Star of the Cape, 21 January 1874 IIIF issue link — Page 1

STAR OF

STAR OF THE CAPE

CAPE.

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J„ WEDNESDAY, JANUABY 21, 1874.

i —» —4 —m. b^or© him The kMotr of tU funoo. Bailon' - J S3M«rTo»2rfor1ih™3. m3 Bb>« BbW Mbodte. -b.t m. T bo AakfeWdlor tkcwd

bnl vitlumt«u SS4£a'

rSTsrSs^s

■gp-vz “ Tieluiritarthe

sstfaS-s awSSSSSte MHttM «w u open fend, for it w»

>-- -T-■•»" •Tmlike thU, 5rsiJps?‘ k s.*“ “”o v l ;;^ t r^ l » ■ ik »* do «»»>* 11 ^ ft f JBm not, mj led." the old asjy—j. to. JighUy ciolliUf'd tone; ■Jr™ 4. "mul Tea eorry yoa don t take , <r OMOu There's e spies of year nh interrupt'd him, ssying f : ‘‘Bilenoe, Uncle David, ot dan to say a *ord sgainst H Thin to my fees I Get oat c he—S, and nerer dare to eroea my

• sly, watchful ae forward, and

*- — ■—*—* v e toned hlmseU pal the amonnt ot tore* «n woold feel needfnl tamw mm b<« medjfwffl.baTl.&h.i

“resUhSSdJ^ISi 1 ? uTb^thM ^e^rkWihe on^ wore tm^m^ortant

“Ohl ItaOlr ao* what has It was with

to his siiaar, a tall, dark^yed riri, who might hare been Uken m a aoftanad woSrta terali fa^bsUon " Oh, Joha ! what ia tha maMar ?” '' Uneta Darld haa tiaaw miaaing from haaa aiaaa the 23d of last nxmlh. sod

—i ImiaaiHiia WhMi waa fore the startled bastoh^may be briag^ in the pnaesioe of a rennitad family ' whan the old bird-fjmalsTjrot

nowwh to add hia portion of the

story. HaexpbiDadthat, ■ ~ ' '

Us friaod Moss, he had be

that mast hare made him insensible, for he nanambared nothing more until ha found himaalf In badln a atranae room; bow long ha had bin there he

wa hta^'l left Urn by hia haothea ntortMmu as if theto'*

C

folly.

" John, HI put on my things and go to har^at oaea u you thuk I eaa do any "lit !

sknuTand the daath-Uka stupor conManiac, he was laft on the hands of Mm * m Aft&aMtot GTC™e°I)OTton trok ap thenanatara. Hls fast step had been to obtain sight of the body; he had

ke naek, wUah led to the suaphnoo ha^fawhaad of betog the bod^of^ Dstid »witt^om*he had bean ae

hasty foetatepa on the stain, followed by a smart rap at the door. Nellie went to opao it, but started book at S- - *« - ““ - Does John Bin* lire barer

ound on iialniry that Ught-flngand 'ae, as ha waa eallad, waa aUastng from 'thanst|^b«bo<>d'ar h ?a£m«u!a waByeaabaloagingte then_„_ waT^i^m'^fkb'eritt^^ was thought that the drowned man 1 dark, had hban into the mar. This was the Uetoty of the miataka thi

at NeUwlr^hl^S? .ThT "Vail, if you don't mind I

1 On *^Whoee body!" Datid Biteh'a, the bird-fanoier,

satiaftinr hie naod^aoehter bt his HbsS^r towMSTtoehSharaiicl Uw Joha.'ud it was aasyteSe 1 would sod with the Twuag people.

wpa5Skto r «aS M wS l y i ^g^iSd

idasttUad it aa that of the eld aaaai who liming. The story wset that it eti their way boase can wet etwwUg. It

poor Nellie who had *epped°don' emtibla. Ha was about to be nawr . whan than waa a snddeu stir la court, sad a man whose many there recognised aa George Denton, tlw dateotlre, forced

;:rasfs

"f&a.'aBP* 1 ''” 11 ' -ASttS.iM at atBlBkm tdm

of the farm, ana Mr. otewi pay* rent for the ground on

Siao alflh Just bafepw k □apt. Bandall sold hia farm to Jacob Breroort for *6,000, but tbs old KuiekssrXKrfi:M"».S: K arty that Breroort thought too btA at

00 in 1800 ooold be aold at public

fcvday for00,000,0001

The benerolenceof Oapt. BandaU d not ptaaaa Ua nephew, and niece They wanted all ha had, and sued inwaktate the will. This waa in IBO

in onsite ot In the ee

and for thirty years the suit was in litigatlop. until in 181 the Dupr—e "*—‘ sf the Dnitad States deoided the

bequest for founding the B ~ ' Harbor (a name darned by

Mmeeli ) waa biudiag.

In the thirty yean of litigation inn waa in the unds of a raeefver, i _m trust ere. on aasnming ebarge 1881, found u handaonre nun to tL_. credit. AD thaaa yean the dty had creeping np to the farm, so that in it had grown to ha ana of the laadmbnrba, and the old Nredsll homeI, which bad originally been dieted aa the home for the disabled •* was aurronnded by the country

iuBjJrtgr 3- —*-

uaiiui o^^'property thirty yaare before. It waa deemed Imprudent to carry ont Capt. BandeUt will to the latov, for the old aaitor wanted the farm

hatplrea nrstsgn ; the treat are ti fore pusrkmrl the praaant site : New Brighton, Staten Island. It tains 166 acre*, and oast *18,800. Today it ia worth orcr (1,000,00a The Snug Harbor waa opened in 1881 with IhMgr inmates, bat fa the forty yean ' — I —me its naefnlnre has been grea lad, and almoet every year n ■ga hare bain aaeetad and i ■anil hare bam introduced, a now Dumber MW, and the yeai aa of the institution an *100,0( •area boaOapA Bandall'■ *5,C

the fact ol watar-preaanre is not an a Mai point in detremining the qna aa to whathae aniaaal Ufa is poai fa the orean'a craairet depths, k admitted, of course, that, at tl level, there exists a pressure of fl teen pounds on a square inch of an teas, das to the weight of the atmo pberk column resting upon it, and thi the piarenia on the aurnareire strata < * > aea. aa the depth increase fa excaas of this, inaamiu of water only tbirty-tbn

Kicaarthtlroaektoatoreaof ttewidowers. At least the report aaya that •'thinking it aaremrey to hare them married, and not knowing how repair them, a committee waa selected to hold

It took thkeoaemlttoe one boor to ■ ' aring among the hearta of thewid- . It waa daeadad to diapoaa of

old aellor, ha know the and dmirad that a portion of kis savings be devoted to aiding tha '— dkabkd by age or dkatae. 1 of hia eatoto devoted to this pnrpoae waaa farmof twantr-onaaoxua bounded by tha praaant Fourth and Ninth akaata —2«£ra The aito of Btowart'a

to'ifre dimly through wi etata of blood. I could boar the labored breathing where I lay, and aea the tot dona- stand out aoroas the thighs an «hw.w too thtek ntnkt Mat this dead ret of strength ooul last always. Every moment ol tim i tolling diaaatronaly npon tfa rtor wind and dareying strength c old crusader, who still fought to Iowa of hia youth. Hia fool slipped, and the intelligence of thla alight disaster so areal to reach hia an tar— qnktmr than a flash of light. No ator aver urged hia advantage suddenly. There waa a huge Im S." 1 .,

id again the old one turned aod Med i make the old atond of head to head, id as aften hia more active antagonist caught him behind the shoulder. With *' ad agony of defeat in hk aye, and blood trickling from tha long ids in his flanks, ha atm refused to conquered. With failing strength I limbs, whir 1 - —* ' ' —

—„—I o! about moasd to. Accordingly, > fcv‘eva^ tb& Vthna fast of dsmmnt in the aea—putting out of oonsideration the effect of

gate preaasre k atapendons. As k wall known, piaoea of wood, let down to a depth of a ' ad red or two thousand fathouu th watar as tobatoo heavy re it there k a fallacy fa thia m

don to an amonnt of pressure so meanly fa excess of that under sh they originated. But with organi which have been developed, bom to last, under tha fall operation any given amount of ineaunra, **-- - ren wonld *- —•

of akangth. Neither for fear of that fatal charge npon the flank, or that dangerous twist of «b*

*.sss«;“„isr, ta and andumnoe, and tb*

re fight and

r\

snkgonial pushed 1 id doggedly. He mad to shield his fUnk, and pitifully endured all that eumo. The original plan of non-intarforenaa waa abandoned, and and tha young lords gathered arvund dm, ana snorted and shook thair heads, and gave an oeeaaoual dig fa the riba byway of expressing their contempt for him. The rows oame and annOed at him, and indulged fa spiteful ' to butts and walked away. Their ■ implied that they bad always id him aa a disagreeable old md they were glad ha finally mod their heartfelt sentiments — „ i rd to him. Through all this tha old fallow stood unresisting, whipped, bnt still obstinate. Gradually they all left him to himself, and the nerd wandered further away. He did not even look around ; be waa probably forced at last to accept ik sentence of banishment, and go and lire aa long aa be could alone, and fight iia last fight with the coyotes and die. The "Uw of Storms.'’ e of tha moat important oontribnrecently made to srienoe, aaya the Naw York Harold, U one on the form of cyclones, by tha eminent cyclonologiat, Charles Meldrem, Director of the I hnwrameot Observatory at Mauritius. This able treatise presents new discoveries fa this Arid of meteorology, which not only most revolutionise old theories, but will greatly enhance the safety of the seaman and the seagoer. The dll thaoiy, that tha oceanic cyclones are eirontar baa prevailed in n anti cal minds rereltsu&ng f If these terrible

ly simple. But if they are not oueoUr the present rale Is not only inapplioe- ' ■ >, but, when most carefully applied. 1 oftonjiluugelbo mariner into the Eha diseovsry which Mr. Meldrem w i stabllibea is tl at oyelonee b

of air. Ha

are of •' good this view and

£Z

Esasa : mg of the 25th oi jreoreary, icon, rorvyone rnula left the roadstead of Reunion

oordfag to the old “Itow of plooed the vertex to tha north . — these veasala ran to the northwest to amidH. Tito;

a deep plait

talking, and oontinned, describing her "•*«» saying tha* she was standing rased fa pore white, her face bright and ahiiiing, her hair illuminsd with aOvar light, and golden dewdropa fag from hat wings. She eonld m*u see bar dead brother, who ear dose to her sister’s side. While talkii

a w»y, i

sngth gave

way aa fa death.

The worst forebodings o ad been realised, and t

bile talking 1 she sank

i little cortege started

s, tile parents following the roeeeding some distance, and

„ _n Third street, the quick ear of the saddened mother caught the echo of a familiar cry, and she gave eipree"*“1 to her suspicion that it eame from

coffin of her child. The coffin was

quickly opened, and the child found to

stable delight of tha parents. In straggles the had nearly torn from

herself her death robes.

he waa quickly taken from the coffin ! carried into the house of a French ; lady at hand, wnere they bathed her fa j vinegar. She recovered her strength rapidly, and fa a abort (time was token to tha heme which she had left only a nrs before an apparent corpse. | bat few months. *" ! says that while others thought bar dead, aho eonld feel their tench | and bear distinctly all that waa said, : bnl eonld not move a single mnaele or make tha slightest sign. She know — they dressed her for the coffin, she was laid in it, and heard the ile lid fastened down, Jmt could make a motion, and waa nttorly powerless until the hearse bad gone 1 distance, when the physical furore probably set in motion again by

notion of the vehicle.

