mm i -w, ,-, n i tKivrnnwMnwmvwBMru.B9tmiM-mmi,vmmmiummMumijin .rtr2K3na9WWm9AiwtMmrjm.'wKiiw mmm9yBrVmmmmmwmmjkm.m jH.,mif an Th Const; Mail. "" I'l'III.IHIIHI) The Coast Mail. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF SOUTH ERN OREGON ALWAYS FOREMOST. TI-3CE :irn . EVERY SATURDAY MOltN'INO 1IY WEOSTER, HACKER & LOCKHART, MatHhllold, Coos Co., Or. Terms, In Alliance. Ono year $2 GO Six inunlhs 1 fit) Three months 1 00 The Development of our Mines, the Improvement of our harbors, and rail rondcoinmunication with tho Interior, specialities. Voi.ii:. marsh :?t:fl, d, o:r., batueday, july 24, isso. :no. 30. Uri'K'IAli I'APIIH 01' COOS CO. ir a ffi . M BJ lm r-' -JV-JL jzl JL 8 j 7J-I1-KJ Hail IIimIIiiw I'ii ItomiiiKM'. Sacramento lice, .hunt 1). On n pullot of raw in a Chinese hut nt CoiirllitiKl, in this county, Micro died a young woman aged some twenty-two yearn whoso maiden iiaino wiih J Iran u, unit who wmh daughter of a once prosperous nicrcliant of Chica go, hit whom) married iiamo wan Mrs. Jo Sing, she being the wife of a Chi naman. Homo four years ago she wan noised wild Hid romantio idea that tho proper thing wiih to wed Mr. Jo Sing, a moon-eyed son of tho Orient, who had become a naturalized Atnori- t'lin citizen. In defiance of paternal (hreatH, ami (IcHpito the pleadings of relatives and friends, this romancc uruxed Kill left her comfortable homo and became tho wife of her Chinoso lover. A fow months ago tho couplo oamo lo this Sluto aid located at Coiirtland. Tho young wife, it ap pears, had, during hor brief career an Mich, contracted the vice of morphine taking, and it is supposed that hor death wan accidental from over-indulgence in tho use of tho drug, although it may havo been taken with suicidal intent. .She is represented as having been of very prepossessing appearance. Tho young wife's transition from the v ry comfortable homo of her family, where she was surrounded by congen ial friends ami all the usual blessiugH of American home life, lo the stilling hut ol tho .Mongolian, with its mob of eatleriug, yellow-skinned creatures, should it would seem, havo boon dis pelled her silly romance. Perhaps it did ; but the step which she had taken had placed mi far beyond tho pale of lecognitiou by her friends and tela tives that sho could not rotraco it, ami all that was left for hor to do was lo mihmil lo tho punishment which she had hioiighl upon herself. Wlirii IIoofhlN ICnrli'il. The Washington corresponilent of tho Hutl'iilo (. oniiiii rciitl writes: Jt was only after some patient inquiry that 1 could ascertain the facts, which nro inteiesting. and so far as I know are yet unpublished. Mouth died, as will bo remembered, in a barn in .Maryland, from a wound received fiom ! tho musket of Huston Corbet!. His body was brought to Washington, and after having been indcutificd by the court-martial before which his follow conspirators woro tried, was dissected by the surgeon-general of tho army. Tho brain and heart and some other parts of tho body were preserved in alcohol, ami are now on exhibition in the medical museum of tho surgcot) general'soHlco. Tho building in which tho anamination occurred was Ford's I heater. Tho Government confiscat ed it, but a'lerward Ford was paid its full value, and it has since been used as tho head (punters of tho medical corps of (ho army. Tho brain and heaitof nooth are in jars, standing in a ciixo that is situated very near tho actual scene of the assassination. Alter tho surgeon had done with IJooth's body, it was buried in a giavo in the arsenal giounds. (July half a dozen persons know the exact spot, which was unmarked. In IS7.r I'M win Uooth.lhoactoi.sont .Mr. Weaver, tho sexton of Christ's church, llahi niorc, to Washington, with tho re quest that tho remains of his brother might bo taken up ami removed to the family burial plueo. After some delay tho request was granted by President Johnson, who was finally appealed lo, and Mi. Weaver took tho body lo I ho cemetery in Hallimoro and bu'-jed it bosido tho older Booth and others of tho family. Tho remov al was conducted with groat sec voy, and was concealed from Secretary Stanton, Ai-i'licrj'. "Wouldn't you like to havo a how?" Said the bold young archor as thoy Niuntertd down the field, ami she murmured, -'Yes," and tho absorbed archer said, "What kind of a. how would you proforV" She quivered a little as she replied archly, "I think 1 should prefer yew,' and then tho young man took it in, and although ho was an arrow-chested youth, ho Weil to the target and heaved a hull's High. Tiiiutv small boyH woro arrested in Dallas, Texas, for giving a negro niin fltrol show without a license, tho com plainant being tho owner of an old building which thoy had used with out permission. Thoy wore tried be fore the mayor, who fiiiil : "1 find the prisoners guilty, and lino thorn 1 each. The alternative is I day in jail." Tho consternation among tho ollondors was very groat, "lint," his honor added : "J was a hoy onoo my olf, and wont on thooud in jmt mioh a porforiimnoo. I will pay tho IIiioh piysolf." 