Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 22, Number 11, Jasper, Dubois County, 5 March 1880 — Page 3

- ii hi . . i ....m.uii ivu cMvarir hum ni 11a i i k -

i

WEEKLY COURIER

JASWtK

0. 0AJIi:, ?nHhr. - "I - IXDIAXA,

Other Sherman and

Another

Tke Shermans seem doomed totliJTjjrences Willi the HYcsHili'nts. I lie i

FASHION NOTES. Tke " sportsman " it the newest jackets. Jet-beaded laoe U as fashionable tut ever. Panters do not seem to be gaining ground. Mantilbui.wiH be more popular than

paletots.

ll WW,

-01d-fahIon(Hllute.9tringriWxnsnre ; mony ; other ;irts the bo. ravlvad frftn which there has been anj c cT.ii . ti i-. sidcrable n.ovenumt of negroes will

The Exdii a4 C'ItII Klhto. about th eXOdlHI W

kii totu 7 effect uikhi one point, .ruHSs:

(His Were HOI " BBtsmg Hum Ssion.' There wan no oppression from which to lice. This wa the ease in

North Carolina, m has lwen shown hv

r0 douiit ine it:i.ii

bouth

ample testimony.

iuriul.tuitfV8rv ha nau its

day, there, and a km and dirt) day . ' i . .i ...til a mi mitrx ill it

iiui mr win

unless tke South w gar

bed-laws,

" . T I . I Uu

and self-preservation

the iwlitieal pyramid snaii stand upon it base, and not upon its apex. Sf. Loui MtjfuUmH.

014 t'rewd.

has lMJOM tor some time m

lie-did controversy with the cone- j ured dress goods.

giKMidcnt of the Cincinnati .W, and J pheasant brown will be popular in

now he &vuroirv i.i-h new millinery goods.

ill VlTU'ltv Willi i;uni"w.p " i the Nvr York JYww. The Miuilaiity ! Uaween the two esses ' in the uppur- , nit advantage tlw i'onepondoiit in each. Witlithogener.il aspect of the , firot-iiamed controversy the readers of j liave already been made

10I1

-Small ttern pravail in new fig- he nm ST Tho&ony of J

the refuiceud from the Lower AiiaaiMiK pi has already iwen taken by wHrtM undotlieruuoflielal examiners in St. Louis nnd in Kunsas. and the refugees have Teel that iwlitiea, either of jmrties

rjr of races, luul nothing

do with their departure

Tn

Tlii is a certain degree of pleasure

I In lwjking over the meniontoes aui re

vikrmn.

Am Ihvchi4w ihM. TrBmH IJklM In Mm Snhik MMHHrr tlMM Mm, TflwyliMiir Tiww VtU ttM! MilHC 0.) K . Dr. H. K. Ucks, of oW Sooth Htkkhem, after three year labor, ekiaw that h Jmw iMsrfeetetl "xn iiruMt by wMk f(t nw ami eohr ea be swit by wire the gme m word are tent. He ealte the inMrtiment a Uiaphoie. Th word dkphote, from tke Greek, sifpifying thrmgh, ami Q4et aijraif ving light, 1mm been fle5tei a u name.

The tendency of fashion is to in

crease the Mae of the bonnet. Headed paseemcntoriee promise to

be more popular than ever,

whatever to

The univer-

f iuiiliar. The 1'wWenttai aspirautn 9 'e ,i... mWoiul irtv to the other jrivo it

