Star of the Cape, 11 March 1874 IIIF issue link — Page 1

M*rU Ignaeii did mt reply, bat •tooped to piok op u »b-’ which, vat and eheenj, lay

her feet.

“And now, Maria, I hai nqaeat to make, which on acquaintance warrant*. L — — parte, howerer—a eouveafr from thia dark hair of yonra ; a letter, now and then, when yon weary of yonr Monterey ■ertn, and with to talk to me aoroaa the rater ; and—a kina." Brill no anawer from the giri, who, rith efoa oaat down, a trolled along by

rataed to hia, and find hi a '*

THE BELLE OF MOHTEKET. The Monterey of twenty-Sro yeara ago waa a vaatly different town from the Monterey of lojay. The alien J areeta, now the aim oat exelnaiTo property of gaoe, oowe, and nomadic bona, than echoed to the ringinlf bonfa of the gaytrattired oabaUcn'r hone; the uniiorm of the Eogliah and American naval officer conlraated with the ataid black mantilla ‘ of the pretty tenorlta; the C tar tinkled on moonlit alghta under laUioe of the dark-eyed belle ; and the romanee of Bnaniab life mingled activity of- a proanaaa of half-roiinol

rof neglect and indifference, countitute the modern Monterey. Still, the roaea and the tall bolljhooka cling lovingly to the adobe walla, and peep in throngh the low windowa; bnt the blnahing, oUwoheeked girla that offerod them to thetonnging wooera at^tlie garden galea dowdy matrona. wrinkled by family ' caree, wfaoae margin la waahed by the epring-tidea, wlurh knowing no change, mnnnur yet an of old on the ercaoent baaek. With all ita dreary aomnolcnoe, there la a oharji al-o-lt the old toarn. Bitting like ae-me ead widow by the eon, mourning the commerce which haa deaerted her, and yet, iii all her grief, Enoch Arden like, hoping and waiting fora

globed tbemaelna

''Then I ehnll take int my prayer* prevail, Her aoft eyeii^v — 1 . oe waa, and how mo cheek. He rained her

thought had anddenly ■ track him, naid, abruptly, half to hunaoif and half to

"■•T!

'■Good God ! it can't be ao, Maria I cirme—do you love mo *" The wbndcrfnl paaaiou in the full town even, ao tender and despairing, lid him all: and when, like a fooliah rang man, he took her in hia arms, id awore all the oatlia that all lover* it* bo often Bworn and to often rokon; and whan they * trolled back rer tfae.mnda, Maria’a teanwero gone,

iapromiaed wife.

This waa all the romanoe in Maria's _Je. The next day the Delight Bailed, and for ton yeara neither shin nor snnereargo were beard of in Monterey. Bat she never married. She bad a strange way of every evening walking to tho bill-top whore the old fort stood, and looking willfully or' * a -

.. ovfnlly a

. id resignedly

her home, nnraing her invalid and aonr-lempered mother, and tnunlng the rosea about tho adobe On thia Christmas eve, Maria Ignaria, leeling before her old faahioaed enraving of the Madonna, thonght of the -anger in Bethlehem centnriea ago, and wondered sorrowfully if Jams* Gllmonr waa enjoying in hia Engliah home the Chriatmaa-tree and the mistletoe,

games ho bad told her of J walked on the Bands ten And then her thoughts that Jane evening when

called her

-j cs uplifted, her black ahawl drooping from her graceful shoulders, and nor red lips moving in prayer, a painter oonld desire no better model the faro one, wit'.. patiimtwi—. — looking,• quernkraa looking faro appearea at the deep window. “Como hero, Maria; 'U» snpper"Xea, Ifadre miaand Maria, aeonring the orratlo vine to a nail in the adobe wall, entered the ' Ten years before th story, when Maria's i . hood was at ita dawn, for t roao in the yonth of the eotry to catch a glimpse of a a word with the belle of M rose-bud from her fingers was a rare gift, to be carefully preserved and worn with pride, and a kind glance from her brown eyes sent Iho recipient back to •amoat faro, nor paaaion fonnd a moment's harbor in her breast. Bnt at last her Borrow came, in this wise: In June, 1838, the atont ship Delight furled her oanvaa and dropped her anchor in the Bay of Monterey. She waa owned by tho great Hudson's Bay Company, and was bound north to drain the peats of the company on the Fraaar and Oolnmbla river* of the vainable fun which lay to their storo*—lea. Tho mparoargo of the Delight, ea Gamour, was a son of the vice-

ions, and expressing a hearty contempt K the humdrum Hie of. Europe, had been sent by his father to the Pacific shone, to drink kia fill of the adventurev for which ho thirsted. He wi

youth of a singular force of character, very undemonstrative, and possessing some dedttad opinions of tho dilettante which had won for him to bis uni ty dan the title of The Bsuioal. rinanitxKra* verdict of tha jnry of old wise-beads to whom Gilmour, senior, had appealad for an opinion of his son's eharartorTwaathat Jameawsatalr * but odd—an eooentrio young mi fact—who, unices travel temperei down, would never be an aoquiaiti tha merchant office within whose dnstv ■raefaets Us father had amassed a bulky fortune. Bo James found himself aboard the Delight, anchored in the Bay of Monterey, and, though nominali a, really to Sat tangled

nng man in pannit of s

STAR OF THE CAPE

CAPE MAY CITY, X. J.,. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 187A.

STAR OF THE CAPE

. _ ; bat whirlwinds of sentiment valuable. The

en for suppresaion than intempe. While it is peculiarly deloterioua in individoals, it la murrain and blight to * ' defied legislation, and net aviwoomo it; bnt

^ of ^God, there

woman to equality with man, and L looked upon the accomplishment of hi

^ allowed to preach In ohnrch in Brooklyn ; bnt it u not ocrwiU make itself felt there to the onilanght on^ whisky in a waj^th '

light

demonstrate her p everlaating waiting. H

' oe, iradonbtedly ; oav wnou sue hat her domestic relations are af- , haa ehe no right to move ? Has • right to combine and exert her ? Is there any other than the vil that eo spreads nets for her nd's and son's feet? If Dante had lived to tho present day ho would -lioture a pure, proud woman tempted nlo wedlock with a libidinous, drunken .nave, who haa a right to her society, lor table, her conch. Bho moat live in he presence of a total hog. No greater offering can be conceived of. Have inch womcn no right to rebel? May viper* crawl in and oat of homes and nobody be aUowed to tread on them ? Ho added that he waa not attempting to apeak critically ' “ * —

nt back t

he kissed her Ups end called

ife.

Boom I boom I boom I throngh the ill night air. Maria opened her window and look'd ont A party of Torts — went rapidly by, and sli« their excited exclamation- , had gone ashore on the Point Pinos ~’iekl. "May God and i»m rr

. her shawl around

in the street.

Everyone was astir. Men on horseback with ropes rode furiously along the beach and toward the Point; the whslera msnned their boats, set their Sana, and sped before the bleat throngh the moonlit water. They were all too l. The cruel, pointed rooks had torn ill-fated vessel to fragments ; end breakers dallied with spar and mast, r flinging them high np on the >eh. and again drawing them back to d them once more against the brown cliffs. Bnt not a tingle body did tbc " np that night. Day dawned, and when Maria Ignada Oomex looked from her saw a crowd of men standing about something. They lifted it up end ' it throngh the street, end to her for hen was the honae nearea

prairie fire, * it stnbblq end perehee revival is to danger of being short lived, because it has no solid organisation to give it permanent effect. If this movement oonld bo transferred to the ehnrehee it

first si

bed. Hie dark

TheJ UidTim

-card waa toll of white froth issned from hie Upe; built men—handsome, no donbt, w) those eyas, now staring ao blindly, bed light end life, end those well-cut F : — loved end emilrd. " Maria—Maria, whet ails yon ?" She was ‘standing by the beds! sr halide crossed over her breast: her reaekfixed ~~

tog herwh. stained breast

yeara." And loan ana smonnea o the tangled hair, and wiped tha fi from the livid lips, and straightened the limbs of him who had oome to s For it was bar great consolation that _e had been tone even to death. They buried him behind the old fort, and

•’at last, after s

pedally the

A great country cannot be governed

1 into the saddle and yon

will find that she ? ‘

knows how to ride.

io of l

of the

thonrand freaks of fancy, e_ thousand grotceqncsies, throngh which shone, the more effectively for tha departures, the eternal calm, tho stagnant imperturbed eeetacy of apathy of Boodha s remarkable face, with tho great pendant cars, and tbc oyaa looking^ out beyond s&y '-\

the plan of tho simple

as the

By degrees I came to see _iis evidently subterranean to look with wonder upon

grandeur of ita massive areuueosure, severely plain, except so far

-ring of the great columns the furtheat end of the lull,

renting against the columns, was a raised dais or platform, covered with - 3loth. This stage waa raised ben three and four feet above tho floor of the vault, and waa about thirty- " forty feet deep and one hundred .'tor broad. Behind it a curtain of red cloth hhng down from the capitals of tho towering columns. In front of the stage, jnst about the spot whi n

pulpit of *- ■- -

!~i" rhicn wi

orchestra to a Greek thewonld bo, waa a tripod-shaped "■ a broad eenser upon it, to

burning a scented oil, mixed

_ • and aromatic woods, that diffused throngh tho whole vault a pun-

gent, sacramentel odor.

Suddenly there waa a wild and startna crash of barbaric music from under itage—gonga, drums, cymbals, and

from behind tin

——, B a scented torch in his hand, olimbed the oolmnna with of monkeys, and lighted each

' from the base

ip to the

e agility .111. It- .!

A driver, belonging to the great Northern Railway goods station, occasion to paaa np the Quadrant I highway, New York, to deliver a peckage. On approaching one of tho

houses, he was seen bv a window, who immediately • friends staying with her :

lady to U

The friends accordingly can window, whan Benjamin Bmltl

io the

dthaon, the

driver in question, was asked to “shake hands" with hia hones. With great good bnmor he at once complied. Standing in front of tha pair of hoi

" Tom, shake hands."

Instanaly the near bona lifted up hia

right foot. After a shake,

Now, Tom, the

foot"

foot instantly.

driver then went to front of the other horse, when a similar soene occurred. Perhaps, however, the moat pleasing Incident remains to bo told. Betreasing backwards several yards from tho

honae, he cried ont: "Now, Tom,torn P

Instantly tl

L -- '-ad, tm

slightest ,

Jt of a whip, and followed tl olover .driver, as the dog wonld tl

shepherd.

Such an instance shows dearly he much can be done with animals, bnt especially with the horse, simply ' ~

tha power of kindness.

TV Beared Jogglers at Slam.

rnnor enunren. wua folks, made a happy

to the nnraery one snowy mornUttle after Ghriatmaa. The new

games, the new blocks, the new toys and

rad the happy stories of the delights to be rehearsed with

' - raid ^ve f-"

best left to their own sweet devices. ' auspicious as the blue army overooata

Two good hours passed while I plied «j<l «•<> »bsenoe of masks wWh mark-

my needle to another room-no more Inghwsymen of Little Rock.

penetrating sound reaching m- ' 1 Th "'‘ *» h.ndsoi

that quarter than now and then of merry chi Id-la tighter. Then sense of peace all throngh the

when suddenly itha - ’ ’

r-i

xious, and "Oh,

ll^Uic nnraery, all snlidued -orrowfal, gathered around the i neart-broken aix-year-old darling, who 1 itood all shaken with sobs, with bright ‘

—a overflowing, and little ids trying to fasten the « kii to? into roSfoH™’

hurst ofit afresh.

•• Why, what is it, Lon ? what is it, rling ?" Still only "I want io see my " Haa anybody been unkind to yon, _jn?" I asked, fearing thst some quick word had wounded the sensitive

Bo, pnxslod and diatressed, I faatenei ib warm wraps, and let her go. The y little daughter put her arms nbon y neck and said: " Mamma, I res ich a dreadful, pitiful story; and i

atrung fn

of "the vault, which, I

ro*o to a lofty dome, thatdonb

Tho iliumion from these mnltitndinons lamps very bright and brilliant, too aoft - •'—ling or overpowering, yet so 8itog d of^Se perfect Ught’of I oonld distinctly trace the and dimtoiahing rings of iho cupola above ns, and the rows of brick ork, only thinly whitewashed, thst reported it. The din of the horrible orchestra toroased, and the band of old women une ont from under the stage singing >r rather shrieking ont) the moat dis„oUcb] chant that I ever heard. The red curtain finite red a Uttle, there waa a doll thud, and there, right before ns, alongside the censer, stood a very old man, bnt wrinkled, with long hair and beard white aa cotton fleece. Hia finger nails were several inches long, and hia sunken jaws were horribly diversified with two long teeth, yellow andograish. He waa naked, except for a breechcloth, and hia shrunken muscles shone

led to death; and there about a mamma who died, n’t love the baby." Did nobody cry bnt I

breath into it .

...«nty feet high,

fnrions; then, with a andden jerk ing motion, he toaaed the burning oil towards the crowd of squatting apoct-

tora. It shot towards them a broi sheet of terrible flame—it dtoc npon them a shower of rosea a ponicaa, more than oonld have gathered to a cart. Turning tho o bottom upward, he span it for a m

the point of hia long th flung it disdainfully t

Tl struck tha pave dang, bounced,

expanse of wings,a shrieking eagle, frightened horribly, and seeking flight towards the summit of tho dame. The old man gaaed a moment upwards, then, seizing tho tripod npon which tho censer had _a M *■“

sent ita legs apart with a non

straightened them against — , and hurled them, dart-like, towards the gle. They glanced upward with a ided flash, snd instantly the eagle mo fluttering down to the pavement our mldet, dead, and three horrible ibne coiled about him, and lifting ieir hooded heads defiantly, and flash-

, * anger out of their glittering eyes.

someperoons,may bo artificially induced ihe m nsic shrieked still wilder, the to other*, as by what are termed magnetic Bn xkea coiled end plaited themselves passes, or canning the pe-raon to look together in a rhythmic dance, lifting steadily at a small object near the eyei. grad eagle upon their heads, and Tho proportion of persona who can bei | right in our midst there stood thrown into this somnambulistic or {j,, tripod again, with its flickering .veamerio state is atont one to fifteen. « —a 1‘- 1-——— * ' “-

TUb late eminent naturalist, Agassiz, ■raa a subject to hia yonth. When in this condition, all directive control of tha will is to abeyance, and tho subject sees, hear*, taatea, feela, and believes aU that la told him by the operator. If told that he is drinking something sweat he relishes it; if told that it is nans com he spurts it ont, and if ae-

Hlnta oo t

t-stoel bottom

in fashion.

A trading steamboat belonging fetches merchants waa lying tied np ' 1 — 1 —v evening after i 1

^Iropjmg

nnifonaity atont thi

unnsnaUy

regarded aa an

itcrvala .to take

id bitter wail of •' I want e, dismayed, io go to the reacne, 1 mv own little girl flying

r, her face pale

strangers ; they conducted themselves with entire dignity and decorum, and were intent upon nothing apparently bnt to get their bounty and their distinction and their gooif clothes to Natchez aa quickly and aa comfortably aa

o end of have committed all aorta of ipnnity, had they been so inclined. If Chang had committed an assault, how wonld it have been poesi- ... .. . 7e arre stcd him without arrevt- ,, also, and had Eng been entirely innocent of all participation to " i affair, why should he have been arited ? In order to punish tho guilty, would have been nocessary*to punish . innocent also; and looking np nng wonld have inclnded locking up ig. We do not see any way ont of i dilemma that wonld have arisen exjit a temporary one; and tliat is the

party, justice would hai a does no.

ioffer for

saihle. Presently, howevei

:st and moat disttoguiaiicu^u. .ur uttered the simple and oommon-

:.',i i place words, "shall we?" Thereupon

i i *ho other four, and before tliey

r how it waa done, the Captain and Captain's clerk, the pilot, abin-boy—every soul on board

raa another id the papa

child. Evt "orKI Hl-o harbinger

Dt a

■till with Upa all a-tremblo, and [ took away .the crnol book, s ooy ont doors in the snow ator his shovel, and suggested f

That night 'before

took the book with thi tho bnmtog taper on the cover, and tho gracefnl poem on ita title-page dedicating all "To my daughter Florence," and asked my little girl to ihow me the xiwful etory. So I was pointed to

Child's Tragedy.”

- read it with quivering nerves—the horror of a fiery death to a goldenhaired toby girl, drawn’ with graphic E n. Nothing spared—neither tho torre of the slow death, nor tho father's

, nor tho mothoi 1 ’

guntjOf presence nlat is favoral

had been uetrayea into pattinf lildrem^ ^ ^ riebd, who sorely only meant to, ileaanre; and tho fact that t ie ■ raa a lady of culture, and a mmd disarmed me of any usual -ions supervision, and in too Chri iresaaro I had trusted, it uure; xrald only say to my little ones, ■ orry yon have read this. Try i

Link of it."

Nannie said; “ It is more 1 nightmare,’ I think, than a

time ’ story."

And Alfred's great oyf

is when he burst ont s ferrto^I suppose, to I

" Tho B :h such lo

trouble* of hfe.

and and ^gagged on deck, whi ; the safe, and packing np an < selection of ^tbo earpo. |With tt , (n*toe i vldnity 1 or Natohe? f

LltUe ChUdren.

invoking by their spells win

ictl? anything to te

delighted prophet.

It would bo a terrible world, I do If it were not embellished by lilllIron.—Itinnry’s Bolt, World*.

irable. Basilica of Sant

punishing tho guilty

conclusive the -tost hton^ ’

BT!

'hang, who. having a separate identity, onld have obtained a writ of habeas orpua, and demanded bis Uberty. Hod mo of these twins been o^rogne, ho ice. If Chang were drunk and disxrald have arrestcl him without laying limself open tom chargeo! false im&sd > thMO , tvrinT been ovU •minded, and ions of the perplexities they conld

o ease of a boy aged

stigattog _ toCf c cTiwting liquor'"

were called n|>on to hold a ^oatonorte:

of death having bee

no tiler and fr

•used by the eo

dthough tl

ufBeiates at tlio solemn mass, aa 1870. Tho lambs were brought in npon red silk cushions, flowers, and knots ol gay ribbons concealing the cords "

kept tin

mentation

ubduedby

high a

ivelty

he can lift a heavy « eight, and at ot raises it on a finger; or is told in I same confident manner that he os lift hia handkerchief, snd fails to t attempt. He is the enbjeot of a dot nant Idea which oxelndea all oth hia mind. He can Utah ig bat what is suggested to hi _ as no power of directing his thoughts, and eo when tho operator ■ays to him, “yon can’t tell me yonr name," he is tushie to pronounce " - * ’ on told, "yon don’t know y , hia faoo assume* an exp rest.— of bopeleaa imbecility, and he will tell yon afterward that he had aotnally for

basques will be a conapicnous feature

of spring eoetnmea.

Tortoise-shell buttons, both plain■ —irved, are announced at the fancy •toraa aa likely to •nperaede the metal

a of Bilk dresses have •cams below the waist to sen in English walking

Tha new dress-coals or ewsllow-tail baaqnee announced for ladies open i

kfontoray waa Maria Ignaaa. A spirit i of rivalry induced him to throw him- 1 self into tha list with the Spanish g.1 sm“sa. W *Ha vreTmore than race.5“

Many yonng people think

lie life most be a pleasant o__. __ icre are none who enjoy so Uttle, and who are obliged to work hard all day enjoy their short periods of rest and

A letter from Springfield, Ohio, (erring to the whisky war to that State, •ays two bands of women, each numbering 100, have been going about all day in the mad and nan invpding «*- * "blhe jdedge or kneeling otrtto quit A

I'dSLra

ited by a party of laditsTfrom Boringfield. powder had been aprinkled ov*r the floor, and the proprietors threatened

werei^raethinr^iio novel to^Maria, m miatota, aa they would soon flnd ontitfl to to it if the fcd&i entered. They totaJlv diffenmt from the atereoirvped they made & tnai of the life they thfl^Went to notwithstanding. The women compliments of her woeraTthst^toe ao sgressbls. One who is never bn^ are determined, and gain courage and

believe

•arts unmoved by ayiot athy dlnary a«* r - 1 -■ •—*•’ _ would ed

ooption of a life outride their own sheltered affections. 1 would I ’.vc them know the joy of giving, not only the gifts that pass from hand to hand, hot tho tender aympathica from heart to heart. But as long as may bo 1 wonld screen them from a knowledge ol aU tho possible anguish that tho world holds—from tha horrors of violent death, and from stories of crime and

nnnstial suffering.

No one ahonla pnt before the childpnbUo any etory book who haa not himself or herself passed throngh a sensitive childhood, snd kept the memories Think of tliat bed-time hour, or rather tha hour after bed-time, when the little heart ahonld drop asleep bathed with father's or mother's kits, and pretty memories of play, or tender imaginings of beantifn Ithinga. Than

this holy land of

dreamy thonght with a vision of sn ' * death—a sweep of fire and of hot. tha picture of a desolate home—a creel “■rent—or a hopeless sin. In latnre years a knowledge of snob lings may and must come to oar arltogs. Let us make them brave and trong, and nnaelflsh if we can, to meet ’batovrr domes; but there la no help-

s'.;k heads, a

hands patted their mei satisfactorily asoertainc re real live lambs.

vest with doable points, Ul

The Marie Stuart ruff, .very high, ory full, and flaxing, will continue to e made of the dress materia]. The togliah collar with turned-over points -ill also be naed, aa wej], aa the rounded English embroidery will be much sod for cashmere sad sOks during F spring, and on the mnalin and betii dresses of trammer. This, it will be leathered, is the open eyelet-work inhioDable a few years ago. Black BleOieune cloth la need for

Tn«r* are two reasons wny some peo-

fol things they oonld not else disoovex '3t onr story-tellers forbear fron 1 tragedies, which make the ele (htfol pages aa dangerous as th mna of a sensational newspaper and 1st them take heed leal they unwil ^ 0 itU a th«rmiiaion“to ble£ ton! instruct.—Horton Trane.

e Boston Jiwmal, which many perns will mad ea describing rather a se-

The orgi

he rejected when offent of the ncigbbora, evil habits of the woit death waa dno dt-

ef AdvertIslag. jwney can be fo thrown away to advtrtiaing ia one groat — ion why some do not prosper to busii. They ignore the benefits of the ia, snd use only the private chanI to inform tho world what they are ig, and what they hare to Bell, and the business keeps pace with the extent 1 the means employed, and does no lore than that. By some injudicious treatment, it haa been decided that te use cf printers' ink is money sqnanerod, and that there is bnaineas-like conomy to keeping out of tho public journals. Now this is a very unfortu—position to bo in, for the bnsineaa who depends upon the pnblic for unless he lias an efficient means to let that pubUc know what he is able to do, rad what indnoementa he can give to make it an advantage for ihe people to •xamtoe his stock to trade. Advertiaiog shows enterprise and generosity, ittraeta the popular attention. If a man lover advertises, the pnblio learn to

itantly be-

jeof tnonsands of our most substantial men wiU ic life-blood of their prosperity, ns and constant , advertising always pays. An annual advertisement » journal will always pay largely, le perhaps “ ‘

arm" T' An Indi_

of feathers by and stretching

Moderation ia the silken string nut tog through the pearl chain of all virtue. A young tody jumped into the Ohio iver to recover her muff—jnst to keep er hand to. The game law of Missouri forbids tho destroying of birds' neata, but haa protection tor the birds. Minnesota claims that it ia toning the _ andinavian immigration, which is drifting to Kansas, Nebraska, and Oolo-

vely light n

h doing at all, it is worth doing People who advertise only oni ’ reo months forget that most foil ot remember anything lot 1

, dam because the v

g advert"

io tearing on ia low. Eithe

Embezzlement by Clerks,

te New York State Senate passed itor Lowery's bill relating to em-

t by clerks and other

A Christian Right. It ia aeareely two war* since lb* whole Christian world waa shocked by the creel murder of John Coli"“ a Paterson by the savages of Now land. For them he h*d left hom

He waa a remarkable linguist, speaking seven languages of tho old world, and twenty-three Oceanic languages. sixteen yeara ho served thi* p with truly nnselfih devotion, and mg once pnt hia hand to the plow Jalterod or looked back until at th ol forty-four bo laid down his 11 coral island, the scene of his lowl; sublime labor*. Paterson was noi of those who, in their great zeal, can pass years of exile aa Livingston did and allow very little sensibility aboi everj- day nffaji*. No father smongh than be with ia heathen stndenta ; and he wrote to his jathor, himself a man of and practical Industry went hand nd with hia piety and fidelity. Liis consecration a* bishop ho saw he lada were proj&rly fed and d when Utey were down with id fever, and deprived himself of liould be projierly administered. sled mind, bnt he also should be rpentcr, a mason, nomothing of a er* and a good deal of a cook, ife ia a standing lesson and roto tho scores of adventurers, blind

A newly appointed Constable i

! Westda noi to the

SHf.

What is the difference betwe ricity and i fool? One is •arvelona, the other is mar

Leaf by leaf the .__ehtog preface to (Ala.) AdvertUer'e ace

rate! a

ployees. The following is the full of the not as reported from the c

rant of a private nerahip, (except ts under the age

In Chains. rritos to tho Boston Jourof the beat locking am' beat dressed of the lady boarders at i ffrat-elass hotel to Washington, who ba been a regular attendant at ebnroh am taken a deep interest in .several privat charities, him been invited to return t New York, by a gentlemanly dotootiv of'that ettv. Bho left, not with " gyve *-er wrists," bnt well watched b; irt, who aays that she ia one o the most adroit sneak thieves on this continent Her plan here haa been to toms while the lady occupants Jt, and, if surprised, to say that ■he had fonnd tha door open, and ao waited tho lady’s return. Her booty ' probably been remunerative, as numns articles of jewelry, gold thimbles, Ac., missing, ware probably stolen * ' ' it she has been taken to New graver charge.

If any clerk or servant of person or of a copartnership, apprentices trad persons under

of eighteen yeara). or ii any officer, agent, clerk, or servant of * municipal or other corporation, or of a joint stock compahy or association, or any Dintor, Tran ten, or Manager of aneh a poration, joint stock company, or ast ciatiou, embezzles or fraudulently or verts to his own use, or, witbont the consent of his manter or employer, fraudulently takes, makes way with, or secretes, with intent to embezzle or fraudulently to convert to hia own use or to the use of another, or f nndnlently withholds or appropriates, Invest*, loans, or otherwise frandnlently applies or make* nse of any money, goods, rights in action, or other valuable secu-

rities or effects belong"

and which have

, ion or under his of such employment

dent, the door* of tho a opened, and then the js scriplion. Yon may tal

to be pushed or to trash, ease to boo nlatoaof oysters, salads,

creams, with threatening spoons and forks bristling in mid-air, glancing by jonr^nose, or swimmtog^ dijwn yonr how a civilized people till I oontrn ■ plated mjyoompotriota to the Waahtog-

whom the public believe have' to eat at home, pnahir- * 1

per-tablo aa a- c feast: and ladies

ig to another

e into his by virtue office, he

prescribed ‘G*y'z feloniously stealing property of the value of the article an embezzled, taken, secreted, fraudulently withheld, appropriated, invested, loaned, or otherwise disposed of, or of the valne of any of money payable and dna, or to bee dne, npon any right in action ao brzzled, taken, see reted. frandnlently withhold, appropriated, invested,

‘Jierwiae disposed of

thing to* uraibal n

fikd ^ ^ a rate that wonld make - healthy woman sick abed let

teality:

Citizen—"Well, y

yourself, Mr. PlumW. The girl left the laundry-room window open, thermomator touched aero, water pipes

froze, than bant, and aa no ' ow to shut off tho plaguoy sier run half of the night." Plumber—"Yea, I aao;

_r*ak; wants new plnmbing throughout; miserable pipes—wonder it didn't h *Stisen^" Hoir much ia it going to coat to plumb np to good shape, Ineladi ?I,£ber^" Well, I don't know, bnt . ... . . .... . m part

in Buffalo

tumbled off bis aaaL Th. • ' "flre I" and the audience made

prated “fli frantic raa

jniinj; at perfectly

- Provided, few days ago a fascinating young , wishing to villi Lynchburg at the of the meeting of the itockholdn that city, foraetting aha was idling an eligible widower in tha R i of an acquaintance, asked h' oonld loan her a certificate __ stock entilltog her to a free ride over the railroad. " Certainly," he replied, "provided yon are willing to travel under my name." With the " width mantled her cheek oami ssutsiSsrviL.damages growa ont of the " proposal cited, the railroad ought to be modi party defendant and mulcted in tom of (10,000.

The agent of Adam* Express at Granby City, on tho Atlantic A Paeiflo railroad waa robbed by a lot of masked bnrglua of (5,100. A bill intradneed to tho Maryland Legislature prohibit* the attachment of wages whore the anm dno tho employee ia under (100. Only one man haa ever dared toclimb the spire of BA Paul's Church, London, though f20 is offered to any one who will repaint tho bait How to destroy worms—Bnry the pork. And wo beg to remark that it had better lie done quickly, for trichtom items are iniltiplying. Tho English Post-office carries annually about 70,000,000 lottore, 75,000,000 postal cards. 103,000,000 book packets, and 99,000,000 newspapers. An eccentric and rich Engliraman has bequeathed £50 to the London Goa Co. on condition that they born his body in one of their retorts. Tho destruction of Taylor's fnrnituro repository to Belgravia, London, by fire, is eatimaied at a loaa of $15,000,000. The amount of inonranoo is unknown. Mrs, Gnssel of Oswego advertise* that Ludwig Gusaei, her hnsband, takes no advice bnt that presented by his own name, and that Ute groggenea ranst atop presenting him the opjior-

dyspopaia, and several of the Eastern States arc bilking of laws against ita ‘ oing pnt into coffee. Atony of the Cenneotient farmers will abandon tho cultivation of tobacco. Lost summer's cron did not pronerlv

mature, and at

ling off, tl ■dashed

slid brighter

ad lost their first ..... — — — „ion abont tho North Pole. Several considerations led him to this conolnlion. In the first place the North Pole, . _ . .„ gel to, waa origito get away from in no other eonld it be Ute dispersion of " C

“ate

leers, altho at half the u

Imington, O., i other day, receiving permission to iw what they Oonld do in ontting np hogs, actually dismembered 100 good average animals to 30 minutes. They -ow offer to pprform the same feat in

5 minutes.

Knitting needles are made in tho United States only at Lawrencovillc, > abont five hundred vaproduced. Now Haven, Conn., la the only place to tho conntry where common Bowing needles arc made entirely by. machinery. It ia computed that 25,000 wreaths and 40,000 boqneta of gnapiialinm, violets, roaea and other flowers, are bought in Faria on the 2d of Novem berfor tho cemetery of Pore la Chaise alone. The wrosthn are mostly yellow.

worked zml abend:

theory plansible, Dr. Har-

Norway Bata on a ■arch. Norway rata, to avert a famine, have singular way of proceeding. When te time for the aetUemont of thi ..on of partii benefit of the

the mountain valIcoding into the platoa, and, tha irmy of exilea being selaeted, they poor ecruas tbr. country in a straight line, a living stream, olten exceeding -

hypothesis,

descent boll, which only by gradual and other changes became fit for the abode of man. The polos, now the coldest part of the sniteoe, most have first be-

' liable, and therefore first in-

Moreover, we are told that when Adam waa driven ont an angel with a flaming sword waa set to guard the gate and prevent hia return. The Hebrew word (we trnst_ the doctor for

etymology) for "

morning,

prineipelly tor night 5, resting daring thi

' to settle to any particn-

rover abandon!

it food may

ieir final destination ia and nothing animate •

ar locality, be to it, fo

the distant sea, t inanimate, if it can be innnoooUd, retards the straight onward tide of their advance. FoiM, lynxes, weasels, kites, owls, etc., hover on their line of march and destroy them in trandicds. The flab in the rivers and lakes lay a heavy

If there bo a

ing* on earth wtq—, .... nominated low it ia thatelaas ■

without

"aSZS.tSi • consume without

pate tha earnings Bia&sr

drowned — —— "flood and field;'' bnt tho sorvivora, impelled br< 1 *—*— 15

ptaCi

die by

sold 1

iward with no thonght of stop- ’ they lose themselves to the g to ita depths as they *- rated, in such numbers l

mi lea their bodies, thrown np tide, lie putrefying on the shore

nple Bar.

Many ne^iSTwho left Geargia

dinger it id Eve, a

w scriptures . r ireta tb— r leaving

ahonld expect to flnd evidence of the earliest residence of an intelligent and cultivated people. Bneh evidence there to tho traditione of several Eastern itions that their ancestors came from te North, and also in ancient remains

I, burial places and mines

.j day. r *He law Ute card a—

arked : ’• I want a ten-do Oar bill and don't ace it" " Neither do I,” waa 16 laconic reply. The native " looked

irther," “•*

■er had others which 1 asssiffi® ■

eah," word ice. The f

is evidently allied to onr s flaming or icy gnndeor sc barred the tray to man’s

So Demagogues Seed Apply.

The Grand Master of Patrons of Husbandry, says he is Inlly alive to “•*

x *- —ai-i- 4tj e Order ia

danger to which tbr

' Am the demagogm- — join it (er their own aelflah his address to the Grand -.marks: "The Order has b

nixed

one of the great powers of the d the gates are besieged from

oeeeu so ocean by hordes of apeenlaton, demagogue*, small politieiani. grain buyers, cotton faoton, and lawyer*, who

anddenly discover that they ara • • ' - agricultural pnranita.' I they *re interested in 1

ealtnral pnrauita/bnt only ea a hawk

interested in the anarrow. V io Grangurs follow the advice oi

politicians, the Order will be shortHved, and will utterly fall to aooompliah

inner, on* no

take down that sign.'

advised the grocer to

The (J rang era and Temperance. The Ohio Grangers, in aesaion in enia. to a body, with their wives, marched to a place where tha ladies engaged to prayer, and there of- ; them the following resolutions Which they had jnst unanimously ^iTAcrear, There has been, and ia, alfalloreof lavra and munts to diminish tho

we. aa patrons ai ordinate grange

'unilies liable t •om the toaidioni wiles of those whoso loral standing and capacity do not elc- . xto them to e higher calling than the •ale of intoxicating liquors, thereby en- ; tho future character and nsethe rising generation ; thenvIteeohTd, That inaamnoh aa law and ordinances have almost signally failed to anoompUah the desired end, wo, tho State Grange at Ohio, heartily indorse —nt inaugurated by tho notf Ohio tor the suppression ranee to onr State, and wo extend to' them onr sympathy and moral support to their noble and Christian Jteeotved, That we. the wives of tho petrona here assembled, do pledge onr prayers and effort s to sopport tho ladies -1 Xenia, and that when we retnm to nr homes to the different parts of tho late they will not be lorgotton by ua. Keeoh-ed, That we request our Worty Master Bhallia to present a oopy of Mian resolutions to the Ladies' Temperance Lesgne of Xgpia, Ohio. Signed J. H. West, Chairman; Isaac Lletx,

Jxt-AKxax Law.—An obedient eon living with hia aged peranta had a dtsagrecable wile, who mad# the oldoouplo very auoomfortabie. The eon, to order to restore the harmony of the honsohold, poisoned hia wife. ThU act though dictated by filial pfcly. could not Iw entirely overlooked by the authorities. The man was therefore tried for the murder and aenteneed to be imprisoned few ton yam, bnt, or. .. —.i— „( tbc oireamstanca*, tb* 1 that these ahonld I