McDuffie weekly journal. (Thomson, McDuffie County, Ga.) 1871-1909, January 30, 1878, Image 1

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W JUKI LY/ y''/ \ | Volume VIII. 'White & Cos., IBlnPiffie ac'lffktu Journal. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. TERMS, - - 81.00 A YEAR. Hah*w. Om square, first in5erti0n............$ 1 00 £acfc subsequent insertion 75 One square three months 10 00 One square six months 15 00 One square twelve mouths 20 00 Quarter column twelve months 40 00 Half column six months 00 00 Half column* twelve months 75 <X) One column twelve months 12; 00 *•" Ten liues or less considered a square Ai fractions of squares are counted as full dares. B US INKSS CARDS. Thomas e. watson. Attorney nt law, THOMSON, OA. •■"Office at the Court-house. PAUL C. HUDSON, attorney at LA XV, Thomsou, On. Will practice .n the Superior Courts of the Augusta, Northern and Middle Circuits, •ad in the Supreme Court, and will give utteation to all canes in Bankruptcy. Aug. 55. 1*74. tf ALBERT HAPE, Dentiwt, (yAW etill be found ready to attend to the wanta of old and new patrons, if desired, at their residence*. Will alao. as heretofore, practiee in adjoin ing counties. Panic prices insured ami all work warranted. Ofßca at the residence of W. E. Speir. Pleaeo address by letter, at Thomson, Ga. o*tf FfmiOH HOTEL, Charleston, 8. C. O. T. ALFORD <fc CO., Proprietors. Ret*., ft.cm. *2.-0 uxl f.1.00 pr day DAN. TANNER, . ■lO Brood Strset, - - AUGUSTA- QA. ] )(i eet foil to go to Tanner's (ialtorj, -where the best end cheapest work is done. 4)Uft piritinw copied and enlarged at DANIEL F. TANNER’S. MlWWif is not easily earned in JB ASM these times, but it can be mode in three months l.y any one of either eev. i* end pert oT the country who is will ing to wirk atendily at the employment that we tarnish. W'.l, per week in year own town. Von need not he away from ht*nc ovar night. Yon can prve y<mr whole time to the work or only yonr -pnrt moments. We have sgents who are making over #2O per day All who engage at once can make inoncy fast. At the present money cannot he made so easily and rapi.Uy at any other La.in.cc ft costs nothing to try the bns- Iraa Terms and *.’> Outfit free. Address •* e* a H. H.U.1.E.-T A Cos.. Portland, Heine THE CHARTER OAK Is • plsin, snbstsctial stove, miule of th iron, and csrefnlly pnt together. More Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand art Aom m the United State**. Wholesale nod r*i] .t. D. L. FT’LI.LRTON’S, Angiwta, Gft. >’o Invention Hh Men ao readily taken bold of and given ao much aatiafaetinu to the public aa MTUT IRAMITE IRONWARE. The price of the ware has been rednced ao aa to bring it within the reach of every ftmly; and as Granite 'tinware is as hamleas and also as clean aa glass. < with only the difference that it will not break). His taking the place of all other kinds of cooking utensil- For sale by D f. FIM.KRTOS, aguata, Ga alta| fillGE A.EING, Mil end Bolts, CHEAPER IHAJ< EVER —ATTHE— Fast City Foundry -ASD— Machine Works, GEO. B. LOMBARD & 00- Proprietors., Angmta, Osu, WEngioea. Cotton Screws, Mill Gear ing nod Machinery of every kind made and repaired. ntay33-Aii American flour pays a duty of $5.40 in gold at Havana, Cuba. In 1877 fifteen Veterans ot the war of 1812 were gathered to their fathers. The Fiench settleis of Pelbtas, Brasil, have sent a crown of silver to Fa' is to be deposil ed ouTliior*’ tom I. A single English prelate firmly opposed the American Revolution ary War—Jonathan Shipley, Ilisho; of St. Asaph, lie died in 1788. Josh Billings says ho knows peo ple who are so fond of argument that they will stop and dispute with a guide-board about the distance to the next town A French gentleman has left SBO,- 000 as a prize to be awarded to any persen discovering either a euro for Asiatic cholera or the cause of the disease. Brigham Young’s nineteen wid ows divided the proper time of wid owhood between them so that it sh< uld not fall very heavily upon either, and some of them have al ready married again. The largest mass of gold yet dis covered in Nevada was found near Osceola. It weighed twenty-four pounds and fifteen ounces, and, as it coutuined very little quartz, iis coin value was not far from SI,OOO. It is rumored that the President, in h s forthcoming civil service mes sage, will recommend that the selec tion of postmasters in smaller towns be made by popular vote, and that the Postmaster-General shall mere ly confirm the selection made. The Italian Parliament has voted to erect a magnificent mausoleum in the Pantheon, to commemorate the life and public services of Victor Emanuel. Italy's best artists are to be engaged upon the work, the cost of which is fixed at 10,000,000 francs. Mr. James C. Clarke, the general manager of the line of railroad lead ing from New Orleans to Chicago, says the tide of immigration from the West to the South is setting in io real earnest, lie thinks thousands will seek homes in the South during the coming year. Eleven miles from Lexington, Ky., Tuesday night, two negroes were hanged to trees and another shot to death by a mob. They were charged with the murder of a white man nam' and Jacob Shootman, and were taken from the officer who had them in charge. The corner stone of the erecting shop of the engineering department in the navy yard at Washington, D. C, is a huge mass of metal, weigh ing five tons, obtained by melting down counterfeit plates and dies captured by the detectives of the- Treasury Department. Joseph Cafe, an Italian cabinet maker, of Providence, subject to fits of insanity, went into a planing mill the other afternoon, started a ma chine and put both hands under the knives, where they were chopped into small pieces. Surgeons ampu tated his arms but the chance of his surviving is small. Fresh flowers are still regularly placed upon tho grave of the Lees, at Lexingtoa, Va., and the students’ guard is still kept beside the Gen eral’s tomb. General Lee’s office is preserved just as he left it. The mausoleum which is to contain Val entine’s recumbent figure is soon to be begun. Dr. James Barry, who died in the English army in 1865, was an army surgeon for fifty years, an inveter ate smoker, and of so testy a tem perament that he was always in trouble and once fought a duel. He was an unusually skilful and hold surgeon. Dr Barry was a woman ; a fact discovered and officially an noHnced the day after her death. At Philadelphia they get things down to a fine point. A man in that < ity was arrested for the larce ny of 'ne cent. His story is that a neighbor gave him ten cents and .asked him to buy her a bucket of e 9*J, which coat but nine cents. He forgot to return the one cent to her, and she had him arrested. He was released on five hundred dollars bail Eighteen thousand men are now engaged in the express business. Express companies cover 60,00“ miles of railroad, and it is estimated that its messengers daily travel 400,000 miles. Three thousand five hundred horses are employed, and over 8,100 offic rs aro required to transact their business in, and the amount of capital invested is not less th*ui *30,000,000. “A MAP OP BUSY I.11E: ITS FL UCTUA TI ON S AND ITS VAST CONCERN S.'‘ WHEN YOU'RE DOWN. What legions of '‘friends” always bless us, When golden success lights oar way 1 How they smile as the. softly address us, So cordial, good-humored and gay. But, ah ! when the sun of prosperity Hath set, then how quickly they frowu, And cry out, in tones of severity : “Kick the man; don't you see he is down ?” When you’re ‘'up," you’re loudly exalted, And traders all sing out your praise. When you're “down, ’ you have greatly de faulted. And they ‘‘really don’t fancy your ways.” Your style was ‘'tip>top" when you’d money, Bo singe every loafer and clown ; But Sow—f'lis exceedingly fnnry Things are altered ‘‘because you are down." O, give me the heart that forever Is free from the world's selfish rust, And the soul, whose high, noble endeavor Is to raise fallen man from the dust, And when in adversity's ocean A victim is likely to drown. All hail to the friend whose devotion Will lift up a nmu when he's down. A Collector’s Story. “Good-bye, dear,” I said, aftor I had put on my coat and gathered up the reins. She took hold of my wrist and do ! tained me. i “ ait a moment, John,” Then she called to Mack, my great Newfoundland dog, and he came out of the house, and, ut a motion from her, jumped into the sleigh and curl ed himself ut my feet. He was a noble fellow, my brave Mack I really flunk there never was such another dop 1 had brought him all the way from New Hampshire, and we had grown to fool perfectly secure ti the house with him, so watchful and faithful was the noble dog; hut it never oc curred to me to take him on this trip in a sleigh. “Belle,” I said, “you are a silty girl. The dog will only be a both eration to me, and ten to one you’ll want him here before l got back. 1 ’ “Now, John, please do take kiln —tor me! Please do take him, John—take him, just because your silly little wife is afraid to have you go w ithout him.” , Of eourso the girl had iter way. I was never able to understand how a man can resist this- kind oi • per son-ion. 1 nevor could, and never expect to. So I kissed her and chir ruped to Chevalier, and he bounded aw ay through the settlement liko an arrow. It was the dead of winter and an unusually heavy snow had fallen, filling in the roadway to the depth of four feet. There hud been travel enough to pack it hard, so that I found the sleighing excellent. Che valier’s hoofs glanced nimbly over tho snow, and in two hours 1 hail made more than twenty milos, and had reached the substantial log cab in of one of our best, and most intel ligent custome s. He received me with a hoarty welcome, end when I told him what my mission was, he invited mo to make his cabin my beudquarters while I romained in the neighborhood. I thankfully ac cepted the invitation, stayed all night, and tjio next morning, under the guidance of Dick, my host’s youngest son, a clever hoy of about thirteen I started out to make my first experiment in collecting. It docs not concern my story to do scribe everything that happened to me during my stay with our friend, which lasted rather more tlrna a week. When I began to realize that I had collected about as much money as my employer expected from this trip, I sat down to count it up. 1 bad been out all day, and it was now just at theedgeof the evening. Sup per was almost read), and 1 made up my mind that if my portmanteau contained as mueh as I thought, I would only wait to appease my hunger before returning to the set tlement. 1 poured out the money on the floor, and counted it. It was all in gold and silver, for bank-notes would have been despised among ms then, and there was the sum of eleven h ndred and seventy-three dollars. They wore all sorry to have me go, and made me promise to come again and bring my wife be fore the winter was gone. I pul on ray coat and muffled up my ears, ami started. The sleighing was still excellent; the night was clear and cold, and tho full moon made it as bright as day. We skimmed along for a mile or two, my thoughts all the time on Belle and the happy meeting we would have in ajjttle time, when the extraordinary conduct of Mack at tracted my attention. He had been lying quietly at y feet, with the rug which enveloped them also cov ering him. He. suddenly shook it off, growled savagely, and began to smell around tho bottom of the sleigh. Had it been summer time, I really believe I should bave thought the animal was going mad. Never bo- THOMSON, GA., JANUARY 30, 1878. fore did I see him behave thus ; and his conduet troubled mo so that I shouted to Cfevalier, and we skim med away faster. About sixty rods ahead I saw a tall blasted tree, which 1 had bo n told was half-way from the settlement to Mr.'ljelkirk’s, aud, pulling out my wat,rji to ob serve the time, I saw sur prise that I had been an jjuur and three-quarters coming twelve miles, j L think I was never so a-tonished in my life. The capacities of Chevalier were so well-known to me, and I was so sure t at his ordinary gait; without the frequent urging I had given him, would carry Mack ami mo a mile in six minutes, mile after mile, that I Could not comprehend that ho had been so slow, while ap parently traveling fast. I called to him aguin,und ho stepped off srnar - ly ; the dog growled, aud, 1 am I heartily ashamed o say it, I kicked him hard in my unreasonable angor. j I hud cause to repent of those kicks before another ten minutes had gone. I passed the blasted tree, and en tered upon (lie last half of the way. Before me now lay a lonir, level stretch of road, without an obslru - tion or turn for si Vernl miles, and one dazzling white surfaco of snow upon it. 1 looked out ahead, and just as far as I could see to dis tinguish anything from the snow, probably not less than n mile away. 1 saw a black speck. It did not hold !my attention when I first saw it; 1 but as Chevalier sped on, rapidly devouring the distance, it took form | und size, until when Within thirty j rods of it, I could plainly see that it i was a man. There he stood, upright jin the middle of the roud, without i speech or motioti, appa ently wait ! lug, Was he waiting for me ? Did lie know that 1 was coining with eleven hundred dollars in cash in a port manteau at my feet? And, if so, what would he do ? For the first time since my absence fri in the sot dement I began to (eel nervous, and thought It would only he safe to take i ut my pistols and irtive ready. I fell in my right-hand over coat pocket, and found nothing; 1 felt in the left one, and found noth ing. They had both been removed, and at Selkirk’s. I was certain - 1 had them whon I returned there at night. A hofriblo suspicion of intended murder and robbery flashed upon me; and here I- was stripped of my weapons and defenseless. Tho horse was now within four r ds of tho motionless figure in the road, and bearing down rapidly upon him, und with the desperate idea of running over him, I shouted to Chevalier, and lashed him with the ends of the reins. He hounded like a b It up to the man —st pped in his fright, swerved, and was instantly seized by the bit, and his head brought down by the powerful ruffian. Be fore 1 bud time to think, there was a shout, which I distinctly heard: “Your money, q ,Sek I” and! then came two pistol shots, in such rapid succession llint 1 could not have counted two between them. One ball passed through my hat, us I afterward discovered, within an inch of my head ; the other went between my right arm and my body, cutting the skin in i spuseage. Almost at tho instant Mack gave a ferocious growl, and dove under the seat upon which I was sitting. I heat'd him snapping and growling, and heard a human voice, half-suf focated, liy ing to say: “Oh, God I Oh, God !” und ticn 1 th /rougi.ly realized tho situation. The man who had stopped me was struggling with l.hcvulier, desperately striving to keep his head down, when a hap py thought came to my deliverance, and I quickly jerked t e lines, one after the other. Quick a thought the noble brute broke away from the ruffian's grasp, and reared straight up in the air abovg Ins In ad, coining down again instantly. I saw that tho man wus lying motion less beneath Chevalier's hoofs, and, at a word from me, the unima! flew onward, while I lashed him into greater speed. The grow sof Muck underneath me hud ceased, as well us the erics of the miserawbs being who was suffering in his jaws ; and in a few moments the glorious dog came out again and put his bloody paws on my knees, white he whined as if requesting some recognition of what he had done. I was terribly excited —i could not help it; tho awful trial 1 bad just passed through wa enough to work upon stronger nerves than mine; but I put my arm around the noble fellow’s neck, and hugged him as if he had been a woman. The last half of the way was passed rather quicker than tho first, and tho gallant Chevalier was covered with sweat when ho stop- pod at the. door of my employer’s house. | 1 tumbled in upon my wife and her parents sitting around the fire, and I was just about speechless ft on cold and the reaction of my excite ment. I found voice after a while to say that I wasn't hurt at all. and to ask my Father-in-law to look un der the Boat of the sleigh. What he found there all of you know by this time. The man was stone dead, Mack's teeth having torn ami man gled hi* neck frightfully. Selkirk Came to the settlement the next day, and with his help tho web of vil lainy was completely unraveled. Both men had been at his house tho afternoon previous to my r turn, but had left about an hour before 1 came. Botli might easily know that I had a large sum of money with me, for no secret had been made of my business, and it had been talked over in their hearing. After talk ing with Mr. Selkirk, I remembered lor the first time that 1 had left my overcoat in the sleigh after coming back to the house that afternoon. Here, then, was the opportunity which the inten ed robbers and murdrers embraced to steal my pistols, and for ono of them to se crete himself under tho sleigh-seat. In the woods, near the scene of the encounter, Mr. Selkirk found one of their horses, saddled and bridled, and hitched to a tree; and he had no doubt tbut it had been ridden there that evening by the man whom Chevalier killed. An Awful Bite. Everybody in Burlington knows John Oglesby, the book-keeper at Dope A Smart.man’s, down on Main street. We suppose Mr. Oglesby s the quietest man that over opened liis mouth to speak. Ho is so cvetl tempered, bo peacefully calm, so in nocent, (hat it would do a person good to see him get n.ad once, and howl and swear and rate around- But he never docs, und no w we don't believe he over will. Yesterday afternoon, about three o'clock, ho Stas w-aikii g opt ftp- of air, very tired of t..c desk, when he drop lied in at John 11. Gear’s for a quiet chat Some of the boys in the store hud just baited a steel trap and care lessly set it down on a store box, and what should Oglesby do but back up to that box, hoist himself up, and sit right down on that trap- U 1 course it Went oil' like u savings bunk, und caught bold of Mr. Ogles by with a grip like a besetting sir. Oglesby never said a word. He got off the box with an injured look, and walked back to bis own store and went straight to bis desk, whole he worked ail afternoon. Oc casionnlly lie puused in his writing und stood w ith his pen prised iu the air and then a grieved look would steal over his face, and the clerks in the store sny they never saw him como so near expressiii" emotion of seine unusual nature as he did at '.iic'se limt s. But ho never spoke, and with a heavy sigh of resigna tion he would resume his work. This occurred quite a number of times during the afternoon. And all that time fbat steel trap clung to him like a taint of slander, with its jaws set so hard that it never clunked or rattled under tho con cealing curtain of his coai tails. And up at Mr. Gear's the porter was just aching to get his eyes on ihe smi of a thief who had stolen the next Gov ernor’s rut trap, and wus wondering if Mr. Gearcouldn’t hang the fellow, who evel' it was, right away after election day. Well, it wasn’t till tea time, when Oglesby had put away his hooks and locked up tho safe and was about to start home that anyone spoke to him about his distrait manner. Then Mr. Dope, tho s nior member of the firm, remarked to his book-keeper that lie di lift just look like himself. Mr. Oglesby looked at his employer very intently: “I w II never,” ho said with great earnestness, “I will never go into John H. Gear’s store again/' “Why?” exclaimed the astonished merchant, “what on earth is toe matter with you and Mr. Gear?” “I went (hero this afternoon,” re plied the book-keeper, ‘and went to sit down on a box, when that Irish setter, that dog Jake of bis, reached up and caught me the awfulest, cru dest bito that mortal dog ever gave to human man, and do you know it’ awful hard to think sometimes that ho hasn't got hold of mo yet?” And then Mr. Oglesby reached uroun.. to pity himself and found the trup. Wo will draw a veil over the dreadful scene, hut we are afraid Mi. Gear has lost oue vote for Gov ernor, unless he can make “Juke” apologise. Subscribe fur the Journoti. only *), IllY 1.1 I TI.K WOMAN. BT “Burua" HANDAIX. Would the diauioud seem such A pterluae gem If it measured one foot round f Would the rose-leaf yield such a sweet per fume If it covered yards of ground ? Would tho dew-drops seem so Clear and pure If dew like rain should fall ? Or the little women be half so great If she were six feet tall ? 'Tin the hand as soft as tho nestling bird That grips with the grip of steel; 'Tin the voice as sweet as the summer wind ' That rules without appeal. Aud the warrior, scholar, the saint und sage May fight and plan, and pray : The world will wag to the end of time ll* the little woman's way. Buried Alive, It is always with a feeling of hor- : ror that we read of a grave belhg : opened and the finding of the fact that a burial had takel! place before deatli had actually claimed its vic tim ; and yet sucli eases are of more frequent oc urrenee than is gener ally supposed. Some very strange cases o‘ per-! sons being buried alive, and the j manner in which lie facts wete brought to light, have recently been made public. A few of the most re markable of these are now present ed as showing to what extent this blunder has, of late years, been cal’, lied in the United Stales. The Inst truly hoirilile ease was that of a lady, Mrs. Roberta Ains lee, of New Orleans. She had been sick for some time with a malarial lever, and was at the end of ten days pronounced dead by hor phys ician, us all signs of animation seem ed suspended--the hod/ was cold, tho pulse stopped and the lips were bloodless. Mr. Ainsleo was himself sick at the lime, and could nut at tend the funeral of his wife; hut a few days af'terwaid he called the old nogress who bad alt-ended her ill her last illn s, and made her give him a detailed statement of the facts. After listening to her story, Mr. Ainsleo stated tiiat. ho had had a strange dream in regard to his wile, und wits firmly of the impression that she had boon buried alive. So strong a hold did this dream j take upon his mind that as soon as , lie was able, in company with a lew ! friends and un undertaker, lie went 1 to tho vault in which the body bad been placed, and opening the large box in which the eoflin was confitr- I ed, th:it receptacle was found to he ' sprung at every joint, and the top almost pried off. Upon opening it the body of Mrs. Ainsleo was (bond on ils lace, and the terrible expres sion the face had upon it gave evi dence ot the struggle that must have been made for freedom. Hard ly less mournful are the eonsequen ces of the sad discovery. Mr. Aius- Ice is now a raving ma'iiae. About three years ago, Miss An nie Carter, the daughter of u well- ; to-do farm r in M chile Tennessee, to all appearances died, and was ( buried. She had on hor hand at the time a beautiful diamond ring, the gift of her betrothed, which excited the Cupiuity of a negro ou ihe farm to such a degree that ho made up his mind to possess it. lie exhumed the body late at night, and after he had burst the eoftiu open he was, on account of the swollen condition of the finger, unable to pufl the ring j oft', so, taking out his knife, lie at tempted to amputate the finger.— . The lady, who was only hi a trance,: was brought to consciousness by the cutting, aud givin.r a scream, so scared the negro that he fled. Miss Carter, after many painful I efforts, succeeded in getting free from her gruve and making her way home. Tho effect up n hor \ family can be imagined, and her lover, upon bearing of the case next! day, mmcdiateiy made her his wile ; and she now presides at his table us Mrs. Collins, with nothing to re mind her < f her narrow escape Irom a dreadful fate but the scar upon j her finger. One of tho most painful case* of <nde mortem interment took place a j few years ago in Philadelphia. The j iadv, a young Quakeress of good family, had apparently died, und , was placed in a vault amii the rel ies of her ancestors. Nearly six mouths afterwards the vault was opened to receive another tenant, j whi'u a sight ir et the eye* of those present which will never he forgyt en. On the steps of the vault sat, or rather reclined against the wall, all that was mortal of the young la dy. Bhe hail wakened from her trance, aud being unable to find her i wuy to earth again, had sunk in | helpless dt‘K|>air upon the steps, and then, when hunger pressed her, she had fed upon her oa ii fiosh, us her shoulder and arms were literally eaten to the bone. A verf singular case occurred to : a minister soffi’C twenty years ago in Monmouth cofindy, N. J. Afiusr a short illnCsS he was thought to be dead, and preparations were made j lories funeral. But it was not to be—the ftiuu was only ill a trance: and. Rs (lie undertaker was making - ready to screw down the lid of tin- | coffin, he discovered U twitching Of the supposed dead in n’s eye-lids aud upon proper retnodi s bring ap plied, the gentleman *.- restored to full life aud vigor. He tleseri' ed most vividly bis led. ngsnttlie t.ti< ~ us lie stii 1 | hut he eould tear all that was going on around him. but could not move until the last mo ment Two case* <uhic to us reeeotly from Europe of most heart-rending burials betbre death, of which the Dispatch has taken cognizance, and which prove most conclusively that doctors are not always the best judges of suspended animation. Extravaacane# of Rich New York era. A recent New York letter says: "Perhaps the ludies muy be credit, ed with some retrenchment in tl,<- mutter t*f dress. Expensive fur* are not sold so rtudMy now ns in former seasons of co@, und at Slew art’*, MaeyV aud other large stores of the kind the sulesuaen say that . the daily throng ot coslomwrs is no gauge vf the value of go ids pur eiuUMi If You visit the fashionable fiol'ist, howdpnr, they will tell you that while flowers for festal decora tion# nre MMB9ully expensive this j wintrinj tfnT demaud for them ex- I ; cccds al! precedent. At a I i:ft given jou Fifth avenue, a few night* ago, [ it took twenty-two men two bou s to carry the required trees, flowers aud innumerable floral ‘mude-piecc*’ from the florist’s to the house, und the cost must have been up in the thousand*. Kveu un occasional wed ding bonnet is made wholly ot unt il rul flowers. Vou"g gentlemen have their lavish w eaknesses, too. as, for instance, the several who have t*-ausporteii their whole stables to Boston this week, merely for the Puke -f a duy’s sleighing, which they have begun to despair of enjoying here. Mr. Eleven*, ir., sOo of lire late Criesu*, of Hoboken. N . i ., hav ing really more money than he knows ivliat to do w'ith, has jysi im ported a small sleigh from Paris, a< a Cowl of st>(Kl. It i* very gundy, with a f. uildcd eagle lor a tl#sb bourd, aud tinkling with silver bolts banging tu a massive silvering; but in lightlies , grace aud practical beauty of construction, it < uuuol be compared with a “cutter” of the best A ...erH ao manufacture. Truly the e are days hi w hich it is ditb cult to determine how rich are liic rich, or how jioor are the poor. A Lady’s Long Trance, The Des Moiuos (lowgj Rujiei<r of a recent issue, says; )'e*toiduy evening there slopped at the Given House Mr. and Mr*. Bhudic, of Guthrie county, aeeoiupim ed bv some attendants. 'They are escort ing to Mount Pleasant Mrs. tflmdle. who has been in an almost cent uual trance ever since lasi June, home time last March, without any pre monitory symptoms, the luuy be came insane, wild at first, and final ly violent. 81ic u u~, visiting a itister near her owu residence. Boon a t vt her arrival there sin- begun to talk strangely, aud a few days later was raving with insanity, and at time* very violent. Oh tbv 121 bof June M rs. Bundle bad a spasm, from winch sue parsed oft into a comatose state, which continued wi'boul inler/uh siou until October J, when alt* awakened aud conversed, although iueohereiii ly. The noxt day she ugaiu left asleep and has not Since been awake, hhe is fed by Ibrcing her mouth open and placing lbv! food inside, live ruspiimiion i*/<g 1 clar, but a little more frequent than , that of most people of her age, ' which is twenty-nine. She has one child, a boy of four year*. The lu>t j evidence of wakefulness she has ry i Inbited iuce the 2d of Gvtober wnr j the day before yesterday, when she wa, carried from her h n>e to a ; vehicle to be transferred tv the ear* ! The little lazy climbed int / the J wugou aud piuciug bi* au jw*>4U j iut Mother’* ireck, Jtiwwxl hvr. f JW | ivMoU ltviu tU<* | e) o*, but they clj thcro vvute uo oihvr HgL G j Uto be l&kcii to ilwo/LUO* f \ tllC lUtoUlii' at if Oft M iMibiOß* At a icoofit auk* ol puU'M f in M*w York a ‘Tolhujg jail to pio j vpjit cut** IVoAu walking ou | brought u b/k a JI ‘ lAMp#'oKA.*<4 j hi gar cvojMOu a* <1 ich •' tor yjiiy i\ut*U*rr ft. Propriiojv Religious JPeft t%~* f Wjritteii fagr-ikt.’ 2d>D*' Extract* f*g Of- 9 '*. loffikHg# fit I, u ,un th 4 Ut. j ' irufticti with conriidi. i Atnh*<*bu , by J H-Httt, iin itih own n: me. ato** 14 *’ toU— . Priest. Uf ito death by Aud****! hitnsoH uled x\ * ! ui i cuirlhrrcd <>6 Lytimr inpr boon killed lc*f IM vMuw<, , MelM'iuKP V(U) I’PNtfJfol. 14b3V. dtUM>n on of Atiiiockus’ death, jjjiMud dk turbancea in m to recover the jVktkuod A4stb ffchus, irriiaU'd hy \hu fr*qpMMit re volts (rf ilmp t’pfiic to ! slew thousu4td Ji.opbj took forty tbou>and and ; then nt vied hn 4eniptn and fdan | derod Lhs ti**M*ry. ! orders that fvefy om i.ieony ihn (dews rihoiiid lim riten of ihv befll iu ns, ami *af o*' iW sr< rifn oty Kn-aisar, om of the priii ijnff a?f man, oko**< J‘i*4.lur kp dt* 1 than to obey trt ll* hmup tin iCn broile rs, u iih ilu ffiiTtl \i> horrid Xufuu\H t*< i the rftiru; yeur, a W dwelt in Modiu, e *U* tAOipj i kihed the j£ lug r *;o4i-iia,vqoi* < aho j compelled men to jimil lh**4i letirnd iuto the wildernc'd. j &A<#m umu not At ra* fur of 'if*/, J tiditf .at iivki-iid of i koaj? v\ ho had tied in 'o |/le a ’lo < makes war alumni AAtio*'hiit '#*>* come and kills ba : .a*, bv Which he We auuTWM [ i ':£<m A,' u KV JP 1' hi. ~ 1,-il down ti uu his s'iq,.'n*t, , and died miserably . AnUmd.ii# Ebf | polvr. his swMq m#de ta ac*- wink Gt* 'Jews but it bntkim Tb j u battle ugoitipt bio., Eieaztw, yoangot invqj|g, , |ilaying ptwm*4 nn efe.pbant u> n.ed sig *o; pi hpw “cas and supposing 'Jail J Ku*g upon * >Mkj, rail V 4outfit .t<h* UiO inies, slept ui dm 'Uc r'Ujihapi siciv him; whenujsai the tell doa l aooo und i him to tl’aUks 'WI .Uldiiiriu* Evv-y Ji#ih.g killed An'hxdim. mo.iped for ’ tiolu He mail' rind ; 1 M I, j/fteMr lioo on Alcii. US. fat# #tlh *,#*ll^#. ilia I'liid'vngiMl t# J < iiseUTU* nev ..is, efl. *****4* *** ' jnatie AUgh P/TcM iiobjl Re el, I .ye yo auqima' ,niUi Ak>an.fey, mt rnv p w'.qntl'd wU- IK Md‘ *4 A Lpip lino, ~, ] Aid long ago J>cv, ifP i Re<l i“g a. i.i. >v/l* t>M-l /-lb painfuj hi*s in 4>i hiy niiy yj Gji D f j . pm* n y‘'W> | >h 0‘ hbiU4>* *Vt*4 ¥ l # ; bow/ she dl V rinY liv yi wvW and- M* L.pwnd bet 'ecu liu'Wl els* # I•.<h while', *ju a-hed m r h/4fef/ Ay of \-ji the fed /Ith L/:i Mill, tkJudi /die* . lequeM wa-g/gnled, , t ,u Uj fin' ' * Mt> Ft l a.- /ginl/, ftjf ■ ini'si net* n bsaJj r iiuut is ~. . ; ! M ‘4 4/' I ¥o tjMhi 4 ,up ii; bt/ l eai 1 g/.*. ,-iig tiu / 1 tii ; the dear Rule j “ ‘U her 0 kW Wimeimfm w - j Wto, Mr 4*o> )uew 'dm -d* re pir-sU'd W i# #i-y 'i'ftvjf ; *}§ yi ;/<//> e,e*it l#yr Rp ' t > - JitUti i/* .be AVV'.jud hi Udifift j.'/h i welds- -til Rn/J Rjj/fhfir, Tlm- aneienG in fp• ir fy'iyh" gttd I Mr. ruwh soj 4h4 mm> >n ! similar afV*'%s MMM mjf 'MtA j 4 hjgm i • iiv pnri 4 rb* j ffiig i/ ? ie m 4 e;. Aiia/*lsys,w v H.‘ > 4J tv'/,ii •> 1 ■' 'V^4)?, r:r