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mtntng mnfn 3 c. per Copy j $6 per Year. TBM CAKRIHOTOM PVBUtniN o oo THE OJjDEST DAIIiY NEWSPAPKB Off THE STATE. OFFICE dOO'STATE STREET. VOL.flLYII. n;w haven, conn.,- Tuesday morning, November 12, 1889. No. 270 mm How .1 Slelsi 8 ADVERTISERS. No. 1 Advertiser. One case Ladies' Camel's Hair Vests and Pants, in all sizes, at 44c each, 75c quality. . No. 9 Advertiser. I. & R, Morley's Sanitary Fast Black Ladies1 Hose, with high spliced heel, at 39c pair ; would Ibe'good value at 46c. No. 3 Advertiser. A line of All Wool Twilled Flannels in greys, browns, olive, etc., at, a7c per yard ; every yard worth ntfe. No. 4 Advertiser. 25 pairs (all we can get) White Blankets, 12-4 size and very heavy, at $3.19 a pair; usual price $4.00. No. ff Advertiser. Yard wide Indigo Blue Print ed Cambrics, pretty figures and fast colors, at 6c a yard. No. b Advertiser. 550 jrards Plaid and Stripe Dress Goods at 35c per yard ; 50c is the lowest price ever quoted on these goods. No. 7 Advertiser. 10 pieces Heavy Granite Stripes and Mixtures at 19c per yard; the wholesale price of these goods is 25c. - No. 8 Advertiser. 32 all wool choicest styles "Pattern Dresses at $8.98 per dress ; these are' all new goods and have been marked down from $13.50 and $15. All buy ers of dress goods should exam ine these robes at once. "The above 8 lots are for our retail trade only." BARGAIN DAY, rridav, Nov. 15, 1889. HOWE & STJETSON, Insurance Building, 886-888 Chapel Street, New Haven. Conn. EVERY PERSON Should Save for a Rainy Whatever They Can. . You mb do io by leading ng your U Uteri, Over coats and Bulla toba Cleaned or Dyed. Ladles, by observing a bore rale, ean greatly in oreaaa iba rainy day fund. Dram, Wraps, Shawls and Qarmeota of all kinds dyad or cleaned. W. olaan and steam quantities of Plushes and Velvets which give general satisfaction. Day V- l y Weolean Blankets. Lace Curtains, Window Shades and We take up, clean and relay Carpets. Our Laundry work Is of tbe highest grade. The Forsyth Dyeing and Laundrying Oo. 07VICX3 t Not. 979 and 645 Cliapel Street. works : State, Lawrence and Mechanic sta. . Telephone. J&i&zzllxuztms. THE NEW LAMP, CALLED THE DAYLIGHT, Whioh wa are agents for. Less neat, More lMgtH, and Lest Oil tban the Rochester, And Costs Less. Deoorated Dinner Bet (or ou 110 and 118 for. t Bats. 10 niaoes. for S3.S0: three Colors, brown, blue, pink. Handsome Game Seta In 14 pleoea, handsome Fish Sets in IS pieces, of the beet French make, at bargains. Egg Sets, Salad Bowls, in fact, a large Una of Fancy Qesda. Do not forget the Lamp, Piano Lamps aa well. ROBINSON'S, 00 Chureli street, near Chapel. We will tell you a $7 50, whldh others ask you flu and (12 for. Deoorated Toilet Bets, 10 pleoi Lumber at Rock Boitom Prices. rTUMBER Boards and Flank, Georgia and C&ro Jl. Una Pine, Michigan White Pine, 8pruce and fiamlook. Pine and Cypress Shingles. Cypress Boards and Plank, Spruce Frames and Lath. pt H. W. STOW, 1171 Chapel street. Sail Bin J FOR MEN AND BOYS. WELLS & GUNDE, JEWELERS, No. 788 Ohapol Street. X LARGH LINE SOLID 8ILTER ARC 8ILTEH PLATED WARE. Repairing of WATCHES AND JEWELRY A .PF.ritAI.TT. R. & J. M. BLAIR, 67, 59, and 61 Orange St. FURNITURE DEALERS AND UNDERTAKERS. Hare the finest Painted Bedroom Suits la the city. new rarior suita, w emu dwiwhi duiw. The beat Spring Bed for the money. Bollnt. Rattan. Cane and Rush Beat Chain, ia great .arlaty, aa low aa caa be bought. UNDERTAKING nnmtlf attended to. night or dar. with care. dies preserved without lea In the best manner. so sola agents f Disinfecting fluid. A new lot of Folding Chain and Stools to Rent narrlas or funerals, anl fbwf Imm nrm Also sola agents tor naauourn s vwuuniioi u Fall Line. Banging In Price from $12.00 to $135,00, INCLUDING THE SWIFT And the New 9100 Steel Frame BOSTON. Call and see them at BUSHNELL'S Hardware and Tool Store. NERVOUS DEBILITY. Exhausted Nervong Vitality, Despondency and Mental Depression Where formerly such persons could endure man .mecuti.e hours ef close application pf the mind, FUR OAPES. Wa have s good variety, ia all the leading kinds of inr, at moderate prioea. SEALSKIN SACQUES. All eizea and lencttha on hand, aa well aa made to oiaer. FRIEND E. BROOKS. T05 Chapel Street. Bf say persona who formerly aappeeed lh.nf.We4 possessed ef pewerfal physique and strong and steady nerras wonder at their feeling of exhaus tion, lassitude aad lack of inellnatioa for physical and mental exertion. They hare a sense of nerv ousness, languor and dullness. This ia often espe cially netloMble in the morning. battered Ner.ee Bxaansted ThA niirht'a sleso. which should refresh the sys tem and rertore strength and vigor te the nerves and muscles, often leaves them In the morning more tired aad exhausted than on retiring. The haul fli hadlv. their limbs tire easily, their arms seem nerveless, and thsy have a general sense of weakness, weariness ana ueoiuiy. th.y now find that the thoughts wander and there Is inability te fix the mind for any length of time open one subject : with this there is an extremely nervous and irritable condition, a dull, cloudy sen sation, of ten accompanied by . l ire Brain and Debilitated Body, Disagreeable feelingsJn the head and eyes. Grad ually the nervous feelings and sensations Increase until the persons lose their zest and enjoyment of There la often a bad taste in the mouth in the morning, the vision becomes dim, the memory is impaired, and there is f request dizziness. Dklivxbzd bt Cabbikbci nv thw Orrv. 15 OraTB a Week, 50 Gents a Month, $3.00 fob Six Mouths, $6.00 a Year. Tecs Sake Trans by Mail. - .... THE OAEHINQTON PUBLISHING CO. All letters and Inquiries In regard to subscriptions or matters of business should be addresaed to XAmas JOCKNAl, AND COCBIER, New BarsBi conn. BURGESS AND BURGESS, 751 Chapel Street, Importers and Manufacturers of FINE FURS, including all of the Leading styles of BEAU 8ACQUE8, SHOULDBB CAPES In SEAL, MINE, MONKEY, PEBSIAHJCH, ASTBAGHAN, etc., at lowest pneea. All Kinds of For Work a Specialty. ft LOOM AND DEPEE88I0N , OF MIND. r thn. affected nAn iiAanandent. and suffer from gloom and 1 de pression of tnemmu. i haMima so weak ened after a time that the least excitement or shock will flush the face or bring on a tremor or trembling, often attended by more or less palpitation of the heart, . ' THE GREAT REMEDY. Sr. Qraene's Nervura la a aura and positive cure. Under the use of this won derful restorative the weak and exhausted feel ings give place to strength l vigor, tne unua m- . oomaa clear, the nerves strong and steady, the gloom and depression are lirted rrom tne mind, and perfect and permanent health is restored. READ ABOUT ITS WONDERFUL POWERS. 'For veers I suffered from nervous debility and its results. Dr. Greene's Nervura was suggested to me. After taking his medicine but a short time I began to feel the beneficial Influence. I am now cured, my nerves being much stronger. 1J. EAlMJlUtl, 8,535 Falrmount avenue. Philadelphia, Pa. A SURE AND POSITIVE MEANS OF CURE. A Despondent Sufferer from Nervous Debility. IMPAIRED MEMORY, DIM VISION. The patient having these symptoms, or a por tion of them, is suffering from nervous debility, caused by exhaustsd ner voas vitality from over work, excesses and abuses which mint iaevitably gradually break down the nervous and physical system,- unless a proper strengthening and invigo rating remedy is used. A BOON TO THE NERVOUS. Dr. Oreene'a Nervura, the great brain and nerve lnvigerant, is the most valuable medical discov ery cf tbe century, it is beyond all question, the Noueel Wa cannot accent anonvmous or return releeted mununicatlons. Ia all oases the name of the writer will be required, not tor publication, bnt as a goarantee of good faith. Situations, Wants, Bents and other small adver tisements, On Cent a Word eaoh Insertion. Display advertisements One square (one Inch) one insertion, S1.20: eaoh subseuuent insertion 48 cants; one week S8.20; onemonth, (10.00. Obituary notices. In prose or verse, 16 cents peg Itne. Notices of Births, Marriages, Deaths and fu nerals, 26 eta. each. Local Notices 20 ets. per line. Advertisements on second page one price and a bait. Yearly advertisers are limited to their own Imma diate cosiness, all matter to be unobjectionable) and their contracts do not include Wants, Te Let Boeelal rates furnished onanclloatlon foroontractn covering considerable length of time, or a large space. x carry aovercisemeniv at roe rouowing rates: One sonare. one roar. $40: two squares, one rear 870: three squares, one year, tlOO. drug-;etable ' Dr. Omiu'i Nervura Is sold by all gists. Price (1 per bottle. It is purely vegetable and harmless, containing nothing whatever inju rious. Droggista may urge you 'to buy something else, but be sure and get Dr. Ureene's Nervura if you wish to be certain ef being cured. most wonderful tonic invigorator and restorer of nervous and physical stiength and vitality in exist ence. It is a purely vegetable and harmless remedy and can be used by all with absolute assurance of cure. THE WEEKLY JOURNAL IS PDBUSHXC Svm Tbubsdat MoBBtina, Single Copies 6 cent IS. 06 a year Btrlctlyin advanoe - 1.50 a yea MOST STRENGTHENING INVIGORATING. AND It is an absolute specific for nervous debility, and all who have weakened nerves and exhausted vi tality can regain their strength by its use; restores lost energy and invigorates the weakened vital forces in old and young. No one need despair of a cure. Don't fail to use this remedy, and an abso lute certain cure will result. BY ALL MEANS USE DR. GREENE'S NERVURA. NOT SUBSIDIZED. In regard to the statement of Mr. Clerkin made to the investigating committee wherein it is implied that money was paid to the Journal and Coubibb for opposing the con solidatioa of the town and city, we will say, once for all, that the implication is unquali fiedly false. The JotrBNAL and Coubibb never solicited or accepted a penny, directly or indirectly, from the town, or anybody else, for opposing the consolidation scheme. Dr. Qreene. the weH known lecturer and eminent specialist in the cure of nervous diseases, is the diwoverer of this great remedy, and can be consulted free by all who use this medicine. Office, S5 West 14th street. New Tork. - The New Haven Window Shade Company, 70 Orange Street FALL STYLES EVENING DRESSES. If yon contemplate the purchase of an Evening Dress this Fall, . Just bear in mind that we are neaaqnartera xor Finest Line ot Evening Silks and Cashmeres ' TO BE FOUND IN NEW HAVEN. HANDSOME NEW LINE OF FANCY SILK BROCADES. To combine with plain goods, all colors to match. TIISEL AM PAN CT STRIPED GAUZES. Fanov Cashmeres for evening wear in all the light and soft shades. These make up very handsomely with Silk or Plain Cashmere in combination. Special Room for Display of Goods by Electric Light. IN Carpets, Lace Curtains, Draperies, AUGUSTUS C. WILCOX. 787 AZtTD 771 O CURTIS WILCOX. fgatscjeXlatieotts. TO., BTOL 68 to 12 ORANGE STREET. NEW HAVEN WI10WSHADE COMPANY WILLIAM A. WRIGHT, Attorney and Coanselor-at-Law, IRS Church t..cor. Court ot. so 713 CHAPEL STREET. EXTRA FINE CASTILE SOAP. Baron D'llullle D'Ollve Brand. fl.OO PER DOZEN BARS. HEWITT'S DRUG- STOKE (FORMERLY WHITTLESEY'S,) 744 CHAPEL. STREET. 015 BLOCKS OF FIVE. "BLAINE IN." "HARRISON OUT." New York's Latest Craze. CAN YOU DO lit PriOO, lO OJDKTTO. rOB BALK ONLY BY V. J. ATWATER 4 GO, Salted Almonds. Finest Jordan Almonds, salted. Wa shall hav them regularly through the season. Edw. 13. Hall de Son, ell 770 Chapel street. "gdttcatiouaX. A CHOICE SELECTIOI or THE I Finest and Most Beautiful Presents OArT B BEEN AT VIZ: I Watches, Clock, Jewelry, sil verware, speciaeiea, etc., At RemarksblXow Figures. ! J. H. G. DUR ANT, j IVo. 4Q Church Street. XOTICE. rpiHE assistant ngUirarB or the several voting; 1 districts In the town or Kew naven will De lu . FOR THE PARLOR. Wilton VelvslBofly Brnssels AND TAPESTRY CARPETS. ONE HUNDRED THE NEW YORK SCHOOL -OF- Shorthand and Typewriting. Alan Mlect biurfiMwe eehaol for TOUDff ladles and gentlemen, boys and girls. The following branches are taught or expsnancea uacners: Shorthand and Typewriting, by atlas Crittenden. Telegraphy, Booskeeplng, Penmanship, 8pelllng, Oram mar, Arithmetic, Heading, etc, by competent teachers. Shorthand thoroughly taught by mail. Gall or end for circulars. Stenographers' and typewriters' sunpllei (or sale. Business positions secured for graduates. School bow open. Pupils may eater at any lime. niaa 8.F.9I. Crittenden, Principal, 87 Church St., New Haven,Conn.,0(Bce, Boom 8. sl7 session on Thursday, the 14th day of November, 1889, from 9 a. m to 5 p. m., for the purpose of re- , eeiving applications of all those who desire to be made voters tbis fall, also to correct the list of electors. EV No name will be placed on the list j 'To Be Made" after a o cioca p. m. ot ssia aay. Place of meeting as follows: ; ward I J ones' cigar store, vs unurcn streot. Wrd a-Om.n'1 loiner shon. 18 Psrk street. Ward a coal office, cor. Congress avenue and Oeorge street. warn s rsaroer snop, kov west water sireet. Ward 5 105 Wooster street. ward a Klenke'a barb.r shoo. 48 St. John st. Ward T Foley's grocery store, cor. Qraod avenue and Bradley street. Ward 8-Koblnson's barber shop. 780 state street. ward v Benham feed store, K7 Broadway. Ward 10-875 Elm street. Ward 11 Store of E. A. Johnaoa It Co., 66 Ferry street. Ward is Barber shop, lis ureno arenas. Ward 1 Office of Diamond Match Co. Ward 14 Hemingway's shoe store, Kaat Orand Different Styles of Parior Suits. Indow Shades and Laco Curtains. HIGH ART Cylinder Parlor Stoves. TJE LATEST AND TIIE BEST. No Smoke, No Gar, No Dust. WE ARE THE SOLE AGENTS. P. J, KELLY & CO., 818-824 Grand Av., 36 Church St. Ward 15 J. XV. BowVb Ktor. Foot Corners. 966-960 on GRAND AVENUE. Hew Haven. Oosia. FLEISCHMANN'S Aft YEAST HAS NO EQUAL. VIIEH YOUR OLD SAWS Jlm not lo use and In bad shape from hard abase, then it tbe time To Hare Them Made as Good as New by Eli Morris, 964 Grand Ave., rot twenty years located la ATWATIR'B BLOCK, Always open evsnlega until S o'clock. Warmers, mechanics, mlllmoa and manufactur es, wko anticipate the usual Fall activity, where by the use of Haws of every description come Into a nraetloal consideration, will And It to their ad vantage to patronise the above place of business, at Ira. GRATEFUL - COMFORTING EPPS'S COCOA. BREAKFAST. Hy a thorowgh knowledge of the naturallawe ' srhtoa geveratBWOverMiijneoK uigeauonanw nurr siea and by aoarefu I application of the fine proper Mae et well selected Cocoa, Mr. Enps has provided yeveak feat tables with a delloately flavored be' ill? br the Judicious use of such articles of d let thwl si eensT i 1 .. . . . k - anoucb to real It every tendency to dlseaae. Hun T i-t Miamaladleaarelloatlngaroundua readr Zlauaek wherever ther Is a weak point. We may SrvtlSed with para blood and properly nourished "Civil Service Gaaetta. . . aTrT i- KAiiin watae at milk. Hold rooara. labeled thue: Homes path ia Chealsu, ade simply with boiling r la half pound Una by tit a sit a EPra at CO.J Homa Made elmnl sly la half p B. O. RUSSELL, Architect, f ft CaMvl Itraat, VpHM. E. P. AllVINE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, EOOM3 9, 11, 18, BUSINESS UNIVERSITY anrMkTtn HYSTEM. No classes. Each pupil n tauaht aenarately. More progress la made by this method in three months than by the old routine in a year. Day and Evening Sessions. THEORY DEPARTMENT. Mathematics. Grammar. Spelling, Penmanship, Bookkeeping, aiecnanicai Drawing ana tuocuuon. PRACTICAL DEPARTMENT. Fully equipped with best facilities for Banking, Shipping, Correspondence, Wholesale and Retail Bustaess. Notes, Drafts, Checks, Bills of Exchange mnA all tnrmm nt Mercantile Paner negotiated. There are Fostofflce, Emporium, Bulletin of the Produce and uxenange mariecs: everytning iu helo the learner. BHOBTOAKT) AND TTPEWRTTINO DEPARTMT. Beet typewriting machines and efficient corps of Instructors. No charge for situations procured. TeijOTanhinflr denartment all comolete. Penman- shin department beat in the country. BOO scholars last year, half of whom were ladles. Life scholar ship SJ6. Success guaranteed. can or sena cor circular, v isicurs wgkuum flee open evenings. el Hogarth Academy, Chapel, cor. Church St. n6t WM O'KEKFR. ED. F. MBRRIL.T.. Town Registrars. J. B. PLATT. a P. THOMPSON. PLATT & THOMPSON, Interior Decoration, Painting and Frescoing. OO and 03 Orange Street. NEW HAVEN, CONN. JUST RECEIVED, A FULL LINE ENAMEL PAINTS. THOMPSON A BELDEN, 396 AND 398 STATE STREET. Oowler Building. PEARL'S White Glycerine BeantlflesthoComnlexion; Purifies, Whit ens and Softens the Skin, eradicating all i.n perfections such as Freckles, Moth Patches, Blackheads, Pimples, etc., without in jury, Cures Bunburn, Chapped and Chafed Skin, instantly. Bold at Druggists' Peiob, 60 Cbnth. THE. FAUMTLEROY SCHOOL KINDERQARTEN AND PRIMARY. 1V fISS LEIQHTON will open a Kindergarten and 1VI Primary School In th. vestry of the Church of the Hessian, Orange street, near Elm, Wednes day, September 85. For circulars or other Infor mation call upon or address mar inn w vnvnrrm ninn Liriiuniun. 9 tf 1M Qrore street. New Hareo, Qonn. CONSERVATOBY 83 Church OF MUSIC, Street. MR. AHD MR8. E. A. PARSONS PIANO MR, B. M. BatlTH VOICE oiticb or Tate Oonneetleat Kntertalnment Bu reau. . st em INSTRUCTION ON THE PIANO And Church Organ. W 111, W JU.UUJ.UA y ORGANIST at the First Baptist church, New Raven, late Dur.ll at tbe CONSERVATORY. LTEPZIS, GERMAN Y, and of Dr. Bridge, organist at erMtminscr Aon; tlon on th Piano and arm IV nt srastminsUr Abbey, Lc.ndon, will give instruo ia unurcn urgan rrom sepp. 11 IIS MOWK8TBBCT. IF YOU CAN SPARE A MOMENT DROP IN, And satisfy yourself, that the BEST ASSORTMENT OF TOILET SUNDRIES and the Lowest Prices are to be found at u4CHiaHuulCiNtents Hair, Cloth, Tooth. Nail. Flesh and Bath N. B. -Everrthlnar gold at moderate prices. The ilMtlen of soma miserble article and Diittirji low price on it and charging fancy prices for every- iiae we leave vo oiaors. Beware ofihe Q reeks when they bear gifts. REQUIRES NO COOKING. Double Strength, Ask Your Grocer For It. ALLISON BROS., Majiufacturere, MIDULKTOWN. COSH. aul8 ly nrm 4k Stte journal atua &auvi&y:. The Oldest Dally Paver JPnb- Ilsbed In Connecticut. ' 8INCI.K COPIES THREE CENTS. freight depot and storage warehonses at La Chapelle. About nine years ago this compa ny found that It was more economical to op erate the windlasses for raising goods from story to story oy means of hydraulic engines than by horses, and later on they substituted hydraulic engines also for hauling the cars and turning them on the turntables. The maintenance of bydraulio engines requires considerable attention, and hence, when the electric transmission of power became an ac complished f aot, steps were soon taken to ap ply electricity for tbis purpose. The economy of time and motive power efieoted by this application is remarkable. During 4 period of eleven hours' work the windlass most used in the large depot at La Chapelle hardly works more than one hour and forty minutes or two hours, at the maximum, bo that it is in use only sixteen per cent, of the whole time. Tuesday, November 12, 1SS9. HOW IOWA WENT ASTRAY. The Chicogo Tribune makes an interesting explanation of how Iowa was thrown away in the last eleotion. It says that when the present prohibitory law was adopted five years ago the Republicans lost heavily in the river counties, and the disaffection has in creased, as the consequences of paper prohi bition and practical free whisky have been made plain. The enforcement of prohibi tion proved impossible in communities where the majority opposed it. Even when the law was arranged to deny trial by jury in liquor cbssb it remained a dead letter ia the river cities because public opinion did not support it. If in such communities judges could be found disposed to enforce the State law, prosecutors and witnesses could not be had. In anti-prohibition towns where open saloons were abolished the traffic was merely trans ferred to the drug stores or to secret drink ing dens removed from police supervision doggeries of the worst possible character. In other places like Dubuque and Davenport there was hardly a pretense of concealment, and dram-shops multiplied without restraint and ran wide open. Taking advantage of the situation the Democrats in tbiir recent State convention pledged themselves to high license and looal option. Grasping at an op portunity to stop tbe rule of free whisky and subject the saloons to a restrictive maximum tax of (500, and aa much mors aa communi ties might favor, tbousanda of Republicans who have grown tired of free whisky voted for Boies to express their opinion of the im practicability of prohibition in oities and to demand actual and effective control of the liquor traffic A Crying Evil. To the Editor of the Jodbhal and Courier: Is there no way to atop this evil of erying Sunday papers? It is said the people must have their Sunday papers.. So the people will have their liquors. Is that a ood reason why liquors should be oried through our streets every Sunday morning, to the an noyance of all sober Sabbath-keeping people? If a man partly intoxicated on a week day should make one-tenth part the noise a news- dov noes on a Sunday moraine he would be darted into the police station at once. It is said the Sunday paper is made on the week day. So are rags before they are made into paper and covered bv moral corruption for Sunday readers. So are the older and the vegetables, which the vender has. just as good a right to ory as the newsboy to cry his papers. If one class has a right to ory, others have, and when will we etop? Why close the saloon and allow lager beer to be oried in the streets? There is more poison in the papers to the mind than in beer to the body. now, you Bay, snail this evil be stopped? Let the police commissioners see that tbe chief and the polioe force do their duty. Let good people refuse to buy Sunday papers. Let the Sabbath committee awake to the evils of Sabbath deseoration. In the name of decency, humanity and Christianity, do let us have one day in seven free from the ear-splitting ory of the newsboy. A. J. V. EDITORIAL. NOTES. AS DIXEY SINGS In Ills Now Piece, fScTen Ages," "Don't You Beet fflrWWBi,. Understand? Don't you Know?' 9 rn Sleeper's Eje Cigar maintains reason or ua men '-,w, . and uniform qual- rVs jr. Atw in ! see. Ten cents everywhere. Trade Mark. S. 8. SLEEPER tc Co. Faetorr, Boston. ALLEN DREW & CO. HAVI JUBT OPENED TH Broadway Paper Store With Oomplata Stock of Wall Papers and Dscoiations TO BE BOLD AT Wholesale Trices. Come and prove thla. Interior and Ext r lor Home Palntlnar, Graining and Kaliomlnlnf. SCHOOL MODERN LANGUAGES. CUABLES II. BLAHEsXEE, DIRECTOR. 40 Church Street, odd. Pottofllce. Iaatruetloii in uarmao, jt'rencn, Bpanian ana ital- etant Instructor, courae or s leaaons 00; private Instruction, Sl.oo per Boor. Ua by oam In ola Orr 46, 48 and 50 Church Street The meat anoceenf ul Business Oolletce In New En- Sand. Firtv-ftvo full graduates hut May, Including ladles, with aa attendants ot nearly 00 in all brancnes. Sniorttiaaial and Typewriting;. Tnmaml faollltiea In all derjartments. Fall session begins MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9th. Hake early application for both day and venlng Melons. F.A.CAROIIX, President? B. A. Lotblaid, Trio, F. H. BiAM, Becy. Brushes. Bath Sponges and Towels. Imported and Domestic Perfumes. Toilet Waters . Soaps, Powders and Cos metics, of every description. MANICURE GOODS. Nail Powders, Buffers, Files and Soitsors. Hand Mirrors, Dressing Cases, Shaving Sets. Razors, Mags and Strops. Chest Protectors, Paper Tests, And choice line of ' FBEN0H CHAMOIS, snitabfe for Under garments. E. L. WASHBURN, Church and Center Streets. Some Children Growing Too Fast become listless, fretful, without ener gy, thin and weak. But you can for tify them and build them up, by the use of SCOTT'S Duision OF PURE COO LIVER OIL AND HYPOPHOSPHITES Or Lime and Soda. - They will take It readily, for it Is al most as palataoie as muit. una n etiAnM kA mmflmhoroH hnt Afl A PRE. VENTITK OB CUBE OP COUGHS OB COLDS, IN BOTH THE OLD AND YOUNG, IT 13 ) OHEOOALIED. Avoid mibstilutiona offered. GOJTI CO UN ICATION S. WITHOUT, Nadoatcok Railroad Co., Secretary's Office, SninnfMllT. Oct. S3. 1889. HOTICE-The annual meeting of the stock holders of the Naugatuck Railroad Company fnr t.hA nnmMa n, alantintF A ROArd Of Directors f Of the sear ensuing, and the transaction ot such other business an may be legally brought before them, will be held in the Connecticut National Bank Building, In Bridgeport, On the 20th of November next at 11 o'clock a. m. H. NICHOLS, Secretary, OMeswd&wSw San Francisco isn't a very good place, if attending ohnroh constitutes goodness. With a population of abont 400,000, it has only ISO ohnrohes, with a seating capacity of 40,000 and an average attendance of 25,000. Volapnk is not dying ont. Though of only ten years' growth, 2,000,000 people are said to be its students, 2,000 books have been pub lished on the subject, 30 periodicals are de voted to its interests and 600 societies have been organized. The suggestion of a writer in the Andover Review that some wealthy man wonld confer a lasting benefit upon the human race by endowing a pnblio newspaper, instead of college, is interesting. Such a paper wonld "meet a long felt want," but the endow ment would have te be very generous. Here's your chsnee. John Qarnett,a British sailor, died in the Seattle hospital last week, He told bis attendants that there was a caohe on Apple island, lying between Vancouver island and the mainland, that contained 1160,000 in gold dust that came from Fraser River. He had no map to give the exact lo cation, but the island ia a small one. It will be pretty thoroughly dag over. The King of Slam is about to send five Siamese boys to the United States to be edu osted at his own expense. The boys are to be placed in charge of an American mission' arv and will probably be sent to school in Pennsylvania. It is the king's custom to ed ucate the aona of the noblemen and the princes of his domain in variona countries and when they return to Siam appoint them to high governmental positions. The Supreme court of Indiana has just Tendered a decision in the cases of Worrell against Feelle and Yancey against Hyde that will cbeok the disposition of the legislature to encroach upon the appointive power of the exeontive. The last general assembly ore ated the offices of State statistician and State geologist, and then appointed Hyde and Peelle to the positions. Governor Hovey also made appointments, whioh the oonrt now sustains, on the ground that all State offioes must he filled either by popular eleotion or by executive appointment. One of the sights notioed on a New York elevated railroad train the other day was a widow with a little girl about fonr years old and a baby in arms. Her widowhood was apparent from the deep black of her dress and the heavy orepe veil which-fell below her waist. Not only was the mother dressed in the deepest mourning, but the children also were attired in all the habiliments of woe. The little girl's dresa was of blaok cashmere with heavy drapery of black orepe, and the baby's robe and cap were of the latter mate rial. There is such a thing as overdoing moarning. According to ex-Governor St. John, who is a thorough prohibitionist, the head and front of Yice President Morton's offending in the matter of the liquor license granted for the Shorebam, his new apartment house in Washington, is that, as an abutter, he singed the petition for the lloense. John E. MoLean. who was the abutter on the other side of the Shoreham, also signed the peti tion, the signature of eaoh abutter being le gally necessary for the granting of the peti tion. The Shoreham ilself was leased to one J. H. Kernan, who, in common with sub' stantially all hotel keepers, deems it impos sible to eondaot his business successfully without providing a convenient bar. Had Mr. Morton withheld his consent, either as an abutter or as proprietor of the Shoreham, he would probably have been under the ne cessity of hunting up another lessee. Among the eleotrioal exhibits that have attraoted speoial attention at the Paris expo sition is a windlass, whioh is used by the Northern Railway company of France in their He (as they stand on the balcony) It is very bright within and very dreary without, is it not! She Without what? He (inspired) xou. Harper s iSazar. A wise woman: Mrs. Jones "I want to buy some ribbon." Mrs. Brown "Well, let's go to the bargain counter." "O, no; I don't want to pay three prices for it." Time. At the opera: "My dear sir, how mnoh your daughter has grown this last summer. I can scarcely believe it. Why, her dress soaroely reaches to her shoulders." Fliegen de Blatter. Simeral That adage, "Marry in haste and repent at leisure," is all boaa. jttaddox wny'i Simeral Because married men have no leisure. Life. Mr.O'Rafierty And what did vonr brother think was the rale cause of nis death? Mr, Daffy Me brother never knew the rale cause of his death, as no inquest was mid on him, Texas Sittings. N. Peck "I think if anyone is entitled to a pension it's me." -s'Mudge "You were never in the war, were yon?" N. Peck- "No; but the fellow my wife was engaged to got billed at Shlloh." lerre riaute JSxpreas. It is a fact worth pondering that though the night falls around ua it never breaks, whereas the day breaks, but never falls. We offer thla delicate fanoy to some straggling aspirant for political honors. Harper's ca zar. Mrs. TJpthar "Have a good time down to York, my son!" Hiram "JNol 1 I" Mrs. Upthar "Thought your oousin Ben promis ed t' take you 'round tbe olty!" Hlram So he did; fonr times. He's drivln' a belt' line car." Puck. We m6t, the other evening, a oharming Maine girl whose frankness was notable. Asked if she bad learned anything at tbe famous oollege for yonng women from which she had jast returned, she ingenuously an swered, "Yes, indeed; I've learned to play whist." Lewiston (Me.) Journal. One of the best things we have heard lately was the remark of a lady, whom we know, abont a quarrelsome family. She said she thought it must be a comfort to them to read in the Bible,"In my Father's house are many mansions," for, she added, they could not agree to live in one. Brunswick (Ue.) Tele graph. "Do yon ever reeeive contributions writ ten on both sides of the paper!" asked a gen tleman, entering a newspaper office. "No, sir; never," emphatically replied me eauor. "All right; I was going to endorse thla check to your order, bnt I don't want yon to break your rules." Then he went ont, leaving the editor in a deep-green study. Yonkers Statesman. Connected with a sawmill in Topsham, which William King, the first governor of Maine, owned, was a store, with the business of whioh he was not well informed. Being alone in the store one day a lady entering asked htm the price of needles. "One cent apiece, Madam," replied the governor. "But elsewhere I can purchase three or four for a cent," she replied. "Well," Gov. King re sponded, "if that ia so, take them all. I won't have an article in my shop that's not worth a cent." Bath (.He.) Independent. will always desire hnBbands possessed of wealth and power, just as most men are themselves eager, in tbe abstract, for the very same things. The wonder Is, indeed, not that a part of the woman's Ideal in mar riage should be money, but that, this ideal bavins been formed and kept alive by the pnblio opinion of the whole sex, it should be overthrown so easily as it is. When the ab straction is brought into contact with the re ality it disappears almost at onoe. A hun dred maidens may resolve qnite sincerely that it wonld be absurd to marry any one but a rich men. The moment, however, that they try to get themselves ont of love with a particular poor one they see their mistake and resign their theories. Yet, in spite of this, and of the fact that a mercen ary spirit can and often does yield to love, it may perhaps be argued that the existence oi the worldly tone among women, even if it is to a great extent unreal, ia very mnoh to be deprecated. A girl, it may be contended, is so sophis ticated by this talk of marrying well that Bhe thinks it perfectly right and proper to say "Yes" to the first suitor who is eligible from a pecuniary point of view, be he never so unsuitable from every other. No doubt there is some truth in this objection, now and then an unhappy marriage Is made simply because the wife has yielded to the notion that money was the only thing to be thought of. it we consider ror a moment, however, what - would be the result if the conventional aspirations in regard to mar riage were different, we shall see that a ohange would only be for the worse. If wo men held as an abstract truth that no pecu niary considerations ought ever weigh with them at all, we should have infinitely more instances of matrimonial disaster brought about by a sophistication of the intelligence than we have at present. It is never diffi cult for a woman to persuade herself that she is in love, and if, the moment she had performed this easy teat, the weight of tra dition, of pnblio opinion, and of example were to influence her toward accepting her supposed lover's proposals, we should indeed have plenty of marrying in haste and re penting at leisure. That girls are strongly influenced by the conventions among which they are brought up is, indeed, a matter or congratulation. They are thus protected from that fatal gift of believing things that they snow to be untrue, which in some measure belongs to every woman. The de sire to marry well often proves the touch stone by which nnconscionsly a girl is ena bled to take the true measure of her feel ings toward a man. If it overcomes the conventions in regard to a bad match, sue need not feel afraid of trusting herself to its direction. If it does not, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred the passion was mere ly a delusion from whioh a woman will some day thank heaven she escaped in safety. So far from the social danger of the pres ent age being the worldliness of women, we are half inolined to think that the weaker sex are ready to abandon too easily the older notions in regard to marriage, are getting a little too prone to make love in the abstract the only condition. This we believe wouia be a real disadvantage, though it is possibly balanced by a tendenoy said to be observable in yonng men to consider comfort as the aim of life, and so to postpone marriage till it cannot by any possibility involve a personal saorifice. On the whole, indeed, we are not sure that men are not more worldly in re gard to matrimony than women. They do not. perhaps, so universally expeot rich wives, but that is because there are so few heiresses. They do, however, what is much the same. In the abstract, they regard mar riage as impossible until they shall be in the possession of an income capable of securing them the highest standard of life which ob tains in the class to whioh they belong. This is their form of meroenariness, and, unless we mistake, they incline to persist in it with somewhat more resolution than their potential wives. Hew Field for Women. Baltimore Free Press City Chal.l Having some business to trausaot with a widow, I made an early call upon her. Ar riving I found herself and two daughters in walking costume. Although greatly marvel ing, aa a discreet gentleman I showed it not. As my errand progressed I noticed ill-concealed impatience for my going. At length my hostess said: "You don't know the cause of our wishing to hurry I'll let yon into the secret. My income is not sufficient ly large to keep np our usual mode of life, so myself and my daughters- are profession ally engaged as dusters of bric-a brao." She noted my absence of understanding and po litely explained. Articles of virtu are be coming more and more popular with the ton of the city. The ordinary help is nndiscrlm- inating between an ordinary piece of Majoli ca ware and a choice piece of Dresden. Here is where intelligence and care come into play and cause an opening for the lady and her charming daughters. There are others besides these who are performing the same congenial tasks. Verily, the ways of women towards obtaining employment are past find ing out. delicate aroma of flattery, onoe breathed as matter of oonrse, has become sensibly faint er. Amusement seems to drag, and the business of pleasure generally inspires a feeling of languor and depreselom. The wo man of thirty-five is not yet bidden to step ont of the arena and range herself amaag the spectators, bnt nature has a disagreeable way of reminding her that the hour is ap proaohing. It is as though the first chill breath of antnmn whioh heralds the Indian summer were making itself felt. She will be fortunate if her antnmn of beauty brings with it the ripe graces, the tender associa tions and poetio suggestions whioh give to the season of decay its mellow charm. Tbo Bartlt's Duration. From the Portland Transcript.! The present age of the earth has, been placed by Sir William Thomson at one hun dred million years, while the speculations of others have given much larger figures. M. Adolphe d'Assier, who believes sueh esti mates to be greatly exaggerated, considers the life of the earth in three periods, which he terms the igneous or nebula atellar sta- Every fdium, tbe stadium of solar illumination or of organio life, and the stadium of dark ness, oold and death. The first which be gan with the detachment of the terrestrial nebula from the solar, and ended in the for mation of the crystaline crust of the globe he calculates from physical laws to have been five hundred thousand years in dura tion. The second comprising the seoosd epoch and to close with extinction of the sun embracing the entire cycle of geological formations is fonnd by geological and physical evidenoe as likely to have total s length of twenty-five million years, of whiah more than half has passed. The third sta dium Btarting from the end of solar illumi nation, and dosing in the terrible and inevi table catastrophe of the fall of the earth to the sun, and momentarily brightened by the incandescence of the earth as the moon crashes into it will have a length that ean- not be ealoulated until the preolse rate el ac celeration of the motion of the earth around the center of attraction is known, bnt will probably be, at the lowest estimate, one hundred million years or more. TJpen the whole the present sge of the earth appears to be about sixteen million years. attFES s fit WOUIiDLINESSI. Whoever Says That the Girl of the Period Is More Worldly Than For merly Is Wrong From the Spectator. "Mr. Punoh," in tbe rhymed assault upon modern manners to whioh he has been treat ing his readers for the last five weeks, would have ns understand that the woman of mod ern times is far more mercenary, as well ai far less simple, than her sister of a genera tion or two ago. If we are to believe the pictures displayed to our view the girl of the period, though by no means disinclined to enoourage the attentions of the lover, has no sort of notion of entering upon the matrimo' nial contraot unless her wooer is possessed of a fortune. Love is all very well in flirta tions, but marriage demands something more ssrious and matter of faot. In. the end the only thing' that really matters is: What have you got? In truth, the accusation is one wnion naa always been made, and whioh it is cer tain will be made bb long as gins want nus bands and men want wives. There is a great deal of oant in the whole tendenoy to deore- elate the modern world. The man who thinks that the world is worse now thsn it was a hundred years ago is either grossly ignorant, or else has befogged and sophisti cated bis intelleot by accepting as a self proved first principle that the present must neoessarily be less virtuous than the past, In the matter of whioh we are treating, how ever, the absurdity does not stop at contend ing that women are more worldly than they used to be. The attack shows a complete failure to grasp the realities of the question. In truth, women are lees worldly than they were, instead of more, if only because of the immense increase in their intellectual inter ests. The girls of 1789 did not take the question of brains, whioh is also the ques tion of boredom for life, into consideration, The girls of 1889 do. The manner in whioh the belief has grown np that the ordinary woman thinks only of making a good match and setting herself well provided with goods, is. however, easy enough to understand. In the abstract, women's views about matrimo ny are almost bound to center, in the ques tion of money. It is all very well for a man who has sot an appointment, or a profession to talk at large of thinking only of love in regard to marriage. JNot one woman in thousand ean feel the sense of security that makes suoh a form of contemplation possi ble. She has neither money herself nor the" power to make it; and she knows that if she marries Bhe must look to her husband to support her, and to save her from being struak down in the battle of life. It is in evitable then that, as long as marriage is to girls a-mere matter of theoretical -contemplation, one foremost eonsideration for thsm must be a suffiaieaoy of the world's good things. It is as inevitable for women to Imagine that they want very rioh husbands as it is for curates to long to be bishops, clerks to be merohants and lawyers to be judges. In tbe abstraot, then, the majority of women Its superior excellence proven In millions of home For moro tban a quarter of a century. It ia used by the United States Govemmeut. Endorsed by the heads of the Great Universities as the Strongest. Purest, amd most Healthful. Dr. Price's Cream Raking Powder doos not contain Ammonia, lime, or Alum, SoldonXj in Cans. PKICE BAKING POWDER CO. jjv - HEW YORK. .. ClilCAaO. C lOTBi PARLOR CABINETS. We hare Jast received an In voice of new patterns, In Imita tion Mahogany and Antique Oak. Tbo designs are much superior to tnoso of former seasons, and prices lower. GHAMBEBLIN & CO., Orange and Crown Streets. TUB WOMAN OF TtHRTY-FIVJB. of Thoughts for the Consideration Herself and Friends. From London Society. Balzao has laid down the theory that a woman of thirty is at her most fascinating and dangerous age dangerous, that is to say, to the hearts of men. Perhaps no wri ter understood his own countrywomen belter than Balzao, and perhaps no writer has con tributed to social philosophy so many .oynl oal reflections on the sex in general. Bat Balzac's axiom wonld apnly, as a rale, to a certain type of woman, a type less common, it is to be hoped, in England than in France. The spinster naturally would not enter into his calculations; and eren in this country the unmarried "girl" who admits to having passed seven and twenty must be exception ally circumstanced if she can boast of a large train of adorers. The blushing debu tante may have things pretty well her own way, and Is quite capable of seriously capti vating the blase man of the world, who fre quently finds an agreeable piquancy in bread and batter, miiK ana roseDuas. she may indeed prove a more enduring delight to eaoh a man than the frisky married women with whom the game of flirtation has hither to been played with intense satisfaction. But the old young girl is neither spring lamb nor Welsh mutton, and not all the garnish' ing possible will disguise her anomalous fla vor or sive her tbe charm ot the daisies ana the meadow. She had lost the freshness and the ingenuous frankness, and she has not sained tbe experience and finesse whioh would render her attractive to man; and un less she be well endowed in the matter of rank or worldly goods, and matrimony be eolemlv contemplated, however agreeable an acquisition she may be to society, she does not find marked favor in the sight of the average "masher." There is a class of women, the woman who has entered the thirties, upon whose drama the curtain is not likely to fall for many a year yet. In all womanly honesty, it may be, she revels in the part of heroine and in the disturbances and agitations of which she is the cauBS. She will go on inde fatigablv playing her part and enjoying it. while the lights grow dim and the audience drops off and the jeune premier becomes wooden and indifferent. This kind of woman must, as Landor puts it, "warm both hands at the fire of life." Her keenly Btrung temperament, alert sensibility and magnetic power of attraction make her the oenter of a perfect vortex of emotions. She takes intense pleasure in the storm and tu mult of feeling that gathers round her. It gives a zest to existence which without it she wonld find insupportably tame. She does not mean to be cruel: she ia not un principled. In many eases she herself suf fers almost as much as her vlotims. Bnt excitement, even that of suffering;, ia a ne cessity of her being, and she takes "comfort in the thought that she too can exolaim, like Egmont, when the end oomes, "I cease to live; but I have lived." And to this woman thirtv-five is the bezinning of the end, To the ordinary woman . of poetio tenden cies, bnt no definite inclination toward the dramatio Bide of life, thirtv-five is'an age whioh cannot fail to bring with it a feeling of melancholy and dissatisfaction, it is an uncomfortable point of transition when the mind oannot dwell with any complacency nnna nast. present or fnture. The illusions have irone. and the solid realities have not vet naite taken their place. In dresB, de meanor and mental outlook a gradual and subtle readjustment has to be considered, It ia felt necessary to praotioe a certain Be- dateness and dignity of bearing, whioh must not, however, be overdone, so as to appear affeotation. Attentions which only the oth er day might have been attributed to the in fluence of personal beauty and fasoinatlon are to-day open at least to the suspicion of interested motives. Partners at balls are lees persistent and fewer in number. The AeiOLIUML FALL AND WINTER FAEM AND STABLE machines and Tools. Baldwin's Imp'd Fodder Cntter, '' The best one in use. . Improved Lever Cutters, For hay and stalks ; prices low. Corn Shelters, Single and double balance wheels, plain and geared ; tne best Sballer in nee. Fanning Mills, Of the latest improvements. Axes. The two best brands in the market ; call and see them and get the best. Both Books, Bush Scythes, Bush Snaths. Crosscut Saws, From 4 to 6 feet long. Buck Saws, Rat Traps, Lanterns, Buckskin GIotcs and mittens. Call and examine all of the above Roods and get the LOW PRICES. R. B. BRADLEY & GO. 406 and 408 State Street. EARLE & SEYMOUR, SOLICITORS or American Foreian Patents, 868 Cliapel Street, NEW. HAVEN CONN. JOHN K. EABLK. . . Expert in Patent Causes. GEORGE D. 8EYUOTJB, Counselor at Law. FRED O. KARLK. OAIiIFORKTIA, Texas and mKJLicoi QEMI-MONTHLY PARTIES Personally eon duetel Combining Comfort Low RtM Qulck Time Pallmaa Sleeping Oars. Call on or address nearest Ticket Agent, or E. E. CTJRE1ER, new isngiana Agent Boutnern roolna Oo., 117 -Washington Hnt, Boa ton. Maaa. lull ioAVr CHARLES S. HAMILTON, Attorney and Counsellor at Law YALE BANK BUILDING, OOHJJEU CHAPEL AND STATE 8T8. Uotary Pnhlla. : " Ww Bm,, Onsm. TfTftTTTT, A Kswltnontthenaeot JD JLO X J JU..the knife or detention from business, also aU other diseases of the Rectum. Oareguaranteed. WM. READ (M. D. Harwd.1843) and ROBERT M. READ SL D., HarirM876) Hosse, No. ITS Treasons Street, Boston. References given. Consultation free. Bend for pamphlet. Office hours,ll A. M. to 4 P. (BnneyaatthoUaanesaeptealTpy