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THE OGLETHORPE ECHO.
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f» ,» Ymr ta.&i j
* (BO&tM... KM; }
T rt* Jfcslfc*. .*0 ;
Twrmjt Cm*h in Adeanr*
I'otttJvely no peper MOt until the ftoney U jold
l-eftvec «*eb» ** - * two »•**• before tb«
r - mm nf ns* time. *n4 if nhecr.pUot. 1* not
• .- e*e*l, tt»* p*per la at once Jl*oontinu*sd.
'ny per*^n who anil aecd oa the name* of
»•>« y*a; • auUmcrTptiow fr*a. No ehih rate*.
I.WI Treasure*.
sr auz.EiTB »n«a
« :r:rr er
7 .r -* 7 -“ ; t 77
Tear Ictiartme 4«„ 9 thus fw ba»e be»n op
printed ;
frt- t : tni» L i* 9ri in. tif. deuUfc
To light, and charm, *nd beatify the rt9t "—
Whit ftlr -uid w* 8 ®k ? th« priMt of young
aiabition ?
Fame, j»w«, wtsttia, sad gilts of pnmkm
c»t?
at. co-~our. Is wohtd utter tbs petition:
o.--oh, on, ewlv on.y give give «a u. barkeur bars otw tort- loat.
, m. «*d blow, no .pleasure asw ««.
,w“r , £S l TS 5 sr'irt~
-,..... :
, ..weawaa ate.*.
•
thrown wiser with oor yean., and clearer
o.«,
T , naws^UM to Was, nor ehsrwito
We d rad toe new, and prize the known, the
trim!. .
K\ wh;,t a crowd of.joji would gather round
U 9 ,
Could we bnt hsvr-tenr vstiished back again '
'i so heart unspoiled, the • alrength ,ud hope 1
W..,ei crowned as- -
The bounteous life, the .gnorM.ce of parn
T ie innocence, the rf-ady faith in otherw.
The sweet 9ponUn«otn» oarnestmiwi »nd
trntb.
Tbs tn.st ot friends, ths tender eyes of
bitithera,
And M the rich Inheritance of youth
T i« pi»11» for noble lives, that earth thereafter
Might Vk? more pure -, the touch of love*
warm lip
And waving hand; the pound of childish
, Is.ngkter,
Die fi.oce sf home, the joy of
, he : hH .1 them aU 1 Mid , now that . they . have left , .
l’H,
We count them carefully, *nd ueethi-ir worth '
A id feel that t.me and fortune have bereft u» "
Of ,n the test and dearest thingson earth.
v,. yes: when on oar he.*, to.
nresaina
And oil our flower-plats mc touched wdh
frvytlt.
V.’o *h!v ut* more Home new antaeted blt miug
' IluHafivwgh.— ttb, give ha bKk our teat!'
More ThanHer Match.
TT r.WffraTde g down through 4 H,at s^nmlMalmoa
TMod and quivering wind dlllied
the green mosses. A faint
w ttb tne foliage.- Wild flowers flecked
353 tML-js
rml-s-vcrybody. , -iwnr.glit disgusted lire with todle^^ emything of
-
seasons, .luring which she had escaped
I,.art-whole, she wm new "csugl.t,
,-,d all because of a three weeka sojourn
ut a ei.iuiti-y villa.
Madge liiv .1 never been off her guard
! efme. Hitherto sue had visi ed
I ishn,liable watering places, plae but this l
±nataidui.liaac»» ii i »t<i nqiito te r e,-em
h,id met'Lindhurst Itorrington. Hhe
O id not yet know, however, she was in
t iralldom. and
Him only knew she whs cross
)-,nespne; KUrTitossomSaiid and so she sat punching bhethonglit tlte
1 i«,ntiug.
P-ortitigt-m exceedingly compauiouahle.
<> id that the Other four gentlemen stop
} iuf? ut the villa were little better ttian
wooden men. Aster downright, earnest
h,ye, wJ.y hor-jptentions for. three years
liwl been never to venture her heart at
but only to glide about the shore,
flirting, safe' to disemhark any tune,
Yet she was now thinking of, Lindhurst
Harrington t-rn-iflo in a yrey many wot tld - inixe
ve. But she would not admit
<1 met flirtation; but when these went,
t .e oo-mng season brought new rnjov
■men,» end fresh flirtatious, and
t ; ,u e mid go with them. Were tliere not
others, pray, who could read Tennysrei
"Ud i-n-l sing sing tenor? tenor? Bnt Bnt now, now, just just tips
moment, it was rather lonesome. If lie
only would com« I
'He bad g-mc to 1 town the
previous, promising promiHing to to returu returu in in the the
, ven.n-r. Hire ha-f walk,si with him
f 'trougt. this w, sal-path, on his way to
t'test itivn. ■ He liml lingered a moment
nt the stile beyond, t,, tell her how bean
t fill ihe looked—hq# th© the ^coWr fresh morning
u cheeks. t hit brightenetl
• Come this evening as as
meet me,"he hail said, “won't you ?
The path will be a horrid labyrinth with- i
out T-iu.” return?” had
."You will surely 'she
. ^Bdnrn, indeed! I shall think of I
'•>«^ght haS^Vto^ her band in a quick
th 7 prtte
taming often to look beck at.the pretty
picture she mode, Itstlcosly leaning on
the sue, with a tinge of regret in her
fare. At a tarn where she would soon
Itc hi -1 from sight he had dared to wave
her 8 kiss. .
Malge was now waiting according to
appointment, and she had taken care to
cones.,-! a most ravishing toilet.
But all tier little preparations were
wasted. Lyndhurst Barrington did not
come. Still she waite. 1 . It seemed so
unreasonable, *o cruel, to disappoint
her. Perhaps he was only trying and to
tense her, had got out nnseda.
would surprise ” her directly by his sp
pearaoce. dolefnlsough of wind, . from
A coming
the d „k recesses of the w,«l a an, hi™
HllUtt rig down of night, made Mia* Bar
r«»n fe»l : something hhe fear; and she
start, d nervously to return. As it grew
darker her dread, beekme terror: shr
fruieihl -strange noises were alvmt; her
f.-et scare.lv touched the ground; she
skirain -d oik fluttering at heart like
Sef some low-flvffig bird belated from its '
What wonder that she vowed that
night as she brushed out her hair, never
to forgive Mr. Barrington? What won
.ler that a harmless little bunch of violets
which he ha .1 gathered for her the dav
iv previous and which' she had treasured in
T on her dressing-ease she now
anlTthatahe ti'*s^ 7 *hem pi-ttialdy £n'iow? <mt
into tm darknere from h«
"I driest him aud Ilia violets,” he
crirel. "He mav stop iu town tilldoo a s
dav. for anght I care.”
Oglethorpe Echo.
By T. L. GANTT.
i- As slie drepsed fir breakfast be was
constantly in her rail
fc^rt&’ssr
iiss
•
j tlte gentlemen Mechanically, m e 'uninteresting than
ever towards evening,
she tlonued the same toilet as on tbp
night previous, and tasik a ciieoitmu
route .'through the garden, that none
might be cognizant of her movements,
tor Emerging-to»f the wo.vl.patb sight, and she here struck strait find h\
^ ’, , we
^ , Memr for he r „ ar of tIle
, «tamftjta»ding all heraugry vows of the
predicament as on the previous evening,
and hav e *o return through the ptomi
wood alone. Hhe had aeveu-eighthsof a
-ta—tgl,
* "
. woman.
Barron began to trace figures <m the
S^neiSietAut ^^SSS^^d ahTIter S^onc f“tuE^siuk*
mg into a repose aim uuco.it en tm ben in utgti g,
enongh to befit asat nt
She saw Lyndhnrst Barrington .le- ,
oonlS stile-' for 'though hidden herself ’ she
obst'rve all his movements.
jp, me OM eager lv ltaduug to the
liSd right and left for her and almost stum.
over Miss Barron
himself’at "Oh Madge!" he cried as he threw
her feet to’’meet'me “von did forgive me ’
aud have come '"
"Forgive you, Mr Barrington?”
Nothing hirlas-n cooid bemore iev cold. "Pisv,
what voni fault?” Hliehsiked.
a „ 9 p L . Urui-'lit before her. led
with Hn air of surprise l which was ex
]y W((i , 0 <)Un terfe j t( .,|
He looked up eage-rlv into her face as
he answered " Why i was buttonholeil
to death “,u"iaraev in town i"d vesterdav. bce.Yent-r.si It seemed
l8 1 f a Wi’sH kmi into
his summer haunt to go up to town to
detain me. 1 transected but of my
buetneeH, aiu| put off.,lack Loutdey witii
only a iwmI ahj wr wuy to tin* station. I
: suppose h«'H itevrrrpmk trrrae again.
IZJXZ
^TRul . walk ,p d,wu -j-vr last evening, but , , I
hard y say s.r. tlp.t I rente to meet
1 .von- hnsiuess I did not expe-t illness you.. _kept I thought,
! or you, you
I very t^M, r ^
tae pomt l
wffldSmrSv .,*ii 8 „”,r. ,w,l I
: 'walk'i.v bnt
, ; wj rj Bh v,,„r side "
{ ■ e j mejf'g-,-,,. exeitastlv
„I did no .*> snebthing lb, ’/histle? at
F ait h -uj-u^-a- k „. ..... ■■■- ..to-,,- 1 ..... ........ -I 1
- tier ptet ire t .............. ram ,wcr held
*«*»
at m.v te..vin ? -a wonran 1 want I t ,r mj
Hers was a jssni . . 1 ,.>p,,s, d to , . Jt „
came like a swrsurprise n. v, rt!e h ss
But it was contrary to M« Rino-i*
taeties Were ksiff de.iglitful flirt
mg to be out ofll in a motm-n m hi
osteon f How emild he have „ l.eved
her in earnest? It was rid-cu ous. She
had mean to play th.- i.ijtire. mtstnys
for several day s, and make „ ma -j«-t m
his efforts to reins,at- toms. If with-her,
Hhe dal u-t want,, e .max reached with
tnitLinaU. Hm-haul lu i d t l il her t hat
.t won U >«.v.,|-a „ --r.u » -I, s„„ h,H
h:0 iu " ......•
make suelnr s, deirnmT Awdispi ,i 1
t.l.ie, st anting v..s e-> info, t sad
w»*. “I 1 ": 1 uavesli >t 'breugh your t. rain,
l can assure you a , 1 ,-liglitlul supi>er now
awaits yon
..Miss .................. Barron, h, — l» can, frownmg,
without apparent JiMiec . -.f ore-«-*K law
wuuour aj.psr*-". -icut-e -ji
and rmnig to l,:s teet, three wi.e„» ,g
I >Ll'«,t know you; out tn that time all
m J E ? 1 W "TL^T^ HWm ? ,0 H ifot^S
JJ° no B m r - ed of „ askmg for voas, th I , y v -would w mid
J*JW* *“••4 it •? 2 to V«-"‘« boas if* w hw .1 lov^l'foi
• -, . "let.,t lot. ,
Very well, well,"sites:,,d, ”«!»('sjuf], . _ . “ . . . be
“ "Very V i ho; so;
vows, no commenctont. ,-,mm,-,.--,n-u.t. >ti ,U *,-e
sg-ee “No, witli_ I will you not pet.ee-.,. have it so.be cried,
trying to take l.er band
“ As yon pleas.., she m.ighed, shrug
Imhavtor^Unt 'Tory”n sta a
if* I cannot say ‘ ves,' perhaps I ren
not »y‘no,' I tlnuk fnendshi,.aloes I—
not jnstifv an a'-ru|-, no. hehreke
' 1 waut equiv ocati on
in. "If yon love !, eyes itas, voice
acts, alh would blend into yes. It
must lie ’ yes’ o ‘no, I say.
■ Madge But had .she never answered, im-t any netertiieless, man so mas
terfttl.
• Then no, so.e - you f u.-e me t»
unladylike. "tatan-task re to te imkdyhkc.
I do not you I ,isk<-dyoutor
say you ore. straightforward
your love It was a
question, I wanted a straight for ward
answer My urm. .Miss Harrwi.
Aud thus watkiug, assist, ng her over
eve ? tndnig inequality of gr-utid.
went on to the villa.
M »s Barren w»* exceedingly her^ gay that Of
evemug. ahe_wasinotgoing L\mlnur.rit ; loywl into anyyirrey
course, She could herige here
engagement. not
seif in by marr.age But they c, mid
this livt- the^ last delightful- three, weeks life always^ / th**y bad He li\e«j
nothing m particular to do Why eonld
he not, when They should reteru. to L-n
dos, visit her everyday? the Sl.e when c-mld, he she
thonght, flirt all same,
not by: and his attentions,
would> just so much gained. Her
life was not to lie altered on iota.
' did not profess to love the man. He
; jnnst not, however, scatter his
‘tons.He- concentrate all hi.
“fitat toward tlie close of tbe evening.
when Madge found he had not
her onoe, a alio-lowof a thought parsed
throng!, her mind that perhaps h
not a porsliewV-g, after all, to be
THE ONI*Y PAPER IN ONE OF THE LARGEST. MOST INTELLIGENT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA -
1 ^ A . FEBRUARY 22. 1878.
a
taken a garden stroll with a rival, Mr.
Oakley, ^z'srsssrv&s and Lyndhurst had careless
l
rrrsw&f inis
-Jte wnt «ht^revtt aiid
bre. 1 , but that was all. She was down
right perplexed.
She 8 «irc« ly ever mrt Lin;, even at
table, much less of an evening. He
went fishing by sunrise, rode night on horse- asked
hack half the day, and at
the gentlemen up f, his chamber ; the
ls.Ues, sitting in windows, the parlor, laughter heard
U,e open
rtag ont ^d_ ?j r «ngs bring sung.
argtgea 1 a
.,
,/hurt he, so to do. Hhe would plant
horsed on the.
