Jl
St3oFTHEcI*r
STAR OF THE CAPE.
LTh« bRowiac Ubm by Timothy Bwu. the well-known *ntbor of the old tODW, "OhiB»“ aad “Folua.” when in the eerenty^bird year of hie ego. They were eat to hi*
“ WeH beep »• it** en'tede wile, Onr wwk wfll then be free fn lie. Vprifht weU itep Uiro' UmA end lb BnlcLtm,. Dent lent wf the prise votl win Mates ceded ■' Te lea there'a hue whe'e jaM aad wtae.
VOL. Y.
/ a certain failing-off ardor, end Mr. Aneon, who bed steadily retnaed to see the wider, hoped for the beet for hie plan. The liner and eon met after snppor. ■'Well, Robert." said tbe/ormrr, ‘the lonthis np.' What haws yon doeidad each other," began Robert. "Certainly.” " And I ahall not hide anything
CAPE MAT CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1873.
Prrealng Upward. Among ail the powers of U mind none u more rital to ita own wan: being, or more essential to the hnman program, than Jthst tiring strength of ward and npinid, beyond anTabon all past precedents or present examples. It ta, indeed, not eo much a distinct fsome and animaicw ass we rwas. ana ops them continually into higher idf'eneUenoe and newer phacce of beauty. It ia the germ of all Improrw- • '-ipk.
at i _fo^3ring aetirity. P« this account that thia . _ ia to often weak and lan ire other valuable traits ar
Sraaeh^ > UM
able things tha
aon, aad a wealthy and were among tha agreeable
were eooolmafed ^Robert Aneon by •milfng fortune. Hie mother bed died in hie early youth, and the father end — -Urn ody members of the family ■na-.iaa-—-a- mere like
a before ho even had
M therabjeet of hiaeon' _enL They oama to speak of orally at but, howerr '
aaw bia opportunity.
" What a question, Mr. Aneon," el replied,^ahowinj; her perfect teeth in
marry him t" "I hope sot.”
“-Sir r and eron the widow’s pretty
frown eaptirated him.
I beg your pardon,” he added,
to endure Buffering, erfl, who am intrepid in danger and aelf-denying in duly life, but who a— yet ao thoroughly under the dominii of outward guidance, or custom, or i Buenos, or habit, that their Tory virtu aerrile imitation * a, instead of belt-., original energy, which ia and aelf-renewiBg. Such This^U phyucian or lawyer, will often progress fairly, and eren rapidly, for awhile, and it may be, attain to aome degree of aminenee in bia calling, hot at length he “ *- - irance; he “ mate -- *-*- has followed beater to new road; hehaai J standard, but raised no re h— much, but thing. He may hare Men
is province, and baa sines controlled ■ destinies. He ia known aa a jealous and tyrannical ral«r. Tha wives of bin —ibjeota ba considered as his own, and for a house or a garden he ia alraya ready to reoeiTe it as a free gift or t buy it for a tenth of its value, the m happy owner having the fear of deat before bia eyes in ease of non-eompl anee. Executions are cruel and fn quant. The gallows stands in ever, * , and the baaaar of Khoksnd often with blood. The criminal is led —1 the streets while the people atone him, until suddenly the executioner,
thrusting a sharp knife into hia throat, " l
cuts it outwardly and the victim falls
joyment of a eollosaal fortune. But last them came a sepermtioa of a vw.. Anson desired to again visit Europe, and hia father preferred a trip aeroar the continent to the Pacific aoaalj
Jf^followad
■. senior, spent six months ■
" I sea.” and her eras dropped appropriately, "you ob/tat *~ T — upsralively poor." ' Indeed I do not The flnaneial astof the affai *
sred by me.”
