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

STAR OF THE CAPE.

STAR OF THBCJLPE

VOL. VI.

CAPE MAY CITY, If. J., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1874.

PROFESSIONAL CARDS.

>< lwWTM * * ATTOR Jf *T*-/

Attorney and Counsellor el Lew

h. r. ixmxd.aim. ATTORRRT AT LAW AND li TER IN CHANCERY. No.*P«y«iMt, Op. Mej City,

HENRY ■WAIN. MASTER IN CHANCERY, lonve yenning. Deeds, Bonds,Mort-

.BUSINESS CARDS.

OE TINWARE, n neAumii(arorxn iikatesa novaa-rcHsiauiyu oooi>a.tc. Tln-Rooflng e SpecUlty.

ivee. Tinware, Hardware, Cl lery, etc. No. a Jeekeoti eirMt. cep. M«y city. THOHas hT Rosa,

t Tailor ADealerJ^lenU'nmlahlng Goods.

ELDREDCE JOB LAWNS', QKyTLKAfKS'N

.V'BBOOTH luioxa

CONTRACTORS A BUILDERS, • Noe. 4 eotl 0, Mention Street. Cepe May City. S. 1.

WASHINGTON HOTEL I

Alee, proprietor of BOLTON'S HOTEL, Harrisburg, Pa.

McKakm’s ATLANTIC HOTEL. CAPE MAT, N. J.,

MEDICINES. KEARNEY'S FLUID EXTRACT B U C H U BRIGHT'S DISEASE, And a peel lire rernady lor

Kearney'sEitxactBuclra i^sasasgasg' KUSHEre EXT. BUCHU

“ GaUty er KM GaUly,”

iJ» died Ion* ego 1“ Preeently another smell boy stopped _t front of him—ragged, shoeless end hall res, but with a mean, jolly-looking -Fire cents' north of peanuts,” ha said, briskly. Old Peanuts poured the peanuts into "ta boy's pocket, which he held open "And hate's a tsn," said the boy. •' A torn one again 1“ said the old an. " It looks like the Terr seme to offered me just now. Where'd ro get itf" " Out of the gutter down the street,’ tid the boy.

By working herd all day,

said Old Peanuts "Well, theyaayi ' 1 penny always turns np again." Giro me the fire, quick," said thi " I want to buy acme taffy-wit!

stamps erery day.' " Well, and wba. wae t asaou arm 'Oeuse Pm going to get a splendid dinner. But I must giro my hair apullin' out, or they won't let me in," be said, laughing and trying to diait let you in Tasked Old Peanuts "Why, the^Mission," answered the ^ The (tamp* ta? gwL" said oid Peanuts, hsndlng it beak to the boy. “Why, yes. It is," said the boy. •'ITs only dirty." “ But it's tom," amid Old Peennta I told a boy just now to fling it into must be s funny boy to fling stamps sway,” said the boy, laughing. "No,” said Old Peanuts: “not so funny as you think; be only went in for being fair. But I gave bun a pint

and telling Ueafsa

patiently.

"TnJnY lies," answered the boy. My name Is Johnny. There 1 I can tore it" He drew a small thin card

pCantly.

Twelro cents," answered the old i who presided at the aland. 1 But look hers,” said the ragged litqneslioner, "couldn't you TsTem keep Thankspim' and baren't say "tore than this." He held up a torn ten .cent stamp. " That's no good,”- said the old man. The goror’mant don't take torn ones" “ There is quite a piece off it," said le boy, looking wistfully at the pile# f peanuts, “but you oould pass It l was passed on mm” The old man shook bis held, “Toro nea don't go," ha answered. “ Gosh I that's so,'' said the boy. I'm tried it in throe places. Can't beep Tbanksgirin', I s-poee. Wish I f>0 you r inked the old mu, smil. faintly. "Bat I am not keeping TbaukegiTing either.” " I would, if I war you,” said the boy. " Yd sal e whole quit" • Ion wouldn't If you had no teeth eat 'em with,” answered the old peat seller, " end didn't like 'em. Onoe ared for peanuts ; but ■ What do yon beer for eh o you like to keep etc keep It all," ( -ied to keep it: b„. tow. and that is i nothing to be ta'Jf'the^Sil

tbe^ol^

use of lolling you?"

"Whal'd I

let he went on u if It reUsredhlm to . J! hie troubles oyer gad boy beside him. "My boy John want out West ud as scalped by the Injuns. I ' cw it'd be; it was In Petmiyl -at it was . small place udhalfV and mortgaged for nearly aQ it was worth al that; to be would go to make hie fortune, as he said. His wife that he left behind till be cleared hk clai *''w bar tolly* oa, why, in lass's after be was dead, aha marri. _ n, and they took John's boy with to Now York. That's ‘ T d of little Johnny."

sr him. Atlartwl

land. He was keeping with his wifa, and hia i Johnny. They were ell at the Tillage -*—*• Macing hymns, ud then again old fann-honae, eating their Thankagiring dinner. Little Johnny climbed on hia. knee and kissed him, * than pulled his hair in fun. Don't pull ao hard, Johnny,” be •aid. And then be opened his eroa. “Yes; I must pull, ifyoo don't wake S ’ eaid a yoloe. " We tried ticklin' erorythin*. Ion aleep eo Bound." Old Paanuts eaensd hia eyes widely ud rubbed them, but anil be was afraid that ha was asleep, for the two Johnnies stood beside him. '• Went to Central Park after all," said the first Johnny, “ ud found him looking at the uimsLla, Thought mobbe I would." "Are you my grand pop?" asked Johnny nnmber two. “ If you are. I'm triad, though yon made me lose my The old mu drew the boy to him and held him closely in hia arms as if he were afraid he would lose him again. "And your mother?" be asked. " Will she let me haro you ?” " She died," answered the boy; " died long ago—him too; ud I take care of myeelf helping a junk man.” " And heraafter^Grand^p will teki Thank Ld! I haro^found yon, and

LOSS Of THE BROOKLYN.

Cbe Detroit papers giro ulam of tks dimeter to propeller Brooklyn. The ro belonged to the Northern Transportation Company, and was bound from BuflUo to Chicago with a an eral merchandise, exploded 1 sight miles below Detroit,

So, hand in hud, the three walked ip the Bowery, ud down a side street, a Old Peanuts’ lodgingi. He bonght cooked turkey and other good things . n his way there, ud at the door he stopped to ask a neighbor or two to n and help them be many."

happy, biassed day they had,

after all I How they talked ud laughed, ud how Old Peunte leaned back in his chair ud almost cried with joy when Johnny sang a pretty song *—

•a— .a-. 1,'g le,—j -*

bowed hia bead in penile •ul pi *•- «- in fact, ha ir hale ud hearty yet. [hie very year be and Johnny !»pe to jeep "ThuksgiTing" with the other Johnny ; and after dinner they all are going to ride in the horse-can to the Park to see the animals,—Mary it Oil-

■ jacket pocket ud held it Read that,'* he said, trium

a dinne

The oli

Dorfling.” You I" he aaid. Hie handi shook __ -hat the card slipped out of them. J net then there came a gnat of wind, ud away went the eard ud the boy after it. The old mu tried to call him back, but he waa too much agitated to apeak. He shook in erery limb, but be started after the boy, running as fast aa be oould. Bnt the boy ran twice aa fast, and be disappeared around a Then the -old mu railed a J, “Johnny I Johnny I Stop, Johnny I 1 ' He turned the oorner, breathless, but the bor waa no lonrar

— sight. On went the

right end left, p

r wildly down

I only be thought, " How silly I am P He has found hia tinkot and gone to the Mission dinner." Bo, with renewed hope, he tamed hie steps toward the Mission. He explained hie errand to the doorcaper and waa nab a red into a Urge tom, where two bnadred or more boys ad girls sat at long tables toughing nd talking merrily and deronring good things. Up and down the passages Old Founts walked, gaging at roxy brown-haired boy ; hut be did

•t see Johany.

Then the children ware appealed ta _ilenoe was nailed for and the question eaked, “la Joha Dorfling hen, or dees -mo know him ?" But all the ohil-

ahook their beads. The enperin-

nnt then searched the hooka and 1 the name "John Dorfling,” he , “but ao address. Ha' probably did not know it Many of the ohildren

innot toll where they lire."

“But I uppoeelie will cornels again

sxt Sunday/ aaid Old Feuuto.

The enperiotendent shook hit head. It to doubtful," aaid be. " Ton

Utile daughter of fire years, w— _ principal actors. The father, a we known and respectable mechanic,who name we omit, had been out all di idling up-town. Boring the day I had taken aboard too much of tl friends prerailed upon him to go non: ~Ie made the effort ud got almost when hia legs refused to carry

a glrl,atarted home, both crying at the disgrace aa though their hearts would break. Arriving at the gale of their reaidenee the - ther went in. Not ao the Uttle Id. With tears streaming down her eke ud sobs that could be heard around, she stopped at the gate, t looking at her mother, then at her .__ier, ud again toward hi aa if beseeching her oonaei... — .. ■ ■* V> the place where he waa down degradatioi '

n with ua throe n

ty again. . an wilting n away without any

ried along to the Oh all nor. "Ha has the ten peanuts teo, but if he to like hto father he will some beck." So he went to hto ■tend. Tarn sly expecting to find hie grandson there. But the other Johnny

'You ought not to lean your aland 'ihoct anybody to look after it,” he said. " A lot of fellows war sgoia' to make off your paauuts, but ?'— pened up and noUowed ' Portico

d learned at ragged-

There waa only u instant's wanting. Passengers ud arew heard a sharp, painful hisa of a team, and had not more me to turn their heeds when the crash came. The captain baa atending amidships talking to his first mate ud a passenger. ^His flist censer l, «t*if*the propeller waa grating on rocks, ud he had not tune to cry before he was picked upend buried, clear to the pilot-house, tending beeide it. A greet booming, crashing sound fllled hie ears, ud for u instant he •tnnned. As be acramblod^nj) he pluka, and beams, ud then the eteam-

wotinde, ud the rir

cargo.

The captain, whe

Howard, instantly oca nr red, and finding b _ ' about Having the tires of others, ew Border, a passenger, was Mixed by the hair a( ha waa tanking, sad drawn to the pilot-booM, which

rbere he ■nitained on with hto right

hud, hia left arm being horribly eruebed. The first mate, Del Byder, fighting for life among the debris, ift arm broken ud crushed. The •ared him. The eabin boy, i ad whose name to no'

when *

get on hto

o him, told the boy to g.

tturned to the pilot-hooM, ud placed the boy high ud dry above water, “It waa awful," said the captain; "awful to hear the women shrieking, ud the wounded men saileake 1 One poor fellow, who to bare both legs broken, paddied about for two or throe minutes, ‘to agony, and then threw np _ ud wont down," While to the pilot-booM the eaptain — - Jody float paat him—a body without head or anna, and sa it pushed way through the broku bales ud

reddened with blood. d to have been the body

deck buds.

again muaged to get on bia feet, wb she safely carried him home. Ws m reported this affair but for one pnrpo that it may meet the eyas of this p< fallen father, ud, for the Be —'le end loving child, be will It himulf to be the debased being he

Detroit policemen,

ouae about 10 c

uw a mu drop from heard smothered cries i

E3H

the house in his olnlohoa. “Well,' " ho officer, "it looks ■uapi.alcna s you drop out of e window that way." " Well,''replied the man; leg a aigh, *■ whan the old womu' gyt» her dander up, I ain't particular about

According to all late accounts ua must be a charming place of dodos just DOW, Burglaries ud data are not only of nightly, bat of eoeumnoe. The, polioemu to own in that oily, baring eeaaed to because the mnuioipality la too to pay for inch a luxury. Open itiag houeea^biead thsur rictima of lin^toey^um’^ocenJytirien

cold, I

i Taring : as, a ohilltl I _ ." Thu is it, aaya ,

&£& Unabridged

now much in the mouths of erery bod; and especially in company with the j morning muffins. Now it to that wa begin to wtfnder whether just a pint or ao of warm water would sot make a grateful addition to the pre-breakfast bath ; whether we shall not tell Mary Chambermaid to put a cover or two more on the bed; whether it to advisable to laare the topuehof the window a tittle down during the night aa . -i-— a. u .urt the fur-

e poor Dt i little bi

, .. a presoat of low temperature ud daylight of only nine or ten hours' duration. We pan play the

through honest October our preparation tike so i Crnaoea. We get 1

and it ‘

a siege. For irioua to think ae we grow more homeiah in our feeling, abbreviating days, how with the perfection of modern improvement we have abolished the fireside, which Rlowa ud radiates now only in poetry. Wo are Fire-Worahippera pure and simple no longer—wo arc only a sect of " it pertuaaion, the devotees of Hot r I Seated around a register or a ire, maybe we loro each other quite well, but the fire-place brought play fuoy, ud old romantic dreams ; it a plain and boneet, and Dot in the -• til Dr. Franklin, who e sought _itil their a to considerably more than legion, to it that the newspapers arc foil he literature of atove advertising, beet borner hardly eteye in fashion er than a woman's dresa. Wo arc enough to remember stoves invented by that great theologian, Emunel Swedenborg—this waa the " air-tight" • '— parlance. TT ’ *-

This to supposed

of the deck

. — propeller (jod after the Brooklyn,

aero looking up the nrer new a * mass 01 boards ua spUntcx fly i in the air, ud the concuealon of cxploaioa staggered them. The • put on a full head of nteam ud bed the wreck within ten minntee. when eho lowered all her boat* ud hurried to save thoM floating on pieces ■ ~ ' ' all aehooner low- , to fish boats put out from the Canada shore. One by one the email boats pieked up thr — vlvora, finding every peraon but eaptain mere or leea injured. Some ef the poor fellows oould not suppress shriek as they were lifted over th •Idee of the boats, anna and lege broke ud akulte crushed. The Gobs took o beard six of the laved. Twelro peraon ere killed by the explosion. Axuaelastleu la South America. A Bnenoe Ayres paper says: A important discovery hu jnut bpe —a. w— .—„ tjme paat well-known Isidro haro frequently disappeared without uything being illy left a e the Ban Isidro station, ud the persons ''eomstated immediately tnd left for a farm

pent, thongh considering his tempora- • ino wonders what he wuted of a n uy season. The learned ud eoientiflo Olmsted, it will be remembasad, biongUt forth twins. These old

, The public tto novelty and

it poetry u there in

upon the new in“The Radiant

ST™

Base Burner; hi

ing Glory;" here “The Brilliant;" hero "The Gem-:" here "The Grown Jewel;" hero "The Dew Drop" (cooking); here “TheFearless.” The housekeeper reads of all the fiery merita ud

pliad for it, ud to

of the peace k happening to sginod it migl

qul vice, ud

^ arms for the of the bus peeled rebels.

ried into the bouse through a doorway " ' intrant* even one at a t They found tbem■w ud uort hallway, . entered e room about flvo yards square, in whit* were a number of aa riotous ud bones, and inscription I, daggers, murderoua

a. On

e same i . I’oat'oi plaoa to recall the memory of the degg.r which, some years uo, caused the death of the Itatiu Oonml in-Bsuoa Ayna, ud e inscription *— ta atoo full of

. the lover

frequautly reminded of ue oeginning of that wonderful soene: “Hamlet— The air biles ahrewdiv; it la very oold. Horatio—-It to e nipping ud u eager air.” We are driven by it into a fuss

•alien. In a small wav ire are Dr. Kane, atowing ud fitting ' ' hyperborean adven-

geiation are at bud ; the nlghta of 2° above 0 er of 1“ helnw am aleadilv

sweeping toward ‘—i and day rs* duratu . . ,

K ‘ rite no longer: wt

the old Northmt

go through

THE FOS1TIOS IS FIRISG.

to affect to utile at the " ridronleus " •tares of the riflemen at Creedmoor. ng on their backs, their bellies and eir sides, may be aisared that those ntlcmcn only follow the prentice of irmiahors and soldiers on tine of bat i at abort range, in time of war. 1 nr of the battle of Win-

thair backs, ud turned ..me loaded on the aide, add fired lying on the belly ; some fired from the knee ; but very few atood upright. even to fire. Yet it to almost incredible to betiero the havoc that waa made upon this tine during that afternootb Out of three hand red and fifty proMct, rank ud flic, our regiment lost one hundred and eighty-eight, or * u one-half. We had ta front division, all veterans years' standing, ud we, on almost as wail seasoned ne. The bnlleto of the e , — _ . paaa over heed; they biased through the long graaa, searching out their victims with deadly aoeuraey. ” re killed by my aide aa they toy i their faces, the ball striking the head er breast, and ao persistent waa the low range of the fire ta front of

[ oar tine, delivered by the mi dr backs, on their fades, ud, t_ oally uw in one instance, from behind the body of a fallen comrade, had produced a like deadly - - -

rith bodies, might hare uaweret lie affirmative, bnt I had direet once on the subject a faw days afterrard from a wounded soldier of •*—

y3>r

ind^sft; they were struck

that I oould hardly betiev. really knocked over, but thought, — ingiy. “■ *■—*■

differs

Creedmoor, tie-field. Bnt Ice

cold desuetude.

of ell these, ud anch to the

meat of red hot riches that he hardly knows which to choose. Unhappy

mu! There to trouble before him, whichever may be hto Mlection. When the myaterione machine select-

ed by him haa been aent home—ner1 It i, onJied " The Ruby "—when

{Taeta

J a dozen doors I Tht o thing to beautiful. Gothic or Moorish,

a or Corinthian ; bnt often it tea nitre a first rate engine with a certificate in hto pocket, to r it nooesefully. You leant how manage it ta time—uy about the U of February—and Ibis irould be cheer-

ing, only that you'

jow'pattorn.with much prettier decorations, next year. Happy are you " tweet (pring-tiite ‘ ■

d and 1-y tiu-

cold and carbonic gas. Weil, if we *

canac there are not ninety end ninL — ferect styles of atovse.onc hondred ud one varietice of fnrnaeee, innomerabie aorta of ooal, incredibly thiek-eotod boots, ud froat-d^- 1 “** *■*- rorttoed ud for — -- add without charge our tittle contribution, which to only the philosophical advice—take it ae it eomee. There will be at tout thirty ooldoat days of •1.. aaaacn - siv enal/*t snow-storms of

Memory le t— gists. What we wish fo (ud ao we eloee) to about one hundred fifty of the happiut davs of

_ jmpartmt-nt in a sleeping ear oa tlie Hudaon Jtiver railroad, ud staid in it until the train left at night. At St. Lima I took the Mie-

aboard of the sloop Henrietta, ai ■ to Corpus Christ!. There I pc

fi^htft

en in'tLe eervioe for three

Then men tell right

tofut

not, of e.

in shooting l

. targets the bat-

ivut a posit er in aktrmii

orititm

ef of the Corpus Chriati told Hutohinaon that he to come back, that be owed him 920. I volunteered to pay the ‘ ’ ‘Parker aaid. roughly, 'I You are the defaulting trouurer of Chicago.' We started back ud got to a ranch within three miles of Corpus Chriati. when Parker stopped ud uid, • You’d better fix this thing ap; I don't think you wut to go back, asked ‘ How oould it be fixed ?' and ■arker replied, ■ By paying me (3,000.' paid the money willingly in tha chaparal, ud reenmei my journey. " At one o'clock the eame afternoon — — — by Parketj

SSiSS vt the first mu that

Padro Manyel,

i't aht

™ Parko.. . - , a parlay of wot Pedro eame back and told me it waa te, that they would murder me unit surrendered all I had. I threw t valise at them, containing 942,000 bonds, and 917,000 in money. They all —nt into a ' hackle' cloae by to divide s spoils. Not knowing the value of > bonds they began qu ureting, and T a asked to divide the spoils, i sake, xker whether he would take bonds, d ha rotnaed. AU at length agreed leave tho hackle, ud I divided 917, 0 in money, then called them in ut Itribnted it ■bare ud share alike, .jay then left me and weal to Corpus Cbnsti. I gave Hatchinaon the imbalance ud bones, ud ha too, ' Pedro Manyel ud another started on with mo toward Bre At the i About midnight I wi

battle by i

daring tho war. And while I say litis, I yield profound admiration for the marumanahip displayed at'Creed, by both natives and foreigners

a recent letter, than t * diphjisosM as weii aa.ili,...

characteristics, onr first efforts wt House tho spirit of the patient by neans of orilietem to resist the power tnd leaden infinonce of diteaso, which mveloped him like a cloud, stupefying and befogging every tr—*—■*and effort of the will to . The invariable effect of oriti-

np the patient in mind

1 heart tt

might and

inutity of ioe broken into amali bite rhich could be easily taken into month ud swallowed or allowe. melt, lotting the piece slip aa far back u possible around th*'roots''.of the tongue, to nails ud upper part of “•* throat. This application of ioe . made every ten minntea, day end night, in til every vestige of thtyoanker cad lirogpearod ud the Inflammation cabDuring tho day the p?tl«nt»- on rery aiek, oomld help thamselva the ioe if a supply ware pi vied at bedside or near at hud, but during night watchers were reqnired to |

patients. Thu ease 01 treatment wee faithfully followed as long aa there were any traces of the disease r'—• ud although we had over sixty a—*s- a-" —a —inter, ud „ t , _ J loat not a patient after adapting lonrae the application of or be diffleult, if not impo ordinary hospital routine . , prectioe, even if deaired by thi patient; but the application of ioe may be made under uy otreumatanoea, ud there must be but few who cannot afford a few pounda of a medians so i, bo pare end eo powerful s efficacy of tho im treat m beiog applied .eoutinuoualy until j trace of the fugue growth baa disappeared ud the swelling and “ mutation inbaided. Aeidl ud a ■ and fashionable gargles wU. — ne meaure check the morbid growth, t they cannot allay the floroe heat d reduce the inflammation of lolled throat. Ioe will do both, it Injure the patient Take Care of the Eyes. Short-sightedness to a malformation • ' * —' ‘“re, as short--tv; ‘

which grows np andaoOTmulates with increasing years, util tha time as for him to um it when it to ready forhim. Bnt the father retains —i-c v- -i-i— 'tt himself, to

no right what this, hia own it all that he

rbetewr he wiahM f

When the old man t giro awaf each of -

property, as he wishes, but does ut giro away is buried for fear that ha mar need it ta

world. When

g, and crossed the river to Matatn e skill. On the wharf Ot m *"bnt owto 1 **!. 0 * t^cy failed to reoouixo me. In lists

. The natnre

•ed to protoot me, however. Crus Carson, the sheriff of county, and the American Slatomoraa called to see nee. snt mo in charge of two ofliiuggled mo —* -* **- 1 —*■

into hia own honae. Whili

t yon (Inspector Murphy) had an interview with laid ta bed not six feet aa were bargaining for my

The following day miles out of town. George Farrier's iuc He waa described to

Oorttaaa I ray while yon retaro. Corip for $20,000.

tas'a ranches, fifty

m'js

frighten away the evil spin! and seen re hia soul to tha good angel's charge. There to always some man, usually the physician, to attend him. whs, immediately npon hie death, designates aevoltarge of the corpse, and in the night take it away and bury it secretly in

some crevice at rock in a lone cliff, or

tetimes in a grave, taking great care t the sepulcher to not aeeeeaible to wilt! beasts, and that no one else knows 'he body to buried. Hia arms, ^plemeuts, and clothing are all with him, ud hia horaea ud dogs killed, but no food to put in the ud no human sacrifice is ever or permitted. The Indius are •itire that there will be uy use CM worldly things beyond the but for feu there may be, the ion seems never to be neglected, young mu falls in .love with a you* maiden ud they agree to marry, they do u without further ceremony, end go to bateekdeping with or without

of their pa

no obatoele. Should the youg mu's father object to the alliance, the girl's parent! consider it etiquette to object also, ud matters become complicated. If, however, the young fellqw can prevail upon hto sweetheart's paps te giro the girl up, and cu got away with her in spite el hia fetber, the old gentlemu to supposed to give in gracefully ud oontribnte hto blousing. Inasmuch aa tplo provision baa-bean made from boyhood, the young buck rarely find# him self in need of assistance to begin hto married life. But if through misfortune tie to poor, help to to given him by-both famitiea, nnto haa behaved disrespectfully toward them, when he haa no right to expect favors. The greatest respect to exacted from one ud ail toward thou older or greater in authority than T&ey are hospitable to atrangera. If a poor mu cornea among them and by bia behavior gaina their reaped, he ut furnished with a bone ud good outfit, whtoh he is at liberty to um as ho pleaaee eo long ae ha' remains^ with

he i

I for

The Utea at present number something over 8,000. all told. They pruHoe no indttstries, but are rich in honM can than Indian. They are pesoeable alwava • hnaat that no Ute retained in

with tha tribe ever

of being n

honest. How brave they ate .= opv- ■- discussion, bnt we know that they are ‘ Beared at the Arapahoe# ud

Cboyenn

aide whiskers.

ranobo I received a letter

you asking me to oomo ud see , _ _ I also received a telegram from my father, asking me to return, bnt I waa guarded closely. In tho opting I wut to Monterey, from there to San Lnta Fotoei, and then to the city of Mexico, thenoe to Vera Ores, then to ”—me, then to New Orleans, and then passage for Liverpool In LiverI met Senator McPherson and Ai-

Toffey on the street, bnt they in not know me. I returned ■'

few months ago in a Oonart. . -ent to Canada,end traveled all through Je# Western Btatea. I wrote a letter te Mayor Traphagen, telling him I intend-

ed returning.’’

B. F. Bailer on Ike Press. At tho Army of the Jsmaa festival, ten. B. F. Butler responded to F .oast, "The Frees." Ho eaid la ope ing : That most haro been a very fi •nee of humor which detailed me 'present the proas—me. who sm te proas what that tittle tomb tl Mary loved waa to tho wolf. After aome remarks in his pecuh •tyla, Gen. B. ooneluded u follows : Again, air, I understand that the prase will tboronghlyud exactly represent the people. If the people do not demand, they will not giro, ud the— fore if there is uything to-day to expected from this presa ud ita oc doctors, the fault must tie with

and the publio taste purified; when no details of personal aeudal, no prurient picture of violent life, no hisloiy r* that which should bo banished, wul I found in the publications of the When that day cornea, air, tlx m will be, indeed, what it ought I , and I trust in tho future will be tl itedium of our liberty ud the it * say to

Death by FolMnlag. At a meeting ol the Boston Medical Society one of the ■peakers said: ' ualysto should not be tho —"-a' as of poisoning. id important, at

C al Iowa. Ha bad h ■ — — aving murdered Dr. Bordell iu street. New York. Blood waa four

ridiculed in the publle p: excess of seal and what wi All aorta of objections or physicians who knew nothing of toxicology, bnt, after one of the moat remarkable trials on record, found gnllty, and the judgment oi me chemist* wa* at length fully vindicated by the Mientlst*. The English Sparrow. In -hit “ Kay to North American Birda," Mr. Coura eipmotcl hto apprehensions that the English sparrow would molest ud drive away our native ida. Ho now wntew to the Ameritfatuniliet that these appreben- > have already been verifieq. From Her written by Mr. Thomu G. Gentry, it appears that in ncighborbooda where they extol tho English sparrows are driving away the robini blue birds and native ■parrows "The,

sr'K&nfn Oonea hu already been opposed to th introduction of tho English sparrot ‘to for other re “ to oonatry, and that the good they