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mi gazette. lodfc AND /OB POINTING , Tery description executed with prompt- tta and jt?ow pricey DEVOTED TO POLITICS, 8OIENOE, AGRICULTURE, AND WHOLE INTERE8T8 OF THE PEOPLE. VOL. 32. ELIZABETHTOWN, ESSEX COUNTY. N. Y., THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1884. NO. 42. Reading notices, amonelreidJni 8 cents per line. f Business cards (not ^^atrates ._. advertising rates application. i - Birth, maniags and death EOtlc^ Correspondence of public intereJt solicited from all parts of the county. I ; The subscription price of the POST AW A GAZETTE is $1.50 per year, payable strict- ~ lyinadTance. , are frjw. BUSINESS CABDS, . POETRY. TROD>• DVOVSY. aa* Counsellor at Law, Convly.N. V. , VKTTE B. BISHOP, I Attorney and Counselled at Law, Jonah, Ester County, k Y. ,Y>TON & CONWAY, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, | TyWITT STAFFORD, Attorney and; Counsellor at Law, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, ICwviUe. N. Y. ™PK1£IC K f. 1IA1.K, Attorney and Tounsellor at Law, ' n \U-r,,r,uirk Mock, Chicago. III. Attorney and Counsellor at Law, ,;„,.:• .Iny, E**^O>.. -V. Y. TTAKKV IIA1.H, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Attorney and Counsellor at La 237 Ma<h*o» Ait:, Atlimw, A'. >'. ' PH Nl Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, ElizaMht'ont. Hws Count,/. ,V. Y. Counsellor at Law, Klital.,-ll-/<»n,, A'. J'. Attorney and Counsellor at Law, FJualu-lhL.u;,, K**<:r Count,/. X. Y. TTT.AUK) A (JltOVKIl, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, JWIlh'nrv. Estrr <:,«i,,lu. N. V. PHOTOGRAPHERS. "• JOHNSON, PHOTOGRAPHER, rvmni I'intil. /-.'.user Cnuntu. X. V. HOTELS. THE "BERKELEY, WOODRUFF, - Proprietor nr f.nkr Villngr, IVankUtt Co., JV. I'. "ALLEN HOUSE, HEXHY AI.IJ'.S, - - Pro/trirlin- l,<ike I'lacitt, JV. I'. THE WINDSOR, (AlUROXItAChS.) rnyrirtar irn, fcW.r Co.. A'. V. ll'iif'liiwn if<milHi'iiul \ MANSION HOUSE, !\!<>X!)S, - Pro,,rli-U,r Mknbrlhtoirn. JV. V. "RICIFAUDS IIOUSK, MUHIT A. fl.MiK, - VroVri,U> Jr>.Wy,,»w, JV. Y. WEFI) JIOUSK, nosmmr \V,:F.D. - rr,,,.ri,i,fr Hi-.il/torl, .V. J. SHERMAN HOUSE, . "• i- nrrn-:i;F/!-:/.n. - /•,•,,,„•„/,„• '•"l-t.rnt,.,! llnV l'!,'!,'lH ' ,!{" Ml novllin. '" I'lii.'.ani:^,. ,|,-|v,.». ,.,-,„,,!,.I BANKS. K l'OHT 1IKNIIV, N. Y. F. S. ATWKU,. SCHOOLS. ELIZABETHTOWN NFKKKSCHOOL v Ku ""VTiir,,«N. K,,, t « (1«i , N Y. ^ "' "• '•"i.v/^, . r,i,wi,H,i. nin Tlir:M ' IW.'.f lhmS.-li«H.l.wUl f .in, Ul ''• "A Itenompenifi. How often In my oflrly day* Tboro enmo to mo tlito vivion: Tho star of Famo, with vltid rayi, Hlioutd buam o'er nuldH ulynlan I Boforo nil oyim I would nrlno A poot ffroot, wluxw nuiry Must win or« lonjf with ttingio song A fndoloBH crown 0/ (flory 1 But tutor nUU I ifnnv more Ixiid , And thoiiffhl, I would Irnportnim ' (To fill my <!(i(f<tr lian<tn with tfoirf) Tluit flcklo KOfKlnow-ifortuiKi. Whore JawolH »bln« wll,h llglit dlvlnn I'd gather at my ploanure; My Btren^rth and hoalth I'd (flvo r(,r wm And grasp a ml^tUy troasuro 1 BwlfUcrowdlng yoani hatn t|Ulnkiy find And carrltHl off tliowt fanolon. Though all iny fonnor hopon am d«oil Tlip linart Ifaw bright romnnnW Th« dmiunur nowprmwiwHW. With Innnhlo nnmo unknown io f 81»o livod ln-I.<ivo'H(inn>j«nn! M!NCKI,LA NY. WON BY A BULLET. King don win n mitnW wiy station on the W. mid A. Kdilroiul. Muhol Ornwfonl wan Uio |,«llo of the town. Kvoryhoriy wurl «>, No ,, Iin ,, ro . iiini.Nl U. rival hor, and now. of UmKlr>« onvind linr. H\w w.w tl,«> prhlo of Ki»iKnt.o,i. At tho liwt imhlto Imll thcirn w«>rn two gwmtn, (}o<irK<i Hini|>fii>n »n,l Vrnnk <!lifto», whohiMl n«m>r lionorml Kingston aodetr with thoir prnaoiuxi lioforn. (}oorgn Himprnm wwi .». m^nnar on th« .ilroiul, iHiil pwwml the town nearly ovorj day. Hmnahow ho wna not inimli llbn.1. Frank (!lift.on wiw Um now lol«Kraj)h opn lor nt Urn station. II* hud only bnen )„ minion ik wtiok, )>nt hulf Ui« toWu knew dim nn<l likml him. ingHlou, F wvy, wna a wny alnUon. 'II,, tol<igru|ili (t|iorntor wiut elation ano.it, oi- H UKoiit, tink«t aKo,,t, trimki.mil and porlor ; ho rnn l.h.. wholn 1,IIRIII<IM. Frank Oliflon hiwl Kfv.m ampin witlafao. (ion, IUK! all thn oflloInU liivl nonfldenon In im. NntwithnUiidliig l.ln prnnnuro of l.iiai MSR, Frynk liml found titno to liooornn ao. iiaintod with Mnr.n) (Irnwfor.l nn.l )>ar ioUi,.r, and th.iy hod In vital I,in, (,„ Uw. Fmtilt (Jllflon mid (inorKo Himjmon war* at the null, mid of miinn tlioy ranked th« miK mwi of tho (own. Thoy worn Uia .,»,. •U of all U>o iwlmirliux Klnnor.a of th« young woruon, and nil Um olorkii and farm xirKoHimpmin wn« |Htrl.l<<nlnrly attmiliva to Mul.nl nil Uio nvoning. Kmnk .landed 'ill) linr imn\ mid Inlhnd with ) w r a whlla n Uio v,iran.l». Tim luvll l,r,,kn up, «n.l Himimon wiilk'»l hom« with h«r. in next day tlu, t.,w,, oa |,| |),at Mnh<4 nml Ofuirgfi Worn pnsm^iui. Kvnryh<Miy l,o- iovwl it, for Kinitaton Imd a- nnrulin," w«y if flndiiiK otit Riioli lhiti Ka,. mid it novor undo n mintnko. Thnu thxro wim In!), of hmv ,,mny r|.1»a Mnliol liud tnken with (lm,rK«oii hia ati(fiii° , low nlm nnt on (hn Artminn'ti IH,) in (ho rait, md rung tho l..,ll an Ihn train rollo.l into Uia itntlon. 'Vlw B<>winH sorinty put thoir hnaila to Kithrr.in.lanl.1. - I I..I.I y,,., *, ." " I knew . it wna a oomin' to ;" "I jr»l thonuhl it," and so forth. Those w))o lonfnd .ihout thn aUtlon dla lov.'iod Hint Wli » whiflthi wnro hnnrd from thd dimotlon ..f .ho long our,,, ii,, tho ,<,«d Malwl wmild ng .uigino wcmlil a<<,|,, i it(i|> down from hi* mil., ahnt till tho train hvl lo Hun tlml ,< ly ?" UHII.M! ( "Oh, that iinpudpul upotail. Clifl.,,,, .,1 our««. HIM hn troubled T'xi Int.ly V " Oil [ <im.rK«, you d.. him ll.|uaU,x> He " Hn i» a low mi,, for all thai, mid I «<•»( on to hnvo nothing lo do with him I'd " '• Why, what him Mr Clifton doiio T" <uk d Mali«l, In ruiloniali-oool <)«orgo did not nnawcr Mahol'a qur^ti,,., ml foil mean. II.. ,lr(^ir.iinod to lmt° it tit with Matml hnfuro ho left hor, m, ountitiuod - " Yoti hatro pr<mij«od to lio mv wifa I Irminl Iliat you ,1., not rercivo nnothor flail mil thai oporol.ir." " OoorgK, plenum don't. Ho hu t.oo,, in.| U> .», motlmr .{.,1 ..,«., n,,d we ..wo him »,-ry oourl..By. Y,m aro ««i. tw " " Qtiiok :" nni.i <)<•,,rK^, u lt« 1 llmn(o]i nn.l ntnrt^l lo niounl Now , " lloi " Vrn, (»rvorgn, y«i ! nn> thiuy. " oil* rri«l •l,,r«...,i«.." Ho l«nn.<d .lown and ti«-.o-l hor, ...n)mH xiilUuilly. Thou ho pullcl U.« Uir.HtU «'d Mal>«] walohrd it till it had Tne olook rtrnok nloron, and Frank «Up- P«d ont on Uie platform. Abov« th« T^mr <A the atonn hoard Uw ahrill Mwl ono*- iwioe—thrm «m«i I " Slmpaon I" ho «Jaonlat«d, aa tnrn«d Imok for hia lantern and wnnt out «MI tha trnok. '11m IiMdllght roan over tho aurmnll Ilka full moon olimbiiiK Mmhills, and flaahsd rtown Uifl ratia. Th* r »i n niunn ,v, wn j n Un. r«inU, tha wind whlatlfld paat tha oornora nt tho »Utlon with an omlri<ma annnd, Uia train name Umndnrlng on. Frank raised Uie lantern to «wl»H It mr<*m tha traok, hut »w.forn thn atgnal mmld tx» jfl»en a fltful tpiat n( wind put ont tha light. The train WM not two hundred yarda off and had not •lanfc<m»d IU«pn«.,i TW«> waa no time toHnt an<rf.hor lamp. It waa a moment t,f li-irr<>r t/i Iho ynring »p«ratrff. No. 7, wlUi It* fr<.|Hhl|nH jrtuiaeri gora, WM nominii J'i»» noyonri Ih" trrwn atmotlon <1aa,tti--a|l IHUMPO bofora hia mind Ilkfl a flaah of UshttiliiK Ho foil Uia ntilTorfriK of tha lloa r>on»iUi hla feet aa hn *UKK1 In tha full Klnra of (ha li«ht, nowfearfully ol.wo What nouhl ha J,,m,md « "ly hi, u, th» rnl wna a flash, a ahar Intllnt we T)I«II all Frank Ho Oln.fi he fell, ), T)|O O|; Komi l<> traok With a hanging ward (hs wpari, an, va.il >4 O, T w . 