M Wbar« bH Ibo Put ta btciad Cadn tU drttud «
■t«n luw, ut d«r ; ao tho ad ill do-for him win do for me.' *'Dpoi: UibI, he lit another eifrar, lUonad np Ilia eraateoat, and lellm’ Ijnry that no abonld be hi * ’ time tapper’ waa readj. he . Captino Hilliard's. ^•lon were too' bed, Ben,' aaje Lney, arter Jeemea waa gone; ' you ' low he'a al'aya aheered aa his own adder, and won't take a mite of oomrt till no gets back again.’ He no need to be al'aye and etarnally boastin' of his oonrage, then,' says Ben. ' He on'y makes himself an object of radionla by doin’ it, and whowill, in my opinion, do him a rightdown
r "In^minot
THE KOBBEBT 05 THE TDBHFIKE. the yonng men arrin’d,
e lane that leads to Deacon
"It la Hr. lamas Brawn, who Urea close by the old red school-hoc so." "I wonder if he remembers the quiltin' an the yonng folks went to at Hr. HayUdd's when tmny HayUnd waa gettin'ready to be married to Ben Palmer. Ben didn't mneb think, than, that he should ewer be a deacon, I .guest; and Lucy bad as little thought of bon' a to hare Lucy; and her father e: aged him all he could, for he first-rate farm, free and dear from all incumbrance; while Ban bad nothi ' on the face of the airlh to depend >
other things, and thought sat Jeemea, when all at once i sneaks up, and says he, mistaken, Jeemea Brown is
m to be back
yet,’ says Ben; 'be hasn't b more'n ten or fifteen minutes.'
'■'Well,'says San ' and I rail'tell the, ri
aa Bayin', Lucy Mayland 'y to be married; and ’anuaryahe in-**-* „ . .. tr and near, I guess you nercr went .. _ ri^it-dowu, _old-iaahioned quiltin'; did
"Tou*SanVbn hare a real good
is, then, to siar'
. . m to forty parti aa, anch;
han now. All the gala made a p'int ol harin' dinner airly, when there waa goto’ to be one, so aa to be on the spot, and ready to go to work, by one o'clock, earth), if hot afore. The yonng mm, in agin'ral way, didn't come till arter dark; and by that time the quilt, unless there waa an uncommon data of work in it, was rolled up into a purty small com-
" Tbs quill Luoy was goin' to hare
quilled, the time Pm speakin' of, waa a dreadful bandaoma one. Twaa made of pah*work called the rlein' aun. and had jest cobs into fashion. Thera wasn't room .for one-half of oa to sit round the quilt St s Urns ; but the more the merrier, you know; and, while one ut wera at work, the other had nothin'
_ MLt when we got tired of that, aung a new tana we'd been lamin' at aini
school.
" It had get to be near scran o'doca; and moat of tha beaux (wo used to call ’em sparks In them dsya) bad arrlrad. . Jeemea Bran and four or lira other* were all that ware misarn'. At last there was s great jingle of bells—for " dreedful good weighin'—and J dashed tm to the door in hie net bottomed sleigh, with and and green kirartid spread orar the seat and back, for there wsa no aieb thing then in the rKssrrr— ‘ood ready to it he aaid be
11 it be ready J ’ uya be.
a minute afterwards, ■'sin' np to the door, ut breath, he rushed , - h eyeswii' „ I with lips aa “ ■ What's the matter, Jeemea?' spoke up half a dozen soiees all at ones. "‘Matter enough,' uya he; Tw barely, laeaped with my life, and that's
alL’
“ ‘ Did your horse run away with you ?' SSTS I,OCT. “' Worse than that 1 worse than that!' says he, ' The foot is, my friends and flamin' poiiticianer, and’ thsl'a the way he ai'tys begun when he made e speech)— 1 my friends and feller-eiti-aens,' aaya he, ' Pro been through a solemn and tryin’ seme, oneof the most —d the boat tryin'est
ah'ght good ad rice, for th
a not to
1 Come, out with it; what hat hap-
pened'?' says Bon Palmer.
