Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 20, Number 21, Jasper, Dubois County, 31 May 1878 — Page 2

"WEEKLY COURIER.

JASPER,

INDIANA.

CURRENT NEWS.

The Mmtm has retlioil the tmty hetwoea 7raee aad the Uefced States, providing fer eeVeetkMI at Ptrfcl tiM WTMMt HIHIMr

with a vkw to tk adept km ef a ntetrieal Seeretary Sberaaa,bavlag been Interview 4 regaralefr the Potter mohiUoa of leyerthjatlnn, Hated that so fern the proposed lartatljrstioa in Louisiana wm directed at bin 1m had a anxiety whatever, m he had neer written My letters or Mat aay telefcranwi wsteh he mu not perfectly willing should 1m tnepeeted by Um House ef hepreHtaHrea ud tbe people at large. He added: I derated naua tiaaa aad esvrsful attention -te tbe subject, and. I aai Ima la tbe ewvkUm that tereuK, ae declared Is Louisiana, satis short ef doing Juetiee ta the Kepubltesa tieket." The FroldMt'aM nonnested Aee 5Hh, Jr. at Cincinnati, Cellseter of Internal Jtevenue tor the Firat Dlrtriet at Ohio, -foe WeKaeJ, to be reawved; Quetavus St. Gen, anreyar at Onetonui of St. Lou to; John H. Sayth, of Xortk Carehaa, to be MinUter fcilaantaad Coasul-Gewral at Liberia. The KpubUeaCegreioal Committee have issued aa addrew to the public, la whieh they efcar& e tbat tae adaption by tae

Settee ef the Patter resolution I the 8rt step ef a deliberately termed plan for the nxpuhrfoa of tae Freekleat from office, aad ta proof thereof cite the ruHnfc of the Speaker of the House, who declared the resolution wan a privileged question solely npen the ground that it iavolved the queetiea ef the rightful ooeupsacy of the Kxeeuaire Chair. Funeral eervieea la memory of the lite Judge Chkaoln, son aad daughter, who were killed a year age la Kemper County, If lea., were held in Washington oa the lfKh, Mr. ChUbolna having caused to be transferred to that city for burial the renalnt of

her husband and children. Bishop Harett

pronounced a eulogy oa the oeoasion.

Freeldeat Hayes, according to the report

wvaiieaea or a reoeat ooBvenation. exnreMes

himself as feeling somewhat aggrieved at

tae eourse of the Southern Congressmen ia

eungiortae Potter Investigation resolu tfcm. He doee not ia the leaet fear the re

aIt of the Investigation, u aay bargaining

aaai may Bare, been done ia Florida or Lou

ieiaaa w entered lato without hie kaowi

age er cossent. He comlders his title to tke Freeldeatlal chair ae perfeetly valid, and the aa)y way ia which it eaa be eeateeted

y a writ of quo warranto.

Oa tke 30th, ubteriptioM to tke 4 per eeat.

jeaa anteuated te 9874,800.

the war frent W" keel ha. W. Ya..tethekme-r

pan e jiltataMppt an iae aeta. in tmm

bare tke rataieU ia awe heara waa ever aae

aaa aj aaareah eTarwaWPe

CAJMT AM9 MTHKAIT. The Faaer lvaaU Reptihlieaa 9tte Cea

'at HarrkeurK m the Utk,

Oea. Haary M. Hojt. of Lu-

aerae, far Oeraraar. Tke platform uaeondwleaally appoiee free trade aad urge Goveraaaeat protaatiea' of hoaae iaduetriee; reeeeaaMada Natieaal aad State legislation

te praveat unfair dieerinlaatioa la ratee af freight aad traaeportatioa by ehartered

eeapaalee; deaMada that tke Oeaeral Gov eraaaeat efloieatly proteet Southern Kepublieaaa la the MMlHtaaaaee of their CoMtltuttoaal priviiefcaa; aad inaliy heartily inderaea the adaalaifttratloa of Gov. Hartraaft. The platform aatiraly igaoraa the Natioaal daalaiatrattoa. Mrs. Lydia Sherman, known m tke "Coaneetteut Borgia," who eeafeeaed to the killing of nine persona by pekoe two huebanda aad seven children died ia tke State Penitentiary at Hartford on tke 10th. Aa agency of the Nevada Bank of San Francises waa opeaed oa tke 90tk ia New York. At Coming, N. Y., oa tke 3th, the Ceralag, CowaBaeque aad Antrim Railroad oar-

eheps burned. Lose, ),C00; iBauraaee, 5,000.

Ker. Samuel 8. Isaaee, editor of the Jtr-

A Jfaasener, aadthe eldeet JewUh mlaiiter ia the eeuatry, died at New York the

aightef the lth, aged 74.

far

WMIATOieCIIwait. The St. Anes Aeadear. a saheol

yeaag hHUee, at MemphU, TeaB.twaa burnd te tke ground e the BMH-nla of tk iab.

There were 46 boarder ia the acaool, all of

Met their wearing apparel. The

was owned aad auuMged br the

ec . jjoatinle, aad was fully in

awed.

Joe Fore, the St Louie

was serviMr tutiM VMr

deeperado, who seateaee in the

Jtieeeurt reaiteatlary for an attempt to kill

Me wife, wm set upon and stabbed to death hy a fellow eoarlet named Billy logers.with wkem he had quarreled, oa the night of the

xjia. Brewa Bowes was hanged at Gorz&Im

Texas, on the 17th, for the murder of Thoa.

aieeraaaa. Bewea protested hie inno eaee to the laet, aad ebarjred the oommia

ea of the erlaae upe hk brother-in-law,

i aetonowi joas We ley Hardin. The Ckleagofcoek; Island and Pacific Kaileed Coaapaay hare effected a lease of the

Keekuk and Dee Molnee Valley Railroad for

a term or years. The transfer will be made em the Irst of October a ext. The Dime Savings Bank of Saa FraaoJsco ke suspended with liabilities amounting to abeHt $4,000 and assets nemiaal. It turns ut to have been a sham affair, not regit, kwly incorporated, and its depoeitors were principally children. Joseph Davlg & Co., a pawnhroklng Mrm, were at the bottom of the swindle. Frank Heulton, a well known farmer of BeKalb County, lad., was shot dead by a Mtrglar whom he discovered la hi bouse awd attempted to capture, on the night of 4he 17th. Tke murderer fled, but was subsequently arreeted and proved to be a neighbor of HeuItoa named John Abbot, who mad recently been discharged from the Penitentiary. The boiler of tke portable engine In use a the farm of David Waggard, nearXew Frankfort, lad., exploded on the mk, inetantly killing John Waggard and John Jenklae. The Ohio Legielature at Its recent Mlon paeed alawreeoaMructingtke Concessional dlHrlete of the State, the effect of wbioh, taking the Presidential vote of 1S7 as a bwils, will give 1 Democrats toTKepuhllans, inetead of 8 Democrats to 12 ltepublien, ae at preeent. Gen. Oarileld N jeerry. !

Jaanderedoutof his old-district intoanoth. or having a hopeleM ItepnbliciiH minority, ad JtepresenUtlve Foster will be compelled to move his hwwe acro the street in he town where he Besides In order to keep iw residence In the Teeth District, H'illlaHt B. Vall, the Proseetiting-Attor-m tke famous murder trial of Naney K.

-wm, ia Indiana, has made a confession

GENERAL.

A total eclipse of the sua takes place oa the 39th of July next, under suoh circumstances as to present opportunities that occur scarcely once ia a generation for the study of some of the most Interesting phe

nomena with which astronomers have to do. The path of tke totality of tkla eclipse runs diagonally across the center of the United

states from Montana to Texws, and ia some where about 140 mile wide The Naval Ob servatory has asked Congress for an appro

priatlon of $8,000 for the purpose of sending

on seven expeditions, two of which It Is designed to send to Montana, two to Texas, two to Colorado, and one to Wyoming, each

te consist of three astronomers.

From Rlchford, Vt., comes the newa that 900 Fenians are drilling at Chancy, N. Y., 08

inues west of the first-named town. An in

vasioa of Canada is thought to be the object,

uui me military is oa the alert In the Do

minion.

ijJMI &r$mWbtffe 9& 141 Mbtaft A at Ulna S1

etuawwre wHiiiee an merred, amenf

taeat one ay aenator K turns tnr the

IhrftHMHt oi a aervtee btwMn

ntr

mall tt4eHiit)ilp

Serious rioting has occurred at Blaokburn

and Burnley, England, following the failure of negotiations between the masters and striking operatives of the cottoH-mills. The residence of Col. Jackson, at Blackburn, Chairman of the Masters' Association, was burned to the ground, and Col. Jaeksoa and wife barely escaped with their lives. An attempt was also made to burn Jackson's Mills. The residence of Alderman Hornby was partially wrecked, and tke windows of all the mills la town demolished. A strong force of iafaatry from Preston arrived, and eleared the streets. Oae mill at Burnley was burned. The disaffected districts were strongly garrisoned by armed militia. It is believed the Pope, yielding to the

adviee of his physicians, will spend the summer at Monte Casslde, the celebrated Benedictine abbey at Naples.

lorty lives were lost by the burnlBsrre-

cently of the theater at Ahnaedrursrer. in

India.

Mrs. Victoria C. Woodhull has brought I

suits ror libel against three prominent London Journalists. The aggregate amount of

damage her reputation has suffered at their hands is estimated by her at the modest sum

of W,000.

United States Minister Seward writes of

the famine in China, that actual starvation is pressing upon 16,000,000 of people, while

90,000,000 are suffering more or less dis

tress, rhe crops, he says, have been i

good immediately around the trlcken dis-

trlet, but as food can be transported only

oa wagons or pack-animals, it can not be

taken thither la suffieieBt quantities to save the lives of the people. Ia Tientsin a house

made of mats, for the accommodation of the

suffering women aad children from the fam

ine districts, was burned and 160 lives were

lost.

THK WAR TKOUHL.BS.

St. Petersburg dispatches of the 17th con

vey the Impression that a less warlike feel

mg exists there as the result of Count

ShouvalofTs minion, and that Russia is pre pared to modify to a certain extent the pro visions of the San Stefano treaty.

A London dlspatoh of the 18th savs: The

week, proline of rumor, closes In uncertain

ty, but with sanguine hopes of peace In well

informed circles. In others, however, enual

ly well advlscd,the pneilic reports of the last

two days are regarded with grave suspicion. They are held to be wholly Irrecon

cilable with the positive action of Genera

Todlebea in his extremely peremntorv de

raands upon the Porte, his steadv ad.

vaHces of hU troops towards Constantinople and his evident preparations for an assault

upon and seizure of the city. It whs re-

marked In parliamentary circles te-day that

ic was impossium to fully credit the Russian reports, and that these pacific rumors were probably put forth with the Intention of dceelving. However, they are generally credited. It was reported on the 30th that the twoyears' tern of the occupation of Bulgaria by Uumia may be shortened, and a Kuro-

wraiinissiun, iiHuesu oi a iiwwian oc

su. hj us nam ov me uoverntuRt ate u

wlki: also, one by mutator Beck, authorising the rostmairtr(.keraI to place mallserviee

on any nuww nunway, river or railroad wherever the miblws HMrvlo rmiulrtM it

In the House, Mr. Wood called up the Senate

eomurrtmt rtwHuiwa lor nasi sojournment, and moved that its eomdOeraMou be post, mined till Wednesday, tlie mh of Mav.

Agreed to-yeas 189, nays K. A division was tltH called (or on seconding the previous ouectkm on Potter's iiivvetivsUou rHHuiutlmi.

and the call showed UK members present ae

tmm inn i(uwum. aii i ue KeputMteHit re ftiel to vote. After several more inetfeotu

al enorts to secure a vote, on motion of Mr.

i Kir tne House aujournel ia Rejiubll csa Hoose Oauons whs held sftur Htilnuru

ment, at which the following resolutions were adorned:

Htvi, That the resolution now pending

in tun lllMlMJ 19 n iivnni in a inrai uniiiu .

liable and illegal to reopen the ouestlon of

ine i rtMHuenvs uue.a question solemnly set tied by the aetton of the Forty. fourth Con

Kress, wnicn aioue nau jurisllctlon, and therefore revolutionary and destruotlvB

good order, business prosperity, and peace of the country. Mttolctd. That the effort nf tlm noumnrutl

najoriiy so lorce upon t lie House, without op

ponuHiiy i or amenouieut or ueuate. a mens

ure ot such revolutknan character which

has not been recommended or considered by any ot its committee, but has been devised

or inuiviuuais lor nnvatn nr imrtv aai i

noiiia bb resteiea ny an means whloli are au

wonieu oy me ruies ot (lie House. TIlM SfAC rUATlllltiAia naailil linal.ln.n...,l..

. - j.mwM iinniitmun.il . the second passed with only a few members

ui tuts unuuus utseeaiinK'J

In the Senate, oa the 19th, consideration

was resumed of the bill to repeal the Specie

Jtesumptton act, and Senator Matthews read

aa argament upon the general nnaneial poll cy of the Government, and otfarcwl an uni.

stitute for the pendlngblll the bill Introduced

" ' ' nil mo mi n .urwilMr 1HSC.. . . . . . 1 lie deadlock In the Itoutxi niu in.ui-u

iuveeii(fsuon resolution still continued

wm nepuoirasns rsiusinK to vote and

mo iMjHioorais ueing unable to

nssfor a ouorum ni tnmr num . -..

After an ineffectual attempt to secure a vote. Mr. Fort susnrested to Mr. Pnttwr thf th

regular order be laid aside and the House

roeeeu to a consideration of the pension Ills. Mr. Potter said: " We are nrenared to

d I yo on with the public business and are here

m ; joruiHi iurioe, uut are leit without a quo

rum uv wm wuuui aosence oi Keiitictnen or the other side, and I demand the regular or

r. i unr men moveu an KUJOurn ment, which was carried yeas 141, nays 18.

in tbe benatc, on the 17th, a number of

bills were reported from committees,

t urther consideration of the bill to repeal

tue Resumption act was postponed till Monday. A number of peiiHlon bills were parsed. Adjourned till Monday....... In the House, alter several more inetfectual elforts to obtMlu a vote upon the Potter resolution of investigation, a quorum whs finally obtained and the preamble and resolution

wore auopieu as reporteo. Tlie Kepubllcan members abstained from voting to tho lat.

tne only negatlvn votes east being thow of

wf- mmis anu Morse, Dotn uemocrats. The final vote was ltA to 2. Some exciting scenes took place during tho long struggle over the passage of the resolution, especially between Messrs. Goode and Conger, the 1st-

ier Having unpiieo iiiHt tuo former had broken his pair with a Republican (Mr. Lor-

The Senate was not in session on the 18th.

In the House, Mr. Stephens asked to be

put upon record. He was absent on leave of

the House yesterday when the vote was taken upon what is known as the Potter resolution, and was paired wtth Mr. Harris. But

jor me pair ne wouiu nave voted aealnst the resolution as it stood. Mr. Ellis, from

telE , Th WiW P"1 Py- l(ft take place. Uneasiness was Judge Truman II. Palmer for treat a r!t. H iu,-)i . . TT ...

mm piwim By waieh she was set at liberty. On the Sftk, Mr. Leon Chouteau, a eom-

J?1 ?fit from France, addressed the

7" vnamuer m OO miser OS H laver ef a mw aemmeretal treaty Htweea Traaee and the United Otates, and was very eerdlal ly reseived, as he had Ihmmi (h u the la-rge eitiea whlah he bad rWted. Aknry wind, rata aad hefl-sterm ran all

cinn ofTJiui iimiuin- prospect or an tin

tlerstatiding between KagiaHd and Russia looking toward peace. Count Shouvaloff, on his way to London, stopped at Beriia.ieemiagly having failed to aeeomplUh his Urst mMon. On the other hand, advlees from Constantinople I mi lea t a strong hepe that peace will lie speedily restored. 4smn ehlelal papers reiterate tke sUtement that merements of the hrmy before Ceastaatlaople are net hostile er menaelag,

tne uommlttee on Elections, reported a reeo

jution ueoiaring that tnere had leen no fair,

aa raiiu imavnatiin hihclhih in inn r irar i tim

KreMlonal XH.triet of South Carolina, and that neither Mr. Ralney, the sitting member, nor Mr. Richardson. fh

contestant, was entitled to the

nesiaieu tnat ne would call up the resolution Thursday next. Th a

pronriatlon bill was considered In Committee of the whole. The Speaker mmouueeil that

tj wouiu oe necessarily absent during the coming week, and Mr. Sayler was chosen Speaker pro tern.

In the Senate, on the 30th, the President

pro tem.preented the resolutions of the City Council of Chicago, praying for the nassaite

of the House bill to nlnr th nam. rtf f!n

unratm jjHJBiuti on iuh reiimi list, with the rank of Brigadier General. Mr. Thurman, from the Judiciary Committee, reported a bill providing that no person shall be refused admission to the bar of any United States Court on accomit of sex. Placed on the calendar. A number of other bills were introduced, including the bill to amend the lfitkl article of war so hs to provide that no person shall be tried or punish, ed by court martial for any oifeime committed more than twe years or In case of desertion three years before the arraignment of such person for such offense, which was paed. Tho Indian unrt ivwinr.

Appropriation bills, and the conferences

asked lor, were agreed to In the House, the commttteo to itiouire into the alleged frauds in the late Presidential election, un-

uer ine rotter resolution, was announced by

"'"-""Y: (""wiiMionjiuii oavnrai mun relating to the Dlmrict of Columbia pssseil, but no businessof general importance was trans, acted. Ia the Senate, on theSIrt, a long debate took place on tho motion to place Gen. James Shields on the Ketircd List. The bill wad defeated for the reason that an amend meut was oKered and adopted, placing tho name of Gen. Grant, also, on the Retired Wet The r lnancla, Committee reported the House bill forbidding the further retirement of legabtender notes In the House, the

;;i'',,T'.. 1 .... "'" w" uiscusseu in

ivtiiunuiKiti ill nlrfht session.

TMiUUMTll FRM IMERSOX.

We art to know that w are narar without a pilot. Whwi we know not how to atr, and dare not hoist a sail, we nan drift. The ourrent knows trie way, though we do not. When the stars and sun appear; when we have oonversed with navigators who know the coast, we way begin to put out an oar or trim a sail. The ship of heaven guides itself, and will not accept a wooden rudder. How came this creation so mattfoally woven that nothing can do me mischief but myself that an invisible fence surrounds my being which screens me from all harm that I will to resist? If I will stand upright, the creation oan not bend me. But if I violate myself, if I commit a crime, the lightning loiters by the speed of retribution, and every act is not hereafter but instantaneously rewarded according to its quality. Virtue is the adopting of this dictate of the universal mind by the individual will. Character is tbe habit of this obedience, and religion is the accompanying emotion, the emotion of reverence which the presence of the universal mind ever excites in the individual. The mystic or theist is never scared by any startling materialism. He knows the laws of gravitation and of repulsion are deaf to French talkers, be they never so witty. If theology shows that opinions are f&atchancinv. it ia not

so with the convictions of men with regard to conduct. These remain. The

most daring heroism, tbe most accomplished culture, or rapt holiness, never

exhausted tbe claim of these lowly duties never penetrated to their origin, or was able to look behind their source.

We can not disenchant, we can not im

poverish ourselves, by obedience; but OV humilitV we rise, bv olmriianna wa

command, by poverty we are rich, by

uying we live,

Man does not live bv bread alone.

but by faith, by admiration, by sympathy. 'Tis very shallow to say that cot

ton or iron, or silver and eold. are kinsrs

of the world; there are rulers that will at any moment make these forgotten. Fear will: love will: character will.

Men live by their credence. Govern

ments stand by it by the faith that people share whether it conies from the religion in which we were bred, or from

an original conscience in themselves,

A fkirTlvIac NereiM ef 1812. There is an interesting story connect, ed with Cedar Point, Situate I r!?S Mass. The heroine is Miss Rebecca Bates, now a bright, genial old lady oi eighty-feur, whose memory oontimwa remarkably dear. The story, taken from her own lips, oan be depended upon as thoroughly reliable. Her fath! ' er was Captain iSimeon Hates; ho was light-keeper at the time, and was the first who lit the light, in April, 1811 In the spring of the following year English oruisers were numereus in Mas. saohusetts Bay, and on one occasion the launches of aa English frigate weresent into Scltuate Harbor. They set fire to vessels at tbe wharves, and towed out two, at the same time threatening to destroy the town if any resistance was offered. After this event a home guard was formed, and detachments, were stationed at Cedar and Crow Points and in front of the village, with a brass pieoe. When there was no sail in sight the guards were allowed to go oil' totheir farms. Nothing to occasion alarm occurred again until the following September. Rebecca, at that time eighteon years of age, and her sister Abigail, fourteen years old, and still living, wcrs sittinir toward evening sowing with their moth.

er. Captain Bates and tho rest of his, large family and the guards were all away. Mrs. Bate3 told Rebecca it was time to put on the kettle. As Rebecca went into the kitchen she for the tirst time, perceived an English ship of war close at hand and lowering her boats. l

Knew tne snip at a glance," aim said.

