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THE HOTUl Y~NE WS,~ rtTHMSIIKD Every Saturday horning. T W. BEATY, Editor. Ti:it.MM t Osk YkaU, ?., $2.00 J?jx Months, .11.00 AU commniHrHHrtim trnrtlnvto nrrvr t?rl> ??*? li?t?'ro*t, Mill l>o hobnr(r<<(l lor h? Hrivcrtl?w?iffiitM; I TITS REMEDY This unrivalled Medicine is warranted not to contain a single particle oi Mercury cr any njurious mineral substance but i?s 1*11 It E L V V Ek;t A HEE, containing those Southern Knots and Herbs, which an ullWise Providence has placed in count lies where Liver Diseases most, prevail, t will cure all Diseases caused by .Derangement of the Liver and bowels. .Si nimbus* Liver Regulator, or Mcdioiuc is eminently u Faniily Medicine,?and by beng kept readv for immediate resort will nave I many an 01 sou, ring an~ j^v.y a uom.r !n time and doctors' Wills. Alter over Forty Years' trial it is still receiving the most, unqualified testimonials to <ts virtues from-persons of the inchest charae tor and responsibility. Eminent pliyuicans eonimcn<i it as the most EFFECTUAL SFECIFC For Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Armed with Mils ANTIDOTE, yil climates and dianges of water and food may be faced without fear. /As a Kcxuedy in MAi.Ainors Ficykiis, linwicr. (iomii.AUoy, .Kksxi.kssnkss, .JAUXkK U, naukba, .ST HAS WO EQUAL. ?.t is the Cheapest ami Most Family Medicine in the World ! M jk N1: FACOTJ IIBO liY HJ. EJL SffKljIZV & ?50M NAI.'uN, GA., ami PKILADELPHI a \Pricq,$1.00. bold hy r.ll Druggist. JBIA'KiVti &HV& I'l OLD LOHQON BOOK Gift. y.r jHunaily dcsigned'for the iu>e o.' the Medical jV07#xxion and the Puiii'lif. possessing tlioso intrinsic medicinal ,proj?eities which belong to an Old and Pure. (Tin. In'Mii*' usable to females, flood-for Kidney iCotn-piainf*. A delicious Tonic. Put up in cases containing one doum buttles each, and sold br all druggists grocers, Ac. A. M. Hinineer Co., established 177H. Nj. Jo Heaver btreet, New York. II ?IOK\S La flokal guide For 1874%, 200 PAGES; 500 ENOliA \TNGS, and fJOIA/iC'lD PLATE. Published Qiuir'.erlv, ;,vja at 25 CenLj a Year. Virst No. -for IS" ! just t?sue.d. A German edition at. same price. P'~ Address,oAM.ES VICK, Rochester, .\. y . I! . Tj-nini**wmmmtmvmmnmxmammkaj I Our Severity J'ayc JllusircUed ! ^Catalogue of Ooors, Sashes, Bttnds ! Sta>r Ralls, jewels, Fancy Class, &c, Mailed to any one interested iu building 8 on receipt of stamp. :j k fi'; oaa & T n 881*. rc is. j p '< 204 and 260 Canal Street I S4ILI;ER'S - I ALMANAC | ix the Year 1874 PUItMBirUl) FOR ITOJil I Y COUNTY. sa*e at cenlu each by I "TO-DAY, 1 THE PEOPLE'S ILLUSTRATED PAPER . j 11 is a thoroughly American enter prise, illns | ; I irated by the leading aiik.1 and teeming wi'b I ?f ,T*o*t able writers of our , MM Country It is a paper tlmt, once introduced t 'M:j I *u the family circle,Ms sure to be eagerly . l:' j Ej at.ched jor and carefully preserved. The' r.'S j woice of y V St i lir.KK OP THE MOMT BBJLUT^FUL fc? CIlKOiHOS i ever issued is given to each subscriber, xiz "Ji si .So Iltoii" and "1.itti?k SyNSiii/vK,': two beautiful t-hfld Pictures, by Mrs //xdki? son, and "AMONG Titrc I.)Kwnrt(>ra," a hcauti ful landscape in wgter-color by tbc celebrated BlKKET FobTKIt. , All our agents have eppies of each, and arc prepared to delivet them together witli a Subscription Certificate signed by the publishers, at the time the money is paid. Agents wanted everywlrore, and liberal inducements offered. Sample copies wi4? full parUculars and descriptions of llig Uluornos, sent on re ceipt of six cents. Only two dollars nnri a half a year. ADDRESS, To-Day Printing & Publisjiing Co., y V*8 8aa*om St., Phb?J*\phla. 1 Broadw ay. N. Y. 3 School St., Boston 118,11& & 117 E. MaUkvu St. Chicago. - VOL. 0. CON A ? ? I C U I. T It A I.. Planting Sweet Potato Slips, or It is well \o tnlcy advantage o( a rainy day for planting if you can, hut plant whether it rain or not. We have planted in the midst of novnr<?ht drought with tlie loss of very few plants. "Grout1'the ]>lnnt? by plunging the roots into u baiter composed of equal parts of fresh cow-dung, wood ashes arid vegetable mould, mixed with water to the proper consistency to adhere to them. This will generally insure a perlect "stand," and hasten the growth of the vines. A good crop of potatoes will "help out" wonderfully, and there is no reasonable excuse for not having an i abundance of them. /. ur<if Carolinian far June. Watering Plants in Summer* Plants growing in ths open ground j and fully exposed to the sun, ore fro- j Iquently ruined by the very means I taken to save them?by watering in Ik/I, dry weather. Generally, (nearly i the surface ol the ground is wet, ami the moisture soon evaporates, leaving the soil dry raid hard ? almost impel-| vious to air as veil as to the dews.' JL?nl this is not the only, nor the greatest evil which results from the ordinary slight waterings which nlilittji :y<e 'pi... I j iivj i 1111 r\u i\? rujiCT- | tidal mobuuro causes the ih?o to seek tIk* surface, which in the intervals between the waterings, I he heal ami ' 0rought destroy them, and the plants 'become stunted or die outright. The remedy lies in a more thorough irrigatioti ami :ii a dilVet eiit mode ol applying the water. Jn the ease of young t rees and large Jicrhaccus plants., the best way is to carefully scrape away | the soil around t hem-to t he depth ol an inch or two, fortniMg a shallow basin linto which suOicicut water should he poured to moisten well the ground-as deeply and as \\ idely a.; the root extend. When the. water has j soaked in, the dry earth should he] returned., whmh will prevent. a speedy evaporation. Among small plants, wliieh can not he treated in tins way, make holes with p.n iron rod or a shut poned stake several inches in depth and fill them with water which will thus reach the deepest roots. Jiurul Coroiinitin for Jiuic. Sanitary Measures. fFrom Die N. V. Observer.] Wo have, no intention under tills head of making any suggestions in regard to health tounded on what people may vat or drink, or how tiioy : niimild he clothed, These are matters which ought to be pretty well under stood by this time, judging from the amount that has been w.itten and printed on the subject. And besides, whatever might he written in addition on the laws ol health, and the means ol preserving it, would ?>robubly make little additional impression. I'ut there are some things that every farmer ought unniediau Itey to look I after for the purpose ot guarding j against sickness in the family, and I perhaps death. Fevers are more or j less prevalent over the country, and i in numerous, if not most instances, | proceed from purely local causes that I might be remedied, in this city it lias been found necessary, within the last, two or three years, to vacate whole blocks of brown-stone houses 011 account of the prevalence of fevers, and the occasion of the illness has been found Oil (>y:l(lill)Dlinn ( i\ In. in n/ i?*/ 111 ivuir cealed dampness. The houses have been built over wet spola that were not properly drained, ami the consequence has been that misasmalio e^halationu haye ascended into the dwellings, to prostrate one after an-1 other of the inhabitants. Subsequent! draining bus completely remedied the evil. There is many a farm-house in the country where the family have nearly all been attacked with lever in succession in consequence of their living over a dark cellar. To sutler vegetables to lie in the cellar during the spring and decay may be sow ing the seeds of disease which w ill ere long bring forth their Iruit. A pond of stagnant water to the windward el a dwelling house has often been the breeding place for pestilential fevers. It is rather late in the spring to guard against all the sources of sickness, but no work on the farm, or even iu connection with an ordinary dwelling in village or country, is more im |nu t;n:t man inai wmcn will secure it against the attacks of disease during the summer* Every cellar should be carelully cleaned?thoroughly paritied; every effort should be made, by draining aud otherwise, to guard it ogainst dampness; every drain should be examined to see that it be open; poo's, especially near the house, should be carried off. A little care and precaution taken at the present time may prevent serious consequence*. A little neglect may prove iatal to many. * V - . ? V W ^ W XT' rCJlX/ !t . .A.n Indepei WAYHOHO, S. C., SA 11 I ' I . "Civil Jtltflitrt, mid l>ou?lim and Lluculn. [From tlio Now York Sun."] Tu view ot llio recent wont* at i ' Washington, it ih proper to refresh j our memories occasionally, and show 1 how bravely wo are moving onward and upward to perfection. Since ' j Abraham Lincoln is the great exemp; lar ol Republicanism, and Douglas ol , I Northern Democratic statesmanship, f wo reproduce what both these men I were accustomed to say: "I hold that this government was j made on the white basis, by while j men, for the benefit of white men, and J none others. 1 do not believe that I the Almigety made the negro capable j ot self-government."?/SUphen A. JJou(/lad. <kI am not, nor never have been, in j favor ol making voters or jurors ol ! negroes, nor qnaMying them to hold j oMiee, nor lnlerinarrying them with < white people, and 1 will way in addit ion i t<? tliis; that there is a physical flittereiico between llie while and l lack races, which 1 believe will forever forbid the two races hying together on 1 terms ol social ami political equality} and, inasmuyM as Uiey rHiuiol IiY'tv, j w liilc they do rownin together, there must bo a position of superior and in- j I terior, and 1, as much im any other I man, am in favor of hnvir.g ''.his su pope ri or position assigned to tire while race.?- / iWahum /. inccin. Stewart on Ikiurntioiu [N'<sv York Sua.] Considering his antecedents one would hardly su.pw>se that Honest i Minor Stewart would euro much lor the general d illusion ol knowledge. His own cdncnlion began with a 1 null team at a c;u't\i head, and if ins| tioo were done it might conclude with j la more interesting scene at p. oartV tail. Those who won hi inter ihc degree of popular enlightenment in I Nevada I mm the -character of its repre sent a lives would probably consider t lie pn*se;ice of ICcad-11 ended Hill in the Senate A sufficient testimony upon which to ground a veiy ompath-etio opinion; and if the voters of the 1 >iei lriot ot Columbia bad a little better educated, it is likely that the Legislature would have proved some chock on the Hoard of Public Works, and the said William might not have had the honor of sitting upon a com mi lie to investigate the conduct of his own i iij.?.rtmnl!/.?c T.wl 3 i .i wwiiijinvvni juitan.1 onu ()l lilt' rilsalis ol' universal popular education would bo tho entire disappearance from public life of men like this hero of the ox gad aiul the malted mine. We wore, therefore, not a little astonished when our eyes first caught in the press depatchcB the heading, "J'Muoa I tion: Amendment to the Constitution i proposed by Senator Stewart." John j l'atter&on introducing a constitutional provision lor the increase of penitentiaries, or Cannon one to prevent plural cohabitation, would have been less surprising than this, lint upon reading further the true character of the proposition was conspicuously revealed, and bold William's motives he- | came apparent. JLiut to be appreciat| cd the the thing must be read: "Mr. Stewart introduced a hunt # # o resolution m the Senate to-day proposing the following as an amendment to the Constitution: A ' t - ~ - .firucie 10. il any tStftte shrill (ail to maintain a common school system, under which all persons between the ages of five and eigteen years not in capacitated for the nunc shall receive, free of charge, such elementary education as congress may prescribe, the Congress shall have power to establish therein such a system, and cause the same to be maintained at the expense ol such Stale.*' The l-'reed men's Bureau having conic to grief, and the carpet-bag Government being in a fair way to be swept into perdition, it is time to be laying out a new field of operations for enterprising thieves who have reaped and gleaned the old ones. It is, moreover, extremely important that a comprehensive scheme of plunder and oppression like this should he underlaid by a great moral idea; and so Mr, Stewart has selected education for the object of his special care. What Could be niOrC attractive ftnd nrnmiu ing ? When CongretH establishes and governs the schools, assessing the expense* upon the States, how the school Kings will riot and fatten; how the sniffling, psalm-singing plunderers will I Hock iuto Washington with cheap new 1 I V . NEWS: JUNE Lo, 1c idont ilournal. tuRi>AY, JUNE .u i i ourpet-b.igH, seeking contracts to o<fc- f cute a lew; and how the afflicted ! I j StctCH will bo scourged and depleted , over again by thin new horde of lime j | gry aliens! On the whole we think it j < not only natural but proper that such mi amendment should be introduced j by the pure and accomplished Senator t from Nevada. Hi* line contempt for j \ the spirit as well as the letter of the ! < old Constiiiution will recommend him : to the go-ahead communities where the gentlemen nexor die with their i p boots ofT, when lliov are so fortunate t ' | as to own a pair, j If the Stales are to regulate any of j J their domestic aft airs, wo can think of , nothing that could he more appropri- ; j utely left to them than the training of x I children. Mr. Stewart's party passed I the Civil llights Jlill the othet dav ! without any scruples as to the right j of Congress to meddle with the com- ? nion schools and the Constitution as it , < stands; but Stewart is Mred of debate ' ' concerning the limits of power over | 1 I ? such matters, ami he want?, to bo tut- \ \ tirelv nnvo-u rained ill tin' exercise ol ' Congressional henovelence toward the , ignorant poor at the expo use of the enlightened rich. His next Flop may l?o a bill for furnitdivr.g wet-nurses to j the indigent under the auspices of ; 1 tho Trea-mry I )epatt.ment, * ? ?! the es- | 1 taidishinmit of a board ot -Christian . ( i.nionit 11 to assess * ho oos't upon per- | sons of unsound polities. ' ( i\ I! [[ih f . An nneK.prc?l.e 1 opposition !\?ir bv>eo j developed t o ti>e sentimental legis- J j lalion proposed in tlio CiviJ flights | , Rill, ami ll is reported, on goou ?W-j j thoritv, that IVesident ^Trant will ve('> ' the biil unless tiie provision making i mixed schools compulsory best-Ticket] | out. Thai is the rock upon widen the N bill will split. The ablest Republican j ] newspa pern see cleat ly that the passage I of the bill would virtually deprive the i whiles of education in the two or three St.ilea whicfi the negroes control, and would lead to ihc suspension of { all appropriations lor educational pur poses in every Southern State in which the whiles have the majority. The; very Southern Stales which h ive done most lor the education of the negro, j without, making nnv invidious disduc ^ * J ] lions, would be compelled to close the j . public schools or sec them oceupiid i?y licgroea alone. Of course the i schools would bo closed. Moreover, the passage of the Civil Rights Hill, , as it stands, would consolidate the ! white vote ot the South more strongly than ever against i he Republican party, j and give that party a firmer hold in ^ only the three Stales where the negroes i i _ i... i i 'i ?i nave airi'juiv uie upper nana, arm | jH-c.l io kd*p it wit 11<>n{ further legislation.? JVctvs and (courier. , [New York ?Stin.] Judge Hunt and the Might of Trial by Jurj. Tho people have not forgotten the ' trial ol Susan !'. Anthony in Roches- t tor last summer before Judge Ward '> Hunt of the United Stales Supremo 11 Co Jit. In that ease the Judge arbi trarily sot aside the sacred right ol t trial by jury, and on his own motion I entered judgement against the delend- '' ant and punished her l?y fine. She H has petitioned (Jongroan lor the reinis- * sion <d this line, and the Judiciary < Committee ol the House have lopor- ' ted in favor of her petition. In so < doing they pass upon tin* conduct of the ' Judge and utterly condemn his act. < "'] here can he no graver question,s i \ Bays the report, "aflecliog the rights of citizens than this. Nothing can bo 1 s of more consequence to the citizen in i i troublous times to protect him against v the exarciRo of usurped or other s power for oppression, than the inter- I vention ofthejudgement his of peers > upon the question whether ho his I been guilty of a crime, an alleged ' offence against the Government. 1 And in the judgement of your com- < rnittee vvu cannot too scrupulously * guard, in the interest of the liberty of t the citizen, this groat and almost in- < valuable right." "l?y 'he order of * the Judge the defendant was deprived 1 of this right; and if in this case of > minor consequence, ho far as regards i I the punishment inflicted, this can bo t done, bo in a trial lor murder or t treason a judge may order a verdict l of the jury without allowing them to u pass upon tho fact." "Sometimes," I continued tho committee, "in the* 1 darker hours of English jurisprudence, * A I. -1 1* 1 A L ? ! I - ? -% uic juugca mid u'u jury wnen ir.fiy were not tho obedient instrument# of t their will, but persisted in iindiug the < defendants in state prosecutions not ' guilty when the Judge thought they t Ought to have been tound guilty; but ^ neither Jeffreys nor SeroggK ever i dared to set aside a verdict of not < guilty." t Tho committee take paius to exoner- ^ ate Judge lluut (rum the accusation t A * j i i L \j\v u V c IV*^r it-i(i j no 11 tfcs UEO. "JjOWKl.L -t <J'J.,'H COL1'*' \\ &>. 874, NO. 24. >t deliberate wielcedness. They "do lot Ktiil it necessary to impute an nlcnt ??t wrong to the learned Judge X11o tried the ease; but the eHuct el ; iih error wrh to deprive this petitioner )f a jireat and benelieont v'ndil guar- i ~ ( > 11?toed to her as btrongly us any other ly the Constitution ol ner country." j in other words, they determine that | ,hU wrong was eomrmtted not lirough wilful malevolence, but ; lirough ignorance and incapacit v; j ut-l vet this Judge, so ignorant .".ml j neapa'de us to dtprive a defendant >f a great and beneficent vight, guaruiteed as strongly as any other by tic const ii tilion ot the country, is n justice ot our vol v highe t runil, ap minted by the 1'icf-oicnl und n nlinu?1 l?y the deliberate jail.? men' c?l the noiatc! Wo submit that it there is any case vhoto impeachment, and rem >vu! are noper, it is this of Judge Hunt. It. s true thai lie ia a man el n spcvtahle h i? u let and upright intentions; but s it sate to commit the highest povi i s )f the judiciary to one v/in> is capable j d an error so gross and fun lamon'ul? And would it not be almost as do ind almost as creditable to have an ulelhgont learned rascal on the Doneh as to have a respectable man apuldc of sueh an extreme and alio no,,,. rrovhlonee and a Ha'. Tin; death of fho lato venerable 1 h". It. S. Slows, of 1 haiillree, Mnaa., rails .o !11i tul an incident. related of him i Storrs with a student at Amiovor j I'heologhjal Seminary, with young Ijionlo'1 SI.ill. (h? a e.eiiain Saturday, !.o\var?ht the ind of their eonrse, Hall wa> preptuing to no to Uraintrey to [iretieii on the following Sabbath, liar ing sumo ev pert at ion that the in \ ilaiion so to do would grow into a ealh I it the a at of cplitting some wood, towover, his hat. fell troni his head ivtt.^lh 4 he ii \e, nod was out in twain ind ruined. Tho riremnvt ane.es w? t? ,'tCh that 10 ro|Htne.t-. n wa>. 'inpossib\o list then, fuel 1 Ui.il i-.oinm lied IV acftle his engageJ ?r;.?intree, twanged with Stows to g<v*o . place. Slows went. Hot prcivldd'ig ,l,S(M Io whs invited to tvone ao,;in. ,*v ' he result was that, Half was uultt^M orgot ten, ? oall was presently extended i o Stores, it vyfts aeeeplud, and ho tvr.s n due time settled, remaining the Minister of that parish until his dvtng lay, a period of more litau half a Miii t ury. Hall, disappointed, one might nnttirilly suppose, r.t this thwarting of ! >* iopes5 hnd his tniml turned to the lorigi) mission field, and beeame (iordon l.ii . i . e - . : . , i. \ 1 1.111, IIH' lll>: 111 INCH )lIIIUI ' CI: .'MillTl I :an Board, whore name is forever j inked w illi the early onto'prise oi !\al eminent organization. No one, who lias any 1 > * j 1 i I in Divine 'rovidence, will lor a moment doubt hut God stationed Storrs at, Braint fee, aid sera Hall to lodia: but riocs it lot also seem as if ho ofl'ecled thai | .rrangeir.ent l?y means of tlie accident u the hat?? h'liDCtrd Abbott.. Spirits as uu Ai'inj Italian. Sergoon Genera) W. 0. .Maclean, of lie British army, has seen service in he lor pica I nations for many years; aid speaks Iroiii his ow n experience i gainst the use of alcohol for soldiers 1 ii tie.: field. 'I he medical officers of he French Army, nays he, who have I md threat experience in tlie. ardouotts j lanipaigiix in Algerki, denounce the pirit ration as hurllul. The evidence I hows thai wherever soldiers, bv uc- : sidciit or design, have been out off rom the use of spirits on marches, or j luring laborious sieges, they have ....:..... i < i. i i liv>?tliv'4 111 V." II II' <11 I ( , r J'H 111 i*. IIU liscipline far belli r than when grog } vas used. (Jarel uI experiment in ide 1 it the army medical school at N el ley : bows that alcohol, far from incroasrig I be pow'ir of heaiing fatigue, even I vhen given in a quantity which many I [>itit drinkers would deem moderate, csk'Mis muscular ioree, and a quantity I n excess of this, it was shown, cnlii'cy destroys the power of work. I'm atlgue, rest and food are the proper cinedies. I >r. Maclean favors the use >f coffee instead of alcohol. That a :up of hot coffee is the best prcpara* ion for tlie fatigues of a march, is in lisputable; it invigorates the men at Parting, and the vigor it imparts iclps tlio system to resist the miasma vhich in the dark and chilly hour icfore dawn is most freely evolved rom the soil. It is worthy of reinaik fiat coffee was first issued to Ku rowan troops for this purpose, ou the ulvice of the great Jaurey, dining Napoleon's Egyptian campaign, ^ooking hack to his experience among porlsinen in India, Dr. Maclean canlot recall a single example of a spiritIrinkcr who w as able for any length >1 time to expose himself with iid|>ulily to the hum, while it in notorious hat abstainers lrom alcohol arc cu>ablo of doing so to a threat extent. Mot is the case different in temperate dimaten. 4,I am in tho habit," sa)s iic autlior, "of spending my autumn vacations on the mountains of the lorth, and though not so young as I f ~ - ^ Iron ii\thq *" ii "i : U .. >i.uO |senate f*>i ftrif uii't fill,'. "iit* lor luii^umit iiRK.'lioi), UnA molt *,*. ;? a;111 consM'nr* a whether in or display type; l*>s?iraft Ull in* 1) *vi|| liy churv.fil for lift R spill*-. Mai ri M'* notices free. Deaths Kimernl pfiMiW OW'ilaiii j of one stjft'tre l'i>?d; tjvr n ?? snare eharye'l at advortrsi'i,, rUes. lod i . < ?i h not ions of one vpiare 11Ofiill discount will o?- mude n> ill ad whose lelvcithseuieiiK nre to tKept in fSft* term ? f tin re month* or longer I I ? I ill BIW have V I'eiv, 1 have ii^nn ui.?J neHiO walk-*1 my Nvliinkoy-ili ii.k'ir.y < mpHu ions, 11 in ml a, Iceeptt*, a??l tr i lie, to n st an ) still. In one Wiit'il, uioohoj tmnletRtion may help a man to j ut on a Spun,! hut it Is no anl in a hu* cinq's w<>fk.At '* 5 ork Oh* S?mU! of I tl?? td'ffMails Wild oMieei's engaged in the Arkansas wfcf think they should bo allow**! to ii'iuv . on halt pay, instead td'b'ii^ wmr f moiiionxiy ?'oii)|;vli? d * o <ju-rn iv <1: > l?v \ ending p amit- and candy. Jasper .Meyers, a Iftrmtr, liviJfft fib ?ut 1h rec.nulvs h*t?m 1VI elisor I eau; ivatimI l ist week aceordin '? 'eg ram in t lie t liicago Jioirt. \ com a n hi'.* n mi m I mm* ot sk'det onv i and heavier b<>in-d than tin* pi?t?o ?t human traine. Men of foii'iio1, * ' lni\o visiioil the -place and ohtar-* - NjuM-imens, hay they bol >ng to 11 ?y known as tin* Mound liiiijjjur.s. A fashionable .nil'iincr (in J'unch) ! "?w: the Slower on the !<-fI f l ir o| t In* lioniM't, xit'eourse, mudanio?: lAi-h h.liable lady * "Will?n-No > The I act is tin re's a pillar on the Icit i-.de *1 my jtew in eliuich, so that only iln i ight. side ot ?n v hoa<l is seen b t 11" ' c >n?'re''atiop. 'M coins 1 I eouid n oh ir my j?(,w !'* ? ashionahle Indy * hind/and : a ? as. * "veil Vh?i c am li, you know, il'necessary. ' (l*hh ionable niillnii i* eoiitudurs.) ISrivrham Young, .! tv, neeording t ' tlx- S;.' t I,hI<o 7 has an ovi-jpn-fd \Vi\y oI <: implying with llir hcviptuiad injuma*o'.s. At :i uoidot etce lwetiiKt lu-l Sunday morning, h?* thus insivi'i-* ed the bveihtvn: 441 pvsi.y K>v your or. ciuies. I ret'i!*(.* i, but ! always p?a> luit they may ? ? to hell'' A 1! ri \ ana lot lor savslhat muiehum * exporting good* to vho I nit"'i j are. already adding \t .?? ineomo, in v ten pet' ? Out., lo\ h'tl by (.* '11. ( " ' h'U to iht; i11\ oieoa vviiieh they r? nut t* their correspondenta in t ho ' Status. 'I lie plan is exceldingly smiple on ther part, ami takes " ) mmm ov\ ot their pocket*., n?>v out ol vInid the i?e >ple of the Island, llio people the I * s ited States lvius almost dire- t.iv j 'lying the income lax ottho un'mms\n . tieln iale, sonio time -back, v%\ ^ < at in Boston, and became vofy JJlfi >. 1 %'.i ^ " fm<' annoying to (lietrtw tvonHI,^. Li?;iv a a.., passengers-, *?v. him; hut a gemvd proposed to mt^v ol- | ;i v i?,?f v, and kind - lie;.rt'ed t'-rv. ,,?1Mr(l 4<V war. al o fi passenger, j,4 him, ami soothed him into )}s 4 havior !o? the rumiimler of >?. lie)'. ! adore k';n in^, however, man se.ow'.ed upon the oei upn.ni> the ear, and mutti-red smiio Wolds of Contempt, hut eiioOk hand." warmly with the doctor, and s.'fd, "i )ood 'Inv, my trii ml; I ace ys.ni kimV v hut i> <*< to ho dI'lliik,1* A (J e";t> At'jjiv.. ? 1 hol. Sin II of Ar1** liOi'ht. I ulli'^i',' rue: that his iv,eo??1s show \ hat t he last A mat V. as the cohtc.tL - ".?"I - - - -- - ~ OIK! in U?h'lV-six. Vrftl'S, I i'K* tVNl J t.?V :v, ? V ' lure hnvinv,; hewn acven degrees the ! IK" V11. HiVI* Sv'iiool I eiU'illTH* 1 T<>I?*j?.-*fil* VA k (\ ltvuse It way* llO ftliCl: OX IlllillO'J the principal of academy in )Vnnsvlvunia, who uwim in doti >\ whether 1 'atagoni* v,:<a to Amevira or Alio I." On a not tor c.nsioii * a tmeher h id ^eiw eighteen month* in a XcW norto academy otmhl name to liim *>li1v ot?<* river in ih trope, and lliat the TibetC** ! hnu lie I ?. ! ?, but they do *mA prow anything ( xccpl that those two men v. t re not qi> rlified to teach. Vary are not specimens ot tiro tcaehofd i* i 'cnr^) 1\ ania or New ork. No, nor in florry! For wo can head thorn, and give them tour tn lh? game. The i oloivd MemodUt Kpiscopal Chinch in America organized in X S'WI I'V the \ 1. K. Church Stnoh, has about 7."?..'?0'i members and ! iidy school M'diolat's. It has a ride, in teed wit to }>u\ent On* C'huroh Ivom used tov political 'Tuis, providing iton ll<> hotoe of worn);SI? lil be iK [. U'* political speeches and ashOinbiii m. "Ik Lbs Tail Co.uk ?T-r * darkeys in the W st went out i*. nam opOSSOIllS, ?tcM mid by HCOldt'lli l.?'l4 1 a largo cuvo wiiii ^nit ' a smalt a nee. Peeping in thev di *?'>?vefe?i three young In-ar whelps m t he inter- ?<v 4 Look he??h,M said one, "whii*; J 'jt * i* *1 ir and get* dc young bars, y? w watch heah t*>r dc old b ir." *.*..? < asleep iii the sun, when opening rtn . . eyt'H ho saw tho old b nr making ln*r , way into the cave. IJbiihk ?h a v.\ ho caught hvr by the tail, ami held like (loath. 4,lItblo (in*, S.vin, wh-t* . dark do holy dar? 4*i. ?T t? % * * J umbo, s.ibw yonrHoll, honey. * dm. - tail com ) out you,11 timi whttv diu'k u?a hole.*' A Chineflj <ie*ci'i|i?io>) of an Am?ri? Can con)t: 4<Onn t?un in xilfcoi, another talks all the time, %tu\ who nun* condemn U*c ma;1 waotit** not ?aid a word. '