Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
puggets of the pure ore attested our rising for- | make it worth our while todo the errand for | ed and lifted her above her sex. Plainer, more — our breakfast, she glanced at Lion | th. of their Naughty Childrea Hast be Smacked. Selected Recipes. ALPHABETICAL some AERIS TS. — | and the infant, rolling and gam ‘= er mmanely postponed, to the last possible mo- —— ARTIFICIAL OYSTERS.—Grate as many ears Louisiane eve. «a in the deep. warm sand. “Never could bear| ment, bus ‘summons. In her little bed we laid her of green corn as will make one pint of Pale: BUSINESS DIBEOTORY: acne = one, until Lion there, then only ahaif-grown| Just as the sun's disk appeared ‘above the ing you know what one teacupfulof flour, half teacup of but- | Oostesetng Cards oF pee PEE pup, saved my first baby. He, just a weeny, | horizon, three of the committee advancing | Dealt out to ty Ada, ter, one egg, and pepper and salt tw suit your Prem egy Ee eye hel ae toddtin thing. got out of the door, ant down knocked upon the door. ‘eyes red and swol- ina very Ir taste. yped and tried in butter. oe. ne eames, the creek; and the first thing I saw was the dog, | len with weaping, Lot's wife it wide. Yes, the nursemaid told her truly, A CueaP axp Daticaer Sour.—Save the ecoe ~» bet. bringing bim out, strangled and dri-ping, in| With a si sensation to describe, I | She would catch it for her cheek, liquid the nice leg of mutton was boiled in to- his mouth. I wouldn't part with that dog for | awaited what was to follow. A ve And her conduct quite unruly, day. It would be wicked to throw it away for bis weight in gold!" lay where it had been thrown, at foot of a Misbebaving all the week. a large fraction of succulence and nutrition of Whatever Lot's inmost mind or secret repin- neighbortn; tree. With a shudder I recatied t out . the meat isin it. Remove the fat to-morrow, walke abroad ings. his outward life bore evidence of a marked | the many times Lot had sat under the shadow | When her mother wen! "etree and then put it over the fire. Add onions, car- he beanty I d wit revolution towards the side of fruitful and | of its branches, his children playing about his | | Meaning next to dot .. * rots or turnips sliced thin, and some parsley “« mysterous riddle plain virtuous industry. No more loiterings at tasks | knees. Missie was empioyed in dropping leaves; or Lima beans, sweet corn and sli t so long our souls has triad or levity of demeanor; no judicial magnate ever | Chris and George had followed at the heels of sate rows, li be (tall potato, with bits of celery; add in either case Saseeiieainal iba iduisiaees clothed himself in dignity and reticence | the other 3 . a a punched her pre edly rice or barley—a tablespoonful of them dry to The moaning winds and tains: ee eee aint ea ee ea aatt Ender the | | A resounding slap upon the shoulder nearly | ,,Nextdestroved.s new obignon. | S.auart of liquor wa good rule.” Do this, And T ame th ee migh’ om new administration, at whose stood sent me r7 e earth. at a trifling expense you may have a tureen o! jo me a aces brisk little wife. “By the great Moses, that little woman'sa| Of her awful goings on. soup fit to set before a King. To us, the advent of Let's wife marked the | brick!” This, of course, we couldn't pardon Sounp Tarta.—One teacup of butter, one SALooss. ‘ commencement of a new era; wholsome food, a **What is it, Chris!” I asked in astonishment; When through c wilifuiness, and a-balf of sugar. two well-beaten eggs, halt OLDEN, WI6 Pa eve. corner a. Pee etnat Meath, WER cases Butek tidy cabin, and, above all, no more darning of | for his lively tone wasanything but appropriate She'd cut up fia’s “Dolly Varden,” a ful of saleratus, three teaspoonfuls TER Bat,(@.W. Driver.) 186-8 or. socks, or washing-days. The wilderness had | for the occasion. * Just to make her doll adress; water. flour to make them ‘stiff enough to roll NTERS. Yet ti begun to blossom. We even attained to, now «Come and see!” and seizing me by the arm, ‘ane ose ma Sen te che ttttered out thin; cut them out with a tumbler. Bathe F and then, the luxury of a “‘biled shirt.” We | he commenced dragging me toward Lot's cabin. ‘Avaibir, pre phony win cles the top with the white ot an cag, and sprinkle Sifeorening upa new and richer vein inour| A sudden revelation came to me: Lot had | , Audibly, and what was worse, on sugar. They will keep well four or tive ee clai ud prosperity and contentment smiled | committed suicide! Well, better so than the Bye imac winnie” months. IT’S WIFE: upon us. hangman's yr ne : To Bractiry TeetH.—Dissolve twoounces | AX LOT’s 3 It was an evil day that dawned uponourcamp | | Entering the cabin prison, a singular spec- | 1» ner jittle bed we laid her. of borax in three pirts of boiling water, and | ¥™ SHE SAVED HIM. in the guich. when one of the boys. ten miles | tacle presented itself. The committee stood in | 1,{er little bed we tad he before it is cold add one teaspoonful of the | os turned in on his way to the city, al- | a dismayed group in the center of the room; | qiough the cfied, and, bemged, and prayed her | *pirits of camphor, and bottle for use. A tabie- | 5° s pint possession of a ‘claim rostrate from a sudden attack of moun- | while Lot's wife, stern and resolute no longer, Dearest mamm: a ee % : spoonful of this mixture with an equal quantity | H. rural distriets of the placer-mining | tain fever, and with money to pay a note which | bent over the huge dismantled carcass of poor ot tepid water, and applied daily wit! sott Country. At first we bad excellent success; the | had become due ona quartz mill. He wanted | Lion. Gone was the nerve, the passion and Naughty children must be smacked. brush, preserves and beautities the teeth, extir- | Wa. Band se i rich with dust, and several small | to know if any of us were going in, as he could | power, which had, the night previous, support- | wc) they're mischievous or quarrel pates all tartarous adhesion, arrests de: ine ou Jo u y " duces a hea‘thy action of the gums and makes : Ve.. COMMMT 3 siTeet east . funes. In ja short time, however, the yield | him, he remaining at our eubin until the mes- | meager. if possible, than usual, there was yet | Witheachother—that'satact. =| aces ea'thy action ~ mAWRINGS, FLAGS, xc. “aeaute. began to diminish; somehow it didn’t seem to | senger’s return. As it happened, we were | something touching in her weakness; perhaps ——_+<+e - i Bean Sovr isa dish that —- people, and " “a See ekccavan ~ tg A “pan out” well. Our scanty washings of dust | not intending to go for several days, our stock because it was so foreign to her nature. Ocean Pathways. especially children. would relish if properly BV. 5 grew scantier every day. cco | Of upplies on hand being considerable and | Lifting her wee-begone con i = n, | made. It requires abeut half a pint of cooked Ra. ars. cn Mee: There was little chance for romance in the life | pot having enough dust to pay for carrying it to | proached, she exclaimed, bro! imship lines use eee same path | beans for a quart of soup. Mash and boil until Cuas. M. Laxs, Nat'l Pic & Bread, 220 K. Capitol we led. We worked hard in the “diggings” all | the bank. “I'd a’most rather died than a’ done it; but the same degree of latitude and | wei; ditt in the water, and then run through BANDs. " day, taking our cold snack at noon; and morn- | Lot's , however, on learning the state of | there wasn't no other way!” — between the old world and the new, | a cola: der to take out the skins. Thicken with Hoty Hitt Baxn, 71 7th street, between G and ing And evening “took turns” in our culinary | affairs, was observed to communicate some | Hardly had the news of the escape spread | aud it ii’ seldom that a steamer crossing the | £\°0# one gillof wheat meal, and adda sprig BANKS AND BAKES 0 dates. and the keeping of our little shanty. | instructions to the ten-year-old, who immedi- | through the camp, when a horseman, riding at antic is not within a few miles of another | os thyme it desired, Boil five minutes and ealt Executive avenu 1 ee dean Rem pon washing days—-‘few and far between”— | ately “lit out’ in the direction of his | break-neck came, in the midst of a cloud | vessel bound in = in a precisely bey. to the tast+—S tence of Health./ Teale, S8% Tth st SS Wm +i after wrestling mightily with soiled garments | father's claim. A few moments, and Lot him- | of dust, flying up the trail. In his hand he bore | site direction. The num! obey eat plying this Lemon Butter ror Tarts is made by manufacturer + pricier, jech boas te ami creck water, augmenting considerably | self came in. He was willing to accommodate, | a white signal, which he persistently waived as | path is increasing almost dail 3 thelr prox! rae’ using one pound of pulverized white sugar, the Fed inbel. G9” bun sume other qhereim the alluvial deposit. me were wont to | and would go to the city. His claim wasn’t | he had advanced. Dashing into camp, he | to one another is consequently more marked, | Uy T1eOve Pot eggs and yolks of two, together PHOTOGRAPHIC GALLERIES. founge im jrune council: moking our pipes of paying him much; and he might ax well look | threw himself breathlessly into the midst of | and that collisions are not more frequent is the | Wr tte lemons, including grated rind and G. Jonsson, Pa. av, bt. 6 & & also, Photo, meek, . ava viewing complacently our renovated | about a little. Ail of which familiar terms | the “Vigilantes.” | Tetult of chance. From the masthead of each | Thice. cook twenty minutes overs slow fire tie, | E.J. Pciiman, copying # specialty ,)4ah-4 F at i swaying upon the tops | might have been translated to mean thachis| ‘Where's the man yon were going to hang.”’ | steamer itch is supposed to be kept, and in ANOS. - - Do Ting it constantly. It is splendid. | wife wasnot at all averse tocarning the ‘some- | «Excaped.” ; ne foggy weather the whistle is sounded about | "Ci ay Sovr.—Asthe season is now at hand with the excep- | thing” before intimated which should “make it “Thank God! for he didn't do it! Frisco Bill | every fifteen srconds; but when a vessel is roll- ‘ naka ; into your tureen with chopped parsley ue career Of Appiston’s Journal gives the half a pint of milk. Just before serving drop the clams into the boiling soup, letting them boil up once. Pour into the tureeen, stirring weil its contents when doing so. lokwientann on | aoe ee Barty of Ren warmed ant eet | following account of the events in the theater | ¢,28e amerest in the m company rumuing fear There were —— wy penance —- members of ‘a vigilance committee. ype = preceded the famous riot in the ee er Levee Kg lig eget A spaee of three miles; and our nearest point of ‘Their errand was soon made known; they were “7 - anc 5 pt n obtaining supplies bemg a day's journey out, | in pursitt of the unhappy Lot. | onic, Were among those gathered at the theater | the «jane route,” proposed as long ago as 1855, The interest in the matter has been renewed ; ts dt are uannace a0tuhab Pa.av..agt. Koabew, : - 5 « E & PORTRAIT FRAMES, had been worked out and | worth his while.” None of us questioned Lot's | has confessed the deed ing heavily it ic almost impossible tosee the | Toner sou the following vecine Woe nee | By shipemithing S86 Waneret care | Phas Lams, 120 Pa. ‘napeciaity.) Este Nat with a ertinacity | honesty, and we made haste to get himoitas | Then the cheers that rang out might almost | lights of another steamshep at night time, and, | 1,0" soup, which cannot be surpassed | Bod K Es. ‘ = CARING MILES, agecr clung to We | soon as possible. rent the heavens in twain, but Lot's wife, alone except when off « dangerous coast, the engines | for three hours a knuckle of veal, with & goodly Remeant r ad, berg: and if must | It was after nightfall of the en ting day, | with her sleeping children, crouched in mourn- | are continued at full speed. It is strange there- portion of water, and add one onion. Strain rd strugg! should’ cause us to | when he was seen riding furiously iward the | ful silence over the form of her poor, dumb | fore that so tew disasters likethat in whieh the | POtON the liquor of fifty clams. Thicken with all it u eave empty-handed. | camp, looking neither right nor l t, bating | sacritice—silent and faithful even unto death | United States mail steamer Arctic ran into a tablespoon of flour, well rubbed with butter, hi | neither breath nor speed, until opposi ¢ his own | Lekvside Monthly. ancther steamer, in October, 1851, and went | the size of a small egg. Have yourclams cut . Patent Office, more easily di | threshold, he leaped to the ground, « ashed in- —_—__-..2e--—___ down, occur at tue present time. A code regu- | in three pieces with the hard rind removed. 87th st.,our. D ng in vain tosell out they abandoned | side the cabin, and slammed to the door. | The Forrest-Macready Riot. lating the passases is believed by some persons, | Beat the yolk of two eggs very light D. m and left the mines entirely—ali but | We had searce time to wonder at this strange | however, to be abselutely necessary. a fs, Que can easily Imagine that inour isolated situa- | 4 party instantly surrounded his cabin. ‘Then | 0".that occasion and shall never forget its ex- | hy Profesor M. F. Maury. ‘This contemplates Non-Combustible Theatres. . BURN & Co., 98 P: tion the gain of a comrade was not a merely | the Fhole of fhe anfortunate affair cme cce crane Inettente. | The house was crowded. The | the designation of one strip of ocean through | 4517 rostince To EREet aecn mercury: Asa L- Hazeuton, 4g 7th stvect nominal consideration | Lot's spirit released from its acoustomed res- | fey Wea Machow. | Wuen dacready appeared | which vessels hound east shall pass and another P. Duryea writes in the indus- | HoGvER # Jackso’, 100 Pa. av ee ee a ee or Lats” as he | traint had rebounded like a balloon that has | ‘Here was afrightful storm of hisses and denun- | for those bound west. It isclaimed that thereby ‘We could have a fireproof con- A eee eee eee eaeaseee a er reoe Si, | thrown over its ballast. | “Tarier's” last words | ©\ations from one faction, and tumultuous ap- | not only will the liability of collision between veing that we have the advantage nally a New Hampshire man, and shiftless #¢ | were useless asthe wind against this sudden | P!ause from the other actor's friends. No mis- | Steamer and steamer be lessened, but that a a degenerate scion from the thrifty New | and overwhelming elevation, born of renewed cane were thrown, but groups of people stood up new resource will be afforded to those in dis- | °f,™@nulactured iron to do the same which Engiand stock can be, he had emigrated from | liberty. His journey furnished him a golden bebo ncestca Lact or aces —— Due | tresson the high seas. Fogs and calms often see frat tite to ear MMe ET Deceit: | opportunity, though brief, for the renewal of | Lntly gesticulating: The play proceeded, but | occur together, and ships moved by canvas: are nnd from thence to our American ‘‘El Dorado.” | thise harmless indulgences of late so religiously | NOt® word could eard. Presently groups | not likely to run into another, but they are Fated to disappointment, he had drifted about | foregone. * | of policemen could be seen gatheirng at dit-| placed in peril by the steamers. It is added irders and breast-summiers might be tubular TER, EGG! Peete til Meany he had setthet deeak nant | A chance acquaintance, met just in the edge | ferent, points; suddenly there was a rush wp- | that if the masters kn t Sad hace we waead Wave uk Oaes a teneasor ant LEY & Ko another, until finally he had settled down in the | of town, easily led the way toa friendly tipple | O" the rioters, and many arrests made. seminating hot air in winter and cold air in mines. Lot was a famous story-teller, abound- | inthe nearest saloop. This change of gond- | This device was repeated until all the P | Simmer. “All joists might be of boiler-piate, ing in legenda: e, and rich in store of quaint | fellowship eventually resulted in many tore, The slay hak dine tenon tae Sete ee out of ees oe more it will concern flanged. The ‘floors of boxes and galleries influence of which, no y - A act, steamers to keein them. . - < he he might have been often heard bilar- | Kothsebild ever felt richer than did Lot with | Neht ou without interruption, But bythis time | “tne part of the ocean teavorsed by the steam- Sie ieee eee ee ebanting, in # high-pitched nasal | the trust-money in his hand. the building was undergoing a regular siege, | ship lines in their voyages is about 150 or 200 fas ciccien sme. bos cknbaeaed” eter What occured thereafter, passed to Lot like a | #,Y#st mob in the streets without. The windows | thites broad, and it is proposed in the new pian Ste gent’ doula Recor t ‘i cond “The sand with golder dust is thick, | tronbied dream. There was a vagne remem- | 2d been Loarded up, and against them the | t) markout a lane he Feet shoul he of iron trussed, covers « FT = vessels will agi secre KP old-time ballads. In the beginning of his life | under the combine with o: et rom this 15 or 25 miles ; foters oufside were hurling broadsides of stones with iron plate. There should be passages of Ho, boys, he brance of all his hands at the bar, a . - broad, which will at least reduce the present hed ane agp Pick np lumps as big as a brick, | pistol-shot or two; and then themed race hone, | 424 brickbats. | Occasionally a boar would | Paks.’ Yeis further claimed. ther the lane to | Srched brickwork on every floor, into which a iforvy gold CAR’ . e' rell-d ov i a doors should open as possible, and all | RoBeERTH.GRanam,410-13-14 8th st.,bet. Dand BE. a trust betrayed, the stain of blood upon his | Vit! to a well-directed stone, and the missile | the west will be 30 miles shorter than the route - Gro. R. Hatt, corner Penn. avenuc and 13% strost. hands, and the “Vigilantes” = pea Ris | would come crushing into the auditorium. One | generally taken, ami some delays from fogs | ‘ese fnagy inlapeee yn erotel voting a x B, Duxnis, KOGth et.,couth of Penn arenes, f sistent good nature | heels. stone struck the central chandelier and fell, | il be ided, as it passes 190 miles south of | Dive easy egress to the streets aren: ‘ne Gaxcts & Bro.. 650 Penn y—such was Lot. as we iret | “They were sure enough of him now—12 men | With a mass of broken glass, into the parquet: | Cape Race. Another advantage claimed for | Sive cay egress to the streets around, — ae dood Out Tan ae Lot meanety | {0.0Ne, amt he trapped like prairie-dog in his | 1" the lobbies were gathered numerous police | the lane system is that one way tt lies along the iz - enthusiasm died out; for, as Lot himself | hole. nd militar nu rthern edge of the Gulf stream, where there | @ditorium being thus protected, it remains to ingly expressed it vs The doors were arri- ith he rhe ph : S > | make the stage and its surroundings safe. And | w. : ; EWING MACHINES. agimcout™ 1 Tum ‘MBE WSS) | Lion, the huge St. Bernard, came smelling at | Coded, "itt Neary Denes. The play continued not a near eae crane tat At the rate Of | Here the greatest amount of precaution is called ‘To : WHEELER & WiLson's, Steer & Son.agts. 48 Pa. ow @'en-a meet gin & | the garments of the invaders, lookin, ith | = o1 ine o “ “ As Ihave before stated, for some reason best | large, inquiring eyes, Half unconsetsualy ate | 1 fhe last act, it will be remembered, Macbeth | 1; vor of the system is that the distance from | {0T: because here the principal and most active iz onsidered it expedi- jer patted the rough head caressingly, as it | S Shut w in'a besieged castle. The mimic | (se ¢ : source of danger exists, First of all, the stage © | Cape Clear to Sandy Hook will be practicall setiy built on bce ene bed 1 1 scene copied the real one. “Our castle's 90 miles, and that, while fe o | should be permanently built on brick arches, Trem! fy, read upon tis TMad legs ang | StfeRsth will laugh thisslege to scorn,” isone of | the'dwtence te eaters: 5 miles, rou poumetans portly Lyeadlpmasiand io glow a lenge er jaced his fore-paws on the leader's shoulders | Macbeth’s lines; upon its utterance there was a | wilt be found in the’ greater securite: aml the | {ues for the conveyance of hot air to warm it standing a haif-head taller than the man him- | {*it!wind of applause from the excited specta- the time his partners this it seemed less | i © | by registers, a furnace of sufficient capacity 7 tors. After the play the audience left the Se ne See ras ond rene eg. I Shae constructed near the center for the. par- iL ERS. “ ot of."” c s ever, 1 Me i theatre at Eighth-street entrance, between | “* 7 ——— pose. ressing - sl al e “~_" ; ry . aimsechas onauinact ackt car Gene sist see cabin Lien nnd nor light came from | ‘ies of soldiers. In Ave minutes after thar A Fatal Tiger Fight. ™ | tron, and the framfug and sides for the scenery FECTIONERIES. Boss. Warven bet. th subject. = deer site nlowction Succi Rollowing, tee tare the Biting upow the ange palates dis” | Mr. Joseph Gay, son of the comptroNer of | ould be Micetaentic came ae |e Di Bates 2 Bre ten ae Senge ES.” fternoon— h been three | j, his res tant—the firing upon the mob began, with | ,, 8 Nizani seen pain preps ‘0 CONVE i 2 i" wrecks ater the exodus of Lot's partnere—one.t | mawtice sree Of hls men, Knocked (0 at- | Siac tata renee We al Knows It'was tae ue | [Uli works accounts inthe Steam torntory” | Scevee are painted shoul be preparad so as 10 EES ae, Thien Noary) | o SEABEING , neighbors engaged in mining three miles r rime we ever listened to « play when in a state | a tiger. ‘Several persons bad been kilied by the | Of Topes, should be of wire, unless where it is f iG WAX, wc. ns. 3. further up the gulch, reined into camp on bis | of siege; it was exciting enough, but we little ator, whe Sal Been infesting the neigh- | ®b*olutely necessary to have hempen cerds or way back from the city. where he had been to EA! ND GAS Loma: i - 4 « A.B. SHEPHERD & Co.,920 Pa. av.,| ~~ dreamed of the fearful tragedy so soon to be | jorhood of Sanigram in the Chudderghant di | Tepes for certain purposes. The roof over the 4 deposit his dust in the Miner’sbank, and getout | am. Will vou ask him tu step outsid enacted in bloody earnest in the streets without. | trict. ‘The o} aon or the public Leer de- | Stage should be of iron, and, as it never is amise iE YARDS. ; , an iron water- ro ony W.J7E CLR. Keune tat and B streets H.W, supplies My 1 | + partment had been seriously interfered with, | & make assurance doubly sure, an DE . v ““Tialioot George: Chris! Here are letters for | coc lf nushand Is mot able to attend to busi A Monster Anvil. hnd Mr. Marrett, the district engineer, "and | tauk of large dimensions might be Da. Wu. MERRILL, 1112 F street northwest. TOV IRON, TIN you!” he cried, tossing us the welcome missives. But our business is important, and cannot | Vulcan himself, with all the smart giants who | Young Mr. Gay started for a village near which ene by as cutee eee EE SALOONS. en — Lot, loitering up with quizzical smile perpe- + If he does not come out, we must come | worked at the god’s smithies under Etna, never | the tiger had been marauding. Each was | 4ccident by fire, : - janext & Moises, is Funn.ov., corner 2 trated his standing joke— ; med with a rifle, ant four shikarees, also | S°Pply of water to a local hose and pipe. bi DRESSMAKER:! “Well, saay, ye ain't got nothin’ fur me, now, mtlemen, you cannot see my husband to- | sew rolling milisin Wovlwich, Engiaut, ‘Fors | stimed accompanied thew. “The party collected | 2k mah, on coneuions 8 grand spectacular night!” Her voice was firm, even, decisive: | long time past the engineers have been busy at | 4 "umber of beaters, who were set to work to and Fair Star”—be lowered upon the stage, and perhaps a tritle more decisive than usual the royal gun factories of the arsenal in con- | ‘rive the tiger from his hiding place. Mr. | Std teat water to the effects. Baloouies enone The dog, crouching at her feet, gave a low | structing fis Titante piece of iron-mongery, | Marrett and one of the shikarees stationed ve So, £ guess not.” returned the other, with a peculiar twinkle beneath his bushy eyebrows: “but thar’s a woman an four smail children on the way. asking fur just sich a looking feller as and they are now depositing in its place the | themselves under atree, while Mr. Gay whohad | *tFround the auditorium on each floor, and the «Woman, we have no time to bandy words! | enormous plate which is to form the bed of | 2° experience in oe hunts, climbed wp bergnpe arom ata yom. Let us pass the anvil block. This plate weighs ot | the tree. Suddenly the tiger made a | &t %% Yor it i th - t's joculanty vanished in an instant; his itself one hundred and seven tons 4 spring from a thicket near by at Mr. | Open outwards, for it was owing to the neglect dropped, and with visible agitation he 1 im seemed to rise y in an oper wonkt | Marrett, who had only time to deop on tis | of this precaution that the burning of the the. text out :— opel 5 - to be cast of necessit: el nd, Vi none of yer foolin"! Yedon't | *Miexpandin the white heat ot passion that | The surface which is to receive the anvil-block | knees and fire. The ball strack the animal in | #teT at Richmond, V so fearfully fatal -H. r her. high and shrill:— | lay, therefore, downward, and when, after | the lower jaw. completely shattering it. The —————————— pall that on with me!” “And I say you shall not pase By: the colossal casting grew coo tiger apon Mr. Marrett and, together Trotting Extraordinary. . FFICES. ‘neha Page dhe “aeoal ath. 12 armed men; with murder in your hearts to | was Needful to tara the haze mass compebay with the "ahikarce, they rolled over on the = 7 . vena Ih etre sickly pallor take an innocent man out from the midst of his | over. At the appointed time an army of sturdy helpless children. I swear that you shall not ground. Mr. Gay at this moment, while trying | ™¥© HUNDRED MILES IN FORTY-FIVE HOURS. Rs. S07 Lith street, near B. nance, i until dwarfed much below his usual diminutive | touch a hair of his head to-ni; Smiths undertook thia task with hydraulic jacks | to change bis position so asto get a clear dot | _ (on hebergereng arab tror teers Ah eg , 008 Pa. ev, rh q lost his balance and fell from his perch on the | 15th insts., the Driving Park at St. Paul, Minn. $ read ' ‘ f° See ni dextrousnand a | firs Might tay Mea ied he Seestets es | See aCe toantnd getty Reread utes | Sat heen of antec eateta | SEAR as rag ‘; What? what's that yeou say?”"he stammered from the fold of her dress, she | of solid metal, twenty-two feet square, and | him and mangled him fearfully with his claws. | Martin Delancy matching his sorrel mare (a wildly. “I say @ woman an‘ four small children ar’ | held itat full Seema bem bat one —— way, searching fora husband and | touched at the sight of this dauntless devotion; “How fur behind?” gasped the anxious Lot, | 7° motion mmat not prevent the discharge of duty. — legs were fast getting tremulous under But this man has committed murder—the vest crime known in the eyes of the law. yh. « matter of three mile, or thereabouts! swith a “Knowing ‘glance, and “No ‘ublic safety demands that we deal with him c His jaw had been rendered useless by Mr. Mar. 1 full-blooded Morgan) to trot two hundred rock-ike wraciare of concrete tna pilte mans | Fete wet, When Mr Barrett” who hea | meen tortyfie howe Yor the amall seater ot to receive it. ‘ooned away in his struggle with the tiger, re- | $200. The St. Paul Press says of the first day: The anvil block to be mounted on the huge | &#ined his consciousness, he saw the man-eater | ‘The trot was commenced yesterday at twenty plate will weigh only a tritie short of two hun- | Still mangling his victim. Unfortunately Mr. | minutes past four a. m., Mr. J. ngs dred tons, pe the steam hammer which will | M4rret’s rifle was useless, as it had been dat holding the ribbons. The mare started out at a 7 AND CO! strike upon it is made of thirty-five tons of solid rage! pila peargpen ageing pte eh FLOUR, FEED 1} es metal, the blow at full force being, of course ing = past ea ‘Daaxnv, Feed,Grain.£c. 7th according to the letter of the law,” - . short distance, onl fifty miles, making it some five farther news. boys.” to us, the little mule, an- | fated thetleader, more moved thin he ceeoet, | emendons. | Tn OW ee Gay's body when Mr. Marrett and the | five minutes, “She was then given a rect or _. swering to the = of his rider, struck into & | acknowledge. when the a hey piece of mechanism gets to | shikaree attempted to come to the rescue. The | three hours and a half, and was started at a lit- bos which speedily carried them both A superb Scorn overswept the woman’s (eat- | work. That the earth around will shake and | beaters, who had remained tle past half- one on the second fift, - es. pt e passive spectators the ; nding to touch the ith hi it of the scene, were at length induced to char, miles. At half-past seven she had com © 4 There we stood, inquiringly facing Lot. He creature drew himalt erect sey | eee ee ene ee nee soe | ta a tony, ae cae P with the aki of | it, having made, the fret hundred miles in aN ve Bl awhile; but finally out = it = " ling, with his lips drawn threatenin, ly | forge has ever been set to work since the bolts | tom-toms, in driving him to a oo hitl, | fifteen hours, ich leaves thirty-three hours | Joux MCCLELLAND. corner of La. sve. ‘Loth st. this, Incid, explanations Lote ith zAnd with | back from IMs formidable teeth. ‘Then boldly | or fove werchessmered: Tiere rans bolts | Where he boon disapeared, "The Fipetiandcenand [Pell ray hg or gear eboney nome may Mn see Cont Tolis Perot, bet. ith & 18th ste is Incid explanation, Lot, wi rid throwing open the cabin door, she pointed with | pon was a mere driver of tin tacks contrasted | W8 carried to camp, where bis numerous | made the last mile ot the = Ory Wineow. suet to Tims Wissen a Paces, aa unsteady step uisappeared ithin his praised finger. still holding the deadly weapon | with it; and indeed, the old Nerse god, for all | Wounds were dressed.’ He sppoared tobe day the fastest of suy—ave and one-half min- INSLOW . x lf i emerged, bear- | med full at the leader A scathing his huge strength, would be puzzled to throw | gTessing favorably until about six hour after- = — who w: nepereyhgs fea fag in bis hands @ pach ef thanmed 20a 2 contempt rang in her words:— this Woolwich tool—which, taking allitx metal | Ward, when he complained of a choking sensa- | the mare sh ae Cent sere cards a set of dice, several worn “dime novels? | _ Does that man look like a cut-throat? Can | work together, weighs hard upon five hundred | ton and died almost immediately. poeta hope any dice, is »” | you all, noe inside this cabin tell me that | tons.—Zoston Globe. . Mr. Gay, after a successful academical career | feed at the end of her day’s labor as briskly as ws old — shan't need these any | YoU are afraid to spare him to his wife and chil- in England, had but lately joined his father in | though she had eepeeneng from the a longer” hesaid, Mashing Painfully—alternately | (f<n,this one last night?” Warnine TO UMBRELLA Canrigrs, — bin ae arett'e profeneaag raneaccklentunder | , Of thesecond the samo paper says: | Wesines- She paused a moment, glancing swiftly around | man who walks the street, i Mr. Marrett's professional training. day the first one humdred miles was completed, standing on one foot, and then shifting his i » Carrying ai brella na at half-past seven o’clock the mare weight f the other, "co I thought I'd jist slean her The tabled waths Rressing close upon | under his arm, was at the corner of Fourteenth i pA Sina ~ The Battle of Life Am Plan en to the stable apparently in as con- cout. Some wimmen folk is pertickerler, | ing upon alow camp-stool, pale, disordered nei | sect and Fourth avenue, He stopped sadden- | Tres every hour there 4s going on | dition asif she haa teveled orn ‘of the ye know Reape p-stool, Te at, and | ly to speak with @ friend, and a man behind | around’us 2 veritable death-struggle. It ex- | distance. Yesterday morning when taken out ~ Chris took the articles, and offered to keep | “Y@*ing torr clashing in his arms his | im nearly broke the point of the umbrella of cites little attention. People would bein no | of the barn at five o'clock to complete the trot PC A . Incirimother: were piuneentim and fearless as | by running his eye against it. ‘The man swore, | (ites little attent telegrapliic dispatches con | rhe seemed m little sore ay mee bee ee “Wal, if ye'vea mind to. I'd be much ob- preg vias and dl nye ‘on soled | peal ei nie en irarores pened cerning it from the seat of war, ‘ren if there | warmed up and commenced her day's work ponte, so kene oer a Wale weeny ees with @ dilapidated chair, as a rest, stood behind to ‘apdogize, and Jabbed the end of the um- are, but thelr ice cece meoyprreteearg (pice oeary ixnty subulins, snteemctieponn : y . i . prella ver: policeman’s stomach. ‘j i an- past twel Eeive the ‘yoke, looked forward with a dim ex- | ,,the,she-Dear and her cubs were grit tothe | Policeman aumiuistered'a jerk, aud ‘Warne: | {2% in general is tot averestod tm thereeete ar | ate fe menaee Deng cestre p.m After this vestancy, adi chanco of futare release. || “SWho are you?” she erted, eloquentty gestar- | “ect Etnt toreom # portion of asmall'bor's | thescrasele om tes Seneca eae | Tests im which she next seven miles in one hour re, we ‘etraibed. from Joking or questioning | ‘Mg22 fhe, crowd with her’ ‘he Almighty tare | puerd ctamet of man's mouth up into his front | twan raos.” Gur fodecaprlioe aoteen ar ne | ee at od oenina were taken to keep MAKERS, ac. nick had ay unmated those “coming | yjur own hands, and send thesouis he has made | Have, bee eping back muebrelinaaeen bee jan: | {He well-being of our tlicks and herds is easen: | general terms it. averaged through the da was nt ec «6, y Z ee so unmistakably “cast their | {.nphidden into his «er’s throat, and at the same time he fastened | '!#!ly dependent on it; the building of our houses | about six minutes and five and one-halfseco: Presence, without a prayer ae, - 6 | * | mes. B.C. Ladies’ Hair Dresser, 1514 cindown, a novel train was seen wend- | {Or mere¥?_ Which would be the better, yen'or | the hook handle--the oraegiiies ee mmened Seer cantante on is een eee te lenge | pee i mpg ng ne ge oe HARDWARE AND CUTLER . mwas seen wend- | him? ve him to us this aight, and as surely | handle was not relia ped: bat that he hooked | Gur feet, and the very sky above our heads, , -e | second fifty miles. aries choco given the | &-C-Camrasti, 0s Pa, rawn together ¢ | zthere ta heaven above us, inthe morning | the entire umbrella—into a colored citizens materially, very materially influenced by tle | sere fronveven natit Binso’cleck in'the even. Kexngpy & Co. le in the background. watched f an eee | ee all come in without hindranc Seabee | Wool. | in, his efforts to get his umbrella loose result of th contest of which we are about te i arties on the und saw that sh: ttle in the back atched for de guard the cabin. There is no danger he will | the unfortunate owner of it upset a fruit and | Te ke. Edward Forbes atte aan tak _ “ ed epee the tokens in Semale ap- | escape you! candy stand, and plunged head foremost into | 3P¢#*- Spiga pedliag Grown: hed upon the back of a gaunt pack- There was a murmur among the “vigilantes.” i ~ seen pierese cing the movement of a periwinkle over a rock gait, and res past . A. Lor: Bu alee passed the threshold of m- | Their task was a harder one than {1 ey were | Sontastie the cnasd Gas canteen oat might be of greater consequence to the human : So eee pee ores ts iasped by one arm, and another, also of | prepared to execute; and perha) | race than the progress of an Alexander; and the | ing her last mile in nine minutes -one | K. L. ROLAND, 628 Penn. ave., bets tender vears, sitting astride the pillion, its | wives and children at home moved them eric, | io Sback and ican umbrelia ware to underne | Ferults of the Ware ofthe plants are ararediyof | secoude. ‘Thus abe won the wager,and in taves | 6: Binorss, Mis ne fimited embrace aspiring to encircle the mater- / to this unwonted leniency. A brief confer: | fepaire ete n ee ‘Undergo | no less impor tance, seeing that the very exis- | hours less than the time given her. ‘She trotted HATS, CAPS AND FURS. A tride inthe rear came a rough | ence, and the leader said: — P s aor. tence of an Alexander dependsin no slight de- | off the track er unconscious of the mar- | WiLLET & Rvorr, 906 Pa. bet. veer. im the capacity of guide, sand- “Have Make the most of your F gree upen them, The cam; speak of | vel she had perfec 5 Lt wiched between two children of alarger growth, you until morning.” Woman's Lova.—The Vallejo (Cal.) Chron. | are real; they are not_mental mts, or alle- the elder of whom could xot have exceeded the are ing me?” she said, watch- | le Says there is much eee peeey. in Coiusa T pebvon illustrations. Success in the practice of A Cornered Legisiator. es of fen years. A monstrous dog of the St. | ing the while with eyes which seemed to pieroe | COURtY fer tne Freakin eadaabrie, recently ar- | horticuiture, of agriculture, ef forestry, de- | A gentleman who now occupies a seat in the Bernard breed formed, successfully flank and | like sharp steel points.” rested for horse stealing under peculiar pends on the action we men take toward the | upper branch, of the New York legislature, but year ran through the crowd. stances. The oe Jui combatants. If we remain neutral the weakest | at the time was member of the assembiy, re- Checking the beast within a few rods of us, lay!” against him. The sentiment fora tothe wall, overpowered by the stronger; | lates the following: ¢ woman gave a keen scrutinizing glance women’s strength seemed | }'8 favor is shown by the facts after his | if we interfere, we exert pprertal intluence “Perkins was as honest @ man as ever set fact round, which rested at last fixedly upon the ied heavily against the case- | ‘™PTisonment he was admitted to bail in the | for the time; but immediately we cease to exert | in Albany. M wouldn’t buy him, and I ntenance of Lot. loney ptr or, Gul ane dans sod sum of $250, and that fund was raised by the | our power, the combat begi ut I thought I weuld havea little fun ‘she exclaimed ina strong, de- | ment; anath dog following, Promoting, thin, the | people for his defense. His wife is descritved as | Cun power he com th though not unmusical voi ing | hind. harming and lovely woman, displaying the ifleantly to the guide. «We'll stop.” ‘The men bivouacked around the cabin, dis- pest attachment to her’ husband. © Her “laep 4 ‘he infant tigh@ly, and loosing the | posing themselves for the night, two or three ‘ms of the other from about her waist, down | appointed sentinels keeping vigilant watch. ¢ ali, lithe as a young girl; and in a twink- the other member of the camp unable to had the three children on their feet, and | sleep, had kept wakeful vigil nsing our little in- = youngest transferred to the arms of the ten- | fluence and knowledge of the accused's inoffen- -old. sive disposition to mit if possible, the pre- | Ber PI succeeded | greater be nN cig) than they Lot waitea in parent!; mood, | judice which we found greater than’ getti ever do in their native: M. T. Macters, die the costion git tae mie ee nan os qTetght of evidence 4 the real absence would have the | in Popular Science Monthly for May. Ket, with business-like h. Then she her little brood, foliowed c! to the door of iber's cabi: “Weil, Lot 5 “T see you have, Marier! And the door closed upon Lot and his family. On the ensuing morning we were able to ar- rive at of the new comer, to as te i—one placed “TILL Deatu Do Us Part.”—The Earl and by the dog, | seriousl: hel yuntess of in. ‘mnocent 4 jor of on ata g z iH (i t the waist. fe Hi ef i Ze! ii F i i ae a i l a of the brain, and some f H ;