"‘I'm been robbed; my fire dred di. liars are gone,' uye Joeme " 'You don't my so,' says Bam. “ • Tie the wlemn truth, my fr
and fellar-eitiiena. Bat 1 don’t sally the loaa of the m^»y, more than if " - brown paper, u tong u my life is
" 1 Ease yon any idee who the robber
wur says Sam Peters. "' I guess I base; I knew inuto I sot my eyes on him.' "'Who waa it? D* toll i
Luey Mayland.
‘"Why who should Itbebutthe idm-
" There's your pooketbook, and all its contents, I expect,' Bays Ben, throwin* It sm tn the table. yon get it?" uya Je "•Oh, the am and me I' •',‘Bnt he mignt se anotsou.—— -irongfa the heart. Arter all, I don't sew how yon got ik’ " 'Why, I jest stooped doi picked it np,' uya Ben. “ The robber moat *re dropped it, I yon 'find fi"
afore the old pnmp that atanda a
way in from the road.'
'■ 'Aad the handle wu p'in ting right im the whole of the time,' sars Sam rs, 'but it didn't daunt 'him -
pocket book t i'it into hie n
a Mtin.’,
e, and puttin'
act down in a corner of tb< , u meek u a lamb. Prom that day this he wu noser heern to boast
idukSj a too much. After
Hr. O'Clsrenoe purchased a new ; f pants, Satunlsy. When begot he— is wife was mi ling bread. .She wiped rr hands en her apron, and made a ireful examination of the panto. Pint ie pinched one leg of them, and’asked .Jm whit ho paid *—**"— — J " -
pinched the other, didn't thlak it wi
that ha stood off ai. ^ , look at the fit, so to forma right opin.on of it. Thou she ukod him ifhe couldn't draw them up higher, as they touched the floor. Ha uid be couldn't without splitting himulf in two, which **—» appeared no urgent necessity for doing. She piuched them again, vi. eyC--'“’-—
clutched t hopped ■
|| Wliwell quite confident they were not ell ootton
•hou clothing people do lie wu not quite snre. Howt
^ Id^teU better^ at the ^window, end lug his ipiM.*" Sis rubbed them again, and turned up the leg so to see the other side, and all the while her mind K emd doable and forebodings. If ad only aaid he wu going to buy e
from Abberille testify to ban hroe of four bodies swinging in in the neighborhood. The mi intense excitement prevails, i -«nof the or—
0 country in ndividusls, s
Iberia the day after the hanging eon menoedjtm their way to the bay. On ■' im is said to here thrown bis sat to the bay aud turned his horse loose upon arriring there, preparatory
id only aaid hi
of pants she w m herself, and picked them
tailors know that a man oan’t tall kind of eloth from another, and will,... off anything on him. Then abe abruptly dropped hla leg, aad went to the back door and called Mrs.^Mugent^ Mrs. S ainted with the particulars, pinched r. O'Clarenoe's legs herself, and asked why he didn’t buy the oleth and a bis pants made at home. Hr. O'Clsrenoe didn’t Eke the bother, and " O'Clarence explained that he alwonld hare his own way. Mrs ml aaid an uncle of Mr. Hngont, — Used in Bridgeport, got a pan of i all wool pants last April for fire dollars, and you (Mr. and Mrs. O'Clsrenoe)
’ would hare thought they cost ten dol- , lars if a cent; the doth wu just u fine
aud firm u anything oould be. Mr. Mn(r**,t -wmtlrl ■nn.sHmss nsS Ikn fn,-
t, and tha moat desolate part of it I'd got right off ag'ln him, afore I diakinred him, when, happenin' to turn my headalittle, I seed him standin' stiff u a stake, a little t'other aide of the fenoe, platin' hie gun right at
thought so, ,
swasher head, ao he needn't see her
" The robber didn't fire, I hope,' 'No; I want fool enough to wait
hat; I knew what h
ao I cries out. Don't t shoot me I—here's my pocket- ; b-toke it I—take it I And with
that, I gave it a Sing, the fenoe, and fell at 1
ol in tloac pants, and if they were -: Magent's she would have them len back. That is exactly what His. O'Clsrenoe thought, and in spile of Hr. O'OUrenoe’s protestations he took them beck and got another pair. The other
she, tamin' wo °* * n them, Mrs. Mugent said.