0| 'if (hoi,,, "••'M " IKliftI, <r»t oraohl waa dark . t-rar, K , ^'1 tha ral ila Irfl arr illrn train hia frpt a r».t *, .1.1 lo "H l l> mfiwa 1. IMI( n un.1 l«** >.d I.. ilgtll nf tl r/H ., r.\ t hla h l,o r o h 1 r.ii f.« ..kc«1 t<> hla aiMj > °nRlna 1 Uio hri c -a nl«M (jiuoa wor ittl.for n.. [hi gh o l l » Ii*. ma fai ,.11,.e lo.1 1.,- hi,, 1 >' f. >ra.k . tl i [.W/il, a> h. ><1 a U,n |,»a.11ighi ro (ho ,i alii.i.o.1 ro ho atton ..elf ho M ir»ti»'1 " no. a,,-1 fl >1e hia n; ,»o .Ir^tf tit., Uia 1,1 7 !).= o^g i H°t ••»».. t"k n a bag. n.* the *mh waa ank Irto •mr UH l~1 TMB HOOBRN TROTTER. (IM N«O*aa af matlna ••<! Wal#i4*« Aa«Ma>«oa1. Tha aratain nf training at preaemt In »otpio la widely dlffomnt from that In pran- Ijns tort y«wra ago. T h e n Irrw dtM and hard wrirk wora Irtrnight to Im what hora** nnad- a<1 n v « t In prw|iara them for the tnfk. Th«j worq limited tn a oartaln r«<KignlB«d '|t»anU ty "f hay and gnUn eavih day, an'1 w M « waa nrrnaitorad r1an« thing like tha rjnai M»lmala. TTalr>»ra i im° horaa rnlghl nemi} mnf> for*1 and drink than art'ithar, ari'1 that If he did not goi it, ho p*,t,|f1 not ah*jw grKvl work My i trnlnvra h<r « ail U \ allka. diota<1 allka No do.tht U.o daTolopmoTit nt In ttio rrrwvpnt gonnration "1 Uoiflng hnrw la In a groat m°»ur° dno In UM» tmpro»* t In training and nrmdlUoriing TV»< A CALIFORNIA WRLL. riwi ••pall** <Je*4 DrlahlBc Water aaal C4**4 r««l al IIMI Maa»a Tlaaa. OnUar Ralrrxm nf Frnnnh Damp, not far tmm W/wkVm, Hal., «nnk a well with a»Tan In^h tnrw tn a depth of ahmit Hid fa**, mn>\ rtrtink a wrHoua at roam of nxoH Unl waUr I>«*iHng to l«.rn whether nrmH fnrtr«*aa» tha flow by going deeper, •nd faaring that ahould he continue the wo)] the name •)«>, h« might bijuro the quality <rt the nppor atrnta of water, Mr. Hulmnri hit on a plan nt ainklng a fotir Innb trtbo \mM* th» ae rot. In oh <m«, And thru making wbat might »» nallfv) Uie eipori- manUl wall fm.r Innhm in dlamater. Thl« nner ™. Vrrar) to a d«pth "t 1'ifiti foot, *nd then r*mo t^, water again. Thia lower atroam nim* Wi tha mrfann, and, Indeed, r»«e tn a tsh- twarily two foot aho»o the gr'mrvd Tlio la«t wator found waa unfit hojrt tralnora do ruK limit Utelr bmmtm In Ut« : t.r, drinking, an-1 hut for an anrldonlal d(«. mi MI hor r>f r|narta of hay and grain 0>oy j n.icrj <4 ita wrmdorftil proportina might |)iall aat, nor 4(i Uioy giro (horn a mrUin : h«r. ))a<n «m«l'1cr«1 a ntiiaanoo ft WM J ra? waior at ono timo and th*n them wait for hottra h«for owing I born f mi nd that there a large of ga* Ir. thia water fr'rrn the lower d«pth 'lid* Frank had rit.f .con Ho ro of U10 faro, and niArlwi. " Ma».ol Miaa r-ra»f..rd ! faint f»..m ».«a .rf >,!«»!. ho ,or,l,1 ^ T mciTB Ho ioolc-1 it,,) foil t,, H|o e>r, Tm a»«l H . r,a»» fall, on.1 him Hhe knew Ho rr,t.«t >,o » HOT rain V.ooJ j , m i « » l ( „,„„, h e I * , , ,»,1 ah.mhiora. t.til ahc .11,1 ,,.,* mlrxi il •n,ar,k 1lr*\. I aarc^i her. he mnrmrW faintly, and then l,mmc „,„.„,»!„•„ Hhp henl ..tor him I- keof, U,o rain . .>! ^ ia far« Her )<.r>e hair ha.1 failcn A,,w» I.I it Ining like a rail .,,., her hoa^i .king an'1 Ualnora lot U»°ir horaoa o*l at will, and j FVrmo '>na «ngg<«frd tho ldo« of aoolrig II plan* a peJl <rf water rl-iaa oti'mgh U> tho y, og9m w,rt|)d >inrn A « « l oil ran wna orlh bi [uormlt lh« animal, aHor r.ttowtng hia . ,,,»( ,, TBT Uio t/.p >,1 tho tuhing, arid, harlng fo-1, b( waah it riown wiUi a aamll.rw ,4 ] * few h'Joa pnn^ho/1 in it, an improviaori walar, tf Ha naraa fir» U,a ll.jnid Tho ,,ao e .,ft, ( „ , . wM .t hand Only a ma Oh waa trf a»«-a ia ala» |.o.mitU»1 >m<t<>r i c h i - li..,», | ,^.,,,1,.,) u. »m[,SM» t>M> proparaMorm Tlio In Utta way, a natnral appctiU U >«Ur»1 U,, ; m , i , h V Mlicl,ta-1 «n/1 app)l<»1 to a hole in U»o artlmaJj amim ar».1 .Irtnka whet, ho f»«Ia j (ho rmn. and fiamoji ahot up Uiro« or four Bko (VHng art, and lh*t« la loaai .langar .if ( fp«4 |rt(/i tho air ar» r 1 hrirno^l aioed^ily Tfio vnltirating a raT<mm>. a pt »«te. with all iU | ( u .m,M Im-n Mr Holm'.n had flro B,,d ttaiacroMthlo n.<n*o<)non»oa tn aarly H{rring | wai«r corning 'rttt >,f tho anttio holo In the pvepe>r*,tkrri, H^rraoa ava »ot ) f ^ga<1 m.fra \ gr*^t}r>^t T~ha &*iho ni fho erttVot woM, lhaf Lkan half raaah aa thay t»~1 »o ho. and whi^h waa "r>Iy *Vi foot doo^, and ftirrdahod tfta wjmimm at waking ha* grooUj r.hanga^i j (),« e^.-1 t«Ui waa UtrjMul, and auttVionl A -lo-arfta air.no, h'rraca ware atarWI at an : waU* f-a all .I.«r>aa4i» ttaoa and for tho r,t<1i,*,r tfaTolllng gait, and >«o kop« at j t*/^k, *' , waa led ,,1f in pipoa Iri fho hmiao wxk nnlll U»sy lx»m> Impaiionl ar><1 nor Jarid .*Wm 1—-«)iHo« A rmrtilng waa hnllt i , m , a«-»i,»J j,,.rfna»ly, and (»••*> »>^arr.a > . ^ M tha »win wolla in «ti'h a way thai it In* 3 *^^!^ raf finiajhirkg r r*tf ai^ck^illy a4 tha ' **rtrn«*1 a raa«*»Tr4r f«^ tho water from the I tmmim* ym** TK.y IH< In th'«o timaa ' .J/Vl f—4 Ic.l, and thai f-rMW, fr-rn tralnora aro aa*la#l~1 I/. B 1 '* »>>« 1 ' '•'"•*-"'• l'U"« * llthr-^gh Ihia water in Oio ) w r { milaa) a 'lay in pfeji*raH*Ff>, *^ al^rot dtirl; »'4r r«rr^o i.r-tV.i4irig up th* ga«, genoralo^ i,. J-« <mRTO daya and n«o.1ing lho»« .,„( M' »-»"»••». »'•• w«.l I,, tH,-kl,m ho had a Vwi^e in Iho veek. nvrMlly Hr,nOaT m'«n e*a»«^e» rr«>4o wilh a a*^. w f c in (ho I / T, r»ga and ..*» Wa-Inoa^lay and 71i.ira-1aT f..to and »hla Ke l,^,k h.*o* Mvi faa4«no<1 -,»of hia j h ,,« Mr Jamc it.ddon, J¥rt»i«^ »>»k. •'» i! « TVa ^^«/ TO wa* J-ma^ti, iha ^,,far-a | , «r in How England, an-1 U at \^M the poo* t-««-1 >' T filial th. f*li ahaj-^1 > « * l i . i 'Hio ! tta»t hla hoteea In tha Pj.»1ng wiHt am»f '"•*>'>*'* hia h.'*rta n*U ga* ma^hino with ! with tw <* m««o men !*• a hoatr wag'n I "* I'"* 1 ' T J t** r*»f"»«t*d w}lh amall h"loa ! II. .W. UHoto. In r.«'l w,,rk. •«,] In gill,,, ' •^"« K * J «'«« "t"* Sr«T/la~o. t r i m d r,T> hia h.taao a lltUo j-^ging -,r.r nair.fl \ ti " i «•*• »I X U *' 1 mmif.h. ar,-1 tho t.r..(.]err) g,.mnd aa an-h e*er«4*e l,*tr>ga tnl/. play • | ••< ' r.e*j- f->«l **• in*i*r,UT *.lt.-1 Aflat «^» ,rf U.ewaan4 atrvaw* wMrh w.,»k in "T. " >ia * •*• in* wa * P* 1 " »>>* fi»» l^.i f^ n.»<i.«> with U>o mnaaloa rm whirh the groai ' >Ha HUher. a*'.T«. and r,' w the moala arc •«,*in la pl«*o4 In »r~«ing .«, a IOTCI „,, \ l"V"^ * ; ^ (> »« n*" '««' •»' Balr.K.n I fa— Mf >l.,lden « an axiet.t h«lle-Te» ir, l»«-aW- '«*•! H.U g«* fn, lUnrnlnating, i,,i« ' m'Atrtn th^mghl and f.*a^4i^ lr> training i '* (lf¥O a> »*"< a**Tr. »/. e,r,tj,c!r fill (he hi)!, a) »».1 >l»iil»a> Ota tooUInc h<«e« In r- mTo, ; iH-^h II ii t i»«t imtff.itmrol ,„, « ul -,«,*., a ,1. T two a . . - , he «rf.1 he r.,ei r l«- '"P »• •«• » - « ang«-rf~1 thai. « . , rtn (hen, f.,» (,.,» w.*k than m,*« 'inaHtT iwpt'--.,1 T>te g»* »h.^. off . ! . t,air*«. 4-.. aa h . »»Ue-»«a in a gradna) Ut» |>«a» m^st "< W*. wl, wHh-ml d-,*,M | THE VIRTUE Of AN INDIAN PONY. I hAve A littl* tUrrj of pwrton*! experlmoe with on* Indian pony thai may b« re«4 with profit. 1 rrxla one* with aotne oaUla hayw* Ui'rotigh tb« tUxik r»ngM of Nevada. My pony fit WM M I M Bob) bad drifted Into Nevada from Utah, tutd waa known aa a hnffalo hnnU»r. Bob wa« an omn looking M a «b»«re/l nhoep, and u bnJlet haaded M a political r WiomL H«w«Ter, Bob and I got along Tery well th* flnrt day frf our ac- qTiftintanoo, got along, in fact, about fifty Noriuift ml)—, which I haT* oar«rfa)ty wrtl- matnd to r«t oqnaj to *iity.fiT« rjhrlntian mllaa. T)ta n<rxt day Bob WM tlja/1 w orrjaw m borwl. Ha ragArrWI tha waaia* nt a»«9- hmah dladatnfnlly whlia I nhrMd^l my whip upon htm and Innohod o£f tb*. aaga- hrrmh whila I mm* ont my npnn on ht» ahaggy «ld«a. Tim, I l«rf him a frw mlloa •nd hn regarded ma hi Mg-ayad BiadiiatUm. Whon I rammtntod, whlr.h I did only wb»i» my nliooa, ware wom mit, Bob appnarnd no broken up that I fait aorry. I determined to go no further that day than tho ranr.ti- hotiae. we, wnr« approauohing, for I did not want IWd/a life <iharg«1 U> my eradlt. Juirt twfore wo r«vn)M«1 tha h<mm a herd <jf cftttio roaohod u«. I may aay re*/-h*d for n». A hig hull the higgoM and wildaat hull I ro- rmmher orer Ui haT* anon acltwUd Boh and me for a target. Oon.idoring IW.h'a condition I waa about U, dlamonnt and take my rhanrwa afoot, when Boh atariad. I be|i*Te he lhonKht hn araa ontx.ro.1 for th* I»erf,y Yon never aaw mrh a rate rrf apeori attained by •nrh a r«- markaldo B«|t IM. wotild alUrnatcdy roll himaolf tip |nt« a ha.ll and atretnh out to throe ttmaa hia normal length, hi* h«*d would go rm» .* aight Into hia ahonldnn Huddonly Ftoh ^. Vp~1 rary audd-nly ao attdtienly that it tin*°Ule<1 ray dignity and l>o*e f,»,king »l«ml I diaro»orod tho •ettae i> ta aridd lUlor W »gan r ia.1 hoe i ha ho i,,|| ir..1 rnT a '> ,o ha.Ing kept n, f. o that the h T the hnll and IW.h rgtng afW » IHtrkof'iai td nrM kmrw rerrt»ln«y a a real g,,,d r rnile*. an- nil had atsipped ><ogan r that f.*d ho hull «- Ft-lh or o*. In th whaf In a to my (imo 7 fin(i) th Jtiirt harglng Uie of a If th nld nr > nhaa< »(>»» - e hull A. haTe t. d«. with II •oat app«i h> rha o hnl I waa red lo ao waa and- ^.rr.o ai'^g fV,b dr^god V^iutlfully, «ntl ther, u.* ^,11 -ha~H w a while. Ttmt thing wm top* tj> for howra. If U»o bull w-mUir, I rUam» »»a JW>h wotjld rrM*o the tmll . it WM »1! U>. atm. in him jnat aa mn^h fnn ^,e war M an "ther I reckon we aha*Wt •a^« r*h»*- FM> and 0»e bnll »nd I *>*«•,! ftfly rni'iw' wh«n wa happooavl uprm a \iUU, -—i*. a»4 Fkok afld UM bull Segan Wnrwwinc tH* an«tp«oUd ptta* to- gwthev in ike w »t frUndly BMISW. I PI- m*mA mr»eif M ^ w«lk«J bavik to UM maob. H-«T=.t*J an4 tho fharity HnapU kw.Ii a I»Ur,4 ara t,n/W Uia di- ro^Um 'rf tHe ^V»mroi*)»lrm«Ta of ChartUa* tharwfor* by Uw Aa Hell, froca Ita prarttkm at the frtoi of Th* rot tha «iU>nt lo fharity nWkweii'. IaUn-1, but Uia Itf) their lanUma thai had h. .!.«io nily ar.mao he 11,0 King*..* H day w»ti a full »nr,,,,mf .rf «i| n-rno.1. an.l F>a»k C\\t\,,t> waa Jta hour *n.o [-[-X lohl Mififcg ih**» f»» l>fc> b w«ta m, »KW, la «*IU»n j^,^^, .,. ari'-na ^ aM«cm^it of Ilelle-rn* -i .I) bnt Uw> regular TVa h'«x-tt«i KM t«ati arranged ID **, wh ««Uining abotrt Un •»«« T%»M-4 \h*a» tarn MeigTvad, i., ..ai^rln 1 !: r:. 1 ^ l - ^ ~* - w ^ -^• w - 1 •««"«— mt tho Um r oi,.1 |,.,w the ft J.r..tllo and a*««1 the tiair. Himpaon <1eao.ua 1,1. t <«t he .U*ette<1 .ho nctei r+,cA U- KC him » 6 .io klrd k. UMM*W Tr*. (Wlaji V * «««.««,*» w ^ t M t M l aui a* r thalrl, and m»<1 lumma w.lh w*IW i- - •« .«i .C«< ^H^J TUll tA ia a J » n l o . aaalataq^t. aed a/Ur K.w «—,•*.!.. W . {,«. » » rM# tighl in their h -t«e« »>T «*€ h. ../ ih. MMW rtw •«-».. « r. h.il l.tw rI.»»l~..T* <1r.»iug U a «*U Ufc-W—^i, I. , Urteg wiUUit UM btiild- .rf UM rttj Um m a tho arHdcnU! Htiaing •-. ec,,n.o I , | tho hand <>f a iwkc «hil« raHing U»«< | f>r..pa, and <-r».p walrhing »>» rvigh* itg the Bkcwa p««iqo<ai .w-*»«<w>« ,rf ervake I Iftn a., alight U the Uie .a <!« be thai il U n * c ,<ah t<, 1 .«. * alee,, , W|«« tHvnax, <4 bMiMi.1mtel.4tw. I sU !• H**t rait. .4 N.»*.U. la fa«4. glrea «v, C«|M« priaes. being »»T*. -* •«*>', •> f~« a. UM* U OM »*>«taaai cat U M •**•• ^ '••»"» wWUi, I* a»w UM> UWa* iir«n at th. odKo of U,e fc.wn. and at.o aigh j ^ I aa ahc turned Rway and at«ri«l h.u,,c Frank <'lift.,n < ante <iut on (ho plat/, r«a.t*allt and nn iaaih Th* r^il l r aM<1 [>«i«» Utrongh UMi Tt4«n st«.1i»*ilT l-e U,p .Ulkii. Hho «.,.n~1 a-a, ! w n m ^ ih , .^i.^, , rf Hf. «U If ^ i * , . ...ill . 1«aki. lH and walked ...» j (|wim ^ , .^^.^ju, f,, trt , H« b U«.e , Tl... »liHht . «l hi... U, U,o .juiok. hat h- | „,,«,,, Uft^w iK. « . « - a.«»4 UU ! foil there, waa aninrthiiig wr,.t.g Hl,,il*.n, ! ..i^^j^, ay^fc like aft*-,1«. «»iy HaitOe ' ' .•»,.. ^him^lf. 1,-l.u^lo.lh.hm.lHI ! | , . .1*. „/ >r a^aiuot him at laat He know id hor iiHriher had alwaya fl it hurl him U> he mlaun 11m« t«ta»o,l en end Frank kopt b, kit work. llo had n<4 l«ei> (.. tho (-.awf.w.U' : | H a m Uk Utlt ilnoo Malud turnod hti l*ok .ut him Ma miwMto K.1 .H..,(il,ilo.1 Ui ltlP«t (twtfga Hin>l«m at Uio atalitm. Ui.mgh »ho di>1 IM4 <XUM 4..>» ao oftan aa formerly Until..* ha.l ilghi Fiank waa ailllog half aale*| , ^ tm y^ &&X rftDB *" «f *••• Ua» laaiaaj •»•» over hia key, »,«n <mt wlU. IMigue. abet ! t«4SkaH,MM aj»4 aw at.if aa fU| > waa an>ua»1 t,y htmtini bU ..w« -ait «« | «».» lawored, aii.l Uu» f.41..w»ng .^1 Hhlo Ua.k, No 10. MMtb t-m*.d. Kttttf alt.n, l l r • lt<4.t f»f E»ti» N.t 7. amitfe mat In Iho <..«1- A MATRIMONIAL ENTANGLEMENT. Th« matrimonial misfortune* at th* Earl af Etwton ar* certainly inToWed ia tm singu- lar a chain of facts aa ever formed the foundation for a decree of nullity of mar- riage. Lord Etuton claimed such a decla- ration on the ground that his wife was already married when he married her; and the present Countess defended the suit on the ground that, if this was the case in one •ense, it was not an available plea, inaa- mnoh as her first husband was already mar. ried when she married him. It therefore became necessary for the jury to investigate, not only the circumstances of each of these Uleged marriages, but the date at which the wives and husband* supposed to be involved ere said to have died. In the result, they found that Lord Eustom was lawfully married to his present wife, haoanse, though she had a nominal husband •live when she married the Earl, yet that hridbftrid had a wife alive when she married him, and was, therefore, not her husband at all. If the first wife of the first husband of thi present Lady Etwton, who may be still alive, had been able to come forward and my that iihe had a husband alive at the time married Uio man who afterwards mar- ried the woman who subsequently married prnseut Karl of Euston, the result of the petitioner's suit would have been Just the nther way, if an ordinary non-jndioial mind in capable of dealing rightly with such an iutriodto ohaln of negatives. - One good marringo followed by a bad on« reaulUi in making Uie matrimonial obliga. tlona of tho Petitioner indiwohible. 0n» ?ood mnrrtftgn, followed by a bad one and then a good one, and the conclusion would have been sxaotly opposite. Put into a mathmniiUonl formula, if A married B, and arrled 0, nnd 0 married D, ««jd so on n to Z, and assuming that each letter of the alphabet was alive when the next two went through the ceremony of marriage, it would appear to follow that all the odd nnmbers would be valid and all the even nnmhnm invalid marriages. If the series began with a man, every man except the would have gone through the cur lony twice, the first ttme ineffectually. Every woman would have done the same, but in her oaae Uie second wedding would have heen the nullity. The question might be •Ul) further complicated by asking what wmjld bo tho effect of a marriage ceremony lietween the last women in the series and tha first man.—London Standard. THBTBXA8"NBSTaR.