The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 15, 1880, Image 1

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    Wed,
White-robed se comes, my love, my own,
Yet purer thin the robe she wears;
White flowers she holds, the fairest known,
Yet sweeter han the flowers she bears
50 white, so sweet, yet 1 could seek
And find, beseath that white veil hid,
Love's hue upd that gentle cheek,
Love's lightbenoath that long fringed lid.
Clash out, ve bells! Ring far and wide,
And laugh tle piping birds to ssom.
Fair kinsmen, (iss the bonny bride,
She wanderdhr with me this mom;
And if her eye are filled with toars,
1 grudge thet not their tender rain,
My love can ose the misty fears
And kiss theunshine back again.
Hugh Conieay
Ee.
TheSpider’s Lesson.
A tyrant § my border dwells
In Austin black and gold;
Wrought #l in silver are his cells,
Finesp@, a thousand told.
His dwelilly has ne
Nor disgl unde:
The sunligh gilds it
On fagret bushes bound,
yd ngy rood,
round ;
slander wool
And at higkveo, every morn,
Such brifants do appear
As ne'er IBRY court werd worn
By Chrisgian
monareh doar
No prison @ingeon has this wreteh
Where vitims, out of sight,
His orvel jgloasy may teteh
And keegin hopoless night.
Yet subtle fratagerms he springs
On harmiss passers-by,
+ thaty
t thea
Winds his #it silk abou
And hang them up wo die.
wings,
1 came to steep his work away
With swilh impatient hand;
But here th lesson of the
He teach as 1 stand,
day
The tymaatlxury doth
Lar winged souls entwine,
And binds lettered in a
To mos Be {ree sunshine.
i
The subtile ¥eb afar I'll leave
Of fattenty dooeit;
The gorgeos spider shall not weave,
His fettesior my leet,
The eve thal views the heavens in faith,
The hand #ith justice armed;
Can sea the gaare that binds to death,
And soatta it, unharmed.
— Julia Ward Hews, tn Ser
DELICIA,
She was so exquisitely beautiful, it
was actually provoking that there
shouldn't he the least romance about
her. Waves of pale gol hair rippled
away from her peariy lore and
were gathered into a superb knot at th
hack of bir head. Such a bine gleamed
in her sweet ves, such a lovely pink
mantied Ber sat cheek, such i
parted her ripé mouth, that,
as you might BS you could n ©
frained from staring at her; and the
thinking of strawberries and .
longed for a silver spoon with which to
eat her.
But for all this
romance onnediad
three-andtwenty,
had a lover. She lived in:
house amane the White mounts
her father r
round. She loved
happy with them
of Are.
Joan walheanifnl, high-spirited; s
wi» camd nothing for dan
flirting and sould neither si
lay, was pssionstely fond
There was a spi
i r which mad
ae forehead,
»
¢
*
th
i
ere wasn't
AN
Aa
and
ani
AL
i
iehborhood
i life
winter
1 oli
A Ril
rts of her
Ww dods,
crmine
iresmy
a.
Snow fer
sweet
At
Al
¥
i
A
a & fF
NESS OF LM
i r
wenty-three
it with
conte
father was
1 her mother
the shock
il » mockiss
cis foundhs
tom
ai, and unable 1-
] i sure:y
. beautiful
'€ ly alone.
id, for no
3
day, De
Outsiders then ealled 4
one saw her weep, She only tremble
so excessively beside the open graves
that old Aunt Thankful, whe |
nursed herde.d mother, was oblige
support tier to keep her from falling.
Otherwise she w& composed, only her
sweel eyeshad a lpok in them pitilul to
see.
A chang had come over Delicia's
serene life: the dear bome-love was
gone, and the girls content had gone
With a naive coumge and reserve pe-
culiar to fpr she made no complaint;
she asked dunt Thankiul rather -wist-
fully te stag and keep house for her, and
then re to lier books and horse and
maiden maditations. But Delicia's
dreams wep troubled now. {e's grief
had touched her: she knew that sorrow
was in the world; she feared the future.
The strange,
fine NTR
sad summerpassed. One
day, Bob, the hired man,
led Joan of Arc prancing to the door,
thezide-saddle on her back.
“| have % go to the village, miss, to
buy the new mileh cow. I'll not be
back till non. You'll not mind letting
Joan stand with the saddle on a little
till I come ™ ;
“No,” sald Deligia, absently.
Her beanfiful oval cheek was ‘white
under her wlveteas There was a sad-
ness quite wamistaimble in har eyes as
she turned Joan's head toward the hill-
road.
Yet who, to have seen her beautiful,
spirited figure loping along th¢ uplands,
would have divined the rare heart of
¥
Cal
3
4h
£
3
the heiress of Wheatlands? She did
not, perhapt undestand bhewelf, and
did not know she lad asked her own
soul: “Aml to be all my lik alone?
Willno one great and good ever ask me
to be his deatly-beloyed wife? If not, 1
shall perish off the face of theearth,”
You musthave guessed rarcis to have
guessed how deeply ran the sti] waters
of that idyllic life. You would not
have guessed it from anything in Ler
perfect proud face as she turned it to-
ward a passing carviage. The occupants
were a blasedpoking man of thirty, por-
haps, and a ¥ery youeg and pretty girl.
A single glance told the story-— that
the young girl was loving sod unhappy;
that the man, for some reason, found
her desirable of possession.
He had hard biackeyes that repelled
Delicia, Jet the sight of the two seated
so close ave her a vague, painful
feeling of solitude and desolation which
pot long agowas uMerly unknown to |
er. :
The carriage glittered by, and Joan
loped softly along the woody road, |
soundless a thick carpet of pine]
needles. y
She made a circuit, and came back to
the main road,
Suddenly mnusual soundst attracted |
her attention. A erash and violent |
screams realied her ear, and as she rode
forward, a snge sight burst upon her |
view. :
The carrigge had gone over an em- |
bankment fd was a perfect wreck; the
horses lay prstrate— one of them killed,
the other stmggling desperately, but |
unable to rige; and prome beneath the |
broken vehicle was stretehed the sense-
less body ofthe dark, handsome man. |
Over him Bent the giel, sereaming no |
longer, but sabbing violently. =
Delicia slipped from her horse, and |
was at her Side some moments before |
she realized hier presence.
“Wal I Wallace! For heaven's |
sake, speak fo me! You cannot—you |
cannot be déad? Oh, dear Wallace— |
see, it is littleA Ite! Only speak to me!” |
despairing cpy, the young |
e pulseless breast.
to her feet to look |
p apparently, she saw |
«l
sped. alghing # her |
LOOK gt him: Ses, js he dead? |
The carriagéfe]] fjupor him, while I--I |
am not hurtgs all. Ob, heaven, what |
The white, § ill face told Delicia that |
the man at
[caring w
the road, encountered old David
VOLUME XIII.
village hotel
Sunmoned to view the scene, they
dis ntangled the senseless body, placed
it in the oarriage, and turned to Delicia
for further directions,
“Get a doctor immediately that you
reach the village, Mr. Green. 1 will
take this young lady home with me, and
bring her back to the hotel as soon as 1
wn put Joan to the phaston. Come
t
i
Cast
ith me, my poor child—1 will take
of you," to the petite. white-faced
and throwing her riding-skirt
ma closely over her arm, she led Joan
by a short-cut through the fields, back
to Wheatlands,
By the way she tried to question hey
companion; but the girl, almost trans-
worted with grief, made such incoherent
eplies that she could only learn that
she had been riding since the middle of
he previous night, that they were on
to Conway, that they intend.
10 be married there
“Were you— were you," said Delicia,
gentiv, in involuntary amaze, ** running
away from your friends ?"
Alta nodded
** From my brother, Guy Vannevar.
He did not like Mr. Munroe. Yes, we
: i married against his will,
Wallace, Wallace™
hrowing Joan's tr the
i
+ x
their way
wd
¥»
£
MILO OV gate
¥ $
(iid
ter of ¢
rat TY ;
returned, §
noon.
I'o Delicia’s
happy girl
constern ation
noe sooner enter
$
i
t
v
1 she fainted.
rength of excitement,
in her arms and bore her into
an inner room, where, placing her upon
a bed, she unfastened her }
her temples and chafed her hands,
At length Alta Vennevar again drew
her breath.
Passing through the hall to procure a
restorative, Delicia saw a man just in
the act of vaulting upon Joan. It was
not Bob, though the saddle had been
removed and lay upon the ground; it
was a man in a ragged coat, evidently
a tramp.
With at in her!
stepped back, and, sna
mounted revolver from
wide the hall-door and fired
The bridle fell from th
hand, and Joan—th
gate—stopped.
To Delicia’s surprise,
ly dismounted, and, t
{ her, lifted his hat,
“ I am effec iiy stopped, young {ady
but, believe me, I did not int i
your se, and certainly left an equiva-
ent, 1 gil NOW In Sorry conan
i still more by {he court
words and cultured tone, Delicia tur:
i rection tranger poin
ft hand, and saw wit!
y buggy and pant
' 8
dress, bathed
lash
lue
t
t
i
ree steps beyond
%
wu
end Lo stay
r ion.
"a
Lh
the s t
i
ine horse
ing norse,
ho has eloped with
ister, who
aid the man, wl
handsome, “and my
¥
in
3 10 was bot
horse
hopele S81Y Ju i
Otherwise, 88 than an i
have probably
wefore she was married
ife ruined. bi 3
ong and desperate drive, I could not be
halked of its object for want of a bh
[ knocked three times at your door, in.
tending to beg or hire yi which 1
saw, fresh, standing at the gate, but for
reason [I could summon no liv
Knowing my
ial yours in vi
i
fore
door. in
should
Tutor
Sima
overtaken
1 and het
}
NO Dear CL Of IF
Ose,
£ Urs,
me a
+}
wt 3
LN 5
wus; bat”
** you have effectually prevented
think I am bleeding to death.”
His voice closed faintly; the blood
was spurting from his wrist. He sank
upon t t her feet.
Delicia’s cheek grew white, HT
knew the danger ofthat terrible bleed-
ing. Unless it were stopped, the man
would in a few moments be dead.
Springing to the side of the now unre-
sponsive stranger, who seemed unable
to utter another word, she snatched her
handkerchief from her pocket, and
i it about the wounded arm, in-
stick picked from the ground,
making an effectual ligature, and,
the ahatement of her terror, saw the
frightful jets of blood subside.
The stranger's white face, the deluge
of red blood, the sudden relief from
spurring terror, turned Delicia faint.
Then she struggled hard against a terri-
ble reeling sensation. and held her own.
She thought wishfully of the glass of
cordial upon the hall table, but her feet
refused to stir.
Suddenly steps sounded at the gate.
To her inexpressible joy and thankful-
ness, Aunt Thankful and Bob appeared.
Delicia explained to the former,
briefly, though her voice sounded far
away to herself.
“ Wounded—hurt—bleeding awfully!
Boh, ride for a doctor fast as you can
go!” cried the old nurse, instantly in
her element.
The wounded man was making visi.
ble efforts to keep from swooning, but
when Aunt Thankful had administered
a cordial and bathed his temuples in cold
water, he rose and walked weakly into
the house, where, at her solicitations,
fie stretched himself upon a sofa, and
then unexpectedly fainted.
“1 don’t in the least understand who
this man is,” remarked Aunt Thankful,
steadily applying restoratives, *‘ bul
such a ragged coat and fine shirt I
never saw torether before. Wanted to
hire a horse, did ? What did you
%
he step a
for she
@
Be
het
shoot him for? Of all strange actions
"
The driving of the doctor’s buggy
into the yard stopped her remarks,
when Delicia returned to Alta Vanne-
var to find her in a wandering delirium.
Three strange days were devoted to
nursing the invalids. A burning fever
made the young girl unconscious.
Aunt Thankful’s charge was con-
scious, but very weak and silent. In-
deed, he seemed to himself to be in a
dream half full of delights, but pervaded
by a great trouble which Le could
searcely name,
The radiantly lovely face of Delicia,
footsteps pervaded his
like a blessing, while his desperate quest
by him in the bodily weakness and in-
action of brain caused by excessive loss
of blood.
* How long have I been here ?"
Delicia sat by him, having taken
Aunt Thankful’s place for a few mo-
ments, and started from a momentary
absence of thought to find Guy Van-
nevar’s eyes fixed piercingly upon her.
“This is the fourth day. Are you
better ?”
“1 am notsick,enly in a sort of dream
which I eannot wake myself from.”
* You are very weak.”
“It was you I saw when I came here,
wasn't it ?”’
“Jt was I who shot you,” replied
Delicia, blushing.
“J—I remember. Oh, my sister
lta!” —trying to rise upon his elbow..
“ Lie down, please. You must not
exert yourself. I have something to
tell you,” said Delicia.
i Lieve been here four days, you say.
Good God! what will become of her?”
“ Drink this coffee and try to be quiet.
Alta is safe.”
“How can you know?”
“1 have her in my care.
Munroe is dead—accidently killed.”
* And they were not married ?”
“i No.”
“Thank God!”
A
+ Are you sure of this?”
‘ Entirely sure.”
Hditor and
'
He could talk no lenger, but was visi
biv better in a fow how
I'he next day, pale, but
strong, ir a simple éarnestness, he sald,
quit tly, to Delioia
“How wonderfully
are!"
Something in |
and for the first tim
felt within her pure b
and sweetness of love
Half alar i by her emo
growing power the
bent upon her, she pose
beside him.
*You oan see Alta to-day,
he is better. 1 will go and
Alta Vannevar was better in body,
but suffering in mind.
She looked like 8 living wraith
of Delicia's long wh
and turned from her!
say down Delicla’s lap like
child.
“Oh, if I could die!
me, Guy;
And
understand
in
wash d.
beautiful you
11% eyes kind ed hie i's,
itte Delicia
the warmth
¢ In hey
t
it
reast
ons and the
IHU eves
her place
He
ol
irom
you know,
st
i
8
nn
nn
in
One Le Wrappers,
jo ¢} a? i 3
{ MOLICT 8 KISS ana
a tired
in
I know vou love
dead Oh,
vOU ares wolian,
he is Delicia, you
1 oved
him
Guy Vannevar looked down
two figures, buried in the great
chair, the woman fold
suffering child to her bosom, and
inexpressible filled his soft dark eyes
And Delicia, glancing up, saw
knew it was for her
I cannot tel
these two grew gether;
Guy Vannevar had told her of
gentleman and
and disearded his disguise,
had facilitated his pursuit
"allace Monroe, He atmosphert
ry and suspicion was entirely dis
, and as weeks and m
develop nig and
a realized that t
t heart was grante
i loved her,
at the
easy |
12 Lit
serene
it
it
son of a
i S
onths brought |
m OCCU
prayer «
or n,
her |
eal and |
1
¥
i
§ a
i MH
i
Lh
one gy
3 x A : i
Ana HARE Asko it
oved wile,
come t BE {OVE
piness |
un
O00
wl
but to-day |
than of yore, shi
and hap
less beauti
sivtt that few men add t
you that gw women aaa uu
tory the experience of havin
i
inte hinicha 3 shitenhs § } vad
ot the I Busbands, witch 18 hers. i
sh
Spanish Beauties, i
writes a M adrid COTY spond-
more Su I was asked |
dark fascinating,
iv d es of Mad
would rie out to het
who were srrangi
fetes, I res
N think was
erely round the corn
» GOTREr represents a
wearest part of Be
mum's hetel. But
lo-dav,
ent of the Bal
Oy one of the Ye
ful and stats
I
18,
Ri i
1g Costumes
s +h SOY IR
LAE COINS
3
i
wh in
i beauty wou abe a il
anism. What fhe ia
up in taiking
1d electric conversation is ne
rid belle's tongue,
z The
riticised Sen
Juan In :
previous John Bu
the spasmodic MD EuAg
“x caution to snakes.”
Senor Americano i
Pilgrims’ Rock when at home?
i reply, ail simplicit
and ask why she puts such ay
Wi question.
is SO cold
ne yes and one
wand n
any
% wi Ww »
1RKes
wat
$e
SEL gly
Vi
» "
,
in
And |
ne no, when at |
A dozen.
ever
never have; even
n beauties in this group
m could put a
of a needle half as easy
al camel could proceed
Not one of them ever
their lives. Two only
et work was done, bu
know a man in the le-
t a hundred miles trom
them
ire
on seen Spanish |
I
1
#1
© S080
tliread
Bibhlic
$
1 1
wel
X oh
gsion ne
1
TAL DIO
Monument
at needs
boning
that could beat
nd thread and herring
k-stitching, ete. Their
have been spent in reading
r unraveling French
of dress—and «the bills. |
ot. neither do they spin,
ir his glory is not
he—gqual to one or a
What lilies of the val
fowndiilies! Yet, not
one to be a housewife!
Young man, don't come here for a help-
You ean do better at home.
after 8 fashion; they ean
piano fairly well, and strum the
angels, but to patch your
they would struggle and
he bre ach,” absolutely defeated
They can paint in water colors
till-1ife® your imagination may
a dish of sweet pota-
toes would be a case of ** hot water and
no food,” as was the event with Breit
man's belle. A Madrid beauty is nota
joy forever, and if she keeps on as she is
shie never will be.
ail i
entire
Aa GIs
Fhey toil n
tL ™DOIOmO!
i
AO ail
t never wiil
ren of then
What dally ¢
i refose
Wie
a
!
Sing i
ke
pantaloons
a in
failures,
aii thes
gl
L
Qi
desire, bu
IO 2
The Hyde Estate.
The heirs of the Hyde estate met in
Jaltimore an short time ago ana organ
ized nn union known ns the ** Hyde Asso-
ciation of the United States of Amer-
ica.” The Rev. John P. Hyde, of Mar-
tensburg, W. Va., occupied the chair.
Mr. George A.
attorney for the heirs of Thomas Hyde,
was elected secretary, and Thomas |
Hyde, of Washington, treasurer. The
questions discussed were: “* Do the es- |
tates exist?” * Are they attainable by |
the American heirg?” and “Is thena- |
ture of the claims such as to warrant le- |
gal steps being taken with a view to ob- |
tain the property" A great deal of docu-
mentary evidence was read, dating
hack as far as 1730. From the proofs at
hand it was decided to take steps to en-
force the claim. A fund isto be created
to pay expenses, and George A. Hyde, of
New York, who has made himself fa
miliar with the law on the subject and
the facts will probably be appeinted at-
torney, and will visit England to
prosecute the suit,
The heirs claim that there will be
from fifteen to twenty-»ix estates, vari-
ously estimated in valve from $60,000,-
000 to £600,000,000, The Hydes of Mary-
land are the deseendants of Thomas |
Hyde, who came to America from Eng- |
land and landed at Annapolis in the year |
1752. The association resolved to make |
Baltimore its headquarters, |
NE WO os
i
——b
Do Animals Resist Temptation,
Temptation frequently begets in the
dog, cat and other animals the same
kind of mental or moral agitation, and
the same sort of result, as in man. Some- |
times we can see—h the dog, for instance
—the whole play a the animal's mind
the battle betwen its virtuous and
vicious propensitits, its promptings to
the right and its endeavors to stick by
the right. its longing for the wrong—
for the tidbit, which it knows would be
improper to steal—and the final triumph
either of virtue ortemptation, The poor
animal, knowing or feeling the weak- |
has the!
strength, the foree of character, the good |
sense, to avell temptation altogether, |
| most trying temptations thrust unex- |
pectedly upon them, and then comes the |
| —the moral tirmoil that may make
| shipwreck of or that may strengthen
| virtue. Sometimes, then, by the dog, as
| by the man, temptation is successfully
| resisted after perhaps a series of pro
{ tracted and painful moral struggles that
have been very apparent to the onlooker.
{ Unfortunately, however, equally in dog
| and man, the résistance of temptation is
less common by far than non-resistance
| or non-success in resistance, the result
of which is various forms or degrees of
wrong doing. —~Popular Science Monthl:.
a
There are fve daily papers published
ator in the inmediate vicinty of Dead-
woed, the Back Hills business center.
ST
EE
The Black Hean of Death,
I'he following story is told of the lat
George Jones, “the Count Joannes,"
whose eccentric ways and inordinate
vanity made him the leading butt of
ridicule in New York for many years
It seems that George Jones, the Count's
father, was an English chemist, who
about the year 1818 emigrated with his
wife and two children, of whom George
Was oldest, to country His
brother was but four vears old, he only
six, and his sister a baby in her mother's
arm I'he vessel, an old sailing ship,
fitted out after the ordinary method of
Lay
the this
nt vessels in those days, Was a
and, weeting with terrible
Atlantic, was driven far
and with difficuity
When at last the
it was found that
h there had been
start,
body was
bad sea boat,
storms on
her Ol
DOVE
ther
HON
the
out of Psi
water,
moderated
} isions, of wh
i 1 y al
Every
but
di
fie
n nish
an insu ntit
wore
ent the
ranning
} $
OL
Guan
short,
on os ALIOWRNCO,
hip was hey
ir Boston, whither she was
further reduction had to |
This was soon ain reduced,
was no food left on
he crew and
aon rect Cours
1
i
nade
we 1
and at
board,
1 pas
i
ast there
.
