| OCR Text |
Show i.vki.i.m; A r .Ty r.-.r C- .: . ..:.-A ..:.-A s-.-.'u. . --i - ! :': : a::' '; A: : : 1 - r : 'i ; i -x i Wi- -'i ' t .-:T I: - Ai Wirr-.u. N. 11., I ! 'i i ji:. i a iiy ' . ! It--.-;.- Live i-.-a iu- t.Li-c '.l-i I i-t - s'y ..r s-.-v-.-y in l'drU his (..:.' a - i ii " I vi l'iri-lia luh-:--ju-. r-' i m L --.L, ar-j lj w-:.: lih- i: T:. Te ci!: r .l'i'.e L l i a fn.rr. "j'i r-:'--r:'.!y i.F: i.:i '.- ''.h ir. i--a!lt) have l-.-va the O.iv-: ; ."jrtiali-t in l!i; w rl l, l.iv':! t.iu au V.-tive teiUr cf '! jT''v-jiva !'-.r ovrr ?:x'y year-. Tl.e T'.-ias Ix-i-'j'.are Lai a $cvi:v uV'T pf.'i'0.-:tiua to change tie Dime jfl'avU vuuuty t- L ii-v.u cjutity. A cju.i nju.L-e iitiul.y mail', and tltf .-.juuiv named Cai, iu ItOBvr ot' Lewis Ca-.' A I'uluth paper says one of t!.e "treaun f 'n . 1 i n tr into lal-t" Superior from the north is ealit d "Temperan.-e river," Lec-auso it is the only otie of all the tributaries that has no bar at its inuuth. A Mis.-i--ippi paper the aJ-' vantages of a jvertisintr by tellin? of a man who advertised in its columns fur a lost cow, and had it restored to him before the paper was distributed, "with a copy of the lmh-.r stuek on its! horns." ''I confess," says Ralph Waldo Emerson Em-erson in a recent address, "that I do not find in Boston, with all the education educa-tion of our people, a fair share of originality orig-inality of thought. Not any remarkable remarka-ble of wisdom, not any broad generalization, generali-zation, no national anthem, have they yet contributed." Those who hold that croquet is vicious vi-cious leading to checkers.l'rom thence to backpammon, and from thence to cards and faro will rejoice to know, under the head of "Warnings," that a daughter of Meyer Belden.of Gales- burg, 111., broke her arm while playing croquot lately. The Scientific American says it is now impossible to construct a burglar-proof burglar-proof safe, for the thief, with his cylinders cylin-ders of compressed hydrogen and oxygen, oxy-gen, can, in a few seconds, burn holes of any size in the hardest metal his fire drill enabling him in a few minutes te work his way into the strongest safe that was ever constructed. The Louvre and the Tuilleries, although al-though situated in a critical part of Paris relative to the two contending parties, have been opened to the public. pub-lic. Xo disorder is reported there ; the Central Committee announces that its only object iu occupying the two palaces was the protection and preservation preser-vation of the chefs-d' -a:uvre and other precious articles contained in them. A very interesting pupil at one of Pittsburg, Mass., schools is Michael Lahy, who lost both arms on the railroad rail-road when a very small boy, who has worked his way through the lower schools, and now holds a good place in the highest school of the town. He manages his book, uses his slate, writes finely all with his mouth. He can also write with his toes, but doesn't practice that in school hours. Several hundred ex-soldiers and sailors of Eastern Massachusetts have organized themselves into an association associa-tion for the purpose of colonizing the West, on the line of the Northern Pacific Pa-cific Kailroad, under the liberal operations opera-tions of the Homestead Law, enacted for the benefit of our gallant surviving Union "boys." The colony will consist con-sist of men representing all trades, and most of them will take their families with them. Their purpose is to erect a real new England town and they will succeed in their undertaking. Other similar organizations are to follow. |