Bloomington Progress, Volume 6, Number 20, Bloomington, Monroe County, 11 September 1872 — Page 1

from the German of Heine. I. My little songs are part. Of this, my groat, great woo : On musical wings tnoy go. And tatter to her heart.

They find it out, for their part, And yet, retnrniBj. they Complain, and will not say What 'twos they saw in her heart. II. The races drop in the grave, Iho aces come and fle: Sot so iieth nor Bicth the lire 1 have in my heart for thee. O but to geo theo nnce. And sink down on a happy knee. And dio in the light of thino oyes: owing : Lady,. I love but thee 1 in, e n :ns .H b'-zsk. my shin sai!s on, .. 'ar per the raging sea: fnpn , knowest I am sorrowful. And yet art cruel to me. ' Iky heart is fickle as tho wind, .,And shifts as ceaselessly: 'With sails-all black, my ship sails on, jot o er the raging se. IV. Art thou then changed, indeed? Art thou unkind to ineT 0 woman, that wionccst thy lover. I cry to the world against thee. l recreant lips, and thankless, . What eyil did over you know In the man who kissed so closoly In the fortunate Lima Ago V. Id my arms yon rest so gladly, On my heart so quiet you are; 1 am your darling Heaven. And yoa my beautiful Star. "The race of marketing mortals Is chaffering far below, scolding, swearing, and haggling, And everyone's right, as wo know. 'Jheir cap and bells they jinrlo. Aad iuarre) without a cause. .ai with their heavy bludgeons X hey maul each other's jaws. But we are so happy, woe darling. Away abave them so far: You hide in your darling Heaven Yonr head, my beautiful Star.

9

A la Belle Ltolle. X MIESOX rOK LOVMB.

0 Youth it is thoughtless and Love it is blind. Regardless of la lindane surroundings. , And people that spoon are bat half in their minii . . , They reek not of weather or water cr wind

Ana drift rrom an mm mmmumr. -xs, -,

It was April the -uontk, and the hour U was

t,

.A. Republican IPaper, Devoted (,o IT

10

.Advancement oi tho Ijocu.:. In ten-en ta of Monroe County.

Established A. D., 1835.

BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, WKDNKSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1872.

New Series.--VOL.VI.-NO. 20.

Waiting. Yesterday's cup was brimming. To it curving rim. with hope ; As flowers to the bee awaken. So did the glad hours ope With songs of the heart's soft humming. Full of a deep doiight. As it crooned over happiness ciuiing. The joy that should come with night; But it blossoms not with the night. And mavo is the morn with waiting. Paint fall tho bee's light wings, Aihi lower is now tho humming V the murmuring song sho sinks. 'lre passionate prince of tho garden ' In the pride of bis parple may woo. 3ut tho queer knows where is the nectar. And she turns, sweat flower, te you She waits for ambrosia and you ! Waits for the bonoyed blooming the sweetest blossom of all. Will it open its fragrant petals. And answer her earnest call ? 'Will ho come as th- shadows lengthen, Dill they fade i.u '.he far-away light, Arl fill tho cup of to-morrow With the dew of a glad to-nicbt? Will he come, waiting heart, to-night? AN AFFAIR OF HONOR. I m reminded, by a recent article iu tho journals, of the single combats which tin former times were wont to deule the ;grecu , turf ot ny native island. Of .course 1 need not name that island ; the rsiir pie ideas of " fighting" and " green" will infallibly suggest to the least logical intellect in Great Britain a compound one, representing the locality intended. Bat although the progress of civilization in my country has, through many painful causes, been wofully retarded, yet there is some comfort' in reflecting that the enormity of dueling may now be classed among the things that have been and are not. I will, however, for the amusement of my readers, relate the history of an affair of honor which took' place in a district of Munster, some sixty or seventy years ago. Albeit a wild locality, so far as natural features of the landscape were concerned, yet " the vicinity of Barnagore as. for the double rcanon of concealment and euphony, 1 shall col) it was a tolerably peaceable place, viewed with respect to its inhabitants. Barring the occasional beating ef a tithe-proctor or ducking of a sheriffs officer, the country for miles around the village, which ;gave it a name, was singularly free from agrarian outrage. The land was divided into moderately-sized estates, each supporting the hospitable mansion of a country gentleman, with his good-natured wife, and their handsome frolicking progeny. Daring a long series of years various Intermarriages had taken place "between

ithe several families, so that, at the time

i write of, there was scarcely an individual of note in the country who could not claim cousinship with each and every one of his neighbors. One gentleman there was, however, who was wholly

unconnected with the magnates of the district.. He was a Mr. Fooks, a rich old bachelor, residing in a very pretty -cottage close to the boundary hedge of a large estate, which had lain for some time unoccupied. The dwelling of Mr. Fooks stood in the middle of a beautifully cultivated pleasure ground, a wildernes of sweets, where the emerald turf of the lawn was soft, and rich, and smiling, as though it lay in the heart of England's sunny Hampshire. A kind man was Mr. Fooks; beloved by the squires, with whom he never quarreled, when in the heat of the chase, following the hounds in full cry after reynard, they trampled his harvest fields. He was beloved by them, 1 say, notwithstanding his uniform desertion of the dining-room after the first magnum of claret had gone its rounds a grievous dereliction from the rules of good-fellowship, which would not have been easily pardoned in anyone else ; but Mr. Fooks was a privileged man, and, as the ladies were wont to remark, "it was really a comfort to feel sure of having one gentleman steady on his legs in the drawing-room, so one might venture to give him a cup of coffee withoift the chance of havipg half of it spilled on one's best satin." With the young neople he was an especial favorite. No belter man in "Sir lioger de Coverly," or merrier opponent in the game of " Matrimony," could bo ' found in the entire country ; while his skill in making "hurleys" lor tho boys, and carving wooden babies for the girls, secured for him a wide-spread popular- ' Uy among the rising generation. By

common consent he was known in this neighborhood as ' Holy Fooks," and

this epithet was bestoweu not in ridicule, bat in a sincere acknowledgment of his singularly blameless and useful

111.", remaps it was also meant to com

mcmorate a peculiarity in his character

. he W88 never known to fight. From . the tithe-proctor, whom he hospitably entertained and regularly paid an un-

precedented line of conduct, which

.. caused that, much enduring man to exclaim, "Sure, Bavnagora would be a

heaven upon earth if every man in it

was like Holy fooks' ?roui the tithe

proctor down to the arching, whom he often caught snaring hares or catting ' fc licks in his wood, he never abused or Quarreled with any One. Yet Holy

. Fooks was no .coward that tie poor widow at th? mill could testify, whose fair-haired boy he had saved from

drowning by jumping into the mill

pond at the imminent risk of hie life.

And when Tom Malonoy' house wan . burned, who but Holy Fooks could be

found to tread the tailing floor; and

while with one hand clinging to the

blackened ratters, with the other to seize

in succession three children, and hand

them safely to those outside? Mr,

- Fo"ks, in short, was that, 1 grieve to say, anomalous character in Ireland, a brave, good man, who would not tight 1 The estate, which bounded nis had lain. 1 have said, for iiome time unoccupied ; but at length a tenant for it appeared in the person of a professed duelist from Tipperary, who having made even thaMiery locality too hot, to bold hjm, and possessing as much money as

impudence, resolved to settle at Barnagore, and break fresh ground among its quiet inhabitants. Tom Mr pennis, for such was his name, had not ;ong been settled in his new resilience we he managed to establish several "very pretty quarrels" with his neighbors, lie was an unefring shot, seldom failing to kill his man at tiny number of paces, and was as pron-; to fake offense as tho famous FightingJFitzgcrald. lie challenged one young gentleman for accidentally touching him with his wl.ip, as they wore leaping together icrosi, it stream, while following the hounds. AH at tempts at a reconciliation were rejected by the scovnM bully. They met, and an hour afterwards a line la J, the hope of his house, was carried hone a lifeless corpse. The- neighboring gentlemen tried to send Magent is to "Coventry," but it would not do : ho was a man o! good family, and tried to maintain his position in societv literallv at the

J point of the i word. Every one wished

him away, but who was to " bell tue cat?'' It happened that a snip 11 field, belonging to Mr. Fooks, lay near tho upper corner of Mr. Mageii' is' lawn, to which the latter wished to lave it annexed. 1 re wrote a letter, couched in a very high and mighty style, requiring his pacific neighbor to sa l him the piece of ground in question. A polite reply in the negative wasvevarncd, and Magennis, boiling with rage at having his will oppoited, hastened to seek an interview will. Mr. Fooks. He found

that gentlenif.n seated in lus pleasant A

parlor, surrounded by his jooks ; and after the first sail? tat ions m passed, Magennis begun abruptly, " Mr. Fooks, am 1 to understand, from yonr letter, that you refuse to let me have the Sawn field?" "Certainly, sir; 1 have no intention whatever of parting with it." " But 1 toll you that 1 want it, and have it I will !" " I should be sor.-y," said Mr. Fooks, mildly, " to ditioblige a neighbor ; but 1 am sure Mr. Magennis will see the impropriety of petsing the matter further when I repeat that 1 ain quite determined not to sell the field." " You won't, sell it." " ISo, sir." "Then," stud Magennis, v-ith a feaiftil imprecation, " it you don't give me the field yon shall give me satisfaction ; and maybe I'll :ind your heirs, executors, adms nis tra tors, and assigns easier to deal with."' A quiet smile passed over the countenance of Mr. Fooks. " Do you maw, Mr. Mai;ennis, that you wish mo to fight a duel '" "Certainly; name your friend, and I'll send mine to meet him.'' " I am not much versed i:i these matters," said Foo!ts, " but I believe, as

a challenged p(,rty, I havo a right to select the weapons and t.ae place of meeting V " Oh, certainly ; nothing can be fairer. Choose what you like, my boy ; the sooner the better." And the bully rulbed tils hands with doiight. at the prospect of slaying mother man. " Then," said Mr. '?ooks, " I wish to dispense entirely with seconds, to fight on horseback, and to arrange that each of us can come armed wi ih whatever weapons we moy choose. Let th place of meeting bo the wide common be twecn the school house ard the mill ; the t'.ine twelve o'clock to-morrow ; and let hint who is first driven oil' the field be declared the vanquished." " Queer arrargemnts as ever I heard," said Magennis. Why, my good fellow, don't you knew that if I come armed with Ion;." sword, and mounted on my hunter Highflyer, I'll rids you down, ind split you like a

lark before ,you can say Jack Kobin-

son? However, that's your lookout,

not mine; so of course I ajnee to what

you propose, and have the honor to wish you a very f ood morning."

.tie men wanted away, marveling

much at the coolness of hi;; antagonist,

uid thinking what fun he would have

on tno morrow, bvery one he met was

told of the jest, and invited to witness

the combat. Great was the consternation caused by the news through Barna

gore.

To think," sad Mr. Penrose, oneof

the chief lwid proprietor, " that our

own boo est Holy Fooks, who would not

willingly offend a worm, is to be slaughtered by a scoundrel; itmnsn't be. I'll o to him and offer to ligh t him in his stead."

AccDrdincly ao repaired to the

dwelling of Mr. Fooks, and found that

gentleman as tranquilly occupied with

nis dooks as wnen no was visited by Magennis in the inoi :iing.

A t.au business this, t ooks," mud

Mr. Penrose ; " a very bad business. Why, man, rather than you should

meet Magennia-11 fight the rascal inybClf."

Thaak you, my friend," replied

Mr. Fooks. " 1 feel most Kratcful for

your Kindness ; oat since. Kir. Magennis has chosen to take, cause! a ss offense. 1

an resolved to (live him the meetiti

he desires. 1 erhaj.s, he added, smiling, "Urn result mt,y be butter than ycu

expect.

"Oh, my dear Fooks." said his friend

"don't, 1 beseech you, build on that.

The fellow is a regular aiisafesin, and if

no nau ins deserts wojli long since

have gained promotion at the hang.

until a iinmiH. nowevcr, tueru will lie a

score or two of your friends on the

ground to see fair play, and havo salis-

tactton from him for you? death."

With this somewhat equivocal piece of consolation, and a hsarty shake of the hand, Mr. Penrose tcok leave of his

friend, who. during tho remainder of

the day, stayed within doors, and de

clined seising any visitora.

On the following morning, a large concourse ofpeoplt, including, indeed,

nearly every ninaijiani oi tno parish,

assembled on the common to witness t lie approaching oonibid. ,on jl and loud wire the lanentntions o; the poorer people, who htd experienced

much kindness from Mr. Fooks, at the fate whicn awailei him : while the

deepened, tones and daikuned looks of the gentlemen testified their sympathy with him and their utter abhorrence of

his antagonist.

Ireciscly at twolre o'clock the fol

lowing morning, Magennis appeared on the field, mounted on a splendid blood

noise; a aagger wts stuck ill lna belt,

anJ he blandished an enormous two

edged, swora in hit hand. He cast a

scorntuf glance around, and not seeing

nis opponent excij.tuie.' (, without ad

dressing any one m particular :

"1 thought the cowardly fool would

be afraid to meet ma ; but if ho sneaks

way, perhaps oneof his friend.s (with

a sarcastic emphasis) tvili lake his

place." " Here he comes hinself," cried

boy, throwing up hi) hat, and a general

cheer announced the approach of Holy Fooks. He advanced rapidly, mounted on a Kerry pony of so diminutive a size that its rider's ieet were little raised above the ground. He was completely enveloped in an ample crimson dressinggown, which waved aad flaunted in the breeze after a singular fashipn. In his right hand he bore something which had tho appearance of a very Ion;; lance ; but which, having both extremities covered by the extended folds of the dressing-gown, was not as yet clearly visible. AVith his left hand ho shook the bridle, and urged his tiny steed toward tho spot where stood the astonished Magennis. Whatjivei the latter gentleman may havo thought of Mo, Fook's costume, hie nettled horse seemed to have formed his own private opinion on tho subject ; for n sooner did tho gaudy dressinggown flaunt before his eyes than he started, shied, and began to prance in a manner wlich caused his rider to exclaim, with an expletive too forcible for transcription, "What's the meaning of this buffoonery ? Come and meet me, like a man." "Always happy to oblige a friend," said Mr. Fooks, and suddenly throwing back the offensive garment he raised the weapon, and shook it full in the face of his adversary. It was a long slender pole, having at one end a distended bladder lilted with dried peas. A fearful thing it looked in the eys of Highflyer, and so appal

ling to his ears was the rattling noise it made, that, despite the furious efforts

of his master, he f.'.irly bolted, turned tail, and piUoped at full speed across the common. After hint rodo Fooks, shaking bin rattle and shouting : " Come hack, Mr. Magennis ! come back ! 'Tin a shame for you, man, to bo afraid o? a dressing-gown ant I child's rattle !" Faster and faster flew the affrighted horse, bearing his enraged master beyond the inextinguishable laughter which bailed his defeat, and the boundless triumph of Holy Fooks.

CAM THEY BE TRUSTED? Who are Greeley';? Supporters, and

What are the Purpoaes Animating Them ?

An Able and Lucid Statement of the Issues of the Campaign.

Personal. Stani,ev is llS. LlTl NOTION E is 55, Daniel Jjkbw is worth $2,000,000. Whittiek has a new volume of poems in press. Bret Hakte's play is entitled "An American Comedy." Two Louisville officials have drnwn a 10,000 prize in the Havana lottery. Lawrence, Kan., wanting n smart teacher, has hired a Mr. Mustard. Stanley has received gold medals

from the Geocraphical Societies of St.

Fetersbug and Florence.

II. M. Brent, an attache of the Unitd States Legation at Limn, Peru, has

married a Peruvian lady worth ?.,

0U0.00U.

When Mr. ISeecher was asked bow he

managed no keep his congregation al

ways wide awake; he replied ".By sleeping so mush myself."

Glstavi: Fischer, the defaulting sher-

11' of (took county, J 11., who mysteri

ously disappeared two or three years ago, is keeping a saloon ia Virginia

City, Nevada.

Anotiiek delegation of Apache braves.

including Sitting Horse, lied Thunder

bolt, Pawing Hlillalo, and scaping Panther, is on its way to Washington. Sitting Horse is no relation to Squatting

wear.

William 13. Astor is coisijt crazy, and

facies that somebody is making s. con

stant effort to rob and murder him.

His palatial residence has been turned into a kind of lunatic asylum. Mr. As-

tor's $!&,OUO,000 do him a heap of good.

Mi.i,e. Cniir tixa Nilssox was n. poor

Swedish peasant girl before her Uiroat

was found to be full of notes good as sterling; her husband's grandfather

was a blacksmith s, so there is equality

of blood on both sides of tho house.

Tub health of Man ton Marble, of the

New York World, continues very delicate, find that his physicians have recommended him to go abroad. He has not for several months done any editorial work on tho World.

Tiihre is to be a remarkable family

reunion at Woodbury, Conn, .Mrs.

)rphfmy 'People will celebrate her lOOlh

year, while her daughter and son-in-law

will have their golden wedding in the presence of five generations.

" Macaulak " writes from New York

to the Rochester Jktnocrat : " If there

has been anything of lato years that looked like madness, it has been the way the JLelands have wasted their fortunes. Ab a family they have been famous for hotel keeping, and nt one

time three or four tirst-clcsf; bouses were

in meir liands. J heir end, however.

has been disastrous; the. enormous :u of

its were wasted in foolish speculation.

and thus, after handimi: numenso for

tunes, they came out poor."

Mu.E Celeste, the tiuht-rono artist.

had her leg broken by the .ope giving

way, during one ot nor perlorniaiiees at

Shawneetown, Kv. he plivsioi;-.ii who

et the limb evidently did not know his business, and instead of ioiniin; the

bone together he lapped one over the

otner, consequently the broken limb i

bout three inches shorter th in the

other. Sho is now on h.r wav lionn-. in

Borne, N. Y to have tho :amily physician break that limb again, and reset it. This woman shows more grit than most of her sex.

Mbssks. Scribnrr, Armstrono V Co., of New York, have secured the right to publish in this country, in bookform, Mr. Stanley's account, ol tin? suecestlul Herald Search after Dr. Livingstone, the great African Explorer. Messrs. Sampson bow A (Jo. will mubli -h the. Knghsh edition of the work. As Mr. Stanley is a native of Connecticut, the work will be copyrighted in (l is country. It will make a volume of at least 500 pages octavo, and will be profusely illustrated with designs, nearly all. full page, Irorn Mr. Stanley's pencil", together with a carefully executed map of the route ho followed. Tho narrative will not be a rehash of the letters already published in the newspapers. It will be re written throughout., and will contain a complete and consecutive account of Mr. Stanley's jourrievings and adventures, and of his four months' sojourn with Dr. Livingstone. Mv. Stanley is now in London," actively engaged in the preparation of the work, ami its publication will be j-ressed with Hie ere.Uest possible expedition. The exici date of its issue will Vie dulv announced.

From tf io l.'hicasro Inter-Ocean. The Springfield li.:iit,lioia, the, fairest and most conscien :ion:; of the former Republican journal which still support Mr. Greeley's candidacy, published a significant article, a few days since, in which, under the head of "Can They be Trusted I " it essayed to present the true issue in the pending campaign. In the first part of its urgument it conceded the point that Mr. (ireeloy would be, and cught to be, defeated j;.' those who are supporting him could be proven guilty ol a desire to make way with the results of the war, to overturn the constitutional guarantee. of universal freedom and citizenship, and either to again attempt the disruption of the Government or to force tho payment of Southern war debts utid the pensioning of rebel soldiers. The lii-jnAlican does not quibble over the point that it is Mr. (ireeley, and not his supporters, that is to be voted ?'or; but, with a candor that is roireshing just now in Confedci ate organs, it concedes that an Administration must, take its character from the overwhelming majority of the men who support it, and, therefore, i! the supporters of Mr. (iredey can be truthfully charged with tha purpose to do o.' attempt to do any of these theo thinjis before enumerated, he should be defeated wore he tu times the, better man that Mr. Bowles believes hint to be. The, candor of the Rejrdbluan very greatly simplifies the true L;sue, involved in the contest between (ireeley and (irant; and agreeing with it fully in this proposition, wo are willing to accept argument upon the second and vital question : What i- the purpose of Mr. Greeley's supporters, and in what direction will they coloi and shape his Administration ? To ioat n this properly, a niai. of common sense, ready to 'Apply the same rules of action ro this duty that he would to the commonest a:l';i!r nf every day biti-i' ess, must go at once to '.iiose who can f-peak v; eath-alra for the great majority of Mr. Greeley's supporters. For we suppose, by this time, no man is insane enough to believe that nine-tenths ol his followers will he other than Democratic, and that the.

' most ultra and virulent . einoc:.'atio

type developed in the past fifteen or twenty years. The men who precipitated the country into rebellion; who upheld the fortunes ot the ' infeileraey

to the last: wlioat; treason cost us the.

long and bloody war: who sacrificed a

hall millions of lives and billions of

ti'eisure in the mad effort to establish a Government whose corner-stone should

be slavery to use the words of the Con

federate Vice President the men who,

in ante-rebellion nays murdered, sceurged and maltreated men and wo

men m the South who were suspected

of enmity to the " peculiar institution," an I who, in post-bellum days organized

themselves in h.u-lilux Klaus, and have murdered twenty-three thousand black and white Republicans for disagreeing with them in political belief thefe are the men who to-day furnish

the overwhelming of Mr. Greeley sup

port. The point of variance is not, as to what these men have been in the past, but whether their sudden conversion at

Baltimore, on tne 9th of -Inly, was real

arttt nonesi ; wnetner tuese ,au!s ol Tarsus, who have for years been pursuing with the torch and swortl the

friends of liberty and equality have, by

virtue of the Baltimore Conventicn, become the true and accepted Pauls to

lead the hosts they have heretofore per

secuted to i better and higher political

life. Passing over i.ho question whether Mr. Greeleyis success would entail another attempt to disrupt the Government without saying more than ths-.t, should the South desire to secede, Mr.

Greeley is pledget! to aid them in their

secession lo tho nui extent ot Iih power, let us adduce some evidence to show that Southern men and Northern, too. for that matter understand that Mr.

Greeley's election means the success of

the principles fought for in the rebel

lion, and payment to the South lor tho

hisses sustained by its treason. The Lexington (Mo.) Caucasian, the

lirst. paper in the United States to name Mr. Greley for' t tie Presidency, and to

w hose editor Mr. G. addressed a friend 1 ' letter on the Presidential question,

lias for its platform today: "State Sovereignty ! White Supremacy and Repudiation! Do'.vn with the Fifteenth

Rednmr.edmt-nt ! Total Hei'udiation of

the Monstr&iH Yankee; War Jteht incurred in the prosecution of an uncon lititutional crusade Mr. Greeley con

teded the riuht of seoo-w-ion, and of

course tin: war fo prim nt it was un

constitutional for th-3 accomplishment

of an unconstitutional i.nd.honid pur

pose!" This is the o. initial Gretlay

platform.

lion. -J ere. s. lilaek, .vtr. l.uchanan s Attorney General, tho ablest jurist

who espouses the Greeley cause, de

olarcs, in his letter advocating Mr,

ireeley a election, tha; " tho Keconil ruction laws were unjust bills of :ttlainde.r," and the Foui -teentli and Fifteenth Amendments are "frauds upon the spirit and purpose of the Constitution." Kx-Gnvernor Brown, of Tennessee, in a speech at Nashville, says Greeley is

Mr. Greeley himself, in his conspiracy for the Cincinnati nomination, agreed to favor the poisoning of rebel soldiers, and the Indianapolis News, whose editor

is a memoer ot the Greeley Central Committee for the State cf Indiana.

lenounees as "a shameful doctrine the

sentiment that the rebel soldiers shall

never occupy the -atne position before the fate that Union soldiers occupy" ft. c, paid pensions and given land warrants ,

uen. ftoUgo, in a speech at .Lexing

ton, Ky,, declared that he had "seen thousands throw their lives away upon the battle-field in defense of the prin

ciples of the Democratic party ;" and

ex-vrov. hundolph, of INew Jersey, and

ex-Senato Hendricks, of Indiana, declare tnat they accept Mr. Greeley because they can trust him Ixtltr than a

Democrat for "n Democratic Adminis

tration." Gen. Hodge auo declarer that Mr. Greeley's letter of acceptance

means the restoration ot John L.

Breckinridge and other chivalrous sons

of the South to their former j ositions of power and inlluence." He a so eays that Mr. Greeley's election will be " a victory for that which they (tho Southern soldiers) fought ;" and that, in the event of the success of Greeley, "my

comrades of the lost cause have not died in

vain "

Col. Breckinridge, in a speech at Lex

ington, Ky., said : " I don t care a.

iicayune for Horace Ureelcy or what he i;is said. He represents the dawn of a new

era to us, an era tn-jf. wxu restore us to

lw,er,"

Capt. Raphael Seinmes, commander

of tho pirate cruise:, whose depreda

tions involved us in the bitter c.ontro versy with Kngland, just peaceably closing at Geneva under the adnrnistration of Gen. (irant, declared in a letter to the Mobile liegister that it is

Mr. Greeley who has corne to the

Captain of the Alabi.nia, and not the Captain of the Alabama that has gone to Greeley."

Lyman Trumbull, United States Sen

ator from Illinois, rebukes the loyal

pitil of the North, s,nd tells it in his peech at Dixon not to go " Iiuwlihg

irounti aoout Anitorsonvilie. l he

Chicago Tribune sneer at the soldiers of

the late war who were not killed in battle or starved in prison pens, as "superfluous veterans ; " it insults he victims of Andersonville and Belle Isle by telling them not "to continue showing their old sores : " see Tribune, August

it declares universal sufliage "a

serious menace to ltjpu'.'tican institu

tions;" see Tribune, August i-1 it de

nounces General tirant, untie whose leadership the Union cause gained vie .lory over the rebellion, as "at arrant

lead beat. I Sec Insunc ot August 22.

The New-York Expre-a, Greelej paper,

says the uuestion now is " whether the negro wa; really born to be a alavc or

not." Mr. Greeley is on record in favor

of secession j in favor of paying $400,000,K)0 for the liberated slaves ; in favor of paying pensions to rebel soldiers,

and in favor of revering the memories

ot Lee and Stonewall Jackson equally

with that of Grant and Sherman. He is on record as saying that the -.vu-Ivlux spirit is still alive in the South, " readij tc be revived to morrow." In hia Portland

peech lie declared that, through this

self-same Ku-Klux spirit, whet: ha was

elected President, the "carpet-baggers'' of the South would be compelled to

fold up their tents ahd silen .ly steal

iw.iy. These are but samples of much more

of the same sort that might lie repro

duced, were it necessary. It ia our design simply to show the purposes animating Mr. Greeley's supporters, and

to apply theSpringhold liepuulicqn s text

to them : " Can They be Trusted ? " This clamor foi the assumption of rebel

losses, tor the payment ot pensions to rebel soldiers, of a new attempt at seces-

sion, ol a victory tor the " l-iost Muise,

is not, ft " Kiidicr.l electioneering ticket" these extract: are from the opinions

of the leaders of Mr. Greeley's support from the class which the Tienubticuns attempt to prove have been converted

into loyal and tru-j Union aien f If they have not, but if they arc still tain

ted with treason and rebellion, if they

still treasure up a - vight design to force

a victory of the principles of the Confederacy through Mr. Greeley's election, the Springfield IiemMican. fays Mr.

Greeley will be, and ought to be, do-

teaied. tVe leave tno case Ultra. " ian they be trusted? "

coo-'i rini? in & verbs.! pikter ov yoor mother yeacnin 1'or noozo uv her absent son, it wood tiov i good oflect, oo needn't trot out yoor fatli', for fathurs is played out. It's the mother that teches :ho popular heart. And yoo niist git yoor eyis in condishon to drop a symoatbizin tcjr or twoef occasboa demandB. I he done good thinara before now fry weepiu portooBe'y at the rite tinio.'1 1 ns prepared, tlo farmer-statesman left tho Mlass-c shades uv Chappaqna. Ti e ro.nit the proeeBs'sn lied started onto its I or, t packt my valise with a bottlo, and poe ibly a Bhirt or two (tho I reoly f orgit abont the latter, payin sn little attonsban ez I do to ttic iiere luxuries uv fife), and started for an interior village uv Ponnuylvany, where I made a spaecb last year, nud eonsekontly knowed all the principal Demokrats. I pat nn ft the old ramfyer tavern, whore tho ticket I knowod to ! good. 1 hod barely time to hist in three or four slugs afore it wuz noised abroad that I we.z there. Iu twe nty ininits a person appoarcid o interview me. Ho iuterdoost bisHiiH oz s, Mr. Slodgers, a Liberal Hepnblikin, win, bed determined to vote for Honest Old Ho' ico. I askt bim to drink, wich he did, nnu thou wont on. He wuz tUHgusted with the con nptiMi and rascility uv the Hepnblikin par.y, and felt that bo most leave it. He wai ted parity he yearned for a return to sut I in beside offiee-Boekin. Hence he hed decided tc support Oreoloy. " But," resumed bo. ' I Lev made sacrifices iu this, and I must ho,' axhooronceg. I wuz an unsuccessful applirant lor tho Post Offis in this viliage under Lit luri, in 18G1 ; then agin in 1865. I succeeded in git ten it uv JolwBon in 1866, when the tni a in-umlient wuz dismist, and held it tilt April, 1H69, when the tyrant Grant dismissod mo ind roappintod aiy predocessor, and left ino to litngtuHh all th-iao years without offlsbcl position, and to subsist on the petty eaniins uv ray wife, wicb is a milliner. Ef Horris is elected, kin I hev that offis? I kin control tho Liberal vote uv this county, sir. I hold it in the boiler uv my land." ' Say no more, air," ted I. "I fully appreshnto yoor posishon. Uv course I kin make no positive promise ; but it is safe to say, sir, thnt tha posiBhen ehol bo yoors. But that Lil ral l .epubhbou vote, sir, must bo alt polled. Wt- she! hold yoo responsible for it." lie It ft tho prosenoo profoose nv thanks, an (1 1 .took four more, drinks, haud-runnin. Mr. Sj.odgers hedn t any more than got out when another citizen entered and announced luVself ez a Libral Ilepublikin, wicb his same wi: 7 Perkins. He wanted to bo understood, to be ;m with, ez holdin tho Libral Hepubliken vo o iu bis band. Ho cood control it. V7ith-oi-.;, hia aid nothin ccod be done with it. He created it, and he held It to-day. But ho hed made siierilicos. He hod bin a candidate for Triiusuior nv the county roglorly from 1856 to dale; but hed atluz bin defeated by fraud. The- last time he wuz defeated by fraud he kodn't hut two votes iu tho county convention us uncle and brother-in-law. He wuz disgusted with the offis-seekin party, but cood he be ashoored uv tho Post Oftta in tho evant uv Greeley's clocaken P He felt that ef he over win; ag-nn to hev an oDs this wuz the- time. Ho wanted that Poa; Offis from the time he wiu; twenty-one yeani old. " Without my infhioonco," sed he, " the Libral Hepubliken in thit. visiuity will be nothin- I, sir, hold that vo in tho hollor nv my hand. Kin I bov that of in:"' I hed takou two drinks whilo talkin to him !,i: J mi.- obiivius nv ovcrytliiflg that preceded it . I ruptied that uv course we coodn't make pir mi 38 now, but that ho shood rest easy. I felt thst there wood be nothin iu the way uv his aupintment the minnit the Farmer uv Chappa. qua shood be inoggeratod. " But, sir, tho L liral liepnblikin vote must all be out ; wo shel held yoo responsible for it." " Trust me," aed he, with a look uv gladness on his hungry face wioli I never saw ekalled ; and he took his leave, and I took two more drinks. ;kasMy hed Porklijf fcappoarod afore another cum, who ami:nmst lusself ez Mr. Kb Jl Uohitt. Itatchitt -omarkt that he rojoieed al the movement wich led to the nominasken u i Mr. Oreolcy at Cincinnati. He hed alluz ai.-ted ivitb tho liepuljhkiu party, but the offisseekin tendency uv the members thereof hed d sgustod him. and ho bed determined to quit it. Ho hod inflouenco. Ho controled the Libral Ilepublikin vote iu fact, ho held it in the

h;iiier uv nis nana, ana wttnont ins innooence j.j,,, D Pfgace nothin cood be done with it. But ho hed made n '

s:icntlcoa. He wuz an unsuccessful applicant HM The varieties of wood produced in

h i cue ij.aKeaaureuin iu coui, uiu agiu m n sV

jrt-o. reti-xii oujisoa tvuz pieaauu 10 Kivo

, l, ii i hi li i llm nimrm

The frot o:i the ground was a palpable whit, t

But Bella tat wr:. pea in a trance oi amum.

As heedloea ot eimc as ol reason.

Not alone wai th lady on that winterly eve, Per tie thie phi) ana'ring and fuolin., , Not sintly she k:pt on the tender i vtw.

For a pair -t tneiu gatr- li you H oniy mmn

Mrs. Faranston biuiok Kaacootnt. Sweet, spirits of nlithtl" tie enrartured ooe said, Ai the sturs twinkled dearer and brighter s .

Bat next mora il wsi bed for tha day. a

nwtead .......

Of "sweet gpirita of night" ahe'd jcoia in me

Mead, And a dO)r of trfc eet spirit of nitorl

.Scientific and Practical.

The vtn-3 cr.nnot be cultivated successfully in clay soils, says M. Becquerel, unless it is trained to a considerable

height.

A rev steam drill, capable of boring a hole eight inches in diameter, has

just been introduced in the anthracite

regions tiy the Pennsylvania (Joat Com

pany. J twill bore turther in one dar

than a dozen men with the old drills

could drill in a month. Tnt: rate of upheaval of the Wwedish coast is f hown by a larjje block, ten feet high and fifteen feet broad, on the shore ........ f . i, : i. : l o l .1 r

feet aboi e hieh water mark, as is nroved sheep raising interloper.

by aft inscription to that effect. Dur- " Ij the absence of gl'es, how do ing the present summer this block was you illustrate the shajie of- the earth to 120 feet from the shore. your scholars ?" aked a committee of a

Td Timtim It .to nAvTAMtol m maim school teacher. "I shows 'em nay

resnirato - for firemen, in which the solid head w8 the P'y

particles of tho densest smoke aro ar-1 a maw out West says he moved so

rested bv nlms of cotton wool wotted I mnnv times dunne one year that wnen-

with glycerine, and the most pungent ever a covered wagon stopped at the layers of obarcoal. By this simple means g&te, h;s chickens would fall on their firemen can remain within burning backs and hold "up their feet, in order

nuiiaings lor upward ot an nour at a t to be tied and thrown in.

timu wim safety and comtoit, so tivr as their respiration is concerned. Tub manufacture of ice in New Or

leans is taid to be a success, and has

Varieties. Thb sting of a bee carries conviction

with it. It always makes a man t. beeleaver at once.

Cattle are dumb beasts, but by gath

ering tnemseives logcmer, moj

make tnemseives herd. " T'i.i. take the responsibility," as a

doating father slid when lie held out his arms for the baby.

Wnv is the best butter?" ex

claimed an orator at a meeting of dairy

men, "in oia ramr rwuum

he can find, and then he'll see how it is

himself. Two LirTLE girls were gravely discussing the tuestion of wearing ear-riogs One thought it wicked. The other was sure it could not be, for so many good peoplo w.sar them. The other replied, " Well, I don't care, if it wasn't wicked God would hare made holes in our ears,"

" What are you about ?" said a grMid-

Ir anvlodv bas any doubts about any-

.V,inr not heinir read in a nowsparer.

just let him put something which he would not like to have known in the

been the means of reducing the price obscurest part of tho obscurest paper

to o per ion. rne wonts give employment to 1 JO men, who turn out seventyfive tons of " protoxide of hydrocen"

everv twenty-four hours. Two thirds of

the ice ued in New Orleans is manufactured, but, owing to the fact of its having no grain, it is deemed inferior to that imported from the North.

There is a tree in tropical America,

known as the Hippomane MauznmH, which is so poisonous that the natives

avoid goicg near it. Merely resting mother t,, a little boy, who was idling under its deep shade will produci se- tv,t. th room, and casting ftirtive

rious sickness, and in very susceptible ar,M .,. mnUeman who was paying

persons oven death, it has been as-1 . .H'm trains to steal, nana s hat

1 -J A.. , " i - . I A l - A I , W V . , , . - L

ae.i-Kiu uv iiawrousB mm, uus irtse iuu r tat, rnnra wiUlOUl leiunc mo

a juice which in a dry atmosphere entlemaa see it, for papa warns bim tb evaporates from the moist bark and I ink he's out."

a irishman beine recently on trial

for soma . suEnse. nleaded " Not guilty,

We hear from New Zealand of a new and the jurv being in the box, the State

iica lor kprnsanft oil. Intern ail v arf- 1 Knlmitnr nrOfrfeaea IO can ui.t-

for . vnt.riMR. With the utmost 'in

chronic rheumatisia. Dr. Kemp, of I nocence Patrick turned his face to the

Wellinpton. has administered it in his fVinrt. and

practice with grittifying results. The your Honor, that Mr. Fur.-asson lsto

dose was a teaspoontui in a wine glass be a witness lomensi, me oeiu .

of water, every other night, and it pro- Judge b.:d, dryly, " it seems so.

cluced no unpleasant symptoms what- Well, -aen, your ixonor, a i""

ever, llis success mar induce otner I nnltv. sure, an your nonw li" i

physicians to make a trial of it, bet no I because 1 am guilty, for I am as iimoone should take it unless bt medical cent as your Honor's suckling baby, bnt .. I . . i r Mr (Turku..

auvice. I just on aooiuat i '"ta

acts as an irritant poison to the skin

and mucoui membrane

" Hat Fkveb," so-called, has not generally been recognized by physicians as

a separate disease, but a recent writer

on the subject seems to have establ ished its individual identity. "Autumnal

son's sowL"

NASBY.

Hie

He

(; rent Humorist's Latest Epistle from (.hiipiiaquiti

(loos to an Interior Village to Organize It An Awkward. Muddle.

y, ftl. O. from Kens i.ino meeting :

' I'OIi'l; Ike. S'Uth ht istt.dl:'

' in favor of restoring to the South her

pristine, rights. '

lion. .1. S. (iollad:

lucky, K.-iid at the " ireeley io.v i- avor i'tr her shieex. and belie.ve.

,. .1. Kllis, (ireeley candidate for l-'.leetor, said in a speech in lOninhtii;i : " Twelve million of popple (the Southl would hail, as a lover hails tho dnwn ol' a first fim.le, 'lie flash of the irH brave smord drawn for vcoeanee ami liberie,'' The (juitmati (n.) Fanner, a Orccley newspaper, .says : " The atroei ,ieH of the Northern soldiery are still uoo fresh in our memory ; the Hears on our he.-irls nre not yet erased ; the manes of ('liiciiii.iuirii and hlinii'A still sulluse t-hi; eyes wild tears nud the hear', with terribh thwuhtt of vcogrance." (.'nngressma i Heck, of Kciitueky, in a speech deob.red that ,jhii it ma neee.i. j,oi !i see nrc .si.-.'A letisjj ion , the Demo-f-raty denned oufl the- m,.M demand f and cmnji-J Mr, :-e:'.e a yield aeruifs-

CllAi'l'A(jtTA (wich ia in tho Btalo uv ) Noo York). August 22, 1872. t

It wuz dutcrniincd by our resident commit; tee that it wood bo a ioo.Hnhtia tlilllg to do to bov tho L-n at and i?tod (irooloy o ou a toor

thro (tin fitato nv Now Hauuwhiro a id Maiiio,

to cm-ouraKe tho week and to eoloor tho vaaBilatiii in thoHO StattiH. I opposeci it, cr. I hod bed some oxporione with trips, l.ovin accompanied the immortal Johniiou on all uv hizztm. I mil ovcrroolcd, but thoy conceded to mo tho arraiiKoinoiit nv tho toor, tho they took control uy tho great and pood mm from tho start to its coih-Ioohuiii. They initiated that it wood hey two ariod effocte i laiij Wo Bhoiild dodgn tli- frokent deiegashuns wich afflict us

at iJhappaqua ; and, 2nd, That tho exhibition uv Honiii wood hov a pood offock on tho rooral populiH, I yialdid. and set abont . littin bin for the joumy. I hod a vtry difllcult Job

it to him, but be wuz removed by the morci-' lroa tyrant, Grant, in 18(19, and ono nv hia ii.iaioim appoiutod in his place. Ho hed sed a., tim is that he wood accent the Post Offis, ef it wnz tendered him, and cz some elite aob:onl'3dgniout uv lus sondes in coutroUin

t no ljiurai napuoumn vote ue snoou expect

il . " In case the good Oroeley is elected, fun I hev I t ?"

Wo drank, and forgettm all abont FerkmB, I rnplioil promptly thit, nv course, no positive rouiHOa cood be made at so early a date, bnt I cood say frankly that thoro coodent be any lioobt about it.. And Mr. Matchitt took his

l iavo thankin mo 'irofooaely, and promisin that the Libral Itopubhkiu vote, wich ho con

tn.ild, ehood be out I th, cm took several drinks by tnyaolf. How I got to the train that nite, or wat ix-unspired, I know not, I hev an indistinct 1 Ino u v hevin a mob uv men in my room, and ii v mr.cn drinkui. f-itiffico it to aay X awoke on tho oars, and found myself some hours after hi Not York, and then back to my quartern at lihappuqua. Ton days af tor I received four lettere. Three liven; wnz from Messrs. Slodgors, Perkins ii nd Matchitt, each reproachin me with dooolicity In promisin tho Post Offis to the two -..tbot'a, ami each aiiioorin me that be alone ontrjfd tho Libral Bepnbiikin voto nv the i.-ounty. Tho other wnz from the landlord, .i cloiiin bill for basted furnitoor, and statin iilcow uo that I hod made an ass uv myself, ez itio o lly Libiat Bapublikins thoro wuz in ttio ,:cunly wtiz Stodgera, Mitchitt and Perkins, and that they wuz uv that pekoolyer Btripe

1 1 at the Eopuhlikina rojoist more forvently ivhuu they left tho part; than tLoy did over 11 air Bnocoaa iu North Carolina. I must quit

oitho:: likkoi or poUtica. They don't work

well iogothor. PETBOI.1EUM V. Nasbt.

i ' Wicli wuz Postmaster, and hopes to be agin.)

Jieedlc Womu In England.

V:n investigation has llitely been made into the treatment of needle wortten in Kngliincl, which has developed pome iiglv fiietSi 0ms old woman worked five days with her needle, and earned the sum of one shilling and sixpence. , vonnir woman who made youthe'

jackets received live pence for four. One who male gentlemen's trowsers was paid three shillings a dozen pair; and another obtained one penny and a hlf for making a dozen linen collars and cutis. The latter could earn five pen re a dii by working from nine in the morning till seven ill the efening. Numerous other cases are mentioned, anil sufficient fact are presented to r.mvo thnt the noor women who donend

1 .i n.. l:..i:t..i

upon uioir lieeiue 101 a iiveiiwc iu

the disease. No 'cure has been found for it; but it has been observed that

there are many places where the die-

ease is not contracted, and where it disappears from those suffering with it,

in a few days. Most of the White)

Mountain and Adirondack regions are'

free from it, nor is it known in tier-

Uae4. I was in a drug store in Elmira, wfwn i' r i , . . a 1 1 ...1 W n

in mtlhHI & IBllOW WUU v--. w.

catarrh" is r.he scientific term given to ,,,,,i r canmhor and downed the

.1.- -t : - Thl-j - rn,l 1 - . j -.

me, and I said, What the deuce oar

do tnss ion

" Why," "aid drags, " he is nneu. " Lined." says I, " what is that?" Then he told me. R.-m vnixs sinoe gentleman who

was about to give a dinner party, spent a whole week showing his servant how to make mock-turtle soup. When the fKa made the mock, ana the

4..1a and ill A KOlll) all rieht. and iust

.c u iihr ut to uour in a bot'te oi

inwt. a. littAe bov entered- singing,

" Kverytnmg is roveiy nu. u e hanirs hich." which distracted ber at-

tntinn. ana sne maun man"

S58 from Asia, 960 from Oceanic, and (

"" .... - I

"Did it make Lair sonpr- t,

wee"?- 4.

"Alas I eatona, --ue omb.t.

sad " "Darn it," said he, "didn't I just say they were sad ?" . '

" XUV t W VaV pnv -

Ah," said he, "two went to -Ue morgue, four to the hospital, and '

whrt man i aio wtsio vv.

liferent parts of the world are far

more numerous man most people are

aware of. A t the Paris Exposition of

1807 there were, from torty-hve diHer-

ent countries, no leas than .1,7611 different kinds of wood exhibited, 395

coming irom r.urope, iroui air.H of her hair

from Uceanica, and t poureu u -

1,298 from America.

Thb discussion of the coal-supply

question in Great Britain is directing

increased atlenut n to colonial mines.

In New Zealand a railway is proposed for opening out the Brunner Mine, and

the general subject is claiming much attention : the Australian and Oriental

Goal Com nan v will work collieries in

New Houtti Vates, loriurnisningiaaian

and Pacific porta, and there is a pros

pective largely increased development I vjvcrg) and that leliow yon just saw waa

ui vue imu uuucia iu iwiixw.

Ms. A. W. Bensett adduces numer

ous instances of mimicry in the whole habit and mode of growth of plants,

which, he thinks, may generally be ac

counted for bv similarity of external

conditions. The mimicry in the devel

opment of particular parts or organs he finds it more difficult to explain. The " protective resemblance" through the operation of natural selection, which has been urged for the animal kingdom,

does not seem to be appnoaoie.

to git tho plnloHophnr up properly for tho oc l eia ror,br(l in the most cruel manner, casiion. I took awhetBtun and rubbod the ui- r ., Html, : whi-h this starvina aido uv his nte liand for lmuri, till it per- -ne ot the shops in vimcn tins 8'arvint,

V--Ol K got'o I'll I" liieitiiin-M " ipOI'L iw Vieing composed of two celhirs,

doosod Bich callous stiota onto ii the most

horny-handed lalirer iu Vermont mite bo proud nv, ami inatructcd him that ufhtm Hliahin liands with tho yooiuanry to giip hanl, that thoro iuito bo no mistake oz to foolin thorn callous sputa on biz lalioi -hardened hands. I then he I him "it out in tho mm tiro hours oach dav. with hiz face upturned, till ho become brownod bv exposure to tho olunioncu i aft or wiou I bed a badly-fiUin mot uv idoao mado fo.- him, that tlio pooplc inito feot that ho hod attempted todresn uj) on ijioir account, but that, after all, ho wuau't auoustoincU to ho much giaudytr. Then eamo tho moaldiftlculi ptJtnv tlieoutlittin liinis, wich wuz to Instruct him in wat lie shood ,i;iy, but I succooded. f chargod him

i-s,cmiii uy that he shooii never nenHhun pol

eacji litteen ny eiKiuaen ieet. opening mado in the partition walla connect tho two cellars. In one of the rel nrs seventeen "hands" are employed, and in the other nine. Sdw Process for Preserving Meats. The French Academy of Moienijps has recently had u communication on the eul.jeet of a new process for the preservation of tilt-tits. The iiubstnnces are

