Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882, June 21, 1877, Image 1

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THE ADTESTISER
FHB ADYERTISSR
I. X. C. HAfTTBTU
.OT.M
T.C.KACSrjHC.
I'AlJlBROTIinR & HA CUSS.
FaUttkcn and Proprietors.
IfA3BJ40ailKR. &: MACEE2,
?wtZSli.aw Ai Proprietors.
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ZSTABUSEE3) IS56. i
OleLest Paper in tie State.
BBOWNTILLE. NEBBASEA, THURSDAY, JUNE 21. 1877.
YOL. 2L NO. 52.
RE IDIX C XATTER 05EYERY PARE
f wFFJClAL PJLPEX 9 TJOLCVCHTY
A.BWXK
IMt. ywt; , ihm,
j; lb , JO
JT Alt tiniiiifwMlw i t be vat
fbrta Maac.
x 0rvv "
f nnusBE) kt
Thfe Earth is net Ctor ely ea-.
raxr.
Bat tana euw not by
.No, Bar by atflh thou :
T.- riory Christ bath boaant far J
TVre pearly street that's aavee wJtoettd.
- :n that city ao brtorht sad a4r.
Tue Lord will aire a dweOtag toecs,
MAST'S AMSWES.
"No, Charte, it eanaot be. As a
friend I esteem yoa ; bat I cannot be
your wife. Here ceatpaseieB on me,
gj: do not press me farther.
Maty Graarille stood before aw as
he thas spoke, with her heeds sieep
ei and hex head bowed, trembling
l.k an aspen, aad I fancied that
tnere was a tear in her eye. She was
a oaatlfol sir!, and I had thoosit
her as fxd and ae pwre a she we
r dutiful ; aad nrtber thaa tba? I
:.d believed Uat she lord at. She
wis an orphaa aad had on engaeed
(ino? the past ten years in teaefaias
oue of oar Tillage choofc.
Of her early life I had known aaifc
inz, sa that she bad Ween well edu
cated, and had Beared hsraadsaeieiy ;
an d I bad reason to hetieve that at some
time her parents bad been wealthy ;
ba: her father had failed in hoeiness,
and it bad been toJd that the sed re
verse kilted him. I bad known that
Mary was poor that she was depend
ent opoe daily labor for sOpport sad
trie thoaajht that I acid offer her a
comfortable bone, with the advsnU-
gec of moderate wealth, had riven in
crease to my prasneetiTe happiness.
Bat tbhrnnexpeesed answer had dah
eU all my hopes to the groand.
"Do yoa aeaa." I ecied Tcbement-
iy, "that yon dfeasiae met Am I east
off?"
"I eaawo W yaer wife r wae her
xepty- -
"Then." said I, wftfe ear warmth
than I miehs hare displayed nnder
other errcsmetaneee, -I leave yoa to
yoorself, and while I strive to shake
off the lore that has boend mto yen.
I oa-ly bop wfas yea lead aaotber
into y out net. yoa wiU keep him af
ter yoa hare eauarbs him !"
ire. gaaed apon any face with a
palufoU. M-htened look ; be I did
not stop to bea- Tver speak farther.
While she stond th.-re, pale and trem
b5inf, I terned h4 left the hoe&e.
I remarked that ander other eir
eumUaee I mirht bar been more
cool and collected in my speech ; sad
w hai do yoo svppose, dear reads
Cbe-attending etteBsaetaaoes were? I
wa a little heated with wine. I
.had drank just enoacii to warm my
blood, aad sire to the brain extra im
pulse, aad my words were aot-ehaee
as I would hare chosen them had the
spirit of wine beset absent. As I
walked toward my home I soaeht to
persaade Qjseif I bad fortunately es
caped the snares of a eoqaette, aad
that I might be batter enabled thse to
reason, I stopped at the hotel, where
I found a few of my eompanioe.and
helped to dispose of a hslf-dosen bot
tlee or so of wise.
On the foBowine morning I awoke
with a headache, and when I sailed
to mind the even? of the preceding
evening. I was anything hot happy.
I began So realise how mech I had
loved Mary Granville. There was sn
aching void in my heart, and I wept
as I contemplated my loss. It was
my first love, aad its power had per
meated every fibre of my being. The
beneiifel girl bad faaeamc more dear
to me than I eoeid tell, and I groaned
in bitter aavgos-h when I tbooeht she
was lost to nfc forever. I had r.solv
ed that I would feel very angry aad
indignant, bat when the sweet face
was eaiied ap to the neotai view,
seeh feelings actied away, keviag
me sad aad desolate.
The'milowins Sabbath I attended
chereh, where I saw Mary oaee more.
She played the ocean as she had done
for veers before, and as her Sogers
swept over the keys I mneied I eoeid
detect a tremaiooseess which I never
notieed before. Was it only my im
agination, or was there really a piaia
tiveneos a sadness in the expression
of her asesic? To me it seemed as
tliiuw ti at times the organ groaned
and wept. It was like the wailing of
the daughter of Son by the river of
Babylon. When the service was over,
aad we went oat from the chareh I
saw Mary's feee. It was pale and
waa as thoagh she had besa siek-r
What coeld It be ? Was sm& seStriag
as I had sneered? The theegbt
Hashed upon me that some one bad
been telHag her something to my eis
advaatage. I had e&emies ia the vil
las: e eaemies who envied me becaese
I had obtained some wealth ; and, I
fancied, eaemies whe eavied me the
love of Mary Granville.
.another week passed, aad I became
more sad aad lonesome. My besiaess
was irksome to me, aad ny books aad
papecs afforded me a respite. In
fact I eoeM act read. &r asynifed was
sevee ea tfcc-angt. besexe. me.
"When bow d with aow . aw a wan cart.
Whoa wcA'i M If fwurt og-wsgBFotp,
And am re tee newt and qwtvwuu
V 1mmc beywMt aae veil of HIOT,
Ami rtiava riTlaaalib AvK3.
i: earth wece aor ecilmcctMclwe.
icti ftuuil'K tale tn lMrt ddtai,
ii) nTSnaeattfT KB sBae h'nmfefrnex' BBBae)
TtMOMtitaatltvniwoBid dwiiWKat
Rat there's m a e. t rt a. boas.
f UM bore iMt WMtfl Wi BW.
r..' tberebebofcf tbeCttrtetteat en,
Tiieceatatag tar Mers Wc
Another Sabbath to the church, aad
I saw Mary again. It seemed to me
that she was paler than before, aad
faer eves looked as though she bed
seen weeplm? lately.
Doriag the seeeeediag week I re
ceived a visit from my college eh em,
Jack Stanton, who had jest opened a
Jaw o&iee in Berryvlile. After sap
per, as we sat in oer eosy parlor,
smoking cigars, I soggested that a
bottle of wise might not be amiss.
Jack shook his head.
So, Charlie," he said, leave the
wine for those who need it."
"Yoa weed to oriak, Jaok."
"Yes, bat it neve? did me a partiele
of good."
"Aad do yee ever think in did yoa
any harm ?
'-As for that I wHl not say ; hot my
boy, I will tcil yoa what I ea& say.
It shall sever do me any harm ! I
know it has harmed others-, who were
as strong as I am. By the way Char
ley, fen't Mary Granville here T
-Yes," said I.
"Do yoa know her? he asked
qaiekly.
I turned away mr foee, ad pre
tended that I heard lomathiog at Use
l iavw.
"I have seen her," I replied, when
I had composed myself. "She plays
the organ in oer church."
"She aad I were schoolmates, per
soed Stanton; "and speak lag of wine
brings her to my mind. Do yon know
anything of her eariy life ?"
"Poor Mary, I sever think of her
without my resoistion of total absti
nence growing stronger. When we
were school children together her fa-
ther was the richest man in Berry
viUe, aad she and her brother were
the happiest of the happy. Mr Gran
ville was in the habit of drinking
wine, acd the habit grew on him un
til be coeld not do witboot bis bran-
dy. He
was of a social disposition,
and in time it eame to pass
that he
was grossly intoxicated. Of coarse,
aader soeh eirccmstanees, aae ef two
things most happen: the mas most
reform or be most sink. Mr. Gran
ville did not reform ; imd ere nwany
years he died a drunkard's death.
leaving his family ra poverty and suf
fering. Thomas, the son, who was
four years older than Mary, became
very dissipated, and at the age of
eighteen was killed Is a street .fight
in New York.
MMrs. Graaville sezTi-rmd bia bet a !
fow -montiM, aosohsfraiF' Qyiag au
broken heart. Poor Mary, thes left
fatherless and motherless, witcoet
brother or sister, at the age of fifteen.
was forced to earn the bread she ate,
aad nobly has she done it. If yoa
know her, Charlie, yoe know one of
the grandest women that ever lived.
Bet what is the matter ? Why bless
me, yoa look as pale as a ghost V
I straggled with myself, and told
Jack I had swallowed a lot of cigar
smoke. I arose and opened one of
the easements aad stepped oat open
the balcony, where the fresh air par-
nelly restored me to myself. At a
late boor Jack departed for the hotel ;
aad when I retired to my ens saber I
paced to and fro until it was long after
midnight. I eoeid no longer misen
dertaed the motives which had actu
ated Mary in refasing my. bead. She
knew that I was in the habit of Bslng
wine ; and on that eveningwhee first
we aset she must have discovered
that I bad drank quite enough to
bring the Sash to my cheek.
"Oh. heaven!" I efwalated, as I
sank into aeheir ; "I wonder ant that
she fears to trust her life m my keep- j
iner." .
She woe Id be wesse thee mad to
take a hnsbead whose eeealag path
way of Itfe fed to the pit into which
the iored ones ef the ether days had
feilfcB.
"Bet," I asked myself, "why did
she aot tell me the wfcole trath ?'
I found ao diafeehy in aasweriag
the question. I knew how sensitive
she was , I knew that she had been
sfrard of wounding my feelings. Per
haps she thoaght me proed and head
strong eaoogh to resist seeh liberties
oa her part ; aad perhaps she imagin
ed that I might look opoa her coarse
as the offer of her hand in consid
eration of my renouncing the wine
cap, and that I might sparn the offer.
On Friday, Jack Stanton left me.
and oa Saturday eveaiag I eaiied at
Mary's boardiag-place. Mary herself
I aaswered the semaioas. She started
when she saw me. aad I saw her
head move qaiekly to her heart.
"Mary," said I, speaking very calm
ly, for I had a mighty strength of will
to support me, "I have act come to
distress yoe. I have come as a friend
aad I humbly ask that yoe will give
me audience for a few mtaute."
She went into the parlor and I fol
lowed her dosing the door behiad
me; aad when we were alone she
i set the lamp on the table aad aaotfoa-Jan
ed me to a seat.
"No," said I, "I will not sit down
yet. Give me year head, Mary.
Mecbanieaity she pet forth both
her heads , aad I took them in my
owa. There was a wondering look
upon her feee, aad a slight flash had
come to her pale cheek.
"Mary," I eeatineed, speakiag
slowly aad softly, aad I knew that a
moisture was gathering ia my eyes,
"yoa mast answer aie ce question.
Answer it as yoa please aad take my
solemn assurance that I only ask U for 1
my good. Tell me do yee love me?
No, no, do net take away year haads
yet. Answer me If yea can. Fear
I act h, fear net, for I woeM rather
tge i&tm eadfesH sight fees do v&a
wroag. Teil me, Alary, Ao yen love
me?"
"I eaanot speak falsely ," she whis
pered tremblingly ; "for my own
peace of mind, perhaps, I love yoe
too deeply."
"Listen to me one moment," I ad
ded, drawing her nearer t me, and
when -I tell yoa what I have learned,
yon shall he the jadge.'
She did not strive to free her bands,
bet g&zed ap eagerly into my Ste,
and her eyes beamed with a bopefnl
light.
"Yoe know John Staaton ?x Issu
ed. "Yes," she replied. "He was my
best friend while at college, and oer
friendship has not grows less."
"He has been to see me, and toid
me of the trials and seSeriifcgs of aae
of the seheoimatea of his earlier days.
Oh, Mary, I think I know very well
why yoa refused sty hand, and I
blame yoa sot. It may be that oer
paths may be different throegh life ;
bnt yoe shall at least know that he
whom yoe loved will so live that he
shall not be snworthy of year kind
est remembrance. I know that
hitherto my feet have walked in paths
of danger; bat henceforth I am freed
from the dread snare. Under the
new light jast dawned Hpon me, I
hold the wine cap to be a fearful ene
my, and 1 woatd sneu it&i wocmi a
shamefei life and a clouded death-bed.
For my sake I wotild do this, so that
my sainted mother if she can look
down from Heaven upon her boy, can
smile approvingly npea the coarse he
has chosen. And now, Mary, if at
some future time vou should fee! that
i yoa eoeid trust yoar happiness to my
keeping, yea will give me some token
thereof, and I will come again and
ask for your band, and shocM it be
my blessed lot to receive it, I will de
rote every energy of my betas to
make yoar life a joyoes and happy
tone.
I let go her head?, aad bowed nay
J
b.e&d to wipe away a tear. I had tern
ed toward the door, really intending
to oVpart aad give her time for re
HectioB, when she proaoaaeed my
name. I looked back, and her hands
were stretched oct toward rue.
"Not now,' I whispered. "I will
not ask yoar answer yet. Watch aae ;
prove me I Only give me assurance
thst I have yocr love, and I wHl "
I stopped speaking, for Mary's head
bad been pillowed oa my bosom, aad
she was weeping like a child.'
-5vWvr F aww P r -gStcggdy -am- -I
woe ad aiy arms aroend her. "Ohk
Charles ! I never doubted yonr troth.
I know yen cennct deesive me. -God
bless yoa for yoar noble resomtica,
aad let me help yoa keep it I"
I cannot tell how long I stopped
that night, I can only tell that I was
very happy, and that my prospects
for the coming year were bright.
The following Sabbath, a calm and
pleasant dav, the organ gave forth a
The daeehters of Zioo !
new strain.
were no longer in a strange land.
They had taken their harps down
from the willows and within the new
temple, more resplendent than of old,
sang the song that had aforetime
made joyoas the city of their God.
All marked the grandeur of the fairy
organist on that beautiful Sabbath
morning, aad seemed moved by the
inspiration. To see it was like the
outpourings of a redeemed seel, and
with bowed head and folded howds I
gave myself up to the seblime infta
eaee. As Mary terned from the iastra-
Enent i eaesat her eve. Mine was
iep wth aofetare, ba
; ness wasj
brightly beaming with g!ed seraphic
He at.
We went oat from the eherch
t-f
gether.
Srs many weeks had passed, an
other ba-ad pressed the keys ef the
organ, for Mary Granville was not in
the choir. She knelt before the aliar
knelt by my ide and over s both
the aged clergyman stretched his
hands with prayer aad blessing.
Yea Bet.
TotttKlwrrf tbsOaciaati Tbneg:
A bets B that be (B) canoe name
the President of the United States.
B Barnes U. S. Graat. Dees B wia?
" Aas wer Jro."
P. S. Above fe decision ef flrttter
Spirit ths week. Is WUke right ?
Yce, WUhea is right. It h&s been
repeatedly decided by the betting au
thorities that bets into which a trick
or & gag eaters, cannot staad. The
gamblers look upon a bet as a con
tract to pay moaey aader certain con
tingencies, aad hold that the contract
(like any other; is not complete I?
there fe presemptuoee reason that is I
meaning was not andezstood alike by
both parties at the time of making.
