The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, April 14, 1866, Image 1

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    BY FRpli'::1,.::41(E11).
„ EI F, eir,on:F 2 P. ~- •
)Insintss artlitge
INCA;READ PA.,
_
!O ' O6
"qo vOUNU IMITED TO
FILL GOOD AND
LtORATIVE POSITIONS.
re y e ou can expeetto occupy atpositien
B e fo
b competent, and you. can be trade
~,'" ut t yrn;t-t-eridin this college, which . is theonly
.s COLLEGE. in Pennsylvania, .New
levri-ey:-Dselaware or Maryland, and- larger
than any . other so-called
f commercial th orytilei
e Institution M either o ose States.. The
r tors and teachers are nrsetwal business
iii
..f:tIP hich is added latge experieuct,
business Colleges, thus enabling them to
found/ a more thOrOllgh and practicallecturse.
than can be obtained elsewhere 4 -
TERMS, - 2 ,
05
for Life Scholarship.
to dislibletilfiloldiers. go
For Blank Books (30 in number), . 10,son.—This Life .SchOlarship is a certik
vole of inembership and -"entitles the purchastr
re !intimated instruction in single and. double
Ar y book keeping and Pertnianehip, with the
p r ivilege of reviewing at anyfuture time gratis,
Toil are inflict a Life men.ber.
Teleg,rapliing is ten dollars and Phonogra
phy (short hand) twenty dollars extra,. but
the Cadent is not compelled to -esti* 'those
Douches
When two or more enter at the same lime,
'deduction Of FIVE noxLass-to each ..wilhbe
Ole. Thus the entire cost
DOLLAR S. inclWeudinhaveg-Blankno
Scotia is only vORTY
“Ertfas.” Boarding is from four to four and
half dollars per week. •
THE COURSE ;
V.mbilices a Preparatory, Theory and Burliness
Nutriment. In the Preparatory Department
he is mutated in Mathematicsthe, nim
}lest principles of Book Keepingi after
Department
where lie copies front sets certain bit - sinew
[auctions. each set representing a businesh,
(stock and partnership) and:eacki set . inygv-
Ing the application of one or more principled.
Next, he is admitted into the Department of
ACTUAL BUSINESS.
Here the student applies practically what he
lot been taught theoretically. For s full ex
planation of this Department send for a Col
lege Paper which we will mail to your address
Suffice it to say that the stud,•nt begins
business with a real • a
eAsil CAPITAL
With which he buys and sells m'erckandise,
pays tuxes, deposita it in :the bank, . &c. Rs,
They discount notes, draw and accept draft's,
wake general and special indorsements, make
out income reports, and in fact go 'throng& ev
ery kind of husinesS transaction, even to at-
Selling internal revenue stamp.
OUR ADVANTAGES. '
The best course of histructimi," and chedper
Cites than any other college. . Located in the
best railroad centre In the State, with eXperi
need teachers widely known in the business
community, thus affording our gißduates bet
ter facilities for seeking and obtaining employ
,
meld.
a" POT specimens of Penmanship enclose
tico tine e cent postage stamps. College Rooms
corm of North Fifth and Washington, and
coiner Fourth and Penn street's, Reading, Pa.
(Ace in Washington skeet loullding. Ad -
diets CLXRIC.
Phn.l READDia, P 4.
PATTERSON &.00., -
NO. 66.1- MARKET STREET,
MARIETTA:P4.. •
DEALERS 111
FOREICAM;DOME I T I C
HARDWARE
Xeep constantly on hand a. frill stock of Bull
ding Material, Nails,
LOCKS HINGES,
GLASS, PAINTS, OILS, WHITE LEAD, A
BCPERIOR. ARTLOOS OUORZEICT,
ONi Ti6lle,d and Hammered
Iron, Steel, florae=Shoes Bar,
. .
Norw a y N a il RodsOloop and. Band Ircri,
lionc-Shoe.lfads;Bolts, Files, Rasps, etc;
fIOUSSI=KEEPThG GOODS.
FIRST-CLASS COOKING
ANt P ARLOR: STOVES, RANGES,
Tuts, Churns, Cedar Stands, -„/
Wasdrßoarde; Buckets,
Knives and Forks,
Plated and Aletalic Spoons, -
61 Irons, Kraut Cutters, Waiters, Brass and
Copper Kettles Clothes Wringers, Pans,
Iron Ladles, Meat Stands, Coal Oil
Lamps, Shades and Lanterns, Tea
Scales, Coffeiidills; Painted
Forks "-
Chamber Setts, arc., arc.
Shovela, Hoes, SPades,.Horse finishes,
Wheel Grease, Fish, Sperm and Lubric Oils,
Cates Pumps, Long and' Shurt'Traces,
Brent Chains, &c., &c.
LS: Hand ad Wood Saws, Hatchets,
ChoPPing and Hand Axes, Planes, Mabel'',
Augers and Auger Rits, Braces, Prunning
_Hooka and Shears, &c., &0. /Umlaut for past Patronage; we hope to'
merit
and receive a continuance of the same.
RATTEROIV 4' 90,
. 614 r . ietta, August I ISSS.•
ALEXANDER LYNIMAYI „dare
Fashionable ' ,
Boos and Shoe iranufacturef,
ET STREET, mARI F A L,±A, PENN
• ....,,,,-- • ;.. .
Would roost respectfully. trifonnittke, citizens
, ° f, tuffs Borough and neighborhood, thfkfAe 'fifkii
we largest suostment, of ,qtY ..1114,(12,_Tildt in ,
hie line of business in this Borough, and be-'
?g Practical B9OT AVD SRODiliol AKER
~iinself,is enablea to seleCl:witliinois judgment
tun those who Are not. 'Eacontinues to Man-
Fhitture in the very, best frisnner evorYthing
''' h's BOOT Afill.liffoE o LlKE,'whiels he
will y:arrant for nestriMiAsa tcoo.fit• -
grCall and essiplite his stock before pur
chink elsewhere.
.........._
11
°WARD ASEIOCIATION.: t ' i-,
PHILADELPHIA, PA,
of the
' l ' llo es Urinissy. and Sexusl Systems,
icit new and -reliable' treatment. -,'Alscr, Abe
,_'''ensx. CHABIBEa I all EMIT of warning-and
'en ruction, sent in seiled - -envelopes, =free of
Orge• Address, DR. J. • Sarmair 1101fGHTON,
?".01 Association, No. 2 tilouth= Ninth-A- 1
14144°441 i%, Pa. "_ ' ,,, ~[ jam 1,,66-ly.
C O LGATE'S - t 014,1
1"1-15'1)1Y, Clycerine, Palir4,""A4oll4:3;llßetjili nd
Fyorving 80a-PB,-4,qual—olary—itußaitga"—.
Jun received and for sale t 'very-cfrelig
DKR GOLDEKAORZW,
ON'Saitst Drope and auOa Fe.
-0,3" the dutclen Mortar
• . _ _
.. - .
. r
...), J1
_alt .
.11
. .
1
I t
f
. % - t 1 -'; I. .t' t r ' 6 , ', ~ , . 66 • , - , .
7
• PUBLISHED WEEKLY ' - ' An Interesting Tale.
AT - ONE DOLLAR , AND A HIM A YEAR
From All the Year Round.
PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. •
Stuck Fast. .
Office in "'LINDSAY'S Bun.,Dito," secon ,
floor on Elboio Lane, be t ween .the -pos
Office Corner and Ikont-St., Marietta
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
ADVEaTrsl~ro~liaT s ,: ' ,squlre (10
lines, or less) 75 ceits'ibr the first insertion and
One Dollar and-a-half for 3 ihiertions. Prd
fessional and Businesssai di, of six lines orless
tit $6 per annum. Notices in the reading col
umns, ten &rite (Mine. Marriages and Deaths,
the simple announcement, razz, 6ut for any
additional- lines, ten cents a line. -- --
A liberal deduction,made to yearly a ad half
yearly advertisers. -
Having Jast sae?. a " NawstraY Mona-
TAIN JOBBER Puma," together , with a large
assortment of new Job and Card type,, Cuts,
Borders, &e., &c., to the Job Office of " THE
MARIETTIAN," which will inSllllLisy foe and
speedy execution of all kinds of Joa & CARD
PRINTING, from the smallest Card to the
LARGEST POSTER, at reasrnable% prices..
THE HOUSEHOLD PET;
BY 11.F.Y. EDEN B. LATTA.
Well hath the poet said that Death,
With his glifittly mien and his chilling breath
With his icy_ hand'hnd his heart of stone,
Bath every season for his own.
There's no escape from his poisoned dart ;
'Twill pierce in its flighreach throbbing heart;
E'en now iha bow and the string are set,
And the shaft is aimed at the Household Pet.
She struggles now with the monster grim ;
Her cheeks grcw pale and her eyes grow dim
Her attenuate form is,,racked with. pain,
And efforts to save seem all in vain ;
They are in vain—she is going fast;
Her form is chill—she has breathed her last ;
'Ds a solemn fate, but it must be met
p.'en-by the little Household Pet.
She is gone I —we never shall see her more
In her childishiiiorte,` as oft-before.;
No more shall look_in her sparkling eye,
No more shall Hit to her sweet bye-bye;
The itienn.has toile to,its rest afar,
Perchance to dwell on some distant star;
Of all she was, naught iemaineth yet.
But the dust of the little Household Pet.
She has gone fromearth with its pain and care;
She 'safe in a realm that r is'brightmnd fair ;
And cheering to us who,linger here
To - know that her way to heaven was clear ;
But yetit is hard to gi4e her up;
And the hand is slow to take the cup,
`And•-hearts are bleeding. and eyes are wet,
For the little; playful Household Pet.
Adieu! sweet child ! it h thine to go--:
And ouhrto rer.oain a while below ;
Ours to lament that thou art dead, '
And strew'with Bowers thy. grassy bed ;
But while we grieVe, 'twill be sweet to know
That our Heavenly Father ordered so ;
And that, however deep may be our regret,
It is well with the little Household Pet. -
An - efderly , gentleman travelling
in .a stage coach was amused by a con
stant-fly of words b4weea two ladies.
One..of them at - last kindly intiuired if
their conversation did not Irtahe his
bead ache; When he answered with._ a
great deal of naivete, " I've been mar
ried twenty-eight years."
eir Two Cherokee Indiana had a fight
over a bottle of whisky recently at Sul
phur Springs, Arkansas, which resulted
in the death,uf both. It is Very; likely
that, had theluages agreed peaceably
to drink the stritit, both would have been
killed, so that it is not altogether fair to
attribute the killing to the fight.
gar " I want - to buy a sewing ma•
chine," said an old lady, baring entered
a shop. "Do you wish for a machine
with a feller,?" inquired the clerk.
" Sakes, no ; I don't want any of your
fellers about me."
I' A lady wrote some verses upon .a
window, intimating her design of never
marrying. A. gentleman wrote the fol
lowiog lines underneath ;
" The lady whose resolve these,words betoken
Wrote them on glass to show it znarbe brok
en." •
" I pay,• landlorkithave a dirty
towel` tar a man to. wiption ' Lindlord
with, a look of amassment, replied:
" Sixty or. seventy of my boprders have
wiped on that towelthin- Morning,- and
you_ate theiliat to find
What the difference`' between a
.
honeycomb.aoll:a.honeymoon 7 A.-hon
eycomb consists ota number of . 4 small
calls," anti
. a.hOneintkeon consists of one
"-treat
- Mr.-George - Moore read a paper
fiefore the 'New York Historical Society,
_the other evening on !` North Amerjoan
Rock: Writing,'.',4c.,, We 5e curio?
to know aif he explained. tho'mysterigua
s;fgiiilati6ll bt "S. T.-lEloo=42'
ar Toads are tneireerbeet fitoteetten
of -cabbage agwinst lice.
i
eg o 16.eptiartut Vonsgitiania for ttcute'
MARIETTA, SATURDA
About a year after .my scaffold acci
dent, I goes home one night; • and. Mrs. .
Binge—that's our mix' roorii neighbor—
shows me something wrapped up in flan
nel. all pink and creasy, and tery snuffly,
as though it wanted its, nose blowed ;
which couldn't be expected, for it hadn't
got any to - signify.. _
•!Ain't it a little beauty ?" she says.
Well, I couldn't see as it was ;• but I
didn't like to say so, for 'knew My wife
Polly had been rither reckoning on
what she said we - ought to hir#e had
inore'n a year agoiso I didn't like to
disappoint her, for I knew she lay lie-
tenin' in the nex' room.
Tolly,always said there sever was
enehlt baby as that one ; and somehow
it was taking to see hOw her, face used
to light up all over smiles when she
thought I *oral looking ; and I knew
it waaall' on account of the little 'un.
She never said she felt dull 'now; and
whenoat home of a night I used to think
how my mates would laugh to see Mit
handling the little thing that was allus
being pushed into my face to kiss ; when
I'm blest if ever I seen such a voracious
fun in my life.; it would hang on to yon
—nose, lip, anywheres—in a minute.
One day, when it was about nine
months old, it was taken all of a sudden
Hie with a fit. Voay . screamed to me
to run for the doctor ; for it happened
that I was on the club that week, and at
home with a bad hand. I run for him,
and, he soon come; and then there was
a warm bath and medicine but after
ward, when 1 saw thelittle thing lying
on Polly's,lap so still and quiet, and with
a dull'film forming over its eyes, I felt
that something was coming, though I
dared: not tell her ; and about 'twelve
p'--clock the little thing suddeuly.statte!
stared wildly an Instant, and then it was
all over.
My hand warn't bad any More that
week ; for it took all my time to try and
cheer up my poor heart-broken lase.
She did'take on dreadful, night and day,
till we buried it ; and-then she seemed
to take quite a change, and bugged of
me to forgive what she called her selfish
ness, and - wipilid hefejes once for all, as
blie said, and talked about all.being for
the best. But she didn't know that I
lay awake of a night, feeling her cry si
lently till the pillow was soaked with
tears.
We buried the little one' on Sunday
and on the iionday morning 1 was clap
ped on to a job that I didn't quack relish
forlt was the re-bricking of a sewerihat
ran• down one of the main streets, quite
fifty feet• underground. '
Arter two years in London I'd seen
some change; but this was my first visit
to the bowels of the earth. I'd worked
on drains down in the country, but not
in sach*a concern as this ; why 'a life
guard might have walked down it easy`;
ea that there was plenty of room to
work. But then, mind you, it ain't plea
' sant work; there you. go, down ladder
after ladder, past gas-pipes and water
pipes, and down and down, till you get
to the stage stretched across the part
that ypu are at work on, with the day
light so high up, as seen through boards
and scaffolds, and ladders, that it's "no
rise r to you who are working by the light
of flaring gals. There in front of lon is
the dark, black arch ; and there behind
you is another; while under your feet
the foul rushing water hurries along,
sending up a smell as turns your silver
watch, end every sixpence and shilling
you have in your pocket. black as 'the'
water that mid° bribbling along. Er
au word you speak gonads hollow and
echoing, while it goes whispering and
rumbling along the dark arch till' you
think it has gone, wfien.all at .once you
hear it again quite plain in a way as
would make you jump as much as when
half a brick or a hit o' bard mortar
dropped into'the water. -
But talk about jumping, nothing made
me.jump more than a bit .of soil, or a
stone' was ioosened up 'Came
rattling dOWn. I've seen pore thish.teln
chap change color.; and I know it's been,
from the thought that suppose the earth
cad in, where should we be"? I'o
doubt the •first crush in would do it, and
aerobes's end of workmen•and foreman
bat there seemed nothing areirj? awful
in the idea o''being buried alive.
; Big es the epening,wasoghfin, I .ntaitt
tcrwork-it made mesimider ;41nsre viral;
the earth: jig s pm. 4 ;Out then , iridilbe
rope -stibe-sidett-tie—bethi 4 .
ing Mti
•ng-Abifi 404 1 304 1 #4 1
like Whig grayo, sluff ant lid *Oa by.
on a little scale the day tsefoie ; and feel-
,t
ing a little bit 'ln* spirited, it firmest
seemed as thono I was going ddwn in
to my owb, never to'comit up any more.
.
Werryrstnpid and foolish ideas, sip;
you—far-fetehed ideas Weir" , likely,
but that's what t thougkti•and there
are times whin men has •*erry strange
ideas; -said tell,yon for .a -fact that
somethimg stmck,me when I went down
that-hole that shOuldn't come up it
; and I didn't, neither. WI/ the l
4 , ••:•-• •
warty feel of the cold, damp place, made
ydu think o' being buried, and when it
fe l ls bits'of earth came and rattled down
upon the stage above my head, as soon
asthe first start was over, it seemed to
me so like rattling o' the earth but Ei
few hours before.upon &little coffin, that
something fell with a pat upon my bright
trowel, which, if it-had been left, would
have been a spot a' rust: •
Nothing-like work puts a fellow to
rights; and I soon found that I was feel
ing better, and the strokes o' my-trowel
went ringibg away down the sewer iie t i
out the Wells in half; and after a bit , I
alinost felt inclined to whistle ; but I
didn't, for I kept on thinking o' that
solitary face at home—the face that
ways brightened up when I went back,
and bid made such a man of me as I felt
I was, for it V was enough to make any
man vain to be thought so much of.
And then I thought how dull she'd be,
and-how fond she'd be o' looking at the
drawer where all-the little things were
kept; and-then I—well, I ain't ashamed
of it,if I Pm a great hulking fellow—l
took care that nobody saw what I was
doing, while I had - a look at a little bit
of a'shoe - as I had in my pocket.
I didn't go home. to dinner, for it was ,
too far off ; so I had my snack and thin
went to, itagain directly along with two
more, , for we was on the same piece.
We had some beer sent down to us, , and
at it we went Wilt was time to leave
off,;_and,lint*,sayes; was .041 out,
and didn't much envy the fresh gang
Ginning: On `to' 'visa all"hilhi, thringh - it
urfghtjtist *WIWI been 'night with -
I was last down, and bad just put my
foot_on the first round of the ladder,
when I.heard something falling as it hit
apdjerred the boards up'ards ; and then
directly after what , seemed to be a brick
caught me on
_the bead,. and, before I
knew where . I was, I was off the little
platform, splash down - in the cold rush
ing water that took me off and away ',
yards upon yards - before I get .nty head
OM it.; and then I was so • confused
and half-stunned that I let it go under
again, and had 'been carried ever so far
biters, half-dro3vned, I gained my legs .
4and leaned, panting and blinded, up
l igaihat the slimy wall. -
=There ,I stood for , at least ten minutes
should-suppose, shuddering and horri
fied, with the thick darkness all around,,
I. the slimy, .muddy bricks against my
hands; the•nold, rushing .water bepeith
me, and my mind in that confused state
that -for a few minutes: longer I didn't
know what I was going to do next, and
wanted to persuade myself that it was
-all ' dream, ankl should
• wake up di
rectly..
, All at once, though, I gave a jump, ;
and instead-o' being cold with the water
dripping from me, I turned all hot and
burningeand then again cold and shad
dery,lor I hid felt -something crawling
on my shoulder, and then close againet
my bare nech,_ when I gave the jump,
and heard close-by me a light splash:in
the water--a. splash which echoed
through the hollow place, while, half to
frighten the beasts that I fancied must-
WOO swarms around me, half - wrung
from me as a cry of fear and agony, I
yelled out--
r'
Rats they were ; for abaft the hollow
"wash-wash, hurry-hurry, wash-wash;
hurry-hurrY " of the water` t - I could hear
her little splaehes, and a acuffling by me
along the'sides ce the brickwork. ,
You may laugh at heir stand
ing on end; but I= knova.that there was
then - a creeping,-tingling sensation , in
the rootco' mine, se though sand was
trickling amongst- it ; a clondmemed to
Some over my mind, and for az few',ma
nietttel tielieve,l: was. mad - mad. with
'ean And it w a s only by WOOS rnY.
.teeth Ord end clenching iny-lista that I
kapirfrotitihrieliingf Hoiriffir; 1 was
aeon b etter , and 'reedy tirlatigh fit nip
.
self ise-I-renolfected' that I eeuldr . rielY be
all:a-way from the. mica. whew the
hien - v/OAM ; de 11)eganitovaPidli'ilhrig
With tlie•Wattit bete atietit'np tS my id
' , A.'4. - ivibco l< stapped,int tbdugbt
WAicktotiliVetitiabliti'rarrt c
tA4400.4140119/bi g t t
thrObbl 4l o ll Olt tiro 844 , 4 4 went
dig mug way I ibqglAilailost-.rlost in
MORNVG, APRIL It, 1866.
this horrible darkness-=4o shik, at Test,
into the fOul, blick'stream; to be deimir
ed-by- the - rite, orelsorto be Choked by
the foul gases that must be lurking 'l4O
here in these dirk recesses.
Again the hOrior of thick darknom,
came neon me—l shrieke'd out
and the cry went echoing through the
sewer; eontiding l holler it
faded away. But once more I got the
better of it, andpersuaded myself that I
had only cried .alond.to .scare • the rats.
What would I. noti.have.given fora stout ,
stick as a defence' against attack as 'I
groped my way on; Meeting ,convinced
that I should be right if ' , crawled doin
streamorheo I little' reflection' would
have told me, that up stream_ must ba
the right way,, for I must have been borne
down by the water. But I could not re
flect, for my brain seemed;in a state of
fever, and now ; and ,then my teeth chat
tered as though.l.liad the ,ague.
I groped on for quite a quarter of an
hour, when;-the--horrid thought, y eame
upon me that 1 was going wieng; and
again I tried to leamup against the wall
which seemed 'to cause my feet 'IQ slip
from under me. I felt no cold for the
perspiration droppedfrom me, as I fran
tically turned back and tried to retrace
my 'steps, guiding myself by running a
hind against the wall where every now
and then it entered the mouth of a small
drain, when, ensure as it did, there'wtss
a scutille and rush y and more than once
I touched the cold slippiry body of a
rat—a touch that made me start back as
though shot, ,
On twent, and on, scaffold
and no glentn of gaslight. Thought—af
ter thou ght gore fresh horror , to _my-sit
,
nation, as now I felt certaiti..that my:
frantic
. haste had taken some -wrong ,
turn, or entered a. branch. of -the main
place; and, at last, completely bewild
ered, I rushed headlong on, stumbling
and falling twice over,. so that: was
half-choked in the Week - water. But it
bud its good effect ; • for it put ii'sfop . to,
my wild strintgles, Which' must soon hare .
ended in my falling insensible into What
Was certain death: 'The'water
. "Cooled ,
my head, and none 'feeling , comple.tely
lost, knowing that - 1 Mind. have hien
nearly two hours in the , sewer, niade
up my mind to folio* the stream to'its,
month in the Thames, where, r if tha'tide
was down, I could 13 , 4 bud the Mud on
to the wharf t or , bank.
So once more I struggled on,' follow-J
lag the stream slowly for what seemed.
to be hoUra, till at last, raising my hand
I found I could not touch the roof, and
by,that I knew that I was in, a larger
sewer, and therefore not: very l iar •-from
the month. Bat-here there was a,new
terror creeping upon me, so to , ; speak;
foy From my waist the water now touch- ,
ed my chest; and soon-afterorrarm-pits ;
when I stopped, not aerial to 'trust my
self to swim, perhaps a mile.when I felt
that weak I could not have gone a hun
dred 'yards.
I kno* in my dieaPpointment I gave
a hal like a hint hoeast, and' turned'
agairi to bave a hard fight to breaat the'
rushing water,WhiCh nearly took me off
mylegs. But the fear of death lent me
help and I got , on end on again till I felt
myself in a turningvwhice-1. soon knew
was : a smaller sewer. and _from .thet ce I
reached: another, , where ..I had to , stoop
but the water was shalfower, , not -above(
my knees,and at, last, mach lees deep)
than that.
~ Here. I knelt, dawn to. rest, and the
position brought something else= from
my heart-; and, after awhile, still stoop
ingil wept on; till; having passed doz,
ens upon dozens of drains, I determined
to creep -tip rose, snd•i did:
I"raps'yon wen't think it Eitririgi as I
dreaUi and groan in bed"sometiineb, when
I Vell you Whatiollowed: "
I crawled On;and on, and On, in the
hopes that the place 'i was lb would lead
ander one of the street gratings, an'd I
kept star kg aheadin be' hopes of Catch.'
Inge' gleam of light, bill at last.the place
seemed so tight Matti dared go no far
ther. for fearTotkeing fixell in.- §o „Lbe
'gut to back veryislowly, nnd the% feel.
lt,rather 'hard , work,. etoppod ; _for, a vest. :
. quiteidig bezi but scaftliog on
in front, I kept hearing the . : rats . I bad
driven before-me l- and-nowrthat I stop
ped and- waitilite balledeeen , of
them madea tie& to get .past,:me, :and
theAittle.light wideb ,, foiloXedctiven
gives meAlai•borrorit: Aionolvdly -nom
Amisowai; butdifilied.osolyi liguesing
hboosbati,thwetbinsi*Ematog - dotstinet
till my. facolfaitittlh
"liiiieCtliledeittblood
r,,Vitieffici - ii•M Ski
-
pushed myself back ' initile way, one
then I vial 'topped, for - the,skirts of my
=
A
s'
EMIG
.
, L.
'
VOL. Xll.--NO. 36.
janlietrfilled uP what little 'space had
' been left,' nod Ilelt that i was wedged
initettiehtfait't
tqfriv'icifintiPthe Vomit gin worse
thin ei , eii.-"Ph4 3:- fint: blood seemed to
rthab'iiiioirit'etes; felt half
and, to add'-tit my sufferings; , a rat that
felt itself ae it were, penned up, fastened
upon my lip. It was its Met bite, how
eteivforhtialf-tuad as I felt then, my
tenth hid closed ina moment upon the
vicious beast, and it was dead.
I made one more straggle, but could
not ,move, I, was completely wedged in,
I and then I fainted .
...It meat have.been some time before I
come to myself; but .when I did, the
first sound . I heard was a regular tramp,
tramp, of some one walking over my
head, and-I gave a long yell for help,
when, to my great joy, the step halted,
aid,' shrieked spay', end the sweetest
sound I hamexarlearlin my life came
back. - It was a voice,shouting—
-"tHailoir
"Stuck fast'• in-the` drain I" -I shouted
with all.the strength I had left; and
thenl sr/booed oir-once- more, to wake
up a - week afterward out of .a brain-fever
sleep in a hospital..
It seems I had got within a few yards
of a Eating wilt& was "an end e the
drain, and the Close quarters made the
nitiko'fierce. 'the policeman bad beard
my shriek, and had listened at the grat
ing, and then got help ; but he was only
laughed at, for they could get no further
answer out o' Me, It was 'then about
half-past tbroe'on a summer's morning ;
and though the grate - was tot gra, they
were.about to give it u . posming the po
liceman_ 44 becniumbngged ; when a
couple o'lwegpkcauie up, und the little
'un offered to go, down hach'ards, and be
did, and came out -directly after,Jsying
that he , could feel a man's head with, his
• • •
toes.
_ That policeunttrlowhathimara glass
at my ekiiemte Singe, and I hope hell
have' inany - mere`; "aedlflieb he tells me
theestoty, whichl like to hear-but at
ei'ayli bike care it' shall be when Polly's
away—he says' he knows I should have
liked to Ilea how they tore up that
drain in no time, To Which there's al
ways such an echoic my heart, that it
CrilicEl quite natural to say—
a,Yotere right,my boy r
Raman PonTrEn.—Mr. Reese, the
Well-known street preacher, was-accost
ed by a would-be wag . the other day,
withthe?oliowing question . :
'I Do you .believe what the Bible says
about, the. prodigal son and the fatted
earn
Well, air, cad you tell me whether
he calf that-was-killed-was-7a- male or
enuderl"
"'tea, it was a female."
"Ho's , do yob kDO* that ?"
IhWhy,tecause," shit Reese, looking
the.chap in the "
Face, "'lime the male is
.... _____._
still aliv4"::- ____
•
t
.er A turkey burst its confinements
while roasting and the stuffing escaped,
to the terror of the ..Ilibernian damsel
left to watch it, who ran to call her min.
tress. _ "-litalaanf-alse-screamed, "comp
down a l udlee the' turkey ; 'tie brownie
nicely; but Sonia bithe consalements is
beiftite out I" - The “consalements " is
geba. '
ear A wag in Detroit has been taking,
liberties_witiLthe-reputation-of the Pon
tiac Railroad. He woe asked whether
be knew of an aceident en the road, and
replied, " NeVer ! But once a middle
aged man left Pontiac for Detroit, and
died of old age, at Binghampton—half
loYecterneditcr wishes tc,know
whether the law recently enacted*
against the,errying of deadly weapons,
applies to doctors who carry pills in
their pockets. -
ait A young widow irbo'edits a paper
in a nelghboring State 'says: "We do
nod lOokai well'as mina to day on ac
count: of the iton.a . rrival of the males."
apr Whatia.the difference between a
wealthy toper and , a skillful n►iner ?
cr , pf t : turns hie gold, ipto parte, and the
other-turns his quart: . into; gold.
fir Mr. W. jkliVJOsetnan, was recent--
1y married ta. Kiss-Farthing. He asked
fpr a farthkagsand teceived assent.
Preni an editor " who
did, and tie tat
emelt him, thevi_Lc . )r rat had the -worst
-
eibriikini in ma
*MAIO 4tfi'esqesiisaffr; -1 - Rif we know of
nothing that *Anal `wont:w i g curi
oeity.
INII