University of South Carolina Libraries
BI ?. A. LEE A\D HUGH WILSON ^ ~ " ~ABBEVILLE, S. C., WEDNim ~ ^' YQLMimi"-g^p"* 1873. FALL I WE take pleasure in announcing now receiving our Stock ot TJRADE, and arc confident of our : a call, both in prire and quality. I STAPLE AND F i r> ~"D Hosiery, CriOVCS, uuiscla, av morals. Shirts, Siii and many oihcr articles too numero Wo would direct special attentioi ZBootis ?t: We make this line <?f Trade a sjieci that those who favor us with a call complete Stock ol' rlady-ma: BOTH CLLRl In addition to the above, we keej GROCERIES A And have at all t'i SUfi-AR. COFFEE SOAP che: Give us us a call, and we will eer Sopt 10, 1873 22?tf' ~ IN C] Miss Jai WHO will nlways bo found WELL-SELECTED STOUJ HA.TS.and BOISTN Hair Goods an' Bin, Flowers, Plus, Con in every variety J. T. E L.ATI Oct. 8,1873, 26-tf COTTON : What we wast is a WE would give notice to plants currency we wi I pay 01' TEA.DR. We arc roiwiving oin? ot' f Good* evar brought t<> this t ?\vi than they have been at any tirno sii mduts to large buyers and are prop: m i BOOTS A f)arhvarc, (Em CROCK F We would urge upon those indcl merits, and as an inducement to on cotton we promise them' tl? very h ' WHITE Oct. 1, 1S73, 25-tf goods In exck Barnnel are now openir DRY GOODS, GEO OB Which owing to the scarcity' of n friends in EXCHANGE FOii I FULL Ml Oct. 1, 1873, 25-tf m MAM TTST Who have the lave O FALL AND W1 they have over brou nuttpt rmrw'Q i ULtf 1 ^ i COl HATS, HAND-SEWED BOOTS Gloves, Cotton am all Wool "Wonre constantly receiving f'ashi* Ladies. AIro GROCERIES A OF THE QUARLES Sept. 30, 1873, 25-tf t^sii13PC? ??i M i-Wjr i IMI IIMI MMMO^ I j to our friends and the puMie that we are (<OODS tor the FALL and WINTER iliilit v to please all who will favor us with n our Stork may he found full lines of ANCY DRY GOODS, ibbons, Edgings, Insertings, Balrt Fronts, Collars, Cuffs, us to mention. i to our Stock of tt* <r3 ^b.oes. ahy, and can ami will offer inducements can not tail lo buy. Also, a full and DE CLOTHING, Yl" AND GOOD. [> on hand full lines of N u PROVISIONS, roes a good assortment of , BACON, FLOUR, TOBACCO, ESE, Etc. tainly please you. UAKGE OF 10 ready to exhibit a HANDSOME AND Ev OF TRIMMED AND UNT11IMMED ETS of the latest Styles. I Head Trimmings, sets, Bustles, notions, Fancy Goo^s, kept in this department. GBERTSON, 3 31IL.LER & ROBERTSON. IS MOKEY ! ~7~ -0-.--0 Madiuci of Exchange !! rs, that (luniiij the present "lock-up" of rsi i)n<; i; wi:s r<)it cotto \ in tin* extensive and attractive Stocks i. all I tile jipiees our if/iods are lower ire the war. We *viII offer special induceired t'? r?rni>ii ih-ni \> ith all kinds of NX) SHOES, jeerics, [Jrouisions, JKV A::. Ac. toil to us flu- uoecssitv of prompt payr custom r- for l>rin^inir forward their i?;ost pric.-> that can possibly lie pai<i. ANGE FOR CBTTUN. 1 Sk' ig their new Stock of wrm o^TTTnsn^Tfl O.fl iliiiS, SlMVIS1UHS, CSUij loncv. they are offering to sol] to their" JOTTON lor which they will allow the IRKET PRICE. .GAINS OTHIKTG A T est and best assortment of ITER CLOTHING glit to thi3 market. Also, WaNISHINS CODS, UI-MJlSi-Mf ; m SHOES, SHIRTS, HOSIERY, I all Wool Drawers, and Under Vests. unable and substantial goods to suit the iND PROVISIONS BEST QUALITY. I & PERRIN. "V MERCH.A: GREEN W0( ARE now ofloriiig to the public in tliei line of :ili the (.ioods generally needc TIIEIIl ST a/1 n?rnn f nrx IIUVU Ut'L'll svuruiuu UHU gium v? EEADY - MAD: A FINE STOCK OF A good asso Groceries, Hardware, Croi which the attention of purchasers is in WALLER Feb. 19. 1873, 45-tf I AM receiving daily my FALL AN everything usually kept .by the lute i?reat care after the panics in montiy ma I will be able to sell at prices to suit the My Stock embraces in part Staple and Fan OLOTI BOOTS km SHOES, Hardware, CrocI GROCERIES, M " J. T. EC LATE IV Oct 8, 1873, 20-tf J 13 a Sia ^ ^ n ^ * __ _ DEAL El Dry Goods, BOOTS, SB.QES, COHFEC ABBEVILLE MAVK now on hand a large, well-select of Goods in (heir line. They pure! New York during tlie Into depression in tin to sell at the lowest (inures. They have in Store a \cry fine lot of JciL C> O JL A N and in fact, keeps only the host articles. T and guarantee complete satisfaction in the on them at No. '1 GIlANITK 11ANGE. MANUFACTU CARRIAGES. WAGGfl GsrSTO 0I1W c~z "HT" EEP constantly on hand the best ma ilsL perienced workmen and are manut a varied assortment of vehicles of every cheaper than the cheapest?which for beai compare favorably wit.ii work from the be.' All work warranted to be fully lip to rep They manufacture a one-and a-half lie suitsmall farmers for ONE HUNDRED ] sal favor wherever used. They manufacture at low prices Harness stock on exhibition UNDERT They are manufacturing COFFINS OF assortment ou hand, and will attend funei ROWLAE | Nov. 10, 1873, 31-lv White, Hill 4 Catalan I AT 190. j ~ ~ ~ s AliE :\0W READY TO OFFER; THEIR STOCK SPBStIG AND SUMMED A T RATES (they believe) to suit ' Aw every buyer. ''Live ami help f -* ? > .. live" is tlieir motto. They have a good {stock for sale,and will show their goods j with pleasure. The interest of the buyer will he kept in view at all times. (.'all.and test the truth of their asscr- j ( tions. April 10, 1873, 1-tf Dr. Morse's Indian Ro t Sugar Coated Pills for purifying the blood. W. T. PENNEY. Pet. J, 1873, 25 tf BROi'HlBK, NTS AT )D,. s. a, r new and handsome building, a full d in this community. OCR OF 106881 re, and unusually attractive. m / *? ^.^rTTTMn t LLUI oliw. BOOTS AND SHOES. rtment of skery, and- Glassware. vited. Give us a call. 8c BROTHER. . D WINTER SUPPLY embracing ; firm My sloelc was bought with tters commenced, and I am sure that times. 0y Dry Goods, HATS AND CAPS, :eiy, Saddlery, :OTX0NS, &c. JBEETSON, IILLER & ROBERTSON. 1. ROQERS af rx~ * ' Groceries, ITIOHAPJES, Etc., Etc. ; c. h., $. c., ed and well-assorted Stock of all kinds liascd their Goods in Baltimore and u markets for the cash and are enabled 3RIES D ICfSlliSf, hoy desire the public to patronize them quality and price of their goods. Call Sept.'24, 1873, 24-tf E PATTON, RKRS OF is, buggies. &c., ><oc3L ?E3=. O.,, ferial and have employed the most exactiuing, and have constantly on hand kind, at the most reasonable prices? illy of finish and elegance of style will it. shops of the* State. res-en tat ion. >rse. wagon, with tongue and shafts to DOLLARS Which has met with univcrlof every description, and keep a good AKING. EVERY VARIETY, and have a large rals with their line new Hoarse. [D & PATTON. ATTENTION. 'pllE attention of our customers is f called 10 the fact thutall unpaid accounts for 3.3^3 #*?? /li,? Wn nr>orl 1 hr> mr?. H I VJ 111; I'ilOV V* IJ vy. T* v v.. w ... . ne)% ami they, without erccjition, will will please eonie forward and settle promptly Quarles & Perrin. Jan. 7, 1874 39-tf TEA I TEA H TEA 111 T'lIE undersigned have juf*t reeeiv | ed a lar?e l.-jfr of PURE UN ADULTERATED TEA of all kinds# and as they are now AgentB of tlx I (J S. Tea Company can Bell it al cheaper rates than it has ever beer sold in the market. PARKER & PERRIN, 4.1 4, 1874, 40-tf Our friend, Gen. A. C. Gariington, , furnishes the following beautiful lines on "Life?Its Types." In sweet cadence ' they are not behind the '"'Summer liose" ; of Kiohard Henry Wilde. ? Signet and i Journal. LIFE?ITS TYPES. UY GEN. A. C. G ARLINGTON. The blushing Rose, at early morn, In dewy freshness greets the eye; But ere another day sluill dawn, Its drooping leaves will fade and die. I 'PI-. r. ..ImiMIin T'l/Ml/lli O f fcl.* t I'f < Vl ulf V lllCSIUt??l.6 vy.uuur, Along the track of parting day, With rapture till the gazer's eye,? How soon to melt and pass away! The queenly Moon, through starry skies, With silvery train leads on her way; When from her couch Aurora hies, She flees before the brighter day, But sweet Spring-time will come again? The Rose again will lift its head, And, 'neath the genial sun and rain, 1 Will bloom as if 'twere never dead. The bright Sun, too, will rise again, And shed his beams of golden light To guild the clouds, and hill and plain, As though they ne'er were hid from | sight. And the Moon's sweet face, seen from I afar, Will shine again o'er land and sea, As on she moves, from slur to star, In robes of light and majesty. Thus life is chequered o'er its way Willi flitting shades of dark and ' light? l The lesser and the brighter ray,.? A shifting scene of day and night. ( The blushing Rose, the Moon, the 1 Cloud? < Fit types of mortals here below; , The smile, the sigh, the tear, the shroud? 1 Ami then to mother Earth tlidy go. But another scone will open eoon, "Where neither eve nor nightshall be; [ And a glorious aiwl cloudless noon i Will shine throughout eternity. 1 % 1 [ Jolin Albany's Trouble. \ I- 1 At the breakfast-table, that morn- | ing, John A1 banjos wife, one of , the dearest, winningest little women . in the world, had said to him: "Have you heard from brother ( Joe yet?" j "No, Carrie; not time yet. Yon j know he only left day before yes- , terday. Get a letter to-morrow, \ may he." , "Do you know,'John,I'm almost ^ wild with curiosity to see his wife ? , Such an odd notion of theirs, to put j off their wedding trip for three \ months after they were married!" j "Wanted to make it pleasant | weather," I suppose?showed their common sense,".said John. I "Anyhow, they'll be here in a ] fortnight, as soon as his business is'( arranged; and Carrie Carrie Alba-1, ny's almost girlish face beamed j, with delight at the thought, for she:( all but idolized her "brother Joe," } -.mrl liiwl hr?;ml wriiwlorfnl stories of'. the beauty of his bride. ; Such had been, in part, the talk \ at the breakfast table, and there j had not been in all the city a sun- ( nier face than that with which John ;j Albany had said good by to his dear \ iittle wife and his rosy-faced baby boy; but now, half an hour later, lie sat in his down town office, glowering at a bit of crumpled pa- 2 per on the table before him, with \ an expression of countenance which might fairly be thought to include'* doubts of his own sanity. r "Crumb Street Station House!" 1 he exclaimed. "What in? "Well, I might as well go right there." And so he did, with barely I enough presence of mind to put ' his hat 011 before he started. A few minutes of almost fiercely rapid walking, a brief parley with the 1 officials in .J)lue, and John Albany j was admitted to a dingy and dimly i* lio-hted cell. !, "John?" 1 "Good heavens! You here ! ' "llusli! Not a word?I gave my name as Caleb Smith, and it's gone! into the reports that way." "But how did it happen ?" "I can't tell, John. 1 only know tlievfound the pocket-book in ray, pocket, and I was so upset I couldn't j say a word," "The pocket-book ?" "Yes; it was at the railway station. I'd jnst checked my trunks when they began to make an out-J cry, and that's about all I know) about it until I found myself nabbed and searched. "But Lucille ?" "I wrote to her that I was de-j tallied in New York, for a fewi few days, by important business.1 Then I gave your name as my coun^ sel, and sent tor you." "I didn't get the note till this morning," said John. "Soino mistake or other. But, here I am, trapped, and what to! do I don't know." "Oh, I can get you oft* easy, enough; it's an old game of the ; pickpockets. All that I've got to | do is to prove who you are, and the Judge won't fail to see it," said' John. "But I don't want to prove whoi I am. It would half kill Carrie, j and just about murder Lucille. Ton ' don't know how sensitive she is. ] ' Vrt. T mnol liii (cnf dft' mul n/'filllt-i i *-'} -i- 1 41 I < k.7 1 *J V- ^ V 1/ V 1A UltVk IVV V|i> I v I I to J as Caleb Smith, or I'll never jget over it. Now, John, okl fellow, j ,| promise me not to let tny name I -lout to anybody, least of all to Cur-j , rie, Lncille's letters will come toj ! your care, as usual; ami I can sendi ^ a letter to Carrie, dated from home, j ' you know, as if it was inclosed to; you." "You must take the responsibility of all the deception, then," said John; and, after a good deal of ^ruve Hesitation, the young lawyer allowed himself to be over-persuaded into giving the desired promise; but he left the Btation house and returned to his oiiice a troubled and anxious-hearted man. lie did not like deception in any shape, aud he seriously doubted his capacity for concealing anything from his dear little wife. And so it was that when John Albany went home that evening, and silently handed Carrie an unpostmarked missive, over which her blue eyes glistened, and made her kiss the babe twice, he did- so with a flush on his cheek and a cjood oh his brow, which- never loft liim tlic whole evening. In vain lie tried to be gay, or to make the crowning youngster a means of concealing his perturbation; for the quick eyes of his wife penetrated his clumsy artifices, and then ?well, if he had been in trouble before, he was badly enough beset now. John Albany was accounted a promising young lawyer, and remarkably good at cross^questioning; but never had any witness 3uttered under his own hands at i? i i - i i - i.; ! ne now uui muter inose us ms who. Of course John kept his promise :>f secrecy, but at the expense of a red face and a flushed manner. He ivas not half sure that his conscience had not caught him in several pretty .well delTued fibs and equivocations. More than that, Carrie was quite well aware that she had not penetrated her feusband's secret"; and she was not only a true daughter of Eve as to curiosity, but as sclf-"willed and imperious a little body as she was oving, with a good deal of that peculiar element of character out )f .which jealousy is manufactured jnder favorable circumstances. And so, though at first she tried lot to show it, Carrie was more :han a little offended; and John, ooor fellow, could not help seeing md feeling it. And thus the next day passed, ind the next, and matters down ;own looked worse and worse, and natters at home grew cloudier at a ate which John Albany would lardly have thought possible. So much for keeping a secret from his ,vife; and the poor fellow grew Roomier with every glance at the Vetful and discontented face that rad hitherto been so sunny. Even he baby was compelled to suffer lis share of the household trouble. In her irritated mood, Carrie's houghs'naturally turned to her brother; and so one day she sat lown and -wrote him a latter, in ivhich she had a great many things .vhich were intended for his own iyes. Perhaps no harm would lftve followed but that Carrie mailid the letter with her own hands, vithout saying a word to her husjaud, and that, more by accident ban by anything else, it was openid and read by a young married ady, in one of the larger isTew Eng/-vm-* 4 1-* /\ illJU. UU Lilt; lUllun nig vjttj-. II. It was the same cell that John \lbany had looke.d into before, I md it was nearly two weeks later. The prison was the same, however; md, with all his confinement, he vas hardly as pale as his worried md badgered looking visitor. "It's all up, Caleb !" "What's up, John?" "Why, this wretched secrecy business. Lucilie's coming !" "Lucille ? How do you know ?" "Read that telegram. Got to ncet her at the cars this afternoon." John Albany had the better in jolor now, very decidedly. "Oh. Johu, my boy, what is to i be done?" "She must hnow !" "And Carrief'" "We'll see about that. . Don't j see what I can do but invite her to' the house." i. A I,,) r?1m All?nuv Innlv-pjl mnrfii is all tins mysiery ?mu , "I can't explain here," said John; "hut if you will get into the carriage I will tell you as we go." And John was determined to keep his word, though ho would almost as soon have been convicted ot' burglary. lie was riot aware of all his trouble, however. lie had not noticed the veiled female form that had followed his into the depot, nor had Ills excited and confused faculties taken any note of the fact that the same < ;>V ' ? , form sprang lightly iuto a close coupe which drove off rapidly after the carria^ which contained him and Lucille. ,- When the latter was pulled up in front of a hotel, the coupe also stopped at a little- distance, but the veiled, lady did not. get out. Sheileaned forward to the window, muttering, "I knew"' there was something of that sort! Oh, John! John ! How cotildyou?/ . And then the driver of the coupe'' received fresh orders, and drove away rapidly up town. Lucille had only gone into the hoteHo gather her somewhat shattered senses after listening to the news imparted by John, and, on the whole, she had sustained the shock much better than he bad. expected. In a very short time? for, with all her nervousness, she was a brave and devoted wife?Lucille declared her readiness to hurry olt* at once to the prison." "I must stop at my office for a moment," said John. "Oh, but I am in such a hurry !" exclaimed Lucille. "But it's only to leave'a law paper with my partner. He has been at Court all day, and I have not seen him." John's office was in a very busy part of the city, and both he and Lucille had their heads altogether too full of exciting thoughts to notice any# particular members of the hurrying ?throng upon the sidewalks. Still as the carriage pulled up at the curbstone, John said: "Good ! I won't hfcve to. go up stairs. There's my partner now. Brown ! Eh, Brown!" The gentleman thus addressed had been sianding on the edge of the sidewalk, as if waiting for somebody, and now came forward with a remarkably beaming expression of r?nuntenants. "Jolin, my boy, it's all right." "What's all right ?" "Why, that Caleb Smith case." John Albany bad to catch his breath for a moment; buthe stammered, "How ?" "Why, there was a whole batch sent up this morning; and one of them?that's Flash-finger Dick? confessed to putting the money on Caleb's person." "Well, but what did you do ?" "Ch, Judge was as good as pie; let him right out, and I've got him. up stairs." A gloved hand was on John's shoulder, and a trembling voice was trying to.ask him : . "John, John, isn't that Joe ?" "Yes, it's Joe," said John Albany ; but he was sorry the next minute, as he sat in a corner of the carriage trying to recall the color to the white and beautiful face, for Lucillc had fainted. As for Brown he had comprehended the case well enough to dash up stairs; and by the time Lucille came to herself she was in better hands than the somewhat clumsy ones of John Albany. And now the carriage was being whirled away up town, for John was urged by something even stronger than hospitality in his eagerness to reach his clouded home. Ife could have no patience with either horses or driver, especially as Lucille and Joe looked so provAlrincrlv Invinor fvnH linnnv tliArf* "'" '"to v "**rrv on the back seat. Home was reached at last, however, and the somewhat irate driver reined in his smoking horses in, front of the house. John Sprang to the sidewalk, and never dreamea of aiding Joe; but Lucille by this time was very well able to help herself. . , It was not yet dusk when they entered the house, and John's 'atch-key dispeused with bell-ringingand servants. "Wait a moment in the parlor," said John, "while I call Carrie." And so saying, but with a big weight upon his heart, John pushed onward toward the sitting-room. As he threw open the door before him, however, he was suddenly con r% _ 11 fronted by a lauy figure in iuu traveling costume, arid a glance b'eyond him showed him a marvelous disarray of trunks and bandiboxes. Carrie, my dear?" ! A gloved hand held out toward him a small white envelope, while a husky voice said : ',Good-by, John I" "Carrie?" "Isn't that Joe's voice ? Oh, Joe ! are you here ?" "Yes, Carrie, here lam, safe and sound." And Joe himself rushed' forward, taking hold of his pretty sister as if he was about ready to i swallow her. "Oh, Joe, take me to mother's !" "But, Carrie, what's the matter ? John has been just the best old fellow?" "Joe?there she is?I saw her at the depot!?the very same woman ; and now he's brought her here! Oh, Joe! what does it all mean ?" "Mean ? Why, Carrie?come here, Lucille?Carrie, this is my wife, your sister Lucille. I've been in trouble, and your John has helped me through, like a splendid old, trump as he is. You've Jjgot just the best felllow for a husband?" Carrie gave one good look at Joe, another into the wistful face of Lucille, but she caught a glance of the keen miftering in the trembling lips of her own husband. "Oh, John, I've been so ioolish! John?" iVliu vv/jia At < uuiij tfc%,vl, ... , likcwi baited wild animal than ever J as lie had tiling himself out of the1 cell. John didn't go home to dinner j that day, or he might have discov-j cred that the nurse had been leit alone with the baby while his wife had "gone out," no one knew whither. So, in uncomfortable ignorance of the dangers that beset him, John went to the New Ilaven Depot that afternoon, and waited for a lady who should resemble, as much as possible, the min/ature likeness which had been shown him. And he found her very read-j ily. There was no chance for mistaking the striking but nervous | looking beauty; and, in fact, as lie i advanced to moct hei*> the trem-i bling lips parted slightly, justenough to say, j "John Albany ?" "And can this be Lucille?" ^! "Oh, John, where is my husband? Why is he not here?" "lie is safe and well, I assure j vnti ? nnd vou shall soon see him."| ' "But I don't understand ! \\ hy ,, , ?, ><! '' " " ? tember. A? aeven A. M/the fearwig had been demolished, and .the . spider, after resting a_ little while, and probably enjoying anajp, came down for a fly, which nehadfinished air nine A. M. A little after nine we supplied bim with a daddy-long legs, wmcu wub eaien uy noon, ai >ne o'eleek^a*-felowfly was greedily sei ze4aud^witha^, jippfltite, apparently no woree for hia previoue St-. . dulgenee, he commenced on- the blowfly. Dating "the day, and,toward the evening, a great many ' small green fljeg, 6r what are- popularly termed raedffes, had' beln caught in the web; 6? these we counted one hundred and twenty all dead; and fast prisoners in^the spider's nest. Soon after dark, pifcvided with a . lantern, we went ta : . examine whether the-spider-wM suffering* from indigestion, fcr hi any other way from'fcW previous meals; instead, however,' of bciffg thus affected, he was employed m rolling up together the various lit* tie green medges, which he theft took to his retreat and ate. y.Thjb process he repeated, carrying up the lots in little detachtnents, uhpl the whole web was "eaten* for/fee web and its contents were bundle)! up together. A slight reirt ofabout an hour was followed by the' most' industrious wet>-making. -process, and before daybreak,-, another web was ready to be.used in the same way. Taking the relative size of the spider and of the creatures. it ate, and applying thii to a man, ft would be somewhat as follows: At ^ i 11 It* i ,_ Li?! "x. dayDreatf, a small aingaxor whs ea^. . . en; at seven A. M. a Iamb; at nh& ' A. M. a camel-leojjfird ? at bnfe o'cl ock,' a sheep; aM1 dtronjj;' the night, one hundred anft twenty larks? This, we Relieve, would be a very fair allowance fof one*- man. during twentj-fouy. hours; and could we find one gifted faith such an appetite and such a: digestion, : we can readily oomfMbepdlow i? might spin five miles of web without killing himself,'provided hie possessed the necessary machmeiy.-r Eng. Paper. * ' * Many of the failures in the attempt to raise our more commoti. forest trees frtfm the se<^d,.ai:e.caujte'd by improper care* of the seed pre* viotis to planting.If such!;seeds aj the chestnut ana the horse-chesiftut are allowed to become dry, thek hard varnished 'slfell is impervious to moisture, and:this alone cansea.fr majority of the attempts* at raising such trees from the *seed. If they can be planted so as to:be secure from mice, it is much safer to plant them in the autumn tfoori afterthiey fall from the trfees; If they cannot . be planted iu their proper position. . they may be mixed with earth and kept moist until spring... Freezing will not hurt them. The elm ana one or two other: trees.mature their' seeds so'early * !b the season, that they may be planted"* immediately, and will make considerable growtn before whiter sets" in. In all cases t\here the. seed:bed is so. sitpated that it cannbt. be worked tip in' the. spring, it \yill usuaHy be foutftf foesfe to plant all kinds in the fall, as they' will sprout very early in tho spring,, and will make*- root, and- 'grOwtb much in advance<jf those nol?planted until lutein the spring. Almost any icma ui IUICSL ucco successfully transplanted by cutting the tap root a year before the attempt is made.. If ,ope or two of the larger roots are cut at the same time, it will be more certain to prove successful. ' . " They had a wreck on Tuesday at Johnstown, and the Tribune saysz "Some of the folks who considered that they had a perfect right to capture the goods at the wr<?ck near the depot this morning, will likely have an opportunity of knowing what twelve unbiased men think of it at the next term' of the District Court.'' Some useful lessons or examples may be found in the . most simple occurrences. At the Terre Haute i depot recently, an old lady a*temj)tI /i/i tn orot. nft' while the cars were in motion. A gentleman standing near the door prevented ber. "Let her go," exclaimed a kind-hearted passenger : "if she gets killed, it will be a warning to somebody else." . . Effects of the fog?Mr. ?Xpllio was discovered by his anxious wife a long time after midnight vainly trying with his latch key to open the tront door. He stated for excuse that the fog was sho shoth-hic that he c-couldn't aeekeyhole. ' "When a young farmer's wife made her first boy's pants precisely the same before as behind, the father exclaimed: "Goodness! he won't know whether lie's going to schooj or coiniug home." _ j