<e describes with singular out n and power, for one so young, beautiful sights that she saw while tranced, many different beings app fag to her fa wonderful beauty.

or doth, eloeely fitting and ala with its two pockets placed at Uu of tha waist For those who difficult to obtain pattami foi

novelties, we find a solution for their difficulties fa taking the pattern of any tight-fitting polonaue and eutting it off about the ordinary depth of a loose

basque ; it may be kft open at the hipa ‘n he trimmed all the way around dressy occasions, for warmth, or fo covering a worn waist. J! sleeves chano to be worn or faded at. the wrist, th i part may be ont off, and a hand (vie is improvise! by nladng ot plaited raff, graduated aa it ap

tight, open tha outer scam and in t a puffing of the material or silk banded aoroai with straps, according ti yonr trimming, or the sleeve* may tx halt covered from tha elbow down by wide trimming, a pointed atifl cuff turned np toward the elbow, a id of ribbon, finished with a , locals the npper edge of the flowing [-plaited rnfr that mb over the hand! — ie no longer necessary to trim drossskirts elaborately, simplicity of style being jnst aa “stylish” aa the opposite extreme. The greatest btitudo is allowed in thie matter Some of tho now fancies lor trimming are extremely simple and inexpensive. A single row of trimming straight down the skirt fa the lire of the front breadth may be da fa shell plaiting, and if the dress black, or of plain dark color, the plaiting can bs lined with a bright contrasting odor, representing a charming effect. Again, there may lie a row of steel battens or bows made of long loops of donblod silk, or the dress material lined with silk. A pretty home

made of bright English

fa engrafting indnatriaf^mtion, npon bar pubbe-sohool system. One of the oldest and largest girls' schools the oily—the Winthrop-has bean nu the koala of an experiment wh nvrmiiaal to be a vast public bane In aevseal of the girl's grammar soho •owing has been taught fa a partial • -* way far aeveral yean, bnt the Winrop School b the first where to all ~ 31 the natematie teaching of •aw has been nndsetaken.

“ The children are r soma article from hoc school, such aa a tow.-,, .*m napkin, or some simple article of apparel, thus combining utility with their ■*"dy. It was at first thought that 11 — hours oonld not be well spared fr the regular studies, but this res shows that tho children have their 1 is even better than before, tho oo lion of their hands giving neoc it to their minds. But os only th nda are occupied fa their work, I idler fills the time by reading aloud to the eliildren something valnshle clive, and at the same time en g. In the four npper clasi besides simple sewing, ontting and fitting are tdbght, there being in the exhibition hall a table and implements for the purpose. In this remarkable progress has been made. The patterns are given from designs on (ha blackboard. In this the use of the study of drawing, as pursued fa tha Boston public schools, receives a practical application, far the pupils would be hardly ably to receive their instructione in ontting were it not for their knowledge

A Scandinavian Colony.

Bjornaon, the Norwegian poet and ovelbt, is abont to leave ms native rantry for the United States with a Bony of seven hundred Norwegians, wo hundred of these are stalwart rang married men, and the aggregate leans of the colony will not be leas isn *400,000. The probability is fast they will settle In the vieinily of Vineland, New Jersey, negotiations to fast —" *“*— «. The colony

ng farmers, bnt

a physician and j Christiana journalist, Mr,

i, who fa ton is to publish s Norwegian paper as soon aa the immigrants have made a fair beginning in their now homes Bjornaon himself will be the tlerwymsn of the colony, all the membe-s being of the LntoMun faith. Mr. Bjornaon haa eanaad all those who enrolled themselves on hia list to aigna solemn temperance pledge, and hia young companions look unfa

itimsiaam for their f

[-tight polonaise, with square pockand coat-collar terminating with the ’, ladies, for wearing shabby finery le {lerronnfajp household dntiss, e , it is hardly fair to expend all your taste on street costumes, and allow husband, brother or father to frequently behold yon in careless attire. Woman should bo to mau the representative of home beauty and taste—a bit of sunshine in a shady place. And, let critics talk as they wiQ, dress has considerable to do fa producing this agreeable result Bhow mo the worthy man who docs not like to see hia womankind tastefully dressed, and I will show yon wear a canvas robe girdled with rope.

Unpaid BIBs.

paid bill, and to many persons fas number and length" of ’such missives received at this season quite destroy all idea of festivity as connected with it faces almost a yard long, and as fane ss if the slow and gradual accnmnlation of responsibility hod been entirely nnex- • -x t- v-rt with the class of persons, s and occupiers of apartments, who run long bills this is so. They are wonting fa imagination, destitute of perspective, and do not realise what they are doing. The' temptations to expenditure are groat when money is not required, and the sum is simply and smilingly pat down to the •• little’' aeoonnt; and it is surprising how snoh accounts swell into the incredible and astounding sum total. Then what pater/amiUru does at fas tailor's and fas butcher's and-thc grocer's and the

benefit llom an industrial point, bnt faeir perception is qniokenod impetus is given to other stadios, the teacher says, ■ It is practical arithmetic and geometry to them.' iber of the girts fa the n] • have already become sec pliabed natters and fitters, and art In teaching the ofa i, a bright and mod appearing young girl, had on a dress which she had out and made * the sohi * ■' - ■ • • kind. T Editor. ^ meter, hopes before long 1 he girls of his upper clout tred in dresses of their own

tiltiner's and th tlrygc '

great enth American

•horea. A peculiar future astitntion of the colony as

baaptoSre li litigation, and to leave fas decision t all Cannes of discussion to a court t arbitration that is to be elected onoe

enburg about fas fifteenth of January, Ire a large Swedish veawl specially chartered for the purpose.

•f being a time of rejoicing, biings tears, reproaches, anxieties, and debt. om .rthese diffioultiee. It is the simple and only solution of what is to many the gravest of problems. Bay nothing: bnt what you can pay for, and yon will not only bay leu bnt at a much cheaper rate, the cash purchaser having always a great advantage over ■ v - individual who is obliged to purse where his bill is runuing, at a 01 pay t!

would be belter for storekeepers customers ; it would enable the foi also to boy for each and sell at lower prices. A weight would be lifted froii the sir, and an infinite aid lent to fat " [cation ot onr New Yekr's dainties, it oonld all sit down to them with d‘ ipaid bills.

of Mr, George Henry Wildes, aa being of particular ^intoreat^JEfayfag^b— totetohkUUng, be^nSelybi divoire, and some time therea in sating Mlaa NuttaU, a faaatoatiog young lady of twenty-two, he was pot alow in assuring her that he lived for

■tom fell fa love with her a second time Sod hAriaoed away to have the nuptial sot ratted. Hisa fiuttell was duly infonned'Of fafame^utfaoly proceeding, giy , >a^ria. < sa5.ra saSercd to the fafaat of fifteen thon-

drng in Australia. In msay'of the old

districts of New South Wales they -—* In lhon—dl, Thsy an notws tiara’’ way ;*Utoyut thetoo profitable stock, s»d an eol; •oourge npon the pastures. Ha they nave fe he extirmlnatod like •

min. In many parks of fas country they are shot by hired men, for so much par hand, sad are collected aad da-

most rugged and inaccessible rha. ' as Well m npon the widaat plains

* measured five feetindiame-

md the

Tha Ylrglalaa Question. The Toe of Havana fa referring to tl ...nking of tho Virginias says: “ telegram announces the loss of the Vi glnioa. We did not expect anything else from the American Government. It has acted with fas Virginias f as It did with the Florida in oi to be compelled to return that . . ‘ ~ xil. Bach nobility-eorresponda ha course of those who are patronising On ban aaaaarins and incendiaries heroic enterprise. Thu —" “*

fa the journals and protecting such

_... of the country with their -easels of war npon fas high in foreign parts, thereby lemaelves the seeomplieee of

and incendiaries. If fas

ag.

of Spain, delivered to them the Virginias the bad faith of the American Government bnriad the pinto ship fa the bottom of the sea, aa it did fae coal barge Upland at tha mouth of the dry doek in tha Brooklyn Navy-yard to prevent fae wfli gain everything except honor, and win transmit to the pages of history ' which, instead of being faeir r 1 —

fnBy SCSI thab hour will omn

the. Uhl ted States for the "“-rinios-i—* '

: ■

of the

fitessris'iass; I toe treaty stipulations. ,

Female Soldier. The military annals of most European -ountries, says fae London Echo, relaxing succeeded in entering fae rauW if fae army, have highly distinguished bomaelvea in fae apparently fa oon ■ [TOOUS profeasionof arms. Such a fact ii k, however, according to fae Opinions, men hitherto unprecedented fa fae Italian Army. It won discovered, however, fae other day, that a young soldier named Marootti, who woe to receive his hsving enlisted in Ittdfi. is one of these heroinea, Julia Marootti, the Amaxon in question, belonged to a numerous sod poor family, living at Ran Ambroxio, Upper Piedmont, to whioh latter circumstance her extraordinary physical strength may, probably, he attributed. She enlisted fa 18«C, at fae time when Italy was abont to engage in the etrug_i nu u -i!_ e befog fa

tojm

six children, from being obliged •ve. Not only did Julia per* wldier’s datiea as well as her - , but abe fought in fae first

rede

at fa the medal c , - if fae oaae. King Victor Emmanne for fao woman, bestowed npon he: fae Cross of the Older of the Grown and desired that she should bo Benpension of 300 lire.

Hod Queen Elizabeth lived in sy, her extravagance would lie _iore extensive than it really wa imagine ; for the old dome—I beg pardon, maiden—knew little of luxury. During her reign, people would _ of sfekness, then a lioeneo must be obtained ; ibjeot of this prohibition was ' (paring and increaoo of fae fleah vie if fae realm." They had eggs, bn honey and cheese, out almost i

ise of scarcity, ground with grain ie bread of tho poor; but it war n palatable that even beggars refused when there waa a possibility of getting anything better. Herbs of ail kinds went into fae pottage oi fae poor, which had not always so mnehasanone it a relish. And these herbs—

often—helped

„ dilation The popular drink

of bran and , for men and women waa ale. We read that royal Bess consumed her full aba of this beverage. Certainly ehe had ; “ ' ' oement to become guilty . appetite, and waa thus justified in making the mor* -* *■

Iowa, for fae rains of goods if the Chicago fire. This company id fast Chicago was fas end of the

and that after they hod placed fae goods in faeir wsrehonae faeii

’SbaT

, and they became

court held that fae defendants sponsible for the goods until i

else became responsible for them—until they had been placed in the hands of •U~ ireting carrier. Taking them

defendants' oars and patting faeir warehouse did not shift

fao liability, in the judgment of the oourt, who gave verdict for plaintiff. If this opinion is confirmed, the Dispatch Company will have to —*" —* “

' -ge amount of losses ie of fao great lire.

Gkxst Mibriiozh.—According to uasisn journals than are one or two ..tile difficulties still to be settled with regard to fae Duke of Edinbsrgh'i 1 T - *—t pliee, marriages

, Great Chureh in-

variably at night, whereas tha Chnroh

of Fngland requires that tha •hall lie performed in the Also, Protestant marriages - at the Boasian Oourt havi

bean, without aaapttan. t —— in tha Impariai Winter Palace, which *-* * 'd not be considered _

oe for the eat Ire the ritiea of tha EatahUahad

. — —gland. Extensive pro I parations are in progress at BL Peters-

trarg for tha reoeptfen of the

Ox-fad John Bull don't take kindly to bona flash aa food. Tha Asheemse have bean again defeated by the Dutch troops. To occupy a baby, tip its Angara with molareee, and give It same feathers. Old Prob.” did not oaloalate .for Jay Cooks storm, and lost his money. protest has been made by Catholics I wi tier land against tb- -* the Papal Nuncio.

ganto speak at and stopped at 8:20, It took him )>'* aeventy-flye minutes to earu his *250, or At fao rate

of *3.83 par minute.

hister onoe recommended a to take snuff to keep him

** i to which fae put the snuff in fae ae

he had bet-

publio debt of

fae United States for December, shows u inoreaaa in the debt of abont 88,53,272. The increase of the debt dnrf the present fiscal year, or since fao of list Jnly, has been abont

*12,000.000.

Tho receivers of fae Now York and Oswego Midland Railroad have issued a notice to tho men employed by fae rood,^saytef: “The earnings arc, for ponses. The ensting'Sefidcncies will

-ion ba recovered."

A writer in Bcribnor says fast when alia and hears “ sleeve ballons ^ft^

finds pork and beans "stars and stripes," or whether dviliia-

msformed Into begins to Wend

Tho late I\

' -ed by fae bile oi a snoxo or ro» m of any venomous reptile, herb >wer, a badOMributed to fao conr-

London hi

million

leuaonsst loaareald

t population of

id places ad-

[& "ITEM'S « tributary to it, one and farce-quarters

millions of people,

in passing by fao Portland, Mo., Boo recently, saw an old end di:ed looking wallet lying on the Ik. Hand rods of persons bad r by it, and not a few had vouchsafed it a kick. It was only fae wa of the world. Tho “* ■*

o man atoo[ aside found i

champion sympa-Courler-Jvirnal: "The editor of tho Sondnsky ReoUtcr'n undo i-LT; “is paper. If we hod on undo who oouldn t die and do bettor than that we wonld most as Hof be wouldn't die at all." A will admitted to probate in Buffalo ..is this odd provision: “ In case one or the other of my children shall be pnt to State'o prison, or other house of oorreo- *— * conduct, through hia or . for the term of one year, such child or children shall have bnt 85 for faeir share after they are twenty. I have offered to take wood," says editor of fao Gajoso (Mo. 1 Demo(in a touching appeal, “bnt not one k boa bean healed to the office by ibscriber. If the paper is not issued t week, fae friends of it will know, t editor, publisher, and devil nro getting up wood to ran the office the balance of tho winter.” A married woman in Tenneeee not mg ago obtained s verdict for 83,500 damages against her father for wmpping her. Her father appealed, but 1npremc Court decided against Meanwhile he bad transferred his property to his remaining two children by deed of gift, and fao daughter i. brought suit to hare fas oon-

set aside.

before

in Boston daring

lie requires a bond fn ship companies in every ease where an immigrant U found to be insoneddiotio, *eaf, dumb, deformed, or blind, insnrig the State against such passenger's auperism dunng ten years. This, of rarae, mokes the companies careful it to bringjover any of tho afflicted Tho King of Bavaria recently gam an ..-der that a ballet should ba played for himself alone after fae _r ‘- u —

from a private box l

sectsiion, whioh 1 the morning. The greatest, oa

. ien taken to expel from the uouao every spectator, and the servants on duty had to keep watch in the corridors to prevent any noise. The next day presents were sent loan the artiste to indemnify them for 'heir non-obligatory

„ —fljnalring ■titnte for coal," inranted 1 peasant " He filled

quarter* with imol!

Hefara'S

so** o* discipline in the Bnsalsn army is said to have occurred recently at a ■“ *■ *•■* " town of Bardoaek,