"V. ,XX, m to TEE TIED CLOUD CHIEF. M. L. THOMAS, Publisher. HED CLOUD, KEBUASIvA. WAIT1XO O.V TUB COllXEJL 1 know 'twotiM 12 Hie propsr thin? to lo If I ilcflre to fair Ado! iltle. To fall where 0io rotf-l. Ilttt it U tnio Ttiat 1 ilnt Ilka to. Sol thnr I'm afraid Or 1;t iKipa. He nlrav ircuti mo well: Hut 1 .swjicct too taluks tliut "Hut you n-x innti 7s fairly well behave I. lilt, truth to tell, Too inuc'i i'teli'icl to ba I! ihemlwi." It makes inc. quite uu'ivy. I will own; Ami nl know Mhe'rf at tho mu'liiee. And will eojno outnud rtart Tor home alone. I'll meet lifr In an nctfidi-ntal way. The dock on IMrk Street Church says tialr-jint four. Tho piece Is iiiovinjr slow ttwlar, it s c car; J iiiqio it-won't hi many minutns more; UVTcliilly waiUnjr on tho ciniw lice. Ah, now they're coniin? out. I'll try to look Am If r stood here wnltiiisr for a car. I Fotnehow feel us thi'.iKh teh i:nor took Tho wholo thin in and f lylyjoiycd me. Ah, h'ho's oo'iilnjrl Yes. I saw her pretty fnce There hi the crowd, some rods away. I'll try To act a triad Mirpris'. with eay trrace. As I iierceivo bur, jut in she xwi by. A fellow who otood yonder, with a new Siikhit, and this same game or waltlnsr Haved, Has picked liis lady. I womlor ho? Hum drawing near. IlyJovc. It's Adelaldo! 1 think I'd like to kic't und pwun I th:U churl Oh! I'm u fool! And all I've pot to say In: Wsatlup t'tni to see a pipgliiifr plrl Is till confounded nonsense, anyway. llwUnx r.L THE MANAGEMENT OF HOYS. A Sinn orl.rt'r-, iviti Ha Tt-o of llirm, Itccltra lit. Method, fit Homr-Training, unit I'xplnln IIi Niirttw- A Cnntcr. mlan if Inlerrt to .Mother AVIintc Hoy. Itotli f r Tlipm. "You sec," he said, "that I make companion? of my boys, and in govern ing them I make conipaniohslrp the basis. I like boys in fact I like noth ing else so well; and my theory is that by cultivating "''''. acquaintance j vnn trot. nti inKitrlit liiti litq ttfitiire. -inil are thereby enabled to adapt your teach ing to his peculiarities." The speaker was amanof letters, well known iu this city. He has two inter esting boys, aged respectively eleven and eight years. ""Suppose you found that one of your boys had been smoking?" "Well, a short time ago I told one of them that so far :is smoking was concerned I should have no objection whatever to his smoking, if he thought best, after he became a man, but that L should object to his doing so until he was of age. I explained to him that the liighcst authorities had decided thai this practice in youth had stunted the growth, impaired tho intellectual and physical forces, and shortened life by producing or encouraging certain functional troubles that were by this habit developed into something else aft erward. Then he j-aid, 'I shall not smoke until after I am twenty-one, and not then if L think it hurts inc.' I have since found out that vigorous cH'orls have been made by other boys to induce him to smoke, without suc cess." "My boys," 1 observed, "every now and-then, especially after returning from Sunday-school, :isk for categoric information with respect to various the ological dogmas, which 1 am entirely unable lo give them. They want to know if certain things that have been taught them are true, but in my pres ent slate of mind I don't know whether these arc true or not. What is a man to do? Js he to make agnostics of his children at once, oris he to be insincere and a .Mar?" "I make it a rule," he replied, "nev er to teach dogmatically anything which J don't believe. I make it a rule never lo teach my boj's dogmatically anything which I don't regard as demonstrable. I give litem fa-ls. If I don't know clearly what to think about a matter 1 toll tlicm frankly that I don't know, and then give them the common teach ing and my own opinion of it; but I instruct them that my opinions am by no means infallible; that opinions rest upon evidence, and that by and by they must gather and weigh all such evi dence for themselves. I talk to a boy of mine as frankly upon a theological subject as upon anything else as upon the question, for instance, whether or not the City ot lierlin is the largest steamer that conies lo this port. If he asked me that question I should say that I did not know, that I had heard that the City of lierlin and one or two others were the largest, but whether jdic was larger than the others I could not .say. Then I would tell hint that 1 had a friend who could givejiim exact information about steamships, and that I would give him thai friend's address in case he should wish to obtain detinite information, lint 1 don't let him think that 1 know what, in fact, I do not know." "But in eases where exact informa tion is not obtainable? ' " In those cases I tell him that it is not obtainable, at the same time assur ing him that 1 ma bo mistaken in the matter. 1 g'.ve him all the" information that is accessible, but I never want him to think that tho subject is exhausted; and I try to leave the question open for future discussion, so that his mind is free to think healthily about the matter in the future. I don't want him when ho has grown up ever to look back upon anything and say: 4My father showed there a want of respect' for truth.' Fur ther, I don't want him ever lo get into his own mind any lack of reverence for truth from an observation of lack of such reverence on my part. I want hira to see that 1 have never told him as truth anything which was not true, and that I have never told hira as true things which I merely had reason to suppose might bo true." " Bo's sometimes pick up bad words from street boys, and the first thing you know they are ventilating their acqui sitions upon their nurses or mothers." "Well, I tell my boj that as a gen tleman's son ho is under obligations to himself to be better and deccnter in his life and habits than the boys in the street are; and I have explain o'l to him - that swearing and blackguardism gen . orally are wholly unworthy of a gentle man. A boy who has a gentlewoman for a mother and a gentleman for a father ought not (I tell him) to act as a boy would who had been brought up in a stable." "Your boys don't read dime novels "surreptitiously?" "That is hardly conceivable." "Why?" "Because from their earliest child hood they have always regarded me as their bestfriend and most intimate con fidant. They conceal nothing from me, because they arc not afraid of me." "Of course, you don't encourage either of them to'report to you the pec cadilloes of tho other?" "No. My whole theory and practice of education and government with both my boys lias been to develop manliness and to set up in their mimls as an ideal a type of maalv frankness, truthfulness, courage and puritv. I have discouraged everything that militated against this, encouraged everything that worked for it, and generally in everything I have done I have given them tho reason in order that they might understand what I was trying to make out of them and work with me to the same end. If one has not tried it it would surprise him to discover how readily boys. may. be made to feel that parental action is dc- 'signed for their good and improvement and happiness, and how heartily they will second every effort in that dircc- - lion precisely as they will help you ihen yon are gettmgyonr hsniiurtacKie - whfcji you propose AdayV fishing in ' rerfflLre to join." ly good boyspur boys are exceptional-c . "NotataU. -. . tie prig in either oTrjinot '"" "TheyhsvemUelra&fc. ne-wnaii 1)3(1 things-like oilier Yea, and I regard the'rbad conduct as I do a bad cold, and I have tried to euro it as I would a cold, because it would hurt them, and I have taught them to look at it in the f aiio way." Do votir boys ever light each oth er?" " "Yes, a good deal." What do yon do?" "J interfere and Mop the fihL I treat I hat as another bad cjM." "Why not let them fight it out?" llccauso I don't th:nk the indul gence in pas-ion is good for them." "If they were I wins would you let them lighl it out?" No; thev see enough of fighl'n ; in the streets." " What would oti do-if somo- htrect bo-s had a'i altercation with them?" "I have taught litem that they must not violate a street boy's rights in any way, but th.V s-c'.f-dcfonsc is a right of theirs, and that thc3 must exercise it." "Have I hey ever had opportunities of putting into practice your teachings on that point?" " Lots of them. My oldest boy ("eleven ears old) had a difficulty with a boy about his own ago ami thrashed him; whereupon this lad cried out, ' I'll take it out of your little brother' (eight years old). "Nest morning my wife said to the cight-ye-ir-oldcr, You had better not come home across the lots, but come down Lewis avenue.' Why?' said the little fellow. 'Ilccausc that big boy will be waiting for yuu in tho lot.' I don't care,' he replied; I am not going to be driven from one street to another. The streets are public. 1 am going to come tho usual way.' Well,' said his mother. What if hit attacks yo:t?' I will lay down my books ami light him.' The street boy (lid attack him and got him down. My J t, y vigoroi Peking brought boy wriggled until he got his lojs free, j his adversary lo reason. Then he brushed his "clothes, picked .un his books, came home and said to his mother: 'Now I shan't havtj any trouble. If I had come around by Lewis avenue he would hao waitcll for me there another day. He hasn't bjen troubled since; and in all such matters I teach him that it is best not to "come round by Lewis avenue." Ar. Y. l'ost. YLI!i:ijy Cards. TiiKsocial use of visiting cards varies not only with periods and with peoples, but varies sometimes in the same cit3 ami in the same set, ai in New York, for example. When oidinary calls are made, it is customary, of course, as it has always been, to send in a card by the servant to announce your name and presence, and to leave your card, it the person visited is absent". This is common-sensible, and all true etiquette is founded on common Ecnse. But where many visitors are anticipated, as on New Year's day, or at general recep tions, it is expected that cards shall be left, and they are left in a very irregu lar manner. It i: natural to hand tho card to the servant who opens the door, and most persons would do so at once, especially when they see the servant armed with a card tniy. But when the company is large, and has, been formal ly invited, it seems superfluous, if hot absurd, lo precede jourself with a card; nor is it hupposed that you will. Nevertheless, it is presumed that you will drop a card on leaving, or before leaving, and you com ply with the fashion whether you approve it or not. On New Year's Day, for instance, some servants are provided with trays, and, oi admitting you, receive your card. Some of them carry it into the drawing-room, and .you instinctively wait in the ha'l until it has been delivered, for to accompany your card renders the card redundant. Aga'n, the servant informsyou that the ladies are receivin:rt and asks you to step in, retaining your card, so as lo make you feel, if 3011 are not familiar with, or independent of, etiquette, as if you have made a mistake. At other places the servant has no tray, and j'ou arc privileged to leave the card in the basket, usually Mantling in the hall, cither going in or coming out. There is no positive rule on the subject, but it is generally move convenient or less awkward to leave the card coming out. At kettledrums, which cverybo !' pre tends to dislike, and yet which continue in vogue, despite numberless manifest objections to them, the same custom of leaving cards prevails, and of leaving them in the same uucertain way. At evening parties or private re ceptions cards are never left, although there is ju-t as rnuch reason for leaving them there as at kettledrums. The ex cuse offered for leaving cards on New Year's, at kettledrums, and general re ceptions, is that the hostess may know who has called, or practically accepted her invitation. But she has the same cause, and, doubtless, the same desire, for knowing "on any other social occa sion. Etiquette is often very fantastic and finical, but sound etiquette is, we repeat, so based on common sense that it lita generally bo divined by a deli cate instinct. In regard to cards, no man or woman of fine apprehension or good breeding would think of leaving a card at a general assembly of any kind, unless beforo entering a drawing room, and this is 'unquestionably ithe best rule of the best society. Ar. Y. Times. A Doctor's Mistake. At some of tho moro primitive Ger man and Bohemian watering places a quaint old custom prevails, in virtue of which the rcsidqut medical or bath doc tors take up their stations every morn ing at a fixed hour under particular trees, on thcloadim'promcnae of their respective BadcOrt, so that their patients may make sure of finding them for consultation or advice at a particu lar time and in a particular place. A rood memory for faces is a sine nua mm to these solis of JEsculapltis who, " in the height of the season, frequently interview from fifty to sixty invalids apiece during theso al fresco receptions. Mistakes as to1 identity, , however, "will occur, arid somctimife result in singu larly comical conipliSatiou. Recently one of the most popular physfcians at a crowded Bade Ort was visited under his tree by an American gentleman, a recent arrivnl,."who eonip'aincd that the waters caused him such tcrriblo head aches that he thought he had better drop them and depart lo other slimesf J he doctor, unwilltng,4hn3 promptly to lose his naticnt, looked him over hastily, and, perceiving that he .wore. ar fat sombrero, told him " it was not the maters that made his head ache, but that Unconscionably heavy hat" Swift ly the American betook himself to the nearest hatter, of whom ho purchased a straw fabric so light as to bo almost im ponderable, and went on drinking tho waters as before. His headaches, how- ever, growing worse instead of leaving him, he again called upon the medical adviser a few days later,' arid, told lfitn that his head was still so bad that he really must try some other cure. Tho doctor, who in the meantime had for gotten all about his previous prescrip tions, and was as reluctant as ever to let his patient depart, again cast aepm prehensive glance at him, and espying the'straw hat, exclaimed: - .. "You cannot expect to .bj free froav headache if you wear sae!fpno6ter ously light head coycringi A man of your age, nearly, bald, and ln-this ho weather, must crolct fi5s "ca,(i -rfrom OEeun's rays, by stoutsouunaui The American 'gaaea at wmreno cutor for a few seconds in blank: aston ishment then, after bowingprofonndty,-. "Thank you, doctor; I amioff.ftha railroad station!" ' turncu on wsavm and departed. , - V von would call Tke CeHductor'i Stery. "Yes," said tho conductor, biting oQ tho tip of a cigar and .-lowly scratching a match on his leg. "I've seen a good deal of railroad life that's interesting and exciting in tho tweuty vcant that I've been twisttngbrakes and slamming doors for a living. "I've seen all kinds of sorrow and all kinds of joy seen the happy bridal J couple starting out on lite wcauing tour with the bright and hopeful future before them, and the black-robed mouuicr on her way to a new-made grave wherein she muit bury the idol of her lonely old heart. "Wealth and ninchinir no vert v ride on the same train, and the merry laugh J of the joyous, healthy child is mingled j wiiu me ucspainng sign pi me a-u. The great antipodes of life are familiar to the conductor, for every day the ex tremes of the world arc meeting beneath his eye. "I've mutilated tho ticket of many a black leg and handled the passes of all our most enrnenl dead-heads. 1 don't know what walk of crowded with thrilling life ts more 1 incidents than ' mine." "Ever have any smash-ups?" "Smash-ups? Oh. yes, i-cveral of them. None, however, that couldn't have been a good deal worse. "There is one incident of my mil- road life." continued the conductor, running his tongue carefully over a broken place in tho wrapper of his cigar, " that I never spoke of before to niiv one. It ha? caused ma more mis err and wretchedness than any one tlnng that ever happened to mo in my official career. ".Sometimes even now, after the lapse of many years, 1 awake in the night with the cold drops of agony .standing on my face and the horrible nightmare upon me with its terrible surroundings, as plain ai onUiomem.r. orable night it occurred. " V I was running extra' oh the Union Pacific for a conductor who was an old friend of mine, and who had gone South on a vacation for hi:? health. ., v Ti " At about 7::l0, as near as I can re- member, we were sailing along all com-1 fortablc one evening with a straight stretch of track ahead for ten or fifteen " miles, running on time and everybody feeling tip-top, as overland travelers do , who get acquainted with each other and feel congenial. All at once the train suddenly slowed down, ran on an old siding and stopped. ! "Of course. I got out and ran ahead to the engine to sec what the matter w:is. Old Antifat, the engineer, had , got down and was on the main track t looking ahead to where, twinkling along about six or seven miles down the road, apparently, was the headlight ' of an approaching train'. It' wlis evi dently 'wild,' for nothing was due that we knew of al that hour. "However, we. had been almost miraculously saved from a frightful wreck by the engineers watchfulness, and everybody went forward and shook old Antifat by the hand and cried and thanked him till it was the most affect ing scene for a while that I ever wit nessed. It was as though wc had stopped upon the very verge of a bot tomless chasm, and everybody was laughing and crying at once, till it was a kind of a cross between a revival and a picnic. "After wc haH waited about half an hour, I should say, for tho blasted train to conic up and pass us, and apparent ly she was no nearer, a cold, clammy suspicion began to bore itself into the adamantine shell of my intellect. The more I thought of it. the more unhappy I felt. I almost wished that I was .dead. Cold streaks ran up my back fol lowed by hot ones. I wanted to go home. I wanted lo be where the hun gry, prying eyes of the great, throbbing work-day world could not sec me. "I called Antifat one side and said sometlrng to him. lie swore softly to himself and kicked the ground, and looked at tho head-light still glimmer ing iu the distance. Then he got on his engine and I yelled All aboard.' In a few moments we were moving again, and the general impression was that the train ahead was siilo-tr.ickcd and wail ing for us, although there wasn't a side track within twenty miles, except the one wc had just left. "It was never exactly clear to the passengers where wc passed that wild train, but I didn't explain it to them. I was too much engrossed with my surging thoughts. "I never leltnn own inferiority so much as I, did that night I never so fully l'calizcd what a mere speck man is upon the bosom of the universe. " When I surveyed the starry vault of Heaven and considered its illimitable space, where, beyond nnd stretching on -and on forever, countless suns are placed as centers, around which solar systems arc revolving in their regular orbits, each little world peopled perhaps with its teeming millions of struggling humanity, and then other and mightier systems of worlds revolving about those systems till the mind is dazed and giddy with tho mighty thought; and then wlicn I compared all this universal mag nificence, this brilliant aggregation of worlds and systems of worlds, with ono poor, grovelin worm of he dust, only a little insignificaut atom, only a poor, weak, erring, worthless, fallible. Jilirld, gropiug railroad conductor, with my train peacefully sidetracked in the gathering gloom and patiently waiting J lor the planet Venus to pass on the 1 main track, there was something about the whole somber picture that has over shadowed my wholo life and made me unhappy, and wretched, while others were ga', " Somotimes Antifat and nyself meet at some liquid rc3taurant and silently take somothing in memory oforiVrrea't sorrow, but never mention it Wc nev er tear open the old rankling wound or laugh over the right wc politely gave tuc mam tractc to vcnuswniiewo stooa (tatiently on tho-siding.'4--rii"yc," t" the Detroit Free Press. A Jew's Heroism. To be brave enough to face the conse quence of one's too hastyangcf is not qmrccqttal'tb'lheheroismthairesUvAJns it before hand, but it is -next, to that Reading the following painful stor3 it is hard to feel more sympathy for tho .smitcr than for the smitten: In a village in Hungary there lived manj- years ago a Jew, who gained his living by earning gobds--frora place to place, lie was so uprsgut ana honest that It was commonly 'said of him, ''You might fill his wagon with a Joad of ducats without securing them in an way, and 'not miss a coin." Smnmer or winter, nun or fair, he might be seen driving his horso.anti well-Jadea wagou sometimes here, sdmejtlnMs' there,, gaining his livelihood aiid.jb'ilof his wife and children literally By the sweat of his brow. He was sorstroag. too, and nowcrfullvmatle,- that? often with-. .outfassisbuice'hB dfew.the unfortunate nmurai out 01 me .wavvuug3, ji;u still exist and render the roads in that partof the country in rajny-weather al- inosE.inipa53Buic. " One day a carriage drawn by two horses appeared insight while the car- -rlcr with his heaTTiload was painfully toiling through uuTtfccp'Siu'. ""Gct out -ot the wayiy cried, the coadHhaniotjt'te eraptoitiage . " 'tlfcfs yen -whe-ahiM3ve'jlace,v said the Jew, Jtfpr yovlwngfeatfeorses and no weightto canyi" ?& J-Dog of a Jew! "Take thatr.ex cliffiaiett. thecoachmB, .feiltiBgjtfecar rier heavy .stroke with nl? whip. 1 hir gigantic friead could not stand Unsfaad seinftg a piece of wood which, was beside him, he hit the coachman aa unfortunate blow, which killed him oa I the spot -Muchcoaceraed, he place'! the body within the carriage, relumed homo at once, and communicated the occurrence to the Chief of Police, giv ing hiimclf up .15 guilty of murder. Committed to pri-n, he quietly awaited his trial, wtile general conster nation reigned throughout the com munity, in wffieh the honrot carrier was held iti high esteem. Friends ucro not lacking, who tpared neither money nor trouble in their effort to av the un fortunate man, his hitherto blameless Me, and the fact of his hating had no intention whatever of committing mur der, ali pleading strongly in his favor. The day of trial arrived; ,tho exami nation began. Sympathy for tho prisoner was so general that the very questions put to him were worded in such a ' manner Utat he might easily havu cleared hlnuclf.from tuccliargc of murder. " No, gentlemon." ho said. "It may be that in the eyes of human justice I ant not guilty and do not deserve death, but I cannot live with such a heavy weight upon my conscience; therefore, I beg to lw al nved to sutTer capital punishment as tho only expiation of my crime. One favor only I ask- that my remains may be interred in our own cemetery," that I may sleep amongst my own pernio, and maybe buried quietly in tho early morning. 1 v according to the r.tcs of our religion. His request was granted, but then wore tears in many eyas when tho sen tence was pronounced. A few days later a small, sad procession was seen quietly wending its way to the Jewish cemetery, people of all" creeds uniting to pay this last respect ta one who, al though he had died the death of a criminal, was none tho less innocent, and as true a hero as many of those who had jriayed a leading part in tlu world's history. Remarkable Indian Co&tiuiies. Thk graphic art is not unknown, il appears, to native journalists in India, for from one of them wo get a most viv id portraiture of the great nobles who attended the late dunbar at Lahore. The puissant Maharajah of Cashmere is described as looking far younger than his real age, by reason of his having " dyed the hair about his face with a most powerful compound, which also straightened his features and twisted up his mustache into parallel lines to his nose." The scribe adds, rather need lessly, that the general result was " a truly formidable aspect." The Nawab of Bhawalpore has his portrait drawn at full length. "Dark, slim, awkward, weak, haggard and dissipated-looking,' this 3'oung chief wore on his head a monstrous turban thickly incrusted wilii gems, " from under which long wisps of unclean-looking hair escaped on -his shoulders, and his bloodshot c3'cs, sur rounded by coatings of black lead, peered in a forbidding mapner." Not a pleasant picture, but it may bo as well to remember that the subject was a Mohammedan, the painter a Hindu. Tho old Kajah of Jhcend pleased tho critic immensely, chielty on account of "his large, long eyes, with a dignity iu them." UnforMinatcby, the Kajah is htout, a personal peculiarity which did not harmonize with "a very tight kin cob coat, made tighter still by strings of massive jewelrj." It thus fell out that when the old gentleman had to stoop his head, in accordance- with the pre scriptions of durbar etiquette, to have his neck encircled with a splendid neck lace by the master of the ceremonies, he could not perform the feat, strive as he might. The kincob was stout, the sewing held firmly, the Kajah seemed likely to be seized with npoplox3', until the difficulty was surmounted !3 cut ting the necklace in two and then throwing it loosely over his shoulders. He came to the assembly, wc are told, in a "barouche made of silver, drawn 1)3 four horses, with six elephants bear ing silver howdahsin attendance." The Kajah of Nabha was chiouy remarkable for his "g'001113' ejobrows," and for beiug tho possessor of "aboard, black, iuexpressive, though defiant." Ho seems to have beeti in r, bad temper, for " his face was as dark as thunder" throughout the sitting. Of the Newab of Malar Kotia, the chronicler mentions that'ho has "a thin, scattered beard and red teeth," a rather unprepossess ing combination, we should imagine. Loii'lon iilobc. Bravery Misplaced. A i.aiv living on Fourth street, who had been temporarily left at home b3' her husband, was shocked on going to her room an evening or two since to discover what appeared to be a man stretched prone upon her bed, with-the cover drawn close about him. Hcrlirst impulse was to llee, screaming from tho room, but a second thought came, and with it nerve enough to put the thought into execution. The lady stepped noise 1CSSI3 into an adjoining room and armed herself with a club. Sho returned with it and touched the object of her fright. 1 here was no sigu of life. She touched it again, and still harder, but tho object did not movo. Sho now thought the man was sleeping, and a third thought came. Hunyiug in another room the procured a bottle of chloroform, saturated a cloth with her drow 33 drug and crept back to the" bed side and spread the cloth over the sleeping man's face. When it had been there a minute or two she knew her foe was vanquished. She now ran out and told her neighbors of what had occurred. Men armed themselves with guns and sticks and marched to where the interloper la3 The cloth and tho bed cloihes were carcfulh' removed and the object beneath them was plainly revealed to sight It proved to be nothing more than a stuffed dummy with a false face upon it The lady's 3'oung son had fixed it up, thinking to give his mother a scare. Sho didn't scare, though, worth a cent, and her bravo conduct has made her the heroine of the neighborhood. Wc have told this 'story just as it was told to us. Waco (Texas) Examiner. A Cool Officer. It would be well if theatergoers gen eral possessed tho cool head of Oon cralCanrobort. .A pky- was once being acted in a temporary theater, con structed of wood, in the camp at Chalons. Tho house was crammed to suffocation, when a cry of lire made itself heard. Instantly- every one rose and a stampede more" dangerous than fire would have commenced, when Canrobert, who was inonoof the boxes with his wife, cried out in a ringing voice, "Let every one sta3' in his place." The soldiers immediately be came motionless, and tho Marshal re sumed: "Let every one go out quietty In order, tho younger soldiers first, then the older, after them the non-commissioned officers, then the officers, the highest to go last" Jn a few minutes, though it was no false alarm of fire, tho theater was empty without a single man's tse "being trodden on. The Mar shal and wife went last The experiments which have been made in France with a view to the substitution of printing types made of toughened glass in place of those of metal have proved qnite encouraging. The advantages in point of cleanliness would, it is alleged, be not significant The toughened glass is, naturally much harder than the usual metallic composi tion, and can hardly, be, crushed oat of shape by -those small, accidents which shorten the life and mar the beauty o the type now employed. The glass too, is 'capable of being cast into more delicate shapes, so that the difference between, the thin and thick- strokes o 1m more clearlr defined. Oar Popala'.Ien A (ewpar.va Tilth (he ("real Natlwn ef Karepc. Ttir. Superintendent of the ( rn reports that the popnlaUm of the I'm ted States is .V), 1 32.55A When the returns have brcn finally correct! vnue channel may be made in :hl Utat. but the w.ll probably be slight Ourpopula t'oii in 1870 was S.aiS7l. We hare, therefore, gained in the ten 3 cars siaw then 1 ! .59 ;, 1 S Inliabitint. This U an increase nearly as great as the wholo popttlat on fifty 3 ears ago. Compared with th great nnliom of EurojM. the I'niled .Slate dww a greater population than any. except Kusiia. which contains orcr ?:5.lwO.C of inhabitant. Agaln-a our uO.l A. '&., (ivrmany how.t ';i.IJ7,3!!0; Atafiria Hunary. n7.o.'tl,trt); France. W.saV' TSM'reat Hrita'n and Irrlan.1: SI.ICO. 000. Itaty, S7.7G9.47,.Smin. HS.5SG.AU. Tho total population of j-urope is given by the Altnnna'A ile ilvt,i a SI 1. 76:1, 7L1. Hcnre tvy have even now onh'abotit otte-MUh as many inhabitant, "hough our area and that of Europe a a whole are nearly equal. The following tabic gics tho first ad ditions of the returns of the lat coiimm of the c:ght State of lnrgutt popula tion, compared with the census of I7U: .r VTk . ., )ViuijrlvHitia Hiir. Illinois Jliurl Iii'llaut . 5InachtlH'tL. Kentucky.... . . 3,-n.trt ,tt,i . .lT.-l 2a.rr.) . iwvn i.'.ri.rr, . 1.7CLW l.IV.&l l.MVtu l.l.ili T0t.1i iu:i.r wn.m It will Vv soon that whetcas theso eight great Slates contained just about one-half the total population of lhi Union in 1S70, thuy (w fall short of it by nearly -0 X,000. They have not gained in as great a proportion as sutnu of tho far Wustern States, as, for instance, these: JsJ. i:o. w rrrvM ;i,mj; ,'! Ml 'iv Vtt.1Ml !. tT.toi Kan n .. Mltmutotii Notir.iskti California I ilor.nl n . TeJtus ... . The greatest gain in population, fur obvious reasons, is taking placu in the far West, and when the next censu- is ready we shall nrobablv find all of ihe.e. States, with one exception, showing a j population exceeding 1.000,000 each. while Ie.aswill be likely to take Us place among tho six most populous States of "the Union. Kansas also prom ises to rival Massachusetts in the num ber of its itihabitautii. Whereas there are now nineteen States with a popula tion of over l.OW.f'OO, there are likely to bo at least twenty-six in 18D0. The growth in the popttlat'on of the cities of the Union has bi en great and significant in the last ten years. Wc arc gathering a larger proportion of inhabitants in cities than any ot our ny other country, and yet wc Mill possess vast areas of unoccupied land. herea.s iu 170 there were thirty-i cities with a population of ."O.OuOand ove:. the num ber has now increased to sit-fottr. That Is, about one sixth of our popula tion is now crowded together iu ihoso large cities. Fifty years ago, including all cities of 8,000 inhabitants and over, the proportion was only one-sixteenth. This increasing teudciH'3 of popula tion to aggregate iu the great cities is one of the evils of modern civilization. It breeds social danger.--, with which our municipal S3'stems are now proving themselves unab'o lo cope, and it makes the question of city government one of the most serious with which tho people have to deal.--A". Y. irtm. Eve .Mcmorj'. Look stcadity at a bright object, keep Iho eye immovably on it for a short time." and then close litem. An image of the object remains; it becomes in fact visible to the closed 0313. The vivid ness and duration of such impressions vary considerably with ditfeieut indi viduals, and the power of retaining them lmiy bo culthntud. I'esides this sort of retinal image thus impressed, there is another kind of visual imago that ma3 be obtained b an effort of memor. Certain adepts at mental arithmetic use the "mind's eye' as a substituto for the slate and jjencil tiy holding in visual memory pictures of the ligurcs upon which they are oper ating, and those of their results. In m 3'oulhful (htys I was acquainted with an eccentric old man, who then lived at Kilburn prion, where he sur rounded himself with curious old furni ture reputed tohavoorigiualh belonged to Cardinal Wolse', and which as I was told, he bequeathed to the Queen at his death. He was the then celebrated but now forgotten " Memory Thomp son," who iu his earty das was a town traveler (for a brewety, if I remember rightty), and who trained himself to the performance of wonderful feals of eyo memor. He could close hi eyes aud picture within him.-elf a prnorama of Oxford street and other parts of Lon don, in which picture every inscription over cvcr3 shop was so perfect and re liable that he could describe ami certify to the names and occupations of tho shop-keeping inhabitants of all tho houses of these streets at certain dates, when po5t-olliec directories were not as they now arc. Although Memor3 Thompson is forgotten, his special faculty is just now receiving attention, and it is proposed to especially cultivate it in eleiuentan- schools by placing ob jects before the pupils for a given time, then taking them awa3 and requiring the pupil to draw them. That such faculty oxists and may be of great serv ice is" unquestionable. S3-stcmatic ef forts to educate it, if successful, will do good service to the rising generation; and, even should the proposed training afford smaller results than its projectors anticipate, the experiments, if carefully made and registered, can not fail to im prove onr knowledge of mental pirysi ology. Ucntlanan's Magazine. Bad Omens. Asioso other bad omens in India ma be mentioned a snake or jackal cross ing one's path; hearing a person cry when you arc going anywhere; tho cawing'of a crow, and the crying of a kite; a cat crossing one's path, ami tho seeing an empty pitcher. As compircd with the bad, there are but few good omen. Among these nuty be men tioned the following: The meeting of a dead body being carried awa and no one crying with it; seeing a pitcher with a rope attached to it, or a Brah min carry'ng a jug of holy water from the Ganges; a lizard creeping up one's bodv-; hearing a bride crv when she is leaving her parents and going to live with her husband; hearimrtbc bell of a temple strike, or a trumpet sound when one is setting out on a journey; a crow perched on a dead body floating down the river, and a fox crossing one's path. rhespheresccnt Flowers. The phosphorescent Cowers, which hare become such an attractive noTclty of late are produced in a ven simple manner by tbefrench manufacturcrs They are rendered luminous bv coating the petals with transparent size, and then dusting them with a phospho rescent substance, such 'a? Canton phosphorus (sulphide cf calcium) or IJologna phosphorus .(sulphide of barium), the first named being con sidered the best, and j-icldlnsr a soft yellow light. According to Al. BecquereL good quality can be made by mixing' forty- eight parts of flowers of sulphur with Gfty-two parts of calcined oyster shells, aad raising them to a temperature of between gOOand S00 degrees C Exposed to sunlight during . the day, the flowers become brightly laminous at night. rnusovvi. ad liteiurt. Ir I W that tiro late George Elk j left manu'ic.-jttU which, altfcoaffh in- I coniplflr, will 3ft in part W ptiWttbtwL f Etr.bAKjcvr. wfco 1h1 m Hon ' rwnUv, was thj author of th? well fcnowa uong. "A Wave' Mc ws, tho Cvr&n (trouoc W, Cabus; of Now OrUiat. i$ tieWiing a new storv fur $nkir'i ontMt called "Mm. IMphlnc" Like "The tratjdttimwi," tho mpsqo U laid in 1-otibbna. Our. EiAS aj that ike larjct income received by an Engjbh byril M is that of Mhw tirvlden. And nh Mira lh.it (;eorgo Eliot w. In tyl and irnpruisivimav. much like Charlotte Cuthntan. ' t Ko.w Ki Cuix. uL.lhrt.Qiln&ia, ala- cauonal quartern at Hartford. Cm l vrr t'H.r rx IwvtV In w1iTV IN. e.L! l.tl.,m. . "1 .ir ..tTLV" ri:" " rT ." trj uu - jiaiawj arw cujujvjrrti 11iin.)jjit &rt iuc vntneso mvia 01 ov previa wixnu ideat. Ih Mfrs. Hojmwov UtfRKSTr. thoJau&oi -- of "That Triws o" lowr"eV cojeTth? gift of -.torr-tcUtug when she but ?evcn years oltt. natl h? now ?Ars laugliingly, thatthupraclHhajibocoiti so tiaiuntl that h can hardly tell thu truth Srn'itrv CI KoTr' i. ..w,,. Down upon U10 8wunMi.lUvr.".haAhast a nU if X),tJ cuimos thus almv4t reading tho hope or u author that H " ' -- - v-vr--. ...... .. . w. fhottld rival "Home. Swet Home. " Svwt Home," wheh he always miitttalned was writ ten in defiance 'of tho laws of melodr. u' 1 1 ti- ..;..i.i .:.. . 1 ,. i,i. imiii iii-uuu.iiirni iirw riiiriXM public life, the per.o 1 wai a llorid ont It was an ngo of vert coat collars, double waistcoat, gtdd ehaltt and Aparkling rings and brva-tt jrins. From the-e gariih tirtbilimcnts he never ha emancqiated Inm-olf. The' H'rr.idod the inner as well a the miter man. They iuthtencu hU thottghl. his lan guage, and his jKJic Thk well-known novelist, Mis Ellra A. Dupuv'. died of ap'pl. at New Or leans a few da3's ago. She wa .i!k)uI .-eventy 3 cirs of go. She was of an old Vtrgtn'a family, and was Intro at Norfolk, but pased noariy the whole of her life, except that she "had traveled extmifcivelv in both hum .tdiunvs. iu I'lemmingsbnrg. lvv. y. Her must popular gttenot Eulu. novul Has "lheilu iinioitous. F.smo:; note- (Ircenbaeks. - yuu tv cannot beuxpeetod in a etr tnis manager. His biumuss comneU him to travel in a hor.o-Umllatious manner. A. O. iKatyunc What a world of worn this Is! One man will be forever troubled about him self, and another eternally fretting about tho poor aud buffering! HvsUm 1 rant'riit. Wui:.r has fa!uu fifteen cents a bushel during thu pxit week, but the interest on moitgtige Im? remained the same, ll take-, a pretty hard suavm U dej-ressa morlo ou-u-futiu. iVri'. Unit. It is worth a month's salary to per suade a boy Mint he needs nn'ovorvoAt. The little r.tc:d will run his hands into his pauta'oons' pocket to tho el bows, and chatter his teeth and delib erately tell 3'ou that he's "j-j-ju-tt ai wa-arm." ".Veto 7itv:i ltcjitcr. A yoi?n;stki:. while warming his hands at the lire, was remonstrated with b' his father, who said: "(Jo sway front the lire the weather is not cold." "I ain't heating thr weather; I'm warming 1113' hands, the little fel low demure' replied. A'cio York Ex ra. "aIv wife lost her pocket-lxiok with lifteen dollars in il to dn" t-aid a s td looking unit. "When." going down town or yoming home ?" asked Mmic boity. "When? Didn't I tell you she had some ir.one iu it?" demanded thu sad-looking man, and evtfrybod3 knew when she ioU it. - IJoslon Tramfrtpt. Tiikici: is no word in tho English language, no matter how complicated, thai Dave ltobiiisou is not as familiar with as if he had made it himself. "Are theso tcrrapinsyou have here on Galves ton Island amphibious?" asked a newly arrived .stranger. "Arc d3 lamlioer ou? Why, boss, dc is one ob de chief dolickicies ob de reason Epicacs jess lib 011 'em. I should s.-iy day was Jam Microtis. Gulces'on Xacs. " Isn't it awful cold?" queried Smith as ho met Jones on tho car the other da "Terrible- terrible." "Any of lour water-pipe? freeo up?" " Worse than that" "How?" "Had three barrels of potatoes frozen as hard as stones. .I'll lose cvcr3' one of them." " Oh, no 3 on won't Just hea 1 'em tip and send 'cm tt some charitable insti tution and no one will know but what t'ic3 froze while en route. It's a golden opportunity you should not- neglect" Detroit I'rcc I'rcss. Anxious to Hoar From Chicago. The following sketch from the Louis ville Courier-Journal illustrates the hardships ami Isolation of Alaska Tcr ritor3, and also how tantalizing it is to want to know and jot b kept in ig norance by the latlurc o: another s memory. The news from America travels slow by, in default of regular communication, but the American inhabitants, most of whom have recently removed there, arc keen to hear all th'c political develop ments from home. Tbcy were particu larly interested in the outcome of the Republican rrcsidential Convention at Chicago, as the latest papers they re ceived seemed to indicate a warm con test between the eminent Republicans, with Grant leading. It happened that a ship left San Fran cisco for Alaska several days after tho nomination had been made, and. after several months' sailing, entered Sitka Ha3. The little town was aroused and every American in tho place, boiling over with curiosity, rushed down to tho pier to hear the news. A boat put ofT, and in a few minutes the skipper, a blunt and honest old tar, with all hi? heart in his shin, came ashore. His ktndty eye vrnss beaming with pfeasnre at the cordial reception in store for him. No sooner had his fool touched the sand than the anxious citizens were upon him. shaking his hands and inquir ing who was nominated at Chicago. "Nominated for wlxat?" asked the old skipper in tones of surprise- "For President by :h& Republic ans!" cried his listcncrs. Oh. yes, yesr' responded, tho tar, with a bright smile, and the crowd felt a great relief. Lcrame sec," !egaH the old fellow, as his countenance dark ened with thought. Lcairue see. now; I heard his name; it was ah." and he paused and scratched his heal, while the crowd hnng breah!es3 for this word. "I beard his name -yes, I heard it, but I can't recollect it." The honest tar had evidently given politics no attention, and on his voyage the light of Garfield's fame had ex-pired- The Alaskans concluded after a coun cil that it was not Grant, became the skipper would have remembered him. ana that it was not Sherman, hecas-e the sailors would have been familiar I with hi3 name. They agreed oe JBlaiae, then, aadprobablydoa t know any bet ter yet They will not hear of the result of the election uatil next May. Tex yonag ladies of Philadelphia, deterrauedto have a stylish NewYear day. subscribed $300 apiece, aad speat the 83,000 on magnificent decoratioas at the house where they received, !. 000 having been spent on a floral arch at the entrance. Our Young Hcadori . wospsKFri. cntuix . &H (nwUOts P " 3W w m - w t Vbi M..A fc m 1 at - - - BHr fc j AV M t oljr -' fg 1 ut nuf-m f a sm I Aerwa 4 1 & ikjf-f-. k . "i 4k( iri-Jt ftp fr HJMfnm w i,l I V. H-r rH ittr t b t4M ?? mnw wwafcl p 4rf U, pi tfj I K- 4 ' 1 trt MM t Miy kft mtsut tut nut. tf tttat It ar tia.al ,, l4t n : x,.tr-rt I m'i1t 1. 4 !' f ritoi I WeuM lrfe- to W ir t&m Ww A r4 wan K St iwmtr tif:i sO M. Ium, rwMBT twtfiiMP, - - , TUH XC.VtK.MtKi: COX. IU1VS W UUKS$. AUb who rldL tb"! CH ? ,.(). f VTaA tnrton for Um lie Um. nw Ui1n irwti ie ranenwo! tw uw h up- I . " .. .. , ..... . J ...... hM.Mlt!!'. .. a.I flk .a-.J.. a. CAM j ro"- f f - Wk- c',,' Wtor'- wm hm MU 'l i ,w ; "tluTu "! .b." ,tM,"J , Wfc T c ! """" a"' m.HiTi-ii tr- w' trig uuiitfr 3R.1 iBiLi.r xdimii vam mwt fo-.Ung fainWarlr wkh thk 6d lhtU l K'wl ". r at.iatu tlHftMtMYw un j .1 tho tLMoi thu '$u0 l-rw.it' raf the : Ws j4aUru " h wtKjH-r h;p regard lht bo) 4 with fci like envy -all th njorti when Vhl uh lhy roeelv nlnxit two 4llnr ntt t ctity-tlvo ee&t a dtiv, dur.a Uh Ums of O'tijrrc. ii pay th. fwr htt ing vtch a gl tlmo. lVuitly our lad uUI Mt riaril thsi picture .-vi wi!jniil,t Vtv lw tiuriletitotHunreMtotiiiUe ot Uidswojs and Low xcolin-h hU iJh) warn th Thfw arm wrirt jr m! to um 1 !. utonev pant thent. thirty of them attwrho! and half x ttianv to th .eant. Vbmr ages run Irum timo )er upwanl. outu nutitWnng twue as mxur maifr; and It ts not by nu ciHn the 4Ut v'ho are the lrih:ol w U mMt fartiresl. 'llxoy are f rsitald fum HitM; Hme of ttWnt nm nohr's of Membwrs of I oiircM a .Mrtbr ohm. iudeotl, Imd suoh tt(utaab! tnt as to procure thu aitmliiUtnt of his own Mitt; and sotuool tJumkavchM kiun'tt in after vn.in tohiwMiu. MHmburitiiin. Aolves. Tho revvnll eh.tt Simkor from Mtr land h ttttblloM prwiil t-i r-' member tlmt ho h -mulf vm tttiM n jftge Although in two or tare in- tnnrps tl.t b'jy ban- bwn thW'l to . tlicir pl:iee in-.te.id of np)Mittl, thr ' nre usually appointed by lh Hirjjtit- nt-Arnn -"ot courtoii th vmoamtnrM- dalioii and tlinntgh thu tn'bii' f lh- t'otigre'iuien and thy am Madvr hw c.nlrol. The old ruitom of HppMtiaK only nrtjii boy4.l1 no hnwut jdhrad t4 '1 In-boy u ho feltfvi'r'lh"''baitj- tr.tibalKt W.Lt nyulj :ila p by rpe tihfj resolutMin of the Senai'i.-1 a'w W- ceptional case prbiib! his frmrt tfoagthwr-afwr was. "Sitdi a goltfng tip .stair. I ue'erdid 10. " j The pages warijniiiifoni. or rjiila- . tion cloUii, r bi'lgo rf atiy hiti. Thev are repttrjd to pnwviit theoich a for work at uiuv o'clock tt tb tu niii. ' although Conuoww il-i not mcAt tU ' twelve, and they are not dwtitUH until ndjoiirittiiiiul for tho day Ukt , place. TI103' put tho desJv of th Members til onlur, llh for itieli th j bills r.nd paper 1 wit eh nre-truwn about ' in conftHioii. Mien g to the Document- room and work tln-tv, helping lu uut afi'tir in .shape: and then itront llieiu . "..-' solves at twelve inthcgruit ehaiiibrtr of logi.sla'ion lo ntuwer th" clappln ot tho Members' and Senator' hnnds. rnl attend to their tMtiutloi wants. Now they are ?eut hunting for that is tte"dc I. for Mttnt 11.1 -"" ,V,k ' an. now fori a giay iu water, it-jw in-) lane a me- ige from 0110 Member ti another at a 1 . .., .w.ve. Miiiiiiiiiu J oil i- wuiu uiwr.iK, J a Wlf1chiMkt f bwf itw. andsouiet.tnes to ladies nt the gttHorj. ..j nUr. "Vos" tJit.ithV Jmt. they f.rtch a cup of tn nU;. thudoftk- . ,lfl(tr niit riMI um a rwkkMt.t. nmni; foteh tin hat and Mick out of U;4 , j OIJlll lo ,H, wMn, u ; na4 they distribute mall In U11. armful; , wMj, ti,at., t-m, n fw i mmm U they st niggle into sight behind ptl of j lhlj41.,tivv palm lcaflans big as they are them- 1 selves, winch are oon cooling (lie hot air, If it be a late eMorj; and- during Mm nights preceding tho plow of Mm 5csion M103 do not know what jdeep U, but arc worn out With running and w.rt!ng. Thtii it will be .oen that they are on their cut with but very hill intermission, running and lunibliiigover .. vim wv V " " lTVw.'V other as If thoy bed nothing ele to do. and were pacing away tho time. Sometimes during a roces? of Con-gre-'S you may come upon thum in a lower room ascrnblcl in a boh, a immic re late, one 01 litem in 111c chair, ! (. i . -1 t 4 ana another maXtng a speech, and Sir. ' lllainc, nnd Tdr. Conkllng and Mr, ' Riyard and the rest are iK'ing imitated V) thQ ltic it is in some contrail to thesflgay rogucrfthatononeacxipplrd aud dwarfed little lnii'dibaek outside the Hall of lleprcinlnUver opening ami'shnUiHgado-jr for the fatsr let boj of thecopiwn'or lh alrkel that may lrttoAjcd Jijtu, aUhongb he. lu noi oeg. jt nigui a unto goa? car riage comen for him, aad he driroa oil. liftlo goit car- I ad he dnvss oil. i The mges whom we harir d-itcribed i do not leave the Canltol daring the nours 01 ineir service, ana ctrry no ; mc-sages twyona the tloom. ror ou-, oui moy noeiii nappy .nun gooti-ri.uuri;l nn, j,.r mf)tUmr. iiironit ti an, attil wJibu they lo sit 1 .. -, ,jOB,r for iiowii . is 011 um wnpi um prosing tlQjUt osri.mnrn oincer s eiw, wnra moy are uxuniiv j "trtainlv. A iicxuttg or nuTning or leasing oaoh ' side work there arc thrgo riding fnges. S cd who aro furu'shed with horsco, andjsU , ...... . . . . support' lnthuyHtnSThruh' Ljiwter.; there is one who Lite ' crs anc care of a paralj J father, the only nU 5? :. Z' ? tth'- ne7e7do M?Z, Z SraV fc i-"' other whose "little hoc U fccot for him l Uy..fciU:fwli6I?oWfotutc? atntght wdh wriou.-te. Mo-t of them havemebojylieitdcthwwclrwtouke V, :r . .r - --- . Ueyoad their regular py. Uwe are varioos .rilHI INnilIIltlff Vltl TtfVtf n..K- swelLtheir inconw coos-derxWy. r . . ?i" !- Ta somebody 'no wants tne sirnatmrNi 1 ?4&tsSSri&if v.wn, niwi m? vUC. aVk 'HWJ Bertrthelcss are sot atwars eav in obtaia, owing to th tlifficallv of finding Jadirhlails in, their si&, aa all of the CoBgrowaea arehvoraMi in coaatwt at(edare. .amj ef thea vvfuf, w; m cowauiiev-rooaM, or "XPS J doak-rornws. ve kwoiuae. lorfoaowiaz the beat of th?r fer-wW?. tioas ia oMwr ways, aad s44o,coiac ia after roHcall, saTe toheur a. herahled speech, or to -rote oa taearercs wiU whoh they are already fawIUar, either fro the rawliajr of the daiJv joaraml ef proceedlagv or in the comiittee-room. or by the word of mow h oi others. For e-TeyLb AiT "-" H lh wgaatorea the boys receive tern doliara wnogoiowovar.o:MLcparr4BeU,thecial jwMiiion. It formt pofhow Mmj fcxecuttre Jlaniton, or on other of thj jtlningeu connertin" link Ukvm out-ide errands of the IcgMlatorx And ctety and literature in or a!KS Ikrttnt. theirs m riot exicUr the plaaavathw. I Tbo day follow hi fomctltkw Hie a fe; r-' .tn . Uny? attractive. " eonUnuotu lrco at Mih obi ewfenW bet. on,K conkatr, IT it har-Uaad inan.4.on, who?c heavy Irra tlwr wcary work, cold; Is the jrintw.- aad : knockor is phed (or m?t. oium ipwrd IniramgHn.hjraCvec.anifuU.ejn.fat Uj a iWiofalia;: rmwmXWo. in ntcr. leaymfrth-jm nwvt while as bjijly Jgnoraco a? to the mvVmul hartdiliig U. ) off m John C..!pin. ,y a hm.4 MriKJin o( .AHiti,Z f i.Iaay of these yoyth arc appointed thigh and hV dcc. drawn br rtrtar-U'ca-wc there mc great ai m ence or -rurioMty. or the wi.hfor ilicir famiucnor hartr some pHfab le j ary advice. J! m., M, tiTa curlT-h?adl Iilile MW m -thivnly I rannehi,H fl'mrtr. l Tv ,.f' inev navoiira tx(t! -miBvi. .. iwV :.i, - C. Z! XZT1 7m V4 - !"c' -' w nnpiiK-l rc ,lt" 1 r. r-pfr -?. -k - ttic .::..-. u; j t r ,. .,..? . -r - .wMr.-i .iv. , vjv m mm; bcswct WD9 H lflr IJtirtrlT fKw....! us " wr - an aitHim inr 5 tai-ritt r, Yi ti-wlW mi (WfVK 4 Um; a4 s m4 tmm$ MrB i rrr ' n t "My ymmtmmt rr iMfcitfeH r?!? "?w ' any pJlJ4 ltti $ i Mfe ? YtU-m tT 'wwrfc. t mm - trV - tim frtmmq W I (h4mw4 4 f U ywfc fc fc , ,mtt V,n'K t& tJM & Up ItMbrA fr w m HI mi U j 14 U wyt fcats4H frmjM; ay VwTf Ulf'k live 4 tot. tt.t b W-wi4-. ni4 Sw'MN tW mmt 1 1 nt-t m-tm-gtm- tw M ily' ! R UN r ' iHt ttvwirr'U bmw ajrt. w k t;iKitcrL &m t UMMfc wal " iu a rw awri i4 vwj.hAti ttvptfe $& " MMM( wfylV,tfT1V W l'jN-w wfc, nf thm 0 rtrxirt. mA 4)rv t 4v UhmM jp ht mm ftf ! ' hr "l '- Hut K d.icW-t )4 lW thw rwfpr'lMtakjttsita"saf tik "Mn Jkuu hiir: "v , ., .V V- f A ,. w"iwiv avriw Varwa ..i ... ..B.. . .. .. I . h.l AM lllMMr. Ul VS1KV rf tW Cvwimm Cnirt H." mmi numatf w.-Kiwt t btKki ( MNt toe&tK't MM.nlH m tluti m " Cmnf fkro V Mvh1Hi p&mmVy tr m iJiai thr toa'i M;h9 ra "rA-l4nt-fc" TV v . -l !h I a H-wmX tTrat w llw " fc- tho MlffltXw f mrmm, ! lr.M X HlUa fmmv tfmi' ' wtMtkl hrw I r-i k rk xr to V DliUMtil r mimty m dnHjch'" hi '4 ik,r. a mm tr. m-amL ti.t iu aixlrtm, al alni, mMMr twn hmt nr T I vo , Jai wlm tlHt mitr-Wrta-l e. S . ' Wlmi-ml tho iit' f ?" un mm UetMii imU ih CwrrW UW tni pttl u to J t waa pmm . ttrtvi oa- of Titir" ts tilt ah1 w!Wi tm Wrd Ui Uhn" U l. 4k bttfi -' " H'XU, H Tuntr kui "Tim UwnUwn W tttna. r. Tho SwdtUinmf.' 1 m iM Jk titnv hnrn tt wiIr Um rmkm t tk lbmnr. I tut to ifMt ueh k)1 Ml-fW?! t. .ir fit m tim niiviiiwtMi&nr i tvd t uku iMrtitialt i-t iW th H K huttt U a "iuM'tn" t4 nhm4 H i, to kmtv arw vumr p r thdr ttli4iMi Ui MMd(Wal Mk4t 4mii th-rmthU, aad tw 9 llw who oven gu 11 far r Ut rma fwr tJk s-lrw ar?0 WH Utat I laf tM4 U follow U frtiUt. to Im aM I MO ia pArtoa Muv a jl whftrUiijAl't" prryriw U tMfwwt r dil. wl iw en hav Url.l nhr r iaaiK t vvIhi has mn kr r 'i nt tjfcs tfdjr to Ui hhit kor (i.tlr whui hfl9Mi d m nd ud In Vt m-H Un ttt I how thu VuU auh on thU wCl4Mi . th otar It o4l t" a Rdf';t boviofrUiw iwrt htahl fc ktittfflrtt , nnd ihunf U IUH djfttfr f foUii .wh gvd inataHnl, "Th InifATM lf-tniuj? th Uuhtrn fof )rxU'impj(jrt 1 If tHVwhh. til. hi ihmir Mtnuofn l-k some thty U Mmkn th lnx Hut ewv r fnitltfwt, tWir Jirferf fws a Irt wan r a ateagMit nijfht to in aUthtliioK mi lkH-lm. njr mint; mm, w tnm k aVtha-n nlb'uJ alMit im lh4r iwitl crmwU, iwm fiolv a If th by km w've bift xittMi timH jmrt Vh tll'rfbrh of govurotax Uia wmiry. IJiur VU fvojrl, in llnnmft wim 1. . --W? .'$. ScfiiK.rltttj.,r JtK.ftHjint tjuwti Jy lir mothorU i-ew. AN was making a Hillmvcve'lwr hr own iUUt ptlkw .. Au imtr m ttkd. tit a dbfrtiu , 1 otitC. Um,m ttmttt j.u,,, ,. ,,m ,Jt,: .. jl u wtl u, IMUej, r n ntgiH .."j hnVti n (rt5i,,i vntl Ml niii,.frf t Slid J4mi. Hi a i niliilwr,p "i& b U r joro." iJtJ fldl a fw Miumi moment a'tor. 'Oh. 1113 Iwm1 h tired' ' wai the ntt Nt tbim w,tf ftomnt'iim; th nmttor wlih hn Iw-. aitdihon her eyei, and 00 1t fh rim of trottbV At length U hw,h nm iIoiih. Jesi(i broiiEiit H to litr mut liar "Shotifcl I notBrHHiit tor a oWtwT' mo tot!r!" ipt rlHMl m hotiowl aw. ltltW girt tut Inil nt pains and ru4M?s miwt U- Ms; awl tlw so-mor wo hartt Ao do:Ur th lMr." "() mother I' aU JmU). HumJjAac, ' the) wtrc iwwitig-ttihM. 1 aw wm.l now. I have he&r-l of 'her Molo girl I- 8j,j, rtw,te ,,un jt fUiiMM Au nttin, wi4nftvnr i!.lr tmreJ hn r tr tl...m t .ti Tin. l.i .Itva. ..f. t "s!iuhnes; tvj i hop noe k aiy little reader) arc aDltoU-d with U. - I UtjrUc lAm$trl'oaf4 IIitp. ,11 mtFi Jftr. IOS.;rrLu-w' tatrJy tlvrMBs, known, by Wahing.on at tlm a'aa of IUiiin. hivt t!rAtJf m.- . itui ..m vailing nubuibon-villa styW of It Hch- ivr isan Mmwood or fcba'ir lit 11. I It li fitting enough that it should. .ifnce by roaon of iu ditfa&ui4h. fed ownor accclblity. i oa : atanL anil vnriml tn.r,Ulii. mJ Ll. a. : " "-- .-...... , .- .- - ""P' ao'! a 5oflhmlllin2 f5.ar4 - ,, tKt,,, .. 1 . 7&&mT- -P " ! aroma in X air bo " r V. Jthr, injl - V -" . !!t -Thecw Orlean CoAtm-ld e. the largwt ia the world, w ltm m IM, has col l.m.WOand .oe yet- ifc rn.-M.sIre Qnlx? rmsH xt iWiatciW l-Tim- rf Tk. n..T .. XT V 7 m. , . tmamn- in xaxmia. Jt has one htiaiJred rrrB. With Keatlv Mur m',ln nf ?r ,j.tii.i.. ...-' -r.. '"- ' rv wit wawr each.bM- galloafr Th tnc'strHctnre from paTcmcn$ tn r. r.. - .r. ..,.. ZZi2JSJ!ZSZ l root which wUU with th jvlfrA story. T-aaic Use general e cva-K-a nfn- j-scvea ice;. The. proposed doaw. whAi, tofeejKinare inform, will I jty-jfc by fortr-Bifift feet va U LAUm, with d. with height of UxtY-ijme tett; " total outatde efcvilWto the wp uw laatern wt the dome will bo one huadretUiKi eIhtv--cYea feet . Mie- Mixxkk, wifa of the newly choa Saaator front CaMfornU. is de senhadju a caltiraie aadebanninz lady.wapwiil he soeinflr aa acmn -la toWamhlmpcm. It & stated, ar. thst Sesat.'rFatr, of Nevada wHUsw', !hsplejHiorf fcUhojoitality, aot thjaif heretofors known i Washln08 1 r t & f 'i 1 rl ' 1 a