Ai s walked of old t - ' ? WSdir story fills :. : .U, . nre passed byi many. a, shrine,, lalavebeerofthec. r VI 1 -iilfelT mountain cedars green, f ; I ri-n.r. fsh and fair, . j v? r rLall I VI ill I O w--- S I Itirf tlum art our owm.v - tl, Wandering race .that go! t If Tlilije are a III roil lili w..j ,i i, ' j a 1 .foinfvthA Mrfar snow i -JSiaenclicd the desert sand.; , ; ; .v I- 3m& the homeless heart that tarn I MallWrthVhrines ttlieet v " I fc their lone faith for ages librae, w i;.itt;8l?cilsiit'niory, : r iii ; - - " - ry' T "Tor thrones are fallen, nations gnncr I "Before the march of time; . ;', - ' ind wherc the ocean rolled alone, t. Kvifstfn.s in" their prime,, ! , ' giuce- iGentile plowshares maried. the .1 xf. prow r ; I -felon's holy lull , -li 7f3 BTiVf.? I ffLeieare the Roman eagles now 7 : , f Vet 3 udah wauders still. . l''lfjP';j ,-J Selected. , t :f HAYING A HOME, j ':'."7 S fella little MrsWeston hid been : married three months, I went to spent Ithllay with her. She wast- living in 1'a41&"enr, pleasant little house, in f totriiich she moved after boarding a i moatiiat a small hotel, during which J time she funus!ed her prospective I tfbuVlcI ami getting everything in I;rca(lSi& for lioifkceping. ; 'itivi glad I lain to see you ; come ; rigid into tie parlor was her greet- I lag, anu 1 loiiow':" ner 11110 i;er - uesi Jopoill Aehially, I felt a chill steal I intpj jlie very marrow." of my-1 lxmes. I Tlie hlimls were all down, and it was I as dark as: Egypt at first, but that was 1 sooh railed ied; ami I had a chance to ooliaiotmd wlrile divesting myself of I s!ia:ilhai and gjoves. . I Vfhlit a stiff looking parlor;! eyety 1 chau" stood at just such an anale : the p iloc ajircro!l books ot poetry on the centre-table were laid with the grcat- isibn, one on the other; not a I speck of dust, not a scrap of lint to I relieve the terrible neicness of every -ir;thidg"Tlie'ic were two siK)tles3,rarian imaiibl yasca on the mantle, nd le ttnhew. stood' a bust of Dickens, I but there were no Autumn leaves, 110 ;fqrlr fjincyl wjork no flowers in the yasi,ctually Nothing which in tlie llealtj icoiild relieve Ithe room of its I tf apiearance. Xo one would jwfejthat it liad ever been used by bp7,i I-woudered ifM was the first Iltl0 lad; stepped across the We Weston seemed uncomforta- l!Sle bolt upright on the sofa. tJatTiti an dasy!-chair which be s r ls name, arid neither of us seem ff fnw what io say, though we lefiltimate frTends. " ' ' -li t let's sit in here. saLI Nell mmlrmi 1 nevPr N at home in the ' t'-i" : - J tl fi1Lai -' I' arisweretlIt, would f fj.ffiPaV thS8- -Tho -newness of ifflVF, strikes a chjll , through is Jil l; ' 'S 1 ' ' yr,. strikes a chjll through If J"st f haMol,n 8aP' cricd ejMli.lW'e; decided wjieuwe first ' ''t.(i , t i 'mi 1,1"? 1lta8 if he-was fNitiuf st behavior as stituv n h . ! . E 1 . 1 Mw,v its:' I it :. . . v - If M i ; J ' ",,V4 wu ira!e lleUon Ip ,? fur1 1 ca't imagine tilffiil maUcr with the roor ; ivi i iurnitiirp i wl l. ..L.i i. al RrnasMa . Kt. .c.;.. i. t:i.. .t .i - " - alwjays sit there.' !f teffil was sotnethiug lik e home ! NViV'Ji Pleasant Ititcheu with (m . ' j . . its g . fiookiug :fHrj 1 ?uppose it is a sign of pie- house linen to purchase, no water tax, t,'Jp!jpTl-1.uuljA"Pr?Icr tl,e kitchen, no gas bill, no servautfs hirej But to itejou mind! if I.took you 1 offset all there is no freedom or do- . ,tupei, ujo oigaaughing at them. ; Lliey newindqwseatthd its cage, the dozen or plants in the sunniest; iVWthe open j sewingmachine ni) hy7'i TMl ,s ucre, i- ft ttlU'.fl eiiif - ... .t tTWlts n tlcA r"v-uu v lirk niCL'nr i.A : i . I-. I n l ..... . n l ..lt ?f tlIe tlirange noHvdu-1 with such VplafnimpIe article as dirr- V i 0l,,ld blame hiui ? j ,V eood' dal of iudustry will soon make "! " ' ,i4ni,iuiviu irin whiclrwasa big feather cushion. 'Now I feela my ease. 