A Blsrouingliig View or Lendvllle. A Ixmlsvlllr (Ky.) druggist, now in Lead villi', 001., the great mining camp, writes home ns follows: 1 have now been here two days, and have looked the town over pretty thoroughly. You may say to I)r. that there are thirty-lire doetors here, and that, in my opinion, this is no place for him. It is the most disntrris'alde hole I ever was in—the mud is ankle deep nil over the town. A thou sand men are constantly marching alsuit with apparently no olyoct in view. The streets present "n very animated npjienr anee, hut the stores don't seein to In'sell ing as much as a casual observer would imagine. I am now writing in a drug store, and have le>n for half an hour, during wldeh time they have taken in seventy-live cents. There are seven drug stores in town, one of which was sold last week for f 10.000, including the house and lot. All of them See®i to have very complete stocks and are ready for busi ness. They expect a hundred thousand visitors this summer. Houses are (wing built in every direction, and prices for rent are fabulous. Three hundred dollars per foot is asked for lots on the principal streets: corner lots, 410,000. It is sim ply ridiculous; they all seem to think the town will last until next fall. The town is unhealthy. I am well, hut know several who are sick. The light air affects my health considerably. Sawmills are just coining money. Mr. MiK>rc told me to-day tliat his mill produced twelve thousand feet daily, which lie sold at fifty dollars per thousand feet—on which he makes one-half clear profit, ami the people almost fought to get it at that. One-storv shells, sixteen lect square, are rented at forty dollars per month. The town is full of gambling hells, openly carried on—keno, faro anil the like. Saloons do a thriving business. Hotels are full and making lotsof money, charg ing large prices for very poor nccoiumo dations. I would not advise any one to Coino hero except with a view to mining. A Lend ville paper gives the following schedule of the cost of necessaries and luxuriia of life in that "city:" By build ing a log cabin at a cost of. perhaps, fifty dollars, a party of two or more ran live by "hatching" for alxuit four dollars per week: it is not safe to count on less. The bote's charge from two to four dol lars per day. Baths cost fifty cents, a cigar twenty-five cents, a glass of beer fifteen cents. Little milk can Is- had, condensed milk being generally useiL Butter costs from forty to fifty rents per pound; eggs, forty to fifty cents per dozen: beans, seven to ten cents; lard, twelve to lourtcen cents; bacon, twelve and one-half to fifteen cents; hams, fif teen cents; beef, eight to fifteen cents; pork, fifteen to twenty rents; venison, twelve and one-half to thirteen cents; cabbage, five to eight cents per pound; potatoes, four to five cents per pound; flour, $1 to $1.75 per 100: corn meal, $3.50 per 100: tea, seventy-five cents to $ 1 .25 per pound: coffee, thirty to fifty cents per pound : sugar, six and one-half to eight pounds for one dollar. Con densed milk is thirty-six cents per can. All the beef, flour, potatoes, vegetables and otlier edibles consumed here are shipped in wagons from Webster, Colo rado Springs or Canon City, and most of these articles an l purchased in Denver, Chicago and Kansas City. I'arole. The victories* of I'ierrv Lorillard'a American horse. I'arole, in England, warrant a glance at the animal's career. I'orole is by imported Ix'amington out of Maiden, she by liexington out of Kitty Clark, by Glenrae. He was foaled in t(f73 at Chestnut Hill, near Philadel phia. Mr. Pierre leuillard bought him. a yearling, for $ 1 .000. As a two-year old he ran six time*, winning tlie'.luly and August stakes at Ixmg Brum h and the Saratoga and Kentucky stakes at Saratoga. As a three-year-old he was braten early in the srason by Vagrant, in the Kentucky I>< rby. lie was amiss ami it was -aid that lie -hould not Is l ailowed to run. He did not run again until the Saratoga meeting, when ho brat Tom Ochiltree for the all-aged stakes. Tom then bent him for the cup, but Parole again turned the tables by taking tlie Sequel stakes. He next won the ali aged stakes at Jerome l'ark. After tlint lie was beaten at Baltimore bv Vigil, both for the Dixie and Breckinridge stakes. As a four-year-old he wen the Wood burn stakes, tlie Saratoga cup, and the summer handicap. He also lxnt Virginias and Glasgow in a dash of n mile and a half, even weights. At the Jerome Park meeting lie eaptumi the Maturity stakes, the (iranil National .handicap, ami the all-aged stakes. Pnrole s next and iwrist famous victory was the race of two mil-< and a half with Ten Broeok and Tom OiJjiltree, in Balti more. October ittth, Ten Broock was the favorite at large odds. I'arole % came in gallantly two length* in front of Ten Itroeek and