Image provided by: Rogue Valley Genealogical Society; Medford, OR
About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1880)
INDEPENDENT ON ALL SUBJECTS, AND DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF SOUTI „ _ _______________ JggQ ~~ -NO 35. ASHLAND TIDINGS. iNMiietl every Friduy, ----- BV------ MKRRITT. LEEDS^ OFFICE— Oa Main Street, (iu tecuuil story of McCall À Baum’s new building ) Job 1‘riutlng. Of all descriptions .lone ua short notice. Legal Blanks, Circular*. Butin:*» Card«, Billhead'», Letterhead«, l’oa l*r*, ete., gotten up in good style at living prices. Ternm OI Subscription: on? year......................................................... f’J 5*) six tirnithl................. 1 60 three inontUM.............................. 1 U" Club rate«, aix cop:.« fur........................................„..IS 50 lettni in advance. Term* of; Advertising: LEUAL. I iaie aquwe (Un lines o leu) let insertion........„..f i 50 00 Ex *h A.hlitlului ii.s-: tiol i......................................... - 1 10u Load u jliee. per line UIC.IU Rn<n!«r a.lverliidiieuts inserted up ni literal terne! PROFESSIONAL. DR. J. H. CHITWOOD, ASHLAND, OFFICE : : ; : OREGON. At the Ashland Dm; Store. JtMES R. NEIL, ATTO li N E Y - A T - L A W , Jacksons ill», Oregon. J. W. HAMAKAR, N O T A R Y PUBLIC, Linkville, Like Co., Oregon. OFFICE- In R.>st O.Hi-c building. Special attention iven to conveyancing M. L. M’CALL, SURVEYOR A- CIVIL ENGINEER, Tho District Telegraph. j. M. m ’ cali . Is prepared to <lo any work in lúa line on short notice. DR. W. B. ROYAL, Has permanently located in Ashland. Will give hi« unilivide 1 attention to the practice of medicine. Has had fifteen years' experience in irregoii Often at Ms n si.lenee, on Slain street, vpoosite the M. E. Church. J. M. McCall & Co Main Street, Ashland. NEW DEPARTURE. The undersigned from and after April 1 Sth, propose to sell only for CASH IN HAND Or approved produce delivered—except when by special agreement—a short and limited credit may be given. They have commenced n'ceiving their New Spring Stock, and that every day will witness additions to the largest stock of General Merchandise! Ever brought to this market. They de sire to say to every reader of this jtaper, that if Standard Goods! Sold at the Lowest Market Prices, will do it, they propose to do the largest business this spring and summer ever done by them in the last five years, and they can jiosi- tively make iWo the advantage of every one to call upon them in Ashland and test the truth of their assertions. They will spare no pains to maintain, more fully than ever, the reputation of their House, as the acknowledged For Staple and Fancy G oo J b , Groceries, Hardware, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Millinery, Dress Goods,Crockery,Glass and Tin Ware, Shawls, W rappers,Cloak i, And, in fact, everything required for the trade of Southern and South eastern Oregon. A full assortment of Linkville, ; : : : Oregon. • : Ot!U*e and residence, south side of Main street. Jacob Wnjncr. E. K. Anderson. W. H. Atkinson. THE ASHLAND MILLS ! IRON AND STEEL For Blacksmiths’ and General use. A Full Line of Ashland Woolen Goods! Flannels, Blankets, Cassimeres, Doeskins Clothing, always on hand and for sale at lowest prices. The highest market price? paid for itinde to purchase wheat —A T- T/ie Highest Market Price, Wheat, Oats, Barley, Bacon, Lard. Come One and All. J. M. MeCAl.I. a- CO. And will deliver Flour, Feed, Etc., Anywhere in town, AT MILL. PllICEs. Wasner, Anileraan A C®. ASHLAND Livery,Sale&Feed STABLES, Malti Street, JAM Ed THORXTOX, W. II. ATKINSON, JACOB WAGNER, E. K. ANDERSON. THE ASHLAND WO OLEN MANUFAC’G CO., ARE NOW MAKING FROM Ashland. I hate constantly on hand the very best NAIIDI.F IIOKNF.W. BIUUIES AND (\KK14GES, And can furnish my customers with a tip top turnout at any time. HORSES BOARDED On reasonable terms, and given the best attention. Horses bought and sold and satisfaction guaranteed in all mv transactions. The Very Best NATIVE IWIOIOILI! BLANKETS, FLANNELS, CASSIMERES, DOESKINS, II. F. PHILLIPS. ASHLAND__ 4 I I__________________ MMARBLEH ft • I WORKS. J. II. nrSSKLL, Proprietor. Having again settled in this place and turned my entire attention to the Marble Business, I am pifr pared to fill all orders with neat ness and dispatch. Monuments, Tablets, and Headstones, executed t<ë~in anv description of marble. g^TSpecial attention paid to or- g^Tders from all parts of Southern ^feT’Oregon. Prices reasonable. AND HOSIERY. 