Star of the Cape, 16 July 1873 IIIF issue link — Page 1

"aSSsssx- —

. VOL. V.

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., tTEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1873.

- - /-

NO. 31. .

*“ W*v" i-i^&isl:^ Item! of Intervet.

rounornrecAPE

STAR OF THE CAPE

Bowla*. wincing a UtUe, jftw th. grisarSAgS

form Martin to -J in ■»h«t »ny

(orgotum ng*. -bon with jnrt onl u ItorotL, . •wsot myitory and

mto porbapo DoUj heiwdf. who » headstrong enough, bat who soonjod bare Tory little thought an to 1

ofXghtten Dorothy Lyme ia' touch in need of sober

Joroth* L thoughts

tided just tis' much

oounael andjttaid wisdoin aa man another young woman, but Dorothjr^nad a

ir young worn of thinking!

forming ideas a— queer by aome. Etou good Bowles, the only mother Dorot* erer known, called her strange,

'twenty, but

nlar heretic, unlike m

faror of the richest man around, the more aptly

-* *»--••Trotta’' .

of late, and appeared

greatly impressed with Miss Lyme, fho

played the hostess charmingly. ‘‘Hiram Biddeford was not ao old a* SSga.^imd DorotbT knew notf

in* of men, except what she had.'•--id

vj-' - ■ - •n-t —. .11

ally settle down after that ' * possession about Dorothy which no could think of calling aolesnnity. Ssfi: ffi ing warmly, steadily on the pure white tiles of a ehepol floor, atesUnff ooli

i the daxal

above, than

velvety meadow—all gold ai

SMOOTH WATERS.

"If only Dorothy might like Biddo^Aud Martin Lorford paced hla library

and aighing winda

Dorothy, left very early by her father, sr last aarriring parent, to the care id treat of his friend, Martin Lorford, _jd been sent away to school among

h peerishly, his white,

l thrust behind him now and again, the supple fingers twirling

template in h et Dorothy wi own, which

i sobriety painfnl I it withonflT'will <

Sis

be hanged if I like to oo

rapted by the uaoal visits and holidays,

a.

to a man double her own age, beoauae of his bank aeoount, and a ponderous, great bouse, with antiquated sideboarda, whose oarved lags a yaara older than Dolly, “ " Gixia at Dorothy^ age pmtioalarly what they do want,' Martin Lorford's old friend, adi and housekeeper, Jans Bowles, turning the heel of the gray stocking she had

grim old house, deeply seated in Ar m and quaint ahmbbery, oooupied

mm' “

_ beautiful as to s who held out the- —— - ilae ot aqfnethlng rare In Dolly, declaring that-ene never meant to go back to the dull routine again, and fiiat, if aha was found laoking in anything essential, her guardian should seeofi her.

This he

ipted after some n

_ W of late the

had at first proven a delightful breal in the monotonous life at the “ Crofts, bad been closed for days, then weeks,

ig it would be, upon my

dispose of his ward, as, of - II 1—1.1 1. i. ri-ht

in the oc

if course that w

— fine match for her, truly, Martin looked out over the tops intervening trees, at the imposing gmblea and red chimneys of the smart brick iram Biddeford hi

’the alarming symptoms which rered him at tisnea, Dolly's guardian thought very seriously about OTiMin. T'-'S- —ns S V

length declared herself better pleased

word.’' (Here, then, was a worry some to remain at home, learning proper snarl and a frown going fretfully to- housekeeping thinga from Jane, and

gether.) " A pretty thing—a line state -* -*-'-1 we should have presently if

—si— s allowed

playing wild, mournful melodies on the r. s'—l -1.1.1, af.rtin's mother

oldharpischord which Martin’s mother s-s _.^s •- —— Mm with in his

though. —w „ --- providing Dolly with a'goqd home. There was no girl anywhere—m all .JO world—for that matter, who deserved better things than Dorothy. She was young and beautiful, and why shonld sbe not look np, and although Lawyer Biddeford was not jnst the aor —*> v.rfie wnnM have' choeen.^ye

trust him to d(

"^ndwhrahe had arrived at this sadsfaetory eoneluaion he ‘felt aa if a band had taken hold of his heart and given it a strong wrench inside his bosom, and he very nearly hated the owner of red brick house across his own velvaty But this was selfish. He would not give way to that desire, stronger than his wish for life, to keep Dorothy in that lonely house, to bear him company, and, perbapa, close his eyes at last. If only Dorothy might like Biddeford. That would make it easier he thought

—or tried to think.

Perhaps Airs. Bowles wss right. men know more of each other in auol matters, and she had no doubt studied this one’s nature too well to be mistaken, and she had very often expressed it, that Dorothy was a girl with no real deep feeling for any one except herself, and quite in love with an easy life, which means fine things to wear, and the best

to eat and drink.

"And a woman may even learn to love a man who will provide her these and

odernJely well."

Dorothy’s suitor had been encouraged by the two moot interested in her, and given to understand that he

i shyly, and looked straight into

‘* Pro no right toqoestion you further,

ear; keep it a secret if you wish. Dorothy looked dirtreoeed.

" lore the noblest of men, with only ■nit He dree cot esteem himself

highly el

“ Meaning jnst yy

"Oh, Dolly.”

Presently when I her collar and noon S of yon to lores u I was afraid yon i

marry me off in spite of myself, noi

"And you think j

lore me, D

Norwegians claim that non, a bold adventurer from the coast of Norway, discovered the present United States in the year 1000^ and with hia oompanions resided

iy? Sill

years. They do not propose to allow Christopher Oolnmbna to enjoy ' ouor of haying been the Aral white __ to land in America.when it rightfolly belongs to the Captain Erickson > j( j_ Accordingly they are cotmoney to build a monument to mntryman at Madison, wis., and

i had thrived wi Which meant that a

i long ago.

oily on it. d learned

Another disappearance—the shiny hair by this time quite in a tangle. Martin wont with a radiant, albeit ■hamed face, to Jane, ‘who let fall

shower of stitches, and ~

into a groat

" She ktibw it all along ; designing thing, no doubt." "Don't call nanies, Janie, because it's mo,” said Dolly, putting her head down on tho lavender ribbons, in her

1 caressing way. "Well, the L ' * I don't often.

t help it. I'm

gladl

And poor Jane left her yam to mercies of Doliy'a whito kitten went away to have a hearty cry, what, she hardly knbw; only that

somehow thought aa plainly of Robert as-if tho grass had not bcejygrow’”"

above him for thirty year* (S Martin reliquisbcd al! idea of dying, as Dolly said that Dr. Ledysrd

> Dolly

le Postal Cards.

their own pick and choice, e of one thing; in that

in call her, wi '

i childhood, years ar r was a Dorothy Lyu

to ameos of it; abo may love aa iy times aa you let her. Girls take to It naturally, aa they do some yean farther beck to the mumps ana the n~at«a But what kind of mi suppose Dorothy would pick < future master—her hnsbs- • “ • •• -* >nw *ret-_,

.a left with

. fit, always ar justly. Don’t

isr own wing things

a trifle more ohoei

lightest wish:

and delicate bijouterie h

» have one word to aay upon the subject. Ton like Lawyer Biddeford—well and good; Pva — doubt Dorothy will oome to it ia tin--. Mrs. Bowles smiled grimly at the top of her atartobod cap-frill, reflected from the old fashioned mirror with a er-*— gilt frame, which had occupied buy mantel at the Orofta ever so years before this Martin's day. 8 membered times when first she ei the Orofta aa maid to its gentle mistress

■ .1 er last birthday a grand ]

^affectionate guardian, Martin.'

And so Dorothy had lived on, thinking her own thoughts, dreaming her own dreamt, and conjuring up such delicious fancies as oome to such imaginative young ladies planed like Dorothy.

This calm, uneventful existence could me on through oountleaa ages.

in's piety now? A Philadelphia gentlcm probity. and o * *—

Dorothy^a^ced her guardian.

ir for his suit.

had already ask-

Martm stood within the folds of hia

by postal card, that, " Unless that at bill for washing was settled, Mrs. M loney wonld brmg suit before sr

heart, for hia clerks saw

like a sheep thief. Another Philadelphia

epistle:

either of theeo happy people

iuuiivu for or required a change, but changes oome fist enough, aU the same.

bo tho fact pleaaant orotberwise

Is in cherry oor Robert

tying np those an excellent

Jan e noticed «. — — — spoke of it, then Dorothy, who kept si-

’•SVSSBKb.-pa-dlr guardian had settled on aome won bo his wife al last, Dorothy, and i bring^har here before wo knr ^Shouldn't you?" And Dorothy looked placidly from the window. " Why not ? Mr. Lorford was pi i.aT, to do thinga hurriedly, and was certain thathis choice would pi

" after all this time.' take hia own time, and

and raiaing the pale bine either," said Jane, dryly, meaning that

•fwsabeii out by ohanoe tun, I biare, meet this thin wrinkled >hite eap-frill and pretentioiii

Lhei, aaia jane, aryiy, meaniu B vi.i _ man of forty had no right to make fool of himaelf, whaterer others might do, or ho would himaell hare done the twenty years before, which ia oonmoer-

a at the "Orofta," shonld diaher guardian from bringing mistress, where she bad been

. Dorothy 1 Mrs. Bowloa?"

’ _ said Mrs. 1

world, and saw him ride away a backward glance, but with ins pride, and a sense of hia victory.

" ' •jrd.who

.east, so it teemed to Lorford,

hia face in his hands and groaned

aloud.

A black cloud suddenly obscured thi sun. a deep, ugly shadow lay on thi golden meadow, and the gloomy pines outside, and a denser one on Martin Lorford, who realised everything in one moment. The revelation came too late to effect him any good. H® had been all his life a dreamer, and an id' permitting other men to bear off all prises while he looked on. A step broke the staineas, and a light dress rustled over the floor. Dorothy ' id oome in to aak his blessing. Could ha trust himaelf ? He turned with a strange smile, his lips drjr, and the hand he held ont bumknd now my Dolly is quite happy, ■e. I know all about it, dear. HiBiddeford asked me for you a

— ; hia lather dr. ministry. Well, a postal card J him the other day, on whi-h

J

sr College, visi ditorial Commi

intended to rely on insamy for thede- piU^fc Mp ,i 0i — ---e- - - „ . fence of the prisoner, called out a strong maa i .avantagooos cfreumSUnees, es- rell, Quincy A. Uillmore, and Horatio protest from District-Attorney Phelps i ubliahed finally a brewery, wlpdli isstill Allen, determined upon the aito from and a pointed rebnko from Judge Dan., ' in ral i 01 , under the proprietorebip ! Anthony's Nose across to Fort Clinton and for a little while there was smte a j o( nephew, and realised a fortune. | as the most feasible one, and the plan

rssryof A

Bull, Bjomson, tho greatest of N gian noveUsta, the Swedish Mil

years before Columbus landed Island, in the Bahamas, ia too w . Ubliahcd to be disputed. The^wftbe-

Jower at Newport, the Digbton Writing Rock and a skeleton in armor which — dug np at Garnet Point a few year

ad Which the

and peopled. AlHhesi

Christopher Colon]

"STT-,

rsa

worried the Spanish Court

| UL

..... agreeable time, ia located on a farm of 1 about JOOacroa, two miles east of Ponghpnsoner | kc —and on tho eastern banka of

nee would j the Hudson. Tho foundation was laid

jtolfifiL^MAttliewWi '" tho wife and motlier of tho partie tho tragedy, waa called aa a witnesi tho defence, and hours were oeco in a recital by Mro^Walworth ^ wr statemsnt of tho counsel that

, of connsel fi

tcly that tl: and tea tin

Irish liberal

brains have widened deepened with thetpequi

— held frequent meetings, daring tho past few weeks, in relation .i -w » Ki-.iiou of railroad furnlah the , to build the Tho bridge, it will be remem-

i 1868-9.

Edward W. Ser-

.n court. Judge Daria dc o admit all of Walworth's let

tho greater part of

voted to tho estabhahmen' lEISa'F ^

noble cd. 'nie

moral Sorrell wan adoptthe building of a ^irancii Turner's, on tho Erie Rsilng in on easterly direction, another brunch rood from Nose to Lake Mahopoc or to connect with the New nd other railroad.. Both of

tSie Board of Tras-| way, --- — . ,

tees securities to the amount of St08,-1 and also onother branch road from An empty

000 ; in 1864 ho pnrohoaod and present- ! Anthony's Noae *° " , .K ) " 1 fuj,. r "jM 1 non wdien a negro boy re-

and there ia no doubt that her ;!?'om which indebted-I and the Hudson Suspension Bridge, the There is shook to bo pubbriied which, onv has been exceedingly valua- h „ canM uS by I is Us', will. By Erie Railway, and the oombn.Aion of (rom ,u title, -c .houlS think would bw

"id greatly strengthened ' instrument also he made thecollege railroads known aa Uie New York, Bos- a very Inurcsting one-" Men jmd by toward iKitS. The I legatee of hi. estate, li bin and Montreal Railroad, will be ... uiemone. o' ~ "

.ti^ that^opre^ ahoold be j f^'Tl.T.'^ the West. North. | Man. th,

fiiippcwm wan is hundred ar

Gen. Kauffmann armonnoe* that the The Khan of Khiva fled to Yonmsndow. i following gem of descriptive ig waa penned by an Illinois ror in his description of a recent wedding. He ays: “The Mayor gaiooted up the ohnreh aisle swaahying and gyrating like a Chinese Joes with

and des

id Blseklock, aged forty Years, a ado fanner, residing on the Har-

inliis bed, f

laudanum, a few dava ago an a few hours later hia sister hanged he ■olf to a bed-post in the same room.

whisky barrel, which e: report like - •—*-

popular sympathy

leld Tracy Walworth to

eated and held in trn« ome only to be expel pecififd purposes. F

. isfi" I S3i”the”Huion River and New Y. .. a aa a lecture fund I Central, the Harlem, New York n

istinguiahod persons nto ( New England, Now dlogotodeliver “ ' 1

. . . uu j fudtor' nUrtfoM 11 su'd" apringflcldC ^ew Haven Chancellor referred to in the letter of aiding stodents of superior promise, l,nt ( and NUrthampton, Connecticut River, decea^l.^nd^abo thejecree of ^- un.bfc U, ^ " '

dnetf nnd, and 8126. •

japtain. It does not appear even tl be began a new era of discovery, for t records show that the Norwegians c<

fartbei

dates. The " * died in Tyre

■uggeative epist

Put a liottlo of Boede

Gun " ia a church

stainless reputation, a Christian; he doesn't! from fusil oil. But the post

and he feels an received

._ finished hi Jonah hod his t

which was B. C. 700, asset forced by King Sonnacher

wan of the date of July 29

„ _. . writes about the release am country, and sailed with^an expedition j ( or her bloody One, dated

J. T. V."

thorn in lie aide that toeustoined_to drink

iced " Boedorer " with " J. T.

a man ia so helpless, too. Ho may ge a bushel of cords Tivery doy, each on containing a villainous libel, but he hs no redress. A reputation that wi! stand this sort of thing ia a good pro;

erty just now.

The Yalae Of Food.

The following from the Jloutehold phj/tician will bo found of interest, showing aa it does the sustenance to '

'DorotSy leaned against a chair, and hanged color, righting herself in amo-

unt

" I suppose that

_ the food we eat Taking Ik as the standard, and expreaaamount of nitrogen it oontr’— table shows

m become so tire-

—_ . had, ytnr know, that yon and Mrs. Bowles aealoualy SSfodiapowof —•"

Ig my leave, if you did not wish me t

cdsSwTvK rondored what —’*

by 100,

ralattvs _

oipal fleah-prodacing artioios and, eonsequently, their powereof fo ing the tusnea: Human milk, 1 Cow's milk, 287; Oyster. 806: Toll egg, 805; Cheese, 281-447; Ed. 4 Port ham, 807 ; Salmon, 610 ; Whit egg, 846 ; Horring, 910; Haddock, Pigeon, 766; Lamb,888; Mutton^ boa; Veal, 911; Beef, 94X We do not infer that the artiolea that have moat nitrogen are necessarily beat adapted to human diet beoauae they are the most efflclent blood-producers. In deciding the value of an article of f ood, other thinga are to be looked at besides its nutntivo qualities. Those which are none in nitrowen are rich in carbon and

that this nutter of f he discovery of Ame

iputed by other

1 21, 1871. ' | the previ i sign the ’ ! epithet

. The gifts of Mr. | City and Albany, the Erie branch lines.

Vossor therefore, amounted in the ng- and through these line, to all pnnoipa I —.—nil to nearly eight hundred thou- I roads running through to the coal

: Sts-

■ SSs&r! £ 1 A rec'Kred J br , . I u | 1,'lve “oo^bl™"™ offTri^th^K ‘ I snramrt of i .U. ^.ix— m.. l... h...,

college, nor

.then are old Oalifor-

e publishers are A. L. Ban-

8&n Pranciaeo.

ties till she attends an auction sale.

, ■ , They tell of a woman in Baltimore who ind Danbury and Norwalk, lllu , provided herself srith two hundred

pairs of stockings, woolen sad totton. She is evidently intending to argamio

i company somewhere.

Englishman and his wife, with

—■» --Is, ’ "

jtb< Jacksonville, 111.

thirty-six

. and Fitchburg,

coster, Boston and Provirailroads of Canada. On lore of the Hudson there

their boys and girls, past

Toledo, Ohio, the other d^o^their

_ nthsold.and

wife thirty-five ; and they had with m ton chidren, all single births.

March, and the yoongeat is s child of three months , •' The musketo is intensely religions, said Sparqnos to' hia spouse, to-day. " How so ?'■ she inquired. “ Because he is preying all tho time," said Sparques. Afrs. Sparqac- smiled at her husband's joke, but immodiatelysoid. •■Musketoesarenotroligious.''^Why ?"

JStild77bS !

“ | his ho

The greater part of tl

“Vt^ra,

obtained from the [

, Boston and i ^’‘fn^Beis^’ Church, 1 Montpelier, It has not yet been ae- Kpv Dr J^ord having been pastor, and

'ing be Colonel H. D. Hopkins ; for a period of more th

due west through tho Straits of Gib- July 1871, speaks of the " msyney raltar, and never was heard of after. I doer's hiss " and speaks of the I • - ’ ' h :i 1 ^

ildiugs might be erected os

iy have I.te- |

| had assaulted her, comjieliuig^

Rafting EBterprise on Lake Michigan. b „nd atayed in th

more quickly constructed, and e workea upon at all limes of the The estimated cost of the bridge ,r $3,000,000. The design of the

Chicago hsTe^ontered upon on export- 1 ment which promises to have a material 1 effect in reducing the prices of lumber In that city. Heretofore in shipping lumber from Miehigan to Chicago by the ordinary means of transportation it has boon deemed necessary to have the timber sawed, or else hewn down, in order to aavo freight charges. But the firm referred to have adopted a plan of

transportation which is new in

gion, and which will not only c«

proyoapi craft, they

■ight chargi

economical in oilier waj

iraoticable. Insteail of shipping

by rail or in small lake

and chains, ai that it can be towed with as mneh safely, i rafts are floated dowi Pennsylvania and Mi raft built for lake nav 600,000 feet of dear li

is thought, i the rivers < nc. The fir

of the s

- r which wonld have been wasted under the ol' method of Iransportatioi " 1 ’

up ot ““

__ — „, oonsisting of each, the raft being three se.

In front is a ent-wator, mode of logs of traordinary length coming togethr-

front ' **■- "

> from pleaaant ways, ai r agalnat all mankind.;

nything, aadaa Dr. Ledymrd gave a very poor aeoount of myself the time I saw him, I thought of yon, Dolly, the only being on earth claiming

well-fitted to answer wanning ths body at

The fitness of an article for diet depends very mneh on the ease or difficulty Which if *-"-*-*

ia digested or asaimUated. If

itor, and will break

tke force of such atonns as are liable to arise on tho lake. One tug can thus tow across Lake Michigan a quantity of

lumber which it would rerjuire^

sof railroad

t wife," Martin had said. ,Had *he B made * - a »ir. v«. u.. tm.Ki

iS

sheet creature living; Dorothy

it beliovo this.

I'a lot waa rather hard on her "

" ' touching

Dorothy staggered at this. “ And so you think yon may die any time, and want strangere here at your

sh lay within hia reach, 11 Bobert Bowles, the r loved, was killed

by the digesting process, it may mneh leaa desirable for food than o which is digested end sasimilated ea..ly\ but is mneh poorer in nutritive qual-

. , !• 0(t horseback one day ! a long month before the dev set for their mai “ riagn. Bh# mourned for him as a vof • t should, and finally oallod herself by hia

Ig ua here, though out in re ia limply Jana Denham."

inch like

ut to confess hia arime.

I feel that I ought to have taken my

„ with me, Dorothy. I have no right to presume that you, to young, so beautiful, with ell your life before you, wfll lieton to me patiently. But I must tell you, now that you are sale and forever beyond my hope, how dear you are to me, and how it la like the pain of death to see yon go to glad-

The Mule end Us Rider. Harper’s Drawer has the following: The negro end mule (write# e friend ~" ‘ n, Louisiana) arc inaeparal ,nines in the Southern ootton field#, end, like the Hiawethon string and bow, useless each withont the other. The laxy indifference and careless cruelty of the one, and wonderful powers of endurance of severe labor, bad treatment, and neglect of the other.

Dorothy, you have been to me the gleam in a darkened existence—my bv day—my star by night I love deeply, truly, my child, in a hopel foolish way, and as I never loved woi He hated himaelf for having said to little Dorothy, who had regardedhim resha-S,

anecdote may be reliahed by thoae who •— *--* 1 —e of lbs two. The

i refuge from tho

ray# under t*" •baderf » "Praedtog {STfitfoT*

cumbeht, enjoying t

i&ieh, *kg»>to8«.

_ finely road

ua..—

teriel,'which it bee hitherto cost e greet deal of money to get rid of, can bo utilised for fuel and other, purposes sawn np in Chicago.

i ruing. [ I do after co

*°hiB father

-s should®

father."

I . “ Bo^uh't, I

oed the same peculiar u in Frank's oqanlenanoc. ^ . -ben ho rend ^ |

lined ai

feUinl

r

i)i n _ __ (n Saratoga.

traTwSworth aaid that Prank ' '

igns of mental aberration^ in

u^rs after tho separatiot

s before ;

_id had no bad (Nineteen letters wi

woe always affectioi

habits or vices. —-— put in evidence hero, mostly to sirs. Walworth). She testified further that her husband waa frequenUv vioient. This closed Mrs. W ulworth s examina- , which ocoapied the best port o!

days. ____

°" I wish'Tu wouhf iust *nte your I ^ ’die'; money^cn-'mu^ °/t trill beTnreit ' P T " “ tolol lengthof 2,4

„ — a great call for laborers it iritual field, where the pay woi all for tho support of a family unmarried mimstora onght to b< t to give a few years to tbeChurcl .1 undertaking the responsibili ra'nntil they are properly estab

who had which fn gregatioi

years since there was s Presby

Columbus, Mias, shouting in churoji

'ery spiritnal si old lady was observed to '■ in s very hasty manni

a few days after thi

rby she had r

asked

church bo auddonly the finnday befc vesponded. '• tho fact ii

filled

have t* write yonr name | „ „ ,ji| la. required to construct this My answer is : " My fnend, do vou ''' - 0 n|)0 mi | M of win(i n.OOD tons really naderatand what my poaihon ^ , Uh ,, >n a 00,000 yards of

would bo before the world and tne aw

proclaim that from a state of complete ; „ , , Jn j nl (|aiia.

Independence, and without tho slightest |

reason for a similar favor from you, and ! About two o'clock Sunday morning, for no conaidhration whatever, except June 29lh, a body of masked men eufricndship, I have agreed to take upon | to red Salem, lud., seised and held pna myself trio rislTof your business, with | oner, the town patrolmen, and, prceeeOtho difference against me, that if yon ! m g to tho jail, demanded the keys of lose I lose and if you gain I do not, 1' Deputy Sheriff Craycroft, who resides share in your loaars, and not in yonr j n the bnilding. The sheriff refuse.- to Now if this ia true, ought I I give up the keys under any peril, whoa ^-»if -—a-mfined, and a sledge-

Dr. Holland on Scrran In the July number of Sc should establish mud -an of registry which wi

Hefferen, w]

eud a tew daya si

gaUam” io

lityan

rattlo In the Indian Country, —afore the war the Indiana of the In-

dian Territory, the Oherokees, Ao., were rich in stock, and it waa not uncommon for a well-to-do atook-raiaer to poraeas flftoon thousand head of cattle. John Boas, chief of the tribe, owned over sixty thousand head of oattloandhorses, while it was a very poor and woe-begono Indian, indeed, who did not poaaeas at least twenty. AU the labor ceoeamary

„ id womci establish, by the moat roliabli

jy. their competency in th. different departments of domeatio acr vice, and so make it a prime object Will all servants to get their names upon it There shonld be also a school of dome*

— judgment ia ji icr friendahip for you ia vuo

lot only thia ; 1 shonld affli tho public that yon are rei

when I really know nothing .

circumstances, nnd in so far help yon where Hcffor a . er to deceive others. I give yon a false | 0( ji had two door, the first ■uado of credit. In abort, I shonld do that, wood, covered on Imth Biiice witn noovy o honest man. true to himaelf lr , m pUtes, Uio whole being about nine ia family, can do and be blame- i„ohoa thick, and fastened with heavy ill anyrigbt-minded, real friend, | imn staples and a padlock. Thin door dew of f ' *' *■ *" “ ,no

really wish fitted to he whether oo work, or t

then, aa now. waa the branding of beasts; and they graxed unharmed the unbounded laud* _ Bat when

of this

iT ' Hundreds of thousands of the beasts were stolon, and run into the neighboring States; both armies fed a. _ i |_ . I .a ii i ■■ t wo. the

mt ’tho public authoritative roeognitii ol it. We want a standard that ahall maintain avdiatinctiouone side and diahonorab good and bad

so were the cattle thinned ont, that the United States Government was obliged to supply many head of oattio • • • i — a—1— lli.l tK.v mie?

r the spot, ,,—.

i of the place gave tho paper a flirt, which waa no sooner aeon and heard than the mnle, as mules only know how, instantly " swapped ends,' 1 and leaving the negro sprawling in the dirt, took hia departure, under fall nail. The negro, halfraiaing himself, and

wipiri^t^’dnatfo

watched the retreating mnle tor i a in aileooe, hnl at length, m mi of an auditor, gave exnresai.

I philcsojihio aoliloq Dafa what make

The Bear Cure. A recent California paper fu the following brief deaonption anrprislng effect the unexpected arrival of a bear had upon the family of a citiof Ventura; One day last week of our worthy elti Sana. P. V. Me Oarty, together with his invalid wife and little girl, while quietly aleeping in a tent improvised for the occasion, at the month of the Hatflaha Canyon, were suddenly aronaed by the growling of a real grixsly near them. Mrs; McCarty's health improved wonderfully^

care of chambers. The re projiosc, he says, wonld

the cities of the 1

Valleys is gradually abating, h . localities diaappearing and to otnera yielding to medical skill and be

alssippi and Ohio

abating,^in becoming

yielding to i

less fatal in — moat violently among tho filthy crowded negro quarters, where ^ the death rate has bSRi severe, doubtless invited by the poverty and unwholchabita and conditions of its vnv Thongh exhibiting some of the teriotioa of the Asiatic scourge, probably, not identical with that

mainly prove precautions.

identical

— —eaaioned by _

itible by thorough aanitary

jg£

it aa good, and d.

cured, y

ed with grace in listening t

ion, that I found I oonldn contain myself, .o I ran over to th Methodist church across tho way an The Australian method of slanghte: ing bullocks seems to bo an improvi ment on tho usual mode. At 8yd: tho animals are driven by five at a ti into the slaughter-house, whore ther no person to be Been. While they oniotly staring around' the strange, quiet apartment, a man silently pass' above them, walking along tho ops beams which closely oroaa the hous Ho ia armed with a lance with a poh like a mortiaing chisel One by one tl beast* are pierced with the weapon jn behind the horns ; they drop instant!

they are aU down, tl

railing'

and bleed end drees the os

oe?”

Cl irom Alieuvnio, MW., ■ ---r> — custody a young girl named Mollio Sherwood, who for intervals during the

boy under th

E“1

irothars j>So*<i her out to loteletSlleKvllle. Becomit

exchange eayo:—A Kontnol paper ha* discovered another of tho fearful family complication*, and tel the atory thus: "John W. Daniels mi ried the daughter of Mrs. Borah ! Brevard ; afterwards B. a Daniels, t father of John, married the old lad James W. Daniels, t

urst open, and the mordert

— blood, anti had” prepared himaelf a* wall an ho conld for desperate roaiatauce. Knowing death awaited him if taken, ho determined to fight

like a tiger at bay and or. The mob, knowing a.— character of the man. ie first who entered wonld

S^dre-

this employment, ahe donned boy's acath. hesitated to effect an entranoo. clothing railed herself BUI Henderson, I Th-v procured balla of twine, aatnrated and applied tor and received a situation , them with coal oil and turpentine, and a. post-boy to carry the mad to and threw aome ot them into the cell, and from Allenvilie. For one year, unans- threw others forward on the ends^ of

thus "light

..wo. Allenvilie. For one year, nm pooled, aho fnlfiUed the ■unctioni' _

.a 1 Tk._ U- -v

poet Then her so

and at Allenvilie aho

t and

SI 1

qneatly ahe State, " -

male garb. After thia ahe tried working in a hotel as maid servant, but soon tiring of thia, again resumed the tronaere . ..w.j ug * farm hand. Snbac-

lame to Agnate, in thia , drover'n assistant, and to Jaokaonport to work to Uvery stable. After'—

wayworn tt_ —- - ., ones belonging to the_ atablem.

the stable, behaving ‘ in to rail her

in order to get

ii up the cell, bringing u UO full view, the mob opem

fire upon him. Some twenty ahota we fired, one of which entered hia breai and another broke hia arm. Thia i capacitated him from “sreg to? “ wriioh held the chair he had acixed defend himself. A rock waa thrown him and struck him on the head "

knocked him down, andbefoi

a and son-in-law of the old man, a other-in-law and nephew of John, A d John flow desires to know, thron s columns of the local newapapi ist relation the children of theaetto

nUcipated Death ofthe

A letter from Berlin speak# ofj precarious health of the Emperor w liam, and states that a few daya befo the cpinion among those nearest to fa was that Uis speedy death was aim Inevltablo, Two daya before it waa

ihUe thought ho waa really dead, 'ill Into a sort of trance, t

suddenly fe

he remalnec — — , .. ently withont breathing, for abont Q ty m inntea. Then he revived and gl liettor nntu tho 16th, when ho ag had a relapse. From thia ho has c

- — The marshal her and overtook her with tho a. Allenvilie and arrested her on

chargvwol hone stoalim

ip tha moat convenient tree.

o hia wile's call for the

E theefcild,andttym,ooDoladingthat he ' could bar* a better view of the aitnation * - jbed np "

i in ttua

iia position

-erha bear5k'iKTbiaa ! Ss , wi

- aera, and wtthostt having molaetod

. anything about the

a midnight train neared Ohiewo illy, it waa stopped a moment for

as the

emptied of their oohave given tha bea of Oolnmbna’ All the alee

after the expected freight train eufotte whenhia train started. He found hia clothee at the next station.

iclined

from arresting n on both aides, of her own free

Jackson port jail awaiting trial for. e stealing. The girl is e pretty dc, and daring all her vtassitadea • ' ie has never been questioned.

Ida Lewie, the heroine of aha married him. Certainly nr want of somebody to talk to. A "heroine" in a light-boose isn't the solitary

lixed, tied, and dragged

uYof 'tho cell and of the jail. " What are you going to dowith me?

loaaked. " - '' the reply.

" Hang yon,"

" I will go along willi

He waa immediately losco so o i •ed railroad bridge, abont thirty

igb, abont two squares from the jail,

hero he asked time to prey, lynchers replied they conld ni

The rope waa put around hia nr . thrown over a rafter of the bridge.

was then pushed off As soon

„ „ dead the lynchers returned to the jail, gathered np everything they had left tost conld afford a elnc to their identity, released tha aheriff and guards, and scattered in every direction. None were recognised, and no peraon know*

r—— to h# told. reived'a great shock from tho death Prince Adalbert; and he waa thorong persuaded in hia own mind that would die immediately after. ^Curil through"hia mind; and he haaav lively fear of death. No sooner had

retained from St P

md no perepu k

by what road they entered or left

Ihebody wr- *•—‘ ‘ ‘

„„„ taken down and —- homo. Only the eltlsena living the jail were aware of the affair, greatest excitement proraila-in the town

recovered, i

- .that he. " lut the atrangeat pi

possession-of hi , — not shake it off He lost all hia he oonld eat nothing; he grew

pale; endwho

Daring the days when hia death [peeled, th '

moie esteemed by the Crown Pr then Count Munster, the newly epp< ed Minuter to London; end a perao high anthority hm toW