r- 2I i- i A 1-" , . -St I' -Kk J. -. t" - , n ' THE BED CLOUD CHIEF. r . U tlMAI, PaaHifcar. MD CLOUT), . NEBRASKA. mats or tmtemewt. MILttorvy. John Brougham will, on the tthoi May, be seventy years old and be will have completed hU fiftieth year upon the Mem. Gilbert and Sullivan have returned to London. They promise to -be back in New York in the fall with a new opera. Byron's Bible, some locks of his hair, his writing-desk, and divers gar ments and other personal belonging?, have just been sold at auction in Lon don. John B. Gougb, the temperance lecturer, k a bookbinder by trade. He is a man of moods, very sensitive and modest; either very happy, full of fun, or despopdent and sad. Theodore Thomas has resigned his position as Musical Director of the Cin cinnati College of Music, on the ground, as stated by him, that the Directors re fused to agree to certain reforms that he deemed essential to the welfare of the institution. Mr. Longfellow is said to write easily but very slowly, washing every word before jotting it down in lead pen cil. There is hardly :in erasure in his manuscript, but when his work returns to him in proof hardlv anv thine of its original form is left. It is asserted that 'The Divine Tragedy" was rewritten after thejnostof it was in type. Mr. Bartley Campbell eald to a rc- Sorter of the Boston Traveller the other ay: " My profits last week were $2,900 from five different companies. My Erogrcss for the past nine years has een through a purgatorial existence, and if I have reached the heaven of suc cess I think I have fairly earned it, and any one who wants to get it at the same price has my sympathy." Count de Lessens is a man of mid dle stature, with white hair and gray moustache, piercing hazel eyes, which have an extremely kind expression, black eyebrows and a ruddy, healthy face. In conversation M. de Lesseps is frank and eloquent and kind to a re markable degree. His manner it ener getic, and his 74 ye.rs and gray hair are obliterated in ua vigorous diction and demonstrative gestures. Science Rail Industry. In England portable gas is now sold and delivered everywhere. Country residonts receive it from the city in cop per cylinders. All the iron mines in the State of New Jersey are being worked thorough ly, and ten of her fifteen blast furnaces arc running, with three to be lighted up soon. The export of butter from this country arc only four per cent, of tho pro duction: those of cheese forty'flvo per cent. English people eat fat more cheese than butter. It is a staple' food among laboring men in England. The export of French beetroot sugar to the end of tho year amounted to only 8,000 tons, as compared with 97,000 in 3878; but in Austria, where an increased acreage more than compensated for the deficient crop, tho export was 110,547 "tons, against 97,400. The Illtutrtrtc Zeitung gives the fol lowing statistics 'concerning tho tele graphic wires of tho world. Those of Europe measured at tho closo of 1878, 768,786 English miles; those of Ameri ca, 114,15 ; Asia, 24,521; Australia, 23,582; and Africa, 8,148. The tele graphic net that embraces the world comprises, therefore, 980,176 English miles, or 1,513,683 kilometres. Tho Municipal Council of Paris have made arrangements wherebv the correct time is indicated by electricity, day and night, along "the boulevards and the principal streets, on a large number of dials, thus carrying out in the most liberal manner the system of time distribution begun by Leverrier. A small fee only is necessary to secure accurate time in private establishments. As the color of indigo is really a. greenish blue when it is used as a pig ment or in solution, and as the color of the dry cake is not only very black, but variable, according to the mode in which it is handled, Prof. O. N. Rood thinks it desirablo to let "indigo" fall into disuse in designating a color of the spectrum, and to substitute "ultrama rine " for it, the color of the artificial variety being intended. Foreign Xetea. Sir James Ferguson, who has filled many offices of profit and honor in Eng land and her colonies, has been ap pointed Governor of Bombay. " Band plays at 4 o'clock and Mrs. Langtry will be present," is the legend of a notice recently placarded at the Brighton (England) Skating Bink. Mr. Jndah P. Benjamin, the new counsel for the Tiehborne " claimant," has expressed himself as confident of proving, tho innocence of his client and the truth of certain npw evidence recently discovered. The Pope, who was a great pedes trian in. the days of his youth, still dis tinguishes himself in that way taking his daily walks in the gardens of the Vaticanat such a pace that his attendants can hardly follow him. Tho German War Department is busy with a plan for the fortification of Berlin after the fashion ot Paris.' Sev eral of the Continental newspapers are already discussing the details. The de fenses will include some twenty outlying forts. An Austrian Jew, named Julius Blum, has been raised to the rank of a Pacha and Assistant Secretary of State by the Khedive of Egypt. It is said that no other Israelite since the time of Joseph of old has reached such eminence in the land of the Pharaohs. Lord Wentworth, the Englishman whom Miss Dudu Fletcher is not going to marry, lives in a new house of Queen' Anne architecture on the Thames em bankment in Chelsea. He is reported to be no great match as regards charms of naiad and temper. Prince Lobanoff , the sew Bassian . Embassador, who has just reached Lon don, aad whose style of living k of barbaric spleader, is not as- rich as he was some years since, but is still mag aificeut. 'The -horse be rides" k shod with silver, but tlik knot vulgar display, bat from a convictioa that naVer k the beat adapted for the jHupoeeT Ifaaeaamokefie Alice da.OBaertoa de BcwMka, a yuaaglady of dktkgakhed mtanly, fee juatfalka a victim to her tore ad of mountain climbing. She re elrad; without a gvide to aeeend the FfeemLaaTnBt,intbePyreaee, She had sat tut some dktoiKsewhea her feet alpfdad she Ml into the abyss ' Eatartaiamunt Society ia England. It began, of aMr. Bethane. by fa w people to speed an evea- kTaLaanbe (district of. London) ., The room. are-tae oary ex- -miiH bv anese - very Marrard Umversaty f,0W,e00aiaoel87W t- --- . Taa eaarnaior . - mM m' to twelve ceato .l4 Z "-- ---g ' j aoweaaea, geaTMajiwc-i -? r - V- i f l.inan fc"JF f. wfc " " J S " of which there are 'eight, have 40 !