OCR Text |
Show Au ti.lu:.. .' -ays "vo-'.i'.au i i-ar-fi are r.r ale." it i.a"cd ''?pjai It the I-:? M13 :l:?r'? a cbuah i L-.-; : 01-1 voir a"'tor year, .w:c to i.-ji? ;er-'.La! c:-p -iw. A h'ff) ix. u ta :fLnr., lately 'ic.eaje 1. a ia:v vi -j ta a O.jU'jster tL-ji,''.:i.:cr wu-.i save hiux a .hrsu.ii( tan ta-i bee a a ui'e-kg urucL: to L:ai. Ay 1- - t:.:-- ca": J u; -.3 in VcTew. .l t--at tL w-re c .-t . a't'c : .r a.Tf-t iri -v; t !' r "trvj.i-.2, fc.uty an j tr-.a:h or rv.r-c. Tlicro a iitt!e jf'r! a, t'-id wbue . x:s ar-.- cutrcly kj.cJ Uf. ttJe eltertjai beinz apparel.::)' d jub.ei I'jrward. A -'.-.cal operation was rcceutly auciiiptc-i, but pTuvcd a tai.ure. Ti..-r ij m a! a'cuier.t cf IH-h i:u-tr::kTa:l"n i:u-tr::kTa:l"n to cuuuiry. and the (V,:f Uri' I w if.lcr- at aui Lmeatj ti.e drai:;aLe which, it ;ay, U as great as in the Ui.-.i d:-:'j.-h:d tix-.-s. The Maine i'arnicr predicts a wet utuuier, becaa- the winter hai been LUaractcriicd by uuujual drou-'ht, and "ut.- tjt-tiie of aiuio.-phenc endition in ilfit - pa.-s-iu.; year usuaiy succeed s aLOther. The editor of a western paper in his last i.-ne says; "We cannut exist any ilnncer on tirnwnod, maple suar aud ;heei'-k:.ns. We bid our patrons pood by, an f,f?'-r for sale two hundred bu-hel- of feed potatoes, slightly frostbitten." frost-bitten." General Si Ales reeenlly presented the beautiful queen of Spain, who by the way Ls as iutciliiteoc as handsome, with eleitant copies cfthe "Siege of Grauaiia" and "Tales of Alhambra" in order to acquaint her with the literature of Irvine. The Louisville Journal, by the litrht of present practices, changes Mr. Lincoln's remark, that "'all there is of honest statesmanship consists in com bining individual meannesses for the public pood," to combining them for the jrood of the rascals who make the combination. By the care-amouia process, a French invention, a boquet of fresh flowers was recently enclosed at Philadelohia in a manufactured rake of ice, and in addition to every leaf and tl wer being distinct and visible, the brilliancy was hightencd by refraction through the ico. A little dissolved alum is very effective effec-tive in clearing muddy water. If thrown into a tub of soap-suds, the soap, curdled and accompanied by the muddy particles, sinks to the bottom, leaving the water clear and pure. In times of scarcity of water this may be used a second time for washing clothes. |