had a reputation Eon Is Made by the Mavagers to Pop- ulerize Them. Pwo factors in English holiday travel pre obvious from these grest pilus of passengers’ baggage. One is that there i no check system on the railways, snd the other that if it cost as much to hire # cub tn Liverpool or Manchester as in | nistion in the number of packages, if not in the weight of the baggage, which English familisa take with them on "| their holiday travele Few big Saratega | trunks are to be seen on the platform at Crews Here and there may be seen a tronk which it takes two men to ifs, | but the addvess on it will almost cer tainly show it to belong to an American dean got mad, and ol whys Be al pe Kew York there would soon be a dimii- | cma ate FLT Ae pion, snd he Fredirick, beers mirni the state ; then to Uo ait hisge ! tog spiakers spr pee It 1 51 wad be did pod sald at tir tine and wi eid Araeriean Pelee # Reh CAPER wisn the premnt Western Union telegraph. Por several day thon had been a number of telegrams for the provident fran Araey vfficers, and among them | remembor two of three from General McClellan. [ don't remember pow why they did pet come over the military telegraph Lives, Weil ous might I started over to the White Hime Tol dn after emus in Taku the case of Lev, W. J. White, : Fine editor of a Baptist woekiy published Wie int ’ £8 BY Pe En Perse fg EW ke Lan BR ga on ced Bis sory “ ark 4 won a dorype Gvorin plans co He wae seppoacd to be a molate and when thes plasty dud the ater was acid with the estate, Alter the war this alicged mulatio picied up an education and investigated Lis aneveiry. He wes pet much sur to learn that he did pot have a “te of negro bined im his veins Hos wn, SE PEE 52 i was a white mu White was noi long So deciding to cast Bis Jot with the blacks. Ho had al- ways been elas od with them It seemed to be the will of the Almighty hat be : Ee Who Yared | : Hig pa. fo hin pover hen i 150 story: A fow years ? sd boy made _onely railroad stations where travel is ight, hours long and the work done « night. An experience resting of milors, so far as the yarp spinning wnoprned, is ax mild compared fo 8 plegraphers’ social session av milk is 105 hea Viva Phe Coy Herb Hove’ Pe para Cros to Cat EB Credit - The LE peter anil ome of Burrs Freitohdin Brosesss a BY ape 80 proto peti ak the BAR woliwe was su indinn snd Lis father | pre oo eq by Whntter the sped 1s ars Breischie waving the stad and @ripes ower The beads of the 1 bel Bosia as they marched throdeh Frederick, tmnt trath eomnds the state. ment thay Barbara ously displayed the fag after the arrival of the Federal troops, while a younger woman dared the rolels without, Bewover, being fired upon. ; Barbara's maiden name was Harner, and she was born on Dee. & 1746, in Lancaster, Pa. Her furaily moved to Fredorivk, Md, when she was 8 child, and im 1806 she murriel John Casper shopld share the burdens of the pegro | Preitehie. One of ber relatives now liv + bar's shore leave. Séveral koights off © Hw toy were sitting abont a table down ony after hours recently, when the Longaes Began to wag about experi seen Gil Bridles started the ball “was sett one night py mb on the Texnx apd Pacific at a litle station smiled Gordon,’ he mid “There was we hotel of foor rooms @ mile from the elegravh sation and two or thee jmbine about the same distancs off The sgxilay operator had lily rooms over the ation and freighthoose, where sup slvr were mxsived for the con) mines wvoral milton away. It was the lonclions aluew I over struck, but I had to work. visitor. English people will not take | the trouble to pack all their belongings , {into one or two large smd Drunks race, and Be tude up his mind to stick to his old companions He prospered and became as lender After fixing things 1 lay down on 8 weply to wait for the pest freight § pose | domid, for § jumped up with 8 with a telegram that I knew came from Geperal MeClellan. It was for the pros- jdent. wannnzs king, and a ! : hoc ing in Frederick ie suthority for the | follwing statement : | “Barbmra was intensily patriotic, ns adding to t x | of system. | Neither is there any need why they should #0 long as the railway companies twill mecept without demur 12 or 15 + small trunks, hampers, bundles and 4 other miscellanecns packages as the . | baggage entitled to go with one set of | | pailway tickets, and #0 Jong as an Eng- fish cab driver will pile all this staff Lon the top or box seat of hin cab and | parry it and the family attached to it i for ball a crown, Every now and again an Englishman who hak Been in Amerioa writes to The Tirses conoerning the advantages of the cheek systom as it 34 worked on the 1 American railways, but all these Jotters go unheeded. English raiiway MADREErS | have a dread of innovations, especially if the innovation comes from Americas, 1 and the English people, who are accos- | tomed to the serarable for baggage at ., | the railway stations, are quite satisfied . | with the existing system, or rather Tack : Cm the whole, they save little money by it. English railway | companies allow a third class passenger { 86 pounds of personal baggage. and a | first class passenger doable that amount | Any excess is supposed to be paid for, ! but a tip of threepence to a porter will neually sce the whale traveling impedi- ments of & family carviod straight from the cab to the train and insure that no 1 questions as to weight are asked. It is | nsaally the lack of a tip or a hostile | hit from a cabman who is not satisfied _ | with his fare that loads to a call at the | weighing machine on the way from the .¢ | ab fo the baggage van. Under the cx 97 | isting system English people bave al- | _ | ways to watch over their own baggage | mt every change, and sometimes to _ | soramble and straggle for it at the end : people's baggage sx they fight their way ste | into » crowded train. But thin, as} y | have shown, it is a system under which the passenger can nearly always get the «| best of the railway company io the mat- | ter of excess of baggage. and nobeddy gives any hood to ® hould be adopted : known, andl they were admitted day or the front door, where atiother soldier ! from their home to the railway station | gard the outer gate, and I thoughs | telegrams come here addroseed tomo sends sny more of my telegrams over to) from here. Mr. Stanton has enough tel- | coln was mad all the way through, and] displeased with his war sainister, Secs: | “Ty those dave there was al” 21% a guard of soldiers peationed af oe two] avenne gates, as also ag the other Sates, tut messenper bis were generally well night without any goestion, a least to goard was also stationed. There was always an officer about the door, who reoeipted for mlegrame This night, however, I anw Mr, Linciln coming to would personally hand him the tele among the people. He har © vo oo pever attempted fo rise above what be thie man Bb not a prnlntto or a quad. room, for his mized Indian and Cou. has Bo desire © cut loose from the ex. slaves with whom he haw spest the bret yours of his Life. gram, which I did. He sdallod pleasant. | Iv smongh a8 be opetied JE, bot a chan oo suddenly onspe over him. “ ‘Have you the other felugrams?’ bn demanded of me. I replied that I hed, fut the one, though I informed him that I know that there Baud been one or two others that day from General Meo Clellan, 1 #5 “Tat is what be says,’ added the president, ‘and what annoys me ix that 1 have not recoived them.’ “Phen, tursing te the sntry, he gnid : “Beant up to the door for the offi cor in charge and sell Bim that when z they should and mut be delivered to me Tell Kim also,” snl by this time the president was very mad, ‘that if bo Mr. Stanton’s house "li drive him wway mine.’ “Phoogh [ war but a boy,” said Mr. Frederick, ‘*] conld seo that Mr. Lin. that, for the moment of least, he was tary Stanton, snd that be intended ex- actly what he said. The president, then of Lia ease, ami they trent him with great ecnsiderstion. Uscomplaysisgly Be Jeaus his Bife of self secyifios, and his sly olject soems bo be the advascamens of hiv adopted rave. He mmricd ama. tte and subunits to all the laws aud | con which separate te | smcind dleninet wo Paces 18 the sandy Few men simibaly sitoated wonid | have followed White's exumiple Asa role, people of Indien and white parent age ohm to be the social equals of the whites, and if they bwve a Pocabottan strain in their blood they are proud of it, — Chicago Tips Herald, HOW ALLSPICE GROWS. Somethbog Aboot the Peautifil snd Fro grant Phsesto Tree, The pimentc or allspice troe is culti- vated fo the West Jodiow and Jamaica This beantiful tree usually grows to a height of about 30 feet. It bus a straight trunk, much branched above, und oow- ered with 8 very smooth brown bark. Tio Jenves vary in sige and shape, but ars always of a dark, shining green ecior. During the swonths of July and August the tres i in foil bloom, the bleasome sopsisting of very fragrant, mini], white Sowers and confidence of Both laces, bat be bax | believes to be bis divinely ordained | jighe by standing at hex irindow with sphere. It is easy 10 see at a glavee that | (ik fing in her band. Owing to her ad- | vanced age {nearly 98) whe attractid a By 10 ; . great deal of attention, both officers and casian hlodd sapped be isinken (Eat be | | the hand. For thie bonrishe continped : : a © Led, she was pervaded th come in and Many of the white ministers of hie dendrnination know the peculinr facts the rebels wore passing. She was pot Ceepnt of 10 to tie post Whittier, yb, | | Wont Patrick street, on the ent bank of party held Frederick was sory to be rep and lend them hor tamblers or her dip the Confederates, whom she woald iirive, portico with » In éme or two directions the English | Airecting himsel to toe, continued: ‘Boy, tell your folks thas I most haw ‘my telegrams, : want them and never did want them about the place.’ "—Whshington Star | COLORADO HOTEL RULES. Sr A The Gestlvmen Guests Are Prohibited. and that if these soldidrs drive every one of theta away. don’t trees is to be formed, no regmiar sowing next to impossible so propagate the young plants or to raise them from seeds in parts of the country where they are not fond gEawing spontanecusly. Uwnally a pices of land 1s selected wither aloe tow plecitaticn already formed or in & partef the waodlund whem plans When 8 sew plantation of pimento or planting takes place, because it ia | was buried beside her husband in thei { German Reformod shunh yard of Fred- | srick damuge to property of West Patrick street, and Barbara's house was con- start at fooling a cold, wet nese intel my face. There was 8 hig New- fowndiand dog wagging bis tail as mer sly as a burmaw cote throagh soft woot. Well, that dog ran first the fighted lantern on the door, then back wo nie, and then pretiy soon I began to hink something was wrong. Up pot, and be lod nie all throogh the fevight- hotise, up to the operator's rooms and sack to the flies; then calmly went 10 dep with ano eyes open and ove ear priviced up I waited for the train, but Sefore I beard it be began fo bark, “The next night the same perfonm- anne. Well, after that 1 osed to goto slang, aud for the week [ was there | and in September, 186%, when the Tnion soldiers drove the prbels dat of Frederick, Barbara manifested ber de. privates breaking ranks to shake Bert by by thie windaw, votil, beroening exhanet- ret. Earlier ro the day » yoonges wo man had waved a small Union flag {roan wn house in the sane street while fired uten, Bowyer “ly the varitment following onthe potent of the rola the wo inchdetits Because blended together, and a resfidont of she town, writivg Ms E DEN. Routhas rid wal thet as one fre sent hwersh, feehug that she could aot do jstice 16 the theme, wre an a wah fond of sleep af night, so he conid play poker all dey. I pever told on him, bof that was » well trained dog. “That's no experience,” ssid Billy Sairshail. “There was only half a thrill in that. Why, in 1888, during the blis gard. I was bolding down a» night job in Now Jersey. It was the dreariest spit that a raiiroed offirial conld pick eitaated on 001 for a sation. It was eo quiet in the daytime that you could boar the sun light ghiot apd ot night the shadows fall It was snowing when I went on wt might, and all trains wers blocked, and by morning I was almost buried. My lunch was jong ago gone, and felt Hie grinding my teeth into some break- There during hot sumiwer days they fant. Dinner time came and went, sap wean Tounge in the shade of Bariara’s| Per hour pumed, and uo nilef arrived stoop. It it were the briys in blue, she || (HEC S60 Jena penis. and rubber: i Ly 3 ACTIN yd § en down ] 3 Tr bookkeeper. Re Wl Yury Eracic Wont oc 4 I palied in my belt and pearly cut my- re en thane Ci fall in two, but the old hunger Was per and give then: Blscuite, bat mt #01, ur the mame. So T tried to sleeps but there Was no sleep in me with thet gnawing af my stomach “All at ence 1 saw three muskets scene up throagh a bole in the floor [ made for them with a poker, killed stpetchiing poet’ lioetse to the limit penmed the welll known verse entitled ‘Barbars Fromchie,’ “Ruarbaves ane Was Carrell creck. Dizsotly opposite wan the pown suing, wise waters still bubble up se refrochingly as they did through ail the years of our bitter strife. Whichever resented by ite soldiers at that ming from ber premises or order from bee majestic motion of bew, enne, ber great age protecting her from “"Rarbara died en Due 18, 1843, at the age of 96 yonrs and 15 days She In 1868 a flood did a great deal of op 0 ol) of that cooking res wae just great joy, smi Fm no chink either. deg kept watch. Yon wee, the repula€ST panies are now following the Prove Doing Lets «fF Things demned and tom dows to widen Cirroll It jam tickied mo vo that I fell asleep Ae . i pers ' . small begqueits. 0 reached foor thingy in the © crazy quilt’ kept there, for English people would rohants a hot companion | “Xam. _ | ple of the American railway compapiok | | trade and the government department | a | which has the oversight of railways .| ducing Jong ears for long distance travel. | | They have not boldly adopted the Amer brought with him a copy of some of the A gentleman of Cartolton, who has! vy peturped from the west, has! roles be fomnd posted ik » hotel dining The bote] was the Rustiers’ Rost, at Little Caynes Creek, Colo. The “rales jean car. The pattern of car pow being brought into use is a compromise be. tween the American cnr wud the Eng- | lish compartment onrringn. The com- .| partment is retained, but each compari 4 ment is connected with a corridor which | rons pot down tha middie, but along | one mide of the car. This has given the | | name of eurridor train to the train oade ry | up of earriages hail after this fashioy. itl On some of the trains all the ear ringes sre ochnected with vestibules if like these en American railways. On 1 other traing there are two or throo cor H ridarears, while the rest of the carriages | are of the old fashicoed style It in 41 characteristic of the English prope that | there is sildom apy scramble for places 1 in the new ears, Prople seem to like Ai the old compartments better, a fact *! upon which the railway companies do 1 pot fail to lay stress when, alter sine _ontrage in a truly, the companies are | prossod by the biard of trade to make the use of corridor care more general. | | The eorridor tesins are privcipally in nes between London apd Scetlwnd. On | pocres of the long distance runs in Eog- land all the carmiages wee still of the trains is typical of ibe Eoglish char acter. Newsboys sre pot carried on ¥ them. The English railway new sboy is still kept solely to the platforms at the Cpaibwary stations, And be is Dkely to be vote it » Buisance too great to be borne | to be pestered to buy boc ks and confec- | 1 tionery they do nos wast. The newstoy who travels with the train bas Tew | friends among Englishmen who haw been in Ameriea. Peonle grumble at! the prices charged by the monopolist { who contral ®ll the railway news sud pot sunt the books thoy sre vending. in use on the Northeastern railway. fashion, and so far a torily, it will soon : general. —London Letter. guest who sap’t throw the rope wil) be panies apprmlage, already ails in this evuntry. But itis for the guidance of gents’ follow “All gente with shooting frous of other weapons ust check them before x & éntering the diving room. Waiters ase too scares to be killed, “Cionis are reguested pot to attract waiters’ bttention by throwing things, ot them. This is no dent mate seylony | “Hewen kinds of pio are given with] every dinner. ¢ oP aluaciothe see changed eviy Boe a food i# all of he best nuality. | Our milk ia pure, eggs pow laid, andy the butter speaks for twill ¢ “Guests tipping waiters most pay. funeral Benelits in ease one should wie freon heart dimesse, ! “Neo gore than six ergs will be given each at a sitting, Any goon found wy ing to wirk off shells an a neighbor will be fred faim the Sabin i “ Pargim found riveted together aan be opener] with a chisel supplied Sy 8 waiter. The gee bf dyramits ix seietly forbidden. | “Pennies aver articles of food must, te sorthal oxide, ! *Tion’t lass the waiters, berause the | at a disadvantagn, ; “Gets ean takeoff their costa if they! want ta, hot they mmd Keep on Gaoik | weuts media frinsone Sul AANA LSI wi to Geo : mist says that! Crate show ing sigs of degeneration or withe ing away. Jt is proved that the bose, im) the coups : © dee Haak gol tug i dropped four tors and now travels ol sue, andl some think that man's pedal | extremities are bonnd to follow a sim {har line of evolution. In the bourse itis | Eman in yuus exh 16 trove wen KroWwing jo 8 native state The chosen pens of lund bs tien clenred of al} word exrops these fess, and the felled timber is allowed 10 remain on bo the ground for the parposs of protecting | the very young posto planta At the snd of two years the land 8 wae my pleasare afew yam since (o sea, thoroughly clonred, and only the most jefr stansiing The plants come 0 ma tority in about sven Soak Io faeorable seamns the plomento org is enoroscnk 8 single tree often yielding 8 hundivd or mom pounds of the dried | spice. The berries aye picked whiis grovn, eoavse Uf left on the tree until ripe they hose their peugent taste amd are valualiss. The green baries are ax posed Withe sun for 8 week or en Says, when they lose thelr green color aud torn a reddish brown, When perfectly dry, theiy are pat in bags std cusks for | exportation T hie imbor and the fasta of the plorato | Beprics are thope hit wo regi Bie a oa Binsntion of those of cinnamon, BULIBOE apd eioven: Hepes the familiar DAR valinpite. —=Ehiladeiphia Time Xi} Tory Well For Wolseley" Any complamis?! sekod the onderly officer of sere wen who were abot to begin tar dinner in a certain barrack Poa, IY eR, FAW revit Si By vas an 1 wish to repos nn,” he doctor was sent for to inspect the Leen =o yom think this ment dant gt for) postion to eat?’ sad he | Ax me to Tell you that greater mad | h Dr tion wo Faster 3 {Wal . Bacharias as SEE than ux w La have aston Even Lond maiidir in elie, wan't adie AY i th wicas of i ls, dud be? cE WARY sahd our of several centuries, has ern ondimd the surgeon potorted the man, wit! for Waolwiey, sats “Ha wish, was ali very : a bedstead owuid by birin an siphol- | vigorons plmesto ees aud plants are | (hat memorably occasion by Barbara's patne niece values a Mune china fle | General Washington whin he ‘Visited instantly exclaivaed a tie Sable. : “Phe beef an bacon in this rare Trish tush ain't fir the jikes of ws 0 | Ww. Jwuler, our preseut nif Furs after the war bo was ser 48 i y Criss aud made many a hearty sie fines, "Ayes, angsenvd the doctor [por who anticipated 8 good tune when : i pEnderly, ayernice ro | Pavior SOF Buar.y 50 vegas, 1 hanhed her {the cup and the read, | paunian service she always partook, as ig : fad been ber Bfeloup habit stabdibg, | and afterward wos sane to glia bands | comdially with her pastor” —Boston often pot to the eredit of the manopo- One of the bewest ianovations from | America in the Exglish railway service |. ba poncerns mileage hooks Thess are now Dowd They are being tried in a tentative are issued ouly to] “1 ture arequite considerable, and the eon- ditiots prescribed by the company are easy. If the experiment works satisfac be extended to third | passengers on the Northeastern, | and, once well established on one large trunk line, the system will socn become “1 hand, but power make themselves 8 op oven ton Boies DYE WOny pPaaseRgers who do : i A AT SE Pleasant Flas fo Liew, : fying tae pole, RR ASA un ABA | splendor of ba clothing Un sia | worth of dizi ys EM TA i % i fields pe Cr ERus } | the middle digit which has survived as Jists that their pewsboys are always at | she fiteest. Ia moan it will be the first A readent of Moscow or St Peters. rg cannot receive the vist of a friend © penalise many hours without peti LO ions he is sd 0 havg wan 1, ip Gi : : | gravelors, ofton sell as pennine manasy wheat’ grains taken Gua their owa tell yea Yon see, wiF, rere Cries I Answers ean, GNIS i CAN ATT irks Sorry to Disappoint. i After the prspeetive tenant had told | i all that she sxpoeted © get 11a $10 that | the agent sadly shook Dis bead. 3 Bs Post. Taken on a Jamp. Ho—Dien't you think people are very The Arabs, suxious to impose upon silly in the beneymoon? Shpemtls, this is sudden, but I es Letter after our DOBEY TOG, —— Putri Free Press. breed paeat wonhd he fresh au gi 4 thar : it's a hat Sime since 1hat Herald. bv, at it can't be exploits [ $0 keep goesd all thes yours" — London | | Oh, thank you sepueh! Whalishould | § have done without yal . ¢‘Tenderly. } May L, Eleanor? Xl Po “Even if we were permitted to sublet | Sclizsan 1 suitan of Turkey, Was the earth,’’ be said, “we worliin't dare | in styled the Xan doent on asount of the ber ome teninut have it ail md LB ROGET : wod only wake np when be wis so | that the oder nearly ehoked mn The sSowplow came soon, hrwever, and wien § got Slled up again I was sort of gind I hadn't put down thes ob muskrat afterall Hemight not Hmwe agrosd with me." New York San. seek. The carpenter who rumwl the hoose made canes of they balustrade and | wid them. One was and to General Grant sx a souvenir. “After Barbara's death there was » sale of a portion of her farpiture, and it Weer . - i. i ne Sw Spe severely The geutio srt of smiling is the Intest plain and simpin, § stein have juss | ting Witieh seionee has be dling i CNA SY ik» handred times without noticing 8 ooo roving buck to its very beginning had my attention not buen called 10 8 og Suaing out with something like by the storekeeper, whi told me be had pt pe how oo a. Swing his purchased it from a Frederick dealer oo. po dors the face of primeval man. agen @ sworn affidavit as to its gene | ae Baward Cuyer in & recent Too {eness. The bed on which she died iB pare fu Paris efusre the Bodiete d" ARs new owned and weed By a great-great ganiogte, stated that oor smiles, how pephow, Her didebioasd is the property ver winning to outward soning, am of another nephew. an Lyinply meeonds of oar very remote ane “The historie silk fin is in the po | oor wifivhvens, groediness and pag- session of the niece Who stood upen |. ..ee The passicn that dominated all others in primitive man wes the desire for fixe. Tho annals of those days Ware huge and fierce, and the implements of hunting few and crude The naked hunter, therefore, was foroed to goeft- times with an empty stomach, bus when he made a kill be gorged hinseif with meat. The anticipation of the ap- prosctung satisfaction of his hunger pated him to open his mooth and show fis teeth, partly through pleasure snd partly thremgh an instinctive pulse fo get himself in readiness for the ume wa Prater ad inediate tow ing sway of his food, he elves spares of Fredoeriok Sith dius Tess § Green walled ly the hill of Maryland. | Be Sontorson grew cgingularly eovugh, the churches he suumsd by other pleasurable thing, are all grouped together WiUlin 8 und then came the sound of sudible stone's throw of emeh other. Barbara luaghten eras a member of the German Reflmmed, | The gracefal smile of the hostess A 16W yharefore, us sie receives her guests ie 4 intwerriewsd penny an inherited expression of satis mbhmivers of \Whittier's exgui- Hfgenon durived from a savage progen- wide while the latter Medd is in her hand; also mmong ber priceless freasuris this pot, which was the property of Barbas, spd from which coffes was served Frederick in 1191 Upon that oceasim Washington spent thy night all Mis RKimbal's hotel, where the City hotel now stands, and Barbara Froditwchie brought her Liverpool china wi grace “Whitt painted truthfully when he saad: by seanie f wr Barbara Frelwhie's he bad people to dinpef or for dinner. Again, the open smile of more open pleasure i simply asurvival of the gap ing meuth with which the semisimisn prepared to tackle roast grandmother, —- New York Journal kin At cur com Pr A Producer. SAE “My misguided friend,” ssid the fat The Moderu Way, "man with the poffs under his eyes, “1 She (as he fmshes mending ber tre) will sdunt that 1 am a capitalist. That part of your assertion can yo anchal jenged. But when you say that I am not a producer you are wrong, | have beeqr backing a COWMIC Opera company for two months’ —indisnapolis Jour nul Ho Don’t mention it 1 wish I conld always carry the repair kit for yoa, And two hiovelvs amtinued to lean aguinst the grassy bike New York Times reste: in It In the frst chapter of Dickens’ Ia 1873 Yesso, Japan, suffered from Lo Bleak House," whihh was published emir +e (ironies ein a fire which destropidd 10.060 bonses in 1853 the phrase is to be found, and is iociosed in quotation warks, too, ae {rliows, “Every chancellor was ‘in it' ifr somebody or other when be was spuneel aorip and left over 1,000,000 pasans home fos The first publiv schools were opened in 16543 in Mossachoseits at the bar. Boston hi ;
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers