Star of the Cape, 16 September 1874 IIIF issue link — Page 1

STAR OF THE CAPE.

STAEOFTOCm

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1874.

•Why. LoBta,0 mad* a mUtah Mllrdollanl Ha » Aaodsd to gire you ac laganma aom told me to gin it to yoo, at no old go to hia booaa and gat ah mm earning yon wanted. Oh. my I I think I^n joat it." and abe looked eagerly ready to cry for fear oF*hanng loet it. "Oh, here it U, mamma,” and ahe

^idioSSSom tS^ISri

i we rich or poor, onr^Uat reat-

e, in oompanr with George etation-tender, and Mr.

far toe Bret tarty dne of the ordinal ■— nayafcaU ahomoalnthe emnSf

. . from death whilaaeoaoding the main abaft of the Baraga mine. The Nevada EnlerpriK aaya: The throe man got on the oage at the 1800' lerri^ which iifat thehottom of the^erepecimena of rtmk. which thejf pon the cage, and Unteraa, which they carried in thejf banda. They placed themeelreo on the cage,! and taking hold of the bell-rope, itrack three belle, which, being Iritm’pratad, meant" hoist with men." Obedient to the aignal struck on bit bell a boro, the 'near began hoisting the cage. All well nntil the oage had ascended >t MO feat, when it nddei it of the guides and wei a-.» *. —,, from to riolanoe, that the lanre knocked ont of the banda of of ore t J they r bnl for whieh hat Croat-barm at each end which may be grasped. Up they went, banging from side to tide, Mr. Chase trying all the while to *< ise the bt 11-rope and ■trike the eignai for stopping the eaga. This rope is in a corner of the abaft, bat when Mr. Cheae did occasionally the eigr oending. That they wen the shaft lot a distance — nrsjilnltnUd bottom of the sbaft, ( which wonli "ten instant death. Finding they oonld not aignal the irfeoe by means of the bell-rope, they .sgaa yelling, ••Btop the cage I stop the oage 1" in the rain hope toet they might be beard above. Bam aaya he "yelled likes hone-thief." All their yelling wee of no avail, however, aa not a whisper wee heard on the snrfeee. The banging shout of the eege earned

are the rich thought In thin world-’

disgrace. 1 that,'bo we ing-pleoe:

• ebrigh rk, when finished, and f fuel. In the mean . B ern my shawl to keep yon « she took off her own needy shoolden e threadbare shawl and handed it to her little girl, while she worked diligantly.boping to be paid by haremplovers ea soon aa it was received; for (a her poor little attic room food was fneh In spits of the IS in whieh she bed lived san, ahe tried to keep op inntenanee for her little daughter's sake. " I shall make my darling's life as sunny ns lies in my power to do so : I ■ball try not to cloud her youth by looking ead myself." And likewise ’* Mrs. Kingsley often speak or ne with herself. Bat she would fail than succeed in carrying aa resolutions, for day after day aha found Ufa a heavier harden to bear. “ ' ‘ widow fc

three yean, aha had been obliged to struggle alone in this wide world. Only when Lolita mentioned her father's

E,

King ley on her grief ; and then, with her lil‘—S lovingly around her iy would both indulge

freelyjntr—

k j^vetospmtoAortoeel bin shall be IcSdslMma, al^tbSjMrt ~ioe^aflaiMl. attssfaLall ptaertbe uSTume and'wSrS tewMohvvi S ■ rvs shsll bepteserred." ' '• Taesttag anv reed, town plot, stnst, alls,

the carmen at the surface, who o the ■•tention of the engineer to it, bsl him stop hoisting, it being app< that aomething was wrong. By m -* — *10™ the att and had a oage • pertinent to their lief. The three men were kept s . pended on the cable for over an hour before they finally got onf of their perilous position. Even after the oage had stopped they werw not safe. They - ed evegy moment that aome of the 1 'at the bottom of the abaft wonld rinjUiel

lief cage reached them. When they reached the surface, it la laid that all of the men looked like the last I shad. They were drenched with end covered with mud ; Obese had e out in bis head, and Bun Je-

FOBGITE AND FORGET, rk and bitterly cold I The rein g in to reacts, and the wind ‘

howling mournfully I Night had ap- ' d, and the pulse of the gresl j —stilled 1 '• Fortune's favorltee" wonld murmur, “ What a splendid night to think of the peat, end build a happy futurefor they, eammnded ' every lazary wealth can procure, dw not the terror that the Me fortunate have for such a night Still, the silvery Ught of the moon falls as softly upon pelatial dwellings aa It does upon the humble roof of the poor and wretched. For only an this earth 1 above the poor.

iwn towards her by inatinoV—by a fatherly love whieh he hie been unable quench? How could be fail to a dear son’s looks in her sweet f whan it is a diminutive picture of dead father ? And oh, how m rather would I die, with my child in my anna in this miserable room, than plead for mercy to him I" " Mamma, are yon angry because I ■poke to that man V and her sweet lips “No, my darling, I am not"

, that I oonld hardly n

among the poor, for they are so inno- —‘ and.guileless. I wonld willingly ‘ ’* — fortune to gain possession

> vw- m—•* be happy,

to forget 1 wretched n

think of whst'oi

h tin bride ^did without almo

many blessings we flnng ] our foolish pride. If my ■ would gladly kneel to-day and beg for forgiveness ; bt

lid him is '

, aa she reclined on the sofa, eight and sobs oonld be heard from behind her delicate lace handkerchief. - trauge, that amid so many boanand costly tnmmndinga ahe should weep so bitterly. Should aha not hive been perfectly happy, having everything her refined nature and taate sailed for? Everything that wealth oonld procure waa at her command. Her slightest order w

"YeejL

> one la knocking at ths door,

, shall I open it ?"

Lolita; it mi

is baa sent for this work."

be may pay me f( Tell him it amounts to only th lain. My little girl will go wii •o ea to save yon the trouble of k*The work waa wrapped u • • h Mm. She ha earning ec

arid with it

the dooTaloeed upon Mr. senger and her little dangheheoften called her, •'her

a Bat

Vane's m

UiU.

Tee, ahe abed teen of narrow, aa abe rat pared her present condition to hat it had boon when her kind and I ring husband waa living. Teara of -agar wonld ^Involuntoril^etarUo ^ber and heartieaa emp^oper, who would no? rains n finger to help those who lh“°my t Hsiwly Father T she wonld cry in bar anguish, '■ do I really deserve all this ?—so lunch privation and suffering ? I am willing to baar it onoompUiningly if so. Bat spare my little innocent child. Let not the sins of the guilty mar the hanpineea of the innocent. How cheerfully I would die ~ ' ' lent if I knew that after my , darling would be happy I My httle child 1 my drooping lily, one to love her in this wide world but me I And yet I've often longed to die, for then her fett-'-prood end cruel relatives might her. Gruel did I aey ? Yea.U. , true—cruel end heartless! Oh, my hoabaad, how can I ever forget that all that held

mss, to-day

srfirJWir other. Bat the third waa eo one pleased that ahe hardly knew where t find words with which to erpreea be ~ *• * daeided what t — 1 sprang, with ana a beaminjf free^ into the gentleman' “Ton earns to see me, didst you, Mr. ; but I don't know your Don't you know my mamma? name is Mrs. Kingalty.

"Oh, Hea la ? Can th

this be posai-

. . ..ent man be my husband's father ? Gan that heart that turned ao bitterly end nnreleut' against hia only son, be eo troubled - crying little girl whom he does ran know? Tea,it ia he, and -a

■3

from the hard eat heart. He oonld u

ire paring hia own luxuries ai t borne to this aha tiered atl Aa hia eyes ""

arm, hepntLolil igh abe had be« g hia arms again. Beling and emotloi

ill j/ou come to my arms and my dearest danghter ? Will yon _ 1 and forget the past? Oh I

prove your superiority, my Buffering angel, by bestowing upon me the hap_i v refold you years ago. Do

e me. for yon in your poverty t Buffered what I have suffered, met this little child in the

street I have searched unceasingly for

in and at hut have found yon. What oonld she do, gentle reader,

but allow hareelf to be clasped in those loving arms which bad a- * 1

„ all my fori

of that child. We would ha happy, dear wife, once more, if we had that little girl to brighten our home. And we would place in her all the love that should have been our son's, had he

ed to—when those large eyca (so much her husband's) were filled with 1 of repentance, and hia arms extended to receive her ? No, there was alternative. She rnahed into hia na, and burying her face on hia tom, gave vent to her grief. For ahe w felt that ahe had a sliving arm to

1, and knew that if ahe waa y there was one to comfort

m wonld have foil

inly approved mneh happi- . I can think

of how 1 na for lived, I hia feet

ml the wrong

bitterly and felt aa unhappy ea th onfortnnate who led a life of dru But nneb, dear reader, ia Ilf ■' Might wo not partly et~ 'ir hia wife —* — ns lies in in this world can ahe be ? Three years have passed since ahe became a —" iw; In three yean ahe might have

ried again, ft itJfnTwIdowaeldom remains single long. I really do not know whether ahe had a child or not. Bat I believe " heard aome one say my ion 1 had left little girl'-'a Mt* oiri,'" he re-

, of the little girl he had met In the street—the "mi- girl w ho had taken Bach n hold hia affeetioaia, be knew not why, whose. little Buffering face had haunted hifn from the moment be left r, nntil he oonld refrain no longer

Us n

little darling,'

— — lint night, bo child ? Could It be posai '

eon’s wife was in the oily

poverty? How hie brow burned line aa these thoughts entered

his mind. Aa he thought of his cruelty of bis eon's untimely death and hia

snffering. Hia heart nly, aa be recalled to

'e'a present suffci w ached keenly, 1

nd the morning hiL —

—n, hnmbly asking his forgis—,—, which he had sternly refused to grant, at the same time exelaimlng—' 1 Never think of me aa yoor father; nor never' again brink at this bowse as yourbi »e! Aa yoo made your bed, eo shall you „t upon it I" And the disowned son, whs

& home of hia youth towards his new aa, where hie young bride of but two weake waa waiting him with breathnxiety, to know what enece at with. Bnt aa soon as ah

vrith tears, whieh ahe oonld not repreeel "Oh. my husband I how cruel that should suffer in this way, only for - h*PP7

a earth; end ) to think Heaven for bestowing , for then only oonld I place yon hare you deserve to be. Bnt as it ia, a will Jive a life of love and

time. It enjoyed a transatlantic repu- ' " for alegauoe and hospitality, and ot unlike soma of the capitals of medhovel Italy. Those V cr ® no* 'he days of Quaker simplicity, but even the prosperous Quakers caught the infection of entertainment and conviviality, and bade wit and beauty to

steps at the and of it. The bridge was enclosed by walla on both aides, on one of whieh stood the guard. A taut roof was spread over the bridge to keep off the raya of the sun, which also concealed * 'hose standing at the foot of the the persona on the bridge. On mtheaatsrn point of the island, baa a steep descent into the sea, a »—» ala —1 . mg].

“ unha 1 ’ ^ "Oh,my s.

oe at this meeting I" And bo raised 1 eyes to heaven aa he spoke, while 1 arme were clasped meat tenderly land hia newly-found danghter. "I thonght yon didn't know my

greatest surprise and muor. cut do all people set that iy when they are in trod need ? I told yon my mamma's name was Mrs. Kingsley, and then " '• Come here, my darling, and 111 tell . that I am your papa's papa; ain't yon glad ?” '■ Oh, my I and did yon just find that ? And ia that the reason why you R re me that mocey ? And—oh, my ! a so glad 1 Are yon coming here to live with na now?" and one fairly jumped round the room with glee. “ No, my little daily; bnt yon and mamma are coining to live with me. I have a nice, big house, with plenty of room, in which you ean ploy, and I shall bay you ever so many playthings. ”"1 yon go?" I think I should like to, for your

Aud, dear reader, they did move into It. Kingsley's palatial dwelling, where ley were all aupremely happy, with nt one drawback—and. that ia the void leh feel in their hearts, whieh nothing in fill but the preeoneo of him wl surely must look down upon them fro Heaven with n smile of perfect eonten meat. Lolita, yon may surmise, is tl joy and pride of her “ grandpa " 1

m garden, f:

ght waa to be eneoaea. un a isr projecting part of the garden the Marshal discovered one day that an old gutter for eany in* off the rain water whieh poured through the rock was filled up by fragments of wall and rubble. Every dey the Marshal worked to open it gradually, and bad to conceal with atones aud grass what ho was doing from the eyes of spies. At last the opening waa completed. If inaido the gutter two strong iron bare were placed acroae the rock, and i! to the bars a strong rope ending with an iron ring and penetrating through the other aide of the gutter waa attached, a rope ladder oonld be fastened to it strong rahaL In the gutter lough to hide the rope ladder and ropes till the decisive day. The most difficult part waa to arrive un- '' " ‘the gutter. Every evening he jailor) accompanied the >n hia retorn from the terrace bridge to hie rooms. Then the door waa closed by the warden, and escape rendered impossible. The Msr- ' J resolved to trust to a happy oheneo t to expect the day agreed ou with wife for the daring act. The night ..-m Sunday to Monday waa chosen. When -* *>—

rived

he sal » trouble, aa the way to the rooms waa now very short Merehi let himself bo persuaded. . The Marshal mu anted alone, crossed the bridge, the tent roof of which concealed him for a moment mtaido, feigned to open and

ft of the bridge, it softly along the outer wall and shed the gutter, having now passed first danger. A thick rope, pro-

tho ring, and the dosoent, eighty feet deep, began with the danger of being '-d against tbo projecting cliffs or g into the sea, lashed by a furiitrnl. The Marshal, who had anch strength daring his espied also pat on a strong, tightly>elt, with an iron book in front, be ~mld fasten himself to a he required

Newport In Ante-Revolution Days. Darin **th!rPrendi ^and'spuria? 011 '' K H^^Se^toTO^fittod^out^privatoere.

waa a regular packet line to Lon-

Loa, with over six hundred ship* errivog at and departing from port, nt aaat two hundred of whieh were foreign. The dooke, extending n mile along '' - harbor, were thronged by several and sailors, and crowded with the nee of both Indies. ' DistiUeriea > mansions and graceful 7 gardens rated the neighborhood. Gentle-

dispensed generous^ hospitality in

oair, and diamond buokire, ■*-** awurua el -their sides ; and belles in brocade,

uhtohsa, guttering ■—■-

iceled shoes, dance.

I arranged ■ - which ho v

veers ot age, of good sanaa, and a fair English education, not having profits- ' employment at hia father's home in itacky, sought for employment ing his enterprising neighbors a few miles distant, and although wages were * ra of gold and silver J, i from his first year’s wages seventy dollars. He waa than seventeen years of ngs, healthy, lively-, looking, aspiring and ambitious to become nselul, noble, and perhaps great. He had already learned that money loaned at high rates of interest waa opl to the borrower, end reacted loaner, and .in the falling of ' rly all the artiolct in the

it they had

j notification for bankruptcy in t paid large rates u,

Feeling, therefore, that liberality ell aa justice wsa necessary in ev. . -isn't dealings with hia fellow l-cu* this youth loaned hia seventy dollars to an exemplary, .enterprising and proejieroos trading man in his neighbor- ‘ L '-- *— 1 in that State, vix.: six

other year^oh'thed hi of apparel, and went l

something of the higher uathematice, wsrking for and liberal farmer, evenings and

the board,, and at the I year, or when ho was

ilghteen yearn of age, he had saved

lincty-eix dollars mt The venue' man's

*■ *■— neighborhood, and his mght for. He worked

trading

July ;

other two years' wages, he had now three hundred dollars, wsa comfortably lathed, sod had a good business edurinter to another, tail ho became a cholar. both literary and aeiantifioaliy. Iia influence and nsetnlneaa increaaug, he had, at the age oi twenty years,

‘ idred and eighty dollars. • ‘ nty-one, this young

id six hundred and

ity of life, as a young man of — -'-ao and naofulncaa, aa

At the fifty dt

beneath him. He know now that his wife waa there. Ho replied by the signal agreed on, lighting a match, showJ— i.i m thus suspended. Hia hands 1 and bled, the cliffs hurt him - ./here—thick oloth trousers, still damp from the sea water, are oovered

1 strand, he let himself drop into ecus nephew. Before reaching itrongth failed him, and Alvarex 11, hia youthful deliverer, hod to j heavy man into therolllng boat. Alter one honr'a rowing they readied peninsula of Croisette. At Borne •nee the barge of the ateamer Baron RieiaoU, hired by Mme. Baaaine ‘ n pretended pleasure trip, waited them and brought them toward one -he morning on board the ateamer. The captain did not know the name of his guest. Mme. Baaaine, when going on land with the barge, had announced that ahe would engage a valet and perhaps a chamber-maid for her voyage. The Marshal was introduced as the newly engaged valet, and went at once to his oabin, which be did not leave again before the landing at Genoa. The Harmhal and Mme. Baaaine state most expUoitly that they have had no aooomplleea, and began and executed

A Battle with n Monster.

home to Windsor Castle, Windier township. Pa. When about half a m 1< from the village, he met e monatei black snake lying along the road aide. When within a few yards of the reptili t made for him, and Mr. Rnbright, laving nothin* with which to defend limself, was obliged to run. He soon .band a eiub, however, and showed fight After knocking down the tna' several times is it roee np in front -. him, the reptile seemed to be dead, and he endeavored to drag it along with

The fight this time lasted minutes, when the snake waa again defeated, and fled to a neighboring corn field, where it wee soon loet sight of, aa it was about getting dark. **— • «- -'wight's estimation least fifteen feet long end from four to five inches thick. “ *- *“ “ **— following eat in the neighborhood within tl twenty or twenty-five years. II ing piece, it is thonght, has not discovered, and n party of m about to nuke n thorough search for it

middle dress of the old Oaatile— , with metallic buttons, gaudy aatbee, sombreros with embroidered bands, end gold end silvei ‘ down the outer eeame of the pant The women promenade with m drees, their faoea protected from the atm

ilf in Kentneky it neat article* er of that year,

of Latin,

places the ' They struck, filled his j

a character ft

, and rode aa collector ion and the ^sheriff

ir he had saved one hundred

ENGLISH Fare labor. The strike whieh has been goinf on during the tummrr among the isrm laborers in England, aayl ths New York Timet, has not been wholly thrown away. It hea, on the contrary, thrown light upon several things whieh otherwise wonld not have been thonght of. For the purpose for which it waa began it baa failed, but it is more instructive in i*-. failure then it oonld

suitable place for their eettiement. When Mr. Arch returned home, he addressed meetings of iarm laborera^m dom, set forth the tyranny under whieh they were laboring, counseled a general strike throughout the 00 on try directly the time for active form operations

S Laborers

Items ef Interest. J next tang.srfll be. •' When this Brooklyn Baendd'e over.” Goldsmith Maid's greet feet erent elf eo big ee s Bangor girl's. A schoolboy defines flee:—•• Flee, flow, fled—when you put your hand on

lightning,” said a prettv Indy. " And wall yon may be,'' said e despairing lover, “when year heart is made of

O. Edith." said a fond mother to little one. " won’t yon Use Dr. MoClnakie ?" To which ahe replied : soahy, mamma 1 Yon kies him

(boat the establishment <

Ither dismayed nor despondent' Mr. Arch advised bis followers to wait till harvest and then, he promised them, they should see the great things they had done. He alio constituted a. baud ot itinerant laborers, who jrere to go aa jiropagaadiats thrirf allow, laborers' to join iB°the crusade against despotism. All this they did. Bnt •*- * from the field v tion, and all the hapaa little me

sally the Will the farmers were The strikers were e crops disappearing Lhont their intervenrork proceeding, per 1 slowly, bnt with nil

that the crops will be well harvested by the third week In August, whieh ia a

fair average period.

agricultural inters lish farm laborer, 1

• Considering bow 10 depression of the it in England,, and iaeries of the EngiiC question ia foil ne extent it must be rally increasing use inultnrai operations,

intelligci

l ways, fie moved to S Western there land waa cheap, and entered one hundred and aiaty acres by land warrant, which ho purchased with hundred and fifty dollara of hia

oy. He made a good selection of I attributed to , in a good region of country, aud j of machinery

! a portion of the balance of bis I which leaves toe isrmcr in a siaio 01 ey in improving hia land, buying a I considerable independence of mannal » atook and a few- implements for I labor, and it ia not improbable that tb> ling, and the second year he raised ■ strike will have the effect of atill fuitnci isll crop. showing them the advantages of ma Iter bo had gone to hia now neigh-1 chinery. There appears, however, tc borhood with about four hundred do!-1 bate been also a store of labor behind in money, and used it rantionsly, that in geneial employment on th( by dcgr.ee, gained the name of a 1 farms, and qnito anfficient to meet an) onaible citizen and a good paymaa-1 requisite demands. Bat above ail it ii and hia infln.-nco rose gradually | very evident that the condition of th( 1 hia appearance among his new ! average term laborer, notwithstanding and scattered neigbbora. I hia apparently low wages, ia not ao bad So rataed a crop, read ! aa people have been told. Asa role, , ,-er, periodicals and j has constant employment, hia money books, which still farther improved his ! certain and regularly paid, and his i mind, till cattle, sheep, and other atook j proses of living are small. He has o’ C op in flocks around him, more | many privilegee; and in ease of ait adjoining him being purchased ness, either in hia own person or amo from time to time, till now he finds any of hia family, all hia wanta 1 himself, when scarcely arrived at the supplied ■ -• •- •-'

age of twenty-seven years, t*— * ‘

iseaaor of an ample foi

tble reputation.

appointed poetmiaiuink, Washington, Pottsville, and McKeesport in Pennsylvania ; Portland, in Connecticut; and ’ in Kentneky. Ida Kuds, - ( y, keroee--jicr ia alb 5 might have l

ire'now at the rate of 857 for five weeke, without board or beer. Considering the prioee of the usual neoeeaariet of Ufa here and there, these wages are nearly equal, if not equal, to those current here. _ .nral paper observed with great facility of expression, ".These moonlight nights I Ah, by how many a vine embowered gate soft eyes look love to lyes that speak again, and the pressure if n tiny hand In the hogs masculine law wakes to eeataoy the living liar." Wo ere living in a wonderful age. k French chemist informa na that be lopee soon to produce diamonds from mgar. Ho has already obtained n carion cylinder bard enough to cut glass iy exposing perfectly burned anger to a emperatnre of 1800 degrees of Fahrenleit I What next ? It ia announced by a French paper hat 200 persona recently lost their ivea in the little village of Asagra. A rklent storm detached enormous mil destroyed sixty-four houses. Only fourteen of the oooupants survived when taken from the rains. r , Jordan stole a gnu from Noah Soott. They are negroes, and live near Atlanta, Georgia. Cap. waa arretted, and hia proposition waa that, instead of being looked np, he should allow *' -■ to give him a whipping. After _ diaensaion It waa agreed that the whipping shonld consist of thirty-nine ’ boa on the here back with a strap, peat anmbcr of people went ont to bashes to aeetho pnniahment,which - relentlessly inflicted and philosophically borne.

Oolonel Bnth Goshen ia ail fret nehea in height and weighs 660 Is. He waa born in the valley of the City of Mexico, fifty-seven years ago, and dose net look to be more than

thirty years of age

had a

loth e

" in ab

The Swedish Settlement la Maine. The editor of a Maine newspaper, having seen reports representing the Swedish settlement in Aroostook innty, that Slate, to be in a poor oonitioa, made a visit to the (felony to wertiin the state of affairs tlirre, and ablishcs a fall stelemenlin th'; lest ..sne of his paper. Ho found the crops large and promising, and the people •MmnndlT mmfnrtahir, and 'Sllltent*?. ■ing psgt of hia

be bir-

*The following

article :

" Their late crops wiH vested. They have now

newly-settled neigh oar hoods ■eeson of the you-, is eo •aperlatively ridiculous to those who know about sew settlements, that it excites only a ■mile. Mr. N. a Lufkin, Hon. J. & Arnold, and others, laid there are many families in Lyndon quite as poor end lestitnte ea any that can be fonnd in few Sweden. A gentleman in our ofloe this morning remarked lo ne that he knew six families in one neighborhood, not many miles from this village,

^tektarn

nor. There has for a year or more be a store in New Sweden, near the Capitel, patronised wholly by the trade of the Swede*. Wo are iafonned that last winter they bought of the Bwedee 2,000,000 of shingles, and they sold large quantities besides at Can bon. Tbo present ooonpant of **" -*— ‘*- Perry Molntiro, has bee July 10, one month. I with them to Ihe amount 01 bmui each, and bought of them 126 abinglea, although iUs n vmjy dull cie of An goat 6. we ateted that a* ■ packaged had passed 1 April 20, directed to Since that, fonr others

place have passed,

r at Caribou Informs large number of regiatered tetters —a- aa-. -*a— m for parties in

lose with the re>'

mark, which in an opinion often ex pressed, that in 'fifteen year* New Sweden — * ■-» *—

thee

people,

1 same place. It has « light for the first _ if the farmers throughout

towe'ing. To hold-

1 an immense chain

of gold rings, large enongh for hia own huge angers, which were looped to-

»nd from the chain depended

_ ,-mont old-faahioned seals. The oolonel, who derives his title from eer--ioe in the Mexican army, was present

t Qneretaro when Maiimilian waa mrdered, and received a cross of recious atones lor hia serviced in the

preceding campaign. It having been Sthe giant vr- —»-‘w*

enpation to a larger number of laborers than they actually required. They had ‘ reduced them in proportion ea they

with the introduotioi

in this way tin lal advantage to

of the

might have done, wi

himself in Bernum a ahow, the took oooealon to aak him if it bnt the eolonel denied it nt 01

m inquired If hia a

o farmers, by relieving them of eponiubilitj of dismissing bands

ey rstaiasd from

a person inqul

. Bihin-tho 1 ^ ^ York city—be asked indigm “tookhi ' *■" L *

said he 1

o be a bone t

a Belgian illvif thay inf?" He

urea, sou nau uu. Calcutta sixty days previously for America. Himself and non were in partnership together in San - ' 1. When hr -*•-*

“When We Were Boys Together,”

I he How sweet are the rieioi ;b aa they glide back to us throngh dim vista of past year*I

life's turbid aea, and bear it away to the frnit and flowers of early boyhood f Ah I it waa then wo were hippiest; when we naed to oateh minnowa in tha branch; when we stole green apples, and see-sawed on a plank stack Ihrougt the crack ol the fence; when we whetted our barlow knife on papa's nea raxor strop to akin frogs; when we tied the new waahpan to the tail of ■ prowling our. and never either an) more; when wo threw rotten eggs a' Jones' garret. windows to raise tin E hosts, and stole the "cream" ant tew np pnsay for it; when we tied n; onr aore toe with mamma’s satin bonnet string and palled oat aifter'e knit- — r,._ • a ’-hooks fc

The Indianapolis Tragedy.

An Indianapolis paper, in speaking of the anicide of Mies Harding, and the itlng ot her alleged eednoer by her er, the editor of the Indianapolis aid, eaya: ■■ Mies Flora Herding,

though brilliant c

r fit K

rl'a playhouse. _

leaps forth line a year-old colt when we contemplate those sweet by-go—

scene* that lie buried deep down in I ilobre of memory, where oft we to weep alone. P. 8.—But if *' 1 —*- — believe

try it that way

e n girl iwhlle.

end Well-to-do agricultural toi

• Hook.”

Ton Many •• MIMte-Men.” > Vermont Arwmr Urns e the fallacy that a large m ■ — lb ante inert— Iteaynnebcountry village is doing a good b neaa at a fair profit, *-•* Wtfe t fe TSl U one with a little cap thinks he will get n

-by a third dealer ..-Tfsta ted at all, bnt the people ar r porting three familial instead of one. t Tiiis is th* way an increase of middle-

pretty qmn, t

A Sweet-Smelling Odor.

>1 obtained from the mask-deer, a 7 little animal, inhabiting the

live of Paris, IlI.^Longh for the teat yrar baa lived in tide city. Her mother waa the flret wife of Mr. Harding (from whom ha wan divorced noma twelve years ago); and who now lives in Charlestown, 111. Mias Harding has been in iwdiawapolla for the put year engaged aa teacher of German in the Herenth Ward district tchooL She wu a girl of nnutnal promiae; gifted lo an oitraordinary degree, and a favorite with not only her scholars, bnt with all who knew bar. Daring the abate00 of her father to the Hot Springe, the filled the editorial ohair, and moat ably. The many eparkling paragraphs of wit and humor, the eeuys on enlivening tepiee, and lettera under various nom de plur.ui in the Herald were from her

and in addition to traualaliona German, syinoed a wonderful jr, tiSK "gave promiae of etlll its in the fntnrs. Her de-

termination waa also a predominant

of her ehnraoter, thia being only -ell shown by the lut set whieh

iromth

v The"haulers cut off this poneh- whleh, becoming dry, pre-

belly of

contents, end in

-rtiete reach e* ml Mask, when moderately dry, ia

, .. ,Bite ding with almost every ooent, it discover- *—‘ little oi its own peculiarity in pound a, when naed in proper pi lion, and yet gives them great pa eney. In point of general naefi to the perfumer, it in probably onequated by any other robstanca, tot.

er life."

Bra OroHT To.—The Loom of the Prince of Wales and bn happy family u the Mall, aaya the Danbory man in ondon letter. Atthenppevendof tbn ic square ia that of the Dnke of Edurgmnd his wife, the Oread Duoheaa .—ib-nosed little girl." aa prejudiced Englishmen Inelegantly term her—wit dissatisfied with thia pteee of residence. " ’ why she should be disoon-

eciCUOW , ■■ tun J—*.'... — -laa,-.-,,-, happy children ; ao ia Ihe editor of a paper with a big anbaonption Hat; ao ia the clergyman whoee coat tbo liltie children 3 the pariah pinch aa he paaaea thqm at, their play ; ao -is the