Star of the Cape, 5 August 1874 IIIF issue link — Page 1

STAROFTHECAPB

STAB OF THE CAPE.

VOL. YL

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1874.

Maduna, yon eallad u rapiitea, bat be reptile, know .hit tort of i woman 7 how will m manace to (M to im her? Don’t yoo know that yon onjrht i 5ll nefb^raoeirod 1 Wall.” aald Victor, who waa at bar on aoooont of tha pokes aha had Biran him with her parmaol. "if money u all that la wanting, wa ahall hire it,” Ha wa made op a pool, with tick at ten none each, in order to diaconn ibody ; ererebody who wiahed to i >erate with ilia (an—' J -

waa to go to Mailima Koee Topaae, and Ml bar the opinion of tha whole aahooL Thle proposition was adopted • ahal? and when the^ota were dr waa the boy who waa designated a in* the one to go and apeak for the It waa not a business that I liked one bit j I aaanre you that the idea did not amnaa me at all - But I took the twantysoren francs and a half, and I prom* ■sad that I would do it, though all tha time I had a sneaking nolten that T

would nerer dare to go aee, to say, “Madame «

* quite iuto'one a°se’lf - to tell It right out to

! together I ■ ; the tboug]

id the green dog-^and

aft, lea re me and so i. •pend an my Bandaya and holidays with them. I am vary proud of my godmamma, let me taJl yon ; and when ahe used to oome to school to sea “ 1 visits always made a senaation, boys would stop playing ball.

thought of the affair I win

~ first half-holiday came, i

I was to spend it with u. All the boys got round me

off, and kept saying, ■■ Don’t forget Louis, Avenue Mote.pan; look

- reirtilei 6 '

il I did e

ror, after all, it waa a sneaki work, don’t yon see, to taka the fellows' money and then to point them. Besides whioh it not be pleasant to have to wa] _ with the money and say, " Hers boys, take back tha twenty-^en franc, and the ten sons, for I did not dare to go ; I waa afraid.” It is an ugly thing to say—that last word is—and yet it was true: so I was in a bad fix whichever way I took it. But when I got to tha bouse I forgot all about Madame Rose Topaae, and the reptiles, and tha twenty-se a *--,slf. For my god man badly I so changed * been jnat i

. and Antoine g

>t ao fast 1 you’ll kill the pony 1

navar listened.

Onl flew.Jthtwagb. the

Elyseos,

r, through the gsios, down Dfariofa, along tha -Ohstops

mty-aoven francs and a half (wh ra in a liltla bag in whioh 1 n

nalblea), ai '

calling behind me, but I never etopped to listen. On I went, running aa fait ae a oould, pushing past the promenaders, slipping between oarriagoo, being tw'nty timee on the verge of being -n over, and at last I reached t*--ranna Mouteaaan and tha house adame Boae Topaae, Half tha school were waiting for I the sidewalk; they had oome ar the news. As Boon as they a 9 they raahed toward me, “Hurry oy oned—" bnny ; ahe baa jnat ooi me from a drivel” ITiov pushed i ward the door, rang aa loud aa th

THE HOT WITH THE WHITE ETE.

y, for ahe had the

is loveliest little

la world. Thera need to be

regular quarrels among the ' who abould get into the pi

ahe waa there talking to me. ., _ — wonderfully good hmea together on bclidaya and Sundays, for 1 used to tall her all about school and tha sera pee I got into, and aha would laugh so merrily, sad then stop to give me son good advice; and then we would its off laughing together again, for she w aa gay aa a mid, and aa full of fun i

any boy I aver aew.

Barone day—It ia a good while aj ms, add when ahe did, ahe was very grave and qniet; not full of plans for pleasure-parties and treats and all manner of frolice, but elweya very kind end r id to me—si ways. And when I wont spend Sunday with her, the would talk to me eometimee about my mother,

- 4. who died when I waa a Hula baby, and

who waa her gnat friend; but r“ she would abut herself up in her room after church, end whet ahe there I do not know; bnt I think sue used to ary e good deal, for her ayes always looked red when ahe came down to dinner. The first Hun day that I isSfeweas a* never new him again an day. Tha next Sunday he was not at home et all the whole day, and it was on that day that I first saw that my godmamma had been orytng. I asked bar what waa the matter, but ahe did not answer; ao I baked her aaeoond time, and then ahe “" —M> things that little

bright end yet ao soft), „ ' a. big again. Her cheek. ■elr moe pink color, and tl ■eyes; and though _J killed ms and bar dear little Louis, then dug in her smile that m ’ sorry than if I bad seen - * threw my arms around and begged her to tell me what

• the matter.

” Godmamma," said I, “ there is y, but you ale mistaken. I am qu“miu, and if you would only tell iat U ia thet ia troubling you, I would in put a stop to it." iho kissed me again—once, twice.

i, in the si

S ; aid then she rang the bell end Antoine to have the pony middled,

’eridein theBoiade

there ia a thing in the world

omg, it ia of riding on Bois do Boulogne. Did f pony, Mouse? Such e I white as mow ; and and tail, and he goes like

from my hands, and a half * ■

enough I i»u“haw'the~beit riding- ffS* I..,— Ks . 1 I- s>— a T s.-— lor l

the wind, too

■ent straight toward a staircase ef marble, which was in front of the entrance, and at the top of i ~ vent in livery was standing. RoeeTopueF hero," answered the eer- “ I want to apeak to olntohing my little lug ■ The mm touched » i.

apeak to

glad the

f a little, jut to keep my courage up. . The girl looked et me and seemed aurpriaed, and then ’

the door md said,

“ Walk in hero, young md I will go 1*11 madam e,’

So I went in, and found myself in the meet beautiful room I bad eve aem. It waa hung with blue satin and there were mirrors reaching froi the floor to the ceiling; md ohaii md great inn-chairs, aome works with flowers on colored silks, md aom embroidered ell over with gold; mi there was a clock on the mantel-piece all over roses md lilies md Onpids in

fliina; md greet v -*

china full of flowers,

in the windows ; md alto-

el the windows, md

in jardiniere

parted Die curtains of sat md looked down into the court-yard. md there I saw ’*■

tha earnage i

horses, and I m .

far twentywereo l _ would go toward paying for all th In the midat of my ealeulatie

the grooms wi 1 rubbing dor gm to calcnlat

first, bnt jut aa pretty, md bnng with silk md laoe instead of light bine — There waa an archway, and a room beyond with pictures on the walls, md a pimo at one aids, md groat tapestry arm-ehaira, md a statue holding a lamp; bnt 1 could not, see in “lore, because one of the pink curtains as down. All that I oould aee was ■at it was atilt mother drawing-room, he wlndow-enrlsins were half closed, id Madame Bose Topaae was half sitng, half lying, on a small sofa near le fire. She did look handsome, I aa forced to confess ; md ohl v‘ ‘ - reul all white laoe md light Ik; md in her ears a pair of sol amend ear-rings that I give you my erf were each u big u the end of my —umb. 8b* —- .1 K-» -• •*--

slippers on blue, md g

„ ahe ia to be my little wifei day. But ahe will have to grow a good deal to get big enough for me, f<~ is very, very small, while aa for

x Varieties In FiiHou.

deep pleated fiancee of white muslin edged with Valenciennes. The large pockets an surrounded with

ire, md the apron ia short. I pocket-handkerchief of ’• -which ia said ‘ 1

is edged with] in the apron

aprons are all _ _ short square shape, trimmed with aertion md a deep pleated frill, md have strings wide enough for sashes, which are also edged with pleating;

price from (2.00 to (10.

Croquet hate in flat Japanese shape -e made of the Florida straw, md coved all over with white mulin or tarhdan^gUn or pieced, and are finished

|lV

tha _____ full protection from 1 girls wear i behind with „ . It ia made i fluted or pleated ruffles of edged with narrow Valenciennes, Larger boys wear deep square collars of antique laoe, guipure, edged with opeu English embroidery, or else of atnped linen or peroali loped md button-hole stitched Turkey rod ot “ Ladies' '

3 foal dreadfully afraid; md

looked -* — —* - laughing, “ Well, , . you want with me ?” the beg clipped

‘s, the twenty *

it rolling all •

gave me a beautiful book of fairy teles with pictures, md cent me into the library to ram it. It waa the Thuradav after that Bun day that all onr school was taken to the Jar din d'Acolimitation to see the dogshow. There waa a horrid little wretch

0 know bow soft music, V at the Hip]

away. But aa I a little

Ii

godmamma bad given ft to my guardian .1* —Ik, ■ - . ,— _ Yssf*!

» glower «-.t

In leas than m boor I waa onl loia, with Antoine following i * “■* pony pranced

Avenue Moutcspau, Champs Elytess." struok cfl into a ride usth whioh wm.

Avenue Monleanen. Champs Elyroee.' It waa the queerest colored dog we eve: saw, * sort ef a greenish-gray; ao Vic

-i,

•--ut a little elam water I It el that we all shrieked with

quieter, md where tl

riders, for I w* geod gsllop befc denly throngli tl

I roeognixed right ame Boae Topaae, the carriage door, a my guardien, the ■a I knew him as

Ss?S

talking to h Marquis do

weH aa I did the s md was going to ride forward U _,— to him, when Antoine caught th. bridle of my pony md tamed bin md. ■ • ' That is my guardian I” I cried. quia. But if you do not went to maki ““■*—ne feel vary unhappy, you wil 'thing to her about bating sees

. —at I not say I i _ > what ails my godmamma? She to be so merry and so pretty, and now I the is ao aad md pale, aud she sits

t you to give him

also something th.. < naa w

mj to yon about reptiles; but we will let the reptiles go; they would only oomplioete the question. I want to talk to yon .boot my godmother. She is mat as pretty as she can be. and you tre . horrid ugly batefutwomm I” whioh was not true, for ahe war handsome, is I hayo said before. “She is growing paler md peter evswy day, md the semnts say ahe to bieukina 'h»»

heart, and will be sure to die

” on account of you, because rou stolen her husband sway from her. Giro him back to.her do you hear? rw. w- to her right away I”

ed out laughing at this.

; upon her ouahions etiU toughing like mad. -Then I lost my hoed oomnleiely. “ Ton dare to laugh at my godmother I” I cried ; “ my godmother who ia ao sick and to going to Walt, md I’ll leach you to laugh hava done with it, but just then iTell a strong hand aeine my arm, the cane was matched from my Wrap, aud looking up, I »W my guardian, who must have been all the time in the inner Oome," he said to me. “ come r

"opeae sprang to her feet, and re spoken, but he raised his i .hand wrfth a warning gmturo.

; “ 1W a word f be said, and then we

deep hem, et the top of wbiclf ia. row band of blue, rose, or violet r laid flatly, and held in place hi

ring-bone atitohing done in \ These sets an worn with black dresses,

also wi!h the dark linen suits. S3. An ecru hem on such seta is 'ally liked with black dresses,

jabots are again in favor to brighten

p the dark dreaaee that feshien

. reaoribea for an minor wear. choicest of those are of Mechlin laoe

waved to form five or six ah el to, f pale blue, rose, or black 0 a each shell, aud a bow at finely collarettes of Meoblin have three fully pleated rows of

around the nook, while the Zousve front to formed of flat insertion md

id a pleating of orepo liaao or Beautiful collarettes for mourn-

ing are of black Uaaa, crimped md pleated, with white between. Others, for lighter mounting, have more while Usee than black. Inexpe naive collarettea, marked (ADO, have three pies tod frills of sheer orgmdy edged with Valenciennes, md mode to lap on the bosom

where they

'frill-

Mechlin laoe.

Tiny old-fashioned caps are again 'or new-born babes. They ere tucked muiliu and ValeneimI cost from (2 to |S. lowest chatelaine pockets f black beaded laoe, and —jhm those made early in season. They are lighter r- J - -citable for summer toilettes ntirely of jet.

enough to attend school he hid bam known aa possessing the moat ikfiidtoh proclivities. To get boys in

I torture them was always

delight He need to tie them firmly, md then with knives ai pins ent md torture them to his hear' content The Molten boy, whom he -*• ' lering, was out ai — -j, and it to more thi likely that little Kate Ounan was si. 4 —’ * 4_ death. His father end

lot lived together for aevt the cense of their sepat publicly^ known. The

ployed in the Quincy Market A Sj^ondent has it from reliable authority previona to the birth of Jciro, __ often with her husband when he was engaged in the work of slaughtering end butchering beef, md this fact may pouibly have something to do with t' unfortunate boy’s peonliar passion i butchering human beings. As one c be bom atone blind,'or deprived of _. hideously distorted in limb or member, 10 this Pomeroy boy seems to bo by ni ore destitute of oonsoionoe sod all th

lealthy impulses of humanity.

Another remarkable liot remain. | be stated. The elothing of the llttl -irl, or et least such of it as remains, i mtely aignifleant of the fact that hi_ .layer worked on e plan similar to that which Jeaae Pomeroy has always e: ployed. Her elothing waa never u fastened. Every button of her drv that has been revealed is aa it waa • the morning of her diiappearmoe. T

B was out and ala-bed wi

in every direction,

dnbitsblo proof that the waa compassed by one whoso blood to marvel on sly tainted with ferocity, the Pomeroy blood is known to be. At the coroner's inquest Chief of Polios Savage gave m aoeonnt of his intai view with the boy, and then narrated * ' ’ 'l he had wit!

. These facts, certainly. -aeasnre, why Jeaae oould doing these things, aa he told the Court. Ho waa simply marked by IT her hart as other children hsi >—only in a different way. Berid)

alone, he arid, md had a long and c fa! conversation with him, which

about as follows:

-.— m — ought to know ■omething about how the body of Kate

cellar. Ton know she and yo

are under arrest, md “ling about it you oui After a momentary ]

“Well, Mr. Savage. I killed the girl, '* T '—^ 4 to toil you bow I done

telTltril 3

but I don’t want 0b, that wont do, Je

truth ; and, in order thi — mistake, I want yon I down ; md when yon story I will read it o'

ut you to tell mi

there may be let mo write -avo told th.

md you

v-r, :

right Wall, I don't want it to go in the

pepera," he arid.

■■ That ia something I can’t control.''

r of the Mellon

that he atoo attempted to U ia of his fellow inmates whi

DURING A FIRE.

The old adage that “ a burned eh inni the fire " waa never more forcil

* wi than in the conduot of I generally in the presence ol »*ater at Chicago. 91 men—m expression of blank iei despair. Fearful experience

in the past had warnpd them too well

ras likely too be the remit, * 4 — 4 — passed md

citiseus

»r of the c

e, their

>Bng fears deepened into s porfe panic. Net to speak of those who si liable on general principles to be tl

. __ tl

reached anything Uk< - it waa remarked u

eraiy things

lid men of the comi particular crisis shared •’ i others the prevailin'

the fire had n gigantic prop]

a significant circumstance that chants very far removed from the

calamity wore already ireparations for the won

—ippen. And when, late ii afternoon, things were beginnu. 0 ._ look aerious indeed, the fright became contagions, md then commenced a general'delivery of goods of all deeerlp- ‘‘— * **■- stores. Away as far aa

lerchanta proceeded to

eVA'

In ac

hired at enormous prices, md loaded up with goods. One mm, who seemed to have grown quite frmtio under the 'temeut of the hour, was heard to it for a wagon md offer 875 to the that would oome. And this, too, in the vicinity of fire. On State

had better tell me al the coronor'e jury th “Well, I wilC” ,

■ evening."

aul it s

John Mltchel In Ireland, looordmoo with hia previously expressed intention of returning to Ireland without the permission of the b authorities, far. John Mitobel

Ks!

us arrival. It would liot o find a eolorsble pretext

queetioneble

bo difficult _ * doing so

. thsctbe a will be able to refrain from seeking

More than twmty-flva waver, passed since then, Mr. Mitobel has never > position of hostility to mneetion the generation that acknowledged hla

and though abandoned hi - > English e Irishmen

IridUfo

had drawn s plan of the store and '*• showing where he had killed i md where he had buried the body, : that it was concealed in hia cell In ■pray with one of. the offloera of I he waa oonduoted to the cell whi itantlv produced a diagram she irreetly md In detail all that “ ,J ’"’on beginning ( be said: “ W<

Mr. Savage, the Ourrau girl came ii **“ “ 're that morning while I »

S brother had gone after 1

my mother md the gi

ot eoming to the shop for

hour or more. The girl told me t! she wanted a school card with the nr Uplioation table on it I told her tl Inadeome in the store down stairs, end if she would go down there I would give her one. If I had told her it waa a cellar d~wn there, she would bare hem afraid md would not have goue. When she started I let her go first, and after ahe hod got about half-way down I went after her. When I overtook hex I put one era around her neek end covered up her mouth, md then I out har throet with the other hand. She * Parity quick, md when I waa aura

was dead I took her body over In corner of the cellar md covered it

np with aabae. Just aa I had got it about cove red np I heard my brother come in md I ran np stairs just aa he waa eoming down to look after me. Whan he saw me be did not go down stairs. I turned away from him aa soon aa I oould md went W> the wrier pi]<e id washed the bleed off from my

suds md the knife."

" Did your mother or brother ever know anything about It f asked the

'treet, between Madison

on street-., two large safes were thrown rat on the street, one being placed nght in the middle of the way near the oar track, md the other tumbled into the gutter. A largo umbrella store on the imo street was quickly emptied of its intents, md the goods transported * le west side of the river. The amou ' industry displayed on all hands w nazing. Every body who had a oo derablo-stake in the matter seemed _ ake np their minds to anticipate the ent. Among others Field, Leitvr t 3. shared in the general alarm. ” ' the afternoon, when the disasb not seem to the general eye to deadly as it proved, they set to wi cleai out their large retail establishment on State street. Every availablf wagon in their possession waa put in active duty, md before dark the entire atook was on the other aide of tht river. The goods wore deposited on Canal street, between Washington md Madison, in the building formerly occupied by Butters, end s large portion -* 4 *—- Schuttler’a building, on the

A The firm were evidently

1 to have a big start of th-fire-fiend this time. The activity dii played by Field, Loiter A Oo. in thi respect was emulated by other firms, and it ia safe to say that hardly a leading business house on the south side failed to "institute proceedings" with dew to get their effeots conveyed — as possible fro— **— » *•

destroying arjjri.

bitty peaking np, , md in many of them the emptying process had been thoroughly done.

M>*E COOL VISITORS.

tingniah onr fires, and toy aside winter garbs; bnt sin.' ‘ - “ celebrated by poets commenced, we have . son. A cold chilling few has almost constantly enveloped land end sew, < caaionslly lifting sufficiently to aht ns whole battalions of gleaming ii bergs gliding, ghoetlike, along t shore, borne on the bosom of the norl

carved spires of the moat fan tube form. It was about three times the tile i Westminster Abbey. The other wi oblong, with a bold, high front, fro: which there waa a gradual alope to U face of the sea. It was a flue sigl m the top of Signal Hill, 600 fet ■ve them, to look down upon the? -gtonta, and watch the effects, as th. wreathing fog enveloped their lofty sides and thei., lifting for a moment, showed . tk.t. dazzling white summits gleaming 9 the bank of -fog, or, rising er tiroly, disclosed their gigantic propo: 41 — tgainat the dark background of overed ocean. Oockslonally _ gleam of sunshine illuminated and glonfled their glittering pinnacles with - itrange and wonderful beauty ; and en the fog onriain envriopqd ‘ t ‘ jole aoeno, and the icebergs md __ dark oliffa around disappeared within " mighty fold a These icebergs ho produce of the Greenland gtooiere, whieh are are ceaselessly forcing

water, fragments are b oated away aa ioebers

of the Arctic ourre finally diaaolved in the warn of the Gulf Stream. They ha

bly been farmed centuries

deeds of miles from the cost the grim solitudes of the i gorges of Greenland, from t packed snow whieh is first

infested t

nouutsiuhe closely jiartirily

Ba whioh,” ‘ PrW,: id there aheifoff thi

ith of

m the clutches ot the

_ planter In India from six o’clock in the morning until superintending the plowing, the sowing, the weeding, and the reaping. About the end of June, says the London Newt, “ Mahaye-" begins, —a —itiMho _beginning of 8*p-b-ai.TlI^iS3S3 " 4 ’ 4t —*— other vri — — — stuff three until it emerges presses " veritable indigo, worth eve: many rupees a pound. " Mahays ’ curs in the very hottest pert of thi dim year; but the indigo plmtei disregard the heat if he is to keel

harbor bad evidently got agrou they retained their position n u a fortnight. The loftier one at length to show the effeots of

stood. Streams were seen trick! down its sides ;- a crystal lake fore on its broad summit; several of lofty turrets fell with s sudden plttnge into the ocean, and fins lire- —-*

oomiblo along its surface, its joints wore becoming 1c

at length, with a noise like thunder, it bursty into ten thousand fragr ' *

9 wreck Its comrade, bet

stouter and broader

t.3*th.

lotion of its bigger brother, as if unable to endure the solitude, it took advantage of a high tide md off-shore wind, and ones more sailed away over the great deep, to wander further md meet its doom in the dissolving breath of the Golf Stream. It ia not an un common thing to aee fragments of rook imbedded in the loobergs whioh have been torn from the sides of Arctic mountains, md being deposited at tbe bottom of tbe sea near the Banks, these will help to build up the great nnbma- —— * slowly

" Washing Should Be Done. .... I am not at ell oertrin of knowing myself the beet, method of doing all aorta ol washing, or even any sort. never "given my mind to It" in to make .mo certain thei I bed JXhauated the stlbjeol or 'discovered its important pUcCtplee bnt I have practically - rerfkeA. and found them ’ should employ i ■e, trnatiug to I iperimental md

BANDITS IN CANADA.

We clip the following from the London Dirifv TVtopvapA .- “Canada to et this moment vexed i with e Cave of Adnltom of her whieh to likely to yield her no sms ■»** a^d trouble. Towmrdt . l of the 'v*st Dominion, southward 1 from] Madknuie Bey down to the Mon- — ■—.-■** — —j - .o.lESST„ll cWjj-SftSJffg* iah'Colombia from Can ads proper. ... - Upon British toil, st the foot of these natural fortresses, where Canada c United Slates or

toot rear of civilisation hsi

liters, and bar. ._. „

Executive of the Doe

liberate defiance. Rnmo. — . . to be about tfre hundred strong, a

-!i»

_ Nevada. Oregon, deserters from the federal army, escaped convicts, hslf-oaatee, md s few native Indians—snob is tha beiorogenoua material of whieh this band it composed; md here, amid the ri-

rjssg.

to hold the_ . _ be the illicit distillation which they barter with the _ 31 — *— ikini, and so drive e roaring neretive trade, the profits of ;M tempt even the cupidity ork itself. For wives me II in their solitude they havt men, procured either try pur-

m themselves to th<

■outile of attending to tl id acknowledge ferity K^jirs y *—* -1.-1- —«—

oth with revolvers, breech-loaders, md repeating rifles of the most sj proved md latest patterns; aud bob few months ago, by a daringly ooi reived md well-executed raid, they sui prised a detachment of United -Stab tro >pa in an isolated fort md oarrie off a large stand of Spencer oarbin] — 3 -ax pieces of field artillery. The« re now mounted in position in th item fastness, md as several men of' the gang are deserters from th. federal army and skilled in artillery driU^ the fortrew's^ strength^ ia one liaary-siege to scorn; while, even honld the asaanlt be anoocesfnl the desperadoes haVe s secure retreat gat the beetling crags that tower their heads, md of whieh they by heart every peak md peas.

TL

nt of the

itnion ia nth a high hand, . _ ivalry, throe hun-

dred strong, nndor tbe command of Colonel French, of the English Royal Artillery, md equipped with two ninepounder Armstrong field-pieces. The invading army has to traverse eight hundred miles of territory, and It ia

lilted that it will take it six weeks month st least to reach the bandi>** itronghold. There a wild md reekk

reaistanoe is expected. The majority of the desperadoes are escaped convicts, md will fight with halters round their

Their numerical strength, aa

ed against that of their opponentsis aa five to three, md the poai-

if the beleaguered fortress will give csioged s considerable advantage. . indeed, in a way, tha old story of

Bob Roy over again, md wo need hardly bo reminded how a few desperate —n, fighting with all the fleroo energy

sheer despair, can often hold their

o against my odds."

putting too fine a {hat poem of Mr. Grey^” to'emo"'^?"So very boot that baa boon written on the duties, power, md influence of the '

fairly ret ii

The tori aion in Lincoln, N

ad Miss Eli

a kerosene explowea appropriate-

Ivina Blazier.

The greatest wheat crop Kansrs ever aew now waves in golden beauty on 10 broad prairies of that State. Now do our.young maidens exhibit a indness for ritting np late o’ nights to rich the comet, md have aome one to t np with them to help them do it. London grumbles at having to pay a jllsr per thousand cubic fret of gas, notwithstanding that hitnmiiiona coal 4 -rioo or even thrice dearer there

here.

ther Taylor, while lecturing on rOnnee, wea hissed by one of hia hearers, a notorious drunkard. Taylor —-d. pointed to the offender md There’s a red neae got into cold don’t yon hear it bias ?" iffloor in the Washington navy inounres that he has an old and roliablo bunion whieh he desires to exr a more modern sort of that will not get so excited

irerf)p!naar i paper pulp, with e

sr that oo

ently sei

of e

a little boy

The California Peabody.

I San Francisco paper gives the folring description of Mr. James Liek a •-1—-• living : " Plenty of

md toto-eo —‘v for yon the i Mr. Lick, attired in a not too often renewed—< ewrilow-toUed coat, ^ant

collar, supported by e wealth of necker-

chief, The style of bis

that tt

i boy chewed np, and mted “ to help pay the

public debt.”

Jet belts of elborato design have a deep lattice fringe, or else haaquea are mane of the beads md edged with jet fringe. These cost (15. Simpler ones, ”"■ — J oated bells of jot, are $7. richly embroidered with Jet

in floriated pat terns.

“ May heaven’s angel whisper golden

words as they kiss yonr darling obeeks,"

)to a La Gross* man to hi. Betsey y tori spring, md now he wishes iven’s angels would whisper to him r hia breach of promise suit to coming out, ae hia lawyer ia doubtfuL Greenville, S. 0., has en interesting risoner named Edward F. Stokes, who x months ago was sentenced for oonC t in refusing to answer questions e witness stand. His seuteuso ia

until such time as he shall be willing to crave the pardon of the court. Stokes will not yield. Ho has not spoken a word for three months, md his hair is

Decidedly the beat practical joke of

the year to related by tbe Jefferson,

Texas, VemocraL The entir the Mayor on the charge of v The charge was preferred by the I: lire of the polioemen, who stated the parties under charge had no vil means of support, ta they had roee but tia from the city in the tost

aays she’ll take a little lam on in hem, with the air of ah old hand at the bnainess. Then ahe watobsa Adolphus. Adolphna leans over the connter, md with s knowing wink,.Bays, " 111 take a little of that same." He's been there

police before

i part"

sHfa

1 the of hia lifi

je with

garments ni fashions. '

• was too even, steady.

enter the political field, bnt will t counsel with other prominent Irish' before venturing on tbe troubled oei _. Irish politico. We have little doubt, the Herald adds, that the British government, with that profound wisdom which dlatinguishee it, will allow Mr. Mitobel to tond without interference, end that ao long aa be conduct* hia political campaign within the lew be will be allowed to enjoy the fulleaiUberty. - J — -* 4 " {rmtedto other

« told abont

-_—_ iber of children Chelsea and South Boston, people have been ouriona to know why it — **- 4 he did snob things or whatf .

of erneity md inhu-

manity. 1 V ‘™ P»ple w! less oonTenant with I

if it canid, it would not be a •e to adopt. Paneoutoihel would be regarded as a 'war for annoyance wi

MKHTM of the coolies, md aee for himself that

the m ashing'il tborouglAand the ning off tekee place in 9b nick of

He must generally pcxNkde the presshouse, and it will not do for him to be dainty over a stain of bine on his hands or face. Ho moat superintend the storing, for the mild Hindoo ia not proverbial for honesty, md feela aorely tempted when the ohanee often to carry off a piece of indigo whieh will hardly make a knot in hia cummerbund, and vat for which he-em realise e rupee. Whan ."Mahaye” is over, the euld

’her is thinking of setting 1% md , after giving e start to his enltiva- , the indigo plantar feels himself e mm for a season. Hia holiday haa oome, md he ia the mm — ra how to enjoy e holiday time.

white garmenta ah in cold water, six 1

washing, the seams md soiled place having been rubbed with "saving soap. They are then squeezed out c. "d put in plenty of tepid (not , water, in which they are —” washed. Wrung out of this they put Into an ample tin boiler half f with perfectly cold water, into whiu. . amail quantity of good laundry soap baa been out. (tore abould be toy them in ihe inner aide on the lid down tight md put thei not very hot fire, so that they ■ to e alow boll This will tel time, bnt when they arrive at that point they abould be Wren out at onoe, put into fresh tapid water, md from that,

vrithbln” ’ T

This process, amount of hard labor md withont __ assistance of my modern machinery •are the wringer, cleanses clothes perfectly and makes them brantifally white. The steaming process '- -* oouree, much more perfectly e with e washing “etaemer;" but the process aa taught to expriwi re md wasteful, requiring large amounts of Soap end fuel, whieh unfits it for regular use » email family, though possibly

iug for tbe push fleeting years, bi posterity strikes

now:

It In-

-ids 'that he He end hia

deeds, great md small, require e motor perspective to be fully pc nly by the impartial future e * justly judged. Meanwhile, roua donor of magnificent gifts

i they

at hia rooms in the third story of Lick House, looking ont on Montgi— try and Sutter streeta. Hia stylo of living to princely as compared with hia former mode of existence, which ’ been at time* ao unorientationa a> be reproached by fastidious fiienda —tr few people, and U

rsieiau visits him v

thoroughly The oily

.juuty ere represented ia the Legislature by five negroea. md two white men. The Sheriff; County Treasurer, Circuit Clerk, Chancery Clerk, Coroner, md Mayor ere ell colored.

In the Beard of Buperviaora there ’ r negroes and one wjuta^ mi

ly all negroea.

m, while

briefly. Hia physician visile tolerable regularity, though

44 -- paralytic atroke whieh all —■Sing more than a year ago hare only in Now England, ! ■ disappeared. The —** ~* ““ '” " 4 —

inary hotel 4

eery. The walla are ornamented few pietnree, md books are scattered

about profusely. He reads solid literature, *— 4 4

large enough to make tie f ! a chiffonier, ia always to be w ooruer. The cards_ of riaib

Urge quantities of waehhig'his^be Sd^^he si

. -I—- noieuuuo »*■ ever OPOU , given to the public, Ae s feet nUi9 mately connected with whet follows, il may be stated that whan the boy Jc.ee "'one of'tris'vhrtirna* Jo ^ e ° For " te Court his story aa to how Jeaae 1 him md pricked him on - m e™" »itli his knife, r Judge Forsaith tuned to Jeeae md I asked him " Jeaae, did yon do ae the little boy Tl-.-s,

gilist tails this story of t which ho red need his fie standard. He-soys: ] opponent restricted ta 134 poun weight. When I commenced to trail weighed 164 pounds, md the lowest could get myself by et 138 pounds. Tl • ■ the "foreing" p

A Canine Proteeter,

itar In tbe London Figaro aaye: a marine engineer, md during ny Mediterranean trip* I brought a canary, s perfect gem of t r, who warbles from early morn 1 to dewy eve. I ho«e atoo a Scotab tar- [ rier dog called Pepper, md a eat digni- • •Uri,.!’.’' the name of Tom. Since ihe -*— -aprehensioni forth*

About a fortnight

s my custom in the morale the kitchen where the when, to my horror, I dis-

9 door of it, whioh lenre, being open, visible; bnt 1'om

"rtriU‘^“if‘!£ r hLTdone tha . deed, of whieh no trace was

observable. On looking around, fancy

“ d -- ^ ** b * hold ^«

■«“i

w Mr, Krebe, hia agent"

oklng around, fancy rope arot ■d joy at beholding might he ell-form, with hie the eevor

' Putman aad the Well.

General Israel Putman'a grave ia i bad a condition, ri Brooklyn, Oi ■client, where he died eighty-f> veers ago, that it to proposed to ask I Legislature of that State to appropriate (8,000 for a monument "OldPut”

'y style of person. That wolf

„ _ always a favorite with We reproduce it in scrimped form, she-wolf did it. The town wont and drove her into her den, to burn her out with straw, fire, md sulphur. It wouldn’t do. Dogs red, and ahe waan't afraid of

me. It was near 10 r. H. Mr.

used to hia negro mm to desoeod i cave md shoot tbe wolf. Col-

m thought he wouldn't P. ' d to do it himself. He tie

■pple crop. They were not worth ; of picking md bousing in many

places. Farmers having targe orchards tempted to give np raising apples farm crop, md when the price is there are no apples Why it ia so lull not attempt to explain, bnt it a to be a fact that apple trees beer

sir fruit in even veers, not England, bnt tbroughont

- of the Western Btata*. in a few orchards in Now England the tceos beer in odd years, md in aome of the extreme Western Btatea the habit of bearing ss yet fully oetabllehed. The tendency, 4 9ms to be all that way.

every farmer, md every in New England, would - 31 —* -• pTokin^off ril

this year, aa soon as tbe fruit ia as large aa aeorna ; aud from mother tree peek off tha larger portion of the fruit ri the same stage, md note ulta. Whether the bearing year* changed by this oouree, we mo jto my with certainty. It baa been often claimed that the change might be made in this way. At my rata, Die object ia well worth working for. Tha tram abould be manured, and tbe ground cultivated ta sthnulata growth md the formation of fruit buds — -a- of fruit ia always d*-

CHI ti-

ler's, son. in N e t#e exponme

The Small-Pox.

Than ia a universal dread of that faar-

tmall-pox. It la a

the importance of this protection ; other* reject it through fear of imparities in th* veoeme matter. It certainly

matter of eueh un-