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Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 21 Jun 1866, p. 1

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' em ---------- VOL. 1X, No. 24. 3 PRINCE ALBERT, COUNTY OF ONTAR C. Ww, THURSDAY, JUNE 2i, 1866. [WHOLE No. 499 Eh Futaris Phseber, A WEEKLY POLITIOAL, ASEISILRNR AL, ign i! t 2 vies Tee ray ig AT THE ¢ICTORIA BLOCK, PRINCE ALBERT, 3 v COUNTY OF ONTARIO, EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, ' . BY Parsons & 1 Robinson. LE AL i discontinued untilall arrears are ers containing money, when addressed to his Office, pre-paid and regisiered, will be at our risk. RATES OF ADVERTISING. For each line, first insertion - - - S1bsequent insertions, per line - - - Cards, under 6 lines, per annum 5.00 Advertisements measured in Nonpareil and charged tothe space they 'occupy. dvertisemeits received for publication, without spe / ei je instructions, will be inserted until forbid, and charged accordingly. . No advertisenient will be luken wut until paid for. A liberal who adverti unt allowed to Metclany and others by the year or half-ye: Any Spe Notice, the object oh ic! the pecunia efit of any individual © be considered an advertisement, and charg 10 promote mpahy = These terms will, in all cases, be strictly ad- 10. inereasivg importance of the North rendersthe publication ofthe OpsERVER er Wispbuting right, and condemning will constantly take the lead in forwarding neral interests of the county; sud in the amount of local and general news given, will be unsurpassed by wily local puper published in Canada. JOB DEPARTMENT. Pamphlets, Hand Bills, Posters, Programmes, Bill eads, Blank Forms, Receipt Books, Check Books, Circulai Business Cards, Bull Cards, &e , &e., of every style and color, executed promptly, and at lower Sateothon at any other establishment i this coumy. Parties from a distance getting haud bills, aig sprinted, 'ean huve them done to take home with them. Hoan Ns. | . ROBINSON. 'Business Biveetorp. GEO. 'W. JONES, M. D, HYSICIAN, Surgeon, and Obstetrician, * Simeoe-st., Prince Albert. +.B, H. BRATHWAITE, M. D,, C. M., << RADUATE of the University of McGill x College, Montreal Plysician, Surgeon and Aecoucheur, Prince Albe Office and Resi- 'sencé--the house lately i) by Dr. Agnew. DR. WARE, ORONER [or the County of Ontario, *hysician, Surgeon and Accoucheur, v 1) take this of opportunity of informing his fends that during his absence from among them, his particular study diseases of the Ea and Lungs,on which he can be consulted, other branches of his profession, on vy able terms, at his residence in Prince F. OAKLEY, M.D, Mies Office and Residence,--the late residence of Dr. Bain. THOS. H. WALSHE, ICENSED Auctioneer for the Town- ships of Brock, Thorah, Mara & Rama in North Ontario; Mariposa, ete., in the Connty of Victoria. Residence-- Cannington, Brock. Or- ders left at this office, or at bis residence will be tually tended aedlo Debte, collected in C'an- E. CA M NUFACTURER of Tops and Fanning ills, Simcoe Street, Prince Albert. Shop --opposite the residence of S. I. Barber. All work warranted. 20 THOMAS COURTICE, ADDLE, Harness and Trunk Manufac turer, Simcoe street, Prince Albert. Every- thing in the line kept constantly on hand, Shop opposite the Ontario Carriage Factory. R, WALSH, ORSE Farrier, is always in readiness to attend to all who may favor him with a call. He is well acquainted with the mode of pricking and trimming ; and can treat snccess- iv disease that horses are subject to.-- Charges incderate, y Jiesidence, Py nee Albert, ROYAL INDIAN BANK, = Port Perry Agency, JOSEPH BIGELOW, AGENT Totels, &t. REVERE HOUSE," MANCHESTER ! PROPRIETOR. HY. ING purchased the above hotel, and has furnished the Bar with the choicest liquors and cigars, Stages to and from Whithy call daily. ostlers always in attendance, COTTAGE HOTEL, GREENBANK. YHE esunbaciiber wishes te inform the traveling public that he has taken the above hotel, which he has fitted and furnished throughout, and where the best accommodation, with careful attention, can always be found.-- Good stabling, enclosed yards, and attentive | Ostlers, R. A. MURTA, Proprietor. oly B PLANK, Every attention paid to guests.