Newspaper Page Text
i ME OGLETflflBPB ECHO.
Sub#ftriptHm Rato*T
• i «*— ...
s moctba... 1.00
-«e
Trrm* C**k i* Adn***.
: jCISt'I j ac i*p«f •‘tst ui.u* tfe« ceoa»7 u poifl
VotfcW ftTBE «kcb MbKnh«r two w**k* b*f<w« the
inlion at bui it wibocrlptHm it cct
« wad, th« p*p«r U At ocoa awMflfeMMi
-Vny per*«s wfe*> will *en<3 a* <rf fir*
w* ttclwcri!-* with glO cath, wtU tw acLUed to
o.. - jwt i aw^.-rtjdto* tn%. Ho oich nt««.
The l!one«»t Farmer.
Happy I corn! ifce firmer 'a life.
It* vsnoan roonda of wholesome tod ;
An hrmw-q man 1 with Turing wffk, "
Aa J offspring hettee to rbe Htl.
Thrice L»p>py, «oresy!— in fci* 6reut
PltUx n.r dvitn rand the irutt in God;
. Hit* t »rb more « reight from east 10 weet
Th«n poiit coMK ever trod. 5
-
-
Hi« gain ** no low? to other men ;
Hi- 8’aPwffirt blow* inflict no wound;
.Not busy with Liu fongne or pen.
fie aueatocs ‘ truthful skv and ground.
•
Parser with seasons sod the suu
bs ure'e co-worker 1 sll bis skUl
Obedirace.ev'u S. waters nm»
«:.d. bio*, herb, beari thsir laws fuilll
.
vSrrrss-.
How I h*„r'v'i- 811 y i» th( the f farmer ii-mtr a . hfe. life '
e 1
TAKEN AT HIS WORD.
-
A «-wwws>». wide e*M>k’k:telien, with - a breath •'•w— of ««
grape grape tikwaoms hlonMoms coming coming in in at at the the open open
' inflows, table and full a glistening ecsrlet tin pan on
the of dewy, straw
berries waiting to be bulled—this is our
same; and our drama! i* pertrma con
sist of Mrs. Perkins, whose drowsily
licking knitting.iife.lles, keep Maltese time to
the pnrr ol the overgrown cat,
a id a pretty young girl with rather a
flushei! face, who hid just entered from
a doorway leaihng to the hall.
“ Well, ’ said Mrs. Perkins, looking
op With that ineffably wise expression
whirit ia imparted to- the human
conntenahoeTiy perched obliquely rottad the silver bridge spectacles of the
un
nose, .“ha ain’t asleep, is-hc?’—
z Yf'M, he is,? waa the answer.
. : Glory bs thaihked tor that, at least,”
said Mrs. Perkins, fenittiflg-needle, apparently impaling
herself ona long which,
1 owever, entere.1 harmlessly into the
l orn slie.ith that she wore at her side,
• "There leased will iu a five scalloped re.J_ of flauneL at
be minutes peace,
last. You’re tired, ain't you, Dora?”
“ Yts,” raid Thwslora White, “ I am
Idher tired.”
'hat Hut the her languid accurate voice spoke phrase plainly would
more
hsvs been "very tir««L”
Theisli.ru White was a tender, soft
■ veil irl of eighteen, with a complexion
■ 1 f pearly clietkft— clearness, and a rose apiece straight on
nr h pirl with her a 'pnr^» chin, ami
1 one and pleading a dimple on l<.M>king at a
? When Petty,, She way Wlie of down beside yon
window, spoke where the sat mignonnette
i ie
- 1 -smted _ grape Wiissiims were swaymg in
.ffijjaiMAr
' iw!s SfetaSte 1 *
no r.uriuesa 1., be m, tlyin’-no, not if
lut wus hu?k f. rly Guhh over! Booia,
-1 nwp, HDHrl - thi« wnt r^erht and 4 other
kieps tiling is wronftf That.» the way Re
it up, I’d as soon wait on the
*
llu-.si.irH smiled faintly, and arched
her i'vebrows.
“Wh.v. Mrs. Perkins, von don t mean
to compare my Uncle Joseph with »o
obnoinmw »-periSHon.* as ?<>« ‘
to?” she said demurely.
‘■Well,” Sind Mrs. P-rkius,reflective
ly, o tltoyoiin't so unbke, after aU. I ;
declare, sometimes, when lie gets in hi* •
tantrums, t’ve two minds and a half I
rive Irm * gco.1 »h«h«.. Ihere.amt.
i o aetiaii in a man s hern so unreason- ,
able. Toil can't please him no way ,J«“
(an fix it,” Perkins.
Wc can at least, try, Mrs- .
“Yes. and that s jest what a a spihn
liimi Ila kTTUws very- well Unit if b ®
r.-as to want the moon, you d hunt up
f He l-Tigest. step ladder and trytoreach children
d. down. It ill avs did want.aud spoil Uncle to :
let’em have all they your
Joseph amt nothin lmt a grown-up .
child.” - hive , all ... he •
" But l don t let 4 lira
wants, Mrs. Perkins fish there , d
" Ami a |.r. 4 tv kettle o
he if you did. Humph 1” and the old
housekeeper pounced upon her ball as
she had, for a moment identified it
with the personage under discussion. ,
“ ft mightn t be- anch a had idea,
said TI,e,Hlo», after a moment’s thought
........... tM ,., Wr
“Be von -er«5.» ... jlfiroMt , „ - *
__
“ Hush V —- from . . her ;
seat with uplifted finger. “He is ;
awake; he wants me.
And she was.gone, swift, noiselessas
:l white-wing-.l dove ln-forc Mrs. p ® r ' j
kins.--,uhl volunteer to go in her stead
•• Yes, said Mrs. r erkms to ln.rs.-lf,
her knitting more .vigorously fhm ;
>ver. Meanwhile Theodor* -, hastened , , S
U P
stairs into a closely curtainedmeto-room, .
where a qnerrulona .fid gentiemim
tortured with a h 7Po .
Olid a very little AHiite actual tie 6“®”“/ .
Uncle Joseph ill, ’ •
•.list he was very t'!!ln , ’ H
7”? .imlily ', healththan >et ov, , e In |,rm«etr» m.
. ■
a., ,1 hie f me UP _ nto h^sem- :
screw. niecehur
,We ot a nut-cracker as Ins
nedlr entered (be apartment aud came
.o his bedside floor till
^ the °?
?r ” b
oearf-d’'rhcltoTWelb ^.r
, marl.d Lucl. J.reph nngrsc 1 iv.
JO t • H |°7f.^ Theodora ^ sdoth’ing'v g!y ’
“P V? n W rre r*
, f- T 'i'“, „ V-'
„p u , skin hot face flush.
j toil,,,, room is enough to. threw
to SSbvtoSi’’ ane into a fever 1 Onen ° p A every every door door
^Tto'l Vtithon. ^ " w-« heaitatirin Then,
^ jf^tour wlmtows , threw
tt aree and re,
,
'tor,Vl ^ s
s.eameil like like » a flood flood of of ft..rv tore radiance rwtmnee
t i'. e .J^°? t i nu t ^MWBMDSr» W flirtte^
Unde jSeph^t l toHte of Stoe 1 ^
to. 0-w-w w !” roared the sick man.
JKKWfi* ECp tTiaTT»rove<l fremdisea^ lus luxurs
^oyouwauttoblindme-toblowme do it, Uncle
‘ fOTmtold me to draw the
O Stint the windows quick
J? W a ******
Oglethorpe Echo.
