Star of the Cape, 30 July 1873 IIIF issue link — Page 4

si fetoavnas-mai; 2 s??s=?r£^ EtsSjggg&g

att^itinjEssj; propriMy. of tb< vhnio town. “ ESId K^u'SlS nod Bntsr KIor »frt ana nnd tba peaon, nnd thi* moraing Iho •ten eonflnwA An m» t* txpwtod public

iTsTSSiS ^

■ throe-yor-oM itoarcw r $12. But nil trnnlan < it the boa! in tough. It m

is no sa»II thin ynar thM *>atra! donn not ran . •) The total siwrant raoeiTod u thnn far ia 80 ear loads of stn The Saeramanto Valley I

»S£r,.~

Prof. Page, acting npon a anggaatlon of Agaaais. marked aoaa brook troal in 1870. and thi. year one wm cangbt with the original tin label attaabad, marked "Half aponad." The praaant weight ia nearly two pounds and a qnaitor. The last awindlaria the poor clerk in baa no money to pay hia fare. If money ia sent Mm ha win be amenorer to It ia reported that in some part Illinois farmer, ware seen in a air day, abont the middle of June, huh p.S’SSSa&s: jnoheehlgb, which may be called mi

Qeafar Q%. An ^T" 1

from in the .of aeraral

a Asyinm in Mwaberation

samples of the expression of astonishment nnd donbt beard in all qnartera It na true that ahe bad not been in Plymouth nmch during the hat dn or

sas-,-

the rilhwi. rible sffliction has a

of the

fadtife, andwaeat alltimsererr i She woold tear her clothing to and waaAieaa to dsetmetinmess generally. After about aixmoBtha aha pegan to rmproTC, and at about the time she was to be toned out as “oared* she took it into -her head to lea re without

is rhmemberad going through the nsnal formalities of is and quaint m diseharge, Beonring a oonple of last one who dreeaea and eome other olothing belong- — " •— llJ * ing to one of the matrona, ahe stepped

snrreptitionsly into a boggy that was standing near the institution end dross off to a relation's near Bridge. There were no apparent symnloi ineanitr. Bo the otWle tboogkt, after inis little freak, end the pi

a one she _hae mo reoentty

»ng*the U moet oitiasn. of the

At Atlanta, Ga.. ia oor P“?--

ire of the terrible tragedy in which daughter had acted so prominent - . I nntil abont the moment she w. riaited bye reporter, end the fathei, who was absent from the town during the day, did not learn of bis terrible -“’-“on nntil hia re torn. When the . raj firat reemsed, one or t the neighbors called npon the family but they were K> happy and obeerfil that none bad the heart to break to them the terrible news that their daughter Betsey had committed the i.; i —

“ I can't tell her the awful news; if I do, loan nerer forgive myself for it,” •aid an elderly lady to' you reporter, with team in lur eyas. “But,” ahe added, " the poor women ought to know it.'' A Mm. Keith, an old friend of the family, at length volunteered to perform the disagreeable service, and a few momenta after the ead news had been broken you correspondent celled “a. King at in a little

before enfferatg th gia in the head, wa Her g 1

a nearly broken, that her

her heart

olining npon a sofa, and her oc an toil oath rather thM liF<F*Bhm was re tint to oonverae with any one,' and i the mingled grief and sympathy < couple of her sister, and acme of old neighbor, failed to afford her "Oh, my poor Betsey I my poor Betsey I* wee all that aha would say, and then ahe would give way to her ‘ not in abba and team, but in a^ „ groqae of the moat harrowing and painful nature. Ur. King, as before atatod. was at this time absent and ignorant of the terribl * •— -*

the peace ing life.

" There appear, to be e great deal of nmpaUiy for you daughter in New Tort," I remarked, " and there is a very general impression that she committed figKSHW

than to know that ahe would do anything wrong if ahe knew it I eim’t tjlh abont it now, bht you please tell me all abont her. my eyes and my F* tod the incidents of Ihetragedy, to all of whieh she listened with an interest ~ as really painful to witness. One _ while she would interrupt with ai ijniry, being very particular to kno girl wu^*her right mind when eommltted the bloody deed. The assurance that t forded her as ion. In reeponse to an inquiry eonoemlng be story of Betsey having formerly — ‘ Ura King

Mr. King, when he arrived home, —ad for the first time the terrible of hia daughter’s crime, whieh has the uppermost topic in the public

next objective point, bnt ahe remained than only a few months, when ahe went to New York. . This was abont four yearn ago, aad the story of bet eventful life iinoc that already been told. Her parents >wn Bttle of her, and have only

expending h

friends linos she firat left Plymouth,

what reason cannot be devined. ther is a man of considerable baa always been lumpy in ! hie wealth for the gretifiee-

comfort of hia children, i ~ this terrible end tragic affliction in declining yean is, therefore, peculiarly

Aa Amusing Story.