Dark camel's-hair or cashmere orar -leases with silk skirts of tbs same shade are preferred to suits wholly of colored silk, says a fashion journal. Various shades of olive ere most largely imported in these. Ostrich feather bands shaded beautifully i '■
imittoe, urged to desperation by audacity of the robbers, have gives vent to their long ' -- *--■ tags of indignation ana t work of retributive jus ties. Cp to writing some twelve of the. gang have
' swung np.
_ jt streets are foil of vague and exaggerated rumors oonearntog theoperationa of the Vigilance Oommintee, the number executed, Aa, sod is next to impossible to nbtsio a correct detailed account of the extent of the troubles.
A delegation of m - —lied nr
lying t
atogthi r. The Ooversor told them,
** Armed with tl
o whatever the
Lego. A prisoner wi ana slisrea the asmi
."KC
of the • id hanging thi Cwo of the le
ty men, armed with shot guns, ai prisoner on board, supposed to lx one arrested at Braahean, forcibly « dueled. IMrties who afterward m me crowd declare the prison * then in their possession. 1 to be eu a tree near Dr. Du gan’s plantation. The foregoing are the only details i have been able to gather iu regard " ’ fearful affair which may be cored at all reliable. It is not known i how many thieves have ' d np to this time. The — sonable reports put the number down
Oar life, as yon may imagine, is not of the liveliest, and I scarcely know what we should do to fight off -‘ignation if it were not for the nua wHoh are fortunately ire- , They never, of course, occur by day, which passes ao quietly that were it not for the dreary, deserted aspect of the streets, and the occasional firing of the forts, there would be Httle to remind us that we are in a besieged town ■ * at night, when it gets dink, the Be begin to think more of enemies, ghostly and fleshly alike; for the Oortagei '
deaeriptiotis. Their chief dotv ‘ “ "-—(halt)fro ybody sp, —. iow they are not afraid.
you feel, half Hit the sentry—often small boy—half off his legs ; and sail L as sadden aa it is stentorian, probably lifts yon wholly off yours. You duly halt, and the sentry then al more subdued tones, aa if 1 ally exhausted, " Qufeu trice f You re"Bipano.’’ " Que gmtef" FOmkius." " Pan
'He neithar apoka nor moved aingle inch, but kept hia gun leveled -* my head, aa if he was bent on havin' y life. But you ae* I diaapp'inted
quietly until you Afigrufat emmt-j .. r several times, a young sentry is l, . . get so sharp or ao nervous that ho see .something move—It may be a dog ar: skiving tuft of grass—and getting n< .answer to hia repeated challenge, shoul den hi', rifle and biases into apace. Ii leaa than a minute bis comrades al -ievra the line are doing C aud before the echoes hai is reported all
Benjamin
nally taking one in bis hand'he naked
the price.
“ On* dollar. " One dellar r laid ha. Oan't yon ike tea* than that r "Ho, indaed; that ia tha price.'' Another hour waa nearly passed w le lounger aaid: "la Mr. Franklin at home? 1 ' "Yea, be ia in the printing offloe.' “I want to aee him." - .The boy immediately informed Hr. FrankHn that there waa a gentleman in “le store waiting to -see him. Franklin waa soon behind the od ter, when, the'lounger, book in hi addressed him thus: " Franklin, what ia the lowest you take for tail book?"
ready been d
i yonng man asked only one dollar! Trae, laid Franklin, “andI could
ackoowlwho baa
, publish k
suit iu both eases ia th( , — bouae aud a faulty newspaper. People rush into newspaper*, thinking they # a “ oail" to talk to tbe publie Iron ; standpoint, and in some rases auo 1 in aeeurtag position and profit . the exceptions are ao manv and iu
notable, that the i edged by all that tl paper man ia that n a thorough appreut...
id baa grewn man ia a genius gives littl ihope that he will be a aueoeaaful a*"'' - — * publisher. We never knew on geniuses to anooeed in the newspaper field, and wo are not without examples by the loore of their attempts. It seems to ns, in pursuing these t arkm, that the publisher of the presit .day is neglecting a grand doty, ids one that should be brought hor - him, that is, the proper care a til age of apprentices. Almost every boys learning the trade. These 'boys should^be taught that they are to 1 come'tho editor* and publishers of generation, and they should be .-ted eooordingly. Not only aho they be taught the rudUiqnta and principles of the art of 'printing, b ' " business features should not be
lectcd.
It ia true that to-dayhppresti< swspaper offices, aslapn ns tl loot benefitflotheir employ)
lefore they have even a fair)knowledge if the business, throwup their caeca and
inci for the cities, wiicro sifPtians as two-lhirders.
might undertake. Pub this, and they feel that enefit they may get from these hove met be crowded out of them at the iso, and at as early a day aa possible, efore the departure for the city comes, 'The result is obvious. New York
Mrocly one before the departure. They irong the atreet corners ; if fortunate, ware one or two dnyn' work a week, nd live—they alone know how. It is the duly of the publishers of tin country to ask themselves how much ol the fault of this state of affairs lies al their . - — ...
■ “ftK' ra, for they me nothing else, ked themselves the question red it to their own satisfa" lem give the aubjeet tbe a deserves, and decide that ir a new leaf shall be turned noe: and that hereafter C
aboil be brought
hold to-day 5,000 b
-op, with a yield of only i:
55,000 bale* of new, the - .
deficit Of 40,000 bales * Bearing i
still in the United Stateg l
iu,wni wi ia,u00 bales of old bops out- f side of brewers' hands (a largo, proper- i lion of which will come into use), deal- i
Hbe able to get through ! hi of foreign hops. Other ! or , y also believe that the di
quality of the present crop does not th up to that of last year, os a great; so of the early-picked hops lack | ar th and a great many of those i sh
1 later will Be mouldy. They i at few ogles have been made at the mrrket price, dealers
„ to pay more than 40 cents. Tl think that, should the report* of * *h Hoc to 40 to 60 cento will be juntif
K foreign hope are received in lai UUoa. They cay the English ei
ill fall short of lost year's yield O inrth, and that it is partly injured by mouldy They pUecmoro dependc—
mating their crop os m bat of Inst season anc or quality. They put
. hops on hand at 12,000
ales—2,000 of which are known i yearlings " (1872) and 10,000 the yiei f previous years. They think the oh ope wo have of reduced prices is fro .ho importation of the surplus Gormi
product, but regard <
r taflr
CTi
kept at the bustawra , a thorough knowledge of it; and when they are *ent out into the world thatthey shall go forth—not to become city loafers, but fully prepared and i potent to take tlieir place amonj responsible and reliable editor* publishers of their day and genera-
tion.—IF. r. Union.
The Origin of a resilience. The laws of nature and the law*
hygiene have both been outraged — Shreveport, La., aad the people of that
unfortunate place are paying tht We had previously heard tl
. j waa in a horribly filthy condition. Wo had been told that the bodies of putrid animals were to be seen sweltering in tbe sun in different portions of the city, while mod bole* reeking with filth and miasmatic vapors were poisoning tbe entire atmosphere, in every direqUon, bat our information, derived * gentleman of character, betrays
of facta that is absolutely ap-
. and if not properly vonehed for
would bn received with incredulity.
We an informed that a boat, having a board a hundred or more Texas eat e, waa recently tank in Bed river
near to Shreveport. Inexplirabli incredible sa the statement mat
a
are informed that —.
have been fla&ed fr
wreck and taken ashore for their hides, and that after being skinned the bloat ed bodies have been permitted to re
’ to the ray* of a burninc icy bar- —'•— a ’
. .a.
thee* daraying
—iphere I la it aatoniah-
i it not] ■ ' -
it not perfectly natural.
