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' ‘ ij AMUSEMENTS, —— =Offenbach's Opera Bouffe, Barbe MBLO'S GARDE: Bleue. WALLACK'#—Fire Fly. Leading character by Lotta. KEW YORK THEATRE—Aug. 21—Foul Play, New ‘Company, new ecenery, &c. Mativce ou Saturday atePM. SOWERY THEATRE-Three Piccer, The Buislay and | Rotier Tropes. han TE Sietwes for AN FRIDAY, AUGUST Terms of tae San Daur, per year to mail subveribere bent-Weexty, per y ‘ ‘Ten copies to one aidross demonic ee Twonty copies (0 One niluroes a) Pitty copies to ne nislrese wo Wernry, per yerr ) ‘Twenty copie! to one address Fifty copies to o . re) Additions! copies, 1 Chi F at Club rates. Tey ment mvariably io aivan ApvEnTigna RATER Porern Paar. per yn ae tabla Three lacs word i " 0 conte Trrey Pace, per conte Breiese Notices, per line Scents Leapep ADVERTICEMES te ch ° aun th ry become Is Weeaty—per tine at above. TRE 8UN ved tor at th homes, Mronghont eteoy 1 4 pee Netice to Subseribere, Gurveribers wi ting Mele nigel wit! please | ver Dati, Semi Werstr, of Waenty, and | fl their ent yas wilt also | te Totters containing - | ‘The Southera Negro Votes | The present indications are, that, unless the Republican politicians in the Soathern States actively bestir thems , the negro vote, whieh the party has worked so hard and risked so much to bring into the coming Presidential election, will be east, to a large extent, in favor of the Democratic candidates The leading Democrats, in many placesin the South, are using oll the arte with which dong experience bas made them familiar, to impress upon the negroes the idea that the Democratic, and not the Republican party are their friends, and that their welfare will be better promoted by a Democratic than by @ Republican vietory, Being, as it were, old acquaintances of their sable fellow citizens, they are likely to command much more re wpect from them than Northern-lorn interlo: pers, and it would not be strange if their ef. forte, on this account, thould meet with con siderable suecess, Bat to consolidate their influence with the negroca, and render it permanent, the South. ern Democrats must not merely indulge in flattering words, ‘They must seize every op portunity to show by their acts that they mean well by their former slaves. Cuffeo is not very bright, to be sure, but he ean see as well a8 anybody else, not only on which side his bread is buttered, but alko whether or not there is any batter on it at all. For inetanee, in Louisiana, a bi has just been introduced into the Legislature establishing public echools for the benefit of blacks and wh Which side will ‘he Democratic party there take in regard to the measure? C it will bo to their long cherished pr we do not seo how Uh than judiciously modify it. ‘They eann with profess to be the friends of tho black man in one place and then turn round aad reassert their old hatred of bin And yet it would be truly remarkable to see them going not only for public eehools. which they have always denounced, but for schools for creatures who, they used to say were not huzaan belugs, and to teach whom was formerly a penal offi We look for their decision on the subject with groat curi onity. But, however either Democrats or Repub: Hicans may act in the present emergency, there is no question but that the negroos must Le educated in some way or other, if they are to be made intelligent vi either cide, Thero iy no need of their going to the same schools with whites, They them selves would prefer a separate classification, and good sense requires that the feelings of the whites against intermixture should be re epected. Allt is to give them enough education to raise them from being barbarians into a state in which they ean form some kind of sound opinion on political questions, wud this nether party can afford to deny them, lve trary as ud y can eately do more onsiste ron em wea ny bhde Abraham Lincolu has gone to Mell t It shocks many persous greatly to see the Statement, which is frequently printed in Brick Pomeroy's paper, that Abraham Liu coln has gone to hell—sometiuies varied by the nosertion that he is roasting in the hot test fires of hell But on the other band, many, very many of his renders like t it. They believe it It may be said, gene le who believe in hell—lit m to take peculiar satisfaction in belief They regard it as a place to which all thelr enemies, all persons whom they particularly dislike, are pretty sure to be consigned ; and they are not disturbed—considering the deserts of persons who differ from then—at the thought that the fl will than a furnace seven times heated The question is, whether it is right for any living pervon to say of avy particular person who is dead that he has gone to hell? Spe cifically, is it right for Brick Pow atof Abraham Lincoln? It is common for people who believe that Abraham Lincoln was a good man—as we believe he was—to speak of his present con dition as one of beatitude; to speak of his being in heavy So, ever since Washing ton's death, have oratora spoken of him ; so they speak of Henry Clay. So all mien speak of those whom they revere, aud those whom they love. We remember the remark of a bitter parti gan about Gen, Jackson. “I have alway consoled myself,” said he,“ by tho reflection that the Devil would finally have the old General ; but now, just as he is going to die, having beaten everybody else al! Lis life, he has joined the church, and is golug to beat the Devil himsclf at last ‘The liberty of the press is essential to the security of freedom, This maxim. is incor porated into the constitutions of States, If be hotter y Wo Bay shall it not be equally free to exprese the be- lief of others that he is in a different place ? A New England clergyman, who believed | that nobody bat his own most #traitest sect | would be saved, was called upon to preach the funeral eermon of one of the fathers of | thetown, The mourners, who were nume. | rous, were present. ‘The minister dilated at | | length on the history of the deceaved ; on the numerous public offices which he had | filled; on the admirable manner in which he | had discharged hiv dutics to his family and | relatives, and on the general excellence of | his characte hen, suddenly pausing in | strain, he exclaimed, “ But, my friends, he was not a professor of reli hor a member of a Christian chureh, and he | ins now tehether to heaven or hell, it is unneccasiry for me to mention.” ‘There are few if any human charnctere | | about which people do not differ in opinion diametrically. To the wed man of th | South Abraham Lincoln stands aa the chief | We think th. Mr. Lineoln war | | noble character, with a heert | a pure and Old Abe has gone to 1. Of the two, we had much rather hear Brick #ay that Gen Butler stole spoons, though he don't prove even that a political opponent can be denounced and abused sufficiently by @ smart man without “Judge not, that ye be not judged.” There | " is something awful to all finite beings in the contemplation of eternity, Death is a mys tery clad in too much of terror for mortal man to parsue his victim with vindictive wrath beyond its dark, el sed portals, We may have our fair, st world; but let us hope of our worst ene — Dangerous Buildings. whose tithe Buildings. ture is or MH that of Superintendent of | 1 His duty is to see that no struc fer life, and no indoor business anywhere | conducted to the peril of those engaged in it, Yet, the other day, a terrible disaster happened in Canal etreet, which it was the provinee of Mr, Macgregor, — the officer aforesaid, to have — prevented. A paper box manufactory was kept by ono Thomas Ryan at Nos, 268 and Canal street. On the upper floor this man in the ruins, and ono of them, Mary FP, Fallon, subsequently died of her wounds, The remainder a suffering from bruises and other injuries inflicted in the crash, Where the blaine reats the Cor has not de or ided, and the Superintendent of Buildings is travelling in Europe, so he ean vt offer any assistance, This melancholy disaster should direct public and private attention very strong): first, to the slight and imperfect character of many of the buildings now erected in this city, and second, to the very dangerous practice of loadiig them far beyond their powers of endurance, ‘There are hundreds, yea, thousands of such man traps in New York, Within our recollection, buildings t this city have tumbled des tem roof to cenat Without a warning, killing and maim ing those within and in the vicinity, without a f escape. Of the scores of buildings umble to atoms at the first breath of a fire, the long list of martyrs of the Fire De- partment ix a sufficient memorial, All this is radically wrong, and shows a vicious recklessness in builders, owners, and inspect: ors that ought to be checked, There are many—very many—buildings today in New York 80 overloaded that the lives of those who work in them aro hardy worth an hour's purel and the Superintendent of Buildings and the | Fire Commissioners know it, yet the owners are allowed to go ou Gamolested in the um of such perilous property, It is high time that the Grand Jury should take hold of this | and Dring these desperate specula tors in human life and limb to punishment | But we do not suppose they will do anything of the sort, at least not uutil some such ap pulling disaster as that at the Pemberton Mills shall suddenly arouse public attention to this erying evil. —— A month ago betting on the Presidential election was two to one in favor of Grast, This was the rate of Jour Mornissay'e funous bets, aerstandin yurth © have gi Dis as we understand, have been withd Since then Surmovg stuck has risen iu the sporting world, and bets are now made at 100 on Graut to 80 on Seymour, Many Sey ng the betting fraternity think tion Seymour will have risen to par, so that then it will uot be possible to get any but even bets. which, through mis such umbsage in the gr ssio trict, and whieh 0) mour men w thut before ele i In spite of the continued protestation of peaceful intentions on the part of the Emperor of the Freneh, Europe is very uneasy at the pros: peet of war between Fru The Emperor is increasing the numbers and eflicieney of his wriny, buying horses and feed, and push: ing on the manufacture of the new Chassepot rifle without rest, These preparations provoke counter preparations, not only in Prussia, but in ee and russia, the press is free to express the confidence of some that a certain individual isin heaven, all the other Continental Stites; s the appre | busin | conduc that he was not bow shall not do it, he curr On the whole, we aro inclined to think that | of rigorous sifting, upon what is furn fucts, saying of him that he has gono to hell. | dishonest, unless he ean bring uy add, he will commit a grave error if hh avoid the epith deal stronger for it, ndup fights in this |} ean who is dead, that he has not gone to hell! iin convince your readers or hearers, — How you do this if you use a style of YY) | language which shuts their ears and inst you at the very beginning? The We have a public officer, Uberally paid, | y very likely that it may have driv eted which can in any way endan. | from that party whom a different sort of reason- however, di comments on the subject are exclusively in the interest of good manners, and are prompted solely by a de current politics dressed to th that it wax wddrossed to Howell Cobb, Wade F ; —a— or his workmen had piled an immenso stock | yf, Gurvivy inthe Triune says that of inill boards, which, added to the weight of Tue Son seems to prefer to cross his track neutting machine, one day suddenly broke | somewhat eccentricully.” We are sorry if he is through the floor with such force as to carry | displeased with our recommendation that under all the tloors below with it to the basement. | Gen, Guayt’s administration he should be up- A large number of workwomen were in the | pointed Minister to England, But we can’t with- place, several of whom were crushed down | draw it, It is our sincere conviction that Horace could possibly send to that country, I dustry aud trade, which we fecl even at this dis tance, For it is well known to careful observers that much of the dullness of the times of whieh we complain on this side of the Atlantic is caused by a similar dullness in Europe, Everybody there is waiting to «ce what is going to happen, and <¢ is brought to a standstill, Even war would be preferable to this constant dread of it, as that would give some kind of occupation to men now idle, — A mysterious Providence” is the mis nomer of death, the inevitable lot of man, Our divines ought to revise their theology. — By way of refuting a speech of Mr. Vat LANuiuuam's upon finance, the Zyébune the other peatedly called him a liar and a villain, nod to ue a coarse and foolish way x A public controversy, and we waid Ko. n the Trihune, with « curious sort of ‘Thiee Theren | Sect to those great Sta'oy, Lil jnconsequence, summons us to consider a differ. en follows: Hovatio Seymont, jst before the last Conneetiont | Stote election, and when too late for efeetive refata Lon, mae a Demoeratic speech at Bridgeport, wherein be stated os anquerGonable faou that TT will cost this year tore than §150.000,00) to maintuin 7 op tie South in satyny , HH, © More tern 0008 per 0 Uphold Unis pulley’ of reconstruc wasied ly convinced that they oh aude them? Certainly we We know, if the Tribune docs mestly the most upright advocate may away from the exact truth in the heat how ready he is to rely, without ed him as h cond: pot the » Evea then, let us emp Prove the truth, but ar case will be a great at umen| » man ought to pronor most convincing eviden oy ihe words liar and villain, te, and y What is the object of public discussion? To am, Was doubtless to make con- to the Republican party ; but by i ot to say blackguard, plirascology, it is ay 8 viow jent, en a ng would have enlisted in its support, not particularly concern us, That, Our to mitigate the brutality of our 1 del Our rebuke is ad Tridunc to-day, in the sume spirit ates, Hampton, and N, B. Forrest in these columns yesterday, Greever will muke the most and useful Ambassador wh opular, influential, United States en his + and peculiarities will contibute to make him a favorite with every class of the Eng- m the lish people, He will be regarded there with an appreciation given to no American in Europe since the days of Bexsaain Fraxkiix, This we say is our judgment, and we mean to say so on Proper occasions, Perhaps Mr, Gueerey would rather not go to England, If so, we shall regre that he declines a field of usefulness in which pnsidering the important questions that will for some time be pending with that Goverament, he would be able to render extraordinary service to his country, —— é “Our future pets toward Mexican" io shay ar, Seward is now pondering, We ought to have but vliey toward all nations, Whether contiguous or afar off, now or in the future, and that isto do nothing wato them that we woukl not have done to ourectoes oli nity, of which the He ought quickly to ‘wash its hands, Perhaps Which Mr. Seward is going to inangn- for our past policies toward Mexico have been anything but just. - —— one Any other podel Repub, yisan i his it is A spondent wants to know what was that speech of Gon, Bain to the Fenians in 1806, | which the Republican papers are now tatki about at such @ rate, In compli with his | request we copy it, as follows: “GENTLEMEN? Lam with heartily wyy God. L ne, al’) ‘ou heart and soul, and «the Piunegans. [A voloo— Uknow what Tam talking [Laughter and cont that P-hope fo see the cause four and shall blest the day when Ire ed by trishmen, In accomplishing shout, and Tsay Binnegans, Hlow.|' And T's sh and pr land is gow this landable undertaking Twill do all you Twill plac miyselt, If needs oh with yo to Staten I kation; Will stand on the the court, dnd as yo fare in ii your ed bluft of emblem While your steamers thelr prows to the e | may you be success. yo May you [if the British Ht Of his boots, and wrest fom his grasp the emerald gem of the sea; hut Whether of not you shall succted in this endeivor, may you each aad oat Feninin dn Irelsud and evewhere, and never again tet foot Won there shores? You ure wanted Uvere, and we can get along without yo is the speech which the Republicans say Gon, Busi delivered, Wedon't believe it, We don't believe Gen, Bla ever insulted an Irish sudience, We pronounce the speech a forgery, Who cun rund ove that it is genuine? eee, The Newark Hvening Courier bas a clever article about Tie Sex, which it requests us to y, and in which the following sound opinions ure expressed : “Tt as sparklin co} racy, and on the whole excellent: ly mana, Its “hews ‘compilations are superior to the gencvality of metropolitan dailies, It hi 4.9 col un of *8u ‘which do not in the wast re semble the Zriduue's *jokes’ on the Presidency, It wever—or very scldom—exhibits. bad writing any hove in ite poges, Weis meutly printed and earetut ¥ proof read,” We are especially grateful for this appreciation of our proof-reading, It d good, We brag on it, It iy the faithful work of a conscientious scholar, and we thank the Courier for bringing it into public notice - —_ The Hon, Joun Mounissey says that he shall UN, FRIDAY, AUGUST MR, BEACH'S LETTERS—TUE LAST. aan New Jensey, July 90, 1898.—Two reasons there are for hurrying these wayside letters to a concle- sion—one, that of necessity they are but oft-told talcs of familiar sights (or tales of sights #0 nearly at home that they should he famfiar), whereas THe Sux may be better employed in ilaminating diurnal news ; ‘and the other, that Tam nearing home and familiar friends, and therefore tess in the mood for chatting with those who know me only at the pen's point. From St. Louis to Cleveland the traveller may spend his foar-and twenty hours’ ride in the enjoy- ment of as much bodily comfort as is vouchsafed to travellers anywhere in tho same period of time; but there ve few places where, the iron horse having been tamed for use, ‘ime will pase loss profitably in the matter of charming ‘vconery, I mean no dist is and Indiaua, across whose surfice we are borne, but I call their own ciulacns to witnoes that thelr riches of beauty are not on the rullroad's border, wherever else they may be, A litte more of variety there 18 in Ohio, and before we reach Cleveland the eye rests upon many really charming bits, Ttmade a défour in Richland county to see a gold mine (aprapor to the nam), and enjoyed fording a stream with borse and buggy—the fright of the Buckeye girl who uccowpanied me ae guide included; but of none of these things will I Hoon was Warm enough for the warmest warn in the intercets of humanity lof a region ever heard of, when the conductor warn | fi me Chrietian apirit. He felt it LO” fper bis travellers that they were entering Cleveland—as Mignelehaigl, bbe roberegg 5 ‘ aud ont though that «plendid expinse of bine water, the keenly for the woos of others; his rympa- | | -—We hu ae ereported TOF Mat rfated Te the | bridge we have crossed, and the ham and nolne ar thivs were tender and quickly touch: ON | World--on the very eve of an tinportant election, | amoke throagh witch we have passed, to say nothing ne oceesion a gentleman of this city, Mr, | Now. we will (haul the Swi to answer categorically | of this maguitdeont d2harcatire, Ald aut proclaim the \ a Ware Tiree: ' fet y | fie! morcetoarly than bis ity-heard words could do. Sherman, called on him at the White | 1. Were these nesertions, or either of them, ¢ | . See ee me 4 It at true, were they tiletises whieh a de. | ‘There bé few eittes in Amerie a E would that House, aud found him overcome with ef | cent A Atacrican statesman could honeetiy | strangers chould emtor, at a means of obtaining ut a and weeping over the story of a Tittle or | '! Of the atove, what sears they P | glonee an Itea of our whole country, ant one cer phan boy who had just Leen into soe him, | We don't see what our opinion concerning Mr. | tainly of those fow Is Cloveland, Few clttos are where he had been twice wounded. ; etter to call a gentioman on the bor side © | rise, ingenuity, and ilberatity, Atthe some time Mr. Lincoln was emi. | or and villain than it is to prove his statomeuts | ""Aqyod to ll these attractions, my tittle party nenUy just. We remember to have seen and his argomests fallacious The | seomed eepeciilly fuvored in the period aelectod, The Limon some oeensions when he resisted ay | common sense of civilized ™ " : everywhere ue gs which followed our arrival w vhs ti pe ig-ol i ‘1 favor of the latter method, and to the | ed with galety, av ever the Christmas holidays eon wals from his old friends in his own Stats, if ent Sac nie nd ' Mle @ hich he | Method of the Zribyne, whose bost parultel is | be, Toree or four weditings