; t
engers in the face.
iven desperate by
1 and
hunger the crew
the cavtain could only
hem to their duty by agreeing
{ be drawn from a box,
one upon whom the hiack bean
would be killed toad for the
Officers, crew and passengers,
1d chil everyhody on
included in this horrible
with heavy hearts the fam
feck Lo partici
wrapped in
was agreed that
opened until
t
18 31OU K
st y
I Al aren,
was
wand
anigrants came on «
I'he
Of paper, and
them should
day of the drawin
* two hours ti
| were sighted
{ the fatal
AVUNR
+ tt
RL LEC Bid
beans were all
_ 1 it
3 ik
Of be
so that
-
thed
biack bean might
nth hour
1
o0m of
vi
th
deat
to
firs
box
master his anxiety
at once, he tore off the
id discovered a white bean
an
A
Wh , one
captain was
into tl
ae
hy
to Know his ate
covering,
He Wus
}
IY Ono,
« i ¥ tha
SHYOG, Al iat
beans from
capigin
APers, and
na A
never
3 3
3 DIACK One,
A Splendid Charity Festival Direeted
By Parisian Journalists,
The fete given o
er 17 for the
¢ inundation
thi
1
n of Deeoem-
¥
Tr
i vist
the night
hinafi 1 i rg By
Les sal i8 DY
u have
event thie
hibition, It is
ys affair was
ournal-
ourna
said to
ol
in op
ratifying
1p and
It was giv
and was attended nt great number of
persons. Toe ex-Qu of
the chief members of the French
government, and, according to one
‘all th
whether in poetry
direct
difome
celebrated 1een
re
bie in Paris,
hi in
i
¥
1&1
Stalesmans
f« Was represented
ch, moreover, was
i massor t beauty, wealth,
genius and valor of France.” The flags
of all nations were up electric
the city of Murcia was repre-
in pasteboard with amazing ac
1 all the principal
id flowers and sweet
There were fountains and
toes and bazaars, Mlle. Sara Bern-
his wrote autographs, Mile. Judie
id fortunes, Mlle Theo cried violets,
Mme. Carvalho sold music and Mme.
Croiset sold the journal of the f
I'he cover of this shee
that is most no
1H
Or |
in the assembly
il
hs iy
pit
a serried
Vis 4
il by
3 ’
lights,
ROLTEsses
meats
ard
{
esigned by
Gustave Dore, and Grevin was the cari.
caturist; and the contents were from
such pens as those of Dumas,
and Feuillet, The pictures inside were
drawn by Meissonier, Detaille, Vibert
and others, and the money article was
written by M. de Rothschild. The ad-
vertisements netted six thousand dol-
luxe
of the journal printed on vellum. There
were eight hundred musical perform
¢rs, fii procession of bull-fighters, a lot-
tery, a concert of twenty piano fortes in
unison and another of thirty harps. The
t was d
dred instruments. All the chief artists
opera assisted. The festivities were
kept up until morning, and were per-
riety.
excellent reasows. The substantial re-
sults that have been gained for the poor
peasants of the Murican plain supply
the first ground for felicitation. [
celebration devised and carried out en-
have done
honor to the eraft by its immense suc-
cess; and, finally. it is refreshing and
grateful, amid the continual jars and
jenlousies and ominous clanking of arms
the great European nations to hear
sounds of peace, and charity and good
will, which testity that among some at
least of the peoples there still exists a
sympathetic recognition
bond of human
Evening Post.
of the great
brotherhood. —N. Y.
ee—
The Men Who Were Not Hanged.
The following story is told in Waite's
* Life of Wellington" “* 1 got famously
that occasion,” said the
“The troops had taken to plun-
It was necessary
to stop it, and I issued an order an-
nouncing that the first man taken in the
act should be hanged upon the spot, One
day just as we were sitting down to din-
ner three men were brought to the door
of the tent by the prevol. The case
against them was clear, and 1 had noth-
ing for it bat to desire that they should
be taken away and hanged in some
place where they might be seen by the
whole column in its march next day. I
had a good many guests with me on
that occasion, and among the rest,
think, Lord Nugent. They seemed
dreadfuily shocked, and could not eat
their dinner. 1didn’t like it much my-
to indulge my feelings; I must do my
duty. Well, the dinner went off rather
and next morning, sure
enough, three men in uniform were
geen hanging from the branches ot
tree close to the high road. It was a
terrible example, and produced the de-
gired effect; there was no more plunder-
ing; when, some months afterward, I
learned tliat one of my staff’ took coun-
sel with Pr. Hume, and as three men
had just died in the hospital they hung
them up, and let the three culprits re-
turn to their regiments.” *‘ Weren't you
very angry, duke?” * Well, I suppose
I was at first, but as I had no wish to
take the poor fellows’ lives, and a< the
example had the desired effect my
anger soon died out, and TI confess to
you that I am very glad now that the
three lives were spared.”
A
- »
Saving Pedder,
| A large stock and a short supply of
{ fodder have compelled us to study econ
omy in feeding Our system, as now
| fairly inaugurated, results in saving
| everything, that is, every sort ol fodder
is made and food is eaten up. The breed
ing sheep are fod straw in the morning
land a gill of buckwieat each, at noon
1
TIMELY TOPICS,
The aggregate steam power in use in
night hay. In the morning the racks
to the solid manure, and the entire
quantity taken to the stable and fod to
the young eattle, They eat this readily,
| as they get no other, and do just as well
jas if fed fresh forage from tiie barn
Nothing is wasted by the sheep The
| horses are made to eat the contents ol
| their racks clean, and they do just as
{ well and better than to have a lot of
| hay lett in the racks after each feeding
By this manner of feeding they are nol
allowed to gorge themselves, which is
a good foundation for heaves, and a
{common one, aud their appetites are
kept keen, which improves digestion
An empty manger is always a good ap
and when stuffed # poor
fone. An animal ean be fed too much
little. The manure from
stable is kept separate from
of the cow and
thrown into a pile by itself,
the cattle sre turned into the
day they eat all of the
i ter on this heap, so there is no waste
from the The cows
all fed in all they v
ciéan, so there is but
what there is, is used
the I Every animal
stable, and never in the yard This
the daily round, and the way we make
fodder goas! F.D. Curtis,
2 Land and Home
Household Hints,
Good mutton 1s bright
{ of Lard, white fat,
petizer, is
i AS well as oo
horse
f
i thie
that stable,
yard in the
{3
| middie of the ite
horse stable, re
the stable, will eat up
that itttie refuse
"
* heddin
fed In
{and fe g
OSes is a
is
i tl
i 4
iC AS POSSIDIG, ~
gr
:
red
104,
with plen
Never use skewers, as they cause the
meal juices Lo escam
fis t
tl best ins delioa
Lue
and
Ba
kind |
Lamb of
rosy meal
green vegetal
fre and
flowering.
All
crisp,
: i
PIS SIMO
sil JRICY, AlQ Aare
for
Be
Roots and tu
od, with {1
uni, 1
en fresh,
clear eyes, rigid fins nd
crabs must la
Tuaay
Fawr ar 1a
SAT AF AAR
,
Lobsters and
1Vely
oils
color and in movement
I'he feet and neck of a chicken suitable
Are iu
tip of
nt b
broling 10
thi
ily b
for Arge in prog
its sine; the breastbone
twoen Lh
Winter Layers,
¥
VS
r layers are proverhia
iV nti
ommana rn
Aan
sted by the
nal
aud
interested parties as avers,’
to shell out the
properly. We,
107 much in
sd specimens
ad 5
bh
vet they would refuse
eggs if nol attended t
IIrse,
i
breed
O
lieve that tl
s Jor pure-i
ving result of years
and experience, and have
a selection of the |
of Of Iu is
thi a Hr
Or, ORM
d from
ur
nary
s will
hirds
ent for vears, for
care and the
To secure winter
f hit
thie in
result
wast, for special
for years: but under ordi
management these self same d
be found far less profitable )
such treatm
had the
puss, {
hiir
fis
thar
' t f
\ y
used Lo
they have
eaction
Myers,
3
Dest! Of
18 LOO gral,
a number
get
arm, comfortable and house;
feed them liberally.
wheat and o casionally on corn—which
warmed before being fed
pay strict attention
roomy
principally on
should hu
and meat scraps; te
cleaniiness and to giving them
water—milk better--reguiarly, and
do not think you wiil have any
cause to complain’ of results.—FPoullry
Monthly.
is
Fattening Fowls.
a small enclosure which can be covered
and made dark. Have some peas or
i
« wer employed in stationary engines,
wl 10,000,008 horse-power in locomo-
ive engines, The force is maintained
without the consumption of animal
food, except by miners, who dig the
conls. and the force maintained in their
muscles is to the force generated by the
product of their Inbor about one Ww
1,080, This steam power is equal to the
working force of 25,000,000 horses, and
one horse consumes three times as much
food ono man, The steam power,
therefore, is equal to the saving of 75,
000,000 human beings,
¥
un
The taking of the next United States
census will hegin June 1, 1880, On
that day about 20,000 enumerators will
commence thelr those in
cities being required to complete their
work in two weeks, while others will be
allowed the whole month of June, Per-
sons alive on the first of June, but dying
hefore the enumerator reaches them,
iM
be counted in the census; births
inhors
will
counted, Special agents will be em.
ployed to collect statistics relating 10
meal and mix the meal with mashed
much as the fowls will eat, four times a
day.
trough and remove the fouled one
of trade and industry
The islands at the western end of Lake
Erie and the neighboring of
Sandusky bay are iargely to
shores
3 devoted
the production of grapes and wine,
Sandusky Register's annual report, just
for 1879, shows that there are
in this district 4,000 acres planted with
vines, the yield for the vear being in
round numbers 16,000,000 pounds of
grapes, The wine houses report a pro-
duction of 1,526,400 gallons. The Heo
tafer estimates that pol more than 1,000...
ons of pure juice has gone with
gallons of wine,
the dealers, it says, make no secret of
largely, and claim that this doe-
The taxing district of Memphis is curs.
arge namber of decayed and
ten pavements. The dea.
that city, in speaking of the
these pavements on the heath
Until the
Memphis
Enormons
{
Liu
broken wos
of
it of
BAYH era
Ws
filth a
wooden pavements
city Ih
cumulation of years
however, ome the greatest disease.
hireeding factor. While thu
ing through the process of extinguish.
wooden pavements, the next
ank. must not be forgotten,
pavemen’ i
Another
a
hesithy
in
r., be
vauils
£Fy
Eg
sont tl
ment, Lie
nuisance in J
3
i
wooden doomed 10
summer's
in
sl on sun
r shine
rotten There
to
ger
Win Hi
"
: aealdir
must he no * i
be without any pavements than |
t It was a pardonabie mis
:
ar * buts, Jetter
i
1
Oo tol it
ral
take WU
now. like
uid be put out
imate, Sid
sinning to manifest
which awaits
icipate being
im
inl
14 date for the
er defend the
Bo Ong
elwoen
4)
:
we superiority of |
{ : { during the former
wars with Germany. it has been decided
i t to defend Jutland
i
Put
9 Wis Lhe onse
{ but to concentraie
nse of the country on the
where the greater
roes of the nation are
wind
On,
Rinna fninng,
nart
centeraa
are said
i! at the first
y Prussia intends to
keeping her share of the
of Jutland
the conviction ths
given
of
IM
portunit
nmark, as
poil the
island of Fuhnen
surrounding are revert
Sweden. This would be tantamount to
the final division of Denmark, begun in
1815 by u Norway to Sweden, and
ed up in 1864 hy occupation
of the duchies of Schleswig, Holstein aud
rg by Prussia
i ————"
1 poninsuin
Isinnds tn
'
:
thi
Nerve,
About a year ago
brought from one of
irons, and
house of with the warning
that he was a desperate character, and
had boasted that he weuld “run” the
He had a malignant look
and a surly answer for all questions, and
A prisoner
Lie
correction.
i
i
1
il
©
rend ated the de puty.
heboldly declined to
LN)
" Step down!"
“1 won't,
around for
3 “
Ix 3
The deputy was the man tor the oc-
oner, he said, in a quiet but far reachin
salted reasonably. The fowls will be as
Carrots are largely used in
Germany and France, at fattening time,
with the meal and ground oats.
ES ———————————
Edison Ontdone.
“1 am willin' to admit,” said Grand.
father Lickshingle, “that Myr. Edison
has invented a wonderful invention.”
| and started toward! the doar,
“1 was well aware,” continued grand.
father, without changing his tone, ** that
SOME Persons resists any attempts at en»
lightenment on scientific topics, an’ 1
theretore locked the door and put the
key in my pocket. When I was a young
mar I was a great hand for experi-
mentin’ at one thing an’ another, an’
spent all my surplus wages in workin’
on a new light. 1 didn't fool aroun’
with electricity, but went right for the
planets The san, moon and stars, the
real source of all light and heat, was
| what your grandfather tackled. 1 will
give you the results themselves, an’ then
vou will see that Mr. Edison is a tolera-
| bly small specimen.”
“ Your light wasn't superior to the
electric light?”
“Wasn't eh? My light was as much
ahead of Edison's as a house afire is
alead of a lightnin® bug. Young ladies
could take my light and see their future
husbands as plain as day.”
“That was certainly very remarka-
ble.’
“ Alongside of my light a streak of
lightnin' had no more color to it than
a rail fence, while a couple of small boys
smokin’ cigar stubs lit from my illumi-
nator looked like a torchlight proces-
sion.”
“It must have created a sensation in
{ the scientific world?”
“Yes, an’ in the literary world, too.
It knocked light readin’ forty ways for
Sunday. By attachin’ a ten-cent du.
| funny to your burner, it ‘ud generate a
| power that could be applied in any di-
| rection under the shinin’ sun. It 'ud
| run a washin'-machine, iron the clothes,
answer the door-bell, carry in the coal,
| run errands—"
| “Grandfather, ain't you mistaken?”
| *“~blacken your boots, cut your corns,
| drive home the cows an’ haul a freight
| train.”
| “What has become of your wonder-
ful light, grandfather?”
| “Right there you will have to excuse
| me. Suffice it to say I have it stored
| away in a safe place, an’ at the proper
| moment 1 will spring it upen the
| country again. I will give you a pointer
|in time to sell Edison stock short, an’
| if you don't retire worth more than the
| king of the Cannibal islands, don’t
blame it on your grandfather,” —Cincin-
nals inqu 1
i
If you are not down
stairs in thirty seconds I will shoot you
through the head!”
No weapons were in sight.
faced each other barchanded.
The men
The pris-
For ten
eves and read each other's thoughts.
stairs, and from that day to this he has
heen as submissive and obedient as any
man in the prison.— Detroit Free Press.
-
. Aged 127 Years,
C. I. Hunter, of Lincoln county, hein
marked upon the recent article 8 this
the Graham county Indian, 141 year
of age, and said that he supposed the next
oldest man in the State to be Cross
Woodig, a mulatto of his county, whose
age is given at and generally believed to
be 127 years. Woodis is a native of
Chatham county, and was bornon the
Haw. In early life he moved to Canada,
where he lived for several years, and
returning to North Carolina he settled
in Cabarrus county, whence he moved,
many years ago, to Lincoln. When ea.
pable of such active work hejwas a well
digger and a blacksmith, and claims t
have dug 199 wells in his life up to the
breaking out of the late war. He stil
does a good deal of work, and retain
with marked vigor many of his natura
powers; frequently in picking cotton he
stops to pick out the motes. This ol
man is put down in the census report d
1860 ns 108 years old, and it this recor
is correct the figures upon his presen
age are, Dr. Hunter is of the opinioi
that his age is not overstated, a number
of facts leading him to this conclu 2.01
w{Yharlotte (N. (1.) Observer,
nc———————
Character in Volees.
The author of ** Sporting Adventurs
in the Far West " says: [I have noticed
as a fact that struck me as being pea-
liar, that the bravest and largest wid
animals always had desp voices, aid
that they were generally melodious, full
of music as it were; while the smull
fry, which would run from a comnon
cur, had high, sharp voices. hwe
the best scouts and the most famd
hunters in the West, and I found tig
they also had heavy tones as a rule;
deduced from this that the highest ore
of animals, these that were brave
daring, were also deep in voice, and tl
their intonations never jarred on thee
When I saw that the heroes in an op
were tenors, it struck me as an odd 14
that thin-voiced animals were seldom
go courageous in actual life as their det
er-toned congeners, and this has caus
me to express it Lere, to see if it isi
any way founded on fact, or whet
is a mere artificial system of disp
’
.
"ERMS: 82.00 a
Is
15,
1880,
Struck by Lightning.
The New York Herald hins heen get.
ting the opinions of various promifent
persons as to the best means of inflict
ing capital punishment. Some one pro-
poses electricity, and Dr. Hammond
opposes that method on the ground that
electricity is not always man effective
desth-dealing agent. In support of his
assumption Dr. Hammond gives this
justance of a man's being struck by
{ lightning and recovering
Dr. GG. Wilks contributed this ease to
the Clinieal Society of London. Op
June 8 last four men
ney Mursh were compelled by the vio-
lence of the rain to seek shelter. Three
of them retired into a lodge, the fourth
(J, Orman) remaining under a willow
{tree by the window of the lodge. Al
| most irstantaneously the building was
| enve loped in a blaze of lightning. The
| three occupants, having recover. from
{ their terror, ran to seek their com.
| panion, They saw that the tree had
been struck, that Orman’s boots lay at
| the foot of the tree and his clothes seat.
| tered in « line for seversl yards along
| the field, while he himsell was stretched
{upon his back six feel away, stark
| naked, calling to them for aid. The
| man himself said that he felt himself
| violently struck across the chest and
| shoulders, hurled throggh the air and
| dashed upon the ground, and was sure
| that he never lost consciousness. His
{ clothes were hlown off him except one
of his flannel undervest; the
{ leather straps which fastened his
trousers were rent like tinder and his
i new strong boots torn like paper, while
i his watch and chain were partly
| fused. Upon admission to @
| Ashford Cottage hospital the
| was found to be burnt ail over, more or
| less,
| gone; the burns on the back and chest
giGove
| and pubes more deep ; down each leg ran
a broad three-inch ribbon-like scar, ter
| minating at the left heel in a small
| roundish hole; at the right, in a large
| lncerated wound, through which the
| osealeis might be felt fractured in several
| pieces. There was also a compound
| comm inated fracture of the right tibia
| and fibula, which bones were protrud.
| ing through the skin in the course of
ithe ribbon-like burn, The deepest
| burns were about where the buckles of
| the waist belt and garters and the watch
must have been, but from the knee to
ithe heel on the right the whole
! thicknsss of the skin in the ribbon-like
track was destroyed by the burning
{ The man was deaf, but singularly placid
and cheerful, showing no signs of shock.
wg
the bones about the fractures and the
of some moment), walking scross the
room len weeks after the accident. Hi
was now (October) earning his living,
with a leg shortened from a half to three.
quarters of an inch The following
facts were noted: First, the course of
electrical metion was from above down
ward; second, the clothes being very
| wet, their conductivity had been prob-
{ ably heightened ; third, where the flan.
Inel was next the skin the burns were
| more super ficial: fourth, where the cot-
{ton shirt and trousers touched him the
burns were uniformly deeper; fifth,
| wherever there had been a piece of metal
| ~~¢. g., Waist belt, jacket buckles, watch,
shoes--there had been an explosion, or
{at least a development of great heat;
sixth the man was aware that be usually
raised his right heel from the ground
| during micturition, which might have
caused the fierce explosion on that side;
seventh, the nervous system had an al
| most complete immunity from injury;
this was attributed to the wet clothes
being good conductors.
aie — .
Humers of Plagiarism
As a rule, says the Cincinnati Com-
sncresad, it is not safe to plagiarize; bet
| to this rule, as to most'others, there are
exceptions. A minister of
New York had been accused of preach-
H
¥
$F
| Presbytery to account for his offenses.
| the Presbytery a carcfully-prepared dis-
| course, in which he would set forth
| thedootrines he held. At its close the
i menbers were called upon to pass
judgment upon it. Some denounced it,
i several sald it contained the rankest
| hewsy, others considered it orthodox,
opnion. Before the final vote was
| talen the accused was permitted to
| mike a statement. He told
th: sermon he had just preached wos
lore of Dr. Chalmer's, snd directed
| where it could be found; and remarked
futher that if they declared him a
haetic on the strength of it they must
| dwlare the great
ore too. Some of the brethren then got
{ mad at the trick played upon them, but
ial comcluded that the proceedings
{ against the accused had better be
| dropped.
Another case of justifiable plagiarism
was that of an eminent minister whe
| aatwitted a brother minister equally
fninent. No. 1 entered the church of
Yo. 2 just as he was about to announce
| lis text. No. 1 tried to sit near the
coor, but No. 2 spied him, and invited
| Him to a seat in the pulpit. No. 1 once
{ in the pulpit No. 2 whispered to him,
| * You must preach for me this morn-
§ ng.” “No,” I said, “1 came to hear
| vou, and Iam goingto.” No. 2 insisted,
{ind No. 1 finally consented. So No. 8
{ *emoved his sermon from between the
{leaves of the Bible, placed it on a little
{shelf under the pulpit, and took a seat
in the congregation to enjoy his friend's
sermon. No. 1, as he rose to preach,
took the sermon from the shelf, and
went through it word for word,
doubt to the edification of No. 2, who
wrote it.
No Royal Read.
The humorous paragrapher of the
time often bears hard oa existing
evils. For instance, the man who wrote
that a son. once declared to his father
that he would never learn a trade, but
that he quickly changed his mind, fo
in six months afterward he was making
shoes in the penitentiary, with all his
community. There is no royal road to
learning, neither is there any to wealth
and position. If the daysof a man’s life
when the faculties are iipening and
when the impu'ses for good or evil are
strongest, are allowed to slip past with-
out an effort being made to work and
exercise self-denial, ruin and disgrace
will be the inevitahle result, The
young should be taught habits of indus-
try, whether rich or poor. But unfor-
tunately we do not hear of young men
who will yet be heirs to fortune taking
a position with the common sailor be-
fore the mast, toiling in the factory,
sweating at the forge or following the
plow, so that by experience and knowl-
edge of all the details necessary to make
up the perfect workman they may be
fitted to follow out some honorable vo-
eation in life. Nor do we find women
throwing aside their trivolities, settling
down to the performance of household
duties, and by a thorough eoturse of
practical training preparing themselves
to rule in the kingdom of home. And
that is not the worst side of the ques-
tion. Unfortunately, this neglect of
ractical education is not contined to
the rich. Even those in humble cir-
cumstances have become imbued with
Jp same false ideas as to what consti-
ws true dignity, and disdain labor.
dese false notions are dojng serious
'A monument to Samuel Nelson, the
E™ hinent jurist, being proposed by the
Sople of Cooperstown, the Freeman's
“wrnal of that place, says: * Heajone
®. ym the time of Samuel, the first cir-
tedt judge among the Jews, till the
¢cesent era, sat upon the bench for a
peg of fifty years.”
ear. in Advance.
———
NUMBER 2.
¥
s
l
| FOR THE FAIR SEX.
i Fashions in Jewelry.
| Very simple jewelry is now worn.
The dinmond earrings and gold neck:
id
Fd
nre fast disappearing
simple dressing.
| with street
gems for evening and fuil-dress toilettes,
where display is more appropriate.
The useful articles that are almost
On a wild and windy day,
Whea the rain, wet-oyw! and gray,
Taps upon the window-pane.
"Neath the low, red sunset skies,
When the ghostly iaists upriss,
Frozen marsh and pool among—
When regret o'erfills mine eyes,
I will go with thee along.
Julie K. Wetherill, in Scribner. =
- _r _- . pe
Oh, thon to-morrow! Mysary!
Oh, day that ever rans belore!
What has thy hidden hand in store
For mine, to-morrow, and for me?
Oh, thou w-morpow! what hast thou
In store to make me bear the now?
Oh, day in which we shall forget
The tangled troubles of today!
Oh, day that leogas st duns, st debts!
Oh, day of promises to pay!
: Oh, shelter trom all present storm!
Oh, day in which we shall reform!
modest watch
| serpentine
| token or a talisman.
The favorite hrooch
Oh, safest, best day tor reform’
Convenient day of promises!
oid back the shadow of the storm,
Oh, blest to-morrow! Chiefest friend,
Let pot thy mystery be less,
But lead us blindiold 10 the end.
— toaguia Miller.
ITENS OF INTEREST.
| pin, and is known as the lace
cause of the prevailing fashion o
ing lace on the throat and bust.
i fis we
| brooches worn ir the morning,
| diambnds
| band, or, better still, a frame in which
| the pendent diamonds swing.
For
Sweet potatoes are raised in Los An-
gelos county, Cal
., weighing twenty-six
pounds each.
C spnibals don’t like to eat a coward,
because the hravest ure the
Saturday Night.
Many a man gets a for be-
knowing man who is simply sa
—Ralurdmy Night.
¥
—-—
3
a
but more rare ones represent a long
| Spray of flowers with the foliage of in-
| penter of a wild rose, or else rose-buds of
| pearls of different colors, such as
| pink pearl, the yellow, like
orthe pear-shaped white pearl.
: onjored
Rf lea-rose,
Rich
| with diamonds,
| massive bar of gold with a single dia-
{ mond sunk in the ocnter; this makes
| an elegant and durable brooch. Stones
{ are mounted in more solid work than
| formerly, and diamonds look especially
| well when set in silver, What is called
Yay setting, where the diamond is
the g
is more fashion.
imbedded in the gold,
merely caught the stones. Colored
| stones, such as rubies, the moon stone,
this way, and are en cabochon, that is,
oar mouth shut is
An ounee of keep
expliarstions after
better than a pound A
le some-
there is
not 8 particle in the house.— Rome
Bentinel
Baron Nathan Rothschild, of Vienna,
Strange as it may seem,
ays his cook $2,500 s year. and spends
oy dollars a day in wages to his thirty
other servants,
fifty feet
high, that grow up like ae an bear
delicious fruit have been in
Arizona Territory.
the commons witi: thecows, and draws
from them as they lie
chewing their cuds.
Species of the cactus plant,
Madison, Ind., hms a pig that runs on
There are 13,000,000 milch cows in the
4.513.765 in France, 3.708766 in Great
| without being cut in facets as diamonds
are. As arival to the straight * luce
pin,” those of crescent shape are per.
| haps most liked. When diamonds are
the jewels used, they are either mass
ip silver or imbedded in gold, Next
in favor are the colored pearls swing.
ing from an Etruscan gold bar. §
times the pearls are shaded from bisck,
through gray and sliver,
Sometimes they are all cream-color, or
else all pink. A novelty is a massive
knot of yellow gold with a swinging
horseshoe of precious stones. Tae
plain gold lace pins are not nearly so
large as those of last season, and are
and in some artistic design. A long
round bar with a pine cone at each end
is a pretty brooch, at $5. A favorite
| pattern is geranium leaves of
green-tinted gold: the Japanese
the Cesnola patterns are quaint
pale
and
Lleeve-bultons are quite large, and
the squsre patterns so muchworn by gen-
tlemen are also in favor for Iadies, The
linked buttons now preferred have a
Y oung housewife ~* What miserable
litte eges again! You really must tell
them, Jane, to let the liens sit on them
a little longer!" —Ollawa
He looked as wise as an owl, did be,
His tricks seve well adjusted,
He declined to advertise, you see,
And in a year he busted.
— Hotel Mail.
Tie sum of $180,060 was paid out at
Key West during the year a Octo
ber 31, for sponge. ere Are seventy.
three vessels in the trade, manned by
250 men. :
Mr. John B. Clay is the only child o
‘lay whois now living. He
a comforiabie home at Lexington, Ky.,
owning 200 of the paternal acres and
many beautiful horses,
Newspaper publishers have as much
-
as any other class of philanthropists;
hut the guestion they are particu iar
interested in just now is—How muc
Jmger is that paper famine going to
last
The Canadian postal authorities have
the other. Reis of gold jewelry are sel-
dom sod nowadays, as it is the cus.
hence the prices are much less than for.
{ merly, snd the set of lace pin and tiny
| earrings is sold for $20 up to £10 or
£50, If a iady insists upon wearing
| gold earvings, she is advised that the
smallest ones are the most stylish, rop-
| resenting a tiny daisy, or a clover leaf,
or a pine cone restirg amainst the lobe
f the ear, and costing from £3 50 to 85;
for more expensive ones are pendent
| balls of Etruscan gold. for 87 50, or else
{ the ball is studded with turquoises or
| pearls, for 814 50 to £18. To conceal
{ solitaire diamond earrings for safe-
| keeping when ladies wear them in the
daytime are balls of gold that clasp
sround the diamonds, incasing them
entirely.
As we have said, the one fanciful piece
| of jewelry now worn is the bracelet,
| at the wrist, which it can never replace,
! used, as it is flexible, and may be made
jasp any part of the arm and remain
stationary.
{ abandoned for dress, and instead is
tO clas
all publications styled ** Police Gazette”
to the dominion, and such publications
to Canada, are declared un-
mailable.
Mrs. Hilton, ot Renich, Mo., has be-
come the mother of twins winling the
celebra Siamese pair, each of the
healthy little girls having a head and
feet of her own, but possessing a com
won heart and lungs, and being joined
by a fleshy band extending from the
collarfbones to the knees.
Pose t : mailers and feeders jadle
all right, but what newspaper i
ers are most in need of isa a that
will take hold of a acelinquent sub-
scriber and make him pay up. The
man who will get upsuch an invention
will get up some morning and find a
million dollars awaiting him. - Walerioo
Observer
The South Carelina sand Georgia al-
of which has
¢ Charleston
C.) News, contains a table in w' h
populations of the chief cities of the
United States are eet down as follows:
Philadelphia, 42.599: New York, 30.-
Charleston, 20.000; Boston, 15,000;
. 6000. At
{S.
| ornamental
{ on top of the arm.
| ful pieceof jewelry is the gypsy ring
| a massive gold finger-ring, with a dia
| all three, set deep in the gold, showing
{only the surface of the stone.
§
made up of swinging vendants, but
| able pendent is worn, itis attached to
| a very light slender chain, which may
{be partly platinum or it may be ail
gold.
{
| pended from a pin on one side.
| Large carbuncies are revived, and are
| with garnets coming to be the fashion-
{ able stones, The garnets are not the
{small Bohemian clusters, but single
| large stones, and, like the carbuncies,
| they are mounted with very little gold
| visible. Silver jewelry is the most in-
| expensive of tasteful styles, a quaint
{ brooch costing $3 only. An extrava.
| gant novelty is the use of gold or silver
| pins for the toilette, just as ordinary
| pins are ‘now used; those of silver in
| various sizes cost from fifteen cents to
| seventy-five cents each, according to
size; pold pins, some of which have
| pear! heads, cost 81 0 $6 each. —Har-
| per’s Bazar.
Bridal Costumes of Fernando Po.
[ As with us, the Fernando Po bride is
clad in white—not the gauzy, flowing
robe, however, but a plastering of earthy
| paste resembling plaster of paris. She
wears a bridal veil, too, composed o
i
|
i
|
|
i
mous helmet made of cowhide. Tae
Fernando Po bridegroom is even more
elaborately decorated. It is a work of
time as well as of art to make the young
gentleman ready te take the neceasary
vows before the two mothers—his own
and his intended's—who act the part of
priests. Like his bride, he is thickly
plastered over with the white lola paste,
and he wears on his head an enormous
disc of fine bamboo plait skewered to
his hair with long pins with blue and
red beads tor heads. His marriage
raiment is of strung shells, and it being
| notorious that the instant a young man
commences to make himselt ready for
marriage malicious evi. spirits are in
close attendance, and on the alert to
baulk his laudable intent, as an antidote
against their malevolence he carries in
his hand the whole time, and never
takes his eyes off, a piece of a yam
shaped like a heart, and in which the
red feather of a parrot is stuck. The
marriage ceremony is the essence of sim-
plicity. The mother-priests place an
arm of each round the neck of bride and
bridegroom, and deliver a short address
to them on their respective duties, after
which the calabash of palm wine is pro-
d, and th ing parties ratify
A4 ©
i
i
3
1
3
i
PARADOXICAL.
ment is annou need of
Fish, Jr., 5 Miss Mann,
ws
The @
Mr. Hamilton
of Troy, N.Y
A Fish will take 8 Mann to wile.
A Mann will marry a Fish,
We finished this couplet before we
began it, and huving finished it we
would be pleased to have some one
Fish Killed by Lightning.
A correspondent of Land and Waler
ays: A curious incident of the whale
of the occupants of a small fish pond
being destroyed by a flash of lightning,
is reported from Seck. grand duchy of
Nassau. The Nassawer Bile states that
duringav heavy thunder and hail
storm at night time, a flash of lightaing
struck a small pond weil stocked wi
various kinds of tish, the property of the
pastor of the parish. e following
morning the whole of the fish were
discovered dead upon the surface of the
water. They had all the appearanes of
having been half boiled, and cranbled
to pieces at the least touch just as is the
case with fish after being boiled. Neither
any external nor ‘internal injury could
be observed, the scales being intact and
the swimming bladder filled and well
preserved. The water in the pond was
still muddy and dull the morning after
the storm, as if the lightning had only
then struck it. 3
The Tichborne case has once more
risen to disgust and trouble England.
A writ of error has heen sued out on the
ground that the offensés of perjury for
which the claimant; Arthur Orton, was
sentenced to two terme of seven years
in prison were one and the same, and
that] ne should have been sentericed to
only onejterm.
Josh Billings on Marriage.
By awl meanes, Joe, get married, if
you have a ft show: * Don stand
shivering on the bank. but pitch rite in
and stick your head under and the
shiver is over. Thar ain't any more
trick in getting married than thare isin
eating pearuts. Many a man ha$stood
shivering ca the shore until the river
run* out. Don't expect to an
angel; they have been all picked up
long ago. Remember, Joe, you sin’t a
saint yourself. Do not marry for beuty
exclusivaly; beuly is like ice, awful
slippery, and thaws dredful easy. Don't
marry fer luv, neither; luv is likea
©00 stove, good for nothing when
the fuel gives out.- But let the mixture
be some beuty bec y , with
about $250 in her pocket, a gud speller,
handy and neat in her splay of