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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1892)
ONLY A SCHOOL-TEACHER. "But s)ie"s on!y a school-teacherr said Bosa Vernon. Kosa was a bright, black-eyed little lassie, not much over four feet high, and us plump as a September p?ach a girl who liked to wear jewelry and real lace, and was Tory particular a to the. set of her dresses. Moreover, there wasa good deal of the aristocratic element in Miss Veraon'a nature, con siderably more than was exactly fitting for a daughter of the Uepubl:c, and she was perpetually endeavoring to incul cate the same into her brother, and his handsome collego mate Henry Leslie. "Weil, what then?"' demanded Bob Vernon, stoutly. "She is as pretty as 1 den't know what she isn't as pretty as! A lit'.lo wikl-ilower a violet just opening a tiny white rosebud, that's what she's liko." "Upon my word!" cried Bosa, sarcas tically, 'Bob growing romantic! What are we to expect next?" "The subject is an inspiring one, Miss Vernon,'' said Harry Leslie, dryly. "Does she get three or ten dollars a week?" demanded Bosa, with a super cilious toss of her liTad. -and does she board round "5toc boards at Squire Macpher;oii's,'' said Harry, ''and as for the salary, 1 can't tell yxt, hut if you choose, I'll make inquiries." "And I'm going round to Ihe squire's this very evening said Dob, ' to get in troduced to Miss .Markham Mabel Markham isn't it a sweet na'ne?" "Bob!" ejaculated his horilied si3ter, "would you po far compromise our social position a3 to " "Compromise, a fiddlestick!" ' "But, Bob, now, of all times in the world, just when Major Taliaferro and his family are coming to the place, and cr.e naturally wants to retain a formost .place in society." "Hang Major Taliaferro and his family! How are they any better than Squiro Macpher30ii, and the dear little dove eyed school-ma'am V ""Tiiey are very wealthy aul aristo wxtie, Bob, and they have traveled in Europe, and taare's the major's niece, who will inherit all the. money, and " "Oh, is that all ? I really can't see the occasion for falling down and wor shiping Major Taliaferro on any of the scores you hava mentioned. If his mayorship should excommunicate me ou account of the Markharns, I must submit to the dreadful decree, and be come au outcast, but until then 1 shall take tbe liberty of doing precisely as I please. Come, Harry." "Then you arc actually going to Squire cpherson's, a place where no body visits?" , "Yes, actually and truly." Rosa's hp curved, but she chose to hazard no futher remonstrance. She was in the village drug store, one afternoon, a few days subsequently, choosing a book from among the well thumbed circulating library, when Squire Macpherson's rickety old family carryall drove up, and a young lady alighted. Rosa turned and glanced at her with a sort of languid, infoleut curiosity, as ifatsome raraavis that; fortune had throwain her way. "So that is Mabel Markham, who teaches the district school?'' she thought, contemptuously. Miss Markham was slight, and fair, .and delicate, wiih big blue eyes which looked :it you with the solt, wondering innocence of a child, skin smooth aud pink as an oleander petal, and a pro fusion of fair, flossy curls rippling like a golden cataract over her shoulders. Her dress was very plaiu a dark brown gingham, with collar and cuffs of the mos gutless linen, a bow, of blue ribbon at her throat, and a hat of line straw, trimmed with blue ribbon also. "l'ou could buy it all for five dollars," thought Uosa, scornfully, as she gave her own green and gold changeable silk a rustle and glanced at the broad gold bracelets that she wore. "Why, Mabel, my darling, is it you?'' Mrs. Wylie had entered at that moment. Mrs. Wylie was the rector's wite, a bustling, genial matron, of forty or so, and was hugging and kissing Mabel Markham with euapressement. "How very fortunate that I should have met you here, my dear, and how well you look! Ah, teaching agrees with you, 1 see! And how is your sick friend, Miss Claremont?'' She is better, Mrs. Wylie." "Is she? I'm sure I'm delighted to, bear it, " Here the chirping litt'e lady broke off abruptly, for she had just caught sight os Bosa, still glancing over the worn backs of the well-read volumes, and yawning behind her French kid gloved hands. She ran up to her at once. "Rosa Vernon, you here, too.' Why you are the very person I wanted to see! Come and let me Introduce you to my friend, Miss Markham?" She laid her hand lightly on Rosa's arm as she spoke, but Miss Vernon drew back, a little haughtily. Excuse me, Mrs.-Wylie, but I have no anxiety to become acquainted with a SChooUeacher," lira. Wylie looked bewildered. "Out my dear, you don't understand that -1 do understand all that I cart to Mrs. Wylie you will please excuse me from the introduction." As she drew coldly back she saw with inten. at satisfaction that Miss Markham from her position at the counter beyond had doubtless heard tho whole conversation. For the crimson had overspread the oval cheek turned toward them, and mabel's head drooped art instant Oh, dear crietl Airs. Wylie ia evident consternation, "I do hope she hasn't heard us!" "It is quite a matter of indifference to nie whether she hai or not!" said Rosa; 'she is only a school-teacher. Mrs. Wylie turned away, hurt and disappointed, aud Uosa swept out of the store. "Mabel, de:irest, you won't mind a petulant child's ill'bred criticism"?"' she pleaded, coming close to Miss Markham, and possessing herself of one slender little hand. "Xo, Mrs. Wylie." "And you'll come home to tea with me?" But Mabel declined she had a pressing engaceinent, she said. Whether that engagement had any thing to do with Mr. Bob Vermon, we didn't pr. tend to say, but certain it was that she walked with him in the moon-light that night, under the gray old Macpherson mansion, until tho village town-clock chimed eleven! And the next morning Bob pro claimed to the astonished ears of the family group, gathered around the breakfast-table, that he was engaged! "Bob! Engaged! And to whom?" "To Miss Mabel Markham." Rosa uttered a little breathless scream of dismay. "To Ma'.el Markham! Oh, Bob, you reckless, imprudent fellow just when Major Taliaferro's niece wa coming to reside in the place, and they say she is lovely!" "She canDot be more lovely than my Mabel, and I do not choose to submit to the imputation of being a fortune hunter. I a;n able to earn my own living and my wife's, too. You will call on my fiancee, Uosa, won't you?" "1 will never speak to her." "Then you can let it alone," said Robert Vernon, flushing a little; "only I did not know you were such a fool Uosa." And so the matter rested for a few days. "A party at the Taliaferror's with tents on the lawn and a band of music from New York! Oh, how splendid!" ejaculated Miss Vernon, dancing about the parlor lloor with the note of invita tion in her hand. "So the family have really arrived at the place and you got me the invitation from Harry Leslie! So kind of you! And will the majors' niece be there?" ''Y'es she will lie there." "Have you seen her?" " Yes often." "Oh I do so long to see her! I must sei'd to the city for a new while grena dine drees, and a wreath of pink ger aniumsroses are so common!" And !osa sat down at once to write the note to her dressmaker. 'Of course yon won't go, Bob?" she said, loftily. "Why shouldn't I go?" demanded Bob, defiantly eyeing his sister. "Because vour liaticee won't be there.' "Don't be too sure of that." "1 am sure of it; who would invite a district school-teacher? And the Taliaferro-s are so exclusive and aristo cratic, too." "Mabel will bo there," said Bob, briefly; but that was all he could be induced to say for the gratification of his sister's curiosity. The evening of the much-talked-of party finally arrived, with a full moon, and the loveliest of September nights, to do all due honor to its festivities Rosa arrived rather late impatient as she was to view the internal arrange ments of the stately old stone, mansion she would sooner have cut oft' her right hand than been unfashionably early, ."he was dressed in her white grenadine, with the wreath of pink blossoms eucircling her jetty hair, aud had the agreeable consciousness that she was becomingly attired, and looked very well. Harry Leslie met her at the door of the all ready thronged drawing-room and offered her his arm to conduct her to the host and hostesss. Major Taliaferro, a fine looking, dignified, elderly gentleman of the old school, stood at the head of tbe room, with his wife beside him a stately lady in rustling white brocade, and such diamonds as almost dazzled Hosa's eyes with their blaze. As she inclined her head to them the major took her hand kindly. "Miss Vernon, allow roe to introduce you to my niece, Miss Markham." Yes it was Mabel Markham, dressed in white tulle, with pearls and simple white roses in her golden curls of hair; and Bob stood beside her, holding her boquet with conscious pride in his fair companion's winningbeauty. Rosa looked so bewildered that her brother burst out laughing. "I thought Miss Markham was a school-teacher'" stammered Rosa, scarcely knowing what she wu saying in her confusion. "You were perfectly correct in your surmises, Miss Vernon," answered Mabel, quietly; "nor wu I ashamed of my vocation. But I was only tem nnnllv owunvinff the Boaltion on le half o mm aialiwil trlmnA Iflaa PlaM. I STILL A HALE OLD . .i - irt went out , mont, whose illness incapacitated hei from at once taking her post I am i happy to say that now she is well, -ome u u w s,RlW. Lnouzhto rtl.-aveme from my labor from Bndgeport haUhe man. i . (iiH! bv deathbed, ibis r.a mm - ... , tunt lis had liartial of love. A fresh group of arri announced, and Bosa Iu the same instant Mrs ing eyes met hers. ,val, were now "hat be bad partial stepped aside. aJf , was on t!ie high road to ilt.au", " . i :.,,i ,Lo (VabCitv ol sevt-rai bJUCll-U - I - j - l- ... i, ... ;nfrn,linn (rt Mica !?... .-.i...,i,i .iii,, business enterprise iU rtl ei-uaui, unci wi . t, - fresh 'H.-ii his a fleet - cuierpribrj. - , .;(.. ,,fv t he innate and relieved twunj spice of Dlayful malice in her tone, "if, m , .-nueried and re would only nave anon eu mo in - .,,.BrtiiiiT dodge, explain to you last week that Major - - but t;,e incident Taliaferro's niece was oihciatmg iu her " ' n1V4rti,ciess, to the friend's place, how much embarrass-, i- ; '... in that Jine. ment it would have savea us an; ion - - ..i.-prt se in some jje cait-iui .lid Baruum r.ol long us all! You . ... . . . i ........ i, i,r Fii.ia nifAr iw i . lmt. I think Maliel has forciven von. ' f!lCI'e or 011 ' for Bob's sake. Uosa, surely you are atf not crying!" T.'I...Z.Z i- it will bring But rota was crying-the Rarest - - -; ia'e k,s0i,!iv tears of mortification that she had ever, ; ' n m n shed. 1 hey were soon over, however ,, i.int, . - . . i 'I h.u iiFHil.lt'!! Ultl IU 4Wi ilUC Ul Win--', i,ro, ' Lecau.- it is evident that it a nan has ever so gc-od an article for n nril .l.nwer succeeded bv sunshine ' This principal applies to of till 1 JJI 11 oilvr)Ci oULL vcui wj tjMwiid" once again but the tears did our littlo tusiness. an I ly than to ai She had received a much-needed lesson. In af.er years her brother's wife became very dear to her, aud Bosa acknowledged more than once that Bob hud been rightabout Mabel Markham. nl to liutiiina more eminent )v than to auvertisin ... :.. in itally good article taeie is which he can reap more advantageuiis lv than by 'sowing' to the pub ic in this way. Kaniuin pos-sesses a genius for adver tising, not only iu the newspapers and I iv misters, but iu many other ways ric research was recognized twenty yeais a?o. Thev were at. that time I'reliUloric GlanU. " , . .,,,..,..,..., ,., i(.n l.lJLlluut-u lu auiiiii iui"."" Xear the Mediterranean coast not j I10l!K.r element of success which he far from Nice, are some grottoes, : Rud wlijoh goes ljHnd in m,i ith which are remarkable for the prehisto I. . iiia i ut, uji nivnw"fi Ms assurance. He lias humbugged the . ,,i.i: ihi.ii ivriti(n a lnt)k re- purchased by Mr. l-Jmile Biviere, who jl0imtn)g 1)is meti,uus wlth remarkable however, neglected to work them, ul;frailkll(.S9i These methods of his more sold them again to a quarry master. 1, Jjfe he M nut 8rtu lo regard as who on removing some of the ri: MlVtljing tu b ashamed of. They were unearthed some of the remains, since briniilIlt 8lrokys. '-preserve then the grottoes have been in vour jntetrritv." he said; "it is more gation much ot the time and no one eei)lls tlma diamuIlds (jr rtlbies. lias ueeu ame propeny iu i.n e.ug.u, . . ,.f . to them At present three skeletons found there are figuring in the law courts. One is of a man whose estimated height is 7 feet !l inches. The head ot the skeleton is missing. Another b the skeleton of a woman C feet :J inches tallj and the third is the remain of a youth. These added to previou? discoveries make seven skeletous of prehistoric men unearthed up to tin present time in these caves. Thi Italian government has not attempted to exercise anv rights in the matter i Up lo 1S75 .Mr. llivic.re had ctis covered the skeleton of one man and two children, which were some twenty nine feet below tho level of tho cavt-t and wero surrounded bv undoubted paleolithic implements. Tho be.d ii a compact one of limestone. Chicago Xews. f ' Wedded Over Her Motliur's Gram The most unique marriage tvei fl0 anything Leyond what periormeu in uaiiunore toox Monday within the bounderies Green Mount cemetery over the graves money dishonestly. 0..r prisons are lull of men who attempted to follow Iliis course. 'o man can be dishonest without soon being found out, and when his lack of principal is discov ered i e j-Jy i V: ry avenue to success is closed against him forever. Strict hon esty no: only lies at the foundation of all success in life financially, but in every other respect." One who is familiar with Ilaniiim's exhibition of the uegrea Joyce Ilelh, the alleged nurse of U'ashiiiL'ton. ltil years old, his w oolly horse, his Feejee mermaid, and other manufactured or 'partially manufactured curiosities ma be surprised at this explicit state ment of tbe case by one who could 'talk bo well about honesty; but Bar ' uuai was aud is doubtViss strictly hon I est. as'Ue interpreted Uio word, and al though he palmed made up curiosities on (lie public he would have scorned to he regarded :lw . mere shrewuiicss. Of I UtirrillTll liflK lu-viir i'.n,i il,.'ro In- degrees. lie has tittered some good A Strange ajcr iu ienna. A eui ious wager Is at present occupy ing the attention of such widoly sepa ratee classes as onr young noblemen and the Association of Hotel and Bes- t ,rr.nt Waiters in Vienna. Several of the younger scion of the big'aest Aus traiu aristocracy, ho w ere accustomed t.,.i,B in hii old hotel of liizh repute in the Kanithuer strawe, took except ion to tu8 practice of '.be waiters, most of whom Lave seen twenty or thirty years' service, in dressing their uiue taches in just the same fashion as the noble swells" they had to serve. One (1f the hich born customers accordingly laid a wager with sotre of his friends, which was immediately accepted that within a given time the objectionable adornment should, disappear from the i::.i-r tins ot the waiter iu all tbe fash ionable hotels and restaurants iu Vien i.a ntiii rwise the proposer himself was to shave o!f his own embellishment for a iriveli lKTiod. In order to effect his purose the fa man has a I latter commenced by trying to jer- sttade the hotel ket per in the Karuin- nerstrasseto forbid ail his servanU wearing inuslaches on penalty of los ing his aristocratic customers. In this cse he succeeded, but the waiters, who were mostly married men, one after another gave notice to leave theii places. 'They were at once replaced by younger men, who lor a consideration submitted to the imposed humiliation. The same thing happened in a number of other hotels and restaurants, and tin- wHirer was nearly won bv the layer when the proprietor of the Hotel Im perial, the first hotel in lenna, na ly refu .ed to comply with the- whim of the Vienna jcuncsse doree, whom he told outright that if thev deserted his house he should readily get better customers. The caie was also taken up, "as mat ter of right and honor," by the Associ ation of Waiters, which threatened to expel from the society any member de grading hiaise'f by humoring aristo crat c caprice in this matter. 'Thus the matter stands at the present mo ment. The bet appears likely .o be io,t, and then will come the triumph of the winters, who expect soon to have the satisfaction ot seeing their would be dictator instead of themselves going . .lout with shaven lip. (.'or. Lcndou Standard. The make cemetery. Hammond lot was reached the crave were strewn with flowers and the wedding was quickly performed, the bride standing upon the grave of hei mother and the groom upon the grave of the bride's father. The bride is one of Maryland's oldest families, being a remote decendent of President George Washington. She is forty and the groom forty-four years old. Baltimore Letter. Mr Apn.n lung the Kartli. The month of August next k sxpecled to bring important, if not wonderful and sensational, develop ments in the study of our mysterious heavenly little kinswoman. August o next Mars will arrive at a point directly opposite this earth, which it reaches but once in fifteen years, when the distance between the two planets will be reduced f om 141,000,000 to 35,000,000 miles. Upon that night a thousand telescopes will be leveled at the planet, which will repose iu reful gent beauty in the southern skies, and a thousand eyes will seek to pierce the veil of distance that conceals the knowledge for which science thirsts Wonderful results are expected by reason of the marvelous improvements that have been made in astronomical instruments within fifteen years ami since the last most favorable obsnr. vation, was made. With the powerful lenses and the photographic ami:nvs of today it will be ae if the far awav visitor, tempted by curosity, had drawn nearer to the earth than ever. Although Mars will be 35,000,000 miles away, the powerful Lick telescope will magnify her to a sizo as if viewed at a distance of bur 17,o00 miles. AVashington Star. In the days when Baruum was en Vavoringlo establish the American . . 1 business, he used to do a gr at deal of advertising in the then prominent Xew lork papers, The Courier and En quirer, The Times and Messenger and The Herald. "Xiglit after nidit." he said, ' at the midnight hour and later, I crawled up these several newspaper staircases to put in these journals some fresh and startling announcement about my business. I even did this after the editor had gone home, bu the foreman in the commoner rnnm lad some authority then .-ni ,i,i olten put the matter loitered in tvne or mane an announcement for me " Baruum still looks back with pleas ure to his friendly dealing with editors. Run Down by an Inland. on it and made partial eininmn,... mere was a nut ana a small farm ou of their hiding places. th lalind and otw .i.n. ...u,. " .. fne ?Nnauts spent the nioht h .k-...k: " " " w VH age, and iu the niornin. tion, although there were no signs of marched uie. seaiue setter but economy patience usually go toother Whether Baruum has possessed these acuities or not he has certainly de- of the parents of the bride. The groom was Loionei nemiricK von iU1(j Stamp, ex-minister of Denmark to the I'nited Slates, a knight of the Order oi Dannebrog and the hr.de was Miss cl;ned to wait for avenues, ,y which t, , : unuK,ilc. reach the public to open m to him mM5 ,,c"c,tt.' V,' D, . CH,n"8w M I- opened them Imnselt but the vehicles were supposed to be a funeral cortege as they slowly moved jn through the A Sllfllinn "a j:lh. 1 Eae!i player Is providtZl and a sh'p of pawr aD(l ,, w'4 ing charge of the game ? clocK or watch n. i. " suited, k wordi .1.,.. i:m I auuounsed, a loug one J number of vni-.. i A This word is vvrittt.,1 .., 1 paper, and at a give,, time J piayers ueguis to write dov, wor-u as lie can think of mt-nce with the letters i f word is composed ea.K i. used only as often as it ocpj wuru eie-UiU. At t,a unit r. .1 . uiree m;a leader calls "time,- and J n-aua aiuiiu me words on sets the number of them do. morals. hea one wrii. . contains a letter or letters original word, he (m J w nicu ne must eet down a-jJ self; and if any one has J noimeeise nas lliought of lowed to take two credi'j Alter the words have Un next letter of U,e origin taken as the initial for i j.J words, and when these harJ ed like the others the uer taken, and so on until all 1 Terrorized bv u Balloon. An account which recently appeared in The Xovoe Vremya of a balloon voyage from St. retersburs to a rni,,t not far beyond Lake Ladoga conveys astriKing picture of the benighted condition of the Russian neasantrv even within a few hundred miles of the capital The balloon in question containing a Col I'omost.efT n,,a Count Covanko, descended at a place called Moustoi, in the government of Oletz 300 versta from St Petersburg and this is what followed: These was a general panic. The peasants thought the anti-Christ was descending from the sky, and that the end of the world was come. Women screamed, children cried and all the inhabitants were well nigh out of their wits from fear. Soon from the wood came the women who had i.n ing mushrooms, running as fast as meir legs coma carry them. "A i,n,,.. they cried, "has come down from the sky with wonderful strangers in it!" The peasants thereupon hid them selves in the village as best they could, with the exception of a few bold fel lows, who took their hatchets a.ul Tiavi i i.i .11.11:1. Travel in northern China is ntcom plished in a cart, a mule litter, or the sadle. The first method is the most uncomfortable but the most rapid, the second the inoiit coinfoi table but Urn slowest, the third the most independ ent but lh. most uncertain. The cart used iu northern China has two heavy wheels, with wooden nxW, no springs, and a body about four feet long, ami three broad, over which is a lght framework top covered with blue coltun. Two mules driven tandem by a carter seated on die left shafs take it alone at a rate of about three miles an hour, and onu can maku iu it au aver age of thirty-live milcb a day, even over tlu roughen cjiuitry. it will carry about three hundred puunds of goods, and one 01 even two passengers; and the tighter one is squeezed in the more comfortable it will prove, for that, and that alone, will be a protection iruin the terrible jolting over the rough country roads. It is told in some old book of travel in the narrative of the miss.onof Lord Amherst to the court ol I'eKin if I re member rightly, thai one ot his attend ants die! from the effects of the jolt ing he received during a short journey in one of these carts. But lhi3 mode of travel being the most rapid, I ad ipt edit. Several years of experience of cart travel in China had made me bold, so that 1 did not fear the fate whieh had overtaken the Amherst mission man. Coml'ortulilv un.i i., wadded Chinese clothes, 1 squeezed myself iuto my cart. leelihir lik u caie piece ol china ware packed in cot- wii, ttnu auer a nearly larewell to the friends with whom i was staving at l eklli. the carters rraj-kl ......'., r whips, and with a shout to the mules e were o.i.-Ceiitury. used. The leader must set no one writes a word af called. Take, for example, the J cratic. Beginning ujlh , will be found the words art J arctic, aoctic, at, attic, acts, 1 hese having been read and credit marks set down 1 of words beginning witbrin such as root, rot, roc, roti , a letter occurs twice ur ofiog word, it is used but once as The player who has once hm remember the fewest wonb ins the most credit marki t not only affords considers ment, but it also serves as u drill for those who are iwt J spelling. Delineator. C'iUie-or unci tiiinik in(e the death of l'rts;d: constant smoker, cancer off;. and cigar smoking have InJ associated iu the public nJ geons of exjierience find thai east? is far more frequent who have been in the Labit ol The disease seems to be tunes' more common in malJ females. Tbe affection known as patch" is common. It ii 1 raised oval area of the tera, to onw side of the t&dk M where the end of the p:!tM impinges on the surface ot tetf 1 he patch is usually red, Mini bluish or nearly white It m. years, but tends to spread mil face of the tongue if te liritB continued. When Uiffased rathion it constitutes kucoaa Lntiiftin. Leucoma is rertainljs pi cause, of cancer. The snsoktr never leave a "patch" unttaa Hhould avoid rough niouthp brands of tobacco which caJ lion of the tongue. IlaH's Js .Mn. t b Vert Is This a Good Id a? Why does not some enterprising per ion establish an intellisfen ,,iim. hero it will be possible to hire fra,.i. ional servants? , Every housekeeper knows that , work of a household seldom comes out in terms ofan even number of servants There is always a little too in,,,.), f,.. tbe servants to do or not enough. If mere are IW0 maids lure is irnrIW work enough to occunv th ti,,, r about two and a Uai if thnr . servants there is not more 'than would suffice to keep five and a quarter busy anu in general terms there is never an exaci agreement between the the labor ;o be performed and the persons hired w perioral 11. A Famous Trio of Sisfl Mrs. Anna BulkelM-Iiaf r.miiv Winaut and Toedt. next to Miss Be ablv the best known and u nhir i-iioir sinsrers in thii fit Hills is the wife of apwH Mrs, Theodore Toedt v U Karle made an enviable f hrith i.i r-ti.irch and oralow fnre IM1 when she married! t,.,wr nf St.. Bartholomew This ffood name she ha c! maintain. Tor several j'aa xlutir u-her hef liasbt Miss Emily Winant, f 1 contralto of Sc. Ihom ' born In Brooklyn, and W' ' present place under Br. b. icr the past thirteen years- her debut in a concerting ,n has been in 1S78, cintr.-kitn in three w 1. .. A Handel socie? "'joe"" . .tit 111 n,i i. ,ti anneared mn' i-iv4 unfl - . i..,ioa nnuer Ooriche. in S.w at the I'hilharmonuv. , . and II many other concw , . ' . , Tl.i.ma M under Theouore ,,i i tbe various throughout the couuuj. n ii-i..,.t m llllo 2 .11 IBS t - but in Albert Hall, LonJ and san(j in many orch her concerts unaer .r 4. Captain George W. Torrey of 0,. 7' , , the'r hatcheU a"d fishing schooner Alice, reports' that hu M,feta Proceeded cautiously to boat was almost run down by a lloatin- Jt. . ? before tlle8e island in the Pacific ocean off C . no TM t0 convcjr the aP" Flatter. Thaat,ti.nH . Pwatus to the vilX-ge, could1 ore vail , . r ... nuu vigif wuiiE, IMT CVlll w .V t 1 isA4t Now all this could be nll.,., ,hl,e al8 8". v w lie ,.lu r.e i..i . ... "7 vue success.---ew - - ....... x... ua,uiK mi 0:1 ce rnr frU,i......i servants This mig, t be accomplished of a single person might be distributed imoug uiuereni Uouses, or those ser vants who are in reality only equal to about half the woik a real -,.,... would do, could be properly estimated and let out as half sorvauta, quarter paratustothe vilfc. could nr.vnn 3 "."T1 ""l"' upon their fellow villagers to come o,Vi IT UhcUoa rikl. I .ui.vu IU, back, the balloon beiin i. ': ' ?" " i-reauiw mere was not a wheeled veulcie iu the pce. The idea is not no u-i,i might at first seem, and It is certalnl v one the carrying out of which would r Hera the mind of many a housew f of nojncousiderable WjtJ juyOould4 Jay (Jould smokes W 4 the market during J pit Four cigars a day are" . is5 usually buvs them ... 11a w incisor hotel. " ' j 11 cenU apiece for them, like smoking more n reaches home, woe'' "T ' reacnaa noma, " 1 luxury ofaTurkUbPir,! When Mr. Gould "-t told him he must W use of tobacco, anu cumstaoeat nl0,'et,0ri(i day-NewYorkAVorlO-