/ 
•A-NECTAR 
TRANSPOSITION,—No. 2 
A N INDIAN AND FOREST ROMANCE, 
2 X AND 
A POWERFIL SOCIETY AM) LOVE STORY 
Will commence in No. 36 of the Model Weekly 
Story Paper of America, 
um.ro 
I am a word of four letters, and I am to lessen 
Change my initial, and I am a kind of fruit; 
Change again, and I am final lot; 
Again, and I am a large door or frame; 
Again, and 1 am to detest, or have enmity with; 
Again, and I am a girl's name; 
Again, and f am to be tardy; 
Again, and I am an associate; 
Again, and I am the head ; 
Again, and I ain value, tux or proportion. 
Again, and lam to satisfy. Edwy Armuno. 
ZSf~ Answer in two weeks. 
TIS AN ILL WIND 
Soft whispers that scarce wave the trees, 
And cannot ruffle ocean. 
May—doubtlessly—some people please: 
They earn not my devotion. 
Give me u boisterous gust that whirls, 
And twirls, arid puffs, and bounces, 
That sets a-daneing all the curls, 
And flutters all the flounces. 
They are the Best Stories of their kind ever 
Published in a Popular Paper. 
Now is the time to subscribe for 
“THIS GREAT FIVE CENT WEEKLY.” 
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£2T“ tt-e unit tend tin nrsortmmt of 1 i ,,r ID: adi.e’s 
Dims rrmtCATto.vs on thR receipt of *.'» for a 
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for one year, lu clubs of ten and upward, f2 each. 
Northeasters, lot your ICrxoi.EV’S sing,- 
I don't cure where It blows from, 
If others' bibs that brisk breeze bring, 
Which my blis* first, arose from ; 
She stood with tresses uuoonflijcd, 
Willi clouds of muslin round her. 
With ribbons streaming down the wind, 
Ah, ye*.-twus thus I found her I 
CHARADE.-No. 12 
My first is a mixture in all kitchens made; 
My second, a fruit, is now suHewing a raid; 
My whole, with great gusto, is eaten by all, 
When cooked by the housewife in winter and 
tall. Calypso and I. 
Answer in two weeks. 
Will contain the opening chapter of RED ARROW, 
T11 K WOLF DEMON, by Ai.BF.HT W. AIKEN. Esq., 
and MAl.IJ ARNOLD’S TRIAL. Or Tbk Broken 
B tcaiumtAl.. by Mrs. M. V, Victor. Also ,n Thrill¬ 
ing Tale by Oapt. Mayne Reid. We here give the 
opening of 
She wrestled with the saucy breeze. 
While little screams she uttered, 
As flounce, frill, panulor— all of these- 
About her flapped and fluttered. 
O, Zephyr,—still within my heart 
Your rogue I sh conduct rankles, 
Although It did a glimpse Impart 
Of, O, such feet and ankles. 
PUZZLER ANSWERS, 
Her head she lowered to tlic storm, 
And struggled onward blindfold; 
In rude embrace her fairy form 
Did viewless arms of winds fold ; 
She battled on against. Its wrath, 
Her graceful head down-bending, 
She came to where 1 kept me path, 
My eager arms extending 1 
A shook ! a cry! She stood, half-pleased 
To shelter front the weather, 
But, also, by my act halt-teased,— 
Yet lovely altogether I 
Well; we’ve been married years twice five, 
And 1 ran battle toughly. 
And not a wind while I’m alive, 
Shall touch that check too roughly! 
miscellaneous QVbuertiscinents 
OUR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE, 
And Pure n-I.lSTiif GK.VPI.NK WALTHAM WATCHER, 
tells how and where they are made, describe* the 
different grades and gives weight and quality of the 
cases, with prices of each. We send them by Express 
to any part of the country, with Mil to Collect on De¬ 
livery, willi privilege to the purchaser to examine 
the Watch before paying. No risk is taken by those 
who buy of us, as every Watch I* warranted to give 
satisfaction or the money will be refunded. The 
prices uf the Silver Wate.bea range from HO upwards, 
and the Gold Watches from 470. When you write 
for < Pi lee List, slate that you saw this notice in the 
Rural New-Yorker, Address 
HOWARD & ro,, 78aBroadway, New York. 
that told of many a year spent tinder the greenwood 
tree. Across u little open glade. Whereon the moon¬ 
beams fell kissing the earth ns though they loved 
it —dashed the deer, and then, entering again the 
dark recesses of the forest, ihc brown coat of the 
wood prince was lust in the inky gloom. 
Then on the trail of the buck, guided by the noise 
of the rustling branches came a dark form. 
AS Hie torai stole, with noiseless treud, across the 
moonlit glade, it displayed the person of an Indian 
warrior. 
A red brave decked out in deer-skin garb, stained 
with the pigments of the earth in ma y colors, and 
fringed in fanciful fashion. 
The warrior was a tall and muscular savage, one of 
Nature’s noblemen. A son of the wilderness linirtim- 
meled by the laint of Civilization. 
Fast on the trail of the deer lie followed, although 
the CllasC was almost ImpelcaA. 
Hardly had the warrior crossed the glade and en¬ 
tered the thteket, when, cm his track—f ollowing him 
as lie was following the deer—came another form 
through the forest. 
A rorm that moved with noiseless steps, A form 
that, cast behind it a Shadow gigantic in its bight. 
The form did not pass across the glade, but skulked 
around it in tiro shadow, as tin.ugh it feared the 
moonlight. 
The warrior penetrated Into the thicket beyond 
tin* glade, but a hundred yards or so. Then, satis- 
tied that the deer was thoroughly alarmed and bad 
solicitt safety In flight, the warrior began to retrace 
his steps. 
The Slntwnrn brave dreamed not of the dark and 
fearful form—that seemed neither man nor beast— 
that lurked in his track. 
lie had hunted tlic deer, but little thought that he, 
too. in turn was limited. 
The red chief guessed tint that the dread demon of 
his nation -tint terrible foe who bad left his red 
“totem’’ on the breast of many a stout fthuwr.ee 
brave—was even now on his track, eager for that 
blood willob was necessary to it* oxlntenoo- 
Wilh sateless steps the warrior retraced his way. 
Front behind u tree-trunk came the terrible form. 
One single blow and a tomahawk crashed through 
the brain of the red-man. 
With it groan the ftbawne© Chief sunk lifeless to 
the earth. 
Theduik form bent over him for a moment. Tinea 
rapid kidre-stashi-s, and the murk of the destroyer 
blazoned on the breustof the victim, reddened with 
bio. id. 
Then through the alblos of the forest stole the 
dark form. 
All living things—the insects of the earth —the 
birds of the night—shrunk from Its path. 
It crossed the glade full In the soft light of the 
moon. 
'J'he rars of the orb of night fell upon a huge gray 
wolf, who walked erect liken man ! The fuce ul the 
tvoll was that of u human. In the pawot the beast 
glistened the tomahawk oi the rod-man, the edge 
now scarlet with the blood of the ftliawtiee chief. 
The continuation ot “ rrj> arrow, the Wole 
Demon: mt. The Qlkin ot the Kanawha,” by 
Albert \V. A 1 ken, is in• w ready In No. DC ot the “ New 
York Saturday Journal" -snnttuxe of tdi popu- 
lar weclilir *, arid hki.i.s fun fiSK CENT less per 
COPV ! ’t his truly reuinrYuble romance, by Mr. 
Aiken, will make us crest u sensation as did "-Seth 
Jones.” " Nick of the Woods," and "Nick Whiffles,” 
in tlicir day ; and In our opinion will eclipse them 
ALL in subtility of Plot, delineation of bolder life 
and character, vlvblncV* oi style end strength of 
story. “ RED Auitow, Tin: H’tii.r Demon • or, The 
Qi EICN OF -1111: Kanawha,” we pronounce the best 
Indian stotu ever j/ublMu’d, 
BEADLE A: CO., Publisher*, 
No. 98 Wlllisiiii Mi., New York. 
GOOD-NATURED PARAGRAPHS, 
None of Your Lillie Nubbins. 
Tiie long drouth lias reminded a contem¬ 
porary of a story told of a Methodist brother 
at an Ohio Conference, some years ago. 
There was a great drout h, and the corn crop 
in particular was suffering for rain. Father 
B-believed in prayer, and invoked relief 
without further delay. He prayed for rain, 
and for abundant, crops, especially of corn, 
saying: 
“ And now, O Lord, give us a big crop of 
corn this year. None of yer little nubbins 
now, O Lord, but great big ears, as long as 
yer arm —ah !’’ 
It rained powerfully that very night. 
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Tins is how uncle Caesar, a colored 
preacher, disposed of the mode of baptism 
questionNow, bredren” said be, “1 
hear great fuss about dese words in and into. 
And folks want ns to believe dat, they all 
mean under, and dat when the Scripture 
speak of an individual going down into the 
M ater, the Bible mean to say that ho went 
under do water. Now, bredren, yonder is 
bniihtrT Solomon. Now ’spose some day 1 
go over to see bladder Solomon, and brud- 
der Solomon wery politely say—Uncle Cae¬ 
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lour and two naughts will, I think, put him 
Straight," the bearerof the hat replied. “ Well," 
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THE I!RPIiiSO.\ED NUN 
Our read- 
a ers will recollect t he excitement that was occa¬ 
sioned, some time ago. by the publication of an ac¬ 
count of the terrible treatment to which Bahbary 
Ulryk, a nun in the Cracow Convent, was sub¬ 
jected. The Government ordered an Investigation. 
Their full report has been published, and is the most 
pitiful and benrt-rending history we ever read. Sin¬ 
gle copies sent., post free, for 26cents; live copies for 
$1. Thousands are sold daily. Agents wanted. Ad¬ 
dress C. W. ALEXANDER, Publisher, 
224 South Third St., Philadelphia. Pa. 
s=2?“Answer in two weeks. 
Fourteen. 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA.—No. 8 
I am eoiriposed nf ninety-eight letters. 
My 4, 29, 44, (51, 90, 78 is an animal. 
My 8.19, 55,40, U4, 71 ! i.« a fish. 
My 10, 2, 42, 60, 89, 21 Is a plant. 
My 18,10, 38, 97, 83,28 is a fruit. 
My 22, 39, 87, 3, 17, 70 is a plant. 
My 27, 14, C, 87. 81, So is an animal. 
My 33, at, 94,46, 12,20 is a number. 
My 38, 86,50, 72,11, 29 is an insect. 
My 40,30,33, 92,48. 10 is tut animal. 
My 42,9,32. 55, 94, 87 is n fruit. 
My 45, 71, 81, 75, 3,37 is u tree. 
M.V 49, 34, 28, 0ft, 88, 62 is a fish. 
My 51, 74,85, 16. 43,31 is a bird. 
My 59, 86, 57. 54. 16.35 is a tree. 
My 63, 6. 20, 73, 82, 52 is an insect. 
My 85,12,83,17. 9(1, 23 is u liower. 
My 68, 25,11, 80,63, 9 Is n vehicle. 
My 77, 91, 66, 1, 93, tO is tin animal. 
My 79,38, 85,15, 58, 69 Is u tree. 
My SO, 7, 56, 77. 53, 47 is a reptile. 
My 95. 71, 29,5,18,13 is tin animal. 
My whole is a poetic quotation. 
Answer in two weeks. Isola, 
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