1OÏÏR PATRONS t OLD AND NEW, Are invited to send in their orders and are assured that they SHall Receive ompt Attention I At Prices that Defy Competition. ASHLAND WOOLEN MILLS. Address: J. H. Ruesell, Vshland. Oregon Lost and Found. Venetian Mai — HEADQUARTERS! Ashland, Oregon. ASHLAND! OREGON FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 6, lb W. H. Atkinson, SECRETARY The telegraph is now made to do a great many services in the large cities. Instead of merely sending messages from one person to another, instruments are placed in private houses, and the occupants, by merely pressing a knob, can summon a policeman, or give an alarm in case of fire, or call a messenger to do any service that may be required. The principal company in New York which controls such a telegraph system is the American District Telegraph Com pany. The bova in this company’s em ploy have many duties to perform which are not required of the Western Union boys, and they therefore have a great many things to learn before they can be provided with work. When the hirer of a District instrument calls for a messenger, the boy can never know' what he is wanted for. He may be told to hurry for a physician, he may be given a package for delivery, or a bill to collect, or he may be sent by a broker to deliver stock or to have a check cer tified—in fine, bis duties are too varied for me to name them all. When it is remembered that about 4,500 District instruments are now in use in New York, and that 1,513,265 messages were delivered by the District boys in the year ended September 30, 1877, some notion of the manifold services required of them can be formed. It is easy to see that an inexperienced and unskillful messenger in such an em ployment w’ould only prove himself a nuisance to the public and an injury to the company. Every boy, therefore, who is employed by the Americon Dis trict Telegraph Company is put into a Gaining school, and this school is a very interesting one. This school-room is provided with wooden benches, like those found in old- fashioned country district schools, but the instruction given is entirely in re gard to the business of the company. Every candidate for a place must know how to read and write before he can be put into the school. It is of course necessary for the boys to know the situ ation of every street in the city. A large map ot the city is therefore placed before them, with the streets marked on it, but without their names. The teach er points out different streets to his pu pils, and they are required to name them. In this way a messenger-boy soon acquires a more complete know ledge of the city’s thoroughfares than many an old resident can boast of. In one jiart of the room are telegraph in struments such as the company uses, and the boys are taught how t,o send ard re ceive messages on them. There is a miniature bank, where thoy are taught about the use of checks, and there is a make-believe broker’s office where they are taught how to deliver stock, etc. Much attention is given to the instruc tion in the bank and in tho broker’s of fice, as bankers and brokers use the mes senger boys constantly. There is, bebdes all this, a great deal for the boys to learn about the com pany’s methods of business, which I need not explain in detail They’müst make themselves familiar with the “tariff book,” which tells them how mu®h a boy must charge for going from any one place in the city to any other. They must learn tlie use of the different kinds of tickets, on which the temporary rec cord of their service is kept. They must know when to charge for a car or stage fare and when it was proper for them to walk. The American District Telegraph Company employs, on an average, 550 boys, who are distributed throughout the city among twenty-three offices. Each office has from five to eighty boys in attendance, according to its location, and every boy is expected to serve ten hours a Jday. In some of tho offices, constant employment cannot be found for all the boys during this time, and one form of promotion is to send a boy to an “easy district.” When a boy arrives at his office in the morning he goes io the sergeant4 who notes if he is in time or not Then he puts on his uniform and reports to the manager, who ascertains whether or not his hands are clean and his hair neatly brushed. If he passes this ex amination successfully he takes a seat for duty. The boys respond to calls in the order of their numbers early in the morning; afterward they take their turns. A faithful boy in the employ of this company is never discharged merely be cause business is dull, the resignation of boys who tire of their duties or leave for other causes, and the dismsssal of boys who are unsatisfactory, rapidly de creasing the force w hen additions are not made. It has required no little skill to so arrange the service that inefficient messengers may be detected among so many, but this has been accomplished by an admirable system of records, and discipline is enforced by means of fines and extra hours, which soon lessen the wages, or prolong the period of daily service, of those boys who prove remiss.