The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, May 02, 1879, Image 1

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    .... . . vrm
-cVtlvertiBiiigr Xtnte.
Tbe larve and rapMi)' Increasing- tdronlriUoa
or Tn Kkbii comnnidi It to the ftrorahle
cnmi1eratioo of ad vert'era. AdvertisviBeots
will be inserted at tbe following rate:
THE CAMBRIA FREEMAN
.i r-j3LISHtO EVERY FKCAY MORNING
i Ebensburg, Pa., by H. A. McPike.
C,mranttfd Circulation - J,12S
V STlLI. A BOOMING. MATCH IT?
srilM HIIM IIt.X UA U S.
,. ,.. t iy. otic j'";tr. cash in advance. II ..Vi
:' " if not p'il 1 iuds. 1.15
' " if nol p'.i it bin ti rnon. -'.no
" " if not p'd v i lii u year.. 2
jj-T pr-rri-i resi'liiiif outa.le the county
ril I'lllional jut i tar will bo cliuucil to
v r :.-.
aa"!" no event will the nb.ive terms he ilo-,r:,-!
f r-'tn, ami t hose who tloti i tii-i) 1 1 t beir
ii in :rf" bjr .uy Inir in Hlv.itice iiiul nut
'.- 1 I.f thN I not be ibsiinctiy iin.ierritoorl
- ni tli .s I tjp fiTwnr-1.
f 'r ''Ur p.i" r before you Monit.
. it i" '1 tr. u -I ' None lni t scat a wa:.'s 'to o; li
r., Ion t be a m-alawn.' -life's no short.
1 inch, 8 times.
ia
t M
. m
k uo
. 6 '10
. luiS
. OH
. li 0)
. IU-00
. 90 C
. 00
. 40 00
t s
3 muni h .
6 m on t h. .
I year
6 moath..
1 year
6 months..
1 yen'
'n 8 month..
6 months..
1 year
6 months .
a.dia mm
3 "
3 "
V co
X "
S "
1 "
I "
NT w N,' ,
1 vor.
AdmlniMrMtor'a and Executor' Notice.
Auditor's Notice
t (O
Strsy ami similar Notice 1 .&
Ftuolneox items, firot incertton 10c. per Hoe;
pfich ftuosequetit lDertion 6c. per line.
MIirtoihitioiia or ricr( -3trtiM f any eorpvr-
tinit i'T '.ricty. and cimtnuttit cifitth driord l
C'lUnt friMoti f'rtfi( mtitfrf hmit'ri ur t tidir4Ml
intrrmt, mut br wiitl fr am edit r'lin tnt ntr.
Jdb Printino of a'l kioi neatly and expedt-
tiously executed at lowest prices. Don t for-
ff-et it.
H. A. McPIKE, Editor and Publisher.
'Hfi IS A FREEMAN WHOM THE TJICTH MAKES FREE, AND ALL ARE SLAVES BESIDE."
SI.50 and postage per year, In advance.
VOLUME XIII.
EBEXSIHJKG, PA., FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1S79.
NUMPEI 15.
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19
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Estal-listcd a Lie Store
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r -"i WHIN Z2 243a.' S'2 FOR
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2. M. JOHNSTON k CO.
rC C ""'irf.ntb.rr.
IT i il i.- m ait rg.
Tuaufl liitl.
I
it I M. Wi: t i vism no. Pa.
ALL TIE LIGHT YOU CAN
--' V IiiE Si H.I YA I or
pheap Groceries!
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! - : -r .J'n i-r. aa I t ben r;-a ta
p. ccfiH?:r's
J10BEL GiiOCERT STORE I
-' "-' IJrvcnfh Avrntie,
ni:th!!thSt3., Altoona, Pa.,'
,r yt-ur j n'rvini' t,n a man who fan
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r' h- liberal i!ron.ike l.m : ..
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M-IM (iraeery. Alt,,, nil. Pa.
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in:- i.M HENTE.
Tb.- i liiMn-u Vi pt ' inning, one by int
"Till i!i' iioy-i v. i iv five ami tli iils were
tbr
And tlie bi t.rnwii house va alive itli fun
I From tin- bii-i'inent floor to the old roof;
t !'' :
KiKt' I'.Ttfti llii'.ivis tlit1 ntt!f oik's irri'W,
. mtu-vd and truiiK'd witli tt-iHirrf.t care,
Wi'.rnn-d t.y lovf's sui:-.ldiH' and liulhtd in
its i!ov
Tlioy I'ioi 'tiled in tln-ir t auty liVe ruses
i.re.
I But one hi t'ie boys rrew weary one d.ty, i
And U'iLTiinjf fiis liead on his mother's
j hr.-if-t. ;
j lie suid, "I ;mii Tiied and eanni't n'.ay. !
I Lot nn- -it awhile on your knee and re-t." j
She '-rallied I : : 1 1 1 close in her fond embrace,
' She lushed hiin to -In ;-p with l.er iwectest :
! oVJ.
j And I'aotinous love still litrhted his face :
: W'li.'i'i hi- siiiil h4 joined the heavenly;
t.Moiijr. ,
Then the eldest nirl, with her thoughtful j
Wlio stooil -where '-the hrook atid the river !
meet." i
Stole sottiv awav into paradise, i
K'er "the river" had reached htr slender i
Wliile t!ie father's ( yes on the graves were i
i.....f 1
! Ti e mother looV.ed upward beyond the ;
lfes
.........,,,-.,.,... .1 .-..r ...e!,-
lei t.
.ur ihiiliny wee anyels in earth's dis-
unisi'."
The y.-ai - ih-w hy. and the ehi'.dten heiran
"lU - in to t h ink of the world out-ide,
Aiid a- -aeh in his turn became a man.
The hovs proudly went from the father's
-i.le.
The trirls were women, so tjentle nnd fair.
Th.at lovers were -peedy to woo and win.
And it'n oranjie hlossoius in their braided
ha!r,
i hev !elt the old holiie, new hotues to bcion.
hv one.
hildreii have llown
The ! os were live and the
r's were
three,
A nd the hiij hrovvii house seems gloomy and
lone.
With te.it two ..id f-.lV.-i for it- roinpaity.
They i-.dk to each other about the past,
A the '.t together at eventide,
Ami say "all lie- i-i : i ot.--n we k.-ep at !a-t.
Are the hey and nl who in child! cod
died. Klu.v.k, March, ls7'..
V y,(,...'.f T'lf-i.-j J;.nrntl.
a cisiivi ri:;ro5-L.NO. uv the
HV .l.FitEu 'i'KEltY ON.
1 have lo-d.!7 au tpt-ort unity of
n..ti. o. r i.i:fl . tt; l....-t i-nri.-.lio si.rbf.
' '1 lilJ- iiv tt . oii.uj. '.'i i : i , . -v in.
: trans-ornifti an i jioriii'Mi tj t no
i.iiii. As m te.htr dry ;nl t't cotiu
trii nuiarkkblw ii'i-ei.r.t.ce-s of i hi-
s.rt iv I'niunii'ii -n ti es.- pji.i ni, ? 4'
ci'.!y in ti e bpihik ; but in : itsii'iPM-e
of : eejal li -nths in ( 'oi.-.ra.lo 1 h.tve
seen lo.Tonvr -..n. parable to this last dis
j lay. To convey c.n id. a of how ootn
pletfiy a nntural seen'-' may 1-e clianp-il
by the jkfrii-lioii of light. I ill describe
ur iaiidi--, atr it i.Mia'.ly ai'i-ar.
I The '-"oth ri: tte i'liy.-r teller iinwinj?
idiircTh. north for l:fiy miles fr.aa Jen-
: n-i '!e --. i :';. in tianinir caste, aid, an
almost exact arc of a circlf ten lniie? in
length, rit-innm.e ltween thr vulaue"-
( j.-af, :.u,n;re'.e. Two iail south
' id the middle of this curve is situated
: the little ciMtle ranch iti which 1 am
winiciii' with two friends from the.
Kat.t. A tvun! us snr.-ad the rolling
I'lains cvi-re l H'iih aiu-rnate pat. lies d
cactus tti.it the vcllow, curii'i-' bulTa'o
j.;i;-s:., ..edhrie and t ''.ere t r:; et s of sa'e
blU-h. 'i o t h t-i 'f a "tt lii'el'foot " ii.
e. in th;- dialect of (.'elorado a new cum-
ei) this irras looks uj if it would !
starvation diet for a pat. it i so low
ii.id sparse and seems so st-ii.d bv
drought. On lirl etiUrino; the I'lains
by ihe Katoas I'acilie r- i. 1 I d.rew d -wn
the wivth " ;t t'.h'.rad:.in ti'avi'.iu
coiupaiiion b i'cmarV iti lhatthe p'ra-
j looked like "J -nor pickiu;:" for the cuttle
! which t wt-iK 1'as.sin. " It is the rich-
est yrass in tlie world, "he replied indi;-
: nantly atid with p-rtVct tiuth. Such is
; the vegetation tiojt suirounds us and
tuViU all the vast extent of coUiitl'J
t ai ieo me i uiiis.
Par awav to the e tst wedimlv .lisct m
i a low line of s'lndy biiilfs along the
! 1'iittl. Tlie plains, of (-.111!'-?. are trt-t-:
Irs,, but aloiio; iht. course of the distant
; river are teen at some points the tops of
; the collouwoo.l uvea that glow thickly
in the bottom lands the n,o-t -trikino;
' feature which the-yw meets U'lt il it rests
' on the niouiitainii in the west. The
li'-ctV Mountain 1'a'ie. ollll i lii-d a.,-ai list
thfl v m dav.a'.nj;' fthiif and sloping
w:u i.i k-iua',6 siiadfii ol blue, is in
.-i-ht for twv htin-hed liiilesof if.-. U-:, 4th
and led - ui our view iioia ali 11 p.'oaoVi
of liC'iiolony. .Nf-oest of the hih
liinli'iUilii ii'li! Iiiiist eolisliit'llous illiium'
, th(?,,
. V.
them an- the two sharp cones of l.en-'"ii
Vak. Hut- hundred and ia ent r-!i e
T O I 1 - " 1 V I 1 1 ill.' S. . 1 ' 1 b " A I. t I O 1 . . 'U
,;,5 to terminate in the low. blue nvr-
, ,
ala.a ol 1 UK S leak. 1 1 IS C I V Ik W ail' I
i.ery L-hie but marvtiDti-l V cii af for so
. i- . t. ., i .
treat a distance. ia,-l one nas heard
of the amai'.!' clearness i f ( 'oluradoatr,
-U(l J'" i LlTl toni.hment to everv
1 rW ("iii-.-r. Lon I a,k is about ltv
tuihs troni us as the crow tiles, but wh.-u
it i viewed in the carl morning li.ltt
: it stem haiKss,il.-lc to harmonize the
testilii'vuv of ones ip wita the map.
i for not only t he out line seen, buttery
st l'lklli ridge and I'il t oil its jaggtU aides
js w-rfeetlv clear.
?.,. , , , ...
111 tills lie ! ' : I i"5n " "I t ' i ere is not the
i h.t.rl iltes.s the rt looter plains. I
b-aie-t ranch i- but t wo miles awavan-l
t'.vo o!hr habitations are easily lis-
t iiigitished in tlie distance.
i It is 'ii such a i'i"Sict as this that
we iiua!ly lock out from our pleasant
solitary w intT home, but now the
: l-n h h.u- Ken white with snow.
f.r this lias bt-cn a winter of txtraordiu-
, ; . -.
'I'tOio.
; the distant onuis 4no ci itcinwooo
' ,.lin':iis the tin ! it aires and tbe lilaius.
i ei never more beauiiful and iear
! thiin in the cold still air at sunrise this
ll'.'llllll, v O, I . U.I .-Ull I .lltll I. j' li I i.u-
' 1,1 ' chuids enough to make his rising
! "c Mis. Al h.i!f-pat tell o clock the
l:ec ssa rv but very irk-oliie housework.
: . . t..... tt... .... .,!i.,..,c
; ); :,.), ,',e V-.d V-S Uis'l! tlll'.C bachcl"i
; iiViig tiioiiC Oil tl iaiicll, was .lnp.et . i
1
i and we started from 1 he house to saddle
up.-itid go ;;l'Ul the more congenial out-
d-'i cocupat i.'i.s- one to search for lost
' cattle, a'tothor to hunt C'lie of the herds
i , -i. . t , i.-.i ... v. ! i ii-'i i i-e e. .i .si a: . t ' v .r.-.,-, i . i
j ,..;,',': .jVi,, .....1 I T I..
t 1 1 ! i : 1 1 fim i . . i i 'in t ; 1 1 1 j i tnu i.no i
i kent well stocked. On leaving the i
lot! --'a decided chmge in teinpcrat urc
as iii'i lct-ti. . glance at liiy t neriiio'.ti-j
. t I", W llich at sunrise had Stood ;tt I'el'o, !
,:,io,l rise r.f 1 birtv-live ib
trees.
i P :; ' t - I i i ! -e rat tli'e and every kiniiretl
:;:...,! a, t v. t.s sti-hli',".!-.- put. out of mv
min! by a "io-utl cry of astoiiishnn -nt from
J one i' in' companions "Look at the
j ii:ii: -." '" It is r stituige sensation to
is..- n landsf :tpe w.iich lias V-conie in
' "if-i I'lv j'lii.itogr'i-!:"-'! on t!i iiiioi.i fvoin
iuo'itlis of familiarity suddenly transfitr
tireil liet'i.re the (yes. It is alinnst as
(lannio;iiicr. to mie's sense uf tlie ii.eilness
of things as to fee the solid earth quiv
el'iliir ielie;itll Hie feet. To such an
tent Was the jirosiect clianjied that the
low line of sand hills in the rast rose al
most to the iriiortioiis of a mountain
chain, and most striking of all "was the
rise into view of the line of wooded cot
ton iii;es alor.n the K'feat curve of the
Platte extending for ten miles north,
east and west of us. Instt adol'afew low
clumps of distant tree tops, it seemed as
though the plain was liedired in on three
sides by a great forest. Six miles away
in the west we saw the llourin mill at
Kvans with tht? white plume ol steam j
from its engine raised into sijrht as if it
stood iijhiii a Jiill, though it is usually !
hidden hy an intervening height i the ;
iollino; prairie. A ureal nniioier ol i
ranches scattered over the more thickly
settled country to the vesl were lnoinrht j
hi fore our eyps- 'i he mirage seemed ;
not only to make visible those buildings (
that stand lie or six miles away from j
us, but also to p.ia.unifv them and briiir ;
theia -ry near. Kvcn the mi uiitsin :
raiix'c set ii ied to -rain in height from the
tuira.'e. l'.ut all the wonder of the j
sUancre sioht was not apprehended at
one o'jice. While we looked the scene
bean to dial lire before our cyt-s. The
trees ami buildings in the west, which j
before had seemed to have an unnatural j
height, lie'an to lose it, but beneath j
each object appeared its own inverted j
iniae as if they were reflect.; from the i
surface of a vast and la'-id lake, except j
that the inverted images were greatly j
. xasreratcd m Iemrth. It is this phase
of tlie phenomenon which litis jriven the
name and which cv.-rv summer deceives
i:icxp-riciu eil travelers on these vast, j
iiry plains, as in the Arabian deserts,
into the belief that they are near lartre
bodies of water al times when they a:id
their horses tire parchf with Thirst.
These inverted images were s-en in the
west t look ina: towards the north we
saw only the dense, continuous hede of
trees apparently of sriantie ize ; but as
we st. Mid watching them the enormous
trees ean to assume a variety of dis
torted shajt'S. As seen in a field-iflass
sortie trunks seeiiied tw i.stt-d into spirals :
other were lent to a Ww-sh;cpe, and
many :ssui:;ed all sorts of irregular and
indescribable curves. As we watched
the strange appearances we could ob
serve at certain point the refracting
strata of air drifting with the wind, dis
tortinirthe objects Is-fore which they
passed and then leavir.cr them with their
natural appearance. This tniraut was
not a nn aientary or r.'.pidly passinj;
isioii : we watched till tiied of the
vaiiotis phases throuirh which the land-
ic-t;' v:
an lioti:
to t heir
The.M
t iliies c.i
its i.ashii', ami it was more than
It fore thintrs settled, dow n atfaiu
usual appearance.
su-ld'-ii changes of r.cene some
eur in such a i-lacc and time ai
to lie stavtlinor to an old inhabitant of
( olorad'i ioiiu' aectistoiiicil to the lui rape.
The ti.wi.s ,.f i'vans and (ire-ley stand
four miles apart, but ;ire hidden from
t ,ieh other's view by one of the highest
elevai ions of laud iu this roilim? country.
An i:,iii' man tells me that it is not
Iom; since the people of that town were
summoned from their houses to see the
town of (J reeley rising over the hill. -f.'reeley
is alare, well-built village w ith
broad, straight streets thi -kly sh;ded
a pretty oasis in this treeless country.
It never was more iK-atitiful than when
it was thus held hijjrh la-fore the ust.ni-i-hed
eyes of the people of Kvans. Not
only the streets, churches and public
buildings were visible, but the dwellings
and trees could l-1 dist intruished.
The LTeat altitude of this reifion, the
extreme dryness of the
and the proximity of
air
the
ami earth
moujilain
chai.i, make conditions on which deiw-nd
ti
r luoM-ments of
the air and t har.jres
of weather tp.iite diiTerent from those
we find iu the l'act : and the miraire is
but one of many strange aerial phenom
ena that surprise the ''tenderfoot" in
( '.dorado. -S,rititjfi, 11 (Af l.s.s. ) Sittnllj
A I It I'UliliH.
-V NAiiiih.v K- ai k.- As is will
known the la sometimes .murders by
lueans of cirenmst antial evidence. One
cei:iinr, avoiiu man weiit to see a play.
Taken w ith a til of coinrhini:, he left the
theater. As he sirixle ahmpr, two men
came rushi'icr down the street, one of
them droppintr a ST'dd watch and chain,
which the votuiyf man jiicked tip, ami
then went after the loser, ruuniiiL; into
tlie arms of a joliceni;in. wlio marched
him off to the station to explain matters.
Presently a messenger arrived in hot
haste, saying the thief was wanted
at a certain hotel. The unfortunate
prisoner was taken there, and brought
face to face w ith a man lyincr on a lounge
, covered with blood, "is this the man
j who slahWd vii-.i?" asked the otlicer.
: 'Tt is," said the poor fellow, falling
back, never to sjK-ak atiaiii. The inno
ccnl yountr man was trieil fur murder,
: foiitid jjuiltyainl sentenced to lie- hanircd;
and handed tie would have Ik-ch. if. a
fortnight before the day fixed lor his
execution, a prisoner iu sin-yiuj had
not confessed on his death-lied that he
had robbed the man of his watch, then
had stablied him and run off. afterward
, dropping the watch as he ran.
MlSTAKF.N lOF.NTlTY. Xot long ago
a man was run over and killed by the
cars at Fvanstown. in the neiglilKuhood
of Chicago. The bod' was identified as
that of Josiah Hill, a resident of South
i.eii'i. ui'i., who iiao neen at work fin a
farm at Winm-tha, live miles from Mid
libtown. The v.idow and daughter
were inconsi .bible ami tpiite broken down
aftt-r the coroner's iiKjncst. (which found
thai ' Josiah 11:11 came accith-ntaily to
his death." (and the burial in the grave
yard at Smith P.t-nd. Several days Liter
Mrs. Hill mustered up energy enough to
go for her late husband's effects. I.o
and behold ! when she approached the
farmhouse there was her husband quiet
ly at work in the barnyard. Sin-fainted
several t lines and could w it h diliiculty le
iu-liiced to I relieve thai it was only a
very s! range case of mistaken identity.
As for 11:11 himself, it was the first he
had heard of his own death.
T.ittt.k Xft.i.if. was looking af j
Woi. i s "Wild Animals'' when Mr. .Tor- i
kins called, and apis-aled to that gentle- j
man to exphiin one of tbe pictures. '
'That is a wild lioar," said he. and the
lit l !c hidy looked at it thought fully and j
replied t -'It don't look like you, Mr. .lor- i
kins?" "I hope- not." resin .nded the'
gUcst.
Wliv
llt catiso." stiid tlie
artless infant, '-niamnia saitl when your
card was son! up. 'There's that old bore
Jorkin's again." " -ml it was a full
minute before mamma's frozen lips
thawed snflicient ly to inform the nurse
it w;is Ned lie's le.ltinie.
To i f'-l-i'i Hrtr.g the s.-o'iiilrel.
UlilXKEWESS.
AN
ALI.KHKI) l l l'.K SAID TO DESTROY
Till; AITKriTK TOR LIl'Oi;.
A letter from Chit-afro to the New
York Sun contains an account of lr.
JT "lifer's mode of treatment for tlie
cure of drunkenness. If the drug or
bark is found to missc-ss the projierties
claimed for it our physicians will, no
doubt, advise its use. We trust this
new discovery will jmisscss the alioired
virtues, for, if so, will prove no less val
uable than wonderful :
"Now, Doctor," I said, "what did you
pive this patient? or, in other words, tell
me in plain Knulish what your medicine is,
how you prepare it, and how any one may
five it so us to cure fn habitual drunkard
1 mean a drunkard with inflamed eyes,
tr.-mhltntr hands. Moated body, and intellect
shattered hy habitual drink."
"My liiedU-iiie," said the Ioctor, "can be
boitirht" at any first-class t.ruir store. It is
red Peruvian bark (citirhona ruhra. ) Cuinirie
is from tlie yellow bark (cnHs'iya.) Now,
there are eighty varieties of this bark. I
use the bark from tlie small red variety.
1 )nu.'L;i-ts call it tlie quill hark ticcaiir..; it
comes ftoin twifs about the size of a iiuill."
"How do you mix it '."'
"1 take a pound of the best fresh .pull red
Peruvian bark (cinchona rubra), powder it
and soak it in a pint of diluted alcohol.
Tin-it I strain it and evaporate it down to a
half pint so it is a pound to a half pint.
Anv one can prepare it."
"I low do you ttive this medicine?"
"I five the drunken man a tea-poonful
every three hours, and occ asionally moisten
his toiifiie between the doses the lir-t and
1 second days. It acts like ijuinine. The pa-
tieiit can tell by a headache if he is fcttiiit?
j too much. The third day I generally reduce
1 the dose to a half spoonful, then to a quarter
i spoonful, then down to fifteen, ten and five
I drops."
' How Ion t; do you continue the medicine ?"
'TToiu five to liiteeii days, and in extreme
! cases thirty days. Stveu is about the aver-
i a-e."
1 "Now, please tell lue tlie philosophy f
this na-itieiii why it cures drunkenness,
and how 'ju happened to make tlie tliscove-
rv."
"Well, first you must under-taml that in-ten.peiau'-e,
tir-t a habit, finally becomes r.
di-e,ie. It becomes a disea-e of the nerve
; cells, or if talking to a physician, 1 should
say it heroines a disease of the sen-orial fan-
tlia. I found hy dissc-tinjf the brain of a
man who had diet of delirium tremens that
tlie cells of the ip.ia lrifen.inal body, or the
cells that -end the n.-nes t i the eye, wvie in
i an unnatural state ..Tt the out-i.le, while
wit l.iii tbe m-rve cells themselves 1 li.cover- i
; ed a yellow, yeaty-loiikipt; depo-.it.
"Now, I n-i'd myself, what is this yellow '
I deposit and what causes this abnormal look '
of the cells? It was caused, I lejrned after ;
much research, by the ethereal part of the
alcohol foinfj -trailit to the outside of these ;
cells. Now, if I drink, miik," continued the
; d-K'tor, "or eat food, it will take it four hours '.
, to pass through the digestive or !, be t
' ken up iu the f lood, artd be. pa-sed to the !
nerve cells in three minutes. This shows
l that alcohol is not digested. II is not f.d.
: It is a poisonous fluid, electricity, foes over
I a wire, straight to the outside f tlie nerve
cells, which it stimulates artificially, when ;
I they should he stimulated naturally through :
i the hi.!.
. "If the spirit part of alcohol," continued
; the Doctor, "were digested like soup, the ;
I kidneys would extract from it its properties 1
I as they extract the injurious salt" from our i
' food, and this poi-oti would never reach
' them. Once stimulated unnaturally by j
! poisonous suh-tance like whi-ky, the nerve, i
; cells call for larger and larfer d'oses, till by
and hy a man can drink twoijuarts of whl-ky j
or eat seventy grains of morphine a day.
' C'i'-i' horta rubra stops the call for alcohol."
. ' Please explain the passage of food and
: poi-oiied alcohol to the hriii awiain." I said,
i "Vcll, when a man drinks alcohol it foes,
like electricity, straight to the nerve cells ;
j theu.-e to the eye throufh the optic nerve ;
! then t. the brain, making a man talk lively ;
j then to the spinal centre, limtierinf the
: back: then to the muscular system: and,
; w hen it filially pets to the stomach, he vom
i its. Food foes to the stomach first, then
j into the blood, then to the heart, and finally
! throat;! the atterie to the brain."
i "Then red Peruvian bark stimulates and
! builds up the nerve cells until they befin to
! receive nutrition from the blood ?"
i "Yes, that's it. 't he only credit I claim is
j uiakitif thU discovery and discoveriu-j; the
! lacatioiiof the disease known as dipsomania."
"How did you discover that led cinchona
1 hark would cure drunkenness?"
"Well, I first discovered it down in Mary-
land, twelve year-, af.v An account was
' published in the 'un at that time. I had
i case of a drunkard. Hill Stevers, who a!-.o
i had intermittent fever. It was a hard case
' of fever, and so 1 tried red Peruvian bark in
i st.-ad of (juinine. To my surprise, it not
i only cured his fever, but he never wanted to
' drink whi-ky afterward. When he went in-
to a saloon and the hoys asked hi:a to drink,
i lull said :
"I can't, boys. That dofon red bark the
j Doctor fave ii'ic not only killed my fever, but
; it spoiled all the whi-ky in Man, laud for mc"
, "What conspicuous cures in Chicago can
; you refer to, D,-tor""
"Well, Dr. S. Ik Noble, lie had the aleo
: holic di-ea-e. His nerve cells w ere poioned.
He was once President of the Illinois Dental
; Association. He pot to In- a hard drinker,
j His r.iind b"fan to lie affected, thotiph a
scholar and a gentleman, beloved by ev.-ry-ImmIv.
He tried red Peruvian bark three
weeks atro. He's a well man now, and ev
erybody in Chicago looks at this cure as a
miracle. Dr. Noble knows it was a disease,
and don't object to be referred to."
I am sat i-lied that if physicians everywhere
will five Dr. DT'nirer's discover a trial they
will .hi more tor temperance in a year than
(.ninth and Murphy have done in all their
lives. It is the f'.r-t r.-mcdy ever discovered
that kills the disease and the inclination to
drink at one and the suiue time.
A House "Who Kxnv tiik s. P. C.
A. sicn. A sonic hat singular incident
happened yesterday at the corner of South
and Gennaii streets, which attracted a
large iiumlerof spectators, few of whom
failed t appreciate the situation. At
this corner is the office of the president
of that humane organization, the Society
for t he Prevent ion of ( 'melt y to Animals.
On the front of the ollice hangs tlie sign
of tlie society. K-aring upon iti face tlie
picture of a cruel driver Ix-at ing an over
loaded dray horse. It was about -J. P. M.
yesterday, and the streets were thronged
with business men, when a horse and
cart were driven down South street, the
horse considerably the worse for wear,
the carl very much dilapidated and soine
whal overloaded. As the horse reached
the corner, he slightly raised his head,
gave t'lif glance at tlie humane society's
sign, and without more ado laid himself
tlown on the pavement in harness, his
head tow ard the sign and his tail toward
the street. It was fancied by those w ho
witnessed t he ircrforiuanoe t hat the horse
heaved a sigh of relief as he reached the
pavement and lay under the shadow of
the society. Tender hands raised the
animal from the ground, though helonk-
ed constantly its if he wouh
. prefer
seemed
good Ci
to
to
remain where ho was. and
think that he had fallen in
pany. ll'ihiiw rt A.-ucricfin.
A (ir.EAT Cirv. London has more.
Roman Catholics than Koine, more Jews
than till Palestine, more Irish than Bel
fast, mure Scotch than Alri-rtlt-cn, more
Welsh than Cardiff; its 1-eer and gin
shops placed one after another in a line,
would reach sixty-two miles, and one
entire quarter of the city is inhabited by
three huii'lii'd thousand of the nt-.-t
miserable wretches and worst thieves to
1 foini'l col r-artli.
IX THE SPHl.XJ.
U. K. MVNKITTRICK.
In the sprinp the merry robin jumps about
upon the lawn :
In the sprinp Adolphus Kilcy puts his seal
skin cap in pawn.
Iu the sprinf fair Musidora wear a rosebud
in her locks ;
In the sprinp the painter painteth ."Pse
Jones' Salve" upon the rocks. ;
In the sprim; the oxlip blossoms in the leas
ami m the hills :
In the sprinp the blushing maiden takes her
share of bilious pills.
In the spring the weary husband beats tlie
carpet in the grove ;
In the spring the weary husband wrestles
with the parlor stove.
In tlie spring unto tlie poet (?) saith the ed
itor, "iet hence '."
In the spring the circus pot.-r decorates the
eoalyard fence.
In the sprinp within tlie forest blows the vi
olet, the fern ;
In the sprinp the small boy shivers as lie
pazes on the churn.
In the spring the happy poet thinks foraver
he would live ;
In thespribp the can's connected with the
canine's narrative.
In the spring the downy cloud.ship sails se
renely o'er the flats :
In the sprinp the maiden's fancy lightly
turns to thoughts of hats.
In the spring through rosy bowers doth the
brooklet wend its way ;
In the spring but wherefore should I thus
give ";eiitle Sprinp" away?
spbim; wckk.
THE UEKKV, MEl'.KY FAHMKIi S HOY.
From August to Maoi'iuh, every field
was full of ploughs and patient farmers.
Dear, patient, g ood-uaiure.l grumbling
agriculturists. Where the farmer gets
his gixd nature from is a mystery to me
every time I look at him. 1 v,-atched
him to-day from the car window, ph Hi
ding along at the tail f the plow, and I
wondered that he ever smiled at all un
der any provocation, of all men it
seems to me the farmer has the It'st
right to grumble. )nly, he never grum
bles at the right things. lie grumbles
at prices, and then nobody sympathizes
with him nor cares a cent for his trou
bles, tcause we grumble at the name
thing. Prices never did suit anyKidy.
The seller always thinks they are too
low, and the buyer always knows they
are too high. The merchant goes into
bankruptcy It-cause he is compelled to
sell his g.Mnls lor half what they cost
him ; and the customer goes naked and
starves localise he can't afford to pay
one-half what is asked for them. So the
farmer, when he grumbles at prices, is
no worse off than the rest of us. and ac
cordingly attracts no sympathy.
I5ut Here is where, to my w ay of think
ing, the gazelle comes iti for the farmer.
It is spring iiiid the annual warfare
lx-gins. Early iuthe nioniingthe jocund
farmer hies him to the iu-M, and hunts
around in the dead weeds and grass for
the plow he left out there somewhere
sometime last fall. When he finds it In
takes it to the shop to have it mended.
