laanFSl -HiT An :...- lBBMBBBBBBBinBBBBBBV ,& -"j- EyalnBBB,j3j l --! . WOfntJCVMlffMMM I&C'-'X-?;?"" L'.v--JjU, --- - . . . .. It BVeMMg tM. itae ."rtL- "t- BBBt- i.." - -r..-J- -1 t-, -r u- "VJIH-. ..V-i Ai KJB - -i tf-3 -.-j.-.-v.---r.- -7t" P... r.. jtmmb rwaHmvviMisoi w n uiuiar 'peacefal nefotfa, g, -"V " (imports SorSovemer showed ot MW,W0 m conwarcd with avia H82. Ssperts ? .'- "wc.JkMvwda:incelt. , The daauce fey ttareeant fae Ik Ike Mgiaa -pahtfe tndldtegg was "iSfiMJm Or the 600,000 shares cf Union Ea- dac stock 4W,00 are held 4a New Eng land. The British. Government continues to prohibit Nationalist meetings in Irelaad. The Forte has informed Great Brit aiattiatoads sending a fleet to the Bed Sea. Foukteex thousand Yorkshire (.Bag.) aiiaers are idle in coaseqaeace of a strike of colliery boys. Lett Bros. & Co., New York cloth iers, bare made aa assignment; liabilities, f2,4,638. Al Tltt1atf)tAllA ib TrtMilM TTmAI conference of Australian dele-l.-,,. . .. '. , iu . j. . ... . i wood was hanzed on the 7th for the murder of Robert J. Pendergrase. A teacher at Irkutsk, Siberia, was arrested and shot within twenty-four hours for striking the Siberian Governor-General. Three hundred employes are thrown oat of work by the burning of the packing house of Sinclair & Co., Cedar Rapids, Is. A San Francisco pool of operators is booked to Ipse from two to three million dollars by the decline in wheat freights. A sleepikg-car on the Chicago ex press, New York Central Road, out of New York City, took fire near Foughkeepsie on the 7th and the interior burned out. Two passengers were scorched. The Congressmen from the Pacific slope held a caucus oa the 7th and agreed on a course to pursue in regard to a bill to remedy defects in the present Chinese im migration law. District Attornev Peckhax, of New York, has given an opinion that the conviction of a dealer for violating the li quor law revokes his license. At the annual dinner of the Brook lyn Revenue Reform Club on the 7th Rev. Henry Ward Beechor made a speech ad vocating tne abolition of the tariff laws. The building record of the season for St. Paul, Minn., shows over 3,500 new residences. $8,470,000 have been expended on new buildings during the past summer. Te United States Brewers' Associa tion will hold its next annual convention in Rochester, N. Y., on the third Wednesday in May, 1884. The twenty-fif th anniversary of the association will be celebrated in New York in 1885. Kar- E-s"" A .-..--j- -ikii -y"w wanwrvWi'i sent a circnlar letter to the forth that If tkaFreaek in Aaam they will be opposed troops. ; Sydney favors a federal oeaacfl to i natters la which matted action of i is desired. m President Welti; a Liberal, i elected President of Switzerland, lister of the Interior Scheack, a rYfee-Fresideat. . m itinople detectives have satyears' imprisonment iV"' S..v,v K vSaFs. k W' a" - WEgSMM prosecations fof Pittsburgh. Pa., fg statistics for ay ear, - is claimed to be the feed States. ; refuse loans until the tare cleared away, and mercan- iln Shanghai are reported going t in consequence. pERs of the National Republican re assembling in Washington, ine upoa the place for hold- BXt National Coaventioa. -Chief of tho North- ty .Detective Service, has Ited on charges of shielding train tnd sharing their profits. ers1 Congress at Louisville, iBsacting- some importaat bus- on the 7th, deciding to ; meeting at Nashville, Tenn. .Mills in Rhode Island possession of Rp- exfiftveraor not fight the 7. iFrota the Toledo Wade.1 ry:J'w. " !-rieBWLBanaaBn'aii" Bto!.t"-C . MksBBBTTIaBS K " mJOmW State ev OMo, U' ym - .KOT.aw.i' The reawts nv the late-elecksfcbaa ase aot calldlated to afford me Ike lively saUefackseea that I eggspe:tid. It & tre we bev kerrled a part uv the State tikkitiaNooYork, and it is likewise' troo that we hev b'ustid the enemy in Virginny, Marylj.'i and sum uther States. But them don't count. . Vir ginny and. Maryland, is para anyhow, and ef with the'gin mills and repeeters uv the City we can't kerry the State uv Nbo York we mite ez well throw up the sponge. From the fur East cuius a gleem uv sunshine. The best luck that hez oc curred to us is the defeat uv Butler in Massychoosits. It was well enufF to elect him wunst, in order to demoralize the Republikin party, but to hev dun it twice wood hev demoralized us. A dose uv calomel is all well enuff to stir up the system, and perdoose internal convul- shuns and sich, to gjt rid uv sutbn wuss, but to keep takm' doses of cal omel makes the remedy wus; nor the disease. It is all well enuff to make the Republikins sick with Bulhr, but when it comes to swallerin' him ourselves, and makin1 us sick, that is another thing. We arc alluz willin to see an other man take medisine, but when the puke is commendid to our own lips it ain't so pleasant. No man kin ever urre another man bv takur uhvsic !arnestais:ezlt doe) 3 ny4ts occasional streeks nv gbodnis, it ooa nev a warranty aeea to ine jung- ltivxieven.1' nd jist then the Devil laffed in high , wieh awoke me. I looked up but ther xrnz no Devil on the fence, and ther wuz no smell uv sul phur, or anything else, but: that arisin from, the garbage in the alley wherj bed laid down to repose. Wuz it a drcem? I spose so. But. all the same it seems to me that it isn't al together one after all. Brecms yoost to be profotik, and why not now? It strikes me that things is about cz I drccmed it. Petuoledm V. Nasbv, (Bunyanizcd.). 