II M ROLCONIB & MC vol." Vitt: -rag Bradlord Republican '1 Is t':d►iixl►ed Every Thursday, AT TOWANDA. PA., BY HOLCOMB _Sz TRACY. $1.30 Per Anuava, in Advance. Advertising dates- :t: cents a line for first imitation. an i five cents per line for ell sub..e queSt insertlatts. Reading notice &dyer:Wits tcu cents per line. tight lines constitute a square. sn.l twelve lines au inch. Anditor's settees 12.50. Administrator's and Eieeptor's notices 12.0. Yearly 'advertising g1f.0.00 per column.. . Tim liclint4.lCAN is published in the 7lacy. Moore and ilobles Block, it the corner of 3lain and Pine, streets, over J. 'IP. Corner's Boot and shoe store. its circulation is over 2000. As an advertising medium it is -unescalled in its im• mediate Businets Direci 'cry. ATTORA EYS-AT-LAW a'NLEVEI.X.ND k McGOV . J. Cleveland %.0 Wm. McGovern); Canton, Bradford County pa, AU business entrusted to their care in Western Bridford will receive prompt attention. 201prel-ly vJIITII S HILLIS, Attorneys-11-Law; Oftlo 1,,j over Powell & Co. • CJALIFF..J. N.,• Mee in Wood's Block, south First National Bank. up stairs. joins 12,8 lABREE k SON (N C L'lsforee and L Eisbree.) E Otnce inAercnr Block. Park St. znayl4.7B PECK. t OVERTON' (13exj M Prek and I) e Oivr torn. Otlice over Bill's. Market 49-'79 MAXWEiJ: W•`- Office over Dayton's Store 1ipri114,76 VT ILT, J. .1)11EW. Waco In Mean's Block. apr 14,76 , DVIES, CARNOCHAN k HALL. r Davies- WII I.•arrp - ihaa. L M Hai.) Office in rear' . f Ward ILntrancp on Poplar St. (1012.75 DoiriESCC ...ONEY A. Solicitor of Patents. AN+ Parthruiar att&ntion .paid to business in 3rptuite Court and to the settlement of estates. e3flice Ikl,ktitanyies Block • • .49-79 ft R c PliEttSpN & YOUNG. ( I. Meflterable and LYL W . L Young.) Office month side of Ifercur's Block., feb I.ls -WILLIAMS. ANGLE & BUFFPSGTON. (11 N Wiatasur, E J Angle and E B Buffington) . .office west side of Main street, two doors north .of Argus office. All business entrusted to their ,eare.will receive prompt attention. oct 26,71' TAMES 11. ANDJOIIN CODDING, Attar nays and Couusellon.at-Law. Office in the Mercur Dica, over C. T. Kirby'. Drug Store,. July 9, 'BO tf.,i TrEENEY, J. P. Attorney-at -LAW. Office in . 1 •-• , ,Ilontatiye's Block, kikin Street. Sept. 15, 'Bl-tf. rrIIiOIdPSON, W. H. and E. A.. -Attorneys-it 4. Law, Towanda. Pa. Office. in Stercur Block. over C. T. Kirby's Drug Store, entrance on Main street. first stairway north of Post-office. AU business promptly attended to. Special atten tion given to claims against the United States or POWOOLA, Bounties, Patents, etc ..and to ollections and settlement of decedent's eslates; April 21. ly HENRY B. ,+'ITIBEAN • ATIORNEI'-AT-LAW, Solicitor of Patents. Government claims et. tended to. - - 116febit2 PIIYSICA.2Ir3 ANDSDRGEONS JOHNSON. T. 8.. 1.D. 1 Office over Dr. H. 0 Porters's Drug Store. feb 12.75 NEwTO N. D .L.N.lz F. G. Office at Dwelling_ on River Street, corner Weston St. feb 12.'11\ LADD, C. s.. 4.D. Office . lit door above old bank building, on Main street. Special at tention given to diseases of the throat said .ju1y19,78- INTOODBUItS. B. M., 3.1. D: Office and resi dence, Alain street, north ot M.E.Church, • • • - Medical 'Examiner for Pension Dr•-irtment. I,b 22.i8 DAYNE. E. D.. SI.D. Office over It-futanye's Store. Office hours [rem 10 to 14 A.M. and from 2 to 4 P. X Special attention given to Diseases of the Eye. and Diseases ooct f the Dir. 1 20.77 • ' . TOWNER. If. L., ALM. I . ilioncsorartnC. PlAssictur i Scaosoa. Rt4ddenee and office just north ,of Dr. Corbon's Vain street, Athena. Ps. HOTELS HENRY HOUSE. Main st.. next,corner south of Bridge street. VNew house and new furniture throughout: The proprietor has spared neither psins or axpense in making his hotel first-class and reipectfUlly solicits a share M public patronage. Meals at all hours. Terms reasonable. Largo Stable attached. mar 8 77 - Wht. HENRY. SECRET SOCIETIES. 'WATKINS POST, 68, G. A. R. Meets every Saturday evening. at Military Hall. GEO. V. MYER, Commander. I. It. Errrurnar., Adjutant. • feb 7,79 nRYSTAL LODGE. NO. 57. Meets at S. of P. NJ Hall every Monday evening at 7:30. In surance $2.000. Sensate $3.00 per week. Aver age annual cost, 6 years experience, $ll. JESSE MYERS, 'Reporter. E. PlEncs, Dictator. ' fob 22:78 BRADFORD LODGE. 1i0.167,1. 0. 0. F. Meet In Odd Fellow's Hall, every Monday - evening at 7 o'clock. WAnszx HILL, Noble Grand. June 12,76= - ' HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTINO, P - F. E. No. 32 Second street All orders J• will receive prompt attention. June 12,75 EDUCATIONAL PSOUEIIAI•INA COI.LEGIATE INSTITUT E, S --- -The SPRING TERM will begin Monday, April 3; Itol2. For catalogue or other Difor teatton. address or call on the rrhcieJF*l; EDWIN E. QUINI.4b. A. M. Towanda, Pa. July 19,78 PLUMBER AND GAS RITTER WILLI/018, EDWARD. Practical Plumber and Gas Fitter. Place of • business in Ifer cur Block nes, door to Journal office opposite' Public Square. • Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Repair. mg Pumps of all kinds, and all kinds of Gearing romptly attended to. AU wanting work in his ne should give him a call: ; July 27,77 INSURANCE 14_17888 11 4 0. 8, General Inimmice Agency, Towanda, 11. 081oe,In Whitoomb's Book %tore. • July 12.7111 And had. 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O : 4 ,, Or 4,, -4, .-.„,_, ..,.. i .,„ -. 7.., „°,,,, ! ..-,-,, , . , -,-.,„:„...,..,., ,-„ 7.....---- ..--,- . .,.......-...,... t . .... ..„ L.., ~,,,,:,?...: .- - • ....,,_ .1. 4 ,0,. . .. . . , ....„ ..;-,..,,...,.,„...,,,,,..„ _ . „ _... - - • - - . - , . . - - , ~. ~ __ , , _ - -..,_ ....:.,-.-„,[:**. ;: ,...1.4ppi. n-:.-2,= , :cr . c . .;:r...--,,,,k ,3,,,, , , .. ~,,...- . -, _ , ,-, ~ . , ANDA . ,111,Scellaneous Advertisements., NEW FIRM I NEW STORE ! Fd. - Mooillesiux, WiriVinerly with Handelman.) HASSOPIIIiED • OF HUI OWN / 4 1 PAT TON'S BLOCK With Swartz & Gorden's Store; Wham he keeps FULL Assowrarrarr OF 1 Gold & Silver Watches SWISS AND AMERICAN . ; CLOCKS, -7-- JEWELRY, SPECTACLES, ETC. t kar His Stock is all NEW and of the FINEST QUALITY. Call lend see for yourself. REPAIRING DONE PROMPTLY. IiZI TAOY, PA. We keep on band constantly for builders. • • LIME, HAIR, BRICK, LATH,' • , SHINGLES; SASH, DOORS, 'BLINDS,'SHEETING PAPER, PAINTS, OHS, VARNISHES, ' CHFSPEAK NAILS. WAGON MAKER'S SUPPLIE S, ' Fellows, Spokes, Hubbs, Thills, Poles '1; r: - Carriage Trimmings. - ; Also a full line of Shelf and Heavy Hardware, and a full line of Carriages, Platform and. Lumber Wagons, Made by us with skilled workmen, and wairanted in every particular. • I BEAIWSLEY & SPALDING, Hardware Dealers. Troy. Aciril 27-1 y 1 BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURER Alfred 'J. Purvis, No. 131 Geneiespe street; TOWA'SDA, PA • 'AU work in his; line done well and promptly at lowest price. Parties having volumes incomplete will be fur nished with any missing numbers at cost price. All orders given. to J. J. Scanlan, Agent for Bradford County, will be promptly executed ac cording to directions. sep9-tf • Now occupies the Corne'r' Store opposite Dr. U. Portor's Drug Store, Main Meet, with a large stock of GROCERIES, Mr. Ross has ANOTHER STORE - ON Ramos Smarr J. Schoonover is clerk. The two stores are connected by Telephone. Mr. Boss can now feel satistled.that he can give the BEST GOODS You TRE LEAST DIONEY His experience enables him to select the best goods. which he is bound to soli at a LOW PRICE. You can always get a bargain if you 9 , BUY , YOUR GROCERIES AT ROSS'S I . ' All goods delivered in the Dori:ouch FREE. FAIMERI3 will do well to call with their Produce and get the C ASE. '203Pr52•17• JE " ELLER, AMIN STREET, Next door to Dr. 11 C. Porter's Drug Sore NEW GOODS I Main Street, Towanda, Pa., ENGRAVING A SPECIALTY. AND -10 BOOK-BINDER, PAPER RULER. &.c • UTICA, N. Yi OEo. L. ROSS OF THE BEST QUALITY. M. HENDELMAN Is still i to be found at the OLD STAND wrrals FULL LINE ova AIID SWISS WATCHES, -- 1 A i .., { l' J_ E W E,it. WY'', STERLING SILVER AND FINE PLATED WARE, SPECTACLES '& EYE GLASSES 'CLOCKS, FROM . THE OHEAPEHT TO THE BEST R' ALL OP WHICH WILL EE SOLD•AT THE MISR LOWEST PRIM, • • i Cld. Wateheiand pnridry promptly repaired by an experienced knd.eompetent workman. i t ' . 1 11 , NDELMAN. - • septl6.tt A. N. NELSON:' 14 , DEALER IN .. i I 1. JEWELER CLOCIiB E'' ' S' El. NE GOLD AND PLATED 0 , JEWELER I , . ot ivory TorfetrAnd Sioctielso. S Portioul /Motion paid to ropaitilia. . Shop la T Docker 1 Froasbt'a Grocery Stol.. Ididn Wrest* Town e spit `New Advertisements. s - That is what a great many 'people 1 , are. doing. They don't kribw just what is the matter, but they have a combination of pains and aches, and eaci month they grow worse. The only mire remedy yet found is BRriN'S IRON BITTERS, and this by rapid and thorough assimilation with the blood purifies and enriches it, and rich, strong blood flowing to every part •of the system repairs the wasted tissues, drives out disease and gives health and strength. This, is why 13kowx's IRON. BITTERS will cure kidney and liver diseases, consumption, rheumatism, neuralgia, dyspepsia, mala ria, intermittent fevers, &c. so 3 S. Paca St., Baltimore- Nov. z 8.188:. I was a great sufferer frbut Dyspepsia; and for several • , weeks could eat nothing and was growing weaker eVery day. I tried' Brown's Iron Bitterl, and aril happy to say I now have a good appetite, and.am getting stronger! - Jos. MCC7AWLEY. BROWN'S IR9 i lq 1/3ITTERS is not a drink a4kl does not contain whiskey. ), It . ~is the only preparation!; of Iron that causes no injurious ef fects. ' Get the genuine. Don't be imposecrion with imitations. I ~~ In the Whole History of Medicine No preparation his ever performed such marvellous cures, or maintained so wide a- reputation, as AYER'S CHERRY PEcrow, which is recognized as the world's, remedy for all diseases of the throat- and lungs. Its long-continued series of wonderfhl cures in all cli mates has made it universally known as a safe and reliable agent to employ. Against ordinary colds, which are the forerunners of more serious disorders, it acts speedily' and, surely, always re lieving suffering, and often saving life. The protection it affords, by4ts timely use in throat and chest 'disorders, makes it an invaluable remedy to. be kept always on hand in every home. No person can afford to be without it, • and those who have once used It never' will. From their knowledge of it 4 composition and operation, Physicians use the CIIETZRY l'Ecronsf.'extensively in their practice, and clergymen recom mend it. It is absolutely certain in its healing effects, and will always,. cure where cures are pOssibiel For sale by all druggists. ; Remember This. If you aro sick Hop Bitters will surely aid Nature in making you well- when all else fails. • • If you are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffering froni any other of the numerous diseases of the stomach or bowls," it is your own fault if • you remain ill, for .Hop Bit ters-are a sovereign remedy in all such complaints. If you are waisting away with an form of Kidney digpv_uA, stop tempting Death this moment,,and turn for a cure to Hop Bit ters. • If you are sick with that terrible sickness Nervousness, you will find a "Balm in Gilead"; in the use of Sop Bitters. I If you are a frequenter, or a resident of a miasmatic district, ba rricade your sys • - , tem against the scourge of all countries— ' malarial, epidemic, billions, and intermit tent fevers—by the use of Hop Bitters. If you have rough, pimply; or sallovi skin, bad breath, pains and aches, and feel miserable generally, Hop Bitters will give you fair skin, rich blood, and - sweetest breath, health, and comfort.; In short they cure all Diseases. of the stomach, Bowels, Blood, Liver,Nerves, Kidneys, Bright's Disease. $5O will be paid for a case they_.will not cure or help. - nit poor, bedridden, invalid wife, sister mother, daughter, tan be made the picture of health, by a few bottles of Hop Bitters, costing but a trifle. Will you let them suf fer Vatious Causes— Advancing years, care,.sickness. disap pointment, -and hereditaiy predisposi- lion—all operate to tun' the hair gray, and either of theta. inclines it to shed prematnrely. AYER'S Hun VIGOR Will restore faded or gray, light or rift hair to a rich brown or deep black, as may befdesired. It softens and cleanses the scalp, giving it a healthy action. It removes and cures dandruff and humors. By its use - falling hair is checked, and a.new growth will be produced in all cases where the follicles are not de-, stroyed or the glands decayed. Its, effects-are beautifUlly shown on brashly, weak, or - sickly' hair, on which a few applications will produce the gloss and freshness of youth.- Harmless and sure in its results, it is Incomparable as a, dressing, and is especially valued for the soft lustre and richness of tone it imparts. AYER'S HAIR VIGOR Is colorless; contains neither oil nor dye; and will not soil or color white cambric; yet it lasts long on the hair, and keeps it fresh and vigorous; - Iniparting, uu agreeable' perflime. ' - • . For sale by all .ruggists. AGENMAGENTSSAGENrS! Far GEN. DODGE'S bran' mew book. entitled Thirty-Three • Years Among OUR . WILD INDIANS' 4 true record od the Auttuere TiiHrtrAnterrati Fenian' Erpn,iesce aawali oar Itidirms. WM ea at& lettrodetetiota - . By 'Gen. Sherman: Thlai sew wrote was at ewe subserilatifor by Pmegket Avec* as adios °Wad., and hy Gem. Sherynam, Gem. Orizee. Gem. Shcridea, Gess. - Mamma, and thossonds of Ztn. hunt Yea. Gas. Gassy says:—",h it the test boa' on bsditwl DA ever written. - Ills no,r Wits r (idetbodish , says_plt is a book elk:tame echo." , It is the may 4en tie sweowit of oar Palliasse ever published. fully tellta les their "inner life,' woe* doings, exploits. eta. lit is ' replete with thrilling CSPCTiellall be the Anther. end Of fa. nemallasits, Trappers,. Cow-bori.' tillaers. Border hutrians, ate., skridly portraying ilk In the Great West u it KW it. 434 thomenad impress. With Stied Severing* and F uprrh *. ChlVam-Lithograph notes islg. calm ham photographs nada by the U. & Government espreasty/or this greet work. AIiSIT•I This greed book Is now orit-selliag sit others 10 to I. No evenefiticel. Agents aver*Vllo to le ordimi a der. We wane 1000 more wits at ewes. Es choirs Territory awl Sp%;iat . Tama gars. Oar large drew leen With toll tairtleulus wet free. • Ism Ilpethains Plate seat Oa ochtslise toe a 3 cent stamp. addresethe sole paha. A. D. WODUI/NOTON A CO, Ilassiosa, c0m...• = SELECT 1 -POETRY. THE LITTLE SLACK 15103131!. •v oats or Te. We were a happy household doer, On the pleasant Pentland bUls; - land still when I think upon those dale Sty heart to the memory thrills, 0 tor the twain the motmtaln beck! The bees in the heather bells ! - wind the cushat'sCall in the summer woods, Andthe silent, lithely fella ! I was earliest up, and.latest out, And always in some disgrace ; "Twas a jacket torn. an =learnt task, • Bare feet, or a dirty tone. Off to the woods at dawn of day. ' -And lost on the hills at night, The little black ilieep of the household fold, - And always Insome sad plight. I had stripes to take on ever; hand; • I had lessons In every boot. But But nothing troubled me halt so much As my mother's sorrowful lona: , And o ft when the house was dart an d Wilk . Angry add wakeful in bed. I have test her kiss on to hot, dry lips, -And her band upon my bead. And heard her say: 14 Tor .Fact &waiter Then What could I rikiburaiM" Fling little brown arms about ber wet, And whisper: " Intl"! ! I'll try I try to learn. 'L'U try te be good. Oh, mother. for your dear sake!" And when I bird. I was sure to hear In the night: "Is Jack awake?" - Ileum end gold to-day are mine; Yet many my memory keep. And wonder and doubt how I have won, • I, such a little black sheep could not stray from my mothers arms. Was true for her love's sweet sake, And if I %Herd or faH'd, I knew 4tie ask—" Is Sack.awskeln Now I hare boys et ror own to guide, And onelis idle and wild; Do you tqnk I forget t'ae Pentland hills The days when I was a child? - Ah no 1 Ab No Imy little black sheep More close .0 my hfurt I take; - And when he strays, in the isole.mn night I whisper, "Is Jack awake ?"! And very soon his little hot band Seeks mine with penitent sigh, Be ?QM I want to be gOO4. To-morrow, I'll try: vD try I" MISCELLANEOUS. THE WEDDING HOUSE. There is ins certain town in Connecticut a small Bud pretty house which remains per. pettedly closed, , and ' which is never, ever fidornell, with a bill bearing the words " fot ale," or " to let" The owner of this bongo lives in Europe, it is said, and will never return to America. Within the closed doors the 'rooms are all set in order and tilled with pretty furniture fresh and new, And in the handsome best bed-r:som of, the house stands a Saratoga trunk' full of hulks' clothing, addle scrota a, chair-back bangs a beautiful bride's travel= ing dress of. gray silk, and near it on Ilk table, hat, gloves, and vail to match. Ax old woman goes into the house once a week sweep, dasta, arid "marmiges It exactly is the same e manner. Then closes and re-fati- tens the doora and *windows. The townspeople have grown used to the house and its mystery; but strangers „who make inquiries concerning it are sure bend some one who can tell them the story.l My informant was the old woman who.iprept the. house. is "There's a fund left, I'm told, t pay far the cleaning," she said. "Anyway It is paid for, and real good too. , Squire Lawton got me the 'Wedding 'House to do; it had to be a trustworthy person--and I was that. he knowed—to do the Wedding Mime. " A curious name ? Well, yes, it is. But we've wn't o' got used to it. It was because of tIA big wedding party there was there tholay it wu opened. It was • built by a gentleman that was going to be 'married. And'the party. But there! rm begin., ning all wrong s tan' last first ; and you want to know jest what the story is. ; That's norm]. I' airs . like to know facto. Ef you know tempt you can coat - redid them that goes on talkie' without getting the rights of things. 'Why, there'. !some here will up and tell you the Weddin g House is haunted. Why,l pshaw l I'd IL lielre come here at twelVe '' o'clock at nig tas not. I ha'n't never done it, but rd asli l eve, seems to me. Dunnoss everybody would. As for talk, why, some will tell you there's been a murder here. That's all folly, too. But I must tall you from the first. !Diann aver hear tell of the Pelhams? Well, their/ Anus s good old fMnily ; but heart disease don't spare high nor ,Icqr, as,l know of. There were the fade br others, that bad the prop. erty: between diem. Three of them died suddea• like: , one on horseback, one ill church, ono! at Lela, Isaac Pelham, he lived and married. He was hearty and 'handsome, and never knew a day's Musa, and was drowned at last, or he might have lived to be eighty. But four of his five chil dren, &upped dead, as their uncles bad, and only *Jo Pattie took after him. She grow up tali' andslim; and pretty; and lots of Young men fell in love with her. h "It was twenty years ago, and just before the war broke out, that she engaged herself to young Captain Deane, from West Point. 'lt was a love affair, if ever there was one. And those' Lwo wore jest made• l for each other. I used to kind o' get romantic my self when I saw 'em together. More a match, somehow, than of they'dbeen alike ; he so dark and kind o' gloomy; the, soft'. and smiling, and sort o' dimpled. "But something alters happens to 'true khurg. rye noticed that. The war broke out, and the caPtainhe went away with the others, and she went &bent lOoking so I4der hopeless ,used to feel like cryiu' when I.,saw her. And one...day there was a battle-,-I ' ve forgot which—aid there, in the list of killed and wounded, was Captain Eben -Deane's name. 'Twas an Awful I was there when she got the news, doing chores for Pattie's ma, and she was enough toirighku: you. " She Went down on her knees, and clasp. ad her hands, and lcioked up at the sky. and she said: " Oh, Heavenly Father, if I ever .forget ;My lost love—if I ever give my • heart or 'my hand to any' one else, may I die that very day!" • " Her mother was standin' them--a splem did'woman Mrs. Pelham was. " She screamed out with fright: "Hush, hush ! that is horrible! Don't my such things." " Motheil I mean it!' Miss Pattie says, strange and solemn, and whine as ra never seen her before--' I mean it. If ever marry, if .ever I let any Una be to me whit Eben was', may God strata me dead with my hand in my kilter's! Here, on ray knees, I swear to be his wife for eternity P and she began, poor soul, to imam mind, and any , the marriage ceremony through, and promise all the promises there are is that, as if she was talkin' to ghosts. "She was sick for a great Iskille after that, givaiiip by the doctors, and it vu a year before she was well ; bat time Comes and time goes, and folks get over things faster then rum folks know. And when Captain Deane had been dead Ave years, Mr. Medway began to pay attention to Ml. Pattie. • "There was nothing he mid do ladidn't do, and after awhile, as' was nat'al, poor gal, she got to liking him. Vie day Ivens over there rubhin' winders! I always rob 'em. There salt no avail jpgo . UNA' pub REg at, velar over thit6gbrii iv wham aline; iod.lirailitid it - thit: nutty altos when lasi, Paha* Attie% Unt i l:tune in. - 1 " Jana Goarly,!)* she, . 4 .y*Ore a plain s Gafeerhe wesatiOand a • member. You heard rattle Iska- Slat oath *bout' dwitys being true to ripe Ottgetsin „Deane. Wow, I think it is a thing bitter forgotten. I don't think she was Wbabild accountable' then ; sad she likes 14 jradsray, and he , a&ires her, and I eh:n*lll44lo glad to see any only atoll well settled. • Ilr ain't be God would not forgive *Wax like that. She wesdel4: ions four hours affsirinuds. nurwlat ton think, 'Jane', fil•Why not ask the domlaleP • 4 "Ctsdy you and Ibeerdionly_yon and I sliall'inms the ald. 'Pattie Mar law aliflhoundit,ky ; pet down lay:- *Mier and! set dont es the window all e .sual I -looked inward. afhw awhile mu :Iv Ms Pelham, It seems to me thatef , de "nut wandering In her mind, sbe sauft4'aceounteble for her words. !-Ifebbiltu ; .hatlehould. flat • u 4 lbettiono," says. 0 • but Pattie mays she Would cow* intuit' breaking that oath.' "'Miss Pattie oughtlo know,' I. aid. " 'Oh, ;ape, I expected you'd be a corn• fort to me e said Elm Pelham, and began to cry. "after.that ; I suppose they teased and !worried her until she gave up; - for one day weut into the Milliner's for a-ribbon for my hat, and she 'ens , making the :prettiest little bonnet, all whitibuie and orange bloa dents ' Who's this - foi, -do yon said she. . , • have to tell me,' said I. "'Miss Pattie PelhaM,' says she. dhe's going to marry Mr. Medway.' • . I held My breath and kinder gasped. sadn'tsa:id, anything,-and I didn't mean to; but it seemed awful to me. - I tried to think - Pattie* was irandering when she took that. oath ; bat you can't think what you please —at - least, l nan't—and when I was helPite 'em 4et ready I noulkt laugh and . joke kb the rest; but the w edd ing day was bright, and the bride looked pretty, and the new, sense was built and furnished like a picture, and they 'were going there directly after the wedding to stay a few days before they went on a trip to Niagara, which Wu the place for brides in those Aar, and. Pm told, jest full of lotin` couples every summer, attire on the grass kissin , each other and lookin' at:the falls. 's . t - "Iliad my black ilk, s and my *kw boa. net, and I went to Church, and I kinder Bd. (ercated until the 'bride walked , down the side leans' on her husband's arm. "Then I says to myself : 'She was de &ions, and wby should I hey set myself agaitist her being happy once The Captain' up in Keay,* game "Over at the new house, where the car. tinge drive, ldra Pellaun,had the wedding treat ready. People were' eating cake and drinking wine. The big trunk was packed, and the traveling dress wad ready tb pat on. ' , Brim Pattie (I couldn't think of hes as Mrs. 11;lway) came up the garden walk. • "Mer, 'Medway -sopped -at the door. 'Welcome home, deafest,' he said, and held ant his hand ; and his new wife . put hers into it. Then I, standing out • amongst the woes all in bloom along the "garden path, saw her face change, and saw her fall for ward; and ladies screamed, and men crowd ed up, and I was so upset myself that , things got sort o' dark and queer, and I had to sit down on the grassidot, and Came to find old Mr& Briggs holding her ammonia to my "It was the wont I 'could hare': thought of that had happened—the bride was dead! " 'Hereditary heart disease,' said the doc tor. So it was, I pew. But Mrs. Pelham, pour dear, couldn't believe it. She' died very soon himself. Mr Medway, rho mak an Englishman. went home to his own country, and before he, went he dyed money so that the ho _ stay as it is and be took care of. - "It's a good many years now, but they say he hasn't .married, and isn't likely to. And the people here call this the Wedding House, and _ there's them that thinks it haunt ed. But . , pshaw it's only just the emptiest ttOuse - that ever widr vait's lonesomeness is tort of spookish, that's all. And the lone. somest room lithe ono where the travelling dress bangs over the chair, and the big new trank—mark4d.‘ Mrs. F. Medway, 'Hotel, Niagara FaUs'—stands iu the - middle of•the room, waiting for nothiug."—Mary , Kyk—Dallas. No one denies that the postal card is .a peat thing, an d yet it mates moid_people mad to get one. This is because we flatus feelsensitife alopt having our cones pondence open to the eye of the Postmaster and postal clerk ? 'Yet they do not read them. Postal employe* hate tt postal card as cordially as any one else. If they were banished, and had nothing to read but a package of postal cards of a foreign book of statistics, they would; read the statistics. This Wild hunger for postal cards on the part of Postmasters is , ' all 'a myth. When the writer doesn't care who sees hie mess: tige r that knocks the curiosity out of those who handle those messages.. . A man . who would read a postal card without being uno pened to,lby `some stringent statute must be a little deranged. When youreceiveoneyon "Here is a message of soilittlo portance that the writer didn't care who saw it. I, don't care much for it myself." , _ ' he yot i look it over and lay it away and forget it. . Do you think that the Postmaster is going to wear out his 'young life in devouring lit. erature that the seitdeo doesn't feel proud of when be receives it? Nay, nay., During our oflicied lespesience we have been placed wherelre could have read pee. tel time and again, ; and no one but the All.Seeingy.ye would have detected it, bus we have controlled ourself and closed our eyes to the writtan tg ca ge, refusing to take edVantage of the confidence reposed in us by our Government and those who time trusted, us with their secrets. All over our great land every moment of the day or night theso little cards are being silently scattered, breathing loving words inscribed with a bard lead pencil and shedding information, upon sundered hearts and they are si safe as though they bad never been breathed. They are safer in-snort: listehmees because they cannot be read - bi'anybody in the whole world. • That is why it irritates us to hive some une open up ''a , conversation• by saying, Yon reruember what that; fellow wrote me horn Cheyenne on that' postal card of the 25th, add bow he rounded me up for not meth* biro thoeelgoods I" Now, we ean't keep all those things in our head. It rs. quires too mach of a strain to do - it on the salary we receive. A man with a very Loge Way and a tenacious inesiori - right kettp run of the postal aviespcnienea i 22 a mall *See, but we cannot do it. We tire net see. ouotomed to it, and it-rattles and mita we, THE POSTAL CARD. "AWAY D s WN SOUTH IN pIXIE. O O wake Psrilstr i dMbisteel HOME Was iu It was anaturday night in 1859, while Dan Emme ttt was a member of _Thyant's Minstrels, tier: looted in Mechanic's Hall, New 'York, that Dan Bryant came to mEm mett and : "Dan, can't yon get up 4 id 'walk aro d,' something new' 'and livelY,, for neat Mo day night ?" At that date all minstrel shows used. to wind up with a "walk armrad," the demand for new ones being Constant, and Emmett was the com poser of all used by Bryant's :band2 Dan, of course, went to work, but be bad done so much in that that nothing which sada ! fled him l'p , ted itself at first. He at length bit on the first two bars, and. any imposer cait tell how, good a'start that is in themminfacture of a - trate. By Sunday af ternoen he hid the works commeecing "I wish I was in Dikie."l This colloquial as ex pression, was not, Most people imagine, a I flouthern,pb.mse, but first appeared among the eheee*Ple of -,the"-$ O 4 : . Pan s hgd r. ' - • ... , "._, ' - •-'' . &nth" aria «Sabred 'hyr - shimmen 'at recites lying below-Mason and Dix' on's line.l hi the early fall, when nipping frosts. would crrertake the tented wanderers, the boys I would think ,Of -the genial warmth of the. section they were heading for, and the com mon expression would be, " Well, I wish I was in Dixie." This gave the critchline, and the balance of the song was origirug. , Monday morning it was rehearsed and highly commended, and at night a crowded - bongo caught up 4ie refrain, and half of them went home singing , " Dixie." The song soon became the rage, and W. W. Newcomb, 13uckley's Minstrels and others gave Dan $5 'each for the privilege of using it. A Mr. Wetting, CIO publisher, of New , Orleans, wrote to llm ett secure the copyright, but without waiting for: a reply published it with other !lords by a Mr. Peteks. 'of New York; secured it from Emmett for ti.ZOO, but Werling sold 'thousands' of liis edition without giving its composer a nickel. , Not only was he robbed of the profits, but the authorship was disputed ; William S. Hays, of Louisville, claiming it as - his own. Pond brought the matter, before a music publishers convention in New York and set tled the question 'of authorship, ,but Dan reaped ne benefit frem this tardy justice. Dan also got into, trouble about his song during the ski. It was considered a rebel song, and a sapient Maine editor editorially declared Dan, a " secesh r and that he should be treated esymcli, although "J)iiie" actu ally 'appes. two years - before the com mencement of the rebellion, nor, as origi nally written, was there a line which could be charged with any political hearing. The crowning popularity _of this ,well known .ditty was secured in'the spring of 1861, when Mrs. John Wood played an engage ment at the New Orleans. Varieties. "-Po cahontas" was the attraction, - and in the last scene a zonave march was introduced. AcreheansitCarlo Patti, Who was the leader of the orchestra, was at a loss what air to appropriate ; trying several, he finally hit on " which as ho played, Tom Mc. Donongb, the stage manager, shouted, "That will do." Mrs. John Wood, Dolly Devon.' port, Leffingwell, Mark Smith and John Owen were delighted, . cam e, _the touting marched on, led by Susan Denin, all singing " I wish I was in Dixie." The audience became wild with delight and seven encomia were insisted upon. Soon after ward the war brihs out, the Washington artillery had "Dixie" arranged for a "quickstep," the streets, - the saloons, the parlors ring with "Dixie," and it became to the 'South what the " is to Prance, and' the author and composer of "Dixie," hali, blind, aged and poor, is play ing a fiddle in a small music room in. Chios go to support himself, wife and -daughter. , -' Boston Herald. . • HOW HE SAVED THE rISAIH. '", The usual crowd of Autumn liars were petered together in the Store, occupying all the grocery seats—the only gross receipts that the proprietor took no pride in—when a little, blear-eyed, weazen-facl4 individual sneaked in by the back door slunk into a dark corner. "That's him," said the ungrammatical bummer with a green patch over his left eye. " Who is it ?" asked several at once. 't Why; the chap who saved a . train from being wrecked," was the reply. "Come, tell'ns about it," they demanded,' as the small man crouched in the darkness, As if unwilling that his heroic deed should be fraught out under the glare of •the blazing keromme lamp. After much persuasion, he began :- _ . . "It wa s' jest such a night as this—bright. and eleir—and I was going home down' the track, when rlght. before me, across - the ,zty a great beam. There it was. Pale and ghastly eels lifeless body, .and.light as it appeared, I hail not the power to move it. A sadden rumble and roar told me that the night express ;wit thundering down, and goon would reach the fatal spot. Nearer and. nearer ,it aPpinached, till, just as - the sow-catchier was about lifting me, I sprang aside, played myself . between the obstrne.. Lion and the track, 'and the.tmin new on nni harmed.' - ;Ths silence was so dense for a moment that one might have heard • a dew drop. Presently somebody said : I - "What did you do with the beam?" ." I didn't touch it," he, replied ; " but touched me." . : • - " Well,"! persisted the gtiestioner, "if you couldn't lift it, and didn't touch it, how my thunder did the train get aver it ?" " Why, don't you see ?" thmsad-faced man, as he arose from his seat and sidled toward,the door. ." The ' l obstructiOn was a moon-beam,and I jumped so that the &W -ow of my b ody took its place, and—" Bang I flew a ham against the door; and If It had struck the body of the retreating beio, there would have been a much bigger greasespot frescoed on the paneL—Drake's Travekr_'s Maga rine. . COULDN'T ENDURE IT. A yonag man in Detroit who studied medicine, and was regarded ai an uncom monly promising student, was graduated last Spring from the Medical Department of ithe Michigan University. During his stn `dent life he visited the sick isseiOnously as an observer and assistant, was engaged in many surgical cases, and everywhere demon strate:lbis remarkable adaptability for the profession. On coming home from college be one day walked into his old preceptor's Moe and said :; I' I have traveled with you several years and rem more woe that I even dreamed existed in this world. Now, the simple fact IN I shall never do it again. The thought of spending the remainder of my life surrounded by the wretched miseries of the sick-room, and being forever haunted by the piteous sights an active physician must encounter, is too horrible to be thought of with anything like indifference or equa nimity. •rn not do it, and there's an end of the whole matter." Remonstrance was use. lees. He gave up the results of ,years of study, and is now bard at work in a mann facttoing establishiromt learning a new buitil ALONE IN THE HOUBEI When the house is all alone by itself, in experienced persons may believe that it be. havesexactly as 'it does when there are peopinin it, but'thst Is a delusion, as you will discoverif you are ever left alone ia it at midnight sitting up for the rest of the family; at this hour its true disposition will reveal itself. • . ' To catch it at its best pretend to retire, put out the gas or the lamp and go up stairs. Afterwards, come down softly, light no more than one lamp, go into, the empty parlor and seat yourself at a table with something to read.' No sooner than you:have done so than yen will hear a litthichip, chip, chip, along the 'top of the room—a small sound bit persist,: ent. It is evidently the wall paper coming off, and you decide, after some tribtdatibn, that if it does come off, you eisn't- help it, 'had go on with your book. ) As you sit wiinyour book in your hand you begin to ho quite sure that some one Lia am. 4 141 Yknvn- 6 taift!' 43 .1 12 eakfignook' • . ilifif#Co* iherir it) Mine but the kitchen stairs. Sonsebodris coming up. Bqneak--ahap ! Well, lit it is a robber you might as well face him. Yoe get the poker and stand with your back against the wall. Nobody comes up. Finally, 'you de cide that you are a goose, pet, the poker down, get a magazine and try to read. There, ~bat's the - door. Yon - heard the lock tuns? They are coming home. You run to . the back door, unlock and unbolt it. and peep out.. Nobody there? But, as you linger, the'door , lock gives a click that malice You jump. ' By daylight neither lock nor stairs make any, of these noises unless they ere touched or tr'od'den on. You go back to the parlor in a hurry, with'a feeling that the next thing you know aomething may catch you by the back hair, and you try to remember ihere you left off. 1,,N0w it is the table that snaps and cracks as' if all the spiritualist knocks were hidden in its mahogany. You do not lean on ,it heavily without this result, but it fidgets Yon, and you take an easy chair and put the book on your knees. • * _Your eyea'wander up and down the page and you grow dreamy, when, apparently, the bookcase fires off a pistoL . •At least aided, fierce' crack comes from the heart of piece of furniture—soloed, so fiercei that you jump to your feet trem bling. • .You cannot stand the; parlor any more. yon go up stairs. , No sooner do you get there than' it seems to you that somebody • walking onthe roof. If the house is a detached one, and the thing ,is impossible, that ' makes it all the more mysterimus. Nothing ever moaned in the 'chimney-, be. fore, biit something moarm now. • There is a ghostly step in the bathroom. You find out afterwards it is the.tap dripping, bit you do not due to look -at that time. And it is evident that there is 'something up the chimney—you would not like to ask what. If you have gas it bobs up and down in a phantom dance. If you have a lamp it goes out in a blue eaplosion. If you have a can dle abroad plalnlienwraps the id* and falls • The blinde_shake as ifs band clutched them ; and; finally, a doleful cat begins to Moan in the cellar. Yon do not,keep a eat and this finishes you. You preten4 to reed no longer, and sitting with a towel over your head and face,. and bearing something below go "show, show, chew," like a little saw, you believe in• the I old ghost' stories: • Ten minutes, later the bells ring; the be lated ones come home ; the lights are lit ; perhaps something must be got out to eat. - Peoplii talk and tell where they have been, and ask if you are lonesome. And not a stair cracks. 'No step is heard on the roof ; no click ,to the front door. Neither bookcase nor tal•le cracks. The hone has ou its company manners--only you Lave found out how it behaves wan it is alone. AFTER THIRTY-EIGHT YEARS. A remarkable meeting took place in the rotunda of the Laclede Hotel the other day. Captain Moses Hilliard, of Texas, had just registered when the clerk said to him :-- "That old gentleman," pointing to a party standing near, "wants to see you." Cap tain Mose turned and said :—"Do you wish to.see me ?" "No sir; I don't know you." "This is your brother," interruptedi - the clerk, as he introduced Captain Mose Hil liard, one of the most extensive 'stock raisers of Central Texas, to his own brother Captain Fred Hilliard, of St. louis-Abispo, whom he had not seen for thirty-eight years. Captain Mose Hilliard was at one time part proprietor of the Laclede Hotel, but is now running 78,000 acres of stock raising land in Texas. Captain 'Fred Hilliard is a retired sea captain; living with his fatnily at St. Louis-Abispo, Cal. In 1844 the brothers started out from their Connecticut home to snake their fortunes , Captain dose coming West to Missouri, while his brother boarded u whiling vessel and made a three-years voy age around the Cape, locating on the west coast of Chili. He then went up by the way of the Sandwich Islands to San Fran- Cisco, and took command of the first fleet of coast steamers plying along the Pacific slope. He married a Spanish lady, and, tWenty-five years ''ago had . accumulated a goodly store of this ,Forld'aigoods and retired to his country home, iwberalas since lived. The last news he heard from - his brother Mose was from St. Louis, and be cording ly East a few weeks ago to see - his brother' and the friends of his boybood. From St. Louis. he telegraphed Fred Hit. liard, in Texas, but that gentleman had al ready started ant for this city' , on business xnmected with his stock ham, so that, he hails advice of his brother's visit here until the meeting - as above descolsed.7-Br. Louis Polit-Phrpateh. THE REAL PROFIT OVERLOOKED. A Baltimore man who lbangkf, him a farm two or three years ago was recently ap proached by a friend who bad some money to invest, and who asked: " Can I Ur: s pretty fair farm - for $l5, 000 r. " Yea, about that figure." . "And want to lay out about $lO,OOO in improvements, I presume'?" "'Yes, fully that." " And I can invest another $lO,OOO in blooded stock r " I think you can." " And $5,000 more in grading, .filling up, creating fish ponds, and in forth?" " Well, you' may get . through with that sum." "That's $40,000; anti' now let's Ague the income." " Oh, you don't need pencil or paper," said the victim, as a shade of sorrow dark ened tie face. "The income will be - about $3 for turnips, eft for potatoes, $5 or $6 for corn, and i almll calf or two at $3 a head. To save' time, call it $25. rn see you again In a day or two. Maybe rye forgotten something which will add' a dollar more. Morning to yon."— Wall Street Dail* Petit.- NEVER /MORE. Pm never quite alone, Around each Step I and Of the Eternal mind ' Some presence thrown. .., Though not In all MT heart, t Yet ever neatis - ; No loneliness I see; .4 i - if We never; walk apart Though severed tar from men In mountain solitude Or far from earthlApiod-- • Oe's with me Own. The peat, God-heart Is nigh ' To cheer mein my walk; He fills the way with talk, As heaven. high. • - —Anerw. TORY OP A DTAAWHORING' A Hew) Love Roosanee Bronabt to Liebe by a Jewel. A few weeks ago the•many friends of Mr. George Hopkins, the popular detective' ,ot the city, force, might hare seen, sparkling on the little lbws on the left band' of the APPEPSEN, liAllantpole,,aolitaire diamond 44,1 - :;:p 4l6l C4CrtglrcaelG l il* --4 0 1 piarginete - vi ,Hopkins' dress made it evident that there was histery.to that ring. Once the detect- lye remarked :—" There is a story - to that ring "—and then he stopped. With, his usual reticence he refused ito say another word upon the subject. 'yesterday. how. ever, a reporter lounged by chance into the office of Charplot's - Hotel. A young women and a little child were arranging their wrap, evidently prepared for a railroad journey, and waiting, it would seem, for their male escort, who was settling his bill at the desk. On the forefinger of the right hand of the lady gleamed the peculiar serpentine ring which' had erstwhile sparkled on the finger of the detective. The reporter inquired her same and history and learned the story of her lifeln Denver and the detective's work In the case. It wasd simple little love story, but it served to illustrate the reward which alWays attends patient and untiring love in a manner seldom met with in the prosis.c Walks nf life. Six months , ago the; lady came to Denver with her little three-year-old child. She had been deserted by a Worthless husband,. now living somewhere in Arizona, and left to fight %the battle of life alone: For several months she stopped at Char. polt's Hotel, for part 'of the, time as day boarder only, and•ag,ain 'as, a guest of the house. She occupied herself in legitimate pursuits and was generally esteemed and admired. An ex-hotel clerk of the_ largest hotel in Denver" nis one of her admirers, but he received but little consideration. The lady dressed in black and passed as a young widow. In Denver ' she lived under an assumed name. She had • married_, the man who had so heartlessly deserted her against the'wishes of her parents. and it was for this reason that she - wished to . hide her identity, and her name. She - would not let her people know the result of her miserable marriage. Meanivhile she still had a friend, who had been her constant admirer since her girlhood. Rejected for the worthless suitor, he still ,cherished her memory, and was resolved te find her and win her for his own. Ouelday the Chief of. Police here re." ceived aretter from this long.suffering suit or. The letter was dated at SC Louis. -In it the - writer deacriled_the Woman, and said he had reason to think she was in Denver. She might be living under an-assumed name. The case was put into the bands of Detect ive Hopkins for investigation, and by means of a telegram, which was called . .for at the Western Union office by her in person, , she was traced to the hotel firpt named. An in terview followed, ending in a stormy scene. The lady reproached the detective for fol lowing her up, and declared she would have . nothing to do with her present suitor. ."I never liked him," she said, "and ra like him less 'now that he has put the detect. ives on my track. Here," she continued, "take this ring ; he gave it to me ; send •it back to him and tell him he will never see or hear from me again." The- detective took the ring and wrote at once to his pa. tron the result of his - intervym. In reply came a despatch:—" Give her the: ring; I will not . take it." And this is why . the " de. tective wore the y ring. Neither party would socejt it andle was in a quandary. A few days after the gentleman himself—a St. Louis raerchant,--arrived in the_ city. He sought the woman whose face he bad cher. iished so long. The result was, she consent. ed to return with him. to her home, in St. Louis. It was agreed that . she would pro. enre a divorce at lice•and then they would be married. Detective Hopkins was sent for and rewarded with a fee for his services. He gave the ring back to the woman.—Dsm. tier Republican. HOW HE SURPRISED THEM. It is said that at some I'm-Ant in every man's life he I will do something to surprise his friends, but a chap in Detroit did more than that the other day. He was a comparative. stranger, who made hiA bradquarters in a. Michigan avenue saloon. Ho , was "old and 'ragged, and it was not always that he had a nickel bout him. .He brought in the fuel for the stove, helped to scrub out, and ,was tolerated on account of-. his good nature. Everybody played him for a halt-wit, and no one dreamed that he had it in hin: to create a surprise, =dew it was by rattling a think. Two or three evenings since, a boy twelve years old, ragged, barefooted, bareheaded, and with the stains of tears on his cheeks, entered the saloon and ,softly asked one of the dozen men in there fora penny_ to buy bread with. He was roughly refused, when up spoke the old tramp and said:, "Gentlemen, here is a poor orphan boy who has asked for money to buy bread, end been•refused.. lam only a peer old man ragged and hungry and almost penniless, but I can't• stand that. tve got' a whole_ quarter for that poor boy : 4 That was the first surprise. For a minute no one spoke. Then eight or ten voices cried in chorus : "So have. I:" and it wasn't five minutes before a purse of $3.20 was made up for the forlorn and htingry /ad. The old man rose seventy-five per cent. in the estimation of those who knew him, and the boy cried some more and went out with the money.l Two minutes later he and the boy divided the proceeds under the gaslight on the corner. It wasn't exactly a whack, for the old chap took $3 and left the boy 20 cents. , When it was known in the Sa loon fourteen determined men rushed out and cantered up and down, and declaimed by the great hoin spoon, but they didn't find the big-hearted old tramp whose heart had been touched; Ho had gone to refresh himself with an oyster stew:—Detroit- Pro Press. True Gam ciAnrturs. --Artemis Ward's grave is marked 11 a plain marble slab, which bi the 'inscription, "Charles F. Browne, known to the world as Merlins Ward; died at Southampton, England, 1867, aged , B3 years.", And beneatk, this - His tnemoryAwill always be a sweet and tmfacling recollection." These words were copied from . the letter sent to the, sor rowing :Author by Mr. Miller, the English gentleman who cared for the son in his. last illness, and closed bis eyes when he ceased to breathe. ,„.:,,,....,...,,,,,,,,,,,:::„,,,,,...v....,. • - ....... . _....,-......i,..,,:-..,-,....ri.'.,...-.. -- 141 ME ,ese, is Advmub 'oet dom. ITEMS OP INTEREST. frtercialag Facts Coiled thoses'4lere sad There. —ln Jackson comity," Georgia, an awn bit his attacked his owner bit his ear off, afterward swallowing it. , —Para grass grows to an ' us length in Florida. Near Orange C ity somo is grow- lag that is 181 feet long. —The pension . agent in Topeka, . Han., recently .shed the largest pezutiou ever paid out to one person in that district. , 11" was arrears to date and the amount was up ',ward Of $l,OOO. ` - --A few days ago at Laixonner, W. T., the infant daughter of W. H. Tattershall was slightly scratched by a _domestic cat. Py temia,•or blood poisoning ensued, and the child died the next 'day. —The pop of a pistol dbiturbed the con gregation of a church at Gloucester, Haas. Little Johnny Dow brought his father's re volver se a plaything with which to. while I away the long hour of worship. _ • Pcifice emit, has neently. *wed that an unloaded revolver is not • deadly . weapon . within the meaning of the statute forbidding tho unlawful carrying of such concealed. . —The Pall Mall Gazette accuses British farmer:p r of buying large quantities of Aper ican oleomargarine. working it up in rolls, and retailing it in the market as a genuine product of the English dairy. The prat ; is very large. - - —Quite mate in Araminta : " Yon • are suejta strange girl!". said Charley, "really, I 4 ton't know what to make of you." "Well, then, I'll teit yon. Charley," replied Araminta, " maken wife of me," Charley did so at the earliest opportunity.—Boston Transcript. —A young lady was drowned recently in a lake near Minneapolis, and a stainer was Bmploy?ci to cruise about the vicinity in 'or der to raise the body. This novel method of raising a body proved successful, the stir ring of the water by the paddles of the = boat bringing it finally to the surface. —;" Well," remarked a young M. D., just fiom college, 7 1 suppose the next thing will be to hunt - a good location and then wait for something to do, like 'Patience on a monu ment.'" "yes," said a bystander, "and it won't be long after you begin before the • monuments will be on, the patients." —An Italian scissors grinder' at Colnm - bus, Ohio, adopted a cl.ild from the Charity Home for Waifs, and after keeping it for three months tried to sell it for $3O. H - was about to sell it for e 5, when the author ities heard of his doings and recovered Abu poor unfortunate. The brute was not ar rested. —" Well, Tom," said a blacksmith to hie apprentice. "Ton have now been with me three months, and have Feen all the differ ent points in our trade, I wish to give you a choice of work for awhile." " Thanklec,- sir," " Well, now, what part of the busi ness do you like best?" " Sbuttin' up shop and goin' to dinnec'.... —A young man named names, While un loading timber7near Glencoe, Oregon, bad ei leg broken iii two places by one of the timbers falling on it. "He reached th e ' . lines while he waa yet fiar-ned - under the ' log; tied a chain around the timber, hitched the team to the timber and ;t was drawn off him. _He then crawled around and hitched the team to the wagon, elinibed on the wagon and then drove home. - . Ifil(Ler =—A waiter at a'cafe ' Paris undertook, for the amusement of me customers, to swallowa spoon. idea was to pretend / to swallow . it, but, to 'iris surprise, be did swallow it in reality Ho was conveyed, in 'the greatest agon , to a hospital, where he remained awed ' the construction of spec ial instronicn for the performance of an operation. - Tlics was performed successfUlly, the spoon which' was extracted. being 9i inches long. - —A • Connecticut thread. manufacturing company had planned to exhibit at a Boated Fair the old-fashioned way of spinning end weaving cotton in the,South, but have struck an mgooked-for snag. - Their Georgia agent writes them : " I had arranged to have one negro man and, four negro women go to the Boston Fair to 4 f ‘ ipin and' weave, • and should have been there now, but some ,fool circu lated the story that they would be sold when got them to Boston; and all thunder couldn't convince them to the contrary." - —James R. Airemill having been absent from his home in Hartford, Conn., and ttn.. accounted fore during a period of seven years, the law of that State presumes his death, and his estate of something over $lOO,OOO has just been probated.. He left i ostensibly tomisit Europe, and was last seen, so far as can be traced, in Portland, Me., on the 23rd of September,_lB73. The. Menai are satisfied that be did not cad for Europq and are of opinion that he sought some s 4. minded place in the White_ Mountains, thero to meet death by his own hand. _ —A serious incident with a comialaide to it 'happened on a Canadian railway the other day. As a - -train was approaching Versailles the conductor pulled the bell-rope as a si r . nal for the engi neer to stop f the train. Vie bell,-bowever, beli,-however; 'did not ring, so he left the car and clambered on "the top of the wood. pile on tho tender. Here he found a shovel, which he - picked up and threw tO the ettfii• seer to attract his - attention. Itfellbetwecn the engineer and the fireman, and gio latter having a longstanding quarrel with the con. dtictor, thinking the, shrivel lied been aimed at him, immediately picked up' a Winner and launched it after the conductor,' who was retreating to the cars. The shot was a good one,_ as well as Others which followed, and before the retreating conductor coal reach ahelte:r be bad received tiro ugly cats on the head. BURDETTEIS IDEAL YULE. No wonder the mule is a kicker. Were I a mule, love, I, too, would kick. Every' time I got a chance I would lift somebod3 higher than a kite. I know just - exactl3 - wiz! kind of a mule I would be. A ba3 mule. . One of these sad.eyed old fellows that lean back in the breeching and think. With striped legs like a zebra. And a dark brown streak down my back, and a paint brash tail. And my mane cat short, and my foretop banged, and ahead as long an a flour barrel, and I'd be worth two hundred and a half in any market, and rd wear aflat harness and no blinders, and some dai when some. man , hitched me up to a dray, and piledon a ton and a half of pig iron, wand Of weed, sin barrels of flour, a good load of household goods, and a steamboat . boiler, would startl i ng with it patiently and haul it steadily until I got to the top of the grade on the new road around North Sill, and right abodt there and then falling maple leaf, ilutteritutdown in a Omit of gold and crimson, would ;Beare me all but to death, end the authorities would have to drag the Irtseissippi Rivet six weeks to'fbul ail of that load and some of that driver, while- in three minutes after the emente I vonkl be trait (Filly browsing on the grassy heights that smile, above the silver Bowing river. That is the kind of a mule I would be. —Burling. am Haickeye.