-' deate, the Southern Seminary at Loak vflk, Ky., leadkf the Hat wfchW eta deate. Mka Li2zk Smith k a aewevaa tttkc who has been working I Few Jersey. At Fanlsboro aboat fatty con verts have been omitted as the result of her recent protracted efforts. Mr. J. M. Sears, the TMUg Boston, millionaire who graduated at yak, k to give that institution $150,000 with which to erect a new gymnastam. The cause of education k certainly ad vancing. An English paper reports that an Archbishop and two Bishops of tho sect known as Old Believers," have beea confined In a Russian fortress for peri ods ranging from seventeen to twenty six years, their only offense being that they celebrated religious services ac cording to the rites of their own faith. A dispatch from Rome says it-k believed at the Vatican that many of the clergy who left the church as Old Catholics are desirous of returning;. Instructions have been asked by the German and Austrian bishops. It was replied that all may be received who make an explicit declaration of submission to the holy see ant) the decrees of tho Vatican Ecumenical Council. Ah English gentleman named Gard ner lately left $1,500,000- to found a col lege for the blind, and the Register of Eton College has supplemented the gift by the offer of several splendid sites. One of them is Botham's Hotel, at Salt Hill, where the Eton Montcm, a bygone collegiate festival, used to be celebrated with extraordinary eclat. Seventy coaches had to change horses daily at Botham's, which is four miles from Windsor Castle. It k proposed in certain Methodist quarters that the number of Bishops in the church be increased. At present there are nine, tho limit which has pre vailed since lwl, and if nine were need ed in 1&U it is held that twice that num ber are necessary now. But whether the church can support that number on the present plan of work is .another question. The matter of a Bishop's traveling expen-cs is ot itself a consid erable item. About 14,000 miles k the average annual travel of a Bishop. Odd and End. The greatest strike of tho day 12 o'clock. Trouble can always be borrowed at low rates. Good deeds pan out better than good intentions. Caws and effect: When the, farmer hears the caws and goes forth with his gun, the crows aro likely to see the ef fect. Tho trouble with the midnight cat is not so much that it can not sing as that it firmly believes it can. Chicago Ihlcr-Occan. "Those also serve who only stand and weigh it," remarked the young man whose duty it was to attend a pair of Scales. Steubcnville Herald. The dentist lives from hand to month. Boston Transcript Yes, and he has a hard pull and must frequently law customers to get his fill. Afcto Or leans PicayunC: The ballots for ladies who vote at the nest election will probably be cut on the bias or scalloped. It will not be at all strange if we hear them exclaim: " Her ballot is old-fashioned ; it didn't look fit to bo seen." Hudson Bcgister. Mary Anderson, in the play "Love," exclaims to tho Empress: "I'll deal with thee as woman deals with woman I " and then she sails in arid jaws her Ma jesty up hill and down. Oh, you bet your back hair that Mary acts true to life. Boston Post. "What's in a name?" Ah, Wil liam, you didn't know every thing, that's certain-. Salt can be bought for a few cents a quart, but call it chloride of sodium, and tho apothecary will mulct you to the tune of half a dollar for one poor scruple. Boston Transcript. , . The Elmira Advertiser asks very in nocently, "How could matrimonial sweets be preserved without a family jar?" They couldn't, they couldn'.t! But the trouble is there are notrnsuaUy enough sweets in the average family to fill one small jar. There's where the trouble lies. Oowanda Enterprise. A Fish" Story. A Boston corresponpent of Forest and Stream tells tho following remarkable story: The scene is laid in Long Island, where, on the shore of a pond, the cor respondent was watching the play of swallows as they kimmea just over the surface of the water shortly before sun set. "About a hundred yards out was a bed of lily pads; and as the swallows skipped it, occasionally a good sized ripple could be seen, and sometimes a break from the edges indicating a fish there. This fastened my attention to the particular place. I had often seen cats play with swallows swooping at them, but the idea of fish doing the same was something new to me. Pres ently I saw a clean breach, and a fine largo pickerel showed Ids, whole size and got a swallow, too,' as he disap peared beneath the water. Thk I saw repeated several times, and I called the attention of my companion to this novel sight. While we were watching we saw two large fish break at the same swallow, the fish coming from opposite directions, and each head on to each. Both missed the swallow, but, singular to relate, only one fish was seen to fall into the water, and neither "was seen to pass the other. My companion and my- scu looked witn wonder. lnere was a great commotion in the water with a continuous spattering, and a boat being handy we jumped in and rowed to the spot, and picked up he largest pond pickerel I ever saw. When we had him in the boat the mystery was solved ; the smaller of the fish had, in his eager ness lor the swallow,' jumped .clear down the larger one's throat, and only the tail, to the extent of about an inch, showed. The huge fish was completely rent asunder and killed by" the catastro phe. Both together weighed twenty two pounds." " A Hermit's Fight with a Bear. A bear story of which a hermit k the hero, k recounted in a special dispatch from Bushkill to the FhUadelpha Frits. Old man Sheldon has ao coapaaioas, and hk lonely cave is several miles from any house, in the midst of a forest. He has ao weapon save a kaife, which he manufactured by rubbing aa old fileoa a stone until it became sharp. "A 'lew days ago the hermit went oat ia search of firewood, aad was absent from hk cave aeoat an hoar. Whea he returned he was amaaed to see a large alack croaohiac in one corner of hk ai groand abode. Before he coaM get oat of the cave, however, the bear spraag toward aim, dealing him a hard-blow oa the shoalder. SheldoB. drew hk kaife aad etrack bruin ia the nock, hat the woend only infuriated the beast. He agaia atteaeat ed. to retreat, bat the beer renewed the attack. The hermit thea eadeavored to deal him another; Wow in the Beck with the knife, bat laeweapoa glaacedaad ferereoaeof.taeaaimal'spawa. ' Shel ;doasacoeedetf ia'getiingpatof the cave .where' the straggle -was renewed, ,the bear getting him in Jik embrace aad the c&lieVwee taeky aad ao re the kaife in to the BMiMter V heart, hffiiaff him' iaetaatly. As the roew JalL dead, SheJdoa5 .faSatedVaad was foaad aacoa scioae, atratal hoars later, bv a aartr rho had set oat from the village to viat hk cvre.Nee York Tribme. J - - k ittAtKK BtEAJt-mSf . There k aa Itteaeaato s4efr-whUh t baKere aaa.atrrar teea paWkhed aitoagtllelrakbtkMM of the fertile hill cotntryof Western Pennsylvania, the BKMtaaMkeljr oaarter ia the world to serve as a breeiiag-place of mystery. It was settled ahaoet wholly by well-to-do farmers from the North of Ireland economical, hard-working PolkMJod fearkdt too, after the exact maaaer described by John Knox, aad having Mttle patience with aaj other manner. Not a likely people, assaredly, to give credence to any fanciful saperstitions, and still leas to original them. Thk story indeed, has a hold, matter-of-fact character. 