AN D FRUIT LESALE le. 19.1114 A (4 INDIA L1" muuxs, “DLER 61c a Specialty Eb can: "- “ Li“ and. ‘icences ‘dis‘ .EDTEA czn‘ WHIPS Di will y on 'uu ll‘ :‘mdo . "i", “ File 113' Linn onwex n ' I , I _, I .. P LllOllSfl!“ )‘CIL 5, The 1:3 .le xiid me breeze. But now no .narhal notes: resound \Vhecc l'ue banne peaceful sweams ; Nu seat ‘V mesaus'es in}; watchful round, \‘0 de: tlly bayone. gleamsâ€" luv the cabh. 111.» uses be'rde tht shore Hath no need of watch an mud, Ann the acidic: who 5“;qu by the UPC" Amt me solcues WHO 5.: (500). Is the holdie“ of the Load. Bu lvmk ! thouw the twilight, strong and cleal A v0 cu melodious In". ;‘ Add clue ludim‘ ins ens \. .u avished ear As tin. mismonu \ hv-x. He hr 3 â€".-..u .he .cnoe~ backwmw rive Each Lender. oviw .une. “ Jesus had) uie- .iuv. i might live, Nign "we -0 L ml .lo-m." '.|‘!1e sweet S_'-I‘:nn fel' r~11 be away: breast \Vi'h .- sofié‘mag ton-c‘u ,ublime, M: fax'lew 1ch bub'unih‘n holy rest \\ hen -.m.- bells o" cVenI-Ig chime. the Wiened .lmi' 1110 voice “K’s still, 'J‘hen "'uxh f-o-n hit "over. strode, And. g 9'3.)an “‘15.;an wit.) right 500'! wil' Timâ€" spok» Lu Lhr man or God :â€" “ Many .uoow .230, when my 0 glowed, \V'ne e the Denver and Marten lie. A pale-Taco sL-udge ' Lhe story Lulll Of your Jesm who came 0 u‘e. ant 1 may not stay to 'rezu' 7!. now, For lne :mi’ to my 'oflje 1': 104:3 ; l On‘y ask Lhat you 1,010.1 me how .0 To sing; the whi.e Ina-1's sow. ‘ '1 he uliS‘liO-lm y 921' '5; Again am- :v- aiu. nu o e‘: and o (:1, Old "Uoronlat'ons" 1-! -.~ ; And again Cue “00111.. m1 dept‘m v‘eply, As the echoes no backwa a mu own ; “ Jes a hath dcd um; I might live, Might, Jiw toGod :l'oue.†Agriu, Mme the greet scents :ise around, Lon; yearv have passed, and the missioa Hg’k I rising and falling in cadence wnld, le nerver and kudos ;rown ; Mlesus hath vied that I might live, flight live *0 God alone.†Round the ï¬ve ’3 bend a. canoe annears, Manned by lugty amv; Md Strong; Tn Un- stern an aged Indian alts, Am? keeps time .u tne low, sweat song. V ’loflp: Fay leasm†to the \Ves’o has gone ; Amt agai- beside In"; cabin duOl‘ Tue p-uaher stands alone. Again (in: evening sinvdow~ fall, And. the sun sinim low 3.1 the “festâ€"- \Vimt faint 39pm? come-s tlu-ouglr «he pine Now qu‘ck beside the .-iver's brim The missionary stands, The light canoe has touched the shore, And t e tune-worn sachem lands. ï¬tmng arms support his tottering fame, r'mtrees tall, Audovm the 'iver's breast ? when my camp ire 1e1111:1.:1'iT1r -< 111L11'can1-115 111111. .101 bpildin , Jul'iSti:\al->! wili; -1':11l11:1l1y (1:14 ‘111 LL11 11L “dumber-grow so 'IJLion o 2.111: .1eoplr by 1111- â€11.1†11:11i1111. 1|1e ::1Ith. 15011111: '111. Ll1c111:;c|1'1-.s \11ll veu‘. ure £0 1:11 111111-11 11‘011l1l'1c U11; 111-111 :1ltex'11m'111' ; :1111 the l:1;11-I 1-1-11:11111,1':1 pea 5 1111' '-'1101e '1l1cly. 1’111'1 1'1 is -11-1I-:1hl era is a V8 Hunt Lilo)" will 1011: hover l) '111 01-11 '11'1 11.1) erroneous notiOI 9:1th .100 1'11“ 1)" i111111'i1la111ht3 ‘111 111-1 11:1!) ‘ atecent inumti l I â€"â€" absoroul, and wig!) :1111l1’1‘1i â€11111111! ;.. recent hostilities lwsio" 111. 3111' 11-.1t .miionui 1--.I1'11- 111i» ; 1 the ï¬rst time 01 be eas'lfle. \1111 111 c1111.1'11-i1~-; “L1- 1.1.. Thntoflatewar 1.13.111. wucre .'u1-_. are {cry 1111116111113, 1y improved 13 t “he 131111113163. 1.'|11:1'1.- they â€1'0 :11 .111 the less 18 it trw mac-I 858 1-1101 ‘ciu' 11-111'1- “‘11,- 1-1-1311 5 11 gained by a jud 1113 311211011: 11m 1111 .11! 1111 1.1: .111I1h 1 11- marme weapons 1:11111'c1nie111'o-" he .11 I121.1.1111~s 111' 1131-1 recognized and 9.1mm; '1'l1m1' ilL‘\ li1'1'. '. s '1111: ‘11'11 '11 have been alrea leill 1). “1].". 0.) lllCH mile, (1111] 1., \r. 31 1 Wlth great. eï¬CC '.'c.‘}' 'zzspc')’ ‘Jle cm}; u' (‘Ln-Tstian misdccd in “in: past. â€"-Tm; .' “I 7/ u": virw. The ancients had queer ideas about monruiqg for _the dead. 7 The Egyptian women ran through the streets crying. with their bosoms exposed and their hair disordered. The Lycians regarded mourning as un- mnnly. and they compelled men who went into mourning {so put. on qunalg garm_ex}ts. In Greece, “whetâ€"1 11. popular Geï¬cml died, the whole army cut off their hair and the manes of their horses. , At the present day, the Arabian women stain their hands and feet with indigo, which they suffer to remain eight days. They also carefully abstain from milk duriyng this time on the ground that its white groolor does not accord 11 ith the gloom of their minds. In China. the mourning color is white. Mourning for a. parent or husband is re- quired there by a law, under a penalty of sixty blows and a year's banishment. When the Emperor dies, all his subjects let their hair grow _for a hundred days. In the Fejee Islands, on the tenth day of mourning the women scourge all the men except the highest chiefs. Another fash- ionable custom there requires the friends and relatives of the deceased to assemble on the fourth day after the funeral and picture to themselves the amount of cor- ruption the corpse has sustained by that time. In the Sandwich Islands persons desirous of going into mourning paint the lower part of their faces black, and knock out their front teeth. No doubt this causes a very sincere kind of mourning for the present time. Repeating watches have gone out of fash- ion of late years, partly, perhaps, because they gore cumbreue; gets-hey need not be so. ' One presented to George III. was smaller than a. silver dime, and weighed only 5 pwt. and 2} gm. A repeater is very convenient. Striking a. light to see the time often arouses a person so much that he can- not get to sleep again, while he can fall asleep again in ï¬ve seconds after just press- 3’38.“ spï¬m and hearing so msny throbs in MOUBNING CUSTOMS. There is a very generally received, 1 erroneous notion that the torpedo in qr a recent invention. and that during recent hostilities in the East it has been the ï¬rst time employed in actual wart: That of late years torpedoes have been gr ly improved )3 undoubtly a fact, but 11 the less is it true that the advantages to gained by a judicious employment of l marine weapons of wur have long been I recognized, and, further, that these have been already largely used, and, with great effect, both for the defenc: harbors, rivers, roudsteads, c., and for more actively offensive operationS. long ago as the 15111 of August, 1777, a_l was blown to pieces and nearly all its < killed by the accidental explosion of a pedo which had been used in an atte made by the Americans . "ainst the Eu man-of-war ('crcbus. In 1305. a brig had been anchored off Deal for the pu of experimenti n submarine exp ' destroyed, in the presence of Mr. Pit large concourse of spectators, by a containing one hundred and seventy of powder. Previously, in 1707, an had been designed by which, to us ‘ ventor‘s own words, he proposed “ to ‘ to carcases of gunpowder 0. pr motion under water to a given p there explode them," and which, contained the germ of the present tive or ï¬sh torpedo. In 2807 a 561 was blown to pieces in New Y and, ï¬nally, to come to me empmyx torpedoes in actual warfare, we ï¬nd fewer than seven iron-clad vessels and wooden ships of war were totally des during the American civil war by aubm: torpedoes. A CLOCK mu Srnmns Tummy: Duke of Bridgewaterwea veryfond oh ing his men at work, especially who: enterprise was on foot. When the boring for coal at Worsley, the D every morning, and looked on for time. The mendidnox like to leave while he remained there; and the dissatisï¬ed at hm'ingto work so 10 the hour at. which the bell 23v- had difï¬culty in gettinv " 0 \ of hands to continue t\e«\}’ _. a“ OI nuuua lu wuuuuu n. he found out the cause the Duke,who from that " , immediately walkingoï¬ â€œn returning _when the menh 3 c‘ and remaining with them\): o'clock. He observed.howev t the men dropped work prom rang when he was not by, t y pearly so punctual in resuming w struggling in many minutes after asked to know the reason ; an excuse WM that, though they hear the clock when it struck could not so readily hear it w only one. On hearing this, the mechanisniof the clock make it strike thirteen at on It oOntinuea to do to this Torpedoes.