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shions, NS’ for work ‘ocheting 3mooth Qinold, onstable & Co. Spring, 1888 COTTON GOODS, Printed Satins, “ANDERSON’S” ZEPHYRS, ery new and fresh styles, just landed. Broadway & 19th St. New Work. ew Waggings of Old Tales by Two Wacs, 1 vol. Oliver Herford, $1.00. x2mo, _ Illustrated by By two of our most entertaining writers—Frank Dempster Sherman and John Kendrick Bangs. “Most curious, bright and clever.” bil and Express. “The book contains a quaint and amusing group { burlesque novelettes and other bright witticisms. he ancients are here treated to new dresses that are jerally bespangled with bright flashes of humor and shes at modern foibles.""—Boston Lome Journal. i New York “Introduces a number of distinguished authors, Enging from Howells to Haggard, who, each in his fn peculiar style, tells some old familiar fairy tale or ildren’s rhyme. Hop o° Thumb, Rumpelstiltzkin, inderella, Beauty and the Beast, and Mother Goose | ft the most extraordinary capers, clad in the habit- hl garments of Howells, Haggard, Tennyson, ievenson and Browning. A brighter, worthier, | pecimen of what might be called our new school of re has never appeared. From the delicious pricature of Gustave Dore’s illustration of Hop 0’ | iy Thumb, that introduces the volume, to the foot- | tes which mark its close, there is a constant suc- | ion of ‘good things,’ which, apart from the in-| ssely amusing parody of popular novel ts, are in themselves a wonderful exhil he brilliancy of American wit.” — Commercial julletin, For sale by all booksellers, or will be sent, post ee, on receipt of price, by lICKNOR & CO., Boston. HEADQUARTERS FOR STRAIGHT WHISKIES, “OLD CROW” AND HERMITAGE SOUR MASH. Sold absolutely pure, unsweetened, uncolored. Various ages. None sold less than four years old. Reliable for medical use. We have taken every barrel of Rye Whisky made at the Old Crow Distillery since January 1872. Sole Agents for The Pleasant Valley Wine Co. ,. Full lines of reliable Foreign Wines, Liquors, and | egars, -B. KIRK & CO., | 69 FULTON ST., BROADWAY ano 27TH ST. AND 9 WARREN STREET. ESTABLISHED 1853. A MIRACLE ON THE ELEVATED. PASSENGER : Is this a City Hall train ? Guarp: No, madam. This particular train is unfortunate enough to reach its destination at South Ferry ; but if you will permit me to get off at the next station and escort you to a coupe, the distance to the plaza is very short, and I am at your service. (The seeming impossibility of this scene is washed away by the fact that the young lady is a Manhat-" tan Director's daughter, and the guard knows it.) —Tid Bits. For disagreeable hauteur, unconscionable self-con- ceit and disgusting arrogance there is nothing equal to the all day behavior of a man who has got up and shoveled off his sidewalk before breakfast. Fortu- nately, though, this only happens about once a year. —Omaha World. Ir is stated that when Senator Faulkner was a ten- | year-old boy he got lost in the mountains while hunting and wandered into a den of bears, ** where he killed four of the animals with a single-barreled shotgun.” We don’t know which to most admire— young Faulkner's courage or a single-barreled shot- gun that scattered so awfully.—Norristown Herald. Tue Czar and his family will go to St. Petersburgh for a ten weeks’ visit as soon as their new winter boiler-iron garments are sent home from the foundry. —Pittsburgh Chronicle. THERE was once great consternation in the office of Zion's Herald when the writer of an obituary article upon a mother in Israel having said in pious phrase that she died and ‘claimed the promises,” the paper was made to aver that she had died ‘and cleared the premises.” And it was out at Worcester, Mass., where the Rev. George H. Hepworth having declared in a public address ‘I am not a free lance,” the sedate Spy gave him fame by printing the sentence, ‘I want a free lunch."—Boston Transcript. THE ENGADINE Bouquet, Atkinson’s New Perfume. This superb distillation sweetly recalls fragrant Swiss flowers, Bright jewels in a setting of perpetual snow. MAISON TORTONI. Restaurant: private dining-rooms; best brands of im- ported wine and liquors ; cuisine unsurpassed. 161 Lexington Avenue, corner of 30th Street. “LIFE” BINDER, CHEAP, STRONG AND DURABLE. Will hold 26 Numbers. Mailed to any part of the Unitea States for $1.00, postage free. Addres: OFFICE OF “LI 28 W. 23d Street, New York. CISER'! or Brain Workert ‘Gentlemen. Ladies. and Youths ; ‘A complete gymnasium, Takes up but 6 inches square loor-room ; something new acien- tic, durable, comprehensive, cheap. S ‘'Sehools for Physical and Vocal Culture,” 16 East N.Y. City. | Prof. author of “How of it: “I never saw any alf as welll”? 14th Street and 113 Sth. Aves, D.L. Down. We. Blaikie to. get, Strong.” 6a other that T liked TO STOUT PEOPLE. OBESITY easily, pleasantly and certainly cured, Without hardship or nansenting drugs. A valuable treatise, sent in plain sealed envelone on receipt of four stamps. ‘Address EK. LYNTON. 1! Park Place, New Yori. GREAT LUCK. | Good Fortune that Came by Chance and Business Sagacity. One cannot help being struck with the im- portant part the element of chance plays in the history of most men who acquire great fortunes, It is peculiarly illustrated in the career of Thomas H. Williams, a California six millionaire. He went from Kentucky to the Pacific slope in 1849, and settled in Virginia city. As attorney | for a mining company, he acquired a claim against it for $1,500 for services, and when the company failed he bid in its mine for the amount of his claim. He moved to San Francisco, years rolled on and the transaction had passed from his mind, | when he was one day approached by a representa- | tive of Flood, Mackay & O'Brien, who offered him $100,000 for his long forgotten mine. He was not a greenhorn and he at once refused the offer, as he did successive offers of $250,000 and $500,000. But when a member of the great firm came to see him with proffers of negotiation, they were not rejected and resulted in the recep- tion of the firm's check for $6,000,000, It was a great piece of luck, but the luck was supplemented by keen business sagacity. In April, 1887, Charles W. Sprague, an orange grower at Chaseville, Fla., was lying in bed suffer- ing the ‘‘torments of the cursed,” with disease of the kidneys, with which he had been troubled for two years. He had been under the treatment of an eminent physician but kept growing worse. One day, when, as he says, “‘ even hope itself had become inanimate,” a casual acquaintance hap- pened in and advised the trial of Warner's safe cure. He hesitated, because it was a proprietary medi- cine, but the testimonials of its efficacy were so ' convincing, that, as a business man, he could not doubt the wisdom of trying it. The result was that May 20th, 1887, he wrote: ‘‘ From the first dose I commenced to improve, and have now re- covered my health.” Mr. Williams owes his large fortune and Mr. Sprague owes his life to chance, supplemented by good business judgment. It is no doubt true that fortune knocks at least once at the door of every man, but it is not every man, it seems, who has the good judgment to grasp opportunity by the forelock. Set of Scrap Pletures, one ‘board, and largo sample book of FUN CARDS fciofner HIDDEN NAMB CARDS and Acents outfit, all for ouly two cents, CAPITOL CARD COMPANY, Columbus, Ohio: CAVANAGH, SANDFORD & C0,, MERCHANT TAILORS AND IMPORTERS, 16 W. 23d St., opp. 5th Ave. Hotel, —NEW YORK— Ladies’ Tailor-made Suits, Riding Habits, Ulsters, Jackets, etc., a Specialty. BOUCHE FILS & CO. Vineyards: MAREUIL-SUR-AY, Champagne. Branch Houses: NEW YORK, 37 BEAVER STREET. PARIS, 23 BOULEVARD HaussMANN. Messrs. Boucué Fits & Co., of 37 Beaver Street, New York, beg to inform you that, as a specialty for Holidays, they import their Champagne, Bouché Sec, I» Fancy Baskets, 6 quarts se a 2 pints . 13.75 Sit bo In Fancy Baskets, 24 half pints $15.50 “ CE qe) stg) 7.75 These Baskets are also to be had from * Messrs, PARK & TILFORD, | Messrs. ACKER, MERRALL & CONDIT, AND LEADING MERCHANTS,