Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, October 11, 1877, Image 1

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    _ TERMS. OP PUBLICATION.
d farthing In all cases - exclusive of subserip:
tilps to the Paper.
SanSOTItI ES inserted et FITTILIM CIINTP
t :Itte. for inn frit Insertian, and !IV'S C.INTf
1 4 *.
- br snt.uent insertions.
, t' A L ,NOT ICES, wune style" es Trading mist 7
pr . wKNTY CiCNTS A LINZ.
,A 11 EltT I St:III:NTS will be_ Inserted according
vAlowing table or rates:
1 by 1 hr' 1 2in ani I am 1 lgr.
; $1.50 1 8.001 8.00 1 8:00 1 10.00 1 - 1 - 8.01
. , _ . . .
1 2.001 5.001 5.00 1 10:00 1 15.001 70.01 ,
1 2 7 50 1 7.00 1 10.00 1 13.00 1 26.00 1.30.00
1 2.001 8.50 1 14.001 18.25 125.00 1 - 85.4
••. _ _
. 1 5 - .00 1 12.001 18.00 1t.% 00 130.00 1 , 18.0 t
• _ _
coilmn.. 1 10.00 1 20,00 1 80.001.40.00 154.0 ` 0
1 75.0 r
rohnon...l - 2 0 . 00 50.1811 6.00 1 . 80.00 1 100. 1 1 , %0.
,_.t ATo ni "and Executor's Notices,
..:Altko: to Itort notices.r.so; Ilasines*Cards„ five
van 85,00, additional lines. 111.00 esieb.
Advertisements are entitled to - guar.
't
• 1r oharrreg.
I; A ,:s'i•ENT advertinMents moo be paid for
.; i)v
1.1. Resolutions of ssoclationS. communles
;
of Molted or Indtvlatial Interest and-notices
m arrlntes and - Deaths. exceeding five lines, are
cENTS. PEE. LINE. . . • - •
.1011 PRINTING, of every kind, In plain and
rotors, tree with ',neatness and .rilspateh.
.:1 , 1,11,11154 Blanks, "earils, Pamphlets., 1111Iheads.
I la. Se., of every Variety and style, printed
,fie shortest Tnotice. Tits listonTitir efficels
sPrfri power preer,„ a rrot ;mar.
ront of new tope. and' everything in the Printitl
IHe can he P xrebted In the mint artistic 13111/11407
...;•1 at the lowest rates.
TEIIMSI7.i - VA.ItIADVY CASH. .
Elii
lit ••4
4 i +1
trofessictil, ar.dliksiness Cards.
ATASON'& HEAD,
.11=
A Ti'OR.N'EXS-A r-J.A
Tim Nub, Pa. over Dartlett Sc Tract, Mriln-st
Asoti.: tiu-11 - 3
4 1 L.Itit . .LIS,
•
14
. 'ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
•' TOWANDA, PA ,
Offie!.? With §1111;21 & 31 , kintanye. Noellt7s.
r 4 • F. GOFF - , i
TTORNE
Nl ctr..et (1 doors north of Ward !louse). To
v:%101a. l'3. [April:lA.lB77.
I tl 7 . A NY I:I I . Y . :Ik I I. P L: S S I NG :'\ f ° ll .R arLt Y d
!.as bvtAu- , 5 , ; entrusted to his care to Itrattford,
Vyotniug Counties. Otheil r.
1'..!•0r. , • EnovlB-7 , 1.
_ _
E.
ri LS [IR 'FE,
I Id. 4 3l"r0 RN EY-AT-T. kw,
ihtli-75. Tow/0:1)A. PA.
A -
(1 L. 11.3111,
v . ,. ;1
ATTORNEY-AT-I, AW. •
WILK Es-BA nu?, PA
o.llection prviiiptly alleml:_.(1 to.
1 (MIN W. MIX;
. ,
ATTORNEY AT. LAW, -
AND'
U. S. COMMISSIONER,
. .
' . Towa!xna, PA.
Ohice--Nortn Side Putinc Sqn.lre. • -
Jan. I, 1875
1 16
IVIES! k_ C A RNO C II A N,
-iLf. i ATTORNE.Ti.: AT LAW,
1 1 - tERCT'II ELOCKI
.
T PEET, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
. ' • ti
prepared to practice all branches of his
ItIF-ItCUrSt IILOCTS i (entrance on south
si.t •) •r, WANDA. • .rjann-76.
•
1711
- FY S. M. WOODB .1.)11:I,'"FIl
°.• 7 .1 !In -art‘t -Sur•eon. Minn: over 0, A. Itlnett's
;.„,..,..
1V , 1111:, May I, 1 , 77ty.: ,
Ai)ILL CALITF, •
,•
• .A.TIOIINEYA•AT LAW,
/ .-• TerwA .NDA, PA;
in Wion's Mock. first door sortfa of the First
bank,, up-stalrs. ,
,r. tt I I. Sinn:4,73lv) d. N. ,C ADIFF.
I)LIA PAYNE,
I TTOT: NEY S-A T-L
E=CrEMI
I=
onioLLy.. :.'r711771
j X MES
ATTOIINEI-AT•LAW.
r,ll'•-71;
4 , Tt)WA !VOA. P
11 1.1 M.
Alttorneyzat-taw and Nata
w ,
::till attention to ally I:11 sines. , en!,
ogier .N% it 11 Patrick
••• 1. Tpwatida, Pit.'r .1 tintl7-7
_
i ()HY F. SANDV.RSON, •
0 - AT I'M; it - ,,Y t tAT-T.AW.
1
t t 1 , 1 7 1 , E.—Meaut, rkfilding (ttrt.tr PlIwe(l - sStore)
II,t•!1:1-71;
0 1 / 4 W. A t Wm. LITTLE, r -
• •
AT TOR, T-LAW, TOIVANDS, PA
t'l«...evr iieekeVs.Provlsion )(Ain :Street
'7G.
EoRGE sTitoun,
J •
- 7rl rp•;r: y / t . 37) t•ssr L o r• 7, ir.
• four door , ,N"ith of Ward House.
Sopr. - 40 , ewirl
L' , U;n , ):vvnia and Dr.ited t 'TOW A N DA; PA.
c.••• ('.1111t , . , ---: D,il.*;tl. • _
iii
rj •I‘lll.-.ETEI.I
LAW OFFICE. •
• , TOWA N DA, PA
I
IVERTON & M'ERCUR,
7 - ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
T(.IWAN DA PA.
~'rl.-n - onav=3s
ir - ' RODNEY A. MEitel:h
T To R Y-4 T-1. A 11'
Fq .) Vl - .11 1/ A . VI - 4•!•:'S ST Olt K. TOW {yl /L. PA
)ATIZICK &TONLE,
• A r TOR 4' VErSzA er A
ill : . It.3l7lir's 1,1"6;
1,1 .1. ANGLE,
TTV R.VE 1 - 7 .1 T./. A It
v, :Eh Paul::, k Carus ban, Tmvanda, Pa.
.ANDItEW WILT,
.