'And now I can lal said CNellieJ I feel as-if my tongue was lied wheJ I sit in the part or; but of course I ii . , can ask - casual visitors ' into the kitchen ; they wouldrfeer insulted; Now please tell me,if you can what isrme matter with that parlor?'; - The whole of the matter Jtliatyou don't live in it I answered 7Ifou had your bird, your cat, your 1 sewing machine and your flowersfin ithere, you would soon feel !at homi jn'tho room, and find it pleasant ; litit six chairs, a sofa, a carpet and a i small Table jvitjra half dozeji .tjcelyl bouiid volumes of poetry lyingn;, J(t don't make a home habitable. Thenyqo Leep the outsideblirtds closed Jajrultuc shades down, makintr it lik-oi a Ann. gcon all the time, penetrates tlicre, and always chill v." The 8u ii f J. L never consequently it ,'TT I think it would be just as well, if not-better, if we housekeepers dispen sed with parhirs altogether $aid Nel lie. 'What is the use1 of furnishing a room which is to be Uept nice ibr the sakcof a few acqnaintanres for ;whom you care nothing, and who j call per haps once a month, and stay about ten minutes?' My friends can always be invited intony kitchen or small 'din-' ing-rooin,where we can be merry and at ease. I don't believe I have ever laughed in 4hat parlor. I believe a laugh would sound out of place. And what shall we do when it grows too warm to sit in the kijtchen ?j The fire will make it uncomfortable liere. in Summer.' j J. M y 'Take my advice and move, your flowers, machine and bird into the parlor I answered. You are natur ally orderly, and the room will uU ways be uice enough tp receive visitors. Don't keep an expensively furjiished room for the sake of n few acquaHitauccs whose opinion, good or bad, will- not affect you at all. Ynir firsts duly is to make a home for your husband, and every part of the- house should be home to him. In no room should he feci ill at ease.' ; I believe you are right paid Nel lie, who is never hard to convince, having a very amiable disposition. 'And I will try your plan, and will certainly let you know how it ivorks. Having no mother or sister to ad vise for nivself in me, I have to judge Everything, and some lines it is verv naru to Know What to aeciue on. -ii ii j .. ii.ii There are so many duties anil annoy ances in housekeeping that one is apt to grow discouraged occasionally. But after all, I like t better than board- ing.' 'One is never at home in a board-ing-houssT answered, and j Ij spoke from a sad experience j j 'I think the newly marrietl niake a great mistake in boarding. They argue; tlmtit U the easiest and the niosteconom- coal and flour to lay In, nd stock of X N-r uasws W mJ J mestic comfort, and both husband and 'Iwif have to "submit! itircsomi restraints. : f.r Which thev have a ing are never on the I to all sorts of Then thejdislies f,r Which they have a partiqular Hk- they could be easily prepared if they were , housekeeping), aud thev miss of a Joint ptoprie- owu home. Then cora- ' - i . - i i i . nlications in the shape of children ;ans8,'aiiu who wuuiu wuut unti !'a.chiia up in a boarding-house 1 7 And Li - , i ' i ti, L.,n.nt ow. V iiti Lilt: J UVSI IJ. A UC 1TUU1CU Ulb IU1 ever meeting tor a -gooa taiK, wnicn in tlie 'disduslion of :Scandal,aud this is 0ujy fi ;apt tb 'afiect very seriously tne toue ofanv s r i . ' vonian, even if he only listens aud is not drawn into joining in itlwliich i?i nine -. cases out of ten she will be. When people say to me Ihey. can't af- ford to go to liousekeeping, 1 feel like laughing at them. ; They, meatt that 'thev cauuot bear to hum.filcl1 their foolisirpridd sufficiently to keepiiouse as their grandmothers did when first married. r,They cou d . furnish; two them attractive,' andj no real friends -i . - - :-.t -. ii- wooden wiir yo joeir uycmu !movc Sensible people wiU resect them for their in- denen3e?ceandYornotei 6f their povertvl 1 - i" :'' f ' iV (- wuai, meu me cry 01 tue strawber- ry man was heard at the door and Nellie sprang up and ran out td get 'twobbxes ibr a quarterleay!ntn(b to digest f herv sensible remarks American Cultivator. Cardinal Manning .addressed an au dience ojf about four thousand people j-ecently j i n Li verpool on the in fl uence of women. t Of all the powei 'upo earth, he said, there was in tlie hands of mothers and daughters and Vistrs a poweriwhichcimld control thegreat est strength of man, andahisjw5 power of good example, of a gooddil of true Christian love, the persuasion of their patience in Waiting until the faults of those whom they tried to wju to ! betterwjjys should be wiped out Men might reason andwrangle, and might convince one another ; but they had not the jpower of persuasion that a mother or sister or daughter possessed over a son, a father or a brother. They could sometimes do what priests, could not. The good Bishop of Ferns, who had gone to his rest, had told - j tlkcm that he had often seen women kneeling beside men and taking the pledge along with them, for the pur- pose of giving them courage and4mny spe:ik all tlfe modern tongues, if you strengthj to tnat wmcb J"any of them wejre so cowardly that they dare not promise to do. Many a man had been brought to heaven and the sac rament and a holy death by the influ ence of wife or mother or sister. It was mosit certain that the character of man was formed for life by the moth er, and he had rarely known a good mother who had a bad daughter or a bad son Speaking of drunkenness, he described it as the sin of the Chris tian world, saying that among the Af ricans and the people of the East drunkenness only came in when we brought ii. During all the time he spent abroad, in France, or Italy, or Koine, Uc never saw a drunken wo man, though here and there a drunk en man,jbut very few. When French men and Italians came over to Eng land they often,. for the firt time, saw men and women drunk in the streets. Towards the conclusion of his remarks he comljemiicd the employment of married jwomen outside of their own households, saying that when a wo inau. married she entered into a sol- ' ! earn conjtract for life "that she would give-her! time to her husband, her home anid her children, and ifshetlid not: do s0 it destroyed the whole do mestic life. Cost of the "Know How. There was much gumption, according to Harper's Magazine, evinced by that particular ? darkey whose master was a surgeon, Who had performed on another darkey an operation requiring a high de gree of skill. This latter darkey was well-to-do, and the surgeon charged hint twenty-five dollars for the operation. Meeting the doctor's servant afterward, occurred this dialogue : Pat was a riiighty steep charge of the doctor' fpr cutting on me tndder day.' How liiuch did de boss charge ?' WelK iulinsV he charge me twenty-five dollars.' ! Go 'long niggah, dafP ahi'tr much charge, 1 M . , ; , . v--:-U -Welllie wasn't more 4t an three orfoa .loin' it. and I tink five dollars was all he oughter took. ..s j IiOoka-heah, sam ; yon don't un'stan' 'bout datt'ti ug. You see, de boss iaf eto speind'a gicat many years larnjn? how ta usd-dCkiiife, an'- it cost himj heaps ..,mi.r d fact nmrfateoTilvcITarcre money ,6w de fact am datlie only clTarge xsxi fnek dollars for; de operation r tie ttiddcr tWeiity ho charge for' do' i-htft tote. his distresses, and promising to re- r' i - ' ----- - - - rrmrif tl.fi mmittanoes were continii- ed. Wrhjen he"failcd to get whaHie wanted he resorted to stratagem, and wrot(TKsad letter to' his father ieiring him that he was dead ami. wanted mo- v -r ., , . 