jr.
T*
/■"
STAR OP THE n CAPE.
STAR OF THE CAPE
YOL. VI.
CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 38, 1874.
o' SnmiMd urid'^i _. ■ to flj hi. country, it is «,b-bl c he do.er would ban tereem tStm
i» d£Ss‘^)^ti4tatoirsr*u ctj m««^inJoejTe.Moe ol oUmw
’ z&zSupi* sfa^aga." T J 1 ttT oit jg
Bbeh ntlMr eev for Brimih LIotAii - tcrwawioi-yfeerhu"
The benker offered Mr. Leirii hoeeiUlitj of Ua hone, end it
Him to (tine.
Lewie’s oocnplerion w» hebitnelly st^HStirtiSS
E5S'^f= •fuSU with one or non pet
ooJSdlT.
diseorerin* faots refmrding their neighbon hitherto nuknown, end then, mth- ■ 'iisS^'—
the person of Thonu Delong, Hereford had ooeof tboee enterprising indiridn- • -* r, he weatbe nephew of
In a«M wX'onm Bendonrst Tipton. The linker hed for jL Teem set his fee sgsinst his nephew's « l»lsnled It S ^ UJ «. bat » "blood is thicket
Ibsn water,"he eonld not o^ off his
urtr of taoae wno . ^ • ••- — - * ■ -
's child, so T his mule's h
ana, after sB. Bar mother's enp of Jot almost ran orer. Tom Daloag wee there, bnt he did not oeU the Ooont a •• fellow," and suspended his slang iSr^SSt'^SIThSl 7 ihrt thought of the oeremony, he repl ■■Wall, the parson gars them a
■abend by hia alangof the rwowoonm. id the pnae ring—in hia estimation m of bffamd-a moat rallied inatitn-
» on the top of the Mr. lepton was sitting in hia roam at
■fc.’SsLsrs
■' Who was that fallow too had no to the house at dinner the other day ?'' I am not aware that I had any Sow,’" answered the banker, with
rid efihTbi effaot of thie, whan Si a attending to the ordinary duties of her household, must often be remarkable. It is, we sappoee, something like
Oh, yon object to the term, do goor^rwjiod Toenj “let me qualify
who hat depoeited a Uua^ bank, and W*?? to speak of SwaTm^ Tom, “why that's th^namo ITth? shooter who need to stop with yon so odmi a few yearn poet. By Jotc,! knew I bed ho^ U-nime ^mewh-x. Did
Audte > . ? a^. uo^d'wwhmri mriml
obliged to ewalhiw some wine. Bn find end himself bed been school-!
Sr. L™^
Jp-SMS
bt that ha la
daegk t ir Angnsls. ^hs latter indalgeil isstc
him in —
jr^SisSyi' 1 in ensues. At length Mr. Tipton spoke: How is thisI belierel am look-
in^npon Mr. Lewie?"
sKsunasA-Thfis.' ty warden did not think that he dreeeed himself with cheerful alacrity end orh to be repeated. He was _ twice, ani on being taken and died. The eonriet's
who was to hare bean
i minii T all Hml hia IrmtjriaiUoHarrlord^
Bernier bad obtained Mi. Tipton's o ■ant to propose to his daughter »a down alalia,--cried the b
pcSHSJxSn’treTT'dmSe’r* *£ wall aware werethe Oomralaalonera who appointed him and himaelf of hia ignor**~t the prerions physician was stsy snd tesoh him. The conafflicted with heart disease, ?*??£.