I In this case A clearly meant the Pres-
ideat elect, else his bet would have
beee idiotic. B takes advaataee of
iaaeoarate expression, aad names
the present President,
win. CiHemttaii Times.
B does sot
J. Baadoiph Tacker, ef Virginia,
i delivered the oratfoa at the ana sal
eommeaeemect of the lew depart
ment of the University of Maryland,
in Baltimore. The oration was as
bitterly partisan as was his speech in
Congress last wfter. He dragged his
CalhoGB deetriaes in by main force,
aad without exeose raved about some
thing that had no connection with
law topics. This k the troefeJe with
these eld fessiis. Invite them to lee-
tare a& she dairy, on love or astrono-
my or law, and off they go into State
rights, and the feulare of the federal
system to realize the hones of its
founders. They woald talk aboot the
reserved rights of the States at a baby
show, aad leetare on the evils of cen
tralism at a feoeral. ItUer Ocean
A Test of Casrtesy.
A siageiar incident oceerred on one
of the ears of the Pleasant
Vallev
Passeagec Bail way a few days ago,
wbeh serves to illastrate the import
snee. of every one being willing to
grant,! by way of eoertesy, what he
eactti from others in like manner.
la otiier words, it is not only improp
er, bet may prove very embarrassing
for persons to set ap a rale of polite-1
ness for others which they are KawH- j
ling to have applied to themselves, j eeived sgood hasiness edocetion, bet
A ear on the road was jogging along j tbeyoempgr was inclined to be dissi
from Allegheny to PI ttsherg. Among ! pa ted', mfit, rsdeed, had Smzred in so
those first in the ear was a negro who many sosapes at home that, his depar
had a seat. Finally, the last seat was tare w not regretted in his native
occupied, and a white man entered, village. The two brothers lived for a
He stood op for a time, and the aext short tljae in San Francisco while
stop was made for the admission of a ! they Mpked for situations. The
iady. The ear started seem, and
while several of the passengers who
had seats were gentlemen, none of-
fered to rise that the lady might be
seated. And jest here it may be re-
marked that it does make some dif -
ferenee in forming a judgment as to
what oashs to be done in soeh a ease
! whether the person is sitting or stand- J that of partner in the firm. He late
I ing. The white man, who was hold-! ly purchased a boose in Bosh street.
1 incr on Ini strsn nd ararcnmtmr hU
jolting as best he could, seemed to
have a much keener appreciation of
the eoortesy due to the lady than the
colored man, or any of his white
brethren who were so comfortably
seated. After glancing at several of
the seated gentlemen, none of whom
seemed to be particularly concerned
about those who were less fortunate,
be at length fastened his eyes os the
aegro, and, addressing him, said :
"Sir, could yoe oblige this iady by
giving her a seat?"
The negro coo Id not resist the ap
peal, and as he rose the lady acknowl
, . .
edged the eoertesy with a bow to the
biaekman aad a complacent gi&nee ;
toward the person who bad spoken in
her behalf. To the miad of every one
in the ear, perhaps, there was some
thing more conveyed than the words
themselves indicated. It was a deli
cate rebuke to the negro for sitting so
long while a lady was compelled to
stand and undergo the awkward surg
ing of the ear.
Now for the seqaei : The lady rode
bet a few -blocks, and as she got ep to
?ii BL-.,Ar'i"nii r Him
there was a sebsequent tittering,
which too plainly iadieaUd the im
pression that the white man "scored
one" asainst hie colored brother. In
a few minutes the be i! rings again,
the car is stopped, and a stalwart
daughter of Africa is added to the
compelied-to-staad-ap alongside of
her dosky brother, who at once sew
hie opportunity aad &eed it. Turn
ing to the gentleman who had sojate-
!-v "PP to hi aader llkeciream-
stances, ne sew :
"Sir, will yoe be good eaootgh to
oblige this lady with a seat?"
The passengers bit their lips, turned
in their seats, and did other queer
things as the white men rose aad sur
rendered his seat to the colored lady.
From which let as learn never to
exact from others, by way of poHte
es, what we are not willing to con
cede aader like eirenmstaaees.
Capiat Barton's Biscoverica ia the
Land of 3ff idiste.
A correspondent of the Timea,
writing from Alexandria, informs the
public that Captain Barton, the Afri
can traveler, has made a "find of ua-
eseal interest. At the reqeest of the
Khedive he visited the "land of Mid
iaa ," the desolate region on the east
ern side of the Gulf of Akebah, the
eastermost of the two long aad nar
row estearkrs la which the Bed Sea
eeds.
AeeoBipaaied by M. George Marie,
a French engineer. Captain Burton i
landed in Midian oa the 2d of April,
sad in an exploration of some weeks
explored a region full of rained towns
befit of solid masonry, with made
roads aeuueducts five miles long, ar
tificial lakes aad massive fortresses,
all marking a wealthy aad powerful
peov. Their wealth was based oa
mining operatioas, aadCaptainBarton
repcrts the existence of gold, silver,
tin, antimony, and turquoise mines.
The auriferous region is extensive ;
indeed, the discoverer believes he has
opeaed up a California, aad the
Khedive proposes to have the country
norked by European eapttaitste.
& will be remembered that in the
Bfble Midiaa is alwars described as, a
land fall of metals, espeejelly gold,
silve? aad lead. It is more thae
probable that Solomon's Ophir wse
situated there, as the small ships in
which he imported gold, ivory, aad
peacocks were lee ached at the head
of the Bed Sea. Midiaa fe part of the
I Egyptian Yiceroyalty. London Soee-
iator.
A roan of geaias never seeks sp-
ptaese : wntte tae little maoee or
those who have bet a small portion of
intellect, try by their vaaity and eoa
eeited boastiags to "ocild apoa the
mental resoerces of others their ews
fame aad repetatioa. However it is
for the best, for they soon foH to their
J Vx?e level once they reach, k, they
aever rfee-
" """
Ex-Presfdente FIHmore aad Van
Bcren visited England in ISao, aad
j the XewYork World calls attsntioa
Uo the feet that they attracted very Kt-
tie notice in that coeatry. Mr. Be-
eaanae, as -Amerfoan M.infeter. took!
precedence at eaert and ia aU formali
ties aad ceremonies of the es-Presi-eents.
The reception of ex-President
Grant fe different in every pextieeiar.
The people of England are enthnsias
tie over his visit, all classes -hasten to
pay arm. noaor, and the Qneea and
Prince of Wales receive hfm as a geest
honored: above all others.
j Esaianac.and.TferiIliHe; Becagaxtien.
Aboel ten years ago two brothers
; teis inevcoome ra Illinois anc waatto
California. The eider was & man of
the mestateady habits, and had re-
yocngerlhrother, however, fell into
( bed coomaay, and they separated by
mataal consent. The elder brother
j obtained a siteation m a wholesale
j store as jKszter, and by his dilligeaee
' and ctcadiaess ao worked himself in to
, the confidence of his employers that
i he rose fooea the position of porter to
i married J isdr with
a eonsaderabfe
fortune of her own, and on last!
vuiiaiiuc Beair tares oamutui chil
dren arajfead him enjoying the de
lights of a Christmas tree. The fami
ly retired at midnight, bet the gentle
man had hardly closed his eyes when
he was ta-Rkened by a aoiae down
stairs, aad moving steadily to the
parlor 9h a rerotrer in his hand, he
saw a man endeavoring to open the
buffet where he kept his silver. Lev
eling bis fevolver at the thief's bead,
he exekthaed: "Stop, or you're a
dead map!" The jimmy dropped
from the hands of the burglar who,
falling on; his kaeas, cried oat : "A3
God is xnjr jadge, Robert, I did set
know that yea Jived here!" The
gentleman then discovered to his hor
ror that the bergtar whom he was
aboet to snoot was the younger broth
er' whom ho had not met for nearly
ten yeaav That night the burglar
eiept peansfaJiy aader the roof of his-1
forgiving brother, who assured a
friend, we tears in his eyes, that he
ig brother, who assured a
was about, In sire him employ nsnt in
3ieety-wiee.
Not many rears ago, when the
of mnemonics was in all its sto
ry , the writer of this article happened
to be ta an city of Wheeling, Virgin
ia, snoa an occasion when two lady
priifi.winr of the science were giving
pealfoeeaaoaatratioas, and daring the
perfonssnee it became accessary, in
order to ttst the wonderful powers of
their memory,, to invite any gentle
man toitep op on the platform and
call oat the nembers or sentences, as
they were proeotinitert ia presence of
tb audience.
A peon of good voice and delivery
was required, and seeh a person was
respectfully invited to come forward.
The'niVtDTtfoa had hardly been giv
en before a fopph, seif-eoaceited
young man of good family, sprang ap
and offered his services.
His same was John Cunningham,
and he bad an impediment in the
nose which he himself did not seem i
to he eanscioes of, though everybody
else was fully aware of the met.
The audience appreciated the joke.
ead at once commenced giving oat the j
following array of figures, to be re
membered aad repeated, first by Mr.
Cunningham, and followed by the.
two sisters.
"Number Nine," said one gen tie-1
maa. "Debeer Dider" repeated Cne
aingfaam. "Number Ninety-Bine,"
said the second. "Dabber Didety
dide," said Job a. "Number Nine
Hundred and Ninety-aine." "Dab
ber Dtde HtMidred add Didety
dide." "Member Niae Thoasead
Niaezxkndred and Niaety-nine,"
said ftjwt.- "Debeer Dtae Thoa
sead Bide Heedred add Didety-dide."
sahi John, aad thes they con tinned,
until after John had repeated "Dtde
Haddred add Dtdety-dide Bililod,
Dtde Heddred add Didety-eide Thee
sadd, Dide Heddred add LJkiety-dkle,''
when the aadkvace he came oaa re bed
with the ledicroos aatare of the afihir
sad ovist act Into reieeifeveas ap
plaase. John became daasbfoaaded. and for
the first time in his life, perhaps, re
alised that he was being made the
bett of aerriment for the eseeiahiy,
aad shaking his fiat ia eager, he ex
claimed with aa oath :
"By eabe is Joed CuAiidgd. add
I'll be eaabed if I cad's lick eer sod
of aged ia the reeb." -
So saying, he disappeared, aad ever
sines that aight he has been sailed
Didety-dide.
Jeaafe (look lag to a milliner wia-
dow at yec thmk $aey are rery
pretty ?
Larsie, ' ( wbese thoaghts are ea the
ether safe ef the street) 'Very ; espe
cially the one with the long,
side-whisfcers.
The Soeth Careiiaa Legfelatare. in
carryiag eet the pledges efWaee
Hamptoa, have aaseated Jadeie Gar-
peater. Carfoes feet : Jedgs Carpea
ter'was.the smrv Bepeblicaa among
eight efocaK jedgre, esd. was eiaeted
ns own aaaas. ana urns no ana never i
JHK ' l . I
nraactnm CoE.
by eneniaoes vote of both brasehes of
the ILegiehUnre which praeeded that
Chamberlain Legistatnre. These
modeet Sooth Carolinieaa want alt fte
iedges, aad law
aad jesttee don't
staad in their war,
Beifefae of Xaiftr.
Thore is somethhsg exaointioriy
pises tog aad snbHme in the son tern
ptatfoa of the growth of vegeteblag,
the germiaation of cootie, appearance
rof soroats. devemaeaeut of stems.
bntrehes, leaves, hods, blossoms,
fiowass and frsits, their variegated
forme, dimensions, movements, col
ors and orders. Some persons, who
bare never terned their attestioa to
this sebjaet till the evening of their
days, hare been astonished at the
wonders which bars on their view.
A new state of existence seemed to
open npoe them. Their perception
and estimate of things were changed.
Instead of eoashtering the world as
ealeslated only for what man too gen
erally makes it a scene for the dis
play and gratification of the most
groveling and
ordtd passions they
nnd a theater crowded with aebn -
ing specimens of the Creator's sfclll,
tbestsdyofwhiehiaapnmtheswsttt;;""' iam &'!or mam a "
est pleasau-es and the knowledes of
which eontrmatas the greatest wealth.
Those pioas, mistaken people who
incessantly mux mar against the world
and long to depart from the 'howling
'ling j
wilderness,' as they are pleased to
term it. reproach their Maker by revi
ling his works. They arc waiting for
future displays of Hie glory aad neg
lect those ravishing ooes by which
( they ere surrounded, forgetting that
the whole earth is fell of His gmry f
looking for sources of pleasure to
and dosing their eyes to those before
them, thirsting for the waters of beer
en, and despising the living foentain
which the Father of all iatelloani has
opened for them on earth. They seem
to think happiness hereafter will not
depend npoe kaowledg or that
knowledge will be acquired witcoet
effort a kind of passive enjoyment
independent of the exercise of thexr
iateilectaal or spirltna! energies Bat
they hare ao ground to hope for any
sash thing. Seasoning frets the an
alogy aad nature of mind, the happi-
ness of splriis most consist in being
i imbeed with a lore of aatare in con
templating tee wisdom and other at
tribetesoftheDeityas theyare enfold
ad in the works of creation. In what
that hamsn or finite beings of aay
class ean erer know God except
through the medium of his works.
It is admitted that the study of na
ture is a source of exquisite pleasure
to intelligent beings aad th most re
fined ones, too, that the miad can
conceive of; It is also one that
never he exhausted. Those
therefore, who take no pleasare in ex
am in ing the works of ereatioa here,
are little prepared to eater upon more
extensive aad mere serutiaizing
views of them ia the other worlds. If
they have ao relish for ea acquaint
ance with the Creator's works while
they lira, they hare ao nght to ex
pect new tastes for them after ieath.
The works of God are all perfect,
those in this world as well as those in
the other, aad he that can look with
apathy apoa a taUp or a rose, a pas- never took tae sffeunst ne
sioa flower or a lily, or any ether pro- "tice of hin
duction of a flower-garden or forest, r Then Mr. Baringer became exetted.
has aot begun to live. Bestdes, we He jumped ap aad down ea the atot
are aot sure that other worlds possess I form, andsarged-hisaseir mmm like a
eaDtrratiaz or more enaoblfaur
subjects for contemplation aad
eareh, more thrilling proof of
wisdom aad beneficence of God.
as ato - - '
A iPCflyfat csB CctaKaHaffe
the
Aa oaearrcace has laieiy traaapired
a; Nice. A aetaneas aaastoe af tea
Casiao, who bad made his meaty
ptincipally there, had set ep a veai
de, a pair ef bosses, Uger aad all.
aad eat aeJte a swell, driving aaaead
ia the neighborhood,.
One day he was riding ia the eari
rons of the town apoa the fine reeds.
when his servant, sittiag apoa the!
raised box behiad, who bad been feel
tag somewhat on secy at not receiving
his wages for seam time, fating his
master qjaito alone, rentered to
him If he woald make
to pay him.
The master was ia a
and asked :
'How math k it La Fleer?'
'One band red and twenty-fire lir-
res, may it please yaav moneienr.
Very well, here it is,' said the aa
ter, spreading the sam in paper est
rency opna the seat of the rehiele.
'Now La Fleor. bare von a peek of
cards with yoa?
'Certainly,' aaswered tbeoeseqai
ens leaky. "I always carry them,
monsiear.' prodaeiag; a pack at oaee.
'That is well. Now, I will be bank
er aad yoe shall play against ate. I
will take the front seat, the back
shall serve for eer table.
The lacky assented to this, aan
at bis master's eoetdeseeasfon. Lack
was rather on the master's side, bat
both became eager is the game, think
ing of that and that only.
