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-It is uno fashionable in New England to 4ave a few words of French on the tombstones over the grave of a relative. --The .ew York Pie-Baking com pany's factory, the largest establish ment of the kind in the world, has an invested capital of $150,000. Have a piece? -Some people complain about their children being non-observing, but we'd like to see the'child who won't observe how the family pie is cut and who gets the biggest piece. -Brigham Youlg's physician feels of the old man's pulse, tells him to run out his tongue and then shakes his- head and remarks: "I dunno-I dunno." -Kate Field says she is conscious that "the man doesn't live who can boast that he has held her hand more than two or three seconds at a time." No one to love. -Sorrowing widow go to Portugal. It is allowable there to marry after seven weeks of mourning, and we know of nothing more soothing to the lacerated heart than to-than to go to Portugal. -John Frode is no more. You probably didn't know him. He lived in western Missouri, and in entering the smoke-house of a friend to see how the hams got along a trap gun blew his head off. -When a man gets into a crowd and relates a joke which he has just beard, and some one speaks up and says he heard that five years ago, wouldn't it be justifiable homicide to kill him on the spot? ' -That was a beautiful thought of the poet that "woman clings to a man like the ivy." But is it always true? How many baldheaded men can tes tify that no woman ever clung to them like the ivy but what she let go like a grappling iron. -Dr. Mary Walker, who parts her clothes in the middle, is authority for the statement of John Stuart Mill that petticoats are but another name for passiveness; that corsets signify coercion, and that the trail is embod ied thraldom. -Every fashionable woman in Pa ris hangs to her belt an alms-bag, a fan, a card-case, a pocket-book, an umbrella, a turnip-watch, a pin-cush ion, some ivory tablets and a little mirror. And the sons of women like these are exuected to knock the non sense out of Germany some day. -Jerome Bonaparte, the second son of the deceaseid nephew of the great Napoleon, has been recently ad misted to the bar at Baltimore, and his list plca was pronounced an ad mirable effort, full of promise of fu ture distinction. lie is described as a line looking youngi man of grave aspect, with!l an .admirably formed head, and a face full of intellectual expression. -Ei.ernity is a solemn word and a solemn wo,'ld. The soul of man shrinks back with dismay and dread from entering that mysterious abode of spirilt. And yet all are on their way to eternity, and must soon en ter it alone. But how little think the gay and pleasure loving, who do tread so near its dark shores, how soon they must launch away on that untried ocean. -A Kansas lady, writing of a vis itation from a grasshopper in MaIiir shall count;y, says: "Next day the cornfields looked like plantations of bayonets. They ate the tops of veg etables, then the roots, leaving a hole in the ground. In the absence of other fruit, we have been counting greatly on the peaches; the trees are stripped, only the stones left hanging oh by the siems." -Bunyan the author of "Pilgrim's Progress;' on being cast into prison, made a flute of one of the rails of the stool belonging to his cell. The keeper often heard sweet music, but could not trace it, as Bunyan on his approach always replaced the rail in the stool. The officers searched in vain for the mysteribus sounds, but Bunyan kept his secret, and the baf fled men were.forced to believe them supernatural. -There is a large establishmnent at Kehl, .opposite Strasburg, on the Rhine, where artiffelal wine is madle into whieh a grape never enters. In the valley of the Rhine.and the Pal atinate there are hunditds of similar manufacturies where thi, imitation is made. The Rhenish and Alsatian wine-growers intend to uirgestlie Ger man Reichstag to pass a stringent law against the adifteration and fa/ sliffcation