K jnihlio interest which it would not otherwise have. The origin of the controversy was the statement, made by the correspondent referred o, that Sherman wa mwiighis ottielal po?iti(n to further k'w proiHeU for a Presidential mmnnatfoH. As evidence of this it was urged that he had Hjnioiuted a number of special Treasury A'eiits and Inspector, who, though noiiiinatly in tiie.turv'ae of the (Sov.-rn-ment, wt-re oxinjeted to give their time,

and aettMUy ui pf . V1L ""J,l.Uion of the political machinery in the Southern States, with a view to soeiirin" delegations to the National Convention favoring Sherman's nomination. This statement and the evidence SecretinSherman atoutly and publiely denied, declaring the statement "aioJutelv fal.o" that he had promised ofliccV to secure delegates, and that he had never mentioned the subject of his nomination to anyone who hud not first mentioned it to him. Meeting thia denial the correspondent

sives a coMtiected account of the courao mtrsned by one Kilpatrick, a recently

miM) mteu special a

in securiii'r a de

. i

fi:.:.i -4a n...nititA rn sal desire to hotter ono'g oonuition c-

Mum art. immatio1 i eounlod for roih. ivavtof the wigmtlon.

... , , t A. i thoinr h this ucsire lias ueen unaiiipoiiii---Ta-liko borders or feather edgoa " ' " lJ"J " thus far reported, areeenon the new taffeta ribbons. JfiJ "foc t)f i-ailroad runners and of : Dresofl are still made with scant laml Recounted for much more, j skirts, bridled back and draped up be- ,w tjmony taken of an emigrant , hind. from North Carolina, who seems to be , Mrvst of the new snrinsr drosses are ,., of siMis and honesty, shows a

made with a basque bodice and a double u:itural disposition to put the best face skirt. , possible upon what has turned out to be Tl. l.,tf imnnrlatlnna nf snrincr u f,w41ili ai-tioil. lie dOCS aUC"C

straw bonnet show a prevalence of poke shapes. Buttons in faaoifal colors arc much used on black as well as solid colored

spring millinery,

t tl... .....i,, (IJtau ItH. i . V . . .... ,. .1 d -

i meniuraucca ui i i. - jmniymg that tn utcni vravewi HWji ' ,..t ilwiM-rixuthu, nii'inoriKS . 1 S n . ..,. iT.. ...

, jiiBttunnt ... or atonjc wire, im iw it

and fiuggesuons are unimu.-m. his invention before toe scieuiicsowiy noticed recently in a nim-apapr cor- .

respondence a brief review or some oi j Tlg jpte cowrie of four the old set which surrounded Grant and . A reCeivine mirror, th

mttting wires, a common galvanic bat-

that the laws of North Carolina are in somti particulars hard upon the ncrocs not, of course, as negroes, but as tenants and laborers and ho 1i1i3 further that the laws arc not

l cd

knowledge

of the conditions

Carolina it is

of

im-

The new shades of brown are pheas- ; . m:tko out jloW Illut., founda-

ant, coachnixn's Urab, ana uryeni or .(n Uim, -s for ,5 eiuirjre. We need silver and gold. , nol s;iy l!i:iL it behooves the people of Old cold straw braids, alternating xor,i.- Carolina and of every other

with black chin, atmoar iu many spruij: : c,.,imm Stti. to sue to it that there

- - 1 ' i - - MVtlliiT' ,

naLa ami uonneui. : ut nr louuuaiuiii

for

in securin

('.irolina for

ent of the Treasury,

fnini Ncirth

1...,,.,,. .......

Sherman. He shows that

L'legatlon

T)ark colors will continue the more ' SUeh a eharirc eitlior against the law or

who administer it. I no

summer goods. legislation of Congress makes it nil but ilil( that anv law slioum oe

witii a ' passed which uiswimumihm - i ivi.it ..4 mid Jilacks. and indeed no such

discrimination is alleged. All that

01

Kilpatrick had personal letters of intnahMstioH fixHn Sherman; that he went

theV are becomins:

Gobel'm ribbons, in all the old tap

among

to North Carolina lor the express pur- 1 cstn colors and eltecis, are seen

poM) of encouraging Shermans can- jat millinery importations. va, and that in Shcnnair.s name, he , pew gnrinK costumes are m

offered Colon'l heogh. tbo Chairman 01 om. fabriu Krepiently two, three, the North Carolina IJepubhcan I om- u ,naU)riai.i are seen in one dress.

nnttec, who is now evi c a - . colonJ wU1

S 1 ba marhie blues, brownish reds, dark, wlS throiS $ dull greens, and reddish purples. .ide. The correspondent shows, further, J sikino millinkrv. that Sherman himself, having been as- further imiiorUitions of spring mil-

nrHd that the North Carolina Keptmu- 1 11.,,.. 4,nnrin the earliest advices.

ble colors through the center,

bonier of satin on the edge. it .

