BTABOFTHECAPE
STAR OF THE CAPE.
YOL. Y.
him, ■neh u I know he lihrd—that *' ,**r. I them while the
looked on. Whiter-
uuw. ap itexn or down, I to plm ud do it At but I bee an to think I ought to retain*-'’* ' •ought the trim for nr jonrner home* Wild. Bitting, in the milroid 8KT ".TKfiF/_ '
Son, iirineipilly
•uue * anew nothing of, exoepi j mme. PreeenUr one of them b-.-gaa
•neik of my ■onl wife. ued to eee 1 greet deni time, 1 ' ihe usd, “ but-
_ 11 well, yon know how they i.ui hid • mother-in-!»ir raging 1 • •
ly, to I hire kept iwiy.
"So hire I.”
" followed 1 lingb of derieion. e-liw r ezcUimcd i hud ; I do pity them,
CAPE MAT CITY, N. J„ WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1873.
IODB MOTIlEB-l?f.LAW.
A good many thingi, tome of them good, many ihup end oecuioniUy cruel, biro been end of liteof mothera- — —d now eomes one oTAhii . ^ .’ dot i“* l “ d toll* her Bide of tte itory. That ihe tells it well, will be admitted by all who reid it: ' Left 1 widow, ifter i few yeun of moit nnhippy mimed life, I retired, with mr two children, to kimill town,* when 1 intended to devote myiolf to
the rare of their ednrati I think the enjoyment children before they re ten ii Tory greet. All f tendenciee ceem loinre 1 with time, we eu mn peine we m taking will bat the desired mult,
rjomiiee ire so beiaulfil! Bren ohUdiih liking leeini ■ talent, licking QtfiT opportunity to deyelop into e? My girl ind boy went te ichool in thi poraing. In the afternoon we walked
together 1 , end we ill thret '
lonw, rambling welki. 1 table, end rrar eyenings,
then how delightful w, uur c |«**-hipl Bow I tried in orery to sow the good ieed. I hare uid I
•rary diye when,auferingfrsm thcloee tie household dntiee. I remombe ‘ Bice little diehee, the neitly _ -—=-><5 ‘ho ehrefolly itended beby. Which of ill thie wie the' -rand” which excited the i..._ 96 of thon young people J hi of Fenny, her good looka, h
wondering whit her nati
— Bnt hero we ire. Thera waiting to meet me, dear child:
bnt there wu come one with her, • meet iniigniflcint looking indiyiduii, with Tory prominent eyee and large whiskers.
Uta it night it tniir clothes—my a were plain enough. They nercr kno of ooune, the saoriSom I mode tl Wray might have pleunres. That my children lored me, mpeeted «ne, I need not rapeet. Their flrat , with horrid little danbe, Which I itiU trail. ■re, tied np In little packages, and dated. Ah 1 happy, happy days I—days when n paper of aweet cake is anfflolent
...I, aa my means did not admit ia going to oollege, I obtained ad-
•— '-' [a ijjip the j ‘
Why did m "oreb ,
glad abt — — _™ She introduced her oompanit
Mr. Jen Irina; and wherena _ anxiety to be alone with her, Mr. Jenkins, with a great flooriihpf politeness, walked all the way home with ns. Before I could nntis the strings of my bonnet he told me that Fanny bad promised to marry him I I waa thunderstruck, haring in the annoyance of his K ence forgotten my forebodings of an hoqr before. I had read with much attention, in rarioni highly landed book*, of the great and imperative
girl to be a holp-
ui. Waa this my thia dapper little
• — —d amiable, bnt so utterly ln|igniflcant I He bad nninter-
My coming wa» an
,, - i>egan to ut up ata
alwaya walked alone.
D-_- ,s-i looiety and ill aelate and friendleas. Friends, like plsnte, mait be cnltirated. I found no oonae-
ninlity in elUier o* '*
From a detailed aooouht in the Kan- -» Ota (Mo.) TTmea of the sariee of mnrdcfa committed by the Bender family near Obenyyale, Kansas, we eon- “— .following statement af the
». On the IMh of last March
Dr. William H. York, brother of State sf Kansas, lof tFort Soott
made for him. Hia neighbora joined • Ida brother, OoL M. York, and the l “~ — *-Teed to Ohenyrale,
- —,— had to end. Early m April, some men rode over to the Bender House, about two miles south of Cherryrale, to learn something, if poaribIe,^0OT<»rnin^^Dr. .York._ They
matayatenoui disappearance.
—t aAms to hare alarmed the
Bender family, for aoon after
riding from the prairie one day smoke arising from their chimney; there was so sign of life anywhere about the premiaee. He ro J - •- **—
house, and UiauiTestigatioiis him that the people had fled
Ho galloped to CherryTalo, and a party was soon organised to examine idlQ. the
Brool
Seventy feet above the apriii^u
the flight of the Bonders waa because of — ’me, perhaps,that of murdfr. — and thorough examination led to the discovery of a trap-door^i the floor of one of the rooms of the house,
data of bringing
ilammy. waa foOnd#NoUiing fop howerer, rewarded their search in
I
It will thna be seen that the cables will extend from anchorage to anchorego, and that the bridge will not only be anapended from tower *- * *—•
oa either aide of the anchorages. From the
* * I * • the bridge the travel on the streets, directed* by a viadnet; and the structure be built of mason it. The bridge in its divisions will therefore consist of a central span 1,600 feel long—aboutthe d : stance from the now Post-offloe to Duane street— the side spans oxtending to the anchorages, each 030 feet long—or 100 feet longer than the whole of the Niagara Suspension Bridge—ini Ihe stone - duets each 1,203 feet in length, wl
10 dignity of keeping looking at many dwellings i looted, one which required a greet many repairs, and now my aervioee ware in
yery great requestattended to all the directions Mrs. Jenkins wished givCn to
.SSR.
mittanoe for him into the place of bnaiseaa of a friend. One day I heard an aonnaintanoe say that my son admired a Mias Benson. Then first shot into my heart-that acute pang of jealousy Which I had baard a woman feels when another woman dans to lay claim to her ' -on—a bitter, nnraaaonlng feeling, bnt
A year later he announced that he waa engaged to this rely girl, and asked me to go and see her. I went She was tall and very thin, and atyliah looking with reddish hair, and long, thin hands and feet. She won a great many flonnoea, and a greet deal of jewelry, of the pole gold kind. Her manners were very sesr» bnt aomehow or othar |
rr trifling, and quite rtn — T * *-me I alt in mr rock- , an nr^tlunking. n with which* .— ___J oommitting — , overcome the mysteries of marbles ol every degree, lored every poppy and kitten be had erer adopted and taken to his heart—why ecmld I not at least fry 'isreddish-hairedfdrl? People "OI yea, I wa* very ^gatain .— - - —tfowtaSaly, and are, aa yon aay, aovery A'ywj* 1 !* 1 - . . —> *—S . months with her h time I saw ber -y that I erer ithhor. ThonJa
the perfection af oerranta. later, “the lorelieet little baby," my graodaoo. Then, acme montha later, n ° l ^ bri « ht The baby had bad the croup, my r~ VI '* - tonoh of the iatormittent; SMSuSr-fcSSrs;.;

