Ontario Community Newspapers

York Herald, 31 Aug 1860, p. 1

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II,“ ’31. slim-maus-‘r‘. '5. n. i. :- t‘ a. 33... a)!” complished 1' 9‘ Long t‘tflblt’vty'tTWenta Worth,” but owiiigitontfi'i unex cted shuffle on the boardsf‘I‘tfieT‘giriéaf reaper-man was cué'déo'nt} ’andf" Frenchman, namedG'nrnee, was put; on the track, only to'bc‘beajié‘iritftliéI race by the longer 'legs John.” It is reported thati'Mc‘ mick did not quite like the maijiineir i.“ which he had been left out bf did” political ~ace ; and, forgetting injunction which says “ revenge not), The blossoms of the wild-wood, ,Bloomiug on the hill-sides free, Howthey take me back to‘childhood, -DaysIl‘never more shall see-â€" Happy days. when. tired of; roaming, With the butterfly and bee, I dimiéifiidihe'ward iii the gleaming, And my mother welcomed me. . W: I , \~ {E l OCATE AND Anvnnrtsan. I AURORA 7AND ‘ Brennan. HILLgADV ,ve - _ ‘ - - - W” a Yj’ywsmwmvAnmev yourselves but rather give “place; “Mother,1am tired orp'i‘aying ALEX.” SCOTT, Proprietor. “ Let Sound Reason umgh more with us than“ Popular Opinion.” TERMS, $1 50 In Advance_ unto wratln”he stt'mglitwny bought :All the long, long summer day :” Then she smiled and kissed me, saying, " Birds have ceased to sing and play : Time my little one were resting In her nest, too, for the day ” Oh! those kisses! that caressing! How it scothed each pain away ! Lips, whose ivords of cheering blessed me, Ye were stilled long years ago 1 Arms,Itliat lovingly caressed me, Many a year ye have lain low ! Oh my mother, angel mother; orphaned through ilievworld, 1 go ; Fora in all the world, no other Can a motlioi’slove bestow. Never, now, when heavy-hearted, ,VVeary, honie~sick, may 1 come, As iii days long siiice‘departed, To thezthreshliold of my home ; I For the voice, whose words of cheering Quickly scattered all my gloomâ€"â€" Sweetest music toniy hearing - Everinoie on earth is dumb. Oh 1 the blossoms of'the wild-wood, ,‘f‘hey arei‘very fair to see, Yet.tlie,t"caiiiiot, bruig my childhood, I,Norti1v mother back to his; But 1 know that, for iny coming , Up in Heaven Watc'ics slic, “Charo 'iiiiinortzil flowers are blooming, 'Tliere slie'waits to welcome me. .. â€"â€"._~â€"Aâ€"â€"\_ Stittttitttt ! I. e )I‘HE WOMAN IiN A Cltll‘vfliTAN' EPISODE. The barren plateau. on which the Allied armies \t'erc encampcd before SCbtistapol w'as'iiatUially suggestive of" n'r‘a'ny superstitions fancies among' the troops. The outly'ng sentinel, with‘ltis o/ye'at the utterinost degree of" tiiiision. to detect Some crouching spit-fiIcvciitiirillv .s'iw it-nrigintiry forms amt-ind, him, and the t-larlitiess tecainc peopled with the denizens of another World. Mility stories of ghostly rriatiifcstations.werc current, very few of them possessing any other it foundation than the imaginary,fan- “pisiftli-tttl'tiflllft ‘t‘ of :in lrish reg-intent, who this conversant with all1 the details. . A Soldier, on being relieved fro n guzird one \Vinter‘s night, swore ' stouth that he had been haunted ' durng the whole period ofâ€" dnty by a woman in grey, who made signals to him, which be, good litt‘lntttt Catl ill‘tllt'. as he was, ilcclith’l tortollow. Hewas laughed at; but when the sciiti'y, on duty tlic next night :told tlic'samc story. the most incredulous. began to believe. When a week had passed away, and each night ‘iiioinctit_.-the \‘ataghati had‘ passed ’lll" ‘ricd tip to flicispot. and both were v01. 