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THE OGtETBOBPE
Subscription Rate? s
OwT«r ..... US.
. 1.4ft
T&nw Moot**, fci
Ttrtm Cm* t» ihoM.
- f ovc rv y so papar mt< GStE ta« moset j pud
!foti * fi*«o «et eatfe-ntwr t»o *m*i Lefor* U»«
—*aa*r»t too of bis tiai* . sou if tsbKripttoo to sot
* !W**d, tba paper to at dl«ooailBu*~JL
one*
Any persoc who w •Mid u* the same* of five
new autmarilmr* With $10 -**h. wt 8 b* Mb* .tied to
Mae yearV •abKiipt Xo«htb rale *.
A Merry f hristaaas!
■ ‘ A merry C i« to y«*a *11! ** I
I« pBBSisg low from mouth to mouth,'
From Mat to we»t, froffl north to aouth
From lovlr oA. ao l hall.
“ A rovrry Chruton.ta to tui all! ’
Jf »hoiAed hr U»e cbenful LoaT
The windows barred Mgnuut, the frost.
We toast the weasou. gfwffend «zh*n.
A merry (Tin^tma**! Hush—no breath
Of revelry must pierce the gloom
Of yonder chamber -from that room
The Ru-rit 1 mm> } «w vue«i I*eatb
The mi ’ow cla-jH* her child, a Uss
it {*reme>1 upon its rovy faro
A chokmg fijjb a close tmbnee -
A merry Christmas T What is this ?
• • • • • •
** A Christina* |>arty—l«t ns go !"
A waml rt r hopeleM drop# to die
Hi#brothers heedless pane him by.
Half fro*eo iutbe freezing snow.
Jtnadn? Cbrintmiui! Whits few
lk-m tin of tho«« it welcomed list;
Another year hu o>r uh pans'd
And left to, wife, the oidy two.
The rhiiditth isogh we held no de%r,
The torn thut m»de oh onee more Tonng,
Hie infant arm# that found Us clung.
Have vanndi'd with the pausing year.
Bnt Ghriatmaa mrrry iff—anil thoao
Who wtrive to make it »o do well ;
-+'t*r-»feo.caa evt-.r fitly UU
What comfort from thl- weapon flows ?
“ A merry rhriftmaa!" let uh blew
The ffeaaon when our Lord waa tiorn ;
\nd doubly bteM the Chri*tiua«i morn
That gave ns •• oto M oar RfeMratunua"
“ A merry Chriatauui to yon all!”
Iret it renound from mouth U> month,
Fmm oaat an d /went to north and south,
To b mble cot to stately halL
The Story Writer.
AN EDITORS ftSRTSTIf AS RKMINISOBNCK.
I am an'editor ; and one bitter cold
morning, a few days >*rfore Christmas,
in the rear 18 —, I sat as usual at my
desk.. Among the heap of manuHcripta
I mat wall J I I ill ( daily f ft.vnt compelled Wnltikrv Sll^tbre to nnfi.Tv examine-— knA
sive of u f gr-mmar, ami an t w^li ith neiti.r hailtoito b.
EH* 'SFmTSSmS Frwh
3i^Xl. whitepaper inachildiah hL rUJS; Imlv’a nttowi hand
wn Hblrvof
AftorwAnlH Tt wfeH a litilft ih»
^-^- great literarv uraSfewuffar merit but there wah an
inr&wraaVre^rTit tlie^light
™ like ‘ K in ‘ c,,; the aky " - liefore “ nL the
mtJTran^meiSd „ , 1n wsrnrthblrtnn n
“ith^ more IntoTtow'Taa if f had touch
-r-f«-< petal Of a rose There was a buy
a.. .>
little atofy. Kf I Am xgBi oUly sixteen, j - and r papa .
aud mamma du .uot know (uiytAiuy
abon t it, bnt please tell mo if it be
worth anything. JLMUuntit to .bo prmt
jd ; I tprrnf to bo pnift for it. It w not
for . wyHojf,.. though, -but I wunt the
nifiney ti* give nyji’ ar |‘tt ie brother a
EdtoS^. "Emw-. 7*
Theii e.me the address and signature,
The writing of the note was less neat
and regular than the maunaoript. dainty
there was tbo same fragrance of
youth y about it. ..
I held it a long time in my band. I
am so eld man: at- Htlevelita mitldlc.
aged, perhaps HonretbiPK more; bnt my
heart, is younger than ray aiqiearance.
Little distillations came, or seemed to
oome, from the paper I held. It was
with no common’feeling of interest th-.t
I sat down and wrote my answer to the
note. I returned the manuscript, T bnt
I wrote gently and tenderly. that, gave with it
as my hope and ray opmion a
little more care ami study, tlm youthful
writer wonld achieve a mccese. I even
script if it were a little revised or cor
reoted.amll ,s,into! out how it might
be made available I opened the window
of mv den after I had written my note.
The weeds piercing through the flags
below had a less dreary lraik than they
bad over hail before ; a gleam of sun
With that, however, all thooifhts of the
man«script passetl away. The
wra bs, timid b. reply. T asked
On Christmas Eve was
usual to dine with an old friend of
at St. John's Wdod. He was a marrie.1
sere ma "ra7smafi efiiwren. mSe ind fc J
!r ~ to give n*^* snrprise after
the.anticipati-ra and of was pleasure delighted, toeome, both and at J )
of privation for the first time of consul- !
- Table present anooyai.ee. Inee,! not .
say 1 was then a bachelor. When we ,
wrait .up stairs after dinner^ 4wid we found the
foMm g do m. sfejfe the front i
from the Ifiek r.s.m clo sed.
Ofieneq rarer .. while,
- . hymn aud
The Christmas was sung, a
tree of the most brilliant splendor was
revea on its branch, s were lmng
efta w.,rke„ tor their a,„i cm--root-red parents. Die by three the
ch. dren
little girls and therr governess hail done
it all.
Willie my friend and his wife were |
embHH-tngnwd thaukiug the cl il'trFnvT -
had time to notice the governess. She :
was very young, almost a child herself, i
A mass of bright hair was gatherer! lip j
in great waves at each side of her head, |
and fastened m a loose thick arranged loop be- ;
hind. The bright curls-were so
as to reveal the ear. The ear and cheek
were, I painted should rather Leighton say they are like his
those Honeymoon,” by Need_I m
■■ Painter'. ray :
more of their ravishing loveliness ? But
the pretty blue, eyes d^al, hs.ked as if they i
had criel a great and there had
hern ICLTUI te.o„,
friend.
the rent ph^i P £ed better^fovS- to
fact, they are people fortune! of good birth,
once had a good Diey have a
son and daughter ; the son is a fine
low also. Riththe son and daughter
give the greater part of their earnings
to their .parents ; but the son has not
been very fortunate. Mv little gover
ness she is only seventeen (my chil
dren are so yonug they do not require
a with prim regular governess,) does more than
her salarv, mediocre an it is,
her brother ean do with his hard work,
He is a clerk in a bank.”
— -■Id.rera»X’C,bntI)mKTt- And she helps himalao, I suppose?”
nr inquired, for she ie full of retie nee
scdrceerve-m these pointe, I only know
Echo.
By T. L. GANTT.
like -be w< horse idjjk all up all *° night, “*Jp ami both
a
parent# and her brother. »he la
home to-morrow ; and he, L (ear. e»Mot
afforithe expense of the joorney.
2S?TLVr h 1 1 raid J '
-BSEfon.
SesSwHs deal after ttua with my frieuda gover
The following Easter we were en
g*j?ed» ***d before the CliriatmaaEve
which followed we were married, nhst
. , hope ... llie . ha»
aQ ain ? aBtA a aay now ao
lum tl ! v -
We have a little suburban , home, and
I leave my wife every morning to pursue
my editorial labors, and return every
evening, forgetting my wrack atoi my
worries, knowing nornng t that the sweetest heart
and the faireat face I have ever known
await me in my modest bnthappy home,
I __ never heard again from iV the - author 11 of '
the manuscript which wmen hail »toi so eo muen much in- in
tereeted me ; and, aoo, truth inun to to tell, reu, -naa
never thought of her sines that Christ
mss Eve. Two or three years have
^ tb8n ’" ^ ‘*°
babies.
Their mother is ninja playing with
them She.-often puts her delicate,
slender white hands under my baby
girl s foot, and the baby, makes believe
to stand on it. What a picture it ia ; it
and reading fumbling a scratcliy, serawly in desperation, manuscript. for
over it
the tiresome person who had sent it had
by some ingenious carelessness thoughts mulcted flew far
itofita last page, my
and wide, and, by some assiwiation I
eonnot attempt fjom to explain, vonthful the wnt.V prettv
mam,script had'sent the uJe
who me no was readied
fatled *°Unconsciously from miud, the manuscript 1 tbe oilier I held
my ho< wa»
present with me. I wondered wbat had
become of her—had she written any
more ?-wUere and how was she?
Every moment with I became the more and 1
more puaacaa»I happy mysolf that memory. I felt for all
was ro
wbo ■Mia ftf lo have car*. Aud Mmggle
m the,r fives, 11,.,k.,1 out the address to
which I h«l written before, an,1 wrote
; to ths unknown a few lines. 1 said that
" 1Jwri S, UC '; * l,,ch «“» ^ Prevented ***£ T he
; I ^ n .° w ^„.™TdTJftTffld . aiwl thut I RinmUI
^ gla«l j*** ami written, willing ifshe to wo had anytiuug Written any- Hw*
'hmg«to* W h then days had
» few I an Miawer
-.g>.fi-in*il!g-y«*.i.".fi-teua»^lZ . tu v |U Ml^l u
•!" “''tt -^-ggg fl k h e S ?» t fBg.
'WT rcmumOcrcJ. Tim wards wure.
■ £**««».»• .went and intiootmto w the
CkX hasbami. 1 7 arftSK iss
f Oh, tbeae womanly eiaggera-
tiona, I tii«»ught, m I-«a*. in my editorial
ch air]. And aneb darl ing lmhina..!
; wrote, tor I waited to help nay dear
j ones, but they have been better helped
; by othera than I Owl eoald ever have hoped
to help them. has given them-a
. when yon go home you see a woman
wife a rose to her hand, bold out yours,
. r,m will know me.”
! I smiled at the rimmutie fervor of this
reply, and a faint desire arose that my
. »if„ 8ut i the writer of the letter should
j know each «»her. and then I went on
.with mv 1’wet.t stni-i’vtng av.K-atuiue.
I A* home. I ,«mfera I looked
1 .dwelt for a woman with a rose in her
hand, but, ns might naturally omnibuwes be sup
posed, neither in cabs nor
Jid such an apparition manifest itaclf,_
As I entered my own door I gave au
impatient shrug at the foolish idea of having
hiien the subject of a jest. But
whom did f see striding witlnu the
threshold «f mv home ? My darhng, bright
• with her fair. chitd-Ukc face and
her with n triple crown, and in her hand
•• Dear Irasband/’slie i»id, as I based
her, “I think I loved you from indulgent, the m.e
ment I had your kiud,
thoughtful note. I had written that
ibsurfi little story for I sadly wanted a
ssKtf arasasisswa ■ — .“»c
seemed!" ,.v“ i wr Tzjnss'-hS
“No; I felt how foolish I had been,
.me I cried heartily but I thoaghtrop (5er
good Jlgot and kind all the same. Aim
home, too. and we had a happy
Christmas after all.”
!.«- never going to write a
archiv.
toMeanwbile, yon can write ours, if you
^
The Resources of Turkey.
A London TVoiea corresjsmqent writes
from . \ area : The measures agreed
upon by the Seraskierato for the aug
mentation of the iirnrv, an, 1 the u umbers
tmm£ A b.. result from fen
as follows : All the recruits
liable by ordinary course of law to serve
next year were last mouth summoned to
serv.ee, Bv. this mea-ure there were
raise,! 98,90-1 infantry, 4,.120 field art; -
tory, a,HiW cavalry, -t.-.tob fortress all .boot
bTriand 1,700 engineers-m
44^00 Beside men. this new levy the Turkish army
m the fiel-1 wi ll recei ve a stro ng_ re in
Torecmeiit In the Corps of Uiig.tad
Temen, tbo greater part of which is al
ready on the march to the seat of war. .
The grand total of reinforcements-
namely, those who have reached the
front, those who are on the march.
thither an, 1 those who are ready to
-ranogute according to the regulations tot
to about 230 battalions with twenty
tones, or nearly 2o0,000 men, Bnt the
actual number, will fafi considerably
of these-fi gn res . — ri ie ! ' ii|ui 'l ra m
moning out ofso many recruits cannot
done without de ducti ons. Die
iimrhh; klso.Tdr wfeK. arueven
Llditions mraSStSeneth ofdhe^^nMnyahd the
thev also are continually mak
Se ing to their numbers, the situation of
Turks will not appear too assuring.
These measures, however, do not
- hanzf^the mij.taryresotiroes of the conn
trv. There is still a reserve which
I be called out, and which would yield an
; increase of 183 battalions, or
men. Lastly, the militia system, when
; fullv enforced, wonld command 467 tot
italions.of which only thirtv-tliree
as vet oome forward There tons
mains a force ot «,« battalions liable
; to summoned to arms,
: Turkey Altogether the called total railltary taroe he
not yet out mey
| dosre at #00,000 men
THE ONLY PAPER IN ONE OP THE LARGEST, MOST INTELLIGENT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA.
ALL ABOUT UHRl.STMAS. ,
——
Bnttn* (rUntlw or <#. !>.?-< ..i.m.
6turara-CMmi < »'•«*
eriata afikt I •• at ittnmi..
1 From the earliest reeorda un the snb
i«t, we learn that some Christian com
satt^s-sssa^
March whllp ve , a third bo.lv reeog
*
Two Two very v popular observances Iwlong
;«« ing in to Christmas—the Gbristma^—the hanging hanging np up of
mjgtietoe, letue, and anil the the burning burning of of the the
' yule log—are I—are more more snoestoh especially especially derived derivel
from onr ■ pagan pagan ancestor*. Ti.e ..'._______ first of
three precticcs ..w s its origin n to to the tile
l Tene ration in which the miHletoe was
j,eld bv the Druila, and the latter to a
ceremony perfornuvl by the SeandinU
vians, who, at their feast of Jnul. abont
a,,, willU>r solstice, burned huge fires in
honor of their god Thor,
AU through th» Middle Agee, and
down down to p, tin* t h« time time <»f of the the Reformation Reformation the the
of chrismita eont.uued to be ob
werved with great rejoicing. On the
j ^^vjo^r^a ^
^ 7' be ^teenth century.the celebrate
0 chriRtmaK 8nd other festivals, wae
still continued bv the Lutheran'and An
Klican cbm-ehei, although absolutely
denounced by Calvinists who declared
' < * ro *" ®F.C ea ’ t ssancumt^CnsT auCl ™ ^*,,1
‘toelf; and , v- bishops, > we are told.
"‘a1 ./SL* ^ J ea'^st' «iJ273 S
V' * ' ' f , 'I *“iSii.i^iKraSr Frit i M i
.
,, ^xompomal in. NormamFretudr uhd.
S't S Is^f remlritto^wtoe eff S flrat
*?' 11111 [r™** > . r r“*‘' 1
; ‘ ‘ :.this"* notice*
J??followirw T hl ., nt resnret was
*„tter peri nowioroeK’sung^i„ hehmeh m ■ to this
od f^Christmas s
E „ ^, (11 morning bv ihil
,, r w ,,„ w , t)ll „ from d«>r to d,s>r.
i^Chw w Uru of M*ry frw,
Ang.l. rang tkar. udge,.
i LJerid %o<f» to-btht.’.
In EiraUa Cl «b.
•• i , t w Krnit h*« com-* in nn> toank-Mj
A # m Hr iptnre truth wc flud .
Ttsoar re tMa s-og w hare in mi A
1, Exo.l«i, Olmur
- Thm bud, fu, Thygrratgra-e
Qr .: iu. U ia I.| » tosilWs*_
-Where*, may *«i» Tbvs^e
.
Die decking of houseachurches an-;
srzz
SSgtS^SVSSZS SitiinmTiir, when they
jie orniinieiited
tbeir templea and dwriliiipp with"-green'
» ppfn r w t bo m^r r -rb :
viona froin tbo fuet that wo find morr
rlmu one early eecIeHiiiVtieftl eouneil i
prohibiting the membera of the <;hnrch 1
from imitating the pagan* jn thug ’deiH*-- •
flowers aud Summer branches is in- ;
-tmet.ve amongsT--nations; and as Christ ,
limself eiitercd Jeruadt-m amid waving
ipntye of arboreal palm ani decs,rations great rejoiefaft, have ftor- ob- .
,1 ami ;
111 e.mneetion wife tho ceretno- ;
lies of the Clmreh until the present
|:LV ami a,-- hkeiv to eontilMie ft- such
-.wall di»e-to
-in e .
:
'" j
-
* Lioness at Mr fe*.
,
Xbe Cleveland (Ohio) {farald, of a
j-acent iraao, savs : For sums time pa«t ,
t i„, people- | Lave alamt Richwissl, in Union
,., mn y . been d.stnrhr d by a wild
i^ratt.-lwHerod-bn'toi ' through the wreactqtevl-lt'm The m ia ,
^ country.
i ,a
hturuats. He saw it m a bunch of
-zrara, and got upori a stump, rifle in
..lonml t,» g«*t » |o.*k at it, wben
suddenly leaped out, and in
fi,„ m ds was uimu l.is tnu-k, and
strl ppod him of his clothing. H
ftve m ch a veil that the animal was
iunt at dusk mid the ■sssssstfsti animal sprang from
the "j^um’Vor bushes, and would mvsiranU have tom him jn
lU c of his bull
He escaped with a laoeratod head
, .dshouldcr. -
Albert Wallace bad the next enconn
j,,,,),. reached the ^ck^wbsn W feu
a terrible manner. The. dogs joined
iothefljfbt . |j« parted to get away,
f ,.„ d „ w „ in attempting whipped, to run, the
The (1{ having pounced been Wallace,
f wlm **, upon
1n faRtPnhw in his leg. He
t , rave j y ^ seized the beast's head and
stobd tl ,e dogs to help him, between but
they back raid tne fight his cries
ma „ and bmto continued nuiii
tU a i,j., ia i aW M.- 3umn.-jmstt.iu
, h> . u ,.;,,i,)„, «, r h,,„d beard the muse aud
, laaten W the woods, arriving just
after the beast lmd gone. A part of
t | 1OTU Wallace home aad'the rest
started in pursuit of the lione ss, -t was
q ua j: v Bumd hiding in a thicket near »
fence John Storting volunteered to
take a gnu and go near enough to shoot
at it but thl , au j ma i leaperl Out and
. Kmnce d npi , n him. The rest stoorl
j )ac!{ an ,j m . while Sterling was
riVl | lllg |J .;,„ the ground in a fierce etrug
, le W U t] „. |, r „te. The dogs finally
( . ama to thn resetwrund the animal was
. in frightened away. Sterling -had
....... s „erely bitten on the left arm and
» ■ -------- J
Tfic hunters again started in pursuit.
T fi r lione ss was finally f ound in a stub
eUi . Two young men numiHl
-—--
A . Deer Captured by. Kiris. ,
A few days ago, says the Toronto
'fOanrala) 'riohe, E« ami Gertrude
Breekenridge, daughters of Mr. Wi
; Breckcuralge,- „f ftelmont, w
.vicinity of Long Lake, noticed a large
deer madly rash into the water, evident
ly Without pursued moment’s and slightly .hesitation wounded, the two
a
girls procured a boat, armed themselves
with clubs and set after- the deer. They
soon encountered toe aggravated annual,
when the girls, couragwmsly commenee-.l
the attack with their cbibs, end after a
. short contest had him brought conveyed his deerskin there to
bay, end to home
proof of their prc-wsM-
LEXINGTON, GEORGIA. FRIDAY. JANUARY 11. 1878.
FAR*. SaRDE> ASD HOUSEHOLD
-
,r..o# ifc. Vmrm.
Three important requisites of a see
ee*»fal and happv fanner are thna brief
"A ittle laid well tilled.
- Mstssst- ;
.awtsss lading for atoek be plaoed in a
can
other purposes. gnawed
A field in which the graaa 1*
off close to the root, is ia no condition
j to logo go into into oar onr severe severe vrinters. winters, There is
no no protection, protection, and, and, in in case case of any Wnd
of ... „-----!-----'* pass or clover, the effect ~ is . late
start start the the bdlowiog f..Rowing apring; aDring; and and in in case. cases
of clover, timothy, and orchard grass,
I there,> a danger of their total
tido. -
I have lined tarred my poultry buildings
throughout with paper for two
yearn, puttiDg it between every piece of
board and timber, and even into neste,
and and so ao far, far, bare have not not seen seen a a Lmsc erase abont. aberar.
I liad a hen-house overrun with lire two
years ago! but upon lining it with tarred
““
There are a great unlimited many people who of
seem to have an degree
faith in the ability of an animal to con
vert an offensive and deleterions sub
stance into an article fit for human food,
hXtof^vmg'sw.ll decidedly to'their injnrioua cows,
u,,tli practice* toata^Sa are STmif to
m.at^or who wants
good pure milk had better avoid
ff. AtoP.fral
We often wonder why farmers in this
t j ^ , nae the cart more; it is
^So^A^^q^c^T^ fftKxi
am ] titimpefl. and oniv England' rcquireR one
Itorse to draw it. In carts are
in constant use, being very gtod popular in
the harvest field. We are to see
that damping wagons are employed on
™my of onr forms. This loading hauling ma- it
unro from a barn-yard, hundred ami yards, to be
}, v n wagon ft few foA-fnll.
nhloa.I»l . fork-fail by is a
^ , rf time and labor, of-both
and beast.— Ilurat Bceeiu World.
™ -■* P..r, f-..
l)r. E. L. Hturt-vant, of South Farm
ingham, Mawg m.kes the following
nurGmaiy **! <•*nu lu*iu>u» Jit■’wbich bfi Rad
arrived of study on anil Ibis.subject, practical experiment after many
°', 8 T^ f :
pTO( tt et«m of butter ia largely
dependent on breed.
T here is a s irn ctural -fimit-t<ethe
p ^ .fi .e lemto ea oho ow.--
a-cuttJa..Xuaju B
limit, increased foodcannotimvease the ;
±S‘»^Z.rsr^S ,n,l fttimnli tluui the inferior
m 1 M to conwoiieuilv cow.
.^liraeT.Toni r, That lbe Buperior
fexito Ittr limit, ami a» a
,i rar ti> ;l i ,•,■>,..in«G>p j. iDr oft ^d with
A ^nt>eFio r l.»t of oows will increase the
product, bnt if b*«l to nn inferior i
fi f £ tvr * waste can Imj but Die roHult. i ;
oltlre tood hra
fi„ttor, but even here breed lnBtWflN*'’
more than food. relation .
7. That there is no constant
between the butter product to,d the ■
( , hiwe that product. the caaeine retains to
g, a coll
Bt , ln t percentage, and that the percent,
does not ftiipear to respond
"
9. That tiie easeiue appears to remain
constant without regard the to the quantity season. of
10. The iucrease in
uuikis followed by an dimcu.se in_ ihe
total amount of easeino. food
11. That the sufficient aela
direetly to check the proportion of
ter.-an* has • tendency to decrease fee
eaac ut e ot -the milk and s ub s titute al hit
men.
— ■It - ..:. ! , ie-n .-.f feedice m to
regulate theeliaractar of the food by the
character of the animal fed ; feeding
Ktiperior production cowajiearerto thelimit of tb<*ir
tlran inferior covs ; ......hug,
if for butter, more Conceutratod and
nutritions fraalB' tl.an for cheaper' pro
duet sawnlent material whieh memme
s^ar?s& ^ ime Imttw'one sweet
a tl cun nimrtersVaapooiiful nip
’2 three lK^ aal
k,
,
VWit Car -Five cups flour Two
oneof lard,
iArrss“ Tgo^ <Mk,st«*s Pn.nnto-One d
| M ^ght c£raT Tjlfii^
! SnndB eggs two ounces of candied peel,
: 8l “ an! mixed "pice se e di - dingi to
„ Hoil gently for reven horns. V
H,ckoby-nut S Caek.—A c.ip butter,
ffigtjS tw „ 81 ™ r three of flour, one of sweet
- and voiks of two
; JR R on? teaspoon mala, two of cream
gg ffjg pint hickory-nuts flour meats lw«t
sprinkled fretlu with J
h a whites to a stiff
,- Brrr- -Brns■-■ Mttwc verv- flt.e--»
! ^theri of tender SSSil beef the fat and lean to
£v Mtace with some pars
; add grated bread crumbs and sea
' all with aa't nutmig and
so n d.re pepper „Tl tra»etl.’er
: ■ „ „ „ ,.....i . ,re.l mois t
: in itonth a beaten flour' egg R-illinto balls
_:, ra;".,,’ h the hands • and fry ' in
' A' J*,' Rread -One pint of corn
; al 0 n —.-t'L^.ra P p i nt nf rve meal twin' birds
„ne large anoohfnl of
- onf . heaping teaspoonful of
dissolved in a little warm
j w atfr, ’ one-lmlf teaSpesmfnl unite of salt; soft mix and
i J „Vr«. - th warm water Pnt'in
rf m lionre. *^ oven fifteen
'
' , ‘
■
_
- _•----- *
’ Hhccklng'Sew* . from 'Edinburgh.
4 writer in a paper pu.ffished at
s«sisri^
sanss and tithe
sodai" same place at another
time, about noon, f .was shocked to see a
lady order and drink a glass of raw.
brandy, and go friend away without eating
anything. Mnular- Hwmlent-raid. A the who dramrht--was'■ witnresed a
■
• followed by u hbenu -application - -f can
: de-Cologne to cover the offensive smell..
I am credibly informed that school girls,
with books in band, go to confertioners
tor"mps of ch-ery brandy, mors than
one such visit being paid by the ■ same
; girl at different shops an her wav home ;
sod in tme case the owner of the shop
got a severe having reprimand her from a young
g,rl family for catered she intended brand, iu
th* »* toeeelf pare sepsraUly. took, M *
-pe? ,
What sad Haw "i!J Eat
Here ia the bill °f B*e menag
erie of the Botanical tvataen of Pari#.
The guesta are anmeroro, rKymn gen
erally from 1,100 to 1,MO- Thru taatea
^ litnndlv ddferen. the
dolmens and Mhtrrh«
alSttgilY ^
although a much sma .er aniau , r«v, 1T es
to The the panther. >t f^ -° .
gw e r 18
i elepfaant, wfaten . eo1 ** r1 m r , 05 P^wnds
j of brae.1, carr ots,8^ 7. ^ *”jhgjn.
thirety, After soihanprat end from eighUoteobMrels yvell he of
t ; water water ThehippopotamnaH ........ are are r»d, ready to t > ra^.s.^
**,..... t, *»t lliAM»#fr »
Rl» rehtm? are like „ H ’’tail is
: bor of the proboscis, sjy. njgu'di is
cookofl. replaced by a coarser r
____ them
The AT»e bears Dears would wonld aecommolaie accomnwi®^
selves .......“— to this regimen, but M mv* —
selves to xms regimen, ra
meats, which are lees dear.
The rhinoceros absorbs dmlratuntUU
CSSfiS? ^ sachra the
.The other and numlrnpedik n.rtwithetandxng
giraffe the bison, ouch^mauer
[ their great height, require
, quantities of food, of winch bar ley, hay
and bran form the principal parts, the
museum is 87,sA. which is .boot *22
perdav. The bill of fare <4 the ZootogiaA
den of L mdon differs little from that of
Faria. Fiah, however, ue used in
greater quantities in the former. They
are designed for the birds and marine
animkls thailive upon fish them to a forfood
freedom. All the brought ^
*ith a fisli which hat! Rcvcrai hooka jn
its mouth.
The sea-dog eats gluttuncmslV , ; «ie
on the contrary, ratsslowly and The
chews carefully h.-f-.e sWatlawmg.
mret gr.-edv lovers „t fish are the
pelicans, fhe k«>eper tlirows the fi»h
a pond; thtm upuia.the gato ami
leaves the passape fr.-e-to .he Jevonred pel.eaus
nuh-in and the flsh «e generally
iu an instant. Lauitjes as
Mtoml potatoes,-appes f„r the monkeys. Turnip
uregtven them, and all dtvsW mto small
bits.
wMOhoftMl The monkeya iwnally comical disputes,
caueesvere
mneh to the delight of spectators
The birds of prey are , si with r»> bits,
gw j n as 7 Il
C aexpia
Jer, ^hich , *r.r: Hmy l i^Let' ‘.
j
to the health and *prest»ff8tioi» of tbese
retdileH. The yrtHtmAUf.
perita'‘areTed solely with rata mnn^tinm
p»g«. These poor little ermitnrew site
onittb quickly after the reptile ln»> bitten
them.
The great iiachydermatou** animals,
Wftt. The last reoe.vi5*»ubnges he avepts e««l’»
few cr,u-kers, a delicaey tot
with much pleasure. Every evening Iu a
new-bed of straw is H»le tar him.
the morning his cell is thoroughly
cleausfSl, and the alraw must be re
newest. - A visitor one day ohaeryed clean to
lie kvsvi-er, ‘’Here-is a V'.’V.
and voryaffefnrnHmr todgmg ;
she would make au excellent - house
keeper.” no,”answered the keepi she
“ Oh, tv
eota her rnattriifiB every morning.
1
.
Frightening the MffS
1,^ . , ... . . Kalivli-v Northern
are ranch troublej 1.V ii’i U.” dep
” ' .1 .......... h-lm ,.!Lra eimntlesa
‘^ . The
° l
‘ ' ' „,’ '.i,,,,,..
a^xtmUnu .. “‘l ''Z ^ *3“
‘" O'®- Jtfi' to wita^raTd J? 1 o7amU*. .V j f r , M ,.
Pi *? ?,»! 'feJtL .iu v dare not
«. , ,r il f‘■ emitutes
s^Sht&stsA^n 1 &^fmiiihL
^13 * 1 ‘ *L ?* i '; nm i that
J *c> “J“ ^ »ra ™ehv£ r' t'lie’Tess
S±^^ffe^taTS f, \ Hr, ,
^ --tent
'LuruA^Skor. when's n.ild Ira tin
thorns 1^ bills G
«■ ot atSffafret retfle- and they
the-!S?«7icTreat«lbv horie t' appear: Astee
,7mm^ is^ such ‘‘■.matotmee«7*'v as^'to Wohton all ut their
tota Todlmim .nd Tni -.Vrarw int.. the t
«d R
W Knbal-'hat tK -ured another ^of ofortriT process has been in
I £ «,'tout SraiSrirat tto captured.
ra iC of ted stnffand
? Wm mn ' li effect is
“w m„t bXe Ims d,fl,l ( depSdato f, .
£<’•dragerous tab the S re i, 1 d alo, f
“ -
•
—
The Wsr IB _ Turns}, ,
-hi. ^naign !,,,? both in Bale .riii and '
a f q, 1 ,mlv very i-ist act now’ leit-d O-maii
]K 'i i-meture surtirise'of
-!*' a the Pleviis many niilitarv which’
Sthmdme oin hohlaoift in imi-regua!
he has rendered ,-„..„^i,.- l-2Lu
b utCTmthtag^ndicahw^tm*U£ l.™ ’ raL'L-e stra*
r abont exhahstod .“.i.'.rara and l.i!
i.e ‘f**^*- ~r TV
llornitablre^ resistance mu“ hrageri
p.. . male-Ruheruau
p^a Snvfeg an d Mohainmeil Ali ia at length
to *^ i £'****ft
ssH^sFi« sasBSs
advanceof the-invadom to Uonatautiute
pie by the passes m the Balkans to.eom
menee the siege tlie of l^ererta .ritoanople. Turn is
tha-poration of anlirano
telly in Europe, -ud * -few-days willbe
,teeisive.d-the rranUof the taunpaigc.
On the Atratic si b 4 the Bosphwns in
Armenia the wra » " n ** moment. At
last accoiiuts the Lviauans ai*#» iK&ieging
Er^roum from which one «»f
theirassaults Oneof the most kml esvaonlmmy 1-ee^recently repulse.1 pliaw.s of
tlie present war, I k -to Fraure-Prn*
Rian stoffe, « the o-mi»raUvely rn^fl
i-ant part played 1>T toe flret*nf the be
ligereute, that to which - In f^th «^»?_ iewhole rtttfT »4, wra, haa bee like
t, n
one of stsrpHrtn* l •sdieaxpeeted erar-ts
SEW TORE’S BABE SHOW.
_
iu.Hii.nraerr.ra KaSlfciifra (■■r.t
fra B.Wn me tt.tr *arrraadira».
The recent opening of the babv ehow
in New York ia this described "in Jg lie
Die bahysfcow opened in Nidgrt’aHil,
At the hour of its ssafttas gening the babh*
ite riUIity, had fallen into noiai^tbov s leu den and
had precarious not yet sleep, opened and his tlie mouth got his
or
• prepoeterons legs into the timn'S of
meaponsible vigor motion. The flash of. the
g^^^agLPeeg* of morning was on the faces of all,
rtd
, «e». . ... and ^-1. there never
was such ft gross display of fa-ml wia
I dom.
The babies were assorted and
arrangeu arranged in in the me large large hall nail on on wie the hotwo second
floor, - which .......... trimmed profusely with
; a W r, waica was ™ inraas p™,. ™«
American flags. At the Fifth avenue
end were the twms. On the side
; an d remarkable hiahirire, while babies
0 f different merits sat on the side op
posite and were strewn casually
- the renterof the haU. The whole unm
j ber of babies entered is nearly four Iran
s^ of triplets, and arrangements have
beeirmade and will probably come to
j father fruition with a phenomenal The Brooklyn
for a guartet. management
; requirea the presence of babies and
their mothers from nine in the morning
mild ten at night, though wearied babies
dismissed or put P to bed on the floor
; aim,, ^ph^to^ist^Xve and the,r places supplied “hlTZE wi*
intellig ent anti instructed
women.to the explaiu and interpret lunch to is al
tors. In ball above a
ways apread for mothers siatnursrs, and
there are cribs and baby-jumpers
; the soothing and remvigoration of speei
; ruena, lie
A number of prizes are b* given,
the mripiento to bo determine,! by
popular Ullot. Every visitor‘will And
.attached -to his ticket a wbatVitW coupon with
printed instructions for as W ’‘Hand;
are to be voted thus:
, «,mest mother.” “prettiad hahy. ’
tmrst tnptotA, pr.rtf tost t«nn«,
; ;* groatost novelty, jjpd the four Imbiea
in order who are next prettiest. Each
child and mother has a priutod card with
a number which t ho v isitor, having
m aii e In a Belectn . m a,asc ert am sa n . l wntoH
his coupon. ,pTs. dep.aRiiife_.thc Hi.-■ lamTsonn-sl wsme
111!llf e.rw ;
havr a pnae o f a g " l' l w » t a
SWC
cklotl by » selected enminitUV.
YeRt erilay tbe wbow wab reel*.
with pl vinitorB. and ehtiekle<I Elderly gentlemen tho marvelw came :
a of coatfiiafiM enty t and over which they
fatness
found, and lAdiesin ailka and ted-skins
pondered and consulted. TUeWuiaand
>V' w rranri'-jii sat.gdfiR.ecl.Ud, . ^
every case- the rMer
and waa ready to M
lao ionsj,u.«'U '
hmigon the walla, one hem*: ami - What, *he
is home^ without a that baby . th
other . due hand a
is the. hand thaimov ■ ’•
.
The European and Christum 1 tees
everywhere, the races which account (
thmuaelv'es the greatest, wises.
bravest of the earth, have watched with 1
amazcmeiit.the spectacle of invalid and
’’emobarbaions Turkey oontendiug organized on
«’Vcn iramis with gigantic and
Itoyauu -V* toy-outbreak of tlua struggle • , the .
SU'iliZ . 7 .l Woyl.l ttneqUAl sopmuesl that, tfiul withrett o the
be assistauco pitiably of ; of the “grea.
some one
powers, *tbeMoslems wonld be crushed
<*'»?<»*» • ,,iat »'?
of the Mnstsivijc srmioa would lm- little
m «x? to«a aTlrmmphal promemtfp It
wu * eoimuouly auppoaed that tne bupt
zsr&VBFSi kssk
could not stand before Luropeajis. the
We w? ® u enough dunug
-unnuv .f l’CT to toad us to questam a
three lieltofs. — Whatever ‘oay dw the
terminati.m of the -mutest Turkish
^erals have showe, formidable capaci
:
««’ equal, of the Russians, ft >1 man
t " mun - B upertors. Mhat is the
■ wv,„deiful and
m e ' imt| g ^ «>m people uprtung mhum al
m -arrsorentiori ot -
E I lro f H ' UH ,' k< ’' 1 “P*® »" l,ecadent * nd
'
.................->• . ***$-h'Jr , i
1,1 th-' character, d ITto 01 lomans
' V " l " i vc ^V«t rea-1. their history thornsigh-,
r ,
!*ftsety - their military disasters,
from
Imwao t g stra - t a «-«»
-inshlies. They have always been brave.
eroo i n th eir overthrows. Their mo«t
..nf.wtimat,- wars, the wrestles in which
they have suffered defeat ou deleat, have
n illustrated l.-y signal Insta ucea of
heroism such as the most warlike naRous
mi « M “>■ H they have lost ter
I'ilury, it has never been through lack good of
valor, im- altogether from want of
generalship, hut niamly from defect of
TWWWtitm.' re/. W. Port*. »> «-»*'-
-
........ .
American Lighthouses.
Tk. kiaim-v iiL ilinmiiiatimr of
i:„i.*i - griin-uises os-au i „rare,im„ rare "V”
imp^vemCnts vJL that have ll made*from
thnuTbem-ons o ,. Us’ manner of lighting
on- our coast have been in
keeping with ^ ^h of - ^
tren. -In'T822 there werem-ventff humlrnl ights nod
in all, ami in MBH twi. I
thirty-eight, .nclmhng ugi.tW s- ■■
IH.o there mue hundred and
twenty-five^ l«hth<rases hnmlred and
P, ,ree ltgl, ships; number. tour 1-enq *<•
.-igl.teeu of the , ->*
Atlantic eoaa t.- , ,
teaiustm .■
were 'i^<, so. mad.tocanro W.derbury ( cue C3qn^.>
out of. a narrow wmrtway for tlie other
_
that tney sat .« their *ag«a.s facing
.-ucb other all day, and anhitoli--! Ins
horses after-lark, leayinB fee wagons
.till tirere. But sb-mt monad -laytoM red tooi next toe
mcramg each stole
w t o«« of toe
Waida of Wisdom.
Little wealth little cart*
The offender never pardons.
The ahorteet answer ia doi us
rr "«h . that warns noth.ng
P™>se the sea hut keep on land
JSSSSSSKtC
*-«««*
A P lt mnrh e*pmted, ia paid not
‘
precepts.
A wise man make* more opportuni
ties than he finds
jr. .j,u huh love in bia. heart hatli
spurs iu hi* sides
<» “ *"“<> .. . _ “ a
^uZZ^ ru.t
the inlet of every vice.
Life beoomes useless and insipid when
W e have no longer -O friends or enemies.
' enemira^s/iflom It ie always safe to learn even of oar
safe to venture to in
- , R
Maks no more vows to perionn this or
f KhSTunS?*^' *
makes thee^nds behind thyself.
Map wastes his mornings m anticipat
mg hia ultemoons, and wastes his after
noons in regretting bia mornmga.
^“l^oaernmcnt '
Tr»t....mi in I ratify Aad niilitv ^ A
^g er ^iu "to h ^t totals "aTlar?u“ify J
1 1 ‘
* ! i ust *” forget all the kindness
•>? *<*« with whom we live for
^ »''■ *“? lmr °
ZtZ^ZtZ bL„ down their
or lipa, and thou* who -do,- oul v
show that they are departing and from right, the
‘™e paths of ooiriroon sense onesimbeam i
There is more virtue ip
m a whole hemisphere of clouds
and gloom. Therelore enltivato all that
w warn and genial.
Life is itself neither, good nor evil. It
is ,1, a scene of go, s! „r evil, as you make yoo) ;
if; and if you have lived a day,
have seen oth.V afi. daS; One day ie equal ii to and
fike all there no other
light, no other shade; this very sun,
tins mo.ni, thes, very stars, this very
uttb.r ami involution of tluugs, are tbo
name your ancestor* enjoyed, and that i
sbalialso entertain finest your jiostentv.
, th , hapnineas on
rf ,L j,-ml,lorn «mt-4 enjoyed with perfect '
B „ tis t t m . P1 n solitude no,' Indo
and ^.», inthfirTWv do
.„ r , w r tnl e leiamv is fre
OT nm y - T.m n i li n th at t ntar r al of rela f l
’'V- w
siSSSKt 51 s;
—H—-—■ 7 . ; —-—- :
Rlectrlelty an a liars* lamer.
a late issue -of the San Francis*** ;
.chronicle luw the fallowing : Professor .
R Hr Tapp zougiit yesterday to tame :
the Ringuiar horse (.•«)gnac, known jig
arrest. l*4U>A **'
to a runaway «,, *
.ntensifvinfe bw exiuft^eilf hatttry with* .bail,
shock of c.cctncity 1 ..l is im
rle .l ,u the root prwkot and the cutremt
transmitted bv mea ns <>I hiass lmttons ..11
the driver a gloves, to' « *“’• «" tot tnw,
and ui that manner to the all 1 i> -
.
re <rf
to how thei .
anxious loo arnivorous t >g
Me-vonld m't.midei the new inltiienct*.
While the Pit waa being arranged in the
s mouthidle otiuccU neree qranre ;
to maatleate the adyeiiturous t nitesso
by snapping at him vtmnwyo nnon
the fj :
toel roleswr A W’^pUtod to «W™>t y
and , he home tearo . d „,.,,,nvnlsivelv lip’ m » Ism ly as os
SttAoUl.y | J.^ .. JeSra.
Ira to.—",,mi, was “‘"-Tri““rt -■■■*
Urn horse resum^tis norma posUon
with ^gf,J'W a bewildered rt l* d l"“ bw "UJ j*. ' JJJ- \
rated the equina n». He stued tberem ,
m hts wbf» “™to HklWttl “d darted mit^ at the fejbsii^ri- way, how
foot until his hlde^waj m a lather
After a lew momeuta *1*^- '***?
a lamtv pmiialily flora have
The utewfchflMOfel electricity appeared to ^
him “
hsg
i » hSdT^fc
animal's mouth a, a satisfactory tost,
^.ary AmU Amid th. the Hlitter (•UttM'.
A WaHomgtou husband letter hm, this the : highest A huly
whose held one of
places m the government stoml '» >«>r
rerepfjou. '!?....... ’”How glwlly. '" woJT r ■''- r T
all the finery, show and -msmeenty
of this public place .nd go hack to
I lived to- when we were
I would throw-vn* silks trad
diamonds afraid sit dtes down b. aiy
.uppe^pf ehip beef an at snnseL
| afterwardsTdlredi TSg -i-.-et walk the
w ith Will, and rest »u the stump m
moonlight, and teg my t had little done plans
the future, aud what know every that
honr while he whs gone, and
we were alone in the world, living oftly -l»ja for
each other. Those -lays wem like
j n heaven. I wra-k harder now than any
slave ; often three hundred r-alls to re
torn in a single week, receptions the-, or
every night: see the same
people, hear, the same talk, eat same
1 things, f come living b—re 'disgusted, where- will wonder
! wtot am TKAtto, lor, I toli-l go -
! wlieu 1 die. ^^'TTn^ji
' H,m u,i >
“ ~
- T get lieu infiueut m :
morro w ; nms t ,
y-m iimst talk mnsir to the secretary^
*; n-rahere else can people afford to
’ The rich
I U1 , ™ show.
aa . „, wu their for
i^a in improv
,,|. h Ruraif a. &ws
“ fr ,, Ia bta , and a „d jr -aback
‘ -..Vtmttoug irw»«* ' He distal- tlai* *nds* a pro.lt- rich
r, W .- W W musk mV
S! Ids : he keeps iro
e retinue -i servants, gambles
Iu0T M lbs age or
F' ®J and the aarplns-I his ine«»ne
fSg fra . ,.„ vW s to I’sris, Nice
ra. German watering places, ’enrich. where
w-« on
VOL. IV. NO: 14.
'■ABRyji£ LISES AM* F.flTAPHs
h.» muwu> rad warn Pra.rd
Great nits often indulge in pl»jing
exeunt npon names. Even Shakespeare la not
tia Methcxlimdly teul Mttob
cans iermagent lady hia
asaaas—
A “ir;:™^sr.... k.te,
And bring you from a wild cat t» a
down in wedlock with a Mr. Wake, a
lady wrote:
Maria, good ua ur«<l, •udha-.di^aeaudull.
^ h.r lrataiU. :
. mLs n,‘« r«.dv toilmlfn? heTadv nrl.ien. Iwlkr'
of the
i But Mill her wicked neighbor, said
-Sha broke the pledge sad took A. Hou.
The following lines, eommemomting
the union of Mr. Job. Wall and Miss
Mary Best, possesses smartness :
Job wanting s r *rtaer. thought he'd be blest
!
Th b .^tTSh77bre7aui tTatooT made bore of
TUough l0 hi# friends, she’d be
B-tl I .l™. _______....
For llicngli beat of her rex. rhe « '«* veakrst
-' M Im B sLhza"f" s Llizii Mo°
Sto’a tdret «••«»*»>•’ f* *“•
sh.“nreIMimaigd Moore.* here
But now is no
Whpn n Miss Snowdon became Mrs.
... a rhyming punster ,,r wrote wrot o. of her
„„ Snowdon by ^ night and be dar.
’*• ^
Bat Hymen hu- touched her, and, woiderfnl
Though sight., luoger _ Snowdu . ^ 4| ' RVS
no , .
’ ^
W tlluuu NqU ,. to „ .1 j J •
h^iSdut^SUSwWi»-t»t. ‘
rp *«« ^“ri P .. v r„2 f ll .1 Widow
C-b tor to riiotuas Rush were r » tlms thu.
-
chronicled:
When Cupid «»lthi» mai^-a tantf-r.
.....
“fm now she ‘„ gV.itwith a Had.:
E . h write ^ ofteD fotlo penne.1 l
^ ^ p i gaUcilv ~S8 th<- w pg r
Slntol in * HboW Teies The iVumnbial virtnea of
>»>»cl lore are arc recorded recorvld in m this coup- co.ip
'
Though fftrangr. yep true, full seventy year*
Was biff wife happy Tivher Tears.
„.nrv ** of Daniel Cole, of Lincoln :
» nen tod *rnm» *t4 t *+vm u ■ ha ll »»») ■ ■ •«
Cole, now raked up fn ashen, then shall glow
LV St. Bmnett
;t ~sr - no more can he.
nfvmor**. how can that
-a? than
1 jut. here fiea oii.' Mora, and tliatv more
one.
The following hre |ooular specimens:
Tbo«n«a lluddlrstou. Reader, don't
. ; .
gg$£V&jEVn'%' .kc«
wii.wWim*asw sprare
Auoth „ .
i.,n«»tli thaw atones repoaatha tarnea
of Thawte tasdrlnim.
„ eto At J ^ then , bis , "" from took junto lam. yrar.
Upon an organist named Meredith .
Here lit a one, blown hfe out and of died hroatl*^, Mere,tall,. ...
Who lived a merry .
An epdaph. iii Waltham Ynllerton, Abbey in
(„«,» tt* that ‘ * Sir James
rometime first gentleman of the bed
,^uubei to Charles I., died resolution Fuller of
(.yj, t ) luu () { fears. Fuller of
, lmn JTO j n8( Fuller of honor than of
days." GeorgCoWn.
Tlierp once Brc ,i- fii Hyde,
I>. Ck. < a tauuet named Anthony
L as follows :
-----—~ ~
• Hvima'ii” uauft"
rim hide. I buy .
Four reaG for jn'-a.
Big ht rent, for A, ,.
lashiou . in Fana.
FallH rtr< . 0 f »U kinda* from the wch
: , 5SJS-r?rst
3R«£a=sr-= 0 *
q ( very small flower blossoms.
rtt , c b as 'Ulies' of the valley with famt
JuUo* ctems and forget-me-nots nestled or
pomis ^he m ros ebuds-; top.! these are arranged
marabout bunch'of and so as
to form a flowers when the fan
!
j sticks of tl.ese fans are in ivory, ebony
, or .bone. Fans with cherry w-s si sticks
j- ; „„ a ufiyoity, tippedwitl. sflver ;\ienna
woo a fans are finished in the same way,
y ;luA aro a* pretty when folded as unfold
UdtofeE tops have prcttily-painted de
’ signs Hie Watteau
on according the
. inM carefully, to
! price of the fan ; or the top of sabn .8
embroidered in flosses; or net y*
; stretched onrthem thi u My e mbr oi de re d
Wnslg, jittering beads. Dark green
color in fan, this ye ar, the mars
j„,uf toyT mh.I .„i (he satin tj being-flee principal tall of
. ,| M . l<m) . ,, f ( or „f 1H
" rel i with colored fans
, c,fi a a UP » worn favorite are
, ..f silvOT or oxidtze.1 silver, A
• .j w j„ u f„ r the claim ia Oto Japanese fan
,, r „ msrkerl j,aifaipeh*»I feature fan iu ; the the Japanese decoration fan
is a
- , ]MulT oilier: articles nbw worn as aecef
' Evening fans for ball dresses
s . )rj( s
, i rr attaciici by rifibotis matching the
,, rpw r ,rj ri mmmg», by chatelaines of
lim , fl„wers or bv ribran* of gold, adds or
. jewelled design whieh
richness to the dress.
——— .
A Rem a rk a ble fteath
The the^th angular cirenmstanecs conu«-teil
of
^ ^ lt mjt and
gnu** hot water m. to wash the ralput.
II-tic u t--E,a enair rai-l ra
tliesfove, and removing oira of ,he l ls
pht toe breech ,«, the fire. After t lad
renrajne-1 there-a few m-nnent*. he |« t
tin-rmiple to ins in «»«. ami W‘*ri.
w ken Hie oil remaining i.i the
and with a no-.**- somt what
.• . roi«te , by blowing
“imihtr h*that _o u
»«»»». the vapors were, fonrai h
throat into his lungs, and lie Mifrom
his chair wife Wood issuing froto
uioutb and ears and expire.1
oroan • His brother, who atood by,
tehiWWMM wmrirera Ame
..Nett.- JVi Ar.--fi
A Chicago f«u-4cel, inventor recn.tk-ma.le ii^the a
small keep the head to cool be placed Si weather, liaf.
to warm
He net it going in his own hat, and. the
first thing « « he knew hia hair-was-wound
-^ mitt . hinf ,. v , • The spring was
rT ^ StnA could rebus
IreX hiinself £SS? a part of *)ir hair was ' pnlletl nut
:
A toZZw rentempornry tLr telis hai/ young ladies
how in a lash,on
able a£>mbit Rtvle “ Lt*t oiit it all down. M ii sftVP,
“ ftu with a oroRw-ut-unv.
Thenin, on the roof of the house
plays (whatever is approprinte) with it.
Then catch up the black with u bow ot
i i. “
.....Tltere are at-puiuait. in tllf Unit y j.
forty-eight grand and about fi,F *,
nHonl in « tr-lTTdgni-of O0 fi-- F <4 h t w ^ , m * r
increase in the latter of 283 during the
yeur ; grand encampments, thirty-nine :
tors, 456,125; cuoaniproenri members
87,785; total relief, 81,680,485,62 ; total
revenue, 84,480,872.46 ; present mem
bernhip, 4hl,«B».
“ Bimp’icity” is the aweet title- of ftn
.Jtkr tfZg&ZLZ? '.md S.itr.'war niton’’ Jbv’rv
Mm,Vr» b.' pledmthemSvremott
must
bav« unv traius or fidse hair lint frivolities, to wear
tuni<iue» rtL"mZ Pol- uniacH or other
t e hr orWm’ming ntaiu OtaGtoly »
H ■ j m ok- I embroidery permitted.^ at the
j ,,„ s tume is
The RurUoL Bead of the Huron.
On that little strip of North f'arulio
^ where the Huron was wrecked, ;
Itn’Men gritvra everywhere. ’When
t(]f , „f ,,fli,.,.rs and ineir won
^ „ s l lor e they were taken by fish
ermcnand buried *in the sand near jKi.g Uu
telegraph poles that are erected
the coast, aud far enough took rroifc uj.v, the
ra-eau never to he reached ,....u:ul- by its t.
CVH —-^Tr^^Hv -u.u m
ihe shore. A party of five sailors i
cued from the Huron visited all the
k/iavee, aud by f theordt rsof C immamkr
he Norfolk Navv Yard,
opened ,,^1 them in tnrn. As one of the men
tattooed ttc arms of ncarlv Stem all the
jj nrtni *„ .orew, and- aft ml of Had
£n,s.; , :::. 5 rs 3 ”"":.=K;:::
i^affesssa be f miles Norfolk in
^ epiim r6 itself, away, Lint
and ^ tlie number of the the'se pole ««...■ 1„
Ciark, with s»s
. ti „ pnfiita, made Tnii mowula n f vrirHv
th “* r various ^"ves taslieswere loirie.1, ..ml th. u
were agran filled in and each
......
A Porcelain Fiddle.
K .h-'-.R made. one The ’ .mmula-durer of
bly, ever por-eh-n fiddle was .former,;
workman in a Hax-n poreemm taano..- | e.
tory After hra return, old and fecble,
to Ins old homo, he atteiupto-l. tor to making carry
put a long c herished proj ect
fidaie, tlig lsjyv.f.wblib a l i.iil ldb c
• .. h i n ». With the <u.l of a twy, it ,s stated
|,« has in fact, succeeded in producing of a
fiddle of this kind, which has a .tone
ih h. purity, and s - b . u .ahmg- r i chness
wire -!*-rn:i-,'.’ havmra.y end
extraordinar y power. The W port, «
resonator, is exceedingly I-f-hf, and tne
strings are 'made of ra-ia.lb-' wires. thp
. ... . .. Ima . dernirti making Ji g- .t-- almost
usual form, is curved, this clever ^
aemi-eir-'le. The success of
YVnetian; who hail etijoycd the mlvauta
p,-, of the skill : .jureed in a German
porcelain factory, mav be the means of
- directing mmueians to the advantages
,,f the dear, ringing, bnt fragile -ma
an d glass, fors.mrisi >•-»-» - .....
.sw, „tif K Arm rican.
flow a Itorse Kept Wafm.
TUeMernie.i (ih»u.'tob-fi- i-ti
f'lJr! tb --i wiisrai -'the . ' ■ -
.It-- up to h
Crown ^ A
i $ \
^
s^h^l,, pmced !«<i torhe h ';
• he ^lhsl 1 aap- ” ' j, ” fj ...
thPiugh_reveral , - , , \«„
-
, tc-s te, d
the corner ; . ... - -
« „,|t,.lrv ra
I’,v «>■ i 1 .'
«■' ' f , •;) .
,.o|N*n. mouth,. h A
t.<iugh _ »-.wv
f’....';“ ii-'l.e He then
'
centiti» ra, a * *•• • lB E re~.-l.ed tire
.'’ ..VH aud when
l».-»: ^;ta ,.i . sta- -
o re,
tonneh a. Cd--- ,1.,. •* .#■ . - .tV« (
.
J*
TIE OGIMORPE EW.
Advertising Rates:
*>*<•»■ f.l w { J • . ; » : * m I In 4 fti
1 uac*.....|1.3 94 »«u
ItttrHM. I fc* JLfft 4Jie ,14ft-’
SiacbM. IW 3 SO *.75 ? » A» ]*.:« 23
4 ttgehm. a.oC, *.ift *.<* « «) »»•
* OO- iiSBU. . 4 »«• lj $.&-> *.!#
„n OB.uaaa. § oo Jtr tft.S» I*1« 23««
1 coiama 12.0W l« W»*i.UD J 5 ’• «8 •■'«■
Lagal Advertisements.
**lm, f«e iewy, t*a !)&«•...... *3
Ra*c<a x-r*’, AdiBlBiMrators' »n i it^ Mm
Sajw. I#r *q<i»r*.......................
Eaca addroeca: «^tur>
......
Wohd to r*0*or* *n,i f’rwfttrtr'*
Satie* of I^*»? u> 8e&.
Lrtt«-r» of Aa% r
Liters cl Dias
l*t !#r» of Guar antaip,
lf*t*r* Ho® »*f ***.i of I»t«. Sot: tce«. QAT-ttoE thr
• •: -■
Eai* SiM i’e per square, fault ttimtaa ....
fleas sf laterest.
The noble horse left.!* a life of who;
It is a wise cow that knows its ow
fodder.
The S^lC;7 language of the snspon ler i«. em ^
In the ease of Sittmg BnU. abaeuc.
z’it —r-rr‘ 1 ”, ...^ G.
-
Ut your exin-naes he such as to leave
If Sitting Bull conLl have his way
abont it, the American nation wouM
have no Indian summer.
Theoidest ex memlierof Congressnow
living ia the H<.n. Artemns Hale, of
^gewater. Mass. He is moety.ffve.
A ,^ t
-1. if proper to ray, 4 1 see .be gan
rising,’ or *1 aee the son lise?’” he
asked. before “ Sir, the proper replied thing hie ia fiirniL get
home it rises,”
A mob in Winnemnoc*», Nor,, threat
etied to destroy tlie railroa<l stAtron an-J
a train of cars if the company tli*l not
remove a passenger who ha<l the small
pox. ^The
liulv whom Htanleywaa to mr-rr;.
has wedded another. What shall it
proflt. • Riim if he finds 18,000,0<*B he*
thona and lo«
ttmUd
The money had ln.uu nearly al
stock speenlabons.
Die police forre of Ltrertsad, Eng
laud, is Compowd of twelve ;u,i..rc.
men, of an average height of live i .
" ! °e sndoue-half inches, and an av : < >
sorvjreof ,due years and seven .....whs
The returns from the savings banks ot
af ^1,000,000 or $4,000,000. that Tfifsistfce there has
firsttime in ten years
been a off.