MORE, PUBLISHERS. 01,1'11E 29. ERIE OBSERVER. BLI'NED.EVICRY 4,Arvan. r sr 0 , 1:11 AND M. M. Moon NJ r , opponne THE POST orvicg _ _ V • 4 V.O t N. Edlt.r .1 pod in %chance, within a uitlatta, $1 14,4 e is will be charred lii!lng to pay within the year, the paper •111 toe accouut led with • proper °Meer for col IF.RALb OF ADVE.ll2l.5l:iti .t aea Or leb tnak• a Naar. AM 75 Ow square 3 manna $1 00 . 0 1 010 Do* •• 15 •• 6 0Q 25 tllie - 6 75 . thaogyable at I.loasary, 610 ta.“1101, $.l ; 0 mouths, $0; V months, $ll .%5 1 I 1.1 •yuart, vole Ira'', :GU 0 month., $4l, 3 leJ al the Dueitaiss Directory at lib per anima t,* Card, over six, ea.! under eight, ri wrial soticea,lo marl a Liao but au advertise. artainir the Special Holler, for lea* than On• and others requiring. frequent , barite* in their -di be allowed two squares, paper, and card, for $l.l pace, the charges will be in proportion, ant the most be strictly confined to the leirltimate Waimea Pay went for transient a4vertUieuieurts required t,ns for yearl) advertising will be presented bait ...faction of 10 per cont. will be mode on all gado .rertineffmentn, •broVald In a4fackco tae NESS DIRECTORY. ii:so — A . —Oda* LE CEENEEEI "Block, viler Netaimeivor Store. Entrance on State Street A. GALBRAITH. -Ones on flth *trot, nearly opyagti the t-,, T. .4., SI.I4CLA/11, char to Steltdirt f Sint:Nerd MT La. DkeOGIST, Corner of State and 7tk St's, Dye .Statis, Glass. Ca/upbeat, /turning a, . 8041111 1 11, A URN+. Kelm Dealer in Feacy and Staple Dry Goods and au.o: • eqe- Sew Block, opposite Bruen% Hotel t LLSit is ktlfaalt 1100 , • • Snots, Shaw Findings, kc. Park Row, • ~/ %V richt a en oft s Exchange e., a rt., roe WILLIAM K. LAMM.. - _ wt ~yCLLJa •T L.A. resoo , inl t.. c4rnitr t•otweig'i Block, conker State Street and the Public URI t:DEN I.• - Other ID aosensweig'a Blu.l , upyosita o.;',.otraurf..o Opp Park, Erb., Pa. W. S. MAUI 1.16. leT, Office lo florroswolf. Hl,,rk, our th •rde of /aft, Erie, Pa. rte, Mow. 1tc.7.--*Zo V. K. WILII,II.Ir, ewes aad Dealer. 10 Gold and Silver taw, ant. ur land Warrants and Certidatica of IN-posit A 1.,, as the principal cities in tire Unica. Lail all parts ol ir) , for %ale 0111 e, in 111.1•14•111.1 . 1. Plo. k , roroee Erie, P.. M=MI J. e.Bll - 11..DiCIV, Retail deal. In ail kin& of English, Gennen and ,rdwaa, Anvil; Vices, Irony Saila, Steal, he. farina l'nm.gs, Machina Belting and Packing oppr.elte the Mal lion., Erie, hi- JEAIGHILM dk azzeocrr, R.TAIL Dvalers la lianlwate,Crocker), Glassware Nos 11 and 1% Empire Block, tomar of r(ftli and rt., E. I L. NAM() rll. a., , tatt,,uery, kaatkJy Magaziner, Cheap Pahhe*. fi•-• , \ ,o,papers, Gold Pena, l'ocket 11llrn , ke Wed Hotax, Erie - _ 114.11" t. r SUA •—• awn Barxey 4IF 0444. y _ au..l Amuutean Hardware end Cutlery. • , n , • • -«+, Irot4 •n.l n 3 areal Hoagie, i,ITLS . It I ..nt 11 .1. • Jo • 111 \ I. , tar•ti ANKi r.•, • • jijk•thi . II - i IA it li I VOLD •ii it J I • 11.- .11. SAN} OHO 4/: (U., .st., Sall,. hank • etio 31.• it lie l e.eit, A.e. "a the prinetpsi eit,• • • • . 3 ,, ills,* • Public Square, J HStl Cliatlit 0., se.fsetiorers of Saab, Door, an if I s d• 1.... eh et , -•••ii ,, y occupied hy Hugh 'loot, T. tilliCIA.1111r• rth ' ! , riViA•SlePTiugl 4.liTar".. EMEIRMEIMI frultA, Soh, Glass, Nails, Jiro.u.. Wo.deu, :woe Wass. tc- Teruo Cash Yt,. re twa So 4 t: lute Street, 4 dour, afwt. the Poo ,oih. e, !wriltit PA 1 NE ~,xxitlimpm *MCVAY'S, Drab,* tr, L'..a,i, &aka, at, I ,me ittiJ 11••ter k. east of State 4111..L.1.11/ Hi LI Chi. r,si, ta liPs 1910,L. 0.. r!6 aka.- of rut,ti , square, funueirly ueeu pLLJ V. Yypll t Co A. trEoilGli J. .1414i1117111. °mammon Moorebiika, End, desbar r Lad Fluter Jjoi — kTrii MeCiMTEM ..d Iletad deoilet lu Orocerte•, ho,tat,.u., Ship . IL) V‘ wire Sc , 141.1c0r4 Ent, B. it. Ft LLICKTON. S; 0 Hughes b1..4. State .4trirret, J tl MS H. FRANK 4.0.1 i. ula, has nottuled trout thr West, reva:u s tn. Jurtng the winter those a Istan tus ;711.1 :.1= .1 to middens*, corner 3d and French sta. VII PI ILE Nl l Oll A.P. Jobber, and frottall DeLL.r IL even des rl,O D.,roest.c Dry Goo.* Cary...tuna, tqi 12 +tale rtreet, corm: of Fifth, Erta P. ?YALU CLUTIIINO 4TOKM. rt. Itanateetarer to Ent ..Coe.lay Bandy &gutlemeo • fardehigg Goode N 0.7. Brown', Err, Y. ILLIAM 'TIIIOIII.N TUN , Leeds, Armament Eteedeasku bccurztel r and carefully drawn. Nies on , et Jas. S. Sterrett, flitocery SW* Cris, Pa. .1. I+. DOWNINti. xt, Jtsrici or rim Pe.r■ WIU practbee rn Era. County, ousel eV* prompt sad ikitidul entropord to ►L hoods, *Won so an At t... Cr (ogler In Empire block, corner of - - N B. caurcial, Joexam, 4, ;ikon of Foreign and Dotoestte Pry Goods, Mos " Warren Streit', New Yorit. RBI LS muyits or co. Iliougto to rimy sad Stopio Ds7 oktodo, 't. Moths. &C.. Ho 1 Brown's Mock, feria, E. H. AISICLI f . "Vim Al. Sharer, habhe spunk betweeu the Herta House sad ?Wann takes in tb• bort style of tine art and it& wtomaisa. ctrriaist. ``, bard, Erie County, Pa. Calleetlosi and woo. promptsea sad dlspate..l. JOHN W BANY - -- r 4 -1 lit , ” in Heatty's BulWiug, up -dun, Ere*, ANN 6r OD kreiebanta,iaai;tra la C0.,l Yloar, ue of Upper Lake Steamers, rabbi/ C t:B@Y di CLARK. I "ctu toc bniers is I kmestis sad baportsd Wiese T raft, Fish, OU, sod /gratis '" 7 &marl' Block, State street it* JOHN W. kVVAN. - - * ;weft,. and iletall Dealer in all kiatho ofrasey, 14 .1 , ar .4, and Dining Chair% No. 4 II 47 _ _ - 1 11AUSUALL. up 'LW+ In Tuarrutny ;lan beiktips, W. OLDS 4 CO., 4 b .1 •••./.. and Retail dealer* ift Wedlaed tk. el...ape/4 and but soy to ritth tdro...t.rrir Perth, PA,. Ps. 4 uor . . to g •144 r for family . Gnu or reochant k' %kirk,k.zr. D. L. Low, eilt.Mekll/I.L. bealet Itoetilipd Whiskey, lS the ir.sch it J. G. ` 4 ... at Wboltaato sad Retail, at No RO P IRK 11A1.1.. Lee:tuna, and Prigle 4.1 t kam tb. Part. Regain at ti. Raman C. , N., h Itnod Hour*, Iris, Pa. 4: 8K07 , 11111. Drugs, Medic Juts, Paint", OW 4, • N. 6 144.4 }lowa% Poi. Altmcki • *at--....L1.<4, surer, Britt...mai. nod Plated °°'• uht. cotkry. Fug 00 01 0 ithwn, %Inn, .ironKrie MI6 W it I di; FAUSLAR. up! !onion. an West India clouds Pnvern Vt•IN on, he, am, N.. F.rlr. Pa. ~.446•tru EicitxxL.tta Jr, - - ` 4 bors, sod -Wtieli4al• awl 'Metall (.1 Leather, rreach and Airelama Ricanagr, oud Rplito,Thread • •-t,o-.. G.1t‘.,00, Ribaudo, Hammers, • " 4 ' 1 ... Prt.. Nett., kr 4.. Muck auto 411( Lii HERM SYS & Sins Loewy Deem MUI Gesitig, -4 CM. ea. • e• • • ~.. . . I , . I . , —.... +. .4., ' , 144i.* , .. : i d I— RI 1.1- , . r ~;# - , . P-i-- . I . , •, e iiii g ' N 104111114 ink Mk , rl ''t , ... . - - - elk • ' : .... ..... ~ ....4 tii .., : 0 ! i . , . -.- I . . i • I. ' N - I , . ' - I=l On the morning of August the first, sixteen hundred and fourteen, the village of Ilatsbledon was the score of muoh lively bustle which rallied chiefly round the dwelling of Muter Simon, far• tier, blacksmith, and wheel.right for the town ship. Muter Simon's only daughter Bore—the White Rose of Hambledon; the folks called her —was going to be married that day to her cousin Richard Nieholl,'who had come to Hambiedon about a year before to work at the forge for his kinsman, whose strength was declining, and bad fallen in love at once with the pretty and warms hearted Rose. They were a very well matched couple of young people, for if she was as bloom' iog and sweet as her name, Richard was the goodliest man in that parish, and many another. She was nineteen, and he was twenty lsix— both of them in the full glottand excellence of youth. The - forge fire was out that morning, and if any traveler's horse had chose% to out a shoe near the village, he must have gone $ couple of miles further , to Wistlebaok, before the dunce could have een repaired. In Muter Simon 's cottage were collected half the women of the place, but Rose's chamber was the favorite point, for there the young maiden's toilet was being accomplished by half a-dosen of .her particular friends. We ought not to go into that Writer rious sanctum, I know ; but for the telling at our is Ism we should It tioroMs reont u rra o er rue nexus ut crowding gossips, and listen also to the remarks 1 of the handmaidens engaged in their agreeable ! tasks The custom of those days iris not re. coarkabh either for its picturesqueness or its grace ; but Rose's pretty shape and sweet face were proof against its disfigurements. She atood in the venire of the room, fair and blushing, in a petticoat of remarkable stiffness and a bodree of preternatural length, her gold °elated hair rolled up elaborately, and a highly-starched ruff lying close at band to imprison bet nand white thruat. =1 1=133311 =EMI! There was not one of the balf-down friends Po beautiful as Rose ; but one of them—the chief it seemed--from her being the putter on of the bows and decorative' paraphernalia of the dress, had a singular counteuence---cold, repel lant, and stone-grey. The blackness of her eye brows, which met and were depressed over her eyes. - gave her a furtive, stealthy expression, and her narrow scarlet lip', while they indicated a sensual disposition, showed also one of cruelty and vindictiveness. She was older than most of the girls, but still quite young, and bad preten moos to beauty which she was more ready to as sert than others were to allow. Everybody, however, Rose included, treated her with a cal tai* respect, for she was waiting-woman to my lady the wife of Sir Roger Bedintleld, at Haat. bledon Hall Her name wu Mistress Gilbert, and she was reputed to possess philters mod love charms, which in those good old times were held in high repute, not only amongst silly maidens but even amongst wise and discreet matrons. One *harm, however, Mistress Gilbert did not possesi—tbat charm which would have charmed Richud Nieholl's heart out of his bosom. Her disappointed hopes bad been a sly-theme of talk many a time in the village, and even Ross her' self had shared is it. Possibly that wss the reason why, when Mistress Gilbert's chilly hands glided so stealthily about her person, slight shiver kept running over her flesh. "You are told, Rose," said the waiting. woman; "shut the window, some of you. Yoe shudder all over when you are touched." "It can't be that her enemy is walking over the plait* where her grave is to be," remarked al carelessyoung body who looked straight at Mis tress Gilbert, mid then turned red under the cold scrutiny that she received from her cruel eyes. "Rose is too good to have an enemy. Every one loves her," said the waiting-women slowly. Directly after she had spoken she ipprosehed her lip to the white polished shoulder, and blew soh ly at a tiny brown mark, sad then brushed it with her hand carelessly. "You will have to blow a long time before you blow away that little mole , Mietress G i l. bert," laughed Rose; "I was born with it" "I am short sighted this morning—l mistook it for a fly :" sad the waiting-woman began to ar • range the starched rut. Rose would have been glad to dispense with the honor of Mistress Gilbert's company at her marriage; because 'Richard Nieholt did not like her, and also because the waiting woman', aspiration after the handsome young smith, of• fended her feminine prejudices; bet Mistress Gilbert invited herself foe the purpose of &east ins the bride, and even loot ber taste and shill in composing the stars to be wort es the coat- Bios, so there was io *wadies her osid, uneores fortsble presence. Whim the seremosy nearer in the obainber, and Rose's beauty was eclipsed as far as could be by her slit olothiagy ate was ushered into the living room; where were hue father, Ili shard as Ilse as herself, and the male friends of the family. • Richard received her with a Ise helmet blush, which was more softly reflected on her own titer, and, after a abort interval, the whole sampan; fell into order, two and two, to walk 1101081 the green to the church, where Parson Phillip' was waiting to many theyo . ung,pair. tidy Be. dinleld and two of ' ha da ughters had theaght right to honor the owy by etweisig - Woolf on from the elevation ofthefeecillypow, and. Anwar& to praise the node Ore g!she Wbitir ilta3Lls a. uillalfutlilo, NutTn a tarressi V ► ►aaaa; MAIM INN* 1J Fat up thot &or ammaatala aids The lowan easdkiently **pp. To 'kora the wild dimwit Whs.. Nit dila* abysmal apaalawa What rower hi. dasiaw fast *all day Wham polls girt his path siesta! 4 6111111 P omen aageta pumha hi. way, Al azgaly as Ow blotto pound Ile nay not ahrlak vibe* saosisiag hie Tempts Lis tha daserroas Ash to dare; Diana the weak, who Hamm watt, Be boldly seeks that awe air, asse la the weld amataiirdeebs His dautless Wert bests asetlamayet; For tar Moose the soar* Mem, la Reams his tract le firmly laid L sward, still upward, in his course, - Where roaring through the mountain cares, The mighty winds expend their Wee, Which all onshrinkingly he brans lite J►wdK grillb may interpose, And Ulm tart obetntet his path— Though death fere on the track he goofs. The banter smile, at Na►arVs wrath Nus, tncseAlts rsygwil toonstato's crest Cowes Tablas to the plata beoesth, A mw, *Ledo whoop vaults breast Are hid the seeds of lie and death The hoot ceitatoht, see bead, la !NM" able' Cie Weasel peak, oastadtel of the Conan dread, Whose deadly alto dallte delta leek From 40 to elilt, Et daring bold, Tbe boater still nrult doth err, Valli le dingingfootsteps bold rpoa lb* ehaaaale awful 'err The Odd tralebler tam. with fear AM tram Its tett 1=101114114 The ball rittiMs Um quick career, AM 'math tL. houlAr's Ain It dies. (Nov York Daily Nur, rp. Magus' Houshold Words THE DILTIIII MARX. 1:=Ell Neva Cf. • lOodOs MI - Loci/Winfield per sister Elisabeelt wool. have given half their AA clothing , fpr a tint mat of her *heels : they were but sickly young igentle.womea on Otiose complexions Mistress !Gilbert's various wishes bad no effect at all,; unleis it were to goat* theta deader sod dullest than even nature -4-whe colored them in one of dulle st penurious pal. litl moods--had ever intended! When Rose walked out of Ohurch, her pretty blue eyes dowocest, and boldiug Richard's arm the folks inside blessed her sOicy as becametb; place, and those outside gavetkem a cheer, after vithitth the belle rang outs fartionsweddiog peal Mistress Oilbert's elayey vittige looked colder and -more clayey than ever as they disappeared. Nobody heeded her, and she did not choose to follow the returning party to Master Simons's bonne ; but when my Lady Bedinfield, the rab. ble being dispersed, issued stately from the fam ily pew with her daughters behind het, she wail graniocisiy told that she might walk wits them to the ilia Perhaps my lady loved a little gossip )is much as if she were a mere common person; and, if so, her waiting-woman was just the pe*n to gratify her, not being in the least scropukus that her intelligence should be fact rather than fiction. "Thily are a pretty pair of lovers, I'm sure, and Ri;the's dress was uncommon gay ;" said Lady Bedinield, who bad a mother's heart. "Bo cheek could not have looked fresher if it had i been painted. Gilbert, your new wash for th 4 face is • quite useless ;" querulously oh, servedlidistresa Elizabeth : "I am sure it dries the skin." "Natural roses have the finest bloom," replied Lady /Winfield, who had been a beauty herself, and w4s still a ham/some woman. She some times had a little spite against her daughters for being 4o unmanageably plain. "Role Nieboll's bloom looks natural," said kfistreis Gilbert with an air of sarcastic respect; "it looks even brighter than nature " "Yob are jealous, Gilbert ; we know 111 about the yodng suitor's indifference to black eyes when blue odes are willing to shine on him," returned Lady Redingeld, with a jolly laugh—she was above caring for her waiting womans fellings, and, besides, she had just been touched and pleased; by the pretty same in the church A muriate always refreshed her, and made her think Of bcr ; own youth. Mistress Gilbert face blushed lividly. That taunt was no; needed to increase the deadly ha tred she bad honeeived for Richard and his young wife She dropped behind and would not an swer alien spoken to. Lady Redintield called to her just as they were entering the house, and amid in some tone of mockery : "If Rue's beauty is all 'paint, why don't you put it on too, Gilbert ?" i4I did not inv. it was all paint, my lady., I wish it were.., It would be the less harm," 're plied the waiting woman. “if it is neither nature nor paint, what is it'!" asked lady Bedinfield. "It is the devil's beauty 1 saw his murk on her neck to-dly," said Mistress Gilbert. Lady BediOeld laughed again, but this time io a less load' and aasttred manner. filmsressiy any one in tlitam vary good old' times was alto getber free frchn the black plague spot of super.. stitioo, and shi was neither better nor wiser than her age She lentercd her house in silence, and Mistress Gilbett, pacing her room that night ve- Plem i 4,41g£4, wild. km %mai. rival's fair fame the firt,t . deatil3t drop of that cor: rosice hi.re I ere long to .1.1• blacken mud 14. t it tot. ri) TM. b l eArfruvio. ~1 ito• IM , ..i , ler‘ at lit din ii. ii H al l sa, „,. I. ~,, I mt.i i ,...., il . i uert passed from one to it), 010 , k ni'l odo,g on .be young lad 4.-3 There wie, eittuP:ie ) that dey , especially, there Iran nn.• v. ui.e V.. 4 I airi uato..l Sir floury Om 0- diA, vetwut !I. it• 1 .i 11, 5. , 1:• e girl:- would have been proud 11/ i 1. 1 11 11.. ; tor, mat unly was 1„,., / handsome, brave, and accomplished, but he was also wealthy' ?tlistresa Lucy stood before her mirror, fully dri.ssul ; but there was diasatiaftu , 1 tion on her ioulitenance,—sbe had small, deli cats featurett : ,fiut her skin was cloudy, her eyes rie..e lacking 16 1 brilliance Mistress Elizabeth use even wrirseJavored; for her visage was long and Wan as ; well as colorless, and her eyes Were not ad perfe4tlpset as they might have been The waitingiwoman had suffered something from their toupee that morning, as her eluded sod hurried mariner! betrayed. i.You will soon be of no more use to us than a mole, Wilier i o Can you not see haw thick toy complexion his Can ?"—said Mistress Lucy, pointing st lie !OMB reflection in the glass ; she always laid th tilanie of Nature's detects on litr abigail "Yes, Mistral's Loy, 1 • see—" she hesitated a minute ' opened the door to look into the pas. sage, and then Whispered, houviedly, "I have a powder that I t from Miastreas Turner in Low don; but if I let you have some my lady must never know." i "Ab, good 411bert, I will not tell bet; speak low that Elisabeth may not hear Row does this powder sOct one ?" "It preserves youth, makes the skin smooth, and gives it I' bloom like a little child's; but it is highly dangelrous." "How dameMosa ? Lit poison 7" Mistress Rillitabetli, overhearing the naysteri. ous whieperisagi crept stealthily behind bet door, watched thrgh • chink, sad listened. The ar civil of Sir 1344 Cavendish bad sown jealously bourses the niters. "It is a Mineral poison; bet with care and in very small quentities, ilia safe. In a week you would be as fair as Bose NicEoll. Will you try it ? or do you fear the risk r' ~o ! I will cry it. I would try anything to have a face like the young smith's wife; bus promise me not to let Elisabeth have any." Mistress Gilbert gave the required pledge, and then stole moray to her own chamber to fetch the powder. The watcher looked for he! return impatieitly. When Mistress Gilbertrelered, she brought l in bet hand a small boa ebony, which she opened with a key attached to a chain hidden under her ruff. Etlisaboth listened' breath lessly ; but she could not catch all that was said. But she saw a mall past given to her sister, and by her, after &portion of its matelots had been eittaeted for immediate use, deposited in her jewel box. Hoe that taken out was used, she could not see; for Mistress Gilbert ouried it to where stood the ewer, and basin, and thither Mistress bkey went to awl, it; betake heard the waiting woman say, " will sink—mingle it well with water ;" so she misjostured abet it was something to be swallowed, and determined that, she herself would soon have a Aloe se felt as, Acre,; the smith's , wife, if ie. oely depssied on • takieg lire - powder bidden in the jewel box. The application of the powder made to pew segtible improlement in •Mistrem buy's thee thitt day, and fir Henry Oaveedisb was by no means °berme& out of his lenses; but, in they purse of the week theta was tevtattlye eksege for the better, and Mistress filisibeth--who bad sot yet found an poteetly to lay her hands upon any of the pow eres more sad more }a lt er to vett by its beiutifying of .Ones evening Mistress buoy left her slain wish' (ha' jewel-box key fasteced to it on her table, sad Asir sister, who had sever ceased wash*, asaß• ed. beef af this Opportunity to pessmi berimpi f . li ii good podia of whet reiss. ilk ism • -4t 61 50 A YEAR, .DI -ADVANCE. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNINI, AUGUST . .„ i nedi a t e dy mixed a IR* Of it with water, sod drank it • Very soon the wis seized with pain, nausea, and sickness, but not so severely as to enforce greater caution In using' the powder, for she re, patted the dove daily. ',She suffered, but her skin aequimd a alearneis which it bad never worn before, and this would have reconciled her to anything short of martyrdom. 'Rer store bet ill exhausted, and theekey falling no more into her possession. she was obliged for a time to de sist from her beguiling experiments.— Mistress Lucy, however, still steadily con, tinned htr appllicsti' she uted the watts 1 in which the powder *solved as cosmetic, 41 1 — it —but, though her comp ! exion became clear, it did not gain the mush coveted bloom of the vil lage smith's wife Both the sisters would oeea. sionally visit her in her opttage, and as Rose's beauty was on the blurb always when th e y so honored her, they went away each time more emulous and more envious than before. At last Mistress Gilberts ebony box was empty, aid no more of the powder could be obtained, until Sir Ro ger Rediatleld went tip •to London with his family, when the celebrated Mistress Turner might be induced to part with more it i priee something like twice • weight in gold. Illits. tress Lney was very in s tient at this delay, but at length, though Mis ts Turner was then in. trouble, for the murder of Sir Thomas Oreebts7 in the Tower, a supply was obtained from another person, and the beautifying discipline was recom• menced by the elder sister at mite. titer L some more deadly ingredient was now d with it, or it was unskilfully prepared, or; A t is *till more probable, Mistretta Lacy used it, ins V I cautiously, and too often, it now began to work the muscles of the face, end the miserable girl awoke one morning with her month drawn on one vide, , and frightfully disfigured Mistress Gilbert, terrified at her appearance, and rightly attribto ling it to the cosmetic, to shield herself from all suspicion, immediately exclaimed that her young lady was bewitched—and, as all new or ill' understood disease was, in these good old times, laid to supernatural ipfluonces, this was readily believed. But, bewitched or poisoned,, poor young Mistress Lucy', days of vanity were past, and she would nevet,oharnt Sir Henry Caven• dish, or any gay pliant, with her face again.. Mistress Elisabeth was so sancta Awaked and, grieved for some days that she forgot to profit by all the opportunities that, at this crisis, fell in her way for appropriating the powder; and, when she recovered her spirits, and looked for it in the jewel box, she found that it had been re moved. At first she thought of frightening Mis tress Gilbert into giving her some by threatening tell Lady Bedinield; but caution interposed to remind her how many petty secrete of bets the waiting-woman could employ ageinit her if so disposed. Therefore she determined ilk wait until they returned in the spring to flambledon, when she would endeavor to get at the precious store kept in the ebony box jowl/. Lady Bethuneld devoted herself like a poi mother to her afflicted danglitartynad,athen bad radio& va alai{rinesine7- bows -.where tha only saassealeata we're auk u her health and spirits were far tooabroken to enjoy.—they might be seen almost daily wandering .through, the shrubberies together, or sitting under the troles Pour Mistress Lacy could not bear to be seen by the most intimate friends , or even by the 1011 gained ground Mistress Gilbert was one of those patient ha. ter', who never balk themselves of their 'avenge, by rushing upon it permanently. To sereette bLr own malpraetiees, abe bad said at Ashl, that Mistress Lucy With bewitched; but it alid not lie. curt a her thou t.• turn this turbo furtherance of her sehemes against I{ a-a Michell One lovely Julie evening, howevet, in pafeaingby cut tage, she sftisa a gathering of the village good• who told her thlt, the White Rose, her deter led tivul, bad ju,t got a little son; and, a week or twolater, she saw the young mother herself standing at the open window with the child lu her arm, and the stalwart smith leaning in, ma, king gentle paternal advances, to her great and laughing delight Mistre s s Oilbert's heart felt like a lump of molten lead in her bosom at this picture. She itOpped and looked at it wickedly over the iatidge for i§ticrul minutes, and then rushed rapidly homewards. tier plan was ma- Wring. A dreadful seem greeted her when she arriv. eJ: the house WWI in an uproar. Feverybody run. ring hither and thither, calling for this thing and that, in frantic haste Mistress Elizabeth was she was dying, dying in agorae.; her shrieks could be beard half over the house 'She is poisoned," said Lady &Ain&ld, 'who wan shuddering and weeping by her daughter's withering form;, but Mistress Gilbert, bending over the bed her ash•grey face, said: "No, I have seen there convulsions before; she is bewitched, like Mistress Lucy " Every one in the room paused aghast with their remedies, but Lady Bedinfield said, "Who can pursue our family with such a relentless ha tred'! There is worthy Parson Phillips coming to our aid, let him be admitted." While the minister recited bin prayers, the. tress Elisabeth died. "She has been,poiseued," he also observed, but the doctor, not being able to name the ding that had killed her, solemnly eountenanced Mistress Gilbert's idea, that s he had been bewitched. The waiting womaa was not long in discovering where Mistress Rlissbet b bad found her fetal draught. Advantage had been taken of her absence to break open the ebony box and abetreet the coametiez powder Too large an internal dose bad done its work for ever. From the time of her sisters death, poor Mistress Lucia health also began fast fn decline. She bettarrie subject" to long Sts of mslancholly depression, and wore than ever evaded seeing , strangers. Still She would go out of doors, and her favorite lima wee a sunny knoll imtheplan tatioos, where she would sitter hours wish.eith. er her mother or Mistress ailbert. Any sudden noise; ens the light of nhird. from one rionoish to another would cause her to tremble Aionsuls sively, as with-overwhelming dread; for.theow girl bad heard it *althea she was bewitched, sod the Wm worked in her i ticeantilabe believed is. It happened one alsg while in the wood, se usual, that Rasa -with her baby in her Brute on ber way to the Haiti taileaw him to Lady Vtedhreeld L as she had received comman d s to d6.6:- . .pisseketkitiMef Mistress Luu arid the waiting woman. Nsiterviagm inga blithely as any bird, but never sotieedithe two lififfif the trees; but Mistress Lucy began to auddirlild cry out. ' - "Is it Rose Nichol) that hag bewitched you, ..ftlistress tneyr' asked Mistress Gilbert earnest ly. "Yes, yts," replied the nervoult . dieattire, fok , lowing the retreating figure with wil4 vies: 4 'l always thnught so tly . devira murk upon bet wit the day she was matiledreried the weithsorcooso Viugephstally. When, they retuned Wan ks *idiom Lucy toldhor tkuther tbitll4 l her 40tPluidirk/WM!. illness had been Mime d . mpg her y thitspuice oflteee the. imitbik.wifeai#E,4o din sight of her threw her intis,ootivultimus tomb as those io which iset,iiister (tlO4. 14141 414 11 , 6 0.4 was troubkid, but anapitions.; She 4011•41#1,lit husband, who was rep:Mirth* ffkr rather than sagaeity s and reposed to hate Rose tried atrial of she iosaliolir iddratitb. liiib 1==O=ZI:1 MEE Eln ISA , I 4 {-2 , 1 ) - kr 21, 1858, it their boaktess to Oioisi . plite'6 plies tilacciv.' ering witches andhtinging the, to punithment. Sir Roger coaseattai, and Mistress etilitert un. dertallsg to potful a. witchinder, ionnecie, un roue Be.. was ;ciliated to bin at a napes. person . ,and, full of the isPoruutae of his weribto idles, the pricker went to the ectitlra, house, when ie. was .st his, Corp. Mutat Muth also was. away from home, and Rose, with her . 14y Weep* her lap, at sewing dileseatly, like the good homes wife sndkossensastkar that she was. The picker obtained an estrous into the oottage by pleadiag that be had walked fai and , was the ea the anseapisims Rose bade him most himself, :ad gun hia' a some re freshments Presently two of the village women sauntered in, - oetessibly to see the baby, bat is reality, by pre-eoneert with the priekepr, to help in the examination. They all began to talk; and presently led the conversation round to the subject of witches and warlocks. There had been many hundreds of wicked and cruel eteetr• lions in England during retest years for the crime of witchcraft, andßose bad heard of them, De others : indeed, a witch had bees swum and drowned in Rambledth Inifhpont within bet oWn memory. IThe 'naiad great oommlsera lion for thie old woman, and said that she baler' a many tuifortunatet were the victims of the malice of their themes, ruler than real erimliele as was pretended. "the picker .took mar* it et this remark, perhaps becabaq Mistreat ailb t's bribe lay heavy colds conscience at the atom nt;. and, thinking to. daunt AM) he exclaimed, at she herself was a notorious witch and pribliter, and be was: there to prove it. Rom started up; and, when the two women approached to lay bold on her, she brake frost them, and rushed out of the debt shrieking:— "Richard, Richard, help me!" - The hammer was not going is the forge just then, and the smith heard him. Clutching a stout cudgel, he ran to the apes • and, while the two assistants decamped, he seis ed the pricker is a grasp like a vies ad, without waiting for as explanatlat, proceeded to belabor him so sound ly that the'siserable official was likely to have a skin full of sorely-aching bones for a mouth to come. When her hualmad, pawed 2 Rose i p id, bitter! z weeping; " He is a witch Wortleherdr , and dealares that lam a witch. Ile Mime here to prove it. 0. where, where Abell we fly? You know, dear husiemd, that I ea year awn UV , wife, and no wicked witch.. 'Don't you lover She clung to him beseechingly. In those good old times there were few ties of blood or of at fetttion that did not break ender this terrible se. nation ; but the smith loved his Rose deirly ; and, haying an intense antipathy to the manipw. Lesions of such odionsgettry as the priekers, his wrath was so far increased by the idea that they might have bees euereined on his young wife, as to find it indispenaible to beat him again, and then throttle him until he confessed that be bad received a bribe from Mistress Gilbert to amuse. Rose. A second shaking inadelkitoring the instrument with Whiehle proposed prich fee the devilfwasselt v which alloniultes bore on their persons. -This isstrument was a steel needle with • hollow handle, into which it retired seder very slight pressure, coming out again when that pressers vas withdrawn, so that though it appeared to run into the flesh, it in reality.tild not break the skin ; u the devil's mark could be pricked, as was wetted, with Out the witch feels mid, without blood following the meehmitam 'mettles this in ismos .- pi ece D e and, with its lying witness trputillessal a poor innocent wretch who, after contrietioo, was tortured into ten feesing every cseptiiity that the diseased imaginations of wicked or supersti I tious examiners could devise. The smith was something of a archaic himself, andiatmedi ately discovered the secret of the instrument, which he determined to Carty to Parson As lack would have it, the minister coming across the green it the moment, be hailed him to come in, and refitted what had been threatened against Rose. "These common. puckers are common heaven l hope- you have ," the parson glanced significantly at the cudgel, as mach as to add, "used it well I" The smith sodded affirmatively. The pricker was trying to tusk off, but Risk ard stopped him and said no—noe until be had been before Sit: Richard Bediadeld and halal judicial whipping as a atoms, and' then a ducking by the village folk; who would be glad to give him one when they saw how very readily they might, any or all of them, be proved witches tied wizards by the painless ' trial of the prickipg instrument. A good number of the rude, Mid gathered at a respectful distance from the cottage, waiting for the issue of what was going otfticte,, the news of Which the two mottles had taken pale% to spread • and, when they tray the official dragged °tit by the smith, Pint* Phillips' fcillFw. ing, and Wee looking out at the doorway, a fed of them felt glad that"the pretty white Rose of their village had escaped the dangerous trial; but when the smith came amongst them and u t hibited the trick of the . witoblinder'e needle, nothing wield WWI them except the summary administration eljnatice there and then t - hp the bruised wretch skas hauled off to the aaji _pond, ducked until he was haltdead, and the 9 driven out of the village with hoots and eueratioes, Mistress Gilbert was foiled in her revenge for the present but, she obi with a deadly teintitY: ~T hough he was not .n true witchsfinder,ihat does not make Reee.Nicholl less a wit, .f' And the village Imps to lookenldl,l on the smith's wife, and to avoid passiog near ter door, lest, she filund blight the* and theirs irith Ike; evil eye. , Tha tay sals. of whelk was fatal is time good old times. Na ose maid less bear it 'With infoolkii *ad ibis poor Rulle well knew- Till see hertelAated sild feuyi, poisoned , her kife .with tie - dread that the general feeling thligltt ex. 1 teeditsilr to tit busbiost he' father laid lien' ehild. Sinnetises she wished die vets vieta, ea the relyirsy of mops Mow: the iadigaiiisso wed ernatieso4,hosi hews at is ildietcl 1 ,0 1 . 4 141,1 women o. ppbably .0 ~ meooe4 of liltOkra!' ,O!, herselfT • Six moOtheaftex the Mt of the pricker, Ms tress Bast Bedisleld • fted;Masat the odd rimers, was thaßisiwited boos bewitched was tented, iritit thericks that it rtes Rae Nioboll, Rose, Nichol' o 17, who had 114:1 Od b her the spell that had estfoyed halt. ' ' - • is Every !ealsivitiv tbst happewed is the tills Walk Acs 1i0.t0., the qbarse of the fi . oviny i i ,If ma old • Orfitsti W he* age s BAR , , .1 1 witched - pits or hie if , s baby, pedal Cr llets t wee/mem Rem lad tekslmil It. it s Me% . I ed, Rose ' 14vheti . AMdictioK eik / . bellY # 0 filgfiltk;ll#4). / ri l • thil t lOW' C 1. ! 114 i AS bead 1 0 6‘i .i ir n , 4 44 11 ff e rir it r , 's.s 4 an K „. A, 1„ 'IR . , W 4 : 7 0 4.5.P 91 40 2 ?! - B Vas*.'; ' l l . . _ hec ..4, tWfi'lls P , Pu enWPIFs .- * ?OP*" >44 • ";' * -1411 fillftegat Ol t her sus one . , kinsairer , .. • ' , Aosilditiviih sawoirw. Mistress 011hert. so fOnalf Verllll4llil ' ' IV. ' ' . .itrilail S . libtilbge tie 1 ' l O4 ;t1II„st 440,4* Ohorouier ele.. :A .„' _ - go' TaliPpfk Wok 'PAO tawttioNc..* *.e0*r.,m4411 woin•- wok •" tale add - sahftitt it .4,ppoi r o t i o mmaa.w ,o . ,,wistwipsia,r jolittarteltkoitt" miktaitiral intgiligs , 4 0 :i407,9,1 ~. ~ 1 41 1 2 04i t sit# 4faittitiei: air& iitri'iiii 46/sufts,.s. 4 ,- ~.. •,, :;. '. ; soi #0,14).g. ,iisiks of sat wooer WM sot soak •,1 eat4loll,4''. S. • '-' l .. .01,14,0 siisoolios qt vow OfsboiliksikrOsiewrourrritiodwildegeso• i ill i e z t ElkiMpAA= . Ihrlimmiliberasiowdef-wirimulrowL -1 •• ; ••-.. : • #llolo4.balig - aspi..o 4 - 3 L •Oi rat is* gAilaidtp att. a• .• I vezxl*sTratei, av, 434) I,of ,w IMISMI ed to hie: Wei abititantriWhirbrd am her and no later ago thaw *trombone lelday sight. Al the speewei were inanordintely united, ad carried Won Sirlad two other arege as 11 44 Is vain did Richard 16eboll swear that at the tine whoa bie wite wore, Mated to be prevent at the horrible 11101Will111 at the witches' Bs66stk 4 oho war sleeps hog eadoesehly at Me An be voi told that the devil Medea hue by patio' g a Apaquoie ot her bar plow that The spighe not 4*mm her now , tumid alirose. The poor smith was Dearly sad- UNA ink *boi marts seta *ea wake to tee, who overs as deeply Is We Sea/ se to hams ovarysitategna be eat • played; Masa wee pemedell wite's in aoomoo, but he meld not prevail on others to beliaroi• it and tioregh Amos Map prow. lei ligalist the eoelimehows des old *man eras ed by pais beteg received as widow spies& Blase sad her wretallei eesouptioss, so attention was paid to his rementrenee, and they were all aosihved aatit tha deny wimpa they were to be tried. Them mat have been sersuptimes that hike sow sell "good old tiaMe whew a maw, who loved Ma more loudly 'than my= cis the wcild could 44seulaNtervutly, God r' ON be was told that she wee deed.— Two days after Rose's throws late prison, Person ABlips brought them Udine to the smith, and pal that le had Unite - kin her body home,' and give - Ter , ruled at the accwwo4 itosgbt *Out her, de. peived of her child sad bar nasal, the' ran Creators was milted Sitblessr, sad died an bar piieon-4 God'ot .moittr 1 011 4.,Pairiom and Richard *ought, for she Morris; esorkPed the doein of. het emeimakuul is stiefortitie, Whist whose names stands is IM , criminal records of the time, the fetal words—ueonviee and The smith brought hie poor White Ross home on the-third ensivereary of their marriage; and the next day she was ineerred, with all the rites of the duels, amidst the too late repeatanee of her ton. Manor Simon sad R e ichard s by the grave is angry sorrow, and dine. ly opposite to them, with her whited eyes, iced on the' strith's fees, was Misers,' Gilbert. As be was moving sway, at last their glum* met; the wafting-woman heeled friumplaatiy, and prated downwards at thsecen with a signilleant sir. Richard ' rooked attar steadily for a mo ment, and then middle a deep, ecemsestrated tame, which the bearers nestled sitartisohr as a tone of prophecy. "Ay, Mistress Met, there lies the body of my poor Roil thst_you bated, and her spirit is We m Bogies . Top may laugh now, but you shall not la* long. • The day is seer when your body sha/Irsisealowithat shall be see from Whkelebeek, to Coolliale' and your spirit shall skirl to be beard frbst Heckle. stone for flute miles ;tend." Mistress Gilbert only lallicbed-the load* as she aarehed away. Bet Richard weeds MIN true. The Healed** we a tail bkook of granite, ant up iwileolthmion park. wan *lranian about Silllseral yards freat s bora. Elot ag s it - resiained, then were two nestita ups. t?p, alga Indite.. saki were mule by the hands of Mistress Gilbert; she wee set ea km Si oidentally, end, dyis_g Ins the hosee t io.her army ebe rw into Beeldeittose, eernamag„ and clung to ity bhea ell .rer, mail the light woe aeon "fees Wkl baa>k to Omni*, and her cries were band for three miles mad." Peo ple ran to her help, bat the leery goes that the lire resisted even effort to put it. oat Metter Brae forever barren. • Briar Eltrirmanunt Titorsimm—There will be no naeassity. for Kim Flora Ilialismey to make "three separate *nays to Paris," in quest of asoinetklng to wear,"` for nor the dear creature cal melee, 49 l*, A. M., direct from the metropolis othalieet t .the newest style of bonnet, in time for theopera at eight o'clock, P. M. We hare been tbing of lite startling fact, that two moo, three thousand Rilis from each other, esp sow eeneene latsiligibly togeth• er, over the Atlantic; and that, too , while tempests are howling, and gold- fr eighted vessel' are plo wing the billows betweel them. Thick of the fearful measlier of God being literally chained to the sum, and made sober ries' to man. Think of reading at tea O'clock, A. M., some Important turoppon event which doesn't transpire ti l eleven—or a backwoodsman reading, fresh from the press, $ speech of Lord Derby, an boar befw wsf delivered—of a Liverpool merobsitt harat4us fifteen minutes, the price of pork in Lotsismilti—of any political dispute between England and Amerce being "amicably adjuster to see bonr—of the merest street marenget, of New lork:being acquainted with the health of the Pthmem Broderick Wil liam—of the possibility of Stpenton sad kforPky tLord Grosvenor chess across the Aalaistisaad of my Grosvenor driving Wily& Park, causcions of the fact that there is a. Mississippi steamboat oh Bre.—Zonitos7/s Democrat. - Fouts et Ltuarwrse.—Oa lkilitay last, the 41weltineof Geo. Plurisgtoor, ia 19elem, Maw, was struck by t y mo taing. The berme bad two patent copper II sing modicum epos it.— Tile electric Ina, so doubt, 'Wasted by sad.first.ittuck the top or did red, as six out of Amu papists were Urfa about three_quartsw of *a boob down l oad whea reachlog we of the is. salmon, *eke It into invents aid mitered the house-.attrenied by the upper . ..sail% ao doubt —as4 passed into tbe *ski amyl the mop board, and Aware below late !babas room, sibs* Dr. lferniactow, his three di uset T s t l i i r i toa ad a bind wawa woo at diner. Dr. . was so mach iajured as to wake it usweary to scud for Dr. Mack, who, by tropism use of cold water, sweeseded is Winship bin to about as boar. Ittwas fend that spot his bask, from 'the week I'4'l6oloms, moo a agrious bp mrs of free Alltraiteld it /Ow A if SI tessellated from wow. Mrs Y. *trine from *Adak bed. Neither of-the ladies were irAbe but injured, Airoagb Ul sow the boll et tteeeeed. ' PARIS OX qtroott.--k o nr. b. 0 . m y , Dm XI , • c'One can teen ha 'Sunday in Parir, die rtreebll:4 l4 4 l of . peOplej th e phew* grand. are .; tte shops open; regitunk of sold lien is Lim Win) 'being baby the weekiegyeepleorito sate the Imes 44 *day of reetantion. And the fiartbet 011 4 4 0411 1 1„, 1110 1011111 M for God's law or lonia: Thom are eat t*; tat .eke Mitsui to set, awl saris„ iN show. arrichkentebat *sir awns. lases ipit as* sia s good actir r antilbwinniost thane tiiwhl.l • te tar slave eentod think,* to 1.•, • - •.1: , 4 . I ~ 1=!11111111;121 •, • ,~ MEM B. F. ICLOAN, EDITOR. Doestiab on Lays Ikon. Doeetieks ►ae been tryikg to ascertain by ex periment whether or not Lager is intoxicating, sad below ie given, in his own language, the re sult : "The first glass seemed like sour strong beer with a good deal of water it; the next was not quite so pear, and the next one tasted as tittiula the original bar bad been stronger sod they did not dilute isso-much Then we rested, and as I bed drank three pints already, I was willing to quit, but Damphool assured' tae 'Lager isn't in toxicating,' so after a little settling down I tbo't I could bold another glass and Ordered it ; it was brought by a young lady who seemed to have frau eyes and two axles pointing In different directions, which unusual effeet was undoubtedly caused by smoke. Then r thought l'J have a glue of Lager, (a liquid known to most of the inhabitants of Man. haute). It was brought by a girl sopretty that I immediately ordered two more, eta kept her waiting for the change each time so teould look at her—thee wo had some cheese full of holes; then we took some Leger to 511 up,the boles; and then we took a sausage ; Damphoel suggest ed that the sausage was made of dog ;• so we had some Lager to drown the dog; then we bad some sardines ' • Damphool said it would be cruel to keep the fishes without a supply of the liquid element, so we me Lager for the Sebes to swims is ad some breisels ; Daiaplioal said the were so creaked that they would not pack close, so we lad some Lager to AD up the chinks; then I made a speech to the cespa. ny ; short but to the point, sod received with applause—it was addressed to the whole crowd and vas .to this effcet, 'Gentlemen, let's have come Lager?' By this time my friends hid by some myste rious process become mysteriously multiplied, and there were fifty Danipboole, sad they all accepted the invitation, and we bad the Lager; there were forty glasses and in trying to make the circuit of the room and touch my glass to. every one of theirs I fell over a table which very impertinently stepped before me, and as I went down I knocked a small Dutchman into the cor ner, then I fell over him, thin I partially recov ered myself and sat on his bead, then I got up and stepped on his stomach, then I demanded as instant apology, Wen I called for six ,lasses of few, and the girl brought them all in one hand. I tried to take them all in one hind, but broke three, then I tried to drink out of the re maining three all at once, and in so doing I took an invoinatary ahowerbath, then I tried to pay for the whole fifty glasses and the damage with , a dime end a Spanish quarter,, and demanded that he should give my change in gold dollars, there seemed to be some difficulty about this, and if r bad a't kiloton that Lager is n't intoxicating I. should have thought the man was drunk." An Exciting Scene From the Thiladelphia Prtvu. We leant, from a correspondent, that the fash ionable notion of suicide has found its way into the fashionable circles of at hest one summer resort. 4 ia one of these, known to the ;demure. seeking world as "Deal," quite an ezeitutg scene occurred, a few days since, tinging with some, thing more than wonted life those who bask in the happy, genial pleasures of this famous, but quiet retreat. The house at Deal stands some tour hundred and fifty yards from the sea, be. beach, to prevent the walk from being filled With sand by passing wagons, two uprigut pieces of timber are created, about eight feet in height, with a eross-piece near the top. An interesting young Philadelphia lady, having fallen despe rately in love with a gentleman, whose attentions were monopolized by a couple of a New York ladies—albeit he was a faithful and devoted at. teadent until their arrival—resolved to make it the last time that he should beso gaily deeeiv. ed. At the hour for bathing two ladies and gents were on the way to the beach, when horror-stria. en, they beheld dangling from the crossbeam (which, since the occurrence, has been named the "Lovers Swiug,"). the form of a lady in her bathing dress She was at once recognised by the party as "the lady in love "—The gentlemen quickly lowered the lady by the rope bywhich she was suspended, wbcu it was discovered that her pulse was actively beating. By the appli• cation of some water to her face, and rubbing her wrists, she speedily revived; and In less than half an hour she was seen dashing about in the surf—none more full of life and spirits than she. Since the above occurrence, which has been the current topic of conversation among the -, guests at Deal, it has been rumored that a gen• aeons from a neighboring city, attempted to "shale off this mortal coil, ' at the same place : but the facts being in the possesSion of his im• mediate friends, it has been impossible to learn the cause which impelled him to .ha rash act. MAMMOTH CAVE TM lEWSTIVEY.-- 1 11e ave nues in the cave, thus far discovered, number two hundred and seventy fire, sod their aggregate length is estimated at two hundred miles. Mr. Holston, who lies in the cave when the iron lamp was lost, still resides near its mouth. He is now 90 years of age Stephen, the old guide, died last year. The Green River Barrens, that fifty years ago were covered with grass and strawberries, morn lag-glerifs and other pretty flowers, and the resort of{ imornie flocks of quails, and a multi. tilde of blutts,are now a great forest of oaks, hickory d alumni trees. This great change from a . d to a forest has been made iik lees than hal a cenchry. The germs of the oak, the Assent od the; kickery were in nature—velem we give the sr* colony of the squirrels the eredit of planting the chesnuts,, the walnut and the soot - gem their winter stores of these nuts collet • in other localities taperstore of ' the air of the cave is at degrees Fahrenheit, tbo air dry and .. No thnodcr is over beard or light. The liftyi sin salsbrio fling eve seen within the cave. A enrreit of *is no coining out of the cave, and.of mini dent fo to "blow out" the blaze of a torch. Within the cave cow bustation goes on, well, towhee rn freely, and respiration is nay. 'Dark there is so thick that ik can be fete, se l l and ail as so profotind as to be istipresaive bet rod dasOription. ,' 1 Mr two' children, a lon add daughter of `6 l 4t- UlmEteht i n of '13,11%4164d, wont to Ormuz Oreilt 4 Monday, whore the boy Teatime a a log and fell into the water. U ' l li ttle r s i i. witnessed the accident, sair'ldin and par again, wherenpon she ran h m e ta bar tither of the Scolded. Mt tr'iot b of 14 boy's Teg and ladled gm' 'Zo had been in the water from twelve %Men ntinutie, ' appeared lif9l,it wboU tabmt out. He was lad out as l a 4 , I: Ito:14 6 r *iiiightest Wiese. p t ty . . 4en . Wog res. lensdirtreAti . 't mai *tip and sngular, an bons aftennurds the boy was oheurr. ireg od ite.brt#m. ICvery effort was em :by pi iskasi hie reeseawas4 a,t t ie. altti, 11 1 ,4 84 1 wancemeraing Walk thaw II wsL -MI is tea . 11101111111111111NriliM at - ' . after drowning that we reoolleet Lariats ) r ray 1 i