^ N. Y. Times. A young lady of this place has in her possession a gold dollar, with a mono gram inscribed upon it, which has been the subject of a great deal of attention. It was attached to a bracelet by a chain. One evening in the latter part of Febru ary last, after a sleigh ride, she missed it. The broken chain showed how it had disappeared. Search was made, but it was of no avail. Finally an adver tisement caught the eye of an habitual loafer about town. He went to the bouse and informed the servant at tho door that he had found th*» dollar below the steps of the sleigh the morning after the ride, and had spent it for whisky at one of tho saloons of the city. The friends of the young lady determined to find the dollar if possible. The saloon keeper remembf red receiving the money, but h? had paid it to a butcher. The latter recollected paying it to a drover in Trenton. The address of the drover was secured and a letter written him, requesting a reply at once. It came, with the information that ho had pur chased a ticket to Philadelphia with it the very day the Lambertville butcher gave it to him, and that the Trenton ticket agent hail remarked about the monogram. The search was continued. The agent remembered the dollar, and said he laid it aside for a few hours, but as the drover who paid it to him evidently knew nothing concerning it, it was for warded to the general office in Phila delphia, with the daily account. The receiver of the New Jersey receipts at Philadelphia was nestcorresj»ended with. The beautiful monogram had been noted, but had been deposited in the bank, along with other sums of money. His opinion was that it could be obtained from the cashier. So interested in the travels of the little coin were its friends in this city that it wap resolved to con tlnue the iuvesi igation. The cashier was communicated with. His attention had been called to the initials on the back of the dollar by one of the clerks, and he had instructed the clerk to place it aside for a few weeks. Unfortunate ly, in the absence of tho clerk, a gentle man desiring several hundred dollars in gold, preparatory to a California trip, had been furnished with the amount, and the little piece had in some way been mixed with that sum, and gone west ward. The gentleman’s name was fur nished. He represented a Philadelphia house, and a letter was sent to him. The events so far described too’: place in March, and the remainder of the Spring and all Summer passed with no tidings from the lost bangle. A few days ago, however, there came a letter from Detroit, written by the gentleman who had gone west, which stated that his health had been poor, so th it instead of returning at once from California, as he purposed when he started, he had stopped at Colorado Springs for the Summer to recuperate. The letter re lating the account of tho dollar had been delayed and not forwarded, so that he never received it until he reached Chicago. He said he had the dollar in his possession, as the monogram at tracted "his notice. The initials were the same as those of a young friend of his, and he kept the coin on that ac count. He promised to send the dollar as should be directed. He was as good as his word, and the little gold piece is back i> Lambertville once more.—Phila delphia Times. A Painting by Rossstti. Her sharply sculptured lips have just parted with a sigh of sympathy, their rich, red outlines curve in a slight com pression, and are so delicately drawn that we seem to see them move with the in-drawing of the breath. The profund ity ot the pity which is marked so dis tinctly in tho eyas and lips is in keeping with the deep sympathy of that woman hood which, although it has rijiened, is incomplete. This incompleteness, or rather this mental expectancy and in sufficiency of self, is impressed by na ture on the sumptuous loveliness of the lady, and apjiears in the suppressed languor of her broad eyelids, in the potentialities of passion ren- dered plain in the t morbidezza of her marble-like cheeks, which have been refined in form Riid blanched in tint by the urgency of unperfected love. The fulness and ruddiness of the lips, the large shoulders, the ample but still virginal bust, the graceful carriage of the head, not less than the statuesque fulness of the hands and arms, are all elements projier to and chai acteristic of that phase of womanhood which of yore so subtly appealed to Dante, and has here exercised the utmost art and the deepest feelings of the Dantesque painter, who has given the semblance of vitality to the image of the “Lady at the Window.”—London Athenteum. The coronor’s jury in the ease of Michael Kuhn, who it is claimed was killed by falling front a loft in a barn, found upon investigation that he had been brutally murdered by his son Hen ry, a bloody axe having been discovered with which the deed was done. Henry was sent to Sparta jail to await trial. Their quarrel was about money left by the murdered man’s wife. Richard Grant White says the expres sion ftIIe is going for to go” is incorrect. Richard is too particular. We suppose he would also object to the remark, ‘You git right up and git right out and git” °And yet the fellow to whom it “ What is the difference between a as addressed would understand it as church fair and an infant's stocking 1” quickly aa if you were to sling two pages Answer—The difference between ladies’ begging and baby’s legging. of grammar at him. . ■■■■ ^es. A New Cereal. if The Venetians have haJ a practical A correspondent of tho Denver and strictly business-like way of ai rang Tribuno describes at length the valuable of curiosi ing marriages from the earliest times. qualities of a plant which he has dis considerable sums of money to the gath Tlie shrewdest provision has always covered growing in the region of the ering together of bank notes of all coun been made for the good of the .?tate, Rocky Mountain. It is a sort of rice or tries and all values, became the p>s,essor private and public interest being con corn, native to Africa, and is found t® of a Bank of England five pound note, sulted ; the small matter of the afk •- grow to perfection on the arid plains of to which an unusually strange storv wa tions has been left to the chances of asso i this continent. A Mr. Hollister, of i attached. This note was ] aid into ; ciation, and it docs seem that V enetian hicago, has mado- an extensive expert Liverpool merchants office in the ordi society has over dealt severely with hus meat in the growing of the past year nary wav of business sixtv-one year bands or wives whom incompatibilities and predicts wonderful results from its ago, and its recipient, tie cashier of the forced to seek consolation outside of cultivation. Neither drought, heat nor firm, while holding it up to the light to matrimony. Herodious relates that the rain affects this hardy native of Africa, test its genuineness, notiued some Lint Illyrian \ eneti sell their daughters at as it grows right on through even the red marks upon it, which on closer ex auction to the highest bidder ; and, the hot blasts from the burning plains, amination proved to be semi-effaced fair being thus comfortably placed in which scorch everything else green in words, scrawled in blood between the life, the hard-favored were given to sight, It requires about six months printed lines ami upon the blank margin whomsoever would take them, with such to ripen, and yields about ; 360 of the note. Extraordinary pains wen- dower as might lie considered a reasona pounds to the acre, The stalk taken to decipher these partly o ble compensation, The auction i was for somo^three feet from the ground erated characters, and eventually discontinued Ill Christian 1 times, is about as large as a man’s coat sleeve, following sentence v. as ma le oat : but marriage contracts still par- and is perfect wood. This in all the tins note should fall into the hands of took of the for in of i a public and treeless region east of the mountains John Dean, of Longhill, near Carlisle, he half mercantile transaction, At a com- is a most important fact, as an acre or will learn hereby that his brothel is lan paratively late period Venetian fathers two will furnish fuel for a family for an guishing a prisoner in Algiers.” Mr. went with their daughters to a great an entire year. From the top of the woody Dean was promptly communicate! with nual matrhnonial fair at San Pietro of substance issues a stalk on the top of by the holder of the note, an l*he ap- Castello Olvolo, and the youth of the which is a tuft something like that of pealed to the government of the <lav ior lagoons repaired thither to choose wives sorghum issues ; this soon drops over, assistance in his endeavor to obtain his from the number of maidens. These and the whole bunch is one mass of brother’s release from captivity. Tin* were all dressed in white, with hair loose grain. The kernel is about the size of a prisoner, who, as it subseqii'-i.t!\ an about their neck, and each bore her little grain of wheat, perhaps a little smaller, peared, had traced the r I mivo :cntcruc dower in a little box slung over her and more nearly round. Each one is upon the note with a splinter of woo l shoulder by a ribbon. It is supposed inclosed in a shuck, or independent cap dipped in his own blood, had born a that there was commonly an understand sule. The grain can lie ground into an slave to the Dey of Algiers for eleven ing between each damsel and some youth excellent Hour, from which bread and years, when his strange missive first at in the crowd. As soon as all had paired other food can be ma-le ; it can be boiled tracted attention in a Liverpool count otf, tho Bishop gave them a sermon and and eaten as rice and cracked wheat, ing house. His family and friend:; ha» his benediction, and the young men and in fact, can be used for any long believed him dead. I’ventuallv bi gathered up their brides and boxes and pui’i lose for which our ordinary brother, with the aid of the British au went away wedded. This going to San cereals .are employed. If this informa thoritios in the Mediterranean, sm Pietro’s, selecting a wife and marrying tion should prove to be reliable ceeded in ransoming him from the Dev her on the spot, out of hand, could only the discovery is of almost incalcuatye and brought him home to England, have been the contrivance of a straight value, as it will enable ranchers to util where he di<l not long survive his ie forward practical race. Among the ize a > ast tract oi land which is now lease, his constitution hat ing been ii re common people betrothals were useless from being beyond the reach of parably injured by exposuie, privations, -lanaged with even greater ease any sort of irrigation, ami will furnish a and forced labor in the Det galleys. and dispatch till a very late day in new article of food for both man and histoiy, and in the record of a certain beast. The more plentiful brealstuffs Embalming the Dead. trial which took place in 1443 there is become, the more prosficrous will be the a.i account of one of these brief and un nation and the happier its people. Mr. Kreisman, United State:; Consul --------- —-------- - —- ceremonious courtships. Douna Catar- General at Berlin, in his dispatch to the ussa, who gives evidence, and whom I A Rich Discovery of Coin. State Department dated October 30, take to have been a worthless, idle gos 18. 9, communicates a description of a sip, w’as one day sitting at her door It has just been learned that early on newly discovered process for the | reser when Pietro of Trento passed selling a certain morning last Summer a lad 1 en- vation of dead bodies. The inventor or brooms, and said to her : gaged in repairing the drain of a house discoverer had secured a patent for the “Madonna, give me some nice girl to in Rome came upon a quantity of buried process, but the German Government, be my wife.” coin dating from the fifteenth and six attaching great importance to th - inven As Donna Catarussa thought at once teenth centuries, and very rich in value, tion, induced the patentee to abandon being gold. The lad at first found only his patent. Thereupon the Government of a suitable match, she said : “In faith of God, I know one for you. apiece. This he put into his pocket, made public, through the press, a full and when occasion offered he showed it description of the process. Come again to-morrow.” The liquid SS. So then both met next day, and the to a goldsmith across the way and agreed used is prepared as follows s : In 3,000 woman chosen by Donna Catarussa was to sell it for <?4. As the bargain was grammes of boiling water are dissolved about to close the head mason and the 100 grammes of alum, 25 grammes of asked : owner of the house happened to see the cooking salt, 12 grammes saltjietre, GO “Wouldst thou like to have Pietro for thy husband, as God commands the Holy transaction, and going acrosr the street, grammes potash, and 10 grammes ar put an end to it. Further search was senic acid. The solution is then allowed Church ?” made for coin in the same spot, and 142 to cool and filter. To 10 litres of this “Yes,” she answereJ. And Pietro being asked the like ques gold pieces were unearthed between the neutral, colorless, odorless liquid, 1 drain and the W’all of the house. A litres glycerine and 1 litre inettrvlic al tion, answered : quantity of dirt which had been taken cohol are to be added. The process of “Why, jes, certainly.” And they went off and had the w od- away from the drain and was on the preserving ot embalming dead bodies road in carts, to a point outside of the by means of this liquid consists, ding feast. city, was sent for, and 42 more pieces as a rule, in saturating and were taken out of it, making 184 gold impregnating those bodies with it. The Fatal Belt. coins of the largest size and as fresh as if From 1 J, to 5 litres of the liquid ar:* used There was a widow lady of compara they had just been taken from the mint. for a body, according to its size. The tive youth and many personal attractions As works of art the pieces have special bodies prepared bv this process are said residing in Canton, N. Y., who had, tor merit, and well they may, for the greater to retain their form, cob<r ami flrxil.ilir v. some time, unsuccessfully endeavored to part of them were coined by Alexander Even after a period of war.-» sv h dead induce the local dentist to accept the VI., Julius II., Leo X., Clement VII., bodies may be dissected for purp-.ses < f rank and emoluments of her late hus and Paul III, and hence belonged to the science and criminal jui ;..in udeir;*, De band. The dentist, however, was a great art age. Some of them are said to cay and tiie ofi'ensiie smell of decay arc cautions man, and, although he greatly be of exquisite beauty, and Avere done completely prevented. I po t incision admired the widow, declined to commit by artists who seem worthy to stand at the muscular flesh shows the same ap pearance as in the case of a fresh dea l himself. About a month ago Esquire the side of Donatello and Cellini. body. Preparations made of the several Smedly, of Canton, gave a party, which A New Channel parts, such as natural skeleton , lungs, was altogether the most brilliant affair entrails, etc, retain their softness ami of the kind within the memory of the The completion of the railroad hyphen pliability. oldest inhabitant. The parlor of the Smedly mansion was crowded w’itli between Selma, Ala., and