iiie E. L. 0. WAED, Editor kud Proprietor. :The Organ of the Roanoke and Albemarle Sections. : ' ' - ' - " ii MURFREESBORO, X. C, TIIUBSDAyL AUGUST 23 VOL. II. ! H SUBSOEIPTIOKJ $2 nei Aimum. in Advance. " f1 ) 1 . - -- 1 . LLJ : L. ii ; i l - - if (it : : i ..1877. .; :!. r , i i -l :.H : no. 43. .j I WE1RY.- Somehow the thought to-day Seems sweet to me, ! That should a still voice Bay 'Tm calling thee." I , As ne'er before I'd go lake one all blest Gad to be chosen now And know the rest. Glad, for the burdens grow Heavy to bear; ' Over the night of woe No dawn breaks fair ; For climbing upward ways Still, still I fall; M . And when my voice would praise Grief bushes all. Not that the woi k is done God gave to me. Not that through victories won From sin I'm free, But on Ufa's thorny road Peace is unknown ; I've weary grown. i Weary, I want to rest Close, close by Thee, And with the happy blest Thy face to see ; " With tnem to sing aright Thy dear, dear love ; All sin, and grief, and night, Far, far above. A Lesson In Fractions. It was such a blow to me-r$uch a bitter, overwhelming blow! I had been so comfortable and happy since the school-master boarded with me The ' big front chamber had been sd grim rand ghostly always shut up and ejnipty It was our spare room when poor, (dear Charley was alive, but now that l! was a widow and poor, it was a needless luxury to keep a guest-chamber. !Nbne of our old friends cared to visit m$ how ; just when I needed them most, when I was lortely and sad, and miserable, and refused to come. But when Mr. Slade took the room, I didn't grieve about the loss of friends. It seemed odd to have money for the guest-chamber, but the way that I was situated reconcile!! me ro the thought very speedily indeed. Then when mv bov Charlev got into that scrape at school, I should jusltjhave died if it had been any body but .Mr. Slade. 'III "Madame." said he. "vour boy is mischievous very mischievous." "Yes,: Sir," I said meekly. "And to Extend a rope in such a man ner that the unconscious heels his teacher shall be tripped up there; p; to rill the hat of his instructor with siones; to put wax upon the bench, so tha t the tails of his coat may adhere to the js tacky substance, and thus come to grhjl'j all these things are very reprehensible, madam, and merit a condign piiriish ment. "Yes, Sir," I replied, and wiped away my regretful tears. I knew ; what was coming. Either Charley would jbjs ex pelled from the school or dreadfully beaten. by this injured man. It waij bet ter, to have him beaten than expelled, but either was horrible. j. "Please don't expel him Mr,. S ade," I said. "He must be punished, of course ; but please don't beat hard." "I shall not beat him at all, him very i f l he fsaid. " "Don't expel him," I entre&ted. "Xor expel him," he replied! "If vou'll leave the boy to me, there will be no further trouble. He has a? irood heart and an open, generous, manly nature. I will appeal to tnese, mjaaam, if you'll allow me. I think we cap get along with Charley if we take the; right way." ; ' 'Oh, Mr. Slade," I said, "howjifioble you are! how generous! how magna nimous! I think heaven was gjoiod to send me such a a boarder." ""j J He grew a little red under 1 iy praise, and, as it was school-time, bokvedj -himself out ; but really he looked lilj:e an archangel to me as he walked down the street. Of course the simile wa ab surd. He was tall and lean anid un gainly; the tails of his long coat did not flap as gracefully as many aether coat close by. Charley sail hejjwas knock-kneed; perhaps he was; 11 don't know what the term means. lie imight have been knock-kneed, but to me he was all that was desirable in manD The way he managed Chapeyi Rafter that was miraculous ; there is nd pither word for ft. The boy was asj wilq.' and untamable as a young colt when Mr. Slade took hold of him, and shortly afterward tie was the : most I trajcjtable and orderlv of mortals. I could, see. though, the time and trouble it qcjst to work such wronders with him. la the and spring: they went fishing: together! Mr. Slade taught Charlie how to manage his hook and line, and wheedle thejpoor little fish to his bait. In midsummer they got up a collection of beetles and bugs and butterflies and all sojrks of things. It was terrible to the potoir in sets, I suppose; but oh, dear Ilejayen! What a rest and comfort it was to me to have Charley amused and kept ptlt of trouble! ' ' . ! ?' I began to rest on Mr.-Slade, tcf con fide in him, to ask his advice, aha In variably take it, upon all occasions), to gratefully talte advantage of his knack in repairing things about the house, and putting- in order troublesome do mestic utensils. He always put up the shade? in house-cleaning time, and hung the pictures; and what I should have done without him that time the ma chine got out of order, Heaven only knows. I had a dress to finish for Mrs. Chappel, and was working away, when all at once the machine began to squeak dreadfully. It was a rasping note, fit to raise the hair "on one's head, and mine had ached all the morning. I oiled it and fussed at it. but all to no purpose; it squeaked all the more. And, to crown all, the nice pumpkin pie I had made for Mr Slade's luncheon was burned to a crisp. I smelled it, and rushed, to the stove, but too late. It was a nasty black ruin, andiljust sat down and cried over it. It; seemed to me so sad and terrible, that t wanted to lay dovvn and die, when ;-in? walked Mr. Slade to his luncheon. "It' no use coming in," I said. " don't know haw you can stand board ing here, anyway. I'm such a miserable housekeeper. It would be so much better .if Charley and I were dead !" "What has happened V" said Mr. Slade; and I was ashamed when I saw a look of alarm on his face. j "It, is very sad," I said, "to burn the crust of a nice pie all to a crisp." j "Do you think so?" said Mr. Slade. "Now for me it is a most excellent mis chance. Of all things in the world I revere the burned crust of a pie. have hesitated to declare this predilec tion, because I know it is a remarkable one, and not at all likely to be shared by the majority of people ; but fortune has favored me to-day. Mrs. Sweet, let us have the pie by all means." And he actually lifted the horrible black thing to the table and ate it yes he did, he ate it which was the most perfect and graceful piece of martyr dom I ever saw in a man. And then I got courage to tell him how I burned it ; that Mrs. Chappel must have that dress, and the machine had begun to squeak in the most terrible way; that I oiled it and fussed with it, but all to no pur jpose, and how I was to finish that dress pf Mrs. Chappel's, with that dreadful lioise "distracting my poor brain, I didn't know. "We'll look at it," he said, in that resting, comforting, soul-cheering way of his; and as I followed him into the sitting-room I knew in my heart that he would exorcise that squeaking demon from the machine. And he did. "It's the ball," he said; "it becomes smooth from friction, and if you'll bring me a little flour or meal, Mrs. Sweet stay! here is a piece of chalk, which is better than all;" and writh that little white lump that he took from his waistcoat pocket he made the ma chine perfect in five in two minutes. i Xow how could I help watching him from the door again, as he walked away to schoel ; and let his coat tails fly as they may, or he be knock-kneed to eternity, how could I help sending after him my heartiest benediction and blessing. I And can it be wondered at that when, only two or three months after, he told me he was going away, I was like one stunned and bewildered? We were sitting in the little front room, and I was finishing off that diagonal overskirt for Mrs. Chappel. Charley had gone nutting to the woods, for it was already autumn, and an early frost had set the leaves aflame. A breeze from the west blew my hair into my eyes, and I put it back with a trembling hand. The soft warm day of golden light suddenly seemed to cloud over, aiid become one of moody sadness. "Why, Mr. Slade," said I, "I never jjot beyond the first four rules of arith metic in all my school days." "And upon these depend everything," le replied. "Put by your work, and let us see what we can do." I It was of no use to refuse. He was one of those masterful natures that always conquer. Half an hour after, I was sitting by his side at the table, with Charley's slate under my blurred eyes, and Charley's pencil in my tremb ling fingers. The rosy evening light streamed in upon us, the soft south wind bringing resinous odors from the woods where Charley yet lingered, j "I have an opportunity for an ad vancement in my profession," he said, t'wbich it would ill behoove me to put by. In my native town is offered me a position , of trust and confidence no less, I may say to you, dear madam, than a professor's chair." I I hadn't the least idea what he meant. I knew that one chair differed very much from another, and whereas one was comfortable, easy, and enjoyable, another might be for the time being a seat of torture, but wherein a profes sor's chair excelled I could not at that time imagine. I sat "quite still, and the ruffle fell from my hand; my foot rested on the treadle of the machine, and I sat and stared at Mr. Slade like one demented. "And it has occurred to me," he went on, "that the position I have held here, which is an exceedingly easy J and pleasant one, might profitably and suitably be filled byohe of the other sex 5 the duties are not at all arduous, and could be performed more readily, it appears to me, than those pertaining to the needle. I have spoken to the com mittee in your behalf, and with al little attention on your part ;to the simple mechanical requirements necessary, and a little help upon mine you will be ready to fill the position at once !" "Who? I, Mr. Slade? Why, you must be crazy ! " Then feeling' that this was not a very respectful wiay to speak, I added that his kindness for me led him to overrate my capabilities. "Now, my dear Mrs. Sweet," said Mr. Slade and the very gentleness of his tone, the tender rendering of my name, made me shiver, for I couldn't get the thought from my head that w hen he was gone there was no one left to deal tenderly with me or mine "now; pray try to give your thoughts to the subject in hand. It is the simplest thing in the world ; and those rudiments once con quered, the rest will follow. Now, a man sold his farm for 8,730 dollars, and fourteen-fifteenths of this is seven ninths of the cost of his house, and the house cost three times as much as the store; now what was the cost of the house and store?" j His voice was so persuasive, so dis tinct, it must have been a pleasant voice to listen to at the school even if the poor little blockheads could make neither head nor tail of his meaning.' I looked at Mr. Slade, then out of the window,, where the mellow light of the1 sunset shone, and I thought how, such a little while ago, it was a spring land scape, bathed in tenderest green, and now it was autumii, the grasss was sere and brown, leaves falling, the branches like skeletons against the sky. "Madam my dear Mrs. Sweet," said the voice of the schoolmaster, "I beg your attention to these few first rules. It is distasteful to me to leave you a prey to the coarse habits of these vil lage women, who flaunt their finery in an obstructive and unbecoming maner, and grudge you the poor reward for your labor." 't "She said the seams were crooked, and perhaps they were," I said, for I knew he meant Mrs. Chappel. "I'm not very good at sewing, or or at any thing." Then two big tears rolled put of my eyes upon Charley's slate, aid blurred the schoolmaster's pretty figures, which so distressed him that he got up and took a turn about the room. Then he came back to his place at the table again. t "Dear Mrs. Sweet," he said, implor ingly, "if you would only make up your mind to master these first rules ! A man sold his farm for 87.30 dol " "Ajad I'm sure he got a good price for it,' I broke in ; "and whatever he got for his house, it must have been all it was worth. As for his store Tdon't want to know anything about it ; I can't see that it's any of my business, Mr. Slade, and I can't bother with it just now. If it was a house alone, or a store alone, or a farm but to cut them all up and put them together again like a patchwork quilt is impossible for me to think of, Mr. Slade. I can't do it, I never could, and it's ridiculous to ask me to do such a thing, Mr. Slade. All I can do after you go away is to go on working for Mrs. Chappel till I drop dead; and only for Charley I wouldn't care how soon." Then I put my head down on the table crying ready to break my heart. I couldn't help it. I was the most wretched creature in the word, and my heart was full. I couldnt help crying and I'm glad now that I couldn't. For suddenly I felt his strong arm tremble on the back of my chair.- ; "It is so sad and terrible," J said, "to have the seams always crooked, and Mrs. Chappel " "Confusion to Mrs. Chappel and to her crooked seams ! Tell me madam Mrs. Sweet tell me, dear little heart, would it not even be better to give over your future to a grim old pedagogue like me ? It shall at least be free from crooked seams and puzzling problems." I heaved a little sigh of relief as I felt his arm closing shelteringly and ten derly around me. "If Heaven will vouchsafe to me' he said, getting back to his dear old wordy way, "your sweet companion ship for all the days to come, I can even find it it in my heart to be grateful to Mrs. Chappel, and wish her well." I don't know what I said, but every body knows that I never could see any fault in Mr. Slade, and I don't to this day. He fills his professor's chair, and 1 have ever so many comfortable ones at home, i Charley is a splendid mathe matician, and there is a' little fellow just creeping into fractions, and he came to me the other day, his dear little brains muddled with puzzling over that same sum. T "And please, mamma," he 'begged, "a man sold his farm for 8730 dollars, and fourteen-fifteenths of this is " "Go to your papa, darling," I said ; "he found out the cost of it all long, j - r ( i i r 1 1 '11 1 long ago; hut as for me, dear, I'm srlad to say I never could make it rrt out never. ! r 1 I Suggestions to Campers-Out. . Our camp equipage was very simple, as we had to take into consideration the "carries" between the j "lakes, where our entire kit would have to be shoul dered by the guides and the nien of our party: it consisted chieflv of a close tent for the women and children, and a and a mackintosh sheet for each of the party, a canvass bed fof the children which came apart and could be rolled Up in small package, a..fev compressible India rubber eouiforts, such as air pil lows, bath tubs, etc. ; besides these, each person had hi-s or her "pack," which contained the necessary toilet appurtenances', and j such extra gar ments as were indispensable. We have since agreed tlpt on another occasion wc should have! very light mackintosh bags, made to hold the blankets, as it is of the greatest importance that they should be kept dry. TiVe found to our cost the discomfort arising: from our want of forethought in that respect on more occasions, than oneJ At the same time, as the blankets are indispensable in their use as seats and hacks when in the canoes, these bags should be large enough to admit of their being comfort ably spread. On an expedition of any extent one can hardly fail to meet with showers if not with steady rains, and a half hour's wetting may often neces sitate a three hours' drying. For my self too, I should carry a portable can vass bed, for I do not find the primitive fir boughs all my fancy painted them, although II. declared them to be su perior to Marcotte's best; mattresses. Experience also taugljt us somewhat in regard to our kitchen. paraphernalia; instead of the heavy iron pot which we carried, it would be better to substitute a set of tin pails, one fitting inside the other, and substantially made with cop- per bottoms ; their combined weight would be less than that of the kettle, the cook at thes same time would not be confined to a single poti add to these a frying pan, a coffee pot, and one ol those compact; arangements of plates, cups, iorks, knives anu s. -- -a " 1' - outfit is complete, so far as necessity is concerned. If the jo'utney is an easy one, luxuries can be 'proportionately added, as in that case lisrht weight IThe would not be such arj object. staples on such an expedition are pork, flour and potatoes, tea and coffee; lany amount of tinned delicacies may be added, but it should be! borne in mind that every additional pJund is so niuch more burden. ; The, men, of course, carried their guns and ammunition, and II., who undertook the direction of i everything, declared that my maid and myself must wear bloomers. I j de murred greatly to this, but a little reasoning soon convinced me that; the ordinary walking dress, iowever simply made, would be an impossibility in a primeval forest, and while "traveling in that most tin steady of grafts, a canoe; so I had dark-blue liannel costumes made, somewhat stronger minded than I liked, while, the 'children were equipped in liannel wjiists and loose knickerbockers gathcrecj into an elastic band so they could be drawn dowji to the ankle or pushed above the knee, as the weather should be cold or warm. I give all the details, iri case this should, meet the eye of any of my sex meditat ing a similar expedition!; in which con tingency, another's ; experience might be useful. The men Jwore ordinary shooting clothejs; andjliere II. bids me say again, for the benefit of those who are thinking of roughing it, that the ordinary English kniekerbroekers, with stout shoes and leather gaiters that reach to the knee, and can be taken off before wadingj and j an extra pair of stockings are much more comfortable on such a trip tlaan the "high-top boots" so commonly worn in. this country, which soon get water-logged and un comfortable. gjcribner. Girls' Attitude to Young Men. There is a thing of which I want to speak, and that is of ihe behavior of girls toward young men who are; not lovers but simply friends. Let me you plainly tnat our sex were meant to be wooers. The custom tell not tre- valent among a certain class of young ladies of asking, directly, or indirectly, the attentions of young gentlemen is not an admirable custom. "My son," said a lady to me, not Jong since, "is much prejudiced against, a young girl, whom I admire, because she ! is con stantly sendingihim notes, inviting him to be her escort here and there,! and planning to have him with her.,j' A modest andi dignified reserve, which is neither prudery nor affectation, should distinguish your manner to gentlemen. Too great! familiarity and too evident pleasure in the feociety of young jmen no delicate and are errors into which pure-minded glfl should fall. In the Naples Conservatory of Mu sic are 3,000 4utgraPhs musical composers. The Homes of Mice. j ; i . MJW8 IN BRIEF. I The field-mice make snug beds In old stumps, under logs, inside, stacks of corn and bundles of straw; dig out gal leries below the grass roots ; occupy the abandoned nests of birds and the holes made by other animals ; and even weave nests of their own in weeds and bushes. They live well in captivity, and you can easily see them at work if you supply materials. In tearing down old buildings the carpenters often find between the walls a lot of pieces of paper, bits of cloth, sticks, fur, and such stuff, forming a great bale, and know it was once the home of a house-mouse. You have heard anecdotes of how a shop-keeper missed small pieces of money from his till, and suspected his clerk of taking it; how the clerk was a poor boy who was supporting a widowed piother, or a sis ter at school, and the kind-hearted shop keeper shut his eyes to his suspicions, and waited for more and more proof be fore being convinced! that his young clerk was the thief; hut, as the money kept disappearing, how at last he ac cused the clerk of taking it. Then the story tells how, In spite of the boy's ve hement and tearful denial, a policeman was called in to arrest him, and when everything had been i searched to no purpose, and he was about being taken to the police-station, how, away back in a corner was discovered a mouse's nest made of stolen pieces of ragged currency ten, twenty-five and I fifty centpieces. Then everybody was happy, and the story ended with a capital moral. j More than one such stolen house the mice have reallv built, and sometimes their work has destroyed half a hundred dollars, and caused no end of heartaches. Their little teeth are not to be despised, I assure you. 1 believe one of the most disastrous of those great Hoods which in past years have swept over the fer tile plains of Holland was caused by mice digging through the thick banks of, earth, called dykes, which had been piled up to keep the sea back. In this case, of course, the mice lost their lives by their misdeeds, as well as the people, sharing in the general catastrophe. They hardly intended this; but i "The best-laid plans o' mice and men Can; aft agley.'' It was by the gnawing of a ridiculous little mouse, you remember, that the lion in the fable got free from the net in which the king of beasts found im self caught. ! j Sometimes the house-mouse goes: out-of-doors to live, and forgets his civiliza tion; while, on the other hand, the woodland species occasionally come in doors and grow tame.j At the fur-trading posts about Hudson Bay, wild mice live in the traders' houses. All mice are full of -curiosity. They poke their noses into all sorts of places, where there is a prospect of something to eat, and often meet j the fate which ought to be the end of all poking of noses into other people's affairs they get caught. I remember one such case which Mr. Frank Bucklandhas related. When oysters are left out of water for any length of time, especially in hot weather, they always open their shells a little way, probably seeking a drink of water. A mouse hunting about for food found such an oyster in the larder, and iut his head in to nibble at j the oyster's beard; instantly the bivalve shut his shells, and held them together so tightly by his strong muscles, that the poor mouse could not pull his head out, and so died of suffocation. Other similar cases have been known. St. Nicholas ' ! ! A Mouse's Stratagem. A strange sight was witnessed one afternoon recently by ja writer in. the Corinne Hecord clliceJ Our attention was attracted by several lusty squeaks from the inside of a pail, almost full of water, into which a half grown mouse had fallen. The alar inj had hardly died away before four or five more mice ap peared on the scene, and began clamber ing to the top edge of the pail. j For several moments after gaining the top of the pall and catching sight of the mouse In the watar a squeaking confab was held. j j First one mouse and then another would cling to the rim of the bucket with hi3 hind legs, and while almost touching the water with his nose, squeak out cither consolation or advice to the immersed ; but while all this was going on the swimming powers ot the unfortunate mouse in the pail Iwere rapidly giving out. At last a happy thought seemed to strike the biggest mouse in the crowd, and almost with out a squeak he firmly fastened his fore feet to the edge of the pail and let his body and tall hang down. The drown ing mouse saw it, and making a last desperate effort for life, swam to the spot, seized the r tail ot his brother mouse, and amid squeass oi aeiignt from all the mice present, was hauled high and dry out of the water and oyer the edge of the bucket. j in Ijer treiasury, and don't owe a dollar -bcnuyiei Colfax has cleared over $100,000; froi his lectures. I i Milwaukee has a population of So much for' making nearly 123,1000. erood lareri i V ImJCL' HI. -t-Auere was not a single marriage in North Carolina during Moorei teounty, the year; 187? 4 l-fTble1 Sah. Sahara or -Burn in e Desert of Northl Afi-icia is 3,000 miles long and i,opo ih width! i 4-Thb city 4f! Richmond, Va.. has over' 340 factories! that give employment to ll,i00faereb)iL- , ' , H-& t 'Newt Hampshire couple weigh 449 poiihds,ibut the wife alone weierhs only M) - -. i I I It ! - poujrlds. Gaivston, lexas, tney are makin dr woir n cats. In one month 143 tabbiesl were illed. The Chinese laborers emnloved at the cutlery works at Beaver Falls, Penn sylvania, nave an leit. 1-rTlip reclibt of indirect' taxes 1U France the; first six months of 1877 ex ceed the estiifaitte by $5,000,000. Flemish language is dying out. to the regret of Flemings, both in Bel gium jindFfance, and of philologists generally ! TdW Tt tub's house at Bridgeport, Conn.J was recently entered and robbed V slII the lpfl.rl ! ninA nnrl tra ff of near! tures itj contained. j l-Trj&mali jives, of Lansingburg, N. Y., I reports that two thousand tomato plants jset oui by him were eaten up by the poikto bugs in one night. i The London conference of British librarians will be held October 25, Mr. Winter Jones, Librarian of the British e . ' Museum delivering the inaugural : ad dress. It A is conceded by experts In rail way management that one cent ner ton per mile is the minimum rate at which railways .can profitably transport freight I i r-fthi ' ofijial trial of the English ironclail Teqieraire is stated to have been a j perfect success. Six runs were made;, jthe average speed being between 14)4 arid 15. knots. j The financial. depression seems to have little eflect upon American tour ists abroad J (More than $45,000,000 have been issued by New York banks in let ters dficreditfthis season. " .ih l ! I '-. Ti I i ; It is estimated by anthorltv that in Lurope 1 Pfirfen in every 1,537 is deaf and dumb; Iif Ireland, 1 in 1,714; In the United States vl in, 2,500 while In Switzerland the average is 1 In 503,. I George jFjrancis Train has received ! thirty -six cents for an article on pea- nuts, tils layrite theme. Upon this he ; remarks 'fins is ine nrsc ana only paid me for literary labor. T' hi' I money ever -4Buffaloi, N. Y., Is enjoying a public investigation! instituted to ascertain whethelr or Iridt ihe president of her Com mon Council packed the School. Com- mittee books. n the interest of a change of text '11 ; . - ; Near Fprestville, "N. C. is a curios ity in the shape of a balanced rock. It is about twelve feet in diameter, and is so nicety pdied that a child can move It reauijiy,; but a giant could not over threw it. Ml 'I . : " j A curious phenomenon noted in the vicinitv of X'etersDurg, va., alter a. re-rain-storm, was the sudden of myriads of the tiniest of cent warm appearance frogs tiiat hopped out a brief existence and then died. U4J. m. Yountr. of Norfolk. Vh claims! to be the champion strawberry growerl liayifig gathered 37o,000 quarts from 12o acres during the past season One day he had seventeen; hundred pickers; at work. M IA Kalf-eister of Charlotte Cushmau has just died jatj Lynnfield, Mass. She was aiiJursj iisaoeiia weld, widow ot James weld, krid previously the widow of Samuel A.fl.aton, a well known Bos ton watchniaker. M ? 'Tb;e :.Eut&kd Sentinel says: Messrs. Flood & O'Brien own 360,000 'snails of bonknb.: stScicks, which at the current rates ab worth about $11,000,000. lipe monthly divillends from this stock give them a!n inM of $780,000. j 'i nle total expense of the schools Ah Neir York iat year was $3,371,694; lin Bostohi .$2,(131,643; in rhiladelDhia. $1,634,053; l4 St. Louis, 1,171,093 'Mn Chicago, SoWJOZi In San Francis. $700,147; iri I Baltimore, $677,986. Under a strange Canadian law! a man gOjing dq board a vessel In harbor without leave-1$ liable to get two years in the penitentiary. The last victim wasj a Norwegian boy of seventeen, "at Quebec, who jwas after a drink ol wate. In Durango, Mexico, there is ajtn beapng district more than twenty miles in extent, which has 600 veins and 300 drifts of steam tin. The supply ii so grealt th&i "metallic tin can be pro-. duced at a cost of two cents a pound;1 MrL George Dawson, of the Albany Journal can edit a newspaper, write a charmitig hook on angling, and preach an instructive sermon. lie now and then fills jthe pulpit of some Baptist church around Albany of a Sunday evehing. j j! J Sh:ep (raising pays. Mr. Ross, - of London, Ohld, bought 235 selected grade ewes for $900, from which he raised 233 lambs. Lambs and wool sold for $1,246 realizing a handsome profit over the cost! of keeping, with the sheep on hand and the mahure extra. The latef period of life at which you tbs have! recently gone into the Eng lishj universities Is exciting unfavorable comment. The average age of public, schoolboys beginning residence at Ox ford is now about 19 to 19, and the desriee Is often hot taken until 23 or 24. A hundred years ago under graduates weni up w .coiiege ai q vo io.