Star of the Cape, 31 December 1873 IIIF issue link — Page 1

STAR OF

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J.. WEDNESDAY', DECEMBER 31, 1873.

. i<mr none, o! rtoio; Mogg»'» in two erf wood. Semgga'a wrfa wm bmlt into U»ir broaili. Mogpi. wUe,-»nd child Und on ■ anUrj of forty dolUn > month, and in holiday time* wan actaaUy aU aatir with aioitament, aeereta, and annriaoa, and intentiona about «ma. (The miacrable ereatnna, whoee whole year'a income mold not ban pntohaeed fliwnawa'a W.O.I. — will had jnal gmm a picoe of Eli mind “ to a neighbor whom he met loaded with holiday bondlea, and found it aatiafac- " Ko, air," he said, "I do not bcUere In hoUdaya. I found myaelf on Scrooge. I oonaidrr that when Dickene drew that "rfo^lad on a ‘ ' '

Can Cletke Heneif on fM a Year. A woman tella what ahe can do, aa . jllowa : Six paira of hoee, at >0 cents, will coat 11.80. Two paira of boota, at

*8.60, and a pair of rubbara, *l-» j

able character, and like many Thia, if preferred, might be changed '

,t ^ e ^Tir3' a "is;

“ - muat bo had for wet weather. Na*t .

should be bought 8 yards of flannel at

0 ahillinga per yard, coating IS. This dll make two pain r* ‘ •— nder-vests. The 8 be the best for these. Next, the undu 1 1 cotton will require 40 yards of which may cost 15 cents a yard, ■ which a roiy good quality can chased. ThU will make three as, 7| yards; three naira drawers,

, a ■, two nlghbfowna, 10 yards

“Mean anything P with a sardonic two outside skirts, 10 yards, an J *— r n. " Certainly : they mean preaanta mider-akirta, 0 yards. Next, ftmy wife, children, and aarvanta, that or 00111 weather, a gray flannel ekirt.

Imust give to keep tSepeace. SiatTs'

what they mean for everybody. If ee position entitled

» «to of what you can gek My r air, what ia the uae of mieeiwg toraf. What you can get rules the

world. In one shape or anotl you can eet mice the world." " Oh i^aaid the man of bum

yards of fl *1.50. A heavy ready-made drees can be purehaatd for$5. -We'

recently, asade of waterseemed to be just thethin^

wear in cold weather. Another dress for a change, or to be worn on Sunday*, might also be bought for 86, or made up of alpaca at home, but would then possibly cost more, though IS yards of && lo"toStoirSrii^S:

‘pOTSCdd^mtS i

mile out of his way: but he made for it The beet plan would seam to be to buy with aa evident air of relief. the drees ready-made, of some reliable

sensation all over him—a givir

faintness. JJe clutched at aohawd it; his knees bent; he bean just by Moggs's door.

His next conedouaneea was of a bed

a lying, ii

eoeking-stove—Mt each a jolly fire !

at $5. Theee are f r

vaty godd matssial, has a little taste in these matters, and suits. Next, a shawl, for which from gl.fifl to K1 may be paid, and which will be pretty in the springs Two printdresses si K, and a Vietoiis lawn or

them, end Mogge'e wife. A s nailing aonw green boughs over that was Hoggs. A boy held I

tad watched proceedings, bead on one aids, and mightily interested: that was their ohfliMrs. Hoggs was interested

slso, from her post by the i •'ll ia lika the woods.

"and scorns to make cot that every thing is not all bought and asM at the

sr away in tkonghC a

, now left from our *58? h might be done at home ; and 75 I more will purchase worsted and jchct-needle, with which a nubia

fcUnghed.

d there was a look far G«L Acil

matTw in a square parcel, a suit for Hoggs, seemed to storm parcels on the lit door. The neighborhood was aroused. “ Hoggs family were wild with exeat There wSs no cine to the Jr. One inscription on all the parcels alike—" From a brother by the adoption of God." AU quite mysteri- — ... ,u dJjghtful fairy.

