Newspaper Page Text
lc 4oni olthe leaf ormr flowr ronsth~be n atoll of ay,;' ý to 9parkl leifrtheflOW O tins fr away. omeeehoooe dtwertnhd ehee r han in rohor ind nguo, of aohotl s havpersel power, gearce ondorotoodw; thignO hefrorldid ttfrwIU' bo wilth oor words with goodl Trylaet>if io neorryb erthmnd OTiwell thavene mlerryheart Hi 1 ROWO shurt weosoyj I~herew pt ing mon heart, g erg ~e'afov~d, q ay: . nyay tiftite head totirlo afaw o t q lonn ho lhliaper Tehapi ' with a otraw. hrG o boin happinoto, twiogoo, we ore told,' hettard taboy, th rich 0000 es.tz Wl h Utliateir heapo tbof go8hu01yr dR wh~te erti e a .n b - ui'tle §Who indgho the moot may frhly boast 0H e's ogtthO0 d fiB{0f -t / ieret'o beatyith46Amorlbuty, :oo0 00 8t the 1oeartn '= Tha 't ub e h tiha, An ~oid len a oi fibt pare, . 4And ms qoe 11broii~Opeak, g· i,,ý ee weiar. snmhoditself totoad, ,tes etAark, Ot ~iýawitbea " holath hednoot may rely bonot XHe ,qt thalvath fearth. ." -i~at sha l p erish 1I Plntethati onrish, dle.teomi eteeptd ite bwre, Gushes. tee te hI-bre f lets e.away. , Oa theat heave atliousand years. SWhat f iralpel , T o.n b most rn mble Getemrewratke' Iroeoyst walls,.wt nd lie dleto trveSrs stumble Cesears'ruined halls. ;£Wh anh arlsWhat -eda, the glo ryn ; f' tepena tb et glory s', ealt elsaired tand aoyrgot d t . teits.t perish b .n thiar t iooure s:' r wOent .to wrbnd oearth h decay, t dhiser eldo ean migtiest forces Like oehnhble lteet away. All ehallp. .riseh, bt, their iater e hile t. e somul that trusts hise race, 'Of ieetrepgth hall he partaker, A riiu heaven kehol his fac, e Studyaeg-Laemn. The NewEra relates a snoteryeof a yung farmer whoc eon had for alngtimone been ohtenslatinon o ge 'p-p "elar academy , er eai ein tfectating wcit th thewi threh esae ohaed meeoadtnfieheyounghopeftl recolledhim sroiachool,a dpllo im y-theI m aide of a cart, ine day,thll oddeoredihism:ho - thl ;oep ee Isie-fork and'there isa heap wo reinr_'a ": arkr that -dotyea call them in Forktinsn eartibus, et aeanuribns," said Joseph. that forkibus, pretty quickabus, and pitch that ma nehieuriehte that carlebne, I'll break yeour ly back J uiimph went to wmorehl lt frthwithibus . T. e Thisvery elseical anecdote reminds us of one told espnedeng eld Matthew Thornton, whose name is nieigivel among those on our declaration of inde iidieg one dayin a tage coach, wherein were a linhaihe ef sophomorio yoong pedanto, hegot wearied Joy them' ehonlony qeiuotations of Greek and Latin, ee wvell nnomesdeel ofended by their impertinence. iak g adeentage ofn sololl in convereation, the old .gentlemean ieteBeted `them to translate for him the feollopsg lanies from Ovid: C0 pin letart, In oCeiuu Is lit peedlems to remark thatebeir edtbrto at solution is rl faillierm; wheroupon, the generous old gen tie main tnrnedhimeol into a tramlator, as follows: la aynoenare , The malaise * treating" wee not thep common, eor they mnight have heenjustided ineqoirlthgwhcther hewesdry. BER~NGEIR, (says the Lohdon Athanrenem) is takingrevenge for the slightseput. on his literary brethren, anid on literature 'itself, by the present rilers of France. His sarcasms, it is true, are not printed in F ce e; but they circulate in copies by thousands and.th a nds, and are chanted in cafes and worksheopaaiite of the police. Here is the old lsiger'aepigram on the Imperial Prince: ' -:< :·II et.aollandais par son pere, .. IIest.Ecssas pr so grandmere, l est nglA'lsiparsallinsee, - est Espagn ol pari maissance, Solle aalheereuse chance, a'Ql no manque a lenfant de France, SQue d'etre tant soit pea Francais l P ch e compositors, who:hab lost their living by t. eotstem of sappressai, are finding, we are told, a Sewrurce ,in' copy{ing these Beranger verses, and ' oth r.landeasT ,produotions of the same class. The .o seof'the abive liues of Beranger is not far 1 0py his papa he o a atch, SBy"' his grandma he is cotch, Byollience he is Eaglish, - yhis mamma heis Spanish, - Whaam-otei unlucky chance That:ts darling babe of France, SWantigfnought else a pinch, Should't have sbit of French l ... ~ er s o' Losnos..eLonde ..o.e. at present .. esei 'of'123a square miles. It contains 827,391 houses, apd 2,8023le inhabitants, the annual in ,.oreaoof the population being upwards of e0,000. Thael8kth of all-the different streets is 1,750 inles. The paving of them cost £14,000,000, and the yearly .cost of keeping the pavement in repair is £I,800,000. London.ta-Io now. 1i,00 miles of gas pipes, and the same length of waetr pipes. The introduction of gas -oot £3;ee,000, There are 300,000 burners in the .city which consemes every night 13,000,000 cubic feet fgas, valued at £500,0000 or two million and a half of dollars.. The bankers of London have under 'heir contel a-capital of £04,000,000, and the difier ent insurance companieshave a cash capital of £10, 000,000, and £7.,000,000 ia negotiable paper. The taxonhousae amountsyearly.to £12,500,000. The leraiture.of theselhouses is insured to the asmount of £16e,0e0,000. Twenty thousands persons are eon letitl' efaployesd in keeping the docks in repair. London consames yeorly 2.7,00 oxen, 30,000 calves, 1,400,000.sheep, and 3d,000 hogse, worth all together, : - ono;consumes every year 1,o00,000 quarters of wieat, 05,000 pipes of wine, 2,000,000 gallons 'of brandy, 43,200,000U- gallans of porter and ale, and 19ii2,000 -gallons bf water, 3,000,000 tons of cbal. It hiss:.50 charity asociations, whvlich distribute every,. yeari£1,805,635 to the poor, which sum increased by private charities will amount to £3.,500,000. The city from the showing of its ofl eial durumante, has 143,004 persons who have no vie hibe means Of support. Among these are 4,000 vaga bonds,-w4o cost the city 50,000 a year to support them . There are beaides in Londan 110 professional house-breakers, 107' street thieves, 40 robbers, 783 pickpockets, 3,075 ordinary thieves, 11 horse thieves, 140 dog thieves, 3 forgers, 28 oaunterfeiters, and 317 v 'who live directly by the profits of illicit trade, lit swindlers, e1,.2 people who speculate on eharlty.w.th false documhents, 843 receivers of stolen seeds, ite. eta.' m all, 162,0s criminals who are own teo le poIce, and who steal every year to the amoant -of £4,000. Ena.e. ; 0'mra m s--The attachments or youth t.lfe n nino the warm and endurmg love of ma. i'tt':.: - early spring bude, they are niuped ly lns 0r of yper seee, or ade intoea di orlluecti osf-their translentbeasty.3 1grxas. apoBau -By -tao mach sitting still thy oad".bees. unoheallthgy. and aethe mind. This ibk N t 'a-inkv. Ahe'will' swvs ac her children e If iia..W. slad, . bich cules the body, eves sae , frgive the injury, Amonatxh'bid been der roved. E BAT f o z LE*IMGTON. i nn' r.. . rinowTh. freoBristlo In :possossion eoBoston had learned, theta ý nttty;.,., blto stores were deposited at; ConoordL ninet inmiles distant, and determined to i·detreýythemn . Arther and aid a much mote impor totlsect of the expedition nas, to capture, if pos aibte, Ji-oh Hancock and Samuel Adams, who were nona to bhlin that neighborhood and upon whose heads a price.had been se . " .. SO the tight of the 18th of- April, 1775, the British landed eight hundred men in:Charleston, who took np the lime of mareh througl Mentomy (now called Wet Cambridge) and Lexington, to Concord. It wns a calm starlight, night, and they. moved with all possible.stilnmss; at West Cambridge theypfined my rather'. loise, and their. tread.awoke him; he arose, stood :t the window and conited their platoons. As sooi as they had all passed, he seized his musket and started across the country every road of Which was ffamiiiiar. .in his progress he fell in with mnilers on' the saimeerrand-that was to get ahead of theenemy, and blarm the country, in.both of which they nc ceeded,'sn'that Whenthe British anrrived ait le gton, eleven miles from Boston, atfve o'clock in te morn eing, they found the militia assemblfln ;'they had re ceived intelligence of the eneiimy' imovemonta, some hours before, and were promptly assemabled at the beat of:thie drum. When theBhritish came within striking' distance, Major Pittairn rode forward and caited out, "Diperse, yen-rebels, dispecse!", and without waiting'to oe tihethelr t.sey.~ould or.would Snot, fred, Idpistol.,i hich was. a'signl fora volley fromthe advance; which billed eight; the others di persed; and tib rltihp ed their way to Concord, where theyarrived'withoat interruption, but Hancock ,iand Adi s Lautboade theire ecae. Theythen cam men.e.bls a'teeti to do which they bad io pass the m ori riihdel:atsth foot f it Capt. Davis had drawn. ep lineomtiiy (tlieConcord Light Infantry,) and then :id' thee the first volley was Sired by the' ;Aiinien n.ia--that cause which gave Independence to America and freedom to the world. In the mean trlelie.hinnte men wsore pouring in from all quar tmt -and -the . British found themselves so hotly resed that had it riot been fir a reinforcement of ihbuot athousand men, With two field pieces, under iord Percy, whom Go.i. age had dispatched to their asihtauce,nauta man of the deaclhment would have reached Boston. Thereinforeement met the retreato . ingd column near Lexington, greatly diminished, almost exhaustod, aving taken no refreshment since they left Bfoston, whence they were yet distant eleven soiles, and bd to ight every inech of the way. The pln theno adopted by Lord Percy, was one of the mostn savage' warfare ; hisrtroops fell'off fromthe front,°entered the houses of thee Americans, plundered them-of whatever they could carry, set fire to the houses, an.d then joined the rear, thus giving an op. portunity to their whole force to plunder ; but so ot was the pursuit, a large portion of the fires were ex tioguished before thery had done much damage. When theyhad pooassed the foot.of the rocks, they entered 'the plain of West' Cambridge, seven, miles from CharleosRiver, nd quite a village for,,bant two miles ; at least I found it so when a school-boy teh years after, and there was no appearance of'any addi tion to it sioca the-Revolution. It is propoer here to-remark, that there were two .taverns near West Cambridge-one kept by a Mr. Cooper, the resort of the Whigs, the other the resort of the Tories kept by a Mr. Bradish. There were three families on the road within a fourth of a mile, by the name of Adams, a name hateful to the British ; in one of those a lady was confined the night before ; the enemy entered the house, took the hbed on which ohe lay with her infaantat the breast, and carried them into the yard and left them there. A little boy about ,five or six years old had taken shelter under his mother's bed--hia foot projected from beneat the drapery-a British soldier thrust his bayonet through it, and for a minute pihned it to the oors; the boy did not even utter a 'cry: this fact I had frosm his mother. They then plundered the house and set it on fire, but the Americans entered in a few moments, es. tinguished the fire, and restored the mother and in fant to their room and bed. Their next exploit was at the Whig tavern, into which they fired more than. a hundred bullets, the holes madeby them were filled up but the marks are visible to this day. It was a singular fact tihat three old men, seventy years and upwards each, who were Tories, the battle coming on so unexpectedly, took shelter in this tavern, (Cooper's) where the British found them and put them todeath. The name of one was Wiuship. I well remember his son.- The heavy discharges of musketry at the lavern brought my mother into the streets or road, who hal learncd nothing certain of what was going on since my father left her on the previous evenisg. To her utter astonishment she saw the battle raging at less than half a mile distant; she instantly re turned to the house, secured alarge bag of uenrreucy so much wanted at this timne, and a few small articles, then taking one child of two years old in her arns, and having two older hanging to her apron, sh sallied forth to go to a Captain Whittemore's, about two miles distant across the fields, on, the bank of the Mystic river, (womnen and children had already fled there, to the number of a hundred of the former, and two or three hundred of the latter.) She mhad scarcely set foot on the road when one child cried for bread ; she returned to the house, and cutting a loaf, gave a piece to him that wanted it and wramiing the remainder up in her apron, she was again in the road. In the meantime the battle had approached so near, she was within point blank shot of the retreating enemy, who let go a whole volley at her, which did no other damage than to pass two balls through her cap. The Americans saw her perilous situation and called out to her," Run, good woman!" She did so, and arrived safe at the house of refuge. The enemy in the meantine, sent out a flanking party with the intention of cutting off the retreat of the mother and child-an objeet which they came nigh accomplishng--for the Americans did not asc ceed in tsrntng their flank until they had approached the house near enough to lodge bullets in t--and a very large elm tree, within twenty-five feet from the house, was spattered with them andI took great pleasure in cutting them out tes or twelve years after. After my mother's escape, they entered the house, tuook every article of clothing and bedding, except the beds themselves, which they ripped open, split up tihe furniture, and then set fire to the house--but the building woas saved. They also killed a hocs in the ataole and some hogs in the pen. Near my fathers dwelling was Bradish'a Troy tavern. When they arrived at tha, I trs. Bradish who was in delicate health, rose from her easy chair to retire from the front of the house; she had not left it a mieate when a ball passed through the hack of it : it was the only one fired at the house, and was probably done inadvertently. The British officers, who had been in the habit of making trips to the country, par titularly on Sunday, knew every family which was near Troy, for many miles around, and dealt with them acordingly, wten they had the opportunity. It was not until dark that they arrived in Charleston, when the Americans withdrew from the contest, and the British encamped on Bunker's Bill. The next mouring they entered Boston. The loss on both sides has been differently stated, and my memory does not serve with certainty on thin subject; hut a pamphlet which I remember to have read, affidavits of many occurrences of the day, it seems to me put down the loss of the British at 245, besides many wounded, and that of the Americans at 140--but I am not certain, nor have I any authorities at hand to refer tb on the subject. Peraonnlittes Inu Kansas. Fighting, we believe, has ceased in Kansas, but high words" and quanreling go on actively as ever. A man, whom we take to be a " Border Ruffian," sends us a Phillipie he has just issued against his enemy in Kansas, who appenrs to be an Abolition minister of tile Gospel. He desires us to poblish it in our paper. It is against our rule to indulge merely personal strictures in our columna; we therefore sap press names, buat for the benefit of mankind and the English language, we will quote some of the excited Missourian's tremendous invective against the Free seller, as follows : "You are a fourth-rate preacher, but a first-rate liar. Crime, cowardice and corruption glare forth from your glosses, imlet-skewed eyes, 'like a guilty hing utpon a fearful summons.' "When the Devil shall search hell for his jewels, ho will gloat with a fiendish grin, and express his joy in an eldrich ead unearthly squeak upon finding an the lower abys, the putrid, gangrened, leprous and plague-spotted body of D--S. * Now, 1 dismiss you to the lashings of your own guilty con science -!you ansinie, ape-broved, ash-coloreed Abo litionist!--you black-hearted, blear-eyed, brainless bu.zard !-you craven, cringing, cheese-faced corw nrdl!-you dark, damnable, doiule-faced driveler- dou elmpty. crawliag, creeping car-wig!--you foul leaded, fisl-moutlhed bfol !-you godless guilty lghouil! -you leaven-defying, lhell-deserving hylocrite -you itch-infected, internal ispsl--you Jesuitical Judas Iseariot!-you knock-kneed, kangaroo-shaped knave ! -yon lousy,loose-tongued loafer!-you mullet-headed, niserable mandrake!-you ltsillanimoes, pvwter eyed poltroon !--you razor--cel, red-mouthed 'rip !' you sap-headed, slhallowv-fced scrub!--vou tallow faced, tuckaeling trickster !-you unwashled, unan iointed ulcer i-you white-livered, wall-eyed, wenzel sosled wie-wsorker l-you yelping, yellow, jaundiced yahoo l--you ' gizzard-boted zigzagzancy ." Here the dictionary collnpsed--the English tongue broke down, aid the Yankee f-intced away. Whether he will survive the cursing he got remains to be seen. [St. Louis Intelligencer. T.. CoADLE AND TIIE OLD AnI CIInR.-No house is complete without two pieces of furnitoure the cradle and the old arm chair. No hooso is full that hath not in it a babe oand a grand-lfathcr or a grand-mother. Life becomes more radiant and per feet when its two extremes keep along with it. The two loves which watch the cradle and servoe the chair are one. But how dillhrent in all their openings and actions. To the child the heart turns with more ten dorneas of love. To the aged parent, love is borne upen a service of reverence. Through the child you look forward--through the parent you lopk backward. In the child you seehope, joys to cone, brhve ambi tion, and a life yet to be drawn forth in all its man, sided experiences. Through the silver-haired parent, you hehold the past, in its histories registered. "You bachelors ought to he taxed," said alady to a resolute evador of the noosematrimonia. "I agree With you perfectly, main," was the reply, "bache oeiem certainly i a ltury`." Who is Cdntented? One day, as theDervishB Ahnoran, the wisest of all the foUlloers of the Prophet, and the oracle of tihe Chief Multi of Stamboul, was stting in a shady grove, by the side' of a Bubblo.lf unntaln, h the shores of the Bosphorus, trylogie.thd out the true road to happiness, in order that hbmigt benefit his fellow-creatures bh communicating the discovery, his speculations were mterrupted byan man richly clothed, who approaching, ant down and sighed very heanvily, rying out at the same time: ,'OOh1 Allah, I beseech Thee to relieve me of life,. or the burdens with which it is aden." Aimoran, who was asort f.amateur of misery, it afforded him hre plcs re of administering coosola tion, aparoached themain of sorrow, and kindly in quired the cause of his griefs. ,Art thou in went of food, of friends, or health, or anyof those comfortsof life that are necessary to :human happiness -or dost thou lack the advice'of xprience, or the consolations of sympathyi Speak, for itis the busines of my life to bestow them on my fellow-creatures." "Alas!" said the stranger, "I require none of these, I have all and more than I want of everything. I have all the means of happiness but one, and tihe want of that renders every other blessing of no value." " And what is that " asked the Dervish. I .adore the beautiful Zolema; but she loves another, and all my riches and honor are as nothing. I am the most miserable of men; my life isna burden, and my death wouild be the greatest of blessings.': Before Almoran could reply, there approached a poor creature clothed in rags, and leaning on his staff, bowed down to the earth with a load of nmisery. He sat down moaning, as if in great pain, and casting his ewes upwards, exclaimed - Allah ! be my star, for I have none other!' The Delrish went up to him and kinlly said "What aileth thee, poor man? Perhaps it may be in my power to relieve thy distreses. What wantest '" Everything," replied the beggar ; "health, food, kindred, friends, a home-everytlhing. I am an out cast and a wanderer, destitute of every comfort of dlife. Iam the most miserable of mankind for in addition to my own sufferings, I see others around me reveling in those luxuries for lack of a small portion of which I am perishing." At this moment, a third man approached, with weary steps and languid look, and casting himself down by the side of the fountain, stretched out his limbs at free length, and y'awning desperately, cried ot :--' Allah what shall Ido ? What will become of met? I am tired of life, which is nothing but a pur gatory of wants, that when supplied, only produce disappointment or disgust' Almoran approached and asked:-Wh:at is the mause of thy misery? What wantest thou ?"' "I want a want! replied the other. " I am cursed with the misery of fruition. I have wasted my life in acquiring riches that brought me nothing but dis appointment, and honors that no longer gratify my pride, or repay me for the labor of sustaining them: Ihave been cheated into the pursuit of pleasures that turned to pain in the enjoyment, and my only want is that I have nothing to desire. I have everything I wish, and yet I enjoy nothing." Almoran paused a few moments, utterly at a loss to find a remedy for this strange malady, then said to himself :-Allah !.preserve Tl ; I see itis all the same whether men want one thing, everything, or noth ing. It is impossible to make such beiungs happy, and may I eat dirt if I trouble myself any more in so vain a pursuit."' Then taking up his staff, he went on his way. A Darins Deed of Horsemanship. A MEXICAN SKETCH. "If you feel disposed to risk a doubloon-I am but a poor hunter and cannot place more-I shall attempt what a muchacito of ten years would consider a feat perhaps." " And what may that be, Senor Cabalero?" asked the officer sneeringly. "I will check my horse at full gallop on the brow of yonder cliffl" " Within two lengths from the brow ?" ' Within two lengths-less the sane distance that is traced here, on the banks of the sequai !" The surprise created by this announcement held the bystanders for some moments in silence. It was a proposal of osuch wild and reckless daring that it was difficult to believe that the maker of it was in earnest. Even the two officers were for a moment staggered by it and inclined to fancy the Cabalero was not serious, but mocking them. The cliff to which Carlos had pointed was part of the bluff that hemmed in the valley. It was a sortof I Iromnotory, however, thatjutted out from the general ine, soas to bea conspiious olbjeet from the plain below. Its brow was of equal height with the rest of lhe precipice, of which it was a part-a sort of but ress; and a grassy turf thht appeared along its edge ans bnt the continuation of the upper plateau. Its ront to the valley was vertical, without terrace or edge, although horizotntal seams traversing its thce bowed a stratification of lime and sandstone alterna- I ing with each other. From the sward upon the val ey to the brow above the heights was 1,000 feet short. fo gaze up to it was a trial to delicate nerves; to look down put the stoutest to the proof. All stood watching him with anxioou eye. Every momett was noted. He first alighted from the saddle, stripped oil his manga, had it carried back and placed out of the way. He next looked to his spurs, to see that the straps were properly buckled. After this he rttted his sash, and placed the som brero firmly on his head. He buttoned his velveteen calzoneros down neararly to his ankles, so that their leather buttons might not flap open and discommode him. His hunting-knife along with the whip he gave to the charge of Don Juan. His attention was next turned to the horse, that stood all this time with his neck curved proudly, as though he divined that ihe was to be called upon for sonoe signal service. The bridle was first scrutinized. The great bit-a Ilame luke-was carefully examined, lest there might be some flaw or crack in the steel. The head strap was buckled to its proper tightness, and then the reins were minutely scanned. These were the hais of a wild horse's tail, closely and neatly platted. The saddle now had its turn. Passing from side to side, Carlos tied both stirrup-leathers, and examined the great wooden blocks which formed the stirrups. The girth was tle last as well as the most importnt obh ect of his solicitude. lie loosened the buckles on both sides, and then tightened them, csing hIis knee to effect his propose. When drawn to his lilting, the tip of hIis finger could not have been passed under the strong leather band. No wonder he observed all this caution, as the soapping of a strap; or thle slipping of a buckle, might have hurried him into eternity. Having sat isfied himself that all was right, Ihe gathered up tile reins and leaped lively into the saddle. He first directed his horse on a walk along the cliff, within a few feet of its edge. This was to strengthen both himself and the animal. Presently the walk be came a trot, and then a gentle canter. Even this uas n exhibition fearful to behohlt. To those regardling it from below, it wasa beautiful but terrible spectacle. After awhile he headed back towards the plain, and then stretching into a gallolc--the gait in which he intended to approach the liffl--he suddenly reined up again, so as to throw his horse nearly oil his lanks. Again he resumed the same gallop, and again reined up ; and this maneuver he repeated about a dozen times, now with his horse's head turned towards tie cliffs, and now in the direction of the plain. At last he was seen to turn his horses head toward the cliff, and take his firmest seat in the saddlc. The determined glance of his eye showed that the moment had come for the final trial. A slight touch of the spur set the noble brute in motion, and in an other moment he was in full gallop. and heading directly for the cliff! Tie suspese nwas of shlort du ration. Twenty strides blought torse and horsercau close to the verge, within al'lf a dozen lensghts. Tihe rein still hung loose-Carlos dared not tighten it--a touch he knew would bring his horse to a halt, and that before he had crossed the line, would only be a failure. Another leap--another-yet anthler l hieo! he is inside. Great God! he will be over!e Just as the horse appeared about to spring over the Ihorrid brink, tihe reins were observed suddecly to tighten, tihe fore-hoofs Ibecame fixed and splread ,lcc the hips of the noble animal rested upon the plain. lie was poised at scarce three feet fromn the edge of the cliff! While in this attitude the horseman raised his right hand, lifted hlis sombrlero, and after waving t round, returned it to his Ieacd. A splcenlid pliture from below ! The dark forms of bcoth horse and rider were perceived as they drew ep on the cliff, and the ittposing and graceful attitude wcas fclly developed against tile blue back-ground of the shy. Tile alrtc, the limbns, the oval outlines of the st'led even tile very trappings, could le seen distinctly; and for the short period in which they were poised and motionless, the spectator might have fancied an equestrian statue of bronze, its pedestal the pinnacle of the clit: T Ert Imyo. EoDWAD EvetwrrT.--This distinguilshed. nortor was born in D)orchester, near Baston, in 17!4, entered tearruvd College at the age of thirteen, and graduated with distinguished creditin 1811, when 17; when only 18 he was appointed Latin tutor at tinar yard, ald Greek tutor at 21; comwenen d prea'lgiirg in the Unitarian church at 19,. and before he was "of age published an admirable debence of ehristianity, displaying an extensive acquaointance with biblical lit erature. In 1815, he traveled in Elurope, and made the acquaintance of Scott, Byron, Jefirv, Cow bdllt, McIntoshl, Iemily, Davy and other distiognuisled lite rary and political characte.. F'ront 1820 to 182 Ire was editor of the North American Review, to which journal ie contributed fbom time to timre no less tlhanr 110 articles. From 1824 to 1:834 Ire was melmber of the House of Representatives at Washington. From 1833 to 1849 he was four times elected Governor of Massachusetts, and needed only one vote to secure a tiRh election. From 1821 to 1846 lie was a Iuineter tPlenipotentiary to the Court of St. James. IFrom lS4di to 1849 he was President of Harvard College On the decease of Daniel Webster, Mr. Everett was appointed Secretary of State of the United States, in nod 1853 he succeeded John Davis as a national Senator for tMassachusetts. The failure of his health obliged him to resign his seat in the national councils, a:nd he has since been living in retirement at Boston, occupied in the preparation of a great work upon in terrnatioal law. A Yankee describing an opponent says : "I tell yon w'hat sir, that man don't amount to a nsum in arithmetilc-add him up and there's nothintg to .r -- !' Thomas .arlyle. Mr, Carlyle has been variously estimated, according to the predispositions of those who have judged. Ex cellnce, when it appears in a novel shape, is some times estimated below, often much above, its merit; rarely according to its desert. The natural eye, we know, is deceiving as to the distances and magnitudes of objects, when it cannot compare them with other familihr objects, and the mind is still more prone to misconceive tile proportions of those things which it cannot refer to some wonted form. So it has fared with Mr. Carlyle; he has been unjustly condemned, and has been evtrovagantly praised. Not that we think he has been, opon the whole, too highly esti mated by any class, were their applauses somewhlat more discriminating. We shosld be glad to believe that there were any persons, amidst :tho motb of talkre about Carlyle, who were cpabloe of vroising to exceas the excellesi which he unquestionasl.l pos seoses. t is peculiarities they esteem too flatteringly his greatness they scarcely appreciate at i all. or ourselves, we cannot give him the sank of a fiStt-mte intellect ; we cannot approve his writing as a whole; but we admire many of his qualities as brilliant and admirable, and we think him possessed of some ca pacities which are a ra here s they are excellent. One of the most striking pecaliarities of tIr. Carlyle's character, is his intolerance of cant in every shape ; whether it he the traditionary cant of moral en lightened opinion of the time; the cant of the nation, or the cant of a noisy sect ; the domaotizing cant of the age, or the flippant cat of the hoar. Now, ut doubtedly, an infinite deal of sense is in solution with alU these kinds of cant, and in unsettlisg "or dissipa ting the strength or whuektes of any one of them, the defences of truth in its fastness, or the supports of truth in its open marches, are to some extent en feebled. Still it is of incalculable value to every reader to have before him an examaple of a writer who is laboring only tojodge sincere judgments; who briigs the consclence of his intellect, not its prejudices or alloctions, to investigate everything, in its search after truth. The influence of such an examsple is of salutary moral tone, and it invigorates and strengthens the intellectual temper. MIr. Carlyl hbelongs, un doubtedly, to the skeptical school : hit mind is natu rally fertile of"' obstinate questionings" of everything. But he does not make his sword his worshlip ; he does not mistake thle moethod for the end. His object is trath and its repose; the means he employs are skepticism and its disorders. Unpleasant Bed rellows. MIany years ago, a young man, twenty-one years of age, and who I will call Daniel, was hired to work oa aetarm by Mr. W- , a man of considerable note as a farmer, in Massachusetts. Mr. I-- , had a daughter and a hired girl, both about eighteen years of age; and Daniel being of a steady turn. was not talkative enough to suit their fancy ; and after trying various plans and tricks without success, to-as they said-raise his ideas, they caught a large frog, and put it into Daniel's bed. On going to bed, he soon discovered the whereabouts of his bedfellow, and pitched his frogship out of the window, and never afterwards betrayed the least sign of knowledge in rb gard to the joke. About a fortnight afterwards, Daniel found a lot of chesnnt burrs, hearly as sharp as thistles, and con trived to deposite nearly halfa peck in the girl's bed and after the girls went to their room and had time to undress, he took a candle, went to the door, and rattled the latch, when the girls put out their light and jumped into bed, and such a squalling was never heard before. Daniel now opened the door and stood in it with light in hand. 'Dan, torment your picture ; I wish you were as far' beyond the light house as you are on this side,' said Sukey. 'Wh~y, what is the matter? have you any frogs there?' said Dan. 'Dan,if you don't shut the door and clear out I will call Mrs. W- ,' continued M3iss Sukey. ' I will call her myself, if you wish,' said he. ' Daniel,' said Anna W- , 'if you will shut the door and go back to the kitchen, there shall be no more tricks or jokes put upon you by as, for six months, at least.' Dauiel, thinking he had punished the girls ehough, shit the door and left them. A few moments after this, Sukey came out to light her candle. 'I thought you had gone to bed, Sakey,' said Mrs. W----. S.aey made no reply, but looked daggers at Dan, and quickaly returned. After this scrape the girls put no more joikes or tricks upon Dan. ite was a srteady, faithful man-saved every dollar of his earnings, and six years from that time owned a good iturn, married Anna W- , and was three -years first selectann of the town, whitic he afterwards represented in the State Legislature. A FoENC.utNo's OPrNION ON T'r UNITED STATES. -ri. Alfred D'Alembert has published a book on America. On slavery he is neutral; but maintains that the condition of the slaves, phyvically, is superior to that of the peasants in many parts of France. Of the inferior cast into which flee blacks at the North are converted, even by the Abolitionists, after speaking of their exclusion from all participation on an equal footing, in the business and pleasures of white life, their exclusion from public oficees, from theaters and hotels, and railroad cars, he adds: Death itself does not rehabilitate them ; they have a separate burial place! And it would not surprise me if the Americans should pretend that God had sct apart for them a hell and a paradise, so that the chls sitication might be observed in tie other world. Do not foerget tihat this is the ease in the Norrthern States, where slavery has long since ceased to exist, and wlhere they manifest the greatest impatience at not seeing it abolishedt by their neighbors. lie writes as follows on the subject of American gallantry : I arn profoondly humiliated; I blush to the roots of my hatir I kinowerot where to hide myselt fin tihe faith of tradition I ihad hitherto rbelieved that the French people were the most gallant people in the world. Everything supported tills conviction. Songs, ballads, the good opinion we generally entertain of ourselves, and tie error of foreign people, who say from habit: " Gallant as a Frenchman." A profound error which I have recognized with shame and surprise! Gallantry is not dead. It has deserted Europe ; it has taken refuge in the United States. * * I proclaim it openly-it is in America that I have seen true gallantry universally practiced, spontaneously, disinterestedly. There woman is re spected for her own sake, because she is woman: because she is, or will be, the mother of a citizen. ita good thirg could be carried to an exceess, I should say tlrt the rights attributed to t fair sex are pushoed to exageration. The women know their iower, thej abuse it as tysaoth a who know that thiere are no limits to their authority. In summer when it is too warm to stay at home, all America travels, by railroad and by steamboat, to in terior watering placcs, to sea-side resorts, or wherever else the irhabitarts of the United States are supposed to amluse themselves. It is in there excursions that one can joudgce better tha anywhere else of tire extent and degree of this true gallantry, and of the eager deferenlce shown. in variably, to women. They arrive late; all the seatl int tle fars are occupied ; twenty gentlemen imme diately rise, at the risk of remainirg on their feet, or even of losirang their journey they quieptly erat them selves, without as much assaying " thankr yonl. The least sign of gratitude to the men is siupertuouos. Tn- E.MPEROR'S BO.-W-herevereverone goes or what err lone reads, the pronlinent topic seems to be the celhild of France," whose recent birth has net nall Paris agog. But careful as his papa is, the wonder child, which i was born full grown, hllas already had an ominous fall. Our foreign papers bring us tie follow ing storgas current in Paris : " The imperial heir has scarcely made his appearance on tle stage of this life, so full of viissitudes, when notwithstanding the minute care by which he is sur rounded, he is already exposed to the dangers that occasionly happen to his inferiors. The wet nurse has had the nmisfortune to let the imperial infant escape from her hands, probably while handling hinm too softly, and he fell to tie ground. le was-not pick ed up imlnediately by her, as she was no frightened that sihe fainted away for half an Ilour: but tihe l)uches of Esslingen, who happened to be on tile splt, raised the prince in her arms fromu his irksome position. As this accident rras happily not attended by alln" serious cooseqeue es, tlihe awkward felale aiteldant wtas quit this time, for the fright sloe hIad explerienced." is not thit dreadful to think of, that an eutbreyv Em peror, and it present King, should be so carelessly handled as to fall upon thie Lloor. Other people's babies fall in tile saute way, and it is nott of so urcl consleqience, but when that baby fell, tile French might exclaim "Then youant 1,AII 1nd all ,,fell down, while blery triltln lSourihi'di A tr r.'" For is it not treason to take the life of a King. and might not tllhe King of Algiers perrhanoce have died? We do not read that earthquakes were perceptible on tihe occaion, nor that this lamentaile downfall of royalty reolty re d in i llaythinrg tlore thtan t vigorous ex ertion of intrniile luge. lBut we do nilt read that a guard of soldiers has been statoined about tile cradle of his majesty, with strict orderl to do something des perate inl cane something else desperate shonuld occur, whic:h right disturb the peace of Europe inl some un knowon wray. Thi " guaorrd of honor." as it is called, is, we presume, properly careful about tie adminis tration of pap and paragric, anrd sees that tile golden spoon which he hiad in his mootlh at his birtih.is not stolell or exchllnged for one of baser nmetel. How To GET A WIFE IN CAIO.-W.heln a Voulg man in Cairo, Egypt, wishes to marry, he goes to soomn old woman who makes it her business to be well uop in the names and addrerees of all nmorriagea ble young ladies, and, tendering the usual fee. informs her of his notion of a wife-as, for example, she is to be graceful, with large black eyes, wavy hair, of a gentle dioponition, etc. The old woman then promises to suit him in a given time, at the expiration of which he is married, and sees his wife unveiled for the first time in the nuptial chamber. According to Mr. Lane, he generally finds her pretty much as he had been led to expect, buti hoald he have been, as of course is often the case, the vic tim of a misplaced confidence in match-makers, he lives with her for one week, as the custom is, and then. presenting her with her dowry and her panesr of divorce, she returns to her friendst 1 ud tlipes for totter luck next time. The Prize of East Indian Empire. Louis Napoleon Ihas a'teady prepared new work for hris Crimean heroes, to oeep tlem away from Paris and mischief, ie is about to march then across the Egyptian battle grounds of his great uncle, with the same propose, that of'outquoring aoitan Empiroe- and augoring from the greater success of the nephew is his war upon the Czar, he will meet with no Acre or Sydney Smith in hris pathwrvay to the East, which he desigrns to follow down the Easterm.noanst of Africa to Zanzibar, and thence to the opposite shores of the great island of Madagascar-an iusular continent stretching 1,040 miles iu length, and averaging 400 in breadth, with a population of between three and four million of souls ; with a rich soil, covered with a prolific and valuable vegetation; abounding in nums - rous herds of cattle, producing sugar and coffee; yielding abundant harvests of rnee and other grains, and calculated to be the basis of a larger comumerce than three or four Cubas, or all the West Indian Archipelago. This great island bommands the Western verge of the Indian ocean. Louis Napoleon has already planted tie Frenich eagles upon New Culedonia, and islands commanding the South Eastern limit. Ioe has, we know from high diplomatic sources, been negotiating swith Holland concerning New Guinea in the South, and with Spain about Magindinao in the North; and thus seeks to encircle Malaysia-an Indian Empire-greater than the one that Alexander conquered, that England now holds, or that the great Napoleon ever thought of or coveted-the one that shall makte the power, fully cdpable of controlling and developing it, the master of the richest commerce of the world, and consequently of the world itself. England, with seeming contentment in her conti neutal Asiatic possessions, is covertly marking out a path for more e extended insular Indian empire. She is establishing commanding positions on the shores of the Rled Sea and the Gulf of Persi;: strengthening her posts at Ialacca, Pinang, and Singapore, in the Straits of MIalacca, that great highway of Eastern commerce; controlling the coal mines at Formosa ; has her vessels of war at Lebuan; in the Mlindoro Sea ; watching New Caledonia from New Britain; and then her settlements on the shores of the Gulf of Car pentaria ; her influence in the heroic island of Bali, and her strongholds al the htauritics and Cape of Good Hope, make a circle of positions and operations wholly enclosing the coveted Indian empire of Napoleon, vast as Oceanica, and mighty as British maritime en terprise. No other champion appears to dispute for this gor geous prize. The Russian retires to his fastnesses to heal his wounds and recruit his strength ; the spirit of maritime enterprise is dead in.Spain and Portugal; anrd Holland, once merged in the French Empire, and restored to her possessions and nationality by British power, has held her position in the Eastern Seas through the surferance of the Cabinets of St. James and the Tuilleries ; and these two courteous allies, with their potential armaments, prepare to contend for the Indian prize, without any fears of the rivalry of a third. Yet such a one may be found in a quarter little thought of. The four millions of Australians are ripe for independence; and have recently been aroused to think the more strongly of it, by the establishment of French troops in New Caledonia-almost in sight of their coast. They have sent remonstrances to the Imperial Parliament againstthe movement; they have notions of a kind of Monroe doctrine with regard to Australia; and if the IIome Goverment will not heed therm--or pleads tthat her lads are ti od by trra'tro, 0 conccssions to on ally-then they talk of "cutting the laintr"i adrift from the ship of Stlate ; and then theose four millions of Anglo-Saxons will drive away French men, Dutcltmen-oven their own British brethren anrd establish themnselves the great Empire of Oceanican. But a fourth disputant may rise ufl in a qlnarterstill less thought of, The master races of the East Indian Archipelt lgo areditted for a high degree of civilization, for a great nationality, and to be the controllers of the inexhaustible treasures of their isles, to be disposed in free trade with the world. Having a common lan giage, literature, laws, and religion, they are, how ever, divided into many hundred petty sovereignties ---an easy prey to any monopolizing trader of Eu rope. 'Tioe higher races of Malays in the Archipelago the Norimans of the East, want a rallying point, a tiee and powerful flag, as a nucleus otbr a great friee outrecpt-a common centre of onslhncklod Al'chilla gian trade, where Eastern tropic wealth can lie ex clicnged for the manufarctures of Westecrn hands : and where Western intelligence cans direct and organize Eastern imaginationr ; where,in fact, American enter prise, not tramnmeled like the European. can lay tile foundation of a developlment of the miglhty resources of the East Indian Archlipelago; commenacing with tile e-tablishment of a coal and naval depot, as we urged uponn the attlntion of our merchants a few days ago ; and thus might Baltimore, once thle leading American port in East Indian commerce, initiate an Ameri'ic'l Malaysian mlovement, that shall lead to the wiinig of the paramount sovereignty of the much coveted East Indian empire. [Baltimore Patriot. [Flrom tle "'WidoW Il, BIt l'lapr-."l An Unerpected Proposal of Marriage. Mr. Crane. Well, widder, I've been thinking about taking anothellcr companion, and I thogllht I'd ask you- Widow. Oh, MIr. Crane ! excuse my romtlotion it'sso unexpeleted. Just hand mle that nare brttle ' camphire on' the mantlery helt-tl'ln ruther faint Idew pnt a little mite on my handkirchief and hold it to my nor. There thalt'll o, I'm obliged to tew ve- now I'm ruther composed. You may proceed, Mr. Crane. Mr. Crane. Well, widder, I was agoing to ask you wrhether-nwhether Widow. Continner, Mr. Crane, do; I know it's tur rible emabarraasin'. I remember when my dezeased husband mnade his suppositions to me, he stanmmered and stuttered, and was so awfully fluttered it did seem as if he'd never did git out in the world, and I s po e it's generally the case, at least it has been with all them that s made suppositions to me--you see they're ginerally concerting about what kind of an swer they're agwinre to git, and it kind o' mlakes 'em narvour . But whleni an individual has reason t, 'spoeo his attachment'ns reciprocated, I don't see what need there is o' being liustlated; tho' I must say it's quite embarnrassi to nme. I'ray continner. tir. Crane. Well, then, I want to know if you're willing I should have Meliny ? Widow. The dragon! aMr. Crane. I han't said anything to her about it yet-thought the proper way was to get your con sent lirot. I relnember when I courted Trypenny we were engaged some time betfore mother Kenipe knew anything about it, and when she found it out shlle was quite put out because I diddent go to her lilt. So when I made up my mind about afelisy, thinks me, I'll dew it right this time and speak to the old woman first Widow. Old woman, hey ! that's a party name to call me!-amazin perlite tew-want Ilelissy, hey? Tribbleation! gracious sakes alive ! well, I'll give it til now ! I always ktnow'd vou was a intipleton, Tint Crane, but I must contsos I diddent thlinlk you wran quite so big a fool-want Melissey, dew yd? If that don't beant all? What an everlasting old calf yotu must be to 'spose she'd lookat you. Why, you're old enough to be her flther, and more terw-Meliosy ain't only in her twenty-oneth year. What a rediklous for Smaln o' your age as grey as a rat tew I wondei what this world is cotniegter ; 'tis astonishin' what fools old widowers will make o' themselves! Ilave Melistv ! Melissv ! Mr. Crane. "lWy, widder, you surprise me; I'd no idea of being treated in this way, after you'd been so politeo o me, and made such a fuss over me and the girls. Widow. Shet your head, Tim Crane; nun of your sass to me. There s your hat on that are table and here's the door, and tile sooner you ut til one and march out o' t'otler the better it till le for you. And I advise you, afore you try to git married agin, to go Ollt West and see 'f yer wife's could, and afrter you're satisfied on that pint, jest pet a little lanmpblac on your hair; 'twould add to your appearance ondoubt edly. and be of sarvice tewp you when aou want to flouriish round among the gals, and wllenl ye'e gnot your hair fint jest splinter the spite or' our back ; 'twouldnut hIrt your louks a mite ; ya, d be intirely onresistable 'f you was a leetle grain straiter. Mir. Crane. Well, I never Widow. 'Holdyour tongue, you consarned old coot, you. I tell you there's your hat and there's tile door. le off with yourself, quick mtetre, or I'll give you a hyIlt with the broonmstick. M'r.Crane. (;immem! Widow', (rising.) Git out, I say ; I ain't agwine to stand here and be innllted under my own rufl', and so ait along, aid "f yoau ever darken ty door agill, or rsay a wle''ltew 31elissy, it'll be wuas fir yellou, ithat's all, 31r. Crane. Triemerljous! What a hluster! Widow. (d 'long, you everlastin' old gum. I won't Iear anotller word ; (stops her cars;) I wo ot, I ronut, xit . ont. e. Exit MLr. Crane. ANYBODY LIK MIE,-I ain't anybody-I'm mar Tied-I ain't a bachelor any longer! -This ain't my omc : 'tisn't nycarlriage n,y horses, noy opera box; oh. no! they are Mrs. Smith's. Im not John K. Smnith, the richest broker on MotgoImery street, but-that thshionable Mrs. Smith's Ihsbanl ! Neller came down to the olltiee yeterday; sweet Nelley shhe almost consoles papa for all his cares; clustering eurls. Ibue heye--dear Nlly! " Whoe lovely child is that? " " Mrs.Smith's." Of course it- is! she don't bhelong to me--oh, cer tainly not! I wish I felt a little more clear on that tioint. That exloensive plate just going honme belongs to Mrs. Smith What if I did lay for it ? don't 1 belong to Mrs.Smith ! Poor oplprested women ! they have only all their own property and halft of their husband's by law, andt the rest by possession; but they need more rights! Where righlts are wr-ong, I wonder what words the petitioners would use! And tnen the idea of calling me " anyhbody! " I'm a cipher ! I'm an animacule--'m a bbblde-a jack-o'-lantern a vision. I'mahsorled-swallowed up-extinct. Tot Sit'ProsEn ItoSSIAN Poy hTet.r--, Irashing inn, April 29.-Otlicial advices have been received from Oommodore Salter, of the Brazil squadron, stant ing that he had returned to Rio from escorting out 0 , sea the steamer America which was sapposed to have been prepared at New York for a Russian privateer, and that she had not been molested by the British Admiral as previousldy threatened. " Tom,you sot," saida temperane man to a tibling friend, "what makes you drink such stuff as yon do? Why the very hogs wouldn't drink that brandy." 'That's cause they is brutes," said Tom. " P99gr eaturot ! they don't know what's good." WaVr -nltul England. The following sensible article is from the London Daily Telegraph: "Those who are disposed to attach but little value to thle preservation of peace with tile United Stotes, should carefully examine the Blue Book which has recently appeared. They will there find that the value of the exports to foreign countries, in the year 854, of the producta of the United Klingdom, was as follows : To Russia ln............................... ..... £5,801 rwedd lu and Norw y .............................. i736,8r I'russln ................................. . 79,434 lans Towns ................. ..... ......o7,413,71 Hlolland .................... ...........4,570.63 i'rwanco ..................... . . ..... o3 907,290 r tug rl ............... ................o ........ 1.37c 603 .p a ............ . .. .......1, 0 r1n4 Clble n otnhr p rlle Isllds .............. ......,: fl3815 ........ ... ... .............. . L281,0 enorA: y res ......... . .................. ,1ooaa l7 '..... ... hill ............... ..... . .......... enln:: . ......209:810 e:e lust: or onghog)............ .. . :007,G15 Ucitll aes o Amric ............... 21,I:,631 Total ................................... ..£51,2;7,054 Thus we are furnished with a result which shonld alwnays be prominent in the lublic eye of every patriotic Briton, that tile Ulited States consume £1,17,.631, of the industrial products of these isles, while the otlher foreign countries designated take only £30,150,500. The declared value of the now cotton imported into the United Kingdom in 1854 was £20,173,303. The declared value of thle cotton goods exported during the same year, including cotton twist, was £31,745, 851. No one is so ignorant as not to know where and in what manner this cotton waa produced, upon which, after supplying ourselves and our colonies with the manufacturesproceeding from it, we are en abled to furnish the rest of the world with a surplus to the amount of £11,7?O0,64. SALE Or WA1SINS OtON'S CRAVAT AND JAO FFASON'5 LnrTEos.--On Satorday, Mr. Anthony J. Bleecker sold by auction, at his rooms, a number of autograph letters, chiefly of Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James liadison, James Monroe and others, in number sixteen,formerly the property of a late Chaplain of the United States Senate. Onelot was a cravat worn by Gen. Washington in the war.of the Revolution This was bought by the auctioneer for $5. It pre sented no peculiarity, its color faded, dirty white, and inform not unlike the black stocks in ordinary use, only containing no wvhalebone or stiffener. A letter from HIou. Thomas Johnson to Rnev. MIr. Hatch, sold for $7. A letter from George Washington to Hon. Thomas Johnson, asking his acceptnnee f an app)ointment in the Supreme Judiciary of the United States, dated Philadelphia, July 14,1791, sold also for $7. One from Thomas Jefferson to Rev. IiMr. Hatch, re lating to both business and social matters, sold for 50 cents. One from James Monroe to the same-a social let ter referring to Judge Nelson-brought 50 cents. One from Thos. Jeltlrson to the same, containing u critique upon the Constitution of the Library Society and a request to accept a dish of sea-kale, dated Moon ticello, April 22, 1823, sold for $3 50. Another from Thos. Jefferson to the same, referring to his children, his library and histriends, dated Mton ticello, Sept. 9,1821, sold for $2 75. Another from Thos Jefferson to the same, referring to the "good old Feudal times," and inclosing a gift ts his Pastor, as an "ofiring of duty," dated Monticello Dec. 8, 1821, sold also for $2 75. Another from Thos. Jefferson to the same referrinl to the Charlottsville Library Society, and suggesting the purchase of bodoes of general instruction, and ex cliding novels, and professional and sectarian books dated Martch 13, 1823, brought $2 25. Three or four other lots sold for similar prices, only a few persons being present. [New York ExpSIres, 30th. i. 0. 0. F. Grandl Lodgee of Loulsinan. T1112 I. It. 11 IIANI) LOAOOFD tr OF LOUISANA, . OO F., marts semlli OnnnllyI on the fount Tesday.,id s inl~rlrolr su Jiy, i0 lOonld lolol 1,onm,, Oddt Fellooo' hlullI, aorr of Caop and I.upool tte slot s, -N (o' IJooo. Dllioop fo0r t1e I'oo-so Y]c,-l-. W1. 000o2, of 00nion 1-1 No.ON, M. W1. (.11and 1,'.Jdor; Iod P'ilol,.y, of Fool,I. 1..dooc No,. I6. 0. W. 1)0p0ty Gran ",; l'Ioo. 11. 0hrhil f 1 Ntcc!oots` odf,'o \o. 42, R. W. 1;11,1 ,0{1nrtrn; 'flolill I Ohirlolo, of Union 1,oIoo N.,. 0,1. 0o. sout .l d It -o 0'ilh00o. of 0onll,01ril 1.o200 Nno. 12, 1. R. 14 G. St fu' o;(11 '. Race, ofr0'.oooooooioN...12, .111.1 . . ontlr-lsturlo Lodge N.o. .0. 110, 0,0.,rc. to t 11e it., W n l.od;I.0 o00 II, lhlo 'd t ;: Is:olrO.. 01. 11'nll, 01 0r-,o..t 1.o-lgo No.,". '. (.02 1'0d,,Ioi,,; 11. Si. k, n1 11np n,2, No. 14, IF. l;,ood hd:c . lr "11 o ' cet ojo,, 1.10N. S. 10. Oo, dOllcrod.o .F,,0l, 0I,,tri 11 D ,,,nty Do,, INI.1oro-11. MtililooOO.h rdr'nvrls.0 I.Mogl No. Ii. ).,oo "t \o. "; 1.3 Itm ko, or .Ir0.11,00,., 0. nd?, 11o. 9 I1i0trier No. 3:; Vicor Ri,'ln, of Ooooloir Lo' I~oll 1'1 2, 1)i1tri00 1 No. 4.1'. 0'. ,l,1l,,.'( Io. f St. 01 nr''n II)I \n. 20 'Di,' 1o. 5 : . N. 0011.0 S0. I.1.01101.l0 Nn . 0ri. No. li;oo,,,. Horo'o. of De~oto. N,,.l,10~. i, 'lxrc N,,. ý P1111. . '0 ''ol.loo 1...'-lo 0.22,o \lio:ol,' N,..t 10; . .D of WI,' 10,, 1.,00 Nrini. 20,>; 11:12,0N. DIvI; No. 110J.,o o.r No;,;, \uIw ' N''t 21 010,101 No. 1\ P Y0o1; Iol'.,.,olko, LOdloo N. 37, D10100, No. .13; J. Ii. F. 1',,,,l of,,10 'l'l N,,. 0, 11,2,.,, N..0. it; 0."4 Ol,,ol myroloo, r~i1Iod 41. 11,0,ic01 No. Ii; J. I1. Norrrlon, of Aooooplloo,, n In l" o. All comsiulclctlioli o thr ilrldr llo c r :d I ~ clfr~ 2,,ihl L." fin n osbd 10 the oli.'o o. the liuoo1d '1 000,01.10 ,,.l12,i SolborctIlnte Lodges. LoOUISI,\ .', \ LOUI;E INo. 1--&lr,h I. Nnnelrt, N. 1;.; J. 11. FG,'m .-, V. r;.; 1. II. Secretkry; L. Ioisll., Per. SeIF . I.; U. FFIIIITU, 'P11,, 9 il.!.hiilr, tLr.*ce ,FIUretr ,; F.I G l nl. atn, k 'rrea1 er. FFINUON IOD GE NO, G--S. NV. M-ore, aC.; ,. \I , I,0Nor , W. G.; A. Thomson, S.cretary; Thor. IL lildlI, P-r. Secr- tary; E, It. Rooqueit, '£reHali'ar. CRS.,ENTI I.ODGE No.p--.. t-',F R11,r11 , N. .; F . . hurler, V, (L.; Ed. F. L'hostI r, SFr- tury; L. N. I F alFa. Pct. S cret. ariy; I'. X. ll 1lJt, ' l'rLl, rer. JFF.LERSON LODGE, N9--h,. -... Canty,, N. (.; N.M. WiFtt".AI.; F. F.Miefll-, Secretary; .1 I F. .llc, Ir. See rItary; J, F'. Kra, Troa--rer. TEUTON IA I.ODGE; No. 10--Ionh C. F'1":itd-, N. G.; 11. F. i, F, \U .. k, . II. O,,lll Uk , Frietetry; .Jok , F11,, ,,, R ute I1'r. S cre , y;F I'. FlShe 1 d r. 11', r .=rar . FUVFS.NFNTFI,FIILU: NI. Fl-I e.1 WL,..tol.,.- U. FI., IF, OIIILALNS I.I.O):.iEN. ll--J. h:I . Frob. . . .: J. IT. iUeihb, \ . G .; IF. F\lkIn , rc-tnrI; I F . F u h - 's, "'.:-rer,. OFIFNII F. A I, I.OI(LF No. F --JU . T. St LN. IFT. LO. ud, ,.ln, V. Iy.,.Fi. C-ong; kLr II, t- y; - , Per. S1crF - FF1110.1I. FFPlr~Lil,11F1 V..·LYC.. FIry; F. I UlI-ye, "lrcIlurlr. IFFlOWAR,, -. I.OD . eN, 1-, J Iir,lkly;' Sl. GIF l.i. Id. 1Va., l fora, . r;.; D ,l~id M, re N-cuctry; 1:. It. Simotwell, Per Sec :Irc kar .I l. IIh. g. TLre u'r.r IIFOE LADG i: NN . I -o h urp, G.9-IF II IiLI C1 N F G;ould, V. i;.;'Thomas EF. W~ker, Secretayi (Chadl,¢ R-lt,,er, 'er. Secretary; Geo. Ranre'hid e, Tnr.sln'er. DI1-'LT FLIDGN.o. I'I.L . JF . FI.IdUIL · N. t;.; P.. F' lins, V. G.; A. NcIonlrge, S-cr ;tary; Luther llutt, '1'r Se TE iMP1, AR. LO1DGE No1 . f-e. 1VF. UIIi'F . IA. \. I IIter, V. F L. : .1. E. CarlFn, Secrle tary; "'1 IF -, '. kBragsi. P Scre-tary; I. A. ate .., r ,urer. 'OVENAN°\T IADOGE No. 17--Geo. Whittcmn-e, PN, G.: I|. Gool rich, V. (;.; T. 1i. brarn, S, -tart; J. S. .a uule ll Per. Secretary;It 91,3il Llspaugh,' treasurer. POLARI STAR IODGE; Yo. 19--0. Inr.ae,.,o. N. (;.; I. N. Wag"r v. G.; I, Ilelrys, Secretary; L. A. (Jlty, Per. Sce rtetry; ('. Kl1t ennceggtr, Treasurerr MAG;NOLIA LOI)(;FE No. 22--J. O. WVakIn-. N. (G.; W. L~ynd, V. G,; J. Peynowski, Secretary, 1V. 11. R.ice, P-r ece tr; Win. slo|)pellhngbi, 'r nsre er. INDE.PI':NDI)NCE LODGE No,. ill--Y. Sl'hwarz, N. G,; A Vualbw, V. r;.; 11. Ite... r,,Sc~ay T. (;rt0ly, Pe..ec tars ; Ge,>. Schneider, Trean rer. COIAJ,MIIt'S I.D(H)FE No. F4-gn . Gerard, N. GI.; D.FP. \"alhqtce, \'. t;.; \1. R.g l-ghe Sec,ctrvr; Jno. M.agel u, PIr. Secretary;I.+ ]tothkrr,y 'J'rentiar't., GERMANIA LI)UGEF No. L.J-Tq. G. Bmaschbaeh, N. G.; T. I1. rl,'el"ndm. \V. (:.; 1E. hlst, Se~cretary; 1'. B. Schroeder, Per. Seertary; ;. Dlaniel, 'frensuror. II A)IIIt'NY 1,()D(;-, Nn. 2,-l.W. ]]aqlliL N. OI.; E. 1P, Pnu iprt, V. (I.; V. V o"rhes Sere'rary; II (hti[ott, Pecr. See reuary; G. V. l~nagay, Treal,t-r. IIERtMANN LODGE No. 39--M. Weishetmer, N. (7.; C, Dahr, V. G.; Louis \loses, Secretary; T. F'attP, l. Secretary; Is,~r]ohl, Trnea-.rer. SO['TIf-WVEST ERN LODOF. No. 40--lloward Srnlthl, N, G.; ,IJttlw. Bc-ggs, V. G.; Gerard Srilh, Secretory; J. Ftlrnelatux, Perr. Secr etary; C. Schlnidt, Tt ea,rtlrer. ..IER(tIANNrS' LOI)G; No. 42--.Vmn. BloomrfielId, ,It., N., G.; W. If. Elis.; V. G.; 1. IUf-hm un, Seretarry; It. 1. Abbhott Per, Secretary; I,. I. 1'ot h r, '1'reasuler. In terlor L.olges. E SOTO 5 LODE So.7 meets a.t Uatoan ouge on Th2urday evening. ST. MAIlY'S LOD... No. '0 meets at FrankIin on Saturday 5'1122II )LODG E No. 21 met2 at Shlreveport on 5d2nesday S''. I..n NDIRY LODG'E No. 7 m...s at Opelo..a.. on S.t.r. d:IN'I'N LODGE N",o. ?7 meets at (Clinton oln Wednesday crveila. tIIn OI2,, LOD(IGE No 30 m leeV. at I.ke Provildnco on Dilldav e.niriing. T5II15''Y I12G,.li No. 52 meets at Trinity on SatuLrda ev XIEI,.SIOPR LODGE Nu- 31 mleelt at Thibodayu on Satur NEWn IIRI.1 LOIDG E No. . mee5 l at N-eton on 0Iurs dvcnv 1 G mn.1 i'I5-fl2': 1 2GI' 2221.37 me5t, a2257 2hgn oi FIjd t' AS.I72 '"N I2OD5 (.1)2P5o. .43 mets2:at N2l,2hon2ille on Saltuudtay evc, lig. TTOMA2 . 21. 5II,.lll5] , Grand Secretary. Oddl Fellowsa' Boll ALssociation.. t4.,Of;I.ITI ON nlccls Ilt lhlir oil! c inl Odd Fulton s' flat 1, onl thle first nnllla· lrr erF; \ntooth. (-rg, I R. .11ha 1'-i loo~t; Th.-, 11. 141,w id*, SIcrrt-y;p ti~~i*,ol, 11. Ilonrill 1, illcn Sin MI,. Tltonlta* aunr q, tyro--;cg Bllrrrll 11 . alttl crcl'ic .111'. TMoultoll Ed-Ilrd Lil~lrnri Rld W. if. look. (IntlE newpmt. THlE R. IF. GRAND ENCAMPMENT'l'F LILISIANA,1 DII. F., Il its r-ulaI nc~sion r on the Il~~thi l ''nr lny in 0-yr c.u-l y-- l 1I thlu o~ld F'ellov' 1101, eo -lc or C',nl' anal I~nfnrettr fitlrpl. iflree:, 'or th~e a ,9 , 31. -Alf. XNoniron, . Wr. Gron1 Pntri It. G. K. IV lS'AI"'"le F',(,I, LILY. US II 114 J. . Dl.o.A., IL. 1l1'. (11. el'T"i S. I. TLDil F. IW. Gl 14141 ThomaLs L. (ll, {V. D. SentIL; John LI FL liorA W. Ilrp. 1 1 Sentinel.. ~lf.I~n~r, . m.n. D G.Pntrinrehh of District No. 2, . t3, Il~oam Itll-l· A. Y. 1). Uavert, V. IV. D. 1). G. Tani.i HIreh, uF lliatl icl No. 1, Clinton.. .y ubortliunle I Ullnntýýllltta I WYILDIEY \o. I met" the (I'.. and lly SiUur$ in eac untl0, in Odd Fellw.:, coo11 er of OO01:1 n I.ufnotl. Oltrceia. uice',o for the0 pt *OLI-jnt . K. O:lojo, I,. t ..; Petecr .lin~cl, II. 1'.; 7. I). Va. hon,. 0. P. OP 0 . (30,0, 11013011 No. 3 meet. the soeond and fourth otaordny In ench 1.th, in Odd Fellows' hall, corner of Coop and Lafayette ;hejls. A)llecu%. for the prol.eno,.. S. ohrop, C. P.; C. W. Goldll, I1 P.; . S0ith, S. W.; ;. iocnlz, Scribe; J. J. Sher-dod J. \Y.; S, M. Todd, Treasurer. I.,AALE No,.. met' the firt 1-1. third Mondagyin each month, in Old Pollos' Ilw11, concr of camp and LPyIyoeIe set ,1s. Otli0"or the p0"hat Wrm-0. A. PtleOaoo, C. P.; I~Oid Moor, II P; IoolMo. ,S. W.; A. J.IMoos, Scribe; N. Bleedict, J. W.; J. R 1, eu1uror,. WASIINGTON No. S t meets te second , od fonrh Motlty in e ach mouth, 1. MgriRny Hltldog.,Third 31 1(ric01 O13,,,, for the prosenttrmo-O. Ltttg..btcko, C. P.; UI. (oldoltt 11. P.; E. 0,rinkmno,, 0.0.; I. (1. Fink, Scribe;J. Goero J. Wi.; fi. dilkpaogt. Tre,,oror. I. SPAYETTIS No. 7 meets the first sod third Manila to each Tonoo ioi . o, TChOU 0.laa a Olttrlet t Oelt aquar be Railroad ttoait Fourth o isuittO, O fi or the prca0O term-,J. F. Dun.n,, . 0 PJ P. Kria1r II. P,; C0,. Ocl0.,lbo W.;. 1 p4, Scrie; t.. JuuinttcJ. W.; . T, 41fqrrg 'trwura. I'glLI(: \N No. s moots the first amt (hul/ll S tlllly In each·! Pteotb, it. 1'olar Star Lodge ro'om St. tLouis hreel- Oldiers for te I lpresent term--J I. Wagner, . I'.; L ulas bae, It. F.; t'. Callhdn,, S. W.; C. O. Dugule, Scribe; J. V-dot J. W, i It, l.e ter alle, Treasurer. Interior llecnmlptltelts J3fAONOT,IA No. 4 meets In Ulttun. ,,ul:l o the second and fOurtll Saturdlay In eltchll.nlollh. MOUNT SINAI No. 9 mneet in F'ralklilnl parils of St. Mary the first and third Wednesday In elih lmolnllt[. 0. W, SIIAW No. 10 meets the first alnl third Saturday in each mouth in Clintonr penJsh of [elta Felclrlflt. All communicatioa s tntended for the G1ratnd Enmcampronlt must be atldresved to Jas, Foronaux, O. Scribo, Odd ,ellownI Haill, Nw Orleans. JAMES FURNEAUX, 0. Scribe. "Oild Fellows' Rtest." OARD OF DIREOTORS FOR ilN0..-Ofliesrs--IcnrY Bier, Prcsident; 'ohn Stroud (Treslerer" ,olrs I, Frne.ux , Secretary. Ceme tery(onlmmlttee--lprlor (lljl'llihmn Gardloer SIndtb, l/![ tlhcr ]Ionles. Flinnceo omnlltteo--'l lmalts beefife W.C. Wl eolb L. llie s. Suxtol--lDonl l ..Mrritt. l|mlber,--Fnrak ~owil. \V. 1. Wilson, George SeymourI. Go.(J tnll, 0. It. jotwdflell, J. P. 'Yrlleor, 1. Casterede, S. UBoul eet. VAUL TS IN " ODD FEII,(WS' REST" easvy be procured by applyhlg to F. N. CORRY5, at Sickles A Co.'s, FS Cllnal .trect; at 1) FPLT A STETbONI 'S 54 Camp street; to 11. MIqP.SAUGI{ U*. S. Mtint. and at ties Sceretary's office, tu Odd Fellows' f.lal, cor 'ner of ammln mnd lnl,lfayetie strecls. T'he price to members or Stoekbolding Lodges will bN $40 per Vll t; to all others, $50 per aulIt nformation relativt to thle purchase of Lots, ean be had on applicntto to the Secretalr-. JAMES FUItNEIAUX, Secretary O. F. Rcst. 1e Georn1 Relief Comlntlto. Thb fnlloa1iR nrtUo th ubel~a for tto lt term TV. 1. 11onnt, l'rc.idoot, 14 ool aog Pbroo: It. F.Sil TOoTraurer., 'Ikl lbollootoF;rect Juoeo FoooneneA Sutooloy, odýd Fobllboo' to hu11 (bootoo 0110, PoOsl OIloo 1OO7diloo, 0cho o'ioo;j, ,P . Ray,O20 COboloo b ?,o J. M. Crawford, a ,0,1, oll d 3 ,0 ooo1,oler tq; l0. I. 1,omb .rto., Fmortbl l)ioltric.;'0. la. Peterson, i- c,,tomo tb,,., It. I1. otnnluo, earner t rbood and Tchobpl,1 -0 Ins otre obn J. J. Sorwhoob, A. W. \l1,0,oobllb, F. IF. Fred,, jo 11011, (OC m oonl,,ot; [I. 1 .1tC00, Ci rlor-I1010: WO. D1ick. s00,corne ol'1oydo,, aod Tobmtinux J sblotob o; ]t. t; Iboh, 10 Abobo'o; 1. '. robw, 1'. bivnudnio, 1 1 Cl,1,0 010tre; c booot n- l311,oobnt mootlnbsoo 1,d on Ion tlbd toondnryn each moo 1, n' te SOcreloy'o of.ie . bo Odd Follo,,o' I[Oal, 01ruer I9 ho ro and I.ultobttu b treola, ntoll o'lobck P. lb. m31 JAIlS FROlI:AUX, Sfetlb00ry. 9 NEW ORLEANS WHOLESALE CURLLENT PRICES CAREFULLOY CORRECTED EVERY WEEK. II` Frrnn j 1'0 )f BAlGNG, "a7 yard D K entucky .................................. I n h ........................lll - 1 B LE,...... K entucky .. .............................. I Northela . ..... .... . . ..BA al1 1b . . ........................... - 5$ - 27 y Itcs or 1,0(* - E AN l 10 11 . . .................. .. 0 I.nL ke...... ............................... 0 S I ngll h-l re ...................... . ..... 121.. . 5 corFFuI,, O Em t9 It"o ...................... . . . . . . . .. 1 RIao "0, . . . 11 0 Gorl Prime Government..........o S Inferior to Middling ............... Sva ....................................... ] q fit. ~o mhlgeo .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . `C- OCOIATIE,.mb No. I. .... .... .... ... .... .... .... ... No. II.·.................................... r azer ' ................................... 39 She I hi , g . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . yellow metal ......................- 25 0 CANDI1a, Ib Sponoo New Bedford ....N ................ , N antul ket .......................... Tallow ..................................... K nreantio O L.. _ 19r''- 2l S an n .. ....... ............................ 1 ,.CO itD,111F., t m M anilla ..................................... T'rred American ........................... - w R SlI ....................... ............ z .5 a 5 OIN MEAL, . bbl .......................... K--"..,.a COAL, t t olS . . C m el..... :.- ................ .. .. .... oCIDoEolt `obbl--. -1 N ,,rt ern .................................. 3 , DOMEflo: GOODS, A y1r0' 1,onwia Shirring., 34 7-$ .......o ...... -0...... Sheeting. 4-1 o 6.4 ............-.. lac ed Shltl g .- to - ................ o 04!y - .. Sheeting:. 4-4 ........ ............. _ 09 - 1 Prown Lowell (" llhurgp ................... 12 ]h'own Virgini " ................... '0'0cki0 l, l ,4 to a44 .......... .............. Stripes n ld J'hecko ......................... D'voiEs 0 13 Cnttoos ................................ .. - Co tton l c ..... ............................. "g samii 1,t. .. . . ........... ...... ...... ..... . l : entllcr . .... .......... .............. :"DUCK(, t`3bolt- R ul. a ..................................... . DYE- 4Ion , 1' o ol l ...00.... ..... ........ ... . ..... 00 Americaln, Non. 2 to 16, t" r'1111.].···I-.I 18 o Fpo.1o'' % 1 t. :7 0o 0.d, tit 110yo ...................... 00 14 N I* l i . T1 1 , ir O .......... ....... ....... . O . 5011 I Indior m .... ... .............. .............. a-- " .....ll. .......... .....0.0.. 0 R ::i 00001. · · ··········· 000 AU1 1I li.o , II 0 ()Oh ).. ,re., ~molle rin« ........................: 5 Slllhloa and M i- nSIri, Sutermlrle ............. ]- S , C iy ....................o...... ol- ,) ll O m . lb4-............................... 44 - 1FI,:.7'01' .,IIF iEs Ib......oo ................... 3 10 0 N103511,100 I.t . ar .kelc. ) No,....... ···· ·............. . .. 17 N: .. 3 . ... .. ... .. ....!. , Tlerri'l., ý- bux ....... ..................... . 0 S .... ?,f,..... ...··.·-····-. l$· ". fi·l: lll. odo - lm_· )-··r ............... 3· - DC~Il A Londo, Lrr l. ) ,r ......... . ............ l o. n, l f h....... .. .... ..... ..... . ". i',eiom ul.. l..r.. ...... ()H ang.~ .................................... lo d, olt..... S. . ..........0. ................. hardie l bshell .. ........... ..... .... - 05ji - I ea , .. h. .................. ... .......... 1 4 1 O ato .......... . ... .. ..................... - 39 \Vp~, ilt), ·ul ......... ..... · ·· ·· ·· · GL SS . bo r 5 e et .. ....................·· C o rr, , itn , car. rN .... ... .................. - - - - 10 0 io .l0 , ..... 1.................... " 18. . . ....... ...............5.00 000 ('U n oNY t . . .................I.. ..... ..... 4 0 Spn . l p I . ...wa .r-r. t. ,...................... ..01 1A 100, 0 C1op, o .6f 5101 0 , w $I-rotC .. ....... ...............O1 5 t b l S a e Fi..... ........ . ........· 3 4 0 " ha 0e ..................0........... LraA I bol 0 1Y , ton-.. . . . . . 10 l0 1.10, 0icn ................. 1 .... 0 o t'. dsrl. ............ ..,. . 000 11050 \ I' ah led h . l ............. . .. ....... It I AY itton................. ....... ....... ... 20 0 '21 0 W lie ~nnd M eri," Flint .............. _ _ lgn i3 ).y coute .......... .... .. , L 'TooAk , h y....... . . ... (m Io - I. D y olrnnooo .. ........ ........... .. . ..... ..: 1-. 1L1A 0, 00 m 00I. il lo oo 0-00. Western ....... ......................... A h 0A1.0,oooý 0$5 Th mto"o 4 0 ....................... ...... n Sh ht . Es. .I....................... C... .... 0. Onlolni ......... .............. ................. . : NAILS, B mh 4oI0 -)o ....................................... d Tar. bbl............ 1................ . 1 'itch ..., .. ...... .1 0. 10 Oo oin o.... ................. ...... Spirit,, " lr nth ie, 3 gallon ................ 4, ' nih, bright ............................. 00 OI1S, 00ail1n- dlm l ..... ................ ................ ,I.I , ..................................... l r S erm, wi ,ter ...... .............10....0. 0 pr Irl , l er . ........................1... . . . . . . . - 50 t W haho re ne . .................. ......... 0 1 i -........... .................... .... . 100 (TlA. E, , .c n............................. 20 Fr. llt nk r, 1 boi.ll...................... 0 0 •' 00r1n5. 0 I :................ . 00....... 9 1 'A o .. ....................... ....: - -W (O r4 10.1, bbl . I~t - rc.e, "n Il~ . ......................... ' ý. - -. st 1 " 0 .I. ...................... . 1 I, . k- ier, bb .... ................." . . .. " n d i a a r c s , . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .... . . - - " M.o ........................ ......... 1 t 16 "" Prian` ..Ves:............................ I$ 0 19 ; S ml' e, 1es bbl.............. ........ 70C 1.. D rll ied , 4ol l .lld) " ... ................ ...... - 07561 . Cl nnsr "., 7B ]........................ 6 0; Plr ak ',--: aol. 9 bbl ........................ y M c.. .............. ........ ......... h h ) , w ............................ It, I- " Che e- m er n ... ..... ...................... . .3 0 _ 1 . Prlim e Apl e .......................... _ . - D,, ;, om d l............................... - - - ') !o' e .. .. ......s ' m.......................... I0 --. ,rogeSir. r . ... .. ..... ................ ( 6 - S;hor ,u ,d ... ................ .. ........ . 10 - 1.a ll[d ....... ....... ...................... PhIne: nt n ... ................... ........... 1) : I n w h lne^: ........................... to - - " I l ,r-A m ,.; rl am.... .. . ... ..... ...... i _ ) I oa. " o8 m a d P lphh. .....'..._ Ap pe Por taoe , fie 23 b l................. ..... .... 0 1 3. 1LTu i, na k -........................ .. ....... 4 _ 44, I ,'e ro , .._ .. .. .... . .... .. . . -- . f'u:-:,i.... . ................... In . Gin er . ... ... ................. 0 22 Turk'rlagrnd , NoI.... h.. lel.. ................ I0 1 1 p e ........ .. ....................... 16 - ° i a~ t .. ..ne ..... ..................... . . . 1 STEE , '? 1-. . . " ro vn . . .. . ... . - - n ai. . ............ ... ... 8. - EToflia) h whlite red........................ . 11 - Loafil, 13 4 nn dP ia ep i: ...,.. . 1 O Ai SALT, r F~u-k + . or+ l.... .............................. , m n...... ....................... 0 - .B oPrITer~n etroa N.1.... . fl SPIRITS, -, rall :-on " ..................... -, - 1-0 frm, Cha p ogne ..... ............. . 51 1 0 T u lk , o rla de tu . 13·· h....... ... ... - 0 I- - of "h z A.r.e.. a. . ..................... ... - 165 1 $ 1Lhis y elclifled ..__................... :::: . - nR.llm. lxlind.......... ...... ,.5 1S R @" Afe r ...... .... .......................... . ) - "I Nenlow Olde ms...................._ 41 - A lcoho lh .................................... . . be ar n ... .............................[-- 75 Deer . a d...... .......... ......... ......... . . - 19 F " in Ilidr .............. ............ - 11, SAm rica .......... ........................ ,-- l 0 All sllr s, . 25 1. ....... ...... ........... 210 1 T OBACCO, m - Choice and, lgta LcN I.... ................ -- - ,Fie ...... . ............................ i-- 7- en I lai .....an................................ - --5 1 S o mmo n . ... .... ... N e lo rl . .. . .. . . .. . .. .. - - 3