Newspaper Page Text
TIE 0GLET1BPE ECHO.
Subscription Satss:_
(JO* Ymr.-- .......... SUk?
8>t 1M
.T'M
r*rm» C**A fft
*''4W ftT •fcRMfOftlb*
• U‘!r*tsoa or hi* tus». «ed if ntarrtpcaor » set
Wtf**.!, the » *« ■««
kuj j»*r*or> who wi!! Mod o* tire um^nm of At*
mw whrater*. with $W «sh, mil be to
•or y♦»/'* ■al*a i 5f<ion fr*e. Ifo «W» r*<e*.
He IHiia’t bell.
“I b’lwvc 111 »I1 the IMS Jsns Aon. and bay
• hoOM io town ;
_
H.- iT ____ r ^ _____ i T _ r«h
P«rf rare.
' b * Wi ' 1 ”
A«J ttowm. tire-id.» h,ril, worth tbs
> D " r “ rttD “
„ , t ,
5fe P
____^- Ujo **^ tM *” T
wai cot the okt place dap w twe Jones , told , „
■amto-day.
I ain't taZZT scared of work, vwi know—mv know—my daddv daddy
^ - -«—ms-.
tarns, m «- o«
hei4 of his.
For he <JW Vim work of thra* birad ******
of rhaamsti/.
f vs tried to work with winin' hand* in sun
shine sod in riia
And Ivst;!-.S vor.1 Awful tees, sirept
hme^msybo,
Whre thorn giddy, hea-t-ttrong rf«re (.■ mine
would' hsw 'jsl.en I yelled •
Potiaps p„, B ........ may be sinful X,.. for a inortsl to ., Snd find
wthtow* With toiling hard i d i bolh it. day ia and i ,,.1, night, .f ih, hr
only mak« Wa
tint 1 vs thought while cradl.,1 ram-lodged oatr
db the Sds-hitl over there.
That my cross was most to® hefty for s small
hoiiad aimn to he* i
It. sUu. breu my onsom P1I m .too s-plowm . slowin'
aoiupy*oi)
’•“sss-sstir-"^-*
““r.rrr’“'"'*
Whene'er s springy root 'ml break .nil whack
tae oti the *hin.
1 mention theee 'ere tiiiagH, J»ac Auu. because
I’d like to lead
-. A pe.«ful- blsmatew loud life, from att
o
temptatam. freed,
But M o..x .. Hwman ft..- - exwt and tatsr
■“H" abound
Thets'h to wMne tall syrdaaity at ttasss a floatin'
'reusd.
So ho. m.iXmwT if voii're . ,«t m» aou 1 11 <*11
Hsll « „ duIttot /o *hst f A-lack, ; . m mil » „
mafls op .a stones—
And wslfaiove mt<> the town next week
.l..f. tb.t you're toyin'. *H—
Vou U never leave the good old pleeteekmg a.
yon here life? ■
___
Wrii, there V it goee sgrfn, I viini' 06 oa and
v i i «
tiveway;
Bn, you’ll and r>. bare my w.y this time, old
—k h l-aswtU.aaj g a... —
S.. 1 fyoire.wmo,jlost.yngbt here by grsn
nire-I'H st»y, tool'
The Old Squire's Mistake.
“tm®h«*ris faiti* are more ihaasoroMtrt,
And simple than Norman Wood.”
Hpnire Ath u rtnn owasd a fin e jdaoe.
and bad need a plethoric have been rent roll, objeet ho in
money not an
the selection of a wife for his only son,
Oyril. Not ^eing of romantic temperament,
a
be had given but litUe thought to tbe
matter, merely hxiking npou rime it as Cyril es
reoiiai, mat at some distant alliance,
should form some suitable so
that the name need not die out; but
there need be no haste, aud a fortnne
must Wtiat, be among the his lady’s advantages. ■>—’
then, was »nrorf.»
»i»y, wlien Gynl cansBAoTUin one marriage mom
ing and •’•■'ed his mnsent to a
with a poor young girl, theorphan three niece
of a small farmer, who lived some
miles from Atherton manor.
A stormy scene eusned. They favorite parted
in anger. Cyril momitel his
“ Madcap " and rode at once to Deep- and
dale (arm. Hilda saw him coming
met him at the door.
The nwh voting lover liad not waited
for his father's consent to wno her, and
they had. been betrothed for several
weeks He had led Hilda to believe
that she would he welcomed to hi*
' home, and given a daughter's portion of
lova
Ityras hard to tell her thbliitter truth,
and in his anger and harsh disappointment word his father he
did not soften one
had «»i!, evil to Hilda a milk
taoed doll, whose pearlyteeth and bright
eyes had captivated him in spite of his
better jttdgment.
“ But we’ll be married in spite of him,
won’t we, darling 171 i He’ll Hell oome think to hiB
senses then, warrant. can’t help himself." it
all Hilda's right when he paled she listened
rosea as to
the eager boy, and the happy light
which had made her dark eyes aobril
lisat, had died s-ay inaomlier shadows,
writ until your father <***._ ^
cXlv ewthquakk
an wouldn't move him. If
•jsu.M.skawiiMiiw
it might shorten his life, if yon hi. only
gjtfhSLis.is^ss: -w» - * ■-«
eye*. wbo^forehip vrvxv-;n *!,er • t
touched. the verv * gronSd your feet
have Oh MVtathef Hilda I did not
wfc, light;
mm ...
siwafissrs-r* Crippled
to he in mind and l**lv, and
miserably poor, and no one else‘had a
prior claim to yon, I would work myself
to a shadow for you, and consider myself
happy in doing than so. It is -because' 1 l«^ve
you better myself that 1 will not let
you do wrong. But l will promise to go
Rohtary concerned, and alone, so far as hnmau love
is to my grave, if; it so be that
we eannot home marry. father Dear, dearest and Cyril,
go te your do as
wishes, folly anil entirely. Go-Vs bless
ing will surely rest upon the dutiful
Her voice broke. With a wild im
pulse she threw her arms around his
neck and kissed him again and again,
between her robs. It was her farewell,
rhe next moment Cyril was standing
alone m the porch, and the themf beavvdoor
woe shut and bolted between
After a few moments of bewildering
hesitation he mounted and rode away
He oonld not but think forgivingly of
Hilda, as he recalled her anguished sobs,
and feit her kiiwes bnrnmg npon his
fonhred-she who had ever bee. so
chary of her caresseR.
tjfaivasa he mighv.he did not again
see Hilda. Itseeured „ though
nnaeeai messenger was evei on the
to worn ner of his approach. At last
grew desperaji, *»d determined to
Oglethorpe Echo.
T. L GANTT.
| boee. Hi* father procured him s
i miasma ia the arm;. Ha wished for ao
; Bre samee . sa d,
tarrying out mu, hispypose. he tma nqoufienlty H i s regimen ia t
"«•£!?,£... .
