ft"--"' V. fflllllflf JMttif HI Wft Allr iiffl lllliW WWwW www Wgf IP Wly ww- . B. F. SCHWKIEB, TBI 0058IITOTIOH-IHI PSION AND THI INFORCIMBNT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXX. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PEXNA.. JUNE 7. IS76. NO. 23. 1 GRUMBLE HOT, BROTHER. bt nun M, con. ununbla not, brother, though dark be tbe night. Gloomy the shadow of life to thy sight ; Other hT blared them, and sealed with a cheer. Ik'll enlleetefl AllfKiile fii. TKam The hill which dir.de a from uniuer phare. I were men and women many of the former armed wun pikes and sabres the latter, the refuse of fie populace. who appeared like birds ot evil omen at again on the ensuing day, and let her Courage !" said a soft Toice. "The Know wnatever baa transpired In the opening enlarges. Now. Julie !" interim. Julie! Beauralloa was sure he heard As he approached the streets In which the name, and yet uncertain whether nis store aua nouse were situated, he or not he was dreaming. nreaineconiuseumurmurora mul- ..juUe!" he exclaimed, cauUousIy. tltude, and soon perceived on turning ..yes, monsler-it Is Julie sure the corner, that a very large crowd enough" answered a pleasant Orer the hill! Over the hill! Sunlight is glowing furerer be still ! Grumble not, brother, though stormy the way, Other hT traveled it many a day ; Footsore and wearied they Journeyed along, Liat'ning each day to the echoing song: Orer the hill! Orer the hill! Sunlight is glowing forerer be still ! (I rumble not, brother, though steep be the hill Ovv its summit tie peaceful and sail ; Orer its summit the valley are sweet. With flowers of beauty, with rest for your feet Orer the hill! Orer the hill! Sunlight is glowing forerer be still ! Grumble not, brother, the Journey is abort, Flitting the season that orer as sport ; Autumn and winter bring shadow that ttay. Summer undying lie orer the way. Orer the hill! Orer the hill ! Sunlight is glowing forerer be still ' Eulalie Lasalle. u A STOttY OF THE REIGN OF TERMOR. every scene of violence and tumult. A hundred voices called out his name as he approached, and menacing ges tures were addressed to him by the mul titude. "Citizens," said the merchant "what is the meaning of all this ?" "You shall know, "traitor" shrieked a palsied bag of eighty, whose lurid eyes had already gloated on every pub lic execution that had taken place in Toulouse. "Here is citizen Dumart of the revolutionary committee ah. he is a true friend of the people he is no aristocrat in disguise ! Tire fe Citoytn Dumart!" "Long live Citizen Dumart. Down with the aristocrats !" shouted a hun dred voices. The Citizen Dumart was a sallow faced man, dressed in a rusty black, wearing a large tri-colored cockade in his three-cornered hat. with a sash Then you, at least, have not forrot- . it - urn uie. "No one who has once known you can ever forget yon. Courage! and you will soon be free. Aid us If vou can." ' "Then you are not alone?" "Have patience, and you will see." ma own exertions, added to those of bis mends without, soon enabled the prisoner to force his way into the next bouse ; but there disappointment awaited him. Two soldiers in the uniform of the gentdarmerie stood before hira. "On ne paste par ici, you cjd' nere, saiu one, rreparatleaa Brestkba, If the breakfast were always the light and nnceremious meal it generally is in most parte of the continent of Europe, it might be disposed of with out any preliminaries. When, how ever, it become the substantial and serious repast of Scotland and the Uni ted States, it should not be approached without due formality and preparation. In France and Germany the light roll and dilated ccfe am lait which consti tute the first refreshment of the mor ning may be safely taken as soon as the consumer is sufficiently wakeful to be conscious of an appetite. We doubt the propriety of "walking on an empty stomach" an odd phrase, but very well understood, notwithstanding Syd ney Smith's droll inquiry, "Upon whose P or. in fact, of making any effort calling upno the serious energy of body orjatpa wwaunt haviix-u-j-. tfifto some ejxtent the first cravings ost ueaituy people, ai- --"- I CEXTEXXIAL NOTES. I WTW9 TO BBTTf of anaetiun. Y "What cruel mockery is thi .-tl ter the Ions- faslt of asleepful night, are Ueauvalioa. "is it not enough that I no ner awakf i'ian iuy in a ctr am condemned to death, but you must emptiness of the stomach, which subject me to an atrocious nieaaanti-v seems to require an immediate snpply This is refinement of cruelty." of fo,,a removeStf ie sensation ot dis- "It seems that our disguise Is perfect oT. "d t 'T'?0" J" ?!: Julie," said the soldier who had not 7. which usually ittwmpany it Thw yet spoken. "Eugene does not know Jjdw. howaw. though rtf hje his best friends " the longing of appetite, is seldoni.- In an instant the speaker was folded VIor.of ntion e-. in the arms of Beauvallon. It was Eu- r.f . 5 A,r . KTbotu Assyrian and Egyptian monu we point to the nnmiatxl-.l,! afforded by the constructional compli cation of many of their instruments. We have from among the ruins of Nineveh countless representations of the harp, with strings varying in num ber from ten to twenty-six ; of the lyre identical in structure, though not in shape, with the lyre of Greece ; and of an instrument differing; from any known to modern musicians. It was harp-shaped, was held horizontally, and the strings, six to ten in number, were struck by m plectrum held in the right hand ; it haa been called the asof, from its resemblance to the He brew instrument of that name. VVe find frequent representations of a guitar-shaped instrument, and of a don hi a pipe with A single mouthpiece, and finger-holes on each pipe. Besides these the Assyrians had musical be)) trum pets, tlutes, daims nApla-vhd tani- oouiibes. Almost every on nf ri.eae instruments, eitner in its onlai form or slightly modified, is in us to this uay uy some one Asiatic or Aijj, na tion. l ne ancient ureeks siOnted the lyre and the double-pipe ; thtf is still used by the Abyssinian , under 1 he double pipe the presentt,. baa himself seen in use bythg batmen of tne -ue. i no guiivof the Abyssini an i probabjj-aentical with thelong- neckedAT,7,r nr tamboura deniftl The incontestabb autographs of the poei are ; 1 His ; lature to the pur- .... . UUUBB ' "krruirs. London. inis autograpn . .l;:vbased for the uuy oi londoi, , , ; f ,, Ui ,nU 3 now at Guildhall. , . . imi1fs of t,,e signature is given i !-chard Grant " ""f . OI lhe i t' works vol. UP'9?' ,8'ri?is Madden and Mr. ruruivai.tnan wb m there am no ah. tu t e r ourtn oi uiy, tianuei s i e South Carolina sends eight colored rillin Will hA MmloM. An MnruinJj I . . . . . In T J rw"Y T M'r ua wmteuelegatea to Cincinnati invited to participate. ine grasshoppers in Indiana are beginning to crawl out on the fences and practice for the Centennial. There seems to be very little lung disease mnn IT tkam this -A.m.. ler decipherers of antique and crabbed v i ' , , handwriting, make the sinatureto be -Vr'ou J"tional conveniences for Shaken. 2. HUdgna to Lmort! vk,trs have been supplied, including a gage or the same pronertv ThiTw.. wowien settees arranged at :-curnereu nai. wun i M80 . UnAir .. h..iinki..i. i....i..i "V" """"o uwu khii iud suatif.-,.,.,. ,j - ,;ii .11 - of the same color girt around his waist. i w uZ 7" fJif,..""'"! ?t long sleep to.which they have v". i Uinrn Th. I- . . . . . iu m lu lug IMU1IIUI7UU UI ho.. . V.; ....I .. . U1IM u ..... vwu- O. what was lore made for if 'twas not for this The same amidst sorrow, and transport and blue? Moore The fascination of the French revolu tion had reached its height; the ex citable population, intoxicated with lower, and maddened by the vague dread of the retribution of desnair. His bloodshot eyes expressed a mixture of cowardice with ferocity, lie was flanked by a couple ofpike-men as hid eous as the Affiles of Eastern romance. "Citizen Bauvallon." said he, in a voice whose tremor betrayed his native timidity, "I arrest you in the name of the revolutionary committee of Tou louse. Citizen Beauvallon, it is useless to resist the authority of the represen tatives of the people; if you have any concealed weapons about you, 1 auvise you to surrender them. You ee I her sex. She hurriedly explained that subjected, and renuire .. 1 1 r .1 v 1 . the moment she heard of uirene'. ar. IT1.1?. "1 not having the "front pillar" which "7i" " K T T , , wo nrst ansing. or even awaking, in ?tffncy- bhe, hd n- bed. let the eairer consumer, if he will, verted her monev Into cash, liearnlnar 1.1. hi. k; i. 1 the place of bis imprisonment, she had for the merest morsel of food or driblet Hired thrAn o-h tK m erenow nf mnntu I :n i - . i r.WnLTnr"g A-V35 --?-P-and 'c'r.f his fnuSare iffi happened to be unoccupied. The task stomach. Ills comfort wiU be promo- 1? 1. w' K 01 niaklnir in aiwrtnra In th tnrt Hn uul anf hia n,.j . .-.-y was an easy one the difficulty of pass-1 once for the subsequent operations of Ing through the city was greater. The ? whether of work or diet. Let Idea of military disguises then occurred. ul' However, by no means venture to cient Assyriau harp is remarkable for comDletea the triangle in the Euro pean harp, and this apparent defect of construction is characteristic of every sort of harp employed in Asia at this day. un Assyrian uas-reueis we nna u.l.l 1 - .. . ' ) l" surreiiuer iiicm. iuu idea of militarv digiruiaes then niirvl insane leaders, was nluT:rin, in, 8Und Plcted by the arms of the julie benelt b .uipved assault the solid fortifications of beef- mllctr.rniH...nii.:..L.r I people. I themselves, and ther were nrnvi.lvl sieait, mutton-cbeps. veal cutlet. nam. with a uniform for Beauvallon. e? boiled, scrambled, poached, and most revolting and sanguinary excesses. I he sou or M. Louis had ascended to heaven, the beautiful Marie Antoinette had laid her head upon the block, the baby heir of the throne of the Capets was languishing in the hands of his keepers, and the Girondists, the true frieuds of republican liberty were silenced by exile or the scaffold, people.' "I have no weapons," replied Beau vallon. "I have no siuister designs. I know not why I am arrested. Acquaint me with the charge, and confront me with my accusers." "Jseize upon the prisoner!" cried Du mart to his satellites. And he breathed freer when he saw the merchant in the gripe of two muscular ruffians, whose Secured bv this costume, the three fugitives ventured forth. In the great It tKrtrt tVn I?! r r . - able sway of Kobespierre, hung jjke " hands compressed his wnsU as if a funeral pall uoon the land which waa ""v " niaiiacies, stiffened into omelet, with the heaned up outworks of hot biscuit, hominy. gine of death and Beauvallon passed, ed toTfuTl mdIT. iK " nonuiTvoi snudder, oeneath the the undertakinir. and in wide-awake fast becoming a vast cemetery. The provincial towns, faithful echoes of the central capita, were repeating the theme of horror with a thousand varia tions. Each considerable city had its guillotine, and where that instrument of punishment was wanting, the fusil lade or the mitraille supplied Its place. At inis crisis, Eugene JJeauvallon, a young merchant of Toulouse, presented himself one morning in the drawing ""in ui jiaueuioiseiie x.uiaiie lasaile. "Away with him I" screamed the hag wno nad spoken oeiore. "Away with him to the revolutionary committee! I)own with the aristocrats I" Followed by the imprecations of the crowd, Beauvallon was conducted to the town house, and in a very few mo ments was placed at the bar or the rev olutionary committee a body vested with the power of life and death. On his way thither he had found means to speak a word to an acquaintance in the not without a very shadow of the guillotine to which ne nau Deen doomed. Seated on the cold ground, beneath the fatal apparatus, was an old woman muttering to herself. uood evening, citizens," said she possession of ail his faculties of appe tite and digestion. The ordinary American breakfast is, in fact, too various, milwir&ntidl. ami abundant for any one meal, it lighter parts snouid only be consumed iu the "We will have a fine dav for the show early moraine, and its heavier reserved to-morrow. Look how the bonny stars I fr the noonday luncheon, or dejeuner are winkrng and blinking on the gay a la fourckette. If, however, our coun- anue oiaue ineyve Deen sharpening. "J" w".' persim in laainif, iiko me It will be darker and redder when the ooa-constnetor, their whole lood in clock strikes aristocrats !" h. rillriti. naailail n A auicken their stens. Thev reached the fne cc!H.nid lethargy of the night frontiers in safety, and beyond the ven harps, two double pipes, a drum, and the above-mentioned asor. Sew (Quarterly Maga:me. Hew I Hake Eilningaw I'stfaak lfcle. Uf course moderation in "society" is more difficult in this country than else where, lor tne reason that education. character, and refinement have no sup port in rank, a uucness may dress simply, live economically, aud entertain plainly. She Is always a duchess, and in the best society, and to cross her threshold Is to be admitted to it. But a lady who is not a duchess, who has only the vague tradition of "good family" upon her side, must be a very excep tional person if without money she maintains any kind of corresponding position. In Washington, lor instance, a high officer of state who should live upon his salary, and hope to save some thing from it against the evil day of bis purchased seum for i .,... j ..-, i i" "aye ever Ln 1. ye a The present legislature of Connec ticut contains about 20 Yale graduates. Some folks seem to think that the best mark a man can make in the world is a $ mark. The Fifth Maryland regiment will go to Cape May July 21st and remain in camp eight days. Maine is not a rood nlace tor sav ings banks. Seven have zone down seum for 315. If tne rectly leading to the entrance gates, within a row months. 1 V The Excf.Ui.n- TL, There Is a Centennial handkerchief Allf If kua Ka Ti....l....: r I 1 y. asaaia 1 va... una ic A-rtiai ailUII Ul J (lilt?- wtthTh i wall m' T , "u:''8 "uc P"""" DDOn 1 ,n -ngiisn, an, I l.'.,rnVoi i..V...... ' ".". uii, w mat a man can - - -., cii:r, aiier J . ' .e. Ornish Government naid m Aorafn 1 h Aiar kia ..v.,A I.. t .!:- . a Wl.ulein.lent .f,l. ',".? "" uerem langu azree aW,wadinir it . 0 Three , lturex i.n.n.ui .i.I ' : I In the rear of Memorial Hall, near of the rr,utUiTanii.tUf Thi. win ,i,.i. the Educatioual buildinz. is situated a K between Manufacturing Company. In this build ing mere are six male and twelve fe male operatives employed. -The Excelsior Boat Club, of De troit, has a membership of fifty-two and a cash account of over t,0u0. Citizens of Ilalsev. Orecnn. offer a bonus of $4,000 to any one who will erect a flour mill in the town. Under a new time table the run by -er ur leans and Aew may i seen by any one for a shi'llinirat P"Tilion ' 'be Singer Sewing Machine York is reduced to sixty-two hours. 1.. w . . 0 1 .11 mi 11 r !ir ii ri n or 1 Vi u:ior v ominous, ionuon, is drawn up on mree sneeu 01 paper, eacn or which bears the poet's name. It has been sug gested that the two first signatures were appended by the clerk who drew the will, and that only the last is that of The vicinitv of the Tern ne ranee fountain, of the National Division .-ions 01 '.temperance, at Belmont ami The British House of Commons has rejected by a vote of 239 to 152, the bill to remove the electoral disabilities of women. It has been estimated that it costs two dollars a minute to run the South the poet himself. This theorv has Fountain avenue. h'h. "1.,." "A"" . In he nntennhle Ihe 1, ft,, . . - .1 ., . " . ." aeain Down with the one "wallow, they should be prepared removal, would find it very difficult to 6 for the undertaking. They must be up maintain in a boarding-house, and with- ves needed no mnr tn betimes, wide awake, and shake off all out a carriage and without entertain- Rhine, in the hospitable land of Ger many, the lovers were united : nor did they return to France till the star of Kobespierre had set in blood, and the Jiaa'a Altatted spaa. The determination of threescore and by brisk everciae in the fresh air for half an hour, at least, previous to sit ting down before and attemntinir the strength of the usual American break fast. W bo, even then, would guaran tee the most robust against the cban- ever-lur- an orphan girl of great beauty and ac-1 frowd, and to beg him to inform Eula- compusnment, to whom he bad long ue 01 wnai nau Happened. been betrothed, and whom he would I So soon as he beard the accusation ere this have married but for the Dolit- read, and knew that he rhirnul ical troubles of the period. Eulalie was with the crime of aiding the Marquis mastermind of Xapoleon had placed ces ofverthrow fa? that a graceful creature, slenderly and sym- de Montmorend, a fugitive from justice its impress on the destinies of Fi-ance. tmi enem r the TovlDeDaia I metricallv formed, wirh snff hlne eve h folt ih,r hi. .;r..nViAn s.i. cueuiy , mo uyspepsis 1 , - J " ', 1 - -. ..IB. Ul. D1LU.UUII n 9 IUU1XU and an exceedingly gentle expression I critical ; but mingled with his astonlsh which was indicative of her character, ment and dread was a curiosity to learn . eruieu ww lairrau fragile 10 nunei wuence nis denunciation could have The determination of three,r.. ..! Tintnr .n It.li.n .lt.. I . i w ",c witu the storms of life, and Ul fitted to proceeded who could have lodged the .k. .ii.j ", "V....r.r:l exposure anil rum iM!2?Zr&JZn nformauon against him. He was not human existence U doubtless In aeon- manna, has taken the precaution to ,bl 8 ' , een long kept in suspense, for the witness giderable degree owing to that period arm them with the modern Invention of i a wuuuir. Drought On the Stand to confront him havin? been adnnteil h the rnvil I Cll n T'lcrnl! nttintejl Ilia .nwl w;,.,,,. r . 1 , - , I . XI .v.. . . . :- . 7 -t r---. .... . ...uv,.. uc.u.Muuwim;, uiauiy.fef- j";" I psaimisi; out modern science, while it at Uie circumcision of the infant JBa- Blaaders ef Painters. ueuu, me social standing which an ambitious, clever, aud daring wife might require. Yet by his position she would be necessarily exposed to the splendid rivalry of luxury and prolu sion of every kind; and if she sold her influence, it would be that she might shine and conquer by magnificence. Such a woman we read of them in novels, and smile at the bold invention of the author would carry her . . . . ir. . 1 ,-v...i,, ana an " "1.T. "t"!" T d what the member. . v. Ilv,n imucu vuauauuu vi liiml ui uci in me week oe-l steal. " ncuumcuiugrapiis. f uey are given ginning wun June 11 in lac-simile by Richard Grant While. in his edition of the poet's works (vol. 1. 1 The Cen'"""':! Fire iH'partment pp. w-s.) the first and second seem to consists 01 10a men, divided into three be Shaksnere fso. Maihlen ami Fnrni. companies, one of which continuallv val;) while the third looks decided! v patrols the buildings, while the extin- vesrs' like Shaktpeare. So Madden makes it Kulsher and fire-plugs are numerous Tom Thumb Is going to Texas to out, and so was It made out by Steevens e"gh te meet any possible demand for live, and the Chicago Timet thinks that auu jiaione, wno in IJ76, Detore thel11"11' ux' 1 some uay we snail near 01 10m being hand ing male ,hJ 7T , V l"1? Why "t open the Exhibition at6 fiia&miiaf"? rac,nKf ,u o'clock in the morning? Why wane afci. beat hour! of theday for reads shnkr,. Tl,.- r...;' i r? 'luesiions now feehfv ami aimnat Viiiki I sKeu rniiadeiphia, iii connection .1? .7.? . llle8 blT raced, are with one other: "Why not reduce, the f! tJ'at.!rUAnlTrem".,n tous .f th price of admission to tientv-five "cenul nouses :ilta-gS: "I" the Main Building Megargee cZJlZSfiV Abator estofEnglUh poets. One other auto- os i.,of this city, offer annterestfng i" 3 " JSS Z Im a dv eraDhi8commoidva.l.Ie.lnnH.e..fi.i- displayof Dlain and fancr naner. a . proposed to Impose a duty v 1. TrT"V. nnt.i.1. . rZr:i "vv" u,e,r 'mporiauon as articles of .f,-. "r-." "."" ""; tii- " , . r" r,"V merchandise. . i-iiaiiciijjea auu uenes suspicion. I mouicu paper, w nicn It m suspected, however, by both Mr. tni flrm was first to introduce into the Halli well and Mr. Kurnival, who have mrket. Xone of their specimens' were good right loan opinion in such matters. ma.l,UIactured expressly for the Exhi The signature in questions Is written on bition, but were taken from the stock the fly leaf of a copy ofFlorio's transla- " 80,11 out of the store. tion ot Montaigne's -Essays." which is The wool clip in the United States for 1875 was nearly 200,000,000 pounds against 160,000,000 pounds in 1869; an increase of 4U,uuo,OUO pounds in seven waylaid and abducted by a Texas grasshopper. During 1875. Massachusetts em ployed in the public schools 8,216 teach ers. .Nineteen and a half Der cent of the whole number had attended a Nor mal School. the property of the British Museum. It is announced that Miss Sue Harrv Claggett, daughter of the late editor of the Keokuk (la.) C'otuUtutian, will suc ceed her father in the editorial control of that paper. Two hundred women of Guilford. T ; . .t . . -I wo uuuureu women 01 u .fc7&". "ErL at-."'e-Ssion.of Conn., cleaned up the village The name whoever, wrote it, is, unmis- cootTiuVS foT the'n . .'A " E APril 26 "J takably, II arm Makre " In the week that a recess will be order "Shak,,eareana Geealogica," pp. 533- J:r 3. tncnniinm, f,r . wear spectacles, the artist has shown his sagacity bv placing them on Sime-1 bowed on's nose. In a picture by Verrio of bright Christ, henlinir the awL- the h low, of great energy and character. Pd Ideaf servant of Eulalie Lavalle hag postponed somewhat the average viour; and as aged men in these days iic irtuiuiiuu surpriseu II 1 Ul in vne act .v uiuucwu uib uiiiicHiuu ui f niakiug a fortune; the whirlwind the morning, and hastened to denounce had stripped him of most of his property hin- Though his sentence was not im- luit he had yet left him liberty aud life, mediately pronounced, and the decision He had contrived to avoid rendering or bis case was deferred till the next himself obnoxious to the sansculottes Beauvallon felt that his doom was without securing their confidence. The eef. tri-colored cockade which he wnre in He was conveyed to a house in the ins hat shielded him from the fatal epi- vicinity or tne town nau for connne- by Dr. Farr as man's natural death thet of aristocrat a certain passport to ment, as the prisons were all over- time, although at present he finds, as the guillotine. stocked. His jailer was a man whom the result ot ten years' approximately I 11 . 1 . ... I lha V, - ,1 r 1 1, ,1 .1 I ' ' . J ueauvauuu men seaiea nimseu De-i '" raimui mu luimcur ucmcnucu, 1 accurate and complete registration. termination, has also still more larzelv prolonged the hypothetical duration of lire. Jriourens, reasoning from the time required lor tne full physical de velopenient of a human being, as com pared with that taken by other ani mals, fixes the natural limit at 100 years, and this is also the period fixed In her house, superbly furnished with fraud and richly decorated with corruption, sue wouiu stand supreme aud queen I j in a costly robe woven of lies and em broidered with bribes; careless, grace ful, reauy, smiiiug with Iree-Uowing gossip; knowing, as sue graciously fter this co 1 . - . , , - ' . , vuj ivvuntiuuc iui m unci ptfriou 54. auaci-ountis triven of four other I a.t.in ti. , . alleged autographs, which are com ZZ ' ' monly regarded as spurious. From an had until November, when the .rt -,r formal resolution session is Teen on spades. to particl- IIIBIianl .in T I l.n ... 1 - !. I , 1 . . -uwprapua 11. u evi- the body will be completed. Xo p.. ""c,cr 011-a-sp-r- may proposition to rescind the ... .pcuing .ue iwi sriaoie providing for a continuous ... ,.c .-rer ifueru aneajter Me likely to be made. wbw-o Mm. 1 uiiiitM aimau lliusi I and chatted and greeted the Christ healing the sick, the lookers-on .e waVsT, h dennY m.anTZ I are represented as standing with peri wigs cn meir neaus. to match, or rather to exceed, this ludicrous repre sentation, Durer has painted the exuul- sion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden by a angel in a dress fashiona bly trimmed with flounces. The same painter, in his scene of Feter denying side Eulalie, who was struck with the na whose heart was not inaccessible to that this limit is scarcely reached by one Christ, represents a Roman soldier very laumiu expression 01 nis countenance, r" P"ri '"""8 " " rtnelisn cnild In a hundred thousand 1 ,. . . . I l. a : 1 1 1 .1 .1 . 1 , l" .. . ... auu oeggea to Know Uie reason or his I "c uriucrj, auu cviucuu; uncruimcu of deceit, that the naked sword hung by a uuir just auove ner siaieiy nead, ant that at any moment the ghastlv mme would glare upon ber walls In the appalled eyes of her blithe company iiai is ine moral or this sermon The text, indeed, it is not necessary to announce. What is it but the old one that if we are to be saved from the swift joyous excitement. " execute his duty to the letter, "I have good news to tell you," he 1 "ve vor to ask or you, my said, gayly; "but we are not alone," he friend," said the prisoner, slipping a added, stopping short, as his eve rested golden louis Into his hand, on the siuister face of an old' woman. ''If it is one that I can grant without humbly attired, who was busily en- violating my duty," replied the jailer, ance of the signs of approaching senili gaged in knitting, not far from the returning the money to Beauvallon, "I ty much earlier than we are now accus- lovers. will so for the sake of old times, but not tomed to notice them, as Dr. Farr shows "O, don't mind poor old Mannette," fr eold " ... while two hundred years ago the said Eulalie. "The poor old creature Beauvallon explained that he wished mortality of London was about 8 per is past hearing thunder. It is a woman f "p note to Mile. Lasalle, request- cent, it is now only 2-4 per cent. And --. inty hop visit hiin in nvloAn a in 1 i . . . . Eugene, 1 rescued from absolute star- . " , Hl ., 7". , mere is gooa reson 10 neneve, says iron, cumiuriauiy smokinir a pipe 01 touacco. .; ., , In antne litriot. nf .kU th. t.n nr i tlnti-h n.i.,ter . -l-ww", ub iuui urvaucuce r t v; : " "r sc:;" "v"; r. r " way to begm is in ,T: 'Jr. "i..rr, .tr. F.J U.r" unitedly to discounte- .uL V' '.. T. IZ t " is " "J a 1 IZ . . " Vr5 extravagance, in tell mio, iivw cin , h iu luanj vuici rcaKtU I ouijiivc, auu in uwisiuu spurs, auu lie we are far In advance of our ancestors. Is in the act of presenting to the child The early English poets fix the appear- a model of a Dutch man-of war. In a tJutcn picture or Abraham offering up nis son, instead or tne vation, and she is so grateful and seems so desirous of doing something to ren der herself useful, that I am mortified almost at her sense of the obligation." "I hope she has not supplanted your femme de chambre, Julie, of whom you threatened to be jealous. My admira tion, I hope, has not cost the girl her place." "Oh, dear, no! I couldn't part with Julie !" replied Eulalie, laughing gayly. -cut come, you must not tantalize me terview which would probably be their last, and the jailor undertook readily to see the missive delivered, and to per mit the visit. The note having been despatched, Beauvallon sat down to wait for the arrival of his mistress. The dread hours passed away, but though he learned from the jailer that his errand had been performed, no Eu lalie made her appearance. 'she forsakes son, instead of the patriarch's "stretching forth his hand and taking the knife, as the Scripture Informs us, he is represented as using a more effec tual instrument: he is holding to Isaac's nead a blunderbiu. Berlin represents azance. intelligence, re nnement, wit, siirewdness. cultivation. are still more lovely and desirable than vulgarity and display. They can "set a fashion" if they will. If thev choose. they can make extravagance vulgar bv confining it to those who can be nothing out, exiravagam. uarper Magazine, abert BeaiteBces. that it may be still furtner reduced I in a picture the Virgin and Child lis- very much of existing mortality depend- teniiig to a violin ; and in another pic- ing upon the preventible causes, such ture be has drawn King David playing as impure air and impure water, negli- the harp at the marriage of Christ with gence on railways, on shipboard, in St. Catharine. A French artist has mines, in street police, and in many drawn, with true French taste, the other ways. What is also of equal im- Lord's Supper, with the table nrnamen- portance is the fact that any decrease in ted with tumblers filled with cigar the mortality from these causes will be lighters; and, as if to crown the list of necessarily accompanied by the absence these absurd ludicrous anachronisms, Short phrases have ever been the most powerful and beautiful mediums of con veying thought. They are simplicity itself, and simplicity is beauty. Easily understood no study is required to grasp uieir meaning, a prophetic politician makes a declaration respecting govern ment, and the people soon catch the spirit and confirm the declaration. Re sults from such phrases may not be im Mikes me. he murmured 0f disease, and an increase to survivors I the Garden of Eden has been drawn mediate, but the words go sounding on the wounded deer is aban- of that good health without which with Adam and Eve in all their prime- until their work is accomplished. a'har hoi swaivASf rs mal-a tsh as gay, at a time when every true French- ""flE..?!! SlnTt a, ""uuucu uccr 1. uii- or that good health without which with Adam and Eve in all their prime- until their work is accomplished uonea oyinenero, ana an untoriunate length of davsis scarcelv a boon. The val simnlicitv and virtue, while near Short Dhrases are eomnrehemuve ami man wears a face of mourning?" "The Marquis de Montmorenel Is at liberty." "At liberty t How happened it that the Revolutionary Tribunal acquitted him?" "Acquitted him I Eulalie, does the tiger that lias once tasted the blood of his prey permit him to escape. Is Rob espierre more lenient than the beast of prey t Jo, Eulalie, he escaped by the aid of a true friend. He fled from Paris reached Toulouse, and found shelter under my roof!" The cheek of Eulalie turned ashy pale. "Under your roof!" she faltered. "IK you know the penalty of shelter ing a fugitive from justice?" "It is death upon the scaffold," an swered the young man calmly. "But better that a thousand time than the sin of ingratitude; the sin of turning a deaf ear to the claims of humanity. "My own noble Eugene I'' exclaimed the young girl, enthusiastically press ing her lover's hand. "Every day in creases my love, my respect for you, and my sense of my own unworthiuess. But you will never have to blush for the inferiority of your wife." "What do you mean dearest?" In quired Eugene with alarm. "This is no time tor marriage," said Eulalie sadly. "Images of death and violence meet our eyes whichever way they turn. We were born, Eugene in melancholy times, and our lives are misplaced. We shall meet hereafter; on this earth, 1 fear, our destinies will never be united." "Prophetess of evil !" said Beauva lion gayly. "Your rosy lips belie your gloomy angury. Xo, Eulalie, this dark cloud cannot forever overshadow the Jam-k-even now I think I can see glimpses of the blue sky. Le bo tempi riendrX the good time is coming, and then, iVilalie, be sure that I will claim your pramised hand. The col been so an the dream was pleasant while it lasted tne regret or awakening can scarce be source of pecuniary loss not only to the tedlous-a few hours, and !all the incl- gufferer but to the entire communltv: dents or this transitory lite will be ror- whiie the longer old age, that one incur- gotten. But Eulalie whom I loved able malady, can be suved off, so much better than my life itself it is hard to will be gained, for when the season of die without one word from the." effective work Is over, the individual, W hen on the following day Beauval- j ceasing to contribute to the general Ion was again taken before the re vol u- wealth, becomes a pensioner upon it- tionary committee, he looked anxiously Thus. iw.r.linr tn ir Prr the vr around the court room to see if he could folk agricultural laborer, worth 5t economical results will be no less iin-l them, in full costume, is seen a hunter port ant. Disability from sickness is a I with a gun shooting ducks. Aaelent Masleal Iws(raweBila. discover the face of Eulalie among the spectators, many of whom were women. But he was disappointed. Her absence convinced him that she had abandoned him, and wholly absorbed by this re flection, he paid no attention to the for mula of his trial. He was condemned to death, the sentence to be executed on the following day. "Mr. President," said he rising, "I thank you, and I have merely one favor to ask. Anticipate the time of pun ishment let It be to-day instead of to morrow let me go hence to the scaf fold." "Your request Is reasonable," re plied the president, in a bland tone, "and if circumstances permitted, it would afford me the greatest pleasure Some years ago Capt. Willock, rvlien engaged in his researches among the supposed ruins of Babylon, found a Eipe of baked clay about three inchee ng, which, by common agreement of antiquaries, is of Assyrian workman ship. This little obicct can hardlv he siiv.uii.uii uiwra.wurm I l; l a " i.i 7i j . his birth and reaching at the age of 'iT?i.,u ''T; .T' ,uu, P them in the has twenty-five years his maximum value of f 1, 230, sinks at eighty to $205. Hew Jka lju ! f Prlsa. ment in existence. It has two tinker- holes, and when both of these are closed, and the mouth-piece is blown into, the note C is produced. If only one bole is closed, the sound emitted is E. and if both are orten G ia nm- auced. 1 11 us tne notes ot this instru ment, which is believed to be the very Bunyan was, in his day, quite a con troversial writer, and was very severe upon the Quakers, until he learned that throuirh the intercession of that aert he obtained his release from orison. It ia I oldest yet discovered, produces the to- I "1 was not. for God took him." a somewhat noteworthy fact, now well I nic, the third, and the fifth that is, nrst Chapter of Genesis is a symbol of sometimes contain whole volumes. Ce sar's " enl. Vidi. Vict" gave the his tory of a whole campaign, and the last words or the dying Tom Paine, "I take a leap in the dark." were a confession of judgement stronger than the infidel ity of a lifetime. When the remains of .Napoleon Bonaparte were brought to Paris by Prince de Joinville, the entire speccn-making was this : "hire. J pre sent to vou the ashes of Xanoleon :" and 1 Aims riuiiippe answered, "t receive name of i ranee." Such was the brief response of a people to T.ue presence 01 a dead emperor. Some times, in a single sentence, the life and character of some great man stands out strangely revealed and individualized. Ao biography could depict the charac ter of Enoch more clearly than the sim ple words, "fcnoch walked with God, The authenticated, that Charles II. libera- I the intervals of the common chord, the ted Quakers and Puritans from eon- notes which, sounded together, form nnement, through the personal inter- what is termed by musicians the har- cession of the Quakers, among whom monic triad. Here is at once estab- was Richaad Carver, who was the mate lished a certain coincidence between of the fishing vessel which conveyed onr music and that which must have the king to France, after the famous existed during the Babylonian canti- battle of Worcester, 1651. This honest vity a coincidence which, to be sure the power which a few words can em body. Baaalae, Did you ever notice what a different aspect everything wears in the sunshine from what it does in the shadow, and Bl.ll.l .!.!..,. ' tograntit- But the guillotine requires Quaker sailor, after twenty years had o priori reasoning might go far to es- ZWUhrt n the .nnii r renair. and will not be in a eomlitinn rolled awav. annealed to the kins in tablish. but never so conv ncinelv lnpre was between the sunlight of the to perform its functions until to-mor row, at which time, Citizen Beauvallon at the hour of ten A. M., you will have ceased to exist. Good night and pleas ant dreams!" This sally was received with roars of applause, and the unhappy prisoner was reconducted to the place ol confinement. The night was a sleepless one. Beau vallon's arrest, his speedy trial and condemnation, the desertion of Eulalie bad followed each other with such appealed to the king in tarnish, but never so convincingly to h",." ZJ1 T,e, 8un"Khf alfof xhoee who were in non-scientific understandings ai boes l '.T8 f ,8k,f ,"nd tbe unshine that rolled away, i k.l..l nri.. Whn fno..H. ,:... Ai lim viHn f rliii ir.oiniti..,nt gleams Into darkened chambers of the for life, this sailor conveyed him on The least observant student of the art- i,u.lnan .ul? M?w b.ri8ht nd beauti- shore. The vessel was bound for Poole remains found among the ruined cit- r l"e Kolaen beams that break coal-laden, wih two passengers, who lies of tbe Assyrian and Babylonian through the raven clouds to light up passed for merchant running away I plains cab not fail to be struck with t.ne. world again after a succession of uie eviuence wnicn tney atiord of a I uays. xiow peaceful strong and widely-diffused musical "a happy are the blessed words of culture among the kindred races who bote ami cheer that touch the heart and inhabited them. The frequent intro- u" t,ie soul with emotions of peace and duction in mural paintings and bas-re- T after a long period of sorrow. There liefsof instruments of music, there- are none living who do not, in a greater presentations of concerts and long pro- or less degree, have an Influence over from their creditors. The fugitive king and Lord Wilmot were landed at Fecamp, in Normandy, upon the back of a Quaker, and the vessel recrossed the Channel to Poole. When the honest sailor appeared be fore bis majesty, the king expressed his astonishment that he had not prevl- cessiona of stunning rapidity, that, until now, he ously sought some reward. The aiilor allusions in the Bible to the musical sense of contributing to the pleasure of uau naruiy lime 10 reucci upon tne uis-i repircu iubi uc nwi iudi r 1 j uuuc 11 in 1 uuaia uu biu ui vud wuuiq dbut mat chain of circumstances now they pressed upon his attention, and crowded I his mind to overflowing. At midnight as he lay tossing upon his bed. upon men be had thrown himself without duty, and God had rewarded him with I all point to a singular development peace of mind. . of the art of music In the opinion of "And now, aire, 1 ask nothing lor I nawiinaon, tne Assyrians were snpe myself, but that vour majesty will do rior in musical skill, as they were in the same for my friends that I did for every form ot culture,, to the Egvo- versationof the lovers had llnfr,.cino. ti.i, i.. he. . .t, you : set the poor, pious sufferers at I tians themselves, and the Assyrio-ba- i mated and interesting that fnMHl nnl ln , .,mt r ,k. liberty, that you may have that peace bylonian music was, there is little rea- musicians., the repeated the earthly happiness of others. The others augments our own happiness. Eacllak flwts. they did not notice tbe moment when old Mannette had glided tike a spectre from the apartment. Beauvallon lingered a while, "part ing Is such sweet sorrow," and finally reluctantly tore himself from the pres ence of Eulalie, promising to see her I I M 1 U.av -1 sah a ilnnkt I a. L. 1. I Inertia t?rti5 it i.TnS f, Uod tion KingChartoa thereupon developed Ifonn of the Asiatic typedf l.hJ l,n.hU cf"le-,,n We in America who eat only dried nuts, cannot imagine how delicious are the almonds, filberts, and English wal nuts, when they-are fresh. The con sumption of them Is Immense at tbe increased. He placed bis band upon the wall and felt it jar under succes sive shocks. Suddenly a current of air blew in upon him, and at the same time a faint ray of light streamed through an opening in the partition. nanijoui fnnr linniinul anil mnnhi. nniie a tvm which iuuihui tn thia I the eosy restaurants of clubs and hotels. one Quaker, and many Independent day most extensive aud most cbarac- !n the modest lodging of the bachelor, and Baptists among them John Ban- terutie development among the slow- 10 the cottage or the peasant, and the yan. changing nation of Asia. If we are crowded city, where they are cracked mm ; asked for more positive proof of the 'id munched by the laborer at the street Pas oi DKnx Father of twin. advance of music among the nation, corners. London Correspondence. every one say who takes the pains to examine the fac-similes. On this point tne spurious and genuine autographs are all agreed. Following out the prin ciple, then, that a man has an unquest ionable right to spell his name as he pleases, we ought not to force upon im perial Shaksp-r-, dead and turned to clay, an e which he persistently and systematically rejected. Still further, from an inspection of the poet's auto- grapns, the weight or evidence is very ueciueuiy against me insertion or an a in the last syllable of the name: or in favor of writing Shaksnere, a( Miak- speare. yrrtbner t Monthly. Several locomotives from the Balti more uu iruiottauroau company have oeen received. The Intention is to show the different patterns of locomo tives in use on the road since it was built. In front of the Maryland build ing has been placed an old camel-back engine, and there will in a few days be removeu to tne same quarters engine Xo. 600, a mammoth locomotive now in front of the Illinois building and known as the "Mogul." It will display the style of engine now in use by tiie Balti more anu uuio company. Hew m Uraad Oweheas Peeled Pola- An incident in the early life of the Grand Duchess Marie, who died the other day, is narrated in the German papers, in illustration of the great sim plicity of manners which used to char acterize the Russian and Prussian courts. Her parents. Czar Nicholas Xo men will be permitted pate in the work. During the last seven years the Bank of England has paid 94.000.000 notes, valued at 3,000,000, which would weigh 112 tons, and joined together reach 15,000 miles. The Boston Common Council hss appropriated (15.0( 0 for the purchase of bronze medallions of tbe signers of the Declaration of Independence to be placed in Faneuil Hall. London refuses to name one of her streets after Washington: but who cares? America has sixty towns. 150 parks, 2U0 streets, and 1,100 hotels and saloous named after them. The old bank of California Ral- ston's bank is doing a large business. Ralston got discouraged too quick. Had he kept up his "nerve" he might have weathered through all right. A Bramah hen in Franklin Pa. cel ebrated Easter by producing an egg hich measures nine inches in circum ference one way, seven inches the other way, and weighs five ounces. Elihu Burritt twenty years ago planted an acorn of the famous Charter A new structure, unique in appear ance, is neiii" constructed near the palace of the Emperor of Morocco, by Mr. R. de Beyue, French civil engineer, who assisted in tbe building of the Suez canal, it will be an ornamentation art- .,.r!t; .,. Iw. I.I..I. ...Ill I nr. The l.il,i;., ia nr i, ....i .ni " " iier, Jirs. 11 have porcelain walls, with a marble foundation, there is a double roof In Missouri there are over 150.000 glass outside and stained-glass within, children who could not go to school If njl tli V wit n j r , , I - ,v" " ' 1 Ui n IUI a mo-I J .mlcu i, jur Willlfc VI MTIIUOl " 1 AKMUUII, UIKU 111 111 O llnnv on. I mill t. L K. I 1 1.. 1 f . I . 1 1 vioit the I'n.l .n k i K: I 7. 1.? "IB puiiuc all ."".. Ul.l, mur UIII11I19 VI KUWI W " -v aia saitii, MaillK I iilsa fT kPAnnh kiAvfiinia-w I.. Kn-.s I n 1 1 ir a.AW v..t.l..l 1v 1 children with them. So regularly was .. .V., a?T".i.V " ..." l uw J J this visit paid, that, iu Berlin and'Pots- Mr. Edwin C. Cushman of St. Louis dam, it used to excite no further re- during the month of July a musi- to whom Miss Cushman appearsto have mark than "the Russians are here 0,1 contest will take place among bands left the bulk of her fortune, is vice again." One one occasion, while they "d orchestras from all parts of the president and an active member of the were at Potsdam, the autumn maneu-1 country, inese will be divided into vers were going on in the neighbor- three classes. The first class will con- hood, and the whole party went out to 8lst r military bands of brass and reed see the soldiers. The latter were, at instruments with not less than 24 per- tlie time, preparing dinner. The crv formers. The second class will be con- LTllUSOIl. Missouri Furnace Company, an exten sive interest. Harvard's University crew have just received from England two new yjL a - - j i . - iMva vi,i9, vi urn sumo I'.tLici 119 an -tne iving and the Kusslans are com- "lul " os instruments wun not those used by the last Cambridge crew nig," did not, however, disturb them, ul!1.1' performer, ine third and with the blades painted c lor tne King Had long before given or- lil" "i less man 10 periormers, the Colletre color . I I i - I i , , U-1 1 I Ka niniU n rf ..11 . . f I I - . 7.J. . 7" r.ppefrf 1 ,n , ., V., ""ril , -Mrs. Evans, of Whitefield men Illiuafc VM W W aiieiiueu Dt nO w. v, mincwnniaia auu ceremony. "Keep your places," he amateurs combined. Ihe nrst and had said : "you are hungry, enioy rest, second classes are to play one selection . . " """I"" I Anil ia i;in .:h .1. .:.k two vounir (iraml Iim hMa M-.ri. tiou Dy the most celebrated commiser. .. scu and Ulga-Arent up to a group of sol- the third class choing their own se- rra"u" uescenuents. dlers who were peeling potatoes aud ad-1 'cciion. i remiums win oe awarded ac- Aivin Adams, the great express- mired the skill with which they per- coming w merit, inese concerts win man, intends, building a inter rest- formed the operation. "Can you do 06 succeeded by competitive exhibitions deuce near Richmond, exchanging Vlr that, children?" asked the King. "Xo l,,e several orcnestras quartettes gima tor Morida tor the cold season they never tried it." How? Xot yet "nu xieties. lie already has magnificent houses at tried? The sooner the better. Xoone One of the most interesting of the "S "rancb and at Boston. ..1 W ; i . i ..... ry i j... w ever uouaewiie witnout state buildings, the Mississippi log cab- Tlie Steamship Mikado ha made ""'"B w l1. V"- s w In has been opened to the oub ic. and the run from San Francisco to Sydney now you could do it." The two Pnn- thou eh the lrrn crpnifnra t,t full av I A ncf 1 1 -i l tn-ontit.Anv iUvj ua- cesses at once knelt before tbe fire, re- hihi,TV r " ".Iik ?"Z'-"2' ", '.r.l " ..l.Z" "Z' ",iZ reiving a couple of knives, and began from this portion of the United States recorded, not excepting tlie famous u.e.r ia, me n. iig, anu r-m- are not yet completed, all visitors will trip of the City of Sau Francisco, press Prince William of Prussia rthe I twv... .1 : .1 : 1 " a. vu. vii n ai vi ciiiui 1.1113 liriveiCKC I .1,1.,,.-,. . present German Emperor), and Prince nf..iin. .k...i., Ji i.:.i.....r.i A single field in Grimes county. Ai7Aauuci 11.11c uresvili varj ail bib nil- 1 nrrwliwta r.f ,hia kt.u ma f..u, ... I - v ......... i.ww ing around. A Pomeranian who had I Tuwi i ,i,i -rv. ..k. .1,, , I one fence without a cross-fence in given up his knife, soon interrupted. "But, young ladies, you mustn't cut so deep. You cut away most of the pota to, and we shall have nothing left to eat. vo an itussians cut potatoes In that way?" "Right. Ahlman." said the King he had before spoken to the man, and never forgot a soldier's name "teach them to do it in the Prussian way." Ahlsnan, accordingly, showed them how to hold the potato, and how bold the knife, and exactly bow much ought to be taken off; "and. soon," the story goes, "the potato-skins reauy fell more delicately from the del icate hands of the Princesses." W e are not told what use was afterward made of this humble but laudable ac complishment. Deraetaalre Ckeese. placed in position. The cabin itself is now one of the most unique structures on the grounds. Every loot of timber used in its erection was shipped from Mississippi, aud carpenters from that State came here to put It up. With its wans or native wood fresh from the for est, its rustic framed windows, Gothic doorway and overhanging eaves fringed witn moss: Its balconies of naturally and curiously carved roots and limits, and its numberless reminiscences of the untrodden forest, it forms one of the most interesting, if not the most in structive, buildings on the grounds. There are in tbe building sixty-eight dinerent kinds of wood In tbe super- It; 10,000 acres are In cultivation. Xearly the entire field beloiigs to one man who rents it out to tenants at $2 per acre. The next meeting of the American Forestry Association will be held in Philadelphia in September next, when it is hoped that a report will be pre sented from every State in the Union, showing the condition of our forests to day and the rate of decrease. Among the 252 tramps that have been lodged in the station bouse at Stockbriilge, Mass., during tbe past nve months, have Deen Andrew Jack son, Dan Rice. George Washington. -,..,. l.w.l.i:.,.l.o,l..-..l IIU t UlCpUCll A. UUUKIM, .hr:":"ir7 nd John C. Tre- . . - " ... 1 mnn r varieties. 1 he outside walls are chiefly The cheese made in Dorsetshire. though in high favor within the limit 01 tne country, has not so good a repu tation elsewhere in -England, though it is said to be improving in Quality and commanding a better price. So de spised was it at one time out of the county that many ridiculous stone of hickory, split logs with the bark on, while the door and window frames are made of many varieties of pine. The entire structure is rich with ornaments, found carved by nature In the Missis sippi forests, while the inner walls are of nnely-polished specimens of every variety of pine. Some of these resem ble bird s-eye maple in their delicate vein tracings, while others, from the mont. A Kentucky paper says that shortly before ex-Senator Dixon died he re quested that a band of music should perform the air of "Home, Sweet Home over his grave. This wish was faith fully carried out by the Henderson Cornet Band, and the ladies of the Presbyterian choir sang the last verse of the touching song. At the castle of Johannisbergh were told of it, of which the following heart of the tree, are almost as dark and the Rhine, some of the fine Prince Met are sample given in a recent English paper: (1.) Tbe captain of a small trading vessel had a lot of Dorset cheese and a lot of grindstone on board : through a slight mistake the rata ate the grindstones and left the cheese. (2.) A friend in the country sent bis friend in town, as a great treat, two real mouldv Dorset rheeaea. Their smell, however, was not appre ciated, and, instead of being pleased, the one idea of the Londoner was to get rid of hi present. Accordingly, when night come, outside tbe door goes one cheese, and in the morning he discovers that the cheese ia gone. Tbe following night out goes the otlier cheese, bat morning light reveals the fact that not only 1 the cSeeae still there, but its companion has been brought backhand lie upon it." Daniel Drew say no man ever lost 110,000,000 quicker than he did. brilliant a mahogony. The porticos on both sides are ornamented with mosses, winie from the arched verandahs are pendant beautiful hanging baskets. ternich wine was sold at anction. Tbe wine of 1874 sold at prices ranging iroiu jio 10 ii.uu tne piece (Z4U gal lons), and from $219 to $800 the half piece. The wine of 1873 brought from $435 to $700 the piece, and from $352 to $400 the half piece. The purchaser were exclusively Rhenish wine mer- Do not be economical. That is. if you mean by economy the practice of chants and innkeepers. y W J""11" " ctvjvj laiazufc auu ail refining influence about your homes through a wish to save money. There is no more sordid disposition in the world. A bare, cheerlesa house which has no pictures, no musiv, no books. ana out very nine ot com tort in cat- The Florida orange crop for the present season is 25,000,000, worth on an average at the groves $15 per thou sand, making $375,000. It is estimated that there is now not more than 3000 acres of young tree from four to six pet and other upholstery, while there 7er old from tbe bud, some bearing i plenty of money in bank and loaned many as 100 oranges the past fruit out among neighbor, ia a reflection on Mason. For the next five years It ia a man as if he wa charged with cer- believed tlie crop will gradually In tain kinds of embezzlement. Be eco- crease from growth of trees to 150,000, nomical by saving your soul from wast- 000, yielding a product of $2,250,000, or ing, a,nd by laying up in store a good about one-seventh of the product of foundation against tbe time to come, Palermo. 1 1 !" ni Jr'i ,1 V 4? ft I - at" it i 1 .1 i J 1 1 1 t 1 1 1 i. Ml