11. No. no. ..._L_~__t_... em... W‘fi gteybeard the figure wore. Pat, as a traveller, was accustomed to strange'sights, but this surpassed all. In a second thought, the truth flash- ed upon him, and he made ready for actionf ’ ' ' ‘Cmne here, my darlint,’ Pat said artfully, but the woman did not seem inclined to obey. The moonlight ,had'evidcn'tly destroyed the strangâ€" cr’s calculations. She fell back a Istev‘i or'two, and then turned to fly Butit wasto late“; Pat was after her with a tiger’s bound, and, ill)- pedcd by her petti'coats, she stumbl- a'ttd nearly fcl'l. In a seconth however. she recovered, and tinned on the sergeant with a inost'un-con‘iâ€" forta'ble 'yavtaghan. , ' ‘ Tearian’: "Gulls; shouted the ser- gcant, ‘the woman’s the devil. it can stand nails, but.;tlicse are rather too sharp.” V A low mocking latiin burst from the stranger's lips as he tried to get bcthcn Bait and his muskcti. But the sergeant was on his guai‘ ; pre- icnditht,r to fly, lic ii'iauagcd to bear down within“ grasp of the woman, and caught at liercapotc. ' The next tlirougirtlic fleshy part of his arm, butlic.di-ilfnot relax his hold. He grappled ‘\_vit.li.tl‘ic stranger, but nice“ ,I, with: an , uncxpcc'cd resistance. he" drew lilel‘tH’QlVCl'. I The stranger clutched at'it with _ frantic energy, ttl)(_l.«'t terrible struggle ensued, which terminated by the pistol suddenly explotfitig.,atitl the stranger fell to . tlic groutnf with .a groan, while Pat. wenkrwid’iby the loss of blood fol- lowed the cxamplcg. The quarter-I gzttul, :tIl}'ltI]St.:tIl,,l)y the shot, somt hur- borne into the camp. The stranger was placed in a, but, and a surgi on fetched, and it was evident that the gliostfln ttg'i‘cy-vnis a fine looking old main: . lie-j was. however, declared toibc iii a very dangerous state, for enough. l‘Tis iiaino'tvtileonstantine, ard lic was.bybirtli'a l’ole.fl Having been engaged in ti'tCI revolution of 1831, lic’was saved from the. death that fell to the lot of his comrades to en‘ dui'e a worse fate. He and his family were transferred to Russia, and he ,t'as-fiorccd to pCI'fOt‘ii’i the most dcâ€" grading’dulies iii the secret police. .Vo'r. tt't'cnty,â€"tiirec years he had on. dure’d'thc humiliation, for th: sakc' of his \tifewand child, but be little reckoned what was in store for him. \Vlien thcwar' with the allies became I _._. _ ...I. ‘nim. ears of Lord Raglan himself 'whol, visited the prisoner, and hide him; be of good cheer; no harm should bcfal, him. But Constantine shook. his head sadly; or 'what value was life in him now, Iwhcn he was separ- ted from Eudoxial ’ 1 need not say every kindness w'as shown to" the POUI' fellow, and the doctors vied with each other in their attention to But there was little 'ctiance oft savingnim: the wretched conical ball was apparently embedded in his backbone, and there was no pros» pcct of moving it. ' I ‘ I Pardon, reader, such a common- place story. but the ‘ cridI- is not yet. Two dfiavs later, Sergeant Leary, who had bound his flesh-wound up, and laughed at’ it. was at work" in. the front parallel. He was sitting in the trench, smoking aI very dirty snort pip0,,and growling inwardly when his wound gave him ti twitch. It was aI lovely night, and double caution had to be exercised, for the Russians were all alivc,_and seemed shooting fora wage“ at the men in the Trenches. l’at IIil'iiIlosophically took off his siiacko.’ and placed it on: the top of .thc ‘ earthwork. In five minutes he took it down again, and i lo! there were three iniiiie balls clean through it. I i i V ‘ \Vhirrali 1’ said Panes h ' cot-ni- cziliy surveyed the damage, ‘ liei‘e’st a patent ventilator.7 I ‘ , ' ‘ Lucky for "you, Sergeant LcaIry,’. a young ensign remarked, ' that your head wasn’t in it.’ ‘ V ' ‘ Arrali, your honour. and do you ’ monotonic Ian. L, can say is,‘that,I nursed Sergeant Leary’s youngest girlItlie other day whcn’l went in for an ounce of to- bacco, at asliop not a hundred miles quested to Wait and see FatlsurCon- statitine, whohas a very comfortable engagement as interpreter at one of our police courts. VViIIih him l smoked a refreshing pipe, anti The confirmed all the details of the story I now lay before the ieader.â€" PVRZenme Guest. NIGHT Aimâ€"An extraordinary fallacy is the dread of night air.â€"â€" What air- can we breathe at night but night air? The choice is be- tweenvpure night’ air from without and foul night air from withinâ€"â€" .Most people prefer the latter. An unaccountable choice. What will they say ifit is proved to be true that fully one~half0f all the disease we suffer from is occasionedhy people sleeping with their windows Isliut'l. An open window most nights in the year can never hurt any one. This is not to say that light is not necessary for recovery. In great cities night air is often the h t and purest at? who had in the twenty-four hours. I could better understand shutting the windows in towns during the day, thin during the night, for the sake of the sick. The absence ofsmoke, the qumt, all tend to make night the best time for airing the patient. One of- our highest medical authorities on con- sumption and climate, has told me that the air in London is never so good as after ten o'clock at night. I)N “3 suppose that those dirty bullets would , go through my shake, for we allE [know what that is made of; ~but an idows lrisliman’s' hemp is made of stro materials.’ 1 ' ' A suppressed laugh ra'n'along the' trenches, but Pat, was not at all put otit. ‘ tiger- ., put at least a piiit of hardspirits into this (ttlt‘tffhc of niinc,‘aInd there‘s not a man among you can say he . hastl seen me the worse for'it. It wantst :1 party distant head to "stand the raki we get up here, for it would: take the roof tiff a house; So I think my head is safe against aflnill seat by Russian pI Wdcl‘r, Hilloal itVllttl’Si their gtiti’ie now, i wonder i’ I The men jumped up involuntarily. l for the firing from the Russian guns littd grown tremendioiis. Forget- ting all caution. they sprang on the breastwcrk, naturally supposing that = Always air your mom, then, from the outside air, if possible. ‘VVin- are made to open, doors are made to shut a truth which seems ,cxtreiricly difficult of apprehension. Every rOom must be aired from Willlt.tutâ€"â€"_CV'Cl'y passage trom within , But the fchr passages there are AN isou‘isrrivu YANKEE. A gentleman riding in an Eastern rail road car, which was rather scantily sup- plied‘ with passengers, observed on the scat before him a lean, slabsided Yankee; every feature of his face seemed to ask a question, and a little circumstance soon proved that he possessed a more “ inquisi- tive mind.” ‘Before him, occupying an entire scat, sat a lady dressed in' deep black, and after shifting his position seve- ral tunes, and manoeuvring to get an op- portunity to look into her faCe, he at length caught lirr rye. “ ln affliction?” .froin'Leicestcr Square, and was re-t ;sat down, , My neighbor on the left Eoffered me a portion ofa kitten, the "one on the right the wing of an owl, and the third pressed on me the leg ofa dog. The Chinese, to do honor to a guest, cram his plate with what they consider the most delicate mor: 's’cls, so that he runs the risk of ha v- ing a violent indigestion. In this country obeisity is considered the *lllgllcst beauty in man. The Chi- nese with whom if Was at table had. lgood appetites; they ate a good tileal, and used their long transpar- ent finger nails, which are as hard as iron, to separate their food into small portions. That was to me a new employment for human nails.- Wine made from rice. tea, and dif- ferent of syrup were sent round the table. 1 confined myself to taking a few glasses 'oftl‘ie latter, but it would be difficult for me to give the names or to describe the taste. This repast ‘asted three mor- tal hours, and when it was over a little girl ten years of age came in and offered us liqueurs. She was not ugly in European eyes, and in those ofthe Chinese was a pcrfe :tbcauty. I-IerIIcyes were triangular, her nose thick, her teeth white, and her hair raised to a prodigious height. She poured out to each guest a glass of fermented liquor, which to me was Idetcstable ; received gravely the allegorical Compliments whichnearly everybody addressed to her, and then trotted off as if she had only wooden legs; her feet, in truth, vere so small that scarcely be distinguished. After- wards pipes Were brought. and every one began smoking with graâ€" Lctler‘in Jllonit "‘o‘r Stir LS they could vity and in silence. teur'de l’ firmer. and winning effectâ€"4n this peculi. arity of needle-work, distinguishing women from men. Our own sex is incapable of any such byplay aside from the main business of life; but womenâ€"“be they of what earthly rank they may, however gifted with intellect or genius, or endowed with awful, beautyâ€"have always some little handiwork ready to fill illc tiny- gap of every vacant moment. A needle is familiar to the fingers of them all. A Quecn,’ no doube plies it on occasimi; the woman poet can use it as adroitly as her l CHINESE DINNE i.â€"â€"ln the even- ling the mandarin entertained me at dinner. I. When the provisions had .been placed on the table, every one when. at. 9-2. many/instancesrealiZed, by wise and great men of all classes, from the Diocletians of old to the Foxes and Burks of our own days. War-t ren Hastings, who had ruled lndla, yearned for the scenes of his boy‘ hood; and lived to be happy in them. , The wish to possess a coun- try-house, a retreat'fa nest. a liar- bour of some kind from the storms, and even from the agitating plea- sures oflife, .is as old as the ser- rows and joys of civilization. The childfcels it when he ‘plays at house ;’ the schoolboy, when he is reading lltIlllS corner; the. lover when he thinks of his mistressâ€"- Epicurus felt it in his garden; Horace and Virgil expressed their desire of it in passages which the sympathy of mankind has rendered immortal. «it was the end of all the wisdom and experience of Shakesa pcre. He setired to his native town. and built himself a house in which he died.â€"+Leigh Hunt. MEN WHO HAVE {tissues-The late Lord Mayor Was but an officeâ€" lad in the firm of which he is now the head. I Mr. Herbert Ingram, M.P. for Boston, and proprietor of the Illustrated News, blackened the shoes of one of his constituents.â€" Mr. Anderson, of' the Oriental Steam Navigation Company, and formerly MT. for the Orkneys, rose in a similar manner. Sir Peter Laurie was originally in a humble position in life : so was Mr. Dillon, of the house of Dillon do Co. Our great Lord Chancellor, .wlien employment was scarce and money ditto, held a post as reporter and theatrical critic en the .M'orning Chronicle newspaper. 'Mr. Chap- liti, the lateSalisbury M.P., was an extraordinary instance of a man ris- ing from the humblest rank. Be- fore railways were in operation Mr. nings, grew till, just before the opening of the London and North- Western line, he was proprietor of sixty-four stage-coaches, worke‘l by fifteen hundred horses, and giving yearly returns of more than lialf~a° million sterling. Mr. Cobden be- gan lifein a very subordinate posiâ€" tion in'a London warehouse. Sir William Cubbitt, when a lad, work- ed at his father’s flour-mill. Mic~ lia'el Faraday, England’s most em- nent chemist, was the son of a poor blacksmith. Sir Samuel Morton Pete worked foi seven years as a and afterwards purchase against the Times, of that; city. Thus equipped with thepower of exelicquer overflowing with -th¢: profits of his valuable patents,- there is no knowing to what heig‘ht’s‘of‘rct flmcrican.‘ MADE SIMPLE. amounting to $23,000, .Wh-creby they. obtained a summary (‘001‘1‘0l03l635thr - two newspapers combined, endan- nown he may yet attainmâ€"Scienlific PaorAtifi‘ioN BY CiiTTIN-GS ' In one of our earliest numbci‘u no more difficulty in striking eyes of native than of foreign grapes, pro- vided, after they were cutIrcadnyor planting, they were sufferch.t0sliIe'-, mixedwith damp moss for two weeks... in a place secure from dryingtéâ€"aHere planted all grow. This hint .wehave acted on, and thousandsof dollars have been made throughthe infer-'3 mation thus giVCn. given by other of our correspond'o' ents, about leaving cuttings of such thing as Cotoneastcrs, Prunuses, &c.‘, in dark cellars in dry moss. when” they would push roots freely, the accounts of striking in Sphagnum messs, and many other details'of, practice and observation, have all. potntcd exclusively to one great prin- ctple, namely, that "callous can be formed in any cutting before being , secret was reVCalcd, that fliere'Iw‘asI” they forma slight callosity, andrwheji , reason to know has been extensively . The hint,"also,' ’ put into the soil, and. where that is , effected, it can readily be made to. root.” , . .