The Camden journal. [volume] (Camden, S.C.) 1866-1891, September 19, 1872, Image 1

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/ TflE CAMDEN JOURNAL. * AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY PAPER, PUBLISHED BY JOHN KERSHAW. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance $2 50 J Six months . 1 50 Three months 75 Transient Advertisements must be pai or in advance. dj Estate of John Shed, dec 'd The undersigned will apply to the Judge of Probate of Kershaw County, for Letters Dismis nf putnto of John VOL. X52tII'. ' CAMDBN, S. C-, THUESD jjffiK, SEPTEMBER 18,1873. SO. 3. ' "' mT^F*' : ? " * -' ?? " " '.^> ? .< I- -." ! i;-> vVlUVTWif > ' sory as auuiiuim ? Shedd, dec'd. ono month after the date of thin noti<*:. J. 0. REVILL, Adm'r. I Aug, 29.?lm* ^ t SOUTH CAROLINA RAIL~ROAK CISDEK BRIXCU . , ' On and after Monday, Dec. the 26fh., JS71 the Schedule of the Camden train will bo as follows; Leave Camden at , 0 15 A. M. Arrive at Columbia ai 10 10 A.M. Leave Columbia at 1 40 P. M. Arrive at Caniden at 0 25 P. M. By order of the Vice-President. A. B. DbSAUSSURE Agent. Camden Dec. 23d, 1871. Greenville and Columbia Railroad * . Colttmuia, S. C., March, lst; 1871. ON and after this date, the following schedu 1 yU 1 be run daily, Sundays excepted. J r Leave Columbia at ' 7.00n.m. * Leave Alston 9.10a.m. Leave Newberry * U.|5 a dj. Leave Cokcsbury 3.00 p m Lcny? Bckon ^ * * .G.O&nm. Arrivfe'MtlreenvflU/at? ^AOpm. DOWN. Leave Greenville at ' 0.15 am. ~ " K.lla a m.' I.oave Bellon Leaxe Gokcnbury i_"*\ *x , * r-W.07 a m. Laire" Abbeville ' ^ Leave Newberry . 1.50. p in. Leave AWoiL ^ ( [ /' 3'.[ OPm* Arrive at Columbia 5.155 pm . IHOS. DODAMEAD, Qenl. gupL T. JAariiBXr, tttuxl GHcUtAgt,' July 11 ly. * | WILMINGTON, COLUMBIA & AU. ',?JBSTA B, E.Co. flip Ki bii .. , . . GRX. SrrKBixTEHDBXT's OFFICE, 1 Wilmington N. C., JuheT, 1872 / CHANCE OF SCHEDULE. I WE FOLLOWING SCHEDULE will go intoef.' fect at 3:25 A- M., Sunday, Oth inst. DAY 1XPR1SS TRAIN, (Daily*) Leave Wilmington 8:25 a.m. Arrive at Florence... 9:18 a, m. Arrive at Columbia^ 1:85 p.m. Leave Columbia.... 12:15p.m. Arrive at ,*lorence..'.^........... 4:10 p.m. Arriv* at Wilmington 10:25 p.m. *-* ? . ?o. might express train, daily, (Sundays CHARLOTTE, COLUMBIA A AU- i fGUSTA R.R.T7 O f , General Supeiwntendant'sOrncE, Columbin, June 8th, 1872. On and after Slouday, 3iine iOth, 1 he'trluns on this road will run in accordance With the following "Time Table:" ' ; - going sortii. Train No. 1. Train No. 2. ( Leave Charlotte <?00&m 8.20pm , " Columbia 1 54 p m 3 40 a iu 1 Arrive at Augusta, 7 45 p m 8 20 a in 1 going north. Leave Augusta, 6 35 a m 5 30 p m 1 " Columbia, 12 80 pm 1102p'm Arrive at Charlotte, 7 42 p m 6 00ft m l Standard time, ten minutes slower than Wash* ington city time, and six minutes slower than Co- j lutnbia city time. * ( Train No 1, daily; train No 2, daily, Sundays excepted. Bothtanins make close connection toall points ' North, South and West. Through tickets sold ?' and baggage checked to ullprincipnlpoints. i E. P. ALEXANDER, , General Superintendant,! ' \ R- E. Dorset, Gen. F. & T. Agent. 1 june 2Ty1 1 j. i; middleton & co., ,! FACTORS j - COMMISSION MERCHANTS, J Baltimore, jid, tk# pntirp STOfiK OF I IXOT Il>5 pU*VH?WWU VMV ~ - GOODS of Messrs. D. L. DeSau&sure & Co., we will sell the same at COST for CASH, and for that purpose heieby constitute the members of that firm our agents to effect such sale. J. I. MIDDLETON & CO. Jnue g tf "RICHMOND" * BANKING AND INSURANCE -m. m-~m-m X. . 0:0 Capital, - - $500,000. PERSONS wishing to insure in a First Class Company at Law rates, will pleaBe apply to W. CLYBURN. Agent, uly 2iJth, Camden So. C4. a The'Lunatic Asylum'in Distress. From the Columbia Phoenix of tiic 8:h inst. We publish below two letters of recent i date, from Dr. Ensor, the Superintendent of i the Lunatic Asylum, the one to tho Carolina ' National Bank, the other to Mr. E. Hope, I imploring aid for the institution of which 1 he has charge. It will be seen that not a i single dollar of this year's appropriation has 1 been paid. The taxes from which tho f p-, < propriation was designed to be tlrtlwh, wire, collected last fall and winter, but they wore 1 all squandered in legislative expenses, meet! .1 !>?* ??< ? n vniA/1 InttAA Ain/I lllg Uiiuis upuu nic utij^un in uicu iiif kii iMiiv. | and such like swindles. The asylum, the penitentiary, the public schools, -and nil eth- t or proper objects of governmental care and i support, have suffered terribly in conse- I quence., Tho. asylum has" be<m kept going up to this time simply through the persona] f exertions of the Superintendent and the as- a sibtance rendered him by private individu- .1 uls.. We are glad to say that Mr. E. Hope I has consented to supply the asylum with ne: ? cessary provisions for *one mouth, though ,c much to his inconvenience and embarrassment. In the meantime, we learn from Dr. Ensor that ho proposes to visit Charleston T and mak$jaqL,appea2vto the. Banks of that city to furnish him with sufficient funds to keep the poor inmates of the asylum from starvation until the fall taxes conic iu, and > the Legislature makes another appropriation ^ which, of course, which will be done imme- " diatply after that body convenes. Wc com- n mend Dr. Ensor and his cause to the bank, a ers^of Charleston, and trust that he may get t( from them the relief needed. 8i -L- . . si ,i, ... 6oj.umb.xa, S; C. Sept. 4,1872. ^ To ihe^PrteiJent xttttb Board of'IhrMofs of a the.Carolina National Bank: w Gentlkmfn :?I have the honorJ to ap- V ply to you for aid for the State Lunatic Asy- n lam. The Legislature made a liberal apprp- ? priation last winter fot tho support of this 1( institution, but I have been unable, up to J1 this time, to draw a.sirigle dollar of .this ap- J1 propriaition: and' were* it not* for the in- 11 V > 1 A J V. i tl diligence 01 me uierciiatus unu tn? vvu??u- lence of those who lent us money, the in- 0 mates of the institution. would haverheen t ucnedout jxpgp the. slcoati, dependent. jip- * on individual charity,'and the institution " closed. Our creditors; find our indebted- c ness :bo stjriods-* an embarrassment, that d they cannot extend, further credit un- c' les^-they are paid - at loost a part of- their P present accounts. This places the institu- ai dotragiataifl bnracdiatc peril. Once Befbib ai when onr household was on tho? verge of suffering for the necessaries of life, you ? kindly came* to onr relief, and kept.the < gaunt monster starvation from pnr' doors for sevoral months. Your kindness to us in k I believe tide us over the balance* of this & terrible year till the taxes are. collected, when the State Treasurer, will bo able to pay the appropriation made for the .institution's support. " * ta Hoping and believing, that, you will, if 111 possible, coma to our relief, I retnaiu very truly and. respectfully, Jr F. ENSOH, Superintendent. * ? C( Oppjc* asylum, ) ct V Columbia, SeptJb, 187&. j P' Mr. Ek Hopi^?Dear Sir: 1 write tcvenquire whether it is possible for you to sup- cl ply this institution .with supplies for one hi month, and wait till December for your mo- ' i,a\r Tho Sfofo Trnfionvof li?i? rmt. naid n 111 UV-J- ? - r "7 dollar of this .year's appropriation, begin- w ning on tho 1st of last November. Mr. Solomon carried the 'institution till the end of -M April last, and Messrs. Agnew havQ carried it from May 1, up to this time,7 but*cannot 01 sxtend a farther credit. Owing to the tight- * ness of the money market, I am unable to " borrow money with which to buy provisions; )'< rod. unless we can obtain a further credit for supplies, the inmates of the institution must G suffer for want of the necessaries of life, or tli be turned into the streets, dependent upon h< individual charity, as the State has proven utterly incompetent to provide for them.? P( We have nowj hut one day's supplies 011 tl hand, and unless relief is afforded, day after to-morrow will find nearly 400 human bo- G ings in this asylum suffering for something en to eat. In the name of God and humanity, . I beg you to help them if you can. . .n< J. F. ENSOR, Superintendent. The Stanley-Livingstone Controver- 01 by?A Letter at Last.?The controversy Dver the gem^neiieqs jof jibe s-Afri- a can achievement is still warm in the New York; prew,; aad,9ecasionally assumes ap amusing aspect. The trouble has been here- ^ tofore the absence of all Jotters from Living- ai stone cbticernihg Stanley's sfatemcntsr Nothing can long be wanting in New Xork. Its ^ enterprising press is always equal to the oc- 3t casion, and in the present emergency the ' Star comes to the rescue and settles the & whole controversy by the following in controvertibly genuine aird veracious letter from tho great African explorer himself: a{ Ujiji, on Lake Tanganyika Aug 25. Dear Star: Since. Stanley left mOi L ^ have finisheefmy line of telegraph to Zanzf- 01 bar, and. sendjrqu. the first message over the wire*. It win reach vou via Aden. Sue* 0' and Marseilles. ' Since Stanley left, I have lived on the fat of the land, and my "ruckle of bones" are rejuvenated. I have traveled jh up to one degree of South latitude, and seen m what Ptolemy and Nebuchadnezzar and Pon b tius Pilate did not see?the sources of the w White Nile. They are precisely at one de- g( gree, thirteen minutes and thirty-one seconds South latitude, and are in a pond fed p' by numerons springs. Tim country is superb and full of wonderful animals?turtles weighing 1.400 pounds, and frogs of enor- fi mous size and agility. The women are lovely, " dark, but comely" as the daughters of ir Jerusalem. Polygamy prevails, and costs but about gi $10 a year to support a woman?or say (ten ? per off) $90 will maintain ten of the dufeky charmers; chignons and crinolines arc not in fashion. They live on fruits ant} berries, is Adam and Eve did in Abo primal Eden, ind sleep under the water-shed,"which is rOO miles long and will shelter thousands of the brunette darlings. Nature" crimps- their liair; fig leaves arc in abundance, but little used. I should have returned with Stanly, but the attractions here are supreme. If ivcr I.do return, to civilization, I will visit America, atad my first visit will be at the of.1 ci.? ? l:-i- r?_ ?u ice inc (we, wiucu LvruiKicn iui ? > ; J) AY ID LIVINGSTONE, i Not a dead stcno by a long shot. . P. S.?Give my love to young Bennett; oil him that atUjiji tho bugs are enormous n size, and in quantity unprecedented, the argest being hiun-busg. ..? . hi j . N. B.?Give my love to Louis Noe,the riend of my friend Stanley. Noe must be i,.descendant of Noah, the man who hod a Ugh old .time in an ark amongst beaste, lirds and reptiles. / . P. S. Extra.?Tell Dana of tho Sun. to herish Noehe is a truthful and lively boy. African Religion?A Row in<a Cobber Church?Muscular Christianity. ?The Chester Reporter^ of the 5th says r" J On Sunday, the 25tU ultimo, Pilgrim; Jhnrch, on the Western side of this county, i as the scene of a riot and tumult disgrace-' ill to the congregation, arid exceedingly alloying to the surrounding country. This is n African church, presided over and.mini^sred;to by Rev. Sancho Sanders, one of the able legislators of the State. On this occasion. as we are informed, one Raymond bright, colored, presented. himself at the 1 I tar, asking to be taken Into ^ membership ith the oh arch. In patting him through 10 preliminary examination as to his fitess for a seat, among the faithful, it .leaked ut that he had always voted the Democrafc: ticket, and that hq had not repeated of is sin. The order was given at once ior im to be cost ont as an unclean thing, and i pursuance thereof, ho was, unrobed out of no ohuroh and out of the pro:- -SMfichcm r other, a collision then occurred between le pelice, detailed by the Rev. Sancbo and portion of the congregation, and soon the j ght becarao general. Men, .women and hildren- participated, and continued to riot uring the greater portion of tho day. Sag- i ho is a burning and shining light in tie : ulpit and in tho hal^j of the Legislature, ; ad keeping as ho docs, both the religious ad political conscience of his race, wUi, no ! oubtf be rcturnod again to the House of ^prcscntativcs this fpH. The Columbia Phoenix soys: The follow- ( ig is a copy, of a letter picked up near one , Vtha Radical rendezvous yesterday, (Satur- i " Doe West, S. C.,' Aug. 30, 1872. ] " Hon. P. J. Moses, Jr.?Dear Sir: Send . leek for any amount you may think ifc will ke to carry this part of the District, as . oney alone can make the thing all right. 1 Address J. A. Stewart. Mottoes for tiie Gkantites.?Wo ; inimend the following statements of politiil facts to the attention'of the Republican j irty for use during the present campaign : It was William Lloyd Garrison who de- ^ ared the Constitution a "covenant with sii." .] It was Gen. Grant who threatened to take t is regiment over to the rebels if slavery us interfered with. ^ , . . . It was -John A. J. Creswcll who urged [aryland to secede from theJUnion in 1861. It was John A. Logan who recruited fifty ^ ic men in Illinois for Beauregard's army. It was William Lloyd Garrison who thanked God that he had worked thirty . jars to break up the Union as it was." It ,was Judge Sottle President'of. the] rant Convention, who was kicked out of t le rebel army for robbing sick soldiers of i . * j^piuu hiuiuzs ]t was the President's father who get a t :rmit from his son to steal cotton during ic war. . It was Senator Morton who spoke of the ermans " as Dutchmen who are only fit to Lt cabbage and dcink lager. It Was freory Wilson who took an oath jver '.to voto for a Catholic or foreigner. It was Gov. Noyes, of Ohio, who said that the Republican party can get along withit the whiskey-drinking Irish." It was Mrs. General Grant who received $25,000 chpck " for the Government's lare in Black Friday." It was Oglcsby, of Illinois who declared intake hoped for-a law tb'sweep the^tish id Dutch out of America." It was Henry Ward Bcepher.whp stated lat "Grant knew moW about hbrtes than atcsmanship." - It was Wendell Phillips who wrote fromalena that " Grant is owing several oldills here." ' , . < It was General Butler who said a year .. .1 .1 _ i. a. i .J> . J ii 1 ?o, " liranc nasn i mc boui 01 u uug. It was Zack Chandler who stated to C. A. | ana, that "we never had sudh an ignora.us in the White House." It was llobeson who paid a claim of 875,- j [)0 over a law made expressly to prevent it. A sotrfirerner's Voting 3r Uncle Horace.?a Southern gentleian wearing a Greeley badge, was accosted 1 y a Grant maa, ou a Fulton Forry boaij * ith the remark: " Well, I suppose you are i sing to vote for Cfrecley ?'*'''' 4 ' ' t "Correct. I shall vote for Greeley," re- j lied the Soutiiernor. . " /?' g " On what grounds ?" , t n - ' .? " On the grounds of what he knows abiont j trming." . , . ,. . i " What does Greeley lhi6w about farm- 1 >g?", f "He knows that when a pile of manure < Bts too high, it requires spreading." <, 1 Uxit Grant man.?flew York Sun. { ofa Front Tard. Woljteverecontly moved into a house tbat/hfch front yard.. We have always livetj, iorhouses, whose front yard was the stre$L?iiIdr6rt will play in thcynrd whether thhre'wwWeet running through it or not. Afbeftrafor three of them had barely escaped flnng run over by tho teams that in sis Leap) 'running through our front jard, wife saftaho -must rent a house that hadn't any* "ay Rasil1-. So we did. But Bord"! f tho chijflroa didn't make any'acconnt of it. They' afk in the streets as much as ever, nccuthjM?ing' their daily supply, .of narrow the yard looked bare without sii'riib^Bjidf flowers, and vines. I hinted that atflittle grass would help if, too. She askednfe if I Snow where I could get seme, and I tdlcjlher I knew < a little, grase widow, ou tho ,uBKt street, if she would do. I retrcatefljBHowed by the rolling pin. Onenjwriihg, as I 'Wis gding away, Wife ' asked nff^to"bring her a few "annuals" when I came wick. I wondered' what she wanted with ap'i^lis aa I rode down tpwn in the street cor! but' I am accustomed to a blind obediciiee?to''.hcr requests, so'when I went :1 homo- Slight I brought'her some annuals. There v^fi*e "Dr. Jaync's Medical Aluianac," I rchiepfnSr, and the ."Odd Fellows' Annual Offeripg^" and a'"New Year's' Address" fo^lSfS^hnd the "Birth-Day Gift," and numeroife'^annual addresses before agrieulturaf"&feociations that had accumulated * onm/jaggi. ,'t "Go$ Vicious'/' exclaiiho'd' Mrs. Boggs, . (she swears' like that unless"under great'ei^WSiient,) "what havo yon brought "Annju^J 31 re., Boggs," said-1. "You mid y0a "sronted some annuals, and hero* they aE*?/' :J A | t Theatre. Boggs buret. out ltoghing and crieS^lSH ry, yon old fob?"!(webave been ji1 pet niutfe^yetj the anntia&,i mean ai;e a lJ W , -. iV. C-i.4: ?*..h . aowentAach as .verbenas, pansios, daisies, .. m6rhiii^gJoTie&, mlgnone^c, Jincl the l|he, to set^Kt -in qur frpnt yaw}.'",, Thpri ph'e tikfc a^Wte^an rid tils 1' had'bc eh at|o mUch pains ip collect and sot' them out in the back;jfhWath,ong'other ruhbisjf.'.r * ~V ,. Til? next morning she asked me "if I ! thought I could get some "roses;for the front yard. Told, her I knew n man wKo ; bad ^t-a lot of early rose potatoes, but it wasn't! the right time for Jetting them out. (I hate ah 'idea that th& ground'is much bettte?p$loy^, in raising a potato'thanin raising: "i 4oifert unless it be a barrel of . Sour.) WifiFfeaid I hadn't a- bit of taste. Shh^ra&f^Ja&fc h>4'a! Adm<&hVjOTi6 W roses *he- w^ntod^rr was busy all day. but just as f Vah' ^ toknig a car fbr hcfcflte Queen, golden tea plafrt, vines' Un^fish ivy, pandering Jew, seeds, etc." T* I studied .it hard, but it was slightly incomprehensible.. She'had evidently got i-hings mixed up. However? I went to 9, lorist'sand told him what I wanted.' Said [: "Give me a few geranimus and a'few ihe's'and'?" ' -i ?? ?: ? ?? * "Af(?w what?" asked the' flower man,-' ooking vgry puzzled. # A. ytj...r "A.ft'W she's," said . T, turning very,red, [ kuotr, for' I; couldn't tell 'for the life of - rt * ? n i . ue what my wite wanted 01 a tew sne s iboat the place, as she nevtfr could live in ,lie aanmhouso with another woman., /, As the florint looked mora staggered han ever, I handed him the memoranda, vherr he burst into a loud laugh. ' ''Why man," ho cried, "its fdschiassho' i rants'!" and he roarod again. t .< : i "Well, whatcverj.it is, give me a couple. >f'yards of it, anyhow? fro/it and back yard, oo." ' Tottsfic Twas mad. 1 "" ' " " I got the things the memoranda seemed i o .caU jfor ut vap*iou3 places, and went 8 iome. ; 3 "Here, Mrs. Boggs," said I , testily, 'tare ! lie thiiigs for your front yard" "Whjr, what is this?" slifr cried, ns:I ' hrost.a two-gallotr jug upon liw pUion"- f ther.things.. . ' i: /it. - | "Bourb.Qn, my dear;;I (?oupd.;Jt; on the, nemoranda. Pretty tiling to set out; in.. ho front yard, tjiough. Ifow' long'do you ( i'pose it'll stay there, vfitli thitf' nln^hbors' 1 ve'vogOt?" " ' * i?- mn-'ii.i r; "Boeres. vou are, an infernal nc .that nempranduru waa - a "Bourbon jloso." 3ut what is this nasty little hook?'' holung up a dime novel, with a highly colbred itlc-pago,1 representing a gorgeous squaw mafiory and untamed . mustang. ''That? Why, you ordered it, didn't rou? That is '.'Running Rose : or the ?rairic Queen,' one of Beadle's you know." My wife carried': it' n't arm's length and ,hrcw it in the stove. Then she took the ug of Bourbon -and emptied it into thfe jack gutter. While Bhe was gone, I con;ealed; Alexander Dumas' "Wandering Few/' which 1 also had purchased, for I bc$anto see that I had made a terrible blunler in filling that order. I have-since iscortaincd that "Wandering Jew"-is the' lame of a vine ; but how was I oxpeotod to enow all about it? Fat Contributor's Saturday Nhjht. Don Piatt, writing from the White Suljhdr Spring to the Washington Capital, lays: The paternal author of the belle here, t is said, the other day,shortly after his rcurn to the springs, was approached bv a ,'outh who requested a few minutes'conver- 1 sation ia private, aud -began: u I was re- c juested to. sec you, sir, by your lovely daughter, Our attachment?" Young man," nterruptefl the parent* briskly, " I don't cnow what that girl of mine it. about. You t ire the fourth gentleman who has approach f id me tl>i? morning, op that subject. , I s lave given my. consent to tie others, and I n ;ive it to you. God bless you." ? The btfbatfi bf a 'Nfetay' Mfcitfed Railroader and! ts Consequences'^ . y : '-T- vT! . i' Vf^roraj the St. Louis Democrat.] f f EoL" is a brakeman employed on "the Chicago^ Alton and St. Louis''RaillmujL He wi4 married1 only a few weeks'agti: His..? wife ba8'\eeu wearing a- piece of ted flannel roucd;ber neck;for,4-helast ieii,;days 1 and compUinjiTgofawry qeclf. ^hi^is bow . it caihe'to pass/V,. '' ! ' i *Ed.M IJhdjttitdoing eitra'dtrtVVtflk-;. i ing a 'sick- frignd'&t?%?.in'additforr to hisj ? own; and so bad not been in bed-for, forty-. ^ eight hours.;, Asa matber df^cpurso,;!)? was nearly worn out, and as soon as bis supper r* had been eaten he went tombed1,'tbfclecp. per- jc chance' 'tbflrtato:^1 ^rW'BChii'locPii'Hib - u ih the arras of Morpheas and Mary, ahd^ j dreaming. **AgWft,>liiS/'fddt%as on his native platform^ aqd.he lieai^l thewarnin^ tool' " of the whistle for brakes..' The* shadowy t1 train borfe nini^iftly bh; the telegraph jkwts i 4 flfeeted^past qtridker^dd qaidrtr^thwbvhele fj country fled by IUrc a paaontaarmouiited'on J sheet-lightning, /roller*., Ja .^hjsj drean^ .he heard far off another roar, and swinging out1 jj by the railings be/saw^ another traqi coming - ^ speed around the curver' Both trmbw'w&e crowded with passengere; in another!moment t j they would cush;together,.aod fro%^he piles j , of. rujm,.a erjjr,/jajf.agqny, woulfi shiver. tp.Jtyo tiugljng stars" frcrai the hps of the maimed ' * and 'tying:'-''mTen?i diugei ;?* tit tf1 hf hi#,J dtbtftn, ? he Heard iiiiO winstler eallidguibad febaJoeS ,g soqpd (loud-and,ft?thlyt j Jfn ? turned it down ..There was a yell of pam, * 'g and "Ed."W6K>to,8nd'ttWn 1.? bWd iand hoMing-rts Wife by theldan^'l lav-1 ^ ing almost twisted tiff kdrhaad. r iH?itr i:iV m .? nOlifl t<*. iK>i)r[niuOt ni.1. Vol [iiw ,?.l?mlfc>K ^ w 'O-OTTrNG 'j r-nDid my deirvBaaBmwrike* hu tlttniueeuiggj ? post? And when he. afose ana found^ BQflip* disorder upon his dressiffg-table, did he won- P" der why his things were alwavs %in such a- -in demon of a'tieapr* Ana wlien he combed g his precious whiskers and a little tangle oc- >d chared, did itfy fexctfliftt' tfte^Nevb$3#ear; .a that-his demon ed comb wab' atway tiwg j] him ?, And; when ^rgmgrfton^^.haktfc W ho knocl^Ajhig?^hii^ ^to the sharp, edge of the bureatr, mtT h6 ever let itA fly' a strin^'6f> dftmbrrs11 frotn'Tfls ttoiath ?? .S Probably-ftbt?btttf'there ,:ard "peVsoiw^and 8 this unhappy baohelaris one} who havfeibbeo ^ knowa upon awn^nipg^tp^qif w^ ? emotion^ of a cannibal, at the furni^use, and ! .? who/according'to a faniiliarpihrase* never'&jr ' be repeated at the time' without' iinftienf?; p exnspcratidn/dd sometimes-" get out of bed e solitary breakfast, and apparently, totasa- ihq k same figure, JUitrl upon-the Wfxnjgaidej pf die |] table*,' I speak 19 ity, shrinking ^ll&.tfiq ^ obliging maiden who waits the wrong way. t. I find Xliat the breakfast lias bc&rr choked wrongs" I thirik, and "if Tdo not londly elate I should like: to,.i that donipnedi icobk ^ onglitto blow l>j ri.Uh ti??,, wiM Ijiifefes a i TteJm^jMagm *M t ?it always is when I particularly wish to. y triad'smnritliiiig. ''And I'ririer^dtirihlTy $ishthat the; demoded milk mad w^iikl'jiMifc*ti?? his demoned.: mouth,.'.and not. screech and, t: yelp like a wild Indian und^tlie ^yip^Qjif, '* when peaceable peo^caro eating theii-jbrc^K- h fasY." Toil' sec, niy'liasil^iat whether tli$ p 3u^sWineso^Itii0'dlx{er' w<5tId,dr'not, a Very' h disagreeable custody fitorbi ptrofhiWirriycrar g humble scmntVwodegirdbmertieifi^rieiv. fi vwdftl^JfrAiilJ * J I > r. i'i:: ' fl'.JI J 1 - J i i. ! ull . DotYbe .Toq w diort article we find floating, afp^nd op $0, ti unknown sea of journalism tiiat. maijy men #J ihohld paste ih thfefr hhts 'ah3 fadles tiri tfreft'1 bonnets; 1f rPom can bo found Orf^tho^ liftlfc! ? luck .nf a thidg:"-?-Theso pobplei, duiblan*ov ]uick emotions with sense ,.1^ ina often marring repose and tnendspip by . j' by utiv?ai!traiTtCd ^s'picaotf|'nre 'riflM aj >ii'r;icitiert.-ti?"Lst xliem read iatid;t|5rofltl-"Uy j] :hwcl-ii? ir;-. )i . -?p i.i tun nb '/H .fii i <\?i g1] a?a eAiwA.nflftnlft nrfttt' mnntrmnAnlft* 4 kKv^s lepkiDg put fprsligjjt^ TheyQqnno^ w sarry gii the daily' intercourse of the family ivithoJtsomP 6flhrldi is:desi^rifitcd/-^-*fhey' ... ire as touchy as hair trigger#."'Ittbey niaefr , in ..a c <] a aj n t a 11 o e wl? happens to he "I preoccupied with: business,, they ,fitiybptcj tiis abstraction in some inodg personal to tli iliemselveS, ancftuhc umbrage' accordingly. Ui They Inyo'n'othcffl the fact oftheir irrftabiH-': fa \y. A.fit of indigestion! makes them soft' qC impertinence.in every one they oome incon? w* ;ract[With.. , A ; . ; ^kli< ,0|? q, "Innocent persons, who never dreamid of giving "offence, arc astonished to'find' O . O / . t i .. ionic mlfbrtnnate word ot momentary M aciturnity mistaken for an insult;: To say pi die least, the habit is uufortunptc. It is fo iir wiser to take the more charitable vipw of " mr fellow-beings, and not suppose a slight is If 11 tended, unless the neglect is open and di- Aj cct. After all, too, life takes its hues in a h( don-rnfi from the colorof our luiud. If a" .vo arc frank and generous, the world treats m is kindly. If, on the contrary, we are tn luspicious, Lien learn to be cold and cautious til o us. Let a person get the repntation of cr icing touchy, and everybody is under more sh ir less constraint, and in this way the hv ihancc of an imaginary offence is vastly in- or Teased.. on h '!,il 1 kli A rhinoceros belonging to a circuS escaped ca it Morirovo, Illinois, a few days ago, killing an wo men, knocking down tent poles and kn eats, causing several dislocations of arms of ws pcctators, and capsizing the cages of other minials. He was finally captured, after loing 88,00D worth of damage. eii ffatAok.i fcifl sMljlObr. .n?> u qai'i tm? oHbil . 1 square 8 00 6 00 8 Oof 12 00 HJ 00 h'W tfli&$Q4HI3 2? fwimtt-w? -to co "itme w? WM 01 i column , 10 00 ,19 00 24 00 ** 00 50 OC J column ' SO (X) 80 uO WOO 50 00 80 00 1 column 80 OoJ 60 00/ 60 00 90 00 150 00 TY-fivz C*N|s^)erS<iu^f^f9|^each subsequent OUR CHIP BASKET.i TKStffSjMsf-3fepi-V5??1Pf ' fl| <: Vegetable widows," they call them in kW?MM mae . A German musician had his will set to music. ?A Leavenworth (kaw. ) cat bit w linger off * - t ???H >* * ?JT * . William Pcnn'a house in Philadelphia-is iijWa drrnkirig tadbohtif ^^"Iwfeift urder. i- > --? t > u?ii lr? " iLBtrong middeJ Wman'pr^anTfancis- , id Is ifr 4i^TOt re^hdyber shop, tBO'fl ?'l*iy?V ii.iL: ilii < ?ii ' 1st niiiti m'his knce? to BOratcH hishead: (Sm^f '' iWhf is a inutf Kkfe k'-fbol4? 'V&lM it lolds a Lidy's hand without sqbeezi&g jfc.I : Thxrtodsi "gallant man ^verlrftStf1'(#iB'ifoe F^o-remfedd from kiekinga dc%-.tbat teid Bit?* hlwhedjrasa^.w^ Y*ashfipmkl enHrel ^ a fitted rewT*1 lad le^^iathferwrtHty thMferrr ?w?C^ An'^chan&c^vffam^%anJ<Hmd lis wile fpra matt^en<4f-ssfqHik?4hdMkThistfe mtftiiiigflfwttffte- ~'J ' ? t ' . * 1 _ ?*:* fli te'fofTi gftmWJb. Wofca^.c?yn .^QpofoA Ht^>iuis ^ .t>i?|OM| t?Jj itfaubfot?teiS?4t aoottnat curoea cat^qnu>^? ?iMM?uu0?g m* v,'Hon his-wife, gfco#t>*?tfB9Qpat*fa?trp* . : ' . " ' ?>'T->w ufa iJ5 dfrdtlfrf ra,t??ribl6 se^.n^s^eapgPiiXfet bene I? Hstifte lieir nosesTtnc geese ponds tron ana bubblo. rfd bctekfel(hilcS? ltltdiflr 'n'pfcVfel^f^Hl^1 cWc i'toominutes!-' *>J?* t! '< * v*bn ?I 'ThcCiWeirlnall^cdVtoi'S'1 ffcgafrlfl $f. Vat&, cfc any d?het ? iPSgiMM3tVcr ,uiao -eay&tbat ift?leepkbtoi>i4 e a Iiac, ' and the gehiiis ot the XJo.^TUffc iat cliizrf' t"he'fofego?n^ as '^'fTTo'oK- * bbfamtaMhAi*f>alK(aftJ ? "> 'toiili % tfcir eadiesdbi^dnJ^t^'tli^l&nty JowHlk ^4u4|)>ad:%HlviHc-dtf?4ty.-aft?3?bsfifa . w?^Mikim yto ^ .wfafo# <m* aiincQ.m mm. to Mid,mm rponev eopujjk to j?6gratlft hbmft'fSrtfis wvt? and reuiiHhe,^ttVefcdrdt'dh&^' "*1V /i-J 1,1 iioitf .l ::ob ?"// . .iu?i;i*?fj ?id) Bi<r.> iV i Q S * ,9J<i?VMW?? i roik-Q top 9704M alT .All awkward man^ttemptiric .to carve 9, ??? iDQ6CJ." An -' idriaefa'okd- cnifcfereeitodbii kiMtiWir/ <Jh#H vtti# lass. .ITe, soys the mutton tastes of suL-. ith mflgnwjitttt: w? *??*? W\.wtf TTic wcsfferri "fellow '^rfi6~ khjcf tfiat^ihe" undry girls of' lYoy >W?re'fttrikki^ vmffgieii" irons, were hot was gudftymfflat irnkji^ a pio^ i&et&r^veriiergtoiife makingja caff f3Fthtji: nddinees of; his boots, saying, he bad not > ken a carriage,- but :,ha4; walked withY immcndable pconpmy." IJe was grieved * hen the loveTy being whom he adored in,jired why he didn't "ask Mr.-Economy in.''' . f.i ^-V 's ' 1-i ' At the last school exhibition of a town in 'alne, the" following essay received the ize: " On the 'Turkle.' This animal js und most always in the water and then he unes on dry land. ; The Turkic cannot fly. ' ho was the right kind of a bird he could f- but if he was a goose bird or an ostrich ; could not fly^ The^T#?^ has four paw.s id a mouth like th'o American eagle, which akes- the British Lion and the uniform emble. The turkle has e shell,-and somenes folks Dut fire on it and the t.nrHrt awls out.u When the turtle crawls outlm ell he is very wet and sticky. There are o kinds of turkle, mud-turkle and the othkind.,. We don't haye any other kind in r pond. French and Jrish people.eat turb and frogs, "but I should not like to. I ught a turkle once, hut it did not do me y good, for I swopped it off fbr a jack life, and cut my fingors. Father1 sdid' it is a judgment, hut I thought it was a life. I dpri't know much about tujkles, 11 am for G rant. Tour, respectfully. Lu.s Tcwsbury Fiy. : ' - *