Pensacola, Knights of Labor guests, who overflowed the hall, and rose Flo., will soon open up a new and arti gradually to the top of the staircase. ficial channel of trade in the South in The Cincinnati Enquirer s cot respond In the course of the evening the widow competition with the natural channel ence from Charleston, \V. Va., says that lit the became somewhat faint, in consequence down the Mississippi valley. not far distant future this new outlet to the mining region in the Knawlia val of the heat, and requested the dentist to ley has been suffering from the acts of conduct her into the garden, where the the Gulf will command the. Southern the Knights of Lalwir in a siiuilartiuan, fresh air might revive her. It did re tratlic of the entire country except that ner as did a portion of Pennsvltania portion which can afford to wait the vive her to an immense extent, and the economy and delay of water transporta from the Molly Maqu r •<. The organ- dentist found the garden such a pleasant tion. This fact of the future is to be izations resemble »•;«< h other ■, and most place that he decided to remain with his accounted for by the correlative fact of the labor tronl les in the region companion and smoke a cigar. that the harbor at Pensacola is the named are traceable tithe : r«?cret inflii- When the pair returned to the parlor finest, safest and most capacious, os well ence of this association, It. first ap- a curious phenomenon attracted unusual as the deepest, on any of our coasts, peared in 1870, and gaining strength, attention. The widow wore a wide belt utio should or East or West, on the Atlantic or the undertook to dictate who beautifully ornamented with a painted long Pacific. In the course of time New should not lie employed, causing luiq vine of some undetermined botanical and bitter controversy Ix-tween operat Orleans and Mobile will both find them species. The dentist wore a black coat, selves overshadow’d!, or at least equaled, ors and miners. In 1877 and 1878 and, to the amazement of the public, one in commercial importance by this newly there were some 15 strikes along the side of his right sleeve was seen to be developed rival Gulf port.—Ex. river and railroad, accompanied bv vio decorated with the green stem and lence and lawlessness. From 1876 to leaves and the brilliant white and yel False Economy. 1879 eight fatal lynches took place iu low tloweis of the vine that ornamented the valley, with no effort to punish tin* the widow’s belt. The conclusion drawn The San Francisco Chronicle sjieaks perjietrators by the authorities. This by wicked and heartless jieople was of the barberous manner in which the week a general strike was threatened, inevitable. There was no possible de indigent dead are buried in that city. The including stoppage of all coal trains on fense to be made. The widow wisely citv only pays for the work 81 37 a body. the Chesa|>eake »v Ohio Railroad. It slipped out and went home, ami the den Consequently the contractor can give was met by the declaration of tho gover tist followed her example, burning with but very little attention to the proper or nor that he would use tlh* whole milita: v rage and wishing that all Canton had decent disposal of the bodies in his pow’er of the State and, if necessary, call but one back-tooth, that he might draw charge. < >11 being notified of a death a on the General Government for aid t<> stop it A’ith an old-fashion turnkey and with wagon is driven to the city hospital, the any such liwless conduct. So far, serious out the use of anesthetics. Of course, naked liody is carted to the establish trouble has lieen avoided. The Knights the widow’ lost no time in pointing out ment of the undertaker, thrust into a of Labor have some 5,0(10 or 6,000 to him that there was but one way in cellar and allowed to remain there until members along the \alies, having its which he could repair his indiscretion a sufficient number of bodies have ac county, general and district assemblies and undo the injury which he had ¿ono cumulated to form a load for the ceme in six or seven counties. It is thought her, and accordingly he w’as within a tery. Then at night, piled like cord that a greater show of firmness on the week brought to the altar, where he ex wood in a wagon, the naked bodies are part of the authorities will put an en 1 piated his fault with much fortitude, carted to the cemetery and dumped into to its dangerous tendencies. and furnished an awful example of the their unmarked graves like offal from a ^When the girl who has encouraged a wickedness ot painted belts.—N. Y. night wagon. ----------- »»•»•< young man for aboat two years sudden Times. He told me that he was now regularly ly turns around and tells him that she There is one kind of canned goods engaged as a writer for one of the lead can never be more than a sister to him, that goes ofl quicker than any other— ing dailies. His honest old mother said h3 can fur the first time see the freckles writing wrappers at 83 a week. Gunpowder. Q i her nose,