Just then Lvudburst steppe .1 into the
EJ^SST'S ^frtS ‘“tocit wdh^a «5
head “to
-^r^vottr U™* htohneas is
lost control of I, srself, anti showed her
vexation. “Sing to me.” she cried,
„ ... , w-hd^tk . . anvthimr T ^“
tarn d "
answered
say, under the stars, what 1 said tinder
the oaks; aud you shall give me a true
Shis-looked at him a moment, suefi then
fairly blazed. Thank “ I Heaven never saw home per
sisteuce. 1 I go
morrow, where gentlemen know what
•'* t” a lady,...... take ‘no’ for * no ’
without getting snllcn, Good night, Mr.
Ba'rrmgton: and less good-bv. tssirisli, If you ever
<'"'i“«nt to be persistent, 1
h l' a -l <*» pleased hi to see von in town.” aud
Re watched r out of Ihe rami
then eat down t» th.- piano,
' r,M Barron’s first impulse ____ to
«aa
'«"t th- party on the lawn ; but, some
how, every face cn earth, bnt one,
-1 tome Then she resolve,! to g" into
read ; but books were
** we a ryi ng-- —^—..... a
“ “ I I thiit w-miti w-.nkl play,” play/’ ehe she maHottlitie *»i«l said ,mttishly,
^ w tri not
monopolizing tbo piano. she into
Ju-d •* at this , point burst tears.
53 . 71 ":;,rr:;c
i^Va^tASS,^
”
X shemd ^siderXt calmer she sat
tu to constderwttat vm« was nex
■
. , a . .. , . • Tta .. -
u Then »lic. acknowledged Mmt ,' t
,v,ut!dlie terrible auywhere 5 without -
, :.
She jumped to her feet.
" H- will drive me wild," she said,
"banging in that way - ,u hall,in lie- piano,” ’ hs,Vo,l
“She irawing-room.wheti- pas.-d tntoth
into the he .1 pis,'
. 11 -i, . m„__________
-
• ,s.rf. ........ v-.-.K.-t,- ■*
■ -:m { L ad l it u ,b-t. ■>••*>. It "“ k J J" - -
“..|,ik.V,! Wiy.ho
. , 0 r 1 ' irau-hod him ’ an I
t J, , ..
. inn
■ i , r ,.t,fn .1 tta
• . ■ , ,
' ' 18 • ™pf i • n j> j „,.t erarms ab'm
as n-wk and pressed her Gu t *luH»k eka 8 - aymist a nunst
nts ■
N d a word was satd for some mo
pouts; but his fingers fell | from the
o-ys tea arms dr„pi,ed listlessly at his
sales. Ins head sunk lower and lower™.
4 .,s hreost.-mni-Mivtlge feB-m-med- g»Uh
ering ... her eyes, a mtsf of happy tears
'Or.£ u zJ%
ir ,„vi,i 2 one of her ha. Is over bis
, r and talking with it against Ins
n t ;,- “Let ns not mar this
or;,rise and joy by a single word."
Lyndhurst, yon are provoking -l.mnat; as
„ vpr . When 1 w .-nld not, now
, wdlVT'-shall n-d. I shall have to lord's prae
humility, I see. and study my hand
lWw played- tin, high
”ng enongh, snd I insist oh saying‘yes'
mv »«y- There, n ,w, if yon
<l m ‘ *«“* * , '*P e » k ■#*« '? »" h ‘ n,r 1
w dl rest my face here an 1 dream.’’
duu:t tJunk you wtH bml. me -a
t^ret," lie said, ami kissing let her. “But come
*>ut, « the wtnpar© week.” week." ottr
ttfnl timl miH^riei* miseries during during the pant past
H e l«l her threugttattectapeq. ewayia# win
d-*w, holding back the vines
for her to pass. There arm and arm,
under the stars, let us leave them.
^ __
Web-ter andBenton. .
Daniel Webster and Thomas H Ben
££
mutual per. aiaUa»t,lity. which , happened
A r,ry striking , vent, _
... B.-ut..n, sn-td.-my chan .-d MteirreU
newly ions to mveutre «ac?lomer. gun.wasto^ ItfWyrerTg^a be betel 'in
the ii.Uemal steamer 1 rmceton on the
Potomac river not far front| W^teng
ton flu- l.r, dent and tea e. met
,,, n on boa.d a id many < f thedtstan
gmslnd statesmen of the time -wire
present, erects to see the
tried.
e c.owd .fast heforp- ofcal the- nut gun ffltere, was teuatqr. h f JiqhB , and ff
: other nut*We m«n gnthered around it,
to observe the effect from a near point
rd Vtew. Among these were Colonel
B 't fta,
tme^touefied J«at be tore „ t he i,„ wjre^flrebsome V 1 ® some ’
reqnestadto sp«-ak.with . tirofiram -
meet. Benton left his |>ter<- in th,
group, whreh was.-tekeu by Mr. Gilmer,
the wn retaiy <»t tbe uuv\ The ^rui
was touched off, burst- and tiled a
b, ; re,t persons, among w!.-m was Mr.
<iilm»r; while Mr. Benton, who
withdrawn from injured. its close vio-.aity, was
bnt This slightly affi-etedthe..great
nanow escape, profonn Uy. It
Missourian most - "
scented to me. lie satd afterward,
if that touch on my shoulder was
hand of the Almiglty, from stretched
tonv-, drawing me,away
From that time he was a changed
He resolved to become reconciled to
- old enemies; and one of the first
he did was to go to Webster toil ask
to "Imre the batebet” tol be g-ss
Time's Change* in ths Senate,
The Cincinnati Enquirer s»vs: After
&»*«E 52 siS
t9om a^nmton. t.eJay-Hann.hal Ham
Un, of Maine, aud Henry B. Anthony, the
of Rhode Island. Notwithstanding who
long terms of the Senator, serves
for six years, and the tendency to-day to re
elect, of the twenty-six Senators,
but two were Senators teas than three
times six years ago. Pitt Fessenden
was in the Senate then, grim, keen,
commandiug. Fessenden isdea. 1 . John
R 1 ffidsiw- there, teav^ eluent,
saT^w&trst sssssrc s» srAt .hk
themau who was mde to summon all
and ail htcratarc to prove
point. Stunner it dead. William Henry
'^teplon'I g“ ‘“itoS'
£^*1 1 d^T t
SjT ;„,,‘L td’ hw'loTslty
a Mtas nature die"
to the Union so deep that not even
appointe .1 ambition always a destroyer
best ‘'‘i"w tninirs in men with^nv could shake “tv
with « , a Ju! o act Ttv pa
vvMti part v win ^
single to the presevation of the mustitu
tionaqd the Union,’’ said Douglass in
those trying hours. Douglass is dead,
Andrew' Johnson was there, his v.iicnjuf
tne bravest, ■ and An lew Johnson is
gone. George E. Pugh was tlieroi that
shrid tenor tone ringing like a silvery
through the Senate chamber, ding
ing to the Union and to peace with ten
ocitv, but to ins belief with defiance; and
that briUiant man sleeps. Jetr-rson
Davis was there, saving, "If I eonldoee
anv means bv which I eotil.) avert the
ontvstrop lic of a strngglC - h g t ireen the
sections of the Union, my past life, I
hoiie, gives ........... of the remliness
with which I yvonld make the efi’.irt If,
in the opinion of .d--. re, it be possible
forme to, do any,hum ,tor tbe Public
the last mnwHUit w!,. lets, un 1 here
is at the emnnrmd of the .W*." Diere
were tliirtv-tbree Htotes then. There
were other Shining names the list of
Senators. There were names, less,las
vSSS-w^
were hen Senators. evUra The graves have
op,neu, mso M 1 ^ hs e U.i ftol t li e
the Uaieu siuce that time, ten Senators
burnt for thn e deyr, destroying 1 . 1,4 <U
houses, mcln«tn,g u anv tine
buddings. The loss by this toe, if
puled by present udu. s, ,v„«l! amount
to.at least one hundred mdhondolkrs.
