WASHINGTON HOTEL I
they pnoaod Polly ~ Oolloa mi Id front. - With all her power, tho nohlo woman brraall againat the rear man, and lit moment both the robbera lay sprawling o This had deep excaration, and the only'
BOLTON’S HOTEL, naxrUbuij, Pa. JO** - HeHAKIH-M ATLANTIC HOTEL,
» XeWAKl!^
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
unerring rifle nerer failed to supply his board and something orer. His nearest neighbor was fifteen ml lea off, so h little troubled with prying TUhtorm. It was in the early spring that Jacob started down the riser with a boat-load of fnn and skins. He left Polly in e of the promisee; and he left her, new bow to nse the rifle, for nerer
Nobly done, Polly, my dear; I oonld not bare made a better shot myself.' And he had occasion to say this with truth, too. Jacob Bumap
Could this bare b*en mored, PUly would hare palled it up imm but it was spiked to its idee*, t let it remain. To clues I Id be useless, for she bad not ready us to fasten it. do aha did what she reaolred upon from tho first—she ng to the fireplace and caught tho trusty rifle, end, cocking it.
but a dim lighl upon
“ ant.
saw the robber raise a pistol, id a hoabapd-a p^hh-amUigd, iraelf to flare the carrier. With
HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN,
JOHN It. HUFFMAN, Attorney and Cpunaallor at Law Chpe Hay Court Hence. N.J. I "“' 1 < ort -‘
ATTORNEY AT LAW AND MASTER IN CHANCERY. Raja Ferry Street, Caps May CUy. New
Pouy i Ah, Polly, MI said, as be drew e well-filled pair saddle-baga from the beck of hie fatigued boast, "Yes, end I am glad to nee you. Jacob has been gone four days, and ■’ 5 is getting heary." Jacob gone I Where I" Down the rirer, with a load of rara.’ Ohi yee. Well, yon aball hare the ipanV of Ismt Morton for one night at t; iW for the ne ' ’ you'll be we." "Oh, I W-eefa^r lie woman quickly—"' Thus speaking, Morton throw his sad-
dle animal fast an
al him.
D*.J. F. LEAMINB, DENTIST.
u the dwelling
SmOFIHEUPE
After this ho returned t and entered, sud wss sooi rrents of toe time over si His hostess had told hi transplvd In tho neighborhood since hia st risik, mid the risitoi gave her all the |>WS of tho Eastern valley. Lant Morin bed bean mei' ’ ' '
into for sot end
ul be peeeed to ai
ig a night at Jacob Bomap's. In fsot, » waa about the only regular visitor le hunter's cabin; and altlwogh the inrrala between Ids risiU were long, .ToUi 1 e seemed almost a fllthre to the phioA ‘ T oily Bitmap, just in tho bloom of lh omanbood, knew hia gentle, generous, able character; eo she felt perfectly ee end at borne In his prceenoo. " la it not known on the route I our load is ralasble 1" asked Polly. “ I think not—though it rosy be, till, I am well armed, and I fancy ' ould be a very lough job for any a
> tackle old Morton."
•• A man wse robbed on the meek
iw dayaaga"
"And the robbers have fled," addi
rton went to bed at nine o' aa be waa tired from hie long ride. PoL ly had work to do, having neglected it while talking to her guest; so who • wn him safe at rest she dir t to a tittle table where the candle and went to work upon tomo clothing for her child, who was aorriO; ■deeping In e comer. The old Oerman olouk upon the wall, with ita great weight end rj-ind e all oxpoaad) had ,truck ten ere Polly roeo from hi-rwoik. She had Just nu-hed tho baaket beneath the tabU Wh
THE 1JA1LY_STAR. S OF JULY AND AUGUST.
THEJOB DEPARTMENT. " istEssTd;;
After Tided into small partiea, each taking certain portion of the wood, Anglo meet upon the summit lisibu from our place of in cue the cMM should be reaching the bill, e meebe instantly dispatched to
oh&tH'i" » U" 11 iniooeee had owned our efforts. .As the difleren t parties were about to oftmmenoetfletr aearch, each under tho guidance of a neighbor living in the attention waa called to a log screes the Helds and marked that it was the ebnost frantic Atbir hersAf. We waited till the came lo not think I ever aaw •f depicted i
id anxiety now drawn on her exp roe
«.■ H"3»{
xe spot, but u wse nnaettled; her lips wefe aehy and qc
us logger. A eaarp rgn np to i
5.': , sa«r®
bnunblsa. With clasped hands and wild, harried glanoea from otw to another,she
ip to .where I
Km*, heart touching
Heave..’e sake, And V / rny ChildMy darling!—my eweet little
injOODDtl" .
