The Oglethorpe echo. (Crawford, Ga.) 1874-current, February 01, 1878, Image 1

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TIE 08LETH0BPE Subscription Rates: 8 •• at : • I s s i IW tbe won*? i» peid abac l»- «*«*• before 4 -aiascnpDou t§ not i, tin- j.«t ire dWnOatt&Md. An & ■t 8t tb enticed •n-ywa’ e Si ob r>tf«. HreaY <i/ (laj. i ■;..■! ... • »„ ..... Fir in Hi diirt. 2.we _.. ^ h Oi * long *. 1 f ,. *Pf • M W ’ : >i-n the m*U. 1.-th. r-n.».erstj f tawningday Off«r {ft I taref gray? Wsttinii. I watej...»th. Aor* to vsia r Kaat flift,’. my i.-ort with Its titteraatpaia. I - ' r • i ?e Ur.rar.ingnes; . It hatt art iu thy lift- or thee. BW..V ths ,-tb wlovan. gmiaaMaaa.' Byr.i«, tebo-eilir.,H*hUiei»ooiitams-gtoom. Tfei the • nr t. w«Tws«tet. ' Jj,»-e . I. ■<*., 4 d.-' • log.^yF-tagomret. log t;-T F.te «<. iwt-t F.- . • ,r.l. rig. rarow.nl shrink: Tlif :h the rnp ia tatter, thy lips moi« drink, KsrUnr-.r-t se mote turn thy tearfulgsza; Wlm.. r! iaasrae-t. in er rnestpraya Tlje 1 uxhdfrk road thon woukirt f*anfor»etV donrud! Tiie end ♦ i. not psb : the rmmr.triw*a arewn, on the ebony m B ht fiber* aith s glory of rosy fight! I.,rk in the volley: the *e« i.gray; Bmuie hill-top hum*, the hewn of day. A tlrsy .haft from the golden East •KnWV. tla. attaw where pad it Priest Prt>*7 ti^KUcree:. ifown Piuihiss RainKtw of the promts** slow hearing. high overhead -wjBrngM.. Tull t the Day coir-inK with silent thread. Hlowlv the fn-taiu of night i* furled; ffiewty Uw-Ugbt of OodMe-ses Um worMl Throni’h tb© whimmfri'riK gold of br«sking dav A white-winded *i*il i? speeding ttM w»y. Ah, hif-iwed !>av. full of hope new-born, That brings my love in its beppy dawn! Shine oat in the *ky O glorious «m' sssrri^rSK,*. —’- A a DlWlfiP PlacASc. ftF Ur THF lift up HtAKI. APT ____ Tliedavsof my Clerkship were ended: mv examination was over; I was a.1 mitted; wrote myself “Xehemiah Hutihs, attorney “put up my newt, bright little sign, and in my uatrve village t#gan professional career No. I did not, either. Tam mistaken. T lutondcl to purnaeTbe I hsitdedieated houpruble lay talents profession and to learning whjch inthf place penned of my birth than the (but time-honored never was# truer word proverb. "A prophet has no honor in Ins own country. ” I believe if I had . remained in the. yijageof Green Briar til! my head was white, they would have thought Of ,iu ; re nothing bnt a boy. would have feared to trust me. Even nfter my sign was put up nobody ^celled me Mr. Hobhept was stdto Nc, with old and young, and No I wonldhaye remained to this day had I remained in Green Briar. • ] Only, one oase claimed my attention during the three months ,.f my patient eontinmmeo ■lmilh'd Iho it, Green Ijtf, Brisr. W.d Urat afterjreng waniie Ut ease of an extracted, imiustly impounded honor; from pig, “fejoneously siniiII hut your winch the e-tingir s.euro spot in my ! A., driven to de,s«.tto.I public enclosure him; and ; mslieiously called pound, for a the vile : dcrobtless, a compelling edent, purpose, in ! of ray hiapoverty and destitution, to pay toe cnorinoua fi«> that lire been demanded of: him, in order to extricate, the animal from his unpleasant ot'hia position and rretore him. to the. bosom family!“ client’s family, By this I meant the • the pig having none of its own. It was a figure of speech undoubtedly, Irish eslim, the fatnilv not Inhabiting an bnt still it- rounded off tlie paruvl a nil Aoun ded , well to me as I repeated over iU T rtcr again my the maiden floor of speech, little pacing office. np and In down my ; • as to rescue the impounded animal of and my client from the payment an unjust demand; but it brought no silver to my pocket, bring neither, to my surprise, The 1 ! did it. honor to my name. eloquence of my loudly speech did not form j the theme, as I the village hoped it would, | of paragraphs at iu the of thfi papers, streets; or otilisenssi on corner neither did it bring to my offic the rush of clients Tt for which lain daily that I I should vainly made I ready. distinction waa I in Green Briar, never aud vise to sol came to toe Hidden determination to rtiaware friua tliat pleiiBant spot and i settle in some city -where ftolKsly knew or hewd of me; and where, above all, there was riot ft soul to call me “Ne;” Tliere 1 was more successful, and soon -had the .opportu nity of forming a very advantageous partnerstltp,—Business * incmi»e«l* mouev heg»n to come in, at all things but after seemed « inu«* wore plentifully, in and prosperous my ; .outward circumstances. But, alas! as we ure often'told poetically, there is.no sweet washout and 'its’bitter, trouble no rose without in the its thorn; came tb me • shape of disease, insidious and slow in i its approaches at first, long feared aud suspected, Imt at length betrayed itself ho longer plainly the that truth. I oonld blind myself no to r , Yes ! I was, without doubt, a victim to disease of the heart ; not inetaphoric ally, dear reader, for never had the or gari bent with a quicker pulsation at the approach of mortal woman. So-far as j perfect stoic; but wa that s omw there o med. I organic w as a was . disease about my heart I could ; doubt, and if ever the symptoms dis- , . cloBcsi theroselve** unmiHtftkaldy they did 1 so in my case. There was a fluttering, palpitating, irregular action, and length; pain. I could network. Life ■ had lost its zest. The fear of sudden ; dentil was ever with me ; I could enjoy i nothing. If I had anything to leave, or anybody to leave it. to, I should have made my will, for I was quite sure that I should drop that some thff day lifeless in the street, or morning would Hooiic ome wheu the power to rise from * my bod would have left me. I remained in mv ‘in boarding-house and j found no .comfort anything but my . Cigar, and my dread disease grew worse ' nod worse. As ret I bad consulted uo physician, partly, t think, from 4he ap prehension * having of »y fears con firmed; but as I sat by my window one dav, smoking as vigorously as ever, gazing attention abstractedly across thestreet, my was arrested by a modest littles*gri upon an opposite blind—“C le Todd, M. D.” While thinking whether or not it would be best to make H trial, of the Ant physician’s skill, a sudden twinge and ter decided’me; yes, I would send for Dr. Todd and know-the worst at once ! S’mnmoning the only male sirvant ng to the establishment, I told ' :: m -’tepover and ask Dr. Todd to • .....=ui(i see me as soon as possible, J\„ ’"•.: :, at °y are griuncfl. yon laughing at?” I asked, ^ Todd a good physician ?” ri-, yes, sir, le answered. I be ev- ini' * I* is a vety good physician, but :i- rt never tended nobody here;” ’ ^j fl TV>myself “the boy, ~ Welsh ; as blood in his veins ; 1x>y. returned saying; *Thft t-hoia^ hut, but I left your b ' - lto course of the afternoon; as I ]v '*'•■ L •^nn.my htnd pressed £ Vi f<fart ty iweyiUrpul ‘ 3 dW s , oft to • '»• i called out. end, w my m* Oglethorpe Echo. By T. L. GANTT. in to. m.fct elieerin!-l«fk : :ig little worn it !i*.I rrer been my /* tat to meet. “Toa eeot me, I believe, air!” abe Wid, iu a brisk, pleasant wav. “It So, madam. you are laboring under a mistake.” -ih! I beg your jamlon," aaid th liu:.. woman. “ I foond N'“. eo^V late tie name of Mr. HahU, Mrs Gwya b.»rding-h.M«e, with a nqaeat that I wirald call and aee him. “ Tour alate, nuelame !" I crelauned. my -donishmeut increasing every mo nest; rhysician “yon surely are sir,” not a"— she “ 1 m >al«r* mpted, DrToil" quickly ;“Iia» physician, “ Ertraordinary!” waa all I <*mld nay. *» though I had hevd at a diatanee Of the enstenoe of su.-h beings, Sde this wss niy first intnafuction to a prac titiouer of the Escnlapisn art. It was rather awkwar.1, bnt since «he had oome, determined leant, the best of it, and 3b© »cqnimt felt the lady pulse, doctor Mked with my case. as^to^ymptoma. my xmmerous ..nestions qniclr. bright eiebumcd and then, ,n h< r way, : .. Servona 1 Nervons ! that's all, de pend upon it, Elouse me, sir, but by the air of your room I suppose yon are much plead given guilty.” to welting." “I “ An 1 how many c. gars d.. you nsnallj „ smiA© in m&Kw ? “I oonUJ nut teU; I never oonnted; m< mon « I threw aw:, y one I todkanother, tiffuallv. “ Hum ! a cigai in vour month prettv the eh Chew, ?* ‘ much all time, ? too Again a reluctant confession was wrung from me. “ I preenme you sit up late, smoke all "Yea, That’s ma’am, So smoking disease and of the reading.” htirt “ it. at all, sir; nothing bnt tobacco. It will "" 1 - to immerliatelv." I promised, romiaed, submissive submissive as as lasnb. lamb. !*In the first place then throw away *H your cigars and tobacco and promise to bnv ” w more. With a sigh given to mv sole consola tions I said I would .do as she direete.1, Many more direetoms she gave me as p, d„ ;t she exorcise, early that hours, cheerful .-to IVr saw, too, com paui«;iishij> was sotnetbing I uetnl*-.], »o she remained awdrito, talking with great glee aud spirit about niattorwaad things general , and. promrsuig to call and noa me the next munnug, she toft. I bail not felt so well in a great while; indeed. 1 hail not given my heart » thought since the little woman entered I, - ’ %r ,s,m. - The next morning I found , myself watching impatientty for the arrival of my cheerful little .biebur. the day bhe before. eamedjnght.and What* per as feet little sunbeam she wss ! 1 could not l,el t , growing better under he, care, audthe mfln.-.iei of her rhcsnng pres ™ce. and yet mnnage*to eo.dure son,. m ho or every ,h.y aa an cxcusoP., U» eootmnanoe of her route At length I found ttiatmy and apparently heart, which hail long disease, been liegau quiet, to flutter aud palpi- free from toto when! ogaiu; heard but I Observed little woman's it wre only the tap at mv door,-or felt her Soft Augers on mv wrist. In short, as she had driven the out of walked my heart, that little I woman herself hwl iuto it. could no myself, to the fret; and when she toie day told me that I was now off the si«* list, and ont of her hands. 1 .leterminod.that she should not so easily get ont of mine. So I told her as she had respect? now given ease to my heart ... one slie must n->t leave till she had done so in ii’ eriAr:! s l igahl bo.twW e’ off ttm I was before. The little woman looked perplexed. ......1 - . .. mv i,»' symptohs distressed » seoi.nd df time, heart, showing and r the state my she alone ixinl d c u r e-iri-The lornicr disease she hid removed hv an occasional visit; the latter could only be cured by her promising toe uue and take np her abode with mi as a resident physician, Him understood tue now, and by tlie way she pressed her mvnl agriinst her own li*tle fluttering heart, one Would have thought the diseaae was contagions: and. I vorilv think it. was. H. now we are both to apply to a el ergs man who is to form between >«# a life partnership as lawyer Bnt and tUmg idh/Hioian. troubloa of which I otic me, ha»l no thought till now ; that it in necessary people h» have our cards engraved, Married 8o,” are usually Mr.* Such “Mr. and Mrs. So and <>r “ a One’ «nd Lady Y but my-little will any one plttase h*|l me bow and wife art u> be designatetl. Will it be “ Mr. an I Afrs. Dr. Hubbs?’' or “ Mr. and Mis. Huhbs, M.P. ?” or, as the ladies are going ahea! ho fast'in these days of woman’s rights, will I sink into still lesser iuMignitV**ance, and shall wr bo “ Dr. Todd an l .< h*nt!«‘ man ?” or must I drop the name of Hubbs altogether and become tell a Todd, too? those cards Somebody engraved. please how to have . ..... .. ...... . . Water for the Eyes. A writer in Froze? a Mauazini 'thinks t j iat whatever hesitation there maybe ; 118t i v cnlled for in recom-mendinir - one SfiX or another UwJuo of the various lotions Sd now S so f ’to o nbt r4M4 nect cold water or pure water. He sav« in cases of much inflammation or difficulty iu opening the. eyelids a in the morning experienced be by and so it Hnmy, water with shorila warm, may he mixed warm milk but in nearly a j] other cases it should be cold. All those who have been eogage«i in reading or vnting daring several hours at a Wretch and especially"’at night should carefully liathe the eyes with cold water going to bed and the first tiling i Q the morning’s ablutions All artisans too who work at a blazing fire ought often to wash their eyes with (Mild pure water Jj and nart-icuIarW so shbnld all those who work ; n wo carders and spin nftra a «<i those likewise who are. eui {nres nWed in woolen and cotton manufac the fine dust which such works disoerse often producing cataracts ob -tinaU* inflammations *• kwelletl evelidfi, eto ’ - _____ — ---- „ Sevelti.es. . . In . Horieullnre. \ very old but good storv has jrtst been rehearsed iu the columns of the London Land and Wetter, by Mr. W. H Webb. In substance it is as follows : Dr. Fothergiil, sn English Imtanist and physiciaa tu/v of not© iu the eighteenth captain ecu successfully st‘ London treated a Rhip of yellow who arrived ill fever. The doctor would take no money f«»r bis ^ T vi^ r h ot ^■t 1 » teded-thr-cap of earth - tain to bring Kira tw.y barrels from Borneo. At length the earth was brought, and the doctor, having burned the surface of a piece of ground earth very thorongbly. The sprinkled result the that Borneo bun upon it. was one dxed different sorts of new and curious plants sprung up - These novelties in fl .ricniture,' diffused including throughout geraniums, the have since been gar flaps of England. In ihtmk days when the iotroductioii of new plants is so sed ulously pursued, it in Rurpriring that the method .of Dr. Fotbergdl has not been more extensive tropical lv tried, as comma nication with region* of germ* charged soil ts innmtety ^ fu wt co w than thwi THE ONLY PAPER IN ONE OF THE LARGEST, MOST INTELLIGENT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA. «* F.x’s Mr^-s. . ^ ?T . \r„„ n - nr<ar Jannarv S » p B i i ’‘p . W I* ■ ^ N 1 , ',/r -Ki.l. ^Knt Sl-J^Th* wP t 'o ’( ' o ”"'' o * ; thmk not (Una eiu-.rn-.. ■ e.t.i .n< - ?” J^Lj'tJ.^he hLlaS 'V f'. 1 “1' .. ' „'Z' . h ^Anto^w’tTOUtS^iii ? rfe« fin^in/thed^rtilThohli^K wroaLLt- uhl f.i i gJ5“JjSto5.A« T iifn,P &*£!., fi ”* WB^bSS JaiProuhl * “ ® t^f’ S? "*\ f J* ^ i ; , P ‘‘"Tji * J 1 * eavmg uo Mhbde z aeen t; . would n> i i, have av , 4 ! ***??. *[* * ra » e,p< | highway", whew .lust !“i tbe 1,00,8 *** ? ^ I " f , n KIi ei *? b>n e b< obiiterate , tli baces of , his , passage : or ha're trod gr.. »< r yfa o angle ,eB , <S! , a with “'V ‘T H i* to rh„' tbo grrmtel, ^^ n ‘< **“ Str LjSTrtS^taS J 11 *- Inesc TrtS artifices . units. m, t'c bewil^m i»-»tM.r an I J, who^knowa'of S ,JZ7r ^ 11 the admlmble trtts of { *™-. >ot “ “* L ““ , 1 ,o Ta more wkinTS^he “‘“‘“J*' 5“^ ,"J h w "a, He^Stam, tJ frih rime turn'd n ,«le*ToB^g , ajd we m*u vnrnoa juiio^h, iuvrows but «-> aiacKeua ^ r ” «m nia «eeu ‘SSTjwrSuS imaw i,*uu ne*s uiy went a#?»un m th© damp prrftHB ; he «mffa at it an luafnt to a*«ure bimHelf then sound* a loud, mehsilions note, »■mlorns on baying at every lope tall the reed Along this he rjSW1 till where the to* has left rt. And 2? w ‘he imzzling bit of fence. «>« dog thinks the te Una gond. through it; he g.H‘» through, icSilSiri hut finds «o scent.there; puzzles alsnrt now that; fluds'the mills tlie «.» ...g .• I' 1 * tro4<i ”**...^ *1 “ P l y |' K rt l t,f 1 til °. mi1 wn,M Kevuarl ,. dainty pad . i down »e s , so ' ;*£f'lh‘'V7ire°'fox' tn, w r * 1 toft * the to nee .', tinging up and..low , , n. bmuul Ue^fails h m fc, t n re «,'m the t went « * Jtosrt tot& luilf df * v„w ho i. eHmla too rail f ! .!L.". shuITh J' if there 'i “Vo ‘ •»* «* i, „ e •• W) 10 * . (X',. LL, . , ..Jj iumpe i from imLTt^ »,f,i , ha * b £ LiX* ,r t " Ibis .gfgl on 'th» he eire tra«^«nee re wi.to'v till Xrf^t^Stotog X P^rerth- 1 -,nt. Z 1 1 j s h t- n , -, r m t.,s..' .re ‘.f tor ' ‘ ° Xt il!t plowed th,. aa.ue nhin X,,/fl lv ?ta tl.oriail field and-after n on "“hill the otoer side “ .. b ... '* but 11 more X a'Urittrem .««.,* Ivhdin. .xhl i .,.,,1 .i . h he scent crow- -thT-4~ ^J ”« 7b? SSTtrT^ j irerto 1 «•• tar f * a ^re7 ,X““shioii , i... htmself on tli n ? ' 11 of a kmil | or rest and cogitation, . llero ho tore i • rah’ 1 If h 110 r wWle.thedoW ' ,rl 11 ore. but alwaysalei draw ■“<* slowly dry ’»i uow almost h*ng the trail.... a edge now ea-ehing it m a moist, propi bona hollow tilt at last an arer burst warn, poor sly-lre-te that he must again .up and away. ^ 1 sh *“ ,ln ~ bxliamdlmii j. The greatest shooting exploit ever performed in this country, "ays the Sew Orleans JWmtak was recently u'hived by a gentleuiao, long a resident if fWsTtoWe; mat tlreoto .4 mu,to the largest plantations, sugar and cot ton For yaara past the exploits of this ............ d irighest aflitnratton and wonder in all sporting circles. Le asing ont Ins .qdeudid sngar estates r.QHie Teche, he iias reserved the privilege of occupying -i shooting box, which he calls his “suipery,” where ho spends without every year dis a mouth or so; to enjoy tnrbauce his favorite amusement of toisitiug this Hue and agile lord, winch abounds or. his own and the adjoining i plantations. Tlie results of. his sport : and skill in past years have been fie quently referred to as wonderful. To bag three hundred snipe on th- wing, of course, a day !ms been a common j achievement-—common for. him, but never accoraplishedby any other sports man. In his hist enterprise, however, be surpassed his previous days exploits this by ; devoting six result successive bag f nineteen to sport. The was a < | Imndicd'and-sixty hours day for the snivw. hunt, " Allowing' this would v.lz ' per minute, which is about gives snipe a I equal t*> the hog-killing operations of of \ the greht slaughter-houses pride Chicago, such Besides the pleasure and of an achievement, Htr robust nppe»ram?e , of the gentleman by whom it was per we met him on onr streets, attests the happy effects upon. His physi- | cal condition of his Nimrodian of the exercise enterprise, and excite- He j raent < will return hi pleasures his enjoyment of his of family the j and residence invigorated at Biaritz, relish France, and capacity -with a keen 'oi | »ud I enjoyment. - „ ^ „ ... Field of PIcvnZ. ie ...... i The • correspondent of the Loudon ; Doi/.v Ncuut > writing from Plevna ou the ; day of the surrender, says : All arrmnd me \he ground was covered with grim relics of battle. Here ana there the j ^rih was up torn lay by the explosion groaning <n fell's. Near me a horse • ,tiui struggling -in death. Close by an , silently bleeding to death; his great, round, patient, eyes looking mournfully at us. Just before me was a cart with a dead borStHying in yoke as he had fallen, i «mhI a Turkish soldier lying alongside whose head had been carried away. An other-man was lying under the wagon, and around were four wounded men, ly ©red'up witti the the-murky ho«xl of their sky, or ragged oov-; £ ra v overcoat <fr»wn over their fac# H. . of uttered sound. They Not one them a 1«J there andbon* their suffering, with a • calm, stolid fortitude which brought tears to my eves. Just behiud the wagon the ground telling was how ripped to anforiu- pieces by shell-fire, these natesha.1 met theij fate The road and its edges were ddtb-d here and there with dead and wonnde.1 • Turkish ^ sol (here, oxen, hoiwes, and shattered carte, and a few hundrtjl yards north of the road the ground over which Osman Pashas sallying column had made that heroie charge, wm Uterally covered with dead - and wounded. Bnseian Oortors w ere already the going wounded and looking aftor them temporary dressing, while waiting for the ambulances to come up. ‘that’s M anted - 1 A suburban resident, losing the last train out the other night, concluded to a hotel bill by spending the night with an old college chum of his, living in- Boylston street. Arriving in front of tv^ house, he U>e>ed a pcbbl e up against his friend’s chamoer window, and calb «d out “ D-ic.!” “■ Oh, Dc^. thirteen “ J>oc-. tor in less than a minute win daws flew open, thirteen beads ptjnped out of tb«m, sad thirteen voices exclaim with OM .coord, “I'm the Doctor . whet's ^teted JBw'on Atvrtiw. LEXINGTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY' L 1878. l HEME. --- J. I»liti l«. . w«i Wwr.-t.lN . . ... *r«»a fcmaaeaa Pm^tu. A crust of bread and elites. lias long be,u a pr..verbi.d jjhmse mdi.-obve of perntriona hoapitehty ;. bnt eontfaranM *f ri ™ ltllr “ t * l “ J »** »eve»e tta »p |wie-.ti.-i, .•u-: 1 r::ig from t) *-.M 2 ant and t-u. V twg ,4 cheese now readf "** **" A ^ a * me f lU from ‘Pf eommonesol - ^ 81111 forest * J **-m8 HWnSSIS- Holland, Mid even diatant °* Italy, ^•**7 tins easily ^ portable to pro- the the fiu s lt ** .^*7 English metropolis. Some the few of these bnt have lung only b«eu recently known t.. become epicure, articles Imve oI comparatively common consumption. right of Hach ia the Grays.*, which by *?* eomea naturally foremoat-a pounds, great cbeeae weighing . hundred one rk . U and 1-wcious. from Sw.taerland. It * ,,m * tina » But meosnres this a yard twelve in mcmtliH eircum. fereI,w - upon ftenUon havis been Hvmhed, to bring qf r to the out consistency of a apeeies **. “ ^3*5 ,,pon tb ® too * ae - The processis e arned °” "? mn f r “ In 3 0st be ** i ? fI,* 1 *?,! “H' 1 swidanche, aud one pa:rt of tlie ays i°, c, '! ng of U, e .f.“ be r<L a repeateji 11 “ geutle ,’".'1 «,m- ^ about a shilliag , a pound. , n Quit© a °? Mnat P 1 **?*** 1 ^ th * Moot d’Or 5 1, “? e T f,,,m Franc f , r a ^calTe rS *did five inches acrosa, like a cak© of solid |, OUO y. The taate is delioknls, »nd it h aa a tempting afp^mnee upon the table. These cheeses are usually ob tained by the dozen, costing ten pence is also the value of the Oame.^bort, stdl lean commanding in diameter, wider bnt 1)llct( , r A cheese a M , eta the Roqnefor (Rrencb., the price w i, ldl (2# , ,a„ m d) indicates a super io rqns.ity It is a cremh eher*e, ormtod .With ttufoil, and weighing *2* about four N ! £ ) lee anJfl p - #n V d when mado cut open b “ is flecked j decay dear the with the peculiar so to the artist artist in in eating. eating. This This mouldioesa monldiness is is the ,.], w [ object of the maker, who assists its dewtopniriixt liythc use of a httle barley '’read. The cheese is maturail iu a «*' of natural caverns, the draught '•““"ej* wb “ b quefort amUe .rgonzola (llalia,) much 5 Wwlnl,le8t,lb m , tfae ff 0 ® CTeam ™ ! , y< “ ver ? » bHn P rice * of . ihe . continental . , , the Itovor of some ’I varied by the "ddition & cm rawajs or uuum.ii ; otliets bohalizugi are pr. pared from J' 1 nH t,l ‘‘ r L Tret ’ „ i! i! „ .? lul ! t 'b'-reinie eti., not all, perhaps, SSSr' X ‘‘X S X’- .1 "f P. ’ i. 7 ”'pT‘ N , esIn’Xs'rm' , 1 ww J* ti 1 "’- 1 V’ ".,““1 ® latter .. is a soft o cheese, and , only keeps . a (r< ' ,n several SSSSSf^SST conutnre- Austr-ia Hwitz Cta 'T 1 * 1 '" 1 - X 3<w> I ff u l Wrg J*-*- numdsnd O* "" ** - Msmm.dtwm.ta.one In t X ""W itocr knot t to nbmk iXt m.V or i y oWa l u ‘‘ d i , Vm merchants, v , Iu addition, the iauvnx.n vallo, from Tuscany, a cheese half of ist's and lmont; half cow’s Turin milk, cheese from a goat’s town p iet a of mjlk . , whita variety from Sicily ; Bo nilltimr from Havana,'* Je»»t Colomuier, Go- in rome ctc )mTO nt been seeu fj0n ,,„ n . thev are copying the English Cheddar aud Stilton, majket said hi,is with be a view to the foreign to open for larger ,f tied eharselcr tliau have rniu-hed it Torn England. But this by the way. F „ reduce Devonshire ereiirn inis long tieen a Iiixiim ; York cream. Sew. FormWeretor, Va-tre i.b er. am, and the little ireharilyperli.ps Aylcabnry—said well to 1 kiiown • d.dii-ions— »they so there seems, imbed, a giilarly justry in wide scope for invention »H4 aniTtbe and in the treatment of ; subject is not without ah interest to those female who are employment pooderiug upon When I he-problem toe of • gov .-ruess of an English farmer’s family is paid £15 per uiiuuui;the hwly who siqa-r intend* the dairy- .the prufesmuua! cheese maker—receives £25, £30, slid even more. Bring as one of the family and enjoying complete liberty as soon as her work is done. Tlie governess has " never finished when the children are in bed, she may be persuasively the re <}ne8te<! “cheese to maker assist ” after iu sewing simply ; but pnfe tea her bounet and walks forth to taltc the air. The life Is deiudedly more dependent than tlmt of of a “lady-help,’* dairy and the science the seeihs nfiii-1 y as yortliy of us tuut t>» cookmg. invariably made _ English cheese is from the milk of the cow ; but many foreign kinds, as mentioned above, arc manufactured from that of sheep and goat*. Those made of gonth* milk are usually amall aud tnldly made some like tablets rather than cheese. It i« scarcely.probable that sheep’s milk will ever \>e used here for thin purpose; but gnats have received an’increase fo attention of recent years, not so much for direct pr<»tit as with the view of sup plying a rich, fresh milk for children, Persons . who have 'not -the space for a cow can slid keep a few goats and possi bly may make a little choose as a fancy, towta’mil k batter bas been exbibite.1: Butter, from Gy abroad—Germany, the way, comes more'and Holland, more Deninork,Sweden and especially France, <*ontritmting largely. Brittany butter i* a favorite; another brand comes from butter Normandy, and l>e during had. the This winter Italian may article lias • been sent to London, on the other hand, almost from the arctic regions—f. from Finland, jfany continental well’ known butter merchants’ names arcus here as in’their own countries ;• in fact, foreign enterprise, assisted by there epective governments,is English doing its Is^t bike possession of tlie market. Iu Germany, Hukhib, etc., butter and cheese making iR taught iu institutions directly Mubsiflized from' the government, and capital is largely Factori-s drawn t*> and this oompanius profitable investment, whose main object is. tlie English cm sumer sre common on the continent— o« the Scandinavian Butter Preserving Company Rennies (Danish), of Roquefort the (France), weli-knowa Caves a society for the manufacture of cheese, jnd -ed, ......r-ipaioes in all the counti n „ pr vhm.hIv named. Some English butter »s believed W-be c dotwl anroad with a dye n.annfacturcu and used ; it m qmtcjn.rmlesR, yet the fact seems strange. Saxony and Bavaria are making great efforts to insure the economic and scientific production of butter, and cheese, and there are da i ry laboratory The rtrftatyTircBenisea]expen ments. Germans have actually a mechanical appliance milk for getting the £«u» out of the by steam power, The ordinary and let the system slow is to simply of set nature the milk, process raise the cream, which takes many honrs. TIkh, singular invention apparently eon sists of a kmd of hollow wheel, jnb» which the milk m poured, and which revolves several hundred times a minute, canwiig a vortex motion m the liquid, ^rating the particles of cream by ^dnfugal —Pall Mat f Gazette. _lr ---- Cxacicn-.t: claims to originated the flirt baby .hpw, who took the ftret price is etfll Jiving. W»y. Some time in Octoliee last, «*J» toe Beaton /W of a rerent isaua. an «*ed ladv in New mranb York citv finding herself ,, it -t) 00 t toe oraiwe the mmrUm fw^StLoe ta it ona J^ib persona in obtaining tfr fcln n to th* s*. Lake's Home Women in that rate ^vPn One J gentleman to ....... nSe ^eat if .he was willing to a ^e eSort to obtain the desired end. replied that it w M not much that ahe oonld do, bnt her w,U was good, and ale wbuld try. The Ken t| < ^ nan .^ “ If you will i «>iiect one miliioowf old postage *ueeded stamps j {J^ iSjaS'toSaJS? ■ tho ftWO to ob The »W „ahew^«ap«WoS UJvwaMatfirat JUem urH ce<]. However, .be'went energy and gh^t „ “wW to ass*star« work in of»^ earnest. ^of fte ^kd waTfortnndte f rieo better a»vs . ; a <iin«r two ladkw noted for their ™ n i , ^ Jim mbwLot di SetTYoTk, «"S'^miny ^ promiaed to ber Their outlie plan ,*,1 wtk that all the stamps on the lctten received might be M „ GjhbiIls giao wrote to the wife of Mr. E. O. Ctompney, the artist, f ud, ci t , requesting her aaBietance. i*f«ttn4 began work, She h« fvv v.-te offha scheme , wkimpstAfl tiirlr tanco. c,-g ia Tlieentliiiwasm with which th» Weft w " s ieceiyed Km wonderful. ChUdren ; | hwgran to wAtch tor letter* tlmt came to j j ^ with almost as for^ntT much itt F J gnd HSZZ uot s -jSS, jj,,,, women on to ont ^ , stamn 3T2 before lending tlie epistle. bWS “ Hast ^’Hl , j ^ , U ,®Udto«mulete thousands. ^ nr ^akand. , to*. , . ,J* o.:„ w(M ,t it was found J that they had million and five thou i^ , ’ 'j ■ the gentleman wll „ to k eH th e stamps of the’ fact he , 0 g em i t,j give another free bed in Dr. K„ rH g hart’sHospital qf.,, fur a secoud million, , ({ | (i e( , to l)B ,i „f hv MesdaMes (i ; bl nn Hn j H ilstfo.i 'p^em. to the most dc- 1 j Ou to-mg informed that her home for ]if( , wng engp^d the lady expressed who had her graHtnde to the ki .i friends 'aaeisted her. Alt!........ having had the ; asmatenoe of many, l’*e lu<Iy hn^C'-ber ^ , ,f fie, own personal efforts o' .-three ] lim roll thousand stamps m the past , (tfi) w eeks,oran average of thirty thou j jn , W eek or five thousand in a -l»r. The stamps ou being receive,! were counted and tied up in packages of , , i.undre.l each, aud then ten of three l^keges were tied together, and in this form thpv were sent to the gentleman «bo ha#’agreed to furnish- the be mouey. maile i j What final dispositimi wss to of the stampe was fur a long time a mat-; last crireilv. It was at p;, to bfijpulin »h^ the nmnafvetorefd *■* »* ««-» •» pSj®-ifirtSqpwda, lmpo the of which {TJXmps uasto making paper them are very desirable, and th- mucilage also adding to their strength. The millmu stamps ikteked in the maimer: deseribeil, till an <'«“<»*'> .. Saratoea aaratoga trunk truux. - — • . ' ■jj- JZI T Fe . „ iv# , ; Little mure firm a couple olgeuera tious ago, the sBth of November was a holiday iu many parts .of the Midland agricultural districts iu EuglanL No matter what might be the state of the atlier, no mtwrnption of tlie festm ties was allowed, however great might ‘ Is* the discomfort of those taking part the in the “Catherine Procetoion.” Iu towns, . f h o an, Sit tal^ig-part lu-the-precoii children sinus w ,-e female belonging to the %.rk-houser, who dm carded for the nonce thmr customary Wui-khama. attire,..ad ilesMMnl appretodumtUy with : orassod in white, various eoloreitrtbbons, chiefly acadtUbfiMI” tlie est girl being rather selected saint, for to which represent purpose queen, or site was provided with a tinseled crown or sceptre. The procession invariably ina.lv a atop at the dwellings trf the pnn cipai towmmeu, wlisudhe childrvn sang > a ballad Imgmnmg Huts .. Horc q„ M „ osttertae, as fine »* any With ,,„*** maebaod horses s-coniiuc to be a six seen. aJ SSS ^ w”!SS ° !, “' fc ’ While this was - being sung, several of the chtlilren would beg foi money at the neighboring .houses, the proceeds of the being prb devoUtd to defrayiug the cost ceMsiop and providing the httle ones with unwtmted'jgxnry of a good uiimer. of the mtwit fainous of these j»ro cessions was that at .Peterborough, winch was continued until the introductipn of _ the new poor law, when the “Catherine Broccssimm-”’became tilings of the piist.. Previous tx> this, spinning ctmstituteo the principal occupation *>1 the female inmates of the w-ork-honses, heuce the origin of the festival, St. Cutherme being popularly regarded us the patron saint of this particuliir industry. She also regarded in ft siEnilar light by'the Midland lace makers, many «if wl»un; . signalize the arrival of “Kafcicni s Pay with a-rump steak and onion dinner—an amptonshire example largely shoemakers, emulated who by the evidently North tlnnk more of a “Batten. Sapper l.an of a “ Crispin Dinner. But these festival meals funu»h a poor substitute for the pictnresque, features which formerly marked the celebration of S.. Catherine's Day, wWr'ftlretfdy becoming displays added . indications of speedily to the lengthy, list of forgotten festivals, - Chinese Farmers. MV doubt if a happier race exists than ■ the Chinese farmers and peasantry. The farms are small; and so the owners are we^thy, but-thay arc veiy tweeta ble. Each farm-house is a little colony, consisting of wime three generations- his children, namely, the grandfather, and his children’s children. There they live in peace and harmony together ; all who are able to, work <>n the farm, aiel if more lalmr is required, the stranger is hired to assist them. They live well, dress plainly, and are industrious, vntti being in any way'oppressed, The female membeisof a fftfmer’shonsehold of have much more liberty than those a higher rank. Tbev have small feet ns usual, but they are not so confined to the house, or prevented from looking on higher ana speaking to strangers, 8» are the classes. f -the house If a unexpectedly, stringer enters be the will court see a u ladies,W nnmlier of old and young, sitting in tlie-Verandah, all iodustnously employ ed on some work — spinning, some aewing or embroidermg, and one probably engaged in culinary unknown operations, for and if the stranger be an humedly, eigner. the whole will rue and disappear like a covey of P«ti*w overturning wheels, stools, and anything else that may be in their way. “ Hum, writer Chinese customs, “ was says a .on earlier.-visits, « but frequent scene in my off when itwae t^rad it I gradually civilized wore being fifes them was a afterward selves. These same ladies would often ask roe to »it down, and evf-n set ft chairi for me, and bring me a cup of tea with their own fair bands ,_»«•* while I drank my tea, they would ‘ with their work, laughing end ©betting « fteely as If l M mile. awef. M | . SRitl! WRECKERS. 7f__.-.7 , „ k . ZiZu^. TfiT.-. .r ,b. -.J. t._s "7 ..a ,!!. fSf Moat of our citiaena. are^oobtlei save the San Fraoaaoo Echo apwcUoie™ chined lha (anekT^tfewa^ not tmeotmnon fnllv ..wore a Q f ^ nothmtwSa incident# which L attaehtd “ T,re to ft. !hiv“.ped^? HiTta^g inlbmfectiou ground. Re. eently *„,*£, some facto the Coolie population with the ; ,“ ri tea of h some into the paMi of u XMo twoorter te^t *'lx* and thev are of euftioieni in t ffiveu to the public One of .“g the funeral 1 '?^St customs of these neoule is “ to . fea§^ n stantial including thoae ''S. artieles When^ m T o,t wdlthv nffectftl while ilvtart iu the flesh Z,\i£, “ r.,J this^iortal .Jf Mil” ____ _ ■•. clab. ^’~"rk irate v iri.-d and Dienti whLlih«—iihiG^a wenerslG ri!S a bnfll^ ^nd *oU»er duck 'artioie? ^’oTwhkhte^ a few indent the in our vernacular the^S^', The teaat Hum aet upon bonei ia renewed once a year, until disinterred the of be the sent departed'dnrflie tojaina.there „ e to fc. ^“r^e^ v,,;„ f ,1o wirt. tlordiuitnt tl.o empire fiUrs of these substantial begin* generally in the first, week of--, Seirest and ivintiniiM nhrmt twn T!.*» livmg mLttet male relative of the de cedaed-no how in pour lifo_atfoudn or lowly the loHur m«v iw^n to the matter and always some alight »nl> uuou the grave During &Sfl the continu Chinese umle^heTL mav be a^uobtoSkrts seen trotting alone « romfortably tS riding mirtioS in an “ express wagon whS* to^ottedfo? D^'to^two the lnriJ weetin of th? o, th!« festival betw?™ nrpriil* there lire in the gnmwd dawn and dusk. eenerallv <whw^ lietweeu two and three him d re( i each of whom has brought eonie offering When to this is added (),e amount which is contributed at the t i me of the funeral, it-will bb soen that (),» «itaWrettorthifre^xd^tolGaS*. p,t ft i 1B cous’denible The iiarticu t ot th( , g „„ !h , ar „ widely >kuowu Hmong bofcSwn a „rew which in this article may as graveyard wreckers. This clasg which to compose.1 exclusively of vaffaboutls, tramps and thieves, burrow iu the day time in the the lowest and and if most wicked quarter of town, no crimiual or vagabond adventure hand, they premia Llo^ ric i u , r reward is on skirt the boundaries of the remetorv at early ,i' dusk and, hiding in the shadows im Sa wait until tlie last Coolie vanisheil esstwnrd, when plundering commences, and the gravs#, are systematicallv and despoded of every article ot food ot va ju P . Generally Silies-is the gin—the favorite Tto „f the setocl first plac-Jtoi [p,.. the toT grave are appropriated, 14 XX ,i„.» . dispute : three wrrekera re to toe nossesrion .,[ Hl<1 1 ,„ ls UmH sacrihgiously obtained, ootmr’b^toen , oft „, personal encounters ri»« ehdmanta «rf same lot. i.s Oyer (I, ,,,„ th e mqnndswhiel^m n _, ark to ™ the , darkening shallows of toghttkese , !| sum *•«» of >'»">" some of W trirfe ^ with a «« vindictiveness pos ses which the sawedneas <M the place dees not in the leas abate. SmcethePhmre* liar e noticed tins despoihngof the grar ea of their dead, the practice nfl’lscii* any considerable quantity of ftxsl ms o tb< m has fsllen efforts into disuse, so that through the evil of these grave wreckers a Cooherulomi partial «■##! ntafildoument n>«y oTa hauttivu ml, aud superstrtrons nte, --- . . --- *«• ***** . ****** o'. . . Whatever may be ultimately decided as to the existence or non-existen eo of the sea serpimt, it seems plain tliat, there el i*t at the bottom of tlie sea monsters ijuiteeqnallv worthy of toe name of le yiathan. The most hideous and gigautie of these deuizens of the deep sea of which .tradition speaks belong *“4 to the starfish or octopus species, it was toe bodies, or rather fragments of toxin s, of creatnres of this Sort which were col looted and p!ae«t in the uiusenma at Utrecht and Amsterdam afier the storms of 1639amU790. Professor Shieiistroep, matters, who is nu authority m these describes a sea monster which was thrown ashore in 1853, the, head of which W|W:JW fat .as that of a robust child, Right years later, the captain of a small j-Ye^.h vinwd-Hgrn icd d- o 'hav^HeiniTriT the cfi;»«t of Teiieriflfe another of these creatures, muting, more than its huge fifteen teet long, Tliis witliout c* urms. was swimming or floating at the time on the top of the water,and a chase Hn8tIe< | t but without any further success ^ of tearing off and securing S ome morsels of tho fins and skinf J<ast year, however, during the tremendous storm of September, it seems that a complete specimen of a’similar prodigy vvas oast ashore in Newfoundland. A description of it is given bjJhe-JtMmaf that it HhMtrf., whereby it uppears was no less than nine, feet long and six feet in circumference,'aud had 2,000 the arms Puckers or jeelers covered vrifcb some 0 f an jnch each in diameter, twoof the arms beinq’aa much as twenty-eight found teef j on g When the brute was first ^ Wft8 0 tili alive, and which was glaring literally sav agely with eyes were idee those of the fabulous dogs, as' big M mnfleW| measuring five or six inches alcrortM> It was at this time of a dark red color, but in a very few minutes after being left high and dry it died, and the color both of its body ami of it* limbs at once failed away to n dull white. Only one thing is wauting to the account in the Journal fltu*tre, and that ia> state nient. wliat became of the fish when capturcd, and where so vahiable ireuri oaity is now to be neon on exhibition. * ' Comparative Value Of Woods. It a great convenience t«. know the comparative value of different kinds >,t wood for fuel. SheUbark hickorv \>f in rc warded an the highest standard onr forest trees, and calling that 100, other trees will compare with it for real value a8 f nf .j f„ r house purposes as follows; Shellbark hickory, 100 ; pignut hickory, 05 ; wliite nak, 84 ; white.asi), 77 ; dog w<x>d 75 ; oak, 73; white hazel, 72 ; apple tree, 70; red oak, 67; white fi5 ; black birch, 62 ;• yellow oak, red m 5!»; white ©bn, 58 ;. cedar, 66 ; wild cherry, 55; yellow pine, M . oh ^t.ut, 53; yellow poplar, 51; bntt ,. nillt and. white bireh. 43 ; white ^ ^ u ^ , wo r tb bearin g - that iu . wo6dg of the game species there ir a great difference, according to the ^ on whicil grow. A tree that Rro wson a wet, low, nch ground will be less solid and loss durable for fuel, and therefore of » less value than a tree of the same kind that grows on a dry and poor soil. To the ordinary pur chiUer oak is oak and pine is pine, { >r j-.^e use, the tree grown on dry np Ja nt | ^nd standing apart from others is .^, rth fl g r r t : deal more. th machine . ven.«d Aya<fk-ReWiag at nvt |3,00P, , apa. aud took the *-'ter -*•»* ** ««« tflwwod secke * <$«* VOL. IV. NO. 17. The Ares k Great Britain. MTyma»««det»?i>f» JouMlw* observed nj»u lamiliar objects, sueli -» books, eliina and steelware, ete., the de vice of a lion aud a horse (sometimes represented aa a ahiel.1, nuieom.1 aurmonuted anp|mrting bv between them » aerowu. On the ahiehi are oertain divn t.ona called •‘qu-.m-ricef, m one erf which von will oborve two h and a I*"* AttaelnO to the whole .a the ™'"*o, {>«« ft mon droit ,-French words, whose taeumng i», God and my ^t.’” » vou inquire, yon will be toid that this . device is the “cost-of-anns ” of Great Britain,—as the ea^le, shield and /.live hrsnehis that of the Cn.ted States, —and that all articles thna marked are of British manuf.cture. ,s old times the national symbol of Englaml was the rr»e, of Scotland the thistle, of Ireland the shamrock or ctorcr. When England claimed Ireland «nd Scotland, thyse three were united «'■ ‘he British royal shield, as we find them in the time of Queen Elizabeth, On a victory over Fmnoe the svmlml of »tuaeorn, -gaa also added, the nnieom wearing a chain, to denote the . soJgMtHm When a new °< swereign *° &>«£““*; auc«eda , to ,. the frown, hebaS a right fo plaoefua «&.J" OWU f\ W f *!• B nta, u - thw. The two . lion* , ma the while borse, *.the wh *f h coatorf-am. 7°* «« ou on of f the_ ®f Gnelpbs quarteriop who were dnkea of Brunswick and Hanover m Germany. It is therefore <mU«l the of tlie Houae of Brunswick, and it is about this that I now design t > tell you ■ • When We read in history ' that *“* at Charlemagne couquererl the Saxou the aortbenr entmtties, one of “«». named' Wittikipd, refnsed to submit to him. and that, i« fought, contequence, wherrv mauy hhws ly b.ttlos were m ‘he Saxous bore ui the van a tall P»^ surmounted by a wooden' horse's bead. This was their ensign; and When they afterward became more civilised, ,lir y retaiue.1 tlie same emblem,—a white borse painted upon a black ground —whiehremains to this day the stand- 11 r ' 1 ,,r banner of the little kingdom of Saxony. Iu the jeer 861,-just about one thousand years ,.go,-Brttuo, the son of a Haxou king, called founded himsrif, a city in Brunonrs Saxony which he after Vicn» r now known as Brunswick. He : 1 retained as the standard of Brnnswiek the white horse of Saxony, and thus it remained until the end of the three sue reeding centuries. Abont. that time the | reigntog prince of Brunswick was a cer tain Henry Guelph, a leader iu the Crusades, uot.,1 for his strength and ; 1 daring wl.toirUdqUTredlorKtoi the Title ' of “Henry the Dion.” This prince refused to own fITegianec Frederick to the great liar Emperor of Germany, Imroses. He declared himself mdepen dent, and sfrH5T.on as a Hr-., -f ■te.^ Tad to llruuswiek and - the same symbol placed upon his stan two lions supporting a shield he nroth the white touse. Thus you know the origin of toe Bnmswiek eonf-uf-arms. Bntho-vcame banner of a small German country a fi 0 „te,l Xm on tue arms ot Great now explain. t?.eu Abont Ata ntthe the yeas vena 1650, jpm the tue. u reign- fc ta^toe grande ■ King Ju™* James the first wf J ‘ ^hHcXof son wxs uum-J : G*to ; • i.'„„j,*i, in want Quo,” ‘ AmMJe ..' ^ .,.L,i \, . ii u>B tu „f u to the r-.vul ,„,i t,, JK .v tliis great . T , Tin,* it w-o • s 1 ■ p ratovfi^X ; ? ’ 1 « d totaVretofw toe u?„ , uThe s', Brunswick ^rmso . Bnlata^ a part smiresora oi’the Hto , .*>■ ,, j u, v mb.’the „ lu j (i|.,,rce tin . w . American , Gm.nre th« Fourth ’ o,e«n Victoria the J L . * A,: ora,d daughter _ „ i Thus vou under- -I ,yn,«.n Victoria 'llnmsnick--how is descended . ' .. ,) nrinees of .j,‘ . , ( | m ,„ instead of Fn £“*,_ 1i Mood Sf anJ whv h ,. r . name is V“* * • ” Wrhnla* : ----- si , I ne Ml»g ng Tr ©<*• Though the tropical scrubs of Queens land are very luxuriant and dangerous beautiful, they are not without their Jmad>ack*,fur the i ptnritgfow- ~ r e s om r ing in them that is really deadly in its pff»«ct-«-—that. i« to «nv > "londly in .the same way that one would apply the b-rm <-M - rfa t in profs nt ion -of any eme’s bcKiy ig bn r ut by th e. iding - i U g tree, death will be the result. It ' <wild be safe to pass through fires as w as t,, f n \\ into one of these trees. They inches are found growing from two tb three high to ten and fifteen feet, iu the old ones the’stem' is whitkh, and red berries . uHually grow ou the top. It emits a peculiar and disagreeable smell, bnt. is ' best known aod haring by its lekf, point whicli at’the is top, nearly is round, the a edge like the nettle, jagged all round, All the leaves nte large-some larger than a saucer. “Sometimes,” says « traveler, “while ehootinff turkey, intho scrubs I have the tree, till . entirely forgotten stinging l»y its warned oi its clos*; proximity mvseH smell, and have then found in a little forest of them. i'ightly. / I was only Its effects once Htnng, and that very are curious; it leaves no mark, but the pain is maddening, and for months after- ] ward the part, when touche.1 rs tender, in^'rainy weather, or when it '-gets wet in : washing, etc. J have seen a man. who treats ordinary paiii lightly, roll on th. ground in agony, after being stung, and | have known'a horse so completely the Jmad, after getting into a grove of trees, that he riisbe<l approached opeh-mtmthect him, and at every one who to be shot in the scrub. Dogs, when stung, will rush about, whining piteous Iv, biting 'pieces from th»* affe-:ted part The small stinging rre* H, a few inches high, are as dangerrmR as any, being, so hard to see and-ac-musly impenhng usually found one’s ankles. This scrub m growing among palm trees.” _ ‘ 0 Horse-^hoelng. _ ., - TT . r , orw1 Frwu», the horee-shotr simp ^oe yttR< s This Wg *]o.rse s f 5 s>t on- h.« ku-, to .L Jepeiids b. some <xtci.it on tb ‘ the breed of bom*, wh.M h . in -01 ninx tries the -tt^rag^, mor« snjvwo. ^.is way Ir ^ ££, £ « 4,1 >“ P. artw of M 1/Jl P£c*d m jdall n^fsroni,me wner^ sg*ri *P feur ?* } t / 4 ' w ,eLi t * Wthe \^ smith ' • ■ . r«. , , rv ;„ JJefeO^e -.Tr, Il-iii, ne J ' mfl ‘ n flr ^^ , ^ iU \ ’J ‘ ! ;j; f ‘ f ’-.mare « R ' ' rr^^of , rJ.rM , ; w«x)en u_{i_ cacc » sr r , ^ w , t 4. frarne^ rrk^hi^ , head h - ; s algo ; »;sd ^ # *v’« : ‘*c ' mp* W ”* j T he WiR Btew MX re < BCSDREI. J.utu. TElRS 1 « 0 . «r«r »i K«*#r«t .be Wnrei.-o... Kirt.... >1 hi,„ t„ «... Bei»«» Kiileat.Twen. v#.r«. The destruction iff Hie and proper , tiuutai •-! Eaatern war haa been immeuae, evenairordin* to Tnrkwi: the lowest ,:hend agares port. of both H Risen I'.-vtu and r- jm- Hug the Rita-mt. 1........ at Sl,«»k), :! vne geat* the changes whidb ovtltadionhaa slowly wron^it . In mankind~ whose uatumi state Hoblw declared to iw war -when we etmtrs^ w.th it the slmo., incredible waste of blood wagedh^y and treasure ; during the Eanteru wars Jeng hiz Khan, in the twelfth and thirteenth I oontnries. Tissogei, the father of that fierce and mighty'conqueror, rejecting a Htteof honor which the Km Emperor - of China offered him, styled t.imse lf Emperor of the Great Ifongoh. The Mongott, of which he was a typical i 11 representative, h^icr degree, as his mn was to iu st. the Chinese •- His are first mentioned - toiy of the Yuen Dynasty, A. D. 618 907, when, and for a long time snb aeqnentij, tribe they were Hinng-nins. anlijeeta of the Turkish of »»M»wai«ls transtorerl their a'legiance to until, the nnderTisstlgci, Lrau a nd KinJraaetie they so estafdished fOhin^ Jbeir independence Tliey had not only buiafeoinanyof >»■■«<>. rude figbtmg Th©«© race, its virtues. they might have communicated to their foe. had they not almost in variably stain braueh. them, Their .cutting distiuimiahing them down root and characteristic was the brute, p^nonate force which destroys but eiinnot upbuild,. and which allhougir'too civilized generally is always, »lol izeu even in this age, vasily inferior with «R-«*Mka andnohe, to the silent, enduring influence of in teUectnel aud spiritual forcea. Y.ssugei, on returning 154& from a victorious campaign TerS lnl the chieftain whom he. had captured and put to death, Umrotd that his wile had given birth to her first-born son. Ou examining the infant, a piece of clotted blood was found clinched in his fist, aud the superstitious Mongol vanquished namml him Temujin, Tartar chief. iu memory Thru, at the the future, conqueror was stameil witj, blood at his very birth. When -thirteen years old Temtijm mhentod his father s throne aud sword. He acquired at length undisputed away over thetrib,* from the Argun to the Irfcwh. On his return m 12 )G from » snocmftU raid into the kingdom of Hia, lie held a groat Durbar at the source be pnaitaimed of the Cteongaud Jenghm caused Khali, himself Very to or Mighty Khan In IMS he made another incursion into Hia. N.it tong afterward, *.v when re,gnmiciiuiced »n envoy hmmreiers reigamg-ila B acres stou.Jeughiz “m.at the vsuehsafed *mr, aud mounting no reply, but l,i« on horse rode »»»>•-, He no w be gan a ca reer unparalleled At s^ Bnk(5«. thg yictoiieayd one of the immerous c,tire which be pillaged and destroyed, he called himself ‘the scourge of God.” As such he cartii, swept over the tagest portion of the devastating am.-iicpopulsting it. Even m retreating through Wmaltoirety eonqnered provinces, JeugUiz, “as the heat of tin* after, the battle us in fight, left behind him a trail of blo sl. " Briefly ^ to sum np the rest of his terrible , pnrsne i mth relentlres energy. and ureurp.issed cruelty his externiiuat ingeouqnesfs in Central Asia, hi Nortb C'mL, western India, in Eastern Knasit, gmlin where; vearii. the in l‘J80, Mongols after became a Wtoggle of flfiv ’whole m-ts <rf * )be empire. Jenghiz himself died on the 18th of August, 1227, ‘be bimintainona reeiun of Linpan. ;l tor- nge--of M’-ri ix; "lttsdi >dv ” fiord was r m-’red iniMongolia, and er to kvvi. his death am ret. ..ti the escort killed one they met the read, ■• As a fitting close to his nmrdetons career. forty noble ami beautiful girls shared that they might writ on him to 'he land of spirits.” Mr. Howorlli, in his •'History of the Mongols, from the Ninth to the Nineteenth greater-leader Centiuy,” eulogizes Jengln’z aa e. Alexander, aud statesman than either Napoleon, or Timonr. Bnt, before the of the t n nr tee nth cetitttrr. the' Khans who sin-ceded him were cm’ pictelv driven out of China, and of the great Mongol Empire bnt which hideous Ire founded, nothing remains rums. Even Mv. Haworth admits that it dor* make one hide one’s face iu terror to rend that from 1211 to 1223, 18,47il,0flt> bumau beings perished in China and' Tangut alone at the liands of Jenghiz his followers! Such was war six hundre d Ten nt ------— - " . ttl1 1,1 . ... ** i .*■ ® * ' . A - f ri ghio il' ■ « T^-i d r S T4 -r > e etH t r^ d ? w or k s of William Wlutw e ll Co., pig iron manufacturers, • ^outh Stockton, England. About eight charged o’clock the hopper of No. 3 furnace was with ironstone, etc., by a man. named Jajnes Higgins and other woikrnen, and in. order to allow the material to-fall .into the furnace au attempt whs made to lower the bell—a large conical-shaped -the ring apparatus, which fits iht> or bottom of the hopper—about In two feet into a broader space. consequence having been raised ..too bell, rapidly had' become tu the previons occasion the tightly jammed in the upper pari of the x&dt, expedients m<\ efmW not lie mured.. tried without Two or three were effect, and ultimately Higgins pjouned the bell, a large hammer, !leaped The on to and struck it a blow. apparatus immediately sank iirto the broader^space, and Higgins unfortunately Nothing wept with could it. A groan was heard, but he having be seen of the poor fellow, passed with the 'material. beneath the b®M into the .furnace. The blast was at once thrown off, and;.«.pgvrggfn! tint the hornble smell air forced in, which rose proved that- the jx»or fellow’s body was being rapidly consumetl, and the slightest portion, of course, was The burial service of the Bomau Catholic Cbnrch, to which the deceased V»elong«d, was read by the Rev. Mr. 'Shanahan on the top of the furnace shortly after the accident Ihe deceased was * marned, man; ami leaves a widow and several chiVireu ' ---— - e The Pocwk Brutliers. Th Chatham and Rochester (Eng.; v* <•- sars • \ beautiful mf-rnorial L1 *, il f hft Church ; been erected at Cpnor r, •- f K 'bv a friend in' remem ■ brothers Edward -and « tlie ^ ^ ju * the following V fni ThetabU-t t.]}, bcare Ed i varied jaeiriorv Jftriuarr of war. 1.7, ftt Chinva Francis Jolm Porelck, drowned bik brother, in the f.re-tv.seven- ^ ; veare ^ s 77 (mm of Heiiry and Ann Pocoeki, who was bom in this V V *<* and educated nt tiie National Schools Frindsburr, faithful \ v .. \ . tre d the perils of their leader, ni-rv M expediti^i, Rteulev in the perished ' Anglb Xmencan and in Africa' aiding to complete light the great people dis rioveriee th^sitin and darkness; to bring ^ofFraucte Rich . ir ,j pr>cock 1^/ uncle to the alibve; boro My #) at Upnor, in tb Arddc Exned’tion, under Sir Job* j e #» Englftfid ttwiiai !-» \g4ft " *thi ^ ^s«« W** . - THE ttliBPE E6S6. Advertising Rates: fcv *•«. » TT w niT; *m ; 3 m. 1 it* ’ * 3 * •*,*’** «• *uj !>.<*-• i IBCttr 2 14 4 us *.ao «• t£ l*..,* s. f*¥*r >M 32 * 4. 4. f.miuj 12 . «* •iOH. &.4HH2.WU «5.ia »S.i 0 ffi Q5n U.oti I4.«su »*.«* !&.»# «&.©* Less! Advertisements. Sbenff Mtsc*. r*r :rry,4«a ii a»....... r.-v FtfVitbrr, V-lsr.umr**OT> aad (*r.»rt V.* .*9« o»r*.. i a-idm -ivi » «• Si- Ite-liKST* c Sottreof S*U. 4 te Lf«t#rSOf 1 tti.r »5 f. pwm&sk -’n. ihvt* » tj i«a«mB^ir,t • ts t IH». , tiomittHwiii, to rt? IS Xi»r- r *»**,&£«-¥ *«i itwv. «nr »S U ! n*ert iou . . ...... ... K *“L *-**-»“ , .min . ml ’ .. dresses are originated • m this .-..uirtejr. 1 the nrtatMt (tarto iu Palis is -aw to be a beggar, fc ttiia suapte; pretty girla *«t go a beftr.ag. Tt ia the coatiwo among certain tribe, in Siberia that when a woman married. . • ; •• t-.- w.o'.ng -t: ■ .. S „.Hrtie. baa diacWeted ’an -ton mountain lit,MO feet high, bnt it i» e . {»r fr, on marketthat she will trade it to iW old shot-gun and a dog. K^te Field writes: “ Tin- bvtet friends I hav*> in -the world are American men, and if I have not married one it is be¬ cause I love too many of them. ” The fifiherracn of Venice have license *<> fish in . any ntireu s cellar after 10 o'doek at night. See what too much water would do for this lountry. Here is a problem for scientists- Why ia it that to winter overshraw «e enUerl Arctic, while .tle-y keep n< warm; and tu summer eoda water » called Arctic, and keep, us cool ? Jing o - nu ulgiu luring r-lgWiitv thousand fe in’ Louisiana, viddmg.over which thirty worth mUlioo Otongeama- the mmUy, are on trees about *100,000. ^ is BotU ^ by whid » I have, tlaongh ? life, more J... profited than bv the the^incSTandMBtle ,. at e^emimrementof f , tM , j *„,? amiaWf> ^ ^Sble women.-ffomiffy New _ Tlie York-the , largest . , bom Third railed Awieioid-. , company 10 . e, S ht .™ ! ^ OWB ? J“b« *nd mules, and carried 80,TOO,000 |>a» sengera dnamg the paat fiscal year. A man may elude a. disagreeable creditor for* long while sometimes, but there’s one thing in this uncertain vale of tears he cant dodge Whena«ecze has business »«tli a fellow, it u.wajs finds him at home.-OnrfwmH Itrrak 'att Table, Workmen employed in digging for the . foundations of the arches of the Brook ; vu bridge approaches recently, came upon an old English lsiyonet, f .urteen f ee |. under ground, which was much eaten bv mri, hut in which tlie crown of England was sH!l traeeabto. ^ orgmuzaliou' formed iu Sew York fonrte en veara »go to protect working women from imscmpulous and rascally oraplovers bits done »u immense iiintmnt It has brought six thousand defrauders of helpless them women to justice, om , i,^ 8eut tuauj i of to prison, ^^l^Xtlong , „ .. . , p Xo wa() “ eB . ; “ hrir - (rlwt rated to-the b W ^ I . appear- 11 J%^SS|^X»Xd p ^ fa,^-u-o. into th# ^ . ^ ^ t Hroe as the targ ^scd , 1T th „ i, r „ iu » UR everybudv • - m ^; the ■liouuevitnd the bnrglawts. #PM j T ■»'” n p - »>• -^;.^rur---- r 1 ' once. dv a n! jt!k ,ult, , vTlit,. H»v toa tL fsir T . r,.n„l,.ds,l m P ..r, Th( „. d - itl W1 . T Ti, at musi lovers do, iufi tHMMMto AmlTouHsv * 'V'! Ah Boo. #,M its. fsstivs A1, «.». pod*, vn.liis heart smiled with -Me here ffl«e v<m- UW,. Von he.,, to my ,,^1, \» I.aliur-Satiiig Devices I, far. Her. L'_ *„ , , „!„« X.Tf ..... *? '^X l ...... "toe woman * n1 -^Ti , »„ think about it ,, *.”* - ' , r ' ini tit- d n-nto' ? y .,TZ r J 'ridlw, . . ,, 1 . t .:u’,. ’ .bsrehe.dedt.il n..i nex< ... sumnur. . N- \ . : , "’ 1 ' ........ (Tvc w „, k i v . ^.jSSdfSriS; “ il * f. * ’’ «d H ^ it tUaJ,, i anew u, > Wl l„.v- * it. all i„ »• id for J. and . • , '* IJ^’W ; ^ 'i, mult with Ji,, Tout ..tw c'ni’t 1 ; o, where it £ i slothes wriino front r wonldn t 11sir k , , ip i„ „ window, 11 ' dollars is right smart •• ' mo, ‘ , “v r ’*“, , ,. , tiat with it t; o 1 stayS . T wish 1 she’d ill tin-old cue ■ * tr ^* n^wnissivelT R f _ j _ man ,, »hr h rirtV wor k it V duM fit^ 1 h#»sMW«it'8 dirt-cheftP at tlie |>rioe. ' ^ v. twl tin vour lingers out oi V.-. i lf!V e one->’ them ' Hindi we " ca n A v.® * tt i Vimw . r' { # T »* T mvtudt *’»• rsMimml dollars thii wi,v V jiV hiT with six wo5*l 1 ~ - tat tt » ! maKe. nearly v everv ^y woman ou tlie square l through the door CK Y i' m ; n ,| <m ( e {J * for R jP»^ a re* coutd-hcsent hum©'to me about 11 g y that would take the !*eac e _ _v within' seven ' r don't spend mueix . <UK>re but when I do. moneyw hard times » want to _ ^ a iitlle satisfaction ont <; ir J 1 : move on with w ; ; ■ . jt to some wpieezm u . * pride about f ;'b ,i. K3 r m his fsee.-«.te.im«<( v Brrakfiut nrenbtn*t Table table. _ . . . . Triple Irageoy in 'r»z< • J. 13.- Stevens, in a Vetter from H.-u-.i berry. Arizona, says : “ I came over here and found-the camp in ft fever of excitement oyer a terrible taM^&y-tha t bad reoently been enacted, Jfou wnito, whom you remember, had some, words with a stranger named Frank McNiei, about a trivial matter, which resulted in Wh l t t ^re K um in g -^xy. M hit e attempted to shoot. Niel, who kuo-daid -bun down, d.i»»med. him, and, m his life, led him to tin; saloon and to.d .mm to go bis. rmsmekR. Cliarlie Bice, whom you 'also remember shortly after ward came mh> tump, awl approaching MeNi-i h» whom lie wiw imlcnown, ne taking emptn-«! six-aho*»ter at him, five mum* • hemra. lo< cinrens tnrm t e t 'ma*** .to .arrest the mnra. rer , a ugpT eiisue*.. o c •’ 1 ‘ ^ ‘ . fmm the ;j4J 11 / ! ; . or\ \ u ' n l \^: tempted r(tr ' to A ’•'/*' ^ ^ 4e-• ^ Wmte wdmulm led e- v that desired ne left join h. -.o m Uy:,r.,»» amoh^l. ' ' - ; no trouble-With,an v. .iu ’Russia’* Captures, f A Monde Hum* has compucd h .. n-nr-c,, a summary of the officer , m *. n and art-illcry captu-ml by to- liu. rians-duraig tiu- ? r. Tb-f--Dowmg o the ?;d >. o* wh^h the officii fibres f n rfl pi.-wo ‘.o-v, , Oj**r, . . n-.-nMt. -Jj 1 v 4,' A \ U 7,6 u m.; »f> U * T ; J ,v K»r» v ■ A- m 1 A* 'H 2 * £