4'm. (.'in-licltl'M l.eller ol Ac- 'CII IMM'. Mn.vroit, O., .Inly lit. Uen. (larllold has forwaided to Senator Hoar of Massachusetts, the following letter of acceptance of the nomination tender ed him by tho Republican National Convention: Mii.VTcm, 0., July 10,1880. Dear Sir: On tho evening of the Kth of Juno last I had to receive from you in tho presence of Iho committee of which yol were chairman, the olll cial announcement (hat the Republi can National Convention at Chicago, had that day nominated mo as their candidate for President of the United States. I accept the nomination with gratitude for (he confidence it implies ami with a deep sense of the respon sibilities it imposes. I coidially endorse the principles set forth in tho plalfoi m adopted by the Convention. On nearly all (ho subjects of which it treats my opinions are on record among (ho published proceedings ol Congress. 1 venture, however, lo make special mention of some of the principal topics which are likely to become subjects of (lis cussiou. Without leuowing tho controver-' sies which have been settled during (lie hist twenty years, and with no purpose in which to revive tho pas sions of the Into civil war, it should bo said that while Republicans fully rec ognize and will sticnonsly defend all rights retained by the people and all the rights losorvod to the Stales, they i eject the pernicious doctrine of Slate snpreinaoy which so long crip pled (ho unctions of tho national (ioveininciit and at one time hioiighl tho union very near to destruction. They insist that the United Slates is a nation with ample powers of self preservation ; that its constitution and tho laws made in pursuance there of, are tho supiomo law of the laud; that the right of the nation to deter mine the method by which its legis lature shall be crcalrd, cannot bo sur rendered without abdicating one of tho fundamental powers of the Gov ernment; lliut the national laws re lating lo the election of representa tives in ('ongress shall neither bo vio lated nor evaded ; that every elector shall bo permitted freely and without intimidation to cast his lawful vote at such an election and have it honoiitly counted, and (hat the potency of his vote should not ho destroyed by (he fraudulent vote of any oilier person. The best thoughts and energies of our people should bo directed to those great questions of national well being, in which all have a common interest. Such ell'irts will ttooucsl icstoro to perfect pence those who were lately in arms against each other; for jus tice and good will, will outlast passion, but it is certain that Iho wounds of war cannot bo completely healed and the spirit of brothoihood cannot fully pervade Iho whole country until every oil' icu, rich or poor, white or black, is secure in tho free and equal enjoy ment of every civil and political right guanteod by Iho constitution and the laws. Wherever the enjoy ment of those rights is not assured I discontent will prevail, immigration ' will cease, and tho social and indus trial forces will continue to bo dis turbed by tho migration of laborers and the ooiircquont diminution of prosperity. Tho National Govern incnt should exercihO all its constitu tional authority to put an end to those evils; for all the people and all tho States are member of one body and no member can sutler without injury to all. Tho most serious evils, which now allliet the South, arise from the fact that there is not such freedom and toleration of political opinion and action that the minority parly can exorcise an cll'cctivo and wholesome leslraint upon tho party in power. Without such restraint parly rule becomes tyrauical and cor rupt. The prosperity which is made possible in the South by it's great ad vantages of soil ami climate, will nev er bo realized until every voter can ficoly and safely support any parly lie pleases. Next in importance lo freedom and justice is popular education, without which neither justice or freedom can ho porinanoiilly maintained. Its in terest are entrusted to (ho States and to tho voluntary action of tho people. Whatever help Iho nation can justly allbrd should ho generously given lo aid the Slates in supporting common schools, hut it woe-Id bo unjust lo our people and dangerous to our institu tions (o apply any portion of tho rev enues of tho nation or of the Slate to (lie support of sectarian schools. Tho separation of the Church and State in ovorvthinif rolatinif to taxation should lio absolute. On tho subject of national finance my view have been so fully and fre quently expressed that little is needed in the way of additional statement. The public debt is now so well secured and the rate of annual interest has been no reduced by refunding, that rigid economy in expenditures and the faithful application of our surplus revenues to the payment of tho prin cipal debt, will gradually but certainly free the people from its burdens and close with honor the financial chap tor of the war. At tho same limo Iho government can provide for all its or diuiiry expenditures and discharge its sacred obligations to tho soldiers of the Union ami to the widows and or phans of those who fell in its defence. Tho resumption of specie payment, which the Republican party so cour ageously and successfully accomplish ed, has removed from the field of con troversy many questions that long and seriously disturbed tho ciedit of tho Government and the business of the country. Our paper currency is now as national as our Dag, ami re sumption has not only made it every where equal to coin, but has brought into use our stnie of gold and silver. The circulating medium is more abundant than over beforo, and wo need only lo maintain the equality of all our dollars to insure to labor ami capital a measure of value from the nso of which no one can sudor loss. The great prosperity which tho coun try is now enjoying should not be en dangered by any violent changes or doiibli'til financial experiments. In leferonce to our customs laws a policy should bo pursued which will bring revenuo to tho treasury, and will enable the labor ami capital em ployed in our great industries to com pete fairly in our own market-' w;th the labor and capital of foreign na tions. Wo legislate for tho people of the United Slates, not for the whole world, and it is our glory that the American laboier is mote intelligent and better paid than his foreign com petitor. Our country cannot be inde pendent unless its poop'o with their abundant natural resources possess the requisite skill at any time to clothe, arm and equip themselves for war, mid in time of peace to produce all the necessary implements of labor. It was tho manifest- intention of tho founders of the Government to pro vide for the common defense, not by standing armies alone, hut by raising among tho people a greater army of artisans, whoso intelligence ami skill should powerfully contribute to the safety and glory of tho nation. Fortunately for tho interests of commerce, there is no longer any formidable opposition to appropria tions for the improvement of our har bors and great navigable rivers, pro vided that the expenditures for that purpose are strictly limited lo works of national importance. Tho Mi.ss's sippi river with its groat tiibutarier, is of such vital importance lo many millions of people that Iho safety of its navigation requires especial con sideration. In order to secure to the nation the control of all its waters, President Jefi'erson negotiated the purchase of a vast territory extending from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific ocean. The wisdom of Congress should ho invoked to devise some plan by which tho great river shall coaso lo bo u terror to lhoo who dwell upon its banks, and by which its shipping may wifely carry tho in dustrial product of twenty-livo mil lions of people. The interests of ag riculture, which is the bus's of a'l our material prosperity, and, in which 7 1-th of our population are engaged, as well as the interestsof manufactures and commerce, demand that the facil ities for (dieap traiisportationsshall be increased by the u-o of all our great water-courses. Tho material interests of this coun try, traditions of its settlement and si'iilimcpts of our people, havo led tho Government to odor the widest hospitality lo immigrants who seek our hIioivh for new and happier homes, willing to share the bunions as well as benefits of our society, and intend ing that their posterity shall hecomo an indistinguishable part of our pop ulation, Tho recent movement of tho Chinoso to our Pacific const par takes but little of tho qualitiosof such an immigration, either in its purpose or its results. It is too much like an importation to bo welcomed without restriction, too much like an invasion to lie looked upon without solicitude. Wo cannot consent lo allow any form of servile labor to bo introduce 1 among us under the guise of immi gration. Recognizing tho gravity of this subject, the present administra tion, mipporled by Congress, ha soul lo China a ooiiiiniiou of distinguish ed oitixen for the purponoof weuring muoIi a modification of the existing treaty will prevent thu evil likely I lo arise from the jireoenl situation It is confidently boliovod that thost ( diplomatic negotiations will be sue- cess fill without the loss of commer cial intorcourr-o between the two pow ers, which promises a great increase of reciprocal benefits and the enlarge ment of our markets. Should these eflbrU fail, it will be the duty of Con gress to mitigate tho evils already felt, and prevent their, increase by such restrictions as, without violence or injustice, will place upon a sure foundation the peace of our commun ities and the freedom and dignity of labor. The appointment of citizens to the various executive and judicial ollicea of tho Government, is perhaps tho most difilcull of all the duties which tho constitution has imposed upon tho Executive. Tho constitution wisely demands that Congress shall operate with tho executive depart ment in placing the civil service on a better basis. Experience has proven that with our frequent changes of Ad niiuisti'iilioii, no system of reform can be made effective and permanent without (ho aid of legislation. Ap pointment to tho military and naval service are so regulated by law and custom us to have but little ground of complaint. It may not bo wise to make .similar lcgulations by law for the civil Hervico, but without evading the authority or necessary discretion of the' Executive, Congress should devise a method that will determine the tenure of ollico and greatly re duco the uncertainty which makes that serviceso uncertain and unsatis factory. Without depriving any offi cer of his rights as a citizen, the Gov ernment should require him to dis charge all of his official duties with intelligence, ellicioney, and faithful ness. To select wisoly from our vast population those who are best fitted for the man' offices to be filled, re quires an acquaintance tar beyond tho range of any one man. The Ex ecutive should thcroforo seel; and re coivo the information and nssistanco of those who have knowledge of the communities in which their duties ire to bo performed, the best qualified to aid thom in making the wisest choice. In my judgement those principles should control the legisla tion and administration of the Gov ernment. Jn any event they will guide my conduct until experience points out a'bettor way. If elected, it will bo my purpose toonforco strict obed'enco to tho constitution and laws, and promote as best I may the interest and honor of the whole coun try, relying for support upon the wisdom of Congross, the intelligence and patriotism of the people, and tho fi.vor of God. With respect, I am, very truly yours, J. A. GA11FIELD. I'ea rln t lIvplosJoii. I.osoox, July lo. An explosion oc currcd nt 1 :20 this morning in the London and South Wales Collier Company's now black vein pit at His- eat, six miles fiom Newport. The shook was very violent. It is sup posed that ono hundred and nineteon men woro in tho pit at the time and there is scarcely a probability that any will be saved. A dispatch from Carddl" says J23 men were in the pit of the London and South Wales Colliory Co.'s mine at tho tiino of tho explosion, and it is bel'ovod all perished. Ninv Yoisk, July lo. A special from Loudon says of tho Kisoat colliory ex plosion : About S o'clock the bodies of tlireo miners woro found near the bottom of (he sha't, but they havo not been brought up. Tho force of the ox'plosion was terrfie, blowing to atoms tho vo'itilatiog apparatus. There is no hopo that tho men may oseapo. Lonpok, July lo. It is thought that L'OO colliers woro in tho mine at 5 p. in. Only three bodies havo boon iccovorod. llBFAtrrouv Sailous. Tho Astoricn says ton sailors and a ship's carponter woro brought from San Francisco by (ho Slue of CaUJnrnht for tho ship llVfidrooif, now l,"ng at anchor oil' Sand Island. On their arrival, tho sailors positively rofusod to go on board the tug which was londy to con vey thom on board (ho ship. Thoy stated that thoy had not shipped and hud received no advance, and had other excuse hr refusing. Tho ease was takon bofore Just'co Fox, and as it was satisfactorily p-oved that thoy had Ntsuoil the ships a.liolos, ho ad judged that thoy bo taken on board, whloh was accordingly tlouo. Ti:n mile of the Denver and Colo rado railroad have been washed avvny between Pueblo and Colorado Spring, and muuli damage done for 21 mile by tlorni uid flood. Hail ktorms fell two feel deep in place 4a(!iicriil II:iiicm:U---IIov li IJii'H mill lull lie I.iiiiUh I, Ike. A Chicago Tribune correspondent under dato of June 20th, writes as follows: Yesterday I wont over to Governor's Island to cc the military candidate for the Presidency, Gen. Hancock. The General occupies sixty-four acres of land, worth, if it were sold for city resjdenccs, about .flo.OOO.OOO. Governor's Island lias ceased lo bo of any value as a defemo for tho city or harbor. It is simply used as the resi dence of some pel commanding Gen eral. A gun fired from Governor's Island at a passing ship would go crashing into (ho heart of Urooklyn. If ii public enemy should ever get in reach of Governor's Island, with the now improvement in long range guns ho would send a shell through the Ator House, Trinity Church, the Slock Exchange, or Sub-Treasury. Here, on this fifteen million dollar farm, surrounded by several hundred servants, tho taxpayers of America support Gci.. Hancock. Here, seventy-five soldiers make Gen. Hancock's garden, dig in his door yard, trim his I grapevines and wait upon him as if he were a king. At his command is a steam yacht, with steam always up, ready to take the General over to Delmonico's to dinner or down to Co ncy Island for u sea bath or a flirta tion with the ladies. Though wo live in times of peace, everything around Gen. Hancock ii on a war footing. An armed Eenti nel stalks up and down in fiont of his private residence all day long and on through the weary night. What for, nobody knows, hut, tired and jaded, in sunshine and storm, this poor sol dier must walk up and down in front of his great master. At the General's residence everything is done in a pe dantic, military way. No ordinary, citizen can sec the General. An or derly, buttoned up and baking in a regulation uniform, receives your card. A haughty chief of stair ex amines it, and, if your clothes are good enough, he will permit you to stand before the General a moment while ho sits, listens, and then waves you away. The ordinary Illinois fanner, with his face browned and his hands calloused with honest toil, would never be allowed to enter the presence of the commanding General. The first thought as you look at the General is that he most bo Itanium's fat boy grown old. His face is gross and sensual. His cheeks pull out like tho fat boy's, and then his whole head grows smaller and smaller till your eyes rest upon his forehead, which is low and narrow. The Gen eral is a great cater and n liberal drinker. Ho takes wine at every meal and whisky whenever ho likes it. High living and liberal drinking havo given him a ilabby, sensual double chin, which hangs down and rests over his smashed down shiri-collar. The General is over 50 years old. He wears a whito military mustache, and weighs about L'oO. He is not a good talker, and never succeeded in making the simplest semi-public speech. He is lazy, phlegmatic, and docs nothing but cat, drink, and ei. joy himself sensually. Ho never reads books. If ho woro not a Major Genoral, ho would be a country land lord, who sits around and lets his wife do tho cooking while his son attends to tho bar. If elected President, ho will do nothing himself. Ho will sim ply bo a lump of dough in the hands of tho rebel brigadiers of the Solid South. The sixteen Southorn States hate Hancock as they do the old flaj, but they havo taken him up as a sweet bait with which to catoh tho Xoithern Democrats and soldiers vote An Ilxcltinf; Scene. A Chicago dispatch of tho 10th has tho following: An army ollicor sta tioned at Fort Keogh, now in this city, gives an account of an interesting bufi'alo hunt which recently took place on and in tho Yellowstone The Crow Indians gottin' a littlo short of meat wont in pu 'suit of bison, and finding a hord of -1,000, attacked it savagely. Tho animals becomo in furiated aiter awhile and stalled in a panic for tho river, followed by tho no less osoitcd Indians. Soon thco was an indistinguishable mass of red skins, bud'alo and ponies in tho stioam. and tho eurront hoing strong many of each woro drowned. It is estimated that thirty savages woro drowned, and ponies and hullalo al most innumerable mot a similar fato. A xativk baker in India, anxious to call attention to his lonvoa, and at tho same time to domaiutrnto hi ac quaintance with thu English toiyjuo, dcecribw himself us an "European loulor" i How 'I'licy Churn in L'riiKuuy. Youth's Companion. I thought that I had seen a good many kinds of churns beforo I came down here crank-churns, dasher churns, and "edemical-churns." Hut I will now describe a mode of churn ing butter that will, I think, make New England folks open their eyes. Commonly they do not make much butter in this country, and the set tlors here corno to get along without it ; but by tho lime I had been at the "poesta" two or three days 1 began to want sonic butter on my bread. M bad a herd of twenty-five or thirty cattle, which he kept for beef, and among them were a number of milch cows. Ed waa bidden to set the milk for twenty-four hours and tho next morning M told Lizado, or "Liz," as wo called him, to churn. They had such a tiling aa to churn butter before, it nppcara. Liz went out and brought a bag of rawhide about as large as a common meal bag. How clean it was inside, I am sure I do not know: but he turned the cream into it, and poured in new milk enough to make it two-thirds full ; and then he tied it up with a strong strip of hide. M stood with a bioad grin on bis face. I was already too much as tonished to make any remarks. Liz now carried the bag out of doors, and then got on his horse. Taking hN lasso off the saddle, ho made one end of it fast to the cream-Dag ; the other end. as usual, being attached to a ring in the saddle. This done, he jumped on the horse and tucked spurs to him. Away he went, and at the first jerk that bag went ten feet into the air, and fell with a squash, close up at tho horse's heels. At the next jerk it went high- c" still. He soon went out of sight with the bag dancing after him. Sometimes it hit down alongside the horse, nnd sometimes it struck slap on the ani mal's rump. M was convulsed with laughter -at me, I suppose ; for I must confess this upset all previous ideas of buttcr inaking. In the course of twenty or thirty minutes Liz came back, the horse looking pretty hot, and the bag very dusty. "Es mantica'' (Butter's come), said he. Ed untied the churn, and sure enough, there was a good homely chunk of butter in it; and it proved to be very decent butter, too. I asked if that was the way they al ways churned. They said it was, and Ed declared it was "a dale asier than turnin' a crank." So I respectfully submit tho ''meth od" to all our good peop'e up North. Everything needed for it is a sole- leather bag, a clothes-line and a horse Nothing is publicly known of For ger Waite's whereabouts, though many believe that ho knows all move ments concerning tho defuct bank, and some arc of the opinion that he will ultimately return to E-attlcboro, though just how he can do this s not said. It known that he succeeded in getting his sisters' $10,000 life insur anco.inoney, and tho question is will this finally come out of tho stock holder? Those who aro convo'.sant of tho bank's affairs think that the stockholders ivo lablo for not only this pari of AVaite's rascal-lies, but also for $0,000 which he borrowed of Trcnor W. Pal:, though it is not. im possible that Pack's noto for $20,000, which Wai o was supposed to havo forged, may prove genuine, aa it is no unusual thing for bankers to ac comoJato each other. It 'shot known that Park has ofiicially denied its gen uineness, and tho matter will bo thor oughly s' 'ted. Waiio's napois a-oso thoroughly mixed that it w'll require unusual caution to get at the bottom of his stealings. Forced paoer in the name of tho Windsor hotol of New York was niado by Waito leprcsenting fr2a 000; A. Skinner, $;?0,000; v A. Leonard, $10,000; Duideft A Co 000; CO. Waito, $00,000; Burden tt Co, 20,0X1. Logal authority differs as to tho liability of tho baok foraforgod paper, some saying that no numbor of genuine indorsements can niako a forged noto good, and others that an innocent holder, buying a 'orged noto becauso of tho subsequent indorse ment, has a claim which tho bank must pay. Mil. JoiinSiiute, thocnergoticown or of tho Five Oak farm, in Washing ton county, writes as follows to tho Washington county Independent : I have a fivo yoar old cow that gives 2-1S pounds of milk por weok, nnd tho ureain from that milk makes 18 jHHinds of buttor por weok. Hor calf is fivo uiomh old, 1 cannot say a to hor stock. 1 bought the cow of J. 11. Sowell three years ago Hancock tin ii Itcroliitlfmlfft. The Cincinnati correspondent of the Boston Globe gives tho public a piece of secret history related by tho editor of tho Vermont Argus and Pa triot, who was a dolegatc to the Dem ocratic convention, which is impor tant if true. The Vermont editor said to the Globe correspondent: "Soon after the electoral commis sion had promulgated its decision, Gen. Hancock wrote to Gen. Sheri dan that he believed Gov. Tildcn bad been elected President of the United States, and, being so elected, lie had a right to take tho oath of office else where than at Washington, where cver ho might bo; that Gen. Grant's term of office expired at midnight of the 3d of March, and if after that hour he received any orders from Mr. Tilden as President of the United States he should obey them. As is well known, Mr. Tilden did not take the oath of office, and Gen. Hancock was not called upon to take tho steps which he undoubtedly would have taken if called upon. I do not know whether Gov. Tilden was ever appris ed of this resolution of Hancock's or not." IVhat IIovn Should lie. First : Do true be genuine. No ulucation is worth anything that does not include this. A man had better not know how to read he had better never learn a letter of tho alphabet, and bo true and genu ine in intention and action, rather than being learned in all sciences and in all languages, to Ijc at tho same time false in heart and coun terfeit in life. Second : Be pure in thought, lan guage pure in mind and bodv An impure man, j'oung or old, poi soning the society where he moves: with smutty stories and impure ex ample, is a moral ulcer, a plague spot, a leper who ought to be treated as were the lepers of old. Third : Be unselfish. To care for the feelings and comforts of oth ers, lobe polite, lo be just in all dealings with others. To be gener ous, noble and manly. rouith: lie sell-reliant and seli helnful even from early childhood. To be industrious alwavs, and self- supporting at the earliest proper age. Teach them that all honest work is honorable, and that an idle, useless life of dependence on others is disgraceful. When a boy has learned these four things, when he has made these things a part of his being however young he may be, however poor, or however rich he has learn ed some of the most important things he ought to know when ho becomes a man. Tombstone Cify. ,i. A dispatch of the 13th from Tomlr stone, Arizona says: A telegraph line was completed to this place to day. The census recently taken gives 2,100 inhabitants in camp and 519 buildings, all but ono of which have been orected within tho last 12 months. lieports from the mines continuo as favorable as over. Tho Empire company is erecting a mill on tho San Pedro river, two miles bolow Charleston. Another new mill is be ing erected half a mile north of tho Contention .mill. These new struc- tures furnish cvidonco that mine own ers havo faith in their mines, and con firm tho general public in favorable-. opinion of them, which is well sus tained by the present shipment $400,- 000 worth of bullion por month. which confirms tho opinion that the Tombstono deposit is tho richest piN vor deposit in America. Pipes to supply the city with water will reach tho corporation limits to-day. Tho weather is pleasant and tho health of tho city good. Yki.low fevor has appoarcd at Now Orleans; a young sailor from Itio Janeiro died Tuesday, and two more. sailors are sick. A .small ragged boy entered an oyster houso in Salem, Mass., and asked : "Will you soil mo an oyster foracont? I want it for my sick niothor." "What is tho matter with your mother?" asked tho man, as ho proceeded to fill a can with oysters, thinking ho would help to rcliovo a. case of Buffering. "She's got u black eye," was tho roply. Tho benevo lenco rapidly faded from tho mind of the oyster man as ho put ono oyster in a paper bag. A sisauLAit foaluro of our export trade is shown in tho fact that Amer-. ica has so dovoloped her facilities ,aa to underbid oven tho Russians in laying down whoat at Odessa itself. This cause tho Itutsians to complain about as much as the English would do if Amoriou should begin to export cowl to New-cntlu, for Odessa has long boon tlia principle depot of tho grain trade of Europe.