I , ' STAR OF THE CAPE. ■I ' * ' 2. ' ' _ ^ , :
- VOL. XII.
CAPE MAY CITY, N. THURSDAY, M±Y 13, 1880. * ' ■
NO. 23.
STAR 0F_THE CAPE. JOB^i^iiinwQ JOHN «. IiriTHAX, T- 8 - * Datea,7* poiuui a irocox. * **"" ra°* ATTORNEYS at haw. ^ ATTORNEY AT LAW solicitor ik chancery. • DMU •Dj.H.J. j TJItlfTlMS, FDRJpSBIIG QIDEETAERS ! / y XJ Ry 1TXJ RE . ! [ *fe. 0HARLKS P. WHITX, * CLOCKS, WATCHES, OTttH ID SiLTnWAHE. pQALwrnntlw qPAUrr. IW.kRA.hnnl » m mte, to ^ CoRljjf all Sizes. um Swim TV wTjwl™"" AnWoMMTriid ttefam takU. imam. I I II n l-eate*. Uma Mar Cfcy. •AMU ALA niSli.l'nrnHa. Iffl n 0BU. AMD WUOO YARD! La^UMi't, LXMtOfl. BM, «TOVA AND PMRtlRUl y***11 — 1 rikk. oak hickorTVood pSHS ; GENTS1 FURNISHING STORE RHMOVgo TO •0MlfraL,**.«reaMnod (MUft, BWhemth. I.iifini. rebate lo Shall caiunuai-s cix>run ~~ SRO M. ^yiUJAM I CHAMBER, auotioN.K„, *nu A, oa-tei In m *» safest! MRM.ta IMAad aflmksr WSSJ^^rife.,* ■ WILLIAM T. (T...IM QW»W Os£T3!\». I A bmaM>wysr c' lilLori. mW j for Ms h*U feeremg ud eU. ^Wba«k«Ua(. • fate*. yirill«llM.R»<.RI*.»lwwIlUU, |w mmt. far te tataUw of ha rates. ite into ite street with a pocket' n r»l h.Tlxq «Itwi sranrililagl j j One day. tte etertt.ta reply - Mr.! OsBpfailt |lriHil. -WMft lb. news?" aU. " Nothing now. Mr. bat | thb. I a sorry to a,. IMkaOi ttJS5££J£trt'm : ■ Ok. (toft HtteA* tete OsapMlj "A. WO, b not hut; k • SHSssssd jjj fegmVrtwjno* tealMrad Rffpfe5wT te m i lite taMManotesA hinriBte^te, a. ten J— f —I tehfe* - 'Steiwtea ow ■!•» I" niTnTrnj *
hongs ef Ite ftonl. "■ "uitapnulMr ternr . SaamUiabalWItHilm. _ • nabaa', kail, UpaaakakaarakM. | "" " " '~* '™0" ^ »ka l»..n. a ailtod aad pas. Ikp, wHba. . wfe "™" Ur°W* , ^ IM^nM. k ' l~a> toan ak f j Ate ka a. ib. I J; ^ - « » fatiTa Realm 7WIK ( The Trials of a Schoolmistress, j Woes "lbs inbabitanu in. and tagil roUT* of" school district number on. t ; ol Ite town of WaNonetlt, in tte Bute 1 J of HawtiMU. chore IW Samuel > u boring nmte^teteM u for nil parties hnd ban suited. Deacon r Carta was sa aid. aad Mr. Waliaos a k ' jroaacaaa Tte Trwsrabk dsaeoa wis b a ntarrtsd Ban. who nMoad ia tte L iarga bail; ol sou and daachtsn that I attend sroaad his ubk. Mr. Waliaos k ' «»a»arrtsd.^sad to lail lbs uaih . llrtJTui'ilSr* iMte J ) w^^to sotdaj.sad.Uwassald.nl. d wait MAlte sterah bsapsa tbs bsa» l dlcdoa. so a to fat rid a pasainr t . ibraofb lbs ordaal ol barlaf to bow. liwhaoiSTsatoaoookloaaoorrofwiMU , " ta ura®d "fitjliaf jirls." I Tbs triocipol detj of a scixioi director t . ilio aisct tte Mooter, aad Mr. Wallaer fc : aatidpaiod Uola troabls oa that arrwr. , a DsateaOartsr ted bssa oMoTtte ' Araaota Ifr aaaj jmia. aad wao a aaa ' Mwajs wllUac to taks tte raspooslbli- , *»• " Roaa," obaarrad tte dsaooa to bis ' ' tbsj art ia tte stoa on. Boraiaf,** m * iea'j araoad this sralac aad h> joo . abate Ite district. That is unless joaM , irttbsrnnBiD.w to bj botes aad spsad . aaocWbour. Mn. Cartsr aa' lbs girb B ' ; wslooBS IHra ao t apt to stelk wrlf-to^tolteToJIj ° iWM— '"It Hi ia oaasj wajat a *tew. i -Oh. oaU otit aad taa as." add f ' Walte*. "It woaM bs a fiaat dsn] ^ eowraaiate (or as U joo wowld." -AU rifbL* rtpliad «N *~oc. ' "oaij JIB Bast te a UttlOaors asifb- '' ' »tea Ty tera basa." te addad , to hm aad saprdauwd Ite pw> Y ■ tkaaitetwarabaaf BadatoraTUtof j | te late fiar washa that te was about to ' aaks to a bsolter who rasidsd ia Ob- . iastSTirs&ca ; i up" dlaosr aad to listoa to Ite cob- 1 . pbdats te his hnasskssjir. * "Mr. W siloes, ban joa rot bj . ! stasabr dsaaadad Itll J Wteilp a. a j , I siilaaw te Iftj wjafa; than bad ate- ■ dsatij bssa so teaawn ia bar Hit. 0 , "Mia HteV I ante— I— that to." J '! -Ibat Is. joa-n r <sH it M1a.- ' ih%sr£_-.o._„ : I j rpr Shirt kwltw apfar £ , i tetetel tla te^L Mrihate^lastipad ' ' <1 ■■ aad tte aaal ' I l| ill ka tebaas Mil Ite teteter * . bajteotetertite _ . J I f-MaT te . I i to teJTtan ■IjgjplN' J -tea. tkte'te tteatetearks I
J tbe door - boof - alter bim. " I'll bat a [ dollar that hs'U be od (or aosaewten bright aad early to-morrow mora log." Earning oame aad with it case also " Boa." obaerred th. pillar of tbe ; ebareh. " joo'll bare to aUrad toreuln' ; tbe taacber.*' »| " What did you eaj. deacoaf" iaqnired the horrified Ross. ia fact, aa' ae I kafcn'l eeen bim for > now fola' on twenty jeara I Iboofbt it my doty to make him a rieft. John alat got no near ooaaertioe but me. aa' • maybe he'll come back aa' atey with Be till he's called, that's what be hinted ' at in bit letter, aa' he's my brother an' is weil oft aa' eo Tm coin' to Ceoj htalMew Tort to an him." replied the " How long will you be goeef" asked I Roaa. with a last gleam te hope. J "Well. John thought him en' me might get hie affaire righted in about a " When must school ootnmenoe. deaI OOP I" 1 j "Tbs district rated to bare It brgia | a week from next Muoday, Roaa." " When do yoo gof" aaxiouly ia* , I quired Wallace. "To-morrow." r_lmly replied the EryeX. (He gru too mueh for it; three a week is a big price, as 1 1 stand, to reason that she won't eat much, beta' a woman.) aa' all you're got to do Is to get the right kind of a girl." he ! added. Wallace groaned. " Has aayooe applisdf" heaaked. "Well not exactly aophed," said the the deaooo. canlioua.y. "There's the Brown girl. Julia, ate told her ma'am ! to tell Mn. Carter to tell me that ate 1 didn't know bat what ste might laki tte school if tbe didn't lake some other, jaa" Mary IAacomb called betorr tte . ■■ mill' wm held toaay that ste might teach this summer, and ag'ia ate (Bight j "What shall I dor said Roaa. des- ' poadlagly. "Wgll. you'd tetter liaroem Bp an' i ride around tor a day or two aa' see L' : joo rank pick ap a good passable kind the dsaooa. as he rose to go. Kerer la the whole course ol his life Rom Wallace been IE sach a fix. Tbe Idea te being pat la sach s position almost drom bim mad. He. Rose Walcste te tbe young ladles era of hb immediate neighborhood, bow asked to ride around aad boat ap a "peaiable te a girl," who might "wurl to Rob wect to Boatoo tbe aext day. oa tbe bra and found no lime to attend to thr banting ap te tbe reof Westcast ic. Tbe eralag foaon bim ia Us room reading Hal lamb Mid"d™ b°U*d**p<* — fearful anoouacement — " A young lady's in the sitting room walling to sas you Mr. Wallaoe." " Angels and retoister. of grace, delead us!" exclaimed Roes. - I wonder she's the Browg girl, or the Mary that tte daaooa told me abootr Plainly Iter, ro nothing to do bat go down aad asset hb unwelcome visitor. "if she's anyway fit to leach tbe school I'll engage bar." thought Boas as be mured tbe sitting room. Hie visitor was aot eo UupoUag a owe after all. It waa aot thr " Brown girl," graceful' llLle ted " te carls, black ate shining. Hair that rtoallsd la tte Bite of tte sateol official a little earl that lay upstairs bsadteths BQthsr who ted died boseat the aoiatan to bis eye., ate the liule lady to gate ted waa ter^sait "TUe is Mr. Wallace, tte school director. I press Be." she said, breaking toeritem. thai wte%B>to< «atem» tog to both. Mr. Walloon bownd. " I am Kit Freeman, ate I called to about Inking your school; I grsduat Tasser. I am oat of wortmymothsr b dsnd. ate I am all alooe to tto world." " Poor' little gtri." thought Mr. Walteteaste ootiaed the uars gothm to be* ryes ste caught the wlilteg as earn of Hp aad rotas, ted If Mte Ek had tocksd aaythtog of hartog gatosd tte I tens ate sought that would h irr ssourad lu OM dsaooa Carter might Bokhara thought bar "a paeaabb girl." bte Mr. Bob Walteoe did. Twautjwill differ from stxty-fir* oa mte q^s'uVhk^Bdabdwrth MMTsto! Ma ~add.-layW tobotef'tete tea u— Is bteh.-rm euro beb just stem-dM-sad use ate MuB; ted Ite (tea. that I shall bars a spltedid tiae III AfcgMl lAnl" ram. sslf Mte Ul PtelhA, _■■■ I Ipto KM. to expast s what parpoae* Wbj not te Barry wHhMRaaa# JPte ate^^pkMBre 1 "toaaa I _^Ttete»»teteaIadteMM^y kte unhid "I" ii telRte tt. -A:
