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THE 06 IM 0 EPE
Subscription Sotos i
Ob» Year.
-
—
ThnmMvaita........ .... M
PosJCrtiy bo J 4 pw MBS
nHAi .
s*prm=5E of Bi. tUM, M4 if MbaoripOw de act J
i ■* At OCM*
kttf persrta Mrtkf- wfi] as Us* oT Im
«** *-^!*cfi!ea. witk $15 wsH j* to
*®* ,Wr .i" -*«*i*«* £•». **■*£«» ™n».
n '“i
The ' drfu Ar-ti.
Sssy. „ WUA e.t.ncet modes doe.
. To sad fro,
A. ti>s mot .r-ftv.t p«M iRhor. fsUs
“ 4 af s
He the SrsUioir t'.-right -he the llrhi
o „*,i
n. it.. h,..is,,
'
« Aeath trn> bofy pMiK.n IMS
I -Imilas toteJ tht wsra. ure^iTinj ray
^ mT
fOve fceliavcv that Is Ids vtalca,
But fche smile* through anxious tearsi
Unborn jw*
Pr*i-ffing forward lie ferwre*.
8h*doiry muffled shapes, they oume
Deaf and dumb, ^
Bringing what> dry cbsff and tare*, or
foil-eared aheareR?
TThat fot him shah she invoke *
RhalJ the oak
Bind the man's triompbaot trow ?
8hall his daniiK foot alight
- tin the height ?
Shall he dvteU anivi-t the kumWe and
the low ?
Fruitage from the tree of life ?
Sbaii.it yisidiuB bitter fiavred
sba 1 its savor
Bcmnaaaa udd fl t tb o-triniattsiia t&
strife ?
t,. Ulsn- H. muii. lle «k.a lit and ,, r .Usd iM
m VrfcnaePr.w . ^m-tlcchUd ,r J e* J was baiuxl.
Thus aaigb the mother hreaR,
bailed to lest, ^
tSiild-NsiwIeoa down the Med river i
Crownedor cmdawt~the.au,.
'GIonm tbe dam*
Of her 4eathtofla-tiwe dfrine.
m ' m SSsr M ’
.aiuah.a.a,
mu **’
Whatso gifts the years bestow.
Still men know,
WhiU) she breathe*, Ures o&a who sees ,
t Stand they pore or sin-defllsd)
Bat tbo child
Whom she crooned to sleep and rocked
Upon her knees.
fiacle Ben’s Gho^ly Hide.
My Unde Ben believe iu ghosts . Of I
SramansiU of'rtuc^ bo^
for hi e; give <ne a grand old ail
ooVSFi'tl br ivy tod hidde o by Trees, '
walls ere huag with vapeetry, and ;
gioojwi room, mako the blood mroftc with their
length. Why, sir, there is
something enlivening oven in ito decay cracis
•th e d itm » . i » »wswf - ito waiw.-midtbe
in the diBColori'd ceilings, which only
anggetta to the vulgar mind ague and
rhemdstism. are evidences to me of its
venerable niiee age and resjiectability. and down The in
very that scamptw up
the .time-worn wainscoting give me a
friendly "“new-W.ioT.ed greeting that I never meet in
mammon-worshipers houses, built for a
race of who have
maiie their wealth out of shoddy and
petrolenm.” believe that Uncle Ben valued
I toteS really that said to haunt hi*
the was
house far higher than all his more tangi- ‘
ble property. Nothing made him more ‘ ,
angra than for anyone to donbt ita eg.
istenee; he was skephe always ready Ae to subject breaks ,
lance with any on th.>«ta3
and to offer him a bed in •
room ; and, although many of the young
members iff the family scoffed »t the
story, very* few hailthe oonrage to accept
the challenge.
One winter night, when toe wind ... was
moaning round the chimney-pots dirge and ,
through the eaves, singing l« a
oWspectml “^gJ^ , t trees 8 ^^' for b ? the i P r joys vI!L <> of the « {! g dead » nn i
Bummer, the family drawmg-room. was gathered round
the fire m the
Uncle Ben, whs was standing with his
back to toe fire, said tolus n^hew •
s.^Aymrsars for
«J don’t |Mtb turn to ret one, ,
^g^?to&. Mood- i
afnud reu'1:ro B a a, tborougb A.
disbelieve in al, superuatorai appear
‘(Certainly, answered Joe, who was
secretary to toe Literary Mudborough, Delating So
ciety in the little town iff
and who had written an emay to prove
thenon-existenreof everything and that
we are simply the creations of. our own
thonghts. " Certainly these impalpsbls I
speetera are only illusions which the dis
ordered condition of our weak physical
~rgan» bring before us."
“I own yon are a clever lad, Joe, but
I don’t care a button for yonr arguments.
I behove in guosts beesuse I have seen > ,
them.” if
“Oh,! am pen to convmbcm: . yon .
introduce me to a bona fido_ ghost Ill
givein. I believe only m thethragsV
nuderstand."
understand. "Joe, ifyononlytaheveinwhat creed will be , aliorter you
yoHr
mention*one instance' any proof? which Can
you in the
tsfs.- “ ..........>
• “ a' hundred, if you wish it," said
-■STS, I..; o„, ; -
about to relate i* an incident that liap
an r2S*J*g "WetopSrad”*
“ I wontcl give toil tht.W the hiatory of the
fjiecter attached, to that
only appearsto a favored few, and I
should prefer a ghost that ran
bescen, if vou have ever met with one."
" Y<m mast understand that the
lage in which-1 Iiv«a, like mtffoihm,
prasesses ita spectral visitor. About
lltOvrars ago, an ancestor of mine start
levSitat ed fo* London in his traveling carriage.
the latter md of
June He was an exceedingly irascible noTsuf
man and the cimchmM w«
ficientlv quick in preparing the vehicle,
he became much ec raged, language. and used ex
ceedin«lv Zm? time'^fSwSbman passionate bSreSis abnse
uatientiv but at last, he lost his tem
ner K,’ and stauek * toeold gentleman in the
"in those davs "ancestor, everybody wore a
sword ' and my ^.TnTtetll who was
Tm” ^tb hm .«■ £e
’rorn h» dmato, and,
:? ; — J ———— I - H JL — oSa—L— hoi I * ‘PE Echo.
Tia
By L L. GANTT.
1 KgyvJgftTL*.^ unh * tm * te mM ’»
“ Conscieoce^triekeB at this fearful
crime, and terrified rrazii bv the dread of its
consequences, he JefmlTu. upon the «dt^, hea4
being seized with a fit of epoplexv,
w»* carried into'the house bt his set
rants, where he died in s few boom ■'
"Well," ssid Joe, 1 “ although
atory is rapernahnS horrible eeoogb, it has nothing
afiette in it. It is quite
possible atourderpnd that a* angry old man mar
commit ilie of fright,"
‘ Yea. you wonidlie tee right; if the Ule ended
there; there nothing to doubt , ,
but what I am going to teU yog, I wa
sfrmd, will be aooffsd at by myakepti
~v”-.rs,....
S.I toS&Ska driWbJVwSS'emSr
^S^s LoadofroaiL^' thte vC ' ^
Lore "Hsm^b^llw'i1 the
he can see to
drive without his head,” internipte<l
the still skeptics! Joe.
" Tliat I cannot explain ^stoleforSple ; some ghost
seers say that it is
d-i n an may b offll*
And d you allow that a dead man
can drive at ail, the amaU matter of a
heml moreor less Ja of very little im
poftance. Jnat«o.”
“
y ° n lln0 F that when t a maa dies lie
e becomes a spirit
"That-, ram," sad Joe.
No, sir, its not ram, nor whisky
a.ths«; _ and, if yea canno. usteu «j my
story without audpvormg to turn it
into relied ridicule, u^ce I had better leave off, ^ ,
Ben, who was as peppery
^Oh iiSSneS? «on «'Wll un-Ie “ exclaimed tokSSfi
all the trr ^
Joe order ” “
in ■
ss^tjaaraK W“ w*
of the villagers hail heard the tramp « of
horses and the rattling of wheels «the
ghostly cortege went by. Now an fi
then Some favored milivid.ml wjtneBstsl
»«
cases, tlie coach whether pasred too oid qn eklv for
any one to see the geitie
{-‘SaS'Jtt&SSTfS.'i sss.tsfx’s. a^ n
J . g evening, to rri„i, te0
But, one as I sat
P* n «.tj }m i -nirdf’algRii.r'j^'*’
upon - the affair. I horrified some
J«‘® company by staUng "?*" my lV> intention
S"i b’ " 1 WB tiia
rend, an,! "Se rf I oonM-toa-t U,e j.hau ,
OTdeede. l ®|fl I BwOeman swore that to if 1 ^ui, I
e pve me
d V,.^“ d ~ I,™ ^
h o? 1 f ’ "
Aaddidjoagot *
Ye# ^ although some of the more
superstitious of the party tned to jne
rent me, I pegyv ered^ and wandered
“ t ! Bto ^l®.. nl f5 d realty to meet with
Al>1 ‘ S^rou did yon meet meet them t bem l t"
, lust as I emerged from toe lane the
ntNte dock.chimed down the three-quarters, iMte-eOHMd
“fj ™“' l “ sat upon a ll shLlowii
J"* ttait S^k •ciinm L**‘ like a n/’l so
^ ghnSder T vSred spumd beg an
**»*£'»*£*”*'%* Ml if byanv .%
the stw tM I had
Jhe . f g, t „,| * wmra|«vM ‘ ooeing '
mv fingera’a euda."
,, Oh uncle unete. afraid atraun I” cried cneu one one of or toe tne
J monT^ri _ tm b^an r f OiiMnrrirrir.iiu to'wish iLfur T
the the'eomfottab^tlinini? I was hark
: n room
..aniblenlv y the ” cloek struck to a hour r
. , ,
fi ’. , ■. ^ , 7 .
distance a sound like the
ooiniiig toward me at a
»*j» A^hl, ■Linaaldeto ta^hS side
counted b» be.ngableto hrar hear mr my
"As the oat nye . s ntnnund topped he he sprang snrsne |
to toe f^onn^ flung open the door lM
«ow» the »teps tfiis aud signed for me to ,
™ter. By tame my nerves were
****!** np > »toi I jumped in without
my tear
Upm-entariug lotJoA th» yd ““Mg ™1
“7 «*tl ® n
S^lTSTh^roinT^n.^mSrt th fhradwta of toe reign 1
dd^oJil _ y. an
tie-wta aml in a his bis hand
.
^edjitoM""; SlSSk
did J* 1 deling
g com
“ For some time we sat face to face,
and s»asSfSSSE^»afaig; when I found that he did not appear
ftwoulil be very uncivil to ride in the old
csr.-jK^aspfrw
opening the conversation, saiil :
mad^oreply 7 ^ tie-wig 8
«“In a hurrr to get to town, I pre
sumel I am very much obliged to you
lotto* hit
after this we tath
maiuS watehfag bim with’great inter
est. At last, the night being chilly for
the tame of year, and the coach having
atantlt a peculiar atmosphere like that
of a vault, I began to feel extremely
oold.
After a while the oid Jan gentleman grew
quite sociable, and-be to talk; he
rompUmented dariig stop me h.s upon carriage. mv bravery For just in
to
one century he had, once a year, driven
along this road without meeting riiie anyone
who had the oonrage me“he to with him:
«d. through would be released
. from all further punishment, which was
to last nntU some brave fellow accom
: panied Sitb him in his drive and conversed
him.
“ For this release he heartily thanked
ms. and' said that, tor my courage, i
should be lucky to my bustaww
THB ONLY •* J
PAPER IN ONE OP THE LARGEST, SR OJJGENT AND WEAX-TJtffiST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA.
*
«? »"»■ fe« tomed
I "Dili Jd£ von talkabout anything }J8
art*]
* “oh *>* M»rAI ^ ui ^ M “ «rrrr.i
a ’%*« n
who. Ineetl rn.t sav ku inveterat^
bsehelor. ii)„d„n <tw> sppea% Xt 27^
,W It
a great bea» .virm^l time, fTvorite and he
considered himself an i
with the ladies. He withe-l t^?t to know
whb was dmgnstrd%hen the rrtrim «d
was nLo, much I htid ! 4
■•f.n ail*" ^
J Was that
K Oh.no. Ha told *e where the best
civet an J poms tarn were to be bought
feas/KbaSaS
tw«tfi^i^»3£^*w1S£
lu w ‘! ' f
^^7nW hbfl^lnddiHAt^arol Bo^^lnnners „ m i if^hTbLl . hfs
’ at
heel*.”
" Did tL von not ask what be -ame of
him wSnh* on other mfUIntfor ui 2 hts of d^? the ,T year
ares his
S?“Snall^sTtTlre Sh taS2
of trouble, but nnable to dow>. A* •
convciwsiL- the dune rapidly ApM W
awsyramrat length tie lamps of
don became visible m the dwtauce. After
thankmg the old _man for his courtesy
I suggested that I might now alight as I
had a peat inany friends in town that I
Aonld like to visit; birt h# shook his I
!| e«d
-
^», no, aaid he^ we are at the ,
eonumad mercy of my ^ng ciiachmp; pr drive, lie has teid the im entire Will :
only
horses round, wo
“UtiejornleFio town seemed abort
the jonroev hack was still shorter The
sarsaap /" “L? f 'j a va l < ‘ r ' lmi tatty F.w j-'i
mil justice to Hogarth . , ™ a picture. The ^
"^rTaTilWOT^tt n - s rt LBdbef.V e'o,, '?■! 1
the I —, enpeyci l»uf a
betterthan ths one I with my
gh^l, ancestre
WW^SSSfttJSnSSS ts. 'iCSjfti sates
whole cavalcade—coach, horses, driver,
^atw^^ne ““
%Ku^ffdi*^rlrff^P”iS™™WP r "’ - ------.P
1 , l
,?n" Imw nothing mere nntiH was
f onn( j the next morning lying beside the
“ I thought so. You the f«U.iij»\eep phantom and
,i r pa mod reidjol. that yon taw cor
« jj 0( sir, jt was no dream. When-I
«*«' that esrriage, and when I role in it,
t was as much awake aa I sm now ; and
when yon are os old aa I am, and have
seen as many wonders, you will be anr
,, ; r ,u.-l nothing, ^tog. and will owu that
here „ 0 moh , in heaven and
,. ar t), jj ian ar( , dreameil of in your phi
’
_
A Sew Motor.
.
getting t?ed .If producer. with People ite are
general steam expense
unlmndiness. Besides tbe ^
habif^hasof- CKsaipually p^lHh g^Ag on a
•• bust ” and forcing the toe ’
immediate toeSselves, neighborhood to cleave through'the a pas
for out
roof, is, to say the least, extremely an
This has a great tendency to dis
courage manufacturing, ^ especiaUy ^ in the
^ ^ ^
ElootricitT~h38 tong be™ eTDenmented
' vith ’ b| i tuo ver >’ satisfactory result has
been arrived at. A* was always ex-i
PCoW lying toe realusiversa! motor has been
at our very feet, nnnotioed. Great
inventions are always simple. This
'“iversul and iBezpensive motor is toe
^
”f rM faArial waste ‘of j
rd j ■,
clmraing, washing, sernbbing, kindling
supplied ^ lso| with sensation be novels, made toe re-i ;
wh nommeree «fa to
TO 've. Then e?ery again, an attachment could
^ ^ to chair in which power i
^ sto red up 5o. when the rocker had I
0 jjj er SSS£m t 0 bottles^ This would bottle \
P 1 up talk in
, hooograph> to could be have used when buggy con
venient A man a so
ivinstruotedthat by taking a package of
these botUed motois he would put them
in place and run his machine, and if his
supply L ran out he could take the empty
*»» any wayside house and have
t hem fflleJ up with power -while be
in toe rocking chair There’s .
;
milbona in it,-Detroit express.
■
- ’Megrsphr by-Mirrors. -
Som* experiments ore about to lie
made^at 2KS&'V^4^^ toe, Marseille* (France)jatataon,
ttemize the art of "att^y signaffi^
last of the whole nene*, w orh !“,
f^i&tblOTde^ S iU^'Sm’ldta A^rf p£
ingly the f mirrors ttaugh are to be “ electric does
™ »d tta term
SeS to toe^^entifc < raTff fa
that these may tare at ieait tenfSdthe
reflecting power of au ordinary
glass. This most be the case if, as it is
asserted, the new machine will
to the spectator a faithful picture of one
hundred miles of line. The surface of
the glass will, according to the account,
to™ a little pamorama upon which will
be seen ail the trains passing for the
. time being over that expanse of line.
They may be watched like pretty descending toys,
ascending inclines and then
them again, oraiionaliy passing one another, and
perhaps rather overtaking In latter one
another too fast. the
case it will, of course, be the duty of the
stetdou master, iuterpoi whose eye is constantly on
tke mirror, to and prevent the
mischief. The iavention is one to de
light the hearts of station masters ,di
over toe world.
LEXINGTON, GEORGIA, I aiDAY, APRIL 26. 1878,
; FARM. WARDEN AMP HOTSEBOI.P.
JMMHMe.
• CB ^ f P0B 1 HoSpikenard ‘’T** 1 a
T ’ “ d <d f e P,
^ J Q • ^P°f oontaimDg equal P*rt« of
and spmta, sod the wflT rspor inhaled,
when suffiaently cooled, relieve the
?°reneaattd ’ * lK *> hoarseness fr<*n of the ooogh throat or
.fF’ «n*a« » °*
a n a
Son withtwoonnce. of stoned rsisms.and
sS^i t cSr ??? and^d T ,»y m
l ^TiJ^f^nr»Tu tewdL
P* of silk or cotton, the other of wool,
and the natural heat at the feet will be
preateved. if the feet are kept clean,
“d thefnction of the same is not omit
ted a ‘ DI « ht -
Bulbs fob the Sick Boom.— 1. Bring
ia ,Ie «h flowers or something new every
J *y : ® veDt h® commonest green tiling is
better than nothing. 1 Don't talk
^ <^e» Ajns
v,, m it t,m£ il'vo*! eLi ^iiltieXTfb^^inlv
a f 1“ mnr^?n“na rewtite
rg , 1 *SnSS.IoKS'. ; nmmit-r u- n d rr
v. 1 nn™ e„7barmens wiffnt and moalTbediorn eomalain 'no *
J“*re wbat^happens, w and and ma» be boro
‘ Prirtt'i eiiatw,'
'
ra order are'imnortant to keen fruit several eondi- •
, ^ww In the first nlaoe
“d^thSMd‘ta^’SSidSS atm0ro ^ nTliiriml of a eliaU f rait tenu should Ja ' :
ne<rf in the
<>at«i*le air. The toam^kmM bean*
eeptible of ventilation in proper weath- :
-uK^sjattarstf ’ it
cards location r-uv be nlaced on a
”■'**m 0 eiatmau .opening roiiie «m
oretalke, or otl£r ronrenient roit-btold- :
J™ eonstracte! * ^ a f, fruit il
^ ^^st’w^rtn toJt t ;
it has four brick walls and
£l^e FwheV toe
^
open lighto.1 and and a free dry. circulation Tne^window, of air are al- ,
so long aa no danger from frost
™!°, r r 9°“> «ur ia tfloeed, «b4o»
admitted. Ventilat.on » secured
Oimterate weathre by opening toe
dtsir aud ihrowuig iiown a window
* he outer room. In ttaa “IJ" w®
apples of.last season s growth until,
present of tlieso winter, apples, in perfect exhibited condition. the ,
at
autumnal agncoUutal fanr. of were pro
aa f renh as ttgwe iaat season s
of Ckmnutn.
b»m.m hi«u.
To Prevent Miudsw os l ar.aaHVKS.
the white iff an egg and wet
to,to skies of a piece of IRtor
large to Cover over the
“f th ® pr««vM. «m«ly. I ■
free from mould and spofling ,
ToLukavKiu „ Gk)vks.-A „ . good . way
-
«to»n Mack kid glares, rays the ,
Scentm American ,■ » to take a tea-,,
Of salad oil (sweet oil), drop a ■
ew drops of ink ini it and rab it over
he glovim with the tip of afaather; then ,
et them dry in toe sun.
Ssut tm STEJnri=tt tamnch
or fry toe steak without salting, :
the salt Efter the meat i* on the
as the wit^dWvJ the juice out oi
meat U put enbefon it indigestible. is cooked, j
making it ury and .
cooking steak the object is to keep in !
unrs*
young lady who makes all
.
quarts of water six pounds of quick lime >
add pound of resin W and ’
to it one common
seven pounds of fat (snv fat will do),
Boil this for half an hour, ba^s. and let it stand
tiU oool, and ent into
* tattn amt H.w 1 .K.
fJ \ hnuse Se for SeFun fiftvhens 3iT2 should be 16x24 emht:
|J ton^re m to mclot too’spMe,
sad routeide of that another row, four ,
feet around'the off Nail boards anil 111 inches
outside inside — one
even with the top of the posts,
one six inches from the bottom, and one
m the middle. Let the posts be about ;
five feet apart. Nail common plastering
^b upright from and the top strip down inahes to :
bottom strip, ataut six
apart. Lay for the roof n 3 x 4 from Ita crib-. post:
to jxwt across the room, not
work ; sopjiort these by central pests
Thl’dra'ahd^ “^usltoree vMo-n ' 1
b^faT^ ^'owif "ia’bniWing Ml tlns,'* dSrF it istuatlo in ! :
moved to a new site, the old straw
thrown away and replaced WJth new in a '
brta»ton7in sp^^d fau'b^a
pound M the htaue, And
dry, remove the whole building oncein
thrre y<»i?.aul pip, croup, cholera and
»H,stall will give place to robust health
and vigor. Never build a palace for
poultry.
HstefcHMi iu,a n«ri»« rsirtere.
I think thirteen eggs is sufifeient for
a large he., and fewer for a small one. I
never allow two hens to sit together, either nor
even near each other, for they
; exchange nests or fight, I always place
the coops tor the young chicks in a sun.
ny spot, where the rajs, of the sun will
be Sure to reach them. I keep thehens,
with their broods, confined for several
days, for, if running at large, toe chicks
are exposed veLy to the morning dews, which
are unwholesome for them. It. a
day or two after the chicks are hatched,
peppjr I prepare a mixture of meal and black
with a amall quantity of soda
j sad some —rtj #ck I tori to them
ST*#?
an atxml
.
Pfiifff tntmhrnfoi ^ s wrrtggjti that the^r sre
^lrc them “kt * 1 '^ “orn
th«c before. I nsrsr
_ *
0 ^ rry
i nuay » th g^r^ L to eme hen, and S
d^tS ?”,.?**“{?. nr^t^w f* ” 1 ^' s!a» o^J**?*
’
Entwires rda» I
the
liable combWs toget feaea; be tefaeCtUs kept large
must in a warm
house if freeting is to be entirely pre
rented. <Mb of a bird is
tonnd to be frozen.-rtAould be thawed
the Ji ea ^ fo w l isheHIn thteN ^®, and. ca ^b'»hile After the,
«**£
pievS the aoTeneea.
<+rease ponlta/breeders of aay kimi a*f he aaed, and
some make snototment
(<| r frozen combs lard.': by Almost^anything melting a little
in hot salt
whi<>b win tom the raw
flesh will assist healisf and do good,
rc^-n. .MluSato
The has gardener found that to Jhji..tJj»verii)ty hyacinths be of
i*«rlin may
propagated wouhl^^appete by the» leaves, and this
method w£S*|e to njSTl? specially reC- |
ommend HteH view
is to r»i» a large number al specimens
of new m«.venetiea. The leaves require
{*J b® °otpff as near U»tbebulb aepossi
^o° greenhouse °» “>« or frame close right to tlie inner nine
» or
weeka . time extrmBities MTa of the leaves
wfll be g i n to tM to jHjWi Sg9 that
rrelTatu thef iaStbno ZJu
K? SSJd&i**** green at which
from the plant
jssttssasss* 1 "*"
_., ___»_____ . .. ,
W
in : n d frioge i
theffpof a peacock featbei.
^ Get sheer stdped muslin, in'coTored or else dime
work the edges seal-,
tatpOryforTHI tnlaht’a basket.,
will be ““ much nsed for trimming Xie «5
? iriiuuied entirely
wjt)l , jla( k p#tin
A balf-limg ... sacq arte crelse a dolman
of black si k ,®
jetaud fringe f . g. what 1
want fur the spring. '
Cashmere suits are coming more and |
more is iutofav.w. exceedingly ^'^T attractive. iVch
much of admired all kinds and are employed serviceable on
suits. very
and dinner
Carriek capes promise to be much
on vartim, spring garments. Thev
ua swques, im
costomes, onpidoUMsee, on dol
on English cloth traveling cloaks,
d finally on linen ulsters.
The furnishing stores display new
tumeB of percale, cambric, andSimtoh
trimmed with pleated frills
lf fte material, on which fall scant
of white Hambnrg embroidere.
tor'these is tbs
YGtnWic basque. being ft
wtapueffi ®to also n- , I
;(w|i, ^#<fa te the furinahiag yoke bqtUM. With
,’ ir (,ttieat of these hava a
pleating in toe back, and are
ma ,j„ 0 f bordered cambrics, with toe
V** SS t
FlLFif Trav*-* timv^^^L^how^r*
*«.* »•“<* “ ******* capricious
»«*—
you should wear the pnnoesss under
clothing'with yoke sk.rts andwith close
fitting chemises that add nothing to the
Arrange your hair so that it will
nittbrag to the size of your h««d.
Braid the back hair, and make a coil of
it Mg'* on the crown ; ware toe front
hair, and comb it tack from toe temples.
Pot velvet taiwiir ».« «Mt droro
with velvet* wide panels
of velvet down toe of tta over
skirt, and edge it with fringe. Tbe wd;
vet flounce should be f» deep Hi»t toe
bottom of toe over-skirt wOlwm**
top of .the flounce, and make toe skirt
to be sntarely velvet. Torn the
clge of the flounce under, and face it
with silk. Gathered flounces are very
scant Pirated velvet flaumjes are twice
the length of toe spaae to be covered.
——
Ancient and Modern Extravagance.
,»
ra
J? -J? 8 eyrewj——
^WSShS^^Sr worth 8300 000 tST* Cicero tbS wlio
time., ontbeP^atine., give•UmOntbr Measala
philosopher, who worth wa’s ^ST a ptau
was
owursl wonderful fortonea. Cesar, be
fore ayounggi'ntleman^^pnvate^life^jiwal he entered any offlce^whMht was
81,000.000, ship of Qutesor ■^bep fir ^.oOO.OOO. 8 L a 5n& 8t, «?i; Mare
Antony owed $1,500,(WOtontoe tta Kalends Idee of
March and paid ^ it <w* Jj®
of March 4J20,000,000 *.
squandered iff Rv«a jrabhe
money. And toese K Rtara well,
Esopus, who was play-actor, P“d
$400,000 for a boHN*. DiBhes were
madeof gold and J >r ® 0 *
ions were stones. °* solid. The si1ct,1ub t^s of Hehogabulns tables and
plates were of pore wito go ld, and hut mat
tresses, coverril raipeto of cloth
of gold, were stuff-Hwrth down from
undewthe wing of keep a partridge. dignity It took
$80.000 aye^rto Senator. „ P the of
a ltoman
1 feds fa New OrtaM.
A Sw Tort Am erresprm,lent £l»ee gives
“ • oeoBn » of some duel* tort took
^ $ 5^ Orleaan about vour^^Ue^ twtutT-five ve®rs
A
from Mi»ia«ppi, New tbe «»a of a wealthy spenlt
gsy’sessor. pent to Orleans ,,S. to
the He w« cwSt
M j imaeeoming, BUs wealth, fine
jjsasging ; personal appearsnoe, Snjtivated mind,
«asn^OT m »piiMs amk^tSttrong” hsA iKstheJ him
: drinking, Being av^Kmng
load talking, ‘
lavonte Tnnng He™,
>l«P^>ent aanmg thatadiea, and by hia
i£d «»ai W the envy and
taLBl .hav. Area, who, notwith
the was St. sidling IeTtiia at. hotel, uble in the Xuda^f
the the^.^, professional cat
throat stepped up Sine, to and sdz
ing the gtoof ,lash«I it in the
enemy> ^ iD face. It was supposed Umt,
a f oor ^ to the follow code, Bot a peremptory
- the Missis
cmfel, sippian knew of hinmelf, his man, and had perfect
he «iid nothing,
^ ™ ^^h^hmfo" T
dito appeared. XreftifSrinrt He strolled acmaa the rotnn
ZllMtZt by reytoj awoTTsSShim
the mnstseht'rmd opeTand goatee dowS jerked TJ his
mmith SuUlenge-i spat to
He was <>n the spot He «c
cepted, li^rtTe and Xice^f being v«r^!“vi the challenged party,
why Mississippi be liad bidm! hiatone. Be selected ;
rifles at forty vards. The ;
the old* place
on Metairie profesLmSTeil course, ud te
the first fire the dead
with an ounce bafi through lus brain.
Such wa* the state of «ocscS?;zn New
at that time, that it was the uni- .
concealed weapons, vAJ in the to Stortoe dressing
before he
Unon one occasion at a ball
at the St. Louis hotel, two men.
Hwut en^ment S^mm^yT-’ Se
au to
Wy
. y e _ minnte. afterward was intha
, aPo7thi pnll a cork, the blade pro
about six or eight inches fro™
clenched hand, between the two
jingen,. Concealin*_tti« requested^ the
the scoundrod man
whom he had quarreled ante-room. to step
for » moment to an
request Imd was wuiplied cloeeit with, and them no
the door upon
the unsuspecting man was. strnck to
heart with the Thug kuife, and in
killed. ailowtd. Bis nnalerei was
wi and to give bail, he but
not tried ; and Iro told that is
et Jivinig in New Orleans, and, member strange of
it may seem, is a respected
q, ootton brokers Mggmnge. quarreled, , , High one
j ™5d» #t Ul „ coiUm followed.
passed, hat ncrohaUenge while they
A few evening soeiaf afterward, with
were Ota club, one of them,
a wcnl of warornff,
The other threw up tos Me
™ “rmed, anA lmgged for
which was not graced. He wm shot
dual. the jury An rendered atetet and * verdict ttMfcllgg4*»«* of acq .
- ...... 111 ---
A leva! uTTIZ. Reporter.
In re latio n > of J” Wales’
*°* <'Veemg l4 - ,, *^Eii'li!t»fvli?Bnsnwnf-u attratt«d_ Lon- m , r
*“ d tL** neither ha nor
toeHWegronpof gentlemen with with him n
MM a fusee with whi h t- ’
4 ® fife lighted his
^ke^raro iVanJ
bmtabedpri^”-Wb,«ionty«» new* P*rcelthe as
smoke
other, ever smoke Heaven the forbid cigar that J°« ^ h I » T *j» «
gi Te n me 1 1 shall treasure it up
the thing* I value moat, end leave it to
m vchUdten as a precious heutoom
The «gJ5, prince laughe i. Well, said
offering his cigar-case, -keep
your ^Woom butfaio
amoto *“d 1 thiuk now. you Tta^a 11 tiket roJ^ ba.1 w ‘‘b
,Ttaj teST'^cmM'^nd , ,
K
ob ? y?^ Fta -SSSd tow rover
ent daze silently smok^ it it. And And it it is is
J long Drthe ago, ”f ;^ that MUPW&Mjfe* toe nr^ons cfaar ’w^ ™
found under his pillow carefully pre
served rejdera . will
DenbUea. a «****!» . of
.
read, toe snee.lotew.th^aim.le of m
Bnt wbro Gtarge the IV.
rataed Urn glass goblet public from banquet, whioh and the
king drank at a
, 4mA * r , „
nsnal qaart of mixture, inquired^ the
kindly °*
A "2*g**P
. „
" And fiow ninycowa have you
"Nine,sir.”
era war and toe state of the roads,
om ^-.’averaire „ b o w much ‘ milk
' ^ Lv'en ? »"
!• Re ouarta sir’’
„m “'ThJSnas ” said the gentleman as
mov ed off. tt lookmi after him
scratched Ms hrad, anil and all all at at once once
P»le Wan “.ta to figure puBed on out tta a w^n-cover^^^ ^ 1 r
quarts down ■ . _ the’ cows -uid ‘ muiti
Rni^rin**F of
J r one ouarts
^5- Si xt 7 iy
twentymght. tad _ owe to rarnr. OT
where Aa I get
111 be hailed,.iII . harm . ., i@ren . m
away to one of m, - • )’
leaving .* ,1'’^ -.T _ 1 1 , :.’ ; * t iee
Aggers to be filled with water .
.Strychnia ’ *“ and it».An(Mote. F 4 *”,
■
A , correspondent in Nature says:
■ h^^-Viiv^wUh packet
1 had mixed a threepenny Kifire," w!iich of
"Battle’s Vermin con
t«t sfsrwSisiTjRai! equal to about one-sixth of
rerttr^prefioMy a
****** f fW 81 -’ LfjSfi
-
.Lvdatjon last rear on the ituaaroocla. antagonism
. jstrveh. rf^ riafin^.4
bvdrate jf and t&at the mini
™““ ... ^«^nt , ]„tter for SdStad a
t 1st once
. the doe’s nf skin forty-five grains of
0 |,ioml solution, mr dog being In
twice toe weight of a rabbit.
. „, ' w xter of an hour fancying toe dog
d ,„ M j us the spasms had oeaaed and
am,ar,'litis lifeless, afSi I moved it
■ It staggered Juggled
- shortly after
£ £ . “nier , ti partoTfire;
L,k the it
some milk usu'sl and excrot for being
H^for than hToAleS seemed nothing ptosed the
for lmd effect
* 8 . Thatthefatal of a
',j„ se 0 f euroeesM^ strychnia was thus
wlmt
; tooold say was a poisonoua dose of
chloral .given hypodermically, is an in
Cresting fact verifying the experiment# experimenta
, , w , WH , lont 9UcU
on the lower tei.mals, a medi^Lman
. m ight often be found standing by similar hdp
loss to aid his fellowman under
effects of poison.
VOL. IV. NO. 29.
'
'*' laraatalloa.
Incantation w*s one of the n.-t
powerful mode* belief of auei«»t nmgm, and
reatea on a in the sbeJ mystenoix^
poser of eertsin word, uttemi
with peculiar iDt/jnat*on* of the voice.
iMsntations the conooctfng were genersUy of Aug"- sc
eompanied by
The effeets, both good and bed, pro
duced on the bodies of men and animals
.by certain plants, and which originally
were disooyered aotridentallr, reune k.
, ‘i® 6 to ^ eiaggerated, until all manner
them. of imaginaryatUnbtites Medicine, therefore, were ascrilssl in its early to
, form, was intimately alhiS to magic,
»fd while it wsa thus in Its
*>«*»« *hey were the seat oflife. Map
«>1 medicines, therefore, cams into
vogue, and in their use incantation was
* gf^ral wd almost necetearyaceom
pamment Bat the operation of these
a nd mnap t ateoBS was not confined
to the physical effeeta on the bring
****** to which they were applied, tilings
They oonld do more womtorful
Ictteis and doors, and even make mono
taUonsVw tsius flv open. Hut Ramans.used inctet
curing wounds and dislocs
tions. of In words Shetland, used for to this healing day, there sprain is
a
can be traced to the tenth cen
and is performed of German tyiSg origin. The
is limb thread by around from
sprained which^^are a nine spun knots,
while wool, this on "wresting cast thread,” it ,
as
called, is f^erel beingapplied in a!m«t the operator Inandi-; |
an
tons of vome. 1
Medicine*worship ™**Y?. has been and fa still 1
religion religion of the tribes in Sonthern
and packets of medicine are Worn ■
the excitement of destruction.
It had been intended to take preean
tions to prevent the sack of the town by
irregulars. Three companies were to
have been told off to protect the spoil
from the hands of those who had (tone
uothingtoentitle loot; them to participation in
but in the excitement of
victory it was not -srried out, and tl^^us
recklessly irragularsaresecuringforthemselves the bulk
waisting, great of
____ that ^ when _ was _____________________ I in went ro up soon the after street the it
oomparatirelv rivulet empty. which On a little
over a crosses one
of the town lay three Russians dead,
came mating past and roou the street
was fiUed. 81,op after shop was
; open. Nowa grocer's, from which skins
Oft “ tortr^v” su^r “'trttSrirr
h
Bashis thrnst the white breasts>d sugar lumps by
handsfnl into their into the
'^WttZrSSi
stysgtti goods thrown out to t»
-were
tnu^todnndcrfoot, while toelnngyards
! l .«l '
and the
heads stove in. bodies were hnrled into
the air and came smashing down among
time a troop of scared pigs would come
rushing SSi into the street, hounded out of
styes by the side surreuts of the
looters. Then there was a shout and a
chase, and tlie pqor beasts were revolvers bay
oneteil or shot Uf rifles and
recklessly fired amid the crowd. Before
u silk store lay an old Bnlgar, shot
ahtuff^her, through the chest, lying Jut as he fell, amt
laid stiff and straight
under Zf 22 tlie &<, projecting Uy Sf front of a cook s
a Russian, dri in
shirt and itrswere, clean and fine of
texture, etS apparently the remains of some
fuLctihuary. *
-
TZiZmo Seme Curious ^in.7uirv Effits Ab«utHwl!’ 1
- A ' ^ moJ| lately made bv‘ A t
D D( ia a y a the 'hatters Ac-)
p^off^er some enrions the results. capacity of!
“P u t that
{^j'Te^romirtioua! j aeve i opm & ent of the
the external
vo]ume rif the head; also, that the intei
ljgel)M , ; H proportional to the volnrne •
add weight of toe brain, he showB inter
aUa. that certain families develop period like
individuals—that is. they have a
,,f growth, then astationary period, extine- then
ft ^ penotj 0 f decrease, previous to
ti In families of the first period the
head enlarges from generation who wrought to genera- the
jj n „, Tho citizens heads thau
revolution of 1789 had bigger
3s.ya,*/{S
specially’
pfjthe* head increases from b™he ««?’. i
#^he beads in Paris ^ ia that ^ of
largest The hatters of toe Fan
Jj„e Germain ^ykw*Bkiun» sav that they only have fit
fargerWls hreds The Cyrisns, and
than the St. adiool
SH*g&-2 students of flf the normal larger
Snlpice, p?esent etc. The
mem bcraof the clergy "Ingeneral, a peculiar
featu rein ttewstatistics. thirty to
Ha v g M Delaunay, “ men from
’ year # of age have a larger bend
thar ^^ith from twenty to thirty. Not
eoelesiastic*, for their heads
; about twenty-five. The
; bishops, h«Ss archbishops, etc., tare
i no than the students of the
j ^
-
ThP professor's Prize.
fiormanv has a Pickwick indeed, with
i out guile.' The n>r/kaU^r. / u ^J* Jl
I Schu-eAzcrue^.
fixed in g,V t na „ t
«■%►.■*
hill yonder.. raj-iJdfather ^Tbe fetched
JLmr ^ b uiH tta would fake for pro- tta
askrnl what he
stone. “ Sinoe yea *** m t . \
_
%% faS*” "That is rs«h*r leave rr Isrgc it at
y. iu Siall hare the forty - i
ant On brought the the stone '“f’ Jipeen^^ the tru-k
the zealous to refresh aatiy mriwa^a^,,^ h'n T-■ ^
it over chronological mscripta;.. „ w « , ..
of its
criwl Re in amazement. , Vesbtoa^I . , j
Tins is not thi-right stone
reail toe date 1(«1, while tots :
date 1801, which prove* that < ■•>>r r
was exactly HO years. o,e , . n! ,
■•The Herr I rofraror m ( _
himself about t#iat .i
*
the taor. "You the. masons
tamed the vu,ne doorway up-. .< ,l^»ore • tmtot
mt lt m the
that way You can tan ! ’ ,
way you I tae must now have it ,s the yonr fort. oire P ■ . ^ ,i
course, paid.
^ moDeJ -------
Norwegian Fishermen.
The Norwegian fishers prepare for sea l
1 sesoldiera make ready for the battle
fiplll no man knows whether he will
ever return. Li the month of March
word reaches them that cod have arrived ,
ukzzzzLzfz toe??iHre aUlieislrethe^Ishtog
Wb« nSr^rss:
I iswat squirming n ° prisoners,
j toem iTMull of the
The
I advance each seises
: t[ 'ta%fatim executioners deapatehes ; it with
hit* it. head,
f hlg kui fa, ^ cuts off el its of oil,
a ^ ^trails, a tunll
its and then totes
^it^ere • t yefc warm I ij ve r of the
; ripe fruit. This
u ttl0 battle of toe ftsliera Th«y tare .
. on thBir si ,le skdl and audarnty. but the :
fisfi have on theirs the tempest the
i Mfelstrom which draws in ships nod
sucks them down, the icy currents of
“hra }{ or tb sea. So wasoMd’the bon
' the subject of cruelty to cod was
I broached to him. The Norwegian sailora
^ ^ tbe best-in toe world. A
' Brito* admiral onee amd fleet : of “To English rale
. ^ like .
•" mann6li bv Nor wegUn sailors.”
*_
Rhyming Legislators. LerfslatorS
a resolution was circulated among the
the rew^otion brought out the following
poetacal donations:
—Hanger.
U -*~r.
( n ought to it don’t) „ .
.
- B m ta.
i, a good g stew madeof Ttenffe Burnt..
fit for » seraphim. -
Wars' f a*k«l-«tat.is without aTareapto. On- .
' Would caU it a Ssb a
Ths blamed fools vho . rhyms , d on Tevr ^tn,
ought The way to have, to give tarapio. value to a diamimd-btak ^
* raik «though tta diamond
irena rnn. — warnsr.
s . wf ,,ua rethe r U Terrain.-. a creeping Karapra —Hofonxm.
Than SwreStertt a atoll pot iuj^r
nwvry ten
And eat « good «te« ot Terrajaa. -Froster. .
; -
iT Ita»d*ta«tata*A OBl!l fl J5fTJ5?rairito P -Toaq/terr.
.
Tbsn tokrar the tta bosnds taand. trvJ! trafl a a Tsrrapta. i.srrapm^
Turks Sacking a Taws,
The El-ns conespondeat ths
Jon Tme* writes. West in Eleosafter
aebarp «n“2d tlav V.W>7 s fight.ng, chaiact^nsed, I
fee of Uxee «U of
feroeitT which have disgraoed so many
TartiA rooeeaMs. There isnotagfrnej Pfcfei
opponent to the Bsshi.ftuwnk
than Suleiman Pasha, but theee Turkish
and Kroasmen free hneee hare been
raised by the oemtral government a
situation qmte beyond control, would transform and any
attempt them at into suppression Us contmUsble brigand.,
eren
We are qi Elena, and the sack of the
place ia now in faU swing From the
winiiw of the house in wtoeh LTarre
because the simnlUneity of the inddenta
is lost. Thus, if I say that the Bashi
Bazooka and Circassians are battering
doors and shutters with the butt-ends of
their muskete slashing window-frames
to P^oes with their yataghan*, blowing
off locks roth their revolvers, throwing
toeoontents of hoose and sliop into the
street, still it is only two or Uiree housre
Su°n
the ot and ved-liot with
| _ anScare*. . . f.,r‘u. hlmv
j Thau wao«rap< the bank cashier, with tou • thou
I «aud a v<»r,
, And a hundred thousand _ short.
Pr. Hardwieke, the Coroner at a re
| cent iuquost in Mnrylebouo, London,
, said that 800 children annually met their
deaths in Loudon alone from suffocation
in bed.
Kin, »„»». ana,.as, a.
^yal by selling stables. off 1,000 horses kept in the ,
n „, ■ .eiiLat land n# ,l„.
gLrium. *,.^ «mi «x -menthw
^ni^^oS^v ~3s ' 'luTaw
^
‘%7TL.w.s.rew»-.» rrTi&,ar men. t, Vr
1
had been jilted by the woman for whom
the men.age was intended.
||.......I. ■SWWJHSrtSS?. the
mining of the reef below it by wa~
Wr a. anRowbali
\ n ews itembays that iray-...
ttoTWiy Land deligbtedto has direovered hear
Jacobs Well. We are afloat
it. There lias been a rumor for
that Jacob was dead—0,7
(*Uy Derrick.
Mr. O. I. Romanes, of London, con
clu , u . s a[t „ r sundry experiments, that
.j,,, ; H [j„ o s j, has nerves. Alcohol
lna ^,. H ]t drunk, strychnine pnslneee
£g«H&k purexysmal convulsions au,l chloroform
.j, VeouuTry. t p ope W Pins IX. was once in
thi was shipwrecked where „„
the XortU Carolina coast, disastere near
,j Metropolis and Huron oe
v"w4ntiu and just before the wreck his
Norfolk tor water.
»ka Lf , m Nevada. «e»’ LQtlfifect
tmudedto level the has Been
toe dentil of 600 fathoms
without finding bottom. It is forty
miloB long, and from fifteen to twenty
wi Entice a e ami contains many island#,
, out h,.,
county, Miss., hires
crimulala ( , v t i„. month to the highest
WJl |,, r w bo takes them to his larm,
Zm k S, freds them and guard
to the county five didlare
. 1( . r [ <jr each able-bodied man.
n ,,„ ij, r t, u i. bo not wake ms
Ere th<? mnrphhs yoa dope*!. and Iravta
Ere von’va chopped the scrap* ■
Of your yiwtecevea s meal;
W»kea>ea,ff tei»n«f« ssiu _ k .
jj^hTIumL tne but isrVvly.
z&'Jzsr&zsit?. ‘ fHTa’teSse
ssissssr '
? 0 7ter dog after tha"
An
.atherwants *y w J" te „^^ ♦» ,, ., „JSelo»”up ,, or,,q L, back
, ’ n P)1 1
and »k yonr fatoey r to „o
per; evening I on^ the jrant boy bln to ‘
An accident occurred .tt Arjeaei, W
in Dsoemlmr,. Great No.then. W » w;f tawski'
gers injured was Hr. M r War \Ysr. hawsK ^ a
professor of legerdenmiD, relative j, ftflar.y and ^
known as Bosco, being a of that
former pupil o 1 the eonpirer
name. The muscles of bis hand nr,
so hurt that he can never again the practice rmlwsy
his art, and m a suit against recovered *,,.,W
company he has just
.huoages, //eraMman ' had rfieurme
A New York hour h.
tism, and in-just One-to!{ rod an rto
lean,.si that the following cure
^^mir-s^^^Sws.'biflKS , ^ sj!t ami tamm*, tansy
i s,«t <rfof f.-1 flu,.....!. chloroform hr.
T ™ he poet who i>W* of nz*vnrvt s.vow
ttaMMnr .„ ? a yauth
. l^.foraomb.
For I w
„ r , w r - drak ta-refai
USKi-V-...... T-.-k . -rat .* «;>
ote the bard
-aid kwkwl torn oufu. o tns ;*,•'« tack yard
To d» m Ow toa'-Mm --••'•
p; a , n i r pclge-,f
, prf *,.,.r .used i* a v.jut.m
, rim - v. cm to hare .i.-'C, „ u-t to
nia : -.4 trau.-unniry
u^ . .. m , re tyeir— tie Sax-.,,*.
fr , m: , h( .
a.^ . , x r . ... fr wr-ttaj an
„ r '................ law. At.tta
:!; M with Philip of
sq in l.Vi*. V ' ' ' ’
a Bible to be hai.o^eJ, 8^»ine
laid i>n the taker, are
r „ ,,;.;y to .
into. . J-. omg tost - r.e
^ withget.*,
w^i ^ ,,, 1,1 ar ,* nave it a.n-rt.ed .with
^ we dded a .
, jaiuiiaJpiff.fftedi-Rk*«teer-nutjJ«v.
THE OGLETHORPE ECHO.
Advertising Rates
suit a i a* ;nni yv
, Iuks ........pit LU *i.»p**esfcw*t 5 .ar »; &? iiiw
itsctum • «* e.ee i*« »
■ i-.urtm «-t» a.» 4.7S 7.U& *.001 1M Wi<»
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I \ «M 08011 , * 00 12 u.sk' UU $ « H» »,<*> •4.10
- 1 minora. ■ it* -m.aa.uj :oi.jo
| ! Less) Advertisements. C
► f-*r j»t *, -tro t&fci... .... |5.ao
• Emc-i'.or* - , A. lcnai*tr%tcr» sad <*u*t*ia.b%
- V ritUT T- f i ^at T TO tte»T4y-d» T». .. - ,
, loiter* of AdsunMrstioB, ttnrty aajr* ....... 4.«»
' I^tLrpot DssmiMiion, thw moottA.......
t !/?!«* of fhi*nIt»e»hip, Thirty .i»y» 4.**°
i L**n»n»o* I>ss. Ou*r.Ji»UAl:ip. torty 4»y«.. STS
j i HorumttmA Sotoc**. tart* io-»ntotn.
Buie M« s per «<iaur, «*c& laaert’xi x.«*
It&s of Interest.
w»ytowlta«t« ^ ffl*SWWepiEI7«
^e. » to g him .
T l„. _t. n t*lrp <> aiwn
Pbol de C*—"ip“, q 5 the Freoch j.% t-K editor,
« said to have fongbt more than fifty
duels.
Mrs. A braham Lincoln >R living a
seclnded life in an interior town of
France.
The gaslights sfw in front of the church
doom in York cost the taxpayers
*44,000 a ye*r.
Tkm , w no nuataking the native
-.hrewdnesa of men who advertise when
ssiSiSiJSr^ waWa,*
1
tml Valley Forge this bids fair the to be the of can.
feature demotetrkion. year in way cen
tennis!
What is the difference between the
flammCT enD „ d .. wellordained goat?
On«* shine** on the dew, and other dines
1K1 tlie r1i , w
It snowed once in Lisbon, Portugal,
during the past winter, for the flrei time
Three willalways be more or less er
i« remark a ly high m Ragland. The
immber o f deaths e ccnr betw
seventy and eighty years of age.
The simultaneous release of. many
ba l characters oonsequent upon the
royal amnesty of minor offenders causes
uneasiness in Italian cities,