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Penn Yan Express

   Penn Yan Express, The (Newspaper) - January 2, 1884, Penn Yan, New York                               Cegal i Surrogate of H against tho estate nf 1 late Kim vi to present tho to Charles one of the Ac n or December i r. 1U to an m 1km. U to nf tuning claims against the i of the town of K are repaired to pre- ss i to Willis 11 i said p tee tf resilience in the town of i ml our n. on or before the day of In pursuance of an r in bv the William S. Briggs of Yates on the 23d day of notice Is hereby given to all the naming against Homer aati ilHam W lately doing n the Milage of Penn In the county of u tlie Urn name of H. M. Raymond A i aru to present their claims L duly to the sub- 11 i i assignee of the saidH ui d I for the benefit of their t aic in on or before the JOHN P. to ANT an order of William S. j 01 all persons i of late of d are requested to t i to the I of tin i s place of on u- day of May 1-AU, lizard of of the ini bdd their office in n in the following land by ts no or persons shall a tho carport limits of the or are for shall for- I i r liri that no or persons i- 0- tor or Cause to bo a or for within OIL of any meal o- i t p nur ii ihc or offal of mat or sheep be u bom taid or be fed in. Uic bounds of said tMi ordinance shall forfeit ve for each and etery i it no or shall kindle kindled or a ur the M i of nor shall any place for any or shall be Sight or k or any said this ordinance jud tLc aura of teL i i i 1 it nil be and for- n or upon and i A-S upon auj ot the this v or ll or greasy u or con- i u. of M and will the to the 1'Uit LI live I 11. tf keep a billiard 1 l icw lui or com- 1 t u other lor or thereon or 11. n jut or other articles shall r for in this or if i 1 k i p t or gaming house o- -in 1 or HIM tr or by offering tur llit of the by way of thu number or li to draw any article r u ot for such for articles at U or any t for i i; a of n' tu Baine after the i i of thw J L inii shall for- i MI l i 11 meats or nsh the or i and all or in any or at ic or tbe bo i and shall lu -o to Jo within twenty rods from 111 i Irom tonla ind tij Ji forfeit and pay a i violation d. 1't it L uror IIH ir for sale o- miy Ir i nu ot or u nt or from in 11'. 11 iiim or peanuts from in u a i la public i jh as hereinafter I1 it- t v (i j 1 'n his agent or iv or fresh k i ir at i in any i l i i ur c upon any of u of Una i i i i f from 11 ut and a fee therefor i ID or more in of No i a longer thin tui in at any time for M i. ui i or contained i or hinder farmer ui h i product of i but Hint ended to i r pi from making the ii i Kt mid of barter and 1 t il and district of i in HI r embraced -i n pre- i limits of said h ill not be lawful for or or the any without and of tho Ut 'n the manner pre- I Of 1 paj a of li i nl offense or twenty-five k II cui tinned In JOHN T THE HEALTH i H LUNG idu and u 1 no t ot 1'noomoDld or are i MUl Ikart i Throat t ir lurs Are worn U 1 the HI I I'm nations u unl of only too i 't t ui i i i V i j. t mid t M c t which contains i tnd with M i rim uh through the M to n ii r Lt Appliance at ii 11 the price by others L i 11 ui ihu i of the many iii their stomachs Goto UO I and ask ti ii write to the i i pr in letter al our v i In ti tit to juu at once by f ID Medical thousands of il ru 10 postage stamps or ir it our with ot shoe ml tn i pair ot ohr d of the power in our t uo cold where mj 91-lyI TO How en of Dr. l cm radical core ul and i ul by Ac. 1 t B of v t i out a t r tin ami by i M v T LO matter what his nj t. ri tt U 11' K m i i i i or two postage MEDICAL 1'ott L AND WOOD PARLOR R. H. Long i Varieties In V U 1'iMii.iid, Cadet -o Hit M NEW II 1 H. IB l with YATtS H. REUBEN A. AM. TOES T. M Main 31. Y. ASD AT attention to Also and hfe in N T. 0ESTISTS, Will practice In branches of the C. E. Formerly ot Painted hM settled In in Dr. Wilson's and be pleased to at- tend promptly to all R. Sew dental over Wheeler corner Main and Elm All work done in tne beat possible PI- absolutely without in Main St. Ho Is competent to put in gold to build ont broken In a to build ont roen Mr Sable and Will try to advise i his patients with to their and not to OTT W. corner Elm and liberty A of use prepared as and sent by mail or to any part ot the Orders ad- to Dr. W. Penn N. will receive prompt 502ti CENTRAL T and he Comforts of a Qcdd Sample NO. 1 JACOB PENN N. Y. Photographs COAL The undersigned Is prepared to flit all orders for lie also keeps constantly on hand MORRIS RUff SOFT COAL Tor generating steam and smithing JOHN September 5, 1S93, HOPKINS BROTHERS Opposite the Penn N. T. Penn Yan VOLUME PENN N. WHOLE NUMBER 926. fid 7.25 p. p. 1.48 p. 1 SOLE AGENTS POR Magee Standard Wrought Iron Warranted In every to to the beat nace in They have a list of namee as Also offer the EUREKA JE which are approved when The undersigned ia prepared to do anything In tbe line of at iila stand on Kim nearly opposite tbe Shearman B He la also prepared to do anything In tbe line of wagon and carriage All promptly In workmanlike the public for its liberal patronage the he hopes to merit its con tin nance In tbe CHARLES Ranges Cooking Stoves I. R. I H. Open the season and offer for Bale the best lino of STOVES AND ID any Among the Ranges are the SEW GOAL ST. ST. ST. DELE MAPLE CORPORAL NEW SUNNY HEW THE OLD AHD B. LEARY'S 81 K AM and Cleansing Two hundred Korth tho New York central Railroad on MILL CORNER OF PLATT EK N. Y. The of since 1S2S has others our checks ban and the cat ol our to and the fir So Connection any Similar 1 have tw in the You can do your business with at the same as so and and all bright colored silks and cleansed without to AU aad Woolen M and pressed All and etna cleansed or dyed S and on Curtains GoSta In one N. T. NORTHERN CENTRAL ble May Trains pass Fenn Tan as Niagara Elmira Southern Freight for the South must 'tis at the Freight Eoo by 9 a. for the North by 12 m. Corning Railroad July 16th, 1883. GOING P. M. P. M. A. A. M. P. P. i 12 00 3 16 10 55 6 dO 6 63 11 85 11 10 2 30 9 45 7 42 6 SO 1 05 10 47 2 OS 9 H 8 03 T 18 1 ST 10 35 1 55 3 M S 14 T 1 K 10 15 1 32 8 SO S 33 S 05 2 22 10 02 1 15 S 03 8 44 B IT 2 40 9 1 00 7 50 Rock 8 55 8 23 B 5" 142 12 60 7 37 Head Ing 02 B 35 B JO 9 SO 12 42 7 25 9 10 B 42 S 22 9 04 12 19 C 60 Beaver 9 30 9 01 3 65 8311203 C 34 Post 9 40 9 18 411 8 30 11 45 6 00 Corning 10 00 9 40 4 45 Another train Is now running each as Going Corning at 4.00 p. 6.SO, Dresden 7.00, Geneva 7.60, arrive at Lyons at 8.40. Going Lyons at 9.00 a. Geneva 10.16, Dresden 11.09, Himrode 11.40. arrive at inc at 2.15 D. m. The only line running Pullman Sleeping and Buffet Smoking in Solid Trains in both directions between New York and Double Steel house Air cars lighted by Miller Safety Platform and and modern Three New York and Chicago Pullman Salamanca and tbe N. P. A O. R. and the Chicago ami Atlantic the Ere A. ChicaRO Line via the N. P. and the Fort Wayne Jt Chicago tho Falls via Buffalo and the Grand Trunk Railway Limited Express between New York and Cincinnati and St. with NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR FAST The only lino running Pullman Coaches between New York and Niagara Best equipment and train Finest Rates as as tho Take the ABSTRACT OP TIME ADOPTED Westward from No. 1. No. 5 No. 3. T. Elmira 6'40 I'll 2 41 5 48 A Ml Corning i 212 J Niagara Falle 850 11-55 1253 103 300 4-25 1-30 8-10 12M3 12-55 ADDITIONAL a. except arriving at a. m at at p. at at 1.10 p. except from arriving at Painted Post at p. m. 4.43 p. arriving at at p. m. Eastward from 8. No. J. r 31 Elmira Port 7 A H 0'31 4g Jersey 10 New York 111 10 25 LOCAL 0.30a.m., Elmira 11 arriving at at C 00 p m. On Sundays stops at ail stations west of Elmira on a. except arriving at hanna a. except at Owego at p. m. 10.18 a. except Big Flats 10.32, at Elmira a.m. 3.3O p. except arriving at hanna at S 5S p. m. N. Y. J. B. PENN N. Y. to L. 0. continue the business at the old VV having refitted and furnished the store with an entirely new and well selected removing all the old stock to another Special tion .is colled to new stock of consisting of Gold and Silver and All of the latest and from tbe beat SOLID SILVER AND PLATED WARE Of the best Meridan Tea Butter lea Of all styles and the best All enods ranted to be as Please call and look before No trouble to shon Mr. Capron Is s practical and Jeweler of largo and will pay especial attention to this part of the Hoping to merit a share oE tbe of the people ot Tates 1 am J. B. Having returned from the New York and Beaton where I bought a large and well selected Block of Slippers and At the lowest Cash I shall be pleased to show them to my friends in Tates Co. Feeling as I that they are well I can sell them as And you know that J. Henry sells the best goods Boots from to Shoes from 25 to I have got them at all call and see J. 41 Main ALWAYS AT THE We are the only dealers in Tales County who offer yon SHOP-MADE KIP We make them ourselves and know how and what they are made of. We uae nothing but the Best Oak and Best Non- Acid Sole You can not to buy Boots and when for a trifle more you oan buy the PEII YAI KIP When in ivant of Boots and come to our factory and see what we All our Boots are Boots and Shoes Made to From the heaviest Kip to the finest Patent We guarantee a fit or no Repairing done neatly and Rubber Boots and 37 PENN NEW HOLIDAY HOLIDAY OPENED THIS WEEK AT THE BOSTON 101 We will not try to lut are to tne Thirst BOSTON MAIN CORNER MAIDEN We are offering a gland line in materials for clothing we ourselves on our recent visit to the Old Among them a line of English we will make a full suit to order for and Wo are showing made a i Over- Can be worn for a Fall Our stock of materials for suits is a mammoth our workmen our ters the and our prices right G. Main and Front N. Y. THE HAVEra OPENED THE GROCERY STORE occupied by on HEAD to inform tho public in that he has a and complete GROCERIES and invites both old and new customers to give R and examine his and prices for The HIGHEST MARKET PRICE paid for ALL of COMTET B. Jenn 1853. f A Something U Mailed on receipt of 6 cenu In tl t P. Box N. T. CARPETS AM IMMENSE STOCK WHOLESALE and I am receiving the looms of the oldest and best all the latest styles and and retail at a small advance on the AlBO Etc. An experience of twenty-five years In enables mo to select the moat And tho most durable and reliable All eco- buyers who desire the Choicest Goods at lowest Possible fail to examine my EVERY ARTICLE AS I. F. 73 State N. 7.. COAL AND WOOD W. H. Long offer the Stoves of thaie Varieties in a Splendid Crown Jewelt Sir Sally Williams Common Cadet Alao received the made hy the Mazes Furnace Co. NEW and The Is and with present style of Also a full assortment of COAL Coal FOR Our Coal is from I Sterling and Monitor Which will Compete with any p All Coal v inging I heard two beggars singing Two clutching from the Grudged No soul waa in their Boasts scourged by cruel Were like them as they shrunk Such choristers were I heard two They sang of love when day was sang to sleep their littlo Such sweetness through the vespers run As J Song s made to Where tho Muse Aa the staunch loaves upon some secular tree Confront keen green their weathering each season's varied Still to thoir branches cling right So this old house has ever manfully Withstood the winds and of Constant in in faith All through our country's turbulent Stern Winter All the wood Stands while the gleaners homo- ward bear From the gaunt fields the last of yellow ah Pause we and will the parable hold Is there no cause for as we hear The ominous rustle tho HER the lawyer come inquired a must be hours since I sent for is only just thirty minutes tho dear since John started to fetch The sick man and moved uneasily upon his onco reigned as the ormolu clock ticked away fifteen minutes more within that richly furnished apartment whero old Martin Dillon stricken down with his last The was of the the carpet a thick pile of velvet The windows were darkened by the crimson brocade drawn closely The old man's niece sat by one her white face bedded in the rich which she had pushed aside just enough to enable her to see her brain busy with the projected visit of her uncle's She dered if it portended evil to her uncle thought to revoke a former will was all in. her Had his heart softened toward her cousin who had married two years before and gone south with her heartlessly deserting him in his old us the old man peevishly And although Jessie Carleton had been brought up as his and with expectations of be- coming his the old man in his unjust made a will leaving all to her Lola who had only been with him a Lola felt slightly consoled for losing the man she who had preferred she learned that her uncle's vast wealth was to be What if this too weie going to be lost to her Her face grew dark at tho Her meditations were inter- by a tap at tho and rising she admitted a wizen-faced sharp and who had been her uncle's lawyer for Tho sick man's face brightened as Biggs came to the bedside with and bent over His eyes roved toward his you may and leave us I have important business with Hewill call you as he goes said the old Lola arose and left the She went down but immediately toed back and in a listening at the door of She could hear very little but that was enough to cause her to clench her hands in anger and and she crept fearing she should be and feeling that she had heard all she cared to when her uncle told the lawyer he wanted to change his Like a Lola swept up and down nor why were some to have and others Jessie had robbed her of her and now she would have her uncle's while she must go forth again to earn her own Bitterly at that moment she hated her absent she almost felt there was murder in her heart toward if she might but have that everything would yet be perhaps even the love of and then the girl grew and at her own dark she my brain that I can think of such terrible Then again grew strong upon her a desire to hear of what those two were and stealing back she listened at the v she heard the old man the will under my head between the mattress and It will be as safe there as Lola heard and knew that Biggs was about to so back A moment later she heard him Miss and hastened to her uncle's side has tired he said feel as if I could drop asleep very Sit and remain with me. Don't leave roe as she You have been a good girl to me the past two Ana he had rewarded her by turning her penniless upon the world thought as she glided to a chair by one of the windows and gazed out upon the chill March with gusts of wind and fitful dashes of rain against tho window How cold dreary and desolate thing thought quite in ing with her own sad Afire had been burning upon the broad and it was getting Lola arose to replenish when she saw that her uncle was the paper that robbed her of his wealth under his am I thinking she turning to the but she hesitated and turned back then stepped closing her lips together with a determined moved toward the thrust her hand beneath the ed tho paper and drew it She must not stop a not long to examine for fear she might lack courage or opportunity to carry out her Steadily she walked to the threw the paper on the coals and saw it shrivel into The deed was and she had only to await the she her conscience already at as she took her seat again by the She could only trust to the old man thinking the will safe his Two hours passed slowly to the tary watcher in the then the old man and feebly ed her to his Lola bent over is I feel such a strange I must be he in. a voice scarcely you have been kind to have stayed by and did not desert me as she it was only a little while might have stayed with me to the Bend while I tell Once my heart and I made my will in. her but it- is all right Ton have there is. was in It is all oi cold went over the young girl as she listened to his strange She thought of the will now ed to ashes that would given her an unquestionable right to uncle's own hadi blasted hec while -ing to With parched lips she asked did you make a will after- after the one you I it's I have made giving to became of the other uncle the one in Jessie's she asked in a strained trying not to show her trembling kept said I might want burn this one and change back but I I could not if I I am A shiver ran over the young girl as she saw that he was indeed and A groan escaped her pale A look came into the old man's and he began to jabber He talked of again she was a little and beside he would reproach her for leaving him in his old Lola had to think must summon somebody when a glaze came over his then slowly and with a slight der all was Like one in a Lola went to call the One thought was uppermost in her mind the destroyed if she had only looked at it before she committed it to tho But it was too late now for vain re- She had only one perhaps the old man was wandering in his mind from in what he When Biggs was Lola saw him search beneath tho bed for the but he said nothing when he found it Ho did not for one moment doubt but the old man had caused it to be as had posed he would when he had timo to think it The funeral of old Martin Dillon was and with terrible suspense Lola waited for the reading of tho Her worst were Jessie was mentioned as sole hearted Jessie offered to divide with but not naturally began to see that her punishment was only and refused even the offer of a which her cousin insisted she should accept from her Lola Desmond went out into the cold world and bravely fought the battle for Purified by her life grew full of noble works and a few years Jessie's two years a sought her and asked to come to him and comfort his lonely she thanked her Heavenly Father that he had forgiven her and at last granted her peace Some Wonderful A Western trotting horse with the curious name of lias ed the time for trotting a to There seems to be little doubt bo- fore many years arc a horse will be bred who will trot a mile in two a peculiar animal in his When fed he insists upon taking a draught of water between mouthful of He the water constantly with tho hay or gram fed to This horse has beaten St Julien and will have 'a brash in time with Maud W. H. Vanderbilt's famous trotting At the race course it is now the practise to give whisky to some It seems they can win races with that stimulus when without it they would An old horse named Baby beat several fine fields of animals after powerful tions of Although still very race courses are becoming de- Their first supporters in this country were people who called themselves but now the principal owners of horses run at the race meetings are professional and other low Even jockeys have their entries at every Tho long races in vogue in former which were a real test of bottom and speed of have been replaced by numerous short for the benefit of the pool but which seriously deteriorates the stamina of the horses which engage in The practise of giving whisky to which has been will in the end destroy the turf physically as well as s. The Increase of Although there is a great deal of poverty in the civilized and lions of human beings are constantly on the verge of yet the seems to bo well established that wealth in all civilized countries has increased faster than Mr. M. G. an English has lately showing that the English people as a whole are far better than they were in- the time of the In 1660, when England and Wales had the average wealth was about per In 1774 the average wag per In 1882 the population was while the total property En- gland and Wales amounted to or per The same writer points out that this increase of wealth has been and ly in excess of the rise in prices which accompanied it. Ho also claims that tho distribution of wealth is be- coming more general as it increases for by number of there are relatively times more wealthy people to-day than fifty years In 1840 only S per cent ol the population had deposits in tho savings 1882, 11 per cent were depositors in those Henry a well-known American has Been trying to prove tha poverty increases with the advance o due to the monopolizing and enhancement of the value of land but these and the condition of tho mass of our population as well as those of show that he must be Still the lem of problems how to increase the material prosperity of the grea mass of All who love their race look forward to the time when ex treme poverty will be ant every man and woman will be have comfortable of and also a to higher wants than which tain to our mortal Clumsily Our country swarms with a class o listless young the nets of organized the idols of and ignorant mothers and the beau ideals ol a as brainless as The young man did who does not know how to do and who has for a season been absent from the scenes o industry and the o commerce and the wil soon be at his post of duty E his mother's ball the sidewalk promenade and the gilded Every rich man's reared in though t- is a curse to the community he In standard books bought for two Here the New York publishers got idea of Belling for two cents a newspaper it has cost them to get A Description of the Lacquer by a The lacquer as it is in America or claims first place our art In Japan the finest pieces of lacquer ware are valued find admired more than any other works of art. The art is distinctly Japanese and is already more than years Tho pieces made in those olden times are still extant in the The raw chiefly the is used for with an addition of burnt clay or fine stone so as to produce a ing of the utmost The pre- pared after having been is in thin and possesses a color similar to that of this trans- is occasionally increased by a small addition of by mere produces a sufficient glossiness of the whereas the pure lacquer has to be For tho lacquer is mixed with cinnabar or rod oxide of iron or Prussian etc. The black lacquer is prepared in the following It is effected out any additions of solid such as lampblack or similar but merely by stirring the crude lacquer for a day or two in the open whereupon it assumes a very brown Towards the end of the operation a small quantity of which has been kept standing for a few mingled with iron fil- ings or a gall nut darkened by the addition of is and the whole stirred again until part of tho water has then the lacquer acquires proper consistence and Tho addition of this water is said to cause the highest brilliancy and ness of Sometimes the colored lacquer is used when the final coating is required to be of a transparent Either the strained or that peculiar kind of lacquer which has been thinned by an addition of is The mixing of lacquer with hardening or coloring powder is generally effected by the lacquerer himself on a wooden board with a wooden spatula just before using it tho thick mixture is forcibly strained through a piece of paper called Should tho lacquer become too stiff for some bits of camphor are crushed and thoroughly mixed with the lacquer by and then it becomes more Tho primary coatings are put on with a mixture of taw lacquer and burnt clay and afterwards stone when hardened they are rubbed with a grindstone to smooth and polish the The next two or three layers are done with inferior kinds of the black or colored according to the color to bo The lacquer is applied in the first place with a wooden spatula and afterwards with a very stiff fiat so as to smoothen and spread the lacquer The surface is then ground with water and of which latter two kinds are the one coarse and and the other light and As a it may bo stated that the freshly objects are placed in largo wooden the inside of which has been sprinkled or washed with so that the process of hardening takes place in a dark and dump Tho black when is repeatedly rubbed with a ball slightly dipped in the each time carefully polished with powder made of deer The called is produced by sifting a certain amount of gold leaf cut into small pieces on to a fresh coating of When the is smoothed and then coated with a choice quality of called the which is prepared by straining and mixing it with a small quantity of g mil The when applied in is and only rent in thin so the final coating Uiv L the gold sprinkles underneath rm be made more or less visible to tho will of the The relief paintings c done with a mixture of red of iion and upon which fine charcoal powder is brought to bear ilus lacquer has This again K coated with lacquer and the tion being repeated thu required relief works have been metallic applied to the final coating whilst the lacquer is still in a viscous so that tho powders so to soaked into the fresh a thick chiefly composed of is After tho lacquer has become haid tho painter removes the surplus of tho and either polishes tho ing or simply rubs it according to the result It is an which admits almost of aa many ferent methods of producing as that of oil By mixing a sort of paste made of bean powder or the white of eggs with the can thicken it to such an extent as to a kind of admitting tho possibility of making impressions which remain visible after This is for with the so-called which presents a marbled with brown and green The first coating is done in black which is mingled with tho and by tamping with a ball of or some similar surface is made to present a mass of irregular depressions and which remain after The latter are partially ground and a second coating of a different color is applied and similarly After having finished tne coating with colored the surface is ground until all the successive layers appear again in veins of different It take too and would even be to describe all the devices made use of by artists for their finest specimens of The finest lacquer is made in Tokio and the cheaper articles are mostly manufactured in tne as for instance in of etc. When ware is the surface is first prepared with a primary coating of glue alum so aa to fill up all the and is then polished and sometimes gamboge or together with the sap of unripe which gives it a brighter the coating of varnish is applied with a stift as a certain percentage of oil has been mixed with the it requires no acquires the brilliancy by mere r Mr. Villard has bought another tract of land on the This will bo added to his original and ing the coming winter and spring all will be laid out in an elaborate with akes and Thar total cost ot the estate and im- will Teach Mr. Tillard boasta that in spring he will construct the noblest castle yet graced the Filial Devotion of a We have a saying that charity be- gins at and it has been added that a great deal of the charity that begins at home stays Of this narrow sort of. we find examples among the the for It is a solitary and sits most of the time in morose silence on a ing for its food tho shape of an in- to fly Sometimes it is said to rouse itself and make a descent upon the nest of some smaller and eat all the little one would not look for any sort of benevolence from such a and yet it offers a very striking and beautiful example of the Tho celebrated who has told us so many interesting things about the birds of Africa ana South says ho discovered a nest in which there were five Four of them were young and but the fifth was so old and when it was put into a cage comrades it could not but lay dying in the corner where it When food was put into the the poor old bird could only look at it without having tho strength to drag itself within reach of it. Then it was that the younger birds manifested a singular spirit of and even with an air of as it they carried food to the de- crepit old and fed it as if it had been only a Struck by this the naturalist examined the nest from which the birds had been and found that it was full of husks and tho remains of ing plainly that the old bird must have been maintained a long time by its vigorous which probably were its own Further study of other birds of tho same species con- tho naturalist that it was the custom for the old and infirm birds to bo cared for by the and There are several different species of barbets found in Africa and South and though not graceful in many of them are exceedingly beautiful in They get their name of barbet from tho French word meaning because they havo tufts of stiff hair at the base of the Naturalists place them in a genus called and some persons call them because they havo an odd way of puffing put tho feathers all over the which then looks more like a bale of feathers than a Wouldn't Taken Old mnn Nelson stood on the walk when a whito man same along and the Uncle troubled in my Dat de has gone gone Dafe gone you lost what does wanter dc olc man Yer help me so wush me well i1 pass might be able to help yer but if yer know I'll tell been a for dis man libs in 1 for him all Dis when I come dar wuz ez nice a britches I eber wanter see a ou de bannisters ob de back Da hung dar at dinner time da hung dar till I went home ler git a snack tor eat dis but jist now when I cum buck I seed dat been tuk or Whut did da want tor a man dat way Ef da wanter gwinter let stay dar tell made put 'em dar hi de fust Spoke ter dat white mighty dis Called him Think o' will Call a man marster twenty years arter den bo treated dis had no idea of taking the did Uncle I 'bout It am de principum dc Showed dat he hab no in me. Showed dat ho m hcs mine while I was want de if dese what 1'se got on urn mighty nigh but I think dat it been as little as dat man coulder done ter let britches stay dar a while Arkansaw Wants Her There can be little doubt that the cry of Canadian independence is and that in a few years all political connection between this country and Great Britain will be at an It is well that is the As dians we have no quarrel with the mother we bear her no ill but we have our own well to consider no mere sentimental loyalty be allowed to stand in the way of our What we lack most in this country is a national a spirit that is Canadian and not a spirit that will be emphatically Canada and that will compel our men and politicians to look at all tions from a purely Canadian point of No one in Ins senses for a ment supposes tho dominion ia ing to remain a British The most among us know that a change will ultimately take and Canadian independence is no longer a question of principle but one of ex- Is it expedient to agitate present for our national for a purely Canadian That is the real not whether iL is right in principle to do so. There arc thousands in this country who believe that the time has come for us to put on long as a matter of the agitation for independence lias be- nor will it end until our first ident takes the oath of A nation we havo got to bo before we can expect any great and a nation we snail be before many more years are Winnipeg Articles tn Modern Clara Modjeska or tho supper in said the out of real viands and sparkling pagne must be provided that sometimes cost for a single performance as high as to Six persons sit at the table in that and when the star is a paying like any I havo we can afford to provide a costly Of course an ordinary actress won't get a table in About or is 11 lair for a single lay-out for this In Home's of a very ty supper is a feature in one of the The dishes come on steaming hot and tbe actors sit down to the tables and eat with appetites that suggest tbe of their having foregone tho regular meal at the hotel for the sake Of eating it on the This spread costs from to a In You Like tho chaps who banquet in the Forest of have a real meal set before and in dozens of other plays palatable ands are provided for tho A young preacher lately discoursed in the Salt Lake on the subject of It would have been more interesting had be taken for his topic Four Deadly Peru TOE Letter to At we were further ever from an agreement on the electoral sion which had long before taken shape and become the definite object of our Mr. Morton bad one of his un- irritating and all hope seemed Then Mr. Edmunds made tlie formal m behalf of the Senate that the latest proposition of the house doesn't matter what it not be Edmunds was the spokesman of the Senate and as he finished it there was ing for us to do but to go back to the report our and let events take their But as Edmunds finished ha believe Senator has thing to say to who was sitting a tle in the turned so as to face the threw one leg over the arm of his and in the most easy manner possible began to give bis He spoke for full twenty and I do not think I ever listened to an address more eloquent and It is impossible for ine to give you an idea of what he more than to say he pictured the critical nature of our the responsibility resting upon us the destiny that might fairly be said to rest in the hands of the little group gathered before Ue spoke as I never heard him speak before nor Thoush evidently without any preparation and without the co-operation of a large largo room or he sat there with one leg over his chair and made an address seemed almost Every man present listened to it almost without stirring u and when he had finished there silence for quite a imber of to worry you with the In- fluence of that address was such that in an hour's time tbc disputed point bad been and tbe report ing the electoral commission had been signed by every can imagine we oil breathed ad retired to our homes m spirits when we Of course cone of us had any more reasons than he to think our favorite candidate would be but we felt n crisis was and there would be no civil war over the possession of the have always believed lhat bad it not been for the fortunate incident that placed Mr. on our or he had not made that wonderful address the more stubborn faction of tlie Republican party would have gained and that meant The Senate have met on tho second Wednesday in cording to the general the House pro would not have been present in but with or without the presence of tbe House the president nf the Senate would liave opened and read tlie including the alleged returns from the ed States and declared and The House would have declared and and so re- corded upon its The result would becu two presidents and Lady the Seal Shin She sat in tbe crowded church lhat fully cold and kept her new sacque on all tbc morning She went with and the into tne chilly and caught an awful And they ed in vain to cure that cold until thought of Perry Pain and sent to the druggist's for a Then came Suddenly checked brings sudden con- Young James Elaine recently ex- from Georgetown D. C. The boy had been previously expelled from two He is n wild Their Namo iff Legions of people have hmP their lives made miserable by This painful Is often induced nnd always ted by is the creat remedy for all aft clions of this It acts as a gentle promotes a healthy action of tbe aud soothes and heals the inflamed surfaces It bus ed hundreds of cases where all other and applications have Sold by all The gory shirt still its lurid tre on the political It is destined to lead tbe grand old party on to Tbe secret of tbe universal success ot Brown's Iron Bitters ia owing to the fact that It is tbo very best iron preparation By a thorough anil rapid tion wild tbe blood it readies every part of giving and rance to every Thus at the foundation it builds up and restores lost Ii docs not contain whiskey or It will not blacken tlie It does not constipate or cause It will cure nervous debility etc. Imports at New York since ary of this year are reported at less than General Never was such n rush made for any drug store as now at Wheeler for a trial bottle new discovery for coughs All sons affected with severe coughs or any of tbc and can a trial bottle of this great remedy free by calling at drug The Unitarian Church of has voted unanimously to use water instead of wine at communion What Give Homeopath his Allopath his but for for for pains and Oil is ineffably superior to It hue ted as many people as it bos bad All druggists sell It. A brain that is wound up by keeping very unsatisfactory time will soon run Accidents and bow to deal with and able medical Information will be found In Dr. Kaufmann's great Medical gant colored Send two 3-cent plumps lo postage to A. P. Ordway and receive a copy Pauline Lucca is lo receive for three concerts Lucca 5ty mother began gaining from dose took Dr. Henri bad feelings about her heart the relief remedies only helped for few Miss Clara per bottle at The Russian and Princes Louise arc tbc favorite shape for fur lined have used Burdock Blood Bitters with great benefit for Indigestion and tion of the L. Ont. Rough surface cloth la becoming to slender ladies for either suits or How can you remain s sufferer from dyspepsia when worse cases than yours arc being cured by Hood's Try it. er Pere wife was a Miss of Scat akin are more expensive than ever the present W Silver and metalic lace adorns pretty for evening W Plain velvet Is much used Cor ming tailor made W Drew and hat must match In i r i- I  

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