k P(i 7 qui1 j oSb t vK A h ' - 4 - V r , - .&ttv aJL A'v? ei CJ l; J li 1 r-v t-a u o Srfc by NO.--47. ylJJ Jfc "-"in THE ;nM.S , TUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY.4 Editors and Proprietors, . 1 A YET IE YILIiE, , N. C. Weekly, 'Do. One year, Six months," $3 00 2 CO e Ote Square. 1 inch or less first insertion, $ 1 00 f eacn stiDscquent insertion Fr one year, one square t. rr bit month.", 4 . ... j;.. Fir three month?, i . Tor Quarter Co;.:jii 5 squares, 3 months, . a m it 'i 1... . . ' 11 ... .,! . I . j . .' ; r ' ; ' ' wir , 12 Tor. Ilalf Column, .oitures :i " It , 12 Tor Ona Column, 20 squares; 0 l 11 it it 3 months, 6 - i 12 .1 i CO , 15 00 .. 9 00 .-: ' g co 40 60 . 75 . - 40. 100 123 73 123 1C0 200 te. ' From the Baltimore Ga?et THE HEV0LUTl)H. LESSORS FK03I HISTORt. anJI loth to red, it grad-reformation After the Long Parliament which met in . 1CG0 had done all and more tlUn all it or igihally sought to do in the why of reme dying abuses and effecting ..reforms in th position it had encountered, give up the power it had acqu ually passed from the work, ot to that or revolution. It apohshedi the kingly office and the Uppar HoJjuse, and con centrated in the hands of a lump of one . branch of the Legislature the. 'ivholo politi cal authority of the country. It ignored the fundamental principle of (English cou ". Btitutional law, it violated th eistablished rights of the citizen, and set up an arbitrary rand odious system. It the ru sweep i isc-f If fit Irvr rvf itch;: maiority la Congress shall have made itself supreme, piaster of the land? Yet, while tina revolution is stcacmy progressing to- wara ttncnj, auu towara tms ena oniy, the: Arnenciaii people is looking on with timidity, apathy or tear. - It sees that the union loriwnxii ic aneetea such patriotic devotion is-being hopelessly destroyed, and it makes bo sign. It knows that the Con stitution, for ; which it professd such un bounded. reverence, is being. rapidly super seded by jthe higher law" of a fanatical and intolerant faction, au.rl it holds its peace. It knows1 tfiat the Republic which has been the "pride! and boast of generation after gen eration is assaiieu uy a tempest wmcn may it forever from, among the political and no hand is There haa seldom been ah instance in history of so base an acqui escence in tirsurpation on the part of a peo ple, and pt; so abject an abandonment ot ttcal rights and privileges. More million and eight hundred thou bjorn men voted against Mr. Lin SG4, because they believed that icdment of his principles and policy lould er danger the existence of the Con sfitution and the Union, and two millions vpted fof him on the theory that he would iaevitabl'v) secure their perpetuity. All theae meiiiare now looking tamely on while tlie inheritance they have derived from their lathers, is bein divided as a spoil ia leaders of a triumphant politi- i Are tlie LiOur rarliarrcut ot nd the National Convention of p.; be reproduced in our day, and is Cromwell or .Napoleon awaiting tlie ausr itfious moment when he may as Bbme the Imperial purple? The history of kiiusrests these things, and it is for e lot this country to consider their pol than one sand free coin in tie enfor I. had been oppressive, tne e of Charles sway of ; the .-Puritan Assembly Was far more so, and the people, after groaning fujr some time under a grievous tyranny, turned for relief to a. military despotism. This Parliament, which at first only sought to secure further .guarantees for p.ublic. liberty the guidance 01. fanatical and erst brought about a chaos qniong t 'cal party. Lngland France t another the past tlie peo them. p J I1 From the G.ilvestoa Kews. ; had, under radical lead- pf confusion, nnjirchy and terror, amid wlncli every ves tige of free and "constitutional government vanished from England, and Oliver Cromwell became the among her people. AY hen the lies Mat. alter ai the sword, ot sole arbiter .gle, tound itselt strong enoug own nanus tite taking into its severe strug- h to insit on task of re- mudelling the antiquated and despotic Gov ernment of France, it proceeded with re markable energy to ef;ect the desired chan ges. The Constituent Assembly, at its de mand, abolished feudal and hibruchial privi leges, and provided for thei protection of civil and religious liberty, equality of rights and popular sovereignty. Flushed with . success and excited by the appeals of dema gogues and the rhapsodies or dreamers, the French people soon exchanged liberty for license. The merciless confiscations which ruined whole classes of people, the com mercial and financial collapse which beg gared the nation, the frequent massacres, in which even women and little emiuren were sacrificed by thousands; these are the things which are familiar to all who have read the chapter that records the proceed ings of the National Convention which, in the last century, usurped dominion over France. A bleeding, a sorrowing nation Bought refuge behind a military dictator, and the. will of Napoleon blcame the law f The regains of Gen. Johnston, m charge 0t;the Committee composed of IIon.N. G SHellby, an the part of the Senate, and !jons..AlBlibel Smith and D. W. Jones on the part ol the House reached Austin on the first. (Near the cemetery they were jiet by a. large multitude of both sexes, who accompanied them to the Capitol, where fh.y were secluded in the Hall of the ilbuso of Representatives by the Governor. I iWe copy the following addresses on ihle occasion from the State Gazette. I On prefenting the remains, Col. Ashbel :firnith, onf behalf of the Committee, said: td by tUeiLegislature of Texas, on behalf other lands mingle with "ours in paying holy tribute to the worth of one so purein all the private walks of Hie, and so exalted in every attribute ot noble manhood. i When the pen of history shall record the deeds of the fathers who made Texas a na tion, the name of. him whom we mourn will occupy one of the most prominent niches in that distinguished array. AYhen generations have -passed away, and the memories of the present hour have been softened and purified by timp, and the student of history lingers with admiration over the characters of the great men brought upon the stage of action by the recent war, no one name will command greater respect than that of Albert Sydney Johnston. May the purity of his private life be an exemplar for our young men in all time to come. iay tne spotless integrity 01 nis conduct as a public man be emulated by all in authority. And may his unsullied fame as an American citizen and soldier, teach us that we cannot- and should not' share it alone. His fame, with that of his many distinguished cotempararies, whether won under the Stars and Stripes', or under the Stars and Bars, is the common heritage of the American people. It is the proud representative of American character, and is alike honorable to the North and to the South. . Many of the heroes of the late civil war grew up in arms together, and shared glo ries mutually won upon other fields, and, notwithstanding the follies of their fellow citizens caused them to lead contending armies of countrymen against each other to carnage and to death, yet, in their hearts they were brothers in afteetion. Their deeds the deeds of other heroe3- the gallantry and endurance of the soldiers from every section, and the glories won by the armies of the North and the South all, should teach us that we cannot be two peoples, tnat we snouid remain, as our latncrs de sired one nation. TT 1 y- T 1 1 1 m " 1 trust -in jtod tnat tne ahlictions we have suffered may purify us, and that the hearts of the American people may once more beat in perfect ; unison and accord over the prosperity and harmony of a re united and happy people, and thrill with pride at the mention of the virtues and achievements of every American name, regardless of the section that niay give it birth or prestige. , Gentlemen of the Committee", you are entitled to, and will receive the; thanks of the people of Texas, for the very accept able and praiseworthy manner with which you have dircharged the delicate mission confided to your care. s A SCEIIE III A DISSECTING BOOI. A New York reporter has recently taken a few notes in a medical college, where he found hundreds of young men and a few women, fitting themselves for the business of prescribing for all the ills that flesh is heir to." The following, relative to the dissecting room, will be found interesting: In the evening, the medical students who are earnest enough to seek, by hard work, to obtain a knowledge of their -pro fession resort to the dissecting rooms, of which there arc several located in different parts ot the city. The largest and finest ot them 13 located in the where college building, f.unto France, i Trio Amnr'ifin firm rrvnea vtmip.Vi ia nnw in f cession in Washington, has cjbtained or can obtain every guarantee that c'au be fairly asked to secure the maintenance of the "Union, the supremacy of the Constitution, the freedom and security of tlie negroes, and the peace of the whole country. But it is not content. It has already! stri some of the cardinal pillars faf Our political fabric, and has shaken others until they are