111 every detail whkh quite Sets it apart from reUtions of the super natural. I have never heard it ex plained, and it k the beet authenticated mystery in my knowledge. Here it kin brief: Among the Scotch Irkhteltlers Washington County Hk 1813 was a famBj named Plymire, who oeeapied a eotaforUble farm aad hoase. ftachel, the daughter, was Engaged to A Vounr farmer of the heichhorhood. Oa a Saturday ereaing m July, having finished her Week's work, she dressed herself tidily and started to visit her married sister, who lived on a farm about fire miles dktaat, intending to return Monday morning. She tied up her Sunday cown and hat in a check ered handkerchief, and carried her shoes and stockings in the other band, meaning to walk in her bare feet and to put them on when she came In sight of her destination, after the canny. Scotch fashion. She left homo about T o'clock in order' to have the cool evening for her walk. The road to the farm was lonely ana unfrequented. The girl did not return home on Monday, but no alarm was felt, as the family thought her sisler would probably wish to detain her for a few days ; and it was not until the latter part of tho week that it was found that she had never'been'at her sister's. The coaatry'was scoured but in vain; the alarm spread, and excited a degree of terror in the peaceable'da meetic community, which would seem Inexplicable to city people, to whom the newspaper has brought a budget of crime every morning since their child hood. To children raised in those lone ly hamlets and hill-farms murder was a far-off, unreal horror; usually all that they knew of it was from the doings of Cain and Jael, set off with hideous wood-cuts in the family Bible. The girl had left home on Saturday at seven o'clock. That night long be fore ten o'clock (farmers go to bed with the chickens) j a woman living in Green County, about fortV miles from the Ply mire farm, awoke her husband in great terror, declaring that she had just seen a murder done, and went on to describe a place she had never seen before a bill country with a wagon-road running through it, and a girl wjth a bundle tied in a checkered handkerchief, her shoes and white stockings ia the other hand, walking briskly down the grassy side of the road. She was met by a young m an the woman judged from their manner the meeting was by appointment; they sat down on a log and talked for some time. Tho man at last rose, stepped behind her and drawing out a hatchet struck her twice on the head. She fell back ward to the wet, rotten leaves dead. Fresently the man was joined by anoth er, also young, who, asked: "Is it doneP" Ho noded, and together- they lifted the body and carried it away out of her sight. After a while they came back, found the bundle of Sunday finery and tho shoes and stockings, all of which were stained with blood. There was a ruined old mill near tho road; they went into it, lifted a loose board in the flooring, put the bundle, shoes, etc., with the natchet, underneath, and re placed the board. Then they separated and went through the woods in differ ent directions. The farmer's wife told her dream to her husband that night; the next day (Sunday), going to a little country church she remained during the intermission between the morning and afternoon services. ' The neighbors who had come from a circuit of twenty miles to church, gathered, according to their.homely habit, in the churchyard to -eat their lunch and exqhange the news. Our dreamer told her tory again and againtfor she was impressed by it; as if it had been reality. After the afternoon service the congregation sep arated, going to their1' widely-scattered homes. There were thus many wit nesses to certify to the fact that the woman had told the dream the morning after the murder was committed at a distance of forty miles, when it was ab solutely impossible that the news should have reached her. There were no tele graphs, we must remember, and no railways in those days, not even mail carriers in those jeclnded districts. When the story of the girl's disap pearance was told over the country at the end of the next week, the people to whom the dream had been repeated re called i"" Nowadays the matter would only serve as good material for the re porters bat the men-of those days still believed that God took an oversight even of their dreams. Might not thk be a hint from Him ? The Rev-Charles Wheeler, a Baptist ckrgvmaa of Wash ington, well known in Western Penn sylvania and Virginia a generation ago, and Ephraim Blame, Esq., a magistrate, father of the present Senator from Maine( And as,, popular a man in hk narrower circle, drove over to see the woman who had told the dream. With out stating their purpose, they took her and her husband, on pretense of busi ness, to the Plyuire iarm. "'' It was the first time in her life that.she had left her own country, and she" was greatly amused and interested. They drove over the whole of the road down which. Rachel Plymire-had gone. "Hare. yonever seen thk neighbor hood? " one of them asked. "Never," she replied. That ended the matter, and they turned back, takiagsa Utthvased cross road to save time. Fresently the woman started up ia great agitation, crying: "Thk kthV place I 'dreamed oft" They.aamirel herthat KachelPlymire has net been upon that road at all.' & I knew nothing aboat hesji" she said, " but the girVIsaw, in my dream came along here; there 'k the path through whkh -the man came,' and beyond that turning you will find the log oa whkh he tiled her.'; .They did find the log, and of the groend the stelae ef bleo3. The woman, walking swiftlv, ted Mm to the old mill aad to the hoard under which lay the stained clothes aad the hatchet. The girl's body was found af terward, bariedby a creek Bear at head. Rachel's lover had already beea arrested on suspicion. Itwas hiatedthathehad grown tired of the girl, aad for maay reasons Maaa ae off: The1 womaa ;reooi crowd of other maa, aad startled her companions still more by potatiar oat aaotheryoaag fellow from the West at hk coiafkjMia: her dream. The was tried ia. the-town of for atarder. The oearUaad actaaBTmaaatoimtaeroatae ' B . -- ... V .m toad, bat ereataea mea ooald not be hungoatheerideaeeof aaream. Wh- oat -a theiavaeBet a i.i.u.'r.i rthitiMK alia .i. ...