1W. CAT'S-CRADLE. "lt'scriss-croM hl?h. and If s criss-cros3 flat; , Then four straight lines for the pussy cat; ,'Thea criss-cross under; ah.'aow' thcrCIITx)' ' A nice deep cradle, dear Grandpa! See 1 : "Now change again, and it's flat eece more 4A lattice-window! Hut where'a'tbe door! t Why, change once more, and, ho'ding it so. We can have a very good door, you know. " Now over, now under, now pull it tight; Bee-saw, uranapa: cxaciiy ngnti" ui So prattled the 1 ij I net! ictlv ttle one, Grandfather's pet. ti Bloody Shirt" Ssecrs. E "OR -tffrrTiainbnr nf fflm. "aoPtedOutiononthe6th ask PUt& take steps to stop the ' dfgfjM.n nf tli ft ArJirnnHnrlr "f OBzv. Uj -w P the VT' litteeon Rules will pointment of two new Internal Improve- ier on Expenditure of Like Pennsylvania Su- - X . .. AKL f tdht "speculative recover the mosey 'rlek speculators. 365 applications for the ' of the mail wagon for the office in Washington. Post- (proposes to compromise by Ion to drive two days each. )DGE, representing himself lphia, obtaiaed $1,000 on the ! First National Bank at Mas- r means of a raised draft. He r arrested at New Phila; MexT aihington, ii'Dearer was re-eli iral Maason First failures for the seven 7th throHgfaoat the United Lnurabered 307, against week. This is the most recorded in any week for itae LouiavilleSnnth- iiSjii.-, ... a aoia an- icmiilf9i,llM) dates being so t to eaafliet wttfcftfce World's NewOrleaaa; AaaddiUonal lis to be raised. fifdip- le meeting: of the -namely, the Satperors of Liusia and Auetoia. It is said arranged by M. de rPriBce Bismarck XLTmTH CONGRESS. The Senate of the Forty-eighth Congress assembled on the 3d. and was called to order by the Vice-President pro tern. Prayer was offered by Rev. Mr. Edwards. Tho oath was administered to Messrs. Beck, Bowen, Cullom. Dolph and Ferry. Tho customary resolutions notifying the House and the President that the Senate was ready for business were ajrreed to. Clerk McPberson caned the House to or der and proceeded to call the roll, which dis- ciosea uo memoers present. The election of Speaker being in order, John G. Car lisle, of Kentucky, and General Kelfcr, of Ohio, were nominated respectively by the Democrats and Republicans. The result of the vote was: Carlisle, JP1; Keirer, 113; Bobinson, of Massachusetts, SB; scatter ing, 6. Mr. Carlislo was declared elected and Messrs. Randall and Kcifer escorted him to the Speaker's chair, whereupon Mr. Car lisle briefly addressed the Houw thanking the members for the honor conferred and be speaking their co-operation in the facilitation or the business before them. The Speaker then took the' oath and called the House to order. Aa the States were called the Rep resentatives qualified. Fending completion of organization the House adjourned. In the Senate on the 4th several bills were introduced: Tho committee appoint ed to wait upon the President in con Junction with tho House committeo re ported that they had performed that duty, and stated that tho President had requested them to convey to tho two bouses his compliments and congratulations, and say ho would com municate immediately in writing. The Presi dent's message was then received, and after its reading the Senate adjourned The House completed its organization after refer- nnr ine mississiddi ana nanus einctinn mam Vicei-J The case of the First Virginia District was laid over, m a:ie tne .President s secretary ap peared and presented the Presidents' mes sage, at the close of tho reading of which the Bouse adlourned. lit the Senate on the 5th bills were intro- f duced: To abolish tho internal revenue: tore- organize the legislative power of Utah; to ap point a special commissioner to look after trade interests in Central and South America. Mr. Blair offered a resolution for submission of s constitutional amendment to prohibit manufacture, sale or importation of liquors for drink. Mr. Morrill addressed the Senate on silver coinage. Tho committee on Indian Affairs was instructed to consider tho expedi ency of establishing a military academy to train Indian youth for tho regular army. Mr. Hoar introduced a bill for the use of patent elections Jn tho t the! Mg44rinJa' ine Lttmmraee on eii In the Senate on duced to repeal the culture acta. Resol submission of coi modifying the fifteenth ingior woman suffrage. twaa referred to girls York, on the 4th, was cele- niversary of the institBtioa-of of Commerce ia that city 117 Lunch in imitation of the style served in the room of the ravernrwhere Washington took i officers in the year but named. Gilmoor vs. Schurz was fork from the BtatejD for iflPWajpNEas Schurz, ;the former front practicuag Departmeate of the Interior Inn was Secretary. w i i (n&Velot)6r45eaators and-Reo- in CoBgrshre 'displeased Id refereaek the President's iauaigratieB. ; "bills, which they will intheHoaM and Senate, and propose severer restrictions i from China. the power to veto separate Items Dins, uuungior lnior "Backbone" land grant inl bfllwasiarro- aadtiaaber offered for amendments ;Trovid- Presideat for Information fT.HBr.tti-: 1 latroduced: To restore to BMrkeiKP voir lands la Wisconsin and MliiKJr provide for a ship canal between nCw. J- anit PhouitoaVo Ran T lu UB" MrtlnM tnrHr lbs nafU'nYriin'no V Mr 009DENSED TELBBRlJBft The German Crown Prince was ban,- isself. Yoo can't turn another man's stummick by takin' an emetic yerself. Butler wuzn't half so much a terrier to the Republikins cz he wuz to us. It is letter for him to bust us in Massy choosits than it wood hev ben to bu.st us in the hull kentry. We don't count on Massychoosits anyhow, and we can't afford to swallcr the wust man in it for the sake uv a chance uv keepiu' the State out uv the hands uv- the Repub likins. Butler kin only kerry with him themez is like him, and that's too heavy a load. It wood affect us too much in other States. One skunk kivers much territorv. It fs well that Butler is la:d to his e'erael rest, or. rather, ez he can't be killed, it is well that we are rid uv him. He will slide over into the Republikin party and make it uncomfortable for them. He is cheeliv a terror to his frends and a comfort to his enemies. Like a kickin muskit, he is dangerous only to the man at the breech. But after all the prospeck is encur ridgin. Things are workin to our en tire satisfackshen. 1 don't know how it is, but suth'4i mean enuff for us alluz turns up j'st when we want it. It is troo that we generally manage to fool it away at the wrong t'me, but ther is suthin in the world that brings us out I bed a drcem last nite that illustrates the p. nt. Methawt I bed bin drinkin late at the sloon uv one uv my noo friends here, and hed taken ruther too much for mv own good, that is ef a man kin take tob much for his own good. On my way to my lodgins I am livin here at theeggs pense uv tho Likker Deelnr's Assosh.a shun, and hev rooms over the Dime kratick Headquarters I succumbed to the inflooense and lav down in an allev and parsed off into a slumber comforta bly. That is one advantage in bein a man uv like appetite with myself. I hev no good cloze to soil by contact wuii muu, anu am never niraiu uv theeves. One argument in favor nv free likker is, that ef all men wuz like me theeves wood be compelled to go to work fur a livin. Ther wood be no body but brewers and 'sloon keepers to rob and they cood afford to set up nitcs with shotguns. But tlrs is a digression. I wuz sleepin soundly wheu the sceen was illumined with a bloo lite wich shed its ghastly rays all over the surroundin territory. I notist sittin on the fence the Devil. He wuz the ori inal Devil uv my bovhood, with spfit hoofs, short- horns and a tale with a spike in it, and a short beard. He sqt thero calmly, ez if absorbed in thot, tho with a more pleasant exprcshun uv countenance than I hed ever seen on him afore. Still I shrunk. Men liko me never like to see the Devil in close proximitv. "Yat woodst thou?" sed I. "NotliinM" sedhe. "You a:n't here after me, then?" I askt. "Not much," sed he, laflin safdon ikelly, "not much. I don't waste nry time. Wat yoose in comin for yoo when yoo are certin to come to me? No, mybiznis is uv no akkount. I ain't dom much myself now. I don't hev to. My work is mostly done for me. I am in pollytix a little." "How docs yoor Majesty like the lookout?" I remarkt, affably gitti on one elbow. "About the same ez ever. Things don't change much with me in this kentry, or anywhere else. 1 hev the monerkys uv the old world who work for me. and ther are jist ez many ele mence in my favor in Ameriky ez there. Up to the time uv the war 1 hed slavery to keep my diminyuns populatid. and it wuz rainer a severe blow to me when Since the publication of Senator Ma hone's address exposinz the murder ous tactics by which theTirginla Bour bons won their recent triumph, horri ble visions of ensanguined shirts are continually troubling the minds of our Democratic contemporaries. "Why," iuoy inquire, "snouiu sucn areauiui objects be exposed t- the public gaze? Why not pass by on the rber side and Kretend not to see the evidence of arbarity and 'intolerance? The spec tacle is calculated to awaken senti ments of antipathy toward our South ern brethren, who are compelled to choose between political defeat at the polls and tho massacre in cold b'ood of persons who will not vote the Demo cratic ticket or stay at home. Think of the grievous alternative to which they are reduced, of seeing themselves defeated in the elections or nobly slaughtering their opponents. Extend to them your sympathy .'rather than your blame. Rel!cct upon the anguish that mu-t wrinsr their chivalrie souls when they contemplate the certain ty of being excluded from office and power, and deprived of the emolu ments appertaining thereto, unles they iudu'ge in a little butchery by way of diminishing the obstacles which con front them in pursuit of these desirable things! Be content with beholding the grand results flowing from the Bourbon system of conducting politLal cam paigns, and remain silent. Don't stir up bad fccliifg Perhaps the thing isn't as bad as witnesses report it to be. At most only a few lives are sacrificed, comparatively. Two or three dozen murders in a State just before election day, ordinarily suffice, and what are they to make" a fuss about, anyhow? Let us have peace. We have heard enough of the bloody shirt, and don't want to be bothered about it any more. If j-ou keep on waving it we will swear that nothing of the sort exists, no mat ter how conclusive the testimony of outrage may be." And so the con science of the Nation is to be stifled, if possible. But, s?rs, the damned spot win not-out. reople will talk and act. too, as far as they are able to do so, and plant the seal of their condemuat:on no only upon the immediate crim'nals but also upon their apologists. U Democracy can not maintain itseli without murder to serve as a hand maiden, in the South, or anywhere else, it is right that the fact be known to all men, in order that they may pass judg ment upon it. Representative Barbour, of Virgin'a, is reported to be in New York denouncing Senator Mahone's axr raignment of the Bourbons as an out nige. The Democratic State Commit tee of Virginia has met in Richmond 'and passed resolutions protesting against the revelation of Bourbon tactics. Barbour says Senator Mahone's statement is an imitation of others that have preceded it from other States; but mere is only so much similarity as nec-essa-ily iuhcres in tales of crime and bloodshed growing out of partisan ani mosily and greed. The fact that in famies of the same sort have been prac tical before in the South does not ex cuse or palliate in any degree the culpa bility of the Virginia Bombons. The "Mississippi plan" of carrying elections is nothing new, of course, but the appalling wickedness of its intro duction in Virginia is net dimin ished by pleading precedents. Mur der dates back to the davs of Cain and Abel, but it is not to be ex cused on that account. There is no moral statute of limitation properly ap plicable to deeds of blood-guiltiness. It will not do to assume that the deeds "But where did you learn cat's-craHo so welir . She suddenly asked; and he could not tell. lie could not tell, for his heart was sore. As bo gravely said: " I have played it be fore." What could the sweet little maiden know Of beautiful summers long ago? Of the merry sports, and tho games he ptarea. nM: When' arama," herself was a little maid? she know of the thoughts that What could ran Through tho weary brain of tho world-worn man? But she knew, when she kissed him, dear Grandpa smiled. And that was enough for tho happy child. m. 3i. )., in SL A'icho'.as. - gittin up queted the evening of the 9th at Seville. that wuz abolished. But ther is a The Mount Hickory Rolling MaL1?imoriinthisk!r,Y' and ther alluz XHoxAxof the Civil Service i will conduct qtsbij tinnn in 'local and general depart- ob the aMkaBdatlomis- MttiHaet. Xxnemiatfms for the will be held MkriMlppiaad thHwstnJannaryaOaadFebrBary icav ws arrested at Gnerroro lor two faco.aaviag cm putei taken ,vkta Erie, Pa., was totally destroyed by fire the morning of tho 9.h. At New Haven, Conn.,- the Salvation Army has openly defied the authorities of the city. The Union Rolling Mill at Cleveland, O., was damaged 480,000 by fire the morn ing of the 9lh. Senator Lvgalls will bring forward a bill to regulate the wire fence business on the frontier. The puddiers at Lancaster, Ta., have been notified of a reduction in wages to take effect December 15. The New York Central Labor Union calls on the President to use his good offices in behalf of O'Donnell. Maryland cotton-mill owners say the business outlook is the least-satisfactory they have ever known- -Exposure is made of a corrupt ring of contractors in connection with the New York Department of Pub ic Works. Till owteeiian nf las lYill be, 1 spose. till the time comes me to abdikate. And Diraocrisv. it entered my servis. cum to stav. n slarprv venr. hnatoii T iltrin't eaam . - - -J - - . - ... v trv,i.iu '"nothuv lor 'em to do; but wat haPPVcd? Why they immejitly sold iT rrV8 out to likker and t16 k a n1eI"erdvantage for too than even 8lavery.pne g healthy brewery, conductevy a energetic biznis man who hez !Hmbisnn to die with amil yun uv dolaw th more to me than a ongresm.,ieeStrik uv slaveholders, uu iurnBBHe with more constitoo- ents. -ioo nev no iu0 uv it jt dont en. shoot -me sich me- yob are, for I hed a mortgage onto p, tTOja the beginnin, but it does fetch mWiabrers and the boys, tremenjns. Ii,n.t kj,0wthat I heyanyrecrootin selt that is so yalyooable to me ezu actjvo s'ioon keeper wich don'lownX, fixters, and is compelled to sell jist tmnch beer a day in order to keep posabgion uv em. xie aoes mv work so wen t,. mess because senator Mahone and his friends have made an outcry about them. They were known in something of their blackness before the election, and their purpose was at once suspect ed, b.nce then suspicion ha3 Dcen turned into such a degree of certainty by corroborating circumstances as to justify the verdct for which the Sena tor asks. And it is well that the atten tion of good citizens everywhere should be directed to the means by which Bour bon Democracy maintains a solid South and hopes to secure control of the Na tional Government finally, with the aid oi jNorthern sympathizers and friends. Sneers concerning the exhibition of bloody shirts will hardly result in sup pressing independent comment upon the recent Bourbon atrocities in Vir ginia. Troy (K Y.) Times. WHAT WISNIE LOST. Oh! now tell me another story, please do, Uncle Will, before it is time for me to go to bed," Mabel pleaded, as her uncle seated himself in the par lor after tea. UucIj Will had read the Peter Parley looks when he was a boy, so he knew just how to make delightful rtories out of what little folks usually think is very dry, indeed. But then anything that her beloved new Uncle Will told her would be pleasant to Mabel. Only a few months before he had married her dearest, best, s.weetest auntie, who had always been good to her, and from that day," curious as it may seem, Mabel tojk him into her heart, and gave bim just as much love as she did Aunt Alice, though auntie seemed to get just as much as before. And so there is no end of lov injr, is there? -Nobody found it a very -hard matter to love Uncle Will, he was so merry and bright, and there was no end to the things he kn?w and could tell about. Then he was unselfish; he would give up his own pleasure any time to amuse a child, or cheer up somebody in trouble. Before Uncle Will could answer, grandma spoke up. She noticed that he had just pulled the evening paper from his pocket, so she said as she 'drew her rockinjr-chair near the fire the very first fire that had crackled in the grate that autumn: 'Come over here, Mabel dear, I will tell you a story." "Will it be nice, like Uncle Will's stories?" Mabel asked, coming slowly across the room. "I will let you answer that question after I have told it," said grandma, reaching for her knitting-bag. Mabel, again. "What is a history story?" "Why, all about something that truly happened a long time ago, to a truly somebody," said Mabel. "Must it have happened a long time ago to make it history? Don't von know history is be'ng made every day? You remember all about our dear Presi dent Garfield, don't you? It is only a short time since those sad days, but the story is published uow in a book, and that is history." "Oh, yes, I know," said Mabel, eagerly some of the tlrngs Uncle Will bad taught her just coming into her head "I know; anything that hap pened hundreds of years ago is ancient history, and what happened lately or the last hundred years or so is called modery history." "That is right," said grandma; well, now, I will tell you a story of modern history. "Once upon a time not a hundred years ago there was a little girl by.the name ol Winnie. "Her home was a handsome bouse in the city. There were many pleasant rooms iu it, but on this paiticulnr morning, Winnie was sittin": in the at tic. "She had not been sent there as a punishment, it was the place she chose 10 dc. j. nere was a pretty window m one end of the long low room. It had committed at Danville nn.lothrnl,.M DIuau P.au, lJJiaBV. fcomu Inem in Virginia are te,nr-l In hUmnwnHh. t we.re co.i?.rcn: A-;11 tne mornimr was !np. iTr.oan.-n snnfr Af.i,nn. .n,i w. 9ft,lV Winnie liked to EC' A firm that advertises in Chicago had to close its doors twice in a recent afternoon to prevent eager shoppers from suffocating each other. AT T. Commercial Advertiser. That is not an unusual thing in Chicago. There is no belter illustration of the benefits of advertising than can be had in Chi cago in the great houses that advertise their goods- It is not unusual to see tbem jammed with buyers, while their neighbors have elegant leisure. Chica go Inter Ocean. The Philadelphia Society of Or ganized Charity in its annual report just rendered shows that there is now in operation twenty-three ward or district associations, completely covering the entire area of the city. The census of beggars taken showed 10,092, or about one percent, of the population. 'I he re ceipts for the year were 917,917.81 and the expenditures $13,600.82. The to- et off ur there. ior the sunshine came with a rosy light inrougn tne red glass. A here was a largo old cbair by the window, and Winnie said it was a coxy place. So she had brought her slate and arithme tic and geography, to study her lessons. She always studied a couple of hours in the morning, then recited to Aunt Lena; after that, the time was her own, to walk or play as sue chose. She curled herself up in the large chair, and opened her book, but did not look in it; she looked out of the window, and saw up in the eaves little brown sparrow fluttering and twittering. She dropped her books and climbed up on the chair and watched them a long time. At last she tried to count them, and that made her remember that she had better be loarning her multiplication table, so she slid down into the cbair again and opened her book. "It was a queer kind of multiplica tion table sbe found,, though. With one eye on her book, and the other roving about the room, it went something like this: ' " 'Seven times four are twenty-eiorht. -1 wonder if that s a big spider r "'acven t:mes nve aretnirty-nve. What a funny looking old bureau that ir Seven times six are forty-two. I do h'lieve I hear a 'cricket!' " 'Seven times seven are forty-nine. Oh dear, what is the use of this old miltiplication table?1 ' "'Seven times' eight are fifty-six. Wonder if grandma's old chest is locked mean to "seer and with that tlown went her book and away she skipped across the floor to the blue chest standing in the corner. It was quite large, but sbe tugged with all her might- waiet-of hercrandmother gether about her own stout little b It was much too tight over another dress, :and the sleeves were too long, butiho pwhed them up, then she slipped off her shoes and put on a pair of cunning littlo slippers with high heels, then tied on s big satin bonnet, and with a dainty little fan in her hand shewas ready.- "She trailed up to an old looking glass that hung on the wall, and was perfectly astonshed. What a beautiful littlo lady she made with those pretty things-on! She paraded ud and down Broadway, smiled, and bowed, and courtesied, and then imagined that she wa3 at a party sweeping about with a long train, chatting and laughing with most charmimr nconle. It became ao real to Winnie that she actually talked it ail out. Mie sailed Up to a bag of feathers, bowed low, and inquired alter the health of Mrs. Fitzailan and her children. - "But hark! what noise was' that? Was somebody coming? Yes, somebody was coming up stairs as fast as possible two somebodvs, and they walked straight into tne room. It was mamma and Air. Denisc; Mr. Dcnise was ao artist. "A large old oil painting stood in the attic, it had been injured in some way and mamma wished him to see if it could be restored. "Poor Winnie! She gathered up her long trail and scampered as fast as she could, with such high heels clattering behind her. It was of no use to try to hide, though, they were right upon her. Mr. Dcn'se laughed heartily, and de clared he must nave her picture in that dress, but Winnie saw something in mamma's eyes that perhaps the gentle man did not. Mamma was certainly very much surprised, and not pleased. ihcy soon went away, and just as Winnie had put the last thing back into the chest Aunt Lena's' bell tinkled up tne stairs as a signal that recitation bounWad come. "That afternoon, just after dinner, a fine carriage drew up before the door, and took in mamma, grandma and Aunt Lena; then it rolled off through handsome streets, out of the city, over smooth roads, to Clifton Park; a long ride on a lovely afternoon, that is what Winnie lost. , This drive had been planned a week ago and she had looked forward to it with delight. But on they went among trees and flowers and sweet air, while she sat at home trying through her tears to make out 'seven times nine.' "It was hard. Btit when mamma had heard her blundering and stumbling through her lesson, she had said to grandma: ' It will almost break ray heart to leave that dear child at home this afternoon, but something must be done to break up tbis miserable habit she has of da'lying over her lessons and play ing, when she knows very well she should be bard at work. M3- little girl may better shed a few tears to-day than to grow up disobeying her con science r" "Did she grow up to be a good wom an r..v.i i-.i "Ask Uncle Will," grandma wmi a siy.glance that way. "Did the art'st ever paint her picture with the gold satin skirt and the bluo Al!n kM,.H Oil "Yes, ho did." "Have you ever seen it?" "Yes: and so have you." "Where?" said Mabel, with wide open eyes. " In this very room." "Why grandma! Do you mean that picture over the piano? Why, that is Aunt Alice." "Didn'tyou know," whispered grand ma, "that yourauutie had two names Alice Winifred?" "O-h!" said Mabel, and then she sank back in the large chair and looked at Aunt Alice sitting by her husband's side reading. The gas fiffht shown upon her brirrht hair and made it look like gold, and her white dress fell about her in soft folds. Her happy face looked as if she never disobeyed her conscience. Mabel thought within herself: "I am glad 1 know that good, dear, sweet Aunt Alice was naughty sometimes. It won't seem such an im-pos-st-6i7-ity for me 10 ue goou .some time. siit she only said: "Grandma, 1 believe I like mod ern history best, and I shall tell that story every single word to Joe and Teddy and Mabel when they come over to spend the day. Every word, grand ma." Mrs. C"'M. Livingston, in The Pansy. O, ,ktthatKtassSl5ieJttihef."f Pause lor aeiatflo moment ' Jit pauej awhilo aad taink: To those wo fondly lave you, Xo those feo bear year name, lou are brtnjttnx paw. and sorrow, .Aad curate;,' them wife shasaol -5" I ' O, let that Rlass a'onc, father! One moment stay your baud; Consider, till its contonts You clearly understand; Look at the liquid Are, And by its luster learn How deadly and how cruol Its fatal furies burn. O, let that glass alono. father! Turn for a little while. Look on its helpless victims The mother aud her child: The wife whom you have promised To cherish and to love. And that pure little bcin? Fresh from the Hand above. O, let that glass alcne. father! Think not. as others do. That that which ruias avlllona .. Contains no barm for you: But know that he who gathers . A serpent to his breast Will learn the cruel nature Of his unholy truest. 3fit$ Strrot C. King, in Monitor-Journal. D0ST BEGIN THE HABIT. A Plain Talk with Young Men. A young man. who had just lost an excellent situation by a two-days' "spree," camemto my study lately and said to me:. "Doctor, I can not under stand how it is that I should have made such a fool of myself and thrown away my chance for a living. This is almost killing my little wife." I replied to him: " There is no mystery about your case. You have been tampering with drink a long while, trying to jump half way down Jflagara. You ought to have stopped before you began. It would not have cost you one-hundredth part as much effort to have signed a total ab stinence pledge several years ago as it will now to break loose from this terri ble habit" I entreated mv friend to an said, . Bams Blae-Ejed Lassie. at the heirvv I'd and it flew ones. 44 She did not more than half expect CS5S The title to a tract of about six hun dred acres of land lying at the head of Cayuga Lake between the shore and tbe village of Ithaca is in law in that vil lage. The heirships are exceedingly complicated, tne original titles run ning back into the lasta century. The lineal contestants are" two families named Kenwick and Moody, the former being in possession. The Renwick heirs now living consist of1 children and grand children of Major Robert Renwick. de ceased, who was the last surviving son of William and Jane Renwick, his wife. But the' last named was. before ber mar riage with William Renwick, Miss Jane Jeffrey, of Lochmaben in Diimireishire, Scotland, and was "The Blue-eyed Lassie" of Robert Burns' song. Writing in,1838 to a sister-in-law in Canandafcua, N. Y., Mrs. Renwick, who-retained till she died at the age of seventy-seven, remarkable cheerfulness of countenance and brightness of "een sac blue.'Ijrccalls lovingly her recollec tions of the poet. "Poor, poor Burns," she writes to Mrs. Jeffrey, "how often have I seen him in a cold winter's night when he. had been riding for hours over the moors and'nfosses alter smugglers, (what a task for such a spirit!) open our little parlor door and stalk In with his great lion-skin coat and far cap covered with snow, and his "fine Newfoundland dog, Thurlow, at ( his side, looking glum and sour as .if at war with the world. Wilh kindness he was wel comed by ourparents while my sister and self, seated turn in mother's easy chair. - r brought warm slmnera and nrenared 1 r . K 1 foi grapple h:s weakness to God's strength; he signed a pledge of entire abstinence, and went away with the desparate look of a man who is pulling for life in the rapids, in full sight of the cataract. That young man is a fair representa tive of a sadly numerous class who "lock the stable door after the horse is stolen." He may possibly be saved, but so as by lire. " My plain talk to-day is with those who have not yet Hung themselves into the rapids. I wish to give half a dozen common-sense reasons for letting every intoxicating drink (whatever its name) entirely alone. He who never touches a tlrop Avill assnred ly never become a drunkard. Preven tion is easy, is 6afe, is sure; reforma tion is difficult, and with some persons is well-nigh impossible. The Jews were commanded to build battlements around the flat roofs of their dwellings in order to prevent the children from falling over into the street. To put up the parapet cost but little; but the want of it might cost broken bones; and alas! what human power could recall a dead darling jto life? lam always thankful that I took a pledge, of entire abstinence jn early boyhood. But for that battle ment 1 might have been ruined by the drinking-usages which were deplorably prevalent in my college.. "Stick to the teetotal" said a shrewd old kinsman to me when I started for college; and now after forty years I wish to commend the bridge that carried me safely-over. (1.) The first argument, my young friend, for total abstinence is that no healthy person heats an alcoholic beverage; and even invalids bad bettsr be careful how the tamper with it as a mefticiue. Sir Hen ry Thompson and several other distin guished British physicians have delib erately declared that "alcohol'c bever ages can not, in any sense, be considered necessary for the maintenance of healthy life; that it is not a food iu any true sense of that term, and that tbe .steadi est and best work Is best done without it." Livingstone, the heroic explorer of Central Africa, was both a physician and a teetotaler. His testimony was: "I find that Tcan stand every hardship best by using water, and water only." I entreat you not to fall into the delu sion that you can do an' honest work the better by firing up your nerves with alcohol. If you do you will have to in crease tho fuel constantly In order to produce the effect; Solid food and sound sleep- are all you require. Even as a tonic medicine wine and Bourbon may cover up a great deal; they cure, but ten Utile. Several friends I have known to be decoyed by them into drunkenness and disgrace. (2.) Therein lies a second reason for avoiding all intoxicants. They are de ceitful. Not only the sting of the ser pent, but the subtlety of the serpent is in them. The deception lies in the fact that the habit of drinking will become confirmed before you suspect it That young man who came into my study so tortured with the adder's bite, never dreamed at the outset that he was play ing with a rattlesnake. Every alcoholic drink has in it this quality, that it never satisfies, but awakens a constant desire for more. A small glass creates a thirst for a larger; one draught only whets the appetite for a second. This is not the case with any wholesome food or beverajre. Bread and beef do not breed excess; one glass of milk does not arouse a morbid thirst for two the next time. But tbis horse-leech qualitv in alcoholic liquors, which cries "give .a.0 give.' ana is never satisneo, is the very thing that makes them so dangerous. This it is which makes it so difficult to drink wine or brandy moderately and so easy 'to fall into drunkenness. A healthful-beverage satisfies' appetite r a hurtful one, like wine or brandy, stim ulates appetite until it becomes an un controllable frenzy. Tlrs I .regard as the Creator's law azainst alcohol: and when you take your first social glass vou begin to play with, a deadly ser pent. You may say: "Every one who drinks liquors does not become a sot." Very true, but every sot drinks liquors: and not one in a mUlion, ever expected to become a sot when he began with his champagne or his "sherry-cobbler:" Will yoa run fnov'riskT' I wdftld'noC The two reasons why J- am -a- teetotaler k ' lkf ' srr'to. M njf :vj .? vatar fl M tvnM if. ment 01 our pe stimulating, and most every direl rate of speed, stronger at the urates, ims is our young menj proof of the dhll dnnk-habit is fot t cry lew are ac one-tenth of thol selves to the bd even though the moments: "Wot never taste anot a touching path ui uur "Doys 1 Magistrate aftc drunkenness, flask and said enemy that cvei let he admitt ana could not I might mult of total abstine safeguard. Tin erless if vou v tation. It is a for you to leap pecc nun to sav No small part spent in booties who were in tl current: The spent in endea men irom em which is all starting-point. bottom. Tons peals have be question. "H from stronjr d be condensed i: you begin. ! Tt m N. Y. Inile, 'V " - .- af J- LJrv-;v;--.-v 'H V " , ' - -CTL ife: -Bftgttt mm m ansae uC af stopping t the faet that v "'reformed. N no enslave, ever bwak oat in their God IbatTi oai". XKere was the speech, Conof .a to the Falav iras arrested for H Hp a whisky-i . rHonor,the only-r uared me is (hat !" t " ttt mkbt; himself, 'f- mit r 7? .fikusfcirta infavi tit f Ka swfir oWfl?D tea of God fopow-s irily yield to tempi r-? eeho the Almighty fe tie rapids andox Tm.,..n ltrn k K Sf, orts tofsave those f 'Uf and tieacberoeM "f- A t2C of M 'shall be- FKw 10 prevent young nr on the stream and mirth at tho :1I damnation at the ' arguments and ap aedon this vital 2ave young men 'but they may all n net line &.ii octm t.r&L. Cuvlel! S V 'fWUBlBlBlBlBlBlBlBV 'JT 4l? Va""TS"S. W Joseph MedillHj 'he- lAmr TraaV. Mr. Joseph Tribune, hav Committee on which Scnato ferrinjr to the liquor the pas Times attemp: he replied in : "I did not s: away on liqii would have fi comfortable h sons who had the subject money squ drinks by th United States and that this out at interes ten years, woi S.000,000,00 every wage-v towns of the rent a co emancipatin landlords.' further com wholesale va beer niamif; whereas th drinkers full the wholes costs some! 250,0(30 sab nue license and the rent ber of dram York) I am roatinjc the vcrv low fij you have tl per annum proportion by wages an wiio conipo: of your tot the a vent million of day, their $112,500,0 a year. N tumor cons United Sta Tho farme the total paratively city people, mate tho British am a year, am two thirds of earning workers j; them disc n eded is 0$ of the Cktfago .citified before tho --ation and Labor, of cis Chairman, r- iejr thrown awl c, 1 "and thcJew ten nrork .correct his figures. jr,m which ha savs: jtt'Jthe money thrown rinjr the past year ll t-d every ono with a nut tnis: tnat per--'f careful study of ted the amount of . .'dr on intoxicating ies classes of thF , (Jf ,000,000 per. year. vf it hadi.becn put hf m durihjr the last; : oar amount to nearly in Niiuicient 10 ouy -iu all the cities and d 'States now paying ble domicile, taws iiCfrom servitude to BLt:ce that in your '0 onlv estimate tho r'tte4iquorr wine and- 2 and imported. Matoxieaat. coat tho '.otimes as mucba price thereof. Vlt 'to maintain tho fng mteraajpreve- nap their bar-tenders. it. ie places. The nura- nsMa thb citv fNew II exceeds 10,000; esti rcage receipt? at the H09 15 nerdav. anBt Ljesum of $54,750,000- tlfi.fi city alone. What i:':'iinonev is furnished vi . . ura.tnaH three-foartas nuaUiea? Computing n-iata of the quarter- '.helps at only 10 per , -gate sales amount, tot not far from a billion! will deny that half the .by the people of the If" bjfthe wages classes. .AOTBStintfc onc-nau ot itfcRT,. drink but com- ac contrasted bv tho Lgtfsh statisticians csti- ltwre on drink of th - a about t00.009,000 by a popnlation only gWasoar. The.wasto', lajlik leaves the wage-: aad poverty readers? iL The reform moat tsBjiace. fiZ "J. Msdhx. m m & fl 7m t, i 1y f- i imLmLummLwLwmm "aajBBBBBBI,BBBWJBB.aBBr WBBBBWaSMWKM.WVjraBMWBBBBBW rlBV.BVBB BBBBBRBBBV. WHBBJ pM"S . Tr ";:r S&'m-MSi.k SitfS'iES't M5i3LiJ5Jt2 ekama, aWIiSVnWi i.: - SaTfci&?Ea& TffaaBa.--.;. :.--,r,.-:v irB amr ttr neh bibi fii ah - '"-.TL--r-"-7i5.!-rBr '.... .iy.r?'.-s.--.-. 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