•*“*- *° ““*"*« to tofcw her sol
d ! CT ' ? ^ 9" w “i’? ‘“i. 1 -?' ‘S ,■?*“ We w P 0 ?' *°
dying ’
soothe hit moueste if . he wu . be
T T. lint d . b !l?' tAher work vi waa ia store lor^her. ,
A letter from home brought news of an
cpidemie of the moat fatal type of te
j ^babitanta P®* 1 fcTW were & her so OWD alarmed v^lage. that they The
:
"By re Atbev toa ia down with H. and
o# all Hannah, Hm indoor aerrantoat thamanor, the
old -jrat-asj- who took care sl of a« mw
•«« -*4 rtT only be
Without a moment's hesitation Hilda
went to th* matron, telbng her ahe was
needed at home, and procured her dia
charge. Then,ladmi with h« precious,
flretoomewuril-bound knowledge, she b»k the
treiu.
old Hannah w«, seated at the master’s
bedrid*, kqkiagwom tad wsyir. As
Hilda came softly in, dresae.1 in her
: clmgmg grw flannel drees, with her
glossy Tin hmr hidden by a cloae-flttingmu^
cap, she looked to the snrpnsed old
woman hke an appantsin. Hilda smiled
and hcldout her hand as me—Hilda, she whispered:
vJ'BSSV p«. IK lale farm 0 ", ? * I now am here to help yon. of
I know what to do, so don t be ahwid to
sp&zxsxz*"***’ i^SMaars
that she was making no idle boast,or she
would not hsve yielded up her post. As
,t was, we«y human nature asserteil its
dmtDa,taddMwtatBbd)y. Ixiwl.of
Hhe e<xm c *. m<) back Will, s,
warm soup. It tasted grateful broken U to her the
young nurre, as she had n^
fast some the reception of the letter.
After this, Hilda was left alone, with
the sick man. The rngli wore wearily
away, the silence only irtdten by the
^ and
P 888 b« cool hand with* magnetic touch
over mmueiitary hisforehead, relief. thus giving him a
After old Hannsh was thoroughly
rested, she and Hilda divide.! the time
m the mok room, and by that mean* kept
. tbwr H was MrengttiwatawngMu^ a weary'fight with.death: ---- but a -
strong constitution, aideil by careful
nursing csrrtel the squire through,
pa9ged away, and a deep
, sleep came a.ikens upon him. It was the crisis,
The rational and comfort
a ble, h « i s revM r-sald-khetloetor.- “If,
; on tlie contrary, he fslla mto a state of
ooma, nothing parsed can he p him. of the
Hours on. Lvery tick
silver-tongued ^ repeater on the mantle
, seemed to find an eoljo in the hearts of
the aniious watchers. At last the critical
moment came. The Houire awoke free
i from fever, though weak as a ohild . He
WfaF At nrat a q^^ Hilda . kept , as mnch "" ^ as possible ...
out of his aight, shrinking mt<r the
shadow of the heavy damask curtain^
when lie was awake. Bnt be did not
seem to notice her, and she gradually
foreot her eaiibon.^ ■. . ■
«»«'« Ifcrmg 1 m loue "mi,rS,n and te^ekyn^teW- _ mi ,
tractable. n Then Hilda would take a
.
book and read to him m her low musical
voice, and thus soothe him nntd to sleep. her
She was only iby.itely. waiting J pres
‘' ''go
-
beck to her self-imposed duty at,Uie
hospital. One morning she him been
reading tbe iVmes, until the squire was,
as she thought, asleep. Then the paper
dropped listlessly in her Up Her
: thought*, uummdful of time and space,
were with him she loved so faithfully
self-sacrificingy. trembling vomesnddenly roused her
A
from her reverie .
“Hanuah tells me you are going away.
I* it necessary ? Oiu any other sick
pen#in n«d yon as much as I do’’
Hilda looked at the old man in sar
prise. A cadence, boru of loneliness
, and sorrow, in lus voice, touched her
unspeakably; and as she regalleu the
hale, hearty Bijuire, who often nsle by
the farm in the pleasant old days, call
ing out a eheerful good-morning to her
; uueie in his steutoriau tone, tears came
to her eyes to see what a wreck of his
former self hehad becomft
.
After a briefLesitrtion she said softly:
“H you need me I will not go away
for the do present. need much, the
“ I yon very was
reply. “So that matter is settled. Now,
nnrso, I want to ask you a question,
Have t ever seen you before» Somehow
your face assms famiimr, but I cannot
plwe .^rkToftt it, . .
^theaHtaneh ^jxezsssttsi in with the
of an engagement
,
- m«Ainterested M^taomjta
%ss«#sf?g:'srtrs
«»««* aha l«uftnn»n»ntlY hea^ Lwened lifeless on the
floor. The rolled fall her cap f
and her hair ih all its rich luxori
squire took the paper, and saw facing
him in staring letters :
a wloodi rkoaoement.
Great- loss of officers and men—Cvril
Atherton of the Grave, mortally
wounded, while endeavor
i«g to silence abate
tery He
' The letters swam before his eyes.
eould rea*t no more. He rose feebly
and draggetl his shaking limbs te Hilda’s
side
' said brokenly.
“ Mv did'noffinishhi^sentenre noor irirl ” lie
But he ; for,
at the sound of hi* voice Hilda opened
daze-1, her eves and looked at him, first in a
dewildered unboned way, then she jmt
out both hands had him
“We have killed him between ns !
Do darltog" von hear? mTdarhnitin, You and I' Oh, my my
The Squire turuS to Hannah:
“ Wtois this voung woman ?’.’
<* j^ord bless its, sir. Didn’t CvriPs vou know
it was Hilda? Master Hilda,
who »“e has been risking her own life to
: ronrs ?"
HiKa'a The votoe is interrupted the them: conch
, <• giv?n grave lonesome we
have think vour it bonny better head, and year
- father voni mav * one. for yon
tbaa low-born Hilda's arcs. Ob,
my own Cyril, oonld y°n bnt know how
THE ONLY PAPER IN ONE OF THE LARGEST, MOST INTELLIGENT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA.
juj heart ached when I shat the doer ia
yonr face, and sent yon to do soar
r^rereiii be
wuer! Yon have gone forever, sad
he thinking, *^fft too that Hilda Hllda waa creel and
J*- Crnel “> d “° re
S'the^ow “** *
rotation afprinst him. .
?e “y took J”° her r P‘. h *? d *s«"*L “ t U * t ’ me “ a h *P ,
me to bear that bitter, bitter punish
alive “ ent - Prom dead, I thia will moment, make unenda be Cyril
or to
yon for my unthinking cruelty both to
yon and him. Yon shall be to me as
much my daughter as though aatbril yon was
Cyrilawife. But aa long waa
st ®u»
” ” ' M. ,*#
hops. “Ob, tell truly, she said clasp
me
nna-JsrTsrs- mg her hands in her intense eagerness,
ttStiaTwara ,ie
- v evPr
P "I haSw offl
instances of one
cer being token for another in the haste
toS confusion of a battle, and thia tde
grun waa sent while the conflict waa
still raging.”
So they else tried was-thinking to.hope-even sorrowfully wh le
that every one bright-fapedyoiBig:
the kmd, master
wes lying with his face to the stars, no
longer ignorant of thtar voiceless mys
terwe Hilda m his solemn sleep. the It
mmuned at manor. was
a comfort to the ohl man to make aa he
thought, order this expiation Hilda f„ r his fault. the
Iu that sp.»utu«iu.
household might be fully be his understood, tie
he announced her to son s
Bt8a«3rtsttais®
The next telegram brought cheenug
news. Oynl had lost an arm, but was
doing well, and as soon as he would be
able to bear the journey to be rent
home, weanng on his breast a oecaration
earned by his own bravery.
After this there was a Lady happy house
hold at Atherton manor. the Hargrave
was versed m all womanly accom
phshments, and slufound Hilda an apt
pupil. uld lJ
«° f w
foudnesa SO patient for and the gentle tender girl m who care ha.Jbeen 1 of lum
throngh his tedious illness. The a^bt
of her pretty face bending over her em
delicate broidery, crocuet or engaged in seemed weaving: to some him
like pattern, tlmt he
a tangible jooefy promise tt waA
hrhetOt a man.
- So the days wore on until the pale
young soldier came home. Then there
waa quite a wedding—the marriage festivities the heir con- of
sequent upon the of
the manor being bri& reserved tuitil the re
^ ,ff to fro m a Itagthened
tour iuTMy, wbeiiitwasTondly fnlly reetored honed
that Cynl wonld be. to
conld healttiand be strength, happy ao by that hts the tenantry
mane presence,
- •—
nhaf CUM* Cen»u»pllon.
Statistics prove that the
of deaths gith. by consumption keep l mln exact
t h e a um Uar - ie taete
who follow indoor. emeupations. More
women than men are victims to it, be
cause more women spend their time
within doors as a matter of coarse,
The rooms in which and they without live are ventila- gen
. erally tk». very When warm, abused lungs
v their poor,
oreaa uowu, uiey uuiuuemiauze me
“ ,lll " 8 g r <«? b l' ! and unhealthful climate,
though their failing health can ba
traced directly to an outrageous viola
tion H of the people physical in this laws of city nature,
ow many very are
preparing for the coming of the under
: taker by slecpiug^Tii warm-rooms, with
*hu blast? deaih-dealiug The old prejndioe iia»‘-burner agaiuBt in night full
air still clings to many. They exclude
itfrom their they sleeping shut and living they shut rooms,
and when it out m
every night enough Jordan's poison to carry
them over stormy waves.
Then the air in churches aud Appar- public
assemblies blessings is univeraally of ventilation ba.1,
tfn « y the are
unknown to the custodians of the doom
and window*-of half regard such for places. their lnugs If people that
had the
they have for their of souls, they would prdi
labor for the pass. <re a pure air
nance in the chnxcnea tisait would give
them more time and vigor to prepare
for heaven. Thetlieater ia not much j
bettor. Until places oi worship and
amusement are better ventilated, no one
who has a proper regard for his lungs .
should frequent them, unless he carries
hi* own cubic air with him. Factories,
printing offices and all places where <
humsn Wings are corralled for several
hours together, are conservatories for j
the propagation of consumption. Who
were the healthy people ? Those who,
ago, slept in rooms that never
knew a fire, and worshiped in churches
as eold as the experience of the-Polaris
sttiJSzzsssB&zz
'o^n'^SwiM
will »-■ sneak ont of aigU-Demwr (Col.)
.Imposed rte to cringe to the powerful.
Ess*
Tears at a funeral are sometimes a
mere disguise tor social joy, just festivities as laughter
^gaye^- anud may
Many a true heart that would have
come back like the dove to the ark, after
the first transgression, has been fright
ened beyond recall by the angry look
and menacing taunt—the sftvage charity
of an unforgiving soul.
served , Compliments accept which only w 3 think debts, are with de
we as
indifference ; but those which conscience
informs ns we do not merit, we receive
itfa\the same gratitude that we do
favorsViveD swav.
:>n -Tn n rTu.m wNlnh atnwwlM and hat
,, fofhertfirof leeo iter^a^mafe’ and
?_* o-hfehihe which ken!
bJ world is salted and
■ .jeh Wis fro**
. ^ tSn
IL?, nSS-and »_,i *iaies men noblfw
demi-gmls 8 and the
prophet* of a better time' tune.
The man wnosp mmd and hands are
bwre , fiis-ls no timg to ?eep and wail. If
18 slack, spend .be time tnreediBg,
>o man ever knew tqo much. The hard
«*» students in the world are tae old
men who know the mogt
Habit* influence the diaraetei pretty
much as nnder-cnrrent* inflnenee a ves
eel, and whether they speed neon .he
way of our wishes, or retard our pro
grerr, toeir effect is ntd toe Ires .mpnr
tant because imperceptible. \
LEXINGTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, APRIL 12. 1878.
QUEER HOUSES.
___
^-tuinttuMiMMU.
The soreeapondent of a Denver (CoL)
paper writes from Mew Mexico aa fol
^eSTandthe’^tS'eSte °“ tWO **T5Si£3* reside,
a^ie plac£T “tet "mTd
other hoSesue I oonld mention,
Where inhabited the bat almost I oonld as learn thickly the
- as best
r eople poueee the booses in oo-partner
rfiip, boose M d aU livelik* one happyfamily. village
a tiruvli constitutes a
One ol&WldingB at and Taos the rowre
about an acre of amf ground, Vqwter. other
.boat an acre They
preanme, like pyramids, <
~ ”
ei^'ot th«*OTe b 'ShA'inlB e in g set
from the below iraffl
cjently ‘o.p^the^Hv.storiremsM: far to bring the structure almost
to a point by the time fire stories are at
^.uuumSSlep^i^, ^up^rttteii^CTre weighty wSte
serve to snpport temperate «ic roof, and top walls
as weU a, the room* The
mmde walls arethiu the highest protected anti
strongest. from%hat Being thorooghly in this
slight rainfallUiere is The
country, theystand for ages. en
trant^arefrom the top, the hBoehts and
descents being laSer made by mesns of lad
d eI9 . A is abont a» useful a
thing in a Pueblo village lie a lead pen
oil» in a newspaper office. There lad
,] er8 gtena everywhere, outside and in
side of and all around a village. They
, lre , 1Bwl ,,, clirul. from the ground to the
aret roof, from the flret to the second,
nD a a, on to the tap, and then from the
animals climb Uiem with perfect ease.
An In(Jiwl dog is the next thing to animals an In
,li» u after his first cousin, and the
ranat of oouae be in the house. Conse
,gently, ,i,g one of the first lessons a Pueblo
must l«arn is to climb up and down
these ladders. The chickens also nn
deretaud the modus operand,, Bod the
h<m9e wife often.thua has a whole brood
picking crumbs from her fourth floor.
llie houses are divided into compart
ments, feet the rooms being family abont teu or
twelve square. A occupies
one compartment, and whosoever occu
pfe, th* gnmnd Boar own* and occupies
ttU above it. It may be seen that those
haviDg thfijr residences in the center of
tU e buUding have titan nstich more outeide oossuk. neigh
dteus mKrtere When their
bore. in one of the Taos “hives,'
» i family oocupying those central apartment*, whom
iait «..? „»nni front'ctirner nnon are
oonferrod rooms have but
. one . xi, ey have rules regulating the
distribtrtioii generally givmff the most
ore< l oitixens. These peojile, when “ at
h„me,”’are so walls effectnaHy between separated them that 1^
the immense
they are no more troubled by their
neighbors than are the people wno lire
along Fourteenth styreek in Denver.
family relations are domesticLdifc. well pre
served, and I am told that
PDT jt tloes Uol prevaR eommonities. hero more than The
among more civilized
lamb mother-in-law and the lion lie down in-law together. sit
The and son in
opposite comers and smoke the pipe of
peace. There are about seven hundred
Iudians in this village, ami they all in
habit these two houses, consequently
they are about as have thick been as about a new paper
«f pins There seventy
deatliB from last small-pox few m the and, place dor
ing the months, feariag
that the walls might be innoculated, 1
,tid not go inside.
These Indians have lived at this plaoo
f 0r oVer 3tM> years, aa we have every
reason to believe from tbe old Spanish
riwords still extant.; how much longer
will probably knowledge never themselves. be known, as It they is,
h aV o „o
however, believed, that they settled
hereabout the time or soon after Cor
tez attacked Mexico,
---
Shocking Scene In a Church.
A recent dispatch from Richmond,
jnd., is to The following offset-: City
Marshall L. Schafer, has just returned
fmm Rnightatown, report* that himself,
p ar k Page, from Riehmoml, a*d Officers
Kehoe, trom Indianapolisand took Haynes,
ot Knightstown, Harry Foxwell,
the Knightstown saloon keeper,
on snspieiou of - being the murderer of
0 h n W. White, to Carthage to-dar, and
arrived at the church just as the funeral
services over the murdered man were
oomplete.1. They fcmk the prisoner into He
t h e ehnroh to look at the corpse.
evinced such agitation that the murdered
raaC ' 8 sister screamed in affright. In
H tantlv the crowd in the church made a
ms h upon the prisoner, whom the*
tri<H q tone f rom the officer. Revolvers
were drawn, the women screamed, the
preacher leaped upon a chair and ex
0 '™£
“hS him "“StoTe hto to
P l hack,'drove , n3^^ rapidly from towi
ee are< a
up the prisoner in jail Foxwell is a
tahon. 3&«te«s~S 11 * w jS?TwSvn^
An Adroit Swindle.
A young gentleman recently drove up
to the establishment of a well known
watchmaker 'in • London and' purchased
a he gold had hunter for £18. Unfortunately,
left a £50 note on his desk at
borne. Would Mr So-and-so kindly
send a man with him to his business
houte-r-naming an eminent firm of
ironmongers ? The inan might-keep the
change . forhimself. Mr. Sp-andso
hummed communicate atM hawed, and tlieoabman, found means who.
f o with hii
told him he had taken up
fare at the ironmonger’s establishment
in and that the gentleman was
8 oin f! down to Pytchly. Arriving Thereupon the
man was sent. at
establishment, watchmaker's the voung gentleman
ushered the man into the
shop, and ted? the clerk to “ give jump^l him
. thatSO-ponndei. and ' drove Hi saying off. The he clerk,
into the cab,
w ho f tch had toe pohtely cash, then bowed returned and gone with off
:to e a
harided^o brown paper parcel, which he suavely this?*
the man.. “What’s
; asked toe astonished messenger, "this
isn’t fifty pound.” “Excuse me,” was
toe dnmb-bril reply, the “it gentleman is. It's toe bought fifty-pound
; i an hour ap.” dumb The walcBuiiE™ still
cheriahes that bell.
p, -minintirT p.n»«w «*1U H-e.
Time* aometiBW fallows: abont Russian
characteristic*! as The whole
government of Bosnia has been toned
down from the Rami*of twenty years
carriage to go to hm, p^ace the^ople
Situ Americans the would most f£ditie*£
The reception I and was he neemed enthosiubc to enjoy
. ever saw, it
i thoroughly. Hhf
tree that some of the poorer
LclauM of Bumisna itself a» vmy ignorant,
and the nation la not ao far ad
vanned in mviliutwa m “ -
nations are, bat it mm
avast area of ph
! and
rivres mineral of 'petroleum fuiuing away,
the wealth of the country is en
: t^'^sssstssi: th»^t^ftegoi|^more c^
from the lowest condition* ri t^gf^ynt to positions
of affluence, and some make their for
tunre will rapidly. Jropo«‘ A there shrewd end *oome ignorant rich, fel
, low
ju*t as theydo in America. inventive
They of have Americans not the great peoples. fac
and nlto and other
they are not very quick to adapt the
improvements of other nations W their
own use. For example, in their ,m
menae grain trade they do not use elevs
tors, but handle this product lore altogether
with ahovela. when their They does time in into this
way. and grain get
the market it is generally dirty and sells
for lesa tlian it wonld otherwise bring,
aBK-a
The people in the intenor provinces of
Bussia are, acme of them, very ignorant,
while the higher classes in the cities are
aa much enlightened as those of any
other uatiou. Not but mmy speak and the always Eng
: liah language, there is,
has been, a very the Russians friendly sentiment toward on
the part of onr
country. The cause of some parts of
; and the populatioi, other parts being rather so benighted highly civilized lie
in the that the may
accounted for fact race,
spread over such an immense are* of
oonntry, is not easily reached ami cen
j tralired. But with their mineral wealth
and other resource* tl.lre ia an .mmense
prospective It power, balongmg to them.
is thisThat makes other nations aux
ioua and Uneasy in Mines like the pre
sent. It is this that Napoleon spoke the about First his
had before him when lie
oltimatelv getting into uosaesaion of all
Asia Minor. Tlie Bussi.s develop
. slowly, as is the care with all great
nations. Sja Out of the three hundred and
many holidays and they keep, but of then-time they are a
great many, the girag
to these observances i* *» iomonae
waste. 'Button mncii praise cannot be
. beatowed npon Alexander !^» for bia untir
ing efforts k^y *wrta,c»* dt tr**#*# his
peopled
man l Know He nas i.oaaeu.
“ Yon will please observe, said old
Mr. Lambwell, a« he led n« through in*
school the other day, tbe “that the boys j
are required to.display discipline, utmost and atten- in ;
tion to quietness and j
a short time become even divested o»
that most annoyingjlisoositioo to i«
l each down other;, the m short, of they mature soon settle ,
! into gravity yews,
under tlio wholesome system I have in-,
trodneed.’