-- Careful Greenbank, Feb) v1 18, 1866. THE ROBS N HOUSE ! LATE SCRIPTURE'S MOTEL, DUNDAS STREET WHITBY, C, W,, GEORGE ROBSON, - - - PROPRIETOR. HE Subscriber begs to announce that he has leased the building formerly known as Serip- ture's Hotel, for a term of years, and that he has d and re-furnished the building through- | FRANCIS RAE, M. B, Ly Surgeon, Accoucheur, {ghicees: sor to Dr. Tempest.) Office and Residence . lately occupied by Dr. Tempest, yaluhguse Oshawa, © "COCHRANE & COCHRANE, ARRISTER», Attorneys, &ec. Prince Albert office--opposite the Town Ilall; Port Perry office--over Mr. Bigelow's Store. JOHN BILLINGS, Bs Attorney at Law, Solicitor cery, Notary Public, Conv: Prince Albert. Office over 1. O. Formn's re. Forman's r out, The premises are pleasantly situated, op- posite the Post Office, in the centre of the town, The Railway Omnibus calls at the Hotel, and the Stages for U xbridge and Beaverton leave the | door ev ery morning. 13" Careful Ostlers always iri attendance. GEO. ROBSON. Saintfield Hotel. HIS house being new, aw, commodions, and well furnished throughout, the pulilic favoring him with their custom may depend on finding every convenience necessary to their comfort at- tended to. Good Stabling, and attentive Ostlers always in attendance, D. CAMPBEL 1., Proprietor. i P, A, HURD, "TTORNEY at Law, Solicitor in Chan- ys Soaveyaner, Notary Public, &c., Linisay, ( FAREWELL & McGEE, 'Bj ARRISTERS, Attorneys, Solicitors and Notaries buic. Offices, in the Post Office Simeoe S Tal B. PAREWELL, L.L.B. Oshawa. R. M'GEE, B. A. MILLER '& PATERSON, AE at Law, Solicitors, in Sinneny, Sonveyasests, Notaries ie Ce -- corner on King an REVERE HOUS BEAVERTON, C. W. IE Subscriber begs to announce that he has leased the above hotel, which has been firr- nished and fitted up throughout in the best of style. None but the choicest liquors and cigars will be kept in the bar, and Lis table will be fur- nished with all the delicacies of the season. Care- ful and obliging ostlers always in attedance, WM. PARKIN, Proprietor. Beaverton, July 27, 1864. 9 d_prompt Jemittances FUE, She Noth, One). 81 my -er replied courteously that two places out Foetry. 'TIS TIS WHET TO BE REMEMBERED, "Tis sweet to be remembered in the turmoils of this life, Rothway, hile mingling in, While wand'ring o'er earth's borders or sailing o'er the se 'Tis or cet to = remembered wherever we may Oh! tis sweet to be remembered wherever we may be. 'When those we love are absent from our hearth- stone und our side, "Tis joy to know that pleasure that peace with them abide, And that although we'e absent we're thought of day by day, "Tis sweet to be remembered by those so far away. i When all our toils are ended the conflict all is Aad peste in sweetest accents proclaim the When bsly dare all gue sorrows and calm is all "Tis Mop at] 't 10 te Yemenbered in the closing hours of life, Litrwatur, WAS IT A GHOST? | If 80, it was a rage place to see one in the midst of noire and revelry, of gleam ing lights and crashing music ; with happy faces around me, and joyous laughter sound- ing from from floor to ceiling of a crowded circus, where horses pranced, and meny clowns joked, and prey girls leaped over spangled banners, and sprang through gar- landed hoops ; yet it was therel saw it. 1 speak advisedly when 1 say it, but I will tell my story, a tine one in every particu lar, and my readers may decide for them- selves the knotty question :-- ¢ Was it a ghost 2? Iu the latter pait of the year 18--, 1, a bride for rome months, was traveling with husband lite step-daughter, through Scotland ; and Edinburgh, with its was ol courde one of our and a many attractions, stopping places. 1 had never been in the modern Athens before, and seldom had I spent two such days as those spent wn see- ing all that was remarkable for beauty, or interesting {rom associations, that could be compassed mn so short a time. The second evening--the last, for we were 10 Jeave per steamer for London the nest morning--we visited the cucus of ie Messrs=------, \hen making a very su :cess- fal stay in the city. handsomely fined up, exquisitely clean and well ventillated, and with a company per- forming therein above the ordinary talent, it had become quite a fashionable place of resort, and was nightly filled, not with the middle and lower clusses, but with the elite of the Upper Ten Thowsand as well, and handsome equippage waited at the door, and dainty ladies might be sean trip- ping along the sawdust-covered passages that led to the arena. what iY the style of a theatre, Well conducted and It was fitted up some- with boxes extending round three eides of the interior, and to one of these we were led by the ob- liging attendant. «Can we go in there?' asked little Ma- rion, pointing to three vacant places in the centre, somewhat beter for seeing than the one we occupied. Her father checked her, and bade Ler sit down ; but the box-keep- of the three were taken, and the perform= ance commencing, we thought no more of the mater, We eaw the occupants of the two seats come in, a lady and a gentleman, eldery COMMERCIAL HOTEL, oh BROCK Srgant WHITBY, dersigued begs ce that he ha & MACDONELL, . has taken the Hon iy known premises QRis RS" and Attorneys at Law, ald Dive, Bhar Bewly furnished and v Sota ounty Council Ontario. Offices: im, and whe) accom! on go- 90 Co On in, Yih cart enon Sap Always Jn foutd, i NELL stabling, enclose s, and atten- ae | H. J. MACDONELL: | ive Ostlers. ni extremely moderate. ; ". RB. J: WILSON, 23-1y JONN MILLER. ARRISTER, Attorney at Law, Solicitor Hi Oe in the Victoria 'pul Brooker, Whi bo HI Sa, LL By OLICITOR in Chancery os Attorney, SRR a t office. } # .C.N. VARS, RACTICAL Dentist, Oshawa, C. Ww. directly Sphosite- gi the Dot mene iret, hind each, Convey- __ Court of ALBERT SPRING, - n for "ihe Pawn- Seo C.W. and pl looking, and my husband laughingly remarked to me however, as if they feared lo encroach on the remaining vacant spaces, or kindly wished to make the fact as public as possible that there was sul a seal 10 spare. "No one came lo it, however; half the per- formance passed over, and still that one cor- ner of the front row of the centre box re- THE ALBION HOTEL, EAST MARKET SQUARE, TORONTO, Cc. WwW. HE Subscriber having) leased 7%e Albion Ilo- tel, in addition to the International, he has converted the two premises into one mammoth Hormiatie largest and most commodious in the Sy, aihere he he yu be glad to receive his friends an Dbl: c. No'labor or expense will be spared likely to conduce to the comfort and con- venience of the guests, Tin AS El BAe, a e stab! very extensive, an ae the charge of carefal Li tions, THOMAS PALMER, Proprietor. Toronto, Feb. 17, 1864. 5 6 Good News for All! IFE-LIKE PIOTURES. taken in all kinds of PHOTOGRAPH CAR, i Lo a execute, in ait : oe ed ite, ETI on, ath at his. Can 'west pied. Then came the usual pause and raking of the sawdust in the eir- cle, which the audience watched with a solemn interest, as though it were a mighty important part of the evening's entertain- ment. The second half of the amusements commenced with the great attraction of the establishment, the skillful riding of a little girl, daughter of one of the proprietors. Very. pretty and graceful she appeared, as the 1ing master led her in, a petite fairy like creature with golden hair hanging in curls tothe waist, and her white drese float- ing around her like a eloud. 1na moment she was i and ing round the circle, her little arms waving and the gar= light gleaming on her grace(ul head, mak- ing 1t look as if surrounded by a golden halo. Not a leap did she miss, not a false step did she make in her rapid course, and the applause was loud and long as she sprang down at the end of the act. . ¢ Capital, capital,' exclaimed my hus- band, applauding with the rest, while little, Marion clapped her hands in childish glee. [ was silent and they remarked it. « Mamma," exclaimed the child, ¢ what 18 the matter 2 while her futher looked at me "lo go and speak to him. ¢ Why, Kate,' said he, you are quite pale." 'lam eold,' I repl shivering ever since th Saddering would have better word to have expressed my fi a gloomy; yy not col "N what I was seeing, but somel Bale + Cold, A he repeated,. "3n this lot place ; you must be ill. Shall we go home 7? + No, I replied, seeing the child's cloud- ed face at the prospect. ¢ It will soon go off 5 T would rather stay." And indeed I felt strangely impelled to remain, I -eould not tell why, though 1 still shook with the same strange mixture of cold und fear ; I tried to think of what 1 was seeing, and that only, but I felt chilled and gloomy. "Presently my husband spoke to me again. Hi ¢ Kate." ¢ Well? I was watching the autigs of the two clowns in the ring, and4rying to fancy I was enjoying their performance. ¢ Who is that man staiing at you ?