(Join* fur the Cows. The western skies were alt aglow With clouds o* roil an' gray; The crickets in the grassy fields Were chirpin'm 'rrlly. Wlon up tho lams an' o'er the bill I raw a maiden roam. Who went tier way at clnao o' day To call tho cattle homo. Co-boae- co-bnal Co-bom co-tsswl Conns home come hotnsl Tie echo o' her channin' sroieo Ilcaoundcd tbro' tho vale; It lingers*! on the uvenio' air. It floated on tho gale; 'Twas boms l along the mountain aide. It driftod through the nlott; It died away among tho lulls, Far from the haunts of men. Co-buss—co-b< sat! Co-bos* co-hoest Como hssuie -■ come hnma. ller face was flusdnsd withhueso' health. Her arm* an' feet wore lore; She hail a lithe an' active form, A wealth o' raven hair. Beyond tho hill rise paeaed from sight. Ait sink* a failin' star, Until her voice wa faintly heard Still r&llin' from afar: Co-bom co- bom I Go-bos~ 00-bosst Come home- Come home! Soon o'er the distant knoll appeared Tho ea tie, rod an' brown. An' from tho pastur' to the lano Came gayly trot tin' down. With sparklin' eye* and clieeks aglow Ilcturned tho maiden KT. Who wared hor anus, and altnuted low: Whay-boaa— wbay-bosa- t) whay, Whay-bose- whay-lsoasi Whay-bosa—ubay-lsoes! t> whay- O wbayl V.tujmt J. Hall. A TWIST or ROSES. " Yon aro really in earnest, Miss Bar bara?" said Hugh Greatorex, with marked surprise in his tone. " I am." sever answer prompter, mora do oided ; notwithstanding, Hugh Grcato rex stared above his papers with an in crednlous, bewildered air. • "I am to understand, then, that yon disdain yonng Bonnifield's offer ; that yon will not avail yourself of any part of your rightful projwrty; that yon sacrifice all—" A flash of her black eyes, an im patient foot-tap, interrupted him. •'All!" she said. Bnt tho brisk little lawyer was not to be thus foiled. "My dear Mis i Barbara," ho eon tinned, snarcly, "this is a delicate matter; very delicate matter indeed, bnt I beg you to reflect; if not on Una proper offer, at least upon the—the primary condition of tho wilL Yon understand yonr grandfather, of course, he presumed yon wonld not find this hard, and as far as Hubert—" The black eyes flashed more vividly; again the crisp voice spoko: " Mr. Greatorex, spare yonr pains ; I will not marry Hubert Bonnifield ; I will not take from him these estates. For both, this is and testa ment, > please tetinjosubjeet drop." She finished with her hand on the door-knob, and swept from the apart ment down the hall and into the charm ing little bondoir which, until this even iug, had seemed to Ler a paradise; into j which, heretofore, she had brought scarce a disturbing thought. Her face softened, a burst of tears would have been the speedy sequel to her indigna tion, bat for un object that met her I eyea. A fair object to look upon; a twist of twin ro3f s, gracing the bracket whither, a few hours since, they had been ten derly carried; where this same Barbara had bent over them with blushing coun tenance, and touched them with her lips. Foor flowers! now beholding them, her blows bent; pitilessly she seized them, and flnng them far ont on the lawn. This action was a relief;' with it resentment temporarily faded, | and she seemed lost in self amasa. •'Who would have bnlivod I wonld ! do that this morning 1" she murmured. " But truly since morning life has changed. Then I was near to loving Habort Bonnifield; now I think I am as near hating him as ever Fd like to be. And be—" Hhe did not finish; she stood staring wistfully down the roadwsy, as if seek ing the sequel there—down where the flowers had fallen, where they lay wait ing, r ere age fill agents, though Barbara dreamed it not. It was a surprising denouement, that which bad occurred this dsy. Old Col onel Holden had been three months dead; the search for his will, vain, though vigilant, wss about being aban doned and an administrator appointed, when, accidentally, the banted docu ment esine to light. And a startling t document it proved, conferring the ' colonel M rich estates. untrammeled,upon his granddaughter, on condition that f the married Mr. Hubert Bonnifield; ; which, falling to do, the rame were to i pes* nntrunmeied into the said Boani i field's possession. Either of which conditions, Hugh Greatorex, executor, was charged to •* spec lily fulfilled. On the faco, a moat arbitrary will; but to those acquaint©! with Colonel Hol den the matter waa very plain. Ho had boon through lifo an inveterate jester; bin hnmor must needs tinge his will. Noting with a favorable eye young Bon ni fluid's nttentious to Barbara—as yet in their first bud—and priding himself on biA sagacity, ho had in a lit of jollity revoked all former teatamcnts and in