By T. L. GANTT.
! “ Wfil,” «*iJ Uncle Joeeph, aa his
j niece mentary returned aheence, to hia “ what lied aide did after he a ? mo¬ "
s ay
-rery mtlv’R
uncle. **
■ < Offended mb d«d i at -t wiiat, pray da de
.
manded CucleJoseph. being told
anppoae at to go to
«‘ eJea \ “ ! aba»«ed Theodora, quiet
. „ . .. ... ;
L t
! v. Mr. Joscpn While tell na< K, flat nas and anu
motiouieas, among ins pillows.^
' tneodJfq, yonareato oi. ^
■■ *
, ?
her in sur
"
° Tbl^.i Theodora °- brought l in a nrat 1 little little
?i°« the snowy, a no^Sri folded l Si*nailrin uaf k n ths^flinkfl'it til nai eu it
1Ln , on ,;„®,y*/' ! J ® J( * e .e „ h h ) k “J , . “J* ,
j threw down the spoon with a petulant
unlike a bark,
. -, rp I,A *! . ■ . ■ T .
*»|®r- Themlora Uuww took it to the *b*JP*K bowl and started
up
°b^ < bentlyfo jj® 1 1 -,the ® dout. e ^ ot ® pil .
• '
o y L* the pig-pen, ilncto ”
***** „ Are *b. ® r! ! ly zv Mrs. ; r ?‘ r L Pe T kin^if b ® ?f a rgot ® f
®“ oa 01
; £**’***"• ,, JStJS . T . H ^ R*
j . "'‘“em.. ten. ,,, o the b( owl
>
wfll^n WUlyou rflnw allow m m, to to have have «n nnin
. _
I 1 ““ * 4 b‘“j own. goid, if tiiat old *1"®*®
8 T ®?7 m-one u iwn
.stairs will add the nutmeg and give it
another boil, (juick, now m ge mg
■ hungry t A man must eat, eveu if he s
at death *'*<** • '
A minute afterwards Mrs. Perkins wss
^® ' bousekeeper, what s
,
•
,
ami uncle would like use it war ned uj o,.ee imre
m<,r, : L,. What ore you smiling ... about, . , Dra. _
: : o°" r 1 *“?!*“**_ L _____...
wasut, said lira. 1 erkuis keeuL.
** Will you be s« quick as.you can,
1 loeodoiu. lit
®*.™ be lshun^y.
■when ili piora re-utcred . • . b ,
r
»■*»'- ‘be invalid bad taken
•
"Why d.dn , t you stay all ,, day , ? . he
j 8T uncle T hurrietl all I could ”
(< todeed^uncl^^h r II lc ih^
! 3!wwi tore the gruel, uncle?”
‘. , fc h*»PglH wita ^ ^ to^Iebatc
(STestioh he tiv> weak
Th«M-lora* further He waitetl
Jf . to press the
^rewnUvhei.^ncd^his nil „ ( . t ; 0 ur th*.r but ahe did not* and
j eyes ' the least
‘ Thwitors . , th,. \vo r M ’
o " !”
..2S* betoreltwteeolT^ i««t -sie sreseiful of that “*
'^el r (. « • ^
„
.-Threw—mv—gruel—awavl J - .gasped
,,' ^
."i? „ toW “® dul not ““ want " am n '
■
I- Furies ain't fiddle
•
, , !{ kl fVL7 ow ) JV t|,j ri* a “„ time
. __ u ,n,.K . ii I iiadn t been
1 a ,e.ir u,~ 1 e..u!d go twice
-
_ v r d ,eig__h e .“h add -d
k my'life a
Oh dear ' to think I
^ „ 'r walk again * t"
. , b hr Je counting
, • nj 9 brought ^tim in a
fiS/totousK , , nLto , f fete „ r ie | this Cw - *o
;
fault with it. *
.. • ■ Bli> j Theslora lailside as she set
to “Sd^yw&fc^ ( he’ “the
gGffirf ,', that R reMly
Velmas t v ’
"' '
aVwto anvbolV ** fid
a said Uncle
f , ■ ,, , f B n - ; *i
••XSTSwto,. l .T* 1 11 * ”**’• ' ’»*■ .
, „
“Theoflora Theodora. 1 ”
d „ I’ll uncled dismherit von ' t" ’
“ Vera well "'“J® j
1Kve t(l f(V( , me
Itos annovan.e j weakened weakened m<* m torn-
7 ..
Stflrtl toKfldd reu m«M Di.^tora? "tZtere
,eU J
* H nc jj u f a kju on ‘
, b
-..you * fold r-lm/you me yourself, uncle, that yon
, me „n say,- - How was I
-know that'this was an exception !’’
An irate rejoinder frcuible.l ou Uiicle
j„^.ph’s tongue, when euddeiily be
.-aught sight of a blue column of smoke
wreathing v™ up P under bis window.
TSSitWa bat ami *e «^tea. ?-• be s?r. ejaculated, putting
.. kba.
^j, kin(1!jn(r , m , the kitel.eu tire."
” N”. it isn’t! ’ veiled Uncle Joseph,
the house.son fire 1”
. .
Uncle Joiepl, listencl wian»rLslled hair
an fi dilate.!eves.
“ Help I help 1 ” be bawled, yelled, hut no one
responded. L-mder still he but
" Vetui'vaTn. bed to
! ■ “ Am I am to stay here in my
be burned to death?” he asked hnns,
and scrambled out with agility that
fairly surprised himself.
^ S efvaut', were arrayed .on the
lawn staring in all directions to find
the exact locality of the fire, wfei the
gardner uttere.1 i shriek.
“ if there a n!fc rnttster, as hasn’t l^ft
bis bed for year, a runnin' as if. a tiger
- ■
1 “Where-where’s-the fire?”
Uncle Joseph, gazing wildly around
bim. ;
IMrs. Perkins rnshad-to-tbe front door,
her cap-string?* never.faw streaming. a* pack
“ I anch of
IdjoU inmytoife r
afore, and—wliv, if there ain’t master
^Sisee it nnc,e. bnt von
THE ONLY PAPER IN ONE OF THE LARGEST, 'mvoT ^INTELLIGENT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA.
“ But. ancle, you’re sick.”
■■ f 1 U =fl* i? ______ J nn t?
- i
— 1 do, -. Theo
OI course
to^“* hern effected aa K r “*•? and ’A Theodora Y* car mentally * .ton!
congratnlated hers elf on the snccessof
tier plan of treatment. And bncle
J«,.h never altmled to the day on
whichhisnieoe had taken himaoun
.......
T,J « »«r Orleans Demo^l rays :
The late Alexamlre Grailhe, whose re
nsaina were brought from Europe in the
Nureml-erg, ha.i s singular
rather unpleasant experience on the
8 -M of honor in his v.rnng days. Like
aia * iTf ' ! ' tHr '>.is young Frenchmen
*"rsies wtuoh led to meetings on the
ReUl ut toour. In the first instance the
duel w«s fought with awards, aud
-r.fLrt;-;,,!,' French men was run through
the Vsidy, and not only suffered greatly
from his wound, but exhibited,. for
rears afterward, the effect of the injury
in a ccrtrnn inclination of bis body,
which was not natnral, owing to the in
ternal abscess resultiugfr.mi the wound.
s „ me time after he iB bi » second
rencontre, in which he received the bul*
let of his wiversary through the body,
Strange to say, the beneficient missile
passeil through the which former threatened wound,
opening the abscess
t j ip estimable gentleman’s life ; and by
inflicting a new, severe, and had painful
wound, not only cured him, but the
vitoct of straightening his person to a
r ’K‘ J ],» anil exact perpendicularity, appeared so
carriage and even un
naturally stiff similar hanghty. exjwrience. of the
Q a it e a wounds is related by Dr.
