The Oglethorpe echo. (Crawford, Ga.) 1874-current, January 25, 1878, Image 1

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THE OGLETHORPE ECHO. Subscription Rates: /Vm f»»r ............ .... «l*s kix ..... T*r-< --- SoaotrTtif as p*»<w •*•* untlj j&« ia paid So ice gives esHt *fafoa~nb*r two week* Worsts ♦iptra'ioa of hi* time, and if trefaacrtptooa S sot rcafwfcii. U*e sw»r iaai <«** diw^tiaoad. _________ Any pervoa who win eee-1 a* the of See »*w • ibrriken, with $10 c**h, wiii be estitied to ewe year’s sabacnptkm free. So dab cmtee. The leap of Ri>a.h»s Beg. >t n« . «*(« mi K;>rat stroagrodfeeX. H« riKsfcmt »l»sa sift tear white***, itoulow Ce ro5 c c Oibd Kamgtos, s.m Of .be u„du chief, mekusrefBiea drsfct, CpifaMsosstain r„#h.a.. pathway few. flew *u«h t.af.www^ Kevtx jt-t couiAikfiy aired liesrh the d .Kt-ebati in his conr»; ssssasar “jsrr . =ns asag^ag -^ Did his bidding night and day ; Now throngb r. gions all unknown He wm vr*- der ug, lost, alone, Seeking without guide bia way. Suddenly the pathway ends. Hhoer the precipice descend*, Ixmd the torrent roars unseen; TIurty feel from aide iodide Vawua the chasm: ou air must ride He who crosses this ravine. Follow ng close in hi* pursuit, At the precipice'* foot Keyfaan the Arab of Orfah Halted with his hundred men, Bhonting upward from the g'en, # M Isa il Allah 1 Allah-la!” Gently Roushan Reg caressed Kyrat's forehead, neck, and breast; Kissed him upon both his eyes ; Bang to him in hi* wild way A* upon the topmost spray Bing* a bird before it flies. “ O my Kyrat, O my steed, Hound and slender a* a reed, t’arry me this danger through! Hatin housing* shall be thine, Bhoes of gold, 0 Kjrrat mine! 0 thou soul of Kurroglou ! “Soft thy skin a* silken skein, Hoft a* woman'* hair thy mane. , Tender are *hine eyes and true ; All thy hoof* like ivory shine, Polished bright. O life of mine. Leap, and rescue Kurroglou !" Kyrat, then, the etrong and fleet. Drew together hi* four white feet, Pinned a moment on the verge, Mea sured with his eye the s p ace, And into the air's embrace Leaped as leap* the ocean's surge. As the surge o'er ailt and sand Bears a swimmer safe to land, Kyrat safe his rider bore ; Rattling down the deep abyss, Fragments of the precipice e*** RooHhfco'i Uswelled o*p r t red Trtiinhled not upon hi* hod • Uitriem at he atw! npright Neither h»ud dot bridle jibook, Nor hi* heikd hts turned to look. Ah he galloped out of night. Flash of harnes* Ip the air, 8<&eo a mom* nt iike the glare Of a «word drawn from it* sheath : Thu* the phantom bor*en an panned; And the Hhadow that he vs**t Leaped the cataract underneath. Bayhan the Arab held his treatb, Whi Jo this rimnn ot }ifmrad death r&Hsed above him. “ AHah-hn !’* Cried he ; ‘ iii a'i KoordisUn Breathen there not ho * rave a man As this robber Kurroglou I" —Atlantic Monthly. THE FALL. •• Ate those the rains ranked Meade Chalmers, pointing with her riding whip. walls '■lean see the throUgf. glimpse of gray now and then the trees.” “Yse.’'• aosweredPa.il Trevor; “and we shall have to dismount hero and walk the red of the distance, for the avenue to the house is now so overgrown with nnderhmsh as to bo almost impassable. forced their They alighted, with and arm-in-arm difBenlty toward *sy some the bouse; building It we* erected a gloomydooking lislge of rocks, ef etone, upon a above the which rose about twenty feet sea. Long deserted, ii-had faUen gnkltufl , decay; the walls were green with moss ; long, dark weeds filled the paths, and the crumbling fountains and broken statues were coverediwith mould, Far from all human habitations, snr "I 1,_ a o„„„„ wwd upo" th" one side, and npgntheothsr by the sea, h stood in solitary desolation. Maud shuddered at the gloomy halted before before her as she and Paul the j^ti!SijsL£S crumbling Steps. t ^ , over mo. *' **Oh, the mrlftti solitary lnoeliness of the place. Shake off your nervousness and we will ezplore t be in tswov.- Hothmg worse to be found than owl. and bats, I'll warrant” And the better to reassure her Paul put his arm aronnd her waist and im printed a kiss upon her lips. Gathering up her riding habit Maud took the proffered arm of her lover, and tlier descended the broken steps. The great hsll door swung open w.th adismal creak, and their footsteps echoed wandered through the dismantled hall. They through dusty corridors and deserted rooms. .Here and there patches of de cayed drapery or a forgotten pictnre. the stained and blackened, clung broMr to mouldy wall, and now arid then a bust or statue showed Owls ghastly and bats, in dia uncertain light. tnrbed in their nook 8 and corner*, abont their nneasily foraging -. rats expeddions, andmice, in amUmge apidera, hastily to their holes; suddenly deprived of their h^aawWinMldirectinnA Mand looked with nervous fear, . and started ■^ass5?SirtSi-ria the sea to repay ns for the had gh.rtly sights and sounds we have to endure, Why, darling, how pale you look! If von nally wish, we will go no further." “ No, Paul, I won’t give way to my foolitvhueaa ; but the house neeine to me Hke.au immense tomb, and trie moan of toe aea like wailing lament. M.v poor, little impressible easily doling. of T did fo« >t think yon were so fected. But come up to the room aboVe ami you will get a view from the window that win brighten yen? eyes and tiie «d-.r back to your cheek*. They aswrwlW the efcairs, paused throngh a narrowfpassage, and srifared a room. Itoonteine,! but one window, whi !. ri acliefl the floor, opening to a i .•{ C time if resistad, bnt at last : ■ Ji 1 - J I l ■ ' I o. By T. L. GANTT. ’opened, with* londoroah.-A .'went 7rat b mnd'aJ! 'uTe ,1 ftJ^ > >! »iiS!w* tii«"^vm < ^Lh ^ ' mrvommt. slammetl t ',?t$ to with e a . d0 dntir Js ?L^.$ soosat nl * P* 0 M “i^h n n °. ot, t V^V, f® 7' ^ ’ UngWPanl. "Whyjim , zernsnrm Tou liseehow ,, quickly - AwiUopeu. . ES33K3E5& bSSSaSSsfrj: Bad eater here for • Oh, P«ui, tfan’t i « a ve me i" ’— H« turned, sad («kiug her in his arms, ! kissed her pule pale cheek. cheek. ' “ Wh J. Maud, mat flarliiig, why thia ex ! cessive “icBuaot fearr tell, Faui; but an traac countable -—*0-1 oppreesion Mole over me at the sight of this gUwmy old ha« ysr* danger s pnBeieacGoi both of ua.” coming to pae or ■ Pfthaw, morbidly “ dearest; jou are affected by this dismal place. I 'did influences. We hurry away from its gloomy 1.________»» ” I; He stepped out upon the balcony as f be apoke, and with a cheery word turned ’ to reconnoitre, when immediately there w® a loud crash—tbe balcony, rotten i with age, had given way lieneath his feet, and he w® hurled to the rocks ; below. Itwaa a strange Bematicm. tbe.gTB.lnal Pan! Trevor awakening to c.uaoiouenees, his languidly, and and j opened wonderetl at* eves his condition. He dreamily and through was lying the in an half-open humble door cottage he could ; hear a murmur of voices. At*fSr«t the ■ effort to ^member bewildered edliim- him; bnt but ab, gradually f-he his mind recollected became clear, ear fall, and- ami- the yea his rocks, the sea, and with a acute pain it flashed across him that j Maud was left a prisoner iu I WWwaMftfe-. .....—■—,— — He ■Ij'ove to t rise, but the sharp , . barp pam . caused by the sudden movement pressed l >r a «M agony from hi«lUps. - *v »* ySJff* ‘ d“®.“^ nta shock, . u 1 , together V. with « the .a physical, ■« • . so prostrated nun that be was powerhws hut hia wain sssmed . on iue._ rtsions of Maud alone and floated helpless vivtdlj ra that solitary chamber betore k%ftrv? his. mental sight. her she beheld his to ma.1 ^ ln plunge ! Be * into terror the sea, as her agony when the terrors of her s.tos tonpt s toy athe^ door. W ber^ld, he, wd i »p- a.' : despair as the M daylight tim -shado crept si'-sb’l-d j)'* wy r.a.m 4 , *tl deathjy tillne htok * tb« a s s m atss 9 thought still crept in upon Ins harroweii .mind, chilling his very heart's W.ssl. He rose from the be.1 n— gazed bad frantic. | ally around. How long he be,-., ; lying aebsclass and inanimate here how long ? and Mind, bis beautiful be i'frothed,' was' starving—lying in that awful house I 1 The thought brought back strength to i his bruised iimbw-=his blood coursed like to Are her through 1 Dead Bis alive ycinst-He he would bear i go or : her from that fatal bouse of haunting shadows and fearful sounds. He rushed i from the house and fled to the woods the sunlight crept through the trees and . of golden light ; fell with breed bars on j the greensward ;, the rabbits sprang across his track, alarmed at his . hasty ■tread; the birds twiltera! merrily and m i leafy branches. All was life his j«y. i and seemed to jeer and am* woe. : Heedless of tl.e cramping para ra L.s ; limbs and upheld by the feverish strength born of intense excitement, he strode rapidly out; but wh.-u and the dilapi ; dated ruins loomed still sombre in : hie gaze he checked tor a moment Ids ; mad speed. A cold eh ill crept through ; ! his veins and hw trembling linilis re fused bi obey his will. But Maud ! Ahl 1 His darling eSsOgf Maud ! ! «rm Maud,. frantically, I'm SSaiBjfr _ the .. J ; he shmted, rnahing up. ernmbling steps.. without, met him, . The win.l so warm chill and cold, as h.x pushed,<qe*B the great door, and the yellow semi-darkness. sunlight paled as it struggled in the The dash of the sea as it broke az-onst the cold gray reeks sm )te his car with a mournful sound; his own footfall ecnoed )jfc e a Irqol) An raenbus of-dread and ; tear seemedu. sen, e to- , - i felt stifle.!,'and unable to advance. But, ah! snything rather than tins terrible snspefee. the He door rushed of the hurriedly fatal up the It steira to room. sJ%£^sAAsi?S —a corpse! For a moment he gazed horrified ; then, with a groan sank un conacious to the floor. ? *Sr*rSiLfnw°lSL'w!l , i*e* 7Si , some, and a lingering kwa was impnnt, d upon his lips. Do you know me at last,I»t?l- Jv“/?>. , . , ® . b “ E own fai and^*/«*»h® had lwfl ^en it before before to*< . 70 ^ indeed, Lv®Sw!S my own sweet it Maud, mean» or I™®- Htu l' laugh “ff b * alttmngh tears shine like pearls in her It lsonlythe norrul pnantorn or ae- d lermm that stit J. J And1 tiitn she told tom' ^ - ashermen, aaUmg t>y m meiruuie j , u. had KSS'toflSr heard herJernhed kaTnSf-SifrW how^hev had cr*me to tneir ai.i, an i yn - j both to a little cottage nPftr *Y j -jsasjssssitf illness. Paulconld not ac^L. 'JL 1 ^ his wonted.health under Mand s imn» trations. Yet he was permanently lame. However, if the evident devotion of a bride can confer happiness on a bnt e groom, Paul, leaning tipon a staff while alter, was ^ the happiest of Benedicts. The old gentleman wral into the pat lor the othei-night atthe witching hour of 11.45 and found the room urdighted and his daughter and a dear fnend oc copying a tete-a-tete m the corner by a window. “Evangeline, ” the old man i said sternly, “this is scandalous.” “Yes, papa" she answemi sweetly b) tbe wait THE ONLY PAPER IN ONE OF THE LARGEST, MOST INTELLIGENT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA. j VLTIHATK AMERICA. **• e«.ra, w.,.,, i uwn-l«eMiH PrrSni.... • A AJeetnrenpon leeforencon tbefotare fhe lututy jxx , ution . ^ YotF' bTfec TtrcT^r C.s>k. .^b«dn«d to hnv aadienee ^ by f Wn“® Wtllta u w lecture . SSS^HaiSs ! now corrupt great citiPB can become. Ho ^liouiJ hav- inquireil what the ttlli mate relation between rich awl poor vrill be when a etill larger part of Sew Eng ! lane shall have become a factory and the great «Wt a bliedfarm. He should b z$ ib e air of the marshes as well an of the ; mouoUii. peak. Ho should Intve taken oounsel of Orion, aa a thousand years * from now he stands at the zenith, slink ing his locks of sidereal fire above land .•«■) and h.ke. I.lrc He 18 c uLnnl.l should have L .1 no .1. done .tin all ell this *l.m : before saying Abat he had formed a con i ception of AmeVica. It t is is very very trite trite to to sav say it, it, and and yet yet it it is is ' an when inspired their wings truth, that the strongest, Roman eagles, were never j new flew ns tut far iar as an from irom Plymouth nymouin Rock ivh’k io to the Golden Gate. Open the compasses until they touch on the one side Thebes ' **??. ™ flte other able London, an,1 they j ®e gree n firida »mi _the j eteepietl steeple! cities cities between f th« Bay of Fondy coast D> nut not England, that ft California M ’ ° m is larger than Wales. Scotland and Ireland, and Texas Sikh Trance. Of coarse, f do not f..i<;et • t*i»t «>'** bigness is » not nut greatneaa. gwaracaa. But «ui lug- rag [ ™P>o.ved SS aem ,» - opportunity, -.T-- KS grealncss. lunity, and and opportunity opportunity m ! . ! our 4O»O00JH)O of population elbow into Toxa» ! 1 and and they they would would have have more more' <»H»ow room room flbunthe ^mn the people people * ^ of of France. France. From From this this erfiwdino-eom^H ,. r()W , linB * TO eH the the danuer. (lail g,. r . It It in lK not ot commonly comm „ nl . known kno „........... that the amount diuuuuv in of arshle «*anmem>n sod in iu x’”““ North uj.d «»4 *-* .jvuiu South ; ^nierit-a is greater than that iu Europe, ksia aI)( j Africa put together, ami can i h ew rf iwwwu M a m im we 'liv .*.- -Thiaja no r aai| ixmchmion. i 1 speak from a scieo i tj'flc bag;,, , 8 nd will bHow you what flint ». Our continent is narrow, ntid ih er efdre the windsof ocean water it well, n .e mountain chains on the east .side of m A-periesa continent are low; on the l •■«*• K „, m World esults they that are very the , (m , m , t r i,^totoofth.'ol,l ,‘Sed‘to .Inr l»T ,d’" The World ami its high camera range* wn*** the rainUma iu- ! teriore of Asia and Africa. Again, Ame- 1 Wtorht?d north scorched and south, S&iSTUitfplflS and admit and so ivp (lie Mlis . x,,e impulse of " fb ^nds is the cause of onr hot ,J“„Zld „| northern winds winter, hut onr mountain ; nmgsa K mo north and south, to that tbe h £ annroaches *iXXir and leaves them, gorges, and the t f()restw cr „ w op 4hB it stop.-s- America t. ^ l]le e ,, n ^«r; the Old ig ) n w ; America -wr ii a r row . i iiid er , ^ ^ old World is w-idr. Henoe wilb IIS , sma |ier snrfaw is fix f t<,the scorching snn. As the ! |llt o{ ^jj this, milting ‘flit the luoun , t*“'A-h ; „ scor continent, ,.-„ed and frozen portions , ZaMM and the r.-maut of , -oil (as the aehojar. Ssy. T , , 0 n „ t assert it on my own Old 100(K)0(W V^rld eouato miles in the | irad 11 000,0(10 to the New. of Thus , „ nr „ts upon j, us in all the light scieu : , jflp trllt the f,u.-tthat Ann -rica can sus i > ^ Ygreetcr population ’die than the Old XS r ,j tb*t and if can, it is unqnestio..- In this she some day wdL ,.i r ,.um»tauee “hose T hear the echoes of bite, "Xriesshould fmdfalls it is fitting that the keep step. Some of us wl)l , ar „ n ,, t T et very old have seen our • ,, m i # «o n increase from Ovtdr^sing 17,000.000 Mri to Brvanfrtiave to 000 000* You. sir. 8 000, seen it mmease from S^uit, noOOOll to 40 000,000. In 1790 the gjU baS. about which, if it were a our nonnbition would swing, vaB „ Kttie' east of Baltimore. Now it is i it th- ,-ast of Cincinnati. As Professor ^inee vVslker shows, moving. it baa changed forty-five I ask you to pause ;l „ r tbig pivotal point, for perhaps our fttults chiefly arise from the fact that we • frontier people. Around , , Uh^^nanv ^ Ult of .the lw of „ n j national pebaiiarities. 100,000,000 SllpD „ s( . tllftt there are a IK . rHO n- ; n .d] America * Ulerate in the estimate:, year 2,000. v for w | lllt q„ wo * a ,-, the hiture of America tobe? lt8 population in the year 2600 =ia would be 6 ^'iT 400 000 ; 000 The “ Eucv- XoA Br s«rms that smlSoith Ameri<» can furnish susteo ance ' for 3,600,000,000. of eighty Europe has an population We have personr to of an area 15 000,000 square miles, ff we conclude (and why Os? mav we riot?) that we shall some N have as large an average, our , ,000,000. A . rha ( hauge „„e M of F.irtnne Fertone. A remarkable change of fortune both % goo.1 and bad .9 reMrteilfrom Cologne, Germany In 1 Ko 2 two young com manists, Mte-kw and Burgers, after, a. fcna l mwhich all Germany wa« years’ interest ad. were eentencetl to aix im ,rat If"'' I’he three chief witnesses against them we re a police inspector, a constabje and in fbe artD 7' Thehenten ^t fe^-srd abused a trust, ran away and finally Bhot himself; the police in spector also comihitJotl Sidc-ide;. ««vi itu, sj-—s s^sssu-s House of Peers, and Burgers is a mem ^ ^Wmed. f the Lower House and is highly ««*» ' —-- . inexhaustible FertiHiing Material. lan“^,aTul^>«Tw«t L. nra boldt dtecribes a spot in the At rd toe AzoWa . ot TeI y great extent, completely of covered with a dense mass urn r n.e »«rr*nta»»on ^riineit 4 Frenefiman r>roTK>^e« t hat . n/aoc be made of taking from toi. some of tiie r»uk ,.L gr-wth Hm ia vessels - emploved in erxl fishing «%££££& of ^L'vovsges the vesr when - to ^rtl “av ,el,eves that 1« taken from tins sa assessx t argmnetrt LEXINGTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 25. 1878. FARM, OAKSES AMi ~j TT*______ _ For ^ , mijontj _. farmers , the clover piaat affords dryspeata nd beat mean, for re f to xl ;« a,t d h whether * d -„ It b clover ”* actually inquire fertility only makes it cresses or T** Yfearn hence t, * Tai !f this 1 ble will .,VV be prf * e ’i ! V4* m ' hn% tor ** long ^ ^ CO 1 refutBtion of its fallacy. Looking i j I the the coaditiou condition of of -farmrag farming through through s period of twenty-five years, I find that wherever good farming has lyen ticed there has been a decided increase i„ fertUity, that larger crops are am ^ less dependent - - the for „ and on season j, profitable lou „ wlo i»«w. results. Most mw* of va this .uo. —*• im provem^nt provement i« is dae due to to the the nse use of of clover; clover; other influences have helped, but with out clover all the manuring tnd under drninihg ik»l that Lmb have Vmum, been MiwM>Ja4 expended cm on land would only suffice to maintain tildv, without perceptible ntiliziug ntiliziug improvement. . clover clover be- be The Tbe best best mode mode of of comes therefore the central question in „ gricultural improvement, Whether it } hhaU snail bo two whether ploughed piougueu shall under, unaer, be turned pictured pa«TOre<i under or or mown ; it ' the year after being sown, or left to peiv feet its ece.1; whether