STAR OFTHB CAPE
THE CAPE.
voL-v
CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER ». 1874.
PROFESSIONAL CAROS.
ATTOR JIKYS-AT-J-AW. U'H. Mlcnd the < ourt« •oalliofCMidcn.
FR.tVKl.IS r. WMTCOTT. COCKBEIXOR AT LAW ANIfMAKTKH IN
r.R-Offle»tCap« bl
ATTOR K ET AT LAW A140 MASTER IN CHANCERY. ■ jNjKPorrrfUrtK, (•po M.> au. Mm WH. T. HTEVESfl, COMMIBBIOBER OP DEEDS AND COSVEYARCEE,
DR.J. F. 1XAM1SG,
>Siy» tnd Ibtarday. ■EERY SWAIN, . MASTER IN CHANCERY, Convoyanclng, Deedl, Banda,Mar A d ott ( 1 « * lfp[| vm£c»|!rM.y’ouuuvI'S Dtnnb-
BUSINESS CARDS. HAYSES dfc l*ETTIBONE,
o vim-FVMyiEiii.ru ooooa, ic. Tin-Roofing A Specially. Alumlao HI- Op* May Oily. I. II. IIF.NEZET A lino.,
THOHAN B
day ha look
walk. Lot Ul
Ha delayed long
at laat the'pnMuaT n
it wma to be bronght
eaine the difllenlty. 1 be placed ? for their Ai delect the elighteat eha
had an inallnct that
wrong. The daughter — window, looking np and down the atreet, while ebe (I elmje thought of her ee though ahe ware a unique, like s
teapot) opened thi '
Bnt they “-KJ"
;ss
ISAAC H SMITH,
ELDREDGE JOHNSON, LADuar. oEmSSrlSra jfi> cn. DKK.va/:oommiriKs, 38 Weahlnaton v
HOTELS. WASHIHGTOli HOTEL!
McMakin’a ATLANTIC HOTEL, CAPE MAY, N. J., IHrretly on the aaaahnre. Open all Hi ga»&h.N B j - i;****W!£!
MEDICINES.
KEARNEY’S
FLl’ID EXTRACT
BUCHU
, . blhe only ranMdy lor II It 10 11T ’S DISEASE,
?a;!S«fflste! , :ssAS3;
Bladder and Kldneya.
Hpennalbnlio.a.Id'urorThoFaer Whltfla, Ir-
Hilled*
hM^t 0 .’;
naiadtae pfiee ... ware both arm led, the trembling rio
tilh aeeailrd by both
gwitnina eenffaeaM indeed, ail hit treaan
ready. I saw them later inspecting it enrionaly and with eager eyce, for they bed e raepioion of ite nine, end, after all. true ted to hia lodgment. Indeed, lutlerlr I noticed that tllia _■ inspecting the cnbineta, and u once I had surprised them with their heads bent down crer some
figure.
... . talking j called bfey’s man" and what he bad uo. This did not make much impreaion, but in a day or two I again heard remark about Dimhley's man to the Toot that he was -coming to-morrow, i onr next little walk, grown curious oout the matter, I asked my father: 11 Who is Dimbley'e man, lather V He started. " Why ?*' lie maid, *' what about bim ? What do yon know abont him ? Who wants him 7“ “hose quealions were put quickly with agitation. I told him what X heard, whim he turned '
at act's of my f aiber'a life st whisk assisted, namely, the old teapot. That should be mine and should not be eted to the prolanation of a nnle.
phi kL”.
