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THE CAMDEN JOURNAL Published Every Tuesday At CAMDEN, S. C., BY TRANTHAM & ALEXANDER SUBSCRIPTION' RATES. [In Advance.) One Year S2 < 0 Six Months 1 M DR. I. H. ALEXANDER, Dental Surgeon, COLUMBIA, S. C. Offic for the present, northwest corner Gates anil Plain streets. Nov20tf DR. T. BERWICK LEGARE, DENTIST, GRALUATE OF THE BALTIMORE COLI.EOE OF DENTAL Sl'ROKKY. OFFilE?1'EKALB HOUSE. Entrance on Una i Street Dr. A. W. BI RAET, HAY.Si LOCATKD IN CAM DBS, S. C., OFIKES 1111 rBOFESSIfl.tAb it .v. THE I'l OI'LE Vr THIS I LACK AJil? V1C1XITY. #sr O.f.cc. next dotr lo ih.'.t of Trial Justin!) Fas*. deell-8m Wm. D. TRANTHAM, Atlcrmj at Law, CAMDEN, g. C. Office over ilie store of Mrs. II. Cr? sbv, in the building of Robt. Man, Esq. Entrance on Broad street. May 24-ly. J. D. DUNLAP, TRIAL JUSTICE, BROAIl STREET, CAMDEN, SO. OA. Business entrusted to bis carr will receive prompt attention junt-Ttf. J. T. IIAY, ATTORNEY AT LAW AND Trial Ju&ttcc CtTce cy?*t sinre ot Messrs. liaiiiu tiros, Spicial fcTtei.tiunyiveu lo Ite collection of c'&ims. J. W. DePASS, ATTORNEY AT LAW AND Trial JuKtico. Btin-isvt a* aH kin is p.-o.n;>t!y i d nc'j-3l. W. L. DlPAtjS. T. H. CLARKE. PEPASS & CLARKE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CAMDEN. S. C. "Will p.-aer.ee in all the State end Federal Courts. novotf J. D. KEX> EDY. r. H. NELSON KENNEDY A NELSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CAMDEN, S. C. OiKec t?J Judge J. E. Kershaw. noTtfSm FREDERICK J. HAY, Architect and Builder, CAMDEN, S. C.. Will furnish plans ami estimate* for ull kinds of hnililio^J. Contracts t?keu at moderate fi^ureH, arid promptly ai.J carefully attended to. Older* left ?t the Cn>ii>i n ocrxal omce will receive immediate aiunticii. MarcbllF JOHN C. WOLbT, PLAIN, ORNAMENTAL, AND SIGN PAINTER, Paper Hanger ? Glazier, CAMDEN, 6. C. pept23.12ui lie Sure to Stop at tlie Latham House, C'AJIDEX, S. ( . (transient hoaro, ?2.00 j*er uat.) .. "VAcipie Accommodations. Tnldcs t-up i?liH w ^ '''e "'Ot" .iti'onl. Kve ry 10 ?? *?*&?' of Uuests {k/-"oi net *l,,, tUe bou'* ' rt ,ir* oW l? )r. which S 'rpii ?t..i ^ **?* Conveyance* supj liber ?1 ttruix, either for cit, 18 febO ly S. 11. LATHAM, . DeKalb HousC r?V A. S. KODOKI1S. Most Centrally Located Hotel in TownTerniK Ht? Per J ):i,y. Commercial Travelers will have every attention paid to their east fort an ! be fur wished with SAMl'l.K IKUC.IS at this House; and persons visiting Camden will tin.I it a <jniet and pleasant home. Specin'rates made lor parti' s traveling together, and for those who wish to stay a week or more. tlkif" In connection with the house is n first-class LI V F.I! Y UTAlILK, where horsey and vehicles can he had at all times foi town or country use, at the most reasonable rates. Conveyances to and from tlx depot at every train. declHti Candy, <'si mly. * ?? COXES assorted Candy for sale In 4?J DAUJ/liROS. " Heed Oafs. g /WUA lluslicl* P.usl Proof Seed Oati 1 jVW M nit Vy VAVM UKOt*. I , I / VOLUME XXXVI. MY LOVE IS DEAD. BY ABA VROOM AN LESLIE. How coM the night, how chill The moonlight on the hill! My love linth had her will, &iv lieth still! The luow how silver bright! Like some strnnge drift of white Soft, deadly flowers (lint kill. Site sleeps, lut yet I know How fairy sell and low Her spirit footsteps go Where God's flowers blow. How warm she now must be. Though far from earth and me, She loved God so. She sleeps, but shall I slcp By night, wlieu shadows creep. Or day when rivers leap To the great Deep ? No thought she had to ' \ Bet haste to be away. Nor care that 1 should weep. Right poor the robes that chiu Her body, but to glad i!cr heart, my love she bad. Like u soft garment sp' tnl, All times to wrap her round. If such great love I found, What thin? could make :ue sad ? i What fault, what lack in me That she so cold should be. That she should yearn for Thee, Thou God of Agony 1 1 km?w not?who replies! I only know she lies To-night, made cue with Thee. | A MYSTERY SOLVED. UY T. S. AltTIit It. ' Oh J' ar," big It id a Ta?? v fli'i d. as a ; coffin cJiitiiinUig all that was mortal of a young mother, ? ut off in the veiv prm c 1 | of Wftiiatihot d, was l-oine .'torn the uoor of the opposite dwelling; "this dees j sc in hard, I cannot uinl- rs'oud it. . | Look at those throe fair young children; i their faces ptestfc'd against the chamber ; window. Alt, how little do tIn-v c< m* pichcnd the arauing uf tin word, 'motherless !' A shuduw is on their dwel'j ing; toon, very scon. it will fall coldly } and gloomily on their heart*. When just at the ngp roost to need a Dint Iter's care, why is the mother removed ? It ! is a mystery; a deep, dark mystery. I j wonder not that the In-ait. crushed and 1 bleeding uiid?r the weight of suth an ufHieiiou. should (juestion the wisdom j and beneficence of so fearful a disptnsutiou !' "There is no mystery here," we ntiIswrred; "nothing but a j tst nlatioo, , bet wren pause ami effi ct." "1 cull it a s'.r-iD.e providence,"; 'said the lady speaking wi ti soun thing of in patience in her hue. "W hy was i she not spared to I or rhidien a lew ; vears longer'/ With llo?J ure the issuis of life. The Ang?-1 of i? ssol'.t ou chills no lire current with his icy fingers, x- ' Iceptat the bidding ?f the All-Seeing , anu ('ninipotent. Without him not u sparrow falh th to the ground." "And one human life is < f more value , tloin many sparrows," said we, impres- ! : ?ivclv, hoping to suggest t<> her mind a higher idea < f providi lice than it cater. 1 faint d f r the tiuic bring. 'Tiue, true; and yet the frrows of death ure thiown with a soit of blind energy that makisoue tl ink of a malignant spirit, ruihcr thau a m< roiful (iod."' j The lady's warm cheek, hall indig ' ninl almost flashing: eves. evinced tlic hir^nuth of her feelings ' (iciiil)', gently." wo tatd, laying a i hanJ upon lura. "-here is no mysterious providence hero. It was the mother's own net thut rcD.ovcd her i'ri>ni her c hildren." "What! Vou do not intimate self-de' st ruction ?" "Not |>renirJitated self-destruct ion. i V< t had she observed lh*J laws of health her children would not, this day, be motherless." 1 "She was u fragile flow r, I know, j and us beautiful as sha was delicate " ^ "Open the window*; 1 t i:i the frosty air upon one o( your hi t house plants, ! and note the consequence. "It will droop and die." "A* Mrs. Melbourne did. Tn either case the effect depends upon a clearly {apparent cause. There is nothing ol ; mys'eiy involve 1." ? ! did tint know her intimately. I -iotily met ht( oiuv" of tw c<; but 1 have " always admired her?always heard her l spoken ol with affect toil jy her fiiends. .'She was beautiful in {el.soil. 1 have j often looked at In-r us she sat by the i window* opposite, with a ri?- of lier fairy * children in her amir, fcfpl thought it the ;i)o*t beautiful si<_*ht my eye* j.'oj ever rested -jpon. Oh. it is so >'d ? ? think jiJiat her arms w il n-vet ntuiiti '?them. nor lie* Lou-to pillow their j vi*. ihr husband, it is m|J, almost . ' , 'vi Iter. J'oor man ! what ? worsh. * * i tf i ' % he has to hear, i heart .<-01 ri ? .. k,.p ? tjai J wo tiller our ' leu year* * . j i i . , , , friend's cxcittfim-it. 1 ' V'" ^ ft?1' "a Joans-. ">1 'i'S1'1'1creature, dressed in *'u!l /f,J'? down from In i room ahou' tn. n in tlit- cvetiiiiL', him a lijrht silk V,J'1 thrown across Iter arm. .-'ho was me at the parlor door l>y a pila woman, whose shrunken face, larje, brL'lit eyes, and husky voitO. told iut too plainly 1 that the days which n m tincU to her upon earth wrrc very lev, i "So volt wiil*:o to-liio it. dear A dele?' she said iu avoice of tender solicitude. ' - Why not mother?, was answered '1 promised (Irnrtro th:t 1 would aceoiiip.ny hitn.ami lie hat t illed forme' " 1 know, but a storm threat* ns. 1 aui Icirful that you may t:iw cold ' ' 'Pon t L'ivo yourself a shadow of trouble, dear mother,' replied Adele. . Vou aro always over anxious about nic.' " The serf is to i lit-n, -1 lUjj'iter.? t (io back ai d tt'.-t your ii^ht ca hai.-r-[ ai?wwl; and bo sutru to wwp jvur?ctf uj, CAM well before leaving the warm ball rooii. to return home.' "'Oh dear, mother! why will you be ro f??olish about mc ? No Tear of my takintr cold.' ' Von cannot go, A dele, dear, unless with some hotter protect on thin this cobweb tear!,' said the mother, (irmly, I ' The young girl, with a slight cxpresi s:on ol impatience tripped back to her [ ehamher. and in a few tnnuu'nttt returned I with the shawl, which her mother drew : earefully aLout I or. Yet, scarcely was i the though*less young creature in the carriage that awaited lu r ere the shawl was pushed back from Ht shoulders, and the fresh, humid night air stillered to bailie her v.< < k. When she entered the ball rcom there was a brighter Hush on her checks than usual, and slio was conscious cfan unpleasant sensation be, 'uw t!i- threat j it. This was but .slight, however. "It was three o'c'ock when AdeJc left tin* gay hailreoui to return home. For at least lour hours of the time since her entrance. she had duueed in the hot and crowded apartment. ' I>raw your shawl closer around you.' j ' said her lover, as lie assisted Iter into ; I t'i? r;ii:incp A slight rain was falling I I and tiie air was coming from the east. | ; "Oh, how cool and pleasant." murmur- j ed the !air creature, as she leaned her j head from the carriage window ai.d let ! the moist atmosphere strike upon her! neck. ''How r? freshing! I thought I scveial linos ih\t I should faint in 11ml j suffocating crowded tooui." The shawl was thrown from her neck miiiI shoulders ami for a quarter of an hour she rode, thus unprotected, until :i slight shudder crrcp'ug over her frame warm d her to replace the skawl, and ' vi n to draw it tightly around her; but it did not, now, impart the warmth sSie Sought. Do _\ou wonder tlat on the r.ext j iii< ruing. Ad? !e had fcv< r, and pains in i the side and breast, or, that when the' doctor en tiie, lie discoverd the existence of considerable infiammati?u of the I lures ? * A week of saiuu.s iiltirss, and two weeks of convalescence. Then, setting at nought all the gentle renonMraucos of In r u.other, A dele wmt out lor a; promeuailc with some young compau- j ions, wearing very tiiin shots, although from recent rains tho pavements were ; damp. It was over three months ere she was able to appear abroad again; ana months longer before the roses bloomed on her ch? eks as of old. At seventeen Adelo became a wife; and before bet eighteenth summer a ; luh? was laid on her bosom. ;'Shc is to young to marry," urged - ?- - - ? i f .i":. r ;u I inr in', u.utmi ui nia.i HM^M\ girl. 'AYait a year or two, until both' miud and body have gained a I'uil maturity." l>tit the ardent young lover could not wait; and A dele was quite as impatient lor the wedding day. To the voices of reason and prudence, they were alike deaf. "A gay round of parties followed the niairiuge. Night alter night the fair young bride. too thinly clad lor exposure to the sharp air of a severe winter, went lor:h to meet her friends, Lu'e hours, stimulating food uud drii k. excessive fatigue, and colds, wrought upon her their Bad t fleets; aud ere the honeymoon was fairly over, she was in the : hau is of the physician. ''When A dele appeared abroad, after the birth ol her first child, some of her friends hardly knew her, so sadly was she changed. NfV r again did the roses of health come back to her checks except when flu-hid by the fatal hectic. Never again did she enjoy an hour's i freedom from lassitude and pain. Vet, strango to tell, she took scarcely any better care of in r health than before h<-r marii igc. You saw her at balls, at com cits. at liiiopia, aud all fashionable assemblies, exposing hot self to cold.-, and encountering fatigue that invariably brought on pains or prostration ol str? ngtli. "A few years more, and the curtain j falls upon ihe drama of life. That the . acts and scenes were so uia^y, was tii ? ! greatest cause of wondi'i; let that the I curtain fills so soon. A dele .Melbourne cut the thread of her own existence." Mi-1Ikiii<iic 1" exclaimed our ! at'cptivu listener;''surely ii is not ol I her iliat you have loon spoiling?" I ''Yea, of Mrs. Melbourne, whoso wa?tcd form has just boon carried 'in lit. It would have have been a miracle had life boon further extend-u. ' ; \ lout; siiotroo was foil owed by a deeply drawn -i^h "Yes, yes, 1 see ii nil the mystery is solved. 'J here is no dark providence . here. Ah. how uiany like In rare daily cut down in the very flower of life ; cut down ere half their work is done I" 'it is a Melancholy lint, wo replied, ' "thai, the v.h-de average of life in this country is iliuiinjdicd by a suicidal dis, .regard ol Mm plainest lav* of health; : Jl|,d illjs Sid defect ? WO tUI"!lt to SaV I * , pi iutinal ?U chargeable more up m your , ^ {bun our own. jt piver one licait .jic Itiink if llie daily deailis 11 he!*? '.he sharp stindcriii;: of vomit: mo . . 1, , , t,'i.it can bind heart !< tll>> It Hue rest 1. , iii> | lit.nl. iVoj.lc clasp t " { rave Tui'l mysterious. :n. s:'.v' * ^'''?l i ;iii ut1)i< tivi.* jir \ idcjico !' I'.. ' ''l,r(' no providence in the matter?on 'v pro vision of the tiivino meicy to hssor., as I'.ir us in; y he, lli.j evils that uiu*! ll"W l'rom tin! ili-ruption, by death, t?l tin1 iii'wt intimate relations :n life. Hero ' is a solution of the whoh mystery that 1 hurt so peiphxei! you, an J huudicdu of ' | others. 'j III! Kortsian* talk Kill rt ill f I ltXiO uuvi u^uiu in lttY7. den, s. c\, decembe: Imngluation and nieeaao. The iiiflu* nee "f (lie imagination iri he >tiaiul.-iti<?ii ofciseas" h.,s often Leon proved. Tt w:n in Fr.ince, wo believe, Iimi. an exjerinicut was made upon a soldier, who bciug condemned to die fur some infraction of military uiscip line was handed over to the scientists as a living subject. He was pluc-d in n ho-pilal, an 1 told that ail around him were pati'-nts sutiering lVom small pox. Although this was not true, the man was soon taken violently sick, and displaced every symptom of the disease. Instances tending to establish this rcinarkablc doniination of tin? moot .I faculties over the body are not inre, and a story is going the rounds of the newspapers which may be cited in this coni ortion : A joung man in .Vow York went into a drug store and asked for forty cents* worth of strychnin *. The druggist gave him a harmless powder, which he swallowed, lie thin explained t!rt his' ? -- - Sft,i 1, Kli.ilif.-wl .mil K/i CA^l'WIUUUU^ IIUV1 uv? if itiau ? ^ had taken (he poison to kiil liims -U., The druggist tol l iiim lliore wag not (if- j teen minutes life in hi:)), and that he was beginning to fade about the eyes already. Tho youth sank lo the floor.' and the sweat streamed front his bruv ; lie was becoming very siek, pientjlly; and bodily, and app-'tmd to be dung. | The medicine man h 'janjo abiniu-d a< ' the effect of the dose and examined the i jar from which lie had taken the powder. It was sugar of milk, s-.re enough, peifectly harmless, and y- t producing spasms! As a last resort, the young uiun was inform? 1 tliat be had tak-m no poison, but, instead, a v??ry hii'tn!? s powder, a bu-hcl of which would ii >i | Kill. The information put a stop to il"- j dying busim So, and lie walked tutnl'i the store disgusted. promising however. | tu stive she coroner an early job It was1 the opinion of ail the bystanders that I the mere imagination of poison in bis; system was really kil.ia^ the youth. Colored vs. Esld-Keadod. Years ?go the then well-ku >wn firm j W. & Cm.., II ist >n agents for a popular' line of Australian picket liip-?. received i a letter i f inquiry from C/incitiuati Correspondence follow- 1, and second I cabin parages Were engaged lor Mr.! and Mrs. Joseph Hatfield, their sou Joseph,-Jr. ami Miss blanche. who: were politely urged to p.it in an appear a nee in llcston on or before May as | the good ship Ihniiel Sharp, whereof) Joseph I). ('usbii.g \< master f.?r the; present voyage, would sail on the day following, weather } "rmiiting. On the morning designated a young; daikey t xijuisite, spoiling a tall hat and ivory-headed cane. i-aui.trrod into the elcgantlv appointed office and tleuiamb'd: Is (lis yer de office of W. He Co'!'' Ye-, it is.' growled the senior \Y. from bellied I-is ib.sk, iiowoing over his gold-bowed spectacles tit the intruder. ' Well. sail, me and my folks is twine out to Melbourne in )our slop LMuiei Sharp, and I?' ' Not if 1 know it?you arc not go' iug to do any Mich thing.' How so. sail 7 Hidu'r I corrcspoti 1 wid yoti from Cincinnati and engage pa-sago for u.y ladder and muddcr and Miss I >1:1111 lie ?' 4 Whnt! Ii your name Hatfield.'* roared the dismayed agent. 4 Yes. sail, my name's Hatfield, and'? 4 Why in the devil didn't you uotily me that you were colored/' 4 \\ hy in the uebl.il di !:/i you notify me dat you were bald-headed/' The pcrtim-nt rejoiudcr silenced old \V.f and although two or three passengers who preferred O have the color line diawn outside of the ship's second cabin gave up their berths and tvvie refunded their passage money, the llatfudds complacently sailed in the Stiarp. doldcn Worda. The habit of looking o? tlie blight side is invaluable. Men and women who arc evermore reckoning up what tliey want rather than what th y have ?counting the difficulties in the way instead of e< ntiiviiig nuatis to overcome them? a>e almost e> rtaiu to live on corn ' ' 1 ' ? l- ..! W.|!f Twll <1 r! 11 sil;k UllMU, 111! |i>nn. IIMU rt%>% !( miitiarkt ! graves. 'J ho world is sure to .-uiilf upon a man who m.-ciiih t* ho buecosliil, but lft liitn jo> about wi ll a crest fallen air, and the very doy.s in the strert will M.t upon him. We must ul! have I ib.-es. laite trust* will nip ti>e. fruit in the had, ban!;, lii! Lr ak, inv< btincuts prove Worthies, valuable horses die, china vases bleak; but all these calamities do not enno together. The wi.vj course to pusue, when one plan laiN, is to form another, when one prop is k. d from undir us, to till its place with a subhtitnh', an I evcriii"te count what is b I'lrather than what is taken. H hen the litial reekoniiijj is made, it it appears that, we haw not lo-t tlie vn.sei tisinss ol inu ntioual rectitud-; if we l.avc kejit charity towards al< no n; if, I y the various discip inc ol life, we have been ii I iVuui follies and continued in viitue, whatever we have lost. t!ic e la at balance sheet will he in I our favor. I low* many t d;t a wrote; view < I' life, ami waste their eiieipj,y an a <1 stroy ' heii nervous sy?t in i?i en b avoi in^ to aeouultllate wealth, Wit!i .lit thinking ol the present I upl ine** tli.-y are t'nrowit.t: I iiwuV ! ft Is not wealth of h;^h station ' which makes u Un'ttt happy Many ol , the moat wretched brio/ on earth have both; but it i-; the radian', sunny . pint, which know * how to bear lit tic trials , and enj >y comforts, a'd thu* extract htippiuvw froai tYvrj incident iu lite. 'rj| R 25, 1877. Weight of tho Brain. T! < fnlhr.vir.g facts n ir.triliiiir 'ho r. 1- j , afivc si-/e and weight of the brain arc j ! condensed from an able lecture on tip's' ! general subject, lately delivered before , the American Institute, by I'rule-.sor | Hurt (5. Wiider: The average t of t!tc human j'.rain is between forty t? fifty ounces; iai??l i* is larger and heavier than ti nt of any animal, with two exception*? (licit of a large whale, which Ins been i found to wei?ili live pounds, and that of | an elephant, ranging from eight to ten pounds. The brain of a full grown I gorilla Weighs about fifteen ounces. As a general Mile, the una inici:ig?nt animal* have larg r brains io i roportioii to their weight ol l dy; and in ibis the d"g shows his superiority i> the cow. i a.iti man to ti c elephant and whale. |1 Tr.is rule has its exceptions, however. j1 Miitc l i many onus tec mam is larger, . in proportion to the body, than in man; j arid the body of the little ,'ou:.-.t'ti." or ! I inaruiuS'; im-nlccy of "unlit Aii'-rbu, i.j , ' only twenty tisu-:s a; heavy as its brain, j ' it was found tliat l' e average weight of 1 two hundred an i set only right malt! 1 European brains wa'? forty-nine and ' i.m I all' ounces, while that of one Inn- 1 lied and iiinotecii lc*ua!o brains was 1 forty-fear. The order, however, re- i vi rs.'d. if the ratio of brain to body to be the stan 'aid : for in eighty-ottu ' utale biaiiis the ratio was f und to be * as 1 t-i .'/d.liit, wltila in eighty-otic fe- I male bruit s it was as 1 to !J;> Jti. ' Carefully | re pa red t.'.bl s indicate ! (hat in l.oih sexes the bra n increases ' rupi ily to ill- t?'_v nTabout seven ye.ns. | < and lt-s rapid!) to fourteen years, and ' afietwurd more slowly to the twenti-tlt j; year, near which date it attains its great- ':i est weight. After the age of fifty, the i 1 brain seems to lose about an nuneu lbr | ' each d<rad'\ The average weight of j1 the brtiiti. with one thou and int.l i' tit ' ' , , - i persons, exceeds t>iat ot an o?|*inI mint- j her of ignorant er.es; but observation proves that a large brain may often eo- ; cxi-t with a slight degree of intelli- JI gcnce, while on the other hattd, a very j t high degree of iutelb ctual j ?wer and j t genotal culture may characterize iinii- ! vidua Is whose brain is below (he aver- ' j age. llcncc it appears tli.-.t neither ab- 1 r si.Into s:ze or relative size of tlie whole , j brain is sufficient t< st of mental power, I i cither in aniniald or human bcintrs. ! t 1 Ho Wanted Live Ones. jf Weil, that's 'bout (l:c sauio thirj.', I ' 1 reckon. Have you got any f'reih oys ' elivTS Out bvur 2" t y-s, id miy of 'cm. Hew many 1 lo you want! I "I low many ? Why, you don't 'sposo f I want a whole drove on cut, d'ye ? i: Ketch us one 1"' | 1 'One oyst<r! Why, on* oyster aint j! no sample, even, L'ye want it in the j' shell? ' * I1 "Wall, now, I didn't know as they ; 1 had hulls oil 'em, out of o-iurs? you'll have to take the Lark tih for us." I' ' II?>w many ? a pint? a quart?*' ' Listen at that, ole 'ottun! S-liin' I ny.?el?c>'* up liere by I Lo quail, jis* like they're huckleberries!" I < iot 'eui iti cans?give you a |?mr, s.r1 < 11 right. Hut I'll take 'em by j inns, i ( ef i dou't have another dauiucd lum:tdiurry duiin' t'hristuia* week. You're isure (hem's ail square-toed aud sound in iitnb I ' Hero's soiuc loose uiwof the same | j sort, sir.'' ' What! Look here! Thcin things ! ain't what yer cull oyschers, is they \ \ lhirn my leatlier Lnoclics ef I didn't ! I think an i-y.-rlu r was a soil of new-fan" , gied duck or sea sand turtle! I lore, ole otuan. d'yo want them things?'' pointing to the oysters in the bowl. ' Why, ole man, she whispered half! : audible, "them's dead; they're mortified ; already.' r?in^ my everlasting buttons of that aint so ! Why. theui uyschers look like they was carved out'n whit leather and j died younjr; they're < 7. eld and slimy i cz pit our. Ver d"n't fool me on Yui, [ huh, not much. When I boy oyschers I wants to see 'cm kicking, I d >! Kx.. eosr n e from dead tins, '.specially when , they're to domed death j And the old fellow went away with-1 out any of the sea fruit. Watching a ltiflo rail's Flight. Three peiitieunn, members of the I Amateur liitle Hiub, yesterday after-; i noon were in the t>wnot Dripoton, rifle hIm otiiip. The distune- w.s 'it v uds; ' all il:r< i! were shootim; ( Vcdmnor lilies. j l'mni the lirinp point to the t ir.;et the pmund gradually a-cenilcl, so that a ' small ?cl< scope, but a pood one. firmly lixed in true bounds on a tree, at a uisI taiiec of perhaps thirty lVet, made a 'line point I".>r observation One of the shooters, while looking throripis the plas.s i. inane a shot of one ef this companions, c.\e!aiiiicii that he saw the ball as it sped on its ini-sion. The announce'incut was ie(ti,cl \tiili intiedulity j ! hut one of the other shooters went to the p'aws. an 1 he also saw the hill a!, j most as it !e!t the gun. and through j (its v. hole hiphf. i. ally the whole line > f jits trajectory. until ii reached the tar- ' p. I. ~o ml 'resting ami h-au'ilol was [llie sight "'it every bail was w.itcbcd ' by "lie or the other of ihe pentlcnien; mi! il is mi aetii.il lift tin:' the point j at which the lull would st il t; the tarpi t couiil he seen before tin; ball strut k. I It was even insisted upon that the rotary motion of I lie ball could be observed. ; Ro h iter (.V. F.) Hvrald. < I ranklin siys. p >or man must , find ni'-af for hidMouiaci). a rich 0:13 to j liud atouweU for hi* meat." NUMBER 24 Young Blocd. The hur l woifc in tho various pro Cessions is done by the young men. The rule i-? not universal, but most great men did their hardest work in their younger days. It is therefore of little use in these days to object to young men taking the lead in the educational work of the age. It is not difficult to show that > ontli is not objectionable for' vigorous mid efficient work in our eol. leges,, in the ministry, in the editorial ^.inetuui, and in the great profession yf iho Jaw. From a reeen' pamphlet treating upon this subject, we note the lb!-! lowing aaiMig tiie mote striking exatr.-l pics of the ttuth of what we have said ! above: ' Thomas Jeflfeisou wrote the Dcela-j ration o! Independence when he was thiriy-sev u years old. Alexander Ilatniitoti made oue of the greatest legal r.r iuments o!" his life at twenty three. | !.or 1 I'.ie >n. at thirty-six published I Lwlv of his best essays. J.)i? kens wrote i '1'ickwiek'' at twenty-live, and -'Oliver! I'wi-t" 1 . fore thirty seven. Thackeray ! ? rote ' Vanity Fair" at thirty-six, aud ! Tismou i" at forty-one. Kmcrson wrote j iij best at ihiity-cight. Colt was but wentv-i ne when he invented bis iui- j )r?>v. <1 (ire arm, arid Fulton was but, ,wci;iy?eight when lie invented steam, j (lO-'tlio was an ardent friend of young ! nen, because his powers were on st vig-j >ruu? in his youth, and said : "Yes,, j u y goo.J friend, we must be young j o Jo gn at things." A id in another place, s[ caking < I" government, he said, *it-li cinnaasis: "If I were a voung Premier i would never place in (lie ligli si o'hcej jiei p!c who '?? ! risen rutin illy by mere birth and seniority, in i who, in their own age, moved nu li.-ureiy in their accustomed tracks: orin this way but little talent is ever irought to light. I would have toting j ueu." A Delusion. A young man who thiuks that he can e ;d a rocki ss life until he become;* a , ui'ld'e-agttl man, and then repent and unl;e a gcod and steady citizen, is tieudtd by the devil, lie thinks that i ifiriph* nre all ft oh, destitute of mem-1 >ry. He c includes tint when lis rcjents, everybody will forget that he was once a dissipated wretch. This is: iot the case, people remember your bad abits and forget your good ones. He- i ides, it is no easy thing to break up in ' liiddlc age bad liabiis which have been ortned in wusth. When a horse con-j racts the bal it oi bilking, iie th-uerally etalns it tnrougti nro. ne will often : perform well enough until tno wneei) ,'rts into a deep tiolo, ana men lie stops iml looks hack. Just so it is with boys| .vho contract bad liabi s. They will .oinetinios leave off their bad trices and !o well enough until they get into a iglit place, ami then they return to their Id habit. The only way to break up a bad habit is never to contract it. The jnly way to prevent drunkenness is to lever drink. General Skoboleff. General Skobelcff is the idol of bis soldiers. One afternoon iu November,! I. i- t i mps wen* massed near their en [-atnpmciil, with arms in hands, and with spades to entrench the ground they v/ero nb^ut to take; f tretcher-bear- i ers in a group at the rear, a suggestive, but unpleasant sight; a battery of tuittrailkuscs bundled up like so many liu-, mail beings,to k< cp out the damp, and io front if the troops the little body of J picked men, each with his shovel, his rations and plenty of asuunition, who I were to make the first rush across, use their bayonet, ami then throw it aside fur the spade, and endeavor to cover In time to resist the attack ol the returning Tin Its. Gen. Skobeletf dismounted ?i .1 ?.a uinJ (<ilJ the Ui'.'D J use waai nc Cipmiju of them?thev were not to storm the works of 1'lovua, but onl) to run forward aii'l take the piece of ground they knew perfectly well, in front of" the road, and to hold it until they had works thrown up. Ho cautioned them, as many were young soldiers sent out from the reserves to till the great gups in the ranks, not to advance too f ir, hut to mind exactly v.hat the officers told iliem. Ho would ho with them hintself, and would direct the movements j'or-ouuiiy. As tho uto.i passed, they all received encouraging words, and thev went by smiling at tin? good na lure I chah' from the llencral, who called to thriii by name, rem irked on their now bo *ts, which. ho said, were like (hose of a Sputii>h ?lou. aud told the uiu.Mcian.s they would play a waltz iu the new redoubts oil the morrow. Predfotination. 1you be'iifvo in predestination!''' iuijuiic i a Mivsi.-.-ippi steamboat captain i . a clergyman who happened to bo traveling witli him. 4 Of coiir.-o I do," was the reply. ' Tinn vou bilit?ve that what is to be, will bo ' "Certainly ?" ' Weil, 1 in glad of it." ' Why;" ' Jh.'c.nise I'm going to pass that boat ahead in ju-t lil'terti consecutive milltit* s if there is nuy virtue in pine knot and >.ifet v valves. :: i don't be alarmed if the boilers are not going to burst, thev won't that's all." ( poti this the divine began (o put on his hat. and looked as if ho was going to bat k out, when the captain observing, remarked : ' I thought you bili ved iu predesti* iiai ion "So 1 do, but I prefer being n little uofercr the ?tetu when it takes p-lucv." ADVERTISING BATES. Tijie. 1 in. \ col. .] col. 1 col. 1 week, $100 $5 00 $0 00 $15 00 2 " 175 7 50 12 00 18 00 3 ?' 2 50 0 00 15 CO 22 00 I 3 25 10 50 18 00 20 00 5 < 1 on 12 00 20 00 30 00 ! 0 ' 175 13 00 22 CO 33 00 7 ' 5 50 11 00 25 00 30 00 8 " 0 25 15 00 30 GO 40 00 3 mos 7 00 10 00 35 00 50 00 1 7 75 21 00 4 000 00 00 0 " 8 00 28 00 4 5 00 80 00 0 ' 8 75 35 00 00 00 100 00 12" 050 40 00 7500 12000 Z'" Transient advertisements most tie accompanied with tltc cash to insure insertion. Not to bo Hanged. An interesiino fitory coined from j unlucky Arizona. Kellogg and Carter 1 owned a mining claim and fooliehiy j rjuarrellci about it. Kellogg was a man ! of few words, "light and free was bis ! touch upon his revolver" V."ih little j ado, he fired at his partner, ai d t-'ippnscd tint lie bad sent a bullet into his breast; but behold! Or. ter hoi a Iiiblo in the rocket of his gray working shirt The ball struck aeon the J raercd look, its course was tur.ici and I Carter was unhurt. Then the g' ??1 I young linn whipped out hi? gleaming bowie knife, sprang upon Kellogg, and carved him .<o artistically that it is hod mi his revolver relaxed and ho was like to die. The good young uian s'aueln d his opponent's wound, aad rode away for a phvsiciau, returning within twenty four liD'its, having made a tot*.! distance of over ninety miles. Kellogg is recovering. Carter, to avoid arrest, sought to cross the river, and this time *!. !. II. mu uiutc uiuu ir euvu nun. ja'j v,,i3 drowned. The moral of (his recital is very intricate. But it is p'aiu that Carter wasn't born to be hanged. Much-married Govornjr. Claiborne l'\ Jackson, Governor of Missouri before the war was a much married man. lie was successively o husband of five si.-tcrs in one f 1..0 most respectable, wealthy, and distinguished families in the State. As l-. >n as one wife would die he Woul.1 go an 1 niirry her sister in reasonable :ime. Of course some of them were widows when he married them. In connection with the marriages there was a .standing juke tuld at the expense of the <b?vt?ri:nr, which was that, when he wejt t > ask ' the old gentleman's consent to tu svy the !a>t ono, the venerable father is r -p? t. d tu have saiJ, "'Yes, Claib, you .-hi have iter. You have got them a)!. For rood* nets' sake dou't ask mo lor the old wo* man." With this reasonable r.'^u tt ? Jackson kiudly complied. A Faithful Dog's Howard. The Jefferson (Mo.) Tvibunc says: A gentleman who lives in 'Vernon county tells a remarkable story of tho sagacity of a dog which accompanied him on his travels. While in the Short Creek timber, on his way to Joplin, the dog jumped and caught his horse by tho bridle rein. Mr. Ewing drove the animal off, but it persisted in catching the horse by the reins, until the gn;flcmau . concluded the dog must b* mad. Under the impulse ot' the moment, ho nulled tlts-rcvui?w una at.n.,1 '??, ? which then ran back along tne road ^ over which lie had come. In a low minutes Mr. Ewing missed his overcoat, which had been tied ! ' J lit* saddle. IIo turned back to lind it, and after riding about a mi'e, not uuiy found his coat, but his faithful doe, which was lying on tho garment dead* Congress. A. C. Buell in the New Orleans Democrat*ays; "When I fir'it came to Washington live years ago 1 could count from my seat in the press gaiiery of t! o House n motley rilf-raff of fifty-six carpet-Imagers, niggers nnd scalawags, and from the Senate galiery sevente n of the same Lidney misrepresenting eleven States, pinned to such viicncss with the bayonets of the regular army Now 1 can see left in the House but five suj erfluous-laggiug momentous of that comedy of self-government, while in the Senate the same number hung trembling in a delicately adjusted balauco between statesmanship and the State's prison, with a gratifying tendency of the scales iu the latter direction." Quails Comiug boutn. It is stated that the migratory quails introduced into Vermont from Europe last spring, whose flight for the 8?uth was noted and followed as far t?S Eagle Bridge, X. V.. have recent y boon heard from in Cartaret county, N. t'., and between Cape Hatterps aud the Bermudas, several having alighted in the rigging of a vessel. Ir is an oid reproach against Orientals that they cannot understand a joke, and that they are sii'l less sb'e to say p:etty tlungs to ladies; but a daughter | of Louis XIV., the Princess do Conti, ) inspired the Moorish ambassador with j an gracclVIv turned n cou'plitncnt as can bo imagined. She had railed ! against the Mohammedan custum of polygamy, and the Moor thus defended thepraetieo: "Madame, a plurality of wives is allowc 1 amongst us because in on country wo must seek in several women the (harming qualities which i are here to be found in one.'' I fYveral chiiiiren wore iceaiug a pet b*?r wish torn at Austin. Texas. An e:.r ?v.;s dropped out of the rci"1' of the near, mul a li tie girl handed it to hiui. The I ar sportively pulled her to Lim, when a Inatso dug, belicwng the ehi'd in danger, sprang upon t'e tear. iJr.iii! tin a carsied the child to the further part id" the hogshead ia which ho ?li'pt :i!id returned to light the .tog. under the itnprcssiou that tlic mg w. uld hurt the ihihl. A party of darbies ii'd to protect the child irouihcr other protectors, but the little cu did not escap'? imil her mother had killed both hear and dog witli a musket. The farmers and sheep ral-ers of (Y, eil county, Maryland, have passed resolution* declaring all dogs ruu^iug ut , i large shall be considered at the meiey of the community.