-_ ft. is, in fact, now become well Known to someâ€"~we may saytmany ~t~0f our most skilled propagators, lens, and then be made to growt Apples, peaches, cherries, and plums, are now freely struck by setteral in" our immediate vicinity from cuttings, and many kinds of trees once thought; are now raised so very freely. I I In our own own experiments, we, into the bottom of fit: bottle, amt:- water poured on. Then all the water is draincdmitthat will go out by in- verting the bottle, and the cuttings placed loosely in. No cork is placed in the bottle, and evaporation takes place slowly. and the cutting soon ' forms the desired callouse. The whole secret, in fact, is in ah lowing free access of air to all parts of the cutting, at the sometime taking care that evaporation shall not be so excessive as to dry up the cute lingâ€"Gardner’s .Monlhly. TUE BAROMETER. I i 4' ‘ ' \ 7' i' i i ' " ‘ 7 ix. Iii, i ) i i v . 1 o 1 ) «i . I 1 w thci’samc ()CCUTI'CUCC happened. the imminent, he was oidcied, \\ tth his mu mom, ,,.I,I.I(Ii,,,,md a SMHCI “my, II\Iis, sI'i, IItTftthdbd “It: lltrlIgv- Pm; me woman’s CyeI ma, has (.nipcntcr, biicklayei, and mason, . .- . . . -, - , - " . , ... ,"_‘- " ,- t 'ircn'â€"~i'1 icr or me icr j’ , . ,_ . . . '. . . . . . __ .___- regiment “"“S 5’) “titrated Will) filill‘tn. litm'lh l2 b‘vl’fiélgtttttl, tot he was d “are in peitct t Sdlct}, however, .illI , N‘O air , ‘ dwmveped a new 5,3,3 toms from pndei his uncle, Mi. Henry II’eto. I II I II II I I “nut-the"captain of the day thought perfect bicnch and Grammar scliol-. {he hung“, we“, a, pmscm (“meted I . “S glory ,0 send the ponshed “me The well-known Mr. Lindsay, We find fiat tits ins iumen , it liip'h .time to ,ii‘itcrfcre.‘ ~ For this purpose be summoned to his counsel ,oncd’atrick Leary, a colour-serge- ant’,‘ who Was popularly supposed to fear neither man nm' devil. The captain lent the nOtt-COtttmlSSthCd officer a revolver, bidding him fire if he, found it absolutely necessary, I but, tog'do his best to capture the woman alive. Mr. Pat took a hearty drain of rumjand wanton sentryâ€"go, much- to. the relief of the men warn- ed for'tliat night’s duty. It was a dark, misty night when Pat‘commenced his duty round, and it was enough to make any men feel "."tiport'l'ii n at' \Varsaw still remained or; and when the campaign com- ii’it:iicch'_li_e‘ was compelled to risk his life nightly, by going out to spy the progtIthcss tho- encmy inadc.â€"â€"Dcath staredliiiii in the face either way; if he refused, the sentence passed in force, which if be obeyed, hc W9... in hourly risk of detection. Why not desert? 'you' will ask; but the Russian police were Machict'cls. I His daughter Eudoxia, a lovely girl} of threc-and-twcnty, was taken into. the Governor’s house ostensrbly to: protect'hei‘ from the horrors of thcl siege; but. Constantine Was given ,showcr of lead, and at a single figure, which was crossmgl the open at ft antic Speed. Our men chccrcd heartily, as the Stranger pressed on. utterly reckless of the some two or three fellows, Leary at their head, rushed out iii rescue, him. ‘Grcat was the sci‘gezint’s surprise though, when he recognized in the stranger the woman in grdy. IBtit there was no time for inquiry. The liussian,' had opened all their batteries, as'if' disgusted at not bringing down their victim, and for an hour the very cai‘thfishook Wltll the vibration. Sud- denly“ the fire died away, as we did Clllitl.I}‘rel‘ltapR lâ€"«boy or‘girl 't’ ‘NIo, sir, not a child; I have no child-‘ to“.7 I ‘ iftisba'iid,tlicn,1 expect 1’ ‘ ch,’ was the curl answer. ‘ Hum! colei‘yiu-a trading man may be P I ' I ‘ My husband was a seaâ€"faring man, the captain of a \‘essc ; he didn't die of cholera, ht: was (lt'OW’llt‘tlu, ‘ Uh, drowned ch «3’ pursued the inquisi- tor,jhcsitatiiig for an inrtant. ‘ Saved his 0732.81?) ‘ Yes; the vessel was savcil’jiaitd' my husband’s cliBClS,‘ said the widow. ‘ \YasI they 1’ asked the Yankee, his face brightening tip. ‘ Pious nianl’ ‘ He Was a member of the Methodist instrument gleaming along the hem of her kerchicf, or to darn a casual' fray'inher dress. And they have greatly the advantage of us iii this respect. The ' slender thread 0, l silk or cotton keeps them unitedl with the small, familiar, gentle inte«l rests oflifc, the coutii‘iuztllyoperat- ing influences Of which do so much for the health of the character, and‘ carry off what would otherwise be a dangerous accumulation of' mor- bid sensibilty. A vast deal of huâ€" man"‘sympatliy runs along this electric line, stretching from the thrOne to the wickerâ€"chair of the MT. for Sunderland, was a cabin boy. 'ilte editor of one morning paper rose quite from the ranks, and the editor of another ‘wcll- known journal usedito be an errandâ€" boy in the office before, by gigantic industry and perscvm‘ancc, he tit“ tained his present high [)OSlllOn.-‘-â€"- flbout London, by J. E. Rite/tic. A GREAT HARVEST AND A GOLDEN REAPEP; In an article on another page of the present number, in regard to the cheeringprospccts oftlic crops, it is which heretofore has been owned by but few, is being introduced into manv families, and becominga mark-z oil-subject for observation Where it is displayed. II many years, has Well established to our satisfaction the followingâ€"â€" Changes of weather are indicated in , the barometer, not by the actual. height of the mercury, but- by its change of height.- One of the most. general though not absolutely invaria able, rules is, that where the more cury is very low, and therefore the atmosphere very high, high winds that all cuttings can be made to calâ€" ' lmPOSSlble .to propagate in that way,_', i ‘ ' i ' ' i - 5 in, , . . ' Y. ,1 ', ' . ' ‘ , ' t g A i... .' "lug-“i Li“: iiiimmii‘ims snimm’i; hm it i lll l' ‘ in on ‘ his limos. i B055! “‘3 ‘bnrltl’lmd’ “"h 90“ ' l” a” ll‘isl”ml lll“ benefi'~Flm'mce m ' ' ' L'iiiliiilf] had TfJCLlBCdlCd m making lave f and '1 tommon preservng ’ ' ' t , t‘ )‘1‘ ta )ttSSCt .tr 1 . , . . ,; - h , , ,t. , I. . . I A . _- , . . . .I, ,(I .0 I 3 ~ I . there are on»? or- two authenticated (“I -_d . l_ I, I ,_.I_I,,5jl' I I I ,I , Hit!) pathos. cIISlntILIlltLI unlut it) day ,Nzglrtmgale. , SEWING...__There Is something ex. lllmsc. one ,0 “0 fllgFSl C0”_“ b ,I I ' I H ‘nt for muomm mm #tii'ft'i of ghosts ‘onc of which. l" ‘Hf‘yf‘ml Hi.‘,(“,)‘i'“:‘li’, ‘llli “3} ( Hg'd‘lliff‘ lsiiat I landed in this ‘ftlt-lfv' Country, Â¥W_‘_,__,___W__ Namely p] )usvlnt, and Oven (Ouch, PI'OPt‘tUtOrS m “‘6 kmg‘lom' “l3 OH,“ (“M‘CAC .‘ ,‘ (fixnly ' «A i i - ' l0: lll'H'; Villlt 1C .0 L HS hinl'v l'Citf l V . ,- I , l» , ‘ l .I. ‘; ,iit i.” I I i . ’ ’ ’ , , " ‘ ‘. I' _ cuttlnas. S )0” re 13 )us )3 . H 1 - will tell here. as l heard it from tho 7 . - ~ not a night has passed that l have t mg at leash 0, very sweC,I 50m establishment, liom Small begin .. I if, f I The obscrvatidns of ' out the Chicago Herald for. $5,009,2U d up claims; Indications of the Barometer.â€" '. . ‘ r- o understand that her life dc-'l (3 "9; .,~ - -, y ‘ . .. _ I H ~ , . I. . and storm may be relied u on, at' ‘ uncomfortable. f‘he gallant Pa-t, fullydIItd IIII IIdCIIII TIIC IIIIIIIII notI oiIitIIlIstItInItlIIttI) tIprlItIII th iItI, church; I I Rumbles, sea,n§ucshII mm Lecpmglsmwd thahdurmg 11,13 SCHSOHI Mn ieIISI IO II C(IIIIIiin CXIenII p . ,I ,howeVer. so longIIas the effects of pen c OIllI IIbI I I LII}. I IIud lHI moon icttiIetI )c. not .tI t. on _I in (I is- I “,9 next quebmu was a lime (“LU-ed, [ugh mm 10“, m a spew,“- nf CO,n_I,\ICCm_miCk has sold 4I000 reapeIISI .. t . I I I I , t the rum lasted, \VliHllCd, ‘ The night father Was “"0 .‘ ‘Slf‘lf‘ "l ' ‘3 gush mid ‘llee “’“5‘ 5110000 for “)0 but itcamc. munion'with their kindred beings.»â€" 1. Generally. the “59 0f the me“ «qI beforcLeary was s'tretched' sot o 00cc, and'smmpedihis feet to restore the chilled circulationfi Somehow or another though, he began to grew very lonely, and almost wished that the ,ghost would .I come, if only .to. bear,him company. _ His »Wlsl.tt‘.S were- soon fulfilled, for, hearing. a- slightsound, and raising his rifle to his‘sl-iouldcnlie saw' a dusky form gibbcring at him in the distance Pat which he played the French or Eng- began rooping and mowing in reply, and the Woman apparently encourâ€" hatred of-the [tossizins \Vas enun- terbalanced by his love for his daughâ€" ter, the only treasure he possessed in the world,for his wife had suc- cumbed under the pri anions and ex- posure of aâ€"Wintcr jouruey across the steppe. ‘_ Need ‘1 say that the‘ father triumphed over theinani Conâ€" stantine was a nightly visitor to our lines, and by the cleverness with lish linesmun, long-escaped detec- tion. rest (if the night. lit the meanwhiie Sergeant Leary‘ had convinced himself that. this Mr. Jones was hot-that Mr. Jones;.tlie stranger, instcad'of wielding a pitâ€" agliaii, employed a far more danger-I ous weapona pair of the most lovely eyes he overseen. Then, in a most seductive voice (Leary swore after- wards that he understood (every word, but don’t believe him), she askcd .aftcr hen father's welfare. She spoke in _Frcnch, and, at any ‘ Don’t you think you have great caiise to be thankful that he was a pious man an saved his ctlist ?’ ' ,‘1 do,’ said the Widow abruptly, and turncdlier head to look out efthe window. , , . . . , . the indefatigable pinup changed his po- sition, held the widow or his glitteting eye once more, and propoundcd one more quch in a little lower tone, with his head slightly inclined forward, over the back ofthe seat. t \Vas you calkerlating to get married again?, ‘ ‘dii‘, said the widow, indignantly, ‘ you are intpertinent.’ And she left her seat «a land gentle Methinks it is a token ef'hcalt'ny characteristics, when Women of high thoughts'and ac- complishments lova to sew; espe- cially as they are never more at home with their own hearts than while so occupied. And when the. Work'falls in a woman’s lap, of its own accord, and the needle involun- tarily ceases to ply. it is a. Sign of trouble quite as trustworthy as the 'tlll'O'l) of the heart itself.â€"â€"â€"fll‘an.sf0râ€" linution; or, the Romance of Monte This statement is no doubt true, and affords an insight into the immense profits which some inventors make out of their patented inacIl'iines.â€"- Ll‘iie McCormick reaper sells for $140 and $155â€"thcre are two sizes ; it is safe, thcrchrc, to calcua late that-the gross receipts of his sales this year will reach the encr- mous sum of $600,000, out of which he will realize a moderate fortune, say $100,000, the result of a single year’s business! Unlike most in- ttentors, McCormick is an energetic cury indicates the approach of fair weather; the falling of it shows the approach of foul weather. the mercury indicates coming than; der; in winter the rise of the titer- cury indicates frost; iii frest, its fall indicates thaw, and its rise indicates snow. I‘ 3. WhatcVer change of weatliet‘ suddenly follows a change in the barometer, it may be expected to last but a short time. Thus.- if fair. aged byIIthisI, drew nearer. Pat‘laid ’ -At length, a dreadful ordeal Was ate, the office;- of the watch com. and took another on the opposite side" of Bani. By Nathaniel Hawthorne. man of business ; and he knCWSI lwmmer follow immediately the rise. hlSI'ff‘ll‘IQlOICli on‘ the ground, as if to offered him; he was told that if he Drehended [Hm nudge,” ,, pa“), Wm, the car, . . m.“ , just as We“ as am, other shrewd of ,hemercury there will be Very encourage llle Otllel, bl“ Pldfle’l “'5 Conld (ml) lnduccdn LngllSll Sold”)! licr- at 01300 to headfqmlrters. Lord ‘ Pulls ‘0 b“ a “me 11”“: ’, Sfild the REFRESHING Luistriin.â€"â€"-Evei'y person, on which Side his bread is llittle of it; and if foul weather fol;- hand Carefully on his revolver.â€"-â€" to desert, from whom some valuable ltaglan no sooner heard ofthc hero- 'tnellahle bore. turning to our narrator be- hind hiin. "She needn’t be iiiatl : I don’t buttered. man who has a right Sense of busi- He is undoubtedly one of low suddenly thefall of the mercury, 2. In sultry weather. the fall of" ‘ I I .I . I. ; -I I », I . . I I» II -N , ‘ I .I.I é.~I,I .I .. I I . . . . . . 'Iheie IwasInoItliing like being rpie- infoimation migh be obtained, hiinern she had copra} ed in cider to WIIII,I IOIhIIIIt her I‘IIIIIIII“ WIIIII IIId,,,eSSI Whether ms busmcss be of the wcamnest men 1,, me North- i, win lust bu, a ShorL “me, I; pared. but If.” WOW 8 “'Omflnflthe sentence would be t‘chrsed and llC'Jtnn her father. than he gave direcâ€" ‘ ' ' ‘ ’ a" ‘ ‘t the world or of himself, has a re- west; and he not only has an inter- 7:! thought fairly turned ,the honest sergeant’s. mind. ere-approached so near that l’gttyvas enabled to challenge. ‘A-Who goes there?’ ,. ‘A friend l’ the stranger replied. in a musical. though foreign voice.’ ‘Advaiice, friend, and give the countersign,’ the sergeant mechanic fact, itwa aI'm‘ono'inania with Conn I , ' " sta'iitiiic._ that he must catch a Briton Just as the figure approached" Pat :alive,_but. unfortunately, in Sergeant the moon broke out from behind a Leary, he caught a Tartcr. ‘ cal’ly s’aid.‘ cloud,I'Iaiid enabled him to’see the Secli‘Iw‘as the story he told, and him. It may be that his repeated,m0re Solid “lime, and deteffnlned ln~lloPes= tire‘ment ‘ for good ’â€"-*-'of reading and cording to a recent announcement, _.._ _ “(3121311175 featuresâ€"The most-.a,S:'lfyvhich ai'ou‘sed conSldC‘t‘able infb‘re’st" visits to her father had'teuctied her"Rd l’“l'e”°‘3> and "eg‘llal‘m‘v ‘0 "‘b'de reflective old age. Such rotire- he Wait town the race for the Conxscnzws have iuuk mac’peapi'..el tounding thing was the immense Ere long the fig» , would be free to go where hepleascd Withthis daughter. Maddencd by the thonght of freedom. Constané tine attired himself in feminine garb, hoping thus to attract some sentinel froml’iis post; He wouldthen wound him, thoiugh not dangerously, and drag him intothe’Russian lines. . In tions that She should be treated with .all possible. kindness, and have-free access to the pIi'iStiiieif.+llcr pre< sencc was better than all the doctors‘; stuff. to Constantine; lie rapidlv're- covered, but Eudoxia'sduties were not over themeâ€"By Some stupid mis- take, Leary managed toâ€"run his re- vvliich sadly injured ois personal apâ€" pearance, and for some reason or ’ another E‘udoxia insisted on nursing l among his hearers.~ I t reachdd’thei heart, but what do I know? All I now’ncd head against :1 Minnie ball, they make you pay for that umbrella you’ve got in your hand. It’s a real pooty one.’ OLn h’lAiDsuâ€"Being an ” old maid,’ implies decision Ofeliaract‘er; neither sham, nor show, nor courtly manners, nor splen- did Ipxérson, have wonitIl‘icm‘ over; tic-r fair promises, nor shallow tears; they looked beyond ' the manner and the dress, and 'rfii’iditig no cheering indication of depth of ‘Imind and sterling principles, they gave‘up ithe specious present for the chance ofa their time. spec’t for all right things apart from it, because business with him is not a mindless and merely instinctive indestry. like that of a beetle rolling its ball of clay, but. an'excrcise of faculties congenial with! the other powersof- the human being, and all Working to some social end.â€" Hence he approves of judicious and refreshing leisureâ€"of domestic and seciaIl evenings-pf‘surburban re- treat'srâ€"of gai‘densâ€"saof ulti-n'i'ate rc- mente have been longed for, and int est in reapcrs,.but he is a liberal supporter 'ofsrcligion, having not long since given 8100.000 to endow the Presbyterian Theological Semi- nary, at Chicago, under the charge of the learned and estate Dr. Rice. Apparently net Satisfied With his profits as. a manufacturer. and his Zeal in the cause of religion, he is endeavoring to mix up with these secular‘and sacred afiairs the influ- ences of modern politics; for, ace I mayoralty at Chicago with the ‘ac- 4. If fair Weather continue for'I several days during which the titer _ance of foul weather will probably" ably succeed. . I 5. 'A fluctuating and unsettling cafes changeable weather. 2 than cork jacketswill ever keep up. cury continually l‘i‘llst 5,1 long (ibml'nuiiui state of themcrcurial column indii ‘ ensue: and again, if foul weather, continue for several days, while the_I_ mercury continually rises, a longngs .. succession of fair weather will «7. “v- pri)le r

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