it shall be sown alone, w with some Rome affeo&g . t^jall grain crop; these are questions vitally the prosperity The of of the faruung New York, tion. fnnners western having long been foremost in wheat ditetioh, auxiliary. easily learned With to the use clover aaef as .ts tiest pyo g n ^rt years they «inrz.efcZer^ht have learned experimentally m most the only one .which sold for money. _ supply supply the family with A A few few cows wiws to to milk milk And and butter butter; ; hot hog* enough to fijj tlie itork barrel and pay the taxe*, arid horses to work the .... farm, were the um only umj nna.iv stock kept m »■* on «»i4 dwm«s some of the mvi largest and most successful wheat fnrnis. The manure to make the wheat crop clover Since ploughed the under introduction (lie previous of mixed ses win. hiibbandrythis system has been greatly changed; More stock is kept; ;’ more re ihmee is placed on raanUto largely used each fertilizers are more year, and there is eomparat.vely tittle summer fallowing and plow i ng under ^Th’cZam ofiiixedfamtog h« no doubt tlmt toil {w torn is more u,>t oulv iu the money value, of crupa sold, ^oFlfietor bnt vastly more so in the fertility **** ids 0 ^ 1 all eggs in one basket, and « bad sessou dim not leave him with receipts runniug far behind his inevitable ex !me pensm. The weather that is bad for crop is favorable for others, and he of Ims having always sidnething a reasonable to sellOf ceitaudy late years shrewd (Sari learned to 'carry the system of mixed clovbr husbandry a step list further, and add seed to their of a v ailable c rop s . -E ight. ^ t e n to fifty or-sewn tv-five bushels of clover seed, as grown ou many farms every year, are a valuable addition to the farm receipts for the vear. The money thus secured is mlilS quite as easily as any which the farmer receives, sn.l t believe it is made „„t only wdhonlininryb.it with pos ifve to the sod at least to us prddne live capacity. The farmers who grow clover Seed are the men who become rioh, for every veer their fields become fertile. The shade which the do ver leaves during the bentsof summer fnrnisl, to the ground increases the nitrogen which it holds, while the clover roots perform the equally beneficial operation of permeating the subsoil and bringing np the unavailable fertility from beneath and making it available, These advantages arc, to some extent, incident to the use M clover in any way. But the farmer who grows clover seed «luules and mulches his Sod more per fectly.gnd secures ,i stronger and deeper growth of root than if the plant is lured or is ploughed under at any earlier [wriod. There is a further and very important advantage in growing clover seed. He who has seed to buy sows sparingly. He who grows it can afford to sow liberally. Not leaathan ons peck pm sere shonhl Imvsowu. After a few Veers' growing of eloverseed. the ground ‘will be filled with the seed, which will spring Up in after years as they turned hi the surface. Two years ago, one of my neightors ploughed »■ field in ssk good | of clover seed, he has as a “ catch 1 as anv one could wish. Enough seed ; was Z wsstol to seed the gronnd, and, as field wte only lightly cultivate! in turnS the spring for barley, tile semi was never npuntU plonghe.1 for wheat. I S do not advise trusting to such chanee seeding as tins. Better sow the field as usual, and let the volunteer clover come • in as extra to give the soil a closer and a heavier growth. The farmer who sows clover seed for a fewyea« will find of^tte it profitable far beyond scUs.-tbr. the m.,ncy Amcr- value WcuWvator. seed which Im \ ioa Hjdrephobia SnceessfeU? Treated. A w n- efl pondeut who wax in Indie ! m years wick, when that hydr<q.h..lfla oountrv was a i ' Zlhe^oUoXg fton s l cesMnllv treated there by resident Eng. ,. TBW , ( )jlo was. that -of , , 1 r ,i.,, f H \ un j Pr the oare of ^‘td Wvlie wls stted^ »t Ahmednuggur. The - J on ' } .. . iin<i > \ , .. . fi . hv« char arsfetf. was »,jj roeath *wsfSs the chair and 1 "Lb-SkWS!^ ** e lhXS“ ■, "hTnir ^ther patients *T h™«c3w^ treated iu w»^ the • SLSf22i J. .' at ; \?dnnre f the charitable dism-nsarv ft The patient was suffering S Wtt8 tie,lon a cane-bottomed chair and H „ rr onndfd w?tb blankets, leaving the pi^ld \ fr..« • a vesio’i <»f ix.iling water was L'i.ml under him, and a mixture f) f Sii"« rrtrts of mertarv S trad sulphur Ta wall braken oi ece of earthen ware over a charcoal ftn d^^nnt alont?8ide Z the vesaelof TS| iioil Sa J flteen eUrv s" hnur?th“ mice ™ merTuriS?™^^ s five mSnsr^ , w® mscharged cured. A Parisian Gambler's Career. iiSSSSf ^e rf the Psns Parisian correspondent, gaming 14 Al bert Wolfis enrions cbsrscU^rin ‘ hl * 'f p - Wolff «• «# .‘b* «■»>« the figaro, thatwittv, flippant, all Part Rian sheet, and ta considered one of the cleverest men of the French press. His tivelr ^ art k -le8,dasl 1 ed off will, . re^l.r, trench ant, . facile pen, are eagerly read when ‘ ever »tS«yww he deicns to throw them on paper, i w®™ ,or bnuiancy and wit *ntch lie j i > *“« felt bas8 has erase *»>.t that j a * his i sustained. position upon As soOH the proas Btr j wm . secured, he mamfested a tMte for the gaveties of Partstan hfe, which was ptob *b!y fesrtered during the long period of I duApporatment pjaeoY and privations through whichhe had — *ro- High play i"-,' was ’»**■ chief ohief vice. vice. He He Boon soon became became h a fre- fre : quenter of the gambling clubs, and ^ passed ninth j]) his Wolffposs/wBcd Ulnl# whole time around mil lha the the green ie , [ 0 tvmq van/lrl all requisites raanisitaa i c j , Bnt-nte card player. He “ is cool, cool, observant; observant; _ bold bold in nBj.ui 1tw prudent prudent 7* *P? in loss. loss. Like Like m gam g 1 his and in many many of of conn * luvn , 7 men of » mind, ^ as raDier hs a matheisatica] completely wt soon WWfe’SSlSiffSS’lSS j °f the best card players in Paris; lie was constantly and lncky, « large good players gene I rally are, won sums very fre known Hotvery long ago three Wolff millions was ; to have won some n f francs in two years, and .MjImwM have foresworn play when Imbarad-bim fe H s u e h a l a rge g ai ner . Three millions Sd^Xl’seZi TSjZgSfe to ' pawowsor of snob u Bum. But> oven thin <5^^ cantiouH Gorman was unable to rt* ;^ t } w eonH tant, never allaying cravingg .