Ws began our March in enmeet, apreed-
party '
Ere the eeoond ,—J himaelf, Morton came rushing into the'
with e pistol in eeoh hand. ~ ' '' he cried.
Whst U it I" he cried. , , . (fun ieta apart, sod boating the buidiM There! there 1” griped Fbfly.^poiur- hi oW«5c« Ooui o. lu some places
ooda were voy cloee and thic' brueh, and hem our progrt
—_™,»aloY and tedious—for thoi to danger to waste time in conjectnre, made a Bood deal of noi snd imrornlistidy shot the rfllaiafilegiC Mm niteStif Afla at least < who fell with a heavy BOtmir upon' «ir ^ it ^se not certain the !
e going
r, did I oo it hope; but managed to separate " ' am all. I repaired with all he spot where the stranger of my dream had led mo away from my To my groat delight I discovered very swamp I had gone through in my sleep; and beyond it, too, the very i meadow and rivulet. My heart fast. Could it be, after all, that 1 bad been directed by eoine higher intelligence I and that I waa destined to save a sweet little life, end bring joy to the almost broken heart of a fond mother f I fervently prayed it might be oo. I hurried on, and still saw everything exactly as f had seen it in my dream. I came to the hill, ascended it, snd discovered the ledge. I wss almost to the end of my journey t I should soon know! Hark I Did I not bears child’s cry I My heart seemed to rise to my throat and choke me I Could the dream be a clairvoyant sight? I plunged into the bushee, and ran around, up the hill, panting with exermit of the rocks, looking eagerly, almost wildly, at every object. Hal what wse that! Something was before me, stretched out on the rook, like the form of a child 1 I bounded forward, and uttered e loud cry of Yes—tho poor, eweet little girl there, her golden-haired heed pillowed
strained to my heart, and I wi
L Ho has too
-nd gave entrance to Jacob Bn hunter had mats part! of Lewiabnrg, and disposed to them, thus finishing I 'days earlier than ho anticipated.
Heaven bloae yon ! I w
rmured the poor,
in a fee' *
x, dear littlo
told U
two officers arrived at tho cab in, and when they wore shown the dead bodies, st once proceeded to remove them. And ere s week hod passed the whole i
Tub story is
Ariel having sailed from Brem
under command of Captain Ludlow, wss
faring the lighthouse on her me, when the captain received " -■nsfl&t* i
uttered the
truder,
"Speak but one word above a whisper, and. you die I" Polly recovered from her quick end looked op. She saw two moot, wicked, ugly looking maq, one of whom ' ,ld a cocked pistol towards her. With qaiekaem of peroeptionnatnral to her, m kls*w the pistol weald mA bb flre&jr
•• Stop the ririp.”
aa follow*:
(nation lo this quasi siisnrti do lad on the represeutalion of the Euroloan agent of the lice, who hapjM-nriMlb’ ■ be ob board, he did atop the chip, sad
Sweat tone, with a winning smile: "You ; R 000 ”V ,r AW tsoaWedidiout this loatchild—it doe* ! frpm the external a ITT- • - - - ‘j—-»-■!—nee and b
from the < fll
are nnoootij)lable.
e, but fainted and fell, could clasp her child, overcome by her emotion. derided that I was entitled to the thousand dollar reward. 1 accepted it, and then made a present of it to the heartfelt blearing afforded me far more
id in gold.
oal. Several of those present who, minute before, were eo tired from the day's work ee acaroely to-be able to drag ! their weary limbs home, now hurried off ■ to get their suppers, prooure lanterns, and continue the search all night, while 1 •era at the village, who oould not t convenient that day to give their to this work of humanity, now
'an aagerni-ss that clear-
potent wav the spell ol good hmltli myself, land Thy strength for
Ihe following day, 1'went home, went toftAf at an early hour. The very much fatigued, I oould not sleep few gloag time, and moved reatleealy to and fro, my mind filled with peinfni
the horrible dieoovery. - At length cam a confused, half-oooerioua state, an thou.that peculiar condition in which w 'fifoaBi and know we drriim, yet have n
florirotn wake. •
ml to Urn ligtiUiriu^ .hw itWbt I war out hunting thed.ll. received the nnk f rota the 1 bad he«i n..i day, and that b
mother id with a
of joy a
smothered it with pieoes <
* " ' * '"*' saved enough so oom-
I't wait, but starta off without
. end brings ,. _ is ell. My phyririaoa ap-1 court of insolvency, while his former proved of the treatment, and I well know j comrade, by | ationt peraeveranoe, comes it relieved mo of pain, and baa proved j out at last with a fortune. great advantage in the healing of the j That young lawyfir, who became disound. 1 am now able to walk, and | heartened because briefs snd case* did e wound is doing well. I applied tho | not crowd upon him while be war yet ooke ouoe every day, and by the ad- i redolent of calf-bound volumes, and had vice of my physicians continued the hop ! small use for rod tape, who concluded poultice. The treatment with tho smoko | he had mistaken his colling, and so id to be applicable to all wounds ! plunged into politico, finally settled ng from brniseo, cuts, nails, and the ! down into the ahiraeter of a middling , and I hope it may prove beneficial pettifogger, scrambling for his daily There ie-’kujioneat farmer who has The Consumption of Sogar. i toiled a few years, got his farm paid for, sugar in the Uni- bin does not grow rich very rapidly,
Uzdnaa office!* stamps, therefore, the diatiUery with it removed will fraud to be perpetrated ip by any officer o Counterfeited without bedetected by duplicating themselves on tho books of the officers. T which way wo will, therefore, and it oomos palpable that a whisky ring of extent of the one now being shown most widespread'and deep scat roption. A Strange life Closed. One who acted an important the long-ago history of oar ri the'Buffalo (N. Y.) Courier, died In the Willard asylum, at Ovid,
in Cuba, the price
i steadily increasing:
continued complies- ] with hia
aa not decreas- j ho is not product which derful st
should come from our own Southern fortunes : States, while greater now than in 1868 | picking t 1870, is by no means up to the figures | to raise i ' previous to 1860. This Is the of gold, s
□ale as
lack ol
I, after m
xintentmont mingled
anything, thongh ,. yerJ lhing Ho hears the won- -q destined
ifornia, and bow for the trouble of
ouths of bard
notations "l”* 7 ability and
never getting
ids sections are, ! the bottom of tbe
kettle, of bettor qnslity than any ol the Mark the ion sngara from abroad, and re- 1 who ar lens refining. Just after tho war i equally no of the old sugar plantations ol ahead, and
liana were devoted to cotton, os j tie those who never stick to any one itaplo brought a high price; but, ol ; trariuess long, but are always forsaking attention baa been again turned to | their occupation just when it begins to
It was oiioo thought that sugar : bn profitable,
oould only bo produced profitably on Young man, stick to your business. It with great may bo you bars mistaken yonr calling, numbers of hands; and, further, that the if so, find it out as quick as possible; cone must bo, ground os soon as out i ami change it; but don't let any uneasy But agricultural progress and science desire to get along fast or a dislike of have demonstrated tbo fallacy of both your honest celling lead you to abandon these old ideas. Instead ol immense it Have some holiest occiqation, mid mills and powerful engines for grinding thou stick lo it; il you are sticking typos, tlio product, a maohine Hko a straw-ent- stick away at them; il you are selling ter now chips up the cone, and large oysters, keep on selling them; if yon are aooehariuo matter. Common sense has I pursue the buainees yon have chosen, shown that however tho cane may dry, I peirisiently, iudartiiuuslyand hopefully, under shelter it loses none of its sugar, j and if there is anything of yon it will but simply tho combined water. While j appear and turn to aooonnt in that as tho old rollers would not press ont this j well as or better than in any other oslldried sugar it is easily extracted by the | ing; only, if ylou sn> a loafer, forsake heated water. Tljeu, too, the never-too- that lino us speedily aa posriblo, for tho ofteii ropcatod precept of a little land ; longer you stick to it, tho pome it will tilled has been found equally as j « B tiek" you.—fibienfific American.
growth of sugar •
apeak of Alanson Palmer, once the mil- i tionaire whose veaeela were the proudest that plowed the greet lakA ; whose land-
ed property waa vast in ita rhose hand seemed to turn
touched; but i drag through m
iindrod years. When, the last took place tho officers' heeds wets cut off ^nd flung into e comer with tho Judge Cole, of tho supreme court of Iowa, has resigned hia neat because the pay is too small to provide for hie family and the labor too eevere to permit him to
perform extra work.
“My ton, it's very rude for you to ask e third time for turkey," remarked Spilirins at dinner. "Ah, yee, pe, I know it is." replied tbo youthful Miltiadee, "bnt
m just consider the asnoe."
at from 1853 to 1871.
s mutability o!
yng into extreme old age of his former wealth, darkened, and, indued, it of tho expression, “a very which, if written in detail, w
larly the t
fortune, gropritb no vestige
the foil
v-rkaps wc might odd, a self-ruined □an. He wav bora in Eaatown, Wash□gton connly, May 29,1791, and came rith bis father's family lo tho then vil-
Nevida hue psssed a law forbidding any person practicing as a physician in that State who has not practiced medicine there for five years, or does not hold a diploma from an established
medical college.
The other day a would-be fashionable lady called st a neighbor's at what die
| thought would be supper t' ! in " raid tl
r Now.
of Buffalo, in 1806. Subsequently they removed to Eighteen Milo creek, this county, where the future millionaire ami pauper worked on a farm until such
□to for Ilia e
o hia
There ar
tbe physical life, says Popular Sctx Monthly, are anger, fear, hatred and grief. The other paeriona are comparatively innocuous. What is called
of love is not injurious until to grief and anxiety; on the ; sustains the physical power.
What is celled ambition is of itself hanu-
for ambition, when it exists purely,
nobility, lifting ita owner rmtirely from himself into tbe exalted eervieea of
mankind. It Injures when it f
illy, pride,
great object, it leads
performance of excee ' mental or physical labor, end lo the i
preservation of the body than to Its deterioration. The evaririona man. who i to the luxurious world to be de-
Ig himaelf of all '
gn( wmiAj, IfeUfc'pndi a long and I
By hia economy he is saving himself from all tbe worry incident to penury; by hie caution be is eoroenieg himself
lined in the foremeet! «•» them on fire when the ATp VaF# Tjeemtanliy ^ vE mf.W said, in a | Thus, in almoet every particular, he
trade, but after working foul
longer he again abandoned it and, coming to Buffalo, bo entered the employ of Mrs. 8t. John, who kept a tavern on Main street, opposite tbe site lattei, and afh-r tho war had cloeed, he bccamo a clerk for William Hodge, and
, remaining w iu, fiim for a time the Something Regarding Whisky. j young man took the half stock of goods, u an article on " crooked whisky,” | with which he started a store lit Eight-
terceting statements. It says;
revelations of Ole 81, Louis trials
it plain that in the mouth
It is popularly supposed by m largo class of farmer* that none bnt business need to acquire a knowledge
an'dpi get e living by it. Thia class of lieve that business forms are uni whereas they are very simple.. Ho is as respectful at the mentisn ol tbe drafta,' _ 0 . etc., ns he is when he hear* hia family physician talk Telle Bnt every farmer is a bnsineas ~ > has crops to go to market lo eell to the best advantage he has to sell oftentimes on credit, an< he is continually bnyiug. To all Intents and purpose* he il that the younger to fill the place* of the present generation, should learn how to handle with and accuracy the bustoeae forme and , ,n.l. which commercial men by long practice and experience have reduced
loved from the dia000,000 gallons of
■pirita without the tax being paid on it. " 'at became of these high wine* I 25,000 barrels of whisky smuggled out of onseityina single month. : 'it thi revenue law is enforced, this '."iiiekr-iA In the custody and under the in.pev.tlon ol government offloera in one place just as much as In another. Lot
e, the rectifying tnb.
first-rale colored * made a bargain with her
It-nr
er shipped abroad for
ntil it is
eaof la
in 200,000
five gallons. But to divide it way would require not leal
jugs and demijohns lo carry u out illicitly from HI. Louis; and tho case is ' ipposablc, for il would be too costid too much ont of the ways of . Nor woe this whisky sent abroad t port, for in tint ease the whisky
' lose their profits—their
~ of the seventy
qh they rob tbo
body. What
port spirit, an ( back of duty, Urn quantity of spirits must be not less Ois-i 1,000 gallons, in distillers' original casks, and tbe entry .must contain the inamcs ol exporter, distiller, district where distilled, the veafel, port of departure and port of rectifiers' and diatillcn’ aerial etampe,
ig intended to prei
•nt the absolute
anywhere manufsclnred. Hence, barrel of whisky applying for ei| tlon can bo traced, and " ' '
neighbor
1 1 thought 1
It i« stated that Bret Harto is a printer
Tho Indians inrorisoned in tho old fort at St. AnginCne, Fla., had a war dance tho other night. Fires were started within the fort, which burno,: briskly, and lighted np tbe seeno for a mile around. The Indiana n foil .war arrav came forth from a dark dnngr u
Tho a
isclfo
r Who h
Alanson Palmer's cash capital st ima wss jnst $13; bnt he wss nsti , basineae man, shrewd to calculate and inergetie to carry out. Hia trade intreaeod, and from that time until tho Inal and fata] crash prosperity seemed to attend his every venture. In 1817 he ras married to Pattie Swain, daughter if Daniel Swain, of Boston, this county. Five year* later she died, leaving no children, and in 1827 he was again marJnlia Matteaon, who Imre him
Lh her pleasant smiles. His >d up until he become one ol men of tbe whole section of According to his own eati--ss worth $2,000,000. Tho
American Hotel, for which he gave $100,000, wee one of hie purchases. The Alanson Palmer and the Julia Palmer
finest vessels i His equipage w
pleaded “ guilty" to counterfeiting cent pieces, nt Jeffersonville, few days ago, uniraoeceafully cm to obtain tho release of his olior plea that the word “ nickel" ns<
>d In th
five children. Fort
favor hi
country.
