fill i l' ! iCll 13. F. SCHWEIER, THE C0NSTITUTI05-THE U5I0H-A5D THE DTF0E0EME5T OF THE LA7TS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXIII. MIFFLINTOWX, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1879. NO. 17. t H. T. HELMBOLD'S COMPOUND FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU. PHARMACEUTICAL. " A SPECIFIC REMEDY FOR ALL t ! : DISEASES Of TUt Kor Iebilltv, -Xoss of Memory. InAlsposf. llou tii Exertion or Business, ahortneaa of Breath, Troallet with Thought of Www, DiuineMof Viston. Pain in the liaek. Chest, and Hw.d. Rosli of to the Uead, Pale Countenance, and try Skin. It these symptoms are allowed to go on, very frequently nilrptle Fits and Con sumption folio'w. When the constrtutton bi -Clime affected It requires the aid of an Invigorating; medicine to etrenfthea and toue up lite ystem which "Helmbold's Buchu" DOES IN EVERY CASE. IS UXEQUALED Bv anv remedy known. I Is prescribed hy tbe moat eminent physicians ail over the world, ln IUieumatibtu. Sperm atorrb ass, Kearalgia, Nervousness, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Aches and Paint, General Debility, Kidney Diseases, Liver Complaint, Nervous Debility, Epilepsy, Head Troubles, Paralysis, General Ill-Health Spinal Diseases, Sciatica. Deafness, Decline. Lumbago, Catarrh, Nervous Complaints, "Female Complaints, &c Headache. Patn In the StionlnVrs. Votigh. Dtcstnesa, 8onr Stomach, Eruption. Bad Taate In the Month. Palpitation of the Heart, Patn ia the region of the Kllney. and a thousand other painful symptoms, are the off-prlnes of Dyspepsia. Helmbold's Buchu Invigorates the Stomach, And stimulates the torpid Liver. Bowels, and Kidneyi to healthy action. In eleenalng tbe blood of all Impurities, and Imparting ew life and vigor to the whole system. A ali.gle trl.l will be quite sufficient to convince tbe most hesitating of ita valuable remedial qualities. PRICE $1 PER BOTTLE Or Six Bottles for 15, Delivered to any address free from observa tion. -Patients" may consult by letter, receiv ing tbe same attention as by calling, by answering tbe following questions: 1 Give your name and pon-offlce aild county and btate, and your nearest elf , express office t f. Tour aire and aext J. Occupation? ' 4. Married orsint-let a. Height, weialit, now and In health? . How long have you been sick t 7 Toureoiuplexion.colorof ha.r and eyesT 8." Have you a st .wiping or erect gait t , Relate without reservation all yon know auont voor case. Enclose of dnll.' wicon.ullalion fee. Vour letter will then rIveo attention, and we the nature of your disease and our candid opinion concerning a cure. Competent Physicians attend to ' rw- pendente. All lettei. slmuM be add ressed to Dl.pensatory, lil7 Ptlbert treet, PbUa delpuia. Pa. H. T. HELM BOLD, Druggist and Chemist, Philadelphia, Pa. cojghg HOXF. Come, Kilty, oume!" 1 said; But till she waited waited. Nodding oft ber pretty bead Wi h, "I'm oomiDg soon. Father (rowing home, I know, I eannot think what keep him ao. Coleae he' just belated. I'm coming aoon." ' Come, Kate !" ber mother called. "The supper's almost ready." ButrKittT in her place inatalled. Coaxed, "I'm ooming aoon. Do 1 t me wa I He'a ore to coma; Bv thi time father's always home He row so fast and steady; I'm coming soon." Come, Kit!" ber brothers cried; But Kitty by the water Still eagerly the distance eyed. With. "I'm coming soon. Why, what would eveniug bt ?" said she. Without dear father t ome to tea? Without his Ho, my daughter' ? I'm coming soon." "Come. K t!" they ha f implore. The child is softly humming She Hardly bears them any more; But "I'm comlug soon" Is in her heart: for far from aht re Glidiug the bappy waters o'er She sees the boat, and cries, coming ! H' redeeming soon-" Besieged. I I was sixteen years old the first fall I ever tried to trap beaver. It was in Vtober of j that -vear th8t 1 m wilh t,,e x'- !"'ent'lrc,V , ,. . i l I had been looking forward to a jaunt for beaver all summer. The fall More, while ininninir nunc nn vnnr wnn rniiiii nil called Wild - -- -- -- - stream, I naa aiscoverea a nine iaKe, ueep j back in the woods, with beaver dam at : the outlet which ran down a thi.kly-w.KKll hollow. ! It was late one bitter, cloudy afternoon when 1 found the lake. I tiau six nines to 1 5" ' rt n.rr .u.i.m .n.1 n..r..ll.' hul IllliA to get to mv camp, and merely bad time nnfis t hf f inn von IWA mtiViT 1 I) ftK a hundred vanls or so alRive the daiiL that night it began to snow, and 1 went houie n. ,KA1,4 wla',t tnA rxi th At U v iililut l. lO.tll. .lit j'law v iiiw- ! Tint T L-s.tt f Kwufitr' w.l) in mi ml Ka r.o l,arr.mtMl I i . rtfT w.tli mv trans tm n.l ntreaiiL ue- de- i lemnnea to nave inose iktiv.t. Following up the hollow aliout fonr or i five miles, 1 built a csran alut two miles i below the outlet of the lake ; n.s: diunng to i build it nearer, for fear the smell of my fire l might reach the beaver. 1 here l passeu ! the night, and alsmt ten o'clock next fore ' nim went up to the dam with my traps. ' T. .. Kill, .. .np.um.ln.l IX If li 11 nan a iniir iiiliv ...i. v , . . black growth, and right across the outlet the t beaver had run as pretty a dam as ever titers set eves on. It was "crowning" up . i ai in an si. -hi an lui. u"in " ' ' ... v . -. ' " . ...... uv ,..u ...... . . . ..... ... .... .. .... .. j hunters set eyes on. It was "crowning up ( fright wore away, and being very much ex i stream, and a few rods alx.ve it were three hausted with my run, I fell asleep several j huts, which stood up out of the slack water times. But it was a tedious night at best. as large as a good-sized haycocks. . j I concluded there might be from fifteen to twenty beaver there ; for they generally live in families of from four to ten. And lieakles the three perfect houses, tliere was a fourth, which I at first took for an un finished house. But on going around to. i the other side, it looked to me more like a hut that had been broken into ; for there b 1 1 ba. k t. ' MIloIed-Jl,tiongtheshntoicewh there were any track, either of man or crea- ! . . . . ,,, ture. but discovered nothing except some ; ' . .,, .... ilMrti : scratches on an old log that lav partly in the , a ""ic i"- " a- , water. These scratches, however, were i evidently the marks of claws. There were no beavers in sight, fia- it is rare that they show themselves, either ashore or swimming, by daylight. But I i could hear one "slap" the water now and ( then inside the houses, j I thought that I would set my traps at ! first along the bank at each end of the dam. where Isawthey hadslidesanaplaygrounos. make a raft- and nut down tram around the ; i bouses, at the doorways where they come ! out under water. : The huts stood out ninety or one hundred J feet from the shore, where there was con- isiderable depth of water. There was a ! I great quantity of sticks with the bark peeled off, floating about in the pond. These I came from some poplars a nine aoove, sev- eralof which the beavers had felled into the ifwrVard; rg r'ii i? 1- aiKinvw, . o ? ... . . . . . . ... fem-d .rrev llier 1m-c-..p .TeV. If. by an pond. The bitter inside harK ot tne popiar lout ad tried to jump up as quickly as 1 i ".-uuim.jt ... . - affords to the lieaver its choicest food. ; could, for I was still afraid that the animal : alu from every passer-by wit h an astomsh I set my traps with a "sliding-pole," ; might spring upon me from behind. But I ; '"K of Pertinacity. This spot was taking a great deal of pains with them, so ; as to get the beavers into fast water enoug h I milMV nire iob i It was a rather nice job and kept me busy until near four o'clock, and four o'clock does not come till near night in October. By the time I got back to my camp, it was sunset. I kindled a fire, and cut off a w - - few alices of my nork. and had iust got it well to cooking in the spider, when I heard I ! the motartlfng screeci, in tl woo-lsthat , ' can well be imagined. j I i. i.i .-. tnn-.r.to il.e lake I ' knew very well that no lynx or bear could make such a noise as that. It flashed on my mind in a nioment what had broken the beaver-house. One is always liable to run across a MHllrin l-t them steD unon weieh-I eonrolor near a 1 .caver village at that sea- son of the year. The beavers now and then afford them a choice meal ; and before the , m . 1 I. n nn.,), nul tiorilnna the walls '"? . . J . -. . r oi uie nuts, mey sianu a c.miii.T: m j.iui-.q,. ing the intelligent creatures. . One of the old "wood sachems was, no- doubt, lurking about the huts, and likely ; enomrh. had been watching me while I set i mv traiia. Now he had taken my track, j ! and was following along after me. I had lintiU VJIVA uusaav j - I would follow a man around till dark. j If I had had a tight camp which I could i have got into, I should have felt better. 1 But I had only a little bough shed. And j my gun was a cheap four-dollar fowling - ' niece: pood enouzh for partridge and small ! knl li huntort tlll ImW ini?P (TreallUmi gaine, though the" lock was not always to be I relied nnon to snaD a can. i I thought it all over pretty fast and ; concluacu uiat uie w tuing ,:-w . . . .. . . .1 t rt be,Bin,g- , . , . . wj,.. 1 ni uuuc uto(,uiii"i ; the brook. Without stopping to even take 1 off my spider, I caught up my gun and ran down the bed 01 me nrooa, six ore.gu. '", i ao as to leave no iresn itbck iut mc vrv. : to take. I I may as well own that I was scared. Tet j I thought the creature would likely enough smell the pork and prowl around my cam i awhile. I ran rapidly for the first mile " two. then settled down into a dog-trot. 1 had anl niattresses in the morning, before pack gone about a mile or a mile and a half more, j m tnenj up inthe fonu of a neatly made I should thing, wnen 1 nearu ...at bb...c ugly, raspy screech again, not nan a nine back. That made my heart jump, for I had bo gun to think that I had given the old fellow the slip. If 1 didn t run men, never a e low did! over logs rocks, and through i windfalls and brambles. I I knew it was a race for life, and I ran like fox. But in less than three minutes I beard the animal again, and it seemed as ; if he wasn't a hundred roos nenina me. I was hot enough with running, but that ! screech sent a cold chill down my lock, j The beast was coining right up to me I It Was an awful nluHk ti run in all Irwm ! and root. Fore Area had killed the old j pine growth, and the tree had fallen across eacn oilier, every way. It was getting dusk, ton. In one of my tumbles 1 came near going headforemost i into a great hollow log, and lay for an in- slant breathless. But a crashing in the bushes not fur be jhind told me that my relentless pursuiT was close at hand. It was no time for I picking out nice hiding-places. The hole in i ne tog seeinca to oner a reiuge, ana i threw in my gun, and then backed into it myself, feet first. I kept hacking till I was as fur as I could get, and there 1 lay and panted. I had got back ten or twelve feet. For some minutes, I could hear nothing of the panther. Then I heard him moving about with soft, catlike steps. A moment after, the bole at the of the log darkened and I caught a glimpse of two fiery orlis, that gleamed with a pale flash. In my frantic haste, I had thrust my gun into the log muzzle foremost. It was use less. I could not turn it in there ; yet I held the butt ready to thrust with. i ue creature, nowever, um not attempt to crawl in. After an eager look, the eyes Hee : lis:lI,P'atl ; and a little after, I heard the in the procession when living which was j Joes the view of more than twenty lakes, stammerers gencrallv. And this is the j beast at the other end. shown by the shooting of one next to thelnrarly a dozen cities and villages, and whole svstem of cure" In consists in efforts I Then I heard him smelling along the out- I leader. Since then that place is vacant and 1 mountain peaks innumerable on every side, ! , n.nii,"r the speech automatic. " He oc side of the log. When he got his nose just j the following one kees his station in the j Its northern escarpment looks sheer down CUpji ,wo vears j curing himself, i off against where I lay inside, the animal j line as he did lK-fore his predecessor was 1 s thousand feet on Ijike Zug, into which i m t 1 gave vent to a quick grow:, ami began j dig! Jt made me shiver to hear him nut his : 1 najs jnU) that log ; j expected nothing biU ! i ne woui j j,ave jt op).n a.i ciaw me ,mt. i j But I suppose the outside of the log was i tolerably sound and tough ; for after dig- i i ; i;t . f,., . f..- i? ! " . . ,. ' . . . . ' ,lf i: '' r.t: L . ' : .... leves et tne noie afmin. , t . u... i. T. ' . ' " , ' " , t., 1 ! Urr'.b. re ! ?" ? T1 10 S" "nd l,ntUrk- ; ........ .H ... 1 i.e.l, JU l:.TaM IU Ull Jl II TT U.ll.C . LIIUlll pretty soon negan w uig once more, i count J v. -" 'v "'"' lnure K"1 "'""W .1 W '.v t I g. out my .Ttnue ana Hrnei il. i ( 1 Tli nniTnul l:i'nt iliir.nnrr ot fhi lm fitr it 1 1 ti, firct at .?r-,1 n.l tl...ti..t tl. I other, but never once tried to crawl in. It i oilier, mil never once tnxl l.) crawl in. 11 j was lucky for iih- that this was a tolerably sound log. j Then he changed his tactics. He left off tearing at the log, and I nilh'T thought he had gone away. But as it was very dark. I concluded to stav where I t'l daylight. ! It was not , ,, ... very uncmifortable p-wtion. But there were plenty of great Ida, ants hat kept ninimig over me, and now and then I got a fright wore ; bite. sharp as a needle. Mv After it was light, I determined to ven- ture out. But first I thought it would In well to try an experiment. So I put my cap on the butt of the gun and stuck that out, and moved it around a little. I was just going to draw it back, when, ptmnve! ca'ne the creature and grabbed off the cap, its ugly claws scratch ing on the gun butt. Tl.... 1 ... .... ,.... Tl, .1- iiiiiui iiij in rti i juiiif. iiii i.i the while, clung for me He pUiyed a-ound or a few minutes; but after that I heard nothing 3 more of him fx the day. ..... - . . . Tbe "areo. n come om. ,. i isseu some hungry hours. I had .Irmilv l.in twenty-four hours without a mouthful of food. Just at night I thrust out my cap again. The animal did not spring at it ; yet I was still afraid to crawl forth after the ex ample I had bad of its slyness. The night that followed was, without any exception, the most uncomfortable with hunger' and from lying so long stretch- ed out, it seemed as if 1 was coming in two , in the middle. I ached all over, and was in a fever from thirst. Towards morning it began to rain. I reached my hand out, and sucked off "the dropg that fell on it. As soon as it had grown fairly light, I poked out my head and i took a quick glance right and left. ot seeing anything of the panther, I crawled i wa8 g,iff and cramped that it was wuie momenU before I could get up straight. a. j t , , i CD siHTTtMi ujwn Mrvaiii iLff uuiiic. Biiu went as fast as I cr Mild, for I was afraid that j AD,h ilnportuniti.-s were very annoy the animal might still be hanging around, ! . -. . ' . . f . -. . The folks said I was a comical, not to say Pitif,,lH objPCt' wh?" 1 readied home, bare- eei, coverea wim wooa stams, ana mj cl,,the8 tora to I did not go up there beaver-hunt ing again that fall. What to In the Bedroetm. Tf t irn rwnvn are to nra-llnv a belroom : ,w tbe retireand then again in lhe morn jg. and they will find their actual -.II nnn tl.e.ract.lRl wcigt at least a pound less in the morn- . i . i :.. t l . .. "H5- - -h -"-j more nouuils, and tne average loss throuchout the vear will be more than one pound that is, during the night there Is a ln(ja 0j a puunj f matter which has gone off ..,. .:- hodies. nartlv from the lunes a j partly through the pores of the skin. . Tne 'escaped material is carbonic acid, and j UCllCU Bill 11104 lialt.l " pviauuvuo ; tjona, This is diffused through the air in . an(1 in part absorbed by the lied clothes, ! asjgie ounce of wool or cotton be burned : jn a nKIIli jt wjil socompletely saturate the ! a;r wuh smoke that one can hardly breathe ; ti,,rh there can only I an ounce of for- 1 J A &n:mnl motlor at nniamiUiB at in eign lnatter jn the air. If an ounce of cot ton be burned every hall hour ounng tne j :... .1 air w-jH be kept continually satur i--- ... . "... -ed wUn tne Bniohe unless mere an open i r or wimlow for it to escape. Now the sixteen ounces o. biiiokc .HUB . in. .11.-U io i. ; )ess pojonoug than the sixteen ounces of ( exhalations from the lungs and bodies of the f the rU'i! . tw0 persons w ho have lost a pound in wci auniix me emui uou. u. o.t.-.ii.i&, i-i ; ,.. Hu'i.m vlnra from the body are absorbed me ury u....j " .3 j into tne innggand into tbe pores of the wlwlt more he aaid to show the im- portance of having bedrooms well ventilated Iand thoroughly airing tlie sheets, coverlets ppjj Front, 1,100. "To sum it up, aix long years of bed ridden sickness, costing f 2 W per year, total $1,200 all of this expense was topped by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by my wife. She has done ber own housework for a year since, with out the loss of a day, and I want every j know fof ttelr benefit... j Interesting Farts Concerning Wild Gmm. Mrt. Henry Faucett, of Pilworthtown, Chester ootmty, at one time purchased a pair of wild geese from which he has raised ; a flock of seven. These ireese have become very tame and more readily (aught and handled than his dtmestic ones, but still they have a strong desire to to migrate, and iu prevr.u ..... ue , r U,T clip flieir wings. On unday morning he was surprised to find bis flock had increased to eleven, and were quietly feeding in his barnyard. They have since remained there and in the immediate vicinity, evidently endeavoring to persuade Mr. Faucett's geese to accompany them. They keep in the immediate vicinity, at n time going J , an(, th(,n Um ,u8 ui frmi ; clcs by which speech is effected-of bring more than a mile distant, when they will the tlme , ped at the barrier " i ln" ,llCm ,nto harmonious and svsten sue alight in some wheat field and again return, j ,ia,, folowed thp action" I)r. Hammond was a stammerer .,mw"'llr,,"s'"',,,u'"" '"''! ing Mr. raucctt has made strenuous efforts, to discover their roosting place, for the pur- ! Pe of captunng them, he has been unable jjtodo w. On Wednesday monuiig t,')r IllUlinil all .IUIIIIM1MI nuillin I, ,- ing the Hock eighteen. Thev. fly very close to the ground, at no time soaring higher than the house top. When they alight they keep the same position as when flying show-. ing that tin y hold themselves in readiness j for anv alarm that mav be riven. Another! i singular cinrumstance is given or Theirmove - ! nients. which is that each binl has his nlace to;liot. Colors In Mnrar. ... . , . . . ., ' It ) is a curious fact, that wlule the various ; shades of gray, from steel-grey to P-re, white, and the grey that turns white a ter j seven years old, are the most common colors f """'.r ' '".''5 ,l"c Ara" r,a--, VMn: 18 n,u 8,?!;lu -TT u .. .. . : ,, 1 ""a ,u"' "., . . . . " .. r " f . ' f v r ,7 7 . : Pn-vailmg colors of Lngl.sh thoroughbre.ls. I J tn.e Arab atuU bred m urU-uilM-rg, m -.,', ,, , liunuu iH mv . it-iuii, ..mi i m rtti-m n, iii.mcu ai ne , lenna am. .ar.si.orse s..owN - - - f-.- ' r'Y"'""fi """."-"', c..mmou c..r amongst the Syrian Ara . , a nrsmui is ine i;ivoruc Arai color. ngi.s.1 ...... -a,, cues...... . am. .nmn; ! HtV tilt? Oil ITS of tllf fllOfe IMll e c...ors o. ...e more puiar sires o. , , . , nii.lum tuii.Hi .n.l ia e.iiua.1 lntiir liL-a tin. 1 " - " 1 nuslern limes, ami is someuiing nwe mat onu,r ,n pnipion 01 numiiers. in nreeu- m,IM rr.agv ..on-- or .. ..... ! !"'?' f"1- '.',U . hlM k U)a, ?hc best selling color. Greys are out of fashion , atid millicult to sell. Brown, with tan tt... I...... 1.1.. 1. l,,-'-,i, ,r" ml lll'n It.-lll. rilili'li ll.ll lii ne 'color. Dark chestnut is a gsl color in ; everv respect, but manv purchasers object ,...,1 ' . ,.J,,. w ;( u . , ,llW()li);lliirtn,sirA UIlliUl. gn i hulls, can nu"cly lie depended on to produce ! their own colors in their stock. A chestnut ! sin- will get Ikivs and browns as well as his own colors. Koans are more esteemed in tnitting sires, but can least of all be de , pcmleii on tor reproducing thiir ow n colors, " .which an; in fact a mixture of several colors. The only mans on the KnglLsh turf of any re pute wereail of t ue I'liysstlis blood, and in the liands of the late I-ord Glasgow. They varied from a red or strnwlM-rrj-roan (the liest of all that class of colors) to a deep blue nun, the last a bad color to sell in uai. .nei.s, m... .eiu.....K, in juv" ...urn-., j extra inlimuy actio,,. The disfavor in which th.s color is now held was shown on the dispersion of Inl Glasgow sstu.l, when , ' . . i a purchaser could not be found for one of i . ..- . .. ... i . ..... ... ' of anv color with a character will find nur- -...... -i .. . - fc- " ""v chasers, but hacks of any staring calor hang Ion hand. On the continent, on the coii-! trarv, where riding horses are chiefly re- asked a gn-at many times. What Ls the ac quired as chargers," or for parade purposes, cret of fly-casting, r how is it that I take grev is the favorite color. You may see the prize when I throw I There are three more grev horses of all kinds in Paris" than principles: First, quick out of water; sec in all England. The cart-horses are nearly ond, give the line time to straighten behind alia grey-white. The Pereherons were you; think throw. I will explain these ferred grey they became grey. If, by any fluke, a grey horse were to w in the Derby or St- Leger, we should sec a numlier of grey race-horses, and consequently of half bred horses. T e Helping Hand. It was more than fifty years ago that a ''?!lr named Anthony stationed hm.sell j ,ar innu i .ma. j "J a jou. , ''-eu ... .u i .'-' take tlie utliinnre nere, mcu coneeu . . . . . . s i - :! i will, a d.-sire to heln the le!rrur. he always 1 1,,,. . trifle in charity. j Une day in ,he , on reaching the he found Anthony, as usual, exer- rising his lungs U. the utmost, v.x-iferati..g loudly, "For the love of heaven, bestow ' your alms on a poor man, messieurs et mesoames; me smaiiesi inne win oe f;raie- , . . . . -.i 1 1 i ! fnllv meeived." In the n.i.lst of his out- stopped and n had a pleas- . .tiwi ..i cries a middle-aged gentleman .. . Tl.a n t. r. i ... i.-n.li.lv .iiinH .ml l .1.. ...- : ...... i i.....i. .nn .,a . .r : tl,e ." 1 . ,1 " ' . T "1 : "Jlon Dieu!" exclaimed the ...... vou making such a noise i , . . . -; i. ; " ' uu w. j ..w' ; ur nlcased to iest" replied , . ' p J 1 An.'-' . .... r. ., :.n i.T, j m"rrT " " V. " o- other means of getting nthonv "But I have no my living," said Anthony. "Are you lame? "No, Monsieur." "Are you blind?" 'No, Monsieur." "Well, you are not deaf, and certainly not dumb, as any one half a mile off can testify. Now listen to a lesson from my experience. I was once a beggar, but the WU.TI j . .. . . . abandon dis!?nipefl, a bllsinegs. I left Paris, and went into the provinces, where I begged " 11,., t i.11 7.d Z a nvr "ta FaS. jfcSe buy rags and aell again, an.l, by diligence and perseverance, I at length beca.. rich enough to purchase an ass with two panniers. Through honest toil, my business continued to increase, and see the result. I own two houses on on of the beat tresis in Paris ZVtoSTiSZ S Tn! exclaVionint! inthef In em-1 STtori on the nose of Anthony, j "mv success cmie through honesty. -All I my awxai " ... . - , .. I U I cZn to bVgin :Th, it . more than I 7Kria live respectably on a very outside the town, the regiment of Segovia hVdTu7if youreferyour present life, and moderate income if they always take the being flanked by artillery aiid other r,-gi-Iflnd you here next week, I shall report cash in hand, and buy where tliey can buy mcnts. Accompanied by his staff, F.spar vou to'the police. " ! to the la-st adventage. Then they will be tero rode up to it, and told the men he had 3 ..:!...... .1.. ...o.,, nr.Ht ! careful first to cet what u necessary. Extra come to ask for his old fnend and comman- leaying the youth and the beggar in a state of amfzement - Indeed the litter was so bewildered that be stood with the crown in LT. haThUevea and mouth wide ow-n.' gazing ic'.ently at nothing. Suddenly he Hur-taait tirarul? U'uo niti'.ii airuln Oaun in the tniisenfa hcmur t ,, 0f,;. ....,..- ,., i,.i .u ii ...ma win iiiw iiir .iiii.i; mini business in town, and strolling through the city, he entered a book-seller s shop to pur chase a book that had called forth consider able criticism. Three or four voting men were busily engaged, while a stout, well-ap- pearing young man, was giving orders, with 5, ?.. " the air of proprietorship. His face was very familiar to (he new comer, but it was not until he Sxke that Anthony and the book-seller were discovered to be identical. The recognition was mutual. Anthonv grusfied the young man's hand and led him back into a well-furnished aclvicc, bought rages with the crown, and." n-"-, ou. enumj cure.. m..;se.., ,,r1,.r.,. n !.,,,. ,n 1 mainly by the pet formance of some slight , h..r,rt,,, -...i ,, (la , aj ,d now W(U1t ,,,, j ten thousand a year i A ltilroal on the KieL Two hours' ride on Lake Lucerne, south - from the city, brings us to the K'SU n ilatel p-k, aad one of the most remarkable of the whole Swiss Alps; not 1 "a ai-couiinH us aiuumc mi unicii as us , PO"'"""" al chaiatter, cominiindiiig as it a person sianuing upon ine onua s.-ems ai - i miwt able to hurl a stone. The summit is reacheil by a railway, which is a masterly; niece of civil engineering. Judging bv the ,he incljne M ,0-fif frm , horizontal; and the car, , mMi gi er Ls rrolK,, ,,v the en!jjn, wu(.n i(utls aml ln t)ie nar. ' and masters the incline, not by bite of its I whls. but bv a third and co-ed rail in tlIe centre net ween the oilier two; the mo- ! 'n of the piston axle is geared down to a 1 movement of the driving pinion, so as ! le Hn( limwp,1 . and j the movrt alM)t as fast as a gKsl brisk walker wou:u travel on a level roaL t.vvry- . ... . ..... :.. ,t . ... 1 ,hin coan,Vii with ie u miltrut.tvil : iiuin f in iniaJ ai-nnf i ip nriiMMti ihi umln-i i a view to ansolutc Rifetv. A few of the wiII rea.iiiy illustrate this fai t few of the and they are as follows: Tiie car, lieing nt- canot , . if ie culIplin, , e ,9 u jn u 1d U f((rc jt h Mlins ,,(lwn . . tM SMVM at M g,ow a rj(tc th.u u r;m jriI(jht t a ,u..ui hlli, in a se,.n,l of time p,w,"rfil 1'rakes are attacbcl U.tli to the engine and the car, and bind iion the cog- gcd wheel shaft, and not upon the smooth track wheels; but als.ve all is the fact that the brakes are not used at all, except for auxiliary restraints as the sleam in the de- scent is let into the cylinders on the reverse side of the piston hea.L and thus becomes a resisting, instead of a pmpelling power. Of course, any unscientific mind can readily comprehend the fai t that if the steam has Hwer to push the car up, the same steam in the reverse order can prevent its coining down. Kven the old la.lv who dreaded to embark upon the canallsKit, fearing accident need not hesitate to sc.ile the Kigi, and en- joy the magnificent Kinor..ma, not presented to many in a lifetime. The day was cloudy as it ollen is. when we were tliere; but whenaliout to return in the last car down the fog lifted for half an hour, and presented a landscape lit up by the rays of a setting sun, never to i;e were witn-sses t: forgotten by those who its glories. How to Ihrow a rly. Seth Green, w Lo has wide fame ss a ftv fisher as well as a . ------- - toiiowing nuns lonngiers, uiciiiueiuiiei. as the trout season is now open: "1 am principles more definitely. liaise your rod to an angle of aliout furty-hve degrees, liack . of you ; then make a quick stroke forward; m-ake the stroke without carrying your rxl forward. When you take the line from the ! water it should lie done with a quick jerk; '. i then give your line time to straighten be- hind; then give it the same stroke forwanl that you did to get it out of the water. Why so many fail in fly-casting is, they throw the rod backward "too near the ground be- hind them, and when they make the for- ward stroke, when the line gets straightened out, it is some distance aliove the water and kinks buck, and when it fa ls upon the water what u wou,(, have lM.n if it nall nlcik ,he . . , . w waier iu MM)a iw u wiw mr.ni:iiHU"ju. u a fish should strike at your flies at this time, Steffens saw a shell strike the horse of a you are pretty sure to miss him. By never irussian officer. Kntering near the should- throwing your rod back more than on an er, it caused the poor animal to make a angle of forty-five degm-s, and making the convulsive spring and throw its rider, the stroke forward, your line goes straight out fragments of the shell being projected on and the flies go" to the point you desire. . all sides while the rider jumped up from Great care should be taken wheu you have the ground unhurt. thrown the line behind you that the line is Amazingly nigh dentil, although in bliss given time to straighten before making the ful ignorance of the fact, was the Confed i t i i i .. ..it . .ii: . 1 ... . .1. ... .. . V. SiroHC .orwar.1. X uavc ....u.li m i in .... . . . ...... Im ",,e ."l"'"S &v,nS rotl a l""'1s atrong hack stroke, t ' carrying my rod n farther back than an ' angle of forty-five degrees, and giving the of forty-five .legrees, and givin. line time lii time to straisrhten lhind me. and makins the same stroke forward that I did .n .m. it hufL- if ni. I nenrlv fortr.it to stran j mention that it is more important to have directed, and sometimes conies near perpe loise fl. 1 your line fit your rod than than it is to have tniting murder. A young New Yorker nlia you J'0"1 coat fit your back, unless you are a named Wells, went one evening to Booth's your , fon. and if vou are. mv advice is to not go a-fishing. You may think it strange that I , should tell you three or four times over in ! the same article that in onler to do good fly-1 ! casting vo must not throw vour rod back I only just so far, and then wait for j r your line ! 10 raighlen behind you, and when your : rod is up to make a quick stroke forward, without carrying your rod forward even a ; little, before you deliver the line. Tay as You Go. Tlie best of all rules for successful house keeping and making both ends meet is to : I nr us mi m " Iti-vond all ctMiiitries in 1 nay as you eo." Beyond all countries in the world, ours is the one in which credit is ' : the most used and abused PaSShOOKS are the bane and pest ot domestic economy, a i nernrtual nla-uc. vexation and swindle. Abuse bv Hants' at the store and th. house by houskeeper, and dealers, they are temptations tolth part... to ao wrong. : "i never uuu niai. j "We neglected to enter tins, I "I forgot to bring thj book. : "Never mind, we 11 make a note of it BuTtheof it is that housekeepers are tempted to order what they have not the means to pay for, and when the month or quarter comes f- settlement they are i,,n comforts will be had as they can afford them. But it is bad policy to buy on credit, No wise dealer sens so cneapiy on creuii as for cash.' - - - tttn wintering;. SlnnnnrriHH is the result of a function- al disorder of tiiat part of the brain which . - presides over the facultv of siieech, accord ing to an article by Ir, Hammond on the Voice. This is proved, be says, by the fact that all stammerers can at times speak as well a other persons. "There is no 'de fect with the organs of speech, no paralysis of the tongue or lis; but there is a condi tion present which, at times, especially when the subject is excited or interested, or specially tries to do his best, prevents the mini al systematic articulation of certain syllables. And this appears to lie due to an impossibility of co-ordinating the mus- i muscular ar-ti n svnehronously with the articulation . f th; ditlicut syllables. "V ith each trouli tao ue wonl, he explains "es- IKViaill 1,1111 VIlC II L I 111 1 1 M M m. Ill IT1I1 A , mailesome slight motion with the hand or foot, or even with a single finger, and I found : t)lat tnis pan enabled me to gi t the word ! mti without stammering. In this pncediire ! ,he attention is diverted from the effort to , gIM-k to the :u rforn.ance of the luscular action mentioned, and hence the speech M-eom.n more ant.Mnatir than it ia with 1 uFrolc Lutm-Honx Krrprr. The Acadians have a tradition that God enjoined perpetual silence and desolation on 1aJl,ra(1(,rllln(,, Antico-, whl.n he lhem to t ain for a heritage. However that may , it u tlt whiIc mht.r wiIlL, , J tb e earth vield to man's eonuuest. th,e vast wastes remain ever void and empt v. The In.lh.ns clled the Island Natiscot . the coimtrr of wailing and under the : m.-lem comimion of Anticosti it has a.lde.1 to its terrible renown. Its whole historv, fnim , j, u w ,wtml hy jaci,.; (artier, in r, A, u the present, is a r-cord of human suffering. Here and there, how- ev tll,.re u ,.le )(f lenisin Viinhy of a nobl.T scene. In August, 1 '!'.!, the family of Kduar.1 HmH-. keeper of the LIlis Bav i Ligi.t-house, was stricken down by typhoid fever, and, to add to his misfortunes, the ; revolving apparatus of his light broke. The ! government steamer had gone; and Pope had no means of communicating with the marine department at Quebec or elsewhere. ! The light revolved or Hashed, as the tech-1 nical phrase is, every minute and a half;! and if it flashed no more it would probably mistaken by passing vessels in that region of fug for the statiouary light at the west point of the Island, and thus lead to dire i loss of life. I'ope found that with a little: exertion he could turn it and make it flash. ' and at once determined to fill the place of j the automatic gear. Accordingly, this; humble hero sat in the turret, with his watch by his side, turning the light regularly at the allotted time every night, from 7 P. M. until V A. M., from the middle of August until the first of Iecemler, and from the firit of April until the end of June, when I the Government stealer came to his relief j wilh a new apparatus. All through the' first season Pope's daughter and grandchil- j dren were ill unto death, with nobody save ' him to nurse them. He waited on then, j tenderly through the dav, but as night fell i n the iron-bound coast he hastened to his vigil in the turret, doing his duty to the Canadian Government and to humanity with unflinching devotion. In the second season his daughter, who had lived through the fever, took turns with him in the light-nsmi. This may have save.1 a thousand lives. He flieu ... .ii. um. ins uecu uas t.eie. u.ui. this day la-en chronicled, for of the heroes of Anti.-osti, as of the long roll of her vic- tims, the world knows nothing. Aee lit leath .Home Extraordi nary fcscape. Colonel Gilmor relating the story of a fight in which he figured, says in his "rour ears in the Nubile "Turning half-round in my saddle to rail on my men, 1 received a sudden shock and felt deathly sick, and at the same instant saw- a man trail his gun and run off. I killed him before he had gone three steps, His ball had passed through two coats and stuck in a pack of canls in my left side pocket. They were quite new, the wrapper not even having been broken open. The suits were each distinct. The bullet passed through all, stopping at the last card, which was the ace of Sjtades." Such another literal -illustration of the phrase "Within an aitof death" is not upi(n .j . ,)Ut bair-brea.lth escapes are ' . " t 1 r i uuiuiiiou in w tu . mc iim: ciotc aiw. in.ii.ei uuu.cu ii i' " -" -..:. ... i ..i i... ., . """" ' V,c commanding the platoon happening cognize in him a client of the insi office of which he was secretary, and to re insurance strik- in? un the leveled weapon with: 'lVm't shoot ! we've got a policy on him. The sword of justice is not always rightly Theatre. Taking with a fit of coughing, he left the theatre intending to go home: but after going some little distance, it came on snowing so fast that he retraced his steps. As he strode along, two men came rushing down the street, one of them drop- ping a gold watch and chain, which Wells picked up, and then went after the loser, running into the arms of a p iliceinsn, who marched bim off to the station to explain mailers. Presently a messenger arrived in hot haste, saying "the thief was wanted at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. Wells was taken there, and brought face to face with a man lying on a lounge, covered with blood. ; wc um.. uo smuu asked the officer. .... ;.. I. l.n . l.1l....- f.illinillinnb i .us, Mil. uir jpun iciiuii, .11111115 . .. . . ', ells was trieu ior me munier, lounu 'guilty, and sentenced o be tanged ; and -"7. before the day Axed f-r hw mmon 1 prisoner in Sing Sing had not confessed on his death-bed that he had roblied the man of his w atoll, then stabbed him and run off, afterward dropped the watch as he ran. Major Duncan vouches for the truth of general, Kscalerm "was murdered at Miranda by the murineenng regiuH-nt of govia. About two months later, rp.u1ero jmd his army arrived at Miranda; and on the aoth i of October the whole force was paraded der their chief, EscaW j "W here is he ?' he cried. Then, point- .ug w iuc u . -went on: "He there, foully murdered 1, I call upon all of you who are true soldiers to trive un the names of his assassins." ! Twice he made the appeal, and silence was the only answer. Espartero then or- da. hen the news reached that place dered the regiment to be numbered off fnmj 'Sheriff K. B. tientry rallied a jxuue and the right, and every twentieth n.an to be ' repaired in all haste to the scene of the nrf brought b) the front and be prepared for bery. The pi,' consisted of Steve Ven immediate execution. At this a sergeant ard, Jauu II. Ie, Albeit Gentry and A. stepped forward and named ten men as the j W. Potter. An examination of the spot actual munlerers of Kscalera. Tliese were j showed that the robbers bad turned out of marched and placed in a line with their ; the road and gone down the river parallel hacks to a broken wall, one only protesting i with it. Venard and I-ee gut on the trail his innocence as he was dragged to the end of the rohliero and followed it over the of the line. Before the fatal volley was ' roughest of all imaginable ground for the fired he darted nimbly round the corner of the wall and ran along the front of the troops, hut was recaptured, and taken back to his allotted place. A voice from the ranks cried out that they had the wrong man, the real criminal ticing a soldier of the same name in a hospital at Burg. Fpar- tero ordered the n an to be removed, while the rest received their deserts. Upon in- I tbe pursued had gone up the ravine to a quiry being made at Burgos, the guilty one j crossing. He was alone in one of the was "found tliere, taken from the hospital wildest and roughest of spirts in that wild and shot, his namesake of course being set j and rough region. The hills hung steep free. I above. Kocks, trees, brush, and logs were A snake once prevented a thief commit- in profusion on every hand. Venard was ting something worse than theft. A woman armed with a Henry rille. The waters of ofOudeand her daughter once alighted at j tbe ravine came tumbling down its steep the station of Hun lee, and hired a convey- I bed of bowlders, with a rush and a note ance to take them to their village. When I which rendered no other sound audible, they had gone half a dozen miles on their The hero of the hour proceeded with eau way, the driver pulling up in a lonely spot, tion. A huge nick arose twenty feet in demanded their jewelry; and upon their j height in the midst of the mm lily water; demurring tied the pair to the vehicle and ! other similar rocks surrounded it, alto seized the trinkets. Then bethinking him- gether forming an island A tree or two self that the dead woman could tell no tales, j grew upon tbe lower end of the island In the ruffian drew out bis knife; but slipping : the midst of the rocks, their branches and from his grasp, it fell into a ditch. He ! foliage partly covering the rocky rampart plunged his hand in the water to recover J alve. Below the island, at a few feet the knife; and as he clutched it a black , distant, was a precipice of fifteen feet it snake fixed its fangs in the w.ail.l-lie-mur- ! more, over which the waters of the ravine derer's hand. He suecumlied to the poison, 'tumbled. Venard attempted to cross the and in ten minutes was past hurting any- ! stream at the head of the fall. He walked Isxlv. The women were discovced by ion a short log to a rock. Above him rose soiiie villagers, ami rchascd; but tbe corpse of tbe driver was left alone until the police coming on the scene, removed the body to the police station. " lininis on the Seaffiild. Two negroes recently executed in Vir - dnia made a rcmest that they be permitted to take their last meal on the scaffold. The sheriff consented to this whim, and the exe - cution was delayed somewhat on this ac- cunt. The prisoners said they only wanted coffee, comhread and molaises. but they wanted a go.! deal of it, such as it is wai Accordingly a wmnan in the neighl)orhl went to work and prepared the meal. In the meantime the munlerers sat enm-msed- Iv. the olerve.l of all olervers. AUnl twelve o'clock the repast was n a.lv. A rickety old table and twochairs were f.wned for the occasion. These were placed on the scaffold, and on the table were a pot of steaming coffee, two pones of combrea.1, a mug of sorghum, plates, Sns. &c. Smith took his coffee without cream, but Christian called for some of the lacteal fluid. The cook had forgotten to send any, and after a little delay it was brought. Then the men liegan their meal. It took them nearly one hour to eat it. They laughed a great deal. and when th'-v had cleared the dishes thev remarked: "The old woman gets up a first rale dinner." Then thev each smoked a scgar, and at one o'clock thev arose on the scalTohL and confessed the crime for which thev were condemned, and said thev would g.. "straight to glorv. At the cl.e, "and just la-fore the n.pi-s w'ere tied, thev reipiested the crowd to sing the hymn, "Peace, peace. on the golden shore." Christian had a fine tenor voice, and Smith sung a pretty fair bass, and after the tune liad been "raised thev bh joined in with a good will. All of the spectators sang; and altogether it ... . . ... ' t was a musical leature oi the snow mat been enjoyed bv disinterested ' firrnl 1,onr' SfM n'eJ and beau i:uln. the occasion been such a tifulI.v inscribed, and Governor Low ap- might have I spectators ha serious one. At 1. 1 o cl.H-k all was ready. Smith and Christian sai.l, "Farewell" in a loud voii-e, the prop was knocked from un der them, and the sentence of the law was carried to its completion. tiold Iaee. One of the most singular mechanical operations imaginable is the making of gold ; named Fdward Farrell. We bade them wire for what is known as gold lace. The : good-bye late in the afternoon, turned off refiner first prepares a solid rod of silver to the right of Sheep mountain, and, enter aliout an inch in thickness; he heats this 1 ing a narrow plain between high ranges of rod, applies upon the surface a sheet of hills, spurred forward our jaded animals, gold leaf, burnishes this down and so on, j until the gathering shadows warned us that until the gold is alout one-hundredth part j we could proceed no further with safety, the thickness of the silver. The rod is then j At daybreak we spied a large flock of sheep subjected to strain of processes which j in a corral close by a rude cabin or dug-out, brings it down to the state ot fine wire, in which were two boys, sons of Mr. Far when it is passed through holes in a steel : rell. Here, ten miles or more from home, plate lessening step by step in diameter. 1 they had been tending a flock of 2, 800 sheep The gold never deserts" tbe silver, but ad- during the entire season. They shot their h.-n-a el. ic.lv tr-. it nrwl sl.nrea all its mots.- I ?ame with an old rifle, did their own cook- tions; it is one-hundredth part the thick- ness of the silver at the beginning, and it I maintains the same ratio to the end As to the thinness to which the gold-coated rod of ! silver can be brought, the limit depends on i the delicacy of human skill. It has been calculated." however, that the gold actually placed on the very finest silver wire for gold lace is not more than one-third of one-mil- lionth of an inch in thickness; that is, not alve one-tenth the thickness of ordinary ' old leaf, ! - , He :t Them. j "Will you give me two cents ?" inquired ! tramp of a man whom he found standing ! on the corner of a street in New York. I "Two cents:" repeated the person ad- dressed, meditatively. It ain t much ? went on his trampship, 1 iu a low piping key. U I thought you really needed it 'I do need it," he broke in. I 'Do you want to get across the nver ? , No, sir, I don t ; New 1 ork s good en- , ough for me. ' ... "Do you want to buy bread for a starving family l" "Xo, sir : I ain't got no family ; I m a single man, I am." I )o you want the money to play policy with ? "Indeed I don t." "Well, what do you want it for? "Now, then. 111 tell you. lousee l ve got iiireeccms nnseii auu . .u a irui.i.u. man and 1 thought u 1 couui prevail upon you to give me a two-cent nickel, 1 would go off quietly and have a beer." He got the two cents. Brooght to ),nnt. In a certain police court a witness re cently appeared whs bad refused to obey a subpana, and who was accord ingly brought to terms with the aid of an attachment. When the police Jus tice asked bim what excuse he had to offer for his contempt of court, he re plied at the time they wanted him In court he was standing at the altar 'git tin' married. 'May it please your Hotior,' hurried ly interposed a bachelor lawyer who bad overheard the apology, 'I respect fully suggest that the man is already sufficiently punished, and 1 beg tbe court to deal with him mercifully in view of his recent affliction." 'Ah !' replied bis Honor, 'so it strikes me. Y'eu can go. You are discharg ed, sir, and may heaven bare mercy on youj' Affair. Kecently a stae was stopped and the passenvi-rs roblied some distance from Neva- distame of a mile and a half. It was evi dent which way the robliers went Lee went back to take the horsrs around to the mad at the crossing below, the rest of the Sheriff's party having previously gone in that direction. VenanL left a'oue, followed the trail. He came to Mever's Kavine, at ! i debouchure into the Yuba. He saw that the huge mass of granite, huttiessed in i front by two sn aller rucks. Between these ' latter was an alley which led up to the base (of the Titan. His position was such as to looK up the alley. At the nase oi me great rock, Venard discovered the object of his I9"" - I ue leauer oi me eang was suin.g ! on ,he Sr,un"1 ml m ,he "f 'Ira ng bis ; revolver. enard instantly leveled his title iuP,nt"er"l',ier' ho was not n ore tuul tvmtT !'ant. At the same moment ue "a " of "w pointing at him ! w of " There was no time to ''Imnge his aim. He bred ; the lea.hr fl" 'k 8,,ot '"naigli the heart. The other ru,i,r attempted to shield himself further Mllnd l"ving the point of his pia- l"1 P"el over the tp. The exposure was f:,,i,, ' inanl C"v'r" 'e with h'9 unerring Henry. No sooner did the head of the nblKr p r above the nic than uU ,rain was P'eree.1 with a bullet. Tl-ere i ttas .vct anther, but he was not to 1 seen, ' ,lis l""'1 ,!,i-1,t at U,:U nioment be point- ,nS al 1 "e 'a","r l'm " 118 vgui. 1 clambered up to the lair, to lieard him in his den. He found the treasure, took the pistols from the dead, covered quickly the former with e.irlh and leaves, and proceeded to hunt the missing' roblier. Crossing the stream and ascending the steep mountain wyon.l, he ais.-over.il me roooer nmning "1 'e acclivity .sixty yards or niorealiea.L Venard hred and the robln-r fell Another tm", t- tl,e last T"Ui't'T l,!1,, ,,own ,h ' "i!l-tlea.L now naight his com- P-nioiis, They ail pn-ee.led to the scene ,rf the ragily. n-covered the money, and by muir.iii h ii iiic .-"i i ii- ii.i. iiii .-niriiii Tany iepue, imecaM. wun.i. ... in 'arS" to '" ,'" l1"9 T' 'After the Mienff s party had left .Nevada, : Wella. largo & Co. offered reward of 1.0"", which was paid. The Company .i I . . nnminliiil 1 -1-w nnunl Tl' 1 1 . niftiHI. .1 1 -.1. I V T" i--- ---- - - poim.-u mm on ms siau, win. ine rauiw o. Lieutenant-Colonel, "for meritorious ser vices in the field." The Itoy Mieplieril uf Ntliruka. tine pleasant day we nsle 21) nill-s over the I jnmiie plains, fn mi Laramie City to the Little Laramie river, where we found a prostH-rous sheeif-raiser from Nebraska, ing and lived entirely alone with their dogs and two ponies employed in herding the sheep. They alternated in watching the sheep, w hich were driven into the corral every night, as a protection against bears. weffes and other wild animals. An ante- lope which one of them had shot the day ; previous was suspended near the tor of j the cabin. Tliere was a good range here, jand the father had in the springtime sent the sheep and the boys to possess it. You will he surprised when 1 tell you that these ia. is, enirusteu wun me care o. over z,r aj.p alMi Hying here in this remote, se- eluded st, were only 1 1 and 1 i years of astonishing, the early self reli- ance which mese iroimer cmiuren uispiay. ana tne skiii wnicn, as mere urcu.ns, mey a"""" ln neruing sneen Ths Mne . th. idua. I see the beautiful Indian leaning up against the fence, calmly surveying his ter- rit()nr And 1 ain free to ,.,, tUat the territory is a powerful sight more beautiful ,. - .,.: The in,iiaa i chewimr i tobacco, and swearing at the mule. He is . f. . rh , aad hi. .. ,.11 ,.f .1.- n,le s is. He wears liut- , , , . fllr the in,.:.- ! and you can hear him bray clear into the ; . , ; . . V a buahv iieaj I f hair ami slmi-kv whikera. tanne.1 otiI by the sun, has the Indian; and he wears more j flat leather harness tluui he has hair, the ; mue dl)e9L ue carries a black snake whip, te n(lian and as he swears, he lar- hi llllnker, th. mui,-, hunkers. And evcry ,-mie h tbe i,ua fetches him. the mule, one, be, tbe mule, kicks dawn a whole panel of fence. I trust I have made this clear enough. What the Country Jieerte. Fewer dogs and more sheep. Fewer tinkling demagogues who are anything or nothing, as interest dic tates and more brave men w ho ilare 10 do their own thinking, and say w ba they think. Fewer great men made toorder.and to small material, and thrust in front men who have a capacity for greatness. Fewer impetuous young men, eager ro rush into print and raise the devil generally. Fewer wire-pullers In popular con vention and more eople. Fewer "leaders" to knuckle to popu lar prejudice, aud more real leaders to combat such prejudices w hen wrong. Fjwer b.r-roou.s and more schools. rawer fences and more pastures. Fewer scrub cattle and more' goo -ne. ii i SOLD CVEBTWHEBV
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