thewholi rathci
that such a violation health should be followed by a fright epidemic? The wonder is that - population ol Shreveport has not —J-i imated by **-
Jllnnesota It Paul (Minn.) Pres* publishes dug concerning an extensive fanner of that State: "Mr. Dalrymple ’* evidently a believer in the doctnnt it after work baa tmoo been commenced in the fields, it ia wnwiae to indulge in plsg spells on any pretext whatever. This year he devoted 2,000 acre* to wheat, and, according to his rtimatra, it has yielded at the rate twenty-one bushel** per acre—giving lihw * total of 42,000 bushels as his total wheat product for the year 187B. In jnst thirty days from’ the time the first revolution waa made by hia reapers, bla crop ha* been safely haMstcA,.-every surplus bushel has gene cn He way to " " ' uu markets, aad the-money baa been added to his bank Th* various tabors have been lexforaed under Mr.^Dalrymple'e pertiBtrflahlwpridewhon he assert* thath) isa handled this great hr
Tha mink is.an expart fisherman, and oe to tbe eel that ia unfortunate enough to attract bis sharp eyes 1 When a brook ia low, this little annual can often be tracked for a long distance thn H.1 awil. n.nl—.1 .hinavs sail
aumeumra uwu- in- lying along sue bank; tbe mink only Bucking the blood, and leaving the fish unmutilated. One —--mu some small ahioen, meant for in pick oral fishing through the ice, kept in an old tub set in a spring a brook; and in cme night all these
bM ,000,000 only mark the mink
—>—t—v — inUrakto(£ and the neeeaalty of ‘considerable importation* of tbe herb from Germany 'iere is looked upon aa probable. that the crop in England has been reported ea also below tbe average id quality ad 3 - *- * v — *— r , aa the trade IS of widespread interest, owing to iu extensive and constantly increasing use in the manufacture of malt liquors, the opinions of aeveral prominent dealer*, together with the facta, figures, and prospects of the trade, will be found of general interest. The annual consumption of hops t the United States is 1'0,000 bales, lough last year it must have fallen 10,000 bain below that estimate. This decrease be attribute* to temperance legislation, strikes, and ranch unfavorable weather. September 1, 1872, our 1 bold abont 5,000 bales of old they have ainoe taken 10,000 the old crop. The quantity imposed waa 20,000 bales, and these throe —lonnta, added to last year's growth, it make the 100,000 bales. Now, as-
that brewe
. —, inld be a most happy if you would become my wife ; I will be e good and kind husband to you, and will take rare that yfiu will be made 'comfortable in yoor.'telit, and will not, want for fire in winter. Will yon bf mine? If the answer is favorable'he will donbtleestell her totryto: -gain^or ^ho wilfa if jjoosible, be* their arrangements*-will be made i take tbe'first opportunity of ei y an elopement. If they are n( ity they will *-*- ■’ — *-
thcr point, b rill take alio
1 in the oonntry each and, like young Loch-
the girl) are blow
liny otbi s his pa
les troys all the effects d forbids his ^' '
terriflj’ animal lerally
, the tepentax. , ir knees, beg bis pardi riven. Bnt if, on the a
denrejt
contrary, t
i, and of hia propositi)
oriptioi
t in a fair and square English I after both being satisfied
requirements of the decrease.
From this:, mind the relati
transferring the
iven then lost yesr », such as mild
definitely the
The Honey Yalne of Han. -mortals are popularly pront bo worth the rope to hang
may be ■ Ine that i . in figan
is true only provided n: at they cost and whs
. Dr. R. Ladtge has re puhltahed ^exttemriy^ntMrattn^art^ t- »*->- -■* appears that, bearing
live ratio of mortality a ire they can earn anything
. tors, the bringing up of laborer's child, at the age of three, hn cost 839 thalers; at six, 705; at nine. 1,120 ; at twelve, 1,580; and at fifteen. 2,119 thaler*. Amongtho higher claai divided by the writer into the mere tHo and the learned proleasions, proportions are aa follows: At five ye •v- -mbryo merchant already has e thalers; at ten, 2.53G thalers ; ■fifteen, 4,238 ; and at twenty, the ogi - ‘y be looked
in the yon
. — .... ram Of 6,495 thalers spent npon him. In thee yonng man who devote* himaell earned profession, his education
ra
rhich hia education c
be interest of the capital
ivanttLe head of a
ilogian,
also follows calculations that, comparatively laboring classes — *- ... , favored than the For from the age of fifteen, or certainly eighteen (taeludtng the time of apprenticeship), the young laboeives wages fully equaling the on the capital invested in His « —2,100 thslera—whilst the I - - -oust wait till thirty rate of interest on , on hia education. Tbe merchant’* earnings are about in proportion hr his expense*. In the lower classes a girl’s
— lath year, a girt will have caused her father an expense of 5,196
edneation
the popuh — . re is about 41.000,000, being males. Without fear of being far astray we may allow abont 75 per of the whole population *- u — tag classes, leaving 25 pel o upper classes, mdaittag million of professional men. Applying tbe number* given ebove, the veins of the population of the t Empire amount* to 77,500,000,000 PUn for an Oi J. A. Bennett, of Racine, has prered a model for what he terms an ran railway. It consists of a cabin ■oed upon a deck 80 feet long and 12 t wide. Instead of resting on a LI this rests on an endless ehslti nf ■ts or pontoons, 2 feet deep and 1 foot wide, which lira crosswise under the cabin. This chain ia made to real ve round largo wheels, one at each nd of the car, by means of an engine, > that it resembles tbe horee-tread in threshing machine. Half of the belt ' “■ ' in tbe water, forming a
By the continued rotation -onnd the wheel*, the acetic fast aa they are released from the water -..a- m oavried over the-atorn forward between the desk
th/**a!’ ’mT’bJS!
nett intends trying to cross the Atlantic this fall. Hiaboat has thirty fioata, with a total buoyancy of 18J ton*; the wheels are 62 feet in diameter, and make 1E0 revolutions a minute. Allowing for resistance of the atmosphere and water, ho —--- * «- *.»—
the guise an hour i
. make thirty
The Titnavillo (Pa.) maidens
Bet to purchase any "dry goods ^Stor « ». M. They want the ahop* to shut
and ast the eteks at liberty.
nd the.
If there are any big^bro-
will generally re* — -■-”-* dghl,
a Eug--ledge,"
r project in exeentior
thick on the
ieir alioes, reverse) leaped, their Kacki
them an oppo'rtuuityto tost the jilcosun cases out of leu, books' will carry tin day. " When I was a boy,” said tin older Adams, "I bad to study the Latii grammar, but it war *
My fa
liege : and, ther mar till I could h>
_ o my father, I tol did not like study, and asked ! other employment. It was hia wishes, end ho was qaii
tag, perhaps that
rou may : will. Ill
dtre t
ightful
Latin grammar oi forenoon and wan at dinner, but it -
This
jP!j»iug ■i gromy ditobit Latin id a deeadow I
■mparison between ditching, bat said I dug the next to return to Latin
. > tell Tom, Dick and Harry th story of your woee, you'll lie awake an keep your wife awoke by tossings, spo ‘--r temper and your own breakfast th ext morning, and begin to-morro vdtog ton ttmra .worse than you d q!j heals, and perhaps some that ea ever be healed nt all, bat all esu I: rlped by tbe panacea, work. Try' i
s. I would go bod: to Latin Be was glad of it; and, if gained any distinction, it
has been owing to till in that abominable ditch.
AOo.
nounecd, made 000. This is, fc probably prodt
■them
der forced sale
>y favorable soles.In e of business. Unwonld produce far
mutated since 1861, un^ was made by negotiating United State* Government bonds dnnng the war. Before the war bronght it into prominence tbe Bouse - m bride of Philadel-
Cook, of tbe Dis-
trict ol uonuntna, slated not long since that be oould not spend one-tenth oi hia Income. It ia not believed that tbe creditors of tbe house or any c" branches wilt lose anything by thi
With Your Hieht.
You cannot pay too carafnl al
to buataraa if you want to aueoaad, that
i*. It i* the result of practical, day experier- *•—-*-*- ■
matters of
ond'anravariablt
it steady at lies at 11
b importance, good training
— accuracy iu obaervatioi
What is done ia boataesa m
• War , of work than to half do
much. Yet in '
virtue, rapacity and good conduct in .v raon who Is habitat be trusted; hia ver again, and he
nally work
mrell'a Newspaper Reporter aaya there are in the United States 6,newapaperm, of which 4,235 are weekly, (thirteen hundred of them naing Heady-Printed Paper); 674 daily, the balance being tri-weekly,
648^50 paper*. In tbe world, ontside of the United la tea, the number of jouruals ia 7,642.
a to be the continuing „• curse of China. Dr. _j, who has been traveling from u to Shanghai, .with a view tc —
in t^at country ia iix digioos rate, to the
cultivation of food, in one district, large tracts of land were entirely covered with poppies, and the doctor waa ed Chat the cultivation only belt year. Some land will yield a , by opium greater than that of wheat by two, three, four, and even six times. Tha Chinese peasant's love of the debasing drug ia attributed to hia batag “tied down to Hie eoD of hia own district and shut out from inteniouree with hia fellows by unjust regulations
ally hasten o . _
Dick, the youth before alluded to particularly fond of /docks, ai
e table with this
remorediu ried it down
implish the b vSVKfe
shore, divested him-
. placed tha pumpkin rice. In a short time the fat and tender pioneer of a flock of docks approached,
foremost and ne-
igining the vegetable
from guile, encouraged the . follow. They were partaking matutinal meal, when aston
struck them at the si suddenly diving—no this one dived feet
gleeted to come np. .. , one waa appointed to investigate, and j j{ approaching the pumpkin, anddenly made a backward dive, and waa gone.
' ho others. They
henceforth num-
... a deadliest terror* the^iunocent ingredient of New Eng-
: pSrgi'iSrssrttas i taxed. •• Lord” Gordon waa captured hy r detectives 000 milra weet of Hifine1 spoils. The police of Philadelphia mad* a " - - ‘be Italian padroni and mafle
Hr. Btornca, tbe English traveler, ret» seeing Dr. Livingstone alive and
1 last July.
> milk akicktag cow: stand off about ht foot and yell, "So 1 you darned
skinflint!"
'here were fonr persons killed and injured on the Midland Bailway through the crimtael reokleasuee* ot a
cn ml actor.
Eptaooty among the aheep. t* the latest visitation. It ia aaid to be prevailing in some of tbe eastern counties of Pennsylvania. A dispatch from Oalontta onnounoea the loss at sea of the ship Indus. In the disaster, four hundred aad eighteen
the departure of the pork p that city the price of Hquo
down tremendously. the pea®
n from
N. Y., disc
Htiat to do with Trouble,
t trv to quench your sorrow in
- " -on begin this,
with it until it you must add
narcotics.
c.iiW! jh^oriatron to the^jojrow^vor’to
Si
iplote will, after drin^seem ni o. Ton to one the fatal drin ■gain and again songht until il sinks a hopeless, pitiful and
else hard—pitch into something with a will. There’s nothing like gowi, solid,
r dinner
rork, and g<
at Whitehall, who had been
arrested, because "it was a lightning-
rod man be had kicked."
The steamer Ironsides rank within seven miles of Grand Haven, Mich. At leoat fourteen persona were drowned, id many narrowly' escaped a watery
A London green grocer was recently found guilty of manslaughter, and . sentenced to fonr months' imprisonment for running over-and killing a
little boy.
A powerfnl memory, iniere^is aaid
that he is employed^by the Humane
Society to remember the poor. Tbe total imports for the second week
of the panic in Now York were 810.902.468, of •which 87.464,702 were meichaudise and 83,437,700 dry good A Amount of dry good, marketed was 83,803,835.
Mr. Yonng, of the Bureau of Statia-
Uca. has got it all down. Only eigh-
Europo this a
»,000,-
aooi-
1 her musical powers. And tins is ow she did it. She flirted up her naniors, eoquottiahly wiggle-waggled to re ptano and sang ^
e-hc-bs-hsiielieSis-liinX hot Ihee-s^-e-i leautifnl, Mias Julia 1 Beautiful we all clapped our bauds. ' I please eiug anotlier verse—it's perfectly divine,_Misa Julia,' said Er *
(dyed)
id EtigeneAugus-
.vised her golden 1, touched the white_ ivory rolled Angers, and warbled : bun Is hri-highUy plowing
Uieeq*e.he-be-he-be-h*-bluk bo-bo-bo-hs-ho-
n as a Mother. i, if one may judge r conduct, makes a
The U. 8. Government planted n quant i tv at spawn in the Fox Biver, Wiacbnain, last year, and now Appleton rejoices in the possession of a houndless contiguity of shod, from three to
four taehei long.
Referring to the disasters to the Detroit and Milwaukee lino of steamer* of late, a paper bbtb that the late Oept. McBride crossed the lake on thi mate over 1,600 trip* without a Mr. Htornes, the English traveler, as arrived at Paris, from Central ifrieo. He reports that he met Dr. rivingalone last June, and parted from im on the 1st of July, at which time the doctor waa in perfect health. A telegram from the special agent igoged in examining the accounts of _ iteraal Revenue Collector Harper, in Illinois, atatra that the amount of the defalcation ia 8106,748, of which 81,948.19 ia a deficiency in stamps and ou
lists.
U Southampton. England, recently, _ ..-hale followed a German ship about a mile up the river lichen dose to Northambridge. A number of workmen went ' i Mata and drove it into thallow ., where it was harpooned and killed. Large quantities of mushrooms are sent, from Anglesey, in Wales, to vari)US part* of England. There are many ipecial train* laden with mushrooms rom Bangor Station. Sometimes there ire es many as twenty-five trucks thus aden attached to one train. Planet No. 127, whiah was discovered jarly this rammer, has been named Libcralrix, in honor of M. Thiers. It has been also decided that planets Nos. 126 and 128 shall be known to the scientific world as Vellida and Johanna,' the latter name being in honor of Joan
□mparison. To see the > won with he ray cygnet* sailing about la not much .joro in itself than if oho were a goose and goslings; but when ebo takes e mind to give the little things a ride, ‘*-on we see riding pic-e-back "eleva1," as the newspapers aay of ciroualing, “ to the rank of a Fine Art." e aaaiata the youngster* to meant r back either by lowering her tail to the water and thus teaching their lout minds the use oi an inclined roe, up which they straightway walk, she "aticks out the black fut oi r," (as we once heard the performance of protruding her web-footed " ' '
and arches back her ikea a moat comfortable cradle lined with swan's-down, imperviuus to^fthe wind, in which the
importance of this.work and the vaine
Barmin’s Balloon.
Mr. P. T. Barnum announces that if _ balloon docs not cross the Atlantic this fall be will spend 850.000 if neoes1 in having that experiment tried ea y aa possible next year, provided or more aeronauts can be found in eric* or Europe who will heartily ;e the attempt Ho evidently does intend to,make the experiment i a cheap balloon, for he aaya: " Aa resent adviecd, I ahaH have the silk tiifactured in China, pnt together prepared under the direction of eeicntiflO men in London, an experimental ascension made from th* Svdenbam Crystal Palace grounds, then bring the balloon to America, and make the itlantio trip from New York. I
the public will believivthat if I
jurtmy hand to tbs plow I shall not look
The Death of Captain Hall.
ilegram from London says: “Horton. who personally attended Captain
* of hi* death, makes
—i'-T "Hall returned in
perfect health from "
preceded his final _ _ _
■'"~‘ **— " • cabin, where he took physiotan, a l*gi*l*tor, a judge, a _
immediately afterwud dent, or a pastor, do not trust your
■A' _
were poisoning him. Morton evi-
y believe* th*
. — not gi**h'lma*lf that, h*' feelio^agninat thedoctor, which may time jut
urge tha princip Husbandry a* tlx
e Patrons
tbe farmora of the grievoppressing them, and reotho study of those priori-
r *1111*1* of th* State, and, if approved, the organisation of granges
wherever practicable.
Harper't Hazar atanda forth as the jampion of the maligned mother-in-law, and reminds ita readers how many things are taken from * married man a shoulders by that involuntarily adopted
-rno, adds the TForld, we
of Instances where such a matron would not hesitate to take th*
coat from her son-in-law'* back. IS British Government baa decided eatroving the Ashantees. By De-
cember tbe troop* will be ready to take the field. Fifteen hundred additional European soldiers will be placed at the head of the existing force. After the Ashontee army has been defeated, a —is win be made upon the
'' ' la to be de
M in Waah-
of the
soacom* Faria^feUtingto frosts wifi bo embodied in the reports furnished the preaa os * part of the synopsis and
probabilities.
1852, Tom Marshall made — hia mystifying political somersanlta, and-landed upon his feet an advocate of the election of tbe Whig nominee for the presidency. Ha had been advertised to apeak at Lexington, Ky., and left Versailles to fulfill the appointment. Ho aaid, aa he waa passing ’ ' ' * Lexington, he beard „ lotber, " Bill, are you going to hoar Tom Hatahall speak tonight?" "Well, I don't know," was " ■ reply, " which aide is Tom oh this
A medical >
sleep, makes th. may do with a Httle leaa Bleep than a other; but, a* a general rule, if y
— wia does nc. Horton ovi- the averagasight good' solid hour* of thing. He sleep out of every twenty-four. What®t medlsal ever mty be hia reaaon for it, if hedora
bIm* r to ba ”)