Q [
Guthrie in his eeletirated work on gun
sll()t „f th»t distinguished
British chieftain who received his death
woiiwl 011 the plains of Cl.almeftein tb«
memorable battle On the Sth of January,
j ,q|5. M’e refer to Lieut. Gen. hir
Edward I’akenhom. In the attack by
th ® B«tfsb at Hie close of the last cen
tiir ^ iu (hl , pe,,,,,.!, f or tit|iatioiia 011 the
island of Martinique, Col. Pakmiham,
w kg led the storming party, received s
musket ball, recovered which passed through tho wound. his
n-ek. He from
but was for some years afterward very
m(|rkw] by it> ^anug his head with a
strong inclination to one side of his
body. Hcren or eigltt. years necotnl subsequent
| v - - wa* tht* mm to as
einu the ladders wh. eh ba.lbe.ui estate
ii whvd against the walls if Baflajos, iu
Sp|lin m tb b n V, : a„t assault of the
Hnti^h f>n that fortided town, and waa
wa)1Nlnlt t _, (mg} r peck the toll
® z ®®‘ «'-> u sUimlposition.
A
A loec»motivo ran over a gootl deal of
h'*wn»«i experience near a freight -switch depot
engine 4 » Knasas .• city re.*ently. baggage A
with three ears was
backing rapidly, wl.i-.i a man r«»h.«l
trim a side crosciug aud when dissppiared thetnuu
b.-uiath the wheels ; »nd
h si passed, the mangled and
K .ttwilz w,m fouud
Iving ai-r .ss the rads m a p ml of blood.
jj B was an officer of the Russian im
purud guard during tlie Crimean war,
wounded during an aasaBlt upon the
Ke> ! »u. He was sent home to his father s
estate near Moscow, and enjoyed until _he the
pleasiireH of aynung n.d.lemim
i *LeI rejoined. the arre'tot imperial guard. • Hi«
was for thejiherilt" a ptilitleal
offence, and sentenced t.i.
tryttew for uapitialtou-ffecirtluneleiuif life. Tlie captain and eleven
: ! oiB.-era relouel.lmtriie t-o ot
the plot was discovered
and the ringleaders were sentenced to
death. On account commute<|-to of hi* high rank
hi* sentence waa service
for life in a Cossack regiment in eastern
Siberia! He escaped from the military
prison at Moscow, made his-wavto the
Black sea, and passed into the Turkish
dominions. He arrived in New York in
1863 and joined the seventh volunteer
- regiment, serving until the close of the
**r. Id 1870 he went t . Rome aud
11 mte au nnsneceaafirl.eff-- to secure a
pablon from the Czar, ih- death of
' • -----:.l o.. .* annuity, nut
nave him 820,000, with which he return
nLUalui-ttoited-ri te ti o ci i.l .ii. tH .. d m
: Kansas. His fortune went to waste in a
ln*l speculation, ^ and he wan thrown
o;vij it uiuca nuahv
failed to keep-him out of debt. He
: spoke seven langiiage*;lie wash gradu
ale of Heidelberg; and he ha.1 two
paid Ijoslied board bills in hi* pocket when he
ont his brains. .
S£“sSlw' the habitual postponing
- astmation, ererrtbiig that they not
of arc com
necessity to tlo Immediately,
Now. <l«4sys are not only damaging to
present prospects, but they dilatory are deatruc-,
five of ultimate success. A ran
not to be depended iipen. Tlie
slightest pretext is. sufficient for him to :
disappoint von. If an employee, the
sooner he is disdiarged, the greater There the
advantage to the properly employer. called “ arc af
those who may be
t r..o.„, me,.'” They are always busy
petting ready to go to work. In the
morning they walk around, carefully in
spret their dnti.-s, and say: " Plenty to
AbSrt three
Kd^ri^ bright and early, tomorrow , morning.”
day wilh them is simply nothing tbe reflec
tion of another, There is oc
mplishM. in a.whole life ; and their
western sun overtakes them and Buds
no preparation ,/age. for the wants and infirm
ides There is nothing to look
back upon but squandered the time loosens One
hour’s exercise in morning
the muscles of the limbs, sets the blood
dancing in the veins, and fits a man
physically U.vity and mentally for the day’s
; while one hour’s sloth after
hrtabfaRt prfHlncFR a torper from which
it is almost impossible to rally.
_J---- ----
- Wear a Smile.
will yon do”? smile and make
others happy, or be craWied and make
. .Yon
everybody aronnd you miserable?
can iiveamongH>wr&aiblsmgmg hinl»,
or in the mire surrounded by fog* trad
he^l^ ^t tSls ^
the other baud, by sour looks, cross
LEXINGTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1878.
An Ice-Making Machine.
StwnSeHalid, *}<*■} *»» .«Hun» ernafo J>
vented a machine fo- making ice in any
climate—the ti;,. of what hotter m calle.1 the better—throng ankydrons snl
use
ptmrrvus oxide a liquid that smells like
a mixture of brimstone and coal gag.
H e exh.bited his process in the Centen
m al exhibition, and Mr. Oscar Vezin
tubular boiler or refri^ator, fmm which
the vapors were drawn by-a pump and
and compressed in a second tabular
boiler, where they were.condensed by a
a stream of. Croton passing through tne
tabes. The condensed oxide was sent
back to the refrigerator through asmall
containing pure Crotoii water, and the
water in these cases was frozen within
twenty-four hours. The same oxide is
used for months, the of only escape being Mr.
through the action the piston.
Vexin says it costa sixty-five worth cents is a
pound, and only four cents'
lost during the production of
fonr tons of ice.
When the writer entered the mom all
the steam and water pipes were covered
with frost. Workmen were lifting the
cans ot galvanized iron from the water
tank, and dumping out blocks of ice
each weighing eighty six pounds. The
cans are There shaped is like trouble the box of an opera
glass, no in removing
their contents. The ice was of a yellow
ish hue, but Mr. Veain said that was
owing to impurities in the Croton water,
With pure spring or well water he de
dared it would come out pure as crystal,
With larger machinery including he said material, thatthe
cost voav o! W. production, snd insnrance and in
labor, lfibor, wear wear and tear, tear, insurance and
terest, terest, would would not not exceed exceed 81 81 per per ton. ton.
The tank used contained 640 cans but it
was said that llie machinery would turn
out an averag*. uf * ton an hour.
A few drops of the oxide were-turned
into a tnmbler. Within thirtv seconds
the inside was coated with ice. Half a
cup of warm water was then poured into
the tnmbler and in the twinkling of an
0 ye the f| glass was tilled with snow the' “ A
t ; )n Q ( 1P etaiff droppisl in right
n i«e„ would freeze out Satan.” ’ said a
’ of the Solntiou dropped into
^almo£tUowriter sj,ime Wss Beaded
ttl sweat
beoumekiada affjoo-nnd white’ the palm
witW frost. A burning
H t*nmition tbrewS?7iSJSSs followed ■ similar to and,^Weria that rtftde
f^Kyrr the* hand r^coveml “ride, its
odir of
however, was linhearable,'and a choking
ln the throat was felt for some minutes
...................
j p A bystumler
such iwveiicnrc. This may be trne, tint
mnoe the enrpriainf? ivl venturer of Mon
sieur Paxaf, no true business man will
putJiis money in any invention until he
thru., uglily investigated it. Prelim
inarv steps, however, have been token
for the formation of ft eompany, and a
certitleate uf incorj*.ration 1 as been filed
of the secretary of
,V«ui Font Ain.
