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,ef'.�(\\ .. , d....c.d JB pUBLIB� EVERY SATURDAY lIY ll. B. Editor and Proprietor, G�'� � Terms of SulllsariptiolL JraIl and 01l1ce Bubscrlbers,ju Advance. 81.150 IInot {laid in Adyanoo. ...... 200 1!iD81e Copies. .. . . . . ., .Oli All a,dvertiBomeuts IUld communlcatlona must be handed in by Thursday evoning to inBure --InlIDri12n same wook. VOL. XXIV. Ab! Sad are Tbey. Ab I sad are thoy who know not love, But, tar from peaalou'e teare and smiles, DrUt dorm a moonless sea. beyond The tdlvery coaste of fairy le!oe. And swdor they whose longing lips Kiss empty air, !Lnd never touoh The dear warm mouth of those they lovo Waiting, wllBtlDg, Bn1lenng much But olear 118 amber, fine aB mush, Is life to those who, pilgrlm-wiee, !love hand in hllnd from dawn to dusk, Each mOrning noarer Paradiae Ohl not for thom sblIoH IIongols pr!!y , r They stllud in everlaatiug hgbt , t They walk in Allah's smile by dav And nost1e in his heart by night work of rescue, cast a little gleam in through the debM8 aorosa her two hands, which lo.y clasped e.t her side. One of her lingers she saw was gone; it was the dnger which held Dick's lit tle engagement ring. The red beam lay aeross her forheau, and drops drip ped from It upon ber eyes. Her feet, still tangled iu the gearing which had tripped upon her, were buried beneath a pile of bricks. A broad piece of floor ing that had fo.llen slantWlse roofed her in, and saved her from the mass of iron work overhead, which would have crushed the breath ont of Hercules. Fragments of looms, shafts, and pillars 'Were III heaps about. Some one whom she could nob see was dying just be hind her. A httle girl who worked iu her room-a mere ehrld-e-was crying, between her groans, for her mother. Del Ivory !lilt III n little open spnee, cushioned about WIth reols of cotton j she had a shallow gash upon her cheek j she 'linB lYJ'Jnglng her hands. They were at work from the outside, sawing eutrances through the labyrinth of plnnks. A dead womnn lay eloBe by, and Sene saw them draw her out. One tlf the pret4y I-mh girls was orushed quite out of sight j only one hand was free, she moved It feebly. They conld hear her oalhng for Jimmy Mahoney, Jimmy Mahoney; ana would they be sure and gl ve him back the hanuker chief? Poor Jimmy Mahoney I By and- bye she calltld no more, and in a ltttle while �he hand was still. The other side of the slanting flooring some one prayed alDun. She had 1\ little baby at home. She wna asklDg God to take oare of It for her. '. For Ohnst's sake,\ she saId. Sene listened long for the Bmen, but It wo.� never spoken. Be yond they dug a man out from nnder a denu body unhurt He erawled to his feet, and broke lUto furIOUS blasphemies. * ,.. * • \ \ lit • Del oried presently that they were cutting them out_ The glare of the bonflrl3�trnck t.hrougb an opening � I!m'Mii1<I\'1��� ;�fw\.� ms:. tlUCt. The openiug broadened, bright ened ; tbe sweet night wina blew lD , the safe filght sky suone through Sene's uOIlrt leapeu within her. Out In the Wind and under the sky she shoul,l stand again after all. She worked her head lrom under the beam and :rRlseti herRelf upon her elbow. At thBt mo ment she heard a o:ry- \Fue I fire I God Almighty help them I Thp. ruins are on fit'e '\ A mall working over the debri8 from the outside hau t4ken tlte notion, It bf'ing rather dllrk Just then, to carry a lantl'rn wllh 111m. \For God's sake,\ a vOIce oned from the crowd, .. clon't Rtay there with that lIght.\ But while hiS voice yet sounded, it was the !lreadfulfate of the mnn with the lan tern toiet It fall- and it broke on the ruined mass. That was nine o'clook. What there wna to be seen from then tIll morning could never be told or for gotten. A network, twenty feet high, of rods and girders, of bO!lDlB, pillars, .stair \vays, roofing, ceiling, walling, wreekfl of looms, shalts, tWisters, pnlleys, bob· bIDS, mules, locked nnd intertwined; wrecks of human oreatures wedged in ; a face that you knew turned up at yon from some pit, whleh twenty-four THE FA.LLING OF TUE MII,L. It was the 10th day of Janunry, 1860. On that da'r, wIllIe the maohmery of the Pemberton mill, of Lawrence, �nas., was ill moilon, the main bnild wi fell, without warulDg, and Il con flagratIOn soon nftel' broke out in the �s. Of 700 persous In the buIlding d'�the time, sevl'nty-Silven wore killeu, and onc hundleu and thlrty-fonr in jured, of whom fourteen subsequently died_ The cnuse of the uisaster was tile faulty oowtrtlctlOn of the ll'on pH b.rs which supported the floor timberl.'o . and the lack of adhesi'l\e power in the morto.r. Miss ElizBbeth Stuart Phelps gave a thrilling and vivid de·onption of the <lisnater in a story entitled\ The Tenth of January,\ extrncts from whloh Will be found of deop interest in thiS con neotion. The stlent cIty steeped and bathed itself in roso hnts; the rlVf'r ran red and the allOW crimsonen on the distant New Hampshue hilis. Pemberton, mute and cold, frowned aoross the disk of the climblllg sun aud . - ehtt ..hpa.!l�it dip bpiQre, 'The .aay brOKe softly, lhe snow and the wind blew wnrm from the river. _. .. * • • � •• Sene was a litlle dizzy .hls morning -the constnlll pnlpltation of the floorR nlways made her dizzy, after a wakefnl night---anu so her cOlored threads danoed out of place and troubleu her. Del Ivory, wotklng beSide her. said .. How the mill sh ll.kes I WIlat'R gOlDS 'On ?\ II It'R the nelY mnchlUlity thfly're h�stiug in,\ observed tbe overse(or, carelessly, \Great improvement, Imt very, ,ety heavy: tbey oalc'lnte on get twg It alllDto plnce to-dny.\ 'rhe WInd began at last to grow ohilly up the ataltcase nn!l- in at the oraoks ; the meltorl drifts out undl'r the walls to haru('u, the Bun dipped above the dam; the mill ulmmed slowly; shadows erept down between tho frames, .. I&'R time for lights,\ Baid Meg Ma�h, snd swore a little at her apools. • \Del.\ said Sene, \I think to-mor row'1l_ She stopped. Something stl'lUlge happene!l to her frame, It jarred, buz zed, suapped, the thrcads untwisted and flew out of plaoe. .. GurlouR I\ Rhe said, and looked np. Lookeu to Ree her overseer turn • llt -.- A LOOAL JO'dRNAL-DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, NEWS AND HOME IMPROVEMENTS. UNION, N. Y., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1874. NO. 20. HYUEN AND MOns. Russinn Love. Bles!JlDg the Sea. The Troubles of Wau Lee. Nioofolis is a sllllill town in the south- A oorrespondent of the London Mr. William Lee, 01 the Ontaris eILst 0 Russin, where the Oaucasian Dally Telegraph thus describes the strect lilundry, haa not left Cleveland, blood mixes with the Rnasian, And pro- curious ceremony of II Blessing the IIlthough he nas not Ilppenred of late in duces very many remarkable speoiniens Bea,\ at Ostend, BelRium : the newspapets. The faot is that Mr. of female beauty. \ Ostend, an excellent bathing place, Lee has devoted himself striotly to Among the most beautiful of the and in other respects nlao Q pleasant business during the last six or eighfl the beauties of Nicopo1is wna Ulyana, vaClation resort, is now beginniiig to flIl months, and has thereby IUIlIUIsed p only daughter of a weBlthl. land-owner. with visitors, mostly Germnn and Eng- smo.ll amount 01 cllBh, which is de& Her father was in the habltl every year lish; and the Kursanl on the Digue tined to be expended m carrying him at harvest-time, to add to nis foroe by Will! crowded with a well-dressed com- again to his native land, over the salt, engaging \people from Russia,\ IlS they pany as the hour of one o'clock, �hich snIt sea. Bnt before leaving, it is sim say, meaning people from the interior, had been 1b:ed for the ceremony of ply lID aot of justice to state that Mr. who at this season of the year seek re- blessing the sea, drew near. Another Lee has attempted faitbfnlly to submit munerative labor in the more oultivated altar, much more imposing than either to the heathenism 01 this benighted and wealthier district of the south. of those in the Place d'Armes, hnd been country, and if he does not carry away One of these people, Filiatieff, a ereoted on the most conspiouous point a fair impress of hospitality or feeling handsome, stnlwnrt ,oung fellow, at- of the Digne j.and hither came a pro- of love townrd Brother Jonathan. th� traoted special attention. He seemed cession of �eat length, led by a long fault has not been his, but that of the completely indifferent with regard to array of httle girls in white musliii angular brother on whose bosom he a� gains, and was always in the best of dresses and veils, who strewed the tempted to lean. But it will be simply spirits. U lyllDa soon became a willing gronnd with flowers. Then oame the an act of justioe to friend Wau to oJIow listener when he was praised,and Filyn- choristers, with an instrumental band; him to explain his OWJl. feelings. '!II �e heff, who wna not wsensible to the and then mnny banner-Clarriers, it be- did in conversing with a Leader ra charms of female beauty, soon evinced ing observable that oJI the inscrIptions powsorto:r. He unburdened hlmsell �s fol- a marMd pa:rtiality for her Booi&ty. It were in Flemish, as being addregsed I( � was not leng ere their liking for eaoh to the humblest and the lelUlt educated .. Me no llkeo Mellolm man. liIe'1ioan other ripened into an afl'airof the heart, part of the crowd, who constituted a mlln COmeg in my laUndry, spi£Eee on and beClam� the subject of geperal re- large mo.jority. Under a oanopy, be- floor, ohew, ohew. BriDgee munee, mark. Nor did the yonng people at· fore whioh censers were swung, wlllked soy, 'Thust, Wau Lee?' -Won Lee te�pt to concesl What they felt for each an aged and vClne��'blo-loolHpg\priest say,' No thnst; thust dend.' Mellcan other, and Filyatieff went boldly to the in vestments of �ola�e�& tAe �st. IIl8D fJJlY, 'l\at eater I punohee.' father of his lady-love and asked for his I found on inqrury that he was not l'un�e Wau Lee's he� pall his pig blessing. But the farmer peremptorily bishop or digmty of his ohuroh ; an,d tail Wan Lee IUDS oiioP-cbop head refused; he was not going to give his was, moreover, informed that no to fleece officer. Fleece officer say, do.ughter to a strolling laborer, hesnid. ecoleslnationl anthority is given to this • Oheap John-one, two, tbree All Ulyana's tears and entreaties were festival na would be implied in the per- bounce.' Bhnltee me pig tail I\Dd Bay, of no avail; her father Wll.8 inflexible, sonal attcndanoe of a prelate from • Olimb.' Wau Lee olimbs-comee and, in order to:\ put othetl'things into Brll\es or from auy adjacent diocesej home. Melioan man steal Bbirl,-and he her head,\ he compelled her to a be- for Ostend is not yet a bIshopric. Still, olimb too.\ bothal with a wealthy toWllBman. The the benedlotion of the sea wna p'er- Wau Lee ottempted to go to BUlld.a;r betrothal was celebrated with great formed in a manner IlB lIolemo na If a school, and his story is as follows: pomr. All were merry but U1yana; oardinal had 'presided; though there \Me go on Sundby day to JoBS her thoughts were with Filyatieff, who Was a good deal of chatting on the out- house. Me takee settee nnd Melican gave her good Oo.use of uneasiness. He skirts of the throng, and the company man's boyee come along. Boyee say, had ceased to work, and now spent bis seated in the balconies of the KarsMl • Here's Ohino.' More boyee come. time in either one pot-house or another. were by no means so solemn and de- Pnll pig tail and say,'\ Bnlly 101 Chi He drank to assuage his grief; but not vout as the poorer people in the crowd nee man.' Me get mod And swear. long. He soon took an aversion to near the nltar. A salVO 01 artillery waa Fleece officer comee long, takee me to .\alDUiJJIJ\-·U rare tlllD� for 1\ Russian to fired from the other end of the Digne stlltion, Poyee fivee dollee and i:dy drink did not lessen his when the benediction had been accom- oents; go home to wash, wash. therfllore lorswore the PDt- j and then tlle prooession took II Me then go on street Dnr. Mellcan aet6nniil.� g�'i\'i!.Y'l!.'JIf.'1·�'6C� .... ·,,-baci:\� l'!to... �..I!r:!!fil.dfllUW� 1ooPl.at��.J.m.q:be_'t.)oD� where, concealed and fo:rgotten, he nll the aports and l spealulii' low�\-'1liiii ml(:'-' 'biie; \ could end his unhappy life. In this were suspended as it speakee low, too, and Bay, 'lIim rat romantic f:rame of mind he bethought only for a tew brief moments. The eater.' Me gettee mad and 8Jl,%1. \Me hImself of SIberia, and determined to band of the Oivic Guard played seoulo.r Oh.inAman-me washee-waslJee. Meno take the necessary steps to �et there as tunes as it followed the priestly reo nig. No nig. Me no rot eater. Bis Boon as possible. WIth thIS objeot in tinue: very seoular tunes indeed were lie.' Mellcan womansoreom. Oonduo· view, he, one evening soon after dnrk, some of them; but the bell of the tor run in. Him say, 'Who's up?' went to the prinoipal bazo.ar of the priest went tinkling on all the. !!ameJ MeHcM woman say, 'Dirty Ohin1l town and tried one door after another and even as that holy sound- mmglea 'suIted me.' Oonductor he tokes my until he found one he could force. He with thc musio of opera bouffe, so did staml1ees, and hesny, '·Get.' Wau Leo entered the well-tUled sh0f.' took what the incense from the oensers blend gets, fnll on the grom1d, and breakee monev he found in the til, and looked with odors less aooeptable. I had no- nose; officer oomes up. He say�, about to see if no one came. Then he tlced, during the service on the Di�e, 'Dlunk again, OhineeL' Me so.y, 'No made a bundle of some of the goods, many prostrations by women and httle dlunk.' He say 'Too thin.' Toltee and again looked about to see if no one children, and a few even by men; but me by collnr and takee me to station. oame to arrest the burglar. As he wna the passlDgof theprocession through th.jl Judge say, 'Here again, Ohinee 7' Me still unobserved, he made a bright light town was yet more produotive of popu- go out, pay ten dollee and 11fty cents. in the shop. This was soon seen, and lar excitement. People rushed from Me go home madee-red hot madee, people oame and seized the supJ.>osed the beer.shops, in whioh, as I swear, blenk dishes, aha.ve off pig tail, robber. On his trial, he simply doclared ho.ve said, devotional tapers were buy c!:: hat, ahut up laundry, and go that OWlDg to hiB disappointment in hghteJ, and actually threw themselves to O· , love, he wanted to be sent to Siberia; down na an image. was earried by. At And this was Wall Lee's first deter that this, and this only, was his objeot the windows above women clasped their mination, but since then he has Moon- 1O breaking into the shop. The jUrors hands and wept. What was the senti- sidered it, gone back to his trade, and were unaDlmous in rendering 0. verdiot ment, what the moving ca'UBe, I could still washes and irons as of old. of aequittal, whieh was received by loud not for the life 01 me guess. But it was acclamations on the part of the speota- there, beyond a question; and henoe- tors. forth, when I am In any mood to speeu- The farmer was now compelled late on psyohological mysteries, I shoJI relent. He broke off the always remember that orowd at Ostend, of hIS daughter with the and the benediotion of the sea. God. Their �l'e& met. Why shorild not Asenath sing? \ 'Senath I\ OIled the old man, out upon the burning bricks; he wna now scorched from his gray hairs to 1U8 patched boots. The answer came tri umphantly: \ To die no moro. DO more. no moro I ' \ Sene, littlo Heno l\ Bome One pulled him back. A 'I{ounK Lady Wedded I\b,l Wtdow.d on tbe Same DI\Y. Between three and four years ago Miss Emma Hulsizer, then a girl of about sixteen [ears of age, went to De· troit to perlee herself in painting anti music, for both of whioh arts she evinced decided talent. She is the fourth daughter of William Hnlsizer, The Founder or Harrisburg, Pa, of Rooheater, Oakland county, Mieh., The founder of the city I>f Harris- a gentleman as noted for his liberality burg, Ps., was John Harris. His house, and hospltnllt, as he is for his aooinl . and polHicnl influence, still standing, wna tho flrst stone build- While in the city Miss Hulsizer met ing erected in Harrfsbnrg. One un- many persons who became her worm hnppy day B tribe of predatory Indians and personal friends. After severo1 passed down the river on a piraticnl expedition, and on their return stopped months of intense applioation to her at the Harris house, Most of them studies she was sent La the Oonvent of were iutoxtcated, and they demanded Villa Maria, in Montreal, where she more liquor from .t1arrIS, which he reo rsmained for two years na a pupIl, dis fUlled to gIve. Benring him a grudge tingnished alike for talentll and atten as the Itlly of tl tribe hostile to them, tion to her studies, and where sho tl b d I' t I graduated this summer with gretlt ley ouu um 0 a mu berr;r-troe, and honor, alter whioh Bhe returned to her threatened to burn him Ahve. Dry home. During one of her vaoations fagots were gathered and heaped around b . d fl . M' the stake, and one of the Bavuges ap- s e vislte a rlend} ISS Moyes, 01 pro ached With a lighted torch. Sud- New York, and wna wtroduced to Dr. denly there WIlS a whoop, a rustlin ... in S. E. Moyes, the brother of her hostess. '\ The resnlt was au acquaintance whieh the bush, and a friendly trIbe sprang culminated in a betrothal, with the eon- upon the scene, headed by a negro d slave named Hercules. The savages sent an approbation of the relatives of fled, Ilnd Harris was res Clued from his both of the parties most interested, I 't' Th\ t h d and it was decided that the weddiag perl ous POSI Ion. e WOlden a 0. shonld take place lUI soon nfter Miss profound efl'eot on his mind, and there- Emma's \\'oduation as possible. Ac- after he menaured his actions by hheir ... pIety. The faithful slave Hercules cordingly this entir.e s'nm.mer hna seen Bllved his master's life 0. second time, active preparations in progress for the d d h' tt h t f event, and an elegDJlt trou88eau hna an prove IS a no men to the amily been prepared for the bride eleot, noth- Ilgain and again. • Hams still prospered and made a ing whioh c�ld contribute !lither �o c1eanng, and p.stabl!ehed a tradIDg-sta- her comfort or adornment having been tlOn nenr the mouth of the Jnniata. omitteu, and everything being chosen with a view of the bridol tour to En At his de'lth, in December, 1748, he rope, whioh was expeClted to oonsume owned about nine hundred aores of I d d d h d at lenat a year. an n lacent to an on t e grflun of The wedding was to have taken plq_oe the preBent site of Harrieburg, two and oards or invitation were issued in hundred a�es on the opposite shore, .time to pennit friends from all parts of Jllld about hundred (leres at the � tt,..e (ioill.OdbjJ;1Jlm�t\¢cM1;�-'l��'( the -aQllllZl!. to be t!l���� jbD��· ... -c_n<'UJ:\' .. anecdotes related 8�eaa on thilt oboalffiiii; 'the ur'�'Dll:ra- very romantic Bavor, and some ready tions were of :the most and story-wtlter may profit by.the two we elaborate desoription, it was in- trllnscrlbe here. tended that the happy eve�t should The few neighbors already oalled the ecl!pse anythirlg of th�kind ever known Harris honse the \l\hnsion although in that part of the State. Friends were It was of the most unpretentious ehar- proouring theu presents, and itseemed acter. The mansion-house then was as though a more atlSpicious beginning d d b d of a life of married happiness would Rnrroun e y a stocka e, as security be impossible; but fnte deereed a sad ngmnst maro.udwg Indians. Ono night reversal of tbe foieture, and that the nil Eugllsh milItary officer was inVIted to stay with the family, and, in enter- cup of joy shou d be replaoed by the IDg the house, he left the �ate of the ohalioe of sorrow. At a late hour a etockl1l1e unfastened.. While he was at telegram was received announcing tbe Mnppt\r WIth his host, an Indian stole sudden and dangerous illness of the through the gate ef the stockade, and groom and oalling lor the immediate thrust a rifie through Qne of the pOlt- presence of his intended bl'ide. Wild holes of the house_ The DJght was with am:iety, yet hopiDl1' against hope, damp, and the rifle missed fire. Be- Miss Emma complied WIth the request, fore the sa'Va�e had time to aim with and immediately started for BnJfalo, M H where she found h�...:vorsb .fears were another weapon, rs. anis blew out confirmed, a counOlI o( physician!! ho.v- the oandle, and so put the room and ing pronounced the patient as beyond the company m darkness. al1 hope of rocovery • We have a SUspiolon that we have al- The meetmg between the Illmost ready seen the incident that remains to dying man o.nd his heartbroken he be told embodied in\ thrlUlDg sensa- throthed was too sacred to be made the tionnl sketoh, but here it IS, at all subjeot of a newspaper paragraph ; but events, vonched for by the oldest the seqnel is one whIch so nearly re records of Hamsburg, whence we de rive it. Mrs. Harris had o.n Irish girl sembles romance ss to be almost in- III ber whom she sent into the credible. candle. The Tho A. Warm Locllltty. The Virginia City (Nev.) Enterpri8e tells II. round of marvelous stories, and its lo.st produotion is as follows: .. We are informed that tbe reason why there are no shade trees about the hotel at the Genoa Hot Springs, and why none oan be grown there, is that the ground iB too hot for them. It is snid thnt np-on digging through the thiu surface soll, a sub-strlltum of hard earth-cnlled a hard-pan-is found. This is two or three feet in thickness, and upon dig ging through it almost anywhere in the neighborhood, boiling hot water is en coWltered. On acconnt of this snbter ranean lo.ke of hot water, trees of no kind can be made to grow in the neigh borhood. Soil enongh for the nourish meut of the trees caunot be oolleoted upon the surfaClG, and the moment their roots pass throngh the substratum they are in hot wo.ter and o.re cooked. By sinking an artesian well in this pl!lce, there could doubtless be obtained a fine fountt.in of hot water, but if it were do sued to surround tnis fountain with trees, it would be _ neo�,ssnry ro have them made of cast-llon. that you knew orying yon from h d'd h h d with the woman Inll ; hellr 11 flhriek from DpI thnt w en questione ,sal sea I froze her blttod; to SI'I' thA sohd ceil- Ood knows where; a wass of long, lair stanwng in a barrel of Ba::t-seed. The cording Ya a h oltergym:n I f II ing gape above her; to spe the wa.lls hair visible here, a foot there, three sequel to the story you who read story- summone , t 11. mOB so emn 0 a �ewspaper LlIe. d . _, t t . I fin \era of a ho.nd over there; the anow papers habItually may guesb. The bn.- rites, a death· bed marriage, wns cele- an WlnuOWs R a((ger; 0 see Iron pI ., d' \ � k t d Th d'b d b <0 lars reel; and vast machinery throw uright fe under foot; oharre\ lImbs rei contained gunpowder, not flax-seed, \ra e • e scene as escn e y one Some gloomy people look with ap- up its giant armB, and a tangle of hu- Bud helplesll trnnks tossod about j WhICh had been ne�ligently left uncov- of those present was neyer t6 be for· prehAnsion upon the prospeots of a new mau laces blnnoh anu Writhe I She strong men earrylDg c9vered things by ered. Mrs. Hams arose from her gotten. The groom, supported in the paper, says the New York Herald, and sprang liS the fl()or !lnuR. As pillar yon, at sight of which other strongmen work table without II. word, and went arms of his devoted mother, fcebly re- we hear dreary vatioinations na to the after pillar gave wo.y, she bonnded np have fainted; the little yellew jet that mto the store· room. She carefully sponded to the questions of the om- fate o( 0. new onl'. Mr. Hndson, in his an inohne plane, With the gulf yawn flared up aud died in Rmoke, and Bared Itfted the candle from the powder, blew elattng ministflr; the bnde, kneeling ndmIrable \History of Journalism,\ ing after hpr. It saine(l npon her; be- Rgaln, leaped out, hcked the ootton It out, oalmly reproved the servant, besidA the bedside, with true womanly prints the names of some hundreds of , bales, tnsted the Olled machinery, lind then resumed her work, hproism repressed the nnguish WIth newspnpers that have lived and died yond wero the stnirs nne. nn open door, d th d h' h h h ttl' � crunche e notted wooo, danee ou w IC er ear was ren ; an on y SIS- and gone to rest in a silent paner mill she threw ont bor Ilrms and fltruggled , h' I t 'Ah d th b he b oth �. d the heapecl-up stone, t rew Its crue er wa ..... e Wl agony y r r er, And we confess that, as preBldent of a on with hnndR and kneo�, tnppe in arms high into the mght, roo.rl'd for Hints for the Honsebold. and a few fond friends knelt in ailent savI'ngR bank or a trust company, we the gellrlDg, snu saw, na she fell, a I 1 fi II d . f th d wer ,,'d wh' h square onken beam above ber vield and joy at he p ess remen, and swa owe New earthenware should, before be- grle ns e wor seal IC Rhould p:refer some other investment crash; It wafl of a fresh, red c�lor; she wreck, death and life together out of ing used, be soaked in oold water for made one of those two so flO on to be than newspaper stock; or, to be more dimly wondered why; as she felt her you:r sight-that thlDg stands Blone in twenty-four hours; this WIll render it parted by the hand of death. clear ID meaning, stook in a new news· handR slIp, her knees shde, support, the gallery (·1 tragedy less hable to crack, as well al1 enabling The :loctor bequeathnd his wife na a paper. Bnt nIl the same, we believe in .. • � .. .. � it to be made thoroughly olean. sacred legaoy to his mother and RiRter, new journals. We should like to see tiA�' t���?::�:s g�e��;:-lv���n 'I ues- The ohild, who had called for her For washing artlClep whIch are not with whom she WIll henceforth reside, two hundred daily morning pu.pers in d mofther, begRn to sob out that she wna gress\ such as tea things, etc., every and to whom she IS now bound by hes this metropolis. ThlDk what a good ay, the tenth of JanUAry, the Pember- f J. to d I .. 0 h J of love. He survived !lntll oue o'olock ld ton m!ll, nil hands bewg at the time ou n ral Ie none. ome ere, housekeeper should be prOVIded Wlth h f th f th d h time pubho oplDion wou have under- dId Molly,\ said Sene, .. onn you crn\IVl a good-sized wooden bowl, for by oon- on t e morulDg 0 e our ay, w en gOlDg the nroeess of eduontlon from ��, t�C'lr�!�l a!��:� . over the tele- around 1\ Molly crnwled around. taot With this they WIll be less liable he sank lUto aqmet fllnmber,fromwhioh two hundred teaohers I In fnot, we do '. . . t I • . .. Put ?,our hend in my 1(, nnd {our to be ohipped and broken thnn when an he nevl'r awoke. not Bee In our progress of lDvention �apu Wire\ \prang In 0 aTge vype w t· t .. '11 \D M as wnn n wealthy mnn nnd l't armR a ou my wals ,anu 'WI iU my earthen basin is used. Still further to r. oy - A -, � why eve- llll'ge firm, every dealer in he newflpopers, passed (rom lip to hp, h 1 . tl I is said he hall 16ft his bride a handsome -J • • d Q nine clays' WAnder, gave plo.oe to the anr R lD yours-so, Jere guesR avoid the danger of breakage, one po.tent medioines, every politlolan an sucoessful candidate and the muttering thnt's better, isn't it 1\ article only should be put In at a time. fortune. opera manager should not have his own South, and wna forgotten. But the1. had not glven them up yet. A small cloth should be kept With newl:lpaper. It is a great discipline to Who shnll say what It wnll to tl'e 750 In the shU unburned rubbish, at the whloh to cleanse them whlle in the Ills Official Crook. a man to be compelled to sit down and 80uls who were buried in tho ruins? right, Bome one han wrl'nched an opl'n· water, for merely rinsing them and then k ·th coldly put his thoughts into print. d n tI lDg Within a foot of Sene's faClfl. They WIpIng them on the tea-oloth will not Sheep are Rn Important [too WI Then he Cl\ll always -10 himself jnstice. Marrlru:es or BfOO ela onR,. What to the eighty.elght who tiied that . tl IkE II'sh farmers says the Danbury \I I olawed at the sohd Iron pm es I e !Dsnre Clleanliness. • nil', NotblDg, as nIl men know, is more enay StatistiBS presented to the Frenoh deathofl'xquisltflBgony? Whattothe savage thing\. A firemBn famtl'd In For washin\ the inside of JUgB, a man. The Enghsh people are fend of than to edit a newspaper, l'onmal18m Academ� show that the marriages of 'Wreoks 01 men and woml'n who endure th k .. G' -t '\ . d tl.... mutton na an artIcle of food, o.nd have f . to hi h b t h h e smo e. Ive I np orle .. e mlDlature mop, with 0. handle 0. foot belDg the pro eSSlon w 0 every blood re ations form 0 out two per cen . �!:�h � t�h��y� �h�e !r:�I��o:d t e�� crowd from bchm:1. \It can't be doue I long, Wte those sold for cleaning the it quite steadily. When tb,ey tIre of American is bom. So that, so far from of all the marriages in France, and that Fall baok I\-then hushed, awe-struck. ohimneys of lamps, is indispensable. mutton they haye lamb. Beef they thore being no room for the new paper, the deaf and dumb o1l'spring at birth. gineer Who, when the fatal pillars were An old man was orawling along on hiS A httle soda should sometimes be never negleot. They are the most do- there is room for a hundred jourilals of consangnineons marriages are, in first. delivered to them for inspection, hands and knees over the heated briokll. used for wnnhlng l'U�S, and If the same oile and uncomplainIng of peop'ewhen 1·\ol·t. t'on to the desf and dnmb bom had found oue broken nnuer their eyes, H ld H' h � beef is around. Their sheep are the 1A propor 1 \et recetpted the oontrll6t and built with e was a very 0 man. IS gray alrB is oClClasionally use for washing tea- m ordinary wedlock, at Lyons, fnll J blew about in the wind. things, it will make them look much best in the world, I believe. You have The Temperature or the Sun, twenty.five per cent. ; at lenat twenty- them a mill whose thin walls and wide, .. I want my little gal '\ he said. cleaner and brighter. seen piotures of shepherds with the five per cent. in Paris, and thirtl per unlnlppo:rted stretches could never keep \Oan't any�ody tell me where to find Sona should, however, never be used prcverbialorook in then hands. Ididn't The latest investigation on the tem- oent. in Bordeaux-the �roportion of theii'Plmm nnaided? One that we love my little gal T' exoept in small qnantIties, nor should think a party oould be a shepherd with- pero.tare of the sun by Father Secchl the deaf and dumb, by buth, inoren- may go to tho and we A rougli fellow pointed in perfect si- It be oonstantly employed, as it ha.q a out this crook, any moro than a man has been recently pnblished, and he with the degree of blood relation- Lk h Lh k cO'lld be the lead l' of an orchestro. I de thnt th\ lowest limIt of th18' .1onoo.-wuuug L e amo e _ tendency to injma the glQzo. � Ql' ........... l ...... ,.. cono U S � '\ The data show tlOnti._h'7I., our h'\ I'll have her out yet. I lim an potash has not this inl·url---....lreet, but a- pair-1)f-�I-IW-�IAQi-1;etIl'P1n'8.tuJl'O-llIlu.81;-b&-alll()'8I�-lIa:s,OlJQ.(le�r.·I.:n;�t.....r;:.;;;.. life, not his death, w Ich btl h I Sh' littl 4UW\''''' that the first man whom I SIlW I Thl'S determm' otl'on he ar - ted man, u oau e p. e s my e neIther cleanses so thoroughly as soda. ks g - child in ordinary marnage, repreBen anll'npla,,_ But that he should go � 1 H d tl;. t there dip li d sheep carried one of these croo. rived at by a oomparison of their solar . th will b .. hteen ft __ ... .\ .. � sare, daily oonunonplaoe 00- gw, yfe se� .:!ll kmo h a f om chok - For tea-oloths nen must be utsle , nab didn't know what a! rook w� for, but radiation and that of the lliectric lif!t. by figrzre�, 18 oneb, t ere .o-f rug sins cti1D'klIoD, unnoticed and unoaressed, per 0 wa r; I eep er r - cotton fabrics are not sufilcien y a - ftlways beli .... ed it was a badge of the 1 d th in marnages e ween un> cou • lDg, mILybe. Now, keep oheery, Hene. sorbent to dry the earthenware. For\ \'. Id He has emp oye e same a'Ppara s, thirt\\ seven between unoles and nieces, B--\I a little, perhaps, because he Your old father'll get ye out. Keep np washing greasy earthenware, two tnbs occupalion, whose origin I cou not namely, the thermo-heliometer, de- and \�eventy in mtm'iages between The French ...... e. the door o�en and tells us how a good heart, ohild. That's it.\ of snitable size should be provided; fathom, handed down from century to seribed in niB well-known work on the nephews and aunts. It appears, too, The power wielded by Louis XIV:. oross we \·e thIS mO .... ;.,.\ • .Illld t.he'\ I ' __ L1.. D \1 1 bad oentury since the time when sheep were sun The temperature produced by • Ith ts'f I ted f th t despotio ... �--!= \.. t s no use, ..u.uJ.ter. Dn\ ee , one. in w.hioh to wll.8h tllem, mnst con- dis' that the mosb hell. y plll'en ,Ire a of France, was 0 e mos bring rum up the steps, \'1)y-and-bye a father. I don't mind it- very muoh,\ tain hot water, with a little soda, or, for invented. I�mll':enuine gust. ftdia'tiou \WU\oba&r.v8ll � Bome in blood, 1I1U;y have denf and dumb f'::=::' When: iho-.m�.;o_ xnangled mass of death and horror- k d t th t' b h t' d to when I saw this shepherd use the saol'ed b t noon on seve-l days I'n Jul� and h te f n ..on hac e a e 1m er; e ne the reasons stated above, potash or a ou LU 'ohildren anyone e wro as 0 OnD: that iB hnrd. ; he bewildered himself with his wood nahes; and the other, in which to erook to oapture the strayft'h �nihlald was determined to be 36i times t at of • is ordeled that _ shall 'be B!- Sene's father henrd, at twenty cheerful words. rinse them immediately after they are by catching hold of one 0 t eu n the carbon :points of his electrio light. How They Shoot at Creedmoor. rested and taken to the bastile. His Iltes of five, what be thonght to be the \ No more ye needn't, 'Senath; for wnahed, must be flIled with clean cold legs nnd tripping them np. The awful Both Sacchl and Him agree that the majesty insknota the governor to '1'6- rumble of an earlhqualle unp\r his it'll be over m B minnte. Don't be water, tmth onme upon me like a flash, and I temperature of solar radiation may de- The regulations of these m�tc11es �- the p8!80n in custody until further 'VfIlY feet, and sUlod with bated breath downoast yet. We'll have ye safe lit sat down heavily .. a broken-hearted pend eIther solely on the superficial clnde all firing from a .. rest; bnt this \ The king signed the d�u- 1I'aitlng fOI the crash. As nothing fur- home before ye know it. Drink a lit- WHAT.HliI l't'IBANT.-A �ter in the man. I had thougnt It a beautiful em- stratum of the sun or on a conSIderable means an artifloial rest. The mar�. ment, which was indorsed by any nun- ther .appenred to happen he took his tIe more water; do now. '£hey'll get Bt. Paul Press tells a new story of Hor blemt and it proves to be a hind-leg thickness of its substance, according as man, however, may choose BDl POSI- ister, and the arrest took p18oe. Some BUck and limped out into the street. at yfA now, Bure I\ ace Greeley. Horace wrote a note to a. snatoner. this latter is opaque or transparent. tion or posture cf the body; e may slight di1l'erence was made as � the A. crowd of men with white lips were Bot out a.bove the eraokle and the brother editor in New York whose Him concludes that if the transpnrence lie fiat, face dOWDward, or on his back. machinery of the arrest. aooording to ClOtu1ting the tnills. Pacifl� Atlantic, toor a woman's voioe rang out like a �ting was equnlly illegible with bis Tbe Wealth. were nearly perfect, the solar tempera- face upward, or take � recumbent the rank of the prisoner. n it was a WashiDgton-Pem}>erton. where was bell: own. The recipient of the note, uot ture might well be only a few thousand position, or go down on ·s. knees �r person of noble birth, a tUe of mous- Pembertcn 7 Where Pemberton had ., We're going homo to die no more.\ being able to read it, sent it back by That the wealth of the United States degrees; but various phenomena, stand ereot. He may braoe his body lD quetaires did the buainesa ; if it; � a blazed 1I'ith its lomps lntI� night, and A ohild's notes �nivered in the MOrns, the same messenger to Mr. Greeley for is passing into the hands of a tew is a among them the observations of Prof. any way by the nee of his arms and of low degree who was to be m- hummed witb its iron lips thiB noon. a. bite I '..1 t' S • it to b th l' f In hi ddr Langle ... of Pittsburgh on 'he oroBBing legs, and may use either for \a rest:' th fa or archers oJ d d ti;'b k il 'bl From sealed an unseen groves, w ,e UOl ... A IOn. upposmg e e very common be Ie • s a ess J h h h if he onn get it into satisfactory POBl- e sergean . �ea � hu!d;elf�ei ��ntie!ir� e, young lips swelled the glnd refrain- answer of his own. no�, Mr. Greeley before the Maryland Agl'ioulturol and of theourrents of the fa oto� ere, �allw tioD. All the marksmen in the reoent oft' without ceremon:r. The • \ We're going going home.\ looked over it but llkeWlBe was unable Mechanical AasoCliation, Senator Thur- that the !!�ar snr ace eSBen y match on both sides .orafmm1� hDat1ea:�.- -,_. \ .. • • • her :yes :tter: time: The orawling Bm�ke t�ed �ellOWd �::ft' ��d m:!t�!!: r:l inf;�a.:J �\: ��:s:��sra� �8 �enc:�t� ���:tei;1r:�!rn:.t �:::se::J:� bent\ POSitioD� some lying face on �=ela�:n= • purple ligh� had turned re�t voice after VOIce bro e an fool mean?\ .. Yes, fIir,\ said the boy that of1:pulationp and the increase of temperature of 180,000 deg. to 170,000 wards, nsilIg their knees and elbows and� on receivinR tlte her, Cut slio had hushed tltterly. One only sang on1\ tha� - j t hat .. _\ sm-\ arms l·S . ..Ansl·\'erabl� \\'eater deg. above \;ven is, therefore, not in- brace themselves in position; SOJP.8 answer, the .... ft\\8 ordert the ooourte(t to her like Bilvm-. It flung deftJince d�wn at � IS us 'IV ,0<> says. IUA \\\ J\� ndm{9,ible, but must be looked upon lying on thell' backs, using then: �ea \\\\\'IS 1180 Men fltnicJc on Ule denUl. It chimed into the lund sky rothanrtan�:�, .!� °g�i� �je:�� � IlS at Jeast giving a lowe limit to the and feet as rests, and some mcline pop_�. = \::ih:'Of�_I�' Ii:ht \ olooks vit,hOtl' a tremor. For One stood b&. A man is at the bottom of indolence • 0UA.1 th �e value of the temperature of the slightly to one Bide, yet still on their IUtDO<& .• in the fttrnaC6, and Ids {otm when he is too lazy to labor Uilder a � for tpe future prospenty of e \\.. baCks. of forever. ;j�riimiii��IDitifiliiiiiUi��tiiW1f.W;�iik4HiDk;.ule..:.lolm of il'cs Son of mistake. _ �_.__ _ _ _ Ike �tdg'\ �t11\ Il:IlabUabed 1851. t\\ - -Advertidnc Looal Notices lQ centa per lIDo first Insortion and IS cents per llne for each !ItIbsequont 1nsetw tlon. Notioos ot D'cathB. publlabed free::of charxe f an,. addltlons to ordfue.ry annotlllcOlIh.\'Ilts ie1i conft! por line Logal Notices lit mtos prescribed by law. A. Boy'll CompoSltfoD. good, but dutch wna a man bated a steel trap with dutch ohees and pretty soon he began to tine ded r�ts evry mornin'. At the end of a weak there was ded rats evry were, but the trop had never been spraDg. Then he found out the rats was starved 'cause they had wom their teeths oft' nawin' the tnp and oouldn't take their meels. They thought the trap Wall the bate and the dutch was the trap. You know who told me that abont the dutch. Wen he oomes to see my_ sister he asks me how I'm gettin' on with. my oomp<lsition, an� t�en he tels �e thmgs wioh I may put m It, and my SlSter she Bays llhaw wat a fib, and I mussent bleeve a werd he says! and IO?� in � eyes with her'n, but he am t a blt afrode. Her'n are black, but hi.'n is gray, and so is rats. Rata is long tails, and if you belry II ded un with his tail a-stiakin' O'llt it. would be a vine. Rats is killed py tarriers, wioh is put into a pit were tlie rats hna been celiched and let out. If itlwasn't for these tamers there would be too many rats for any body to live. The black·and-tan is finest eo look at, bnt the rots licks 'em like smoke. I asked my father if ferrits was good for rats, ana he says yes\ t�es \\'_8t they lives on wen they can t 81t ve81t. tibles; but he was readin' the newa pBper, and mother she says wen a JDllD 18 rendin' 8 newspapGl' they never knows nothin'. My uncle Ned he _spoke !lP and said that was the best fraim of mme to rend the papers. Newspapers tore up little mokes a good nessed f?r ra�, and the puls moh wimmen puts m th6ll' hare is oolled rata too, tiut not the bitin' kind. Bishep Ratto was e� by ra�s, ev!y little tiny bit up, and serve him mlty well rigbt too; but they don't now 'canse their is more bishops than there Rats is row-denu, row-dentists, my sister's young man sea. • .. • t: - •