The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, April 03, 1872, Image 1

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    • .s ore inserted at the rate
sr per square for first ilfsertion, and
3 ,1, s ubsequent insertion 50 cents,
thseount made on yearly ad- :
st•a n•ets.
, , renal to ten hues of this type
. ;es a square, ,
Notices set under a head by
i tuediatel2, - - atter the loval
• ;,1 lie charged ten cents a line
i,•11 insertion.
v,-11:ietPerats should be handed in WI
54 -No. 13.
e .Nlonday noon to insure insertion
at week's paper. .
usiltesiO Directory.
LUCA VIF.Et.
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.1; C11)411 11)1; Cold Iron.
11.,:, . hCla io Order. ~ . .1' '. I .:y . IN .mall or large loto. 1,000 tor, + wanted i in.
[m - timely, ,•! ca.,t :thrt wroligtit ~critii iron. for
a . tvbich the tilirlle.t nrtc n ill 1,.. nnltt 11.1,110• of
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Carpets, 011 Cloths,
Alattincrse , Are-,
VP ,( )NVI'LVT` PINCFS
Henry McCallum,
T. ,t‘• -\1(•(-- ilium
111
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122~'I'AIL EIF:.ILJ I{_S
Fri rt r•I •v ' u J „l• Lu AIIUUSC
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1., 1 , 1,0 , 41 to mr,t htw uld Clll.l.olllent xri.l
m r,lav want ettlwr lhe 11.E.NT COOK
IN by E. H1.111:112 .•1(11 v.. it tllll oTher ktnd
~f 'napkin! and svorktuaneinp. The
1' C'etri7idNed
e . . 1 :111 .1 J ANI)EIt.44)N NUNS.
and ••\ z
A RTI FICA A L TEETH PERFECT
ED ! T 11 d.
11\ \D1.1:14 has., par
.
tj a 111. b 'hey can put
upl'ulcautte as thin 11.
Plate, untbaheau
.
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ttful enameled polteh
Ettfl 11,1 : t m t d taftite a. to perfectly adapt fteelt
to the mean 0., fat fug. all that clurr.y and bulky
h rmaplain•• , ! ,pr hert•ti,fore. and
I It.rhlhlt to break lode r
nor It a 1011.1 ha t% II 111 i.: 11 , a curdle
1,,i-ty„,• plate any ..tner than they t ,old cori
I. 11°,11 f• -- s - chmlgett All br.tnchtu.oll....to
t performed in tIO be,.. and n. , )-t ,rhholah•i•ll
r Iu nlnu, u , 4p 5.,1111 gold. etc.,
::tr. i .n.npetrtLe, !rota fiq.krlr • can r, h•t
• III,: a •. , •,:t• _•• -
tweev Thirty and I%n - 1. Ath(4,..;: r
fl-0 Jr...," We lb-. r
SE
1;11ott
Ir.us..k ll._ the ••• Ira, ~! I 3
.0.r , • rut her 11, LTI of lt,rr,fr nrili
=MEM
Brighton Paper Mills,
BEAVER FALLS, PENN'A,
ROOFING, BAILING,
HardAt are. 411:las.s. St raw
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AND CAEPET
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MEM
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Itole,4ale ti.: itetitil :kJ
LYE!_'-!. Lk.,in exrn ••
H3mcs Still Larger
I . ( )1: THE - .\l I LEI
I for in
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• nseed Oil & White Lead.
Boots ; t Shoes
LADIES I.IIISsEs • AND CIIILDEENs• SIDES,
to groat ruriety.
Rifle Powder and Shot,
Blastinz Powder and Fuse.
iQut-4- ru-m - nr,c.
‘M beau, gonO• delivered free of charge
itr attehtiOn to boyonesp. and by keelOriL:
roh , oo,tty ..TI :I SVVii it , ek or
r.• kotd. nonally kept in ountrY
•• , r • Ih , unOer..izurvt hope, in the lu. It.
lo toer:t an , l receiet• n libera', obore of the
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rlL:tt of IS.- srr county
c- ,• Dr :,turk
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PRINTING.
MA NNIL LA.
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Railroads.
RAILROADS
Eli
PITTS., FT.WAYNE CHICAGO RAILWAY.
On and after Nov. 12:1h, Is7l. trains will Icavo
Stations daily, (Sundays excepted) as follows.- -
[Train leaving Chicago at 5.35. M.. leaves dal
-41 [Train - leaving Pittsburgh at 3.1)0 Y. M.,
les^, s daily.]
GM
TRAINS GOIISU WEST.
N
sTATIoNA. ESP , MAIL. P.@
PifiChur,ll
liotho.tt r.
Salem
A I It. nce.
( mitt a
Orr% .
W r
Nlantqield.
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Ulyer Suittli4cy
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Lima . 1154
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( - re-trine -% MO j 4 - .14) , two. St
I D 2 : 1 0 , 11";‘ , Am .dill
Ni:ln.th , l LAX) 1211 4 1rx' IN4
I rn' Me 1113 '1.' 25 1112
AltWeillon
Can Its!.
Alliance ~
Rorbe,ter
Pit istmrl; tv
REI
Nee. Ca,tle a:01 Erle Expret , . ,
V.lMP , town M l() NPW ea-tie. 2 -
arr, :it a:11 p.-in
7.0 tr., In: arr at New Ca.tir.
0 et, a. m. liclm!.town, 10, 1. u. to
, suls, ,, _toss :s:ew Captie and l'lttpl , argh Ar•
rommodatitni leas re Younzo..wn. 6. - .0
t'a-tio,1:•20 a. m. arrirct , rut,t,cr_`',
m Itrnunt leaves Pittohnr:rh, 2:0i) p. m: as-
Last'.s.-P••l3t I:1.
Gor r.atul Itcket Ati.•//
1.:.>, 1• a - 1) ,h; l'lTTNlit . horll ItA11.1:0A D.
, trltita ur.l
Ma' dAily (Sundays ostrpted) a.; foli,ome
I. a.. run
1
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WEI=
I'i"-1,11 , ~,t
Thvyard .
!litincr .
ctitut
FLeadtitrvet
n'.
G . . 7.- kTli,
Itrllair
Brit:elm - at
Steubenville
Wel:PVine .
Smith's Perry
Itocri,ner 'urn
PII.L•bUrL , h , lOW 4(31 tyltl
ccitb:!i WE , r.
•TA110!(^ AIL. • EXl' s Ac , on! Ac
h -lc r
r I\V . A.S *
I ' l ' ladelll ' h, 1131•Ird: , .
ant 1.4,in m. N•riti
F: ft, NtVl RS, t;cineral
IBM
Viscel I a newts.
CLOTHING STORE.
NE\V (: O() I )S!
IS ILTEit *;TOC6i.
'l'll4 1:11.1.;•1;z:Ivd t:L1:!• , ; plen , ; , irt• is w
athl t . ht. .utilr, crier
Cow he 11:‘ , 4 jiNt r,•-• "•,.41 and up. i,c.l
A Nevi Stock of Goods,
Fall and Winter Wear.
1i tl„• ht 4
..t and tilaki• Up 461 luc , it • I. it li
t•1710%,r::.r::~
anti ill 1. a I:. L 1.114
GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOOIDS
INIIM
(01 ,1 ger ?or belor, leuriuy your
NE
jr( ferS E4flrh f f
%%A LL6.111 REACH. .1r
u 1,% 4.7(1,1v
f1r1.14 , Pt
ai:' 74r ! 7 'ef ARTIFICIAL HUMAN
I N 1.11 T I. 1) T
`• I. 110'. I \ I 11.1.:11',
V., I 'filling ,),- P•iin 117,(11,T.7.
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01{. !CENT. I h.tt lio‘s
I I: , i.riee • Pn liuOu - D a- ivc " D)clzet,il Pf 4 -
~ fnr r•Net fr • , •1 the 1.1 nf ,lur
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1)i1 Li( IST
( Tifl A of.ur(tle-
31abclic,i - i3.3.
11 ES AND thIli011S;
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Glass,
DvE ST uyl.,:
ANILINE ray lS OF ALL COLORS;
GLASS & PETTY;
Sprrial nilv,ktion vis.•ti to t h e
of trrel I..amp I.lll2ternt4
Ixittle Assorituoit of
TOILET
t 3 Il II S 1 I 1-_: S &
11'EN1 MEDICINES,
Main St re , !, rear, r Pa
lI OUSE and TWO LOTS FOR SILE
thy tilage of luthoory, Bean.ur county.
, au L house with eix room+ cn thu corner of
to o ' , MTh., with pavement on Nth et reels. 0 ith in
tn - rnty rode of the Cle‘sland and Pittsburgh
In - inroad Statiot. The lotg are well pet with e , totl
.`frait ; a well of Bond Av:tter at the doer; a frame
he twenty by sixteen feet, and other outland
'lngs Terms male racy. ror further Information
loonire of S. llntoos. in the rtnatte. or the eub•
I 15.*Y 930.11% ]UAL '23OP II
;042 845 336
555 1:35r.34 :145 675
633 , :1 , 23 1511.7. 7-11
5:15 4:22 41,1
919 9111 5119 1111,1
9al I.:15 I; WAN :u2J
9;jo tkXI 1'243
M=IiIM=EI
417 , =pm, 510
Ti)2 fLr,i) W•N
EM=l2
E . :±. Exr A AlAti.
trouAs Wax, tt2tory
v.vrsr sr ¶4i 415 1.240 A
111.0 1':15 12414.8 315
1122 31 :!..5
2:.0! 42t) 1i212
11(0 rzo (0 Inva
1111A3f 1111 S 717 37
2111 . 1Yf1 1 7•l7 A'l.s .1.15
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Nt MAIL. ExP 1.
marl
ISMS
55 r,) 210
700 41.",
415 155tH 440
:
IRENE
.1;111u 650
MEM
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Beaver, Pa., Wednesaay, Akil 3, 1872.
Miscellaneous.
Uo.
.001
eo-
RI
116 4 '
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T.:
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C.
10 10 •
WO
VIII'
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WiNS
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21
la
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$ O4 -i
PA %
tlt
A rril IR. 11. 1 11 - ly
Ivy! r[prdl•loue
TOR PRINTING
Pc execateti at thi. ofti
MEYRAIN & SEIDLE
.9tl s t' nein u m
I: IL' It it. 1 4 41 Xc failtll ILI
12 STIT AVE, I'ITTSP,Urt(;Ii PA
Gmj) AND ~ILVER4M-ITII
DEALEIiS IN FINE JEWELIII
frterhrt 1)1 , 0,0,»Ils„silrer (C. Prated
nouta.l' CockA,
ItEM - I,Vl'olts, IMoNZES
WATCIFES,
WATCHES,
ILLES
\\-.\ comr.kNv.
Errt\ - .1:1) rnitEvG.kt S.
1:1,(11N WATCH COMP.kti
VACIII:St)N
VNITEI) • ,, TATES wATrit ( . 4)
cir.\l3i.l4:s E .121c(IT
NoW.1111)
ZINIEI3I.\N AT( 11." mode I;ti C‘itt.
Zivt-LIMAS. LiNcriv,)ol. t. fit. e..tull tit,2, t‘t!cli
.e the ;011)1t, fhts-11 Ind thne 1; •ett•
ti 'le)t eNt etttih.t the Frwh.tetth
NEI RAN A SEIDEL,
S'()LE MIENT,
I ‘-n 1r
ESOSADAL•IS
C-r- fIIE INGREDIENTS THAT
1 ' COMPOSE ROSADALIS .re
~. , published on every ru kaz,, thew
s..
, . "' fore it 15 not a Gisela prcp..rat,on,
consequently
t ~"; j I PHISICIVSS PRESCRIBE IT
1
",,.. .
'•
l
~ ,
t
.
•:e ,
• i
r
ft is a certain. cure for Scrofula,
Syphilis in all its forms, Rheuma
tism, Skin I.hsease_s, Liver tom
plaint and all diseases of the
Blood.
ONE BOTTLE OF EOSADALIS
will do more good than ten bottles
of the Syrups of Sarsaparilla.
,THE. UNDERSIGNED PHYSICIANS
hart, I ti.sadaks in their practice
fi•fr the throe yoarit and finely
endorse it as a reliable Alterative
and Blood Purifier.
DR. T. C. l'Ur; fI, rf B,ltjuicro .
DR. T. J. 801 I. IS,
DR. R. %V.CAItIt.
I , lt F 0 DANN EL.L.T" — ”"•••••,,,
DR. J. S. S PA of Nic hnlatcllle r
K
!DR. '.I L. McCARTHA, Columbia,
S. t.
DR. A. IL. , ICOLF.S. Edgecotnb, N C.
7bLD AND ENDORSED BY
'1 rt. vni:Ncit & SONS, Fall River,
i SittDril,Jaokau l , DLrh
t. F. WHEELER, Irma,
II II ALI., l.tm 1. O L 10.
'CRAVEN CO
cFADDEN, 7%lntrfrecS ,
Loro,
Our :p.t, e will not allow• of any ex•
tendril reru..r k, in relation to tht ,
%Janette( ltosadal la. Toth° Medical
Profession we guarantee a Fluid Ea
-1 tract superior tO any they have el er
card in the tre:cm, t or diseased
and to t he atil -led we Ray try
flognoalls, and you will Lv restored
to health.
I
s
Rosa.lalb 13 sold by all Dru7gists,
prim $ L•GO prr bottle. Address
CLELSITTS lc CO. _
Manufacturing CAernuto,
r. A YOBE , U.LI
1)111 1 y
Black, and Gold Front,
GEORGE W. BIGGS
No. 159 SMITHFIELD ST
Ft , tlf do. , N uhme hizth )oe
FINE WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY
()IV irysl and .I.4tne7) (loon's, Av.
l'l TTS I le (111, P.l.
FINE WATCH ILEPAIBING.
cat this advertisumeat out and
Cold if• Silver Tratches,'l
"ROBERTBI .
rr 06 la, E:
American Watches at Factory Pricei.
STOCK M UST BE SOLD
11 E F E Itl B
Genuine , Waltham Watches •
.
2 Ounce Coln-sliver Casts 010 00
4 66 66 II • 21 00
6 66 66 ,46 29 00
Elgin Watches :
2 Ounce Cebu-silver CUSes 020 00
.1 4C 611 It
25 00
•
2 Oz. Sliver Ca!es Chiono !Balance, $2O 00
1 " ". " 23 00
2800
Ladies's
Geld Witt
$25, 830, $35, 11040,*55 •
• '
AND U PAW
Att Warranted (food'
. P. R OBS 'S
:*-7,i41 . kt.!3X
Yo. 16 Fifthdtvettiiiii - 71 . ;"
PITTEIItURGIVT
Prompt attention Oven tolluptrers by mall
novls Iv
MOVAINX 'SECTION
BEFATIVE.
PATENTED FEBRUARY 20th, 1872.
For Term,. of Bight. illvo and ltaltan Bees. ad
drepok, filth stamp. J. E. MOORE.
lt,:ziderice Bridgewater.) Roche.4ter.Pa.
niarch‘2.l,qw
SELECT POETR Y.
TIIE BREWING OF SOMA.
The 1'311)1.. blaze. the cahfron'o stook°
Up thr"egh the grevn %food curled;
- 111-Ih_ lo,ney fr. 4ti the hollow oak.
Brint! mllkv .np." the hrtriverm F1H)1:0,
lit the childhood of theVorld.
olio
k
712
=
12
A nd hr - sred they well or brewed they 111
The priettto, thrept In their rode , .
Ftret tasted and then (blink their lilt,
Aid .11.teted. ieith one vOlce and will,
the drink of Gods !"
They drank:, and lo! In heart and brain
A nen . f 2.1,1,1 Itr benn ;
Th.• v re,,,, of hair prow yonnif
The sick nom laughed away his pain,
Th.. cripple limped and ran.
mortalg, what the cods have *eat,
Forvet your long annoy."
So ftana the prterta. From tent to tent
The tioma'r oacred maddeg. woo,
A karat of drunken joy.
ThPn knew each rapt inebriata
A winced and clarions birth,
Soared upward, with rattan...74.)ov elate,
Ileac, N 4 Ith ?lazed head. Varana's Gate
And, sohtred, to earth.
"Ja
1!)
The land with Sor7l3'. ttraittea ram:
On t;ihon'i, hank'. of shade
hymna the dusky maiden. sang
141 to , of Ilk or mortal pa -
All nom to Soma prayed.
The mornitez twilight of the race
Semi. ilown the,.o tntttlu psalms;
A ml .tin with wormer:l , 4 eve, we trace
The Ample prayers to Sonatt'a grace,
That Vedic v, rse emhalmg.
El
Ay in that chill-world'p early year,
Each alter a.an tlan Art, en,
fly ina+lr. Inc. tiFe. drear.
And %Tanen. In hriniz the akll`l, more near
(Jr lift me. up 1., maven.
Stlmo tev,r of th , Mood and hrnin
, CITTIC etaliinu
The PrOUrger . ok keen delizht of pain,
The Dervi,h danre. the f)rphlc
The wild-halril Bicehant's pull
de+eri • a hair-,:rowtt hermit Punk
The saner Mote helots•:
The nstkpii Suwon. h.s.hish-drink,
• hhe cloister road III'S: , of the monk,
Tote fakir% torture show.
And vet the past come+ round main
And ttew duUr o!d tuition.
In •en.nn! trfin , rw , VP !IP vain
\V, hrnp. In many a Chrivtlan
Th , • heathen
Dear Lord a nd Father of mankind
e our fie,ll•h way•
Eel loth, n• in our rlzhrrul
lu Parqr livet4 thy p+er v ice find,
deeper I. ereit, 3, :./r3i,!.
In •Imnlr trnmt Ike thcirn who head
11.,,1 • the !Nyri iti
The :.*.rat. long rail. r•_ the Imrd.
Let 11-, Ilk.. thorn a ithont a a orl.
Woe up and fo ;low the('
I) slhlYith root hv '
calm of hill, Oose.
kto.ll to Auire Wirli thee!
,1)..nr0 of et, rtl;ts
11) , ,•Ipreted hv 'ove
ith that dreg hu•h rtithin Ina all
I Itir Wm . & and work. that drown
Tlu• tmuter wtinc, , er of thy call.
Or mri.cl,rs et thy bleatnlwz fall.
1,11 thy mailni down
1 1 7 1, I) 011 Oil!' lit,A e 1 or quietnepp,
Till .n 1,117 ,stri'llll 1 . 1 . 111.•
T• 11, from onr id ill• .train and P frcPA
Ard )41 f.m. orilered Ityrs conte9s
H. lv•titit) of peace
11-enthe throuell 'he• heal. of our desire
cool.o, 3,llihy h.lial ;
Le•t he• llr,m•, let flesh retire .
li,esk throng:li th• enrtivinnke. wend aler fir,
() still , s tnall vwe•e of C.,:rn.
SELEC4' MISCEL LA _A I'.
What files-el t iings Satordnv Nights
are, and what %v. 111.1 the world do wit It
red them' Tho:e breathing moments In
trutnplog morrh of life; those little
twilights in the brow' and garish light of
noon, o hen the pale yesterdays looked
beautiful through the shadows, and fares
lons ago, smile sweetly again in
the hush v. l u •n one remembers •the old
folks at home,",and the oul fashioned fire,
and the old arm chair, and the little bro
ther that died, and the little sister that
Was tianslated
S:atordav N ehtc make people human
their lie.,rtq to heating. rioftly the
tii,l to, before the world tnrned them in
to war dr.ine: an , l shattered them to pie
lattOoS. •
frhe ledger eloses with a clash; the iron
doored vaults come to with a bang; up go
talc , hotter with a will; click goes the key
its the lock. It is Saturday night, and
business lire:Wits free again. Ilimeward,
ho' The doer that has been ajar all the
week gently clo-es behind him; the . world,
has hi en shut out. Shut out? Shut ITV
the rather litre are his treasures aftM.
a ll, sand n ot in the vault, and not in the
ho , dt —save the reeo7d In the old family
Itible—and n , t the bank
m ay bo v on ore bachelor, frosty and
forty. Then, peon fellov., Saturday night
iv nothin!! to sot, as vou are nothing to
anybody. (let a tyiht, bl ue-eyed or black
eyed, but oboye all, true-eyed,—get a lit
tle h ome , no ma:ter how little, and a lit
tle sof:v . lllst, to held two, or two and a half;
then get the two, or the two and a half in
if, of a Saturday night, and then read this
paragraph by the light of your wife's
eyes, an d t h an k Sod and take courage.
The dim and ensty shops are swept up;
the haulm( r is thrown down, the apron is
doffed, and laborbastens with a light step
homeward bonnet
'Saturday Nigft r feebly murmurs the
lantruishing as sic turns wearily upon her
court*, 'and is thire another to come?'
' Saturday night, at last !' whispers the
weeper above tht dying.'and it is Sunday
to-morrow , and 0 morrow!'
Duluth, which loves to exalt itself
under the name if the 'Zenith City of the
Unsalted Sc.as' his no cemetery, and it IS
a hurtling sham that it should be so be
reft. A metropolis without a g r a v e yarn
i. certainly a stir spectacle, but th e mis
fortune of 'Mitzi] is that Nis so young
and Situated solar from th e outs k irts of
civilization and withal in a climate...so
healthy that dtith has not found it out.,
and it can havelittle occasion for a burial
place so soon. lf, however, it. deems that
its dignity woul be increased by the pos
session of a cefetery it certainly ought
=3=l
!EEC=
United States Watches :
El=
Sittrirday Night.
IN THE SUDS.
BY CHARLES J. CHATFIELD.
"A most unpoetic theme, 'promis
ing little save steam, and a combina
tion of Mondayish odors;" say you oh
faithful reader, who, having; consci
entiously paid your subscription and
tiled your, receipt, seek to glean
from these pages instruction and
and amusement? •
Didst ever pass on the windward
side of a pearl oyster, just ready for
the knife of the seeker for hid treas
ures?
No!
Then you may fail to appreciate
the fact that your hasty decision is
by no means based upon a= logical
course of reasoning.
Carrie Allen would have, agreed
with you, though, as, on a sultry
morning in July, she toiled over a
wash board under a great apple tree
in the hack yard. Her plump arms
suffered little by contrast with the
soapy foam which'she so vigorously
conjured up, until it rose nearly to a
level with the top of her tub, and the
clearness of her complexion proved
that she had been reared in a tinnily
where the pork-barrel was not the
Alpha and Omega of dietetics.
Patent eldthes washers and wring
ers-were deemed a,,useless waste of
money by • Farmer Allen; whose
'mother and , grandmother had never
used there .nod:bent* ttal- toOnd - 103
latittOthbObt . ', 91:4f,
1 1 1S6Thilittitroffhit l - irdilud.gaiitf
ttiuU • bAilukfttbleattout
misietliztal* - hue
kti*Witityt*.tiithti Atititlettrorq
1100ilibailithie r gftite ttl
acsofkstrAttnitenk*Eatirtiiitell
it etinlititits fellows, 'vas stir
priseetto find 'a stranger regarding
her movements.
His step, upon the Velvet turf of
the old farm-yard, had been so light
as to render her unconscious of h is ap
proaeh, and her color hightened as,
removing his broad-brimmed straw
hat, he said :
"I beg your pardon, Miss, I am in
search of a trout stream, which I was
told at the station lay somewhOvin
this direction ; may I trouble . Ytu
for some information in regard to
it.?"
"The little stream among the hazels
yonder must be the one, I think;"
replied she in a courteous tone,glanc
inv toward a belt of dark green, that
skirted the further side of the mead
ow, behind the farm buildinxi: "my
brother sometimes fishes in it furth
er tip the glen; trout seldom come
down as far AS t h is. ,'
"A college chum of miue used to
live somewhere in this neighbor
hood," he remarked apparently less
anxious to pursue his piscatorial ad
venture than to continue the conver
sation ; "I should be glad if yen
could tell me whether Harvey Allen
is about home."
" He is sir." said she, i3llliiing
''Harvey Allen is my brother. He
is at work somewhere about the
farm."
"Johnnie, Johnnie!" she called to
a little fellow, who was approaching
from the direction of the barn, with
a half rimleAs palmleaf filled to over
flowing with eggs, "where are they
working this forenoon ?"
" Crad lin' up on the hill lot." an
swered the youngster, seratehting the
turf with the toes of one hare foot,
while poised upon the other, he
viewed the elegant tishing-rod of the
stranger with Open-mouthed admira
tion.
"1:9 up and tell Harvey that a
gentleman wishes to see him." John
moved at a slow pace toward the
house, casting every now and then a
glance at that wonderful fishing-rod.
Hurrying hack as soon as he had
emptied his hat, he beg,an: " Now,
xis, pa is awful busy, and I can show
the man where he can catch more
fish than Harvey can ; I know where
there is some r'eg'lar busters."
The stranger laughed.
Carrie blushed nt Johnnie'm ill
timed remark, and bad him go for
hN brother at once.
Seeing that she was in earnest, he
started off at a hrkk pace, not, even
looking back until he reached the
first fence. •
"If you will step into the house.
sir, my brother will he here very
scon," said she.un pinning her sleeves,
and rolling - them down as she spoke.
"With your permission, then, I
will wait for him here," he replied,
seating himself upon the tongue of a
wagon drawn in front of the corn
crib."
"Pray do not let me disturb you in
the least."
"Then I will go on with my wash
ing, and take you at your word," was
her pleasant rejoinder, as she turned
to her tub and resumed her task.
• Ueorize Merrill watched and won
der Pd.
Here was a simple country girl, as
much at her ease, beside a wash tub
in her fat her'syard, as though he had
been a thousand milesdistant, instead
of noting every turn of her nimble
fingers. To he sure she was Allen's
sister, and Allen had plenty of good
sense and genuine manliness about
him ; but then the young women
whom he had known had not the
strength, even if they had been in
clined, to rush a washing in that fash
ion. What would either of his three
butterfly sisters say, to such a tax
upon her vitality, supposing, her
pride would permit her to attempt It?
lie had heard his mother boast of
such feats performed in girlhood, be
fore her removal to the city and her
marriage to the rising young lawyer,
hut had always regarded them as
somewhat apoiTyphal. How neat,
looking this maiden was. too, with
the large apron. over her pretty cali
co, and her close-fitti ng button boots.
His revery was interrupted by the
cherry voice of his friend.
"Well, well, old boy ; what lucky
wind blew you in this direction?"
"Hardly lucky, though, either.
since it stranded you in the back
yard.
"Puss, why didn't ui show my
friend into the house" Suppose you
hardly need an introduction by this
time. Georee - permit me to present
my sister, Miss Allen; Mr. Merrill,
Carrie."
The young people bowed and Mer
rill said:
I must hastenoto acquit Miss Allen
of any imputation of neglect. I peti
tioned to he allowed to remain 'here
as I am partial to outdoor air.
'•I CXpec•tfvi flu sooner, or I should
have warned Mr. Merrill that he
would find it pleasanter in the libra
ry," Carrie added
"Johnnie found me fighting yellow
jackets, and I was loathe to. leave
them unsubdued, as we had mbbed
neighbor Barton's wife of a boiler of
hot suds expressly for a vigorous at
tack, and the men were a little shy
of cradling into the fence corner un
til I had
,wet down the squatters.
Fire wouldn't answer as the nest was
on the lower rail, and the grass would
have been almost sure to catch. -
"But come into the house, George,
and, after dinner, I'll show you as
pretty a place to throw a fly as there
is in the State."
"Sit doWit while I lay off my de
nims," said Harvey, ItS he led his
guest into a cozy little sitting-room.
"I'll be back in less than seven
minutes, se make yourself easy,"
cried the merry fellow as he ran up
stairs.
Seating himself hy the open
.win
dow, the young man, while, awaiting
the return of his friend, loOked about
him.
nrto frfaik soul he was
.Y . . ..
, 11...1 . .
1, r: Q, ,
r
e 1111
.. „
• 4, ' •i.
k .
is
7 N • - .:. . •
I •
hiM, though how he can stay in this,
quiet place and drudge through these
hot days, when he is one of the best
chemists that ever took his B. S., is
ahead of my calculations.
"I don't know though, either, as tie
stands lunch in need of my commis
eration' with that wide-awake sister
of his foetroin pony. Let's see; here's
a piano there's a sewing machine;
that guitar must be her s, too, and
shades of Raphael ! there's an easel ;
Allen:don't paint," soliloquized he,
stepping quietly Into the tray window
to get a better view.
Looking out, he saw that the sketch
represented the meadows and hill be-I
fore him with great fidelity.
"Do all these things, and big wash- I
ings to boot, eh ? Well, if any man
had tOld me I wouldn't have believ
ed it ;
cooks dinners, too, no doubt;
wonder if she always expects to li
in this way," he mused, researing
himself.
"Allen told ine that his sister was .
at Mount Holyoke until after her
mother died , now she. is. paying for
her education by keeping house for
her father, like a dutiful child ; and
household help being so uncertain,
she helps herself, with the assistance
of that little creature that I saw peel
Ing potatoes, and her brother' John
nie to hunt eggs.
"What a life, and still she has a
business-like way trim must be the
result of such training.
"141 get-myself invited to stay, a
Wee.krjust.to study her. for she .cer
Islay APO - MU:oh frota apy;yi9Pli.
,shill ,0 11 0/i1W 1 1 1 4: t:
1 - fi rfi.zuggi e trikd. ll **o-i
'Terect hint 5431
ednieritAvitle tits situation. Their
character we leave for the future to
develop. -
Soon the heir apparent comedown,
humming, softly a snatch from the
last opera. Taking a chair, he in
quired :
"How did you happen to find us
out, Merrill? I had no idea of your
being so far from the gay world at
this season ; supposed you were at
I Saratoga, or were off for a trip to the
Thousand isles, with a lot of other
fellows who had the summer to kill
1 aristocratically."
•'Not I, indeed. Then you hadn't
heard that I had quieted into a sober
young M. D., and then admitted to
partnership with old lir. Selwyn,
with n fair prospect of succeeding to
his practice one of these fine morn
ings ?"
" Not a word of it. Permit me to
oiler congratulations upon your lucky
escape from the ranks of the do-noth
ing brigade, which generally recruits
among you chaps who have a heavy
bank account under your lee."
"Thank you, old fellow, and in re
turn let me ask what you are devot
-1 ing your surplus energies to. Ex
pected to hear of you as settled in a
drug-store in a thriving Western
town, or as superintendent of some
chemical works nearer home.
" I am intending to enter upon the
latter in the spring."
" Indeed, where do you propose lo
cating ?"
"Fiere."
"I-hire! why I didn't suppose there
was an opening for that sort of thing
within fifty wiles of this neighbor
hood." •
" There is,' though ; I propose to
engtige in the manufacture of grass,
beef anti inUttoti."
" You don't mean to sav that you
will torn farmer?"
" Ni,, not turn farmer, for I have
been one from boyhood, but my fath
er is getting old and I mean to rent
the place in the sprinc , awl install
him in the chimnerkorner for the
remainder of his days / ."
"All right, I'll gi4 in; but whyex
pend such a sum on your education
if it'sall to he buried in the earth?"
"The most fitting place for it. I
bury it that it may grow, and if I
bring this farm up to a high standard
and introduce improved stock . and
labor-saving machinery, it will he
money well spent, not only for me
ny an individual, but for every mem
ber of the community in which I
was reared."
"Why, you area regular enthusiast,
Allen; you, whom we used to con
sider so calm and unmoved, as you
worked among us in the labratory."
"it's enough to make any one en
thusiastic to see the future that is be
fore the agriculturalists of this Zroun
try, if they will but reach forth and
grasp it," replied Allen, his clear eye
kindling as he spoke.
"Such an twiny of non-producers
to feed around every manufacturing
village, and 'wars and rumors of
wars' in Europe, enough to insure a
r' ally market for all the breadstuffs
which we can spare."
"Dinner is ready, Harvey," said a
pleasant voice in the doorway, be
hind Merrill.
He turned and saw Carrie, in a
freqh white muslin, with a rosebud
at her throat, and two or three twis
ted carelessly among the braids o
her dark brown hair:
She presided at the table with a
gi - ace which charmed the fastidious
young physician, even more than her
self-possion over the wash-tuh,
and, the meal finished, he seemed in
no hurry to pursue the sport which
he had 'left his duties in the city to
enjoy.
"Good-by, George." said Harvey
Allen, as, six months later, the bri
dal party entered the sleigh which
was to convey them to the railway,
"Many a fine fish has been taken
by anglers from the city, on this
farm, but yon are the first one who
ever ventnred to east a line Is TUE
SU ns."— N. Y. Tribune.
How Small Expenditures Count.
Five cents each morning—a mere
trifle. Thirty-five cents per week is
not nmeh, yet it would buyeoffee and
sugar for a whole family—slo 27 a
year—and this amount invested in
savings bank at the end of a year,
and the interest thereon at six per
cent. computed annually, would in
twelve years amount to more than
sBS9—enough to buy a good farm in
the West.
Five cents I efore breakfast and
dinner and supper—you'd hardly
miss it, yet. it is fifteen cents a day— I
$1 05 per week. Enough to buy a
small library of books. Invest this
as before, and in twenty ye...rs you
have over $3,000. Quite- enough to
buy a good house and lot.
Ten cents each morning—hardly
worth a second thought, yet with it
you can buy a paper of pins or a
spool of thread. Seventy cents a
week—it would buy several yards of
muslin. $37 50 in one year—deposit
this amount as before, and you have
$2,340 in twenty years—quite a snug
little fortune. Ten cents before break
fast, dinner and supper—thirty cents
a flay. It would buy a hook for the
children. $2 10 per week. enough to
pay for a year's subscription to a good
newspaper. $lO9 50
it von could buy a good melodeon,
per year—
w
from which you could procure sweet
music, to pleasantly while away the
evening hours. And this amount
invested as before Would in forty
years *Mum the desirable amount
0f.515,000.
s tl 7- A peddler was offering Yankee
clocks, with a looklfig glass in front,
to a very homely lady. "Why, it's
beautiful." said the vender.
"Beautiful, indeed ! a look at it
.almost frightens me! "Raid the lady.
"Then, marm," replied Jonathon.
'I ffutss you'd better buy one that
Established 1818'
PERSONA IL SKETCHES.
The • President and Vice President,
Senators, ha.—Their Habits and
Peculiarities.
The Washington correspondent of
the Herald of Health writes In the
April number of that lively maga
zine:
THE PRESIDENT
Every body knows that he is a
smoker, and a tremendous one, too.
He told that while he was in the field
he smoked literally all the time, but
that in civil life, confined to the
house as he is many hoUrs in the day,
he has been obliged to reduce the
number of cigars he allows himself.
Especially in walking does he smoke.
Tie takes his solitary walks regularly
every day, and graduates the length
f the walk to the length of the cigar.
'hen John Quincy` Adamswas
secretary of the State and President,
lie set an example of care for health,
with reference to bathing. Every
morning early during the summer
months, he took his plunge into the,
Potomac. In that form of hydro
phatic zeal, the present occupant of
the White House certainly does not
imitate Mr. Adams. E The) . Execu
tive Mansion enables him 'to make
his ablutions in a more private and a
more agreeable manner than by a
swim in the great river.
But President Grant has another
habit which is very wholeiorne, both
for body and mind—he belleveS in
- .411),411/pAry ,iadue otAiw_oceatdona I
W=o n the sea
NO tnatterifiiartieen'histapapereiti
ridieule: , him forit,lt Is the proper
thing. for him to do. It brings him
into contact with the minds of the
people. It saves him from the illu
sions which an incemnt stay In
Washirwton is sure to breed. Above
ail, it gives to mind and oody the re
laxation which both need from the
torturing strain of Executive dutiail.
It is hard to find fault, even in the
mildest lashion, with a man like
MR. COLFAX
His sudden and alarming illness last
year led to pretty wide discussion of
his health habits. Some very ridic
ulous and false things were published
on the subject.
Mr. Colfax has always been a very
healthy twin. He believes in health.
He has tried to take care of his
health. lie is a jolly and eloquent
advocate of the sanitarian value of
constant cheerfulness, of resistance to
bother and worry, of the avoidance
of personal quarrels, of moderation
In ambition, of living at peace with
God and tnano Moreover, he takes all
the exercise tie ran get in rapid walk
ing about Washltlg,ton ; he is very
temperate in eating ; and all his life
he has wholly abstained from intox
icating drink
At a great dinner party here a few
years ago, where were illustrious
American and foreign statesmen, he
declined to take wine. A noted Sen
ator, himself a little heated. exclaim
ed across the table, half jestingly,
"Colfax dares not drink !"
"You are right," said Mr, Colfax,
seriously, I dare no !" That simple
answer, given with gen and earn
est solemnity, was itself‘a re -
sive temperance lecture.
CIL& ItLF-S S I "31N Elt
is a prodigy of physic a l endurance.
I have it from his own lips that for
many years, indeed, for nearly his
whole life he has worked fourteen
hours a day. He has never been a
smoker. He lives "generously,"
and, in a very temperate fashion is a
wine drinker. In his younger days
he was a famous pedestrian, striking
off for his dozen miles without the
least difficulty. Hp has given all
that tip. ,He literally takes no exer
cise. Living so heartily, workingso
laboriously, shut up to his pen and
his books for so many hours, it is as
tonishing that he keeps so well. But
he is a man who will go suddenly
when he does go.
SENATOR
is another interesting figure in the
Senate. What are his health habits?
A glance shows you a noble physic
al endowment. He has a muscular,
active,vital frame; all his movements
are quick and vigorous, and, with
proper care, he ought to have length
of days and great honor. As to drink
ing and smoking, he is a thorough
German—if we may say that ( k-r
-many has any monopoly of those
graces. I mean, espacially, that he
has a German's faith in beer, and a
fiertnan's ability to flash intellectual
light from the midst of the den se
clouds of tobacco smoke. His great
est peril lio3 in excess of work.—
Such a hrain as his can not lie idle;
nay, it is a despotic member, domi
nating the whole man, and tramp
ling on the gospel of rest and sleep.
Senater Schurz works very late at
night—even till one and two o'clock.
For exercise, he has a fine plan. Ile
has taken a house about two miles
from the Capitol, and resolutely
walks the whole distance, both go
ing and coming.
MR. BOUT W ELT.
is a man of medium size. of wiry
frame, selfposse..sed, anti temperate
to all thing's. lie takes good care of
himself—especially depending i)n
billiards for exercise. For that game
he has a passion, and amid the etick
of ivory halls he ease; his mind of
the eares of the State.
6.--4, - DEAn OR DV I NC. —Where the
hair is unnaturally dry, you may he
sure that it is dying; and unless arti
ficially vitalized, it will stsm be as
dead as leaves in. November. Feed
the withering fibers and stimulate the
torpid scale wit h Lyon's Kalhairon,
and the evil, which must otherwise
soon culminate in baldness, will be
speedily remedied. It is absolutely
necessary for the health of the brain,
that it be kept moderately moist with
.a preparation capable of nourishing
and invigorating, it. Lyon's Kathai
ron, fulfills these conditions, and is
the only article that actually putsnew
life into the capillary tubes, through
which the natural nourishment has
ceased to pass. Tnis pure and harm
less vegetable preparation is absorbed
by the skin of the head to the roots of
the hair, and passes into the filaments
by the force of capillary attractipn.
—A gentleman took a lady out to
ride the other evening, and came
home with a false cd rl attached to the
button on the side of his cap. He
wonders how it could have got there.
WY" A brief letter from Dorchester,
.111ass.,-tel Is the following :
There•are in this town two twin
brothers, whose resemblance to each
other is so strung that strangers can
hardly tell them apart. They keep
a grocery and provision `store,' and
were one day bringing in bags of
meal from a wagon which was out of
sight frotn;inside the store. Nathan
had his coat on, but Eli was in his
shirt-sleeves. A stranger in the shop
watched them coming in and going
out one after the other, but only one
was visable at a time, and at last he
exclaimed to Eli.
'Well, you're the smartest man I
ever saw; but why do you keep put
ting on and taking off your coat ?'.
These brothers and several other
men were in the habit of vetting up
very early and going to swim in the
Reservoir Pond,' and once Eli going,
as was his wont, to Nathan's house
to call him, by tapping on the pane,
saw his own face reflected from /the
glass, and, taking it for his brother,
(Idled out.
"Come on, they are all waiting for
THE BEAVEB•ARGIIIIt
Is published every Wednesday in the
old Argus building.on Third Street, Bea
ver. Pa., at $2 per year in advance.
Communications on subjects of local
or general interest are respectfully so
_Belted. To insure attention favors of
this kind must invariably be accoMPa"
Mod by the mune of the author.
Letters and communications should be
addressed to
1 . W rit ND, Beaver, Pa.
ON THE RIO tat&NDE.
Bullet, Palling Upon itmerfran Soft—
Uncle ;ant. to Take a Hand.
FrOln the Cincinnati Enquirer, lianas B.;
lady in this city hai'recently re
ceived a letter from Fort Duncan,
Texas. The writer, Mrs. Leggett,
was.born and brought up in Piqua,
Ohio, and her husband, Major Leg
gett, of the United States army, is a
native of Ripley, Ohio, and was for
some tithe quartered in Newport
Barracks. Mrs. Leggett dates hgf
letter from Fort Duncan, Texas, and-
In a letter unintended for publication
but vividly interesting, writes as fol
lows :
FORT DU CAN, Texas.
Of course you take very little inter.
est In the revolution in Mexico, but
when I tell you we have a besieged
city opposite us, as•near as Newport
or Covington is to Cincinnati, I think
you wilr be interested enough to
want to hear how war is carried on
by these "greasers." Piedies Negraa
(Black Rock) a large city in Mexico
on the Rio Grande, is not a half a
mile from our garrision, merely di
vided by the river. The city is held
by about four hundred regular troops
Mexioans'mostly with a skinkle of
deserters from our army and about
thirty discharged who, having serv
ed, five years under ; the stars and
stripecchave enlisted treat love of ad
.venture under Juarez,and are having
a taste offend right under, the guns
and Hag they served under so • long
without seeing a battle. : The .. cum
iriantillm.9liieerisOalopei Winker'', a
:liiiiif ittarilf-reirking' re an , with' the
regulation Spanish black eyes, hair,
and swarthy skin, who has shown
some military spirit and knowledge
by fortifying the principal piazza or
square—taking in the Custom Uou..se
and, of course, all the revenue—sn
strongly as to hold it against twice
the number of Diaz men who have
kept up a constant firing Capt.
' LeggetEand Lieutenant Ditturtiewrm
near being killed. We were stand-
ing on the banks of the river
on this side. We three ladies,
wives of these three officers, happen
ed to be standing together, and when
we saw them fired on, and
dodging you may imagine - our anxi
ety until we knew for a certainty
that they were unhurt. Her,ry came
home with the dust and tt.e dirt on
his cloth coat which the Jai' lit h 1,1
knocked on by penet ral i II g the ea -to
works. He escaped by dodging and
hugging the wall. This morning the
bullets came over into our garrison
so thick and fast that we had toclike
up doors and windows, and put a red
flag on the hospital. Six halls struck
our ambulance, and one man was
shot in the leg so that it will have to
be amputated. We have the full bene
fit of all the battle, and we are very
mush excited. It is something worth
seeing a regular battle and siege. I
wish I were a good artist, I think I
would or could make my fortune
drawing sketches of the different
skirmishes 3 sorties, to saS7., nothing
of the picturesque appearance of the
Senors in their scarlet shirts and
wide sombreros. It is rumored
, through the garrison that we will
open our guns on the besieged and
besiegers if hy ,•hanee any more bul
lets come this way. Certain-it is that
a courier left ' this morning asking
4 hat a Carling gun be sent us from
Fort ('kirk, about forty five miles
from here; and a company of infant
ry, now out ou the scout, has been
ordered back; and that looks as if
Uncle Sam meant fight.
A Sporting Joke.
Gordon Camming's new book of
hunting ad-ventures contains this
story: "I remember a joke played off
on a man whose deeds in the saddle
were not supposed to lose aught of
their importance by his own descrip
tion of them. Some youngsters of
the cantonment having purchased .i.
Xilla;,•e pig, had been in the habit ..,-
sending it out for a mile or two In a
cart, and hunting it home with long
bamboos. By th is course of training,
the piggy acquired wind and some
degree of speed. At tenth, on a day
appointed, nu was taken-out and se- •
cured by the leg in the covet. The
usual party, with the addition of the
mighty hunter, were at-tsembled zit
the mess table, when a native ~a, i me
up and reported a fine hoar marked
down. !lorst and spears were called
for, and with the guide in advance,
all prockledecl to the junglea":fide.—
NiMrod announced his intention of
refraining from all active part in the
proceedings, on the ground that it
would he unfair for an old and ex
perienced hunter like/himself to take
the spear from a lot of yonng fellows
to whom the sport was new. It'
was, however. assured that with.ait
his valuable aid the game would
probably!.,;escape, and that it wis
thereforehoped he would not nractiee
such extremeself-denial. On the ri
ders taking up heir taisitioes ' own
were sent to -free the he ,-- '1 "'
speedily appeared, and in &—' '-c! e
tion of the customary chevy. Made
off at its best pace. By hulielons min
iagement. all the field ent rte-own ,iit
with the exeept km Of N:i•li- ~ I , iv',',
was seen ridinir like,' e, .- ,1 '
inter no to the -
Making a well-dire • , ,.d •
triumphant ~1 4 hont he -4 ir i :14.
beast, and a few more thrusts rolleJ
it over. The other riders now gath
ered round the re4lourhhible bunter,
who waq seen -tandinz ht' the 4ide
the prostrate `gnroatee.' waving,
cap and brandkhing hi-4 hioed,r,ftill,d
spear. "Gentlemen!" he cried, " it
MIS 14) had of me; but, really, when
1 saw the hoar break cover my Wild
got up. and I was quite unable to re
strain myself." At this moment a
\Mintzer, who had been previously
well conehed, came running up and
demantled payment for hiA property.
It was long before Nimrod 11":011
tertained the mess with his hunting
exploits."
_
Indian Idol% in lowa.
The Dubuipw„ Ttrii . "4 Says that at
the base of what is known As rapito
la Bluff, seven miles troll lAnsing,
there is :1,11, Indian Idol manufactured
Out Of the solid rock., which , has stood
-there, no one knows for how many
centuries, but which must soon Ise
removed to make room for the 00111-
ing railroad. At a little disitanco
the idol resembles a huge bear repo
sing upon its haunches. The string.,
and uncouth object is still held in the
utmost veneration by all Indians,
and the various bandS, as they pass
up and down the river, invariably
stop and endeavor to propttiate the
idol with liberal presents of tobacco,
strings of gaudy-colored beads,pieces
of dry buffalo tongue, etc. Thero
it 'sits, at the base of the Bluff, mute
and solemn, looking out with ex
pressionless eyes over the bosom of
the mighty river that murmurs at
its feet, never mourning, never speak
ing, like another sphynx. Thu
ground whereon the throne of the
idol reposes is wanted for the road
bed, and the silent, expressionless
god', - Ivhose brow has been bathed in
the morning sunlight of so many
centuries, must fall. But a short
distance from this is a smaller idol,
which had evidently been placed on
the side of the bluff, but by some
convulsion of nature was overturned
centuries ago and pitched into the
river. During high-water It is com
pletely covered, but in low-water
the head and part of the body :tr.'
distinctly visible.
De" "You seem to walk more erect
than usual„ my friend." "Yes, 11 .
have been straightened by dream
El
I
MO