; , R,VE7 Col:N.sr r. L(IE-A
•r Hook Store, ten doors a lrth'ur
.• x L 014: T.v31141:1, 113 y be con ulted
xprtl 1?.., '76.1
ei'llEON.4-, KINNEY,
..."ft •
A 2•TORNE YS-AT-LA II
T• it l'A. Tra , r & No1.10.:9 Block
I•a.. Tan. Xa. 1576
( IV.EIZTON k.ELSI3IIF;E, TTOR';. '
T I.k Tow.( NI, P.k. Having en
-11,.1 t• , - r.tritier. 3 lilp,. offer their professional
io atkrition given to
, gr:tl;itu', mot ItWltrr's Courts:
i 1:
ii C. IV lIIT A10:111,"
n BisDr:R.
Fl,ol%.rowiANl,
S. . ,
I_4
GENERAL
I N NCEAGENC:'
WM
f \Si:NANCE AGENCY.
The f'..110%%
AND.FIitE
I 1.3111• s reprk.sented
X;iIOME. MI:I:CHANTS
11. BLACC.,
lEEE
ME
1811;
r " WA` DA I NsURANCE:
t. (1. dTr,7rl Moto.'
N:1;;LE .S: VINCENT,
ETEEZIM
lyt. T. B. JOHNSON,
PUISI , V-1"; AND SCRGEON.
( •:1,,,v0r I kr. l'orter Smi's Drug Store, TowsnAs.
.t,
-:I D. L: DODSON, DENTIST.
•,\ L. •on :yid atior sept. linty Is) tt•trt In the
; • 11 , 1 V r 01,114 on 2114 root of Dr. l'ratt's now
strrztr,. Businemssollelted.
Vt - B. KELLY, DENTIST.—Office
• oy e r M: E. Itusentlel.t's, Towanda.
,Pa.
It; wind vu Gotd, Sheer, .Itut.ber, and Al-
Teeth ritracted
AI. ST A :S;.LI',.IYENTI&T,
rrft - r.a:1 . 1 . 1:1oVed ottiet! into Tracy
nutek; Derr lieut. & Morn,
to do' b ;awls e 1 dcutal work.
il is a'..o put in a 719A' gas a ramps.
, 1 , I). PAYNE, M. 1).,
I
suncl:o.v.
.+.:,•• • ~v.•:• nomanvOn• Store. 01Dec:boors frvin 10
1•' 1:7, A. th. ainl tr:no : to 1. P. n: • Nfneeiat Eltterlikka
~:t b.llll44.tivi of the tie and Ear.-.0et.1V,''7041.
8 6, 1 W. - AVORD,.Publlsher.
VOLUME XXXAIL
THIS WAY FOR
AND!' WARRANTED TO FIT 1
31 E .R C N T ..T L 0 R
AltTlit7lt HEAD
OPPOSITE COVET lIOUSF,'SCitTAftE,
NEW AN-11 COMPLETE:f3TOCK OF
.1 •
GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS,
HATS, - CAPS, ;\
Vic, bc. , &c: -
He tc,,prepared 'to furnish to order, made to
measnre,' • -
~1\
SPRING ANIrtIFAIMER SUITS,
• 1 . OF
tiEST - QUALI F & LATEST STYLES,
Atleeshe most rea lilofanytstllltshuetH ln 4! vnn L .aajde % mnemysie :
\ ,
July 27,76
Towinda,fia., April S. 1817
EaSaWard.
CRVAPEST
HARDNARESTOR
IN, iTOWANDA
SCYTHES,
FORKS, FIXTURES,
4. ,c.,
Cheaper Than at 411 y Other Place
IMRE
I have always on hand Repairs fur the YOuxo
Anntou.and CHAMPION Mowing Machines.
PERRIGOS SIDE HILL PLOWS,
TOW SD.S, PA
• All kinds of TINWARE on hand,
:ilia . 71n Work of all kinds done at lowert prices.
Tucennila,dune 29, 1976
HIGH': ,:,AWARDS! •
CL EI.y:NIAL
•
J. REYNOLDS \ & SON,
Northwest orner
THIRTEENTH . AND FILB T STS., PULA.,
•
3lanufacturers of pat itml
WROUGHT-IRON': AI =TIGHT
•
HEATERS, •
With Shaking and' Ciluker-Grindiug Gr es \ for
buculhg Anthracite or Bituminous Coa •
CENTENNIAL
IVROUGHT-IRON -HEATERS.
. For Bituminous Coal. '
KEYSTONE • •
WROUGHT-IRON HEATERS,
- Cooking flanges, LocC.Dowhiliratei, Etc.
Descriptive circulars SENT PEKE to any iddretis
EXAMINE BEFOR,E SELECTING.
'• •77-I.y.
BIM
Tywanda,. Pa.
• J1y17•73
G _REATLY REDUCED PRICES t
NING, .3TATC)IIING, AND iIE-SAWING,
kinds of Planing-mill Work,
41.1V - \ \ %llilWil ! I)6WN !! DOWN:::
TOWANDA, PA
Which I am setting at prices to s ehlt the Hetes
M promptly to orgliir, at a low price, for CASH
' \
IF 1 1 01.1 . WANT TO GET RICH QUICK,,'
Eumber_nronght here to be milled, will be kepi
under enri:r . nod mrfertly dry until' taken away.
Good sheds for your horses, and a / dry place to load,
Towanda. Jan. IS. 1877
NE": STOCK
. _ _
FINE TEAS AND COFFEES !
• . Cazb pall for all kinds of
C 13 N Y P RACI WIT: E !
Tuwitmts, April 15,!1677:
■
:~
\ ,
Merchant Tailor.
SPRING, SUITS
Made to order,
J. L. McMAHON,
R
1 Has Just recelTed a
CLOTHS, 4,
s
J. L. toranos,
IS IN 31EBRUk_BLOCK !
Farmers can buy their
SNATIIS,
GRINDSTQNES,
Kest in Use.
i
I
H. T. JUNE.
Heaters, • i:
Planing, &c.
'rho undorsignedls doing
So tar you can't see It.
\tot.A large stock of
mAzill AN! D OORS,
I=l
WINI9oW-BLINDS.\
ace my Goods smil Prices
T. B. RODGERS
OF GROCERIES!
Choice selections of
Fei !ale cheat,
At the old Atatid of C. B. Patch
W. H. MCKIM Je.
...,
, . . .
,
1
1 ...,
<- • -
-F IRST IiOSE
ON A BOSTON POLICE OFFICER.
H. R. 13Tsvesk— , Dear In.the rpridg of INC
was atrickendown with fever, which had a long
and almost hopeless run. The best. medical advice
being in attendance, I was taken through the fe
ver; but It left me terribly reduced and weak, with
excruciating pains in my„side, back and .hips. I
was prostrated with Kidney Complaint,
and no medicine seemed to reach my.case.
In this condition I was persuaded to try VILOWe
TINE by a friend whom It cured of the same die.
ease, and it seemed as though I could feel the ef
fect of the fi rst dose through my whole systegut and.
frofn that moment I began to mend.graduielly
growing better from day to day; and I follotted on
with the VI-Gallica until It completely restored
me to health, since which time I have been able to
perform my duties as a police officer. enjoyinggood
health ; and therets ho doubt about the great value
of VlGsTlvs in Kidney Com !sing and similar
diseases. I am, sir res Unity.
LA..FAYETTE FO d, 564 Broadway.
ALL DISEASES OF THE BLOOD.
If Tzurrime will relieve pain, cleanse. Purify
and cure such diseases, restoring the patient to
perfect health after trying different physicins,
many. remedies, su ff ering for year* is it not caon
cluslite proof, If you As a a sufferer, you can be cur
ed ? Why Is the medicine pertortnlng such great
cures? It works in the blood. in the circulating
fluid. It can truly be called the GREAT RLORIJ
PURIFIER. - The great source of . disease origi
nates In the blood; and no medicine that doe not
act directly upon it, to purify 'and renovate, has
any Just claim upon public sttention.
SEVENTY-ONE YEARS OF AGE
Mit. STEVaxs—near . 11(r : I am seventy-one
years of age: have suffered many . years with Kid
.ney Conipiainti wcaknes In my back and stomach.
l'svas Induced to try your YEGETINE, and I think
it Is the beat medicine for Weakness of the kidneys
I ever used. I have tried Many , remedies for %his .
complatnt.-and never found so much relief as from
the' VEGILTINII. It strengthens . , and 'lnvigorates
Thew bole system. Many of tny,acqualittfinces have
taken It, and I believe it to be good for all the
complaints tor which it Is recommended.
Yours truly, JO,SIAII If. SHERMAI4.
WOULD GIVE A DOLLAR FOR
11.11. STEVENS, Esq.,—Lrear Sir: I have been
badly afflicted :with Kidney Complaint for ten
years; have suffered great pain In my .littric, hips
.and stile, with great difficulty in passing urine,
which was 'often and In very small quantities,Vre
(Needy accompanied with blood and eierticiating
KIN, I havo . tbithfully tried most of •the popular
remedies recommended for my .comtiliitit LI have
been under , the treatment of mune of the most skit
ful'physicians in Boetun, all of:vrtiomrpronoUnced
my case Incurable. This was my condition when I
was advised by a friend to try the. VEAKTINII, and
could see the good effects from the first dose I
opt. on Improving
in all, I should
_ ROPES,
!so a great std.
aslng exprncla.
back nearly all
, has cured, and
.calkl4 :\ and 1 will
add.iappitt4s—all c;sused from the eof a tow
bottles of Vt.:SISTINE.
Respectfully, - ' 11. G. 1111XIIES.
. , • 1 Uptonplace, Boston \ Mass.
VEGnitsrk la • composed of toots,, Baas and
Ilerbi. It Is 'very pleasant to take ; every, thlld
likes it.
•
• .
Prepared, by Ti. U. STEVENS, Boston, Mass
VEI I IETINE IS SQL!) BY ALL DRUGGISTS
Wagcns and Carriages.
THE
OLD ESTABLISHMENT
STILL TAKES THE LEAD!
,
Cairianen CHEAPER THAN EVER. and Plat
lona 'Wagons at a GREAT REDUCTION.
•
Proprietor of thn Old•?7arriago Manufactory, cor:
Main and Elizabeth streets, would. call the spsclal
attention of FARMERS and others to his large
and complete assort in •ot of
OM AND TOP BUGGIES
AND PLATFORM WAGONS,
•
All of his own 'manufacture, and warranted In
every particular to he equal - to the most expensive
city work.:
Is YOfl TIME•TO BUY!
* Look at the figures, and remember that every
ehlcle Is warranted :
• .ATFORM WAGONS...
BUGGIES—.
1:06 TES..
t
1
LY ATTENDED TO.
•
\ d :11sabttii streets.
\ •
4 1e: JAM ANT.
•
. •
y
or\
Tor
The prk
and will ni
(119xNed
sllre far beim' , the enat of manufacture
t he maintained after the ',resent stock
Nkf. so you must mate selections NOW.
Don't be Itir,
poor unsterlals. 1.
which has been In .„
tory and Is pertilani,
tEPAII:isp PRO3le
oMce and Factory cor. Main
Towat4a, mine 1877
NEW CARRIAGE FACTO'
East of the Reporter Office
Mclntyre & Spencer
teapecifully announce to the public that they are
incinved to build all kludeot
_FAMILY CARRIAGES,
Tor AND OPEN BUGGIES,
PHAETON' i'PLATFOIC3I SPILINti WA6O2(S,
TROTTING !SULKIES SKELETONS,
Made of the beat material and in the best style
All work a arranted to give perfect satisfaction.
''PAIITING A SPECIALTY
We have one of the best Carriage Painter' in the
country, and de all work In this line at the lowest
rates.
and proroppy den° at reduced prieety,
Making new springs and repairiug..nld ones a
specialty. All work guaranteed. Please give us a
cad.
Towanda, April 24 1171,
ME
VegethiL
BOSTON, NOY. IS, 1871.
EAST itAßsnrizim,-Aug.n, 1670
A DOSE.
BOST9Ic, May 80, 1871
•and 11,1 ihottld .
1 -wiled give a
It without.
J. M. GILE.
EU
Nov. 2, 1873.
e: From s poor,
Rims restored me
sufferer from
iderlng life al
[0°11(t3) pounds
0 um of Vzu
JAMES BRYANT,
1100 to WO
... 80 . 200
... 125 " 174
sed upon by Interior work .and
t purchase at the - establlshnient,
peratlon for nearly half a ten-
II)* located.
armitg
11{,EPAIRIN41
.
WeINTYRE k SPESCER
ini
TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 11, 1877.
Port.
"LOU A? EONS!"
•Shoald you feel Inclined to county
Yantis you may in others view.
Ask your own hear.rwe you venture.
If that has not falUng. too. •
Lot not friendly vows be bmken.
!tattier strive a friend' to gain ;
Many's irord le an spoken
Finds its passage back main.
Do not, then lo idle pleasure,
Trifle with a brothers tame
Guard it as a salned.treasuret
' Fi:red as your owfl good name. =']
Do not form opinions bllndty, , ,
Hastiness to trouble terids;
Thom of whom we're 'thought unkindly.
Of Chemin our warmest friends.
- .i • i i,ifellqueoki.
„,, •,•••••.••••••••••••••••••0•,••.:”
OUR GAME LAWS.
- -
A DIGEST OF ALL THE IMPOTANT FEA
'':URES OF THE GAME LAWS OF PENN
SYLVANIA.
The information contained in the
following carefully prepared abstract
of the gaze laws in force.in this
State is important, not only to sports
men; bukto farmers and owners of
property •on which game isofound.
Judging •from complaints we hear
from farmers, several of the featues
of the law are not either understood
or not regarded. -
The act of Assembly, passed at the
session of 1876 to amend and consol
idate the game laws, is the la* now
goveriing in this Commonwealth,.
the Only amendment made at the'
session of 1877 being an additional
clause in Section 1, relieving certain
western counties from-the provisions
of that-section so far as it -relates to
the running of deer with dogs. 'All
the important features or the game
laws are embodied in this' compila
tion : •
§ 1. Elk and deer may be killed
from October 1 to January. J. ' The
running of deer with dogs and the
killing of fawLs is prohibited;
$5O. •
2. Squirrels may be killed "be
tai'een July 1 and January 1. Pen-.
alty for killing at 'other seasons, $5.
0. Hares, commonly called rab
bits can . ..only be shot between the
fifteenth day of October and the fif T .,
teenth day or December, under a
penalty of $5. Hunting with ferrets
is, prohibited; pnalty, $lO. Trap.
ping or snaring is prohibited by sec
tion 15; penalty, $lO. .
§ 4. Wild ducks and geese can on
ly be killed with such guns as habit
ually are raised at .arm's length and
fired from' the shoulder • penalty, $lO.
§ 5. Wild turkeys and wood ducks
- or summer ducks from October 1 to
January 1.; penalty, $lO.
§ 6. Upland or grass plover from
A ust 15 to January 1; penalty,
$lO.
§ 7. Woodcock from July 4 to
Januar (1; snares and nets prohibit
ed by see ion 15. • •
§ 8. Quail or Virginia partridge
can only beot between the fifteenth
day of Octobel\and the fifteenth day
of D-teniber malty:, $lO. Traps,
snares-and nets p Whited by section
15.
1 9. Ruffed grouse,
ed pheasants", and pin i
co.rinonly called pre) 't,
from October 1 to Janus 7 .
ty $lO. • :Trips, snares and
hibited by section 15. - •
§ Rail and reed birds canonly
be. shot during the months of ST
tember, October and November, trro 7
der a - retialty.of ss._ Snares and net
prohibited by section 15.
§ 11. The killing orany insectiv,-.
erous birds is prohibited ; penalty,
-§ 12. Permits the killing of inset-,`
tiverous birds for the purpose of sci
entific investigation.
§ 13. licibbing or destroying eggs
or nests of wild birds prohibited;
penalty, $lO.
§ 14. No rerson shall kill, catch,
or discharge any firearms at any wild
pigeon while on its nesting . grouids,
or break up or in any manner disturb
such neiting ground, or the - birds
therein ; or- discharge any fire-arms
Within one-fourth of a mile of such
nestir.s. : place of any will pigeon or
`igeons, or shoot at, main; or .kill
any wild pigeon or - pigeons within
their roostings, tinder a penalty of
$2O.
§,15. Prohibits . the 'killing or tak
ing, at any time or place within this
State, any wild turkey, ruffed. grouse
or pheasant, quail or Virginia. _part
riOge, woodcock, rail, or reed bird, or
rabbits, by means of any blind, trati,
snare, net, or device whatever, under
a penalty of $lO fur eacii and every
such 'bird or 'rabbit so trapped, snar
ed or taken proVided, that individ
mals or associations for protection,
preservation and propagation - "of
game, may gather quails or partridg
es with the written consent of the
--, f.the jar LI; fr DP";
y
the pure e or taking -fish from any
private Bond, stream or spring used
or improved by the owner or lessees
for the propagation of fish, after pub
lic notice on the part of the -owner
or occupant thereof, is . prohibited ;.
`penalty, $lOO in addition to damages
recoverable by law , for. ,trespass, all
or which pen,slty. shall be payable to
the owners, lessee or occupant:
§ 21. Set nets, Ash baskets, pond
nets, gill nets, eel weirs, kiddles,,
brush or facine nets, or -any other
permanently set means of taking fish
or otherwise in the tiature of seines,
I in any waters of Ms Commonwealth
RECiARDLEBB OF :DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER.
are prohibited; penalty, $2.; provid
ed, that nothing in this act shall pre
vent the fishing with gill nets\in any
of the tidal waters of this State, '
§ 22. Prohibits the killing of black
bass, pike, or pickerel, or Susquelia
us salmon, except by rod, L oak and
line, outline or scroll,, and prohibits
the catching of them in any manner
betweeti the first day of March- and
the first day of July, except to stock
other waters; penalty, $lO. .
4 23. Prohibits the catching or
killing of lishAn• any of the inland
Waters' the - State, inhabited by
speckled trout or black bass, by
means of any net, or device in the
nature thereof, of less than three-inch
mesh, under a penalty of $215. Speck
led trout to be caught by. rod, hook
and line , except for protection and
to stock other waters. '
§ 93. Prohibits the, catching of
veckled trout; black-bass, or other
fieh, in any of the 'inland waters 'of
the State, by shutting or drawing off
'any portion of said waters, or by
dragging_ar drawin,g small nets or
seines therein when the waters shall
be wholly or in part drawn off, ex
cept by order of the - State. Fishery
Commissioners.;orlplacing, or caus
ing to be place, in any stream, any
torpedo, giant powder, nitro-glycer
ine, or other explosive substance,
with - intent to catch any such fish;
penalty, $5O.
§-24. Authorizes ( the employment
by the Board of Fish CoMmissioners,
upon application in writing of ten or
more citizens of any county, of one
- or more fish wardens, whose duty it
shall be to enforce, .by information
or prosecution, the laws now in force
or that may be hereafter passed,
for the protection of fish in any of
the interior-waters of the State. The
Commonwealth not to be Bible for
any salary or compensation for the
services of any such fish wardens. '
§ 25. Permits the sale of ruffed
and pinnated g rouse, and quail, for a
Period of fifteed days after the time
limited for killing the same has ex
pired, provided it can be proved that
such birds were' killed during 'the
open season, or were brotight from
some other State where the law did
not forbid the , killing of the same.
§ 26.; Defines the duties of 'justices,
provides that one-half of the penalty
shall go to the informers, limits the
time.for conviction to one year from
the time of committing the offense,
and permits she defendant to give
bail to answer before court on a
charge of Misdemeanor. In' default
of payment of penalties the! court
shall commit the defendant to the
common jail of the county for a pe
riod of not less than one daytor each.
dollar of penalty imposed.-•
§.27. Provides for the stocking of
other waters with fish from waters
owned by private parties.
- § 28. Nothing in this act shall be
so construed as to prevent the catch
ing of bait fish, by means of-i hand
nets, for t angling, or'.scientific pur
poses.
§ 29. Provides that the act shall
not be cogistrutml -to apply to any
stream foruding the boundary lines
bet Ween this and any State over
which this State has conturient Jo
ris-diction with such State, so far as
such strea.os form such -boundary
line, nor to any lake partly within
the boundaries,ot this - State. '
§ 30. Repealkall acts or par l its of
acts inconsistent herewith:
'oOmonly call
lated grouse,
`i \ e
- chicken,
' 1; I?enal
'lets pro-
iniiipv Boon. /-
,
1
. I
,
Every lady who ,t akes a newspaper
or magazine which . she in the least
degree appreci tes o ft en sees !num
i ers which co L ain some interesting
o ' leasing a tit le thrown aside with
reg„ , ,
3 as i is '
gr t piles . of, papers ' and
inconvenient to-pre
serve
‘ t/'
troubl me to make scrap-books.
Yet a stp-b4vk is not only a useful
but an i ctiint thing . One who m
has never accustomed to thus
preserve shor article's can hardly re
alize the pleastl e and profit there is
in them. It is 'a °ad Ova to carry
on several -of the at once—not in
the way . of 'earetull pasting in each
scrap and waiting a d %foirlthe pages
to dry—but by :ei•simpl 'w :etting the
head ofyour ca w' '
nton I‘ - arop of
mucilage and leaving Alkt Bt• of it .
loose. Take sihy old books, tent
ottice report4l, pamphlets \ even
almanacs; des4te one to house, old
recipes, and Sou will , find it inv. c
able ; another ; 1,0 matters of histor
items of refet*Oce 'and other data
which you wil-I.Bnd it hr rd , to remem
ber; another to poertynd ?Another,
I
if you like, to'amusing a todes and ,
t
a
interesting stories. At t e end of
yearyou
_will have akeumulXted a
mine Of wealth with which you
would be loath-to Pitt. In turning
Over the. familiar oges here a poem'
meets yoiit eye which charmed your
fancy and winch ~ would have been
lost long ago if _not for -your scrap
book. There a witty story. makes
you• laugh for the twentieth time and
laughter, you' know, is good for the
digestion. Next is a valuable,Teeipe
Which pia find” just in timo to save
much perplexity, and therels'a sweet
little romance, the memory of which
cheered you when almogt ready , to
sink under the . pressure '-of
.life's
-Cares.
An excellent and ever-ready way
to amuse childimi wherf all other ex
pedients_fail, is to let them make
t
picture scrap-book . Pfit on their i
big . ' aprons, set hem round the
dining-room table, even ir 'Bridget
or Dinah does frown, . and lit ,them
just revel with scissors and paste
cup. It not ordramuses them in the
making, but long afterwards affords
fresh delight In turning (pier the half
forgotten pages. There is no scarcity
of pictures in.the papers and period=
leafs of the day and' every nether
ldren
ictice
, and
s ith
-little
-culti
pains
class
:nage
Fr,agi
li, to
liiper
11Ea
, Aps Fit
1 , 1 t
GOOD 30REMIANI
So it struck me with it tingle of
surprise, one day, :to. overhear a new
reading of thelterm. . IC `was .a clever
women who used it, learned in histo
ries and school, well .known, to plat
lorms-and pressrooms, but'eqnally
so:Nto fashionable dinner-tablea, and
saions ; with a social place equal \ to
the st,and a line suture superior
to mos Yet, talking with a cleaver
man of he world of equally good
position, nke wound up something
she had said\ witiOhe phrase, " For
Such Ilohemisitr a. 4 yon and me, my
dear fellow"—and then/ seeing Ids
look of surprise, she added, smiling:
"For we are Bohemians, aren't we ?
-good Bohemians,' !"
Sure enough! Why n t? ',‘ Heaven"
i:\
says a' quaint essayist, is a disposi
Lion, not a place. Tile real, the bet
ter `Bohemia is neithet geogrhical
nor local, it is bounded by-no d ine of
ortune or caste, it lies in the temper
and intelligence of ,its children. \lt
is not to be sought only. in .13r6b
Street or Printing-House Rol -- ; tt
Quartier Latin, or the Studio Build
ing, or Leicestef Square. Its real
bonds lie far beyond, wide as human
nature, and no cases or neighborhood
but canahow some scrap of its terri
tory.
Read the term-in its ihore imagi
native Sense, get at' its.essentialehar
acteristics and not its mere exterior
traits.. If we are to make a -meta
phor 'of a name-let us at least manu
facture-it on liner principles and 'net
on the cheapest points of resemblance :
The geographical Gitano is 'vaarant„
lawless, idle' and often dishonest.
Very well. So .much for , the bad
Boheniian; or the Boheq.an :pure
andfiimple.. Under that - title; as I
lia4e hinted before, it is fair enough
to class all Abe shiftless, -restless,
entrust worthy . people, who are. pop
ularly understood by the term. 'But.
the y,ingato is inde pendent,-,brave,
adroit, with a wild poetry and elas
ticity 'in his personal habits, and
hints st leash of an imaginative mys
ticism in hi 4 traditions •or 'his reli
gion. Translats these,qualities - into
the language of modern life. ' Wher
ever you find men_ or 'women, what
ever their station or calling, brave
independent, adroit, and imaginative
there, be sure, you have changed up
on a specinen of the Children of the
Sun, the Olosrn people.. In so far,
-at least,they are Bohemian, though,
to justify: their title of good, they
may pay their-debts' wear. clean linen
use good grammer, keep a penny fur
a rat.ny day, and altogether behave
like, the respectable citizens they
are. Independence, in thought- and,
action, if iVasible, but certainly 'in
thought—that is the prime requisite
almost. the . definition,, of the type.
Your modern
. .Zint„rato - hates -shib
boleths and teats. He gives due- eb
servalice to all fair limits,. ethical,
political, or . social ; but he must have
his moral elbows' free.
,If . you bully
him or hamber him, threaten him
with the Inquisition in any form,
from 'Thrquernade to Mrs. Grundy,
be resents it. If he doilea't defy
you; he dodges you. When he faiDs
to do this he derogates from his
class.. ' It ' is. very hard to make a
snob,of him, for the liberty which is,
sweet to him Meat seem sweet to
others,- and I have found a pretty
liberal' charity one of his pleasantest
traits. Ile- sonietiines sits high in
places, but not often or for very long.
When he does, it is in virtue of some
exceptional good luck, or peculiar
available talent; for the word's lis:'
iness is worked largely by averages,
and a kindly - conformity is sweet to
the majority. So lie cheerfully ac
cepts purple and place when lie can
have his•own way, and get the-world
to agree with hire. It not, he as
cheerfully drops them, and-has his
own sway t3ill. You may occasional-
ly catch & first-rate specimen of-the
type in the "first circles" strong in
the confidence of-capitalists and pol
iticians, hand-and-glove with queens
of society and doctors of divinity.
But these splendors are apt to cost
Loci much in n coin which he cannot'
pay ,:without an ugly wrench•to his
constitution ; so, in most eases; he
declines the payment and goes • with
out them. His independence, how
ever, is not one of the bull-headed .
sort.; for our typical Botiemiad is cle-,
ver withal. Ready,. adroit, inquir
ing; thoughtful, all these he should
be to claim full standing with lit
guild. His prototype, wanderin
. hrOngh shady. English lanes, - crib-
lid .chickens, fire-wood, and baby
lin . ; he• cribs ideas:- Very often,
dl:4lb less, he originates them, what
ever 7 iey i ay mean, but at all
events, i7en if he , has to plunder all
Nature I society for it, he gets
them. • Lik the clever Frenchman,
\
" firre . nd ioig Lien on il froure,"' harm
bin' no one in Ile process.; for, if the
stolen pullet can: nourish but the
man. who cats it, an idea, kid:cloudy
filched, ne* feed• whole generations.
'The franchises of t blight inure - by
use; and human pr grl...s is but one
4 ,
consequent i series f -thagnanimousr
. plunder. But the re tlessii, ss of tem
perament which h draws rem' :his
ancestry still besets him. He 's rath
er inventive and impiisitive„ th con
centrative, rather many-sided anor, \
iginal than. exhaustive. New ii,
L
painfully studying out the law • u(
gravity, Kent with ' his categOries,
and :Mill with his - dry, logical, and
economic speculations, woul4 not it- - .
lustrate the type. But Go6ths, leav_
ing the composition of "Egmont"
to practice Painting and write "The
Theory of Colors
." and " The Meta
morphosis of Plants ;" or Da, Vinci,
passing from engineering or -.archi
tecture to the execution of" The Last
Stippper,"—these might be cited as
brat-rate specimens of the class. Per
ltamthe most brilliant and perfect
illustration within my own knowledge
lives in 'Boston, it'l l the very odor of
Tri-Mountain sanctity; h ctnring to a
class in , anatomy one day, cOnvulsing
a dinner-table with pun or parodo*
On the next, now startling Puritan
orthodoxy I with his audacious liberal
ism, " and then soothing' it with a
poem, a tale, or anessay.-- 7 Apptetou's
Jolt/177mi. -
, .
"Mr dea -7 r, " said an affectionate wife
to het husband, as she 'looked out'at the
window," "do you notice how green anti
beautiful the grOs looks on theweigtibot
lug hills?" " Well," was the wnpoetic
response, "what other ,color would you
bag, it at this time of the year?"
MN
„ .
\ ( P.-
==m3nsa,
insomnia has bedome a mention,-
henee a vulgar, malady - among us
Ametimins—at - least, to
breath the oxygen which the great;
waste of wood and water has been°
garnering up for, lus for centuries.
Heretofore the malady his been con
fined to the few, they 'who sleep on
'pillows of down, to those who have
too mreh brain, or' to those who have
'a gully conseiene,e—so the poets
Inkve said.
. Now,. - however, we ,ho have no
such distinction, we who.have adopt
ed hair. mattresses .instead of hair
shirts, who cannotkolaim. any flatter
ing preponderance of !min, end who .
have-not had, originality or boldness
enough, perhaps, to earn a particu- .
lady guilty beinse'nce, we too Are
sleepless, we tose4n fevered pillows,
we are haunted .midnight asses.
sins of ) sleep--hours of
. unearned re
morse, spectres oil.. peo ple 'we , have
not murdered; vengeance for sins we
*ve.not had the pleasure. of eomit
\ting, ! We start like guilty creatures
fKom the, commorplace linen sheet as
Wit, were the pc4soned - Mantle of
Dejardra ; Aiatheti saw no suoli'dag
.gers in the air as we .see; Cain felt
no - suek gloomy ;ostracism;, Peter
wept not \such burning
. tears, nor is
ourmartyrtkom leas c6mplete then
his—for if our dreams may be believ
ed, we aro nig!tV'crucified with the
head downward. ' - •:
Prom st.ch visiOns we awake at
two o'clock ih the`morning, to pass
the rest of theTnightn, gloomy rev
eries. Ilow.all• our wasted opportu
nities rise up and 'walklt i ore us in
.their grave. How any sins,
-comitted and uncoinittecl find s us out 1
The. naked human soul-:-alivays a
terrible object, • with ' no -drapery of
circumstance, no apology of affectitm,
no sivet and soothing balm of sym
pathy-our. own 'unahriven soul stands;
before us! . ' 1 • • . .
Night after night we Meet this ob
ject,-we-contemplate oursel7es, and
get. wc)fully tired of, the subject.We
try,philosophy--it proves uuavail ng;
we try memory,' and, so far as w can
goi•ern that recalcitrant tilavet he
serves us well. .Wie summon via on 4
ofi Switzerland, look again upoi! . he
snowy wonders of Bout Mane, enjoy
the bride-like beauty of the Jungfrau,
once more count the statutes on- the:
pinnacles of Milan ICathed ral ! These
joys of travel last us one,- two, many
nights; then memory g rows restive,
and will - not , obeY; b ut' brings •us
rather all that we wish to forget—
the slights, the disappointinents, the
failures, the falseness, the poorness,
of life. . . '
Its no wonder that, in the fre
quency of, this universal - misery, so
many people resort to opium, and to
chloroal=4that most fearful antago
nist of the brain, which simply takes.
a club anO knoels its .enemy over.
The sleepla chloral is not a natural'
or a restful: sleep. 'lt is rather a re
oval of the battered and bruised
brain int 4 another room , . where it re
covers at 'leisure, to •become more
frightfuliSt naive than before. Opium, ,
takeh a:more deliberate revenge. /it
gives halcyon sluniers, that it. may
strike,its fangs ddep . ' into the,Moml
sense ; woo its victim from honesty
and truth and. dedency,- then throw
back a poor and worthless, weed •on
the shores . of time, likete poppy
whence it sprincrs,,;lshowy and beauti
ful while it lasts, but fading quickly
into'a disorganized heap.
" 011,.that one could take his pen
to bed . with:
.him!" said. a witty
preacher. • Oh, that-one could be as
sleepy in the night as in' the day
when,tasks preSs.and the book waits
to be finished, and!; the sick:require to
be nursed, and. the poor to be fed I
What heavy lids descend, too, ii the
parlor, listening -to sorae r well-bred
bore—the boa - constrictor conver
sation who winds his, heavy coils
about • your reluctant That._ dazed
senses ! . . ;
We remember dinner-Parties,• too,
where a little slumber between the
fifth and sixth courses would have
been very gratifying; and Sunday
afternoons in city churches—but this
is - chloral and-opium combined.
The physicians guile now when
Weary women come to them, wiping
heavy dews from pale brows, - and
say: .
" I cannot,sleep,7 •
" Who can ?" - says the .11hYsician,
wiping his brow.
"Itis d clot of blood too much .
gout the heart, or it is a drop too
h tle on the brain," saysdnOther.N
Niimatter what it is but can
you matte us sleep?" they cry.
• "Alas, no, unless -you go to Eu
rope 1". •
Yes; but-can we all go to. Europe?
One sleepless gentleman :who can
says he always sleeps well in, Paris,
4 because the air is bad and the water.
is had and the people are' bad;" ., he
adds, satirically, thinking of his own
;Ovely country-place. where be wants
to be, but where; amid choicest air,
flowers, 'green trees, gushing foun,
tains, wife,children, friends, and • a
favorite indu4try, he sits Up all night
staring at the' wall like a well-bred
maniac„ When he gets worn to a
-skeleton with sleeplessness, he goes
to Europe and "sleeps like a top."
Sarcasm of destiny ! he does not
:want to go
. to Europe.,.-Appietons
eiung•al.
n. one of the last letters written
by ilYaniel Webster he . slid : I once
defended a man , charged vtith the
awful tne murder. ' At the con
clusion the' trial I asked him
what coul induce him• to 'stain his
hands with t e blood of a fellow-be
ing. • Ttirnin r , hiS blood-shot eyes
t
Mil Upon , ,me ,1 ;rep lied , in a voice
of despair: " M W ebster , in, my.
youth I,spent the o'y :S abbath' in
'evil ntnusements,ins ad of frequent
\
ing the house of pray and., praise."
• Could we goback to th early years
of all hardened crimin als, I believe,
yes, firmly . believe, that '• Or : fi rst
departure from the path of utility
was when they abandoned th r Sib
bath schele,' and their subsei ticnt
eddies might thus be traced - lac
~,' to
the neglect. of youthful instruction:
TILE paper; relate an 'anecdote of a
beautiful young lady,who had become
blind, having. recovered her sight after
marriage. 'lt 28 no uncommon thing for
people's eyeat to be opened by matrimony.
OA. per Annum. in: Advance.
lIIMMII
- ' 317:11. AND BONS,.
Most: - boyik s go throu a period
When they have great ne U of patient
'love at homes \they -are awkward
and clumsy, sometimes strangely
willful and perverse, and they are
desperately conseious \ of themselves,
and very sensitive to the least word
Of censure or effort at restraint. Au
thority frets them. They are:leaying
childhood.. but they ' have snot yet
reached the sober good sensinf man
!Mod They re an easy prey tek the
-tempter and he sophist. PerhipS
theyadopeskiptical f iewa from sheer
desire to prove that they are indepen '
dent and can-do' their own thinking.
Now is the mother's hour. Her boy
nee& her -now more than when be
lay in his cradle. , Her finer insight
and serener faith may, hold him fast
and prevent his driftinginto danger
ous courses. ' At all events, there is
very' much that only a mother can do
for her son, and that a son can re,
ceive only from his mother f in the
critical period of which We are think
ing. It is well for' him if she has
kept the freshness and brightness . °
her youth, so that she can now be s
companion and friend as well as en
ter. It isix good 'thing for a yto
be_prond of his mother; to feel COM
p!acalt when he introduces lier to his
comrades, knowing - that they cannot
help Seeing what a pretty. woman she
is, so - graceful, winsome' and attract
ivet—There is always hope for a boy
when' he, admires his mother, and
mothers shoulds.are' to be admirable
in the eyes of their sons; not merely
to possess characters which are worthy
of rwet, but to be beautiful and
charting, so far as. they can, in per
son nd- appearance. The heat dress,'
the becoming ribbon and smooth hair
are all worth thinking about when
regarded as means of retaining ia
fluence over a soul when the •ivorld is
.spre r adinglures for it on every side.
Above all things, mothers need
WO. Genuine, hearty, loving trust
in God , a life„otmeek 9 glad empties
\.
ence in his will; lived daily-through.
years Inpresence o,f sons; is- an im
-mense newer. They can never get
away From the Sweet memory that
Christ was their mother's friend.
There is 9-___reality in that which no
false reasoniegean persnade them to
regard as a figinent - of the imagine:
tion.—Chrislian In(elligencer. . . • 1
\ •
,
CURE FOR 'STAMMERTINT—A
Canada Journal containk letter from. '
a correspondent,. who profeSses to
have been a . stammerer -from. child=
hood, and who wishes to gig "other
sutfeters the' , beriefit_of the trea i ment
by which he was cured. Ht., , ,,T
"Go into a room where you 'will e
quiet- and alone, get some book that \
will intelest'yon,Nit not excite you,
and set down and' read two hours,
aloud, to yourself kmping your teeth
together. Do the same thing every
two or three-days, or once a week, if
very' tiresome, always taking care to
read slowly and distinctly, moving
the lips but not the' teeth. Then,
when conversing with others, try, to
speak slowly and distinctly as possi
ble, and make up your mind that you
will not-stammer. I tried this rem
edy and readttor two hours aloud,
'with my teeth together. The first re
sult was to make my Jaws ache-that
is while I wqs,reading ; and the next
to make me feel:that something lind
loosened my talking apparatus for I
could speak with fess difficulty im
mediately. The change was so great
that every one who knew me remark
ed it. I repeated the remedy every five
or - six days for a month, and then at
longer intervals, until cured.'
DELICACY OF FEELING.--DCliCady
of feeling is a trait of character ni-
most more lovely, and .engaging . .than
any other. It iss.a quality whose hid
den printiple exists in a • greater or
less degree-in every mind, though- it
is often thrown shade - by_ the,
workings of the tier:per passion*, in
the rude encounters of M an's '
mind, as manifested-in\his daily con
verse with the outward: `world,, seeing
to be made of " sterner \ stuff " and
cast in sterner moulds butdelicacy is
no mark of Weakness, for it 1* essen
tially consistent with. the ,:stoutest
courage' and, the sublimest energy.
It is in every respect a manly qtildr
ty,.and throws over the, whole intel
lectual and moral - character 'a
er hue.- • Ittrue . delicaeyexist*in the
heart, it wiil gush spontaneously.
'from it; and never can the cold cant
of hypocritical formality be mistaken
for the warm welcome of the soul.-
. .
Power, mental or physical, never
appears so great as• in the hands of
thoSe who seem uneonscious of its
possession. True intellectual great,
ness'gathera .an ,additional 'charm
when s accompanied by ' reardelicaey
of feeling,. liiOness may -enter
where the sword can not penetrate,
and a "soft answer ".'und winnino ,
deportment;:springing frem.delica4
. feelings and a generous• heart have
allays proven irresistible. Breath
ing nothing but 'harmony harmony
and love, ." a ministering. angel." to
-mankind, it goes to and fro On the
earth .unitinreverywhere more' firm
lyand strongly the' bonds of social
union.
Tux old sexton stoipacin the church
steps wiping his nylancholy features
with a red bandanna. -A. hearse stood
near and three or four carriages were,
draWn . nli behind - .it. A stranger
came along and said :-.1."-FUneral
And the old sexton bdwed his head
it. was. -"Who's dead ?" The old
man again wiped his brow and gave
the .name of the deceased.. , What
complaint ?" aSkett . the inquisitive
-
stianger. -Solemnly; placing his ban
dam in his hat'and coverinthis bald
head theold eextoirmade alisvier :
" There is no complaint everybody
is entirely satisfied, . • •
ME
UMEER 19.
. A FASHIONABLE paper arinciunces that:
in Paris everything in female. attirci
worn just now with frayed edges, snaking
it difficult to distinguish :ragged dresses
from whole ones. This haiLteen done, it
is suppiksed," with lieneVolent intentions
toward small incomes, though it is diffi r
cult to believe it, 'Oen on so eminent . an
authority.. The most appropriate vim- -
onent seems to be Bern! '
PilawNs blight young children as flog:
ts .fi g hts blightyouug r plants.
D..1;11. cannot bo an evil, for it is uni-•
renal& - -
HAUL
•
A letter troin, Washington to a
Chatanooga paperthus picturie the
President's lire: -
' "Nrs. - Hayes iccompanin her husband,
and I have a splainsugestion to make
in reference to her; .While difference or
opinion may (Mist npon'the character and'
conduct o f husband, acquaintance
only is required,:, with her to bring emery
intelligent and' . respectable person to the
~
belief that Our la.ft of the White Ronal'
is a pattern woman; Be the ,scans' re
forms of the President great alibis warm
est admirers believe them, the reform°
the age is the ono yvrought by his nnpie
tentions wife. He is, in _his best essays, i '
but the elm-Mice exponent of an inchoate
popular demand which preceded his ele.." ''
catkin. - She stood in the path and check
ed an abase which was poisoning the •
fountain of American life, for, I take it,
no nation can longbe purePthan its cirri
lat. She found Washington official sod.
ety extravagant, frivolous and not seldotn ,
corrupt. • She has bravely" set it an ex- .
ample of itimplicity, decency and honest.
living, which helps her humble sisters#
their husbands, brothers and father", to
realize that there 'is something worthy . in .
womanhood besides fine dress and fash-
ionable dissipation. The change she has .
wrought in the tone of society ill per-
meats the country. with aw .. .•:•. .. L in
fluence which, will do 'quite . much as .
specie. Pt/wenn - of civil sere' - reform to
restore' ,batioual solvency and national -
virtue.: I know whereof I speak,. and
r u
have no word of flatte for this good
Woman. It was my fortune to meet
,lnv at the Postmaste Genelarsaummer -
residence, some weeks since, under thei,: -
7
faVerable circu nces, of a, private and'
soCial \ visit, and who claim to be critical;,
of women , w charmed with her. • Sho. '
ts good looking, with an honest, fearless,.
cheery randier--face, has a magnificent. •
complexion\mischievoas brown eyes, and,
royal a royal dit'ortilaCk hair, which she dares
lay in , flixt bands over her temides.
Her ate
In -dress is a trifle severe, but"
fiultlesslyneat—as nice a little body. in J'..,_
&ben, as mar sustalued a • man in trial or '
wed on hiebuttons.\ It lithe intellect-
Jai woman however, that attracts most.
Site is so free from self-consciousness, so -.
unaffected, and withal so canny, that you
feel perfectly safe in leaving the Govern.
`Meat ia-the hands of a man who - has this . •
Woman to guide, him. She is so demo
cratic and genial in manner, 'so pleasant
!of speech, that you feel that she feels that
she is but your equal citizen, temporarily
'raised to , exalted station, from which she
'must return to the domain of simple wife
and mother. • Every goolf ' American . _
woman should he- glad , that she is in this .
White House.'. •
A FEMALE ranter appeared. at a
Methodist camp meeting and related
how, after casting asick personal
adornment, gay attire, ribbons, fur
fiks, ear ring 'an d last her
wedding? ng, she obtained the bless
ing, and yet this was her appearence
before the audience, acCording to the .
Ifethodiet
--As she stood is the audience, relat
ing the great change that 'had come
'over her, she displayed do immense'
mass of-false haii wound up on the •
back of her head, upon which -was
mounted a thp„not'of abat," neither
protecting frOm - sun or cold, nor or-
namental to; behold. She disclosed
beneatlyd Indf cast off shawl a cor-_
seted waist !which was reduced to s
such diminutive proportions as to
dppear painfully abnormal. She sup
ported paddings, pannier and pin
back, and a dress skirt Sadly bedrab
bled to a . depth of several, inches
which'it dragged upon. the ground.
As she sat' down after het' testimony .
and an exhortation to erring. sisters -
to renounce all pomp and glory of
the world, she plied her fan and pant
ed very like a ball_ room -belle Who
had waltzed too long
- and was dress
ed too tightly to breath with _ease. •
When at the close of the meeting the
women walked away', -- she had a para
sol, a fan, and a hymn book to hold
jn one hand, - and the other .was em
ployed in gathering and holding the
front breadth of/ her skirts high •
enough to enable her to step, while
the limit, of her ? 'mincing gait ,was.
determined by her contracted pin . ;
back and stilted bootheels. -And
away she went, a 'sanctified women:
. .
Tug evening prai!! : meeting of the ~
Eussian army is thus graphically. de- .:
scribed by a war-correspondent .. of •
the London- News, which
. teok'place
on the march of the Fourteenth Corps, .
,
through the . Dobrndj . a, in_ the early.
evening, near Trajans well; .
- "Along the road., perhaps a mile
away were some Turkish . horsemen
on the slope of. the next bill, and be- •
yowl this 'rise was a long unbroken
ridge, with the. Turkish camp -exten
ded' along the 'ridge in an - irregular
blaCk line, with here ,and there white. *.
'tents. The EussianArmy was drawn .
,up in the •foreground for the
. evening
hymn, ,whiclr.is always sung at sun .
down. - The. soldiers stood there in
parade,,With. their white caps.under .
their arms, ' singing in chorus 'the
sweet vesper - hymn,. with an inter
lude
from .the bands,andbUgleS. The
long lineioNmen , with :their accou- .
trements standing in reverential si- .
lence while the bands played a strain,
-and then joined in-the Chorus .with
solemn , earnestness—the - twilight
hour. the (presence qf , the enemy, the
grand lines of 'the ,encircling hills--=-
all mne it scene to be remembered:
:after the hymn -orders "were read
ti
thatAl e dark unitiSni§ r were to be put
on ak_that they- were• ready to ad-
vance4, daybreak, l and that if any
firing was heard in the night they
were to- lie still and await. the sound
'of the bugle call..Every' soldier in
the camp knew that a battle. was 'ex- .
pected,-and* in an. hour the whole '
.
--
camp was asleep. ' • •. .
- ~,. .- - •
A I'EnIPABLE A NUEII.--Mysteriails
is a woman's ways. Beyeral weeks .
ago s lady . with a bright .face and
pleasiwr manner, elegantly dressed,
arrived in Columbus, 0., and after
breakilistincr at 'a liotel , '-went to . A
Station hojeto apply-for a lodging".
She was giien a cell on the first floor •
with the privilege of the prison, and
and she immediately began to bright-
en the lives of the poor prisoners.-
She made adecisive onslaught,on the
cockroaches. and, the bed-bugs by
scrubbing her 'cell again and again.
When the **work. was as neat as
a o:10 and
. water could make it she
litingsome pictures on the Walls, and
every day she has a boquet ofsfresh
flowers: She has books in her 'eel,
and sometimes she Ankce . a short.
walk, but whenever there is angliing
to be done for - any: prisoner
_she is
ready to do it. When a drunken
Woman is brought in awl laid on the
floorthe strange lady busies herself
(luring the 'night in bathing the poor
creatures lead f .rubbinir her . hands
and feet,.and bringing her toherbet-
The'expense to the city of
keeping this ministering.arigel is noi
great!: She lives' on„breall !tad water.
• -
. .
IT was very eartoeS4 leaving the itarrot
in the parlor. Snottily i4ening, but. she
never thought about it until
Monday morning. When I e roused .the
whole house by k ing - a smacking. noise
and crying, "'kitting SuNie !, Darting Su
sie!" He kept it up all day, too, ,and-the
old are much interested iit - the case. • •
Titk man whose sole - anitthior, wirt
applause of the weiht, is Furi: to Lc &nip.
pointed, whether he why. nr tsars, . •