rttmruaiomni Tym* t"*"™' Hi W "g -n*, ■«■ uuu»i p.-t -1- - i •* — ■■ ■M'Wr «*- , a«M>nMiMi>Ui«>|t, J ■is* te» rnun*» mumn. wJnMlooHatm, KoA tt»7 were pstnlre red and bluf, TtoiMWTwmltklluiow ta~i . Ttea »Q«ljUM rtllywtoy AMhllnfc'»«"«Wp«> Wltt.4jfcto.~l.Wl.-tk~. A Wr^M M< •**» I IkMI tot USVTSrwor, ». tMAi b-Waw Wk .11 iraut, MtmiT ■— A want at metal-A beDc. A "draw bock"-A hUster. Anorderof discharge— "Fire." HdHt matehea-Early marriages. The Nation's Turaslyte — Fashion. Hy mpnthctic Spoken -r sooth (e) A " noooe papcr"-A marriage certificate. Motto for a jail— O-kum and dwell wlthrae. . Do ndnue piro produce mining manA beauty troubled with vapon— a fog ML A fciut oooory— » pretended rccolbotian. Motto far the reprieved—1 " No uooee U good new*." Moat tioarding-house* ahould lie •pelted boredlfg-housr*. Drawing icoma — one of the regular apartment* of a dentlM. Saw veraiwt of an old song-" Meet mm by moonlight all woo." , Wll tea little love lead* to marriage, It may* old that write mahra rite. Can a eoeka's contempt be oooaid-eredaon-a^oerdc? A raipruvra himself tit to go «««»» who abowa that be la fidthlhl where he k. f;ltt " »
Why are oH maids the moot charmbg( of people ? Because they are / A mwrore ^arhritfr-tWdarr. the .trongiet bond of-tdarriogc la the prin- - riple that misery torn ooc^-w. __ I As a fable or fttj, so to ! Ml >» J Baiters not bow long it has l»en acted, bat how well. An agtjr aid bahhekw suggett. that j births should be puhfehed under tlie bead af new an*." k Mr. l-tJlywugmjatherei.no danger ] &*j££BggMUryoa only go to the ^■ow ten the Ethiopian minstrels ' ao stowdiiy when they arc always ■ h'vh'~' <*■! nwet valuable if *» Use fcraaic tirtnea-a rirtue that IteBtetfVa* certainly not bote ;■ With — ia to be a gulch dreaser. ( The youag lady who suftg, »lwg , Mnebody woold cume," ha* had If* , dettia gratified. Ekvtel eoantt | cousin* haw arrived ami intcud to *»}' . "Why did you leave yoor Ue» pteJf" ; inquired ayoang horaekeeper abu* <" 'V HMl a new servant * Why**, are- ma'am," replied tile applicanj " 1 f ml— a." | K. Freddy- ■" Bart, wanmfitt. .jt—a. * ' itKlf in two. an' baby fitlbvl >'«r an' fund ter -ed, Wn hated -an
Lot" "UhJI I living out at sorviSWM Ldhsppy; but c.1.1 lfi™s#W«^M I .4 work s rwhoO^ | let It'*' the last aftirthing with me. Sky. why dldf you »ke Tom , E the whrahrffo and «nd «- fed; limping co#r about his buslrn'' didn't BkJfrhn." said Becky, •fch J jmt kzw ho* and co*y S3 he logetbf- Kever a quami, ad Aud hW we used to go to Ho1*4 and har tanoiuole in the gardwlnJ coo- home after dark an af- . tmXi how we used to go to riojl ou famlay morning In dothea as ptt a**ny one." TAd.e sighed poor Sick. "A.,- it can't be all np hill," said Bechl "I haven't time S° o"1, gnltwLig now, hut la, 1 don't mlssj It. Mre steady married folk* nowl -jniiijii." ... | "CUBecky," sakl the eobbis® : "you <A to keep up heart, but )'• known cow« to starving." § Thcjioked at each other, ami W 1 Becky dt her arms about her# ' hand. % did not weep upcif• bosom ; fcc was so Wg and •« mfand he A small and so frallj' 1 tely scaged natural to ' ten. .So h.«ged 1dm xJ , shoulder knd covered his » . °J" anil sooded and patt'ti#. had been S baby. But # t .' ,, and the sprou wa* wot W^1 1 10 ° timel „ !!%... I-.1 .lnlc#l"ln8"- "° ItWaaa lad atate^^JP; '
money^nefoud, no ■ s.'ssr^-HE tim, M the thumb of her » ^vzLr# *«* >-> queer Utile rf>- stopped cry- ' X«1 him between the - -^i'-aLs!!^. i .--i «* Ida ce" "I"'n Pdug out «l SSio. 3p» 4WHI W * Wt of i- '°oi„ "'jo hrr bonnet and shawl— onch * jm shawl — which had cr (»en u/ t>r an Jronlnft dotti, and to an Irof sh*>e scorch between the should!*— *"d took UP * haskrt. ^_E.,Wcr looked at her. ^jilblicr looked ""
uX|,o'hc said hotrwdyl "Becky," she lew just wliat he meant. ..fie little chllilrin, Nick," she ■aicf -wc could starve-but them poor' Btls critter*. Sick, It wont V> Mr» llkv begging when it's for thrtv'1 u M then the door shut behind her _M1 poor Nick limped after bcr, as q Uuigh to slop her, then panned, and ' fctiy flung himself on the floor, ^ wfhing he were under the ground be- q ; 3nii , , j-QodA-wtv- ilio mail tlint marries jja omari to starve lier," he sotdied. n ' Tifhy, if XM known it would have B > kmc to this, I'd never have courted j ' nr. It-s time X was dead." t r f Perhaps being a strange. Impulsive t • llttlo IHlow, there might have been a , tragi* «rl to this scene, but that the children came in from seliool and b6- | gan to rty— partly at the sight of their , penetrate father, and partly because of and N iek forgot himself to do . what he could tor them. i He had no dinner, but be hail a j enoffdesd of love to give than, and I some pieces of red kid. And the fact 1 that mother ami the basket were gone . 1 together, Impressed them with the , 1 hope of provision*. ' Mean white, Becky had gone a begging. It woaK be horrible, no dowft, h she thought to take food bum strau- '' gcrs— but she found that there' was d one thing even more tarihte-'not u> t' take It " "' Door aftcr.door was stemmed iu ho " fore. Poor a dog wsa ad at her, or « attttjyttMA and ig| 0, know whoa real poverty mkal imsl r- hfon^rhom they 1-d t&TH i«c j
my §1" r curU- ,nd " Is •F*,fnmln>: ln "*"■ Bhc ] " joat^ ouL p. a# take yon homo— only say f. she said. Jbhe child could tell nothing. It » e^Eainly lost. Becky took it in Am;, and made inquiries at the Br grocery, : where slie bought a Id IK slice of term ; but no one knew ut W child. It pras growing late^too, ltMn llcckv coitil not leave It to its W "in take it kome," she said, "and Ao-morrow fiudk* liilkc." # So, when thl cobbk'r'a children in | their Juvenile tews of such matters. I thought that key had another Utile t sister— I i "It's a poorlst child," said Becky. , "I'm going tdkeep It tomlgUt Its l parents are pAer than we are ; you ■ are that bit* hare fret ami only r one little frJ— poor thing! Now r hold her, NlJwhlle ! cpok supper, t I didn't lieg llfllck— so don't fret." And thcn,**plng lier ring-flnger e out of slght.irky fried the ham, ami i, iiuuk- the g*. and cut tho bread, u und sent for S cents worth of milk— which, judfcsly diluted, ttodo a o quart of mBnil water, and tried to of nitpnu wnicr, ana tnea to
be very eheB. The lortBd criwl, but Becky tod it, and sotKoxrd it to talk; then ' ramie A at ' n blue dress and u ; nasty won The yot , wlio hod chewed the , red kid, Interpreter. Soon it r wan dteoo that some person dcB scribed A y, had taken away the - child's Mi ■ and other garments, e and had fl her. t Becky' I Intently. "That was Hue, Nick," she c cried. " w it wasn't here— a it tipsy, raj oman ; and folks that .f own Ui >n't come pawning. _ Then used — the secret was ,d out. Nil 6 had glanced toward ,d her wed ig, and hack again to tie her Bice. "O, ' he cried. "Becky, wedidn " ilidn "
Bedq scarlet "I dl an taJcU," she said, "but n< oifl; I'm married— all the son : God. It was at the pawnsh the blue dress. And she tolc "the woman whom she had wi ml of her suspicion*. i i been stolen, Nick," she su n genteel child, you aui set T we ram but find Tit* name may save some one trouble never had. Think of ono of 1c ones being out all night. The sme>*ceincd to be Minnie Su ugh M. 8. might he any thl and putting the chila , all in a row, like the Utile C fairy tales, save that they h owns on, Nick and his wHbst to the pawnbroker's. The as good naturod, and looked garments. . Tbey were markr "lb then," said Becky. "They child's and they have i And if we ram And Its poor I e'll reive more than any hut a an tdL" "Ih if all the Smiths," said ! the ps r. "There's thousands ofm " "A inaiid*." said Becky. i *7' ^mfnnin8 P°" • An nt Nick and Becky, to " quest ^lnrdians of the night, tiny dug homeward, when a r blase from an open door toll •i over J they saw on the step* > swi man ami a tall, hundi| us UUW Minnie," crie.1 jl the * - Mi " " ssiti Becky; "them, j|««rt "Oh, mum. if youri
with a bfl^^H with a m ucer^^^i^B . milk, and two or three^^^H , (The eneked wlicat to milk, is to be Iwilral first, wc stq^^| and the a)(les to la- put in inUk j to be riroefi wc" think, from our cxpBQ rlcnee). Hs was to cat nothing for ' I supper, with hi* room well ventilated. * The diseased stomach, needs rest, and abstiucno from the tilings whereby it lias beqpnic diseased. Tlie rest " J can oidy be «>tainral by eating mode- ' rate quantities of plain and easily digested food, Slid drinking sufficient j pure water, either warm, with the ad- ' , dition of a little milk, or fresh and 1 . •obi, if the sbwiaeh wiU bear it, in 1 r sriiaU qtuuithtc*..; And hcpf-wclSl^ffr 1 add, that gmpeil, cufnutt*. berries, . and all ether fruits that are somcp times msde into wine, would make far ] the best medicine for the sick, if dc- 1 prived of pulp and pits, or seeds, and ' made Into jolly or cnuned. in an unt fermented state. All fenuentated drinks contain a quantity of alcohol, which renders - them unhealtiiful; if . j preserved from ffermcntatiuii, they ( would be hkhly medicii j and re- . ( storativc to the sick. But they should 1 not be cooked in bra** or copper e kettles. , Heallhftd food may bo made largely i injurious to health by a thoughtless i e cook. A certain quality of nutritious I food Is necessary to the health and f ' growth of tho system, jhc strength ^ snd activity of the mlmUnd nusclcs, * e and It should always fc Isrtthfull# si j prepared. The cookw^o thisks I if ft t pickles must look gnfci, s»ks Lr J scalds them in' brass or topprt kettfis, P aud thus renders them ■ ihraUby food, n s Fcogie do not usuallttcat <noug| of p j pickles at a meal to turns tbem tifnc- h 0 diatcly sick, and coutthcc then/ tluvt g they liavo eaten sAstbiug wrong, u tliough their upprtia may , rule that J< jjcry thing. I w
Physicians tell twtimt ]■ ojlr, from ^ various unhealtbf Jraiw -. oficn hare j morbid appetite*. Jan insinc craving c for thing* highlymjurioui to health j ami life. This iltbu caw with tho c wine blliber, th«kquor drinker, tho I opium cater, tU^obocco user, and o many other*, f one tinds tlmt his a fanner diet, mnks, medicines, or f otlur nnheniyil iuilucnce*, have e bra n such as I creatt nn unlsaithJUl j- appetite, or lurtoui to Ucaltli aud I, good moralsj is few duty, as a rational licinglto conquer such cra- „ vings, liowcw sekeie the struggle. c Mine pcojihtrfe proved that ah*UI. nonce from md, (ritli rest, quiet, and e wasliing thJsliA1 system wltb warm t water andfoapf *o ns to open tiic , s pores of tmikli was better for them . than '"kiw mdicinc*. in many atj tacks efmncn- Others hove raxed tfacmselvfof # ironic ailmunta with I those mouns and n change from < thdr forwr fsl and drinks, by eating i j raodcraw of boiled wheal bread or J, eorn-ni Jbrv*l. and fruits of various kinds, nl iifiroved in strengtli and mental fcor fi the time.-Ri.ro! New d rarlrr-i 1 — — Is A life tor ytar old, residing a short dLnfrrn.m tlie cite, was say- , iug tisjofi'a ftajr* tifchort time - ago sJfti>«-'« Ami after he " bad (Ai it Ida mothmfctid, " Now, 1 o •tendKf (d>d 10 »«" a good, i L boy.Vwe •d'M ^ 9 r hiaJw"" foe®1** tow moments, j a as Jdmp tliougti, aud tlmn start led ■ II 1r. Jt). the I'o'.lovblgreply : "It's no ' « mjL He WL.nt.lo it. I'm a«tad ' - , ■thing to MS*"1 though every t J Kj, the i-ietiam mutability. The ; X<4tli- dogsAwnral at our jwnd . rf Ko?vcrted, ilk soid, Into gtoVo*. t paJluwhMi.wqjmvo , '• K writing n3avi once be® foe ,
large omount^BB ducc a ctsrespondHB^^H kul-QI fruit*, and the v^^H product* fur which - la moos. i'ineland, fur tiutt ia haidly foil to occupy among the rising toi^^H yet seven yeatt of age, starting into 1 . lift in the mi df of the great rebellion, ' . with the piarfofher founder not folly ' . developed, *fo yet cahiblta mi 'much 1 | thrift, entejrire and beauty ; such a 1 t male ; siJi masterly *tate*mani,liip in c , (if that firm be applicable to a town- I f ship) italic successful and total out- ' ■ htwry / tlie great nodal vice of the ' . age ; feb incoiitcstilile evidence* of c [ daw'ijfig beauty in the long and koiiictinuJdoublc lines of sluulc tree* along c hcrf cnues, and miles of young luxlgiw, ' Ihtif hardly one in a thousand visitors f a# restrain his admiration at tlie con- " Ant over nature already achieved, t pd the sagacity and energy which 1 »uld venture siuglo lutndcd on sucli a Ian experiment in foe face of such ob- a staclea. Tticse wenfmany and power- P fill. One was a pn^udiuNigainst New " Jersey for her Uickwarrlnci>*vi^ enter- b [prise ; another her tyrannical nulioud " monopdfy ; and still another (especially " potent with New Enghuider*), her n lately inefficient school system, now a greatly improved. Besides, it was an " innovation in emigration to go toNcw a fosldon ]>olnte.l to the West, c where laud wa* known to be " clicap" "
ii (a* regarded flrst cost), rich and ready t for the plow. In ntldltion the great g rebellion was looming up in awful proli portion*. The young men must go to e the war, not to New Jersey— unless 0 tboy went there to keep her In the 1 Union. But in »pitc of Ml these iliflls cullies Vine land rose - not from hrr r wlies — but from out of the woods ; c acre after acre of timber was felted, 1 aud the land cleared for the plow ; 1 young fruit trees took the place of - forest trees ; flower gardens leapt into • bloom almost as If by magic, in fact try the only magic there is— that of In- - duslry ; neat, tnstcAil, and homelike 1 structures rose all over the tract ; a I beautiful village— soon to be a city— i grew up around the railroad depot ; i and hMfnr, far on tiic road to fhnic, • this young township stand*, not, a* I was Often priMiclcd, a monument of i projector's folly, but of signal wisi doni and cutcrprisr, and a glorious in- [ stance of what New Jersey may do for ■ herself In redeeming lier waste places i as well a* lier intellectual and political I character. ' VineWind largely owes her splendid prohibition of an evil, I the presence of ghieb elsewhere has . crippled hand reds of promising scttleThc criHs loud soeculation. Vinefonus^l village lots are origtaSHcqXition uf a perfaAtitJc^Sic'h must tove a dwelling luauu oreoted upon itwitbta one year from tlie date of puraiase, and a certain proportion of foe land, varying acevwding hi the rise (fib,' farm. Iwooght under euHlvotiuo. Tho I Hlilqjfltitt|l must seeded down to gram, aud sliadc two n-ls. Fanu booses mart stand oo( k* thanVv-«^-flve foot from the ride of the road, and viiteg* liousss twenty fret from
germ of surpassing IsK"1? 'here tho streets and roads areV1"'1 out. tl„ qABfoto<;><s are nted. (with mure o^^BMuion cacUt spring and oiitumn.THP. will. Uistfra«d enterprise are there, which «tln" distant day will make Vineland umrt*' Eimotis beauty than the Swcel Al "hurn" of Goldsmith's song. As to the soil, we find tlietX^B two classes who always admire it. Onto '* I the els-mist, whose analyses prove tmtj existence of unsurpassed nunernl andqj marine store* of plant food ; tlie other, experienced and skillful cultivator. rapid growtii of fruit trees, vine*, and |ilants, when properly eared for, attest* It* natural fertility. The only proniiuet dofldencv is the nlnencc of aivrngr amount of vngetahle soil, bat which clover, or swamp tnuck (of which immense quantities are at hand), stable manure, or some green crop, readily supplies. A clover sod, once established, grows with almost amazing luxuriance, and then " all thing* possible" in foe agricultural line. cleared of it* wilderness debris new soil works "like a charm." There is nn nvreenhle ilivsnritv of soil lv There
,'t clay, sand, loam and grtlvr! in all dej. sirolilc proportiotis, Vut rarely a stone M larger thnn a pebble. TtK-re is nn „ alnrwlanre of clay for brick and [lottery ie ware, ami fine, white, sharp sand, f-w* , j. pressed concrete brick, along the r Maurice river, a stream forming the , western boundary of foe township. ^ The surfitee Is rolling, and from the [ . various Utile eminences foe eye take* ^ in a wide eximnse of country. 0 It is pcrfretly natural— in fact uun voidable, that in n settlement so com- ' bintag so many advantage* for mar- j :o kots, literary and religions privilege*. n sociability, biste, temjierauce. good [ _ morals ami g«»*l order, that property , in spite of non-taxes or bnslness dt- | premiums, should advance at a rale . B nlineat without parallel In the rural £ World. Those little fruit forms, only ( three or four year* out of the woods, . and costing originally from MO to 830 T per acre, are held now at prices rang- ( , Ing anywhere (ilepending on location, , j improvoruenta, etc..) nt from AWO to | *1,00(1 per acre, and in some rare coses ( , bven more. Anfl they are worth it, , certainly to a man of modcrute eupl- " « who has a teste for rural purenits, ; and who can appreciate a Inline where j ~ children can be reared away froid city ] ^ temptations, nmld tlie refining influ- , " encc* of rural Wauty and social cub § " tore, sad yet nnt wholly cut off front ( city advantage*. DWant only some , thirty jnikm, on Uie direct road to C'ape , u May. that most charming resort of , ssin mer tourists; this rising young t town, now »o littM known to our dti- , zras. so scrtaln tohcconieerc long our j . city's greate" exuiscrvatory and fniit , t garden, will same foy also become, wc . t . Pfsffict, the most j»pular suburban v ; retreat aronnd Phllfcleiphla. fost youth was relating . - foe expiwicnce of hi* voyage across the ' J 1 °.x*n to a *ympathti»u; friend. Said i, • be, "Uellyou wftati old fellow, foere 's i, I one guol Udnjabou.lt, thoagh. You f ' | <wt jet as tight a* you please every I.
re*J^^, " every" Jail ami jhe I Charily ho*|,ltal [„ tlM) J ^ '-eggan. J ■"> | I »" bringii'w^h aJd'foq, ,T""ll'',W|'!ni" j 1 " any one other form of ri«v t „„i,i i I but dry u|i this one moral uktw j 1 to L»w«.p away forever all the "oloii*" r ' 'hi* one form or one .[„ ' |M sue), thing* a* pri^u , • "KXfoe halls of plenty. Tin- t.«n. or j 1 i, ot])lW*e and widowhood, and di.- • appolWd hope, would dwindle in a I ' f goodly "masure. wnu|d . I f S^-"r Tr4 " ""»■ The ' , clouds would 1-auish ftom U-n thou- I 8an<1 afflicted homes. And i«.(v r , breathe its fragrance an s* wfimH™ ■ almost as if the day .t it„ redemption c » luul come.— Or. J. A. ViVi. < allocking Occurrence. " . AS 1SHANE WOXAS TMltOW* \ CHILD j OCT OF i. WINDOW Great c-xcitcmeiit ways oiilm-J nn ii tinait exeitemcut
Saturday morning in' the vicinity ' tiic residence of Francis II. Hublei.| ' constable No. 7M South Fifth street, | by a shocking occurrence, of which , foe fonowlng arc tiic details : lire wife ^ Mr. Hubtej was recently released from the Insane Hospital, under the fUU lielief that she had been thoroughly cured of mental aberration. At 11 o'clock A. M., Saturday, she went up ' stair* to where her grandchild, an infant three months old, was lying, and raising the little innocent in her arm* ran to foe window and dashed it headlong to foe pavement The little one ' came down with great violence upon foe front port of its head, and sustained injuries from which it win [ hardly recover. It* father 1* Thomas ' Fottengcr, son of the late Alderman [ Fottengcr. This is foe thinl child child Mrs. lltibky has thrown from an upper window of her residence. About i two year* ago she threw her son, a cliild of three or four years of age, from the front garret- window, and though ! was badly injured, he recovered, i and is now n hearty child. A few ' weeks after she tossed a young girl : (her own child) from a second story- i window bock. She was qpt much i hurt, her fall being broken liy ^ahed. < It was deemed necessary to put Mr*, i under restraint, and she was sent to tlie Hospital for tlie Insane, 1 retease dhl ant take place until she J free apparently from all trace* of ' mental aberration. After the occuron Saturday she wa* sent luck the Asylum, lier insanity did not ' manifest itself until she attempted the 1 life her son. She ha* expacssed u dc- 1 ; sire to kill the children before she die*, • that she may not leave tbem behind ' I i The National AraSrUty-af bcicuce, " alU-r a quiet session of four days at , Northampton, MassachnsetU, ad- . jonrnad on Friday to .meet in WashIn April next. Interesting paptn on "The Tltal Currents at Hell ( Bate," on "Deep 8oa Dredging toil* Gulf Stream" and ofosc rt^ect* were read. *
ulf "?"■ ..1 '« County ConrtiobSmi In I ^prmuM.-urol!^ " tachlraBdi :,L ijZ In J daugliter tin- being tile troe luin'e"| " | the' Si"'"" n"''S"1. br ,m" teltsrs from f J It i* further *:ii,| (|m, |U|B ,r i "onw a. • hlhnlir. cm.mrT, b, |BT . fiitlier s wish,'*, win, j* „„ Art J llau, and tiutt ! fiitlier'* (lentil, lvom1B. „*• |lr,L „f • thnn a million. Tlie raise coming up yesterday aiW- i K!' ' l*r"r* n°t Iwlng ready « tor trial on account of abront wit- I dates! " (' """ 18MUInUWl Fri- | roW .^,,r A-M- Court . J i. u?flivW|itfiNl" flW'to Ifr more « explicit. g This trial will develop some of foe 0 to jurispruilcnce. » Can a Mother Forget f , Can a mofoer forget ? Not a morn- , noon or night, bnt she looks Into i night, bnt
'• the corner of foe kit-lieu in which you . | read Kobinson Crusoe, and thinks of , yen as yet a boy. Mothers rarely i liceome conscious tiutt their children c are crown out of their childhood. J They think of them, advise them, 0 write to them, as if not fhB fourteen f years of age. They cannot forget the 1 child. Three times a day she think* 1 yho are absent from foe table, and - hopes the next year ut foe farthest, she 1 may have "just lier own family there ;" » and if you are tiiere, look out for foe - fitt limb of a fried chiekeiuand thte ! cofftc which quno hut even I i mojlicr can make. Did llaiui^f"' I t - Samuel 1 A sliort scutcnrc, (Bm i i household history, tuid running l with genuine mother-lore. 1* tellingM I beantiftil. "Moreover, Ids motherl I made hitu a little cont, and brought it i to him from year to year, when she t came up with lier husband to tin i yearly sacrifice." l A mother mourning at tire firstr grave, or cloning foe dying eye , of child after child, displays a grief whose very sacrodness is sublime, i bitterer, heavier Uuui tlie deathstroke i« the desperation of a son wlu> rushes over a cruslicd heart into vieea which he would hide even from the abandoned and vile. Napokou ounc asked a lady whal France needed for the ednaitim of hoi youth ; and tin short, profound reply ' "MoniEBa !" A yopko minister, i" » , Uglily elaborate sermon, wMch In; ptenelicd while sunilylpg an aite'uf Mkiister's pulpit, sakl wrenti times, VMi giving some new exposition af sf jiasaage, "The critics and oouiaxmtte r* do not ' ««gree with US herv,->Jfotl morning, ' poor woman cacafi to see him with something in her apron. She said her ' Bad sermon, and thought it a nay. to e one ; and as be said ',-tha eu<MBpiten did not agree ' with him tote," he luul ismt him sane of foe WJttf blues. • * A ■•SfoMiiT'n "T"
p' j It wa* the cr «" a ^UTworo is I , Fotndexter got forough with tire p I bmdiud ami tw.-otj thouaand, Ih, in « down hl" hand— then- laing Uk, r many S|rectntor, to rafte a row-ami witn his companions, went ashore at me rrexr wood yard. . Wholesale PolHTnlng of tkll. dren in Boston. - n»m», KJR,* ta. '■ ""l" M. i„ .. from which the nausoatin* Phytic or castor oil ha* been made. It gaged ln the manufacture of castor oil, or at least they had some of the refuse I leans from which the oil had been made in their posueasion, and desiring to got rid of the uscles* garbage, they lire ordinary . oour a and dre ' posited in foe proper place to be gatiilo ered by some of the city scavenger*.
B) some means or other the barrel got ^ overturned and tho beans were pro- '> fasely ncattcrod over foe sidownlk. A number of youths gathered in the'"] vicinity thought they had dlacwcred u peanut picnic, aud of course they stufftilw^ '" their stomach* with more than / H 10 ted sufficiency. The story JJi ■ nuts were plenty in PriU brought foe nnJtilw from 10 Ba^^P^artook ^-Qcrcx^H^^^^ra to ■P^^ome of tbem cnironicdteHHH RUrekets, started for bopie aod foatt^Q \ tlielt paronta. All of t).is was dwb|^ J the space of ail hour), pt-rh*]" i jMjnt Inside of another hour foe ' jtea, [I'. tiood was taken viokmtly sldt, iSkrhliy th« juvenile portion of it. • VV iuw wcrff suniniooeil *> ones , ML. time the symptoms ot the le WhTrous patients tevrtfcd Jo lsiflte j -;"V tlu. .ullerer* vomited uivl^H liuWd^Ste. r- luniwl blsek tefflhbJ^I In thp fiiee, iL| u^re fraa ever^kljflB tbal tli\,ijcra or wane Af J tittecmio luid qoA , imultaneousiygi^^te " « ucighborhooA. Tire ofleri'n^. iU| ■ur stomachs wa*' n^st oflbnuivo ift,Q * Sight and snrell. and Jheir groan* from .J| iai as were painful to Usti-n to. Ituumrs fl J were freely dreulated that forty or fifty J deaths biul already oocumd, and tiM'tv J 1 was the wildest alarm afed cxciti nieiit . ahoottbedty. and th(*i«iffeBr,^^^|l After a couple of Jioura Uae df"'"' J the sudden iUoeas wa* iti^teiirejL^. ] 1 foe phy sicians wunt to sM adauK | rally to relieve the prohohk", however, that in nboutl,.,!r\j neamL nm ts no hUnre. attaehrl to itoT* l^w-TU- nafos,'*,^

