Evening Star Newspaper, December 14, 1872, Page 3

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) URE She's jnst as patare w: Tt, now ** not re UNADOERN Ler, Pa.ot,” os pa for'al! the wo uever bai. She would ve! a yg kin it would be need By any other girl. with en” Icomember, whi st we was ler'4 One wet and windy day Pe asnopm Pie adit And she sid, in accents scorn ~ fe be to. ‘biews £ prefer.” One ot waking By aite ed, ‘ Pawar breathed @ sigh. Bot ne tra And ber genie Ata heap of yels Her tender heart it ‘Toward that t« Then I, i > was thera, as levei Bair. She's neither false 0 *s wot m foolish, Praite can we 1s Pohie zet all thal A very petject woman ta very awful fright!_[ Punck. ——.00e-< MEMORABILIA Anecdotes, Both Old and New, of the Late Horace Greeley. [From the New York World.] It le thought by some unseemly to jest in the that ch righ hear presence of death—to seek for te amusing ip te lifeef a great man recentiy @ecea-cd. But great m: ded, and i is impossible to present a fnil-lengt them—such as the public demand whe die—wiihout setting forth all character. Whi provoking feat saarees of the people are more interested it it ‘Ubap in any other which by Peete 5 Tack of reverence for It is pot, then, from the howered Gead that more laughable of the following incidents in his life are priuted here and no ‘The best things that were said about “ Arto mus Ward” were contained in that poem so full of smiles and tears, by some unknown Englie.- man, which began: Has he gone to the land of no lang ‘This man who made mirth for us ail? Aside from what was mirth-provokin; culiarities, Mr. Greelay wae fle well tllustrated what Swe- of c hi Like persons. ecause they are in inno- cence, theretore they are in peace, and becan they are im peace, thereiore ali things are with them tull of mirth.” : Among the following “ana” extensive currency in books an paratively fresh. ‘The ear'y isfe of Horace Gri toiling ass stekly child among the bleak hulls of New Fnz- inne, iS Of peculiar interest in this land of ea! made men. He first shone as a star of the first Maynituce in the spelling-classea of the roush some have .d others are co New Hampshire village. He has saidoft him- feli: +*Phese spelling-clasees usually took place in the ev when I could not keep my ey open and should have been in bed. Lt was of Receseary to rap me ‘ply when tne wor eame round te me; but! never fatied to respoat, and it came to 1 asiecp ax awake. tiking moral trait ce i come, ft let's go w-tist ip his whining though the row! pile be was perpetual tons, asking question Tead.” When he fished he fished for jish, no for sport. He could never be induced to shoot anything. When he did accompany a shooting party he would never carry or discharge a gun, apd when the game was found he woul: chopped at the wor talking about his aud narrating w | all the tim | character as a reply; ‘tend {f: you boys expecting any fun ont y him, oud beter it quick. or you'll be too late. There’s some thing im that tow hes, as you'll find out betore you're a week “cage A dis! ia iz hysiciam femembers seeing Aout boarding house at Powe :—‘Treaw @ tall, pale, white. bos seated atthe further end of kf ‘a hit shirtes: gidity amiaver A DELETE nor sin as © Bs snd had gone 1a \Hemettuer jadked hp Bor around, nor peared to) ay the ieast bY td the con Yersation. fret thought *Phis is a pretty sort ofa tarefn, to lot a fellow as that eit at pes fe With ali these geutle- nen. He onfht to come in wich tha hostler? 5 “range, 260, tha: no one seemed e bir, and I sa) d be owed his ai the table to that circum. 1 ‘sat, eatiog hele Watching the won. a tformance of the wonderfal yout At lencth the copversation at the table became , tarming Dpon seme measure of y Congress, and a question arose how members had voted on its tiual passage. wax 8 difference of opmien, and ft) 2, a tinely-dreseed personaz bonndie-s astonishment, re tr to the unaceonat st right, Greeiey:? without 7 Said av ex: youso) *And yen'te wrong to Gevonring mrstery. Then ha kuife aud fork and gave the hist measure, explained the state of the parties the time. stated the vote in dispute, mame (+ leading advocates and opponents of the bil, in short geve a complete exposition ot the wh tmstter.” He obtained a place in the office of the Era Pest, whence, itis said, he was soon di¢ a by the late Mr. i. on the ground tory earrent Aah so a odeapied in The in ‘Mr. Leggett came inte the prin ing ofttee for the purpose of speaking to the wan whe-e place florace had teke Jonesi” asked Mr. Legge! way,’ replied one of the men. taken bis place, then?” said the irritable edito: “ There's the man.” said egme one, pointing + Horace, who was bobbing at the cas¢ in his por enuliar way. Mr. Leggett looked at “the man,? and said to the foreman: ** For God's sake div charge bim, and let’s have decont-looking meu im the office at least.” Horace was accordinis < goes the story—discharged at the end of e week. He went to work soon afierfor J. 3. ee ‘Mr. Redfield says: “My recollections of Mr, Greeley extend from about the time he first came the city to work as a compositor. [ was carrying on the stereotyping business in Walliam street, and having occasion one day tor ; -. » could ha a AuG be had season. seen that he was deeply t: Tag evening per had the, reput of being hal ypaccurs political in this case the totals that Mr. » copied “were erroneous by many thousands | Forgetting the source whence he had taken his figures, Z (Bay ted we compo-in j 100! ect, remce-traed wi ir. Rook foreman, saying Urat be, : to. be Kike: A then to the printers, that they ought kicked; and tnally to te proot-reader, gbt to bekicked-more svomdtr than nal est. Thelatter meekly juced the orig! manusctipt of Mr. Gree! Ne from the evening _— zr. fe that cut from’ Mr. replied th dudenly Detinn reeley. -proot-reade: x Ming himself of the character of the & yaper, pr. Taptty, with that Bense of just'ce which ts one of ls g trib: turned he | Poof reader, a ina ated manner, “W Tike to Kiet me When Mr. Gres ley fr cherter coun y every bod of managing « turm, an? one friepd said, * Horace,> be sick of Hiring ia theBoant within tw6 yeatsand your plate will be aavet- tised for sale” ‘Then,’ responded Horace, “the shert s name will beat the foot of the ak yertisement.” Other fri nds remonstrated wit Mr. Greeley on th « xpens:reness of his farm. ing operations. “Do you rot per-cive,’? saul one, “that yout bired ‘man docs not more than “Certainly,” replied Horses, “1 aware 0: it. were he dispo*ed to be ef. ficient he wuctd work his own iaud, and not ould you Dougut Janlin West- laogned at his notion 2 r. Greeley was on the eve of bis first voya ze to Purcpe Letore bis life-long partner, Thém4s cEirait, heard a whisper of it. The trip suruck McElrath as the very pinuacie or saber di z Hast: ning to his partuer’s room, he arcused him from a deep reverie over his ex- cbavges with, “ Horace, 1 learn that you are going to Europe.” “ Yea,” qnietly said the al sorved editor, not lifting bis eyes from bie newspaper. ‘Are you going alone, Horace’?’ contipued his tner. ‘+ Yea,” as Quietly a before, and still readin, “ Well, Horace?’ persisted Mr. McElrath, *‘don’t you know that you're upfit to travel.in Europe alore? Why, youd wever get half wey through thacity of ‘aris. New, Horace, | have a young frieryi who wante to see Europe, bat hasn't the means, ‘He is young, active and intelligent, and you must take him atong to take care of you. You'd jose halt your baggage before you were hal(- seas-over.”” “Fr ex gc half-seas-over,” said Horace, still =e wer his newspaper. The bone Ae ye ree pher he exe- bis trast se weif that the Zribune after- wards sent him to Europe on an important special mission, ‘4 A storm arose in the Tribune editorial rooms one morning in 1562, when Mr. Greeley’s eye detected anerrorof punct which reversed more compositors, one Of the house brought in | the bro pens 2 of one of bis own It an- Greeley, remarking, sotte voce, that he was ‘a eo ed bin! es; ond endarance,and his vexation boyish and rather odd looking genius’ (to whicl | found in loud exclamations. At length remark I had no difficulty-in asscuting), but h¢ | Mr. Ripley edged ina word and explained that bad ‘w that he wasa workman.’ | nobody on the editorial rooms floor was respon- Being much fm want of hetp at Grec- ley war set to work, and Twas not a little sur- prised to find ou Saturday nights that his bills were much larger 1os¢ of any other com- Ppositor in the office, and oftentimes nearly dou- bie thore at work by the side of him on the sam3 work. He would accomplish this, too, and talk The same untiring industry ant the same fearlessness and independence whic't have characterized his course as editor of tha Tribune were the distinguishing features of his urneyman.”? One evening tn November, 181, when the young economist was working in the printing fice in Chatham street, he astonished his rei- low-workmen by marching into the oifice en- _ cased ina new suit of clothes. There was no 2 that I spelled as weil | < brother wou'd say sometimes, | set the ho yt agg Lhad | , one apd all. “Come along, boys, I'l tr: dewn and stop bis ears till the murder had been | Cone When his father was finally driven to ban':- Yuptey on the barren New Hampshire sol Horace was too young to understand the “j. tice” of the sheriff's visitation. The story that be seized « hatchet, ran to the neighborir field, snd began furious!y to eut down a faver- ite pear tree. saying, “They shall not have that any how.” But his mother called him off, ani the pear tree still stands. Another story is that be went to one o: his mother’s closets, and tak- ing a# many of ber dresses as he could grasp in his arms, ran away with them into the wood-, bid them behind a rock, and then came back (0 the bonse for more. When Horac as ten years old the family, after a brief stay in Vermont, returned to New Hampshire. One sleigh was sufficient to carry ail the little property the law bad left the family. The teamster well remembers the intelligent white-headed boy who was so pressing with bis questions as they rode along over the snow, and who soon exhausted the man’s knowledge of the geography of the region in which he bad lived aii bis days. * He asked me,” he said, ‘a great deal about Lake Champiain, and bow far it was from Piattsburg to this, that, or t’other place; Lord, be told mes sight more than I coul: pet v gitke ate on bis — was 2 po 6, all the c! H mto one dish wich their epoons. veing Even as a boy young Greeley was remarkabl for sbeent-mindedness, and was often buried therght and dead to the outs) A curious incident is recer studies. Horace was accustened to speak of his father as “Si On one occasion, as he was chopping wood by the side of the road,a man rode up and inquired the way to a distant tow: The boy, who was as i; at as thi —— referred him to his father, saying, ‘Ask Sir. ‘The stranger repeated his question. Ask Sir,” was the answer. ‘asking, “Well, ask Sir,” was Horace’s D: "tT asking, you d_d fool?” “Bat I wi you to ask Sir.” tavern. and it ly asked who that “to headed fool” was down the road. ‘When st school in West Haven, Vt.. he was always st the head of bis class. He would be terribly cot up if he ‘‘miased a word” <i see him now,” says a clasemate, ‘as he sat in class, with his slender body, large head, bis open, ample forebead, bis pleasant, simple face, bix coarse, clean. lothes. His attituie was always the same. loosely folded, his head be crowed, and one foot swinging. feem to pay attention, but nothing escaped him.” ‘He was once fola to whip another boy. He Grew otf asif he was going to deal a terri blow, but iteame down so geatly on the boy's het that every one saw that Horace was shamming The teacher interfered and told » to strike harder, and @ little harder he did ske, but a more harmiess tlogging was never istered. He seemed not to the power any more than the wiil to inflict pain. He bothered his teachers. He was not to be puto? with commonplace solutions of serious difficulties. He wanted things to hang together, hiked to know how, it this was true, that could be true also. At length one of his teach- ers, when Horace was thirteen years old, had the honesty and good sense to go to his father and sey to bim point-blank that Horace knew more than he did, and it was no u-e i him to go to school say more. So he studied home. “The beys of the village would often visit him at night to get him to explain the lessons. When he wa not assisting some ty » he lay on bis back in t chimney-corner reading by tue fire-light—a. Ways reading it was Mrs. Hemans’s poems which first aw: ened bis enthusi him aware of th tier impulses of his matar He was wire in his fears. He obeyed nature's warning not to face what he could net master. He wasa match for rustic auditory and ne feared it not. He was not a match for wild beasts. so he ran sway ii be supposed one was aching. Visiting once when eleven years old he had started for home, bat soon returned, *aying he had seena wolf. There had been taik of wolves in the neighborhood, but Vermont beys generally eared no more for them than cats. Two of the elder girls of thefamily had He would never boys, but weld simply «stand and take it. Yet he was not afraid of the dark or of ghost Stories, never Was abashed in speaking or Feciting. was not to be overawed by supposed superiority ef Knowledge or rank, wonld talk up to the teacher and question his decision with perfect freedom, thoagh never ina spirit of iumypertinence. Horace was a teetotaller before teetotalicm €ame up. It bappened one day that a neighbor stopped to take dinner with the family, and, as Satter of course, the bottle of rim was brought ont for bis ertertainment. Horace, it ars. either tasted a little or else took a disyust at the smell of the stuff, or perhaps was oifended the effects which he saw tt produced. An idea struck him. He said, “Father, what will you give me if {do quor tilt [ am who took the ed, “ Vil give youa = a bargain,” said Horace. Avd it was a barzain, at east on his side, for he kept the te viakete . When Horace went to Fast Poultney, Vt., and applied for work in printing offies, ‘the pro- Prietor was astonished at first at his appearance and then at hislearning. So be hired him on the strength of the “You're not going to bire that tow-head, Mr. Bliss, are you?” asked one of the apprentices, at the close of the day. | | | but Mr. Greeley said, “Don’t you see that yo: | of me, an utter stranger.” | Mr. Greeley | porte them to Blackwell's Island. One mormia, mistake 2bout it. Horace bad seen ® second. hand cluthes desler and been made ou: wardly another mas. Stowly and with a digni- fied step he marched up to the imposing-et sue about whieh the men were gathered, and looking down complacently upon lis new st, sald, “es he move is hands aloft, | ‘To which Horace sent the following answe: “Weill, boys, and bow do you like me Dear Sir: I happen to have in my possession “Why. it’s Greeley!” ated one of | but one autograph of the late distluguished men. They gave him three rousing cheers | American poet, Edgar A. Poe. Itconsista of an t and laughed and turned bim about. Finally one of them reminded bim of the ancient tac which has been levied from time immemorial upon new suits. : Greeley treat on that suit.” “Yes, yes, a trea: said the good-natured Horace. They adjourned to the old grocery on the corner of Duane street. ‘There the boys dramk whatever suited them, Horace indulging in sprace beer. The anit cost him five dollars. No record exists of the cost of the treat. AFTER THE STARTING OF THE “TRIBUNR.’ An interval fall of vicissitudes found our hero changed from @ journeyman printer to the head Of creat pay In connection with the contest between Clay and Polk Mr. Greeley = From the day ef his nomination In May to thatoi his defeat iv November, I gave every hour, every effort, | half apologetic tone, responded, “Well, you every thought to bis election. My wife and then | know, Gale, (hey used to build wagons bigger | 1d (our third) spent the summer | than they do now. | rse in setts, while f In 18iu Mr. Greeley was invited to tea. He | gave heart and svul tothe canvass. I traveled | was delayed by some means aud did not appe and spoke mach. I wrote, I think, ao | until the guests bad all eaten. He became average of three columns of the Tribune each secular day, and I gave the residue ot hoors Icouid save trom sleep to watching the canvase and doing whatever 1 could to reader our side of it more effective. Very often I crept to my lo¢ging near the offics at two to three a. m., with my head ao heated by fourtsen to six- teer hours of incessent reading and writing that 1 could only win sleep by means of copi- ous affusions from a shower bath; ant these, while they probably saved me froma @avgerous fever, brought out such meri ot iis thatthongh I did not heed thein, till after the pattle was fought out and losi was covered by them for six months ensain often fifty or sixty at once, so that L could trive no position in which to rest, but pass: Dight after night in an easy chair. fonumerap! storiesare told of Mr. Greeley’s row enough to take me home to wy fatuer's when I will repay it.” the respons, “you ently cannot stay here, avd I must help you to get awa’ But why say anything about paying 1 r uu will never pay ed and remonstrate: “Stranger,” was Or pro! cannot bave been Cad marae a clerk in a lead- ing mercantile bouse in gia without making the acquaintance of merchauts doing b: i this city? Sow pay you woul thoes ascrehamte whens you know; not He did not admit the force of the demonstration, but of course the seoue! proved it correct. could into the wooden tube. Of course it was Mr. Greeley says in the “Recollections of a | cold and not hot air that came out, bat the Busy Life,” referring to his imprisonment in | philosopher was absorbed in the Herald, (not Parle for some imaginary claim on kim for a | them an over-civil neighbor,) and did not re- broken statue: “Among = visitors was M. | alize his mistake. Soon Mr. Wm. M. Newman, Hector Bossange, the well-known publisher, | then ship newseditorof the Tribune, entered. who bad been accustomed to call each Sunday, as he did Was toon asked by my w my rooms on this one, and ‘Have you seen Mr. Greeley?” ‘Seen hin!’ he perplex- edly responded, ‘! do not understand you. Have | not called to see him ‘Then you have not beard that he is in prison?” ‘in prison ?” he wildiy inquired, ‘what can that mean?’ ‘i do not weil understand it myeei?, but it has some connection with our New York crystal lace.’ *Oh, it is money, is it” joy- fally refoined Mr. bee ed * then we will soon have him out. it knew that J was a farious a..ii-imperial feared that I had rashly ived myself insome lot that exposed me to arrest as an apostle ot sedition, am enemy of ‘ order.’ ”” arly risers in New York haye frequently Roticed the procession of prisoners on their way from the police courts to the boat which trans while Mr. Greeley was walking down Fourt avenue, be was unconsciously entangled in one of these gangs of wretched prisoners. At the polpt where it turned off to go to the boat, Mr. Greeley pursued bis onward course, whereat ore of the officers having charge of tha pris- cners roughly said to him, “Get in the line there. old man.” Horace, really puzzied, re- tort d, * [am going down town.’ * Come, old man, ‘ said the officer, (still mistaking him for @ priconer,) “we don't waut any of your airs, bat just move on.” * But I must go down and attend to my business,” said the plilo: opher. “Ob, what buriness have you got down tow queried the offi with you.” «Why, I am Mr. Gree! the Tritune. aud 1 have got work to do.” The oficer called one of the and told him the story abor with his forefinger i forehead, and looking significantly at Mr. Greeley, said, “* He's a bad case; he’s a goner.”” lust ‘then a eporter passed, and at @ glance taking in "# predicament, told the officers icemen assisting him. it the prisoner, and hew a a blunder they had committe po rf logized, and Horace, hur- The ryi wrote @ racy article on comen a to his ‘desk, a reform. Greeley’s white coat is historical. He br I og “ coat, but it tan’t. The original white coat came from Ire- ‘and. An emigrant broaght itout. He wanted money. wanted a coat, so 1 bought it of bim for $20, and it was the best coat [ ever had. do work well im the old countries, not in eneb a burry as we do. ‘The Fremont campaign profoundly interested Greeley. In those mene telegraph and facilitics were not dealings wi borrowers. In cue instance « | question was how to get Horace to eat the cheese young mau c.me with the usual request, and | without reminding bimof hisextraordinary feat | was asked to state his case. “1am aclerk from | with the crallers. A lucky thought came to her New Hampshire,” he be; d have been | relief. Sbetook the empty basket and pat in its for three years employed in Georgia. Atlangth | place i) ot cheese. Horace was meanwhile @ Severe sickness prostrated me; [lost my place; | expounding bis views on the Lcticgy4 question. my money wae oxhausted,aud here | am—J | He saw nothing of the ——. lowly thie with my wife—without acent. I want to bor- | cheese disappeared as the crullers had done, sible, that it was a -room = binnder? “Then,” said Mr. Greeley, springing from his chair and making long strides towards the hen- room floor occupied by ‘we must bave proof-readers The tirst man he met was the then aged Myles Murphy, and to him he delivered a yolley of abase, winding up with, “You're not fit to be here; do get another pisces: ll give you 550 to get out of this.” yles tried to speak. but Mr. Greeiey’s tonguc was too rapid ior him, and before he could frame a sentence Horace had vanished, leaving the proot-reader too thoroughly frightened to tell his fellows that he had nothing to do with reading that proof : Mr. Grecley was rau down with begging let- ters, The following is a sample: Dear Sir: In your extensive correspondence you bave undoubtedly secured several aut re; hs of the late distinguished American poet kdgar A. Poe. If so, will you please favor me with one, and oblige, yoursrespectfully, A. B. 4 LOU, wit jh My pameon the backofit. It cost me just $51.50, and you can bave it for hali- pr Yours, Howace Gaeeie ‘Twenty-two years ago Mr. F. Gale, since { man of the Times, was Omployed in the com- ae of the Tribune, and Mr. Gre ad a high respect for his ability. A proot w sent to Mr. Greeley in which the word wagon was spelled with two g's; the great philosopsur crossed one of them out, but when the 7risuy appeared the next day ‘the correction nad not been made. Mr. Greeley impatiently summoned Mr. Gale and remonstrated with bia mildiy (because he did not wish to lose the services of 0 competent a man) for not correcting b proof properly. Mr. Gate replied that the word wagon had been spelied {rom time immemorial with two g's and he knew his business as well a+ any man. Mr. Greeley,in a half persuasiv once engaged in the discussion of the currency question. The landiady tried to persuade bin to take some tea. He waved her off and con- tinued to talk on his then pet subject. “Take acruller. any way,” she said, presenting’a cake- basket filled with these articles. He pat forth bis hand and took, not the craller, but the bas- ket, depositing it in hislep. He kept on taik- ing. After a time his hand, with which he was gesticulating, touched acruller. He took it up and began eating, talking all the while of car- rency. He finisted the cruiler and began an other, and soon until all had been eaten, the guests meanwhile laboriously restraining them- selves from laughing outright. His mostess was in atever of excitement. She kuew that crul- lers abrorbed in large quantities were next to indigestible. She had heard that cheess liber- ally caten would counteract their effect. The and the it economist was saved tho horror of an attack of dyspepsia. Horace never knew of this little episode, but the guests enjoyed it hugely. . enty years ago the Tribune office was heated by anold-tashioned hot-air furnace, sending its Diasts through wooden tubes about one foot square into the various rooms, the quantity being reguiated by wooden gates sliding across the © tul OnSunday there was no heat until “Pat” fired up in the evening. Ona bitter February Swnday morning Mr. Greeley hurried into the editorial room, his hands and pockets full of papers, pulled a chair to the place in the wall whence the heat should have come, kicked the tlide away, and stuck as much of his feet as he and seeing “ the situation,” said, + Why, Hor- ace, what are you doing with your boots in that @; there’s no heat on yet’ Mr. Gresley lown his feet, and, in a haif offended outin his peculiar whine, ** Now, il me thatfor? 1 was gittin’ nicely warm.' One night in the spine. of 1853, while Dave Rboadee stood behind the counter in the publi- eation office, in stumbled @ poor, halt-drank printer, whom rum had thrown out of employ- men je had just been up stairs and borrowed 95 of Horace, and now he was downstairs boast- ing of it. struck the old man for a fiver; how's that” And he rang the changes of self- congratulation until Mr. Greeley himse!fstepped into the publication office. Instantly the able borrower SP) roached him as though he had bever see! im before, and coolly asked for 235. Mr Greeley, mistaking the applicant for anothor, said: “I let you have $) three months ago, and you promised to come and pay me in a week.” Applicant—I have called upon you several times, but couldn’t tind you in. H. G.—Yes; you never tind me in when you have money to pay me; but you take good care to find me when you The philosopher carried with no little pride a 0 chronometer gold watch, presented to him by the 7rtbune printers. It would have kept accurate time if the owner had wound it, but hands, and alter whirling them times think the job was done. Ap bent aftee- ward, in looking for the time, wondered why the thing wouldn’t go.” One night, ashe 22 going home, asked javid P. Rhoades, e night clerk, for $5. David itout, and Horace jammed it into his waistooat pocket as far as bis would go. On the car bis watch was stolen. The next day when shed the office he told the story of the he reac! , windin, lle ge robl watch, but didn’ made known to Colonel noted inal lawyer. the chief “knucks” thatif Mr. Greeley’s watch was not in his hands within <r. hot the first of the jg that should be “nipped” would get the fall benefit of thelaw. In leas than hockey Me mg hours Colone! Spencer handed the watch to the astonished philosepher. On his release from the Paris prieon his funds were low, in fact ail but exhausted, and rath: than avail himself of the unusual commercia facility of drawing is New York, he wrote and the election returns were tardy and un. iy to trustworthy. He had igaures from | send the money, regarded it as a joke, and as various sources, and had ® mass ot documents | joking was then always in order in the Tribune before him from which he expected to close his | circles, sent the letter to Patrick O’Reurke, =a 2 ber of fi demanded his | chief engineer, who — knew had attention, and while he was in conversation 5 were sure the generous - witb them the office boy handed him anevening | man would instantly draw his money, Dut newspaper contat: what seemed be updeceive him before he had time caret ully-prepared of the he | tosend it to E Pat, however, absented needed.” Mr. Gresley his cut at ont table, comments the total, and sent it up tothe printers. ‘The nest day any close observer of cs > iT w The ~ TE eS ee i : : | ershi; apked him for bis the sister er, adding: Pte F sthag bi Siw york. W ben béwent t the Worki's Mr. Gueeie: the foot oF shary. He sat at i's dee until very nearly a quarter to twelra Suddenly be sprang up, clapped om that famous hat plead aspall car the dior. say somebocy rea ‘3 oF Ppa my proof.’ ready. and he was justin time. turned he mede for the office omy ‘of time, ghtful and t Reven'ta was tobe on beard the Balti Canal street, at twelve o’cl writin gor the 7 » Tushed up Stairs, and, with Pair, in Lon: mu id pusued towar 'm off for Europs, A carriage was hen he tem with equal cou ot | } ' waiting to speak to any Obe. or even take of , accountof his bat, was instontly at work the remarkably q attic. A friend “ Why, Horace, bave you got Well! repited Horace, © ick pasenge entering. greeted bh oft seureif.” This is suppose: origin of the weil-knownphrase,which has been attribnted to Willlam M> Tweet. Scientists say they can teil what a man is by the yle of his salutation. Ir this is trae it easy to measure the frank democracy © the great farmer-editor. The meaningless * goo! moorrings”’ “Goed morning, Mr. or Jud | manner to kvown friends was to Mr. Greeley’s first ¢ “Probie” (Arthur Young Grec so oiten carried toand from the office bis shoulders, and whose earl reat sorrow of the good man’s life. and all the preliminary recognition were little to bi iid was b rites Tostead favorita. boy be ley,) stride iy death "was tlie Whon the vy wae two or three years old the tamily lived atTurftle Bay, then a roral rétreaton the East Tiver, near Oth street. One day Mr. Grecloy took bis boy over to General James B.S wain's, in Murray street, near Greenwich, about jive miles distant. Mrs. Greeley had fed the boy on milk tresh and warm from bi would not trust to any other lacteal too. ther himse cow rpust go, and the fond the animal down and back, properly ted. is own cow, and The drove and Pickie was It iswidely known that Mr. Greeley’s pene manrbip war, to say the least, wae a boy Le built make fenc queer. When he eon hilly land. e was still Aarot — fence on paper the day of his deat! are unnumbered. A page of hi whieh the editor had an ‘tis ’tis Br Peter Firtke rendered it th quoted, true,” tell into the hands an Irish compositor, whe ‘What the devil is this—'tis two, 'tis fifty, fifty ‘ts tis-what ‘at ati” tes on this head 18 manuscript, in ‘Tis true, ’tie doce it mane, Years ago Donald C. Henderson, now editor ofthe Alle, ace’s valk ie encyclopedia Many of the philosopher's strongest poii wrote even @ worse hand; he waiked as bad! be was an imitator of Mr. Greeley’s té:let; bv (Mich,) Journa!, bat then Hor- of pow ponders what allied them was the fact that Don had @ peruant for political statistics. Mr. Greeley Often detected errors in his tables, and two or three times discharged bim; place, however, for, said his tellow- bis rai “cheek” was as boundle: jee whence he came. On 1 discharged you lon, Bir, Greely;, but reg e got a in’t goin’. fey caw Bim at tbe exchange newepal said, “Don, what are you doing there? he clung to his rkmen, se as the westera ne day Mr. Gree- Ts, and thougiit 2” et Know you did, good place, and ‘That joke was even too much for Horace, and Don’s cfticial lite died a natural of Don's seq Jeaih. ‘He only went when he gotrea’y. One irements was his ability to a Dir. Greeley’s writing at aight as easily as print but his remarks to compositor Lim were rude in the Jast degree, To a ¢ 7 who ssked him to read 4 word which ir. | ious article, Don, ecley bad written in a reli, with @ contemptuous sneer, snarled out: * ch vist you darned fool; di lar ‘She printer wil! nowand ¢ retort, ws well as receive one. reader to account tor a ve Horace retorted to the proot-reader rs who bothers 1 you never piay hen give asharp Cailing a proot ry slight error exoust that the “ copy” was not plain: + What! that net plain? Why ans fool ean sce tha So I find,” retorted the proot-reader, walking off with achuckle. ' | nom balls and , the foot-) Doring the nine days’ strugg'e for the apaak- | p im Congress, which wn of the republican back Greetey’s im- menee ability in venting his righteous indigua- tion was demonstrated. Heswetled with wrath; he scethed.in his hot displeasure; he boiled over with lingual rage. To say in just what terms he cursed the whole republican party for a pack of fools, cowards, ninny-hammers, dough-taces, imbeciles, and mishegctten jackasses woul: volve @uge of ali the objugatory words in the dicticnar ent to et to the Tribune. He Jabors until the arival of eve and some not y¢ t invented. He is hotel and despatched a territic ‘ulted in the | rested from his | the Tribune next ng, and sfter that he didn’t rest so much. | There was fun of a lively sor t in the National Hotel. Scmebody showed Judge Kellogg tue Triiune—scmebody xiways will show these things to the wrong man—and the Judge arose countenance, and said: * 1’ white-coated’ euss before I eat my sapp: it. The Judge wae fat and Teporter outstripped Lim his benevolent inten- Mr. Greeley, and that inoffensive man, done, and his wrath abated, vf ee But be didn’t do coujdn’t walk fast; in ing the news tions to his duty now being and not cesiving to burt J never was known to burt b astern and sudden resolve on his broad i lick that he his carpet-bag and the train for New York, which was just starting. took the white coat and 1t- great occupant out of the District. ‘Kellogg is wi iting tor you In Washington,” wrote the Tribune correspondent, James S. Pike, a day or laconic letter in reply. taking his seat in the Thirtieth Con, ‘vigorousl; ips the old mi y oppore: at length it was gravely Dp Mr. Greeley vbuse, and was bitter! fellow-members, and posed to expel him. “Ths | twoatterward. ‘let him wait,” was Horace’s “e by many of ovement,” says Te} bir Greeley, ‘was crushed bys terse interro; tory remonétrance from Long Jobn Wentworth, then blessed leading Gemocra' “Why, you fogs, de ou want to make him Proadent!” Seve: Astor House, ‘at which the a dinner was given in the en touched Upon some of the ins) it interests of the day. The unsophisticated Horace noticed the ban- quet editorially, winding up with a sharp aliu- sion to the convivial chatecter of the party, paming Heidsick and champagne 98 among the liquors disposed of. When he entered the edi- 9 other man in the country sive knowle Greeley. H Ds I am the only manin have made that mistake.” had such exten- e of political statistiog as Horace memory of bygoné votes was rodigious. From the days of Jackson and dams he had a clear remembrance of every important election, who were and how the people voted. To see Horace in the candidates, his perfect element one must have been near him on the Dight ofa would work al at did not vote for some ticket he Seas. election. He A mar who d, and he never failed to vote and to try to get others to do 20. Before an: be at his . As they they were forthwith + ut they showed no particular chai with _ curren' run them over returns srrived he would were received tw him he would comment, such as ‘We gain ten in Milford,” “ There’s small loss in Naugatuck—the railroad strike burt us,” and so on, rapidly making @ table comparing with a until the list is complete. and settles down with a liked bis party candidate, jor mile,“ That hoes sot.” Mr. Greeley having been nomi unexpired term in Cor gentleman in the interest of Mr. Jai aleo @ candidate f — vote. oe Then chuck! tatisfactory expression, **We've sure.” Of a loss where Mr. Greel 'y ——— comes gh, eb-ha,” he mutters— inexpected loss. A third die- list of gains: “Hoo!” startles he grabs his pen ing lau nd ma, rather dis- sav, with a eyes is nated to fill an mporary painter's attentions,) ‘‘no, pot so much to blame,” said she usingly. ‘What!” exclaimed the gentleman, ‘you astonish me! Not to blame for such con- fast “No, my = Lap d still the Cogn 5 Teally detend su pods as desertion?” “Why. sin interru; te the lady, “‘to confess the truth, I am firmly ot the of the women that the majorit ould rather be courted and ji at allt”? than not be | preper @ sight, sothat he can 1lamb, ont of level, out » portioned ing, all require i st ust Aram the: detec TOporten, shape, lacksmith in tive eve Moringsqrare; yer fi ocenpstion. Tk “is simpiy Ea square ® shape; and unletsbe can z'e" Of ill-shapad ja tes ical atteinmer ¥ it cas be attar poten | there a: taal: ad Organ of meut in on an. ertection + ‘ar Ont 4 ogt der order to +t the slightest imver!eetien in shads, colo", Xpression. ete. Not om? | attam: tbe srtof ham - becamse. he allow: himself to get intoa careless habit,a lint's ‘raining anc care is all that if meoessary for success. fault asthe heedles qetquire the curcless Every time they ft gh aut always be trained blacksm:t picks up the he rse’s!: the toc t. rin ef a fine horee. allowing himert¥ to the object ts accom) A very good way wo di soon be @ tnct f that the eye ty not half ae m: Ving their mipd= right to tbeit busines properly taining their they cultivate this powtr or the eye, they will » at Sourney-work. be goc® across ‘oot, takes a sqaint, retar Ww the anvil, forges the shoe, and 1¢ Cowtrast Gum witb looks at the tcot, then torges ot in pl pline the mechani eve w to fire? measnre an toch with the ere then prove it with the rule, then m inch, then an eighth, and ’so on. e wo discover at aglance the yer; Look ra ous ies uingler wie 100, of nto the sinever fs not io determine ace of the foot ow itup until al aly ence between a twelfti.and a sixteenth of av inen; then go to 3 lnches,6, 12, and seen. So call this guesting; there 1s no guess work abc uring with the eye and min it of criticising for imperfo. it; itis qhire the vat A Cyery piece of work that you sce; do everything as earl: as you can without ‘measuring, (or spolling {t,) or'as nearly as you can trust theese with its present training. [f you cannot see things mecha’ ay, donot blame the eye for it, itis no more to blame than the mouth is be- cause we cannot read,or the fin, A person may cannot write. band with his eyes closed, directing the fin, writs 's because os & very goo. mind of Soarse The eye is necessary, however, to fdctect imperfections. Every occupation in life requires a mechani- cally trained ¢; thane do, the and we should realize, mor Breat importance of properly training that organ.—Srientific American. Stage Thunder with a Vengenace. Bo: Edit me titty years ago one Lee, ma urg theater, with a view to improving the thunder of his stage, ventured obtainin packed the ledges. ‘The Jolting of the heavy: along the wveven pat and the ruinbits: duced counterte i of the upon 8 return to the Elizabethan system of representing astorm. His.enterprise was attended with resul ludicrous and disastrous. here and there along the back of his stage ig, Parcel of mine-pound eannou these in wheelbarrow, which the penter wasinstructed to wheel to and fro over was te ges and, alls, ea b h Over the hollow stage, and reverberations thus pru- 1 most effectively the raging of the tempest in the third act. Cntortunatel however, while the king wus braving. in fro: of the scene, the pitiless storm at the back, the carpenter missing his rooting, tripped over ona of the ledges, and fell down, wheelbarrow, ca’ Nt. The stage being on a dec ty, the cannon bails came roiling rapidly aud Rolsily down toward the front, gathering ‘oree as they advanced, , evercoming the feeble re- sistance by the Scene, track itdown, passed over its prostr: to them singular! erm, and made their way toward ghts and the fiddicrs, and the amas meni and wonder of tire audience, and the t and alarm of the Lear of the night. e-pounders advanced towards him, | bout him in ll directions, he was splay an activity in avoidin, nappropriate to the age an 4 condition of the character he was pereonating. He was ever said to resemble a dancer achie ing the terps<uorean fi hornpipe. kn: own as the egg- Presently, too, the musicians b. came alarmed fur the safety of them-elves and | their instruments, and deemed it advisable to scale the from the pi them, suas) piked partition which divided them for the cannon balls were upon | gthe lamps, and falling heavily into the orchestra. Meanwhile, eXposed to the full gaze of the hovse, lay prone, beside nis | empty barrow, the car voker of the storm he iter, the innocent pro- wl been unable to allay or direct, not at all hart, but exceedingiy frightened and bewildered. After the unluckiy experiment the manager abaudoned bis whevl- barrow and cannon its, and reverted to the were ‘Tecolved smetileds’ oF Producing stage storms. Queen Victoria's Amusements. - The queen’s walks and drivesare not confined within herown poiicies. She crosses the Dee almost daily, and is quite as often seen on the opposite le of theriver. She always uses an epen carriage, but not always thesame. Some- | times it is = wagonette, sometimes a low pony phicton. No guard of honor accompanies the royal equipage, however. Her trasty attend: x beside the co: John Brown, on man, and when there is not room for him there he rides on horseback ‘No fuss attends the queen. Anoutrider, a! in advance of the royal carriage, clears the road. | and the queen goes quietly on her way, with a smile and @ nod for anyone who chances to meet her. But asarule her majesty ts not in- , truded upon when she ventures beyond theroyal domains, unless on Sunday, and then it is stra: gers only who run after her. The cottagers do not annoy her, andsbe comes and goes without .} unless | Sieeghter Your Qun Meat. I LAND SALES, We are paying twice as much for meatsee 0 ee we cught. Less than haltei all gees to Peal— Pe. 772. G b Oy bd age ah A oar mae © a ap ehb 2: hinw is op ri trite more, ver: Pregideet of = nited rroperiy gaew {othe vurcher. It Rewest, be ls; yet, ee ye Kit eth bo so haif Cf ail we are papwog nest bath PECL DE a> & emer » Sebe. upon cuemsoives nevess.ties, a all ec So mary of them and will not Tee La Che 'r weight, fupm yang ol we aud in all to fr muscu. What becomes of ind the fair frover ate akG bo more Than @ met » COnpehre> wo fr! ¢ lebor and Maadbipe they re not cnreasonabiy tnlewt: sbowld be paid theamount Th purenance of lew, 1, Ci yom 8. Gavi, Pree dent of the United Btares of America, do Bereby daclare and wake Known that public emlre f vale able Pine Lands will be held ai the apdermeationed * Ofcom in che Biase of Minnceute at the pe- riods hereinafter designat <. vis At tho Land Office at © oe MUD DAY, sepr: sient Timber Lands hot previo: for iresh ue padlic weatbor- oi ” Re wsderacaticnss townst'pe and parte of town- PS. Vaz, prkes Of theit bilis promptly aud cheertaily. But Novis @ base time wad aeot of lowed poomcupal pearly ha! what we pay fur our meats, is | wart can yet emaccounted for. Who gets it* Answer— vol Lownnhipe a6, 47, a5, 49.0, 54, 5S. and 86, | the Dig epeceiators im oattic of «| Kinds, men | with lerge means aiready aconmelated in this pay pe ag OM RMDE HE A OH, SS, wed SH, OF Dusiners, ang others with sivnder means of | Practivnal townships 4, 40/00, 81, 82,63, 54.05.0048 ‘Meir own bat with Inrge bank accommoda- Myleene + ve | tems, whe can ran o toma! towuelsipe 48. 48.50, 61. 88, Ss. ae. 50, 16pr 15) mPes ©. croves that are a cites, aod be WE ow fF practices by whic American plople are tor bey ought to ng clas w the 4 an wet * med the case ia thew ome whe Live near et dress, in part. are unde? nO necessity Of selling allt fd animals to the drover, and th ingso much ef the meals as w own famivies, at a gre prices. "They can siaughter th mais at home, to the extent of eup, O9N Tames with fresh meats. in when a large animal is slsughtered, advantageously tarn over the sq’ their own wants, in the payment of merchant’ and mechanics’ b 4 tt not ant happens that the farm laborers who Stead ot 80 fruch cash. The farmer a could #9 arrai the matt. interest: of Both parties We few suggestions, jing the readeremay beo at few York Beangeti: Educating Giris be considered as universal. of our existence, swept red, aud turned, nd altered, ow to make a little home; how to win her children from ¢ how to keep her busband from t house, the gaming-table, and the | Such a family spectability, toly uniDess sUecess, and to lotied to them. It may be enters into married lite who bas learn aloaf of bread, to purchase a roast, painting, to sweep a carpetor to cut si make herown dress. How much th knowledge of these things bears npon pen hands, They many cases w some of oor ated as ty profit by them. lomehold j tor houschoid duttes ought to | necessary as instruction in reading, writing and arithmetic, and quite as We arein our houses mere than ha! should be dusted, how the clothes should | vated; if the knows how purchases can be m: to the best advautage, and uuderstands the lay- | will be trained to social re- end usefulness in whatever Position may be al- safe to say one girlin ten, ip our large towns and cities, rauge =. Firmctional Lownelipe 42, 43. 44. sed 45, of range 2s gph rbctional towuehipe 42. 43,44, 48,and #0 range Fraction: woshlye 42, 4.44, 4s,and a. f range x Norte ef ATM premcipa Frectiooal sown: 142, of range 3 Fiechomal doweebipe Li, Lib, IS, aod Les, ange Practional towuehtps i oe 8, 139, 140, 6h, ened ot 136. 187, end 28, <s, must mpositios ps 133, 134, aud 140, tps toy) Tw, US, 1S, © Be great - Aaah) nee mc ye Lad. Land, 33,182, ditterens. Fractions) townships 129, 130, La, 198, 6.1 and 1a, of ranwesh r fatten ing their cteemal townshipe 156, 135, 197, and Lag of a © the Land Ofer nong oh MUNDAY, Sep 13 Der Lands tt provivusly dispeard = PS At com the sale of ‘ reguentiy | im the Gadermensivucd towuships aud paris of work townebips, +2 Ror: Fractional townships Lip, Ul and 136 Fractioual townrhipe 1¢ and 13s, of ra ig Frac (ional tow neh ps 187 and 1a, of re . Feectimal towielape Lis end 139, of gouge Atthe Land UGce oi Taylors Palin, » tupesota copmencity on MUNDAY, Sepsember | thesateot tn ke pnde cauge Duties | Untipe 44 aud 45, of rame 24. 14 | Fractional towusbise 4 and 4, of renge 25 » how fur- Also.at the fice at Litchfield, Misnesote conmencing ob MONDAY. Ocvtor 7, IN2, there anireno- | ¥ill be ofiered i 6810 tbe wudiaposed-. lauds te | i the following townalaye, to wit ers North of dase line aw of fourth rr incipad @/ base deme end west of Afth proncipa meridian. and i wae beaven © he stree he club- wine-cup. of ranges 21, 8S Se, and BS efficiency that m ed to bake to dust a na i 6 perfect the thrift the comfort and beaith of families may be con- jectured, but not calculated hy would be an immeasurable advantage to make by a! p f base lume and west taching a kitchen to every girls’ school in the | nation, and y in the pre- paration of all the ordinary articles of food and | drink for the table, and how to parckas ma ) sn the market to the best at ge. the result of a large qving of money, an increase of comfort, and higher bealth inevery fazmiiy in the lan Hall's Jour The California Pioneer's + rimer” ‘The Calitoruia miners were sigoi female society and domestic ties tu currents of their tenderness and sen ward each other. To be a man’s part tortune, to cleave to him even jenlous of him! There were who were more faithful to their parti were partners whom even the grave divide—who remained folitary and in their friendships. Perhaps the absence of fied something more than a common promissory or buriness interest; it was to be bis friend throngh good or 1! report, in adversity or nd none othr—to be I fear, they had ever been to their wives. There dead man’s memory. ‘To insalt a man tly toyal o@nshipe 15.47, avd « Township 46, of range 2. All lepds beld at double m knot lear than two dollars acd fifty Te. ( 320,) aud all tends seid At be disposed of at aot less than ome urned the | timent to- ner signi- dollar avd twenty five cents per aore,( 125 ) Lane af propristed cok schools, Indian, m and or reserved for railrosd purposes, will be excunded tvom the argonaats rf mers than, | Tie offering of the aBore lands will be commenced ay the days eppomted. and wii could not | .t Which they are miverieed. wi loyal to a | Sa shall ‘be kept ie. shall ‘be kop ‘spartner Sy and no privete entry oi any « _ was to insuit him; to step between two partners | pitied uutll afler tee mp in aquarrel was attended with the same dan, ote the wert are in | aud uncertainty that involves the peace er the toe! off beopen for the ina conjngal dispute. The heroic possibiliti 1 thope d: eiring to purctas ‘e were men who had fulfilled all t ditions, and better still, without a knowledge or | belief that they were classical, with | ology to turn their backs against, and conscious appreciation of @ later tai symbolized by sacridice. In these an the marital! relation. A ta‘l and she: delicate, sickly youth aud a middie-ag power'ul frame, a grave, reticent nature and a | | spontaneons, exuberant’ one! M left me the other day,” said a dis sissippian to m: y Damon and Pytbias were always presen’ were the seme odd combinations often seen in solate Mis. Jeft me, aud has jer my band at the city of W th Gay of June, AD. 172. C. 5. GRASS, resident of the Uni hose con- ates. no myth. By the Presttent WILLES DEUMMOND, hardly a | Cusumlestoger of the Geurral Lad Uihiee th that is a o* NOTICE TO PRE-EMPTION CLAIMANTS. Avery person entitled to (he right of pre omption ions thers ‘any of The lauds within the townsiuips auc parte of wrehipe abos te required to -tebiieh 1 same to the sBtis'act od the Begtetor> and Be- cetvereof the proper land Uffices, and make payment Lheretor ae #00n AB PrActioable after une ‘ug th notice, and betoce the day appointed 11F che com rt man, a od man of ‘partue’ ; “my partoer mencemcnt of the public sale of th: molestation. Indeed, they make a point of | yy: > | ing the tract clatmed; ot! och keeping out of the way when the white horse of | [qt {B jith @ shiny, Yankeo at Go 8 nt | poole WiLLip DEC vee on aes a eae | might have reckoned on it—ho was ullers fickle, | mm ou her’ subjects by Deeside, she ts deferentialiy | 24,1 nd of Jewelry and dress,” —Bret Maries | faerie Ba frp pet See | 0 . Nazice or F: Lidier or saues or quentiy ** ic? in woods, o1 on . jecal Effects % + YeTIG a | side, should it be handier. Materials to make a E Aart nary home ede, moyen PUBLIC LANDS in MESHES fire and cooking utensils are taken in the car- ly been the subject of detail cnt by guateet hereby given Nagel riage, and tea is made on the ward, and | iSinz, who found it to. ha ¥ | ists, bacditeried that the sules of | handed rounded in rustic thout any power in atresting the process of fermentation | sots, ordered by the forege! Prowlatia’ ceremony At these afterneon “teas” thequeen and utretraction, and to be @ powerful poison | 77}, be wapoast une! we Taio has no special chatr of honor. Her seatis pretty | {or low orgewisms, or in other weeds hecan | svveral tard ullices: te wit. Giten on the stump of a tree,with her cup imher | moving bodies consisting of protoplasms. It | , QUST, (Lot, commenciig MONDAY, December hand, or any other casual resting-place that | appears to kill hand which ac- | 6:33 one te, qummencing MONDAY. turns up conveniently. are made | company fermentation and patrefraction, and | posehAT Ss jee ~, 4 also to various places of » andevery cor- | putsa step to . It arrests th At Dv LurH, commencing MONDAY, December rie and glen within reach has been visited by the | motion of the white ‘corpuscles, and th 30, isra. royal family.—From the Court Ciccular. | prevents them from making their exit fromthe | _ Abd the Fresident ies also dirroted sha: so muck ST REE TL RED versels, Spas jen 4 Pecaliarities of the Chesapeake Pen. i et tatectoal: taatsiidacistirsaveita thn Ricjan eee ekas nis ince Get, i imsula. tion of pus in inflammation, pus consisting in this twenty -cichth day of Angust, A.D. Iona * George Alfred Townsend writes in Scribner's | great measure of an accumulation of white cor. | "By Nic se peecie Monthly concerning the Chesapeake Peninsula | puscles which have issued from the veesels, It | WILLIS DRUMMOND, and its people. He says: also destroys the er of certain substances to | ee pé lawtde vimmissomer General Land 01 ‘The queer phrases and unciation of this | hroduce ozone. The red blood corpascies j— —— region are of habit, and no of ignorance. | this power, and, by depriving them of it | (pFFICIAL-Re. 776. 2 dono but” is a mild form of affirmation. “A | pine, when present in the blood, must diminish ;O _— danged sight d deal” is an ambiguous esti- | the change of tissue in the body, aud thereby | By the President of the United States, Reply aay Bah ike Je Come to | lessen the production of head. PROCLAMATION. = invitation. "Wher for pede yar] - yy 24 | , It is also found that quinine lessens oxidation rant, Prow an’ hardly indigenous, but sounds suspicionsly like an imitation of “Fildelfy” or “Baltmer” bu: ness talk. Whocan define an “‘ili-commeoned day” except upon the taeory of natural volubil- ity unrelieved by a dict “An else” is a transposition of unless. “Right smart” is of universal eurrency; it applies toa man of sa- | 1d to distan: gacity, to quantity, the word “peart”’ signify animation. means hospitality and good-feilowship solel: wever skill, and it is the next diplo: le grade of “a gentlema ipa usinehip is @ feature of good family life on the Peninsula, the remark bei “So and Se is my fourth cousin.’ common of Extraordi- nary cases of human longevity occur here, not- Drevalency at times of low fevers; but the Eastern Shore is healthier than withstanding the the opposite and hi society was tranquil udice. her coast. Crime is rare; during the war; norther: immigration is welcomed, and observes no pre; The Fashionable Poole isa sul to + » but in reality tic freedom, who will ork Tatler. at character in his way. He is very shy of voypey. acaak & be treats his dukes with and is ready tomake a his price. An; im. ‘One day & | jected into mixed with quinine, this rise is cretion of urea, the amount di: greatly. Scientitic Swimming | _ Frederick Barnet, of Paris, has just a novel yet simple appar: The psp 9 consists of | im the blood; other instances, such as snake poi- son, increasing it. When putrid fluids are in- circulation of au animal, ite femperature rises; but if these are previously much diminished. According to Zuntz, the use of quinine bas @ marked influence upon the ex- mindeh In pursuance of law, 1, Ulyases 8. Gi Gcut of the Uvited States of America, do bereby clare and make know {ust public saice of . aluabic Pine Lands wil! be belt at the audermentioged iaud | offices in the Btate of Minnesota, at the periods here- inafter designated, viz At the Land Office at ST. CLOUD, commenc op BOND: fox Ler lands AY, sale of tim! Underiuen! ‘or very mot - ing very townships. patented j ale of timber lands i. ‘and are | shipersirs = | at ser, Doth in | | Barth of base line and west of teh principal me |i back. ‘ ‘ownehipe 157, 188,139, and 140, in range 3s. whens Cotes cutie tatene cae ces | fomestips toe tk na tag rage pot on the water, at least in it. ‘The difference sie 1 188 10 pe like the be- with shandieandthe blade | Al) !4nds belt at doubleminimam prioe wil be ai ol rouble in | per scre. ($2.80,) and ail using bis fins at first trial, and is surprised to | price will be disposed nd with what he can swim without | and twenty fve | exbanstion. swims twice as fest | bende with the es without it, and with ithe | {orraliread purposes. can sustain hiineelf for hours upon the water, or | ssic. : swim many Piles. The fering: 4 obs ames pecscheeriee eo farm, es table to Eisted by nore sale shall Le Kept open People laid some veal inthe cellar, from which ES until it commenced tosmell. The result was u . tmmcllcd and tasted ike epoiiog beet. Reothek | shia isdny cf Octabr.a: brian’ * Wertineton, Indy reader Observes that there is’ Bitsy, otag- Prete ot Be SEARE, from which an offensive efiuvium would be Win gis DEUMMORD. whan tee wich eaten certain Girection Ge — — ere the cream snd batter Re te-9 oo To Paar, CLAIMANTS. from that pond. i sogn_as she (pond was were ibe Inds wishin the Scat eee drained no more damaged t. fir ry ae. ‘Wzo TavasrT the parrot his “welcome?” Meceivers of te proper ince ‘Who taught the raven in a trouth to throw peb- pd ay Ti! J bles into s hollow when she espied water, Saas oe that she might sme tot? ‘treet. ‘Who the bee to sail Sreneh cock 8 vast be sea of sir, and to find the ‘8 flower in the ‘eld fo ner hive? Vibe taught the ant to Bill, fest I‘thould take rect andgrow?—Beem. | JB eye to Ww S7- Mark Twain comes back because hiswife’s ‘is health is 80 poor that her death is expected trom aya = Ail Bours, Day

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