Star of the Cape, 21 October 1874 IIIF issue link — Page 1

STiBOFTHPCAPK

STAR OF THE CAPE.

y0L - vl *

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1874.

NO. 45.

fc* d.[iriroi nf hi. b

ihoM in the oolitic (the cell* ol which IZZ—i s wore lull Urine ; •ome hid 'eight, come hna inaceecd; of the pUtea of rUm were it wu dectnca poeeible

tend. The liTin^toedi wen left ek for enother twelre months, et the t of which time *13 s ’ "

lows seemed to be elwsps i

open eyes. Perbsps they were mcrreiing whet crime of theirs had subjected

•- - —‘enoe of two jeers soU-

, led this prindpel rae. Dr. Backluid pieced four toeds in k — cells or holes-ont for thepnrpoec

trank of en apple tree. Two were

apple tre

ipenions in the largest cell, end the 6r two oooapied e smell cell each ; though small, these cells wen tolerably roomj for middle*iaed toads, being about flye inches deep hj three inobss diameter. The caritioa wore carefully and closely plugged with wood. All four toads were found dead and decayed at the end of the first year. In another subsidiary experiment, four small basins of plaster of Peris were scooped out, a lire toad placed in each, and a coyer luted down air-tight os the top. The whole were buried underground. Twelve month* afterwards two of the toads were dead, the other two living, but greatly

tJ “ psngrsph », a nas paragraph SseSs-sSrs? et. aa4 traai tiara te Usm U»

_ IP: tl

agree that, however a inderfnl the

ascertained phenomena really are,fi and toeds cannot live one yes ' without air, nor probably t

—w.-g^jam-raa

rtoW^fSs;

to?«SKrJ raS«u7'entll“t^ 1 'dju i«;xr

.SK, 1

Experiments With Toads. Bucklsnd, to test the matter in degree, made some remerkabli experiments. lie caused twelve circular calls or cavities to bo cut in a large

Twenty-four live toads wars pat into tbs oeUs, one in each, the oovers fee- * down air-tight, and the blocks of

OSB OF THEM, ic spring of 1860 sn American Theodore Adams, s Hussion Ivon Torovitoh, and s Frcneh—mod Pascal Pondratte, formed the design of robbing -the Rajah of Jams]poor of hie collection of snow diamonds, valued et ten million dollars. The story of the desperate enterprise is at loot given to the world by Mr. Adams, the American, and the sole survivor, os he lupposea, of the affair. He has lately Forwarded ns s thrilling sooonnt of tbs expedition, which, minus the nth prolix Introductory, we transcribe fro the original MSS. j We separated in Colontis, having agreed to meet again st the capital of tbo Rajah'* dominions, between ' first end fifteenth of September, deemed it beet to adopt this mann* procedure, knowing that the errivs. " ‘s a body at the oap majesty - * snspieit so ns under s at Rhstta Pnbj guarded well: the Oolden Pleeeo stehed se faithfully by the —x I carried s dr e in my pocket, the only white m two millions pounds starling. The gem of the collection, he said, was sn scorn-shaped diamond, which he -lined et £800,000. My jeded steed took me the capital of J nmol poor, i

dirtiest inn found es

by the ruler of my country to photograph tbs person and palace of bis royal highness, the Rajah. The camera and stock of ohemiesls which I bad brought to the capital confirmed Bamsca waa e town of about four nd inhabitants, and stood

.bout three hundred

Jalontto. I say M was " and " stood " jeeeuse in 1889 the entire capital was reduced to ashes by s terrible oonflegnon. Nor has it einoe been rebuilt Two days slier my arrival, Pascal Pondrette, the Frenchman, reached the capital. He hod traveled e greet distance in boata, and bad suffered nnmerons accident*. Everywhere the

iSX

A dermal Picture ef France,

inea of the Government, .mratlve eeae with which they are collected, in the midst of the effects prodneed by on ex ban sting end diaaa-

tho correspondent* of the German peC have been studying the nature of teeouroas ' which France duplaya. One of theuLwriUng to the Cologne

thek&taa, insh __ jhfXsrriage give* way to at—__ one, and the spare horse la employed — “- farm. At night two or tiara lighted instead of six ; wine from the wood is mb— for bottled wine ; the lackey has a a gardener ; pleasure journey* • four weeks' moil to Baden Bee given up, end the •nmmer is -pantry, " which,’' says

■ut they are nr thinking, oh sey " ills re* sup tas* oosis. Bat it is not family economy. The first step may be very easy, end those that follow painful and diBoult ' The i

EtepolitaumewtU be profuse This girl determined she would yield — * had scarcely began her she found°hmeS Wa-

lt seemed to be s counter; found it e cheat, end it coo tame very diamonds 1 had journeyed eight thousand miles to purloin I I thought of Tantalus while I stood over the gazing st the very precioai and an at ones the light was

s fortnight I recived one t

per day, end the light showed - Rhstta Rnbj's wonderful diamonds

Int I hated the sight of them _ lamed them for the dreadful death was gradually approaching, and ay sprang upon t 1 — **-* T *~ )e chest covered hich, with oil my strength, I could ot raise. Onoe or twioo daring *' - long nights, I thought I heard Ti vitch’s voice, and I dreamed of Gaol end the Boas escaping down — Brahmapootra with the gems. Whet hod become of Pondrette? Had ho effected his eeeepe, end broken bis oath, for we had sworn to stand by each other to the very lest extremity, which, —— death. 1 cursed my the darkness of that octagonal prison. I called Pondrette: coward, and Torovitoh s traitor, and struck the walls with my hands anti

they bled.

My supply of food end water daily rew less, until two onnoes of meal v— i that waa allowed for dinraal ec nnption. I also discovered that t a ter bad been contaminated with bitter kind of wine, which inereas thirst, and occasioned s fever __ fit of the stomach. I felt I should go mad, and in my rage flung tbo -xrthen pitcher against tbo wall, reeking it into s thousand pieces. Wholesome sir entered the cell from -jme ventilation overhead, and I fisttered myself that I had caught sorer si glimpses of stars. Due morning (as I afterword disrrered) I was surprised to find e piece 1 paper beneath my meagre supply of od. 1 thought of my two friend* ; a ll they eonla not smuggle any wrilto the prisoner of Rhsttts Pnbj. most laughed boisterously when I ntolded the paper, for how could I tad a word in tbo gloom of my cell ?. i seemed s mockery of hope to send tea weed on paper. Bnt I was unable to reed in the darksea, I discovered that the paper had sen perforated many times with s pin -that these perforations formed raised “ I almost shouted

s his rarer stones, tb let no whitomnn remain in Hu Bach words had only served tc

itering iKH is will

is attempt. ] is arrival we di

b« plucky lit

become of Tsrevileh ? September bed — 7 .of —

had

ten nothing of the is might of ourdea-

Rnas, the life and tha might of

persla expedition. His indi*paneable, for he a Hindoo Isngnage qnile f

Pondrette, out of i not been idle. We

of the Ganges. After repeated eolicitetions end many presents, I was admitted into the royal court, surrounded by hie swarthy guards, armed to U- *— -- pistols, sabres, in. I noticed

no happy mood. He would n_ - sit quiet e moment, and I tried In vein to get a good picture of him. Bnt I did not exhibit my impatience,and told him that tha clouds intsrfsrsd with my

Whether ha sprang from his roysl^ UT his guards. Instantly I waa but-

is words, end st lost I c message, which ran thus: n the pslsee Pondrette ia u. Touahsntdi- m ‘—“ h end Foudratte i pslsee, sod working for my I could sesreely believe it; end yet message written in English, far Ruslan eould write end speak Isngnage fluently assured me that the * .— v . Utzt

Pubj's gems were not d would have slain the ton

that be led the Hindoos to the purpose of betraying os. Bnt 1 call the Frenchman more a man than let” There's s collection of ” rery pretty -tones " in my sanctum to-day. Tbev look like diamonds, they weigh diamonds, and they ehi— ,,c - monds; bnt in the diawwuu - ronldn't commend fire dollars I yon couldn't bny them from mo for five hundred thousand. They make mo think of two brave, •ue men—Pondrette and Torovitoh— nd of sn eight thousand mile “ wild

. ey were determined yet to rob his majesty of bis enormous wealth. ” —not tell you how I waited for inoe, 1 slept slightly, end thi The slightest poise was euoug _»me,mndwhetieverthusswekenetwo words fell from my lips : “ Terovitch ! Pondrette I" At last I was reused from ou_ — those eat naps by a sound that I eould not misinterpret. It sounded like"-” foil of a human body just withont door through which I bad entered treasure room and cell. I list® Holding my breath. I beard the b ing of my heart. The rattling of

A long silence followed this, “ American 1" I started I It was Taroritoh's V ■'Hen!" arid I. •‘Thinks b

od!”

A moment later the hidden Ughl dark lantern, whieh I bad seen the atan purchase in London, flashed an'ray' face. The next instant be tukr-d it that I might *ee him! I started at tha being! saw. A giant Hindoo;teemed standing before me; buH knew that it we* *— ■*-■-

No time,” he arid, hastily. Ac then, * looping orer Use threshold, 1 dragged a body Into f- --- -- the door. It waa a i

. began to undress. H list'd with nimble fingers, and pres- ' sided by prints, the roUiar's

enlly, old clothes, or

brought with hi

Where's Pondrette?" I asked. At the river,' in the boat,” was

”^5beu 1st ns go."

" No, the diamonds first 1 We o>

them," he arid, starting for I thought of the gnat it had neeeaafully reeiatod m

for tha iron li

. myetreugth,

id eeugfat hla arm.

"Heetor couldn't lift the lid," I

Statohed°the pistolwi hroaTbopun l Ke^»Ut»°in said led to U mapoo tre. ? looked on. and 35Ara.s Hindoo oisiaa *

t" deaeribed by the English nriot—a gem worth £800,000. ■' Give me that * tone I I may escape I" ^No| I win eat the pretty apple—I will swallow it l" Before I eould arrest hie hud he second la termite fell down ins chocking spasm. The stone was fast in his throat. I drogped the oars ud sprang to his rid, but when I touched him be sprang erect, reeled ud fell overboard, with the “ loom atone " in hi* throat 1 panned my journey rione with ngs better imagined. I * aspect, ■5—ibed. It wsa the wUdeet

ched the ooeat, femiabed the diamonds with s tenacity oertsmly

admirable.

ip, the Black Pri

taken on board. iptrin opened his eyes st a

_, r _ were blasted y one men—s London lapidary. Very pretty stones," he said, with smile; "but they're valueless. I ouldn't give you five pounds for the

* like dis-

A Princely Railroad Han.

They pay a contractor with ■' concussions." Besides ready eaab ud subsidies, the Incky railway-builder ores concession and monopolies thst mines of wealth. A long line of d is sabdivided. into sections that ry with them exclusive privileges in : or oosl, mining, fishing, gnin-rais- , or vending of certain necessary ares of popular demand. The royalty nred and the sub-letting of the count duly made, the fortonate posse*- - of these magnificent monopolies

'o Faria or the ehoee'of

An Educated Bear. The Epiieopal Rrgitlcr has s letter om Centre Harbor, N. H-, in which One amusing story of this region,ud long beer was ought by a stoulfiad -or the borders of Lake WinnipoBsnkec, ud carried into the neighboring village, where he was tamed ud grew to bo the playfellow of the schoolboys, After some months spent in civilised society, he suddenly dlrxp peered in the woods, ud after several —lore he was forgotten. One winter's day, while a new aehoolistrees was teaching the smrij boy* id girls how to spall ud knit, u

hies him sway to 1

the Mediterraneu uu uw. u> mu.v than royal ease. Some of these mag- ' ' ’— been overtaken by calamity, u imperial edict has, fos mysterious reasons, ont off their incomes untimely, ud one or two hsplesi persons have been ustohed from thr lap of luxury to be sent to the bittei exile of Siberia. But, for the moel part, the happy railroad-builders realise in tbeir Isvtahness the feaeinsting story -f the Count of Monte Oristo. One of thaao beroniri opeculators, rho is arid to hive sumptuous pelsoes -a Peris, Vienne, ud Nice, lately burst upon the simple inhsbituts of

gaid ennui st Lnguo, he beeer--teres ted in the seenery. Nsv interest deepened ^

“* -"Ut the pron:

he reeolved

liousire, ha thu ud tb

it^usinsm,’

build s ohstesu prince of AUdie ground where dr —■*‘—-»

building U t

, deooretioni 8,000,000 each, snd s brigade of his ri following will be detached by iron from his other psleom to

It is gravely ■ baa ianis trai

Is, sixty mnainUns. and u army ti, ooufaotiouera, ud naterera. A celebrated prims donna k oooaaionaUy engaged losing forhia special pleasure, end hls orchestra is obliged to give e drily eoneert whether he be present or abeent. The income of this child ol ' ue is estimated at 15,000,000 a No wonder he eu build prilike Alratate ud entertain hie guests as royally as tbo Count of Mon to

A latter from ' Lowell, Cherokee _iffieri'ty to solve is how ore we to rail another crop? The time has now a rived for fell wheat to be sown la ordi to prepare for a crop the ooming yes but with u army of grasshoppers c bo fed it would bo folly to so greii ai they would devour . • sown. For one whole week lag, and still tha end U not yet. As apes the meureeoh they ou be m wirgiag their way southward, and '—to the earth. The

— light t >,'they would M«t before joining destroying army already at At every step greet storms of m all shoot yon, and in their eag erases to get out of slk otriki— -~ 1 —-

Wnrmro Coon * Mrerssn—It has

One class of immigrants ia always in demand in the United State at toe

other nationalities. They ore I legible, cannot to easily adapt ra to new ways, ud perhaps svo too high a standard of sgrieulira. An English workman should itber seek e place io the Eastern -totes, or purahaee u improved " farm in the Central West, where pioneer work has been done for him. Stock farms, especially In Kansas, have, howbeen suoocasfnUy managed bjr lags in the West where a skillful farm laborer who should arrive in the spring will not at once find employment at good wagee. In regard to mechanics tnd skilled workmen, it is somewhat difficult to advise. The whole matter of the relation of capital and labor is K now in a very muddled condition, unions will undoubtedly moke it nnploesut for any foreign meto who did not join them. And

s reasonable reduction of wages, raid unquestionably bo a greet revival * of work; but in the present mdition of things, with employers tiling down production, ud laborer* . jf using to work, this country ou hsrjlljj be pronounoei^s good^pUco for ploys a vast amount of mechanical labor, ud there will soon be good openings for experienced mechanics in every

direction.

" ■ k also thst for the present _R abundut supply here of unskilled labor, auoh as navvies, bodcarriers, common laborers, ud the like. There will be fewer railroads built in be next few years thu have been for ty like period in the pest. AH imrovemonU are somewhat suspended ; wor buildings are being put up, ud tere U leas demud for unskilled labor. greet numbers of people will oome upon public charity. The publio authorities

THE C5ITED STATES ARMT.

t. Shermu baa to say rt of war will be re- ■ ed respect, for the that with him the " M to united

The publi-

Whe is Du Caries !

Dob Carlos, the Spanish insurgent .xief, belongs to s rebeUioui family. The rebellion is whieh he hie been the leader for several years in Northern Spain, is only the last of a series

I M-t.era.r-.

unpublished "Mem

The first point Gen. Shermu makes the Beoeeeity of providing in time of peace u army organization which ou be made promptly efleoaive in war. The istration of this must be evident to The beginning of the late war tnd tbo United States with u army d up by red tape ud badly organ d, ud niuo years after the end of i wu Congress proposes to make the army even feebler thu Mr. Lincoln found it. The two greet practical suggestion of Gen. Shermu tor tbs future > 1* be :_Firet, the reorganrmy system, by dividing .ente into three battaig each regiment a war

The second . _ in reference to the divided

bihty ud authority

torers to emigrate here for oome. It will not be u t lamity to the country tc

elling tide of immigration I

it checked,

menage it. The ii

e partially d

warmin'* himself by the fire, , signs o' genuine satisfaction, ud deferring his meal until he hod thorongh1 himself. The ehi Id I— U. UUM W_> begu to t^ hate, bonnets ud satchels the pegs by the wall. His memory did not fail him, for the astohela contained, as of old, the children'a dinner, ud he had arrived befc Having made

looked. Giving a shake . “ *- —• by thodoor ud

village was t bear punned ud shot.

tion, ho passed out b appeared. The 1 alarmed ud the beat.

much to the regret of the p they discovered by some r hia body that ho was their

A Wise Decision, Firmness, such u appears in the lotwing example, may cost much heartihe, bnt weakness costa much more. Tbo disappointed affection that lama sway a tippling sailor U far less misery erd'e wife. young English

Bi ■ ■ frisad of her mother with whom she stopping. During the time she making up her wedding outfit, he e to see her one evening when he just drunk enough to oe foolish, was shocked end pained beyend aura. She then learned for the first time that he wu in the hebit of drinking frequently to exeeee. She imi dlately stopped her preparations, l— told him she oould not marry him. He d that ' <m; j ..I"! ,

ian who has formed such » three thousand miles to man an I loved, ud now, rather thi e drunkard, I will go three thoi nQea beck again." And she wu young ladles will not, probabl; I to follow this girl's example I similar oases, bat if they would do I the effect of their firmness would gree

Family Calon at a Brave. The Springfield Rmibliom says tat the searchers for ooinoidenoea will than was 11 affmd^ljre'a’SHera/goHw a la that oitj. The wife of Mr. EdWarner, of Boston, died ia that

wtuen that c

.he bends Don Osrlos, like his

before him, is ih throne, wh;

his bv right. In on

the.year 18S0 F . j, indbtent etu. v His Queen, s princes the other hud. s

jegintents filled

IciTa Wisconsin regimut equal to u mlinsry brigade." The Germu acthod of reeraiting bs describes as limply perfect, ud thinks there is no rood reason wh --* —

ibstutisJIy.

should not fclli

ohspter

r General Sherms se aa General of ti

t commanding general in Texu,N< iw from the araenais a pistol cartridge

uy sort of qrdnanf

it procuring an oy of Wu in Wash! aiding' gueral.

t order ot Abel lahington. ITm , though Nntl

soldil

condition

i whom wo copied the rfy proscribed it. ud to protit by that ex* Is ongbt to be heeded, lorce, the strength of he civil law ohonld be

time* 'subject to the direct oo Congress, ud I assert that ft raent^day the rej-nUr srm^ ■eon that onr*army ia oomparatively > beat possible, organized ud gov- ■ e military ^rinri-'- —•

oompelled to snffer Ute diagrsoc, nfnaioB and disorder of 1861."

" If I Hsd Leisure."

^If I hod leisure I would rope

, however, iider with e

piece o' corn. He hod *leia ___ repai .•'* (enoc, but it did not bi

They bed one child—the Infante Isi

as excluded, end Don Oulos wu ho shonl.' - * -' - "

led.

Bnt Qn<

Items ef Isterest. A we mu, 101 years old. asked assist mee from the town of New Hivee re •ntly. A Lomu skull wu lately fond nca Jsage Mission. Kansas, bedded in i olid rook. Two Atlanta professors, w

An editor says tl

knows of 'why bis ho sway the other day. during s

eheavy

« day tied

At the eleotien trial in Quads, * Dr. Haggerty tea he bod paid about $125 to

Ferdinand j ‘

i Christina. Fetdinud’s

, satisfied with this. She ; isjoled ud threatened Ferdinufi, until ; JSXSKS 1 ? d" r Isrloe, entitled to the throne a - 1 ’

against six, the prisoner

ud Isabella became vhen she waa three r mother. Christina, as regent of the kingdom. Then begu tbe first "Carlos' 1 rebellion. Don Carlos, declaring that he had been defrauded of hia right, which wo* to mount the throne when hio brother Ferdinand died, lost no time in «ging o kept up, in the auto vicinity where is grandson is now established, for The Queen Regent's vigor, however, radered his every effort vain ; and at lout, weary of fruitless fighting, de- — * •- of hu soldiers,

te second Doc Oulos wu his oldson. He made several attempts, reen 1845 ud 1861, to invade Spain Spain wu then governed by vigorstatesmen like Espsrtero anc

; but Don Jusn. uuitk. the ^"at u . ud laxnrire snd i ‘V„ ot “ d r ^'

The harden of the Csrlist devolved noon Don Juu. hi

brother fighting,

to the ehiefship of "but ,h He{id married Maris dnekess of FUte. a ds Duke of Modena', u eldest eon, who was bor When this boy wan Joan alKltesU'd bisclait

prisoner is oonvietsd. Salt Like seems to have lost its savor. Wnen the Saints Aral oome to the valley, say* a California paper, the waters of the lake yielded one pail of pore salt to three of water. It now requires five pails of water to yield one of

ult.

In England tramps with a sovereign in their Docket put it in pledge with the nearest pawnbroker for e shilling, have s good time on tbs shilling ud thu apply for relief st tbe union or poorbouse, which they get only If penThey uy thst if you wut a free fight while traveling in tbe far West, von must find a Granger whose fields Lave been devastated by grauboppera, ud congratulate him ou haying dic-

tion ot middlemen.

The first census ever token in Jspu wu in 1872, ud gives the population of the Empire at 33.110,825, there being about 486,000 more males thu females. One-half of the people are classed agriculturists, 701,000 u artisans, ud 1,300,000 u merchants. As soon a* the leaves of cn&ut ud gooseberry bushes have fallen, prone o - —» —* inch old wood u

bo planted in n

1 T*' ,Ild

I Press tbe soil firmly around the lower I j ends ef tbo cuttings. In two years

, j these pluts will fruit

reported that navigation on the

UtaM

n 1857

:hty-th

me, Don | steamboats plying regularly on tbo tht to the river, some of them ia costly in their

Spain wishes it or not, rest* upon l'i-, vine authority. His early yeani were i fnce.^xJ ere ^I'^nonka "breije/ him into hia mind. Ho waa Uught military exercises, ud soon acquired a teste for militecy life, such as his father had not, but such as distinguished his grandfather and uncle of the same name. He is described by those who have seen him as of medinm height, full ud strong in body, very dark in complexion, with largo dark eyes ud thick, stubby, jet-black hair ud beard.

smell crafts on tbe upper, A correspondent soya : I notioi

1 account of s remarkable woma omc i^Lodi, Wii!. which bear ) analogy to it. Tbe bones of i

bo in danger of breaking every time wo* moved. The limbs had been oken repeatedly in attempting to lift so it was carried on a pillow exclu•ely. The child had not outgrown age. The bones seemed to knit readily, ' ' broke in uotber place as soon ss child wu lifted.—SWenM/fo rimeri-

“ if I bid 'eisure," s " Iwrou'il p'y more attention to my sococcts sad try ud collect my bills more u ompily." Tbe ebznee is, my friend f f . you had leisure you —ould probs'-i’v pay leu attention io the .nailer than you do now; Tbe th : og '.’eking w-lh'hundreds of fsru’srs w.-o till the 00*1 ‘l not more leisure, but more resolntioc—the spirit to do it now. It tbe farmer who sou his fence in poor condition would only sot at onoe, bow mnch might be uved ? It vut breeehy eelt'e horn en rels among neighbors tbs ease* termi .'.-lx in lawsuits, nssily all they are both wo

the lawyers.

The fact is, farmers ud

hove more leisure thu they ue of for study ud improvement of minds. They have the long evening of winter in which they ou poet tbemaelve* upon all improvenw*- -• **“

day, if they will enly tak.

ducledjournali ud read eare. The farmer who foils to study

" " en gets shaved, hu

The Earthqaskc In Guatemala. The recent earthquake at La Ai tigua, in Guatemala, although it wi obviously very severe and caused greater loss of life, if it bu been co rectly reported, then the great cart *te whieh lost year shook down tl lal of 8u Salvador, can hardly — -. j so mischievous u influence n the prouerity of Guatemala u earthquake of last year had upon the prosperity of her energetic ud enterprisin'' little sister State. T - n tigua woe ruined a century ago of the moat terrible earth quake* ih wo have uy record in modr— Tbe effects of tbe tremendc oonvu'aion of July 29, 1773, were f ' r as Mexioo. It left the city e mi dna, muy of tbe Urgeatsud finest in their pioturcaqm dilapidation. Tbe ’oosl chronicler* tell that the eity, however, would

hioh woe then ea et

naturally thought it

nobody but himself

A Cure Ter Drunkmutts, r mu in this county who we

very drunk ons evening reeesitff,

is wife et.the door. Uhe hsd

ig for him. When he sttempuid „ r -*s her end seek his virtuous couch, she flung a pail of slops into bis. face. "There," slid she, " lake thst

next day the n

The

eh now eonaJetiug of an aired attempted to beguile the finny beauties marry tha lady himself, he d motirag ud seven children ; to their dretraoEon by offering them a be forgotten. He did so ; a ■ gathering all a# surviving diet of worms, whereupon a veteran of forgotten, being rapidly tar tbe flrat meeting face to gigmriie preprettena eSuek hia boad out through the influence of hu

te it inctuded had

Cn°o

nou*!y rich d moat other parte The proprietora ether a neat thing

the tleftrt* of the old. The Chnreh a naturally objected, but tbo propri-‘-J the day. Nr - *-

_ _ built in a safer position ; snd La

Antigua baa never recovered ‘ blow. Had it been o 1 stroyed tbe mischief dom

tmpletaly de-

SslvadOf. Bnt it does not spp> ' been oompletely dcetroye„. .. i very,extensively damsged. Andes admirable reorganisation of the Government of Goetomala begun by President Berrios hut year seer *- *—w bepn ao far perfected as U it tlie development on s very — le of nsoelity ud confusion daring disaster, we may hope that this ib explosion of the terrific energy of sublemneu forces et work in Se strange ud interesting regi _. our continent will be found in — end to have pissed off without sensibly

How Ha Focro Hu.—The in which the late Bishop ol Wli .... . ... I* thus t

.fter graduating he 1 i* «rare D traraUng U ’

A Singular Case. A gentleman writing from Kinsmore, 'hio, to his brother, tells the following irange story : " Sou wut to know ..bout Jesaey. About the middle of April Louesa came home from Portage -runty with inflammation in her eyes, ■ —is blind for acme days, ud Jesfrom Mr~trday noon, ud b . oold water, when i (Jessey) begu to complain oHior^

wilhher ey

it holding it, rith the tears 8, as patient ter book until

her finger over tl ib oould read by bat she'conld

..jw daya after that ohe could read without putting her fingers on the let- ■ - ' it looked onnous to

tod with a wet cloth

her sight. She su see ss srel ss ever, bnt she retains her faculty m w. She can see, ou read both behind er bank ud before her face, ud deaerroe pistons', tall colors, thread a needle ud — as well ss uy little girl, with her —*—d in the most thorough e. *lfowwl

Gruite Mills st Fall ehuaetls, have render A Thev find that dne; j4 need in giving the ah the fismes had broken -out. to t h0 nnfortnnate persons employ^ in th sixth story of tbs mill; and they olere their belief that bad s proper alum given, all the lives now known to been lost might have been Saved. They also state that, althongh they believe that the owners had intended to met their mill eo aa to provide i means of escape in out of fire, ppUanees were really inanffioient to allow of a hasty axodna from tha top -*—, They are also of opinion that

lud, tbe pnptl fell in love with tifnl but poor Swiss lady. The .*.~.

informed hio pupil’s parents of the danger to wUab be was exposed. In reply word was sent that. If the tnlor would

1 shon'ld "p

ShbSteftb.

ton eons alarm in esse of file to all its stories; and expreee their surprise th ‘ In this eeMf tha opesativee tn the lour story did not hare pi -*• enough to alarm ud ea tha sltto before tbe fb