Jhe widow hero pierced him with a look of gratitude.
made a discovery on the return trip. distot relative of hia deceased w —• girl whose parento had not long before died, leaving the daughter dependent upon her own exertion* for support. Mr. Auaon sought her out find-
tain age?"
divined the reason, and
feetly frank with you. ]>y avu i* ve dear to me, and it has been the draa I my life to eeehim happily married — line beautiful and laving won an.” Hera the widow turned her glorious eyes full upon Mr. Anaou, and managed to show her arm, which 1 * *- *"
—a aon who ia in Europe. Ha will ba home soon. Both of na have had fill of traveling, and will want to ae down in a home. By making your home with us you —-** •- “ attnetion, raUeve i ... or’s bin, and we'll all be aa happy aa larks together. -is oertelnly alluring to i, and aha accepted the » How York with Mr. Thereupon the old mi orated, refurnished, no the hfodquarlers of a brilliant social clique, flora atones took her place aa a favorite, and Mr. Aneon was preud of his pretty protege. As tha return of Robert Anson w ly handsome and dashing woly oonld have
ticnlarly ^ronnd,^ s "I beg your pardon,” hastily i tinned Hr. Anson; " I know that yon w good, beautifnl, and lovable, but—" "But I am too old- » — •• • • — • SO very old either, si—___ . — older than Robert. My levs for him baa been largely of the guardian sort—1 have patted and admixed v ' f might And he lovee i— “ But not exactly as he should s wile.
This lack ia aean it all the phases of ife. Intellectual labor far oftener eonaists in retraeing the thoughts of others than In pressing forward' original thought. Beading and study are valuable, not only for the information tluy convey, but for the impetus thsy give to fresh and vigorous mental aotfon, to push its efforts still furthsr in the direction. Yet the majority of atm on tent simply to reflect the light brown upon them, instead of giv- ._ . it a aalf-de rived light. Bo.l moral and religious Ufa, it ia far —men to borrow our principles of aofrom outward rules or from a conventional standard, and thus to babitnvirtne, than to nourish in tha soul that spiritual vitality which shall, by ita owu freedom of choice and love of goodness, develop ever new and richer fruit- ”
In every Sty and village he either boegfat up at a low price all the shops on the bazaars or seized them without • of law, merely telUng the late 1 that they had enjoyed them long enough. After repairing aad 1 strnosing them, aad in some eases I v onea. he isle them out at a high Tha inoome derived from this aouroe ia enormous. In tha Utter part
Uving power of wiU both
auataina, and when it dies luo lorm illustrious minds' who, with strong t energy of their own, have quicks
that of multitudes, have been the K it and leading" "
yhsve known
bondage, either to
) hia rife.'
rhe^ridow, burst
tears—pre-
buried nor
rohief.and hart
Ituously. The
ewer's courage quite forsook him at thia to him unexpected crisis. A pretty
. sad
Mre. Morrow could have desired. She sank down on the aafa in bar grief, vary close to him. He wanted to console her, and ao be took her hand. It was
white, soft, aad warm.
" Please don’t cry," he said: "I have offended and grieved yon. Fray for-
routino.^of ' noble porpoaaa, tied content m the thonghta of the past or tha doings of the present, bnl have made their Uvea a con tinned aeries rithr '
don’t cry," he said: " I have
ad gri<—■* ^ There, don’t pit^ me/
"I ean hear it. I h
i a nrsk “A tented."
■’OerUirdy.'’
fig On the firet day Robertmau-B. _
“ What is mooay to me? 1 >d nalBvad—I ahall try to b< ■ of having
■ youth let na not ba satisfied to ins! the virtues of obedienee, patience, ii ' r and fortitude.. These are al
to determida for himself. Let peculiar! Sea be crushed, or d down, but rather marie the . rhieh to build a itrong ind>ity. If possible, let a love of the ful. the poor and the good be and in hisheart, 1st hia fresh aad mpalsoa bo gnided.^and hia r suppoeea that be who undertehee I tee > task will himself bring to the weak a . trnty Uving spirit. Only life can create - life, only warmth of aoui ean stimulate the snintai] germ. So if we would cro- - ate vitality in others wa must cherish it elves, and although thia may . J ba wan a harder teak, wa shall not despair of affacting it Just - »*, by watchful care and patient labor.
The manufacture of glazad, or aoealled patent leather, 'though not an American invention, ia indebted to American genius and skill for its bar. mg entered eo largely in the numerous branches of manufactures ; for prior to the time when Seth Boyden worked out a proceaa for its manufacture—for which he ia justly entitled to be accredited aa inventing aa though none had ever been made—very little was used. Calfskins were finished thja way ' ’ ' iported to this eo
. this will eon <300,000,000 to (300.000,000,
this species of our cdrculaUng medii It will leave the paper currency free « arm the legitimate functions of
a, and will tend to brjag na back
where we must come at last--to a specie basis. I confess to a desire to see a limited boarding of money. It insures
thin he could gather from ... sample, but by peeve Terence replied, though ridiculed and opposed, and even denounced aa a nuisance, because of the smell produced when preparing his varnish. Aa soon aa the manufacture of patent leather ceased experiment, capitalists became . 1 in it, and it has grown to be i-1 a large and profitable branch of inly the use . of the leather-splitting ohine, a hide is split in three or four that, in the old procees ef old have produced but fifty — — -tcreaacd to about
mty-flve feet, suit
NO. 47.
> from Khiva ia extremely
aad value in
aw P®£ 1 able for glazing, besidi (R&.OOO per annum. Silk is woven in j ^d1n'^e^. 0O . T uSXted 0 thm oounUy for many articles ol use experiment, among whom ' and of apparel which do not compete Crockett, a fellow-townsman -ire re. dress goods from foreign B oyd<ra, wto t a rnod his atU
•ts and nb- producing an enameled snrfi
i portion of Uue greinAid. '
. Tr!
io apeomplish h
swing silk is by far tb moat importmit branch of
New Jersey bus at
11 demand for their goods u. i j gradually and surely, that in I .jpeot f- -*—
uufacture,
[reaa, an“d "the
streets, in Newark, N. - was durable and aa fr ' the plain, poliabed ai 1 and important indnstr i Before Mr. Crocks * dressed leather, prose -poarence of harness I only leather used foi
>bbed aad beaten, and barely « , with their livee. Another party i ’ d in the same way. When I of thia occurrence reached I
afire—an atrociously
el punishment, under which the - often lingers for aeraral days, re—re -• ■-* idred K
see the hoardi _
; that has a atendard of value the 1 over. BaW hai this; and if wo
gat back to that our strides to-
wards a higher appreciation of our cur-
moy will be rapid.
Our mines are now producing almost alimited amounts of silver, and it is eooming a question. ’’ What shall we d with it?" I suggest hero a solution that will answer for some yean
to you bankers whethei
1 imitate it; to put it iu cm : mure - now ; fcoep it there until it ia I branch ..
fixed, and then wo will find other mar- i markable than
The South and Central American , last decade. trasflt I Th ® W#rW ** , L * r f»’
earth is. inhabited by
r large i 000,000 of the Ethiopiaa ; 220,000,000 j tho'oi'd'rountr
- in ail-1 of the Malay race ; and 1,000,000 of the Ueved tbo Ami vur, white payments are not neossaarily I American Indian race. All theaespeak ; pending u|
itin^aU the i
...... — —, iphatioaliy
bo said that since the capture of the town of Khiva the real campaign baa only just commenced. The Turcomans have lately risen in arms against na The first division at onr army, under command of General Gqlovaeber, marched against them; it was afterwards followed by the second, under self. The division of General Golo-
WCbei. ' "
preached a Turcot
tente of " '
to fight _ general, and soon changed into a
to-band battle. The Turcomans oomo to such close quarters with our men thst even the commander of the division, General Oolovaeher, received two sword outs, one on hia bead and the other across his shoulders. It is said that Lieutenant-Colonel Esipov and Ensign Kamenetsky were literally chopped to pieces; indeed, all onr officers her of killed and wennded from rank and file was considerable. Tbe Turcomans advanced with great determination, being assisted and goaded by their woman, who acted like veritable fanes. After tbo oeptare of the town no quarter was given; om soldiers wore so exasperated st tbe enemy that they bayoneted all indiscriminately. It ap.s . expedition .'ourd&w sions, especially aa we hare lately lost 5,000 camels. The loads they carried consisted of officers’ and soldiers’ baggage, which, lest it should fall into the
es. The capture of Khiva, a
with oar present difficulties, was a moi trifle. It was simply vent, vfdi, vici, must repeat for the third time what have twice stated before, that the rei difficulties of the Khiva expedition hai
it the Khiva
uktr^.wiU^l
-lor
eather
uetry o
i oo on trie# have asked
, silver for them. ( authority of law
Mr. Boyden
| will be
ZZXi,
be give;
o tne eqmvalez ion were previously Orders will oome;
W.- By their
riage tope. Mr.
ire lastly oniferrod upon they placed tl
A Narrow Escape.
> of Enropo. They re- ; jt odds v
ao. We become tl
t on the bazaar.
probably seonre a portion of *001
re preolona metal. The Boston Grange.
, — news of the revocation I charter of the Boston Grange occasioned
I | 3,004
Tbs j
1,000 dif-
leather ; and, n
id always to of ATt The it be obvions. •voids tbo nn1 resnlts from 1! the theatre. - reason too ; eaoe ol mind.
SUROFIHECAHS
predict the take asocial storm. The editor of a Nevada newspaper o :res notice that he cannot ba bribed with fire oent cigars to write a <5 pu£ 1 It was remarked recently of a solemn- v ly precise yonth : " He looks as if he —ere setting an example to hia anoea- «*." . , Josh Billings lays, "When von atrike ..e, atop boring ; many a man naa bond (dean throngb and let all the ils run ont
Daring hia trial — e did not destroy the forts before sr_ sndering beoause be feared the enemy would take revenge. Bee how wonderfnl ere the ways of 7stare in Illinois. A pate of boots oats two loads of potatoes, and to raise The Andie Handicap, at Utica, N, r was won by Vioter, Blind Tom eoond and Black Bird third, after a lock and neck contest, which was very
wised.
ith sides, am it thronghoot I
the entire province.
Lore Story,
A rich old gentlemen had an only daughter, possessed of the highest attractions, moral, personal and pecuniary. She wax engaged and devotedly attached to a young man In every respect worthy of her choice. All the
hare watched the short Boston Grange saema to
ia no field for tbe operations of inch a society in the city, *-
S port of New England, si to itself it will quietly ox| Grange has been in existence weeks, but it has yet only • «-* in —
members enrolled u
n Grange say tl
reoeired (150,000 down
day, aad a farther sum of <190,000 hte father-in-law’s death, an eventwhi would probably soon oooor.) had al tie jeaiona aqnabble with his intend at the evening party. The "tiff” artin oonaeqnenoa of hte paying more attention than aha thought justifiable to a lady with sparkling eyes and inlmit-
ani.. ringlets.
The gentleman retorted and (poke tauntingly of a certain cousin whose ——w. was the admiration of tha
if the Order ia limited to farmi ring np an Order of the Patrons ustrv which will become powernumbers within a abort time, and that the Granges finding themselves in a hopeless minority, will be only too glad to avail themselves of the oppor-
f tunity to ride into influence and power > by uniting with the then dominant Or1 der. They elsim further that the pres- ’ —* trouble had Its^origin^ in a contro-
™f th°e T ltetional
1 to be schooled after they were 1. and that she adopted the ihsa" a little too soon. After the they became reconciled apparently, mid the bridegroom elect, on taking leave, was kind and affectionate. aad the on ting sarcasm with which he had given vent; and, ae a part of the emends honorable, packed np a magnifloent satin dress which ha had previously bespoke for hte beloved (which bad beau seat home ia the interval). ' sent it to the lady with the folio w-
note:
Dxoxnar Joxx: I have been unable
of imrmtemSntaa
Pray pardon me; and in token of your 'ergirenews, deign to aeeept the aooomsnyiag dress, and wear it for the sake f your moat aflentinnato Henry.Having written tha note, be gars it • to hia servant to deliver with tbe per- r oeL But, as a pair of panteloona hap- '
w to Boston Mai Grenr
7h* Ploughman, and
Needham, the Secretary of tbe Hew England Agricultural Society, being the principal men who worked with him. ’ steps, it acema, were taken for some —M afterward, though Mr. Needham claims that he had the position of Deputy of Maaaaohuaette offered him. and when Mr. Abbott was appointed to that port, some little time am he oon tested hia right to form new Granges, or to bare anything to do with them. Tbe matter was then referred to the Grand Master, Dudley W. Adams, and that gmtteman at once gave hte support ts “-’. Needham, and siroad hia appointit to office. Mr. Kelly, tha National rotary, refused to affix hte aigsatare, I be document on account of the reputations made to him that, if spited, Mr. Needham would Hoc hte —renoe to anpport Dr. Loring, and so control the Grange that it would really
become a "Loring Club.”
This te the story of tbe Bortou men, who aay further, that xinoe that time
dy distributed very ! CI po
ueuny m mt' luilowing proportion : i it is Christians, 885.800.000; Buddhists, | this 360.000. 000; other Asiatic religions, c 260.000. 000 ; Pagans, 200,000,000 ; Mo- \ ti on ,
hommedona, 165,000,000 ; Jews. 7.000,- 1 necessitv. lor witn patent 000, The Roman Catholic Church 1 with every other mnnofaett numbers about 200,000,000, tbe Orient- | there are persona who jnd si churches about 80,000,000, and the j from tbe nativity, and with Protestant churches about 110,000,000. I ,„ K j, m0 re objectionable tl
In Europe, America, Australia, and ; made article.
State. In Africa, the only independent | 'nlre l.T Chrisffan States are Abyssinia and Li- } — .I.. ’ „J*t’ beria, while Christianity prevails in ,
several Enrppem, colonic/ He Iragest
empire of Asia (Russia) is also a Chns- h “J prodaotion. tion country. India, the third oonntry j . I “ exteDt - is nDder ‘r® nU ? ® ( I wilh that made in a Christian government, and so is a „ ,, , . ' ;xz£,"" is? T .s at f s; Turkey, Persia. Affgbanisten, rad the j (L—j'
Khanates of Csntral Asia ; in Africa, Morooco, tbo dopendenoie* of Turkey (Egypt, Tania, Tripoli), and a nu-"~ rf interior States. Baddhism pn
In Indio. Farther India, in many
of China, and in Japan. The go
treet ^Theatre, Baltimore. He gi icatre nndisinrbed, and nso only tin ith which he was forniahed by hi
1 officiating. Mr. Chon- ’ ’ ‘ c put away by
onldfiodi
. . „ . „ tSe the — . .larisons between J else. He quietly stepped out, met the ret quality leather policeman on that bent and asked the ao lowest quality of 1 loan of his revolver, remarking that American patent i they wanted to use it on the stage a tested side by side 1 minute. The polieeman acquiesced, ther countries, and ; and Manuel Bond was furnianed with thst all kinds have j the weapon. When the time came for
use be drew it aa the play required, sd the aix shots straight at Kit, who s 10 or 15 feet distent For once th was a reality, bnt Manuel Bond i
life was no better B
inpeiiority e.
liable
Order, and tether than that, they pro—w to form new Gran gee ox fart as ■ibte, believing that when their case nee before tbe national committee adjudication, that body will reaowe tha valor of so important an do-
th e religion of Oonfncini; —* religion of Jr—- — “
sm ! *
civilized
a leiohcnaen Btatisux " ot (Leipzig, 1888) gave the I
ox tbe number of Jews in the 1 named : Germany, 478,600; Ana trio, 1.124.000; Great Britain, 40,000; France, 80,000 ; European Russia, 2,277.000 ; Italy, 20,200; Switzerland, 4,200 ; Belgium, 1,500 ; Netherlands, 64.000; Luxemburg, 1.500 ; Denmark * Sweden, 1,000; Greece, D0J ean Turkey, 70,000. The Jew tugal ore estimated at 8.000 ; i end Asiatic Turkey, 52.000; i 00 and North Africa, 610,000 ; i * Asia, 500,200; rad in America 500100a ’
Tbe Ties ef Bother Coontry.
_ le American abroad te a glorious animal; be likes to go to the hotels where other Americans go, rad to pot- — -■ter
grant with-
rrifuction </f prii
ont reducing the standard ty, and various means hi sorted to In order to sell st lower figures sod yet realize a fair margin of profit. The most objectionable has boon the introduction of powcrfnl stretching machines, by which the also of the hide can bo increased from three to seven ■anara feet. Tbe wet leather is thrown it which is attached to uprights
aa^process of
As soon ss he finds that yon are’ e, be tells yon that "a great riesns oome here, and he
blacking and varnishing,
ed this way will shrink more rapidly than those stretched in the canal man- •; they will even oon tract if spread . -J in the ware-room. Onr reputation abroad bos been much injured by exporting enamel hides that were streteh- —’ 1 1 - ! 1 owing to the fact nrers nave on established brand or trade mark, the dio-
falien upon certain homes
m the general trade.
doctor’s coming to know your family constitution and peculiarities, the action of yonr system—for each individnsl
Hte Early Days, experience of ehu^ jiitkx wl d rn ttinx toM by Himy Wi > go to msiltil_ Therefore I hardly ever tried to get •wsy.^Onoe in a while I escaped; bnt stood a single thing my father preached about tiHiwss ton yelrs old ; rad my *-*hsr oertelnly was a good preaober. seldom preached descriptive or bistort sermons ; they were almost always structural; they had a very I' body of mgmaan* — i *- J -
if gragariosta'^i^nrt'-llke^to told that be ia. He may seek the he where hte countryman go, but if landlord should endeavor to mak point ire informing him of tha feet be would be more likely to toes a pat "— *- gain one. There ora so is who go abroad under the i .v-. . ^ enough of
e, and there-
tfcu have token place in enamel leather mas bean tbe sabstitation of hides with a spread of fifty to sixty 'feet for the very large ones need a few years ago. Experience has shown that the smaller hides, owing to the finer grain, retain the enamel snriaee much better, and do net shrink so much or so quickly when exposed to the weather sa tbe Urge hides, and when the carriage top is to bo first-olsas, they eat to better advantage than the Urge hides, ao that for Ug test three years, firrt-elass small
hides have been in greet demand. inf sot ore of patent leather
: bat the greet majority
ion from niinote went over to Fort Msdisnsi the other day with sweet potatoes to sell. Hte early education had somewhat defective in arithmetic.
Old Pupils, A story is told in Arkai gogne who onoe come fl to establish a school. Be seen red a small cabin on Crowley's Ridge for a school-room, rad after giving doe notice opened his institution. Presently the door opened and there appeared at the threshold two tall, ungainly youths, each with a shot gun on his shonlder. After placing their guns in s corner of the room these promising pnpila took seats on one of the rear benches. The teaeber examined them^ in regard^to both ignorant of their alphabet. One of the young m * *-»— *- and the
<2 a bushel for the load. offered him <1.90 per bnsl He persisted in selling st 60 cents half bushel, thinking doabT ’■ four half bnsl
jhreehrtf bushels. A third tooktwo
her pupil, who to bo shown A.
■21
SSteSteSg
sir
left tbit night for St.
iy be
when he was told of it Baltimore. Tbe.andii
ful ignorance of the se they came eo near being eye witnesses, rad bod it not been for’*- ’ ‘ *
Hollids
long list of burnt tbest would itill point on ‘ boles with the trine
the late fire
11 in now ono and now another modi1 practitioner as tbe fanev takes them, ■ as they
Wado noTb
on, aad stick
temperament and dfsposi*reer, don’t expect miracles
. . . Biman. What man can do, be nndonbtedly will do—i. e., if be is st all worthy of confidence. Medical science even yet ik very largely a eroping in tbe dork. And don't for„ pay bis bills promptly. He is at
as much entitled to j
Your gratitude
botcher or hia oon is
won’t feed him or
■gblook-
An I’n willing Stock Borne thirty yeUrs ago e young smittufmit “ont of his time,” a Providenoe in quest of .work, and obtained employment with the American Screw Company. When pay-day came around, he was informed that be would bo expected to take s Urge portion of his wages in tbe a lock of the company He demurred at this, bnt finally oon sented, sa no other situation seemed h offer itself. This continued on somi
became quite 1
rtly.s
■e shares increased in value.
that man te one of tbe most wealthy property owners in Norfolk county, Mass., end has a fine villa in one of its qniet villages—all the reualt of the few ■hares of capital stock forced upon him when the above company was straggling
bllver Below Paper,
One of the peculiarities of the late financial panto te the feet that silver sold for'beverri days below bank bills. A broker of Wall street refused to take <10,000 for the seme amount in paper.
_ hte usee than silv first indtoailon of U
Hoarding up silver for several yean down *° ’* ork - C don’t dispose of it soon, they will ('depositor in the National B on it; for when u paper dollar gets DnbuqtM, which closed its do
, . id to whip ir after being ooasidar-
ief Domrell thinks ho lisa discovarhy fires make snob havoc in Bus- , ind has issued an order that all tbe " ' temperance pledger .n examination of the latestjniblishlist of those to /Whom Canadian patents have been granted diacloses tbs feet that folly two-thirds of tbe prtileea ore residents of tbe United
totes.
Nearly two millions of salmon eggs, ikon from California waters, are on icir way to the Atlantic seaboard, to e placed in hatching houses on tbe . islsware, bohnykill, Susquehanna, and Jamas rivers. Tbe Boston Journal 0/ Comment te rery indignant at the attempt to recall he charter o( the Boston Grange, end mggesta, if the threat is carried ont,' he organization of a new order, to be mown as* the Patrons of Industry. Tbo laying of tbe corner stone of the icw Capitol of Iowa, the other day, inmgurated a now ere in public occasions. No speeches were made, except a few ■emarks by a workman who got hte ingers pinched, a" 1 *'— —— ——1—
were making ^aoap, rad tae^teooher cup of lyo os a punishment for some trifling misdeed. The little creature has jolt died after suffering for seventeen months. For making man thoroughly nnoom(ortablo, rad reducing him to a wholesome sense of his fosbloneas and isferiority, there is nothing feminine inge-
lat institution which takes the form of general cleaning, sorabbiag, rad pal-
ing of things to rights.
Mr. Edward Robinson, who wax the rat mu to officiate os a rail way oonnotor, ts now living in Utah. He te ow sixty-six yean old, and st the age of twenty-two be was the first of six -nen selected to run trains on tbe Liverpool rad Manchester Railway, the
ever built.
now In operation in tbe
;k4; The twenty roods to oouraeof oonatruoto 1,950. The average cost of narrowgauge roods, with the rolling stock com-
plete, is <10.000 per mile.
A wealthy fanner of Falton, N. Y., . has this notice posted np to bis field :.
first rsili
There
United States fifteen
for killing rr^of Carj
from New Orleans as nurses, were arrested for robbing the body of a deed priest of bis clothing, money, watch rad crucifix. If the evidence is clear against them tljey will probably be bnog by tbe citizens, wbo are greatly enraged at tbo aoonsed persons. The jury in tbo os tin. tried In San ’’ William Johnson, " ’s young dinghter Hannah, _ . .Tdlctof acquittal. Jndge iswiueue told Curtin that he did not regret the verdict. The result was loudly cheered by tbo crowd in the oourt-room. Tbe entire hop drop has been boosed, id the estimated quantity of the care country te put st 11,800,000 pounds, .1 which New York furniabee mure than 6,500.000 pounds. Tbe quality is not
require U bales, or about 8,000,000 pounds. A Hacgarira hnmraitariu ife was slowly rad painfully „ _r accidental dose of corrosive mate, considerately shot her ’ end to her sufferings. By 1 iced for murder.
We are permitted to mention the 00- j _ irrenee, though not to give the name ■' of the gentleman who stopped in rt u v»— * *■» - r, w dare alnoe, a of pork end j
voice, order, " Brown-rtcoe front for,
oner
William C. Connor, nominated lor Sheriff by the Tammany Democracy of*' Now York, is u old New Yorker, born ,< ’ “ -■'"’- i ’of the qity,nndn
1 of ege. Bis bus! lecturing type, ii engaged in oon
abont fifty yean of S( te that of ma——
which be hse be — — ncction with his father since boyhood.
r known ss Jam
— firm being I Connor’s Sons.
1 n Galloway large crags are met with having ancient writings on them. Ons on tbe term of Bln 00k le by hse eat deep on the upper side, “ Lift me np and I’Q tell yon more.” A number of people gathered to this crag and succeeded In Biting It np, in hopes of being well reid; but A of finding any gold, sy found written on it, 'Issy me Sown
saying that he bod 1 tries for the sole
..... tog what woe new rad good, rad ss Isr ns possible intro- -»—' * bould that would — B tent and people. He bad s hood time, and would now
settle down to his work.