Bar. Dr. Smyths, a visitor from Ireland, last summer, made a tour of this oountry. Since his return Jie has been delivering several lectures on the tod States. Among the pleasant sbe tolls is the Billowing, an incident of

. led wife, and two dren. One fins day aome of u wen — — deck, when thi

ZSISir- "" debtor, wit

I vrife,^i

yonng doctor, being in i mood, told ns bow he l

rda, for ahe was present and 11 ha laid. I repeat it bare for sons—in the firat place, because o me ou board

b5T[r^'LdPucfflrftStoudheSt SSsa-rsS-S fdhrmilesweel of Ateirfflammli ' tween the Uieemaippi and Missouri veea, and eouM sixty milee wuet o( " ’ ea. IWeuot eatacSad wua ft lor the deed, their being no i

IssMsiFdSS?,. •a- -i.~ w^, wassailed, ar quick enooeaaicu. The enginet toe displaced rail and revened hia <*- --5 and applied the air-braki . •■>- hia 1-t act Engine, toe baggage-oar. were thiown am the dUeh, and the forwai

-piens car, aompeuea uio maseu give np the keys by holding revoli _ their heads, and took from the 1— nearly $1,700 and one aetled bag of Wells, Fargo & Co. 'a, I amount not known. Pistols were atoo held at the head of the registry clerk end Mr. Rice, Assistant Superintendent of the road, Jt of the coner-* sion when the robbers entered. — * dm Rafferty, . broken, caused by falling at the time of the,craah. Ho was also wounded by a pistol abot in the thigh. At firat it waa supposed he. — - -*■-* dead, bnt thia proves not to i true. Dennis Faby, the fireeseU lying on tbt — rt, with the dead body of the engineer on top of him. Drugging the dead body on the truck, he started to alarm the others on the train, but was compelled to turo.back by the robbers. Patting ont the furnace fire, he let the ' rout of the boiler, thus avoiding xploeion. No others on the train injured, but several wore fired ah The conductor, Mr. William Smith, had eo ballets sent through his clothing. iWhile the robbeiy was going on the aaaenger-ooeehea were guarded by the smaining robbers, so that no aid oonld be afforded from that aonroe. At the firat shook the passenger* weru thrown forward, and after the recoil many started forward to the scene of the wreck, bnt were driven back by threats, mingled^with oaths anij^oocaeional

the robbers

not oinerwiso maureaieo, mo confining themselves entirely -VortonateSy the through registered lerDackage from San Francisco to w York was unnoticed by the thieves,

while three and a half tone of bnllion

jumped from the ear, mounted and rode any southward, less than ton minnl from the time of the attack. Aa soon aa word oonld be got ' ~

two lovely

a — —— :e leave of their toene. One of them found herself

deck with the dMto^and w lurched, the fair novice at

advantageous to have a ready hand and steady atop behind her. Abont the "'“l day matters were getting aerioi

father waa notified of the state barometer, bnt ho frowned, a

peremtoeOytmihiblttod this walking deck. On the seventh day, by one those strange freaks of Atlantic ext viaaae, Uu> old p—H—- booama u sick. He sent for the doctor, who administered a seidlitx powder. Becoming perfectly well in an hour or two, ho began to think well of the yonng physician's akin. Meeting him next day, be •aid .-—'By the way, doctor, I did not pay yon for that aeidlits powder yon gave me yesterday; pray how much money do I owe you ? ‘ Fifteen dollars, air,> said the doctor, dryly. The money was promptly paid, and the old gentleman want np stairs to take the fresh air and to meditate. Abont an

afterwards he eommoned hia

tor to bis state-room, end ad-

r thus : ' My dear, that yonng

, your friend, has charged me fif- , dollars for a seidlitx powder; my 1 ^ that yonng man la able to t**—

of himself and one more; yon i i with him on deck as much aa

.* And she did, and all want on ao —j, that by the time she got within of land, the yonng doctor Tiad in anding net one of the best fish that over waa caught from the deek of ' —ean steamer. In America tnflnm

