They say that she is cold, bat they say} what they do not. cannot know, The very flowers that hang from the girdle of gpring were growing under the snow. Ts the violet cold that it shrinks from the gare and the touch of the herd? fs the song of the thrueh, thoagh it is not | permitted to fondle the bird? OMA spon a grasping his hand with painful earn- | over the common, Ie had counted on | estness, { a moonlight walk, but instead of moon Again his wife seemed to be looking | light a fog fell over ever yvihing | &t him out of these eyes. His wife's a fog, too, that wetted one like voice seemed to whisper through the (rain. Dr. Prince was perplexed to room: “ You must keep her and be a! know what course heshould take when father to her for my sake," to the left of him he spied a gleam of "Wy hat is your name?” he asked. | light, whieh proceeded from Rainger's : I * Kate, | cottage, The doctor gave thanks for They often love fondest, love surest, who “1 will never let them take you from | it, and, pushing open the gate, stood never betray the emotion, me, Kate; but you must always do! in the little garden, whieh, because of I could tell yon of one whom she loves with a | What I tell you; if you don't they will | the season, smelt then only of decay passion as deep 8s the ocean. find you and take you away.” |“ A pest on these November fogs" * And beat me again?” { thought the doctor, before rapping at * Y eg, worse than ever.” [the door. Then he stood there a Then he looked at the poor mangled | rested by what he heard from within, am | though what he heard was ] It is true that, in words, sho has naver con. | fessad to the feeling; Love chooses a daintier way for its choloest Poly and dressed the wounds and swestest revealing. 3 a 8 Wounds, . I : | writing of a time, happily past now, | man's voice saying Never once has ho touched ber lips with his | when the unfortunate inmate of Inna “ Well, when the good fairy saw how oWwh, never once caressed her hand-— | tic asviuius underwent hor which | sad lttle Alice was, with no books, no Heo might kiss and caress to his heart's eon- | it now sickens one to think of pretty picture, no nice dres tent would he only understand ! { He made Kate lie down upon his bed | dolls—" “0ald! Cold ™ and then casting himself on the floor hen a girl's voice, questioningly as they ip fell into a broken, uneasy sleep. Fi- | « Didn't she have any dolls # 3 i f van sy ha g nh y \ . uN } He would leap W nally when the dawn had well come, hen the man again to ihr SinpiyY a Ors 1 4] QPN , and no Did he know all her heart ays b A Y BRAY it tthe falsehood slay it and birds were talkative, he rose and all, not . 2 . went to look at his charge; she was Phen the gh Some time he will kuow what to-day what he siecping as peacefuliy as a child, one | music ¥” wonld barter his life to be knowing v Not, perhaps, till the roses and daisies above her are budding and blowing. at a ad AW $ ha sane fit wes I} * Did 0 hand half hidden in her long gold hair " Mr. Ranger felt that something very | precious and very beautiful had come to him, but what was he to do with “Ro was; but let it? Fortunately there was one person | what the good fairy did rusted “It must be \ Prince. “1 should anywl dear Without more delay the cottage door Th talking, and said * Hush!” tone of voice: then feet moved “No: no musie, either: “Then she must sad little girl I" have been She may die with the weight of her delicate she secret upon her: . Then may God charge His angels to crown | (0 the Hilage WHO loved and t her with Heavenly blessing and honor! | him, and » nom he 1 return also loved 80 th jand trusted. This person w not : 3 whe were made to be lovers, alas! | youytiful to look at, and also she was they are nothing bat friends; ald. Her name was Martha le re Ho dare not, she will sot—behold, for the | sulved to take want of 8 word how it ends! She had nursed Sie DAA RUSK she ben iy ALIN as were. Run to earth her Well, the case is, at least no marvel, thestory | long and fatal illness Leen his is common and old : i miend ever Unwilling himself | the floor and a deor shut. I Mourn over it, sueer at it. which yon will, i to leay athe he USK, AS 800 & was | door that led from the garden into but you shall not say she is cold ! i light he sent out one of the boys of sitting-room was opened by Rainger ~~dnson G. Chester, in Our Continent, | the village to Martha, asking her to| “I have lost my way most i come to him at She complied | in this horrible fog,” with his request, and, while Kate con- | “ and, catching sight of your friendly tinued to sleep, Rainger and Mrs, | light, I thought vou mi be le to | Wakefield talked of what was to be oblige me w ith the loan of a lantern.” done. One thing was clear, that, if I'he unsuspecting photo When Mr. Tom Rainger, who de- | possible, Kate's presence in the cottage | plied that he should be scribed himself as a traveling photo- | must be kept a secret. Mrs. Wakefield | ply the desired object; graphic artist, was not on the road, he | would send in some fresh clothes for | was getting it ready, the lived absolutely alone in an humble | the poor girl, and when night came | in and made himself at } cottage on a wide patch of land ad- | Rainger would take those she now | was something joining Thornton Common, a high, | were, and which seemed to him a | mistrusted and disliked, wide stretch of grassy ground, and a | badge of the asylum, and bury them in “You live here place much resorted to in the summer. | some wonderfyl eaves close at hand, | the new-comer. The village of Thornton, from which | holding in their depths miles of night! No answer the common took its name, was seven [and darkness. When Kate awoke! * I say, you miles from the nearest country town. | Martha went to her, washed and “Yes, I It was a meek little village with an | dressed her, and shuddered over her “J igh old-fashioned parsonage, an unpretend- | poor, wounded body. When she was | I hear ing church, a schoolhouse, a forge and | dressed she was brought to see Rain- | Mr. a public house, called the Three Jolly | ger. She bade him good-morning and | the k ) Boys. | put up her face to be Kissed. : on th ranger’s face, and sa To return to Mr. Rainger—when he! As a rule Rainger prepared his own | lently, it must be owned: was not at home he lived on wheels; breakfast; to-day Mrs. Wakefield “ Perhaps you did that is to say he journeyed round the | saved him that trouble. Kate's was didn't. What business is it country in a Kind of cart-house. He taken to her in an inner room, lest | whether I speak the truth or not » traveled mostly in the winter, finding {any of the neighbors should eatch “ Asit happens, "answered the doctor, through the warm weather no stint of | sight of her in their passing by. “it is my very speci: people in Thornton willing to pay from | It was little work that Rainger got nay, I am almost certain a sixpence to a shilling to see their | through that day. so occupied was he have a face, reproduced by the artist's glass. | in studying his charge. Mrs. Wake | escaped Inn for Besides being an artist, our friend was | field had lent her a picture book, which | search has been made.” a musician. He really played the vio- | seemed to delight her. Once in the “That's lin skillfully, and between fiddling and | course of that day, when she was other, brusquely, photographing he got on quite well. | alone with Mrs. Wakefield, she said, | the ne At the time of which I am writing | fixing her'eves intently on that good | lunatic here.” he was a middle-aged man, strongly | woman, and speaking in a tone which, “1 am sor : built and rather short of stature. His | in its intensity, corresponded to the | rej ‘tor, * but, weather-face had.on it a look of weari- { look in her eves: * Where's Tom * ightning he ness, and also of resolution. Other! She had heard Mrs. Wakefield call ' « djoining things than the sun and the wind had | him by his Christian name. , had their will with that face. A life's| “Do you want Tom, my pretty! tragedy had scarred it deeper than | answered the widow. : > ever the elements could. His scant “Yes, I want Tom,” hair was iron gray. Tom Rainger dreamily. Then she { was not popular in the village. He her hands, as if the would sit for hours at the Three Jolly | grown strange to her. Boys, smoking and speaking to no| Mrs. Waketield went for Rai one. When he did talk there was | who was not far of. The girl threw something overbearing and aggressive | her arms about his neck, buried her | to-night,” L in his manner. He never went to | face on his shoulder and sobbed and | her in the morning church, bul he might often be seen | laughed by turns. Then she asked for , She will be coming out of the churchyard, where, | the music, so he got his violin and | this” And under the grass and flowers, lay what | played to her. he played| 11 keep had ounce been “ thedesire of his eves” [it seemed a8 her poor [of ¥ anion, his good | spirit, wandering in lands lit by dabi- |» ious lights, echoing with unjoyful ¢ loss of her,” said the laughter and sad singing, haunted by ) ie Three Jolly Boys, | shapes terrible and indescribable, was | possible in the cours * that turned him sour, as thunder | striving desperately and vainly to: said Dr. Prince, urns milk sour.” | grope its way back to the land of rea- | to-night After five years happiness her | son and reality. What could there be | up the lantern, fresh gay voice, the it of her to apprehend in her? seemed ht ¢r hair and | strangely gentle. Her voice was very i » she bad {low and had in it a subtle inner music | locked it, Then he sat down and con- gone out t him, as | which went right to the hearer’s heart. | sidered what he could do, and Kats we have seen, & soured man. i I cannot set forth in words the pas- | crouched beside him, erving from time One midsummer’s eve, a time to be | sion of tenderness with which Rainger | to time, © Oh, To come memorable henceforth in Mr. | thought of his new charge. When he Rainger’s life, that gentleman sat in | went on the common he left her locked the bar-parlor of the Three Jolly Boys. | up in the house with doll or picture It was a club night, and having for | book. So passed a couple of months. At one time the benefit of the Jolly Boys performed | One col, wet, windy August night, | out his wander g twice on his violin, he put the instru- |g night when nature seemed shudder her away in it; but what good would ment away, and shouldering his case, | ingly to realize the impending desola- that be? They would be followed and and with his pipe set fast between his tion of the end, Rainger lay asleep soon found. What was there to be teeth, passed from the mixed fumes of {in the room adjoining the ome oc- done? He had always prided himself tobacco and spirits into the clear, icupied by Kate. - He was a sound | on being a man of resources, vet now moonlit night. The Jolly Boys were | sleeper. Suddenly, however, he was | he seemed resourceless. Presently } hard at it when he left them, but the | awakened by some one shaking him | got up and went into the garden. sound of their jollity was soon behind | violently. He started up to see Kate strong, keen wind had sprung up, and him; the common was about a mile! standing by his side. She carried a had wholly scattered the tog. Ti from the village. ; light in her hand, and ‘her gold hair | cold air was radiant with moonlight. It was a warm, luminous night. | was all unbound. There was a look in He walked up and down, sorely dis- Every leaf and every twig of every | her keen eves that Le had not seen | tracted as to what he should do. Sud. | tree was distinctly visible, such a there before—a look of protest and in- | denly he stopped in his walk and ex- power of moonlight was on everything. | finite horror—the look of an animal claimed, “Yes, better even that than A note faltered through the warm, | about to undergo some torture from to give her up to them.” He took. an- compassionate stillness. Then from a | which it knows there is no escape. | other turn to and fro; then he went clump of trees a nightingale began| « What are you doing, Kate?’ he! on. Kate was sitting just where he sip png. : . | asked; “ hasanything frightened you?" | had left her, her fice buried her There were hot tears in Rainger's | She placed the light on the table and | hands. eyes as he walked along. It seemed her fingers began working in one an-| “Kate,” he said, “I can save you if to him as if the woonlight, the warm | other. Then she said, in a tone of | vou will do just what I tell vou.” air, the singing dird, had some mes voice scarcely louder than a whisper: © «1 will be good,” she answered sage from his dead wife—a message! «I am going to scream.” Shortly after this a man powerfully which he could not interpret. Ah,| She had scarcely uttered the words | built, though somewhat low in stature, x sion of worship he when she flung back her heal and {and a slightly-made girl might 1 TL stretched out her hands, while from | been seen walking together in the When he reached the cottage, in- her lips there broke a shriek so terri- | direction of the noted Thornton caves stead of entering it, he passed on to the | ble, so unearthly, as to make the blood | in which once Druid priests had pe I. common, Where moonlight and unbro- {of any one who heard it turn cold. It formed their dread sacrificial rites ken stillness reigned. Standing there, it | was a cry which seemed to rend the | The girl carried a violin case, the man came to him to take out his violin and | sense of ‘hearing. It was. so wild, so | carried a lantern and a spade. The to begir paying with all the ex-| unlike anything ever heard before, two soon reached the mouth of the pression of which he was capable, and | that it suggested some new agony of | caves. : pi he had no small measure, “ The Last | body and soul—a fresh discovery in the “ Where are we going?" asked Kate. Rose of Summer.” It was one of the | realms of torture. “In here. dear.” he answered airs his wife" liked best to hear him | Fortunately, there was no cottage! She s rang back, saying, It looks play. Under his hand, which then | within a mile of Rainger's pes d Did Loe Meda de wlio sum > J ' t within a mile of Rainger’s. He came so dark in there, I'm frichtened. seemed to acquire the very master's | near her, but she sprang at him like a “It won't he dark with he soul, She De Tose and quivered wild thing, her eyes flashing, her lips said, turning up his lantern to the full. and floated far away. He wondered | drawn back and showing her gleaming | * In here you are safe. Here they will if beyond the moonlight she heard it. | teeth. At length breath failing, she! never find vou.” : All his heart was intent on this when | fell to the ground, where she lay cow-| * Are vou quits sure they won't find he heard a sound which made him | ering as if she expected every moment | me%’ start. It was the sound of feet hur- | to feel the stroke of a rod. If was clear “ Quite sure; bend rying as if one were running a race that she wag liable to these terrible | low. There, that's it: for life. In another second or two, | and dangerous’ outbreaks of insanity, up now.” with a low cry, something caught his | Before morning she was taken with They were in the everlasting night hand and dropped at his feet; then a|another wild fit of screaming, after | and winter of the Thornton caves. In- girl's voice said, in a whisper of terror: | which she grew strangely quiet, and | deed in that mighty darkness the ravs “Save me! hide me! they will find | then fell asleep. . of the lanter: ‘seemed just a faint " me if you don't! They are following | When she awoke she was again the | test of light ay bi] me, 1 know!” gentle, trusting, childlike Kate. The ground was thickly eovered Rainger raised the girl, and, acting | * « What if such a fit should take her : with sand, which rend: red their stops a impulse, Jed her to his cottage. Asin the daytime?” thought tainger, noiseless. In part 4 thi 3 sand colle ted ney alked slong she Said : and he shuddered. : { in drifts, forming regular hills. was nnng heard Joul Every day she seemed to cling more! “J am frightened,” she said, begin. calling me. That was you, wasn't it 7” | and more to her protector, whom only ning to ery. “I want the music.” “It was my music you heard,” he |ghe and the old woman loved. "| Giving her the lantern to carry, he Snsweral. music?” she repeated, sine- Often, for hours together, he would : tock the violin from its case and began % kn 3 ain 10ld her slight form clasped against | playing, and so he drew her on as Or- ply. *1don’t know what that is” his heart, as if she had been his child, pheus drew his Euridice. The caves Just then they reached the humble | her bright head leaning upon his are cold and the caves are dark. They cottage, with its wholesome garden of | shoulder. He told her fairy tales and | streteh for miles, and wind as snakes sweet-smelling flowers, Rainger struck simple fhymes, of which she liked the | wind, i 3 ie a light, then he turned and looked at|gound; but most of all she delighted | At length they reach a remote part his companion. IIo started back with | in hearing him play. Hé was seen | Rainger leaves off playing and restores an involuntary ®ry; for, in the girl | less and less at the Three Jolly Boys, | the violin to its case. : fronting him, he seemed to see his|and became still more unpopular. | “Kate, my own darling,” he says, | Fite Be ane Buape of face, Then people grew curious to know drawing her close to him, * I love you 1€ Saine light ol gold hair, the same | how and where he spent his evenings, | as I should have loved her child and goft, blue eyes, only in these there was| Que evening a man stole to his cot- | mine.” a strange pleading, questioning look— | tage door. ¥t was closed, but the man | «What are you crying for?’ she a look Which seemed to say: “Where | thought he could hear Rainger talking | asks, putting her hands to his eyes, am I? Oh, save me! . to himself; he was telling Kate a story. | from which, indeed, the tears are fall- | He came near and his hand fell on| For four months the patient search | ing fast. “I'll be good; don't cry, her shoulder, He started again, for | had been made for the escaped mad | Tom,” and she lays her face caressingly the shoulder he touched felt warm and gir], but with no good result. It often | against his. : i wet. He looked down and saw that | happens that when we have searched |" He draws one arin away and feels blood was soaking through her thin long and diligently for some object, | for something in his coat—a flash, a and have at last given it up as lost for | sharp report, a whizz of something SN ier ti 5 Lit i'r it ) } aa HOP AUNSIN once. began the doctor; HIS oh i ai TRUST Hoe ti him that 1 il alone ®”’ 8, i though , hixed them i inso £ 88, 153 perl aps il business, y concealed atic, nansens lantern. dout it. trom it, ru at Rainger's fee take care « " 3 3 13 SNA Passe im nger, | “1 1 well isle pur s Tu Haver not toug LI ii : : Mn. sil foie wil landlady Of Va 1 Yan quietiv, she lose] the door after him and i, 3ayve me n Yes, my love, ves,” he “1 will save vou still;” but himself, * How ¥" answered he asked he tho i } 13 ough ino \ ing wouse and «dri \ ill 1 Have this,” titer dress, “They beat me 50,” she said, “that I ran awa} to-night.” “ Who beat you?” he asked. “Iden’s know; but they did beat we, and made the blood come,” Then the whole truth flashed upon Rainger, About five miles off was an asylum and the girl to whom he was talking was an escaped patient. * Xou won't let them take me from when there is no thought of it in our | a thud on the sand—then absolute si- minds, lence, So chanced it with Dr. Prince, a| Rainger stood for several minutes shrewd, hard, implacable-looking man. | without moving; then he took the He had quite given up the hope of {lantern from the ledge of rocks fading his escaped patient, when fate | where he had placed it, and kneeling led him “to the very place where she | down by the fallen form looked closely was. The doctor, who enjoyed bodily | at the face and felt the pulse and exercise, was returning on foot one! heart, Yes, she wus passed all earthly detection, all earthly dread. Ie re placed the heavy old-fashioned pistol in his coat, and using the spade he had [brought with him dug under a pro. jecting of rock a rough grave wherein he reverently laid the fair body. “God ble you,” he sald, as turned away {rom her he had loved well, He was at home in these caves as very few people were, so that lu had no trouble in retracing his way the entrance, Oh! the deserted tage to w hich he returned ! empty bed; Kate's empty oh himself that it ha only way He had loved her to let her live for many deaths could be The next dav, with ih Prince presented | Rainger's cottage “I have come to remove slab hi ao S35 little Kate's Mr! Stl | heen the {oO well 4 he said to \ i ay 3 UBering orse than a force of Keep Ors, tinsel at my patien y 'o which answered Rainger & removed herself: th rd i alleged against Hin rust slon Was? The Chalrs of Noted Senators, Daniel Webster re signed his seat in United States Senate July 20, $s 4 Washington letter. "His } as ull I intl enate ol ¢, where is sit senator that i1 the worl hom Mir - Here boy, ic I exc W ehst and put eighteen veurs | 3 i Page signed, Captain Bassett has he a place In the Senate I ! until the present, being ¢ rgeant-at-arnis now, ry of the desk As aboy stated the [ or its number is t found a se ret to the as it is to an Egypt Bassett's st possessor of or as pre WhO sits f Nenatlor il reason for Ke mummy numbers o y and female, ve the secret wid be cl veld urious who thar ipl nerations snd his Sa There ane except i t it o} the Mr. Pend! in was nied by he scat th wae ono un Bassett 10t now had 1 ill wen A Remarkable Freak of Nature, markable freak of 1 cently in the way vat (re ar idLUre arr: i i eventeen mont “dome of the iq as essential { ontinued existence, More to have } no need for a brain, if the eyes may be believed, for, in the absence of a skull, and almost . Wille, by the aid of alamp t may he perceived that yis filled with aecolorless vothing n this serum be The head larger than the body, the increase of size being almost entirely above the temples, measures twenty-seven hes around, The lower | vi i 1 he child woul ver th ! ver, La i “eens $ rane} . . head is translucent exists } perceiy il is and in ace is perfect, and d be pretty but for the development, The rapid ywih of the upper head has drawn until the evelids will not and eyebrows are pulled up an inch at least above the normal po- sition. When an Enquirer reporter visited the child it was a leep, and its mother would not allow it to be awakened for experiments. A rather il lamp was placed behind head, and gleamed « though the skin formed The locks read madi roved by light behind whole of the monstrous It He 0 2 t skin close, He ol dim eoal-o is bstucle fo the light. veins upon the fore hair upon the back of the Yisidd the only sl head and the of ] adows, as was | moving the lamp. the head illumine interior, be a8 perceptible upon the sides as the front of the occiput It is claimed that when the child is awake a lamp or sunlight falling wk of the head is even seen through the eve trils, or through tl ears when j at one side, This re- nurkable wered with an abundant growth of auburn silky hair, The child hi 0 pt frye ie laced hi head ¢ CAarance, ex- good very apy vO Vi ) We SKin, of Ih ti { in the color of health. fully plump, and i d to be strong, while it has a good appetite, In all its h developed, i nl it q iil, ssed so far good reached the one of the wonders are said to { possesses a ] hat it sh as to be health, and teething period, is of physi : It be perfect and acute, and | enough of intelligence to smile faintly when tickled and to recognize food when it sees it. When the child was born it was known as “the headless baby,” as it seemed cut off al the cars on a line sloping toward the naps the neck, while a wrinkled skin covered the Lop. It suffered greatly, and its life was preserved with difficulty, At three or four weeks of age the skin began to fill out, when the child's sufferings ceased, and it enjoyed The growth has been The child suffers no the inconvenience of 1 tie ia d, ¢ progre maintaining have logy, KON&es $ WON 6 Ove constant since, and only of its deformity, The tension of the skin is such that it does not yield as pected from child does not seem to experience any trouble from this, and was sleeping as sweetly as anybody's cherub, This child was born February 20 of | Einia, It is of the male sex, and is known as I'ranky Canady, PASTERN AND MIDDLE STATES A Tih Syracuse, N. Y., destroyed the main mill of the Byracuse iron works, caus. ing a loss of $200,000, At Keeseville, N.'¥ : the flames burned two hotels, Association Hall and other property, entailing a total estimated loss of £100,000 A swimming contest for £1,000 and the the English champion, Captain Matthew Webb, championship of world, between the and Thomas Riley, the champion short di to 1k : i 0 ut the fo lanes swimmer Hall, Mass, and was won by Webb the hour, four minutes af America, rer, le distance (1 Captain ad miles) in one and ity seconds, and Riley in one hour, five minut and ten seconds, A rai ad on i United States steamer Talla spoosa J New York b mien were at 31, adeident oeours bohm N | § whor for Newp ve Life 3 le exercise, lower tl three of them Henry Kra bolo ut when were thrown over : artermastor, was acting q tit a 1 did not rise to the surfue Au cued with ane arm 3 erholm, with broken ribs, Gl. Bakes of Ohilimser soa, Hers pale, was thanked ou the deck, and substantially rewarded by Beors tary Chay SUOEA. Ar Cohoes, N. Y., the i of the Harmony Mills operatives, which be led, resumed work Hexuy J. Hav, paying teller of the Rhode Island Hospital Trost company at Provi dence, confessed to being defauliter in the I he st wller, who was on board the Talla rotracted stroggle gan on April 24, is virtually e most of 3 4 . the strikers having i gam of $21,000 ealing was begun is 3 1875 and the money was spent in extravagant living iy 1 lov Erie railroad elevat Ax explosion at Baffalo blew off the roof of that st I'he building a took p AL ned to the gr Her men ound The engineer and ad Were tex The damage done is about £9450. (40 Janes Reopen (colored) was hanged at Newcastle, Del., for assaulting a twelve-year old white girl, Grosor Lee, of Newark, N. J., defeated Courtney, Wallace Rosa, Hosmer, Riley others at the Saratoga Lake tt wl and regatta professional thres-mile boat race, teur championship was wou by ¥F. Holmes, of Pawtucket, RL A rine at Newport, R. 1, parti the Cliff house, & y destroyed Ber res nd two ad atiages, Genenar Cuoanves J. Powess, a prominent N.Y. I sustaining injuries Rochester lawyer, slipped and fell in the stre that caused his death. He was forty-nine years old and had ar served with distinction in the late w leg Penn yenuon y 4 Sylvania ° met in a series of nee of the Lab ms A. A and Flor irtoen assing assing rOsO Ofna i nsirong Mantua ively fh ie Peddick dd 10 Lhe in accordance with 4 sew] wife at Aiken, he ¥ Ropxsr Panxen was han C., for the murder of hi Two of stage in Arizona and murde tho desperad 3 xl the express were lynch d red ere shot messenger and another man At Madison, ¥i prisoners, charged with murder, w and killed in a train by a crow] Goveuxon Caxenon, of Virginia, fused to commute { pon be Booth {eolored), aced fonrtee: to be hanged on Novemx Mra, Gray and Travi inthe early part of April, 1 at Globe. two ool ho 2g OLB, of yellow fever ny orted from iy. T g the Ri ' Santa Maria, ¢ Business has b Maxy now canes § # hs ha ous death Hen re] ville, Texas and vicin guards extend alot mouth to mil pended in the a fit fn preva: tid Two men were instantly killed, another was fatally injured and several more Were se riouely wounded by the explosion of the boiler in a tile factory at Selma, Ohio, state that Ficklin, town in Texas, was all washed away except , and that forty drowned. The jorit of wore Mexicans, Mgrs. J. M, Sraarron, wife of a successful Disrarones Hen a eight honees persons were majority « the violins lawyer at Leland, lil, shot her husband and then herself, both dying immediately, They hiad been married only a short time, and it upposed lived happily together. Mus, irried ring a Hovey, a young m Thetford, insanity Cuantes woman living at Mich., dn fit of temporary Qa and five-year-old child in a tub of water, drowned herself Tumnrees Indians engaged in the recent el in the red, tried and found guilty, and were pab dy whipped at-Cane Creek, Creck Nation, hundred lashes on rebellion Girock Nation were cap | £4) lic each man receiving one the bare back. Trear wero cighiy-two new cases of yellow fever and eight deaths in one day st Browns ville, Texas, Fiuny the the of Farmerville, eatimated loss, $850,000, the cashier greater part of La; destroyed hneiness portion total of the First National Kewanee, Ill, which was recently of £20,000 by the charged with complicity in the is charged that the locki Mies vault, by the robbers, was pre-arranged. An other of the alleged perpetrators has been captared at St. Louis, Mo. Pratt, hank at robbed who had left a arrested, robbery, It Pratt and the man valise in building, has been yur IW Harris, up of his aesistant, in bank's FROM WASHINGTON. Warrants for the payment of £10,000 00) on account of pensions ware isaned the other day from tho treasury dopartment, A commrrree that has been investignting ment of the treasury building has discovered {hat there has been a regulur and systematic ghortage in the amount of ico delivered to the treasury department, extending over two yorrs, The amount of the shortage is es | Duna July 65,010 emigrants arrived at | the various United States ports, | By order of the President, Acting Post. | master-General Hatton has removed Mrs, Anne E, Thompson as postmaster at Mem phis, Tenn., and appointed James H. Bmith A Wassvarox dispateh says that General | William T, Bherman will ask to be placed on 1851, He wonld be retired under the army compulsory act on February 4, 1884, at which date he will be sixty-four years of age. | A rerearan from the navy department at Washington has been received by Admiral the United Btates naval wing that munanding the ABiR, AnNoOu: Commodore 6 treaty with Cores has been reject of to Mi Young, the y to Lina, hip wir be sent that would assume | atic control of the question. aipiom Cartan Avene Horzies, commanding the navy yard, Pensacola, Fla., bas informed the acting secretary of the navy that yellow fever is spreading in Pensacola, and that ex ions Precautions ira procau for Ul aire necessary, ww salely of the men were secordingly axen Une secretary of war has approved the of Rives the apportionment of the the last Congress fo. commendation for fund appropriated by re the M sissipp COINS IOn improving the navigation of the Mississippi river, and it is supposed thet work upon the river will begin at ones. HOT Kiel, of stopped American fishing in Canadian waters, i Frsnesy Insped Canada, has Svees are being taken in London to place a bust of the poet Longfellow in Westminster Abbey. Ms. G, O. Ireland, at a reception given him by the eiti gens of Delfast, said that the government Treveryan, chief secretary for would wage unrelenting war on crime, lagvrexant RK. M. Bessy, who commanded the Jeannette search steamer Rodgers, and Engineer Melville, of the Jeannette, have had an audience with the czar of Russia, by whom they were cordially received. Tourer thousand ship-joiners at Glasgow, Feotland, have struck work. A nuvivayr of the attacks upon Jows is re ported from the interior of Poland. In consequence of the disturbed state of of Athlone, Ire. soldiers and police, on ears, scour i$ the country in the vicinity id, sickly A Howe Koxa dispateh says that four thou #and natives have died of Asiatic cholera in single Phillipine provines, but dhe epi. demic is now decreasing. Hosres, 8 notary of Montreal, Canada, lied a large number of w oa swin idows, orphans and then abseonded to the United His liabilities are more than $150, He held a high social position and adios (ER spent much money in extravagant living, Dorixa a heavy gale off the Newfoundland of their coast 1bher of vessels and some a nun Crews were nd fal riot $08 nn A Caroorra i has been fear ing between Hindoos ard : y : : moedans ai Dalem in the présideney of | fty Hindoos and nodans have been arrested. An One hundred and fi that bead d women of Mo of the dis rs SAYS the pround, walls with the idren » proopedings are said ¢ ex-Regent Tal. father ¢ king. He has ment of foreign prompliess be the wilh it Rhin onosaki, A fleot has been scene of and y been gathered to await the do. of affairs. Reparation must be war will disorder and unconditional or ahsalule Engne. Lare telegrans | tha rom Corea stale tha lo of the king has seized the throne, ue Siberian plague is appearing to m al fant in most widely x separated f Eur ing pean Russia, Unie annual report of the wheat erop in France shows if is excellent in twenty de partments, good in forty-five, fair in eleven that of Corsica ravages in Japan At Yokohioma and bad in one LERA 1% creating great in the P! | crushed in, presumably 1 the road 10 his mine with £2,000 which with rare tl 3 i gvpl., was the AIOMS for and then Arab Souda three on hoard mutiny. sored tied to a rope and hauled up to the port side vardarm. i hey were tl y the soa, dragye to the wen dropped int nder the keel and hauled ap ard yardarm., Tl Hr —— — The Trouble in Egypt. Nautilue, bound ia, passod Abou. he white flag int they were rus ey were soon dead. y Anetrian gunboat s BRPPOR 11 in possession of the British, and sent a boat ashore with an officer and twelve men, who wore made prisoners by the Egyptians, A dis h from Port Said says: “The British have eaptared Ruechdi Pasha, for. merly tl live's minister of finance, and 2 iti kn hia, of the khedive's household 1the cause of Arabi } asha,” he mi police have ted nineteen ow re pillaging in the Arab quar. ters in Ismailia, Ten of the prisoners were shot. A dispatch from Kantara reports that the Bri forces now hold the Suez canal throughout its entire length, and that they have an abundance of good water. ” General Sir Garnet Wolseley, in a dispatoh fo the war office, recounts an engagement at Magfar in which he held his ground the whole day against 10,000 Egyptians. lis forces numbered about 2,000 men. In his details General Wolseley says: “I advanced this moming before daybreak with the 4 who nrre ho» 3 sh thirty mounted infantry, 1,000 men from the York and Lancaster regiment, sad the marines, Affer some skirmishing 1 took posseesion of the dam which the enemy had constructed tho canal between the villngres Magfar aud Mahatta. Daring the operations two squadrons of the Household cavalry charged the ene- my's broken infantry very gallantly. 1 soon found that the enemy were being largely re- inforeed from Telwl-Kebir, 1 could see trains arviving, 1 thought it inconsistent with traditions for the queen's army 10 re- tire before any aumber of Egyptian troops, ae inforcements arrived. All day long I have had an Egyptian force of 10,000 men, with | ton guns, in my front and on my right flank. | The precision of the enemy's artillery fire was very good, but fortunately they fired common shell nearly all day, and when they did firo shrapnel their fuses were badly | adjusted. The enemy had their eavalry rogi- | Our horses, having been re- cently on board ship, were not in condition | to gallop much, The two horse artillery guns sasvaltios have been slight, Captain Hallam Parr was wounded through the leg. lord Melgund received a wound through the hand. Captain Parr's mounted infantry dis. tinguished itself. All the troops engaged did i well, Jo-morrow | shail AACE the enemy's position at Holenke, and hope to take posses. | sion of the dam which they constructed there this morning.” : On the following evening General Walslas ! telegraphed was follows from Ismailia: “1 pushed on again this morning at daybreak. | which they attacked me yesterday I hoped | they wonld stand their ground ay. They | withdrew their guns, however, last night, They had twelve in action yesterday. The | force at my disposal this morning was the First Division and ull the English cavalry, with sixteen guns, My inteption was to pivot on my left at the dam we took yester. day, and swing round my right to take the enemy's position in the flank and drive them | into the fresh water canal, sending tle | cavalry completely round their position io ocoupy the railway in their rear, and, if possible, eapture their engmes and rolling stock, This operation was very well carrie out. All the heavy work devolved on the cay | alry and artillery, which were well handled | by Major-General Lowe. He attacked the | rear of the enemy, who had a large camp st the Mahsameh railway station, which he took, routing the enemy with considerable loss, taking five Krupp guns, seventy-five rail. way carriages laden with provisions and & | large quantity of ammunition and rifles, Notwithstanding the faet of our horses being unfit for heavy work and the long mareh which the reinforcements 1 ordered yestor terday had to make, 1 have every reason to be satisfied with what has been done. The guards, under the Duke of Connaught, Jade Bn very trying march yesterday noross the desert. They were well Rondel ay him. he losses yesterdgy were: The Household | cavalry, one private killed and five wounded and ten horses killed; the Horse artillery, two privates and five horses killed ; the York and Pn regiments, one private killed and five wounded ; the Marine artillery, one private killed, and the Mounted infantry, two There have been forty. eight sanstrokes among the privates, one fatal to-day, so far as 1 have yet been able to ascertain, Major Bibby, of the Seventh | Dragoons has been severely wounded. Ad. miral Seymour has organized a bost service along the canal, on which we shall have mainly to depend for supplies until the loco motives get to work, The army owe the navy # deep debt of gratitude for the assistance they have rendered.” i An Alexandria dispatch says: “At about 8 | o'clock in the afternoon two heavy guns, | recently placed beyond the Waterworks hill, | opened fire on the enemy on the left bank of | the Mahmoudieh canal. About twent rounds were fired. Beveral shells Mune 8 in the midst of the enemy's intrenchments, | causing considerable damage. The enemy | replied fesbly. The British forty.pounders ut Ramleh eannonaded the enemy's lines to- | day. At abouts ». uw. a conflagration was | observed in the rear of the enemy's | camp, about ten miles beyond Ramleh. The | British man.of-war Minotaur shelled the | enemy's outposts in the direction of Abou- | Kir this afternoon. The shells seemed to burst in the midst of the enemy's position, | The Minotaur fired with increased rapidity | until sunset, he enemy's reply was weak, | There was altogether little activity in the | rebel lines. The impression gains ground that the bulk of Arabi Pasha's men have been withdrawn from Kafr.el-Dwar.” Only six dead Arabs were found on the field of battle at Ramses, but inside Ran'ses | wore found sovers! sinall pyramids of stones freshly erected, beneath which dead natives were probably bo Though the engage- ment was not serions, so far as hard fighting i is concerned, the soldiers acted splendidly. I'he diffioulties of the ground were fearful, | whi Genetsl Wolse ley's object has hoen schieved, gays a dispateh, and the British have gained 80 much more fresh water, for the caus! had carefully dammed at Ramses. The 1 lost a good many horses and mules, Pacha informed Lord Dufferin, the ambassador, that the Turkish eouneil isters had resolved to publish the pro- clamation sguinst Arabi Pasha and to accept the military convention with England com- formably to Lord Dufferin’s proposals. Eight men were killed sixiy-ong wounded on the British su & battle at Eassasin Lock. 1 be Egypt and after eonsidersble fight it pulsed with severe loss. Arabi Pasha was in the field during the section. 3 | Wolseley tedegraphed from Kassasin ¢ following scoount of the engage al Graham, command. acked last evening by guns and eight batmiions. Ow ved extremely well and inflicted pon the enemy. At first Gepersl 8 two and 8 half clunent of cavaln ng reinforced by acked the enemy in avalry brigade, under 1 charged them in we number. The by Major-General ’ positions 1. His op- pt with the coolness for salways been well known, Arabi field during the action. moonlight, bul were rebel guns, which the 1 he iat. Lr Ve B1X INariic niantyy sergeant: jor, two captains pix men.” and ie In ritish troops, Wate reph Ls post, Ml twelve the srged Loy thw ig the night, munition, fit Gag FIVOs the mnt of the British cay. he cavalry Seventh drs. goons leading, nder r of these the Life Guards formed for a charge, and at the word of command dragoons opened right and left to aliow them to pass. Already the brigade major bad passed down the line word, “The cavalry are to charge the guns.’ Sir Baker Russell in front shouted. ‘Now we have them, Charge.’ Away went the long live, disappearing almost instantly in the darkness and dest, Away behind them went the Seventh dragoons pressing on the flank of the guards. We who remained in the rear had the full benefit of the storm of shot and shell which greoted the advancing horsemen, of whom from this moment we w 0 more tll the battle was over, Lod by Sir Baker Russell they charged straight at the pans, sabering the gunners as they passed, dashing into and cutting down the flying infantry. General Russell's horse was shot under him, but ‘he seized another kept with his men. When the battle ended a seene of wild confesion en sped, Some guns still fired. Bodies of infantry kept up a fusillade. Mean. while our infantry had bad a bot time, Hun ireds of shells burst in the confined space ihe shelter of trenches afforded but pox protection. The Egyptians came on much spirit, and were gaining ground x ihe roar of gans on their left and rear, § owed by the rush of cavalry, proved io wich for them. From that moment the) thought only of flight.” Toulba Pasha, commanding st Kafr-el Dwar, and one of the foremost of Arabi Hey's generals, has been poisoned. The Rising of the Nile, Measuring from the cataracts of Sayene, where the Nile enters Upper Egvpt fromm Nubia, to the most north- ernly points of the Delta, or Lower Egypt, there are six hundred miles of country, the settled popula- tion of whieh is peculiarly dependent upon the great river for very exist ence, and every vear swaved by hopes or fears as the waters of the stream are ent or abundant. The of the Egyptians is in truth, intimately bound up with the | recurrence of a natural phe pRich now the the Wi and TY b about suflicy SCaArce or too welfare \ dial 4 i annual ri oe 2 The river, issuing from a val r a few miles north Cairo, enters low, wide plain, which, from its nee to the fourth letter of the Greek alphabet, ree iveel from that people name of the Delta. The stream divides itself into two branches, that of Rosetta, or old Canopie, and that of Damiat, or Phatnitie. The river at Rosetta is about 1.800 feet wide, and at Damiat nearly 800 feet, The rise of the Nile, occasioned by the pi riodlical rains of Central Affica, begins in June, the summer and con- to increa until September, overflowing the Jowlands along its The Delta then looks like ant immense marsh, interspersed with nue. merons islands, with villages, towns and trees just above the water. Should the Nile rise a few feet above its cus- tomary elevation, the inundation BW ps away the mud-built cottages of the fellaheen, drowns the cattle, and involves the whole population in ruin. Again, should it fall short of the or- dinary height, bad crops and dearth are the consequences, The inunda- tions having remained stationary for a few days, begin to subside, and about the end of November most of the fields are left dry and covered with a fresh layer of rich brown slime; this is the time that the lands are put under cul- | tivation. During the winter in Eng- land, which is the spring in Egypt, the Delta, as well as the valley of the Nile, looks like a delightful garden smiling with verdure and blossom. Whoever makes a great fuss about doing good, does very little; he who wishes to be seen and noticed when doing good, will not do it long. of 3 rescmbla the about solstice, tinues course, The first step toward making a man of your son, is to train him to earn what he spends; the next best step is to teach hin how to save his earnings. ret I —— erties England's standing army numbers counting all ranks, 133,210 men, 3 a dra Afrald of a Letter, It was not long ago that I happened to be in a part of Central Africa where no white man had been before, I was separated from my companions 100 miles distant. War was raging around me; the rond was difficult, 1 wished to communicate with those “Who will return,” 1 asked of the naked sav “to the white wen and carry them something from me?’ Numbers vol unteered, glad to earn & yard of cloth for the job, A letter was written and offered to a man, and he was told that this piece of paper would inform my friends of all—~that it would speak to them. He dropped the letter on the Others were tried, but it was useless. A great crowd assembled, and at a safe distance from the little bit of paper fluttering on the ground. “It is medicine,” they said. “It is charmed.” In vain I tried to reason them out of their terror. None would touen if, “Will no one,” I said, “keep it and give it to the white men as they pass this way?” A yell of refusal and excited gesticulations answered my request. “Then 1 shall place it here in this tree,” 1 sald, mov- ing toward it, while the crowd dis persed in flight, “and you can point it out to the white men when they come.” Even this they refused to do. My friends passed close under the tree, but no one dared show them the charmed thing, and there it is probably to this day, fluttering on the Lranch of that stunted fig tree like an evil spirit, the awe and terror of the tribe—~—J. 1. Cotleriil, Ar Advire te Consumpiives, On the appesrance of the feel sym operal debilily, loss of appetite, pallor sensations, followad by night sweals and cough, prompt measures of relief should be on, Uonsumaption is scrolulous disease of the langs; therefure use ihe great suti-serofu. lous or blood.-purifier and siren th-restorer, Dr, Pierce's “Golden Medical Discovery.” Sa- perior to cod Liver oil ani pusritien, and un. surpassed ss 8 pectoral, For weak lungs, spit. ting of blood and kindred sffections it has no Sold by druggists. For Dr, Pierce's Bufialo, N. Y. In Virginia 14,236 men are employed in oyster fishing, and 2,079 persons sre kept at work canning them. The total product is v1, 037 bushels, valued at $2,540,588, Young and wmidd'e-aged men, suffering from perveus debility and kindred affections, as loss of memory and bypoehondria, should inclose three stamps for Part VIL of World's Dis. pensery Dime Series of pamphiets, WosLn's Dosrgxsazy Mrsical ASSOCIATION, Buflalo, N. 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