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   Boston Daily Globe (Newspaper) - October 3, 1883, Boston, Massachusetts                                VOL. 94. WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 3, 1883-WITH PRICE TWO TO THE Governor Butler at Athol and at The Importance of a Practical and to Get It. for Thinking That America is the Old Despatch to The Boston October 2.-Governor by Dalton and Colonel of Ills military left Boston at 8.30 tills for tlie purpose attending tlie exercises or I ho Worcester Northwest aud Mechanical Society at this The which arrived about was the object ol tha curiosity of a dense despite the had assembled at the station with the hope of getting a glimpse of the at the fair his excellency sat down to dinner with a hall full of who afterwards to hla remarks with the deepest lie was very Introduced by J. H. Lee of the and addressed the assembly at Mr. congratulate you first of all upon this very line day because I know each one of you lias self-denial enough to bo glad that it rains for the sake of so many It is a great discomfort to I congratulate having to speak to I have got you lu such a situation you can't go any where You must stay and hear because I I cannot make it any unpleasant than It Is When 1 first to contemplate with seriousness ray duties as I had known but little of the horrors and customs of that peculiar I knew what his legal duties I determined that I should liave so much to do that I could not go to cattle I felt It a treat I assure because there aro so many to Bee and so many pleasant people to aud 1 supposed that X bu needed I said therefore to my Governor when he offered mo a large accumulation of that I should liave no need of But when I came to know what my particular duties I lound that was nothing else to do in the fall but attend cattle and that my predecessors tor a long time had so trained the people that it was to be present at cattle and therefore I am I shall not make a speech to I shall only have a little conversation of all X to call your attention to the between comforts now and in the I had at ono my plate before ine things which wu deem which Queen in all her pride and oven after she had conquered the could not have had upon her No no cranberry no brown no no in But lot us not go back .as as When we old men were iho dally work of the woman and of the upon the farm was much more severe and arduous than It Is And It is owing to that condition of things that yon have learned from your mothers that farm life Is not there is something bettor to he somewhere lJut nowadays there Is no reason why the farmer's daughter should not be as of a lady as the in There is no reason why the daughters should to marry other The farmer is not now so driven with his labor he may nut bo as cultivated and as a companion as Yoang look for a respectable farmer's who has a unmortgaged larm In It Is a great deal better than to marry a man who has got 850,000 In stocks that are not worth if you could get at the worth of I do not how far views of mine mav with your but are the fruits of reflection upon all matter for more than GO and saddest thing 1 know about today is that her agricultural population is that The uro Suf ana that today there is more land growing up to woods in than there was in the days of the There is one matter to which I want to call your and that is the education of your How and where shall educate them? Many a himself to send his son to college anu make a man of Send to some if sou want him to bo a where have the least of The chances you lose him by temptation are two to one to those that he conies out anything better than lie would havn been If he stayed on the farm and avoided the State of using the bounty of the United has founded a which I am sorry to in has not Itself to the attention of the farming I moan to say nothing Invidious of any I don't believe very much In Greek and because X know but little of hut I know as much as the college boy Is wanted Is a good practical This our Agricultural College I have been to that college aud examined Its of and as good a be got there as any man The highest education in tlie college boy generally makes a writer of or other which will not be read five years alter ho or puts him Into some place where he Is of but little use nine cases In You will often find that where he has stored his he has lost Ills and a good stomach is just as useful to a man as a good let rae tell X say there Is this where a good education can be The Legislature of tills State has made forty Everything comes within the reach of every well-to-do It Is In a town said to possess tow Why It not been well I Is because there U an Idea that nothing Is taught but and that the boys arfe taught simply to drive and But is not so. i The at is as high as any young man need In the the boy Is taught what he Is not taught .In any other college in this be a and for an purposes la as well drilled ns a West Point This menus than being tau ght to shoulder the The young man Is taught to take care Qf himself as a soldier In the army see that everything about his mom Is He does not leave things for his mother or slater to clear up after shoes in one corner his shirt In He would do this if he because he knows she would nick them up afier I I have been there X hud a kind and Order IS being taught and that is a very great let mo tell A boy had bettor be taught to be a soldier than because he learns to take care of What caused the Immense mortality ol the volunteer army of the United It was owing to the tact that the boys had always been taken care of by mothers and sisters at and When they went Into the army they hadn't the slightest idea of how to care of I took a regiment prst went and we led them all the way out on chickens and but when they cot Into an enemy's their food was portioned out to many of raw bacon and so much hard aud looked as though they never Knew what could he done with Six months after the got to the fleld 87 per only would be lit tor out of the some 700, more or Why? Simply because they died or were they did not know bow to take care of Let me give you aU illustration of what I It fortunately so happened while I bad uot the education of a I bad upon this point an education In The at People tor the reason that 1 had to try a case for three weeks once against Bufus where I sued a shipmaster tor allowing his men to have There Is uo tor Bo I set myself tp work among some Massachusetts and Maine soldiers to look after them very and I every from 0 o'clock iu the until daylight They thought that I was and couldn't understand what would make the general peer Into pots and and why he was looking at thp etc. one iaj when It was bitter 1 was inspecting Maine among other things looking hito tlie Now every knapsack should had a flannel n pair of drawers and a I found one that did not have parade ground double-quick until he gets This was I did not see the man lu I went up Into the upper part of Maine aua on a With the the driver asked mo If I didn't know I did He was a soldier under Said was one time In my when it I could have d Vou and 11 would never have been I would have done it with a great deal of but you saved my life by the very thing which made ino halo Then ne went on to say that was tho man who had worn the two and he asked mo to get off and see his old lather and which X was very glad to I give Vou this to show you what keeping And I trust of will see to it that the Agricultural College has Its full share of Tho State is taking care of it. The will take care of It to any extent just as long as it is seen that it is It has met within the year with a terrible tho of its Paul A. I should be to think his loss was did I not know that this world goes on just about as well after any one of us has We differed m one thing but It was a very Immaterial We had good sense enough to befriends for all And X am glad that I have had this to pay a tribute to tho memory of one of the best teachers and one of tho best men that this proline as she has been hi great ever AT If Is the and Decuy oC ACou and to Tho Boston October 2.-Governor Lutler arrived hero at 8 and went to the Town where the Association lair was to the circulation of tho report the rain lad prevented his excellency from only a moderate crowd awaited The seats wore more than before he had spoken very long. General was introduced by Christian B. the and spoke as of for your kind I am only puzzled what X may say to you which may either Interest or Instruction in the matter of the display which I have had the great pleasure to examine Is 1 interest you lu the tew words which lean say Is my I will assume from the display that you are a horticultural rather The earliest of that sort ever made together was a great many years tho date not precisely where wore and one who was not a thrust himself in where ho was not That was that very remarkable association the curiosity of a woman about an apple worked a great deal of evil to if you will allow me in 1 never thought In to tlie blame olt on to tho I think some of the men of the present day would have stood up to It. The apple has had a place In history from that It is the fruit which far north and very far soulli on a higher but it follows the rule which is universal to all to all to all to all The further north it can be grown tlie hotter It is. That rule X said is Take tonato tor It was hut lately tor I can remember when it was cultivated as a liy the iu pots in the windows In every means of Lot us consider this for a What means of did they used as copper as means did thoy have of mining and of trans. Sometimes we sav they aro found in lie mounds on the prairies of but when you you littlo left In those go to Norih and tho or mica In tho world Is found but it was at some and from nil tho it had been to four times the teii tlic extent that It is worked