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Iffr f&y^fw^^ £#%,%J^^?^^ ^ _ SB MS: ailSubsci\' j advanoc ,scribers, PRINTING. ELIZABETHTOWN, ESSEX COUNTY, N. Y., THURSDAY, APRILS, 1888. rsMsi red roads of UMUh ni«H «aw heard {ha w^onZZilZZ fortable looking oabfa stood brS K«M* . »d tiu. th* wayfarar aatoaai' wtta a ^Haao^at patch. Printings ess Cards. O & GROVER, RD L. HAND, llor at Law, IBETHTO WN. K. DUDLEY, . COL'.VSELLOR AT LAW FFPI County N. Y. S W. SHEEHY, D & BROWN, B. BISHOP, ,D COUNSELLOR AT LA' ,x Oountv. N. Y. f STAFFORD, ^jnW i or if. Boom 31. IOK 0. HALE, j*Jle>ck. Ohlcaj?o, 111. M B. KELLOGG, 'own, Essex Ooanty, N. Y. !D C. KELLOGG, •wn, Essex Co.. N. Y. Essex Co., N. Y. ZRKELEY, ^FF, - - - PRC AC LAKE VILLAGE, 'jklin Co., N. V. >USE. TPOHT, N. Y. •s rwouily boon fiitir* eled, nnil IH n>.w nun jl. «- A ttrst-f>l,iflH Live, -n with this houmv R. POTTER. Dr. E. T. Strong, HA8 REMOVED TO Elizabethtown, N. Y., OFFICE AT HIS RESIDENCE ADJOININGI O. ABEL. ESQ. DR. J. E. TAGGART, Dentist. Boe opposite the Richard* House, WESTPORT, N. t\ J. E. BARNES, Licensed Auctioneer FOB EBSEX COUNTY. Westport, Es Kitended irv Te s JE. BA.ENE8, N Y M. J. McDERMOTT, Carriage and Sleigh Bnilder, Mineville, Essex County, N. Y. pairing Done nd Satisfactio With Neatness FIltST-OLAgS WLen in want of i EAM EAM HARNESS HARNESS my kind of ny kind of ny kind, H AUNE ARNE FARM FAIU! BOTTOM PRICES BOTTOM PRICES Lake. N. Y. iT ADJACENT TOWNS. IROANS REGULATED \ BEPAIRED. 11H A\l> HO H E ilUEL HAYNES NO. 34. MATCHED, HOT MATED. I have a darling wife i love; Ho other imowait But aoe and land eod above- Who shall dtsclow it t Our hearts an manned, not our handaj Yet the my wife Is; No other aba to all toe land's Bo near nay lite is. Bh« comes and goes at her sweet wui ; My heart goes ww» her, For lire or death, tor good or iu, Or where or whither. WeoanaM break the bars of late Tha^sUUaeirua; Bmteaula art tree and Heart* may mate; Who snail deny UST —New rtrt With brightening eyes, she addod: \ O. . •eel Ootayla, you ajre a ganiufll Oonu here and ait by me, 'and well arrange it aJL\ Ttegold*n«ntninn.time had oomc, and the wooda S«>B«1 Dowll Court were wear- I hh IHtUe Shxdotm hid tWpp«l aroaad all <Uy, lathering th« sweetest nwea, arraogiqg i tt If Dl hi d l tsts In, , gq g of Dnwlen china, adding th it f rtt THE YOUNG WIFE'S PLOT. '' They are determined not to like me,\ said Ootftvia Darell, with the tears of mortt» fled prid* sparkling in her eyes aa ahe laid down the frigid letter she had bean reading. And it la cruelly hard for me to be forced to meet (hem without Sigisinnnd's presence sustain*itnd uphold me. I know Just how it will be. My mother-in.law will look ooldly and critically upon everything I do; my atepdangbter will fanoy me a tyrant, and ateel herself against me M if I were an inquisitor. Home will be a dungeon and life a burden 1 Ob, I wish—I almost wiah,\ •he added, correoting herself, with the ahy •mile of happy wifehdod—\ that I had nev- er married. But, after all, what nonsense that is, when Slgismnnd la so good, so noble, i worthy, of a wife's devotion {\ Mrs.\Duroll wason her way hondt from India, and, seated In Un'pool, marblo-pav«4' ipartment \at Gibraltar, from whence the Peninsular and Oriental steamship was to sail the next day, ahe watohed the palm- Uavea swaying in the breeze, the flutter of the gay greeu-and-white awnings, and the rbaned Eastern servants passing to and •to with trays of black coffee, delicately- vorod loeri, moulded to imitate apples, ingas und pomugrenatos, with absent, un- seeing eyos. sr before had «be been parted from her basband, who was American oonaul at one of the oriental ports, but a snddon call had arisen for his prenonoe many hundred illes back in the mountain country—a wil- ftew beavtiM to tfc* suit of apartment* which had been prepared for Mlu Weldon, the only child oX \ ' firUnd.\ \ For we must enjoy her society all we Mn before my odious stepmother oome*,' •aid Eudora, all uueonsolous that she was it the least dagret unoharitab).. Poor child 1 ah. only eohosd the ohime of popular opinion, after all. And when grandmamma', pony phaeton earn, baok from the train with the tall, love, ly lady in blaok, Eudora flew into her arou, •rlth all a child's innooent enthnsiam. \Standoff a little, and let me look at you,\ said the child, Joyously, poshing back her Jetty curls—ah, so like Slgiamund's that Octavta's heart thrilled within her I \ Oh, you are exactly like what I piotured yon in my mind* And we are going to be so happy together—you and I, and grand* .ma—until—until my stepmother comes 1\ OoUvia lookad wistfully at her. \Dear Eudora I\ she said, \ I love yon already. Promise me that you will love me I\ •Wftfe, t*6» and lip. with kfcam \ Amt#km Weldto,\ said she, \ I prom- iae yon a thousand times over 1\ And !*rn. Dnrell led the guest smilingly to her room. \ My darling,\ said she, \ I want you to be very happy her*. For you aro filling a plane In our hearts that has long boen va- nt—my daughter's plaoe I\ \ But Mrs. Slgkmund Darell ?\ suggested the stranger, ootoring deeply. The- old lady made a gesture of dissent \ I oan never love her I\ she ntt*r*d, sad. <r ' But me—you will be kind to m. V \ My dear Janle, you aro like my own ohild already I\ lovingly spoke the old lady. to which it was linpowible that h« could Uko his (Micato young wife. Tbnro Is no (oiling how long I may b« lined among thoso »onil-fl»vagOB, Ooty/ ti* had said to hin wife, \and I can neither to yon nor loave yon. Oo homo to my mother, rind make friends with litlln Kudo- II is poasiblo that I tuny follow you in r mouths, If all K o«* well. Itut, nt all In, I shall t«r\ safer if yon urn noour* on rieau soil. IleiiHoi), your maid, is an itemed traveW,\ and Leonard, who ; wo n R11 h « art *- 8n e W M B^ndi commands tho Pamnoa, la my ol<l friend. M , Kudor*'. oonftdaat, the pot and sunshine of will lnck no nnro \ ( \ 10 boos*. And oh, how her heart beat Higismund.\ cri«» Mrs Darell, ! wbn n Mr * ^^ took \ d a t h * r tendorl T 0M evening, and se-ld, with a kiss : And Mrs. Dnrall novor nuspeotod th* rnin of bitter tears which poor Ootavia shed when she was at last left alone. But I will make them love met\ sb« ight; \ and when otioe their affection it thoroughly mine, I will not let them with- it from me, murnly because I am Ootavia Dnrell instead of Janle Woldon 1\ And this boauliful young impostor had not been a week in the honne before sho had nrllng, in>«« di«ii«y, \a , a «tcpdftughtcr! [ nt thnni, all b; ! j J. C. OSBORNK. FIRST NATIONAL BANK of PORT HMY rhtuiK o o r l>ur^hllN«^ o f Ha m l.> »IH1 nulrond !,«»!),)« I,,,MKI.I tu.<l «<, nrt llnirv, N V. N..v 1 1HT,\ F H MWCI.I , <'iw4hl..r Mies ELLA L. LAM30N, cfior of Piano, Organ and Ha A \l H II D COUNSELLOR AT LAW t' N A V K M I BANY,N. Y. nalon Notary rfy e a spe o Crow i Poin t N. V ! M JOHNSON, 'OGR A FH KK. Point, Easox County, with \\ T . II . < 4 lilt. fo r KMCX < 'o. , I»or< llonry tf. 1. Hom e Ins. (V <>f Ne w York , ('.-ipiiiil $ ;i,uiMi.omi 1;O^.M\S paid m (his ('nmpjuiv in Ks^cx ( 1 <». liv in<\ In .Inn v I.M, iss'j, ov.'i- $24,000. Othe r ti IH t clas s enmpanin s rc]i?( i s<'ntc(l an d al l busines s |innnpll v nllemle d to. Call on or :ul<ln\^s as IIII »ve. HW-1 with a eounio nioth«r-in-l o b*\e«mpel • yeelfl\ \My dour lltlln «<»>•.<• '.\ «ftl«l tin laughing, \No w j-.,,,_ar.. frlgh mere shadows. My mother m th. oldlftdy in Iho world. • I'd l>- » Ung.\ \Oouliln't I stay with your\ pie young wifo, olingiuu to his a n r&lhra b* murdered by Iho native*, c iholorn down oi 4morion nil l.y i llyorlod ont Mr. Dnrell. j And so Dm matter had UM I setUnd. And Ootavia WM thus fm on hiwr Uxiions ! '»>•*«*• homo, whnn, rr.»««i)) K Hie ( i)i«qii«r»Mi j jmvmnm.l willi'.iii. a alight, ymnoful figure ; fringe,!, r' ( th« bonuUfitJ >trs Mien WVMO.I, ,I Iho platan, limn go l*ok to \ Dfar Iittte Janie, I was thinking ban many thousand dollar* I would give if Slgis- mnnd's wife were like yon.\ Ootavia turned Drat red, tbou whitn. \Mnt Durell,\ aheaaid, hurriedly, \if I w*r* fllghroand's wife—\ And Jast than a bevy ot gu**U were shown to, and the words of ooofeesion wer* dteeked on Octavia's tips. Bat the secret betrayed Itself at loot, at .•or*** will always do. It was a ro*y Detomber sunset, the snowy field* all dyed with carmine, the ha H « fir, ef mo**y logs ereoklitifl in th* tiled Are- pbM* Of Dnrell Court. Tb* old lady was **r*iMty dosing in tb* bla*s, and Eudora WM helpina; h*» gtwat to arrange roMia, fresh gathered from tb* groen-bou***, in anliqp* majolioa va***, when thn door «ud- dnnly opened aod a tail, w*IUnioulde(l figure strorift In. ACE AND THE INTELLECT. \ The rioaer a nature,\ says Oarlyle, •' the harder and slower its developement. Two boys were onoa of a okas in the Edinburgh Grammar Sohool, John prim, and. dux j Walter ever slovenly, oonfused and a dolt In due time John becameJBaihe John of Hunter Square, and Walter twoamo 8ii A HWLL OP GREENBACKS. War has its horrors—but no less its amen- ities, as the following carious story wiM Bhowi A short time ago Colonel B. F. Sawyer wrote an article for the Philadelphia Times describing the battle of —, ^ .., oalKm . xhe artigle waa copied extensively Mdoompktaat Of all the vegetable, to thej throughout the country. Among othet cabbage,\ This slowly developed Walter Boott of the uuberse \ 88 when he made his first draft of \Waverly and was 44 when he te d blih d i hen h rewrote Nearly every one of thos td ilit y nd published it l hi h tarred immortality upon him, waa composed after he had reached the age of 46. Oarlyle was 42 when he published the \ French BevoluHon.\ the first work of his to which he formally put his name. The publication of this work was, it Is true, de- layed, owing to the burning of the mana- soript of one volume, through the careless- ness of Mrs. Taylor, to whom it had been loaned by John Stuart Mill; but if that miahap had not ooourred Oarlyle would have been over 40 before his work oouW have ap* peared. Bis \Cromwell\ was published when he was 60, the first two volumes of his \Frederick the Great » when he was 68, another two when he was 67, and tho last two when be was 69/ Swift waa 89 when be published \ Gulliver's Travels,\ and cer- tainly did no work on it before he was 57. Tennyson was 50 when his idyls \HWne \Vivien\and \ Gulnivere \ were publish- •d, and was about 82 when he completed the series with \Gareth* and Lynette.\ Maoaulay wan 46 when he issued the first a,od second volumes of his \History of England,\ and the third and fourth did not appear till he was 55. Good aa are the essays of his oarly manhood, they pale when mpared with this work of his mature years. John Stuart Mill was (58 when hts essay 1 On Liberty \ was pnblished, and 86 whan e gave us tlmt on \Utilitarianism.\ Mil- m WM oertalnly more than 54 when he ogan to compose his \ Paradise Lout.\ Le wan *9 whon ho sold it to Simmons, tho bookseller O. dlemaroh \ L«ti and after that was BO before 1 \The Novum ovor 80 whon he wrote \ Tho Task,\ and Dofoo US whon ho pnb- HRhorl \Robinson Cmwo.\ Darwin pub- lished his \ Origin of Speciea \ whon 50, and his \Descont of Man\ whon 62. Orote wroto the larger part of his \ History ot Greece \ betwoon tho ages of 52 and (J2. and lift Horn occupied nearly the tamo period of life with his \ Introduction to the Literature ffhioh 'Tke orgo Eliot composed \ Mid- oen tho ages of 48 and 61, \ Daniel Doronda.\ Bacon o published hia groat work, of Europe.\ The tw Oowpor 1 John Oilpla \ orka by and Thomas Hood has survived tho graye, Brid i Bridge of Higho \ and Ihirt,\ were composed nd on a sick bod froi rose. lfiJ'©MOW fJftVO UB ' 4fl, \Tales of n. Waynido The SonR of the after that waf quwito po only , Divinia « prolific \ Mm Anto< of tho id whf-n Holin.'H wn Many Koys \ whon hn • Irvin H oomplotod \ Tnl at 41>, published \Mi \Tho Lifo of CJoorgo that a K e. l'n. H ,ott wr. >o wan oxoellent. i fransla ion of .,\ aud his ex- ibln \ was pub- and \ Hongs in r,. Wimhington tho Alhambra\ .•t\ at 67 and \ 1..-H \The ir> * Tho J'om|u<mt of Pern' 1 M. Motloy ooinpkted thn Unilofl N«th«rlands\ mt began tho hlntory oi .M,\ which lie publisher OURPBrtPLUtTIES OF WOMEN. papers it found iU way into toe St. Louia Qlobt-Democrat. Then Colonel Sawyer received a letter from David Baker, of Atohiaon, Kansas. Mr. Baker, who was ftrst ljeutenant in Compaay G. Eighth Kan- sas Infantry, wrote: \ Seeing au article in the St Louis Globe-Demcsrat written by you for the Philadelphia Weekly Times, giving an aeioount of some of your army experience, I take the liberty to ask if you were colonel of the Twenty-fourth Alabama, and if you were present and took part in the battle of Ohlokamauga, Ga. ? And if so you doubt- lew reoolleot on Saturday night, the 19th, after th. dose of the fighting for the night, that as you was passing over the battle-field Fou oame np to me, aa I lay severely wound- »d, and in conversation with me I told you I had wme money, which I gave you, you saying that you would take it and keep it and return it at some fnture time, I being afraid that some irresponsible parties might take it from me. You gave me your name and address, with the assuranoe that yon would return it to me again. From th« effect of the wound I wear an artificial leg. The amount I gave you was $111.\ OOlonel Sawyer was surprised, of course. He at once wrote to Mr. Baker: \ I ra; member the incident well I found yon lying badly wounded in the leg. You told me your name was David Baker, first ser- geant Company B, First Kansas regiment (or at least this is the rank I made on tut memorandum), and that yon had some monej you wished me to take, charge of and send to your wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Baker, Lafay- ette, Indiana, ahe being living there at the time with her father. You had one hundred and seventeen dollars, I think, in green- baok^. I reluctantly took the money and, wrapping it in a leaf torn from a note book, I wrote on it i ' Thia is the property oJ Sergeant David Baker, Company B, First Kansas, to be sent to hia wife, Mrs. Eliza- beth Baker, Lafayette, Indiana.' I wrote by tho dim and uncertain light of the moon. [ was thus particular to write, aa I then ex, plained, that in the event of being killed oaptnred the next day there conld be doubt as to the money found upon my pel- «on.\ Oolond Sawyer's letter added that tlu money was sent by him to army headquar- ters with the request that it be forwarded to General Roseorans under a flag of truoe. Colonel Sawyer, having written to Mr. Bakei, then wrote to General Walker, at Charleston, 8. O., to trace the money if pos- sible. General Walker has been in corres. potidfeuce with the brigade commander, Gen- eral Manigault, of Columbia, about it, and a general search for the aey is froing on. nakee episode of the war the whole t a chance Aftei ityyi publication brings together once two Boldicre, who fl«hting under apposing flags met on a battl«.-fleld and parted after hurried clunp of the hand and a whispered word of sympathy.— Atlanta Constitution. FLORIDA 8TBAMBOATS. Tho principal amusement for the 200 dler* at thid place, writes a Glen Opve Springs correspondent of the Hartford limes, \M to walk to the pier and witness ho excitement on the landing of four steam ooatu, twice a day, from both directions— h way—and of opposition lines, h They all nage to reach our pier at the d ft h it hil p arao time, and one often haa to wait while « rival Is making its landing. Often, iteAtnboat look for O! rickd > 1,\ « my o»m i isnt 01(vo(t auy k»BK«r,\ a yonng wlf«, ln^Klny Mid bin Mia Hi k -iini<iml Diir.ll \ U.I Ml u W.ldmi, wilh her « affo Well, Bndora—\ | Th* snrp«rfkms woman haa received • Th* old lady *ta*t*d tip wilh a nry. En-' great <1n«l of tlUntion, l,nt thn rapid rat* at flora looked witk dilated, wondering pye* \ whloh women *.r» g«Uinj| rid of their aurper Imt first and *Wif»**t of them nil OotavU OnlLle* soamely excite* remsrk, uy« \Jon- waa In b*W boaband 1 * arms. i nl* Jan* \ In (ii« LonisTllie OourUr-Journai. \\ ah* orWl, hystedoeily, n, . roaaon Is Umiw it in tho lnter**tof th* ! deal«m to ««11 them, «Ji'l now«[j*pers are i«ir with an habituated to wriUng op the foil!** and ex- | travagiuio«* of women, not their economies know o r restrintlons la the n.illtiT of •rpendltar*. , It Is probable, howevcir, » g«n«ral tendenoy | k *P k nook and that operate* in thl* InsUno*, rather than an , flv « \'l>s. Oo effort with a dalihorate [;iir[>oai to lus(Hro and furnish the motive. Tim vail is a r.fi uant Of monaatlo and feudal sonluaion si ha* h««n diaappoarlou hit hj bit for tho in. half eentnry. Fifty year. Hi<> it w ttfl VM W»i>g and widn, and tho Ihirk douhlo rmi Tail of the widow reaoh«J nearly -l.,wn I e resorted to, to hold the Ol<1 Km. PurmU l, and looked OB in amassment. Hlutsjnund,\ said »h». \I did nol lhal this Wly - \ \ I hi* Wy, BKHb^, 1 brl K hlly, \ b Uie *WM«**i a l«<1y In aU U>* world to we A ixl Ofl*arb hW her faoe Mwer«l, . my wlf. I n b.r l>««r Kr*. Dt.f»U,\*h4whWv^<1. \for- • me for *twIW*l f9Ut hm*i by strategy, •«v1 of er«r winning It •rt, which leads to hard wools ; but at tho first opportunity the boat which got loft retaliates. All this happeni twicn a day, and affords our only excite- ment.. Hlx weeks ago the new boat started in KB first trip, advertising a r ice. Both itarted at tho same time, each being loaded with people, and these were the strong ad- herents of each. Your readers o«u perhaps judge of the exoitament when vrc way they sck, so to speak, for tvreoty- ilng too near At oue point, the suction caused tbora to coinx logother, ind In that position a dUtaooe of (LV» mile, wan HAilnd, until thin place wan reached. Both boaU came \ head on n for the dock, •aoh striving to push the other off. Buoh m*f> my Annt Iiarl^ra waa a nd of I wlpi. the j what My Ijht borrow hnr j>er»oiialHy. 8h*, iniiig a/tor Now Yw'i , and \ mre,\ RAUI MM Dnrell, nerTnualy *i o r , oinrl. K'\•«« \ I don't know ! ib« ground. Hln allnr t )ia ror* a,,,l liiontlng vu never heard before, out threw itn line at the same only onn made it* landing, having Each but A 'Z FOR SALE. • '»W-iitu.-s>l.1 \H«y 'I '1 In Babethtown. IAN N. Y. norsi;, '&;;,::;!.:;; •'A.i. l t .Iatiytilo.1 a \HI.. 1MM w \1 U>rmp>h, Uie oW lady, falter ii glTlnu why, I am need foryWauoee tin While lilllo r,,i,I,)i yi>iiii« wtfe'a *ld# Ton,' \ Mid O«iavU ; '• you, daaf hUr t\ Hill* d*««ht*r,\ eald il.T \ And aa tat for- \I c<*rt*in but thai 1 m..*lof all!\ |u*« M <>,• A.ln'l l> Mt l .1M, ] n, o mil TERFIELD. Pn op r ha<! to rw.Minl her lilllo pM, «> «»i nearly ttatniyet! by (Iw fuUneaa nt her .. heart HtaU.nnn.J lub| fr retale tne 'ally 1***, until Uull^s, intUn-l of b refiilarty mad* article*, found a n any BtU« utrln of laoo that wo, >ye* aud noee, and thU h«ln U foi mental by phyaiclana and aheuni I *«1T** Ihe oharished rail haa .li.ap, l<iK»ther, ojo«jit la K»atc for toarii a. The Tall of the widow die* U la uroally aurtaiUd Ixjlh In l?n K t] and thlflkneM. It has Ix-gun I\ 4n Ui. femaU m\n,\ Uj»t killing w,,, Uok of light and air, )>*)A,»\ fo>,ln . F,nnlkJi ora|M ta n<* far frorn U,P onialty whloh offsr wMow* n,>.,n pyre, and, therein!e, orapa vails uMj di**>it>**riD4f *Jto^«(l»or a K rtr.t.to o r WAH iuti . thn beat of it.\ Th* new boat backed away yiiiK the j * n<1 ofrotfnuad her trip. Sinoe than the niiutituU : btiata \ tart * fc w ttilnate* apart, to avoid • I muk ' f^nfl. That day's rao* ha. b**n the town id d.tri ul k * TaT ''DO*, aad eaoh person ha. bii ,, thrm . (avoriu boat to ride on and oheer for. I iar«d al- «mi*4ime* donbt whether all thi. rival feel- pur.<«.. l in K 1» \ hou* ftda;\ it possibly may be j | in l l t aiiothrr of thn tricks they resort to to ndrer- .\!:.';»\ Dan'I Carey E ^WuM DCIIIU I oje* Allot «Ui> l«a>> UU « U> i»a?\ »t>e oi. W..n-\ 1-.I |-..r^ M* fi»v*4 Ifcro^gh Uw able of lb« li mw a*.) «|i«arA |MM*tng •tllilti a few IIKJIM Ui. W. M »l.»U.r who w»» doepln* In m riHio**, and l'Oili>>l iUolf l.oUhni KOR8B*BRSAK!HO III JAPANi Uokoaai w u «]ev*r weary of studying hor*«* and their fanny ways, and of aU creature* Japanea* horse* ax. the mo*t amuaing. Th«*« nags, which wear laced-up •hoe* of draw, drink out of a dipper, take h!i>-UUji of hot waUr, and stand in th« .UUn w:th their nionlb* tied ap higher than (heir ears, ar* broken In lo th* park or sad- dle in a T<rj rough way. In Hnkusal's .lays. h< r«« w.re n *vrr 'l.am-s*cd b) W««OII». IKT <h I they draw anythin K . The n.o.lly \ broken In \ in thi ranli atte\he to tempi™, re uruaJir kifMil<y|, and tii.- li nfekee k> th*tu, *o that th«y o aoeh a oominon ' Tlie i»eitM»l of bswakiug th*e> in was at l.-ititi Ihe jrt>oug hone V M duly har ii«»l . mt*\ a EMM oil eaoh aid* field a faridU ki Jcra Mm to tb« rtf bt or left, wkil* an- .^o» t»*s lo t*. rmi Uat hia wiU. a Um- UKI etic*, kw)<| «*il away froas hi* Ixxrt*. T»*'--« cm awm «u«u a«J bojr» th*n look M d m lUs kMf »nm or UBJCMM, and a Uvdy *tHi«(itif litau, T»« horv* plvi(*d and gaik>}Mi4 ufl, «if>*»titn 10 get tii oi UM tutfcr <»»«, Lut KMMI f9«ut1 that this WM oc THE PLOW IN PAIR HANDS. The Dakota fever is inf ectiona, and a n SiKlS 1 ^ y, piggb faQ o* «ra jhrii at his disposal Ta« ***** Was* ». paUed into 0 » howa, and la+ami a, —to ^maelfathoma. Btag. lo«i bia** - m tb, hearth, andupononeaide,ttiid«a«aAa.** BV«S bow-legged andiwtt, waa; a &<—* * emben. An appettjing frag^ao. mlUd ifc. air Around the U «- in ind-pen^Tol^ 11 ^ Zfl^'Z?- \\\^ ^ *^ ottanrtoth^woold bT^SETfa^ ^1^.7^^. ^ \P\**.** ^ ^~ y oold be working fa nm e menial capacity. An instance known- to the readersl of the Stor. ta th t f g p in the blaok cavern of ta« —, menia capacity An instance known- to the 1 fhere was not a ohair to U ,«•*% «*u tai readers of the Stor ta that of a young widow ! J6D ial host was equal to dt« «nav«i>» who oame to Lisbon took a preempti f the Stor ta that of J who oame to Lisbon, took a pre-emption \pull up claim of 160 acres, proved op and got a title to Her land, then took another claim imder the bom«stead l*vr of 160 acres more, on which the U now living; and as the pos. lessor of 820 adres of the riehest ioil tmde* God', footstool she is of course consid«red worth having, and several bachelors in the vicinity are glaring at each other with fire in their eyes and hatred in their hearts toward their rivals. In Lisbon there are not a few sexvaat girls who have taken np olaims and intend to col- dvate them by oontraot; probably any one of thun could realize from $600 to f7fiO eaoh for their land. One young lady, who I. clerking in one of the stores in town, is the possessor of a number of town lots in addition to several quarter sections of land. The land fa worth probably $25 an acre, but ihe came into possession of it by taking ad- rantage of the pre-emption, homestead and tre*olaimlaws. Her town lota were bought when prioes were low, from the proceeds of ber salary, and have now advanced to nearly ten ti-iaes the price she paid for them. Another young lady who took up a r . _ «mption claim last fall haa the satisfactiap of knowing that a railroad survey has since been made across it, and it is not at all im- probable that she may yet become the owner of a town site worth from $50,000 to $100,000. It is a very poor town site that is not worth the former sum, two hundred and fifty lote at $200 eaoh making that Amount A quarter section of land will make about six hundred ordinary town lots, allowing for streets and avenues. The in- etanOM above recited are those indigeneus to Bansom oounty and every county in Dakota ha. ft similar number of cases to record. A Sttrrtac Pletare «f the Battle by an Ey* eqaal to t&e puukm, »traog«r, fikiu a tater.\ With that he fofied a panka from under the bed, the t ted [The following vivid accoun't of the battle of Pleroa is taken from the exciting story, \ Where was VUliers f» by Archibald Forbes, th« distinguished war^orrespondent, in the 8t. ItidwUu. The description gains addi- tional interest from the fact that Mr. Forbes was the only journalist who witnessed this terrible fight.] Before daybreak on the last day of July the whole force was on the move to the front There was a long halt in a hollow, (There was the village of Radishovo, which Turkish shells, flying over the' ridge in front, came bangiug and crashing. About midday Schahovskoy and his staff, which we accompanied, rode on to the ridge between the guns, already in position there, and we surveyed the marvelous view below us— the little town of Plevna in the center, with the Turkish *arth-works, girdled by cannon smoke, all around it. After an artillery duel of three hours, th<_ Prince ordered his infantry on to the attack. jalhe gallant fellows passed us, full of ardor, with bands playing and colors fljying, ar went down into the fell valley below. Fi three hours the demon of carnage reign* supreme in that dire cookpit. The wounded came limping and groaning back, and threw themselves heavily down on the reverse dope in the village of Badishoto, in our The surgeons already had set their field hospitals, and were ready work. Never shall I forget the spectacle of that assault made by Sohahovskoy's infantrymen on the Turkish earth-works in the valley. The long ranks on which I looked down iped steadily on to the assault, ikirmishing line was thrown out in advance, rhe fighting line reained the formation, till, what with impatience and what with men falling, it broke into a ragged spray of hrmauity, and surged on swiftly, loosely, and with no close cohesion. The mpporti ran up into the fighting array independently and eagerly. Presently all along the htirt- Ung line burnt forth flaming volleys of mus- ketry fire. The Jagged line spraug forward through the maize fields, gradually falling aooucave shape. The crackle of the musketry fire rose into a sharp, continuous peal The oiamor of the hurrahs of th< lighting men came back, to us on the breeze, making the blood tingle with the excitement baok.down the g« the dead and the i nded began a tie slope. > trickle mid iee- erely wouulod lying where they had fallen, on the stubble and amidst the maize. The living wave of firbUng men was pouring over them, evei on and on. Suddenly the disconnected men drew closer together. We could see the officers signaling for the concentration by the waving of their swords. The distance ret to be traversed was but a hundred yards. Ih*re was a wild rash, headed by the oolo- of on* of the regi.nents. The Tnrka in the work stood their ground, and fired with terrible effeot into the whirlwind that was rushing upon them. The colonel's horse went don Inac men forward on foot, pace*. He staggered i hear th. tempeat-guxh < half yell—with which li th* charge, nwhed on V e over tho p«ra|; theTarku likf un ov-r I, but the colonel was on his feet at, and, waving hin sword, led his ~ut only for a few d fill. We oould wrath—half howl, iifii, bayonets at iwrijohim. They • mid in among leiiiniitf avalanche. • l'r-.phet got tht tlio gleaming Bus- Not ninny follower » >hnnn« to nin awuy fi «an bayonets. But there wer* not mon enough tea the •nUrprte*. It was Csrurl to watoh the oravt Buaslan soldiers standing there leadarleja, sternly waiting drath for want of officers to bad town forw.u I <>r to march them baok. A* th* sun Mt iu lurid eriuuon, th. Koa*ian dafaat b*o*w* aatorad. The •toops had been drivra back • down. All around as the air wa. heavy with Uw UJW moaning of th* wonnd*d.' TOO PtKtfAMB VO» ' h* kirk having foaad i UD.-An eider ot littl* boy and hto isUr playing marble, oo Sunday pnt hU re- •joof In thia form-not a Judicious on. fot ohiM, \Boy &> yon know whawohOdrw » to who pUy marblM on th* Sabbath iyf - \Ay aa4dth* boy, •• th*y gang Nr.toUMl*id by tb* waUr Mo w tk* ig.* «X«I«nar*4e«t .M«U*r, \th*T C AballkaAa** tar»«L H TU UUl* W- from under the bed the self as gracefully were drawa forth, and just such- a&otbai delightful meal as tbat-whM* boapitate cheered oa th* appetiu that y«i \ the savory sweets of the roasted ' never been chronicled. This legend has fjr*o Ctaorgfa boafttafitr Its watchword and motto. \Ooa* deht b . rtraoger: Pull up a ponkin aa' h*lp m ikin a tater!\ And it may be said bar. «M hospkality could not more oomphtaW w. tify itaelf than by making U» rt—ted M ttebaste of its offering. THAD 8TtVMS» HAIR, John L. Thomas, ex-Oongr**nn*« aad anr Collector of the Port of Bahimor. talk M i good atory about the. great MMMMT ef Penntylvania: WhenlwMia firing— I owd to be a frequent** of th* room ot *td ThadStovcni. One day, whfl* >»**Tt ta. gather, a visitor entered nnexpaet**. A* was a tail, raw-boned woman, with «*to * , a «**»* p on the bridge of bar M M aad a balky green gingham umbrella. BtMbaodtd Mr. Stevens a card with tho words; \ JM> gailMeecham, Kennebunkpott, Ma.,' aod SWd: \ Do I have the honor of beholding UM Hon. Thad Stevens, of Pennsylvania r Somewhat embarrassed, Mr. Stems a» knowledged hl> identity and asked hfe viatec to be seated. \Thank you, no,\ was tfa* raplj;'• b«t I wish to say, sir, that in mf qntot bom. down Bastlhav«haardofyoar gteriow «Corta Ja behalf of the emancipated afctv, of yo«r heroio treatment of th* Soothara qu«atioa\ and of your undying hostility to the *n*ml*» of my country, and I hav* travekd -hiihet, air, to ask the privilege of shakmg yon She shook it \Now sir, I have one mare favor to ask. It is a soavsnit of this entervUw-I wish to take home with me, if I may b» to bold at to ask it, a lock of the gm * OOMBOM^ hair.\ Old Thad was fot a momaat nu n «s> Darrassedtbanleversawhimbafeni UM*I h« smiled faintly; 1,* put his bM i to bb gcalp-lock aod, lifting hi. bgown *% bo«r, laid it upon the table, leaving hi. pate M bald as a billiard baH. \ Thaw bmr/ ball on my head, madam; make your own abois* ofakxjk.\ i • Need it be added that th. MaiM «ga« did it ? WMtSbfik Pawing under the \ a carve we suddenly see a srectaei. WBatrf beyond description. It U the Bond*? evm. ing '' serenade.\ All the gondola, of VenJea teem to have oongregKted in one spot lit - erally, there we ama of them. The whole surface of the canal far one aolid aaa of ' boats in almost inextricable oonfuatoa, bot, as by a common impulse, moving slowly ilong. In the centre of thia BUM, drawn by six large gondola-, each maoMdJ* eight gondoliers, is a huge barge, abont a htm- , died feet long, fantastically shaped aad LrespUndentwiththooaaadsoflightlofrfwy Imaginable color. At intervah flnworki are discharged, rendering th. night briDiaai and bringing out, for the time baing, tht beauty acaqoaint originality of the oarring. on the palace*. A fine ban* and the prom. inent artiste from the theatre, awente in- stramentai and vocal mosio, Th. dulcet strains, softened by distance, steal upon the senses, until one nearly loses U s individual- ity and lives only in .the harmony that to . velops him, exerting ita mftening4od refln- Ing iaflaenoe, and inviting the aansea to oomplete repv^e. Some^mes ,£b* T prooesidon halts before the] palace trf some official or patren of th«te4 arts,'and amidst dlenoe almost oppresaite, Uw^Uar note, of «ome noted soprano wipwara* ; fc|tt i mrip- pllng music or the deep tones of a baa roioethriUthebeartaof the Sttontot w4tb rympetbetic emotion. -S« b k the Vcnie* of to-day, though but a renuiant of her former grandeur, wh«n] • \Her daughters iMuSthetfiowert ! From spoils of. nAUoue, and tbe \eilenceisnotgoMaftlaakav ^,- nmarked Jim Ba^ the barber e^ oojowd . tike to be Ulked to -ii * ihaved or their hair cut. barber named faefcon, the \ von ever. saw. He wookte't op*nhhmowtt 1 to speak nnkMtpoken to ff«* \\^K - ™ •' Btutomen, after he'd got tt would come over to m* and i ber was mad or felt U d They didn't like it At aU em had been twedtobeing thav%d «jr mt, -\ ind if thoywdd one word tome Fdeajfaeven. J Jfes, air, there's nothing like knowing how : '* to talk. Of course, you've got to have * ,'-| tttUe discretion aboat yon, and know j» * when to buzx a mm lean atw«y* r i*Jl by ^ tho flr*t thing a man says after begets into my chair whet'. >• he'U Htand talkiBg to «f4,' not. It he a'lnwdreilme p self onf and cover nti the ittbjeet* «-'. f ert ; Unt if un simply gros*a;l%l * month un Good, . maad letting good wage^f well M and able to dr«i rtatton. Bert #»Ubom, :^I full of prldeand **», wl » .