ofwines. -Thrtbell.of Alatno has been re moved to" Oalveston, Texas, having beein made a'priesenf to the Histori cal society ofTexas bl the Hon. Winm. E. Kendall, ofFort Bend county. This was the garrison.boll that soun ded the hours during the perilous times when the "Lone Star" was a r- - public and whose peals wakened to battle Fannin and Ward and their followers, whose bloody massacre marks the darkest page in the histo- i ry of her early career. What an Opposition Ilouse Can Do. Howeter the elections this f, the Atliniistri~tion wyilt 'lve a deci . ded majority in the Senate of the Fortv-fourth Congress. Then, what valuable objects can be.. attained by securing a hostile majority in the House? A little reflection will suflice to answer this question" and slhw that important consequences woldd flow from such a result. Though an opposition House could not repeal bad laws, 'ft might pass bills for their repeal, and thereby throw upon the Grantitcs in the Sen ate the responsibility of defeatinig them if they chose. It could prevent enactments in the interest of Riiig robbers, and thus dry up the fotn tains of much of the corruption and jobbery that now pour their demoral izing streams a'l over the country. More important even than this, it could put a stop to that spccicc'of legislation which, by lodging arbitra-. ry powers in the hands of an unscru pulous President and his supple min ions, has, since Grant took office, been gradually carrying us onward toward a monarchial or oligarchial system of Government. 7 An opposition majority in the House would restore to that branrih of Congress its constitutional author ity over the finances of the country Under the loose practice of late yearn the Senate has been allowed to usuir a good deal of this authority, ah'd thus become the leading power St legislation on money matters. N.ot long since nearly a majority of SCe. tors asserted the right of that body to-originate appropriation bills. 4. opposition House would reverse al this, and put a hook into the nose oe Grant's profligate administration oa, all subjects relating to the raisini the keeping and the expenditure o public money. If, in spite of the ad ministrations of the elections, Grit and his fellow conspirators against the Treasury shoule continue to pr sue their usual reckless, oppressiVe corrupt career, the House might 1@ sort to the old time remedy of tfie English Commons for curbing t spirit of arbitrary kings and prof --. gate ministers, and refuse to pais bills for supplying them with mone.. In an extreme case the application this sharp lash by a resolute Horse of Representatives might bring even so solid a ruler as Mr. Grant to his senses. One of the first and most impd-' tant duties of a House in antagonisp to the Administration would be l institute a series of searching invos tigations into the operations of al the leading departments of the Gov: ernment since Grant became Presi dent. By thrusting in the probe the House would touch the core of tli deadly disease of our times. bringing out and spreading before tlh eyes of the people the mass of daniti ing facts which would(l surely com forth from such a probing if ti great ulcer of Grantism. Congress would do more to give tone and vital ity to our republican system, and 1f serve it for posoterity than coqld p' tibly be accomplished in anu other way. These investigations would prepare the way for the performance of by far the most serious and weighty duty that would devolve upon an'honest, sagacious, fearless' House of Rep:i sentatives. With the necessary and appropriate facts in the possessioriiok such a House, it would be mwved,by the most solemn obligations to brin to the bar of the .Senate, under arti cles of impeachment for higIh crimes and misdemeanor, the most' distin guished of the public fuanetionaries who had flagrantly and flagtioumly violated their trusts. The-IHoise should th'en Iisist upon speedy trialse and spread an abundance of: indid 'table testimony on the records of the, court of impeachment. If the couxrt saw fit to acquit the offendlers in the face of condemnatory facts, contemn, poraries and posterity wduld: fasten the odium, on the shouldors tht1 ought to bear it. In clear cases of guilt, whatever might be the yerdict of the cour the judgment ofbe e ple would be unerring:. The ree (l of the procecdings would endure; and for a whole generation it woulld de future rulers from offending in like manner. . These are a few of the benifloent fruits which would spring from the election of a House opposed to the, Administration of Grant. Surel3y they are abundant enough to warrant the exertions to secure that end. -[New York Sun. Jo.-i-A young lady in San Jose, Cal., .alotnt a month ago secietl~ married the man of her choice an then went right along attending to her business as if nothing iad hap pened. The other day the happy couple, concluded to .publish,, their marriage in the local paper and the old man saw it: Showing the notice to his daughter, he sternly demand-2 ed, "What does this mean? Is it.a joke, Maria Jane, or is it reality?" The daughter raised her face suffused with a blush, and said: '"Yes, father, it is a joke-on you!" Th uold man weakened. Whalt iMake Insiuess So DIllI SAns er. " 'oibnnh htfes. For the -pst twelve years thecommercial and ' manufacturing interests-the foundation of thel irosperity of the country-have held a secoindary place to that occupied :by-a meire political party. Instead of working for the prospehity of the c6nntrySif ery ef Sfort of the representatives: of the na tion in Congress assembled has been directed in the interdt. of a party. In all legislative matters the question his nrot bsn,~e ow will thiseffect bus iness. .but, how will this^effect my party? And'thus to day. by the force. of some legislation and the neglect of other, the business of the country is far from being what it should be. The corruption, the filth'and mire, which have been dug' up at the cap ital by investigating committees, also demonstrate the recklessness of the people during the past few years. No nation can point, to a time in its history similar to our. own-when tinprin'cipled and unscrupulous poli ticians, by a peculiar run of Circum stances, held sway over the greatest nation in the world, legislated for themselves and their; pet. schemes, jut their hands into :the' public treasury, donated theiiatioir's land as though it were their own, created rings.within rirngs,,audacio,aly black ,hnilkd the -merchants. of-the land, .oted thqmnsel es.bpck pay, retained the- "Cdamage- 'taid& by' i- foreign powt whilo.aond uwi-l thad :Suffered imperatively. ,needg~ d reliefr, and be :spattered .th6 honotr of':the nation with threats of repudiation. And flogs, bhenatisiness grwdrdill, when t mes giew,hald, .these same prolli gates( aj.d lalh~6 bol yiptpped to the fro t:tp su~rt pqgre paper mon ;ey-more liest in order to rlf'eve the ,situation.: - :It i~:Lime the carnival ;were stop ped. We advit~ the pcopl to cease theim strife ainoing thlasealvis (which the, politicians foment) aId to unite for principles for the riglt: and for .the 'comiercial ,nd manufacturing interests. No men shouldl be-ent to Congress whc. have hadEa ahlAnd in the villainie.perfoni'ne tlfe:during and since the war. Men wh'o forget the nation-thi ', i eu:. ry.-for the good of a party are not ileededto-day. Neithet 'e' Af hcd"`l ' h6" would fan the smouildl&ri4 flamies of iscord and disunion, and stir our Southern brotlhrs-to 'mathessa again:. The re 'bfilfonil 'ifis'lagly the .ork of poli .tieis~is The ation, needs -peace e-uiet,, sober, thotglatfutpeace. Pa triots are needed more to-day than di'r-~'s~e ve.tlce ,b~iess of the *Q.untry,. We can naR prospei hen a neat' notion' of t'ie land ts v"iplled by hloodx-snokers supported by bay onet , ,It is ,eces :qry foi the counu try thait dl .parts at it bet.a i e and pf'osperous. When we ' hel~ the South to .prolsperity we are really helping ourselves. 'A:nd now w b ,ssk. pardon of-any of our i·eders if thbes: plaUn-spoken words offend their justly eimbittered sirit. We aippeal to them to have i~ore thought foi'the material pros operity, of the country than.for a pe litical p'urty. S.h4 men toiCongress -wo care not,what they: call them selves-who will labor for the pros perity of the nationi the commercial and manufactutring interests, instead Of&i the maintainance in power of a poliuticeliprty. Everywhere the cry Is of 'irad tij~cs." veiiliere leg islaiti9on .is. miade for some party. politicians rule and hold high carni val. Right at home our words apply,. for here we have a mere social ques tion, such 'is pirohiblition, oqershad owing that of choap transportation; which would add new life'to the bus iness of the State, And "-s;n .i,s anid Wfll be unti the pobpl8 unit6 agdainst it, If we could but see,;e leading men of the day working for the' com iercial and mn.ufactuiriig: interests wth tlie zeal thatthey now lbor fior party, then business wouldi 'lgoh d at over the lantL 'L't'ets' :lie sensf~i e "an 'ekk oit uch1 feiiregd less as to what they call themselves.: -.-~[Boston Journal- of, Commerce. :"OxoLA CorraI sh ..: , r..'¢:r' RYroTs Afr.ooAr.-Dhirig Major Whiteley's perambulations in Bearrien conunt kccentl:i one da;' npar '4b9u4 dinner.time he-called at the holuse of g 'gntl~nan 'and asked 'If he could get dinner there. "OfEo~arse,'. thei gentleman replied, telling him at ;tw~at hour to come. Thq pInorF went his way and returned at the appoint ed moment, with visions of a godd :dinner in:his'imaginaitioa-to be par 'taken wf in ,theo mpitay of the hon est nistai "adi~ifbif' ~ t t tinja;tily. addreses thae. gry*IE nhdeerate I and ,civil- .Tights :advooek: -'Major Whitelev, I inderstalid tti .ta vo ,tqd for th civil rig: iti.he !bjdc bf? wiitz i" "the degraiation 'Cf the Snouthern whites ,td i'tie vel of the -degroes; you amre a candi~date for re- $oction.to Congress d:d af~ advocat ing this infamous rneasue,'ntnd'hcnce you hbelieve in., aociitl .equiaity. I shall be gljd for, you ,to partake of my. hospitality,, s.nd knitOwing your Prpference for cokored society, I.have nmade arrangements to accommodate you accordingly. You'll find your a dinner in the kitchcen, Maior." Very .Extraordinary Love Story. The London correcpondent of the New York Graphic writes: A veiy strange story was. told to me the other day. In a town not far from London there lived a young lady who was hapdsome, tolerably wealthy, and more than usually well educated. Her fa ther was an invalid; her mother was an insipid, cold and heartless woman. Two years ago a physician of London was called to attend the father; in this way the young lady saw him. He paid no attention to her-his mind was engrossed with his professional duties. A few weeks ago this doctor, after pay ing a visit to his patient, was some what surprised by being asked by tue young lady to give her the favor of a private interview. She took him into a drawing room, and led him to the further end of the apartment. "Doo tor," said she, "I suppose that gentle men of your profession are astonished to recive strange confidences. I have a confession to make to you." He supposed that the impending confes sion had something to do with the state of her own health or.with that of her father, and he begged her to pro ceed. "You will, however, be scarcely prepared for what I am about to say," she continued. "But I wish you to hear it. It is now just two years since I first saw you. You have scarcely ever exchanged a word with me, but I have learned much about you. I am not mistaken in believing that you are unmaa ried I'" "No," said he, "I am not married." "And your affections are not en gaged I" "You scarcely have the right to ask that," said he. "Well, then," she replied, "I will not ask it, but I must make to you my con fession. I love you with all my lfeart. I wish you to marry me. I luved you from the first moment I saw you. I said to myself, I will wait for two years-if he then speaks to me I will know what to say. You have not spo ken and now I speak. I say I love 1 you with all my heart; you are neces sary for me; will you marry me ?" The doctor, who, although not a 1 very young man, was twice the age of I the young lady, recovering a little t from his surprise, trieol to, turn the matter off as a joke; but the young lady was very serious. , "No," said she, "I am in very sober earnest. I know all that you may.say I or think as to the indelicacy of my 1 proposal, but I cannot help it. I ask you once more, can you love me, and will you marry me?" S"In sober earnest, then," he replied, "I cannot marry you." "Then I shall die," said she, very calmly, and she left the room. The doctor had heird people say be fore this that they should die, and lie left the house without attacilng much I importance to the prophecy., although wondering greatly at the other portion of this interview. A few days after this the young lady was found dead in her bed. Two let ters laid upon her dressing table. One was addressed to her family solicitor. It recalled to his mind a promise he had made her. Shelo had gone to see him, and had asked him to make out for her a paper transferring the whole I of her property to a person whose name I sheo would not then give him. He was to prepare tihe eessary paper and send it to her t1 fil'ui the blanks and to pigo.. She had done this, and she I now enclosed the paper;, :iled: pland signed. Every penny of her property was given to the doctor, and the solic itor was instrnotefod to make the trans fer to him, to'ask no queiitons, and to take no receipt. The other letter was to the doctor. "I told you i should die!' said she, "and whlen you receive this I thall be dead. For ten d~as I lltveisot tikpp any fodil nor any drink; bat that does not kill me, and now I 1 litve thken poison. Ihave no r'eproach to iminkiike to you, but I could not live without your love. When I am dead, hook at my heart. You will see. our name there. .I.have. two requests to make of you. Go to my solicitor, and take'whast he has for you, and then go off on a holiday to Italy for a few months. 'le.other request is that yout ."never ask Whmorianburied,,and aw or cone tomy grane., : . : There was aIpost mortem 'etamina tion made of the, youn. r 'lady's ody. ,)n,oerebreas r over her beart,' deeply imprinted in thbe Slesh,,were the initials of tlh'dbdtor's name, T,. characters gpgpaed to have been made: there two or three years before, iT hey.. were jirobablyimpritetd by "iet o~nt Iand onu te day id eg Abfirst saw him. Scn4E aoMrdrf "L~iltl OF JAcoB. Sometintfahi inee a.pearty bfladies and gentlemen went on a tour of inspec tion through Durham Castle. Trhe i'hiaihs" iere sheisa to them btk el derly female of a sour, solemn and idig nified aspect. T'I the course of their p)gxiatonf ±)e~l fl e -to et)ine cole so famed. "'These,".said--:the guide, in true showman style, flavored with a dash of pietyo.- smill;he-.sbhbeet,, i pohmting to several groups of figures upon the tapestry 'thesd rep'esent scenes in be,lihie.of acob." '"l;i yes--how pretty !" said a yonong lady; and with a laugh, pointing to two igures in somewhat close proxim it~t she contiuued. "!l sBplpos t~it is i o- , adaim e responded the indig nant guide, with crashing dignity, "that is Jacob wrestling with the an- i The men haw-hawed, the young lady subsided,'adil 'ofiered ino further ex pository remarks, but groaned under a sense of nworthlinessduring the rest, I of the riSit..--U[larrCr's for Novenmizer. ij Household Exercise. Dislhwashing is good r ddyspeptics It is light exercise of the ni mas and chest soon after meals and it miay be i done sitting as well as standing. A high office stool is very useful in the kitchen. Feeble women, who do their i"own work," often stand upon their 3 feet more than necessary. You can sit down to dress vegetables, to wash and wipe dishes, to knead bread, to iron, and to do many other things. You may be a little more slow about the work, but you will get through it in a better condition. Housekeepers would often like to take an out-door walk, only their "feet are so tired." Dishwashing would not be half' so disagreeable as it often is, it the dishes es were lightly scraped free froin crumbs, and neatly piled up for wash· ing. There should be a large dish-pan and plenty of hot water, with which to fill up the pan gradually as its con tents cool. I' seldoin use \sBap for for washing dishes, but to the unskill ed, or to those who use much butter and fat in their cooking, it seems a ne cessity. Sweeping is good exercise if the floors and carpets are not dusty. Ah ! that "it !" Bed-making will serve as gymnastics, if the beds are kept clean and aired. And what of washing? I do not think highly of the old fashioned wash b.ard exercise. It is hard for both lungs ind; back. With good washers and wring ers, with strong arms for lifting, it may be made passablo as exercise, and it is always a pleasure to see soiled things clean once more. A moderate amount o f ironing is good for women in health, in cool weather. On hot days endeavor to do it in a cool room or on a shady porch. Cooking is perhaps the most impoF taut part of housework, and its esor cise is not heavy in quality, though to some it may be burdensome in quanti ty. It seems to ime more like a high art, or dignified occupation, worthy to be called a profession-far more hon oroble than-the legal profession, for instance. I should not wonder if real ly good and scientific cooks could do more to prsserve and to restore health than the doctors of medicine can. As with ironing, the hardest kind of cook ery is the least necessary-the orna mental part. We should study to make our cooking work as -light p. possible.. For instance, bread may be baked in the oven instead of cooking it upon the grdd~i e in the form of pan cakes, and in hot weather we can avoid those forms of food that require con stant stirring while cooking. There is a great deal of necessary work to be done in the world in order that we may all be comfortably fed, clothed and lodged. I should like to see what would be the result if the' t-' bor and strength spent upon unneces sory work, usually considered orna¶ mental, should be given cheerfully to doing thc,unecesgary work of the world, as a preparatiod for the advent of real beauty or genuice adornment in all de partments of our daily life.-[Amti-: can Agriculturist. . I COMFORTING SENTENCE.--" Onq.'o them fellers," remarked Bijah, asthe] handed out Tom Ludingtou, a young man charged with vagrancy. "So you haven't anything to do, ehm" asktid e Court. -:. "Notling,. mournfully aiswe-ied the prisoner. "Out of work-no home, and your cash so short that you couln't get intol a woman's rights convention, ehl" con tinued his Honor. "You'VO struck it, pardner," answ~oz ed the prisoner with a smile. "Yes, andlnow I'11 strike you,' MIr. Ludington. I am down on loafers and vags, and PI'm going to boast you for a sixty if it tans the-desk down. Yonu'll have something to do up there beside~ sitting on a box in an alley and whisti ling '.ome, Love, Come.' And when day ides into night, and the remaiit der of the world retires to rest, you'll have a bed and some coveeing They will hire some one to hoe that dirt doif ofyou, cut your hair, dig out youn• nails, and when you come out you will d'W65d"idI t Ilifw '*il Pffldther over hero to hunt ducks and buy gas stock." The prisoner said he'was willing to~ go up, and if the institution pleaseassd him as well as he thought it would.he might come back for a longer sentence. -[Detroit Free Press. A PERFECT HIOIE.-The most pgr feet home I ever saw was a little house into the sweet incense of whose firea went na costly things. A thousniand dollars served as a year's living of father, mother and three children. But the mother was tihe creator of a home; her relations with her children were the most beautiful I have ever seen; even the dull and commonplace man was lifted up and enabled to do good work by the atmosphere which tnldeIs Iisiddeallaf ' Ainte of her house involuntarily looked into her face for the key note of the day, and it always rang clear. From the rosoobnd or clover leaf, which, in spite of her hard housework she always found tiiki to put by our plates at breakfast, down to the story she had on hand to be read in the evening, there was no in termission of her influence. She has. always been and always will be my ideal of a mother, wife and a hoene maker. If to her quick brain, lovipg heart and exquisite face, had been : ded the appliances of wealth and!the enlargement of wider culture, hers pudlda.hyie ec .adaltelAh, eal hben eA se.iti ws it I ae £hlAVt I have ever seen.-tieIdce Un nt. S. ,Sol~Ing. Mr. Spurgeon has addressed a letter to the papers on account of it having been stated that on a recent Sunday evening, when a minister in his chapel had condemned smoking, he rose after thre sormni, abd expressed his dissent from the preacher, addizig' that it was possible to- "smoke to the glory of God," and that he hoped to enjoy a ci gar that evuning before he went to bed. Mi. Spurgeon says: "I demur al together, and silost positively to the statement that to smoke tobacco is in itselfoa sin. It may become. so, as any other ijdifferent actio may, bpt as an uction it is no sin. Together with hundreds and thousands of my fellow christians, I have smoked, and with them I am under the condemnation of living in habitual sin, if certain acon-: sers are to be believed. As I- -would not knowingly live even in the himall est'violatiop of the law of Gdd, and sin in the.lransgression of the law, I will not own to sin when I am not con scious of it. There is growing up in .ocietiya iharisaic system which adds to the commands of God the precepts of men; to that system I will not yield for an honr. , The preservation of my liberty may bring upon "me the up braidings of many of the good and the sneers of the self-tighteous; but.I shall endure both with-sincerity so long asI feel, clear in my. conscienco before God. The expression smoking :in the glory of-God- standing alone has an ill'sound, and I do notjustify it; but in the seons in which I employed it I will stand to it. No elristian shodiA do anythingihD which he cannot glorify God-and tibis any be done, according to diseiptisre, ipr eating: and drinking and. the com.mon. actions of life. " When I have found in tense: pain relieved, a weary brain sootheed, and calm, refreshing. s.lep oljtainnd ,by a cigar, I st've felt grate ful to God and have blessed his name; this is what I meant, and by no means did I use sacreI words trilliugly. 'II through smoking I had lost an .hour of my'time-i1 I had stinted~i-my gifts to the poor-if I had rendered my mind less vigorous-I trust I should see my fault and- turn, fcov it; but-lhe who charges me with these thiings shall have no answer but my forgiveness. ran told that nmy open, avowal w~ll'" lessen my influence,' and my' reply is that if I have-gained auy influpzii hrougl;ibeing,thogg.kt different, from, tvna am, ha"ae ýio wish to ketkin'il, I will do nothing upon the sly, and nothing about which I have the slight-' eat doubts" / , Bottled a. Last, . Next to the result in our own State, the most gratifying incident of the po litical tdivluttioh which has swept oter the country i'the defeat of Ben. But ler, in Massachusetts. , All, good -men "in 'the iiation will .nare thlijoy of this uuxepeted defeat of the igost. dangerons, pestilent and unscrupulous demagogue •who over cnsured 4thiMs e try.Dt-" elf`New Orleans' nd Lot isitsa have special a4 A ' icif1P TiistMOii 11 oulbtion b e ith dbwdfall of thoentiis furious, remorseles:& and malignant enemy est Stateahd peopile ever bad. :-!hire:was no coneadidable wrong,lieult and igno miny he did not poit upon our people dreing the period odlo ir vanldalie reign in this city,. And: loig after all g6od oen ( pdirged tepir mind ggd hedFrta of, the bitter. and 'revenglful feelings excited by-our civil war, Butler still optin.ed to( eherisb, andon every oc casion to give, opression to that ven-. omous hate which bad men always lirnifest toaird those weon theym have ,vronged. For once he mistook-.the real feeling of the ti sfch~ttib pdople, who have at last grown tired of these perpetual appeals of Radical demagogues to their olIl sectionpl prejudices and, hates. W fve~ee- wba4iio,1 hating, abusing and despitefully using the Soutiera..eople: Audiso, -whenn dar ng the last canvass Butler sought to divdrt- the tibdtle ef hi~ constittients fremt his- mranyrecmnt -corruptions isa misdeeds, by offering tosj~l'h'1pseif at thgep)rpJ ,q.,pi;Npgr England voi unteers to reconquer and reoccupy YNew -3leeaq p n .-rene ~peqifiiflPl~nl 1' degraidation of our State and poeple, his proposal 'was received with taunts fi~id ja,. 3,_poou ~auglcd .before his j' 'aind--extlngul-shed his- valorous It wlp* agoo o~ ,e , of the defeat whichl s-Io:l1loi1o!' Louisiana ha_ ~i,_n Viilidlated in Massachusetts. 1'he S--Iv-_ ake. .wlaf~f umtdeaa oritlh hassio- ,a;~play~ds d ,tele excesse'of tihe doW'bitl ihdivdi~ial ever entrth d. with powr in this cunatry, have learned to deplore their misgoidedVIr ulence and unjust persecution *fd brave and honest people; and now in :torse the judgment which impartijr history has alreIMlyprnoupce. gainnal the worse man wh has ever P'red a conspicnous part in the political rama of this Republic.--INew Orleans Pie' ayuue. -Ir An inventory has been made out of the Mtfelislf6ti# d ri the stomach of - lunatic shoemaker who died in: the Prestwick Asylqm in England the othUs er day. In all threre were 1,841 arti: cles, namely, 1,638 shooemakers' spar gl1es, fpg~jnch cut nails, 18 three 'n meti~,ie, 3 two-and-a-half-Inch, cut nails, 18 two-inch cut nails 4% |alf-inch cut tails, 7 tlhree-quarter-Inch cut nails, 39 tacks, 6 brass nails, 9 brass brace buttons, 30 pieces of buckles, 1 piny14-bits of glass, 10 smeniall pebbles, -;3 pioe f astring, 1 piece of eather tfimevniuithes ong, 1 piece of end four inches long, and 1 American al l'tftDtit- . 'rigtbeing _I uidsamd I 10 m .: - AT tunenber Plantation, on ayoi BoPeuf, NANYY, third dcauuglter of the idtat Dr. Hcnry Machvn &11d Eleanor i*~~ilt !nandrrf~:?& Jo.~. IT .Ml~ei~;·. TEMIPRA T!RE AS t Ft9 F Y FERoUSON & SCIINACIC JDato. Morn. Noon. Iight. 3r . 3_p .fi° 4 W 46 rF'zng 4. 466.. 680 540, Clear 5. . fo 760 680 CI'dy P6c . * 590 75° (o3° C(lear 7. 58° 074 680 Clear 8. QO . 78° 70° Clear 9. 65 - 730 60 Cl'dy RE PRINTS o- TusE., EillTIIl .- PEIlCAL, 1 'nE POLITICAL FERMENT . among the European natieo's, the strife between Church. and State, the discussion of Scienoc in its relation to Theology, and the constant publication of now works on these, and kindred topics, will give, unuqual iWte~tst to tihe leading foreign Reviews during 1875. Nowhere else can the inquiring reader find in a condensed form, the facts and argumnenta necessary to guide him tb-a correct concluhasion. The Leonard Sott Publishing Co. 41 BARCLAY STREET.,, NEW YORK CITY continue the reprint of the four lead ing Reviews, vizs: tlnburgh Review (Whig)-.idn Qunr terly Review (Conscrvative)--Brit. ish Quarterly goview (Evangeli al ) -Wecstminater, Ig-. view (LiberaL) Blackwood's Edinburgh If zlae. 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Jt CLf,, L D., a f or 9f the Gpeen,3 t &c. .T worldrenaowned atiteriit thin pwrmabbrl:Leture, clearly po.v~elfrom bist own 'experience.tha t ite: twful nonsequences of SetfAbuuie tmsibe ef fetctally removed Witliout'hinii4cine, u-wtth.dt dafiobSiqi li~toalopera -!O,a~ b9ruments, [ , ildgee: , or italq.'ponln'ut a mode of cure at once certain and etfctual by which biti1~i 9iou a"p-e, hilkeeQeap-· Iy, privatelg and radically. Ths.Tls JAtutiwill prove a boon to thousands and thousands. ,Sentiuder seal5 iP aPla v aplope, to winy 'Id~ress, pbst-Fpid, o-'o doipL of six centseor. wo post stamps. Address the Publishers, Box 4586. i oPIE,. ~~4iE 'LTND ._ comumodione0oot4~sader th6 Ex al o y' es.... 9,A rve J(v.4, 1874. " , . Special, _ for commencing the collection of the "Town .r]axes 1874," and I shalt, thlerefore, proceed to make a com ",:-,i 8 CRAWLY, Nov. Il-t. Cololkotor, (1 ONTINUED 14 ,IfALTII AND - other/rbiitons have forced me to give up all eonn ctipn pith Die -t AP : E;AT,"Y DDN.'.: ATl' TlF FIc "N MosT Rl:AsoNALE_ ' ,.,