Little by little the fbotasaa's moa
ey was going, antii at! that was left ef
hie wages was fire irvres. He ngaa
to feel aaxiens, whoa saddeair the
kick terned aad he won the whole
seet back with every see she master
had aboet him.
Piaeed at his less, tae master wa-
t gered a horse, which the Jaeky waa.
thee ks mate, next the haceess, aad
t lastly the carriage aastf. Lack: am
sH ese vr&j, aad the servant. La
Fleer, woo eivery thing. Too
took oat bis watofe aad
f against a given sons. The sards' wec
i sfeenled ; the laekov won.
'I have aothtag mea. La Ffocar ;
have eteaoed sse ot seM She
half-desperate gambhtr.
Tbeserraat was is. high spfalai at
his strange ran of reek.
'Here are a anndred lirrree.
fonx, I will stake thorn against
position ; if yoa win they am room.
If yoe lose we change. seafe.'
Agreed r
The emie were shoffiad. La Fleer
won, and the vehicle reteraed to 271ns
with ite former master sitttng in th
servant's box behind, and L
iaelea.
&.
A happier man than Mr. Bnrtngnr
never whkHled hiaaseh home. Every
thing had gone well with hiaa thro
the day. He had worked oaf some
billicBS looking fifty cent nlecns. that
his deck had taken in. on ;
rostic eeetomer. aad thes he had
f ehnrged thsaa np ts theefork fortek-
f IO a lawyer aae couaas-
bill of man Baxiager thonghtf
uMi.e uk aniy aseesses mm property at
one-thltd its acceal vaina
" r- er w, pretty cona-
" ' Py"HP
aiiogetner, oa in groeae at "trepidation the
t. And then, ftnallr
a policeman bad shot his aeieshors
dog. Everything transpired to make
Mr. Baringer fesd happy as the beast
of earing. He whistled all th
homo, aad ba trolled a aaertj rounde
lay in a deep rich wheelbarrow tone
as ho skipped op the staiss, ho smiled
entered the hall, aad there the
song died away, and the amilo
act of the silent gates of the Was,
down into the eeholeas adsles of the
silent Had Been, oat into the
less sea of the distant "Ain't
beak again," aad Mr. Baringer
transfixed.
"Well," he growled after a
of silent reflection aad eoateaaplatioe
eyeing the object that had so seddea
ly changed hie happy mood, "what
next. I wonder? As If there weren't
enenza legitimate eses for money to
make it go faster than aay one m
eon earn it, somebody most go aad 1
bey scales with it. What eader
the
sob, what ia the asase at
sense eao we or do we west with gse-
aaJS tBSi VVaaaswoaaS
plot st ef Fairaank's hey scales if
some peddler woald come along and
offer it to her."
He dashed his hat viemesiy oa the
hat rack, aad climbed moodily oa the
scales to weigh bhaself.
'Fancy old scales, too," he said,
"carpeted platform and aJefcel-plaatd
dial indicator. I wonder if I've gaia
ed any thin since last foil ?
Bat, as be stepped his foil weight
apoa tae platform, he was snrprised
to observe ao change in the diaL The
iadheeto? poiated at "aothing"
oiuteiy as thoorh it meant is.
"Hah:" exekimed Mr.
ia some amazement. And be
ed himself lightly on the platform.
and watched the indicator with some
appearance of interest.
, tidal wars, bet the todieatar
lled, aad obstinately indicated the
nothing point at every effort. Then
Mr. Baringer got frightened aad a !!t-
tleaand.
"By tbander!" beexciaimed, "I
kaaw better thea that ; I knew I
weegaapacad, anjhe r. Here," he
assroesly, "III mm what yam
artais."
Aad he ma oat and brought in an
aratfel of brinks mad piled thorn en
taspiatforna, aad seated himself on
them ; bat the indicator remained as
steady as thoagh it bad been merely
painted on the dial .late. Tnen he
wen: oat again, his eyes staring at
each other across the top of his nose,
and eame staggering ia with the axe,
the spade and the lawa mower, and
held them oa like Marias M-y tbe
rains, aad glareJ at the todieatar with
a dreadful expression of
aad the indicator only Termed to set
tle e little more firmly in ha place,
aad that was all. Then he sallied
forth again, and eame la with his
hair staadhag oa ami, aad piled a box
of sand, s coal scuttle, s pair of dumb!
hells, a coil of led pipe and a piece ef
curbstone cc, aad climed to the
tit of the heap cad looked.
I piauorm groaned eener tae cs
dons weight, and the
itself ep. aad indicated
going to bodge aader nay seeh in-
l duecaatBts.
Then Mr. Barrage? go mad. He
cried aad cHased down to the finer.
aad begaa to bombard the thing with
tae vartees article he had piled oa it,
aad be yelled aad howled at it antii
the meket bseeght the aarraats aad
the children sad Mat, Tan i eat i late
Mb hall.
w
'artSs. "I . v
i "- -.j.
Whet Is
ftaemattor with
yoar
"Matterr' he yelled, tsyaar to!
throw the htwa mower st tae. dial.
"Doing? S matter with aae T Ba-
toed ! Bahsed by & women that will
bey anything s. peddier caahtiagbee.
Seaies that wetisst snow aa eei
if yae pilec moeataias oa eea! Sea -
taVethv a lit
tea! Ablaaedold lyiag-feced ed!;9B.the went
Aa old pieee et kea. Ehal weeid he nv -
! jected at a
Scales! A rila.
JBntOGtt
JlElSC 9SlllnfpK
a
nrof the hail.
ear-
pet with both
wish
aSBV
OBtvet-
MC, help! help rhnlpr she shefok
sd. "O. Isnsganaiodiavlknow I
sea! O, be, he,Jt.ho.ho.bcvbe, he,
he! O, dear, dear, what a font a maa
hi ! O, mercy, mercy ! O, Efasmas
Bashagcs, yoarH be She death of me
re! O.msrej.mesay! Sea be, ha,
ha lee! He, bo, he! Snaks! O.
Ssascnes Bnslusnrt Stmibs! O, Im
Chnt jo ssnpae.
Ifbny;
.
Oettetedby
WnnwWwat nrJaB9r
ral
enough to themes Iran, bns
aJea headed acientiacs can no)
explain, is vonchadfor by aSon JPma-
Aladtj rfottiajr harals-
te, w ooe of the
of
f Uuu city
tooti
pj
pane was ma
over aad over, bet fruitlessly. Ia
the middle ef the night the lady of
the noose was awakened by the en
trance of her
toady for writing nmomdais.
Bar aaiveea seehaat annaeat to ha
highly exiled, aad aae did
pear to be to her right miad.
it was not a ease of mann inali in.
Paper and paacU were gfcraa to eer.
aad she iaxmediately coronet the for
mer with sera aria which were aaafly
decipherable. Shoaana aaistod iowa
lapewd toto her normal LiiMUlUwiJ,.
when the two ladies net tJiemseirea to
work to eeerpaer the wiaJa. ia
which they were finaJry seeeeasial,
finding, aewerer. Ik all tons a leaeaV
ttoa of the aetttesea, "-Sae hat hid it
aader tae stoaL" Taey deomed thai
"she" meant the aew -errant, and
to tae letter's door tacy
for sdmitxaace. At the foot
of tae bed
r. Highly
the;
to It, trap wi
with fes coirteues latast. Tl
the oatsade ef the
had
watched the ladies'
meats, aad as they placed their hands
apca the stool she turned, ma dawn
stairs, unlocked a deer, and zeahed
into the street aad away nefota :n :i
eoaU he apprebended, aad saahas.
net been seen or beard of ansae. So
far from being a apiritaalist. the lady
la very positive ia her rtishslisf of aay
seeh agency, aad. moraorer. is aa old
school Presbytsriaa, aad ia fated
aace with hex retigioas eeetriaes la
opposad to any i
eJamia:
With a Caw
A short time ago a
ewe Usongiag to Maj.
of
eaary. nave birth
nek
she
immediately after e
died. Aboet the
ejena
heifer on the Major's place dreppsd a
calf which died. The Major'saoa. af
ter eoasaltiag 'BaadaU'a Saeep Has-
f bandry.' placed - the lamh with the
heifer, first holding it ap to the cow's
odWr till it soaked. The resalt af the
affair i that tae heifer at oeee adopt
ed tee lamb, aad Ufa now fot, taaffty
aad rtaaeose, being; be
old and weighing: over fifijr
Sedalia Bazoo.
Ranters for the barfed trensere cf
the late maxeated Caps. Kktd will be
iatereeted in serious expasiatentH
with the 'diviarBg rod made near
Baltimore recently. The geatlenteo -ly
brigands who hare plowed the At
lantic coast with forked stnnni of
witrh ha ml, only to fied taet the ken
sots of their ancestor were awarded br
faacDerltvUI appreebUo tan eaasov-
ery that the 'rod' fa mm noted of two
pieeea of rattaa, anitad at one aad by
. ' a brar-s eap. and held at the ether by
a good Methodist. It is claimed by a
correspondent that eonipjlasee with
these condUioBs iaerttabry rooafa ?r.
lading water at camp-meeting, aad
the dedacthm a aot fttogical that the
implement, property haaaaaf by
brother, wilt tarn ap the
serfage af the ilsrwatf pi
rate. SL Jm
The Battiaaare Oazettr, feetiaa: eaii
ed apoa to diapose of all inimns and
txvqairfes eon canting
of the reazahai of J.
says chat soma time after hie caacu
tloa they were deJirecnu by cedar of
PrtairtiBt Andrew Johaatn to taeati
mtkwem at the deeeand ia Baitaaose.
The remains were exhamed mm their
phi of banal ia the Withingtaa ar-
aed by Booth's retrros. were toaee.
to Baltimore aad there iaeiirad ha she
fisesiry lot ia Greet
Bat I
said a
Saaday, in
f hfe sebject to take an
, I make it spades V yeUed a
. the seflery who
igaaeefsaehre. Ti I ia."Tl n
aay
bJ-
i aaj unifsfnT by aae uf the
That sngtalar tsajijint, that
piclsnaliats aan
day, earekaslj leaving has pemtscaa
tain lag eeia aad araJaabla ilmmnnrf
pin. on a boreai
ing, and with gse&fi
boaso was seenand
f tn ttii msnr nhnialiii manor ad irk
fog sans
WiBtec Booth.
i hi later, one-
gcimtawaseof
tenth or. Taea
nana firom.
ifo amlag too
aw. inaagtoary