* ¢« What man ?' ¢ That "one there, mamma,' said the child ; I have been watching him so. long. 1 followed the direction of her eyes and finger, and looked. The vacant space wus no longer vacant, and with an exclamation of surprise and delight, I then rose from my seal. ¢ Who is it 2 asked my husband. ¢ Harry, I replied--¢ my counsin Harry. I wonder how he came here ? «1 thought he looked as if he knew you; ask him to come here ; there 1s plenty of room." He did not khow Hurry ; they had never met, but-he knew how dear he was to me. We had been brought up together like bro- ther and sister, aud had looked upon each other as such till circumstances separated us and he was sent abroad. When he 1e- turned hie was on the eve of mar ails you 7-- I have been id came in,'-- ge, and he was engaged loa young lady he had met Rome. She was to come to England and be married, and then they were to go back to Italy aud reside, During his stay 1 this county he helped we 10 arrange my affairs previous to my own wedding, | but belore they were settled he was seized | with a senons attack of illness, Recover- ing slowly, he was ordered to the sea side, and before he had left it 1 and my husband were traveling northward for a wedding tour. There had been some money trans= actions between Harry and myself; I was his ilebtor to a small amotint--so small as 10 be hardly worth mentioning, but for what followed. I heard of him once or twice, but always that lie was no better ; but our movements were uncertain, and our corres- pondence flagged. I had no news of him for a month when I reached Edinburgh, but I expected to see him in the course of a week or two. It was a delightful surprise 10 'meet him thus vnexpectedly, and well enough to be in a place of public amuse ments. He was looking intently, and as 1 thought somewhat sadly at me, not re- garding the performance in the least, but gazing straight across to where we sat, with a wistlul look in his merry eyes that troub- led me somehow. He seemed thinner, and his hands, one of which lay idly en the front of the box, were very white and deli- cate looking. Tdo not know what made 'me note his appearance so particularly as I did--his fair hair with a wavy inclination to curl which he had a habit of throwing oft his forehead by a peculiar toss of the head (like a young man shakmg his mane, as his father used to say,) his regular features a Ittle drawn it seemed, as if with some suf- fering or other ; the diamond ning he was roud of wearing, from which the clusters of light sent out shimmering jets as the hand moved now and then ; his drese, quizt and gentlemanly as it always was ; the cu- riously carved handle of an umbrella, one of the souvenirs of his stay at Rome, all seemed to strike me with a strange force as | wiited for the pause iu the performance 1 nodded across the space, and smiled a joyful welcome, but lie took no heed ; he made no sign that he was aware of my presence, save the honest mournfu] gaze he had fixed on me from the tirst. . : « Go now,' wy hugbandsaid, as the act conoluded, ¢ 1 will come with you." We made our way round, and sought ad- mission 10 the box where he sat. ¢ Only room for one, air," said the box= keeper, looking at vs, wondering no doubt al our return. ¢« There isn't room for any one," I said ¢ we want to speak 10 a gentlemen, the one who came in last in the front row." ¢ Only one gentleman in the font row,' he replied. - » "0 yor, there are two ; only one has jost come in.' ¢« Not to this box,' replied the man ; cit must be the next ; no one has either gone out or come in since Mlle. Emma's per- formance.' « Perhaps you will let us see,' said my husband, somewhat hanghtily, annoyed at man's pertinacity. I am certain the gen- tleman we want to see is in this box, on PORT PERRY, x Hn 6 xbridge, cheap and w it tam Pict CO] Jed od to} ay er args i Jotures sop and 'phota a J. A. CLARK. ' Tega Oct. re 1865, 40 with astonishment, ¢ Certamly, sir, he replied, throwiig open the door, and we entered eagerly! The man was right ; the place was va- cant --there sat the elderly couple nthe front seat, the people behind them the same who had been there all thegvening, atl beside the lady the empty place where not five minttes before } had seen ny. cousin sitting. ¢ He must have gone out,' I said, he will come back again; I'm sure he saw me here 2? We returned to onr box, and when we had taken our seats [ saw him siting as be- lore. ¢ He is there now," my husband said, and we weul back again. « The gentlemen is here