altogether a perewial tiling, t depend on family, rank, oi

ia aristocratic element is that of ability, character, and alaqnenoe, and thia bolds good in all the departmente of

the pallia «--* —

There ia „ , Lynch of New Orleans. It is related - him that not loan since a lawyer arguing a somewhat tedious case be dreading a lengthy speech, said quite abruptly to the relnbla attorney, whom •• Mr. Hagntjei^dovn. air!" “he attorney, with a ooolni i refreshing, paid not the • _ .. ration to toe command, and proceeded with the argnment Hagan," mdd Lynch, more j, "lake your sate, air 1" Lynch waa now excited, and tor . the sheriff, he exclaimed : " Mr. Sheriff, sate Mr. Hagan 1"

miles of railroad in operatioi $1,472,625,232, or $50,650 per mile

Their earnings equaled $193,826,258, o "U0 per cent, of the coat. Their earn gu per mile were $6,785 ; per head o ipnlation, $13.76. The number of in ibitanta to the mile of rood waa 490. The earnings‘of the railroads of thNew England States were 21.10 per! cent, of the gross' cost; those of the : &Gddle States 18.30, end those of the

' 18.10 per ‘ ~ 1

WciuTd.

to pepulation. Should n roads be constructed there for t five yean, the investment would bly show as well in the West as

A California Ranefi. The following description of e Cali productiveness is supplied by the Sac romento Wiion of Juno 22,—" Dr Glenn, of Oolnsa county, owns a land which contains nearly 45,000 acres. 1 nbraoes a frontage of eighteen mHoi

meed, and the line of the Burlington 1 Missouri Road is heavily guarded.

fifteen miles south oi the miles south of the epot, the trail oi five horsemen has been etruck, and followed to Nodaway River, eome thirty-eight —" -> -A fnlldeec”-" * Jicved, hac , __ thought the robbers — hardly eaoape. The general opinion is, that they are a eat of Missouri guerrillas, similar to those who robbed bank at Oorydon same two or thn

yearaago.

Oat Heal In Brinks.

Some time ago, says an exchange, we presented some statements regarding the use of oat meal in water aa a beveraga^Wa find a reprod action ol n - journal^ The edllor •aye^™ ^

refreshing.''

The Medieai Journal, ol Edinburgh, •ays: " That in its raw state, whan it is mixed np with water, it is becoming a its aiah. The broae of'Auld Scot-

ia becoming a fan

je glad to note thia, _ . . live it to be a healthy and mmole-form-ing commodity—by the hunters and trappers of the West, who ere enbstitoting oat meal in thia form for parched and Indian corn. The same brawny fallow whose power* of endurance are proverbial, whose acorn of fatigue is known to all reedera of travel and natural history—have found ont that a very acceptable drink i« made by putting abont two teaspoonfulls of oat meal to*

ofwatoB. TUa’tit "

lark Twaii

rom C

it in the

world. Noting the fact that

passengers are charged IBe. 4d., a deed bodies £110a. 8d-—just doubk he says : “ That is- Belgian morals. I

any odious Hung. , I publish tl scandalous discrimination against t moat helpless class among us in order that people intending to die abroad come back by aome •'•her line.”

A writer in the Boston Courior says ._iat the hand rede of visitors who Sock every day from the neighboring towns to see the Esquimaux atWtieasaet. He., ■ ^ to find that^being, in dressing and eating aa we drees efid -* Occasionally native predilections out, manifeating themselves in outlandish head-gear on pretty or in aome meal in the old faaatiisr style. A benevolent grocer from Wiacasset, coming to visit the Esquimaux, brought a peso* offering in the shape of four poani delighted ssvagee sc forthwith eat down made a meal of it me greasy pounds vanished in a very few min fiftSr a s?sss^S'ass in the world, got np and asked the groeer for more. It is said to be unsafe to leave oH-cans abeot the bouse. Hbwwr, sooh relapaea Into barbarism are ifrequent and generally furtiva. The party are generally in good health, though two or three of the ehiigvwn have been beat alok. Ther ‘ that a Maine inmmer Is not the leabaMe temperature in the world. to get beck into cool

PAIN! PAIN!! PAIN I wnns IS TBT SXLTXVSS I IssSns, res win ‘Jwilos'f. f ’ T ° r1 " * PXItRY DAnir P.U.V-XJUJIR-15/ ya^a.yggarwaggcca

rMn^frotii md Heart's Ctonto£t deep-see cable extend* to within eighty miles of Heart’s Content where '* —— —-"■t bnoyod, ready for eplioeicre end of toe line. It

■Effi-hjacadgalsraurci —■

SSfiffisTresaru-. onerSou. ‘The met of the mile (57.823 miles) of the reeds whose op.

snt of (he gross n

ss-s^r.,. .. log 6 J par sent of the whole ip■er.t. The cost of the rosds aver-

pertSS

f population, estimated at 40^82,000. The earnings of the reads of the dif■rent sections, of eonrae, differ greatly, io most prod active roads being those the six New England Btatoe, *>•- earnings of whieh, the past year, w $48,619,835, or 21.10 per cent on a c

’ banka o* the Qragratotoe Eourtor, emd yos^ft^ tt by^isaii^preiwJed — . wmabo^htody IMatoSra^ Ap oped by the okaraetor ol the water u ; as a drink. In 180, toe beautiful i , rteanly Qty of Tewi.gtoe situated . toe blne-graea region—the meet far , portion of Kentucky—was firat vial i by Asiatic cholera. Tbe Angel - ‘ Iraato seemed to hover over the doom- . ed city for days arid weak*. Maiming all . aa its victims. Bat tiro families eecap5 ed toe disease Dr. Benjamin Dudley's end Dr. James Bush's. Throe were toe ee in the city who need cl —, as a drink. Cisterns we then almost unknown. The quick pc caption Of Dr. Dudley bad detected tl

^ ESSaTSSHs .or yreav have bed hrftfc IS —*. jssisrifja sss

’’"'S

that ton natreoa A the eoarata may ero wbst tickets have prorad a eouree of

of toe wheel is not tc

e free.from calcareous

to protect 'll ss from the

badXS’cU*

hew of its coming. No

——j a coincident, that b families of a population of some Ivo thousand should escape, and those twe onl^ nsing ciateru water-hen

d principles. Again, there

, . in epidemic cholera on a , single plettation npon the Mississippi j Rirur, from Cairo to its mouth, where ■ * n exelnaively used,

The eo

t of the 11,617 n

if road 1

equaled 8922,700,77A or 879,427 per mile. Their earnings were $169,205,602, 18,80 per cent of their cost minge per mile were $14,565, 5.86 ner head of population. inhabitants to each miie of

and their

prior to and

directly to t] — __ —_ from springe gushing out through ot nelian pebbles, clear as crystal and oc

. sa 792.

or the ten Western 8

bank. In 1855

mtignoua 1,778 mil.

and cholera broke oul nant form again. Th

ouxville. aitnated

te.bluff oi

the dreng^fr, the ci

Sno/thi

own is occupied by Ami

. , »o exclusive] vein tern wat j the other portion by a Frenob

he Bayou . —

is divided nearly leupied by Amcrirelycistern water; tiy a French pojinlar to drink. 0 In Im9

about five miles. It is inoloi divided by 140 miles of fenoi tenant, G. W. Hoog. route i cultivates about 10,000 acres of the la: andtheOnpton Brothers cultivate equal portion. Some 15,000 acres rented ont to a number of farmers v rork on a email scale. At the pros ime farming operations are going a tills reach at a lively rate, as .. 'ork of harveeting, is progressing rapidf. Hoog ia engaged in ontting 7,000

_orae of wheat and barley. The crop will this year yield abont twenty bushels

par acre of wheat. In favorable aeasoi the yield has been about thirty-fli bushels. The yield ol barley iscoi eiderably larger. The total crop wi mount to nearly 180,000 bushels. He

. j threshing bis grain with one of Oose’s forty-eight inch cylinder threshing machines, whieh is ran by a twenty none power steam engine. To supply this machine requires six large sised headers and eighteen header wagons, all of which require the labor of 110 horses and fifty men. The machine baa threshed five Backs of barley per minute, at whieh rate it baa run for an hour and a half in succession. It has also threshed thirty-two sacks of wheat in seven min—It will require about eiz weeks

break the entire crop.

theoperations of Hoog al

brothers have an equally Urge crop, , are driving business on abont the

le scale. The smaller equally well employed.

the French portii

nearly destroyed by cholera, and yet

can aide of the bayou.

The Way of

We clip the following from the Atn< icon Ileglttcr of Paris : " An agent the Special Detective Agenoy of N. York la now in Paris in pursuit of t! Bender family, who are charged with 1 ing the authors of the wholesale mt.. dcra lately discovered at ChorryviUe, Kansas. ’Detectives from the s agency have been sent to London,

. 3, Johan .

iraonly known, Katie Bend

» forty-two y«

if age

istful expression. ^She wi

i for Havre, and it is supposed that th 1 Kate Bender i» wisaeaseJ of some edi cation, and is said to be able to speak little French. If they are really in France, now that the police are on their tong to eaoape detection. It appei that the world is to be ransacked til these murderers may be cangkt- It

of (lie Inwriter, are very great inmg themaelvea, when not their guard by the pmange ra, they are unwearied talkers. I speak now of the foil " r - ban. whose native tongue ia saiu . well adapted to narrative, description, and declamation, and whose habits ■ ’ smpeaaments lead them to be v imilnetfve. Abont one-third of — * ee* use toe English language aoe and elegance, bnt generally the Bieeeee the English is imperfectly tareafmn Uoaable. Yet toey are generally eritica, taking notice of any inaccuracy of language in the conversation of a whi on. A stranger delivering a as or lee tore U rigidly oritieisad as language, matter, end manner, and ia at ones placed In comparison with their —* —*■••* has been formed from toe whites, as well aa

CmcAOo'a Mbaitoco.—John Jonki an old gentleman of Momenee,,! writes the Inter-Ocean os follows garding the meaning of the word 0 cage : " Forty years ago yourplace i called 'Tnok Chicago.' Took, in 1 Indian language, means wood or timber, and Chicago, gone, absent, or without.. The words Tuck Chicago signified, therefore, the waste prairie, or literally tranalated. ' wood gone.' ^ Whoa^ ' as with my own language, and the above

time, my father being th man who raised a crop of r county, Mich., which was 1825. The nsnal definition word Chicago ia entirely or

rATHRLsrsmirva* "ts5satisrsisiss.ss.sr* WYOMING SEMINARY Commercial College,

Vroetakto ra too da-

id “a? 7 0t

night drawing, and th

morning drawing. The former s No. 78 drawing and the latter a ai lottery, or No, 75. In order to mat ‘-at consistent the tops v

iff the 77 so as to make it i

it variation is in j |

thing speaks for that of aB the se

away from the people, 'hotover name they are given, take the lose Havana lottery evei States are counter!ni

It is safe to i ' taking mou lotteries, nndi

■the GREAT ALTERATITE I AND BLOOD PHBIFIEB. I I It is not a qusek nostrum J I The ingredients are publiitorfl I on each bot'le of mcdicinq

n the Unit

or or Jomox.—Doubting Castle ad stumbling block in the path |an's Christian, though it con idn’t vray to Troth, We can ey thiso with the Pilgrim, for Dout beset* us when wo are asked t anything particularly extraon ry. Consequently, when we beard, eighteen months ago, that a physician in California tiad compounded, * ' the juices and extracts of certain lound there, a medicine that < almost every variety of blood di incredulous. Since tin

I MA TJSM, LIMO, GO I T, GOITRE, IIRONCHJTJS, MERVODS DEBILITY, IXC1PIEE"

irnmm. Storm Nevada mountains of CaHtornia, tbo Btedidsal properttre of which

■ tberefrom-witooat.toe ttso The nnrotion to almort

daily asked. "What Is toe cause of too uupsralleled success of Tmoato BrrtbxsT" Our answer Is, that they remove the cense of disease, and the patient recovers bis health. Obey ore toe great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and Invigoretor of the systatn. Never before In too

SSSTSt

. „ Pargative as well as a Tunte, tellevlng Congestion or IntUminaticm of tho Uver and Yiararal Organs, in Bihous

re-nsesa. -A

Pho properties of Dit. WALmt’s xoasBiTTBss are Aperient, Disphoretle, - ‘ Laxative, blurs''’

ttvC’and Anti-Bilious.

Urnteful Thoununds proeloim VrxXGAtt BlTTXRS the most wonderfaT In-

c 'mpoundf 1 " qualities of Vis nek of every <

COX^MF’at^.^^iiL No Person CAB take these Bitters

__._.ra of the blood. _ or oarRoaADAS.m Auuitac, in ■ which yon will find certificates ■ from relisblc i ■ Physicians, Ministt ■ Gospel and others.

means, aai vital organs wasted beyond "’Villous. Remittent and Intermittent Perers, “hlcli ore »o^prevail! roughout the United Statee, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri,