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THE OGLETHORPE ECHO
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fn-wd Cm* in Jd«*aM.
SoMiTftlfBO •cut tmsa tfe* BMB«t it »•** *
I
«Tpim*» of hie tlnje, and if esMertpSoo 1* «*
natvta, the paper i« at once dfrcooti eoM .
isj person who will ecnd os the of fixe
sew Kjbecrtbm, with •» c*»b, trUI be ectitied to
*»e yeer* wbecrtptlcti free. Ko ciab rate*.
Efhi \m >a? the HiUs. |
Bo FtiU ! Ho *‘t l !
The night ioots& mi tr*ie mkI hill ?
Bo Hr*ng*h sti!i, I esnnot close ;
Bfbiazx
Abr.ut toe littic. tri-v n to keep
All 'tov.ft* at hi^h*. I..cc><&ot liettp! i
So dark! 8 > dark’. :
Save i.em And tiaerw a flit^ftiog *park t !
The fireSp's Tthy l»nip. that makes
The dark mare d&a*e. Iff s^rit (jnahes
With tcTT T* r&gm aa«i oadefiaed
I se« the liilk 2 jom op hbLi»h
So ac*r! So koa? !
Thoee ecJemo nonaUioM, gt»ud and drear
Their rocky summit*? ito they stand
La».«cott»l* to jifnard tfco lead t
Or j*ik>n2 Sercc oi/i grim *&4 Siam.
To ah at tt* its till fit; return 7
Aeu^’mncwf: o 5 T&
A eparroe'e »&»X there, 1 know
The birdiings ftew three days ago; .
Ye4 aiili tiAvltu «i#b mghx to rest !
And sleep in the forsaken neat. I
K9 fear! Softer: I
R ee pt U l id heart Bit-vp eafeiy feers *
A million helpiese cn-atoros reet,
SecnreJy oa 'Earth's kindly broaet^- - ;
While Slight her solemn aleroe keep*,
He Make* to w&h'b'Vuo 'never a'r-*?*:
— JogAllison,
11 —u
.... THE ACROBAT S neurunr REVENGE,
The snu w«s k- tt 1 « behind the hflls ;
of Maldun one- Jane evening in the year
were' 1845 when an acroba' with bis wife, to-'
soon plodding along the road
ward thenextmarkettowti.
himself wTsTSIn JtoArty e 5 *rt
elidin' hunger her* and i i
Carrie 1 -ro infiid breast.,
Bhe too had the appearance fid of a person i
cornelv^o enwrhir to V«>k her hm*n' and her face was
Th-fir lifewra a hard one bnt feet I
tofidshira bort* it well Nor iVivcrtv i vet bad ail the
which h«l bronght
feto their fei«oufof door sent ths%Sfew. lo've'as the P proverb
toit
They were now iourneving at‘t to the mo™ mar
ket town of Middon as to >w
wonld woma be oe market m irKet dav uay, jLmvai Duval thought aoog u he t.,
fSK^SchauliShand *! 1
it feo^TSro wfts^erTdesiruWeth'it he i md his
taK’to^.. ionraev iSSda^Ktori'entaibe 7 ewto^ P tattotoSS was
Shiore re^ii^Tt P ^ r P - °sm ?tI y a
^LfgA asasafw'L’" rj rjfej ’ “ -
lodge an 1 noble gateway of a gentleman*
ssr^sra-isa! and their clear, ringing Iniighter.
As he and tooW tjrpnglj ;
came nearer ,
the gato he saw between twenty and ,
thirty children inholiday > ■ ■ playing
Wiudns family for maiiy generation^
wsjs:.
The acrobat’s eyes kindled ns lie
^r BnrelvTwraihffiS fc ieht^he
^ 4 turUia^SnI«dtetattouir upland
whirling rpriuring thorn strtlim np like the ever
afl totorwoi^rfulSS of atountoii. Surely could
fee he
do would be the very thing for thuin.
Snreiv woul.fi tho great mul wealthy parent*
nav handsomely for fee Mouse
meat of the little ladies and 'then gentlemen.
He paused for a moment el-miy
pushed Cd ttoCn utien the foCdhr gate and walked iu in “ to
Ws
aasitfiitfsj! ? ffes
some of Ids feats The ,u’d girl nlitto
tle repradfeat thev their would; hb
faces, with great eyes, Were
turned toon fee acrobat and tlie wonder
ful box which he took from his shoulders
^S^:dtoi„l ( ,-opened
ceived feat Sir William Windas was ap
preaching Si-to wife hi* gamekeeper. .ftrlles, He .
forward with rapUl and
when within a few- iiacia of Duval he
calletl oat to him, in a voice of thunder:
“Vagabond! how dare you enter
here?”
For a moment Dnval atobd astonnded !
and dumb at this sadden interruption. 1
He saw before him a gentleman much !
taller than himself, in snooting coat and
boots, with a felthat, narrow shouldered,
fair, with a. shaven lip and chin, bnt hft
btrehy whiskers of deep tawnv hue;
eyes, of a bluish gray, large and bright,
and his bearing that of 'an at.
with wsvu a a stroug OMUUH dash uo» u of w, fee ...» bally.
44 Come, pack up yoarirampery aiwl
begone T‘ said the baronet, seeing that
Dnval stood looking at him. recovered his
But the acrobat had
self-possession, aud - now - said, with’a
firm voice:
44 harm 1 meaut no offense, yonr honor, nor
to any I one the or anything children, antt belonging made
to boid you. saw
to enter, thinking it would please
t he m t o -see that’s my”— old story,” said
44 Oh, a very
the baronet. “When ildmv* and sryn>
eiea prowl about gentlemen’s pstks-wg
all -know that thairJutwdtOfft are 'per
fectlv iuU 'VeutT^—'
call me a thief, sir ?” said
Duval, his dark cheek coloring aud hia
eyes flashing fire.
“Scoundrel!” exclaimed Sir William,
his blood rushing into his face and mak*
. ing it in a moment would red with rage ;*«do
you think I chat logic with a
strolling pack vagabond and like yon? I told
von to up be off. Do.so at
And as the baronet uttered bis com
raised the h;«)d iu which he
held the whip as if about to strike the
aC Dural T?** fc \ looked i t j at . Jam , . with tl a savage
glare of his keen dark eyes, ana slowly,
in a deep voice trembling with suppress
ed rage, said :
‘Duval ■ r said b ^r- his ao wife, ?; gently , pulling
h-m by the sleeve, and m a tone of
mintrleii pnthos and humility, 44 never
•nunl the gentleman. Wo shouldn’t
•have come in without hi* leave. We
humblv ask your pardon, sir. Gome,
Duval, let na go.
“ Take your wife s advice, my man,”
said the gamekeeper, “ and don’t come
mto gentlemen s parks no more till such
times a» you re specially invited. There
now ; gather up your toggery an 1 get
'
W in,c Martha and the , gamekeeper
liad hacn.fireaking Dayal’s eyes remain*
«M riveted on 8 ir Wi.Ham’s. The Imronet
had dart*! to threaten him with ft blow—
with a blow tif that whip with which he
was v,- »ut to chastise dogs. Duval would
Oglethorpe Echo.
» T t T fF» ONLY PAPER IN ONE OP THE LARGEST, MOST INTELLIGENT AND WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN GEORGIA.
By T. L. GANTT.
died sooner than emigre safe ad<- j
irhtia« liet'veen mansaJ man vealt’a
-ns-. r^i . P -^
aumhoi.l .* strength of Emb. S.r Wil
torn £?j‘jtsfzF&,'siJr£! aaw the fierce spirit that wax «trog- j
5 ±a 4 ssia*JSciiS
H " ImVh'tut'.ilii.i '^ii. .t lu.
uESisaaJfcjssu;
a apri og^xajiiaa te |J fl M>.
eo aid only have. 11,01 one blow at him
delivered with the prodigious atrength
Bat, as Dnval rushed forward, Leo, one
of tiie noblest hoamla ia Sir Wiiliam'a
kennel, which had for some time watch
the parley between his master and
Oaval with grave, selate face, sprang
upon the acrobat and mterceptatlhia at
tack. M“anwhi’e two under gameke- p
had her arrived. bedrxim And Lady Wind-is, the
from casement, saw
straggle between the man and the dog,
and wondered what itatlcouldbe about,
‘OhMmJUo, dowaf- cried -Sir Wil
Bam, and the dog sprang away from the
mat., and sat down by his master's side,
“Now pat him out, ” raid the baronet,
“he turned away and walked off toward
the hall.
about iV ? raTl ‘the gmshnlfunTgam”
LT Duval was advised, the more
easily beoaiWo of the appealing look his
w 'f fi gave him as eke geutLy Heflanghis wiped box the
blood from his face,
once more over hisehonMcrs, and walk
ed through slowly toward closed fee gate. then, He pausing, passed
it, U, lifting
he clenched his ham), and, it up
toward Hoaveu, cried out, in the agony
bis heart:
“My God, I only ask this favor of
Tiiee-th.it I mtiy one day be. revenged!"
Bo he. and' his wife resumed their
PrtBentiy r pony-chdriven hfhinl when by it a
ReaM them;'
<*"-■ !o them, tho lady drew agitation, up,
asked Natwich; them, with then slight adied Martha
fee way to
wtotlim. U.e infant s he e ar rird rara hoy
ihi“
chaitki; n.
s&,‘%=x 4 s^:s^ j ss«‘
which totokened thegrrat wealth of
the proprietor, who sat by tto
pattmg the head of a noble mastiff
which evay how and feen looked np at
not much that dog or man conld do for
Well might Sir Willium be proud.
,n“ 2 ^
rare'llvpnt tto inw'rich ^le onesth Tu 7 were Wtitatol heard
W one n
vim-e-'“Where is mv la.lv« Where is
Sr Wi'linm?” and «4 tie next moment
drawing-room. Mira J maid rustol
mio the
Sir William-md ‘ Lady 1 Windas started
aB
“What is the matter?” demanded the
baronet. f
“ oh Sir William oh mv ladv—ob }
mv.lrar gmvdladv—”
as%aa.tt.nip"' 0-4 sTr Wdltoi ""stfoi'.mtor
“
very with sioilv. and soleeKng her that words
a precision which stowed she
state was resolved whot she neither hid heard to under from or Emily; over-j
“ Confound it, woman I come to fee
point ‘ 1 ” cried Sir s»£ William
“So, smldonlv -to. she auickening feme," s her .id Cham
hers *the’chil.lren,’aays paoe;
she; »the boat,’ says
she; ‘where’s mv lady?’ And androvladv when I ;
told her sir where yon inme's
was, she rushes in, and at. my
Sarah’s .Chambers, that's all as Emily
Carter.said- to me.”
Though Obamber’s information was
neither copious nor distinct, fee^children it conveyed
forcibly enough that were
in danger, and that the boat had some
thing to do with it : pliastly
It It is is which which imixisnible impossible spread spread to to desoribo describe Sir Sir the the Wiilianra William’s ghastly
hue hne over oyer
face,'sw the thought flashed ■ ‘ ‘ across his '
mind that his children had been drowned,
Bat Bat he he had had hardly hardly time time to to realize realize the the
n/wtefkilfire possibility of -,T such n-iVrtl, » - * calamity, rtra.IflreiHw when reli an ami in i Tl
stole-the curate, with a soft step
smiling “There fa»e. ia imminent danger,” he
no
said, at once. “ There is vet half
hour, during which lose^rt it is
to save them,. Bnt a moment
in sending heart*stsSh^fmah, a mess c«ngcfoii horseback to
the and bid him bring
roundbis boat directly. If you'll lend
one of yonr liorsea, I'll go mveelf.”
Orders were given for the immediate
saddling of a horse, und-memiwhUe Sir
: William learned bad from Mr. his Ling boat that
Master Wili am ran upon
a sunhfen rock; that she had filled and
gone down ; and that the boy, with l«is
sister, were how upon a point of rock a
quarter of a mile from the shore from
which thev were cutoff bv the flowing
tide.: In half an below on
which they stood would be a foot
water, and unless a boat could be pro
cured by that time they would be in
peril. In few seconds the. saddled
a more
horse stood at the door. Mr, lang
mounted it, and rode eff.
“ By this time, however, shore. Lady Win- The
dus was on her way to the
moment she heard of the boat, she
guessed all the rest.
The truth, however, was that Emily
and Miss Joan bad .U-eu scut '.nt m-tho
phaeton, imder the William, charge oi seeing the page, the
for a drive; that
equipage, ran his bout' in e!.M.re an-t
that, as Emily decUued to bile vehttire and her on
account dislike of her" tendency took to his sister, of
of sharks, he
his own lordly will and authority, under filial
his protection. Tbe boat struck,
and went down and, by the greatest loW
gootl fortune, William, with Joan in
arias, was able to reach the point of rock
G p which he now stoid.
Wimt were t! e i- elinga of La»ly Win
dus when she: reacht d the shore and be
. held her child r? n on a small spot of rock,
alniost with the sea ail around
?t» glass. ;t ;s true, but with the
LEXINGTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1878.
tide flowing. oral every ntorate «raering
swell sithiu Oi.- tor tm ft xtfc ydi nish
i I jVUm. 1 her fc Joan U, an Rfretetel TiF tmie U.ssrd
ij.n. . of ont
her, and h. r brave h ? take off hi* cap
s^zi^sguuu^i aesa" ■“ *
tb.
K.T»SS«w a b’ii°‘,
marqot*es. baronet, and rai
catcher* abate equally among them.
WeH, wae there no one there who
conld swim ?
Unhappily Sir William ermH not, nnr
the game-keeper. The rat-catcher be
log applied to by Emily Carter, looked
»t that yonng per-on «olemnlyforhev- closed
eral seconds, and then quietly his
eyes, and tiros addreaaed her:
1 “ Towog woman, do yon see this here
rat in this here cage ?”
“Well?” demanded Emily, with much
dignity. '‘•^en-.-nnfcss-wome.Ottyop«mawim
-
fnrderer nor me, or unless a boat comes
up, or unless sometbink else happens,
which I secs no promising sign on, I
wouldn’t give the life ofthis here rat for
the life ol them two children."
glraiis^th,'spariousTnd -jass^ffitirtsg smifeg as
lifts her np.
i The water is at their feet I My God I
can we do nothing V
Yes, it was tree. Tbewaterwas at
feet. William ha,l raised Joan in
his arms; and as he saw his mother
.lirect the barooefa utteution to them,
ho called out, though she couldn’t hear
him:
“AU right, mamma; there’s plenty of
time yet.” of time 1 The flowing
Plenty the see was the shore
in. Often as patty on
their Ling^ftd eves in the direction in
which Mr. ruiden <o procure a
; boat-, there'was nothing fainted. in flight. Sir Wil
Lady Wiudns hud
liam stood a picture of agony,
at hicchildreu. Sarah Chambers. Em
,|y, urod the stable toy were grouped
^ sr
2 a;
and perhaps truly, that he was ready to
!^* to 2 gA^' ^ rs< ^
“PP*
The to«met did imt tmmfe look at
one had addressed him, but when he
<“
ehUdren. Sir William’s was flxed upon ;
^^aW^wirrssir* i
It was D ival! -Duval, L who had
prayed tor vengesnee the soto favor :
for which lie wonld trouble heaven. It
was Duval, at whoso,Ion, have bad if he all could ;
to raid ever to cue, the
miseries of life had knocked, and at
whose hearth thev-had seated them
selves. Fordid not slm, whom he had ,
loved more, than himmlf-—Martha-—did
she not lie in her cold grave, wi h tor
Sn baby by f her side, nSW, in the sain, pauper’s ‘
? And what wua left to
X Dura? “ nht ”iVu H dfi.l ' I,’.
sister-only Duval. lie alone ,.f «,
who stood there conld breast the floo i
to the rock andbiu* again William with the Why toy.
Why not tell Sir so?.
iu, p— than she relapsed ihto
“ Sir William,” said Dnval, “I see
yonrememtor me. Once I thirsted for
revenge upon you. For two year. I
feiretod forifc Heavroti baa sent it to me.
A bright light shot from his eyes as
he said this, and then he walked slowly
down to within a few paces of the water,
He undressed ; he wailed into the sea
till it name up to fcts breast, and then,
himself forward, .attack- out
for the rock. . .•
We shall not describe fee joy , with ,
wfcidLtlifi qjarcntAJrho the acrobat’s ha d w a t attempt c hed
agonized suspense their children, received them
to rescue
b»ok into, their arms. Bnt while they
were —...— fondling them, — - . Dnval hail dressed
and ’ sapped " ’ away. He " had ’ ’ regained ’ the ” ‘
road, light ’ and step w»« and pursmug a light Jus heart, pomey for he with had
a
had his revenge.
No, not all M it. _ Sir William
no
| sooner missed him than he went m pur
; suit of him.
“ Here,” exclaimed the baronet, when
at Iftfet he eeme up with him. endeavor
ing to pat a well-filled purse into Duval’s
hand. “Yon have saved my children,
and are entitled—I say entitled—to a
reward.”
{ Duval drew back his hand. .
“I have had it!” he exclaimed, dart
ing a look of tierce and withering scorn
at the baronet, and then, turning from
him with an expression of contempt,
v pursued And the his proud journey. baronet stood looking
after him, rebuked and humbled.
- ----
-
How to Choose a Horse.
An English paper tells us that the
purchasers of : jrses for the French army
alwavs endeavor to obtain a first look at ;
the animal when he is in the stable, ^4
noting if the anima’ supports hima ;
equally well.on all his legs, and, if ope :
geem» to yield, ia then especially directed examining tho large- it. j
Atteatioa to i
ne8S Q f the pupil of the eye, which ought
io be more dilated, when in the stable :
than when exposed to light. After the
animal has been let out of the stable, the
eve ought to be again examined -to see
,f tb' sight pnpilhae been contracted; if not,
the is feeble* Others, to test the
m vetoi vision feign to strike the fore
ioai ] with the hand.' If -the hollow over 1
Uie eye be profound and the t«» mr le
rrt&v old - age is to he concluded,
Worfiide about the temple suggest attacks
oi gkaggeia. and when the end of tbe s
,, 0*6 presents circular scars, it mav be
concluded the horse has been twitched
with a cord to insure hia quietness while %o
being shod or having had to submit
Pome painful operation. '
— m i --—
An eminent German traveler in Africa
speaks iu the highest ioti for terms and of petrol©- animals
as a profeo men
against musquitoes. '
THE MABVELLOIS WlRoPHO'iE
: F*tW«i*. --
Pacifie Bytte«>arU»yof MxlK who Agent enthnsx
traenUflc mattem, u qnite an ad
«*» wo epcnt o
sf'astvfft^ssrs
Pr..r,w, Hog'h. J^re.
.‘ 2 ' 3 ,i^.-!.t.s i r's;'’sJS
iSMl’.rsr^.isrs^s
it resta; to tbi. i. atteehed * omril.
ordinary battery faet^ , a wth email «>t piece of of pnre
rn
the board, and another piece of carbarn
hko M ih<* and a half pipestem »
pivoted near the center, from little anp
port*, one endl resting nptm the pteoe
strapped to the. board; the Wjnveyeil wire* by
ivhtch the sound is to be are
attached to either corner of the bo»d,
and connected by other wires with the
iirbon vibrator and the battery; with the
carbon, highly pum®j"® charged a* it is only
merenty, fee power not
-f wn.Uiet.vity, tw .1 of r^rodaerog
sound, but of vastly increasing its pow
er. As the microscope reveals to the ey^e
of rn»o the'most 1 msiguiflcant. of nature s
works, so does the microphone disclose
to onr heamg even inaudible sound.
microptome^aio :x-ssrfJ! six hundred feet rrf
and througii the nearly the one-eighth only of fee a
mileof wire came to ear not
tiekiug. rusonudmg like
heavy besting of a marine or tower
clock, bat we conld clearly wheels,
whirr of the mmnte the buzz
and frictioniof the> delicate .machinery o!
the watch. Then the watdh was removed,
and the geutleet sweep of the down of a
feather.brushed a* lightly tho as possible
acroM the board readied ear mag
ntfled to sound like the ooarse grating of
a tile or the scraping of a heavy brush.
Then a email wire'eage, contaunug two the
common house Rie«, was plamil on
instornment,' Bud to the ^isL'ning rar »
six hundred feet away, distinctly eumo
*. .ft and irregular patter of
feet a« the flira walked over
and as they flew from one side of femr
welder as heriveta the bolt* in the iron
EfSHHHa-S “nd‘w« it
towB In
front r ™' of ™ the little ^, wonder r feS, end with W "„™ oar
, n tllHt ««
8 ‘m^ltorn fee
m rounds to wtoeUwe
listened, bat there waa no differeooe*
may not to added with tho same result.
ventiou of mouthpiece, heard as in the the other tele
phone, was distinctly at
end of the wire. This is therinstrnment
which in Halifax, Englaml, was atbu-ho .1
to fee pulpit of a eh if. 1 , tbe connecting
wires being carried, to a house the
fence of a mile, every word of the Ber
uon toiug transmitted with distinetnesa,
sn.l even enabling the listener at the
close to bear fee janitor as he wa tod up
the aisle, close.! the Bible, and return
ing closed and looked fee door. As to
asBssa&stsfJss luhg. Iieurt and other diseases. Our
brief examination convinced us of ita
right to stand as one of the marves of
Hu's ageiof wondrous discoveries.-/gtre
rraioa, Mata., American,
----—
with v£fa&, January 1
'opens-its accounts ,
1778 , and continues them in hi* own
hand until January 6 , 1776 , It falls
ithen to fee keeping of his nephew
until Bertember 1783 , when tho neat
‘ hand of thofatlier of hisconntryisaggin
observed. Hie receipta and disburse
four nicntn shillings in i 762 were r matned jafSUtl, HMMM ami oni^
J for. A correspondent, who has had the
j Idaure to inspect.it says :
“ The book isfalloi ennons,
fnl confesaions of how much he gave in
charity, how much he won or lost at
horse-racing, tow much he paid “for
sundry play-tiekels for himself and
others” when he went to town, how
much he paid for hair powder,
powdet, black silk hose, what his claret
cost, how mid evidently he went did to fee bet Annapolis fee
races, not on
right horses, 1775 while when there ; how, wife in tlie the
sprmg of , war
mother country was all bnt inevitable,
he subscribed £140 and more for tbe
purchase of ammunition to arm Fair
fax County; how he helped bear the
j 4 contingent Company,’ charges of Fairfax the patriotic Inde
pendent like
: country gentleman that he wea ; liow h«
. had paid Mr. Peale (what Mr. Peale ?)
for his picture, and for miniatures of
j Mrs. Washington, and of Mr. aud Mrs.
Custis. All these, and a great many.
more interesting found and more this valuable
■ are to bo in book.
And one finds, too, that he paid for
in ‘Mr. September, Jefferson’s 1774 Bi 11 of he Rights went to ;* that the
,
Congress in Philadelphia ; that as it
camemear-the tune for him to start for
the front be had hiff holaterg. covered
hanger altered, and that one
daydie^bonght bo °h®* a sash and five military
-
■
,
l’«efo'l ~ for Beferenee '
» In general, 20,000 pounus . is . a car
ioAii 5 ■* in *}*<> fw^enty barrels of sidt,
seventy of lime, ninety-nine of flour,
sixty °f whisky, two hundred sacks of
floor, six cords of hard wood, seven of
soft.; eighteen head to twenty of hogs,.eighty heaxi of cattle,
fifty hundred to sixty head of sheep, 6,000 to one
feet of
'boards, 17,000 feet of siding, 33 ,
000 feet of flooring 40,000 shingles,
one-half less of bard lumber, one-quar
ter less of green lumber, one tenth less
°* l oid ^» scantling and all other Urge
lumber ; 340 bushels of wheat, 460 of
<*>ru »680 of oats, 400 of barley, 360 of
flaxaeedj 360 of apples, 480 of Irish po
tatoes,.and 1.000 bushels of bran. The
foregoing table may not r be exactly Cf»r
rect, for Gie reason that railroads do not
agree in their rules an 3 estimates ; but
it approximates that shippers so closely to tho aver
age wilt-find it a great
coavenience as a matter of refereneoi
sais^«g Ww,
2 ijriccq*!- flgfefe from vtach
ial is lira flm fe Meek
ao j .ltr« e the
Hato b , All the chanttenatw
ssassastiaiss ttmB ^ eiocentewf bwtMK Id* »«
a
aAeiSTPi Hs
c ^^S two spaSn^^bandroBKdy »r-.
otoamenteii, and contaiu. it,
wfth theatrical hall
resplendent gaudy, freeeoed walls, i
auJ the colons and flashy gild
- in keening with the
taateref Ihepatrom. - Armigeolinenty ^e
priTOte forBJ # h#1( the
lower hall, where pertorm
ea> principally toe female intervals singers, between oongro the
, 10ja ^e stage is of pretty large sine,
ggyjy decorated. General admission to
ttle eooeetk a-ffiffirJr aaloon. twenty-flve oente,
Tndda&f cigar Top stairs,
twenty-five cents extra. Every mixed night
tba nlaee is crowded with feia
pupation, pmaresentinp nearly all race*
_ the tswuv Indian i n blanket, breech
clon t and leggings; the greasy Mexican,
*rsis SdiaTSd bland^Tenegro^Kra- 2 ra
“
siv
sho oteror towie, and shooting or cutting
gep,* aSl m, a freqaent result of ine
bri oontentkm. The saloon is over
floode ff gambling with waiter.gfefc, the rest in
Th6 is day hill, nigRi, like Sunday iu
town, run wni attended and
eluded, atrou J openly, by ^ th and is i)ld aU(1 ,ng.
,, operated WJ , e ^ “fere,” “keno," yot
games are :
“roegeotauir,” “vingtnn,”
„ j ansqU enette,” “freeze otft" or
rrui kot *• 0 nnmberof other carl games. :
Rati‘i wpitll^ crowded, and
moliey change* a This
hail ih equally <w finite as the aoiuMtei theater,
Hud »!«, trimmed np ; it is
^ wife fttfetlkllie “ mblblg g eidr witb dnutwrywi .. cbipa ,”
g %o Asw dpUl ,
wbicb n « exchange for your
r^ , “ , 5 :bs?si.^
gaiBeg ftl © dealt- in town, but by the pro-
5 saar 5 Sa.v
"£iwVi' 3 _ a iu miPs^nort a-g a ,J fand ^ho
ts'".»®^ «*" bnte • P'Z&iZf?? tim-- *^mg to h luiSS ita of life.
dissolnte state. Every day and evening
t^rtsisssssa
>■ ' '
A correspondent of fee Denver Afetes
jays: The agate * Uw «*
ctosiWtoger the park, scattered over the surface in
fragments ledges. and occ..r«..B
also in massive Only a very
"mall pereentngo of it,. however,
ttocnrious and delicate
turn of iron known as^ moa*. Curious
notions prevail relative to tins substaiiei.
the formerly ‘moss it was was a find common in fee opinion stone by a
photographic process, and I l‘» T e
8 high S 5 polish. asg Sp.cr.a. 3 ara vjdned, »c
os
^?“ A
the' moss Mtoter, ,-. mtained , tmd the
riemness of the stone '“F" 4 ™"fe “5
TtoiBwt toldtotoattoof .
moss ap.e
* on “ n jJ* ? r h^STt^pto. * 4 and
the XJmted # Slat™ hear settings trinM from from
^‘.Softto found north at fee G linmd.dm. JfiSreXX^ t\V'yc 1 "
l_eveg ite, saw werapi ckedrqi f 1 a ‘-?.P?Ti~.. I h< *eutl uAn'mS 8 63 -
There is an agate patch—or several 1 f
t-eca “SSlg nT
creek, T^iTa, om^ioffee t Grand. ?P< ft Twoor Iht Ztera three
Frarer n-reir m tllereastera
edge of fee park, not far from wneret ne
Berthond pass and nollins wagon roaoB
come togiether. in 1 all the^loralitie* mils
f ar deeeohvd fee bnow “ 0 ? 0 *
brown-fee rums! color. Near Grand
miiea west Oh fee of btoth-sule. Hot Sulpbat a^feont firings, three is a
small area where red m es^ agates are
found—featia, fee ‘-mote » red or
reddish-brown, instead of black. Nearly
opposite, across fee rover, neai Beaver
creek, i« another “ patch of fee. same
kind. Beil moss agatto w very nre
and curious. No search has ever been
mails in any of thBlo Pfetteeb mierth fet
natur il surface of the ground for valna
ble m ates. Those gat W have been
picked np on the snrfaae, generally m
broken fragments of stone that
the moss naturally.
— — ■------
..’ri Pvramid Lake.
Pyramid _ ... Lake, among u . fee mountemS •• , ■ i
,
of Nevada, and lrtfle known To
world, is described and as lonely a singularly spot. -K pjc
turesque, from unique oiviliaaUon, M nnnera and “•
away fishermen the only people‘who. go
are Salt Lakert
there. After the Great is
fee largest ho.lv of water west of Lake
Superior, tieing fifteen 100 fe*T by above forty miles the m
extent. It is 4 ,( droppcl sea,
and sounding lines I,W 0
have failed to 'find's bottom., There
no outlet to tbe lake, the dry nir of fee
place absorbing the water rapidly. At
intervals pyramids ol rook rise ont <>i
the water in fancUnl shape*, and bmfeig
been worn by fee waves Btorma.
One of these islands has Bulletin a height of 50 !)
feet. A 8 au Francisco fee place.a corres
pondent, Sb who visited, month
say 8 vegetation is very rare. Sev
eniyor eighty goats rotaa at will and
afford Bhooting for whoever qonsiders the
game worth the powder. They live on
alfllaree, which is geUfeg pientifnl, and
a bunch of gross which grows la erevi
ces, aad are as-fa< bOB Tho
whole place is alive wife rattleanakes,
and a mm might kill.» dozen in an
hour’s walk. A gentleman, who is the
oldest Inhabitant, told feemwrespond
cut he bad seen 85 d ton* °* dm*, geese
and pelitsm*’ egg* n ,°, t f”"'
with that bnge 9&&e& that , ia
assists?fssniszir
***"’ HAK ® E> ASU HolsEMOto
A iloat . hath essentia! to fo*s
is 9 , -
Low perches are preferable forlowla.
belter for farm implement*.
aoito. well dtained are -ert pro
JsutszfiiSE.'gs “
.liV.*' « 5 pl^
lSara bat smenoe growth. and Imucm ean jnetify
their
i lOresaing^bw»ej«! _ wifi rerwto
prevent iron and et«Bl from raatmg, jid
mired with lead and applied will implements prevent
the decay ol wood of farm
and maefenes.
The great want in farming is more
stock and more manure. Erhanst tdl
yonr home materials reaonrees for in barnyard the ma
nare and compost
cheap before investing largely in arti
ficlsi fcrtil:z<-rs ,—A merican Cultivator,
ampSire A Ugal bushel of eats JersevriTt iu Maine, Now
H and S.-w weigh
, ,jJ pounds; in Canals, thirty-four
WW( ^"stigMiuri , ^ Oregon, thirty-six pmmds;
tbirtv-three pounds;
j Massachusetts, New York and
most othMStates, thirty-two wounds.
HssSS "XTy ^and “ 1 st
,
‘ a ™ h f, r « d sweeter “ ltt ‘ han
°^ wf ° u ° ’
A ?”!?® . ■ .
» commonplace “!T* ap n bnt n„? 1 T f Important a troth, .
W> Ti to i** ar * £fi act,ia,l ,T Ioafl
work to hoe a fieldos -. often sp 1 weeds can
start H® adds ofyouand he thintrytoconqlier ha* ltarneo this
.hat
Wa many bmes
Donit allow wee,ls atont your
yard, barnyard, roadside, in the hedges
of yonr fields, in the garden where you
have taken off acrop, to npen seed; nor
should you put ripened weed*, full
seed, into yoar pigsty c. Neglect not
these touts and suggestions, lent,y.m
rirmld cro tong be inquiring how to
eradicate weeds. “ Prevention is totter
than cure ” is an old aulage.
bgra^^^jai
^ holds a large volume of air, and is a
Bgg sssrttwassaasst aiaattTss
*° plant growth Midi UMt •
Tlie following table give* the number
nt ^ * to6 <*** ^ " et 0, “ eit '
MuMmom: ^
VXZ,Xtvt. by 9 feet. ■ SI
9 feet . . ......... * •:•■
iisiiiE :::; : i
p^^siet , a . ato» philalelcliin
femperature nf forl-y degrees will not
sour, bnt the cream roll* and .come milk s>t
before rtis ready to skim, dc
ut a high; tomperalure, say-seven ty
rBCS , will sonr m twenty-four tours,
A between proper fifty te.-nperatnre and sraty'degrees, for e^ngmilk wife is
which toet, no doubt, tho majority
dairymen are familial'.
f oen j, e and heal up places of broken
th* shonldera of draft
dissolve six drachms of iodine in half a
fee-'skin is lirowtoby kicks or other a-ci
debts and is a sure «™» for splmtt if
, lu tt proper manner, saja an
cliangc. u.s.vn.ld Ittuis
; Ttos^^liiakts xus masts abdicate a W“, and
fuTto^JS^ ; m ,
'
" ? -
. - 1o
j S entont miTtho^tems'and *&***>* . .'S ftgS *tow
fender, press through a s ivo, season ,
sluL the pain P until
“«*: ””rreat«toire aauoe 1 may mav be
mira This »nice wife cold
mait*.
_
Many do not know that hot fruit can
j* pnt ln co j d K | as8 JBr * without weak
j„g them. Place plated, an ordinary table- tho
spoon {silver before putting or pewter) in the m hot
jar {^fries, or can, tomatoes, hr anyflimg feat
is
ean,,*,). Also, when putting jelly fee m
ttimbliTs, place in a fee tablespoon hot jelly. in Do
glass, then ponr
not be Afraid, the glass will not break if
sound. It saves mnch fepnble in can
fl i D g frnit For tumbler, an experimtot, and put bo;’.mg a tea‘
gpooD j n a pour
water in and sets if it will break it.
^ whit e n o]d flannel, make a suds of
water- dissolve a tea
P tatto ends; lie
' sdds and let
P ^ ne , ]n tbe it
v__ m ; u ufes then wash and
taveresuly feme cloths dipped in-melted
and wound o'u sticks; two
will bn snffleient Siything put them in a candle
stick or 7 R tohold them inan
PS . v . j l8fi „ tbe flannel in a
, feesmokecan come light up
tW-iiLstotm candles - and- and set them in
,V„ bottom ol the barrel cover
' 7 .* will come
-
P”* l me .
u ' ar > -
- -----------""
parrying the Bill Through.
, A , w W “®S^ratSro^s aloWon corresnondent says that
as one replwe“Wtve JW terine temng to fee
States bo
|be iof, r®f from * Dt ”‘vwnop, tea durtnot a pension came up ^ent to „ him
. and said:.
“Weil, general, yon did not get —t my m v
•hMferotfeh. ...... the red
“Tour bid, gir. pewMW*to - „
“*>«. bill for granting
the heirs of those who were called ont
*>y General——. the eenerato Y«,
“Ou- r exclaimed
I remember. without
fell through both honses ut any
trouble. -
“You did! 1 did , not Me anything
about it m theuewspupers. the , general,m
'.“My dear sir.” said
his most tragic tones. I earnedyom fell
through todh houaeem my pocket ™LeA At the
li,st s *
ioft«.«icu«iie&t b I ft.iall ba .t it pawttxi.
m&y r ” ■
YOL. V. NO. 2.
iiT^^l^tloT^entire
V*., Seven mitesbelowMmia: Ytraon,
the winlows of whu* the cini
W • KJonmU anJ bmhlmga are in |
"A ht ®>® praebaal manner m which
^srsK^rtSssss ,^.'!,. Mrjufl
1 H
mannfaetnre three yearo, of our toys, tptenitj snch being iomted
a*
dothr. b»ckganimcn boards, etc. b
werebnrnel oat, tat out maehuieiy
still m VennoLt We have been farming
and gardening hare in Virginia, but not
manflacfiiriDg flow sa yet.” nibeis have „
Twenty many persone—fifteen mt yon . and
men
We . ought women—-with haveonelmnJred a capital of member* $17,o00.
to
■“•!capital rmuiaefrom fee pf ^> beginning 0.000 to enable the foil js ben- to
efltH ofcor.jierative lioiiReketpmg. Onr
ttss o0 '" ,ir,n constlmt
ani , ! reflB ” n jble wages to its emp.oyes,
* n ‘i htiards them in a pleasant home at a
fi 8 ure - A workingman can
f* fW a yf ' ftr ' H .' S board will cost * 115 ;
bo ,B , 8aw ooe , «? 1 1 h { ^
- °
^°* •*^*‘‘«* !rjW “
s 5 v
forty, »L 8 I«; ^ ^ fee age “ of St forty his
S’ 10 ** be * 1 . 878 ; end going on et
the same rate, when he is seventy years
°M be will have 829 , 019 . A womani wjll
earn * 2 o 0 per year; her board will be
^}V‘ „f her wag, Klie - 18 s, or 850 and ¥*• invest ? iye .°? it e 111 ^? the b
,
*toef, incidentals. leaving her *75 for cl.Ahing and
old. Starling she would at bave-flhKt, Twenty years am]
at thirty
at seventy yearsohl her saving* would
be«H. 5 a 4 . In case of marriage between
two members of the as^ociation/if ibf're
be no .wIh;u children th*'y thecouple will have S 43 ,
o 73 re^o three score and ten.
Yet the man ton. * aroM -emly. 88 ^r
week and fee woman 85 during
lifetime P^t home, They owed have lived debts, we tod , in »
no no
nf » certainly. What iftto the teqaire
Sjfiifis'vassa samagr 1 ^^
| J^^S d ( a bly. If 3 an eJT association 2 onst^tiy with and pro- 10 «
members and 850,000 without capital admitted often
\ new members money a*
w „„i i « r(l » mnidlv ^a,id wkL absorb all
i ,simemhera Ind^aranitiiof *“)0 MK *
jflSOO.Otkl; id thirty years, »p.t«l. 6,400
tors end 85 . 200 , 00 U ana so on.
ThiBiui'reiee, moreover, does not include
j interctoor dividends-simply the people
jmgs. You see that the working
i , m [y require coustaut employment oomfortable at
, reasouahle wages, and a reqmred
home to live m when they are
; to save that part of their wages not
needwl for their legitimate want*, to
liecome capitalists. That the better
’-ass of workingmen can secure these
nt*
: “The p?zts&= by-laws provide for - ton per
• oeut dtndeud. The m« who sdramet
monw are gi^t^d.feaMooy totoR
■ Mwaint.tnwited. The
self pi", 0 ?' “! n ;i y “JJ*'’ ^ of trt' m 1 mfred ‘ .
I rhiladmphm now to get fee the required »
fT ‘Tfe, y * rom n v *<rm<>i-t, 3 * > SatS and tnen “widi we win
, tart 10 WOrk ®* rac t
* “ *
After Many Year*.
There P*«ed down to fee tram the
other ()ay aud agaed but
Jng ^ betw( , e n sixty and seventy
years <>r age, having wife her a little
child about two yearsold, whose dark
eomplexion nninistakahly betokene .1 In
afen origin and lady naturally communioative, excited some
enriosity. ij Tbe was She
aud tl) a story filled with romance.
waa a widow, wife oh only son living in
Oonueetiout. Her boy grew to be n
y onng man, and, fiilwl'with love of ad
venture, he forsook the parental roof and
came West. His rovings at last letl him
to Bijtnarek, Dakota Territory, where
b e became intererted with Indian traders
ft nd finally married their the daughter being of a
cliief, the fruit of union one
child. At length in an engagement wife
the hostile* tho yonng man was killed,
The sad news in dne time reached bis
mother. She was almost disconsolate m.
her grief. With true maternal affection
she at once resolved to searen for her
sou’s child,-and, if possible, find in .it au
object nptm.wbi^ she might Forfewith liestow her she
to. Minnesota. The
ties in the way formed no barrier; to her
NewEnglandenergy. Northern Her Pacificrailroad diligent in
qniry along the
brought to her acftuahitance a man who
had known her sou. For fifty dollars he
offer{ d to find the squaw who h*d been
fee son’s wife. Without going into
tails of the search it-is snffiaient to say
feat the tribe of Indians was found, and
with it.the squaw and the child. When
the lady {,. first saw .her grandchild she
(hon h h(> cou!d discern m his
a resemblance to her son, but when fee
B was in the midst of a number
cW , dr e D) it was hard to dis-
1 w cover r “ mneb difference.
a dm(}ther of thednsky little half
i, vte .i was lient on having him brought
„„ and er fee gentle influence of Con
civilization, and she quieted
j, e r compunctions ol bartenng in and
firali Bra.iiiy by the exigencies of the case
reavSl ^ of - fl „ur to fee be
r Indian widow. The old lady de
^ with bpr { „u nd treasure, as
Imppy as a bov with a new toy.r— Winona
, : .
____——
.. e wt g .P.. Pl r f ' e!is how a
. .
«»« ^ v i w n t]l j OW htrK elf
elspboth feet to the
drawtlto arrow wife both hands and, let
s»Jasi- : * j't -cJoar Gir-ut»b
* 1 »« toW! fdis Jpp^roiOom the d«
j. '°\) A.IXmttv^aijooiig^omaafciveRisea ep l l ^J^
and tony t young men mca repueo.
sr**^* ““^{sTSSfS ' 5
I, EsRl W.l. It..., u.
^ rc^ntly cut ont
j j f antirr ^, edition of the period
a ve l mnning through
^ ,^ cooumed nfef«euoebl»
n tare
___
Siatiitic3 „ how ttat .,. 4 ^ ^
JSjQjmmo .omi^cm of emra in the United States is
• • w„i g The Bonltiv
^ igvy j S esti
■ «an • mm • ooi) - » nennda w - <4 iheealae
• • •
___
Ea*on,feeroventer, Cshfsrma for proposes todies to pro*- by
spert in ore
means of electnmty, and think* he can
determme^^by the.resistance to the^^enr
rent tbe exfe<nt of any ore body, and also
lts relation.
« » notal hy a New Jersey nnrwjy
sssrisa^:
^ “*«■“"
advent of tbe sperrow. ,
-
Mnc h litigation is Minneapolis, likely to grow The ont
t u e m itl explosion in
insuraIJ( . e companies refuse to pay tho
whole dumape, ou the ground- that they
ara | iabu , oa ly f„ r the actual loss by
flre . but tb e mill owners told that fire
wlKeil the explosion, and that, there
for „ # , be entire loss was in consequence
„ { flrp .
-
'
j^n^xhff . , ... .
& “ maS«fra t <5
r . 7 *I being unable to
B ntho a serira of »vs
i,e nS^on^hVtouS Zught ^thl
gniltv One
-
^e»js«!ate^
l^fMi^. cupola rt^t^rfSood and minaret covered ®fe every first
spire, with blue then with the different
! “S,jnt* ’• selected. The stonework is
™ la/w *nnd one is remind
tak ' '
■
*.***»*«> sqnfight,
fa ajr> ^ roa tooeseary / to ban wgeUtkw been established as by
WBte Pro
) experimente made by M. Granileau,
|wBor of fee French Esole Forertiere.
In Al , ri)> 1877j i 1B b «,k two tobaceo
]d ant Bl eoeb weighing H* grammes and
; b aviog tour leaves. They were toth
, pi an ted j n boxes containing monld of
pjefitical quality, and placed side hy
Hide in a position favorable to tlieir
g « row fe jj u t ,mo of them of had placed rials
; T „ u a cage, consisting four
s»sss* i eft nniiterfered •sssss.’^s with until
were resutta ob
m i d dto of Augnst, when the
turned were as follows:
tl three " 1 " p (««* / n *? live h “* -inches, ? tta!n< whi-e ? , . a 0 the “^,°! other
■
1 SSJ ^e 5 XS 3 . fXtSJ? &
““alogons result*.
^-- — --
.
Cattle taint liaising na.si g on the .* Plains.
W. A, Boland writes from North
Neb., to the JacksonYMieto)
Oiiizvu, a description of how fee stoea
busineas of the plains is oondnote. 1 .
Following of the is plains .an- extract; -extend The.g^aug from 1 Kear
ncy „ea, the ninety-ninth meridian, to
, R,«ky Monntams, and embrace
tbe sonthcastern Wy
southwestern Dakota, and part
omiug, western Nebraska, Through this
and Kansas.
east region cattle and aheep range winter
:uld summer, feeding on gras* and re
quiring no attention except teandmg
snd driving to market when fat.
wboe country is occupied by ranches,
f rom three to four miles apart. Baucbes
. 1I; e the houses—mostly made of sod—
where the herders eat and sleep. Gov
ernment owns the land, except the stock
owner generally owns forty or 160 acres
t, n fee wntercodrae where ilia ranch is
«itnst«l, and this ownership of the ranch
settles his title to-tlie range, as the State
| ttW forbids any other party to allow
cattle to remain on a range alrerdy ranch ocen
pied more than three days. A 1 *
generally occupied by from two to five
meB; one ranch can care for from 500 to
2,000 cattle or sheep. Men baying
over 2 who . 000 ;head have 12 of 000 cittle, ,-and and some feere^are 40 000
. , ,
generally have ooutiguous The whole cost of
twelve miles apart. npd marketing
keeping eattle a.-year head for
feem ranges from 82.75 per than _
small herds tsuiall herds are less
1 000 ) to 81 per 'heed for large
, Three bnndred two-year-old
heifers will keep a family «• m< 4
comfort after Uic second year, and make
the owner rich m ton years. The sup
pivot' cattle is kept up by natural in
er^seafid by fee importation of
cattle, which latter are driven in herds
of many thousands to OgsiaUa, a small
station on fee Doion Pacific rafiread.
some forty miles west of Nort h Platte,
and sold to stock growers all over fee
grazing region. From Juno 10 till the
latter part of July these Texas cattle
arrive at Ogalaila in snt-li vast numbers
it is beyond doubt fee greatest
cattle market in the world. No choice
m allowed the buyer except as to age
anil sex-a fhonsand is.-a tbottaajid-and
the buyer rak--.Uis number, drives-feem
to tfie ranch, brands them anil turns
themioore. held Thepresent Ogalailaare-for prices at
eattle are at year
ling heHers, 88 ; tor steera, 89 ; for two
; rear-old heifers, . 812 ; steers, «l 3
three rear-old heifers, * 13 ; steers, * 16 .
These bring at tour years old, graw>d JoJUr
one year, alx>at ^ 2 r>, sometimes a
THE OGLETHORPE ECHO.
Advertising Hates
Mv*?*. ) 1 *r
$L* *5Sm **r>
!.*» ue *.«' *«au- kite
%*> S» fl.TS ?.<« Sit
«a»eh^.... 4.t«‘ aa Il.od ife.yO 2 ..W
H co’bibjl CS> is U? »M»- flGJft
maao . ! #.»> IS U.Ui X> • '*,»,**• KJf
’1 aoiuoatt. 13 .W js.(fc 4 .ivs».t«» ia,a
f Lesal Advertisements, £
glMTiff Ex<eceurr*‘, Adnu&i*tf*u»r» p«r levy, tee list*...... «d ....... | 5 .W
«»auCiaxjW
»*»**», P*r square,........................ r.x*
sr.OU
VotiNto Dd«on aad CndtVn, Sirtjr a;* 4.06
SoticeyfLww to Sell, thirty 4*y*......... ..
Lrti«» of Atauartrarioa, tairJy iiM . *.'« *-«0
LHtw of DisnnSAJoa. thr-*' mattes ....... .
1+ttcn of OMt1mM|i,thirty 4*j* .-*<•* *•«*
Lrttem of IH-. iiaar.n»DA‘op. forty d*y*.. S- 7 *
Hoowtftta Notioea, tkpee iR-*r"tx>o»....... S.'S
Bale .«»•» **<•
of
A wetl-re*! offioer-OeaSWuees.
^ k'rfSrZSZZ ltg snl>otblt iS
Some eaitor* own real catale, have
lot* of fun. that ia.
is y ™ 3 healthv. If ,4 T on
S5i?~<38M&<.- ?-r''r .s
Aq wiwic W.ttU .,1 I'-.,'. Eog- b
’
yet the shaft uirtn.thog ~tr^
Tkl ’ ' jT
„_________,, SomefimeamccIhe/Vee . ,— rl /Vei*inq.ur- ■•■
^ paper answered "seal fl ", h skin. ??‘¥ Another,
more recently, ray*, certainly, ont in
Cplorado, Pikes Peak. -
It i« a f ac t d e monstra te d b ey on d di*
pnte that the person who is entirely side-.
«*»« when slipping down on the
mote-hart than if be weresnr
ronnded byscoreeof unfeeling people.
The women of Cyprus, like all the
Greek women, chew great island quantities ..Seri, of
mastl0 , i m port«.,J l.v the always
^ )t Kracy [„; to a p|iuir in
b j f j n g (j,^ g nm> am j jj will soon be
or( ] er « 0 r a ] a(t .r Hvroti t-iremark: “Maid
f cJpruB now we’ve tome. Leave, oh,
leave off chewing gum.”
A gg b ^ of^arth"
_
!SlSZEl£tE2L£S&^ 3 ~/lo.JL
« ke Cum
msraial merowl llulirtin BulkM.
What a grand faculty as glowing that of ei.d too
poet who can print, the feeUug* m fa*.
graphic verecs. gj* .
fad harass JV. men «< m tirrnr rarioosj . honra of th a
changeful life;^iitre pen <if dto
d'yiaest herd was ala ® *° “ ap "
the mystic thoughts that ynUrmel
tbe soul of n m.in wlitn a u
slip# ff<.nn under his sm aua nnutes the
P^ement. ~ancl«ua<i /«
?*'%* of °« « nrr!l1 « *• - 4f ! . ailr ' p .. ..t : nv
pearai.ee m odnew-oaper gi«* Rives ttiih Him
“ton 1 ? "“'uL i,±h 5 men ih the
sfHssftawSrts deeu-edhair
S^noWe sai^ 2 hV iiiraaa.ss nuinners frank* and a mi
•*
Hprakingof persistence in slvirtis
ing, an escfmn e rays : Advertising; well an
fee means of a! prosperity, is not as
.mderatbod it stomld to. Nothing
SaH?«=iSS Z^Mve^^^l like disimting
Kvnfpnmtmiillv has f« H
the h^n eto of sdwrtoim ' 1 The’
vertised them m the right way, without
snccesa wonld to a curiosity,
Three hundred apes, four toft Inga,
“great Unites and as savage a* wild
beasts,” have taken possession of An
gnrpara. a village eight miles theinhabitant* from Ogl
cutta, and having themselves ejected the orchards
have billeted on npefee.v
uad: gardens of the hamieLwhi —
direct varions offensive strategic mov
menti, night neighborhood. attacks and predatory They attack ran-s
upon fee
volunteers are a^tstress to be e.vlh-lout,
.^c feBowing ecordel euriooa ease of peinlwc
Hon is i by a Oal.fora.a paper,
: More than twenty years ago Judge A toy
sauk ;l weUnt Boltnas. Happening, to
• he
the The H^ro rat about puk
.into well. top and u curb of
two feet below fee surface, a ^
' , «»»>»'» the casks. Bev
tunning down to meet rotied
era i pf these cart* lmvo ozk away, «s-ks
an d been ve..t»ee.l, but the
appear likely to sisml forever. »* «'»**• fee
i ier e a hint forwell builders, or are
a,,,**, of petrifaction local?
| MAKY fi UTTUS OOttM*
M»rr had ft htt e c orn
Upon her JitOe toe.
AD'2 evtryehere that Mary WOnt
The florae an
1 And followed to the cooling ooean day; «
It her one
Bot the little ache eoro waa so eo sore eora
ShecooldnTplaye^^^
“ What make* the coni hurt Mary *o>”
The Ybeotncr; other players cried. . . tight? '.
“ Because «) w earn her boot* so
j A looker-ou replied. —&xtgi<k Press.
■
; l - And you a little lump Hi»s
•; Your toaeaa grow to si/- suit. 1 ^
By putting on a ‘five’
j ’A uoxulser two sized- UkU.'
B&ton Traveller* _
AoS «o the made d‘>etor dog Mary it out. LcPi
Which poor avent ; ^
A^-f no# ho corn sba known
what> the #b. ' '
Except ' —AV-,c o i c Vorfc Gr<iph.u:.
. ;
“ Oneen Victoria’s Narrew Escaiie.
Aprop<» , ol . h r mainatv’s maj_ -y • review ^- of
fee teres^ftere^^fei. ^ ro^il?&ef^’featrtloSi. 5
JpPj^act WgJ** oruiainc^oB' OI ,e d „» t .
on* ♦beleloot’Wight mar nog a^ Em“« 1
while she was yet I r.ieiesstoct r.a. W
beeexe fxeaKened fehr a gah. «J >4 b«®»
the vessel eonlo get iuj > C ■ ■
dSekswcreswept mg queen, however, forpMi;(aft.. nndamt.. Iu-com «f .y re
immd a witness ol fee .-enei whpna
sadden and criick squat! went took fee topmast fee. EmMfigs iramni^tt f«b .y
ahoy.- fee cap, tbeughu Ibe pitot Mr.hJ.n-. to *!tore
dere, the quick as a-as standing, sprang h.t.-, h«r .n
pnneras safe^; -
h;a army toa^re <«sdo. o -
aft, and. fee yext moment eras,, cense
the topmast d-rttu.where the Wmn to-o
<wigmally*tatiojied .hersalt Butf
prompt »• -turn of Mr: BwWosWmtBi.
wonld probably never, have lived to. *
ties* fee imr.derona pr.K-cri;.. ■ vf tU
ironclad ". Xmlrad, li'-r- mi-• -t
-a<ro achcoiifledgett tha. Ljc <
something to bethaio fnif--. ' ;
pilot, *t her mstenoe,-.was. to
be a master; and. when
Yietona became <i<to«* oh
was early invited MrJ^ ' u w
at tbedeafe of nswUcm] , i a, r »t.
years after, H nd fteoaBy.