k bas a large number of thieves, many of a lead an honest life and are not 8s dishonest members of society t to a small circle of friends. | among the class referred to, says | etropolitan paper, are river thieves | rates, all of whom at some period | r lives learned the art of hand. #0 oar either as an accomplishment | line of daty. If ove of these | should be found basking in the sun. | light and mentally mapping out his | duties for the night, he conld easily | plead that he was an honest man ont of | employment. Groups of these fellows ‘can bo seen longing around {he Erie | basin in the e, playing cards or : using at the vessels at anchor. As a! rule wen are rough-looking fol- | lows, although many appear honost | en » Some of them hve in tene. | ‘ment houses in New York or Brooklyn, | and have good reputations not only among their neighbors but also in their own families. Many are young men, | the sons of honest parents with whom | they live, Each one knows how to dis. pase of the articles which find their way | nto his possession. There are a num. | ber of ns who make money by buy. ing stolen goods from river pirates, | ~The junkmen, at best, aro regarded with suspicion. Some of them, beside : junk from the masters of vessels, will steal whatever they ean lay their hands on. 1f a boy or an ap: prentice should be found alone on a vessel the junkman will offer him a trifling sum for some of the gear or| stores. Watchmen on vessels at anchor in the stream are sometimes in ealln- sion with the junkmen, by whom they are well paid. According to the genu- | ine boatinen, such as those at the Bat. » the jan usiness, although it is x by the authorities, is dishonest, and the men who follow it should be classed as pirates. Og dark nights the watchmen of the vessels at anchor in the bay are told to keep a sharp lookout. Every appreach- ing small boat is viewed with suspicion. If the latter should be hailad and should il to answer, but row hastily AWRY, ean feel himself free to fire at the retreating boat without being called to coconnt for his conduct. There are usmally two or three pistols in the cabin of a vessel, and a crew, when warned, is able to repel a boatload | of river pirates, or at least to attract the attention of the vessels in the neighborhood Consequently the pimtes have to proceed with great caution, They usually select a dark night for making an attack on a vessel at anchor, If it is summer they gen: erally pass themselves as honest work- men enjoving a quiet row, but if it is winter they g on their dishonest mis- sion with the expectation of meeting with danger. If the captain of a schooner anchored in the bay is known | to have money in his possession the pirates are apt to select that vessel. When trade is brisk aud quantities | of rum, molasses or other liquids are left on the piers, the river pirates row in under the docks and Lore holes through the planks in the flooring and into the bogsheads above. The liquid | puis through the holes acd is caught | F the men in tke boat below. One night in the spring of 1880 a boat con taining four river pirates approached a | fleet of coasting schooners anchored in Flashing bay. Bat the alarm wasgiven in time and the crews were prepared to defend themselves. Oune of the pirutes | in endeavoring to eseape fell overboard | and was drowned. Several of the crews | in the neighborhood were aroused and | three remaining pirates ware canght | and were armigned before the aunthori- ties next morning. In a day or two the | trio were “ railroaded to Sing Sing.” | This proved a wholesome lessor, and .. for some time afterward no attack was made on a vessel at snchor. There have been a number of cases of collu- sion between dishonest dock watchmen ! and river pirates. The forme: wait | until the coast is clear ard then give | their confederates the signal to ap- | proach and begin operations, while they ! mont guard and stand in readiness to give them warning of tke approach of | any one. Bat for the watchmen on the vessals the river pirates would come on board aad cut all the ropes below the belaying pins and carry them off, The Lost CLlld, In Uvalde, Texas, the littla three. | year-old daughter of Mr. Sam Johnson, living on the Sibinal, wandered off after flowers. Its absence attracted : attention before it had been gone an | hour and the family began to look for it, but not fiading it on the place at | once roused their naighbors to assist in the search. California Brown, who had stopped over night in the place, Ben White, Henry Shane, several Mexicans and the distressed parents hunted all | that day and night, and at abont 1 o'clock on the next day the dim t. ack | of the child's shoe was discovered by | the practiced eyo of Mr. Brown. The | party, bonyant with hope, followed the | trail with great difficulty until night, | when fires were built up in the hope of attracting her attention. On Friday morning the search was resumed and fresh tracks found, which were followed by Mr. Brown, Mr. Shane and a Mexi- ean, the rest of the party having divided and keeping up the search in different directions. About 10 o'clock the little one was discovered on a high hill by a | hole of water, three and a half miles from home, with its clothing torn to | shreds by the thorns and prickly pear throngh which it bad worked its way. On the approach of the hunters the. child commenced aiying, and the first | remark she made was that she * wanted fo go to her mamma.” Signal guns were immediately fired, which soon | ~ brought the balance of the party to the | Spot, aud the feelings of the overjoyed | but hereloiore frantic mother at the | ing of her living child, iustead of | its boves, can be better imagined than | described. I: was out two days and nights, without any food whatever, and | Ww tracks of panthers, and wolves | and wild-cats are found thick by the hunters. A Big Cattle Farm. { The ranches of Cattle King Powers, | all making np a river frontage of | eighteen miles, and including a number | on the south side of the Arkansas, and | ali are noder fence. Directly opposite | these, beginning at Fort Lyon and | reaching down the river twenty-two | miles, and extending back far enough | to include an expanse of 80,000 acres, is | another pasture under fence, the titles | for which are in the same name. Here, | Shen are forty miles of water front and : { { 000 acres of pasture under fence, | owned by one man, The fencing on | eae ranches will snm up over 100 | ~ Northward to and even beyond | Kansas Pacific, and southward to | ron and lLeyond, into the Pan! e of Texas, graze his cattle, more | ,000 in number.— Denver Repub- | Fourteen Gireat Mistakes, S 6 greal mistake to set up our | *d of right and wrong and | people accordingly. It isa great | Bo easite the enjoyment of onr own; to expeet uniformity | n in this world; to look for | dd experience in youth; to | r to mold all dispositions alike; | ield fo immaterial trifles; to | perfection in our own actions; | ourselves and others with what | Meviation, as far as it lies | er; not 15 make allowances infirmities cf others; to consider hing impossible which we cannot 1 believe only what our finite grasp; to expect to be uble ind everything. The great- th es is to live only en any moment may launch tii PAA th t bromide of potassium, ively used as an anti. ess, is largely com. hose who employ it ves to ead poison- is made by a Ger- THE LASH IN DELAWARE, Howilt Has Been Used In the Past. A recent letter from Wilmington, TAN SVN evidence. The only thing left for the pfilioted father, who had already been! much impoverished through the pecu. lations of his family, was to buy the | RPO AIH The whipping post in the New Castle jail yard bad seven viotims yesterday. Three boys, who bad stolen something like 815, got ten lashes apiece. lashes were applied to the backs of four other prisoners who had been convicted of larceny, Sheriff Clark did not handle the cat in a partionlarly forcible man. ner, and the men who were strung up in the pillory didn't seem to mind the blows much, The whipping post has wits a timo when it was applied indis- oriminately to thieves and falovs of high and low degree. Now it is mainly used as a sort of scarecrow for chicken thioves, sneak thieves and errant tramps known as * peach.plucks. There are member, as children or vouths, a time when some of the Blue Hen's most re- speotable chickens were put in the pen known as the pillory and made to ex- piate their offenses against law and morality by a forced embrace of the whipping post. As a child the writer remembers hav- ing seen men who, after being whipped, were by law compelled to wear the letter ** F" (felon) over the backs of their coats as long as they remained within the boundaries of the State Qther people, a little older, will recol. lect bow in Dover a man who had been a prominent church member and most highly respectable citizen for some act of dishonesty was publicly whipped and condemned to wear the stigma of dis- grace, the lotier “E.” as long as he lived, or to abandon bis home and busi ness and take up his abode in another State. He resolved to stay where his interests and affections irelined him to remain, Although he wasa storekeeper and his cocupation recessitated his con- to his busines: in person, and it is said by those who frequented his store as purchasers that he had his stock so ar- ranged and was so adroit in his move- ments that no one ever canght a sight of the badge of his disgrace while being waited on by him, In the old:time, when Delaware was more rigid in her righteonsness than she is to-day, it was held by those who made and those who administered the laws that dishonesty was much more heinous when engaged in by those placed by social position above want and amid respectable sur roundings than when indulged in by those tempted by necessity and evil com- panionship. Consequently, when a prominent citizen was caught stealing or forging his punishment was always made heavier and more severe than that meted out to rogues of either of the classes contemptuously known as “poor " In fact, a half-century ago so large a proportion was of the respectable class of society that a lady on visiting Delaware some years ago, having heard that this, that, and the other distinguished citizen wa the descendant of some one who had bean publicly whipped, asked: “Do rot all the aristocrats of Delaware derive their patents of nobility from the whip ping post Toward the close of the last century an eminent and well-beloved gentleman of Sussex county, a public benefactor, distinguished for piety, fell from his high estate. He was 2 magistrate, and noted for wisdom and excellence judgment. On one occasion there was brought before him in his official ea pacity some counterfeiters who had. been arrested for passing bad money, a large amount of which was found upon their persons. The magistrate, as was his duty, took possession of the coun- terfeit stufl to destroy it, it was sup- posed. The rogues were committed for trial and subsequently pilloried whipped. Years afterward the neigh- borhood was flooded with “bogus money,” at length traced to the “squire” who had committed the culprits alinded to, and who, it was afterward discovered, had been for a long time passing the money he had confiscated for destrac- tion. Every effort was made to shield this beloved and respected citizen from the consequences of his offense, but with outany avail whatever, He was whipped most severely in the jailyard at Dover, and the sheriff who inflicted the pnnish- of accused of partiality for a rich and re- that he cut so deeply into the flesh as to cause the blood to run off the end of the lash and down his own hands, while the back of which the most stoical could not look without horror and pity. Some thirty. five years ago a well-known and very Congress, and came within three votes of being elected. He spent more money than he conld afford, and in order to tide over a temporary embarrassment, in-law, a distinguished physician of the city, to a note given by Lim, intending to take is up before it came to maturity and so escape any bad consegnences, He was not on good terms with the brother-in-law, and this the teller of the bank at which the note was pre- denly: ‘‘ Why, you have made your quarrel up with J— and have com- menced indorsing for him, eh?’ «1 have done nothing of the sort,” raid the doctor, who was thrown off his guard, and who, for family reasons, would have cut his tongne ont before giving his relative away, had he taken time to think before speaking. His after attempts to hush up the matter were without avail. no don’t had not his lovely and loving wife gone to ihe governor and to the pardon. was politically and socially dead. Among the most beantiful, highly who had had the misfortune to bs born | kleptomaniacs, | all the citizens of the town in which | they resided that they had inherited | this mania from their mother, who was | 8 constitutional thief. Tlese girls! would fake enything they could lay | their hands on, from mouse-traps to fish- | ing tackle. The acquititions made in | this way were, in nine cases out of ten, | wholly nseless and worthless to them, | Their father, knowing this propensity | of his wife and offspring, visited the | different storekeepers of the town and | requested them to send the bill to him | for any article they might miss after | visits from the female members of his family. There was, therefore, no par. | ticular trouble about the peculations | of these young ladies until a new stora- | keeper came to town, who, on receiving | the usual intimation from their father said to some of his neighbors: “Klepto mania be banged ; it’s nothing but thief omania, and if they were poor women | they would have it thrashed out of them | at the whipping post, Ifthey come into ! my store to do any stealing I'll have | them arrested and whipped as quick as | if they were chicken thieves,” No one! believed the fellow would carry out his | came into his place, and a'ter they were | goue he missed a bundle of gloves, He | followed them up the street, called a constable, had them arrested, searched, | and would bave had them committed to | jail as common thieves had not bail been promptly oflered by a score of citizens for their sppeararce to answer the | charge at court. Now began the tug of | war. It was known that if the caso came bo trial the younz ladies wonid be | sentenced to be whipped and that this | sentence would not be remitted by the | righteous men who believed his | position demanded of him the exaction | of the sentence pronounced by law, save | in case of after discovered exeunlpating The father never recovered publio disgrace and died! The daughters, however, | rpon him, from this goon after, { they had been guilty of any criminali- { ty, held up their heads bravely, and all { married well, Some of them are living | | today, beloved wives and good mothers, { who, under the very shadow of the whipping post, it is said, get their dry | goods and other merchandise in the old | fashion, while husbands or sons pay up, just as their father did, A ———" India in Hot Weather, I will briefly indicate the thermomet- rio features, say at & central position | like Allahabad, In January the indoor temperature will reach its minimum, perhaps standing at fifiy-four degrees, The risa is very gradual, and gets into the “eighties” toward the middle of Mareh ; when steady at eighty-five de- grees punkalis become necessary, Above ninety degrees the heat is op- prossive, and at n noty five degrees hor ribly 80, This is generally the tem perature during the lull between the monsoons. In exceptional vears I have known pillows and sheets to be nneom- fortably hot, requiring sprinkling with water; and 1 similarly fired to rest in drenched nig clothes, but the hot weather mercifully joterrapted by two remark. able meteorological phenomena. First, at its commencement we have almost always violent hailstorms, which bene. ficially cool the air, and then acme we have those very remarkable electrical dust-storms, which impress fresh life and vigor all around, Let me deseribe one, Nature under tha great heat, and is in absolute repose. Not the faintest breath isthere to coax the faintest movement in the leaves; silence prevails, for even the garrnious crows can't caw because their heaks sre wide open to assist respiration, Suddenly the welcome ory is heard, “Tatas I" {A storm 1s coming | and the house servants rush in lo) close all doors. Anxions to witness tho magnificence of the approaching storm, you rem in out to brave it, and feel its ap; breath on your cheek. Locking windward you a k clond approaching, and before it leaves and sticks, kites t and crows circling aroun lin wild con fusion. You now hear its r.ar while rapt in admiration, you are enveloped in its grimy mantle, aud bave to look to your footing iu resisting its fury; and this is no joke, for eyes, nostrils, and ears are eclonded with dust, As the approaches yon may see a flash at its $3 3 S80Is susauedq i wis 0 0 S00n roaoaing to S80 blae last »f lightning and hear its clap of thun- der, and then feel the heavy gold rain- drops which around Darkuess black surrounds you, darkness which literaliy may be falt, for clonds of dr occasion it; and if you are within doors night prevails, requiring the lighting of lamps. The storm passes, lig yon find everything begrimed with dust. Every door is now thrown open to ad- mit the yl, bracing, ne charged air, which you eagerly inhslo { with dilated nostrils, and feel that yon have seeurad a fresh lease of existen rel Ha OZ e0 e A Japanese Hotel, In imagining a Japanese hotel reader, pieaso uismiss architech ideas denived from the Coutinental or Fifth Avenue. Oar hotels in Japan, outwardly, at least, &¢ Wi aden tures, two stories Ligh, oft but on Their roofs are usually thatched, thongh { the city caravansaries are tiled. They are entirely open on the front ground floor, and about six feet from the sill or threshold rises a platform about a foot high, npon which may be proprietor seated busy with his account books. If it is | winter, he isevgaged in that absorbing { oconpation of all Japanese tradesmen at | that time of year, warming his bands over a charcoal fire in a low brazier. The kitchen is usually just next to the front room, often scparated from f street by only a latticed partition. In evolving a Japanese kitchon ont of his or her imagination the reader must cast strao- @ } ae on Figs ORR NEWS OF THE WEEK. ‘astern and Middle States. Tue defaloations of Palmer and Hall, the Newark (N. J.) offiolals, sre estimated at Ar Biddefor], Mae, Loon Moore, a olerk, shot and killed Miss Helle Cushman, a school teacher to whom he was engaged to be mar ried, and then killed himself, They were each twenty-one yoars old, The deed is supposed {o have bean prompted by jealousy, Parraner pita threatens to abolish the eles trie light. Twenty-five buildings were recently sot on fire in one day by means of the wires, of frandulent conuting, has been fined F100 from holding office or voting for seven years Tue apoual report of the Massachuset bo 165; labilitioa, $338 906,738.78 accounts, 738 031-inorease, 83.856; deposits, $250, 444,479.10 plus on hand, $14,800, A CO Christiana, Ps, Kn increase, $13,330,000,73 | su sulted in the death of an engineer, freman and brakeman on 3 fon of two locomotives and loaded cars " ¥ Tue late William F., Weld, the estate valued at Hostor Honaire, leaves an i all of which, wit} for charitable The gpon in Hoston, } go a astato A SIX-DAY fest 11 Patric realm, Blissful, indeed, is the thought as we enter the Japanese hotel that neither the typical servant girl nor the American hotel elerk is to be found here, The landlord comes to meet ns, { falling on his hands acd koees, Lows | his heed to the floor. One or two of the pretly girls out of the bevy usually seen in the Japanesa hotels | comes to assist us and take our traps | Welcomes, invitations and plenty of | fan greet us as we sit down to take off | our shoes, as all good Japanesa do, and as those filthy foreigners dont, why | tramp on the clean mats with muddo | boots. Wo stand up unshod, and are led by the langhing girls along smooth corridors, across an arched the which iz a stocked marine rookery, garden and pond with gold-fish, turiles and plants. The room which our fair guide chooses for us is at the rear end of the house overlooking the grand seenery for i which Kanorin is justly noted all over the empire. Ninety-nine valleys are said to be visible from the mountain top on which the hotel is sitnated, and expect that multiplication by ten would scarcely be an exaggeration. A world of blae waters and pines, and the de- tailed loveliness of the rolling land form a picture with which I lack power to paint with words. The water seemed the type of repose, the earth of motion. — Lipptneotl, Bathing In the Great Salt Lake. After looking at the water for a little it. The Mormons and Gentiles of Salt Lake City make good use of their lake for bathing purposes. At convenient poitts they have thrown ont wooden piers provided with dressing-rooms and to one of these erections my companions and I were soon fitted out in bathing costumes of approved pattern, and descending into tho lake at once realized the heaviness of the water. Iu walking the leg that is lifted off the bottom seems somewhat bent ou nsing to the surface, and some exertion is needed to force it down again to the mud below. | One suddenly feels top-heavy, and seems to need special care not to turn The extremo shallowness of the lake is also soon noticed, We found our- | selves at first over the knees, so we pro- ceeded to march inte the lake, Aftera long journey, so 1 ny that it seemed we | onght to be almost out of sight of shore, we were scarcely np to the waist, | At its deepest part the lake is not more than about fifty feet in depth. Yet it | measures eighty miles in length, by | about thirty-two miles in breadth, We made some experiments in flotation, but always with the uncomfortable feeling that our bodics were not properly bal. water, and that we downward at any moment. It is quite possible to float in a gitting posture with the hands brought ronnd the knees. As one of the risks of these experi- ments, moreover, the water would now | aud then get into our eyes, or any half. | healed wound which the biszing son of | previous weeks had inflicted upon | our faces, Sn rapid is the evaporation in the dry air of this region that the | skin after being wetted is almost imme- | diately crusted with salt. I noticed | too that the wooden steps leading up | the pier were hung with sler der stalac- | tites of salt from the drip of the bathers. | Alter being pickled in this fashion we | had the luxury of washing the salt crust | off with the douche of the hot water | wherewith every dressing-room is pro- | vided, — Professor eikie, | A ——— "I move,” said a delegate in a Virginia | convention, ‘‘ that our chairman take a dose of Dr, Bull’s Cough Syrup; he is 80 hoarse that I i cannot understand him.” That gentleman had | no doubt tried this wonderful medicine, South and West. Buirrrox is raging with great severity i some parts of Dak Twerve prisone execution, escaped from the jail at Bhrey La. Jour Jomxsox was shot and badly wounded by a nogro in Baldwis : Als brother Abe, as shor f tho assailant, mortally wounds himself shot dead. A vracas at Bellefonte, Ala, resulted probably fatal shooting of O. M. Fenne! Martin and his son John, merchants in the place, and the dificulty nated in jealousy, They were DriTxo 1881 thirtv.six homicides w icides were commit Coy, living at Florence, Io il, was delivered a fow day perfectiy-formed fomale chi Virrtaax H, Ens was hanzed at 8. irdor of his NB CO. wife. On the Gabriel th on the gallows ored man, Ex thirty and forty medics Towa, have been stricken aught from a sabject t had died of the l'pox also prevails fn about 08 in 1liinois, AST winter the Dakota legislatures organized a new county ealled alliday Do 1k nas, ita an to ita x which are now shown to be false. 