Show L L I 1 N E S 1 i ADDRESSED id F ED TO A DEAB DEAR IN IX ENGLAND this glorious sabbath morning calmly dawns the sunlight gives to earth a happy look the tho dewdrops sparkle on the fresh green leaves like beads of grass and tiny rings of pearl the rosebush has her loveliest dress put on As if in honor of this hallowd hallo hailo wd day the busy brook that runs before our gate seems breathing tones of thankfulness and peace and birds and insects cheery bright and gay sing slug out their praises loud and wild and sweet all nature smiles and through my being sends A thrill of joy and gratitude and love of joy and gratitude that I 1 am biere ft with loi lov love loie e for him who hath ordain edit so here herel in my quiet humble utah home I 1 found new friends and new affections formed A heart heartney nay hearts that beat in unison and kindly gave me place I 1 share their joys and oer their sorrows weep for all have we are as happy as the earth affords because we realize much the gifts of god but trials come to us as to all flesh tonit tofit to nit fit us for that home for which we live for though our present home is very good and though we much delight to to call it blest we live lire each day or humbly strive to live for something higher nobler better still if thou only bea sea as I 1 have seen believe as I 1 believe know as I 1 know soon would the ocean broad bo be crossd by thee and thou soon enjoy the scenes I 1 love and deem it blest to be a saint and here but ill confess believing as thou dost theres theras scarcely anything would prove a charn charm I 1 p to cheer thy young and ardent nature here for life so changed from all wa we find it there could not be sweet without some purpose high some object great greater elthan eithan than mere worldly gain here every morn the herds mans horn he blows and every eve the lowing herd brings in and at each time may young and robust boys and cheerful chattering rosy girls be seen with cups and buckets hurrying to the yards and would you think it I 1 am one of them and oft a gay one merry as the rest the art of making cheese im rm learning too and how to cook and man many other othen thin things s can churn and make nice butter now with ease you see bee my mode of life is wholly changed and yet yeti though happy and contented here my heart still yearns to thee and other friends and dear old england my native homel yet never to return no far from that I 1 would not change these rural sports and scenes for all the wealth of sedentary kings if that could dim the light I 1 have received I 1 it is not splendor wealth or worldly fame or ought that peri with earthly dross dress that holds me here or prompted mo me ta come I 1 came with purpose fixed and thus remain to know I 1 have embraced eternal truth and that its founder hath bath my guardian been heen and constantly draws near to bless me still though there are many hardships to endure and many rainy crosses la my way of life to feel the ilie hope of 0 happiness secure when I 1 have fully earned that great reward to serve eny iny my god goa with all my might and mind and dwell among the saints of latter iatter days I 1 Is all I 1 ask disk and all my heart desires lulb lulu in behalf of mrs S P P G june 13 7 1871 T A circumstance of a thrilling dis dig crip tion took place at eddyville Edd ulster co N Y anthe uit the particulars of which are as follows A mrs cantney went to Roun dout creek for water taking her little daughter susan three years old alon aion along g with her and in while she was drawing the water the child strayed off and got anto into a boat moored on the edge of the hudson river which runs close by the chill loosed the boat and it began to float down the stream towards some falls t some twenty feel feet high at a short i distance anen the mother perceived the perilous position of her child her cries speedily bro brought dight fight a number of persons to the spot but the position was so perilous jerilou s that hope of rescuing the child seemed vain and as they stood catchine wat chine ChiME the gradual approach of the boat to 10 the falls it capsized caps capa zed and the child was seen struggling tn an the uhe water struggling soon the struggles cease ceased and then thon the child was seen clinging to the guard of the boat which by thi this time was about on the verge of the fal falls falis s all hope os of rescuing the child seemed to be utter utterly ly hopeless and while those on the edge of the river stood transfixed with alarm child and sod boat went over together A bost boat now started from the shore and rescued the child from the water seemingly dead but in a short time she revived and has since wholly recovered tue TUB skull and brain of the murderer Ruloff Buloff have been subjected to scientific examination and investigation and the result is as extraordinary as was antio antic abed the average weight of a mans E brain rain is fifty ounces but that of this remarkable criminal weighed fifty nine ounces the average thickness of the bone of adult human skulls is said to be something less than a quarter of an inch but in no place was ruloff Is less thin than three eighths of an ali inch and in many places it was half an inch thick the animal portio portion a of this brain and the part assigned by the phrenologists to the fhe mechanical powers were unusually large while that portion governing the religious and moral sentiments was very deficient the measurement of the head around the eyebrows was twenty four and a half inches the head bead was opened in the usual way by parting the scalp over the top 0 of the head from one ear to the other and sa sawing off the top but so thick was the skull that it took quarters of an hour to saw it around the m scalp was nearly as thick as the hide of a erous while the cords corda of his hib neck were as strong as those of an ox he was five feet ten in hight and measured nineteen ep inches across the shoulders after the dissection of the i head the brain was exposed to a proc proe process ess W which aich will harden it when whon the intention is to take an impression of it entire and afterwards ter wards to part it and to take the weight and impressions of the several sections the head was waa severed from the body belore before the latter wai interred but this was known only to a veri very few and so great was the interest manifested to as certain full particular particulars tf cra era hial haaland and cerebral organ organization stid that his bis grave was opened three different times on he the night of the golb uit by partle parties i s who it is believed wan wanted to make mako bid bis head the subject of scientific investigation MRS JULIA WARD HOWE has been delivering a lecture at new york in which she makes an appeal in behalf of maternity and children in this she uttered some soma plaine re proofs among other thing she said 1 very irrational and is the leaving of children 10 0 the companionship of servants do you hire a man to drink your ainest finest wane wine a woman to wear your best silks and jewels but a nurse flaunts up and down the park or promenade with your pretty ond ong one the tho hireling not the true shepherd feeds your lambs you would be luxich much ashamed to dra drag your banys car carriage ilage or to carry dai mal bim him through a single square in your arms yet nothing that you can wear should so become you so move if you wish it your neighbors admiration or en enay avi as that with which you are content to adorn a stranger THE annual product of pins in the united states is packs each pack containing pins or a total of of pins this terrible quantity is the yield of eight pin factories one manufacturers agenten boston ac cording fo the buik Bulk bulletin tin sells every six months 1000 cases of pins each case containing pins the factory represented turns out eight tons per week hair pins are jobbed bobbed by the cask and but one factory makes them but that at the rate of fifty tons per month the machine which cuts and bends the wire makes hair pins pin s a minute ready forja for ja panning the production and consumption of pins increases ten percent per cent annually agrest A great part of the hair pins used are imported after these thebe Agures figures we can safely ask what becomes of all the pins |