The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, July 22, 1868, Image 1

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IP YEARIN ADVANCE, -, t, .., F i„ ~ , ,1,,,,,
TWO , Rol r~►RS PER
er + be r arn i a bm I „ I ', a . ..; : ~,ji
te c opies or th e VIP
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at
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each. , ---, 7 - ..1 ', ~ .1 1. :. '., • -r:,
, '• • ; s, , Lo - T •,( N,
Ow ', • dons on subjects of i lekai or general In- '. ~ o, , ~•, ,
co mma
dray solicited. Vo Inane° attention, - , ~ ,
,•,,
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rr•• , th i., tind ronstnararutbly ,be accompanied by . I ,} ,•
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to”'
°°° f the "mo t ,. rintrp‘fisqlleatlon, but as a ,_ a
net iropce.ftic.4 ...fr ,
IT "'
rld commerdeadtair 'should be addressed to A I Vii •' ' 0
ti
0., WEINLAD, .litittor it Proprietor. l e git , . , , . 1,.
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C• • P.,Digs!me, , , ~,,,!,' rit E , , ei rr o m p Err i ..-
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1 , IN 0.441,01. ,„ ii• lli4triviiVuu s tlLE a tG04141
.4 ft a
i t in smote:Aer' M Rubbbni. at 'New
t o N, nistßior.o . ... I .NI Y art
rte Pries' than ltaiinrof ;:xeneett'and
SiISTRICTOF TIM* tis. .„ 4 1r,„_. : st iF fo r t, 4 !„,..„
...., t,. .. , r. 1 • , , ,
„, , , i
1 . f),,Arri.Pmed ghee , once thm h , ~,, a • it ,d40, • ,A,g6t. tot Itilidelphti City ..00n * iki good' ' *
V i c;,Vier. or 140 forft , }_ , nut i ropinctractureaprices. ' ' • ' . 1
1 r i r r ', v .r. aittlin °: 11 44 1 ~ 1 1 1/ . 4 rbetil D , ' i ' VOlrateydliteternte ind Nhile Thitilftli will 'rare inosi
k fiet.
I:d Is. c l i g uica p. r ,,,,,,"„ ~.,„4 „ . /bsta/nnterne berme gobgllimit r. :, ): , t, ; „,i
• ~. h 1 : i. p i ,
„im y s t :Wifr T- -- , 0f.4 0a! tC4I o`e * ol'r id'D a lir'
fr! , - v a Mt' to .
r.
- 118. 11.11tQUiee ..4,,, , , , Qp1i M i , :' Seat ,N0...102 r Third Street, .rd
:. I) g i o, .
• t=r4rwoi>6l 2) " ''' t . PITINDUMMPA: •
Pr,ACTICINd 1 I AM; . 4 , ; ' ! t , trt r,4, - if t _7 43 2 t 2 1 ...
t „ '7,
f1,6 41,r1 if y t . ' Alio: V 7•6 marßets otreet,
SD pool . t . FROM v . ripx. ,
„". d rove two doors' gt t r *d otel • tay(ra#:s l l.. -....,.• , 1* 7 2 * , ~ c
' 0. • flan .then. loAdt , . 1 &;.", • , . . . . j
r- prorl i n( n '
i c ds6 , .iy .. 0
* ' --
F --T-EBI:RnAnt.no< wovi. ROO F ING 0
'''' LATE
0. .
(011,ENGIAEFlitikSUILVETOR TWIN'CITY • SLATE MINIM
,NEW BRIG,IIT4H;PA. , • ,
t rz.F.Ts, mArs .AND ktOFILEI3 AIDE ON t 'ltraus - i ji Ai g n i l t G . ' •
- ' ''
' : '
1 00.1111 PARITY.
um uuth.e. i
~,, ,
~ . -LielT6B.
~ I S --- •
a . ' i. e. 'sawmill', s.x..urnamsex,, i.x. unnustatritiosa,
s - ti t cvm:
1
1 President. Secretary. Superintendent:
J. lq II
. .
1 1 ' ' ' , lP
OFICE, , ' ..'
DENTICS - T. N 0.43 Solltilth ISIXFiteIP II 44 II 3I4I II I.
5
il ifflts um - ritorEssioNet. smu t ,
o vi in cis h TO ' ----- 1 • s . .
IT is believed that thq time •
has mute In the pro gre a
V lit r1112,1i. , of Beaver and vleint j. a) nu
.; it
g , Store, Third Street, Beirrer,•Pa„ of Antedate architecture, whon the question will no
a vof drug
a tnv ,
longer be atik:ad, "What shall we Use tot roofing
,
-
RS. PAIIKER 4it WALLAC
but, "1017nzan • CAN W 4 °mins TUE MEW Siva WI--
, . . : 16 4 , Older countries bare kmg "Ince established the ilmt
,
' -- . that no material la so well adapted, and so durable, as
oneopithio Physicians & uurgeons,
p
Slate tbr covering buildings. Two obstaelea tO its
. ?trt51)811 THEIR vrttiticsisioirm..sogwioEs general tise In this country inire'V.sted heretofore
"'• jto the people of Rochester and alehdtp, ot m in
•F'
feon•F Mock, corner. ot Dlommd, Rochester. c ° 'first; ibe transition character d''', ineletf, watch 'l l l
'' p s Spei la' attention gl% en Wregery and chronic neceesarily opposed to permanenie in architecture
.
' 9
LO ` fr ` ;consultatlons can bo had at any time. end Second, the g reet Anndenee end Cow Price of him
'.* eg"'s' ber.,, The first impediment is rapidly yleldin# to Grit I
1 • F. and riper ideas on the subject of building, '
and the Mh
Law Partnership nUiSt
s°°ll
give
away
to
the
aMtirkaul tthinci l lg
• price of lumber suitable for rooting ptuposes.
We submit a lkirleadtag advantages of a Slate roof:
- &O. 4:II.INNINGUALIII, . ic. P.
I ILVIIN. It lasulpterlOrtio every other In apical:MUM:.
Er.1W121 7 011:41F - & .KUALA. ' - ' It is 221 411 Y Put crii. . l
It maven Insurance.
~ Xtts 7l /ESEF AA Mllar , o7. ois ti'r'e prone. '
OFFICE, THIRD ST., it is litiaperisliable. ~
1:
4 1 01 r; iy. . . JigA Ow # I ,A. I' --- .., ' The Twin City Mate Mines are in Noah .
; -
, . 't,,, ot c_, - .: empton '' County,Penn'a: The Slate is 11 bean
nit.C. B. WARRINGTON, - - dark bine, unchangeable in color, splits in perfe
smooth plates of any size required, and hardens a d
41 - (SUCCESSOR TO DR. W. A. ROSIt) fly by exposure to the atmosphere. No Slate In e
PIITSICIANkapd ,SJURGEON, , United States le superior to ikin all tbe qualities ei4en
inmate of the IluirellitYl 'et .P..° 1113 11T)ia0 111 . Nal to a good • roof. and we think but little equal t o it
Thee located per:net:catty at It le tarnished at the yard In Pittsburgh, at the rat' of
koohest2r, Beaver county, Pa. $12.00 a square (one hundred square feet), which with
Ilrlng had many years impedance In all branches of expense of laying, will add about 25 per cent. toithe
',peke of medicine, he offers his service, to the cost of a shingle roof at presents:dem.
moll of tlu village and surrounding country. Samples of Slate may bo seen, and orders left tithe
roilice abd residence on Water street, second,office of A. T Shallenberger Ft Co., Rochester. Pro:
la Wed or the , Pittsburgh National Plow Factory
Its he odsY lie coteloted,afterJono 18thAtall hon.a Parties at a distance, esti_ _ s_ddreee Z. S. Newm or,
env night. DelT 63 : B t llo6 ' No. 43 Seventh street, Plttaburgh,Pa., .
p JELTNET,
a Watch Illalter and Sotrelller,,
' / RAIL ROAD'S'. ''l
,
Third Street, *aver,- Peru,. a., PITTS., FT. WAYNE do CHICAGO BAn.wAi.
(broom adjoining J. 0.• Wilson's office.) on
end
nonr4unn
703,1 rinins will
nenvi,
sol i
nn ,
.am imams and ellronckeiers" repatreil ittitilvar aim (fitmdaya extepi7t)l tut Mimes. (Train loavUfg
rums Engraving done to order. Chicago at 5:31„. P. ?1. leaves daily.) (Train lean.
Witte patronage of the public 1, solicited - , and Rig Pittsburgh at 1,43 I'. M., loaves daily.)
siestacthmvarameed. Give us a trial. % .
.prlriVlm I TRAIN% tioixo Wasr. '
Exes.l.Exr's.
Henry Lapp, Pittsburgh..
' 200 ix 645 ix 'mix S AY
I I ' I . • Rochester ..- 310 815 1640 500
DEALER IN ALL BINDS OF . ' Salem , 4tkl• 1031 , 1226rx 447
-• Alliance 545 1125 115 540
• Canton ..... ....„, 627 1213rx 158 Coll
IrrISFLIVITICIT-TIFILU lOrrvaBfle, 017 24 0 218 045
1 717 I 182 252 7118
I "
I;Pightun et sect. abore the Plow Factonh Woorter 745 207 :320 745
a- At nalleld 1.910 409 500
1 2
' I .ROCHESTER. PA. Crestline i I 915 445 1530
1000 BOLAN 600 1015
'nil: I A ROEST STOCK IN bEAVER COUNTY Burro s '1025 629 640 NXI
I totottaittly on hand, and el.llling at Movery lowest
ecoi• Upper Sandusky ' ,1059 718 719 1114
cr. Y II" cr. Forest 11127 719 75 1147
1227rtt 1103 , e , 115 ax
i _ / Van Wer:t iVS 101 T 1 • - '2OT
m vi lli 9 On St./ Jo nTI 0 Olt. Fed We i n° ' , EXI 121Orn 1t 1 IVO
Colbotbia i ' 11 387 ,100 -4 ., tat .
Warsaw .., 510 155 A 'i t , , 1
Plymouth
•. 1 l cxf 11.cr 415 124
-Valparaiso
Chicago It 820 700 020 910
Dit IWING &
PAINTING•
aNnd
P.m , emitted to order, Laridamroa and-portraits on
Coioll , or Crapm, 31inintnres copied to any slag Phu.
lomolor tenoned in India Ink or In Colors.. Water or
l'utlk received In painting and arid mechanical
to,hand drawing 011ie° and etndio, In Wynn's
%%Jar:. 13,3.1ter, Pa., west of national Abotol *Round
INC hoot.
IrTorms mndemte. • rapr2lM:Bai.
Chas.'Et. rail st,• • •
Rotary • Public, ; Cony' ey . a, •i.
••• and Inluranbe...Agentmer
riE4DS Ash AGRELNRN TR lrarMisf ; AND
arknoul , h4tymentßiakez,
Itivig been duly comm`peloned as Agent for bßeier
tl o.ro. Ittsnrance Companies, representing the
fire, Lite, Art' Itlent, and Live Stock Departments, la
r,'Pared to take rieks'and write policies ou • the Most
tornpi. ye•
Agent for the "Anclior Line” , of flret alas
t'rten Steamers. Tickets sold teat* frormdlports in
reottn, Ireland : Scotland, Germany a_ hdWranca•
IMer in Leafs brick row, Diamohd, RoChester, Pa.
wpm, .
SPRING AND . SUMMER
• •
G 0 01).
•
VNDRIISIGNED LEOS LEAVE TO INFORM
1131 P friends and the public generally that he ha
ist received a new ',Lock of good!. of Ow Infest
rtyka for sluing nod...unmet went. which he
i mere at very moderate ratea. - -
GENTLEMEN& Ft:107814 IVOG ODDS,
OONSTANTIN ON HAND. •
Clothing nuidit to. order on the ,shortest possible
Mice.
Thanlcful to the public for, past favor*. I hope by
tote attention to business to merit a continuance of
14 tame. •
• DANIEL MILLER,
DVDOR S 7. BRIDGEWATER, PA.
Bands & t einemon`
No. 80 Fifth Sreet, Pittebur i=
DEALERB TA
ROUSE FURNISHING• GOODS,
SAND PLATED WARM, DEITANIA, JA
u Planed, Wooden and Ward ,- Altericau
1' 341 French Clocks. leo , have always on band the
tilowing • ,"•••
,----
T:ble Spoon', I Telt Setsss. iriji,neßrackott
Tree oon% ; o°M°l4l4 " .$
Iron abies, '
'ihie
Fork ' Ica
Tmlg. 4016thes Ironies,
Niqe r t garb. . salver", : —.,...
%fie Urn', " le e C4ea" l ' •% -
.
;;;=,
Dividend; Nti.. - Mt
icArrotrAL BANG: OE BRAVER COVETT, I,
Nzw.llntouzol44uly /11418f6
, ••.1 • ' IVE B IIESIDi,IT P ANI) DITtECTIVIS :OF THIS
.... Bank, Imp this day declared a ditidend of nye per
tnesa the Cepttal Stock. out of UM profits of the
Pot m rmtke—payable to Stockholders miller legal
4 f , ecatathe a on demand, free from Untied' Stales
kdlitate tax. _..
B; A, 1 By. order of the 13erd. i ts 1
• EDWARD 400101, c Mar. •
T O gOECHANitS•
-1 t
P CO NGREGATION OF LONG RAPT. WILL
tn _ 11 elere proLposale for building a Brick Church, 4
r* „„ r th, O J' Esb,Liverpoot Col titans: county,
o' ""° car Mitil The bricks will be furnished
itround. For specifications, Asc. pertinent to
rr,"" et ' e merPondence win be had with Jobe Am-
Etat Liteepool,l'Oide•
. .
• • TRAINS nimo EAST. I '
. .
-,. • . 1
, . 11Eir's. Ext.'s. Ear' a. . }Xi
Chicago
------ 174U1sx 820a31 ---- Mmt 7Mtni
Valparaiso .-... .•,,,, ri . .;.; •61Yr, ; 969 , 1106 tn.()
Plymouth ' I, 9:0 1125 12.37a1l 200
Warsaw • • ' 110261 • 122.1 rm 132 960
Colombia /1115 100 217 . 1030
Fort Wayne , /3220rsi 200 815 1115
Van Wert, i "an 302 . .430 1215 am
lima II
61i3 3:9 ! 400 1113 - 1115
Forest. . , : 443 509 ,218
ltpner Sandusky ...... ' 014 Mel 718 212
Bucyrus il 557 l 603 801 1816
.IMI 05 _ 839 .
.140
craillt l o ',- - .,. .~ I' Wait 655 i - : , Inc, :.,'
.355 .
Mansfield - 1 010 ' 721 '-` 7137 -' , 424
Wooster - • ... i 8.11 • 1153 1100 ' • 360
Orrville... - ...... r. g.. 1 615' .918 . 1127 • 1 615
..
Massillon •.'-..?... 1 940 900 1157 647
Canton .1 '4002 , 1006 -1213 rat 7613
Alliance - 14045 -1/160 11256 805
'Salem . 11114 11120ami 125 . gel .
Rochester , ‘ 112.5.5ax 165rai 802 1066
PiltabOrgb 1 • 155 ' 210 410 I]o
Tontigatcrwo, New.Castio land Ede Express I leace e
Yonngotown at 2:30 p. in; New Castle, 4:00 paint , . toe
at Pittsburgh, 6:00 p. Returning, leaves Pi burgh
7:15 a. m:arr. at Yourigatown,lo:4s. N. Castle, 0: a. in;
Youngstown. New .Castlo and Pittsburgh Ace:miner
dation leaves Youngstown, 600 a. in; Now Castle, 7:10
a. zrz; arrives at Allegheny, 10:00 a. m. Returning.
leaves Allegheny, 4:15 p. m; arrives New Castle, 7:05
p. zatifoungstown. 7:50 p. m. - ~ I
: • ; F. myER,B,_ Gen e ral 710,e1 Aka,
• CLEVELAND & PITTSBURGH HAILEO r AD. •
On and after May 11, 1968, trains wM leave Stations
daily (leader; excepted) as follows.
• GOING SOUTLI. -
r.
- 4 - - ' -4,r; 4...rv 1'7 - T . ; - BUIL:Bre& *AIL. Asmon
... . :•••.•4- . ,r • _ -,.......-..:......--- -........._ -.....--
Cleveland. . .."- - 1515aar 1210 ex 840'eat
Euclid Street: .848 1221 13' , 1
Hudson ' ' 1 250 • 108. 505
Ravenna • ~. 4025' .141 • 547 .
All/ante 'll2O 24.1.3 MO
Bayard • 11154 252 •• •• .
Wolltiville .1. - .•..4.4. i:.:.*. i loom-*or • $ , , , y, ~ •t• • :
OGLING NORTII.' r r .
' Matt.. Bazre. ' Accost
' --%
Well !v Ille! • .1.
fala3t 635rar • -
Bayard 10M 445 ...... ....
Alliance. 1120 510 i 745aat
Ravenna ...":4 , ....... - .. 193.13 re ;547 1 831
Eu .
illaclid dm" Street .1239 '-- .018' 4 • ' 910. L
137 059
Cleveland, 150 710 1 1030 -
. .
IGOING TANS. I
- .
:I EXP'l5. i EIIIT,III. Nart..l hocot
Bridg
&Bai
eport 1r 11313 oax
626105 a. " 2301 x ... - •
4 240 ....
• I
Steubenville 2238f1e 743 337 -.. ,
Wellsville ' 200 ISO ' 41/1 I6O6AN •
Smith's Ferry - MI ' - 01$ • 507' 635. •
Beaver - • 807 940 337 . 120
Rochester 315 9550- 550 1 720
PlttstFgh4.l.. - 1 ., ..., 425 056 . , Oa - i IMO
GOING WEST. _ I I
.
.• ," - '..' .- • Mtu. Ex,' P. Exp'e l . Seco*
~......-7
Pittsburgh aomix 130Px .425 as ' 3510 P it
Rochepter no 2.35 550 440
Beaver
Smith's Ferry' ' 4 .4" IN- ' -1305 • 12121 646..'
Wellsville 825 840 .715 415
Steubenville ' 925 445 LBl3 .... .."
Bridgeport 1035 .1555 9:7 .... •
Bel mu .r __
:--
'IA V' I :
'Pee . ,
Water
161
TIIBC4R.
Leaves
N. Philiutelpids,.B*ls.
Brom!, Itlo,m.
11P. R. 3129
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. WAB BRANCH.
Bayard, MA, wit
1 IC Philidelpht
TRB. ext Ttoket
= O /
.E.p.pcAT.iciA,4,,...gOttitii
I.o.AupEßE4ffiliTi:"Editor.
i,'•• • A,VER;'.51i1y211.?;t1g60. ,,, T
•tf, ,!(,,-
litra4 convartrAlloyarouTmeDV,TAllTlUM
I,Dir INEA , ..iPeL,I3ruoT ; , ,AAMOraSSO. To
4,,0. umuralLutrorzw:asionTorri,T4,4/1
rte:,:l:
r :• -;,-ii. - , ti., ill 11,11 ~, i •,..i.i fir::
CFroui',:”Foole's Testbers! .: lnstltato l n . aohllsla4 br
, PTAUfttela tn;,Cetteptson . Seltpolect-
.: iiii!'o.bieK!etion':otiniinir '0'0410t0144
riltit4t . 94*lt ei4fte *:
.t,tfj,Blllsoo/01/'
l i
asides easily U they combo ugetle reedd . ; ;I
do not gielin to say that - every eldididalerge
'ichecii r iiiii tieteught tti'll,ing eqUallf ittll."fb'r
4 .l i 3 i*tf<S L bt‘qtiglii .0 43 x stROY,.wO Aiiii 4,c_.
suit ;.oUti (to mean to ; gm, that ; euoigli ;'-9T
music May be .taught to every childrteaffitird.
WM ifeUsuts, , iusd to Mater tits tektite in -the'
lopyatilNcitlli44,of go:iich4L , `lfcri* I
mean that every teaclierhp, , iiinieet iti'ally
Well in leaining aid '
~teaching; his pope -to I
Sing; intt I do mean that aim? teacher may 1
accltirli.edlrie: l3l cin itl, music?' 0,11;14"9:0_44.0f
his more gifted Onpel4fic may" Midot the ex
ercises of singing extremely Misfit! and Agree
able to Ma : pupils. !rhothruis has notyet come
but is fast approachlrg;When icomPetent
knowledge pf.mmic will he, eonsiderq an In.
dispensable qualification in a district school
teacher..' In Mims , towns,' prepireempla.al
ready given, othet things being equal, to one
'who,lian sing, and in . many Paces a teselier
who cannot sing cannot get etopb4ment.—
The effect'of this.. preference two beep. that
hundrods• c wlio never imagined It among the
number of possible "lip, that they - ceedd
sing, beim corrected poi/ mlstako,withent
much effort, and have seinowledimilthe ad
ditional power they this acquired over the
morals, the diseipling; and the happliteas cf
their pupils. .. .. I I .` - - .
The power of imitation is so great that the
youthful voice will remember sounds almost
as easily as words. Much is said of the im-,
portance of teaching what li taught of music
scientifically; and I know of but one profes
'sional teacher who has proceeded upon what
I think the more easy a$ well as the . More
natural plan. AU chilitien learn, to talk be-,
fore they learn to read; nd singing by roloi,
Is to the reading cfmusi+ what • talking is to
the reading OfboolFS. Many' children-learn
to sing before they learn to read . boobs; and
shall such be precluded froth exercising their
sweet 'voices in harmony with 'those around
them ? ' • - ' • -
The.main object. of introduplitt
ithonlarntiy I*4l4drisd as a.
children to sing by the ear as by a. more sci
entific method, and why should a whole
season be spent in acquiring this p9wer, - wben
it may be attained in a few days? I baie
seen the teacher to whom I have just alluded
go into a school where singing had never been
attempted, and teach the majority of the pu
pils to sing several tunes in one hour. I have
know him even to collect the children, of a
town in whose schools music never had been
taught, and, in three or four i lessons, prepare
hundreds of them fora concert at which the
parents and the citizens were delighted tp at
tend. His plan was' to select some simple
Melody, such ns was perhaps familiar to the
ear, unite it with some in'eresting words, and
then sing it over several times with the phil
dren.. Sometimes he sang a line at a time,
the Children repeating It after him, the
finished ; and then he would sing ► the
whole tune with them, till they ernild` sing it
alone. As the model was good, the imitation
ad few faults, and the result ,confirmed me
In my good opinion of that simidtaneone ex
ercise °treading after the teacher, which I
have recommendedandei . the head qf Read
,
. -
The amount of time which
.should he de
ivated to music must depend 'upon eireurn
`litancel. If alkyrmil is sung at, the beginning
end end 'of sqhool, and if the change of red
itation is accompanied with a ihoit tune, much
exercise will be attained. A. short tune im
mediately after recess often tranquilizes the
spirits of the pupils, and prepares them for
quiet labor after active recreation. All this
tray
,be done by rote, but if theteacher . un
derstand's theapience of music, he may have
his regular time for instruction in this depart
ment; as in any other.
It is remarkable how very generally then°.
two has prevailed, that few can learn how to
sing; and yet, perhaps no person can be
found who &et tot amuse himself sometimes
by singing or hpmming a tune, while not ono
mother in a hundred, who sings her infant to
sleep, could tell a semi-breve from a dealt
seml-quaver. , Once, the eminent gentlenian
wish whont I had the'pleasare to 1 co-operate
for so many years in my school, told me that
he had only met with one pupil , ' that he
thought he_couhk not teach. She had taken
lessons Wit ,the plas s . for three' or four years,
but 'ran& A * 6 Itioiress, and niiVer Wie in time
or harmony with the. rest.' I afterwards esl,
led that scholar to me, and. asked her if she
to sing.' She said, "Yes indeed." -"Do
you find any difiiculty in keeping time and
according with the rest?" "Not said
oho; "it comes periecily easy to me." ."And
you love to sing?" said I. "Yes; I do, dearly,"
Saida/ie.: This singular instance shows that
no great 'degree of natural ability or skill is
necessary •to enable one :to: take pleasure in
music; while it shows how very rare it i 8 to
find ii'pupd unable:to . ptilfil, by instruction.
A etwaniore . encotiraging to teachers hap:
pencxt stone of the Institute& , After I had
made some remarks on the almost necessity of
a teacher's being able is saw one of the
young female teachers .In*ra. On inquir
ing the cause of her grief, she told me that
she had long been endeavoring to qualify her
seif to ilea teacher, and thought she had made
some progreas; but a teacher of mole bad
told her she never could learn to sing, and I
luid knit told her that singing was essential to
her
. succe,ss, and she Was ccmpletely
couraged. , I asked her to read tai fie, alld
P- 14 , 7 *, MS 41 14 404 W
~ N ck lc mintiot*lit
of
tva ii ii:41;444,0(
.tiyAt es*MitccieqtelY 4 ti
6 oftiis;cent, etch; ips; plat
w4lch•is 14111temika-` af 4
ascii.' lir tiersoli t4Laia at
fro l / I ). l 4. 4l kPielno
hence on cacti ,P*o4c4d,
formica tietifeetcOlr"
amts. equal 16749, cents.,
put 046114 pined 167
bate Gal l akiatataPPle
tamed Unica in 167 , ink.
bought an equal . inun,er
41490 In ;ha: titlr
Lave
each idnd.l . '
Proof 60410iiii
40 cents: at 8 hatria
at 8 Ohs each east :48
cent& 00 4 1[444410
1100 penes; '3 o ocept, /ulnas
Jamas, iriat he lane&
, No. 2. Thiaolaity of a
fannil by nmitiplying,the
ter by the decimal ,538,
Bad the *agility ow
to be 88.5104 attOe inches,
Jackal in cliametnr MOM
that cliche* 9' 'inches'
1181.70.11Mabictlinbei.
The boiltinhich the bas
is 8 &et-4 inclieson
4 inches in Manger, we,
each way, 19 balli deep. or
Is 729 expresses ihe numt
In diameter 'Mob can'be ,
is 88 Inches on a side. 'ln
we learn that a • -lie*.
balls 6 InChes
In'4tametei. • It4lllbo .
4
. 729 tails 3340 -
. 141 1
.
Indies in diameter , aria
Studer, .are essictly•
their solid* is pmill
contents Of a boa 88
enbiolnches; 106
thlaf Artd
a wine gallon (281) givei tite*tunber
ofgationti of wine the ,box !cotitalit. alter
It Is filled, with the balls. Our answer then is
that a cubical box 86 inches-8 feet—ron a side
will contain 729 four-inc.h . balls, or 218
eia
inch ballaor 04 nine-inch Valls,and 98 gallons,
1 pint aid a fraction over agills °twine..
No. 3.1 The: minute hand of a clock or
watch in 12 minutes gains 11 minute spaces
'on the hour hand; • hence it gams 1 epees in 1
eleventh of 12: minutes, or in 13 elevenths
minutes; and to gain 00 minute spaces it re
quires* 60 times 13 elevenths minutes, or 65
minutes and 27 and 8 elevenths seconds. The
hands will, therefbre, be togethOr :again i at 5
minutes and 273.11 seconds - after I . o'cloOk.'