I .on? oasoues. rcacnins thou e. n 1 ,i... i.aa,w of

the hipsrare still worn by those to whom , j - -

,., ! are hold to obligations which are lrk-

soma and which they consider uniair,

and thi of course is a thing which is

, , Hkely to happen in any country at any ado of .....ligations a are made

,IU ' a'miust the courts are too intangible j to lie iloalt with satisfactorily. Hut

the Southern jieople must perceive mat it liehoovcs them, alike as a matter of duty and as a matter of policy, to make the emialitv of all men before the law an established and an undisputed fact. It will bo observed, however, that ,.r.ii.;..,rijl.l.!.rtrd which can. by even

tlu ratwivincr iMirrnr. tka traHfi-

I.Sj A.l..iTniutl-4linll sUIIHU Of tlie UlOrC I ! u1,.uuLa Lai.

prominent who were im to the surface as the whirl of events rapidly and

disgracefully revolved during a rj notorious and corrupt era of American

Hilitics. As history, they say, roHaia

itself the same old crowd or their counterparts will doubtless

Im tossed to the surface again. Jine

t.lii.Rl nartv s full of these same

types, and they usually get on lop and in the lead when men of the taste and

nelinatious of Grant are in the N hite

louse. The first one that attracts our atten

tion is a lare man with a pidly face and vcrvlong whiskers. His eyes arc

red aud swollen, and lie holds his neau

n ii liHmr'imr nositioii. He loats a

cans were m favor ot i.ratu, :iskcu Thorc wjji he verv little change in the j the most reckless partisanship, ho uesKeogh to divide the delegation m the rfwiMM ( Uonuet", and those ot medium crjiHjd as oppression. In truth it is Sherman interest, holding oat as an 111- . neiti,er very large nor very smull, ol to u0 supposed that a single case ducement an intimation that a friend ot HnJ ni0ht goen Kt pre845nt. I'oke shapes 1 of what crtn .ArY )0 sodescribtnl could Keo-'h's would be provided for at dov- f moiierate mes are very largely ' (M.M,P in Southern State without

in. o- . Kniiiir KnOWtt all OVSr UU vuu..v.j

chip, lace straw, f g'u withTn a week and brought to the at-

' " . . , "..7 J

ernment expense. Aim iam, , e jm.rtud in all the vanous uraias. biicn K.,w,tulMuL sIkiws that the Collector of , 'Tuscan, chin, lace straw, mglih

Customs at Wilmington and other I )Ut straWt satin braids and Ughorns. . lenUon of eVcrv rwcr of our Republi-TwMim-anoo'ntees in North Carolina Tlie cromv vellow Tuscan braids and nn,n,lVarics. Tlie two sec-

- V 4. X . . . . . - r . I I I V" ...

the lustrous satin straws are ond-hand murders" which were some

and promise to lie the leaning tim, shC0 $nVl.ntoried as the political

some,

I fabrics ' !.. 1

The lace straws are open Draws f i,.nuhlican party for the ..Wml out to a treat extent.

. .., , .l..:..a .n. an. vl . .,l l'"V , V,.

in ueamuui jacc-nnw uuaix.i-, ...... -i- ( ,.3 01 luiiavo 1101 oueu lutiuww not prooaoiy uu any

?r in" " u i,, nuinbor. It is notscomng, uut speaK- shepherds for a while in tl

abandoned their duties 111 that Jitate

and came to Washington tocpnsuu wuu Sherman resecting his canvase. Thcstorvof the correspondent puts

siirmn in a verv xwkwanl position, to be much stronge

The issue of veracity is 01 compara- j slraw iacQ8 formerly useu. 9umulively small importance, for the Secre- t,e brim only is stniHHl with this lace, tary's conscience has always been a 1 WI1jic the crown is of more solid braid, t M. mattflrs. He never ' crti, nhin or Tuscan. A special nov-

iilllU UlrtlFi. .... - m m I OlV " S 1' .1 .

elty is the cashmere enecus jji vu iu

had any hatchet or cherry trees, and if he were perfectly frank he would undoubtedly express profound contempt

for the intellectual wmorai wmi which made it impossible forthe lather of His Country to give his father an

evasive answer.. But the neing uetected in a misuse of Government jtronage is a matter of importance. It implies a lack of foresight ami shrewdness and an inability to judge fairly as to the secretive powers of men employed on delicate missions. Knowing what he does of the temper of the Republican party. Sherman must feci that he had better havo Wen caught sheepstealing than detected in bunghng so F r wnrVr that

of buying up a convention without paving for it out of his own pocket. No Republican Convention that can posiblv be convened will forgive him for Wch a blunder, and the Ilamlms and Camerons will ridicule him unmercifully. Th'nre is but one possible war out of

his predicament, and it is by no means sure that even that can successfully be made use of. It has been tried before under somewhat similar circumstances, but as the result 1ms not yet been reached it cannot bo regarded as absolutely certain. It i worth trying, however, as a last resort. It is the method adopted by Sherman, the General. Shermanthe Secretary, proclaim that the corrctfiKMiricnt wit hasexjiose.l him would slander his mother for l,Hd, and he mav possibly wstpono the diecushion of liis particular issue until a liliel suit has been brought and tried. i'...,.r..,.. c.,.1. .suit, itnrhana. the dele

eatestothc National Convention might lui imlitt'i. il in siisiu'iid iudgmcnt. and

- nAlnnnl

new straws oy iiihuuuuiu6i v...- -threads in the lacc-like design: pale blue, heliotrope and rod threads are

very effective wncn coniDinuu wn i natural hue of the straw. There are also mottled effects of color given to chip haU to match the costume with which they are to be worn, and sometimes two shades of colored chip form alternate stripes all round the bonnet; these are excellent for morning wear or for traveling bonnets in two shades of brown, beige, lavender, gray, or itlack chin bonnets have mcre-

y the crown of chip, while the ! iTrim and the curtain are formed of

scoop

straw

1

lg POSI110I1. 110 lOSOh pwm

deal around the Arlington-the leading

hotel of Washington City his name is

Uelknap W. W. Belknap, at one nine

Secretary of War under urani. nis

history is laminar 10 our rcHuure. j huj

iay the extravagani namui mm iuitainments of liis wife brought him into

trouble. ... . .

Who have we here? JJaucock. un,

yes! Grant's old private Secretary, unpleasantly mixed up with the whisky

rmiN and oilier odorous comuHiauous

of Grant's time. They say he does not ...tm, nioiiud WashiiiL'ton very much,

Im! tin trsm there the other ilay when

Grant arrived, to extend the right hand ,.r ti.llnttshin to his old chief. Babcock

is Lighthouse Inspector, with headquart era at Baltimore. A little incident limits around Washington that when Babcock was found not guilty,1 at St. Louis, Grant, said to him; ou have lost mv confidence, aud 1 desire run never aVain to enter my family.

Vet Babcock was the first to. welcome Grant during his last visit. One point in Babeocks favor is that the investi

gation of his affairs, made by the engineer corps of the army, resulted in muling him guiltless of the charges made against him at St. Louis, lhis much is tme, however, that Babcock, while violating no law, did speculate in on SheiiTicrd's advice. Then, at

convenient places, he built blocks of dwelling on contracts, the mason taking one, the carpenter another, the plumber another, and so on. leaving one for Babcock clear of all incumbrance. This was using official information for private gain; but there is no law to punish such an offense. Boss Shepherd is another of the old

t historv is familiar. He is

ami mere

more Boss

Shepherds for a while in the District.

ti.. iu wealthv. thouL'h. having recov-

ivd himself in mining speculations

Robeson comes next in review. lie n,w, nld Snerfttarv of the Navy,

1 .., vnrt-niHrlv!?ettinsraway with

the entire concejn. There may hae 1 1.1 wiur-linat nr tWO left tllCre

L - . I lll'ITIl Mil UIU - - -

a 1 i!t;n toin 1 .

ity. To suppose imu a pwimuni joubtiess was, ami pernaps muic " f tnrmr nxint or has existed in auv' .,, ,, , n unfair to one who is

tmrt of any Southern State and has not nQW onc of the roost distinguished leadbeen fully made known is to arraign enj on the Radical side of the present

t he managing politicians 01 wiu ii!u- , i,ml,n nf censrress. uu is w

lican party for gross incompetency, a f orff0OUS nlumago .though is 11

ieh most oeoiilu will hold K " Mth and lives high, has

them guiltless. The testimony that ,4 ener0U9 abdomen and a purplish

there has been 110 such condition 01 Mnmioxion." He has a distinguisie

things in thoso parts of the bout 11 irom . RmJ ig to he the best

ing seriously, to say that a fresh politi i1 ear case of "iiroscnp

tion" in the South would be worth manv votes to that party. The interest of th'e partv lies iu fomenting outrages and in giving to any outrages which may occur the widest possible pnbltc-

by judieious appeal to the law's dnlavthe case coald be easily kept open un'il

after the Convention, it ' rt ' 1

i.......r..i .-ui.w.i.t iwmtue 1 no rmn

nondont mav decline to bring a

libel

suit and insist uon making his charges good. Bat it is the only hope Sherman has. Detroit Free Vrnu.

iinsiin"w done in

the this

than

hist

transactions

month foot up the enormous

of VKXV2.W,f2:L Ax enternrising'Yankcc is mM Honolulu directory, and for the rt time the houses are to lie numuereu.

lace, which is heavily beaded with fine in.i-- onmotime.3 old eold straw is

arranged in stripes ia the black chip boanets. The ilarie Christine is the name given to a dressy affair which is neither a bonnet nor hat, something between, and is to be worn by young ladies on drew occasions, at Newport or It kaa a tiromineat crown,

with a wide brim rolled back from the

front, and split in two irom u igB w the crown ; this split ki to come directly o-the ton of the head, and the crewn

v. - t hiiitl' rr

is to be piacea quiws UL;. "

the head. The nanng onn " faced with becoming color, and the crown k to be trimmed down one side

.:,!. inn Mercuuo P1UU1U,

.i. tba other with Mowers.

.r-i. iiw TM-aa braid is most

used for this Spanish head-dress, with cnUl, lae strings, and the new bpan-

km yellow called fsabelle will appear in i.:...ni!niN. eombined with red in

.1 in noniniote the national

i,. f Snain. There are other wide-

brimmed round hats fh various shapee, recalling the Devonshire and Pinafore styles of last season, and young lad ies who havo valuable Leghorn am chip 1.-.. l.., from laAt atumer will lind thorn

useful this year, as they will readily t,i ttiemsnlve to all that is now in tho

i... rhtioni. Gvnsvhats are very

lanrclv imported in the most coquettish Shai,cs. to bo worn well back on the

tho so-called exodus has pro

ceeded is therefore precisely what every

sensible and unbiased person wouiu ex

pect. A. I. Jrorw.

- The Seath ami Xegre Kale. The Republican organs are worrying

themselves over a recent statement m the Charleston News attd Courier to the

effect that the people 01 ouuui wiuuu. never intend to again submit to negro .1 ; umII takn all lU'CCSSarV

uuiiiiiinvtuii, ..... -- f means to prevent a reiietition of their

former experience, ji me murewiu vegans will put themselves in the iilace of the people of South Carolina, they will

probably obtain a more impartial view of the case. We have repeatedly de

clared, and now declare again, mai there is no State in the North, not even

Massachusetts or Kansas, overwue iningly Republican as they are, that " . . r .1 ... ...nll.a What

would endnre iot mrcn South Carolina endured for eight years.

If negreee had none m uhi ui - r - i.v .1 i.l in thn lat-

lornier oiaiwo nunv i..v.j - - ter, the last one of them would have been driven across the bonier. I ho original Yankees in Massachusetts and tlui imported variety in Kansas would have risen in nass to rid themselves of tho unbearable nuisance. And tho nuisance once gone, they would have died rather than allow it to return. South Carolina will do no more, but she mav have to do loss. She may have to yield to negro supremacy backed by Vedoral power, but neither she nor -Ii.. .tti.nr Smitii,.rn Stale will ever wear

1 diner-

These are samples 01 uie ow

i.,. .nnniv lor lO-U. iJ

tervand the reproducing speculum. Dr. Licks gave a detailed account of tke many experiments undertaken to determine the projier composition ami arrangement of the mirror and speculum. For the former he had finally selected an amalgam of selenium and iodide ef silver and for the latter a compound ef selenium and chromium. The peculiar sensitiveness of iodide of silver and. nhromiuin to lisrhta ha long been known,

and tlieir practical use in phtograpky

suggested tneir application in ims umplwte. It was iound, lKwever. after . . . . t'

manyexperimemsxiiai. ineu cifn imm.

be so modtnea that eacn ray w iitv should influence the electric current

proportionally to ita position m the

solar spectrum, and selenium was ascertained to be the beet adapted to this

purpose. At first a small mirror was employed with only a single wire, but the

images reprouueea in inespeciuunt were indistinct and confused, so that it became necessary to make the mirror of a number of small pieces each about onethird of a square inch in area and having a small wire attached. In the diaphote exhibited by Dr. Licks to tbeebib the mirror was six inches by four and had seventv-two fine wires, which were gathered together into one about a foot back of the frame, the whole then being finely wrapped with an insulating cov

ing, and on reaching the receiving speculum each little wire was connected to a division similarly placed as in tke mirror. From a common galvanic battery wires also ran to each diaphoUc plate, and thus a circuit was formed which could be closed or not at pleasure. The theoretical action of the instrument appears now to be the followin The waves of light from an object

arc conducted through an ordinary

amera, so that they fall on certain ol

the divisions of the mirror when tne

electric circuit is closed. The light ami accompanying heat proluce momentary

chemical cuanges in me auiaiam w

mirror.whkm modiiy ineeiecinc currem. and cause similar changes in the corresjionding partitions of the remote speculum, thus reproducing a similar image,"

which by a second canters may b readily seen by the eye or throws npou

a screen, ur. l,icks esumnwu m ww proportions of selenium in the mirroranel

ipeCUlUm SHOUKl oescieiltinwui aumra to the size or the divisions aadthe resist

ance of the electric circuit, so as to avoid any blending of the pronorUoaa of the reproduced imajre. This, he

said, had been the pioblem which fcaa caused him the most difficulty, sad

which at one time had seemed almost insurmountable.

At tlie close of the paper an Ulast ration was given of the powers of the iastroment. The mirror of the diaphote,

in charge of a committee of three, was taken to a room in the lower part of the building and the connecting wires laid through the halls ami stairways to the siK'cuTum on the lecturer's platform. Before the mirror the committee hew. in succession various objects, illuminating each by the light of a burning magnesium wire, since the rays from gas are deficient in actinic power, ami simultanomidv on the soeculuiu appeared tho

secondary images, which, for exhibitkm

to the audience, wereinrown ou screw

magnified. An apple,

!

T ti HUJV v.... - . I C3 - , , .

mav not reach place ana power , pen-knife, and a traae-aouar were the amount ol cheek: objects shown: on tke latter tke

IO Hie A ----- rnimd him men of similar cliaractens-

.i .ronoral features. Grant can

mr.i avoid thcmthan he can change

.1 ..w f i,; nvn. Thev gravitate

to him naturally, and there is in his composition a certain peculiar magaetLm which attracts socond and third-

i.oMt..r His entire career

shows it. Indiana State Sentinel. .

buried in San

T.v,lf.Uo with elalwrate Chinese rites,

becaueehehad been wealthy and ma a, l.5a niilence a loss was

111 iriiLmit ... -

uteebefore tke mirror, and the audience could plainly perceive the motion of the

rainnte-hana on tne screw, v

movement of the secona-nantt was not satisfactorily seen, although Prof.

Kaunlch, by wotang io vmm camera, thought that t was there quite

t)ercept4Die. ab ibk-uuiuc, """ and a part of a theater handbill were also shown, and. when tke head of little kitten appeared on the screen the

CltlO tesiineu im atu.mtmt.nm ... .

hearty applause. After tee close 01 ine extieriments the scientist extended

nut up at the head of the coffin, many their cougratuhUion to Dr. Licks, aa candles wore lighted, and peacocks' thc PreJllent made a few 'remarks o.

fnathers were placed on tne comn. lhe prouaoie scteMUBv: tnriost rang a bell and struck a pair of applications of the diaphote m tie 1 . m .1. ...T.n.. .niiio- tha nml ou ah- i;.ri, with the telephone and the

CVIUUMIS WUHU ---- o A.. I . . . . . .11

ties and deeds of tho dead man. 1 nen aiRph

dididvnto. it rnieht vet be possible for

tZL"7J..i .in nhinose 72'J" i, -n.raiSil l.r the wide Atlantic

a oanu 01 ihuiii p';- . "t, -v .t.. " ,t, M '

instniments and hired women uimu uoia to hmT anu see wch uviwi v wailed. The procession was headed by t5me to talk, as it were, face to face. ,;nlinarv hearse. Then came a car- In connection with the interlocking

switch system it might be used to eaa we

( fall v; 1 1 1 v I vv'" . .

I 1 . . A 1 .MIIMb ml . T k Z uIa

i 11r.ur. yjv ; , ,.l i..l with th SHlttfl tMKl uown, aim mo .l.Ai . tucnni time unless ll is n-

commercia and flii I J' t nroiecting in poke shape. Then FcvlurHi i)gVonets. This is tho country during November, 184J, .front . w,th lialo urim9 that VJJZ truth, and the Hepubll-

during any mouth oeiore t f , h off handsump ,.v woll take due notice

ory of this countn-. ine u i ,rthevar to be merely perched , ,umrM,f an,, oVern itself accordingly.

of werai ciuw "i""r ".. iMi;.if thn hftad: and there are trM .dimekedHndiraesred."

t...u, f x-arioiis shatlCS. tO l)fl WOHl

low down in front or far back on tho head, according to the taste of the wtirer. Harper's Batar.

by a standing army, the bouth win ue ...,i.i K,. id.. iiitfdllrnco. the capital,

and the energy ot tlie country; in oth- Ier words, by the white population. Af- I fla

(Ill uiuumi j . . - , carriago full of bell-ringers, several carriages containing mourners and newspaper reporters, and finally a wagon

laden with roasicu iuSa

i t.i ami oralm. OOlliew 01 ii'iui,

joss paper, candles, and chop sticks. At

.. .... un ...uriiMn uriurv n.u

... !... a iarcrn niiatltl.

. .....I. Till! II-.. A . K Vr ..... --

r..i ..undies was burned.

IV Ul in o... , , . and tfic food and drink were left in J ..si. MM... wmiifn from Wongs

larem were not permitted to enter the . .. K,,f timv built a bonfire ot

holy paper outside.

Fowls fed on

for.

buckwheat are of fitie

signal-men of the central ofKce to see

bundreus 01 hiiiw w " once, thus lessening tke habihty to

accklent. Ia connection wua litlmgraphy it &

that the fxmx jnciw umwro ww fow Wwtr afttr

their appearance in London.

ir tkMd years from now

some Schlieman of the future will dig un a cigar-store Indian, and show by t

thewonuenui prgrs w r

had made in art, as we now w-i

the Venus de MHo. 0mn