We at this moment arrived in front of
•Wlrf-Hyitt;------- bnoket of water, aud ------ had just u;;d
a one
charged his mouth with the contents of
u tin cup, while the old his gentleman from was the
stooping floor, when to another recover passing pen along be-. j
!
, hind, the snapped drinker’s his finger quickly caused him be
neatli ear, and
of by a sudden start, to eject tbe content* ! i
his mouth over the pedagogue's bald
'nate. Starting drippLg, npriglit. with his hair 1
, and face th5 maater said :
“ Who did that ?”
The party sir,” unanimously <—| cried out :
“ Jim Gun,
" Jim Gun, yon rascal, what did you i
do that for t”
Jim, appane.1 at the mischief hehad
done, mattered out that it waa not his ,
fault, bnt that Tom Owens had suapt;
him. 1
This changed the direction of old
Lambwell’s wrath, and shaking his j
cane portentously over Owens’ head, he i
nsketf:
“ Did yon snap Gun?”
Tlie culprit, trembling with fear, mtir
mured :
-'“Tee, sir ; I snapt Gnu, but I didn't
know he was loaded.” '
- ir ' ■—
^naraeter. .,.
The _ g«at ,. hopeof society ; ■
.beca use it. n <A* alone^ge^s
“t
^^^Kl^rhe
™P, ital » ^ »,* , * ™ toI 7
betoriplia^h^
that when a nerson of doubtful
character calculates a pieoeof_new» iim
recdiwl with suspicion, whereas when
who showed in tuwof fWJSAg danger and diffi
culty a force of will, a tenacity of pur
pose that loss have '.neverbeeni that, surpaiwed haa filled
It ia of character
! prisons, poorhonseaand people lunatic appreciate asyluma,
ond only when the
true it should worth be of guarded charwter-howjealousy and transferred ae
a precious heritage to their offspring
-will the world furnish fe*er causes of
human misery, sorrow and degradation.
Probating „ . ■. the — __ Will *f a -rr, Living Person. „
' A good joke is told of of
one the
moet Louis distinguished bar. membef* time of the St
A short ago he was
called upon to write the will of a lady
of some means, residing at one of the
public institutions of theicity. He wrote
the document, and after having pSiket it
regularly attested, all about put it. it A in hie
and forgot the week or two
| afterwards ho found will in bis
pocket, and, the Ohduag toe lady Wa* dead,
took it to probate court and bad it
probated. Bhnow, Some hearing of of the the heirs, residing
in provisions for rf
ofthe will; came to the city foandto the par
pose of contesting it, and then
surprise that the lady wa, living, and
notHkely to die very soon. The lawyer
is now at work getting toe probcie o.
1 the will set aside.— Olobe-Democrat.
Bnurkabie and Historic Trees.
There are numerous remarkable and
historic trees, among which may be
named the bread-fruit tree of Ceylon,
the fruit of which is baked and eaten as
we nutritious. eat bread, and is equally soufii good America, and
In Barbutn,
produces touts -.wkbvww feed milk, their with'which“the children. In the inhabi- into
rim nor of OI Africa Ainca it ia a a tree tree which wiuctt produces produces
h^m et o22?^k. anJ A7teTO whteh'to
Leone is the cream fruit tree
the
China produce* a beautiful soap. The
talypot tree in Ceylon grows to the
ffis.ssffiA'nsshiS,: ^is^anUy^xto^n^ to ««te
benches in like manner ettemddowu
ward, and re^bling large likirioh oaks, the
ftnit of which is much scarlet
flgs, and furniahe. a luxurious subsist
to monkeys «ul birds of every
description. ......... eaid be the
The completely pippul tree beautiful is of te all which
moet
adorn the wide garden of Mature.” The
Hindoos call it the •« Tree of God ” and
the “ religiona flg,” becauae their god under Vishuu it*
simile they suppose
was born. It ia held by them in such
veneration that the form oi the leaves is
only sdlowed to be painted They on furniture them
used sraft-as by their prinoes. sssss’jb plant
One of the most remarkable trees in
history is the great dragon tree, which
was blown down by a hurricane Iatapd a few
years since at Orotava, in the alxmt of
Tenerige. Itwas a early stately tree, D., 1402,
eighty sJl feet amf high, as as A. tiien
sb old remarkable a tree as
to excite pafticnlar Humboldt notice and spoke care of for it
its preservation. sixty-two and computed
some be 6,000 years ago old. Sir George
it to years
Staunton had previously brought it into
notioeiulTn.
A cypress ^forty.three tree in Oaxaca, Mexico,
which years ago measured
one hundred and twenty feet in height,
„ U e hundred and seventeen feet ten
inch*, in eircumferencc, and which
,heltere.l Herman Cortre and hit follow
ere under ita widrepreading branches
9bont i he year 1520, is supposed to be
t ni.l
A true 'IS, of antiquitv in the in^eylou. vegetable
tinod ia that of a tig tree
fiSSSjllS&mR ------1.-__
2, J65 years old.
The'oldest oale.fa Fmgland is iu
fordshire, Rituatwl thonsanifveara fc Hatfield Park. It
t, oy8r a Parliemcnt old. htiMm
old oak i« the “ Oak,” from
the tradition’ of Edward L holding a
parliament under Its branohee, on one ol
the emieaol lheX)a¥e“of Portland, It
- 8 ooue tf Bre a to be thirteen hundred
„ eftr8 The tallest oak in England
©as the property pf the same nobleman,
^ ^ the “ Duke’s Walking-
8 |j c ^ »• ft was higher than Westminster
Abbeys The largest oak is known as
Oak,” Yorkshire; it
U resseveniy*oigbt feet round the ground, Work
wh i! c the " Three-shire Oak." at
m ,,, nailed from its shade covering
of three counties.
-
^-W-- sc •
Spring style* _ are miEug _ flieir ..... ap
pearance.
Heart draperies for fourreanx grow in
favor.
rfftewora Blonae polonaises, with earriek capes,
'
Old ®, ld gold, . , amber w and ■, ‘ rainbow rainbow mjK,w beads
*« to be worn.
Large quantities of fiowero>«e seen
on allhalltoilets.
Dress and breakfast eapesnieworn
by ladies of all ages.
FtuffV wool fringes are to trim the first
„™jn a dresses
JK“*“r?K riiamberv gauze is me the material material tor .or
K bndesmauli drease .
Blue gray jetis the .-orningvariation
New percales show dashes of color on
grounds of white or black.
Spanish colors—old gold, vetlow and
black are coming iu fashion.
Iwrwo Isce ‘“r 1 collars ” and outside ' cults
• -------
“ ‘
Rose color , . . by the , nrsi; ,. ..
is worn
maid when several attend a brule.
The brims and crowns of spnng bon
nets will lie dovered with a network of
beads.
hut fancy in flower garnitures is
tv‘ h, ' ra ,o he ’ n,hBrt,ficial
rimdeTeolor. “ ‘
Oie moment,
and^rietots stole-WpiU T s. h— down
have
4rese. •
When several bridesmaids attend a
bride they wear dresses of the same
^-s-fewaa'srssft
:
_
.
'
Bawto Wgil . a |« n rhA Cleese. . M
An article oL diet of almost universal
oomsumption among tbe poorer claasea
in Russia is the variety of home-made
ehepse known as “Tworog,” of which
more than seven million Petersburg pounds alone. are
sold annually in St,
Its mode of preparation is very simple.
Sour skim milk is placed over night m a
warm oven, and poured the next day upon
, sieve, where it ia allowed to remain
all the packed whev has run off. The curd is
then tightly m a wooden vessel
and covered with a lid made to fit
) exactly within il On this heavy weight*
are placed so as to keep w a constant
pressure oh the mass_ of cu'd; and
; space between the hd and the top of the
vCsre! is filled with coU water, which
; is frequently renewed. Tworog cheese
is, in tact, nothing more than hard
pressed milk curd. In the northwea.em
and southern government* of the empire
it is often made from aheep * miU(, and
: in from Bessarabia the whole a snpnor qnahty^e
possesses far lietter keeping jiroprat rti
: than toe. ord.no v^sort, a ° d
^ported m enn iidrrob " 7
; Wallacbis. Moldavia and wen ..
< Austria.
Y0L. IY. NO. 27.
fAhM. 6ARBEM ASH H0CSEH0LD.
laparuDfr #f Mariai G
In a climate and so , changeable^ stabling onre, the
_ P^Per care o! domestic
animals mm » are of m more im —to their
number of
imit
jjtsasrtrtfisM ™°* **»• »° a a sleetjiot sometimes nnfrequently three . dsys. ,,
“
one ___ ro.^Much Muck hiwt has been «piil »id and
written that stock does better to roam
>
’
I * f””L d °. b l
SSrsaA^rtiSK b i SSaKSr i t , sa£rt
u<) d ^ ^ to h ^ ^
f "“ WJTwS
, §™*' “
1 «»■ fo‘ »*. mo ^ U «*.*>. the .*«*», wri^i, u i
very wet and muddy, fem»*onbdow'^to^Uta almost r ntna gdad
Sfhe*«Hd l to > iLJ Thi^atheaTav
* s h e L fro^il to
*?™™ £**1 nrofl P”? , or T „ nr e
!“ f i ’ .Amm-rlv th ; ^ mon ths If a
mnstmeted SSJS well 1
**Zotilatal^ntoSa J ' ot of ,f a11^ U ■P kiSb n< ?.. wal
** ^ .
^
I, Tf. ^rmth . ifr Tim!T,.!77p Ind vimtilTteon .b oririt fre il
rowbt hlrith Sd in-
3“^imaR the HicsTconSns derel™
and ^ £
SSShertnMamo^ to tha? ^mueh giSn
“ i^ 0 f«reorteL vreSto wXamnued btold
t*7?J**7 Au amnte 'ro *^1”^
'« .u X" k ,
j i f 1 whichoecnnv ’ bSn^adSted srysce snSneceesitate wtodSiuld
Wtermed,XdlX ot expire to toirect B
”:"£ro ^ S te felh^ teue^ too aU^hestock pnMh^- Ta
^Jutoit r '‘ is to L B tot Hie fre^^™lS vrill
t h matten t r A mall term vntl
"^ Sbfmore^foT^r m VXiuariom. a. the e^in^f
building need not afford. ne more The advantages lor euner
: *“ *“?* d they can
-damo»etretete»tyt,atrac re neS^vS 8
: SlTknd^re teSSS'
tad The
i P ^Cinore c lea rlyUie vnretom oi me
\ ihrmtmeiA-riaineat.Jmmdr,.
“"''***•
A Cheap Fuvrt Oakk ,—lu one quart
-aifted- -floac-^add a toee up -e f -eagar,
half a cup of butter, one cup of washed,
dried currants, two heaping teaspoons
of baking powder and spice flour, tp taste then ;
rub all cold thoroughly into makea fcue stiff batter.
stir in water to
.- Bake an hoar, tot halt hour quickly,
then slowly.
a Swims Som> —Thai ri t ™» »**...r.f
potatoes, Lane mash them well and add slowly
gm \ broth, sufficient for *'ne
tlir ,-<-n Let these boil together ; thru
add some spinach, a little chopiieJ parsley,
lemon «■' thyme ;* and eUifv sage all minSfes
' II t five
o t , .i . ........... : : , w i before tek
{ n d it off the fire to serve add two well
laiten eggs
...iV'-ow r more'tari xtake a lemon
SrSifca'^'toke than for ordinary
aa an^tSlIhoronuhlv many earn a* von have
; Hght, Ktot hght, adding ^dmg .Wni during during^ tlie the proceHR, nrocess prowss, bilf half bait a a
cup ^ of f ^*h^„J^lthY powdered au
ecrsn eggs, : whe when tUoronghty mxor
ti®. P“>* 8 12^1 hmdtire
.Innk, sml 1* parti many |
Corn Dodoebs. —Oue quart of com
‘"f 1 .’* tablespoouful <ff lard, two eggm
a toblespoonfiil lard of it, salt with scald boiling the water, meal,
with the iu
cool with e littlo m-.l- *■ ...
neaten light, beat very hard f S* JSJ®
minutes, make them thin enough witn
cold milk to drop off the spoon and re
*■“> hot. ‘bf Have lr “W® the lard laming nor wneu
: you drop tliem ln '
Excelmot Rom*.—Melt m one an , 1
a half pints new milk a quarter of pound
of butter—lard will answer, or one-half
j the qnantitv each of lard and butter.
, jjave ready two and a half ponmls sifted
flour," iu onegrated which mix potato, well half which a teaspoon-- should.
fnl salt, that
iL^fiaxEtra/: have been lwilod the day previous,
k^skx&ssxz Kon ^ , Bt S rolls, p&e , in a wellbnt.
t
i a.,..c^r AdlrtU^Xle
attention
8sswss»4»5i£s
latter verv much in the form of a eres
cent, or rather of a moon in her last
: quarter, .which wouldbe the more appro
protuberance, which the httlc kingdom Alto
of Greece is anxious to reduce.
geiher, however, the genenfl outluie of
the country will resemble the form of a
waning moon about ae nearly dimimsnea as that and o.
Italy does a >x>t. Its
s{irtt moon nked described proportions in Shelley jnU.^ui s line .
*• Wan emblem of an empireifadiuK now,
-See ho* it ^ ;pent,
8 ^nd, JE-. |ike v » mighty^^ * ige wbjiV frons
-
-
onestsr, SSJSShote„#■ with iiwoloot snd riotonwi.tiglit, ±*
M, m *'
Stnies juh? wym it * 8 i^ga?.- '
n Q H e e r Yanies for Town'.
.j AwsSLl following as
fome of Umte<lBtates the fiurer nam Toby Guxzle Ouxrte,
in the .
Ouray. Kiclmpoo. to - w
Doe OoUyBun,
Gallwi w’ w. f, Tv OsakV
Cob Why JStoo Not, !», ppy ® y hL-tsct'
Fns*v-il « G-Jd ySl>am lh^dws ^ Dvcnshurgh’ l^u. ajsip
rheektawaga tiheekto ag . , g^
S^horeUT V o V, t’.
Thirv 1**% £HS Daems’ £:
%
] ^nTttYts~tte~Mwms ®f lUra.
We are able tocomriderthe relation, of
i“*«™^er in worlds where gravityis
80 *““11 aa it must be in the Mari turn
“oou*- others, I* has that been building said, by all myself
! among and eu
' gineering £T?ersrliS, wonld be b
processes |n s s;
2jrArs?rsfa.‘s5i
ErslSB^si ^“5; '“
SttiE2irtts£& »il «H weight* weights ___________ ______ ______
i t are are ao so much much reduced. reduced. Snjv Sop
P°*>.««» platinum were available in
....... ' ‘
! ! effecte^if 1 gre^'d'd’fucp™^ m'^hct'orec
*
of gravity, though he is not there con
£&iara cttfsesn
mines ever yet dug by men. litein
mTLmZiXth^uX‘ft 'precire'V
«woufdS from the same iMonveuenres Uk^ItrSves
creator Mar^We XmW
Mold^flnd^onrrelw^ living inthemoonsof like
t hem in
wsaamirereor. lmngs,, .», us wnaweu
^
plared them, but would slide away live with
the slightest push. We should a
difflcidty in standing or walking,
like that we have on
and shfbboard, should wheu the deck is helplessly incliuwl;
throngh we stagger
which an atmospherethinner than that the
oppresses l Z. the respiration of
tbe top, is^Tard,” t , f tb(i hi „i,f8t
mountains” “ It *?& says the in
^ £u, - ■
^.jk Projectiles wonld > « s?tJa be less . 1 deadly
no
; i ‘h»n io <»iir own world ; bnt the raugb
which projectiles such re ours would „b
: tain in such a world would render close
fighting imwesible. on the one band,
aid efficient aiming dAnncnTfor impossible on the
other. A Krepp instance,
whore greatest range on our earth is, let
mi say, five miles, projel-tde would on the Martian
; moon fire a which would leave
the moon forever, and the recoil of the
cannon would ^from^he probablv carry it half a
doren mile* firing “wroM point.
Much weaker emplSvei, projectile fore
i have to be and less mischief
would be done on this account, and also
' breanre living bod struck by
any v one
of these projectile won!.! Smn give away similar be
a
bodv similarly stniek on our own earth.
—Richard A. Proctor, in Belgravia.
‘
■—
" H * w ,b8 Repeated the Joke.
ftESf B Bateigii ? ‘of v X i: < odserver relates XoZ
Carolina judge : Home Cmnberfaud years ago* case
«* called for trial in tin
: ,QhaHof QramlrL AmoDg the witoeeaes on
the State was to have been
one 8ara Mooney. She waa not found
j n the oonrt- room fern and fiftr name waa
• catted lh due'fdrm the court-house
State window without effect. late Whereupon, Hon. Robert the
solicitor, the of joke,
Strange, who was fond a even
of a pun, turned to the court and said:
“May it please your honor, the testi
monv We of this witness' is not material,
and will go on with the case withont
'V» moony.” Of conrs® judge the lawyers didn’t
laughed at the pun, but the
! see it, and cracked never a smile. 1 here
were'uo railroads in those judge days, aud aud law- a
few atage-coaeliea, and
yera traveled from one cone* to .ooth' -
, m McKethan's buggies. On the read
■ to- the-next court; iu the procession judge's own of
eonntrv, there wus quite a
lawyers in buggies following the judge's
lead. Uie judge called a halt in the
middle of a stream to water his horse,
and, iu the thonghtfnl mood incident to
thst Process, suddenly astonialied his
brethren of the bar an<f by bursting into
botu lo „ d l*ughin| long. He ex
&(««„«'« that onnd he was Arrive.! at Judge home.
thresh L toka at
with toilet, and seated at
supper, hie wife, aa wives will, aske.1 of
the incidents of his journey. Thcrehad
been none of interest, h said, except
the good joke gotten off by their mutual
(ficBd Judge Htrange at Cumberland
( . ollrt ..And what was that, my dear?”
„ wrf l, there was a ease in which one
the witnesses was named found, Mary ani
• Moonn. She conld pot be
1 jnjge 'sttange, amid shouts of Uonor.-we laughter,
without - t please Mary your Mooney.” The
will go on
k<joA ladypondcred awhile, and said she
did not see anything very funny in that;
and, after a little thinking, then, the judge
said that ho did not either, lmt his
that he had seen it while watering
|, or9e .
Badly - FrlghtfM fW 1 " Celestials. —:—
' • Rll h
. ... StoSJI* ,. . ... , .
Ssapfesasassf tha' tonmem,
wWi
stssssSSLkss “t^f^b^k^dowwdZght safe
sat-ast-as-sncaP 2ttttraa»«a
: ent earthquake. After a long oonsulte
tion.the bwrest ^^v
-crept back, peered
hoy forgot to m —Eureka
i h- • *
ten .. .
.
.
”
Hf? Would. Tell. •
^ j ja< ] invited him to stop to supper,
.^j he was trying to appear easy ,«k1
imconeernefl, while she was nr. ner
pre ttieet behavior
“Have you used the sugar, John ?
. the mother in a-winning man
ner. sugar,” ejacu
<• John don't want abruptly.’ no
'
|* t ed the yoimg heir, the father,
“ Why not?” inquired his surprise swai- enn
eusly while John iu
lowed a -bit of- toasted crust sod nearly
cut his throat open.
“Cos he don’t," explained ”1 heard toe him heir tell in
an artful manner, ^
.
•■'You keep still,” ihterrupte.i Mary
inan ilV .-t< ri«l manner while to* v- ,-n#
man caught his breath persisted in dismay
■* f hev-i him say," Hit- - «r
^ ^ tfa “ dreadful 'eageinsas, - “ that «ti« * *
wt llL .ahonldn't never nre no • more her.
sugar nrleiii-i'i any more-an; then he kis*
.......WvoHi-gioo tell, an'—”
“ti-i -v - tor
room by bis ear, and the mp« r «»
finished^in moody silence.
OfiLETISHPB MO.
A<*v©rtt*ing ITate •
Sfac*. II »i'i» !*•* Ib if aftjlyr
U i.m
t.tfr is ns
31 iA. 330
4 IBCtkM. aa> im «.m n.m ie.*o
MCOlBBUJ. 4-tO «.® *.00 10.90 izm 12.06 ».oo ».» mM
* coiximo. 13.00 u.Ai i*.t* *3 *.0©*>.«► 00.as 1W.0O
1 <*. tuoa. 13.00 l«.(» Jk.«J 25.00
Lent Advertisements. 6
a&etiir pettoTj. *• lae. *
RacL 5 Note* Lertvr* loiter* otic* Stoi.pw Addition*! of to c of .f Debton Lnta DiwUBtou. i»mitolnUJ.-'L to K)B»r*.................. And Sell, Creditor*, three thirty thirty mofittui...... d*y*...... thirty d»y* ........ d*y» -. sr.sii
Honuwteod Letter* Lett*** Role Nik's of of Dn*rdt»n*bir. Di*. per Siotic**. aqou*, tiaardiAaship. three <k tliirty 3 »»*« laeeet:oa torty d»y*. d*3T*~ - - • - m\
j A Abate” atitch m etmgreas tiine save, baa harsh just been language held
m rana,
The man who would like to aee yon
the blind man.
'srsTTS-wa-aw*. ***• pounds.
e « ht fw>t w*Wh«uiue
Jwwaws
^'wireoosiu Wiaecwfiiu ba» hss30,000,000w-rps 90,000,000 acres of of lam! Ism!
which which have have never never been been brokea broken or or felt felt
the plow.
eihibition will be open eieo
and will be lighted by an
'I
Why is the eUn the piosl a nnlucky part ntly
‘ i{ ^ e ,>od / ? Bec * nM “ oonB ‘*
ssnaff&£’*“ *“■* “
Let's have spelling!*^ this winter by
tKL “ “ L
ui , ,.,^1 „ Sition'' . ku „
he'^ak* t?ol bntwhcu * U
he br *«* his hmwtmi he he nmply rimnto li« Hes.
SSgfa*^ 2Lh workn'
Thao s Itonthat shirks.
A horse-thief, in Houesdale, Penn., of the is
ascertained to have killed one
stolen animals and salte.1 it down for
meat.
To bans hss dim d ^t no sirfv-^ve a musket supposed
rJZV^Z Imvc dbv navdugbTr 8 Ihis
' '
-
nssr-sr . . . Tt . ,
Rsstsir“’‘“*“ fc
“Tell your mistress that I've tom the
'-tirtain, ’ said a l-slger to a female
domestic. "Very well sir; mistress
will put » down on the biU as extra
rent.''
"The bright lexicon of youth," in
which “ there is no such word as f«I,”
.toes not seem to be a very popular die
tiouaryiu the mercantUe community just
now.
Wonder if it would be considered a
Sw^Wtethst remartaWe original observation if we
-taXkiSri^ont the stufflug has
ZhBr^kfyst of Turkey.-Cfeteh.
” ‘ f ' Table.
“* A , ** ^^Wdrea^ Xv^w^re- whitfte.
^nT* frenduleut urarttoT of
South Carolina supplies v nearly u.u hall
rire pro<ln<'e»l in the conntiw.
kteorgia utii-ad 1 of is f ^om next, sis or ns 7,000,000 Nearly alb poo^a the
.
rice comes from these three States
.
“ You're getting a great deal of adver,
aren't yon?” be said, as hep*Kl hi* «
teen cents at the lunch counter, and took
| half the toothpicks iu the tumbler.
“Yea, bnt we’re getting w hort of ton -
j her/Vio^liod the elerir. - —
A now niece of music* composed by a
^ ew York newspaper man, is entitled
the “ Editor’s Waltz.” The title-page
should be embellished with a picture of
the editor* waltzing afb?r a subscriber
who is seven vears in arrears,
**wf»nf i« a veranda ?’* is now dis
Lc X.-., foroicn K arehitf'ets A veran
. gL, * j lfl place where with
m.io“hine» kfa of companion you will
HnJ " » brighter iud the
fl ^ gwi(tef tlmu in my J other spot
,, . rflK .o.
iiu> , kuuam L»iy . expands , tmm^se^
seated ^ >^c. «> ““..JJ?* ,™„*
easily sit up a littte closer to make roran
tor a p:rett^y gir^I, but s . . . ,
manage to “"““P* :
of the car when an
>»•
Sixty five of the eighty-one ... lives lost
at the Ashtabula L.keSbore disaster have aud been Michigan paid
tor by the
Honthem railroad company at a rate
averaging *5,060 apiece. The 'mud>ex
pensive life cost the c ompany
and a uewTy married coniile were ap
praised at only 45, merchandise into
The net imports of
the United States from 1820 to 1«8
were E2,257 l 753,197, and the domestic
exports $10,777,785,872. ti'.ac, 15.o
(he imports have exceeded the exports
in value by the sum of $149,111,838,
although fee excess of exports io the
last four year* was $896,-481,316.
A oo-nperative society of working sro
men in j. a ,i fi m the hope of obtaiaiug
,teady work and remunerative Boulevard prise*. du
have opened a manufacture shop at 2 and sale of
Temple for the
underclothing for both sexes, and of flow
era hats and dresses for women. There
is also an aas-uiiatiou of journeymen
tailors established on a firm basis, at 72
Boulevard Bsbaatopo) and 88 BaeTnr
bigo. which advert&en that it obtained a
S£SrSsS» SSfitoatSlfafiknSS, ifi^n
Tl aaeiM ii'iiiisrtS
ssfassysAassa keS> remise.
to his p
jraj&sasVbSsg:
tn aense impure .;ur and lead n* to
11 ’ ^eudly. th<* rneq^htys of,
the nares retain sohd
A lady contributes to
alem fehechildren, Sf a Mile for result tLejni of , u , ma - n *
vatoon ift natural lustorv it is to .
Pom hasof showing when sne^mk r
and when she hMdflmh enoa^.v
fie l^ly. T ff u n< >tu. w n^o g
Htends straight a? .m. ; j
****** he ^ ■*‘.“J®? Ti'fLd ’i-biL gradually
droops irom its posi'-jo, ia ^ lower
and lower until it rest oc drink, th . and ■
Th«i Pussy has fim*he,t her
want* no more. Irj it
The American whaling fleet of l».i
«a» very successful.. There were ao
special du«.-tere. w.-l n-< <-tm3ges .a A*
bunaess worthy sddi.ion* of .note. toe «<*l'ting fleet,
the continued to the
Twelve v. seels were I, oil during:
year. Tiie present ft<wte*.n-wte of 187
vessels, agmastliJ 16-t • W<-<. Jaroispi I J. >•>«»- J*'-.
169 its lxTfiand n e
and South Atlantic pecan trap-os tnr.fn,
100 vesretri *;’•« the m <re
grounds of the Pacific ocean, Japan and fh<
Mew Zealand are a!u * lesertod.
Motto Paci fic ■e-t : , throe vereel*.
and s ut ero - rey eis
everageof 1,06c barrel* of r and 8.56C
pennd* of whalebone.