1 hiss bat forty voters, and its t is only about £12,000; but a few of prising citizens, after electing th the county offices, have sn bonds and sent them to Now market, Coroxer I. who lived near Hamburg, Ark., is said to have #0 brutally beaten and abused his wife an in. telligent and refined lady, that she died tha other day. Her cruel death so excited neighborhood that a crowd the next night took Dell irom his home and hanged him to a tree. Tur Ohio legislatore met, organized tho NEL Winnias BE, Casen Richmond, quiet mam and x ecolvod annual moss Lot IN owas inangu- rated al as governor of Virginia, in a WinLe a Knights of Pythias fi progro stival was in ws nt Bhanesville, Ohio, the floor gave fell stove containing burning ¢ fire to the building, perished to tha floor be al fell Four women aud one boy hinndred, with it In the flames and two other persons i The wore crushed to death by falling timbers citizens by heroic efforts extinguished tho burned or otherwise injured, Tur Atlanta exposition closed after a suc. eosslal existenco of three months, W. E. Gramma, who killed, robbed tho night of December 28, was hanged by a In Missouri a child seven years old, having him instantly. Wire attempting to escape from jail at Graham, Texas, three brothers named Me- Donald, coarged with murder, were shot and killed, as was also a deputy gheriff, The Me- Donalds first killed the deputy sheriff and then broke oat of jail and took another deputy act 8 a shield between them and their pur- suers. Then a pitched battle took place be- tween pursuers and purened, daring which the McDonalds were all killed and three other men From Washington. Tr {a now thought that neither of the dels. the House, and the case will ba remanded to the people of the Tervitory, Tueur wore 2085 bills and joint resolutions of Fhe law provides that 950 copies fniroducad in the two houses Congress bes ura recess of each document shall be printed for the use Mii of memln i'n, 1 i ol) QOpioa, quiring the printing ef 2,835 stage stamps, stamped on ards for the quarter ended $7,017,788 834, 0 ng period of 1880 t 11 4.10 per cent in re ad Bltates bond wonnted to ) No such I Prisoners 1 News. r of a portion of FOoroigt snd have been cal yoars in justing \ lon ad — tnitean’s Trl il. f Dr. ALE ¢ in Linger sternly at ‘1 demand that this criminal " The crowd was listened if, without 10 motion was likely it had meant be- weld with his nowe- } IL every moment bra] el Gultean, be sai 1d be remand ar Yoioe, pointing i the doe €X( Porler } wid od w hoar g fro i k an insulting response, 2 month Poiter,' informed the judge that “that kind of talk” wasn't worth his honor's notice, Colonel Corkhill and Mr, ge also called for the prisoner's removal k. Mr, Reed and Mr. Scoville both ¥ measure which would keep the prisoner quiet would be a relief to them, but suggesied merely a warning by the court that he would be placed in the dock unless he strained himself, Here Guiteau suggest when Mr, Porter apologized for a defect i that he was *‘very stupid;” no one was more noyed by the interruptions than be blurted at him: “That's beout Jackass on this caso two. Is time.” Judge Cox stated that latitude been given to the prisoner upon the express desire of the district attorney, in order to fur. nigh the doctors an opportunity to diagnose his case, It appeared, in fa that tho ex- perts had based their opinions largely upon their-obeervations of the prisoner's conduct in court. This object seemed now to have been accomplished, and therefore he granted the motion to send the prisoner to the duck, whore, ane was, Gaitean 186 you're a ger, but should have the fullest protection, court-room without infringing his cons!itutional righta, Having accepted counsel ho had waived the right to appear as such in person, must be removed to the dock assassin for the first time be. to realize the possibility of the change. His confident look faded away: in a flash hoe turned very pale, and was visibly ter rified. He said, with an ashen faco and a tho your honor, I'll be quiet and sit here; but his head. Then Guiteau looked over to the dock, which was filled, the whole of that side of the room being packed 0 there, said : “I move thai the room be Cod Judge Porter repeated the suggestion, Lut it was not aoted upon. The crowd was now in great excitomont, Several of the policemen went ever to the dock and began to move the people ont, while bailiffs opened the nearest entrance to the court-room, and forced some of the crowd out, 80 as to leave a little space, Marshal Henry was standing near the judge, wawchivg Lis subordinates; Guitean was on his foet, and the policemen about him; so near the dock. There fasion. Deputy Marshal was Williams went council table und across, As he reached Gui- tenn ho said, excitedly: * Put the hagdeuffs on i { him if | scross the room with him, he sut looking very pale, Hoe had hi save a word,” Then moved oven fing. aie hardly sea each side of him and three standing behind gan to make good his threat fo be noisier than aver, thanking Corkhill sarcastically for such a good seat, taunting Porter, aud, later on, when the coast of his bead was produced, which looked Mie a whitened skull, throwing the dig- nified into convulsions of laughter by calling out: "That looks like * Humpty Dompty,’” It was not long before he was pounding the bal- astrade in front of him in de familiar man» ner, ralaing his voloe s0 as to fill the court POG. ihe dock court-room on the thirty-fifth day of his trial, i slinply a raised inclosure on the south side of the room, in which criminals are seated while awaiting trial. It js about eight feet long by four wide, and its furniture consists of three chairs, two with cane seats for the bailiffs, and one with a wooden seat for the prisoner, The dock is oloss to a large window, which, for the purpose of ventilation, is generally kept open, and the prisoner when seated in it was expose 10 & far preator extent than when sitting at the counsel table to the bullet of sn sesassin, A big policems lod the vacant space be- d the window, snd kept for susplolons persons, om his wooden seat iu the dock, ay in interrupting the igs as whe ho sat at the telde with lawyers, guard of § Loe withitliawn, the and there was danger thst rank wight shoot him ss he was going and the The juarreisome during the day, and had to interfere to stop a dispute donel Reed and Lawver Porter, vkhill persisted in speak Bpiteks, who had testified for the defense solne woeks ago, as a *' horse doetor.” The counsel fur the defense protested, and Judge Cox told the district-attorney that his words were not proper snd not admissible, Dr. Callendar, of Nashville, amined, During his examination My. Booville introduced a letter recently written to Don mmeron by Guitean, who in this letter says is a Ria the Btalwsits, that he weral Arthar, was ade President eads $F the van eourt-house, wars o ie IK { who i in i which, if the Btsle and that he Bn i wit repay it, is to be charged to My, Beoville asked Dr. Callen. writing of such & letter. under umstances, would not In 16 une lness of mind, The witness thought pot agreed with him, Guitean abused ing the letter, and his to Benator Camerar The witness afer ha Jeter was not commen sense, and npon the defense, as sot forth in Mr, al question, he though ity was & self-evident propo- Kempster, of Winnebago ut of the Northern Hos 18d i that 1p is ojanion 21 of last July, and ho cam aris, er the HE ne wien ¥ tite was pass As Oi through 1 a telegram which of the conrt, eat 4A Host or Apuiness.’ i L. One is Porter, because hs 0 for It Lh iat Hepablican N y nal ational I will be there Porter ' i poe 3 0 not ve me hanged iy ight as hiss go man for killing iG B TAN W Hwy W War weld another during the &% 10 hang me. My molive was er Divine pressure, to eave the nation ther war. Dut | am pole 0 ve got to the jury.” n of Dr, Kempster JOlLeal Was sane, bP Grav, of t of the X The of Wise Was Utiea, 1 ew York } i 3 alied 88 the last witness for the pros fon, He wis alen HHA] WAS BADE, asin, wh Rut G 4 , during the day 5 the end of add he woul next week in surrebuttal pow wilnoesos, and ow him to d i 3 J, + ouniry, sud be ob Presence of Mind, When an Austin schoolmaster entered ago, he read on the the tonching legend: * Our teacher is a donkey.” The pupils expected there earthquake, but be Philosophie . gogue contented himsel! with adding the word “driver” to the legend, and with prayer as usual, Teas Siftings, The Des Moines (Towa) Tri-Weekly Pribune says: *“ A Harrisburg, Pa, journa ket Bquare, that city, was cured by Bt Jacobs Oil of a violent attack of rheumatism, George M. Pullman, the palace ear in mining in Chicago, He was worth less than $100,000 when he began the sleeping- oar business, and now has a $400,000 home at Chicago, besides elegant sum- mer places on the Bt, Lawrence and at | Long Branch, The Pullman palace car | company now has over 1,200 ears run. | ning in this country which cost over $15,000,000 I 1555575 { i i as everybody knows.~Columbus (Ohio) Daily Times, going on in telephonic communication heard in Boston, PT B Ansa announces that he will human race, including giants, dwarfs, fat people and freaks of nature, for his great show, write, inclosing photo's, to Barnum, Bailey & Hutchinson, 40 Bond st, N, Y. service, On Thirty Days’ Trial, The Yoltale Belt Co, Marshall, Mich, wil send their Eleotro-Voltaie Belts aad other Eleo trie Applisnoas on trial for thirty days fo amy person afflicted with Nervous Debility, Los Vitality, snd kindred troubles, guarsntoesing gomplets restoration of vigor and manhood Address as above without delay, Ps allowed, bs ai To make new hair grow use CARBOLINE, 2 deodorized extract of petroleum, This | ia the only thing that will reslly produce new | hair. It is a delightful dressing. a { A EATTY'SPIANOFORTES -M £3, holiday presents; sqoate grand planofortes four very handsome round corners, rosewood cases, three URISODA, Pearty'e matchless fron frames, stool, book, cover, boxes, ; : siogue prices. BRD to F100; salisfuclion gaara g uded, after one searsuse: Uprle hie Planafortes, $12 10 $355; cata lope prices £500 to $8 standard pispofortes of the util i wlifs : wide for mammoth (st of tes vise Beatty's Cabiner ORGANS, cathedrs], chapel, parior, 830 vpeard. Visitors welcome; Kut meets passenzels Jiasirated catalogee (hall day edith) free. Adonis of call ups . DANIEL F. BEATTY, Wasoeros, New Jessey HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE fs the BEST SALVE for Cuts, Brafses, Sores, Uloers, Balt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Clilblains, | Corns and «ll kinds of Skis Praptions, Freckles and Pimples. Get HENEY'S CARBOLIC SALVE, as a thers are counterfeits, Price 25 cents, | DB. GREEN'S OX YGENATED BITTERS . Is the best Remedy for Dyspepsia, Billousgess, Ma sevs, Liver, Skin, ste. DENTOX'S BALSAM cures Coughs, Colds, hen matiam, Kidney Trouldes, ete. Can bs used exter sally us a plaster, Use RED HOUSE POWDER for Horses and Ostile, Dehility & § gc ores aragginle, ALLENS Hraln Feod«cures Nervous Eons of Geperstive Crgans, $a! THE MARKETS YEW YORK. at live wi ® wus discussed, bat Lx was 3 1 bility of ly prepare A $e 1 he foreman pat an ssion by wneing s anti] the that ol ut 10 separa trial closed, EEE interrupted assertions of paper's ullterances, ba y eond Gray declared his positive CRT Was san vied to bave the testimony und that it mu was diving. The on, and Guitean re. RL WD LS ewidi “ , -, i hy ig whose sd aRae - 43 -) a5 Ls y “ Absolutely substratom of that question is vo wond in ton is Fue, the rest e waiting for the counsel for the ta enter after recoss the Pisoney “1 have nothing else to do, so 1 without money, without H) for them 1 wouldn't y in that business and 1 don’t want that fmportance to the ¥ the cross-cxamin- ie ning speech on the : “1 had a very y did, I had lots of visitors, high. , middle-loned and low-toned., That takes them all in, I believe I'hey exprossed their opinions reely, and none of them want Thay all, without dissent, expressed that I shall be acquitted.” s-cxamination by the defense was Witness said that he did not be. of the so-called moral insanitiea is theft, dypsomania is dr fa, yromania is incendiarism, When Dr. Gray leit the stand the district ney announced that the testimony for the ' Dr. 8 P. Bowker, the defense that toned nment was concluded, as City, testified for Mra, Dunmire, the sssassin’s divorced wile, told him, after the shooting of the President, when she obtained her divorce from ghe feared be might be mentally This was in contradiction of portion of Mrs, Dunmire’s testimony a! trial & few weeks ago. Guileau's ther was called fo testify concorning the ho prisoner recéntly wrote to Don Cam eran seking for money, but the prosecution bjected, and sdmitted that Gaitean wrote and sont the letter, and so the withess was dis. missod, Mr, SBeoville wished to have the testi mony of Clark Mills, the seulptor who took a cast of Guitoau's head, but it was raled out by court. Mr. Scoville wanted to eall some stn whom the prosecution had subpomiaed it used, and, § t his preparation of iavit to show w wirhed to prove by wdjonrned, CGuitean was unusually quiet, an 1 himsel{ writing his name on cards handed up to him in the wk, He started to read a otter, which ho #aid was from a friend of General Garfleld, howing the drift of publie opinion on his case, lige Cox atornly ordered him to keop quiet, the marahal directed his men to stop him, Guitean succeeded in informing the jury th according to the letter, the harsh feoling wae all toward the doetors now, the bare th wii and n an a new witnessos, the a4 i EE ———————————————————————— WISE WORDS, A cheerful face ‘is nearly as good for an invalid as healthy weather, The truly wise man should have no keeper of his secret but himself, in each other is difference of opinion. We carry all our neighbors’ crimes shoulder, from the rest. solid in the ear, up in the country. | viduals of the other, | cious stone for its place. Iv... 50 @15¢ 62 5 L216 D0 GIB! B00 6 8 2 a 57 © 100 6 1 Ha Fob Ue roms nd a Prime per bbl ing W t Patents, | ombd& Delaine hod w 80 WN (MASK) CATTLE MARKET. OCB Th dressed, | PHILADELPHIA, Ex. Family, good tad vid ¢ Creamery Extra Pa. so New York Fall Cream, Ie uns Refined... ...... Vegetine EPILEPSY. H. IL Srevexs: Dear Sir-My husband has had Epilepsy for tL past fifteen yoam, T 1 mea be past winter his blood sex to be in a bad condition, and seeing the god results from the use of Veaxrixg in others, felt anxious to try it, fan taken some six bottles, and the rent has boon that he hax had only ten Hts in thre months past; whereas, he was acenstomed to having ax many in two days at his worst, an effect that hie did potexpect. Am very anxious to have him con tinue the ure some time longer: and write you to ask you what terms, or what redaction you would make and send me one dozen bottles, Very respectfully, Mis A. C COLE, Baraboo, Sauk Co,, Wis, Veorrixe thoroughly ersdicates every kind of humor, and restores the entire system to a healthy condition, Vegetine. Bt. Vincent School, Troy, N. Ootober §, 1871. ¥) Dn. Srovess: i donation of VEGETINE received lant evening, Alsdy has boen using it here, with much benefit to herself, who, for yoars, has beon pronounosd “broken down, worn ont,” ete, Frequently she was disturbed in her sleep by a violent nervous twitching of a foot, or the face, or the whole body, By takin TINE she is enabled to sleep quietly, and dication of chronio diseases to cotitend with. bod bless you for your charity to the orphans, Respectfully and gratefully, BISTERS OF CHARITY. slooplosenoss, as also of harassiy VearrINe has a peculiarly soothing effect in all & casos, when taken just before going to bed. Vegetine. PREPARED BY i ————— a \ hisuds in that inde pring he presses, shines, fve JO it Ay hr inte Wedel, Norwegisn Deadiah, wail Bpanish lations, chronological ftema, ete, which oan bt Sependod ot fos : "fie Almanne for 185% oan be oblained fres of cost from drug dealars in all parts of the country. In the United Btates twelve munufactories produce 10,000,000 teeth snwaslly, or one to every five persons, The amount squandered on teeth is $1,000,000, A wittion of gold is used every year to fill teeth, Dr. Piercs’s * Favorite Prescripiion ” is not extolled ne 8 * cure-all” bat admirably fulfills a singlences of purpose, being a most potent apecific in those chronic wosknesses peoulisr to women, Particulars in Dr, Pierce's pam- phist treatise on Diseases Peculiar to Women, ninety-elx g sent for thres Ad- dress Wonrp's Duvessany Mupicat. Assocrs- sion, Buftalo, N, ¥, Tocver egee in Cyprus sell ai $83 5 ton, Oue Grathinde” Pre Buffalo, BN. Yi: Duan “A Da. RV, Pinos, i Please accept our anring Yours truly, Hewny Wamise, Pave Torase, & New Orleans millionairs, propoeis 10 $1,000,000 to the pabliz schools of that city. give a» vv m— Dr. Pierce's * Pellets” little liver pills rect all disorders of the liver, it FiLx culture in Louisisns has of late become & thriving industry, sod day promises an abdudant production, indigestion and sick headache will yield readily to Warner's Safe Kiduey and Liver Cura, A souoot for railroad officials Las been estab. lished in Germany. Here employes are in- For pyseersia, I¥pioestioN, depression of #pirits and general debility in thelr varions forms, also 88 8 preventive against fever and ittent fevers, the Penne Puosrnoraren Evrxs oF Catisavs Bank, made Ly Caswell, Hazard & Co,, New York, sod sold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for patients recovering from fever or other it has no equal, i The Beienoe of Life, or Be medical work for every man--young, mi | aged or old. 125 invaluable presociptions. “Yporrose,” says a Boston physician, “ha uo equal as a blood purifier, Hearing of ia many wonderful cures, after all other remediey bad failed, 1 visited the laborstory snd con vinoed myself of ite gevaine merit, It ond pared from barks, roots and o | which is highly effective, in such + mannsr ss to produce resulis” a he. an a prod © (Thisengraving represents the Lungs 109 & healthy state) A STANDARD REMEDY iN MANY HOMES. For Cone hs, Colds, Branchi sand all other aR nctions of AL ek aL Vx =, if stands unnvaled and utter y bevond all competition. | It aproaches go near a specific that * Nine i i per cont. Are permanently caren whore The i | dons are strictly complied with, Shee bs no chen. { cal or other ingredients to harm the young or i AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL! J. N. HARRIS & CO., Proprietors, | CINCINNATI O. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. 12 104.) ous’ Purgative Pills pike New sud will completely change the binod in the Tbe 2d health, 1 such a thing bo posible, | bold everyv bore of sent by asi] for 8 letter staiaiw I. 8, JOHNSON & C0. Dostou, Mass. formerly Bangor, Me, entire svstosu in three months, Any person one pill each night from 1 to 12 weeks 13 Re a fA CU REL I} UR Ek.1). (eo rprnn Asthma Unre oever falls Lo give fos. » « volved $8 Lhe worst oxses, ares eoinfort. 5 row whee all others fad A oe vont sheprionl. Prioe, G0, und I Druggies or ty moll Bamjue FRE Pa KR SCHIFFMAN, St Pasi, Minn, sinEap, te AAI. we wend Bol sang fr Use vont complen Catalogues TYPE, BORDERS, CUTS, PRESSES, &4C. LOWEST PRICES LARGEST VARIETY, WHY WASTE MONEY! Seury mas or did 3 you worn og reg hh, whi or 8 bay gow LE Pro oR ge TARR INTIGORATE the HAIR aviwbere dom’y In tau Ter the gross Spanish dior which bas KEVER FAVED, Send ONLY SIX CENTS wo De. J. GUNEA BEL, Bes 1000, Boson, Bam ware of 8 lations. stim he | A ny Living Porson can to play Piano or On | Al asin 15 minutes, Musical jopiay Th previous | praciion une ie by madd, 00. (eta tak. js TMaxs, G58 1° . SiX 4 rr. Guide lars. LW. Tosaxs, 65 AGENTS should seni Y, g Gronetle eh i Foren CTEAMSHIP QTEA 1 ay {free of the for a copy | taining all | pformation about A Kiegeashiy ines, Ad | dross W. HICKS, 150 Nassau Siroet, New York i TANTED Agent's everwhere to sell the best | W Puzzle sires the “13.5 ust the thing for the Holidava, Send for circulars, Sample, 13 cents. | ‘ME PUZZLE CO. P. 0. Box JUSS, New | nd P.O. Box 2988, Boston, Mass, ~~! Rend stamp for instractions, | ATENTS i adap Age Repnioy oy i ENSIONS: vou x 65, Washineton D.C. 3 Morphine Habit Caved in 10 | GPIIRE to WO days. Nopay (Hl Cnred, | £52 Rip Tht, J. STRPRENS, Lebanon, Obie, | i ¥ @ OY) A MONTH-ACENTS WANTED 90 best | DOr R MONTH -AGEN 1s Word: Reampl fren, | ff ¥ Address oJ ay Broasasn, IX rude. Nich. i “A GENTS WANTED for the Bost and ast A Selling Pictorial Books and Ritdes, Prices re 81 per of, National Publishing Co, Philadelphia, P $66 a wee your own town. Tergs and $8 outfit | free. Adds B, Haiarrr & Co, Portland Maine, a Brest Wet Bue Works, Firiahared Yoarce's new method computing Partial Payments, | By mail, 100, Address J, . Pearcs, Milan, Tenn, | CTS, pavs for the Star Spangled Banner mos, i Its Volking Ure it, Noth vear. ¥ pages, i'd, Roel. | mens fren. AAA 8.8, Baxxes Hinsdale, N, H. TALUABLE ROOK SENT FREE VAR BI Nts, Riarnetievities No Ve a A WIEK. $17 a dar at home easily made, Costly $72 Outfit free. Adds Troe & Co. Augasta. Matos, or gid Saw Thing The parts, reports of Fulton pal pendent Catholic Church, everythi to pecide: arkels, stops terest the ladies, 1.50 n year, B and pet 8 specimen copy 8) o Dovaatt & Uo, 15 30 58% . 4 hsmen £33 alge 0 Cin Agent EE Cad I RE JERE UIPHTHERIA! re ont , will save many lives, sent free brasil. Dou™ ix better t sox & Co, Boston, hg Doe TRC TON gs ve go tear a a Price Bots, aby nail, Stowell 2 On aRriestown, Mass, ANTED-30 Girls, Good wages; pay wes 1 a swark: yen, TY i home. Wark eslied forand ¢ for $510 $20 [732 3t nome. Kamp Portiand. ot yOu since MEDIUM and sx NEW ILLUSTRA trating more than 100 styles of Organs, about organs generally, which will ba nigel iid, Address MANON & RH 0 AD Street, NEW YORK: or 140 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO. 2 his, with net Marguerite” cards. 1 nothing, and In return I enol with them. Sen £9" State which close two three-con Ds, e have been foand PROVEMENTS in their instrament br them, ENLARGED CaPaclTy; abo £34, #0 and upw 1 and { rs containing will be sont free and BOSTON; 46 Esat fas Hi LCELLENCE and prices, and cireuls i of Purchasing. or mont Sires 17 East 14th 8t., New Y or If You require Both sector: EVERYBODY WANTS IT. 268th Edition (New). EVERYBODY NEEDS . and m Bound in work ever publishied.---London setie ;arded the aatho Roy Bu man. Thousands of a For J ees ew A 6 CENTS. SEND A scaled and postpaid, 10 all pasts of
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers