Star of the Cape, 20 May 1874 IIIF issue link — Page 1

taka-th* til o'clock train Uut mning.' I bad a little money oo dcpoatt at bank, and harinf a payment dae on my life ineuranoe in O . I draw •100 and thoseht I would pay that bofora I returned. I to ' " containing the •9,000, ■ ^anired at mbonlOJW o'clock, and wmt direetl^to

r deatination it directly to Mr. Martin’a bonce, but fc

bought the principal* bottd, thinking I might.aec him there, bnt waa drcappoiuted here and there. I walked around where X thought I would ba it likely to meet him, until about [.put —a .« —fc-—-a *-

.M

Wl “* , ?amelypu for the robbery of the Farm era' Bank of K and the mur-

Mada the dark ro< And a gentle rate TUI abo followed where tiled.

THE JUDGE'S HTORT,

in the apring of 185—. X had |had but HtUe bualneaa and the eaae you hare mentioned prored the key to my future aucoeaa. I waa a''* 1 — ' **“

alreedy pointed to 10:30, opened and the keeper i jail entered. '■ •We hare a gueet at our houae who la quite anxiou* to aee you, qneated me to bring you up to yon had not retired.' "X gladly put ou my coat to pane the jailor, for I needed I could earn juat then, and t myaelf ready to atari. It waa not far to the jail, and w ' ' " Alter unlocking — — iron door* the jailor admitted me to the

IT ready to go be would .— let me out. The huge iron door

with a clang, the bolt waa eprung. and I waa alone with my would-be client. Aa 1 had enppoaed. aa noon aa the jailor

S*™?' *

about twenty-four yearn of ego. tending hia hand to me he said, rTiTjS ktodto —- thia untimely hour, but I wanted to talk - - — ' *-t1 that you will

STAB OF THU C APE

STAR OF THE CAPE.

VOL. VI.

XT

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J„ WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1874r

NO, 23.

be the unanimous opinion that he waa the oold-biooded murderer. Btill I waa hopeful, and returned to C , feeling quite confident of my ultimate aueoeea. On my arrirel, I held an interriew with Burton, and told Uni ** "

d took supper, a n. to which I went

a^burly

help me God, it ia the truth. My name is Howard Burton ; I hare no parents.' •• This ia the aubatanoeof what Howard Burton related to me, on that ~ ' - *n hia cell in thejall at

1, bat hi

Im^

attcntiTcly to erery ’

interested in the young m .

about my own age, and who X fell waa innocent of the horrible crime with which he waa charged. I remained ' "i him until long after midnight,

then, charging him to conrane i no one en the subject of the murI left him. I knew nothing of the nmatancee of the murder as yet,

__ the next day being Ohriatmaa, X thought I would go to K and learn what I could, aa X knew my client would not be examined that day, *--*

ho'would the next. Jui

my arrirehat K I went directly to ** - bunk, aed found two or three de-

line there, and some of the offloera he bank. Nothing had been me ept the body of the murdered n waa found lying on the floor i skull crushed and his throat m ear to ear. Borne of the drai 1 been rifled. But aside from — there waa nothing to Indicate robbery.

miasing from the Bale

000, bnt the looks afforded no aridof haring been tampered with. 11 that belief in Burton's guilt

general. I proceeded to loo te aee some, indication of rio ing used, but the locks of thi

"iweie in perfect order. window in the Freaident's office

fcs quite

that divided the bank building bom", lawyer’s ofliae. It was securely guarded by an iron grating, and I felt that tho assassin entered the bank in thi ordinary manner, ria.,

1 1 stood at the window in the

dent's office, staring vacantly out, hard • work thinking, when my eye noticed

' —' '- the Uw-

in mo. He suddenly interrupted “-re'lou pardon, air, I do wish to retain you, to defend me in my trial;and atrial r * "

Paint’ written on it. A suggestiv thought flashed through my mind aa walked leisurely out of the bank am :topped into the law-offloe next door.

occurrence ol acme tune, ai

SWISS

and I fear that there are eon that will appear to be against trust that you will bring m

right. Do all yon ms, for I am innooenf

"I assured him that I had no dou but we oould clear him, and added— •' • Tell me what you know of tl a and the circumstances that you

appear against you.’

•“TfalLI had a quarrel with Kr. Richards last evening, but it did not last long. I will tell you the whole story. Sir. lama clerk in the Fanner's Bank . of K , of which Mr. Biphsrds wse

sign! Kelley, the paioior, has a young German working for him who ia really Ho did all the work here,

almost worth what he charges . Frits Vogel's presence in tho fc He ia - • -

When wt

All dona yesterday—be careful of

nearly five years, ant tended to my duties faction ef all the offlt and have been liked very much by them all. partWhhuly by tha rreaidant, who many times. ^Now.^Mt. Bichards, you

W

at across uis pssssgwwsy. of paper with the word

io and invited t

lot the trightfnl n previous night for

I at length I said, rising

3S5

... guilty. Tho District opened for the people in an *- giving

verjoy-

tho!quarrel be-

Mr. Richards and Barton, and that ha heard Barton threaten Hr. Bichards' life. Notwithstanding I

• * ” I fsiia to

male'him contradict himself, and when be retired nearly everyf - '—■*

District Atto: xle criminal lawretained by the bank

X'

minor import,

" then followed, aou aifccr a ore Ig address, called the German paint ho swore to seeing Mr. Richards ae Barton on tbs errand, also to seei_„

Mr. Bichards in the cigar store after six

o'clock on the evenin' * J —

When I had finished

subjected to

in which he acquitted himself very

creditably. Then I called the . ‘ ho swore to seeing Barton on the tho night of tho murder; he also i that the train left on time, 6 o'clock. The cigar store man waa next ex-

Itiobunis"

>S

t directly to the depot ar . ist the conductor X was : of wonld arrive in abont an hon d, all impatience, and upon h naked him if he wonl-1 do n

'*10 jail x. Bur

e oould idan

le willingly oonaented, and upon iving at the prisoner’s cell. I ini— [need him to my client. The conductor

gmaed steadily at yo % and than said—

Mr. Barton, be kind enough to put

it hat.'

‘^Barton did so, and again he looked at him, sharply, without a change of "Now, air, please put your loft hand

waistcoat pocket.''

afraid the conductor waa not

going to identify him, bnt aa young Barton put hia band in hia waistcoat pocket, the lappel of hia coat waa drawn baA revealing upon his breast a nniqns

mio pin, the badge of a Knight

' * Yea, ni"; did yt

, loam in oi remember faces, and nc

over thia young man a ear, I laughingly advised mm to taka it down. But what called my attention principally to him, waa the fact that he wore a Knight Templar'a badge. I stooped to examine it. Yon see it is a very enrionaly '* pin, and he remarked that he wa strictly entitled to wear it; it hs morly belonged to hia father who waa now dead. I shall be moat happy to S re my testimony in your behalf, Mr. irton. And now, if I can gat out, I will bid you good evening, gentlemen.' Bo saying tho gentleman with-

“I saw that I oould prove an

and thus undoubtedly clear my cucu., but I waa ambitious to do more. 1 wanted to arrest and com

party. Tho next thing foi to see tho keeper of the i_.,_ my Dotoh painter, on ma wi

hid seen Mr. Bichards after 9 .. the night of the murder. On the following morning I took the train for ” —, and on my arrival went directly the cigar* store and then spoke ‘

I bade Mr. Hams good day and left Boo. I had learned who painted window, which was jnat w*-‘ ’

know I waa

lotting Mi d in Mr. E

i first real had since I had pre-

'bomaa, to be served aa soon aa r should^ pronounce my^dient

tores ting

pistoto, in thw.possession of Bnthorfc-' *-

sa guilty. Tho next witwaa mo hotel elerk, who teetifled Burton came into the hotel while ia attending to the gueata from tho that arrived in 0 at abopt

lination of the bank erahier, who ore that the package of •9,000 found Barton at the time of hia arrest waa tank on the afternoon

bank with

e all eroaa-o did not contradict in any particnlsh I then sac, and after a few remarks

Judffe

charged the jury, who retired, and

fifteen mlnntea returned with a verdict

of nor oumxr. My cliont and I i overpowered with congratulations,

never since in my professional life h

proud and triumphant aa X did

[ approached Thom SB, tli and said, in a load voice,

for tho murder of Mr. Richards.’ Tho excitement i court caused by thia unlocked foi * leu proceeding waa moat intense. prisoner was immediately taken to jail, followed by a crowd that wore load in their expreasions of denunciation,— tame crowd that a little while De-

ll ad marked Barton

this story, I have

fcifcua au fc- --a retained bv the bank officers to prose onto Thomss Heal y and he was convicted of the crime. Ho

S ated his innooenoe almost to

bnt tho night before ho e made a foil confeaalc that he had determined to ro

evening when Mr. Richards

the evening, and when he and young Burton quarrelled, he, Thomas, aar vl - opportunity. His determination strengthened by hearing Mr. Rich remark on the day of the mnrdor a sat at dinner, that there was an tutuaually Urge amount of cash on band. The note In the ease was ons that Mias Clara had given him_ to take to her fatb<

MJKBEIDERED TfffcB MAS.

. has been writing a< iminisoenou for Ur tfriat, contributes'

icrford, of Sumner county. They were-etoel barrels.

sad highly ornamented with silver. The histofy X received of

is aa follows : Many years bebrilliant triumphs of the war id Gen. Jackson high above all

, tore into the presidential chair aa chief exeentivo of 'the nation,

custom to have some

io hfi place in the dirty street broils which might come up. At the haw to which I refer, one Ferguson was tho man, a regular knock-down and drag-out sort of a fel- ■ ' ' all who were ever so

I come in contact with if Colonel Rutherford,

by the same name, visited Nashville to abort credit and to give General Jackson as security. The arrangement was made and the horsee were hia. Before Mr. B. left Nashville, ho learned tho character of tho] man with whom he had boon trading, and waa told that if he ever asked for the money or note he * * received for tho horeea Ferguson . lid whip him. It happened that Rutherford was a rough customer— nothing suited him better than a ground souffle in defense of hia rights, * BO he waa impatient for the day of coming conflict. Early on the morning that the note foil due, Rnther'wd visited Nashville, saw the same inn F., presented his note for paylent, tolling him at tho same time hat he had heard of him, and farther aid to him that, if ho didn't pay the ote right away, he wonld thrash him he a dog. A word and the blow followed. Never waa a man more soundly thrashed than Ferguson was on that ton; in faot, ho waa supposed to sad for a time. This aroused the •eoeiveUTnch a cudgeling, and to it it waa hia first impniie, bnt in a fisticuff he wonld be only a child in It's hands, and so challenged him to fight a duel the next morning, distance Thongh R. had no experifirearms, ho instantly accepted the challenge. At the appointed hour all parties were at tho appointed of rendezvous. AU preliminaries

THE HOMESTEAD MURDER.

evils—largely co-operate " 'raainres and profits ot sra, aaya one of them York paper. A life-long city

City. One Ernest Ijovo

_ i spec ted as tha mnrden

rested for the orime. He gave bis name as E:

„ observant disposi-

aust have noticed among bis of acquaintance many who, through the sdVerne turn of fortune's wheel, had sought to drown their

be witnessed tSan the educated, by

to the village of — tiro glaaaea of beer i waa ail he took that night, tinned aa follows: Juat as I waa leaving the saloon it

Himnet's money. I thought be had i great deal of money in the house, ini as 1 fell so queer all at onoe in my beat I thought I must got it. I went direct ly to tho house, but don’t know how 1

the level of and associating

ignorant and the vile; visiting places of the lowest description, and ”*ien impecunious, actually begging r the villainous compound which is sink them one point lower in the lie of humanity. My memory reore painful than the one X am abont relate. I first became acquainted tb him some fifteen or sixteen years ago, bnt bo was then in the prime of

life: the polished, od nested

rid was visible * jg

to me that to get the mo the children. I found

kltdhen, i

and Mra. 8 Hsm- >. It occurred

Robert Bn

"The b room and

took a position ii

„ that with omover the kitchen where

and myaelf

toward me. I

J the bed killed the boy ; ha

him twice, bt the boy waa joining room

the other, the one occupied by the children, near tho center. Both of tho little girla were sleeping. I crept over -lutioosly to where they slumbered, . . . .... . * -irfnfblow, which

do. She uttered a cry and I hi ic second time. She did not i -gain. After thir I »ont down and took a position just inside the door

this janctore Jackson, who was a shot, having eyed his antagonist ly, saw that there waa no flinohir him, bat that ha waa aa cool ar

enrring, stopped forward and addressed Rutherford : " By tho etorr-' 1

wonld despise myself to ssei noble material as yon sre ms please accept these pistols who ever admires true oc pluck, snob as yon have to-day

and accept them from me aa m of my high appreciatii man who dare- *- —

to defend hia

ward the Rutherford family have Jackson's warmest anpportora, none lamented his death more

The platola will

family forever asprioelesi

reading it he struck bln

wiin a aiOTo poker, and then ent hii

throat He got no money •

a crime, aa the vaults had been

A Peculiar Fish

Tho Fish of Paradise ia oat peculiar of Chinese ih. It is small in site, a i color, and, at first sighl,

little abont it to altreot attenui

animal becomes

— long fins on the back

belly^atnighten ‘ *

. "^5’the •tripes npon

living.

A Strange Story of Crime. The IHfiune narrates the lollo _ remarkable story of a Pennsylvania robber whose exploits have berfamous, and who, altar a long period i immunity, baa at last been arrested ex will be brought to justice: " In the early part ot 1808, five ml -* Saesontown, Penn., entort. of aMr.Bcnnehoff. a wealthy Petroleum Centre,

•aw Mr. Bichards a

[aft the bank. I went tottopaintriiop

of hia sales, The robbera secured or

Well, Thomas,' said he, * I suppose it ia for money; that usually ia the subject of her perfumed " ’ oomo into the bank a m< In a Ultie while I saw the direction ot Mr. Rioharda-

and convicted, and wore sent t penitentiary. Two others were board from, Jmt one, Jamea^Bi secreted, but before the Anted for a division of the spoils Saeger stole the entire sum n fled. Mr. Bennehoff offered *100,(

thirsted for more blood.

After waiting a long time I heard

of the oonplo coming up

?hey. ... and I clutched my axe handle tigbt. At last they were there. Mr. Hamuet camo into the room flrat. I waa stand-

ing so that ho oonld not i

b fell to the floor. Mrs. Ham came rushing into the room,

e passed through '*

Couaeqaencea of IrvitaUaa. to 5

The"SrtSS in a direct way ; that is. K may.

If It exist in the brain or part of the .plnal cord, go direct to the muscles or skin rr bones or glands or parts with which U ia connected. But there la another way. An irriution may sun from a part of the skin

. 1 goaptotnehreir

ic beaotled drunk-

become alrophlcd. There an

. — — of the

(of eficct produced la considerable. On the akin a great many alterations may bo observed. A bulla, which la a rising like a bllatcr on the epidermis, a liquid being between the epidermis and tho skin may be formed, or what wo call pemphygus, or papules, wl the riling at a part at tie skin wit

a every act and

retired, or had been recalled from the head of a foreign embassy, having obtained grants whereby ho expected to open international trade communications advantageous to himself and the United States. Constantly journeying to Washington, bo expended large snma * money, for the purpose of securing rouble legislation, and being a man a liberal, generous disposition,^he

sued him**! largo i

— aI ■- and pearls, wnieh

gardiesa ol the usury laws. Boon they returned; for a period in tore"' promptly paid, then a request farther snm ; when all hope of n 'ailed, a proposition to s , and I became the osmer. noticed tho growing tendency eping -- • v

InilTS

rben he applied to — — — •100, without aeonrity, I granted it, al‘’lough —‘ — 1 ‘

mf lower he sank, friends deserted, and sickness prostrated him

anpplioatory roqnr-‘-

around tho city until iho end -camo. Yerdiot of tho jury: died of delirinm tremens.

is which

w that an inilailon

; has produced a

toil’s oi Tom. what in tho world put matriiy into your head I” “Well, Ihe fact ia, I waa getting short of shirts! Josh BiUinga aaya: "Bnooaaa don't

ficcuon. It ia wdTkno' insane patients especially those h peculiar inflammation of the gray u ■' e brain and the audmllm elfasgi use attacked with what Is known si paralysis of tbs insane, have i luaion of blood In the car and so: ngtenc. It used |to bo thought Uist ti

uses, who are unloruinatrly often yr violent to insane patients, had been abuali

*'ut It is certain, also, that tl Irequenlly due to an Inflsmm r there is no reason why nuts ways and especially strike them •

’■fight

be car and gangrene slier It.' eversl species of animals, iuinea pigs. So that then

rhalever In my mind

it the affection i Is produced by

disease of tbc brain. They bee In shape, and show a aeries o: prawions, and protrusions, or

lay be.

may change color from oi under a morbid influent mged not onlv in color 1

and thickness,

U a mort cellular

"i

in

I become dry or alteration of the

brain or spinal cord. It ia tbc sloughing of s port due to Injury of —'— it was perfectly well sloughing might appear after an injury to the nervous system, yet people often called

r, bnt did not kill her. Bhe

ce; *he .

truck s second blow tantly. Mrs. Hame the only onee I

district of Meshera, says an AfIrader, was an old woman r* of Shot Aa wealthy as

delay

_ —,-,'ing her hospitality t "

strangers.

n irritation of Uio ne

tho Meshera. OldShol displaying her hoap pers, and camo to p

Dr. Bohwoinfnrth'

very day of his arrival

the color of **■

book. It contained or

pale gray

_ Jflt

d will green. The

i bine, constantly cl

is yellov

. y cbangini color. Tho scales seem to bee opalescent, and rafleot the light with •• - ‘ at brilliancy, while the

I committed tho deed to get Mr. it's money. I searched Mr. Ham* ocketa and obtained hia pocket-

“"teen dollars

Mre. Ham-pocket-book un the sowing ma- , There was only fifty cents in it. kod over the house, but ali the y I got was fifteen dollars. Th<

money I spent I brought Qatmuj; —* this deed was to get't

or had any ill footing . . Hamneta. I always liked the little children, and I always bought thi candy when I went to Homestead. T boy Smith and I wore very good friends, and I alwayp liked Mr.

*' HiunneL

1 did not fire the houae, and it waa not a part of my plan to cover np the

I did not get il

•• When

foam floating

mads by the fish rising'to tho'snrfarj and alternately absorbing cod expellifig air, until a little cluster of fine hubbies, hardly three-ton tbs of an inch square,

overturned. I thought it v

' did not think the hanse wonld barn. a soon ss I left the building I pro.ceded at onoe to the railroad and walked direct to Pittsburgh. X stopped

st several places ' ‘

names of the plan— Pittoburgh and want to see my friend Baler on Pennsylvania street, I

I don't know locations vary

is formed. Tho female Uren deposits Baler on” Pennsylvania street,

—'—u—— —i nest Then bo watches

ion, carefully guarding and distributing them with wonderful

aagmeity evenly thronghout

of foam. Whan they dot together, b

pnahee them apart with hia n. besides;:! “““*

»riei to get work. I pure! mil of clothes and finally

had made herself a f

eoarae.

and wrinkled ; her figure was tottering ind knock-kneed; she was utterly oothleas; her meagro hair hung freaay looks ;. round her loina ahe h _ i greasr eKp-oI sheep-akin, the border if which waa tricked ont with white

beoda and iron rings; o * ,nd ankles ahe had almos jf metal, links of iron, bn .

per, strong enough to detain a prison! in hia coll; abont her neck wer- ’

ing chains of iron, strips of

or Instance, the patient lying 1

Items of Interest. silk dreaaea with holra in tha re said to be much worn. 1 msyMa great by chance, bnt rise ana good without taking

” They put him in a show ease," waa e remark of a rural lady who recently tended a city funeral.

A French wit said of a man who waa toccditgly fat that natare only made _lm to abow how far the akin wonld

stretch without breaking. A. D. 1900. Boone before

mdertaker's shop : Small boy— 1

* is dad don ’* T,v *

&F atl

if ba is.

Religions excitement prevails in the Colombian State of Csuoa, South

— '' Down with the

America. The cry ia, " Down w normal schools, tho Masons a

Protestants I”

A ms" who promised hia wife on her deathbed never to marry again, offers a : ward for some one who will convince im that a lie is justifiable when it is .jld to aoothe the last momenta of tha

departing.

Anxfbna mother’ 1 : Yon aay yonr ling boy ia three years old. Then re ia not a moment to ba lost. No i over became truly great who hadn’t tumbled down slain or been bad-

ly scalded when a child.

~ "a judge in Missouri to

io stand, " do you know

tbo plaintiff was intoxicated on the llTm'.'ale'w'mfnutcs after the muss, trying to poll off his trowsera with a boot-

jack I”

of tho

>na from tha iliacurare of petrolonm to Jannare 1,1871. was 10,852 barrela, tha total prodnet reaching 55,461.319 barrela. The average daily product in 1873 waa 27,067

ia expansive judicial tri

or reimburse him for their value

tar

of tho on tbo other

ilcd long ago, and which Is now ling accepted—in animals, In dogs, for stmcc, when.lesion is produced^whlch fU an inflammation of the nerves arising

Tnd s sloughing coming fr icrum, which is Just the

re 1

„ Umk —. - - worship God aocortting

part of the — — ‘ •"■••ad of lying down

lylog down 1a on

nt part of the belly and on the thigh, ho sloshing, ncvcrtMosa, ~ -

caused by'pressure. Besides, I sloughing i "—••'■

injury, so

In three days after an

would not be sufficient t trouble there. Neilher is l " ' "ic sloughing Is ' “

produce lb

•£■! itiings of wooden balls, and Heat

. A soldier.

iho bad formerly been a Dinks slave, acted aa interpreter. For the purpose of impressing the strengera^riUj a due ho give a vivid description of her immense wealth. AU the neighb sheep farms from which the smoki so hospitably were here; here wc the bullock runs along the river bi , tho murahs which extended in every direction of the compass, without —

toting the ’

here; she bad . .

cattle ; and in addition aU these she possessed no end of iron

:: Vi;'

des, keeps np a oontini

of blnbblea until the i„„. p above the water and reatonly upheir soft conch. Aa soon aa the ryes appear, hia care ia doubled. He watches that none recipe ; ■

panted, he i

, in his month, and replaces them carefully f - ' ”

out becomes injure-' •>•>

tho others, and giv-- .

•' and apparently 1

Look After tho Eire.

Mhltitades of men and wo— r .

soda thsir cysa weak for life by mo

. -• .u- eyesight, reading

i fine sewing. In

d, heremoveaitfrom t

free use of

11 print and doing fl-

cllowtog*’rulea ia the nae c

- On Ihe Scaffold. Johnny Stewart, convicted and sentenced . to death for killing Frank Durand at Oolnmbna abont a year ago, was bung at Aurora, Nevada. Tho hanging was witnoamod by about fifty spectators. The prisoner on leaving bis oeU stated to the offloera that he had but one request to make, namely, that be bo aUowod a free Indulgence in alcoholic beveragea until tho moment of diaaolntion. Oar informant, abo wit-

Avoid aU sadden light and darkness. Never read by twilight,

dondy day.

request waa complied witn, me doiih holder standing by him and giving hit a drink when aver ho desired it. Befor

aSSTtotSofollowing aphorimna. being under the mfituaoe of liquor:

the sloughing, but c, ss In loose animals

i privileged to to tho dictates

There is nothing that yonr gennino psychologist will study with desper interest than the peonUar expression that

as endeavoring to ter this month only free Chinese wiU be allowed from

old.

Peruvian Government induce tho Lisbon Cabinet

aider thia action, but without avail. A little girl about seven years o daughter of Nathan Btimt. a farm

living seven milee north of Sidney, O. was instantly kiUed while olowfng n the muzzle of a gun in tho hsnda of ' brother, snpposing it not loaded.

The gun had not been used

The UablU of Bees and Watpa. Lt the last meeting of the British Lln:an Society, Sir John Lubbock read a piper on the hablia of boos and wasps, more especially on their power of communicating luionnauun Io one another. Although Kirby and Spence have given an Interesting —‘-nofanecdotes about lbs Instinct ol

At Moline,'111., the anti-crusaders low a disposition to indnlgo in terirism. The wife of a prominent temaranoe worker in that city lately relived an anonymous note asking her, isbe values her husband s life, to in.uce him to desist from hia war upon

the saloons.

In Trnckee, Nevada, the other day a of five able-bodied individuals mveraing about firearms. One

ea of patient observations ot

own study. By giving np whole days to bis observations awl keeping a systematic record of tho egress mud ingress of his

» had

- --ofc- the drinks that

three revolvers in tho crowd. Tho bet was taken, and tho result waa six revolvers, three derringers, and a

horse pistol.

