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Show I " K 1. 1 N . . ' - - - : ' . : " A . r - -. 1 a a rv- - ; . i - A 1 -..a:..-'. : :.'a.: - r.-.-r t. .v- t r . ti (. a..:' -t: a . a:, i t . - i : a - . i:i.re 4", l.c; la c.r-'.i:: c.r-'.i:: ,-ti. :. -. 1a'. -1.a:1 to - a . :1a..' ! i- : r !'.- l'aj.- w.::e .lty 'tl. j-a:. 1 .a.. :.i .-:e 1 U-l j at. ar.l ::. tc i: a:i i:.a: aa.vUM i-:. i-:. v In .- . A' . A fl-.'.lLC i t'lA-e Ia.1 Iv .,kcj Ijillt..- i'r in ti..- i vr- cl' ti.e I nittd S:a'i.. ll -vt ill ti.e M .i.t'-rrAI.eA!l WAS KveLtlv I !:;.. i mi ;i:e I'Iacc d' Arn.ee. At Nice, in t!.e i ."..-eiiee oi' UiAiiy t'.u'J--a.il i .-j ..cIa:. r-. A lady in I t'eA recently atreinpted te, lianif lier-di', but the neL'hi.er ru-hed in and cut her down, lk-r d i- t'u-tcd liu-lAiid thinks 'Some i'olLs had better siav at L"iie, an.l not nied-! die with other pcoj.lc's s:;'Air.-.'' ! In t!,e el. e'.lon eamj ai-tn late'v in IJui lin-ton, Vt.. er.e can.li.iAte eliArued AUdtlier a-j.ir:int with b'lyini; e.Ui Lones at the luasket, and .-ticking a I'air of turkey's leus throu.-h the top ol his ba.-ket to ''make a show on the treet." Six years a:. a raft of hard-wood loe-s sank in Goo.-e Pond, Swanvil'.e, Me. La.-t fall, during tlie low staee of water, i-oine of them were recovered, and they are as sound and firm as ever, with tlie exception that the layers lay-ers of wood are separated, like r?ady-niade. r?ady-niade. baket stuff. Of one hundred male children who are born, lilty die before the tenth year, twenty between the tenth and and twentieth, ten between the twentieth twen-tieth and thirtieth, six between the thirtieth and fortieth, five between tho fortieth and sixtieth ; therefore, six only live to alove Jie aire of sixtv. One would be apt to think that Boston Bos-ton has a laryer proportion of native Americans in its population than timet tim-et her large city in the country. Yet the census returns show that of its -4S,Si'ii; population, ST, 353 are of foreign for-eign birth, and 153,11 1 have parents of foreign birth, leaving only 90,750 more than one generation removed from the "old country." A writer in an English sporting pa-1 pa-1 per, who has thoroughly explored and : hunted through all the accessible regions re-gions of the Rocky Mountains, says that the wild goat found on the highest peaks there is furnished with hair of a quality admirably adapted for weaving into textile fabrics. Japanese art, he says, is to be detected in the ai tides made from it by the Indians, in whose language traces of Japanese words are also to be found." |