CI J, nit mm mm, SfJNSSUTS, PA., nihy .Morning - - St 1,3. 187 1. Dani.cratlc rminntlons. r.'.s :-i I'KrMi: .tfn:r. it WA,-. .:t".N .'. w x !va iwks. iv-x I ;;-rt v nt :.n i:i:Ni:, .J.'MN I.ATTA, W, ti:.or.".;u;d. ix u At rtTi-u e;r-; !;,t., !!.-. .u srrs r. tkmi-lk. urr, t'.'i: sn-RKIAKT or ISTrilSA!, AiT,ll:s. : (its. WM. M'CANDI.KKS, Phi lad 'a i ' j .. 1 l,:,orrat,c tnymlrr CWcffc,. zr'. .v, .M.i ... Hit usuui Plan; inr --.1 : ..-. . f ........ ...l it-: i.t. . tialo a County Ticket. j WM. II. Si-.r-nr.rit, ; Chairman Dcin. Co. Com. ! M . , , iO to to the delegate election to-morrow : and vote for none but oood men. ! Ihr Democratic State C'ommittco v.ill meet at roltonH Ifotrl. Ilfirri.lmt ,. . i r,. . .. .... b' Tuesday, 22d inst., at 4 o'ek.ck, r. M, j'l inocraiic conierees 01 trc tir"". ,. , '.r; 1 i ni liuutingdon Longressioiial district nioi.I Sit iMewport, Terry county, on Wednesday I of last wonlr i .o no nomination However ' vas mado at that time, Hon. II. Jlilton ! Hjer having six votes, and each cf the ether five candidates receiving three- votes. The conference then adjourned to meet at th. Bame place on yesterday. Of course, j a our paper goes to press on Thursday atternoon, we cannot announce what result if any, tliat has been arrived at. Th r Maine election has astonished ovcrv ..-!... . I i uy O'Usuio of the State by the fullness of t?te vote. The Democrats more than held ' their own and have made largo gains in ! r-y - iv I'lii i.v .iiio i havo not fallen more largely behind in this -,. : , ... . j State is due to the extravagant efforts made I by the friends of Mr. F.lainc, who whh to rive him a crood scr.d-orr ns n rve'.,,finl ! r, . , Candidate. Desnite Ijlaino. bow-Bver. lho t j . 1 J . , - . j j.i puoncan canidates arc elect ea bv re duced majorities, and Maine falls into line Aith Vermont by making a losing fight whero victory could not bo doubt f-.l. To-morkov.- is tl;e day fixed for the tkc tion of delegates from each election d is- . . . , - .' tnct in the county, to meet in convent ion ! .if tho Court LIouso in this place, on next ' Atom! ir frtimmlnnio . ; ,Mo,,u.iy, to nominate a Democratic conn- ty t.ckct, Riid to iform such other dit- ! ties as mav bo deemed nece-warv AV0 ! . , , . j have only one rcquttt, or lather demand, to nako of tho Democracy xf this county, j rind that is that tl.ey elect none but the ! most intelligent and reliable men a;i d;In- j gates, because on thcti action tbe s.icoess ! c f tho coming battlo f-rii'.cipally depends, j 'I' J I n flCliM'nii fa C - - t.. .1 . it . 1 - 1 The aspirants for nomination to the c"if- f-'ieiit offices are all gentlemen of well known reputation, each o:.c of whom has bis warm and enthuMastic supporter?. J.ct, then, tho Democratic convention next Monday be composed of a lodv of men who will honestly represent the integrity f'f tho party, let them put in nomination a i ticket which will be an honor to tho coun- ! ty and then let tho Democracy go to ' work atul repudiate the present State and rational administrations by a majority of j K ,kl,1ncrt'C Stato Convention at eight hundred, which can easily' be dono I'i,tsb"rS alptcJ the following rcsolu if ii,.,.nii:.i..i . , ! tion : " v"unl-j ui.-r.ti is as unoiiject tollable r.s tho State ticket, and if candidates for nomination will act tlio part of honorablo men after the tribunal to which tboy h ive voluntarily nibmitud tboir pretensions Lavo i afc.sed uhji them. " -o-- IK)H I.i iiiiANA ! This State, adicted aboc all her sisters in tho rcckW ... , ,, . I wiiiirman oi t lie i vmocratie State Cen- iiianagcincnt of her public a.I"airs, lias ju;4 J ral Comirutteo Julm Miller, ICsq., ofWius (iimo i-ixl fi. i.i iimkii,,.. ri r. r I ter county. r- -- - --. .ij..i.iivi vi uui oib-rocui ring lome.stic convulsions. Tiio tyranny of is Governor Kellogg's government, which aptly denominated by high Itopublicau au thority ns a "usurpation upheld by force," becamo absolutely ittsup,ortablo,- and tlio poopU of tko State, as if animated by one impulse, arose to throw oir tho yoke of tho oppiessor ami install the legally-elected government. The conflict reached a culmination on Tnewlay, when a band of militia ten thousand strong snrrountkd the Stato House anil caused the surrender of it. and Kellogg m hi, Rlftir. Tnc rcin8 -f government were immediately assumed iy IJouttnant Governor Penn, actingGov ernor in the absence of (lovernor McEucry, wlifse election in a strictly k-gal manner in ltf72 is not and cannot le denied. A considerable amount of bkxd was shed to attain this result, which Is very much to deplored. Kut tho rectification of a wrong so monstrous as the Kellogg usnr jation was never yet accomplished with out resort to force. An appeal to the bal lot box had been recon mended, but Ies nons already learned have taught the pc 1 U? of Louisiana to believe that the will of tho mnjoiity thuscxpnsscd is always ruth lessly set aside. Governor Pcnn, in a dis- ' patch to tho President, says that the ac- j lion taken is 'Vttpportcd by the great Iwxly of the intelligent and homst peotdo of tho State." Kellogg, after hisej.-ction from the State Ib.nse, took refuge in tho C ustom House, under the protection of Federal bayonets and later in the day a proclamation was rromnhrttea K lw.., .... ' ' . . : J '"'""S 1 enn and his partv to d:stn.u -;!.;.. . - 1 o.w : .... i,j,, lllVJ immuer ir fed- days. Kellogg was placed in )wer U fore ?ral mcc holders were 8'J,C(M). Here is an by the President against the expressed - -1'?? r.5xT r.cpnt- in fmr yran. ; his caims and of course his native in.be- j treasury. T.,is is civil service reform with chtywdl tot now jrmit him to recede ' a vt',,"o.,,,C0. T,,e ai'lnprial ions have kept from tho p...,.; ,,, there as,umed by him. 1 bst i's fh f ",,,n "r The army is U ing put i tAZi l1 move, and the contest cannot W doulitfuL 1 . zsZiW, 'crr-rr op- pres-r. Such is ra'ilca! rule. II Vt t'u'icn ii'rl'vk on S.itiKiliy night, a j . vote had in tl.o Sor.tb Carolina Repub ; J!r;i coiirention and DaviJ IJ. Chamber- i liin, aged thirty-seven, native of Worces- ! ; ter, Massachusetts, attorney , general dur-J ins the tidmiuistiatioa of Guv. fccoUyof i '. , was nominated by a vote, of seventy- ! tv. o to f.fry. Closes v.as practically with- j i! . :w:i n 1'iidiy, and thrcv his influence f ii- Jm'gc Creep, a man of honest and fair j ability a-:d a native of tI,o Stare, but not acceptable to bis party. Mr. Chamber lain's ioniiiir.t;'j!i was made in convention j by State Treasurer Cardozo (colored), vho i v L''"" iiranuer aroozo oku km;, kuu !.:.! n... i . . . i.: . - .i ii i inai lie (1 Kl so ai l no ' ccom iiiuuuuiiori - . , . ,. ,.