" . , , , , , , .
mmimmimmimimmimii i- : jf ( ' - - -. w :
TttE Pathiot.
f ... v.ui:t it
GREENSBORO, N. C.
-
HATES OBI ALVEIITIS1SG.
- i - - . 11
Transient tutTfirtlMinmU firb1n atlr ne ; yoarlv
4TrUMaiU quarterly la Tt.BC.
reen
if f.twfFY. f t-"'r Proprietor.
..' ... -
I .-- . i I
- Sr.
OUR COTJ1TTEY FIRST J2T JD
(Vinrt order, six wwli. fT ; Mg
f.rtir wyk I, & Ailuiiulatrat.tr' uvUri
r
Established in 1821.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1879.
New Series No. 560.
. l.mbl ruin for UouUlelcvluma k4Tertsrtnriit.
' . 1 ! . , . ' - - : .1 "N. ..-it -
-sir. n. , . ;.
Fairnot.
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1 In. - - t.w 2.iii 4.on .vo ' tt.TO , 11 oo -
1 " - 4.00 . 8.00 uit.avi u.OP'i
1 - - 1.40 i.no .no io. J'tc.wi u i'
4 - - J.00 7.00 10.il 12.00 fai. in ju.w v.
5 - . 4.00 $.( 15. (O l.W, IHS.OO H.W V
cil. - .uo 11.00 ls.ou .o-Ji.a So.ou ,
- - iouo ti. Sj.uo 3d. w JJH.U0 j.ou t'
1 - 1 1400 ao.ou i5ioe. aii.w m).oo, Hj oo f;
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"An" why t .1. thiA to v t r Ln .r. an !
t . to i.f n1un!frint rogue, t
..ki.i' w r li- tMT t;su-. And I'll take
n. k :! ,.n lam !,t-itittt ycr
l......f vj ."
A." i.h' Kai l ll!vth Mbn-1 rn.rn
r.i: ii, t, my Tutj-m !?!. '
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r.aj kin.
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i. v " !'?' -! 't'rl " r5rl
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...Lin i I k- t.
nil V A r. I n.lir KtUi ( jsi! f-r
' ... j It iw t.t I ..l I'm a ffc'U
; i : ' . i !. I n. Mil-1 I ri" I ! !
i . . . I'm li !!. An-l I !"n't
,,- r.tt'i' r- -n I !m k.'
: . ..(.- .! lli'rtli'h. IU?
.j. hi i!. I,. .1 ; l!ti-
l -tu t I r.-aVr,.! Irl
! U - hi .rl, tt.' " ' I I'.hlhf.
ii I l t . k 1 1 I !, l.t r-. t"
r. ' ! j-! . ! tl. j , ! r
y lulled, l.i H rr
I 1. nn . r r-1 tl..lljl...Ul
- 1 . t !.t tlirr it i
i s j ii- I i !- ! - iiiim Ii. t If Tf i
; i ! . !..Wiin -f lli- i.i'-ral
II. r. i. iy rl Wi!lyi !
i.- r at. I j-i- nrr tf lirt-.ki.4tin:
f
i. ii. it rj.vinr nt. .i
! !' a n :i r rt-ta';r iii'.
r r.-S J.:f ll.r 1.1 i.f
i. k i ;i I..- i liVr
r . fni. nk r
-, ..,r Wl.. u i Mil tl.t;
.-. w . 1. ;,,(..: i',y I',;l I.
j- I il-.n t iiiiiul
t;;.ir 1 ! a!l
. t.'.-jli t ln l tl. III
I I i
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t t. j; uj f..r ir; ,ui I
u. .." . t .. tf H i h ,!n
i.f ..l ii v-u kn
) r ii.
r I ii
I in r i l i..n , .r. tf
. " ' !! John.
-r l f r !
1M
Vrlia I
in a im
Ik H
t . . !,r if! nirj-ri- "A
r." f.-- t !. !..! riir mv a
I k. :.:' Tl.At rrm.'ky'
?..r"- ii.t!.;n.' i. 1. 1!. ir. I'm
:r I :: tt thf r.rt timr
r t-
:.k .!:.n!-r!y. I l! my
!.-! tit- : ioii.c tnk. anj
I ! k a ntj w.:jm tin.-. an -I ".1
(r - !! I rt. n v. Aiul I -t1
ri !l..r tUti- rtn; and lvinr-
i'..r. r ! riu !l .t i
:J . ...! I w rk ii h.tnt
if..
r . .n-l i;"t a '! iiaiiif.
n.t- .!. I i.'.wi-'t ! hit I. I lnj.
, U.ifik I. 'lain! flr !
' t .iwn i:; ' jik h- lui'li!
. I..
? w
ti-
r ! w
.111
r !- l inl.it himt.y rvt
i! 1 1 . y I ,n. I it out. Arnl
tk- n.-; an-l D"!! -f t!i'
!l t. 'uilw 1 !... "till
I. tt.ii ni ; ti j-rrUml
'- l.-.i. -t itli a in- i-n In
"- :.. :i 1 tr.il irtt Jr
It
IK'
I
nun vi!h.:ji a b tr.ii ii r
I." vin- ' tn
tl 1 tl.
-r I Ty:'.
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iu U.Il. I l.a-In't
I' it I U-l t' M il.t
r f ,t a tl.iuL I
-!
I t k a M .' Ii.
I in a j-rrtty le
J it--n't I n-i
I iS.-n't u mt it
work mni. A til
; : la-' h ivr tin:
Ill iii a i n
. jt in j ii!,
. t .! r a
ill
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w
i:i i j r. m r r -l
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An I I m.ii!'
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I d jit ! a new
S f did get out
. '..ll.. n,l tia-.i
fl I 4.f
i- t . v t; J, t l.,t an, tw
I in. Kul! ll..it tht- .tr
'in.- s, t!,. n I tn.-il rL'ht .:r
V Ai.-l 1 1 - r t!. I - -- a ,
.1.-1 .. .tk li-tT' I -.
Ii till Ifi . I
: t! i ri ii. I'm a nt.vi t
:t ' ' i ! I.f .!! "I -t"r , Ni I
kfi Van. I Ii ti fki r I u I. ati!tl
is. in .ii.. I ti. t (l'.Il.ir i- t at
it..
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f J
,v I .h
tn i ii
up iiiifhl Iff. re lat. S
In t h.ive no v itu d. and I
i I'd . t...4i.e mini-ti r
lint iu!tiir am't much
i n -it, .it. J. ltl. I didn't want
I..- I M.ititrd to Work St I W!kl
t - .4 ' I. -jlit l ilt IlU'li'. 'mill 1
t
iii-' tm tii !io,t-i t 1 1 - ta'.n
I know 'm ! well.
fi
I
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. . t
1 !
In
!"
t!. i i ;-n wai't't in
1. 1- r-.m porpl to
i l...; 1 oi.t no longer.
, n . hut I fue
.. i.. A nd lh it all."
i ; ; !.! n!y . T
. .i
. t
... ! y-t:r t-.n.'ue - mu h
l.--.! , tt ik.- it ran !
Vi-U ' t ;! .l.-l I I" i;
W i
- n.
I !i
ir
f..r d o-g it
lilt.
tl
tig
i
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-n . !-"-r '. -I.
I'e ! i
I'd rutl.er p .!i '.
kin
! t k j
v.iii irt
In " And
- !. f. i" f ti d
oi.t irt-
i'ii;
f
it.iti te tl
I
r
ht-Itil." M1 Withe, ijuirlly.
. : .:..rt jot i m-ivnd
I he i i in j .!;.;1 it;. "N hf . th.tt ain't
i . n. m : . i u ! l.e en.!. "Win
i.! ! I iitfr. ih-Hiii? Ju;
Y..i e tra'.l i;mt I:r.
, t .. i kn. w the law .
I: ; '. if it Uu't
t.- vl? Ii. "What i
it on mo. ;
nd I d 'li't t
!
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Hrvn
t.i ti--i
ir: tii t;
name a
to !.'p
i. t if I !
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tl.ef, if it
aia
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I urii;.:
' t
n IV
' ai I hi j.nr: "t ike
v tl . It's a g kl, hnes!
1 1 I: tr .-t t kep it -1.
rs I" I'hil !' !p! i a Irn n l
r m the rafn.ig buiuei. big
1 1
lb-
r! A.'-r.tloiKi Uiri4. I llwri-tr
h m
J
and til l im a'.! a!ut Jnu in a
hi tak.-. He i not tit ret. rt u me
.... w. :: v. u'll U- e!a.I t.i let me
M it
Ik II -
:t V
. I.l
ir- If ir.v.id .n't, I'd rather
it at all. "I'll have no fp-
1:1 i I 11 tru you hi k.-rp t titk
... i n tout anothrr Pint and
. -: iiir- in .. r -i ktt t niake ! j
! t...,t,( 'r Sinn We'll iToan.! get I
...... , t
1. .. .1 l uv for 'nket, an.l uae our
".. r -e-J w r to a nevt market..'
Vvi..r ti Hlvthe went home
t l.at
. t . I ' I
ai.i.l l.e Uttglo-d a little to ntm-eir to
i n k !...w Many of bi inv'.ment in
w .. I at liiiMiitl'ilr had Ir 'Uill bat k llo
!. U llut he always hail faith in
the 1-t ore "The truth 1, hi Mother
l.4 t-.M 1 1. mioiterthat moraine, when
f,r f-;',el bim to withhold !ir it'Ft a
l.'tle fre ., ,i pnli,ral lnevoVncr "the
;!. iiu.it Joint r-ir iUrlv "r.
hmelf
..toe a -non lb "t I04, "'in'
. inj "f,r- ti !- thi -a-n
laUsthle
ht he
And I
b'iM without a wattntt
pv t l- e the day w h U he w ill
l.ar tu lie iu )-! t. l.tvr hi only fl.irt
viasLI. hb uJtnt Ui'r L:ivia
jaw juil all tin- rt."
Btythc till litt-l with h'm tn-'thcr, I.
-a-r hr f.-!l lu.t nii4li r woman wouU
1 happy wi:b""tb rplexiti hili hi
ftintant t-i'rimnta io n.iiiJtjf t nuilnl
on Li lioiiM-LoM. an l-t(ur he L 1
Dcvt-r funl m wou. in wj.oin hv ouM a.-k
to -J.:irr tf.&t juvertr which mirht i easily
luir l-t-n wnlth IihiI rhox'ti to im-
luct hi moral l"k kn pin cnrlinir to
r'--iri"il u4kt-. In thinif w rojut- he
t.ik ii !uii h -t'- k. a he ua. I he tn tn
not only ctMin to n f-rtn. Iut ti vjivc
I.uti'lmli ni m n l.kr ltini! If. w hnt h
wr.tjU! know hw to rrach Hut after one
hrirf. ill -t-lh.il, an.! duty not.- to sty
that he lii-1 ! .t.u-1 vn.rk, ai.-l a Iri.u.l in
hi Mup'.oyiT. he nuili no i-n. Ami
wLrn a i ar or to of .s.lrnci- h t-1 con
x tnml i'vi n HI yth- that the taint of ten
v-r trniM nit ? curiil 1y an hour s
kin-'.ni-. h.!ih s.ti.l. NVi-lf. j-n.r JVIlow.
1 iiti.'l.t i. hat- Ktt.t l.im unili-r inv own
I f. TIji TV Vt a T'I n 1'ini-
.t t'i Iurl.
Si t -ilit yiar wrnt !, ltlythi jroing
his daily round of utio-trntatioUH duty,
m-t r dn-aiu n tint hn Ha a -iiut in
!aM.v -titineiit. and only M-in that
rat h Jay he itt !tp MMiie haine ol help
IiliiK r wh'h h he lik;ghl haTe -iil. Ilis
I.Mt!it- had i!ot thrivi-u a. he had hop"l.
Melt vt-re a I'.ltle hy of Mi h n ljuixote.
Lentu though he Man; and he n-r-1-iiU
to r-lue t it-M- vi In re the rijrlit via-
:i..(i!atly oil h? fti I- I h it hi Iri-i Kr'
.v r t l.y y mr It -.i-hard. Iieimw
he i a ui h iT'l Hi it lui.'ht Im- .ne w till
lie n y . 1 1 1 l.i only pim ht-l hiniM ll the
l.n.lr
Tln re ta.e ill time a I hoh r t tuiniiier.
-.j.Sf f"l till- i iiy in herd. AIiihI no
.y VI Irlt. MW the wretihe who
iKi.d iiol My, and viIhm- po rty. inor
ai.i e. and dm predetermined tin in U tun
Hy da and hy niht, in the htf' and
.!iiof the ton n. Ii.. tnt.lt- in th- AujtM
h-at ai.'l -t nrln-K, John H'vthe wut he.1
and w.uk'-!. H' x r!l health. whih
emlto pi in- him ln-yoiul 'TiI o in
!.- !;. hi hkill iu i.uriu. hi ten.h r
t.i .. and tin' .jLi-1 i our.ii- whi h roiiMl
mn tnrTjt lountre in the a!!riihted
xjititu. ina.li lum in von iie to ine u-w-tor
He often nut one other volunteer
iitire. tmt ! iuvalu.thl'. than himsilf.
the phyviiall id. Hit - Uvoiid t V;I
rettinr they had neither time imr
thought to K oh oil e.i h t h r.
It;it ot;e ll..ril HiT m Illythe h lt the hos
pital, alter a lutrd and vn-iiry iiihl'k
work. hi-oterti ik htilent fellow wotker.
The l.i'ter hlti-l hif hit. nlid u the i har
i arlv light ! 1! on hi Ine it ..ktd o
familiar and - frietitllv that Il! the top
pt-d. i tn. Surely 1 in nt know yon.
my k' -"l ir ""
V e. aid the UraUk'-T. heartily, "you
are rUpt the only roii who ever did
kn.iM mt. ir .n i'i t intain 1-e.Mii in a
l-r a h of ! in-inner on my trt. f..r I
ak'-l an iinj-riant -ronal faior ! tore
N in intrmlui Vu m ty rx-niemlM r
lein n!n ilel to kii k me and h t ine go
n a in-.rni ii r hum h like thi ""
Joi n 111 v the. the t;rB! of" the name,
d ragged hi Imiui ike into a tr.elidly door
way. within whine h.!ur he tlr-t fell on
hi" lurk mid U. i I hint. an. I then at
low n on the rry dirty ttir and t ried.
John Itlythe. the t-ei ond of the liatne.
h antnj." on the l.ilu-trmh-, h1i riii.
The ain. r wa the lirt to reeovi r hi
h Hi'ory repeal itx-lf.'' he faid.
"Twiii foun I in th Mrret. and a -innil
time to ! inveteI in tnv i Jot In for we
can't take hrenkta-t in the ami aiTtin
to hrv-tk the hread th tt priced. a new
r.ir- r to.-t ther f r I never w ill let you
out of my ik'ht :u' tin. oti mmkI-and
once mireto-t vu up in aU"ther 'M-ine
for now you are to ! jour own hior.t
t- r. an-l til me uiet i vium-ii ir a
thouund and otu night. H it U pleaxtl
to hold
till we have ..tthl
and ca'en. or we
U&11 l-'th U dow ti w iih
the two lnt duns tin
the f hi' r.l.
and
engaged t.t attend to i; "
loll W In 11 tin y had refrihed thetll-
M-lve with w.iter and freh linen. jukI
hid rati !! their break !ut together ill the
i i-'.l r rt t .uratit where they hid firt
a-l'p?ed rath other, the t Id. r entreated
the tii'iti.'i r to j-ak "Mv Imy," he
.lil. "wehall have olwervml the drama
tie iinitie in a way to tify I r. JoIiiihui
him- If. w heji in that very chair von tell
ine V "iir ft -r V. t'.lne. now Kut-r .l"hn
W'j'.Kr, tf-ful, lu Iff at fur. '
I;n Hlui.t ih-af and tlumli with joy.'
Sir." ;tnwi-red hi iaint.ike, "and I'm
afriiid that I'm m-t a until U-th r fi-t at
tilkin a!nit in t II th.ui I w at when jmi
firt inv i.i-il tin- to do it, and made a luall of
Ue. I have often thought of I iU- that I
hud done wrong not to write. Itl the
tru.li waa that alter I h.td writlm yon
lh.it I'd trotien a hold on life agiin. il
v in-I a little contemptible to hang
ing on to vou, tit-u with li-iter. when I
oeild :.t!td alone. And I wasnfraid you
uiuht, think 1 waitit-tl money, or nlin-.
or the h- Ipofyour n ime, it 1 kept remind
ing vou ol me . i think now it wa pride,
but then I thowcht it i humility. And
I m-i i:p a certain lint tt my -If to do In
fore I Would write M.-aiii I told "U I
wa an eitra good workman. W ell.' I
od. 'i ll get r lira g 1 piy. and tin 11 I'll
write ami .t that !- '. are a Utt-r citi
than word to piv ne'debt iu. and that
I've got .iie of thl g""l tenih-r to hoW
hiw gr.itefuH am." 4 f io'.r- I h i.l to
.l cm . ! oi Arid 1 f it my
ignoranri. an-l gt l"ik. and -tu-ni
every ni,:!.? and sn! iy. That wa nun h
the t.ii;l-t joU of the two. the l-ook
!. arninj lt.it Mr. Urtdbury waN h-d ine
f'.-r v.eirfike. an-l when Mr. John w a at
h"r."e in v v ition he u-e-l to eime down
and t tlk to me. and when he found that I
wan tn itiif to improve niv-eif. he offered
"to hefp nw. n- I after that I got on
f.m-.i;.y. Presently I thit it all de
p. nd.l on me how --n I houh! Ie ma.le
foretiian. and I worked like all j -: --d.
nieanioJT to write to vou at 'ii a I got
the J.l.iee II tv in if mi ei-n tt jeak
of. I U.tn to lay up money from the rirt.
and a -iff! t grd of gelling and avilig
i. k In-ld of nie. fr I wante.1 to a-lui-h
mv u!otii-h ing ir!fatht r w ith the amount
of d. IS. it Mr. lira dbury w & buying l itid
hen ami there in the infmrha where he
knew the hor rat In ! were iroing t.i
put it up. and he -aid to me. J.'hn. if you
cli..w to rik your m-ney in land. I'll
buv for vou an" I buy f'-r ihvh If. and I
think we -hill in ike a good thing.
"Wi ll, of rouie. I did t h". And.
what i-ii't of iiurte. weili.l m-.ke lii'liey
Land over hand. And it -reined a tf I
wa fore man in no time. And then I
thought. N', I won't w rite ju-t ye', for
the iirn are tl at I hall be manager.
:re en'Uli. thai wtn i iir on tisner.
For the yoang gentli m n tiidn t like the
bn:ne4." and the old L'eltileman wa.
wrajj"d up in it, ami couldn't l-ear to
think th tt it would g all to pietea wh n
he nhoiild die. S he pu-hed me. ami I
pu-hed niv-eif, and every win.l that blew
veinetl tn" rill my nail. My money ju-t
rolled over like" jt treat now-lll. And
. V . I . . I., r 1 .,,.1
1 ill A -.. .
crew and th
u.iievi. ine learer my nea-i
ei-ier it m eined, though I
... . i
found out. like Mr. IS.t!!.i. that there were
lot ..f arer' in print.
"Will, I hadn't more than turned
round, it art -med to me. after I was man
ger. I fore Mr. Kradbury unl fir me
again, ami told ine that I wan ao well up
in the huinc-a, f.nam ial and met Imnital.
thit Lf m prejretl to ofler me a junior
ptrtnn.hip if I likil I don't -uppo-e
the Kiiij- r..r of Ihnnlni think halt k Well
of hiitwlf a I did them, Mr. Bljtht.
Hut, nfier all, it wan't the nuci ess itMlf
that I cared aUmt, hut jut the hringing
of it li k to you. and savin p. It'i all
yours. Jir; the credit of it. and the money,
and the man that you imide out of a vaga
bond with your he-ivenly kindnea.'
Si then 1 a.tt dow n and wrote you a
h tfer. and told you all of this long dory.
-, j -' -'" - - - J
llut when it wa done, a great lurm leil
on me, as it did on 1'aui. Ann 1 saw
that, after all, I waa going to make you
a mitx-table return. For I had just
settled right dow n, and gruhlK-d for money
and grubbed, for learning, just to make
inyM-If a little worthier to lie your friend,
and a little more important in your eyes,
and to be able to t-peiid it for you. And
I had not made the world really any better
off for my luring in it. I thought how'
di'f. rent my narrow notion of virtue was
from yours, that helrw everv
all about y.
.Mr. Ilradburv h.nl told me
.ir. And I felt that I wasn't worth
liui I flip j bhutk. Si I tore up the letter, and be
gan to live a different life. I knew well
enough that my work lay among the
Sirixiuert. and for a year I've done what
could for them. Hut that's not the
point now. Still I didn't feet fit to come
liui k and leg you to live with me, and
that via the dream of my life. I was
poH-d to do feooie tremendous thing,
like having a family from a burning house,
r from a wni k. male, at the risk of my
life. And I w.i in that mood when the
new of thi awful holers came over, and
1 xaw my a haine. I knew that you would
be in the worst of it, un-t in my thoughts
I Kitw )oii luet ting lut:, and being so
ph aed nnl itoiiihe.. Well, I t ame;
ami I tvv you the first d.iy, and you
didn't know me. I had never thteight of
that i limn-. And it wax a kind of blow
to me. Ir it seemed a if vt u hail never
...I ..ft., v !).... .rl.i .l..i.in,r..r uak
ing. and I felt clean foriroiten. S I made
umiiiv mind not to t-i-ak till v.m knew
me. uiili v ou houlil get the Mckuess. or
I hhould. ltt.it juM to ace you every day
has Iii a new life to me. And th.it 'a all,"
he n.iid, laughing like, a Imy at his own
tear.
John lllythe never knew w hat he said
in anwer. lie talkt! almmt u hmir a
hi namesake had done. He planned a
little holiday that they should have to
gether when their nursing wan over.
And when thj n e from the table he
-aid, w ith ipiaint reverence, 'John, hence
forth there is a new -.m. r.tmcnt for ine. Il
in the Ird breakfat, for I shall always
ln-lieve tint the risen Lord ha tw ice sat
w ith u at meat."
"Mot fiilkft would think He'd loot His
w ty," a.iil the other, "to sit down iu a
t eli.tr ami eat with' a con vict, where there
waa no tihle cloths nr silver fork.; but I
gne, Mr. lllythe, He'd go most any
w here j'ou go, ttecauae you're just one of
Hi kind. I'm on dutv at eleven o'clock,
ami I mii-t put out. llut a few hours of
part iu if don t matter to a mill who's Imd
fi iiLiny years of it. And we can liave
dinner together, can't we?"
"All dinners and all breakfast, dear
-on of mv love," cried ISlvthe. "We
shall live together now, and help one an
other, I shall coine down to you an soon
an I have had HIV sleep."
liui w hen he ran up the ho-pit.il Mairs
lh.it afternoon, thrilled with hi new joy
and strong with-it strength, he found the
house, surgeon waiting tor him. ''Mr.
ISlvthe." s.itd he, ""we've had our worst
stroke of luck this morning. That capital
uurse by the-hy, tpueerly enough, his
name is lllythe too, 1 And i down with
the tli-ea-M. anl it will go hard with him.
He h is had mniie great excitement to day.
1 saw it the intaut he came in eyes all
Hllatm, f. e perfectly transfigurtxl. hands
trembling. He is not strong. Karlydia--ipation.
I ret kon, and overwork in busi
tieM. Alii lately this awful ln.spital
duty, and irt tlevil's own heat lsides.
When a trong excitement was added to
tlnme . strain he broke right down. 1
-lopp-d vou ti tell ou that you must take
en re ofhiui. and that if you can get him to
till you what is burning him up, it m.iy
-ave hi life, though I tlouht. A nd talk
ing" a bad remedy too, for he ought to
be quiet. '
"ISut I know w hat il was that tied him
up, and he truta me. Then what?'
"My deir fellow, then we may save
him. We won t give him up. '
ISut the Kr -oiil tint had never known
a t hildhood. n-T tin Unstained youth, nor
the l.ive of WfKlltll, nor the kis of little
t hildreii. was to begin the new lite where
all tlne, or their recoinjxtise, might
await him. He dil not talk. He wa
tintenl to lie still and look at John
ISlvthe't face. ISut at the last the chap
lain slixnl besiIe him tn. Anl when he
asktsl, Ihiyoii truet in the mercy of God,
hnr brother?" the failing eye- looked
with unutterable love in lilvthe's, and the
i-nt voice said clearly, "lfe gave his un
irel charge concerning nv tt keep me up.
h -t I should dah my f-mt ajfiinst a stone."
1'heii they left the liedside, or the living
nethl them.
He lovl given his p;i-rs hi a friend,
ami aino-ig lln in wan a copy of his will.
In token of his love he hail led all his
property to "John . lllythe, for whom I
wan named, and to whom I owe all that
I have and am.'" Il was a legtcy that
vTew iu bulk day by day. ami made many
an ahjt-rt n ature aappicr. And it is still,
in other hands, doing its gnsl work,
ii.x.nh the at earthly record of the two
ob-cuie liven w horn tilt u 5 written
on a litiie lab in Greenwiiod, thus:
Svt KKIt Ti i TH K Mkmout
of
JOHN V. I5LYTHK;
and of
Jt HIS BI.YTHK.
Hi HtlOVKH NtMMlKK.
Across the Atlantic distress and
discontent among the lower ordnrs are
growing more wide-spread every day.
Mnkes, lock-outs, want and sUrving
turbulence prevail in Great ISritain
among the IaUriiig classes to an al-
most iinpret tHJeiiteti exu-m, wi.iir mm- .
tarv oi'iTes-ion. wielded by the Man of
w hue mm
Iron, cannot suppress the cries oi tus
- - . . - , -
trer-s and the execrations of discontent
in broad Germany. Throughout mn
archial Kunqie there is an ever-present
tlread of a vast socialistic conspiracy
whose primary aim is the assassination
of sovereigns, with the ultimate view
of establishing some kind of I'topian
republic, where verbody will lie aa
goi as ever) Unly else, and a great deal
better.
Statistics compilcl by the Paris
slice show that since May last only a
little more than a quarter of a million
i of foreigners have entered that city.
I f these about lVl) were Americans,
i despite the common notion that forty
; or hfty thou.md went oxer to the Kx
; hibition. Paris shopkeeiers say the
! Americans are not what they usetl to
N-. They a.k the price of things, and
grumble if too much is asked, very
I much like other people. The receipts
I of the exposition were f 2,."V.Jh74 , $4A',
. injU more than when it was last held in
that city, but almost $1,30," short
of our Centennial success at Phila
tlelphia.
THE GREEN TURTLE AND HOW IT IS
CAUGHT.
Master Charles S. II., of Neb., and
others, who have heard about the Grewi
Turtle, would like V) kijow how it differ
from the turtles they have caught, and
other matters concerning it. As it is
rarely to I seen very far inland, and
then onlv in lr
I - J v --VUj 11V UVUUl. iTVUJC
accotini or it will interest jnany. The
tortoises and turtles all agree in having
the noft tiarts of their U itliew crovpred
by shells; the upiK-r shell is really the
flattenetl ribs, while the lower eorres
Ionds to the b.reastlK)tie in other ani
mals. They reproduce their young from
eggs, which they lay in holes in the
ground, leaving them to lie hatched
without their care. Naturalists divide
these animals int6 groups or families,
U k t-1 inr to ..i .1; T . ...11
("J emfor various nuHles of life. One
'v loiuiiiw ixlliw TCt e7ltU7MI llUIU
the Greek word 'for turtle), includes
tnose that live in the sea; as these rarely
leave the water except to lav their etrirs.
they are qUite different in several respects
rrom those that live on land, or in the
rivers. Their feet, or Mippers, and other
parts, are well adapted to the "seago
ing life" they lead, and though they.
move rapidly in the water, they are ex
ceedingly clumsy, indeed almost help
less, on land. I'liere area numlier of
S 'a Turtles besides the one t 'alled (il eeli,
one oi inein glow ing io an enormous
size; some live on other animals, while
others, like the Given Turtle, feed(
solely ujion plants, and vary in size from'
a few jiounds" in weight up to .' to
Ilis. or i ii ore. The under inut of
this turtle i vihite, while the upper
.art is usually a'lighl brown; the name
tiieetl 1ft .liilU lOUeirOIII llie COIOr HI
. . ' . . . . : : i . l a' i i
l"T "lv" "oiu iu.it ui uie
ammai useii. inese turtles are gen
. daily to be found iu the markets of sea
Imard cities, where they are kept in
tanks of salt water, and fed upon cal-luge-leaves
and other vegetables. The
Green Turtle belongs to th waters of
the warmer parts of this Continent; it
is esecially abundant in the West In
dies, and on the coast of Florida; llow
ami then one has len taken in the
waters of New York liay. but such have
only strayed or drifted from home. The
llesh of this turtle is by many much es
teemed ;is food, but it ischietly usetl to
make Green Turtle Snip. The turtles
are generally caught when they go on
shore to lay their eggs, though they are
sometimes taken at sea.
The turtles leave the water on moon
light nights, and after carefully looking
to see that there is no danger, slowly
trawl aboutto ulnl aproier place; they
then, by working! with their hind flip
pers, make a hole in the sand aliout two
feet across, and each deposit about ;?x)
eggs. Their eggs, like those of ourland
tortoises, have a' soft parchment-like
shell, with a little" dent at one side;
they are about the name weight as a
hen's egg, ami. are highly esteemed as
food. Though the turtle neglects her
evrgs, she is very careful in covering
them, patting the sand down ution them
w ith her llipj-eis and then bringing the
weight of her body down over the spot'.
Though very shy jwheii they first leave
the water, when they get fairly at work
at their nests they do not care for the
presence of strangers. Then is the hunt
el s' time; they c.iQ go directly up to the
turtles without disturbing them, turn
them tiiMiii theitj lack and they are
caught. When Uirown nion its back
the turtle is unat'le to turn over; the,
jHHir creature is quite helpless, and must
remain until it is carried off. It requires
some skill to turnjover a large turtle, as
the animal makes' a great struggle, and
if one is a new h.inil at it, he is very likely
to le bruised by blows from the powerf ul
tlipl-ers, or le blinded by the showers of
sand that are thrown up in the strug
gle. The turtle-hunters have iens
placed where the tide will tl.w into them,
w here they keep Igreat - litimliers until
they have "a chaiice to send them to
market. A gnhtt many are sent to
Kurope. iThe tuitle that furnishes the
Uaut if ul shell of, j which com Its and or
namental articles! are made is found in
the Pacific and Indian Dceans. The
great Loggerhead Turtle is sometimes
found as far north as Virginia; when
lull-grown it weighs l,"i, to 1,X lbs.,
but is of little like excel t for the oil it
yields, 11
THE WEATHER.
i a - --- j
MOKMS niMK .N TH K S1IOKI I'AVS,
The year glidei around, the seasons
come and go, the nights grow loug and
the short days bring their storms and
gloom, vet why these changes occur
few intjuire. If the earth moved around
the sun with its aiis ierpndicular to
the plane of its orbit, or in the same
jNwitiou that a t ip, when in swilt mo
tion, has to the i 'floor or level surface
tin .which it stands, there would U no
change of seasons or variation in the
length of the days. At the equator,
but nowhere else, the sun would always
rise directly in the east and set iu the
went, and e immediately overhead at
noon. As the rays of bent which tall
tfri udicui.irly ; impart the greatest
warmth, the temperature at the equa
tor would be higher than it now is,
but the heat distributed over the earth
would lie much less. Instead, however,
of the axis of the earth being ieipeii
dicular to the plane t f its orbit, it is
inclined degrees toward that plane,
or like, a top when it has partially
fallen, and a the sun shin s over one
half of the earth in the passage of the
latter around that luminary, the sun
light one ortion of the year extends
j:SJ degree beyond one pole or ex t rem
it v .f the. axis, and at another tieriod
ii-iiv IT lil'liU'S .I'll . IK I. A.-NU iv il i
a like distance lievond the other jsnts.,
- f - without the benefit
,r.av" " c ... . ,
of either iieat or ligJii.
The longer the day or the greater the
length of time any lart of the earth's
surface is exposed to the sun, the mre
it will 1-e heated and the temperature
hi 'her. Hence it is that the weather'
is Vually warmest when the days are
of the greatest length and coldest when
long nights intervene.
On !ome of the planets, as Jupiter,
the variation in the leugth of the days
is small. The axis being inclined but
alu.ut three degrees, the breadth of his.
torrid z .ne is 'but a little more than
six, and consequently the difference in
the terni-eraturei which prevails at the
polls ami at the equator of that planet
must be much greater than usually
occurs on the earth. i
ISut, while the change or seasons is
due to the passage of the earth around
the sun with its axis inclined to the
plane of its orbit, there are many things
on the surface of this planet which
tend to ru'tderate the rigor of cold and
the intensity of beat. The direction of
ranges of mountains, the vicinity of
large Unlies of water, vast areas cov
ered with timber, high altitudes above
the level of the cnjcTu, ar tend to
mod if v the temtiera? re of tfee Jieasons.
To these may be addi i, as ti- as north
ern portions of the, tfSh are concerned,
those rivers in" tfefoceau: the Gult
.Stream, and the walm strm of the
Pacific, called thevrlirt-r of .gi pan the
Gult is. ream, giving-iighei tempera
ture to th'e northeiiifp;-t t' Europe,
and the latter to Ktllostj, portions of
North America wjiiljh .boriftT on the
Pacific. ,H- . .'c .
The climate In thfff trip ojthe North
American contiuenIijijvcli Hhs between
the Allegheny raiigctiDd tfst Atlantic
Occau is due ih a iiti'dh measure to that
k large bttdy of water -iriidlhaPmountain
chain. I he direct? m- of prevailing,
winds is the Sitiue. the of rection of
the Alleghenies, clo;is loaded
w ith moisture and I'jg-eonijuued rain
are brought by breves i'rofia the At
lantic. In that'botfof Ni-th Amer
ica, bounded on ont-tjside biithe Alle
gheny and on .-the 'ilhi-raiy-ie Hocky
Mountains, other ics&ses. tifau those
which ojierate on tbeasteruyrlope arise
to modify the climlp. In "inter cold
winds from the ice-.tp?nd laltes sweep
with uninterrupted; irce or the im
mense prairies, oftei-aceon!panied by
vast quantities of Hliw, whge in sum
mer the clouds of3ipor -wfiich arise
from the waters oithe. (!u are fre
quently deprived jbtff moist jre before
they reach the i-entry! parts 1" the val
leys of the. Missouriftfad theisaissippi.
Mau) jHirtions, thefijlire,- nitt always
beexosed,as the tvtfrds of tle weather
sltow, to severe sto'itjkatnl loig jienods
of drought. Chuiarl is a .sihject ott
Which much has ln writti, and iu
renivect ti which 3isch is Unknown,
but it can never bp: Jtln-rwisif than in
teresting, as on it '4"aitiids tl. jM-rma-neut
settlement of iifge portS''iis of the
globe, the length ty lite, tre leading
pursuits and thej jyhieal :ind intel
lectual vigor of thcami!y otniau.
1HE YEaOWONE.CAON. i
WONDKliS OF THK'S'XKY SMl'M'AIN
' JtKirr?N.
KlON. a.
.h-iHing a ja-i
i'Sjtessor trM
A
gentleman
oiumeut
.onnection
with
jiessor slaytlen s
j. , .
geological survev-fH.
detainlSl at llie
Grand Pacific lloltfi-by Uieijlluess ol
his w ife. To a jtqtie&euwitife of the
Ttnus he gave aiWV-restiii account
of the oieratioiiK'i;ind ani vitures of
the (expedition jiiji the Yiow stone
couutry during tho jl ist suiniler.
This-party of siiditttsts tdk to the
field in July. Thle were Jfvbrty men
in the difl'ereiit iljf iotia, atl eighty
animals were reted-. to H.ransjiort
provisions, instruiints aud personal
effects. The tield Ufperatiot covered
the most interest! jffg portipi of the
ltocky Mountains liiu in yomiug,
Idaho and iIontaijU, 'ierrit-ies, out
of which flow -uaW streanisf indis
(tensiible importaiij to the t&liner, the
s,tock raiser, the agulturali and the
tourist.! The teiTory ored eiu
biaceathe Yellowi-tfe Parkfan which
the invest igationsirfithe explorers may
be at all times inUU usetuxy prose
cuted. Kspecial attention h$ given
to this area; aiuKftfJe su'rvM ol it is
now cohiplete. -TJjJ' ViKt. abounds in
the most p'henom)a,l woters, the
fame of which ha. spread t)fie utter
most ends of the eari.. Tht xamina
tion of the w hole disj rat wasiorough.
Carefully detailedi(servatif&s, locat
ing all the geyser hot spfiigs and
muii volcanoes wejirecordeffiaud will
be used jn the preMpation m charts.
Numerous sketchtjJjLaud pltographs
.. ..ii mo).. .1 tfM i he leAJrx rat ure
vveic aiou tuav., " - - -cii
of each ol the spriniand thtf ineasure-
ikoiF .lii.ffittinnM wfi-ere accu-
rately iiscertaihe4rrf It is glculated
that the material jiOd datajfcollected
will enable the suniejr to makl a report
and charts so accujily desc-bing the
park that any clauses by findahsm
or natural causes di 1 the ciiljous fea
tures hereafter Uftf be rfjdily ue
tected. While tliitgwork is. being
Iiet formed by oifc.wnch ofhe exiie
dition. other diviQfiis weri engaged
in an examinatij)fof thefadjactnt
districts. The par'tjhavinghaige ol
the jiximary triajiiiiikitious clivered an
area tf about bU q?quare ifles. The
heiglit of over. ISO mountain -aks was
determined heliiV'htist.ohese are
Irora ltMHO to feet f1x)ve sea
level. Fremont's; ff;ak a Mount
Washburn are amoXLg the vfy tallest.
The expedition toured nJtoy naru
i.-j . 'V 'a i 1 1 :
t nr. i rv..t u'i nn v Liiriinui:
manvf Ithrilliug
adventures. The tossing ojjne swiu
... . .-. .
mountain streamsiii- that C5rt')U was
often attended wdtlextrern? ieril to
both human and afijitiar.ife.The ani
mals were freiiueftivv iei wng
most dangerous dciUes. ie mule,
I tearing a heavy paeM uii8sciis iooi-
in"- and fumbled oim a precice 1,jk
feet high. The ittS peeiK over the
lu-iuk.- and saw aB$lci mtiin and
mule meat at the Htom, b- no time
was spent iu eff.jttU' to revjtver the
nack. Wild gaiueUiun.ledaiid men
could sit by their ciivhresuml slujoi
oixse, elk, deer ami3eiirs. , .ie uranu
anon ot the l erjwsiuiiwao
ploretl by Prof. HajiVu, whosJa.i ine
tratetl it once or twi beforiu former
years. The gorg .i,WJl ueep,
'the walls being a$m'Iat infiidicular.
tt w so dark at tit-botto; of this
awful chasm that btkrfs are plainly visi-J
ble in the skry at aWjhour ltlhe day.
The loneliness of Ueplace-ifdreadlul.
Waterfalls are nuiqirous. J'he lour
highest and grandtt ones f re called
the Tower, Shoshorf aud lier and
Lower Yellowstont;ffall8. (Uie lower
fall has a plunge gf inearlyrourjiuti--dred
feet; the othVjls average about
one hundred feeU '&h average width
of the river in the: gmon lesb tlian
six hundred feet. celeited gey
sers were re-examitftjSby Pr- Hayden,
to ascertain whetlUV the-ienomena
had develop any feattes. "Old
Faithful," the largest of ths group, is
still subject to huBJy erutwus, the-
intervals bf activitycurriH as regu
larlv as the ticks ot ti;ciocK. iieu at
work "Old Faithfuittfjprojecff a streiim
of hot water two hmdred pet in the
air. The party camijd lortven days
within sixty yards this gjyst-r, the
mild temtierature j8J the sjtt greatly
mitigating the rigoiifof thjg weather,
which waa severely ld an temistf
uous, snow having ittien to he deth
of two feet in soro.jf localities, 'the
suffering exis-rieuceig by tin men was
intense. Mr. Wtlsii iu chA-ge of the
'primary triangulaU4ys, hadjiis kuees
-and face stivetelvi'osted. Wilson's
party is etill at wofkHn the -Wind river
mountains, and it t'eare that the
heavy snows may fcOder tMir escape
from the -mouutaiuVfa m m aruuous
and dangerous undew4akm
S5r
r
The corfairatifoS 1 ltast, tire-
land) pfbimee ere?tig:. nef markets
from the actimulatn4 profiMof the gas
works, which are rhsttby tltown.
. ' il ' f;- '- l
RIVAL FOR E'DISOnJ
During all the agitation of the woman
questiou, which has so shaken society
tor, the past dozen years, there has bten
one. sate refuge for the opponent of
woman's emancipation. , Driven to ad
mit that woman had climbed as 'high
as a man' in literature, in art and in
government, compelled to confess her
equality, if not superiority, in a social
aspect, it has always heretofore; been
open to the 'scoffer to shelter himself
behiud the triumphant declaration that
wofnan has never shown herscll an in
ventor. But unless the London cor-
I v r . m w f?
respondent w ine Aew lorn ,. nuvj
l'ott has been deceived,, or is tleceiviug
that journal, this last stronghold of the
foe to feminine progress, has lnen in
vaded and his last defense, beaten down.
According tot he corresjM indent, woman,
iu the person of ,Mi-s Harriet Ilosmer,
has slw n herself not only an inventor,
but a great inventor in a time which is
j kh-'U liar ly one of great inventions.
One of the inventions with w hich the
account credits Miss Hosmer far ex
ceeds iu importance and value anything
ih it Ftlis n has tliscovered or pretends
to lie on the point of discovering. It
is the use of a iKrmanent magnet as a
motive power. M iss Hosmer claims to
have discovered in the jHrnianent mag
net a projierty bitherio unknown and
unsiisjiccted, which can be turned to
practical use in the driving. of machin
ery; and he is now having constructed
iu" London a machine 'of foui -horse
lower to Ih; run by the new motor.
1'he re is no battery, no .electricity, no ,
h at, -no luel. It is the magnet, and
Uia.1 alone, which is to' move the ina
chihe. The enormous possibilities underlying
such an invention" it is utterly itnpos
sib.e to estimate. The falling oil' in
the juice of coal alone is sufficient to
I'evolutionie the trade of the -wtrld-.'-It
would diuiinieh the cost of every
manufacture undet the sun by doing
away w ith the necessity for ttjansporla-.-tion
of raw material. It would iu this
way destroy half the manufacturing
centres of the world, to rebSuiid thein
in the wildernesses and the mountain.
It would relieve Niagara from the
shameful. possibility hinted at of late
of being given over to the. drudgery of
turning wheels and driving spindles;
ami it would enhance, immensely the
value of the latest Kdisoniau invention,
the electric light, by furnishing a cheap
means of generating the electricity.
There is no end, in short, to the mar
vels which the new invention will per
form if it answers the expect At -oils ol
the iuveutor. j
i The very immensity of the disco very
and of its possible consequences will
serve, however, to make people incredu
lous, or, at the very least, sceptical
concerning it. There is something in
the story so suggestive of the will-o'-the-v)-isp,
'perpetual motion, that the
worlea, both scientific, and unscientific,
will be cautious about committing itself
to approval until Miss llosmer's laim
is established by the protlucliou of a
working' machine. The prod u -tion of
such a machine is promised in the near
future, and will be awaited with a good
deal of interest. Dtlnnt Fnt J'irs.
JOSH BILLINGS.
WISE AND WITi V SAYINOS ( I I.I.KO
, KU'lM jlllS 1 AKMKI'.'S AI.I.MIN A X.
I hav finally cum to the kouklushun'
that if I kant prove a thing without
betting if.'S on it, the thing has got a
dredphul weak spot suinwh.re.
t4. What is the best religious' kreed
to hav?
A. Charity. If a man w ill swop oil
all the religious kreetl he baa got on
khand, aud invest the proceetls in
charity, 1 c will always be proud ov the
job., .
t.-- Will yu pkze define an enthusi
ast?' ' - '' .
A. An enthusiast iz a party who
believes about four tim-s.az mutch a
he kan prove, ami kan prove about
four times a, mutch as euuyboddy else
beleaves. .
Allmo.-t enny jihool kan prove that
the Hi hie. ain't true;- it takes a vyize
man to lteleave it.
It iz a wiz man who- protlits bi hiz
own .exjieiience. r'but it iz a g'otfd deal
w ier one who 1 ,ts the rattlesuaik bite
the other phellow.
Yung man, set down and keep still;
yu 'will hav '-plenty-ov cham es yei to
make a j'hool ov yu rest If lie fore yu
die.
Take all the phools out .if this world
and thaie woiialu't be enny phun hoi
irotlit living i ti lit. v
I would az soon tlimk ov jiulliiig the
feathers out ov a peakok's tale az t
interfere w ith the. iiiosenl v.fciuly ov a
man. J
Marr'nl life iz a little game, in which
the woman, if she iz called, iz, all must
sure to hav a strate flush'.
The man who knows a thing, and can
tell it in the levvest words, iz tlie hard
est kind ov a man to Ix-itt iu a.kross
examinashun.
The things th.it i kant prove i bileave
the most; i b.-leave that one apple i
sour an 1 another" sweet, but i will give
enny highly eddieated man a span ov
matched mulea who will tell me wiiat
makes them so. .
The finartent thing alxiuf't-imy man
ix his co.uschience; he may outargy hiz
reason or stultify his faith,, but he kant
beat hiz ;conschience.
Toe., beat thing i kuo ov iz a fust rate.
vife4 and the next best tldug iz .a
second rate one. r
Thare aint nothing that a man will
thrive so well on az abuse that uint
merits
When yu cum aemst a man who dis
trusts evervb.xldy, yu hav ifound one
whom it iz safe lor every boddy to dis
trust. ' The Hrunswick (Me.)
sas: We have .-aid, and
'I'tlcriXfili
lurniahed.
statistics lroiii tune t lime to piove,
that the consumption of opium is large
ly increa-iing in the Mate of Maine
Some three week since, when travel
ing, we entered the store of a druggist,
a friend. Just passing out was a, lady
in dress an d'h-aiing, though enfeebled,
who had just U-en making a purchase;
of opium'. Sa;d our friend, here is a
fact for you. That lady ha just -purchased
10 worth of oi'iuin, and she
has made similar purch;ises for several
years, coming once every year, from I
know not where,, and, indeed, I have
never yet found out her name. She
buys about the same amount each year.
That lady did not dare to purchase at
home for fear' of detection, but when
she wanted opium she obtained it of
dealers residing at a distance from her
place of residence. ' : , '
Hoots are madeoii the Paciliciqwast
w-ith pockets for pistols in their toys.
fnritfies.
The tl.Hir of the Panthebi at lbme
was recently tloodd by a rise in the
TiU-r. - ; . '.' -X : j f
The San Francisco lln WW says
that alaVut l?S0 tons of cri lesl were
Phipiel from California to Philadelphia;
during the iwist season, j
The little -.Modenese towr
reggio is getting up a subset
tton fot
3
a monument to
Antonio Allegri
painter. - ij
lons'son,1;
rio tl, 1
6v. r'.3 j
-i-A mutiny -brke out in
a Fle-he j
Military Colleire, Mans, 1 ran
e. nue
out walking one class attackHl anothtfr,:
Wfiicli hail reiuseu to unuergo stmie.
practical joking, j ;
He is in st sck'ure from tl.kigcrwho,
even when conscious of siftity, is on
his guard. Tin? man -who isf prndctit
and cautious is geiieralty secure from
mauv datii-ers to w hich"Hfthers; are
U-fi'jtl
continually exposed.
. --The statue ofj HmiilMihltf, just uo.-ii
veiled in St. Louis), representy him--iii
a voung explorer, dressed in ii iivelling
costume, leaning" airainst tlie broken;
trunk of a tree, anil h'Mtli'ugJa map of;
South America.. , " ' Tp-
--It is stated that lhe iiiiniattiie!
Swiss t halet--a present sfroii lee liter, ,
tin Ja tor, in w hicii Dickeis v rote most,.
oi ins later woi h., iia oeen uuni m
the grounds of the t 'rystal Palace Com
pany at Sydenham. ' I -.jrj
'- A .eiitleinan in lSostoi) luis just
present t?l. to tlie public libiary of that:
city the sum -of $lO(, w hih is tu Ik
funded," and the income t herefrom' ex
p. ndt dUn the purchase vi' boki relat
ing to j mer-ic'an history. , v
' Ni later than the 1st of oveuiber,
a largeicrowd of Intprnatioijalists ia
radetl .through the streets dFltarraf a
shouting: "Death to King Iumlert!"
and throw ing stones at the wfindowa of
the larger ieidencjes, withou interfer
ence from the police. "-
Tin. l.si uef iiHi'il in the a.iministra- !rTi
... J -1 - -, - ---- T J ,
live departments of.the Frueti Gov
ern men t is composed almo.-tt entirely
of wood. Prof. Iteulieaux 'ondeinns
the in-trusting of im(Nirtarrt writnigs
to this material, and says thaC it L or
12 )ears they will Is lost. fl, j
The name ytterbine, given to the
new faith found iu gtuiolinitjlwby - Ma-
rignac, is very siguuicaiiL. iimuir
'it sit'mlarit.v Ln vttria in 'ljeilur devoitfllii
of color, to erbine by the eltlvation of
ita teuqieratute, and to both Iytiie re
semblance of its properties. , j
' A Lomlon cal-tlciverpwhodiad
been thrown from his ;ehiclTTy a col
lision and his skull T'racttvil; was
iaki-u .up, trieil, t'onvicte.!, .Smjl fined
for being drunk, and then helied, and
a coroner's jury discovered tlit jheJ-tau
not la-en drunk at all, lmt.oifly jfalallf
injured by the accident?. f j; !
Infinite, toil will not enable you lo
sweep away a mist; but byll;eudmg
a little you may look over it altogether.
So it is with our .moral iniovi jheut;
we wrestle fiercely with . ; vicious
nabit which woultMiave no bold upon
us if we ascend inbva highfr attiKis
(ihere, -i'T. . . ' I-
(Sievreul supiNtrts 'thefrvieV of
artists and dyeiB thiilTther are oniy
three, simple .colors red, yellow ahd
olue. Hy an apparatus havinjp'a maxi
niuiil motion -of 1'0 to l-'iturns in-r
uuuute, and a miuimun of jturnsier
minute, the complemenUryfoJ' every
coior may be proiluced. j..-. ; -The
introduction of a un(f.rm oath
for the soldiers of the vanoup German
.... V - i . . a
contiiiirents is leing mooiet? at newi-.
uuarters; At prt-hent the 'J
I Pru-isran
iMildii-i-s swear allegiance to tlH
iKmg
to the
of i'mssia, tlie -Alsace I;0rrarifci'd
German Lmp:ior, ami an ouwis -co
their respective sovereigtui j and ;the
( i eruiau K mieror. ) ' .4i '..i
Hel-ieving that the .diiScult-jT of
separating phosphorus in-thtl oidihary
ISesM-mer converters and oiii-hfi.irui'
.steel furnaces is due to the highly sil
nciousluiuig usuallymployedOspau,
. .1 I til .Ul'll lol l' ( i .m -man v. has I oaten ted
ii i.-irlniu lmiiiir. bv means of lw;hich hcjlf.;
hoes to I eliminate the' tiliosphorus
itretty.- thoii'ou-hly. J .... .-t j-,. '
M r. iGwy (Jar.lton, a -robtiMlriiierafj
si,ventv-h!e vears. old, ttvai tl4
village of Wyoming, N. Y., hM bought
uis colli u and has a ready ioi use.' Ue:
also has ready lor erection a solid mar
hie block, chiselled in the Shape ot a
dwelling, Willi doors and w judo. -l'he
block will 1'- liit oyer Inf jjravsdJj
.,miiolie-by its -torm'andiiOltdity the
i.iaL Jong dwelling of mau .yJ y y
L Miss Julia' K. Smith, tl siirvvt
of the well-known (.lastoiibUty Histeis,
is visiting i iji PiUsiield, M.-l. for a few
days, aud, though S yearso age? aje
iiean, as m,rry as a maiden jut temler
i ears Sue was itroducr-d o uuiii
I-.r..i i-n.ize.ns last Thursday, and in
the evening held a ret.eption md made
a half hour stteech telling
tue syij oi
h.-r cows, and relating otlcei
tiei'S'iiial
exjitrieueea
if her long struggle
tor
va.-ii:i stu regards as tue. iu:tw
a i - . - T- ,
of her
- . j j .1
in exten-
rative store on
sive scale is lo be oJened ip ISostou,
under the sujiervi.siou ol Josian vu.i".c.
and other men of wealth ahdjnuence.
There is to be a storekeeper in clnuge
hut he is to have no Voice' iii t-htT gen
eral uiaiiageiuent. All pulf lases and
ales are to be. 4 or ca-sm , Jfjue-
are
H eac-h, and an ettjoi UM t ie mane
lo have workingmeii take tinjui a wo
kinds of dividends are conte nplattid
...... to wtoekhohlers on tlcrtr 'ffaiaff and
one to ciistbinera on their ; urchases.
; roceries, dry gool",, clotniu Jatid lioots
and shoes comprisj the stjck 1 -
The ruling passion strongjui wealtlt.
A waiter in a cheap IZuidiui restaur
ant recently becauie heir 1 6 One hiyt-i
died tb.us.ind dollars. Whei the law-.
vers called uixiii htm to rejtisi nun io
step up and get his. fort tuH lie-Bald,
l '.munis- sir:'' then lUsd t Wipe!
its UlustC
de Corrcij
-otl' a plate, wliisketl his1 ualii'ujovt-r 'Jy .. I .
cantor, and nugerea lou.- f-cmuu y
chair of a guest iuJ.ho hopJ hi receiv
ing one more small lee. y: j " , '
A lady, who saw a miilor beaten'
and iMjunded by a brutal captain, va- ;
made so ill that she remanled bt low :
deck for several .lays. W hcli sm? once. ;
more made her aniearaucu ou deCkjfri
rllie sailor was at the whJ In great:
iiiemory of the dreadful ment and
said: " How is your head to-day i ; li4
had himself forgotten the little cirCum
.tunpfi. aiid. elancing at ine
CompasaJ
"no'weistj'
cheerfully replied: West
and ruuuiug tree, matlam.
is
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