Noble County Register, Volume 1, Number 16, Ligonier, Noble County, 20 May 1858 — Page 1
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St ondmabeiL o)1 o ” Noble County Register SPUBLISHED CVERY THURSDAY MORNING BY ~ J.PALMITER & Co. . l_lg’;‘lfi'jr;;:r&fl.hefl n?eke' 3;]l %fiz, Corner of Cujln Terus—sl,so per stinum in advance; or $2 00 ifnot paid uxtil the expiration of six months. ‘ SS4SR NN G R & all its various branches executed with neatness and déspatch at ,thaf‘Exggn" Office, , Aot 0. ARNOLD, M. D. .. Physician & Surgeon, LIGONIER, ; . MNDIANA, Having recently located in Ligonier, will attend to all calls in the line of his profession. Office--in the Drug Store of O. “Arnold & Co. : :
ol e bt .. C.:PALMITER, . SURGEON, OBSTETRICIAN AND PHYSICIAN Ligonter, s ¢ ¢ s @ Indiana. ~ + J. McCONNELL, Real Estate Agent and Novtary Public LIGONIER INDIANA. "WILL accnowledge deeds and mortgages ! and take depositions. ; e J. PALMITER, LIGONIER, . "INDIANA BIAN‘UFACTURER of different varicties of Tombstones, Monuments, &c. Engraving exccuted in the most approved style, O\ ARNOLD & Co. ¢ LIGONIER, R INDIANA. Dealers in Drogs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Glass, Yankee Notions, l'ooks, Stationary, Wall end Window Paper. &c. &c. . Also, a large supply of Chouice Family Groceries, counstantly on band. o . 8. H. ESTABROOK, LIGONIER, \ INDIANA "WHOLESALE and retail dealer. in Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Glass, Dyérstufls, Perfumery, Fancy Goods, Family : Groceries, pure Wines and Liquors, for mediciual purposes. : e ;
- J.C. ZIMMERMAN, = . DE:\LER in Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Queens-ware, Notions, &c. Also Dealer inall kinds of Produce, . - LEWIS COVELL, GENERAL COLLECTIION AGENT. Ligonier, 4 Indiana. COLLEC'I‘IONS in Noble and adjoining Counties promptly made, and on reasonable terms. ; TB. 3. STOUGHTON, | E. B \\;);:\_;;; STOUGHTON & WOODWARD, : Attorneys & Counsellors at Law. LIGONIER, . : © INDIANA. "VII.L promptly attend to all business ¥ that pays. o eet e e e et Y C. MAINS LW, BRYANT MAINS & BRYANT, Attorneys at Law, Albicn, Ncble Co. Ind. 'W [LL attend promptly to all Legal Busi-. ness entrdsted to their care in the courts of Noble and adjoining counties.: : et ee e i i es e e e J. E. BRADEN, DEALER' in the diflerent varieties of FAMILY GROCERIES, also a full assortment of Wines, Ligquors, Domestic and lmg‘orted. Refréfhments of al]l kinds alwayg on hand : : ‘ : £t J. RIPPERTON, | PHYSICIAN AND SURGEOWN, Ligonier, Indiana. I :ESPEGFULLY offers Lis professional services to the citizens of Ligonier and vicinity. - o :
. CLIFTON HOUSE, . . BJ, J. COTHRAN, PROPRIETOR, _Elkhart, - ladiana. T HIS Ilouse is the gencral Passengers conveyed to f(nd from the ~ ars free, . % F. PRICKET,: Attorney and Ceunsellor at Law, O FFICE in the Court House, Albion, Indiana. Prompt attention given to all Legal business entrusted to his care. - ~ E.B. WOODWARD, NOTARY PUBLIIC. '\\rlLL ATTENND PROMPTLY TOO ; all kinds of conveyancsng ane all other business appertaining to that office. - . OFFICE over Fisher & Hosteter’s store, . Ligonier, Noble Co, Ind. : | .. HENRY HOSTETTER, JUSTICE OF THE fPE.ECE. . OFFICE‘on Main Street, Ligonier, Indi b ana, e bt et e e e et - . LAND AGENCY.. ‘ PVHE undersigned has established an AgenT cy for the purchase and sale of Real es- - tate in Noble and adjoining counties, and has - effected arrangements which offer superior inducements for those wishing to buy: or sell the satiie, in this section of the State. ' _ Particular attention will be paid to Renting Houses, Leasing farms, and other business which it may be necessary for non-residents ‘ eave in the hands of an agent. " © 2 LAND WARRANTS ' “RBought, sold, and obtained for those entitled to the same under the late act of Congtess.. ; JAMES McCONNELL, * . L. H.STOCKER,..s'svveesW. C. MCGONIGAL. “STOCKER & McGONIGAL, - . ATTORNEYS AT LAW, ‘A ND General Agents for Buying and SelA_ ling Real 'Estate, Examining. Titles, % Making golleefinns and Paying Taxes. . ¥ Auburn, Indiana, b [ 00y T BARRON, Clocks, Walchis, Jewelry & Patent Medicines ¢/ Kendalville;.' ~ Indiana. - ) Any person wishing to purchase any of the - above variety of Goods, are invited to call £5% n ‘,_," I .rt»;“._“kgfl,.‘mz;.;*“ S gk
TF £ D% Wi A DESBRIBAY. St . ‘Bemutuslin Sympathy; . o { Have heart for one another, it ‘Wives and husbund cherish it Hustinds hové their trials dally, i 00l Dusioed Ils, iF s U 0 Ll o ' They noed some kind heart tocherish them, . Thiukof thiseach wis, | Let them kiiow your heart is withthem, ' | t 5 * Gentle words-will help themout, | | Love may fall if all the trials .~ . - ¢ Are borne by one heart alene, = s | " Wives have duties long ,a,t}d weary, o gk ¢ Muny irksome cares at home.. i - Ilusbands, bring them words of kindiress, . -~ When your daily work is done. - Y o "Tis hier hand fhrough many sorrows _ o = Qwnides the young witlstender care s She bears all home scenes of sadhess— . Treat her as “the angel there,” | Fris -:-7-——9~<.>-c-—-—— : Letter from a d{ing Wife to Her : . Husband: i The Nashville Gazette says, the folowing most touching fragment of a letter from a dying wife to her husband was found by him some months after her death, between the leaves of a religious volume which she was very fond of perusing. The letter, avhich was literally dim with tear marks, was written long before her husband was aware Jhat the grasp of fatal disease had fas tened upon the lov@‘furm of his wife who died at the early age of nineteen. “When this shall reach your eye, dear George, some day when you are turning over ‘the relics of the past, I shall have passed away forever, and the cold, white stone will be kecping its lonely watch over the lips you have pressed, and the sod will be growing green that shall hide forever from your sight the dust of one who has often nestled close to your warm ‘heart. - For many long and sleepless nights, when all but my thoughts were at rest, I have wrestled with the consciousness of approaching death; until, at last, it has forced itself upon my mind; and althongh to you and to others it may seem but the nervous imagining of a girl, yet, dear George, it is so! Many weary nights have I passed in the en: deavor to' reconcile myself to leaving you whom I love so well, and this bright world of -sunshipe and beauty angr hard indced is it to struggle on, silently and alone with the sure convietion that I am about to leavé all forever and go down into the dark valley! ‘But I know in whom I have believed, and leaning on his arm I fear no evil.”
Do not blame me for. keeping all this from you. How could I subject you, of all others, to such sorrow as'l feel at parting, when time will makeit appareut to you? I -eould have wishedto live, if only to be at your side when your time shall: come, and pillowing your head upon my breast, wipe the death damp from your brow, and usher your departing spirit into its Maker’s. prescnce embalmed in woman’s holiest
prayer. i § ‘ : | But it is not to be—and' I submit.— 1 Yours is the privilege of watching through long and dreary nights, for the spirit’s final flight, and of trgnsferringi my sinking head from your breast to My Savior's bosom. And you shall share my last thought, and the last: faint pressure of the hand, and ‘the last feeble kiss shall be yours, and even when flesh and heart shall have failed me, my eyes shall rest on yours until glazed by death, and our spirits shall hold one last communion, until gently faded from my view—the last of earth —you shall mingle with the first bright glimpses of the better world, where partings are upkown. 'Well do I'khow the spot mry dear (reorge,where you will lay me. Often we steod by the place and as we watched the mellow sunsect as it glanced in quiverin® flashes through the leaves and burnished the grassy mound around us with stripes of burnished gold,each perhapshas thought that some day one of us would' come alone, and which-ever it might be, our name would be on the stone. But we loved the spot, and I know you will love it none the less when you see the same sunlight linger and play among the grass that grows over your Mary’s grave. I know you will go there and my spirit will be with you then, and whisper among the' waving branches ‘I ani not lost but gone before.’ 4 2 —_——— ePt
Love ReAsoN.— Bridget,’ said a lady to her servant, Bridget Conley, ‘who was that man you were talking with so long at the gste last night?”—Sure no one but me eldest brother, ma’am, said Bridget, with a flushed cheek. “Your brother! 1 didn’t know you had a brother.” ‘Batney Octoolan, ma’am.” ‘lndeed! how comes 1t that his name is not the same as yours?” - ¢ Troth, ma’am,’ replied Bridget, ‘he has been married once.’ e o 2 ; B@~ The Indianapolis papers find fault with. Governor Willard for pasturing his cow in the State House yard. - ~#@¥- The man who ate his dinner with the fork of a river, has been endeavoring to spin a mountain top. ;
ILIGONIER, IND. THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1858.
River Pirates Caught and Punished. { _ There has been quite a formidable gang of Mississippi River Pirates re‘cently arrested in the vicinity of Prairie Du Chien. The Vigilance Committee have since got hold of about a dezen more thieves, and a jury of twelve citizens, was appointed by a public mecting to consider the evidence against the prisoners, award sentences, and report to tbé; meeting. The trials were summary; and the Praiaie Du Chien Leader gives the following account-of the sentences and prompt execution by Judge Lynch’s court. The Committee reporto : , -
~ “That Thomas Colling apd Thomas Lee be discharged from custody immediately, as persons entircly free from guilt. : i ’ “That Edward Pardec is a young man whose greatest crime is having been caught in bad company; that he be given into the hands of three of our respectable, substantial citizens, to be talked to about his érror and given some good advice. - “That Tony, the -negro, be sent out of town, and advised not to come back during the remainder of his natural life, | : sl
“That. Charles Williams,, William Charles,John Dougherty, (ico. French, Michael Fagun and Geo. Steele, have been proven to be hardened desperate characters, guilty of the crimes charg ed against ithem, and that they have their heads shaved, receive from 10 to 30 lashes on the back, and be sent dewn the river; and be informed that if they are ever caught here again they will be dealt with aecording as they deserve.: o i “That the negro Geo. Robinson shall shave the heads of the other prisoners and leave town in ten hours,and be informed if he is ever caught here again he will receive 25 lashes.” )