The North Adams Tranucript tella of voung lady there who waa troubled _'ith a acre tongue and oon suited a physician, who at onee pronounoed it a ' haae of a unborn. • Tho voluble lady was chagrined, and there were evident

evidently nndi

“ If yon take tho i*.-..—— are aU right; if you go u; you will be murdered by

you take the trail you will —. — ter and die of thirst. I moat take 'the trail, and in fifteen mlnntea X will be choked to death." After hia eyas had ’ - bandaged and the hangmans

had been adjusted abont hia

neck he waa asked if he had anything

■on he spoke briefly

_ . tor knowingly have wronged any man. I love my friends and hate my enemies, I never yet followed np an enemy without overhanling him.". Timing to an acquaintance ’ - c —-•-» him a half-eonaumed paper „ __ saying, "GiveUiiatoX<arry Murphy, of Genoa, and toll him that the last man who took a ehew from that

Johnny Btowart.

dally life of each.—,

gencrallrations can be baaed. On an average, a bee will r curslans in the hour from Its

of honey. There

Have, as*— ‘

bcca have ,*Mfc i^—vfc %.- —.— *. - one another intelligence aa to the locality of

tongue was growing w.

n formerly supposed, it

„„„ original Bender in Kanaays that the old man in custody is Bender. The person under 'arrest looks like a grixily old imbecile, lias icions eyes and a ragged, unkempt.

Inly appearance. ‘ "

little intolhienoe it about, that when beci ski: v.'S

vial ted a aopply place they often i— uce familiarized wllb

» fcja placed they vWted u'vrth great”reguiariiy. Many popular Ideal sboat beet sre, Blr John believes, wllhont aay foundation. Tbs aouod of .fry Ing-pans and flredrona at the ••■“ "f

swarming is probably based only ( —— for there U no proof bees I from violins, tuning-fin . 0 prodace soy effecu. They dis-

color. ss tfc*

tineulsh coll A numl»r

their relsllre posltiooia They ■«— •- 1 •”

flndmg tl

mouth 6 Inches wide,

turned totoe light, witiiont

ss£SU‘~‘'

of different colored pieces of

.1 bafqni ihougk re often chingea ur|c canning in

- te placed wlih the

A Story of Herelnn. There Is not a

George Gordon, Sixth Earl of Aberdeen,

wbo.wrate-

\tiie WretTmUes He was one o tboae young noblemen, ot great wealth greater heart, who bstteve that hnmai has some claim npon him, and he prop! to prepare himself tor the duties of Mailed' station in life by practical exp

of the slrngglcs and privations ol . He came to this country, and. m

named name, worked (or a living with hit bandA gaining the regard andoonJUcnoe

of his fdlow-lotioreii, who n

bln real rank sad position. He boemme in

..

contribution of

Aberdeen,-lias just aent i • 1,0011 to the American

Society of Boston for the

& the nae of sriore- It a proper idrtory „ , of hi. romantic Hfe corid ba written^.cm

hia Identity will soon ba settled.

Pnblio attention cannot be too often called to the danger of nsing impure ... • ^u. -•

^ origin «( typhoid fever, which to frequently runa through families in city and country, ia

oftener in w-"—■' —•*"

and springs thin is anpni it. & easy to nnder-

pneo, now wmia listed: bat for

wells may become oontiuni-

in the country, among

the hills or in tho green valleys, can beso impure aa to be sources of diaSince the general introduction of aqned net water into large cities, typhoid fever baa become more common in the conn try than in tbo city ; and Una drain certainly zymotic, or one which Its from a poison introduced into the blood. Wells in the country sre vary liable tobeoomooontaminatedwith house sewage, aa they are generally placed, for] convenience, very near the dwelling, and the waste liquids thrown out upon the ground find easy aeoras, by percolation through the aoU, to the

nation which have oc

poisonona when in-

itio production

fected by sewage, ia growth, and highly pa traduced into the «y«

doubtedly concur

61 typhoid fever.

cult to determine, bnt it is at leaei ceivable that the spores of the fi may get into the blood and bring

iadifflut con-

Of yeast in

fore the whole dreulstion become! filled with Utem, giving rise to abnor-

rareUwatara free from all 1