and vet at the end of workings and in shafts wo nnd at the present time sheets of mica that would do for such glass as sensible people use and windows that are much too for the of What old they mine mica certainly had some use for it. It was mined for Who tlie people that mined What were they and where aro Wo Find Jio of Go to tho western coast you will find a body ol Indians tho and among them you will And specimens ol sliver filagree work In of II you come to my homo I will show you a cako basket of work made In away up at the head of the Kivor by somo negroes under a tho work 13 of tho same pattern as the work found among the aud you could not well distinguish which taught Did the negro tho or did the Indian teach tho So 1 have eomu to the conclusion that this Is the old and X liave told you in all these matters the reason I believe that to be the We get no no no form of no of record on continent there Is nothing that we there of which there IS not some Some somo form of something that we can depend We have gone back some 7500 only Into tho time ot the kings of but Is a people greater than leaving only those leaving ho no no Is the old It must hu that of which tho record is almost entirely blotted ont. seeds may ho found and ot years put In proper places and under proper will and reproduce their but whether they wnl bo the exact kinds sown depends upon whether that law ages ago was as universal as it is the seed sown does not in every respect reproduce its these of may bo ot somo use to Thoy in ly open up to you trains of thought to the intelligent They may us to that we aro relying loo much on the creature aud forgetting the of the In the concluding portion ot his remarks the Governor dwelt at upon the advantages of physical by those In tho practice of aud urged upon all of his auditors tho necessity of good healthy bodies In order to lit themselves for the duties ot At the his remarks he was liberally THE Their Arrival and Entertainment in New - Rain Interferes with at tlie Old The Welcome a Cordial Weather are I said the what aw Minir to dn next week be It called the When I was a small boy I was told that that little red fruit was poison and I must not bite it. ot Course I Did Bito and the strange taste really made me afraid for a considerable time that It was but I dare not ask my mother for any Tlie orange IS better the farther north It can be Tho most delicious figs I ever eaten were grown In the Fortress which Is the upper limit for their growth so far as I The strawberry is better the farther north you find It. I don't mean It is but strawberries of cultivation are like all not their The most delicious strawberries X ever ate were the Magdalen where never touched the The next best strawberry that I had many years In 1836 or In the woods of that In clearings three yoars the old primeval hard had been out down and Iho whole land burned over around tlie stumps sprang up tlie by the ashes and partially decaying and grew very large for wild But where did the seed come Nobody sowed The common theory at that time was that tho birds brought But the birds must havo been exceedingly busy If they and there must liave been a many of because these berries were growing every And that leads me further to ask where do seeds come You turn over the hardwood the and tho pine springs up the ground has been Durned for some Inches Where did the seed come How did it get Burn primeval trees again and various kinds ot hardwood spring Where did those seeds come How got they there? How do thoy resist the Are which had been made to burn deep Into the These are questions of great Interest and groat and so tar as I know they remala We used to think in the olden time that wheat was only lit for the horses other and we preferred yellow Northern and we used to replenish our corn from that the coming from a would grow more Id seeds again as a has it ever your mind that in tiie case of this cultivated the the pear and the you cannot by the be sure of getting the same kind That must be got by grafting from some of the kind which you Ail fruits that can Tie raised from the seed seem to go back to their original wild nature left to Tho potato which you have brought here In Essex county to the highest when Sir Walter Raleigh found It was but a mere little Insipid and and bore the same relation to the beautiful growth that I see here that that little louB apple ot a as big as of my did to the fruit which is tound now In every Cultivation will produco tho highest results in everything man to the lowest But the universal rule ot nature is that K the whether man or fruit or Is to bo kept you must turn back from tho higher to tho So men may be until they run diminish and run down hi the great race ot as we see in the Chinese mid Thousands upon thousands of years have brought these men Into a very but When our Came from into these they grew better more more energetic with better minds and bodies thau the people from whom the We are told in our story books of tho knights of their their and we look upon them as men of great vigor and The the coals nt the the ot those old knights have and have come down tii and there Is not an young man of 21 years In this audience who can wear a suit ot that He cannot got into It. A son ot Essex county told me that the only suit of armor In the tower of London that he could put on was that of Henry and the trouble with that was It was oy far too Henry being about 6 feet 5 inches aud he a honest 6-foot Essex There seems also to have been another law from what we know of the traditional history ot the and that is that races run out and We see them run down within our own but that is only during a period ot a few thousands of But wo know strong men and enterprising men have entirely disappeared from the face of tha and we must that those races went out from some Inevitable law that there should be a reproduction ot a better That is most strikingly Illustrated in this I believe that this Is the old world and the the The evidence 1 find In a number ot Go with me to Lake on the shores of which we are working copper almost to supply tho There aro evidences that at some remote ot Which we have neither tradition nor an unknown people worked these mines to fully as an as we work them And they had some better means of working them than we we And large bowlders of copper so that we have Xo of Tour oan bo melted in large masses by no other process yet If one should give you a round ball of copper as large as would go In this he would simply give you an elephant which would be of no Jt would be too big to impossible to Impossible t-o blast pr to and you could not gn iw oil with a chisel enough of it to pay a day's And we Qud pieces of not as large as the I bave but so very large as charcoal lying under I somebody mined mn. do npt fun I beard NEW YORK Seventieth of the Grand Despatch to N. October 2,-Tho seventieth annual conclave of tho of tho State ot New lu this city Notwithstanding a violent the city was densely packed with Between 3 and 4 o'clock the column formed and consisted of grand There v ere fourteen in each by a band of Nearly as many were as there were In owing to tho of tho It was a brilliant Tho conclave continues throe Bismarck by the IBy CaWo to Boston October 2.-."rlnce Is very much annoyed at the the Socialist which has spread broadcast great quantities of An extensive seizure of socialistic books and pamphlets has been made In the Swiss and a lu has been sentenced to three Imprisonment for in bringing tho across tho In a small in several houses suspected of socialistic writings were the result of large of seditious hooks and Ten who known to havo in disseminating matter of this were Alfonso's by His Loyal October 2.-King Alfonso In this city this and was welcomed at the railroad Crowds of people lined the streets along the route from the station to the expressions of Joy at tile sale return of tho king were heard on all Houses wore generally Illuminated aud decorated with Hags and As the cortege neared the ilie crowd became so dense as to Impede tho progress ot the royal and the police good naturedly pressed To such an extent were the of delight carried after the King reached tho large of of all classes invaded the royal chamber and kissed his The Insult for October 2.-The odium of tho Insulting reception ot King Alfonso last Saturday now rests upon President Not only are the populace denunciations ot his to the King of but the German embassy at Paris charges aid has reported to the German government the belief that tho outrage was Germany and not King Marquis the Spanish has loft Paris for Berlin to consult with the Desirous of October 2.-The Catholics of a province ot Incensed by their treatment at tho hands ot the church whoso abuses have become have declared their Intention to their allegiance to tho Greek of which the Is the visible aud have signified their wish to become They liave petitioned Prince Bismarck to protect them against the tyranny aud oppression whiph alliance with the Protestant church will bring upon The New Cable October 2.-The bulk of the capital stock of the proposed Atlantic which Is designed to connect with the Postal and Baltimore Ohio telegraph In already and the remaining necessary amount is Alderman Hadley ot the Is composed of Robert of tho & Ohio Telegraph and John of the Posta will this week register the company in the Stock ' Into Parliament He Must Co. October 2.-Alderman who was last week elected Lord of but whoso was not by his colleagues because of his to sustain the dignity and dispense the hospitality of the will be a candidate for a seat In the next In opposition to Mr. who wis selected in his stead to HU tho of Lord A French Ambassador with October 2.-It is now claimed against M. late French minister to that in August last he demanded 200,000 as the price of his good In a treaty in which that country should secure exceptional Rumored in the October 2.