The report of the jury was acceptedl by the meeting with acclamation, and the jury discharged. Thomas Collins,{ the prisoner found not guilty of anything, was brought up from the ja_ill and informed that he was free to go, as there was not the slightest suspicion against him ; and was apelogized to for J having been detained in custody. *He expressed himself as not cntertaining hard fzelings foward any one for his arrest, and retired from the room applauded by the crowd. Tt being then late in the evening the meeting adjournéd. At 10 o’clock Tuesday morning, the people having assemblel in front of the jail to the number.of one thousand and over, and formed ina hellow square, the prisoners were brought out to, receive their punishment. - Lee, J (ines and Pardee were informed of the disposition which was made of them, and expressed’ themselves grateful for the leniency. Robinson, the negro, was let loose, and left town on the ears that afternoon, leaving a white wife and some negro babies at the old Fort.— Tony, the little negro, presented a comic appearange, and wEen he was ipformed that he was at liberty to ledve, and was supplied with dimes and quarters enough to carry him out of town, an opening was made jn the ranks for him to pass through, and he made a bee line for the cars at his greatest speed, urged on by the cheers, hurrahs and laughter of the crowd. After this the other prisoners received their punishment, and have since been sent away, having been informed that if ‘they came here again it wounld be at their peril—which was, without doubt, a ncedless caution. s Sh7A AR
The whole proceedings were executed without cxeitement or opposition; and the assembly dispersed satisfied that what-had been done was right, and determined in future to prevent thieves from making their stopping place at that quarter. - -
—b et @ “ A Tale of Horrors—An Incarnate : ' . Fiend. ; ~ Governor McWillie, of Mississippi, is charged by the Vicksburg Southron ‘with having pardoned out of the penitentiary a man named Dysou, who had assassinated another man named Nelms for which he was simply sentenced to prison for fifteen years. That paper 'says of the criminal: : ¢ He waylaid his vietim, with whom he had a deadly feud; brought him down at the first shot, and then, emerging from his hiding place, taunted his dying victim with words of insult and reproach, and finally concluded by placing the muzzle of his gun to the body. of Nelms and firing a second time.— This shot produced instant death,#nd’ so close wds the gun to the victim that ‘the flesh of the murdered man was burnt by the explosion. ~Haying completed the"work of slaughter, he . deliberately monted his horse, rode to the house of Nelms, called his wife out, informed her that he had murdered her husband, and directed her where to find the mangled , 3; son is a blood-stained blood-thirsty: incarnate fiend. -He is not a man; but
{a' ferocious tiger, and Gov. McWillie has no more right to turn such a beast loose upon the community than he has to open the cages of a whole caravan of tigers. Hisantecedents are well known too, and fihey should have forbidden all ‘hope of ' Execulive eclemency. The ‘murder of Nelms was not his first taste of blood.. He had previously, in a most cowardly manner murdered a man named Moss, of De Soto county, by shooting him in the back as Moss rode from him. He had murdered three-of his own negroes, and one of ‘them in so appalling a manner as to. cause the death of his own wife. This case,occurred at his own table, and the victim of his fiendish rage was a woman. Taking offence at something the woinan did, or omitted to do while waiting at the table, he rose, drew a bowie knife, and with a single blow, ripped her open. His wife swooned, and when she awdke to consciousness he had cut the negro’s heart out, and, with it "upon his knife, he thrust it into her face! She swooned again, and the result of her harror and fright brought on convulsions, from the effects of whizh she died.” 5 L e—— e @ ’ . An Adventurous Navigator
In the early part of last year, a resident of Stamford, Conn., by the nawe of Charles R. Webb, who has spent a portion of his life in a sca-faring capacity, went to work ‘and built himself a yacht, twenty-two feet long, which he christened the Charter Ozk, and in which he, accompanicd by a man and a boy, started from New York on the 22d of June last, for Liverpool. When only abouta day out, his right-hand man, an old salt, was accidentally knocked o-_ verboard and drowned; and fearingthat he would not be able to find another sailor equally ventursome, and that he might loose the lad also by desertion, should. he return to port, he concluded to proceed on the voyage without any other ' companion or assistant to keep watch and: stcer the frail bark during his own occasional brief opportunities to obtain repose than the boy referred to, who had never _before becn at sea. without the aid of a chrorometer or chart of the English coast. Capt. W. arrived safely at Liverpool without a pilot, on the 28th of July, after a voyage of thirty-six days; in the smallest vessel ‘that'ever crossed the occan.— The adventure was comsidered by nautical men the most skillful and daring exploit of the age. Thousands rushed to see the Charter Oak and its intrepid commander. The little craft was soon disposea of for £2OO, which amount, together witha passage ticket home for thie Yankee sailor in one of the Collins” line of ‘steamships; were handed over to ‘him by a number of strangers, 'who thus desired to-manifest their ‘admiration of ‘his ‘cotiraige atid ghill.- ¢ £ wriitiares ? | Mr' Webb, not eontent, however with what he has already ‘achieved, about: Christinas last, commenced building another yacht (theChristopher Columbus) forty-four fect keel and sixteen' fect beam, whieh is now rapidly approaching completion"by lisown hatds alonc, and on board of which He eontemplites enbarking, in the course. ofia’ few ‘months, for Southampton, the" Isle of Wight, and St. Petersburg, with a view of giving the British ' Queen; the Czar ‘of Russia, and probably the ¥mperor of' Franee, a fivorable: opportumty ‘of seeing what the Yankecs can do in“he way-of ‘boat-building as well'asin navigating the Atlantio—N. V. Timesi -
- Honorable Conditions.” = Many yeafs ago; in what is now a flourishing city in this State, lived a stalwart blacksmith; fond of his pipe and his joke. He'was also fond of his blooming daughter, whose many: graces and charms liad ensnared the affections of a susceptible 'young printer. The couple, after a season of niutual billing and cooing; “engaged” themsélves; and nothing but the Jack of the censent of the young lady's- “parent” prevented their'union. To obtain this, an interview was arranged, £nl’the Type. prepared a little speech to astonish-and convince the old gentleman, who sat énjoying his pipe in perfect content.— Typo dilated upon the fact of their long friendship, their mniutual attachwment, their hopes for the future, and ‘other topics, and taking the daughter by the hand, said * » rins ond 1
- “I now, sir, ask your permission to transplant this lovely flower ‘from its parent bed” but his “phelinks” overcame him, he forgot the remainder of his rhetorical flourish; blushed and stammered,and finally wound up—*from its parent bed nte my own.” : The father keenly relished the discomfiture.of the guitor, and after removing his pipe and blowing a cloud; replied: “ Well, young man; I den’t know as 1 bave any objections, provided you will marry the gal first.. - L
. ABouT So.—Tt is not wisdom but ignorance that teaches man presumption. Grenius may be sometimes arrogant, but nothing is so diffident as. Knowl_edge. e i ks
Bl e oiomn S . A Tale of Love. b AN OLD WIFE IN SEARCH OF HER i - YOUNG HIUSBAND. : ~ About six months since, an elderly: lady of praperty, living in Brooklyn, N. Y., whobought her fashionable wares at acelebrated dry goods house inßroadway, New York, became enamored of a ‘hsndsome young man attending there. After many visits she décided to invite the young man to her imagnificent ‘house in the city of churches. She told him she wanted to see him on mat-: ters of the gravest importance. He blushed, and more out of euriosity than admiration, he econsented to visit her. The young man was dazzled at the magnificence’of the house to: which he had been invited, and was entirely lost in, conjecturing for what purpose he had been brought thither. The lady, after giving ‘her guest some vinous refreshments, proeeeded to narrate the fact of her long observation of his respectable conduct, adding that she had enquired of his employers and found him to be a moral and worthy young man, worthy of a better situation in society. She confessed that she had become enamored of him, nct of course because of his physical beauty, but for his moral worth, and finally wound-up by offering him her hand in marriage. The lady was on the shadyside of tive and forty, while the lover was not twenty-two summers old. :
‘The latter was in love, too, with al handsome Joung lady in the millinery department of' the same -establishment where he was employed. He flatly refused, notwithstanding that she had some thirty thousand dollars that she could place in his hands. - After several interviews, the widow gradually won | the young man to Ler views; and he finally consented to, and did marry her. After the marriage, she refused to make over her real estate to her husband, and this displeased him. L About a week ago, the “Bencdiet” thought he would take a trip to the country, to seea few friends: His wife consented. But in a few days,}mt re-. turning she concluded that the bird had flown. She started in pursuit ot him, and learned that the young lady accompanied him in his flight. The old lady arrived in this eity, and consnlted avith® an experienced detective, who put her, after some enquiries, on the track of the guilty pair, who had gone further West, 'The wife says she is now prepared to give him fuil control of all her property, if he will but return alone to his home. S : : ; 7—-—'—-——Co<.hoo-———'—- ¢
j Dr. XKane in Boyhood. : . When he was ten years old, four or five neighbor bays, all bigger than himself,” who had elimed upo: the roof of a back. building in his father’s yard, were amusing themselves by shooting putty wads'from blow-guns at the girls below. ' Elisha, attraeted by the outery of the.injured ‘party, promptly undertopk the defence, and in the firm tone of a young gentleman offended, required them to desist and leave the prémises, which of - course, was instantly answered by a broadside - laveled ot Mimself. Fired by- the outrage, he :-g},l:"»;;t:he,.min-spout,‘jelimbml to the roof and was_ among them before they could realive, tho- practicability of the feat;and theihe had 'thém on' terms oven cnough fora Bandsome settlement of the case. Aey e
‘The roof was steep-and dangerous to his cowed ‘mfitagonists; but'safe to his better ballanee aad higher courage; and they.were cniirelyat ) ',»xssrrcy.;‘*é;‘g;zt | no.one, could help anbtlier, and he was more than a match for the best of theii in"'a ‘position where the pemtief a‘tor rible tamble was among the riskéfof veSISPAROR. . 1, v i i T e ... Forthwith "he went at them scrafine till, severally and singly, he had cuffed | them to the. full medsure of thejr re. S~ et ien) ) SOPART - SUREE T TRt Vi st spective deservings. - But not satisfied with inflicting punishment, he exacted penitence also; and he proceeded to drag each of them in turn-to the -edge of the roof, and holding him there, demanded an explicit apology., ¢ .. ~Before he had fnished pujting ‘the whole party through this’ last form of purgation, little, Tow, who had witnessed the performance from the payement below, greatly terrgfied—by ’holmlfiminent risk of a fa“l.l*wfl&.ch.'Woué;mwc broken a neck or two, mayhap, called OB s s e e ‘Come down, Elisha! = Oh, Elisha, oome downl” . il e L e ‘Elisha, answered in the spirit 'of the' ENgRROMANby. bty e K ‘No; Tom, they ain’t done apblqg’lryflg yet.'—Dr, Elder’s Biography of Kane | the Arctic Explorer, . "4
o s T . @~ The best line to lead.a woman with, is a Mascu-line. = &> Why is a dog’s tail like the heart of a tree? Because it is farthest from: the Badky ¢ siicn savbraas o se>~ It is vain to stick your finger in water, and after”pulling it out, look G L
-2 T IR ee O
- At Battle'Creck, New ¥ork,'w{:~t 4 er evening two gentlenien and: aJady—one_ of' the real skirt expanders=got - aboard the cars for Chicage. One gentleman and his wife had through tick. . ets, wgye' other Bmd!usfm; oy to thefirst station. From certain.man.: ifcstations, Geo. Wangdles,the condugtor, . who is keen on a scent, concluded it - was the intention of the trio to deadhead one of them through. On arriving at Augusta'the gentlemen did not get out, and,;on search being made, he , wag found scereted jn the Ilgt§ies saloop. He was brought forth and directed to leave the train at the next station, but - on arriving there hie was not to be found . After a long and "diligént search, in--which everybody had become interest- - ed, it was coneluded that he had leapsfrom the train while in motion. Speoulation ‘was then rife as to hisfate,w%en : a gentleman sitting near the lady of big dimensions hinted that those hoops might there “a tale unfold.” On producing a light, four fect were seen protruding from. her petticoats, which it was unreasonable to suppose belonged to one person, and ‘thhe lady was re- : quested to rise,which she did after some . hesitation, revealing the lost passens ger.: S e
~ The Place for Sehoolmarms. . Prentice, of the Louisville Journal, relates the following experience. of his sending schoolmarms South ;= . - Some may thing it strange (it isn’s though,) that, ever sinee the time when we remarked in our paper that nine” tenths of all the hundreds of young women sent by usto the South as teach.; ers have got married there, we have been literally overwhelmed with appli--cations from New England, New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio. =~ = 1« We do not think, that, in justice to. such of our Southern friends as are in want of teachers, we can send any girl that will not pledge hereelf to continue in the busincss. at least six months.—‘We kuow that. the conditions scem‘hard, but really. we shall have to be exorable. | ity P
~_About three years. ago, the trustees of '3 fime female academy in offe of ‘the Southern States wroté to' us to send thew .a toacher. We, sent them a; ~xery beautiful and accomplished young lady, and they promptly wrote us a letter of warm thanks for the sclection.— In about threc months they wrote-to us again, telling us that their teacher had got married, and requesting us to send them another.. We did send them anotler, quite as beautiful and accomplished as the first, and they wers, a 3 the{ ‘might be, very much delighted with her, lln-just about three months however, they applied to ug a third time bogging us to send them still another the second having got miarried like the first. * In their last application, however, they insisted that the lady next"sent to theza should be. plain looking, and - not less than thirty-five years of age.— The conditions were difficult, and we - did not suceced in complying with them. We prevailed upon our friends, the trustees, to accept a richly talented 'lady, who was neither old nor ugly, she giving her hounor that she would not marry in less .than. half a year. . We understand, -that she held out like a brave, good girl, to the cnd of the spees - ified tiine, but not'a day afterwards. Names of Colors—A Bright Salesman.
: - T . 5 /i The vocabulary of celors is always progressive, though not always increasing. . New names are perpetually dntro--duced,.fimt thfiir o:lf]l angs ave perpetaally rapped; so that the aggregate is main&ri%f%yaem pgmi‘({br‘ip.‘ft‘gg' Ry “" X novelty in"this Tine was lately ‘in. froduced at o fashionable shop;“not, %flflévér,:? by the shop-keeper, but Ly s custonier. A lady with great jex- | quisitaness of manner, asked for dress: silks—“not a gray, nor alead color, but a' subdued ‘motise. *The smart yoing - nan-expressed hiS .regret that “¢iat shade of color, had:pot yet been. introduced into the French studios;: but he informed tl qqffefl:v gj?iz;’,’@sfi@lfi show her tfiég&gfi{fij@’st%tfi;g g, which was enraged Wi 1 A L eST o (31 > Phe'lady; not taking;-or. not relishins the wit.of. the unlueky clork, immediately repanted 1““1&%4*5,3, uyer as “mO,. Supertipeat, PRERYLL Kicietpen i canfover ii i o, S maily e h Yo’ that e had no further occasion'for hié servioes::": .1/ Prabably, i the . misjortane. of ithe
young man will_not be permancnt, for the suldxed brca: ol 048 Shawor ki bhs Tady Wil make fts” i 14 thES6 ust tindes and he willlhardly be lond out of emplogment. (0. fnaw gadisg lid #lO Thig joke would:.bflsmfnflvu one I 3 merp Spadeiuny; Biiliging Hhapsl: Iy true, it is worth preserving—JN. ¥, Puétz.x« SRR s _:’\aff_:'au 3‘:3%1»,:‘. ¥ ~ p&> The man‘who woe fitled with emotion; had no reom: for Wisdinmen @y Moving for a new faial ; colirh ing a second W‘lfic, aw dlgte s mal.