In apoplexy, as than ia too much -lood In the head, every one can see that the position is to act a man up, nd the blood naturally tends downward -as much so sa water will oome’out of bottle when it is turned upside down JzS.lJszxxsr-'’' If a man has fainted, lay him flat on

ia back, for hi. fsoe is diadly pale.

If a man ia apopletic, sat him in a -lair, because the face ia torpid, swollen, and livid with its excess of blood. What ia apoplexy 1 From the sud-

1 the attack and the apparent is of it, the Greeks connoctod

a clear axy, more cornea a lose of sense, and feeling, and thought and motion ; the heart beats, the lungs plsy, but that is all—they soon cease forever. The Romans considered the pereonto be “thunderstrack" or planent-etruck,

if it were an unearthly origin. The essential nature of apoplexy ia i unnatural amount of blood to the

ever keepa the blood ami

brain—dams It up—maj . _.. ilaxy. This is the kind of apoplexy rhlch seem* to oome without an parent adequate oause. Tying a around the neck, or holding the

form ofalooiiol, is to sand Ui

r’awife in Grew

I that the era the torfaoe of the milk in her dairy was often interfered with. At first she suspected that some of her children ' ping pieces of bread ia it, but i£e oouU find nothing to confirm this buspiciou; and, by-and-br, ahe noticed strange little streaks of cream on the •dgtoof the milk-btotaa. aa it a taring had been dipped in and drawn on, so as to leave s mark. At last ahe die-

taining the milk,

‘ down tc

net being at depth of a<

ttr.x.'saxst.s.s np the amoo.'ti snrtaoe again, dipped lb the tips of their long tails, drew them up loaded with the rich cream, and

this case in the; the rreta. We have eome „ „ rding the ingeanity of rata, in s country bones in Her! ford-

ducklings, ev> other. With rata, the mail nal dnek and her yoang were bousi for the night under a coop, which a milted of no opening for the furtive in- *—*— The rets were not to be eo sated of their prey. On disthst the mother dnek and her

.ss-as outer edge of the coop to its in- - Aor, and tona very neatly, without producing any alarm, stole every dock ling from under the guardianship of

being runaway Enins. A great was going on in the huts of this kraal, singing and shouting in abundance, whilst the smoke that forced its wry through the thatched roof indicated “-at cooking was going on inside. once decided npou paying s visit —is kraal, especially when onr heat i formed ns that the gay and festive se was caused in oonaequenoe of a yoi - elephant being killed by him on , previous day, which waa now be. ., l rapidly disposed of by the Kaffirs. 1 There waa certainly great novelty in , dining in a Kaffir bnt upon elephant, ~ r we decided upon inviting ourselves I dumar with the boisteroos blank gmtle-

IfternTtoet

sard too long, eat i U|v.p:.-xy, 1 y d

lotion can send too much e brain ; or toe gnat mental does the same thing. It ia ths nature of all wla*. and

old be .faL - marvelously to out the steak ; the prongs of the fork seemed round instead of pointed. Our teeth, alas I had lost their edge; and after diligently endeavoring to bite the picoe compelled to give it up aa a bad job ; _ —is —^ no impression „n it, even I antes' munching. Future e same animal indnoes ns to four-hundred-yean' old eteit so good aa fonr-yoani' old ittomand we doubt whether elephant ever likely to become s popular dish. seems strange that two animals whose food is so similar as la that of the elephant and hippopotamus, and whose slse ia eqnally unweildy, should yet be

not forget the sebra, and wilde er gnu, as it ia also relied ; both animals an eaten, bnt they are and coarse. A young sebra,

howevsr, about half grown, is not to be despised. HdtastosJlko veal, but with

oomxoou, it returns special harm results. But suppose a man keepa on drinking, the blood ia sent to the brain muehiastar. In such quautitiaa that in order to make for it, the arteries have to enlarge ‘ they increase' *

set in operation, ik enough brandy,

u literally being dead

ange and tragic story ia that of roman who wanders among th tins about Psrtenbehm, in Ba varia. A abort time ago ahe was th ' ome and happy wife of s man wh nt one evil habit—that of poeehOno night he waa pursued by a er, and, turning, he shot the man. ’ The deed waa seen by others, and he obliged to fly. With his wife and children, one of *' " ■ '

at night, while all were alseping, concealed in a thicket, the sound of hoofs heard. Touching bis wife's arm, husband whispered, “The gennea r Sbe started so suddenly and iolently that the infant resting in arms awoke and began to err. The er ordered her to keep it qmet, and poor woman held the little one er, endeavoring to stop its eriea, lo the gendarm.s had halted and ned to be listening. Then her hus-

thai his pnrsnere remained quiet. When, at laid, they rode aw— “ ’ ad. The family wen

1 the frontier the O.

1 inquired if they had anything are. " Nothing/' laid tire tour-

speeial diapateh from Sen Ai

“So Indians attacked three m... „ miles from San Antonio and mortally

age-looking scene. Inside beehive-shaped hut, about in diameter, were assembled some flve-and-twenty Kaffirs, men, woman, and children. They were seated in a circle, watching intently ■— *-—•— retoels, in which w —elephant's meat—boiling and stewing. A wood fire glowed on the floor of the hut, and kept the pots boiling. This, I was informed, wss the third lot of m that had been eaten that day by party. It certainly was too eloae 1 uninviting to outer the hut, bnt we determined to taste elephant; so we sent for a plate, and knife and fork, and waited ontaide whilst the cooking proceeded—a little salt and some bread being provided by our worthy heat; the Kaffirs utterly sooru tl— -Jsi*.-— preferring the flesh au length the moat wss prone by an old Kaffir man, who snpenntended the eooklag, and we were oflered a

orld and

lu Pejrton grow in his place, rail Ba Peyton's memory, 1 which wore on Willis He has given his story under oath, and itiathis: After leaving Tens Haute he lost an msciousnoss. but somehow got into hospital at Evaasvillo, where ha fin. found himself recovering from smallpox. He wss then bald, and whei * resumed his clothing every article peered to have been made for a m smaller man. The pantaloons, which he recognized as his, were at least inches too short He could get trace of his money, watch, model spring bed^orotbs— ^Ual he went lochia friend David tor. He wsa,1n (act a horrible sight, and looked like the Wandering Jew, or other walking pestilence. sver's remarks abont bis friend Willis Peyton's personality caused him himself, and he found he 1 eight inches taller in aa ts- He would have denied mtity if it had not bean for lid other evidences that ned larto him from childhood, he could not

its objeota aa engine hou ror, and did

a who preferred sebra to beef, when iy had a choice of either. Wilde sat however, has a rank flavor abont that prevents any period eating it m choice , bnt in the desert it some-

i*g£!

principles, arrived i

«£f:

1, as be was about to removs to a I part of the country; and Mr. Harare seeing the doctor drive np.and eall at the publio house, immediately —sat thither to taka a friendly leave of lutatioas, 1 Mr-iL' s^tifto ^^’" pne “ Why, doctor, I was not aware that you expected to leave this part of the — so soon, I am owing yon a bt which ought to have been before I have not the money,

id his next thought was of home. The latter prevailed. He was utterly lost *~ J to find himselt On the

taken ill again, and once

—I world waa a blank. He finally arrived at bio own door after an ** Willis Fayten'a id. The Willis Peyton who hod left that threshold two years before bad light hair, nearly red, 1 ~ — "y scanty beard and was thin

The Willis Peyton who now _ it the door was much taller,

rounder, and had brown curly hair, and ivy beard. He looked tike a gross 1 the former, with no truth in him ; but the sequel is startling. He knocked -“■AlUus' IrliAJj»l--th» Jubuo of the Looking at Mrs. Peyton he said: “I suppose you don't know mo, Addie ?'' “'-v answered. No sir, I do not; who you?" The man burst into tears _J said: •• You'll not believe me, I know, when I tell you ; but it's got to ime some time, and might aa wall now

1 not I'm Willis Peyton."

Mrs. Peyton shrank from him, orired him out of doors, and two of her nearest Justice, who sent Urn to jail as

fbe doctor replisd that ha most ha ~ " affairs settled, as he expect return to that part of the oot try again. Hr. H., as he went out . ' >w the money, waa called back by lootor, who had previously made t receipt in full, which he ' Aere^Mr. Haynes, ia a discharge of your aceount You have been a fi“ u «1 servant for a long time, and eeived but a small support I give the debt” Hr. Haynes thanked him eordisDy, [pressed s willingness to psy, when “Hut you must prejr foi “Mr.‘^quStta rraUed: — r, doetor, I think it would be

twenty-11' fled that

r-flve years'experience.

cing childlining the

is vary destructive

m, and almost

principle

to the nervous system.

begot s taste for aloonol a

__ after Ufa. Mothers who 1 habit either of quieting crying babies —«• drugs, or permitting nurses to do rill set the pert of wisdom if they

.the hint given by th' ’—‘

- -“tolar

sot upon the

. fslsi/pto?

the origin of sn appetite for such things often antedates the period of infancy. Intemperate fathers end mothers hav much to answer for in that respect — ere mothers, as well as nurse arvanta, who habitually "dose on to make them sleep while they having a good-time" Oh, the I theee soothing sirups] They idiots, imbeciles, -•

to of thousands of

fabrication. We give reposted facts: Two years ago Willis Peyton er of Asnklin county. New York, left borne with the usual baggage * eler and a patent right me spring-bad, and several totton duction to parties Bonlh. His business wss to sell rights. ” “ * sgs, and had a wi

Hsnte 1

wrote to his family

tally {ran 1

that he was feeling fll, posh on to Evansville, where he had a fnend, Oavffl Weaver, with whom

he intended to " '

from tbo prop: rod cows to stoi_ edeePh 1 ’ 811 * 1 '-

kor all this, the land, it. He furnishes, on

dairy utensils, the ne wagons, the furniture for the bouse,the farm implements, and the nsoess labor. The tenant pays to ike ow wenty-eeven dollars and a half per iam for each cow, and agrees to l he beat care of the slock end of

parts of the farm,to makr '

repairs, and ti

-rally o

and U thought was^TsnSide,

D bulls from good milking strains. I was told that the aver, age product of butter on the whole estate is now 176 pounds to eaeh oow; many cows give aa high as ICO and even "50 pounds per annum. Men do the diking, and also the butter-making, lough on one lam I found a pretty wedisb girl superintending all tbe inall the department '

I law, tb<

[e waa first tried by a eom-

”Jbg1j£a

rorfeoUy'w

sjlgtalia'i , , lis pretentions as tbe husband of Mrs. Peyton and the owner of the Peyton property. He has told his atory, the mam points of which we have given; ’ ■xelatodia —' * **-*

lawyers many iild"n^know;'related WilliaPeyton'l,

Inute de-

giring 1 rtrictly

sicken daring her eoartohip, which •he snnpeeed r ’ band and bn E bable he will be able to establish identity, incredible as it may apThe principal ovidenoe

phoaed Willie Peyton baa had a tattoo mark of shield on his right am. there. On his left arm aa — ohor there, bnt elongated. Peyton bad Angers, which wss disfigured by crushing in s cog wheal. A critical examination of this finger by the physician who dressed the freeh wound oompells the doetor to say that it is ths finger -* Willis"—*--

day to know what would take (he flammation out of my arm where I was tattooed by Jim Bayne, the aailorT

toLT that tbe strange Pevtom Bbe baa told hi

riosity in their way. The Oaliforniana, who have a singular genina for doing 00 a large scale which in othar ' me by retoil, have managed ven dairying^ in ihi“ - n '’'"which -jty far——_Take, for instanoe, the rancho of Mr. Charlea Wobb Howard, on which I tad the cariosity to spend a ample of days. It eontains 18,000 aoree of land well fitted for dairy purposes. On this! be has at this time nine separate farms, ooenpied by nine tenants engaged in making batter. To rent the farms outright would not de, because the tenants would put np poor improi would need, even then.

alee curing tne coming winter, wntee follows concerning it to the Chicago Inter-Ocean: “ Mrs. Young '

in 1814, apd was first married was eighteen yeera of age. E with this husband three years, boys born to her. From I

d abe wss divorced by the Probate Court, Brigham Young and Daniel H. Wells aaaiating her. She then lived —ith her mother in South Cotton-wood, id at a meeting there over wt 1 -*-

righam presided, ahe noticed bis When the meetup wa*. over

,ӣR

nd to save her father and brothel

nin, and being cut off from the church he married Bngham. The ceremony »a quietly performed in the Holy Eu-owmi-iit House by Heber O. Kimb "

Chancellor to the Preeidi .

from the Prophet to

the F:

ne leuoes roe iarm, making proper subdivisions of Isrgo fields; ho opens springs, and Isads water through iron pipes to tiie proper places, and also to ths dwelling, milk-house, and corral. He builds the houses, which consist of

s substantial dwelling, twenty-eight by j, '“

thirty-two feet, ejtory and a half high, m dtanlnamas eonnerniVe’

and containing tons rooms, all lathed

irnimr room storeroom ™l.^lrorr ! r « 1 ‘ ,i ™ or Mormon fnonaa received f.shtld a enrral oTinnlo.nro fml tbe nl,a "°' tbp w “ t ot “CCCmery Comforts, , s eo . the need of malicine and medical ed-

intbyher ImVband

nd monthly ration! mmoneet ebaraoter she received only J30 per year in an order on the co-oper-ative store for her and her children's wearing apparel. In regard to the Prophot’a partiality for Amelia Folsom, '■ ' lya it is owing to his fear of her, ho atauda in great dread. There

a well-arranged pig-pen; r

i-fifth a

theoalvaa

reing killed and fed to the piga. He greet to sell nothing bnt butter and logs from the farm, tbe hogs being onirely the tenant's property. Under this system 1,620 oow* are now :ent on nine separate farms on this eturgeet number kept by one

said by parties familiar • families that bis partiality for Amelia _ attributed to the wonderful magnetic iny love for her. It oannot be denied —t,.in every separation from her, the Phrophet ia not well, and ia only rostered in returning and living with her. In Brigham's public declarations he has

milkers

r tbe

In Brigham's public Ueclaratic

stated that he only has sixte _ Mrs, Young declares he has nineteri wives, and gives the maiden name of eaoh one ; alao, the names of forty-five living children. Of those wives fifteen — ' to the Prophet for this

* otoniity, fotlr, ; - ’

: - -orld s'-

mbdel dairy«

The Grand Canen of thf Arkansas. While at Canon City I went with a party of friends to see tbe grand canon -j *«.- Arkansas. The point from which en st the greatest advantage is about eight miles from tow- *- - charming drive, and a mor horseback ride, to this poll tbe way the road is good, bi ■ me places is fearfully s ...... the brow of the mgl — >- outriders seared up a couple of deer and chased them back to the carriage, ' which there wae a gun and eke a trtsman. Bnt he dared not shoot, fear of frightening his horses in that perilous spot, so missed the royal