-f or v j,ioh always lend the gambler i to Wolff, lived. ....... • for ........... several ; j .yv^a***»« y ea rsiu the mbv finest “qi-*e, style, almost ftlluont gave giiio up up jonnialism, and went in for spwulation shares j ?n a ] ar g e scale in stocks and fnvorahle to the lucky player, who lost t at the Bourse a.large the jwrtiou of the 1 lie bint won at tapis vert. Tlie cards i r an:agsinst K him, Wolff too. for a »hli while; and he- a sllort t ime ago was ged to ;, ,, ow BrBat hatl ^rtn the ii.roa.ls Ws gambling gains, whenhe hrnlta request a short bnt si gnirtcmt delay in LV’toZ"' night'at' bacesmt Wolff - p.^tre,-,,; the mim without snf grea* pii^cnlty, however, and has «i»ce hail n return of his old lack; several thousand rswMHv^L ***- occiunonally the terror dfh'Sset. 1 r ,r<1 ", Wn ! ff pens spine chewm or witty review; he shows ! in Ml thought, bis articles and the possession of observation of more taste, ofthe power Figuromo lay i!:aa the othermen 1(t>y chum to, and it la certandv s pity ! ««“ h ® « honld P» a ‘ itnte his taleut8 to gambling, . * MULUiSf 1CHIETRKEKT. j - , , Uwl ___ .. *l l > > . < ’* r * *.^-« ^‘s ♦' »«»«•-* * * * , «r«si.. I A war correspondent wntmg of from the London Daily .Vrtra, '^Tti General I he ^ q th»Tjvi<i ”, ““ B * Ut “ of moacdmi*, .poboik, aoeonst 1 tbe b^tle of Goritf one of the aaaa^Ess j ^ ened by a brisk cannonade di toward ^ecl^^e.'^toger thenso redonbte, situated __ j SlS CP grenaSiers, regim “ ents ■ 1 ™ of omof Qadiei were »> ^ j south and stout rivance^wimn ewhtVcJock along in the momta ^ ,5^ all 8 the j j ^ _! m T __,______ _ . a 5 . 3 ______*l. nnftTl ♦h- ™ • moving ^maws thmnsl a temoie tanks, nre, caused wmen the I TaDldlV v»P>dly tflllUUu the tu6 ranks, caused the !ln v« «* w»vor“d seek shelter, out tne | ™ al terreaoiw was aimed a anon , ««»© “™ e anerwans •***’"**» wlt -,. wuo rt “ 0 * a msn. xeu-m»i j * if*? 6 xSks otsca?m>fnSr&BB shod* J . ® „„T*o.™™.r«oro.. ebanwiee v> tne ., . . ,, _» ™2^ et £iJ3. ~ *«, ** ” ”** ; of those who were tn the other reuouot, ontnot a wmiwm sent ont; he was , wlt “ a r ®' a J*’ er "f on ® ®* .~r*" ; near, anatnep lace was amtoa minutes. At the time there was tne inanw nmtf budetB that is ! »0 siow a head over tbe imapet , ^ «feE wd™bt was to .iteiL A at Ia8 * y ent J ** J^ ftr *2. ,* ' 1,18 i drefweu,»nd other oracorA gave - uji at last the aefempt b> bring tne men ; the1 largere<touDt--a proeeeauig of , life, and J which . . . the .. | •. -, one men, » mdividualB, .. ... ■ ref w i ” l TV' re w > ; tether hesitatedtonndertake. inedonl the only two liarofficers «w(su< j. - ~' r !■*'* f*L small q it*estnM**if redoult were tge ®^™ c ™“**r * a ? a na ; for every to* the men triirf to_go ^ toll atnuk by a Turkish ball or sought covey at ( once ro ” 1 «gb* never conceived of tonml. by the offloas. ^ wdwb -Hw men enough, wan the only tbingtojo. They ordered hr k®? - , .liiaval 1, ola-ved ‘wheri thev .■»»? *Med wd d>lay«i when they h^ ?&***."*£*■ - Tfry ““ ‘ he “ ,el ‘ *nl *2?' , w Mole out to,m tri m the the eaotnre.1 captured earthwork lodged t WtnrM. M . ditch of the^^snasee, airfgnf into atib i *?.*?S.d stand “ «taw * stack ot two P' a M the first. W^wlt M l hLame ms ttm^sniart ‘ »« "f ‘"■ ” flhf “j”> 19 ?" ,?I „d *“** tra * m r «■« * h to ” i ®>® ll *£ little thole w'ho the ““J*® *“'® , ®fi*“ att “" 1 eade ® ; S fl | «»?*■, "btigeiltogo wfartfa tartom er, i JreM | >«to the_vmy ditch ol redonHt ■ ~«««ewho reached tljwe. Of L ItoL tftSmbnc ^eontinna’l osrtirs r j i^^emMkrtrt ^wh^ swelled kept smt-Amrasriied up a M ^ntatml as ; ^f 1 ' k ‘l .hire | As late as five ™w'red!uht ^Mx^ toMrrv'the lwoawfo ! jH eat fMtel no “’’j-; ^T'^ijfth^mUnto fireof the J be the Sere ditch wS ; , ‘‘,^*^{1^^ tiieir surprise'■ ; , ?b«di.l (h e othms onnortn° to »hmh.theydnlas !f^nn as npportn j jl ‘ thennomr' i ^T^72SdS^» of tfem ^ : T^Tmlm bit eouldBflt them they fire m cm obh^l t ..mo to i *o were the toten st eps Pf/ which Y™ tiler amid mount to the nafapet. 1 nm o Z -i ^he P" 4 !*} * J tlfe ^le ««“■»«» * tbe redonbt , wltU rei,,8tleSa „..i^i.ik J Who gave thesigual for that a»auU no one can tell, but the brave fellows went up like one man, and primed to ho full with an eagerness to revenge the oomrailes they had seen go down that day, they feU upon the Turks and slaughtered them like sheep. Within the narrow enclosure of the redoubt men fought .hand flag to.hand flairate.1 in m>e corner, anotb and the^hite *as in aesemble ®»V only to give the enemy time to them a derate on^souadon charge. By seven “'clock the thebattle-field of the wounded,ajarge P art of whom lay on Hie gronnd neglect <** ^ flI « ht l< *% item,because thei 5 lives, many of they had %>i pumiuiu bravery were so numerous that^day that ia3«f?»“ssr«: except!, nally brave and ^solnte. s*jks Gases ere namerona where officers simply threw their lives becau-e they felt - their *w*y inatid it d ou alongside of them. One young hMr rode a whitehoraeai th« head of a ™mpany that charged the peat redoubt j ? b fT‘1? feli The officers led everywhere, terrible loss and this accounts The first for tbe net among them. I «* *«*» tnfwly *»«*« rotrodeced »'l manmuvrcl tiie commend- the ««, the second and successful mosses ; the «®> wite nutoaflpad by the iLeh, and proof. ! O prov». * hat, Io»lj indeed, needs'no i «P»B» of endeavoring ! f»ee the fire of breeeh-famflers ! ‘ he ,iflt * ore Tb *“ She Hiradr^fim rogp i nter es ting in the records of criminal practice was rendered in the supreme conrt at Oohim Ohio, a few .toys ago. Sarah M. Victor,, convicted of poisoning brother, Joseph Parquet, in order to ob tain *1,000 life insurance, was originally semen,-ed io be Imnged, bnt as were-symptoms commute,! of insanity the her punishment While to imprison- the mP,,t f °r lite. she was ra penitentiary her reason was the restored, ,,nd she refused to assent to eommu t«ti.m * «■« sentence. Haying obtained ft gn( of Anfeos corpus, she asked the eourt to release her; but the bench niled that although she was detained in Ihepemtehtim-.v Without wnrrmt of law, inasmuch as sheeted not consented to tlte commutation of sentence She was not ^ liberty, ,.