ould be awful; they -might > torture, they should nerei e I had concealed this relic. m were laid. I ohoae a mo1 they had gone oat, and, me into my confidence, pretxecute the daring sake crons task. The teapot h a few other articles
... — _ high bracket of antique pattern, over the chimneypiece. Even atanding on a chair I ' it; atari waa not to be nstrncted a (art of ladder formed of oh airs, which, with much trwpidntiou, I aaoended. I secured-the grotesque teapot, .bnt, without ever haring beard the Latin quotation "neilit dcjoencuk," I found myecll cordially indorsing ita truth,.and stood **■— preoarions balanoe. earefnlly - * w and not knowing
To get down and
lare the teapot, it might be thought, onld be the elmpleet course; bnt, with, ly nerronsnees and lia own inseenrity, io structure now began to totter. The sxt instant 1 heard her on the stain. When they were tired of scolding end beating they had gone down stairs; "— -ratting patiently, T — <
.„ lily and stole do-
had not thought it worth while to .. 'lore the frmgmente which lay there in heap—the onrred handle, the leering me, the spout, the lid. I gathered
the year 1799, and ita reeurrenoe in the yeela 1833 to 1838, aayi the New York Times, gare rise to the theory that that theymlght* lie expected regularly each thirty-fourth year, and lor the four or fire yean immediately suae ing. Accordingly a third shower predieted for 1807, and for the y immediately following it True to prediction then did occur a moat .. s.s.. o( mM eors in 1867, irary November since — been a like phenomena., oept that the number of shooting stars has eaeh year decreased considerably. Upon the night when this periodic shower waa to be looked for the pointment waa fully kept. It is that 300,000 stars did not flash through
3. And neither •a thickly aa.
w flakes," i pcaran rmbreed tl
. . I gathered i up tenderly, end, ee I did to, saw .■ . ^ folded
e email piece of paper, f
it. They wi
We returned hnrriedlysrfeei fever, and, win iw to inapeot hia treat found all safe, though
the things.''
id Handling
And the frosts of * Why on serth don’t thsy cbsngs It
Ih nobody tbsrs to ste 'im bet rrlpplsd <
1 1 msy go bank In my dn
ROMANCE OF A TEAPOT. Our grotesque teapot waa an • decidedly ugly wearing a perm and disagreeable grin, and with a kind of snake arrangement for handle The gentle aaaociatione—the day's her done, the drawing in round the fire, the ftmily circle, with no oh and not inebriating reenlterholly incompatible with the n .. nch an article, and the speoteole ef the suable fluid poured from aueh e • 7 gentle hende elmoet e painful Bnt I would hot part with it for any money ; it is held in affeotioi a cherished heirloom. Tel it ie aged; indeed, from the network ol wka which covers it, even ■
restoration, deemed Impossible at flrat, wan undertaken for a large sum of ich wae paid wHh - - • - 1 brought ahent w ing to hear. hedajthat
. in it, nlthough we tried herd to do eo, end ne to ita nnlquenees, we
thU
thought th i world en
One day there
-> “y » shook, f little Cnnklotou, ee the neighbore end
>on end sriosUiew!
Eeamey’sExtradBuclni r 2 r AM t , S^S5'^ , i-M'!sr'
KEARNEY'S EXT. BUCHU
Ales 1 a stepmother
S'FlSJS&MSSrt
shrinking nod timorous; he iver have had eourage to carry iherne into execution. Thnnoe-
jan a new and, for me. terrible life. They bronght no money with them, though ho Tie persuaded that be -ms doing what in sailed "a good
■is*-"
They vetjr soon oonvinoad him of the
could not be oonoeived. Ever in the dey they were making i
tory of "the property" about them with a questioning eye. An order waa sternly sent forth that all bnying waa to be atm given up, end that "good money" was
£1? tenth's; ^tohedlealon^
the property, counting them and taking good ears to aeoertain their value. All our life in that koaee was of as ' den changed, Our poor dear fat teemed bn shrink and oower away der this dsepotism. Aa for ma, I that nil happlnrsa waa gone and thi was living in prison nnder the ehs. a . of jailers, lian'y were the little furtive walks he took with me-I being no olds* than eight or ten yearn—whan we ,/£fl5y to.
„—. -lie opinion end
eollaotion.
He read the whole • glance. The color flew to hia cheeks, and, with vehemence that waa wholly artiflelal and unnatural, he addressed
the party.
"I know well what nil this m he said: "IHnot have it-Tll
low it It ia robbery. I'll no. with these things bnt with my life. Oo awsr. sir." he said to the gentlemanly
property. They are
A'o oo mm jnmioe, the gentlemanly and declared truly that he hail merely
lot to be valued or
trees ores," he cried.
I'll send them away ner than have them scattered. Mind, e warning, for they are part of my The two ladies were much taken mk at this sudden explosion, and in tried to soothe him. Bnt for the
ie terribly
lyingiB ild eyes end all the
lymptoms of fever. A doctor was sent 'or to attend him—en eminent pmeti*
v only one whom be seemed uixe, though indistinctly, re waa fresh whispering end — of papers end property. And again his rjt* peered out wistfully toward the door, an if he oould sen " spectral images of his colleotion fit _ ing away in the direction of Dimbley'a. He grew worse end worse, to my inexpressible grief. It one morning passed around the house in e meet — were to lose him. nnlngfor me and to by the band to lead me to hiai. ' wae a piteous intelligence in hie eye, and a gleam of light came into K as he -iw me. He was moving hie arm * linting end trying to apeak. The lady who wae his wife kept tornMVebo*wcaidnj heririto But he kept his imploring glanoe fixed on me, muring-an though he would olutoh something in his band. I
s that ought to be preserved, end ently brought the whole mass away ■earned hopeless. I tried myself .. ie the piece* together in many
ferent ways, but it —
driL done save by a miracle-jS miracle, howlater. In a tort of despair I Said it •aide, end then carelessly opened the
paper.
It waa signed with his name, whieh wae enfllelent to give it en interest for me. And yet this only made me feel
of eartle
could over restore e long time ind< c» myself seriously to lip ofpaper. It began, "Oodldl to m tated that it revoked the particular date, and left all bis personal property and effects, including the ohina, which waa to be acid off, ‘ hia two children. This I did not qnite understand the time, nor did I see the fall force and meaning of it Bat seizing a favorable o.iportunity I got out of I' house, and burned to e fneudly & Baker—of course bald end benrvolt -to show it He started as he read. " This makes a moat importeut difsrrnoe," he said ; “you must leave " Ith me, and I will oall np in the mot Ererythirg, ee it proved, wee om he cruel pair got nothing, save t mall sum that had been settled on h I the time of her marriage. The oolleetion brought e vast eui inch more than any one had ever a cipsted. And the teapot, aa I ha
1867. Bnt it it the theory only
eoreasing with each year succeeding 1867, and that reqo
was amply satisfied. From n until early dawn there «
they a
have expected, moat of
re flashed oof from the vicini _ us Leoina. In short, without ig to magnify in the least the
bore that were visible,
idant enough to show they oould not be the sporadic or
accidental shooting stars of any oaanal evening; hut were really the remnants or after-thought, so to speak, of the magnificent periodical display of 1887,
— the period ia thought to be r years, cannot bo again extore 1901. Bo remarkable a
thirty-low
w aa to ita explana-
WHAT WE MAT EXPECT.
llAltlNd TRAIN ROBBERY.
The ocoentno weather through
the country baa been passing for months constitutes a memonbl
toorologic cycle, of whieh seen the end. Binee the
have not, ment prevailed in this city, say 1» part of j Toronto .Vatf, in consequence
has been rumor prevailing that a gigantic rob-
bery had been perpetrated on the train of the Great Western railway, which
the eity from Hamilton at 7
re ^lingered into o
That the great continents underolioal changes of olimale by na inappreciable is a matter of hu
far to be ignored. 1 in 1857 and 1858, ■
these nou-periodie rieiaaitndi been sensibly felt In the y< Central Europe that the
- u *■ to a mew
, in Paris, al
dried np, were left uncovered. Strange say, simultaneously, however, the .. »1 of Lake Ontario wa. t»e f«.i higher than ita mean 1 mined by fourteen yean' observstiot "te few yean preceding 1810 ,tb II was so large in Pecnaylvani - American geologist showed tbs
lion arrived at hour, viz.: within a! having atopped there k S and baggage, started fo i train does not stop at U proceeds atr_ it-appears that e cam had begun
—inary clothes, entered — baggage car. The baggage-mau was engaged in removing some trunks, when the three men in question laid 'told of him, and having thrown him lown Ire main force, they handcuffed
no nr. si | him. Thia manacled condition of the height. man not, apparently, being considered
The extraordinary dryneaa of the ! satisfactory,
ould hive
ts had ita compensation
patently in the abnormal rainfall of opposite continent in t! ' —
phore. While the Ohio i bare been ^sluggishly
M."?
— 0 — —^ alarm. The marauders, having Mississippi i made one prisoner, passed through thi —i-V tkA. i —i-*- .a ’“-s expressman,
had been re-
PreeattUMt Against Fire. r. John I. Durkrv, Fire Marshal ef Si tclsco. in rinsing hi. tenth usual i te the Beard of I'nJerwrilets ol th the remlTJf"*:i"."'KvTi, Be well aeqnainted with the best wea
"^"m you^runet inske eon building by the stairway, end a (runt room, and be careful t doer? .hut behind you, for so low a * draft, and dime, tb studere^ yourmouth^i
building where there
has - and by this time the gang had Bring | iuforoed by two additional m is of ! disguised in masks and smock
The Ualtcd States Treasarr. _ BDinner't nil tares and «s Treasury >< ..re —. fiscal year, was la follows : The hooka of the offloe were closed ' ‘ ‘ itry of "
. I brain witli desperate smpta. At first, I thought it mustbe i two precious figures of Old Bow, -j Kitty Olive and Wood-
into hi ' d hia t6gl— o curious stupidity — was it my trouble I for I surely ought to hire guessed, sod gone out to o«se some other article which should the right one. While I was taking a hird’s-afe glance over the oolleetion. they came running to me again and I
jTS — one to interfere with 'Dimbley'a man," and "
«— I may i the beginning by stating th— — oipal buildings—tor there will be s definite quantity of minor one* Are in number, with above forty of floor space. Three are the ms industrial ball, tha art gallery, the maohinery, the agricultural, and the horticultural halls. The first of three approeehed from the eity ia tha Industrial hall, whieh it in the form of a parallelogram, no Isas than 1,880 feet long by 564 feet In width. But, in addition to thia, ainoe-lheir fronts are in a line r—■ the interval between them ia small, must imagtns the machinery hail tending onward for 1,300 feet m. Jnst 300 feet in the rear of the n building, and In each a position 1 uwUm^ia*tbeartgail*7- 0 *’ l £hwre be eonnaeAed during the time of the vmJta 0f°wlttL*wiU t tS D ua2l hwKdU°
iuHnito number of snilU heavaaiy bodice, technically called bolides, that wander aimlessly throngh space in an orbit which, if it exists at alVia an irregnlat one. Another theory is that this shower of meteors is canted by the passage of tho earth through oomitic matter, the particular eomet in question being that known aa Biela'e. And it ia certain that this hypothesis ia supported by many reasons, which are said to be astronomically strong, bnt which are also, to an unscientific mind, at least, quite aa bewildering as convincing. Of theories nnaeientific the number ia legion. One of them ia that these meteors are merely volcanic stones, which, having been thrown indefinitely upward by an eruption, at laat return to the earth by force of gravity. And another theory differs from the last only in placing the volcanoes on the moon rather than on the outh. Bnt, however the existence of these meteors is explained, there is scother thing about them which troubles the popular mind. Astronomere say that the luminons path which the shooting star makes in the sky is
terminatee abont lift
tbe earth's surface. ! of the stars after they have flashed soroes the speee thus marked out for them ? Aa to thia there is bnt one accepted theory : they are entirely consumed by their swift passage through the atmosphere, and are thus either entirely volatilised, or else they dosornd to the earth in an imponderable powder.
A Story of Stanton,
as hardly been Inown to ; small army of robbers having' entered s immemorial. Early he > the express compartment, saw the exS eat African river began pressman sitting by tbe stove engaged (at the very time our in looking throngh some door—' rs began to foil) and con- : As tbe official looked, he obser lo till it reached, on the j strange men, and that they wen
cued at thia point
id bowie
ice was soon rendered useless, tor if the robbers presented pistols st
ly-five miles fron
_ — , , _3 robbers presented pi tho 7th of October, when an in- j the head of tho offleial, while ise of three feet would hare put all j held a bowie-knife to hia throat, offerDelta of Egypt nnder the rushing, ing to use it if any struggle were made, ow tide. Still farther east the The expressman was then thrown down, heavy rains in Tndis, the antnmnal cy- | bound, and gagged, and bis pocketf clones in the Bay of Bengal and the ! rifled in order to find the' key of th« *— ; b!e typhoons which recently swept j safe, which it waa intended to rob. Nagasaki and Hong Kong evidence ! Tbe whole of the five men then turned conditions of excessive linmidity on the their attention to ransacking f opposite side of tbs Northern Hernia- from which they took valuabh
pbere, balancing the exo— : — —i —-—. ' » * prevailing in the United out tea. noon | oorotng io u physical changes appear anoms'ona much greatei enongh, especially when wo contrast scot tints. The propc those which caused the Bengal famine j slated of bills, gold, et
in 1873 and tho floods in 1874. Are ! villains, however, were moat dainty in they dne to rognlar cyclical causes, re-1 their seloction,for a cash-box,containing earring in cupra-annsnl periods ? So j between $50 and $60 in silver, was left it wonid seem ; and it also seems likely behind, it probably being thought too that these extraordinary phenomena I heavy to bo conveniently carried. Tht travel slowly around the globe, seme-; expressman, for greater security, hi'
at of from $12,000 to $16,000, >
iroperty stolen
old ye
il
followed changes o:
snu-spot; j
[used to
s lie vi
The bahdenffs
i office. It m
•wwm, iiu. —• uo, wio so- > la.ieiBHi and bonnd, should have 1 Jasons we have experienced ; anything of this gigantic depredi ly traceable to the variations j but tbe surprise will cease when .. ... .meric pressure 6u the earth. ; remembered that tbe compartments Thus, according to known laws of the I where the officials wore employed ' ’re, tho abnormal prevalence | insulated from Ibe other parts ol -liberty winds -on any couti- train, the jtoat-uffleo dividing them !
>rth of the
there lias been
itandmg i
te long-standing high and low pr Idle latitudes, aa transient cyoloi
depression of tiou at in west of it ;! Moreo
rly! would If; heard »-1 Queen
ESS
i, 1 *ii
Jeremiah :
& Black has hinted mysteriously that 1
tbe death of Edwin fiL Stanton, the ^ . War Secretary, waa not wholly attribn- j o MtswSbs*. <™ 4. I SgiSSWSt.
Northern theoretical
nnat n.aox intimated ro darkly other.
whispered, hut in no indefinite way. I 0, U,e l 1 ? 1 "
There are men sbont tbe nationsl capital who in conversation amoni tbemselrea talk frankly of BUoton'
qaoatiun of hours, ireumstanoea were known to very fe nd the number of those privy to t .cent has not much increased sim Outside of the Congnaaional Librarian ' a few well-trained treaty servants he eajiitol, who guard secrete as ir three family, the story below ia probably people in the com.... On tho evening of the 34th of Deiber the oelored valet nailed to shave Blanton. They were private apartment, t hia seat in the ehair partially finished hia down the razor on a 1 tan ton, stopped act _ ome water, A movement startled him, ■nd he tamed jnst In time to • glistening steel flash by the throat, leaving a streak in ita ■'nshing to the aide of Stank irber oanght the razor before a roke oould be made. He call dp, and in a few momente there were the bedeide the Burgee ■' ’ - the
Bow well the ‘ t the 'eey quietly and expeditiously *— ‘-'a funeral were lying In state.
death all that W_ Blanton waa put to Olay waa boned hit of the war."
r preventing tha payment of — * » *-l ar drafts. T" k or draft to
person to whom the money to to be haid. Another photograph to, to be nirntobed by the payee to the drawee, who will indoae it In a '■ bank, notifying it that draft has been issue
of the
Rocky mountains. . The winter and spring rains oi 1875 may restore tht water of whieh the rocks and springs have been exhausted by tbe summer and autumn droughts and thus prepare the ground for agriculture, - But in the meantime the water-oonreea must be scantily filled, the wells low and the
rebtorrenemn fountains bnt plenisbed. - In a word, the t ■a now in the condition of a tl S ' drained field. The effect
ryneea, however, will be lo c chilling evaporation of the eoil, And'
thus, in some measure, to mitigate
n Furs,
' jacket im $125 to $200, wt ev in oinn.Slid leal costs fr o $275. TrimmiBga of " pup " “■ sa by $100. It
™ toirefw
iwenty-flvo of killed in the
ana tuelr- exquisite
— — extremely valuable. The coat of a single small skin to no
leas than $160,
Trimmings of old sea otter add from $50 to $75 to tho cost of a sealskin jacket, and beaver trimmings, which are used chiefly in revamping old garmonte, increase the price by from $25
to 40.
Beaver and mink Backs am in popular demand, bnt, b warm, are told in eontiden bore fox wear in the oold climate of tha Northwest. Their price varies from $100 to $155 for beaver and from $200 lo $250 for mink. Muffs and for-trimmed velvet will be worn to match. The following will be favorite trimmings for garment - ‘ velvet and cloth : Chinchilla, fre_ ... to $30 per yard ; Russian fox, $15 per yard ; silver fox, $5 to $15 per yard ; Alaska sable, $1.50 to $5 per yard ; anti silver marten, $1 to $3 par yard. For children, furs, white eon ermine will be fashionable for For trimmings tl
$1.50 io
uni genet at fix 3, and grey fox
to Iff Ms
shown at Irem $20 to $60 in sealskin, a « to $76 in chinchilla, and to $100 in mink. Ladies'a
Re FUt Hto Fata.
George Gary Eggleston tells this story of what be calls a ease of superatition, which he met in the army : " I'm going to bq killed pretty toon," ■aid aa breve a man at I ever knew, to me one day. " I never flinched from ballet until to-day, and now I dodge rery time one whistles within twenty
feat .of ma."
any cries from being with several hundred rear oi the oar, little a robbei-y, almost iddents, had been per-
Ctdng del ShTta
i-rsy.
The Nun there
icy know little*’ er is. ami plsec them ,m adly.plnwrd lands, loney by the operatioi
r^grwS^hue.xr.^ he split rails, built fence, _, about cotton. He plowed his land deep inhe unulc roni enough to support all his' stock, to feed himself and hand-, and had •-II and family, crows grape-, makes wine and dfliKho in hu-piubly entertaining the planter- who in the beginning luydirtrd hi« ..o,i.i 1-. ol -, ,io wsy in which lam!
. Tile planters have Sfij! hey of iimne loac . What i» needed mili>r»!l tiieir'shnt -
» folly of thi ne of the ric he,
otw”d. B °7^7lu*t^o4ton. id of tiic year they found themaclvca ightly in debt. Tficy uibrtgag,-d their Jiid.i boujht^lred, -"jjpliev, made^what >lar- to produ,v. llopuig agaiil-t hojw, J j they wen- obliged to let it into *Sie
Something Pretty from the Foretl*. ! There are many who, s» they walk or' | drive through the woods in autnmu i and winter, haliitnally look around for ' whatever is beautiful or curious, and moke collections of the lovely mosses
! treasures. ‘ But hsvir
r I lection, tho
ig 8 ls bo'
and pleasing o
ef tl
tho correspondence UMtally dt
bnt the expressman, o" course; auu uus put in au appearance. Tbe obuavquenon
was that the express car wsa entered,
when the unoomiortsblo stato of things became apparent. The saf- waa fr.and nnlocked, and the door open, and tbe whole contents in confusion. The two
railway servmata were discovered iu ... - - - , - their respective compartments. Both year, hat 1 remember each
men, iu addition to being haudoufTed j an two w, and bonnd, had been eoverad over with ; P jrl "1 'be
coats, cushions, and rugs. It appears, ^
as abova aisled, that tbs train loll Port 1 ' nrck,-, ,, ■
nrriving st the j PJ“’ r
slthongh still beautiful, is outof favor ; because it catches the dust, and will not bear tbe frro ni ■
free use of the dust-bruah, id o( finding other ways of
laid sway in that drawer which the gold of kings could not buy, and yet they are relicthat grieve a- until- both our UK-art- are ■ore. I have mw dare) look at them for a
* ' rticlc. Therei
s&si bita of broken ;
of the newcat and moat beautiful of these rustic designs is mads by arranging n bunch of -Corns in their natural groups, with tho large dried russetcolored leaves of the oak around them,
on s ground of bright b' velvet or paper. Tite ad dried grape tendrils and . --'ll improve the general el.. . its mast be secured in place bj a little glnc holdisg them
Qaeet
i Wharf at 6£6 r.
lowing ,only twenty-aiz minntaH i whieh to complete tile robbery. Who the latter place waa reached the maake
individuals had disappeared, • bad assumed a new refe, pert ing among those who declaimed n
heartily against the wrongs perpetrated. Be this as it may, theyhad not been ; satisfactorily beard of when we went to I C ss, bnt it is to be hoped that e
g the whole gang may fall into tl hands of the officers of tha law.
in the )
ie rape, and introdno.
^cTunTJ
••wing, a child on the-I
Section 10 of tl Oonatitntion oi Kvening Pott, ae
rofofraffstato
lo orphan asylums, hoi .. less, and similar charitable ■ throughout the interior of
c hundred and six, re- , when this amendment 1474,500 from the Legis-
M hope, only to find the da
It is so atiil and qi al tho window wh ESS sound. There ifur presents, and turmal over, tho t to the door-knobs
ling, but hp is not the itteruig feet, his iu, ing laugh, hut there is
be assisted by appropriations. The eleventh aeetiou cuts off all town
r oily appropriations' to church schools, r to aueh asylums or chart tics aa are not distinctly for the poor, or whose appraadations have not bean aathadaad by law. The Buie cannot aid any charitable institution lor assisting tbe poor; while the county or eity can. If such aid ia anthoriaed V Legisla-
StooHds* Unions faith ; for it can be given it few words. Bays he ; "I believe t— if people oniy aet hall as wall as they know how, God will forgive the bai-
The American Eipreee Company has beenaoad for thaetarrationol a atoekto^Tt£kcM lia TYir dSUtoirt*7£i-
tiecad in Irving's History or Men York, that the Hudson once flowed ■ ■ • parallel to. the Highlands, confirmed by a doable row
Bamapo valley, from 60 to UO :
others standing, aa it — i^idMttha^e^tyjAdaaoftharaoiinUin.
A Fuuaurr Lira.—French journalits must be expert swordamau. for they never know whan limy will be challenged to a combat. One wellknown Psxlalau editor rays that last K ho fought In eleven duals, and he can show cable arms and faea hH djfcrSTe^nto^ Tbaea duels are seldom fatal, end tha
tfiem to represent a cluster oi Bi-poe, with leaves overhanging and a twig like the stem of the bunch fastened in the proper place. Ae a border to thia, the lichens, with a lew antnmn laavaa with bright lint, will aniwer. or a wreath ol twigs and briers alone will be very lutefnl To render such a group atiil more permanent, the loaves maybe made of leather-work, either oak or grape leaves, letting tl
A New Engine of neetraetlM. A new eheli, invented by or for th
foreign journal:
" It is wall known that with tha ordinary elongated bolt a ricochet fire cannot be maintained ; and as this species of firing is vary eflbotire against maaaea of troops tha leas is n matter of considerable moment. The eeiarooh, for each is the name of the new projectile. Is a percessMPt - tWre shell and a shot, the 1-ttJr of whieh rioooheta beyond the point ol explosion of the hnrsting charge. The shell portion ia'a simple >n cylinder, to one end of whieh is rared, by a thin sheet of lead, a spherical shot. On leaving the gon the combined projectile aota like an ordinary elongated shell; but as soon aa tbe explosion of the charge taken plane the cylinder of oooree flies in ,mue the shot, impelled by the
d bv reason of tt batteries the
, Jbeil might be exploded among tbe guns, while the ball would strike far in the rear among troops ; or while the shell in tbe front rank of an ad- „ ...nmn the bail wonid oou ttnne^Iowlng tt»"way throngh several
iliaity. timed bee -cecawfal treetma the p-tienl, aad
lowed lo slip as the roots ol th
main thg. until ns
This l^plicais sat,] to Oeetroy the ^tio^ue growth that impnrtao.v lo nmmr the palien, fiotn* the lethargv which acxwmpanics the dtsrs*,, and to this etetitsl treatansn, tht Di ascribes a great pert oi hit vuccma