six lengths ahead of Tom Oehlltn e. liltt season Parole ran ten races, win ning eight, including the Baltimore Monmouth and Saratoga imps. Miraculous Exercise of Strength. John Boone, an employe of Gehhart's flour milla. in the eastern part of Dayton, Ohio", was caught in the shafting of the machinery and narrowly escaped with his life. lID -lothing became wrapied about the shafting so tightly that when he discovered the fact he could not extri cate himself. He is a man weigldngtwo hundred pounds and of great strength. Throwing one arm around a beam near at hand he endeavored to pull the shaft ing-out of gear or trar himself from it. He succeeded in springing it from the xx-kets, but on slacking up it sprang back. Boone held the shafting in this position for fully fifteen minutes, when, obliged to give up from exhaustion, he was drawn tipi n tlie shaft, his clothes fortunately*giving way. They were torn completely from his laxly. He succeeded In getting to a lower floor of the build ing, where he fell from sheer exhauation, and was discovered shortly nfter by those who had heard hi* cries. He was at once placed under medical rare. ChrystaPs '* Xylophonleu." The dog with the shortest tongue mke the most laps. A friend in kncad---thc hired girl who can make good bread. "Soled again, ai last,'' remarked the dilapidated lxx>l a* it left tlie shoemaker's hands. Tlie tyrant Grosier < rigiixited an oft-ra peatrd expression, when lie said, *' Blood, Will. TellI" Animals may not take much interest in athletic contests, but just introduce one old goat to another and are how anon they '1 have a " spring meeting." The man is yet to he found who can make conch shell discourse s#eet mnalc without giving his bearers the impression that he is suffering from a severe altaek of aggravated astlims.- ttarkennark RtpMimn. TIIK GREAT MIMING CAMP. The Vnprccrdrntrit Until for Ix-mlvlllr, d'ol— I'in-lou* MrUh In Abundance ■ Nlr*ngr Hrrnri of JVliirm* IJfr A year ago Lcadvillc, Col., wax a de serted milling camp. To-day it contains several churches and three theaters, and is the most bustling, exciting spot in America. Although distant twenty miles from any railroad, hundreds are pouring into the place daily, ami the sur rounding country is filled witli eager searchers for the precious metals which are found everywhere In abundance. Writing from Is'iidvilie. a correspondent of the Louisville ('mirier-Journal says: " I tliink lam fully justified in saying that new 'strikes' are Wing made daily. Prospect holes on the mountain sides for miles around are as thick as chccries upon a tree in full fruit. Dally there comes to town some happy iiimvidual whose pick lias struck into the precious stuff. The streets are full of men who arc ready to buy claims and prospects, yet there Is so great risk in buying that all are cautious and wary. Hourly, aye, constantly, the ripiilc of talk goes from center to circumference and bark again—talk of mines, claims, prospects, strikes, prices paid and received. Every one nearly is interested, or seeking to become so, in claims. Tlie demure looking individual that look* at you over his gold spectacles, .seeming calm and unconcerned, is anxiously waiting news from his claim tip Bfg Evans, Little Evans or Stray Horse gulch. The clerk who is yonder measuring a r-a- hath, if the stp-ct loading l>y the churches is not taken no imagination could tor ture it into a Sabbath day. Then- is the same whirr and buzz as on other days; or, if there tx- a difference, it Is on the in erease. for Sunday is the day that many miners rami' in from the mountains to do tlnir trading. Injustice to the car praters, I should mention that I have noticed that not a groat many of them tlius desecrate the Ixird's day; iiiit it d"xx* really ln<- must bo very ricli indeed to be nblo to afford to be cureless with OIIC'H dot LIT*, Dreuse* touted down anyhow, when taken off. soon grow shabby and tum bled, anil wear out twice as fast as if well kept. When a dress is taken off, even fin - a few hours, it should always be shaken out and hung up, or else Added and laid away. If it lias lieen worn out walking it should he well brushed, since dust, if allowed to accumulate, soon ' robs it of its freshness and cuts the ma- i I terml in every crease into which it works jits way. A stiff whisk broom should never be used for silk—a hair brush is far better—while a soft woolen cloth is I bint of all, especially for removing the I i dust from the skirt under the flounces. | Whether it is best to fold dresses or to hang them up is nn open question, j Thick silks cut in the folds when folded, j so they probably keep best when hang- | | ing, while, on the other hand, thin, ! light dresses are I letter folded. Princess j dresses, with much trimming, after the I present fashion, should have two loops i lor hanging, one on each side, else the : j weight of the trimming will null the j skirt out of sluipe. Dresses should never 1 tie crowded in a wardrobe lest they lose j their freshness and take on undesirable folds. Dress-waists, if separate, should never lie hung out; the proper way is to ' fold tliein smoothly, with the sleeves carefully pulled out, the shoulder sciuns j i straight and the lining outside. Then lay them in a drawer, on a shelf or in 1 the tray of a packing trunk long enough to let them lie flat. Ribbon* and ruches tossed carelessly into n drawer stain lose j their freshness and look soiled and worn, i I All sueli should he carefully rolled up : and laid away in IM>X<-* after each time ' iof wearing. A soft bonnet whisk should j form a part of every lady's toilet proper- ! tics; her bonnet* should nlaays be brushed and the strings rolled upneforr putting away. Of course all tills takes time, and there are busy people who find it impossible; j still, when it can la- done, it pays in the j end. I.inen collars in the morning, real laces in tlit- evening, are the most reo- i mimical as well as the most stylish net-k -wear. Crcjie lisso and tnrletnn ruches cost b -s than lace in the beginning, hut when once soiled are done with, while 1 the lace may he washed again and again. 1 Every lady who wishes to dress well on 1 a small income should able to do up her own lace*. The ability to do fine , ironing also will 1M- found a most useful accomplishment. Washing dresses arc 1 the nn-tti'-st possible wear for warm j weather; hut if the aid of a laundress j . has to he called in every time they ' are was hi si, they will also he found very expensive. The ironing and fluting— not the washing—is what makes them so, and if this can !• done at home, without licing an additional burden to , the servants, the young ladies will find themselves aide to drc** in white all the ' summer at very small cxp*n*c, no sliyht consideration to people with small I incomes. It isgiss) economy to changi • one's dress for evening, since any dress lasts much longer if worn in turn with others than if worn all the time, and with most people a dress may lie worn in the morning a hi. b would lie w holly out ,of taste in tlie evening. Hut even if you do your own work you may still'lx ' neatly dressed. We onre knew a lady living in a flat, without a servant, who was yet always ready to receive com | pany. She dressed in the morning neatly, in a pretty woollen suit, and over i this ,he donned a calico wrapper with , lony sleeves buttoned at the wrist*. A calico sweeping cap covered her hair. I and a long apron was tied nltout her waist. Thus accoutcmd she went alsiut her housework; swept. dilated. cooked and washed dishes. When the door-t>cl) i tng, wrapper and cap were iaiil off in a winkling, and a visitor had seldom to ring twice licforel>ringadmitted.—lfiiln h IfJiui Timet. Xm I'loimrfi. There are many pretty design* for flounce* on tlie new iliws. F le deepened on the fri-nl breadths. For thi* border flounce French modiste* use a full "hell flounee made up of the wool and silk goods lined in the costume; first a knife-plaiting a finger deep made of the silk is nmund the bottom of the skirt: the lending for this i a narrow ; liny-plaiting of the wind, each edge of ' which is finished with silk knife-plait ing ; bet wi-en the tail-plaiting the edge* of the knife-plaiting are pulh-d together ' and lacked to form the shell. The shirred flounce is simple and pret- j tv. It i* made of straight *iik ten inches | deep, hemmed hv machine on botli edge*. It i then laid in side plaits, each ( an inch wide, three in a cluster, and a space a finger long is left bstween the I lusters. Tlie plaits are pressed smooth- j ly at the bottom the b-ngtli of a linger, while above this each plait is gathered lengthwise—one row of gath'T* to each ' plait—and drawn down to a spac the i length of the flat plaits. This make* frilled plaits at the top and plain plaits ts'low. Sew to the skirt an inch from 1 the upper edge of thr flounce, and also i l>e|nw the frilled part of the plait*, j A stylish fan flounce easily made is ilso of straight silk tenor twelve inches ' wide. In tills flounce the plaits—either three or five in a cluster—are folded or lapped upon each other, and are stitched across near the top. and again at half tludr depth ; this makes the upper'part quite flat, while all below this I* allowed to spread outward like a fan. The festooned flounce ia most often seen on the front and sides of trained skirts that are plain liehind. or at most .lave a plain side-plaited flounce. It j forms five curves usually, though *ome ; times only three are seen. It Is cut bias. I and edged top and bottom with knife; plaited silk, or la.*#, or else plain-meshcd grenadine. It is then caugiit tin in four horizontal Adds thnt draw tne lower : edge up almost to the top, tliua forming i curves on the lower edge. A hunch or rihlwm loops, a rosette, or a small cas cade of laec is set in between each curve. This graceful trimming is pretty for j lawns, hati"tes, white muslins and'gren j adines, and Is seen on sonic of the most fnnclful pompadour foulards.— lUuar, W omen In Iks l*l: The.Mobaniinedans pearly all believe that woman has no soul. Tills is not ' taught in thcKoran, hut Iscountenanced ! by the faet that, in the great prophet's paradise, boiiris are given to the faithful Instead of their earthly wives. The ('liinnae make slaves of the wnmcn of tills world, and deny them any hope of compensation hereafter. In wtjdcrn Australia female children are alwavs lie- I trothed a few days after thHr birtli: and should the first huahnnd die before the girl attains her maturity, she belongs fo bis heir. In New Zealand if a girl's future husband should die no other man VIV V mk " 11 i ,ro l>°sal to Iter. Among the Hindoos widows may not marry again. In ('liina the puretiU bargain for the marriage of their children while they are yet unborn. The New Hollanders steal their wives; and if a woman attempts to escape her captor, he at once thrusts a spear through the fleshy part of her leg or thigh. Of all methods of obtaining a wife that of purchase is the most univer sal. It la practiced by the African, by tlie black and brown races of the Indian Archipelago, and by nearly all tin-na tions of Asia. The ('ircassiau women prefer being sent to Constantino pie to h sold. In Siani and < "o' hin-China men invariably purchase their wives; hut the women have one privilege—the parents cannot sell them without their will. In China, however, women arc sold'with out being consult*"d on the subject, and have to obey everyone In tin-family of her purchaser, without exception—tlie husband's control over her l ing entire ly unlimited. In Japan presents nre made to the bride, who transfers them to her relatives, to defray the expense and trouble they incurred in bringing her up from her infancy. (tru uhu Journal. A Governor'* Arrest as a Horse Thief, It is related that while Tlioina* Mann Randolph was Governor of Virginia, lie was once arrested within a few hundred yards of his home, in this county, and carried a prisoner to hi* own house. Tlie story is to the following effect: The governor was on a visit to his own home, and finding that the fencing on his plantation was pulled down and burned by wagoners passing along from the Valley to Richmond, lie determined to detect and punish them. One evening he observed a party go into camp on the roadside, nnd after dark he strolled down to n jioint where he could conveniently watch them. He staid out all night, hut the wagoners made no deprivations on his fences. In tin-early morning, how ever, when tln-y were alsuit to kindle the fires to prepare breakfast, they start,*! out to gather up what ftiel they might find for tiiat purpose, when tin y spied a man sitting on the fence a short distance ahead. Now, it appears that a short time Ik-- fore. Coventor Randolph had i*in*l hi* proclamation, offering a reward for the capture of an escaped horse thief, and tic wagoners, who had seen the des cription of the convict, thought they discovered a close resemblance Is-twis-n the man on the fence and the escaped A-lon. So thoroughly satisfied were tln-y hat tln-y would receive the reward for his arrest that they r*iprmehe|>ed at a cost of fl.fltlO for each guest. Com mon sense tells us that tills vast expen diture is not necessary. 1-uxurv i-annnt replace human skill. Now in England, with a hard working governmental su pervision, which controls the erection ot buildings as well as the personal can- ol the inmate*, we find modem a*ylum* construetid at one-tenth the maximum and one-half the minimum cost of m-ent American hospitals. —Nirtr York Ob an* r. The Andre Xonnment. Mr. Cyrus W. Field h*s pnrrhxeed ths land st Tsppsn, N. Y., where M*jor John Andre wss exeeuteii Ortidier 2, I'tWl, snd is hsving piepsml to lie plsrcd on the ssme s stone, nn th* front of which will lie in scribed : tl-r* '11—). Ortotier J. I7SO, Major litis AXDRK. Nt th* HrOi*h Army, who. entering lb* An-ertesn lines on ■ *eers SIIMK)! I* ttrn—lirt Arnold, for Urn *nrr<-ndsr of West I' IM I, *u taken |>rteoner, tried and omdetoi.ed s* a spy Hl* death. tbnngb tnmrdlng to the stem code c.f war, moved even hi* eiieml—> to put, snd both armies monrned th- I*l* of one so pnnng snd so tirsve. In UWI his rwnsln* were removed to Wmtiolnstor Ahl-ey. A linndted years aft - r hie - aer-ulloa * ettiaee of the stsle* aasln-t ohieh be fa(hl piaeed tbt* *Sno alaive the spot wher* be Up ; Hot to perpetniile the record of trtf, Hot In token ol those better sentiment* r WTbloh have etniw united two nation*. On# In race. In language, and in r*lt*ton ; With the aarneot hope that 'hi* ftletolli union Will never he broken. —Jk ISm ff * Ays a-rrdeg Ihww Sf WVi - inSaW—. [ erty. I will appeal to the legislature to adopt some systi-m of re lief lam willing to compromise for sa.4oo.nno iu ten-vear installments. I liave piialgi-i myself, as a thank-offering to my Maker, who ha given m< - success, to spend the p-t of my day* in doing all the gixwl I can. I have -bown tliem what a little woman enn do in an un u-u.-il an than conquering in the Gaines suit. " I'll tell you how I'll do it." said she. " I have not moved in Washington so ciety for nothing. 1 know its weaknesses and it* strength, its ins and outs, its dis ease and it.* n-medv. I'll build a mam moth hotel in Washington and I'll make the term* *n low that no member of Oon gre- *hall have an excuse for not bring ing his wife with liirn. that thev may thu fulfill the legitimate ihwtiny which God ilesirnri is a " dead planet and that, inasmuch a* she haa hut a alight and very rare atmosphere. and that, ax a consequence. no water exist* on her surface, *h<- j. entirely unfitted to jx- the dwelling place of any organic te ing* wliatever—at leant of any kind* that our mind* can form any conception of. On the other hand, those who take the opposite view argue (to u*e the word* of I tick) tliat " matter appear* to have tieen created chiefly in KUliftcrvicncy to mind; and it ia highly improbable that the Creator would leave a glolw con taining a surface of 15,000,000 square miles altogether destitute of scnsitivc and intellectual Is-ings.Jesjxßc.-ially when we heboid it* surface diversified nni ailorned with u ha vast assemblage of picturesque and sublime wenerv, and when we consider that every department connected with our globe i* people) with sentient Is-ing* of every description. Al though wn* and rivers and a dense at mosphere are not to he found connected with the lunar orb, and although some of it* arrangements are different from thone of the earth, yet tbewe el rcu in stance* form no valid objection to the moon Is-ing inhabit'd. for the Creator '•an in all case* adapt the inhaldtant to the nature of the habitation pro vided for h iin. as lie has adapt'*) the idrds for winging their flight through the air, the fish'-* for gliding in the water, and man and quadrupeds for raveling the dry land." A lirnnken Deer. It is stated by nn authority tliat the deer—at anv rat'' the French decr--for all liia amiable qualities gets drunk. Itut only at this time of the year. lie then 'throw* himself with avidity' upon certain tender sli'sits containing a juice which ferments in id* stomach and intoxii-ates him to such an extent tliat lie -trays from his u-uai haunts and ' follows his nose.' Thus it came to pass that a deer 'in liquor' was dis covered by a feasant, also 'in liquor,' lying 'dead drunk' in a ditch on the road to the village of Queue-en-Brie. The peasant, delighted at the godsend, tied the deer's fegs together with a bamlkcrch'ef. and, having hoi-ted the animal on Ills shoulders, prepared to carry him off. The dw-r. rntiMil from lii- drunken sleep tiy this treatment, )*•- came so troublesome that the peasant, who was of an inventive turn, took off his blouse, pa—.'. " Greening*." A youth living on Bagg street rolled an apple liarrcj to th<' curlistone tlie other aftcrncMin. filled it with cobble stone-. headed it tip and marked the bar rel "Greening*—handle c arefully." The youth retinal to await further arvelop ui< nte, and they soon came. A sawdust wagon > ame along, and the driver jumped down and trascal—A number one slipper. Wlioop skirts are much worn on the frontier. Fair one, if you don't want some fei , low to steal your heart, you must steel it yourself. A perpetual-mot ion watching marl im —A mother with several marriageable daughters. It s nw..y amusing o examine th mans of tlie different ral.way line* am find on each one their own road cor. ven icntly represented as direct . tin bird flies." and al. competing no ( rooked as a rani's bom or the streets o Boston. Tlie editor who wrote what he in tended to be a complimentary pnragrap] concerning a lwitlc-scarred soldier, vn hail honored his sanctum with a call wa* exasperated beyond measure ca taking up his paper tlie following mora Ing. 'and seeing his fine effort utter I, ruinoil by the intelligent making it owl, a " nattle-*cared wfl ' dler."~ CMrmpn cbwMwmwaf A lirrtxmr. H a In every walk of Hfrthepresent luanifl and its attendant Ills have taking a —a dangerously deep—root. Some Isdlifl on tlie south side have undertaken (■ make two thousand calls in twotb-maanS quarter hours A boy on the west siilH was rescued from the pantry whore I H was trying to eat three thousand quart-■ pie* in three thousand quarter Ilia mother ahowed him nn quiul#r. HQH lie got no syrapatliy from lilt gisteti a*H his cousins and his sunU. gig