One inch, one your , . . . . 'i‘wo inches, one year ..... 'i‘hrcejnches, one ycmxm. . Adv tisoments for a shorter perimi than one year, inuertimt. U 50 iiachsuhscquent insertion...,.. , 0 25 2‘.’ inches in be considered One colume .Livcrtisonients without written direction “sorted til] fm‘hid,'ai;d charged acc rdiugly. All transitory :t‘LVlCl‘tigclliblltS L )m regu- lar 01- irregular customers, must be paid for when handed in for insertion. lul ,liapnti'iicil to submrilwra by the earliest [Lisls ur own: unu‘wyinces, when so desired. l‘rsi: Yam; lliciuui will always ln) found :1 ‘JU'ltllll t-hc Lita-Sb and mist important $13.) :ui't Lle News and Markets. and ih‘ grams! c u‘c‘fl'ill lye‘i'akzm tb render it. _; gable t1: the 1mm 01' business, and a i .-».‘u1.ble Pa nily Newapaper. 'l‘.c;:‘.i»: 0.1': Ihllar pz-r unnum in ad- 3':L'l’3, ii' n it pail within two months. One lull-1r :ml Fifty Cents will be charged. N x p UAJHF xliscontl‘llued until all aijresrages mus PJld ; and parties refusing papers with- out paying up will be held accountable for the subscription. All letters addressed to the editoifs mus}, b ‘. post-paid will be prmuplly attended in : Faun-y Bills, Businesis Cards, Circulars, Law Forms, Bill HemthBlank Checks, Drafts, Blank Orders, Receipts, Letter Heads, Fincy (,‘artls‘ Pamphlets. lqtfge’arxd Small Posters, and every other kind 0f Letter-Prev Print- Garner of Young and Centre streets East have constantly on hand'a good assortmen of Drugs, Paints, ~1‘erfumery,., V.Chemicnla 0:124, Toilet Soaps, Medicines, Vamishes FaucyArticlcs, Dye Stuffs, Patent Medicines :"xd all other articlu kept by druggiab generally. Our Qtoekcognwdicvines warrant- ed genuine. and sf Qualities. “c, Having made large additions to ‘the prim;- ing material, we are better prepared than ever to do the neatest and most beautiful printing 01' every description. DENTISTI‘Y. A. ROBINSO *, L.’ D. s. \Tiuw method of oxtx'actin teeth “ithont 1 pain, by the use of lit er Sprayflvhich affects the tectl}.0nl3'_., ,i’l'lxe toot-h and gun: surrounding he'cé'inie's "insensible with the External agency, when the-tough can be e):- 1mcted with no pain and Without endanger- mg the life, as in thehlsé of Chloroform. Dr. Hobingon will be H“? “(he following place- prepared to extract teeth with his new up: para-ins. All ofï¬ce operations in Dentistry performed in 2: wurkmanlike manner : Jun-om, lst, 3rd, lï¬tlmnd'ï¬â€˜lll of each mont- Newmarket...†2d 1“ " Richmond Hill, 9th and 2-}tll ' " )It.Alb91't..,.. .....,.H,....15th BOOK & 'JOB PRINTING Plain & Coiored Job Wm'k RICHMOND HILL DRUG STORE, ' ealcr in Dmgs,‘ Medicines, Uroaorios \\'inus, an'd‘U'iiTl'um‘s,‘ ’l'ho'ruhill. By Royal Letters t’hféu‘t has-began appointed-Is- uler of M‘grriag'g? qu‘c‘liées. ' V “or. Every Friday Morning, 'l‘hm‘nhill., . Alapl(:., ‘ ,.,. [nu-wick“. ‘ . Kleinbuz‘g ,. .. . N oblcton. . . ‘ . . . 26L}: ..;28t11 .Q‘Jth 30111 ' 1.: 32811!" *H u Nitrous, Oxide «Gas always. on hand .ub Aurora. ' . Aurora, April-‘38; 1870 (SIS-if I L"l‘(TH ERS, RI‘C HILL, HAVE > always on hand he best‘of Beef, Mutton, Lamh, VeuL l’orkwï¬ausagesrkcq and sell at the lowest prices forlGasii. The highest max-15g {wing given f0}- Cattle, Sheep, Lambs, Sac. ugc'd Beef, Smoked’and .523: ‘ Also, (ll)rllett'1|}'ll(;\l Dried Hams. " â€â€˜ mmme Bot'rfmn 5mm STORE ‘ OHN BARRON? inhï¬â€˜lfacturer and dealer 9 in all kinds of boots and shoes. 38 \Vest Market 311133119, Toron‘to. Boots and shoes Illade.:tg_).1nens\1re, of the hest- material and workmanship, at the }ow» ... 9% rmnunemting} Zxcegï¬f ; Toronto. Dec 3, 1867.. was YORK-HERALD ‘ 11mm, assets, _, . . )liuVlNUIAL DAD-J) .S-URVTEYOR, l Civil Engineer and Draughtsman. Orders by letter. should statethe Concession, Lot and character-of. ‘Survcy, the subscriber having the old 7'"ch Note» of the late D. GIBSUX and other surveyors, which should bé consulted, in'ï¬h‘ztnf oa‘sic’s‘ aS‘to original mdnummlx, Sta, 'prmimxsz‘ 10' «:junmencing work. ' ‘ ’ PUBUSHER AND PROPBIE’I‘OR 0F? Ofï¬ce at. \VII.LO\\'D;‘.L-}‘., \‘nnge Street, in the lownshlp of \ nrk 0-!) "r'. . u Jan’y 8, 101.). ‘ ' 7’5 OWICEyâ€"No. 1‘) York rchmnbcrs, \Soutk- euï¬t Comer nf Turontn and (‘mlrt Streets, '1‘01‘ontn, ()n’u. heap Book and Job PrintingEsfubliahment ( genuine. and ‘fï¬igbfestrrjudlities. Richmond Hiya ï¬gï¬aï¬v « My J. H. S£XNDERSON, HzTEmNAR'Y SURGEON, Graduate of Toronto Universitv College, corner of Yonge and Contra Stsl‘jast, Richmond Hill.‘ begs to announce to the )uhlic. that he is now practising with L}. b‘zm __ersuu, of the same place, where tme‘muy‘ h'e consulted ersonv ally 01' by letter, on all diseases of orses, cattle, 8m. ' H Alllordcrs from a' distance promptly at- tended to, and medicine sent to any part of the Province. I ["1133 “Hinges examined as to soundness, and also bO‘ ght and sold on commission. elimond Hill, Jul. 25. 1872. 507 den; l'm‘ ’any of the undvrmentioned deg cription of iichmond Hill, Oct. ‘24, ’7‘2 January 15, 1373 SCOTT, (Late Qf Duggan g? Meg/erg) JJiRISTER. A'T'IUIESI‘IX'VATâ€"LAW, {SOLICI'I'OR1\~£§1{\Q my, (Joxvmnmcxn, TCH ERS, R153 Lu n-vn n.. run"! 15;. TERMS: 31 mm AXNUM m ADYATW‘L‘ VOL. XVII. NO 43 V". ]L ck H. PUGSLEY, (51’ UCESSORS To w.‘ w.. cox,) ADAM II. MEYEKS, JR ADVERTISING R ATER humanism. 11.x.»xrg'lnéusox'x sox Yomm Rm, hmmoxp HILL 1‘ LI 1C H 11] R ESTA ELISE WENT. THO MAS CARR, l'BUPHlETUBS UP :I‘llE ‘ THE YORK H EIZALI) PUBLISHED ‘X 141) PER 1 N (in $4 00 .3 50 3 00 56~ly 0 50 Here's u young lady fair and faint, mo weakly to walk a. mile or wield is broom for an hnm' ; the doctor is called in ; he looks wise and shakes his head, gives a. prescri )â€" tion, and eventually gets a libeml fee. The father thinks his duty is done, and the mo. ther tries to ï¬nd some consum tive ancestor from whom the poor child must mve inherited that extremely fashionable disease, and than the victim is coddlpd to death. The whole phing, as a rule, is a. farce', though it doés of- WV tummy.» i1? 1.1.63ng Lia mu] v7 (Icahn. But if the same subject had ‘had clothes ï¬t for a human bein to wear. under which the blood could circuï¬te properly, and the fresh air freely roam, food of a proper kind and quantity,~along with some actual employ- ment or n suflielent amount of’out-door exer- cise, ten to one she would never have needed a doctor, and her robust health would have furnished her mannna. with a more leasant, though perhaps less fashionable su :jeet for gossip with Mrs. Grundy & (70. There's a 'oung lad just budding out towards man- O’Od, snllow, weakly, so omiiy tired, and all that ; tender-hearted lnamnia. thinks his brain must be too active for his body, he must be studying too ambitiouely at School, and his body can t keep up with his m )idly- developing mind. All of it the veriestlmsh ! Give your boy food suitable for him, and teach him how to keep himself clean in his body and pure in his habits, and all his school and college work will leave him not weaker, but stronger, physically as well as mentally. Asa people we are willing to take an)“ thin to ofleot the cure of an existing disease, and ence that flourishing branch of industry known as patent medicines, which come perâ€" iodically and constantly, numerous as the frogs of Egypt, promising all sorts of marvel- lous cures, and offering a panacea for every ihle ailment of human flesh. And year y year these liquor-dozed drugs furnish for tunes to the enterprizing inventor and ad- vertiser, and destroy .the stomachs of those who are gulled into taking them and ima vin- ing they are beneï¬ted thereby. On the ot er hand, We] are just as unwilling to spend a cent of money or a fraction of time on pre- venting or forestalling possible or inevitable sickness. J \Ve run the machine until it is on the point of breaking down, and then spend a little fortune on doctors and apotheean'ea, loee a vast amount of valuable time inst when we can't spare it, and then, after all, never know What robust, exuberant health means. , “’0. wouldn’t spend time studying hygienic I laws, excepting as they relate to horses or ‘ cows or pigs, or some other equally imporA tent live stock ; taste and fancy regulate Our food, while thought and study are lavishly A subject. of nmm general imimrcanoe than the above could not well be chosen ; and yet it is one on which the majority of penile poi-sun in remaining in the must inexcusa )lf‘. lgmn‘ancc‘~ Strange it is that the. man: in- pidl)’ civilization advanced, the greater need there in of physicians and drugs to patch up the deteriorated physical cunstitntion. In there any legitimate or necmsm'y connection between this intellectual and political «level» opinent. and the accompanying de Ieneracy of the body? Do mental vigor am social Y‘K‘» ï¬neinent necessitate dyspeptic stomachs and consumptive lungs. ‘3 Most. certainly the oas~ nal observ r of the difference in the health of highly-civilized and hnrharous nations would be tam )tcd to make such a deduction. And yet not ling could he more wide of the mark. l‘he cause of all the nicknassm of civilized lands is to be traced to invatemte and culpav ble ignorance of the laws of health, or a more culpable disregard of acknowledged physical 1mm ' - - EALER IN FINE GOLD AND SH,- ver \Vatches, Jewalry. Mg, 113 You†Street, Toronto. 4 Sold by Drnggists generally. The Dominion \Vm‘m Candy is the mediuéne n expel wormsl Try ii. 700-3,- ex (led on thth of our cattle. This is ca led a practical age! \Ve are living in a most unpmctical age, and what men call practical is selï¬sh and short-sighted n10uey~ grill-fling. A.. . | n m Stands permanently «lmvo every other liem (1y now in use. It is invaluable. ‘lSO, the Pain VlCtuI‘iS Infallible for A Diarrhoea, lluseutery. Flox, Colic, (liolera Morlms, Pain and ('mmp in the Stomach and Bowelsy &c. Directions with each bottle and lmx. Manufactured 'by H. M USTA RD, ARRISTER, Attorney, Solicitor-in-(Thnn cery, Conveyancel‘, 310. OrFlCH~~Ncn 6 Royal Immune-e Buildings, Toronto street. Toronto, Dec. 2, 1859. 594 The month of March, above all o’uhers, is the time when the want of a little common sense and forethought in the matter of food andoleanlinesa furnishes the medical fraterâ€" nity with arich harvest, and invites the fre- uent visitation of the Angel of Death. eople are Sick, and they want a. speedy cure, and yet they are offended if a common-sense piliyaician strikes at the Very seat of their ( isease, the barbarous way'. in which they treattheir stomachs and their skins. A man has control over what he cats and drinks, and also over the whole outer surface of the body with its millions of ducts‘for the draining of the system and the puriï¬cation of the blood. \Vith the internal organs he can do very lit~ tle but destroy them. Hence the responsi- bility for adequate knowledge on these two points. ; USTARIYS l’ills are the best, {111: yuu 3‘ can get for Dyspepsia, Sick eadaclxe, Billiuusnessy Liver, kidney Complaints. &c. HAVE you Rheumatism,\Voumla, Bruises, 7 Old Sores, Cuts, Burns, Fth Bitâ€, l’ilcs,I’21inful Swelllngs, White Swellingu, and every conceivable wmiml upon man or boast ‘: (211101300 has a new way of heating her horse cars. A red hot loo-pound shot is placed in a box under the car, with re vistem to admit the heat. Five of these will eat. a railway car for four hours, the inventor says. ‘ UH'X‘AR US (Iatm‘rh Speciï¬c Cures Acute and (.‘hronic cases of (‘atarrh, Neural- ria.,Heaxiaclle,(301(ls,Coughs, Group, Asthma, imuchitis, &c., it, is 211mg good Soothing Syrup. " SCIENCE,†says Dr. Holmes, “is: a good piece of furniture for :1 mm) to havc in an upper chamber, provided he. has rmmnon 59mm on the ground floor." A NORTH Carolina exchange tells of a man living in \Vilson, in thatState, ï¬fty-fourycars of age, who never owed a cent to a hviug soul‘m his life, and, as the records will show, was the ï¬rst man for the £351; thirt ' years to pay his taxes to the Sheri I Though a black- smith and plnw4naker by txm‘m, he cuts and makes his own clothing, and when enga d at this work, if.there is a call at the shogvï¬fis wife goes to the anvil and will shoe a 02-90, H__< n__, .. hm a ow; upset an axe, or perform any 011m; jq the line with as much Ikill an her hlilbllld PATENT m1 Flown rs. P no G L 9:571: i‘ i (V) .\‘ . J. SEGSWORTH, '1'!II!IKXI\'(§(H’U1LB WM. MALLOY, Health. ...< Proprietm', Ingerboll, i ()n. on to 1m shore L»! the blissful Forever < . "Husband and wife; { 'fogmhcr \s Vfloaty down the beautiful rim-r Tourism generally are apt a: fall in, in some sort, with this way of thinking. Every- thing in this Charming, perfumed, sensuous land is so full of pleasure, so fairylike and un- real, that it is dilï¬oult to belim'e that» the cares and troubles of the world could have any place there, or that the inhabitant»; can have anything to do but to 100k picturosque and dance and sing from the cradle tn the grave. Nevertheless, the Piann di Sorreiito is a country in which )icople love, hate, weep, struggle, pinch, am suffer in the same way :15 mortals do in other parts of this planet. Here is the history of 3 man and a woman born and bred in Sai'rcnto, to both of whom want and suffering were familiar in their earlier years ; while one of them, atlcast, ex- perienced more of the latter sensation than mast people wmld hold to be the fair share of a lifetime. ‘ u. , "" ucuu‘nud w u Ituldnuau m v V VI w“, and even more agreeable, as bung free from the mcom'emeuce of gas. The name of Annuuziata Vaunini, the fa- mous prim-a. donna, has become well known to the world, while that of Luigi Rattu “ ill Convey no idea to the mind of the reader, and would, probably, indeed, never have been heard ten miles from his native Village of Sorrento but for a circumstance which shall in due course be related. But evervbody has seen and heard the Vsnnini ; and even those who cannot claim to be considered as other than nobodies~that is to say, people who look at a guinea and a-half as tooï¬largc a. price to pay for an evening‘s amusement~~ must have become familiar with her features from her photographs in the shop windows, where she has ï¬gured in a hundred ditferent costumes and attitudes any time during the last ï¬fteen years, Yet a very small propor- tion of the admiring and appreciative thron 8 who have apple'suded her to the echo whi e bouquets, laurel wreaths, and oven diamond bracelets, u n occasion, have been showered down upon or as she stood smiling and curt.- seying upon the stages of Covent Garden, St. I’etemburg, and Paris, is aware that, not so very long ago, she was a hare-footed orphan girl, hel ring her aunt, old Marta Vaunini, at the was itub, seldom tasting meat, sometimes getting cuffed for carelessness, and not un~ treflueiitly going hungry to bed.~ glam-0d them ; the people are laughing, k aiming, singing and chattering from morn- ing till night; even when they work they seem to be only laying at toil, dragging up their pets or temllng their vines, as h (ml to make a pretty foreground ‘ * icturc. d Life at Sorrunto and (Yastellar "11°11 _1_ le 9pinion of an enyhnusjgs ' hâ€"ull that one haé heard, seen, or rend of this countryâ€"cannot have exaggerated its loveli- ness or idealized its perfection. The sky and sea are as blue and deep, the mountains as Softly purple, and the Vegetation as luxuri- aut as the most fervid imagination can have There ii no disappointment about this part of Picgums}, poptry, books of tg‘ayel one of the hotels; u long line of smoke is blm'm {mm Vesuvius towards the horizon; the lights of Naples wink and glitter on the other side of the bay ; and )reaently (if you are inclined to pay for it) a little com any of young men and maidens will come an dance the Tarantella for you, till you are weary of watching an much activity in such a slumber- ous atmmphem Ircqncntly gom I hungry to bed. In those old nys, from which she has he- comc so widely and utterly removed, Annunâ€" zinti'Vannini was a beautiful, laughing, ha - py, and good-natured girl, whom evcrylxxi‘ was fond of, and whom some (notably Luigi Ratta) loved so much that they would fmn have taken her, all poor and dowerless as she was, to gladden their homes permanently vdth her bright presence. Nowadays her beauty has lost something of its freshness, as is but natural after ï¬fteen years of constant labor and excitement and contact with the world; her lau hter is perhaps neither so frequent nor so earty as it used to he ; and it is proverbial that wealth does not of ne- cessity confer happiness on its possessor. Good-natured the Vanniui has always boon, and always will be, one may suppose, till the 0nd of the Chapter. The district. that forms the southern horn of the Bay of Naples, with its orange groves and vineyards, its aloes, olives, and palms, its rocky hilhs, its white, glittering towns, its deep blue sea, in; bare~legged ï¬shermen and graceful, dark-oyml girls, has always been the very Paradise of tourists. The faint, heavy scent of the orange blossoms is waited to you as you sit in your balcony above the sea, or. warm, moonlight nights; the tink' ling of :1 guitar is heard from the distance, when: somebody is siugiu" “Santa. Lucia," or “ La Bella Sorreutina " llmforc the door of The peasants of Horrcuto gm (2 her the an» bx'iquct of La lmlla Sorrentina, after the well~ known song that bears that titleâ€"whether from her remarkable beauty or from the fact that Luigi, who played the guitar :1. little, was fond of trolling out the air at her garden gate, 1 do not, know. The name “'88, at all UVCJltS, 2L sufï¬ciently appropriate our. LA BELLE SORRENTINA Lovers, as has been said, were not. wanting to her; but at the age of eighteen she had as yet declined to have nnytlnng to say to any of them-woven to Luigi Ratta‘, whom perhaps Sllc liked the best of all, and who had been constant to her ever since the time when, as children 0f ten and eight,- yoars nld respect- ively, they haul broken a small coin together, each promising to keep a half in Sign of étcr- ual ï¬delin Luigi, like herself, \s‘axs, at the time our slur ' opens, an or him. His father had died twogyears before, caving him :1 small sum of money carefully locked up in 21 (5th box, a share in a good-sized fishing boat, a couple of nets, and a little cottage that outside Sor- rento. \Vith this n) rty uigi, wough not preci‘aely well-mag, gm himself in a posi- I fem not thu storm-clouds that hm or around me. Drifting thh thee. For the wring-time and summer of UH 3'0! haw-a found thee Them in nought in the past that is Worth 1110 re petting __ With Faith. r the pllut, and Low 10 cast O‘rr 11.»; "the light of her amne. The wants oi x‘ ‘ her of life yet before ma tempflng (ho while. ' My (hiding; lnswsd NM ix mumch this hour we would min by forgvt 1 ng, Low;- hs swwmms ; joy‘u radiant flowrm Bloom never for luv, As Eon-1y! walk 1hrou h tho dvstulrne hours, “failing 01' mm: Bean linked wixh heart in onchuuuc mulvuvur-v Husband and wifv. We‘re “(him oh, mv sweet. on the bewn‘fu‘x Hnu‘ ’l‘heflwz of life. But your luvefiirug‘ VlQllrdr {al‘thfu}. will mam-.4 my uxistence 'l'be anon; mm of love has nevr‘r 31H. failed 1134‘. Never. dear heart 1 No: yum-faith. oh 1 my darling. when vunsmc as sailed me. The. more of my irlhomL fm‘hm‘k in we dirumcc‘ sm I can see: me Hm ('ornhiH Magaxlw Tim river of fife Fuhhfnl m 111(- Since WP, wcn' ch Lifo‘ whm 3pm A. heaven {0 m CHAPTER 1 W EDDED RICHMOND HJLL, ONTARIO. CANADA, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1876 + h I Wu Y» v ‘ mm mm: and La" : Vnu uknn Judge 01' yoursc vyou who know what a voice is. It is but two steps from here~~n little cottage, not a hundred yards off.†And the enthusmstic Susi seized his ponderous {Jartnor by the arm, and attempted to drag xcr to her feet “Dccidedly,†shriokcd that lady, drug. glinv violently. “I «10 not leave this chair till go to bed ! Let me alone, Sassi ; you are causing me great pain and discomfort." And, being released, she dropped heavily hack into her former position with a grunt. “Signor Sassi sighed. "\Vcll, well," he said, “I “1'1! bring her hore in the murnin .. You will hear her, and be conviucod. I wi I make the fortune of that girl 1" “ Bah I" said the Signom, shrugging her shoulders and depressing the corners of her mouth. “ You are always going to make somehody‘s fortuneâ€"and what» is the result ‘1 Remember that girl at Venice. whom you took to live with us for six months, and who, as I had already prophesied, turned out to have no more power of understanding music than that table. Remember ihe tenor, as you called (though he was really nothing but a harritone), who stole my rings and your cash box at Anemia. But what is the use of wast- ing breath on those who will not hear? I supï¬oac this new angel will come and stay wit us from to-morrow. I only beg you to notice that I prophesy she will prove to he a failure, and that she will run away with all our clothes in the bargain. 1’ †You will see-~yoT1 will see," replied old Sassi, nodding his head and closing his eyes wig} an aspect of_sercne‘c§rta§qt3_'.x The next morning, while old Marta Van- nini was hard at work over the washing, by means of which she lived, somebody rapped at the door with the handle of a stick, and on going to admit her visitor she was some- what su )rised to see an elderly gentleman, of benevlgleut aspect, who took off his straw hat and bowed down to the ground. The old gentleman chimera noisily up the wooden stalrcase of the Albergo della Sirena, and bounces into the sitting room, where his win who is twice as fat as himself, lies dnz- ing in an arm chair. ‘ ' My dear !" ho gaapn, “ my dear " \Vell, Sassi, what is it \mw ?" says she, still only half awake. “ My dear, I have heard the voice (if Ml an‘ 7 Che (the! Them would not be room in heaven for all the angels you have heard, a , \* n. But Why (1005 that elderly gentlenmu audâ€" (lenly win round upon his lxecls with an ex- clamatinu of deli ht? \l'lxat causes him to tear all his white icghurn straw hat, as if in a thenzy, and dash it upon the ground ? And why does he presently pounce upon it again, and scampcr nfl' towards the hotel as fast as his fat, little round legs will carry him? It is only that Aununziata, by way of reply to her lover, has begun to sing one of the songs of the country. Everybody in Sorrontn has heard her sin"; everybxxly knows that she sings well, and3 has a sweet voice ; but upon no ’one have her vocal pmwrs prmlucml such an effect as this before. "Signom," said ho, “ 10? me ï¬rst of all felicitgite ygp." __ “Your Excellency is very good," replied the wondering Marta, “but- with times as hard as these, I don't know~â€"â€"-" “ You possess a. treasure, Signm‘n. " “Santa Madonna! a treasure! I can as- sure your Excellency that this is the ï¬rst I have heard of it." " You possess a treasure, I was about to my, in your niece." “0h 1†said Marta, with u l'engthened countenance. “ \Vell, yes; she is a. good girlâ€"one cannot complain ; but she scarcely pays for her keep ; and we poor people have to think of that. ’ “ Not fly for her keep 1 Woman 1 is not a voice ike hers payment enough for the keep of a whole regiment ‘2†Does not your heart leap into your mouth when you hear herrging‘!" “ Che bella ragwa 1" he ejaculatml, under his breath, with a fat, approving smile, as Annnnziata. nodded and waved her hand to her tuneful swain. He sat and looked and listened till the song had been gone throu 11 down to the last word of the last stanza, on y giving vent fa an occasional shuddering, hAll-vh-h I" when Luigi Ban Hatâ€"~59; the truth. he pretty frc uent y dim r and then got up to return to his oth. “But cam Signor mio," said old Marta, laughing at little (for she began to suspect that her interlocutor was not quite right in km head), “she is one of those who must work and not sing. One may sing all day long, like 3 0211130. but that will not bring in mmmy,†“That is precisely where you are mis- taken, my good madam ; singing will some times bring in money enough to buy up the whole of Sorrento‘ Did you ever hear of Alboni, and Grisi, and Malihrau Y" “N0: Marta was unacquainted with any Now it chanced that as he was thus em- ployed, one ï¬ne Novemlwr evening, a. stout, elderly gentleman came sauntci‘ing towxmi him from the direction of the hotel, smoking his after-dinner cigar, and stopped to listen to the rustic serenade. The air was delici- ously soft and warm ; thch WM just enough of gentle southerly wind to 50$ the olives anll ever rcen oaks sighing; thomoon was Htrcann ing own full upon the white walls of Marta Vannini‘s cottage; Luigi. with widcmpen 'aws and (host well thrown forward, was awling out “ La Bella SorrcutinaԠwith all the power of a magniï¬cent pair of lungs; and presently an exquisitely formed little head was thrust outl fmm Annunziatzi’s win- dow into the moonliwht. The elderly gentle. mam was so plcaaea with the whole scene that he thouuht he would sit down on the wall and watgli it for a few minutes while he ï¬nished his cigar. “ N0 : Mart: (vi these namw “ \Vell, they were India‘s who made more money by singing one night at the o era than I an pose you would earn by was in" in a coup e of years. \Vhat do you think of amt ‘1" “ It is extraordixmrv,†said Marta, “ich a, sigh : “ but surely, Exocllenm, you do not mean that our Annunziate cmlld do that 7" “ “'ho knows '5 l slmuld be better able m tell you if you would Permit me to hear her sing for a. igw minutga.‘ “ "Annunziata 1" shriuked the old Woman in her shrill, nasal accents, “ leave the wash- ing, and come here. Here "u a gentleman who wishes to speak to you." Anuunziata made her appearance, smilin am! surprised, and Wm greeted with mucï¬ cordialit ' bv Signor Sassx. Likn flxe generâ€" ality of {tummy she was wholly free from tion to support a wife; nor need he have sought long or for to ï¬nd a willing partner, for he was steady, handsome. hardâ€"workin , and as; strong as an ox. But there was on y one girl in the world that Luigi felt any in- clination for; and she, when one npokesï¬o her of love, would only laugh; and if one mentioned marriage, was apt to retire into the house and slam the door in one's Taco. It was provoking; hut Luigi was of a lonrr suffering and per-severing nature ; he douth not but that, in the end‘ his hopes would be fulï¬lled, and in the meantime possessed his soul in paiienco, and got what: comfort he could from long interviews with the girl of his heart on fine nights after work hours, at the 0nd of old Marta Vannini's garden, which overlooked the 8021.. He used to take his guitar on such occasions and station himself by the low, la\'a.~built wall,l_singing love songs till such times as it pleased Aununzi- am to ixiconie aware of his presence, and come down and talk to him. The winter that followed was one of almost unalloyed happiness to Annunziata. Every day she spent three hours at the Albcrgo rlcllai Sirona, workingrhurcl at the drudgery of lmrning to get out» her voice, under the auspices of Sigmor Sassi and his wife, the latter of whom, having been completely Van~ quished by the beauty of the young peasant- girl, as well as by the undoubted excellence of ht‘l' clear soprano, had now taken up her cause with as much enthusiasm as her more easily moved husband had done. Toiling at the wash-tub till one's back was like to hiulli was now 9. thing of the past; Aunt Marta was always {gracious ; dinners at the Sircun, accom anie< by unheard-of luxuries in the way 0 strange wines, were of frequent oc- currence; {oodnatured Madame Sassi had gone into Naples, one day, and returned with a. present of two beautiful (lrossz-s; ex-erbmly was complimentary, polite and kind. Already some foreshadowing of the glory of success. was beginning to make thc world brilliant for the youn aspirant. Luigi, on the other han , was cast down almost into the depths of despair by the changed order of things. He seldom snw Annunzinta now! she was forever running over, on one pretext or another, to see hcr new friends; and although she was always kind and pleasant to Luigi, and seemcd glad to see him, he could not, but feel that a gulf had already begun to open between then). And if it were so thus early in the business, how would it be when she should have visit~ ed distant lands, and sung before vast audi- ences, and become a great 1adyâ€"~ns they said she would do? There were timcs when Luigi felt that if he. could induce the fat little singing master to accompany him on a sail to Capri, and if he. could contrive to u - set the boat at a reasonable distance from t 1c shore, it would be a satisfactory and excusa- ble thing. But Signor Sassi had been to Capri, and had been grievounly sick on the way ; insomuch that he had sworn by all he held most sacred to tempt the 5m no more. Luigi Ratta, passing down toward the shore with hisoars overhis shoulders. caught a. glimpse of the group through the open door. He saw the little fat man in his black alpaca coat and white jean trousers, talking and gesticulating ; he saw Aununziata stand‘ in leaning against the table, with her beau‘ ' 111 b r ‘ an i o 'n I Haw}.mmhghsdgu Junk; he! hwéds “1th a pleased, dawl look in her eyes; he saw old Marta. grinning from ear to car with satisfaction; and a r‘oId. undeï¬ned feeling of dread, which he afterward recalled, crept over him. Nobody noticed him, and he went on his way Without his usual mnming salu» tatiou. ,7- , “There will he no (harm done," replied Sassi, who lmd now ( nite rewvomd his 00d humor. "I am well enough of? to a .0rd myself :1 caprice it will not be the ï¬rst time." And so Annunziam‘s licstixly was settled. Sassi roddcnod a liillb. “l dn not want money,†he answered, in :1 slightly injured tone; “but- you may feel at case about in curring any obligation from me. The Signo- rina shall repay me allI have spent upon her as soon as she is in :1. position to do so. And there is another thing. You will want some one to replace her in helping you with your work. I will pay what is necessary to secure you an assisuuit; and that also can be my turned tn me in due time. Now, \A‘llai (In you say '3 A )1: you contented 1'" “'hat could Marta my hut that ï¬lm am ceptcd 50 liberal an offer with willingness and gratitude, and that Annunziata should begin hm- lcssons as 50011 as the gentlmnun pleased '3" But what if it turns out n mis~ take, after all '1†she suggested. and all {his expense leads to nothing Y" As for speaking of marriage to a young woman who was all exultant at the thought of quitting her native place and seeiu the wonders of the great world, that was 0 curly out of the question. At the bottom of his heart Luigi nourished a faint hope that the cold and misery of these unknown foreign lands might prove insupportablc to one who had been hrou ht up in the Warmth and color and sunlig t of Sorrento, and that, after a few months of struggling against the bur- den of cloudy skies and barbarian habits. Annunziata might ladly and rcpentantly return to her native taly. In such an (wont, how willingly would he throw open the door of his cottage to receive her. It was not much of a hope to build upon ; but such as it was, it served to sustain him when, on a bright April morning, he stood sormufuliy watching the departure of the traveling carriage that bore away Signor and Signora Sassi and Aununziam on the road to Castellamarel The carriage disappeared in a cloud of dust, taking with it Annunziatu and her fortunes to (‘nsstcliamarcâ€"~t<v Naplcavfo the unknown. \Vould she ever come back again Luigi wondered Sadly, as hp 1an to go dawn {o hix boat on the shore. †But Signore," gas ed Marta, mthcr 2w,- wildored by the rapinty with which this programme “as aunmmugxd. “ whn is: in pay you for all this 7" “Now this is ‘what. I pituimslé to you,†he continued. “ During the proscut winter, which I intend to pass at Sorrcnbo, the Sig- norina, shall come to me for singing lessons twice a (laywtwo houm in the morning, mm in the afternoon. In the sprng I take hur, under the care of my wife, to Paris. whch we reside: ; I continue her instruction there, and in the autumn I hope to introduce her to the )uhlic. In three years, or two perhaps MW 0 can say Ynflhe will be earning, if I am not mistaken, a musiderahl salary." Whuu Luigi saw the Last of Anuuumuta, on that Spring morning, he dctormincd that he would think about her as little as possi- ble throughout the sumu‘xrr, that he would expect to hear nothing of her, and that he wuuld devote all his time and energy to the tuning of money and bettering his sition. Ho knew that them was no pm‘ua ih'ty of the mtum oi the wanderer before the autumn ; d indeed it was to the storms and rains of t at season that he rincipale trusted to bring about the fulh ment of his wishes. Even in the South, autumn is often a. dreary But notwithstanding: all his resolutions, her inuni 'ul caprilnlitios. She sang him ï¬rst I v 0 found that ho uould in no Wise succeed in one Rong, then another, and ï¬nally, roprcssâ€" I h ing a strong inclination to bumtout laughing, ‘ banishing the image of his absent low from consented, for the ï¬rst time in her lift: to ho ] his mind. \‘t'hother he was ï¬shing or mend- put through her scales. Highor and higher 5111;; his nets, eating or drinking, sleeping or rme the clear, full, true noles‘ till Signor walking†in every hour of the long blazing Sassi Could no longer contain his ilcliglit.1da}'s.zi11d throughout the sultrv nights, the Ho Seized Annunziata by both hands, zmdksamc sweet, kind face was always before VH-nt noar to embracing her in his exultation. ' him ; and as the rcfieotionaithat arose there- “ Signorinn,†he cxcléimed, “tho world is from could scarcely be of n. r‘hcerful nature, open to you '. A little work,qu little flierse- ! Luigi became silent and moroao, and some- reranceâ€"and everything you touch wi] turn I times even, as his companions remarked with Thou he twirle mund and fat-ed ‘ surpriaoâ€"Jor that had never horn uwal with the old woman. "And now. Signoru," he him »a trifle quarrelsonie. said, “for n few words with you. I am Sigâ€" :\ n' would he keep himself from going nor Sassi on may perhaps havr hmrd mo may now and thou to gm; what news he spoken of ' could from old Marta. Vannini, who did not But‘Martn was as ignorant of the fame or receive his visits with much cordinlity. Signor Emmi as she had admitted humpli to < Marta had begun to dream ambitious dreams be of Urisi and Alboni, “Hum !" muted with regard to her niece’s future, and was the old gentleman, “' I am not altogct JCI' ob- d1+~{>osod to look upon the young ï¬sherman as scum for all that. if chance ever takes you a. (voided nuisance. She told him, how» to Paris, London, or Vienna, you will Iiml ' cwr, pretty nearly all that she heard, not that: :Uwsandro Sash, the singing nmstm‘, is being able to refrain from imparting such pretty well known in all those places. Not lgood news to all who cared to listen. Anuuu that I am a singing master now ; I made I ziatn was in Parismthcn in London-then in money enough years . "o to kei-pmy wife and Paris again ; she “as rtudying hard. and mfï¬clf in comfort, and I have no children. "ï¬ttinir UH admirably. Her voice had horn . . ‘7 , . Music and Art. N‘Cupy the place of (‘hlllll‘cll ward in several of the great private housicn in my ufl'cotions,†said the little mzm, draw- thc I/mlnm'i Inglcsz' had been enchanted ingv himself up and tapping his mount. Erith her» 'n l’arju she had sung before tho to gold i 4M. shyness, and though somewhat. taken aback by the Visitor‘s request, she made no diï¬i- culty about obliging him with a specimen of her musical capabilities. She sang him ï¬rst one Rong, then another, and ï¬nally, repressâ€" ing a strong inclination to bumt out laughing, consented, fm‘ the ï¬rst time in her life to lx put through her scales. Highm- and higher rme the clear, full, lz'ue nnies‘ till Signor Sassi Cnuld no longer contain his tic-light. Ho Seized Ammnziata by both hands, and \wnt mar to embracing her in his exultatinn. “Signorinn,†he cxcléimed, “the world is open to you '. A little work,qu little Kisme- \‘emnceâ€"and everything you touch wi] turn to gold 3†Then he twirle muntl and {at-ml the Ulll woman. "And now. Signmu," he said, “ for It few words with you. I am Sigâ€" nor Sassi~you may perhaps haw hmni 111(- spokcn of ’ 'T'HA I’TER ll We hm‘e received a dozen or more com- munications asking us to insert whai we con sider to be the host cures for coughs, oolds, hoarseness, &c, As this is the season when consumptinn lays its traps, we feel that a few hints to {he young and inox ricnced may subserve a better urpose by ing inserted in our editoxial c0 umn than by compressing them into the department of “ Useful Re- ceipts A somew‘uziL lengthy and varied experience has taught us that the simplest and most- cnsily obtained remedies, such as our good old mothers believed in and used, are far better and certainly much cheaper, than the thousand and one lie-puffed concmtions which flood the modern market. “'0 also believe in the truth of the well-known wlage, that "an ounce of prevention is Worth a pound of euro†“'0 therefore offer our ad- vice under txro heads :~ u. nu. u. \. \Ix.‘\VA\4, Kll‘lllS‘lU [HRH L-ulgl lllL'lule. “'hmi he entered the well-known room there was such a buzzing in his cars, and such :1 mist before his eyes that he scarcer knew Where he was or what he was doing; 1101' did he for a moment. or two, reco nize in the elegantly dressed youxw lady w 0 was seated by the \n'ndow the limrcfooted com- panion 01 his chilihpo'd. The YOl‘"'h‘-§f“' ,_-,,.,.,.ie réhson to feelucmbarrassed, was not slow in her ureeting. She ram up to him, holding out hath her hands, with the bright smile that ho rmnombercd so well. PREVENTIOX.â€"-â€"K00p your feet warm, your head cool, and your heart joyful. (Boerhziave slightly altered.) Never g0 intn the street when you are perspiring. “'hen you are walkixw briskly and feel comfortably warm on a cold day, don't stop on a corner to talk with a. iriemlmmzmy a man and woman have received their death-warrant by standing on the corners, while the chill winds blew upon them and “ sto wped their pores," thus cams- ing the ï¬rst. cold. Don't go into crowded assemblies. Don’t drink your tea. or coflee hot in winter. Strange as it may appear, cold drinks in Winter and warm (not hot) drinks in summer are the most wholesome. If you get wet. change your clothes as HOOD as mmsihle. 1 DUI with Nm-mnlxu' and the arriml of the ; eool sermon mine great news, Luigi, on on- ‘tciing Maria's cottage on his usual errand, one evening, “as :w astonished as he was de. lighth {n he met with the intelligence that Annunzinta was expoctml on .1 visit (0 her aunt, and that .x-hc would actually make her appearance. on the following day. Luigi lumlly slept a. wink that night. He rose early in the morning, scrubbed himself carefully from head to footâ€"A2111 operation which I am afraid it must be acknowledged that. he did not go through every dayâ€"“arrayed himself in his hem clothes, and then sat indoors do- ing nothing. till the hour which Marta. had named :is- the prolmlile time of her niecc’s ur- l’lVILl was past, With u great short of will, he suuccalml in keeping within his own house. for half an hour longerm for he thou flit it would nob be quite the thing to pay it ady u \‘ixit immediately on her reaching the end of :1 long journey. Then he set out on the faâ€" miliar road, and found to his surprise, that his heart was beating fast, and his hands were (lam and cold. “ [ never knew I was ii coward icl'ore, thought poor Luigi l110fully. 1"v .. . as imssllflc. (,‘L‘na.~â€"Fnr hourseness, eat hoarhound, or even common molasses candy. For sore lungs and hard cough, make a mixture of molasses, vinegar and butter, simmered t0- gothm', and lake hot, 11 tenspoonful at: a time, intervals of fifteen or twcm-y minutes. If your cold is very severe, and your head is affected, send ('0 your doctor, and direct him not to call on you until you got Well. Then put your feet in soak in hot waterâ€"~hundling yourself 11 wnmn the While-drink a quart of hot her tea, jump into bed, sweat like an omnibus-horse in July, go to sleep, stay home next day, and eat as little as possible. If this don‘t cure you. send for the doctor and sottlo up your worldly afl'airs. l't’rom ilIC Springï¬eld Republican; Thu French butcher separates the hunes from his steaks, and places them where they will do the most good, The housewife orders just. enough for well person, and no more, even to the coffee If a chance ï¬siter drops in, somebody quietly retires and the extra on}: is so prmided, liut notliingextiu by care- lessnoes of intention. “'lieu the pet has boiled, the handful of charcoal in the little range is extinguished, and waits for annther time No maling cook stoves and red-hot covers all ilny long for no purpose but waste. The egg laid til-(lay cost-s at little more than the one liiid last wool“ Values are nicelv Mtinmted, and the smallest ï¬lll'plllï¬ is careful- ly sm‘mi. A thouszmd little economies are pmcï¬mul, and it is respectable to practise them, Choking is an oeozmmical as well asa. sanitary and gustatory science. A French cnolr will make a franc go as far as an Amer- ican housewife will nm c three, and how much further than the American Bridget no- body knowh we. should probably be greatly astonished, could the computation be made, how much of the ï¬nancial, recuperative power of France is owing to her soups and her cheap food : better livi after all, than the heavy broad and greasy ailures of our culirmry ig- IlOI‘flIlCC. ,. 01, when she was to make her dflnn an 1110 principal 0 mm of that great city. All this hligi heart-1, and wont. fl\\'iix_y with :L heavy heart. He greatly feared that the moiety of dukes: and princes would turn the head uf thc simple peasant girl; and in none of her bums, so far as he knew, haul 5110 given any hint hf :1 x'vtum m hm‘ homo in the South. Princess A., “10 Due dc I“, and immy ntlivrs. Hernmx'amnm: in public had been postpmlml, nnt frmn any incapacity mi her part, but he. muse Signor 5119,51 had wished to reserve for llt’l' n' more brilliant triumph by withholding lM‘l‘ from ilic public till the maxi, London 804% Paris again; she “as rtudying hard, and "Drum; un :thn‘ably. Hm- vmco had hem ward 11] several of the great prn‘ate housca ,. . wthc Malayan [7291631 had been enchanted with hcr~~i1x Park: she, had snug before the time ; north of the Alps, Luigi supposed that the snow and the wind began then, and oniy a sud with thgi't-turii qfï¬priug: Household Economy Coughs and Colds [To Br comm URI). 1 “ Yes, I know it. A couple of grecnhorm were down here this morning and measured my feet and sizu I was sure they were Kan- sas ‘ ays.’ " “ on can tell a. Kansas ofï¬cial, then ‘2“ "Oh, yes. Most all of them are of my stripe, and will steal whenever they get a chance. Tom Spears, now, is a gentleman. and always treated me like a humuil being." " You 'are sure you were not in Wynndo‘éte on the night 012 the robbery T" 7‘ I wonder how much they would give 11m to get back that 31,500. I guess it would go a long way toward getting me out of this n scrape. The min looked at the 'reporter about iii teen seconds, and then said, Without appear ing t5) haw; heprd the quegtion : “Do you think you win get out of this ‘1" “ Yes, I (19. I am innocent, and, like Micawbez‘, am waiting for something to t-urn up to my advantagc.’ “ No, I cannot, and shan't try. “'hen I get outI shall go back to the 01d Luxineas, and keep at it until I am gray." me to be better. The world is all agaiusi me, and I might as well be crooked as not. When I die it will be some satisfaction to some, that. I leave the world a squeezed lemon. Public opinion is against me, and it is n law hi her and mightier than any jury l have gx'ex‘ ï¬een brought beforg." “ You are suspectgd of having had a in the \Vynndottgbank robbfary._" ~ " Do 3:01: think if you got out of this scrapc you can do better." IF a flock of ease Bee one (If their number drink, they wil drink too. Men often make geese of themselves. â€"-,w anything. With it I will make the Missouri river run up stream, or get out of any prison in America. I think this is the Worst apol- ogy for a jail that 1 ever mm in, and I have been in most all of them. I have Often thought of being a betm,,man- buihammï¬ .. MA v. foé'iigdï¬ï¬gn crime than to suppress it. If .1 man was a. thousand miles away in an honest business, and one of them should see him, he would 'vc him away in a. minuta l have ncveriiiad any inducements held out to H E Mu: ‘ ‘. Ls an eel by the tail and a wu man by the tongue is sure to come off empty handed. AN Irish lover remarked that it is a great pleasure to be alone, especially when your “ swatchem‘t is wid ye. †A LUMP of crude iron was recently rolled into a leaf so thin that {our Square inches only weighed one grain. " Money and political influence had a good deal to do with my getting out. On thu books it was re istered as ‘ executive clem‘ oucy,’ but I te you money will do almost “ On coming back to Leavmnvorth, lmadc the acquaintance of a number of bad charm“ tux-s, and when once on the road down hill :1 person "005 fast, and in a short time I “’35 tho law 91' mt the gang. 1 havn been arrested scores of times, and have semi the inside 0! ucarl ' every jail in the “hat. The ï¬rst time was sent to the pcnctentim‘y was fm obtaining $400 from the American Express Com any of this city. I was caught, but ham 0d the ‘Hwag' to a 'pal,‘ and while serving my time in the jail had the use at the money. I was sixteen months in jail in Independence, and was at last sentenced im- thrce yeum After serving ei hteen month.u l was pardoned out, through t m exertions of mycounsctl, the Hon. Henry I’. “"lxitc. l was good for a time after my release, but the detectives would not let me alone, and kept hmmding Inc from place to 1:106. At last I made up my mind to go bac to the old busi- ness, and at Omaha. I ‘ contidenced ’ a jewel- or (mt of $700 worth at jewelry. 1 was ur- rested the same night on suspicion, but, am usual, got away with the ‘ swug.’ \Vas sent up for three years, but, as in the Missouri case, was pardoned out after having served half my sentencc MUCH valuable information is expected from the “ Spontaneous Combustion in (foal Commxssxon†now sitting in London. GLASGOW claims to be the second city in the British Isles. It has a. population of 547,- 598, against the 473,405 of Liverpool, ACROSS the “alnuts and the Wineâ€"Engag- ing child 2 “ 0h, M r. Jenkins, do let me see You drink!" Mr. Jenkins : “ Seems drink! \Vhat for, my deal ‘1†En mg child : “ Oh, mamma saw you drink 1i e :1 ï¬sh,†AMONG an invoice of old mper stock re- ceived at a. Norwich a car mih recently was $50,000,000 in cancel c( United States bonds. SURGEONS say Ilmt» ï¬nger mulls, bit-Lon oï¬', often ï¬nd Iodgment in the stomach, where they remain for years, adhering to the tissues and mining nne's feelings. Don't bite your ï¬nger nails. Tm: Prince Imperial owns “Hero,†the well-known sorrel horse of his late {amen and rides him daily at Chisolhurst. Tm; man who was caught on the pickets of a. fence he was trying to climb, knew very well when he had worked himself up to the sticking point. > AN imglest on the body of a frozen man in Seneca, 21]., was interrupted by his thawâ€" mg 0111» and coming to life. A MAN in Santa Clam, California, two years ago bought $9,000 worth of hogs. He has since sold 812.000 worth and has 55,000 on hand. Axiom: Hm Humans the gift. of a rim: was badge of liberation from slavery. A arried people can land explain whether it. is so with the modems. “1 would like a history of your life," answered the scribe ' “ \Vell, get out, your nnte book and 1 will commence. " The man then, with as few words as possi- ble, gave the following amount of his life : “l was born in Sim Antonio, Texas, in 1845, and lived there until I was nearly four vcars old. M y father then removed to For! .aramic, and I lived in that: place until he had served his time out in the regular army. At ten years of ago my father and mother moved t0 Imveuxs'orth, where my younger day were Missed. It had hmu m ' father‘s wish that should become a Cathefic priest, and my earl ‘ education all tended toward that thing. u‘Ixm't-uworth I attended St. Mary‘s College, and WM under the special charge of the bishop of that place. At; fifteen years of age I was! sent to the Jesuit College in St. Louis to cmnpleie in education, While there I came to the cone usioii .that l was not cut out for :2 priest and jumle the institution. ' ‘ ‘1 Taunterm Dollar pu- Autumn in AW: Hi the many oily-tongucd rascals and thieves who have been run to cover in this city, Philip \Vatt, wlm was arrested for com )1iciiy in the Leavenworth robbery, is tho hing. He is a man about thirty yams of age, weighs 160 pounds, and stands six feet and an inch in his stocking feet. He has a good head, ei-nwned by a "I‘Uthl of sandy hair, and from beneath his ( ark eyebrows look out as foxy a pair of gray eyes le ever a person looked upon. “ Do you want, to be interviewed 2'" “ \\'011, I don't mind, but I tell you, to be- gin with, that I won’t tell you anything that will in the lemt possible manner criminato me. What do you want to know '1" A Talk with a. Man who is a Thief by Trade. THE YORK HERALD M. Teolv luqq yUBLISHED AT THE OFFICE Issued Weekly on Fridsy Morning Rmnmox D Ha u Yoxc x: ALEX. Sw'n', 9309312103. m the Kansas Lilly ’I‘hm'r ALL SORTS‘ WHOLE N0 9‘22