-It is stated tonight that M. minister ot foreign and General minister ot will and that French minister to Great will succeed to the of Arrest of Deputy October 2-Deputy the Alsatian member of tlie German whose papers were recently seized and published in the North German and who threatened suit the Gazette on account ot the publication has been Cable Colonel Thomas will sail from Liverpool for New York on The Pope insists that Cardinal shall remain in be being to the Michael and Getty were ar rested In Glasgow with connected witn the conspiracy to blow up last minister of tbe 1 hot Despatch to The Boston i New 2.-The Ancient and Honorable which left Boston last evening at 6 arrived at Fall RiVer on and embarked at once on tho Upon this morning the rain was pouring In with prospect of a stormy The company breakfasted on tho about 9 o'clock a committee ot the Old Guard ot New York waited upon Major commander of tho and tendered him an hut tho streets were In such a bad and the rain still tell so that the street parade was The Ancients remained at the St. Nicholas Hotel during the receiving the individual tho Old Guard and ot other military organizations that At 11 o'clock the Old Guard band arrived at tho and In the spacious gave a concert that was applauded by the visiting company ana Its American band and Clark's drum corps also played selections that were received with At 2 o'clock tho weather began to show signs of as the storm had the Old Guard delegation upon Merrill to try a march of a barge rido to their At 8.30 p. m. tho preceded by band and the drum and In company with tne Old marched to tho armory ot the Upon arriving there they wire welcomed by Its In response Major Merrill after tho Old Guard for their that place a warmer spot In the hearts ot the thau the homo of the Old Guard of Now A collation was and early In the evening the company repaired to tho St. Tho lu the evening was a brilliant At 8 o'clock Invited began to arrive at the and as fast as they laid aside their outer garments they wore presented to Commander The gathering was purely a military affair and but few black coats were to bu seen among the Tho uniforms represented nearly all tho New York and Brooklyn regiments ot the Now York National the Loyal Legion and Army of tho Tho badges worn by those present Indicated honorable service In the late as well .as tho National also denoted that in practice for which the Now York aro At 0.30 Colonel Ezra J. Trull gave tho command 1.0 march to tho spacious dining aud Major on his led the followed by arm in the hour followed the of the hour ripened Into many warm and It was the last ot the guests Among the gentlemen present were Colonel Major Captains Tiffany and Ray and Lieutenants Woohouse and Moores of the Seventh and Captain ot the active General Colonel Surgeon Captain Quartermaster Colonel Dustan and Surgeon Albas ot the Seventh F. S. the of the board of charities of New York of the paymaster IT. 8. General H. A. Judge Daly of the Supreme General Gus P. Yatto of ex-Governor Rice of General H. 0. Goveinor General Captain Charles Chaplain Colonel Laird and many Tomorrow If tho weather Is the company will make a street bo reviewed by the and tho work of the day will conclude with an lu tendered the Ancients by tho members of tlie Old Dinner will bo served at 1.30, and at B o'clock the company will march to the wharf and take i he steamer for arriving there Thursday The reception of oldest corps lias been cordial and genuine no adverse Those of the Infantry wing provoked some but the fact that must of tne meu had been members of tho loyal regiments ot the Union known and that And they have that Shoos from the CELEBRATED FACTORY OF WASTE AND DO KOX EXTRAVAGANT were entitled to wear the rank of past the origin of their name began to bo and they at once stepped Into popular Both on the street and at tho forty the command received a warm Four of the party strayed away from headquarters and visited the and they received from the members a warm aud were gn by cheers upon their Tho weather Is beautiful and promises to give a fair day and evening for tho completion of tho and give tlie company a splendid for their THE of the Property Hani Despatch to The Boston October 2.-Following Is the list ot property taken from the post safe last night by About In money and 7C In postage No. 3560, dated February 31,1878, for ten shares Boston Gas Light Company's unregistered No. 1027, of the New Mexico & Railroad for note ot 0. W. dated September 24,1883, for on three payable to tho Gloucester Gas Light two unregistered bonds of the Now York & New Railroad Car series due 1889, numbered 084 and 685, coupons No. 403, for shares Gas Light Com- In tho name ot the Gas light No. 880, Why firs the calling for JAMKS It because his factory is ruu In the interest of His goods lire to give satisfaction to tlie His goods aro not to induce purchase by deceiving the 35conoiiictil people havo that it is not Avell to wasio money on worthless and they have also found that it is not necessary to pay prices in order to secure the Kvery lias worn a pair of JAMES SHOES that all goods hearing Ills slump can be DEPENDED UPON The James Means aro the MOST DURABLE FINEST ONCE ALWAYS Tho Kew aud itt to The Doston New October 2.-Tho newsdealers of this city and who have for the past week been protesting against tho reduction In the price of tho New York Herald and other morning had a monster parade aud mass It Is that fully 2000 men nnd boys were In the Stephen president of No. 1, after stating the of tlie meeting Introduced Who In the course of his remarks said that nithin the last few days tho ot this had been trembling under tho thunder of tho Speeches were also made by Bosomer of New and After a greeting had been read the New News Association were thu of allowed on certain morning and agreeing not to soli tho Herald for less than three cents or it for less than twenty cents a Tho meeting is one of the most important of its kind over In this WILLIAM O'DALE Tho of the ot the Despatch to Tho New October 2.-In the back ot a plain frame 841 West Newark In Jersey a party ot mourners gathered last night around the of O'Dale He had expired unexpectedly on Sunday heart lu his 2Bth His was tho original owner of tho who was born hi In began when 4 years old to take part In the In 1861 tho Australian a tour ot tho Thu company sailed to tho Cape of Good and thence to where they gave with great success In Bengal and They went to tho New and In Madagascar tho cider Stevens died In 1872, and William then obtained a position with Great Italian With tills he returned to India aud In the spring of 1873 he sailed for Saii Francisco his brother and sistor known as Petite is DOW In In this ho placed with the and He then married Miss Linda and In laSu with her and her sister to whero ho remained six months and then During the next he played with Ryan & Alter leaving them ho ashow of his own under tho old ot tho Great Australian and introduced the novelty of giving circus performances Most Durable Finest Perfect Once EVERY you have boon been to are not to thoy am to hold tho tho factory of havo boon many yoara by of ot until tho of JAMKS Shorn bavo booo able to for a This is now oviin If vou Uvo in tho most corner of tho for if bo cannot supply your by card to AX the manufacturer of tab SHOE liOW of Gloucester thu Gas National Hank to Light Company of two note of Fred L. Stacy to Mary Low for also book ol postal notes from No. 105 to Mo. 6(30 WAS IT Old from the oS Despatch to The Boston October 2.-A special despatch from 0., Inmates of tho Dayton named Ernest and died last night from tho ot Both wore old men over GO years of About noon Scheror was found lying on Iho near his suffering great pain and He died lu a very low At ilie time death the other was severely and only conscious at He rallied somewhat and said that had been oht liquor In a saloon on No further information could bo obtained from and In Imn an hour ho was a Thu homo physicians say that men died from tho effects of has a family In this and Is well been employed as turnkey In the Jail here for a of It Is the was poisoned In the dive It was The coroner this afternoon began an but tho taken so far Is very only establishing thx theory that the two men foU victims to a Local Boss Lump 50, 75 and 81. Dooley's J. D. ot New Vork Is visiting in funeral of the late Dr. J. A. Fleming will take place from the Church ot the Immaculate Conception today at 0 a. m. School Union Bible Glass Rev. K. R. will recommence next Saturday at 8 lu Temple Alice May daughter of J. Henry was married to William D. sop of Lawrence of by Rev. James De Lyons arrived lu this from and after wandering tho North End fell asleep lu a aud when he awoke bis watch and valued at 960, wore North of the Land a meeting last voted to apply for a charter to the president ot the National the branch numbering lUO ladles antl It was also voted to give a ball at au early 33 years ot living at m Oxford and In the employ ot the stained burned hands so as to 1(4- yesterday as ito He appeared with his company this last season under his own canvas lu the Park square grounds In and met with Ho until August 4, when ho moved to and a month later wont Into winter specialties ns a performer consisted In dancing on three balls and balancing a cross and an electric He an and a good general In appearance ho was of of robust Ho hail a cleanly shaved lacu and au aud good-humored to Tho Boston October went before Alderman Williams at and gave for rioting against a number of his and warrants were at once Issued for their The arises from a sermon by reverend fallier somo mouths iu which no took grounds in favor of Unit It was an InsuU to God for to spend ihp in This aroused tho Catholic Polish and a war tho Through their several charges were laid against the signed by persons was to ' Bishop asking for his a careful Inquiry Into the facts the him This so outraged the feelings of that barred the doors of h against The woro released on ball The priest will preach in a Noted to Tho Boaton October 3.-Hon. S. u. Humphreys and John B. tho auditors In tho case of the Dexter Rank vs. the estate of tho lato J W. Barton of today filed their report In the of thu clerk of conns In tlits The report was opened at noon hy order ot the court This case was begun In and from to time were held before tho last session having been held last Tho bunk claimed that tho estate owed a balance of 75. The report shows that the estate owes the bank This report will probably not end the litigation in this celebrated The estate still has the right of trying thu case before a A Boaton Yacht to Tao October 2__Tho yacht belonging to Dr. Whitney of Into today at and a quantity ot oil This evening the police Hogan In and the also a trum It. 0. Manning of hml Pound Her Diamonds -n the October Talcott had a pair ol solitaire diamond earrings swept into a waste basket the other day And into the She - tonna them today in the the THE nnU a lu At 8 o'clock morning tho In this city Indicated 01^. At 10 o'clock It dropped ono and at noon it stood nt 48Va" was degrees lower than tor the time last Tho winds which during the together with almost and tho chilly atmosphere Induced to In their The and cars wore crowded during the day and evening hy crowds of Willi damp clothes nnd wet white on tho street pedestrians tho drippings of their had the mud into their faces by passing Nearly every ono with some remark referring to tlie A conductor on strent car kept a record of of people who some to him the and following Twenty ns aboard fifteen merely that they It ten were nt tho opinion that It was and sixteen were sure It would betoro Four Inches at St. i Special to The Boaton St. October 2.-Snow has falion here tho and tho hills In this arc The total fail hero i3 estimated at nearly four although most ot It melted as It The Whitn Mountains to Tim Boston N. October 2__The snow storm of the season this leaving tho hills The storm was heaviest north and south of Indications for D. 0.. October 3-1 a. Now Clearing north to west rising stationary or slight rise lu Cool Barsea in New 2.-The severe storm ot sunk eleven coal to tho New Company off Should the break It will entail a loss of It is believed tho will hold lu which event tho coal call nearly all bo A Missina Wit loos Turns New 2__Chester tho boy who Iroin the Remson House and who Is ono of most important wit in the of has returned again of his own It was 111,It liio boy had been He refuses to tell whero ho has RECOMMENDS YOU TO READ THIS AS IT IS IMPORTANT TO * My Is and above in Interest of By their my first I host further the Interests of the hy so best Tho SHOE Is tho first nnd only shoo over on the market nith the retail and by tho for tho of retailor anil Thla Is tho ORIGINAL OF ANTt TIONS WHICH ACKNOWLEDGE THEIR OWN IN. BT TO BUILD THE OF THE Dly system of may bo ny may bo and mjr labels maybe BUT 911 GOODS ARE None unless my fall name and tbs price aro stamped plainly on tho should always look tho Inferior goods may bo packed old boxes bearing my ' HOW TO GET THE BUI OF THE FOLLOWING IK corner ot Washington and Hanorer 1 Jt 12a Court O 2S Eliot Bd EUnt Bno CONTINENTAL 130T Tromont 60 IN IN Found in Altor Twenty-Two October 2__A resident of this place has lust SBO In gold he had lose in tils well years 15c. musty in IKE which follows and the persistency with which It to tho aro well known to all who have hud any with this terrible Tho following letter shows how tho and Invigorating properties U overcome and S bow by lug and u neutralizes and eradicates tho poisoned matter from bringing to the convalescent tho lUa and vigor of robust Messrs. I. Hood & Bly little girl had tho diphtheria last The loft her wery blood with no aud could uot seem to rally from its was recommended by a After she had been taking It a few days wo noticed a change for tho began to eat with a It seemed to take ont the poison tho disease had left In her tha change being very noticeable In her Bhe took It two months and fully regained her much to our now recommend Hood's with a great deal ol Very truly n. ' 10 Streets Extreme Tired first bottle has done my Kreat deal of hor food uot distress her nor does she suffer from that Ural which she did taking Sold by all Price a bottle or six bottles for Prepared by C. I. ft Mass. flood's Only EVENING STUDIES And Good That Meaus an Early DO YOU WANT AN St. Heavy If look our stock If yon bay yon will learn what is Stylish and be able to judge better what yon should pay The WASHINGTON ST. Opp. Globe Now Ready AT 48 Canal stuttering and all In cured for the S Ko uu le aW BILLIARD AHO POOL TABUa and  

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