——--
: t Lillie Bog’s Opportune Tisif
The Lancaster (Penn.) Framin'* of
savs ; The other night the residence
Dr. P. - W. Hiestand, at M.llersville,
u-rw-duii-gtarToualy qnietiv asleep .■utored their while beds, the
tamilv were in
T ,„ i ■. !o j B th e
te r c ellar— door, t l ire ugh -which he
imaiitau-li t,i insert some instrument and
L thelilstdeTidnr^~trrthe cellar
found au axe. with which he cut a
| 10 ( e in the kitchen door at the head of
the cellar stair*, aud -o succeeded in un
the door. In the kitchen lie
f ottu ; ,j Bn „{ d bo appropriated and tweuty-tivc to his own cents use of
H p ‘ a c ,, lB
m lk IB()UB v. In the kitchen was the
iootofV . tog—small cop#-with tin l gentle—quite but,
onab | e t 0 a burglar, as
^gacity , be Rw juel will show, possessed effective of that
which often .S more
thou mere brute strength. After the
bnr g} nr had thoronghlv j£ inspected the
u ... a with me
j u Ji(r B rent result alsive stated, he be
thonff |„ i,i„,Kcif of the n^iL.
ri: g um »~^5ve. But no Warner bad be
opened the door leading up Stairs, than
the little dog beeauLMB. part in th.ejflrniPtt.
( ,f ^ ietl y f hmt that dog looked on uu while _uw
ie vi lain prowled sliont on the the first first
fl „ or . without but audible protest had
his masteris boots ana the milk
rn „, 1( , T of his mistress stolen before his
very eyes ; evidently the owning of ihe
up-stairs’ door was what he had waited
sSSssS. tin above
the robberv below and dung, r
Iwfore the'eautio, is thief had got half
way ^p. Of coui-sc, the doctor sprang
to the rescue on the instent and made
_
some noise in doing hastily to. retreated, , 4Tie and
j.eard tlie noise,
Rl „,i j.;, escape. Hut the house
w aa saved, and saved by the dog ;
a good deni more intelligently and really
than the geese saved Home, It will lie
some consolation-to the foiled ridicufons burglar
to knbw .h,,' cause of his
fiasco, ,’goo.t and to learn that Dr. Hiestand
g „ t look at him and will have no
trouble timoeem-s. in identifying him when the
•
Dangers of ^Bernard.
,
north wind was blowing it along in
blinding clonds ; still, notwithstanding of
the remonstrances of the preprietor
, h e caatiuo,they Night determined overtook to continue them at
their journey.
t j, e bridge of Mudry, about sn hour’s
]is t an cc from the invent. Three
the patty soon after became so exhanst
ed that they were finable to proceed,
b where ,it the they others arrived started about for the three hospital,
a. M.,
having mistaken their way and wandered
about rev. r*l hours in tbe dark. The
monks immeti lately set out for the res
one of the other three and travelers, taking
with them their .Togs a 8 good harS
of restoratives, and, after some
work, They succeeded m
tlmm-one dca.1, «ul the legs and
of the other two portly frozen. One of the
survivors <lwl after hi**
to the hospital, but the other is in a
.way to reoovejy,,^-
Some one wisely calis^sip The
rot of conversation.
^
’
THE LAKE WITHOtT BOTTOM.
.A. tr..j .rtt r 'Itoe. . r ira
Nevada waaltaina, ffihteipri*?
The MT J * • lengtifby
j ake ig nesI (y fatty miles
f Tom 4,000 gftrea feet to abm twenty in width. It £3
put Tahoe is level of the sea.
Lake 6,216 «SSi„ feet above ^y the
Ie vel. Tke lak. V&I
islands, aererai of which, near the
0ne northward 1lU spira, wfcWi seen the t„ ^the
lake' seems shore
less, is perfecHy target white. A large island,
• probably the in the lake, con
iains 6 ve or mx square miles of compara
, tiveiv level ground, and is covered with
vegetation. this island a number
a s-sa.Ii'S
Fernaode 7 . Tie lake is of immense
: depth :jt ip said that near tfie center
floO fathoms of line failed to find bottom.
1 'he waters of the lake are brackish,
except immeiwtely about Truckee the point
where the waters of the river
flow into li
Owing to the brackishness of its
; waters, and to its brackishaess, great depth, the or lake to both
depth & WI19naB8s - newer er
Althongh the lake is generally very
rough, owing to its being the exposed to
sweeping fearleshy westerly navigate winds, it in Piute all In
djans
tiona and alnost at all times on their
tote rafts. tu These rafts are often nothing
■ more
when the raftiaintanded to accommodate
more than one person two or
bundles ar» lashed together and drawn
‘ into the thev^eeneraUv shipe of a clumsy boat. Near
shore shore note these crafts
5 about, biri they ftequentlT f^rlessly hoist a
' made made of of s a blanket blanket and aud fearlessly steer steer
away away so so far far ont ont upon upon the the lake lake that that only
their sail remaine visible. These tule
boats verr elnselv tie resemble the cats
marans used bv natives of some of
the island* of "the South Pacific. They
are bo buoyant that it is impossible to
sink them. Far oat in the lake among
full islands books. thev Bet their they long viait lines, strung their
of These on
rafts, ami sometimes bring in not less
than 300 ttmnds of trout at one trip.
The trout are sold at ten cents per
pound atthe lake, thcrelore it will reml
ily be seen that fhliing T*- is a profitable *—
Imsine^. At _ end - of the lake
tlie north or tower
are a dozen or mor) islands of reek of
of-solid aud ^ct«3 pictttfeaqt 1 © form. frqm^800 These to
are are
400 feet in monstS hoig^. At a distance tRey egg's
look like muahreoms or
atandii.ig on Rtoma—radi eggs aa might
have been produced by the roe,
a
.. nwell . . ■ ' ■ oat ^ ■‘yf norawr ^ l ^ «r. thSTbflinto BttiW
he Uaa Bonn&e&tke Jake at
some of these
ttit* longest tad line at his command, was
.to«'>l,. to bxittom.
Oue of tin largest of these . lslaml ,
the tabIwlmo one sceuifrom toward the
head oi the lake- whoU.v perpea
dpfilar there mastevslope on all sidev which it is “* ftotght
; might be scaled m some way. A story
Ftenwru*. current theffwat at the.lake .■“.b»®ri that John L..
' ‘
;® P? 4 *' 4o4 “* h'P 0 .'. 4 ™*™®*. ft
t'elieved th at lie M l- Ins field glasses and
; Rrm summit ® nth*r^,.istrura™ta,-,f of the rock, and nuiuy value oil ®P the 4a
have bee n m-de te-el
s sooiiro thciu. artarlwr
Hj® last attempt to »Mda he ..
py a _••
*•* b,V a sailor, who used a tong r p ,
threwingutoupwatd Pick, ttllyi«*u?ht«pm ffien drawing *
projecting point of
■ bunael^ up amt agstn tlaoa u n g
! 4 ® 4be 4 f c k ®b° T ®
i ° to 4 about 150.feet, . more rtol®' when.Iie 4 '™'® waa °n b
: to‘b~w h» roper»d never
j cams.near
; reaching lex el ®‘
*? .
' effected the ‘ * ascent, MSB i s "_fL and when b L,” ha^tnaiw he ijoal j
- #* ‘"Shands <*<«"> b® were'bieedmg fSS^£^2! and hewas^ent
®°1* scratchi-d from i .< ■
—-imeninave now cone «6e, Jliat the
1 1> “*7 ' tn ® ‘h which the tti 11 g
. rlim.I. i r in it ilToZmid I",' " " ^ fr^
j ^»'® r th ® ® “f ®“ i U ® P7n»°*» from B
r
j Vwoi r - liiei&U n- ---’^rwiirw WiRntli - hi °\ inR u ^
hbwwrtb^rattlesnake n^tUesnakea. , _. It, It .
^e ''Ae ia is . Alive . with “ftbejjpjbw ia is
i ®“P}^®^ 4 ‘b«'Hand b 84 . 4 b« A® ™ 84
■'l" 14 ”' J - .**<>« .Wood, .... .
**' 1 ’® to 3-^T 1 !* 1 '® 8 ,***- ** their homes
, „ tbe eBB8
| ” f '2 " ' ,,ss i f, isfend
n the
Y e ftini
j SSJaSUj- f . fh m*'the ran awav
j?® < ^®f crevices of
{"* k .V 1 "*?„?! I nld U h hare been “ done “
t b olliei snak.s.
7
,
lai«w Walk to (let Married.
J he ^®® a-™.(V Vi S Hmre^f «•«
a domestic event; ha Iran secluded pired there <
1 ®uch mtcrest to our com
?«««•?. ivamelv, the marriage of Mms
i Lambier and Mr._ John Va uri m. ^
! JaV|es). ^2 B?rk
i Mr. not’be
{«“ «d Vanglm
-.license, and b®’"‘ ie primeeded with it
*9 4 “.^gbtoen.uules
'“ey went to the Btv. Mr. Gilmonrs,
;-dmtanee J*?*™ miles, where
S^S'torh^r '•v’tal 1 her ,, tr nfi .ntj Hter^to tour miles, and
. h ™V "h® buudred _ and twenty-three
nl, m° *®*» D 7- “^bs "mlrtit 9 /7 poraiut 4 ’mt “11 of this niatri
! was t raveled on foot
*Q . „ S ®** Whrt ® astonished S P*"’.
Natives . were yesterday
an nnasunl sight on Carson street. An
atKirigmalbcansndbellewerepromen^l- ing omr tbvfifigh;attired
conx*ta» latest ’ L Jbey e **J® a n I
silk bah .. , f . Y*T/»**i
| eoseflS a^l^ht kid gh
coveredi ‘Ut beads, an_ b_,
,
Anecdotes «f Dog*.
dogs, . showing iu.ri.iui. the - .CT highest s-Sre exWnM order of by
;
atinct, tlle following if not of reason. Telesios relates
! fact of his own dog, to
»bich he was an eye witness: The ani
mal bacl h,i *‘ n hy another °f
1 P'cater strength; wa.’observed when he returned to
; hi. home it that he ab
a** 111 ®* 1 * ro m half the quantity of the
! <*<*» °f the neighborhood, and
1 ’bem upon Ins horde of fixid.
kmgnlar proceeding attracted hie
j P«“h>r * be s reaalt attention, observed who, closely that they all
,D 8 .
/ went d out ‘bey together proceeded Following them he
i oa ® by several streets
Z r xt SSSttf
. withdraw his head from Jh whenever
b> 4o so Reflecting, however,
J bat lfbe ahonld attempt any snch prac
“°® when his master or keeper were
‘"bout they might so tighten hisoollar aa
*° P™rmt its retietition, he always re
framed from the manoeuvre daring the
! ““J. but availed himself of the-privilege
roaming about the neighbor
,n * **Ha.that wore stocked with sheep
. and lambs, someol'which_on snndry
: oc
casions he wounded or killed. Bearing
™ bls “°uth the marks of his misdeeds
i **e would go to a neighboring stream to
^ asb *be blood, having done which
be would return to his kennel,and, lie slip
aWlKHa Ring h'S hesd into his collar, SS5 down
: ‘
»>i „ night. .
; Mr. Jesse gives the following anecdote .....
of remarkable sagacity luncolnshirerilf^any m a dog hf-long
; 8 farmer m
! we ” person goes into the farm
7 “®d during the day the dog takes no
. beggar beggar _ enter enter the the
no4,c no4ic ?- ?- W. If, however, however, instantly a a him,
8®atly premises premises lays tbe the^dog hold do* of instantly hvs stick goes goes or to to clothes
i and quietly lesds him to thsdocr o! tho
dwelling eUing house, house, and and sees sees him him srfe safe off
the s premises nremi868 under under similar similar nrecantionpe precautions.
Ihd in the night the faithful animal will
I apprehend gentle all^ persons until alike, bidden aud_ never by
re.ease a grasp
. h’smsster ot mistre s s . The latter has a
® 18 ter living on an adjoining farm. In
: order to make a short ent.between the
I 4wo bouses a single plank w»» .ttwowu
across a< decp brook. The wife of Urn
owner oftlie dogeonstautly httlochiaren aud toh.s
ly^lruste visit her to their annt. Nieam- care
“t* 1 baits tho little group of children
when he to the narrow bndge,
fwrfuete toa them Rohl ov« me the child by rt
wa y® taking *&%*%$* of a gar
Ho thin . awaitH ®*“ to thc ‘b®’* ; r return » 4 "™“ and d oonvevH conve y"
oThc^chlwT’a .-MjftAgSI:
owner (an engineer the^heada of a stcamuhip), musician
U>a ped over of the a
,* n the orchestra and flew t<» the rescue,
StnttoZr. one of tho ruffins diig dropped
Tim was with
( - n g; . u jj -R, v removed and draggeil off the
■ i,,,,; i„^ n UC castomeJ to the
( occaaioris ..>mt>aiiy of chiklren amThad^oTTminy
evinced strong « proofs f of
hfe ( n the theatre
^ 'j,,, ba( , thu appearance kra.t of reality
^ 1>rn ,„ he hastw ed to
exhibit the ..,^ promptings of his kindly in- 1
y J 1
. -
------
Snails as a I elicacy.
llillg hke 99. W •6
snails are sent up daily- to tlie Paris
maraets from the gardens of Poitou,
Burgundy, where they Champagne, -pecmllv reared and Proyepjie, Fir this
are
purpose, the natural delicate fte*«W «*
flesh being unproved hy feeduw
tb® m oiu bivls of aromatic herbs It is
not only as n delicacy that snails are so
generally appreciated m France, lhey
Is0 , take high ranfcas a most untntious
• food, a«d from the time o, the Bmnana
' ‘I' >w, ' war, ‘ baye been regarded as and an
, excellent medicine in consumption According
; weakness of the chest. to
j water, p a y 01I sixteen they emtem per cent, seventy of nitrogen, I - cent., one of
..percenkol fat, two per cent of salts
an. li ve in' per i-y ifl,— of miile ta n n iin ul
____ In preparing them them for jorthe the table tel.le
j.repari.ig well wU washed T-*L. and then
j J thrown, thrown, ,<>y ”* I shells she ,“*? tot Us and and , A^“ all, into
' xgafcog^wh^-' cookeef. cooked. tf: l 'i v\ n r m."? ci “ liquor 1 ' T ^' ro « then a I? 1
. tdl „J .well well The 1 ____ is
; , strained Btra i n ed off, off. the the contents contents of of the the shells shells
m th a suitable instrument, and
| chopped sardines and up bremi into crumbs. a. fine hash The Bhells with
f-f?rtf^«JShS ’’roiled liglitirte l utter, ptrnifhfal wifli
fr? PtT- S’1”^’them 'Ft r*£2 ,
!■ V*«*9**A ««»
®P ^ t,>lu tRae^tera l rsP'd'j 4!ir " a ?’ 1 4b ® ^.jj® « 0 nnn
• j?
try ®«”P ’ .*? 1 ®to < ^'b™ *® rman 8 ?- 7 ® X ®®P 54 4 la son,e . tow f
i ports of Bo hemia.
___
— Berth of a Pig. „
^ Ir - ®°bertaoo, in M* “Notes aneclote on of
Africa," J gives tho following
atl ui t r«tiou of justice iu that.qnar
of the 5 Cube: At Tantnm. the mother
, u , dal ttat attracted by its cries,
which were caused by a which pig having had
stolen something from it of it
^sss«l3rsr-."=w® broughi forward, and urged .with such
■ b were involved
j^jt vi tbat manT ‘not persons at the the
who were born time
transaction .'took place. As the animal
^ r fema je, the damages were ealeu
j at e,j a t a higher rate, and the result was
that every one connected hy the most
distentaffinity with the unhappy mother,
to tbe number of thirty-two, husband,
, childMn an ,j a! j that were most dear,
wwe w>b j ag a remuneration for the. loss
received f j, The avsrice of the chiefs, who
a proportion of the spoil nothing was
only restrained when there was
more to be disposed of. The same mon
; roas pra c t iee is adopted on the loss
fowl the bairns calculated in the
8ume waT> Whole families have been
. ^ ^ chicken.
----— *" " ---- :
-
The Bro>fn<*st 'wedding w ITwRiin^.
1 have
The brownest » • ^®
^^^“'^l®
j, ,, L,d ther.-c.pt i.m was given bv
YOL. IV. NO. 19.
■
j FAR M. WARDEN AND HOUSEH OLD.
: oi<r.r.« c.ki.«..
..Ipiient a ladr writes the Fhrm Journal • »'„
; «>1<1 sW cubage m made liv wTth ahredd.no
ft hpa ,) of a n’acini Ibm
h K ., r knife or a slaw vourdi’sh entter then
! the " cut cabbage .^ in cour ^ over
'
jt viu^^Xt ,] ressm „ i. e 1 . W?ing int ilto ,
„^y thra a^lumn
it T one beaten ege with
Sp™ pe J „ ifis %rtfa btodWbT “ ^
■ T fr v cabbage, citepor shred quite
g nP have a spider hot on the stove in
whi p h is a ama fl quantity of bntter or
; : meat drippings, season anil put in the
cabbr.ge, and c.ver tight, stirring often
: tlikinlf c ,re tt does not soorch on the
iaw®5!«astt«5
nr an egg:, aud a eoffeecupfnl of boiling
; » a ter; cut up the batter with a half-tea
cup fui G f fl 0U r, and When stir it it boils; gradually stir in
{j K , jj 0t water. in a
, dessertspoonful of vinegar, aud a dust
of pep per, with a little salt. For the
mac # .thick sweet cream is an excellent
substitute.
p or hot slaw, prepare the same as for
cold slaw, cook tender, aud season pour over
; the dressing, or merely with
vim-gar before dishing up. corned be. with
go me l)ody has said that 1
boiled cabbage makes the best 366 din
: nerg a maD csn cgt j n a year. Torealize
t ^ e jnll measnre of excellence, the qual
SjjStSLS® ;ty j curing anil cooking of h' the hisT beef
^i^l^iH^x^xr^e ™
the lower end of the core. Skim the
------ floating ^ase _ ______...—, as nearly as yon can from
, the t i, e topofthewateriny.mrpot top of the water in yourpot of of boiling boiling
be ef, and an d about about one one hour hour before before ditmer dinner
; d rop m yOHr cabbagennd keep it boiling
; steadily and slowly until you lift are ready
todiah to jj s j, it jt. Now Row csrefully carefully it out
. o-ifi, witll a „ nicf?r>rvi/>r skimmer an.] and otf ,]«v lay the outride o on nptttter, layer,
,l ril ining well, take dear
an ; j yuur cabbage will come out
, f r( m grease <w scum.
irevipe..
Appub Custaud.— Pare and core six
*p p |ee; set them in a pan orith very
j itt j B water, and stew them until tender;
then putthem iu a pudding-dish With
K ’ fiH the centre* with sugar, s
aml [>mlr ov e them tt custar( i maile ot
B quart of milk, five eggs, four ounces
, )f miga r and a very little nutmeg; set
tRe piuUiing-di»U l iu a baking-pau half
,- ull ()f water, and bake half an Hour,
^ etXB it either Rotor cold at Die dinner.
'^ockwheat IU-ckwuct Cabbs.-To a quart of
add two level spoonfuls each
of imlian meal aud wheat flout; mix
,
«*« neztmorniug, then heat the remain
° Qoe *
Hashed Fowls.—'Take the meat from
cold fowl, and . ent it in small pieces.
Put half a pint of well-flavored
into a stew-pan, add ».little
and nutmeg, and thicken with some
flour and butter; let it ton!, then nut. in
the piecMnf fowl to warmpaftcr poached stewing
sufficiently, hud serve the hash, with with some 0
eggs on. a sprig round
parsley i.uthn center, and garnish
the pinto with pieces of fried bread.
Cokniso Bkrf.—F or 100 pounds of
beef lake seven omicjs pounds sattyTWo po'imds
sugar, two saltpetre, soda; two dissolve ounces
pepper, two ounces in
t,,......{ a half . gal lona -of water;
8klm , and let c.sd; when a scum rises
#ftitr ft tcw week* scald the brine over,
by Hlj ,|,,j n( . a u I keeping will moat kiV-p on
/ cqvettSl with brine; it a
aUll more . ,
ctaew-tw and «wa
The principal cause ol the disagreeab'e
,,f c j 8 tem water is stagnation, or
t , H >tiouless condition it remainsin
f f periods '.md of time. fresh Springs, and salt
all
of W ater ure in almost continual
raobon , eonaiautly receiving aud emit
; air ^ lu ,at, ^oqsiug cold and m-neral sub*
portion, form or
ensity- Tims the Almighty keeps thin
| ^ ^ pure, ',„i healthful alul invigorated,
m tightly,^ t; T ......„,e,i measiiralilv -i , n ,r ■ *>.......
^’ r ^ .° „ii this is true,
Rwnt M the water is moved by every
I rain storm lE».8. pouring in, pr every
a -55 C of liquid is silent
1 motioulcaa, ^ and soon'^bccomes stagnant,
*,, ^ lu a Bbort time a coat of
; thv ^j^ent covers the bottom and
. ia ^ f d ciBte
, T he cistern cover excludes the rays of
t) ( ( nll j bas {en sarroaiuhiig deoonipoei
tion. a]so The ke supporting the water and at lower
eartb eps a
-might preserve it in nearly its normal
B rt Itoi Wteh| - fe expanfivu
and, generally, impracticable. There
-
fore, have two or more small, cheap,
cement, brick or stone cisterns in, or,
i better Btill, outside, of every fanners
house. If one of these small,
j reservoirs, that will cost loss than a
year’s tobacco or and liquor, -washed is, clean in warm
’ weather, cmptic.1 months, water, every
1 two or three ram be ready
I paratively jmre, wiU generally
tor every day use.
’
.
I Chinaman Hanged Ter Held.
A San. Francisco Chinaman appeared
R &nst?asz in ,; and then, refund , to go on.
. mf .n,
Aa iltfur he again came to the
4 p ,,jj,. c nn ,j repeated his store. The
* fflw rs locked him up and tor'ced him
(0 , eU where the (dace was. Tuey hanging went
. (b ere, i. and found a Chinaman
b , t! neck to ft rafter in his own ns-m.
am j j 6a ,j. The Chinese tell coutradic
, orT st4 ,ries about it, and are in a great
: ferment and anxious to. get the Sail
: E ra[i tbe eisco Chinaman out of jail. holding It
Chinese court is now a
sessl „ Di 4nd the offil . erg thint[ ot mak.ng
a raid and capturing the whole lot—
sactanurUo Cor. Virginia ^ Cit.v Chron
’
. ———-.
C4W s of MisUken Mfntity.
Mistaken identity.is a fruitful
in the bands of tlie novelist, and
: art? three cases from York, which
t may aid the p reduction .of tke ever ap
been held, and. as a prisoner, was on
a*
cute.
Saltan Hasaan, wishing tow.
.world, and lay aside (or a time
anxieties and cares of royalty,
tlle C *““S* °* k » kingdom to his
minister, and taking with him a
amount of treasure m money and
i character visite .1 several of wealthymerchant. foreign countries in
a
with the tour, and Woming
eonne ot “ faw T*n greatly increased
1,18 «lready stock of wealth. His pro
i traded absence, however, proved a temp
i t& i ion 100 strong- for the virtue of the
viceroy, who. gradually forming leading for him
self * party among the men of
' emnrry, at length communicated to
the news of his own death and the 1 asnr
; pation of his minister; flmbng, mfar
v? strong to render an immei late
, 'vLJ.amu'Tn,.*!. Tn
<«gmto, and sow beca“« »»>•» “
buiroas the wealthiest of tier merchants,
|nrar did it wt^te eny eurowe wnto ne
announced his pious >£*«utoon ofderot
; ‘“K “ portion of his gains to the erection
j need '' “JP™ ed rapidly 10 ™ under the J he spur „ of the
! HI®* 4 merchant s gold, • D 4“ lto c ™ a '
J??f*®?’ * .
stilten s presence aritbe .1 1 ^ ceremony of
nanung it, Anticipating P“?® the finj praUQce
!
became necessary to give the nam«v
Thetfaef mwcliant, moolrii inquired tumiBgtotheinppoaed what should fae.it*
m«cl»ut, . inquired . . , what t , should , ,. , be its
na ??S;.„
o,. Call it. c. be replied, i,u the mosqn .1 of
the Hitl.an Hassan. a»®^ All stared at the
mention of this name, and the question
**>“ heard Jb™® aright, 1 or “» to powd afford nop sn opportnmty beligMthe
of ooneetuig wiiat uugbt be a awteke,
TSH’u mi,,,. ,
H»M»a.n, anil throiongoff bisdisgt al<Hj be- e,
4b ® l ®P 4im ?' 4 ® m* 141 ™ ® 4 ®®J i rev ®
fore hi* traitorous SteT»J;__,.____
?» h «d f ?F " ltanl -
taiieously , withthe discovi ry, num ^^ us
^“b trap-doors '^‘“K 4 "®* 4 ®" 1 '® J®’.P“£ «*““*■
tod been prepared f ® 4
’ farmed men, m teraw tW* tor r *
nunate.1 atones the reigu and life of the .
; .? * possLIoSth^hrene '
“
^ ta * father f **“’--—-
gi’&s'i&zyr&i Kadikem ~
»"»»•... and H®J?“ R*
niug of the present century, offices in the rose State,
gomo 0 f the highest minister of
having been six times war,
ir | ce -miui»tor of marine and.
master of artillery. H« hold office
at various and critical periods the head of_ of the
j,j H f„ rVi wss at war
office during the Crimean war, during
oqmipition, th g . pj massacres during and insurreetion European
and the
, at Crete. He was decorated with many
orders at varions times, having received
{he higkmh Turkish orders ef the Os
.name and the Medjidie, the Persian
Order of the Lion and the Hun, the
orders of the lhitli, of the Legion of
Hlllior, of the AlUtriW St, Leopold antT
the Iron Crown of Italy. little Htrange French, to
a» y , although he knew a
he never auwaasled in spoke mastering Turkish tiny
; European langtrage, but
.and Arabic fluently. Notwith.taudi.ig
, hia wealth lie waa- not. ostentatiously
charitable. His “good deeds,” if He he
performed any, were dkrne in secret.
was about seventy years old at the tune
of bis death, The latter years of his
life were quietly spent ... bw house at
Kadikeui, overlooking the It Bosphorus his
and the Hen of Marmora. was
dailv custom when tlie weather permit
ted to walk to the seashore and smoke
his tchibouque there. His meditatious
'latterly 7* must have been i nteresting, and,
«• i ' ' f “ - ...........
together pleasant. c
......*•’
----irbMTtfW *Sh»
iiu to , imSionc il.an in ili-company. V»K
Couatant occupation prevente . , tempta- t <m
‘ton
Courage ought to have eyes as well „ as
:arms.
Necessity reforms the poor and satiety
the rich. '
t , rll e friend does sometimes
a»£jr’ We have all of u. sufficient ““ strengtt
of mind to endure the misfortuues
other people,
Watch over, yourself. judge. Be Ask pour* yourself
accuser, then your need,
grace sometimes, and, if there is
upon yourseU somc^^pam.
a warm mind sinks adversity. under prosperity A strong
aa w .*ll as under
m u)d has two highest tides—when tte
n „jou is at the full and when there is no
miwB . .
re..a „3aA “d, I. rew.w.he.1 ataelHwnrate.
Neither nor heat, uor ag-e itself
• Kl7on can nterrnpt this exercise. po.weasioa’whieh Give, there
™ to a
^ its ^
, f-w* ,
-;■•’< S..e;ety,eonsistingof imd ravante, who doctora,snfer pledge ^ol» them,
-elves to give up their bodb* to dt sec
twn by .«* wi™ T1.
-m-et on the death of on ®,re 4 ”™ m toe
-aton of a. restaurant, and after thei tsi .
j* cleared a box is
-eiies of Imttles, m whi h the r mg
ceased, the proneta _
. the d. ot ,
arc {ireserved in spmto of s-ck ,
malicibu* story is b.,.l a me
who th nghtleaslj odl«J in 8 •
;4 been a ® ft > long: t.me withpnt a ^
the temptation was too atreng •'
pat at expired. All tins s
hke a joke, bnt senouMy the Tempt hold^i is
to.jokmg. and it
fi® *y' iiav
^ e8ira v » ’sbeietv '* " clay * a
P 8 ® 4 -
________
Frozen to Death in the bonth.
-. very hehlo oooo...< t 1 _
.....
TEE OGLETHOEPE ECHO.
__A«**wrtlmi ff ng »,,««
**>**-*. i w— 7~ ---~
; t
- - *1. *
. ... r v I*i?T
Oia tt £-“ ; u.
:•
►* U.t*
li.OU 16 « » ■« .•
Leeal A<tve « i *ement».
ftsrj^iKisLar ...... i-KaSKS:..............
put* - ...... r*e
Kotirti to Debtor* 1 C.'4 .. . *00
Noiiae of L**w* to 8**»i, Uu,
iait »rs of on, • - thirty d«j»
i-e-ter* of r»;« ■nffiffi thr*'* . . *,« S3
gass rssaasL.^. »K?T:tfe* ..
- .... 4.1*
•]
llTO. of interest.
A carpenter may seta saw bat he can't
make it hatch,
What i- Tfre r- i -t Mvirir Thewinlh^ r, ,
looking out of a window » J 1
* , T — nf;' , ^L‘ ,,C m" **•'
_" master Dl ? home. t,acli ' **1 miles, to
a
An old salt sitUng on the wharf the
«td«ggeat.Te biography.
The young man arrested for leaving
! *0 ,te oyster telling saloon wtlwnt judge paving for bis
*. «n the lie bad for
, gotten it, was reminded that he had
played that ore-sv w often.
A teacher, who in a fit of vexaUon
i'^r'fFrr rr
negotiate, if possible, treaties of com
metc e with the natives along the route.
Editor : We go to anything press early this
wepk Have von got in your
head ? Contributor ; Yes, I have.
Editor; What is it, a story bad or some cold.
{ . T „ Jg0 , Contrihiitor : No, a
r „. mlts „ield a large j^ percentage of
. {(>r
* . j<>h ns a osl s as
^ %^d j “ . SUd m ,, rP palatable ’extemiivelv than
« 'r>uria»e» to
j u arv P 1 ’ finding a ready
-..urf* -’fw
One Philadelnliian P, hil. P died last ,j wear ■ at
the age f . T •
, ,
! j more than m years‘^e ppara „’ nf ! beta. hrj„c 101 01 at at
| “* *"
j i envelop directed.to a correspondent ui
“ Paris," and another heavy draft to
••London.’ •< Lmdon. Tlie fh® P Dost 0 ® 4 .office office clerks ci sent
the lirst topiriw, Me., lUi’.l till- other to
; ia>ndou, Oinaiio.
A gtnmger was strolling Pat about Daily, Cos
tello’s tannery, and accsted
tbe bark grinder. “Is there tiie n man
abpu t here McCarty with one eye Fhat’a by the na-ue
„f j erry ?” ‘ ‘ na .e
of hisothereye?" said Pat, who has an
in tense horror of being “sold. —/icwii
Sentinel.
According to a foreign book on
1 « Kisses," about 150,000,«KUusses son
ri vjnr^v; (jgg (ggj. Ruisirieads, at a rate of
w ’S., OeroiauT next, with 20,000;-
18,000,000 ; England,
13,060,000; and Saxony, 1,200,000, 90,000. es
pecially Dresden, which dote
Oni m in Dskoto Dakot* the the other bbhw day daya^srage a atage
lit agingofldgh~Iirobt,ed t i l<k A hands aboW their h«»ml» while
them,
One of tho victims, who re marked :
reghbu to^ i h i g l. li andti dTflw iriirTitud
-jj **•
.. Liv< .r-reting Johnson" the terror of
once ftto the fiver nr tfV ttumh #R*’nW
whom he had a revenge, and tr. n that
incident got Ins name. His pas tin t was
killing Indians, and he i« crethte*
u bksidv roll of the simn victim, id his
Imtreil fargi-r tbsll any "tiler miin vho
‘ lived oirtlU' frontier.
: It is the Easton Free Prns which
throws* great and familial- truth into
this etittemg form: “Jt is now that
tlie seductive and mystertona mince
,,jo ) e a irtl i « niqn into - tlr.'ough tuaipt a tnm, -
,,ml u t night praneeth his
dreams in the form of a pea cold green
goblin with a molten brass m
hi s bea d and, red eyes, mounted on a
oeil mule with cast-iron ho.ds that
weigh a ton apiece."
Refinements. A s ort of tkuijnim
Roliertor Walle'r-yotl-nu.ycali it, “I in
*. , j t „\ an t a row of Henry «>t beaus.”
TW* memorial is a very James-crack
a fl„j r ." “ IncomprelieuBibility is a Benja- Mary,
HyI | aWe » •• He bad been quite a
,; nn ,f n Mor to mx” “Never-talk of
people bv their Nicholns-uames." “' r '—
,gro £kiss pinyeil upon his ban-Josepli.”
an-Thomas.” J( . h.»tly as a little spectre Patrick ora
pb “ Iwant a
of | >u tter. ” “ Wil>e your feet upon tlie
M y attbew ‘* t4u ®"’ /’
Taming a Sirrew.
. *""ba
t t„ t in and
/Minn blieir X Vhinn- there resides a man
wnfe. names vre Fh.airwA, .!«■!«
! who have been married but a few year*.
in im-s,-low yea. s •; • .... . ;
i ^ i?<?thcr there Rave arisen diflcroncct*. au<i
^ (J on*t like each other in «el as
they ought to. Thc«c .l-ff.*r™.-.*sfr.
qoentlv ilcthej lead to open hos tiliRes , and, as
the one or the other tik.-s to give
np .lU they quarrel most furiously. Or e
lastweek trouble began one,- more,
, and recrimination ^gs? followed reenmma- as
> a
eontento df this jutel,. rTm y ’ Lo.-j
pai d no heed to the threat, when, alas!
the content* of the pitcher made came the upon
her. .Of course this now
thoroughly irate Lucy Iwilmg. I be
husband then seumda pail.of water and
snd : Wv. if y«.”«n t ” ! ; i ;
ng, I shall certauilgWirow this •
j you. Ln.-y wraiplwHled no ' .
. *n.l r«»i»»I flie water .in jl i
: This but added if.,; (
Lucy waxed more m hy than ver
Ihcurthebusliand caught up a - U
j I • toapsnds * 4 "P. * and ern d h ^.ilpn dont
*
P^r^hr: s, F;
bandhasteneddo ‘ , :~i^-'z
two pails ot *® 4 ' r , "’ ’ .j
informed L'cy H-“* '. , ,...
f„r feet, hen anl Lncj Gold snrr * B, ‘ r . ^ ^ . u ^j , K „ riw ¥ -e .
1 understand that a. .... k ; ; ‘ ...
h "« 1,wt ’ ” " '
, ""
An Exposition for the Buys.
T b- .' *• , ' . Tim-
1m - ,to .... which it
' uvem.e -
, T Vnstraha, K^’iTh , "hr tl c l ■ : r.
g-.v.-rnmen' *. "■ ^
worthy of rniit-d ,■
j agrand show, go!.mi : y-if b
,* ra phernaha ™ tf ^- -,;„^Vwd« -
!,'T™ r or e“ ^'aoie^^ ■
'T4»^r»* •>.. r- i-iei.t r-stsV* ir.
Kitotelren, ar»-24 - rrr i
.
7^'^ ’ ’ ’ ' ' '
u» • •
^ !' 1 - - -to ”
Fun
have
- -
- -
o 4