Newspaper Page Text
Tffi DGLETHOPB
Subscription Rates:
tttmTmr. ...i.
TVr«M 5t-.*&th». M
Tvrmt C&*k m Ai**9e*.
retire, ao roil asm ,*• “-cro, 1st***
Kotl>* fiwt oacti •wtwrarckwr two •«*•** bsfor* it*
•spi ratios ®f *is tt****. *»•* >* *«b*e^p*»o« to oot
MMwafl, Ute p*f*f * **
Xny p*r*fto .who will «* Ut® of flv*
a*» wiiit *10 «wfe. w^-Nr »y
m.* 5«kr'« *a!w.w!j«tion fr«w. So cloto rot*®.
Falliag LfAvt*.
They *r* failu.*. f^ihag,
Toiti c[»u Uie side—
ScYffiwd fruat s^*! noble titBoehm
TTBerettie'y Wived in bn*uteco* pride
They are Ukmn m the Tiileta
WiigMri the emf iv rioJttfi •prmg.
And th« bird* iu .aiu ey MiFttore ^
Firpt tb*-tr duieet mu4u riag
They *Kai*Jling, wuliy failing,
f ioe** bt-Njd - oar c<jtUge door—
Pate «kJ faded, like th*$ hired outm
Titlure ftettoe forever more.
They are-felling, and tbe urmbeam*
Shine in t>eaaty eoft around ;
Tet the faded leaver are failing -
Falling ou the grmwy mound.
Thfijr are ffilling on the «treamk-t
Where the *ilvery water# flow
And upon u* placid GtMom
Onward with the water* go
They are foiling in the ehurebyard,
Where t or kindred eweetly aleej*—
Where' the idle wind* <»f nnrnm«-r
Hof tij oVr the loved one* weep.
to They >ra#efi»ng\ver falling.
When the autumn breeaes nigh -
When the «t»r« in haanty glinten
..... Bright upon the midnight aky.
Tiuiy falling when the tempeet
Moau'fi. hke.Ooeaa*^ hollow roar—
When the.tnnehMw winds and follow*
Had tv High foro vermore.
They are filling, thfT imfn’M-ff
White oar na<ldened thoughts still go
To the snriny day s of childhood.
In the dreamy long ago.
And their faded hues remind ns
(ft tbe blighted hnpes and dreams—
Failing like tl»e foiling leaflets
Cast upon the icy streams.
THE SHADOW ON THE WALL
A MM or uacoMRAHluitmiMWCB. _ _
Captain .Tames Stuart, who had gone
all through tlie Mexican war, was a man
of great great force of character and of
unflinching bravery. He bad a win
most but placid his prit.ci- ten.
per I have ever known,
-feftv. pies were as fixed as his feelings were
----- —
He went to California in 1849 and set
Hing iii- Tuolnmne county, then one of
the principal mining counties of the
State, was elected sheriff, an office in
those .lavs, when they were far removed
from State or Federal aid, carrying
with it all the dignity and responsibility
which that ancient title implied. fn
conversation with him he iutereated one
by relating man? i^mininwncea of acetie*
in his cnrlv life whilst in that State, one
case particularly, of against positive ionoceut and cir
(vtmstautial evidence an
which I—give—you- is bw
cxsrt'-worria.
James Lyons lived on a farm near
Honors, ereoni and manv disappeared were tlie stories of
having after having
i-en seen nour hia plac* for the last
time. A rowlwav up to the mountains
had been made across displeased the land of about Lyons,
but lie was always it,
He cut down tree* and let them fall over
the mad -he s bnilf barricade!* to prevent
Blade Tjemsftr of Trm gKw ^ratg^nbi upon that
grass ever
"
lets after this Jim Lyons
A short time
went to the mountains to take charge of
a water ditch; he gave his farm to his
brother, who afterward, sold part of it to
the Morrison brother*, who paid one
thonsdnd dolbir* down, giving their
uores ledes tor for the bffifieSgjgyffileTK'-oiie mm , U
At the rameVsick expiraHon of iKflt that time Mike
Lvens to the notes.
! very tlie’iutcrest, willing to
settle - thev ov'f figure-1 up aud
rtm mlnsl the ,rotes, told Lyons
ihev would have to go to Smuwa to would get
their money to settle, that they
oo.l.wn win, him in the mnrning, lie
could hare his papers with them and
tihev would figure up a little more on
them 'Lyons and-settle next day in Sonora.
left his papers, and the Morri
sous drotroyeil tiiem. Lyons eaUed on
them toThedeuce for his money, they told him to go
,
S.,„i.r l.v Z Ibis JXSmIST oieee of sharp practice iriJM Z
Lrous u w
mattrrr before a lawyer named Watson.
The lawyer wL foil Lyons he bad no caue
as there no evidence at all to sns
taiq itj but said he, we will ohauw. bring the
unit Mxfmannr, anyway. “ I want to get a at
the -and will give them the
beet blackguarding they ever got in all
their llvto, and before I get through
With them they may wish they had paid
the money to the persons entitled to it.”
The suit was brought, the trial came
on, and as expected Lyons lost it. He
hail no evidence to show there was any
amount coming to him. and the Mom
sons swore point blank that they had
made payment in fall.
Then rueful mattering* were heard on
all siuun as to the davger of the Morri
son lirothers. “I wonld not live on that
farm for all the money Itor iu California,”
soul one. “Nor I, I," repeated
others. Tliits it went from lip to mouth
with shake of head which'brought the to
mind all the old troubles of Lyons
place, tlie mtftterious appearancffrof disappearaneea
and the bonid Ybywsywrith all the
nnforttmatas connected in
that fatal locality. I vras »t the trial,
said Captain Stewart, and rememVier
well these fearful prophesies. More
-U-w**-not b*ug a
tragedy was enacted in return for the
mocking farce that had been pnt off on
the Lyons. The trouble predicted by
those who knew the desperate character
of Jim Lyons, was not long delayed,
“But a few days after the lawsuit
says Captain Stewart, “I was
byamausaving the Morrisons had a)
murdered and tbem house
Iti^ toe^Lt^s mv hors© an.l went imrae
to looking I anpnmeW
of miners about the
Sey rata* hv the light of pine toiots which
mounted and went close to the smoking
ruins. They had found the bodies of
two of the Morrisons, the third was
Bamng.- One of the bodies —
was a more trunk
xnthoutWv.armsorWs. andconnted twelve bnck-shot I turned holes it
over
in tiit; r-iuiii* w t«ii bhn. Thu body of
the MW Wx;,xG, lay onhiide of ‘th
fire line where he had dragged himself,
his right arm shattered from a gunshot
wound; he was mangled and bruised bnt
still alive. I pnt my lips to his ear an.1
asked him. who did this? He said, “It
wa* Eil. Watson, the lawyer, who had
killed ii’.B brother.”
I waa aetonnded. I knew Wateon had
abused tlie Momson s in court at tlie
suit Of Lyons, and bad ponrel out on
their heads the bitter invective of
deeply tollowit injured client, but that he shonld
up by a murder most foul, winch
should glut its vengeance bv committing
to the wrathful flames the.bodies of his
victims and their earthly habitation, I
could not (vmceive.
I knew Watson hs.1 no pecuniary in
forest in the suit; I knew he did not
expect a verdict in his favor, but that ho
had tried it a s much to satisfy these men
that snreffiSfwSaa 1st made t.. rigid
their wrongs, as anything else snd to
prevent, if possible, anything like tbe
very trouble which had occurred in the
tanible vengeance on the Morrisons,
Oglethorpe Echo
By T. L. GANTT.
Tliis was “E*f. my firm belief, and when
told me Watson, the Sawyer,
it,” I waa more «hock«tl and surprised
tlian when I heard of the principal oc
cnrrance, the killing ot the
and the burning of their house.