henjDr. d about
SSJi,!? ... U Any sudden was dengexone, ^et^the physician ordered him ^lo^he
of e " solitary.” The physician applied to the Commieaionera for permission te admioietar the bath, which wee
dmung'thc
as one of “criminal negliThe most sxperisnosd snd the majority of ths medical wiinemn do-
Adder writes: Bier hare s in Toledo, it is arid, who cannot ritbout^riiyirijg.^^In ell hm
in stub 61 feet long, 38 indue wide, and 36 inahea deep. Sled te two-thirds depth from an artesian well with eretnre of 64 deg. The prisoner amareed on hie beck, end hie
six aeeands.'' Prisoner! ere occasionally handcuffed to ring-bolts in the wall of the eolitsry. with their hands ss high as the ohin, fill they gire in. It is “not oestomary" to put weights on
.-srasisih
punished, though eometimee e prisonei Im oompeOed to -' walk a beet in the solitary for tin boms with fifty pounds stamped on his beok. The jury elicited there buds in the of its seal ysK
fflkSa'.ass: Or this: •kldgdjo. jm-to# newp, _ q«*hwyp-H.b._b°»to« 1
Or this:
o tall the hired
girl to bring up the orel asuHta, where is the going to find e word to rhyme with "eeattler And if she ebould
how is she golagto ring in rit
asre? We do not n We ere only certeJE
m to be msde up and printed in tl
daye fimt we are not likely to forget it. Without the thumb for s lores, we old be unable to bold anything fatly, snd^moet of ^ the inrsofione of tiZSTiSTmTeerepTS • • _ haring thumbs, than, sad be I fill end rejoice orer our Den friends, the epee. We did not know, —* *—Minis freyienUy •* re age
The country editor in our illustration, end the Weeitfp' riree s plotnre of en editor in his eanotum, reeairing pay for hia paper in pumpkins, KaasrsaES'*^ sgatffledsnd gntaful eabaeriber, as
■ubeeripHon to his paper. It would seem to be liberal, butit must be oon- - d that be probably neaired e ... deal of the seme kind of .tuff, end that the payment of a little hard eaah would be an af
of this fallow last, sad, with l , through hi. heart- eharged upou enemy, snd dropped down stone c— so close to the old man that he eould
—* of 1874.
Thor tall a story around hare of a foolish young fellow, residing on Currant Greek, Trim made a bet that be would ISMS a grissly sad bring him into camp. He msde the experiment.
swft-ffssrsj-fijj
the State Prison at Joliet, DL. which rrssss' ' ' “
t -K!4ia
—-S-.S7
£d 0r in b lhS ot
pqunds. He is a supple, sotiTC brute, and inclined to be e genuine cower' Meet him in a aeolsded nl.ee, end will ekulk off with hie tell between I
• ' ' he in ret
1 end brought to bay. Then he the ofUsnatTe, and ■ true rifle jas® '
is, BO mnen me oesser, as rue cinnamons ounot climb ; and a knowledge of thie fast tends to restore confidence. The majority of men I here conrereed with prefer to hunt them in thie wuy. In
I a. M., after ha had
m rerbeily, though e he records forbade eu
lot fly off the handle. The bear may
the immortal “ Old Guard" daon, your gennins grissly nerer -Isis, but is nine to the lest. The fng^sndoo his natiT. 1 * or in »h ‘ ‘ ”
e^ dbmiptine of I
their Urea; lor,*
you shoot a grissly, whethi through fits heart or breinbox, he nan -■ the gbota re long re he ean li:
armW^.. _.. ehronicled in ita columns for the ini * “ * snd its at
a pew. Practical illnstntions ef the rtT-i “-g^^monnteinoua regions
dent encountered e mi-
'three years the labor of
sociarioua sstablishsd in Sew Tnk'and
The mountain ranges of Colorado, writes a eofresnondent, are rery wafl supplied with Ws, sad daring the fafioflheyear, when the plmre snd
snMrn*, now felt To be of nettousl importenoe. hre reoretlT here most engisayssrfesrsS mris of loiiK Bo little is known of forestry in many parts of this country, says the Sew Tori Mnrald, that, until fataly, the idea of gttrtng the aboriginal —‘- "eu hre not been retmtalaed. begin to dieoorer the neaeeeity legislefion to this and. Lret
chap i
Mli IlghttngjrebAt
ths way from 800 to 1,000
red (rigid winds of the neetbwsat, naming far beyond their wonted eouthare limit, await through the Mississippi Valley and penetrated unretarded end unopposed to the Gulf of Mexico—a theuomenoD that surprised the oldest inhabitants end which was explained >y the extaneire dieforeeting of the intarrening Btatee. The rapid and nnchecked denudation of the soil throughout the United Btstre, which, wheuer
timely i
dantir and heustiblei
>sources of wood supply, hare only to be le t to themselves to furnish periodical crops ad In/lntturu, —“*•— — use or oultiretlon; snd
the absolute neoeeaity of
arert their early decay.
in has a small stock of patienoe, en ha asnsrtsins that tns poeitof'SrC:.’*
- . - has bean oActmlly oonsarrsney, the enrplua annual yield of wood becomes the exolnaire property ' 10 community to dcrote to the:r public purposes, end hence the peocoord their iponten ecus end earnmpport to the forest officers. In other conn tries, especially Austria and
Britain,
ire been euooeeefully surreyed, mapped end diTided up, end working plans derised for their admin-
istrmlion.
t be pnotieebleto
dx Indian »T aignsl euooeee in the Ur''
it is erideut Omy
the ebuee of deforesting. We should rigidly nserre to the nation erenr right now existing orer the great Weetem
little, to requita the enormous grants I which they hare fattened. State and onimpel legislation, too, can be made
.. reach many forest dlatnete end wooded spots, not under Congressional oon- — "-t if the people at large were in-
ly informed as to the neoeeaity
ralley'regton fc
personal appeerreoe t least, peculiar. He ca arm in a sling; one eye
carried hie right
twintadSp-
l, end tan
snd indented with ridges; while ‘ ' ' wee as guiltless of heir jse e
ft in Tiled Ire some of the friendu to a eoeiping picnic ee chief mt that he had reoeirad each
JUBri^u *« My'cf'ki famD^ to Ml the truth about it. Slu knows
and part of it . crime. If it ha. a gll wrecked her happtoeu, andwUUhat "brailiee in Utah, hunI women ei * 11 **
tl innsfigmUon. sated in the offi-
[ lie timely ■d if it lands
l5 r ^hS°report ebun-
"™**"inex!
1 ss in Germany,
u^Uds^r^t
telligenUy in
of ■ffisMing; ..
tress sad woods which form the netnra ooreriugof theeofl, whioh attract thi fertilising rein showers, and detain it
oelate, the mein point would be ga KiUp-saX^rtar' ■
Mr. 0. E. Fraser Tyler boy of ton has, for e playmate, e wary fine young retrierer, end in the heyday of youth fits two used to gambol and play ^together, just si though the
One day in their rambles—for the reierer preferred hie young ma-'—’-oompaay to any other, end they nneperable—they crossed a lake island, whioh they entered, o^letaly earing the boat Insufficiently tautened
time, snd wishad they returned -re shore, only to find that the boat hed drifted far out of reach. What was to be done? The passage
rjz
with hia faithful playmate-
' yet It sea
houses, end eoueotiag the rarenues, to be *66,677,398; for Indiaae, (8,608,716 i for pensions, $30,478,166; for the militaiy
nary yards, *37,7*3,451. ■■
these Bums there is set down 1,100,■o for foreign intaroouree. This gives for ths current axpensea ihrthhttlaittta
menh independent of ii public debt, *182,351,668.
