JL JL. JLJLJLjJ 91) U M it ' JJ II U Ecuotcb to politics, fiitcraturc, gricnlturc, Science, iHoralitu, anb cneral Intelligence, STROUJJSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., JULY 30, 1874. NO. 10. VOL- 32, T '' ,,.r discontinue! untl' aI1 arrearages are 1 V ! tV ".ti'n ,,f ,1,e iitor A -n T! .'nwnti f n.- viare of (eteht lines) or ii- livi7,'e( ! Tortious ?l additional in- , "r u.n r ones in proportion. CV'IH-- - . . . . - ' J0 I'ltlXTIXG OK ALL KISDS, . u:..i,..t tvl nf the Art. and on the yr-jid ia ,7 jvasfnable terms. jersliani Normal School. . iTi;lE viisVII.I.E. MONROE COUNTY, ta. ls-i-,Xtrm of thi Sfhnol will besrin In the t Uro-ilH-adsville, on the second ' "juiv is:i and continue twelve woeks. no rrVi'funill ,he l'..le term, !r week 1 00 i? ,niin ' in private families, per month 12 00 ' ' ("h-ir-vf..r th- higher branches. y,T '""l H.ju5olm ton enlarged nd thor- kw?U r-" patwas. 1 lbcrib myself. P. II SOEDLER, Principal- I lvi- ' DR. J.LANTZ, ri-tTT TTA A T T TXTTITOni ., . n on M.un si reel, iu mt-tjihi -hi .! -,;t. n ti. k building, nearly opposite the ', . .,. . and lie tiaters hiiiis-df that by ei;h-'".,-V.iiii-: -in t ' j.nietice and th most enrTit and ' "'.',.!:. 'M t" ':!' matters pertaining to his )n -"'ui h-' is fully aide tu perform all ojvra:iris "j ',',';.,! ;u,. in the most cartful and skillful tnau- : i ,.-n!:"Ti -iv.n to virin tho Natural TiHth; T'ti'ic' i:: r;.'n of ArtiSeiuI T.-cth on KuMier. 'iviT.or i"..riti!iuiu tiums, and perfect fits in all ???'0 k"W thr- ereat f.illv and d.tn?er of en ".. ' i' -ir r'i tu the inexiH'rieneiil. or t thse liv- A'.ril ls74 tf. 1 i:i F-i-r C; r-Jiid-Niinr, Va. nnov;nce5 that t iii-rt artiSrinl tvth in the most 'iif-'-lik' iM.ir.ii-T. Also, ri-at attention ri.,Tv:ic t'io nat'iral teeth. Teeth i.; by th use of Nitrous tlxido tias. t it i-i'l 'i.t to the profvsM.in done in the 1 a'j-rov.-d style. Ail work attend -1 to Tt-.r-ratit.'i. nurses reasonaLIe. l al- ! r'llt'.te "ii'"it:ii. A. I.ob-r's new building, optx-site Anal-)- Ilx-t Mroud-buri. I'a. july 1!, '7:.. !v s :"t: D B.. L. ITXK, X ri I-- Sarscon 2eiitist. , that havinz jnt rot timed from Pental . i fi! :J v- j.r. i.ar.sl t' make artifieial te-th in . M.itii'.i! life-'.ike manner, and to fill do h t.--.r !:! t the wst iii!irovel method. : -i -.villi. in: j.;tia. when desired, by the W was. siut-n is entirt iv Harmless. ii.i ii'-i!yl U'i Ail vrof'i waraiiUxl. r'. new brkk building. M.?in strrct, i Auj. ::i '71-tf. Cn yen tell why it is that when any ;;.:js t T-'):i.',i'!r to f-e.v Furniture, ther al- :r ;Jr-i Pt iKi arty t uruiture More: WILLIAM S. REES, Surrey or, Conveyancer and Real Estate Agent. Finni. Timber Lands and Town Lots FOR SALE. r.t-rt il.vir above llees' news Depot :n i ! . -r )-lv the Corner tore. D . ItOlVARD PATTLRSOX, P-ysician, Serges and Accoucheur, iucctss.jr to Geo. V. Seip.) 9:5,- Main street. Strotiil.-bnrg, l'a.t in Dr. ''.!" -i'i- o;i2, n.sileiioe ??jrah street, next --rvi :,fw Kitting house. Prompt attention f 7 to 0 a, m. Lour J V2 " 2 p. m. ( 5 " 9 p. m. A it: J 10 1 js74.1v. . vr. JACKS o WKfiAX, SURGEON AND AITOUCIIEUK. :Le o!J 05(.e of Dr. A. Reeves Jackson, re-iji-rn corner of .Sarah anl Franklin street. STR0UDSBURG, PA. PHYSICIAN AND ACCOUCHEUR, v , MOUNTAIN HOME. PA. A j. !iWriber woul.l inform the public that K, '- house formally kept by Jawb 'r't. in tlie Iioroujrh of .Stroudsburgr, Pa i.'i.'UVin?rl,aite.i and refurnished the same, n ' l? tnttrta'n a'l w'ho may patronize . .- U N tiie aim of the proprietor, to furn- t.i ;m "'"O'jations at moderate rates 1 f . sI'are nr pains to promote the com Uie ?'ts. A liberal share of public Kir tf. '- D. L. PISLE. H0NE3DALE, PA. ' 'Ccutrai l.catkm ct any Hotel in town. i,nr. R. V KIPLK&SOX, , ' .Uwn rtreet Proprietors, t), ls73. !y, J 1 si ts ixT Tv a i7rox At(orsy at Iav, Wj'"u "? buii-ling formerly rccnpiel trrp i olii ar'l opiosite the Strrids JIaia street, Stroudaburff, Pa. RJ-.. KiwARi A. WII;OX'rf (of f, i!'--bur- N. Y.) Kccii for COX- e.t,; VJ-N a,id ASTII3IA carefully hundwl at HLUNSHEADS DRUG STORE. v M' l trine f,;sih and pur'. v C7. H0LLIXHEAD. Republican Address. The Republican Congressional Commit tee has just issued a long address to the people of the United States, getting forth the relations of the Republican party to the country during the last fifteen years, and demonstrating the importance of it3 continuance in power. The document, though extremely interesting to those who take an interest in politics, is too long for immediate publication, and we can now give but a summary of its principal points. The committee address themselves to the task of giving a review of political events since the accession of the Republican party to power. The work is performed with a vigor which could scarcely be looked for in midsummer, and we should think it no Republican who will not feel a deep iuterest in recalling the great incidents in which his party played so conspicuous a part.' The course of the Democrats prior to 1SG1 is traced, uot without many caustic touches, and we can fpuite imagine that the Demo cratic press generally will pronunce this address to be one of the worst ever issued. The awkward point about it is that there is no getting round its statements. It : deals with facts, and there is no answer to those facts. It is shown that the Democratic party did not provide us with either a capable, powerful or an enconomical government. It left multitudes of errors to be corrected, and on every hand had work to be undone. The great improvements demanded by the progress of the people were neglected, and it wrs not until the Republican party came into power that these improvements re ceived adequate attention. There were an armv and a navv. but the first was officered by men who "had been educated in every soldierly grace but that of allegiance," and the latter was "scattered in remote seas" when the nation most needed it. "In all these years." says the address, "the nation al character had not been raised an inch. On the contrary, through them all it had fallen constantly luwer and lower." Then came the remarkable treachery of 1 Sol. and the Rebellion. From that period the record of the Republican party has been one of almost uninterrupted success. The Rebellion was crushed, slavery suppressed, public credit has been maintained, the de velopment of the country has gone on with out c. station, and at a rate never known before. "It will require a great deal of rhetoric," remarked the committee, "to ersua le the country that it is being ruined bv a eovernmcnt which in thirteen years h;.s advanced its credit throughout the money markets of the world fully thirty three per cent., and has nearly trebled its surplus productions." The address deals with these great changes in a trenchant and animated spirit. The course of the Democratic tarty in op position is afterward traced, but not iu a way whicn will be satislactory to the Demo- cratic leaders. JJut as beiore, tne lacts presented are undeniable if there had been any answer to them we should have been favored with it lung ago.; but there is no answer. The Democrats do indeed cry out that the Republican party is no better than their own that dishonest men are in our ranks as well as in theirs. Rut this kind of talk is effectually disposed of by .the address, "hvery time a rogue has been punched the opposition has shouted, 'ee how corrupt Republicans are.' It is as if, whenever a doctor removes a tumor from his patient the in ob shout, 'How very rot ten the doctor must be.' " All this has been pointed out many times before, but the work is done once more, with almost a superabundance of force and imagery in the present address. Finally, the committee make a very strong appeal for the renewed support of the people. They show the absurbity ot the cry that the '-mission' of the Republi can party has been "accomplished." They show how much remains to be done-in secur ing fast what lias gained, in reforming the currency, in dealing with the vast question of transportation. Into the latter subject the committee enter at some length, and it would be unjust to the argument made to attempt to condense it here. The address can hardly fail to have a marked effect on political affairs. Snook's Chromo. solo, buts dexterously checked by his mother swabbing his voice with a sponge. The manner in which a stream of soapy water is represented running down in the urchin's right eye is very finely done. Into the other eye is thrown all the added emo tion and pent-up grief rnd "sorrow that knows no tongue." Ve defy any man to see this picture without being stirred to his inmost depths. Mrs. Snooks' face is a study. It is such an expression of mo therly love, house-wifely zeal, end beauti ful devotion to duty, as can bo likened to nothing except that seen upon the face of our mothers on washing-days and at house cleaning times. Three of the children have already been washed. Their rosy countenance, bright with exuberant health, have been further heightened by the art of the limner, who lias depicted them suffering with colds as one result of their baths. At the same time their complexion forms an agreeable contrast to the three behind the tub who have not yet been bathed. This is finely done and cost a world of labor. The whole forms an agreeable contrast to the naked cherubs sent out by the reli gious press. It is a domestic scene, full of holy joy, and tranquilizcd by a sweet and dreani-like peace. In order to delicately convey the idea that even in so perfect a home as this, sor row must enter, the artist has depicted one of the children suffering with the measles. The way in which the mcasle blotches are strucru;ling with the dirit on the nose, hav ing captured the last named organ, is one of the best things in the chromo line that has ever been presented. We are now prepared to furnish these chromos to every subscriber of the El Paso Journal. We append a few certificates from prominent individuals : "True to life The very atmosphere smells of soap." Henry "Ward Beecher. "I assure you, that the chromo is so na tural that one of my children actually caught the measles from looking at it." Ben. Butler. "Reminds me of the time when they used to wash me, now many, many years ago." Susan B. Anthony. "Send us 15,000 dozen of your chromos, 'Washing the children.' We want to offer them as premiums." ClnLstian-at-Wurk. "It shows domestic misery in the highest degree. Xo woman ought to be allowed to have seven children." Victoria Woodhull. We trust these testimonials are sufficient. We could append many thousands, but we forbear. Xow. let the honest masses show their appreciation of art taking the Junrnnl. cruel and inhuman treatment other than a crazed brain and great excitement of the nervous system ? "Isbild mention one point. Many female dogs are said to have hydrophobia. In an experience of twenty-five years de voted to veterinary service I have never seen a female dog afflicted with this disease ; nor have I seen a well-authenticated case recorded by any authority. And I can in truth assert that in forty-nine cases out of every fifty where persons have been bitten by dogs, and have died, the disease has been lockjaw and not hpdrophobia." Swiss Delicacies. In Switzerland there is a certain dish, at the sight of which we have seen British matrons shudder and a bronzed jer famlUas turn pale, perhaps from peculiar parental instinct, for it cannot be denied that a marmot, when served at table, is ; n-onf n Jtli bim him for forgery, and showed him his official papers. His baggage was then examined, and in the bustle of Mrs. Esser about 800 in crisp Bank of England notes was found. The wife is said to be a beautiful woman, a native of Russia, and has been a resident for some time in Essex street, near the county jail, New York. Her father fell in the late civil war in this country. A handsome music box, which cost some 40 in London, was also re covered. The following morning the ex tradition papers of Esser were duly pre pared. He consented to waive examina tion before the United States Court, and to go back, on the steamer Minnesota, to Liverpool. His wife and four children were placed in a hotel, while he was kept in custody till the Liverrool steamer started. News has been received by telegram that he has been delivered to the officers of Bow street Police court, London. His family Xo news has vet been rather suggestive ot a plat which is now, rcceiVed of the whereabouts of his ac wc believe, the exclusive privilege of some ! complices. Xcio York Herald. South Sea Islanders and a few curious nour- I . . qou wets in the interior of Africa. But this feeling of dislike, however it arise, should certainly be overeome, for your marmot is a most excellent creature. It is vastly like sucking-pig, but has a gamey flaver, and is, of course, more mature. In the reign of Another Dam Bursts. By that strange fatality which sends calamities in groups, here within two months after the Mill River disaster fol lows the bursting of two more reservoirs the great landlord--, Herr Wellig, at in the western Massachusetts hills and the the Eggischorn, a marmot was almost al- j devastation of another thriving manufac ways to be obtained if due notice was given, turing valley, though fortunately the mis and one of our last recollections of that fortune Is of less extent than at Mill River, most excitable gentleman connects itself and unattended by its tragic circumstances, with a specimen which had been procured The reservoirs which burst on Sunday af fur our special delectation. Certain letters ' ternoon, July 12, were situated on Mid- arriving, rendered it necessary to leave dlcfield brook, a fine mountain tributary to some two hours before the pretty beast could be served. Though our grief was great, we knew how to practice resignation ; but Herr Wellig placed no control upon his feelings. He raved, he tore his hair, he cursed the letters, cursed the postman, cursed, we fear, the poor marmot himself, while with the next breadth he lauded him to the skies as the finest, the fattest, and, altogether, quite the most perfect marmot he had ever seen. But alas ! the separ tion was inevitable ; we left him bathed in tears, ourselves with saddened hearts. He probably consoled himself eventually by eating the luscious dish, intended for us ; if so. he must have forgiven us f .r what he denounced as a base desertion. Xoman could eat abundantly of roast marmot with out feeling profoundly benevolent to all mankind. Another strange and delightful di.-h once fell to our lot in the land of glaciers, but it was and remains shrouded of his grave. The sight was the most terrible ever witnessed, and the stoutest hearted of the party nearly fainted when the lid of the coffin was removed. Dispatch to the San Francisco Chronicle.- Counterfeiting. RARITY OF HYDROPHOBIA. Opinions of an Experienced Veterinary Surson- Dr. Edward S. Smith, r.n old and experi enced veterinary surgeon, has given the fol lowing opinion about hydrophobia, its causes and its preventives : "When a person has been bitten by a mad dog it is generally thirty or forty days before any development of the. disease is perceptible, or he becomes affected with the disease. The first symptoms of hydrophobia are as follows : the bitten part becomes ver painful, and the whole system begins to be affected. The wounded part becomes hard and elevated, and sharp pains shoot from it through the entire system to the brain. "The terror of having it is altogether out of proportion to the danger of taking it. The actual danger, in fact of having hydrophobia, is not a fiftieth part so great as of being struck with lightning, about which people have, comparatively, but very little concern. And our advice to all who may be bitten by a dog, and who wish to avoid all bad results therefrom, is to have the bitten part laid open by the knife to the very bottom as soon as possible after the accident has happened, and to thoroughly cleanse the parts with a strong solution of table salt and water. After bv couiii!r and ' m uiystcry. We were staying at a moun tain inn in the neighborhood ot the bt. Gothard, not very remarkable for the good ness or the abundance of its supplies, when one day a dish was handed around which met with the loud approval of all, though none could put a name to it. We appealed to the grotesque hoyden who waited, and who went by the name of Chfgnon from her once having begged a member of the Alpine Club to bestow upon her his wealth of beard, to supplement her own scant locks ; we appelaed to the fair "oung mis tress of the house, but no intelligent ans wer was obtained. The animal had cer tainly four legs, the whole body was clothed upon with delicious fat ; at last the word chicji was whispered, then boldly suggested to the attendants, but neither assent nor denial followed, nothing but shrieks of ob streperous laughter. Two facts are cer tain. One, that the jlat was simply perfect; the other, that a pet dog of extreme obesity belonging to a hostile establishment had disappeared two days before, and was never again seen alive. Possibly the Chinese are h rascr s wise in their generation after all Magazine. Midnight Capture of a Forger. NEW USE FOR A BUSTLE. About the middle ot June a telegram was received in mis city irom Jiessrs. Mullens, a well-known law firm of the city of London, addressed to Messrs. Burrill, drying the parts well, cauterize the wound j Davison & Burrill, lawyers iu this city, with nitrate of silver, and be sure you get j stating that a fugitive from justice, named Al. red L.sser, had Ieit fcouthampton by the German steamer Xeckar, bound for Xew York, under an alias, and giving a descrip- the Westfield river, and reaching it at the Boston and Albany Railway station ofMid dlefield Switch, three and a half miles south of the reservoirs. The damage done by the lossing of their hundred acres of waters was first to leave the industries of the lit tle village of Blush Hollow without water power, to utterly demolish an old woollen factory and grist mill, ruin a carriage fel loe and shaft factory, destroy barns and out-buildings, wrench from their founda tions and tear open dwellings, strip the earth of rich gardens and orchards, to the bare rocks, and leave the roads impassably gullied, making, in fact, a second Skinner ville in its desolation of the bright little village. Rushing hence down the short val ley and carrying away six wooden bridges, a woollen mill, and two houses in its way, the flood struck the highway and river at 3IiddleSeld Switch, and there tore for it self a wide passage, throwing down the heavy masonry like mere stubble, and scoop ing away the road bed tor a considerable distance. In the tortuous course of the river between these points it demolished a stone bridge and somewhat crippled two wooden bridges by undermining their abut ments, and at various points, rising over the railroad track, washed out the road bed. Reaching Chester, the waters car ried away one wooden bridge in the centre of the village, more or less damaged the foundations, dams, and stock of several manufacturing establishments, and quite ruined many fields and gardens. Below' this village the flood's chief damage, out side of that to the railroad, was the carry ing away of a bridge at Rolling Brook, and then it gradually lost its force and power of mischief. The entire damage by the flood is roughly estimated at 8350,000, and the estimate is a moderate one, not in cluding the 4rsons thrown out of employ ment, and the enforced idleness of the' place. A Young Man Buried Alive. The report of the lalors of the United States Secret Service Division shows that even in this advanced age the counterfeit ing industry for such it would seem to be has kept pace with all the improvements of modern engraving. The following is a list of implements captured from 1809 to 1874: Twenty-eight complete sets of dies, swedges and molds for counterfeiting gold, silver and nickel coins mainly twenty-five' and fifty-cent silver coins, and one, two and a half, three, five and twenty dollar" gold coins. Eighteen complete sets of steel plates r counterfeiting the Lincoln head, Goddess of Liberty head, Spinner head and postal fractionl currency. Five sets of plates for counterf -itiug United States coupon bonds. Seven complete sets of plates lor coun terfeiting internal revenue, tobacco, beer, aud proprietary stamps ; one of the latter capable of producing 420 different subjects, and of defrauding the Government of 8100,000 annually." Seventeen complete sets of stool plates for counterfeiting the greenback, legd ten der, and national bank notes. Ten complete sets of steel transfer-ruller.? and bed-pieces for multiplying counterfeit plates. Also a large quantity of unfinished plates, vignettes, pieces of lathe-work, &e.T all designed fir the purpose of counterfeit ing the currency and securities of th United States. Twenty-three presses for printing coun terfeit mono- were ah captured, together with an amount of countrf?it monov esti mate! st about cue ruilli.n of represeiti tive dollars.- MOTHERS. Mothers, you stand" af the fountain, with the lightest trace of your finger on the yield ing soil, you can give a direction to the in fant stream, you can send it gliding down through verdant fields' and flowery lawns, imparting new fertility and beauty, and anon contributing its strength to propel the complicated machinery of industry ; or you can send it dashing, f laming over preci pices, to join with other impetuous head long streams, carrying devastation in their course ; or you can suffer it to roll its slug gish way into some stagnant pool, afford ing refuge for loathsome reptiles, and poison ing the atmosphere wkh its pestilential va pors, in mlancy and at home the deei-est and most lasting impression are made :your children may have had able and faithful instructors but there are many lessons of practical wi-doru which are not taught in schools. The mind of your child is con stantly busy it will be learning a lesson of you when you least think of it. To your chdd, your remark is wLdom : your opimous, sound doctrine ; and vour word a law your caild t? Iarnmg a les son from every look and action but, most of all, your example is educating your child; lay a book constantly open before it which it is constantly studying. Be careful, fond mother, that you insert no page which hereafter you may wish to tear out. no line you may wish to bolt ; be careful that you admit into that much read volume no senti ments which you are unwillmg child should transcribe on the fair tablet within its own innocent bosom. -A horrible dis- The humbug of giving chromos to in duce persons to subscribe to newspapers, is well hit oft in the following irom uie j.i Paso Journal. That paper says : If the religious press gets ahead of us we give it fair warning that it must get up on its spine. We have stood by the "Sleep ing Cherubs" of the Chrutian, Union; we have gazed on the picture of wall-eyed vir tue with which Bro. Talmage ror.es in sub scribers from the rural districts, unmoved. But when CMniKit-Work sends us a picture of two sore-eyed dogs watching three merino lambs, and wants us to pay 820 f;r it, then, indeed, is the free spirit of an American citizen aroused. We want it distinctly ' understood that we ::re in the chromo business ourselves. Hereafter every subscriber that takes the El Paso Journal will receive a pretty chromo, entitled "Mrs. Snooks Washing the Cl.ildren." It is one of those beauti ful home pictures that apial to the fondest and holiest affection of the heart. Every man who sees it says at once, "Would I were a bov a lain," when being washed and gett ing coup" in his eyes was one of the regular Sunday abdications next to the catechism. In the foreground is 31 rs. Snooks. Be fore her is a tub, and one of her orphans is struggling in the water. The artist has seized upon the moment when the miant ha just ujiencd its mouth for a prolonged to the bottom of the wound with your caustic. Wet the diseased part several times a day with a strong solution of crude carbonic-acid. The sooner this is done, the safer the patient ; and if projH?rly done soon after the bite, the success will be almost certain, and the patient need have no apprehensions of the consequences. Having been bitten by dogs myself several times during my veterinary practice, and knowing of several other persons who have been-bittcn by dogs when sick, 1 have treated them in the manner here described. No bad results whatever have ever occured therefrom. "Prof. Butler, I believe, did not die of hydrophobia, but of lockjaw, or tetanus. Tetanus is generally developed in from eight to twelve days after the wound is received, or the injury which is the cause of it. It may, however, arise from irritat ing substances in the stomach, and exTHjsures to cold while the .ores are open and the body Is in a profuse erspiration. The lockjaw is much more frequent in warm than cold weather. "If we set apart one case out of every hundred of cases reported as canine mad ness, we should over-e.stimate the number of animals suffering from this form and character of disease. The animal is suffer-in"- from a mental derangement of the brain. The cause of this abnormal state of the, brain is the want of proper hygienic care - their food has been scanty and in most' cases putrid, or else the dogs have been unable to procure water, and they must suffer at the hands ot stre.it roughs of all ages. tion of the man, who it was supposed was accompanied by his wife. Further details were subsequently received stating that the forger in question had been the confidential clerk of a large seed merchant in Loudon, and had committed a forgery to the extent of 1,000 (85,000) on the banking firm of Glyn, Mills & Co., in Lombard street, London, by drawing a check ujon them for the sterling amount above mentioned, which was paid, and subsequently found to be a forgery. The case was placed in the hands of Detective Pinkerton, who sent down one of his agents, named Davies, to discover, if possible, the forger's allis 1 previous conclusion that Iukliurst had Salt Lake, July 4 covcry was made Here yesterday upon exhuming the Iwidy of a young man named William B. Lackhurst. who was buried in the cemetery on the 22d of June last. On the 20th of June, Iackhurst attended a pic-nic here, and while there concluded to take a hath. After coming out from his bath, Lackhurst went kick to the pic-nic grounds, aud getting into a swing, began to amuse himself. All at once, while in the swing his head dropped, his muscles relaxed. and he fell heavily to the ground. He was picked up and every effort made to revive him, but in vain, ihe senseless youn man was placed in a carriage and driven home, where restorative agent were again employed, but to no purpose. After some hesitation, the physician in attendance pronounced the young man dead, and preparations were made for his interment. The body presented a singularly life-like appearance so much so, indeed, that the friends felt uneasy about going on with the funeral until more positive evidence that life had wholly gone had lieen obtained. The funeral was indeed delayed one day, but finally the physicians reaffirmed their APPLES. when he arrives upon the Xeckar, and to arrest him and recover all the property he could. Davies was accompanied by United States Deputy Marshal Robinson. At midnight, on the ISth of June, the Xeckar came to an anchor in the Quarantine i . . It 1 1 IT. . 1 grounds. jJeteetive xuvies ana me umieu died ot heart disease, and the body was therefore interred on June 23d. But one or two friends of the family seemed haunted by the recollection of that life-like face. They went about whispering their fears, and finally these haunted doubts spread throughout the city, and led to a proposal With us the use of the apple as an article of food is far underrated. Besides contain ing a large amount of sugar, mucliage and other nutritive matter, apples contain vege tables acids, aromatic qualities, etc., which act powerfully in the capacities of refriger ants, tonics and antiseptics, and when free ly used at the season of mellow ripeness, they prevent debility, indigestion, and avert, without doubt, many of the ills which flesh is heir to.' The operators of Corn wall, England, consider ripe apples as nourishing as bread, and far more so than potatoes. In the year 1S01 which has a year of much scarcity apples instead of j being converted into cider, were sold to the poor, and the laborers asserted that they could 'stand their work' on baked apj les without meat ; whereas a potato diet re quired either meat or some other substan tial nutriment. The French and Germans use apples extensively ; so do the inhabi tants of all European countries. The la borers depend ujhui them as an article of food, and frequently make a dinner of sliced apples and bread. There is no fruit cook ed in as many different ways in our country as apples, nor is there any fruit wluv-o value, as an article of nourishment, is so great and so little appreciated. .srt..M T-irJi:l w.mf rtn lo:iril. I n former, in exhume the remains ami settle tne iues- after conversing with several of the officers, came to the conclusion that "A. Becker 1 was the man he wanted. He accordingly knocked at "A. Becker's" cabin door ; but, finding the room empty, went on deck, where, the individual being pointed out, Officer Davies walked up to him, and turn lorever. Permission was granted by the authorities and yesterday a nuimVr of They do matters up beautifully in New York. A Mr. Jones, of this State, was recently robled of about a thousand dol lars m that city. The robbers were arre -ted, and released on Kiil, while Jones was , i I 11 i V l. ' Vi l 'lll .' 1 the liiends ol young .u-u-KUursr. repaired xo . snui up ana win oe ueraineu as a witness. the cemetery and opened the grave. Upoti ' It is better to le a thief in Xew York lifting the lid ot the coffin a sickening and i. :i i . i..: iioi I luie ml; in uiei min ;.. was turned over on its side. The Imdv The skin and slapping him on the shoulder, said, "Esser, . great pieces of flesh had been torn from the old boy, I am glad to see you." Esser j face, the hair pulled out in huge patches trembled, and losing ins presence oi minu, btanmiered, "I am gl-a-a-d to see you, also, but I don't know vour name." Davies What can we expect from this then explained that he had come to arrest I efforts of the man to burt the cercm:urs from the scalp, the grave clothes and coffin lining torn into shreds and two finger nails worn down to the quick by the frantic A temperance crusadess, on her return from a pilgrimage to the leer shops, w s seen to approach the pantry, and overheard singing Little drops of toddy, Little grains of spice, Don't ihey make a lody Ftcl so awfal nice i ' . ' ii
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