d in heavy banka
it city. Bnt al
•a de-
veloped into nothing, oostiy bubbh burst, leaving nothing but empty al and Alanson Palmer's riches took wings which honied them irretrievably away. On tho fourth of May, 1835, he made an assignment to Horatio Warren, his brother-in-law, and Colonel Alfred Clerce. His rain was otter end complete. Ol his lost fortune not oven tbe shadow remained Tbe blow waa more severe than hia mental faculties oouhl sustain, and tbe balance of hit long life
m the m
I subeiat-
woxld. Not
anew remained to public pauper, for year* an inmate ol the Erie county almahonso. Of all hie faculties the only one which seemed to ipaired wns his memory.
u be made
if tho governat bejurty little u in its work ings, or the oorrnptioa* of tho whisky ring must ramify throughout the entire i ^ '-** old " out ol., '
Hence, The old man loves! to talk of the very
coked whisky con be moved early history of Buffalo, redting many porta anywhere without the quaint .and iutorcefing ciroumatanee*. * ' cuNU.mg officers. Many anecdotes of Alanson Palmer'
' ' life might be repeated, bnt they would only lengthen out a chapter that is al ita beat gloomy. Many of our readers
the old man makin t the dty streets c
hia poorhonae garb, a melancholy picture of the work of ndvenity. , Daring tbo oonsinietion of the addition to the county asylum he was removed to Ovid, where his history of over eighty-one years has
tion of any piece of United States money. A m.n living in Clay Bounty, N. Y., la invented a anew plow Ahicli la so inatnictcvl that instead of crowding or rrasinfe the enow from the tranks, it carries it np sn inclined plane or apron to the height of twelve or fourteen feet,
’ by a aide shnte end
carrier, which throw it from the track as Ursa maybe desired. The inventor aseeits the new plow will do th u hundred men, and *"
low considerably m
played "Camille " in one ol
- e gent!
acted’Armand was an ndvertiiing agent i the last act, he tilted the curtain, ime forward and made hia bow, saying: Ladies and gentlemen, yon have seen io death of Camille. She died of conimptiou. Had she taken Parr's pills in would be living now.” Camille, bo overheard him, come rushing ont, "She ain't dead at all, took any of your quack medicine, either." One of the Jeraey (England) judges, Mr. Le Beilly. after thirteen years' serrms not long sgo sencourt to five years' penal eervitnde. A fvw months afterwards one of the judges at hia trial stood In the dock on e similar ease ol fraud. divided aa to his guilt the bench, Mr. William Oaudin, impelled by domestic- tronhlr* and by the terrors ol a lawsuit with a former client, committed suicide ; and n fourth, who has been a judge for twenty•seated hi* aeat by a declaration of insolvency.
■ million gnllona ol crooked M removed from St Ionia and i market II 1* probable that much of the same article wee
similarly disposed of in Milwaukee, in Chicago, in Cincinnati and in Indianapolis. The machinery by which 5,000,000 gallons ol spirits - *- *' **
The Future. ■be Chicago Timet thui advertisement*of thofnhue : "Died, , aged ninety-seven. His event table was always supplied with At by , and with fine groceries . Tbo funeral will take|plsoe tomorrow. The aatin-lined ooffln Is furnished by — A Co., imported by — A ——. Tho corpse will be rcourreeti-.l ten days from date by the ealebratod
have already sold It to tbe medical College. where the highest prices are al way* paid for cadaver*. Country papers

