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wnn:w"rnho,-a: .. .. n:"." .>ra.,av.snn..,rr"rr ...v . "-r."-v.., ... ._ ... . !lffl9)1 DID to .=r.::..- ..--. . J. TIII-WEE KLY El)I'1'ION. o JJ Y".,l ',',tJlnir : 'f 11;i,1v, Jr;)ft!$ j3Qlt0 3. Q., SATURDAY 1 0RNINGh'MA1tdHf10 1877. 1 r . ; ro I t s3 i J J ,J .AN: CA Il.;1 . tles wilth 11110 Octs pos~t pail. .1. J1. I-USTSOn, Nassau, leons. Coa., N. Y. ''IU LING * With it Cold is Always Datngo oils. USE? rtStoteai Q1,9vqop &, 1} lw ,,. PUT 1111 ONLY IN BLOC' BlOXES. Sold by aill Druggist ". C. N. C1ITTmwroR-,78tath 1Ainue, N. Y. aI~8 111ll1 acco u iii of lhi rt~l(1 a: vat tory written by his F'ather, beats ltolaja. soun Crusoe iin thrilling lal(-ew. T.) Illustrtcod iUAND-11OOI t 111 :u:a}o,a 1 (On)p~th a~ccounit of atllIl uls lilt Ill ust r1t iorli f {Il >7 t I4 O sell at sighut. ilal a~nti f'inio agapv, lS cin )nonxe on thous. Puare *ithI.a'fr.,. Xtlpi'*s by mhail $2 ouch. .*i~bnWL4; Peor-i1:1t C .o. Phi lndclpthit ,1s ")tai 1 A~~Il A 11,WY~irT~T ,_'' UITNJSS Will)n t. , 11 l 10 11r,1'a : ~l:a4 .'i "LV: log ?14lJlciue Agcalts, altid ; ill) au-nI ..t energy lullI al.ility to learn the b::xino,a: of' selling; Sowving '1liniii. (e:,l imhixa t jot) 1iba'ral, but VII iihi a( r1 ia, to Agent. For l'articulou's. A1d] res~ 827 & 8 1 Lh'orlway, New folk, or N wt ())loan:(, riat A HOME AND FARINA. OF YOUR OWiN, On the li1g.ti> yt ,lct~ \ci1; Sot Now is tht' 'I'1II lito SI " ure I t. fr Stockl uitiiij ii h )ni. Stilt: "TIHE 1IONEE"IU .t0 Sent free to a'l parts of the wvorld1. Addlres, ' i)llt (hut V H ()M kfl I NUB. OF~T)1 CENTt.NNIAL -EXPOSITION11 " )'lEfIltEJ4' A, I) Ii.i.'Ir.ST rmi Sold in1 10 :liiy', It lw: r:g the owdl{ oiuip.011 ?(%t pV-fe. tvork (77 ;1"" ,,al\ shujiting., in,a<1fid' i4 tl t~iihi '" 'r~iL' ~ great (lys, ("t(". ;illustilal ad. 1L11+ 1. c'(11, or thani. auj Other:L '\.i , .al MI si O~no newv a t ~'* w h. 3l,1110 agt.i tvnjiiec ..fjif I(1111c lv fuor I p~roof of abos ,.Oplh1is of atiajalts,oja. ,l~. and pfe. sa pie. pa. 'oi fult i e >crilJLIija an DY(xlt 4 6 llpo ugsi.,. uius.. di .$araasoyaait, Clution. Ile~vare of al a'ly oaiio( official fld wor"tlosus hou, S. 5011( flor ): roof. '" Mil on (0a1l1.e .lul (alit. l(a 1 Sistila l ' of tnt I am t " _hT ,i+jt ' "r-t",?:;--t; I11( KT, ")r ;,I t1 utlI --- Or",tf :'It t (-iron 1)1111 ti (t1; I D- i , ;r t ittu(11 J. (jui, It. 1 " lit ci"":1 .t,:" 9Rrst1 E f i8 fO Wi 114, m; Cabb'4, e:; (1 J1 W iJ'MI/ i' 9liir' ::71"7Ta Cl r f i.' )r r ()t}l" , t lit CU t l> ( A OJIE 1)roiltttl; o vltric "ot 11 A 4,t, ll krlu'it ti 'iritrltfHf'tik)r, (t f1 ' i>ipii " oft to- ]ii0 ('e ttnlry:tajolitsi'trely,'>fsV the tui dortligg 1od, e,1l4+ I witlti.;l;;11111 U lilt ivtttion; it ' tltit>,1". i14 : stt I islti] ,; J'. r 1) tQ}Il)Rg "ofl en4 -' ttons iie, and +;l"fttrtc in tiro (Ip1l4"Itolf'i1tl.l pL"ii'tft Ill;kt IrfitSli if q to- the prG Iii qqr. In trlltiepIItntitnl! great elttd Itlliit l(l bp' tttit!, ,itl;> ;& e;tttt l'Lt{lt{I1t'.t;p[lco 1'or growtlt: l li(i, } [ s ~>;i'. ul'tl),u Ilau h o# t -1ll}11t 1 11 ref 1 (liv -w"ur"tgc rill 1 of tillttt aip0 varitstMi- I()+h'tl 1A.1nlga1 df 'ttle " h a s'ut+ pot:t.Itl i(ij ()u r(:(:t(ipt t)f 5Q Ofty tr't; I, tij dne ; 01 Ill. IIyttit l;c} t;l:llt)I;": '1'1;)()tl :puokA ;cs to 1 ( ut' :1i t I'l"ss; i I I111(1 two :3 rout st: t of U). I :is" Rem 11dt vifell o n G eta Cu, [ary ly14 ; HaJ'11 ok t1 th ito>i . 'ir., Y"' '13t,()QthINoRbN, tt ft r co Md., Jitiv. I!a;11A77. ire. Jnattaa ('.liet ;l; f.r,, I$U Pttltc n 51: N. Y. Ij (,;trslr:- I 6111:01tsome s(tc(1 trout Y()el lust s111"i11 ", Itild itimitiggatl( Your Eli t,t ll( [ 11'll1ialll ('abbttge wlits thi; 0liuitte n t th On of memmmitl side " t e need you sc"lit 1110 pr6tMeoc1 'Cabbnjea wveigl}i1lg thirty poundA c+lyd1r : )\ rIl.trttly votlria, , ' ( 1 tq 1 J. 13l.tO WW N. atfyI trim "Solo t1<I;ent in tlih LT. 'S, for' t h t. ILLI Il .a - 11.""aidMone',Qn'ion Seed frn[p 1,1111: t(nt: , ] cigf o.;~N1t *:alld, pro., .Inottig t}p I {n:;( pruelne"i"l ; tlt( . nl( ,t 1"(,llftR 11riA'> tti st t a\'( 1l (1 ullipll5 litiowil 1111(1 S'3 tij(i' Ili ;'tl ttitAlii( :.iil fr.ul SOU to "n t) iIlill l" ' t" ;'' 1 q b n, ' S it In drills(. I1 " Rn1i ' }i i'i t ,' .!r}.rbu I i{Ut k0ir 1011. or.. ill yraeh1lCi, t( tra, " t ii 1S4Iish ()Ilion tired sit }'ised tie by Its lar;;tr yi("1(l, 1111,1 the (titht ilia' (l$tVor of the tut it. I eollhl h vvsc I(I any (Matatity .ir, i?: i.$ lntlt' (t rtt good riCC.t" My wife s$ ys 1 t"iit !Wt V' nii' tlirr uh U. i forthe Iiibly it iutnl+("" 1, 13 ttt*j t-no nfi lilittlll 66' "ou 0111 f.(: t l(''ell' h4"I s7,nt).'s O10 ne i nektge ' of seed sent on reocllt of eerit 1111(1 one 3 cent postrtgti stitnip, three 1lttcl"it rs to one address ;t4 (IV'' ulul two :3"/%.01,0! i. "."t"... 011.1'-4 U 1J1tclt.lb6ibuilt ,eta I0001In. of I (,t). \IN" supply 1, IlII$It(:d. Partll 1 desiring to tie("iir. ""it1lr;" of the h1tove rare seeds. $ !t(titl(1 fit)( delay their order-, All liecd wttli AN-0):i) 1'I1@SI( A1;) TO (.I ll\IINA ;. Catill dust 1lvuutill Ittl)" till orders. For cither of cite above st.4dis, address "1.l AILS CA J11'B 1:LL, filar 1- st(tn f t. I'Illt(,n tit.. X. Y. 1 Sewing-MaohSne. TRADE AE MARk aft t' rP..JL =6, 1811. WE C'r..V U Volt 'l'ilt: tarPitov):n ME it VP w ni 'V FI 000HON FIDELE. 4 STORY OX/0' 'T1]X QV.11lJKR )ATIN, to Anirnal is moro unjustly breated Than the Pig, BJ3ns wrote lines to a butterfly ,on a lady's bonnet in church, (jtwa.':n't a buttorfly, but no mnatter ; this is intended for family reading); Gray aobievod a dirge on a favorite oat drowned in a tub of gold fishes and'Coleidgo soared "to elegize an ass," but who hes over made a hero of a pig ? Even Virgil does not p tre him at hexameter in his third Geovg c. ' The pig has been accounted un clett:bec use of mental obliquity or prejudlice. That the pig is not siltpauislh in his taste', must be allowed. -He will oat anything, but so will othe(r numbers of the tnimal ci egtiuu, lDdoks are not fastidious. Tigey have been soon to make an aidoeynaic feast from the fl.l re jected by the pig. Yet the duck is 09t aic(counItt imelCtan, aui H-ans.5 Christiatn Ail ersen has devoted a charwing storiotte to the adventures of an ugly duckling. But who ever made a hero of an ugly pigling ? it i not contended that all pigs are ndtdrally gentle and self denying. Some are boin with viecs. On the 4th of Juno, 1094, a pig was hanged vd a- itbtet, ne:ar L.Ltn, for devour, ing the 'child of a cowherd. But, the, condder the number of cow herds who have regaled on rashers of baedn in their time. Again, on the 10th of January, 1457, a sow and her six sukldings were indicted for boimcide on the person of one Johan Lonfant, of Savigny, when the foi-rder was foumd guilty without ex. tenuting eircuistances, which showed the animus of the jury, andi sentenced to be hanged by Li hind legs from the branch ofa tree. The yonugsters wore loft oft, there being no positive proof conneefing them with the crime, though thero was ".,,n1j on.a..amai videnoe, there chaps being spiinkled with a froth of warm gore. But these were ex. ceptiontl pigs, and we are no more warranted in condemning tho porcine race as murderers because of these isolated occurrences than we t hou'd be in denouneing English working mon as brutal because some of them reoul( fstrate with their wives, when their diier is nrot to their liking, with tiro heels of their clogs. Bnt your ordinay pig iN anialle, an indefatigable iUoter pftor food when he is hiung:y (and when is he not ?) and a par sionato lover of the d-c far niente. All be asks is to ha) let alone. but men refuse this nvvmativo favor. Mischievous buys polt him in the ribs. Malieious Leamsters orack their whip lash over his rounded back, active pound mlasters arrest him on the Queen's highway, and pound himl, tund even heis owner slits hip em ars and inserts ab ring in his nosti i!s. He is the object of general persecution, and we would scarcely recognize in hinm any connection with the piggies so touchingly alluded to in the famiijar household s tory '"Thie. little pig wsent to market; This little pig stopped at home, This little pig got bread and butter; And this little pig got none! This little pig cried, 'Week I weekl weeki' 11e11 me over the barn door." The pig, although universally contemned, is endowed sometimecs with exquisite sensibility, in proof of wl.ioam I will relato at storywhich came to my knowledge in Paris. I am enreless whether the story is credit. od or not by the mob; some folks are as .sceptical as the Tichhorne tavelve, and~ will not believe in the sea-ser'pnt, or the enormous goose berryv that grows every autumn; but tIhe story is true nevertheless. Well, this pig of which 1. write g ninhabitarjt of the Qnartior atin.-that mirthful, happy ron. dezvou of wild, buoyant, improvi dent studentship, atlhtent in spirits, but limp, of purse. I oan of the' narrowesti erookede est, darkost lanes of the network of str'eets at~ tho back of what is now the Bolevl~ard St. Miehol, as oneo brossd dliaganolly from the Snra bonne to the Panitheoti, stood a smialj tavern whish will be known' Uy/zon of 4)e present gneratio as sLe coch&oa Fidtele, "Tb atfl ig." Aire flocked *h. Bohmiians whodiveod by the sode of hokior anid the Miorgsie, and peon.and~inkc photo ginppha. pk duels: and 'suicides' *ith hieand qurn'ing ain' pip ..,lihrhot, 'Ay'*Ore ng canea tme;, t1e me ~~fal st ettof fifteen war .tandinut shr' ate books were woman's looka ; hia list less brother of the law, who had Dawned his "Code Napoleon" long smco, and had his hair out a la Robespierre on %et ;. dreamy ideologists, skilled billiard-players ; and here, her last aaylum, hAad come the ultimate sp-eiuo1 Q that ex tiht race, the Lisetto "bf' B&ianger. At the Coahot Fidele the gayest parties for onnooing at Asnieres and picnicking at Robinson's Oak wore mado up, nad from its portals twice a week a merry hand sallied arm-in= arm to enjoy a saucy revel in the salons of Pore Bullier. It was a sporting place when I know it; thero was no dullness there, respectai bility. We cracked jokes always I somtiunes cracked bottles--when we bad the money ; seldon orinoked heads, for we were all firmu friends, a joyous sodality. The ceiling and walls of the diminutive tavern wore oloquent with grotesque sketches in chiarcoial, distemper, and oil ; the portraits of the principal clients of the house wore there in side-split. ting distortion, but still recogniiza, ble ; over an inner door was the most bizarre of representations of a ltoCe of pig-h)caded courtiers ; a )an1el opposite glowed with lifelike portraits, in an oval cluster, of litera ry worthies worshipped by Young France Dumas, do Musset, Mur ger, GeorgQS Sand, Gautier, Janin, Gerard do Norval, Beranger and Hugo, of course, for Le Cochon iFidele was nothing if not realistic. Portly CQurbot, with his pleasant face, ruddy as Burgundian wine, came sometimes to amnoke an ancient catty, and Ohan and Gill, and oth ers who have since won renown ; and some of the wild daubs around that mooked uis were their handi work. The laugh of Henri Mopnier was familiar with the echoes of the strained rooftree, and Charles Bau deltire had often' strolled into Le Cochon Ficdle to borrow a roarn of foolscap from a miore fortunate brother. Even some dii nhajores enthroned in the oval cluster had haunted the tavern in theme days. At yonder deal table, where Jules ,d bolotte are playg dominoes for a hump of sugar, mused Alfred (10 Musset ; and in that nook by the casement Henri Mlurger outlined w' th a stumpy pencil the " Vie de B )heme," heedless of the cup of black cofl'o that, grow cold. There was a tradition t 1at the petit bon. h/n fwe, Adolphe Thiors, had run up at score of (three fnmais (seventy-live ecnt i) there when(;1i he was (ams la der:Ae (as all of us who are worth our salt are one tile or other.) But the tradition on which the e npany prideud itself most was that which gave its namo to1 the hostolry. liecall the pig of the Latin Quarter wl:ich I have 'mntioned--a oai aless, ha.ppy-< -"ucky gra(tor, lie seem-, ed to have drunk in - the free-and easy spirit of the sheloola with the atmosphere he breathed, Could he sing lie would have been a trouba. doir. A s it was, lie was the student's pig, and rubbed his snout against the knees of every roysterer, who passed, with the same love that the soldior's dog showed for a rod-coat, and the firemen's dog for the Sal vage Corps. Ho rovedi about the Qnuartier in the morning, a ohartered libertine, and nobody nmolested him ; but invariably, and with~ the~ regulari ty of clockwork, he ag4 down, as noontide appronohodl, on his haunch es opposite the window of the B~ohe Mian tayern, which was then called. Le CJochonb d'Ind- "T he Guinea| Fig." The students never failed to hand him out a platter of alops and to pat his slooek head ; but when the platter was licked olean, he did not stir, There lhe eat, in the sampe position, motionless, as if lhe were out in stone, with his gaze wistfully fixed on the dame du comptoir. She was a bonnie buxom damsel, with laughing grey, eyes, and cherry cheeks, and hair that fell on her plump shouldors like thick skeins of soft shining, golden silk. Not till the shutters were put up could .that pig be induced to quit his groundc; and then, with drooping emrs and tail, ha reluetantig cept otr, Burt how cheev'fqlly ha trotted up next morning before middag , - by wh1ili' hQear Titmp~ had tak~r 490~ se4% be-' hind the oouliter 'of 'rno, as hn in'a danud, te while she shwmdspihl bautter -o) the easteprar leftly piweed tire: eroohet-hq , tlhrough te capelinp on kehicih he was everlatinglge n aoontide' Titin~ M-61 in her accustomed4 plaei but' tho' igi was in his. o r ; and- ogtl Jie, looked'; at, 1 ~ y qt g6 ~and' put' big foreetQi{' 1 e %uor, aockn ed gMus of absithe $ni Ko arTtnt sub , vi.e eskM about the head with a orumh-bruel}, and angrily shQuted, Pas de coc4 onnerie !" The pig slunk baok, mortified at the rebinff, and st e .. ing to the old eptw YhetQge of the lne, aptawled; at Atll length on the hard pavomont. When night. I fell be sorrowfully depaded. Next,, day he re-appeared, 'but Titine digit not. INo did nlot dare to ente-4, 4 vi:xen waa there ; btt ho sank heai ly don, groaned and hing4 to, ie Most pitegne hirwuman ouner, abd!' big beady tear-drops gushed frg, his lge 4. The studonts oontribut d the customary platter, but h6 r i fused his food. Youth is proverbi. ally 'careless, and with p a r-e cochon!" the efiitbrer wad dismissed, For ten days this scene was re poated. Titino was s 1 o k in the IToapital of the Pitio, and then she roturned, paler than when she left, but still the Came bright, joyous Titine, The pig came down as usual, Stepping feebly and wear ing a dejected air, for the poor fol low had lost at least fifty-four kilo. grammes ; his ribs were all spare' ribs, and the flesh hung on his sides. in groat idle collops, Suddenly he saw her ; his oyes lit, his nostrila distended, his whole frame quivered with emotion, and he gave one' exul tant grunt that coped through the neighborhood, An Anglo dian in the Rue St. Jacques though it was the trumnpoting of an elephant. Titine, who was receiving congratt.. lations, turned around at the noise, murmured, "00 he' ooohon /" and tiokle his ear with her soft hand..The pig was an altered pig from that day. He ravenously fell upon half a dozen consocutivo platters of slops, and visibly-almost Miraculously--.----, proved in appearance, He wa him self again, Next morning he trotted up brisk and blithe as ever. But no Titine was there, What was the meaning of this a There was a holiday group, at the threshold, and by-and-by Titine came out arrayed in virgibal lace. white gloiva on-her hands, :ahd a wreath of orange blossoms on her aO hivalo h 41p ar ,nth ht the pig knew what was meant. The wedding party hiod it to the adjoin. ing church at St E.tieine du wont ; the pig never made a aosplainf, but followed it to the Place du Panitheon, and deliberately putting himself in the way of an omnibus, was . run over and killed, That double event wasr knowrn ll over the Quartior before night, and the students determined that in future "The Quinea Pig" should be known as 'The Faithful Pig." This is believed to be the first instance on record of a pig having commit'td suicide through disappointedr agfee ton. May it b the last.-J, A O'Sbhea, in the Ran Ferancisco .3(;M LOST Ers DMAoEs..-SoOn after.. dinner Thursday a citizen of T4ird street entered a lalwyer's ofmee arN began : "My wife has been bittein by! r dog." "Good I" replied the lawyer. sumn of $500." "Yes ; she was bitten three tirmea by the brute," continued th. lyig. bandh "and of ontse I want dar, ages. "Well, now, you go home and 'tell your wife to go to bed and ,stay -~ there for at loact a weelj. Have her groan and take on, and puffer gr~a pai and distress, and call in the neigghbora to wites her suferings, We 11 just make thp mian who owns that dog get up and bowl." The man left in a joyful frame of rnind, and yesterday he came back, looking sorrowful. "No use trying," sadly said ho, shaking his head, ?'My wile waited just long enough to find out that the wvasn't mad, and then se start ed out to make twenty-two calls this afternoon, and I giwss we haven't got a cas."-4..)etroit Fr'ee .P-reps, Br~geport ry goods plerk dtbah'# layo ng tim~e4 - I0 ana muwe--M' -- y 4 oat M Ti 444:6 hbsy t4~ iUj ort p 8>Rloo 1, d .nou~ ~tr~h.