--w m . - -i - pnsooer to escape, lxwasaeu tire proof of hk jraBt that he dkaaarrkditaaiaktor of the aoeueed maa aad laawred to Oak aa AaBBjBwKiew -V be wi with i effort was poet- ., wfllaotJejare' taftdtyftfati. w Jisteaats are goiag? eat ef vagaa. Satia bridal toilet are still able. Goiaipe k agaia afaaaJoaable trim ming. Among new goods woeka moire fPv Tulle eoatiaaee to he the preferred hrvMveiL4 Buttons with iarktbk eye will he mack worn. White faille k agaia la rogue for bridal dmew. The bonnet of the day and hoark the flat turban. Beads of every color appear in boa aet decorations. The Faachoa k the coming shape for chip bonnets. Silk madia crowas for boaneU will be much worn. All fashionable coiffures ia Europe are worn low on the neck. Langaeo'oc lace bids fair to precede Breton for milliners purposes. Bridal dressei are made high in tla Beck, and with elbow sleeves. The fashion of wearing powder ia the hair for evening toilet k aa be re vived. The let shape for ladies in-door caps, either for morning or evening wear, k much used. Sleeveless habit corsages of velvet or satin are worn over ball dresses of tulle or gauaei Heliotrope and cream will bo the fashionable contrast of color for early spring millinery. Two bouquets are now always sold together one for the hair the other for the corsage. Puffed or plaited plastrons take the place of waistcoats, out they are unbe coming to any but slender figures. Light woolen and silk and wool ma terials will be more fashionable for full dress even in the summer than silk itself. Ecru lace of the same shade as the chudda cloths and French buntings that they trim will be much used this season. A large panache of feathers, of two or three ostrich feathers, placed far back on tho left side of the bonnet, k very stylish. The high flaring Valois collar, kept in place with wire, is found among new styles of neck garniture on tho richest toilets. A " Daisy Pinafore," Orlongtablier of tulle or organdio completely studded with daisies sewed on it, flat and in rows, is the latest novelty in floral dress garnitures. Square handkerchiefs of bright-colored foulard are twisted into pretty dress caps for ladies, and fastened on the head with large Spanish pins or bou quets of artificial flowera. The hair k dressed very simply and quite low, but not drooping in the neck l'o noise-shell-headed pins, black jet, and also gold or silver filagree orna ments, are very fashionable with modern coiffures. The Ycddo foulards have striped Sowns in the delicate shades of blue, yellow, and pink, seen in tho finest ba tistes, and over these are sprinkled small, delicate tinted, shadowy rosebuds, dai sies, bluets, and other popular small flowers. Tho Spanish marriage has brought Spanish colors and styles Into vogue in Paris, and modistes are combining red and yellow in very rich toilets. Tho newest Parisian costume is a skirt of dark Capucine satin do Lyon, with a basque of garnet velvet. Handkerchiefs of sheer silk muslin are imported in white and cream color, stamped with a gay border of flowers of natural hue roses, forget-me-nots, etc. These are to be made up in turbans and caps for wearing in the house, also for cravat bows. Purple in all its shades, from ike darkest violet to the palest lilac, stands in the front rank thk spring. Among them the newest and most fashionable is the heliotrope, a reddish shade, which is exactly that of the heliotrope blossom when full blown. The new hosiery thk season k in describably pretty. Among the many choice novelties in thk line are black silk, with instep and front exquisitelv embroidered with bunches of roses and forget-me-nots in the natural colors; white silk, woven in alternate plain and lace stripes decorated with colored silk embroidery, while fine new thread balbriggans, almost as soft as silk, are elaborately embroidered in floral designs in white and in colors to match the evening shades. In enumerating the fancies of fash ion which are not imperative or even general, the close-fitting cuirasse basque called the Jersey must bo included. In form -thk k a familiar model, which modern style directs to lace up at the back, or else underneath each arm. The fitting is required to be absolutely perfect, to resemble the silk webbing manufactured 'for tho foreign Jersey cuirasse. Although " in fashion," this basque will scarcely bacome a prevailing model, as it k only suitable for perfect figures, and dispenses entirely with trimming. Novelties among the small points of dress include round, turned over collars upon polonaises, and collar ettes simulated by trimmings, instead of being made separately and added to the garment. Short collarettes ending at the widest portions of the bust are com posed of folds, embroidered, or eke plain; and berthas upon evening dresses are of lace trimmed with flowers, or of the garniture material shirred at center front andback,and again upon the shoal ders, forming thus a curving drapery. Domestic Monthly for Vartk. Fattening Brines. The diseustiiur features of Moham medan civukatioa are -brought oat by tneiacttnat in Morocco young ladies are rattened for the .matrimonial mar ket. Throughout the Empire there are vil lages where the elder adults follow the pursuit of fattening young ladies for the matrimonial market of Barbery. The Moors, like the Turks, prefer "moon faced" wives to lean ones, and are more solicitous as to the number of pounds which their brides weigh than aboat Iheiraooomplkhmenta. A girl k put pader the process of fat tening when about twelve years of age. Her hands are tied behind her, aad she k seated' on a carpet during so maay hours every day, whik her "papa" stands over her with a mmragve, or big stick, aad her-mother at times pope -toaermoatha ball of cease bmmsk, er stiff-made porridge, kneaded up with greaje, aad jost large enough to be swal lowed without the patient choking. If the unfortunate girl declines to ha crammed, she k eoatpeOed, ao that era loag tae poor -girl leeigaa heraalf to the torture, and nine dewa the ao- aaoald e beataa. JearfTe The Baptists report 12,407 schook, wkh S2,tQ scholars. Ia Bet bv States, North Caroiaa ,w4taijouseaoott;ew lerKfleoows, with 863, aad kade wifa 1145 eehet ars; Bhaok has oary 500 sehesk, aad 6677 scholars; Indiana, 0 eebeeet, 65,000 acholars; Mfeaigaa, SSBadawb, -.. M.K -& . . 