Star of the Cape, 30 July 1873 IIIF issue link — Page 1

STAR OF THE CAP*

STAR OF THE CAPE.

VOL. V.

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1873.

NO, 33.

bj » ibrick louder Uua Usa k in* of tho torrrnt, hr* trombling. bo daroa no ho hod Fimod too ' ' obis, to look, he - p^o and f-Wtlv, elnn A hasty glance to the

grief the onhoppy eoolie threw hi on the ground and wept The ahnpnaeie joined him, and explained that in the middle of the bridge hie brother

" Khnda Ba iai !“ ("It it God'a me zno !") the 1 * d at length; and a rir joarnor, they ir dcetination, and 1

„o, Mr. Frederick ill-known Himalaya with the OalcnlU^d DrJhi* £5l^ Company for a largo eupply of eleepera. down large nnmbera of pinee and deodor cedar treat, on the alopee orerbanging the Oangee rirer, near ita aonroe, them called by the nmtirea tha Baghlrati. Theae treee, rolled into tha rirer, ware floated down ita wild and tnrbnlent waters .fora dlatanee of one Iran- . died and fifty-miles, and were picked np and landed at Hard war—a lorely

Mr. WQaon qm eloaely, but could And no ground for auapioion. The ooolie's affection for hie brother waa well known j the chnpraasie had long been a trusted and faithful sigusble, and anch aocidenU were, alae! too oommon in the Himalaya. . He thought, hownrer, be would make an effort, howerer hopeless, to reoorer the thousand rupees lost with the unfo-*-nste eoolie. With great trouble he i— struoted a raft of etrong logs, had it floated to the spot where the unfortunate 1 disappeared, and preparing ho- 1 -- grmpuels, oommenoed to dreg rforma body. For two daye ‘ of being orerwhelmed by the He alone rentored on the r oh numerous coolies held to re By etrong ropes, letting it t n stream as he direeted by signs, voice could not be beard amidst the al roarings of the torrent, owerde the oloee of the eeeond the drag'

, I and’a&faea of the river; bnt enough were ami render the speculation a good The greater part of the Umbel felled about fifteen da vs’ march Mneeonri, the nearest Britiah hi! tion, the toed from which, then ss was s mere foot-path, leading cipitona monnlefaia, tli v - K'<BS5, Lis- .— afool 'Several hundred hiU-oooliM employed hr Mr. Wilson in felling end rolUng the timber into the river; end in order to pay them, be was obliged to •end periootaafly to the -bank at Mnseonri for money. The Indian enrrenoy is silver—bege of imeee had therefore ' ba oarriod anms flheen days' journey the hooka of trnstv natives. The mot

of the rook, the violence of the water have separated the bag from the body. On opening it, however, whet — Mr. Wilson's consternation to find 'thousand rupees, btU a heavy round iai Snepeeting foul play, beat onoe tied home, eeoured the two oompauons, and brought them before the Bajafi of Teree, a native protected prince, in whose territory the event had happened,

ho who enppoeee the Indians do not sujoy thsmeelvM, ought to see them engaged in thie game, whjre their whole •oul appears to be absorbed in pleasurable excitement- It ia called Ni-n-witx, -1; and while it is goat either end of the J» baste on the polea which separate them with all their might, keeping time totheonuaio, and increaaipg the euthusiaam ae much aa poeaiblo. Some of tha young ujusws — a—a™, blaek^yed creatures, raven hair, who womlfi lion anywhere. Their bright colored blankets set off their Alarms to the greatest advantage, and hey appear modest and deoorona oougb. For a long time I was of pinion that there was no much thing aa , handsome Indian girl, bnt in this I raa greatly mistaken—some of them icing vary fair to look upon. They ireek early in life, and the old women wk like the veriest hags. The young girls have all the plsyial little ways of their fairer sisters, and the little ones have their dolly papooses, the same aa white children. Homan nature, alter all, is a good deal the same everywhere, . _ .in.- Saorration among savages ley ere governed by the and impulses that we are, ad. A love of ease and a iterant for hard work are '

