TUNI OP PUBLIOATIOX. The BIADPOitto Savours* is paths)** every Traindny morning by GOonatcit lIITORCIOCE, at One Dollar per annum. In advance. Mr Advertising in all cases exclusive of sub. set ption to the paper. - ' - Sr ILCIAL NOTICES Inserted at TSti carraper line for first insertion, and riTa Carts perllne or each subsequent insertion, but no notice inserts for less than fifty cents. - YE A.RL Y AD VERTISEMENTS will beinsert ed at reasonable rates. _ Administrator's and Eiecutor's Notices, gi; - A.ulltor's Not IeeB,ILSO; BUSlneal Cards, GTO limes, (per year) S, additional lines et each. Yearly advertisers are entitled to quarterly - hinges. Transient adVildiSententa must be paid for fn advance. AUresolutions of associations; commute:glean of limited or individual interest, and notices of - marriages or deaths.° xceeding fivellnessre charg ed rice c tarn per line, but simple notices of mar riages and deaths will be published witiumteharge. The ItZPOititlit having a larger circulation than any other paper in the county, makes it the best advertising medium id Northern Pennsylvania. JOB PRINTING of every kind, In plain and f alley colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Handbills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Billheads, Statements, Ike., of every variety and style,printed at the shortest notice. The , Ratonvan office Is well supplied with power preasesoi good assort ment of new type, and everything in the printing I toe can be executed In the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. TERMS - INVARIABLY 13 ASV. vustness garbs. DAVIES, & HALL, ATTOWSZYS-AT-LAW, SOUTFI SIDE OF WARD HOUSE. Dec 23-73. SAM W.. BUCK, 10 - ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, ;Noydy79. TOWANDA, PRIMA . Office—At Treasurer's Ogles, Its Court Rouse NVH. & E. A. THOMPSON, . ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. TOWANDA, PA. OffiCSl In Derma Block, over C. T. Nirhy's Drug Store._ All business Intrusted to their care will be attended to promptly. Especial attention given to claims against the Putted States for PENSIONS, BOUNTIES, PATENTS, etc; tosollections and to the settlement of decedent's estates. W. H. Timmrsow, EDWARD A. TIIOMPRPN, Apr.7:Bl-y1 A BEVERLY SMITH & CO4 BOOKBINDERS, And dealers In Fret Sawa and Amateurs' Supplies. Send for priee-Ilsts. ltnrowricic Building. Box 1512, Towanda, I" . a. March 1,1881. lIOLLISTER, D. D. S., T: .1)E sTIS T. Successor to Dr. E. IT. Angie): OFFICE—Second floor of Dr. Pratt's office. Towanda, Pa., January 6, 1881. MADIII & .KIN NEY, ..- - ATTORNEY' F-AT7LAR. -'t - Office—Rooms formerly occupied by Y. M. C. A. Reading Room. It. J. MADILL. 3,18,80 O. D. XINNILY. JOHN W. CODDING, _ ll ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. oaice over Klrby's Drug Store. THOMAS E. MYER ATTOUNEY-AT-LAW, WYALUSING, PENIVA. 'Particnhr attention paid to huslntss In the Or phans' Court and to the settlement of estates. September 25, 1579. • , • TOECK OVERTON -• ATTOEINEYS-AT L AW, TOWANDA, OvEuToN, BENJ. M. PECK 1 TIODNEY A. MERCUR - . _,U:ti- ' - ATTORNEY AT-I.A*, - . . - • TOWANDA, PA., .' Solicitor of Patents. Particular attention paid to huhiness In the Orphans Court and to the settle ment of estates. odlce in Montanyes Block May 1, '79. OVERTON & SANDERSON, ATTORNET-AT-L AV! • ' • TOWANDA., PA. E. OvF.ItTON. da. JOON F. SANDERSON IXT 11. JESSUP, 11 • ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOTI•AT.LAW, MONTROSE. PA. Judge Jessup having resumed the practiceof the law in Northern. Pennsylvania, will attend to any legal business Intrusted tohim lu Bradford county. Persons wishing to ,consult him, can call on I 'Streeter, Esq., Towanda, Pa., when an appointment can be made. HENRY, STREETER, .ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW. TOWANDA, PA. Ti L. HILLIS, ATTORNEY-AT-L AR, TOWANDA, rA. (novll-75. HIl'tAM "E". BULL, SURVEYOR: • ENGINEERING, SURVEYING AND MATTING. (Mee with G. F.,Mason, over Patch .& Tracy, Maio street, Towanda, Pa. E LSBREE & SON, • ATTORNEVS-ATILAW, TOWANDA, PA. N. C. ELSBRES.. I.:ELAM= JOHN W. MIX, f , AryORNET-AT-LAW AND IT; S. COUISSIONZII, TOWANDA. PA. • Office—North Side Public Square. _ Jan. 1,1875. _ I ANDREW WILT, ey • ATTORNEY-AT-LA.W. Omee—Meann • flock, Main.st.; over J. L. Bent's store, 'rowan May be consulted In German. [April 12,'76.) XXT J. TOUNG, Y • ATTOIINEV-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA Otlicr—Mercur Block, Park street, tiR . stairs 1 ..7 ) 1 !1 . S auand ll S:lrgeo lal n 9 0 118 R tllce' at residence, PhYß ot )luan street. first door north of M.£. Church. Towanda, April 1, 15t.1,1. w r B ov e . r K M E . F L , L R ° l s fl D e T T l o S w T a . n — d a ? p ill . c e • Teach inserted on Gold, Silver; Rubber, and Al. ronium base. Teeth extracted vrlthouq,aln, 0ct.34-72. 1 .1 4 D. PAYNE, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SHIMMY. ' tft re over 3iontanges• Store. Office hours from 10 to 12 A. and from 2 to 4 P. 31. Special attention given to • nismAsts . , DISEASES OF - . and or THE EYE. THE EAR AIRS. E. J. •PEREIGO, TEACHER OP PIANO AND °MOAN. . Le,..ttis given In Thorough Rats and Harmony ultivation of the voice a specialty. Located at J. P. VanFlect's, State:Street.. Reference: Holmes & Passage. Tovranda, March 4, MM. G • W. RYAN, _ . COUNTY SCPETIIICTENDT. (Mee day fait Sat urdayof each month, over Turner -a Gordon's Drug Store, Towanda, Pa. - Towanda, June 20. Is7S. - b_s:RussELL , s ''73ENERAL INSURAN•CE AGENCY May2i:AtC.. y ' TOWANDA,PA. - F :D 7 ARD WILLIAMS ,. PRACTICAL PLUMBER & GAB FITTER. Place of business, a few doors north of Posbernee. Flu:Mang, Gas Fitting, Repairing Pumps of all kinds, and all kinds of Gearing promptly attended to. All wanting work in his line should give him a call. ' Dec. 4. 1879. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, TOW AN DA, PA. CAPITAL PAID IN 1125,060 SURPLUS FUND • 76,000 This flank offers unusual facilities for the trans action of a general banking business, N. N. BETTS, Cashier. JOS., POWELL. President. HENRY 11017SE_, CORNER MAIN • WASHINGTON STREETS FIRST WARD, TOWANDA, PA. Meat at all hoar& Berme to stilt the times. Large stable attached. -, i i Wit. littlitY.PEctlitlwrOW. Towanda. .I,nly 1. •75-tr. -. , A PEW COPIES OF THE ROAD 416 LAWS aka tke bai at Ms 0.444 COODRICH & HITCHCOCK. Publishers. VOLUME xtal. :44ANY A DAY IN +/IE ()NAVE: The summit* has come with Its sweetness, Its fruits and its flowers so fair; The fields ate all decked to completeness, No branch In the forest Is bare. There's happiness breathing all firer, As full as the senses can crave; Come, let us rest here In the clover— We'll be many a day In the grave I TOWIL2tDA. PA. The birds are all cerollirg o'er us. The bees are all humming around, Supplying a soul-soothing chorus To Nature's grand anthem profound. Let's drink in the perfunto of flowers. ThaVlows round us, WO upon wave ; We.surely can spare a few hours— We'll be many a day In the grave I And when, as o'er life's way wOrander, We mee a poor brother dtstaied, Let's pause In our journey—what grander.l And lift oil his load for a rest. - Let's never refine our assistance-- Tr : The man may be worthy and brave : — And what do we see In the distance f - Why, many a day In the grave Heed not the contracted of vision. Who . see but their own narrow - way ; Who calk with the primmest precision, And boast that they're never astray. Perhaps they'll be vastly mistaken When doWn - in the Lathe they fave, Acd their memories be lost and foisaken Ere they're many days in the glare. Let us all look atound as we travel; l And pause at the Green fora dance; Tarn off for toil's bard-beaten gravel, Now and than, down the lanes of romance Ever young keep the heart and the feeling, The hand over ready to save; Take part In all helping and healing— We'll be many a day Inthe,igrave 1 Ofi v list to the song of the ;eon, That swells around old mother Earth ; 'Tie ransomed hwmanity's pwan. Proclaiming its brotherhood?a birth l Let brother stand fast unto brother, The pathway orprogress to pave ;. While here let us help one . another— We'll be many a day in the grave I The world Is a pretty good Yellow, s , Who often Is misunderstood ; Ifere's a laugh for the wit that Is mellow, A blow for the cause that Is rod. Let cou aids, with fear and misgiving, Go hide In Adullam's dark cave; But we'll enjoy life while we're living— We'll beMany $ day In the gravel The man oLtarge, warm human nature Findstlme to give aid and delight ; But the sordid ind told grubbing Crenttire Can't lift up his brow to the light. ". I don't want that Man for a neighbor— He must have the soul of a slave, Who can't spare a day from his labor— , He'll be many a day in.the grave I A Policeman's Mbtake. It was a dull, rainy day toward the end of A ugust---one of those days when earth and sky alike are gray and dreary and the rain-drops pat tering against the window sound like human sobs. The clock that hung . against the wall pointed to the hour of three -in the afternoon, and I was sitting by myself in our little inner office, -looking out at the expanse of dull, gray wall - that formed my only prospect from the not over-clean window and thinking I had read eve ry square inch of type in the news papers. I had made out all the-nec ecessary papers and documents, and was now with literally 'nothing to do.' I was musing about Kitty El ton, and wondering how long -it would be before I should be able to marry her. . Dear little Kitty I She was as sweet and as patient as it was in the nature, of a • woman to be ; but I knew it was a hard- life for her in that over-crowded milliner's work= room, day after day and,mnnth,after month, and I longed to set her free from the - monotonous captiLiity. She was a pretty blue-eyed girl of twenty, with a dimple. in her chin and- the sweetest roses on her cheeks that ever inspired the pen of a poet. I was no poet, yet I think I under stood and appreciated all her wo manly grace and delicate beauty as dilly as if my heart's thoughts could shape themselves into verse. And it was of them I was 'thinking when the door opened and Mr. Clenner came in. Feb 27, '79 Mr.: . Clenner was our echier—a dark, silent little man with a 'square, stern mouth.and , clouded gray eyes, which appeared almost expression. less when - they were t - ctrned full upon you, , and yet which seemed; to se everything-at a glance 6 He eat - down beside me. • , • 'Meredith,' he said in a quiet, sub dued tone that was natural to him, 'didn't you say that you• were getting tired of doing nothing ?' 'Yes, sir.' 'Well, I have something for you to do.' • $ 'What is it, sir?' 'Something that will bring you both credit and friends if you man age it skilfully. I had intended to go myself, but . circumStances happen un towardly, and I :shall send you in stead. - Bending his head toward me and speaking scarcely above a whisper, he told me the special business on which I was to be sent. There had been, it seems, a series of very heavy forgeries lately committed with a boldness and audacity that fairly seemed 'to set the authorities at defi ance. For some Unite he had been in doubt as tattle exact perpetrator of the, crime ; but after much quiet in vestigation • and casting hither and thither he had deteeted, the bidden spring --one Perley Matterson—who had skillfully eluded all 'pursuit, and was—now somewhere hiding ; in the northeastern portion of the State. His whereabouts had been ascertained as nearly as possible, and it'was for me to go quietly up and apprehend him before he should become aware or our knowledge of all his move ments. I sat listening to all the various details of our plans as they were sketched out by Mr. Clenner. The reward that had been privately offered was high. My heart leaped as I re flected how much nearer it would bring me to Kitty Elton ; nor did the enterprise seem particularly diffi cult to accomPlish. 'Do you think you can do it?' Mr. Clenner asked after the whole thing had been laid before'me. 'Yea, sir. When shall I start?' 'Now ;- within half an hour.' 'Yes ; why not ?' - I could think of- no sufficient rea ca one s -which I did n$ 1110 t '4;,, BY .P. S. CASSIDY. & TRUE STORY. b...,., ~ ~ to communicate to my supyrior—tbe longing wish to see Kitty ()nee more before I started. - __l ' - 'Just as you decide , Xi. Cleaner, i t I of course," I said, tieing. f I take the four o'clock express shall be there by 4aylight to-morro morning.' 'Yes, and that is alto ether the best_ plan. He wilrnot re ' sin long in any one place just at present, de pend upon it, and what yob have to do must be done at once.' All through that long night jour ney I mused upon the'task that lay before me. The house to — which] was directed was in theamid,Ot,W woods, about half a mile beyond the village of Drownville—the rgeidetee of Mrs. Matterson, the mothdr of the audacious forger. If help wks need ed, I was fully authorized , to tall for it upon the 'constabulary;iutiforities of. Drownswille, but I c Ifected to need none. The rosy dawn was jinx flushing the eastern sky when I slighted— stiff, weary and jaded—from the train at the little way-station of Drown. 'Can you direct me to Mrs. Mat terson's place P I asked of 06 sleepy station-master, who was yawning be hind the little aperture of -the ticket office. ‘Matterson—Mrs. Matters= ? I don't knnw her, but I gimes likely I can tell you where she lives. Just you - follow - the main street 'of the vil lage oat about half a mil; and ye'll come to a patch'of woods, with bars at the fence. Go through them bars a little way further on,, and, ye'll see a little yaller house, 'just. the last, place in. the world where you'd ex pect, to see a house. That's-where Mrs. Matters= lives.' I thanked my informant and set out on a brisk walk, carrying my traveling bag. • It wei quite a .dis tance ere I emerged from thisuburbs of the 'main street' into a quiet and secluded road, or rather lane. The 'patch of woods,' with the bars and the 'little yaller house'la cream colored, cottage literally, -overgrown with honeysuckles— rewarded my search,-and as I knocked at the door a cluck somewhere inside struck seven. , A. decent-looking elderly • woman in widow's weeds came t4:.t.he door. 'IS Mr. Matterson Perley?" 'No,' she answered quickly tith, as I imagined, rather a con fused look. I did not believe her, and 'asked qui etly 'When do you gxpect him home?' 'Not at.present.' Apparently,she expected me to go away, but instead I stepped in. :'Mother,' asked a, soft voice at the head of the stairs,"who is it?' , And then for the first time I be came aware that acute one had been watching our colloquy from the head of :the stairs—a young girl, dressed, like the mother, in deep black, with very brilliant eyes and a profusion of jet-black ringlets. 'Some one to , see your brother.l She came half-waydown the:Stairs, pushing back her culls with one hand and looking at me with wonderful eyes. Even then her beauty struck me as I stood gazing at her. 'Terry is not at home,' she' said hurriedly. 'lle has gone away.. We do not know when he will return' Evidently'this mother and daugh- ter were in the secret of Mr. 11,1atter son's villainy, and doing their best do screen him from its consequences. My heart bled for both of them ; but it was no time to indulge , in senti mental pity. Speaking as briefly as 1 - could, I told them it was My duty to compel them to remain where they were till I searched the house. MO. Matterson sat down, pale and trembling; her daughter colored high. 'Mother,' she said, 'Why do you stand by and listen to such slanders? It is false ! Let this man search the house if he will; my brotheris as in nocen•; as I am !' No, opposition vvas offered to my search. It was entirely fruitless, however ; there Was nowhere any trace of the 'flown bird. Nevertheless I concluded to remain there quietly for a day or two, to see what a little waiting might bring forth. • The same afternoon Clara Matter son came in as I sat by the piazza window, keeping a quiet watch on all the surroundings.. 'Mr. Meredith:, she said softly, `mother thinks I have been rude to you. She says it was not'your fault, personally, that you were sent here on such a mistake; and perhaps she is right. lam very sorry if I have hurt your feelings.- The pretty, penitent way in which she spoke quite won my heart, antra few, questions on my part seemed to unlock the hidden recesses of her confidence. She talked, at first stiyly; but afterward with more assurance, of herself, her absent brother and her mother, giving me a, thousand artless little family details which I almost dreaded to tear. The twilight talk was one of the pleasantest epi sodes of my no means universally pleasant life, and I was considerably annoyed when it was.broken in upon by the arrival of the Drownville con stables, who were to watch through the night; - - At—the sound of their footsteps on the piaza floor Clara rose up and sat down again, confused and frightened. 'O, Mr.. Meredith ;, those men—' 'Be easy, Miss MattersOn; I said ; 'you shall in no way be annoyed by them. •Your rrivady shall _not be broken in upon believe me.' ' 'I know I am silly; faltered Clara, 'but oh ! it seems so dreadful.! My orders to the men wero brief and succinct. I stationed, them as seemed best to me, and then; returned to spend the evening with Miss Mat terson. And when I was at length left alone I could' not help thinking —God forgive ine---bow much more winning and graceful she was than poor Kitty Elton. . At length the answer C 1111163 to my report to Mr. Clennpr. .It was short and to the purpose.: 'Come back. You aroonly losing time. If the bird haollown womnst look elsewhere for him. I read the .missive ' with a pang. Clara Matterson'a cheek deepened in color as 1 annonneed my'departure to her, ;~• ~~, El !. ; i , • - ( TOWANDA BRADFORD COUNTY, VIIII1121)AY MORNING, OCTOBER 20 1 1881. Was 1 foolish to press the jetty ringlet to my lips ere I laid it closely against my heart? Clara evidently thought I was, for she laughed, but did not seem displeased:, Mr. Clenner seemed annoyed when I got back to the Bureau; rather an unreasonable proceeding on his part, for I f certainlydid all that man could do under the circumstances. • 'We haVe been mistaken. all the way through,it seems,' he said, biting his :lip: 'Strange, very strange; I was•neverluistaken before in my cal culation. Well, we must try again." I went. to Kitty Elton's that night. She received me with , a sweet, shy sadness of irelcome that-should have made. nie the happiest man in the world, but it did not. Clara Matter son's dark .beauty seemed to stand between me and her like a visible barrier. When I took my leave there were tears in her eyes. • 'Kitty, you are crying 'Because you are 'changed. Ed ward, you do not love me as well as you' did 'Kitty, what nonsense l' It'svas vexed with her, simply be cause I knew her accusation was truej -But 1-kissed her once more and took my leave, moody and dissatisfied. When. I reached the office next morning Mr. Clenner was - not there. Ile has gone to Brownville," said mgellow-detective ; 'he went last ni t.' 3 To Drown Ville !' 111143ABDUI88 4:4:I4tWOLLTION ram ANY QUOTE& • • 111.00 per. Annum In Adimnoe. 'Yon have , been far .kinder ..than we flared to hope, Mr. Meredith; she aahr t as I held her hand in mine. ThWeader will easily, perceive how our intimacy had progressed. smiled, hung her head, and taking a , pair of scissors from the table, sev ered one bright black curl from the abundant tresses that hung over her forehead. _ ' ' 'Keep this, Meredith, in mem orl'of me.' w.is seriously annoyed. Did Mr. Ckenner distrust the accuracy of my reports? or - did he imagine that I Was unable to institute a thorough and complete investigation of the kern iSCS ? - 'lt's very strange,' I mused aloud. t Jone's laughed. 'Well,' he said, 'you know. Clenuir has a way of doing strange things. Depend upon it, he has good reasons for his conduct.' I was sitting at my desk two - days subsequently, when the, door glided noiselessly open and punier himself entered. 'You are back again, sir. And what luck ?' 'The best' • 'You don't mean to say you have got him?' do mean to say it. Edward Mei edith, I knew I could not be entirely mistaken. Perley Matterson is in the nest room; half an hour from now he will be in prison.' 'Where did you apprehend him ?' 'At home, in his mother's house.' 'But—' 'He was there all the time you re• mained there. Ned, my boy, you've made a blunder for once; but don't let it happen again' 'What do you mean; sir?' For reply he opened the door of the private inner apartment, his own special sanctum. A slight boyish figure' leaned against the window, smoking a cigarette, with black curls tossed back from a marble-white brow and brilliant eyes. He mock ingly inclined his head, as I stared at him, with amotion not unfamiliar to me. 'Clara Matterson 1' 'Yes, he said. in a soft, sarcastic voice • 'Clara Matterson, or Perley Matterson, or whatever you choose to call me Many thanks for your politeness, Detective. Meredith ; and if you would like another lock of I turned away, burning scarlet, while. Mr. Clennei closed the door. 'Never' mind, my boy, it will be a lesson to you,' he said laughing. 'He makes a very pretty girl, but I am not at all susceptible. What a double-dyed fool I had been I had lost the reward, failed in the estimation of my fellow-otßeers, and behaved like a brute to-poor Kitty—and all for what ?' I went to Kitty and told her the whole story,"and to my surprise the dear, faithful little creature loved me just as well as ever. won't be jealous of Perley Mat terson, Edward,' she said; smiling, whatever I might be of his sister. And, dearest, don't be disconrged. I'll wait as long as you please; and you will be a second Mr. Cleaner yet.' She was determintd to look on the bright side of things, this little Kitty of mine But I felt the mortification none the less keenly, although, as Mr. Cleaner said, it woUld undoubt, edly prove a good leison to me. . Perley Matterson's girlish beauty is now eclipsed in the. State's , prison; nor do I fay him. The stake for which he played was high—and he lost ! How SHE HELPED HER MOTHER.— don't:See how I'd git along with out Mary, nohow," Mrs. Blucher ob served, pausing to wipe the perspira tion from her aged features anirput another ladle of soft soap into the steaming suds, while her daughter's voice at the piano could be distinctly recognized, - floating. Oa from the ad joining parlir. "I don't see how I'd git along without that gal, nohow. /Ways on these nights, when I have the tiringest work, she just picks out her nicest pieces, like 'Sweet rest by and-by,' growing old;' and sings 'em fur me afore she goes "out : on the lawn with the other young folks. 'Taint every gal as ud be so thoughtful, I kin tell you.. Now, most or 'em ud jest bang away with 'Jordan is a hard road to travel,' or 'Whoop 'em up, Eliza Jane,' but she ain't none o' that sort. She's a pile o' comfort to me—a pile & comfort:" `And Mrs. Blucher fanned herself vig orously with ber soiled apron, pre- paratory to running the clothes thro' the second water. &muss bs primarily the squint of sus loins ; And suspicion is 55t4141404 be '.1•:-. - ;q•-'i:::':; , ;.'- - '-', - -:- -, :-. , ,;....1.-',', :- ..- 7- '-'4 - i:i'.• - •. ,1 '.''.: -. 5.':: -,,, ;: -, ' 7 , k . ...,,,,, , -,.. 2 , ;: ;::: 1 5.,, ;! ..: : ,. , : .iii , . : , „.-,4„.. , 4„ : -;;;1 : „-. I F , ;_:,:iy...,1 2 .2: , ..,,x -•-•.''' ; • • ; • ; • - r ' • • ; -:"' : Hawlt Was Done. A 'BONNE AT; Til#' "SQUIRE% IN TUB NO11:1 1 11' STATE: A couplifrom' Virginia landed in Milton the other morning to be mar ried. by 'Squire Lewis. They walked band-in-habd .up Main street and took, a seat upon the front step of the' °Squire's Wiled, and the man ask ed fora liednse. As the 'Squire was preparing 4,4 make - it, out the buxom girl beganWo inch off, and hesitated, and flnallyfimid to the young man in a. half whieker 'John,' Zap she, 'I don't believe I ne:yet did feel'so ilustrated— lawd I I 'Wonder what papa's doing now—l feek4ight tremblesome—less go back ; Conn on, John.' 'Well, yob don't want thi license thenl' - said _the 'Squire. Hold Oii thar, Mister; yes, we do," said tbe man. . Then be Moved closer . up and set his chin to .11. nest work: 'Now, Stilly,' said he, " don't go on thawN . oly ; what 'ad the folks say? It '0 be awful hard on . me An' thar'sAbe candy stew at Bob Brown's t-lght, an aller that; and Sukey Jobes would jest die a-grin nin' over you about it. She was mad as pizen tisterday when she heard we was cdniin'--' • ' I dprqt mind her no more'n the dust oir My feet, but Ifeel so skittish like Johat; wisteermydie if 1 haint sorry we dome. I don't want'er , get married JOhn,..!, 'Say, liter, fix on-your papers,' said John nuthin, r more'n - statidin' up in spellin' class at Oldfleld ' Well, sand up,' said the 'Squire. " I'm ready' But as,bq ceremony was - under way the girrierkeeback, exclaiming: be Johndinged of I do.' The 'Squire suggested that the license had been given, and they had gone most . to far to back out uow. That's so !' said John. Stand fast, Sally 1 Don't git all in'er quiver now," gently . taking her arm. 'Come'r long in -place • it's most over with;' and she elide d back. As the 'Squire said, now pro nounce you man and wife !" ' Lud amercy cried the bride, an' it is done ?' • - You bet 'tis—easy as spellin' ; and now we'll go,' said the man; and they m'unted the horse double and rode out of. town.--Reidsuille N. 0. Times. Don't Whine. Don't be 'whining about having a fair chance Throw a sensible man out of the window, he'll fall on his feet, and ask the nearest way to his work. The more ;s , coU bare to begin with, the less you!!l have in the end: Money you can earn yourself is much brighter than you' can get out of dead men's bags. A scant breakfast in the morning of life whets the ap petite for a feast. later in the day. He who has tasted a sour apple will have the more relish for a sweet one. Your s present want , will make your future prosperity all the sweeter. Eighteenpence has set up. many a peddler in business, and he has: turn ed it over until he -has kept his car riage. Am for the place you are cast in, don't find -fault with that; you need not be a horse because you were born in a stable. If a bull tossed a man of mettle sky- „high, he would drop down into a good place. A hard-working young man with his -wits about him will make money while others will do nothing but lose it. ' Who loves his work and knois how to spare, may live and flourish anywhere.' As to a little trouble, who expects to find cherries= without stones, or roses without thorns ? Who would win must learn to bear. Idleness lies in bed sick of the mulligrubs, where industry finds •health and wealth. The dog in the kennel barks at fleas; the hunting dog does not ever.know that they are there. Lazi ness waits till the river is dry, and never gets to, market. Try' swims it and makes all the trade. 'Can't do it' would not eat the hrsaFl:set before him, hut TIP - niadetieatiaut of mushrooms. Does the World Miss Any One ? - Not long. The best and most use ful -of us will soon be. forgotten. - Those whO to-day are filling a place in the world's regard will pass away from the remembrance ,of men in .a few months, or at the , farthest in a few years after the, grave has closed upon their, remains. . We are shedding tears above a hew-made grave and wildly crying out in our grief that our loss is irre parable, yet in a short time the ten drils of love have entwined around other supports, and we no longer miss the one"who has gone. - So passes the,world. But there are those to whom a loss is beyond re pair. There are men from whose memories no woman's smile can chase recollections of the sweet. face that has given up all its beauty at death's icy touch. There are women whose plighted faith extends beyond the grave, ' and drivea away as profane those who would entice them from a worship of their buried loves. Such loyalty, however, is' hidden away from public gaze. The world sweeps on beside and around them and cares not to look in on this un obtruding grief It carves a line and rears a stone over the dead-and ;has tens away to offer homage to the liv ing. It cries out weepingly,''k roy eat mort,' but with the next breath exclaims joyously, 'rive le roy.' - The American " I Guess."- It may be well to consider the' AMerican 'I guess,' which is often made the subject of ridicule by En glishman, unaware of the fact. that tile-expression is . gclod Englip.h. a It is -found in few works written during the last century, and_in many : written during_the — seventeenth cen tury,. So careful a writer as Locke used the expression oftener than once in his , treatise 'On the Human Un derstanding.' In: fact the disiise of the expression In later times seems MEM=S=I II to have been due to 'change in the meaning of the word 'gnaw.' An ,Englishman whii - Would sayll guess' 'now would not mean what Locke did when ha used the expression in for times; or what- an American means when he uses It in our own day. We say, 'I games that riddle,' or 'guess what you mean, signifying that we think We answer to the rid dle or the meaning of what we have heard may be such and such. But when an American says guess so,' he &lee not mean. 'I think it may be so,' but more nearly ktknow it to be so.' The expression is closely akin to the old English saying, 'I wig.' Indeed the words 'guess' and 'wis' are simplydiflerent forms of the same word: Just es we have' `guartV, and 'Ward,' 'guardian' and 'warden,' 'Guillaume and 'William,' guichett and 'wicket,' Ac., so we have the verbs to 'guess? and to 'wis.'—Gen tleman's Magazine. Spooperulyke's Picture-Hanging. Well, my dear,' said Mr. Spoop endykei with a nail in his moutb, and balancing hiniself waveringly on a dining-room chair,' all you've got to do is to get: your picture ready, and I'll show you how to hang the thing.' It's awful sweet of you, pet,' said Mrs. Spoopendyke; :Alternately rub bing the frame of :a very hectic chro mo and sucking the thumb she bad been hammering for the last twenty minutes. ' It's awful sweet and thoughtful of you, dear,. to offer your assistance at such a time, for do believe I never would have got a nail driven in that stupid wall.'. • Of courseyou wouldn't, my dear !' laughed Mr. apoopendyke. Who ever saw a woman that Could drive a nail? You. couldn't drive a galvanized carpet-tack in a 'leven pound bladder of putty. And speak ing of driving nails, I'd like to know it' you're ever going to hand up that hammer, or meat-pounder or whatev er you've been_ :using. Think I can drive nails with my elbow?' ' It's the , stove-handle, love,'' said Mrs. Spoopendyke, meekly, handing him a mysterious-looking implement, with a wooden handle , at one end and the tinder jaw of a shoemaker's plyers at the other. Oh, it's a stove-hook, is it?' said Mr. Spoopendyke, regarding the wea pon with a sinister expression. 'Now ; if you'd handed me up a dog-iron - or a pair of steelyards, I'd have been right at home; but a stove-hoiok Really, my dear, I'd rather under take to drive it nail with a scythe handle." But the wal!'s so son and lovely, dear, it really drives , them beautiful ly—if they .would only stick," said Mrs. Spoopendyke, reassuringly. ' Only stick !' said Mrs. Spoopen dyke, contemptuously ; now I'll bet that you miter wet the mucilage on a single nail before you started. That's ir by they didn't stick for you—ouch ! suiferin' Moses! - Are you going to stand serenely by and sec me beat my knuckles into a shapeless pulp with this dod-gasted, measly marlin spike?.! • Poor-dear 1' said S Mrs. - Spoopen dyke, consolingly. ' You do act so impatient—and at the first trial, too. Maybe it struck something hard in the plaster. Try another place— that's the way I managed that.' Oh, yes,' said Mr. Spoopendyke, that's the way you managed it! and you have punched enough holes in here to play cribbage in. Will you gimme another nail ? Don't yini see I've knocked this one fiat, and can't unpry it up again?' • Can't unpry it up *in 1' ejacu lated Mrs. Spoopendyke; in a very gentle voice, handinc , him another nail. Qin% unpry it up again t i Well, if that ain't grammar!' • ' Oh, ain't it ?i said Mr. Spoopen dyke, with a most horrific smile. 'Of course it ain't, you old feifale semi nary with a‘cracked bell in your cu- Iguing to seh9c!Lto or ain I driving nails?' Well, dear,- sighed Mrs. Spoopen dyke, you're surely not (hiving nails.'. ' No, you can just bet'l'm not driv in' nails, and you can bet I ain't a-go ing to try to drive no more nails nei ther! And - you can bet,' continued Mr. Spoopendyke with still density ing intensity, and a war-dance flour ish as he leaped to the floor, ' and you can just bet your high - muck•a muck, if you set that measly old chromo of yours on the side-table, I'll throw this dodgasted thing so through 'it that it won't get back in a century 1' " Self-Made" Men and Women Self-made men of President Gar field's type are . often Justly claimed as being among the finest fruits of our institutions. There is another class who also deserVe well our praise —thoie:who have had to overcome, not so much their early disadvan tages, as what many people would consider their early advantages. They did not have to surmount poverty but to surmount wealth—not to rise out of adversity but above prosperity. They have had . to learn to sympathize with those in need without ever hav ing shared their necessitous condition. to espouse radicalism& when they had everything to, lose by change.. It is hard, at any rate, to get, good work out of , those who are born to inherit what others have earned by working; hoir much harder when their career is thistined to involve not merely work; but the loss of early friends and t)erhaps of all the special de lightei of the society' in which they were born.- To accept these condi tions and to do . it knowingly and cheerfully,' is to be a self-made man or woman indeed. A rich young lawyer was once told , by an older one That the way to suc cess was this : To spend his fortune; then to roam and spend his wife's; after which he could.hope to succeed at the bar. But to achieve a really independent moral . position=to be indeed a"self-made man or atrue man akall—implies more than success at the bar; for it needs not only intel lect, but'the highest 111018 besides. TO accomplish this in spite of early "ad _ ~ . , ~, ~, . • • • ' -.- . • ~ • '..-•,:_ 1 , ) - N .' - • . • \ . , . , • '' „:. , _ , ,.••1 -: ' ' '''. 4 I - • • 7, ' 1 , 1 ,-,... .. - • .. ..- , ~ * • - .. - - -''' ^-• ' • . ..:., _ • .• MI --S l vantages' is in many respects hard er than to rise out of what is called obscurity. ' , To begin with, it wins far less sympathy durhigthe process. Everybody is, interested in ' The -Ro mance of a Poor Young Man.' Those of the class from which he came, whatever it be, are apt to cheer him on; and to rejoice, with almost tire some repetition, that he was once'rt rail-splitter, or a tanner, or II flat boatman: After his career of Lila,. Unction is once begun, he has every inducement to make the most of these circumstances in his career; they are counted to iim for merits, and he is tempted to exaggerate them, like the character in`Dicken's Bleak House, (' Hard Times r) whose main stock in trade lay in his early struggles, and was put to shame at last by the discovery that he came of , worthy and well-to-do parents. But the man who-tries to elevate himself into in dependence of character out of "for tunate' surroundings is apt to find himself unfortunate. Those of the class he is leaving do not urge him on; but are more apt to censure him or satirize him; and Where this is true of - man it is twice as true of the other sex. I remember one oc casion when a lecture was to' be de livered in Newport, by one of .the most accomplished women in New England. A-h! now I have named her, which I did not mean to do P— ILO-Warrington 2 once said of the same person, after' applying to he r somewhat similar. epithet. 'Only a think said.one of the little q ueen of our littleisociety, as she read tba announcemeht, that woman was lady once IT I well re ember= when a boy, to - have only h'eard of Lothrop - Motley as the handsomest fop and fianeur in Boston- 4 the manager of fashionable assemblies, the leader of the dance. Wendell Phillips in his Cambridge oration the other day; described the process of change which transformed Motley into an author and then into a reformer; and made his pen worth a dozen diplomatists to' his country when the opening of the war found the United L States almost without a friend In Ehrope. Of Mr. Phillip's own carcer L l neeil hardly speak; `nor of that other charming orator, who with his new Harvard honors upon himaraised Phillips at the Phi Beta Kappa dinner in words almost as eloquent as his own. Whatever., be their errors or shortcomings, I never think of men and women such as I have named—and the list might easily be male longer, without recall ing that fine passage in which George Colman, in his once famous' - Looker- On,' describes Sir Philip Sidney— putting the language, be it observed, into the mouth of a woman. This is the closing paragraph This bright and accom p lished cavalier might, if he 1 -pleased, in his day, have - set the fashion of a shoe , tie or altered the shape of any man's peruque in 'the country; but he I thought it more beseeching his man hoo-;1 and his `greatness of soul to hold out a. brave example 'of virtue and religion. While all were look ing up to him as the sample of court say, of elegance and gallantry, he was bethinking himself 'of his Phara phrase of the Psalms. He fell fight ing for 'hkcountry, and died in an act of Christian charity.'—Col. T. IV.lliggin.gon in The Womanls Jour nal. Garfield's Heavenly Escort. A Wilmington, Pel.,despatch says: " The people in this vicinity are greatly excited odes what they be lieve to be supernatural .manifesta tions. A.little girl some three weeks ago, livin g c , in this village, saw after nightfall, before the moon' was Jfairly up above the horizon, iiiatoqns of angels slowly marching and counter marching to and fro. in the clouds, their white robes and helmets glisten ing in the light. At intervals the heavenly visitors would dance mourn fully. --- - .llerlather also saw the spec tacle. Monday night two weeks ago William West, a farmer living near Georgetown, the county seat, saw bands of soldiers of great size, equip ped in dazzling uniforms, their mus kets shimmering in the pale, weird - light that seemed to be everywhere, marching with military precision up and down, and presenting arms. The vision lasted long enough to be seen by , a number of Nest's. neighbors. Many people, living near Laurel, many miles away, sitriated in the lower end of the Peninsula, saw the• same, extraoirlinary phenomena - . A few go as far as` to say that they dis tinctly saw in the midst of the sol diers, and conspicons •by reason of his size and commanding presence, the hero President himself, with every feature . distinctly an,l _ vividly por; trayed. In Talbot county the illusion was seen by numbers." What England Will Do. 'England will scratch before long,' said O'Donotan.Rosia yesterday. 'How soon?' -asked the reporter. 'Between now and Christmas.' 'Please read this/ said the reporter, handing to him a newspaper clipping, as follows : 'LONDON, September Eight cartridges marked "11. S." - have been discovered in a bale of cotton at the Abbey Spinning Company's works near Oldham. It is believed they were placed there with the design of setting fire to the mill. The usual Fenian reports nre current.' 'Well, now, do you see that? Dear me I' exclaimed O'Donovan Rossa • after he had read it slowly. . 'Du you know anything about it?' th ••reporter asked. Not 1. This is the first I have .he rd of it. How do iyou account for it ?' ,We furnish the money and the material here, aad the .men on the other side do what they think best.' - But they ddn't intend to burn -- milli, do they ?' I won't be interviewed: Ws any thing to hart England.' 4 / Perhaps the cartridges were meant tia be found ?' ' 'Perhaps so; a little scare goes a rat watt--Neio York Sun, al NEW Comet D. TITE PROBABLE FUTURE OP THE ZR. RATIO C.ELESTIAL . VISITOR. The list aMierc among the new comets of the ,year, discovered by Professor Barnard, of Nashville, on the night of the President's death, makes small advances toward visibil- ity, for it can yet be seen only by the aid - of the telesope. It may, however auddenly blaze forth into a famous Specimen of its class, for nothing in the material universe is' more unae,- eotntable than the vagaries of a come‘ The probability is l however, that it has fulfilled its mission in re warding the-discoverer with a prize of two hundred dollars, and may in cite competitors to renewed effort to secure the four cometic Prizes still attainable during the ,year. It is worthy uf note that, four comets are now visible with telescopic aid. ' They are the great comet B, Slucberle's comet C, Barnard's comet D, and Buckets comet. Comets B and C have passed their perihelion, are re treating from the' earth, and soon they places will be known no more. Comet p. has as yet no tail,.but as it has not , yet reached perihelion, one ay suddenly appear. Encke's cornet, which makes us a visit once in three and a quarter years, never hid a tail, and is seldom picked up by the un aided eye. It is now in the constel lation Auriga, where four of the five comets of the year have appeared. The "great year," 1881, will not prove specially prolific-in comets un less several new ones are found du l ring the three months that remain. The year 1880 numbered eight com ets on its list, and thus far the year 1881 includes only fotir new ones. But with prizes of two,.hundred dol lars to reward research, stragglers in .celestial territoiies will `find it hard to escape the eager ken of comet seekers. It is difficult to tell wherein the value of these telescopic comets lies, or what practical good is effect ed by adding them to„ the system. They are worse than the tiny aster oids.that are/ being caught in astro nomiCal nets; for the comets.are seen for a brief , space and then depart never to returl again, but the aster oids, that are often lost are . as often rediscovered.,:-From the Providence Journal. A Strange Tribe of Indians. Looking, on the map of New Mexi co, on the eastern confines of Ariiona, in latitude 3 - 4 and-longitude 100, you will see the country .of the Zunies. These Indians'are white as any other people, have, lieht.' flaxen hair, and the Indian Mies might even 'be con sidered blonde beauties. Some of them have red eyes—albinos. The women have regular, pretty features;, are very modest, gentle, moral and , truthful—as also are the men. They are intelligent, cultivate their, corn• and cereals, and always have on hand, stored and stock for several years ahead, a sufficient supply fot their community. They are not a warlike race. After the Navahoes, their more warlike neighbors, conquered them, or perhaps before, they built their village or town in the form of a hol low square, as a quasi fortress. Into this =hollow square they lead their flocks and herd at night, shut the gate, climb up by ladders to the roof of their adobe houses, haul up, the ladders and go to sleep in confident security. The entrance to their-dwell ngs is only by the roof—like the In dians of Taos and other places in New Mexico -= as a means of safety. Their worship is a mixture of idolatry and catholicism, so Tar as could be ascertained. They worship a very ancient picture of the transfiguration, the origin of which they know not and' have no tradiqon. Unlike the Navahoes or Nabajdes their neigh bors, they are a peaceful, simple race, but are dwindling away and soon will become extinct, especially as they intermarry—other marriages be ing strictly prohibited.—Port Chester Journal. . .A - CONSCIENTIOUS POSTMASTER.- A postmaster under Buchanan, find ing by his "instructions" that he was to report quarterly, addressed the following official communication to the President : - "July 9,lBs7.—Mr.James Buchan an, President of the United States— Dear Sir: Been required by the in structions of the Post Office to re-, port quarterly, .I know herewith fool fil that pleasin duty by reportin as follows : The harvestin has been go in on peerty, and most of the-nabors have got their, cuttin dun. Wheat is hardly an average crop; on rolen land corn is yalerish, and wont turn out more than ten or fifteen bushels to the aker. , The health of the cora; munity is only tolerable, and cholery has broke out about-2 and one half miles fronr, hefe. There is :a power ful awakening on the subject of reli gion. in the falls , naborhood, and many soils are bein made to know their sins, forgiven. Miss Nancy Smith, a nere nabor, had twins day before yesterday.. One of thein' is supposed to be a sieven monther, a poor. scraggy thin*, and wont live half its - day. This is shout awl I have to report the present quarter: Give my respects to Mrs. Buchanan, and subscribe ,myself yours truly,. "—,P. M. at —,Fulton Co., Ill." —Harper's Magazine. WORTII RrmEmnsario.—Sirlienry Maine says that the most imperturb able of llindoo liars may be detectec by_the twitching Of their toes. Dr. Sarmiento says : " Whenever a Gau cho tells you anything look at . his feet; ! if he moves them he is tellirg you a. lie. • This was first , observed by Paean+) Quiroga, the most accurate observer of Gaucho habits." - Olten get a maLupon the rails of doubt 1 1= eae.haw,him onas ap far.y.m loxwir is round and will roll away; but education, once required, never escapes 118. VERY amiable and good-natured are those people who can have their own way in etrerything, °nu chief want in life is somebody who .shall make ui do what -- we can. This tie IlertiClP of a friend., " - ' I NUMBER 21 Taking Care olihn:Hisc' Thdiewho thlnklisrness mods no care taken of It are very muck all. taken. Harness taken from a horse and thrown in a corner, or hung up with no cleaning soon decays and becomes useless. A harness that has been upon a horse's back for several " hours in - hot. or rainy