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w^mm. it '^' AtBEBT 0. STUBOIS A CO., Fabliahe^^ _L HE INI AZARETH AN INDEPENDEITT FAMILY NEWSPAPER, DEVOTED TO J[.ITERATnRE, LOCAL AND OENERAL INTELLIOENOE. $1.00 PER YEAB, uSgfS^ Vol. I. TT NAZABETH, PAo, FHIDAY MORNIKiJ, JUNE 3,1892. NOo 27. Fiaaoe receives about tSO,000,000 ierery |«ar from the monopolies ixm- troUad by her Oorernment. { IMmsI journala aay that tbe young wooaea of to-day aro far better dereloped phyaieslly than tbe young women of 100, or eren flfty, years ago. Dr. Green's farorite illustration oi roatoess of the Westera Union Tele- aystem, of wbioh he b Preaident, say that ib wires wonld make a qoadtaple line to the moon. I Two hundred and fifty dollara hare baaa ofhred by tha Psace and Arbibn- tioa Aaaocbtion aa a prise for the beat asodel chapter 0(i peace and war, auit- ihi* to be incorporated in elementary Queenabndera aak where a market b to be fouad for the fat bullocks coming Off tbeir ridi poaturas in tena of thon¬ aands. , . Small-aiaed and medium built men eon* Stitute two-thirda of the Fifty-second Oongreaa, it b asserted by aome one who has made a patient inrestigation. JANET LEE -OB- tlie statement la made that Iiondon oontalna 8000 more doctora than thc whole of Irebnd.'' Thla prorea, for one thing, commenta the New Tork World, that the people of Ireland, for the moai part, oannot afford the luxury of getting tick. The Shoe and Leather Iteporter pro¬ pounds thb poser: "We should like tt art: tbe 900 re^'etarUnt who liiet in Nen Tatk what tbey would do for abot ieatfasr if their peculiar fad was generalli praottoed." The, daya of nataral gas are num¬ bered, announces the Boaton Oultirator. The aupply waa greateat two ye ara ago, and though new diacoreries bare been mode ainee, aome eren of thew hare failed wMbio that tim*. It mty bs uaed for a awhile far iliumtostiuK i>ur, bat" pow( ' flW yta^^a^tttXtlifT ^imi thai be has aa eleetric rood orer which can maf be run at the rate of two milei a aOauta haseniy to demonatrota the feasi- liil% ttf hb acheme, obserrei the Sai PiSPSiaiiu Ohronlcle, in order to gather fortune What tbe trareling public now b apeed, and the man who aaaiUUte dbtanoe may commaad an fortune. - Sereral Anatralbn ranchmen, or pos- toralbb, hare incomes ranging from $50,000 to ISOO.OOO per annum. One man, wbo owns nearly thirty stations oi riches in Victoria, Queensland and New South Wales, had a net profit of 9910, ¦ 000 in 1890. In the Shadow of the y u:OaU0W8a BT DAVID LOWlif. Among the rarlous religious bo Jiaa be¬ longing to the Erangelical Confession the greatest increase hss taken place, ac¬ cording to the Ohioago Herald, in tbe Presbyterian, Methodist and Quaker communities. These are from three \o three and a half times atronger than in 1871. "It haa been eatimated," aaya the Trop- a Florida, "tbat there b in that SUte 10,000,000 toaa of moaa hanging on tteea. This, wibm gathered aad cnred, b worth Mr aMts..pirpound at our doom. U it b wenh oae eent a pound it will amoiwt to the enormoaa ium of 17,000,000. -.^ ^^'Oslaael Jules Berton recently ¦.«- '.^¦arlrail to a San Franclaeo leporter: \|fi*fTou cnltirate the orange here for the ' ^'llait oaly. In France the bitter or wild ' .'Tl PpMp^ b cultirated ezteuaireiy for lb , ~^j|iBaAial mla. From the flowers neroli ^^i^aktamed. Thia b tbe base of oloi^ae aad otber psrfumos. From t|^e learea it Matilled 'petit grain,' whicii b uaed tr adulletate the neroli." Ibt ^f. Boston Transcript miket the aaiertlon that "an insect as daggeroaii aa that which b generated in pafkealBtain raw aujar. It b called aeaiaa aaechari, and b lesi than a bua¬ dredtb of an laeh loag._ gmM as it ia, it b copaMe etXtfU"! miaehief in the bn. tiody. It b nerer found in reflned rt becanae it cannot paw throu jh the ll Alter, and if it could it would ¦pd ae abrojen oi whieh to lire. Bo dl^ aataat »w aagar or laW ipotk." naa raoeatatSgasine article on "Ves- (table Dist," the autlior makea theaUte- msat tbat there is an idea tbat cancer b coased by eating tainted meat—tha* is, ahimola brought a distance and being io an ezhausted and almoat dying coaditioa before t^tey ore killed. The writer ol the paper alao aiaerts thst Tagetarbot,ai a rub,tiare unusually clear and tieautilul oomplexions, which claim,if it oould bs aubatantbted,wonld probably hare more influesce, at leaat with women, than the flrat atatement. Dread ol dlaeaae does not seem to babnce detire for a clesi aUa. It ia aUted in ooe of the Swediah nawapapera, aa a coapariaoa between Ameritam and 'Kuropean busiaess aaathoda, ttat a looomoUre for one of niilwaya «f Swedea was needed in a hurry. It waa foaad that in Bagland or Ssreden at bsat a year would be required for the ailing of the order. It was J^arefore Contracted for with the Bild- iria locomotire ah>ps, of Philadelphia, 'ViMre it could be had ia two moatha aad a half at aooat of tSBiO, dellrarad, a eoiiaideral>b reduction upon tbe ¦aropean price. It b not that Ameriean teeooaotire worlm employ more men or for longer hours as a rule, the Chicago Oraphie (zpbins,bat the moit im;)rared oaetboda and mooaioery obtain,aad there b eloeer application during working bawo, and more iuteliigaat labar, erea in thoee portions of tba work cbiiel oa "anakUbd." Bangor (Me.) flahermen who catch big Mimsn and aend them to New York are aurpriaed and rather annoyed to hare tbe fish referred to as "Kennebec salmon." New Yorkers may not know it, but there b no each thing aa a Kennebec aalmon. Salmon will not go near tbe Kennebec, bnt they thrire in the Penobaoot; whioh b to the Kennebec oa a atream compared to a puddle. A oourae of inatruction in out door ^omea waa opened for teachers in Bsrlln last September. Thb, declares the New York Bun, b an omen of a better time ooming for young people in Oermany, where the more or lem complete absenoo of outdoor gamea for young and old b a sad feature in the life of the peopio. "Hie Emperor b enthasasUealiy in faror o( a change in thli dl boll bimaeU Priaee Henry Potadam. It b a comfostaUa tfeaery, wUoh, to tha Ohieago Newa, appeara te ba without aubatantial fouadatieu, that in thb oouatry there b a pacniiar tendency aaaklBg agalaat tbe perpetuation of great family fortuaea. It b the eoounon aayiag that yesterday^ millionaire b to-d^'s pauper. Yet tbe reslly great eolatea ia America are held together not leis ten¬ aciously than tboae of Bagland. The Aatora, Vanderbiib,Rhioebnderi,3cher. merhomo, Oeeleta and Belmonts hare handed down their fortunea from fatber to aon, and there b no reaton for be- liering-ibat hereafter a different policy will ba pvriued. Tbe preaeat repre- aaatotiraa bf tiiaae opubnt bouws will troiMmlt thair great properties intact to their heies, aud these in turn, with hero and tlwre aa ezoeptioo, will doubtleaa lire withia their incomes and bequeath the augmaaied prinoipb to their chil¬ dren. CBAPTKR XT|—ContlaaML In that eaae, then, 1 aak permissioa to apeak in my own beJi/Uf.* Janat Lea lifUd her head proudly. All ayea were tutted upon her. Tha ann'a rays stresming in throagh iki window bathed her in g61den light. Ber baanti- ful head—thare Was no shsplier head in New England—was ophsld with tha pride of the Leea. her clear-ont faatnrea im- preaaed all thers witb a aaDae of her beaaty, while her oompianra and courage appealed to the aympathy of all aronnd her. Men and women aaaad at bar in wonder, marreling at her aelf-poaaes- sion. 'Sinoe my fsther'a apprentioe ia the only witneaa uainat ma, and appeara aa my aooueer, l crare the priYllags of qaeationing him." QoTamor Danforth whiapered with hb aaaooiatea. "There b no objeotion.* Janat aeemed to gftow in alatnte aa aha turned lo her fathar'a appieDtioe, whoae eonntananott betrayed a oertarbed opirih •Eara Easty, if all who go to Will's HUl an in leagne witb the eril one; why may I not Seenee yon of being in leagne with tha aril ona?"^ "I een prore by Ann here I followed yon to aee what yoa did with the oake and mllk." 'How do yon kaow it ta wroag to go te Will'a Hill? Did yon erar aee the erU aae, aa witcb, thare?> Bwa Baaly beoitaUd and twice choked flawa Oe ewetUag lahb Itawt bafora be aasweaad. *l*^ly..'€U>«4aiiMFVara she eaw the erll eae en a lfea£iy.*- .. 'Withhorna and fleaiii^r'ajiavltttad Janat, ironbally. ^ - "She aaw tha homa," aaid Ezra, dog¬ gedly. ^^ 'And a barbed tail—did ahe not aay 'twaa Uke the fluke of an aDohorr" "Yea; 'twaa like a fluke, she said, and ae terrible she fell in a faint." "And juat then her sister, Ann Bigger, eame np behind mv fatker'a cott. That waa the aril one her sister Folly saw." Oae of the macistrates imiled, and soma of tbe peopls held down theb beads te oonoeal their merrimanL 'Has not Ann Bigsar yonr promise to marry herf" Jaoet asked, abruptly, as if it waa a matter of eonrae. * Tb fobel" Ann eiclaimed. *I nerer Rot hb promiae,* wherapon Depnty Dan. forth oonrhed, and the woman pat thsb hsndkerchfefs to their faces. "Than 'twaa yon whe aaked hk. Earo— waa th»t tbe way of it?* "Mnat f anawer herf* aaid Ibe appreo- ties, ahifting hia feet, and erading »be glances of tbe oarions crowd. "It ia not necessary," Janet eontinned. briskly. " Why, ail bar*' heard yoa oall hn Ann Bif oer to bear yon ent." my affairs and Ann Bigger's then after disgradteg the naftie of Loe. Much waa aaid about the pride of tha Lees; as if than waa none like tha Leaa. John Lee wished Martin had nerer been born. Martia said he hsd done no wrong, and it would be more like the pride of the Leas if hia brother John would take ETs nart, and not join with othen against aim. Then John flew into a towering passion and bade Martin itegontl. last ba ahould Bttmnder bim to the sheriff. Then Miatnaa Lee and Janet interfered, and that made maater worse. He said he wished Martin Lee were dead, and for his part tha aooner he woa out of the way the better. Than Janet Xee. who b jorandsr tban her father, aa all know, aald H Iwite tma that Martin killed tbe Manhal's hone and aheep by entting their throata in that omal manner, aha ooald aee him well ont of the way; that it would be a bliatariDg disgrace—his preeenoe in Sa¬ lem. But it would nerer do to lat him hMg." When Ann ended, Janet aaid, in aa andible roice: "Hearen'a will be donel We an gnatly wranged by thia moUoiona eceatnreT' Aa for John aad Dorothea, they atared at Aan in amazamant. They wan ao damfonnded that neither oonld apeak. The mMdatntea consulted again, and Depnty Danforth apoke in aolemn tonee: Wanet Lee, the erldenea ia deemed anfliobnt to igttlty the charga of ^witch- eraft." Then he panaed, aa a mnrmnr rose, for many than wen aUrpriaed at the decision of the magiatntaa, aad did not hesitate to expreaa thair wonder. "Bnt," he continued, "then ia anothar and mon aeriona eharge pnparad againat you.* Ha apoke to tha raagiatrate on lib left, and the mogiatrate, lookinff at a paper ho held in hb nand, addreaaed Janet Lee: "Janet Lee, although diligent aeareh haa been mode, Martin Lea b nowhere to be found. Ann Biggar awaara John Lee wiahed him dead, and you agned, bnt aaid it wonid' nerar do to lat him hangt Dorothea Lea admlta tbe brothera anamled; that they parted in anger. Jaaet Lee haa been fonnd on Will'a Bill at night, when all othera aroid it. All warrant the belief tiiat Mar- oat of the way by 'la bronght np henf" manded wnthfaij; to ba apprentioe de- Dnring the Janet, Dorothea, and John I<ee loSfId at the magUtratea with paling faeea. When tha Isst word was uttered, Dorothea Lee amased all present by tbrowing all near- bar aside, and confronting the magia- tratea, aa sha oried, in a roioa thai waa heard by thess ontside: . "Do not hold Janatl -'Tb I who am the gnilty oae! 'Tis I who was on Will's Hill? Janet ia aa innocant aa any of yoo who ait in jadgment on heri I will pro- elalm it with my dying braathi It waa I who want to Will'a Hill, add tt rrmafliom my neck, not Jcnet'a, that Isra Eaaty plucked the handkarohbf I" Dorotbea'a arowal amarod all who heard her, bnt it fall with emshing eSeot on ber hnsband, who rose, staggorad like ana dmnk, then putting forth a hand, as If reaehing for aoinethTng to ataody him¬ self, aank oaok upon hb seat, and bowed hb he id npon hb hands. Again tna mafilatratae conanlted, amid the oonfuaion and mnrmars thbt ensued, ead oaea men the roioe of the magiatrata aeesamnded ailenoe. ai id. The eolbpae of the Paaami Caaal, the gigantic aobeme of Ds Lessepi to coa aeot the tsro oceans, seemi near at haad. Ita - aeorwheiming financial troubles an fretty ttwroughly well known the eiriUaed world orer, and now thsy biro i>een supplemanted by a aerioua diipute between the canal compaay and ths Oolombiaa OoreramenL The cooapany, la orderJo prarent merohaoU using ib -aliaaal to earry tbeb lu-nber aad fraduee fc> tho ooait, placed a obsia The Colombian Ojreramant, sing thb an iaterfsrence witl its in- 4astrial aSairs, ordered tha ohiia'a ra. amaral. Thereupon the osoa^ny j^laeel tiie ob^n acroai the oaaal ttagll. ' The polombbn Qorerameat, it b aaid, b now jMonaiy oonaidsring whether it wilt not 'liivoka tlte conctbsion t«^(tha eoaiiany on tbe ground that the bt^yr has riolated tlM tarma of iU eontrast ky aellhi^ part wfitsB^^aUaaryu What the aatoome of tlM aaatteir will ba ean only be aurmiaed, I ooaess liil^M rerokad otxfttl^m that the Tbe DalMt Free Press naaarki: "Tbe tiaigaiag fcaqnency of sudden death has introduced a new daagjer into tbe proaoeulion of aereral' bnnches of tbe world'a baaioeat. A few yean ago the death at hb pott nf >ahe wheelman of a Brooklya ferryboat compelled the oompaniaa, sa a aamsara of precaution, to change their regdUtiona ao that the; pilot houae ahould aarer ba left in charge of a single aoan. Aaiaiilar casualty in the ease cfsa eagia^ onone^of the Hudaon Rirer ferriea it Ukely to reault in the employment of duplicate engineen on all aucb boata in the future. The riak b too great to b^ taken. In ths eoae referred la the anitbaaar waa kilted by accident, aad them baiag no one to anawer tbe pilot'a aigasb the boat atruek tbe wharf with great foree, injuring aereral paaaengera. Beeh aecidenta an uncommon, but tbe cbaaoe of one oocur- tag, or of tlM: OBgiaeei'a dying from apopbzy or heart fallun bao great that it raoUy b not aa^ to nn with a aiagie engineer. There, an other aituatiuas where the rbk b squally great; snd the demand of the aga b that ht aaob aitua- tions tbs pubUs Ihall be, proleeted by the employmeat ft an eztr^ bawt^ ^ I ..... tu. —-usyiiiw '.' BlasMait Maai»s^ \,^l^;,', Tbe method At- blaatiag stMlVI' If .ximmon blaatitt|^ powder b te Van a ImIo into the atiUlip with sa aMS* two Iaebas ia difaetiir. Thb helM b efatirged ia tbe naoal way aad tampetf sritk iand, baring apace for aa iron aorsav baahig a hob through it lor tba fbaa, to be wnwed down ag ths '-"ffiig Tha. charge breaka nf Utg atupfsJaMl Ihs icnw b ready fot ua Jlgala. ^Oaeaetaw .arill last for yearn. It n saaity\faa^4 af¬ ter tha Mast, geaerallji iu tbe Wld ia tbe pott af tbe stump that b sptil aiMi.-V*w Tork Tlmea. ,- bean foinad lln M- ^^U^patobedloKcgbnd >a«>tly,>«bblbh s _ le aiBost eampoann and aaid: ' "Arthnr Prootor haa naked ma te aaarry him, and I here giraa asy promiae.* Then, addrscainig her fathar'a appnatloa aaain: "Did yen net aay to Aan than waa noth¬ ing short of daath yon would not riak to pleaaa hert* "la it fab Ann'a affain and miaa abonld ba made pnbllef * whined the ap- peentioe. "la it fab or manly to make my af¬ fain pnblie—yon who betny y^;ir maa¬ ter?" The peopb now pricked ap theb ean aa Janat'a roiee roaa. Bbe tnmed toDe npty Ooraraor* Danforth direotly, pointing te Esn Eaaty, continued: "Thia man ia nngmtefnl to my father. In his pitiful oowaidlea and ignonnee ha atlribniaa motiraa to me aneh aa animate enaturse Iika himself. If thb poor wntoh. Who dons not look ma in the fOoe, be not nm aeouaer, than ao mneb oaon b ha to bf pitied, tot he mnat ba the tool of onot hel! I am ae innoeent of the charge brought agalnat ma aa anyone hero. 'Twonld be ae fair for ma to Charga thia poor wretch aa for him lo toatify against me. And whan yoa listen to a tale of thia sort yon inrlts all who hare a grndgs againat anothar to peiian them- aalrso, as thb msnhasperinred hiasaelf. Wen I on the aeafPeld J would aay ao leaa. I will say to iht end that maliee ia a* tiia bottom of thla matter, and I will aoaert my innoeenoe." Wbaa Janet Lee ended her apeeeb with auppreaaed paaalon tha Ibtenen looked at ooeh other. It waa plain that all wen .farorably impnaaed. The jndgaa oon- anltad, and commanded John Lee to be awom. I'John Lee," aaid Ooremor Danforth In a mannor that indbated indcoiaion, ^yon hare a brothar namod Martin?" John Lee bowed. . "^Do yon luww when yonr brother ia aowf •I do net." "Whan did yon sae him last?' *It will be two weelu to-morrow.* "Let Dorothea Lee he a wom." Wben Mistroas Lee arose all tha women in the romn dnw a long bnath. All pnsent knew her to bs| a woman abore mproich, sal one whose kindneaa waa prorerbioL "Dorothea Lee, when did yon laat aoe yonr hnsband's brotbar, Martin Lea?" Dorotbea'a Upa morad. Bhe tried te speak. Suddenly thoae naar her aprang to har aid, but too late, fer Dorothea Lee dropped Ibap upon the floor. Then waa a oommotion, aome aliondag for air, otiieri oailing for liquor or water, in the mi<l-t of which Dorottiaa roaa, and looked about in a daaed meaner like one waking from a sleep. Deputy Danforth spoke to tbe msgistrate on hb ^ft, who nsumed tbe examination. -< "Your husband aaya tt ia two weeka ainoe he aaw; h'a brother Martin. Did yon oee him tbea?* Darothea bowed. "What paiaed betwaen them? Tbey hod l-ome angry worda?" Again Doiotbea inclined bar head. "Yonr huaboud taxed his brother with gnit follrt' "HedW." "When Martin Lee walked aWay, did not John Lea aay be wiahed MaHin had not been born to bring diagraoe on the name of Lee, and did ha not hope never to aee hi< faoa a^^n?' Again. Dorothea strora to spaak, sad again her tongne rafuaed to obey her. "Ofloer," said the magistnta, "let Biggar be avon." Ana atrpped forward briskly. Bea umjSpe^gmtmtvtmtbmoihat mtk- w Aaa lo miaa anythtag ' aaid Janat, qaioUy, voa a langh. n haord, Ann." > fna aad nnoeaaata i'SmSC __ _ of witoh- and mnrder. Long beforS he eonolnded, Dorothea Lea fainted dead awar. Than confusion Migned in tbsr old Maeting Honae. tmkPTMg^ xvn. oaiSEi.a MUPB asp mpun joa The anthoritiaa immedUately Si^^*^ to WlU'a Hill, when Martin Lee hod hid himaalf. Bnt then waa no sign ot ths aailor, nor waathen any OTidenoe that any ona hod been tiiare. ^ben tha offleera reported thU, mmon. of oU kinds wan eircnlated.-^ Fint, it was said that although ne sign of Martin Lee waa found, a hole was thera large enongh to bary adozen in. Janet I^ee and her mother, after making way with Martbi Lee, bad oaUed in tha Witehea' aid,and had bnriad him ao deep he nerer oonld be ftrapd till Jadgment Seeond, U waaaaidMoriin waa, like hia abter-in-law and nboa, in league with the deril, and had been eanght by tba heel by the eril one snd dragfod down into the oatth, and thua waa in hall then, wben all witobN and their (omilian wara aora to BO. Third, tha hole was a deeeption. It was freshly made, as all oonld see, and Mar¬ tin woi aSOr at hand, snd ooneoated him- telt in it, bnt whoerer put a foot near it slipped and fall into it, and waa in danger of beingdng^ into tlia boweb of tne earth. The offloen, knowing thla, and faartng for theb liraa, nportad no ona waa in aight. Tha manner in wbioh the devil flgarad in all theae atorba demonatrated tba hold that faor of tha aril ona aad on all the people of Salem. Tnen wen aenaible maai and women who waro amaood at these stories, bnt they wen discreet. Thsy knew that to attempt to set the pnblie rlabt would but subject tCem tb snsploion. Tbtf wisely kept tbeir own ooansel, and were thns undisturbed at tbeir own flrasides, wbere- os, hsd'tbey arpwed boldly what thay af¬ terwards averred, they might hare eared human liraa, and laaaened the period of the an iteat folly anr known ui Ameri¬ oan niatory. Whan waa MaHin Lee? It he waa mnrdand, wliera waa he baried? the offl- een of the law asked. And if he wen alire, why did ha not mske himaelf known? If ha were alive, yet did not ahow him¬ aelf, and aave hb nlailree from death oa the scaffold, wbat was hia orime hefbn he killed John Winalow'a bona aad aheep? Tbeae were the qaaations ths aathori- tba propounded, and whioh remained an- anawend. Now, howarar, a new witneaa appeand. Thb waa Indian Joe, who nlated with great minuteneaa of detail bow he wit¬ neaaed Martin Lea ent the hone and lamb'a throat Onaationed why ha had net mada the mth biown at onoe, Joe anawared be atSod-W awe of the cruel man. He feand that tbs man who did tbeae thinga would kill him. He alao faarad, in oaaa ' ao atroogar ooold be found, tha orime wonld be him. So now all Salem knew that Martin Lae waa a great monater, and had always been a monster, and was well eut of the wag. And beeauae his own paopb hod mada awoy with him, tt ven wall to hang thesa all tegethai. Whea tha geaaipa hod agreed oa tbb, s fssah aanaoiion awaitod tiam. Daaiel Meada and kb wife Orlssb «NMl befon the Jndge and mode oath that the mea who mnrdend their ealy in truth Martbi Lee. Qaaationod thia known at 'ared they did Martin Loe until aab. satnant erants; tha amat of Janet Lea sad! her ozsaaiaatlea sad tha tootimony sabmittad nraaled the truth; bew the ailer they had lodged, and waa now jtnrdarad by Janet Lee and her mother, lad qnambd with and ahot tbeb aon. Than Ihe geaaipa of Balem bad mon to talk oboat than they oonld do joatiee ae ia a week. On ths eranisB af^the day that the laadlord of Oh>b« Ina and hia wife eharged MarttWiLee with the murder ef ^MHT aoa. OtMHUlls walkad lala Olehe Iaa uiilifti iiMiilsAbl;4aal| if a labia neat the tfe, wherelie oonld obser^ all who entered, himaalf In tbe ahadow. There were many enstomers that eren¬ ing, bnt-Oilea EUb did not remain to keep tbem oompany. His errand was With tho landlord and his wife. He waa in the inn, a solitary riaitor then, when the landlord ponred him out a glass of wine, and atood near him, at hia onatom- ar'a aerrloe. Orizale Meade aat naar by. Oilea Ellia took Up the wine, looked at it oritloally, aipped it alowly. and sarinv. "Here's yonr good health," dr^nk the wfne off neatly ahd nplaeed the glaaa on the table. "Thanka,* aoid Oiisele. "Thia waa a good day'a work." OUea Bllia nodded hia head aa he repeated the worda—"good day's work." "It waa all we oonld do," aaid Orlssb. *I think it WiU pnt an end to Martin Lee. If he be alire, he will nerer'he known in MaaaaohDHetta.* "No." said Daniel Meade, "ha wiU not lan. to eome bsok on aoeount of John Winalow'a horae and aheep. 'Tb mon like he wUl ntnm to aaa." , "No. Ha wiU not come baok—if he be alire—to be hanged for killing yonr aon," laid OUea, looking hard at the landlord who did not meet hia ayea, bnt made a pretena«.otatirrina the ire. TEBEk 'ym fhsy wm hang Dorothea Lee and her dangbter," Orizzle aakad. "It b a thing almost certain," OUaa re¬ plied. "Unleaa it may ba the jndgea an not raally aure Martin Lee b mada way witb. Tben may be—I do not aay this io ba lepeoted, nor mnat you tlnota me in thia matter-yon know Ooreraor Dan¬ forth is my eonain, and it mar be aome »ne baa innaence to sare Dorotbaa and lanet Lee from huiging—bnt it wUi ttp a Ufflenit thing to do.* Here OUea Ellis looked ao wiae that hb Uatenara eonld not help nodding in uniaon and eompUmanting him npon hb ralo- •ionahip with'tha Oovernor. "Haat heard 'what Indian Joe tolb of MaHin Lee?' Oilea inqnired. The landlord of tha Olobe Ina waa apening hb mouth to apeak, when Oria¬ ala preaaad his toe hard and said: "Never a word hara we beard." Mow the truth was tha atory had been told with graat deteil in the inn, but Orizzle did not wiah to rob tbeb' custo¬ mer of the pleaaure of thinking himaelf '.he first to give them tbs news. —Whefsopon Oiles told sli that Indian foe reheaned^ ~tn - ^ager Ibtonen—and rery maoh more. Tben again they all agreed that if MaHin-Lae really was in the flesh, he snraly woalcTisi^arpand the globe rathar tban risk being bange4^1n Balem. And now Oriula Meads ponred wine for tha three—the smallest glass for har haaband—and all drank to eaeh oth¬ an' health again. It did not aeem strange to any then that their health was so preeions that it needed much nuning andean. Whan OUea Ellis withdrew oftor ap- plaading.the landlord and his wife for ibe prompt manner in whiob they had ohargod Martin Lee with the marnor of their aen, and adrbing tbem to demand bia ORoat and oonviction. OrizsU Maade turned qniokly to her hnaband. "Now, you oon judge for yoarself. Thb man haa aa mach eanae to dread Martin L^e'a return as we bare. Did yoo mark wbat ha aaid about Jobn Winalow'a aheap and horae? How tbey were kllled at •uoh sn hour, wben all otbara toll ua 'twaa a good thrae hoora later?" rizalo." • lud^mc^ilaa.halev mito oa tka ether Daalel Meeis. 'Wall?" "Why*—hen Oriazle bent a scornful look npon him—"a babe ooald see how 'tis. I tell you, Daniel Maade, 'twas ne one else bnt Oiles EUia killed the horse and sheep—and paid bis grudge against Jobn Winslow. * "I nerar thonght of that, Oriaala." ' "And 'twaa tho flnt thing-tha rary flisI thing oame into my mind," anawend Orizale Mead*. "I do not want any bat- tor proof than I hare that he kUled John Winalow's shaoik bnt it would be well it we oould let hun know, Daniel Meade,' that tbare ia a way to prore it, ao do ran keep your wlto ah«ot yon, and be anra I'll do tna aame. for then ia dan:ier to ron and me as long oa that msn Uroa. Ba inapeoto too mnchlnow." {TO SB POMTniOSP.l PBOMINMT PEOPLE. THE MERRY SIDE OP LIFE' gTOBIlM TBAT ABB TOLD BT THB xxruux UMM OX THB PBBM. in Bloaaom Time—The Only War —Reaaon Bnonah—Dowerleao— Their Only Coe, Etc., Bta In tdomom time, Tha whob world aeema fraah, bright and fair. The green buds bursting erery wbarsk Dbplar subliine Of beauty, vraloome in the spring, That glres naw life to ererytbiiw. When peach bnds start, and robins sing^ In blossom time. tmVwfa In bloeeom time, FromVwtntar's icy bonda sst tree, Tbe earth grows warm, tbe maronry Becina tooUmb. But If you'd ward off cold or ooogh At tliis adrioe pray do not sooff: Don't take your winter flannels off In blossom tima —Somerrilb Jonrnal. ita.isoN aaoooH. MeOorkie—"Why do you for your houset" , MoOrookle—"Beeonae I wont to 17000 for it."—Detroit Free Preaa. oak $8000 THU OKLT WAT. "I wonder how Hawkinaon got hb in- ri&tlon to the Van Bteenburg'a recep- tiont" "Robbed tbe maila, I auppoae."— Puck. THB BOOM was ovaa. OapitaUst—oHow b that town you apoka to me about a few months ago; ii it laid out yet?" The Boomer—"Yea, Indeed; atiffer than a maekenl."—Life. sfnoe 1 draw my aalary, and you eonld hare all you wonted."—New Tork Weekly. AIX la KOT OOIiD, KTO. He waa a Hew Yorker, acenatomed to the beat thinga going, and Yer a week he had been in a little town in the wUdSr- neaa where the fare .at the hotel waa rile beyond description. One day he was aitting in front of the trnvem, aUontly cuniDg the condltlona of things and nnraing a dyapepam pain, when a tramp pasaed by. •¦Excuse me," said the peripatetio to the sorrowful sitter, "can jou gire me a little aaabtance?" "WhatdoyouwantI" "Wha^rer yon will, air," whined tbe tramp. "I're been In thb town for three daya and haren't eaten a bito of any¬ thing." Theaorrowful altter got up and looked him orer. ^ "Fortnnate man," he said In an eu¬ rioua tone, and alowly walked into the houae.—Detroit Free Preaa. WISE WOBDS. ]x>waBi.ass. Hard-np Painter (to old friend)— "Yea, CboSee, I am wedded to my att." Old Friand—"Confound you, d'Au- bur; I alwaya told you that rou would tome day marry a poor girl I"—Puck. "ou, aoa Tua wwoa or a oora I" Helen—"Juat Ibtou to tbat aopranol What good would tbe <winga of a dore' out'l^oJierl Bhe muat weigh two hundred poun3i.^ Jock—'Probably ahe wanU them to trim a hat wiati!l:^Pack. Tuaia oin,T nsa. ."N; LitUe Boy—"Mamma, mayn't^f tNCr long ponbt" ,^ Mamma—"What in the world Am yon rrant long panto for?" Little Boy—"So I can tuck 'em in my boob w'en it raina."—Oood Newa. Imitetion b the ainoereat flattory. Oratitude b one of the nreet o( rir- tuea. Aa aoon aa we form a habit we hare a maator. Erery ain that ia not foraaken marriea and nlaea a family. The beat way to teach cbildnn to do good ia to ahow them how. Frieodahip ia the gift of the goda and the moat precious boon to man. A thankful man owes a courtew erar; the unthankful but when be needs it. Nerer loae your temper. Nobody wanto it; all hare eaough of thoir own. Tbe aeora of gea)aa b tbe m^at arro¬ gant and tbe mest boundlem ot all acorn. Tbe man who has the right kind of wiadom nerer makes the same mbtoke twiee. The mora you lore yourself the bettor, if you lore your neigbbor to the same extoot. Ooodness docs not mora certoinly make men happy than happinew makes tbem good. Half the gossip of society would perish ^ l^tbe books tbat are truly worth reading WOT but rcHil. Then U m remembreaee which time JlhW not eblilarata,nfl]^paia whieh death THE HEWS EPIT0MI2 Baatem and Btidille Statee.' • Patmck FrrsPATBicK was banged Pittsburg, Penn., for tbe murder of Bam Bariy. It waa the fint exeootion in Alli gbeoy Countj to eight raan. Taa Feople's Bank at Bea Isle Clty^ aloead ito doon (or laok of ' oflloan of the Iwnk annouoos pooiton wlU be paid tn full. Mas. RaIiPH NoTas, of Woodsrllla, N. H., went aoddegly Inaane and drank a etrona soluttoa of aconite. Bhe tben foroad'. hsrtw«<diildrantopartekeo(the roiztarsk Tban abe cnt tbe children's tbroat with raaor. The mother b dsad and tt<e ohO fatally hurt. Ai^raa an abaaoea of exaaHr^i mais ths United Btatee oruber fbgaUp of Aottag Rear Admiral J. Walker, retomel to tha harbor Tork. Taa DoriUngsr glam worke ai Whtti MUls, noar Honssdole, Penn., wen aln saUnfy deatroyad by fire. Loaa, t^ RoBSBT J. OoDmar, of I Traaourer of the Sup Ordar of Solon, ia < •u,ooa Tub Problbitloniatsi Btato (^onraation at j of Falrbaren, waa nS Tbb Dsmooratlc/ New Jerssy atraotad the delegataal bod. Two paddbn from Newburg, N. Y.. whib walking on the traeka were struck and UUed by tbe FeekskiU way freight, nortb «l" ot Rl hound. the little tnnnel abore there. South end Weat. WAUraa Sarra, colored, who aaaanllad a whlto gbl, waa taaaa from tha JaU at Cabot, Art., and lynoh III. atrika at New Ori saaa A LOnO CAIX. Cumao—"That new gown of Mn. Fangie'a b a calling dreaa, bn't itl" Mn. Cumao—"Yea; but how did ts*-< knowr Oumso—"It aeemed to me TVS rofoa oa luu. avsuass. Baboony—"Hello, Loony t Wliat aro JOU doing nowl' Looney—"Trareling for a jewelry hooae." Baboony.—"Aht aelling goodi, eht" Looney—"No-No—juat. trareling."— Jewelera' Oircubr. marry aaraasiHO ran ordbb. Oaaket—"I bare decidpd to and settle up." Dolley—"Most peopte marry and set¬ tle down." Oosket—"But I am going to marry the rich Miss Rsxy aud pay my debta." -l>etroit Free Preaa. dmmmmmrmigfgg. , Tfamaa lodl|l|Hr{ he shall see Fortune, biind, yet ahe b Aa richea and diacorer htm to be ooiMtad ft ent in relr, '•H'fc.,ie fooL rproapenty. o^hody laid npon amm waa in trnsa J(u why they had not ilm time, Ihey both am kaow U wao M Qlapstobb hsa beooma a fragawtor of ths iiondon theatree. Ukhebal Mii.a8 ia antbnataatte orar tha nae ot bicycles in the army. Au. attampto to induce Rubinatain, tha pioniss, to ridt Amsrioa bare failed. Obubbal N. p. Baitxs gtree a good daal of attention to gardening to his old age. COMrooBB ABTBua BuLUVAB tuu en¬ tirely laqorersd from hia recent illnafa QuBBH VioTOBiA bss mods the Khadlra at Egypt a Knight of ths Ordsr ot tha BoSk. Hbbbbbt BpanoBB was taodarad a noml- nation (or Alderman to London, but he de¬ clined it. Bbbatob Rabsom, ot North Carolina, h aoppoaed to be the beat: dreasad and moai pfHlkbad man In the Benoto. CoLOBBL Btbapmak, wbo haa just besa made (Commander of the Qrand Army, De¬ partment of towa, ia only f orty-ttmie yean old. It Is mid that Rar. Dr. CoowaU, at FhUo. delphia, hacl a law practice yiolding a rar- enue of <ao,UOO a yaar bafore be entsrsd the ministry. BbhAtob Babbovr and Bsoator Plumb ara said to bare both besn klUsd by tbs orsr-work of answering loMara of tbeb oou- atitaenta. Tbovob Senator Berry, of ArkanfOK haa but oua leg, be Is on expert billiard pbyor and gets about <tlie tolib p* nlmlily as ab opponent Jay Goiru) corrbe to hb pons a Isu csul piece which he dedaree vras at cue lime aU that stood between blm and a dsad-broke oondition. EuPBBOBWIuJAi^. of Oermaay, ia being severely criticised for his wasteful peraonal extravaaanoe to tbs face ot Ihe preralUng distrea amoog bb subjeoto. Bebatob Hmooox, ot Naw York, b food o( athletic qxntaaud as aiiprtot mnnar haa done good vrork in tbe Cniumbb Otot\ at wbicb be waa atone time tha moai flool- f ooted member. J OBM R. BnoBTBis fonndtr ot'Buehtel College, died a few daya stooe at hb home in Akron, Ohlo^ from poralysb. He was serenty-two yean old. During his lite he made gtfto to Bnohtal CoUege amountiiig to 1000,000. Tub Albert Medal of tbe Bodetr ot Arto jbind) baa been awarded to Aomas A. bon for hb ssrriow to eleotrio Uahttog, thetekgraphaad the tobphoao. Among former holden of tha medal wara Faraday, Lbttig, De liimapi^ Baaaainar and Halns* bolta. GorBBHOB Bbat. of Oktahomo, b a rery popular man to the Territory. Ha is a bacbeler, "aigh onto flfiw,* as ha mys blm- ssir. and weighs DOO poomb. Hb face b baardbw and hia roioe a Ugh (Sbatto. In Iha ersrydoy talk ot toe Tvrrlktry "tha Oorsmor b no stouob," and eraryboify llkaa him. QuBBB ViOTOBiA bolag aaraaty-thras yean old the othar day, the onatomary oh- aarranoaa to honor of um erent took ptaoe to Wtodaor. As usual on tba royal biriaday tbe bestowal of honon by Quaaa Vletorboa'i farorad subjecto la mode pobUa Prim QVnga of Waba raoairea tha Qnka of York, Barl ot laroraaaa KUhumay. Bb Jalbn ¦auaeafola, the] bh Minbtor at WoaUnglom rwoali" Orand Ooaa ot tba iSaa^aaSI Chp Laeosia, ot Qnebec^ ia' ttABOB onun are' bke ihip yaiQa tor crati craaatoK UMaaad fW iolie'l uuBHio Aa araaiBo walk. Mr. Dolby—"Now, I don't beltore in signa." Mba Flypp—"Wall, I do. Now, for histance, then b one I beliere in-" It waa an ice-cream aign, and tho young thing'a belief coat Dolby flfty cento.—Harper'a Bazar. BBBZET DaumfUB. A rather bobteroua salesman had come into the atora and waa bent on aelUng gooda. "What ball that uoIm, anyhow I" ozelatmed the bookkeeper. "That," raplied tbe jnnior partner, "b a trade wind."—Waahington Star. AM ABTTST WITH HOBSB aaaaa. Friend—"What on earth^are you do¬ ing to that picturat" J Oreat Artbt —"I am rubbing a pieee of nw noeat orer thb nbit ui the fore¬ ground. Mn. De Sboddie will be hera this aftornoon, and when ahe aeea ber pet dog amell of that rabbit ahe'U buy it." —New York Weekly. A paixa. Little Wife—"Now, aee what I~bare bought you for a birthday preaent—I got It at aa acution—a genuine, antique, Md-faahioned boot-jack, aueh oa your coloaial aocaaton uied." Huaband—"I haren't worn Ixwto for twenty yean." i ^ Littb Wife—"I know. Won't it look lorely when it'a decoretel^ and bung upf"—New York Weekly. raaa witb thuib MBiqiniOBa. Not long alnce a family mored into a houae on Auatin arenne. Aftor a week or ao a friead of the family oalled on them, and asked itow they liked tbo looaUty. "Perfeetiy well." *'Bare you called on aiy of the neigh¬ bon yetr "No, but I am going to if thera b any mora of my firawood miaaing."—Texaa Siftinga. Saapplag Tnrile. Oeas, a woodaman liring near Penn., caught on eleten-pound aoapping turtb while he was on hb way bome from trout flshing on a reeeat Saturday. He carried the turtle by tho toil at arma length, and in hia hurry to reach home he took a short cut aeroaa Lewla Daytbn'a farm. An ugly bull be¬ longing to Dayton spied Cass and tbe turtle, and the sight of tbem filed him with anger. He raa bollowiag after Caas, and beforo Cass had lime to awieh the neereot fence tbe bull orortook him. Cam yeUed, but the bull came thuader^ iog on, and, seeing that the bull was de- tormined to attock him, Case threw the turtle at bis bead and legged for the fence. The turtle struck the bull's face and stopped him, and soon aftor it had dropped to the grouad the bull began to paw and scrape snd bellow arouod It. By that time Cam was on the other sido of the feooe, and he was intending to go back and get the turtle as soou as the bull hod gone away, but then the bull gare a tremendous bellow, thraw up his bead, and went to tearing aeroaa the fleld, aad Caaa aaw that the turtle hod the bull by the noae. Fourteen cowa were in the herd, and thoy had atorted toward the bull soon after he had begun to paw and scrape, but when they spied the bellowing bull tearing toward them with tbe turtle swinging from side to side from the eod of hb snout, they turned tail io a twin¬ kling, bellowed with fright, and stam¬ peded for the bara. The noisy buU gained on them, scared them all the mon the nearer be got, and, inatead of entering tbo barnyard, they daahed paaa the ban aod ttorted on a wild cb- cuit around the pasture with their heads and taib up. Caas sold he liad neret beard such a bellowing liefon, and when the cows pasaed him tbe bull waa only a ahort diatanee behind. He ran out with a club and hit the turtle when the buU came aloag, thinktog to knock it looae, but the turtia's tosth wen aet in the buU'a noie for goed, aod the blow only increaaed the buU'a paiu sad made bias rua\the harder. At^ the back end of tbo lot tbe cowa leaped orer a bruah fence and acattorad throngb « pieee of wooda, and 'the bull continued to raoe through the fleld nntll, in hia blind flight, lie ran hb head plump agidnat on elm tree. It knocked him back on bb baunchea and atunned him, and Com started for the bull with an open jacl^knife, intending to uut the turtle's head off. The bull sprang by be¬ fora Oaaa reached him and ran toward the bara, and tho turtle Uy near the tree. Then waa a chunk of the bul'a suqut in the turtle'a aet jawa, and Caaa couldn't account for tbo way ia which the bull faa 1 tora hb noae loae. Ooaa drore tho cowa book, and then he ggm^ « with tbe turtle. r^tmmittiaA.,1 •sInniaerarlMic Ma. koa lUa T. C. Twsisuua aad Iha siasjaei iilil Sanghter of Charlea Plncfcoey were drowned at Amnaaa Paaa, Texaa Thb Territorial Convention of the Bmpatt, liean party was held at Booth MoAlaatar, Indian Territory. Thedelegatm eleoted to tha MlnneapoUa Convention ons as foUowj: Ridga Paoool, a fnli-bkioded Cherokee, wbo heads tbe deiegatee, of Tahlsqaah; John B. Hammer,o( Ardmore. Ooe of tbe altoraolee b a oolored man. The deiegatee wera aata- straeted, but are for Harriaon. At the Third Party Convention at Chs' lotto, N. C, it was reeolred to prsaent th name of L^ L. Polk to tha National Conrao tton at Omaha, Meb., as a Preaiitaatial aan didato. Fiaa destroyed a number of mills ia Spokane, Wasfatoztoo, and oaosed tSaaLOOO damaga. Three men ware injured and two parisbal. A aoa attaoked tbe Jail at Dallas, Toia^ In order to lynch a colored man wbo klHaa a polioaman. Two abJhsai were siiot aaA- theg|hsrainl|>ii»r tloa gJgjgt^a^rMeani sieet»I ^rw<*yL^Mbfeation to the Natioual Coni iB^mkW^r AT tha, Waahington Demo Convention In Vancouver all tba I >t« ohosen for Chicago wen toe name of the ez-PreaUbnt vMs No instructions wacagiraa.. iiBttmaSSLl that at leaat 10 OOD peft^I- ^—^i^armi hcataas by flo t . . Kmnssaasc—.— era. Thh|| Iwiil inthalferhanlaabt of IlUnois, isaned a monay, food and doihimc tar tera. The damage lo MacHaou, aad St. Clain Counties will footM. 000. ¦ Thb Demoorata ot Oolorado held Btoto CTonrentioa at Denrsr. The to tbe National Convention sbrocted, but all Ot thsm are kno' pronounoed HiU men Thb Mstbodist Oeneral Coafi Omalia, Neb., csme to on end. Tbb "silrer anniversary," the flfllLoelebrating the admission of Ni aaa Btala, was continusd in Linooln. Btato Oooraotioa saoahiad at Yaoktoo Chieago Oaarenticm Thoy go A nBTAOBHBBTOC the Fifth .^ ^ Carotrr risitod the (Thorokee j OUU- boma Tarritory, to stop tbe qi tooot rook thero-ond to conOacita ttte Tne troops irsre ordered to tbs sti^ Prasl- daatBorrboa j Tub sti'eet oar strike in Now OJai. IfA wassetUad by arbitration aad xAmtia riolory for tbe untoa'. Aeoordiag to agreement none but ooion osea on to implored, excepting the few at arork Tbb Idaho Domooratio Stato met at FooalsUo aad ataetad dalagatar Waltoaai.Oeu ¦ sa»lmi. ¦ 13wraaBtaltoaa Ihs tMa aMl nalbaiaail oaiaagtof.allwar, -irniMi--' that Iha plaak be iaaarlMr Walbaal pbttorak The delsgntaa aaa B. (X. MoaieoHBBT, Preaidant oft man Nattonal Bank, a wealthy u known citizen, wai ahot and inatantly i at Unooln, Neb., by W. H. IrriaSkJ BMT rsoldant of Lincoln, now of Baitl City, and a member of tbe Utah T« Laglalatore. The murdered ~ friendly with Irvine's wifp. Taa Tsnnassae UeipQbratto4 tkia was held at Nashville. Tbe to CUeago wen instr uated to rote for ( hmd as long as bis noma was baCsro i Conraatioa. Washlaa;t<(n. Tub ezeenton of the will of tho lato t sral Oeort* W. Cullom. ot New York C oallod on Beorstary Blkins and prsos ^ hbaaohaok toriaSO.OOO, the amonnl ot] baqoaat aada hy Oaaaral Cullom tor < aaeoStaueCaasaaagrial boU al Was* T WUtarr ihsalimy. Beei aaaBy aiiif lid lh»>-<iqnj! AVAVovaaf thai le tiairiiirt of iat ragnlar ordar betora dibar bills on takaa4 Bia JouAH PAnnOBrova, the Miniater, and Lidy Faunoaforto gara a. oaptton at tha Britiah Legation, Wa too, te honor ot the aerenfy-aeoond raraary ot toe birthday of Quoen Vh Taa Unitad Btatee Treaaary boUnoo atated at 187,060,844, made up enti depoalta ta HaWamil hauta^ i ' ¦¦AHD an WIFB. Wife—"I need a Mttle mon money." Huaband—"It b only two days aiaoe Wife—"Now, see here 1 I waat yoa to undentand that I wouldat oak for laooey if I dida't need it, aad { doat mi ton i to be rmninded that bfa oaly two days ainoe you ^ra sae ssaM^ I am not a dkUd, nor a assaial, mit a slare, to be jiSatad like aa irreffoaslMe being, and I it yon ta Maw tbat I wonH atand t I'regot juat oa [ur money aa you hare, you " I—"My dear, I waa meraly laawrk ttmt it b ttaiytnt) cjaya United aiasse eajha ^Mb ot t eboaa ot Iba MoKtoley UIL CcnaasaioiiBB Raum has aakad propriatiaiis Committee of the daflclenoy appropriatioo ot ff,OO0^Qlia| ooQot ot pension poymsato tor Iua dar ot toe Saool year. Hatch Cggs la Thsir Maatbt. Thera an animala which hatch tbeii egga in theb moutha. Oertain flahea be¬ longing to the geniua Ariua allied tc tbe cat-flahea hare thb rery peculiai habit. Tha egga ara carried about by the liahea In their moutha, aud appear to be aafely lodged during the period ,uf Iwtebing in the huge and eapactona ptarynx, or binder part of the mouth carity. Another well-known inatanoe ol a like habit b furaiahed by the Ibhaa of the genua Ohromb, from tho Sea ol Oalilee. Theae dsbea in the aame ^y carry thair egga in their month, andfthoa hatch their young. A aimilar <w aai^lo. goua practioe b witaeaaad ia oertain (ruga.—Yankee Blade. Oraniti b the loweet rock in the eartbl crust, it b tbe bad rook of the maid. annum maanng m Amarican Physiaiww thras days to ^ ^ . aaMb£^Waohi fip!S|flfr&^L"^ otNewTerh, awsibstal tha Vorebtn- Mbxioab troopa and Yaqui fonght near Loa Filroa, Maalso. Harmj rotm amA taro efltoan ware kllled. Yaqab wars dbRBtaad. PaaaioBaT Bias has aapoteh Matioo Bomsats the praaant SllabI " ¦¦ ¦ Btataa. MtoMsr of r to SesKir Romero sa Unitod Btatss wUI be United Sib Ausxaanaa Campdbu^ _ Ooremor of Ontario, Canada, m1 waa lhe aan ot the lato Jamaa CM D., aad waa hom to YerksUn^, A ooBOiaaai arraagad hatwa AI. mOdna Spato and < I. Qoaaa Viotobia's i Wy wao eobbratod to Lil., iTSafMeatohooorof liuM Ike King aad Quean I
Object Description
Title | The Nazareth Item |
Masthead | Nazareth Item |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 27 |
Subject | Nazareth's first English newspaper |
Description | A weekly home town newspaper published from December 4, 1891 to November 20, 1975 |
Publisher | The Nazareth Publishing Company |
Physical Description | weekly newspaper |
Date | 1892-06-03 |
Location Covered | United States, Pennsylvania, Northampton County, Nazareth |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Source | microfilm |
Language | eng |
Rights | Public Domain |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the Memorial Library of Nazareth and Vicinity, Attn: Reference Department, 295 E. Center Street, Nazareth, PA 18064. Phone: (610) 795-4932. |
Contributing Institution | Memorial Library of Nazareth and Vicinity |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Month | 06 |
Day | 03 |
Year | 1892 |
Description
Title | The Nazareth Item |
Masthead | Nazareth Item |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 27 |
Subject | Nazareth's first English newspaper |
Description | A weekly home town newspaper published from December 4, 1891 to November 20, 1975 |
Publisher | The Nazareth Publishing Company |
Physical Description | weekly newspaper |
Date | 1892-06-03 |
Date Digitized | 2008-03-18 |
Location Covered | United States, Pennsylvania, Northampton County, Nazareth |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Digital Specifications | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 300 dpi. The original file size was 40873 kilobytes. |
Source | microfilm |
Language | eng |
Rights | Public Domain |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the Memorial Library of Nazareth and Vicinity, Attn: Reference Department, 295 E. Center Street, Nazareth, PA 18064. Phone: (610) 795-4932. |
Contributing Institution | Memorial Library of Nazareth and Vicinity |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text |
w^mm.
it '^'
AtBEBT 0. STUBOIS A CO., Fabliahe^^
_L HE INI AZARETH
AN INDEPENDEITT FAMILY NEWSPAPER, DEVOTED TO J[.ITERATnRE, LOCAL AND OENERAL INTELLIOENOE.
$1.00 PER YEAB,
uSgfS^
Vol. I.
TT
NAZABETH, PAo, FHIDAY MORNIKiJ, JUNE 3,1892.
NOo 27.
Fiaaoe receives about tSO,000,000 ierery |«ar from the monopolies ixm- troUad by her Oorernment.
{ IMmsI journala aay that tbe young wooaea of to-day aro far better dereloped phyaieslly than tbe young women of 100, or eren flfty, years ago.
Dr. Green's farorite illustration oi roatoess of the Westera Union Tele- aystem, of wbioh he b Preaident, say that ib wires wonld make a qoadtaple line to the moon.
I Two hundred and fifty dollara hare baaa ofhred by tha Psace and Arbibn- tioa Aaaocbtion aa a prise for the beat asodel chapter 0(i peace and war, auit- ihi* to be incorporated in elementary
Queenabndera aak where a market b to be fouad for the fat bullocks coming Off tbeir ridi poaturas in tena of thon¬ aands. , .
Small-aiaed and medium built men eon* Stitute two-thirda of the Fifty-second Oongreaa, it b asserted by aome one who has made a patient inrestigation.
JANET LEE
-OB-
tlie statement la made that Iiondon oontalna 8000 more doctora than thc whole of Irebnd.'' Thla prorea, for one thing, commenta the New Tork World, that the people of Ireland, for the moai part, oannot afford the luxury of getting tick.
The Shoe and Leather Iteporter pro¬ pounds thb poser: "We should like tt art: tbe 900 re^'etarUnt who liiet in Nen Tatk what tbey would do for abot ieatfasr if their peculiar fad was generalli praottoed."
The, daya of nataral gas are num¬ bered, announces the Boaton Oultirator. The aupply waa greateat two ye ara ago, and though new diacoreries bare been mode ainee, aome eren of thew hare failed wMbio that tim*. It mty bs uaed for a awhile far iliumtostiuK i>ur, bat" pow(
' flW yta^^a^tttXtlifT ^imi thai be has aa eleetric rood orer which can maf be run at the rate of two milei a aOauta haseniy to demonatrota the feasi- liil% ttf hb acheme, obserrei the Sai PiSPSiaiiu Ohronlcle, in order to gather fortune What tbe trareling public now b apeed, and the man who aaaiUUte dbtanoe may commaad an fortune.
- Sereral Anatralbn ranchmen, or pos- toralbb, hare incomes ranging from $50,000 to ISOO.OOO per annum. One man, wbo owns nearly thirty stations oi riches in Victoria, Queensland and New South Wales, had a net profit of 9910, ¦ 000 in 1890.
In the Shadow of the y u:OaU0W8a
BT DAVID LOWlif.
Among the rarlous religious bo Jiaa be¬ longing to the Erangelical Confession the greatest increase hss taken place, ac¬ cording to the Ohioago Herald, in tbe Presbyterian, Methodist and Quaker communities. These are from three \o three and a half times atronger than in 1871.
"It haa been eatimated," aaya the Trop- a Florida, "tbat there b in that SUte 10,000,000 toaa of moaa hanging on tteea. This, wibm gathered aad cnred, b worth Mr aMts..pirpound at our doom. U it b wenh oae eent a pound it will amoiwt to the enormoaa ium of 17,000,000.
-.^
^^'Oslaael Jules Berton recently ¦.«-
'.^¦arlrail to a San Franclaeo leporter:
\|fi*fTou cnltirate the orange here for the
' ^'llait oaly. In France the bitter or wild
' .'Tl PpMp^ b cultirated ezteuaireiy for lb
, ~^j|iBaAial mla. From the flowers neroli
^^i^aktamed. Thia b tbe base of oloi^ae
aad otber psrfumos. From t|^e learea it
Matilled 'petit grain,' whicii b uaed tr
adulletate the neroli."
Ibt
^f.
Boston Transcript miket the aaiertlon that "an insect as daggeroaii aa that which b generated in pafkealBtain raw aujar. It b called aeaiaa aaechari, and b lesi than a bua¬ dredtb of an laeh loag._ gmM as it ia, it b copaMe etXtfU"! miaehief in the bn. tiody. It b nerer found in reflned rt becanae it cannot paw throu jh the ll Alter, and if it could it would ¦pd ae abrojen oi whieh to lire. Bo dl^ aataat »w aagar or laW ipotk."
naa raoeatatSgasine article on "Ves- (table Dist," the autlior makea theaUte- msat tbat there is an idea tbat cancer b coased by eating tainted meat—tha* is, ahimola brought a distance and being io an ezhausted and almoat dying coaditioa before t^tey ore killed. The writer ol the paper alao aiaerts thst Tagetarbot,ai a rub,tiare unusually clear and tieautilul oomplexions, which claim,if it oould bs aubatantbted,wonld probably hare more influesce, at leaat with women, than the flrat atatement. Dread ol dlaeaae does not seem to babnce detire for a clesi aUa.
It ia aUted in ooe of the Swediah nawapapera, aa a coapariaoa between Ameritam and 'Kuropean busiaess aaathoda, ttat a looomoUre for one of niilwaya «f Swedea was needed in a hurry. It waa foaad that in Bagland or Ssreden at bsat a year would be required for the ailing of the order. It was J^arefore Contracted for with the Bild- iria locomotire ah>ps, of Philadelphia, 'ViMre it could be had ia two moatha aad a half at aooat of tSBiO, dellrarad, a eoiiaideral>b reduction upon tbe ¦aropean price. It b not that Ameriean teeooaotire worlm employ more men or for longer hours as a rule, the Chicago Oraphie (zpbins,bat the moit im;)rared oaetboda and mooaioery obtain,aad there b eloeer application during working bawo, and more iuteliigaat labar, erea in thoee portions of tba work cbiiel oa "anakUbd."
Bangor (Me.) flahermen who catch big Mimsn and aend them to New York are aurpriaed and rather annoyed to hare tbe fish referred to as "Kennebec salmon." New Yorkers may not know it, but there b no each thing aa a Kennebec aalmon. Salmon will not go near tbe Kennebec, bnt they thrire in the Penobaoot; whioh b to the Kennebec oa a atream compared to a puddle.
A oourae of inatruction in out door ^omea waa opened for teachers in Bsrlln last September. Thb, declares the New York Bun, b an omen of a better time ooming for young people in Oermany, where the more or lem complete absenoo of outdoor gamea for young and old b a sad feature in the life of the peopio. "Hie Emperor b enthasasUealiy in faror o( a change in thli dl boll bimaeU Priaee Henry Potadam.
It b a comfostaUa tfeaery, wUoh, to tha Ohieago Newa, appeara te ba without aubatantial fouadatieu, that in thb oouatry there b a pacniiar tendency aaaklBg agalaat tbe perpetuation of great family fortuaea. It b the eoounon aayiag that yesterday^ millionaire b to-d^'s pauper. Yet tbe reslly great eolatea ia America are held together not leis ten¬ aciously than tboae of Bagland. The Aatora, Vanderbiib,Rhioebnderi,3cher. merhomo, Oeeleta and Belmonts hare handed down their fortunea from fatber to aon, and there b no reaton for be- liering-ibat hereafter a different policy will ba pvriued. Tbe preaeat repre- aaatotiraa bf tiiaae opubnt bouws will troiMmlt thair great properties intact to their heies, aud these in turn, with hero and tlwre aa ezoeptioo, will doubtleaa lire withia their incomes and bequeath the augmaaied prinoipb to their chil¬ dren.
CBAPTKR XT|—ContlaaML
In that eaae, then, 1 aak permissioa to apeak in my own beJi/Uf.*
Janat Lea lifUd her head proudly. All ayea were tutted upon her. Tha ann'a rays stresming in throagh iki window bathed her in g61den light. Ber baanti- ful head—thare Was no shsplier head in New England—was ophsld with tha pride of the Leea. her clear-ont faatnrea im- preaaed all thers witb a aaDae of her beaaty, while her oompianra and courage appealed to the aympathy of all aronnd her. Men and women aaaad at bar in wonder, marreling at her aelf-poaaes- sion.
'Sinoe my fsther'a apprentioe ia the only witneaa uainat ma, and appeara aa my aooueer, l crare the priYllags of qaeationing him."
QoTamor Danforth whiapered with hb aaaooiatea. "There b no objeotion.*
Janat aeemed to gftow in alatnte aa aha turned lo her fathar'a appieDtioe, whoae eonntananott betrayed a oertarbed opirih •Eara Easty, if all who go to Will's HUl an in leagne witb the eril one; why may I not Seenee yon of being in leagne with tha aril ona?"^
"I een prore by Ann here I followed yon to aee what yoa did with the oake and mllk."
'How do yon kaow it ta wroag to go te Will'a Hill? Did yon erar aee the erU aae, aa witcb, thare?>
Bwa Baaly beoitaUd and twice choked flawa Oe ewetUag lahb Itawt bafora be aasweaad.
*l*^ly..'€U>«4aiiMFVara she eaw the erll eae en a lfea£iy.*- ..
'Withhorna and fleaiii^r'ajiavltttad Janat, ironbally. ^ -
"She aaw tha homa," aaid Ezra, dog¬ gedly. ^^ 'And a barbed tail—did ahe not aay 'twaa Uke the fluke of an aDohorr"
"Yea; 'twaa like a fluke, she said, and ae terrible she fell in a faint."
"And juat then her sister, Ann Bigger, eame np behind mv fatker'a cott. That waa the aril one her sister Folly saw."
Oae of the macistrates imiled, and soma of tbe peopls held down theb beads te oonoeal their merrimanL
'Has not Ann Bigsar yonr promise to marry herf" Jaoet asked, abruptly, as if it waa a matter of eonrae.
* Tb fobel" Ann eiclaimed. *I nerer Rot hb promiae,* wherapon Depnty Dan. forth oonrhed, and the woman pat thsb hsndkerchfefs to their faces.
"Than 'twaa yon whe aaked hk. Earo— waa th»t tbe way of it?*
"Mnat f anawer herf* aaid Ibe appreo- ties, ahifting hia feet, and erading »be glances of tbe oarions crowd.
"It ia not necessary," Janet eontinned. briskly. " Why, ail bar*' heard yoa oall hn Ann Bif oer to bear yon ent." my affairs and Ann Bigger's
then after disgradteg the naftie of Loe. Much waa aaid about the pride of tha Lees; as if than waa none like tha Leaa. John Lee wished Martin had nerer been born. Martia said he hsd done no wrong, and it would be more like the pride of the
Leas if hia brother John would take ETs nart, and not join with othen against aim. Then John flew into a towering passion and bade Martin itegontl. last ba ahould Bttmnder bim to the sheriff. Then Miatnaa Lee and Janet interfered, and that made maater worse. He said he wished Martin Lee were dead, and for his part tha aooner he woa out of the way the better. Than Janet Xee. who b jorandsr
tban her father, aa all know, aald H Iwite tma that Martin killed tbe Manhal's hone and aheep by entting their throata in that omal manner, aha ooald aee him well ont of the way; that it would be a bliatariDg disgrace—his preeenoe in Sa¬ lem. But it would nerer do to lat him hMg."
When Ann ended, Janet aaid, in aa andible roice: "Hearen'a will be donel We an gnatly wranged by thia moUoiona eceatnreT'
Aa for John aad Dorothea, they atared at Aan in amazamant. They wan ao damfonnded that neither oonld apeak. The mMdatntea consulted again, and Depnty Danforth apoke in aolemn tonee:
Wanet Lee, the erldenea ia deemed anfliobnt to igttlty the charga of ^witch- eraft." Then he panaed, aa a mnrmnr rose, for many than wen aUrpriaed at the decision of the magiatntaa, aad did not hesitate to expreaa thair wonder. "Bnt," he continued, "then ia anothar and mon aeriona eharge pnparad againat you.*
Ha apoke to tha raagiatrate on lib left, and the mogiatrate, lookinff at a paper ho held in hb nand, addreaaed Janet Lee:
"Janet Lee, although diligent aeareh haa been mode, Martin Lea b nowhere to be found. Ann Biggar awaara John Lee wiahed him dead, and you agned, bnt aaid it wonid' nerar do to lat him hangt Dorothea Lea admlta tbe brothera anamled; that they parted in anger. Jaaet Lee haa been fonnd on Will'a Bill at night, when all othera aroid it. All warrant the belief tiiat Mar- oat of the way by
'la
bronght np henf" manded wnthfaij;
to ba apprentioe de-
Dnring the
Janet, Dorothea, and John I |
Month | 06 |
Day | 03 |
Year | 1892 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
FileName | 18920603_001.tif |
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