i 4 - -9 1 ! si ' 'J " -S .- . N't ' ,V '. 3 .8 ::it t. : ill 1-1- FiMiv IIciiiin-r, T fi til. ISTi. i : Ii !, r! tl:i: liu is Ids I'li.-iniitMit f thiit t! V Tin-'. :p. l art! l.lLly ic-j erred, wife .--f II.ni. Simon '':iniei"n died ii 1 lurrislm e; !m Fi iti;iy last. Site was ov it seventy yo-i: s .f pqe atil was beloved wml houotcu ly all who knew her. rnruiy i.enevcis t.ii It wim'.il Ik.- ai;:li:isl s.-.c- t ;e jjanixat.ioii ;uit will ' 'i''ney, U l.e i .'. ii. ;ir.il . the aeeom li:"ts a ;roat mL-inf the oniitry. n'.l f : ir.er precedent t the fjovernment. SttucLlitiff the Iress. A MatJiematical Marvel. lU!J.sf, .1 1 ( In the Sei -.Moi.d.iy last (' nn.l mission fctlcd !v a vi ,,le Kti.'c the p :i-t ltltt lull :r'o:v t- ml i St itc, was de- ii.i v-. te of tlio I'niied t lie hill to en a hie rah ten ilory to f.:ni a lie o-pnimrtit pi ml the L :)io:' as a j f i! yens t .ToTfv f . ( ;.-. Ai a:i it li-is Won ap pointed A-v--':.;t".!U r"t'i:t l.-.:y of tatf in plaeeof.T. n.aivrofi. lie is a native :-f rhi!ah-Ij!iia, hut ever f i.n-e his ailinissioii to the har h is losi.h-d in New Yi ik i i ii pers in ii fi i- h in, it is s.i'i!, ination. of Secretary Tis!;, is IlltlchLetl for his li. Ho to Mll- Tin-: terms of j line and exehui fn .1 t- t!: man :;f ,e ) Mil sewing ire, and I'on- 'f the n tl;o lahor-sa vms; and nsi fal sold at a in xierale pi lee stents e lij marhini's hein .ilmnt to ex press having ref.ised an exters'on a(rnts, it n:ay he antieipated t'i:it near future t hesi machines wi'd he ;t li-y.f.iK-'-, th.e proprietur of the ':!: j i .!'.", lias alw::ys heen a :;:il liieiid ami siipjH'iter of cii. ' j i a nt. i'onner is wealthy and is the : owner of s mm of the inoi rcnia:kable a vtl! as fastest tioitinr liaises in s!ie coun try, t lie iri'st notahle of which is the world renowned "7V"' ."' Whenever (rant iias Iieretofore visited New York, Jiis friend I5.iiiiit was promptly m hand to jive him a glorious i ide in his light hnyjjy behind Dexter, or some other one of ids unrivalled horses. IJut llonner can not stand the third term programme, and in his paper of hist week expresses him self on that suhjeet as f..ih ms : Wit'mur lieii -.g partit'ckti !;. demo :stra ive in po.ities, this journal t.i r.-.i t.n.-n. Ciaiit tor 1 'i esiiii nt. II is now servin.it his see- nil r-rii). 'o President, lias cut served mere than two terms. (Jeorgi-! Wasliingtou, the I-'.t; Ikt it liis oioitry aiut its :irst ITl-s-iih-nr, was the tir.s! to s. t the example ot !. loin;,; even to he :i eai.nidate lor the third term. This voluntary relinquishment o! p.e.vt i has lit en regardeil hy many as lijt; erowuing glory of h.a um-t iiuistrious char- a--ler. dm A.! r--eh- ;,-.! I'g'it: term. ams, tlie seeond I'resident was :(!, and cons -ipn. nt iy served hut and yet amply rem u aerate the p'-opr;eto-s of the establishments where they are mau nfuciuird. In the Illinois Ilepnbliean State Cn:vcii ti :i, on Wednesday of last week, n resol tienwas er.rried unanimonvly tliieh :e iteratid the platform of IS72 in repaid to an eai Iy resumption of specie payment. This is diieet'y contrary to the views ex pressed by Senator J."gan in the I". S. Senate, and ah-o what was supposed to be the vie-.vi.- of the great maj iif- of the par ty in that. State. A resolution was also passed in opposition to the Temperance law in force in that State. j 'T-J.-t -s j v- - 'N last S.'.t-,.i(liy, in tlie Hons., of Kep. i ("etdat ivi at V.'asir.ngtoti. a vote was taken o:i the pav.-age of the supplementary ; civil rights bill, which had previously pass- ' d the Senate, :M.d t.mler the rul" of the House it wis defeated by a vole of II) yeas to 01 nays two-thirds not having v tel in the a iiirmat i ve. This bill was, the cherished project of the late Charles . Sr.mucr, and is a remnant of his unfinish ed business in that direction in the Seu r.te. It has been the subject of much i!is cufsim in Cong-ess for time years, as well as throughout the public press of the country, and especially so in the Southern . States, against hose coin moti schoolsvs trm it aimed a fatal blow, and thcreforo created intense excitement as well as thj most bitter opposition. It. did not even meet with any warm endorsement in the North, r.spt cia'.ly in the cities. We aie gvat if.ed that the question has been deli nitely settled so far as tlie prCM-nt Con- ', .1 homas .-'llvi-soii, our third President and author "t" t he I )e.!ai a! ion (,f lmbpen ileii. e, t 'liuwcd the example of Washni" t 'li. Ho .lid .lames Madi.-on, than whom no man acted a more iuijimtaiit part in the lorinai im aa;l esta! iisuriient of our Consti bum s .Mun roe. Vilams, like h:s father, was Pitio:. So ,tul ioloi t.iiney f.n Ii'tl on i y itiiee. t his hroujrhr us to the time of Andrew .laekfon. 'i tiu opposition to him was vi v vio.ur, tut i in; s-uppoi t of him was slid nniiv powerful. Mn had l-ecn a miili'arv man, and possessed an iron will. It hein to lie repoiitil, and soon l-c;i iu,-t;v eially h.-lieve.l, that le- would si-r.k a' tldr.l term. ISat the oid hero took an early o ea sion, in a message to Conr-'ss, to ds laim any sin h : n ten I n n, and ihus promjit'y to sihue:' what ho evidently regardeil as a Mainl.il. Van I'.uren was elected but once. Harrison an.) Taylor iiotii die.t soon after entering upon th.-ir r.-sp.-etive terms. Jh'r rnd lwlimore were m.ver t i'resideiiT, !ui saeeeedeit as V ic--I'res tin- toiuier to ILanisou, Ihj hitler to Tav lor. Jr ran it tin l':er-e was not so much iual.-d for re-elect ion. a,- Neither i a 1 1 a 1 1 . understood on IT press isca.en:ed. It v. a nt WnsMngtoii that ir tlie l.i'd bad j asseil bfth Houses, Ciaid was dutermined to veto it. in ine senate or the I luted State?, last Satin d.iy. the Committee on Fore Affairs repoited and j.assed the House joi it resoluli n to puroha-e, for tlio sittn cf v-TH the gold wat. h presented to La fayette by General Washington, and au thorizing the restoration thereof to the heirs of Lafayette. There is a most, si:: g'.iiar history connected with this watch, the details of which wc lead about a year ag. but. the main facts of which we have forgotten. ), i ocllection is that the -natch was presented by Washington to Lafayette during the American revolution, am! when Lafayette revisited this country in 1P"2t", still retaining and carrying ir. he cither lost. it. or it was -toleu from him, ji, Nashville, during his join ny tJno:ii f?,c Southwest. It is now. ami for years h:t ocen, by a singular and well irain ot circumstances, m t a pawnbroker in Louisville. manner of doubt about, it id nas engraven up vi it th- !i moivd names of Washington ai d Lafayette, just as they R-erc originally ordered to be placed there by George Washington. This action of 'Vmgrcss i a tit and honorable, tribute to the lnennry of Lafayette, whoso services in the war of thj Uevoluiion can never be forgotten by the Amoiiean people. Tin: administration of the atTairs of the District of Columbia tinder its Governor A. L. Shepherd, and hi associates-, has become so flagrantly and notoriously cr ii'pt, that Coiigrcs.--, at the .session just closed, aholhhrd u rilKl !in,st.t ni) acrau thoti7.ng tho Prrsident to appoint ommissionci s ft Lincoln was assassinated after entering noon his .xeeond t'-rm ; ami Johnson, w ho mii coded him, ha rely sijiteezed through, after i in pi-ai huir-n t, a sino- term. Thus we s.;c in tin- lonjr line of I're'dents there is no precedent to he found for even s mu h as an attempt to he elected a third t'-rm. To he sur.-, th-re is no provision in our written Constitution against a third term. I'.'U tli,. tiaditi'.n which limits the ohlee of I'resi.i-ut t. eight years has become so lived and sanctified in it.t minds of tlie people lor t!ie uniform example oj our K'.eait-st men that it poBSes.,eM a;'i the force of a i ousiituiional jrovjs;on. Anv ar'empt t dt part from if now woe !d 1,: looked upon w it h well -grounded su.-;uciou as t!i" first treaekerons step toward the overthrow of nnei-tv and the fouiuhition of W ' do not doubt t hat snej, wouid he me; t y a i-rushin this would not he all. The popular bation would h!a ken ami brand th o. Inlii v, ho sleeil. t seek to he summed by a leui."-,- '.en ,,. 0f power than tliat wha Ii Wn'sli- and .Kti'eis.ea and Madison aid :id .1 :i. t-.,iou lonnd suitieient fo till isure of their ambition. Ne repula - high th is it eaauor be san;iiced. was unquestionably one of the great f la's ef t h I: -volution, hut beneath ;uy am! infamy which cover him, s m ilitary g-iurs is lost to view. end of eiyht y. ars Cenerul (Irant tly walk out of the White house. ver pia. e himself outside of tie? .Vinern m pi re. a movement defeat. jut rt-pro- name Hilton Mi. -n roc the me: tion is . A ruoul e-t the obh even hi At the Will qllie or lr: wiil K.r the est' em of people. connected he possession of There is no it-it v. as it i Tiik following resolutions were adopted j at the convention of the Catholic State ! Temperance Association which was held j in Pittsburgh last week : I T;(niny That we have viov.l with ' alarm t he wide spread ir ttuene,; of intern- I peranee throughout the land, and that we I pledge ourselves, boih individuallv an. i col- ; le.-tivelv, to make use of :M fair and ieiti- J mate means to extripate it from our midst. ! AVsol-e''. That tllf CalhoHe elei-.re tlo-.e,,rV, I State are entitled to our lasting j for their increasing efforts in Z inper; .r-e, and we herehv extend j .!' i.isuiift ir. ai iUMi: ot imrsi. aio:i assem hied, and soiiei thanks of all who love vim C'Sen,-v vim, i , , .... . . i l.rsi,,' ri, l ;at tfoiipcr.Tnee i n ml.wtnri The Fenate has passed a bill which is Intended to intimidate the press of the conntiy. Tlie language of tlie bill is not calculated to an est tlie attention of the casual leader, much less to excite his fears. ' it simply provides that when a company. or individual, doing business in one State 'of the Union has an agent irt any other portion of he Union, service of a writ i-pou sneh agent shall be considered service upon such company or individual. This bill trrew out of the hostility of members of Congress to the newspapers. It was by means of tlie fearless press of tlie country that the monstrous iniquities perpetrated by Congress have been ex posed. IJnt f.n the publication of the facts relating to the Credit .Mobilier stock jobbers, the Sanborn contracts, the Wash ington King and tho salary-grabbers, the people might have remained in ignorance of luw they were being robbed. The , opportunities and facilities for plundering ; tlie people were diminished by reason of the exposure of these great fraudulent ; transact ions and members of Congress be i caine correspondingly incensed. If thev i brought libel suits against the editors at i the places where the journals were publish . etl, they knew that they were likely to lose ; them because the juries would be compost d ' of honest men selected from the bodies of ' the respective counties and the judges would be men of learning and probity. Hut not so if they could try these s,uits Itu : Washington. There, judges and juries are moulded according to tho notions of tlie Administration. They feel that they are dept talent upon the men who hold the reins of uovernnient and those who make the laws, for the bread they eat, the clothes they wear, the improvement which have enchaneed the value of their property, the trade which lines their pockets with green backs, and (he privileges and distintion which they have gained in the social ciicle. Hence, the author of words written, re flecting upon the character of Washing ton ofiieials, would of necessity, have to be punished, and that too, severely. The ' New York journalist who dared, therefore, . to publish an article in his journal, nar rating in plain words the facts about some stupendous and corrupt jol, would be summoned, through hi.s Washington agent, : to appear in a Washington court and an swer to the angry official in damages for ' src'i a publication. He might be continu ally harassed with suits until ho would naturally come to the conclusion that, ! lather than lose all the property lie owned, ! he must suppress the tiuth and allow crime to flourish in secret, the criminals to grow rich upon their plunder and pass in society as Christian statesmen. j Such was the reasoning- of the corrnnt gang which rules the now decay ihg Uepub lie an organization. If the bill became a is IJu- law editors must take a tremendous respon- siouuy upon i neir .siiou uiers in exposing crime, or deprive the people of the facts which point Oie way to the condemnation of unworthy public servants. It was by a free press that Tveedism received its dea'h-blow in New York City. It w as by a free press that the San Domin go job was branded with the infamy that caused a halt in the project of annexation. It was by a free press that the Christian statesmen whose hands were suuiciied with Credit Mobilier stock werasinojed out for popular reprobation. It was by a free press that the' Sanborn-Iaynesawyer-iiichardson exposures were made which drove an incompetent Secretary from his post and repealed the infamous moiety bill. It was by a free press that Shepherd and his leprous crew were hdd tip to tint pub lic gar.e as plunderers to the extent of twenty million dollars and the form of government in tlie District of Columbia, devised for this purpose, was abolished. Can the people afford to allow the press to be shackled ! A horrid gangrene is eat i itr away the llesh from the body politic. Shall it goon unchecked and no alarm of danger be sounded ? Corruption is here, there, every where throughout the nation. And it now seeks to shelter itself, so that it may pursue its wot k unmolested, behind such aihit,iry enactments as that upon which we aio now commenting. If tlie people wish to know the truth, so that they may act upon it as seems to them the best for their ow n interests, let them keep the public journals independent. Whilst they guard tlie citizens against the licentious ness of the press, let them see to it that its AS f TAMED Missouri I BOY KKCRONIiH. AS A READY The Heroine of Mill Hirer. yam atitl rolitival Items. On last 'eet,l dellt, A correspondent of the St. Louis Jle fublican, writing from Tabo, Mo., says : We have quite a marvel of a man in our community, P. natural mathematician. His name is Kenben Field . Having heard of him frequently through farmers and others, who got him to do their figur ing, I determined a short time ago to make him a visit, and to ascertain for my- ; self if the stories told of him were true. ! I am free to confess that at lirst I was (ul- ! Iy as incredulous as many readers of this ' paragraph will be ; in fact, would not 1 have believed statements made concern- I in him had not the authority been mi- ! disputably good. Proceeding to Fayette- ' vide, tlie small village in which he lives, j I inquired for "Keith," and was told that j he was in town, and was shown bis resi- i deuce, toward which I made my way. ' When nearly there J met a young man, j apparently about twenty-five years of age, ' walking a little lame, and seeming to be leisurely and vacantly gazing about, and ' accosted him with: 'DoesKeubcn Fields live in that house yonder?" '-Yes, sir.", "Well, I've heard that Keub was a great calculator, and I must go and see him." j and I started forward, when he stopped ! me with "I'm him." "Well, Keub,' j said I, "I have a few questions I would : like to havo you answer, anil will make it worth your while to do so." Gazing ! around, he answered : "That's all right.",) and remarked that he could "count" any- thing he could understand. I may here remark that he cannot read or write a let ter or figure ; he said if lie could he would : lose his gift. He cannot explain any- 1 thing, but says he has a numeration table away on "beyond the books." He re- ; marked : "You commence at the bottom and work up I commence at the top anil work down ; It is easier falling out of a I tree than climbing one.' He frequently j observes : "If 1 could read and write, ; I shouldn't know any more than you ; do." It is saitl he never makes mistakes, i Of all the questions I gave him, he made ! but one, and hu corrected that on recount- ! . ir'S- ! j I he following are Rome of the questions ' ' asked him : If, to the time past noon, j ' there be addetl its J,, 1-3 and 2-0, the sum ; w ill lui equal to l-( of the time x midnight, ; what is the hour? Divide $11.50 between ; : t vo jiersons so that one shall have oc. ! more than the other. A tree 1I3U feet long fell and was broken into two pieces, two thirds of the longer piece equals three quarters of the length of each piece ? What I is the interest of 1 cent for one day at G ; per cent. pe- annum. iVhat is the exact j length of one side of a square acre? "We want a new Hemiade. The heroine : or, as Charles Lamb would have mildly j corrected us, the sheroine is a hen who ; I made herself famous in the Mill Iviver flood. ' She has put out of joint to employ the t slang of the nursery the noses of two per- : J sons hitherto famous, Archimedes and tho lien who insisted on laying her daily egg ; on the best lied in Mr. Ijeccher's farm- , 1 house. Uveiybody has heard how Archimedes- sat on a brood of his mathematical conundrums in the very midst of the burly- ; ' burly of the Syracuse siege, and how the ' ; hatch and disclose of his abstraction did I prove of some danger to him in the shape of a cracked crown. We would repeat tlie story of Mr. Beeclier's hen, if the poet- j preacher had not already told it in bis own ; inimitably delightful way. We believe it originally en nit: in as an episode in a scr- mon of his "On thePersoveranceof Saints." Hut our Mill lier hen set a larger exam- ' pie than did this tempestuous creature, and as nom- These questions were all correctly answer ed, hi answer to the last being, "It can't be told." I then said : "Rcub, I hear that you can tell what day of the week any given date was, or will be ; is that so?" "Yes, sir." "What was July 1, 1SGS ?" ""Wed nesday," "Correct." "What was the 2iM of January, 1845?" "Sunday." "What day will the 4th of July come on this ! year?" Saturday." "New Years?") "Friday." "All right." "I have also heard, lieub, that you can tell the hour at ' any time of tlay or night. Is that so?" i 'Yes, fair." "What time is it now ?" "It' is 17 minutes past 2 o'clock, railway time j sun time is 13 minutes slower." We j walked around town, and he gave nie the hour several times, correctly each j time, within two or three minutes. Sev eral times he called on citizens of the place to attest the truth of bis statements, which they did. One of tlie leading citizens of the place told me he had tried "Keub" on the time question on both clear and cloudy days, and also on dark nights, and he always gave the correct time. Keuben asked the gentleman we were talking with to write down a column of figures, which he did ; they were then read to him, thir teen numbers, two figures in each num ber, and he at once gavo their sum, and could n; peat the numbers in the order in which they were writcn, cither forwaid or backward. The tax collector got Keuben to look over his work last fall, and Keuben taid that he could remember the numbers in the columns and the sum vet. County clerks have ser.t from Kansas for him to help straighen their their books in a nobler way. We know few details of her history. Kiddy, wc suppose, was her name, and America her nation ; Williams burg was her dwelling-place, and as the sequel will show, presence of mind washer salvation. She had laid seventeen eggs in a barrel, and having done her level best in that line, she was setting on them when the mill-dam burst. In spite of her teeth, the Hood bore her along with the awful wreck with houses and barns, trees and fences, and the bodies of men and beasts but this steadfast creature never stirred. She knew that Massachusetts expected j every hen to do her duty. She was clear ; grit. So long as her barrel kept out water she would be hanged if she would drown. No one of her sex ever had such confidence in hoops. "Sink or swim," she cried, : "survive or perish, I don" t give up the ship." j What outsiders were doing was none of her business. She was too busy keeping ; the beams out of her own eye to look after ; the motes in the eyes of other people. What j thoughts may have passed through her ! mind ! Perhaps she whistled as she went, ; for want of thought. "Who knows ? How j her mother's heart must have trembled ! ; "What," she cried, "must I lose all my j pretty chickens by that dam?" If she j could have sung, no doubt she would have clucked to herself some ancient lay. Until i the barrel was stove she would not deny : herself the comfort of a stave, "(iive me j but v. hat that barrel-hoop bound; Take'all j the rest the sun goes round." Or somc I thing else appropriate. Our hen was car j lied five miles, and at length the Fates, i snubbed and disappointed, 'dumped the : barrel ashore and left it high and dry. j "What did the hen do ? Did she jump out, I and crow and cackle over her ride like a i man ? Did she scratch off a letter to Bar ; iram offering to make a show of herself? j No, she just -went on minding hr own ' business, and in due time hatched out j every one of her seventeen eggs. Oh fowl most fair ! How meekly didst thou bear ; thy yoke ! Many hens have clone excel lently, but thou excellest them all. A Black Sampson-. There Is a negro Sampson named Nelson de Lisle in Nev Orleans. He is a horse dealer by profes sion, and the trick of his trade is to take possession of horses in an unauthorized manner. He was denominated a horse thief before a court in New Orleans in lSG'J, and sent, to the State prison, where he stay ed only six days of the five years awarded him. lie broke jail by snapping iron bars as if they had been pine sticks, and carry ing the outer gate, and fled and hid. Tho police have been on the lookout for him, and afraid they would find him. The other day two or three of them got hold of him, but he got loose atid laid them out on the pavement with one blow each of his mighty arm. De Lisle then ran, and the cry of "stop thief' was raised, and a gathering crowd surged in pursuit. A policeman fired three shota at him w ithout any appar ent effect, but he was at length brought to a halt by running as it were in a crowd of about a thousand men that had collected about him, both before and behind, in hi.s liight. The friction of such a mass wastoo A forlorn hope That Grant may be of some use a:t private citizen. A maiiut disaster in the Sea of Mar mosa resnlied in the loss of 3'JU lives. The old fashioned woman's crusade ' A boy's head aud a fine-toothed comb. A dairy company at Knhway, N. .7., - turns out about a ton of suet butter daily. Sheboygan has thice young ladies who claim In have refused SartOiis when . he Wo a firmer there. 'io ladle of Pennsylvania are doing ' liioto inn ards raising funds for the Centcn- nial exposition than the men. There is an old maid in Lowell, Mass., ; who shows the documents to prove that ' she has refused over forty oilers of r.ip.r . i i;ge. Two pills have gone into the ten hide business in Sun Fiaucisco, and are making money. Neither of them is over ' seventeen. The Peoria -woman who ".ranted to throw herself into her husband's Rrave. a few months ago, has just married a lightning-rod man. i Chester is the oldest town in Pennsyl vania. Tho title of its town lots extend back through the ownership of Europeans and their descendants to H!4"S. Of the Pennsylvania delegation in the house only four members, Messrs. Magee and Storm, democrats, and Mcssis. Sco field and Townsend, i epublicans, voted against the currency bill. Henry Gill shot and killed Mortimer Sullivan at a saloon, corner of Greenwich and Murray streets, New York, on Friday last. Gill was arrested after attempting to : shoot Police Officer Sheldon. j Kitty Camp, of Northbrook, Chester ; county, keeps a home for disabled and va grant cats. All sizes, sexes and colors of felines are welcomed aud cared for, with out money and w ithout price. 1 In Omaha a baby ghost is astonishing the people. In a certain house every other night a baby is heard to cry anil a cradle to rock, though the family is baby less. j Every other night just at twelve o'clcck. i Duchess of Oneida, a two-year old heifer, purchased b' W. .1. Alexander, at ! the New York Mills sale last Fall forlt -1 000, died on the Alexander farm, AVood- , ford county, N. l., lately, of pneumonia, j There is a goose of a hen in Spring- field, Ohio, who laid her eggs up in an old ' apple tree, and when la.sl beard from was ; sitting on a bough, not comprehending that her eggs went to grass as fast as she , laid them. A singular coincidence was noted re cently in a church at New buryport, Mass. The pastor called for 40 for a specific ob ject, and when the collection was counted it was found that precisely that sum had boen contributed. Says a broken-hearted Pennsylvania farmer: "If the new constitution had had a clause inserted outlawing sewing machine and lightning-rod men it wouhl have been carried by a majority that would have been unanimous." A band of crusaders, in San Francisco, while standing on the sidewalk, outside a saloon, broke through and fell a distance of ten feet intothe mud below. They were not hurt, but, after extricating themselves the meeting adjourned abinptly. A young fellow living near Howling Green, Missouri, got into a tight place the other day by marrying a'girl not yet thir teen years old. The girl's father and brothers tailed and feathered him and then rode him on a rail out of the country. Fifteen jiersons were killed outright and some two hundred others were more or less injured, many of them fatally, by the giving away of the Central Kaptist church. Syracuse, N. Y.. during tlie pro gress of a strawberry festival on Tuesday night last. At Eureka. Nevada, a curious suit for the possession of a child has been going on between two women. b?th claiming t,T be its mother. The child is perfectly white, while one of the claimants isa full-hoooded negress. and yet the case has lasted for some time. Clark Evans, who recently murdered Mr. Holbact, in Green count v. Til v.--c Sllhil iv . "u"ul tweivc person asspi estei n T,.t, i"K'i'o n v. To wit 11. Ihitler. late ana tieueral t t.v.,. "'athi,.: l. ' t , ' U," ' onsvl i I eene l . ,1 1 .1 ' ' IK cu, :iiii i ne sec tlie pimc.j als, ui. proceed further i,i t too tlark f..r ban t . duel will t take . .Michael Met i wtntietli st from di ink. ' kicked l ; rbt reei I, ice. o tin. I'fr it . t. i; 1. 1. 1. .!!;n.,... Sf;,- , . 11 ;"ff ;. '""'"fll.se, ! ,';-n : :1 , i - tl.lecti,,.,. i'i tl.M ... re.pa-.t. 0... v, py oi .tCe lie ;, a fii : I Hi. IV 1 lis , lie :t n,i attempted to sta': !, and a tei ribie s j finally attempti ! f,, t when MeCaithy s( i;.( ; She fell ir.to the u ,! neath. and .ci scanting. At the h she could not live. I A story of a recent (p ator Carpenter is g,,in;, t isning i.i enjoy a j,,k the document roi.in'f,,, ; t ideation bill." tellin"' ! ions to await the ra-e' jus oiscomtiture. At tl ator 1 ipton. who was ii,A . , , . I j'-'e mane li: ; sent back with a c I n. : oill. 1 lie smile over tin Sennfrtr w-i rr 1... .1 - '" " K" tsllV o-;e I A century plant is M. j tor, of Hagcrstowii. I,,,;. ' old, very little bent, hns nair, several well preserved t. , uMiiauic, appetite rroed only two meals a day. l!t . power of locomotion (-,,, in his easy chair, bv a w i tooacco ii-oni morning u'A eve habit of mast icatin- he a,' ;; , was ninety vcais ,,:,. st.K.0 V' has failed vei fist for f.wa-v j In the l'.va-isviile b..) .;, : a tragic story. A few Kyle, having pone a s! ; the house to wash, took ianr, wnn tier, and left t' A rattlesnake fastened ; child's wrist, and bi'... ' Hurrying home, with" 1 arms, she found the i in a tubof water. Her , husband, w ho wa at w falling to the giouud. killed. : A Floienre journal sav tli- p ' been presented with a ..f ,,. sent from the United S:.,:V t , t'V j Ledochowski of iV.-r-n. Ti,,. ',- ; 111 replying. spoUe tn.nt I ca, and said : The Fn:; countiy where I am rea'.iv j' (I. tarn. 0 " t l',K "tie (;, 's L.i.v U-V.V ae if-..; i.er (;,.; "1 !;. e n .1 re i'i;,i:.v a'( . : much for him. and he saw th b'vinrr wnll close around him. lie had no jaw-bone of ta"ien from jail in Carrollton, "at 2 o'clock an ass, or any modern weapon to wield or " ."' -1 '"""""r. "i a large moo of dis ne mignt nave waded through that thous- Sr.lrf I' - w nueity is preserved. llunnhersburg Valley sale firm in Kansas City heard of him and sent for him to do some invoicing. He i told them ha could do the work of ten men in "making computations. They told him if he could he should have the pay of ten men. He mounted a high stool with the out til- gratitmb ha! f of t to them in coat-, t!)e;n ttie . ves, ; for anil is ('Vent -1 . 1 try ., , , .. .. . . . , , ,,, ln lo inry u,u iransn.irre.t to tlie committee on Fh-ifr's Vtfwt nct f- .U.d stn-. 1. nt a!s to lie nation ?.! hank nor a,i , aiAl.ltlts VENOFANCK. A most ter- gard all edorts that n.-int to the era, !e:,i ! troller of tl, c.rr,,;.,. li i , 'IV 'r Z?lu.' i ri,'le vengeance was indicted on a would of this vice ;is bet-inninrr ;,, !, i.ii,-;,l.,.a ! arvlact v,,i .1' .. be libertine ill Greeil Hav. Wisennsin nn ,. c ., n , i.t ...t , - i-i ,11,1V lur iiri-Mtiii nm provides 'Oi. 1 A , - , . ' and in t.ie fatudy, and thusdifbised through- i tor 'he redistribution of .?r,r,,0( 10,01 )0 instead I "atu,'d-"tv-. A deaf and dumb daughter of ' e.-eoiMiiry. inoti,fr words, let eieh 1 01 s2."..U0!),o0. The bill also di Iters from th "vlu ",n,llll 01 Urcen ISay, on her return , , e, i inmseir, and ail will ! corrected, yo-'i''f.', That we wholly and entirely separate temperance and politics and shall lalior assiduously to hinder tho one from iu- FoT.T.owiNo is and abstract of the new currency bill reported by the conference committee, which passed the Senate on Friday ami the House on Saturday, and has since received the endorsement of the President: Tlie first five Sections of th bill reported are nearly identical with th bill reported by the previous conference committee. The provisions in section seven of that bill, lim iting The amount of leual tender nro JNtSi'.OOU.OOO, is retained. The three other sections ot the bill are almost identical with the bill transmitted to the committee on banking and currency by Mr Knox, the eou trobernt the currency, on the :$d of Febru ary iar, except, that the present bill nrovides clerks around him, and kept them giving tne nam tier ot articles, price of each, aud taking down his answers. They gave him 4o for his day's work. A firm in Fayetteville selling out took an invoice of ; their goods. Keub was sick at the time, i but they found him out and seut for him ; ! he found a mistake of $300 and men and been free. It took twelve muscular white Americans to take him to A whole- ! flie station house, as he kept up a skirmish ing ngut an tne way. lie was put in the stocks, and it was found that a pistol ball had passed through his thigh, and a club had indented his forehead over the eye. His vitals, which were covered with a heavy coating of upper leather, were un harmed. The authorities are thinking of putting De Lisle to performing feats of strength for their amusement, as the Phil istines did Sampson of old. He is not of exaggerated size, being a little over medi um size, but his mould is Herculean and his endnrance is equal to that of a ateam engitie of twenty horse power. fringin. The res n p"n 1 tio me other. s rcre ur.animoiiily adopted. or its Monday Grant nominated as these oo.ssioiiers i ins . same man S hc-.t 1 ost master General D and Henrv J three On Coni ne rd, ex- ennison, ,,(" Ohio. Hlow, c.r-member of Con gress iiom Missouri. Koth D i.low are rentletr.cn of hi 'h rdinmMn- -----r,---"---.inl ndmiiied integrity, but Shepherd, who is an intimate personal fu'eml of Grant, is a man after the style of William M. Tweed, who robbed Hie people of New York of millions of dollars, just as Shepherd has plundered tho people of the District of Columbia. The joint committee of Con gress fully investigattd (he charges against hint and were so well satisfied of his guilt that they unanimously recommended the abolition of the government of which ho w-.m the corrupt head. And now, under ' Ihe new ai rangement, Grant insults Con gress and tho tax-payers of the District by appointing this man Shepherd to again take a pan i the management of its af fairs. We regard his nomination as a most wanton and inexcusable outrage. P. S. After a two hom-,' debate the Senate rtjfted Shepherd's nomination by a vote, of HO to G. This is a most terrible rebuke to Grant, but it was richly de served. Ex-Senator A. O. Cattell, of New Jersey, was then nominated and confirmed. i its statement that a complete recon ciliation has taken place between the President and Carl Schurz, through the intervention of Senator Jones, of Nevada, is enlirtly without foundation. Senator Jones says he has no knowledge of any such attempted reconciliation. It is there fore like the reported settlement of all burner personal and political difficulties previous conferenc bill in striking n I home for a vacation from tli Tlonf ?n,l of the bill referring to the retirement of leijal ! 1)umb Asylum at Delavan, was approached "mh er nores as national hank notes are is-I on tho train by a traveling salesman of ' tytiiiipiioii 1. 1 nanonai t.ank jewelry named Howe, who made himself nnnreperir1' led States bonds at any agreeable, and subsequently addressed her Tii l.iii r .I , - ' a letter making improper proposals. The lXyj.?to thr "-"len.pt.on of i letter fell into The hands of the fat her, i Tna Grakge axd tiie Cucrctt. A Milwaukee (Wis.) correspondent of the N. Y. World says that the Koman Catholic Church has at last taken action in the mat ter of its members belonging to theOrder of the Patrons of Husbandry, several Cath olics who had ioined the Fox Lakn Rra era having been notified by the Bishop that in : 1 a ii - . . . . . amounts of 31,000, and at the counte'rs of I f P VJ PI , CUt ln P'aCe tlna dauRh fi. vioiiifj to jiowe s room at tne rieau banks upon presentation, but abolishes the present system of redemption agencies in : the redemption of national bank notes in sums less than 1,000, can onlv take place ; at the counter of the hank, while by the i present. law mutilated or other notes may be ! redeemed in any amounts at the redemption I agencies in the different cities. The present bill releases the reserve re- 1 umreti to ne Held on account of circulation mont House, and locking the door behind him, so that there should be no escape, he administered to him a most tremendous thrashing. Howe first drew a pistol, but this the angryfather seized and threw away. He then jumped on the wretch and pound ed him, threw him'down, knocked, kicked and ruing lmn around in the most terriblo Si iiimn Cameron and John W. ; i he average amount of cash reserve renuir- 1 uuwu strewed carpet, bed ed to lie held for circulation by national aml walls, and I Iowe was so badly punished ip t- , , i b:lllk-t is estimated to be aliour S30 000 000 1 Ulat lfc was at ,lrst doubtful if he could re- 1 orney. I f Schurz and Grant can come , h:t the national banks on the 1st of May' last ' cover. He is, however, under the care of logetiieron inendly political terms after , ,n ftx'5'9 ot cash reserve on circulation physicians, in a way of recovery. Mr. what has taken place in ConeTe.s during . ll"1c!si, a'MJl"- S-i,000 ,000 over the pres- Smith is receiving the congratulations of p ii k iti ii i ri'tnawre r A nrui i - . r. : . " v uv 'i iv j.i rati guised men. and hanjrtMl to a tree near the I outskirts of the tow n. None of the lvnch , ers were recognized. i The largest locomotive in the world is ; tho "Pennsylvania." on the Philadelphia and Heading railroad. The diameter of the cylinder is twenty inches; the stroke twenty-six inches ; the number of driving wheels twelve ; the diameter of the drivers four feet ; the weight of the engine alone sixty tor.s. A patent medicine and steel pen ven der, named Pearce, undertook to make a balloon ascension at Aller.town on Friday, w ithout bar or basket. He rose f.f fet dangled around the chimney tops until he i on tl,e e"''gh river slipped from the ropes and fell, b.-nl-inrr one thought of sine! both legs and it is supposed injuring him self fatally. b Of the thirty-seven States in the Union eighteen are under Democratic- and eigh teen under Republican administrations Arkansas being neutral ground. Five Ter ritories are Democratic and three IJepuli lican. And yet tho Had pretend to think they have seen the funetal procession of the Democratic party ! i wo ,ew riaven fishermen rcontw . - . . : v . - . . oi tjroverninent. i atn ;i. J European Governments. : trol my acts, w l.crcas ! r,,-. lie documents ttithe l uit. fear of opposition on tl.e ermeut." j An act of true her..: performeilby Geoi ge Kiver. Wliile be was !vi,i-" i . cane deck in handi-n:N. f .. , i ceny, a little girl te!! f:...:, r ., boat into Goose lhi:.:,i );. meiliately sprang o-( : '. .-. i . gill, and after several ,v. : manacled hands, sm , -J, ., ,; child until a boat came t!.. The act was witt-.e--. .; ! -r sengeis, who signed a honor for the noble n It is estimated that :'.-t -road ties in present i;-r ... States is l.y.t.tMHi.n-i i. a c-r the acre is alvue r.'ie.n- ,i--. r fore, has reip.iiiiii the in: - acres of well-timbciid hoi.i i sujiply. Haihoad ties list .i'-i 3o,ooo,000 ties a,o 1VI n ;- ; pairs, taking thetin.bei f. -;ii ' The manufacture of io',;i' .. of the entire yield of i'-.v"' full Supply of .": II 1.1 li H i ,...;.-. !:. , Our railroads aie t 1 :t e -z tt. the rate of l.tMo.ooo a'c:es 1 tie act 01 t oii'-i sions, which has just be President's signature. 1 crease of the pensions ors who had been totri'".r jiersons w ho are now t r!,;'.ii under existing laws. a:.d v.-'i-d er an arm at or ab ve t':e f '" at or above the knee. sL.i"'. hi' second class and shall : i ;-' dollars jer month, p: m , 1 cial limbs or commutation '' furnished to such pet sons .-.s tied to jiensions under t!a a takes ellect after June !:'i. i' "ery few j-rrsons. sa oazette. Know that tne 1 i' - mense anthracite iron rr.'.d:- ; David Thomas, the invent r furnace, is the oldest citiea -s ,f s.. ..e l'.efi. Tli.' ::t s;t CaZl iJl : V?e" ' 'or a numbed taS to 1 11 contained several American ro1d nnrl anu 10 in in surer co-.ns, and a roll nf bant- .,1: 1 lhia, lialtiniore. I'lttsinn Catholics to take part in organizations of a secret character. As a natural conse quence many members have leftthe grange and as it ,'is understood that similar action will be taken by the other prelates in the Northwest, the effect will be a considerable loss of strength to the order. Archbishop Alemanv. of San Fr.in referred the question "home to the Pojie at it w the last three years, then oil and water j ennison and t"a" mix. and that is simply impossible. i meic is a guT. wido and impassable, in political affairs between Gen. Grant and his corrupt administration and Carl Schurz, the able and incorruptible Senator from Missouri . In th ic United States Senate rt iho 1 1 f l inst.. Senator I hurman said : "If the past-, of ii,.- Kill would st.v, dis cussion on the enrr-iiey ipiestion and make people stop talking abo u- what, kind of mon ey they were going to havo, and g. to work and earn it, it would ilogomt; hnt I do not think if wouid have that-effect." Tliis language, tho money editor of the, New York Irnii'l ays, "embodies a vol ume of truth that needs no furl her consid eration. It strike's the key-note ofevety possiblu real and jmu manent improvement in our luesent financial, commercial aud i indnsiiial condition. 'Go to work and earn.' ! It is I he w hole thought in a nutshell. In ' other words, wc must produce more than we expend. It is the solution of the prob lem the true and only way out of our ' troubles. The President ami Congress can i do but little good." mated that, even with fh repe! of this pro- - ".ion, ine i.anlc, Iu tlie a-regatS, witi oon- " excess neyond its reonire- 1 meats, so that the total nnimin(. f ' , released by the operation of the bill will probably not exceed 315,000,000. The amount of national bank notea in cir culation nf banks which are iu liquidation and which have closed business is more than S.-..000,000. The bill provides for tl, mg and return of these notes tothe treasury for redemption, and it is estimated that, in addition to this amount, not more than Si" -000,000 will need to lie withdrawn from the ew Lngland states dnring the present year lor the pnrjiose of supplying applications from the west and south. Of the circulation to be withdrawn, about 32,000,000 will be 000 n ,,anks in New York, and 36,000,- oon from banks in Baltimore, aud the bal ance from New England. the whole city. Toothactik proceeds from ague in the of CP',"?rn,j"Z lon the exposed nerve f i S- ,d t,oth- Hub " gum thor ngniy with the finger, wet with Joh niton ,,; fl y 'in'"t, heat the face well, and la,, flannel wet with the liniment on the face, also put a little of the liniment into the cav ity of the tooth on cotton Covr.p.r.ss finally adjourned on Tuesday last at f r. m. -Ortwein the murderer of the TIamnett family, was trtetl in the Pittsburgh courts ... v t.ttw i,unijf ui murder the first degree. in Two fatal accidents occurred at iler tlljr Tydvil, in Wales, a few days since. Four raeil employed at tho Cyfartha iron works met with a tJrcacIA:! death by the bursting of the breast of a funice wit.'dn a few feet of where they were standing. Two were enveloped in the dreadful hot blast and gas from the molten metal, and were literally charred to a cinder instan taneously, their remains having to be raked out. Two others who were near at the time were fearfully burned, and have since died. In the same works, a few hours af terward, an explosion of dynamite occur .. .1 . . t line preparations were being made red. to blow out a furnace, under the direction of Mr. Urquhart, an explosion from some unaccountable cause suddenly occurred. One man was blown to atoms. Mr. Urqu hait was fatally injured, dying soon after the occurrence, and several men are suffer ing from severo injuries. some months since, but no rejdy has as yet been received or published. In Ohio and other States Catholics have generally been warned not to join the grange so long as its secret features were retained. In the i 01 inwest there would seem to have been considerable disinclination on the part of their ecclesiastical superiors to forbid Cath olics to join the Order till they were com pelled to do so by recent events. Amono these may be cited the circulation of a false report that the Pope had permitted the Catholics of Minnesota to join the Order so long as its principles and praoticesdid not prove inconsistent with their religious du ties, and the recent open participation of granges in Indiana, Illinois, and other States, in politics. mated to be worth 1.000. There WPr j marks sufficiently legible by which its for mer owner coma -jo identified. The Hoston r.tst is authority for the statement that a boy in Athol, "Mass., is B.nuu.iny i-Himg nimseii up. He has been 1111 sucn fatal persistency darino- the i- in the large cities. Mr. perimontinjr, but with. found the merits of the If! ' v I was iu "Wales, in IS'?, and i furnace, thus erected. l:is s; -u: ' I anthracite iron trade of IV: in 1S!), Mr. TIi.uiiiis c.iv.o y ! Chunk to erect furnaces fcr tl-c I Coal and Navigation (Vr.ip" settled there, and built f ; : n- gaged in trade, and now ate:-' :T men in the c .1. rt- ' as active as a man and to think nothing of v;:'i -' : er if they fancy takes him. Shaking hands across the bloody chasm means something in Golden City, Colorado. A military company has been organized there consistrnsr entirely of sol diers of the Federal and Confederate ar mies. The captaincy has been given to a Colorado Union ex-officer, the first lieuten ancy to a rebel, and the second lietiteuaucy to a Maine man. Shad. One day, ihs early part of this week, an immense school of shad were noticed opposite Xew Cumberland, a few miles below this point, making their way up the nver. The shoal was large enough to create a great wave, and the shad re cently caught at McCormick's Island are supposed to be from this same shoal, that were seeking places in the clear, fresh water for spawning. These shad num bering, it is supposed, at least two or three thousand, are supposed to be the legiti mate results of the fish ways or ladders at Columbia dam, erected by the Fish Commissioners under the directions of w 7, . -nxner and Manager, Col. Worrall, of this city. -Harrisburg Even- 'if -'- -' 1 Lty, nnIH.lBy'5tJenu freluent"y gets out of order th.UK, -at once re&ulted, else need J'T i,e8 2,U en.Sue ; when Phic ! thti . Uke aron t Purgative nils ; nJJJt a 8afe' wholesome, and natural . four years of his life , - x v in t 1 i I tllf hngei-s of Ixith hands to raw and bleeding t stumps, while of the thumb of the left j hand nothing whatever remains. Paper Hour barrels am ,,.t Iowa. They are said to be air-tight and water-proof, to weigh much less than the ordinary wooden barrels, and to be able to stand more rough usage. One of the man ufacturers jredicts that in five years every barrel of western flour will be sent east in ban-els mado from the straw the wheat grew on. The recent hailstorm in Clayton coun ty, Georgia, did much damage. The shin gles and boards on the house-tops were split by the hailstones, the crops were de molished, and an immense amount of tim ber and fencing were blown down. The average depth of the hailstone r-,a ',t twelve inches. The hailstones were n-en. erally about tlie ize of guiuea fowls' eggs. The Troy Times tells the story of a boy thirteen years old, Lewis Smodell byname, who, a week ago, saved one of bis little sisters from drowning, and a few days later saved his two other little sisters. Refer ring to the latter he says : "I don't know how I did manage. They were almost gone when I reached them, and this time I bad no help, but I had to get them ashore, and I did just in time." The eldest son and heir of lord Tetre has renounced the brilliant jrosition to which he was born and the wealth and honors of his birthright, and was ordained, a Jesuit priest in the church of that order iu iarra street. He is in his twenty seventh year. This makes the second lieir toa British peerage who is now a Jesuit priest, the other one bein the brother and heir of Wd Arundel of War dour. Lord Petre has estates which yield a revenue of f'Vi.non a Venr I tvtoticf: to tax-pa yj-'i j accordance wit li a:i A''";';' ' Assemblr of this ('..tiiiii --oo-1 '- '" Sth day ir April. A. I'. ""7--'. ! leetion of taxos in the vnn'y 1 if hereby or: von t th t.ix ):;-' il-.strii'ts"n:une.i he..w. 1 l:-e ' ' '' ' : . in nrenr.l.-m-o with the --.,:: ' will atten.l at the .!:u-es .! !.-! ' ' - . and Township el'Vti-.n. en '! : -ted .lays, fer tlie jmrji -' ': r i'oor, :111a s.tate tni I--' Fort'mvle town.-ln!'. :. -" Fur Wilni.iru In-r-.f-i!.. 1 1 ., '..';. Ver Suinmerlni 1 ti.-i:.-.-r- '. . For Wasfiinirt-n n w:.-i. 1 ' " ; For Summit villi- -.r---i-j " "; ' ' , , , For t rallit in ..ir.'ii-; !- ! .a. Fer i aliit i in li'iM'-.'i ". ' :' '." : ' For Klen-:.iirir l.;viij!i. r da v, July 'Jl'f h. ..r..n-l For FlM-nshur: July sath. For t'ambria town-hip. For Minister townsti-p. !"! For Jackson to n.-lup. 1 ,: " For ltlaekliok timu-li-t;. " ""; For Lnretfo tuireiii; !i. ' For Allegheny t.in-li !' ' 1 . Fort 'hesi Siirinu'i heirmr" F.r I'ter.r-iil.l t e r - !l : I '. ForAVhite town.-lnp. xv '' For Chest t. ntiii. Ilmr guft 13th an. I Hth. V..r I '.irn.l IlilWn bor.-'U''- r,.r Cnrrnll liUCl'l: !'. For Burr township, 'i'" . ,; ForSusttui'luiiina t ;'-, 1 "" . 93" Ami. in avor.l.in.-e tvr.h -of said Act, upon all t:l . r before the 1st ,lay ! ; i ',,., de.luotion of Fivk l'r-: 1 XI " ... .. . . ... i ... .,'1 ie:l :i: l I '1 fill- :- " will be n.l.li-.i to all le hands of a l-mist-i e -Ebonsbursr, Ta.. June 1 . - . - 1 V J l'1 ,-lMSTF. i tsT4 Itelfrl ej .TUXIAr Jnlinnn Street, This well kmwn Hull-hH.i n.i- J by the unuersii.-ue.l. ,.ia, h - i eVperiPiire iu keepnn. a . .. .;,? i 1 fullv solicits -hep.itr.m: y SPECIAL ATTENTION TO TRANS. : , ArramentiH W i can be turnislied nb n--'- riK-f Tt BUS -1.50 FF.R . Brdrn, tk by th. J' J- "f Bo! fon!, Juno 5, 1S74.-5"1- I : c tj t ! tv i rf J : tho . ' f..l I ; ji.-id : t'.f 1 : ,-! Yt I i w :,ri-Mi i,oi wi::a t e-t f-,-1 1.. krt c ris If tl: . lit rvtr i LO Jlere, . I.a j.-.nr. V1 ; YVr fT 1 iti ; Tb: !:l-f" .Ill.: ti ,1'unr t lk- li : A . I;. lire is. bsf. : -It is ,! lie 4 four1-- -v:;- br .3 ,.t-s,-r j-I'r. V -'. fo-' ST-'-' ;-';;:: .-..! .1. - rrf -- Neii! l.u f 'l i '--. -Ti.e t e A yo :tti tin. 1 s r! ip. -The e V -ky. w C fv. ; V. i.:r. -In the r. -l,e , ".:li 111 n R- lie M. ;... t ma. -h ..r 1 1 1 ni'h. r . -A svtT f i ii 1 i ' x -Ire ( II ff-.M 1 H.-ivi:: Hr'-;ir.( t - on- sti; W - t-i l:i -Mr. A !t ' 1 ' .1 s T r r s,.r, :l:e 1 .-1 rr e.v. A eim rs. t v s..,.n terry tti'ii;: 1. t '.l 'ra1 : -I"-irt I-l an, i w. w, rf" Ins, r-i;ti:, 11 tr, s-l J, $ !l tr,,v in M ve,,,,. f'"'i"k 1 I' "s'nv a 7 it-j::r. i ' ir. r.,i the - a-l liis -a i"t, : nr -'h i anth A. ' .T.ren "cur Jam,-. I.ldi! .v rnar "' mo. 1 , ' ll.l irn:,Vorf lM'--I''Moi e l,a r,Ii ; W(. l,, in,,,. ""'srlvtf !": so I." el,k 5. i ",: :0t over t. 11 1 T 1; r, "vatt-r ''rl!lN ll.'t .. b l. ... ''s 1 her wouit ts S .tip 'lie "-hf..," ';r-ns :i hot of, "Hiv fo: s7N sua,- -si a 1