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The weekly Floridian. [volume] (Tallahassee, Fla.) 1867-19??, April 02, 1892, Image 2

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ENGLAND BEFORE THE STORM.
,The da; that Is the bight of day*,
With cannon Are for ran ablaze.
Wo spy from any billow’s lift;
And England still this tidal drtftl
Would she to sainted forethought vow
A space before the thunder’s flood.
That martyr of its hour might now
Spare her the tears of blood?
Asleep upon her ancient deeds.
She hugs the vision plethora bleeds.
And counts her manifold increase
Of treasure in the fruits of peace.
What curse on earth’s improvident.
When the dread trumpet shatters rest,
Is wreaked, she knows, yet smiles content
As cradle rocked from breast.
She, impious to the Lord of Hosts,
The valor of her offspring Roasts,
Mindless that now on land and main
His heeded prayer is active brain.
No more great heart may guard the home.
Save eyed and armed and skilled to cleave
Yon swallower wave with shroud of foam.
We see not distant heave.
They stand to be her sacrifice.
The sons this mother flings like dice.
To face the odds and brave the Fates;
As in those days of starry dates.
When cannon cannon’s counterblast
Awakened, muzzle muzzle bowled.
And high in swathe of smoke the mast
Its fighting rag outrolled.
—George Meredith in London Athencenm.
An Amusing Trick.
Select a boy who will be easy to man
age and seat him at a table with a gob
let between his teeth. Now tell him to
groan and make other doleful sounds,
still keeping the glass between his teeth.
This part of the performance having
passed off, say to him, “I think, my
friend, that the results would be more
satisfactory if 1 should cover your head
with this towel.” Accordingly his head
is then enveloped in a cloth on
two marks have been previously mao?
with charcoal to represent the eyes.
Care must be taken that the glass is still
kept between his teeth.
When all is ready he is told to con
tinue to make the sounds he had made
before. If all goes well the resonance
of the sounds, amplified by the presence
of the glass and the curious aspect of
the boy, will form a combination quite
sufficient to please the most exacting.—
New York World.
Persian Tombak.
Tombak is a narcotic, which is known
under the name of Xicotiana Persica.
and is cultivated in Persia exclusively,
in the provinces of Chiraz, Keehan and
Ispahan. Its quality varies with the
place of production. The best tombak
is that which is derived from Chiraz.
The production of this province varies
♦*? tween 1,500 and 2,000 bales a year,
which is almost entirely consumed by
members of the imperial family.
Tombak of this superior quality is not
very abundant, and the price paid for it
is about fifty or sixty francs the oke, the
oke being equivalent to 2.8 pounds avoir
dupois. The province of Keehan pro
d ices the second quality of Persian tom
bak. With small leaves like the Chirax
t.iinbak the product of Keehan is not
t-ven so abundant.—Kew Bulletin.
An Old English Institution.
We have quite lost the mughouse.
Tins was a kind of music hall
a large room where only men were ad
mitted, and where ale or stout was the
only drink consumed. Every man had
£::* pipe; there was a president A harp
played at one end of the room, and out
•<f the company present one after the
other stood up to sing. Between the
' jr.g3 there were toasts and speeches,
sometimes of a political kind, and the
i-tuple drank to each other from table
to table.— Walter Besant in Harper’s.
From a Scotchman's Sonnou.
We are told to love our enemies; but
*ve are not told to like them. 1 don’t
like my enemies. 1 dislike them very
much. But (this with a baleful glance)
[ love them. And 1 shall ever lx? ready
to show my love to tin m by trying to
.et them severely j uni.-hed. that they
maybe lei to repent of their behavior
toward im .—ac-.s.
!!'•- I'oisuti . r Illi'-.n.ii
ExX*erii.' - til; mti
• >te I ' r •. . . . • : -.poL
' ' ty-i'onr ■i: ■
-New V
flic MiJtVrcncc.
A woman viii -.it auythii j without
•omplaimng. white a man will begin t->
• ickslide w ...-never :!.* cc goes
•ATong. Bui wl; *:i it conies to the lit of
garment that . sui >uit her. slie has
opinions that can no more lx? held ui
;!eck than you can put mittens on a
landslide.—Ram’s Horn.
They Never Met.
"Is it true.” asked a sympathetic
friend, “that you met with another ac
cident on the street yesterday?"