1 tiey for the f u n ere 1 ex penses. Ill fares the land, tlmsteningillaa. prey, Where wesilth accumulates and men decay, Princes a no lords maytlourisn or may iuae, breath can make them, as a breath ha. made: But-a lnJd peasantry, tneir connrry s pride, ' . When nco destroyed ean never be snp - nlied. -ColdsinitlS$ "Deserted Village." ' - v - - - r ' r Ft v f )uujSA;ffP Vi iiJ y quisof Bute in 1 806, andthe crown tanceTfrom 'home4' had ' been stopped H 6( ptoU M a8toi ; . -. .m n I in V7 I IflL'll FE 111 I I . I wrote" very f urgent letters, telling; of ;peau Stanley, who, togethcr.wi Mid-1 nyu Ai?Mf.kX -Idt ai 1 j,.,At the oimepcement at . Charlier,. In stiiu?, Dr. j Irnaeoa Prune spoketo the jiuijnyilfsdo apeak.ta yoa live inint sau opjy tive Jittle ayihe said, m!,!a45li? " i w i1"nate ;! W WrPia ty, scu tie a shipM rai soalirie,error jor :a tZtZ .7X7 ' r V ' fJ - tnv x fAl I." la ilAha in n minitfn in.AM,l 1 moaient makeAiioJXfiWjof life. Get hI .Teiatedlihsiij etuember that in fire mlniitea yuuiutir destroy ytmrgooduame, fill your sdul .with nndylng' remorse, , and bring with Borrow your father gray hair to. the'gTavft.' But ifyoa can do so much evil; Bb yoalinayido a miglity sum of good in fire minbten. i" i IMYfcfihnay4decMte to live for nsefulnsss ' i L .i - i .t. f and honor. lEvrjthing; hang on that i Vr t L , i , . k choice; and it raav be made iH live xuitx- f i J, i f , Take care of the pencp, and the pounds :n - 1 i 1.1 ' ill take care of! themselves; take care of i will the minutes and jthei hoars are safe. I made a little book in this way : in the Wakfast room were pen, (nkahd - papery - and if, when the hoar for breakfast came; all was jiot ready,' lhite a'few words' tor lines, kis time" allowed! f T!i4 book was fiuislied land it had been finished scarcely a week before I heard it had saved a soul ; it has ! 'saved many since. It did not cost me one minnte that would have been used for any thing else Five miuates in the morning, and as many in the evening, will make you the master of a pew language in two or three years. Before yu are i middle age you will but improve; the spare minutes of the year now llyiug by. Minutes ai-e more than jewels ; they are "the stuff that life is made of they are diamond stepping stones to wisdom, use fulness and Wealth ; the ladder to hea- - - ' i j vcn. It will not take five lhinntes to do Ii good deed, and one day Will make a life of honor and usefulness, with glory beyond Tlte Shalcr Manifest. The Cave of Machpclali. The object of greatest iuterest in the Mosque of Hebron, concealed beneath its pavement, fit is! the double cave," or JMgji-hjtelah, the oldest known burial place iu the world. Here the three patriarchs and their wives (except Rachel, who is bnried beneath a little white mosque near Bethlehem) sleep. Joseph'sbody, too, is said to have been removed thither from Shecheni, near Jacob's well, where his tomb is still shown, There never has been any doubt about the identity of the spot. Such 'caves are as everlasting as Qie hills to which they belong. The sto ry of Machpclah is singularly tonching. With what solemnity and carefulness did lather Abraham acquire this his only property inthe Holy Laud from his heathen-friend Ephron and make it 6ure for ever by that first legal contract recorded in history, j (Gen. xxiii :3-20.) The scene conies back to us in all its cir camstantial (details, as Dr. Thomson shows so graphically froni his own experience of bargaining among the Orientals of the preseut day. How pimple and impres sive is the record of the successive inter ments of the! patriarchal families aud the burial of enmities between brothers over the gvstves of their fathers: first Sarah was buried, (Geu. xxiii:l, 1110,1 Abraham by Isaac and Istimael , (xxv :9, 10) then Isaac by his sous Esau aud Ja cob ' (xxxv : p -29)' ; and last we read ' tlie ilt-iiifr reo nest of Jacob in Ec.Vli't : "And he i. charged them and said unto them, I aai to be gatlieicd unto my people:. bury me with my fathers' in the cave that is in tne neiu oi ipnron rue liuiuie ior po session of a.jjburiedi place. Thei-e tliey buried Abiaham and Sarah his wiffj there they buried (saaciaud Bebekhli his wife; aad there; I dHedrileah xUxi-ai;' j j From the time of its jiermaueu t M ussel- , muti occupation in . 11S7 to 1862, the ir ! mosque was jnost jciilously closed to all i t .-- L . i ;-Ji' in... r..t...1nl ta .oni jioiiauimeuans, uuu wic in,tir o clpscstilllsPievjous to that year we' had but three -brief and, confused accounts of stealthy visits,' especially by a Span renegade AH Bey. ; Even the Mosque of Omar, aujl f the Mosque of ; Damascus were open tot foreigners before , that of H!ron. At. hist, bv a special firman of tbeSnltau arid after a great deal of trou blew the i'riuce of Wales was admitted "to the interior iu January, loo2, the Mar prince th the - . . ' I I Prussian Uousul, ur. iiosenr a leuuieu i archologist, accompanied the Prince of Wales, has given us a very interesting ac cuuut of this vuit. From it we earn fthat the patriarchs and their wired have separate shrines, en closed with' irrates or railhigs, bat they areempty 'cenotapliS PX )uoh'u iucu ts ih honor of the dead ivho lie beneath. 14 The 6lu iue xf i J Abraham aud Jacob .were- kliowi tathe isrf ML bat not 1 those ; of FM.. $"".'T-"Tt "r pli AMKuau;Wa f auwnti : ut7 - dians grtianded aloud, aau wieir cniei ru- tharked :-niie nHuees ofant bther na1 - ,?Xtl - x .Vu ,nfovyvaeiidbodv : ... ,. soiiucr than enter.?, t But to the eldest son of the Qneen we are willing ; to accord Victoria even this priTilege.wa Then .. he offered an ejaccnlatory cprayer to Abra ham ::,0 friend of God forgive this in trnsionA: . Isaac1 shrine tliey i were ; not permitted to enter for the singular? rea son that, while Abraham, who interceed ed for the wicked inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah, was fall of kiudues4 and would overlook an affront, Isaac was pro WbiaHjr jealous arid might resent the 11 " The most sacred and interesting part of the mosqne, the dark subterranean -; cavecountry sent thein mefae with which "sy itself, which contains the remains of the patriarchs, was closed to the distinguish ed visitors, and could only be i seen thro a small hole in the parement: It is un cer tain whether even the Moslems enter tlie Machpelah.r : Once, tliey say, twenty-five litimlr1 rmrt Ann uwnnMftU mm( . . . Z, T king entered; bat returned blind, deaf, .4r i V i j - a- ' , . wiLhcrcd, sind crippled " Sinqe tlienti the t , , , , . . entrahco aaclosed,and only, the aperture , , , t A , , . and a lamp be let flow why 4' chain upon . n . , 1 iuu grave. jr- ocnajf. , r-. . ' . There comes a time in uyoungj man's experienced i when it suddenly dawns tipoiV his'youthful 1 "trimd 1 that life is stern and reaV,! and tliat only by the severest labor and great self-deui-al can he hope to accumulate even a modicum of wealth. Then he prompt ly marries a girl with a wart on her nose and goes home to live with her sixty-thousand dollar parents. George Augustus Sala is coming to this country at once, it is said, for a winter tour in the Southern States. NEWS ITEMS. Trade Mark Laws. The Supreme Court Declaring Them to be Invalid and Unconttitutional. Washington, Nov 17. The Supreme Court to-day decided the case of the United States against Emil Steflens and Adolph Witteman of New York, and W. W. John son, etal. of Cincinnati which, are prosecu tions for violations of what are known as the trade mark laws. The cases came be fore the Supreme Court on certificates of division from the Circuit Courts of the Uni ted States for the Southern District of New York and the Southern District of Ohio.- fhe question upon which the judges of the lower courts were divided in opinion, is, "whether the acts of Congress on the sub ject of trade marks are founded on any rightful authority in the constitution of the United States." It was maintained by counsel, who sought an affirmative answer to this question, that there are two clauses of the Federal consti tution which furnish a sufficient warrant for the leirislation in dispute. The first is the eighth clause of section 8, article 1, which provides that Congress shall have power to pass laws '-to promote the progress of sci ence and the useful arts by securing for lim itcd times to authors and inventors the ex clusive right to their writings and discover ies." With regard to this point, the court holds that the ordinary trade mark has iio necessary relation to invention or discovery. The court is, therefore, of the opinion that such legislation is not authorized by the constitutional provision concerning authors and inventors and their writings and dis coveries. The other clause of the constitution relied on to support this legislation is the third o the same section Which prdvides that Con gress. shall have' power "to regulate com merce with foreign nations and among the several States and with the Indian tribes. With regard to this the court says that this legislation contemplates the establishment of a universal system of trade-mark registra tion for the benefit of all who have already used a trade mark, or who wish to adopt one in the future, without regard to the character of the trade to which it is to be applied, or locality of the owner. Such legis lalfon is, in the opinion of this court,' in ex pfsa of eoncrressiona! power The court o a wishes, however, to be understood as leav' in the whole question of the treaty-maxin power of the general government over trade marks and the duty of Congress td passiany Saws necessary to carry' such treaties into effect, untouched. The question in each o these cases, viz : whether these statutes can be upheld in whole or in part as constitu tional, must be answered in the negative. and it will be so certified to the Circuit Courts. : Under the provisions of the laws which have thus been declared unconstitutiona about 8,000 trade marks have been register ed at the patent office, and about 200 appli cations for registry sre now pending. Home Front Liberia. From the Charlotte OTaerrer. Several colored families from this county went to Liberia on the ship Azor which sail ed from Charleston Easter .Sunday.-1878, with a large number of colored people ion board, and many , others wanted to go .but could not. To, s the friends of those .who went, as well as to those who were so warm ly interested: at one time in the Libcrian exod us project, it will be interesting to know, that the bark 3Ionroria arrived at New York last week, having .left Liberia September 21st, and thaUt brought, eighteen, colored passengers; a part of the Bhp'Ioaaearnei out by the Ar. We copy now frWihl mWorthel9th:a vtm i Voi -'A soon as the returniiiznirlmarnV. ed; in New Torfc they wew'" ej tne cars and started at once forrth4if eld homes in SoutCarolIiiiresterdir"Cap Richardson gave a reporter ra iny details pit ...v.. ia eturj i sunenng ana uniisppt neis, only thevopenirig-; chapters'or whicl hate beenlpubllshed 1 in!thiP country. ayefal single a'JoUsJi Their ends In th'is --"o f j iuviuucu tui cc lauiiiies ana i'"ws uw;no inrir oia nome. Tnet say there's not one of theAxorVparty'ti ne of th& Axors party 'that would not gladly come back if thy could raise fands for the journey.- & more disced- icDisa, raisers Die lot or people can1 nardly l i . l uc imsginea tnantnofe unfortunates, whbJ frvn'Ttl - 1 : ' ' A- '4 ' I .wmuvi uisuj uiuru gTyei man nomes i.a the young colored Republic. u '""tl Vlt will bo remeinbered ' that of the iO xodisU who started cea the Azo twehtylj uu uiw wr ibc-k. oi proper proviaiOBS tot heir healta. and comfort before they'reacli- ed Monrovia.- Somethirty-orforty have beei sble t6 return to this country; Of the ihrefe iiundred and over rein ainihg! there' are how only, about sixty persons aim." 1mI Shaltn to fr Center. - -' "-" ' San Francisco, November 18.-An" ex- plosion occurred in Tunnel No, 3 on the par- row-gauge railroad from San Jose.to4t Cruza early this morning From the gre accounts thus far received it seems that a blast was letoff ab'outlOO feet from the mouth of tl tnnnrf. h?.h nnnA . . ex- at the time. Immediately about twenty more Chinamen rushed i torches to aid their comrahes; and when they had penetrated about 1,500 feet their torches caused a second explosion' lent than the first, shaking the mountain to its centre. The white men-Lindle, ana Johnson-were brought out terribly burned - w U( tVUOtJ S I inrprl AariAfir as an lua ln.pn.1imn.tli!iL Phin.m,n r. VSII.,1 Tl. . A -J t plosion wrecked the engines and works. ! Physicians have scene from San Jose ble is beinT done for th Kiiff.rpra From additional reports concerning , the explosion it seems that three explosions' oc curred the first at 11:50 p. m., the second at 11:55 p. m., and the third at 12:20 a. m. The men were changing shifts at the time of .the first explosion. Seven Chinamen have ty-four dead remain in the tunnel' A Chin- aman named Ah Wo, was taken ul, barn- ed about the chert .and injureaMnternal xt r . , ; . . . . iii 2- I !uc was iuuuu ucau in ins muia na iiuur mi- terward, strangled with a silk scarf. .The Chinamen say that he hanged himself,' hat the indications are that he was strangled by his friends to put him out of his misery.' There is a terrible scene of suffering in the camp, and ruin all around the route of th tunnel 1. The cmrine for pumng'air isfdis- oines arehmki-n. hada wrxlti.dtid abled broken timbers scattered all around.- The I gas prevents any attempt to recover the I bodies st present. The work will be delay-l ed for months. Colored Emigrants. , !- , , w 1.! . f m fifirfy fef; ! About 1 o'clock yesterday somd fifty -or sixty colored emigrants arrived hi this city from North Carolina. Upon arrival at the wfc- - 'it lh party proceeded Id the office of thsEm- igrant Aid Society, at No. 934 F street, and requested assistance in continuing their joftrney westward. Some of the emigrants i , 1. .x. fiv 1 j ' had been able at the time of their departure from home to purchase through; tickets tcj theiidcstination,butpyfaAhe larger number k them lacked sufficient means' to.continuJ L. . , ' rru"' " : their journey from this place, The. sock's funds at the present time are qjiitejimitedi out the emigrants were made 'comfortable at the Baltimbre &'Ohio depot &Vit$$& and an'etort1 wmte msde toj to' piyVdJ eacli of the destitute ones w U pnrkns ticket to nortlrernthatana'wereBendran f 'i'.MliiVl- f.f.il'1-L '.Jiyi'JI corresDonaenis 01 me socieiv are sccunnir. homes and employment tinder its auspices. They are clean intelli i a ..1 n. "sli- nlosion of the Erases nnratpl h fth ering of coal oil through the roof apsides tt ' IT f? r of the tunnel. Twenty-one Chinamen Jcv o see i the , creditabk WPaPf two white field, and ihop pro4cUiitfi r w .m .umuw i anyW Vf.R DU Will "IH uciutfc iu aiij wj uuui WUriIi!ri'il7: : si I'' p.-t . r'l . l 1U; . -vv ' ' i'. . : f'Jf a.V'iJI frktn- iirT vTia sxtiniT nrwif-rt aL'A tn ftiir they may locate -AiVw ; ,K?TT t We are informed by a rentlemaa 'Jrim so motion.' oWvefaliofrte.Urce mills aft Lancaster that Mr. James C. Adims, the husband of the maniac mother, Is lying in a critical condition at the residence of his father in Lancaster county His ' indispos?- tion was occasioned by the fearful shoctne . , , . -. . , n. received wherr informed of the hotriWe work, of his wifej I Our informant says thkt lA..iA af nkMtor Bulhtntimjum . ii W when ne last ncara iroin njm nis me was i JL r..7f..- -i - 1 1 mm nnvTr- ri w iim w m aw. rpiHirLH a ih u 1 17 ii jar accident : Zim Anderson a colored man', liring on the plantation of Mr. VL M. Dodds; received a w,mnd from the accidenUbdiii Charge of af pistol lasttiTaesday. He was T . ... ". , . . . .... V. . i rawing water, wnen .ine winaieas sunoea downward lodged below the kntfe eajc out 01 m nanq ana strucs; a pisxoi wnico 1 ? was in his piatol pocket The: bam enttoed H6&fif2 JroVCteu the fleshy part oi the . thigh, and ranging j Produced the' mammoth aA GTisttmbeiof ourjchlremi : en4ojra tpamaju Jtw.eeltond we saie oj tne personal property oftbliae um u ii . Axrrpupi ine xargest Tanners U the cUT)ty.,Thj side lasted thronlrthrt daj 'm4 .was .$lie1VggeiitIiiciiQklB.t t&m tqriarpunf sine? auiepjuiiM J t?n acrt jofilelyith4 Tem4ay tnhaAdrowerje-e from the auctioneer did not know what was heingi Jfnokid; wjiundef-thfliam? weiWhyriaWLllorse from, a, mils to a t?ile and Ajaajjfnra The bidding was lively and Jfjifitedrwd prices ran . up soJL that the auction r fotia4xrpulto ktf funpn e ! jl H D?rMebwftaghtho4atyd aptwr.WjiaOKl iWPf4aIliteirwftcrir MU& iitlliJour mpnUjsolcf lf2jmHi ! j ii - i i i j. t, aau uwi pnco,pia fjjrgwii $70. Six hundredJmshelsjof wheat wtfs pOO. 'iTbecash came down .for eTerythiag on the spot and taking it on the wnoTe. thu was a sale thelike of which i sildomcrfn. Buyers were mere tromall parts ot the atAte. The Greensboro delegation came back em- nunarea mousana yoicrioiinc- xxv cratic party coulcTeiic Northern State have Mff?!4 f? J V? c? 7i3SS tlT't DUll-dozed, they look ko to e th$r- f Z f0.0 P proe4iiig4ovse4thstttetiiortMrawd- ed with noisy and twell a dresaekl t tetTfa, . a t .r . W Vf4ri t$- r ; e i- e -ti a .v. . , r. ounBudsL.LSnrely the H"WW mmgvFr . T 01 "eB l7 m P Jr' tbpug 'lit Ull' l Wi" ""W'TJ"' 1 , . . . ' Al.--'V. V'.A cards is no longer forbidden. . Ijdoei not now render them onmailabe. out correspon dents are cautioned that sueh writings may confuse the direction of the cards ana pre ..... j J' fiiti ..iv;j; urtsfL runt their nmmnr nliwprv . Mail matter pf anjf class may be Yorwacl ed from one office to another Vithoutadai " - - - rVt- .flV8 " ftWrMth" .hmW second, third or fourth class matter, provfd- ed the postage shall have been fully bfe paid in the first instance. . -t ;-fMl-H:W 0'X i 'Sta -tffi'' IS n,,,. t.. .rt jtf?LM4 i , s .Fight .in the Atlanta, t Roluso lMIL1' Atlanta, GaV, Nov. l.--To-.day a tembl fight took place at the rolling taill -De 5weeD,fuF eraI,loJe alwal waes on one lWe ayounilman named HarHrsMbf A. I. IIarris,:and David Reld lorematf fthe Pawrn cepartmenrr pn wie - oxuernswe wfere two1 orothers namedrfSlieats.i Be1d nrea several snots at tne cneais ormners without effect, when Frank Sbeata struct 1 . . : . - . . t .. -- IReid oU the head with a scantling, infllct- ing apalntnl wonndf. Harrfa'thetfltl'llk Edward 8heatsrtbe4fead, crushing his akuB. Edward ffiheats caa not Mv?rAU thpttrt!ea-4tu4er wreaU.iu aa V '"' f' ' V M;tt srrf'E escape frbm death occarredf at the Stantfn shaft this afternoon. John McMatort was asccndihg tb shaft wheii a'trock wlga. mg eighty Wrednd tOP distance of pvejr six hundred feet, inking tliei carriage oh which he stood, driving 4Mt throogli arwoooeri partitIon.' Tfc track" and carrirfe WCie otterly de- 1tadem wrekjrith,afew!braisesandone armdis- ab&. 'He then' i imbed tin? Iadde?T sCr Iiundfeoffeet,1 having; Vuthe'artii'toaid hlM and'feaiaeil thefott- NothlaliEelt rtUKjmmlttatowM& f " ' k?t " .CliifftTcetfakli Pt W watWitrnt lltttc,tW mnrh known WflnsA..lhA Chinese anin. 1 " itmww'w ' ---- - -rr that Manchester t Chaiiotte Observer. , tl f j r?. -t rfl4l ABad Bset CBoriii'a-In.aoi bv17.A 'Paris 4 dispatch iafs : Thi P f SSS- antUhe price of anga has- sensibly risen: Manvefineriea have come to a stand-still, 'and nearly all areTikely to termfnafcellleir 1 ojperauwnw vj mccuu vi uctriuwu 1 fraalUjoft lheeropls tinferioTao 1 auaatity defijcjent,f fH?tl! fuiia 1 ,a -- - Chasdlks's Shoes, X3o BEoetxev-DQ tl'e' anpoiotment of, &uiat-, U M Chandler's !lace. "Tlitj Governor. to-Jr 1 spiwiuhw wwut. urur v , iim lu vm I fill thm-rmkar "'rn'.!nl Kill eland conatylua gonrd. It ateas- ures 6 feet 8 inches in elrmfefenca.- sales of the first dav alone amounted to f 3.- 1 WUdctino'hratlVher . I mvavA an1 r mti mtk (hnir Air n frit n Tim lor tnose sent, outx o.T,if"XiD " Tl t , " 4 " iCTon.iu uie vnenr.noweyer, )s auorstnis gent looking people,! I ear. anu .it is Ngmw ue ueency , ! ( i! i ; 4 H 1 i I - 1 ! -!vl ! f i i - I' - "i 4 I 1 ! i if 8 ! 4 1st ' f -4 1 ! L "si i I ! , n ' f --1 1 1 f ! ; 1 , ill II ft :1 i . . - ' t I I - - :! :'v 1 j s 1 t :1! f .' ' '.'":!?" 1 .!; -i t.' ' ! . .'" ' . " I "j . . - i i . - ! !i ; i j' ; ; : ' ' - V::i ' l :-' if ' " I. !ji 1 . ! i '!"' . ' ' r' - ; BSBBBBSJBWSaaSSSBBBWBl - i i 1.

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