33,000 aeaours; lowa, ecaooje, 17, 12,15 sefcelars; M00 DeraD to Mks Xate k mming to FMitm MUH11 un. A TuiBrti -meat la Mm TV fnltnwia estnet from a sriraie letter written by Lkateaaat McCaaky," Third Cavalry, to hk father, the Kr. Dr. McCaaky, ef Heading. P,. published la .the Detf 7W of that dty depict- the peculiar hardships aad dangers ef f roatW life : From the baOdiag of the statSon X was ordered aorta by General Crook to survey a new road from Fort Steele, six teen mike east of Rawlins, oa the Unioa Facile Railroad, to cro Saake River and connect with the new road to the sooth the object being to make Steek, where are large Government warehouses, the depot of suppli. in stead of Rawlins, for White River. Between Steele and Saake River lie the continental divide of the Rocky Mountain, the trend being here north west and southeast, all water oa the eastern side going into the Platte and the Mkouri, whik Snake River aad its tributaries belong to the waters of the Gulf of California. It was on thk sur vey that we encountered one of the most terrible snow-storms I ever saw in thousand of milt of travel in the Rocky Mountains. During eight days there was a daily torm, which km only milder one day to gather strength appar ently for the next. One day we made but three miles; and another,after going one and a half miles, the storm broke upon us and compelled us to return to the camp wo had left; and so each day we attempted progress, but with varying success. About twenty miles up the Platte to tho soath from Steele crosses tho nlil oniitrrant road, ninriine cast- ward, the great highway in early daw of the coaches and the celebrated Pony Express, and still the route of emigrant travel to the west and northwest. Hav ing sent a courier back to Steele for a pack-train, all our wagons having brok en down, I concluded, while awaitieg that and supplies, to go westward from the crossing of the emigrant road and measure the distance bV the Rawlins road to Snake River, the junction of which k at Sulphur Spring or Hum phrey's Ranch, a station on tho courier lino. . . , With the odometers in tho "buck board "a light vehicle for mountain travel in company with Judge HuguJ, a wealthy merchant at Fort Steele, In terested in the new road, I left camp on horseback Saturday morning, and start ed west over the emigrant road which is, by the way, one of tho finest natural roads of tho West. Wo reached Pine Grove, or Errctt4s Ranch, thirteen miles, about one o'clock in tho afternoon, find ing but little snow on the way. All the hollows on tho road and the banks of dry streams had drifted full of snow from two to four feet deep; and these we passed by tramping a way for the mules, or, when that was futile, in get ting them over, first drawing over tho buckboard with ropes fastened to the double-tree on the opposito side. At Pino Gaove tho road skirts tho base of the mountains, and thence the road begins to cross the Great Divide by the Bndger Pass, so-called after Jim Bridger, tho celebrated Rocky Moun tain scout of olden days. Six miles from Errctt's is tho summit of tho Pass, which we reached at sunset the tongue of the buckboard breaking on tho way in getting it over one of tho many drifts that wo encountered, deeper and deep er a our ascent was greater. From tho summit the outlook wa5 more gloomy a3 the snow was observed deeper to tho west. Tho road was covered from ono to three feet, while here and there it was bare from tho winds that blow al most incessantly at these high altitudes. We had our bedding with us and a lunch, as our cooking utcusik we had left behind in camp for the use of our guide, who during our absonce was to hunt tho easiest point of passago over the rauge directly to the south in a direct lino from Steele to tho other road at Snake River. At Humphrey's or Sulphur Spring, a fine ranch, I was sure of a welcome, having always stopped there whenever going north and south, and therefore we pressed on ward. Three miles' descent found tho snow deeper and deeper, with drifts near the road as high as twenty to thir- At ono place, where for but twenty feet tho road, crossing a ravine, was hlnolul Htt a. drift in thn dee Des t Dart ten feet, we were compelled to mako a detour of a quarter of a mile, up mo hillside, through the snow that was nearly two feet deep our horses at times sinking to their bellies. And so for three hours we pushed on in our descent, whcn,darkncss coming on, and our stock being tired ont, I determined to stop and remain there till daylight, when wo could finish the remaining nine miles of the Pass. Noticing to the right, some 250 yards, a gulch in the hillside, I rode up to it through tho enow, two feet deep, and found some clumps of box-elder which would answer for fire wood; and thither we proceeded. The Judge, however, by thk time had be come alarmed, and, fearing a heavy storm; and our being snowed in during the night, called mo back and advised a return to Everett's at once. We held a council of war. To return was nine miles, ahead the same. The latter way we knew nothing of the roads or the drifts, and so, as the skies and the ris ing temperature indicated a storm, we had Connolly, the driver, put our bed ding on the mules, and, leaving the buckboard to the mercy of the " beau tiful snow," we bade it adieu and left it as rapidly as possible. We had. scarcely gone a mile before I noticed it becoming warmer, and, while walking over a drift, observed the snow so soft that I dropped back and told Connolly to hurry on the mules, as there was certainly coming a tremendous storm. It was very dark, so much so that we could not see one hundred feet ahead, only kept the way by riding between the tracks of the wheels, made in our going west. Before the summit was reached the storm broke upon us ia all Hs fury a high gale, fast-falling snow, with a sudden falling of the tempera ture. The night now became pitchy dark and exceedingly cold, aad we had to nut oa foot or ride with our heads dowa low to watch the wagoa-ruts that were being rapidly obscured by the fall ing and drifting snow. Itwas so dark that, whea twenty yards behind, each one would be ont of sight, aad we were coastaatir calling oat to find oat each other's whereabouts. Aad so we pushed oa, frequently falling, oar aakaak stumbling ia the drkts. At half-past t, after coming seven and a half auks. whea we were oaly one aad a half auk from the cabia whose shelter we were aeekiag, ay horse, which had than far bWkediag, aad swdfakhfaly ftntfd the trail uadar the deep saow, gave way ia a saow-baakaad fefl back ward oa a, pitching my gnu, carried acreea y aaduksome six or eight ieet to the rear The aakaak here ioaadered aboat, completely exhausted; aad, with the storm growing wane aad wane, we could go ao farther. Whik off fifty or asm kaadred jarde, looking for the read ia the saow, I lit a match ia my hat, wham I heard Connolly -yefl oat, 'a the cabin! There, Jaage, m. m " U ..eMU . sea tae ugwr ' Aerur I. heard mere for m aay one's mmyhe'Aks! itwas a- MrmrBaira wbbk step tin day-i what a "eaaap!" As JeeaVj afire, far than. a the the anew. Trias our peer. to racks, we quickly U lea wren, an mi awnre wm- -.