- r .1 ! tu President CI rant. vc copy from tbe telegraphic correspondence of tbc 2'ew yorL Trih,ine nn nccount of lhe procccd. that rHowci : ink m?-!(i 1 1 u wnc uit-ii iioiiuniv- IlOt sup- was i the ex- i sectn- for a. recess being declared adapted, Gen. Elliott ( orcd), a minlwr of coiigruss, disputed 111,3 decision of the Presidont and attempted to pin congressman Kainey in the. chair. A..1.1.P3 amanron amid great disorder, when Urn President, Also a colored man, advanced, daring liim to rome on and declaring that tf1" nH'!' ''0"!1 1!0t ove him. This firm- r.era hrnnpht nbont pare, and the deciHion of tiie chair was nu.staim-d. Nearly every "itml.-cr who hpoko for cither of the eandi- nates was otm-kIv nreusfd of crimM. An liotn st republican who cat by mo remarked: "And the worKt of it is that it is all true." Cardozo, who nominated Chamberlain, was .i , ....... f,,ard with felonious abuse of his ofilce as tats treasurer, and asked to give an account ,' liHiMiiijr trom the Rinking fund commission, of which be was a inenilnr. r4enrnl 'he nomination, was charged with stealing ....... ..if, tM.in- ;w,iiiiu as a nwmoer oi llio diiffI pajM-rs Fhowin that Jeot Ur. Win Pinith'n noiiiiiKttor, who mrwle the vhAren9 Jiml ilrAwn p;iy And traveling expenses ttiUL n vn nitil l.v tlx. tT;t...l fito'... atid doing duty as a policeman at tbe ex ecutive mansion in Washington. They showed also that llayne, a prominent sup porter of (Jreen, had drawn ?l,0(o a month for ervifru nis r..a tl ; r rr .l..rlr t . L. thn legislature, and wanted reform localise i ii . . ln" "'Kisiauire. aim w he eonhl not l was Jianl to determine whirh fht had Jr r i ii im; Uiic VI ii (MM tCl 1111. Ill LTl'I f f:li,I:, hnvo ihe VW here to put you ,,!e I'enitentiary," when the member thus threatened ran across the room and ,ri,'tl ' take the papers from him. At limts a wero claiming tho floor at. onre. ju em tiers arose from their seats iml Mmm-.l il,r,i,.i. n,i;,.,.i., j I - ....... n MI; ,lVmi . H.-, . II1II1U1 I'lll : ' W -1 u ul rrranf tl.... 1. . .. .... 1 2 I I --.-.-. liuu ii. a uuitiv mi- i j possililo to to! i what was going on. These I wsiii-s cmiunTOi, with occasional intervals, of comparative quiet, for hours. At length the Chamberlain party, confident of their ! strength, determined to cut oil' discussion ' and carried a motion to that effect, but tho 1 mummy relumed to auido I.y the decision . ...1 r i . . ami for nearly an hour managed to stave off n.rr i.iwi Dj-.pTOcucn, urowiicii 1 1 y thn rrirg r.r tin . . , -. t . i .. . i.'j- hii-uHK, iirowiu-ii ny I ho cries of the f.Dnoif ion nn! tlio miitiniin... r.r... ? P;lvel. a,,a w hich nohody could hear but themselves. Ch:unlKrl;in and his sup- rort,-H were alike denounced. Lond . I"ftmts of gag law wero made and a bolt was Planned and threatened, but tho vote c'''"f, hist, for tho opposition could not hold out all nlht. It stoo l: Chamberlain, iZ tireen, 0; Winsmith, 10. boinination of Chamberlain, says tn0 Harrisburg J'ulriot, is the triumph of carpet-baggcia. His election will sc- rnro to Fattcrson and other persons of Itin l- -1 1 - A i . t--..ii..l .1 .-. Al . n ..n . I . . 1 tho pamo disreputable character the results of their industrious robborios. The ad ministration and the army and a heavy majority vote being in favor of the Cham berlain combination, it is altogether pro bable it will be successful. Moses is dis continued as a law giver, but his princi- l 'c3 ro"''" mid hi associates in infamy cwtinuo undisturbed possession of the ,1C,I Tlesolrcd, That tbe nominees and chairman of this eonreiition are hereby authorized to appoint chairman of the State Central Committee, and that tint delegates from ea h t.lMiate.ri.il district select and liand to tho clerk the namu of a person to act as a mem ber of said com m it too. In accordance with tbe above resolution tho following gentlemen ero apNintod : Chairman of the Democratic State Cen- First District Daniel .1. McF.ride. Soeond Timothy Mealy. Third John W. Powell. Fonrth J. .1. Young. Fifth F. Ij. M.mie. Sixth Henry U. Oldish ad. S.'venth John H. Sloan. Eighth H. F. Sellers. Ninth Tyron Ijewis. Tenth Nathan C .Tames. Kleventh Charles II. Shaffer. Twelfth .Tames W. Apph. Thirteenth A. J. Steinm.nn. Fourteenth W. Haves Orier. Fifteenth 1. W. Seller. Sixteenth M. II. Horn. Seventeenth dohn II. Iiressler. Eighteenth II. W. Scott. Nineteenth Joseph Hemphill. Twontieth William Mnrrifteld. Twenty-first J. Prior Williamson. Twenty-Krcond Charles i;arnett. Twenty third E. A. Parsons. Twenty-rtflhF. Arnold. Tvvoiit y-si'vc.rith j E Kichhohts. J went y-eifchth Frank Deisse. Twenty-ninth-Rolomon Foster Jr. Thirtieth C. F. King. Thirty-first Ii; A Dunbar. Thirty-second John H. P.rnrken. Thirty-third Benjamin M. Ncads. Thirty-fourth D. P. Bush. Thirty-fifth Thomas W. Jackson. Thirty-sixth U. A. McDonald. Thirty-seventh S. Ii. Uutledge. Thirty-eighth J. G. Hall. Thirty-ninth .1. J. Hazlett. Fortieth C. E. Bovle. Fortv-ftrst V. fl Ki t. ott Forty-second W. H. lieel. Forty-third Goorgo II. Knhn. Forty-f.uirth lohn Ii. Guthrie. I-orty-firth lohn P. H.-jscl Frty-ixih W. 15. Dunlap. lortv-seventh C.eorg., D. Herliert. Vorty-e.ghth William McNair. 1-orty-iimth M. Crosby Fiftieth J. It. Itrawley. "i m In 1S09 when Presi.lent tlrant was first naKuratcU, tlio number of federal oflicn Holders was ri4,207 According to the offi cil i..riw r.r, 10-1 n. . . V"- Tr- -w.-t , .' '""i rv., nuch as horse ail pianucr. etc may be prevented bv the use t 1 sons tiavui m- uitl. 1 . i. . .. . lio'.e of tLLs. " .uiu take Tie Condition of Affairs South. Tbe nianasersof tbe Radical party, sad ly put to for a war-cry to turn back the ! growing strength of the Democratic party, j persist in thcircltorts to create tbe impres- sioft" tliat a war of extermination is threat- t cned against the negro in t!ie boutli, and that there : secmity tln.-:-e to the life , and property of citizens ! have gone thither from tbe North. 'i"he regularity ! with which theso reports of ".Southern ' outrages," "Ku klux conspiiacies" aiul the like, are set niloat before the annual fall i election in the North is the bet evidence ' that they arc designed simply for pai tisau ' purpoBcs, and by the desperate tricksters who hope, by elevating the "raw bead and bloody bones" of the Ku-klux, to re -open ino issues wnicn uy me consent 01 i lie uet- j ter nature cf all good citizens are fast sink ing into the grave of oblivion. We have examined with care the files of our Demo cratic exchanges in the South, and though throughout they b re at ho a spirit of strong opposition to the iniquities of the Civil Rights bill, and the attempt to elevate the ignorant negro to positions of political io lluence, they uniformly express a purpose to acquiesce in the results of the war, and only ask for the right of local self-govern nient guaranteed by the constitution and demanded by every consideration of our general national welfare. Of general in terest, as indicating this sentiment, and of loc;U interest as bein tbe testimony of I a gentleman from Jancaster county, savs ' T " , , the Intelligencer, we publish below an in- j tcrview of the editor of the Livingston l Ala Jnn t-mnl i. irl. I'snl It V ll.rr o I native of Lancaster couuty. lie was in terviewed with reference to the assassina tion of one W. P. .Hillings, whom it was charged had boen murdered by the "Ku klux Democracy." A portion of tho inter view was as follows : Q- How long have you resided in Sum ter? A. Five years lacking a few days. II. Were you in either army during the lattt war? A. Yes; I was in the service in the Fed eral army. 2. What has been the general bearing of the people of Snmter county towards you, during your residence in the county? A. Yory kind they have licen very kind to tne. i- Do you know of any other persons from the North having settled in Sumter stuce the war? and if so, can yon stato any thing of the treatment they have met at the handtt of the pmp'.o of this county? A. I know of a few on of them a brother-in-law of mine. So far as I know they have lieen treated kindly have heard them so express themselves. Q. Do you know of any Republican, or any Northern man, having lieen murdered iu Sumter on actonut of politics? A. I do not. O.. Were yon personally acquainted w ith tho late W. P. Timings? A. T knew him as a boarder at my house. Q. Were you ever solicited to become a candidate for office on tho Republican tick et and if so, by whom? A. I was, "oy Mr. Hillings ; Mr. Welis also spoke to me on the subject. I at first, thought of assenting, but afterwards de clined to do so. (. Did you ever hear Mr. P.illings say his life, had beun threatened by persons in Sumter? A. I did not. 2- From all the Information yon have gained respecting the killing of Mr. Billings, do you think it prohahlo that his death was the result of a conspiracy? A . I do not. 2- Have yon ever seen a Ku-klux In Sum ter? . A. I hare not. 2- Does th article In tho Write Journal' give a fair or unfair account of the personal i difficulty of which you have been streaking? ' A. It- is an unfair account, ami dotss iu- i justice to lioth parties to the difficulty, Q. Judging from persoual nhsurnttion what is the general character of the Demo i ratic party of Sumtr, as to good order and peace! nlness? A. It is good. I think as good as the general character of political parties ia the North. The above statement is particularly note worthy,' when it is remembered that Sum ter county is especially iointed to as th "dark and bloody ground" of Alabama. e Mr. llcrr's story is doubtless a true one. and verities tho representation of every in- .A . ' " vch .ji ....... . .... iuiri i,i... CPVI U 1 tllV rllllb VI its people. r- K.i l v r rt-PHKxs, oi tno Eighth District of Georgia, has every rea- 1 T A. . it -. . .. son to lc flattered with the esteem llllt appreciation which his constituents havo for him. In a letter to a friend, which was read before the nominating conven tion, he replied as follows to an inquiry as to whether he would accept a renomln ation : It is trno that I have entirely recovered from that. seTcre attack of rheumatism from which I was suffering when I wrote to the tJreene County Committee, nod just at. this time I am in as good health as I have lieen for tho last twelve months; but so preeari ous is my general condition that I feel no assurance of a long continuance of my re cent improvement, and have no hoMi what ever or that restoration or physical vigor and self-locomotion, without which I cannot perform t-hn duties of Representative as I could wish to do. Still, as I have said, if tho convention should, from any conaiiiera t ion whatever, take me. as I am, "for better or worse," and I should Im elected, it would la pleasure to me, it" lite bo spared, to serve tli jieople of this district to the liest of my ability, though not up to the full standard of my wishos, so long as I can raiso my Tofee or wieM a en. There are very few Congressmen who could be renominated after such a letter as that. Thk anti-Gai field Republican Cono-resi.- ional Convent District, after unanimously nominating Rev. 1 1. II. Hurlburt, Presiding Elder 0Kf th Ninf.tf.n( I. m, u n;.-:.i f 'i. .?..-i. 1- the Nineteenth Ohio District Church. West ern Reserve Conference, in opposition to Credit Mobilier, salary grabbing Garfield, adopted the following platform : Resolved, That tho peril of th Govern ment lies not so much In high ambition as in low dishonesty, and that the perpetuity ami welfare of the republic imperatively re qrnreB ns to emphatically condemn the acts or ts public servants who, by their support or the back-pay and the increase or salaries sharing in the proceeds or dishonest Credit Member swindles, by prostituting and sell ing their official influence to proniete tbe schemes or corruptness at Washington, and other wrongful and nnjnstiflahle acts, have brought reproach and dislKmor upon tho country. R "solved. That we demy that party fealty or loyalty should make it's forget, our man hood and become more knaves by approv ing or accepting either men or mercenaries at tho dictation nf party managers whom we believe t b dishonest or corrupt, and we affirm that the only test of political pre ferment should be sound principles, capaci ty, and honesty in the disrharge of official trust, and hereby declare that by this chart our course shall be guided. . The grangers are accused of overstep ping the bounds of their announced creed, anrt of entering into a combination with the Chicago wheat speculators for the pur pose of keeping back tho wheat crops of the "Vest from the market. This would .xur,S?hnn "'Rhway roblicry, for to withhold fowl from the market is a conspi racy which has for its object the starvation of the poor. por the 8ake of hnmanity we hope the accusation may not be true. It should have from both the grangers and ..in . niuHgrt grain speculators and effectual denial. a prompt A Study for the Doctors. HEM ARK ABLE CAST! OF ARHESTED ! OPMF.XT. PETEL- One of tie tnost Angular cases of lunns naturip ever known has just come to the attention of the public near Forestville, Chautaupie county, N. Y., and should the subject live, as there sterns frod reason to expect, will afford an opportunity for inves tigation and study by tbo medical profes sion that its members will not be slow to improve. Many singular cases of arrested development arc recorded, and nature has pt times played very curious freaks with human kind, but there have certainly beeu few cases that equal this in its interest to tbe orofession. or that will be regarded with m0re interest by the public. It is, bneiiy, a living child, now three weeks old, perfect in external form and developments, but with its heart absent from its normal posi tion. Directly below tbe breast-bono in front is a protrusion of tbe nature of a rui enre, and alovo this is the heart, covered only by a thin membrane, plainly visible and susceptible of being lifted bylthe hand outside. 1 he organ itself is the usual size, and performs all the functions that pertain to it correctly, its action being normal and the pulsations and respiration of the child being regular and boallhy. The child is the son of Archibald 'Mul kins and w-ne. and was born August last. a iiM ,.iw..it .iw .tl..o.f i-.. - of Forcst.villa. am in comfortable circnm stances and in good health. Tt weighed at birth six and one half pounds, takes its food, sleeps well, and is as comfortable and as quiet as children of that age usually are. It has been visited by a number of eminent physicians, and is in charge of Dr. (J. W. Carjionter. All pronounce it a very singn lar case indeed, and one of them, w hom a reporter of the l.ufialo Mpresa called on, rtutiHiniji i or it in in is way; it is a case oi a - r it . 1 - arrested development, occurring in an en tirely new quarter. He says a part of tho diaphragm and all the abdominal muscles iu that region. are wanting, as well as the fascia and natural skin. It is not likely that the child can live a great length of time, notw ithstanding it has every appear ance of health at present. The child is said to have been still-born and artificially recusci'tatcd. Dr. A. P. Parsons, a physi cian of local prominenco, has made a ete thoseopic examination, and reports the result as follows: Septemlier 7, 1874, I examined the male child of Mr. A. Mulkins, which presents the remarkable phenomena of bavins the lieart upon the outside of the chest and in qwiryimade as to the condition of the crops plain view. The sternum terminates ah- i in that State, and has issued a proclamation ruptly, and is rather shorter than natural.! to tbe people embodying the results. He At tho lower tnrminns is an opening in the says that information derived from the scv skin, muscles and integuments, almut three i .-:il f-. n oil no -, : '. -i Inches in length ami two and one-half inches wide, thiongli which tho heart protrudes, and is covered only by the nri;ardium, which Is very transparent, and tinder my magnifying glass the appearance was truly wonderful. Th systole ami diastole are wlum ( perfect, giving thn blood its proper uniform circulation or impetus. The left pulmonary roHsing in front of artery is plainly seen crossing in tlie itescenilmiT aorta. Th ilm-tiis nrtirin. Rlia nctu o a 1 i.rfi ....... t 1,..t tl.- , 1 1 ary artery and the aorta The entrance to the superior vena cava la well marked. The right, pulmonary aitery is visiblein one p:irt only. The heart is perfect in form, welt proportioned, and firm in texture as j could to expected in a child not three weeks i old. The gterhoscopic examination of the j i lungs indicates a normal condition both in j I development and position, and there is 110th- i I ing in the action of either heart or lungs to : j indicate tho unnatural position. When the i j child is crying the heart will expand to j I nearly twice itsordinary size. The stomach j and liver perform their functions properly. It is growing finely, and appears healthy; j takes nourishment freely; not very worri- I some; and sleeps well. The parents nre j healthy, and no cause can Ik assigned for ; any material influence, except, a f;kll aliont ! ,w. months previous to confinemciit. It Is primipara and a maie. A Matrimonial Chaxwk ov Mint. The IJaltimore Gaze Itr says : "Eliza God frey, formerly living near Leavenworth, Kansas, is among the curiosities of woman kind. She is an interest imr and not unat tractive damsel of sweet sixteen: and when ; vuc niLiiii obi; nun 11 one night she was missing, her father set out on a seal c!l u. ,,or , ic, lanf,ea ovcr S1X uuiKireU mcn of monntain and prairie. The worst of it was that fche had eloped I towns. Says Mr. Furnas: "The more foi with her lover, one, as the sequel proved, j tnnate of our own citizons will meet tlfe unfortunate Mr. liailev. For when her . father overtook her tho course of true love hiul ot bv U1, nc..s ...... KlnrK,th. shfl ) t 1 A 19 . . . . , uaa iravcica over two Hundred miles n. a lumber wagon over rough roads, and cither her affection for the man of her choice had Ikcii shaken out of her, or she was of a disposition mighty uncertain. No minister was attainable, ami when the Judgo ar rived to marry them this is bow it all end ed a nice little romance spoiled by the cantankeronsiiess of 0110 woman : "Judge Norton was sent for and came upon tho scene. Tbo party assembled, while the eager crowd filled the doorway and windows to witness what next would transpire. Spoke the father : 'Judge, this is my daughter. 1 wi,li to givo my con- o...... ..i-i nmiiuij;!! 10 tins mull. men ; tion to tno case bebn-e tbe court. When said tbe Judgo : 'Mr. Bailey, do you wish j the counsel was about finisbinT bis illus'ra to marry this woman ?' 'I do,' said Uai- j tion a swallow actually Hew into the room ley. 'And you, young woman, would yon j and alighted upon the indge's desk It havo this man for your husband ?' said the then dipped away ami found rest for the ,U ?eI, ,,ie,yo.nns.,ady,ooked "P,l,,d re- 1 sole of its foot on the railing of the jniy pbed, 'Well, Judge, I guess not just now.'" box. In its circuit of the court room it The Petersburg Index tells a story abont Governor Moses, of South Carolina, which indicates that even before the war that of ficial was not a stranger to dishonest trick ery. Moses was married in 1859, and went North on a bridal tour, passing through Petersburg. On his way back he lost a trunk containing a part of his wife's wear- I ,n?. II claimed 5i ! fn f;'; "' trunk which w oy the 1 etersbnrc Railroad V.t 530 as com pen- 1 wsifi riiti.l tr liim by the Petersburg Railroad Company. The trunk was soon after found, and Mr. Moses was requested to take his goods ami return the money. He replied that be had dupli cated tho articles lost, and did not care for the trunk. The company opened it, and as the contents were found to bo worth abont one-fourth the sum paid to Moses, they again notitied him to return the $550 and take his articles. Moses paid no at tention to' the request until the war had been going on for some time, and Confed erate paper money bad become compara tively worthless, w hile laces, ribbons, and tbe other contents of his tiunk had gone up greatly in value. Then he closed with the company's offer, and regained his truk, paying the $550 in Confederate notes. T Washington correspondent says : In Ocoljer, Lieut. Fred. Grant will prob ably lead to the altar Miss Honore, of Chi cago, whose father is reputed so wealthy, and whose sister married Potter Palmer, of that city. One of the handsomest ho tels in Chicago is called the Potter Palmer House, in honor of its owner, and a block, almost ad joining, is known as the Honore block. Miss Honore was educated at tbe convent in Georgetown, and graduated with high honors, taking tho first prize for TOusic. She is withal very pretty and stylish- Secretary Fish's son will also be married in October, to Miss Lee, and alto gether we shall not have time to take breath between the peals of marriage bells. $Irs6ioARTF.s and others aojottming in foreign lands should not fail to take with them a good supply of Joh .' Arudm ! Liniment. It is the most reliable medicine for all purposes there is in the woi W. A. Bovine Ratti.k ok Tioxo Duration. To O-ren Fiyht Kiht Hour. The Au gusta (Me.) Journal hafl the following ac count oi a protracted iMttlo between two oxeu in that State : "Mr. CoryoVm Chad ! wick and Mr. Sullivan l'rhine baveapns ture in common at South China, which they use for the pastni age of cattle. They j have the present season had several yokes of cattle in tbe pasture. Mr. Chad wick ! and Mr. Erskine have each an ox with a i lopjKrd or crooked born, the right born of one and the left of the other having that peculiar forrrralion. These oxen were turn- j ed loose into the common pasture, and it : was between them on that iint that the pitched battle or which we are speaking j took place. For several days these cattle : had been missing when the other cattle came UO these wero not ninnr tlm num. ! ber. How many days they had Wen miss- ing before search was instituted is not de- finitely known, bat becoming alarmed the owners went in quest of them. Coming to an opening in the woods, covering an area in the virtue of Mr. Iieecher that it is pro of about an acre, Mr. Chad w ick, w ho went posed to raise his salary to 30,000 s a in search, came upon a sickeuing spectacle. ! compensation for his trials. The looped horns of the oxctt Were clasped", j High-toned. A swarm of bees have and the exhausted animals, united com- established themselves on tli toi. of tin. I liactlv. Stood f:lf tn fnOI. wnifinnr for rtofitti l.lrrl.oct- 1. 1. l. i r! -... , : . . . r . --t,".-t on in vniviiiiiau, aim i l.siana is la Tim tln rnti . ,. i i. t""?" "J? 1 8tru,e' f nr much at home. . J.' ami Yttornev Onera, wn i'LVV' ii i.i Biii- joscii mai nnn uifv women- I be banKintrv xttmfnl nf Hnn n ' .t.- t.--.i '1 I iraired in nlav their t.nrt lmA i T" ...... t i.n.i'j'i.llj .v. 'oeiai.army to assist 1,,,, I i,", , .,: " puuii!iii, uui uuivh iiui oiiiiaiii i oive iirnt and hit fnrt tkm..-.. i .i 1 - tried : fai ino- to d smnnrrt t1irni1va 1 i : 1 . i. ; , vmeuraiii aim nis lony tnonsaild tb i-virf I i-i-;i.1a cti-iirr.rU. nr d..-.i ..i I . . i in; ii itu ?i;ieu was iiceiany lorn up. as though it had lieen plowed with a sub-soil i. : . t i i i . . . plow. V Leii they wero turned into the pasture they were large, fat, seven feet oxen, but now they had become so emaci ated and famished that a ierson could al most clasp them round with his arms. They were perfectly docile when found, but Mr. Chadwick could not untie the knot. The horn of each was sunk into the other's head, and it was only by calling help and ; sawin" the horns oft that a separation could lie efiectcd. There were festering sores whcie the horns weut in. "Thus a mortal Conflict, lasting eight days, had been going on between these oen, who in that time had not partaken of any sustenance, and erhaps had not been able to lie down. Their jaws had to be pried open, and gruel administered1 to them. Their heads had lieen united so closely that their faces were bare to tbe bone. It is possible the animals may live." The Govetixor of Nebraska oxGrass irot'pnns. I lis Kxcellency, jiob't FiirttiiS, Governor of Nebraska, has h.nl -1.w in. 1.1 .- ... observation; warrants the assertion, that though the crops are shorter than for sev. eial years before, there is ntt a failure, and no ground for serious alarm as to the gen- agricultural year, which has affects! tho i whole United States, and the greater part : of Europe, has bad its pflt K.o..! i - nn1 11 ..:.. .1 r. . - ... ' ! and small n-rain tbni-ofoi-n ;i.i : .. ! .1 - " J"""of, rts vas expected at the end or June, are only B avcr e , . d iu:iljt :,,f J 'J tJ . j.1 , J. "-"i"u I B"""" lyesieu oeiore tne grassliop lers appeared; but, as in States north and south this yeaf, the grasshoppers have done damage to the farmers to a considerable extent. Happily for Nebraska, however, very little but corn has boen subject to their ravagcs;'and corn is by no means dest royed but will range from half a crop to f possibly) almost an entire failure in a fow places. The fruit crop of Nebraska is more in quan tity than ever before, but, as a rule, the fruit is inferior in size; and taking the whole range of agricultural products hay, grain, vegetables, roots and fruit the State has never before produced so great an aggregate crop. No cases needing re lief are yet rejioi ted; but at a nnniWr of points on the extreme western border, help will be required by the poorer settlers, who have but recently come to Nebraska, whose farming operations, therefore, were not ex tended and not varied, and who were de pending on their com crop alone forsnbsist ence. Even those who mav have to suffer. i however, show no disposition to abandon i ineir Homesteads. 1 ney need employment; and in the case of tho homesteaders, have I to l"'t their lands for a time to work in tho t ,01 mer emergency by allordimr emtilov- v..!., .uiutiiuirM. viiicii aione possesses tbe power, will, no doubt, piomptly meet mo ocoouu emergency. A Widow's Witness. It was told of old that the cackle of a gooo once saved Iiome. It is now related that a swallow won a suit in court away down in Texas. A ixr witlow and hcrdanghter had a suit for damages before a court in Houston. The counsel firr tbe plaintiff introduced into his pleading tbe fable of the swallow that built her nest and reared her young under the eaves of the temple of justice. The lawyer enlarged upon the swallow's trust in the protection of her homo the place af- forded, and very aptly made the applica halted awhile on a pile of law books, then hovered a moment over the heads of the plaintiffs, flew out of the window and away. The counsel concluded by saying : "Behold the witness," and as tho witness could not be called back by the opposing counsel, the case was given to the jury pretty much as the swallow left it. The jury could not ignore the bird's evidence, and gave a verdict for tbe widow. The story is a little birdy, but not in tho least fishy. If it was a precentcerted plan of tbe lawyer, it was very happily arranged and nicely carried out, and deserves a place among court reports aud curious pleadings. Remarkable Advkxtcre gt a Child, On tho evening of August 26, according to the Louisville Uourier-Jotirnul, Mrs! illiam IVigley,- who lives near Crother yille, Ind., lert her little three-year old boy h the house while she went to the field near by. Driven into the house soon after by a storm, she found that the little fellow had disapi-earcd. A long and thorough search was made, and a whole day passing without any traces of the child being found, tbo mother and father were almost crazed, the former in ber frenzy attempting to drown herself. On the afternoon of the 30th, a boy passing through some dense woods alwrat four miles from Mr. Prigley's, and on the other side of the river, was attracted by a moaning sound, which ou investiga tion he discovered to crime from the lost child, whom her found lyinj on his back almost dead from exposure and hunger. He at once took tho little one home, where medical help was called and everything done to save his life. It seems that the lit tle one bad crossed the river on a recently constructed temporary bridge, over which the water had snddenly risen during tho storm, and it bad not occured to acy one while searching for the boy that possibly he was m the woods on the other side of the river. Such an adventure for so young a child was terrible, and it is somewhat remarkable that he could have existed so Jong, hungry and insufficiently clothed as he was. demented VirrTaliTucd with Lis mother-in-law. 2'eird dtl r'ofttical Items. At Hoston, dii Saturday, Athletic 0, Ited Stockings 5. A man is about td tlnilortak a walk koiws the continent from Portland, Ore gon, to New York. Tring. England, is llio lioilld of a wo man one hundred and eleven years old who works iii tln harvest field. A mother in New York, sends to a drug store for paregoric. Infant dies: Clerk held in .j,tK)0 l,;,n. Kight. A Terrc Haute (Ind.) giil niakes nine feet at a standing jump, bhe is to jump for a wager at the next State fair. Danville, N. j., is proud of the dialtol ical profession of a young lady who mira culously "turns milk blood-red." ' sylvania go Into the petiQing canvass to j win. An open field and a fair light is tbe watch-word. a-mw i lien, in i ne npmiwratv r i . n . K- 1 ... .... . I Such is the faith of rivmouth Chnrch i I . ... . I Il". plunder. AtiY girl may raise a mustache bv I . . filmvinir liAr firmer lin A r f, ... . 1 ..... . j - ----- - - - , - - - .'!- 1 ' . v. wt nmFii. a month. A St. Louis girl has demonstrat- co tins lact, and now wishes she hadn t TU Si,(...rti...-;o. : - Jt ii i Vc- '- 1 1 jj, J - , owe a oonar in ism is now saddled with a debt of three millions and a half, and, what is worse, has nothing to show for if. L. II. Colhtm, while attempting to cross the track lietwren the depot and his stove factory, in Lutler, Pa., on Monday, was caught between two cars. He lived about four hours after the accident. A voting farmer in Madison county, N. Y., raised tifty-cight pounds of potatoes this season from a single seed liofato weigh ing three-fourths of a pound. Which was cut up and planted in twelve hills. Six-years ago a Portland (Me.) girl was married in a 1.200 dress. She is now a resident of St. Clair county, 111., and at i ast acco nts ganied a 1 v ne for her t ! XaXZl ?f . u" ,"?..$ . 7:. cnnoien ana drunken husband by digging poraioen. Ati Iowa centenarian 102 years old, recently made the oveiland trip to Califor- nia, wliere he went to see a brother five year younger than himself. The father of these men livco to be 109 years and 5 momnsoid. i T'i'V defenders of P.altimore celo oiii uie sixnetii anniversary oi the bat . ... .1'" .'i ""ii --ii i-f,i iii ,i;t v, uy mareu- ibg around the battlo monument. The venerable men, 24 in number, attracted! quite a crowd. A rogue, in his alphabet, who could ! "either read nor write, got aw ay With seven thousand dollars, after having been county treasurer in Alabama. Wl elected What will he do when lie gets the ordinary cai-ct- "iigger t-uueaunn c A large vein of conuntum has tecn found near t'fitontille, in Chester county. I H. I Ins mineral serves the t.nrnoso emery. It has hitherto locn found in lim- Two Jittlo lmys so. s of I i..el ited quantities, but now the supply of it is bring in- Nfw Oilcan were evo i said to bo immense. T Ii"! Sunday evening while The employees of the Philadelphia arid on tho dek of steamier, bv tl,. f Heading Railroad Company have been put r a stage whirl, was mis,,. ndod to :l on half-time, work-mir twn -.L-i r .1 . r . ... . 1 .1 , ... . . . " : III" 111(1111 II !IT OlfrilT tH; W1W IAm eral stagnation of trade and business is tbo alleged reason for tbo stoppage. "Francis Ilulter, a merchant of Pine Grove, Schuylkill county, who has Wen misning since the 4th inst., was found in the mountain hanging to a tree, with his faco much disfigured. It is supposed tLat financial difficulties led to suicide. ---A woman forty-fire years old died in an insane asylum in Fxtinburg after having been confined to her lied for live years! After her death it was found that hor bones bad become soft and light, ami had in fact almost disapiioared. She suffered no pain. Seventeen Methodist preachers, fic- longmg to one family two great errand children, torn .r-i t ...... . 1 1: . i : f.......-.,.....v n.ni,,.,, ;liu u.e.. u, i,iC ,aie i.nrnern I'etk, of Syracuse .ire mm jave a gai nenng ftt tiro resiteuce r 7; VTnnP 1 111 lllat c,tv 0,1 tIlC " Julius Mendelssohn, convicted on Fii day of forgery, killed himself on Saturday by Kisson, iu the Toombs at New York. His claim of being a son of the great com poser was generally looked upon as ficti tious. His right name was thought to be Julius Lesser. Says the Bedford (Pa.) Gazette: 'There are in Pennsylvania 150 postjnistresscs. It has been common for many years to ap point women to that position, and they are always efficient oflicers. We lielievc no one has ever proved a defaulter to the Government." Miss Keelcr, a young and promising daughter of Mr. William Keelcr, of New Hanover township, near Fegleysville, Mont gomery county, was scvorely"bitteii on tbc back of her hand by a huge black snake several days since, that will no doubt re sult in her death. . .w ,,,,lt Colorado has for the first time since its organization as a territory chosen a democratic delegate to congress, nothing more will be heard of the projiosi tion for its admission into tbe Union as a state. Colorado has not population enough for a democratic stato. -A new style of steamloat is projected in New Orleans. It is to bo built of iron, three hundred feet long, of six thousand tons capacity, and is expected to run twelve miles an hour either way, with a consumption of less than one hundred tons of coal in a round trip from St. I,oi-.i.s. J. C. Whittman. a Gorman, nlu.ut .. r ... "J V " 1 1 ? 1 v v ri t rrn vm - . . 1 z , - 1 - ..j . -i v... iu r-uiciuo on . .. .11, jus I (Kill I ill io. J Itobinson place, Worcester, Mass., by shooting himself through the heart. He was engaged to Ire married on M0nd.1v to a young lady, and it is said ho had a wife aud two children living in New York. Another railroad disaster has occurred in England, on the Great Eastern- Railroad, by which twenty iicrsons were killed and fifty wounded. The rate of speed at which English trains are run makes collisions more destructive than they are in America and they seem to lie more frequent now iu Great Britan than at any previous timo. General Slrerman is not at all favora ble to the movement of sending tho troops ir.to tbo South and taking military posses sion of tbo poll. Ho believes that the military ought to be suliordinate to tho civil power. Such views as these havo rendered it necessary for the General of tno armies to 1 omovu bis headquarters to ou iouis. -i citizen ot Charleston Is said tobavn raised a curious variety ef rice. It has the iaiK, ure Diaoesand the co'jof tho ordinary . ' ",0 ,s c"ver,M" w grains rice. 1 no seed was obtained Trom jeorgia, where a pond which had leen planted in rice for years was drained and planted in com, tho result Wing a crop of the hybrid rice above described. On Tuosday evening last, while on his way homo from a political convention at Wilkes-HaiTC, Pa., Anthony Lenahan in vited Capt. John Roilly to a seat in his wagon. Soon atcrwards Reilly was heard toexclaim, Iamshot! whereuoon Ina- nan move oft ramdlv. On n. ! bridge the wagon wan niwi n.,.i ti. 'iTP.Z -Mrs. Carroll and Mrs. Ford, twin ,;" c. living in South IJethleliein, each 4 birth totwins laudv. T!,a ,ft.;J. cian K.nn tlioaa r...,.:. . I',,Vsi- : : re almost of nsjewHlno an hour. Thee sitc,,, marrieu on me same d.iv ; their ti,M r'n j dren were born in the same month . ,," , secnd in the Mn.e week, and their t' I in the same hour. ' lf,11,orc is a.v b .ttom toth i d c w ickedness, Chailos Disaor, or Now Y " has sounded it. 1I '., id thi-ce d xlu' two of whom he d,bi,.-ratelv s-ldVi t' keejeis of bagnios. The sale of the tl i d T..n ii.iiiiiiiiisnni mi it el:ies4.ty tltf . amMh? purchaser were ai resl. ,i 1 M" filH. 1 tl, gin s arrival ai tne hon ,,f tll0 l.Ut i N"hat should c done to ,im bat : rt I. i . . rr t. . v....---........vr-Aii.(.iiieni wnsraueil . Kti.i.l. .1.1.. SatnrdaTla'r by M "Li, m w'" '" ! ES a T he Secrei Serviee H ' ,a'! uTt JX ZIa T" aXn,M-- , j . . -- - .......v.. .-ii.in.-r, anu jTrti.l. . 1 1 . . .? . . ' i 1 1 1 .. . i ;t. ii i .... - "I'M vim. Mdii wuip. aiier strikmg one un.iiii miuuicu uy an oiiicer. Tbe halcyon davs of lnrli.i a';H-J ; bagism fa to come again. Kello. means, tint n I iuey are juoicioiisiy distributed institutions of the various States. j The states of New Hampshire. C, ; necticut, tiregon, orth C aroliiix T i Pee flTlfl Art-ancna fill .-,.t,u c tux 4 . r. Ior ,,1:v I 1 ,,cy x,ovr " e,vp democratic m:i.),.iit and some of them . , . ri i;r"e clcm. majorities. Yet the railirLil ..i- .. a- .1 n miicie mere is no ciiaife or r-.n 1 1 -ii i -w i- qurncf!. .niiiou s ijiiciler. though f. -flifirt rVn,l.f ... 1 ... 1 . . . . 1 . . , . ... ....... . ..... ii.. ,u iiiin ie Wll iKJ expctiei lrom Heaven ; yet he c headlong. . The Paris correspondent r.f tin Ivoiiis Glbf speakincVif M. Ivovs .i, . , that, except fa laugh at hiiw. i'anv .. 1 - r . i . . . .... " iiiiiiicr inietesi in tlieir !!-c f , low -vuu ii 1 1 j m;in. mm lsaiMmr pitciiin 1 I tent in tne t nitetl Mates. He had n.m, the stuff of a reformer in him. and j more, lie lacked the required le u:ii."- ree 1 " s,r' ve. ' aves nothing behind to force or iW is a fluent spt-aker. ehx-iuerit n..-, i,.u, thinking. ; K Relton, of Chicopec, la, a culiar little 4.1d silver spoon that In. teresting history. It was made au.. . hundred years a'goout .fa silvci 1m- a Iiritih" soldier gave a little dvi-ht.-i Gideon Saunders, f Grot.m. Conmi-i and now liears the initials "i 1. S. " At - J time it was made the Hritish tr,.: t : v 1 I - j nt tJinton, and the soldier C;ive tl ! as a plaything to the little girl, th-. a year or two old. Father Taylor, a clergyman. vo. local (Hi at Uishop Creek, ( a!., w: I- SO pressed with a dream that the wli,.l, u, I valley country in that State w-01.!, ..,. destroyed by earthquake and H h , be has sold o-.-.t all his jw;i..us started for Aikansa. Ik-fore Icivin. publicly warned bis congregation of j impending danger, and advised 1 1 -1: 1 follow his example and depart from of r.t.i t.r. :. ... , " ins uisipiiiims ei wiuri, trave nav. n ' 111c nine iKiys mea last Nmilav tii-M. nine or ten years. IIi HttU brothci i exacted to recover. Charles, aged c', years, a sni of James Boej.iniin7 severely injured by the same accident A Sullivan (Ind.) paper ttdls a story of an old man w ho came iutotnw gte.it baste to get medicine for ?i cbild, but missed tbe dKtor"s otlire ( got into a saloon, from wtiich lye w as a after taken to jail. Sobering- off. a -f hours after midnight, and thiukine of j child, be cried so piteonsly. savin , she would die wrt Trout him. that I 1 rcleasHi. When the vreT1ied f itliot I ! "! I ed home, he found the child lievoi.17 ..i..fi 1 I . : . J - I'arsou iirowttKAr, the the ardent so-i.I tow 11 radiivi! "i dares that tie j alM.litiotiist and well-kn .f tor from TrmK-nw, dec ; "Re of tbc Civil High's Bill by the I States Senate haw brought alxmt ti.f lilos wliich have broken out in ser:-f calif ies in tho Smth. The radic Pennsvlvania have endorsetl tic Rights Bill in the tenth resolution .fj platform and have thus dclilmah-ly countenance to the scheme to bin:; a war of races. In Philadelphia, about ore Monday afternoon James Tozicr Iii wife, Sallie Tozior, and then killed i.ii I lie wife ticcupTod a imm in tt: house No. 24S1, South Fifth stm was not living with bor husband. .' aged twenty-four and be twenty-sct tney bad been married only- a jr; useil a Sharp pistol, firing two ha her bead and one into hisowu head were dead whim the officer aud or. ro tho? traded by tho shots rushed into Maggie Jenks, sister of Mrs. Toziof in the room at the time, and witness, tragedy. A single patriot in Hampshire of Mass., serves the commonwealth ai leetman, Assessor, Overseer of the Highway Surveyor. Justice of the and quorum throughout tbe State; Public for Hampshire county. (Vim er of Insolvency for Hampshire Parish Assessor, Parish Collector. I of tho cemetery. Sutcriiitendi-iit cemetery, insurance broker, ii. agent, conveyancer of real estate. T. of the savings bank, memlier of tLc bean v ounty Committee, t hairnia' '"-I"' Kepublican lown t ommitlce. :n; 1. to Iks ready to act as a uiass-imi- favor of a third term whenever ' reqnii-es. Miss Agnes Iloltzman. a you nineteen years of age, and a rc Pittsburgh, avers that she has K-c of siwchlessness tii rough the 1-r-tho priests at the monastery. St'' power of speech altontsix months a having trieel a iminlvr of doctois l-licf. n-rnt tr. flw ..i...7isti-i-' J She says : "On July 20 was my ti when the iiriest cave me s-mie w Inirdes anel some prayers, which I continue until my next visit, wii: that day two weeks, when the pri me the blessing of St. Paul of th and nine days' prayers." '11 the Is fallowing her second visit to the ni her sjieeHjli returned, ami she ha trouble since. A Nattrai. I kci'batci it. A hid tcrson, N. J.. who kept hens, is t ;n. -c..,i.,i -it the ! manner iu "which a nestful of eg i batched. A ouantity of manure I of i thrown from the stable, and lately d:e:i heard young chickens in tl 1 Tnev at once called the attention mother to the fact, who, to solve tl tery, directHl that the heap lie pullet -Vben this was done, a sliortoiM.v tho Kiirfaco. a cavitv was diseiv. which were nine little chicks. bail managed to make her nest in : in the heap, and afier laying e!e i the opening had lNHn chrMHi by t' ' jnan nilimr on more of the cleat 'M n.. ctl.lr. Hip warmth p-enem''- Ifivr.....-.'. ... r ,. 1 .. 1...1 Kit. the ei'irs. anil l. l...-..n b it.lie.l out. SMUfl .....I.. . r...n ,.-itcllt -Ml lhl--l w AIIUI ftll-1 Ll'l 111 IIV ml three times. iiliii. 1' I - j 1 - plan for hatching t-hivkem.