"No, sir.” said the victim surlily, "it
isn’t. I’m not meeting these accidents
at they're following me up, d’ye
hear —following me up!”—St Joseph
Daily News.
Little Pet Explained.
Mamma (with her best company smile)
-Why do you raise your feet so high,
aiy pet, when yon walk across the floor?
Little Daughter—l is afraid ITI kick
up zat new mg an show the holes wat’s
under it—C rood News.
It is not likely that, save in Russia,
Persia and China, there will again be
•tich dreadful loss of life as has been ex
perienced from the failure of the crops
The railways of the United States pro
vide a living for nearly 3.000.000 per
uis, or nearly one-twentieth of the
.pulation of our country.
Love that is love is not veneered or
grained timber, but is solid oak clear
t.irongh, and is never one bit afraid of
me auger or buzz saw.
In the parrot's beak both mandibles
are movable —a peculiarity unknown in
other species of birds.
▲ Qmw Relic.
Borne yean eince Lieutenant Peary,
who is now somewhere in the frozen
north, had charge of certain govern
ment works at Key West. While the
work was in progress he noticed on the
bottom of the harbor, near where a
breakwater was bc.ng built, something
which shone through the water. He in
quired what it was, but he was able to
get no response more satisfactory than
the assurance that it had always been
there. The boatmen of the neighbor
hood had seen it shining there in theix
childhood, and had in turn been assured
by their fathers that it had been there
all their time.
Although the inhabitants of that sub
tropical clime might be content to live
and die with an unsolved mystery at
their very doors, it will easily be under
stood that the temper of Lieutenant
Peary was different. He sent divex
down to investigate and after much dif
ficulty succeeded in bringing to light a
small copper cannon of the Fifteenth cen
tury. He was able to satisfy all the
claims of the government to the piece
for the price of old copper and the inter
esting relic became his own.—Boston
Courier.
A Gallant Kentuckian.
When the name of Mrs. Mary Brown
Day was before the Kentucky legisla
ture the other day for election as state
librarian Senator Mulligan made this
fervid and chivalrous plea in the lady’s
behalf:
“The storied stream that surges near
us, floating on its bosom a full, round
century of history, poetry, tradition, was
broader, deeper, clearer than now; these
old hills that tower above ns were
greener, loftier, yet easier climbed; this
old pile was statelier, majestic; men
were braver, youth more heroic, lasses
were fairer, may I be pardoned for at
least believing? and amid that troop
ing throng of maidens, more beautiful
than the nymphs of Thessalian groves,
purer than the virgins who fed the sa
cred flames on Ephesian altars, brighter
in glance and smile than the beam of
Venus, happy as the wild birds that
twittered around them, the echo of these
hills repeating, but adding no sweetness
to their laughter, the most winsome and
beloved, gentlest, bonniest, best, was
she whom we so love to remember as
Mary Brown Russell.”
She was elected. —New York Post.
Sharp New Yorkers.
Your New Yorker is a witty individ
ual. His sense of humor is as broad and
rollicking as his conversation is keen
and crisp. He may be a small boy in
frayed knickerbockers crying “wuxtra”
on the street; a fakir on Broadway sell
ing patent collar buttons or a broker on
’change—the same Attic salt and laconic
brevity flavor his remarks, tempered
with a sense of humor that rotes his
sharpest thrust of half its sting.
“Here, young man,” said Russell Sago
one day, as he held out a nickel to a
fakir who had dropped his box of tin
watches on the stone coping of the Trin
ity churchyard fence and dodged, at the
risk of life and limb, after the old man's
hat, which had blown half way across
the street. The fakir knew the multi
millionaire, but had evidently not reck
oned on the thrift which helped win the
millions.
“Thank ye, Mister Sage.” he said, as
the size of the reward dawned upon him.
“Wait a mixmit an I’ll give you yer
change."
Deacon Sage hurri*-J away and the by
standers laughed.—New York Recorder
Onions and Garlic lor Luncheon.
Neither the German nor the Irishman
is averse to onions mingled with his
food. The Italian eats the onion like an
apple. A chunk of bread and two onions
is luncheon enough for an Italian ditch
digger fir pil driver. All of these de
mand th-.-ir full midday hour, and if
l -thing : otter offers curl up with their
kea cn a stone r pil j i 1 irds 1
1 ■ 1 1H- - - ;?
• • *• * ! ,
. , hi ’. r .: ,
L iy . nti us lv; Wit I
!:.*•>• e<unein contact with < th r net
alit: o. and partic’.n.irly in th • fact . • ;
w! ■ they work with- irlthere i> .
lot; 1 outcry against their garlic.—New
York Evening Sun.
Nurl.*limiut by liatliing.
“It is we'l known that the skin is a
great absorbent, and nutrition even can
be conveyed through its agency,” said a
trained nurse. “A physician once or
dered a beef tea bath for a child that 1
was nursing, who was apparently dying
of some exhaustive bowel trouble, and
with admirable effect. And 1 myself
have found that rubbing delicate per
sons with warm olive oil is an excellent
tonic. If I had the charge of a puny,
sickly baby I should feel inclined to
give it oil baths instead of water baths,
and try the effect. The oil is quite as
cleansing, and it stands to reason that
such tiny beings, particularly if they
are badly nourished, should uot have
the natural oil of the body continually
washed away.”—New York Tribune.
Kata in an Engllnh School.
An infant school at lias lieen
closed on account of the number of rats
which infest it. The vermin bad In-come
so bold that they scampered al*out in the
most impudent fashion while the chil
dren were engaged u]H_>n their lessons,
and there was uo remedy but granting a
holiday and in the- meantime oxb-rini
natiug the plague.—London Tit-Cire.
A New Cure.
Will—Hello! 1 thought you wore
down with la grippe.
Fred — l was. but a burglar cur.nl mo.
Will— Explain.
Fred —The fellow was in my house !
night; 1 collared him and held on until
i lost my grip.—Pittsburg Bulletin.
Ur Morell MMkuti tm Barite.
Sir Morell Mackenzie's death recalled
the placidity of that eminent surgeon
amid the series of extraordinary insults
and antagonistic demonstrations in Ber
lin during the illness of the late Kaiser
Frederick. I have seen the people in
Berlin throw mud at the carriage of the
English doctor, who was popularly sup
posed to be murdering the German kaiser,
and he was subjected to insults without
number whenever he appeared in the
crowded streets of the German capital.
The bitterness of the emperor’s physi
cians was so keen that it transcended all
bounds of medical etiquette, and Sir
Morell's life at Charlottenburg at one
time was only saved from continued and
unbearable insults by the protection of
the kaiser's English wife.
The Empress Frederick was a firm be
iever in her countryman's skill, and she
prevailed in the end. After the mist of
the medical battle had cleared away it
was found that the skill of Sir Morell
Mackenzie had been justified, and lau
rels were piled high upon his brow. He
was a typical surgeon in manner, for
nothing ever had the slightest effect
upon his deep seated and natural tran
quillity of manner.—Blakely Hall in
Brooklyn Eagle.
Extraordinary Capture of a Hawk.
On one of the cold mornings during
the cold spell a large hawk pounced upon
one of Benjamin Haller’s tame ducks
that at the time were in a pool of fresh,
unfrozen water in the canal bed a short
distance beyond the “third lock” at Mace
donia. The hawk fastened its claws
around the neck of the fowl close to its
body, but the duck was in deep water,
and true to its nature it ducked and drew
the hawk with it under the water.
Again the duck dove, which was too
much for his hawkship. The hawk re
leased its hold on the duck and with diffi
culty flopped its way to the shore. The
weather was cold and froze the feathers
of the hawk together so that it could not
fly. William Haller was a witness of
the capture and escape game between
the hawk and duck, and when it was all
over he took a hand at the game by cap
turing the hawk. The bird measured
3 feet 6 inches from the tip of one wing
to the tip of the other wing.—Juniata
Valley Sentinel.
LEWov vi,i\ip.
A Pleaunnt Lemon Brink,
For biliousness and constipation, take
Lemon Elixir.
For indigestion and foul stomach take
Lemon Elixir.
For sick and nervous headaches, take
Lemon Elixir.
For sleeplessness and nervousness, take
Lemon Elixir.
For loss of appetite and debility, take
Lemon Elixir.
For fevers, chills and Malaria, take Lem
on Elixir.
Dr. Mozley’s Lemon Elixir will not fail
you in any of the above named diseases,
all of which arise from a torpid or diseased
liver, stomach, kidneys or bowels.
Prepared only by Dr. 11. Mozley, At- j
lanta, Ga.,
50c. and SI.OO per bottle, at druggists.
Lemon Hot Drops.
Cures all Coughs, Colds, Horseness, Sore-1
Throat, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Hemor
rhage and all throat and lung diseases.
An elegant ami reliable preparation.
25 cents at druggists. Prepared only by i
Dr. H. Mozley, Atlanta, Ga.
April 1 6m
Pay for Writing Love Letters.
An old lawsuit is again occupying the
attention of our court, and Judge Harney
is at a los- how to Yule on the points of
the case, !x.-cause he is unable to find
any similar case on record. The case
has been m < r.r court several times, and
it was supposed the matter had l>eeu
dropped. Years ago Mrs. Nancy Mar
tin. who then live i near Linden, secured
tiie servi oi Mis.- Franklin L*-- t. who
lived wi h her. to write !• *ve h-t.- rs lor
”• a. hi m*t ; 1 a t - t-. rf •rm
i * ;,u. . \ . „ - ’ .?• • ♦ ‘
■ ic . ;u; t : it
b-- .11. ..it 1> to ;et aside the Set
ti me:.: f * estate : or hr t > get the
UO. -HI •. t.e w s.vtt L'rawfords
villo Cor. In !:.: .a, • -iis Journal.
.Matrimonial Complications.
The particulars of a very strange wed
ding have just become public. Night
before hist Mrs. Li/.a Stanley, a wealthy
widow living east of Liberty, was mar- *
ried to Mr. J ames Esherman. Mrs.
Stanley is over forty-five years of age
and Esherman is only tweutv-one. Mrs. i
Stanley was left a widow two years ago. j
when her husband. Lewis Stanley, died, j
leaving his wife and five children in j
very comfortable circumstances. He j
left a good DrJ acre farm and over $3.000 !
in cash ileceutly Charles Stanley, of |
Liberty, who is a son of Mrs. Eshemian. I
was m-irned to a sister of his new step-;
father. fisherman is not only his step- 1
father, but Ins brother-in-law, and his •
wife’s brother aud father-in-law.—lu- j
dianapons Sentinel
Milton, Fla.
This is to certify that I have l>een Afflicted
with Scrofnia, or Blood Poison, lor h
number o! years The physicians oi M< bl'.e
and tin.- city said nothing could he done lor
me. I also took a large qu *mity oi ,
but found no relief in anyiiir-g 1 'o.-k.
My limbs wt re a ma.-s o? ulcers, aud when I
whs i-eni to a pnysician in Mobile my eu
tire body was amiv oi soo s. 1 had given
up all hop*, :n i as a i i*.i resort tried P P.
P (Piickiy Ac. i, Pu.’; Ki t \ nr*u Potassium!, i
!, nd afur Uatng 1> nr l>ot U-- tsmu’.l size) the ;
su es have entirely u:-;q p-ared, and n.v \
central health whs never belter than at the ;
pies* in lime, and people that know me j
thii k it a wonderin' cure
Respectful!. ELIZA TODP. 1
9 9 •
• the secret ®
Aofnernitliic hMlth to dtooomM into
! TUTTS •
•Tiny Liver Pills*
M In liver a flections, tick headache, dys- M
w pepeia, flatulence, heartburn, bilious w
• colic, eruptions of the skin, and all A
troubles ox the bowels, their ouratlve
effects are marvelous. They are a cor*
*rectlve as well as a gentle cathartic.
Very small and easy to take. Price, M
sc. Office, 3to 41 Park Place, N.Yi
MMMMM
The Bluebird.
You may expect the bluebird an)
time after the sun passes the wiutei
solstice. In his musical engagement?
it is not a matter of dates, but oppor
tunity. It is never a matter of importu
nity. Who ever heard a bluebird’s sou§
out of season? It may be cold anc
snowy tomorrow, but his wings trembl<
in the nervous ecstacy of the present
and he sings of the bit of spring thai
now is. When the storm comes then h<
is silent. He may flee before its breath
or, if it is late in the season, he will folc
his wing, unstring his lute and tmcom
plainingly wait till the venial sun anc
wind shall come again. But let tht
merest slit of sunlight gash the cloud
and he warbles forth his greetings. Hi
has been accused of trying to force tht
season. But it is not that He is suet
a lover of the very promises of nature
that he is as happy in hope as fruition.
I found a group shivering against t
March snowstonn, late, as the sun wu
sinking, and stopped to watch them
pitying their distress. Suddenly then
was some commotion, which I attribute!,
to my presence and scrutiny—a low con
versational chatter, a quivering oi
wings, a few flitting changes of position
and then a gurgle of spring melod)
among the snowdrops. Astonished, J
turned to where the sun should be, and
there on the horizon’s rim its half disk
was burning like a beacon. Two min
ntes later it was out of sight, the ail
was gloomy, the snow fell on, but tin
morrow was a bluebird day indeed.—St.
Louis Globe-Democrat.
They Trusted in the Lord.
The two gangs of negroes from the
southwest who have been stranded in
this city within the past few days have
displayed traits that are pleasing, and
that have stirred up popular sjunpathy
for them. Though they found, when
they got here, that they could not get tc
Liberia, in Africa, by a ferryboat or a
horse car for ten cents; though they
aud their pickaninnies were hungry,
homeless and helpless in a strange city,
though they did not know what to do oi
where to look for anything, it is inter
esting to learn that they did not whine
or howl, or threaten to raise a rumpus,
or to play havoc with most things, ot
even to let l<x>se the dogs of war.
They stood out near the dock in the
cold patiently; they held dialogue about
the unknown; they were overjoyed when
a policeman gave them advice; they
blessed the good Lord when they got
shinbone oup for nothing; they grew
merry and sang the old melodies of the
plantation when they were offered a free
place to sleep in, and they laughed,
prayed, grew humorous and exhorted
each other because things were going
quite tolerable in a country for which
they started out on their way to the
happy land of Liberia.
All of which is somewhat refreshing
as things go in this world.—New York
Sun.
A Peculiar Commission.
One of our Springfield artists, whose
reputation for lifelike portraits is estab
lished, had an old lady walk into Lis
studio the other morning with a queer
commissi- :i. She was a quaint, odd
figure, clad in an <>ld style bombazine
wit: .; :• \v ,-ir.. rgiing trimmings * f rusty
c:. ..: e evidently was not familiar
v.■ 1:.. . •• y' , . -ir,“
* ' y 1 h: .
i . like him :m..t mm, but they .- .
ue.-s an i . i: <1 suit. .
lLias.-, i Homestead.
For years tb*’’editor of the B iriugion
Junction, (M 0.,) Post, has been subject to
cramp colic or tits of indigestion, which
prostrated him for several hours and un
fitted him for business for two or three
days. For the past year he has been using
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cho’era and Diarrhoea
Remedy whenever o<*casion required, and
it has invariably given him prompt relief.
25 and 50 cent bottits for sale by M. Lively,
and ugt ist
Mr. A. K. Hawkes. —Dear Sir : I have
tlinoughly tested the glasses you ad
justed to my eyes some time asto, and
find them to be unsurpassed in clearness
aud brilliancy. In fact, they are tliebist
glasses I have ever used.
W. D. Bloxiiam,
Ex-Governor of Florida.
Ail ev*> fitted and the fit guaranteed :
the Drug Store 11 M. LIVELY,
Tallahassee, Florida.
De Win**. Saisq u La cleanses the blood
increases the q>: vine and tones up the sy
tem. I’ benefit ted many people who
have jutl'cied from No and disorders. It will
help you. Sold by M. Lively.
=1892.^^1
NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSOIRBE I
FOR
THE NEW YORK WEEKLY HE|J
The Best and Cheapest Family Journal in the United State*
SI.OO A YEAR BIJ
With the most perfect news-gathering machinery, and with com*
in every section of the habitable globe, the weekly uep.ald i* I
lay before its readers the latest intelligence and most ente!tailp >^,, I
from every country in the world. DUI S I
The reputation for freedom and independence which it has acquired j. j
the many years of its prosperous career will be maintained
During the Year 1893.
SPECIAL FEATURES FOR THE x YEAS
ORIGINAL ARTICLES ON PRACTICAL FARMING AND GARDENING.
PROGRESS IN SCIENCE. * * * WOMan’
SERIALS AND LIGHT STORIES BY THE BEST OF AUTHORS. 8
LITERATURE AND ART. * * * WIT AND laJ
NEWS FOR VETERANS, INFORMATION ON ALL StJBJEfI
The stamp of Purity and Truth in Ideas, stories and News will be *pi&
maintained. Send all subscriptions to , <od coo- t
JAMES GORDON Bf ' '
'° rk WEEKLY ERAL., tl|otb(rowt<
e of the “Henin,
Ql HI) A Vi;\ 1) DO!iOT 1-ail TO HUBS,, d in cotton gig,
qiUU ii 1 eAU, New York We on about time
GODEY’S FOR'
ommand.
YOU NEED A MAGAZINE IN YOUR FAMILY,’
GIVES THE BEST SATISFACTION FOR T m
GODEY**S will save you in Dress Hints
ten times the cost in one year.
GODEY’S will give you a better idea
of how to dress and what materials to use
than any similar publication.
GODEY’S will give you better reading
than most of the high class (so-called)
magazines.
GODEY’S will give you a choice of 12
cut Pater Patterns during the year, alone
worth double the subscription price.
GODY’S will give the best illustrated
P*ded via a
With the January Number we will Begin twvill any^gr
THE DISCIPLINE OF PAIN,
By Edgar Fawcett.
A story of New York life, written in
his best vein and manner. His national
reputation is at any time a guarantee of
an interesting novelette.
MARJORIE LEE,
By Margaret Spencer,
Whose bright anl attractive letters from
For the Latter Months we will Have a Number of Serial and
Short Stories.
THE LEGEND OF THE LANTERN,
By Mr?. Olivia Lovell Wilson.
This charming story will run through
several numbers, and will be illustrated
*ith original photogravures by Will
Philip Hooper.
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MARY,
By Aca Marie Peck.
To those who have read “The Fejean
Mystery,” by this author, we teed say
nothing, except iliat it is thought to be
better (if possible) than any of her pre
vious efforts.
ADVICE FROM EVERYWHERE.
By Olivia Ph:
Embracing such subjects “The Siek
Room." 'Tl*one Nm-orv." < hiMmn's
Nnisery.'* "Amu.-cme m the
% ‘y ; ir v . \
* ■ , ; *-i u
" < *■( -L>;B V -- L.A r * HO >K
Box :I 11. -•. pur
* ~li u : U.. ?v;i ii - o i>. 1 1 iitY - >l i* I'..- a: pi \,, I’ric
\ ci. i ! :,• >f’i’ to t!.e > .!! ’
Weekly Floridian, one year, s2°
Lural New Yorker, to January 1, 1893, * * 2.0®
73
$3.25 the Two in Club for Only $3.25.
KIR A L NEW YORKER has done more lor farmers thanni®*
1 •. 1L sof all the laud-grant, colleges and experiment station*"
New York Tribune.
SUED for $150,000!
For Defending Farmers Against Humbugs.
Will You Help Beat Them?
THE RURAL NEW YORKER
Is hch'gr Sued far #130,000 for Protecting Fanners.
THE RURAL NEW YORKER has done more to promote the tr#
interest of agriculture than all the Experiment Stations p ul
gether.—New York Times.
Tiie Rird New Yorker, from Receipt of Order to Jan. 1
THE WEEKLY FLORIDIAN,
IN CLUB FOR 83.25 ; REGULAR PRICE SEPARATE, $4-00.
S tuple topies set t on application to The Rural New Yol&
New Yotk. Address all orders for club subscriptions to
The Weekly Floridian, Tallahassee. Fl*
fashions, both in
lected from the Pa.
models. • HOTEL
GODEY’S will contiivgt*.,
Corner, which has been __
ceived and enjoyed by ou* kiA.
GODEY’S will give yo JJJg
of everything within itv s
ing as it does Literati* J t
Engravings, Dress f
Etiquette, etc., etc imdetoiS
Washington hr "“"gfiRS
favor from o* jli t Wot ad
located in tl through tr
thoress herr California aadnSS
real incidenW e ed
Lee a wan fL o- ■, *
ers, who unn y Sld *-SJ.
w fUsoL. ot enn&i
worked foP’fhem tiVtflif
many beauties and real interest v<m
its meshes.
lus.’’ “A Minister's Outing,” “ATi
Well Spent,” etc., etc.
AUGUSTA SALISBURY PRESCOTT, 1
well known from her writing for thepil
| New York papers, the World, Advertscl
etc., continues to write for us anddsnjjl
the year will furnish a series of artk|
that will be well worth the price of il
magazine, entitled "New Year Re|
tions,” “An Aft-moon Tea.’’ Jenny*
Going to be Married, “Wtdding P
ents.” etc.
BELLE C. GREENE,
wh- >e numerous sketches. The Hafkk
Family, have made her famous in ®
way. will o-ive us some new feans
which two are will be a*
mirth-pi k g than her prevkßl l
. -.1 e£
- ■. circa
' • pici ]

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