says

" It was tho La Jlogue. O Lord ! 1

i to my sister tne old La Uomit is off

here again! What shall we do? hero are their barges coming again, and they'll burn up our vessels just as they did afore.' You see, there ware twoveesels at the wharf, loaded with Hour, and we couldn't afford to lose that in those times, when the embargo made it so hard to live wo had to bilo pumpkins all day to get sweetening for sugar. There were the muskets o? the guards. I wag a good mind to take those out beyond the light-house and fire them at the barges; I might have killed one or two, but it would have done no good, for they would have turned round and fired the rillaee. 111 toll vou what

we'll do,' said I to my sister: look

which the popular religion echo&j. If ! here,' says I, 'you take tho drum, I'll eovernmont could onlv stand hv fr.rrn. i take the I was fond of military

if the instinct of the people was to resist

.. .... . . ' ' t"muiriTCH in the W hole in both a day and

Ltixnrie ef Life. Compilers of statistics sometimes oome into possession of singular facta, which not unfrequently indicate tho peculiar tastes or habits of the people. For instance, it is ascertained that the amount of teas, coffees, and sugars consumed by the people afford n fair criterion to judge of the financial condition of the counti-y. Those articles are not necosearios of life, but luxuries, and it is fair to presume that nsonlo wnn

themselves from such luxuries, in some

the government, it is plain the covern

ment must be two to one, in order to be

secure, and then it would not be safe from desperate individuals. But no; the old commandment. Thou shalt not

kill," holds down New York, and London, and Taris, and not a police, or horse-guards.

The credence of men it la that

molds them, and creates at will one or another surface. The mind aa it opens transfers very fast its choice from the

circumstances to tbe cause ; from courtesy to love, from invention to science.

rom London or Washington law. or

public opinion, to the self-re veal ine-

idea: from all that talent execute to

the sentiment tbat fills the heart and dictates the future of nations.

The man of this asre must be matric

ulated in the university of sciences and tendencies flowing from all past periods.

ne must not oe one who can be surprised and shipwrecked by every bold

or subtle word which malignant and acute men may utter in his hoarinsr. but

should be taught all skepticisms and unbeliefs, and made the destroyer of all card-houses and naner walls, and the

sifter of all opinions, by being put face to face from his infancy with Reality.

A man who has accustomed him

self to look at all his circumstances as

very mutable, to carry his possessions.

his relations to persons, and even his opinions, in his hand, and in all these to a. t at

pierce 10 ine principle ana moral law,

music, and could plav four tunes on th'e

fife. 'Yankee Doodle' was my mastorpiece. I learned on the fite which the soldiers had at the lighthouse. They had a drum there, too; so 1 said to her, 4 You take tho drum, and I'll take the fife.' What good'il that do?' said she. ' Scare thorn,' said I. All you've got to do is to call the roll, I'll scream the fife, and we must keep out of sight ; if they see w, they'll laugh us to scorn.' I showed her how to handle the sticks, and we ran down behind tha nttlar wrwvl Sr. w.i nut ;

I, u pub Alt, as the boys say, and pretty soon I looked, and I could see the men in the bargee resting on thoir oars and listening. When I looked again I saw a flag flying from the mast-head of the ship. My sister began to make a speech, and I said, Don't make a noise ; you make me laugh, and I can't pucker my mouth.' When I looked again I saw they had seen the flag, aad they turned about so

quicK a man leu ovcrnoaru, and they picked him up by tho back of his neck and hauled him ,in. When they went off, I played Yankee Doodle " U not this heroine, who saved two ships laden with flour, and perhaps other valuables, from destruction, entitled to a pension? She has five brothers and sisters still living, the eldest 85, and the youngest 71. Her grandfather was 100 years and one month old at the time of his death. 8. 0. W.Bnjatnin,in Harper's XagusiM for June.

When Adam was Placed in the irar-

and everywhere to find that has put den' be had nb which wrh made of himaolf nut. nf th rfh nt n !,.... i e"vyi vanity and venom. One dav he

onuin- ,A - . - , , , , Jt .,

asm; and it seems as if whatever is most 1UU """n WI,en. n wokc, uintnu

allecting and sublime in our intercourse, in our happiness, and in ohr losses, tended steadily to uplift us to a life so extraordinary, and one might say, superhuman. Worth American Jteview,

German Wives.

was gone. row, what became of that

rib? 'ihis sounds like a Chinese Story. Courier-Journal .

Till MARKETS.

XKW YORK, May 52,

The culinary art forms a part of the education of the women in Germany. The well-to-do tradesman, like the mechanic, takes pride in seeing liis daughters good housekeepers. To effect this object the girl, on leaving school, which she does when about fourteen yeara of

age, goes through the ceremony of confirmation, and then is placed by her parent with a country gentleman, or

ni o iHuuij, wneru sno remains , Hous-Packing. one or two years, filliug what may also SHKKl-NativefShornV..,.".'. be termed the post of servant, or doing ''OUK-oimit e the work of one. This is looked upon whkat JieiUvYnteK xoVi

o au iniuiiiiuosniD in timneann twnn

m She differs from a servant, how

fiKEVKa -Native steers,... wjwi

Toxan and Oherokee 7.75 BHKKP-Shorn Vto UiXSSrJftefi

lionoH- Middling KI.OUnGood to Choice.. .. WHKAT No. 2 OhlCHgo.... CORN-Westem Mixed OATW-Western Mixed.... I'OKK-N'ew Mess st. i.m..

t'OTTON'-Mlddltii

lSBKVKS-Oholce to Fancy Oood to Prime.. Native Cows

Texan Steers....

, . . 8.75 1.19 49 31 8.W

Ited Winter. Vn. I

CORN'-Xo.a .Mixed... " k n'i.' ... .

uvoi.iii tuts sue receive no waoroa? tfK-xn.

otny

degree at least, when times areso press- on the contrary, hrv parents often tnv T.'M0T,,V SKKD-Primn.... Vis-Mil5? 8h t,,at ,(huin th! clothing. This is the lim step in her HAV-OholosXefhy. KLl8; 4nthIortl'n of teas and education as housekeeper. She next i SHSTKMolw up 10 a lew months sincn. A nomimn. wi,.lv. f .:i. ...!.... . uL . J worn

f oil". i vrii iii n i inn in ivh u u 1 1 1 1 1 ' - nr nun . ' w w a a i w - i n,-iir:ii,ivriiiiiJn

tive statement fortheelsrht montba mi

ing with February last exhibits the fact ,HJLti,f1,!?,urcnHM of was increased 12,000,000 nOltnds over thn imtwrf

duringan equal period of time in 1877. I he value Of this increased nnndiasM la

f 12,002,126, against 1 1,1 76,6901 n the rraer year. The item of coffees shows 85,664,6 if), against 2D,.1 11,772 in 1877 Stiicurs are renorted at T.m.oaomn

pOuntls of imports, valued at $1)7,811,3; an increase of 5, iOQ,OO0 pounds, rheee figures man ifeet a return to the free tiseof simpler luxtiriae ageotlsign. ! Byraouu Standard.

that of a hotel of good repute. Hero

she has eCntrol of the expenditures of the servants employed' in it and assists personally in the cooking, but is always addressed as Miss, and is treated by the family with deference and consideration. Many daughters of rich families receive similar training, with this difference, however, that they receive it in a princely mansion or a royal palace, There is x reigning queen in Germany at the present time who was educated in this Wy. Consequently the H'pmeii in Germany are jwfect models of economy. Cerrepmknte Boston Traveller.

.... sxo 4.10 .I.IK) 2. A0 2.115 3. f'0 5.1 r, 4. l 1.0.1

-'l.'4 M c 1.20 r 1.70 ti 9.0) tt 1 OT.'i l s.ir, & M

Unwashed Mixed... 21 a

CHICAGO. nKKVKS-Comm'ntoUholee 8.10 s HOGS Common tnUholce., 't.m RHKKP-Wnohorn tt,W FIAIUU-Oholce Winter.... M) UhelceSnrltM...... ." WHKAT-SprliiK No, 1 1.04 i No. .1...... w OORN-Xo. 2 Mixed mih tt OATS No. '.' K K No. 1. ......... l'ORK-.New Mess 7.8J , , .S'KW OKI.KAK9. rLOUR-CholCe r-amlly.... 4.75 CORN White a.1 OATS-St. LoulM Va AA MAY OMOlCW 15.WI f PORK New Me!.. 8.7.1 f it A C O . ,,,,,, ,,4,,,, (Mi cjorroK-Middiin ;

1?7.

411.7.'. r,.ii 3.70 13 "t ..ro 1.20 '. 32 H.73 10', 5.i1 f..'.0 5.19 4 Ml J.lfl JttJi

2ih MH li!H : 10 ti low 13 OS a:. r, 5 40 3. "A I 75 (MO 6.73 j mn P a 770 l W sl lt,tid 1(111 r.v lU-'i