When it is mended, he goes back into
the field with it. Half way down the
first furrow he lays, he runs the X'l"iiph
fairly into a big live oak nxd, the ban- .
dies alternately break a rib on this side i
of him and jab the breath out of him on
the other, and the sturdy root, looking
up out of the ground with a pleawd
smile of recognition, says cheerfully :
' "Ah, Mr. Thistlepml, at it a.'ain.
eh?" I
i Fifty feet farther on he strikes a stone t
I that doubles up the plough point like a ;
I piece of lead, and while the amazed and i
'breathless agiicultiaist leans, a limp,
i heap of humanityacross the plough, the
i relic of the glacial is-riod remarks, j
; sleepily : !
j "Ah, ha ; spring here already ? (Had :
i you woke me up."' j
I And then the granger sits down and
patiently tries to tie on that plough
troint with a hickory withe; and while
he pursues his lruitless task tlie inemliy
crow swoops tlown near enough to ask t
"Coin" to put this twenty in com, this
year, Mr. Thistl.-pod ?"
And lclore lie has time to answer me ;
sable bird, a tiny grasshopper, wriggling i
out of a clod so lull of eggs that they:
can't 1 counted, shouts briskly : j
'-Here we arc again. Mr. T'histlepod -. '
dinner for "t-i,iMioir,oit !"
And tin n a slow-moving but va ry pos- j
Hive potato bug crawls out into the sun- !;
i light to see if the froat has faded his
', stripes, and says :
"The oM-fas'hionodr-eachhlow-potatoes ;
are the Lest for a sure crop, but the
early rose should be planted for the first .
j market." 1
! Then several new kinds of Lugs -who ;
haven't made tiny record yet. climb over i
i the fence and come up to inquire alout j
; the staple crops of the neighborhood,
and before he can get through with them ;
Professor Tice sends hima circular st at- i
ing that there won't be a drop d" rain !
' from the middle of May till the last of j
: OctolK r. This almost stuns him, but he
I is lregiiming to fel a little resigned !
1 when a dispatch is received from thede- ;
partnient of agriculture at Washington. ;
sa ing that all indications point to a '
summer of unprecedented, aanost inees-
sant and long continued rains and flood.
i and advising him to plant no root crops !
at all. While he is trying to find words
I in which to express his emotion a neigh- :
! Im.i- drops in to tell him that the jx aeh
i trees in the country are winter killed. ;
and that the hog cholera is raging fear- ;
: fully in the norilicrii part of the town- j
ship. Then his wife comes out to tell j
; him the dog has fallen into the well, and j
; when the por man gels to the door van!. ;
: his children with much shouting and I
: excitement meet him and tell him there
! are a couple of cats, of the pole dciiomi
i nation, in the spring house, and another ,
; one under the barn. With tears ami;
. groans be returns to the field, but by that :
; time il has ln-gun to snow so hard he :
can't see tlie horses when he stands at i
his plough. lie is discouraged and
starts for tlie house with his team, when
lie meets a man who bounces him for i
using a three horse clevis lie made him
self, and v. rings ten reluctant dollars out ;
i of him for ii. When he reaches the
' house tlie drive well man is waiting for
him. and while he is settling with him
a clock loM'.tTti lines in. -and a lightning
i pd man. screened by the storm. c!iinls
i up on the ten dollar snrnke house and
' fiistensikldollars'' worth of lightning rods
i on it, and before the poor farmer can get
lu.s gun halt loaded, the liauift comes m
to tell him that he has lieen drawn on
the jury.
No. I would not, even if I could, be a
farmer.
The life is pleasant and independent,
but it seems to have its draw backs.
If I were a farmer I would gnnnl-V
all I wanted, and thump the matt who
f. .ill-id fault with me fur it. K. J. 15.
A ROMANTIC STORY.
I
A despatch from 1'mt .Tervis, X. V.,
to the New York 'Voo.s. relates this :
.Toset.h Morse, of Stroiid.-bm '. Pa., made !
f.-0 lino in lS.ao out of a contract on the I tela
ware, Lackawanna ami Western ran way,
which was then constructing. He removed
l to this place, and purchased a fine residence,
j His family couM-tod of his wife and two
daughters. His wife's maiden name was
, Collin. She was a member of a prominent
New Jeis.-y family, and had two younger
i si-lers. Mr. Morse gave both of his daugh
ter a line education, rianecs was a gradu
ate of Seward institute, in Florida, thi
county, a school founded hy the father of the
late Secretary Seward, and which has always
leen conducted by members of that family.
Miss Morse was a tine musician and linirui-t.
After returning home from school she be
came a contributor to the New- York period
icals. While at school, she, with thoiu.'htless
companions of her-,in-ei te.l an a.h ei tis.-iuetit
in a New York new -paper solieitinp corres
pondence with some gentleman, with a view
to matrimony. The advertisement wa- an
swered by F. I. Jenks, of llo-toii. A corres
pondence wa-' curried on between Miss
Mor-e and Jenks tor some time, and finally
they became en gaped without ever having
seen each other.
Some time alter the M ,r-e family came to
Port Jervis Mis. Morse died. H. -r husband
subsequently married one of l-.-r -i-t.-r-. In
ls."4, after Frances returned from school, her
betrothed husband came on front lio-ton to
see her. She disliked himas-oon as .lii-vnv
him. Her stepmother, however, fancied the
young man, and through her influence Fran
ces was induced to reconsider a determina
tion she had made to break off her on-:age-ment,
and she and Jenks were married.
They went to P.o-ton. Mrs. .b-nk- remained
in that city only a short time, as -he and her
liu.-band did not live happily together.
Jenks came to Port Jervis subsequently and
lived with his wile for six months, w lien a
separation was agreed upon between them,
and Jenks went away. Meantime, Morse
had squandered hi- fortune. Dining a se
vere illness about this time Mr-. Jenks t""k
as medicine laige quantities of opium.
When she recovered she a.c -p.-d a position
as teacher in one of the New intk schools.
It was there that sh- discovered that she had
acquired tin- opium habit, she became such
a slave to the habit that she was compelled
to give up her situation in New York. In
isv.t her stepniotiiei died, and her father af
terward married the remaining one ot the
three Cofliii sisters. Mrs. Jenks gradually
ohtailied control of herappctite for opium.
In 1 -"' her father took the contract for
building the Ilawley branch of the Erie rail
way and removed front Pott Jervis to Haw
ley. There Mrs. J.-nks married a man nam
ed McKay, ami the two removed to Connec
ticut. It docs not appear whether a divorce
was ever obtained in the first marriage.
McKay died a year or two afterwards.
Morse somewhat repaired his fortune by the
JIawlev branch contract, and removed lost.
l.oui m lso.-., where he amassed a large for
tune, and where, it is said, tie still re-ides.
His widow.-d daughter joined him in that
city, and, by her accomplishments and N-au-ty,
took a prominent place in s.M-i.-ty.
The Morses, ia ls.'.si p,-nt the summer at
Saratoga. The young widow captured a
voung Southerner named t.eorge S. Henry,
who was also staying at the springs. si,e
married him, and they took up their resi
dence on hi- plantation near New Orleans.
They lhc.l tnere happily for three years,
when Henry died. After he died it was
found that hi- affairs w.-re in such shape
that his wife and child woul 1 be left penni
less. The child died s.H.n afterwards, and
Mrs. Henry fell soon afterwards into h. r
old opium-eating habit. She came to New
York city. Friends aided her in securing
work on the press. The habit of opium
eating grew on her, and she was finally com
pelled to cea-e writing. She then engaged
in dress making. From that time her friends
in this place lost trace of her. A few days
ago it was announced in one of the morning
papers that Mrs. Ib-nry had died at No. 17
Clinton Piace, and that sin- had Wen so ad
dieted to the use of opium that she required
from four to five ounces of laudanum a day.
This unlortunate woman proved to be the
former siK'iet belle at Port Jervis, Prances
.Morse.
Iv TIIK Si'iiiNO, &c.--Aii infallible
indication of the approach of summer is
the numlor of elo'ieinerits which are
chronicled in the local columns of Ihe
domestic xehangos. One ot the most
touching idyls of the season is told in
limpid prose by the Dayton liitwu-rot.
He w as poor ; she was y.miig t her parent s
were sensible, lie was forbidden to en
ter the house and she to leave it. Her
chainlsr was in the .second, story and
underneath tfie -window was
gtape-
arbor or rack. At the hour apiiinted
for love's advetiturc he made the precon
certed signal from a shady corner i f the
Street and she answered it. She had a
change of clothing sa
lt,.tv S'l.V.I'il illVilV
in a valise w hich sh
ad borrowed from
her brother without his know b-dge. She
opened t!ie window and low rod the
valise to the ground. Then trawling
out of the w indow and straddling ou of
the rafters of the graja -rack, sin- crept
down to tlie post and thence, as it were,
skinned it to tla- ground. Ever thing
looked auspicious, and they were in great
glee, when t her horror she happened
to observe that she had on a pair of old
rublrt rs instead of her shoes, which she
had taken off in her room, and had for
gotten to throw out upon the grass.
This was a sad stab- of affairs, as it
would not look well for a young holy t-
go traveling among strangers with a
pair of rubliers. and nothing else in tin
form of shoe leal her. and licsides. as it
was damp and cold, her health would be
endangered. Jtisi what in do greatly
distressed their ardent young hearis. A
proposition that be should climb up to
Ihe room and get the shoes was n.t
favorably entertained by the flashing
voung man : but white t hev were Hiseus-
; jt t1( u- pn-ttv little st'-lo-bie sutlden-
ly collapsed. Tlie Lig brother turned ;
lip unexpectedly at tint front gate. The ;
girl sat down on tlie door step and bu.'st :
inio tears, and heiTovor di-sapiM-ared over '
the fence with uncommon agility. There ,
was a domestic tableau in the par'or and j
the young lady was sent to lied.
No Dm iit a i.t. Titni. A country ;
pajM-r tiid not half finish a story altonf
trout in ;i geiitb iiitin'strout-pond saving ,
the life of a little girl who was aoens- :
toined to feed them, and who had acci
dentally fallen into the pml. by forming '
themselves into a soiid lmdy and supiK.rt- ,
ing her in the water. It aptioars th. re
are later advices about it. Tlie trout
not
thev
only raist-d lc-r to tlie surface, but
tloiited hi r ashore, after which they
took
her on tnetr suouitiers ami can ieu
her up to (he liotise, ovi-r lialf a mile,
across li.Ids. !n-ing c 0 1 ;p-;-lb-l to take
down several fences in order to do it.
When the father of the little girl came
to the d-tor in answer to tlie li-ll (rung
by one of the tr-'Ut ). he discovered a lot
of trout rolling the child on an old salt
barrel to get the water cut of her.
When she was finally recuseitatcd. the
trout united in giving three cheers, and.
declining to step into the house to "take
siithin," thev trotted Lack to the j-nid.
7;.((.'otts Xnuthbj.
! Alaii T tiik Sit'H k It. The erown-
! ir.g abib'tioii of ninny a man's life is to
I lH-inns to a :.o-ret society, and after
j listening fr many years to the constant
1 1
at loit ot one col tocii ; ! "is 01 vmiiiis. 10
.lie an -1 b
aw !-.yc:.ii-'l
rj-pitr ej.,
oiiowed to the grave by an
iti.td in b'.acl. coats a.inl
; two -:'cs t"'-' Lig.
A TAILLESS KITE.
j This is the time of kite living and the
j boys are ready for any novelty that will
;"'' 'est tot lie . liUlntHToi years
ago some gentlemen of Kochestor discov
ered in a lnx-k of designs printed in Hol
land a draw ing of a kite which should
float in the air without tlie necessity of a
tail balance. One of the gentlemen con
structed otie. and when ho displayed it
to bis incredulous friends theyder:d--d bis
assurances there was go in it. and that
he would make it go. Th- first attempt
was a failure. Iinb-cd. if the kite d"esn"t
rise on the first sufficient gust of wind,
it should In? discarded and a second kite
made. The second ntttmpt was a de
cided success. s(, much so that as the
erratic thing cav . rted lH-ne;;tli th J -mpy-lvan
everybody wondered what strange
creature of the air il might 1-e. ib-ceiitly
aiiothi r one of t he singular h kitig ilyep
was put up :u d it would have done one
good to liavcsi en how di-iighted the Itiys
of twenty or thirty years ago were as
the taiih-ss kite soared away itito the
Lint- depths, tii.w plunging eccentri. ally
towards contiguous dwellings and again
gracefully s miming up towards the
eiiitb. It is intimated that t.i;!!. -s kite
ih i:;g w il! 1-e f'o popular a:ui;s. m. bt this
swi'.si.n. P,.r those who d -.-ire i'ltry a
hand at the novelty we give brief direc
tions as t t he const 1 1 i,-t j. .n. The sb :'.
of the kite i- wh;;t the 1h's tail dia
mond." The cross-bur. v i.i, h it: tail
kites of tin- diamond pattern i" straight,
should be mad-' of bbkory, ;u.d bowed
by cotitiect ing t le- n Is w it h a t i'.ut -1 ring.
