Bloomington Courier, Volume 9, Number 23, Bloomington, Monroe County, 7 April 1883 — Page 3

Hebmax Eiijbk, tie Milwaukee boy who shot his step father dead and tried to .loll Ins mother, was aoqnittM The-Jury toxoid that he was crazy - when he committed the murder; but that he. ii sane enough now. Theie is altogether toq much of that kind of insanity goiom r, A HUJfORT tittle girl was begging hi Bes Moines, A man dropped a five-cent piece into her hand. A tramp came along told the child he had .eaten nothing for a week, and so -impressed her with his greater distress that she forgot her own. emdgnve him the coin. Then he went to the nearest groggery and bought a glass of whiskv. The climax of the'story is a tremendous whipping given to the tramp by the original donor of the nickeh IxiuANAComes to the front as-the pro-" dncer of more wheat fcrthe- square mile than any other State. The big figures

or the big wheat States are -as follows:

Bush, of- Square

wheat miles. Indiana .45,461,800 35,810 Ohio 45.4?3,600 iiimois vmw r Minnesota S7,C30,500 . California 34..U6CQ 18tf'

Bnsh. to

at, ml. 1,115 . 368

the-pld;ari$ secoBma 6hcmgefig

ly Russia wiefifis hjeld Su :gfcs i vestimatirlr.atcl afthf differeSt martets'

onantitfe& f hbatptfcelte

could aTwarvba liWb SoLW.jas-allBg mht

ifSp tiiSthe tresiiry becaiwe he was absent alsnfficent mimber of days to take that

mueaxout or ins salary, recalls tne tact

.tivators are ij?0$JlimS

gageatheircrops tpjpeflnlatore, who do not heeitaie to'iifggide f . -low grade andexp6rt' iiTas alUJu gh grade wheats aiiesedishoneBt methocifhave"

become so gemeral as'jserionsly to affectthe foreign-: demanoforETsJanvcereals, and a system of gowrrnnentiinspecaon is proposed as an extreme reMedy for. the

situasioB; Wereweilective a system o

VI U 31Ioitx;iriti.i no oAiows jiitims cuiui" try adodted we may well fear theesults ofBussianvcomp of cerealrodmots ife diminished how can

we hope toanauitam.thej favorable' "bal-

ance

The coal indnsiries of the United States now represent an annnual production ot about 80,000,000 tons. About hree-fifths of this is anthracite and five eights-bitu-

niinoiis. A very small quantity of anthracite comes from Bhode Island;otherr wise it is found exclusively in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania also produces enough of the bit ominous produet-to entitle her to the reputation of frirnishing threeA fifths of all the coal used in this country. Ohio follows next with 9000,000 tqnsoi so. Illinois franks, third and Maryland fourth. When the sSouthernTaud eastern parts of Ohio are honeycombed with railroads, a state of things wliich is fast being brought about, the 8h)wingof-jthe Buckeye State will beeven better... Oittside of Mainertis robable that

Pains liaveintafeito PhiladeJphia to ascertain wnab proportiorji of the young men who arelearning'trades are - native -AmuneaiMU- TOe-resriltows-hRt-urxinife: two of thertes d6jpiioaiapriSen

txces predgriter-mt xnaeM opsy and printing offices ' In nearly allr' tfie;

trades the Oermamapprentires'were found to lmim&on the preponderance: Theyare?lerTiingto be weavers, Jfrv-, turners, or furnitemakers just as theirancestorsThv;etTdo'nefbef tions back in flie-Patherlandv But while the foreiin-born apprentices are deserv

ing of the leaxty commendation tliey are;

iwsiYjug sor weir wimugnesp to learn trades, and -to acquire byslow stag'es 'afl'd persistant endeavocomfpjtable home, there is a word mat anonld be said for the boys .who havrbeen ,borrfoi this sid andataughtby wdrWad' epiple tlij greSortunitieswait :theni. The twx;1audes which. t!megcb'dni boys in Philadeli)hia &e0fb learfi in i?umbrs

greaier-tlian can v-beapccn'imQdE$e(l are

State Legislatures this: year. The general j reverse "Why.arelihoy clSoit? because' drift ot legislation -rolnr the temjr.aricei therafe trades5tUa4 offer scopeior a higfr:

question appears to be towards; high. license laws. Sueh-reteictions? c, the

hquor trainee nnd much t av.jr n Ohio;

Wisconsm, lilmoie, M3nng souri. The latter State fac'pass-

ed a law imposing a Q j tax upon thel

sale of mtoxicanT it been signed

"-nor. A snmiar measure1

would have. gone through the .Olniois Legisladre jja jjQt opponeats delayeit. It has now passed" to ... a hrst leading. As prohibition has failed in sp -many cases, the public will watch with much interest this latest effort to - deal

with a troublesomeiieshon. N ite

xTioune, -- .- .- ..

London recently look down her Hyde Park statue t0 "Wellington" and found that the interior of the -marble aren on which it stood was absolutely - honeys corned with makeshift apartments:, which were occupied by a colony consisting of nearly twenty persons, - including the janitor and ine family, half a dozen police constables, and a medical student. This calls to the memory7 of the Londoh Tele graph the fact thafcwhen the old palace a Somerset House was pulled down to make room for a-new pile of - Government .offices it was found that a prohfio colony of beggars and cripples had for many years been tranquilly squatting in tue apartments formerly tenanted by the maids of honor; that a gang of coiners plied their trade in one of the kitchens; ad that the cellars closs to the river had nong been utilized as a storehouse for -atolec goods by a confederacy of long hcfemen. -

er order of intelligence than . 1st found5 in si

tannery, k a tmehojor in tbe5makpg.of clothing or shoes. S printer . n& ma? chinisfemay noj tecafigbvages1 thanalhe .tanner, buthiy ajarge wbrldiit is the Auieari;b0it appearj who discerns thi3fac and writers whg do noiiee in tsi wbiment something for praiset are lackiigr pe. brUtnejSi? whi'cFIs his c$araofesticV. J I V:Ereaccustoniejfo tiui tj$at th'j United tates is tSeafe aljsn cbeSt pom of emigration in grld. athat bidalair, like AaxupriV$wailj? all. thest. Mo sfour' ejdg:s ySu probably be 'surpc6 lrb ther is a counfery whi,cnpiderfn" ffie size, is.drawing in moiQ feigners than onrej afWi thai that cBuntr? is Prance. Ms

Beroyeaulieu has Riently, publishel

in L'Kcpnomist Pranqrriis the; OTahsc5ref the"5acrase oalien population in France In the fret 4naftSr o.thisTiuj$t ijiffre. was nq emigrafion into that country, igrance'wasfpr the Fcench.rSoile..,Jn 1857: a sniall but steady ' stream, foreigners began ii) set h& TheiJ propoirtiohiu 1861, however, reachetnl per- cent to the whole population: in X$81 theJ proporfcionibad reached 3 per oenft.'" In eaeh year the increase reaches 4);000. M. Beaulieu calculattrS that if it continTU to increase in the same proportion as tbe last two years for the rest of the century

one-fourth of the adult population will

be aliens: The large proportion of -thas inunigration is from Germany, and 'the causes tf it are, accwrding-to Beaulieu the abundance of capital, the high wages and the fact tnat many ft :4he trades are left unoccupied br'FrenWbo"s and men. The-same causes, account focthe large inunigration into our owti eountryof skilled workmen It isja vei'advantt-' ous condition of -trffaire for the rforeiga skilled workman! But hoWnbpui the

tharif certain other ropresentalivea fol-

lowedfliis example they: would not have

"drawn, enough to pay their board bills.

tectoiuid Cornell, of itow f York; for in

stance, did not occupy their seats more

sthan balf a dozen times during the session

while Hubbelf," of Michigan, was away nrfdiif 'half the time, and Pacheco was

oulin? his seat the last four days of

the session. Mr. Flowers is from New York The department of Agriculture will 1gin issuing monthly crop bulletins, in fApril. IThese reports are becoming very valuable, and eagerly watched for by grain .. dealers, growers, and specula tors throughout the country. The April bulletin will be one of the greatest im

portance as it will give tio first reliable

reportsof the damage done to wheat in the West and in the Northwest, by frost and

-snow. Jiauy o tne operators in wih-bu

and No' York in a measure anticipated the regular reports of the Agricultural Bureau, but their information is uuavoid-

-ablv more limited in its scope, and not so

'impartially reliable as those turnisnocr.

from Washington.- The bureau gets re- j turns from 2000 reliable and txperiuted

crop observer every month from April

Ac December.

. The growth of the postal order system at home and abroad has been remarkable.

was created by the act of May 17, 1864, ? during the civil war. In ti e fifth year of

-its'' existence the orders amounted to

about $24,800,000. The system now ex-

Intends to the remotest countries. Ine

domestic and international orders of t!553 Jast offical year aggregated y120,lK)OfOeO,

tabout $6,500,000 being on foreign ac'count. No attempt has been madeto glori-

Ufyfthis-branch of the public eervioe, or to

-pulpits acliievements. It is modestly and

waU mumipwl. . fJonfidence has been

gainal' by good managements '"The eya "tern has become a most important element rof the postal service, an immense conyonience to those who wish to send small

remittances without' risk of losswdanger of . repudiation. Instead of it being a

charge.on the treasury, the money order

system' is actually a source of profit, At the end of the last fiscal year,: after deducting all expenses of every sort, including the appropriation's made by congress the1 business had to its credit the respectable sum of $165,000.

M . Tf. 55 snirl the Nerval adnsorv board

' wi3l:report in faver of equipping the

League Island yard with plant and ma'eliiiiery n&3essary for the construction of

ironani steel ships. Navel officers be-

flieve-i hat the action of Congress in authorizing the construction" of the" "new steel cruisers is a forecast of the future policy of this government touching its

navy; that the war ships in future will be of-steel or iron, and1 that tMsgpvernment will-soon appreciate the importance of

-being able to build its own ships. A

prominent oilieial of the Navy Department remarked: . "Now that the vexed question of monitors is out of the way, we may confidently expect to have a navy.

The great mistake of this government

undertaking 'to 'have its 'ships

idea

of these

men, be of

letter carriers.

.livered from the

grosi revenue was returned last year of 167,0il,10. The expenses of the year amounted to 85,720.01. These expenses wen-, for office expenses. 0,B67.7o, and free delivery service, he. net revenneto the government was $101,386.17. It need not be said tb tit the letter carriers fairly earned their money.

There is no class of goverjimeunw-i

more severely taxed. To give tome

labor required

- . ...

the statistics of tne capnai v interest. Indianapolis bus thirty

.During hist year they aei 1 1 .

mails coming ioito tuo

.fv R.fi7ii30 letters, 961,732 postal cards

and 22,465 registered letters. Beside tins they delivered local letters to the number of 3(52,793, and postal cards 482,167, The Dumber of newspapers delivered was 1,926,502.- In.the saroerperiod they collected 2,12.,168 letters, 845,481 postal cards, and SSftMU newspapers, making xe total number of pieces of mail matter 3 iaudled 10,5568,49, or to each carrier 345,6 16. -Dnring the year new postel ser rice was placed on nine lines of railway in the State, the total le igth being o ver BIO mi'es. There is now in operatioi l in Indiana postal railroad fservice on 4116 miles of h-ack,at a cost each year of 8510,188.40; irf this amount $79,8803 is paid for railway postoftice anrs. ....

" There are eighty-six postmaste rs in Indiana appointed by the President, and ...lnmnR nmbined amount to S158r

tllCH OllJ.V " . . - 900. The aggregate groai receipts these offices are $710 962.

HOME SWEET HOME.

f A originnliy written. BY aonN HOWAIID PAYKJ5,

of

The White House undergoes a good many interesting changes in this matter of gueststhat is, of private guests. The parsons have always had free tickets -to the White House tables, "but the character of the other guests has changed frequently according to the tastes of the occupants Now the parsons seem to be supplante s as regular diners by the .actors. The President acknowledges the inr riuence of the church by keeping a whitechoker person somewhere about the premises, but the practice of keeping vacant chairs at the table for stray parsons a practice which- was pretty well observed in Grant's time, and -which was a a regular thing under Hayes has been abandoned. Instead' of denominational suppers we have- suppers 'with Gharles Wyndham and his prettyactresses. We came near to" a sunner vrith- PatfciantI

Rhea expresses her delight at White j House honors. The fact- seen a tn hA that. I

the handsome Resident has aa-eye for I public? debt during the month

pretty girls who have had boarding school I Marahvnli be about ,mtimt fein miMiw r, fsii reut.Oftcei:has;-prepaied,

L native frenchman and A mericans,- whore

work,' wag3f and prosperify are thus'suf-fered'-tafall into alienr hands? The French young man, says .1 Beaa3deng

too effeminate toj learn a hafsleady1

trade.- He goes"i Amenca toccib&T to dance, to 4play some flight v. r,ole; . iujife; while the'German corapiipj 1n?jiiH Jus place ats "home. Precisely in thu same

'Way the young American makes of him?

self a book-keeper-osalesnmn, wiule tbe slffled' trades are fiiiedyeamans and

Endish.

WASHINGTON

It is estimated that-the ,reducfion.. of

of

and

-rolicking beauties who can be chucked ! has DOW rsale o ZLA xr. United Statespir?rim.e38ctfc&V

j pii?AU; awut Tjuw jMMiiji wj"imi.-" MiiMHug

the :arst rresicent to-ecognize dramatic

talent if we except Iancoln's unhappy experience with aJstaffHacketfe---Milwau-kee Sentinel.

Tuere seems to be somethmjin the air and life of Germany extraordinarily favorable to the digestion. Bismarckrhas

thriven on mixtures of champagne and porter, washing down meal at the description of which the American trembles,, but he does no more than the other most famous ruler of his eountry,Frederiek the Greit. Here is what -Br. Zimmermann saw him devour whens a eeptuagenari'jn invalid. "A very large quantity of soup, of the strongest and most 'highly spiced ingre&ifvh?, yet, spiced as it ulrsady was, hvijided to each plate of it a large spoonfull of powdered ginger and macepthen- a good piece of boeuf a la Busee-beef steeped in half a pint of brandy. Next he took a great quantity1? W Italian dish, half Indian corn, half Parmesan cheese; to this the juice of garlic is added, and the

whole is baked in butter until there arises !

a hard rind as thick as a fhijr. This, one o? tbe King's most darling dishes, is called I'olenta. At last, the King having expressed his satisfaction at the excellent appetite which the dandelion gave him, closed the scene with a whole plateful of eel pie, so hot and fiery it seemed as if it had been baked in heJI! At other times he would eat a large quantity' of chilling and unwholesome fruits. especiaHy, melons, and then again, a. vastnumberipf sweetmeats."

.a volume of '250 pagos. BSag

The acting secretary fe; i?easury has decidetl t hat the ratcof duty ?as b& .

tweeh the

by the date

vessel at the port of en,and thfjt goocdss

w as in

built by contract, instead of at" its own yards. When wooden (ri gates were on vogue ours were in every respect the finest in the world. We have the most skillful and in teiligent artisans, and our frigates were the admiration of all nations in every part of the world; but wooden ships are now out of date; and

few&have fallen behind in the constructi )n

of iron vessels. Sooner or later, how ever, Congress wiit realize the Importance

i of equipping some of our -yards for iron

and steel ship building and I have no hesitancy in asserting ipaat it will soon be found that we can excel other nations in this character of ships, as we always have done with pur wooden vessels?' ' ;" " Gomptroller Lawrence has rendered a

decision that the salary of Oongressmah

Ochiltree, of Texas, ninst be paid to him

self, notwithstanding his indebtedness to the United States, oh the grounds that his office is a constitutional-one; and that

if his solarv was withheld3 her would be

deprived of the means of support and his constituents of representation. Trrito rial deleg ates, however., are not constitutional oflr cers, and1 it-is held that in their case then indebtedness to t-the vgovemment can be set off against their salaries. It is said that not less than 75 per cent of the retiring Kepublican members of the

'Orty-seventh Congress have applied to

the President for appointments of one kind and another, and their claims are' pending. Ex-members do not go about this business like the general run of candidates for office. They do not overwheltn the Executive with cemetery petitions aifd formal written .applications

Ulnstead, they call on the President in

person und urge their Jltness for aoine

-place they have fixed their eyes upon,

Agricultural Notes.

In Kansas farmers are plowing for oata wpheNew YoTkMilk-Oondensin Company has declared that ensilage gives to milk a disagreeable tiavor. W S KHiotW Howard CoMuty, lud., SB.VS thai about thirds of the 6hp-kill-mg dogs in that part of the country are shepherd dogs, or cresses of that breed. V Chicago firm advises the Tribune that land plaster in bulk, car-load lots can be furnished at per ton at Grand Eapids, Mich., and at 6 per ton in ClucaCO. .

4hnt 20.000 will be required to pay j

Uic necessary running expenses of Purdue XJnrvorsity, in Indiana: but by the fpalure of the .nral apnropriatiou bill itr was left with uSsTfy ibout S21000annn 5 income with which to pay fa aeeessary expense, i The Germantown Telegraph says that a view of the interior otsdme of the Mar yland canneries where uncleanly negro as are employed is sufficient to cure one of any desire for canned tomatoes and peac lies for all time to come. Peach-buds have .seldom been so shgl itv developed at a corresponding date of the vearBas tliey arenow Theirhaokwa rd condition is very favorable, and peo hgrowerson the Atlantic coast predict an unusually heavy yield.. Charles, Lyman has on thehneofthe Chester Talley Koad a' farm of 57 nv es said to be the most producUve-of its sa e in Chester County, Pennsylvania. eartj

10 ousbels of wheat per acre a t - f -Yes.,? she said. fchreTs a vacancy

age yield last year, and other , cr0Ps the Some and the $100 that Parson Arpfoportionately heavy. Ia January last m wiU pay my way in, but it

17 cows produced 4,000 quarts or nc:nrai. j w0xlWt last me long if I began to spend

nhngrto ojeo- .. . v. , , .

w, yoir jenow, ana a snan nave wi u uw. and ?ay reg nlar meals without worrying about whe re the next one's coming from.

'RliI pleasures and palaces, though wo may roam. .He i'vover o 1 amble there's no place like Home .A charm frnn the ekieB seome to hallow us there, (Like the love of a mother. Surpassing all other,) 'Which, seok through tho world, is ne'er niet with elsewhere, There's a spoil iDthephado wfior cur in fancy, pluy'd, Kvn stronjror than Time, and more deep than Despair! An xile from Hume, splendor dazzles in vain! O give me my lowly, Jhatch'd cottage aguin! jTSi oirds and the lambkiuo that came at my Tlioee wlii nam'd me with pride,--Those who plny'd by my side, ' Give me them! with the innocence dsarer than all! The- joys of the palaces through which I roam Only swoll my heart's anguish there's no place like Hon e, Hoars, sweet uomk. Ah revised by the author (date not known). nd said to b copied from . Mr. Payne's aanucrfyl, and with his own precise punctuation. ) 'JMfft i)lasures and pahmes though we may roatn. Be it eve? so humble, there's no place like Home! V A charm from the sky seems to hallow us there, "TOhinh seek through the world, is ne'er met with elsewhere! Uome, Home, Sweet, Sweet Homo! 'lliere's no rlnce like Home! There's r place like Home! An exile from vome. splendor dazzles in vain! O, give mo "aay lovely thatched cottage again! Ill i birds; singing gayly, that came at my call (ai're Kio.hmMand tho peace of miiui, dearer HoTae, Home, Bwoot, Sweet Home! 'Tfe-ere's no place like Homo! 'Caere's no place like Homo! AnrrroyATi stanzas. pFiW' foiling additional verses to tho song of aQiipip. Sweet Homo," Mr. Payne affixed to the h?ie! nmsic. and presented them to Mrs. Ritos, in Loii lor, a relative tf his, and the wife io(a wealthy banker. TV' us in defpite of the absence of years, .How sweet tho remembrance of home si Ul apipearst; F vom ntluremeuts abroad, which but flatter the eye, The unsatisfied lieart turns, and saya, with a sign. "Home, home, sweet, sweet, homo! There's no place like home! Thorp's no place like home!" t. onr exile is blest with all fate can bestow; But mine has been checkered with many, a woo! 3'ot. tho different onr fortunes, our thoughts are tho same, Asm) both, as we think of Columbia, exolaim, "Home, home, sweet, sweet, home! There's no place like home! There's no placo like home!"

CHANGED HEB MIND. Mi&s Becky was going to the "Old XacHes Home" at last It was a sorry faet bni there was notliing else for her to do, it seemed. Who would think of ottering any other home to a poor, almost helpless old woman, who had outlived her usefulness? Having passed her days in other people's houses, so to speak, she might not miiMt it as muoh, perhaps, as a more fortunate being.

m

but they've told her all kinds of wild things about me; they've told her she might as well jump into the river as marry such a scapegrace. And perhaps if I made her a little jealous you know there's no harm in that, is there? All's fair in love; and perhaps if the old folks see me driving about Miss Becky Thorne my stock may go up, and I may be saved from the bnrning'as Parson Amory says." And Becky had consented.; how could she refuse to do a service for such a true lover? So slight a thing, too! She had often since traversed the same real on foot on her daily rounds of toil and mercy Sam Eustis had married Lucy Amory years ago and was the foremost man in the county to-day. Strange how that friendly drive had interfered with Miss Becky's prospects; how tbe simple fact of carrying home Mrs. Bustis needlework should have determined her fate and devoted her to a life of hardship and

the Old Ladies' Home at tb en ! ! Talk of trifles ! Poor Miss Becky ! she remembered that once or twice the opportunity ' had offered when she might have made it up with Larry; but pride or a sort f re serve had looked her lipsLarry ought to know that she was above silly flirta

tions. Once, when they met at Lucy Amory's wedding, when they all went out in the orchard while the bride planted a young tree, and the guests looked for four-leaved clovers, she had found herselfwhether by accident or 'design she could not tell on the grass beside Larry; their fingers met oyer the same lucky olover, their eyes met above it, and for an instant she had it on her tongue's end to confess all about the drive and its result, to put pride in her pocket, but just then Nell Amory called to Larry. "Oh, a horrid spider! oh, my arm. Larry Kill him quick do! Oh, oh, oh! I shall die I shall faint" And that was the end of it. The old orchard with its fragrant quince bushes, its gnarled apple trees, its four-leaved clovers, was a thing of the past; a cottonmill thundered there all day long, where the birds built and the trees blossomed thirty odd years ago. It no longer blossomed except in Miss Becky's memory. She had turned her thoughts to raising plants when she wrs left to her own resources, but one cruel winter's night killed all her slips,and the capital -was lacking: by which she might renew her stock. Since then she had gone out for daily sewing, had watched

with the eick, had been in temporary de- j

mand whenever a tired housekeeping t ontinir. but latterly

iuun w .t.-v- ; w ' . - her eyes no longer served her for fine work, and sewing-machines had been introduced; she was not so alert in the sick room as of yore; she moved more slowly, and her housekeeping talent was no longer in request ; added to this the- bank where her little-earnings had been growing, one day failed and left her high and drv. Some of her friends had traveled to

. i .... "I suppose noU4 siippjjae not ave you lived there lonii'?1 l : ; ' "I? I have lived there ail my days." ?Goodl I'm hungry .far mm of the people. Tell everything' yo catf .thinlt'of: Did Parson-Armory-leave a fewtn.ne? Hewas called close, Where's Miss ell, married or dead?' I can flee the &L place in my mind'seye? :isSOA the elms.atid the orchardbehdnfbitwhere Lucy Armory plaiied a young t ree on her wedding day, and iihe gown lifetle Becay Thorne wore-by the wa is , nhe liye? Do you know her?" .... . Miss Becky hefifcated an instant "Yes," she replied. know ber.onore or less, She'fl' alhe.Y , , 5 A, ; . 'And mBTxieAV . Well, no; i'he never mrnecL" ; ' " - vShe must sixty ' odd; :sbe! was apretty creature, fltieh dimulee-I suppose they are wrinldes now! Wbefeu? ave the ye; rs gone? : Is ber hornej n Jie. old -pjace. still?" "... ;f : -V ' Her homo?" said Miss Becky, flushing

3ffATBtMOOTALJ f I Vf

s .. .--.

The bride was 5ed tip the, board aiet i J. JL Got up in the nost killing stable, 4 When asked f nhe'd be A true ; wife U bo7 - - J She prompt? roplie3, "1 ahonld emawle." .

CONDIMEN.TO.

Fieasan ter teffsx to pay your addresses

than' your dSlfci!3

... Thei arew teJg'-.tpry- about Chicago girl "ho, insisted on thrpwing a, : t, shoe after aoewly married couple.' Tb ' . carriage ism total wreclc;k doctor hastlm ,rr bride and horse, under treatment, an5v" VP large nTmbei' of men are43cBing4 IB r 3 "f

nnuoBTor.tha gyoom. . . ,

The following is the repiv of fond fattier, vrho bad jnst TBCrVed a letter from his son, " a student fe hisown talma i mater: f My dear Son? Aeeept W beartief t c. n t gratulationsw I was engagejdito the same, r :

Miss Burner' when I was in College, .a.nd. t ' 1

can aprAoiatie the fun youWe 'bavinei (26 Ui;

er.

W1

n little "ftbfi hh noner She is on her

way to tne' ia. aaifw;jnviu,r- "' . .' .m -r - -1 . J TT L. T 1 -

"Tn? the' U d Jiflaies .numeit neci;i

ThornerVhe gnspedv "and If" , "You seem to l ave known her Trty well," said Miss Becky, who was beginning to enjy the incognito: ' I should think so! Bve loved ?Becky Thome from my raffle; we had a silly quarral which pitted us-euch a trifle whfeu I look back- . .Po; you ,eyer. look back, madnme?" The twilight was deepening about them; Becky's ftic..' ad grown a shade

or-two paler atl'atntr";8ba.lmffifed br

dark, velvety eyes f ull up ahim- nth a startled air. r f ' ;:.:' i '-11' " 4You " she saifl, 'fyounmust ; lob', -Earry Bogers!", jThen coloring to ter. , cheeks jria crimson wave. "Do you know I never fHnnfirht vou had ffrowuold like myself?

Don't you knbiv me?Tm Becky Thorne i,f

Just then th train: thundered, through the tun nel, and : they forgot ft -that they were 60 odd.-. - i s ;. r- -. i e : "On the way to, "the Oldliaies' Home," she wrote to Mns. DwigH "I was persuaded to go to an old gentleman!s instead - : " M: ;V j um.Hf i All Over the South. , p r y-, Chattanooga .Vrants to , tax the drummers $100 eacfi. " Cleveland, GHa., has a ten-year-old boy who never-had a-tooth- ' ' r; ! ? ; ( There is a cal f in Georgia? i thatapreters

grindstone to any other diet, ,.;-'. i Andron oage costing $2,400 is? o3,be placed'in the Morgan county, Ala jaiX ,t Nearly 19,00(1,000 feet 6i tumber 1 have

been shipped' from Pensacola' this season. '

One man in Lexington, Miss., has shipped 1,750,000 pounds df seed cotfeoni ! ' ?? i. Upward of 40,000 bales of cqtton-, have

' A styliehly-deesed'- woronuiutered a.ai:h Boston restausrant, The waiter banned herg I J a billoffare and said : "Please mark off tfe -

dishes you wslx to order. Uonid a wo-

3

man in a sealskin contethat sbeconld6 not rea 1 ? Taldng-tbe pencil she made a few dashes, an i the orjflerread: f 'Dinner, 5J ,

cenfc" "Febary 20, 83," ." "please pay a-; the desk "celerfe" .The . fiendish wite- brought her beef stakf.'and' o ions, and1 prun sauceTOdh did'nof ?; - f

dare'tb raise a wordvjn proteai. t Please eirbre's nothing in thehonse to eat,", said r Brown's .landlady. . "How nhrtnt tbA finri t Rent !fn V' "Please, sir. the

catr'ave eats thea,',u.euth,a-'r cold chiokeE?Tlear,the ca 1 ? " Wasn' t.ther tarts of somesort?"leaaeii c a $i I airvthecaJ .Urrighfel $

cheese and" "Please, sir, the cat--4tThen, darn it, cook.the.cat, and let's h&v it all at once." '"The Washington Republican !n.fiinir-

ing on tb result of the next -residentiial

election, claims 180 Northern Republican hum

electoral voter wbicb with tb 23 electoWu rf

votes , of Virginia and ixortn uaronna, would elect the BepubKcab' candidate. We are satisfied to let things go nb that; withrjs U out' rushing intoj tb xcitmenjb of a Wflff? election. Our Democratic friends are hard f to please, an d they may offer some object . ions. It would be juste lik 'emNornsi M tpwn HeraldV; rW-iinm

4 its V)

"it.

landv

relating to

maTgarine is as follows: "Be ifconacteu by the General Assembly of the State of Indipna, that whoever sella or has his possessu n with intent, to, or exposes for sale, or whoever keeps on any table at any hotel, or any other public or private board ingrhouse, any butter other than that mrli from unre milk without first label-

lame, letters 'oleomar

lug v - - gaTine; shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on couyictionthereof shall be finised not more tbau $50 nor less- than am M

- A farmor in Ttidiimii. writini? of the iW

been received at Little Bock this , season.

German labor is being mtroducd , , farms in several" counties in T oa v;a, -water

'.Tifin h? i)aii connecticg Jackson

ossi, will be?dinished this

jx whale about fifty fee.t long was, seen

in the East Pass of?Apalackiola BayiUa,,

I'm most tired worrying about ways and

means. Seems as thongji rve oeen auour it all ir iy life; ever since father was ta1 with f he heart disease hearing th csg in aV-bfa. Now that the rheur .

u got the better of me, so t-be j

in- cold weather, and th doctor says it 'ill dr aw my lingers so that I can't use t' aem soon, it doesn't seem as if there was anything left tor me in this word but the

nome ana l ought to be thankful for

i that."

pastures no, some married away, , r,,, .

unu iguww ur iwisv. - i month. Larry Rogers, he bad been away from j .

Pljunout??. this many a year, oomeoowjr

had seat him abroad the year arter y Amory's marr We to develop h! -fJWy . .a mnoiial

H-todgrowP Jnt0 a fflmon. over the country to

j'ed nottdfis, before tlae finest people

i 1-' 1 ft T '.-

mio laca, j.c- was a oeautitui romance to Miss Becky to read in the ICecord about "our gifted townsman"; she seemed to hear the echo of his violin when the wind swept through the pine boughs.

She had no bitter thoughts: she did not i

blame him because she sat in shadow-

because her life had been colorless. She church and-rave-yard werrbnrnedin sane asrain the old tunes he had fancht T Becaturfienu., last weekiT Uu v- - ' ;

Yonhg Women Inveating.in Laudi

Xaabon. (Dak,') Sf ar. - t '

A young widow who came, to Lisbon

took a pre eiaptaon, ciaim ro iw proved up ramT1 got a5 title'-to them took another claim i1' 1.

-steadlaw of l30ar?: t ? .jL.. tis&

is:nowOip' ; .Botob sW acres of : tne issesaor d 0 )-

Wf : -ne attufefll soil on nod! footstoot a.

19) o? course, considereolwortbhaving-,. . .

and venil bachelors un; the vicinity are l c. glaring at eacbother 5 witli fir tff tiieii5 lf; 7 f eyes' and hatred in!,tiieir teirts: toward

1

genius, violinist

crow

v

. - . ... -I I 1. .l JS V....v. "k" I

vlSlons wcu auog iaw uu. , r, v - j Miss Beaky had other espeetations in "AHow every fanuly to have a ma e o j h d yo arr" e Iree; compel every owner of a female dog j ,t her aad Cfl ., J

to na3r license or i wx i;i uuu jcoo muu v-.

"old anrunew'dnv is to be iixal-

o! amVal or'xne nmjbrtniig"

imported before thexesract; -tastes effect and shipped tovesteru ?5ortsi underf immediate transportalionvfll -be, dutiable under the preHent-tariu.?unless they remain in a public strire.or bonded " warehouse Until the act goes into operation. j J It has finaUyi .been vdecidedrto begin work on the Waaiiingiv Monument on May 1. 'jjhe pproSiou xf S,0p0

it is to be hopeda&it isjto be doneatU,

now be sent up to the intended o55 feet ,

It is now 340 feetaucl wlrFfinishec?. vriil

betforty feet higher than any otherartir

ficial'work ia the wprlartoppingtlt8li-

est spire of athe ' OolognePathedridL" that much; ,-" . .--T-' -" - -

United Stotc-s Connl Astwood, atv an Domingoreports to .thdState l)epirfc meht thatj owjngtoi iAie, bar whacjttas formed ajthe entrance Jtof 'tiie. larrjori that poix is virtually" closed ytfof conimenc& ' Vessels; drawing more than eiht. feet of water can not. enter the? harbor

f rwae not many years since Bussia way regarded as the granary of Europe; but of late yars the United States and India have to a great extent become the sources of supplies. This has resulted f in the change in the cultivation of the fc, soil by which freed labor was substituted for that of serfs, but owing to a number of cireumstcOices of which the usurer and the Umti laws play hii important part the new method is Jew efficient than

without great risk of gt ranch

unless dredugfizrtedcleMt

the mouth of the river the commerce of that progressive ..cbstriefc. rmiflfc become: .paralyzed. ' . -Mjf frhe-reurned seamen oLfche Jeannette

were? before the board-of mquir&iday.

They au-aaia tney naa no statements; to make with regard 'to the management- of the expedition efpriB;oafr . the sinking

of the ship, ancbno ?: onarges to prefer against any officer. Theybclieved-every; tiling was done.thatcouldbe dmeo;enr sure the safety of the i"CrewaBfc thought that lieutenant Dnnenbower in particular had displayed great skill and gcliod judgment in bringing the wbaleboata safely to land. Representative Flowers7 return of $458.

going ac him thus: "This position (in

cluding the oneitheyf want.) Mapn Vfor

whicb'if am especial lyttetll T posses' every qualification for the placeT and I

. want it I have serve! my party long

and failbfalry, and it owes me that much

n recomp'eiise." ConressmanH aroi lipt;

moaly-monthefl in tellincf what they want when ii; is an office they are af ter. They go at it 'with no more ado or fuss Jsjtu a

private citizen would in entering a store ;to buy a paper of pins. ..." - Under the direction; of the ' Postmastergeneral some interestinf aWsvhavef been1 collated relative to tbe postal management There are some features local to Indiana, of interest.! Indian : dsT one 4 of i the States in which Ahzf gostalfeceijits? more than-inet the postal expenses. 1 It is ,a close shave, though, as the surplus is only -$3,366.40.; During last year the total receipts reached the sum" of $1,132239.14,' while te. expenditures were

.S1,1Q0,1 65.65. The main source of reve-

!nue-wasi ocourse, from the sales ,of post

age stamps. It was 0586,mM 'The rents from posTxofficG I 'boxes;: $54,128.99,

and even the sales of waste-paper brought S88.86, The largest l expense" met was

for the vtransportatioirof the mails. "This

cost, for Indiana, 501,86364. The com ' pensatiou of postmters amounted to S33S,896.06, and for clerks in postoffices, rent an A fner, 95,81398 The lettercarriers received $56,984.96, and the raflway postoffice clerks, $116,1101. Under the law the"ffee delivery or lettercarrier service is confined to such cities as have atM least- 20,000 inhabitants. In Indiana there are six'- cities which have this service. They are Indianapolis, Evausville, Fort Way;ne,; Lafayette, Bichmond and Ten Haute, and each one of them only pays expenses but returns a good revenue to the government for the facilities furnished. Of conw Indianapolis is first in rank, In Indianapolis a

But a few years would elapse netore ail the worthless dogs would je out of the State, and those who have no use for a dog would not be able to b ry one." Another man says: Let tbe county be cleared of all dogs except the shepherd and the Eng. Hsh bull. Then tax each person owning one male dog 32, and all additional dogs $5 each, and make it a penitentiary offense. fo any one to own or harbor a dog-he does not list :6r tiixes." How Classes a.reHreserved ia England. London Trntb. . - The other day a clergyman refused to

allow a laborer's child to attend his Sunday-school because there was a frill at the bottom of her f lock. Not long ago, in a parish in a western county, there was ; a li ttle girl with long,golden curls among j the scholars at the national school. One !diy this child was noticed by the lady o tbe manor, an imperious aristocrat who had long., ruled the parish with a rod of ifon. Hext morning the parents were informed that, unless the curls were cut off,

:she conld not attend school. The mother

Wtml&Vnot comply with the order, and sent the child as usual; but .a few bourn later "her ladyship" visited the school, andprdered that the mistress should there and then cat oft the oflfcuding curls, whicnwas done, and the child returned m the evening cropped and shorn as thonsh she had iust come out of the

county jail. Of course her parents. might ifave sued her "ladyship," but then they; . ould have been speedily hunted but of the-pkee. There is 6011 an enor'm.oiuamount ot tyrrany iu rciral districts. ''

.ijpaqieeb.ster and Uotd Brougham.

if jiff. Webster was an admirable racounter, and some of his reminisoences of his. visit to England were very entertaining.1 One morning in London, after, a breakfast with Bogersi the banker poet, he left the bquse in company with the celebrated t3:idneySmith, and as they passed the door of Lord Brougham, Smith proposed a cal V to which Mr. Webster assented. On entering, Smith introduced Mr. Webslvar as "Mr. Clay." Now, Mr. Clay had not" long before denounced Lord Brough. am in the United States Senate; eo, to

last we.3k.

The boy who murdered Buler" escajiedJ from the- jail-at anielsvilleV Ga'7 last Wednesday; t " ' Qrvt v Keports from ArkadelphiaT Ark;j; say that the frost a few nights, since (has;ut down the fruit crop. - Farming ojierations around Brenham, Texas; are ' three weeks later than for several years previous." ' f! 1 -.: An exchange t gravely states s that 1 a

use Mr. Webster's words, "Lord Brough- i and that as she left to walk

am did not. say a word to Mr. Clay, nor Mr. Clay tf) Lord Brougham." Smith and Webster soon took their leave, and as

vtbey were crossing St. James Park the

former all at once became silent and. then asked; "I)id I not introduce you to Lord Brougham as Mr. Clay V Certainly you did," replied Mr, Webster. No more was said on the subject, but Smith soon excused himself. That afternoon Mr. Webstefound a card from Lord Brougham mscriu ed, "For Mr. Webster," and they bectamc intimate friends. A Greensburg cow recently gave birth tip a calf with two heads, four eye, mx legs and two tails.

strt mg arm paddled her down the broad liver to church on Sunday morning; when they sang together in the choir from the same hymn-book; wheu they loitered homeward in the fragrant duak,and heard tlf wMproor-will complain, and startled tbe fire-flies in the hedges as they brushed by. It scmetinae seemed to Miss Beokv

,.r, ;r n i.o i :: mJm

pianex.caiie was young,tiian,witn a bloom ou her cliitek; but althiough the rheumatism had tsnfc her figure and rendered her more or lew belpleiss at times, yet her dark, velvety eyes looked out like soft stars, and the ghost of a dimple still flickered on cheek and chin in spite of her sixty odd years. Miss Iieeky's father had leen the district scho ol teacher in those f ar off days of her girlhood. He had taught her the simple f ore at his comraand, but it was I 'wry Bogers who had taught her music, A&sar after hour in fehe empty old school bruse;'they had practiced together, wMle he wrote the score on the blackbo'M. But all this had not sufficed to en Me her to earn a livelihood. Her educati'ja, musical andotherwise,had flopped sbjort of any commercial value. In those Mays she had never expected to earn hf v living. Larry was going to give her everything. How trivial the little quar el seemed to-day which circumveut3d 'thi good resolve of -his!-, But' what maguitude It bad assumed at the time! On his return from a trip to a neighboring city some busy body, had whispered to

Larry that Miss Becky had' been driving

with 'Squire Eustis son Sam behind his trotters. Sam was just home from-college, a harum-scarum fellow, they said, who made love right and left, and gambled a bit; and when Larry reproached Iter with

it she had not denied it; she had simply said "Wht then? If you choose to listen fc gossip nither than wait till I tell you 11 1 "But you didn't tell me, and I've been home a week." 4 "I bad forgotten all about it till you i eminded me,-- said Becky: ' " "It's such an everyday affair for you to drive with Sam Eustis!'" which incredulity so stung Becky that she would not

: condescend to explain that she had caI! riedsome needlework up to Squire Eus

tis' which she had been doing for his wife

home Sam

was just starring off with his smart chaise and new dapple-grays, and the Squire had said, "Take Miss Becky home, Sam, and show him their paces;' and how she had been ashamed to refuse the kindness although preferring to walk a thousand times; and how once in the chaise Sam had been the pink of courtesy, and had begged her to drive with him to Parson Amory's, three miles out of her way, "That Lucy Amory may see that you don't disdain my company. For you see," said Bam, who was not so black ae he was painted, as many liked to suppose, "Lucy can make me what she will; without her I shall be nothing and nobody;

her, and made a little sunshine in her heart. All of happiness she had 'ever known he had brought her. Why should 6he complain? And now she was, going to the "Old Ladies Home." 1 "It isn't exactly what I expected in my youth," she said to the old doctor!' widow. .. . it fU-

"No; hut you'll have a nice room and a-

bright lire, and the neighbors will, drop in to see you and make it seem homelike; Now, there's old ' Mrs. Gunn. Nothing can persuade her to go to the home. She

says its only a genteel almshouse after all ;

along with what the

neighbors have a mind to send in; and they have to do it mighty gingerly, too, just as though they were asking a favor of her. Lor"y she doesn't earn her salt." "I dare say,": returned Miss Becky. 'Now, if it liadnt been for the rheuma

tism, I could earn my living for years yetj

and may be get something ahead again. But it seems as if the rheumatism laid in wait for the poor and friendless." "You ought to have matried when you were young, Becky,"said the doctor's widow, who had forgotten all about Becky's love affair, and labored under the impression that matrons are apt to entertain conr cernbig their single friends. Miss Becky had been spending some weeks with Mrs. Dr. Dwight, who had moved away from Plymouth after her husband's death. She was there chiefly to puj some stitches into the widow's wardrole, which nobody, else would do "reasonably," that lady's grief having incapacitated her for holding a needle or giving her mind to the material details of "seain and gusset and band." But during the visit Miss Becky had been seized with her sharpest attack of rheumatism, which had kept her .in bed

for weeks, till her wages were exhausted i

M Aleck "the well-known, valet of ,thes;

late Gov. Stephens, is 'employed as., a

3 ; ' 7 . t- 'I ;fct. dv rtVJi P. f : v Tjie .Keptth Door Shufc ?? 9 'J Stage-drivtirSiamortg i the i Koekies and

: Sieras 'learp 1,be as7peremptory, -m they

areTdariDTrHud-nrbajIply from the, same necessity." ' They willhaye tjaeirv orders obeyed. This is not saying that in the instance here told the Jehu might not have built Ms? scarecrow story bn some bit of faeti '' 'J i'" -(tlf be mm ww A corresponden t of -the Satf Francisco

Post. relates the following; incident o-fet

stage rie through the mountains: -We were going to say that on thia particular trip we passengers were exceedingly anbved by the persistence with which Foss, (the driver) demanded that stagedbore be'

kept olosediMirticularlywhen th'eirbihg

their rivals v .. -J-n :5ti'". i r ' fi f$ InLisbon not a few servant girls have ... taken up. clAims, and intend Woultiyate t ,v them :by:antracV; probably any bile of. theMcOuldn-ealiir $750 'eae,W4f for their land. On youngs lady,'wliOi is U clerking in,on ;of the i stores u in! town fis" tmv the possesspr of a number ot town, tota 4ns addition tq several quarter-sections o, , . land. The1! and is worth probably $25 an . acre, but im'o came into poeeesionof it by -i?m ri taking advantage of -, the pr&emptibn H H homesteud and freer claim laws. , Her;. -r.n d t

town lots were bought when prices, i were

loWi "t rom .the proceeds of her salary, and have now advanced to nearly ten . . times

the . price !slie paid for them! Another

young lady who took! ?up a pre-emption m -V

claim , last . fall i has j the isatisfaction tcjf m 61

beeb made across

and it iBxtot at all "

iniprobable'that she may yetbeome th

asm

that is -not worth je& snW

at, 200 each makinghat amjqnnt;.a;qnarr $liSTHf

,ter section oi lan ' . will make about 600 . .

ordinary town lots,1 allowing for streets

anas. r-

and avenues

a w asmneton i urn-uut.

3 One of tjad1 handsomsfe trnuts townsis a light spring landau,, that cost 4 tl f S2i8Q0. , I t ii i upholstered in heavy orixn , . f son satin, and perfumed with he five . ' owner's favorite floworrviole . 'Lifhr :U ' drawn by apair of bright i bay1 jybung J?S

fleet-footed crtures, worth They wear a 8300 gold-mounted harness, ? and ?

opened caustJ an apprecmbleoiroulation. j-r$100 blankets, with beautuully embroid-

. of air. .. - , . 4 eredimonosrrams m the, corners, to keep

Just as we wererounding a particularly J their .shining coatsfrom 'h"e frosty air. narrow turn in the face of the obflV Foss 1 The man who holds the ribbonaoVOTctheihfMi

noticed that the inside door, so to speak, i has hig livery rnrnished and receives- 50,: tUi Wfla ntmiii hoitwr ftlr? ninr: -PrnmiiflV nnlL 1 n TiYrmth with a stftble man to belt) him. 1 ''

eeabsfim ...

b' that W l1

and closes the carriage door,? ' whoKraces t up and down steps and., rjnga. .hebells must not bear about him iiny flavor of .g the" stable. He received l25a month?" when young- and) charming; and none-

other lees favoredvill',fi Ufsthat -popb ? af?

ceptably; Bos liveny isaJsoiabeds

bhiajempioyers. ,

ting on the brakes and bringing his horses rHe tuclM a 8300 lap-robe M

to a halt, he descended. i ?M ; ri r ? J about him and : flourishes va whip

p.-i

ing to a huge bowlder ahead.thaare5yi Ifltt; rhAm fnr f)iA cfn?A f o nncc

seasbna stage was

stage to. pass.

"What of it?"

"Only this. - Last

passmg that rock when somebody opened the dwr The door caught on? th look,' and as it opened further it prjed the Whole business over the cliff. That little speck

way down there is one of the hind wheels

that door shut?" It took half an- hour tO 'get 1 that doo r opened' when we got to Oalistoga, every,

luaiviunai ou oonra naying separately

tied it shut with his handkerchief.

by chugs and doctor's fees. Tt was at this

time she made up her mind to go into the . Wluwi Armies Fought Hand to Handv home on her return to Plymouth. - 1 In the days of hand to baud flghting

when missile weapons were employ ed"by

Mrs.-Dwight saw her off at the station. "I hope you'll find the home cozy," she

said, outside the car window. "It's lucky

Parson Armory

dollars after

it," .

it.

"So yonissir h called yoiiis liar, abd

git him back in return tor thee qow M Vt

ac-

a comparatively small pbrtiou'thecombat ants, ihe vanquished? were; generally

nff ti-v fknf : 1 V T WT"' " 1 - iuiu ,uuyM . '

VJil MUCtV i-l l4Xii.4A Cll .... .i . i . -r. I - - .: . - - . 1

,n ti ni. uiA enormously. ,vt unnnns 4u,uiu omauB -ThM?y6n. pay4hilbak

rr ... : one or3UAut were inllci.'At-tt

"Yes, 1 suppose so," Miss Becky answered meekly. Perhaps she was thinking that if she was Mrs. Dwight no old' friend of hers should go begging for a refuge at an alms-house door, were it ever so genteel an alms-house. Perhaps she was thinking of the pretty, comfortable home waiting for herfriends,and wondering why their fortunes were so unlike.

"Write when you reach Plymouth, and let me know how you're suited'said Mrs. Dwight, and just then the cars gave a lurch and left her behindhand Miss Becky turned her glance inwards. Somebody had taken the seat beside her. "Your friend was jspaaking of Parson Armory and Plymouth," said be. "I couldn't help heariug, I was born m Plymonth myself, but I haven't met a soul from there these twenty years. I'm on my way down to look up my old friends." "Twenty years is a long time." answered Becky. "Pm afraid you won't find many of your friends left. You'll hardly know Plymouth."

-Hastings

Vamm am. -f-V. r-L. XI. ; A.: t A JlAA'

. i, xwi mttUB, uubu sue' vawwrsj-j.ot iu,tuu'

out of 60,00a and at Qrecy 80,000; Erenoh-: men out of 100,000 were, it, is -asserted, killed, without reckoning the wouudedj When the flint-lockn-eijmerl tEe'average of the proportion of the killed andVonudeii: in ten battles, beginning.iwith Zorndbrf in 1758 vand' ending, with- Waterloo;-?was

from one-fourth to one-fifth of the troops present on both 8ide8tn i"he heaviest loss

was at Zomdorf, where 32,916 men1 Out 'of 82,000 were killed or wounded; It was also very heavy it Eylau, being 55,000 oisualties out of 1 60,000 men. In the campaigu in Italy in 1859 rifles were neeel on both sides, aud we rind that tlie proportion of .casualties to combatants was 'at Magenta and Solferir o one-ejoventh. Ih; thranooPrussia wax of 1870 71, when both sides were aimed with breech-loading rifles, the proportion of killed aud wounded at Worth, 8p:.cheren, Mars-le-Tour, Gravelotte and Sea dan was one-ninth, the heaviest loss being at Mars-le Tour, where it was one-sixth, aud the smallest at Sedan,

j where it waa one-tweUth.

inauired the Austin Recorder of the

jttst Mokedvhim tstjop and ealledhini BSk jfal J

a bar," was the reply.? v-s tfis f WriiA rm tit riiTV with fVlA finmA ' . i- : i.

emphasis wih which he kicked you, and : on the same portion or this body.

,MThen I distnisa the case. ? Thiaourt i mm ?; holds that where Htigantaamongt mil sl .selves,, ha nnonioiisly make a friendly exchange, each" one-1 receiving i a IvaluableJ- ru consideratiou for sefnesvv rendered, stlie kfli:i arrangement l?etweenthem wi0; tgsi&M "erf I disturbeI,t)ie object of the law being to promote-:te monjoioiratibnaja 1 f ebjejey1 ,,1 vm; :js?iif

- , T?e? 1 nfluence. Uie fftyfem m j

uOne?oi?6nr 'most?' inSnetiai Georgia a 1 grangers was super intending affairs at his i' coti on-p rest i the ojther y swheiiahfi fMWWn j accosteuby a neighbor ; . 4 . , v-'. . WI see, OoloneL that the tariff bill tha8 i passed ri rf; ' . "ia that sol How about cottcn tieg?" 1 ' "Still rfiir t'-five per cen L ad valorem.' "Well, h'e you boys til ar! sift auoth er ebovel o Band in the middle of that bal? -I iau t ftrTorxi to reform until tho tarifl'dooef4 And the. siftiug . was striotly attendiad to. I . . - . -