JEPFER80NIAN. JL 11JU 1' U'J WMH IWLHmjIW.Hil i'"u.m,.iiik.j i Ecuotcb to politics, itcraturc, gricnltuic, Science, iHovalitn, aufi cncral Intelligence. VOL. 33- STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., SEPTEMBER 9, 1875. NO. 15. PnUirird by Theodore Schocli. " ... . . : - ...... If ii. . T,Y'',T. t!i '. t ii i "1" tii'' year, tr. dullar and fifty vii-' i!l'' Vjir.li 'i'ii'iM'-d until all arrearages are :li I ,.v.-. i ( (). llaf,. f (,...)it Hues) or ; ' Vihr- i' rt't 'ii-' ct " '-''" additional iii . I ii r ii- in proportion. rii'"1- ' ' ' -- - - -- - - jOIJ 1KI.TI." of Al l. KINKS, i i'v lii 'ht slvle f th- Art, and n the ,:. ii. r.iirci-: joiixstoxi:, J) Homoeopathic Physician, lIoM.k-iuv: r.. nj:i!nin Dunlin, Cherry Valley, MoXJIOK torxTY r.v. M,v 1 :". ly. A AeennehpTir Sam ('i t, Wayni: Co., Pa. !l iM-'. promi'lly attended, to day or lURht. ( nrr'e im.dYrate. May 1."., '7"-lf. 1) n. . i Bi. Surgeon U;:itisl. . iVtl liiviii just rOir:i-d from !r-nfif Vj.. I, i- iullv ir..i t.. make :rtitiei-il t.-eth in . '.vi ilii .l and lif-lik inaini'T. ami to iill de- !,1 t 1 " vr I'm .' to the 1110: iinirov.s 111 iIhnI. ' r.. ... , .. -t..i wiih mi n:i:n. when deir-i. I.v tlio f Nil ; 'i-1 Kid iia. which isentir 1 haruile. i''-Mi: kind - n '!! ilotie. All work waranted. ( :, (, r .! hi t i'.i K -11-t's '' hrii-V Imillin, Main sire t, j) it. s. 1.. rori.Ki:, l'MYSlCIAX. () i 11 Mily o;i;v)ita Wiliiau:" Dm? Store, j C - il M . fuvi-r'.y o-.-iij.i -d hy 11 I,. Wolf, .rner ' Nr';i W'.i! , j ;i t r.-t-. Si rou,li.u r;j, l'a. j M ii !i .'-", 1 7"i. ; I) . u;u iitw iviTTuasox, P 175121 in, Sireaa and Accoucheur, lliv.n! IIi.L-n-e, Mj5u street. Str.ni.ls- j !nir'. l'i.. in t!e huildin funncily tut-iiptwl ; b.- i'r. iji. I'r.iMij't attention qiven tucills. ! f 7 l a. in. .;; Ii.fir - 1 " p. '11. ! t ; A;.ril ' l7-!-lv. 1 1) i. k;. '.v. .3 ac :vso Fiirsinw, sr;:;iE;) and ArrorniLTR. ; i l:i rlie nil oll'nv of Ir. A. Kecves Jackson, ; fe-i !-. :n e, curiKT il ir.i!i ;:id rr;itklin strei t. ; STROUDSBURG, PA. j A -h; 7--;f ; riLso.v ii:irso., AUCTIONEER, Rul E-itite Aent and Collector. j T'i 'i i ', -. -i ;;i ! .- 1 -,;ve to notify the iMiMic that ! h ;i :r 1 t - -11 at li rt not i.- j Tilial projeTl y j i 1-, a w.-!l a- : -al Ktat.-, at Jn'tii- or Jiriate ; 'ii - :i; III i S: -iii ;d i 1 tor and, at Ftt s-. . 1 1. in.v. i;. ir. i Dvv: s. i,i:k, Ailursicy at Iaiv, ! !ie il ior :i'ove tlie "Stroudsljtirg Ilonsc." nil-!iirj. Pa. i t '.'li.-;ioii- pronijitlv undo. ! u-tuljer 1ST 4. 7. i iiorsi;, HONSSDALE, ?X. M -t cjntral locution ot any Hotel in town. ' K. W. KIPLK ,1- SOX, I o'l M um strs't. I ropnetors. Jaw iirv '.i. 1 ti j & iir X.rlh Tiunl Ssf.rrt, PHILADELPHIA. t?i' KeJuceJ rates 1 T" Jkt tlay."2.'3 IIKNPiV SPA I IX, Pn.pr. I- I. Sviku. Clerk. Xov. jrN i,s74. f.m. WILLIAM S. REES, Surveyor, Conveyancer and Real Estate Agent. Farms. Timber Lands and Town Lots FOR SALE. !!iee nifstrly opjiosite American Iloticx an 1 Hi I dour !kIow the Corner Store. DR. J.LANTZ, HURGEOH & MECHANICAL DENTIST. s!:i! lias , js ,, ?.5ain str't, III the s-i-ond story '. s. W.otoif, hrii k lu!ldi;ij. iiemJv oKiiie the 'r i l'U:. !,-,. M'.iiv, and lie Hater. Iill.ucjf t hat l.y ei-h-1 "i v . t- ti.iaiit oaetii and th.- nio.-t earliest and i r-riit a i -u: t-ii t- ail m.iltrr NT(aiiiin-.' to Id yr-t- I'u ii It . j i.iliv ai,l,. to MTl'orm ail ii.-ral ions I i tiifd ilt;,i i.. j ,;. , ,,, t.:lr,.f a,i skillful man ;i"i'. ,!' Ml .iii. iiTimi tfiei-ii to savin-; the Natural Te-th ; ' . t.. th i:is.Ttioii of Artificial T.-eth on RuhU r. 1. mIv t. or n' unions ( Jtmis, and fx rtfvt fil in all M -r.-.n- k !. ih-. sreat foy mi 4aM'i'r of en f'lstin - th,.;, w-o,k to the iiicxjHTtciiiiil.or to thos" Ii v-lr'-' " J ditaii.-e. Aj.rtl i i, l7l. if. R. MAINONE, Maker, Tuuer, Regulator and Repairer Of Pianos, Organs and Melodeons. .ui k s r.-sidin' in St roudshur' and vicinity, ih ' A Ui' it lu.triiiiii uts thoroughly tuned, renlateJ and ; l-;r.l at a most reasoual.le price, will lea.se U'UVC iii' ir .i,li r, a, the Jetf. rsonian tlttice. i. , , ' ."''"I'"!' to i.urchaso Piauos n fi:ifl il 'llitiradvaot:!;elrtci -s luul a Jirai-ticle experieln.-C 'of O' fi,rrri r',ii-",l liu'i. 1 am prci . ". v lll lliist- I liiU'la "I OIOI liiJ I U" teal! on iuo, Hav- OVCT IWMitT-SIX I .nored to furoi.sh ; - ati iuost ir.ijuovcd in.-trunirnts a.1 llic io .-I 1 , -y prices, j lis, v- located mvM-lf iu. rtnaoi iit!y ' SOMETHING NEW ! A SHOE MANUFACTORY. Tlio tiii-lcriiii'-d would rsje.'etfiiHy sriro li'.tiee that tliey liave it:iMislii at Williams' Hall liuiidin. -i.r-iier of Jnre ami Monroe Mrvet, Stnmd.shiir;:, l'a., a SHOE MANUFACTORY, for the making f all kind of Lady' and ( ieiitleiiiens ami fhililren's Hoot ami Shoes auil rpp'Ts. l'ai ticti !.ir alt. Mil ion paid to CUSTOM WO HIC. IVr-iis having deformed feet, huukms or corns, or i liililren with weak ankl-'s. or rnkitl Uuili, ran have here ol'fir-t clas material and at reaonultlu prices Shoes made to suit their eases. llavini had a lar::o ex jn'riene in New York v.- feel eoiiti.leiii that e can suit customer a to ijualil ies and prio, all of our i;-mi1s both for jjiMieral and sji-i:l sal! ar? warranted to t; as represetiteil Iteae uive u a call, examine our kihmIs and tiiateri.tls consisting of Surges, jjlazM l-'rem h. Mat and Kreneh t'alf Kid, long; grained. Hruh and IVMJod tinat Morot.im, I'reneh and American Calf 3inl Kif Skins, ail of whirh will lie cheerfully shown t" those who may call. Intending to make a first rate wearing srli-Jo we have Jiollilnir to courrl. cith'-r in st-n-V or make from the puMic, hut would iuvite their closest scrutinv. July S, 7.Vtf II. II LLOMMETT &CO. mm for Th" unleriiKl otl'er at private ssle, his Farm, iit uate in Hamilton townhii. Moiiph- omitr, l'a., near iissardsville. and 6 mih from St roiulshii r;', founty srat el Monroe, iNiutainiii 75 Acres, i nliout C .ten- Timlier Land, the tulaiier iniiroTixl lsndt JiiW ..!!,. soil, in a hih stateof cultivation. The im ;r'vini' art; a T7 f'V. Wa.p.11 Shi-I. Ti-.'-l- n Is l.y .'M fi t.iVia 00 t'li 11 i n- nine room ll:irn 'A'l liv to with arnae llvise altaemsi, aiel all otlicr nw -ssary j out-IoiiHinjs; a 11 -ver fallin ; well of water near the dj ni:r,'. There is an excellent (Indianl of j i Choice Fruit Trees j on th" firm. coiiitiii of Apjd . l'earh. fhei ry, IMum, j rriint-. 1 'i:il-:!'d.', s'-eral vai i -til's, iraji- s. standard j and dwarf t lien ies. ,1c. : a Lime Kiln, and one of the , l.-t stone .iiarri in the vail -y. The Kiln ha capn- j city enough to turn out one hundred r.lnl filty hush- 1 I- of line .-r day. Tin-i ro;s and .t"M-k can he ttoiiht uith the Farm. ' Here i a ol chance for a harain. I l'LI Ki: IV. SHAI KH. I5os;lville, .Inly t, 17."i. If. j PRICKS KHDITED AT THE orner Store! TI-I3H CHEAPEST GOODS IX TOWN. (Ireat bargains are now oflered in FANCY DUKSS GOODS, ALPACAS, VKLVKTKF.NS, CLOT X-I S , CASSIMEKES, FLANXKIJS, Ac-., all of which liave been marked down to PANIC PRICES. floods all new and right in style, but marked down to meet the times. We invite all to call and see for themselves. Terms Cah. c. i:. an Din: & Co. dec-4tf Main St Strotnlsbnrg, Pa. 0. H. Dreher. E. B. Dreher 3?I-ICEISriX (2 doors west of the "Jcflersonian Oflicv,") KMZAHKTII STUKKT, StroiiIs!iirpr, l'a., DREHER & BRO., UKALF.nS IN Drills, .tlcMll IiM's, 1 c r fit iii cry and Toilet Articles. Faints, OILS YARXISIIKS, (JLASS k I'L'ITV. Abdominal Supporters and Shoulder Braces. Seeley's Hard HI Illicit TRl'SSIJS Also Emitter's THUSSKS OF VAKIOITS PA1TKUXS. Lamps and Lanterns Burning and Lubricating Oils. Physleluiis' Prescriptions carefully Com pounded. X. H, The liidiest Cash price paid for OIL of WIXTKItGUKILX. inay-Jtf. BLA N K "DE E DS For sale at this Office. GEEAT THROUGHOUT MONROE COUNTY, ABOUT TllK Large Assortment OF J And Extremely Low Prices AT .r 4' THE Mammoth Retailer OF Men's, Boy's Children's Qents Furnishing Goods, Trunks & Valises, Umbrellas, &c. Aii'ii Announeemeiit TO THE PUBLIC. order to have more to display my large room stock of Clothing, Gents' Furnishing Goods and Trunks and Valises, I have eonclnded to quit the Boot & Shoe business. 1 there fore oiler and will sell my stock of Boots & Shoes at and below cost. SIMON FBIKD, April 15. 1875. Aeut. LEANDER EMERY, M AM FACTl-JtF.R AXD Ir.AI.F.K IS ilX K1SI5 OF farria-rfs ami Bn?girs, Two-seated Carriages for Livrry stables and private Families, Platform Spring Wagons, f t lie Ijtfl tyl' and f"f :ill kiulr t um, krjit cm liatul or iiiiulr to nl-r. SINGLE-SEATED CABRIAGES, m tilt oj or without top, all tjlc. Deliveiy and Express Wagons, of difirrcnt styles, hippcd to order. All work warrant od in every iartionlar lor nur year. I will make to or der anv Btylcof Carriatfpor liht DiiKfty that may he aiilei. JCone but lir.t l:is work leave nir shoo. I uf only firt eM t-k and employ first rfanii work men, and feci ronndent Ihat I -n pive enlm-MtiJ-ue-tinn to all who may pun-ha.e my work. All orders hy mail ohall ri'-ive prompt attention. Hoping thai I niav ! ahle to fiirnih the eiii.eni of Hroudshurs and vii'tnily w It li anv thing that they may want in my line. Addreiw all ori-r to LrcANii:n kmkry, Marengo, Calhoun County, Michigan April 11, lSTo. ly. UNDERTAKING. M CAKTV A SfX.S have on hand the lart and lt axsoilinent of COFFINS and SMfW TRIMMINGS In he found oulileof eithereil v (New York or Philadel phia), and will niiike (bis hramh or l heir hu&Iuc a speciality, COFFINS and CASKETS of any haie or style, i:an be furTil.-hetl t owe hour's notice for alilpnielil, at a tnare 01 inr-iiuii nw mu any M;oS IS Mroudshurg. in DO ease w in mey t uar more .shall ten fT ct-ut. abuve actual lost. iiiiAi,.n.c; CLOTHING S1M0K FREDS suend. d to i aiiy of tfc Court y -t po.-.-iblc iioiiie. J itm 1". ' j ABDUCTED MORGAN. A MINXKStiTIAX THKOWS C(XSU)KKAi:LK LKjIIT ox a famols old mvstkky MOIUIAX DI.SCOVKRKI) IX MAIXE X EARLY TWKXTY-VIVE YEARS AETKU HIS DISAP PEAR A XCE. Correspoiulence of the Pioneer Press. 1 Axoiv.v, Minnesota. August 17. I see by your issue of the loth inst. tliat tlic iniiiie of Willium Morgan, with all the mys tery that surrounds the fate of this unfor tunate man, is brought again before the public by the publication of two letters writ ten ujHui this subject by the Hon. Thur low Weed. Perhaps I can throw move light upon the fate of Morgan than any other person living. Prior to 1S2G, the'time of his dis appearance, my father, then a young man, formed his acquaintance, and knew him well. In the year 1827 or 1S23 my father went eastward as far as CJreat Falls, X. II., where he remained a few years. Here he married, and here he experienced religion and united with the Methodist Episcopal Church. Feeling a deep love for the cause he had so lately espoused he determined to devote the remainder of his life to the cause of Christ and hunianit3. With this object in view, he entered the ministry, and started as a missionary fur the wilds of Xorthern Maine, which then were just be ing opened up to civilization. Arriving at Moulton, Maine, he decided to locate there, and enter at once upon his work ; and here he resided for a number of years. In 1844 he went still farther! north, and settled at Fort Fairfield. This part of Maine was then an unbroken wil- dcrncss, save a few strairirlimr settlements i that were many miles apart. In these mis sionary labors lie visited these settlements from .Sabbath to Sabbath. Upon one of these routes that he traveled through the forest, guided only by the trees that were glazed to mark the way, stood a ! solitary cabin with but a lonely ocennant. a i m y A. I man well advanced in years. j The cabin as well as the little clearing ! around it showed marks of age, and led one i to the conclusion on that its occupant had long j of these wilds. With this j an my father often tarried ; n- r.lp.-ivrinr lumrs vluli nwr. ! been a denizen stranire old man my i i and nassed many pleasant hours while rest- j iiv his weary limbs. - Xot only the hermit, but the cabin, cx- j :ited his wonder and astonishment, being juilt in a very unique manner and con" j cite built in a very unique structed' without the use ot nails or anv thing else save wnat nc couiu procure irom .1 i ,t ii the forests. In conversation with this strange crea ture the conviction gradually forced itself upon 1113- father that he had seen him be fore but when and where ? Those ques tion he could not answer at once, but the truth finally flashed upon him that this lonely old man was none other than the friend of his early years, William Morgan. With this truth pressing upon him, he resolved to keep it a secret fur awhile un til he should make himself double sure of the fact by watching him closely, and by tracing the resemblance, if any existed, be tween this old man and young Morgan. Thus, with the hermit all unaware that his true identity was suspected by any one my father watched and studied him until he had not the shadow ot doubt but what this was the veritable William Morgan who, it was alleged, the Masons had murdered so many years before. Upon making in quiry in the settlements of those who came there first, they started that they knew nothing about him, only this, that when they came he was there. lie told some of his discovery, which soon reached the cars of the hermit, when he silently and un known to any one, departed in the dark ness of night ; none knew where, but doubt less to sock anew some secluded spot, where he could remain in solitude undisturbed by his brother man. When William Morgan was abducted by his brother Masons and carried to Fort Xiagara he doubtless escaped from their hands and fearing that his life would pay the forfeit for his distardly outrage against the Masonic fraternity if seen again by one of their number, he fled here to the bound less forests of Xorthern Maine. And here he had lived in all these years, his only companions the birds of the air and the wild beasts of the forests. His wants that he could not supyly from the soil and from the game that is abund ant in those parts were probably met by visiting settlements of the French refugees upon the St. John's river. The life that he led here must have, in deed, been a singular and lonely one, and doubtless the first years of his life were full of terror, of fear and disquietude. At the rustle of every leaf and the breaking of every twig he would fancy an assassin was creeping upon him to strike him down, but as the years stole by these feelings would give way to one of greater security and safety, till at last, like Selkirk, he would feel that he was "monarch of all he sur veyed." My farther died in 1837. but the forego ing facts were received at the time from his own lips, and they can be relied upon as being strictly true, lie knew this her mit to be william Morgan, and this is con clusive evidence mc that Morgan was not murdered by the Masons, but that he led a lone, exile life, and that if he is now dead ho has died a natural death. But some may ask, if this be true, why was it not made public before ? This is readily answered. At that time there was no paper published nearer my father than oue hundred and fifty mih-.s uud reporter Q pot r,u'ue so thick in thee forOoto as the mosquitoes were, and my father not be ing a newspaper correspondent it is easy to perceive why it did not lind its way into public print. I decided a number of years atro to make these sacts public when anything occurred to call them out, and as this seems to be a proper time I send them forth to your readers and to the world. Yours truly. A. P. IUmsers. HORSES. A stock journal in Canada gives the fol lowing, which may lie of interest to those who are concerned in the management of horses. It says : "Whenever the muscu lar system of the animal is greatly taxed, we find a demand for the nitrogenous foods. Hunters cannot do their work on hay alone; they require oafs and beans to supply flesh forming matter. The British soldier and workman has hitherto excelled in physicial endurance and muscular power as much on account of his meat diet as his national qualities. The late Mr. IJrassey found that when he fed his foreign workmen on the .ka:ne diet as his British navies, the work done by the two approached au equality. Previously thev had no chance with the hnirhshmcn. rlesh. of course, su rallies a cs a j heavy percentage of nitrogenous matter, j but beans and peas supply even a much j larger proportion, and their feeding value was well tested in the late Franco-Gcrnnn war, the (lerman soldiers beim largely de endent upon peas as an ingredient of their food to meet the waste of muscular tissue. The wonderful endurance of these men is conclusive evidence of the nutritive value of such food. To keen horses in health when not tiara worked we need no mix tures ; we have one grain in which the nu tritive elements are so proportionately ar- l .it ii t ranged that it cannot be improved upon ; i practice has lung adopted it. We refer to I ats But to keep hard working horses in tamny, he felt that he must make some rc m is a very different thing. Oats marks. Turning to one of the ladies, he condition alone are not equal to it, nor can any other ! single grain preserve both health and con- j dition I he fact is, either their chemical ; constitution or their physiologieal action is j defective, and we must, by mixing diluir- I out articles, so alter the nutritive value and so balance tho physical actions as to mo- so balance the physical actions as to pro- j Iec a food which will not disarrange the 1. f . ! . l lunctions ot tlie animal, but which will sup- i ply all the requirements of the body. ' J "To hard worked men oahneal is no offi- j eient substitute for beef and mutton, and I for hard worked horses oats are inefficient 4.1. ? V. Vlll j'Ot V VI Kill I .i Itli r H J J.l'V I t ience tells us this most plainly, and science explains it by showin- that beans, peas and j tares are almost identical with beef and mutton in the amount of muscle-forming matter contained by each ; whereas oats contain nearly lift' per cent, less than cither of them. "Xow, in horses or other animals exces sively worked, the consumption of muscle is far in excess of the waste of other tissue, and the blood must be supplied by a cor respondingly large amount of flesh forming material. To fulfill their requirement we must give food containing a heavy percen tage of nitrogenous material, otherwise the digestive organs will not be able to supply the requisite pabulum. Boons or beef will supply it, oats or potatoes will not, even if we give an extra amount of them, because this entails the consumption of such an im mense bulk of material, a large proportion of which is indigestible and non-nitrogenous, that the digestive organs are overpow ered and unable to reduce the mass to a state in which all its value may be absorbed. For these reasons, then, we say that the use of oats as a principal article of diet for excessively hard worked horses is very ex pensive, if not injurious." ADVENTURE WITH A COUGAR. As a test of nerve, the recent experience of a wayfarer, traveling a wood road near Olympia, Washington Territory, was as re markable as any on record. The man was a speculator, looking out wild land, and he trudged through the forest, following the almost unseen path formed by an old road made by pioneers in the wilderness. His mind was devoted to one subject the cri tical examination of the trees upon the land about him, and of the character of the soil, and he failed to notice for some time a "pit-a-pat" ujhju the dead leaves near him. He at first scarcely looked down, when he felt .somcthin'' rubbin- against his loirs and heard a slight purring sound, but when he did look his heart came up in his mouth and a cold sweat started as sudden ly as though he were suspended by a weak rope over Xiagara. Pressing itself softly against his les. twining about him as he "walked, moving its flexile body swifily, but with never a sound, turning up fierce eyes with something almost like a terrible laugh in them, was a huge cougar ! Xo chicken was this man in the woods, but his account of the manner in which his hat was raised by his hair is not be consi dered as apocryphal at all. Sleek and sup ple and muscular the beast glied about, and at intervals it would come closer again, and press its bod) against the logs of the man, the light touch making gooxefiosh of every inch in his form. It wan a terrible experi ence, that interview with the cougar in the forest primeval, and it was well for the man that Ins nerves were of the kind to do hon or to a frontier adventurer. Steadily pur suing his course with steps that wohid fal ter a little occasionally, he kept on, and with him the beast continued its treacherous gambol;-,. At tirsco it wou 1.1 dido a fo'-v 1 pace rcr the front, and roll over and over in the road, and wait for the man to come up. and then it would circle arouinl him again until the impulse, almost too- strong to Ie resisted, wotth! eorjiie upon him to spring upon the brute, oppo.mg fants U frangs, and ending the intolerable su-penst" at any riks. The movements of the terrible animal were but as the playing of a cat with a mouse, and the man knew it, - The moment came at ler;gtrf wherf t?w strain could l lionw m longer , and tin man kicked desperately at the hwl as it passed by him. In an instant it Iwmnded in front and crouched for a spriigf grow ing its hoarsely and showing it teeth. The man stopped aud shouted hopelessly for aid, while the cougar did not spring at once, but appeared waiting to gratify its humor a little longer. The shout fortunately was not in vain. There were hunters arid dogs m the im mediate vicinity, as rare fortune WonM h:tp w it, and the hounds dashed suddenly from the covert as the cougar, seeing thern, leaped for a tree. A few moments later the beast fell a victim to bullets, and the man with whom it had taken a stioH tt"a telling his story and trying to restore the normal condition of his nerves by internal applications from a small flask. It was one of the episodes which turn men's hair gray one which would, doubtless, have brought ileath to a man with k'ss erro than the hero of tbv :ffarr. Wonders of the Microscope. The other day a Detroit father purchaet! a microscope for his son, boy f ten, patted the lad on the shoulder, and said t him : '3Iy son, take this microscope and goi out and study the lcarttics of nature' The boy left all other amusement for that, and he took such irrcat interest, ami improved. rall tht at the ten table, to which several visitors sat down with the inquired : "Did yot ever look at cheese through a microscope : ;,I do replied, -Wei crawl - ;,I dou t think I ever did. ?hc pleasantly 1. ) jut oftglit to see the things "John ! John !' exclaimed the father, ill 11 1 i . 1 1 .1.11 snaking ins iicauattnc Doy aortas tneiaoie. John subsided for a minute or two, and whc" h'K 11?otIiCT tMe cheese around, connouy said, "manic you, no. rretty the young student, desiring to mollify 1 1 1 t. Mil t ?f T "Father, did rott ever look at a toad tlugh microscope V I uvnt r-.ll- re- plied the parent, scowling at the boy. John was rather disappointed at his fail ure to arouse enthusiasm, and just as the strawberries were being passed around he remarked : "Well 'ou ought to look at a strawberry once through the microscope I They hxk just like warts, they do, and you think you sec bugs running !' "Jawn !'' said his mother. "Boy !" warned his father. "Well, they look wors'n flies' heads protested the boy, vfho imagined that they doubted his veracity, "for flies "Bov !' said the father, making a motion for John to leave the table. John left, and soon as it was convenient for him to do so the father escorted the lad to the war-h-room in the basement, bounced him around, and said : '"My son, gimme that microscope, and you take the ax and go out and study the beauties of that woodpile !'' If that boy continues to feel the way he . doe at presnt, he will become a bank rob ber instead of a naturalist. Detroit J'We An Attempt to Starvo a Wife to Death. A very mysterious case has just come to light in the town of Boonton, X. J., which it is asserted, exhibits one of the most brutal and fiendish cases of barbarity that has tv curred fur years in the vicinity of Xcw York. It appears that one Philip Cook, a carpenter by trade, residing in the above place, has for a long time lived on unhappy terms with his wife. It is moreover alleged that of late he has been on terms of improiT intimacy with another woman, and ho sought to get clear of his wife by starving her to death. To accomplish this purpose he is alleged to have locked her up in an upper room in the building, occuyie 1 as the family resilience, and has there kept her confined for nearly throe weeks. Cook has throe children, and the sudden disap pearance of the mother led several of the neighbors to inquire as to her wherealMmts. The children finally told them that their mother .was kept locked up in a room by their father. Cook was asked as to the whereabouts of his wife, when he stated that she was sick. This did not sati-sfy some of the citizens, so on Thursday even ing about twenty of them forced their way into Cook's house, and, to their groat astonishment, found Mrs. Couk lying in au insensible condition on a bare floor. They removed her to an adjoining room and sent for a phsician, but as yet she has been in such a condition that but litlle hopes are entertained for hev. recovery. She has been unable ta make a clear statement of the brutal treatment she has received. Cook, has therefore, been arrested and committed to the county jail, without bail, to await the recovery or death of his wife. -- - It is easier lor a lady and gentleman to walk ude; o$o brc-lh udw than it ut'cd t t o, cor.sttfpK-now or ia narrow Miirts 1 -t v .mi r um;,