toe ed.v of New tank lias suffered by
>• least'thra- great flies. One in- tatu
‘h'str-y, J 600 warehouses, winch to
l i -n .» a , - .;- - - . u ,i. J)
t»«,ntHl- ' Another in J« 3 » destroyed
Ut „ t „t $l(M'<»t,«>!>;
„ud a third iu 1815 , 1 . str.we,l
dwellings, valmstoat
'b.srW,m in 188 $ suffered by a fire
which destroyed 1,158 buddings, coyer
mg 145 acres. ' Pittsburgh, in 1 «», lret
bv fire I.OtKlhnihliugs, valued at«(,,IKK),
,m - Albany, N. V„ some builitin^s years 13 since
in ^b'ambnatHuiid Louis, iu 181 U, lost 83 , 000 000 .•
8 , ,
000 in st.wmtes.ts and 300 buildings,
,, u ,„ l( 18 T, 8 . lost honses.
j t) j Htr . two thirds „f the City of Quebec,
- comprising 2,800 houses, were JolmV swept
, 7 n,l| The_rity ra,eath,Hy of damaged St.
, N - ew f 0 i a u,t.
,; r e. was nearly all destroyed in taltt,
buildings. Chicago, in 18 . 1 , and Bos
ton, in 1872 were !e.vast,rMrl to tite
extent; of more than 3200 ,OOff ,000 ; and
'quite recently a devastating tire Iuih
,-dinost entirely destroyed the city of St,
, f„ b n, N. B. - Bat th es e mark ed fires do
v ot alone measure.the work of .testmc
tiou ; much is duo to the smaller Area,
which makeup by their frequency what
th(!V Work, lai . k in proportions. bttle, Co’istantly by
iU little .by year year,
the aggregate of run they accomplish is
tearful. . _;____ „
-J record kept by the New York I,i
mrarten Chnmioh shows that thfc loss
l>y j,f fire in the pmt^tl.'-States aiiilX 3 .aiiafia
: 1876 was $ 75 , 008 . 000 , and in dhe
: previous year it was 888 ,Whim This
r.svnd is trustworthy, as far *» it gore ;
; but it is asserted by competent..nutbonty lost
that the loss during the ten years
jms not been less than 3100 ,QN ),000 per
A „ Ancient Chapel Dlscorered.
^
t)l e U.ardcr of this read the
rn j n8 Were found Severn'feet below the
^_ Thr a t.ar ut" the Thnpe! was
awrtpl t „ „„ tilp spot where
hp Savjo , , )v „„ lfP d his ass at the Feast
oJ p alms , Tpr , lsalenl . Several
jnti , , e tie- stones,
„ U e of th->liseip!es of Christ
brmgfng the ass to him ;-another of tie
- j^j,, ri| -, to ^j l-.e and * a
P fo
quarrel. d I.kuh KU'ehener. command
J{; tll( , Ryi.,.;, fie expedition to
PaJ ,, stinPi )lfta (ir jd' „ lgll id-Cai)t , fiw pi Uiiilleimit a „ ,,f the
-,?)'£ SShasthe E ta 't,*la t •a l
SS^rt^Sius^ls dte- ‘
A
bronze shield, with the embktnsof the
^ ^ jf> m
workmanship’ «>t Jit.* * Weiith whturv,
i, as been'appropriated-,>v.«
? * ^^Xl? who haamv-i. permission to
t •
------
Floonenee { of Trees.
' '
H.e tr<« by. the , ,. rsteo may .
cal e -1 nature « preacher A home with
out a tret must Wci.erlesBin.leed. Let
'here be n-.t one merely, bnt many.
Transplant, plant rods pleasant and learn
ha.PPJ to exp.-r..uice watch the how of a tree
it w progress a
-nt and wav.n.l and t, ndtslhy one
™ ^v tS
of the year the s-.lels.ard may be
with heaping baskets, from wlrn-h
generous h*ispitatity may. Tliere offer to
a wholesome treat is a
nic influence .sued from trees.
(
A Perflans Position.
About as tight jmsw a place aa ever I %z go
- r
cable, reached which a *“***«■»% tte Wnen shaft we we
j stopped then pother auefi V****, place
aoAt wen * • *
was reached. A ^ r “* P™*
Os signal toslly *S*
j distance, 'when'"» stack Wo
replied giro ths signal the|«^I-rope h>^« P. but we m ha orto .1 fonud to
t that tt tto^rWg ‘ ^
our
■ipszisssjts.'^
Wa itwed f-ary mnmmtt thrt the plat
torsi w«« 4 e turn over --m-yrtrttl
pressed thnngh tbe tight place
l^tae pTatto.to S?
cable. hoarse. Wo woutjup tlfeiiiaftLU heard cries, we
were j B t no one our
and stead.ly .ownnma the ctd#, cans-•
ug us great rouble to keep dn weight top of
its coils. W. felt tksfrthe niSform, great l^th
'“net stem start the when
torn of the sheet.-- . .■ ■ .
hiually, to tta great relief, the cable
ceasoti to descend. Feta long tame we
tu sus(.anse, not knowing what
woidtl be the n-xt mov-e of those above
At last, lijwqvw, we heard the voice of
man wboutigg down tons from the
neatest station above. We explained
at length perilous the pmitionm great cable a^^fewworda began to unwl oml
"lowly up the"shaft again. Htill beiug
afraid the platform would give way, we
were obliged to keep hold <>f the rope
and dauee. ab out u n ite . f a ts. J Uth tbey
unwound. -. .
It tedtousbnsiness, , and was all
was a
th e time a maTter of theit ds ol a
penny whether we gjtont alive or went
tightened up under us audwn b.gan end to
-Otir wor-was e.vecdlien
safe.
On arriving attls surface we f, mini
that the engineer -tad «mc-tiled that
•St S&'&gr bSMggsj 3 K
.
plane where the danger lasted so long
and all the tone «,,! • fever best. It
was too long a tine- for any man's hair
4,1 staudon end .—<-‘W (Aw.)
photograph of tim JWleut, a drawing
^ wJl i,. u Wyalt Eaton has lieeu cn
,- rttve .a bv Cole as a frontispiece to the
- W e number of the raagazme:
, ()n s ., tanlll y mght, the President
, naked me if I had any objection to ae
• .OTnpstiymg him MA !„ s photographer’s it impossible cm
Sllll(1 , lT Jf „ tta ir , * M -
■ p , r ),,,, , t ., ,, ,, , , n i ni -tl n -r day, end - h e
! would like to tiave' m- s>.„> him "set.”