; a j wished that hb parrcU would think eo 1 re | also. Miss Bit bad no peace to her lift ." I whatever hope she might hare in ber ! eo I death, which she declared to te near. | aa the children were bound to kill her. | te | A worse school could hardly te ime' . agined. Mias Kit had lad in repeating * j the Lord's Prayer, a part ol tbe rogu- J n- i l»r school exercise, for a few days with 1 bowed bead aad c-oaed eyes, bat the ■ , found that tbe assuming of that rrrcn rent altitude wis the signal lor raining j " » shower of paper balls on her devoted ^ ^ well as pray." and lwi iha. portion ol ' ' the school exercise with eye, wide open ° u aad brad erert. „ Tte children acted worn and worse £ be who tried tbe beet she could to keep ] 'J order, wae aoculy perplexed. A a M is. I *! ^ Deacon Cmnm exproeeed It. " Them | ° critters at the school- houee act as if ! " pusses uo with witches." sod Miss Kit j „ , Wt that she would gladly bare ex- ^ changed them for the whole company i ' ^ ol the servants of the " prince of the ] ^ power nf the air." that of old lime so { " sorely afflicted the good people ol the " ancient town of Salem. . b 0_ Sach a stale of affairs oould not of j ; course long escape the notice of tbe only remaining school director, and Mr. , . T I W njlare hnd frequent Interriews with ^ * ( the perplexed teacher, aad be found . I himself thinking of ber in a way thai ^ | be bad never even dreamed of thinking M ^ I hare been setonUbed if any ooe liad " ' 1 suggested that be wae to fore He was v : interested in Miss Kit— and in the school n M Only thai and nothing more, 'it wse k hb duty to attend to the school aad te discharged thai duty in the moat pain,- " taking manner. a By the ad rice of Ibe director Miss Kit ° j took a firmer stand and punbhrd oneor ^ two pupib. but a rebellion is much more " " th^oommeneemrol history teaches. ar.d Mis, Kit found 1x1 s- | Tbe school had been running two q. ' Deaooo Garter waa expected home j " I Monday night, and the people predicted A j that he would at one, oring order i '' 4 (which b teaeec's first bw) out of 1 °| what pretty cfoaely resembled chaos as I r« tor as law was coooerosd. by the dia- J E charge of the teacher, and tbe hiring of „ m either the Brown girl or Mary Liacomb . p. whp. It was said would thrsab the n c rebels into instant and unconditional & 0 Saturday eraing Mr. Wallace called ^ , at tbe school- house alter Ibe school o u had bees dismissed. It had rained tl rather muddy. 2 1 " If Miss Kit b here I'll take ber p, Irome." Mr. Wallaoe had thought as be it drew up hb barer In front of tbe tern- in s pie of knowledge. M „ Mies Kit was there. . And Miss Kit was in lanes. . . And nntarally Mr. Wallaoe inquired u what freah trouble had occurred; in- XI quired, be it aaid. with a aad heart, for w hecoold not disguise from himself the lr n fair that Miss Kit must go. pi " They are gesting worse and worse," bi ^ sobbed Mies Kit." and to-day when 1 & put Tom Dyer under tbe dtuk to nunlah to him be cut my robber to bite." and tbe to little taacber held up tbe fragments of ai what bad once been a dainty little rob- m ber. "And now." tbe added, "they w tell me that crate old Deacon Carter p. will Bake Be bare, and where can I « get another engagement r n. m " rfl tall yon." aald Roes Wallace. « She looked up aad read the lore story U that hb eyes told, sad bar ows black pi W eyes toil again. m ,, "TUke Be (or a lito-iong pupil. Be my ii , wife-beted. r! ' Miss Kit looked up shyly and whin- o 2 pared eoaelhlng that probably wse aot " Afefusal. is Mr. Wallace gnre-and rs- G " blred-hls Urst lore kirn. « * dsyTand"' 'rile^ro em^rl "°wM°st^nce 2 h school and saeosndsd to keeping the 2 * Mem out to paaoe. ate Miea Kit was to- " suite aa misoum of the boms of Mr. d t Sra-r- s ig a mm. * An accsdent oaanrnd aa lbs Ootom t 1 bin rissr a lew days ago w bleb strik- » *■ Tngiy illustrates tte buaans instincts » " end syapathy ttet fflrite to animals. ; reyrd oa the boat. wkm. dnrtogncom- , i- motion among them, ors n ktated m > and had Its leg broken. It wee de- « tt cided to Mil lib poor brute ate put it £ " out a its Bbery. He was dbpteted E ■ by an sxs la the betes of am of the . Z empfoysmof the boat. Tte relabeled w ■ : ant ate just as the blow wae struck " ■ te gwunlete iinim ate Ml bate- " ► bom hb nostrils- T<* upward of three U * bowrs bb agonies were (mrful sad it {> I w^«R>MteMteMten.bteteteri& J f wore tseteM-rU™-!-. n » " saticnxl rrpwtaticn. tertog beagm An- u »- teate e ter Mini i HI In Til nf A A thetorf. He Iswwaad by tte Honor- » ■ tete J- M Bdtk.-ftem (Coupte) 5 ^ Cmgr iiid—l Bteton. % E i 5^'i^HxrS : 1 b by w.jgblng tteeteto. to Iteemim - Z M»Njte| I ■ A tew days j Jtdtor— dteowfeg— ftestetwutes. « ^SteMtette ' * ^toLVto L UTtete."
A ■UKI'EREI'S COSrESSIOS. I^NoTmbSTwri. William E. Cd- I ^ dcrsook wxs be^ed at West Cheater. . Pa., on the charge of having mnrdered j, much divided as to the guilt of the ^ executed man. but his aonfeteoo. „ which Is just made public, sets tte mat- ^ W S floss, living is the neighborhood " j of Baltimore, procured insurance on his ^ 1 curred soon after in hb workshop when ' I nature being found, his death -v. xi '• first accepted ae a foci by the public. | « I When the insurance companies had | j been defeated in a suit brought bj Mrs. " I Gom (or the money and ,t seemed in- ' r evi table that they shoo Id hare to pay. u I parts ol the body of a mnrdered man | '■ j found In Cbtaler Mtntj, Pa. Tie 1 ^ id^rd^telTto Otehl^re.m*ibo^ ; E 1 mother rrnidtd near the sew of the j b iTted* twe^ '"Tbi"'11' 'u' Crtm' " with a strangsr. east suspicion upon tbe latter Tins man's name w.s u William E. L' d dcrsook. He wxs xr- y. hanged for the crime. u Cddcrsook says in his confession. ' n written while In mil. 'bat It wxs xt first | p medlxUiy xfter hb execution, but he I b finally left it in the hards of hb coon- n sel. J. y Perdue, With the request that he retain it for firs yams and then give it to the world. Cdderaook aad Gum > married s liters The latter was dbsi- j ,. paled, and. after having got hit life in- 1 sured for fii.ooo in the Mutual Uto in- n IS®- for the benefit of his wife, found d I great dlffieclty in keeping up the prrmi- j He accordingly borrowed money j u I of Cdderaook for the purpose. Finally ' 1 I (loss brovbd a plan to hb brotiier-ic- ! P bw whereby the Insurance com ponies 1 r could be robbed. This wss to secure I h •UO.OOO more inaurun- oa bb We. then 1 1 rent a shop or some other building in 1 dead body, corresponding in sine and M appearance to himself, in the structure . ! i' be himself was to remain out of | P sight until hb wife, in whose Uto, the t> policies were to be drawn, had collected all the money from the insuranor com- I b panics. Udderaook wss to hare one- ai ol the profits as the price of assist- , b to the conspiracy. Udderaook coo- is led, and the amount of Insurance menUoead was token out A. C. Goes. 1 tl *1"° ^ to 10 ^ "msb£ rented, the corpse (where it came j E Udderaook aaya be was ignorant) i h to it. and W. S. Gas. and hb lr took part to setting tbe a Wilmington. Del. building oe thence p Delaware county. Pa-, flnalle to New r ark, K. J. He spent a great deal of t d to hb biding, which Udderaook a obliged Jo furnish out ol hb own I h pocket. Tbe sulU a—tost the Insurance r companies to letmiri tbe policies did E not prosper. The suspicion finally oc- j b curred to Udderaook thai Gom might, i o natural ooosrqurace. the latler's death p riew of the brother-to-iaw to secure hb j E safety from the penally of the coo- c apiracy. With the Mm of murdering Udderaook land bim Into Chester d county. Pa., tbe last of June. 18T3. and ^ and there took bbHfc." At Pmntogtoo- „ rilfe n carriage and barm were hired. t; ride into the country Tbe conlrmion o says: » "Tte emtog was srarm and we h drove rather slowly. Gos, was iar*r- o shout being brought into such n . country pbce and was complaining I * ratbar disposed to "quarrel with him. nod goto* np we quarreled considerably. When we rot shore Cochraarille to a woods 1 bad notkteJto the mora tog. ate which Ihad . selected for the purpose. I drove in , some chestnut sprouts. I did ■at tfiuk Gom would notice where we T wwtpite but be did. ate exclaimed, a 'J stopped the borot. threw down the line. kte mnds^itt'Balrimore'te the b poruosa ate cut bb tbrute. It was the u r^^Ste^teteirfir'itoS ti nosi tte bocaom of the wama. smoterd „ SVute^te Iks^utebBte ouur ate ^ 5 SrSsWSJSg; I Itiu.iupbly. tertog Rrttjake. out the J ieteteSTSte ST BymZ I ted tl Agmdwmtote»Mufmmb».Mt a
"Is Memory sf Cask Dewa." ' I He b at rest. Cash Don b dmd and j buried, sod the mourners are borne from 1 1 j of ixte years be wxs not half appro- 1 1 leiated. There was a lime w ben be stood ( ! head and xhouidero above Trust and I c I Beat, but times some bow changed. ; I Down left quite a Urge family. ! < who will take wanting by bb sad latri 1 1 ; He cut hb life short by many years to |< 1 hb efforts to keep bb word sad meet | ■ hb pecuniary obligations, and they will « There was a time when Cash Down 1 met with s smile xad s hearty i I ( shake of the hand. If he wanted hb I ■ buggy repaired the blacksmith would J ' I figure fine aad depend upon hb pay the I hour the work was finished He could ' Down himself, making a difference of 1 1 per rent, in hb ineor. It Cash - ; I wanted a new anil of rioches tbe i < ! tailor made a difference of fii between < - and Slow Pay. and the money cooid I I sent East to pay foe hb cloth Tbe j i I last lime Cash Down was out on the I j street he saw glow Pay. Bad Debt sad I I the tailor, thr grocer and ' i shook hands witheachone 1 j liown had paid over that counter I j cash, and Slow Pay wxs in debt fifty and adding to the figure. - ' 1 Cash Down went to a dry goods store 1 purchase s drom for hb srifr. Bad \ I Debt wxs stead of him. Cash Down , 1 I pulled out a WO bill and paid for hb ' ' goods on the spot. Bad Debt picked up | in the cash -box to help pay lor a 1 new stock. In the other his aolinrtor profit and loss. Yet Cash Down had to ! the same price that Bad Debt did- 1 j Cash down wanted a new pair ol j i He rat to hb old shoemaker i ' and was surprised to bear that he would I ' charged fifty recti more than fur the , I " Has there been a gral advance in ' ! price of leather f" be asked. | "Oh. no " " Not n rent. Yoo see. Stow Pay. Bad 1 and Dead Beat are into me pretty I heavily, and I must mxkr it up by charyCash Down must thru pay the same ) prices as Dead Beat, and help make | | good Dead Beat's iodebtedness In ad- | : and body. Tbe doctor who attended ! chary.- as much as if called to see Dead j and Lb proscriptions oast more. he hnd to held pay Dead Beat's | old bill at tbe drug store. When he | died tbe undertaker made no reduction . on the casket, and the tombstone cutters ! put an extra fire dollars on the prior of i | the shaft to pax the halance due from i Debt (or tbe ooe furnished hb : child's grace! Mm Cash Down, widow of the tote 1 tog yesterday. She bought a bonnet at ooe place and aaid she'd pay sometime I this summer. She got dram goods at another, aad simply told them to put I the books She needed shoes, and she said abs'd band it in someday. She a hundred dollars ia her Docket, but she didn't pay out a cent. She bad ^ Hew Peonies ARutta Sleep. According to an English physician. Groerilb. tbe posttfoRedteeuabep. S A constrained posture generally prew, rents repose, while a comfortable ooe sleep. He says: Lying flat on bock, with tbs limbs relaxed, would tte'Jtetioo"^!^ in the most exhausting diseases, and It to g enseal! j bailed as a tokeo of revival wbeu a povoluntarily turns on tte aide ; but then art several disad vantages to tbe teals' atom' ^tow^r states of Ite teun ate btoodTsmeb. ate certain nsfirbM conditions of tte brain. blood sesom to gravitate to the bark «f the bead, ate to prodaee ttouUeaUy'to thair gxit'oTrok. sloop. Iters to pn babij erase dbtrom consequent on here coa leaned chaeu. especially persons who bars ted plsurisj ate retain adteafoao of Ite laage. do aot drop well on tte hock. Kseriy all who are Bribed to mats do to wtah felted ttertim. > in tte soft pafete ste OTUfe baa* oe the tooga. 'and cSRMfeltote* so ss write* ctom tte top of tte windpipe, to It team, therefore, to lb on the rode, sod a the atemee of spetbl diotesfc aHstappo 10 teas Ite telhy tetebsnul.il to usil m tteasr hsifetessd..Wsaeme when tte body to fe^teteteitod STtewtte te esfess. A pmuss ss su* pseos sd the BUMte. Ifeuy T in i ■ son dual fe sue — • «Md paste uhu.iill ito. B®M bte, Mn— I. Ite Mte* rite EHr5£zEv£:
Look at him ttaodiag quietly in bb stabie. to see he bum trick like that of putting one hind foot orer the other ' ■u In doing tbb be oftefi cub the : all I pert of bb hind foot with the sharp i "' calks of hb shoe, thus making him lame ; acj perhaps for months. When brought j : out. do not allow him to bs jock led in ; bb poors. Take your stand oo ooe side | m I of the road, aad let bim walk naturally ; and quietly by; then turn and walk by. j I showing hb other side Now etaad be- : I | hind and hare him wxlx off in front of J Bt i mad from yon ; then turn and walk Tl toward you. Observe if be toes rroely ha and easily and plants hb hind feet in j *' trotted by you. aad back and forth. ^ watching hb action closely. I"r ! Now look at bb eyes .nd make a mo- j "■ ' I lion with your hand toward them, as If l hi ■ intended to strike. If te winks good, and no blindness ta him. The . > should be moderately prominent, i eyes are am to get blind ae tbe M and era. look at hb fore legs and no- u that they arc not sprung. Examine the ! 1* , bocks toe say swellings, sad especially or curbs sad sparias. Now look at all j ^ scare on them ia bmseqornee of thfe [ The pasterns should be rather short for | a carriage horse, and not touch sloping, f* apt to give out si s hard pull. bub The feet are otln passed over.^ but a 1* - tough, (roe from cracks, not shells, and hi . well set up at the herb, otherwise they or , will soon wear dosrn on pavements or | hseb an ncd so obwetfoeabie: lastly, rr- * Pr ! card the 1 ixide ol the boob and see that , to a good-sited frog to soften the larUi K ! 1 A pony-built horse is the best for < cr . working in harness, while a more rangy- bs , bodied one. with longer legs, mpy be to , I preferable for the saddle, but ihase i jr I weakness. Tlis iegs. from the bocks th I If thr tail lifts hard aad stiff. It is , to usuxi.y sa rvidrnev ol a strung back and til As to thr age. thb is readiiy told by ! in J are " bbboped " It b usual for jockeyi | | After all. there is a groat risk ia buy- j In | , truthful and hones: I j disposed to speak to ; of hb failings; for in many eases be b of • ; really ignorant of what these are or of fit ' incipient diseases which may be lurk- in ' lag ia the system at tbe time of sale, fo 1 As for the tricks of jockies in hiding the dc ' | age, faults, and covering up discs sea. ft ! they are past finding oct ; and when ' I they trade with each other erra. the ^ ' vary smartest aad most knowing one C gets c beaten really by one much more 81 c skii.fni than bimaelf in allowing off a ^ ' I bone. It b only aim using n burse u | for months that pretty mnrli all that j? , there b in him lean be found out. aad ti , we bare known unexpected faults sad „ I I In tte dty stabbs so many horses are ^ 1 kept under thr same root, aad there b . I such a want ol proper ralilatton that u "pink rye" and the " barer distemper" ^ sre often prevalent there, oril not shown ^ at the rime of purchase, these break out u . immediately upon lu arrival ir town. ^ F before be has a chance to get diseased. R and before tte sellers hare lime to p, i "slick him up." Kerer mind a dirty g I coat ate ratgh looks ; you can clean tte ^ i risk to the animal as socio as you get „ . tome, mad after this be will probably c. r show twenty -five or fifty per real- better . than wbeu yoo bought him. One rather _ t thin fat flesh b safer to buy than when c[ t fat, (or thb covers bad potato, and when u - worn down somewhat a rather fins ap- ^ i peering horse tares out to be vrry earn- ^ I moo fooAiag .'— Aawwf Nsw Yertro u ■ Pi Itmlaesa Raxbea. ^ ' the folfolbg' maxims for hb°«J in- 5 i — . of ; b posit i re'. y required lu • J "a Que kite oflinrtnlTb't. Eauohm * ! tHj ma. ■■ et! rC|te^"!te «» T^TSX^^-hatyouS ; zzzLZizrzftzz : ; ywuwiEa<rea wot wtek you aaal buy. fe | riser; taaagr'your dwelUuR. If you ten A I em jf Ute^usss W hlghjl Isemly ho- ri j lw^Sri»ri»*teteei 2 « A Ml te rite. ■■•■■Mb p-rite U tmij. Mint auii »il ttem ste wteo * ' yomBaoeybtee 1 enfH; doom le« a ; riR»— MriMri I i life i ll II I II I ri i 3.".'7T^.g - : ' A Urn —tee yam feoBtet te* ri i=S=r"J literilte.ibridBm.te * ! jgrffrra;i!atf|
TIMELY TfflBICB. U b a curious feel brought out in the statistic of iusuranee expert, that in all of the great cities of tte e+rlttsed world tte death nlrii decreasing. The eclewcs of right living causes an inctcxw d kmgerily. From IF13 to IfCE as compared with the preceding six yeses, was lour per ornt Ifet new translations of the. hare been made in th languages. British and Foreign Bible society Am rican Biblesociety.fi tbrNattonsu . Bible society of SeMiand. J ; the Bibb society. It ; the society for Christian Knowledge, I"; Trinitarian Bible society. X; the Netherlands Bible society. 11 ; UM eo- ' rietiee of Germany. 9 . of Ssrilnerhsnd. eian peasant: He fooke eurioosly xt j ooe odd little bundle laid upon . shelf. | a third slung over our of the main I of ths roof, xad rocked by tte [ traveler, with a feeling similar l0J that experienced oa treading upon n eertained that Chinamen decline to become naturalised because the Chinese renounce their country and allegiance | shall be beheaded. Tile property of nil ' Their parents, grandparents, brothers mtd grandchildren. Or better habitually not. are to be banished to tte distance 1 connive xt the crime are to be strangled . property Cyclones sliil rage te the Wat sad region can feel rale from their revxgcx. Ia Illlnob ate Mississippi the destruction of life and the wasting nf been groat, aad man has been able yet in the infancy of science, but when strums of ths air. whose mission b to Tbe W mbiagua correspondent of the ; maintain hb position through tte mn- > laliuns of politics during the long sweep ' of a half x century was certainly entitled , tbe government, not only for long and services, bat tor his Ingenuity i eiodinx the decapitating axe wbieb The oldest officer in the I tlemaa of Tompkins county. N. T.. Benrdsiey. who was appointed postmaster ai North iunxinf in thai on June 88. 1888. during the , administration ol John Quinry Adams, and when James McLean, of Ohio.- wxs posunaster-gTBeral. Thb ancient oland the returns of hb postal ae- . counts to-day Indicate vigorous health and a close attention to business. Wll- . Hunter, of Rhode Island, second pointed s clerk in that department May 1888. by Martin Van Boren. then through nil the Intermediate positions : and administrations since that period. December It, 18X1. Edward Stabler waa appointed postmaster at Sandy Montgomery ooonty. Md_ b> aster-General W T. Barry, of ' Iu a recent ieucr Mr. Stabsays that be b still sopping rigor- 1 ous health,. and daring the past winter was abb to indulge in hb favorite spent of deer hunting. The old est official in meat b Captain Isaac Bamelt.of^klajsawho waa appointed •V-ge In Senate by Daniel Webster in I8J1. Webster then bring ths Senator that 8tale. Captate Hassan b now doorkerpsrof ths Senate, and oeou- , confidsnUsl relations with that toteresUng reaterimrea of the great fffeaiors of tte past half a ctutury. and RteRSSSSiSflSHim Is tte JaaesH. Mere entered thsssrrier Juas 1. MSI. b jBarry. ste from n ciert la iRuirs ol MOST teot^m a salary of^ RfeS Pa, who wao ipgsfeiid fe Ml If • ■US ff Mfell.ste John WuteMfeRT. was 8i iHil Vy Mr. KsshUII fe MM TM fetes af feu lisfflsl ten r |IS( sMfel sssmr wso that at Jnmb LMUtetlLatl. P^. who CL^MfeM BbkMoeumy te MM. a pm fod M Mg- — Mfflfeteslfe fe^tete te tefeff *» Ms ' j"' | i' ms.mdritebiited ;|5=,HsEj ■>
MfeMAteteteb' JZXC TSSSAr TWw Bar wore Mr maA 1W> W" —re -~T md. 1 tate iwi' 1 (*oUTbm 'aaain the Orisiss oat sT stghs M*' te-dlMsstetewbM. WHIpxImscS i.Wfiw. PtoTZsr Ite otesa Saabs. Aad wbere lbs eld gsww yaarg smia. HUB OP IKTEREST. Whatever good au umbrrlbpertens lib "put up "to*. A Kan m weekly poWbtea "fourteen roim to be oteerred during a tornado " Only ooe U ustemnry. Be sousewbrre The mvxer prooam of cMuiaing a ftiv by the Irictfon of pieensof wood is daily per fanned in London by a company ol I In the United States 1 00.000 t, us he is [ of hemp seed sre annually consumed for bird (bod alone Much of it b im - ported. gmynttriat Mates that speeds of over 1 with many ol the express trains in Great ! Britain To parties who sre onabb to express I trr at sending them by freight. — AeoAxaX i Tbe total amount already disburasd tor arrears- of pensions ,s over Sit.000.«.1 and the slums far arrears oo fib number 210.000. ' I Thr man who has the worst things to i say shout newspapers b the man who pa) s hb subscription only -vhen he Use 1 to do it — HieutmniU Herald. The new gambling bw of A risoaa requires .-soli house where gaming it carried on to pay a quarterly UcMse : of $M». one- half to go to the school j fur.d. Chinese -old. ere get three rentt a day. and when the war is over very lew of item invest their sav!ags in twenty-fire Belgium rabbit skins are successfully sands of rxbblls are annually kiiiad iu England wbiwe peits go to Belgium, xad leave that country as grnnine sssbTue German empire has now twenty I lotion. As they are partially supported by the stale, it claims a genoal right cd virtually msoaga, ib own affaire, ertn the appointment of the professors deI pending in ths main oo this facultba to ■ which they belong. 1 l-et the next spelling reform convention be held 1" Maine and adopt measure, to reform tbe spelling of the lakes of that Stale- Some of tbe lakes there only a quarter of^« mile is ^gtMrnre , ere might wrestle with Isake MagoguehunkiltebognemasqniUusaekiaogw to begisqwlth- — Sorridowa Herald. > Tte Empress A u rusts, ol Germany, had in ISTU as bar render I French gentleman named Gerard. One day be I of 1870-71. nod came to s passage in which the French were Iran ted with a good deal of severity. " Skip that, if you please." aaid the imperial bdy. with ' equal gracefulness sod quickness. Holland boasts of s house ia which ; lives a family of six persons, which inI eludes one widow, two h^sb-nds sod ' son. two cousins, ooe son-tn-law, ooe • daoghter-in-law, two daughters, tiro 1 nieces, ooe half-brother, ooe halt -rislsr. ' father, ooe bther-ln-bw and three chll- ' The Australian papers report the peril,,' continent from north to south Three " Europeans started from Burkrtown. an the Gulf of Carpentaria, with 800 bate , of cattle, soil hare suoceeded in bring- ! i ing them to Adelaide iu good condition. They traieled in nearly a straight line . from point to point, the journey taking r 1 ** ' Ooe Hundred Canary Birds. I On West State • tree* in Ithaca. K.T. ' I there Ures s lady who has as many M r 100 canary birds in ooe room. Mrs. ' El Us H the lady's name. The floor of ' ' the room b eorervd with nice, clean sawdnal nod there it two pretty bum. ' in tbe boughs of which the birds swing 1 and sing sad awing ami. oese might sap- ' pose that their little Lends would be- ' come dbxy. and their musical little ' thrasb wvarouL What b very interesS- ' i lag is that atony-eight of the bird# are he children and grandchildren of <BS . pair. And soch children! Some of item ' are as yoliow aa a ball ol yellow sephyr; ; others sre groan, many black, s fcw 1 nearly while, aad almost all rariegrted. 1 Mrs. Ktlb knows every bird la ths roam. 1 Chick. Keel. Qasst. Chews, or soma ' sank aims sail ste can tell ths cxaut r age to a day of every Mrd- The only ; K-rere is tte place of rises, as thai Ite [ Hub fallows may hare plenty at tbe. , ate fe sum nsr time a tee ii* m totes ' the pirn, sf Iks panes of glass. AU " l II fi ths room are UMfa hnxm or • Zdfe toil tteleThl^rf ffafed^ • Ste ■ ths CuMte Ib— i [ infejiff an fehteM^^^^^i . hsbngM Wdh hiss, hwwwssu. Mly pus* . MM H MMt • "Nri® fe fee ssrM smaM pan ho so ' '/r*-"" ^ ^-*1 1 * J Ste fe fflwrna te tam^wsteMBrim