- aaieeaeaZaadleeueiaetaadtheroed; aor were either of the'ethan aaecaav ? We were rat:bat threw dewa ear bedding ea a bare piece ef ground. 1 took eat my eerjw teat, put It aader the Judge pear fc kw! aad ever aim my errreeat, aa-4eraAhhkhffjdo-rote. Myfertwvre so wet aad cold, aad my boW ful ef saow, that I took them eeTaa un wise more. Although we rorertd er -lrw completely with ur bedding, I weS tanked la, iae w the aw, so hh-h the gale aad pkrekc wiad. that K bkw through aad tareer. nod frww I my Maakets aad fresaio-re tae u canvas tam covermy incae. u wwjw tor ? -, wt - about thirty-are kgrrw Wlaw kto; kgrd. the puABhr f fettrirte lW and bow the norm huwW dnring ih . iara uf ahl laea tha laWraal part or lone- hour ef the akfct! It w like the carkJe Owl! fur e-amtalnx moaning of the surf during a fatrftd j atorm coming from tae sea like the aoie and ruh ol a pawing train a you a?n nblM fnim tfc rill mail -tri-lr In it. It a Ti waTrtji!tT51iU Ur. H day night. About eight o'clock Suadar morning the Jndgo uacowrrd bmi and f calktl for me to jump up-ihat he aad 5 nnnllv ittirui! tn tn tar i)m tf " -.. I .ti-. ft iric wnt " pviMfc nn mv . boots underneath my bedding werV froaeaatur. I warmed them alktk W y rubbing them rapidly la my hand. aaA y nnaUylorccd thcnTon my fivtcl fret. Mv finger wk frozen, too, and. aa my ear were frwteU lat wiatr aad la the cold,Iamgcttiagwmawhatuaanlmou,lUeohHkaof Mfe. or ratiwr darlsg - . J tJ... t u i I tb MvltLi. tit tkt U tit fMvsJcttm ? zr'i "r v:: z kj " in vain xor tne ruau, anu m stonn till rageti in all it fury, and we could not see fifty yard into the storm, nor look at all againt H ; aad m we all jumped under our bedding again. The Jmlire vu o cold that ho came clown upon my bed, pulling hi sr him, fairly groaning In hk and laid robe orcr suffering. Hk hand were white with i rutrtc incnea more 01 uru w m ; w u wiW( ,,-wh . cold, anil he" was warming them in hk . lMmaa-thaa It happra that fcuiti. j by Um trar -JJ J'JJ mouth, trembling and ahfvering frup . a of musk, whkh earrvly U in Jrward to Jf head to foot. At nine o'clock he aTd Inferior race, becwraa eoagrnUal kMrtdl If I wM tale Jjj fc " Connolly again started, promising, if ; thJ guide with food to take me in. ThU innv n'arnrni inn cauih. iti stfiii uil & lP ward the mountain, found tho road at . Ias.t and reached tho cabin. An hour J Sltc:& Vitut siaaaa nruuva aaaw4ii isat au . rtiiirm Iih.1 lSffwl a. Httln. 1 took out rnr compass in bed, and, getting the course compass m ui, uu, kwhi: iuo rounc to ErVettfa from my notebook, got the I bearing at ckxely as I could. (Jetting up quickly, I put on my overcoat, but was unable to button It. It wa ao In- tensely cold that my hand were bythat time powerless, and 1 storied off on a trot that ceased as the snow grew deep- er. I took along my dog which was lying under tho Toot of mv lwd, with me, but left, as did tho oth'crs, horses, mules, bedding and gun,. l-aittitui dog, mans true menu in uw- vimhjmi v . . .. i..j Un ia ti... Umu 1k.li." r once of venoiu force, aa the bkxMl re- ir;i.'c.iftr i. nt nnfS with Stixtln with Merritt command to rescue the ticsicged Thornburgh'H command In the ! :,. r. 11:11 p-.i. ..i m.. i.MM l imi,.iiiiiiicv., ... ... - - ... . ... ... -. 1 coirmzea uunnir me inuian unnr. ami brought back bv Cnntain Lawson to Fort Steele. Finding the direct line to the cabin was full of snowdrifts that I W2is too weak to cros, I took to tho left, over hilli from which the snow had drifted off my dog leading mo, runniug ahead, and then returning a if to hurry mo on. Now and then, where the snow was soft and very deep, ho would flounder helplessly and moan, as ho did during the ttorm and the lung hmins of tho night, and then follow behind mo. But, Unding I was too slow, ho would hurry ahead and then return for mo. Too weak with frosted hands to button my overcoat for, as tho snow touched my gloves, it froze 1 went on with tho wind; but, when I had to partly face it to turn toward tho cabin, so great waa tho galo that it blow mo down, and there was no way but to crawl at times. And so, through tho deep snow and over ridges, I finally reached the haystack, less thati half a square from tho cabin. The latter I could not see, for the air was thick with drifting snow. I therefore lay down beside the fence until a lull in the storm let me discover tho hoae, which I reached as soon as possible, to tho surprise of all inside, for a party was about to start out to hunt mo. Our stock and bedding were subsequently re covered ; and, tho pack-train not arriv ing at camp, I left for Fort Steele for more rations and a new outfit, intending to return after tliawing out fingers and feet. It was the worst night but one that I have ever spent in tho Kocky Mountains, and the Judge says he " wouldn't pass through another like it for a million dollars." Hence Horaco Greeley's advice should be modified thusly: "Go West, young man; go West!" but not till tho springtime comes, gentle Annie, or tho "beautiful snow" hath gone. Your affectionate son, C. A. H. Mc. What He laew ef English. I heard a funny story of a little Bos ton boy the other day, which I think has never been in print. Ilk father had amused himself by teaching the bright little fellow several words and phrases in a number of languages, so that he had quite a reputation as a linguist. An Englishman of some note dinedwith the family one day, and tho child was much interested in watching him and listening to hk conversation. After dinner the guest took him on hk knee, with the remark: " I bear you know a great many languages; tell me how many you know?" "Ot I know French and German and Italian and Spanish, and that k all." "But yoa knowEnglkh?" "So! I don't know Enjrlish," he answered, with a very poMtivB shake of the head. "Yee.vou do, certainly," perskted the English man. "I tell you I do ao."' replied the child, almost impatiently, and very emphatically. "My papa knows En glish, I s'pose, but only know two words in English!" "And what are they?" "'Ow aad 'orserBoaton Transcript: m a - A Wise Serpeat. Mr. M. of our akter cky. West Poiat, was down oa the river fisning last sum mer, whea he discovered a very wke serpeat. He was sitting Bear a rock, under whkh was a saake's dea. The proprietor of the dea came gliding