; Next day went together, and lie
wc as
j m b^ing the ho,ire he st opped EveY. and
| Pni ,i, ", iotd on. Ihavo forgotten
„« r Stepping hastily back, he brought
a f„|,jed paper, which he ex
; pained was a printed copy of the oration
| '.toy*, that Mr. Everett whs to deliver, in a tew
ly'the at, wbol© Gettysburg, uf piigesof It oceupietl Boston near
journal, two Wie
and looked very formidable in
deed. As we walk«lawav from the
> i lon 'ae, Lincoln said: •• It was very 1 kind
j,, Mr. Everett to-send me this. sap-
1K)8 ihingtlmt „ | ie waa a S*J,.Z. f ra i,l I should say some
v,f he r . Tfe
| m hem. alarmed **' Mv sneedi 1 isn't
lm »
,
•<- ** nr
wav. I have written it over, two or !
three ahothfir fees, lick auiUIsliali before have satisfied. to give But it |
I am
r it is short, short short ”
j found, afterward, that tbe Geftys- 1
burg speech was actually written,and The 1
; ; rewritten several draughts a' great ami many taterUuestioha too,-s. of
! that famous address, if in existence, !
" would lte an invaluable memento of its
; great Evereft's author. Lmcoln took the copy of
oration with him to the photo- ,
. groidter's. thinking thatlie might have for
I | time to l-s,k it over while waiting
the operator. Bat he chatted so con -1
atantly, and asked photography, so many questions that he
. abou tthe art of ,
v-mreel,'opened it. The folded paper ;
j s seen Iyi„g on the table, near the
j President, in tl.e picture which was
.
; mode that dav.
ffo fer „ I know, this was tbe Itot :
^ S ■^“prteteuSS
.... ......teas ef Hrek-HreM Snee
Dr. Carbally says:. “In descending
atoirs or deep declivities while wearing
: high-!, eele .1 stes=s, which throws the
weight, of-the body upon the front part
1 of the foot, the vetaiuiSg extra eg H»' tetmadefor the
! pimmsc of within
the centre of gravity tennis, posh,ecs a direct
strain upon these causing imp
tore or stretching of-the annular liga
ment placed! sufficient t-i allow them to be dis
It is :,-> w„nder ; then, that
fashionable women waddle in a must un
i graceful manner when they attempt to
walk. They destroy their comfort to
jiailow a ridi«ah>uN-fHrtbiou undignified t and acquire
an ambling things and Wlow fashion movement that
Perqile do w.utld to them to be
their g,sal sense cause
ai!lajM „f under any other cireum
stances. La*lieN wcftnng eucb shoes are
often obliged for satety, they to go down
stair* backward: aud can he seen
every dav descend,ng the steps of our
: fashionable^^ rJsideneeN-.in. talking this manner,
making pretence of to sotoe
imaginary person in t'pe front door as an
to hide m,le their 1 awkward move
----
w .
people are use .1 , re to ,he the sicht sighrefyvlide of- 1
mice, says a recent is.ne of a Utica, (N.
Y.) paper, bnt ,s “ V *S"
^
doubt, however. A gentleman living in
JIarcy caught s verteUe white ra, in a
trap .» r on end ALrqd^. exo.b.t
.vs it recovers fr-^d'eeflv.ta of mtere
isis'^Sass - -
] A LI. ABOUT MONEY.
---_
-~
4 B "‘“"
eulw.st by the chase as aU primeval
peoples mr.st m some dt^ree, and l i.
"“‘t ^refore, sn^n-^g toflnd m *e
transactions of the Hmlson Ba^
, the writto
; l’A»S *>th the Indians unit o.
, . reckoned is the beaver skm. ’pSi! Pastoral
; pe->p le animals, employ
tarn .1
fttmitaemploytafa SZZj.
mna.l disk
}tfriisa^st:£±
roe nets tne vurrentvwo.ew ™
In the Etwt, be ’
« th.
“ont «'deSSthe oTTr":
' ^nr^&en 1 ^
| way the amount of wealth possessed by
: a Among person thaTgta..the is denominated number m nmde^r of mar^
; their similarly possessors. determines Among the opulence the Estjtu- of
man, it is customary to speak of one
-«>-any.mgs
Slaves havoieen empToye .1 to deter
mine ratios of value since the state of
bondage was first established among
men. In New tnunea the slave is stall
; the unit by; which the-value ot other
possessions ia recorded, as he used to be
among the Portuguese trailers of the.
1 Gold Coast, Among barbr-reus tribes,
we may conjectnre that their earliest
, commercial essays would be in the ex
change <.U truita 1 , nuts and such simple able
iwrnl primitive articles ns.they were
to mannfaetare. One would exchange
i Ta' -i. a -iiat. for a stone for pestle; hunch another of featli- a
; rndely.-woven After mat tune a article would
- era. a some
naturally be found .morecnenvementthan
others, and vtoiUd tans be etnployedaaa
, inte fflinu ge. Tim Portu guese found
tsmah tnn.s
about one and a half, pen,e cm li. cm
; ployed as currency on the African coast,
; and buuehes of ml feathers serve bv
■aSt.SSSgaSs.-S
,l,e merchant of South street or Burling
s!ipa finds greenbacks oriuUs .uf
. ,-hSbge.
Cowry shells are still exteu
sively nw>d in East JUldia, Siam and
Ornaments of all kinds have m all
tamos constituted measures of value, In
Egypt, Pmnicia, Etruria, and many
or ancient countries, an well as. m Ire
land snd Northumbria, rings have be 11
found which were designed to serve the
double jHuqewvMit ornament and out
reney, mid the same dual fuse 10,1 may
l , e it- c fi l, ,• d -i-etio--sok 4 -on-mi.il,.L. an 1
ear-rings which arc worn thronahtmt
British India,'Persia, Egypt, and Ab.vs
sima. The Goths and Pelts fashioned
their rings of thick golden w, re. wound
spirals, from which various ,mm,date lengths- the
could be broken to aee chains
varying neisls of traffic Gold
have tieen similarly employe. I. 1 « many
countr.es golden heads are yet hoarded,
worn, and circulated, fulfilling thnn th«‘
trijde fuuetions of money, inasmuch as
thev constitute atonce a store of value
a shui-lanl of value, and au mstruraeot
of exchange. Amber was used as «ir
renev hv the savage ra-es of the Baltic
tlie ner iod of the Ataman dominion,
as it still is in. sonmof Hie regions oTtt.e
The Egyptian scarahee carved ret.
pressed, and engravwtagems and preot
ous Slones were employed to transier
wealth as: well from one (Smiiitry until V to
another us from hand to hand a
comparatively recent period. In Africa
ivorv tusks pass to aud fro mthe pro
rjestas of trale. rudely deli,,tag,he rat.„
of value of other articles. Among the
Tartars, bricks of tea, or cutes of Hmt
herb pressed into n solid form, P«s»
from bi„',.l to hand:.- freely as besver
skins do at the trading jiostsof Hudson
Bay or the Haskatelicwan. Among the
Malagasnos the only currency entirely
equal to the roquiiements of trade con
siste of rough hft»‘TwiUt», such fis Iio^b,
shovels, and the like. Prices of cotton
cloth ot a fixed length, constituted the
cloth, fora longtime Senegal, Abysstnia,
unit of value in
Mexico, Peru, Siberia, and some of the
islands of the Pacific ocean. In 3 u
*£$£ shouldhave early teenal- pterl
that corn The le of
as a measure of value. ases
the great setioOt 'fimnilstmtiraf^ ttnUaii,
Cambridge, Oxford, and
probably- leases,” that muiir is, rdher specifying e , were that f'Trera the
rental should -consist of s . many q to
ters of corn. Compared advanced with gold, t Kit hi
pnstuct has steadily the schools in vn have
for eeuturies, so that
bren the -gateef by the wisdom “t their
founders. In Norway, corn is depos:reo
, n banks and lent and borrowed ™
time or call loaOs, as money is with us.
In Central Amesfica .and Mexico inaiz*
waslong employed to serve tbe use
currency. V
Lvcurgns. established an iron
not only making
H uch weight and bulk as to
, >ia th( . ir export,bnt bv deprive them them,
their-metaltarevalne thfi wilt plnt&eil causing mn-gar!
a destrovi^ tube into
t j ier( 1 i, v -Lriorams, their malleabditv.
rta^.-nj of .this coinare
s,, a hr -ved r, respire from the
atio.iB of pe, filters llere,^ and th^n^rtire.
1 n* 1 'ne>-bre ifil'L i''ortune-b-’d-rs’to p-irt-slVitli
tat tee fT «M Jw eir snare s ^re^,-, rS Wide
• „
pe<:i Irrmghti.nv • . ^ 0 tfLkm war
cWhant to?ui-ig back th . leg.J
strel would uplift hm voire- and
aupbiat J«l>e lus * ; >r .1 fnlue-y by
mbism couhl h.^mupdr’less
dun. ' - ;| nd elf ner,c ■ of
b
%
YOL. IV. NO. 20.
of a people who crossed his palm with a
fifty-six P°' m K’ rf “ 1 *,K
*»™.«.ww
'”™ er “^*i 8 ', “*t
bave meuhoned o ; it ‘ tl ®‘'
Jtoowl^ ^Tof S
vft iue hr
• ofede a u f 1
. j. „ 0
gold thonghaucha reversal ol the ordi
TS ^ '
tw- 5 u- m»wWd, bSrta . to <tv «««ly eotonla!
ware
fc,T 3 S^rSSTSS l & gtf. •
wltli tl>« tin of Britiuu before Car
y,™ was founded and coins of the same
buT “^^td 4 S|“‘HSi sldonTfor^om^ 3 S
** *JZ3£* ***
^nd t o I
^£^1 "T 17 "V” .T*'"" legend * |
of several of^ In ,, the Ro*m «“£«««I
abundant. J «*
msjss j sr^MuJSi? ^, Straits of Malttoca.
o| . j j tell eI j u a
fu n] } r j v ,i 12l , ( i countries, however,
,, a a Tfir and ctjpper have always oou and
6 titnled themain elementsof coinage
, il(i (Miliar forms of currency.
T i, e ^ value between the first' two '
|i)lB pjobably varied less during the last
other '
g 600 vrers Uian that between «nv
ka „ wl ; substances. Copper has flnctu
ateJ lnor ^ i t, ut its f uu ctiou has always
Wn ra ,g, jt ji Ht} . at „i limite .1 to
t, ransu ,.t; onH . In the hierarchy of the
uaw j H »e,ii us , gold may represent the
the king, g silver the lord, aud copper
alaw _ Tll6 Iat ,,, r i% a , )W nickel practically taking
oma „ c i,, a ,p,i. lmJ* bronze and and palU
jt8 ,,i ' BCr . .. lire^n.pi.se 4 , osmium,
, lr , T v Iiave Xntaium .1 as substitutes
K«ld. and and
6S0 , ()r , ilvw j, at without anv practical is
thus far. Platmum, which
j,,, , oan(l iu t | ie Ural mounteuw, lias
• extent by the Bus
bwtl oinr(I to some
„ ian Government; hut, althongh a beat.-
3 S 5 UAS STTSHS
” .av.h».w.Si. “d indeed it he
S^atm^ aa u entae^t^ mav of'n^
Sra^VhronSt the
the world is
oonmoWt | „j illovs The Tuscan sequin,
1 , 000 . Pure gold and silver, however,
are soft metals, and untempeml serflfns. loss by by
.qhers, are .subject They to therefore, renders.
«l,rasi,m. me small
more useful by tin, admixture of a
,a>rtion of copper, whioli, m the English
system, in tiieca--- of gold, may bed
|ir ,, 1 ,,-oual lv lu. 016 . 66 .and ofsdver -
pa ,, > „ot - ■o —-P r uid, \o-ksd i s n a ii al ly
,,lh,v,-l with three parta-of copper. Ihe
The old Homan as was trade of the mix
Wl . t al called re* a e.,iuponnd of cop
,„. r au ,l tin, and in quality and extensive- value hot
uu Hke bronze. Brass was also
ly 1IS ,.,i from the tune ot Hiram of Tyre
,0 that of the Emperor Otlro The old
fcing* of VorUuuuhria coined a stual
fa , W styres out of a natural all
j 0 y oonjptmeil of copper, zinc, gold,
$ Uwd-aud tin. which the metaUnr- had
gists of that rude northern coast not
^.wigivchemivuil skill to separate.
While the iron coins of. Lyonrgnsal- hugest of
rw | v referred to were the
historic men,ire. small is HMfe be actually the''
rei. ta» to of
coined, is doubtless the smallest unit
'actual coins, is perhaps of the lowest
V!i i ue known. In Sweden, during the
last century, huge squares of oopper,
weighing between each three and four and pounds, in
, iUl „ stamp in corner one
t j w center, >S« issued in, ;com, and cn
ri „ us specimens ofdhem mayStill be seen
nutnismatieal collections. These,
: tUa Mattaday money, a small nor
tinh o/.wliicli is still annuallv struck at
tbe -Brittel, mint and distributed by her the
majesty in alms, probably dimensions represent known
: el tre.mest variation ot
nn j ao g modern systema_of coinage, the
smallest piece of the Mannday money
b,?i Q g a tmyer penny.
--------
JtaUs Protecting A Catf.
The buffato cow stems to >„ , !pivo _, lrtrie
maternal instinct, differing initab.re
spent greatly from ww.
to ttirir boSw, sehtam toreake'riteir
Tne eveton, at, he was re^
^ euriou. Appr<«chmg behavior them ofsix te nr
- igW butraloes.
t«w. that t hey 8 i • -
.
Ptmd m ’Tf ‘ s™ie ?»dv#or w fljiren
pices dozen digest large grey man wolves, eccrafn; 1 kre .iu. r ,
h-!«, a* .if impatiently _ut. ig
supper. „r„s tl.e eircte of'Vm'lls
Iu :l fe ®■_
! tarty, , ke w up. dM-l off Ju«pt->* d-wsrd « «e » I:-;;-! ,
l.a, re. one- - d. t- >>■ am-*- ;;
doct-n bulls a ",'.Ti littta r' f'.sddecaU.i.. i 1 calf „ wte b .m -iu 1
hardly able to walk. . 4 ft r g \ _g
dre .1 paces, the calf .laydown, and tte
.bull. indlk-kei th,-:'
a'.ont and lkk.d t.,
bn each sole, sat down -r
ch ^- wai* the
Vl'mm hi i; i no* »a> see
end, it being late e r-d aud the the fort tort .ii.trmt n» tm .
but to-had no doubt tte bulls bronffit
tbe ea!f, abandoned by t«m ’ ‘ *
b, the herd.
An Alleged a w»„ Kenudy J. tor for Blnhtherla Diphtheria.
Dr . F ieid,..a.-. English afflicted phyoician, with diph
visiting his patients nothing with him hut a
tie rm. t...k powderedifiphor. «epnt
quill tlaste.-mful and »
J. of : tl.e su'.pbnr stirred it in with a wine- hi*
„f „ a ,- r and
linger usii until thoroughly mixed. He then
it.as a gargln an -1 ta ten muintes
gb wss wkllSteaTnot- spit Tut.
^
that the £me patient could not use the gargle,
lie blew tb^ dry solphnr throngh
qndl into tbe at. and when
saatariss
PROM DEATH TO LIFE.
.
p,&garer
children, tUiscitTaM appeared in the office that of she a law- had
y er m stating hnsband
every reason to believe that her
t>et ' D in-that disaster, re
quested him to commence a behalf. shit against The
the railroad company in her
evidence in proof which ot her she offer ed to iutepduoe Wa wj.
S?iX
*• SSSTihe had been to AAtobnU,
toJySlfM^dS. iwi
JeMJ keyfor to the awear deceased. that he Another ltatl mwe key snen fitted a
w^ftasr •£**. ^f ^keys^t^Tfk
^
coat. The proof by no means stopped
here, however. A physician ofthiB city
b>st.fi«l that he rode to Buffalo onAhe
same train with the deceased on the
f ata l 39 th of December; while tleceaetsl another
gentleman testified to seeing
fOtn at Ashtabula. ^^ With this all but
positive proof that the hUBb^nd was
among the victims, oi^ _i diaaster, enabling the
® nit *** eommenced^the funds
Ilf r ., U * ea .^,. ? en b8 ““ ”f ."L.'SjILSSi snpphedb^.a
wh<m t ,l ° railrwnl . | company s attorneys
were eputrouted > with the proofs «(tbn
JJ 1 '* ll8r ! TT’KitSm for^ W.OOtk 1 ”*!!!! Not MmLd she »“*«*
[»*y«r» concluded iS^f’^J'nL to J t th ^SB^S materg
before the cotn^s. Che inve tigata ms
concerning the fate of the tanband were
contained, and it was aaoertemoil tiwtbh
J 1 " 41 bw " b y Gen. Martuidale, his
f,- r ^ r *N^'r m ‘he are^. b
the Pension n Home m Wisconsin several
*“« W W tmnagitt to iigm tne
“ l " n, ® l ‘,. answenng ms descripthm^ex^ lescnption ex
»° J two m.Boc hwtCT, wa s stall
£c*£j£aasvg SUS fc a.
re
*«"*»«> advanced the funds is out h«
iliabnreeraenta, as the woman is too poor,
markable repay him. The case is a most re
gsiiBSSTr one, however, 1 Iron? the fa^
~ 1
Fashion Hint*.
The Carriek capes introduced early in
tJ|e aeason have become very dresses, popular,
Rn d are seen on Itourette on
0 ]otli, and on the richest brocades. tuanUCTjieing They
nT e made in the plainest doubled else piped
merely or Viiriety
fhc edges, nn,P _ are seen otl a
, ^ -j-,'-—- 1 ; -c- o'- , ’ -- t
'
* French
®htoi 1(ult importations of
WD>p grefebtb of black jackets tar. with These a
a in J „i e Carriek capo furjthut
ar to the stoles of are
w „ rn ; n Paris instead of boas ; the stoles,
however “ ' Z' have long ,£ fronts like the fur
nru -, U vmn graV Kg „. Very
<JrwHVg ‘ ^ tol©a arc of ailvcr fox fur,
®i,i of m , ra i,ont feathers edged
t e Spanish loee, and tied with
pn f le Wne strings. These »v-wren hi
b( , carnaR( , t ,r with eveniug^dresses,
Xnenter!', am i a ,.,. remove.! oi carried 'th.- arm
ig the house.
,V^ " with short skirts are trrtniit
al a into favor. The materials
„ rftv gm .„ mur,x,n or- anal
br own" j Worth -haH-ateo-made:: these.
6uits a , the g reM L and bine Highland
* ^ g. , r t ] ie a tr,s-t a Cnt-awav lin'd jacket
.jlktand >f material is made and will,
X\ m inline-hoUmg au iiderluiiDg „f ihiime! This
wrap, si,aged
„ ^bv re cisriy like the Eaglisluuorning,-oats
Ctoehuia gentlemen. used trim
^“ray bands are for
6 r blacksnits, and the bonnet
SiteU'i* .if «*«iiet gttv felt, merely cl.iuehilW a crown,
, ith a btred band of
fnf A j M)W „ { six loops of gray satin
^ ia at thu - eud ',, t tfie crown tied be
hind, ! Wlong-loofed‘ kud tMgr«v satiu string aie
Is, w just below the
right ear I’he fvo.it is softened by a
face trimming of a single row of gath- the
e^ . a Sender grey wing is in
' trimmhigs
The ,.fo,v ■!,- /„„> and 'jet
d^ ^‘tSTefote
■*» <> ld f^SwS 2 *
*sometimes' *,
ro these are used alone,
^..metimss with pale- pink roses, and at
others with dark damask red roses.
row clusters or etse vuolete
Edme in light mourning..
______--
Keniarkalile Mart, m man hi|.
Captain Bogardns, a well-known
■ ar ifoi .an, rk; recently reraiirkable accomplished, break- in
y Y the Ceatf if
lr ,g 5,600 glass balls inside of 600
muiutes. the missies being shot from a
finuhtebarreled gun. The balls were
thrown ^ J up from spring traps and were
JcomplishS the' air. The feat was
with a margin of nineteen
mites an-ltwenty-tive seconds to spare,
|U(t ^ , hat , e weapon, a'm«dl. wcrghing 300
ten pound*, was hft«l and ^ -
times, winch, work ia eqmvalent to 318
fw , • , J minute, eontintnvl w.-eompbsbed for
(v !r alone a „d
over Fight lioiirs. This m.^t be added
to the brain work mvoive .1 m aimmgthe
gun,' in -.rder to :nercetve t'.e nature ol
ScmSkrtnau. r ,..„ a ,kiihl- skill and endurance of
..... . — ■ ■ -•
Adnlteratton Adulteration or of Silk- - 1
^ There is a grert outcry , in hn?..
about the odolterMum of sd». - <t f V
are sdk raanula, brers . t
nous and weigh,-giving substanceswith
the five, but the presents- of jute rnoften
more than »“spscja •
and dealetado notaleny^^, rdet
oJhjUK'eEffig’t
.*.- 3 *-^.—
THE ILETHOffE ECHO.
Advertising Katas
MK mR
lme* ...
\.s 3.St : 4 .W
tcatae. a >o t,~\
VHHfttC *JBO. «. 0 i
~ umn. lip Xc,- -*
V^snsB. ‘ st» 12 .i» K.'O
i coiame.. iiw ie.!«j..H ax* in
Legal Advertisements.
Sheriff Mitt, per levy, ten line*. a $V •»
Exec ; iV, Alrtu-tscratoe* xb! a*ri Hi"*
S»j»s, per iqiare.....
E*rb x J.iS’icfj*. e-j-i*re
Sstlexto Drbton «s;l CraShm, Jfcuiv dij» 4. y
> cf l^ave- tn sec; ttrrtj day*. j tw
..
I^trere uf 44ni'iu*tr»tioti, thirty cuy* i.i«
Letters of I>'.«mt*ioa. tire* luoutt*
Liters &f (•ttuffttsttis;?, rttaty day* . ..
l>tter» c?t -Di*. t»asfdiaa*hrji, tony 4*v?»..
Horae* cad Notice*, three in
Ru>.Saa’i pet x^ at ff p,e*ei» tueeitu^n. . .:... t&r
Items #f Interest.
There is one Republican in the Ken*
tnckv ..^„ Senate
the **^
^
Thy flgareot LAW*. X ‘ flfa fmT
; ^tb« cncleol .Ur. dtd not nppear tall
;
Vba*J **|ft*** . ban , ks in . the ..
State of New York, bavnig aajaggntgatc
. o. A *»•«*•*>£ l ^ MOb* jma *rmsr*
% 2%5 ?%mL 2 W 2 T
tae^Tpiace.^ ' “ 4
Jaa-JsStR-wS-JlfS STIhfnJSSl k^f Stover Z
j( meJte , awaT u , ul theft
lm , nK(l t in a bill for $074 fordoing so.
There is some foundation tor the vam
S^^SetC^ fih t^"file surS^ e iX
from the ennsequeut exhaustion.
Inis sh.to at Mendota, Ill., a town of
si,thousand mbatatante there met by
accident the other high; day the six men over height six
feet four inches average
being within a hardlyAppreciable fraction
^»•*
235 J pottmls.
It is noted that probably the oldest
SP ttler in California is Feter Htora, who
m-rived in the Golden State 111 .S 3 . He
aa8t } le maker of the famrms ” liear
ll " g ’ of ^““‘b when ltMii, the citi
:MW . llf t)iat place declared that Cahfor
tun should be an independent State.
A ““ ri-cently. convicteil in
southern Germany of murdering one of
a family aud attempting topqisoo four
p,| lfw xbe judge naturally thought
h11c r a beinous crime should be
Wlw| wit |, tUan Usual to severity. death
^ so seUtenceiVthe murderer
^ flft< a, n TfRrs - impris'inment.
“ Marshall the first discoverer ot
Htat‘e.°Xtl ifph.ee m j ^ LWaia> ht
he made
.ij B coverv thirty years ago, aud has
remained there ever'"since. He made »
oftf mining but l,«s spent uearlv
a u and is .tow a romfortnble eulti
an yonng much man mortitled remote tlnil. ’ " i f" n went ' t !mon upon « 1 *
spree winch ended with Ins death in •
few days, uraam
•ter,
Tell, the ha,».n kuid fret., l-c.l,-.
hMighu-r tt- Horn,shying Arete, voice
"d»KreWirereo« f^Jg^SS^rtdtSa^aJSSt*.
q- \ . , r „. columnnicifes r s of the Danish
j rf m to a
J^ c , b K inter,-sting w-hiel ac
M- riow re'
cnrr.d on D , > iu „ ,,, w -,
a voyage .,.^* to Valparaiso, iwtu fl.m
?e *1 .-I' to ,'h abou ”'T r, h i i"
Sowlv esi.De,i'«illimon ’
m'iL where ‘charts no tr.ee ‘tli. of ve“d land
fPjJ*f ■> <"« < 0 .u ntd fOwwto ,, y- ' . , r,, fap
j\ 1 . the new
f' , «- r i th^flmt i mrtduillv obT^taon aimiuiLhed
A ^'"t, ^rta ‘ ,11 tenl "J r V Vm h
, a,s * wlll i„l, . ug , no
a hl P !, ,,’nerc'ot r, i
, lnR cl J‘‘- re v h^dyd 11 tonernutof oflando,,' lan mg P The Ahe
smteng ’S wuttnnwl WlSS’ owly,______ veSlcV «
, w..»-i»„«'-*■«>-«• to
1 ♦rsdLt * * Ht ,swis*' of Month tracrire
dfla*- Types.
„ . , uv , if #*2 _______
ness ofTimghe^glare b ; ,te frtrta to he to
:,n'*ater^ snpposed. more Some? senotm nteWueuts than wa^fir are re
*™*£%%* ported to have ^een m^e '£g in , F . - SuKris
^TL^tad^wSStuted d t be
“dsnbstatated_tor for the tne metal me mi
1 ' "‘ ^1 do JL es not al at fi :first rat sight gh ■■ rtrike
'
° fli, n 1 ," ?. UmaM ononirh the*fo unhand when the
me frem, severe
B een anv but a
f ^* JSSJSire „ them '^,i -i tefSe verv ranch
more iBwapi^nce amt oe tore thev rimy
HnaUy r et^«l^tli, ^mltrag^j ^
di^th^»mg ’
nowj^
£ ”^ g »re ln T othe, " 1 ^ ..' an., D more ididjmpr.rte i*
b ^ ,,,.,,1
?* UmwC'and'wine WlV tl , 01 Sed
noVofom^weMt,taifo* glas'-es 'trinsnarer.,, ra,d
,!Si n’aturslh ranch 'div harder than the old
Shaw . m iitfle:-'-. be cr-e fo-i out of
bv-tl,.we ■ -,> wh-h so
shorter tw£ 3 *t-'-vlile nul- th-tee.ufy of
y mte'we now employ. It is^also
^s !Lnffl-’tetw-.-u t Tlmt „ the tae , thd. dMbreutte, ... . ... .. tie-i.thi-k . f-r , in¬
-I
^ “j, more. ,-WrH defhn-d.
f,>„'«.» tod tie new
““ . uT^dhe i he east in ex;;ctlT the wime
tel and that therefore
to .impleroeute
ttfo ^
“ t ^.4
^ |iJis h ^ ti ■ w ,. s}; : ir:> tb- ex
.
f . . .
• toughened
, mifiijtv of
B to re.merous <>ti>. r
h],....... err- u, be fullv
-*“ l ’t
■■
A Model Tramp,
On one of the c, Id--! ,!;cre lust winter
''a ftaxmafr men eah- 4 -..ha lufflse He
■ : ,--1 <-r.' ....'h :-g".
„,i'j, | K
* ......f Thcla.lv
kak *. w . a r an.
f's’feet , ,.... , ......
mid a p,.:r of s. H- w-t.t
awureim-l n- . _
urfi ; rert oi-yh ,«- . « >
j i a „tVi it -i. 'll- w-mld u-t leave
.^‘'11 , ta - ; ,.... , e. . » with
-----m„ : .ira-H TT^'iTFrrTt