now,' he said to the attendant, ¢ be kind enough to say we wish to speak to him. «There's no one come in since you went away," he "réjiied womeshit rodely. <1 can't disturb a whole boxful of people" for your fancies." I checked the angry reply I saw rising to his lips, and again asked the man to open the door. He did so, grumbling audibly, and I entered again to see an emply seal. The lady who sai in the seat said: "Have you not made some mistake ?, she said, "and taken me for an acquaint- ance. [saw you nodding to me two or three times to-night." Not to you," I replied but to the gentle- man who sat there." "The gentleman who sat there,' she re- peated with a puzzled expression of face. 'Yes he is arelaton of mine; I am dis- appointed; he is gone." "Gone !" she said. «My dear ycung lady, there has been no one here ; that seat has nol been occupied at all." Ii was my turn to stare now, for I" fully thought she was laboring under rome delu- sion, but the otier occupants corroberated her statement, and I was fain to think we had all been mistaken someliow and go back to my place. «Its very odd," my husband remaiked, «I am sure | saw some one there." "And I am sure 1t was Harry > I replied hardly able to express a scream ol terror tor raising my eyes as 1 epoke, I saw him agam sitting in the same place, and gazing | as intently as before, over to where T sal. "Its he, I sd. What can it-mean?' « He is there sure enough,' said my hus- band. ¢ What ¢ould these people mean? Don't look so frightened, Kate, it is some mistake, we will catch him coming out ; the padorm- ance is nearly over." Daring the last act of horsemanship we left our reals determined to solve th: great myetery, if possible, and stationed onrselves in the lobby opposite the door of the byx in which we lad seen my cousin, assuring ourselves that he dad not left before we moved. He did not come out, however, no one but those we had seen passed out the door. Again we spoke to the lady and gentleman by whose. Tarry had been 50 long ; they weie at a loss™to understand our persistent assertions that the seat had been filled during the evening, and again assured us there had been no one there. "It was entirely vacant," said the lady, 'for a feeling, I eannot really account for his kept him en roching on it, as one is apt to do sometimes on an empty place. I have felt allthe evening as if I could not sit there. It was as;much a mystery as ever, and'we went away completely puzzled. Neither of us had the elightest tinge of superstition about us, and we looked upon the whole af- fairs as a mistake in rome way or another. Arrive! at our lodgings, we found a letter for my husband from Londen, requesting us to attend to some business in Glasgow before returning, so that our journey was put ofl for a few days. When we did start, an un- usually rough passage fell to our lot, and | was so exhausted when we arrived in town, that we put up at the nearest hotel for the night, and saw no one till the next day. My sister had arranged our house for us, and was to be there to reeeive us. I was surpnsed to find her pate and harrassed, and dressed 1n new morning. She apologised for things not being in order by saying she had had a sad time for the last week, and a harrassing journey. 1 was completely puz- zled. ¢ Time ! journey » I said. ¢ What do you 'mean 7' ¢ Surely my letter 'was clear enough,' she said. «I have have been to Te----, you know." «1 received no letter,' I replied. did you write?" | ¢« On Wednesday.' ¢ And we left on Thuraday, too early to have it. But what has happend--what took you to T: -- 7 + Poor Harry," she began, and smoothing her dress nervously, she burst into tears, and could say no more, ¢ Poor Harry,' I repeated in astonishment. «What has happened Harry since last week 1 ¢ Nothing since," 1 did not note the emphasis, and replied, "then nothing was wrong with him, then, he When the very row where we wished to sit.' was in Egil rgh.' "You satv him, Kate? Yourself." ¢ All of us,' I said, ¢ my husband and little Marion as well as me.' ¢ When or "I named the time, and my sisters face turned white. ' Kate," enid «he, «it wos no living man JOU BiWe Harry's dand I Dean! The room seem to whirl round with me ns she spoke. My old play mate, my childhood's companion, my brother of old days --dead. I thought of his sad look at me, of how I had tried to speak to him on the eventful night, and the terror 1 had seen? Why had I seenit? Was Harry thinking of me 7 were the thoughts that flasbed through my mind as | =unk into the chair. It was long before I was sufficiently composed to hear aly particulars, for the shock was a terrible one, I was so sure | sen Harry alive andgvell, He had been recovering fast my sister told me, though his lungs were very weak, and he was ordered 10 take great care. He had somewhat disregarded the injunctions given him and over fatigued himself, but he thought nothing of it, and trusted to rest to restore hi, The mischief was done, however, pnd oné night in a fit of coughing he ruptured a b ood vessel, and trom that time his dechne was rapid, a few days only intervening be- tween that aud hie death. My sister was summoned to see him, and nursed hin to the last. He spoke of me, she said, fre- quently, and begged her to write to me, but she did not knaw our whereabouts till we wiote from Edinburgh to say that we were coming home. But tlien it was two late, my cousin ied on the evening of the duy on which my leur reached her, and she wrote only to apprise me of his death. He died the very hour | saw him in the circus at Edinburgh, and his Jast 1utellegible words were the commiecment of a meegag to me-- ¢ Tell Kate not 10 mind What me he | ad 10 say was never then spoken: death arrested the words upon his lips, and he died with the sentence incom- pleted. As his last words in the world were for me, £0 Was his Jast glance, for [ saw nm gazing atme with a wistful look, at the very honr when he passed from this world 10 the next, Wa. it fancy when thiee people saw hin as planily as we See any one whom we mest in our daily life ? and that not for a moment 0.1¥, but tor an hour or more, two of them being strangers to him, and having no iu- terest in him wh tever. If it were only lancy, it was a most extraordinary coineid ence if not, what was 1 ? I have told a simple uuvarnished story of (acts, as they actually occurred, and 1 wili leave my readers to settls (he question for themselves, and decide as they please-- wan ita freak of imagioaon, or "was it a ghost 77? % esteem rn a FUNNY THING ON THE EDITORS "Gris? the ¢ fat contributer' of the Cin- cinnatti Times extends his condolence to the former editorral ¢ dead heads' of New York. He says: The New York Legislsture, last session, passed a law prohibiting the fice puss sys- tem oo railroade in that' State. By a pro- vision of the law, all passes were taken up on and afier the 1st of May "The law must have been a little heavy on such editors as got caught away from home, We undersiand that a large number of those wretched creatures accumulated a principle points along the line of the New York Central Railroad, principally at Unen and Syracuse. Their passes playing ou, and having no money, of course they had to stop over until they could hear from home. : A large number of the press gang, who live in Eastern New York, and who had bean Wes', stoppsd at the Pennsylva- nia line, unable to get any further. They are anxiously ¢ watching and waiting over the border' for succor. The Atlantic and Great Western Company have very kindly extended to {hem the use of their water- tanks to lodge in. J The Unian Telegraph Company kindly permitted them the free use of the tele- graph to send their despatches home. A friend has forwarded to us copies of the despatches sent from U'ioy, whee a lirge number of the country editors were ¢ struck. 'Through the benevolence some of the citizens, the 'Soldiers' Home," which had been vacant for some months past, was fit- ted up for the accommodation -of the im- pecunionis to them. Some of them, ren- dered temporarily insane by the decapita- tion of ¢ dead heads," had to be. quartered in the Lunatic Asylum. Oue editor tele- graphs to his partner: " Send me some money. Five dollars will do, if sent 'immediately. Don't susa| pend the papee Ju ontequanie, if 'you san ibly avoid it Pe Anothe didarad savage 'and prove, telegraphs his Toreman ko "Sell that office slove and send me he «P. S.--Give our Legislature h--Il for this." Orie poor fellow, who is canght a long way from home, it being a small town on the Hlinois river, nearly despairs of ever getting back again. This 1s his despatch: Urica, N. Li May 13th, 1866, Brug Liox Tavary, DEAR Wirk=Seil uy wener vores son what they will bring, and Temit at ohoe.=" Had my linen duster for supper, and my apareshirt will have to go for lodging. -- May be able to make a light breakfast on a German silver comb and a pair ol share that I chanced to have with me. know when [ shall get home. It will de- pend a good deal on the walking. Don't marry for a few months ; there is a bare possibility of my getting back. Simon. A St. Lawrence county, (N.Y.) editor telegraphs his assistant editor: ¢ Il my last letter 10" printed, cut oul that puffof the New York Central Railroad. Give them something; about + Swindling Monopoly,' ¢ Dangerous Roadway,' ¢ Rotten Bridges," &c. Send me ten dollars. P. 8,--Take any advertisement that of- fers for the present, whatever its character, The editor of the Podunk Stuffed Club,. telegraphs his partner : « Dear Sam,-- Forward me at once all the money 'you have, even if it 1s five Jol= lars. P. S.--Bring down the Stuffed Club with all its weight on the head of that Giant Monopoly, the New York ('entral, FRIGHTFUL TRAGEDY. The New York Tribune of the 1st. inet., gives the following particulars of a case of posoning in which there were 213 victims "It is now nearly two months since the people residing along that portion of the Walkil Valley 'which lies in the western part of Orange country, were attacked by a disease which for some time b. filled the skill of the physicians, they being at a loss 10 divine the cause. The malady exhibit- ed the most positive symptoms of lead poi- soning. In some cases whole families were stricken down, while in others only one or two members of a lamily were anacked. 'To-day hundreds are suffering from its ef~ fects, many of whom will never be avle to do anything, and will in ume , waste away and die, the victims of this teinble disease. Alter cousiderable research it was wound thal the lead was conveyed ito tue stomach of the sufferers by bread und meal, und as i greater part of those staples were manu= tactured at the mill of a Mr. Mash at Puihipsburg, an investigation was ul once made wm that direction, and, greatly to the surprise ol every one the miller limself eluded, it was discovered that the lead mixed with the meal at the mill in consequenve of a run of stone which became was old, having the cavives filled up with lead. lu this way every pound of four was fermented aud sutjected 10 the baking process, this lead became 1mmedi~ ately transformed into carbonate of lead, the de.dliiest of all poisons. Besides the 213 poisoned by this processs in the immediate vicinity of Muidietowa, ubout 100 have been poisoned in Goshen. Several of these cases have terminated fatal'y. . rr i -------- Ratuer oN THE WET.--A bashful and rather green young fellow invited a young lady to attend a ball wih him one might last summer, The invitation was accepted, and the couple appeared at the ball. dancing for some time, * greeny" saw hs partuer sitting in one corner of the room all alone. Now was bis chance. Su he walk- od up to where the lady was siting and sat Jown beside her. All well so lai; but the bashlul fellow was at a loss for something to say. He figeted ubout considerably, and was sweating profusely. Fiual'y, king hold of his wilted collar, he commenced conversation thus :--¢ ['s powerlul warm in this room--my shirt's wet, aint yours 7° His partner blushed, said noting, but thought how 80/1 he was, and being fearful that he wou'd melt down to the small eud of a grease spot, took his arm for the next dance, adopting the motto nil desperandum. nn An Arrear oN Dorg-0LoGY. -¢ Police- man spare that ¢org, touch not u moyle Lair, he worries many a hog, from out his mud- dy lair. Oh, wheu he was a_purp, so ,| (risky and so plump, he lapped his milk trom a cup, when hungry--at a jump. And then his funny tricks, so funny in their place, so full of canine ficks, upon your hands and face. You will suraly let live! Oh, do not kill him--dend. Go, get the muzzle now, and put upon Ine mouth, and stop that bow, wow, wow ! and tenden- oy to draught, Hed a'your children's go companion of th ; you would ht. X { him yet, and thus i] wx liopes, destroy. No 3 policeman, spare that purp, tough not 'a smgle hair ; a your pistol up, and we away from there !' In he depths of the sea til. the h savlos grief ao borne re pest love flows i and Tousls the. purest joy is 'the Er the uo proceeds. We don't 'need Dis in warm weather. Discharge the De Afters Don't - ~ ES

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