TS- shout a hundred: millions—that is, on tl.218,72»,160, at six per cent in gold, *73,138,698, end pa *603,478,800, at fire per cent in gold, *35,173,940, snd in addition the small amount of Lntereeton the three per cent Nary Pension (and end the four per oent oertifioetee of indebtedness. Let us say, then, in round numbers, one bandied millions for interest on the debt. This, added to the *183,261,668
the morning, Raya the A\m, bore delegations of happy snd expectant pickpockets snd sneak thieves, and the noma-bred light ff to think it a gala Taking a view i workingmen Urn polios i no parade should take place. Notwithstanding the order crowd a a in Tompkins Square early morning, snd diaturbanoes bet polios snd the workingmen were of frequent ooo describes
on u»
nearly four millions, D—‘ ^
The amount required for
118,866, is m the interest
the Paiug to sddei
‘estimated for 1876 at ,918,866, is not included. luclu- -“■* interest on the Pacific Buil-
ds, the revenue required for year of 1873-74 amounts to a er *316,000,000. Tbs Seoreimato for 1874-76 is *319,198,. r tbs first quarter of the pres1 year the receipts from ail rare *81,863,493, snd the esfi8 i for the other three-quar-87,100,000. The total is
*368,963,493. To this must be added the premium on the sales of gold, which for the year will hardly amount
firs or- 1 - -»>‘—
Square, when the crowd began to gather sad whan a terrible and bloody riot a inevitable, * v - -*— 1
inUneS persons, mostly German snd French. Few of Ireland’s sons or daughters were visible The crowd in the square nqjfdl^r swelled, snd long before 11
almost covered with human beings. The men who formerly _ •- and drank to “ Vive la >od out boldly, and by looks and lotions encouraged ths
dollars at least.
the income to forty-five millions of
YentiUUen ef Buildings. What a mistaken economy i ■bnt op the bouse ea close ee p daring this cold season and fire • nnoe. A gentleman has josl if I don't think that an air-tight re is a more economical wuy of basting a room than an open grate ? Certainly not 1 I told him. Nothing on bo economical, even in a dollar point of view, which is . • cane of the poor —— hie capital? A deer brain and good muscle. He, of ell men, can least afford to poison h's bloed with the close, overheated air of hot foreacee and clou •torea. It is only the devotees of fashisr*Si Ws, si-TateriSS being in nn ventilated, overheated v.—— A a three creatures am of no to anybody, as they only
rsa*
eling clou to them With trembling "*We mturt°haTe work, onr'famSos ere S ” nd seemed to ful better oy had arid so much. They Thev felt that their most sacred ^rig^t aaumble in public and diaouaa “ Capi•ri and Labor" and why they should not bo allowed to march through the streets nd show the public who nd t they are nd bring to the very a of tie people the fiot that they „. able and willing to work, nd that they: ' ' j| While _ ■ambled
e of a close, f nrnsoo-1
ntfiing •heated
nothing equals the open grate, working family eu afford to ha wimout it. It will contribute additional health and working capacity enough to more thn make up for ita additional cost. I am tar from bein^ u
Rant mu, but living where woo fourteen dollars n cord, I hare in study n old-fashioned open wood fire with andirons, nd T **-* 1
A grate with coal nd a good draught ■ a very good sabafitne, nd much L caper.—Dto Xetrts, in 7b-/Joy.
•jss?"
A Prompt Addition.
Immediately the dog plunged
_ia water, end swam toward end at
the boat But it was a rery heavy
fiat-bottomed one, known in Boound
by the nataa of oobble. »« ■
drar^af-
ita'moorings, and ’to hia anxioualy expnntanl^^omg —— —••.iw—
have six numbers of four ^ of which you shall fix upon the first three, ud I will pnt down the lari three. First of all, I put down the
proposition. Ths teaoher, however, Mk the chalk, marked three points where the six
h and the boy begn to tl thus wre little hope of re^me. Not eo the deg, though it only nu end one summer instead of ten. 1
theu fire figurea," aaid he; to the sum we ebril obtain, own the first three numwrote 4,568, another 3,891, d 7.0n. " Now It is mj
mod the boat, but made one vi spring out of the water, and eu oseded in scrambling up the aide ai
« inride, dripping u he wee, he - himself e strong shake, nd then ai euoe jumped up out of the bottom of the bost on the senter seat, where the
.997. They were very
1, 7,r,(W, 2,!b'2. s the addition,
,s.
anxious for an ex-
r d point oi boat had i rongh, wooden grating li
_ ... mnlfiply the 8, you have ths amount, 20,9*7. that the teacher, therefore, had to do,
' write down such
e enough. 90,999 bv 1,9*7. All
_ , says a Greeley Tribune, of last month. Teams come in loaded ... Vra. _ M Ua readily at 3 oonta
the honeri nd fair-minded rkingmn, it must be arid, they ” mtoneneed eU snob actions, and i dona to listen to the views of mo loeMe and^porition^and jyldDi^ ■ no leuTtaUtTn^notee. The oeunlenoeeof ril plainly showed that they anticipated interference with theu. »(j,, charge of the ar
11 o'doek aim oat every Tompkins square was blocked, nd the : Suddenly a
rm extended
square itself wi_ .
great cry arose. The , alarm through the neighborhood, ai -“ ‘ fearful. The p
rides, ud a terrible encounter h probable. Out Walsh with on tocn entered the middle gate in A ~Ie led hie men to the eentre of the square, ud than faced them towards the south. He gave the order, “ Bight face." The rear rank in a moment afterwards faced about end in u instant
flsteral ■sU.sUVa.S'w'S
prominent being from ud in position in the of the square. Tl— through the gatee.
The squad under gent Ernes did quick work. That under
Sergeant Berghold met with:
’I-1-.- ha I a ,
he reached e ■nail gatb-
eriug around a banner on whioh was inscribed “Tenth Ward Organiaetion * Workingmen," — 1
md him to resist the ,. er Wolton with a heavy one. Scxit Berghold went to hie subordi-
dc badge
oroee, nd the lettera, "
hndled ud heavy claw hamman which was e piece of stout red cord. The ocad he wound about hie wrist ud then struek the Sargent on the heed with the hammer, knocking him down. Two polioemu clutched Meyer, ‘ *- his frenzy be struck the prostn ear again. At this freely. A
m nd dried beok ig him in debt to at if he worked ly notber year he moat
of It bringing only 2.
point for the sale
expecting to core 3,006tl^a
fired.
to the Ikwr.' Guo of hill tan was in the room at the time, but owing to her agitation could not interfere. After throwing away the pistol he left the boose. An alarm was given,
lloedSre'body
thi •«
After leaving the house Joseph a u officer ud inquired of him when doctor could be found. The offic
___ 9,999, wtuob he oould carily d at e elanoe. In this way: 4,668 plus 5,6M equal 9.999 3,391 plus 7,608 equal 9,999 7,077 plus 3,922 equal 9,999
great cloud of dust arising in the neighborhood of the mounted police, ud a rush of men nd boys, nearly • " " •-“'-’ith street from the
t douhlee, dey vants
-« von uncafiant man, but I have
.a,.' “
tail h destroyed by firoirom
Sss A As tin
Tbsre are those who believe it to baths tower of Bel us, and regard it as a • of the rein of Babylon.
Catharine Oates, of CorhwaU, land, traveled all the way to Tm wedded to . iK^nstamo'e dnhg-
iat wee tne metier, wuan that he had killed hia mother. The officer took him to the •tation-house, where he was locked up. told the Sergeant that the killing entire'y accidental ; that be had wKuided to ahoot himaelf and had killed hie mother Instead. He waa
Mrs. Freeman
(nil speed on the unbled over each into the falters, or up high stoop* to get out aflbsehamra. Thehoreebe air with their batons, ud mny^greona vratrMaM^low. ^Thm part of the mounted police to ride over followed. Than waa no use in ptt-g to rents t the horsemen. One nolicemn aotorily rode into a grooety, and scattered the terrified fallen who tumbled thereof the
widow well ad- . ranced in life. Her husband, Ji H. Freeman, was widely k
prominent Meson, nd orlivee on Hudson City H
phyrimen.
The murderer >■ 37 yi has the reputation of t man, bnt has n very violet
Hie conduct ia very eooeutrie, ■ doubt ia entertained aa to
Sr&slK - - and to About
but bee given the boy who laugbed at ts.~.

