The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, March 27, 1879, Image 2

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THE RED CLOUD CHEF. ! K ,he Mtted j tnasm ocsoe.
T
PITH AXD I'OI.TT.
I
. I. THOMIS, r!H.!jfr.
j The Princess Louise, it is predicted,
will work a notable dress reform among
NEBRASKA. ' -iUU " "4UC". w V"-"" ""
is a very simple one, and she makes no
uxspiay ui jeweia. ai s recent, enier-
iriwc vn rnpvirv nnlP tainmentat Rideau Hall, she wore no!
V,MI ' '" " ", ww w.WU WIV..
Alone a
Dreary Dert
Years.
Ulmmd
RED CLOUD,
tnj waal to lie, aa4 frnrfM li
defe&dast o avvre parity A IkJ tfeac
w Ir Johas aa fc ea3l ti
RUbjr2t fib-wjBn a srt
pronoun. Oar Craaws frieaw, W
om me sienoer ureaa oi skirt of Uckinpt whicb, M(i a $iU.
bythenarratzve of Alex-JorcoUon shirt and a black neckut
. TT.T- monncra ra liim;is . Va "- 4js,as at rr jvj- lu uiti "" ;t.3 l drfcM WSJ mmnW. -A vrpn
. . n; jtu-. 4i.i uiuuubi j c buaiiuiuii uci huql. . -.-i- i ri wt. . !" y-----..
bILVEP. Oars wonn a million uunara ,. ,. VG Ho Prr, fr ;;.," ,,. - " e uuiuau innauiisus. ui lcc
recently found in a rum near
were
Zacatecas, Mexico
Pakis last year consumed 11,319
horses for food, being some 700 more
than in 1877.
Hereafter every losf of bread sold
in Cincinnati must have it3 weight
stamped upon iL
Tiieue are now more than 1,300 wom
en employed in the departments at
Washington.
j the time of her discovery appeared to
;nTe an aounaance, sucn as it was.
for is . She retained all her teeth, bat they Tut man who U waiting far 9om-
Tzozn the San Krand-co Chronicle J Z?aZJa " ? 4 v 5 ' vP PV fisds
TL rnmane of --Knbinina Pmi.." ' r .T toUSh "M " f he Ste?S n barrel-hoop.
" -- - - -w-. -v - -m VSVVal a - K rva i n iini vn V. n Va-m . ..
-fc-. -rr "- T' -wv" it vuiirar lo caJJ a. mw hnv 1.. erer. aar rraWT Ullfc BTrafW av
id." Ju; 5pak of bm a a parea- neeti ct fel tiieoxiTgifi by th cti?f
theUcal pedestriaa- of the ury, 'b&rref ft (rtma it
--.-.. v - -mm -.r .
my mutAche dved." Polite barber
Certainly; did jou bring it withyoc?"
The individual who called tirStboot
comfortable dt fended h DOMUon br
is
! t
fiukrii mj uiiriiif Jii.wi . xrv in l iii:u iiia . a
. r - p r'-" r t- . . nnv vcars. air. urowa mace tier a
tire De Foe from
fact afforded
ander Selkirk
the
plete
whether be be a Prime Minister or a i i,. :.i.r " T, -1 t?ZT . . storm arose, and embarking with
trembling child, she places instantly at , . :Mlr ltl$ . thte ,1'
ease. SHe is a most gentle and kmdiy to the sympathies of th reader, and bv SlVfci-l5!nS2!f.i.!. !S
Two men have come tn ra'ef at Rnch lhe .te?ln of ilf .fle almof': Pe.r " could stop'the storm, and obtaining per- ""S ey mde a man forget all hb
.1 vT -l!"?. snadea him to accept it m ventable his- nio-.C knelt on the deck facing the oiner misericj.
w;i,. i.,uuiereup;reuDz ua a tory. J fce story wtnch we are about to nn.rlar.t,.n.J),.;n,i.m..n il,
novel lay." One would asiaifa lady ' relite, though tke in every particular, iu"! T!!i2Le-!S?.S.e "? S
J A.I .! - , - . - 1 . - . "AidiiUHl-i lllULLClllJ-' ULUCfcllllJV llllIMIM t 1
him deraasd that h hI.
cat lU
.d if br won t do li
on a dark street, and the other come up J possesses a remarkable similarity in nzSf
as the chivalrous rescuer, drive off the mrt-r f ; ;nm'Hn. t v.a Ttt trXi Kr " " r prayer.
as the chivalrous rescuer, drive off the
ruffian, protect the lady on her home
ward way and agree not to mention the
occurrence to her husband or father in
Ik 1815 the average vfeld of wheat in consideration of a douceur. They had
ranee wa 11 bushels to the acre, now
it is 15. ,
o liquore, wines, or lager beer may '
be sold in any pait of the new Connecti
cut State-h mse.
The London Stanford the other day
paid -?3,CO0 for a single telegram from
India.
A mix before the Nebraska Legisla
ture provides for a new Capitol at Lin
coln, at a cost of not more than -5100,-C00.
Yung "Wing, the Chinese Ambassa
dor, has just had a son born in Wash
ington. A Chinese President now j
looms up among the awful possibilities.
- A uiLLis before the Legislature of Al
abama appropriating 10,000 for the
payment of 75 each to soldiers who
Icit an arm or a leg in the Confederate
service.
The hotel -keepers of Iowa will hold a
convention at Council Bluffs on the 10th
of April. The object U to devise some
means to protect themselves against
dead-beats.
worked the business successfully in New
Haven, Conn.
Ox the coast of Florida, 30 miles from
rm!Ktncr cnnnnuwl
-, .- --w
many of its incidents to the tale tofd by " "5 P' "?UP?1
De Foe, and affords another illustration Tu J Ti i:"wlauu"a
.t j M. ... T- : the day, apparently without fear, and
of the adage that "truth is stranger than . n . , . .ftt .
.iw. 77 Im 4kA .H. TQ-JC !.. --.-. --- ., .-- VH. .i .w.m
small schooner Peor es Xada, built at
We never knew but one man who had
absolute faith in humanity, and he ad
vertised for a lost umbrella in this pa
per lat weck. Girmfrn W.
A babv imadnesi that he can sleeD all ' . l "c c'
day and cry all niht, and ti!l bo the : lbc UV
utwi in KnzJus. an
takcaUfAClKsbykaorkxajj himdermn
As " knocking dowa" t a teres Ameri
can undcrtAad. ajry mW h s
ditHculty In rrmo at a i!iavika.
Awrricaa G4 ia A trail.
land so
there is
an exchange
a light-huse,
informs us
the keeper of
eVntla Btf4 . v a t Kaf . -- - V. .1
f. -. U 1 U I :- T suuic uiiwc iiftiu mai li utavt.S B4U
n " 'j t r o i " .. been answered. She was taken to the
, Burton and Isaac J. Sparks for an otter ZZca nt MJ V; it- c . u
" ,r,.;n. rw;;rt C ct RK. house of Ur- dever, in Santa Birbara,
where she became the center tf attrac-
ed to her fellow-voyagers, and with a tiarling o'f the houehoM M On thl
The AVao, publi&ked at Sydxy, tii
traliaa taat it it eaoafa to
a n ilectire man thmkiar to o t al-
t:on. The Minion 1-athers took a j;reat
interest in her, sending to Los Angeles
and other places, hoping to find y)me
one who could converse with her. but
'' failed. Even the Penimaros Indiana.:
who were said to have hail an acquaint
ance with
hunting expedition from Santa Barbara
to the coast of Lower California. The
schooner sailed in May, but the trip not
which is a young man who sought the , proving so successful as was anticipated,
place for opportonity to pursue his she returned as far north as San Pedro,
studies. But he is evidently setting where she remained at anchor during a
lonesome. In a letter to the Depart-. portion of the month of August of the
ment, after enumerating his various same year. It being known that the
wants nep.ii'lfwx- thrpstH. starinnprv. t? small island of San XTohnlsjs. sitnatpd
he concludes with the suggestion that about 70 miles southwest of San Pedro , ,T"Et ""JAf os, TUK I5J.ANI'
perhaps the Department could furnish and a little further southeast from Santa d not understand her. Two offers,
him a wife. We are not informed , Barbara, was inhabited by a number of ?n?i Tl.OOO, for the pmnlegeof tak-
whether the required article has been Indians, the Peor es Nada was dispatch- Vf S ratnJL4CO; we Used
..i.i i,: (!. Imnra ,u .i, s i. by Mr. Nidever. hen found she was
m Axvtf VfrifM a noorwnm.' Nineteen men, women and children : 'n cellent physical condition, strong lay over the rAdlw.-Chtatgo Tribune
".".. .rr-w. , .. ,.i.. nn ., .k. .!, !.;. uuuuu; uut me eaung ox xruit anu
an oi uetroit wno ownea 4 to an iras- -""- -" v i.p.uUUu:.lnU.wu vegetables brought on a sicknes which
'mi.. i.riHipr. lAifiii iiiri'fii iu um iniii - - r - r--" -- -.w..... - v..w -v.
.m.v ..wt... mMr .w..va ..w .. .w j w- . .- .
. ' i .
wSt - ); v n .- most untverxat ue now beis? isaa. ta
...... nlmot evcrv handicraft, of tool of
There are two ways u MtUe a diffi. American maonfactore, Tke lunu of
culty in this cocntry. One U Uj fi-ht a innuity. aTi the editor, irrai tn sa
duel and the other to set up the dnnk. been rrachwf m Kaj-Uad ich nrm
The lauer is now regarded a the most j Elkmgton & Co. x:n beiar caUrcfj
fashionable. Atlanta Coruiitutiotz.
Some clothing was stolen recently
from the office of the New London Tel
cgrnm. The editor must have been ta k
mg a bath at that time. Hutu-ken rtU
Fenttntf.
Hj vijueh Hjoktii Botesex has been
rather discouraged incc the arrival of
Wilhelmj in tbi country, but he thinks
Hjalmerj Hjorthi Boveenj will rather
i in connection
nm
with
to the
-i -w - r. . . tin v:iJiiiir?t:iiiiM w tn ?n mi irv
" . .. rna mnion mrvt rtTj ni trT-iifii that rrrk - v -. ... .
ner nouse, wiin ms wne, ana :ne two t "": "1"-" T r.". Lu!l ; . r: : j SDine received bv falling from a noreh.
HTJS; nTasS-r? IT ! 5 S?SBI wm S?SiSSS "--- T fe r ' ?. or
T r e 'r r.w ,; r..1 ,." U.unBi,.Bnr;Bifi.- .('wteik!irommeuine sne tanaeu.
pieteiy prostratea. ner illness suaaen- j u"wwu
ly resulted in her death, and the Cor-, ?wanj
nnpr's .Tnrv dpnidftd that th PTnitprnpnt i inS child
of the auarrel hastened the fatal attack ! years of age and the ther an infant un-
3 IIZ. JLJliXU' IIILU Llin iLd ikUU w a - - .
theshoreTncpflrphofthP.mUs. er dress of shag skins, basket and,
. .k:,.i, .. t.'innse were given to i-atneru
AaA UiiO VI TV AilUAA T" ilO IU1CC
of heart disease. Added to the verdict I able .wak- Her hurried search was
The late Judge Cadwallader.of Phila-" was a strong condemnation of the con- unavailing, and, abandoning all hope of
delphia, was such a stickler for judicial duct of the grocer, Lorenz.
dignity, tbat he fined bis orotner ou xhe New York Home Journal says
for contempt one time when he came the amount of luxurious tenderness be-
into court and called him "John." stowed upon pet dogs in that city is al-
A Welshman, named Thomas Row- most incredible, ft i3 not at all un-
land died lately at the age of 103. He , common to see a carriage with two liv-
onzaiez.
of the Mission, who, it is said, sent them
to Rome. Messrs. Nidever and Brown
are still living, and it is on their au-
,,; i, kk o,Q ...,w u iuuiii mat iiiu iuregoing sirange nar-
beachlust in time to see the schooner j Jlive.? n l tbe rt'ader5 f lhe
failing away with all her friends on
board.
she called fraxtically
for some one to lake her to the vessel.
Chronicle.
It is because he has heard that clo
attention to little things mikes the suc
cessful business man, that the young dry
gtxxls clerk takes care of his mustache.
S'eto York Mail.
Ax old gentleman has been brought
to court iu I'ittsburg fur kissing a girl
against her will. His defense wa that
she set her face against him, and he
couldn't help it. Philadelphia llillttm.
A Wisconsin dentist adverti-c his
new plugging machine thus: It's op
erations are swift, easy and beautiful,
j pleasant to the patient, like the hum
1 ming-bird as it moves from flower to
' flower to get the sweet nectar."
cast m the shade by the TlSaajeii aad
similar firms of America. If there I
any labor-saving, novel, ingesiott la
strument invented, from x vcwtn ma
chine to a needle gun, tea to oce bl it
corac from the ferule brain and skillful
f.-vshioning band of Mice cJeTer Ameri
can inventor. To leave Ediona mar
vels" alone, look at the woadcrful ma
chines bow elaborated to nave labor la
agricultural work. The reaper and
binder, and a hot of other, will c
got themselves immediately Our
bushmeu work with American axr. the
very bandies being of a new Yankee
attern. We ride in American bcggle.,
ounge in American chair, and get
weighed in American weighing ma
chine. American inventions for
domestic purposes from the wash
ing, wringing, potato and apple
paring, churning, and other housework
machines down to the latet dodge, a
self-weighing cheese knife, are the won
der and delight jf our houewivcv In
the workshop their marvelou elf ad
justing plane, screw., chUeh, and
splendid tools of all kind are entirely
ousting the old-faihioncd production
A tU Vglrj Firw.
ana. y Avr l4u - -
aai nic a lMU wii.
aJbrvict el jht i furLar o a
Ixatl Tbj ai Uwj rmrf . ,
at th farm that Vj &mt , - - r
tath cetory TWj a
la ti K9t&3 wta i wr
thrth theta, by wh a 4
ar Leid ap U lp IA I'- t -dirty
Tfe itaW wan mrp-r - "
plaat aad fiowrri te . I -
ta rUkidri of as.ii krw x A
bek 4 U aSLi wi trm- -ary
sbnn eight isiwr wf -jaoh
Jcrp, wsU a 4lrA r rra
wajrr S e e&i A nw a
ru djixisKj ihj tarard mi n z
aad aH th csassre, e , i
to a rTrr?J rat. m)mm'
rra3wTef U Him A4ii r "--waStl
fe BMrTrd t Ts fwt w
deaa, if rwrt eiear. Ufcxa y '
X& the factracg thry hf i
cord arr3d taer rrt, a-
wj geaU a&il e:t Ut tVr '
jr asr thas ttrwjjw
bra mt fail tMMf r - -o&ea,
H ar tfce w-y tW . 4
rwiad ehrtr' VsjA are l l k
They hare wnLwdoa maiti tt
of two hcscflkrM r k
These are WmUo aad u
The eheee rtd r ir
iaU.bi aad Lb pU4 ir,
The WeT half at the mU m ,
while the epjer ?.rt w la.
kind of )K-rrw writi it i'i
aead The 8ppr hajjf w- '
Ught, aad the ehr k Utt f w ,
At thcead of a wmi U iet a
Ughtrr and left awHiker wr k V
eau ox a uuru wros iuc rfv
pod to the air, ai Um -r -It
takns thrr rritwih fr r . .r
cured, and a year before a n '
market. Kvery thtag wa .
ceat a any parlor I e-rwr w
tAblp and stall tac th? '-
Civtrcd with matUg 1 t
lde hor clean every Uu n
out seeing how it wai dMe I
the um kind of eher. U. i
r
t
Jim keene.
. t a - l i i . .t iiiw Akv-ww w kuu uuiuia iiiuuuui Cniii'mnti aMAn.lA.MA.l ..M. it.A J!Mi.
mi r ri niii r-on ti "ii m n r r m w w k v v r - ' j- . . .aaair. iiiv-iirii r -! k& vs i . iiriiiic-iiria bix -r- irt tit ra&4BB v is. Bi v.r -vis ; -
left eight children, whose respective eried men upon the box driving through ' j '- ... bam Ward, who took care of hi health, ' inir . ,. f ."t " i i" ,V " of shtiheld .It m high time technical ;",,: . '.T . .77.,,;
,ges were 71, 70, M, C6f 64, Gl, 58 and Central Park ou a pieasantmorniSg J ng? , (-ponpyr), wh.ch . made him exercise, regulated his diet JJf "Stiu',? 1011 the and h of Uc'n wcf" tSV tlmk that i. .wLC V
57, or 514 years altogether. with only a dog, or perhaps a pair of neer after ceTJ to ng in .ner ' and has brought him out of a very b.td nn" ti? Srn. h? thf.3r.fn ubltohcl. or Yankee ingenuity will ?2Jrri ilT 11?!?
M lUula H.P.HErv,LLKfof 1-.i-U entirely bi u out of the market As ..StaS.
orthfield, Conn., is in her 101st year, ; They had their bath, their locks have . la Jy 1 ' y I said to Mr. Ward: ntM fm..ip , .u-n.i,r pn,i ,i,fl one of their own wntcr pou ii "One ,., M. im-MM,i lk
and is .tiHable to be about. Two years ' been dressed, and fresh ribbons adora!"lw a Inrge amount of ZklUrf cnd.-JJncXm- of lhe prindpal for thc ,ucc, J fLSuU?
.. t i - ji.-. ' !.,.: ,.u u:i u t ui.,.A a :. " til looi, when George .Nidever. another I m- ;r,no ua . v..r. v...i.ji ' irK J,(P- . tu. a ..... .,,,.,.,....-..,.. -v,,.,i laecaiue, aau ion: a. vr
i Mwr t r. r -wrt i fi ri n aj m tt nar. m n r n t n r 11 i - wh . 4 i ria. J ' r- xr La a. mil mv. 11 1 fei 111: li a . w . n a a . - u a kiiii 11,1111:1 it. tin a iiaii a a a iaa a a a a a . am u a ai:di
aJJ lit lUliC Ull lliUn HFl--ilJiil.lllUt;. . wwa.- w iUU1VUMU uvc a? 1
driving the horses through the field. J carefully blanketed
ANEWFOi:xoi.Axodog. atllidgewav. ' Rabbi Yigdal, of
N. J., reeentlv seized a little child bv
its clothes and dragged it from the rail
road track, just ia time to prevent its
being H'led by a passing train.
Tiieue is a man in the woods of West
Virginia who has been a fugitive there
ever since he was drafted in 18G3. He
can not be persuaded that the war is
over.
The Melbourne Exposition is to open
Oct. 1 and closejdarch 31, 1SS0. It is
expected to do great things for Austra
lian trade. January and February are
very hot months in Australia.
Jerusalem Herat
Sholem, writes to the New Yoxk Her
ald: The Chinese are not all heathen.
In Foo Chow Foo there is a large popu
lation of Jews who sincerely believe in
the Lord's anointed, and, like all the
Jews, are look:n2 for the coming of a
savior. A Chinese Jew can be seen al
most every night in a cigar store in J)e
lancey Street who talks Hebrew and is
circumcised, and, like all Jews, has
heard of and believes in a Christ. These
Jews are also ostracized in the United
States because they are among the
Chinese. Are the persecuted Jews to
have no resting-place
nrt rr.cttrifr-nl'tvA in thig fn.n Vr
Rats and mice will go into a trap pubHc if lh ce from China and are
more readily if a small piece of looKing- yrm thnmP
glass be put in any part of 'the trap j . . ,, T , .. ,
where they-can see themselves reflected. S . Af?.,?aJ? J3' J.oh? e5.i
They mistake the reflection for another So"ih Mllfo"J. blc County Ind- died
rat, and where others go they follow. sVddenly and under U mysterious
b J circumstances. She was recently mar-
Tiiomas Ckai'O, of New Bedford, ried to Dyer, and had about $2,030 in
Mass., who made a voyage across the gold, left her bv her former husband.
Atlantic in a small sailboat, is now The money was"invested in a farm near
planning for a trip next summer up the Kend&IIrille, the deed to which provided
Mediterranean, by the way oi the Suez , that in the event of her death he should
- Canal, into the Indian Ocean. j become the sole owner. Suspicion be-
Columijus, O., has an ordinance for- ing aroused that she was murdered,
bidding candidates for municipal offices ' Dyer's premises were examined and a
. from treating voters under penalty of a J quantity of strychnia and a spoon were
50 fine, 10 days in jail and forfeiture of i found in his trunk. He then suddenly
vote in all municipal elections. The or
dinance also forbids electioneering with
in, two squares of the polls.
The receipts of flour at Chicago dur
'ing the vear just closed amounted to
3,i20s000"barrels. This is unprecedent
ed in her history. The same may be
paid of wheat and cDrn. Of the former,
30,000,000 bushels were received, and
of the latter 03,000,000.
Tiieue are parts of California where
the beasts of the forest exist in their
primitive glory. Panthers and lions re
cently made a descent from their moun
tain home upon some fine and costly
Angora goats belonging to a farmer of
Carpenteria, and left only six out of
twenty-two.
A Nevada paper tells of a Chinese
cook who was reprimanded by his mis
tress for not having cleaned the fish
well that he had served up at dinner.
The next time there was fish in the
.house she went in the kitchen and saw
John carefully washing the fish with a
fine piece of brown soap.
Two little children went to church
alone in Westfield, Mass. Thev became
, tired during the long sermon, and the
older one, supposing that school rules
held good in churches, led his sister up
in front of the preacher and said:
"Please, sir, may we go home?" He
said "Yes," and they soberly walked
but. m
Owikg to the severity of the weather,
the forests of the Bernese Jura are in
fested by droves of wild boars, some
times co numerous as to defy attack.
Bands of wolves hover about the farms
at night, and hundreds of hungry
chamois have descended from the moun
tains, and are wandering about the val
leys in search of food.
Du. Bellows says that it is unfor
tunate that so large a part of the world
, fails to recognize the truth that labor,
manual as well as mental, is heaven's
bestgift to man. He declares that while
it is natural for men to dislike to see
their wives and daughters work, yet if
they would work more they would have
."better health, and probably better tem
pers. Gov. Williams, in hi3 message to
the Legislature, commends highly the
managers of the Indiana AVomen's
Prison, "Mrs. Rhoda M. Coffin, Mrs.
Eliza C. Hendricks, Mrs. Emily A.
Roach and Sarah Smith, the Quakeress
Superintendent. He says of them tbat
. they have "trained the inmates to habits
of industry and kept their expenditures
. within the appropriations."
Gakgs of sharpen, claiming to rep-
resent a firm in Syracuse, N. Y., are
canvassing in Maine, making so-called
commission contracts with responsible
farmers for the sale of "Eureka Scythe
Grinders," to be paid for when sold,
but the document they ask the farmer
to sign is so nicely, worded that the mo
ment he puts his name to it he becomes
responsible to them or some one clsefor
about $200,
disappeared and is believed to have gone
to Kansas. The bodvof Mrs. Dver was
exhumed, the stomach taken out, taken
to Fort Wayne and placed in the Medi
cal College, where a chemical analysis
was made. Unmistakable evidences of
poison were found.
While experts are quarreling over
the question of how fast a man can
skate, the ice-boat skippers of the Hud
son are showing by practical sailing
how rapidly their peculiar craft can
skim over the ice. The other dav the
ordinary time of 10 miles in 10 minutes
was made between Poughkeepsie and
New Hamburg, and that, too, under
conditions not entirely favorable. It is
an every day occurrence for these swift
winged sailing-machines to pass the
fastest trains that run along the river
shore. So much has the sport of run
ning them increased in popularity of
late that there are regular ice-boat clubs
having races for prizes and for the cham
pionship, the same a3 though they were
contested in the water and in warmer
weather. It is an exciting and in many
respects a dangerous sport ; but maybe
it is the danger that makes it so popular.
hunter, stopped there for a few days
He was not previously aware that the
place was inhabited, but on this occa
sion he became convinced that thi was
the case. He noticed three small circu
lar inclosures about 200 yards from the
beach and about a mile apart. They
were about six feet in diameter, and
made of bniEh, the walls five feet high,
with a small opening on one side. Near
these openings were sticks of drift-wood
stuck in the ground in the form of a
tripod, supporting dried seal blubber.
These inclosures appeared to be simply
wind-breaks, affording no protection
from the rain. He also saw
a mysterious footprint,
and judged it to be that of a woman
from its size and arched center. An
approaching storm obliged Nidever's
vessel to leave the island without al
lowing him to pursue his investigations
any further. Mr. Nidever having seen
many otter on his first trip to the island,
made a second during the winter of
1852, and, being requested by the Mis
sion Fathers of Saita Barbara, he and a
party determined to make a careful
hunt for the supposed lone inhabitant
of the island. Within half a mile of
the head of the island they discovered
a basket in the crotch of a bush or small
tree, covered with a seal-skin, and con
taining a dress made of shags' skins a
sea fowl common in tbat section care
fully folded up, and several square
pieces of skins similar to those of which
the dreis were made; also a rope made
of seal sinews, abalone shell fish-hooks,
bone needles, etc. As it was late, and
time for them to return to their boat for
the night, Mr. Nidever scattered the
contents of the basket on the ground.
so that upon his return he could judge
of the presence or absence of the ownar
by finding them gathered up or remain
ing as he left them. The following four
or more days were spent in otter hunt
ing, and before the search for the In
dian woman was renewed a southeast
gale compelled them to seek a more
hospitable harbor at the island of San
Miguel.
4 Keene." answered Ward ."m th Touching obituary in the Buffalo
mo3t successful living man at the age of Erprci. D ictor McBride. who called
49. He is worth $10,000,000. He could himself the King of Pain, recently died
wind up his affairs within a week to n Chicago. He was a person of long
two weeks and have $S,000,OuO in the hjlir Kfcat pretension, and a lack of
best kind of securities and interest-pay- medical knowledge that w:u apparently
ing bonds. His other property, which bottomless.
he has no desire to sell, will bring him
up to the figure of $10,0C0,000."
" Is he a native of England?"
" Yes, he was born there. He went
when quite a young man to Illinois and
then to California. He has washed
many a ton of mud with the pan in his
hand and picked the gold out. Keene
was a plain, laborious miner but always
had the spark of honor, courage and
genius in him. He made wealth and
reputation on that coast selling the
much exploited bonanza stocks short.
He came East with no decided intention
of speculating but was induce J to take '
a look at New York, and to him we are '
in great part indebted to the buoyant I
condition of the stock market and much
of the restoration of confidence."
" Why are you looking at me po in
tently, Alice?" said Theodore. " I was
gazing at vacancy," replied Alice,
dreamily; and yet there was a twinkle
about her mouth that showed her ap
praisement of the young man. Ponton
Transcript.
When a nice-looking young lad;-
yields to the icinesof the pavement and
U the adaptability of American mechan
ia. They are not only thoroughly
competent, to make any thing that u re
quired, but they can aio design tool
for any conceivable purpose, i'hey can
make machinery fur any work whatev
er, and they aie always ready to learn
They do not think that theirs is the on
ly way in which a thing can be done. It
U the versatility of American mechanic.
tbat pushc their products on the fur-
from 'HMf to Mt refkiar. ad
from 300 to i: gafeior.
money, cows from .ii lt ,
from lrtl to Sl.-O. r -
i - ' -
Chlner Humor.
cign rnarKci."
Romance of the Hub.
A Boston romance, in which a halo
and hcartv man of 50. and a slight, little
gently falls down, every young fellow in woman a couple of years younger figur-
sight will rush to her assistance, lift her
up, inquire icnueny n sne is injureu,
and be rewarded by a grateful smile;
but when an old and homely woman
meets with the same mishap, she will
clamber to her feet by the aid of the
nearest hitching-post, und all the male
lookers-on will remark, "The old gal
I i .1 .1- ! ! t... t. 111 J
tU l.oc ho c,io,.,,i0.l ir rr,oW;, "- U O, U1UII I SHUT Jltt. IKl : Blltl
much money and yet keeping so much I l,herte is novsraiJ" on th': prt,rt of lhu acci'
nnnnlRritv in thn -trW.f P - dentCC. JS UC IPlVOl lUJl iter.
Our Lunarian Neighbors.
Mrs. Mart Holbrook died in Mass
Tscluisetts sl few days ago.aged 93 years.
When 75 years old she began the man
ufacture of tidies, which found ready
safe in Boston, and were so much sought
forthat she was obliged to employ scv
'eral old ladies to do the coarser wort,
while she filled in the finer parts with
her own hands. In this way, up to her
A great change is taking place in our
views in regard to the moon, and it may
be that we are on the eve of discoveries
which will make this century an epoch
in astronomical history. Some Ameri
can observe.-s saw not long since a cra
ter on the lunar surface in active opera
tion under conditions as reliable as hu
man vision at such a distance can be ex
pected to reach. A French astronomer
has made observations on a grander
scale and confidently -'asserts tttat the
moon is inhabited. M. Camille Flam
marion, the present originator of this
long-cherished idea, is a scientist of
honor and renown, well known for his
reputation as an observer and enthusias
tic writer. He has written several ar
ticles to prove his position, and has de
termined to devote his life to this
branch of astronomical research. No
instruments on the globe are powerful
enough to afford a glimpse of our lu
narian neighbors. M. Flamtaarion i3
not in the least discouraged at this ap
parently insuperable obstacle in the way
of a solution of his problem. He is go
ing to have one made that will exhibit
the men in the moon to terrestrial eves
without a possibility of mistake. He
is urgently solicitinsr cuntributiona tn
fund for on immense refractuag teles
cope, whose estimated cost is 1,000,000
francs or $200,000. This instrument,
the astronomer believes, will be effectu
al in revealing the inhabitants in the
moon really existing according to his
sanguine faith. Some of the largest re
fractors in the world, if used when the
air is pure, bear a power of 3,000 on the
moon; that is, the rnpon appears as If
it were at a distance of eighty miles in
stead of 240,000. It can thus be seen
that an immensely increased power
would be required to detect small ob-
jects on the surface.
We trust M.-Flammarion will be suc
cessful in collecting funds for his mon
ster telescope, and that he will pick up i dencea of an encampment of the lone
A THIRD EXPEDITION
made to the island in 1853, by Nidever,
Charles Brown and four Indians from
the Santa Barbara Mission, was more
successful. On the day after landing,
Mr. Brown discovered the object of their
search at a distance, and cautiously ap
proaching in an opposite direction from
the remainder of the party, got quite
close to her without being observed.
She was in one of her pens or wind
breaks, clothed in a garment made of
the skin- of the shag, without sleeves,
low necked, and, as observed when
standing up, extending almost to the
ankles. She was sitting cross-legged.
skinning seal blubber with a rude knife
made of a piece of hoop-iron driven into
a piece of wood. There was no cover
ing on her head excepting a thick mass
of matted hair of a yellowish-brown col
or, due to the exposure to the sun and
air. The hair was short, looking as
though tbe free ends had rotted off.
She would occasionally raise her hand
and shade her eyes and look toward the
other men on a sandy plain near the
beach, whom she evidently saw. The
balance of the party were now signaled
in order that
SHE MIGHT BE CAITURED
if she attempted to escape. To the sur
prise of all she made no attempt to get
away, but greeted each one as they ap
proached with a bow and a smile, and
chattered all the time in a dialect that
none of them understood, although the
Indians accompanying Mr. Nidever
were acquainted with several Indian
dialects. She was talking apparently to
herself from the time Mr. Brown ap
proached within hearing distance until
she was made aware of his presence.
The expression of her face was pleasing,
her features were rezular, and her com
plexion much fairer and her form more
symmetrical than the Indian women on
the main land : and she is believed to
have belonged to a different and supe
rior race. By signs and other means of
communication she was made aware
that they wanted her to accompany
them, and without any apparent hesita
tion she made ready to follow. In their
course to where the schooner lay at
anchor they found a beautiful spring of
water issuing from the bank above the
beach, under a shelving rock. The
cracks or fissures in this rock were stuck
full of bones, and there were other evi-
popularity in the street
" Because he has always valued his
good name and has never been a mere !
scalper or conspirator against the
pockets of individuals. He cut Wil
liam 11. Vanderbilt dead in the Fifth
Avenue Hotel one night."
" How was that?"
" Vanderbilt was not above tricks and
deceit, and he came to Keene with some
talk about Lake Shore stock and gave
him false points. Keene is a man of
honor, and apart from Mr. Vanderbilt's
great wealth could not understand that
kind of treatment. A few such les
sons would be of great assistance to
build up Mr. Vanderbilt's character.
He has conducted himself tolerably well
for some time past."
"I was with Keene," continued Mr.
Ward, " at the White Sulphur Springs,
west lrginia, last fall when he got a
telegraphic dispatch informing him that
Michigan Central was selling at some
thing over seventy. He had bought it
somewhere about forty. He said to me :
'Mr. Ward, I have got 17,000 shares of
that stock which I bought long ago and
put away for investment. I think I will
sell it now.' He made over $100,000
right there. That is his style ; he is not
merely a speculator on turns, but he
buys large lines of stock for investment
and puts them aside. He owns 3,000,-
000 bushels of wheat and has it stored
in Chicago. He has nearly paid for that
wheat in the stock transactions of a few
weeks or months past. He also holds a
large quantity of Erie bonds. As I have
remarked, he is the most successful man
of his age who has made his name in ihe
stock market in an upright way."
" GoA," in tie Graphic.
i
IllfllT nrv Milll
AIku lion A'IIiin (in:iy ld- trit; incrwiiy)
i Auokconi iiint limn a !n:iui, a plycc
Of pfe li-'t nt- th night le'orij
u'itroi iiH -luinCM-r.-ani uroice ith more.
An t lv tin iht of a f ). dtriu'llf iik tapr
Hi "aw a fellow wi itinKti n pli-r i.f mjmt.
Iin Ailhetn tiavini rur d this p!e,' of pf
At tin chap n-writlng wlnke I his eye. j
And aid. " .My fi lend, j on -llntr a na-ty int!I.
illst t-ll me what you w rite?" ?aid ae, f
will.
I write the namci of those who love their
ni-ijrnhor-."
"And 1-mine lliTe?" "It I," nafd he, "I
JaITs.
The.-! ar the name of tho v alonf
Who to their fellow alwayi ;1'e a loan.
To tlio- distressed they give and take a
bond.
And ten per cent. !$ the Interest eltstrged
thereon."
He vanished, left behind a bankrupt INt,
Audio! Den Adhem's name ld all the rft.
Oil fVu IHrrick.
ed. ij reported. The two melon a ralnv
day, whde hurrying with tilled umbrel
la about their buiitie., a collision fol.
lowed, and the wjman slipped to tho
sidewalk. In picking her up, the man
recgonized her a an old flame. Thirv
years before, when be was a Lowell
factory girl, and he a poor medical
student at Harvard, they had loved each
other. In 1SI9 he went to California,
and forgot the girl he left behind him.
He prospered in businew, became neb,
and married. Later, hi wife and chil
dren die!, and in hi loneline, he re
membered the Iowell factory girl. A
dream told him she was in distny He
hurried East to find her, but looked in
vain until they accideutly mot. She
was a widow, with two children, and tn
destitute circumstances, but that is all
over now.
I'o Hats Keaon I
A. correspondent send the following
incident to Suture: During the pro
sent frost the window ill. of my draw
ing-room are supplied with bread for
the benefit of the bird, who finding food
there are constantly fluttering nbouttbe
windows. One day a large water-rat
wa seen on the window ill helping
himcil to the bread. In order to reach
Our law reports yesterday contained the window he had to climb to a height
oi auout i) leet; inu ne uu oy me neip
of a shrub trained agatiul the wall
Neither instinct nor experience will
easily account for hi conduct, since he
never found food there before. If neither
experience nor instinct what avc reason i
led him? His action ccm. to have
been the result of no small observation
and reasoning. He ncera to have said
to himself : "I observe the birds are
thronging that window a.l day; they
Colorado, (he Colored Land,
This land derived its name from its
many-colored turreted hills and rocks,
which, white, pink and blue, stand out
in painted contrast with the unchanging
greenery of gnarled and wide-fringed
pines. From the Divide tbe whole
range of the Rocky Mountains is seen at
a glance. And they are ever varying in
color. In early morn Pike's Peak Is
clad in violet, and the rising sun tips
him with gold ; in the evening he is all
rose, lhe bnowy itange is sometimes
silver, pure bright silver, and at other
times the snow is a perfect pink, fading
as the sun sets into a gray and violet
and white. In a bright noonday the
Foot Hills display all their hues of green
and umber. Tfte Peak, as I wnte in
January, is violet colored streaked with
silver. I fear no brush can ever repre
sent it as it is in nature's dress. It must
be seen. The vivid colors of the rain
bow in this land are truly enchanting
when thev appear, though we seldom
A Philological Fus.
mention of a novel lioel case in which
one German sued another for calling
him a "Spitzbube." The jury was com
posed of Americans, who did not know
what the word meant, and some Ger
mans, who were frank enough to admit
that the meaning of the word dependel
on its connection and the occasion of
using it. Before the experts who were
called to establish the meaning of the
word were through, the jury knew so
. - i-'..-...--. ."-..
little as to the merits ot the pmioiogicai would noi oe mere lor naught; it may i I'm tbr jnt tM j , Mrr.-rf
controversy that they could not decide be they find there something to eat; iff owhrjou.i"
whether the plaintiff or the defendant so, perhap I too might find there soms
wa3 the "Spitzbube," and so acquitted thing which I should like. I hall try."
the latter. The word "Spitz" means
"point," and the word "Bube" a "ras
cal, knave, or cunning fellow." Used
together, their significance in English Of late several copie of a paper
would be the "head rascal." When we ' called the Congrcxsionnl Iltmrd have
call a man a "boss thief " we call him a , been received at the Tribune office. We
"Spitzbube," and even Beelzebub may don't know who send it and we don't
wmpi.-iiu yi uic uim w. fcOM "- want n any luuger. j aere are no pic-
An American connected r ?
the Couxelate in Chtaa kvi ' .
some of the Chinee pc
glisb. Among th-ra are . - i
which prove, a!a' that the t
L abroad even in that far Ua! I r -J
production b eattlled "Far- r -
Grave, or the Wife Tcted,"
how a wife whoo huUat4 w .
to death promised htm Ual b "
not marry agaia until tho ! '
grave should be dry AfW h
the conscJentiou widow applet ' v t
a.iduouIy to hatrnig Uw ! ' !
the grave by fanning t Thi -
plbtned, "he married on CIm' w
wihing to iet her. fotganti t
avowed that he wa atttt to d I -sought
her not to take uaU Wr
other huband.
Oh, mk- ymsr rotn4 .
TrpMiL
I nVf Mid I won't on. 4 I
Hut. Ah' iat Tir" 1m4Mi )r '
lmpttwl
IWm't ajr tbftn jrl. 4r '
Tale ol vlrtMJnM uun I M
r-d.
And ny lom wU wW k -111
ruialt" ll-tit. hv tatwr-1.
II I don't lh. the , I II t i.i
Chuang then die contentlJy a '
be is encoGincd make W o , -
guic himiclf a a josg n i '
make love to Mr Cbuang a ' ,
they watch over the empty eof. -
next day the funeral btked km-im. o
I a the wedding dinner " Th . t
nized Chuang bam iUwe f '
declare that nothing will cure
the brain of a living maa -
who ha not been iaA mwn h r
day. " " Old Cboaag' will d .
hi relict a abe vanva. wn"r
Chuang take off hi dg a' J
ties himself in the oilia fcsrii I'
pouwj soon appear wtti sa i : !
mabe tbe lid, uoon wMc ( . .
bound up with a " h"lIo'" '! i
vitaUon to explain, Mr. CJm f rr
mark
yon ttrr Mr.
My tnmirttlosr rJ f WrC4 : 4
garment worn.
To which anwr her krl-
" Tonr talc ti piattMle hml I Uhte ''
vr up,
tttm't tuiijpt- jrtr wif try Wmc It"
the tMat t nr tJrf
To tet irnjr fUMilNMi to -mm I
tnrrly Mffjmlfs 4mwl.
Sin of the Fathers J!als!a!nd bj
Sea.
th
An Unappreciated Exchange.
One of the cutora of oar fathers
the habit of going to leepdenagchtirc!j
crvice, asd varioa sod singular rm
tbe expedient adopted by the ra.cMer
an tie deacon to keep them wide
awake. Here is an account of a rouajr
ceue ia a Lynn (Ma ) Church fi Ir
.1 r .t t a ,.i I'-
rm . a. i . -- m -v-.i ai.av .-m n. m aa an in --. a m - - - . r -
as a "ispitzouDC" wnen iney stigma-, tures in it: nocookerv deoartnnt itk ii . . i ,.. i-
tir.n him as the "arch-fiend." The r5- 1 ,- ;'.t,Si 7u "-.' ag uie preacamg oi 50 .-
meaning of the term, however, lies make tatting or spatter work ; no la
in its application. It may mean noth- structions how to take care of babie -
taken
ing, a very little, or a great deal. It may
be used as a term of endearment,as
a father calls his son a
rascal." or as an extreme
proach. It occupies a wi
plication and involves shades
mg too cunning lor an American jury
to separate. In this particular case tbe
jury,
there
have
plaintiff and defendant, their school of
education, their trades, the brands 1 f
daarcel TTBitnev. I). IJ. it w
from ObdiA Turner' journal
ir,$,Je ye 3d Allen Urydg
?-. - .
un i'MW, UVkUllIK UUk UBU 8PWCOM DV WtUU.tii; ..V. -r. .!Mvrrr 1
when a few insignidcaateenUcsoea- We don't : .. u.- i-.j , t r
"cunning little see how the concern exist: it ha, no "VIJZ? .Z J I
term of re- advertbiny natrona and nt . .;-- r" " . . . c 1. 1 ... .
le field of ap-' letter seuiforththe rTr. of ; J oi a iosg sun --
of mean- ing-powder or a cooh enre" rV,7- ' ". "V "f! . V " ,
1 - crwT'ai nrc tvitk rw niavwrij air -
T. 1 . m .- wmm a4 LAJ V 10 ""
t-i. .-A t " ., ... 'B "
" "T11 la Ka "pS.to a faarT lhornc whrewtUi .V w
i- "tit K IU H.WJ kttC MOKTIKIOI ..L 1. L . J- Ik-
m. w -M a a a av mj 11- fi b. a ruf a t. hiiiiiit
nw t - f . .
e was any libel in its use, should ed. Bismarck Tribune. TZZ J a- -xt t -
i ascertained the pedigrees of both m J nsceUng-hou.e, he did Py Mr T
beer they consume and their capacities nhvrain .umIW t .J5i -xi
fnr Mimiltimr that dfiHhtfnl h-vpr. W VM. CaI.,ed . k
-; -o ----o ---- --- cnua in imu citv, out before he arrived
age. their views upon the Schleswig- fua.;M :Z ..: ,,e?
Holstein question, their shJfles o poli
tics when at home, whether they are
disciples of Schlegel, Kant, or bpiei
l L.ma rT . Li KStMvvl frtfratM tlia
haveatrueramrw,sorareistheram-c ,.., ,, -r1- nil v;n.
1A.1UMS. - W. b w VMM
crowds of lunarians thi ough its far-see
ing eye before the vision of the present
generation becomes too dim to behold
the long-wished-for sight. Providence
Journal.
inhabitant of the island. These bones
were used for nourishment, obtained by
sucking; they were dried and resacked
many times, showing that occasionally I
she was put upon short rations, but at j somewhere in the neighborhood
shower. But we have other rainbo ws
a rainbow in the snow mist, a kind of
snowy sleet, which falls on the hills, and
at times ris3 from the snow-range un
der the heat of the sun like a bright
gauze veil. On a frosty evening, too,
at sundown the landscape is Jiemmed
with an atmosphere painted with all the
colors of the rainbow as with a broad
ribbon. 2?ight in Colorado is not black
or even grav; but when the weather is
Una whirh i nuarltr aivAVS. th mnnn i . ......
:rt r r f .TjI-um Lri. f the word" bpilzbube" opened up a visxa
saif rAnv:..u. of such appalling possibiltias an.
auu wwr. itui, imku, to wt nraiciu 4 n., L.7. i
which centers around Joachim and
Brahms, or that at Weimar, which flte3
the colors of Liszt and Wagner. The
Germans have time enoughlo devote to
the elucidation of tbe "meaning of a
word, and some ot them have spent the
whole Scriptural span in running
down a urees root, out wun
llna itvivl9 r?iii mitwh mra.i-tfJ'
The Pera find.) Republican ha.i a hrf krat OHutU hv hns- m v u r
startlizgly suggestive vry to tell. A aad kU hand srramng ye rail A'
so pying, Allea did qaieklw ihr J
staff behiad Darse Ballond aad re -a
grievoc. ptick upon ye hand. W t?"
poa Mr. Toadiai did pnag op m--
lW r rtnsv mi A vl lfTlhi I f
strike kk haad agauBJt ve wall, aad
so, to ye great wonder of a!!.propha
1 j J- . , a.a Mali, un A IVWU W-V, M T .
aosec repeatedir with a rit wii Mt..v v -t- -. : .r- tt a
Yk- Ar ...- IT., ?. s - . r- T ' i9
the child was, to all appearance, dead.
tiowever, m moviag the body about,
some signs of life were discovered. In
quiries were at once made by the doc
tor, and tbe fact drawn oat that as a
ireaimeai lor a cold the child had been
i
sirup.
strong
The moral is obvious.
aown a ureei row, ous wua TTrir- tn, 1, . r-
Americans life is too short aad they a3?t ISJgZ??'- T?
are in too much of a hurry. Hence, it do-Simblo Sfcifta!00?
m.i,.r.iumtw J,0tiafTr,,-t do ciimbto the higheat sh
adjxiaktArr! t vnml.tvV -,A Z- vA t-
coffee as an antidote fo tw. I ; v. c . :-rr m ka
opium which the sirup coataia!, aad Ia where he waa, aad ye great casdl
a few hours iUm (child was entirely welL cosasaittsd, he seesed aoch abashed
bt did not speake. And I thiax &--
f bo sooae ariae ro to siceo in iceeusr
Take a five- t Ye wootefn siv sometime iltiV 3-
inatioa will i bom irsnv It hr rtnrs of their eC '-
highest shelf is tk ! w.ocu Kwxs f- U'ki'ner
ywj, aau ueponi, it taere.
dc is.
mnct Vva Vwn tfc tfiA tAsrtTn-innT ! tn
' T - !T . .T " J T DantrV. nri tlannMn I L.- -t-i 8 , ... - . w. A
r- t. i i- .t ja - x v - wr-K&i i. I mrrin t m f tilam m t& . 9n .9.irttT nrr i. -.-
ppailing possibdties aSd suci U??l 27? f fiaaace J see to be preaching to iacb of ,
Z.!i-JZa ; .. a:.z zs wo weecs.l -.v, mnAm s-.t-o. v. mmA hr amor?
landstvled "Colorado." a land clothed. I c.CJtrL"frr"f". " ! Z Zl'Zr JT, TZl.T? ft A. -
like the darling child of the Hebrewpa-. SSSteS li dJK S J TJ? "?JU' to i T ""
tnarch, in a robe of many colors. " "".- " leu ua yet another sign of the rood i m i
piTl L trJl--XT -"J , avert tne endless shower of philological times en mi bf Tb;.. kt .-T K ,.
Frasts Magazine. rutiV tht tT,rtn Th r, ; ""Jr ?oanB?' THn"' xmd I Bake Rice Pcpwxo. Swel a cof
rr. :r:-: r -"--- - iu uucover me oeaaumi md !,... -.. j . W1 v.
' vv wm aa a -m v 111 v m-naa u p r wm rr a i - - - m
- - V -- r 1A S J VWBA '
sweeten it with brown s&gar, aad ba.a
A ULW-5UIT over a $20 steer cost the also possible mat tne jury laded to see so elocuent of scratch MM cvil
.: T-V Tlronn .,) n.ni Ino. t inV TTIIl 1T1 fhP WAffl 'ST h tOITOT lfS . ... r . . . 1
WlUiUW Ul I ou uuicu auu io,xu, j .-... . .w .. , -r-..w , wuz "JHJ3. S. S B&H.WOrlri ban. .1.1.1 s. i . ?i ,!..Y. . f -
lood o f f 50C I meaning might be, that did not convey np, yoa see."-i?wteH TiwueW w i T5rZJr ZZlZZ " scl '
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