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VOLUME XXIX. CAPE MAY CITY. NEW JERSEY. SATURDAY. APRIL 5.1884. WHOLE NUMBER. 1551. 1 s'te commenced ootii ahe bad completed
' ... ^ ^ , OAPE MAY OITT. TV. jr. • " ( 9 1 .50 a yaar in Advanca. ?raf«Jtoi»aI Cards. J a HUFFMAN. STwcnvirT 'awo rraTB1,UH IT1I* ■OURITOa. WABTER ««" numn IS CHA?<c*HT. aCTBgW' (WE* nmiPHJEA aM WOTAKY nJBUCL ^ ' Afcspt cm? ashy asrimr M—g s liana. , IT F. douglass, " ". ! JJ F. DuuULAno, c
attobne YVAT-LA w alter a. harrows, j attob ket a t-l a w ■oucrroB is chasckbt. i ^a"j. f.~lsamino a sob. \ distTstb, . i and *at- ( J.-TJ ««aitub— YrWIava ' JAMES If. a niLDRETH. * ' attorneytat-i.aw aoucmm. hastch akd exakiweb is r so. a w^oroo ture«. <•"££•? jjerbert w. edmunds, ] attorjfey-at-i.aw, SOtJC-TTOB AST* WABTKK IS CHASfTWT. """"^CspF Hit CHJ. S. 1. All-? ' At Cap* cwm d«h, Turadara And Yrlda?*- I james h. ingram, ' phtsictan and surgeon, , • cm— u i»- rwad-oo* Of r»r«Ahi wtwoo RCA, I OBKBS CHEEK, X. I. ! A Ion "Apply •' h*k drag* rouraantly on band. ' reuben townsknd, ' AOIST CUMBERLAND ! mutual fire insurance co. noMSpuioSEH OP DEED*. ^lfred flanders, ' oounkf.llob-at-law, R252^£E2*So«ij%irw aiimkim ?a«inrs< ffirflsr" ~~ •psyos a Williams, y~ architect and buildea WILL MAEE DRAWING*, AND HI* P EH IS .PES II OBOOSTIUCT. mtCI-n WMttoltoq «.. Cpc %tf. SJ. ^ a little. PBACmcAL AINTBB and glazier. """r_0APE MATCTTT.sTl "HlW» At nsnu *5^,, J^UCTIONEEBING. "*'** ' JAMRH CREAWELL-. n»- om» m.» caj. s. j. QRGAgS and sewing MA ' •aF; HORNER. HAMOMMTC I SEWM MACHINES sainorpos. s J. 5J^5«^hT**wbc"*1 m QRO. W. GRACE, uracticaitbuildkr, ■TILL AT THE OU>'«TAKU_CAPE MAY S3R __ tost*? QO TO GARRISON'S STimSfflT, in SIDBE Tiffin pbb oold pes*. blase books. toilet paper. pocket ittlesy. shell ouoi*. pibh1su tackle. CHEAP LIBBARIBS. mtsiatuee mtb^mastpacrrbeti os n fassisotos mttikkt. cape may. s. J. yy EST JERSEY HOTEL, t. w. moi-st, ri*n*r. . ^hr. bay view house, PI MICH " r*<ST. OAPJi MAY >o_ Maris MUWjnpHS. paueg house, ta chbtrlt btmkkt, pboamlphia mmwh AUT'10* * ln'"4 " '•'TTll. ,y^«r. *
gMtort. Thousand* Hastened to thalr . Relying oo testimonlala written in rlrid glowing language of Acme mlrACflloot . mre* mttkbf some l«m ly pcff.-d op lino or or p«irot medicine tiw -bmAtenrd iboumodi lo lLeir £r«vr». brlicriog in their aldoa! lamer fmllli UiAl the aaidc oii-ac'e will be prrfcrmrd no ihno. And tb*: Ibaw MioionUU mAkc tbr corm, while the to . nllrd mrdirloe U *11 the time bA»trnio( i Ibrru to their prAtr.. We tan Aroided puhliAhinp teAliownUlA, U thej do not Bake the cimw. although we hare ' - TSOI-MSDA CPOS TBOrAASOS I of il»em. of tbr m-wl woodrrfal cure* »olIUcor't Iml* nwkra tbr rur* . It uaAorrLT Itiltd nod oerrr can. We will pire rrler. mor lo any nor for enp diwww aimllar lo ib-ir crtti II draljrH. or will reler to my • oriphbor. aa then ii not a neighborhood - in I be known world but can abow Iti by Hop Iliitrfe. Hop Ibitrte,
ss Ss5SJbSSK,sS lotiuxlj .ALh^-Tn^ Hop^Bn'riec TR* ^ey ^SSS™ bTASH ™«'»lmA*AoSl The f«e of doctor* l« »n item Ib»t tb ry toe (iv peraooi are loiereMed in. We beliere' tbr acbedole for rtaiia In MOO. which would iai a Clan coo flood to hit brd fort and In need of t daily eitil, > T r *1000 a year for mrdlrwUtlrortanoe alooe And nor ainple hoitlr of Bop Killer* tnken io lime would atve the *1,000 and all the , ji a.'t tickorea. jig *lai OITES rr BT THt'onCTOia. "Is it praeible that Mr. Godfrey i« up and at work, mad cured by to almplc a , remedjr" • I amurr you it ia true that he la entirely cured, and with nothing bin Hop Bitten, > 1 an J only tro daya ago bit Actor* pare bira I up and mid be muit die, from Kidney and | IJrer irooble!" t Half Outof His Head. | ■ : rtli ■T.S^SBL.b.ill'f^ Jgetl . rnali norh .nrpri-d n.llrtte.1 me. , . ft? ' i pert to eigmnda. In brui. Ik. aa. oi me , • f ' , tor am ainnrm aa* lor It. trowel diaardon , IwprmSrSea'C'birwolortbeeatnowi , - ^ , ■ uTai^rwawaWpmuu 'tieon^'lirwllrai | or%I^'S?ln»M«»n^1ule,Han51Si ^ reeuee remoBrln* in Ur^ fan*. ot ^Betler.. ■ ^^'r^WQMAOM* " '"w ^ow "»I ^ CATAft H ■fflr^Wer*llr?llK*ntrr- G 8. D- ' t ' FEVER^1^S^ WBIry y^ " FE VEy eS^mViLn^ at ■ BbSw^i frw i^KLT BMOTU Ek'H iemElW. Owopo. N. T. .
i Capi ^»s Co. SImlUBtt. y U SCHE1.LENHER, " ""* « 1- tiui ai tna eaayiaoe bribe" BtfOUTraa oo W OBKES CHEEK. CAPKJIAY CWSTY. „ » GROS? Si SB^Skidks ° ot*ii^' " i"'' ™ rVX*lU ' " je-a., , ,T J^MEB H. 9CIIELLENGEB, OBKBS OBAKK. CAPE BAY* Ot»_ ^ FKE6H AND"CURED MEATS, J TOCLTHT AND SUOB. ' f? BowaaferwpoT* of Low-r B«t.-1- aa* Bmabla aarrw* mnwm ou v . •LSSi'BSL.^. rA apwnal aEon made la ploaar onatamm la " PJ^BOMAS ERRIOSON® mrmuiTorooor. ] ~ 6S0 C EB IeT PROvi's 1 0 H S, ; i Late I Gaiflciimk FSmBtWear ATLOWECrXlCBP KBCim ^ ( — bo to»da£. at lie nratrti were In DWOrrwfc • john M. RUSSELL, r. UKSEHAL UKALKR IK « DRY GOODS, GBOCEB1ES, | , tLO I * It AMI FF1KD, J*;j PORK. LARD, HAMS, SEEDS. Ac. j * ; JOBS «. BUBBKLL. coat Brrmg. fwao Mar pa_ K-J. | I'l- 1 Tyj*^ c. PRICES' fTPOR*". :ia_ ; SS3ESRIES. DBT GXK Oi K2TOS, B. j T4bh1^W^MW ITTTT. *" i ^ w FEED STORE.i ^
A Common HlBtory. -It M time to be bora.." Oorl aakl. an* Ikero [ -nieUmeto Iran «* a lenAerbreaar. t uuwone.^iny * ream jobm drear,r -ii m nor ta warty, an* eeaoe to play," 1 bard tbr tarter grave to tba boy oue day. r -n .a Urme UMn."Ywaa a armor Unngm, » JloC 11 . baiiy. came lo naogbL 1 "ll M uwe to km.-aaid a lorr* UoW. , A. be ateaed awaet npe or a melting mold.
"It w time lar Joy.- era* aa air a? prble. J haW • hrtd-rroom (owl^-J barrwonabrMe 1 • H ta lime to tod for i!*Hy brra-1. Tor a wile and family nM be led." I By a boay mat waa aa w. "a Jang tiler. :cU borne. 01 them , -II ■ dmi to bt kmoly. Ue boser W aulL" And Uej wept again.: ueu w11l j • And I renUy call tboe BOW.-aaM death. Wlra tha OanUamtn. Tbr new verba which Ibe ruth of proprrm briop Into uar are oftan atnm- 1 blinp-blocka to ibe dimple. Tbr fen ootnra 1 when ignorant peraooa get frightened al ! tbeai and go ofl wltboul aaklng what tbry J Two young women entered an tote!, I- i genor olflor and oo e oftbem agkrd if there ' waa any aituation open. Tbr agent mid he bad jndt received a letter from a grntlewan io Pougbkrepare aekiog If they could aend op a aervaDl girL Tbr agrnt el plaiocd what wojkabe would be reqolred to perform and Ibe wagea »be would geL The girt consulted for a few momenta ; with her companion and tbrn mid (be would go. Tbe agent gate her the nrrramry dl- [ ruction* and told her at what time the * would bare to be . At tbe italioc, with , tbe amorance that ibe would go -Uwooch 1 ill right. Tbe girl liatened alien li rely. i i "Now you'mudt be aurt and go through ! all tbe way," aaid tbe agent, "and not gel r ott-" "Tee," aald ibe gfri. "Aod don't let anybody la'k to you j , and aak you to go with them," aaid the 1 agent. i "Yea," aaid the girl. "I will write at oo<* what time ytm * will gat I be re and tbey will expect you," ' laid the agent. "Too will gut there t^ . 10 "Yea," aald Ibe girl. "If you have aay difficulty when j oa ; reach the railroad elation, wire tbe geetle- * man," handing her hid card, "and ha will 1 - meet yon at the Ha'i to." -ril not atir a peg, eo I won't." I'll h_ engage lo waah, iron and plain cook for j > tic family, but I'll not do all tbla and * wire gentlemen for fourteen dollar* a mouth, ao 1 won't," end «be went out of n the office. Hla Uriouttlvatwd * Volco. * lYuring the evening they called oo the l pnrfeaaor, who entertained tbem by giving choice mlrdi to* oo the plana ; At hwt the young man who prided bim- ► aelf upon hla voioe, raid: "PiriftBwt.ree got the fltwt nncnleahd _ harirooe voice io thia city.* nartrooe vow* id uii ciry.
"Ah." raid the prafemor, "I'm dellghtrd hear It. Glvr n* a dnog. I'D play tha ! accompahtoieot." The voting man.oothlng loth, approached the piano, arkctrd a long, and pro. cerded lorinplo tbeprofoaaoCd accompani When the aoog waa flalibed tbe tleger toqniied: "Well, ptofemnr, don't you think tny voire would improve with ct 1'iealloo?" • My dear air." replied the porfrwnr.j '■cnbivailoti wooWn't touch your voice What Your voir* naada laptowtop— ptowair. Nothing abort uf that will reach 1L" Since then tbr vales of the singer baa ; bornaUrai. T wad too hai rowing Cartlald e Coffin. 1 I we a paragraph going the round, which aa? • that GariMrTa body id tying la an unpaid for coffin. This la an Ignoc- j ant autrmrnl. Tbe cheap etotb-coened i box to which tba body waa brought lo ' Clevelabd had no! yet been paid for, at ' tbe ondertaker wasted loo umch tor 1L ll It eocb a coffin aa can be bought at ' time lor *100, or *75 r» a pinch. report, aaid when it waa arrrt to Glrveland that it wai bannatkally sealed. Both. Tbe bd waa fattened down with, •it ddrel eciewa After tbe foaetal ihr Colon League, of New Trek, eent at a gift aa eiegant leaf br -oir «dka( wevth ' ts 000. Tbr body was body was IrenaI rpi ew nlgl.t by aoverJ lotto J.r ' fricada sad ihe xi^aal cadul Wa.gi.ra > to tha Cleveland Bjauwtca: Sooety. Ula ! Would you avoid the burden of doctor* I bill! Get IIS flrat-chue preacriptWm. . 1 publiehrd in the "Science of Life.* Price j vnly >100I Ii I* e*Hnat«J that of MlaUealppi'. atotj l ' "or eweaty oetnarle of tbr hie war or* - more than MOO remain. I tJm ««*=» «u it hmmY apeak m.^hot vr* aide fa* t Adm*. mind when U Uk» him only.
LOVE AND BEAUTY. "What do yon lore ma for!" aaid aha. ' "Bros use yon are so pretty." mid be. She did not know wbeler she liked the . answer or nor. Admiral loo is always re- ' , markahly swerl In a women. She put 1 i her brad down oa bi* ebouMrr. "Oh, ' Charlie:* she «ald "if I were ugly— you j think me era ao much prettier than I ; really am, you ksow. but If I were really ' ugly, wauldnY you love me? I should , you. Uh, if anything hurt that dear ' larje, or made you leaa strong or graceful than you are. I should love you even ' more, I know." Men have no tact. They can't help it, poor ibinga : The husband of a week laughed as he 1 biased the sweet upturned face, and mid : 1 "Dau't Imagine all aorta of things. 'Why doo't yon toll In lore with that eiorllenl
. looes? You like a big fellow, an<1 cce ' who we* Dot nbanluiely hideout, Inatrad ; c and I— I appreciate virture and learning. | ' 1 did not 'love Minerva Bobble in ' ' a|.iie of Ihm» 1 laved the prvtlieat girl in I , the. wtirld became alie waa Ibe preuled 1 and .arenL Kite uie. , She kiated birn, buralierwarda the mid | • lowly and io a ball whisper—"! hope God will let me die before Be makes me j ugly. 1 could bot bear to live if yon did ' | Tbey tad not been married a month. 1 : They were oo their baoeymooc trip teen ' ! I Leo, and they were very mud: to love— ■ _ I be as a man i«. she a. a woman. U-and 1 ' j that ia quite a different way. N<* that I 1 > And fault with thaL It ia but natural- 1 ! Men and women alwaj. do everything I different— work, play, idle .differently, -j Why should they love alike? But I he 1 I knowledge of the fact duaeo't come to a " | woman until her firal lute has been "win- ' | tcred and summered^' and the lore ia seldom agreeaoh-. llul lo return lo our ' j pretty heroine. Nellie was lured. Ii , should have contented her. and she told " | hereell ao, hut she would have been bape, | net it Charlie had 'jua raid what she wauled him to my. Ii made do difference 1 to I bat h-mey moon, however. They i walked, and dialled, and aal Ii gel her in e the ui vinllgli',. Tbey rowed on tbe river and wandered through the wood and. and ' had such a summer that people never have but once, and then tbry came hack * lo ibe cily and lo Iheir everyday life. Ah. when ll la the borne of married lover*. And there wa. no cloud tn mark their e day* for many bappy moo tha Al laat. ' however, the lime came when they mart he parted for a little while. Charlie found h ll nccrarary to go to O oa hutinera, and ' Nellie could not accompany -him. CI Afle* did not like the parting, bul be , iqrk pbdoaophically. a. roan must, but Nellie nearly cried herself blind. "j Ooly a few weeks, be aald— it waa to be | Nellie gaw ihe time its whole valuj When be had klmed her, she clang to him ™ alimm cuovnlairely. "11 I should oerrr see you again," she aobbed. "My little croc, doo't he foolish," be raid, aod held her mire closely lo him " then, and waa off. Bul be thought of her as he I rod the streets of a strange cily. I and aal aiowe al strange tabid, and he ! dreamed of ber all night. "
1 j But she wore hid hurra to ber bosom, i j Once bit letters were delayed, sod ale I "| wa» tare Ural something urrihle bad hap- I ^ i peered, and waa just raved from nervous i I lever by the Uudy arrival I | Oooc hers did not come; he took it I coolly at tret. 'That osefouoded poal- 1 w I man ha. made a miauke." be raid. Bul | Several days, be concluded lo make sure i I that all waa right, and telegraphed— "U B | well answer at once." Just then, if he j ouuhl have seat hla spirit homey* the ,d , telegraph wire., he werwl<t bare arrn lbi» I picture. Ilia Nellie lying oo her bed. , . j burning to the doctor. j burning to ; *