'Wiliest Blinker Intim World.
UM
At all Unseal in •the haunts s3f business, es
pecially on 'change, Nathan Rothschild was a
marked ( object. There he stood, dayafter daY,
•
leaning against his pillar, on Itin right hand
entering from Coinhill. He was a monarch
on 'change ; and the pillar in qnestion may be
said to have been his throne—bra in this case
a solid one of granite. No consideration would
induce him to do 'business anywhere else, so
devotedly attached was he to that :particular
spot. There,: with his track resting against
the pillar, and with note-hook in hand, ho was
Always ;to be Seen, during the usual hours of
business, entering into transactions of great
extent ith the merchants and capitalists of
all countries. i
Little would a 'stranger who chanced to see
the' money petentateof the world standing on
the spot in question bare fancied, from his
personal appcarsuce t what an important in
iinencihe exerted on the destinies , of Europe.,
No one could he more miprepossessing than
be—juit such a man as the Whys in the street
would have thought a fine subject for a lark;
unless indeed they had been deterred by she
lowering expression or sullen aspect,of his
countenance. He alwayalooked sulky, never
indulged in a smile, nor even relaxed the rl4
slay of his muscles. In private, his Mende
mention, that he occasionally made an effort
to emir brit'never with any marked suoielli,
his sm il es at; n xi,
best being hardly more than.
specie of spoiled grin. ( i
His countenance'wore. a thoughtful aspect,
but hi:} whole appearance was rather that Of
a stupid, clownish-like farmer of the humbler
class. !Hie features were massy. He had a
flat face, its conformation being peculiarly
charaCteristie of the faces of the Jewish tam
of people. His features seemed 7 to be hiddled
together without anything like regularitV in
them. I His nose had a good deal of the -thek
up form. His month was, rather • large. and
his lips thick mid prominent. His forehead
was niore than an averageheight, • consider.'
tug the ,altitude of his (sok. - - His hair has
something of it darldah hue,snd was generally
ahortJ His, complexion, was pale;: except
where it was slightly Olga by the weather.
He wits shorten - a
thick, though, beingeonsid
embly tmder the general height, rt is possible
bla pet belly and • corpulent aspect generally
may - have made him appear shorter Own he
really was. ".•110 was usually; tole leen ,in a
great coatof a dark brinnt color; and, as he
paid little attention tok his personal ,habill
menta his tailot had PO I difficult pusMmer to
please--that is M respect tO taste and style,
though not on the question of rWice.‘
It was one, feature i Nathan's conduct ,
When on 'change, that bentrier, except when -
engaged in business, entered into any center- .
whatever with any', of the , multitude
surrounding him..` There he'stood, apparent
ly as deeply lostitt thought, Mules , mein
choly a ccamtenance as if ha bad been in the
"vast wilderness. of abeam" referred to by
Cowper, or been the "last man" described byy.
Campbell. Wbether his mieriewas
consti
tationsl, or Whether it ardee from the pride
of purse, `or whether from matters 'which
must have been occupying his mind, Or from
the conjoint operation of these three; can on
:y be surmisa—ibekard's
.116pahly.
~C 5; L„.l
MR,•Ir 1 4 149 . Tonic.
Adventareivsituribarger
eituttjfirsisia , Verastea?ee. .
-,!••••••••••••-•
Farittetelale Blade.) . •
1-fr3Yorq/F (14 C*PltOrlili:b - OUB4
, • • ani
_ . 104 )tnowd, rib, go
thiiiiakh with, I never weodebev re d thr
:the I)Ostaherattiirvi Owd the
trdttbleaikh Elias" to :beset tile.; thew:Camera,
mitahavgana trarepressraid, Mid,tkaPeMoo.
4cy mite heWqmilist94 ft ENRUiltite,WitAmit
my help:: I an at ache bordlnlioune, aleh
legato - 600 iitooatid on art alley,•lhii land
[lady belt! one ov the ansliont Kingaoflrehtnd,
wiekker name is o.l9 l fimetrofsii coPaunt
,gat 'Nap at-the Ater, or Ot,. Ntchplaa, cz,
' poodentet a clerk to look at hie' tor anhonr,
and'Whla Menem& ItiLiivithi the itten
ahha-trvtlAkeilia,tew Into- a pashan and or
detred. tolneve soy-with 449.,nalbetra re:
markl,,he he' no for, Mei , Alf('
%hat: huadt mite he added to Ikhiery t . the On
tbelizi woman who presides• Over themtnabiiti
HAMM.: peremptoVilyr refoased to veseeve 1
Ve anti' Ipade in advance.,.tried " InVeral
places, : but lade.% no hagga,ge, -the ine l
otAnyunieemed to 'be that advance
'paYnwnt wood be better, and •I. win forst - to
return'tarher., ;
_
. 'MYedlantePert Ort:the Mate *FP, C 1 .9 01 4erl
our tf zot.pleti.sant,,
IttSbine Pitteln Whei:ive'etninged
oars, I found the trane we bed to lake lull uv
delegates. -- In looktintround fora seet I dig=
kivercd but one that hadift twoinikandlbat
tine tied in It a disgustib nigger who: lied the
finpoodentie to be:well drilla"; itruthed IV car
*teach beside him. 'my •Demoknnic blood
riz'toNiuntiC &min that in it car Bed with
Ditnoknitlef delegetes, anything.' ' , shoed do
to a tigglawoodhestife, atawkt proudly
up to'hintholdin tattoo.
`;1904;1;ordr: /sera "wat a.tnnell."
"Good Loid 1"..' el Coed thii. delegates,wich
got on at that stashun, - "wat ii terrible sria "
• "MY gentleAfrikin4riend." tied. "deiitin,
Mtn bo- Ow collar. "I regret the., necetelty. uv
eaylo.dingreeable things. and still;more uv
dein .em, but the fact is yonr inipudence in
gettin into a Car uv White gentlemen, with. the
disgustin odor, inseperable from and part nv
race„is rather too much. And
more especially, do.I wonder at .Your keepiri
yyooi seat; while Landtbese other white gen
' tlenniu are standln." •
"Out. with the nigger r yelled the 'lately, ,
Arrived delegates, "bustle the' stinkin 'sense' 1
"Mereittil heavens, wat a smell !", sung out
Altera uv em, "hist him I" "hist him !"
le myself !has baeked, and feelin a 'lit.
I.wood be*safe; ez nigger* esn'titote, I
&his bat oat tiv,,the winder,and.follerd
domonstratten with a serious attempt
.him ,out uv the seat. I wood: hey
led; but the nigger resisted, and resisted
isly i to-wit: He' knocked three tW
it teeth dawn tny threte, pulled out
le there wuz ,left uv the hare that
scanty festoons about my venerable
id blackt both my eyes. Iwuz ly
in-the passage, somewhat as
" standin over me, with his
face, ,mben• some
_as die
erintams, A the, "let Sim up. Iferi
pore-white trash, and not wurth wastin yoor
indignation onto. Let him up, Ml. Wil
liams, let him up."
"Sirs," sed I, risin to my. feet, tremulous
with rage "1z this the treatment I am. to ex
pect awl the wav to New York! And to be
pounded to a jelly by a nigger—a stinkin
niggerrsirs, whoseoder evin now makes the ,
car ontenable to gentlemen uv refined send
bilities—and to beer the nigger addresst az
Water, after that, instil uv bein 'tared to'
pieces by the infurvated apecktators t 0,
shame, wher iz thy blush
"Yoo mizerable cuss," sea one uv tliesegen
telmen, "apologize at cunt to this gentlemen
for your insultin roodness, or we'll chuck yon
out uv the cars. Apologize, sir, to Mr. Josef
Williams, delegate at large for the Stait uv
Tennessee.."
I almost fainted. This nigger then was a
delegate ! He wawa regritar delegate, armed
and equipped with regular. credenshels to
theDemokratic Nashnel Convenshen. and I
hed been. guilty in my sect uv I easaultiri nv
him! Gladly I apologized, °and nuttier I
humbly begged permission to sit beside him,
which he emerald with a gractousnis I never
saw ekalled. ' , •
-.lt wuz estonishin the change , that c rept
over the Iqiesny . delegates. They crowded
around us arid shook him by - the hand—they
didn't smell any odor at all anv more; on
the contrary they seemed to like any
They
addresst him ez "Mister,'! and several them
in intro ducin him to their friends who got on
at various stashens, yoosed the prefix "Hon
omble." It's wonderful wat a difference it
makes with a nigger to hey a vote, and also
how ho votes! Had that Williams bin efec
ted with Ablishnism, I make no. doubt that
the stench which I reely fancied I smelt when
I fast undertook to subjoogato him, wood hey
continyood to the end nv the trip. In olden
time it wuz observed that slave niggers didn't
smell—it was.only the free ones. It fit a set
tled fact now that Diniekratie niggers are in
odorous I I mite herknown, however, that
nigger wuz a free nigger, ; , by (the "way
~he
pitched into'ree. No nigger in a , stalt tit
seivitood wood ever hey did arch iiihing.—
That much tha owe to the war anyhow.
My principal objeck in goin to. Noe 'York
wuz to do Watl (mod toward j s. ecooring the
nomination UN' Jethro L Kipp . I found
the delegates b z diy tore up.' e L offers made
for votes wuz so redikulonsly low that there
was much disgust manifettid. The 'trouble
wuz that the market win overstokt fled the
Convenshion been pretty &ally divided. and
ballan& of Power held by a few clout mouth
ed souls, they could hey made a good thing nv
it. But Where a whole Convenshen is in the
markit and alt their intlooenshel friends, no'
candidate k in afford to buy. -I withdrew Mr.:
Kippins to wunst. Ez he lies but n,small'
farm, and that mortgaged to a grosser,' keep
er, the delegated I, Approatcht • laft inn to
.korn., -- , ' ' -,-, • '.' ,"
Iva on the Committee on Resolooshens;
or rather was In the room ez a sort uv advi
gory. committee while the resolooehens was'
baba dratted.'' General Format nv Te.nnesiee,
was partiklerly anishils =that it' resolhoshen
ahood bendoptid denouncin the Radicals who
Wuz; withunholy , hands, a striven to destroy
the best Golornment the sun ever shone up
•an, and one the destruction uv wichtirood be
a calamity with unborn millions wood; shed
teers over.. He (Wired- a resolmshen pledg
in the Dimociisy to. sten by. thcoldStarn and
Stripes,,'with flag laud braved 'a thousand
breezes, and wuz synonorimus," et . Panty,
Mr. %inky,' Mr.' "Cobb (Mrs: Coblits,'-hua
band),and Perryruller pertikelery, desired
cresolooshen demential the turnin out us urns
uv corrupt men. that the Governaierit might
be administered with authing like iviclidiatin
guieled it donna the admintstrashen , tiv the
late lamentid Bookagen., at the menshun nv
whose name .every delegate, present .beld a
handkercber to his eyes for five Consecutive
'Matta, el the n'gritte greet' hod fallen' onto
him.' . ' ' ' • ' '• •: - ,
~,., , • .. 1 i•-
lralandygum hoisted Make - plank be insert
ed with recognized nigger sufferage, but that
was withheld ontit it coed be definitely ewer
turned whether 'Mississipi was reel) , carried
by nigger votes or pot. Eta Majority uv the
sed
id
nlsge s ? dtcl ' reeiy veto e str ' eine ic.l e
it Wok deaded that 'they' shood bet recoOlerd
tes tinr.pkals-ret not; .we'd di—d Net;
•Cheff, Allitztice'Chosawuz csPoshelbl
yes kir a resolo=extn dentnnsin thq skiver,
nit tenni thitii ontifincipled, hinatind ' Radt
ke* Who reignite tied been. laborliv to snip
-vett the Governmeat, by, laterferie with ;the
Polu.ns PfOßertY , lLTAiLize,nre frit Alio
pl the convenshm to that
,Wise conieri
raisin. WithoO'ilck thq 'Coed 'be ad peftrik.
iienceliiiniegoVernineitC • - rrl 7) • •
drOptinto tbe &Were an'tl , i3alleri Cott-
Venahm, hue I ' didn't ; h ay , ' l ._onfc ,, ,A7leill
whose noses wurn't.red want ed to b e filth'.
er President or Cabinet orhsers; and uy the
halonse em, .tho. haistest sed_ the, better.
My Sole indignated cz Rested timinig chi
- theiieryintitir'who tefoh*ed inti credit. 'when
Itivtizsenrin et - a dnifted..mattitn 18QI!: and
elso'st.elosint agentwko gotten dollars nv me
on.tbe,preade Ay gentle my bating', which
got ithe absoibed in fees; Costs and
abniiiiiesicms: There 'gine Ovr conrew some
- tie° men. 'There vrnz =peril liter which .re
itfgnect early in tT4avor on akkousitly its be.
Ina dr4Abliebin war, and ottiers who left
bee= Linkin wuzn't,` rapid ennff in makin'tnt
"ern lifitjor Genentle: • 'There' torne no limit to
their speekin. , Every .wnn led the speech
which he delivered at the Cleveland Coween
aben In 1866 carefriltv preserved, and' they
tiff insisted on eni: which ezt left
tiler were dein, all to thentselves. Ef they,
kin star it I am minim • We,ere , goin to her
a Boiler; Convenshen in Richmond to entity'
the nominaakene, wich will amount to :within.
We shalt hap Forrest there, rand Itokegard
and Breekenridge.. and 'their-speeches will
entinti We-will, her the flag nv the twc gem
ertune.nts entwined, and we will hey the moo
sic nv both sections played. inch a Conven
;then will amount to entitin.'
'Wet the nistfonnwill be; or who the can
idefea will:be, the Lord only knows. lam
prepared fer any. thing and so are nil time del,
egatim Ef its Pendleton, On a repoodlasken
platform, well and good--er Ito • lieynour, on
a Naidinel Bank , platform, jest et .pood. I
shoed be happy to-yea Breckinndge the
clink* tni thee party, and delighted' of Han
cock shoed be chosen. I kin • burrs li for
Chaste, and with ekal:vigger kin , swing my
hat for Vallandygian, and Ilind nil the del
egates simllerly affected. The Post OMB is
, the lean kine wich•ewallers Up all the others.
We are willin to sinleevery thing . in Post
,Otis.. That my sincerity may not be doubted,
let it be remembered that I bey rid with a
nigger from Ingesny to Noe York; hey been
whaled by..one and hey felt wield over It, hey
bin ha rrah in for anold'line Abolitionist, and
swearin the while I liked it. Ef any other
evidence nv flexibility is needed, I feet ekal
to the task. Politically I am ekaLto all emer
seactes.: •
' Picritomni V. NAFST. P. M.. '
(Wick ts Pcstmaster.)
•-• 1 4 • 4
Eltr. Colfax at •or.
Lincoln.
Washington Cove:poi:o6w* of
,the Clnetansti Corn
• =add.]
The day that Mr. Lincoln sate the, ast of
earth be asked Colfax, whom he warmly ,es
to aceoppany hins
1,0 the Mita ht. 4 "lt *as th 4 abi e tAtt
mai a r •••"- `-• •
Colfax replied : is impOsiftile, is t r ' ; ' a ti
my time is engaged."
"What kind of play is this 'American Cous
in,' Colfax?" asked the President.
Mr. Colfax said it was just the thing to , be
amused with and made forgetful of one's self.
"Then," said Lincoln, "here is a little Ines
sage I want you to carry to the miners. Let
me read it to you." •
And while they waited at the office door,
Lincoln read to Collet Mai last composition
in this world, and then placed .it in his side
coat pocket.
"Good-bye !" raid Lincoln. "I'll telegraph
you at San Francisco." • ;
That night Colfax, going home frame visit
to the Postmaster General, who lived, I be
lieve, in the Speaker's present residence, pas
sed by the Metropolitan Hotel. Seeing a
crbfivd there, be hurried by, as is his wont
when there are indications of a quarrel; but
a man cried: •
"Colfax 1" The . Speaker stopped.
"Tile President has been murdered I" said
the man.
-The Speaker lanehed in his face.
"Whyj I left him," he said, "not morn than
an hour ago."
--
• "Well 4 sir 1 I was in the theatre myself and
saw him shot."
At the word "theatre" Colfax saw it all.—
He hailed a cabman and was driven to ,tho
White Rouse. There he dismissed the car
riage. Ringing the bell. the porter said there
*aa no doubt the President was murdered,
but his body had not comErhome. The Speak
er walked with Senator Confess down to the
little brick house where Mr. Lincoln lay dy
ing, and, being admitted, stood by the martyr
till daylight. Soon after the life of lincoln
expired.
This incident links Mr. Colfax to Lincoln
as closely as Grant, and both wore probably
nearest the Emancipator's thoughts when ho
received . the disappointed actor's bullet Tom
Taylor is a pleasing but not extraordinary
dramatist; the "American Cousin," however,
by reason pt its , association , with Lincoln's
death, will probably keep the stage as long as
the mock drama in "Hamlet." - It belongs to
history' now, and not to literature: . :'
When Colfax saw Lincoln so shortly be
fore his murder, he was accompanied, L be
lieve, by Representative Howard. The topic
of conversation was Lincoln's recinding of
his permission for the Legislature of Virgin
ia to assemble. As reconstruction is now be
ing fully consummated, I may refer to this.
.The element of mercy to Lincoln's nature
hastenedvematurely the business of.pacifi
cation. Re gave permission, under pressure,
for Letcher and his entire Legislature to as
semble at Richmond.' When he came back
to Washington, Stanton assailed him on this
point, and demanded that he revoke it. They
talked together till Stanton sweat through his
shirt, and moistened his pocket-handkerchief
with the persperation of his face.
Lincoln, therefore. said to Colfax :
"Stanton says 1 have been behaving wrong,
Colfax. Iguess he is right, • and here's the
telegraph " message wherein I let Mm have his
war! - ' • -
the rebel Legislature never assembled, and
the principles of • Stanton prevailed, ,"that
loyal men shall govern'a redeemad Republic!"
A YANZEH riditigeif a railroad was dis
*wed to aprtorrish' the•other .passengers ' with
tough stories.. At last :he mentioned that one
of his neighbors owned, an• immense dairy,
and made a million pounds o f butter and a
Million pounds of cheeseyerrly.,' The
.' Yen
ked perceiving that his venially was'in dan
ger of being questioned, appealed to hii
frland:= - ' '
"I `Tine, isn't it, s lfr. I speak of Dea
con Brown."
"Y-e-s,", replled the 'friend ;"that.s, I know
Deacon Bmwn,,though I don't know ad ever
I heard precisely how many pounds of but
ter and diem be makes amt. t but know
helms twelve saw-mills that all go by better
milk." .• .
,
AN inhuman hnii band,. in mithiletown,
Connecticut, drove his wife to suicide by
throwing her new bonnet in the ere.
' , A - 4'VA 4 m , ..
. 4, '"o 7 +' l " , r l ontt , k• ~ter vteterw;
-411
f..301.:001-44,:;-_ , ,:;1 7 •
yij: tit
rssion
EsSiL 9
• dri!
ark* 4. , ,....-... .... , 44, .
i .Wenbeske#,! E s !Nets* as tho alto OLII .
iiiiitto lOcittik siiCkie midi istlifiliiinf* -
ligincis AO * /4 1 0, 11 4 /4 634 C 11
.4 ' la" !mlifir
*dmiblitOti; ??r s .**4 ' • 1 :•.• tz
ipiceliillattormi ilimoiAlll464ol:
li=s ' iiitti iimie iiieid bi / lilis
if ql t eii toed s. win bp dilitga_impirit
XL tsf gra, fam
ipsecoot;, 'e: r 1',.11
, marrin...idoisth. anzenuicod fr es oe dump.
' Tta t pgbltolioc menu tiro eight to ego Om
tiontelitib i tccili *v 1 40 09 4 1 . s l i6s litil4r :10 Wittitor
,whentimez It to desks* to do so. -
Oo A dttellototi to =4)3'l4*
4: : :„;:).:';.
.iiiilie. ..• .. , :i .... - 44.:`;; }r,...=!7 ,
'rid:, 1 ,• 11- i.,::!•if;:tvd::
~t. •.,
4: .:',i
~~ j ~ ~ ...'mot.
e d:1818
A. MOTHER. IF*LB .111,11 DAIMITIEW TOZ TWO
vircnrelaxti ;101/~ • Ann
D ' EcA r r • _ _
[From the Winona RerpcbUam, UStb alt.]
Our neightAing city Of AoWatonns has
beta egibiltedtnin hieltifd-ifribr eatrliemenS
affair whlelf? Occurred 'there' last wee k , the
particnEtis of which were received . bum _
gentleman rtlio am& in on the rider,
day ;
At Owatiinna' resfdeda milliner, Mn.s My
rick, who was the 'mother of: a young sod
tessimatinfr doxightet 4f about liZteers 'A
very respectable yweg, man:limed Odell,
bad been paying. the sughter apention
some time, and it was crirtently r e ported toad
believed that they were, en edd.. Matters
stood thug when a, nuns from Chicago
some city fhrth'er east,lO Whom Mrs.
was indebted the sum of , ,*8,000„ came to
Owatonna. and niade r the seqnsintsnos of
Miss Myrick.
He In slimier saw her than be determined
to possess her, andbeleg a man unscrupulous
to what means lie eiliployed, he offered Mrs.
Myrick - to rub:ate heir from her obligation of
$2,000 if she Woirld hre hilt' her daughter, •
Whether *requlreil much urging or not it
is not knoivn but she finally accec:ed to they
prop ositio*• There was anotherparty to be
consulted, • .owever. The young and inn°.
cent girl shrunk froth the. Idea of being sold
—bartere I for it'price—iand that to a man
whose character seemed anything but liar,
and whose purposed appeared. colored with
dishonor.; tihe , hastened to her lover with
the tale and they promptly decided to elude
the vigilance of the motheriand thwart' her
miserahl& , :dangns iby speedy marriage.
Theyltook the.first Oslo going eastiittid.were
soon, as they supposekbeyond the lowa Ihr,
but angle:namely they, lig_hted from the'cars
sooner than they litterided, and theyy, were
obliged to take'a carriage and .drive CO Ciea
c•n.
Thiiidelay gave the mother tune to over.
take them:• .'She telegraphed to
,Cresocr , and
had them *floated,. and alter her arripol i with
her. miseraO
blertner in the disgracefal bar ! ,
gairt,a ninek trial was.' luid and Odell was
Geld in custody at ter request; until • the gos
started home with her' daughter. . But ln?
stead of going to Owatonna, the party took
the eastward hound train. • Theyoung. girl
wasalmost frantic, and, it braid attempted
to leap from the train ; It is silo - reported,
that' she attempted to jump overboard at
Prairie du Chien.: The young man return
ed to Owatonna with 'his father. The where•
abouts of Mra llyria, her daughter, and the
man who 'sought to.have posse ssi on of. her ,Is
not now ! known. •, Mrs. Myrick's 'milliner
shop Is cloeed, and the public opinion is very
much against her. It could'hardly be other
wise with any tromp who would deliberately
sell her daughter in that manner.
Wrrn a.. Coppeihead of the rankest and
most rabid kind fot a candidate, and at Ott
fo.rm tho Chief ibiank of which
Repudiation -the Derttolatleilaity hatis pia
aerated to the people bine whichl,lllla
111e441144.!-Qiilf_theratinottbe. ,
bariftaNateemV
The election' eif
sal or the;, - 'tarot if Mak and indnrament at
secession! The audacity of the Convention
is equaled _only by the strategy whereby the
result was rilached.l That the party thus ear.'
ly should have challenged the verdict of 1884,
and presented all Inc old issues on which it
has been repeatedly condemned, with repudi
ation added, is amazing. Of the result there
can be no question.' To doubt what the ver
dict of the people will be, would be to impeach
their intelligenz) l and distrust their bona
—Pitt.. CoM.
Parrhurros's PLAN.-A. 8., in great dean
dial distress,appeala to C. D., and exhort; him
by all that is holy t 4 loan him money in order
to aavehim, the sap A. 8., from utter ruin.
, The money is provided, and the terms of re
payment and rate of interest agreed upon. A.
8., weathers the storm and goes on his pros
perous way rejoicing., When pay day comes,
A. 8., proposes to cancel his indebtedness by
giving C, D., his promissory notes not draw
ing interest and payable at no particular time
that is to say when the debtor sees fit to pay
them. 0. D. Insists that this is no payment
at all, but only changing the form of indebt
edness without his;conseat and to his disad
vantage. i.
This hi Mr. Pendleton's plan ofpaying or
rather of not payig the national creditors.
GENERAL GinsonT, on his return from West
Point, the other day, was sitting an the shady
side of the boat.quietly reeding a paper and
enjoying a smoke at the seine time, when a
newspaper boy, who was selling badges of the
General,: suddenli,catnepp to the smoker and
said: '•Giant badges, twenty-five cents a
piece; gobd liketelises,onlytwenty-five cents."
Grint put his hand into his pocket, and tak
ing out a fifty cent pole, handed it to the boy,
took the badge and said, "Rover mind the
change, and resumed his cigar. The. boy
looked up to say 4 thardi you," and reMgniz
ed the General, blushed and hastily retreated
amid the smiles of lookers on.
A ws.roneut mother, on: looking for a
missing key, found it in the po&session of a
eon who was bound on q kite Hying expedi.
iron.
"Why, my 13 onovhat are you doing with
that ke.y
" "Tie it to my kite string." •
"What for ?" ;
Why, didn't oid Ben. Franklin tie a key to
his kite string and catch lightning?" Tho
mother intimated that however it might be
about the lightning. he might catch thundei
when his father came home.
Ala afflicted editor "out West," .complain
ing that he could not sleep, thus summed np
the' causes : "A' wailing babe, seventeen
monthsokl, a dog bowling under the 'win
dow, a cat In the Alley, colored serenade at a
shanty over the way, tootinte r lus,, a white
swelling, his wife dlscourstng on the right*
at woman and tyranny oetnan, and' the 'idev
-11'? whistling en extemporaneous overture is
the troop above." •
Mns: HEAvirsmEs, getting into an omnibus
the other day, heard.a.disairreeabre old back•
dor make .tho krumbliag.remark : "Omni
busses iwele' not made for elephants!' To
this sh'e replied : I "Sir, omnibesses ire ban
Noah's Ark; intended • to' carry all sorts. of
. . •
Two Iris Wizen were , traveling when
they, Stopped te* exaniine 'et• guide bm rd.—
"Tweive toilet to Portinnd,": sail err, "Just
six miles a piece," and they. trudgod on, ap
parently satisfied at the short distance.
NIEDB 0, word on punctuation—that, sol•
Bier who sent a letter home to his girl, clos
ing with the following : "May Heaven Hier•
ish and keep you from yours truly John
Smith."
Itt4uiessta ibnualaiiwf