The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 03, 1886, Image 1

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    : OLD SERIES, XL.
voL NEW SERIES XIX
FRED. KURTZ, Eprror and Pror'r
While old Edmunds is trying to block
Cleveland's way in the removal of Re
publican office holders, his own party
up in Vermont is tryiug to block the way
against the old codger's re-election to the
Senale.
ied hae: rican
When the Republicans get through
with their fight against the President in
the matter of removals, they will be in
the fix of the fellow who stuck his fi..ger
in the water and pulled it out again to
see the hole.
.—_—
John B. Alden is offering a 15 cent
book for a $3.00 reading notive in first-
class papers. The “first-c ass” gndyeons
will ns doubt be proud to bite, we open
our exchanges to see who the “first-
class” chaps are
.
President Cleveland has informed the
Senate, with Jacksonian firmness, that
it has no right to call on him for reasous
in removing Republican office holders.
Will give his document in next weeks
issue. It is very conclusive,
The question resolves itsell down to
this: If General Beaver is defeated for
can the fellow who gets the nomination
be ele ted ? and,
If Gen. Beaver is nominated with
cold shoulder from tCaweron and
P. KB. R., can he be elected? and
1f deteated again, will it not be
4
the
the
end of ueneral Beaver
Pneumonia has entered a large num-
ber of families in Cass, Todd, Union aud
Oneida townships, Huntingdon county,
and is becoming such a vivlent epidemic
that precautionary steps have been taken
While the dis-
persons of
ages, el erly persons are nore generally
cted, aud in a wajority of cases the
New cases aud
to prevent its spread.
ease has taken hold of al
affe
sickuess proves fatal.
deaths are daily reported.
During George Washington's second
term hie was requested to farnish the
Senate with certain documents, and seul
a reply of which the lullowing 1s the cou
cluding paragraph :
It is essential to the due administra
tion of the Government that the boun-
daries fixed by the Coustitutivn Detweel
the different de; artipents should be pre
served; a Just regard Ww Wie Lossiiiution
an 1 the uubies Lo ly Olioe Bhder ali Gar
cumustances ol this ca-v lurbids a Cows
pilanve with your request
Gr, WASHINGTON.
But the opinivns of Wasbiugtun and
Jawes Madison count for naught with
the majority ol the present Senate.
The Gazetle iutimates there is not
enough of good Dewocratic waterial in
our snug little borough to fill the uifices,
hence a draft had tv be made upon K»-
publican material. the “cowpliment”
seems to be sustained by Dewnvcrat.c av-
tion here which was an insult to life-long
Democrats. Centre Hall has as good
and competent Democratic uaterial as
any other town of its size and enough ul
it to fill the offices fur two buroughs. It
is nut so very long ago when Lepubli-
caus here openly declared they would
sooner vote for a horse-thief than for the
best Democrat.
CONGRESSMAN CURTIN ISTRO-
DUCES A MEASURE.
Our member, Gov, Curtin, bas intro
duced in the House “A bill for the en-
couragemento f closer commercial rela
ticusbip and in the interest aud perpet-
uation of pesce between the United
States und the Republics of Mexico and
South America aud the empi e of Bra
zil.” Precediog the bili is a long pre-
amble, in which Mr. Curtin points out
the advantages of a throug line of rail
road (rom the southern boundary of the
United States to the Argentine Kepublic
aud Chili, a distance of 4,500 miles, and
that such a great internationa: work, iu
he imerest of peace and reciproval com:
mercial relations, can be constru ted
through the united ellorts of the Gov:
ernments of the countries it traverses,
guided by the advice and experience
and ussistance by material aid from the
comercial and ratirvad interests oi the
United 8. ates. In the bill proper Mr.
Curtin propuses to authorize and request
the President of the United States w in
vite ail the Goveruments of Mexico, Cen-
tral America, South America aud Bazil
to meet in convention in Washingtou
gowe time this year. The conv. ntion to
consider such questions as relate to the
best mode of estabiishing on a firm and
lastin ;. basis peaceful and reciprocal
commercial relations, aud to adopt prac
tical meusures to forward the construc
tion of the great railway in the interests
of peace, cammerce aud mutual prosper-
ity. The Secretary of state is wo be a-
lowed $50,000 to deiray the expenses ol
the convention in 8 wanuer becowsing
the dignity of the United States. T. ¢
pr position is a practicable one, and in
beneficial results tw the comiuerce of the
countries interested, particularly to that
of the United States, would lar exceed
those to be secured by the Nicaragusn
ROBBING THE ORPHANS,
One of the brightest honors that mark
the executive career of our great “war
Governor,” Andrew G. Curtin, and one
that will be an enduring monument to
his memory, 1s the conception and es
schools of Pennsylvania. His devotion
to the national cause and to theinterests
of the brave men who periled and sacri-
ficed beulth and life for that cause,
prompted Governor Curtin to think of
their orphan children and to advise a
system for their maintenance and eda-
cation, as wards of the State. On
I'hanksgiving evening, 1863, two orphans
of suldiers appeared at Gov. Curtin’s
door begging for bread. His warm heart
was moved and his generous nature sug-
geste i the founding of schools for the
maintainance and e tucation of children
made orphans by the war; and no sub-
The Philade:phia Kecord contains a
tion that warks the management of the
soldiers’ orphans’ ~chools for sume years
past. With cruotions of sorrow and shame
the state will read the'
damning details and will dewand a full
investigation and the condign punish.
ment of the guilty.
Four sowe time past the Department of |
soldiers’ Urpusns’ Schioos bas been
iraught with corruption, speculation, of!
ficial Jiscriwination and criminal neglect
ul the children; and well wight a Penn
s» hvauian olusu with shawe to uote the
voul indifference ut Superintendent Hig-
bee, who, wien wld ui the sd and dis
giracelul condition of the depar ment and
uf thie greedy vauwpires who are sucking
the life-bioud of the system, he Hev.
Higbee) tured on bis heel and coully
rewsarked thas he “guessed that the
chit dren get wore tau they would have
received st howe” Kev, H gbee is
charged with retaining J. LL. Paul as
Cue Clerk of the departioen. for years
Knowing bau to De Duaucially interested
in tue profits of the scoool at Mt. Joy,
pute ithstadiog Guvernor Patuson ad-
vised bis removal. Kev, Higbee still re-
tained the robber of the orpnans, when
hie wok control of the Chester Springs
school and drew nearly $1000 every
thiree to ptos from the Slate treasury,
wiiile he continued as chief clerk of the
departiuent. Nor c.n Hev, Higbee ex-
plain vow an lpspector can hodestly
told stock in a schioul as Pan did in ts
Chester Springs schoul ur twelve Years,
it 1s shown that the chilidren never get
ware of lnstractiva ut oded by tue
; Every brauch of iustraclion re-
quired by law 1s neglected, and every
LOmaue provision is syswatically vie
wied,
tue schools at Mt. Joy, Chester;
Springs, Mercer and McAllisterville, are
conducted by a syndicate, the chief
wewivers of wiich are ex-Senatur Geo. |
W. Wright sud J. L. Paul. They receive
irum the Stute $115 per annum for each
scholar nuder ten years of age, aud $150,
fur each scholar over that age. Lhe con
sequence is that the diet 1s stinted, cun-|
dewned fruits aod west that is tainted
is given to the chiliren. They are
crowded four iu a dirty bed, clutbed in|
rugs and pinched in every way, iu order |
to leave » large margin ul profit vn the
aww at allowed per capita. lo addition |
to thi-, they have nearly 100 wore than
the ordinary capacity of the buildings. |
At Mt Juy the buys are crowded nto]
a furnace cellar at other schovis they |
are pacaed into filthy beds like berning|
i & box, Again, at Chester Springs
sowe thirt, have been, on sowe pretext,
debarred from school for three wonths,!
aud where there 1s a show of school
wore thay BU scholars are crowded int
a swall room utder one teacher and that
teacher never examined as to fithess us
required by law. Ihe syndicate bas been
kuuwn to otler $20 to agents fur each
new scholar they bring Ww their schouls,
tur the profit wade by robbing the schol
ar. For this purpose too scholars are
taken from comfurtable schools, clesu
beds and whulesowe diet 30 be crowded
i040 the 8 hoois in the bands of the syn-
dicate. A careful estimate shows that
Wright, Paul Pearson and Gordon, the
syndicate, or the rubbers of the soldiers’
os phuns realize not less than ninety
thousand dollars a year, which they
draw from the State treasury. To thus
end with au insatiable greed every cone
sideration of honor, duty aud humanity
is suburdinated to the one object of fi-
nancial prout. There are at present ten
schools in the state. Those under ‘he
syndicate at Mt. Joy, Chester ~prings,
sterver and McAllisterville costing thou-
~ands more and resder the very worst
accommodations. The State furnishes to
these grabbers $20 for each scholar's
vlut hing, per cent. but they do not get it.
I'hey get no undercluthes. Tue boys
went the same suit winter and summer.
The gris are without bats or any head
covering. At McAllistervilie they got
12 hats to be divided awong 90 girls, so
they cau only go to church in detach.
weuts. We have not mentioned a tenth
part of the satu alous abuses detailed in
the Philwdeiphia Kecord, but enough Lo
arouse the indigoation of every hon: st
citizen aud Ww juin in persisten. demand
that these horse-leechss shall be come
pelied 10 louse their foul bold on the be.
nevolent and patriotic system devised
fur the b nelit of our solders’ orphans.
CAUSES FOR CONTENT FOR LOW.
ER DOWN,
In the past year the richest American
merchant, H, B. Claflin; the richest
American railroad man, W. H. Vander
bilt, and the richyst American planter,
Edmond Richardson, have died. Tt is
notable that nove of the three died 10
his bed, One dropped dead at his desk,
the
sleriid
THE DEMOCRATIC POSITION.
The Democratic Senators have about
decided that it will be unnecessary to
hold a caucus to hear the report of the
minority of the committee on judiciary
upon the Edmunds resolutions, full con-
fidence being felt in the judgment of
Senators Pugh, Jackson and Coke, who
are charged with framing the report will
be very voluminous. The Washington
Post publishes a sumwary of the report |
so far as prepared. The s nopsis calls
at ention to the comparatively few sus-
{ pensions from office since the Adminis
{tration assumed office. It is maintained |
that the Senate called for papers in con-
‘nection with purely exe utive acts,
{which is in violation of all precedents.
| Despite this irrecularity it is held that
THE STORM.
The City of Bangor lsolated by the Storm—
Heavy Snowfall in Chicago.
Thursday noon. Streets are piled two to
ten feet high in drifts and country roads
twenty to thirty. Sime farm houses are
suvd, Oue Bangor wen had to enter his
h use by the second story windows and
taone! out in the morning. There is al
Al grenmers are de
ww lgt B ston Chore |
a gule vi The coast,
laced. The train t
day evening 8 d sould have besa her
Friday moruing has vot you arrived, 1
ix gta k fuss mo toe suow wt M amon!
eigh'y miles west of 11s i y, un yi
vot be here fir twenty-loar hours yet |
ithe Nenate received all the documents |
'the resolution called for from the Attor- |
iney-Generasl
| Probably the strongest point in the en- |
tire report will be the vigoro.s at
ity of the |
tack |
{made upon he unconstitntiona
{tenure act. This is a valuable place ir
‘the Republica « record, as some of their
most prominent men-Joha Sherman, |
the ate Oliver P Morton indiana, |
‘and iu fuct most of the leaders, with the
of made
speeches bitterly assailing the constitu-
tionallity of the act. The report will
quote extracts from the speechesolthese |
men.
of
exception Edmunds have
i mem————
General Buel breaks his long silence
about the battle of Shiloh in a paper in|
the March Century, giving his of |
that much-discussed battle, and the par |
hjs army had in turning the fortunes of |
the second day's fight. The Geuvera! by |
the way dissents from the idea that |
Providence takes a hand in a great bat- |
tie in favor of the ju whichever |
view
L cause ~
that may be—and -ays: |
Nowuere in history is the profane idea |
that in a fair fie d fight, Providence ison |
the side of the strongest battalions, more |
uniformly sustaived than in our Civil
War. It presents no
triumph of 15000 or even
It aff rds some such ia-
stances where the strongest force
surprised by and upespected
move:nents, and still others where il was
of skill
chosen positions strengthened by theart
of defegse; but
weaker force is uniformly defeated or
of the |
LRN)
example
meu
WAS
rapid
azains
i
b
H
nowhere else The
compelled to retire.
Huntingdon is crazy
covery of a gold mine.
meat prevails in Brady
the discovery of a valuabe deposit
closely resembling gold. Jacob Zillius,
minervlogist, while prospecting for coal
found evidence of a large deposit of the
valuable mineral when but 75 feet below
the surface. An analytical chemist of
Philade phia reports that the is
worth from $10,000 to $15,000 per ton.
Mr. Zillins is now in consultation with
capitalists of this city with the view of
organizing a stock company ‘0 deveiop
the land in which Lis valuable find has
been made. In the pruspectiox for gold
Mr. Zillius struck s 3-foot veinof anthra-
cite coal, which is now being developed.
The land in the neighborhood that here
tofore would not bring any price what
ever has now risen to fabulous sums.
Prominent capitalists of Philadelphia
and Pittsburg are buying vp land with
the view of developing 118 recsources.
i ————— or —
A TRAIN JUMPS THE TRACK
Tamaqas, Feb 28 —An accident oc
cared this morn! zon the Penus) iva:
win and Reading ralrvad at the western
entrance of this town, The early traiu
from Pottsville jumped the track at Dan
ner's switch and three passes ger coa hes
and the baggage car toppled ver an vm-
bankmen: of about 15 feet, Tha care
took fire from ‘he heaters under them
aod the wiliest excitement jwrevai'ed
(he peas-ugers were resued tor uxh
the car wind ras aod through he doors,
which hed 10 be vurst is by omit sens who
rusned to the mene. About 25 passeu-
gers were injored,
John Getzinger, the engineer, proha.
bly saved wany hives by increasin the
speed of his train after the cars linc] lel
track, fort prevented the cars from
telescoping. The engine broke lowe
from the traiu and crossed the ii ge
across the Wabash river, with the wheels
of the tender within two inches of the
vdge of the brider, The cause of the ac
ident was u defective saich, which, it
8 #aid, had been revorted geveral Liuies
a8 beiuyg fu a bad condition,
———————
THE STORM.
Huntingdon, Pa, Feb, 26. ~The wind-
storm which has prevailed doring the
past 24 hours was e'ctremely viol ent this
morning io the vicinity of Alexan Iria,
this county. It blew down and utterly
demo ishe | the large barn on the S8woope
farm between that flue and Barre Sta
thom, on the Pennsylvania Railroad, now
helonging to Dr. George D. Ballantine, of
this city, The cro farming imple
ments and stock of Thomas Yarnell, the
tenant, were in it. Oue horse five steers
and a cow were killed or so badly man.
gled that they had to be shot. The other
property was comgletely broken and de-
stro;
»
dis |
Intense ite-
township Over
over the
ext
ore
Sevea ocom vives sud stuow-poooghs of
iron a1@ sorking between here sind the
snow -vontud trun. Travel 18 ot a sand-|
still, Toe siigatic is nupar siielad
( hicago, Feb. 28 —U aum-nciog la'e
last ng «L BuOwW has fal en coi tio ously
ted] by enough
the temperature
1e- zing point, LA
tWer aid LU slg peniad tt
Fie progress ul traius 1s uo! Yet
iy impeded within a tuodie!
Ch ; bat Capa Ws
wil of 1
here, nocOm wb wind
jn
groaiuyg
pe 1S
tisides Of
es from
ao
irgins
ck
Girtiside rat le
furs
hecoming bl
ubiy be at a stavd-tul,
- i -
TUSSLE WITH A BEAR.
Willlsmespor:, Feb, 20.—Peter Alwood|
lives & few wiles out ui Bla e Kuu., Yes |
i
ierday he avd severzl old
when il)
struck benr racks aud followed thie mug
Alwood, who sus 10 sdvaboe of the ol
er memoirs of Lhe party, came up bo Loe
Dear, sutl, Daviug Ba ale Over tis oot.
er, hie sbietmipbed wu BUHIKe Lilie ofl Un
fivnd wit ce sosip esd, His ail Aas
tise Dear vecaped wi hott 8 sora ch, abd
Larue ul Alwowd, = ho had «Tied
fin bas kK LO nLifte LIB Cull pauions » ar
Bruin vverieok (be well sid sn severe
Aiwood drew In
wuld Dot use iL, out ol
Deilig pie ied fu the gro ind bY 1he Lear
Several of the PANY Catu@ Up ui Lis mo
weut aud vie of Lew, WLO Lad 1ille |
i
SLE Ae
“
pis head, Ainvod Was removed hoi]
Ur iises vid sratclies, oli€r Lue Lear hau
beea kilied,
»- _—-
HORRIBLE FATE OF
DREN.
“9
py
IWO ()
Reading, Feb
*
owns a aanll at skin Hill, His
anghters, Kate aud Susie, aged six
to 0
0 a 1k’:
Was ing. While at
lie Nhatn
twin
years, strayed an upsiair room
where « shalt revoely i
play the iitile ones ventured tou near)
the machinery and their clothing caught]
in the shalt sid they were drawa around |
it sud were whirled with each revolu-}
ton. Aller belug thrown arcund for ao
hour they were found by an elder sister
who Lad come to look for them. When)
the machinery was stopped their budies|
were found to be terribly lscerawed. Thel
skull of Katie was badly fractured aud]
Ler body in other ways was wuch muti-|
ated, causing ber death, Susie stall lives)
but hier chatoes fur recovery are sual.
Her entire body was wore or less injured, |
several bunes betog broken. :
-— p——
ACCIDENT AT i
HAVEN, i
Lock Haven, Feb. 27.—W. L. Merwin |
a young lawyer, who came from Connect-|
«cut and married the daughter of Col]
W. H Mowre, Pre<ident of the State
bank, was thrown from a buggy at Flem-|
ington, just west of the city, snd seri
ously injured, The physiciaus fear in-|
tecnal injuries and doubts are expr oad)
of his recovery, |
» i
SIMON CAMERON'S DONEGALSALE,!
SERIOUS
|
sales vver bed in Lancaster county was
that of General Simon Cameron on his
Donegal farm thie week. There were
litterally acres of people in attendance.
The General disposed «11 his personal
propery at big prives, and w Il in future
bave his farms conducted by tenants,
- -— sh
HISTORY IS AGAINST THEM.
[ Bo-ton Globe. ]
Forgotten incidents in the history of
the executive and legislative branches of
the government are cree:ing out of ob
scurity to tea h the Edmunds par
ty that they have undertaken & very
foolish piece of work. Seustors tried to
buliduze Presideet Madison, and made
jost such a fai ure as President Cleveland
will help them to.
-
HELLO!
(Nashville Union.]
The ol4 bandana patriot, ex-Senator
Thurman, is retained by the government
to 'nvestigate the Bell patent When he
ge's ready and calls “Hello,” you'd bet
ter listen,
it lly — > ds
MR. EDISON WEDDED.
Oleveland, Oils, Feb, 24.—Thomas A
Edi=on, the weil known electrician, w-8
married to-day to Mes Nioa Miller,
daughter of a prominet mapulacturer,
JOHN B. GOUGH BURRIED.
Warce ter, Mass, Feb, 24 —The re
mwine + f Joh B Gongh wers buried to-
day at his home, * Hill Side,” in tue town
ot Buyiestown. a
The tronhle at the McOoarmic reaner
factory at (Chicago tiresteor to boome
serious Tue proprietor maintain: (he
lockont sud does not swem disposed 10
cvroiliate the wwployees, and toe ister,
thresien fo
another in his hall and the other in the
Be al hts yas
"wo e time, of whom
sighuy injured. “The loss is abont $5,
- oe
1,800 in or, thn "
war”
-
3
4
BRUBQUENESS AND WANT OF TACT.
The Trait Which Separates the
man from His Americar Cousin
The
English.
n fow
pieal Roel
bend
Rev, Mark Pattison, who
who was a by bie
volatile Americar ba
{ Lad to
girl, as to whether
thought she could write a book
her thing!” he
told ber she was the most ignorant
ever met.”
disappoint Poor
Another young woman
Me Clever essays was as
asked criticism to the offe
sidored her conversation cxtre
While be was dving hb
ing wife with the
“(3h ot my
Tears
dens!
ROO TRAr:
that you
The
prophe
This
roost widely
his Arcri
BEnsIL
taught
his
learns 1
%
Ha
stuns
fmt 1
wha i
curd
periments
ott
Fg ¢
aay be
Undere
n
1. AY
Whi
q
DEACON MINGLE ARRESTED. |
Mingle, of Wil |
inst Nove
{ the arrest of F. B. Beaton and F
Foster Smith. on the charge of swind
* Dearen™ Sameon Q
nher
ing, was arressw | yesterd «oy in this di)
by Depu y entl He
charg«d with obtainieg wmouey under |
Min |
and 1
8 8
Ferguson
AR
of
false pretenses, Fifteen years
ole got an interest fa a tract
xpoan as the Paterson tract, of 178000]
acres in West Virgivia. This land |
been purchase | under by the |
Rev. Isaac P Siriker, who had married « |
wealthy woman in Ogei la conaty, N.Y, |
and bad paid several thonand dol are |
lapse |
ax |
bind |
Contract
down, It was, hosever, allowed io
tor some time and a lar
#4 were due, when Mingle went to Ns
striker, who bad wmoaey her own
right, and ob aimed irom be $500 to |
(ay trem. Samuel Ira Smith, Mra |
torpey, says that al er getting :
the mosey Minge approsnated 10 ww hing
own use and 1 foxes relia ae Naps
The above is frm te New Y
World, of 26 uit, Inthe fall we vave the |
acoonnt of the swindie a bem pted avin
Ming e, and copy the above as beonging |
to the case, i
l
i
awoint of
14s
Bo A —————_—
Attention is called to the fact that Pro- |
bh bition has a very serious «ff «t apon
the health of communities in whi hit i
procisimed. The town of Bac Me, has |
a poputation of only about 6 000 and no |
Jiquor can be sdd there except for medi
eat uf mechanical parpres There is bul
one app ¥ ageuey in Saco, and the san.
isles show that 16000 persory tions
were pot up at tuis shop ia abt wx
montha, This argnes wretched healib
op the part 01 8. 0, or 8 great ded of
harnera Sicg—whiskey heing sometimes
need 10 Maive in heavy mechauive
transsotions,
i — "Wo ——————
25000 MINERS THREATEN TO
STRIKE !
|
Paris, Feb. 28 ~All the miners in the
Aveyron Ditne, nambering 26000,
hitesten ts join the sirike of workioe
Bete The weolect of the depa timeout ae
relegrantiod ty M, Sornen, M ploer of
the Lateriorn, for retuforcemen ~ Llroos
a ot en ed
TERRIBLE CRIME IN HUNGARY
Vienna, Feb 25 A: Mexa Tor, Hun
ory, yesterday, a Protestant school
do —
NO. 9
THE FRENCH PEOPLE.” |
MANY AMERICANS DO MOT
KNOW ABOUT THEM. i
-- |
Igroranes of Visitors and Foreign Cole~
WHAT
nies and Its Causos~The Middle Classes
~False Pletares by Dumas, Daudet and
Other Dramatists and Novelists,
The great majority of American peopls
who 1 y 1 been residents of Paris for
yoars k je more about French society
and its » than if they had re-
wn native cities, They form
Toe
ving
in foreign coun
they do in their
is the sans
hotels and
in the French
y never air their
keepers, Bome who
into Freoch
themselves to
of
n the sae
lewsons
they
nsignt
5 wet
raistress their
poor specimens,
+ thing a French
wep A pen
iv » ail who can
ny other way
NT AME
I who
tins WO
BI ANS,
have met
¥i have made
are even
than the
way
who, in
the
not
call
the
as
wivantage
their tea
their soirees, and the
IH, by
them to
¥v Sender in-
assured that
OTe
renresent
« lea of
Can
But
American oolony,
them th
meh you
epiorable one,
e not even Lhe
~»
nt ihey give
PORE Je ie
HE ALLOWS
thelr
an interpre.
§ necessary with
rican
to read the
Joan gossip,
French
are from
ex
mest
Are
1 from
fhe
$
ip the Ghetlo
ie classes, the
3 If they
v they would
3 wt of
ne in
leisure,
cupy their
Jording items for arth
iow the same
gi
i
to
vO 1
intellectual
balls in
present an
gossip st 8
SCoEn.
piced French novels,
HE XATIOR.
of the crusaders
ng a good time
They form
the nation These
do everywhere, of pro-
and little mer.
BrURts, Glo, ~--
of wome kind
day lsborers
tha: Americans
of is bour-
a good clear
court the so
ry exclusive; tin
to its shell, itis ine
jodness, and is apt to
wid ends with the boundaries of
iress, they ve
Lie juestad
pastimes,
fg Fbetanos as
a
¥
Te
SVIng
Work
:
:
LES
+ fact
rs glean their knowl
{rom French writers, who
would lack interest and
t sell if they were not filled
i debaucherios of people who
ry small part of the
is to be remarked thatthe
portion of these novelists thumselves
to the good and peaceful Lou rgecisie
te the aboninable fscts and invent
y the way of spices,
asny of the Ameri.
purity, sanctity and morality.
For {+ ere is no family where itis
sad, purer love dwells in all respects of
honorableness and damestic happiness than
that of A? nder Dumas fils. No chaste
3 swan oud be more sorupalous,
more tuoially exacting than Mine. Dumas
Trey ters. SLi] the author sees
fit wo d un up the stenchy strata of
Frencl Jay to write his books,
Alphonse Daudet, who also delights in
whys wo eems to be quantities
w mary of his books
i ached over wventy and eighty
ort Sappbos, kings i: exile and
goch slow ! qustionatie morality, is
the lord and aster of a home which possess
sos all the domestic virtues. He married a
petite bourgeocise who is known to be the pink
greater
belong
and »
more abo
in bomos that can vi
cnn hearthe {or
ple ones,
“hinds
AN
wives and the most devoted of mothers. She
was reared and sducated in an inteliectual
home, Jd tsing of a literary turn of mind
sho soon becamd her tusbands right hand in
the writing of his books Indeed, the ques
tion wiier discusaon at present in literary
circles is which part of Alphonse Duudet's
works are attributable to bis: and which to
his wife, Their bone is made chesrful abd
bappy by a family of sturdy boys, who are
being most carefully reared and educated
under the watchful ove of (ather and mother.
«Paris Cor, Brooklyn Eagle.
The Cuesta Caries’ red in Sugar,
At & rownl dimer given at the Hotel
Brunswick, in tab city, the saddle of mutton
and the phessants wers brought from Eng:
laid, the grouse from Scotland, and
truffie: nud rare wines for each course from
the continant, all especially fmaported for the
occasion, © och cover was a statoetie
wrving his likens 0
recognised at a glance.
trated.
gir Pay the Reeonran one verr in ad:
Janes, and get the N: Y. World 6 months
a