I had been sfr«j3 sometbiog like
, would orertak* them and Tt?TeaIizaUon
brought onfirmation to my nneasv
appreheunions. for life life Tlie doctrine eye {<tr ere, tooth
tooth, for had been
sraasr* Jsrs^rvaxrj
homl h.» ,l.«Ur»lion.
I wnnntal an ,i i.^L
goblbk tevo. rouse.1 tlw laarer and made him
withmofotfieseeaeofthe Are
«tdmor.ler. bmnsht him where Mor
I the maul Morrifon opened hi. eyes for
an inatant and then shutting them tightly
said, BobIt: air
"Yea, ; tliatia the man who shot
my brother.” Watson went almost wild
at^this ;h» clutched his long beard with
both hands, wheeled about once or twice,
:«ud Ooiaiiig GpS, closer to Morrison, "aid:
’ " My sir, is there no possibility of
! yotir being mistaken opened ?” bia and
said, 'The firmly: dying man No, sir.” eyes
••
I knew i'f I let Watson remain there
many him, and minnteis longer likely rimet they would his body lynch
very m
the burning rnius of the building. I
plucked him by the arm to come, mid
as we tamed the glare of light threw
his shadqw^qn th e wal l. I was trims
fixed With asb.iiishme.nt 1 stopped
Watson and piiutwl with apw-cbleas thrilled
anxiety to that shadow which
me tlirongh and through. Heshsalmo
fionjeiis, apparently much not comprehending
my feelings, too terror-stricken
by this accusation to be more than haU
alive.
: The firstjwqrda I could utter were aa
if I luuTbeeu myself tougue-tie.1 struggled for an age. if 1 I
raised np, aud as
was being amotbered. and ray voice broke
out in a loud call-” Bob ft we and Sam
Lyons didthis”—Tile shmiow on the wail
was the exact picture of “ Bob Pore, flic
half-breed,” who worked evil with
Lyons, aud it seemed as if some other
voice than my own spoke of through me. 1
There was in a perfect the wountletl ferment excitement, who had
was man ru-
1 cognized the lawyer as the murderer —
and there I wiot, the sheriff of tbeeounty,
with the accused in mV charge; and yet
th a t sl ta- low -oif—Gie wall
-load exclamation from myKjm, from me,
] who should have been should the have last one waited to ao,
; cm any djgnlt, one, but in
culm the deliberation, of the
law; in fact, I waa there to see that such
deliberation was hail.
j I Hiiptxw© the fear that an innocent
man would bo execotofl, together with
j the knowledge oi the bail character of
‘ the half-breed* Bob Pore, and of Lyons,
« iheightened real grievimca-1 suppose
things my_nenrtiBjLft p
shallow on tlie wall with what then
seemed to lie almost a supernatural
apparition. It went through mo like an
! electrical shock and compile,) me in
latently to cry out, -'It was BobFore and
Jim Lyons who did thi*.” I hurried the
iu-cuse.1 t«ck U, jail an d started aid, a
warrant i.f arrest for Lyons aud P.ite. I
found them in the meantime I said about Lyons day
light the following wit/,ess day. in to and
; asked - I want him you il be ss l»»d a ii&Mi Bo’> a P«r« eaae, iafc©
i iy."
He said he had not.« him for
several days, hut that he was at the np
- per ice-hraise. The snow- was deep, hut
I started up. I came .cross a ditch
, tender, wh tol l Bii l Pore iia rf t
o i um i i U'
! passed np a little while ago from the
(lirf*cftiou of the upjier-dam, where I lii.tl
i mat left Jim Lyons, and that he was all
UrahlffSd aud wet.
i I pa<l.ed on and a little further up 1
*pi» I Pore, lie tiegan to run when he
! saw me, and I culled to him that I wanted
i . him n“g as a wituess taeTne^c on that ol in.^ d es se
refer to ™s
; seemed VTqSM him. and lie return,-J
* with mt». Weotille«t back for Jim jail' Lyoun
and brought them both back to In
I the meantime the coroner's jury hud
met, the RUHpici-ms aganiat rd^a Lyons ml ha.1
been cleared up- and th rom u t
burning lixed on the lawyer, When I
returned locked them with in the two somewhat prisoners, I
op our mse
cure jail and the coroner continue,! the
investigation. He had previously given
out warrants to arrest Bob Pore and Jim
Lyons as witnesses iu the case. The
trial of the lawyer; was the first Iramnea*
now on hand. Summary punishment laws delay
; was then the rale, and the There
but provoked swift retribution.
was cor parting off until farm
Bight now, was the word with those
' men iu tliatrougii life, who stall earned
with then, the notion of well-regulated an.l
society, aud the love of liberty
^ justice in their hearts. The
could not prove an atibi. He bad
| at home sick for several days, and the
! law did not allow hts wife to testify. and
wounded u«n swore directly point
blank that and he saw Menem- the lawyer shoot li.s
>rotheT, » nighrk swore.that he
saw the accused the l the mnr.hr
pw»hw ulwr tw a- winte irorae witjr
double-barrele.1 gnu over his shoulder,
and he eonld not tie mistaken. This
to finish tlie ease.
During the trail . Germs,, lalsirer
came to me and said that on the morn
mg after tbe murder a young man had
come tohiahousewitba douMe-barrelod
gun on his-ShoaMer; that he sanl he had
faUen down s.rack tta tagger on a
g tlie iw
he worked wTnt for Mr Lvoaa one? up at M?
hrane I out a for nnj
Wallace the voiint? man de^TilKxl
in bringing him in I said • “Wallace.
to be mixed np in. There was
more than one man present at that mar
der. Lawyer Watson never eonld have
htnwwlf, ami tb«t^ story of
yon falling down and striking the
double-barreled gnn gainst the atone?*,
toiind* anapuapas. - No* do not let any
on© pnt von irt atjol© in thi?.
life is still before yon, and it may be
bright and successfal. Wallace sai<l
nothing in reply except to ask what the
law officer would do if any one would
tell,the whole affair. I told him they
often let that one go unmolested- «*
reached the jail. I pnt him in a cell,
and before leaving, talkedagain to him;
As I closed the door to leave him, be
: rapped yo'nsav" on it and called ms back. ” Did had
asked he, “ that any one
the whole matter." “No,” I
said, “bnt some one might and your
voung We would be gone.”
Mr. Stewart," said Wallace, “I will tell
yon myself tl! about it Jim We Lyons, Bob there Pore,
and Satunky did it I went on
night I was stationed out
side near the back door to shoot any
one who came out that way, Jim Lyons
shot through the window and Bob Pore
put Jet the mattress under the stairs and
fire to it”
I rushed out for some citizen to come
in and hear the same storr. and whilst
. listened
! . they to it, and I went laid the to the matter p;ote bs
curing attorney,
THE ONLY PAPER IN ONE OP the LARGEST, MOST INTELLIGENT and WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA.
fore him. “ I •'ano«»t ” be said,"
u*e him impunity; if he wiabee to
tlie chances _ with __
es with the th people and the of
deem of the law'let him do ao.” T I
hurried lAck J)Aok and and told told voting w a!lace,
He said he would «uam take the c hance* ,
then he wtmt iuUm minute ikvmint
the movements. He said that 4 ‘about
t>ne handrod yard# from the - house
-
’ a little cave ; we stopped stopped tliere there several several ,
Sjotira. You will find if
4
grsy^'S^-K.’
Jay ,r' night at hm place ...a bought *.». in
OveXonlams. .1 w itL him to bis homo
He deaeribed the arti
,-le., hspottedbandkereKief. and said he had wrapped I opened them up
in <• the
«id the ah,rekeeper.
I hurried hack to the eourt house
I only to be astonished at the full con
(easionof both lh.b Tore and Jim Lyona
continuing the statement of yontig Wal
J«ce and implicating a man named Dun
«an.
We had brought the w ,un led M«-rri
son in to the tral and had him at the
-hotel. I went to the jail and taking
tiob Tore with me. I marehed him .town
to the hotel to aee if the wounded Mor
rison would recognize -him. Before
; going up stairs I Uirew inv short cloak
'over his shoulders and taking his long
hair I shoved it up under hi. hat as tins
wa* the way Wallace said Pore was ilis
gained the night of the tnnrder. He re
{sistad somewhat at thm^bnt-..I .flushed
it and walked him up. The wounded
man opened his eyes and at once
, claimed "th*l forgive me for what I
have s»id agamst Mr Watoon, but this
is the m«n. Tins u the monlercrl
Then the shadow ou the wall became
„ living creature. I grasped Fore cm
vulsively-few would be his steps to the
: grave,
Tore had worn a loose cloak the loosely uiglit
..f the murder. Hia beard bang under
: tint Ids hair had lieen lucked Ins
hat as described by young Wallace and
as conleaaed by, himself. Watsons
shadow HttwSf ou the wall was tlie exact and
striking picture picture of of Ben Ben Fore Pore as to be lie now now
stood ,t,**l befofe before me. m*
Watson Ws*. cleared. Young „ W allnee
was release.I amt Bob Pore and Jim
Lvons teauEstA were executed at ass* the scuffuld
where th ey again confessed thei r guilt,
TV "" , ^K? ' 1 J. ' ..Tr , ilS* ir
-A rcotH* t v u«o« o*-~ Go*- t-*£*wy*n t ‘^ v -“ „
~
. JVt*» tdto tlie loUowing
Newfoundland dog: The propolli r
Mam® Northern Tramnt company
-aUed «Ub» P«rt Frela.v.bonod Chicago Uadi down
-n her way from to ns
ourg. ^ w and ®» Mr among »* W. J. the Kailly tlirongh, awl paesen- Hetty,
her «eveu*y*Hr-oh! who
hr their home m AU»»wy, >. i.
=
:*>o< 5 * ,,lw tiu.ru fhe rr^isxt lx>At corap^y was mooretl « the
! foot ?.
vicinity as any of the many boat* which
-allthere. They were h av^ g a glonoiw
''me. when the girl ran along the wharf
reward-the stern of t,,e ’’"iVrireT, ''
her head partly turnedto l,s>k at tlie.log,
die ran headlong off the wharf into the
«*«r. lVko sfoppel an mated.
hough slioeketl, then sprang into the
vab-r near to where the girl waa clonk float,ng
supported by her dree* and and
j fithratten feet friim the wharf. month, Taking
‘»ne of lier ulumltlers lolun hutie
'the small noble bout dog out supported and she her rested nag *
perilous put wa.
from her position.
Deko thus added another event to m
1 cvrutlul life, he being n
j remarkable feg. Maryelons "f"”®* ®™
f old of hi» sagacity, rwo yearnwo lie
waafth tnnwitefs sort of mght watch) m
the NortbfleW^ mghl (Mran.) bank, and waa on
duty the Jha^n otorimis Yo nnggr
brothers robbed that nmlitution. Hi
had a fight with Hilaries Yonuguat the
time, and to this day carries a broken
Ult eaasflff bv a bullet from- M
«’"crohis restdence in Itotroit
D«*ko hAs learned the sound of .various
Propeller whistles and instantly when a
N irtjiern Transit lx»t signals the dog
fa lamps rtonsly up, to and, lu> if *n out. tlie ■ II the J™**
arrive have all *i !nt« gone at home, ntght, Peko start* for „ tul the
Ouse House where one of the l ! ,r k»
i !«ard», and before the boat tom hes the
wharf, has some one who can talk on
to receive the eaptam. As one of
the captains says, If.Deko eonld
talk, he eonld run the office 1 “f 1 **
without help. As soon as thc^ boat is
ramie fast 1to'the wharf, Deko steers for
the door of theeook-room, and w^ill n t
unh. rec« ■ s R rn^,o
eatmg he stands guard at the Sftugway
until Ml (rerghtMrmnoyednnd tto rd
given to haul,n. Then h„
to wait for the neft craft.
, Yon (J, fining' littfo
if TO n are ? esinine a everyday thait
■ less
, ■ . yonr expenses though
income to “ that toenmnda* it be a
"“t^lOT^SeveVy^ay? t ron.tantH
gtl ™er ever} nay Be oe
? Thonjh STbe littl«*l»y little,
t f, e ‘agCTegate ^,o &iv porinittad of the oecnmnlation. with
>vllpre is topass
,mt C adihng something "ouritelf to the ^ stot*.
fo 8olon,on did
become the wisest SZ man BtU^e?w in the world
S^ja iui t _X»T learn something rS.r even alwavS for a
^^ring settle y the between and life lying time down of
risinpr up in morning
«* mflUt-tWa is the way to accumulate
a full storehouse of knowledge. Finally,
*re yon dafiy gaining in character? Be
they !, wonld wmh , to ,,, be. r,
■m ^J^fdid thnn‘ did yesterday; lart
, *** thi ” »v ear ^ von year
do not become
w yon
. nf » r fir and high
V „* w hit>ii von aim Littlo
. »- v /V* 1 * knowledge ® is *5 gained'; twltion
^ ® ch ‘® V v JL- « d - P
------- Mint Hearf.
A-Yoang Girl shooting
Tin re was an accidental case
under unnftaal circnm«tanoea in Phil*
delphia recently. I>wia- Myere, a Pan
ber, ha.1 been paying attentions to
line Streicher, fifteen, who lived
with her aunt. But she had forbidden
him the house becanse he always came he
with a .loaded revolver. However,
oame again, drank, with Henry Russell,
a glass-blower, ag,‘d mueteen. She was
ont and they sent for her. On nor arri
yal Mvers took ont the revolver
bnt Russell, who was a stranger at tbe
house, seize.! it and took it away from
him. Bussell wsa seated sit a-tabWby
• the s id e o Hh " girl trying to «8n> re th e
| cartridges, when the pistol wen’- off, the
ball stTfell pissing through the girl s heart,
mid dead. She wss tbe oldest
of eleven children tad ber father livatl
; in Pittsburg.
LEXINGTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 18 , 1878 .
Uw . Hssdrva Tear* Ag*.
in^HaU's ___ hwtorv'c^^KMteni _ ^ _______________ Vermont
tome account of - the • • laws which * * -----— were in
force a hundred rear* ago:
witii * * Burglary wa*. the punished forehead, by and
one*of ^ a H on offender"* _______
one of the the offender’# ears ears to to a a poet and
catting it off, and whipping; for the see
<>Dt | offence there was the like branding
as.tBg.Tja , !ib 5
dice ThtLimr or prirtl. tho «ml, mjoiy. with or .leceiytog n»«S or
report or
wag mmwhed by fine, sitting in
H,V stocks and whipping, SeU the punishraent
brio* repetition
SBSSfsHS is!.ed by compelling threefold restita
ti.m. b/fine the proaecntor and by a sort being ..f empowered temporary
,i a verv.
to disp.«e of anr offemler in semoe to
IU)V subject erf the State for aueli time as
heshontd be assigneil to the prosecutor
by tlie court. Bnitaaonable night Walk
i£g that i» to any after nine o'clock, wan ot
prohibited, as was also the convening
iiersousnnderthegoveramcntofparento, after that untimely
pngrilians or masters, publishetl
hour. Tavern hauntera were
bv posting their names at the door of
every tavern and prohibiting them the with tavern
keeper from supplying of drink. any- So
thing in the way shouting, strong hallooing.
clamorousdisconrse, jumping,
screaming, running, riding,
swimming or blowing of horna, was
tolerated on the Lord’s dav. Listening
„utaide of a meeting-honse during the
time of public worship waa not permit
ted. Socul.tr meetings of sny number of
is-rsons in the street or elsewhere on
Saturday or Monday evening* were for
bidden under penalty of » fine or the
***** _ in
Mr. Had' gives several notable
stances of popular legal error* prevail- that
1 iug iu Vermont One notion was
lf ,j ie f r i en ds of one dying in »*!«..da- prison
car ried his remains beyomLtlio
nm „f tlie Ja il yard, they were ncenm
,,ii C ™ oa of ^ an canape, U^irffie aid rfS listble to satisfy lmd hall
the „ judgment c^fined. ™ by virtue of which he la
been been confined. Another Am tiier notion notion was was that that
jf one should trnrv I in- body nf an im
prisoned debtor ' lie {hereby beom®
asiK^usasajs aiiiaiuiHlrator in hia own wrooR, ab<l
liable to disci
‘ : tioiis. lions. I In u the the case erne ......... of of Judge Judge Chandler* Chandler.
wll ° died w hile con fined in j ail jbrdgllti
uib ictertsieut feecsnie -a serious discovered problem*
r i„ this predicament the the jaHer chain ho could
j^shSe [hlit bv stretching liberties small
within theiiljoiiingburying-ground. tlie jail a
-V grew wns dng, commeiietnff jn«t within
k|i jj, lue graveyard fence and jw*t
I t j ie jrtil-yard, ftloptng under the fence,
. until a suffiidcut depth and Chandler obliquity
! 0 btaineil. So Judge wu
Uorieti »»ftera ChnstmnfftKhion, n wfirt-riar and yet
^ - wai auflhrej*”. . .
-----------—
H. G. Abbott, of Maine tells, in the
. A r*,„ England Farmer, what five sheep
, wi n do yj e gays
P "» * hw » wi " «S* " w
: oM . worn out mowing land mthreeyear, and oue-uilf
RO that it will produce .i, one ......i»l
..... seH a each year*.
,.j, J„. y a light sprinkle of seed year,
u in the eirly will spring. produce
; Fivo sheep the value of ten dollar*, manure by m
wintPr p, pnitaliWbedding.
giving them living
Fi„ .heep the'summer will get their
. tfl „ n(th on one •«« <rf
Rmima . thn parturing of same would
i„, three dollars
Five sheep will raise flvr larab*,worth .. .
' fifteen dollars. shew fcwenty-five
i sheep will
p OUn ,] fi of word, worth nix dollar*.
i,^.; s let us see how the aeceunt■
0r ,„^ tmp-ovcd .V«r by tha »U»e? ram ing
, Vais* on „ of n maanm to ..........»J*.w
! ^-p^ineir ........ in J'.i ‘2 to
living the land AM
-—t: *»»
Tl, e above being<)re<liteil keepfiveaheep to the sheep,
let us see what it costs t 0
t)m)n(?h the winter:
■ Five-h«ep ‘ , wille»t emts...............»«» ene-andooe-h*lf fons
0(ll , v ..hich
t-.ters-t and tax..... man 0 °
„r sheep................. Il>
,53.00
, . . . ,v fl m c n tion
; »«?.re* we_ hsre »P'-°f »«•<»«»
, five sheep for one year .
Now,e itihros ve*r». »■>'’ »* ®,
............ ...... M;fl0 ^
’ -
--—
; r.svvini:, m th»»hrre vo,™' pr 5' .
Now if the above is correct, we hove
tlt m<X) , end a gras* field
1 that will cut from one hx two t >ns of
hay for several vents, and without Wie
usualoostof plowingaud kind, the which is.
i tion of manure of some
- no small item. It may be found best m
some instances, to plow the seetl; that
depends 1 somewhat upon the
. , - “rt boSoutand speaking of
stAJ au«i produomg
run oat, an we Wm it.
1 but a small quantity of hay.
You will see, by my statement, that I
hava-vofaed the manure from sheep one
! third more in summer than in winter.
From mv own experience and obs»rva
tion, I am fnlly -satisfied that improved sheep
! are of very great value.-on
land, and th»t they should alwayr. be
kept on the plowing land, and ahead of
; the scythe.
-------- |
Necromancers of Old. l i
exploit of the necromancers of old ; the .
fame of Toitsiva, the Spanish magician, j
,R h {'' u ‘nimortaljzed in DiraQuirote ,
^ ei S Bcuvennto >D8 ***** Cellini, dMcnb* -J®" aa 111 ;
inTOT ^ c l H* 1
A ‘ ' i
im ^ umrU ‘Ubj Rtverux iugionB, are now
t° havft magic ^ lantern “ ere,y and ?#!?* their
^ an atmoaphere theburning of perfumes
i» accounts! for by of or- i
douferons woods, m oroer to When ,l„n he
visions of Charles the spectators. the Fiorihjvaa the
*ted Emperor Uie'Bavarian^Pjrincya Boplua, mar
to in
the city of Pmgtw, him the father loa-1 of tlie of
tnbe brought with a wagon
magicians to assist him m the feetmbes.
Two —Zyio, of the chief proficients ,n the part
the Bohemian sorcerer, and
Onion, the Bavarian-appeared before as r.
vals in an extraordinary trial »n
exalted assembly After saperhuman
, effort* to astonish, Zytho and swallowed opened his his
jaws from car to ear,
companion until bis teeth touched his
shoes, which he spat ont because he said
they had not been cleaned. The
; att - aof tlie audienee was succeeded
feelings apprehensions of horror, but by Zytho aimed the
their restoring
al vanquished proportions Oman ljfa—• hts perfect triumph corpora of
tc art
! insxpUcible.
THE PlRILS OF TUB StttP.
ur*
The tiareief by who, approaching the
^ »Ur, nc <sm»l night at this season of
tlie V( * r> *** a continuous line of lights
‘ aiJ .j down the shore as far his
vision can reach, has little idea in general
Q f t j lc > e |*boMii arrangements that are
£*
fwld r^lllu be siE*! unpoeslBle for ao a »»• m
i ^2*5 b
!f n one of the slatums
ioompetent keeper,
..ient-competet^^.ffloeni t hf^ll»t aspectore from of tbed^art- the United
statearerenfl. r«ine eervioe. This in
^r^tieelde, is mkiitoi early in the winter
fci-.it the reni. sqna.ls well or
’ "Thelife-safchu'tfttion at Point Judith,
fo5„j" j> r f-. .eur-te of those to be
jji aiongiiie ^ cuast. A two-afory
{rame bouw e j wl thont and within.
..—n but subsuatial. with a tall flag
,*..a oiectimr (rom its roof. On the
BruUn ?_ d fl, Kjr with a hnge door opening
f K)I iUse. t »the bout-room, thl* the
tluf*Uving in the Back of ia
room for the crew, clean, and
we n warmed bv a bilge stove.- Upstairs contain
t!iPW s] M piag rootns, each
r in ,,? _ cots well supplied with
loSSinlta n tvrf thick blankets. Tlie crew
. of a keeper and six anrfniMi.
| Tliey ^ taughttlrattheir tlrat duty ia
to ^ave life. When they can rescue
fj„ property P from destruction, they are them to
, t „ lt nothing w to prevent ‘reacna
’Sin luge" fc.
For Ibis ,mr ( i»e
ar(> ftrBt iMtro.te.1 in the method .of
I reviving apparently drowned persons,
,,sto"ratives mutant coataihing is ptaridattyetth two bottles a ease of of
- toSytTooi r „i sherry, aud a Imttle preparation of snuff, of
Om monia, .tvotic a wound"
ir ,, n fig ln (ie Z UHeil ** „ muntord ou
Also a box of prepared uren tea b'.mllo plasters, , Were,
* rbl | ( f adhesive rnbbiag,^sponges. plaster, plaster, a a bundle of of
d , lnllll j f„ r unrfimit* baiK ta g i y ,
, aud a unmberot for cleaning
^xezsru „„t month nml thriiat.
*tatiou B tathm .............. ST are a iarge larac snrt-bohL suvf*boiit, a a life-car. life-car,
.4^^-. ^ ,,,} n mm t a r * f nr
• ‘ « line over the Tow soh atiti many op£
smill i er iuipleinents to Im nmol in
1 rating these nrincipal vwmel ones. In ordinary
! ease*.when taelifcsuving » mdiarevored sshore,
men goo,it toher in thei>
and i-Oauc her passengers and
j ; crew ]j a ,dd B«riheresre be certain many times
w en wo
iut . t4 w wwwurvw — r
H?. j ma att tf er ®-^?? how r atmug sh'"ngthc;r.j their : .t. ‘"Then Tbenthe the
j brought into service. Thnmr*.
? . ta.r ir ia brought tiwS«rSwli«»Vi>Tlife out. a slender h
f r ! Vn
| jke “, umatarand „,*,**' baffwM* ever ns«l in the
; nited Life-saving service, (he
. . , ” x)niJ *j,ot
, and‘the ... ^ w waa
fired, ’ hall just cleared the ves
HP ,. H rail nn( , wcnt through her deck,
,,, ranch t, nud more than -gw
hTra w , irr , W ml The 'tire vresxO,
1r the *’‘ shot is KseHfiach" fired draw in the “ small
H directions fln.l a l it,
,j nniiited J on a board, in
’matot to mike the
1 ' hawaer (jwt to the ‘ and rig m.t tlie
| SSm.. SSb£w£n b.J2?l5'iS£hl£h
the shin
...... ti, P sh.,ra ,m*nira,.«is
i ■ Vhnilt ™, hf,. ,«r is nearly air-tight.
aud in the form of a small eoy
; vm l boat ho tlmt rthoiiM it, l»v any ftcei
, .^„’ j 01J j break ^Sd from the " hawser. ! "if« patten
j f*' Z w *; ,2 H Hfe^r, .moti,nes t
t to the and
!!.S' tlii'ri an implement * f* known us the
sent o,d. This is
* nniy of short wide
! foX S^Sft to rit o». A cork buoy nini
i jirouml the band nreveutH it from
the vessel can
j goon be drawn ashore. Each man, upon
1 going i nto the anrf, wlicther for
1 or practire, oouyeniont is required cork to wear ja<5kat, a with
but which''iTis verv
impossible for him to sink.
'Tin- -ration* are elan furuisheil with sev
era i ,rf the Merriman life-saving float nrion suits,
w ;th which a man can the
water „^Sed"wet. for hoars without being drowned
Th « inside and evtfry-dav iveU-arriuiged work
: lif,,-saving station is a
j piece of macblnerr. By day ami by
OJlTO , s nr „ ^ walking np and
down the beach, each provided Where with
' Codon light f aud 11 lantern.
t)ilT8 „ r nletB prevent, the patrolman
from one station meets the patrolman
; f m m the nest, so that almost
I communication is maintained between
them. In tlie house, one man beds,
t i le fl, wr> another makes the
third takes care of the lanterns, uud
the stations where otheft t^mendo take tutus at
l i in™ a „,i baking.— New York Timet.
The Horse (best** tar Bhenttcatmn.
Last year we met an Americ»n-bom
fellow citizen with horse chestnuts in his
pockets, which he said he carried as a
safeguard against rheumatism. We had
„„t known of suck s reputation before,
* n d supposed the files originated on this
omitinent. lint Bouillon »vs that the
m l from nuta ik nre.1 with "dvaptaee
gooi Aenmatwm. whidi
!*«« We further » h ® 8 !gjj”J ) 7 B !^” ( W,TV*pee
of their specif* (-**ctdus
, - ncpa come from So" distinct
«u-h
^,,^04 wl,st«ie,4her th««W be hnofmrad. than
it may bi* fliat in m*jr more
th<N chwtnnt being
cure., Hava any of onr
roaders^had ehv.reVahle fexijsrteacs ^tb
ifiSS ... yor we HuppOR^ that th©
he wider than we
^ Know - —7%g _________' Gardner's Monthly. y
Welfics Novellics In In Paner Psper.
When the nsefulness of compressed
pa per for railway, wheels was demon
two or thra© ?em ago, people
ftsk#Nj «*.What next qwjation can
now p* answered. be Tbe latest nse tor
tmper appears to tor chimnev-pots.
«y „e made m Breslau and "«
l 1Gr ht and durable. Before the paper
nn l p is monld«l and ccmpreas«l mto
the required shspe, it is treated with
chemicals wmoh render it non-infiam
ma ble. Specimens of paper and cloth
mai r.erently j e fmra exhibited tbe f.^rfonua before the cactns Maryland were
; Academy, of Sciences. Tlie cactus grows
abundantly in many of our Western
states and Terntories. and it ta found
| „„ arid toil where no brngean be eulta
^ted. The success thai ha* been “2
! with in making P»pri how thxa plant, is
so merited th»tthe businese wfH proh
sfcly beritempted on »large scale
| THIRTY MILLION'S OP BOLD,
In &e spring of 1863 a party of fire
• miners from Bannock to6k the*trail for
the Yellowstone and Big Horn country,
which for some time had been supposed
to be rich in gold. Shortly after cross
‘ ing the Madison on their way eastward
they encountered Indians, and were
\ : !?tarnrs 6 jssss
' ^
i A^r to tb« Teiritorv.
most productiw O aloh, mouotafn wh ieh gorpe poireiT fo, the tts
length thathaemooably ererlieen fonud
paUon and lawlessness that could be
tad.
The Fairweather . party, theidicoverers,
immediately locatedaud staked out the
rieheat ground to»«tu«wMi- they eonld flu-1, and
.bwaa dented waabing, For time nnpwcB- the
, suoceaa. a
covery was kept a secret, bnt-nltimatel.v
provisions had to be bonght, reatdted and the
- trip made to Bannack for these
in the publication of the news. Iu
atantly there was a tremendous rush to
Alder. The gulch was invaded by
thousands of the wildest and most tin
! tamed of the pioneers of those .lays,
Prospecting disclosed the fact that it
was rich from cud to cod, from tlie base
ot the plil valley Biddy of the at Stinking its header-downouta M ater. Every
fobt of the ground was taken up, am)
i much was claimed twice and three
: a circumstance which lustautly necessi
tated atarge hardly graveyard and a coroner. clnim
With an exception, immediately every
ifl the cation became almost
pmataUr,. In twelve mouths a
of. 15.000 ha.1 congregated
there, and five mimatii « eitiea had
sprung to life. During doliare the summer of
* IStWOver six miluons in dust, a
yield almost incredible, hail been taken
from the bed of the creek, aud iu the
spring of the following year the popula
tion had ^StarfthTcSSdSta^ increased through immigration both both
from from ril all parts of the United States,
olsimeyirlded East East and an,1 West, West, to to nearly nearly ‘JO.tMO. 20.W. tlW.OOn-; Many Many
; to their owners
SvSri^-^srics *nd several easily jlouliled that amount. It
can be imagined liow wild must
stream, ._ where fortunes were so plentiful, the
TyuTy ,
eouhU t^stH for who jnftCPti . vithiu
'& fh» miner* an-Menly rawing to
Btfliience. The flush times at Washoe
• were child's play to then Alder Onlcli
: da.vs. Of tlie five settlomenta - atrung ' along
the narrow seventeen miles of the creek,
, 7 to-dny — ----- the only — -----* oue inhabited,
oleaaantlv _J located on on the the east east bank of
JSSnMGT raqawi wars ox *vir»® !?s
The Fairweather party, who uncover
’ their f the claims, Rttleh, aud r«di*e.I threw immensely their from gold
and away dissipation,
; in all forms of excess
aswas customaryamong the j
: William Fairweather, the leailer of the
.l«t«y,a character in our national lire
Story, not unlike Comstock, the discover
er of the lnmqns nune* in Nev*,!,,. .lied,
like the latter in abject poverty with few
friends, and with scarce sheiicr over hi.
beaul. In botheftsea the discoverer wa«
. the fame of hi* di.
I forgotten orlost in
'
... .. far . „ HciUUUu ... .
We find this in a Son Francisco
Men here only think of making a round
raillioa of dollars. Tliia ie their great
.
aspiration. Whenever von Bee a knot
men and-W them talk
algint money mattors, their talk mbs iu
huudteda of thousands of dollars and
millions. Some business transaction,
swse scheme Z they 1 &nza have in view, is going
to prore them to
ail the treasure they waut. The women
hew exhibit the terrible'longing same papmoa for wealth.
Thev have a h„- fash
humble life. They think of ease and
luxury, aud would make and life » <v>mpleto V*
holiday. -Dressto diamonds.
opera and theatre, ft uever-endiug constUnta* round
of social gayely and frivolity
the height of female ambition here. I
was dining with a friend at ‘be Grand
Hotel, and opposite ns sat three ymmg
ladies engaged in an animated eonversa
tion. “ When I millionaire.” marry,” said “And one, “I I,
rejoined marry a toother. “ Nothing short
of a man with plenty of coin for us to
fool away. That’s what we 'Frisco girls
want." i don’t wonder at these longings
for wealth. There is everything ttSty the to
prompt them. There is no in
world that can show such an array of
millionaires in pr^mrrion to the popn
latior «* San Francisco. There are over
forty men here whose fortunes exceed
four millions of dollars each. There are
as many more whose wealth la from one
to three millions each. None of these
fortunes were inherited bnt were ao
quired bv business sad Vri-xl
andaTT rritfim a
tweuty-flvv yearn. None of the million
wires here have passed the eSer jpime of life,
and they arc riches all just those as who enjoy in
pursuit repntation for for opulence. aa Tlte passion
for great wealth here of is both unprecedented. snd
It is the end and aim sezes.
all they desire to attain.
----——
Some Big Words.
a citizen or Baltimore has been hunt
ing „„ to „ >rae bi g words, and the beneflt^of pnbUshes
them the Amfrican for
getters-np of spelling matches. The
>n the English and ptaorf lan^sge. the monthof
Md pleva in nSiorifira^b
1, “ Fll(?rim«»
fcnf d iinita«ba8 ” The next io “
e KHine M by “
i } "^ a ‘i- ■w!Kwafc*vonfi*«to*»rtf«*antinm SJSrSw ”
is '
- rj on ,j tiaa Neporanceno de
; towiThTtL he
j mxt is Isle ™® of ot Mull,
.,
n “ g nzjmmer !L~in' Jursobwindsuehtt
p/ilVn^iraatieontinomi- - Nitroph-nvlen
^Smidniation ,,, *« ar^tw^>
.. mcgalon n ” which recent-'
Iy ch^liviZlja™ London 7i»i« and
. ; na, i!(, ,o.^SStaZS- ' .P '^
i W( , productions of
:
Nsnse ta,i^ hanodrimnpotrim
^ .lmikosanplmphsitopernstortl ^ kra p
■
, J53S,J2Staraoplaiu«tan^’
. This last
*«io »«nl P hrr.JrTt m anv AwS™™ language. It
. ^ ,, ”
*“*?,. “f A . Fj- , ‘ T crv excellent com
-rt «“|s - j n „ nt i J o{ iXrs ^ 0 ;
l„d fo of 169
! and makes seventy-seven Mventy revra syllable*-sud sgatass ana
j ® cr * 9 * , ~' rt socn
*P , ->k
VOL. IV. NO. 15,
LABOR SCHOOLS.
^
flew** fr»« unMugOA ft>« 8 pw« ,
A remarkable report has lately been
published bridge, England, by the University the subject of Cam- of
on
industrial^ education, from which we
ma k e the following interesting extracts :
Premising that since workingmen can
anajeawfa $!*
title tiooa indites, jS S* Jhe these childiw mdtistnsl of mstitn
i watt WjPrptmna, Otod them a lodging ^tgor
^nt
SSLiS* romving a subs^ntml techui«l W
Pf direction 0 *?* 8 by ««*•“' ““g? ; .'i®
worthy of imrtatiou are pointed r^iii out uS rn
ludus.na! ***» -eem to to be f nn qni ;t> r
numerous iu Dtmimir^8w«ten,HoU»nd the German Empue u. d
Austm, in They generally known
and Belgium. art
“* comliine apprentices theWetleal work-shop8,^bu w'tli practici.l “®y in
»traction, and presuppose gn» lati m
.from pupils W admitted S
arc
twelve, or even »«lwc, if thCTewnabow
JIi” requisite measure of elementary
knowhdge. Holland _ the . most , b-cn'nrtwnt important tech tach
In
UjC" 1 acwlemie. tivpToducera Kre those
«f w°rkiW A !" s , tr H^V 'l^'. ^--l-hreH’" w a.s'oSLllv
Working Cto^s, frw tl^et^deswrUHb WMidreigneil to trail
wortoeB «r «m
'' with arA.tccture and shilh
! »»ldiug. The “ and n . r ** mchidt^-besHl^i “ ,
»sts three years,
certain studies supplementary eli” oLpn
““O acqurror»ts---the of mechanics and natmal his
forr, the ■«‘ ^
tool* H« ™» and «f ina^mlsreimentey,^ U*® Jatue a^ the forge. ouiy* The
I-npils p^da muat^t must be at teas, tawt thirteen thirtaenyre yearsof
aff®, educatinu- kmlhavi hn;lhave IliCT v.swv-,ia rein klcreipiiresl oa ^sUtonmatay to pay an •
auankl ever s^sssst^ tb^teeu fce^hiLb dollarH. diiw not xliert^ «tceed,hmw- j b >
*.
wliy wftfrgSSrresalta,tiecauswitTias ga uagemennms bemL avoided
... ................ ®* ™ ctln * ritn®
....
In Scaiiduiavui and the (n.iuan V. man cm m
l»re, tlie apprentice "cjeoto ibAwi
IL^’w^W those above do- rim ■-•••-■ W?S^^ -• 1 ■
that they are government instil lti mu,
tltpngh they receive a s ub s idy from tlie
the SoAingcte, has borne hilt mt^re
GBcM-nt. „r„i,
brought forward i*» at t tlieShH} the , episfis n „v t ito t*
b“*- ; ,r« —thSfihi’IU, ‘fo 8 *‘?theoM*w- “j
proudmg aiq-renticeship. “ ‘ . hicb mssfd
“f -tl^imn^id^Einui.
away-with have .token thon^it for critty
"fern* to
thing except k 1 ed
assemhlug,* wieutif \c and
profess of apeend » inrtttnt^*. wh««e ^
a score
gradnate. «&?.«* are
U' ‘', m
J; r TU.'S ^mnndies . .
W! a
the..«‘\ei»l \ uh of foreign and
douuajtie trade. _ p ».
oxceottlie
: -government n ft?n“
„
npontluwaaatam It that few innmcipalitiea have
is true a^ srfftfc but their
«mM ,Z‘tasSXfX^iud-“ apprent.ee
‘X >nly one-m st it;i n ■ he are U
, , eia"
Vrefira V'* e 2®L 3™., bowerer^ ncconiinB merita snr
to
JSJJ trail ««dem|to P 'mav Me may ! ad<l ml 1 that'at tha « his I >s
: SSSI^fta So2»d l *
rtiret
| ?*'i “tilra/w P dphIucc suecific^aU- intelligent
and skilfn workmen okmen The Th, «P®^»e-t.aU
"^Aita
■‘hoee ,,S*. helweeu the
fft***' / after an ex
“‘Yinf „ ; ^1, „ „
metric hatdeserv’- svstom
^“.“ ^ '’’T" 7ones ^ J a fortnight Hbl>" a
^^a n .. - r r fbeir'
,
; ™^7"]Ffr'. P i B three y years )
; ,'„,r i/the j . a lilb(
bonrs workshop las? and
while for fSSctoi the Jrito vi nr
‘ “ .XiToli* M
J foolsl Dnnngttaj&sttwelvejmon^epnpa and tnrae uuirsgijiiujv,
p—nrfl eaeh of one the o specialties ft^ montliR taught, alieni so ^ y^ t
j «“**»»“>“. »Wle tto^durectew* cm obserire-hw t apta- “JS’
I tude. ”*>. >**?& Only®* the b^nptngpme JLjL roc
?
S^oWof w^hefirotes S himself W^M exclusively Tlie
topSrabte during rehwl ttJreeStal have breh
empire. ban
j and unOer the exintiog regime Yet it> its en
„ )nut( ,red many obataeles. pw,
; gross haa been r»mirtftbTe.Tlien nmber
( ,f apprentices, which four years ago was
iR Dow ° flartytwoh nDdm< -
AerW
Professor Loomis has been making
in »«rial telegraphy m the
S mountains of West Vix&m, his idea
to send a wit* up to ^certain
height, reaching a atmospher©. partiouAai■ ctufum-w At
electricitv diSance in the same^ent any
nway this can be
reachetl nicition by cin a* similar wire, and comma
!>e hail immediately. The
prof^ftor ^„Sles haR telegraphed by merely to siTding parties
distant
np a kite, at each end of thasdtstanoe, a
certain height, attached to which in place
of the ordinary Rtring wrh r fine copper
wire. When both kites, although touched eleven
Se miles distant from each other,
tame current, communication was
W bstweeri' them both, and the message* other by
were sent from one end to
ordinary Morse instrument
in connection with the inetrament in
vente.1 bv Professor Loomis. He ha* a
scheme now on foot for a series of ex
perimenta from a point on one ot the
highest tieaka in the Alps, in Switzer
land to a similarly situated place in the
Bockv Monntains. If this succeeds, of
TOIirge his invention will rank ia telegiSpb impor
tocewith that of tbe electric
itself. men All tbe monvy neoeatary to
rirto*- ttw
SENSITIVE SENATORS.
rr MH3k 11 has the following in the SL
Louis Globe-Democrat: While on the
snbjectof Senators, X am tempted to give
a few recollections of the reporters’ gal*
lery during several sessions the when I was
employed debates for as the reporter New of York Associated Senatorial
gnzgi —
frrlewnM wur+Lat 1 had «o( hnu rf.ort
i u the report of ft bijf debate. There
f hail lieeii a warm time on the reeouatrnc
tioo ppltcT. Ben Wade btel lannehed
» U ‘ te *f taA f ,*%*•’-*«* “(,*>» w
two speeches and only a menUon of this
'&*' Stemnt, who had been cot off «»tk »
'
pM»grapb. t wa# ushered into the
. p r Sf no 1 erettt speeelif’
•• . Why 1 he didn’t 1 replied yon report that I my had steected
f? the 1 * two ' repre ■utufive no-n of .he ue
Irate—Wade and .lohnson—anil cut all
the others down. ’Brit, said Ryery
modestly, - You are not as well known
as Mr. Wade or Mr. Johnson . they
speak for t heir parties, and what they
nay m nf national siguiflcMnee The dence ; yon only
S say P^ for said youvsedf.” Mr. Stewart. " I speak you to
.
the Republicans rtf Nevada, and my
speech is as important of h “ “*? ”7 My
^vc'wa^at that, Mr. Stewart reflu J t . msisting ? .? that r " e J I J?1 hnd i
wronged him I agreed New York/*raW. to send his
“P««ch by mail to the
would Inn M^lsrei’Si coat gl.ag) to print it m an sn'^veJ adver
tisement, and that tjiey dul noL care..
about printing it as news,
neTCr b, ' t 1, «‘‘ d
that were 05B»tant I wiw , always .complamtatotheefrect. omitting important
t.ebate, _ which the Senate
uuvo printeil, and that I was always
width mabng reran for 4e*n«d W«»l “ spats ’
tlie Senate b»
To remeily that it was proposed that
the the Senate Se^te shontel should furnish furasbita its own .Ws iW
ctoted crntol Etesa Efto.report. jwwrk, choice, V*<**«m to be paid by ™ the
of Its own
Senate. I appealed to Mr- Hudson, -
then managing JZerota,
sg t ag a di toi n f. th*
the matter, an d f^SSSHhwptw- fol'ing fliem that if they
order :
indorsed , -■
reply fully . my
>“
the - .Senate proposal ,
A s to s
adverttsin&rate. One day there was a
l)U ,it!,,l the debate «f9 re? Wbfto.
_
, J ^ ve^ i !' imAmrnutliom
paper* became very unpleasant trom
u»t‘»ne forw,trd and I soon after g V.
‘ P *
—---
l-nrlesllie, t unosilicr. «T oT Suicide Sahlde.
’i*us latest report of the CTiromalad
m ; ui8t ration of France contains a very
cnrlons*erie* of statistic*relative to the
suicid#g C ommitte,l in tlrnt that country d nring in
Ul °y car It appears
that perio,1 thatWs 5,617 person, failed them
selves, and total is greater than
•>“ ®T*f ^orebeen reported. Of these i
men and twenty-one n i per n e l ^^^^ cent, wimen.
Gf 105 suicides of the the ages remamiiJg.5,512, could n«it he_de
but
N^^^-niue were under sixteen years of
H « e ’ m bl ' tw ‘' f ‘ u h ' Xt,,en “ d VT?'
>,214 between foitv aud sixty, and 1,5.6)
tlie last mentioned age,
f p 0 committed the latat net
whUe |ahorillK under mental disorders,
*"»" »•«**• « » to*erestmg tb^HUimaaxxnth to comtore the
the ooaditmu o* 2,3*1
8 »»»® wll! ^ * tUcaue:lv>s, How ptolific a
sour< ^ ot wlrinm 8 1 l, ^ h, “. “ v ^ 5 ^
amrmgg m
wrt e thatforty-tnglit married pro pie, |M»r and that *°J out ^ of
5, 136 snien les, ffPrp reganlio "Hairusl. g wlllchant^ntn WI killed
themselves bm-suso , ol tannly <t«»W •
11 W .‘ * ?’ ""”*«
unmVwr ,, f s n ,e,des — were p,vq>fe psst the
-pritanxrf life , inrttto t mg th a t , |t ss M mte.
tion wlt h " waated or tmanm-ssf nl - mt
'»tenc«determmed , tlieir _ putting anrod
‘ a :t - This k further subaUnt'inei. iy
t!le fllct . that out of_ the 5,186, W are
' u, °wnto have killed themselves beeanse
of reverses in fortune.
rieron Imndrnl and ninety-eight auffi-rmg, p.,> and _
pie died to avoid phyft. al
489 bles. b ® l 2? The 8e . fact 0 L T ?J that U i“J ontofrthefilS 1 5*fforai s who who
‘‘ * ,patu er ®. bro ’ n ’^ ^ t TrtV to to temr^r- drank
enB®y,»sin a nreerfnl
afica tcetnr e. It
stand why £ which sprinipand summer suicides recurred. «iie tne
se8SOIU , most tor
rjte p erce ut«gef< are twentyrLiree thirty-one
winter, nineteen for autumn, for
f ” r 8 l )rin ?' *“ J twenty-seven sum- the
^ This would seem to negative made that
stllten ient which has been
moist cases of-self-murder 0(»ur de during
gloomy Weather, wb tob'Mds i n prere
,n * ^ '‘PH 1 **’, for certiaDythercKre than
more dark ffitysmw inter^ m sum
filter-wouhLlmul ^T'thai the pnration^ fncllerdT
S g fiR thTSuS: especial to^.aii^ .imi mla e
. Aa oy
, th r hoR.ni, morn than seven tenths
, )re f erre( f either %uj. strangulation (2,472) or
the suicides were willing to throw awaj
their. lives they pro bably shrank
,
any mode «»
mutilation of their ’
American,
_
-
XK> not b© ftfr&id of-diminiBsAiug others, _______ yonr
own happiness by seeking that of B -
^L Keep good h company and be one of th©
fl world is,
niro great thing wO^tand, in this
much where as^ in.whst
Ujrection we are moving— O. IT, Holme*.
J pnive
Rich gifts poo r ssir when givers
; • H 8We€ , f . to tho se who have who
» hnrdensomc to those
! 8®*’* 51 no « , “8- deceit man
Etches gamedby e.tea - ■
so much as the gamer.
i One day you will be plesswl with a
friend and the next (lay d-soppanted end, and m
him. It will be to to the yon
must make yonr mind up to Band not
nnairel, unless for very grave eansca.
Your friend, you have found and ««*. cannot ”• no J
perfect. Nor are yon, yon
expect to get much more than yongrefc.
YohmurtW bnmsn for weakness, nstore foolishnees it ■* un
sod vanity in ; *"
i h*Fpr « JW *« ””
HE OSLEfpi Kjn
Advartteln*: «»<*».,
*• . i Sfc r a>* ■■ liTeii' f-,®
J - 40* *4W 4225:15
«■*-- ^ ^^ 51 :
i V ooSutar eofepa. --Hfitt£S sum is 8 £ 35 i 3 S;£: !sm«
-.
L»««l Advertisement*.
...... T.e»
it
SaMLfiK^s&i^ d«„........ 4.IW
Jbrt* «
p*r *-,**<*, wet nwtaai ........ MO
1U«, «f latorest.
Wanningto* rmiTMpendMl.
An Alabama man recently walked
sixty-five miles to see the .arena. Be
moat have enjoyed the walk home. —
A fellow of infinite chest,” is the
drummer.— Turner « Fat
He is also an example of ii
.rs...
,aO«.^e^ooda Mr. Bargift ootrhided Mr. Waltber m .
•giehii i OHd ! _Iiid.. ^ ®
Then Mr Walthereowlud.-d Mr. Barps.
f * n ’ 3 w flDed *“•
t |,e grfgdy’. otm top.
In rea-ling a hvmn to be sung, one
s ^Stfyw'T- no day afternoon ’"Yon a New York mmister
may omit the
fount f<»nn verse veree • , I i don’t non belieTc oe eve it's . » true. . ”
Jt wiw rough on a ftllow to haye to
get up m the reiddie o,- the night and
hunt around for another blanket. Bat
uwm rougher to And that the blanket
wasn t there,
Woman consumes thirty-six button
, )n her single pair of kid gloves with ; whefess shin
, nau buttons his shspenders folks a
And yet will ask : "Jint
tmlj button—^who’s got the button ?”—
t forctulfr Prent.
"Cousin Fred,^-won’re not at all haven't uiee,
now vou are marrmd. Why, lies. you Have
for
^ to compliment ?”
; , My clera. I’ve been married
two years, and of course I’m awfully oat
rmwtice. ”
shelbv Kv was provoked
IwfcWahr She&nik h^m wSi
qiiet. She strn(khm„ on the head
« ml 1 “ i, r „j n r n ,,, r ot
, «hc kept is
,.‘m:i’ii r.i‘overed f was
e 6 anil then
she rnarned him.
“Bid yon steal the eomplaluants of seedy
g*ked the magistrate a betae
jljlliyid ,, al ^bo^aaarraifmad who
him. him.- - “ “ I I decline declii to gratify lue morbid
,., lr i, > »tty of the respuinled public by the answering seedy
that ^ nueHioc,” scornful glatioe at tha
s 1 *
“ Chati* >s-~ - yonr ch ief c onsolation
U*r asked » T-i?tor ®f
ak* of
ity, only
railroad
anti an,l Webdin Welslin river, river, and and of of exo excellent, ellen t. suite i
wre* of'
«20, on; Jtntrf-H acres for m, *tt an nan
ridi New York lady, who, dying the
day, left nearly *350,000 to C-rr
yj,. t ;|,, sk ,. Vj j, a limit to be con
mm , 9 nepbewa ground
are to he the contestants 6n the
tlult tlie deceased was insane and was
vimtoinndne influence when the wilt Wta
^ cleaning’ ^ Tear
^ ^fchemng and the
^ tweutv-six eighty-six
^ horses, ,c“ ‘sw.woing wagons, J
'toStodnSthtt-ffc®
arc swept Ihf other regu
everv ne7iTm?r5:d
^ ..
_An Aus^an statesman . , conversing • ^.ij
with an English geptleraau, *
eontauptaonrij. *«r »y
English spe^Freneh diplomatist mm-h - * f S
to
,>f the Oontiuentat diplom. -mts . llm
Englkhman repltod : “Yrm forget
)»>•» i Agent ha\mg their Sliwta tapta f .
^e Frcneb army.
BoMngonwJl tioee gave n»mgento» par^,
explauatioii, ai u Parisian dinner
,,’f the American French practice gueRt, ,, tuimmg '.carrying to
’ weapon**. ‘„ A the colonel
IuK ol ,, ^claimed : “Will
|I|)Uill in tfa j g matter ? Why, Messieurs,
, travel all over France armed with
ou i y a bodkin.” The eolonel rose1 to hw
feet, ^ and replied : "The rights explanation few is
A Frenchman's are so chur
Tp ^ imagnificant enforced in with
1M .,,. r o,at they can be *
,*^ kiu or. for that matter, with a fisith
.
Aotaxirai important a «lj2ei-.s that nr-- he -
are ^ numerous and
K whole arsenal to defend tbem.
Hence the practice of carrying weapon*
. UjAou ^..
a . Literary . r-nriasttv f»H •'
Great interest attaches to the first book
"ie English language pnute,. in tins
eountrv, usually csBcd “ Tl.eBay IVarm
Book-' fro m M soro cbu ectt. Bay , A par -,
’ shown at the Caxtonme
^S . , e St“m Iti. Botlleian datol library 1640, and at
belong i' to the be the only
• i K Vs-lieved -to sample of the
•
p ji^toric Here isn
rhyme ma which wu sntisfiol our
1 ' ’
1 O blessed man, that in th advice
of wicked doth not walk •
nor stand in sinner's way, nor sit
in chavre of scornful folk.
i». , But iw in htri the l<Mtj^ift« lew of deitehtr Jehovah,
—
_ ancTi" li?*» J»w doth meditate,
by day and eke by night. Jr.
.. And be -t.ai! he Uk« s tree
and ^ IfisJasTa riee-r withers.
...... *' ‘fos toSsd'ira ^ _
"
mrf vatoitiechaffe. - .
bnt they are like and frc.
mode driyeH to
fine to Htand in the d<x»i>e,
nor fibali the Miautr* vath th e. jh*t
in their aiiist & ■
r, For of the righteous men, tlie Lo-d
ackno 5 viedgeth the way’.
bat tlie « ay of vngoffly men, / I.
nhall vtterlv decay. — m -. ?/»
A Horrible j, Death®
Mary.OolHns, ot Verona borough; Pa.,
—!• w jth a horrible death recently. V„ She
SSW-P, to- ps t ar md! the
xb'c Ihil
'wluie blrfhhg at work fell into a vat
voter en i votriol.
. #hoat p!x eight feet
lt h tbe l floor on which Mira Collins
• • },teen inches
w rk A ilo!e wg directly
*1 j,,,,, ia taK tloot. ovar
, to t j ie workmen access fc.
., "' . ,'ra. wnfortuoate girl recovered f*U through al
> i( Her tiodv wal
.
jnrtantlv but life was extinct
ytm J of age, sen
. ynpoort of h*s
V
_