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12 : THE CIIICAGO TRIBUN TIIE TEXAS ELDORADO. s of ircatars, of whi SATURDAY. OCTOBER 2.7, 1B77—TWELVE PAGES. ha Just returned from the West, whither he | orelension, “ves! it'a the same onc. that's Tina Feen to look after Mr. Coburn’s intercsts, | hini: Bill Sanders. Little aseount enoush, and sce ahont the inat purchase. e veports tho | aloull say. No account at all. Why, bles' 1and In Dakotn as amonz the tinest held by the | you, sir, that boy I8 14_years ol neatly three Governor. 1le saya it is well adepted to growing older than my Jin, and 1 don’t Honestly cereals, and finc crops of wheat have been har- | heliese lie ever did / day's work about his fathi- vested in the vicinity the prescnt reason. One | cr's house in iifs life. My boy ia away ahead of of the caures of the fallure of the 8pragnes was | hin In school to<day, nid fl’l)fll morg chores land speculation. They purchased from Mr. | about the house in'nday than Bill does in & Coburn, six yenrs shice, 4 tract I Matie, for | month, He's no acconnt “for anything bt mis- which they were to mve £1,400,000, and upon | chief, Dropped a live cat, a great bie, roar- the same advanced $500,000. The land waa well | Ing Thowas Henry cat, duwn MacElroy’s site timbered, but the Spragues coutd nat keep ity | ting-roum chimney the other night. No and Mr. Coburn has now come Into posseasion | fire in the stove, and cat yelled till ihe again, while the 8pragues are out the amount | nolse blew ont the flue. Fact, Just roared and advanced. The Governor is said to be besieed | yelled and wailed till you conld hang a hat on with beggars of hath hich ana low standing, { the noize as tt come out the flue, and {t cost and there s acarcely a day passca but herecelves | MacElroy #S to have thechimney cut out nest Ietters making stf to hiclp bufld scminaries, | day tw lct the cat ont. And when the hole was churches, and charitable institutions. He I8 re- | made, sir, cat was ha!f wiid with fright and shot ported a3 giving away upwanls of $100,000 per | out lke a rocket, and scalped the workinan, annum. Mr. Coburn {s probably worth mfi.- clawed out the dox's eve, and fumped on Mac- 000. Elroy's back and snatched a pound of flesh oft liis shoulder blades. It was just awful. Why, thoursnds of circalars, of which the followingls 8 copy: and dou't pay, Some time alter [ zo to a dudege and say, **1 owe this man five pounds and only got one.” Then he says to me, '‘sou give him the pound: " and he savé to the etorekeeper “You give back a receipt for five pounds.’ Then the Judze says to me, *All right; now you go and do jt ngain.’ *> e WHAT IS CONSCIENCE? The Law of Morality in Planta-—Righteons. ness o the Lower Animals, To the Editor of The Tribuns. CnioAao, Oct, 25.—~Mr. Joseph Cook's defint- tion of consclence has been presented te the readers of Tux TRIDUNE. He condenses thir- teen propositions, the “resuits of the best schol- arship in Europe and Americs,” Into sfx, which 1 may further, without loss, condense intothree, natnely: (1) A perveption of the difference between right and wrong. (2.) A sense of sclf- plied to the origiu of gravitation or of chemical | yodenta by the chila’s parents, A late nu aflinity. 5 of Ledie's Idustrated Times reprints this (o, Tt sata nekde Foster's theary that conclence 18 | huax, with neut shawing the progreas of (L2 e of habite," amil gives ua o theory | tle in tne signal office—Sergt: OKeef i much more In arcord with the afentific mothod. | shown n the act of clubbing - an army nf L% and eaunlly relieves us of Kant's diflicult prop- | while his heroic wife, having thrown s mfih' oslilun that conscience i3 Infalliole. For if con- | wire like n jnsso about bor hishand, iy xom felence fs the result of » general aw operating | feurn loose! the electric current from the b 0 upon the humnan soul, then conscience is the | by the aid of which, it will be Temembere, E{{Q product of complex tactors, and cannat be uni- | rata were drisen off, but not untii atter ) forin In Its action, or intallible,” as Kant ex- | had eaten up the oaby. The hoax ling h‘f" presaes it. One moral orzanism will offer leas | copied Into lialf the newspapers of the vm,x" reslatanca to the law than amother, and the | and translated into & dozen lancunges. Emd' sama organism may offer differing degrees of | body haaread it, and every visitor to the Peyi resistance at different times, 18 anixious to henr about ihe rats and see o 11 we compare this law of rignteousness with graye and montiment of the poor child, the law of physical life, or what we cail thio vital Long articies have been written and ublisy. force, we may sce why restatance to it or viola- | ed by sctentists to prove that rodents do nut fa. tlons of It produce the pain whizh we call re- | habit rocks above timber line, “wur all to gy morse,—perhaps long after the offense has been | effect, for penole are more ready to beliery committed.—just asaviolatlon of thelaw of | good story than adry truth, and ro the 1, X viality will reveal [teclf with pain days, or it | story s everywhere credited fmplicitly, fi may be years, after the offense has becn com- | scems almost superilnous, therelore, to nv'n. mitted. “We sce why it is that while wa are In | it was only a clever hioax; that there iy mber TOVE-SECRET. After many years of experlence In the practice of medicine, 1 have at Inst discavered and componnd- eda_vegetahle substance, which in 'rlrh/rrllv rafe and harmless. And yet it possesres such powerfnl and miarnetic infinencen, that, when handled by elther sex and given to the other, they immediate- 1y become attracted, and in ort time lovc the giver, no matier who they have loved before, Any Iady or gentleman can gain the lore, and wed the one they love, by neing this powder. 1t {# eanil given in wine of Hquors of any kind. or tea, cof- fee; or any drink thal can be pwectened, A¢it taatrs and looka Itke sugar, and can be given without fene of detection, or can he given by nnather person after following directions. The love yoo pain wll be true, pure, and permanent; and this ia the only true love-secret in the world thatany one onght to nee, Many otner love-pawdera are being sold, which excite only the animal pansione, and the effects s0on die, lesving lale (nstead of love, having & far different cfect than that you intended. Even it yon shonlil marry, you soon find out your mis. Col. King's Mammoth Ranche on the Rio Grande. A Farm of 160,000 Acres, Stocked with 90,000 Callle, 35,000 Skeep, and 22,000 Morses, From Onr O1on Correspondmt. ‘Wasmneron, D. C., Oct. 17.—We are likely 10 hear some very extravagant stories about the Mexican border during the nejt few months. The adventurers who are sccking to incite the iwo countriex to trouble along the Rle Grande for the sake of booty or ambition are here in considerable numbers, and are sometimes able | ¢age "o are truly sorry yon used them. " ATE 10 ray 3 s D that hoy—*! approval or disapproval 1 choosing the right or | bharmony with it we enjoy the pleasure of mora) Pike's Peak; that they %o attract a curlons crowd to listentotbestorien | My powdcr in safe and rehanie, and1 recetvelet. | CURR GOSSIP. e colmetaplateiraplid-bim by o A oD e apsraetl o e g easlife Of mora | uedm Lik'e Beksthal fned nevarate wegy, Fldorsto. Th taraevery day from ladier and gentlemen thanking i ol po Teal eat, of the wonders of their Eldoralo. These are volce that was solemn with gravity of “appre. ealth, strength, and lmpeccability, Tt also ex- —————————— ma for ttie powder which bad secured them such MODERN GREECE. & 7 | that cholce. That Is all therais of the six, or | h colored by warm Imaginings, but I have reagon | perfect bappinces. lienelon, that he wasn’t apeaking of any boy; the thirt itlons. But even the ookl plains why it is that when this morat force Is A NOTABLE COMMITTE 1o think that the one which follows fs sub- | ~ The price of the pawder ia 81, and R will be sent An Elgin woman owned a calf lie had & littie matter here— e thirseen proposition: even the Lookisn | registed and overconie, and 8 momentum to evil 2 EE. tally 4 At all events, T have it from | on receipt of money by return mall, in a well- Most beantifally brindied, (b, pools, poohi ! Oh pshaw,” exclalmed the | definitions reduced to their lowest terms are not | 18 attained, there Is no possiblilty of self-recov- :‘l"nen;?lg! z::xe!:lemen“v'hn .om'gunmldcmblu sealed ‘e“v:y'vp.:"l'c‘zlt;n.:drnnm mflnly;‘lfil‘ona" :\llvfl 1 And, by his wrong and wicked pranks, debtor, wm'lnz&fl: muul"?ln[h the t' e u{l n{ n definition, In the exact scnse of the word. f{l‘:&‘i{'}:{f lm}:nthe;e hl’!‘" gge l{hn n.;u Origin of the Committee of Tays ang 8 wearean n ceore o direction, reassurance and tranquilliziog patronage thad len m 4 preciplce return Menns=The Men Who Liave Dee time n the service of the Gorerameat slong | A1 Sommanictions siicy condaeniinl " A Her righteons wrath was kindled. il betore mred lh?lttunurs G hix volce, Nt :flf’{l"‘:fl?fi,:”fm:’m;', cepscitnee; ot the n;v.‘f;fi pon Himaell when Bl way dow (n bfe | piead, sk ln 0 rder, and wlho coula have no i) " She 3 a bit of it; nota bit of ft, my good sir. 5 i 8 escent, He may have power to grasp o e s o i W8 fmaginatfon | There were 8 large number of thess cirenlara s Lot 2 el ik Nothing _the "maiter with' Wim' ab s | know, all exlating attempta to dellne consclence | rope, but he fnust be drawn 4p by a stronger | e Rene, ; apcctal Intercst tn calling Upon 18 I s bt | Rreparcd for malling when the arrest was made. Temnskssereeely eating; < no moro than thers {a with me. It's | partakemore of the natare of a treattse than of | hand on the rock above him. ¢ origin fn the Congress of the Unity for his facts. At any rate, t! nahucryn. WS DI | The crentar was usunily followed by an order :h:cz.l::: .n:nbym may think, just_uatural, inborn mearmess, sir. 1 don't | an axiom. Tiis lack of accuracy and versniculty 1 would not apply the word “consclence * to | Btates of the Committee of Ways and Means, raache, as told to me, runs in this way: aul the necegsary dotlar. In the room was alzo y of batting. know, either, tit the boy doca it for pure | i ooobanls chargeable with much of the the moral naturcs of animais below man, be- | the names of the eminent men who hase beeg A FEOOAL RORDBR FARMER. a quantity of the powder In butk, which reeem- micannesss, cither, I won't say that; but it's P & a pick r 1 q | cause the meantng of the word as generally un- | placed at the head of this importaut Commiste Col. Ring fs & falr Lype of one of the former | blcs White chalk. ~The directions for use wero Now, in thene days of rines and eliquee, wickedness, sir. 1t's desiltry. It's orloinal | confusion and wysticlsm of moral and | geratood is alrcady extended to the confusfon of auring our national lfe, and the territoriy & eudst Knichts of oor Mexican border. He | 2C0t With the powder, but wore written and not Tt was a crnel thing sitn. Wby, there ain’t nothing the matter with | metaphysical philosophy. - The mathematician | ldcus, and for the further §aml reason that man | gotoF AN R e of ita il o eudal e . b rinted. Bamples procured hy Mr. Comstock Forcalf and woraa then and thero the boy. ile's healthy, and lic's smart. Gol a | tells us that a straight line is tho shortest dis- | bas & nature not in any degree thared by the &l alrmanshiy found bfs way to Mexico during the Mcxican } [n his traflic sith her ure decidadly queer. To form & buttin'-ring. Urighg tnfud, Thinks quicker than any boy I | tance between two ponte. In secking Lo reach snimals below him, uamely: a spiritnal nature. | 8mong the several States, or as between yny War, as a camp-follower In the wake of the | ~Tiie discivsures were astounding, and showed thisfown, Goes In swinniing in March, and | oo o b e e Mr. Cook says ho | A Foush illustration from chemistry will illus- [ North and South, present many polnts of fa. army. Bubsequently he became a catin-bog on | Lo what adeplorable extent the morals of female *Twas In the dairy, eve fine day, 1've scen that boy skating on the pond in De- 3 oy, A0 V! trate my meaning. lron in combination with | teresting observation. The recordsof the Il eambont on the Lower Mo Geande. Tl | CollcRes and scminarics were being debauched While running her bash-catter, cember in his bare feot. \Vl:{. here one day | #pent nine days of what we may call mathe- | gulphur is calied a pyrite; In combination with | o Repreacntatives exbibit the followi e :‘Mmi A a little money in this pursuit, and b’1'el::‘:(::::(£::=lr;dlclcd by the United Btates This calf made up his moley mund last aummera poor wretch of 'a bLlind fiddler | matico-metaonysical study, with the resalt abovo | oxygin is called oxide; in combination with car- g onlery; | was singlng and playing around here, lost his bon is called stecl. Now, it would be untrue to | (/¥iV 24, 1780, —Ordered, Thata Committee of dog, Lean, swnart, faituful, hall starved cur soon had accumulated enough to bewdn ateam- | Grand Jury on twenty-two counts, and relensed, ‘fa batt her in the butter. giten, Doctasts sakd 1o te thetrusks piliono: say that steel {s a pyrite or apyrite is sieel. Ho | pioft Af Means, 10 consist of a mamber fromency 5 liers, arriving at great truths by intuitive pro- by Stafe, be appointed, to which 1t shall be ref, ‘boating on bis own account. The accumulnted | after rome difficulty, on bail; since when sbe that Ted him around, fell Into an old well, dowa | P the law of righteousness fu; the spirited natura | g etred N"hlngs of lin steamboat. ho fovested tn Span. | has been non erf. Yestenlay her care wascalled, n,?;“ :nl\ °;“d' ;’r,: "MT‘{“,"!“' A ty the brick yanl, oric day,and the olil musiclan Sosnos Mr. Tyudallsays that Matthew Arnold's | of man may appropriately be named consclpuce, p';:;:-'n'dnl': 2:1:';-‘12"‘3'-fi;’;‘t’fi‘:fi;;fi’:ffi&fl? fah Jand grants, saving lis grants untf] fic hud | and she was not present, bt last night ehe was RC SR LR 8 SaLKL came near foliowing him, Old man neariy | *Tliat not of ourselves which makes for right- | whilo the ssmelaw aperating on materlal ofgan: | service of the United States the carfent voar, cor pecured o large amount of “acreage,” which | found and placed in custody. Her trial will he- Bot, 23 the oatter wasn't stamped, beartbroke, you knaw, for the dog supporicil | eousness,” Is the poctrs of sclence. But the | fsms wonld produce s result having poluts of | torevort thereon. Chaleman, Thome Fitzimson, he settled In_one locality. From_thie thne of [ &in to-mortow, Iler counsel expects to secure She then got {n her work, tim_morc thsn his singing. and fddle did, poetry of sclenco ia tiie commonplace matter of | Fesemblance to consclence In man, and yet be | Fennsyisania, the Mexican War until our late Civil War, he | ber acquittal on technlealitics. But, whether Mighty smart dog, you know, splendldl; $ wholly different, except In the ono éommon Sepl, 17, 1780, —Ordered. That the Commis, devotod hmsell to agriculfural pursuits, ' At | 8be be consicled or not, the public have learned Tow If this Gregcefan incldent irained, danced, went dead, "cottected the Tack of ma ptulosontiy s “Mes Andld, Ja Tactor, b of Rarnand Means e dichareed i fie the outbreak of tholast War he commenced :‘lf‘fl:“:i‘:"x"‘f’ :‘:;:;“:h:’;“ew"‘lf:l“_'!f_!‘il;.x‘:f'":')’fi To taneh your hearta shonld fall, woney, steod on his head, and throwed | €@ T o, 1f these sucgestions lay hotd of the clewa to | [Fefieie, o8 the buel Beoaary B ,r:!d;':?l conceded tho essentlal fact of Thelsm, which Is tho foundation-stone of moral phllosophy. By processes, and in a fi¢ld the furthcst removed from systematic thcology, ho has fdentified n forea which {8 the ultimate of theology, s it ls the ultmate of aclence. Io describes fn a phrase what thcology puts in threc letters,— God. And to Calvinlstic theology at least, the (des of the absolute and universal . relmn of frrevocable law 18 not allen, These laws nre deflued as de- crees, & term which carrics with 1t the fdeaof resistless power, Rod upon which, thercfore, acl- ence and Calvinlsm nre at peace. Assuming, therefore, the oxistence of a unlversal govern- ment of law, I identily conscience as the out- come ot one of the clauscs of the universal con- atitution and deflne it to be The effect of the law of righteonaness upon the Auman organiem. Or, to use Matthew Arnold’s descriptive phraso, “’hm force, not of ourselves, which makes for right- cousnesa " acting upon ourselves. There Is o gencrallzation so far outsido of the old metaphysical Tabyreinth ns to cover a great mass of moral phenoinena which the metaphy- sicians and morul plilosophers bavo hitherio refused to recognize, It also cuts us loose from any necessity of sccking to verify, on the one side, Kant's supposed demonstratfon that con- sclence s intuitive and Infallible, or, on the vther, John Foster's supposcd demonstration that consclenco is nothing more than a * bundle of habits," The breadth of this gencrallzation will be perceived when we remember that the law of righteousness is manifested not only in human consclousuess and conduct, but In the ongoln of tho unlverse, aud of every form of life ane nctivity o 1t} that it Is as really manifeat in tho vegetable and in the animal kindgdoms below man as fn man himself, For no theory yet ad- duced, or possibla to be adduced, will secount for 8o much as the detleate nencilings of a tlow- er, without recogniziug a moral force behind it. 1t the lower wero a rude splotch of red or vel- 10w, it would attruct the {nse:t as well as it does now with all its exquisite tracery and shading, unless, indeed, weo recognize an wmsthetle fuctulty In the bees, which would only be admittin, auother manifestation of tho dniversal law of hteousneas. jome ono mu{ say that ho secs no sort of re- latlon between thie physieal beauty of the flower and_morul beauty lu man, But thore {s apoint of idengity,~a fuctor common to cach. Up to Lhie limits of the necessitics of tho flower for the performanco of its functions thero 1s no resem- Dlance between its beanty and the beauty of such a virtue, for instance, as charity, But so Boon ns supcrfiuous beauty and swectness arg renchied (those heyond the necessitics of the plant itscif—and this lupemult{ no one witl deny), then benevolence appears. Thero s, then, o law In the plant's life which makes for benevo- lence. A siinple process of logic will fdentify tlic common factor, If we could finagine tho plant as endowed with consclousness and will, we should not hesitate to recognize the exlst- ence of conscience In the plant. And it we could linagine the righteous man as stripped of consclousness uud will, we should claseify his benevolance with that of the plant, The reason why tho plant {s not a respousible moral agent {a because it Is not endowed with tho nocessary conscfousneas and will, ‘The reader, not frightened by any spectro of anmmm or materialism will respond, * True, ut it Is not the plants, but God's benevolence, that Is thus manifested in the plant.’" And to I I reply, “ True also, O friend, and cqually true that it is not man’s, but God’s, benevolence that {s thus manifested {n man” * There 8 o mighty difference in dezree and a wide contrast in inanifestation, but the eontrolling force of rightoousiess In each 1s the same. There s so much parsiinony In nature that the same resnlts are overywhere provided for by the same laws, 1t consclenca is, then, thosum of the phe- Tomena mumnF from tne influence of & uni- versal law of rightcousness npon the human or~ nism, we have also tho key to the morst qual- tles evinced h( tho animals bolow man,—the social **instincis,” as we call them, of bees and beavers, the Instances of individual compassion, maguanimity, and mutual helpfutness among thum, the gratitude and affection of the dog sud tho ofuplumt toward man, and the thousand vo- litions o the lower anitnals vrhlchupsmnr to have thefr origin In o moral nature, Iitherto it has been the habit of moral aud metaphysical philosopliers to gnore or to deny the exist- ence of any trace of morality among them, but it can be done no longer. "No man can trame u detinition of morals or norality that shall ex. clude a vast variety of moral phicnomenaamong the animals below man. These phonomens have made an impreasion s0 strong upon _minds famillar with the babits aud actions of dowmestic and other anlmals that thie question bos often recurred whother they uay not be immortal, The Etteick Shepherd’s loving sympathy with his quadruped frlends led him to exclaim: %1 canna but belleve that ppcrations in cotton, in which he winde another Tortune. The excitements of the border, and the love of speculation together, hel tomake dm rebellious duriog the War, and he became » Rebel of that pussive sort which permitted sther people to du the fighting while hie pocket- #l the gafus, [ am Inforined by an officer in pommand along the bonder that during the War Col. King found a more cougenlal restlence utn of the Ko than nortitof it, Uels 8 mun years of aae, of Irlsh parcntage. Ile lns u hinily of three daughters, whom he s wdncating # Loulsville, Ky., and who are tho heiresscs to he most. MAONIFICENT FRUDAL ESTATA n Republican Amerfea. As might be expected Yom nis life, Klug Is a man of little education, jut posscrecs miuch nataral ability, awd has wequired considerable polish from contact with tie world. Ie has had no time for cultiva- fon, !e now owns most of ke steam- soats ou the Rio Grunde, and coutrols e Guif ftrade between Galveston and New Drleans, 1lis rancho posscases the magnlficent sroportions which can he best appreciated by the ambltlous 3Vestern farmcr, 1l estate taclf comprises 160,000 acres. Of this, 100,000 wre under fence, In one Inclosure thero are 100 niles of fencing, built at a cost of $600 per mile, The ranche Is ritasted |n a diversified sountry on the Lower Rlo, made up in part of rich low landg, and in_ part of wooded rolling oiils, The figuren which represent s stock are of such a character that the addition of » cipher or two would make no sporeclable Aifference in the imagination of the ondle pary reader. He bus 22,000 horses, 30,- 0~ cows, 60,000 stock ecattle, B0,000 mules, 75,000 sheep, and jocknsses and pigs in connt- Jess numbers, He employs 800 Mexicaus to mauage hisranche, They are of a pecullur tribe or clan, from which the fierdsmen of the borler sru usually chosen, and aro of n very differcut tharscter from the roving bandit clans whose uccutnnunn cousiats in predatory lucurslons upon our {erritory, These henders are tame, guiety {noffensive,and falthful, and constitute in them- sclves an army olther for offenscor dofense which the Isolated bands of plunderers do not necd- Teealy attack. % THE HANCHD ITSELY s o large brick building, uvpretentious ln ap- pearnnce, but comfortabld In its appaintments, A targe brick warchouso {5 necessary ta contain the stores of this plantation. One’ scction of thls storc-house, strongly bullt, is called tho “Treasury.” Tn It this farmer Knight of the Border kéeps Lis money, mostly in the shape of Bold and silver colns packed in bags. TIOW HE SPENDS 1118 MONRY. The * Colouel " had occaslon, when my in- formant was there, to go to the nearest largo town on commercial business, Ho travels ina style cotresponding In_lavishness with the ex- tent of his own broad cstate. The spending- money for the trip was coutmned {n Hifteen or twenty bags of consfderablo alze, filled with gold and sflver colus. On arriving at the littie town ho threw out thess bhags on the ground with carcless unconcern, and_directed the hotel an to take care of thein. ‘Thoy were stowed away by the landlord with equal enrvlessness behind the bar on the floor, as if they were so much plg-lrun, useicss as pocket-mouney and difiicult to be curried away, Call Stanley back from Africa, all kinds of tricks, Well, § rockon the two To lell o yon a Raflirtale. Cmaonr, was about two dags trying to get the dog out. i 8ldes of well were dangerous, nobody would go PUNCH, -{uwub ‘\\'elllau|dccpmnud durklcouhml’%no"lhu oy ut coul icar him moaning and howling, Todiy e e . B ty-thied | Well, thia Bilt Banders. saki. he'd get bim out. A ghty-third | G dothies-line and tled a big stecl-trap to i, auniversay of the Introduction to civilization of | yjed on a good buit, and let the' trap dowu Into that world-renowed beverage, punch. Un- | thedark. Pretty soon hears a sharp, muflled, willing that the birthday of snything so aged | half-strungled anort and yelp frowm the dog, an anil famed should, slip by unnoticed, and more | Bill bauled bitin up, wrigggling and kleklnul nose to Hlustrate the complote revolution In sochl {,’:,;’";:a‘2“3,;‘;1&‘;1‘;,}'“"{‘;‘,?10"‘&"g;h Iken customs and mannets a hundred years or 80 | Jors— t has effected, rather than to draw a moral, we But tho collector broke in rather impatiently present the odd history of Punch’s early daye. W‘fl! that thx‘] &“fi:-fwufiffifik‘ffi'&mfi?fi" Admiral Fdward Russcll was then command- | andhe wantes piad ! pio.ch, ing the Lritish squadron tn the Mediterrancan, | ri4f this uccount of SLT.85 which Taro & Trol and, having heard the tniraculous virtues of | gver time nearly three months now. putch extolled by his sallors, who had brought ‘The d‘chlor took the bitl and looked at it a fow the secret of Its compounding from the East | moments. Oly, yes," he sald, very dellberately, after n indies h; d"'"dl “" origlanl eml Honater while, ’ uri'ng which the hapatient collector method of presenting it to publle fuvor, Tle | jyo g™ and’ danced about the room. * Oh, selected the Valenclan town of Allcante, and [ LoROt! Qi BEEE wepis LSO, Pl the, most beautiful gurden I the.tomn, | Fihe Luilding bofors I enino hord, and it out el T © RAT- | only three weeks sfter I came to Burlington, den, where four wwatks met, was & marble [oun- | Yo voe, my name's J. 1. Sinclatr. 1 don't owo :,:,I‘:' ::‘ln;,:,f:g" he y g]flr:l'n:mn::!;n;l ':{?:'fi“ Tare & Tret a dollar, never doue nnr busincss “,,“Th_,;o," Four homsheads of hrandy, g with 'em {n my life, and never will so long as et Matage wine. 50,000 gallone of Hone | there's any plico clse in the markot to buy. B 200 o o i S | This man Sarmot 18 In Texas, He's no goods o Julee, 200 lomant, thirtecn hundredwelalit of | 4. b “You'il never get a cent on that bit In tho line white puicur, fivo, Rounda® welght of grated | worid.” You sce, this Tom Marmot—> nutmegs, ¢ oasted blseult, and” ele] 0ga- o e th . ;:cmil or" v‘vlnlc:;’ cunnf:{.umd tuwl ln;:mllnnll‘n. 5‘0 nulwi“et ;};&,mm;‘_’i‘"‘ collector snatched the bill, ecp out the n and prevent evaporation, an w Why didn't vou tell me this beforet" logunt canopy s, oversbread, und o B3t | _yyaridd out tio soor, leaving the entertalning a sl ,x w&'. rowed around the fountaln tg tradesman to wonder what fn the name of sensc p L0 afled the man, and It anybody was fool enouch ::,"’:‘ .u':f-l(,“,‘:mhl:m,‘:{a :llw '}f::kl:.’.‘ fl:,“":l"'f:r to suppose he was golng to pay all of Tom Mar- oA ced, c] opularity iy Uecame inatantancous, and its potrons and | Mo '&:}f bilia. just becauss ho inoved into kls devotces numborless. We arc disposed to | o148 s r'cm:rd Ilur introduction lwlm fl: lllflht QuIIs, degrec of reverence, since . 3 fatlier, 80 to spcak, was an English cle r‘x‘mn. A man born to conunand fs different fromone :h:n l(elvi fltxmrvh'l":ouuo. I(i'hnul:;lg o{, hcr’ 'h]up made to order. ¥'s abip Assistance. Ile made Punch's sc- s s ls'uulnlan‘v’:c. and, If his diary is any evidence, mflp{l “": ponings: rab-traps.. Fall opeulngs: they continued firm frienda through life. In | cieatnut-bura. that year he first tasted of part of threo bowls, $'Only the female mosquito bites"; but thoy and ho natvely remarks that he had some difl- | average ninety-nine females outof n possiblo culty in inding Lis plllow on retiring, hundred. Punch at_once stepped Into politles and be- b camo the boon companion of the Whigs,nl- | Whena Virginia gentleman ssks another to though the Torles regarded it us n foreizn fnter- | drink, he blandly says: * Shall we give the pub- loper, coming in_about the same timeasan | )ie debt a HEL1? And they lift. alien usurper. King Willilam's statesmen and followers, botl Dutch and English, sworo byit, | Little Johnny ls quite sure the pletursof n and even its virtues found favor with ‘the | Spitz do¥ he drew on the parlor wall was gcod, clcxl-ryi. ‘I‘I;I?uol o{ w{l;‘mlu zrru tl(mxd lfo “’I‘t pr’xlu;u beeause It mado his father mad. and Taith n thelr devotions . Tho “ (3 styled it an orthodox drink. They used puncii. m,,:'y,’fi.’:‘m'ifl‘:':"w:: "’.'i':,‘;' ,'{,}X‘.';,’,‘ ],':,'3,{ bowls as baptismal fonts. Disscuters and Hizh | who stole the mare not gullty, Churchmen, by the sacred purposes for which W o they used them, servod to add to thelr semi- oy by Aong o st tho dhaller’™s hulivmuhummr. 'aud 1t was with a peculinrly an- This £ he: ‘,:“"lh";',‘::;"';"d e cestral und paternal prido that the fathor drank o uoy shntton th OMORE umpers to his friends from the bowl that bis - g me.u-mm aod children had been christened | ' What will become of the Jast mant" saysn o, sclentifls exchange. Why, manufacturing shocs £ven the medical profession were not slow in | by machinery is knocking bim out of the busi- gnyhu: thelir addresses to this new Bacchanalfan | ness. everaze. 'They o not now recommend bitters A man declares that [t Is {mpossible for him and tonles, invizorators and matutinal drughts, | 15 keop out of trouble, for in tl‘l’u Lest of tines with any more of zeal than did their I, ‘mu-a- " tean pn{tut pes centuries ago pralse thu{v rtues mfi?:l&e," UrieC bl o3 il Ll of puncli, e, Shorty u physician of ropute and leatning, wrote, in 13150, “'thatfouncn fs an ad. | Balda politiciun to bis son: * Look at me| 1 miirable quor,—the beat Nyuor in tho world,— | began as an Alderman, und hera atn at the top tl‘ludunltvefim canuot afford a better lquor for fxlnm‘.hf e u:‘cl'lnv‘v'lm'- l’)‘q my rfm‘;é:l rWhy v J i1 LS “Tomake a good punch waa esteemed an go- | i tho cits: “To this the young liopeful re- complishment, +0 much so that not ooly fndl- v"ed' *“Yes, dad, when you dio—but not thl vlcllu'sln l;;b‘ulm.--l r:uuwn In:'l llle'lr peeu! "l.n‘rld l'tI)’- hen. cclpts, but cven towns and citles coutenude with each other as to where the best was made, ,fl:.flf,:"’?né' '.,35:"'3{‘} ‘n':l :n‘:g:;{-“gt‘ u: QGlasgow long enjoyed pre-eminence for the ox- | things asked what an uvcmm': ‘was. Soveral boys cellence of its “punches, Denizens of other | pleaded Iy norunce, but vne at last replied: 1t burga could not vie with the artistic manipula- | {s whntn?leu tays on,” The answer pmlfid the tions nor the mmfl{ of the Iugredients of the | Bishop not s litile, but tho boy perulsted In it punch concoctions of that town. stating that he had read it in his little book of Puneh-bowls, too, that formerly were handed | facts, 1ie was then told to bring his lttle {rtx:xfi-:’ !::h‘fa :fu:?:.'. trosanred 0 h'f-"m aud re- | book, anil on dolng g0 Le pointed triumphant) ¢ e carvi ‘s or decoratod with vine-Inspired paintings, are }f,: 1:'::;’";.".2“.";’;2::3’[:;%}(, ,’{2‘: ,"e‘,’,':‘%' He among the iogs of the pust. In tlib lust = 2 eentury s punch-bowl was ‘estcemed . & suit- Y ABMAZ -!hluk gnlnfut trnmw L8 banker }olhl- l?}‘" e “'B,E’,f ,‘,’,‘,f,nm,,., AZONY clerk, u shipowuer s succeasful sea Ca 4 taln.' ‘Tavera signs lured to tho lttmtlml;: Wvl:an Qibson modceled tho ** Wounded Ama- within .m,nn“,i to the quamntness of their de- | Zon,” he sald to afriecnd of mine wha weut to slin or orlelnality of thelr vxecutlon, and the | Lis studlo to sce tho statua in the clay, % Yes, nunch-bowl always appeared as a cenlral Bgure. | that {s my *Wouuded Amazon.'" You have Addison mentlous one In Chariog Cross with a ¢ couple of nnuullu hovcHnK nvnr:n. squeezing in doubtless heard Gluson's pecullar, dry, crisp femous, and the original +* Mat of the Mint!! {n | mode of talking Imitated, and can kmagino how ‘“The Beggar's Opera,'one Bplller, * afcllow of | he spoke. *Yes, L call it a ¢ Wounded Ama- futinte jest,” at whwss house in Clare Lane all | zon,” but that statue is a proot of how useful it the artlsts of the Howarthlan vra found free and | g sor an artist to keep bls eyes open, Now, kindly weleome, bad a sizn destancd by the | how do you think I found that poso! I was jor great master of English caricature. representing | {1¢'alonie the atrect, aud I saw u wirl catchiog o himsell fu the blg-wigezed garb of tne perlody’| oa, Yes, 1 um;1 whe was catching a flea the'truth, they lead also with greas directness i and certalnt, gu ond the immediate phenomens o!lt)r'n;lil:llefig}:l_c:)l'::&rmlq;;‘:'uf Jf.‘;".:':‘nfi}“a‘};‘. 17 undor consideration. This law of righteous- | mittes "of Ways and Mcans be appolnted: whow ness, everywhere found, is a moral, not a physi- | duty it ahall be to take Into consideration all yaey cal, fnw, though it permeates all lawa, It ls” as | reports of the Troasury Department and all guch nbsolute and ultimato as gravitation. It cau- | Propoaitions relative to the revenue aa may be re. Bot have & material origin nor. be derlved from | ferred to them by the Houges to inqulre inio e the Interaction of materlal laws, ‘1L can be | 3180 ofthe public devt, of the rovenue, and of e . nothing less than the expression and tha fnstru- | SXPeRS (AT, A7 16 ebort from time to tine ey nient of an omnipotent, all-pervading, nod | §onth Carolinn: Lot 0 Smill, absolutely rightaous will, gutded by unlimlted Dec, 24, 1705, —Ordered, That the report of thy iutcligence, " The fact that it is found in-the | Secrctary'of tha Trensury, ncmmnnmmf'whh eatl. Jower as well as in the higher forms of life and | mates of the sums neceun%:ln be nppropriated for activity—vegetable, auimal, cosmical, spicitual | the morvice ol the year 1700, alno statements of —18 Jiroo{ not only that ali these are from the | the application of cirtaln sums of money granted }m'n) of one un("]?"(";:x'gn" but that “"1“ &""fi“" hy':nnv.v, be referred to the Committee of Waysand s tho sourco of all rightenusncss, and im- & self intinitcly good, just, and bencvolent. e 3}"“12‘,’:";.’.,”‘31‘,‘;'.‘;'; fl’";:;},f;‘&‘f“f:& PUILOSOPHER. | duty It whall be to take into constderation all acy ———.-_‘ — mmml &l ':nu '{;fiuu{y lgupuflmmt and all sach propositions rel ve Lo the rovi e . THAT PLTRII‘ IED N[AN' sen!ed to them by the Hmu:; 'i'fi:ulm:l.:lrl:. n?.?{;‘ —_— ntate of public debt, of the revenae and of the ez. Prof, J, F. Todd, of Tabor Oollege, Examinas | pendliures, and to report from time to time their 1t Critically and Pronounces TLa Frand, | SPinion thereon, Chalrmas, Atr. Willlsm S, To the Editor of the Councu Biuge Nonpariel. i Tanon COLLEGE, Oct. 18.—It was the privilege | 1t oulld scem from thia record that Congre began, in partial imitation of the House of Com- of the writer to sce and examine quite carefully mons, by creatinz a committee of “supply,” y the famous * petrificd mun® from Colorado | shich, probably, was rcforred the cstimaty while he was on cxhibition tu your city, :‘;fi“:v‘fic rom, :hgo};:l»;lulltl:gzto?n;{‘ anlu Treasury, As some of your readers may have somc . SUPDLY Feported, curiosity to know liow it appeared to one some- fzfl;fil{v‘;?,::firflffif'cc}:s}a'a”fizt::ncxy n'w what familiar with “*petrifactions,” the follow- | of ning members, but of *a mnember from each fog ts offered: The *prehlstoric man may | State.” And thls busincss was, on Bept. 17, have been corrcetly represented, but he was }2’-‘];:3'::'(‘4’:‘73 b‘:'cck“:;yt“h:n% li‘“.:‘;‘:’c;‘mm“‘ most certainiy not pdrified, This was quite cvi- OF O sileration and roport. Under the Enil, dent, almost atn glance, from its full-fleshed “;,u' at that ,,|m,'," the "muc‘, ‘,; co,','.'fn;,l.l.' ITI form. No parts were shrunken; there wasno | not vote money unloss asked by tho Crown collapslng of the abdomen or sinking of the | The foundation of ‘all taxes was the declaration oyes. - These poluts could not be explained by | of the Crown that they were essential, but the anv thick focrustation supporting the surface. fif,‘,’,w(:‘(l{m "&,fi’:“?-’,,{:‘,'fi?&?::‘“rsofl:S{;‘f{gfl; ‘The apparent Incrustation covering it was only | tho'report of the Ways and Means Conmimittes an appearance, else It would have elearcd off | went back to the Exceutive for approval, sins at some point, or ft would have shown itsclf | In Englaud tho Crown domanded "moury, the when parts wera broken off. But many other | Commons granted, and the Lords nzsciitedto poluts may be mentloned, any ot of which fs | the grant. sutliclent to prove the statement above. The 1n 1795 1t scoms that all tho estimates of the body s composed of a dark-colored fosailiferous | Treasury wers sent directly to tho Cominittes limestone, 'This s shown Ly fragmeute from | Of Waya and Means, without any intervention tha interlor, kindly shown by the exhibitor, ns | of 8 conunittce on supply, and early in thi well 88 by traces upon the surface. Oue of tue | ventury thu present Ways ‘and Means Commi- fragments sbiowed a portion of apparently a | teo had a permanont cxfstencs n each Con- conchifer shell, containing crystals of calclle. | Rress as a scloct committeo composed of nloy Such n cluster of crystals, probably due to the | members. resence of another shell, produces In tho right | The records befora us do not disclose plearly orearm o flaw in_tho stone, which, from ita | the constitution of tho Committee during the shape, suggcats the direction of petrifactlon, | First, Becoud, and Third Cunmsuhnud frideed Louking further, with such an Idea in mind, | In those ncarcr our own day thero is o want of five scams are found nearly varallol with one | precision as to dates of realznation and il another; cne through the meck and shoulder, | Ing vacancics, but tho following llst of names iwo across the body and loft arn above the | of those members who have been at the heal elvow, another ncross the hips, and the fisth | of this Committes s olherwiss substautislly across the legs below the kunees. These scams aroa demonstration of the stratiflied character of the stone. A patrifaction micht break, but not thus in places parallel to one another and cutting right through dissiinilar parts, whether connected or not. Another very conclusive polnt lsthe fact that wherever scparate members lie one upon an- other, the angle between the surfaces s not acute In a sluglo instauce, but invariably the arms are bound to the body where they rest upon it, and the legs are bound together where they touck by & mass of stone. In fact, thero arono acute dogles in tha surface, no furrows, except such a8 might have been madeby blunf instrument about half an luch wide at the point. ‘The pits upon the surtace wera clearly formed b{n similar instrument, the direction of the blow in many cascs being cloarly shown. i But eoough to prove that it 1a not o petrifac- on. & ‘The next guestion b whether it is ver: ancient, Cau it Lo a work ol some prehlstoric artist? [t ts clear thatit Is cut to represent o reclining figure. It could not have besn sup- ported in sn uprignt position. The general symmetry of parts secma to have been care- fully studied and pretty pattontly worked out. ‘The left lorcarm, however, is about cu fuch louger than the right. ‘The fingers are appar- i} fmr, dl:pm{;’nnlnnu&l?’ I-ngm’t.fhnnel n;‘u: m:i Willlam K. Morrl n forming the second finger of the right han tho artist apparently sccidentally broke it off Bal;"'.‘llx?rnwshtnl'cln.iclm:"vv‘n“bc‘lg?:u{?zc:’minm equal in lengthto tho third, then tried toImi- | wor aa the slave-labor Statcs—have badie tate a beat Joiut and got it too near the end. | Chajrmanship of the Comumittee during mucd ‘The.rough surfuce was used spparontly to ex- | moro than bait the period since the Guyernmeat EmpL et dleoty el detall hias beun [n existonice under the Conatitutine, ition of e loft lex scemd to have | 4y tnat Virginia and South Curoling bave exch been choscn to more easfly exhibit the caudal | haq tha office Junger than any other State appendage. The general forni s clearly Intond- | _jonger aven than Ohio, which had it for nioe ed to represent that of au indlan. 'Tho feot, [ yours” New York tas not been thus honored however, have the Simlan characier of & short- | g1,00 1853, when Mr. Filluiors was selected, s1d encd d"‘"""!"qhwd great toe, which, In | 4iycq 1850'the hnad of the Wiys atid Mexok bt connectivn with the long neck and short chin, I | pegn taken from the West snd Nurtb. llflplylmnumoun. ther latelligent G 3 uxley or uny other latolligens comparative anatomist would at oaca pronounce the combli- i A TUBEROSE, nation of wuch characteristics mbsurd and wholly incousistent with she harmonies of na- Whits, wazen, still, achiool-lite of thelr daughters. Thousands of lighly-respected youung misses may give thanks that thelr names are not blasted by their ex- posure. HawReYE, ————— RAILROAD EXTORTIONS. Volly of Tligh Tarlff an Gratn Freight, New Yort I'ridune, Oct. A, The raflrond managers are killiog the hen that 1ald the eolden eza. Thelr one chance of temporary recovery from the extreme distrust which thelr mismanngement and concealment of facts bad caused, and which, in turn, had Urought them to the very verge of bankruptey, waa in the increased carnings promised bya large crop of graln, But, with rare {atuity, they are shutting and barring against themselves that last door of escape, by successive advances of ratea far beyond the figures which, they have clafmed, yleld them = bandsome proflt, and at which grain fs nmow moved in great quantitics by lake awd capal. The* consequences are well worth the attention of stockholders. Since the 1st of Aupust, the rhipments of grain (rom the elght chief West- ern markets huve been harely 1,000,000 bushels per week by rafl—10,312,231 bushels in ten weeks. Moreover, although enormous guanti- ties of grain are now pressing forward, the rail- ronds are obtaintng more than they ald in Au- eust, and absolutely less than they moved in Muy, beforo the price of stocks had fallen to the Joweat polut, During the two weeks end- ing May 12, the shipmcuts by rail wero 2,550,000 bushels, and by lake 4,400,000 bushels. Hu dnvinfi the two weeks endiug Oct. 13,—thelatest ofllcially reported,—tho shipments ftom the samo points*were only 1,955,314 bushels by rall and 0,563,001 bushels by water. No wonder. that men begin to sce that the large crop wiil not drag out of haukruptey roads which are so wanaged as to transport. In the height of the movement, Jeas than thoy secured fn May, from the fagend of n small’ crop. Tho inanagers talk continually of the “lack of cars.”” Yet, the vary same roads moved, from the very same Western arkets, an sveraoge of more than 2,000,000 bushels per weak (over 14,000.000 bushals) for nine weeks fn successlon Irst year, tlaviog trained themselves loug to the concenl- ment of truth, the manngers ngvnruuny are practicing upon the ercdullty of the public with storics that are palpably not true. The one thing certaln {3 that the ratlronds have contrived to move less grain this year from a very large crop than they moved last year from s very smull crop. L year, during the eloven wecks cuding Oct. 14, the rallrosds moved from Western ports 17,833, 849 Lushcls; this year, during the cleven weeks endlug Oct. 13,3ithey have moved only;10,~ 53,147 bushels. All" ths enormoua {ncreasc, over 7,000,000 bushels more, Lhe railwasa lost, and yet they labored to make people bu stocks in the faifh that a great crop would pul then out of trouble. To the credit of the public, it resolutely decliued to be gulled * Meanwhile, tho enormous movement, from other countrics as well as from Lhe United Btates, begius to have its effect. In Ureat Brit- ain, to latest mall dates, the surplus of deliver- les of wheat over consumption had amountod to 6,720,000 bushels, against 5,178,000 bushels to the same timo last year: the Aunplg Was accum- luting at the rate of 1,500,000 bushels per, week In excess of demand, and there waa a stendy do- cline (v price. The shipments from British In- dfa this year have becn, Lo iateat dates, over 5,000,000 bushels larger than those of last year, and the shipments from Egypt rere -also much larger. Australla, at Tatest advices, promised o wurplus avallable for exportation ot 8.000,000 to 10.000,- 000 busbicls. ‘The shipments of wheat from this. cuuntry, durluE eight weeks ending Oct. 17, wora 8,351,421 Lusiftls larger than during the corrcspflmllnk weeks last fllll‘, but by no means as larre as they might huve been. The lake fleet and canal boats were crowded, but the rull- roads moved only about 8,000,000 bushcls, when they had_on hand abundant rolling stock to mave 16,000,000 busbels Iu that time, as they did In less than eight weeks last year. The marketa of Europo are being rapld- 1y Mllwl. The demand may be expected to subside when uavization closes, both be- catss the supply accurilated wiill then be largte, and because the Western farmor will not bo in haste to sell at low prices, pr.lymgln the ruflronda wore than twice therates they charged last year. ‘The higher the rallroads force the tates, the lesa graln they will get to carry. As for New_York, its commercs already suf- fers tram Mr, Vandesbilt's surrender of {ts | terusts, precidcly as we predicted that it would, ‘The recelpts during the last thres wecks, since the rallrond combination lifted rates, show the effect clearly, Baltimora recetved during the three weeks codlng Oct. 20, L.~ Name. State. Thoman Fitzsimmons. .. Pennsylvanis. William 8mith, . . .....S0utl Carolin, ‘South, Carollza. “Countcticat. »Viegmia. . Pennsylvaola, Tenneneee. A BATHER TOUGK BTORT. ‘The occupant of an adjoining room the noxt moming found drifting” sbout the floorina dnrk corner a wad of brown paper, which, upon picking up, he discovers Lo be a roll of green- Lm-kn. #4,500 in amount. o knocked at the ddoor f the rancher, and wakea it he had lost anytiing, The reply was that nothing had been missed. His friend showed hinm the brown rol), when King reptied, * Well, Ivow. I'll bet that Is iy roll of grenbacks. It ain't Inmy pocket, sure,” He apent 15,000 on that m{). King puys his taxes with fm“ regularity, and takes speclal palus to aid the Asseasor to make lils assessment. 1t takes scyernl days to 2ot the herds together fu order that they way he asevsscd and valued. With all his vust éstate, King has very littlo {dea of business {1 a com- werefal sense, and s casily culted, fle came wery near losing his rancho” recently through a Culifornia speculator, who almost succeeded In gi¥ing him wortliless bonds for jt. ‘The ranchers In that country, from neceasit, rather than adstocratic tendencies. have aduptes tho curtom of the English Lords. They have thelr munor houscs 0 runches in the country, snd maintafu besides a residence In town, The dangers of the bonler country are sa great, teavel {8 8o beset with perl), aud’ the conditions of human (e are so uncertain, that, during a Jarge portion ol the time, the fanmillics of the Ereat estate-owners reside In the nearest town whera there 1s & mititary post. E.B. W, « LOVE-SECRET.” . Exposure ofa Horrible Busluoss—Operatlons of u Fein *“Doctor ' at Des Aloines, Special Correpondenes of Tha Triduna, ohn W, Epp . Wililam Lowndes. 4. ..Bamuel Smith, enry L, Dawes. liinots, ny 800,000 bushels of gruin, agajust 1. | presiding over a enpacivus and well-fliled bowl. | sropped and sald to myself, *That's a prett X o Q. » . It could not, thercfore, have been made Though panring forth fe's passionate breath, Ao o, o e o e | 0 DY st ooy | Yoo ey, vt o, s | el ey o s S A | wene S ol il Gkl | Lo oty crrk e g | Ml TSR AR ‘wecks last yea! kt b - Pau - ! an luw, and sceks to vindicate it In a v - | it embodics ideas whol crelizn Rl 3 uotlced tn & weekly family paper published in | deiphin reccived 5,060,000 busbols, agalust only s'\i;‘,‘m’e 1":.‘3;:;:‘::,:"’::&:3’:}:&“ér"g:f"x"‘l‘: y;zvrkcddé;-‘ out, o 'thulrju t atonds uow us 1y | Tratcd with. more U waols';.‘-h:n:’.hi:':w:,‘:\ Tiava baca found th Aterican nnthuluc{; 1t is T e Boston, which hus & lare elreulation throughout | 1,765,000 1ust year, & jzain of 70 per cent. But [ W S SOCBIIRE PC H oun mazon.' Hut it is the very poso | jite, The fsult in his lugic, as it appears to | difficult to bellove it the work of avy snclent e ar, aLa g the Uniou, and is considercd one of the best, un | New' York received “durin, 191‘3 sauo wecks Whete'et » bawl of perch wamiks oty Il‘l‘fl t‘::;‘l‘{"lfl the tica, novertholeas, A | mo, ts that he falls to pereeive that hnmor- | band, while, ou the contrary, the Simlan fect 4 4 advertisement, carcfully worded, and especially ‘(’e‘l’f‘.ngfl';“;:'bm'm‘ "5"" cent. "i‘lhl:c‘mfi: l{:u l:nklm: opposiics we take— K Mkfl"‘nm’.“m urll'l'lyx':l‘t\::;'oln;‘r:(‘ .l: k:::p h‘h" :,‘;1 "i :‘ .331‘ :‘;‘:gu} nu:‘l;“ g.,',m:pllzw‘;,'[ ,."".‘{,‘,'.'.3 :fl;fi&vg{lc‘l&:flgf"‘hfim& E Jl‘t‘a.'glrlll(yol’t i)“:: “?'.' y i 3 o A 3 ks 3 3 g ci z J o e e e a1 40 | furge, and thiscity Increaacs Uy receints, though Topetier fized, Gost kindly ety oo | €ved always open.” of tho uythor of the soul’s existeuce ln sustaln. | Teccnt workman who bas' loarned just caougli | And cold, hearttending helr Jove-aflalrs, o cesod Lo 8 cer- | cven nuw the discriminationinrail rates {u faver And when they happlly unite, foglt. ‘The philosophical oridences of the im- | of evolutlonary views to misiuterpres or carica- Ot Iife and pain; 1aln box lu thiscity would secure further in- | of other citica begius to injure, But, when The bow) is preguant wish delight, A PET DOG. mortallty of the humun soul bear almost as | ture them, This Pueblo ‘‘petrifaction can As loving one formation. Tha suspicion of Mr, Comstock wus | Davigation closes, the dllfercnce o rates will | pyy, alosl the d.l. o8 punch were numbered, | Rover," beloved dog of Good Will Fire | strongly againat the unmomllllyl of the lower | ouly werit tho title, thereforc, because it is Whoss Ilnv-. cllnh- i menal at once aroused, and_ he began an {nveatization. ""‘u“'., "‘}'ll offect, Buipioents by ,"“‘“ WaY | In 1553, when the cholera visited bonnie Beotia's | Company, of Harrlsbury, Pa., dled on Bunday | snlmala as they do in favor of the immortality | made out of stone—not made luto stone. It Ab, nol ab, no 1t wiis soat_ discovered that the advertlsement | on Bl ‘""l e ;““:‘l “"l“c o'fil' shores, the medical [aculty took the matter In | lust. Ie wasa white Newfoundland, abaye the | ©f man. Is a worthy successor of the Cardift ‘“‘“l For mige sad thine, very large proportion of the gralo moved by | huyd, voted punch tobe a vils compound, and 1z of the b - |, Jt would extend this paper beyond proper | May its glory be briet and the planners of Bweel Gower, bow thy hesd and weep, emauatod from tho ofiice of & woman who | rail duriok the winter shipped ta tber purte. | the manarch of liquors bus never g reganed | SYCrAe size of the breed, and nad greatly en- | yuniy'to cite, specifically, the oviataces. o 'n | tho fraud mect thelr deserts. J.'E. Toop, Thookb earth be wids and bt Dad u sbiugle stuck out as & doctor, e the position of biliulous prominence froum wirichs | deared bimself to the members of the compsuy | moral nature fn the lawor animals. - Butice itio Ll lie ik BBt Ween lits away, il Wbuse epcclalty was - the diseases of PARTING, ft was thew dethroned. Punch-bowls are Lane | by his falthful atteudance st fires and parades | ssy thatths indicutons of a sonss of guilt aud AUTUMN. i And in thine heash-eods aay: . woen, Noous 'gfig't;‘ to know unytliug of — {shed to garrets aud pawnshops, or ave been | and his affectionsto disposition. After death | saimne, of furbearunceand mumanimity, of gons Ab. ool ab, st = Ler bn the iy, nor did slio supear o liave 807 | With s swelling breast and & tear-molat oye, broken aod lost. Funchics arc onty occastonully | he lny In state for sevoral hours n the engine. | CrUsity to each other aud to man, of justice and Sweat Autuma lngers yci awhile ! I R practica. ler L e r. Barsh A, Bum- | 08 EYEL AR bR %o0d-bye— sipod as an spology for not taking “atraight,” | house, Jiu was placed in neat plue box upoy | inteity in thelr own conduct, and o judging Ta grect us with bee b,{g‘f“m imflo: u Hor business, ns it now sppears, wis | - irhag word soctusl fur fricads 1o say, and, save at occasional and rare guthierings of | a bed of fresh myrtde Jeaves. Flwers and | Of the conduct of others] their long remem- Bright sanlight gliots actoss fhe telds; FAREWELL, BLUE-BIRD! )‘xlnlv‘cn:l;l:':l:xr:rnlg' :‘flr'. i :fut?lubl’ru & Jl:‘:‘:‘ffi :: “X’,,‘.{T:,‘"F cotme; | Taust bey, veleran topers, punch as it ouce was b known | gersnium leaves were strewn over the body and bmnfiv %‘l :u‘tll1 uh‘?ullllun ;n Denwe ill-treat. A droutay muemur a'er us atcals, e thie disuis of wboandini achool il and & thare ! ; ! 3 . j el — :,',';‘{,'.‘f"i',':!’: ,‘:{,‘;’e,}.}‘;‘._.“{,‘m‘;’:r‘:';n:":.'a"fim‘:‘} Kilnoss by mti‘;l<l:|!:;.rfii’tec‘fiun.u:nvli° 52:;'!?:'.-‘2 AR E oo Gain'Fing o the Weat, Plavsiate, T pary-blus,® e o o iout s ‘o 1ors | Wik Tk Tond fooi at ome mise oy ™" THAT BOY OF SANDERS" the engiie-house, tho dogwas burled fu the yur | thele trict over tho 108y ol human friends, so The ipencd corn with golden gl A I e o which derélopea tha fact tbut abo was the | Witha lasttond look stuse i Burlingion Namkeve. surroundiog th'bullding, and the Src-belf way | POmANLI somenstances as to result In death; | Fe ABEEELE, WG B0 Cen B Atnly polead, with wide-opea does, l:’&vfl‘-"fm?fl ) ':;':“fl (‘,,,L;;;‘,,‘:‘,!"u ",',i “J'o cheer my way &s & sunbeaw above, ¢ Can you settle this little bill this morning, | totled in his honor, thetr k‘l':.llun hL-ll u.-n.duvcr the death of their T'he greon wheat covers dnl-bru:v“n feMs, Lolty verandas, with gilded vaue, termed it, which possessedl » chanh which no I griave the tnore ak out pariing, siri" the collector wsked, ln bls most fnslnuat- T ¢ b e b, ‘L'"[" of admiration, And wavcs of Hight actods it steal} SBall welcome yoa in the Speing azain— wer could resist when udministercd accordtog | wigh anwiliiog stops 1 wead iny way§ ing tones, snd with his most reassuring suite. TENNYSON, Leliutay - auprgbation o thel i mwuflfif ovee hils troes adorued with colors rare Inscead of tue papiar, guarled s} tall, £ Wirections. - For arried women, or soy | Jp Rey i i Jove et bids mt a3 ¥ Bettle lttle B quieidy relotuod the | . OF Mr. Tonnysun, whos personal appearance | £3cly ther, and thele sy villainy wad SBlE WAL Chese ML brcwn At gy, O Madgesad b ttlicr wuten, sbie had a reclpe for procurlnga | 79 .,,.L.E\L 4 witli one whow Fate deblor, “Livtle Bill Saudersl Maybe I can't, | 18 somewhat yronk, a story is told, which | man.' Whei we sce 8 dog, hia- The purple grapes In clusters You can rely— ""2:::’:"1“5:"‘ J".l;"li'flrwlg:::l L :‘lz:l: ifuvrle llhunl‘f'll::zl u:fl: :K: ;*:“"‘:‘:"'v;m“l Just. 'l settio with bl quick enough. Worat | Would be good i1t were certalnly truc. e ls | sell-famishing, carry food, wndisturbed, to the gj:v E‘.’:‘l:i‘llfl;fl;l wid mlnh e, Xooye .8 B i be end in Yaris, "y sud procured the arrest ol ths womau on the ay fn the world, sir. Tied sy gate sbut the | $3id to have beeo staylug 'm',"" iin Barls, (:Jfiflfi:‘x:‘n‘flnfis:fi’-’lf ':3 rt.lflumn:.l;m !.,:.‘;'i: ‘And puck s brivk t dainty sesds. T tharge of seadiog obsccos lterature through | When faraway tn the sanuy cllme, otler night with a leather thoug, and theu weg | Aid one day wsked Lis companton, who was |y ihar notite moral qualitics are presont befors Are Uatbea in sunlight rich and warm, Stoppiag the Intarest. L biails. Oy I e e s Sty BEH the kuot, Bwelled a0 tight, by Gcorke, sir, 1 [ £OIUR out, o tell the porter at tha lodgs 10 | uy i tue phenumenon| There aro well-wuthen. | TUA #bows us plaiuly every form, Danlel Webster ouce dined with so old Bostod oo ke olice were thoussuds uf letters from s.,fif.','., Eies TherD, Lo BIOH 10 DR fuuldmy bave untled fein dn” eternlty aol'a | keep tho fite . Mie fricud's ¥rouch, bowever, | ticateu fustances of deepalr and remorsedmoni | Kiug ¥rost will come with ey breat, merchaot, snd whea théy came {o L wiic 4 coulun’t break it, and I had uo knye. Couldu’t Huu} #0 that bls ore thinge point to's morul uature so conclusivel to the host, ‘Taking tbe buul!:l c and rics were nuincrous, from which bad been ob- | Think of me, thon, alone I the gloom climb 3 pleket fence, and there it was, 11 o'clock | the form of No Jaisaea pas sortic e fou! When t, ave sakd, nition ¢ e framee ud dar| 3 D and haude tulved the uames of young isees, to whom fo- Of & long separsiion, whose love lu ita bloom, a IHH‘:‘ and 1, nowling aud yelling it to wake | Tenuyson, soou afterwanl, wanted to go out, b :k‘lfi«;‘m}e‘:n‘fl:fldn&?fi: al:lll x:a:‘:xfi e::m:]‘c *hg 3‘"5 hfl“‘fl.l‘:!'l.flltlch ::;:l arm fi"{‘;fifi""‘rm p‘fyu‘r‘::‘;'o‘utx :::v.!.hu glass for troductory notices weére scut, aud in several ot Like the ross iu its pare aud fragrant scenl, thedead, trying to youse sotie one up to bring | found the dour of his yoom guard by two | the worul phicnomona in auhinals below him, Tuwatd the sug that falls 1o was, binsctf he bald it to the Hght and said: the most hoted wnd populas sewinaries o the £bal) linger about you 1u fullest sxtont, D we out s kuife, and u policeinun camo slong | stalwart men who refused to Ict bim pass. The 1 know of no ctblcal philugophicat or theolog- ' s Hlow do you like it, Mr. Webster " tountry were found ber best customers,—~numes L““H‘Wl“‘l’ flg_}_ y";‘;af’ 0. 1 W. before I could make auybody understund who { | wilder Teunyson erew, of course the wore tha | fcal necessity for secking to frume such o defl- And ever hn.nY in Memory's hall ] thiuk IF ls a Sne specimen of ofd port! which, if publishied, would surpriss And bring | Cuicaso, 1L, L 1877, LB We | was, and justus L whs iryug to explain, wite | men wero couvluced that Le wasa danverous | uiion. The fact s, 1 suspect, that moral phi- Sheplcture il be, 80 prised by all, “Now, 138 you gucss whab I¢ cost wel” griel 'to Doble fumilics, and o parests who T —— opetied ber window and “screamed, V Pollce!” | lunatic; and resbted all bis attempts to cscape | losopliers and metaphysicians have been fright- 8( "ll"““':n‘:.hn' “"&‘ mu\‘m' the host - would gearce belleve it true, Daughiters of cler- A Largs Lundholder. sister opened unother window aud sbricked | till the uniucky fricod came back, aud the error euuf by the vislonary” drygzons of waterialiam OF Nabure (o bes iihass dvemny “Burely not,” sald Mr. Webater, * 108l gywen, lawycrs, college-professors, end sich Probably the larzest landliolder In America fs | wunder!” childron roared *flre," sud apo- { wasoxplained. aud papthelsn away from oue of the strougest Dafore she sa0k 10 winlry reat know that It is excellent.” pierchauts are represented i the wass of corre- | ex-Guv. Abner Coburn, of Mufve. Incredible | Neeman took me off and jucked we up. ljm. S ———— P and best, becauso most stmple and fnteresting, of ‘Mauos Las. ““Well, now I can tell you, for I made & cae luoud:nw.ll‘?mll:fuuflt‘{l'filflw l‘x;‘ lh]":l&m- Mltl.;:’ly m-u&lhfdts u“'" nwucr(ulll not lu:!:lh: m zufuax (fir J&i‘ufi’r‘i‘ ofdmgur‘srlm l:fibeeu THE BANKRUPT LAW, thclsticarguments. 1 the hypotticsisis true that ———— ful estitiate the otberday, Wheu I -ddlt‘:: rom some of them are two or ree letters, BCTCs, vided up as [cllows: 0; ¥ V' o C Wi 7 e 9 q 4 cosl fbu-hm Lhat they bave tricd the 1mwd<-u.wmr!'x ¢ "’ o Thut fsu't the bilt 1 ruh:rryc-l o0 zlr‘" 5 The Albany Law Journal gives the following :ll ;l;:fiflhn;:meun qre thy maonifvstations of Colorade Hats. juterest to the first prive, I find that it 450,000 weres; Canada, 1350005 Wiscousin, 83,- 000} Dakote, 35,000; Michizun, 20,000; Minye- sots, 18,000 His lutest purchuse fs’ that ‘of the tract in Dakota, aud was taken of the Northern Pucific Ratlroad in leu of stock, lu which be ing veated sowe $000,000, His ageat, Mr, Wapple, o the colicetor, suillng, but In o painer | Slustration ‘ul the workiug of the bankrupt law: muue of countenutico, * Iiucant tuis littlo | **A Maori Chler, Karaltlsoa Takawoaus, was R e—— &ood enough, some years ago, 10 sxpound the 4+0L,” ghouted the debtor, reassuringly, sud | princlule of bankroptcy. BSald he, *Igo to in 8 tuue of the beightest intelligeacs wud cou- | slorckeepur aud buy tive pounds' worth things Denver News, the sum of just §1.: r glass ! The most success{ul fisu‘n of modern times, 4 Good l,’l!!dfl:ll yu‘:fdon’l suy s0," sald “’v‘ aud one that seems destiucd to live fu Wistory, is | Webster;and thea dnlnlufi Lis glassbo preses! the story of achild haviug been devourcd by | ed it acain with the remark: 1 rats at the sigual station ou Pike's Peak, sui “Fill {bup again as quick ss you cad tor the terrife cowbes waged agalust the arwy of | want to stan that confounded intecasd-! fatled, sad asking further Ipstructivn. From bundreds of wowen areleters of inquiry, and orders for the recipe for telr iix:du benetit; sud the books of the **Doctor” shiow that they obil The room was acutlesed sbout whi it cuts u&) by the Fuots tbe argument fiy which Evelutionists seek w derlve cousclence, or the wioral nwumenon from pou-worsl gerwa, It shows that the words ‘+germs’ and “development’ ure as unscico- 1 such a retativn we they would bo Uf sp-