0 proof against 1 obtained, and

both protested their

• Bat native josriaa does net always require strict legal evidence. The rajah oonaidered that the subetitution of stone for money was eridaaoe of some one's (railt. The brother, be considered, being in front, wee absolved from suspicion ntiesst of the iisL'sSE*'’""-

amid loud proteitatious o £« the rajah's eoort

id about this time Ar. Wiltwo thousand rupees. He It dispatched two hill-coolies

eAuproerie, or belt-man, an overseer who wears i _ token of anthority. The money wee

thepartyatarted on their return journey, adopting the prescribed precautions, which were ee foiloire: Every hill-man,

need instead of on oven. This flour ia carried in a bag made of goat-ekin, tied ‘h, and the goat-akin bag

>• ends of the net securely .jo shoulder end under the ei

Ilka e knapsack Each of the ooc. had a beg of a thousand rupees placed inside the flonr-bag, with a sprinkling of flour over it; the bag secured as usual in tha Dotting, and presenting 'the ordinary appesranee of a provision bag. Their order* were: always to remuo together; never to met or peas e night far a Tillage, hot to bivouao in soma unfrequented end sheltered spot; when it became necessary to purelm« provisions, one man only wras to leave the halting-place, and go to the nearest

village to da SO, returning at

matter, yet felt doubts aa to—. _ of the rajah’s eentenoe, bnt in the buay traneaotions of life, soon began to forget this mysterious ooeurranoe. About - —-T had paired whan a messenger id him from the njah, that his . am ehnprsssie, the convict, had oonfeesed hie crime, end, probably in hopes of pardon, wsa prepared to make restitution of the stolen property. He ried to the court, and heard oner's confession. Love, it red, waa the motive of the i isie-s crime. He had become ec Jof e beautiful maiden in a neighboring village; bnt the prioe demanded by her parents (tor in that eountry wives are porobaaed from the parents) wsa " rbejoadbia mesas: and to obis desire, he resolved on stealing ! the thousand rupee lugs. Thie t about with oonsummato akin. When, at tha end of a toilsome march, they reached the osve near Dangah he diapatahed the alder brother to evrlhge two mile* off to purchase «—

Hsrdlybsd ho gone.w the other bratber a

■ custom of taking to ihemseln n wives still prevails among th hunter* and tiappereof our Wester

to find e white man and a squaw who numerous progeny of half-breed ahifdrsn^Ke aotive’end qniokrrit^d, sud^their deeemdamte wlBgo The aquaws make good and laith- . ires, and. ao far aa the' edge goes, good mothsrm. 1__. *- y life and, in their gambling get thoroughly excited. The 'have games of their own, and i interferes with them in any the game seems to lie somewhat like the old play of children called " Button, button, who's got the buttoring the whole game, aU tha wol sing,together the meet lively sit* I e ever heard among the savages, ell were eager for the pose re tion of grand prixe, which consists of beads and bead-work, scissors, money, neeand s hundred other tilings ' ' ' ' - cbild-

Of the eight cats and dnnka in a day, it ia thought that not lees then flve pounds lean his body through the skin. And Of these

^vKsnirlj

being in great part gaseous in penetrates everv paytof the bed.

Texas Cow Beyi. A eorxeapondent CbarierJbomal th 7S Mexioo: " “

• Cow-Boys' of Texas ore a peueed. Thtj aM aa distinct in

mneh of threa poisonous aeeretious, need to be purified ae often certainly as *- •*-— months. A sheet can he rated in this way. Indeed, there ia no " «y of cleaning a mattress bnt by g it, or picking it to pi core, and fragments exposing it to the direct rsya of the aun. Aa those proleeeee are searcety practicable with any of the ordinary mattresses, I am decidedly of the opinion that the/good, old-fashioned straw bod, which can every three months be exchanged for freah straw, and the tick waefced, is the sweetest and healthiest of beds. If in the winter season the porous_sea ol the straw bed make* it a little unoomfortable, spread over it a comforter or two of woolen blankets, which bould be washed aa often as every »wo feds. With this arrangement, if yon rash all the bed-covering aa often ss nee in one or two weeks, you will have delightful, healthy bed. Now,-if you have the bed to sir, with open windows during the day, and not make it up for the night before evening, on will have added greatly to the reetneee of your reat, in oonaequenoe, > the tone of your health. I heartily .wish this good change raid be everywhere introduced. Only loee who have thns attended to this nportant matter can judge of ita innonce on the general health and From the Holy Land.

rge May F rnsalem, asyi*: Egypt, and Pah

Lane, Ford and .Baylor are tha beat ear type* of this class—perfecth and essentially adventurous, bn mneh like other met* in the main. Il.u the volunteer cavalryman is no mon like the Kabyle or the Tartar than an tho rangers identical with these mm who sleep, eat and lire on horoebsck er leave their ' bunches' of oattli

ept to chase the Mexi render, and know and i ing bnt their avocation.

'• Hot it cattle-herding an easy life. Think of driving the wild, fleroe brutes from the Bio Grande to Kansas, compelled to watch them day and night, they stampede, as they often do, the w-boy mnii ride alter or *—*—* **■ —

Who Skall Fay for the Beans I Jnvelere on the Boston end Albany Bailroad win remember tho bean stand in the Springfield depot, and the rash ia s* occurs there among the famished passenger* upon the srrival of treln*. X few days since Colonel Whitley, the United " —*•*

ate, was absorbing the wholesome able with a rapidity end a ooolneea wan refreeh&g. Tho Colonel laughed immoderately, but the Tmnkeo paid no attention to anything bnt the boons until, having eatisSed toe craving., ho * ‘ Colonel and

pealed to, but could not presume to eido so delicate • question, end it finally suggested that each party make k deposit to the value of the beans, after whieh the matter could be left for arbitration before the proper legal tribunal, and the money retained from the one adjudged liable. The deposit was accordingly made, and if put et interest may reach a sumauflteont to pay the national debt before the question is de-

country than olive culture. It is especially adapted to the mountain region! of Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee. First results era tardy, but

' of 100 trees per sere requires ■e than our fruits end yields aa when in bearing from $3

„ , me. Aa a mean, of permanent available Income to educational Interests the subject is worth attention. There is also an annual profitably cultivated hen called " sum-sum," the seed of whieh yields a clear inodorous oil with a nutty flavor, of great value for —“ Those intonated i-

praetieed for generations, auto bring in their eggs and get half thefowtaWoKedframtham. Enclosed please find some wild seeds gathered o Mount Olivet. In the hands of som

niters and Cool Water. w of the fact that the i drink ia not unlikely to be crowded with -■ theptutof

country has such floral variety as this.

New Hampshire- From so other eou Hoe of seeds and cuttingvand if a pr posed organisation of a Palestine fi mere'ohlD euooeeda there will be a m ' n of exchange. Asa field for t ly of birds, flower*, and atones, t indist will always find Pelistino i

those oi whom the world i worthy. and^ ~

* slab, leaving a space to hold a of filtered water. A fanoet ia II j a hole bored through the md I jar, as near the bottom OS may be. the slab or stone is plaood e Uyer of ravel, cleanly washed **■-* .jf dean wsahed sand layer of powdered drartxwl. JSSv spaoe is for water. A cover ot cloth plaood - '

re for doth-

tangled thickets that fearinlly teat th strength of the leather fc- ’ arms and the oowskin lei proteot hia lower Umka. — — ly posseas^organixatiou, af on and their rrprit dr. corpt. Nor ild it be difficult for on officer who erstood them to teach them disciEiko o°hor Texans, 'they are, P *?S occasional exceptions of oonree, tempergood deal of stuff has been writ-

o which they a

, an I' tin

ble in the i * ed. A cavalry oommondi troops.might safely attempt anyfor he would have a corps rapid

aa tfie horsemen of Kaled, resistle*a as

the hordes of Oenghis.”

se in. the sohoola. The day is

day recently. a raspeclably1 man carried s well-grown child, up and apparently sick, into a New York hotoL He placed the ohfld an the utairm and begin to talk to it in a vary unkind, rough way. lion of the guests was ei theygathcrod around. “Ion are able to walk up stairs by yourself," the man said, *• and I won't *“54 0 oh," the child corryme uj>; please, pa, leak both my feei I can't That's aU stuff" the “get up at onoe or Fll m .. The poor child began to sob baton, and the brutal man gave it - ) thump over the aide of thr Tha child

o the Texan who dwells in the plains. The isd after Hays Jd and daring feof adventure stamped strange peculiarities. Bnt r* had not been bred to his it up from choice, re educated, even

dxridt

riy rear. oldaat inhabitants. At hie birth-

place, they are now i to celebrate the cec Spelling always

in senility is like Jem

Heenan.

Then Ee wee atheistic, vigorous, and with what seemed like a perennial bloom Nowheist

playing billiards and gambling, then wonder* why, in smto of bis I efforts, he sinks annually deeper deeper into debt, till tbc^akfiriff ole

sr.„ girls mu—

SS

lonals, and mom skilled ai

t to loVo labor by oa to do it offleient-

ired the s >ird of ir

nse quantity of article nnally imnort, and ed ft (u debt that we have s. snccessfnily angmentei We must qualify^r srect and run faotorves.

and all in honor of the birthday ofjj}m notable personage—Grand old

tanneries, to open and work minei, K ve and fashion implements, and ble the prodnet of the farms. If wo shall adopt this policy, and the'*

16 disincline*

in village. ' io to drink, si

iionsand of these incipient soldiers over Western Texas, aU eons of

and inured from infancy the drill and the dnties of

planet they bad just

yean ili tablets are. and sometimes it Is temporarily laid in a sort of dead-house, hired — constructed for the occasion, until it n be tram sported to the original acpulehre of the family, or until a lucky an be discovered. Tho Chinese y enperstitious on this point,and 1 times of epidemic Sill often inretaining coffins in their houses, end, el far ee we are aware, there is no sanitary or other authority to interfere * protect the health of the oommnniMany will, doubtless, eey that all per on this score ia sufficiently obvif by the care with which moot coffins prepared ; but the evidence ' jee, in • cholera season at bee taught us that the oc

it of tho Himalayas, were sail lies above the valleys, when " Got anything to Aj about

" I wasn't thinking of that," nued the first; " I am troubled abbot nr course. If wo oonld leave the 'leiadoa a little more to the right, Hiking a middle course between Boots nd tho ecliptic, we'll find it all plain ailing aa iu as the solstitial coluro. Ini once we get into tho eodiae nr present bearing, we are certs— .. leet with shipwreck before reaching

nr aphelion.”

They escaped this melancholy fate, owever, for some Chaldean shepherds, Ming a nsbnlonsolonddrifting athwart

ibecuring e Ii it inTented, hi

t within fow-days ol their t this practice is much looked

__n, and la eoneUered a proof c parties being sunk In the lowest depths of penury, as .-^11 aa wanting in d—

' r.) or geomancy, are consult subject of a lucky place for i . Iu Oontrel and Southern

whom they proceeded tt

detail by dlaebarging at _— —-

-'rnments of smaller calibre. There

ive been occasional "meat showera"g rer since. These are probably nothin (Onr author can be depended npon i matter* of lact; bis eclentifle theoea are not worth printing.—Trrmi’aA hrn who had hatched ont a qnantir of duckling* was somewhat surprised, ne day, to see them take to tho water nd sail away out of their jurisdiction, 'ho more she thought of this the more ..nreaeonable snob conduct appeared, and the more. indignant she became. She resolved that it mast eeaae forthwith. So she soon afterward convened her brood end conducted them margin of a hot pool having a b—-— connection with tho boiling spring of Doo-sno-ewair. They straightway launched themselves for a craiio—re-

turning immediately to the ' yrhod forgotten the ehip's

spoil, especially if near water and with a aonth aspect. Coffins are also buried •- * tlds, more partlenlarly in thenortE. if our memory serves na, we have more than one large eemetery filled with low gravee, and remronded 1 ‘ mud fenocs, in the flat oennt Is toe walls of Pekin. Again

[ tho Grand Canal—we have

aver hill*, whe a ae thick as they well

— these, in shape very horse-oboe, are even now stW well-kept and oarafiiUy tended by pious relative* -* the departed, although that

. i* aadly folia- *

morwy OTerUieir “unS-pIscii, adorning them vritb Hie jSiioflgMes of tint of friendlasa and poor strung* s deposited in any waste end vacant

Country Papen.

The New York ifmes says that you might nearly as well forget your churches, your aeedemiss, and sehoolhoueee, aa to forget your local paper. It speaks to ten timoa the audieuoe that the local minister does. It is reed eagerly each week from beginning to end. It reaches von all, and if It has a lower spirit end less wisdom.than a sermon, it has a thousand bettor chance* et yon. Imy ing, as^it does, on eve^y table, in rally liberally to ita support from it aa awe, high-toned

miSk niTfo-

and earn—for it is your Indeed, in ita eharaetor, __ tion of importance, ini of you tilL It ia the of your own oocscqnenoc, and yon oannot ignore it without miaerably dopre-

The Chicago TUmet goea on in this Ja._ ea - Poorth of July—'usually t “the Fwnrth"—we* bora

nearly a hundred y of the Fourth ee ex

at within th

fifteen yean ego m Mice or John

hday. h of July . to be. There was _ when he stood alone in receiving 1 ‘ omage of the American people. birthday waa the grandest

s shimmered, on if on orators declaimed, i •dom clapped his wii . shrieked defiance

io fever in Londoi

Local Government Board has tjnst nsned an important reporton thr

■f typt-‘ 3 -

M the

naybe made thevehiolefor distributing he' lever, the report give* the following “ At Terling Place ton persons w< ■ —iterio fever, and all throe only of a large family, m a particular well into -Tvered that •

Picks n

caked. Al lertain well waa polluted, and

lighty-eight drinker* from tli... .orty-two persons were attacked; while only one other person oat of * population of 20C in the village waa attacked. At Nunncy. a village in Bomereelehire, having a population of 832, Pr. Ballard records seventy-six cases ol ontoriofev were limited in a remarkable way — families who obtained their water rapply from » small rivulet which reoeivod the iiewogo of several Eouaes up otreai At Howkeabury Dp ton, in Glouoesto thire, avillage oi 057 ihhabitanta, with a short period,- ninety-five caeca az fourteen deaths from entorio fever o onrred in groups, following the snooe sive pollution of different wells in th. village. Burbage, a village in Leicestershire, as recorded by Dr. Gwynne Harries, had' an outbreak of entorio fever from the same oanso lost year.

' Iho fever in the village exrhoifteinlyi *■’-

About Wafer,

The extent to whieh water mingles ith bodice, apparently the most solid, very wonderful. Thoglittoring opal, I beautiful as an ornament, ia nothing flint and water. The sir holds five ' every foot of its bnlk.

turnips ninety per

see City, Mo., to the „ reached that surpasses in grandeur of scenery anything found in Switseriand, in or in ^the South of Fraaoe. ' matter^o orory four gallons of like the Galen Spring, near r ; swimming baths filled with water from the Idaho Hot Springe, also within a lew miles of Denver, make this seetion of country not only the asylum of the Invalids, * “•* “■*

beautiful "Twin Lake*,” Which i with the speckled trout. C— Pike's Peak. Cheyenne C Garden of the God's, Mont the Petoriflcd Forest, the Die Falls, U spots in the vicinity of Denver, with . moot salnbrioni climate and well furnished hotollthet have astonished those ho past went to the Old World tho grandeur and beantif* of nature. When President Grant passed over the Raima. Pacific Rood the other day, ho expressed his surprise at tho magnificent scenery, end since his r-- ' ira to Washington msny members .. -rreign legations have gone to Colorado to SOS for themselves the greatest watering place the New World offers. The Pnlfman care ol tho Kansas Pacific Road, with only two change* front New York, leave Kansu City every evening at eleven o'clock, and u on the day following the morning breaks before tho eye* ol the traveler, tho grand Rooky Mountains surround him on all aides, balmy air refreshes even ** --nflnned invalid. To any who deaires to see America, Colorado, make a trip orf Paciflo Road, and see a dwitxerland far i

Prieon. An old Brookfield farmer’* advioe-is: Take core of yonr health when von are young, and when yon ere old it will take ears of you. It' le prophesied that lotMtere are is the lutthatahaU ' flesh. ' . Graphic had ita own __atonoe the Directors of Inman Line '.to "twelve knots an The celebrated Minnehaha Falla, in [inneaota, were eold at auction last

Persona who drink it uy thi it i* apt to give a reeking headache. Mr. Sehtokumber, ol ShaUey oc

Twenty-eight different kind ire" eold inBhode Wand fo

Ihett

J^._ _ hundred and forty pounds

.. exed in a hydrautio preu, seventy pounds oi water would exude from his body, and only thirty-live oldry residuum remain. Man ia, in fact, only thirty-five ponnde of carbon-nitro-gen, diluted io five and a half paila of water. In plant, water mingles no leee wonderfullv. The sun-flower evaporates md a quarter pints daily; trie cababout the eame quantity; atel a single stalk of wheat exhales, in haU'a —r, abont a hundred thonaand grains . water. An acre of growing wheat draw* in and gives ont ton tone of water daily. The sap is the medium throngh which thie mau ol fluid ia conveyed. It forms a delicate pump, np whieh the watery particles ran with the rapidity of a swift stream. By the action-of the ran, various propertiea may- be leenmulatod to the growing plant. In France timber is dyed by various colors mixed with water, and sprinkled over the roots of U* growing ; end dahlijw are also often colored

seen under u favorable eircnmstano as in a ride over tho great plains Kansas, from Kansu City to Denvv and th* wild and wonderful scenery the Bocky Mountains. Another Sad Tiger Story. ’ A correspondent oi tho 77me* o/ J ilia, writing from Akola on June says: "There was a very sad oocurren— a few day* back. Tho Patel of a village, well known u a tiger shikaree, ' aroused late at night oy a tumult in cattle-shed, and, peeping throngh crevices of a door, discovered mai Stripe* coolly walking off Tt.. feet nn hi. mrr

„ Patel, Bcoompaniod by his two brothers and a Pardbi, (the first armed with a gun and sword, and th* remaining three with ewe-r- only.) went in search of the .nimel, who was

•rPr

rested lue gnu against the trank of a ES3.r,fere»“«-ij^ this he suddenly sprang up witfiil - and atrack the Patel senseless. 3 two brothers then bravely attacked tiger with their swords, bnt both Wcjv ; disposed ol in thejMune manner. ^By

li'SatMk louth, and

wounding th dropped hia ]

"etriotiy anaiyaia

liver made an attitopt to escape, .'of them Succeeded; tho other tore ehot. * ia an order lately given by • young lady to her milliner: " Yon are to make it (the bonnet) plain bnt at the time sweet, as I ait in a oonspio dah papers believe a marriage to -. ..Jnitofy arranged between Prince Arthur of Great P Britain and the Prinoeu Thvra, and that the betroth- ' will be made public in autumn, man, unaided and afone, hu been •ntly employed, for the last three years end over, driving a tunnel into a hill near Swansea, Nevada, and hu completed 400 feet into the soM rook. Louisville, Ky., hu tilleriee, which are in nine montbe a year. L — lixmontha they have produced a total of 960.818 gallons, on which the tax wu M59.T74. Two hundred men in Stamford, Or

IS a weef'^ind u fast u raata are built, lota am drawn to see ho ah^j be the poeeaeaora. The Oblttonango White Sulphur Springe, of Madison county, New fork, are sixteen miles cut of Syracuse and *—miles aonth of Chittenango. Huy I long enjoyed an extended repnto-

Is time the i

int/and quietly feU buli dead. By

evening all three brother* dieo from In- • ' eoeived, leaving their famihea rholly-unprovided for. Within toe last two or three months no fewer than aix or eight children ere ascertained to have been destroyed by wolvee. ~ ok animals ore getting so bold, that

daylight, and within tight of

i Pardhi cat

lathing hie left erm in ' " into tho tiger's

c&argcd wit

-For midsummer journeying*, a drew which separatee at the waist, thereby permitting the use of linen bloose*, is on every eooount moat desirable. For cooler wear, one of the new rediogote polonaise* of gray do bail*, with e black skirt, ia the moot serviceable suit. The red in goto polonaises of gray do beixo, with a ble&ekirt, to the mbet tortiee-,

.^.Jiind, and

Girard estate, in tho oity of per efint The taxes p6J‘®“f l T °™ 8 flflBJWa. ^ mnt

A girl ee

rested in BuflUe, e separate attempts t

ployer'e' boose. After i—.j—o — .

' 10 for eome time ehe at lut mode a confession, raying that ehe only it "to have * htUo fnn." a* eh* "knew they were bedly eeared." There i* a girl in Georgia who extorted a oonfeeeion from herJover that ho worth batflIOO and some clothes, wu too poor to marry. Now this

iua*l creature looked seorohiugly into

hi* face, and said: “And to this tho reason yon have postponed no often onr morriagcT” “Ym,''he replied, "Then," she said, "it shall be eo no Jonger—we win get married." And the poor young

A German anal

i nearing Oahkosh, is speedy a way of

BrT'roKirded,* . A fur reaching the depot a land hfi. teal, having

'to pass, and rightly too, public opinion oonridera the duty a man with a .ftmUy really done ....-re^ lie hu. insured hie lif^for iu FirTwant as universal end exacting' 1 u that whith to met by fire insurance. ' too. is for low rates, jth, Uberal noliciee and prudent management, and we believe {fasten the whole list of eompanie* in the field, there to none whieh perhaps of the Dnited t~ *

i eovered with the materiel ■ is large square pockets, square cuffa, id eoatMOuar either of the same, black aOk. or silk the color, of the polonaise, avo noticed that in nearly all things A plain two-ineh hem edgeait, and it to ly to the main object in viowl looped behind, and left open risve noticed that in ordgr to be a dawn the front. It oovers the

a ancones, m wio euv*.. I have notioed that whatever to to right, witli a few except! one—tho left eye, left leg, and the left side of a plum Iding. have noticed thet the preyerof every jail man is --rorglre us uui aeore, 1 - lie he make* everybody who owe* him pay to the utmost farthing. I have notioed thet he who thinks men • rogue to very certain to eee hen be ehavu himulf, end he In mercy to his neighbor, to eur"ffii'avV Uoti^-d that all men speak well of all men's virtue* when they are dead, and that tombstones are marked with epitaphs ol the good and virtuous. It there any particular eemetery where the

getting rid minors b<

itmloljd .Si il,S0 S M-h U p«j * asasn-ortta.'TK! sia,'5ts;s:!5ms=: end wu giving vent .to grief that wu

An Artirt's Dream. . The Bntland JJerald, in writing of ' “ Hiram Powers, a sculptor, is house in Woodstock, in

A Z'Tlt ■ met tMiflnw ti-_r, -.i^. elastic. Bnff linen co.lara and euffr long trip* WiiuMMaqH ji ' and oouars, whieh are now pretty ahapra for ladiea. end readily renewed that lira w<

Ss.bTSi.'.sa l .,“.5a* this time hie life work wu determined ’ '•' iwn mind, end hie every e*—*

...—j lumber can be eeaeoned in open air the better the quality, and toe £w liable it is to be affected by the varrable-

ChariMterlstles ef Inohrletj. — aooonntof dButtonnoM in England

to the law

, ... out of an Irishmen one hundred areguilty of e ai '

air to dryer than at any ether period, Sfiamcd