dited this; chuckling to think that, should ho die ere things wore settled, how delightfully, under those arbitrary conditions, he had arranged for liis " dear young folks." And ho had died, suddenly, leaving this surpriso. Barbara understood it; uufortunatoly Hugh Bonnifleld demurred. His deli cacy was to bo his llrat stunbling block. There was no joy in his coun tenance when he heard tho startling news; ho appeared to fathom but one point. " It seems very ridicnlous.Mr. Great orox," ho said, "that I should offer to forego all claim to Hiss Barbara Hoi den's estates, but this is, in my view, tho proper course. Please mat. ago it as informally as possible, olse we may make a matter of iniporuwce ont of n farce." Hugh Greatorox was not surprised. "A fine young follow, Sir. Hubert Bonnifleld," he mused, privxk ly; " but Hidden did not know him as well as I. The case stands thn*s: Ho can have pretty Miss Barbara to- morrow for the asking; but ask her he never will,with out some advance on her jart—some thing to satisfy his nice soul. Undoubt edly she will miscomprehend him; and so the chances iro that we shall sc® a genuine love-match nipped in the bud. But perhaps after settlement, in tiuio-- stranger things havo chanced." And Hugh Greatorox bustled off to Barbara with tho news. Not an over-plcasant mission for the little lawyer,who knew this case so well. For, as Hubert BonniSeM had ignored tho will's first condition, he must neces sarily do the same; ho must smother suggestions, at loosttill tho open point was ruled. Bat he was ill prepared for the decision which was to rale this out. To Barbara, under the most delicate stating*, Hubert Bunnifield's action would have caused offense; in its bare, legal representation, it grow a mighty thing. Believing that he loved her, she hail anticipated but one course; ail the day she had been awaiting him, wondering that he did not come. From her lighter natnre the delicacy of his motives was hid; bewildered, indignant, beset by varied emotions she took refngo in the defiance which so amazed Hugh Greatorox, and which culminated AS wo have seen. ' Bat, as wo have scan, resentment fad©!; wistfully down the roadway Barbara stood gazing,whero the flowers had fallen, where they lay waiting, revengeful agents, though she dreaded it not. Littlo thrfught Bijf> would And his their feeling be. Though into night, aho sat waitiJH away at last, but with The I 1 mnrmnr: ' "He will surely como to sure IT as tomorrow cornea." H' Tomorrow, but not HnborVßonni fiehl ; a woek of to-morrows, and still he did not como. A week; and then on the passenger list of a European steamer she rood bis name. It had been all a mistake; be had never loved her, he was only too glad to yield up the eatatov, that he might ' be freed from her. Bo reasoned Bar bara, as she road. Not strange, perhaps, since sbo lacked the hint that Hugh Greatorcx should have given her; ignored her haaty words; suspected not the flowers that lay in wait that night. Amid her pain tho realization of her late caprico flashed upon her. Odd that itahonld be a comfort; but so it proved to Barbara, and she clung to it persist ently; over and over she repeated: "I will never have the estates I Hu bert Bonnifleld shall take them, or the will will be forever Toid." In vain nigh Greatorox pleaded; Barbara was firm. The homestead was vacated, and with on old, faithful ser vant, she went to resido a few mtioe from thence. A year passed, and atill the late com fortable homestead stood empty aod ghostlike, and so did it® brood lands. Barbara persistent; Hugh Bonnifleld as one dead. Till one evening Hugh Greatorox appeared in her cottage, with a letter in his hand. "Read I" he said, excitedly, pointing to it® concluding clause. She reed as follows; " I expect soon to be in W— with my wile. And, in conclusion, if Mine Bar bara baa not then assumed her inherit ance, if she still declines it, surely I may not be oonsured if 1 lay claim to it myself." A moment's silence, then die handed the letter to him/ "I understand, Mr. Greatorax," she add, quietly. " Surely be should not be blamed." " My dear Miss Barbara," he pleaded, "you will O'A pursue this whim? Sfou will not reject youi inheritance, now that the crista has csouie ?" In vain. Life had gone hard with Barbara; she had but recently recovered from an illnosa nearly fatal in effect Bat tho old will was active. Deter minedly she replied: • My decision remains unaltered. I decline the estates." Surely he should not be blamed. And yet there was something in that final sentenro worse than the belief that he did not love her, than tho fact that Ibo was forever lost to her. Better that love lack than one's ideal fallen so low. Ho mused Barbara, sitting, a few even ings later, in her little parlor—mused I so absorbedly that she heard not her i servant's announcement, realized naught till, turning, she saw Hubert Bonnifleld at her side. Surprise, the charm of the old pres ence, despite her efforts, did their work. 1 Barbara knew that her heart was bare. "I have been very ill," she stam mered, confusedly, " and my nerves are still weak." Ho did not spare her; he gazed stead ily down into her telltale face. She would have withdrawn lite hand she had extended, hut he clasped it tightly, as if he would never lot it go. " Barbara," lie said, " will yon for- I give me when I say that I rejoice that yon hare boen very ill ? For I do re joice ; otherwise I might have remained forever ignorant cf what makes my joy to-night—of this, that I was not mis taken when I thought you loved me ; tliat when you discarded my poor flow ers it was not as I bitterly fancied, but because you mistook my mo.ive, and were offended ut my course. I acted on niy first impulse, Btrhars. It seemed to me indelicate to act other wise, and I hoped that you would un , dcrstand. But you did not; you in dignantly declare*! that you would not marry mo. Still I was inn editions, aud was hastening to yon, determined to read your heart, when suddenly I found mv flowers. I heard some child ren telling their story ; my pride was now touched unto belief, and—you know tbo rest, Barbara—l was foolish and went away." Ho had spoken tenderly, with a wealth of qniet iovo ; bnt his next words wore pa** innate, spoken with bis face bent close to bora r " Barbara, darling, fate has been very kind. You were delirious and revealed all ; all was heard by that faithful sa vant, whose letter had bronght me borne. Will you deny it, Bartmra ? Will yon deny that yon lore nic still V Hhe could not answer. His kisses | scaled her lips. Bnt though so sud den, so barely comprehended, there seemed no greater happiness on earth than hers, till there came a remem brance, and she exclaimed : J. " Your letter to Mr. Oreatorex—your wlfrvTiubert ? Ido not understand." " wife yet, Barbers," ho ; hat she will be with ' SHEs-1 S ; * ''• on * Sleeper. ' JJHBPPou often hare trouble with Paringpassengers?" asked s reporter ' of a slecping-car conductor. " Don't IV repeated the conductor, i with ferror. " Oh, no 1 nercr, by sny means I Why, there's one man, a drum mer for s Chicago house, who crosses with mo regularly crery week, who'd drive a deaf corpse crazy. He's • little ( bit of a man, and don't weigh much | more than a hundred, but he can snore for twenty. He lays himself out, and falls asleep the minute he gete the ; covers over him. Then the fun begins. I've known him to have the whole car 1 awake and yelling for me and the por- j ter, and he snoring away as calm and peaoefnl as a Iwby. The last trip ho made wo had a minister with tut a big, jolly gentleman, who had the berth j next to him. He snored for half an honr at a stretch, and the poor preacher couldn't get a wink of sleep. But he dida't say anything till the others had i given up yelling in despair. Then the I drummer tolled over on his side, and, j giving a kind of ohoking snort, like s man liaving his throst cut, he stopped | snoring. For about half a second there j wae dead silence in the car. Then we heard the minister say : '"Thank Qod I The scoundrel's dead I' " Women are as bad for snoring as men, and much worse tempered with one another about it. Wo carried a theatrical company a month ago. Actors and actreaaas don't often take sleepers. They have a nack of making themselves comfortable in a common seat. But this party I tad been traveling Ml the day t>efore and acting till midnight, and was tired out. Well, they turned in, and pretty soon an old maid, who had the oorner berth, began to raise Cain about one of them snoring. Bhe woke the whole party up, and I never heard such a chorus in my bora days. First one be gan to pretend to snore, and then an other and another took it up. For a whole honr kept at it, and only •topped when they hadn't strength enough left to go on. Yon can believe the old maid didn't have any remarks on Booring to mike after that serenade," AFTER MAST TEARS. I Nrnm Knnimirr of th Wnl, On the 29th of September, 18(ili, James Baxter left Stone county, Micb., witb his wife, intending to emigrate to Louisiana. Home place along the border# aya the Frm Prwn, lio fell in witb a man wbo gave him his name as I aao Young, und who obtained permission to join tbo Baxters, an lio claimed to bo traveling in tho sirao direction they were going. Young was about thirty, very plausible, and quickly ingratiate#.! himself in the good graces of Baxter and his wife. Ho confided to bis compan ions everything regarding bis financial resources and future plans, and Baxter, in return, made a similar revelation. Among other things bo informed the i young man that bo bad sold bis farm | for $2,000, and that bo cirricd tbo i money, in $2O gold pieces, in a belt 1 strapped around bis waist. Some time after this the emigrants camped one night at a point liclween Dyke's Mill, La., and Magnolia, Ark. The spot s looted for a camp was at the head of a lonely glen, which was shaded on either side ' by tall pines, and thickly earjietod with luxuriant grass. A spring of clear, cold water gushed from a lodge of recks half way down the glen, and a number of pine logs furnished ample material for fuel. When a simple repast was prepared and oaten, B.ixter lit bis pipo and aaying be would return soon strolled down the glen. Young and Mrs. Bax ter remained seat# d by the blazing tiro talking about tho incidents of the day's travel. An hour passed. B -xter did not return, lit# wifo grow tinraay, and Young, to quiet her fear*, as he ex pressed it, started down the gien, saying be would bring him back. The woman waited impatiently. Ono, two, three hours went by, yet neither appeared. Mrs. Baxter was now thoroughly fright ened. She called loudly for hor hus band, but received no response. Only tho echo of her own voice came back to her, borne on the night .rind, which swept down the valley and through tho tops of the swaying trees. She ven tured down thoglen, trembling, calling, listening; but she neither heard nor saw anything. Both her husband and his companion had disappeared at completely as if the earth had suddenly opened and swal lowed them up. Almost distracted, she returned to the camp, where the pace#! to and fro until morning came; then, mounting one of the horses, she hast ened to the nearest bouse, and soon had a body of men scouring the country i n search o? the missing men. The search was continued nearly a week without finding so much as a trace of either Young or Baxter, when it was aban dosed. The men engaged in it told Mrs. Baxter bluntly that the affair was preconcerted between the two men. and that her husband had heartlessly de serted licr. The wife so strangely bereft would not sceept this theory. Hhe in sisted that her husband bad been murdered by Isaac Young, and that time would show that she was not mistaken. Acting on this supposition she re turned to her former home, and gather ing all her available means, instituted m thorough search. She advertised, em ployed detectives, scattered handbills with accurate description; of her hus band and Young; but all to no purpose. Nothing came of It, and the affair seemed a mystery which no human skill could unravel. Years went by, and still the remained in her mountain homo, hoping and praying for tidiugaof her missing husband-—or even a clew that would point to his fate. The sus pense in all tbeso years had been try ing. Since that memorable night she had become an old woman. By the sale, of nearly all the effects which remained to her after her husband's disappear ance, she had been enabled to bay a little eabin and a few acres of ground and have enoagh money remaining to keep her, with close economy, from actual want And alone in that little hnt she waited for tidings of the man to whom she had linked her fate. A short time ngo startling nowa reached that solitary woman in hor monufain retreat. It came in the shape of a letter written only laat Jane and dated at Malbonrne, Australia. The writer aaid that be bad that day aaiisted to bury a man of the name of Saunders; bnt whose papers, which the writer had been charged to examine, ahowed he waa laaao Young, an American, and who confeaaed to a horrible crime. Then followed a detailed aooonnt of the night in the glen aixteen year* ago. It aeema Young had made up hie mind to rob and marder Baxter from the time he learned that Baxter had 92,000. He followed him quietly down the glen, atole upon him unawares and atruok him a blow with a atiek of wood wtdoh killed him instantly. To eeeure the money and bury the body under tome loose earth and atone waa the work of e very few momenta, and before Mr*. Baxter had atarted down the glen Young waa miles away. He hastened to New Orleans, took peseage to Australia, changed hie name, and •pwHstatcd with his ill-gotten gains. He prospered stnstiogly, and, unlike the traditional murderer, died undo tooted and wealthy. Ho directed that Mrs. Baxter lie found, if living, and paid 92,000 with interest from the date of the murder; and he begged her to forgive him. That was all which tho letter contained. But subsequent in vestigation proved it to be true. Bax ter's bones wore found at the foot of the glen and decently buried, and tho Australian party turned out to be Isaac Young, the murderer. Mrs. Baxter de dined the money with indignation, but alio may yet conclude to take it. The i story if, as strsnge us it is true. Curious Time-Keepers. An American traveler once saw a rare 1 Japanese time keeper, which ban been | described in an old record. This clock, j in a frame three foet high and five long, ' represented a noon landscape of great i loveliness. In tho foreground were | pluin and cln rry trees, and rich plants I m full bloom ; in the rear a hill, gradual 1 in ascent, from which flowed a cascade admirably imitated in crystal. From i this poiut, a thread-like stream glided along, encircling in its windings rocks I and tiny inlands, but presently losing | itself in a far off stretch cf woodland. 1 In the sky turned a golden snu, indi- I caking as it passed the striking hours, j which Wero all marked upon the frame below, where a slowly-creeping tortoise served as a hand. A bird of exquisite plumage, resting by its wing, pro claimed tho expiration of each hour. When the song coaxed, a mouse sprang from a grotto near by, and running over the bill, hastily disappeared. In the South Kensington museum, at | London, is a small watch about one 1 hundred years old, representing an ap ple, tho golden cam ornamented with grains of pearl. Another old Nurem burg watch has the form of an acorn, and is provided with a dainty pistol, which perhaps served as an alarm. In London is an eagle shaped wate'a, within which, when tho body of the 1 bird is opened, a richly ornamented | face is seen. They are sometimes found I in the form of ducks and skulls. Tho bishop of Ely hod a watch in tho head of his cane, and a prince of Six our had one in his riding-saddle. A watch mado for Catherine 1., of Russia, is a repeater and a musical watch. Within is the holy sepulchre and the Roman guard. By touching a spring tho stones move away from the door, the guard kneels down, angels appear, and the holy women step into the tomb aa 1 sing the Easter song that is heard in the Russian churches. King George I If., of England, had n watch not larger than a five-cent piece, which had 120 different par Is, the whole not weighing quite as much as a ten cent piece. Clocks and watches must usually bo wound up every day, though some clocks will ran eight days without winding, and a few even longer than that. But there was a century clock at the great Centennial exhibition at Philadelphia. The man who made it says it will run one hundred year* with out winding, though it is hard to be lieve this. There was another curious kind of a clock at the Centennial. It was fixed in a carriage, and tells just how many times the wheel turns round on a jour ney, and how many miles have been traveled, and how long the carriage has been in making tbo trip. The lliM-overy of Silk and Satin. The discovery of silk is attributed to ono of the wives of the emperor of CIUOP, lioang-ti, who reigned about two thousand rears before the Christian era! and since that time a special spot has been r.llotted in the garden of (he Chinese royal palace to the cultivation of the mnlberry tree and to the keeping of aiik worms. Persian monks who came to Constantinople revealed to the Emperor Jostinian the secret of the prod action of ailk, and gave him some ailk worms. From Greece the art passed into Italy at the end of the thirteenth oentnry. When the popes left Borne to settle at Avignon, France, they intro duced into that country thoscciet which had been kept by the Italians, and Lonia XI. established at Tours a manufactory of silk fabric. Francis I. founded the Lyons ailk works, which to this day have kept the llrst rank. Henry 11., of France, word, at the wedding of his sister, the first |ir of silk hose ever made. The word " satin," which in the origi nal was applied to sii silk stuffs in gen eral, has since the lest oentnry been used to designate only titsues which present a Inatcred surface. The dis covery of this particular brilliant stuff was accidental. Octavio Mai, a silk wsaver, finding business Very dull, and not knowing what to invent to give a new impulse to the trade, was one day pacing to and fro before Ms loom. Every time be passed the machine, with no definite object in view, be pulled little threads from the warp and put them to his mouth, which soon after he spat out. Later he found the little bail of silk on the floor of his workshop, and was attracted by the brilliant appearance of the threads. He repeated the eiperiment, and by using certain mueUagious preparations sue- I needed in giving satin to the world. A Xew Mother Shlpfou. VVlit ii liwyer* full to tske • I"<\ And juries tuiwt ilieagri*; Whee politirUns tr<- content. And l:>n<l'or<U Joa't collect lljeir r-iilj When partis* arnuh alt the mas-hine*, And folk* giso tip their he&nr; When nauithtjr cblldfMi all die yoonf. - , And girl* are bore without a tongue; Whan laditw don't tale time to bop, And office-holders never Hop; When preacher* cat their at iruuia short. And all folha to the eU>:rch resort; When back a.ilwrll -er* all have paid, And editor* have fortune* mate; Ho- h happenings will aurc portend, Thi* world ulttat noon come to an end. ITSUEXT PARAGRAPHS. A professional beauty, though two j word*, in really only one hilly belle. " Clotted in consequence of a debt in j the family," in an excellent epitaph for 1 a hunted firm. A voting lady with a big volume of bouscho'.d recipes in anxious to know j the ingredients for making a sacrifice. Learning ia well enough; but it j hardly pay* to give a five thousand I dollar education to a five-dollar boy. Wlren the schoolmaster threatened to tan Johnny, the urchin reminded him that "a soft tan, sir, turnetb away wrath." A landlady wa*. compla ning that she ! couldn't make both ends meet. "Well," said a boarder, " Why not make one j end vegetables The young woman who need to sing to divinely, "Oh, hat! I the wings cf a dove," is satisfied with a chicken Jog ' now. Hbe is married, i The most thorough hypocrite in existence is the young man who can ; successfully assume to Icve the younger 1 brother of Lie sweetheart. i • We Lave just read a handkerchief flir i iation cod", and advise all men wishing to avoid a broach of promise suit to j wipe their mouths with their coal-tails. There ia joy in the heart of the man | who carries an umbrella every day in the year, whting a favorable opportunity i 1o pity the rest of the uncovered world. Young husbands very seldom allude to their Art baby as "birdie." That j may do for the mother daring comling ; time, but who ever heard of a squalling birdie? If you want to know just how yon stand in the community ask your worst I enemy and your best friend, and then strike a fair average. Most ]>eoplo make the mistake of asking only their best friends and taking that as the fair average. A health journal fays that "an attack of hiccoughs muv be stopj<cd by hold ing the head under water." It doesn't say haw long the hood should be held under water, but wo should think about two hours would be plenty long enough to stop the worst case el hiccough ever invented. A spread eagle orator, at a political dieting the other night, said "if he hod the wings of a bird he would fly to every village and hamlet in the broad laud, and carry the glad tidings of vic tory which he wa* so sure oL" A naughty hoy in the crowd song out: " You'd be shot for a goose before you had fled a mile." "I've been to see Mrs. Tittletattle," says Mrs. Telltale, " and the wsy the ran on about you was perfectly scandal ous." "80 she's been talking about me, boa abc f asked Mrs. Brown, quietly. "Yea, indeed she has," replied Mrs. Telltale, with emphasis. " What a nice time you two must have bod," said Mrs. Brown, with a sweet smile. Everybody remembers the famous Iriah echo which, when the guide called out, " How do ye do?" answered, "Party well,l thank you." llut this is quite outdoue by an echo in the Pyre nees. '• Observe," says the guide, " how the sound ia repeated from rock to rock anil from crag to crag, and especially bow beyond the frontier the echo has a perfectly distinguishable Spanish ac cent." "It may be months, darling, before wo meet again," ho raid, squceoiog her hand as if that grip were his last; " mountains and valleys will dividj us. forests and prairies, perhaps the river of death Itself. Can Ido anything mere than 1 have done to make you cherish my memory, and keep your love for mo unchangedr "Oh, yes," she ex claimed, choking down the aobe, " buy me a box of tortoise-shell hairpins be fore you sAsri." The Brahmin. The Brahmin, says Dr. Scudder, has intellectually no superior. No in an can mingle much with them sad not have bis wits sharpened. They are the learned men of the oouutry. The Sans crit, "queen of languages," is their na tive tongue, and its vast literature has been their grand field of mental train ing. The Brahmin is almost white, wonderfully nest, begins every day in the water tank, eets no animal food, be lieving that if he doee he shall pass through as many transmigrations afkr death m there are hairs 00 the animal of which he *str. Physically these people are of splendid form, majestic lo ads, cud carry themselves grandly.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers