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Waukesha Freeman

   Waukesha Freeman, The (Newspaper) - June 20, 1878, Waukesha, Wisconsin                                25 WAUKESHA WISCONSIN THURSDAY JUNE 20 1878 WHOLE NO 1013 Proprietor a Yoar In in Aetna Slock Kim Prairie 14 1 y no 14 I 18 i 12 V 12.22 du 3.16 7.10 10.29 0.28 10.45 LA BAST Arrive in 5 p.m do 0 p.m i 11.12 12 K l 1.55 11.11 10 DIRECTORY M- I I U.S Corner ijf l 1111 2.07 1.23 i RADICAL CURE For CATARRH A purely vegetable distillation entirely unlike all other remedies TIT tho preparation of this remarkable remedy herb plant and bark Is subjected to tna essential medical principle Is obtained In condensed and bottled remains In the still IB Inert valueless and totally unfit for In an organism BO delicate as the nasal passages Yet all aro compounds of woody fibre all tinctures saturated S RADICAL CURE Is a local and constitutional remedy and 13 applied to tbo nasal passages by Insufflation thus allaying Inflammation and nala and at onco correcting cleansing and accretions Internally Administered It acts upon tho organs of circulation Keeps tho skin moist and neutralizes the acia poison th at has found ita way Into the stomach and thence Into the blood Thus a euro progresses In both directions and It docs not seem possible for human Ingenuity to a more rational menu CUKE twelve years ago travelling with Father Kemp's Old Folks Concert Licked all points in the Union bo procured ut tho tickt-t in H S Troape as a tenor singer I took a severe cold and 23 1 40 i J n severe attack otf Catarrh I battled every known remedy for four weeks without avail and wao finally obliged to give up a most position and return homo to sing a note years I was unable to sing at all Th o first attack of Catarrh had left my and throat so sensitive that the slightest cold 2.00 2.13 HAY in r n k STATIONS l M KJ 1.35 12.12 i Time which in 2.1 I INN Kay witli I for I i Sun l which run ii a Mini use con- vrith to du in I via Wilh for ami points on line thai ol with Company for Detroit York Al wilh the hust liner in for Al witli Central M At Central for ami with lino for Al Galley At lino fur AI li with r Mailis tlh rii 11 Si imil St Wilh mil BO as to bo speak navo victim consumption and I firmly belle these continued without relief they thought I was Into consumption and I firmly believe time had In this I commenced the nso of CUBE FOB very confess as I had tried all tho without benefit The first dose of this medicine gavo nia tho greatest relief It IB for ono whoso head aches ache can scarcely distinctly on connt of tho choking accumulations Jn hie throne to realize relief I tbo of Under Internal and nnd by an of tbo remedy hare been entirely free Catarrh for tho first time la twelve years MABS Jan 8.1870 P the Cmin of OJLO H Kumford Building jnr beautiful Maggie watt married Beautiful with soft brown hair Whoso shadows fall o'er a fiico aa fair K Hie blooms of the early Slay kissed her Hpa and sent her away With many a blessing and many a prayer of our house who was married bR sunshine is gone from the old South room Where she sat through the long bright And the odor has gone from tho window flowers rid Is lost of their delicate bloom a shadow creeps over the house with ita gloom A shadow that over our paradise towers or wu sec her 110 more m the old South room thought that the song of the robin this eve As he sang to his mate on the sycamore tree Had minors of sadness to temper his glee s if he for the loss of our darling did grieve Is nnd Why did she who sweet duets with Bhe the song of the robin this eve dim where they ham on the wall Though they cost but a they looked fair Whether lamplight or sunlight Illumined them I think presence that brightens them all Haggle no longer can come to our call With her eyes full of laughter unshadowed by earn Ihc pictures seem dim where they hangou the wall I lounge through the garden I stand by tho She stoud thereto greet me last eve at Hits hour Every eve summer in sunshine or el lower by the postern my coming to wait Duar Maggie her Us welcome elate To give me a smile and and will she meet me by the gate She loved as and left loves nnd Is gono With as his beautiful bride How fondly he culled her his joy anti his pride Our joy and our pride whom he claims as his own Uut can ho like us prize the heart he has The heart that new trustingly throbs by his God we that eho loves and is gouts Each package contains Dr Improved Inhaling Tube with full directions for use la all cases Price 1.00 For sale by all Wholesale and Retail throughout United States and Canadas WEEKS POTTER General Agents nnd Wholesale Druggists Boston Mass I i Si Km V N St Char New c wilh S i I to lit HOOTS SHOES F iii and in the for all V S II K At n I wilh U CASK HIDES ICKE Shoo und leather Ami E siting Plastering Hair and Oils of every kind J F HIDES cast of t I Street J T E N T I S T- VOLTAIC An Battery combined with a highly Medicated Plaster con- tho choicest medicinal Gums and Balsams known to modern macy These Plasters havo now boon before the lor two years and notwithstanding the number of remedies In the form of tions and ordinary plasters they steadily Increased In salo and met with approval BS evidenced by over ono thousand un- solicited testimonials In our possession Many ro- cases been to by known citizens In all parts of tho United States which will bo of charge to any ono desiring them Improvements In many ways have Been made ns by experience nnd It is believed they aro now perfect In every respect and best plaster n the world medicine All wo ask from every sufferer In thu land la a single trial Tho price is cents tho cost Is that of uny other plaster But notwithstanding tho efforts of tho proprietors to best plaster In tho world for the least any similar remedy can be bought bers of unscrupulous dealers will be found ready to misrepresent them for motives nad endeavor to substitute others If you for VOLTAIC PLASTER Have it If you have to eend to us for It Sold by all Wholesale and Retail United Status and Canadas and by Good Croiss Plenty priced Jowa tit the Store af T Main Sts AN ASSORTMENT OF Family Groceries CROCKERY chanced to pierce one of her dainty his eyes from the flushed face that was I fingers with a cruel thorn Paul insisted upon staunching the tiny drop of blood i with his handkerchief and afterward playfully healed the wound with his lips you must exclaimed the rosy Clara for Aunt Alice will be angry She is quite in earnest about breaking up Our he questioned in the tones of a lover Flirtation she calls it says I am naughty and you are and all this sort must stop That is all she knows about it my dear littte girl Flirtation As if we were capable of such a he replied with the jolliest of laughter Then bending down lower screened by the roses holding both her hands clasped tightly within his own he com- a very earnest conversation and succeeded in not only convincing the APPLES or BY HELEN Tobacco smoke Clara My curtains arc completely and Aunt Alice Amesbury shook out her Immaculate window drapery with many expressions of disgust It is just imagination re- turned her pretty niece glancing up from her embroidery Mr Paul Seldon always smokes on the balcony Yes consequently the odious smoke is wafted by the window drafts directly into the parlor For my part I deeply ever having taken gentlemen boarders they arc such upsetting ures and make such a world of work It was your own proposition aunty If you will recollect I was in favor of taking only ladies But you said they were never satisfied were meddlesome ami did not pay as well as gentlemen All very answered Aunt Alice with a pink creeping into her faded cheeks but Clara I did not suspect you capable of getting up a with one of the gentlemen Having been beaten in the argument she womanlike shifted the subject in hand into an entirely different channel dropping the old grievance for a new as if the much abused curtains were after all only a secondary consideration Flirtation Aunt exclaimed Clara in wide eyed innocence though the very next moment they were veiled in modest confusion while the telltale color brightened the pretty face I do not know what else yon call it Clara Paul Seldon has become your almost shadow If you practice he is leaning over the you sit ing or he is certain to be at your girl of his sincere attachment but in believing that he completely filled up lier own little loving heart And then out came the secret of Aunt Alice and the determination that her niece should never one of the Seldon blood We about returned the joyous Paul as he kissed away the lathering drops from the eyes of Clara I have not another moment to whispered Clara aunty is calling me T shall speak to at once and then to Miss he still clinging to her hand But she is very firm Paul dear and will not relent I fear Then I shall run away with you de- pend upon that for you are my promised wife Paul that would be Clara it would be Upon second thought I fancy iB would bo the best thing we could do leaving the two old lovers to settle the matter while we are I will not listen to another laughed Clara and snatching away her hands ran into her aurit the happiest irl in the world The result of Paul's speaking to his uncle of his attachment for Clara was a most terrible scene and a notice from the elder Seldon that rooms would be vacated upon tha following day The note to his landlady also con- a very scathing allusion to the fact of both herself and niece being very designing women and expressed a determination to protect his nephew against their arts by all tho influence he possessed The second result was to send Aunt Alice to bed with a miserable headache while poor Clara nearly cried her eyes out in the seclusion of her own room though presently she received a long and comforting letter from her adoring The next morning Miss Amesbury went down stairs fully determined to end all intercourse with the Seldons and to send them forever adrift bag and baggage as far as her niece and self were concerned But when she rang the breakfast bell Paul and Clara lingered beyond reason and the maid she dispatched for them returned with the announcement that the young people were not in the house and that Mr Charles Seldon was hobbling up and clown his roam like a caged bear and raving over a letter just received from Mr Paul exclaimed Nora the it's the young masther that has run off the Miss Clara an it's will pitch the ould one out ov the house neck and crop if spake the jist Miss Amesbury be sobbed Aunt Alice pretty despite her five years When she had concluded and was about to leave the room he managed to ulate but in a voice so changed as scarcely to be recognized Alice Amesbury is it possible you lay the charge of treachery and sion at my You you Alice Amesbury who had won a love as true and strong as death and th en for a hasty word of reproof cast me off with bitter scorn It is she answered with ing eyes You left nie without even a word of farewell except the eloquent though mute one of the returned age of notes and letters withered ers and the glove you took from my Hand when you placed the engagement ring upon it The flashing eyes were dropping tears when while Mr Seldon drew from a pocket in his bosom a letter faded and worn and with trembling hand gave it to her asking Do you recognize He watched her with eager eyes as she read Her cheeks flushed and paled nnd when she had finished she raised her truthful face to his and answered with white nnd quivering lips I never saw this sent it to you It is the of my cousin Stella But so like your he answered Yes so like my own that it would be very difficult for any but myself to de- cide Nevertheless I am not to be blamed for thinking your own hand penned the cruel lines See it says peremptorily return all my keepsakes and consider that from this moment our engagement is broken I have found out before it is too late that I never truly loved you ind now after all these years you tell me that I have been note which parted us and sent me into exile a soured disappointed man robbed of my trust in woman until this hour was written bv another She lifted her face to him once again ana As God is my judge I speak only the truth But she who did us this wrong is in her grave Her motive was revenge for some fancied slight or love of you it matters not now Again she bowed her head upon her white hands and while he also shaded his face to hide the tears But at length he brokenly Alice after all these weary suffering years can you forgive me for being a being so blind and whispered she through her can you forgive me for cherishing or JS She best to bo in tlic County AU AT TMK VEKY KST from the best dealers Of III Surgery A XI mi: i of of tatly ami I OF anil I HAS REMOVED Patent Spring and Wheat U From lie Mills Corn and Meal ol tho Bost Quality To moms he wi ami Main in all lit work in Monda k r n cadi i inin re- IX i N Y ON K OK THE OV ITS its to Private Dwellings Only ill liy Iho THE FUH and Give me eall place to the i CORNER Blouk ml In Jhu in the above lines is at GROCERY Wis T RYALL CAPITAL A J I'll I will Ki-mlnck i- ii of week i 1 OF SEAL ESTATE WILLIAM S- A J M n 31 11 TO THE to the Hint ho Transact a Banking Business Coupons direct on all the ol Europe unb el nuf nlk TICKETS To and From Europe by the lines at lowest or very near You cannot even step into the to gather a few flowers but he is instantly there keeping you to waste time by the hour Now aunty you are not your dear old kind self but just a bit cross and exclaimed her niece with tears eyes and springing up she threw her arms about her aunt who was very energetically dusting and arranging tbe pretty little by considerably mussing the crispness of the morning wrapper which like herself was precise and immaculate upon most occasions Though an unmarried maiden of mid- dle age Miss Alice was not in the least the traditional spinster soured and On the con- she was gentle kind and always sweet ed and hud thus retained very much of her youthful bloom and She owned a lovely home m one of the suburban villages that surround New York and with orphaned niece as sole companion lived in calm independence until the hard times reduced the income from the Kail Koad bonds she depended upon for port Then as a last resort had her quiet house to a couple of rich bachelor old and gouty who always kept his own room arid a young nephew who was his devoted attendant and general business and the cause of much anxiety to tile watchful Miss Amesbury There there Clara you are ling my dress Sit down child and listen to what I have to say Paul Seldon is exactly his uncle was at his age vain selfish and exacting Oh Aunt Alice how can you know anything of what his uncle was at his The moment those Seldons set their feet in my house I recognized the elder as an old friend of my I now congratulate myself as having escaped linking my fate with you actually engaged to that old bear a fellow she sighed with misty eyes it was the one rose dream of my youth There was much of folly and sentiment upon my part jealousy and suspicion and upon his I cannot dwell that portion of my life But let me warn you I will j never countenance any engagement between yourself and one of family They arc selfish haughty and ing Have you any idea the uncle Charles Seldon recognized questioned Clara ignoring the last remark of her aunt I feared so at first Imt time has changed many years I wish I knew what to do Twat In troth an ye may that same But as be above takin the sass ov the ould one along wid the young one's im- pertinence Jest hear till him now Shure an it's brakin the bell cord he'll and the irate damsel hastened to answer the imperative summons But almost instantly she returned and It's Amesbury he would be wid Bad luck till him An ye look loike it's ye would be But don't be givin in till him Shure if he sinds mud jest give him Aunt Alice was in reality a plucky tle woman and even if she was as Nora said pale as death and looked like ing she walked very firmly np the stairs and into the presence of Mr Seldon he exclaimed read that Just read and he rudely thrust the letter of his nephew into her hands It contained the simple announcement that he Paul and Clara had been ried that morning at an early hour and had gone to New York and taken rooms at the Fifth Avenue where they would await the forgiveness of the uncle and aunt believing them both too generous to withhold that which would make them all perfectly happy What do yon think of snarled the incensed old man What do you think of that I am shocked and grieved more than I can returned the lady in a faltering voice and sinking into the nearest chair sneered he after ting the girl to dawdle away her whole time in the company of that young dog in door and out you arc surprised and grieved I looked upon your nephew as a Gentleman sir and though I had re- with Clara and even den further intimacy I thought him incapable of actually stealing the returned Miss Amesbury firmly his taunts having aroused all the dignity of her nature Humph All I have to say is that if you did not actually plan the match madam you must be a what blind guardian of a young girl But I have sent for you madam to give you distinctly to understand that I wash my hands entirely of the young couple As if I would give vour selfish nature such little of you these many sad sad The next moment they were standing face to face with clasped hands ing the chasm of time said Clara a week later as she was seated upon her knee to find our naughty selves forgiven and installed in best blue guest chamber as she calls it And all about little wife by those old lovers quarreling over us and thereby unearthing an ancient standing followed by reconciliation and a hasty marriage And such a happy returnee Clara and such a changed man as your is our uncle be me exclaimed Nora in tho servant's hall Ther be's no fools like ould fools Butther couldn't be in the ould mouth these days An he a me she a nie and she a ov him up and a laflin about the apples ov thin he kisses her jist changed the ov him bless the two pairs I say though Mr Paul and Miss Clara bo the most to my likin do ye THE QUAIL SAYS Whistles the quail from the coven witli all lite might High and duy after dar Children tell me what does he say little one bold and bright Sure that he understands Bob Bob Call quail from the Thick with its Misty floating by Hide the blue of August sky does he cull now loud mid Gold is a sign of ram He more Pipes the quail from the Perched there In full sight trim wtt quick eyes Almost too round and plump to lly calling piping clear What do I think he says My dear lie snys Do do How to Observe Sunday The question of the proper f Sunday has been a much disputed ne and is one of much interest A ain amount of religious services should if course form a part of each Sunday's ife should indeed be its central idea jut it should not infringe upon the de- mands of overworked nature for rest Jut what is Clearly what would rest to one would not be to another would increase vitality and to the day laborer would make he weary creditor nore weary The work of the six week lays whatever it is should be put en- irely out of sight from Sunday until Monday Mental ing or other employment that requires mental effort Physical laborers must cease physical labor and can obtain the desired rest in mental improvement Those whose week days arc spent within lie four walls of a store or aa office should be in the open air in the broad ields where they can breathe nature's surest draughts as much as le Those who labor out of doors will hid their greatest rest and enjoyment on their homes The ness man and the banker ceasa ill thought of his business take a com- plete respite from all thoughts of ind Sunday for all classes should be made as widely different from other days in the week as possible It should be made enjoyable especially for the children that they may grow up with the love of the day instead of an sion for it as too common even in the best of Christian families The ance of the day in each household should be made a study that the most profitable and rest-giving enjoyments to suit each case may be found and then let the observance of the day once tled be lived up to as strictly as a ness transaction The day should have its distinctive features religious ture freedom from toil for servant aa well as master rest in its true sense and enjoyment of the higher order which relaxes the nervous system and is one of nature's greatest restoratives All have their place and none them should be neglected for exercising his capacity this way About one-half of the great town of Cardiff belongs to him of course in- the castle which reconstructed once is receiving tion The east end which is practically the west of Cardiff belongs to Lord Tredegar and is called after him His laud adjoins Lord Bute's and he may possibly have a port o compete with Lord Bute's A cunous loint haSj however been raised to the fiect that the Crown is the owner of he beach from to nark and may on occasion assert ita Slam other instances might be liven of commercial interests if nobility The great ire the property of the Duke of and might be mentioned The Duke jf Westminster is we believe greatly engaged in building transactions Ho s the landlord of the two Houses of recent years his property has been developed and will soon be entirely covered with sumptuous ngs The Earl of Derby owns a great of Liverpool the Duke of Norfolk owns a great part of Sheffield the Earl of owns a good deal of Lord said according to Mr work that lie would not exchange his position for all tho wealth which Lord Dudley had below lie or Lord Westminster above The town of Brighton affords eral illustrations of our subject The Earl of Chichester has a good denl of property in the east end but being dis- in an election he abjured Jie place beyond presenting it with a cemetery as a solemn warning Ho is low taking his part in the levelopmeut of the Ex Words of Wisdom Very few diseases are so mortal at the fear of death All human virtues increase nni strengthen by the experience of them Relations always take tho liberties and frequently give the leas assistance Avoid tedious circumlocution in Ian guage Words like to their mark We trouble life by the care of death Female Philanthropists Who has not heard of worthy Mrg Fry the Quakeress who led the van in the noble work of reforming both and work so ably ried on by Mary Carpenter who ex- her philanthropic to India 111 the interests of education and prison discipline Elizabeth Fry the Female was a daughter of John Gurney of Earlham and sister o Joseph John Gurney and Lady She began to preach in 1810 and hree years later commenced her work is a prison reformer She effected much improvement in Newgate and in all parts of the United Kingdom and then she proceeded on a mission to the nent which occupied her during several years She died at in laving been the mother of a large ly Mary Carpenter comes next 011 our friend of the miserable and out- labored not only for their re- form in this country but have remarked in India likewise times shu visited that country and oil er return after her first visit in called upon to give evidence to the com- of the House of which in inquired into the condition of criminal and destitute children Miss Carpenter was born in 1807 at Exeter the daughter of a Unitarian minister and died on the of June last Her decease took place in the Ked Lodge which she had herself instituted and where she had labored many years The third great female philanthropist was Caroline Chisholm the daughter of a well-to-do yeoman in Northamptonshire a good and actively and death bv the care of life the i benevolent man Her mother early a widow gave her an exceptionally News Gossip The income tax will probably bo long in coming The mass of people think the out go won't admit of it's being put in force The end of the Goblet works was blown in the other day at Wheeling West Virginia It's nothing out of place or uncommon every thing blown in a glass A vessel with 063 celestials lately arrived at Ban Francisco and all the bummers who won't work are happy in the opportunity to sing We are ruined by cheap Chinese labor The telegraph reports Indian raids in Texas a number of persons killed and a large amount of stock run off dust as if that was any The item would have been a true one any time the last twenty years Doctor Le Moyne in advocating mation expressed a wish that lie might live long enough to burn some of the law makers and it would not be the occasion of many tears should his wish be but father to the deed The President has decided an can give money for political purposes or not just as he pleases Thanks for the right we had previously If he will give us a good office we'll see about the other thing The much litigated Erie Eailroad has finally been sold for under foreclosure and purchased by the tees of the stockholders The broad guage of reckless expenditure upon which it was run for so many years will now be likely to be reduced to a narrow one With the population of the United States estimated at and the total circulation gold silver and backs at and the actual value of real and personal property at each person would have could the Communistic idea of an equal division be carried out in money and in property The passage of a by the United torments the other frights us Modern education too often covers the with rings nnd at the same time cuts the sinews of the wrists The remembrance of a beloved mother the shadow of all our actions it either goes or follows Our own hands are heaven's favorite instruments for supplying us with the necessaries and luxuries of life All men look to happiness in the future To every eye heaven and earth seem to embrace in the distance There aro stone bridges in China three and four miles long and an arch of the incredible span of six hundred feet The law should be to the sword what the handle is to the hatchet it should di- rect the stroke and temper the force Talk of fame and romance all the glory and adventure in the world are not worth one hour of domestic bliss It is dangerous for one to climb his too high for he is very apt to get among dead and decayed branches Value the friendship of him who stands by you in the storm swarms of insects will surround you in the sunshine We hate to see a boy wrth the man- ners of an old we hate worse to see an old man boy ith the manners of a th t it credit for anything she answered tartly And madam permit me to add that Paul Seldon the husband of your man- aging niece has nothing in the world independent of me and though I may still choose to keep him in mj employ Love cannot fully admit the feeling that the beloved object may die all passions feel their object to be as eternal as themselves The man who violently hates or ardently loves cannot avoid being in some degree a slave to the person de- tested or adored Rich who are Useful There is often a great advantage to a town as well as to the individual man when the capital of a peer is in- vested in some great commercial under- taking or takes the direction of ing and developing the town itself The Duke of Devonshire the very model of a business man has been doing a great work in the two towns where he is a large of and bourne Cardiff is a typical instance It was once an insignificant place whither coal was brought down on the backs of mules to the tiny wharf of a creek belonging to the port of Bristol It was known chiefly to the traveler as a place situated near to the ough education turned well to account in after life Having married Chisholm of her Majesty's Indian Army she went out to Madras where she founded the School of Industry for the daughters of soldiers in which instruction of many kinds ia still being given including those of the various duties connected with the hold She was little more than twenty when she opened the school and in she and her hasband removed to tralia and settled at Sydney There ahe established a home for the protection of young giris whose peril was great oil landing in a new and very rough try as it was some thirty or forty years ago Expeditions into the country were then undertaken bv this brave and erous woman for the purpose of ting sometimes as many as eighty young women to bereft here and there in the scattered paying all ex- penses herself On ono occasion she took in charge the whole im- from one ship consisting of sixty-four girls possessing but fourteen shillings between them Paying for she took them up the country and in two years they were nearly all married and thanks to her selection of homes all had preserved good characters But her work did not end here she a for immigration Sydney and advanced no leas than of which she lost but in return for her generous confidence At last after much labor the beiran to subscribe to her work Colonial Secretary she in- the English Government to send out the wives and families of leave convicts One shipful collected from most of the in the country she brought out in person She also effected important reforms in the sion is ite impossible I will never see his wife or permit her you may as well i- i i i i The name aunty is an despise all flesh in T n hp I 1 with their work Orders bo ut his house On Opposite Town Ha DAVID II uncommon one and I should think he would recognize you by that He may never have heard it since coming here Mr Paul seemed to find some difficulty in recollecting it calling me and almost everything else NERVOUS DEBILITY th at sounded like it Then you know mi vou only address me as Aunt and i- Depression for mR Alice Vita or a wonk exhausted feeling DO energy or the result of or excesses or some upon ffc is always cured by him to call me Miss when he endeavored to get my name What a cute woman you are aunty woman form They are nothing but apples of discord and ever have been from Eve down to the present time And permit responded Miss Amesbury springing to her feet and her fine form to its fullest say that I should hate all of mankind through you Charles Cut I cannot for 1 am satisfied there few who like him are capable of winning the affections of a young only to cast her off and trample Vi It t 1 V i States Senate for the repeal of I village of me nipt Law appears to meut with favor relative importance of the two places is by the majority While acknowledging entirely altered Cardiff is a busy that it may be beneficial in some in- and thriving port while Llandaff is its stances objections urged against l suburb as Clifton is a suburb of Bristol are many and its working unjust The The late Marquis of Bute to whose opportunity to force men into spirit the rise of this town is when a delay of a few days entirely due possessed in addition would place them upon a sound footing some acres of the Glamorganshire has been used by vindictive creditors rich with mineral treasures a large and the great bulk of the assets tract of moorland desolate and bare m lowed up in expenses Good and of the small town of Cardiff essary as it might once have been yet j Several schemes were suggested to him the errors that have have made utilizing this land and he at last de- i of emigrant ships On the of her leaving the colonists pre- sented their benefactor with a purse of money and an address and able work was publicly acknowledged both by Lord Derby and Mr Lowe The valuable life of this exemplary woman terminated March 25 1877 E s all newly ry attached THE W if for Is in tin crts wulls ta barn and suiMe i on the u tm Woman's wit And as the them upon the slightest provoca- was i believe that generous loves m and at once now py ana you wiu much oblige me by vacating immediately poison of any conceivable de- scription and degree of potency which has been intentionally or accidentally swallowed may be rendered almost the Duke of Bridgwater to have almost his last penny but in the issue the docks have been far more successful than the canals vas only an infant harmless by simply swallowing two gills I The present marquis of sweet oil An individual with a I when he camo into the title whenever it is con- Do not commence to scroll all wooil by machinery Office MEDICINE Jew 1 01 o share it with her They were as usual one the garden cutting morning in when Clara While she was speaking the man sat aa one transformed never Wl which physicians and chemists are further expansion of the port J.ne j marquis is the owner of large fields of smokeless coal which is now preferred by often the more an the navies of the world Lord tute the farther they are removed from it inherits the genius of his father in being as the more giddy the height to which they have attained the more frightful yawns lite gulf below a immense builder and as his house in his Scottish isle has been recently burnt down lie will have a fui ther op- all How to Smoke a Cigar The best cigars may be spoiled by bad smoking Chewing and smoking are incompatible with each ed at the same time We men worry a cigar until it became a ing object The smoker ber the advice of the fine old master of the gentle craft Izaak in regard to play ing a Treat it gently as though you loved it So deal with the 01 with a sharp knife cut off as cleanly as possible a transverse section about a quarter of an inch from the small end if vou would avoid being troubled with particles of tobacco between your lips the whole time smoking Avoid also the filthy practice of licking the cigar It is always unnecessary and nasty and often the cigar which should be dry especially in the wrapping leaf as it is upon the excellence and fragrance of the that much of the flavor of the cigar depends Light the end thoroughly aflame smoke a cigar only Keep the cigar out of a draft It is difficult to taste the fragrance of delicate tobacco in the open air Smote gently and be careful to avoid the cigar or to burn under the wrapping leaf without igniting it In the latter case flavor is at once lost and a bitter e of the tobacco charred but not so aa to eliminate the essential oils is tho result If a cigar go out it may be relit without serious disadvantage but lighted a second ami culd ia rr us i ami i U K i CO A iic   

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