It should then be placed at rig-it angles
with the j rp'-bd ii uhir s'.iek and la-ti.n-ed
securely, t lie b il l . f the Im-.v b t:g
Lackward from il:e intersection i f th--
sticks. linn a strin-.
lib t.ti
. v. r
1
r thr
:':lti.e
.-;..' .t
i l-
end of i it h sj ji k and i
with light tissue p;ip r.
th.
F.T
t!
ki'e tlie i-erpoihlieinar
StlfK Shot
tend three feel liel-iw tb iKUiit i t
s"ctioii with I he ! -. and -no f- !
it. The b-iw .-hotlld In- o':o an
half lC'-t long on each side of t;
of intersect i. 'ii with the p' !'ji:
stick. The b'-iiv t- .r,! simuM i-
.u
-.it'll.
at tin-jHiiut of interst cti'in. and at the
same dis'ance down tin- Tp. n licul.tr
stick as the arms ol the Low txtetel on
each side of the p 1'ls-le 1 ieular stick.
The band is atta.-ht-d at only two points,
the point of intersect j. in and al a j-'int.
lielow, in the f.'iir-f.M't kite li.iti'.i-ti d,
one and one-half feet Li low the t-'int of
intersection. Tie these two strin rs to
gether and attach the captive cord,
balancing it so that the capth e cord
shall le exactly ; po-itc tic- js,'ti-t 1" il:
leisecli"ii. or a' right angles -.vi;!. tie
-.erpendicular stick fratn -.
the kite is then ei.uvex an
Th.
1 the
lac.
bitch
i !
course. Concave. If
succewd, try ag..:t:.
sorts of boys. I'L is f,
t inn- ver ecc. ti . ric ;
wily fish.
at fir-; y.yu .eiii i
It .;- fun i'T all
I In of kilt- is S"lne-
itid as c,me as a
Hr.i: Finsr Hi-ham. 's Win:.
About the most amusing case tin- Police
Court had before it for s: me months was
that of Mrs. Winnie O'D.nim 11. of Kus
se!, w ho i -harged Soiom.-n st(-vt is with
intentionally Irving to walk over her on
the public road a few das bg". As a
proof of In-r injuries she showed a hadly
d.kliiaged till pail, which stood the bl Ul;t
of the shock. The fun came iu n the
cross-examination, when she "v-a-scd"
the defendant's lawyer in lively shape,
so that licre th in once Judge Lew is had
to interfere. Winnie's husband, an in
offensive baking Cerman. was the r.cxt
witness, and apparently wa.- in fear of
the law, for when the lawyer asked if
he was Mrs. OT oniiell"s husband, he
stood w ith ";en nn.uth, looking la lpless
ly around. After the qtn.-ti -n was
Several times ivj fated, and the judge
had ordered him to answer, h" at b-ngih
blurted out. "None of your pitita
Then the woman told him to say of
course they were married, and finally he
said: "Well, .'-budge. I call b r my mine
frail." ''How ib-cs it ha pi then,
that her name is O'Doi.noll and yotiis
tilenn ?" Tin- vk itness' face lighted up
a he turned to the vexatious lawyer:
"You tinks yourself .-malt, ain't i.'U?
Mine frau goes Ly name i f In r ilr.-t
husband's vile." Tic- ti-tii'. 't.y on
In I !i sides was S-. i coniiii t ing . hat J udg.
I.eyvis paid that st-vf-i,s was "g'tiity,
but n-.t 1'i'aVi ti," and di-iniss-ii th. -case.
Sjn-l.t'iut LI ii,'.'"'..'ci,.-.
F.s-AV
us Woman. Afltrn
woman.
siie i.as bt .-ti afler Lini
vi r sit
ie ext!
she is :i pvrsou ..f noble
lrt iiig made of a man's rib.
I don't know why Adam
fo.il away his ribs iu that
suppose he wi.sie t accUi.t
Will,
w;- v.
al !'
1 to
it 1
he did.
It costs more to k'-ep a woman than
three dogs and a shotgun.
Hut she pays bill b.n k w ith
Ly fixing j.u a hotis. ft;! ..f 1 1
k.-.-p you awake at niglr.s
li-cs camlv eil r ..tir Siu.d.-i,-P.esides,
your v. ib-is v-r .
article in have about the hm:
sie j s(, haiidv to -we ir at
let i ;-.-t
:ii !r ti to
-.near nio-
i: r
don't
you cut vours'l! w ith a ra.i-i an-
li-t-l like blaming yourself.
Woman is the superior U-ing in Mass
achusetts. There a reab. .tit 01,000 more
of her sex than l.i.ali s hi that state.
This accounts for the tt trili'-d. hunted
tlow n expression !' ihe single nn-n who
(migrate from the Fast.
Woman was not t reat; d p. rfi t.
She has hT faults such as fi!"- ! :t:r.
false coiiiph xion. and so on.
Hut she is a great deal lw tterth.tn her
neighlMir. ami she knows it.
In a wild part of Scotland a dealer in
fish used to drive Lis carl a considerable,
way inland. On one occasi.ei, when
passing a wild moor. when-, although
there did reside a m-! 'thiisi .-r. tlie
knowledge of the inhabitants . t affairs
in general was in-t very extensive, he
dropped a lobs; i r. Some obild-vn pick
ed it up. and w ". tiering what th--strange
looking creature could be. t-i'-k it to
the scb....! master. The dominie put on
his "spectacle-;." atid turning it over
and co
at leu:
o" the
except
They
dove ;
twa."
rr f .xaiinne
ttli said tl
1 it c.n fi
'-'oracle.
iv.
W.el."
I
ken loai-t
Wi .1 1
twa.
are
and
"If-rfc.l atrmals " creation
and those twa 1 newr saw.
;ui ! phant and a turtle
s.i this must iK. ,ne o" tlie
Nor long
since, iu Xf'.v Jersey, an
Irishman was
for selling vvbi
ing asked lie
arraigb'-d 1h f..re a Court
-key 011 Sutiiay. On le
usual ti'iicdi' ii. "Ictilty,
" he sin tcht .1 1 ii isi tf up
height that he might see
or let g-.iily V"
to his great''
the judge on t
squeaking e'
vonr ii-'ni'f,
! tottlehe.l by '
put a hs 1 1.' '
' JI . f-r'$ U -.-'.
l-ench. and in a thin,
aid. "A ..'.' guilty.
' hi ,d: "
s si tlll'S
' if 'I
Tbe tottrt felt
funk!. ess. and
bo piil'V'-hn.