in a cask and acetate

nlaocd in la vein

ii soda imnki.ed over each in me nro-

litix (ceptin that ho mite now and then howl I ortion ot one lourth ot the weight ot mildly h ithln about the ora nv good fcoliu), I (,h meat.. At, the end of twenty-four

boars the pieces are inverted, tho upper

nti"s beinir put in below. In another

twsntv four iiours the action is com

-ilHtti. and the meal packed in barrels,

.oiiether with the luiuid. Hetoro uing

-Aiii meitt niusi, be washed in water for

:i lieriod of not lens I ban twelve, nov

more than twentv-four, hours. Hall

in ounce of salt ammoniac should be

lidded to tho water, in order to deconv

nine the acetate. Pv this common

kitchen salt is produced, which restores

to tlpj meit its tTmatefr and navor

d Hhcod bo anealiolv knorful to doduo nil

tliom pi it out uv wicii offeneu mito come. 'Tho teor." I romarkt, ' is to be ono uv sentiment. We are on n pilgrimaRt to the toomit uv our aiicontois ; wo arc a goin to revisit the scenes nv our childhood, ez it wore to revive romeinbr.incRH uv our vonthfiil days and sich. and it n nsl be routined strikly to that. I bov arranged with onr onmmittooH on tho route to organize for a spout aneous outiiourin uv the people to receive voo, ard yoo must spook to m at eiich ntoppiii-placc. 1 wood rernmmoml that your rcHpouses to tho groo'.iiiH he niostli alloettioiiH to the grandycr uv tho mountiiih and (lis purity uv the air and .vater, and. above all, don't 'forgit the mother biznw, Ef yon

' . . . .1

" What the devil does no swauyw mch camphor for?" m.

"Well, saia uet vudown his throat, and

he took the camphor to keep the moths

ouCWoAa, ia New Xort aim.

A fashionable Womaa's Prayer. TWr Tird. have mercy on my souLand

please let me havo the French satin ii,i t t. .Stewart's this morning,

for, with black lace flounces aadoyer-

A Strange Mi. W , ?'Tr Sit mTmy

Intense radiation of heat in the great wb , . Wack

- ---- - .. renuest, piobo " -.

Desert ot isanara produces cai.ui- - i,i in. dear Lord. 1 kneel De

nary eflects on insecui as well as animals ,p, ee to 'nihti feolirig Ksrfectly

and men. wnon a caravan smutb n f Km. Emile has sent me to traverse that wide waste of desola-1 , ft bonnet! A most

tion, flies folk w on in prodigious multi- j Uule k' composed rf white tudes, attracted, no doubt, b odor I ftu coVost-rich tufts. For this

from the carseis, out mey soon aroP I r n fwlmg Ty gratefcl. Gwe dead by intennified heat Fleas turrow- r nv Tbee, mi humble heart, and

uie in nair, straw, or esm., are aiu a:ik with noint I.Mse trim-

off rapidly. Bat Uie moet amgjlar or j - fc Let me not grow too fopd of

ait is tne maiaay w wmcu mcu w t MQ deceitful world, HKt.oui r

ciueni aitor ocmg ct. - i WOmen. but make me exoecoi igiy gento burnin.8 sands and a vertical sun on 1 j'iftnv.rtic When th fintftf

that arid and life-forsaken region. l-t them auit my stylo

is called raele-a kind of bnun fever. .nA lfct tnere be olenty of

Tho stricken traveler u mig, - - ffl . gonnoeS, tor I KW

amused, and made extensively nappy em Tery 'dearly. 'Bless my chilby exhibitions of fantastic lorn, ne d gend me a good unrae, sees mirages, palm-trees, groupB oi , . . neu,or the time nor inelina-

tents. shady mountains, sparKtme cas- . . , hem myself. And,

cades, and misty forms dancing delight- uke eare ,f me whiie lsleep, and fully before hit entranced fisiors. m r, w&tch over my diamonds.

all that can be gathered upon tne sun-

ert. it aoocars that a certain conoivion

wholly free of moisture,

'"" i . , . o r

with intense sciar neat, uiwuowbimkw on the brain very similar to hasheesh.

Both exalt the nervous sysuim ana

,i.iiiv Hnstrov ail desire to exist, ne-

. . . w... . , .... -

nrived of the unnatural excitation oi

the brain.

A Plea tor the Brake.

rim number of brakenien wno are

lent everv

vear exceeds tut of any other class of the will of the operator. .. i r 4 (tvnr I uAD (anal mnriiU mattd.

.niios,u euipiy, . . ----- i " -r..:. 4--j, s

And yet, in seeking situations, uiey re poses to cui. " : e t7.Ii,T

roninelled to wgn a con iraci tei"5 i ciuinvj, n . V. .- . I . tmrn uirlV.nnn .nil

l i,, ens , of accident. There is Mo. This model weijihselevenwmm!,

ud ..;l.l nncilinn on I .A 1U il rarrvimr caiiiunlV Ot seven-

hardly a more .13 r "TP1" "-L, Uth oom

.than tnat oi T"'":'ri:" il.mrt

i utj.n.1 at thatosU m umec-i uaugOT i pressea hit or b i -" r to sumo ai- i.u-oii'w . .i i I f .nu- i,;no i.u m m. mil m

certait. deaui, ana i "-" i ic. i uv . M

I JS w r watch over my

&OI6U.

A Flying Machine. Has the iiroblem of aerial naviatiou

been solved? A dealer in machinery

and the President and tnree uirecrois of a "Me!' Institute," all of

Kansas City, Mo., teetuy " -

L. Judson, of that city, nas ibtobwm Min nuchinc which "move in any

direction, either horizonta? or vertical, with the wind or aint the wind, at the will of the operator." Mr. JndMin has had a model niade, which he pre?

nt ai tne coming wr m A liicAa iinri Tatwika.

billed to wgn acontrac. w-e ZZ'x32ZZ

, l, ,. ,acl emi toying i-ueui j m anuw", i. j

I . . . ll. .... - , mIIu mm.

nv train than that ol braaerian, anu teen, lae

is almostceriau .k T . "r.ZT s,m th. it in Mr.

t'ZLthZ it i. hard to Judson's areolar, his ,air ship" en

lee the iust ice of acceuUng men for to consist of a cigar- napea oaiiaou, see tne jum-" v. r c p..i t:..iK.;. a inhin. mt one end of

rinngcrou, P,-""'' "rrr 7-:.MneUer that t be

the day uiey . -::Tv." I In.U ao Uaaiit iamo-

i be e.i)iit)lini;6 OI im iw hb i uMiuwi v -i -tj -- . . . witrelnes8,eithcr--onwageaU steering jfperattt in

and at the I one.

i i .

nmnnr unialBlv larse,

in casoof their death, refuse

their families a small part of the sup

port they have lost.

Tbskk are half a million more male than females in the United State.