STAR OFTHE CAPE
STAR OP THE CAPE.
TOL. T.
CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY. OCTOBEE 29, 1878.
NO.! 46.
r?s
s
Ml
ft
1
sm
:: ii:
mam
yg.^iaasr;g
Anon Um cm nd Mrimi tkisn T ." n ^ l 2“'‘ • eue^t him br the oolW 1 off—for I hud wit enoogh to eee th»t, wfaclerer might be the **— meater didn’t He; bnt Mr. B fleehed. end hie fleta doubled as ee he made a step forward. Gentle-— T: - pat hie thin, rough hand wa te atar him, and I heard throngh BeO'a.ftrnggling with ia not the man Ton moat a Belton ; bnt the porertr that made him what he ia r And Mr. Belton fell back, looked at Ben fora aeeond aa if he reallr aaw him for the lint time, and then It into another room* 1 ^ (oaf; and abort of it la that a aa decided on; and the next not a single man in MinaarUle ■aa’Ki.^'SSK-S
IKS’*
last quite ao long. Wa ' iobborn, famiahad, and at laat rfrSStgoffto^igh^' robbed na of what reason w till eren the soberest and peaoefnl among na ware ready to take part ia almost any action that waa proposed—for wa were not used to be idle, and time hong mighty hoary. T*ehildren began to look haggard and i_„ for bread, and the women to mntter that half a loaf is better than none, and gin in or to do ■They did not ol to keep the young ones from dying and the homes from desolation. Knowles end two i
After it was orsr aad we were tuning away aa gently aa we oonld, Mr. Belton, with his arm around hia wife, who waa crying on hia shoulder, asked na to atop a moment, aa he had thing to any to na. Bo we held nr gathering together our little to listen to him, feeling a
lost their all while on
E AT MIXESTILLE. *. it is true that wages ain't ilneaTille aa in other plaees VS bed long strikes te get m the owners. Those tb
desperate, proposed to attack ‘The Hotue,' and thus either force or fright-
throngh the woods—the solemn tramp, tramp, of ao many feet orer the flecks of annahlne that faD throngh the Boftfyiu the spring broeass; Urnt sort of paaoefnlneaa that brooded like "is whole pathway, nor the stern, ... —saef the men, silent, dsrk, and toll of diasdtol threat. > was an unnatural stillm emplace when ^ws anired d theawn wide, green be felt but
MSI nerer hare yi hare starm sasb. 1 ; I win show
and he glanced orer at Bee. T would hare starred drat, and —
if yon will
■bow you why I could not oiler
.. _ .tore than ten per cent, ad ranee; and when yon see just how I stand, yon — judge whether you will still pursue
ifnBelton had bis chief dark
there, end they got down his books and tow them out loud with Gentlo-
Jim, and it ~
1 of talk among ouraelrea, we agreed to take Mr. Belton's terms, sad every one of ns went bade to work the next day. “And that's the way death put an end to the Strike at Minesrille ; we hsren't had another since, aad ain't likely to
-v _ said, ‘ I cant say anything to yon now. Little Willie u dead and ' ha broke down aad oorarod bis face for an instant, Kota
he oonld do it, yon ■now; ana. *>on came from the ru with hia bead down and hia Bps qnii A good many of the women er. . ' ' whan wa told them about it, and. .iteofere. “■-* — ahonld go
ire struck cTctrbody. said Mr. Beecher, in a Flymonth praye meeting, "tbat a great dime wsa wrought in the Disciple*. They can scarcely be said to bare been men of ordinary intelligence to begin with, eren in their day. Bat when the HolyOboet entered them they became as powerful — to torn the world npeido down.” ~ ■ rfus^r
Sew Tack Oysters.
I had long wanted to hare seen York oysters enough, and in California It la impossible, ao I ordered the waiter to bring me a hundred raw on the halfshell with my dinner. He looked astonished, and I had to repeat my order and forcibly, too, before he left the
■r wrong her h th her >ng Tai id 7 weeping droi • ]a falling on thi ■aid “ Karth to
with her, and the drowned the noise of the wood when the
earth.* Thei
conception of the higher efSiitoal plane to which they might rise. A brother said that Mr. Beecher had dona e-" enough aa far aa he had gone; bnt had left the subject half dlmaed —important point waa how to m— higher plane. Mr. Beecher replied those with happy nature*, and e who hare the faculty of belier-
H'
“except through tiro thoughts,
a real icing aeoae of th* life to come, aad the other a ooutinual knowledge of the abiding lore of God. All that I know, aad all that I .want to know, ia t ' God ia all lore and mercy. The l
Jerusalem has twelro galea, and a
i into man's t
i was my most senoos s • story 1 '' Th 11 "'tor***
and. replied. “ Yea, a handled of yi largest oysters, six, and my dinner wiui them, and quick, too." He bowed and ‘ “ - *' * fear I had orerdrawn — finally got down to work again, and forgot all else bnt my letter to yon, when he returned and brought my dinner ia, bnt no oyster*. T naked where thy were, anO° “id,
beat to bring eoltato
While the dam ia in nse, Um colt ahonld not be allowed to ran with her, colts are not nnfreqneotly injured in this way, and al way* worry and annoy the mare. When the mare ia brought in^ahe should ^be kept from the colt Spring oelta ahonld we weaned in the latter part of August, aa it ia much bet■>r them to.b* depriredof milk the weather ia warm and there is — . 0 raaa. It ia always batter to wean oolta when there ia grass for them. Grain ahonld nerer be fed to eolta nnE ind, and carrot* and other vegotofed to them ahonld be chopped _ mixture of corn meal, ground oala and bran, with a little Balt, about i quart at night '
*- to toe
feed
‘ Dtf . o.
10 fewer en a truth.—1
ist they were t loursedrea.
a yon snppoae," asked another ir, “that a man can rise into the _—: state that yon apeak of by atrir-
> ing directly for it t”
* “ I. do not beliere in &o main in fliigher life' people," replied Mr. Beecher. “Wo are made to reach a right end by performing all our duties. I nerer helped anybody that the effort did not hcjjg|mej * v — M AM vi— TV.
'HowSit,” w "that some try to ae • • fail?"
the prompt reply, 'toexamine the star* through a bottle of whisky he wouldn't snooted. If men desire to understand the problems of spiritual forms, they must take God’s method of doing it," “ Do you mean to asy,” said another Questioner, “that the attainment of this higher state depends upon fixed laws entirely, or upon the Christian himself ?" ***- ‘suppose that God ercr did
l tow days ago, remarked t tori L Qf"
against whom li - giTsuess awaits 1 ! take It."
Origin of the Word Nrhooncr,
ir, corrects that lexi-
° 0 y , T?e happy thought of a Cajm Am
i designed a new ani* —*—
TBasels, and gare a: ia certainly
ufant child. entered the car, and passclaiming: “ Oh I whare ia Johnny f I ' •-> «-i_ .. o*. b t m
it in all the leading papers of the E at the time, bnt no i He sent it to hia m
at e party giren in hia bonof. he was already learned to look with more than ordinary friendship. Both enjoyed the - with a faint seream, died in hia i. He rtm recurs to the aad scene
r, if told et ell, ahonld be told rightly. Fifty years ago I used > well-known citixen of Brighton, nephew of the great lawyer and , Theophilns Parsons. Mr. Par■oca waa bant, I think, in Gloucester— oertainly hia father, Elion Parsons, began there hia meroeutile career. More than onoe I heard Mr. Parsons, wl a man of intelligence ' efi —tad memory, tell the sto-, a schooner. Hia aooonnt, which rery oirenmatantial, with nam - details that I hare forgotten, w statftiaUy this: After the new t> ‘ lly rigged end ready for ni &ed for the first tml. Mnc ad been excited by the inni d all ware onriona to tee how ■lie would act, bnt Captain Robinson and hia family, who oonld watch her —“one from their own windows, ware than curious. As the Teasel b waa at onoe evident that she oc smarkably near the wind. In oal dialect of the time and ; teJuxming win the term generally to designate that feat, and tf- : word was familiar to all. As ti “eeaol shot ahead almoat in tl — of a strong broese, the Captai: Afceqla—■ exclaimed, “^^tother, a
ly hand, erery oyster. Well, s was my dinner on one trey, and i trey* of oysters. To ray I waa riaed would out faintly express it. re often eaten a hundred California 9IS, and f nerer yet had enough,
tri was not to blame. These thoughts rushed through' my head as I >ked a little astonished, for on* of the darktf* begin to grin, bnt I looked around and said, “ That will do now, and if I wont any
ore I will ring."
I could not eat an Mater. I comenoed with a eup oP'tfa, and a little inner, all the while eyeing the oysters ist lay there eyeing me malioionaly. it emed, and kept on looking at me with leir great tat «ks, till, if I waa to die. oonld not hare tasted one. I looked it the window; there waa a drain lere for the rein, and into that drain I ropped those oysters, every one, one -.Jndrod and two of them, and with them has departed my liking and longing for oyster* forerer. California oysters hare no indiriduality ; they are oomparetiTely as ao many grains of rioc; bnt each one of these great horrible New York affaire seems likt some strange indiridual, ana 1 feel just as if they were speculating on my probable internal economy, with a view to raise a* much disturbance os possible. The way those oysters slid down that drain I Ugh I It makes me shiver now. I was afraid one or the of those waiters would peep throngh the keyhole, and I went and looked the door and hung a dress orer it, and then continued until the fast one had disappeared. Then I atopped trembling and opened the door, oloeed the window, and rang the bell. The waiter same, and I act there calmly and answered sweetly to his questions, and said: “ No, James, not any more now. I don't believe in eating too many oysters at once; they are hurtful. And his face I It waa a model for aur‘u and woudgr, and, I think, fear. ! think I can stand it to go to Egypt r, where I cannot get fried oysters every morning for breakfast. I thought ones it would be a hardship.—Cor. SI.
LouU Globe. *
bedding;
Lion and i „ . stable as in the honae. The stables ahonld be kept sweet and clean, and eolta ahonld be brushed, not eurried,
every day.
, It ia a good plan to habitnate colts very early to being handled. They thus lose all fear of man, and when it is time ‘ 'lit and break them, no trouble ia experienced. Bitting is a very nice prooeee, and requires ranch knowledge and judgment to bo successfully done. After the yonng horse has become accustomed to the bitting apparetne, he should bo taught to steady himself upon the bit when driven, and the driver ahonld see to it that ho does not learn pnU. The^horee ahonld be tanght he ahonld tail. By pulling, a horse Ibe bitting of a yonng hot** ahonld
—“ * J —slop speed.
S ioedo any attempt te Ita ahonld not be d
generally dno to over-driving. Trotting horses cannst draw weight until they are fully matured and have had a great deal of work; and a sure way of ruining mg trotting horse is to drive him
Deafn 1 avert
novelties in Fashions.
_..ipad percale, collar and onffs, with now flaring standing collar and very wide French ends.
from *450 to |6. ” ‘some ornaments for the hair i China crepe of palest tints wi snnee li ~ — —* ’—
butterflies, m
The meet stylish bolt* are of velvet, with three oxidised bnokli. • ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ *15. Cut steel
tolated old age—a
o the ear. Not that this most nt and healthful pleasure need, e, be in the least discouraged, lould be wisely regulated. Stay. - long in tbo water certainly o produce deafner- — —— ils; and it ia a pn which young persona of hot
be carefully on their guard. But independently of this, swimming and floating are attended with a certain dangci >m the difficulty of preventing the enrace of water into the oar in liioae positions.' Now, no cold fluid should eroi
boefof
latest novelty
private letter, wnticu uy a gei residing in Memphis, to his ail
northern city, aays:
or Memphis baa suffered tern . There are hardly enough well people to bury the dead and attend to the aiek in the northern portion ofihe city. It ia heartrending to witness the distress here. Whole families have been swept away in a tow days, and the dead lay
tended to in h -
r to look after ; help the poor! This ia themoatdiseing epidemic that has ever vi*if 4 «d country.. No on# knows the anfferot the poor hot those who have been mg them. When taken they live > a abort time, and there ia na one to the tale. I oonld write 100 pages I oonld not tell yon all. The
velvet belt*. Camel's-hair lace ia .. for trimming oemel'a-bL light and wiry than yak.
yard for trimming widths. Elegant French galloons, to be laid ally on velvet or silk, have droopig teaseled ornaments: price *5 a yard. There la a special fancy for galloon or solid jetWhite mask veils with black chenille “ta eve becoming end sty! Hast caps have an— , of the high-pointed Normandy Pink and nine reeped ted in one cap, while k trimmed with black velvet ribbons and roes buds. Stylish French fraitee to i black dienes are found ready-made ■ black auk. with white silk lining crape liase pleating : price *3.75. 1 —'—‘ standing collar* quadruple box-r d lining; p ' lin pleated raffs,
while li
*1.75. -Elaok toll* beaded'
stylish. White tulle raffs with ehenills on the edge ere *2.50.
A Spanish faney is e high-necked
small fichn of block heeded tnllef
daily ed at
ltan« der, *
s&s&szx; tistbnrying-ground. point e man mala •* her, and fastened . . .. her month, et tt pouring upon her face
bragged c boys; but h next day, nc
ct. He did ni
he made his appearancei
pint of chopped
morning, ia a very giod Colts should 8 ^ kept warm. The. hardening process " generally does a rest deal more harm than good. After oolt has got some substance to haren, there ia time enongb to harden im. Bee that the oolt has plenty of
id lack of ventila-
be habit of feigning lamenesn : Among my hone frienila waa a oeri Suffolk ' Punch.' whq had been
isteoed the Artful Dodger, from hi* trick of ooneterfciting lameness the moment be was put in the shafts of a drey. That is to aay, if the dray was loaded ; ao long aa it was empty, or the ‘ d was tight, the Dodger stepped out
dy, but if he foundtho dray at all ivy, he affected to' faR dead lame. ■ The old strain of stairooh blood waa
strong in his vans to allow him too bnt instead of — . . me or jib or standstill. Oh, no ! pooled, hia teacher, wb< The Dodger arranged s compromise with •' '' '
conscience, and. though he pulled nfutly, he resorted to this lasy aub- ’ Mure than onoe with a * new chum’
it had succeeded to perfection, and the "lodger found himself back again'in hia table with a rack of hay before him, rhile his deluded owner or dnver was nnning all over the place to find a sub-
titnte in the ahafta.
“ If I bad not seen it myself, I could not have believed it. In order to induce the Dodger to act his part thoroughly, a dniyman was appointed whom the horse bad —' —
fore, imagined
md otherwise injure
i&EjSr.
turdy leg liter the Xr. ..to a,!: * UlUe
nee of tho deepest concern. This In toe aquarinra notes of /-and and iraged tho Dodger, who uttered a Water, Henry Leo, an officer of the So’bis boat, and limped and Blumblcd a al facta regarding^ toe baby oolopods.
iposaible to be- follows : " Tho young, octopns. fresh
hsdithappenedonme.tbe Dodger would sepia without ita tentacles than an ociustantly hare been unharnessed and topus. The arms, which will after- ; come to nnranak him. His of ita body, are so rudimentary as to he itepped forward, and palling oven* shorter in proportion toon the cunning ear, on the alert for pedal anus of toe cnttlo-fish, and ap- i riage, u •It won t do. sir 1 Htcp ont directly, Caving points of hair-liko QneneM, and j style,
'.nd don't let ns have any nonsense.' arranged in ton form of an eight-nvod Youn
“The Dodger groaned again—this coronet aroand the head. In itsjfond-I al gian ime from hia heart probably—shook nesa for light, tho young ootopus differs I oarafu! limsclf. and leaning well forward in from ita parenta, being notomvwilling. i .n,.er,.i
topped -
id yet, by ignore!
lying
the fo
reXluld
ir leas irritating, and, liaised for swingng, rapidly produces extreme giddiintrance into the ear is leu objeotiontble, but even this is not free from dia* idvantage. Often tbo water lodges in ;ho ears and produces an uncomfortable lenution till it is removed; tins ahonld dway* be taken as a sign of dangor. If ;ho water cannot be prevented from enMiring toe car in any way, the head may Lie covered. Wet hair, whether from bathing or washing, may be a cause of deafness, if it be suffered to dry of itself. Whenever wetted, toe hair ahonld iped till it is fairly dry. Nov t the practice of moistening tl
hair about the
if injuring them. In the washing of ihildren, too, care should be takeall toe little folds of the outer carefully and gently dried with towel. Draft* of air are also peculiarly 'njurious to the ear. The modem at - '* jf cutting toe hair of men, and of ranging the hair of women, ia much . be deprecated; because it waa intended
‘ ihould fall
be deprecated; because i
it. But u we cannot throw down *
handkerchief ahonld bo applied to toe ear exposed. The ordi ■' washing the toes does a ■
loth or tint moistened with ater or other flnid, ia by . .jo neoeaaary safeguard to thf internal ear. This information is ol practical value to all, and wo hope it may be remembered u such.
air way into this section of oountiy, s give the article an insertion in our iper so that farmer* may be on their
going for eon neighboring counties. The awindti travel through the country with ssi_ jdeajif goods, repreaenttng themselves
grangers' i samples, of
' 'low prim T the amount, payable in sixty days. a. ds never get around and toe traded off to innocent third parties, and while toe farmer ia eon—itulatlng himself upon not buying of ddle men, and wondering why toe oda don't come, the note turns up. ia beat for fanner* and others to buy ly of men they know, and eapecially -.1 to giro toeir note until they have
mine received.
. Borne awindlera have also been operating in another manner. They aoll a
kind of oonlpound to
'■-..v"4f|* ...
at a farm house they ius us posting landlord to sign selling forth toe' utility of
gtor the^edifloatiao.arthoM
like Thomas of old. They usually ope—with those who cannot read Engor who are not posted in the vaiwaya of this age of awindlera and oheati Of course toe oertifloate turns up in few week* aa a promiserv note duly signed, Ae. Aa toe patent right and local agency business becomes played out. these scoundrels are breed to resort to some new mode* of swindling, and there are among them. Look ‘
for them:
A ehaittabl* Ciceinuati man keeps a pair of dogs chained at hia front door ao that poor people, who “atop to get a bit* "can be accommodated *r«—* taUng the tronbio to go into to*
duos toe m
LadyB.
deportment, I cannot remember which—and hia teacher told him he must stay after school When tho other scholars were dismissed John seised a moment when the teacher's back was
signal was gii :r, after a glai
be subjects
told him to .
obedience-" John took her meaning onoe, and sat scratching liis head a
following, whiel
Finally he handed ir
is called ob 'is called *d
ng, and
g and -be
don’t do it, it is called disobeying. The boy's r T -*~ — J *— -* 1 -* —
ol>ey h
The t
and be did
1 when she called r her. and he will
tisfied.
in an undertaking ' waa _ _ to tho earnestness brought to beer noon it, a hen oonld ran aboot eighteen hundred miles a day. An Indiana aobool teacher had ni*
titles Edward & Blokes, who abet Col. Fisk to bail, and he will, he allowed bail, if such an event takes place on this
£*L
'mere ia sai nati, who is
a to no a man In Oinein; in possession ef such
iwerful memory that he ia employed ’ toe Humane Society to remember
State Institute ia Vineoancs, lad., only one opellrd correctly a Hat of twenty words in ordinary use, and ous mined
them all
Tbo styles in ladies' dress hare nop got back aa far as too days of ^Catherine
itylea prevalent in th*
bad place for
have reached garden of Edl
~ “ id, Oregon,
thieves. A police justice .recently ***• to need a follow to thirty days' imprisonment in the county jail for atoating an
egg from a grocery.
In tho river Medway in England
thousands of fish are dying owing to the offensive matters discharged into ita water* from tho mill*. The dead
and dying fish are generally bream.
Pattee, tho wife murderer in Now Hampshire, bsviug pleaded guilty to a charge of murder inyha second degree, boa lieen sentenced to twenty years* mreting^by Dr'chamberlain'estimates the prodaotion of silk in the United States to be already worth *<0,(00,000. A Lafayette. lodiana, man drew hia vretel it to”a pair of'horaes and a carriage, hia idea being that if we were all
smash ho would at least go in
ladies
io use the Brobdig-
•d by m
The
tbout a but apparently anxious, to display ita ! Bu disap- ugliness in ^the best^ possible light; th
irirei1*an”wmaide'rod^t^aafo’uTtyy'bi* I rirelf''boek^aid by a^aeriea o/^erksl j J, 1 ' •- ' " doilge' once more." ! caused by projecting from ita mouth a , i One iilrenm of water. It will bo remeiu- j
l that the mother protected too , , h. me..,, of tin- ..me foree.1 .mV. I 3,4
i any desired amount of reading or cold extremities ; but should these Ita follow, other employments that lees taxing to tho brain must be is so o^te^X P rereted1or*tovMid». hat it is badly cboeon. To offer
.dividual sufferii
latistics recently published indicate England hud this year 3,<1.0.392 * to wheat, nud it is calculated that average yield was 24 bushels per \ wlden^gives an aggregate ol 86,A French custom house officer, of en
. A Hlllsbc I Jeff Yokutt 1 0 - x !^ , 2“^ 0, .
nTlnf;^^
to bo delightful 'ment. So has crayons, or pen a part of the day mrk which does on a counting of
bo try-
», and is not so fine as . the eyes, is often a
ment, particularly plain knitting and crocheting. Then there are many ocies of oramqntal work which afford ilimited amusement; each as making 1 shapes; making caper dolls, and . ilia' furniture of c&ra-board ; cutting paste-board transparencies ; decalcomanie; cutting pictures from illustrated paper*, and prating thum on loaves of Been, to bo bound for an indestructible child's book ; and winding worsted into soft, fuzzy balls for toddling bairns of two years old and under, have each boon snooeosfnlly resorted to hr invalids, who, though forced to bo ill, sere determined to -save themselves 'rom the gloomy fancies which, without inch employments, trifling as these mem, would be almost inevitable.
gradually.' Then ho was l and if the after dinner speed
that he *
(letting a Fair of Shoes, recorded that a certain ii man who boards around
Second District, New Orleans, wi
days ago aroused to the melancholy fact
’--at shoeless, and that
Im, to bo followed in
.no by too stern and rigorons winter, when no man with the proper amount of feotipg to his feet
could go barefoot.
The matter was one of painful interrt to him, and ho pondered long and deeply on the —* v - -*■—"
at he g
thing for him, but, strange to say, was a brilliant one. Ho acted on i and thia is how he did: With the ass: ‘ with a well filled pock.
entered a shoe store and had hia asuro taken for a covering of ‘ foundations The obliging Onapii oeived particular instruction., as to aad style of make, and his now
too dignity of a free and rospoctahl. citizen, and a legal ‘ rotor, called or. shoemaker No. 1, tried on the right loot shoe, and came to the conclusion that it might fit belter if he had on a pair of •oriu. Would the shoemaker be ao obliging aa to let him take that one shoe home 1
but too happy, and the purchaser left, and No, 2 was visited. From him the'Mil foot shoe tained to tho same manner, eoi There are two mad m if the shoo purchasing chap 9* the way of either there will be trouble.
of tho moot extrao: dinary thing* in this world ia the oot ‘ -f * hen on toe approach ef - If she ia standing in toe way at ne she remains there, and yon jtirely atop your horse, only *- discover that she ia safely out of t way. And if she ia on one-aid* of t . road, she immediately dashes into the centre, and brings yon np again, while th* sold sweat forms on year baric al the thought of tho damage*. And it if a little atognlar that while yon axe confidant yon navar saw a ban ran orer, nor ever hoard of aueb a thing, yot nc number of trial* aan keep bask tha perspiration from your back, oc pr» rent yon from drawing np your bona Jo too imminent dangor of his hind
i. opened eoveml, and lound tomachs full of cigars, ro, 111, philosopher, named , alter batoning to various early days narrated by a
aa State Fair tb Edw^Po^enov
. old-fashioned cliim
ire. ''In tho bottom of tills, j e toward the fireplace a grate j
ileld. The water would ta
nt to work tho night before, had ils glowing and ox started *'
ii me sunmionai , led by ^ratting on j
jf"
ZX
The Story of Logan. Another cherished Indian idol shman, bnt by an American, f. Addison, of Maryland, a'-'en , rove not or ly that a Col Ores not kill toe chief Logan's famii Logan tried to mnrdor h:
vires. Including a loi
I- 'rhit.'
posed, killed hi
eance of he ihot dead by
lotlicr Indian.
•ntenda that Logan never e sneerii attributed to him by Jefferson in his "Notes on " as Mr. Jefferson's authority lory ia only that Its heard it 10 person wnose name bo had forgotten. Mr. Addiaon ia perhaps hasty ia driCrging Logan with being a baiXUdlan, for there is trustworthy * adition to prove thiitbo was well liked id highly esteemed by bis white lighbors, and that he had a kind heart
id fine feelings.
two hnn-
twelve degrees."
iwport, B. I. Kewt lies been libel damages claimed 820,-
000; but tho Newt «uj«, " if the protoeutor gets a favorable vordiot from any jury, we propose celebrating tho event \ -ffioo and going on a
■hot-gun.
n too Swedish colony, in Aroostook inty, Maine, a Swedish woman, e, sawed and split it np, made it
.dent's ^stnotures o itoals seemed to seor
Blair county, Ponn* prescription is not ol itself a safeguard *- - druggist who sella liquor without iso. A druggist is liable to prosecution if ho soils liquor, oven on the prescription of a weU-kuown physioiin, * ■ persons known to use it aa a bever-
5»-
If orchardista wore generally to mnlch ith wood shavings, too injury resnitig would be incalculable. Potash I* io principal mineral element of wood, ml daring the aeraon of growth it must
through ita :
iposed Repeal of * Peaslon Law.’ . is intimated that the Second Comptroller of the United States will in his annual report recommend the repeal of the law requiring biennial examinations ' pensioners, toe expenses to the pryiment for that semee reaching, it ia ....d, at least a quarter of a million dollars per year, while to dispense with toe biennial examinationa would not cost toe governments loss of more than "re or six hundred dollara, ao tbat by ^ repeal of the section of tbo ponti - tatntoo requiring these oxamlnatir io outlay of *250,000 would be nr > tho fteasnry and '' would gain too difference . comparatively tight amount might bo lost by not having pensioners examined every two years and the amount it requires to perform that acr-
. . . .M.W. Dickson, a ranchman of Brown connty, Toxaa, where ho haa fire thousand head of oat tie. ^Atow woritajyo he was atat hLa'rhirteen bulletatookefleet la body—one in the right shoulder, — in tha breast and abdomen, four in th* Uft arm, one in th* right sido of'tha in to* back of th* baad.
stay at ofhia
trw.q tO scalp him, and bad |0
irely ra will a
will ■
a if entirely laltimore, haa I hundred and
leprived of food.
Mr. Rosa Winam, .—^ hirteen"*brick dwcfllnphonU.
lories high, suitable for people in noderate oircumatanoe*. Theypossoao m usual aceommodationa for dwell ing* if their class. Their cost was about *560,000. and they will accommodate
about 1,500 people.
An English scientist lira disoovend .. fact important to farmers. It is that sulphite of lime appears to exercise ■ decided influence hi arresting the spread ‘ decay in potatoes affected by the |»»- salt was dusted over some tabere, partly decayed from thia oauae, when they were stewed away. Some month* ofterwards too potatoes were found te have suffered no further Injury. the " toughest" set of “ roosters " ..ist ever shook the dust from any town, •ays tho Reno Journal, left Reno recently for the new mining diatriot of Cornnoqpia. They came here from Virginia. Among the crew were four ”— York gnu-fighters, two Chicago lerera, three Baltimore bruiseri, Philadelphia prize-fighter.' four Francisco hoodlums, three Virginia beats, two Union Pacific roughs, and
two check guerillas.
tiling te live at a high rate, truatiag to Inck to meet the bills; to ooenpy a heavily mortgaged honse; to dress wires and children in finer clothing than wo sen pay for; foraish otil parlors with handfom* upholstery on credit, and to keep a loo** running aooounl without grocer aad our butofier, knowing—if V** would only stop long enough to know « all—tost we cannot pay for what w*