B , "I am sorry to aay It ta tbe smabp>». | e , madam;" saul cha ganllanran. tail attar i all, nader good treat loeot. It is oo wane j I to have than many other things. Tie r c it no danger in this cur." 1 •Thai cruel disease. * murmured Nellie , r to herself; "Oh. Bcavea, and Charlie i I l.ivea me btcauae I am pretly. 1 dare not i I _ tell him tba troth." Tbe answer I ha! came I to Charlie's telegram was "All right*' , l . Nellie tcui.it by tha nurse, who agfkrd with hrr that there wa. do need c-l J lilghieulug tb* poor nun. "And I wouM ii h , not lave him return now luranyojoaider- i | aiioo." ahe aald. "lie might lake the I ! diaorde." But that was not all brr i ; reason. Then there was a time Nellie i i knew nothing. Thro— ah. what then? i | cnarlla only knew that be was packing : hit purtmantean lo return home, a letter I , | waa brought to him. Be thought it was j hla wife's handwriting, and be had bad no I letter for many days. Be tore It open. J i It began "Sit." It waa not from her. Yet 0 ; bow like here. Be .panted before he „ "»«1 ""I i. 1 "fir— 1 hare had newt to tell you. * I Your wife la dead. She oaugbl the atroll- , pox aotaehow, and it pmvod total. Enc k- ] wa. glad to die b. cause tbe diseaae makra lo > pc'ipie very hideous tocneltmca, afld the 1 j knewyou would Dot lore ber 1 1 Ae was ugly knewy.ru wiiuio ool lore her! tane ugiy
h ! She raid y« aald ao, and bade me toll you 1 i bow dear your lore waa to her until the I* tor. -The none, a1 madras Bloomobeb." j 16 Aa hour afterwards a waller foaad , •- Omriey lyiwg aew^uaeaBra fnx befdr , » ' hit te'J-puL-d rxSo. 11 inuy , a to. (u-jw. 1 !*• Lit do^t c u bua IVa be lauml lbs: he criuW n.A i j j fire there. Tbr place seemed faannced. ' | ' His wife's dresses hang cm the wall, and i ( ra' be teemed lo baa; the amsd af ber feci ! m on the stairs, and hear the door stir. and. j « duxrn time* lifted hto head and looked , toward* it, almost hoping she would cant > to. In hit place .Nellie * "would hare f gathered ap small trifles that he had "* toqebed. aod kepi Ibem where ahe could ' (| hi* grave and sat breidr ii foe ioog^ Dd Lo ire .but those pretty pesaonai hclunginys were cbe vary things be. divBded to tew And Ihcirravt' Ah,Eond Bcaresi. to took ! Ire at it and think that 41 covered, lie did | l» nut eras aak where it was. There bad; been a peflBcript to tte lettrr, *jrlic Umi '
all expenses were paid. And tbe fact i that .be was dead blotted out all minor thing* — all rare the terrible reminder of hi. idle speech. Ton! ahe thought of that i j in dying was vecywoefnlto him. In a i dav or two he locked op the bouse, which i t hroawned, gad accepted the position of j supercargo oo ao ocean steamer. Tbe a a i ' wiih Its troubled wave*, seemed better io i I him than aelid laud; to roam. hi. beat re- i , lief. Ah. we lake the heart with u. where- i j rrr- we go. It i. not tbe land io which we j r that troubles ua. but that heart's woe- I j ful depths. Nor can tea or sky give u. [ comfort. An unhappy man would be no ! r lea* happy could he traveree .pace and ' all ibe r.an,only we do not think ao when I e grief Mings ua to go aomewliera. Tn le . trials la always ihe blunging* of ihe un- , happy. Charles did not ray much, he i c never talked of bis wife. Bui when ibe
! venal returned home a sick man lay in I one of its berth", t wring to aod fro. and c jimuteriog again, sod again a womaL'i t , I "He's been disappointed in ievc." aaid c [ Ihe alewarrle>A and cried over him, and I thought if she had been a fair young lady 1 I he would bare oerer Iwen dirappoiolcd. • . Wheo tbey reached L-mdon the deliiiiltn. I , was over, but a pale skeleton wa. borne I "Take him to Mrs. Boston'.," the cap- < tain had said. "She's a kind woman, ami 1 , will dn what she can for him;" aod poor I . Mr*. Boston, who bad boarded more sea ' j captain* and tbip's officers generally th»n I sny one cold count In a minute, open « her hospitable doors and gtve tbe in 1 f valid ber best bedioom. 1 "I don't miod silling up st nigbta," ah' r raid, "and Nancy is s real good girl, she'll ' i help." Nancy was s shy young woman with , brown hair, short la the neck, sod bet t features were deeply scarred. She wore j tbe plainest possible dress and never i seemed happy; but rioce she came to Mr*. b Bcwton'. door and asked fie work, she had bceo invaluable. "Nancy Saiitb Is a treasure," raid Mr*, y Bodou; "*ud only>i*h I knew what ahe 0 cried about so much; only I can't uk 1 question, no more Hun II she was a lady." d poor Nancy Smilh : Slie wa* oo doubt t nervous when abe stood beside tbe young t man*, pillow a moment. She turnrd pale i, and gave a little cry. ,. bear her, but Mrs. B-wton raid. "I hope ,r you are not overcome by the sight of slckit Aod she answered at once, to a f rightd ened tone— "Oh, no. I'm an excellent ,. ourre. Do let me nuree him, Mra. Bcwi. too." And thus it came to pass that that ,e night Nancy Smith sat up with the invalII id. Be slept os was Insensible; even the doctor did not know which, or thst be je might never a pen hla eyes again. And when Mr*. Boston bad gone to bed. and If all was Mill, tbe strange girl, Nancy hern listed most strangely. She knelt down by tbe bed and klmed Ibe pallid band that ie lay to gro'ly upon tbe counterpane*, aod wbispbercd oeeraud orer again— "Oh.my M darling! uh. my darling!" Bad Mra. Basin ton seen her slie surely wrald have er thought her had. Silence lay oo Ibe city, y. and Hit light of the late riren moon fell lie white through tbe ere rites of tbe shutters and the laceof tbe drawn curtains. A 1
. night lamp burnt to a room. and showed a ' . face that watched intensely, and a motion. . one with dewed eyre. Tbe clock on ' , the mantel ticked slowly. At the ap- 1 pointed time medidne wa. to he given. ' t It waa dropped hetween lips that never 1 - misted; and lay always a little apart. "Be 1 I la dying!" But towards dawn a Chang. - came. Tbe head turned upon the pillow, f lbs lip* parted. F "Nellie.* wbispbercd the voler, "Ndf lie, I waol you.". Then ihe girl, this Nancy Smith, atari- . td. trembling to her fret and knelt beside ' Her face waa dewed to bis when bis bis 1
i eyre opened, and looked al ber. ! "Xrilk ," be raid, again. "Nellie!" then 1 Into a feeble, quleeriog laugh, and rl.-ped ber about the neck. "My dor- ] ! ling.*' he said. And die cried nut — eh, Charles do yr,o me. aod lore me?" and took hi. ; j head opon ber breast. ■ "I've been very gick. hsvrn't ITU | I ! "Yea." aaid she. "eery." I | "I've bad adrram. nr hero craxy." be ' aaid. "which ta It? I thought jroa mar ' ■ dred. Oh. Nellie. II wu horrible. I e thought I at are I — why. how can it b* i r dream? No U was no dream. I'm erary G now. Yet this is Nellie. Nellie," b- | continued, "your hair It cut. yonr. pretty ; face ha* marks on It it never bad be- - r fore- Nellie what doe* it all mean?" a She tamed tbe light high, lifted it. and o held it to her facta. "You are me plain- , lyr ahe raid. ! t "Of courae," aald be. "Why. my drar e little girl, I haven't dreamed that part of ! tbe letter. You've beta ill. though you t did out din What does it all mean? Am L I entirely easy? Bare I been!" ' "Aod you lore me?" she preeiateri. | "My precious wife, bow can I help it? I It's port of me to lore yon?" raid he. 1
"Tben it mcaat that I hare been craxy. j not yon," aald she." "Oh, Obarfie, you , . know you said you cMldaT tore rat If 1 I waa ugly. So, when I found I should be ' so terribly msrL-d acd Bin* loom all ir i 1 ' ' jr. jr. 1 jab w n tie In you rhat I was deuF i r.l~S3tot to kill myself, but badaT oou. i L{«*t. ro I went away. I wasararvant , ' i here wbeo you were benogbt to, and I | didn't think you'd know me." I I Than 1 have lieed that yaar of mia- ' cry." raid Charlie. "Oh. Nellie, Nellie." 1 ! Then be cried oot almost angrily, "What ' a fool I w«a I made oo ioqojfloa. I did ' | nnt eves see the doctor, or discover | where they had, as I supposed, buried I you. I should bare fathomed jroor J ' jachecne al aooe 11 I bad. HowoouUyML ! * . NrUteY' * i "Too aaid you wouldn't love me if 1 1 "■ | was ngly. aod ccwtldoY boar It" * Mra. Bcwtoa }UK then roleriog noes- I * j p*ra^jJ'Yf exptooattona became hlgbly one j tt'°*X2l th( doctor said Ibis STritwacnt '
i should bare killed ao vary sick a mac. ■ But it did dm. ! The re-enrted couple were aoon able to I return to tbrdr deaeried bom*, and bare i though all 'he rewt of tbe world knows ' f ; very well that Nellie's face la not aa pret- '■ i as it used In be. Charlie don ore. lot ' < Ibe beamy that love sere cornea from the ' • light ol tbe glaarea that It wears, and ' ■ endures. Charles mil belie ve* that I e ' ! lores Nellie beaiu«e site is »o pretty. Site ' • better now. and both am bappy. ' I ! Tbe State Senate Committee oo i'ubllc ' i I Ilrelth ha. node a report upon tbe bogus ' . | butter burinrea which stroogly reinforcre I I the uranmitree'a toll providing - for the . i prohibition of the manufacture of thia : article. It ia shown that butterloe. : nhemargerine aod all the various compound* made lo imitate butter are made A
of oils sod fa's of all degree* and eoodi- * lions of nwlutre.. aod that the stuff is V invariably add for butter. The main defence >,f lite manufacturer* has been lbs E hotels and restaurant.; n grrat many people who purvey food for " the public are ''willing to defraud their * euatomer* to theranie ray that tbe renders £ of the sham butter do. A challenge to - produce a single family that consumed u ■ Grgue butter knowinsl^ wu dcc-lmed.and h . ibis wassigniflcaot. The act-cat tod artificial * butter lis. now had a fair trial, and tl ia <! coodemnerLafcevery count of the id-i-mw =? i inenl. !t%a. been proved that it ia made * of otoierial. which, if oot positively un- > , wboksemr. are repaid ve, have never been 1 ! used aa food.tnd may easily be poiaooous. < It has abo been shown that chemical, arc , used io tbe process which arc certainly ' . poisonous, sod ca.cs bare been cited in 1 - which. persons engaged to the manufaccurc t r suffered seriously in their hesllb from I constant contact with tbe alleged innocu- ' 1 oua materials employed. I Tbe testimony taken altogether eatab- 1 .' liabes the -fact that the genuine butler proP dure of the Bute is. being driven out of ' t tbit market by Ihfat clreap and nasty euh- • stitute. Tbe committee puts the annual - c lost t-r the State at tietween M.000 000 e nod fll0.000.000. Three figure* may le e esoessire. but there can be no doubt that the injury Indicted upon the dairy Interest s is considerable, and it i. equally clear that e tbe manufacture of the sham butler is distinctly Ormurabring. not only to the makers arxl vender*, bat lo a great ouotber of the consumer* of the article. A* It the law providing that all artificial butter should be sold no lu owo merit, aod with lt out disguise baa been a dead letter from >. the Aral, and as tbe temptation intake c advantage of Ibe cheapness of the stuff 1. !f plainly loo strong for the morals or moat d Interested parties, prohibition ia the only d means of protecting the public.— -V. T ^ Sir Waltor Scott was dlaflgured by a dub fool, but ha bore his lameness bravely I and cheerily. I-otd Byron was also lame. The contraction of Ibe tendon Aebi.lt. of r each foot prevented him from putting hi. ;'l heels to tbr ground, and thus compelled , him lo walk on the balls aod toes r.f hia , fret. Leigh Hunt sneered al him as one sneered oar
who went bopping about like a bird. Byron's lameness afflicted hia mind *■ , well a> hi. body, ll made him a moping , and a mow* man. Early in bt* childhood, hla mother made him bitterly . rea'iae the fact that bt was physically , defsnued. She waa a paaaiunate woman, ; who would oue moment hvisb klw« on her child, aod al the orxt drlee him from her w lib blows. Oo ooe oocaaioa. rrlieo hysterical with' ill-u-mpre. after heaping abusive- epithet, upon htm. atie mucked him aa 'A lame , heat."! The child looked at ber. with a , fearful light flashing Imm his eyes, and llgm iia-ning i.....,.,.. rr™, „
The acme wa. in lib mind when lu- j wrote rhe flrat word, "f "The lKformcd j Tran.lonDr.lt ' ; "Be/fka— Out, hunchback! i rirmd if— 1 waaboro au, mother." j Years after an incident ruvurwt which a exhibited the p-»-t a WDMuvrneas hr li. t "ThlSftsa'v. mv I cf cried a tmk hov. t i* Byrrm wa. Ftr-trping with It.rgrra lo ( | hia carriage fn"«D the d'.rrway of a bouse. , ; "He serosa to koow you." said Rogers , "Kturw mi!' waa the bluer reply; , ' ooe know, roe — I am deformed." , ' Men Who Throw Light on the Labor ' Question. ■ »'«» Street Sew*. 1 Some day the aenat - oommrttee oo labor < I will have Kuweit Sage before it. to tbe « - « itnera bog. aod tbe rxaroiostioo will < lead off with: 1 r "Let "a are— ab— Mr. Sage, you were ' I tbe poor too of a poor firmer up lo New ' I Hampshire?' 1 "Had to rtudy your book, by tbe light I . of a enrooob fire!" 1 "I did." 1 f "Went barefoot in winter ami ragged ' in aummer, and up to yaar eighteecto '
year you never had fifty cent* to your ' "At tbe age of 1# von begun in speru- I leu? Yort t.A led a >*■ >■ cb 1 t . *■"' ' F ctr. and ip ormr- ol rime worked ir ; 1 > cult i'lto fifty .beep pelts - nod t bridW . 1 ■ KxacUy. ah." |< "And you are now worth miltlo«)*r | "Yet, a few." "All made by selling tinware from a : ' ■ peddler'* wagon, and tetqpring core* and | 1 , mart, at 10 eeota a reancve!" , "Every rWlf " 1 "That win "da Mr. Sage.- You and; r Mr. Gould and the other boyi hare thrown i 1 I a heap of light no this lab' question, aod r ] our gratitude I* unbrnrnded." , Photograph*, Engravings, nc . an be , etquWteiy rotored wtrh liquid AriOnte** made from Htamood Dye*. Knit directions for ihta b-arotfnt art work, with a band- ' . . wieae ootervd cabinet pbotnanrtto any | adrtraaa for 10 oeota. Wtua ARlcitiau- i gl»»* 0a, BurlingMri, n. - <
"Uncle Tom'n Cabin." j • tbi iv*i* mrroar re rm. r.wo. . NetwitbMaodtog tbe arnouot and variety , of ber literary labor*, Harriet Beecber , Slowc will alway* be llrougtit of and re- i . membered a* tbe author of "Uncle Tomt ] CHbtn." Thourand. and ten* of tbourand* ! ol peraon*. many of them her own , . compatriots, are unaware that she ha* ] i , writ tm anything else, to .uch_*n extent j , bar chief effort overshadowed all ber | , other effort.. Although by no mean* the j , author of but ooe remarkable work, at j ; author* hare torn, tbe almost un- ] , , precedented success ol 'Uncle Torn" baa j , , made tbe novel, that succeeded it teem , . iuaigoificant. Neeertbclira bad »be , , writ leu ' He Mln'talci'a Wooing," "Old | Town Folks?' aud "Agnea ol Scerento," , 1 alooe. ahe would bare b«n of the flrat of , . American novelists, and would hare held novelist*, and
high place among contemporaneous , writer* of fiction. , Harriet Elisabeth Bcecltcr, daughter of Lyman Bcccber, wa* becoe at Litchfield, Ct.. aod paMed ber flrat year* eery much u moft children of Mrictly orthodox parentage do. Inoculated eery early with the rigid irrinctplee of orthodox theology, •be exhibited a prccodotr* piety and a degre* of conieieutiomoea* almost morbid. She waa very studious aqd food of reading, but she ocrer read novels, having bred taught to believe that they were wicked and dangrrous to tb* eouL No site often lay awake at night reflcctoo her trespasses, and torturing her- 1 self with the possibility of having tinned .gainst the Holy Ghost— a sin which the bible declares lo be pardonable neither in this world nor in [be next. In the' pari generation tbe unpardonable w
tin caused as much trouble and diacnarioo ^ among theologian, as it did distress lo unrighteous folks. But having been intertried figuratively of late, the aererely „ orthodox mind has been relieved of j periodic agony on that particular point of e the scriptures. g At fifteen. Harriet yielded to the c common drMioy of Juvenile New Bug- ,, . lander*, and became a teacher, acting a* n I auiriant to ber sister Catharine, twelve „ I years her renior. who had established a . school at Hartford. She remained there , I five years, when .he accompanied ber „ I father, who had been choacn President of l Lane ThenkRIcal SeminsrT.to Cincinnati, , I a here she met Calvin E. Stowe, Professor , ! of Biblical Literature at that Institution. t . They presently became interested in one , i another; their interest rapidly ripening t r Into an ardent attachment which resulted , in utarrisge. She was tben twenty-four, 1 her husband being ten year* older. A. , f »he had won so much mare renown than t . he. it ha* often been inferred that Proferaor ( t Stowe, like so many hushaods of noted , r literary women, is a commonplaee.lnferior , • peraoo. He is, on tbe contrary, a man of , decided talents great learning, energy and , benevolence. To him Ohio is largely a indebted for her exoelicnt school system, » which he was very active is founding, , r h.8h by voice and pen. lib went abroad , • on her behalf to investigate the public , lf acho.il. of Prorata and other German , • State*, and 'waned, on hit return, a report ^ i rl o0 "Kteroentary Education to Europe." ! , « which was dirtributcd throughout Ohio , e fv ber Icgblalure and widely circulated in , ' by widely circulated in
other parts of tbe west. Iu 1850 be was , ' ebnaco Professor of Disunity at Jlowdoin ( : G -liege. Brunswick. Me., sntl be snd his , ' wife removed thither with several stnsll , ObUdren. s Up to this lime Mra. Slowgksd written . very little, aod she was then thirty -eight. ( 1 Beyond a few sketches and tales, wnieb , 1 bad been collected and put between covets^ , some years before, with the title of "The j I'" May Flower." she bad done almost Doth- ' log in a literary way. There slight. , r -tentative efforts, however; bad furnished , " evidence of rare capacity for composition, ( A and many of her friends frltcnofldeol that , nod many or uer inruur ■> - i
she would make a name If she should take , seriously and sysmnalioslly to literature, j thoae fneods a at Dr. Gamaliel , Bailey, editor aod proprietor of Tin- , National Era. ao anti-slavery paper published to Washington D. C. He wrote ber repeatedly, requesting tier locontribute tsioty salted to hi* Journal. She replied that sire Lad 0# lUna. occupied as site was whit tomathtdd ami -domes' ic dttiies. V* any sustained writ. Be urged ber Miongly. telling her she c->u'd du it lo weekly | instollincnts; aod flnsl'y she c .mpliret, rather against ber will. Slie rat up 'hue nights tu arila the first chapters oi the Uie. and got the uwouscripl off barely in lime to catch the mail. This was the beginning of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." which list been more widely tjhr ciliated and read and exercised more ini^| enoe. probably, than any work of fiction produced. It was prosecuted with lite greatest difficulty, aod under the moat adverse circumstances. Many of the chapter a acre penned in tbe midst of the distraction and con fusion of a home Ibe reverse of opulent; while ahe waa in the and what might have been Ihe nuraery-if she had auch a luxury -coking. setting Ibinga to rights, and at hod tog ber babies. Much of the celebrated novel waa written ailh the, paper, w remap wreroan
. toehtoo. oo ber lap; and an Want .ho llit - floor. Stic toiled at brr task tariously and untiringly, and soon became eu interested her character* acd the progitea of ber I ho* utoJat.e aa * onul lira s4nt nail he- n | finished, and aha had goo* to bed. Bra j arepy wax always ready in Uroe.and.towsrd . Ihe last, ahe gX so ia advanoc of the i printer* as lob* s We to read ber maDQI i script lo her husband and aeeeral of herneighbor*. They were much moved by it, and were sure pf Its aoocess, though 1 neither they onr anybody rise could hare i ' anticipated bow rinpendoai tbe aoreqto > would be.' Proferaor Blowe sljiy eeotnred the optnp* Ural il might briag her to enough G j to buy a new silk gown after it had been ' issued in bonk form. Dr. Beiler peidjier. a» agreed. »500 lor Ihe "Cehln." and on liacnmpietion added fiSOO moreonac- - ■ cjunt ctl ita heorfll to hiaaubacripUon list-' * U wag only four moBtha from ibe day v
I ibe siory, writing whenever she bad fifteen ; iniDutea* leisure; anywhere, under any • conditions. Dating Us progress abe lived st Andres er. Mara , where ber boabsod filled the chair of Literal ore in tbe TheoSeminary, having rooialood at Brunswick bot two year*. "Uncle Tom" excited tbe deepest stieslion in The National Era, nearly trebling , circulation. But as it was rend by ibnlltiooitts mainly, then comparatively a small class, it 'drew little Dotioe iff Ibe > community al large, where. iodeed,lt bad hardly bceo heard of until phi between envoi. Bed it. not been so published fit I reputation would bare bcem ephemeral, In 1 a<l likelihood; it would never have reached ' the greal pohlic at sib As aaoc aa issued 1 two volumes il crc-aicd an extraordinary commotion. It wu devoured lo the North, ' and excited wrath wherever read to tbe 1 South, where It waa, of course, largely 1
' denounced as a foul libel on Ibe patriarchal and divine institution of slavery. It was r prorpcrous beyond example, Edition after edition was sold, l'rtsar* were kept ron- ' ciog day and night lo supply tbe demand [ which steadily increased. The first year ' 150,000 copies were disposed of in the • United States, aod nearly as many in ' Greal Britain and on the Continent. No work has been so widely sold in anything ' like the same lime since the diaoovery of I the art of printing. In tbe thirty 'year* ' that have passed il ia estimated that about 1 two millions of copies have been lamed all over Ibe world, ll hu been translated ' into more than twenty-five languages, ^ including Armenian. Welsh, Arabian, c Syriac, Chinese, and Japanese, into every ° living language. Indeed, that has a literature. There have been six different French
editions, eighteen German, and ceuotlreu. editions in Englsml. In the British Museum a oumUr ref shelves are exdvalvdy devoted h> Ibe editions of "Uncle Tom," which, though have seen them, I shall not attempt to enumerate. Tbe name ot Harriet Bcecltcr Stowe was carried lo every quarter of llic cirilixed-globe. Hundreds of thousands heard of her who never beard of any other American. The dramatic versions and adaptallousof tbe noedcoukl scarcely be counted; for ll Iiu been put upon the stage of all natioos, and is bxih played in Ktore of tongues. It ia idle to ny that its wooderfol success is due to tbe opportuneness of Its sppcaranoe. The first stosalion it roused bare been, doubtless was, ascribabkthat; hut subsequently it made ita way its burning truth, its dramatic force and picturesque presentation. Young jwoplc of the present day who can rememnothing of slavery in connection with republic are fascinated by it* narrative, and moat foreigner* rend it aa a work of art. Il still draws crowds to the theater, taking as much of a bald on the ordinary un tbe cultivated classes; and there is telling but it may keep il* full allurement for centuries to come. Despite tbe unprecedented sale of Ibe great novel, its aulhordid oot make much money trout iu Tire general supposition Ihst il enriched ber is errtuocooa It 1 should have done ao, unquestionably; but understand that $15,000, owing to ' ' various untoward circumstances, wsuid ' nearly coyer all ber receipts from royally 1 dale. She should have cleared some-
thing like $500,000. But who, with very rare exceptions, ever got any greal of money by writing? Money getting and manuscript. making are Inherently and absolutely incompatible. •ll eery seldom happen* that an a nr hot's genius remains , Uudiacuvered, or indeed, unsuspected by any ntutubrrr of persons . . until be or ahe has been turned ol (urty,as io case of Mra Btnwe and Uncle Torn." So fierce was the bowl, ao bitter the censure of this work of fletioa in the South and io many parts of Ibe North, llul *l<c publialied a ' Key lo Uncle Tom's CaMo." to prove thai the book was oot the moo-
' at run* false bora!, the abominable slander, had Pern pronounced. Tbe key con- ' uined the original facta and alalemeui* ' ou which the novel bad been baaed, unl - they were convincing to any unprejudiced mind. Tbe worst libel that cCuld be : tillered against the peculiar institution, *1 > any time of H*ixistcoee,waaUi!aTarsiah- ' ed facta Happily we can now speak of ' it io the gpst. F.ir near a century, slavery, • a.cverytiody oowaeeawAsanovcrwhehn.. ' | ire (ham* aod cur** to the nation. Mrs. . I -t rae.llriog seventeen year* in Cincinnati, < which w aa thro almost as pnetlaeerj aa ' ample facilities for crossing the Ohio into Kentucky, bed abundant opportunity lo a study hcr revolling theme. The year (1853) following the publica- | tioo of "Unck Tom." ita author went I abroad in* all ibo frvabnea of ber Dew -born h celebrity, and waa meal oordiaily received, < especially io England, by many of the G highest and heal personages of Europe, aa g well as by the communally. Tbe Duke e and Duchess of iRutberland entertained g ber with suiafWfiona boapliaUty, aod al] t ber tread seemed like a triumphant - march. Jcnca Bxsm Bbowkx. j Gultaau'a Prediction Raoallad. 3 New Tor* Graphk.
( It will be remembered lhal whan the 1 ibe prisoner leaped from bis 'chair asd r shouted: "ft id -"ill Rurrith yo- ir r ' r Cork mi,, the Lira UM AUraney, Lu iuas 1 his office, and is locking far someihicg to . drinking aoon after tbe trial and is now * r common drunkard. - ? Two of tbe Jurymen are dead, two osure b have failed io buaincra. rnd another U r hopelesaly inane. s Three of the medical expctla also iaatifirxl lo bis ranily are dead, and a fourth b And DOW in a recent paper it is announcn ed that J. W. Tti^tn, ihe cbemlsf who r> discovered ibe potsoc in the boquet Mra „ Sccrv i I. r stnl lo her brother on the moraine of bis execution, has gone craxy. and been 1/ ommuied lo the GoreroamU asylum tor y treauncnu

