Bloom of White Violets. Perfeotly harm- less. Used by Her Majesty, Queen Victoria.\ \This is what we quarrelled over/' said Will, opening the box, and showing me that 1 was fall of a sort of white paste. \ The frls have taking to using this, and we don't Ban to allow them to do it.\ \Give me the box, Will. I'll teat the staff, and give the girls an idea of what it is nadeof and the oonsequences of using it That will do the work, I think.\ '' Do you think BO ?\ Baid Will. '' Well, they believe in anybody it is you, and we'll a much obliged to you for doing it Td rather Kate would give np quietly, bnt she instgive up.\ 'Tm not so sure about Kell,\ said Silas. I'm glad of the dootoz's help.\ Well, I did as I said I would, and I found le stuff labeled, \ Bloom of White VJoleta •' was a vile thing, with poison in It, pore as ' looked, and I went over that afternoon and talked, to the girls. I told thorn that this pretty oosmetlo was a preparation of lead; that though there were tome people whom lead seemed harmless, it was Im- ! >ssible to know who they were; while here it was simply deadly.\ \ I guess we are the kind it doesn't hart, tootor,\ Ellen said, at last, \for we've used a year.\ \Stop using it now, then,\ said I; hat do you want to smear your faces tot ' an your husband's dfeliko tho looks of 'Oh, Silas don't,\ said Ellen, Uughlng. He owned np that I looked ever so much lirer and younger with it on.\ Then I knew Silas had put it out of his iwer to keep Ellen from using tho vtuff; t of mine, too, perhaps. When next I rat to the little home, I heard nothing of 9 matter, and I concluded that the girls ,d given the thing up. I kopt on going We didirt say any more. I not up stain Theto was poor Ellen on the ted, and Kate eryiig over her. \Whatr we call \w^st- dn>]>\ had attacked her—har buds were panlvzed. When I tad 4« » wfa*i I could for her I took K*e into h«r room. - 1 fell me Che truth, as though you were beft ireyonr Maker,\ said I ; \ Do'you UM tha /TBoom of White Violets • yet ? Ellen has done so, and tbii is the end ot it\ 1 No, dootot;\ replied Kate. \I haven't ton hed it siwe out quarreL Win was too »agry; bnt poor Nell waan't scolded, as X was, SOas gave i£ Oh, Dootor! oan*t you help her?\ : '•rB do mv best\ said L 1 could have cried, too; but a doctor (earns to control his feelings. TfelVI found my bestow better than 1 boppd. After six month* of pain and help. iwsWtfeUdidba^t o get well Ih a yeat«htfhad»he use of hir hands agafcu The| blue hne over her tseth was gone, and har skin was healthy once jnore. Silas, was J rej<i iced. He petted the girl as if she, was a ' by, and hired a svervaat to do her work : jer, as he had while she, was unable to It That was not, perhaps, the best thing he ioold have done, bnt Nell loved him for, \ ' She went out» great deal, aad'dwaseai reU as she was able; bettor, I thick :f « I h»rd of certain bill* that Silas had hard wo: k to pay. • However, as he salfl, she hid strffered ab much Qart be wanted her to en- joy her llf* a little now/ And when summer oabie, I was surprised to hour that Hell Wat going to Long Branoh to a hotel Seaside is a good pkee to go to,\ I said; it hotel life is not- the thing.\ , Well, NeU watats it,\ said Silas, \ so I've drawn oat my savings, and she'll hare a •ppleof weeks.of it A friend of hext, married rioh, is goings and Nell will go her. It'a expensive, but I've only; got I, you know.\ Well, yoa are your own toaster,\ said L tour all, money was made to spend.\ And money WM spent. Ellen went to oing Branch; dressed* as far as my man's eyes could teU, as well as any one. Silas ' * J me. how she enjoyed ttie hqps, and how >pl& had told her they didn't believe she over seventeen, and bow well tbfi' wrote to him every day. AH aeei on well, until one day I received ft tel i from Long Branoh, Bighed by «Uag. dome iere at once, Kell is dying/' I went. ' When I got there, t found' Nell ipeWhless and going from one oonvulrion ' itt> another. 'the oause was on her dressing-bnreau. Ktfle box, porcelain this time, and labeled, (jkeam of the Angels^but fall of thenme lewdly preparation of Iea4. ['Don't speak of it, doctor,\ moaned »l< las!. \I didn't know about it until I found H. I thought poor NeU had learned hei son. ! They gathered np the handsome dresses, i jewelry, thelaqe, the puffs and powders, I hair restoratives, for her illness had ren Ellen some gray hairs, and she had ' \ ' '\ her fate by tudng a \restor. LBTTBRS OF INTRODUCTION, | ORBAT OOLP BARS, Pteopto who writs letters of inteoduotion! We saw this week, at the Bank of Califo*. i The attorney. ••-•-•• - - - ! nia, saysfiie Mining and .Sdentiflo Presn, j serving the C \ them. Kafirs wef by MT obtrusively handed the letter to the stranger, \ 1 inohes wide; : wh> wa^reqUtiitoat hjs. ease, he waited anx-! and & inohes wide. ll t jh b hioh he; bio inches. The thickness of the sides is \ Loualy toopwSbnsinearabont had called. ,„ Bu*.ttw letter began with the usual fonnu- j 1 - r - . — . o^q- v ™ m » la, \The bearer oil this,\ and the capitalist',^8 this bar. The castings were from iroi M . A «,»* *— J-IJ-J \• —, — i--'- ' - •• -' produced at Clipper Gap, in this State. The. North Bloomfleld mine, from which the gold oame, is one of the most prominent hydraulic mines in California. The run it not an exceptional one, though the bar is. The line of the tunnel is cleaned\ up about tf, it ap returned it, and •aid, impatiently: \Ky good man, I can reaUy do nothing for you; no doubt it k the old story—large 1 family—been unfortu- nate, 4b.; but^ou mUBt exouse me from giving you anything to day, you really j twice a year, and this time they 'thought Explanations ensued, and' the two oha- j they would see what they oould' do in thi titionere e day the yo t ag pros hre \ of lead and lao stuphur— and we took poor girl home. No one had any hope r. Kate eat by Nell's bed-sido with a [title new baby that had just oome to her, aid which her sister oould not see, though ' le stared in its direction with her meaning. le^s eyes, tfnd for a long while we all nursed ; but her biain was gone, her limbs use- ihdwhen death came h!a touch was Cul. It is two years now sinoe Ellen died, and Will do all they oan to oheer Silas, bat I believe MB heart is broken. He will all for hoars with Kate's child on his knee, A he fanoies it hag Ellen's eyea ; and some, lies he will say : \Ah Will, if t had been as firm with my rife as you were with yours I might have yet.\ Will always answers: \ You did your best, old fellow;\ but that loes not alter the fact that the \ Bloom oi White Violets,\ the \ Cream of the Angels,' and the \Vegetable Hair Bestorer\ killed oor Noll. My story draws its own moral. It is sad- true ; and it is not the only story of the kind. Hospital repords prove this. In one, this moment, three girls are lying, young, g g p p gg ioaeionally, as usual, to see the little fami- blooming as > but that happeni Kat« rls after (hoy take the oaros of the houso- flo jtemark about It. btight morning in tj I winter, at I was g y riago, I MW Silua Hordo* runuias down the «troet with a Tory pnle fao«. \ Dootor 1 Dootor I\ l>« odtd, as h« camo near me. \ I WM afraid I WoolJ ntisa yoa. Oom'o nroaiu) to mjr hotwo, will you f Kll«n In in a bnd way. Him in Tory «l°k, utid «h« lost th« \Good hWT BIlM ;\ «nd I .In as I dated to dri< wer. going ThUk of her U.iuU.\ ooitl\ raiii I. \Jtnii|i lu, e bJra to hiii hoato u fut I w»ld nothing until we ' together. JU S r Hunt )Ky given orb id don tr Sho 1 Co tl , pndack Iron and St. ;unvnslnp 4C, 4fi .t 47,in, ,,„„ Jitary n<ict.\ in tho County Of S. V. and aro forW.W .hsrepu in any way, nndur ael«*l. All persons u. np& » for the purpose of Shooti tUkt*$ t *i \ bo prosecu 1. THOIIPSOU, President, •irondaok Olab,tu«orporated. . W7T. 8»yl Insure all your Property with W. II. C IKK, Afccul for Ewen Co., Port H«nry If. Y. Home Ins. Co. of New York, Capital $ 3,000,000. LoHdes paid in tiii.s Company in Essex Co. by me, to Jan'y Is!, 1882, over $24,000. Other first elans eompaiiioH represented and all busincHH< lnvrforlhM 1 (promptly atteudod to. Ottll!fhHuKwWgi on o r addreys a s above . 8wl P^, *n.iMI«>f»SIUM«.*h« oaikd oat thai the oonUlu't iu« bar h*ml«. Hh« rnn Cht V ! «itt»«r. Hh« \M ookl ami grmT-lookiug. I'm ri/n ORtt. -#» ^ ub ^ n dying;\ wwl the pwr Wlo* i GOOD FARM nbout on* iiitlo w«nt of I* \V««t|ioit ilopot. known a« lb« Talrick , droa aoros of lnu,|, Wl% * go«4 hou« burnii, grnoery make a good U veulent. Wall watsxto\ and containing lumbsf pay for farm. <Jooi\ ment. for farther prettry, and foolish as Ellen was, victims of i And In the «atn« ward a bra- nette, who blonohed hei- halt to 6jt> It gold- Bbo U tmt booo-nlng nu idiot. Tho than have thoir HVUHUH a p tliongh they have a '.—Mary Kyi* Dalias. HOW LADIES' SHOES ARB MADE. \ It is a faot that ia fedW line anooi Now k L grined men had a good laugh over the affair, ftiid the capitalist ordered liquid refresh- Ihents, which ooet much more than the char, ity would have been which he didn't pro. *»ose to bestow on. the unfortunate stranger. A more annoying mistake occurred :to a young man, the nephew of a weU-knomi New Tork official, who went to a town in the interior of the State to. Idle away a vaoa- tion in fishing and hunting. Previous to his departure hjs uncle remembered that the olergyman of the place was an old college friend, and he gave the young man a line oi introduction, which he dutifully took, but did t ited to t Th l , l y took, but (•did not intend to present The olergyman, however, had a very pretty daughter, and the yoong man bethought him of his lettei and armed with it made a raid on the par. tonage where the pretty daughter entertained way of casting a big bar. The bar is said to have been the result of a twenty days' run. ' . ' It wag in 1873, if we \remember aright, that the Spring. Valley Mining Company sent down to this city a bar weighing 141 pounds, worth' $41,000. At the time they thought this the largest bar eref aiade, but at their jjeqnest we made inqnWes and fotmd that Seligman <fc Oo., bankers, of this city, had received > from Helena, Montana, 'orth an even f $0,000; tho (London and San Franoisco Bani had one worth $85,000, and the Mint and Bank of California had each one worth $40,000. The San Francis- co Assaying and Eefining Company had also had one worth $41,000. The Spring Valley people, then went to 'ork, and after thirty-flve days' run, with 4im charmingly in the parlor, while the ser.' 1,000 inches of water, with a partial clean vant took the letter to the father. In » ft • moments word was sent down that the rev- erend gentleman excused himself from re. ctiviiig his visitor. The daughter presumed j up of 800 feet of head name and 14 under, currents, produoed a bar worth $71,273.15, eighing 299'pounds. then, howev'sr, the Spring Valley g g p j , , pin g Valley there was a mistake, and hastened to hei i Mine, Cherokee Flat, Butte County, shipped tether, only to be informed that his retolu- to this oity a gold bar valued at about $60,- tioniwaa inflexibler-he had laid the lettei 000, and that was considered an exception- away—and he would tjive no further ex- a ^y large planation, but the young man must be. per- j Company, py , tho mortifloation of the visitor at this unexpeoted rebuff may be imagined. He wrote at once to his unolo, bnt as he was absent from home for a weel did not get an answer. He occasionally met The North Bloomfleld _ . isidering it owned the biggest hydraulic mine in the State, thought it would made the biggest bar with the result noted. ' There is ho special advantage in making ibasa so large, except in happening to hai the young lady, but received only a cool; tn<s gold to do it with. Smaller bars are bow, and at last the uncle's letter ci more convenient to handle, and some people A highly indignant at the slight put on j even prefer the metal in small circular shape, his nephew, and demanded of his old friend tne reason; The bewildered theologuo read the letter, sent for the young man, apolo- gized, and said: 11 1 suppose\ it was a joke of your uncle's, but I must say it was in extremely bad taste, and—I took it literally—here is his first note,\ and he read slowly through his glass- es these words: Dear Old Friend, This letter will introduce my nephew. He Is a tramp. Treat him as one 1 &o. . Yours, &c. But the daughter reached out and took the paper. \ Let me read it; there must be some mistake; your eyes are not good, pa- pa,\ and aha read as follows t Dear Old Friend, This letter win introduce my nephew. He a trump. Treat him as one I <feo. \ Vfell, well,\ said the old gentleman, laughing merrily, \ why don't people write more plainly, and how wag I to know the difference ?\ But the young lady evidently did. INDIANS IN ALASKA, A correspondent of tho San Francisco Bulletin found the natives of Alaska eioeed- suoh as we are accustomed to see on bank- ers> trays. The big bar we refer to is on the way to the Mint> out on Fifth street, where It will soon be transferred into coin. The North Bloomfleld and the Milton hy- draulio mines, both under the game manage- ment, have produoed this season about $1,000,000 in gold, and the ground they are in is increasing in riohness right along. This doesn't look much as though hydraulio min. isg was a dead industry. ABSURD CONVEYANCE! This part of South Carolina is a country of one-horse wagons. It is rare to see two homa harnessed and hitohed to a farm wa- 1 gon as they are in the Western \ agricultural States. One mule or horse hitohed to a wagon or a oart is the prevailing rig. Thi Band hffler has soberly burlesqued this con, veyanoe. He, finding, or begging, or steal- ing, or it may be buying, though the latter Is highly improbable, a pair of wheels and anaxletree, builds a cart. The cart is a rough affair, pinned together with wooden pins, and Impressing the Northern beholder with the : belief that it will shortly fall to pieces, t have stopped on the street several Ingly curious to see and to know. Ho thus ! times to see these oarta tumble into kindling describes their method of investigating and ! wood, bnt they hung together, and creak- ;he rough ways by which the whites pro. I ingly rolled out of town in the direction of teoted-themselvea. He says, ienoed n i trouble from tho i :por- ! the sand bills. To this tivea, except '; °°w, or steer is hitohed. snail bull, larters animal, a York surpasses London, and evon Paris,\ sxport In one Of the leading Jkoadway •tore* mid. \The long, slim fe*t of American women lose nothing by comparison with those of UM hlgh-bom Women of Europe. Our women hare ptwfcjr «Mt, and they like to sea thetbselvea well shod regardless of the cost. Just look at that riding boot, made to fit like a glove to tht knoe, a model of eleganoo and durability. How dainty ir this satin slipper, with the Louis XV. hool, which adds an inoh and three-quarUra tc tho stature of the wearer, and makes a num. bn four supper look like s> number one I rhnt heel is oonstruoted on UM same to(«n. title principles M the I«j»niog tower 'of fts*. 8o long as the oentr* of gKkvity falls anj- whero within the heel and not on tha inatep it U all right Women's fine shoM la thia oountry have about reached perfection. Al though w« do a large basioMS we do no< bave *n e«UblUhm<mt wl)«r« all tho work ic iiftk!u K a ihoo is (Ion*. Wa cut oat UM up- pers and lining* sod U>»,kM«, nnd tie them *11 together, and tbay a p then sent auk to ih» fltten. Oultom raoslv* fram f 18 to $«() a wttnk. Th* flltotn omploy twenty or thlt-- the early part of the winter they would i tho Band-billers have bnt a single mo and stand about our doors and win-! sober, nad-facod animal, that doss WH and get in our way gonorally, BO that U»o oud of content; indeed, I hove yet to they beoatno a nuisnnoo. j see them chewing any cud, either of content ) utlwrly I \ When the froat gathered on our win- \ or diaconlent. The harness u«ed ia home if reoov- [ dowa they kept peop-holee open by licking | made, consisting of bits of leathern etmps, the frost with thoir tongues. This we final- ; ropes, aqd short ohains. Many of the ani- ly got rid of by making a strong deoootion niak have collars made of corn husks, and Of cayenne pepper and painting the outside aro harnQseed as horses are in tho North and at th« glftHH, HO that lioking WAS not at Ml Wcet. Others have a Riogle yoke, such as comfMrtnblo. ' aro imod on self-Bucking cows in the North- ;voro oo- oin-Statee. Tho oattk are well broken and any of ronmrkably docile. They stand stanobly i treated when left on the road, or, when they are nt hat thoy the end Of thoir Journey, they lie down and sro very blink klrtdly at the by-passert. That there Is anything ludicrous iu the appearance Of of thoui had tho habit ol tliono tea.i)8 and their driven never seems to I thought that \A fow of the renpflotnbli oaaionally let into the ho th«« did not behavo theniRi them with •o«n, became civil. At first ry llttlo ce afraid of py y ty Rlrb, aocordlng U, th« d«* of tb. eatab- Hahmant. Op* P*»U*, fnothar turn* in tht kid anmud Uie adgM, anoihar aaw« <ba lln. inga, anothar M>WI tho ouMdaa, anothoi wovk* ttMh«U«nhpU«, and, An»U>, lha t>i>- •MMaroalba aUohlna'—^ \• ' — • - aponiug tho door and walking into the hon«« xtriko the Mouther M if th«y wore its owners, and after a short the wight of those people and of the n time we got tirml of'thin and put a fow of who cultivate the \ one horse farms,\ igroes jnthe thotn out, and by that mount) they havo im- street* night have made tin proved in thoir mannera considerably. thoughtful, and that the tremendous qaes- \ Thore i* very litllo fight in thoui, nnd tiona imperatively demanding attention ihey never stick together or at ami up for troio before them. Not so. They are used each other If you onff on«, Hin rent aland •\ the npectaale, and carelessly damn both •round and look on nnd Iftugh nnd nay it it n^groM and mud' hi 11 era, when npoken to \ Nakoomk \ (goodi, and tho follow gotting ; abont t>jflm. One affluent sand hiller, a ehsMinod in \ Afleemk \ (had;. hnuyhly'uionopolist, oame to townyestordtty \ They are u«t at all limxtHonic, but then with n t«am that struck me a* being exceed- they are quite well for Hrvvngoe. The wo Ingly «b»nrd and ameftinreof unciviliauttion. m«n wlien yoouK aro innoli bolter looking ' Ho had throe nniro>ht hitched to hi* wagon. than the m»», but all we very dirty, and I'lio nigh-whoeler was a lean tnnle, grey Barsr dreiini of waiihing nny part of (hob with age, and having deep pocketB above bodies. hit) eye*. The off-wheeler w»s a small \The men woar ft largo pnlr of >>ono \,nU brindle «t»er, fat nnd snucy. Hitched to the tons, like wlilrt-ntud*, in tlicir under llpn, «nd of th« pole, nnd soberly pulling his »nd it gives U»em Biiythinn but » pJcnimnt Atiarn of^tho half enrti of wood, walked a lit* *ppe«r*noe. ITin wotu«a tattoo U)«ir ol)lti«, (!<• r<«l hull- Hi<Hn« on the uw,who«Io* #Mfch th«y tibiuililor A great murk of Imnulr, mu a tni), g«uut mud hiller. Ho WAS tliag- but I oauuot wy that I ngrre with thpm ou ^y <»f hftir. rouml-ihonldsrod, kx^e-jointed, Ui*t jMilnt.\ dirty, utid dllent. H« nurm- spoka to Ills Jorkml tho rope that guided d<ntU. Going down the main wd faoed She CALL! NO. li«Ad \ My boy,\ .ni.l I, •• 1>M J It's •oinatiiliiK tlml la f. white U tfst ov«f k. raitoflhe ips w* «*o oursl Mftk la lb« st«m bmtm, botir N#or* th«y frtw UM mw air, *W>tsipsi«s«> <rm tha majority of th«m o a nwk t llou warehoos«, dk- ororj rl»y; l>ut yt>\ niouutwl, and «Ulk»d off, living hk teaoi • not hupiiy. Wh«n U» the street -N. Y. Sun. til In U>* w»l«wu)Uiig the Itinpoyw at itcuala turn* p*]o, MM) the A M*r Vry ma of unwtutliDD noiidn Ika poor p))T i« ra :wing the fir*. Ho* •±s br.U« passed w tit te&i ta»y be :s:fcg- j —Svi, frr :: :ru;heJ iis hair. Th«tt VM ic.ciag :o be dcze bu: to 5t*a;p *U ite es - t oar ak>»kf HI j .: c-^t r:r« » keep dotrn, th« cr%ri-,gt ct =uiger. A: lbs relief of the residesv-y oi ator had a re: L-cfcc?- the colonel of my regixEe^t h»d . - a - --ererred ;c had terisg free ose posstica to another, tht EO- baen retained by the defeoae. Tie proee. doc of the horse raised him a kttle oat ot i with great oare bit the saddle every now and then, wd -a»t at hope to iozria ;hs the sKraent when he wan raised oat of ths itirrsd ap somewhat, ; saddle a b-^iet passed below bins, teancg — , by sneering ailasioas ziads t; his: '»ie leather open along tbe whola seat ot **kt during the examination, by the imported saddle. Had he been sitting still m the aad. counsel, and so when he oame to sake his die he wotild h*ye been horribly wooaded. opening speech he iadaiged in a litde boa- Shortly after acother ballet ttrack th» bast himself. He expected to be torn tip handle of his re-rolver. which WM -a t poach somewhat by the imported counsel, bat was ' attached to his STord-belt, and~~t>et tor the Utterly unprepared for the simoon that swept ; revolver be would have received a tnorua learned that tire g outor handled his c from the first did noi prisoner. He was when die imported ' way. He paced up through the court-roon counsel got fairly under and down in front of tht. , B . . the air in front of the jurors .\he shook hi< finger in the face of the young prosecutor, aud shivered in imaginary horror at the thought of so youthful a youth undertaking to measure swords with him. The voice him. Th was loud and bitter in its denunciati gesticulations nd. — C WHERE ARE THJSJfANKEE GIRLS. In one of the latest bulletins of the C#- sus Bureau Mr Edward Addasoa aavs, * an article on the specific cottoa manafetftarts of the country . — •• I find, by ooapar^n of '^ e i the actual accounts of leadiaij f^ 1 which have been submitted to tr.<? violent and demonstra. , ±e ^ whicfa h M ; tive • the manner threatening and swe in- t , , ,, , . ipiring, and with face of scorn he sat down g with folded st down and awaited the verdict aited the v hich he did not suppose they dared imported counsel oat of has boote. He arose to his feet, uncertain for the moment whaf to do. A happy thought struck him, and throwing his head back, he oast his left arrc behind him and thrust his right hand in the breast of his vest, while under overarching eyebrows he scowled oat at the jury. The' . when r I land were 1 ters of fai of Ai an birth-—moatiy da -the following changw 8chool g , :hat the mills are now b and ventilated than ever before. >• labor less and the \condition i ilesaardnous.\ of Uu yo was the familiar pose of the imported counsel, ' lips, proceeded to copy the gesticulations j and movements of the eminent attorney who j had preoeded him. He snorted and cavorted and stamped and rolled his eyes. He strode up, and down in front of h England from the obtton fmttorie. It economio fact. French-Canadian i taken their places; but whew are ree girls? Evidently they a*v« »B1 successfully, a higher and a more remunerative field of labor. In th* last twenty years thousands of n;w indus- tries have sprang ap, dotxiiuding a high dU- phi- iod twirl on his finger a martingale ring whioh he had drawn from his pocket, and *' )h was intended to represent the .tree its own problem and each generation *hap«e its own condition; therefore, unless ha who xinsiders statistics can observe what is r*. attorney appealed to the oonrt for protection, while the. judge laughed till the tears rolled down his cheeks, and the (nry and spectators chuckled audibly. The judge replied that the young man had done upon t fettled it. called | argument That The imported eonnsal broke for WHAT SUROBRT CAN DO. The London Lancet, in publishing its ecord of the progress of mediofne te its Mhe door, and the jury, after fifteen min. utes' absence, brought in a verdiot of guilty. —Columbus, q , Time$. ROOF-TOP LIFE IN N^W YORK. What do you think of the queer lives led by Janitors' families ? I know a janitor who has charge of a big building donn Broadway who has four little tota of children, and they don't get down into the streets more than once a week or so. Two of them were born In the seventh story of an immense iron building, just under the roof. to my certain knowledge hai down in the street at all. That's a fact. It will be down some day. It was born only last week. Where do you thick the child- ren's play-ground is ? It is the roof, and a rare, good yard it is, too, with flowers grow- ing on it, and everything just like, a good, big, paved, yard. There is a high ledge around the four sides, so there is no danger of the youngsters' falling off. And there are clothes-lines there, and tubs standing about, and clothes-pins lying • on the ground— everything so natural you might easily imag- ine yourself in somebody's back yard. Thdae children seldom see anything of the world down lielftw ; and their mother hardly ever does, for she has her hands full taking i of the youngiUrs. There is a nice seoluded life for yon, with no danger of annoyance from prying neighbors. There Is something attractive about it, ^>. Just think of tbe janitor at dark shutting up the j hole place and barring the big i l iid Th h i p doot of tha Urgwt imfrMn and 4«alen . . g«at maani and daale SutQut of TttHiey teambU«n (Bin Ua L.rmn lu N.T*<W. Mk *co«k »D|* oooiprle- U l ll h t ^ i h td h Hbld i l louli Ujrtn a \»h ot U i h | p with- OMuy tawwaod mxtm on tht Hamboldt, mi til !! Ok b tU k JU.oi !»•* . NtU* p*n.*i«if« »«uia ft odd •&»•» ruuulug bmi&attm «4Ue ' !• ttb*II x* Ms Iwok. Nor is W tor UM 8U m «iU> ftteg» *B4 KkMdfwM. OB qmMlttei of t»< U It Ate** Mfer to «>• a T*»- i SMM h*vtu 4 In ,< '.jaBslwlMivltf^ Mar, (MIJ UM 4«hl of • d«ll<Mt« lit^gU Or««k, wh«« ar* aoostonUy krgt H-«lWf t h p g g with himself inside. Th*re he is, with his family about him, and all the world seourly, looked out. It is as good as living ia a cas- tle with the bridge drawn up and the moal full of water. But even when the out si doors-are looked the janitora are not always shut in from the world. There is a block of buildings in one of the principal business centres of the city all about the uame height. Each building ban its janitor, and each jftni- has his family. When the outer doors are shut and locked 1 and no outsider can by any possibility make his way in, the jani- ton' families-begin to vurit. The roofo form their avenues and boulevards, their grand promenade. There In something slightly ourlouH about that way of living isn't tho«M having your neighbor dropping through tha roof instead of coining through the door ? It is something bin the y of Uting of the old cave-dwellers in the i IN lTkj.Y.—lu Italy, when tbe conn try men and women rfnnot together, the first thing they d<i is t6 toss ofl their Khoes, if they wear nny t A iunn doeriii 1 go np to a girl and auk if «he will donee, bnt h* nk«s hi* eye on her froth a diutanoe oud nod*. She nods in retail), and then boll kick off their shoes and advance toward! each other and begin to dance. The dance, be- iid« being an incessant dp and down o: •tops, repreaoJi Ui aUo quite a little lovo drami In geatnrw, and tho socoeas of the danoe d i p«od« on the oleverueM of the JUncer to ex prtasthis mixnio seeae. The man eonrts, plmO*, iMMeohai, runs after his d«*er, trJM to oksp bcr w»UUnd kias her; all th« time >te <!»*&* wl^ont «« p.'oitog. Th . gave some of the more prominent points uonnected with surgery. Some ol the ope- rations seem almost miraculous, and ««t regarded as impossible previous to »et«* experiment. No region of the body is now considered beyond the soope of surgesy. Its most marked triumphs relate to the it- temal organs and cavities. What teas rendered the < lid, baad l, 94HW . K ugh, #» baad aadaseape* bar partwr, till itHrt^ * I—• tiHkii, ikrMln # Wp fUJM Mil paratively safe is the use of antiseptics-' fluids that prevent putrefaction in tk* woundfl. Hitherto carbolic add has b*en (he chief agent used. Bnt this proved mom w less cangeroaB—sometimes fatally so—in Dther directions. A much safer and equally affective substitute has been found in what '•» called eucalyptol, whioh is obtained from she eucalyptus tree. ; Absoesses of the liver have beea freely »ndsnccessfaDycutinto^anddrained. Large parts of the stomach have been cut oat, in- eluding even the pylorus, which is the more lighly organized part of the stomaoh that rtrats in the food until digestion is curtted to certain extent, and then opens and ponrs ; into the'intestines; Entrances have been made through the' walls of the stomach for the regular intro- iaction of food in, cases where the «wph- igufl (gullet) has been closed by dlgea*e. . Two pieces embracing tha entire' circum- ference, the one about three inches in length, :he other five, have been cut ant from the arge intestine—the colony In, all such jases the divided.parts are brought together md sewed, the stitches becoming : soon ab- jorbed after the healing is complete. Considerable progress has been made .to- wards ascertftfrrimj the exact spot whire the brain and nervous system may be Effected, .hus facilitating the reaching of disease, t It has been found that bone can be trans- planted and aid, iu the formation of, new »one.; and more wonderful still, that sponge san be grafted iuto largo wonndB, and be a porous support for tli^ granulations(thei?ew 3esh pirticles) while they are filling the c*v- ' ties. The sponge is believed to be god- wily absorbed. AN HONEST*MAN'S DILEMMA. A stranger who had made a purchase of a wcond-hand dealer on Chatham street grew confidential and said he would like some ad- vice . . -j'. ••'•; , .;:•{:•-:• - \Vhell. goahpndt 1 * \ If you were in my place and >flirte* to go into business here, wololS''yon jejiilf yotw money and I've on the; interest, j8? r f?uU you go into the second-tewS > idatMag' bwil. neHs? \ -• •-- ••• - \•'- - A '•-•'• • ••'•ti ! '-' f •!•.•*', \My freut,\ relied..tbe other'*, •ery serious look ou his frt^ '\M tn you sbuHt like a fadder. Do an' go into de secondhand bewness yoHr»eU,; bot |6ad \ ^ w - -\- ^asHent,^ \ Are tbe proilte'&piil^ 'I'- ,:•'•! ; < < Large ? How ttoob y<W tlnk. I \ mtde | on dot west I sold yo^-for |2f?- : I^ia^ shtwht twelvesniyings,\ t V 'i ; r\^*'- 1 \ Not by a blamed ^#WiM fot it and won't ia^itl n exMvb&th stranffer, w h« dropped the bundle>nd| watkwiout. ; . /•'-<? -V-^iS:tm \ Vbell, Vhrfli^ i