v :u::j . OBE SURE YOTJ AJBEKIGhHT j THEN; 0 A TTElAJ).nP:' Qwcsfcette ; J t5i idrSEirilt:." -iJ VOL. 58i a TJAM TABBORO', N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1 1.-- J i "'Vt;SJ- laid rijf.-. -j - ..i; .7iAr : RfM ilpcpolntments. Calory Epitcopal Church Rev. lir. J. B. CheMiiMtm,i:boias ttrlne services every Sabbktn, fbMrioon and aiternoon. Services WedneaiJbibrnXpg t&flO aud Friday af-ternoM-4 VeMek. : ' ! - Jyj tmtlhurci-ZBer. I. H. Baldwin Pato iricti oritxijr and ereaiag fat ' TmfboH 6d 1st Uod 3rf Sabbaths ; In Scot Ian Meek on 2nd, and Rocky Mount on 4th. -CfajUiihajr t Wwtawaay evening. Afuatonory Baptist CMirth R&v. Jos. E. Carter, Pastor, wlH , preach, morning and evening, in Tarboro, on 4th Sabbath in each month ; in Rocky Mount on, 24. Sundays. IfetANM & mctail f eeepS D- Ar-fltCl'altoa,- idltfjfeadi Affray-Mid cven inx every Sabbath. P rayer meeting every Monday evening. f Wmttee B&ptUt Kler P D. Gold, raator, pteaches on 1st Saturdays ana Ban days in each month. P&OFESSlUlf AMu CARDS. QX) WARD KA8H, ' Attoni and CoTiiuelOrs at Law tSf PraciioVtn aU thf Court, EUu and D AttmudCornucjlor t Law, Praetleesjii aU Btate and Federal Courts. Regular circoifcJaaB, Sdgecomb sad Pitt. Will keep sb oOefl it Rocky Monnt. 13" Special attention given to collections. Feb. 80, 1878. - -7- J. LRART, JR., t;riyijB Cori8snor it Law, - WAHlQaSSTKK; HTDE COUNTY, N. C. PracUaea'in tDovrts of adjoining counties, Supratne and federal Courts. -clstitBlion given to collections. Jan. 15, 1880.-1 .. ' Dossbt Battxs, - J. R. Tnliir, Tsrtooro', N-CL Rocky Mount, N. C. pATTlC A TILLER Y, Rockt ilovm,&SM ., N. Q. Have formed a copardersstp lb the prac- i ties of law in Nash cotaiy only and will, give their b3t attention to all business of a egal nature entrusted to them. -wan, la, issu. vt iy I have removed my DKNTAL OFFICE the new building recently erected tT . C. C. Lsnier, next 46or to Tarboro Hons. where 1 will be gUA reeeire my friends or any one desiring Dentel work. I am per manently located here, having teased tbe second story of this bnilding for a term of years. Yours, Ac, ISAAC N. CARR, Dec. 4, 1879. ly. Tb PazhcD hrmiicQ & Sukin; Co.) (BANKING DEPABTMENT.) Baxx open from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M. ' f f Duconfc pay, Xhxtbsdat. Dtbzctoes : , Geo. Howard, ' Fred. Philips, JohnIf orfleet, W. M. Pippen, H. Morris. Tarboro', N. C, Dec 18. 1879. Iy. NORFOLK CARDS. JS-oVt. TAJLAWT. W. B. JIO. L FABMT & CO., Wholesale Tobacconists, Cr rtarssal Ellaa.bc tb sts. Nbf foU'J Ya. Feb. 5, 1880. r ly J. B. POVELL, T WITH POWELL & CO., Tolesale Grocers, 'laVater Btrsst and 41 Conuoeroe Street, UORrOLK, VA. Sept. 18, 1879. ly. LIQUOR DEALER, '21 ROAKOKS SQUARE, iVor-foll:, - - Va. All orders promptly attended to. o2-ly OODORN & FISHER'S Cor Market Square & Union St .se wi ffieBFOUE, Ts. Wines sad Liquors of all kinds. Table sup- jpBsc wKU the best the market affords. MBXAsa.&4AX.Lr HOURS. sep.lS-ly. 3-a.xna.g-e, 100 and 103 Water Btreet, Norfolk, Va., re ceiver and shipper of all kinds of BmitS '"FINISHING LIMES. SheU Limes j Portland, Roman, Keene's, and Rosesdaler Cements ; Calcine, Dental, Cast ing, and Land Plasters, Marble Dust, Coal Dnstjffisflisl Fire CUy ; Press, Angle, Cor nicsi FirsifSTiAg sad Building Bricks ; Tar, Rosin, Slates, tc. Special rates in freights and prices for whOtosale lets. oct2-ly B4TTLE, BUM & AND e CO. Commission filerchanb, ;, ..- .HOSFOLE, VA. We make-theSAte of Cotton a specialty, and promtoeafways to obtain highest market prices. Bagging and Ties at lowest market ratesfkse olebmmiBSkfjs. Very-nberaliidvadcos made on cotton to be held. ang.ll-ly. jroROlX VROIBIA- M. 8. JAME8, PROPRIETOR. Americ or JEBropeaa Plan. Board per day $1.50. $$ lirijUelaM .esUurant attached to the hoirsn. P.SCHALK, of if; C. Slater, Myers & Co., Wholesale Grccsrs and Liquor lierclia&ts, Keep constantly oa band a fall and' well assorted stock of Groceries, Liquors, Wines, Tobacco and Clears, at lc west nviikct pr.tces- i Srm43til1l ifepllinyeolieltefr lOportant to ConsnmptlTes . Oentleman having. been so fortunate as XS. to core his son of Consumption in its worst stages, after being given up to die by the mo4t celebrated physicians, desires to make known the care (which proves success fnl in every case) to those afflicted with Asth ma, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, Consump tion, and all Affections of the Throat and Lungs, and will send the Receipc, free of charge to aU wl tetirc It, if the;, will for ward tbelr address to DANIEL A DEE, 84 Libeny &lgyii York, s- Aprdm. mff mam la l 3 sm ADVERTISEMENTS North Carolina Line! A HO MB Str. . 'Edgepomto. RllaJU iliMfliaa I eonneetions fkwn sUl poimta en Tsur River to . SrTollx, Baltimore, New York, frV .aMiaeiaillaV. IXOCtOBI. l-lOWl NdeaeeVfaU Rlwerarad ll pinta I- !-i As general agent for thU : line in the secf tion of country bordering on Tar River above Washington, the nndersigned begs to an nounce that the Steamer Eogeeombe is now making regular eonneetions with Steamers of the Line between Baltimore and Washing ton (generally known as the Clyde Line) and will issue through Bills Lading to Norfolk, Baltimore, New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Providence and Fall River. - - LOWEST RATES and RKa30NABLE DISPATCH can be secured by enooaraginjr uua enterpnsej Be careful to order all shipment? marked and consigned via " North Carolina Idas." From BALTIMORE ship by Baltimore and Washington Steamer, K. Foster, 'Agent, 90 Ldght Street, eauimore. From PHILADELPHIA ship by Clyde Line, w. r. Clyde Co., A genu, u South Wharves. From NEW YORK ship by Dalzell's Use, H: L. Chapman! Sol lei tin g Qrsenv v.r . If Agent, o Bowling From BOSTON ship by Merchants St Mi ners Line, care W. RMayo, Norfolk, Va. From NORFOLK ship by Norfolk and Washington Line, W. R Mayo, Agent, Clyde's wnarves. : . , For tates and other information, apply to I N. M.LAWRENCI, ; A gent N. C. line snd, 8tr. Xdgeeombe, ' , Tarboro .N. CV Oct. 4, 1877. - tf. A REI14RKABLB REMEDY. jttorrlson's (English) Pills. i STOMACH, LIVER, KIDNEY. OR BLAD DER DISORDERS, JAUNDICE, 8ICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, AND COSTIVENB38 EN TIRELY RELIEVED. DYSPEP8IAj " I took Mnrricon'e Pills for Dyspepsia, and was cured. I believe I would not now be living but for using them!" i JOHN T. 8UBLETT. Hardware Met chant, Richmond, Va. August , in w. . GRAVEL. "I took four doses of Morri son's Pills for kidney trouble last July, and several days afterwards passed seven gravel, and three days afterwards passed three more." Dec. 16, J. M. OODDIN, Banker, Richmond, Va. 1879 bTONE. "My daughter was relieved of stone in the bladder three-eighths of an inch In diame.er, after using Morrison's four days." JOHN SHELTON RAGLAND. Brick Mason, Richmond, Va. August 13, IbTJ. a.. LIVER, &c-4-"U Fto the Kiddle of last commenced - uslii? the September, when I commenced - uslii? Morrison Pills,: I suffered much with pain in in my head, back, liver, and kidneys, and nothing gave me tbe relief that these pills have- I believe that they will relieve any one suffering with these disorders who will persevere in the use of them." I ALEX HEIRHOLZER. Dealer in Hides, Wool, Ac, Richmond, Vs December 18, 179. CHILLS. "The Morrison Pill I got from you about four weeks ago, releived me at once of the cbill I then had, and I have had none since. I can't endorse them too high ly. E. G. TYLER," Messenger Southern Express Co. Dee. 6, 1ST8. . ., . , - These Pills are in sets cf two boxes each. with directions accompanying them. Price, $1.50 per set; and they will be mailed free to any address upon receipt of tbe price. w. a. riiuM Jttt, Agent. 817 East Main Street, Richmond, Va. Cut this oat. apl23-ly. BEST IN THE WORLD ! Aran and Hassti Ia pare Bi-Carb Soda is of a slightly dirty white color. It may appear white, examined by itself, but a OO MP A R I SON WITH CHURCH A CQ'S m ARM AND HAMMER BRAND will show the difference. See that your Baking Soda 1s white and PURE, as should be all similar substances used for food. Housekeepers who prefer bread made with yeast, will Improve its quality, make it rise better and prevent it from touring, by ad ding one-half teaspoonful of Church A Co's Soda or Saleratus. Be sure and not use too much The use ot this with soar milk in preference to Baking Powder, saves twenty limes its cost. 4 See one pound package for valuable infor mation and read earefuHy. Show tiia to 'Your Grocer. April , lotsoj , anv. n siii WHOLESALE AND RETAIL STREET, ' , i ; l . ' f i TARBORO, N. C. January 8, 1880. tf. prescptiok; fej For lite speedy Cire of Seminal WeaVngas. fjist nf .11 riMnHlKattfOUSlltOl eretion or excess. Any DmggUt bas the lnrre. . dienta. Dr. W. SAOVFJt CO- M. AM mi 7 wan jatata atreet. CiaMiH, ' naer Rntad. , . " AND LIQUOR DEALER, MAUN jtxboiiOL mtr ?lmrsday, Jtaa If, 'iSSO- j BJLX BROKE JUOfOgXJt AGrftpole ieperlptieB f Sene lB UCateaf uenTtnuen ' Chicago, Jtffie Sth. The greates scene which ever oecnrree in anation; al convention took place between 12 and 2 o clock this mormnir, amouniiiu? almost to a battle be tween the contendincr factions. ' Tjoho; John "Wentworih Bays ' he Aas Jiever Been anytnnur njte it xn lortr Years, and Piilet, a California delecute, declared it looked like scene of terror from the French rev olution It was so Drolon&red and excited ihat the coolest men were dazed aid stood terror ftricketi ia their seats. Hen and woraea-went into hysteri.es, and rushed around and shouted like; maniacs. People who heard the rush and roar fiv e blocks away crowd d into the conventiorfTSltho at tick ets, as the poMee seemed too mctch startled, to detain; any .one. i ir would seem that- tne anrmai spirits and wonderful lunp; power o: the convention were reserved, after all, for -the closing debate on the eiglxfeea anti-Grant contestants from Bliiibi. Matters were -comparative ly qmet during the speeches, although the speakers ..pa each side spoke wltfC xnore than usuaj" bower. But when Emery Storrs, ofChicago, the last oi-tfie f urj took his stand 'on the 1edg of tbe press platform and proceeaea in ma peculiarly eoqHent style to . laugh down the axgumenis Of hisopponentsvthe enthumasmjn creased each seeond. When, impr vinfir 'his advantage, ajad in a voice that overcame the accoostic diffieul' ties of the halL he spoke of Blaine and told the supporters of that preXu- tleman- to nominate im if they could, the tempest opened in good earnest with stirring cheers and loud verbal interruptions from the gallery. Mr. Storrs, turning to the cheering crowd, said: "And when the gen tfemen who are cheering in the gallery to-nignt are reposing un der the soft - summer sky, tired of politics and disgusted with its fatigues, yon. will find the follow era of the grand old silent soldier ajvrake by their camp-fires, and carry ing the banner of the sluggard for ward to triumph." "HELL BBO&E LOOSE." At the conclusion of the closing sentence, "Hell or something that very closely resembled that territo ry," says the Chicago Times, "broke loose, beginning on the east side of tne hail, spreading to the floor, and finally inefctirig every part of the vast audience until it seemed to hare gone absolutely mad lor tne time being. The adherents of both the renowned candidates vied with each other, in roaring like wild bulls, or perhaps it might be true to say like an immense band of wild Indians, sounding their ferocious war-whoops at a gigantic scalp dance." lhe delegates from the different States and Territories seized their banners and waved them on high, while everybody on the floor and in the galleries waved handkerchiefs, or hats, or umbrellas, or sticks, or what ever they could lay their hands on to indicate, their preferences. The threeuarters of an hour without of ficial . mterrtrption, sounded like the storm of the. battlefield itself, f conspicuous among tne leaders were rxoscoe Uonkixng, Liong Jonn Wentworth, and John Logan on the floor, and Bob Ingersoll and Mr. Conger on the platform. The flash ing eyes and 8carlef" faces of the ex cited niultitude showed to "what a pitch of passion the once cool and dignified republican party had come. WILD WOMEN, TOO. ' Even womanhood for time lost its delicacy and dignity, and showed as much insanity, standing on chairs and flourishing Hymbolfiy as the: men themselves. They were few,' of course, in proportion to, .the number of "women who sat there awed and amazed by the Titanic uproar i Ten thosand people were on their feet, standing upon tables and chairs and the backs of benches, Waving handkerchiefs, canes, hats umbrellas, overcoats, papers in f aci everything that could be seen or used to add to the confusion and excitement.. The flags, with which the building is dec orated, was torn o:own ana wave a aloft. Crazy womeii tore off their bbunets, and swung them by their strings ; and crazy men pulled , their coats from their shoulders and waved them in the air: j The noise was absolutely deafening I and no one knows, till he bears it, how much, noise IOjQOQ beople make, shottting t ! the tops of iheir IttngSj jjotrndig the floor with thejr feTt, arid banging the resonant pine benches with boards torn from the backs and arms. It was bedlam, and beyond bedlam. It Was like nothing that was ever seen or described, and any attempt tq de scribe it would be a failure. ' i One woman on the stage, a Mrs, Deane, of New Jersey, '! crazed with the excitement, tore dowA taga find ok themu ihs m ohe flnaUy plhiibed" to the pedestal of the GrOd djass of liberty, that stands behind the chairman's desk, and there con spicuously to all the audience she swung her flags tind screamed at the top of her voice. 'She. wa: finally ta ken down . by 1 SergeankafcArms I Sjtrong, Governor Jewell, Congress- man juaxica ana otnerRana piaceu in a seat, but her hysterics returned, and she snatched the flags from the men who had them and sprgg tf the pedestallfifniv; .. ' &bi y&e& uamnt : ; : 1 ! to keep her seat; but wsb finally taken from the building; before she could be controlled. ' i . JCY LOHjB0800K OTBSKDS. senator Uonkling stood upon a chair, and waved the banner, which; hanging upon a pole, was placed to marie the seats of the New York del egation. When his arms were tired with' holding this , Jieavy banner, he waved' his hat' intone band and his handkerchief in " the other. The dig nified gentleman 'in the New York delegation shouted with the Sena tor in the Pennsylvania delegation. General Beaver waved his crutches in the air, and Senator Cameron swung his hat, standing on top of a chair. Ijorig John Wentworth's huge body and conspicuous : head rose up among the Illinois delegates like a giant among pigmies. 1 He stood, upjDSPbair for twenty mhv utes, with . hisl cane in one hand and his old brown hat on the end of it, and his red hemmed handkerchief in the other, forgetting all parliamentary deoorum. j--:' ,:.-; The.dele&ratesbe&ran tosiner "John Browu and "BaHy Bound the Slag," and in all that yelling, rapping, sway ing crowd the only men, who kept qme4werejEhe Bportera, to were compenea in uie miasc oi me aeai- ening turmoil to attend to .the busi ness of a farmshing the news for the pubhe. It was midnight when the first thunder peal was heard, and it was half an hour after 1 o'clock when the chairman began to show that he still lived by hammering his desk with the formidable gaveL He could not succeed, however, immediately, because the delegates from Maine, California, Nebraska, Nevada, Kan sas, Virginia and New Mexico, bear ing aloft the banners which designa ted their places in the hall, formed a procession, which, amid monstrous confusion, marched around the halL PEACE AT LAST. Doubtless the disorder would have lasted " all night . had not General Baum, with an unexpected sagacity, proposed three cheers for the victo rious candidate. This parting volley of sounds seemed to satisfy the fren zied assemblage, and Mr. Storrs con cluded his speech in careful senten- res fearful that he might create an other scene tike the one' which he had so1 ably succeeded in producing. There "never was, and perhaps, un less in the same body, possibly never will "be such another spectacle. In fact the scene put Grant and Blaine m nomination, and the speeches af ter this will be tame in comparison. Written for tbe Tasboro Southsrhss. Census Taking. BT 1CXS. ANGELIKS X. ALXXANDEe! Scene : A. house in the country. 'Good morning, madam ! Is the head of the family at home ?" "xes, sir : 1 m at home. "Haven't you a husband ?" Yes, but he ain't the head of the family, I'd have you to know !" "now many persons nave you in your family ? ' "Why, bless me, sir! what s that to you? ' You're mighty inquisitive. "I am the man who takes the cen sus. 'If you was a man in your senses, you wouldnt ax such impertinent questions. "Don t be offended, old lady, but answer my questions as I ask them. "'Answer a fool according to his oily.' OlSTadtf, indeed! What bus- business have yen to enquire into f olkses' affairs ?" The law makes it my business. Unless you answer my questions youH expose yourself to its penal ties. Obi It's the law. is it? That alters, this case." "Now.' tfodd lady you're a fine poking ladyi if youll give me a few answers 111 thank you. How many persons are there in your family? (Counting her fingers) "There's me and my husband is one "Two, you mean. : "Don't put me out, mister.. Me and toy husband is one, John is two, Peter ls-ihree, Sue and Mollie is four. ThoiriajLia five; Mr. Jenkins, his1 wife and two little 'girls is six and Jowf er's seven."' " H "Jowler V iWJxa is he?" "Who Jowler's t. Why, the- old ujf n is the number of human beings I want to know. 'Human I Why, there amt a more, -human dog ever run on four 'I mean the two-legged kind of being. . , ; Uh I Well, there s the old roos ter, he's seven the gamester s'eight, and the bantam's1 nine." ' thou stop,; good woman, I beg of you.- -1 don't want to know the number of your fowls." "Didn t you say it was two-legged kinoTof beings ?" "True ;- but-I 'did not mean your chieken Jrenri." t f va ,Aivn r wvtvowauu vviu Ther-old gobbler is seven, the hen turkey: is eight, and if youll wait a week tliera'Jl be seme young una, for sbiia is setting on a' whole snarl of "fVinf rmnfl vnTir tnrkevnV bv don't say that naughty word, good Mr. Flippant-Tongue !" "ion are trying your best to vex me. I mean tne beings that talk." "Why didn't you say so before ? Then poll parrot is seven and the black girl is eight see you will have your own "1 way. '.Toff have mentioned all 1 youi Tjamjuyaaje jqti "Yea : except the wooden-headed man the school master." 'Sow many males under ten years T" "There am t none. Husband don t carry the mail now." ""You mistake me. I mean male er folks, not leather mails. s. There's none, except little Tom- my and Mr- Jenkins' two little girls. "Males, I said, madam, not fe males." "WelL if you dont like the fe, you can leave it off. "How many males between ten twenty V : - - " None but Peter and John, and John rah away last week." "How many between twenty and thirty?.'' . - . - . - "Let me see.:; the woodea-headed man is one, Mr. Jenkins and his wife is two, and the black girl is three. " "No more of your nonsense. ' Ton must answer mjr questions." 'Answer' a fool' accordinW to" his .." . .. . ' - r ; . folly. "How many males between thirty ana rorty t a - at '!, "Nobody but me and husband; He was forty one day last month. "How many between forty and fifty?" "None-' "Between fifty and sixty ?" "None' "Are there any between this ; and one hundred ?" r "None, except the old gentleman Granthe Greyling. He's hundred and two, come next August, if he lives, and I daresay he wilL" JLhe census taker havmg enquired the number of females of the diner ent' ages, and obtained the like sat isfactory answers, next proceeded, to ascertain "the number of deaf . and dumb persons. There amt do deaf one, except husband, and he ain't half as deaf a he pretends. There's no dumb folks' here but the wooden-headed mah. He never speaks, only when heft spoken to. To be sure, husband of ten wishes I was dumb, but he can't make me so. "Are there any manufactures car ried on here?" "None to speak on, except turnip sassidges and tow-cloth. 'i never heard of turnip sausage. VV hat machinery do you use ? "Wothmg but a bread trough, chopping-knife and hller. "Indeed ! ' "Have you anything more to ax ?" ".Nothing more. Good morning. nrmrlft.m 'Stop a minit ! Can't you think oi something else! Wouldnt ypU like to know what we are going to have for dinner, or how many " "Nothing more, madam; nothing more. "Here, just step to the cupboard and see how many ants is in the su gar bowL 1 haven t time to count em. "Botheration on your aunts, and all your relations. Exit, in a huff. The Bible- The Bible, aside from the factor of divine agency in its authorship, is the insoluble enigma of the literary world It well may be. Think of it ! It is the oldest book upon the earth, still read among men: going back beyond the Roman or the Greek lit erature; going back farther than any other, mparts of it, toward the time when the waters of the of the deluge subsided from the hills of Western Asia; farther than any other toward the very morning of creation, when the sons of God shouted for joy. Yet its vitality continues, and its power over the human mind remains unwasting It is a large book. It sets its stately front for two millenniums along the lines of chronology, history, biogra phy, philosophy, and human science. It challenges assault at ten thousand points. It says to science, "Search the strata beneath, and the stars above, and find a God more equal to the problems of the universe than Him I reveal!" It says to philoso phy, "r ind anything in human na tore, any power or any passion, any mean inclination or sublime possibil ity, of which I do not give the mani festation and the explanation !" Thus' challenging assaolL ami opening its line along the whole extent of it to any endeavor to overthrow it, it re- mains the most remarkable of books How an Arab Lady Ferfomes Her self. In the floor of the tent or hut, as it may chance to be, a small hole is excavated sufficiently large to contain a common champagne bottle; a 'fire of charcoal or of simply glowing em bers is made within the hole, into which the woman about to be scented throws a handfull of drugs. She then takes off the cloth or "tope" which forms her dress and Crouches naked, oyer the fumes, while she ar ranges her robe to fall as a mantle from her neck to the ground like a tant. She now begins to perspire freely in. the hot-air bath, and the pores of the skin being thus opened and moist, the volatile on irom- tne smoke of the burning perfumes is immediately absorbed. By the time that the fire has expired the Bcenting process is completed, and bft& her person and her, vobe are redolent with incense, with which they are so thoroughly impregnated that I have frequently smelt a party of , women strongly at full a hundred yards dis tance when the wind has been blow- ig from their oyrecojS 6R j MM?f 4 After a Texaa jury had diaagreed for ninety-eat hours the judge got a I verdict in two mmutes bj sending in woxdtiuftcirmwasia town. . xiie report oz ma xeotsbiiuae ap pointed by the House ctBifrfeistww I Winerahickeri Iiake aopiwrmationhaA. I beUeveTBevereen -iasde nnblie. It seems, that: the member for the' 193 Pennsylvania, IMstrict persuaded Congress to apprxpsiate; $150,000- dredge Out" Lake VVingahicken, so.asJ to make it Bvigable -for-:frates ; and after thembiwailexpeQTjil reports reached f ,J2sm6 otf Corximercejtbat eak Jffi&Stiik not absolutely navigable. pThmth . io- vestigating; committee wag appointed, and after visiting, Xk spot jt rq ported as followat -rj,. F.:i "The spot, upon the ,7 eommittee s map which is marked asrlke Wing- ahicken was found. ninn examination of the locautyr tooonsiM ol wan 1 A.''.a Ll' -f'l I " . m I about four miles i in cveumferen I TT : -ii . ! n . : i" a Your committee swill consider -th easer ot the mormT a a 5arefxa,exptoratum,of it, asxl aiter; having been three tunes treed , by bears, and once by a false about wild-cats., your, committee givethe rcroiectiia, ai probation' iiU-,,. u.f - - " "The other .way, M- xmakiug . the monntajfa navigable us to, remove j. it and to excavate a hole m deep as, the mountauvjfl Mgfr Ibis wopcTipj about seventy years and It-will roost about Jf iSLUOO,0OU,goa mora :or, less W hen it is doncL . your, committee recommend tbe;.tho. excavated dzrti snau oe aumpej.- somewhere on .tne 1 mm- m --mi ' A' - - a, m . coasts so thai at- oi it may form; another StaterwFhieh shall -be added w we STeS pna r gioriousv- umon. ucn an extenBion oi the area in which maV be enioyed the- blessings of free government maypossibly be worth; the moTieT But "before 1 the worst is begun a detatchment of iron clad troops should be seat into the hilly part of the lake to kill the bears and to secure the arrest and mearee- ration of the unprincipled r- scoundrel n.uu'Draue jruiu 1 whiiuuiict- Duuucuij up a tree with: an exciting out wholly mendaciouSr -report about wild cats. , " w itn reierence . to the wampy part i of Lake - Wingahicken, your committee were nxuch struck, as they went over upon; stilts, with its extra ordinary fertility in . the matter of bullfrogs. If bullfrogs' commanded a dollar apiece' : in ' market,5 f enough money could at once be '' obtained,, in the swamp to pay for excavating the mountain. v Two pound - bullfrogs, with legs like a pair of fire-tongs and voices like that' of a trambone. were found in myriads; and the chair man of your committee was assailed, during his passage through the swamp by what he; at first ; thought was a watermelon with legs, but which turned out to be a frog of un usually savage ferocity. "The swamp is even more rich in mosquitos. These range in size from an ordinary mosquito to a spring chicken. The secretary of the com mittee captured one of the!1 largest, and upon our return to the hotel it was pitted' against a Brahmapootia rooster that weighed seven ' pounds. At the end of the 'third round the rooster wis dragged off dead and the mosquito could only be kept from attacking yomV rmmittee by knocking it in the head with' an ax. It will be stuffed and sent .on to the Smithsonian Institute. Most per sons will probably mistake . ,it for 'a, singularly fine specimen of the Amer ican bald eagle. "If it shall be decided to build a new State with the material excavated from Lake Wingahicken, 'your com mittee could guarantee " that the young commonwealth should have a fair start as far as the blackberries, bullfrogs, mTisiroitoSj bears and man ufacturers of liars about wild cats are conceHiedaw. as'2. vi.neru "Of course this swamp could ' be dug out so ai to make a channel of sufficient depth for frigates f but ; as there is not enough water now in the swamp to float a mud-scow,- and as the nearest t stream ; is eight miles distant; either Congress wlU have to i pass at law compelling the flood gates of Heaven to stay perpetually " open over tbe bkesbr as to keep it fuU, or else some arrangement wiU have to be made for frigates navigating the lake to carry their own water with them. In dry weather- the surface of the lake is apt to be so dusty as to choke tile bullfrogs, or to make them flat in their high notes.- Your , commit tee throw oat the suggestion ihat -if Congrese feels any solicitude for these national bullfrogs a boy might be kept in the lake in summer, tame to moisten; the surface with a sprink ler. -'- ' ' - ......;. . - ' "Your committee inquired closely respecting the appropriation of $150, 000 which was alleged to have been spent ; last year -for dredging ' the lake. They were able to come up on tracts only i part of it. Eleven dollars oi it were given to a colored man who undertook the Work with a long- handled shovel and a wheelbarrow, He seems to have become discour aged, and knocked off, upon hearing a calculation that if he stock; steadi ly to the work, he would - probably be able to eomplete it in 11,000 years. Two dollars, and seventy-five cents were given to a man. who killed a pole-cat, which made the mountain smell at a distance of twenty nuies. Eight hundred dPjkrs. wera hvid out in hre worts, aacfc' capppa, as tne infirahicken, hotel, as- an expression of the joy with which the people of the, district greeted the arrival of the appropriation. Seventy dollars ad ditional were spent? by-the Bepre- Bentatives bf the district m distrib- uting STigar-eured. hams among . the I poor; altbough your cosnmittea ; ixm ifeistisei(iiwl ' in. I. wvrkifend luunl had ur Theraj rTnnors , tht, muh of luo remainaer pi tae appropriawo: lusn. tatave'shouri.lia?rirhis ter, serenaded, upon- .her .eighteenth" neJ- Mhanared and thirteefi time durm eve veiling in "a manner that the member Jroni the 19PennsyliJ l?A TVoMwT ' '! "A Your committee -Iherefore- aska to be 1"tt,1i'E'V ' ''i;t ' It is niroersloohai'them iromf thimiwaaxied-toJ'nl this report;ibut I ' li ani ,4etenml that it shall oome Out and heraLwon UBTS . ' .1'! a. USsnU.-iL. fariiVvlL' '.The Lrrst Ectsl Is tie Vcrl : I The finiBl strokes ov the thre andhajl ijbrjdeia Janmioa Baj; ay rhe '.JShgi Yorl M0rald,.yrpit given ib on June, ptn, anaon.vQun- aay xvocxaway" romj wni nave jt newtraatcrjtmectkw with New York. ThehewhoteLxtJs mdO,id t6b uuiv next.- rne, strucknrA eovera aboit three; hundred thonsand square zee oi-ine' nrcnerto Tmproauctive land otliobkaway- point atid' is to cost whm-flnlBliedaltT A casuabT$sorI:woUai be:skn to credit the confident aesertien of Mr. John floors, the .cfeief foreman of construction, that-the edifice wfflj b ready for occupancy this month?,' but on comparing Wha ? tat j-,to be done with what has been? donsv sineer the l8fti of February lasiv r wen rJhf view: the faf hat 1,400 men re em- ployed on the ifcotel - Itsef f and ' 800 more are-afhievung part of it in this city, its comptknvwittin tbe time specified seems''' not! " improbable. MeB8tB.'bi!Brttxt& Scraa'the archi tects, arid oiiiarentieme& inspected the, edifie aadts sunroundings yes terday. ,- J,; - .rrr. --,-fj sVixrr 'Ht is." tbe' elder Mr. LeBrun swoi "the largest hotel in 'the world. -It has 616 sleeping rooms and will have accomodation fori JUG0D permanent cuests and-liLOOQixanaaent .e-iKitrrfa. Its length is 14QQ feet audits, aver- age wiatn npwara ox three nundred to six stories' above the basement; There are to.be ibc the jguests -two elavators and , ten staircases. , five of them inclosed' dv. fire, nroof walLvr The ikrcb vxrotitiWtbo sea. 'arid ex? tending the entire length of 1 the hb-' tel, is to be seventy feet in width at the main entrance and fifty-four feet wide on the wings. Between , it sad the bulk head that we are building to keep off the sea whenever there is a spring tide with a southerly wind there is to be a lawn more than 1,600 feet in length by two hundred two hundred and fifty in breadth, which is to be ter raced arid ornamented with, shrub bery and banks of flowers. The porch on the Jamaica Bay front, to which guests wiU step from the cars direct, will be about fifty feet in width. Passengers bv, steamboat will reach' it by crossing at broad, pier that runs out into the bay about five hundredofeet The great bar room will be separate frOJH tho hotel proper bnt connected, lfJM, wing on the western end 350. feet in length; to 'contain teripm allevs bil-J lard rooms and the- like. The1 hotel will have five thousand gas jets;' and . . the - -f distribution -.of, n water throughout the building; will, . enable it to become its own fire department The weights of the deaf erring papers between tba fkroble: floors is . 'twenty-, seven, tons. -The: tare which will be wholly t of ,b. walnut, is oemg maqe in We shall begin to ttat dowfr the 'CBiets" next Mr. John k. Eice. of the Tremoni Hotel Chicagpi and formerly , of the Pacific Hbm San !frjiciscot who 'is t6 be thet Vmdtprarof tie Boekaway BeacfcHo'BaioHhat he will ' imfAoy natxmt iseven- -hundred waiters,, "Jfc.irjA bt conductei"rha continued, ,op jbotiy :.ie i European, plan and the Amencari. .it isowneil The two miles of Harrow that you see running doe west into the sea ia to be laid out as a : park, wiu walks and , drives. , Tjie iron pier a quarter of a mile to the north of us, running out into the ocean a thousand feet ctf!;ttbrelr & long tot tbJebatcl company. Our pier ia pn-jthevf JamaieaBayy side.of :the hotel, away from, tha swell- of the Bol with worked togetiiei In J a'plow net Milton married the daughter of a cotmtry Squire, arid lived with her but a short trine. tie was1 ari austere literary recluse, while she was a , ro sy, romping country lass, who could not endure'4 tSe' restramt' imposed upon her so. they; separated. Sub sequently, however, she returned and thev lived tolerably happy . :; r J. ' Queen "Victbria andJftxnoe Albert' were cousins, a rare' example in the long i line: : . of ': Rngtoth monarchs, wherein Che wunhd vows - were r sa credly observed and sincere affection existed.. , . , . . ' , Shakespeare loved arid wedded a farmer's daughter. 11 "7 '! ' ' : Washington married a woman with two children. , It is enough to Say she was worthy; cX.. him, .and. they Ured as married people should live in perfect 'hsnnony '-' with ' each other '..1 v-fe'Si f j:. -Ail -' I V' John Adams married the daughter of a Presbyterian clerfrvmaxu Her father bbjecW on account x?f ' John 1 cisely what bearingflrel the diHsnniinatiaarDf sbisww lamsassMv wm mm j V r bert Brri-nB hiaTTied a- farm gir whom hef fell' in love while they tbxoriielmaiTied- was altogether beneath him in social laed totellectual, capacity,, and, esiJe this waa flfr-two j years ' old while he was 1 but twenty-five. He wouldn't, laktt '2Sfo- for- an- answer, Ad they iw idarried arid'- lived hsppUy ulstUcsbidied,: wh was two years afard.;. r vf .rjz:a t.;tj f etifir tne Great of IiossiSj married cause he loved her. Of (Wursetiiev .-. XL isr'Oiotrfkaytc.awri11iat Andrew JckaO- fcjBxrisd y.lad whose husband was still living.; ; She waS epITH-M ynniVn 'iliiy n) devoutly attached to the-plcl .warrior andstatesnTari..-!-7' 'f) ; y Professor AxasroWirichiCf the Vto9mtmTi-UxkiarhaM iust iwiea1B.rsWraiaiWJC-xl.-dd m . a . v , . . ;TrJadamltes, bjeefctef iearly s 't6tsible'i:whio?,thev were--to iderilify arid'locale therfl, MitrweiloThe -itheoryOj: sdt a new1c:aad .the jelnef iriUiest ibf ; the' present ,.vblume.r iharefore.,lipa 1 not in the iovelit of the, idea, pc the fact that rt,iA tbe prodactior )Of one whois bftrinfilf at once va irian.of scieaie aridr 041 devoutr believer "Jot Revelations add who -hen tlleizzln faWmthna iaAhat tHeyjtdIs regaroing tne origin of tnaauy ',4 lr !! - I Thft rnSsfons have brought him are that the. Adabi M the Bibhcal narAtive wW.iuieDre4? sentAtite of the' Mediterranean racaV the remotest anasitor toui whomc-i Hebrews! could traca -their "descent He aTCTias, tliat fJiD bibli TiArrn- tiviisetfiirirUrr people who were not descended froin Adafn.' The 'names' msfritidned iri the tenth' chapter of Genesis, though' rendered, mWasirigularhijorir trans-' lation arTfeaTIpluTlaTr deg nate tribes i endnatioris. h' Een Cairi had riairjr set upon-bimtt should not loll .3rim. , implvinflr,. the existence of others besides ;hisf,pwrA family; he merrieii fronv another race M fcronded a city, which would' have been tmpoesible bad there' been no other people than the family: sof Adam :iu Bjuslcncc Tn8de8cen- danta of Noah could matr hT XrfJd- nated the nations and joples . which existed uV the-peripd covered by ' tbe acVbunt In Qeneslejbr' Wcording that aocount the dispersion was over ' a Uriiited area. And the descendants ' of Noah could net Vhave multiplied, with sufficient rapidity id account for tribes and cities represented to ,have existed We give these . points of his argument -' not at.all as assenting to them, but that we ' may n state it fairly and do it full' justiee. vi Predeilck;.thj-(p(lmt.. Sheriook'rliSttiirl. " '"-. " " " Plutarch and Shakespeare hav shewn great fmeri-'in their nigbtcti- and. -BhpTOrs. f !X.eannot show , you . his Prussian Mai est via his nightcari; for he never wears'one ;J he acquired headed, in order to' harden himself. Nor haroeamT'KS5KrB; TSFss sooz as he leaves! 1 ms bed h he puts on i boots, trli is, known that he rises '4,1 that h goes .to; ped at seven, that uejprucnwuiuwa nouung, map ny ii londor lesthrgi-that he eats a great ' deal of fruit tlat b plays hv Hii' flute j e vtiry-e VfeiligTTharM'passes n most, oi ins time at Sans-Sondi in Eis bMj.boofar andiithat rhe gorrrns;' Sluiwpeij asked the Swiss,' 'Whichv was the King a, 'chamber 7 ; 'This. " , t expected ar magma cent oeo. - mere sv fme - aleov tii theerid of ' the1 room, bufc nb. bed.in it'. ,"YTifrd is tbAbed?"!r(ere.;:. Behind aiitti screen in; a corner was a small .bed, very narrow, with CtUjainsoXgreeo Bilk ; . this , was .his. The .carpet .on which he 'steps whehTrbe gets out tof bed iaVvsery -coarse; And there- ire three: oti fonrtablesV " ; coveredij !witi J pooka; and papers, Frederick was told one jday that soine one baispo; i xen.ui oil nun. rie asxea 11 Laajc per. soil had l00,00a men. r He 'was 'an swerei No? i ,:Very welL? said th King, I 100,000 can do nothing ; if he num ! ITxmld" "Tleclare - - X J agauiB(LUun,ji 1 ... ! aJ L j ' PriesU-:"Yott dfianken sot 1 4 the very'beast'of the . field givir yon; a lesson b -' Ciey leave off when - they have 'quenched theirthirtt" Padiy fffYeSj-yer, rivVencej brit; didL the beast ever j. come .across a streamo v jiwaj t Ari English engbieras trying explain the . electric telegraph. to Persian Governors Finally he saidi "Imagmea dog with bia tail. inTe beran arid 'his - muzzle ! "In IiondonJ Tread On bos talf arid he will bark there. d-r-W ''':"! -; Walter; a five year old, was sur prised at breakfast by ' the 'rtesen of a diminutive egg, served for hi; speciat delectation, lie thus' Counted j for ' the. egg's smallneesi Mammai If think the - chicken ' was leajMig o lay." v ?k..-V'., Ul When a party ' of ' gentlemen' and ladies were climbing, to the top of - a high church towes ; one , hot - day a gentleman ! remarked, 'This is s rather spiral flixrht of steps." fYeSi; pertTjiral," and she' wiped her brow: art she SPOke. 1:WAr- 1 " -fc' 7 -J . !!-. 1 ..V I 31 V If von ever noticed, it, ': the with a cold loves, to. .talk just a littlei noarser ,tnan necessary. At . is so pleasant, yon khow, to attract atten wnicn is tQ prove jUie, existence, .. of men before Adam; and" also to hoint out as i mi 1 1.. .;':z 1- 1 i