weather be. comes wet; if not properly cleaned, the damage - to' the leather is irritable. - If, after being taken from the horse in this condition, it is - hung up in a careless manner, traces and reins twisted into , knots, and the- saddle and bridle hung askew, the leather when dried retains the shape given it while wet, and when forced to its original fcrm depute is done the - stitching and the leather. The first point to be observed into keep the leather soft and pliable. - This can be done only by keeping it well charged with oil and grease; water is a des troyer of these, but mad and saline moisture from the animal are even More destructive. Mud, in drying, absorbs the grease and opens the pores of the leather, making iti prey to water, while the salty character of thil4erspiration from the animal in jures the leather, stitching and mount ings. It ;therefore follows that, to preserve a harness,, the strap should—. be washed and oiled whenever it hall been moistened by sweat or soiled , by mud. If" a haniess -is thoroughly. : cleaned twice a year, and 'when un-_ duly exposed treated as we have rocommended, the leather will retain its softness and strength for many years. IN A Huaar.—A-fend has existed for years between the Curtis and Da vis families, who live in the same neighborhood, near Maquoketa lowa. But as there was a Juliet in the Da vies family, so there was it Romeo in the house of Curtis. R,omto, or Ben,- and Juliet, or in matter- of fact Ma tilda, met at church clandestinely, went: sleighing together on moonlight nights and last winter eloped. Ar rived at Dubuque, bound West in search of a new world, the lovers were overtaken by the girl% father, who forcibly took his daughter back to Maquoketa. Fair Matilda was kept a prisoner in her father's house until last Tuesday, upon which day she attained her majority.. In the middle -of the morning, she saw a chance Co escape and ran bonnetless - to the woods, through' whiCh she made her way toward the Curtis farm - house, several miles distant. Her - - gown was torn by .briers, and she was forced to take off her shoes to wade through streams, but she push ed on and found her lover at work in a field about one . - o'clock. Young Curtis sent his younger brother for Justice - R. W. Henry, at Maquoketa, and when the latter arrived the bride and groom were sitting on a fallen oak in a roadside grove. Judge Hen ry began to twit the young people upon their romantic=- surroundings, when the bride exclaimed : " Hurry up, 'Squire ; father's coming!" "Rush it, Judge!" shouted the groom. Jus tice Henry looked up the road and, saw the bride's father coming down upon the party, at a furious speed. The old man was rolling along like a summer evening thUnder4torm and Justice-Henry hurriedly placed .the lovers under the umbrella of matri mony, "uniting them," as the local paper says, "in as few words as the law allows."—Chicage Times. A QUICK ANn THOROUGH CURR ! ---- A man in, Scotland had for years been afflie l ted with some cutaneous disease that almost rendered life a burden to him. He had tried doefors and patent nostrums until he • was sick of them; and had bowed the inevitable old woman with her roots and "yarbs" to torture.him almost' into idiocy. One of the latter, how. ever, stuck to the case until she got the upper hand of it. She told him of a man who told- her husband that he knew-of a woman who heard .her mother say that in her younger days it was generAlly known that by satn. rating the body with petroleum and standing by a bon-fire until the oil was well dried in, any disease to which the cuticle 19" heir could be effectually cured. The poor fellow tried it and was cured. When tl)e experiment wan completed there was nothing left of. him - but a few steel pantaloon buttons and an unpleasant aroma in the air, - but the disease was knocked higher than _Mr..Oilderoy's balloon.—Detroit Free Press. !- Fun, Fact and Fctcetitc. IT is a sad thing to see _many walk 'in the dark themselves, who carry a lantern for others. . LEARN to double your kindness to thoee who would be missed if their places were vacant. THERE IVO Om for whom money does everything, except to make -honorible men of them. A WISE man makes trouble less by for-7 titudo ; but to a fool it becomes heavier by stooping toit. WE ale going ,to Arkansas to ;start it paper, calling it "Quinine and Whisky." Everybody will take it.=~lloderi Argo. "Iv you grasp a rattlesnake firmly about the neck, tie cannot hart yon," says a Western Paper. Keeping about a block ahead of the snake is also a good wheme.-Chiadsro Tribune. " WHY dost thou soar, my love ?" sings Celia Thaxter in an exc hange. Probably it is because ho haebeen trying to Mount the fiery, untamed bicycle, Celia. It will make auy man sore.—Rockland ecurier. THE Vacation : &Limner k that varm of the year in which a man carries his rockets full of railroad maps and summer resort prospectuses-for a week, and th en decides to go where r did last year.— Lowell Citizen. " WHAT are your politics ?" the chap lain of the lowa penitentiary asked of an intelligent looking convkt. "I have not come out for anybody yet," replied the convict, gazing-placidly through the bars. —Detroit Free Press., PROFESSOR BELL claims that be has succeeded in inventing .a machine that will." locate a bullet in the human body." lie needn't think that's anything new. Almost every man in Denver totes such an instrument.—BotatonTost. KING KALAKAUA'S army consists exact ly of sixty men. Well, if that is the case, we don't wonder at his wanting to sell his kingdom. He might trade his army fot our navy, then swap the. navy for a dog, shoot the canine and finally die hay,- py.-oii City Derr:ek. ; Six Nevada widows, each worth over '5300,000, have formed a compact and sot:- emulf agreed to take nJ men but editors for second husbands. Gentlemen, even in the darkest hour we have stuck to it that things would workout all right_ hi the end.—Detroit Free Press. Tng East India Prince of Gondal is on the eve of matrimony. He is to lead sev en happy maidens to the altar at once. The troubled life of-the East India prince has its compensations. Just think of it ! Eight souls with but a single thought, eight hearts that. beat as one t--Boston Transcript. AN extract from the letter of. a recent emigrant : "I'm mulling on de roads here at Saratoga, but I don't indrd to do it long. Shore Mike Mulhooley, wholeft home three years ago come nixt Alder, has a rich young•lady to drive him around the city wid a beautifuispin, and be sit. ting up %Attila - melds arm folded loike OWN= entirely."—Bestels Cowrie. - • 0