led off te fostivain a from astern sonse of public duty, which he nin sof angry boors or quar. | Slaminations, and parties followed tn rapid succes | would willingly have made great personal | 1" hed lcctntit B oa dh ae | elon. ‘Tea partion and all kinits of house gatherings i} i leet oe | were the every day weleomes to whieh we were bid sacrifices to grant, He always impromod ae ier Uy notice the Tiddunce quest r ry day ut let us notice the Zrvdunee questions, ime | ee eee eee sonia wa onto 8 a strictly conscientious, faithiul public " y are to th PY pdt escalate pal boas atebidl Moly Yi pertinent us they are to the point at issu | promenade en roltwre, And let me say for the good officer, evident to ony man who knows the facts, that the | Gieyotaud folks, that these things were earried out Whi ntertain th views, | statements quoted as Governor Seymour's are | with charming taste and completeness, leaving noth. others, with entire honesty, hold very differ. | not trne, and that it is not ereditable to him Wie tobe wished for, “ Bro’ Limeelf, J ent ones. ‘The liberty of apeceh and of the | have made them, He should not have allowed do better. eh i fe in t himself to be led into such exaggeration, We hada quiet afternoon with Gen. Sherman and Re eee a ie | Was ws cae prope Sutera We 8 party of mutual friends at Taylor's farm, and the Hut it docs secm pretty rough to say that | fair banks of the lake aided much In the enjoyment thereof, Then we had Fourth of July, m country dance in New England #tyleon South Mountain, and an tee cream, or something better, at Rocky river. We investigated the mysteries of refining petroleum and of storing itin artielal eaves ; of making white Jead and barrels, fences, chairs, and oll cloth, and a hundred things besite, One thing there was in Cleveland which, more than others, I would, if it were povsible, transplant to Manhattan soll— Enelid street, with Its fine re This “Fit avente™ enjoys no 2x100 lots vered with ma ble, or #tone, or brick, but an ample spaee for trees ‘1 lawn, fa the portion assigned to each residence, ‘The Kuelid lots” are not leas thin twenty thucs the size of the full lots on our Now York Pifth aven- ue. May they never grow smaller, many hours’ ride from Cleveland are the world-famous “oll regions," and these were next on the list of desirabilities, At Meadville we rested for the night, and at sunrise were *oil-bound,.” The Feneral aspect of these oll regions has been much changed since the earlier period of the oll fever. What was then sp modic hax beeome chronic, The excitement of welldigeing and of fortone finding has no whit abated, Latit has Leeome a matter of fact culentation, ant does not come so prominently to the surface, The chances of a greas gain or a great loss are now foote . up and understood from the outset, Dizging an oil well is aa item of pre determined cost, and Is as regularly undertaken by contraet as the building of a house in New York, While linproved instruments have lessened both time and cost in weil boring, and some deviee Ix ready for every possible emergency in that direetion, an equal, if not greater, degree of tmprovement Is manifest in the masiagement of exhausted wells, aud in handling and transporting the oi {a bulk. Tt has Deen found that many ones large producing wells have falled frou coagulation of the oil by contact with alr at those points where it flowed into the well, These points having beca frst determined by certain sounding rods, torpedo 1s prepared—made of gun eotton—and lowered to the required spot, The explosion of thia torpedo, by breaking the rock and by burning out the coagulated oil, rejuvenates the ola well—sets it flowing again SUll more easily appreciated is the now system of transportation recently jutrodu The oi is found in many places which aro not easy of access Such a one is Shamburgh, distant flve or six miles from railroad or water communication, and eut off by high and rocky hills, Here an oil transportation company has been formed, They receive a tank fall of oil and deliver it at the allroad depot, six miler distant, without removing the tank and without the use of barrels! How? They have laid a three-ineh Iron pipe over the hills and across the streams the whole intervening distance, and, with a steam engine, pump- ing the oll out of this tank, they force it into another ‘one at the other end of the pipe, Pipes from that far-oif tank lead juto othr tanks on railroad cars, 60 that by the mere turning of stop-cocks whole trains are filled with oil in the space of a few minutes. And thus the yield of oil is scattered over all the adjoining country and the dangers whieh necessarily attend « we progesa aro thereby lessened and teattered. Yet is there, neverthotess, immense quan- tives of oil kept on hand at and near the wells, To Protect this from dre and explosion, as well as from evaporation, has been a subject of much experiment, ‘The result is, that immense fron tanks—Just like the the great gassholders of the New York gas works, are everywhere seen in immense numbers, ‘The rools of the: nks are covered with earth, and that is kept so molst that grass grows upon It freely, The earth protects the oll trom the heat of either sun or fire, and the tank is filled uptied by pipes and PULps Without taking Off the cover, Shamburgh, of which T have spoken, and its neigh. + Ploasontviile, are towns of but a few mout ‘owthyand there seems a probability that every year will add one or more yet newer ones to the oil region, ‘This fs not because the wells have failed in Titusville, Ol City, and other localities, but by dence ause ofthe steady and healthy growth of the whole re- gion, and because of the Increase of facilities for making a stealy ond reliable business out of the hitherto “lucky hits’ in oll production, From the oil regions (whose fue public school Dulidings best mark Uhe progress in systematized Dusiness) my route was down the valley of the Alle ghany, to Pittsburgh, by a uewly-opencd raflroad, T found myself in the course of that ride more “in the country,” among simple-learted, unsophisticated People, than has been my fate before in many years, Farming and oll-refuing bave become sadly mixed all through this valley, and glve token of more strife betweon producer and consumer in days to come, ‘The produc.. will be driven toward the setting sun, ud the long line of munfacturing pursett+, of which this coal refining is but an avant courter, will become masters of the fleld, Pittsburgh shows loss of change in the last ten Years—less of progress—than docs any Northern elty Weot Of the Alleghauies which has conie within my observation, It has grown In extent somewhat, yet not remarkably, and its business appears diminished rather than increased, Tut I speak from impres: slons, and not from studied facts, It seems to me ai more of an English than an American city; the rea- sons being, perhaps, its ample supply of smoke, and the many peculiarly English names of streets and suburbs, My Sunday there was marked by the ap: pearance in the pulpit of a friend whom I had heard Preach than a year previously in the A yin Beirut, Syria, ‘The gratification ‘® separation, may be lange of such a 'mcctug, after due mm gh, over the monntaing, by one of famous of Atnerican railroads—the Pennsyl Vania Central—to Harrisburgh was 9 rich feast of pleasure to the eve, ‘The eapltal of the Dutch State Was ax quict as thong it had never known the ox- elvement of a threatened rebel Invasion, And thence through the coal region vad across the State of * Cam: den and Amboy,” as New wey 8 not unjastly eall- ed, my route lig homeward, Not without incident, not Out pleasure, nor yet Without subject fore. certainly Mave the Democratic nomination for Con gress in the Fourth District, His pluck is goud, and Lengion thus excited isa complete varalysis of in- Litherto Lis tuck has been god alsy,, ion, but the days were warm, und travelling Writing and dust go not "well together, fore say Ta foal kood-by, putting with it a id of good wishes to all Who lave borue me com: pany, dusty, whi 21 Meee src eort ots eters rae. 1868, Hauppague, An [dy!, by 4 Long Istand Farmer, L Among the pines, and near the sea, We spend our lives right pleasantly ; ‘Tn healthful toil the time Mes pawt > With busy towns how great contrast No rent, email tax, are ours to pay, Bo loudly sing the cheerful lay: A country life's the life for me, On old Long Island, near the sea, M. ‘There's J. R. Walker has a team ‘That goes like lightning's darting eleam, And Haison's Kelly, gritty bay, ‘Can trot two-lifty any day; And Wilson's farm u# fair to view, It's large and nice, productive wo Bo come and «ee us at D. P., Oa old Long Isian\l, near the sea, mm We plough and sow, we reap and mow ; We tend the chicks, we mitk the cow ; ‘We gather fruits from pear to peace And clamming go upon the beach 5 By enil or steain we cross the bay ‘To fam'd Fire Istand’s suet and spray: ‘Then come anil nee us, epooutly On old Long Ieiand, near the sea, 1. We bathe, we fisti; our trop, onr gan Afford us lots of «port and fan, And linnting, rides, or drives #0 fin Speod us among the «badly pine; ‘The roads are good, the f-lk« are kind, A hearty weieore you will dod: ‘Then country Hfe's the life tar me, Ou old Long Telaud, near the sea, Vv, Sublimest essence of our days Our Sabbaths! th nd praise At meeting or at Sunday kehoo! ; ‘Thus learn to live by faith and rule, We try to practive what 1s taught, Since withont God, all clse te uaugiit : So thus we live, religiously, Ou old Long Island, near the rea, VI. Thavedeon Mast, and Ivo sought Wert, But old Long Ieiond Is the best ; At Wooly yickls What man requires, Nor need be limit bis deetres; Here, near tho city, all he'l! find— Health of body, peace of wind: Come then, with friends, qitek, joyously, To old Long Island, near the sea, in we pray B, W. Hauppagne, te, eweot water, This seetion was so called by the Undiaus Wocad-e of Ie Loe aud humerous Sbrings. Har-way Houiow Iris, Dusk Pam, | LONG Ietann, N. ¥., duly 4, 1608," f ———— ta Olande Davy: Kichmond Dispateh, mn received here doubt about the fret tha ville Montele is at the head of a regularly org bani of | thieves with active members in many of the counties on the route between Hichmend and the Potomue River, ond with efficiewt agente and secompliess ta thin city, Washington, on! Haltimore Granville Montclie, the ehief and executive of or of the gong, isnow known and feared in nearly all the eastern conutics, and many are the etorics | oat his dare-devil expolts aud " generous f There eecwe to be a dixponit 8 hero of him ; and, indeed, he 4 HiiMaeif su Ditiogs to rank asa geutioman of the road" wiily Claade Duval, Dick Turpin, and Sixteen-String Jac with this dite lis speciality le fine be stead of fat pury He scorn Will sometime test rate He glorics in bic and fant t aceuts keep him pe * to [he whereabon three, and fy dred doth # and if he ‘once slips the bridie over a horse’ 2 that horse te gone, Tt ie sald he mover takes the last horse from the plough, and swears that he would rather quit ue busivess than rob @ poor man! It may not be generally known that Montelle ts a Richmond man, ant ts the son of respectable Many of our citizens remember himasa wild, ba: searum, mischievous, but centecl bey. Tits known ex) it Wan the elcaling of a cow, This eri been followed by many of the same erade; but hax never been secused of murder, altho es doubly aruied, and bus several times excha Hols Wilh those Who have attempted bis capture, Once, we ren wer, Lu the streets of Petersburg. Montelle has veen three times in the penitentiary; and many tines !o juil, almost as often making his escape, te Was bk onvieted in the Clrenit ourt of Vetersbarg, and it being for lis third pentientiary offence, he wan sent there for life, Being received Within thoee gloomy walls, he behaved himself in the most exemp!ary manner, Winning the commendation of all the prison offcers, But four months had not elapsed bifore he made his escape and with him two other convicts. He did not heel- ite at once to resume is old trad: bat stole horses for the party § soon ‘as he crossed the live into Mano county, Since that time his exploits have frequently reecived notice at our hand. After twor or three months in West Vir- ginia he boldly returned to Richmond, and has xeve- ral times been secn on the streets by those who knew him when he was an honest man, mn one ocearion he reined up bis horse in front of a barroom near Bacon's Quarter Branch, and, handing a bystander some money, requested him to go in and bring out a bottle of whiskey, begging to be excured for asking the favor, bat urdi We y Way logy, Yam Gra. ville Montelle, aud ft tsn't ai ether safe for me to De Hingering about Richmond.” He got the whiskey. Gov. Wells would do well at onee to offer a reward for the apprehension of this desperado, He «wears, however, * by all that’s holy," that he will never be taken alive. Ho is deserived as about thirty-tive of age, five feet eleven inches high, with dark fair and Lazel eyes, He is marked by scars on the aves no foraload, on the fligcrs of is right hind, and ie: alto, tween (he first wid second fingers of his lelt by axcuron his let leg, from the kick of a ben last heard from he was near Duintries, ord county, probably on kis way to the Dot river, ‘The’ police should have aneye on i pected accomplices in this ety, — ‘The * Wickedost Man tn New York," of Luckard’s Month- Oliver Dyer’ ntate. ty, the editor monte in re the © Wickedest Man ty Naw York.’ He says: * All the statements in Mr, Dyer's qrilctes are literal and exact truths, ‘There is not a Wrure nan crapulous, careful writer ea the thee of ci In another place hd says? “The Hon, ‘Thom: Acton, President of the Board of Metropolitan Polic Allen for ten years or more, Dyer’s first aree on *The whd has known Jobn said to un after M. Wick dest San’ cane ‘ever War a man so truthfully portrayed, Dick ens has never limued an ideal character so faithfully cr hax set beiure the world the ehuracter of again wie Inst we have met *T: fuce to ficemand a lung-to-be-ren as, As soon as we were i began about Mr. Dyer's articles, # What Mr, Dyce says is all truc—except that am the Wiesedost iW New York, Tai not the Wickedest Man in New York; no, #t, not by a good y tovussnile, Hut never mind, Dyer fs a kod «good man, T should say—and m ns Well, Tewore I never shake bands with him after he came Wickedest mbered tee Ato hin, onton me; but Phave, aud. shall again. He's killed the danee-ouse business, though, and I'm not sorry Tm going to qult anyhow. T wash the old shop nailed up tovay,and Pd nail itup if ‘wasn't turning the girls into the street without a howe ‘The uctoricty produced by Dyer's articles 18 perfect ly awit! Wy, L hast wt least forty white ehokers in 1 they began to call on mc to Said Tio one of th yoks are thore ii the Old Testa: "tell. Sald I to another: Looks im the New Testament!’ Ze wld T, *this won't You are not familar caough with your tools to You just go home and getan e Bible, and then come here and Fil aud I showed ‘em out,’ : — ‘The Force of abit, paper relates the following, Mustrat- of habit in horses : tin Atlanta a good story, told on the press Ag aud bis appearance at ehurct bathe since, Those who lve ln Avant who bave visited there this notice a aplendid pair of la drawing one of tie Southern Express wagons, Tl. se horses are the herves of the story, wiici rund Js col ows; ‘On the Sunday after the * Express ration a» so-called Governor, he essayed to appear in before the public with his “lady.” Orde: ent toa livery stable for the finest turnout in the way of plueton’ and horses which the establish ment could atord, When the equipage appeared, the * Agent,” not thinking the horses sufliciently stylish for sucll a great oecasion, ordered them to be remov- ed and the splendid paly of blacks putin their Place, ‘This was doue, and the party proceeded with liverted driver to the house Of worship seiveted fur the vcew- tion, Upon approaching the door of the church, the man in very directed hie line of advance so as to bilng thot side of the carringe in which sat enthroned. the “Indy” of the f° (' nearest the church entrance, The crowd opened-—the sexton bowed and humbly approached the august presence—curlosity. was, od Up-toe—ladies were scanning the style of bonnct, the cut of the dress, the color of the ribbons—while the sterner sex stood entranced with the dazzling do, be good worktnen. intrduet n tO t tals to you © is ato gent’s haugn spectacle so now to Atlanta, Just as the carriage step was apposite the door of the cluurch, the driver culled to the proudly prancing steed and ip an instani—in the twinkling of an ey noble imag, true to their education and habits as * expres carricrs,” wheeled upon re of a cirele corre- sponding with the length of the pole of the earriage, and bucked the je, with a Jam and crash, into the vory door of the sanctuary. The panic orented by this diversion of the noble blacks ean better be hiiagined than described, Children sereamed, wo= men fainted, the minister lost his txt the sexton | come your feeling for hum, | duce, “Lord have mercy npon us," and men seam. pered right and left, while the splendid blacks, with Clevated heads and arched necks, stood grandly their foaming bite. Tetnccntione thot arent," covered with con. In fasiom, and crimson with mortification, strided out of the carriage and, sharply drawing hie After hiss, was soon lost tn, the seething crowd : a hus ended the “Agent's” first appearance in state the gaze of the vulgar herd, ——— A Little Love Story. From the Oid bachelor, in Harper's Dusan, You would Ls f believe that old Algernon Ridley, whose paisied form yon see painfully totver- ing and shufling along the avenue, was ever an is, But he was, Ho enptivated men and he conquered women, and like most heroes and con- rors we knew his own power, My cousin Macy tiiner and he were neighbors. They played to- guther, first; then, as they grew older, they walked, and rote, and bouted, while yet he was a boy and eheagirl, Next came college, and away he went, ‘They said a blithe good-3ye and parted, nor did ‘they meet erain wntil the lone vaestion, Home came, the handsome Algernon, no more ® boy. Prank, familiar, thoysnt, he was even more welcome than’ beiore,” ‘The switk years flew. Fach added a crace to tei charm to hin He ‘old ber of his college lise, th id pranks, th hopes, the triumphs. She toid him of the town’ gos Hip. of the Deoks whe yead. the journeys wlio tad rieada she gained, “My friend Mary Latimer, Alzeroon to hie intimate college compayi« bs one friend: room Ridjey,"" eaid May to ler mother, “is the brightest man in college, nun very for'auate in having wuch a friend, you think «0, manma It wa wis how much she talked of Alecrnon, how consiontly whe congrutniated herself upon her good Crtaae ta Ms fricndship, and how very {nth tante t a he cate home. * People scorn te this rnon aud Leronot be gnod frien t how te tat Mary tol of he erent gtr in tove with y how serry he wa could he de, and i a reimaraable man he ting, evide bat « faithnul "woman nd, with whom there was no wer of falling In love. Home came Alery hove Taate. Fora few wee he was to enjoy the delictts of tMeoess beter the study Of his profession. Te waa summer; it was a lovely cguntry; and a every day and almost ail day Aleertion aud Mary we Bae took hor Work into the w erat ne a nymph wpon nd awung bimeel? inte the pine Jwart arms, a is voice in a tone W #trong and #weet: yor task Is ouded, Mar: bounded, langhiny, to her wand, “Do you know that? Te is the pre ley be hy's*Prowetheus." 1 lake Si spisedt the conventions. Me thuuzut the 1a fow!, and he told it so, And who lila Hutto tell itso? He wis aport. Mark! bi woodthrueh! Shcustone was a poet, tuo, when ang: i y fair, od-pigeone breed, y twan a ta * deed ‘could be tra, she avorred, Would rob a poor bird or ner yoltng ; AndTinved her thermore win Eheard Buch tcuidet! ess fall from her tongue.’ * He looked ap in her face as he repeated the tis Fair asa wood nymph, Tsay, Mary Latiner nat the rork, and 7 Hugers few and her soit anewered bir, and her happy li With suck a frlend, “Duay, busy — always busy." he would «1°. dary, You country klil, you village malden, do pod remeuber those lovely ‘iinos that gull uid Urea yon rt was contented Major used like to repeat ¥ ** Vera ‘wetous toil, however rade th» BUN at her work the village maiden Mag) ud we sie the busy wheel around ._., Resolves the sad vieaitude of thinus, Well, 1 too aust turn the busy wiieel around, of though T am not exactly a village malden : and, Muy, [stall want to hold tn my haud some clew to | the dear old days; so you will write to me, aud we oun be Just as good friends us eve: With the evening they mer days of idleness passed by A tmanly bo d begged her nut to con: urd! “Algernon and [under otner perfectly. | Our friendship is purely ‘Then for an honr she taiked of him, de- | repeatingerery thing he criling every thing he did said, uatil her mother replie# © Mary, itis a matter in which my experience mi decid, “Uniess you love Algernon inore than ime you will not wrle to him. Wuen you see him y are conscious of some fruits, but they do not ove When he writes he will right to ask you to giv: ept upon one condition,” tad burst inte tears, that ber mother w: ad woth fie, Hee they unde a qi nt ae that they were capa. i" ndship. We know that it is just that and nothing more, don't we, Mary "sald Mary. © Certuinly we de He went, and Mary hind no. life left but in remem: bering the wood-we nd the poetry, and his tones | and his looks us he repeated it, But she did pot write, The next summer he came again walks were renewed, there was m st one day soon uiter he returned Al “Mary, bam off for « Lam engaged to | the most beautiful wowas world. | want you to know each other, for Lam sure we shall wil three be as good friends as we two have been, And, now, I don't believe your mother will object to our eu ponding, We, at least, have shown that and woman miy have & Platonte trends Algernon Kidley never brought the taut peaatiiut woman in the World to soe lis Platouie friend, and Mary Latimer never marrted, com fauitiess, He bas m n said to her Burnum's Race, The telegraph, a few days ago, reported that PT, Barnum had won a foot race at thy Fram House, White Mountains, A correspondent of the Hartford Post gives the following version of the race t © After dinner the entire company repaired to the verandait of aud promonade 4 Of the Louse for a little frolic as usual; the moving spirits in crowd secwed tobe Barnum und Le Grand Lo wood, who had been bere some little Barna made a humorous — speech, set the crowd Into roars of laugiter, and then proposed a race of the heavy men of the house, whieh should include himself, Clreulating among the company, he picked out six of the ta i; st and fattest men he could thd, and placed: them In a Ww directly in front of the steps of the plaza, Mc tuen addressed them, and said the race would be to {heh nea. ann ty ed Ma SLED at start upon bis counting three, and the stakes ere to be 4 dite Gicket to his new museum, ‘copy of ls leetare on Humbuggery; then tak his position at the head of the line, he iad and deliberately tthe 1d one—two—three, Word * thre,” they all started om a dead rum, with the exeeption of Barnum, who quietly sat down on the steps: fat men didn't discover the sell until they had rea the fence, and were greeted with souls of liuguter from tho crowd on the verandah.” a Tue Vevocirepg Fiery Yeans Auo.—The * ve locipade,” which Is now attracting attention, ant « Which oh exhibition Is to be given on Boston Com mon, is sinply anow name for the same kind of i vention which was in quite gene years back, Itwas inen called a Knglond, probably from their use being mostly con fined to the dandies of the period, At that th fashionable men might have been seen on any of popular drives, propelling along, with thelr coat jt of forty-tive degrees, to the infinite themselves aud. t of the of the coveted hinen that period was structed Hk atroduocd, eaceptng that (t the front whee! by whieh it eo rly started, It w ind, and al indy horae”” ii he | of temporarily rested pon | mall pro) nd of the front aate unt) horse requ Propulsion. ‘The danily horse, however, dled out of use about the year 182), 6 measure owing to several serio through thelr nag, ¢ Jess nature of the But they we Sheridan, Pitt, aad oti patronized thom extensively, Taking their * constitutional after & hard nigat spent in the House of Coma or arouud the gaming tabi mmanncreral Adver flay ath aa able Tue Last Texxesser Ovtaack.—The Nashvill: correspondent of the Chichinath Gazette writes In ‘accid icity ruptares, whieh the jor's seat was Very apt to | pre high feather ohee, and. Rox the. period in Si, James's Park on the dandy-hors ah relation to the late Ku Klux outrage at Pravklin Tennessee: “The rebel Democracy will endeavor to represent that Bivrflold was killed for private and not political reusour, and that be had something to do with the murder’ of young Kael several week A ine | citizen Of Frrnklin, who has en a The) rdlay, He heard of thi attempt excising us fout mt ¢ indignantly characterized 1 <a basel od. * There ts,’ sald he, ‘at he present tly 1 Grand Jury'in session at Franklin, com) Tt has been in bust, and if ¢ atirely of conservative citizens, son for more than three weeks > were any suspicions whatever against Bierflel). liere was the amplest oppor! un: to verify them, Hut no one has uttered a word in reference to such a suspicion, not even upon the streets.” The sawe geutieman saw the murder of Bierfleld from the wiudow of bis house, and de: scribes the entreaties and supplications of the poor Victim a9 being most intense, "I have beea tn ts Yor.” be remarked (0 the gentleman Who lieard is uecount of the matter, “1 have been in favor of the mildest aud most moderate treatment in reference to the misguided men who compose the Ku-Klus Klan; but Yam now convinced that forbearance encourages them, and that a Littio wholesome bloods the noblest of women; we are the best of | mt | ! Muse ome fifty | cha | | | The fares SUNREAMS, pane —The United Kingdom Temperance and Gen era! Provident Society has a eapital of £900,000, =—The Rothsebilds hare come into Possession of the finest blue diamond in Surope. —Man does not know woman, but thinks docs, and tolls her he doce, Woman does know man ond thinks she does, but tells him abe does not. In Indiana divorces are four times more nu merous, according to the number of the population, tuan in Connecticut, —The § w Valley, Michigan, it is stated, Will ship this season over four handrod million fect of lumber (o the cities of the West. —An ntomporary gives enrrency to @ report that a Journal i to be started In this city, to Acutralize the antielpated lafluence of the Hemarrat, —The Manchester Unity of Odd Fellows num Dered at their lest annul meeting no less thin | 40,090 metnbers, with @ eanital of £009,000 sterling. —An English paper saps that 4,090,000 copies of “Hymns, Ancient and Modena,” lave be | Great Britain within the last five years, —Many wheat fields in Eagiand have been «et by sparks from Jocomotiver, and entirely de- fold in Nova Scotia bonsta that nota single case of has oecnrred within Ite 1 this year, | Which leads a contemporary to retark that the sane is prot Greenland —A man who was murtiod the other doy | Providence, not only$neglecte! to paz the dergyman | the castomary fee, but borrowed his umbrolla, which at last accounts he hal not returned. | —Laughter is seldom heard in new countries Rmong women. Overtaxed stronzth drives alr Away in wowt casos, aud seriousness, all st prevails, —The Norfolk (Va) Journa! says that there are 75,00) Virginians in Ohio, reone migh | at this Was carpet-burgary on a prodigious | Provably circummtances allor cases, por of the bested 4 | 1, a Boston gentle. | “ Last Saturday my motler-in law eam @ short time it became so hot I was obliged to md, | now of Porten 97 year uth, N. HL, He has p married 1,718 © is hale and hearty at th hed 5,00) times fn Ot lox, wad attended 2,163 ays that the poems of snken, called * 4," wall be pprilr- eoursly in London, P ad New & religions east, and 4 to Charles Dickens. kmon of Gloucester met th to consider the propriety of raletng York. Th we | tre destion —The mil niet other the price “of the in oiler words, owing to the searelty oF ch is now manufactured in fs wound up by opening and shut ting the case six tines. When the wateh ts wound | up it may be opened and closed an Indeflaite number of Umes without effect —A Connecticut sportsman, who is addicted to shooting out of season, saya be dues not violate the game law, He only goes ont with his gun, and Mivcharges It; when, If the birds fly up just in time to get hu, they virtually commit suicide. —Owing to the recent uncaampled heat, all the tropical plants inthe public gartens of Paris have flowere! and produce’ fralt and sce ts, ‘The Indigo, fer, bawana, and cotton plant are er, clunamon, © aus the nw Very extensive fires are raging in rshies and pe the bogs of Russia, and serious fears @ euteriainel for the safety of St. Petersburg, which is built oa peat. The people are now al- inost suifucated by the smoke of the neighboring uausen tavern keeper has in his a nice frame, @ board bill which Louis Na- poleon has owed him for thirty-nine years, Being a Deimocrat, le says he will not now take any money fort, When he wanted it paid, many years ago, ho says he could not get a shilling for it, —Johu Allen, “the Wickedest Man in New York,” has gone to the country with the Rev. Mr. Arnold, of the Howard Mission, to visit his father, ! ra, all clergymen, will be present, and a family council i# to be held in regard to Mr. Allen's course of life and the breaking up of the Water «treet dance house, —Washington College, at I seems to be prospering under the I’ Lee. The numb ts during the coming sewsion will, it Is sald, far exceed that of the la term, Gen, Lee is spending the summer vacation among the mountains of Virginia, and is gr proved in health, —An enthusiastic Democrat of Okolon wants to bet teu sections of land in Chickasaw county, in that State, on the election of Seymour and He thinks the party win the land would make a profit of one hundred per cont, in two years, This is a more cheer(ul view of the result of Grant election than Southern Democrats usually enter. tain, —The Springfield Republican says: “A worthy deacon in 4 Lown somewhere in North America, gave notice at @ prayer meeting, the other night, of » clureh meeting that was to be held tmmediately after, and unconsciously added, ‘There is no objec: tion to the female brethren remaining!’ Which re- minds us of a clergyman who told tn his sermon, last Sunday, of a very affectiy ene, Where * there warn't 8 dry tear in the house !? —The Hon, Samuel J. Tilden, of this city, was once Hpining wu apparently tuterminable yarn to President Johnson, tn the course of which he spoke of the oyster os pleasant to eat though repulelve to tly: Miss., look at, The Presideat, who was perhaps a trifle bored, here interrapted, and taking his spectacles from his nose, quaintly observed: * There was one thing to be said fa favor of the oyster, and that was, it know when to shut up.” London paper says very sensibly that ‘iced 1d be sipped, not gulped,” and adds: te connection between stomach and in is known to everybody, and it must be obviout at to pour an {eed draught into the stomach must send the blood to the heat, Very few who wave fndulged tu the rapid drinking of these beve- rages have failed to notice that a sudden pain tn the Lewd was the result, It may have been s sharp hoot, or a meve feeling of dullness, and it may have passed off iv a moment, but it was at least ineiptent p of the brain."* —The rapidity of travel since the introduction frailwaysis iustrated by a recent announcement drinks shou The tintin conges at the Journey ean be made from Paris to Constan- tinople in five days, passlag through Stuttgart, Mu- nich, and Vienna, and then passing down the Danube to Odessa, ing by the BI Only fifteen hours are occupied fu pas x Sea from Odessa to Constantinople. © $80.90 by Arstclass, and $59.60 by sec- oud-clase, or ¢ by second-class on the rullway and first-elass on the steamer, The passengers have the privilege of remaining fora reasonable time at the cities mentioned, —A lady riding in a car on the New York Cen- tral Railroad was disturbed in her reading by the conversation of two young wen occupying the seat before her, One of them seemed to be a student of some college, on his way home for a vueation, Ho used much profane language, greatly to the annoy- ance of the lady, She thought she would rebuke him, and, begging pardon for interrupting thom, sked the young student if he had studied the lan- guages. “Yes, madam, I huve mastered the lan- gauges quite well.” “Do you read and speak He: brew” "Quite fluently.” Will you be so kind a9 todo me a small favor #? * With great plousure. 1 am at your service.” Will you be so kind as to do your swearing in Hebrew #"" —A correspondent of the London Telograph tus describes how they did" the heated term in Paris: "Life goes on chiefly at night during thie Weather; when the earth is with dusky mantle clad, parties start for the Bols. I believe they pass: most of their night there. The correct thing is to drive to the Café de la Cascade, have a ‘Lock,' ord, letting is the only treatment that will suit the cave.” —— Srapoina Arvesy.—Elizabeth Titus, aged 29, S Grand street, seamstress, was y: ay charged at the Jefferson Market Court) before Justice Dodge, with cutting Louisa Connolly, on duly 15. with & rior eros the cheek and neck, wid. also across the breast, Wounding her ina serious ind dangerous manner, thereby endangering her. Ii The prisoner exeaped arrest until August 19, when Detective Kealy, of the Eighth Preeinet, took her itt custody, and brought her up yesterday ut Court vhere ‘she was held in the sum oF $1,000 to answe notwithstanding ber strong protestations of inn cence, supper, take a turn by the lake, supper, another turn and more *bocks,' and so on ‘till daylight doth appear,’ and thea home singing that chorus, * Buti- ness?’ you will ask, Oh, business is here trans. acted at most ubnormal hours, Ministers requeet you to see them at § o'clock A, M.; lawyers make Appoiniments up to 10 A. M., or after 6 P.M, A gens oman on business asually calls before you are owt of bed; aml the man with the Mttle bill,’ who will ‘wait, if you please, or, Indeed, if you don't plean is always eitting In the hall when you go Into break. fast.”