^o bnt jctinn, was an and escaped #fk , r T must therefore >«' delivered to the sheriff and the miginal sentence beromed ont. In * »«r«l, ,bp iwisoner, who was trying to '™ wl l,nt " f the courts through ordered the knot be hole of a technicality, was to hanged. This was more, than she end ImrTawyer had bargained the county for. jail, As soon she “ she was taken to opened proceedings judgment in error and and applied outer b'r a reversal of the ^ ^ tergelt pmcnrcl that supreme eourt now rules the com ra " 3 plcss was wrong in affirming that a prisoner V must consent to a commutatusi ^ decide that Mrs. Vie- cow Gazette, calling attention to the «nd courage .Usplsyed by a private sol Stepkin. Si charge’ wlm, during a diffl- j . «* retreat of a tea urn, kept a detachment of five battalions ' weU thft variomibalting the ; f plaoes with tea. •« During retreat : rom Little Yagns,” says the letter, “the fourth detachment of Ardauan, cmsmtiBg only of five battnhmis, imp ported ^ by twelve guns, receivml orders reti ri/before fourteen Turkish battel, ioD s with an artillery force twice as •- strong ee onf own. • The chief of the de tachment, Major General Komateff, hav in(r assembler! the battalion commanders, informed them that the retreat would be tr ving, but tliat he would order a halt fawn time to time, when tea would mat i e ‘ ^Xoff, Stepkin, light up the aamo and the water in St epkid s urn was soon brought to boil : togfooint,-''- * self-boiler,” «id, ch fetter, e 0 f the “ says 1 ^ the “protected it against the ? , B-teV-; A C. ; Wf , nni ietl whom tLe tea wo.nld oomAon..’ , , . '-»j£jrTssf^5»«» »- ■— *“■, 1 mask which conceals the real character. : The ’men .^nd women most famous for : heartless cruelty >»« ,often *«» for tW handsome face.; of fiction have not^ be^n nn ' mindful of the fact, and Faoat is repr jentel who «ir,wer of beaut with the.r fatal . dower of neanty v tion unreadable, and 1 Borne lace* are The i nothing of the owner s character merriest faces, and men the rorud moat senons ^^*** freqn have cheerful ones. Frequently th J most heartless eoquette h® all toe shy graces of a girl of sixteen, while >he heart ot VOL. IV. NO. 16. Turkish Taler at Plevna. Tbe oorrrapmident of a London gives s vivid account of the bravery ethlbitoi l,r He the Turks »t f^l of Plevna. writes Ou north side the new. came that Pasha was heading some 20.000 troops, ^d^edltoSr and had already driven HeIhSd^oeTdttom in the Russian tlaeRetl and was g^reral aimiigat Etiopol Meanwhile of the staff aSBSSSSS the Russian?, sontherlv and easterly, *° faU * ®“d it was evident «tat their ammnnition>aa exhausted. Bnt courage had not failed. In the trenches or wT the epen-ihey cheeked, more than once, the impetuous j charge, and had it not been for the Mus ;c*wlte guns, the battle would have : provod too dear for the object formed of prize. ptiw?, Whenever nurajetn the me Turks *<**iwuim. to w> reeist resist or or make make a a stand, stand, there there was was con- con centrated the. fire of the Russian gnr^ Whole battalions were well nigh swept ’ g^J^y Rut at Ktropol, where Ohazi Osman commanded in person, the fight w:..-* de mouieal. They bore down on the Bus sian positions with a fierceness and steadinoss that nothing could withstand, 2Ti32 STiSrXSr-A ga?*ss , : dead. They leaped into the entrench rneuts, and there, band to hand, strng I gled in a death swarmetl struggle the with rednubtB, their hated and foes. They the Russian like j'lMny sprang on Their gunners fear- so lessl'v tigers. reserves came forward and had to pass through a nonverging firethat made^ape i SSLg“d.S with a Ktoudine«H and an undaunted' liou-like ; courage that outlasted the .bravery of' the Ostuaniten. the Roumanians boro down upon the Turkish ............... flunk, and .................. from the west the , Rnssisu Hiiwifiii troop* troops swept swept in in.tipou upon 111* the liueH. lines. Closer and closer the allied troops j hemmed in their foes, and thinner and ran ks. At length, Osman, who fought as only the a Turk Can fight, grew weary of ; slaughter and ordered a retreat, II was too late. The enemy had surrounded him, and Plevna was already in the hands of the Russians. With a last at tempt he strove to pierce his narrowing Mos tvmds. He fell slid with him the The tom" fluuc The artillery batb*ricH ccawfl their fire, the infantry dashed their muskets agrinst the truce was Msible, W Itw-js “ c ? l ‘. W Q HI ?_ an ward, and were toltnwcrt R-mm Otanetzkyand other officers. Paslia, Supported banding by two officers. Osman Ins award to the Russian ( eneral, said : “ To tbe Emperor, and thi-ongh you, I Thus, sur render «*!>»«*’ my sword mv army. «*'.>.««« S» bu th . fendc-r and hm army became prisoners of the allied Russo-Roumanian troops. ——x_ ........... Their. High Sews. - pie “ wore sheen-skin Lfc,- mittens had his P . — d Jm covered his “EjxSCktoto^auTffiddo • piece's of rag rarra-t and 1 .„LIi a » b ^”nm L,L„m M»v“ He was J .!^,,e l ....Rafter l' V) 1 *. 1 .- ue a,s-med s *‘ 1 toexaettv knit h, u U ' ' „ * r l - , * £ vou every > stvie of > a ‘' 1 , h 0 ,\se in . 1 f^^Vis^tX. , , lwl i„f & VUev stood hetee this tot one ^ , <1 >'*♦' «*» nils tto) 11)6 lull bl11 ' was waB the dntnsno ,iuMTOO "'“L? Vandsome i r en't euoncl^or thev big enough tall enough, h«Bl g , what . m "W^hlllMl '^1' ‘ 1 b Lit >™, von " slowly replied ffic wmfli Mg jto d ogig; her head ~“*i.full 18 .‘ bni ‘Vj of °‘ ' p n t?!’ M .,1 AralieUa a 'M Biv«lrB «L_ .^e- mds thev Jf r«d IteratedClandins Prtra* j,., ^‘'X.^.m’aSonomv „„ f m’ S, i I»«hu "J* *^LS°b?nt mvBelf ami I'm igJUbi . *5“;!" 8 Venus vou’havn't Mars Saturn and Jupiter. NoW, * .* J« got a stove m tnu lat u,i■ m apnefolta a hti" like ^. ps a J; mttimaronna r< “ u V“ a 9t0 . ve e fnrtoer and A Duellat s Deathbed. ff ago there died at the Hotel ^MmT’ m*,, ftg — ebarfeter^V <!« d»ml»U an odd and i ***»>(, ' to nfwasuot flglit with snvl-.lv iore on any pretest excessive or - | n0 absurdly Romeo and thau that described ra “ , nBrt .» The reams of paper he con snmed in writing challenges, the thou ^,1* „pon tbonsands of friends he sent p, .thousands of opponents, who would b* bold enough to compete* As the oW roan lay dying in the hospital last a Lnsototion pri est.was sent for to afford him the of religion. The- w<ntl» father did not spare to tell him frankly in what eonditionhe was, how obnoxirius to Heaven was Hie desperate life he had led, and the necessity for his When prompt the anf i thorough prSihad^Thim repentance. €*Iondaim& |f noa feebly to a friend who and was whispered watch .hv-Jra. bedsi de, hoaraelv l»ft£ ; priest’s address. ** dowr the* rie has i;_ —I*— —get okc • er—this—I—-will—send—a—couple from ar»7 man living. i _^, V ---- ^ p Exposition Buildings. The braidings 1I17S of tbe -oming Paris .tee'nnrnrn». ar ethe largest vet ^ w ^i vtk Af nT I Theniveof . ^"AkbSS^'” : > 2 200 feet two islinbfeTtian 2,3(» feet; and each of the transepts and vestibules JourteVre _ ino f^t The'eight indhs , 1 all parallel, aud are di ■ ^ d^ four each ; one bring * tb ® I^lnctions the of F d the other to rest . nafll , r ^ « Id ‘“w! the sSTes centre of .to.- gwd™ fit t <yn are ® ti.?ri5^Tfte On the Troc^ An Agreeable Guest. Susan A. Brown write* in A'. JWdte lot, Magazine; Tie longest visit that we rea.1of in modem dajs wssone whieh l)r„ Isaac WaiG made at Lord Abner's n the Isle of Wight. they He went to spend a fortnight, but made him so ha P p V ^tfoJto^Walm that ho remained a beloved aeI0 w and “t 111 nunoreu h<n<jr«l Few of ns w^ld «re to make a, long whiieVor a visit a« that ' bat ^o'trr^and it might be worth the sass»t&-Ta» us all lean* the slthongh happy, and yonrMeS enjoy are gfad visit to see von mav vour on that account, vour departure will be followed with a sigh of relief, as the family settle visitTs usual occupations, glad 5 that the <Ser.------- ---- A greet many different qualities and habite go to make up the-ehsraeter one uus whom wmua peouie people *re are mwsyw alwavs giau glad to iuspe, see, and and these these last last nmst must be be proved proved while while we we are young, if we expert to wear ____ them ___ D gracefully —,— 1V , A young peraon whose presence in the house is an inconvenience and a weariness at fifteen, is seldom a welcome visitor in after-life, The 'ru*. two most important itt.vuiriant oh characteristics of a gu«t are tact and observation, aud these will lead you to notice and do just ss-'&tws: KyJSH the Romans do, ” Onhws vou liave some friends good reason for not doiug so, let vour know the day, and, if possible, Surprises the hmir when you expect to arrive. are very well in their wav, but there are few h.iuseho Ids iu winch it is quite fri.mddrop iuwilhout warning ^ X ; uotieel t-bft* vou aradiAturbuigany * pre arrauffeimmtH wLi»-h thev have for the »lav. Let vour friends know, if possible, HOOU after you arrive, about- how long you mean to stay w ith them, as thev miirlit not like to ask the question, and WO nld still find it convenient to know wheth er fair yH* have a duration ,,f three days or four weelis Take vtm B „ m e work that vou have already | «r i some tax* thidvdii are read £ g ’ V( „, “hLZ* mRV be agreeably istougaged^With employ gJ’Sg Ag" “f Zl ,r',t be adtiug at” u X Tnter wait tog to be entertained, time is ne^ssarily ^ taken up Z h uifii-v toveZ* respoSt about amusine you. \i„.iy who isehanmugsa a guest J? and : I never take nag H in the afternoon when I am know wlM* » fmm « sometimes Iwen to me to have company dinner/' Ue Jowu fat »little while, after , ■ : , . Osman _ after Plevna. A correspondenl at Plevna telegraphed ^ ie EnsniatiH The Grand Duke Nicho las rode up to Oaman's carriage arid for into some escb ..........., seconds other's ■* fixeeawpont the ‘“"rtoin’"Bfo .wo^chiefs ^ _- mui teranee of a word. T '‘i* 1 dilke sttetehed out his. hand, simqk , hand of Osman EasBa heartily, and said : “ I compliment you on your de *** "< «mo. It is one of the most splendid unhtnry fcate Osman sailed -sadly; of . his wound rose- peinfidlyto .and said feet in spite which X could not flesr. He something tomsett The BussuUl 'hen reseated bravo! officers all cried “Bravo! .» 'there • peatedly, and nil saluted respectfully, who did was not one among of'Revw, them ''X* the hero with the graviwt Prince admiration Charles, of Roums.ua who liai ' arrived, rode Up. and repeated tbmgrand un wittingly almost every word of “lake, shook hands with Osmsi., .grim wh o igaiu.rose silence. and He bo wore wed a this toose time blue in Sak, with his no rank, apparent an! mark red fez. on ,t He to ' designate * i» » large, steongly-built is-covered man. with , lowe, fck part of hrs-fsee streak of a r short, beard without .a grov, ami he has a large Roman nose and bis-k eyex. , cxelaime. ( ol. "».»'« grand French face, military attache Gaillard, the him 1 r dmo-l stedd of seeing ' ‘ m y expectation should be-mepporated, ideal, it but he more than fulfills my ; t he face of a great military chieftain, gal's. Bkobeleff. “I am dadto ass^As «-* *-, ■■■-»■ A >«nr Zeeland p»F«* 7°° ell trntb ofthe following and story, ifierewa and dog at Tan po a lso a young pig, animal ssgaeity Thesetwo an.l amanl^Uve counuence m other. finite native pa tha scharwu,midithe.tog*£? red some happy hunting; informed groan th _ PW. . side, and p>fr_ bmng:pnly two months oldyittfOTmMw dog that he c<m» not s^tdebonchrofrom nver, which at that toflopedjo the ^.‘he'^ST^.S'^SSl Uke, but that ^trtme The dog settled rtm^WRiWtohm the difficulty. He wet neck into the river, croa^effdwn toe in the water,-ml , PWgqt b r_ bac ^ C ;S fhcu with the fore legs, rbe h «og xnwi swau swam nm.^. thus. t J^ ra'tins way go age arouni! „„ ^ mght, and •*'« lV, ^ -rntiv to e ro ^ VO T nh; I c™^ wait no m o.*, z- v ,ivpr - ^h*.- tn.stfi or ♦he ,.-3^. Brighnro s Amelia. wif Brigham Youngs favorite , Amelm. bee been dethroned since she 1 .» prophet's death, and reportsaya that baa gone buck to/'-Peofia*. 111.,-with fhe intention of remaining. It appeare that Amelia was never a Mormrmrtad ; Um her connection w.fi. ujxm a contract whw* . ' ^»me!v. funmb*'-» home, cam am • - 4 Imrses, and_ f nil liberty mi^-ht deewe. b-mc tnminrf* »s she This wife ab*,lately wife whose nnanthorn. was the only ^ohkeepen .were fu ? orders on ‘* honors.!. Mve attire, She was — entirely very fond radeK-ndentss ^ riraen< to the wishes or desires 'A th«^ rarate , THE OGLETHORPE ECHO. Advertising Rates: |i Srirm. . I * • i * i Vw73fw.» *»]•»! 1 jrr ! « * n »« v* S* • * is !<•••*• a* sixes i.se 2 .#> *.<», «.ao- T.irpy is i s } llMct***.. 10 ' iw 4.TV T.«0 S.OO-ISW ’ r tbbbwc - Jr.<WTrr } Vi **•«**..., *.uo •.»> la<♦. j*.** «i,iS x ^■•Tjraa. S M itH tt.QOia«© M • 0 is * 58. © 1 CO’ ©aia.. 11.6P !« fl» 5-JfrH BC Aefett Leaal Advertisements. Sb« 1 » S**., p» Utj, i™ Km«. „.., ...... 15.60 | { ftr'-nwt', S*;*S j^-r A-iiuitsMUMen' *qu*n* *&*i Aui^iu t.f-0 Karto additions} ........................ ; Na»io» ^sir* .......... ....... .. 5.90 S Nr>ttc* of to Drt?or» tart Creditor*, d*J»...r..... thirty day* 4. 0 i Uit*- to »,-i .thirty iteit^fibyi SO® | Lr-tcr«ot At mnm i n a». <.oo ■ lj>wrm>««K>Q, UinM* n>outb*...... S.OO j Letter* oi Ots»nitMDit>i|> t thirty day*......... ii« Letter* of IH-. G-.iuir-liaasUip, toTty day*.. t,T» KoaMMMd !to*tre«, three In ertioae......... AMf Kui<- Sim's per «<ja&re, «ach ssmitx>u ...... 1.00 Skating. A bounding gallop ie good Over wide phrin*; A wild tree «*fi » good Mid galea and rai's: A dastuag dance U good Brood balls ak*ug, Cleaping and whirling on Thr *igh the gay throng But better than those. When the grt&t lake* free**, By the clear, sharp light Of a Starr ? night. O'er the io* spinning Witb a lotxg, free w e ep, Cutting and ringing Forward we keep: On 'round and aronndU With a sharp. c!*ar sonnd. To fly like a fieh'in the sea l - Ah, tbia is the Wmikrop sport for me ! ■n-Tfv*«lorr in St. .Victorias, Item! tl Interest. : jtsaaAShs*' religions people &s* sfctmfe lw careful strictly select only upright pfctxw for to their houses. ^nt.* , Hartford Conn . newspaper pro a wbnlnr show, the * pmat to be ^ Thclonse. of JT the^ Iws-r. thi. yearthrouglfl<xs^aimdibad »«f,ww,oou. weather are This is the season when a man who wants to remember the p<x»r can ait down and think of himself the whole day long. Tbirtv Texas pai»rs have died within the last twelve months, and sixty new ones sprang into exifitenoo during tho same time. Home Tooke being askeil by Occrgo III, whether Majesty; he played the at cants, is, X replied, “ So, your fact cannot tell a king from a knave.” -That's wtat t call a aorta? wroccV' fflyntie■ ■BmwtMy-^nwpsiissM t.ig w-u.ia.craU-d '''— hi- hair V"", J 't t. moth^ 1 . the ' T|aie j«.*v is a wren© ana H-.-bor ematum ; . un ‘^ they are- miserably. but that take . laughing for rejoicing; the Heat of it in within, and there in no cueerfuhiew like 1 the resolution of a brave mind. ** Speaking of riddles, Mr. Jones, said a Chicago landlord, beef-steak “flaw^ you tell the difference between a and ’.a shtogle. Not ThcnT’it broil yon t a tlWc n ft e r every m orn ing or breakfast instead of heel-steak.” Ammic the attractions at the Paris exhibition SOreheMrom^S.^^in will be performwaiss by the Shrf5toto“ Im, the The 'sL^h*ng Viennese artists Zvto :tte ir- - tortntoto's Paris; _ 1 f"‘ ****** **“““• were fSZtodifrs elnlil r and from ^dtSEd the effect w<»rn I.] of Of.^jamkk dsu.pi.nj damps and a«m W inCiiza sndZ&Sf«-h hv „ r<t , These, 0 winter, ore. thy thing*! It esnnei be too “often repeat* eat f it tliat * v are rum • tliink there : Wiiut, but wind we we want; . - never-go „ ao[ro abreast „ in-s-arch ....... uf your ....... t (j lu'acaiefcfof ey ml ] ones, itorhewho they'will ®”“® ** rt ‘°* Jri>u want wh* he does not want, will soon ^^ - _ * q ?rfeep tbgt (,is elo . th^oort t stop, ^ ! “^jt^’tiiedudgef And He cogtoues 1, t hi* arg totnrntot nrai-n '.»>»?• P® .(...fi^q^vored •> new me to makedtm- to^ : h<mow vestM-lsv.” IhJW'J ^ ()(1|( . r mui ar ,, ShTS . WssSmwh^ , ,, t t b CT ; iltv „ lost '»whole night of hia W,.nl* of Wlsdem. “ There-.s a department wb^Ml.ts i, .„, t s the the figure.and talents of ia h n • always lost when we quit u _ that of another. advenn ... . He who hits not known y s but half acquainted .with otiiere W him self. Constant success shows ns bn. one Side of the world, W e all dn-ad a bodily; paralysis and mak „ oso „f every eontnvm. t-. uv-.nl , t bl „ none oFTib aretrtmHed about a (>t thp son!. There is a gift that is almostablow. sud there is a kind word that is muni m mo d» “ is therein the way of . ' ^ ^rt-memogr „ r(m e,-,Vrv is «h^ better that tl a mere heed-memory, it .. ( _ (>il ,. rv . «*»? “ fto repeat^verv afss5&«s»«* always aMt your conscience forceitself atu , M .,, Hltl ,-e. If but one sm soul and inlo t )u.t tender part, of the ■ ^ *? ^ ^ ** ‘ thousand iniquities, wish We art an presumptuous that we to be known to ah the world, even to those who come alter ns, and w« are so va i n thattheesteemoffiveorsixper- aronndns enough__to na immediately satisfy is ™ ns. discourage.1 "^rtiidfly under any OTMiflmM.. : 'tewanl: eoamence than toe ttetete of men, thongh tlm last are not fa tostegaritel b Be industrials, ! r ^ « V„ deal in prelect Freising ( a j Uvh( -«.me in your way, ***-*■*?** < lw-igli!..rlv sml obliging r own iu mterccmr^. t ereounte The tierman Army. A „ i,^ a ii ng . i mcmmLafih£ Of.rmap„ .. v.....hr nnbliahetl Wmany bv u French offiH^r -Wiio whk rt-of Wrhr years “ _____ r r . . r .1; i .1 ~r of in time of S wSss3S«f!»fi» V b * ■ details of *hx A to**™ . ^ - D the b «^.7,® wrdef the war > e ealriulates that in . t__ wiK> j e 0 f the regular the ^ ^ . concentrated ntoj on. week-toe of four l» lwehr h..todi,x- troops anu cou h.x d .by:- be ^ • Jv 4 Jth« , ^ t : *• total strength : f to : iuvwling'arrav n w ng being.'01 uh r^ed about to. ._ -- 'Ue-mobillzatk* . , f ,_ ^,, i) unti) t . nth week ; but by . T f t . (1 v . r , wtr k 25 0.000 - - fiaIJ more n ; . tr.-ngtl. of this latter ■