0 charming A Meet of Just

Bnt n

subdued by a great awe—my disappointment waa lost in a solemn joy when I came to look down on that grand non, tlie greatest sight I have yet seen „ Colorado. For some two miles the rirar runs through s narrow ebaam be-

tween dark, massive rooks, in pkees quite perpendicular, and

fifteen hundred to two thonsaud —

" ' 1 grander than tbe Yosemite, its color, which ia every- , with rich porphyry tints, iwn upon the nvor roaring thousand plunging falls ft

aeons like a lazy rivulet ereeping on ii tbe oold shallow. Bo awful was tin

hen living, and are to be his in eterniThe children of these four wives by -righam, are also lo be Joseph’s for his exaltation in the great hercattor, Brigham acting aa proxy husband for " Of the Prophet’s habits, j he rises with Amelia at 10 o’clock, when his barber calls and makes aa good a looking man as possible, icdiately after which breakfast is JGraSrtfiaiM!*, iWrpBHffe.to the honskeeper or the bee-hive have a table by themselves at one end of the —->m, with all the delicacies of the sesI, while the root of the wives with dr families, six of which reside in this house, dine at another table on the

plainest of fare."

The Most Nutritious Food.

Upon this subject a writer in the

hiladelphia Star says :

I submit the following article on food, oping it may do s little good to the poor class in these pinching times: Oatmeal eontains 91 per cent, of nutritive matter; wheat, 86| per cent.; potatoes, 28 per cent.; tbe beet flesh -oat, 25 per cent. It may bo aeon by is above that one pound of oatmeal mtaina nearly four times aa much nuition as one pound of beef. Wo pay it beeTper pound fifteen, twenty and Nearly half the people of Ireland and

live on oatmeal and potatoes; not taste flesh meat onoo 1 The writer of this article has

1 steeps around it, so gloomy we woods, so strange and lonely « savage and otrt of the worid seemed t whole vast scene that it recalled to 1

arrived for two

[earing to move daring u they snowld oome inoollisioE

they sLonld aims in oollXsion with other craft For the same reason, the eatlle

show at Agricultural Hall was a failure. ;

Some of the beasts perished,(fed CEE of many others on exhibition ; IW them. Ttie fog covered sn about fifty xr ; ' ™ -• 1

London was the

nothing in tl

it has b

tion was s very fair one that I

»dy expressed-

him for this

■tarod by the offio

ow that the eurviv

1 would be willing to

ground into mo by everything My wife and children periahnobody tried to eave them. All

The deck* were crowd- - - - went down. Of course you will uudersiand that I was not in a -audition to make a calm, judicial de* iaiou. I cau only give the Impression lat I got in questioning the survivors. A Servant for Every Guest. A writer in thediicego ZWlunerays: The first-class hotels of the dsyarc forced to keep one servant for every guoet they entertain. We have asoer■ained that the lowest number of ser■auts kept by the Pacific Hotel in this ity at any time since it was opened was '73, and the highest number 325. Dur- „ number {0 every guest. 1— proporiion holds in the Fifth w Windsor, and all the other largo it-claes hotels in New York city. This item shows that it ia not the hotelkeepers, but the extravagant demands of the people, which render the high E ioes necessary. The fact is that the w-wrioed hotels make money s rapidly than the grand hotel*. Wo know of an instanoe of 1 1 *- the ante-fire times. 1 e opened, with:

Uny

Hisdim _ .. __ ant's worth of oaten-meal ot at wheat made in the form pt “b does not do this tor eoonnn r health. I would like to ray a few words here I closet hie article on w]'-' ""~* ntains of the carbonates, t producers, sixty-two per cent.; of e phosphates, the cl tea that anppUee e bonee, the brain and the nerves d gives vital power, both mental mu _oscular, two and a half per cent.; o the nitrates, the olaae that supplies tin rate of muscle, twenty-one per cent If wheat were eaten in its natural condition, without bolting, it ’•* supply all the needed elements human body; bnt in the process of bolting nearly the whole of the nhoephatee and nitrates are removed; so that breed made of superfine floor wi" sustain life only a few weeks. The best way to get good wheat me: ia to buy of any mill in our city half bushel of whole wheat, thirty pounds: Either got the miller to grind ft lor yon, „ 1 ...r —a *_ —

The United

Congress held - r r —hieh wss attended by sixty BenrwentntiTe Syr *' Louisiana, read the cal] fertile: 'lieh, he said, waa signed by over imbers. This meeting, he remarked, a not’for the purpose of committing y individual to any particular project - re East waa interested in this question eqnally with the great West ana Botath. to which they should address them--e— These would «•- —'

of Western sd European Cnnupee, tbe Hudson and the Mia ^be average freight rstos per bushel nc of transit sre ea follows: Chicago to Liverpool, by mice route, 45 oenta per bui

be Hu

— elothee they.had

body who got to the deck bad time to put their clothes * any connected wyyranl about tne wreck from them. Their stories differed slash sd with eaeh other. Yon ean agine just how it wonl<i be on 1 steamer, the roloon and the psa«e—. pitch dark, the deck covered with little

vessel it would be qnlti

was eloae to him, \Vhoi? I asked Mr. Waite, of New York, if be eould tell me anything about my family, he said, "Your wife and ehUdrrei are all lost, and nobody did anything to save them." And from all that I could gather in talk* u!? "raito!* survivors, I pm^eonvinced

President MaoMahon has oemmn

re are allowed to oa

uch longer if left to the worm folks to saw and split. Roe tod man waa cursing an edit’ : otiisr da^when he fell dead. ^8e

and^chil

'''Tl

■re, they ai

o^one woyiut

11 agreed

h the vasi by the ofllaen and >

Jie dock when the 1

down, and as they oame np those who ——d were fortunate enough to get Joea pieces of the wreak, ladders, and gratings, and 10 on, and saved themselves. Mr. Waite told mo thaf he wee on deck trying to lower s boat the falling mast bad injured one of the davits, and it wouldn't work. Ladles

“ ' ' ig up to him and aski:

and their obildren,

could, Time on deck, and 1 alHn the wate

‘ w were raved by life preai doubt whether many of

diem men inqqjre “,S( 'he hSTeft'fa'.' hind him; angels inquire what ho hs.sol before him." A little baby ia an easy thing to lovr, nt a big baby is a hard thing to lovr, lya a veteran observer—especially ii on have married her. North Carolina has discovered n quarry of elartio stone. It may bo

it thing they w

- - i Captain Bnnnout

ftot raw none of the oflioers and ,

1 right to give a deflnate

covers its shape u readily aa India rub.

sparking her f She'told NodBobblen she kinder felt skeered tn doth and tickled tn 1” At Eontonrsvile, Pa., recently a man aa etanding by his horse, eating an iplo, when tbe animal openei! his jaws id seized the apple, biting the man’s thumb completely off. TherA/erUoaf JZeaorrf:

a investment

In ten yesre its profits had been 000, or nearly 100 per cent, a year .... —“ah A flrei-eleia hotel, which furnished at a coot of *120,15500,000 in ten years, or leu t cr cent on the capital invested. The difforenoo is still greater nc ' n the extravagant tastes of Uu patronize the nrat-class hotels hi... ....eased. There mnst bo a change, levertheless. The Sherman Hor - his citv, has reverted to the o

in by th _ of the _ . gorgeous houses of the city will be affected in one way or another. The people, in one word, must simple tastes in hotel-llle as

Self-Krstralnt Under Provocation.

in of great vlolenoe of temper ice my father, and rated him heard. I looked^at my lather with mant. as he sat perfectly r“" anqnll. When the man hod d< lit relieved, father began, in — at manner, to ay to Elm, “Well, right in the raverity'of , " ' ’ —pose that if in any regard yon jrreet, yon are willing to be set right I” “ Yes," said ths man, with a growl, "ot comae I am.” *• Well., will yon allow me to make on moot?" said father, humbling before the man. “Yea." Sofi with a tittle matter, and abueo 11: then he went a little further; and then a little further: until, by-ond-b the mrfn began to lone color, rad at Is “■I have been all wrong mi* anaMcr; I did cot understand it Alter he had gone awav. father said .. in a sort of casusl.manner, “ Give up, and brat 'em." I got an idea of self-reetraint under provocation, which «— ould have got by all the inin the world which came to me merely in the form of ideee, and in picture-forms and fables. I had before mo. the sight of my father suffering— for his pride was naturally ^touched was pride in my ,, . it) ; hefaH ftkMBly - rad under the keenneu of the feel-

r MxBsxCHTSirns ___ichuaotts State Or» „. . organized, and the following offioeri selected: Worthy Mstoer. T. L. Allis, of Conway: Overseer, A. J. Oaajer, ot Harvard ; Lecturer, Chaa. W. Felt, of Danvers ; Steward, Geo. a Willis, of

Franklin Barilett; Pomona,. Mrs. A.

A Lebanon (Ky.) man was thrown 11 m his team a few days ego, arm a ig rolled upon bis legs, holding him own several hours, but he finally escaped by digging under his legs with In Had dam, Conn., the other day, an iquiaitive person picked up from the ’ the jury room ten ballots, them was written “not guily,” on three “ plaintive,” rad on - •• plaintif." evioe has been hit upon in Eager making sure ot unadulterated The honest dealer drives bis oow rad milks her in the presenoo of his customers, rad so satisfies them rad /. H. Clark, a reporter of the Streator (Hi.) FYee /'res*, has been arrested rad lodged in jail for having lioen present in his journalistic capacity at the recent fatal prize fight between Rogers rad Lewis. Peter Yra Dyke, an old chap who dl 1 New Kshire the other day. at his funeral.

The evidence shows that he sat np with her night after night, rad they aqnoze hands rad talked soft, rad I think she ought to have about 523 domagra,” was the charge of s Kansas 'edge to a jury in a breach of promise What wo call illusions are often, in truth, a wider vision of peat rad present realities; a willing movement of man’s soul with the larger sweep of the • movement toward a _ -ban the chances of single life. A rural exchange states that Bornum has several oiok bears rad toothless trained to escape from their keepnd roam at large for advertising purposes ; but that the wild beasts return to the menagerie fold In season for dinner daily. Tne first allk ever manufactured in ■e United Statae, it ia aaid, was made by a young woman in Rhode Island, who waa married In ft in 1800. She ' I the r"-

of age, waa recently turned into the street, on a bitter cold rad blustering night, by an ml:A*an St. Louis landlord, because shoWM.unable to prompt- • pay four dollars rent tbe day it waa ueT What will St Peter ray to Aim/ A greet deal of intoziasting liquor being sold to Afton, lows, the Indies of that place made a raid upon the saloons, knocking out tho heads of the barrels,

everywhere desolating tl haunts of baochus, twelve of them being - dreadfully demoralized. The Mayor did not interfere until they had a' m - • — upon th- w,, ‘

A few day* before my arrival a

missionary station called Enon, si. traveler, a troop of elephanta c down, one dark rad rainy —“* -

• -' outakirta of the vi"—

del heard them I extraordinary r

[ rainy night, ole 10 village. The m

1 it is’ to.encounter the powerful anly kept close withdaylight. Next 1 examining the spot where

trench, abont four

poae’of irrigating some portion of £elr Ids trench, which was'still id without water, one of the

marks of his feet w.— _—- at the bottom, as well as the impnot of hi* huge body in its sides. How he bad into it wr hut

get out again, was the marvel. By his own unaided effort* it was obviously impossible for such in animal to have extricated himaelf. Could bis : pinion* have aaaiated him ? There be no question that they had, though in what manner, unices by haul • ing flm out with Qieir trunks, it would not be easy to conjecture: rad in oor'joretion of this supposition. I to"-' gresf t^trerahwer^Pily ini