tpttering to their foundations; it has vio lated, day by day, some plain provision of . the Constitution; it has contemned the de cisions of the Supreme Courjjt; it has tram- j . pled upon the clearest rightjis of the States; (.r ' it has infringed upon the privileges of the people; it contemplates abolishing the forms ,of government which have!' existed in the '. Southern States since (he -Revolution, and ( of ruling the vast majority of their citizens 'through its own agents, backed by the ne groes and the Federal arniy. Day after day, ever since the hour when it first con ; vened in Washington, it has been, assuming new powers, and the authority it now ex-. ercises is very -jieany as iuji anu arourary as if the Constitution had been formally ab-; rogated. If it shall impeach and remove the President- as it will do jmless some un- - foreseen action on his part, or some unlock ed for uprisirig on the parii of; the people; shall compel it to pause- who can doubt; the result? 7 The South , be handed over to the rule of petty despots in the 1 ehape of Generals and Commissioners, and; .. these will be surrounded with legioqs ofJ reckless adventurers and Venal sharpers., ' With the. South a prey to desolation, rapinqf and misrule, how long will the North cn . ioy prosperity? How long will "disloyal Copperheads" "of that' section, who may emoarrass the Government by their re-? proaches and protests, bo permitted to en ' ;)oy freedom of speech? : How : long will a uemblance of' free constitutional govern ruent continue to exist when the Kadical 3 . ,1 r . Bunenntcpding tiie removal 01 tne remains bt Gen. Albert Sydney Johnston from their mporjiry resting place in the city of New Orleans!, to be interred in the bosom of Tex- jas, tb3 land and people whom in' life he :loved abd served so well, and who eo lov ed and hjmored him in death as in ; life, have to announce to your Excellency, that t'Jiev have performed this duty. The Com mittee hive the honor here to present to i ' Vh fit' ! ' C your ixceiicucy tne . remains oi jen. Albert Sydney Johnson, ihe (Jommittee will, ac an early time, make to your Ex cellency ia written report in detail, of their action milder their appointment: f j ThedUtyof the committee, under their legislative appointment, is finished. I To this the Governor responded in. the fbllowihg beautiful and impressive address: J frjlE' GOVEIiNORS's ADDI1ESS. txcnllcikcgi of ike Committee: I Theleolemii duty, imposed upon you by ithe BepresehtativeSi of the people of T o upper part ot a twenty-five or thirty tables are ranged between half a dozen rows of bright gas lights. Around iue siues 01 ine rooms iorty or merer closets are numbered and set apart for the use of students, who change their clothing when ever they engage in the work of dissection. The tobies are about six feet long by eigh teen inches wide, and three feet six inches high, one end being inclined for drainage purposes.;. Under direction of the College faculty "subjects," t. c dead bodies are procured ami brought to this room, which, although thoroughly ventilated, smells very much like a slaughter house, which it re sembles in some respects. Headless, legless and armless bodies occu py some of the tables. On others untouch ed bodies await the disposition of the 'de monstrator," who apportions it according to the demand; one student asking for a head and neck, another taking the trunk; one gets an arm or a leg; m short, the body is divided according to the inclination or desire of the different dissectors to p irsue their, investigations of certain portions of the human anatomy. It is a ghastly sight to witness a score 1 of dead bodies, or as many portions thereof, lying in all stages of dissection stiff and stark, surrounded by young men clad in butcher's overals, and armed with small scalpels with which they cut away fledi, fat, or muscular fibre, while following up veins or arteries to their con nection with vital parts; or searching into the structure of heart, lungs or kidneys, according to the bant of their studies. Upon one table lay the uncovered form of a woman but a few hours dead. "Near by, the inanimate body of a muscular look ing man; and farther on, the corpse of a pretty little child, with flaxen curls, was being cut for the benefit of living children; two students working together upon this small "subject," which' they treated some what tenderly. Avith open books before them, theseyoung men deftly ply their sharp steel instruments, the incised flesh being The National Intelligencer, in sneaking of StevensVbill, denounces it in" the most decided language. We make an extract or two from it: it Kewspapsr ProgrcsaA Contrast. i We are indebted to Mr. Lewis Wood ruff, architect, for two conies nfth London The blackest record ever made by an Tunes, one bearing date of the 7th of Jan- assembly of the representatives of a free uaT 15G7, the other, 3d of October, :179S. people stained yesterday the proceedings of -i" appearance they alford a striking con- the House of Representatives. Never, in trast- The former is well known as a largo the most tyrannous hour of the Long Par- Paper of eight ; pages well filled; the latter liament misrule; never, amid the utmost 3 a 7 by 9 affair, with four columns to tho subservience to . the royal mandate of an P3Se The former contains the news of tho 7 , English king; never, in the most blood- whole world spread out at large; the latter thirsty epoch of a French convention did 3 dcyoted to Nelson's victory of the Nile, - the representatives of : the people stamp a rebellion in Ireland, some local news and v themselves with greater ignominy.' seven columns of advertisements. Nelson's 1 "Such a bill makes a mockery account is dated 7th of August, or nearly r i !.ifi..i! . -r 1 . ti-rrx -v nti.. Lr":i. . 1 ui iruu insiuuiions. Jtc uespitesau tnegreat ",uuw ueiurts it was maae Known to safeguards of popular liberty. It trample3 the British public; while the Times of Jan- 1 the right of free assemblage: It silences uary 8th, 1S67, publishes the news of tho the lips of free . speech. It infringes-ihe Unitfid States for tho day previous! Viacom right of the people to bear arms. It wipe3 'TcUgmph - , r out the guaranty of a jury presentment "Such is life!" - , It abolishes the exemption of freedom from ,r 1 .7: - E - seizure and from search. It abrogates the . -oiu ms maims iatner right of trial bv a iurv of one's neera in thn in.hl3 younger days, was in a stage coach vicinage offence. trial bya jury of one's peers in the in.h,i3 yun5cr days, was in a stage of the commission of the alleged with a party of military officers. O It tramples upou tho perogative m ne ot them, a prt, effeminate young dandy, an-' after of the President, it makes way upon the acrc00. wqaiz the plain uaker, and, a Constitution, it rebels against the authority . - B - inuUtfrenc jokcs, asReu mm, at aa of the Supreme Court. It invades the J.nn wll!re they stopped, to hold his sword, . sacred constitutional rights of tho citizen. !?r a mnte, supposing he would considec -It is treason enveloped in the forms of law. ,fc an abomination to touch it. Mr. Dill- It is rebellion wearing the garb of legiti- waJn "oever. eycing the yonng man from mate power." hcad to foot said "As I believe from thy : .-' - appearance it has never shed blood, and ii From tho Augta (Gx) Chronicle. not in the least likely to do so, I have not 4 - Scarcely a day passes that we do notei- the gmalIest objection7n ' ther see or hear 01 negroes passing through J una city ai route tor tne , boutnwest. I-or A lady was told by a travelling gentle- thc most part they are young, hale and man, that every lady who had a small mouth . hearty the very pick of 'the field. Jian Js. wa3 provided 'with a husband by the Gov- . They are mostly from Virginia and the ernment. "Ith it pothibul?" said the lady, . . ..... . . . Carolinas. Numbers, however, have left, and are still learving, our own State. These making her mouth as little as she could. The gentleman added. "That if she had a li!o nnrfnor f n r l!fV uiui vuu suuuiu icifaii tu a uciiiuuui- . , . i ' , . ., - f m wirn er iikli ncrs. nr n g tate, nd, m tne name 01 exas, re- - uviiiu j , 1.1 jvj 1 in ceive anl convey to the early adoption the mortal remains of Albert Syd ney Johnston, has been accomplished. As foying friends, and as honoring countrymen, without the splendor and pa- Ktr5rknn flwn l ffeantry ot public or omciai ceremonies, we receive, his honored dust. i All) that is left to us of his once manly form. Wrapt in the habiliments of death a death I made glorious by lofty conduct in life ndw lies lowly in the midst of mourn-17 -1 i !. . T . . 1 - .1 Union mg couniryinen, who Knew 111s woi in, anu who hboor his memory, not alone for his Ilatrisioziy ia Italy. . In Genoa there are regular marriage bro kers, who have memorandum books filled with the names of marriageable girls of the different classes, with notes of. their figures, personal attractions, fortunes, ' and other circumstances. These brokers go about en deavoring to make arrangements in the same off-hand mercantile manner which they would bring to bear uponabuisncss transaction; and when they succeed they get a commission of two or three per cent upon the portion, with such extras and bo nuses as may be voluntarily bestowed by the party. Marriage at Genoa is thus often simply a matter of buisness calculation, generally settled by the parents or relations, who draw up the contract before the par ties have seen each other, and .it is only when everything else is arranged, and few days previous to the marriage ceremony that the future husband is introduced to Should ho find fault ppea ranee, he may condition of defrav ing the brokerage, and any other expense incurred. people are induced to emigrate, partly on large mouth, she was provided with, two the promise of higher wages, but chiefly husbands." "My gracious!" exclaimed tho from a desire to change their locations. . lad-, at the same time throwing her mouth ; Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas and Tex- open to its full extent. The gentleman be as are the recipients of this emigration, came alarmed, made his escape, and has not Should the frcedmen . continue their migra- beeo heard of since. V v . tion AVestward. the rdanting interest in . . - . --"J - I ml. . Tf! 1 a t-r 'rrf " - T i i this section must nPMssar hr snffnr fmm Winchester 1 a. j j.nne-3 says tnat tne want of labor. If, however, the negroes counte from aU parts of the ralley are very j 1 , a " 1 ,. encouraging: A very large area of ground ?v lWf fre industriously, in the -perhaps more than lias been tilled ?o? tea A est than here dunng the last year, it is years as List fall sown with Tvheat, and tho very questionable whether tho interests of seed being of a very superior quality, the "re the planter will not be subserved by the suit is the promise of an abundance hi ch emigration now going West. will go far towardi restoring to prosperity From the Eichmoni Enquirer. oar agricultural interests. .Besides the .very Accounts from all quarters concur in lge crop of corn raised last season, and the un the above. And our readers doubtless gelled prospects now for an abundant wheat 1 ik ,k;u 1 c harvest, we learn that it is the design of our noticed the appeal which we copied a few fo eff f1ia AW : , I days ago, oftheagent of the Freedmen's in3 out an extra large corn cron. Labor ia ureau lor airlax county, urging tlie ne- adjusting itself to the new condition of things, roe3 to cmbarlv 111 tins scneme oi emigra- imposed by tho result of 1 the ,war; the stop- in a manner that enables the operator to Jjon to the bouUi, and warning them that page of Xll nuf.:n n ,lnfMrrtmiinri WMri-in-they must give up their objections to the -treedmens Bureau has thrown thousand j obtain an untrammelled working .space J fr vhic4i such emi-ratiorr uPa cir wn resources, and "rather than upon that part of the body wh ctTtie s in- lwii oj jaumestmei sucn emi0ratiorr 1 to wort. Tho result is vLigating. AVhen these subjects are first would often render necessary. It no doubt SL r,m..?,ut ti, Ai;.,r, n. .tt.,.i caused a smile to see the slave trade, as ; Kw,i thrrh ant injects 1 plaster, col Dtotha voinla preparation of conducted by l.o Bureau callms for a sj-p-lored with vermilion.. This ar.a."?f hm,'a m0?.?0 cs!la !,at o ley. BcGiTrnaED LrrrE3. Tho now regulations t :.t .. i::. ti t. . r 7 lWiucti luimeu uuj ui liiu staiitc uuumliuii uuags uuuuisfuucuy uu urn imuuiu courts o . n, 2- nn rcj-ardinrr remstored lri wbich 1 tn m. iivu vig til ivi u(.4 biiutct uuu iui 11 iiiwii ii j 1 . a J ' - w 0-- through which the blood passes, and mate rially aids the student in tracing their di rection and function, besides hardening and preserving to some extent the subject. Periodically a "Demonstrator of Anato- my makes ins appearance in tne dissect- ing room, and discourses learneuiy upon soiae portion of anatomy laid bare before There seems to be an apparent yielding, for the time, by the English Ritualists on the points of tue elevation, and the "censmg o persons ana things. These are reported gamst by tho committee of tne .Lower House of Convocation of Canterbury, and also unan imously condemned by the nine Lawyers who prepared the "opinion" for the English Church Tiie Church.- liraes says very can didly: ' ; "We loolr to brighter days when the details achievements as-a warrior, who led mighty Gf Kitual which are now interdicted by the hosts to battle, but also for the many and authorities we have ourselves called in, shall rare virtues that adorned his character as a be freely conceded by the growth ot tnat ov-ne on, .1,1 thnr, 'h nrlmJrfrl ! CilQCZ OS SOOU the inStrUCUOU3 ! and blanks enn b3 forwarded to the several h Deitiis of the Sea. A French journal Post offices, provide that registered letters " says that the soundings effected with refer- nr.ve,? toAb seut "direct" if a distributing ence to the new transatlantic cable have ff " locf anr? tween the pUc f , . i j ri vtv of maihng them and their destination. They ; enabled comparisons to be tnade of the difl- arealso & be al ia Registered pack- erent d.pths of the sea, Generally speak- ago' envelope furnished by the Department ing, they are not of any great depth in the to all trost offices. Everv rjerson connected - the class, whose scalpels are laid down and neighborhood of continents. Thus the Bal- with the service through whoso hands a"reg- tables are deserted, while they crowd around tic, between Germany and Switzerland, is istered package en velope" shall pass in trans- tha'-Professor, during the delivery of his only 120 feet deep; and the Adriatic, be- mission is required to make a record of tha -lecture. In this manner, the medical stu- tween renice and Trieste, 130 feet. The nml?eT et.c-' the same in a book or blank ' deits are practically taught much tha greatest depth of :the channel between VcVTit other people only hear of, or read, about; France and England does not exceed 300 he delivers it, in all the cases where it is prao- it is nor, tnereiore, surprising mas uiey leet, wnue to tne southwest oi Ireland, ticable. The pdstago and fees for registered soon become accustomed to scenes which, where the sea is open, the depth is more letters must be prepaid by stamps. at first sight of the dissecting-room, curdled than 2,000 feet. The seas to the south of ; ' f the blood in their veins. This familiarity Europe are much deeper than those m the in- II ff f-BTT.--a. xrxena ot ours met. with the dead, and the handling of different terior. In the narrowest part of the Straits of fs ighixr a coachman locking renLortahly -portions of the body, yery soon become f Gibraltar the depth is only 1,000 feet, while Si tractive work to some of the students, who a little more to the east it js 3,000 feet. On . "vvvil Jobn what haa hmneael von Tool- composedly eat their luncheon while sitting the coast of Spain the depth is nearly 0,000 so pleasant to-day? :f alongside of one corpse and surrounded by feet. 250 miles south of Nantucket (south "AVhy, sir," was tho reply, "what do you ' . i -tv 1 1 i ' d-m t . .. r 1 i, -in - ll 1.1 L , many otners. undue levity is irowncu oi Cape cod; no Dottora was iounu at 7,uuu inm-r no .are a preuy lot at ourouse, upon by the professors and gentlemen in feet. The greatest depths of all are to be that we are. I started with five of its in tho , attendance, but nevertheless at times some met with in the Southern Ocean. To the ?ld icarnage yesterday monung. First of all, 4 sleyans; young master to the itomans, and wife went to the Banters; and when X Citizen, arid made him pre-eminent among the noblest of men. j His Imputation 'as a public man belongs t , . . ' ! Til ,.; i a to history: anu to nis country with it to day, we have no concern Catholic spirit which is now slowly deavening the whole nation. And this is not chimerical. Time was when, the surplice, and choral car vice, and daily prayer were as strange to tho English Church as high llitual was live year3 back. To-day we see the Euchanstic vest- However desirable-it might be to com- j ments. and the altar lights the , recognized memoriite: his distinguished and useful pub- symbols of the fundamental doctrine of the IIp. rWJ through a tntnl mkp.nnrntinn nf Catholic faith not merely introduced into the the honor - and fidelity of the people of most solemn function but recognized as lc TrL w are denied th .rad and blessed Sal e hl?liest anthonties f rom whom we re the exposition of the Church s TUlvrk olirtll Kf.v thrt. if. ia o.. tnrtl foin- manner which the people of: every clime sioil to anticipate the day when tho same and cation Christian or barbarian, civilized sanction shall be accorded to election and to m ! - "7 . 1 hntrA Ifeppn wont to pxhihih whpnrnninrn I . bg td ihe tomb the ashes of heirgreat men. A foreign paper pubHshes the following With truth may it be said that General "i? .SSSlY."" Johnston lives in the .hearts of the people hiUendedby a caplain of the guards, whose ot Texas;: lie is enshrined in the holiest or dutv it ia to observe the effect of each shot their affections. 1 he showering tears, shed anci announce it The Emperor, for instance by thousand ot our noble women and brave have greeted the funeral procession on its melaDcholv way, attest tne allectionate re- card entertained for hifn by our people. Isutour tears do not alone moisten the mem ories ithat piiDg around the departed , hero. The tears of the lovely and noble ones, of strikes a partridge? "Partridge!' crie3 the captain. Next time it is a buck. "Buck!; shouts the captain. . Une clay tho Jiimperor fired, missed the game, and wounded one of the fcmilemen oi his suite. The latter on beino- struck uttered an exclamation. "His Eoval Highness the Duke of Hackenbergl V v . 1 1 1 I Ml . 1 1 I I announced ths captain, wirnoui tne sngntest change of features or tone. ' hn-loving youngster perpetrates a joke, west of the Cape of Good Hope 10,000 feet VtlK vhich is quite out of place u the dissect- have been measured, and to thewest of St. nest I took the young master to the E ng room. As a general rule the remains Helena 37,000 feet. . Dr, Young estimates ami w;fQ to the lianters: and are treated as respectfully as the pursuit the average depth of the Atlantic at 2-5.000 1 had put up the horse, I took-a turn myself : of science permits, and when a lsubject' feeti and of tho Pacific at 20,000 feet. - with the Calvinists." t t i re i i j: . i it n k . J lias ueen sumcieuuy uiccicu, uiw iiwii uim NnTfl tTAvn. A writer in thn ... -it i l j: i i i i , . j " - ones are gaiuereu up anu uitpurc- o. .ur AJba Kowg old debts, are careful to have them payable proper -I .. ..... V weeks "is' sometimes occupied in tne ais posal of a body, although it not unfre queutly happens that a, head, an arm or a leg is retained for a month or more, during which time some student 13 engaged, ior several hours daily, investigating its struc- AVe certainly did laugh outright at hear ing the account of this "happy family." Tha rainbow is nothing to lL Liverpool Alcioru , ItirrDrrr or Neste Actios. Haller at tempt ed, in reading the JEneid aloud, to count the eluding the atmosphere,' which would de nomnnsp. the -"subiect." During the win- u - ff!nn i Wui.,i.9- a rtfrt I number of letters whicn ha could pronounca them oycrSoOO. AVhyisthis? A note for n a miaate, Findin. that he could pro- feOUU, u payaDie to oruer, wuuu , uesueu in nounco 1,5000, among which the E, according the Circuit uourc oi me unnea stales, un-1 f0 13 statement, requires ten successive con- of the 6tylo-glossu3, he anirm3 that i can contract and relax itself 15,003 , minute; and as the time of relaxioa nx ;0 wa'tA A R . nrror fln if ia is as long as that ot ccntractjon, each con- transferred to a non-resident of this State, traction requires about 10,003 of a j minute, t uancrjcu . .. ' or 1,520 of a second. From this Haher. coa-. clude3 that tha nervous agent requires tha several nours oauy, .uvugauug , . j , tfa payer of the note was a non-resi- tractions of tore. When the work of one day is left 00lcrwisc bad ihe right to sue in a muscle ca over to be continued on the following da), that Courfc- But if the debt is over S500, times in an lb is usuauy covereu wuu oiieu-sim w wrapped in a cloth tor the purpose oi ex it can be sued in a Circuit Court of the United States. .The purpo3e is to thus get ter season, such precautions are not ,u thdr debtQrg beforo 7a jurisdiction whire queiuiy resioreu to., xu . uum a uc. pmftiv :3 more summary aiid the stav hnru i nro hpffpr fcpnt uncnvprod: thercioro I . J . . . ".. J l. . .. .. I Ini7 nt niir Srn.tfi WOUlU not DQ 1Q tllft WAV of selling the debtor's property. 1,500 of a sec md to go from the brain to tha , stylo-glossus muscle. JSevue des Cours Scienf. I A gentleman in California, having mada a lady a present of a pair of pistols, after several trials of skill they concluded to go through the iorms of a duel. .They took each student when heleaves his"dissection merelv nin3 unon the flesh apiece of paper thus rMvin" notice to the The Cotton Csop. The Commissioner of attendants, and al others, that Uo proposes - ?&"St their portion,. - fired at tho word, ind. to to resume, operations agn.n. "5 wWriaTntt the terror of tho lady, the gentleman fell. -rt,' i.tii,-,.f T.v5,' cotton cron estimate . of 1,730.003 bales of She threw herseif frantically upon tho timated at 1,100,000. It- was under 700,- pounus WA , r. V u, uua r V"u nnn l u i. : piu. i menu wnauuk w v-w- rion ui cuuearuicuu. ' uuuer eutu i.jj at j,i vuv uta tuc i6.Ui.... ..v, uu 9 OOO OOO hales. Th rrpnUpmen A 'Minnesota paper says th it If ars have j above referred to at first assailed and ceu- riftver been so nlentv in that State and on its 1 sured the estimate of the Department; and in Northern frontier as the present year. I reparaiionmaiie tne aDovc staicmcm. 1 una. influences the gentleman revived, End rc:a unhurt from the ground, and- are to ba married. -7

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