up from a foragiBg expeditioa, aad was disappearing ia a bote aader the rock, whea, wkh a dexterous movement, CaptaiaM.sekadhknby the tail aad threw him tweaty feet away. The saake hardly knew what had happeaed, aad agaia essayed to eater hk doaaki ia the same maaaer. Agaia he was tasated ae before. Xerer dcapaarhig, for a third- time the wily serpeat ap proachiag the rock- Thk time he came deliberately, aa if carefally coatemplat jagthe titaarioa. Arrivkg at the mouth ef taeaoae, tats uene ae eiimi ij ceiled imirif up aad pat eat a toamacasiftotake the ral tiba. Foraw9e he paajeka, whea be eaS. atthaaaaae tail Jm earner iate the dea. k fiaBy warraated by Capteia M.. who etnnde readr to teetarr to (urn.) a of iaoaaof thepaac, I the other was left without tovaretatka. Beth' paau J July 31 to Oat. 4, the draiaage water was eal- aaalyaedwjth reeaJtewhiah the above Dr. J. H. Erereet Ifcaafoawd that rfrTaaeZf three kgamrnVTSA torn VFaaamA CaWTCaT VB0K. WW BeWml AMI UtilMef IC KtBCTutc &umtmm !kiT Aa kjrtiaeat la rmliem ef ekrtric fctfct to eat prwfJd wa &tvt i kmiaaUou a4 ramlaatha f lb imal MTU ar ef h W-4t- the urethra. Madder, laryai, iiiMgs t4aah, atera, aad r awyry pataagu hat beea fcrcfe ferwafd! H a Dredea (Saxuay) mrratar. Th amaon, w um mu --- tm al f part Okertly, or k raer4 lavage, ar, tt Vh ty-. tx rAept the kld of view y, k k KHM, b raBTM CPUaBtMUCTi WW iw vm creuMaU. The mmt ef hbt r- $ pfcyed roaku ia a pktlaum aire m4 laciadceat by a 4trk rurrraU The whh heat of thk wir k Ukea f XH1 M&de hraul bv Ma4 of tvM . - . -v V ." . , t - . . C.uiIaalWa flmiilCnnlVVST UhFT CAM " V -Ta- wire. , TrtaLL l)nmo ar tkk Bnaix.-TV buiuaa brain, T4F to lrof Tradail mrat .kdnklon, k the orgakUed regUcr of MnlWy jm u been rachrd : the tlfeu of the . 1 uniform ami tmjueatof th nprri- j koT. wWtker, to w - enchareliniwcve!ybrathe.iJdcalh t4 lK rfr u them W4 priaciiwil ami laterwt. aad hare alowlv I that I M uVe Jn out r"g t moume.1 to that high kteUigr. which J hsjjrril crowd that wttt r wm Ilea latent In the brain of the Infant, row, whK'h maxu tkily to rt Tha It hapiea. J Ty mlall. that the f lx)can fakerite from twenty to thirty . count up to the number of taeir finger. napiHi - - -- , - ----- only nouna and verl, arle at kngth Newton and Shakapnarr. KKtaTldX 0 TIIK LtYKK TO tub je4x Ge-herau SrsTru.iTcfror vi.'" v....-( -. ... . " eapne hk beikf that the waate tku k carried by tho blood l tho liter, and k there acparated into llvex-augar aad urea, or some aubatanco which rajldy change into urea. KtiierimenU md by Schlff ninnort .thk theory by proving that venoua bWd k aoon fatal to lj mala If tho liver k tied, but k not If the liver k fnw to art, the polaonlng be- ing duo to decmiKel a n the wooj . wmwiniu e. P"-, mains for a tonrer time In the capllla- ric of tho tlasuo than In any other or- : ... . . . n "" "" m. - -- i.Ij....i .- a .b bu. -j mii.i m .m it rC-P"" ":'Jv"r . .' V V . .'i.l..t. .Milt ...I ...niil.M .. I, t). onlr nl mvren Dulol imxi. anu.ll walr. ,.. - . '" , . t. . .,... .''mnktla ahUltv and anrmUe m t tt r wiu lint umdu u ., it. u. - .It.. ffj..t.l l.Vn (n r.hJ1i.t.. IA taitl tlfi.1 flft build up tlwuo tolay, but i taken Into circulauon in m moon ana inn wooa form tbwue and ngrncratm Itaelf from the supply of food o tbue watod to day k carried by the blood to th Hvcr, there dcconipojied into nugar and urra, and o eliminated perhapfthodayaftrr, or even longer. ftT liv ITwii t Tifr Tli tlnvirv U now ingeniously maintained by lW. tt.4,..M tC Kn .niHtimr tv.n.llflnn txl temperature, 6'2 Ave. to 68 d-g., and rltl htimdlltv- Hri tn US rw-r rnt.. U not dodrable or even attainable at olhtr ncajtons in the heating of dwelling. IIU argument k that tho dry air f America ksm"scs both curative and pmrrutio qualities of great value, and that molt air, which promotes vegetable growth, is, on sanitary groumb, notdrslrable for breathing. He Btat that the dew point is far below tho freezing )o!nt of water In well warmed and ventilated roomn, where there k nothing of that sensation of dryncwa which Is usually held to accompany tho heat of a fur nace, when not supplied with water for evaporation. Again, now houc, that are accounted unhealthy in Europe, aro not so in America, ana gas burned in rooms produce mueh 1 unplenxant effects In America than In England; what k needed k an equality In relative humidity between tho Interior and ex terior air thu if the outer tempcratsrB be 0, and relative humidity 40 per cent., and tho interior temperature b 70 deg,. the interior humdity ought to be ratcd to 70 (kg., by adding a little water. trVmvv --."- - -- - - - ----- Lint ik Tint Solar Worlds, Mr. Proctor bold Man to be the only planet old enough to be inhabited. He thinks tho other still incandescent. In a lec ture at Philadelphia be said it wai grat ifying to obacrve the swift growth of popular interest in aatronomy. The stars are rapidly ceaaing to be regarded as obketa of beauty simply, aad the time k approaching when intelligent people will be ashamed to gaze In indif ferent admiration upon the firmament and acknowledge their ignorance la a field which the vast stride of modern science have made accessible to all. Astronomy has been largely delivered from the realms of peculation to the uncompromising domain of mathe matical exactness ; and, whik the scope of research and development k bound less aa eternity, enough has beea ascer tained to make the tetal acduiattioa !m possibk by aay one mkd. !rapcr's discovery of oxygen ia the arna k the most important fact in modern astronomical ratearch, becauae it shows that the sua k in part composed of ekments like the earth's. He thinks Satarn's rings will eventually resolve themselves into moon, aad hold that the dark places oa the moon are not mountains or seas, but eisaply indenta tion, aad therefore leas tamiaou. The black spot rkibk apoa the surface of the sun are but holes through the sur rounding envelope through which only tae parent mas can be seen. MeffTara ef tae Paaatac m rcras The Boetoa Jmnutl of a recent date pahaknee the foQowieg letter, writtea to the Mr. A. H. Fanmb, of that eity. hk akter, Mrs. I). P. Cechraa, far thirty years la Persia: UBOOttMH, Jaaaary i. We hare a terribk faaiae apoa as. Xetakc like k hae beeakaawa by the eJdeetiahebwaar Chrktka vfikges are safft ting far ka than the Mohem medaa, which k acted by alL Haa dredeof theee who may escape wkh thearKveawtl fiad theaaaalvea utterly deetitate ia the apriag. Dr. Coearaa her soa k appoiated by oar eaUiea to atttad to the week far the aoer. Bek UJkswkhUaenaiaiilliireflaa heetef rm kMjaMai the coaaaXeahitha ef JK J9 WvM4flla kaeidfer law patartr at erera flariaaam laaal oar peepae are soraay aaetpaieed aauty, aeaanag aaaae waraa ear aaa taaaaaalrea, aa far aa they have the aaeaae, aaa vea aw a n waav vias iagkdeaa by she riMrnmmf OBaafeacBMawha helps Dr. Caah raa ia the eValy dJawJaejaka ef bread to eWthraageurdeor) Jaettold me that aaaae ef the karvaag go daffy to the akawjetar hernia, eauTybag a dam to eatea the bleed ef ftewalaam bawte, whkhtaeTdrkgreedBr! Maarhawa sold the ket pkeeef haaaialj ateaT, of their heuaeatoaafl tor bread to keep taekfaaaaake aBee. Several heaaex ia aseaeaf arjr Tfflagas haeu beeapuaed dewa eatkaly. Otheeu hae eat dawn their arrhards aad dear a their viae- Tarde to fall tortoeL kr every i Ill aweFaML e9MaaWa eratar 4 ft1 d m7 f Jwwl, K4 H rwfcfe pity. mmf Hy f Kew mi earpHt, W4 l?t 4 dj? aiefurMkWtrter 7H? that wit ui p burnt? Ibt fetto; faV sraya ftr 4t. Tedya hf'V4 f het J1 ty 4tieeU;4JSri Ayf gH a wr tbr dl. Afea8yiae p mj t8WfHi -4 r4 Vy ahWsr h-Uf iVu Intt wvre fftuJtr ditC ef iMTt$ IVr lb tii Nf M - lfv htr4. 7M. tfc tM tmil? 0 ( (mU cxe; thfr are ftlV?f t? os la ierr iNP ake m teMikf hi ti d jra hy h r kmie dMWrva a fl e to w- I hv r, 4. e aS & MHtiM. TWpkrrtrta wkkh t U my Ue ir ! Ub abM4 iM l laaatlul hUn myU hr M- a Ir dj Mk? of ih aUr Wk ih4r kr fca U- cA a Mrl aad ba tWv t H- ! ' . . . 1. ... . Uln. Tln iffw v JT Umku ul fer'" , Tf J T TZ' ' M-J iJLl LJTli and rrtlr4 Vi hk laaer tHm -i h-Mt, . hU-. ...h,,. IUllWwCijLT rr. which tifiVt aa fwr fi- iz. m - fr kve: aay mea av n. w Jttti. Oh! l ")?; ."TZ lrny &r TmiJ - gnl atoor. nw KpM4uiiy r lb drwwat d)rlft. iraviag for death. rv4ful 4mu' Wt n thk citV hat pokwawd the lt fil Hm-v nmbl brocurv tor thrtr dr . and all he gou tgthir l mn with a. txmWr ot aitfht fW agw , . .. , ... .!.... i.. mlaraeaw Into the aWr whteh w. to ; make their JU htUe rake. ,l al dkd tgelhr. ij .h January .lamb, ajc. with rising price. A Uttk sofwr one tmab.1 of wht. or r-Kwa-.n U. - ?-" .T1, t-Li aW hthr famlno t aejer wP i akwe eight dolkra. 111. fearful to Ike her- now! ... fi UHt lafenuatUa AbeulHtl. helm. wnihelml, th vlollfitM, i r)mig, bjtrrt in th Chh. -.i alrvadr ,,l I. .11.1.11 Mtt.H r.kii(. .it til. :mni - - .-,.., vr,. ., ----- ., j i t 1VW .nfl. ml. J"'t. ....-. -- ." rra-on ir rriPt: 'i " i '"' after him a a cavalry Mincer a word, Obo mtish'nl critic rmarke.l today that Itill ought to n whel to the J ao1 ilrag it aflr him with ka labjr Anotlier olenfvil that h nn4Hihlr uel thn crook of hU J to hang hU ftddk ob when hn wnt to lel A thlnl thoueht he ought to tn I tflraphwl U!lllT ltl f arl adviaetl l ke-ii It, under hk arm w hen h reach! Virgin- 1. r wnw lKy wuuht hltfih tiwir W i U U. Prof. Jeup Waa lnlrreweI by a Chronicle rvrtr akmt tlw J. and aM In aultamv that ui?h a termination wm common In Hungarian name. e. ivciay among tho IwW HKninUtheera f that romantic cMintry. Darwin,' continued the l'nfear, " Uka a atrong lnterrt in Hungary Pre told that M regard the popular terminal J as of high aclentltlo value aa a aarrlra). in a flguratlro mm, of lh timo when the undent Hungarian" hH)ftfcetelrea up for the night on tho tlmba of tr by hitching on what then rvpt aented the final J. What lhy onr carrietl on their lolka they now rep resent tn tho peculiarity of tbnr names. " lalttnie," naked the rep'Mier, that while Mr. Wllhelmj wa rreeatly pfm. onaillRg HnHulway a imlhlog im HU I and bit It, and that ever alec Hr. Wilhelmi ha worn it wrapjd up In r! flannel?" Prof. Jeaaup had not beard of thk well-authenticated Incident In th great vloliakt'a experiencea, !t nlutrMl the Information that it k only brcai of hk life-long practice that tb Hunga rian mountaineer aucreeda la managing hia J with dexterity. It k qnite a com mon thing In that wlhl couatry to mj tho native leaping from rrag to crag in pursuit of the Beet and aure.foote! chamok (pronounced ahammr), and for mutual aafety Joiakg their )'. ath Alpine climber secure lbemeivw to one another with rope The J k ah found uaeful In ascending the tf ot precipice, a it can aaUy ne thrown by the practiced Hungarian w each a way aa to hwk on to the oocaatoaal b. Virginia (AVtf.) ChrmkU. ' ' Befena ia Lee Ltter. Thk cuatota that the paper bare of printing the lore tetter that are pro duced l court a evbleace In btsah-rf-proHike cafta would be bad emmsh If they would only correct the orthogra phy, bst they don't. The editor to take a nendiah delight tn reproducing aoch amatory aad damaging epUtie !ut a they were wrkton, witn all tfcdr mperfectioa on their bead. If th In fatoalM lover tefk hk laamerata that he k hk dear hr,,( aad he " kad her vrrj our," that k the way It gt into the papr. If he procure hr a fir ctkc," fir ctoake it k. Aad if in a hurried aad, a k often prorea. a no guarded moment, he aHudcr to hr a hk betrauthed," the pitiJeM proof reader couldn't be Induced to Mbatitoto I the eoaveatioaal way ef apelifeg that word Ur a sunt ef money. TV thtog are particularly harrowing to tit father ef the Iftcuaipkte ktier-arrkrr, whoe ahame at the pubXeatkaof tbm eorreapoadeaee k ewaKowed up k hk aaortmeataoa that he ha aqaaadergd much money oa the young mvut' edec tfee. Thesatoat way k net to write aay lore letters, but if you do, k would bs advkabk to have them raviaed aad &- i rectod by some expert Sa grammar, or- taograpay aau puatftuattou fcetere p lag out efyaur haak, m taat kea they get into the aewapapert, yea -will not be set dewa as Qatorate, hewrer much you may he aampeeted ef bekg a C Saj0Ztm' sw0wv91m tdnt- A A brave had hae jaet prefaoaed a rare feat ef aearage, eoaaBaen aeae aa preaeace ef aaaad ha Iterba, hs the pre eaee ef very few observer. A mtlk eart, i alalaiag aa eaa but a auie gi?l aboat three years eld, was heteg drad aaeag she Mektiannnw by a fewtoae harat, aad aa una jarmi to rah attitebridaeaftha faafeikg beaat. A bey apparently aet aaare taaa thkta rear eld aaraagierward aad reW a Urea aaantr tea, whkh. ura etoedkg a LiaaBaBB 2aBBa taaafjfK ftaWa aaaXar' da tlaafi vfinaVfiav SaOTPT Jemmaw aW OTsnasV P aaaav read. Thk bruaght aha herse to aa iaeteac paaae, aad whea he tried fata at k aide the beyiakff i the bridk aad haaBf aau at the aaaae aaoeaest tbrowkarap hk ha aad eaatpkg tbe tigfalaruaadlaut her' aeek. Tki heavy harden iaxso aaaual" a pkee breugatthateiTawed heaet to afaalstop.f aad the byataaAew aaarried up aad Sfeed the aiaaiegiri out efahe eart. WhaV aU I maaaer ef uiaerioaj aad aoothkg peeaee weve Wieg iddrriiml to her. to here ef aa acslea'uiktJy ftkfd away, aa eae kaewiac hk aae er . dwuawag. t eva t -fJB- V k I r A ' .r-JLJ .- ft. . J. --p-l: IT ri .- "-! s: r? I 2? "t'r r. si. - -" .& t rs f 5 j- -- 'j--- tv mz r a-"uV - ;S s. ' .. 3 -." -'. Hi '.J9 rt-T' ' -VTL t5L. .2 "