«» The nester In Texas is the cattle ^king's neighbor, but between them thore Is a wide gap In rank. Aman may own a section of land and have fifty, one hundred or two hundred head of cattle, but he is only a ne«Ur. His 600 acres may be worth $3, $5, |10 an sore, and with his stock his posses- sions may foot up from $ 15,000 to a)20,000, but hs nevertheless is a neater. Hb land is " a farm " and his stock " a hunch." When be oounto hia pasture, owned or leased, by UM ssoUon instead of by the acre than he has got " a range," and when his stock is turned on by the thousand Instead of by the hundred head he ha* "a heTd." Then ha ia a genuine oowman. Hs joins a live stock aaexwiation. He has kis brand known and recognised from Uie Bio Grande to UM top U«r of Pan-Handle counties. When he go*s to tha city the papers refer t* him as Mr. Bo-anrUo, the oattle king. " TWe a/a two ways of treating these witan," said Oharles B. Brown, a young ootintry stockman, to the Slobe-Dmoormt eorr«rpond«nt. " Tvs *MQ'«m both tried. On on« aide of me I've got a neighbor who fenced his range without any particular re- gard to what the n«st«rs wanted. When they ooraplalned he talked back pretty stiff- ly and told them the road would have to go where wanted it to. Wall, they'vs odt down twsnty miles of fence for him. An- ottur of my neighbors Is Eelskia Davis. That first name ia Uie one tha oowboys gave him. Eelakia gate through th* yaar with Is* arrpenaa for Us herd than any oowman In T«IM, I bvUsve, When hs wants td round up or get hb oattl* together, h« « y s to UM tM*t«n around bin, who'v. all got UUU buMhsa of mayb* fifty or a faondnd baaxl of a.11 la, • Hare, you fallow*, oomc wtth m. Ws'll ran this iking togethar.' Tb*y all join In with himaad g«ttt)«lr<Mt* tie M»rted oat and branded. It's ddts oa ttte mutajal plan. Tlu naatar il hslpcd oat, •od Z*lafcte doasB't h*v« to hlrs h«rd«ra, t dosttki«k fats oattU (K*tbin POUND IN A CHICKEN'S The Dlacsvery of a Lost Screw Speaking of chickens piokinj up tad allowing diamonds," chispas " rf gold and . Dther bright bite of stone .nd meW reminded Judgk , of tl is d^y, «f an experience with! the chicken t sea. ID une, 1850, he made the trip froi a Maxatlan o San Francisco oji the French bark Sur- prise. One day, when about ha t way TO the coast, the steward had out tl e binnacle s lamp and was engaged ia cleanis ; aa4 pol. iahing that bit of (nautical apptratw. Ht had it on the deckj had taken it all apart, and had the debrLi, wreckage, o whater*f - you would call it when at sea, s attend alt about The vessel was rolling s ightly, and as it rolled it caused a brass s irew about half an inch in length a travel down the deok. Some ohiciens were loit« ring about, and the flash of thle screw caugh; the eye of ui old hen. She dashed at the >it of brass) and in a moment jt was in her o op. the transactibn and hu knew there would Unshed up th i fnee to pay td hd up butting it together again The judge saw wardly chuckled, soon be Davy Ji •orew. When Uie :he lamp and was _ he miased a particMar and important somr, After uearching fcb- the screw fo tttes In vain the steward spoke a io some of the sailors. They j< ined in the »earoh, but no soi ew could be f »und. 8oon the attention of tie captain was the group of Bear(here, and the obliged to tell him of the loss. The skipper fle^ into a rage 11 once, and used muoh profane language ii i with Uie frequent reference h< ipon to make to Uie steward's steward was on the point of taking a short ride on the jtoe of the caj tain's boot, when the judge thought it tim i to appear upon the scene. He told the aptain tt&t if he wanted the screw it cou i be found with little troubled He had oily to order ope of Uie men to catch an ol I black hen that he pointed obt, cut off her head, opea her crop, and the screw would >e found. At this the sailj>rs gazed upo i the judge as though they t^ougat hint wme, practk tioner of the blAck art, and the steward gave him an appealing look, ae muoh as to beg him not to j^in Bides with his i The captain hfld the fowl oai ght at once. Its head was outjoff, ite crop opened aad out rolled the lost screw. Sai low and all aboard were astounded, and eien the cap- tain changed color. The'face o! the steward showed a queer mixture of deli ght and awe. After that bit & legerdemaii the steward could find nothing good enc ugh for tt» judge, and when the wind fail id he heard bints among the sailon thai th»y i have a ton knot breeae any tine they i ed it, provided a oertain should see fit to give it t City (Nee.) Bnterprtu. y easinr than through tfc * (Tm.) iMUr. j.rough rrolght. .IM i»« leaa aigoa,Ua.t 4.. Tho oi«ut mKhik MM dowu itt ah—ta. U*a «1»4 14.W, i to TIM tfla«ll rn«ti UM Hurt* M>«> h*a»» *«4 H «M «b- mmmi <*f «Nfr M#«aaK IS <** ajajl fmm. «Mytl lt j a. j * -*i i t T^iqTi. Vfir -tmjpu .f UM «M«M ' im^m*********** **m **t ^X r ^ w< ^ ^^ SOUTMIRM NCORO'SDOOS. When you ooraa to Uie study the matter rou will find Juct as muoh difference be- lwaat> ttt* rkratharn negro'e dog and the white man', dog, as there Is between the eanin* owned by aa Indian and one which romaa when a Senator snaps hie fingers. Th* Stmthern colored man who is too poor to k*v* a aaale, ox, pig, fowls, doors, win* dows or Araplao* in his oabin, bis a dog— rnmmtimm Ivor or five. When he comes to tows af Uaaat as0 followai him. When yon pees his bone the whole family of oanines bark at you from a dtotaaoe or silently gaze at row frets UMdoorstep. The negro's dog Is a okxMB. He Is built oa wrong prindplee to begia with. It would seem as if half of •tm had been on earth for a year or two before UM other half WM hitched on. He raeitM Utat tie b a t " purty " aad be be- bevas accordingly. He la almost invariably of a 4nA^olor. He eldtea along where other Ur*. aod if ho lao'trtumjvUilad ae k a Itvdiy eMta«. lie follows along !a a hum- r, mU begflag pardon for being m a«rU». aad UMvmalleet whiffet eaa i «yee beac put like peekd Toe never aee oae misbehave ia IU «H» «>der the wagon, If there is mm. V aot, he follows hie master's heels «t.a4-ld«»»aa4»xw.i>diDab>o»bQinUity, * tb* ellghti llaot show a tooth, k to hta, .awl he attps 9«l with his Isfl tl» m*M m»y be * w k'*J felt oalled eyes. The MISTOOK THE I From the .Chicago Herald you think should be done i ith the tariff?" inquired aa inqui* ve p e * - , of a tall, sombre man who sal beride b$B stiff as a barber pole. i " Don't know anything about it, sir," plied the stiff man, curtly. Lfter a pmM j Uie questioner braced up hit oourage aad \ began with: What breed do you prefe •? Breed, sir I" toe aombie nan eji._ lated, in astonishment "'.' don't know . anything of breeds, sir. Do you mean to j Insult me, sir?" inquired th stiff person, iharply as he arose from th* seat/ << Top ' should be ashamed of yourse f, sir." ' , •' Darn it all, stranger, kee > cool. Didai youteUme you had the hoi tor to predde over thefirstflock at Aaron r " Oertelnly I did, you «tu] id man; but I am a minister of the Gospel.' A look ox blank and uasp akable > „ « . . ment o'erspreed the other's i toe, which WM '• K>on broken by his opening lit month aad | •Ting: , " Ooah darn it all, strut fer, tit down, tad we'll change the subjecf" HIGH PRICBS FOR lOVBLS, LreatpreVent j popular aooe] Tbe noveliai* are at among us, so far M goes. It has oertained that Mr.' a year by hit poetry. That tat WilUam Black makes 1 Mr. Walter Besant, who waa; of a nations of the novelist's art, any one of bis romances thaj ed in tbe first ten yean of bis , l$Uty M- T«nnysod ,mak« £4,000 Mr. Charles Beade aVerages, Here, 45 per page for hit Herbert Speacer'e remuneration exceeds fire shilliagi per p «e. Mr. Mat. thew Arnold's imaginative | nrai e*n ~~ antnoomeatleastfour tim<s smaller Mr. WUkie Oollins' imagJn ttloa g , tJwioe M much, seduced from Cambridge djm by the f u d - art,[eamo more for tbak Oarlyle eam- «, w% be. j writings. Mr,j l: 1 paying h m more than il,000 a ya*r tor , whatever he looses to wri*>. H 1 written a po<m as good «i he might stti have been as void ofmoome as Elijah in ,the desert-*.

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Page 1: gazette. - NYS Historic Papersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn92061913/1884-05-29/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · Though al l iny fonnor hopon am d«oil ... MSR, Fryn k liml found ... «orgo did

mi gazette.

lodfc AND / O B POINTING

,Tery description executed with prompt-

t t a and jt?ow pricey

DEVOTED TO POLITICS, 8OIENOE, AGRICULTURE, AND WHOLE INTERE8T8 OF THE PEOPLE.

VOL. 32. ELIZABETHTOWN, ESSEX COUNTY. N. Y., THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1884. NO. 42.

Reading notices, amonelreidJni8 cents per line. f

Business cards (not

^^atrates. _ . advertising ratesapplication. i -

Birth, maniags and death EOtlc^

Correspondence of public intereJt solicitedfrom all parts of the county. I ;

The subscription price of the POST A W AGAZETTE is $1.50 per year, payable strict- ~lyinadTance. ,

are frjw.

BUSINESS CABDS, . POETRY.

TROD >• DVOVSY.

aa* Counsellor at Law,Convly.N. V.

,VKTTE B. BISHOP,

I Attorney and Counselled at Law,Jonah, Ester County, k Y.

,Y>TON & CONWAY,

Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,

| TyWITT STAFFORD,

Attorney and; Counsellor at Law,

Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,

ICwviUe. N. Y.

™ P K 1 £ I C K f. 1IA1.K,

Attorney and Tounsellor at Law,' n \U-r,,r,uirk Mock, Chicago. III.

Attorney and Counsellor at Law,

,;„,.:• .Iny, E**^O>.. -V. Y.

TTAKKV IIA1.H,

Attorney and Counsellor at Law,

Attorney and Counsellor at La

237 Ma<h*o» Ait:, Atlimw, A'. >'.

' P H N l

Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,

ElizaMht'ont. Hws Count,/. ,V. Y.

Counsellor at Law,

Klital.,-ll-/<»n,, A'. J'.

Attorney and Counsellor at Law,

FJualu-lhL.u;,, K**<:r Count,/. X. Y.

TTT.AUK) A (JltOVKIl,

Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,

JWIlh'nrv. Estrr <:,«i,,lu. N. V.

PHOTOGRAPHERS.

" • JOHNSON,

PHOTOGRAPHER,

rvmni I'intil. /-.'.user Cnuntu. X. V.

HOTELS.

THE "BERKELEY,WOODRUFF, - Proprietor

nr f.nkr Villngr, IVankUtt Co., JV. I'.

"ALLEN HOUSE,

HEXHY AI.IJ'.S, - - Pro/trirlin-

l,<ike I'lacitt, JV. I'.

THE WINDSOR,(AlUROXItAChS.)

rnyrirtar

irn, fcW.r Co.. A'. V.

ll'iif'liiwn if<milHi'iiul \

MANSION HOUSE,

!\!<>X!)S, - Pro,,rli-U,r

Mknbrlhtoirn. JV. V.

"RICIFAUDS IIOUSK,MUHIT A. fl.MiK, - VroVri,U>

Jr>.Wy,,»w, JV. Y.

WEFI) JIOUSK,

nosmmr \V,:F.D. - rr,,,.ri,i,fr

Hi-.il/torl, .V. J.

SHERMAN HOUSE,. "• i- nrrn-:i;F/!-:/.n. - /•,•,,,„•„/,„•

' • " l - t . r n t , . , ! l l n V l'!,'!,'lH ' , ! { " M l n o v l l i n . '"I'lii.'.ani:^,. ,|,-|v,.». ,.,-,„,,!,.I

BANKS.

K l'OHT 1IKNIIV, N. Y.

F. S. A T W K U , .

SCHOOLS.

ELIZABETHTOWN

NFKKKSCHOOLv Ku""VTiir,,«N. K,, , t« (1«i , N Y.

^ "' "• ' • " i . v / ^ , . r,i,wi,H,i.

nin • T l i r : M ' I W . ' . f lhmS.-li«H.l.wUl

f

.in, U l ''• " A

Itenompenifi.How often In my oflrly day*

Tboro enmo to mo tlito vivion:Tho star of Famo, with vltid rayi,

Hlioutd buam o'er nuldH ulynlan IBoforo nil oyim I would nrlno

A poot ffroot, wluxw nuiryMust win or« lonjf with ttingio song

A fndoloBH crown 0/ (flory 1

But tutor nUU I ifnnv more Ixiid ,And thoiiffhl, I would Irnportnim '

(To fill my <!(i(f<tr lian<tn with tfoirf)Tluit flcklo KOfKlnow-ifortuiKi.

Whore JawolH »bln« wll,h llglit dlvlnnI'd gather at my ploanure;

My Btren^rth and hoalth I'd (flvo r(,r wm

And grasp a ml^tUy troasuro 1BwlfUcrowdlng yoani hatn t|Ulnkiy find

And carrltHl off tliowt fanolon.Though all iny fonnor hopon am d«oil

Tlip linart Ifaw bright romnnnW

Th« dmiunur now prmwiwHW.With Innnhlo nnmo unknown io f

81»o livod ln-I.<ivo'H(inn>j«nn!

M!NCKI,LA NY.

WON BY A BULLET.King don win n mitnW w i y station on the

W. mid A. Kdilroiul.

Muhol Ornwfonl wan Uio |,«llo of the

town. Kvoryhoriy wurl «>, No , , I i n , , r o .

iiini.Nl U. rival hor, and now. of Um Klr>«

onvind linr. H\w w.w tl,«> prhlo of Ki»iKnt.o,i.

At tho liwt imhlto Imll thcirn w«>rn two

gwmtn, (}o<irK<i Hini|>fii>n »n,l Vrnnk <!lifto»,

whohiMl n«m>r lionorml Kingston aodetr

with thoir prnaoiuxi lioforn.

(}oorgn Himprnm wwi .». m ^ n n a r on th«

.ilroiul, iHiil pwwml the town nearly ovorj

day. Hmnahow ho wna not inimli llbn.1.

Frank (!lift.on wiw Um now lol«Kraj)h opn

lor nt Urn station. II* hud only bnen )„

minion ik wtiok, )>nt hulf Ui« toWu knew

dim nn<l likml him.

ingHlou, F wvy, wna a wny alnUon. ' II , ,

tol<igru|ili (t|iorntor wiut elation ano.it, o i -

H UKoiit, tink«t aKo,,t, trimki.mil and

porlor ; ho rnn l.h.. wholn 1,IIRIII<IM.

Frank Oliflon hiwl Kfv.m ampin witlafao.

(ion, IUK! all thn oflloInU liivl nonfldenon In

im. NntwithnUiidliig l.ln prnnnuro of l.iiai

MSR, Frynk liml found titno to liooornn ao.

iiaintod with Mnr.n) (Irnwfor.l nn.l )>ar

ioUi,.r, and th.iy hod In vital I,in, (,„ Uw.

Fmtilt (Jllflon mid (inorKo Himjmon war*

at the null, mid of m i i n n tlioy ranked th«

miK mwi of tho (own. Thoy worn Uia .,»,.

•U of all U>o iwlmirliux Klnnor.a of th«

young woruon, and nil Um olorkii and farm

xirKoHimpmin wn« |Htrl.l<<nlnrly attmiliva

to Mul.nl nil Uio nvoning. Kmnk .landed

'ill) linr i m n \ mid Inlhnd with ) w r a whlla

n Uio v,iran.l». Tim luvll l,r,,kn up, «n.l

Himimon wiilk'»l hom« with h«r.

in next day tlu, t.,w,, o a | , | |),at Mnh<4

nml Ofuirgfi Worn pnsm^iui. Kvnryh<Miy l,o-

iovwl it, for Kinitaton Imd a- nnrulin," w «y

if flndiiiK otit Riioli lhitiKa,. mid it novor

undo n mintnko.

Thnu thxro wim In!), of hmv ,,mny r|.1»a

Mnliol liud tnken with (lm,rK«oii hia ati(fiii° ,

low nlm nnt on (hn Artminn'ti IH,) in (ho rait,

md rung tho l..,ll an Ihn train rollo.l into Uia

itntlon.

'Vlw B<>winH sorinty put thoir hnaila to

Kithrr.in.lanl.1. - I I..I.I y,,., * , ." " I knew

. it wna a oomin' to ;" " I jr»l thonuhl

it," and so forth.

Those w))o lonfnd .ihout thn aUtlon dla

lov.'iod Hint Wli

» whiflthi wnro hnnrd from thd dimotlon ..f

.ho long our,, , ii,, tho ,<,«d Malwl wmild

ng .uigino wcmlil a<<,|,, i

it(i|> down from hi* mil.,

ahnt till tho train h v l lo

Hun tlml ,<

ly ?" UHII.M! (

" O h , that iinpudpul upotail. Clifl.,,,, .,1

our««. HIM hn troubled T'xi Int.ly V

" Oil [ <im.rK«, you d.. him ll.|uaU,x> He

" Hn i» a low mi,, for all thai, mid I «<•»(

on to hnvo nothing lo do with him I'd "

'• Why, what him Mr Clifton doiio T" <uk

d Mali«l, In ruiloniali-oool

<)«orgo did not nnawcr Mahol'a qur^ti,,.,

ml foil mean. II.. ,lr(^ir.iinod to lmt° it

tit with Matml hnfuro ho left hor, m, h«

ountitiuod -

" Yoti hatro pr<mij«od to lio mv wifa I

Irminl Iliat you ,1., not rercivo nnothor flail

mil thai oporol.ir."

" OoorgK, plenum don't. Ho h u t.oo,, *»

in.| U> . » , motlmr .{.,1 ..,«., n,,d we ..wo him

»,-ry oourl..By. Y,m aro « « i . t w "

" Qtiiok :" nni.i <)<•,,rK^, u lt«

1 llm n(o]i nn.l ntnrt^l lo niounl

Now ,

" lloi

" Vrn, (»rvorgn, y«i ! nn> thiuy. " oil* rri«l

• l , ,r«. . . , i«. ."

Ho l«nn.<d .lown and ti«-.o-l hor, . . .n)m H

xiilUuilly. Thou ho pul l c l U.« Uir.HtU « ' d

Mal>«] walohrd it till it had

Tne olook rtrnok nloron, and Frank «Up-P«d ont on Uie platform. Abov« th« T^mr <A

the atonn h« hoard Uw ahrill M w l o n o * -iwioe—thrm « m « i I

" Slmpaon I" ho «Jaonlat«d, aa h« tnrn«dImok for hia lantern and wnnt out «MI thatrnok.

'11m IiMdllght roan over tho aurmnll Ilka• full moon olimbiiiK Mm hills, and flaahsdrtown Uifl ratia. Th* r » i n n i u n n , v , w n j n Un.

r«inU, tha wind whlatlfld paat tha oornora nt

tho »Utlon with an omlri<ma annnd, Uiatrain name Umndnrlng on.

Frank raised Uie lantern to «wl»H It mr<*m

tha traok, hut »w.forn thn atgnal mmld tx»jfl»en a fltful tpiat n( wind put ont tha light.The train W M not two hundred yarda offand had not •lanfc<m»d IU «pn«.,i TW«> waano time to H nt an<rf.hor lamp.

It waa a moment t,f li-irr<>r t/i Iho ynring

»p«ratrff. No. 7, wlUi It* fr<.|Hhl|nH jrtuiaerigora, W M nominii J'i»» noyonri Ih" trrwn

atmotlon <1aa,tti--a|l IHUMPO bofora hia mindIlkfl a flaah of UshttiliiK

Ho foil Uia ntilTorfriK of tha lloa r>on»iUihla feet aa hn *UKK1 In tha full Klnra of (hali«ht, now fearfully ol.wo What nouhl ha

J,,m,md «"ly h i , h«u, th» rnl

wna a flash, a aharIntllnt we

T) I« I I all

FrankHo Oln.fihe fel l , ),

T)|O O|;

Komi l<>

traok

With a

hangingward (hs

wpari, an,

va.il >4 O,

T w . 0|

'if (hoi,,,

" • • ' M

" IKli ft I,

<r»t oraohl

waa dark. t-rar,K ,

'1 tha ralila I r f l arr

illrn train

hia frpt a

r».t * ,.1.1 lo

"H ll>

mfiwa1. IMI(

n un.1l«**

>.d I..

ilgtllnf tlr/H .,

r.\ th l a

hl,o

r oh 1

r.ii

f . «

..kc«1

t<> hla aiMj

> °nR lna1 Uio hr i c

-a nl«M

(jiuoa wor

ittl.for

n..[hi gh

o l l »

Ii*. maf a i

,.11,.e

lo.1 1.,- hi,,

1 >'

• f.

>ra.k . tli [.W/il, a>

h.

><1 aU,n |,»a.11ighi

ro (ho t «,i alii.i.o.1

ro ho atton

..elf ho Mir»ti»'1 "

no. a,,-1 fl

>1e hia n ;,»o .Ir^tf

tit., Uia 1,1

7 !).= o^g

i H ° t ••»»..

t " k

n a

bag.

n.*the

*mh

waaank

Irto

•mr

U H

l~1

TMB HOOBRN TROTTER.

(IM N«O*aa af matlna ••<! Wal#i4*«Aa«Ma>«oa1.

Tha aratain nf training at preaemt In»otpio la widely dlffomnt from that In pran-Ijns tort y«wra ago. Then Irrw dtM and hardwrirk wora Irtrnight to Im what hora** nnad-a<1 nv«t In prw|iara them for the t n f k . T h « jworq limited tn a oartaln r«<KignlB«d '|t»anUty "f hay and gnUn eavih day, an'1 w M «waa nrrnaitorad r1an«thing like tha rjnaiM»lmala. TTalr>»ra iim° horaa rnlghl nemi} mnf> for*1 and drinkthan art'ithar, ari'1 that If he did not goi it,ho p*,t,|f1 not ah*jw grKvl work My i

trnlnvra h<r « ail U \ allka. diota<1

allka No do.tht U.o daTolopmoTit nt

In ttio rrrwvpnt gonnration "1 Uoiflng h n r w

la In a groat m ° » u r ° dno In UM» tmpro»*

t In training and nrmdlUoriing TV»<

A CALIFORNIA WRLL.

riwi • •pal l** <Je*4 DrlahlBc Water aaalC4**4 r««l al IIMI Maa»a Tlaaa.

OnUar Ralrrxm nf Frnnnh Damp, not fartmm W/wkVm, Hal., «nnk a well with •a»Tan In^h tnrw tn a depth of ahmit Hid

fa**, mn>\ rtrtink a wrHoua at roam of nxoHUnl waUr I>«*iHng to l«.rn whether h«nrmH fnrtr«*aa» tha flow by going deeper,•nd faaring that ahould he continue thewo)] the name •)«>, h« might bijuro thequality <rt the nppor atrnta of water, Mr.Hulmnri hit on a plan nt ainklng a fotir Innbtrtbo \mM* th» ae rot. In oh <m«, And thrumaking wbat might »» nallfv) Uie eipori-manUl wall fm.r Innhm in dlamater. Thl«nner ™ . H° Vrrar) to a d«pth "t 1'ifiti foot,*nd then r*mo t , water again. Thia loweratroam nim* Wi tha mrfann, and, Indeed,r»«e tn a tsh- twarily two foot aho»o thegr'mrvd Tlio la«t wator found waa unfit

hojrt tralnora do ruK limit Utelr bmmtm In Ut« : t.r, drinking, an-1 hut for an anrldonlal d(«.mi MI hor r>f r|narta of hay and grain 0>oy j n.icrj <4 ita wrmdorftil proportina might|)iall aat, nor 4(i Uioy giro (horn a mrUin : h«r. ))a<n «m«l'1cr«1 a ntiiaanoo ft WM

J ra? waior at ono timo and th*n

them wait for hottra h«for owing I bornf mi nd that there a large of ga*

Ir. thia water fr'rrn the lower d«pth 'l id*

Frank had rit.f .con Ho ro

of U10 faro, and niArlwi.

" Ma».ol Miaa r-ra»f..rd !

faint f»..m ».«a .rf >,!«»!. ho ,or,l,1 ^ T

mciTB Ho ioolc-1 it,,) foil t,, H|o e>r,T m

a»«l H . r , a » » fall, on.1

him Hhe knew Ho rr,t.«t >,o »

H O T

rain V.ooJ j ,mi«»l ( „,„„, h e I * , , ,»,1

ah.mhiora. t.til ahc .11,1 ,,.,* mlrxi il

•n,ar,k 1lr*\. I aarc i her. he mnrmrW

faintly, and then l , m m c „,„.„,»!„•„

Hhp henl ..tor him I- keof, U,o rain . .>! ^

ia far« Her )<.r>e hair ha.1 failcn A,,w»

I.I it Ining like a rail . , , . , her hoa i

.king

an'1 Ualnora lot U»°ir horaoa o*l at will, and j FVrmo '>na «ngg<«frd tho ldo« of aoolrig II

plan* a peJl <rf water rl-iaa oti'mgh U> tho y , o g9m w,rt|)d >inrn A « « l oil ran wna

orlh bi [uormlt lh« animal, aHor r.ttowtng hia . ,,,»( , ,T B T Uio t/.p >,1 tho tuhing, arid, harlng

fo-1, b ( waah it riown wiUi a aamll.rw ,4 ] * few h'Joa pnn^ho/1 in it, an improviaori

walar, tf Ha naraa fir» U,a ll.jnid Tho ,,ao e . , ft , ( „ , . w M . t hand Only a ma Oh waa

trf a»«-a ia ala» |.o.mitU»1 >m<t<>r i c h i - li..,», | ,^.,,,1,.,) u. »m[,SM» t>M> proparaMorm Tlio

In Utta way, a natnral appctiU U >«Ur»1 U,, ; m , i , h V M licl,ta-1 «n/1 app)l<»1 to a hole in

U»o artlmaJj amim ar».1 .Irtnka whet, ho f»«Ia j (ho rmn. and fiamoji ahot up Uiro« or four

Bko (VHng art, and lh*t« la loaai .langar .if ( fp«4 |rt(/i tho air ar»r1 hrirno l aioed^ily Tfio

vnltirating a raT<mm>. ap t»«te. with all iU | ( u .m,M Im-n Mr Holm'.n had flro B,,d

ttaiacroMthlo n.<n*o<)non»oa tn aarly H{rring | wai«r corning 'rttt >,f tho anttio holo In the

pvepe>r*,tkrri, H rraoa ava »ot )f^ga<1 m.fra \ gr* t}r> t T~ha &*iho ni fho erttVot woM, lhaf

Lkan half a« raaah aa thay t»~1 »o ho. and • whi^h waa "r>Iy *Vi foot doo , and ftirrdahod

tfta wjmimm at waking ha* grooUj r.hanga i j (),« e^.-1 t « U i waa UtrjMul, and auttVionl

A -lo-arfta air.no, h'rraca ware atarWI at an : waU* f-a all .I.«r>aa4i» ttaoa and for tho

r,t<1i,*,r tfaTolllng gait, and > « o kop« at j t*/^k, *' , waa led ,,1f in pipoa Iri fho hmiao

wxk nnlll U»sy l x » m > Impaiionl ar><1 nor Jarid .*Wm 1—-«)iHo« A rmrtilng waa hnllt

i , m , a«-»i,»J j,,.rfna»ly, and (»••*> »>^arr.a > . ^ M tha »win wolla in «ti'h a way thai it

In*3*^^!^ raf finiajhirkg rr*tf ai ck illy a4 tha ' **rtrn«*1 a raa«*»Tr4r f«^ tho water from the

I tmmim* ym** TK.y I H < In th'«o timaa ' .J/Vl f—4 I c . l , and thai f-rMW, fr-rn

tralnora aro aa*la#l~1 I/. B1'* »>>«1' ' • ' " • * - " ' • l'U"« * llthr-^gh Ihia water in Oio ) w r

{ milaa) a 'lay in pfeji*raH*Ff>, *^ al^rot dtirl; »'4r r«rr o i.r-tV.i4irig up th* ga«, genoralo^

i,. J-« <m RTO daya and n«o.1ing lho»« .,„( M' »-»"»••». »'•• w«.l I,, tH,-kl,m ho had a

Vwi e in Iho veek. nvrMlly ' « Hr,nOaT m'«n e*a»«^e» rr«>4o wilh a a*^. w f c in (ho I /T ,

r»ga and ..*» Wa-Inoa^lay and 71i.ira-1aT f..to and »hla Ke l,^,k h.*o* Mvi faa4«no<1 -,»of hia j

h , , « Mr J a m c it.ddon, J¥rt»i«^ »>»k. •'»i!« TVa ^«/TO wa* J-ma^ti, iha ,,far-a |

, «r in How England, an-1 U at \^M the poo* t-««-1 >' T filial th . f*li ahaj-^1 > « * l i . i 'Hio !

tta»t hla hoteea In tha Pj.»1ng wiHt am»f '"•*>'>*'* hia h.'*rta n * U ga* ma^hino with !

with t w <* m««o men !*• a hoatr wag'n I " * I'"*1' • TJt** r*»f"»«t*d w}lh amall h"loa !

II. .W. UHoto. In r.«'l w,,rk. •«,] In g i l l , , , ' • ^ " « K * J«'«« "t"* Sr«T/la~o. tr imd r,T>

hia h.taao a lltUo j-^ging -,r.r nair.fl \ ti"i «•*• »I X U*'1 • mmif.h. ar,-1 tho t.r..(.]err)

g,.mnd aa an-h e*er«4*e l,*tr>ga tnl/. play • | ••< ' r.e*j- f->«l * * • in*i*r,UT *.lt.-1 Aflat

« » ,rf U.ewaan4 atrvaw* wMrh w.,»k in " T . ">ia* • * • i n * w a * P * 1 " »>>* fi»» l^.i f

n.»<i.«> with U>o mnaaloa rm whirh the groai ' >Ha HUher. a*'.T«. and r,' w the moala arc

•«,*in la pl«*o4 In »r~«ing .«, a IOTCI „ , , \ l"V"^ * ; ^ (>»« n*" '««' •»' Balr.K.n

I fa— Mf >l.,lden « an axiet.t h«lle-Te» ir, l»«-aW- '«*•! H.U g«* fn, lUnrnlnating, i,,i«

' m'Atrtn th^mghl and f.*a^4i^ lr> training i '* (lf¥Oa> »*"< a**Tr. »/. e,r,tj,c!r fill (he hi)!, a)

• »».1 >l»iil»a> Ota tooUInc h<«e« In r-m To, ; i H - ^ h II ii t i » « t imtff.itmrol ,„, « u l

- ,« ,* . , a ,1.T .» two a . . - , he «rf.1 he r . ,e i r l « - '"P »• •«• » - « ang«-rf~1 thai. « .

, r t n - « (hen, f.,» ( , . , » w.*k than m,*« 'inaHtT iwpt'--.,1 T>te g»* » h . ^ . off . !

. t,air*«. 4-.. aa h . »»Ue-»«a in a gradna) Ut» |>«a» m ^ s t "< W * . w l , wHh-ml d-,*,M |

THE VIRTUE Of AN INDIAN PONY.

I hAve A littl* tUrrj of pwrton*! experlmoe

with on* Indian pony thai may b« re«4

with profit. 1 rrxla one* with aotne oaUla

hayw* Ui'rotigh tb« tUxik r»ngM of Nevada.

My pony fit WM M I M Bob) bad drifted

Into Nevada from Utah, tutd waa known aa a

hnffalo hnnU»r. Bob wa« an o m n looking

M a «b»«re/l nhoep, and u bnJlet haaded M

a political r W i o m L H«w«Ter, Bob and I

got along Tery well th* flnrt day frf our ac-

qTiftintanoo, got along, in fact, about fifty

Noriuift ml)—, which I haT* oar«rfa)ty wrtl-

matnd to r«t oqnaj to *iity.fiT« rjhrlntian

mllaa. T)ta n<rxt day Bob WM tlja/1 w orrjaw

m borwl. Ha ragArrWI tha waaia* nt a»«9-

hmah dladatnfnlly whlia I nhrMd^l my

whip upon htm and Innohod o£f tb*. aaga-

hrrmh whila I mm* ont my npnn on ht»

ahaggy «ld«a. Tim, I l«rf him a frw mlloa

•nd hn regarded ma hi Mg-ayad BiadiiatUm.

Whon I rammtntod, whlr.h I did only wb»i»

my nliooa, ware wom mit, Bob appnarnd no

broken up that I fait aorry. I determined

to go no further that day than tho ranr.ti-

hotiae. we, wnr« approauohing, for I did not

want IWd/a life <iharg«1 U> my eradlt. Juirt

twfore wo r«vn)M«1 tha h<mm a herd <jf cftttio

roaohod u«. I may aay re*/-h*d for n». A

hig hull the higgoM and wildaat hull I ro-

rmmher orer Ui haT* anon acltwUd Boh

and me for a target.

Oon.idoring IW.h'a condition I waa about

U, dlamonnt and take my rhanrwa afoot,

when Boh atariad. I be|i*Te he lhonKht hn

araa ontx.ro.1 for th* I»erf,y Yon never aaw

mrh a rate rrf apeori attained by •nrh a r«-

markaldo B«|t IM. wotild alUrnatcdy roll

himaolf tip |nt« a ha.ll and atretnh out to

throe ttmaa hia normal length, hi* h«*d

would go rm» .* aight Into hia ahonldnn

Huddonly Ftoh ^ . V p ~ 1 rary audd-nly ao

attdtienly that it tin*°Ule<1 ray dignity and

l>o*e f,»,king »l«ml I diaro»orod tho

•ettae i>ta ariddlUlor W

»gan ria.1 hoe

i

ha

ho i,,||

ir..1 rnT

a

'>

,o ha.Ingkept n, f.

o that the hT the hnll

and IW.h

rgtng a f W

» IHtrkof'iai

td nrM kmrw

rerrt»ln«y a

a real g, , ,dr rnile*. an-

nil had atsipped

><ogan rthat f.*dho hull

«- Ft-lh or

o*. In th

whaf In

a to my

(imo 7

fin(i) th

Jtiirt

harglng Uieof a

If th

nld nr> nhaa<

»(>»» -

e hull

A. haTet .

d«. with II•oat

app«i

h> rhao hnl

I waared lo

ao waa

and-

.rr.o ai'^g fV,b dr^god V^iutlfully, «ntl

ther, u.* ^,11 -ha~H w a while. Ttmt

thing wm top* tj> for howra. If U»o bull

w-mUir, I rUam» »»a JW>h wotjld rrM*o the

tmll . it WM »1! U>. atm. in him jnat aa

mn^h fnn ^,e war M an "ther I reckon

we aha*Wt •a^« r*h»*- FM> and 0»e bnll

»nd I *>*«•,! ftfly rni'iw' wh«n wa happooavl

uprm a \iUU, -—i*. a»4 Fkok afld UM bull

Segan Wnrwwinc tH* an«tp«oUd ptta* to-

gwthev in ike w » t frUndly B M I S W . I PI -

m*mA mr»eif M ^ w«lk«J bavik to UM maob.

H-«T=.t*J an4 tho fharity HnapU

kw.Ii a I»Ur,4 ara t,n/W Uia di-

ro^Um 'rf tHe ^V»mroi*)»lrm«Ta of ChartUa*

tharwfor* by Uw

Aa Hell,

froca Ita prarttkm at the frtoi of

Th* rot

tha «iU>nt

lo fharity

nWkwei i ' . IaUn-1, but Uia

Itf) their lanUma thai had h. . ! .« io

nily t« ar.mao he

11,0 King*..* H

day w»ti a full »nr,,,,mf .rf «i|

n-rno.1. an.l F>a»k C\\t\,,t> waa

Jta hour *n.o [-[-X l o h l . »

Mififcg ih**» f»» l>fc> b w«ta

m, »KW, la «*IU»n j ^ , ^ ^ , . , .ari'-na ^

aM«cm^it of Ilelle-rn*

- i .I) bnt Uw> regular

TVa h'«x-tt«i KM t«ati arranged ID

**, w h « « U i n i n g abotrt Un

• » « « T%»M -4 \h*a» tarn MeigTvad,

i., ..ai^rln1!: r : . 1 ^ l - ^ ~* - w ^ - ^ • w - 1 •««"«—mt tho U m r oi,.1 |,.,w the ft

J.r..tllo and a*««1 the tiair.

Himpaon <1eao.ua 1,1. t<«t he .U*ette<1

.ho nc te i r+,cA U- K C him » 6 . i o

klrd k. UM M*W Tr*. (Wlaj i

V * «««.««,*» w ^ t M t M l a u i a*

r thalrl, and m»<1 lumma w.lh w*IWi- - •« .«i .C«< H^J T U l l tA

ia a J»nlo. aaalataq^t. aed a/Ur

K.w « — , • * . ! . . W . { , « . » » r M #tighl in their h -t«e« »>T «*€h . . . / i h . M M W r t w • « - » . . « r.

h. i l l.tw rI.»»l~..T* <1r.»iug

U a «*U Ufc-W—^i, I., Urteg wiUUit UM btiild-.rf UM rttj Um m

a tho arHdcnU! Htiaing •-. ec,,n.o I ,

| tho hand <>f a i w k c «hil« raHing U»«<

| f>r..pa, and <-r».p walrhing »>» rvigh* a«

itg the Bkcwa p««iqo<ai .w-*»«<w>« ,rf ervake

I Iftn a., alight U the Uie .a

<!« b e thai il U n * c ,<ah t<, 1 . « . * alee,,

, W | « « tHvnax, <4

bMiMi.1mtel .4tw. I sU

!• H**t rait. .4 N.»*.U. la

fa«4. glrea «v, C«|M« priaes. being

»»T*. - * •«*>', •> f ~ « a.U M * U O M »*>«taaai cat U M

• * * • • ^ '••»"» wWUi, I* a»w i» UM> UWa*

iir«n at t h . odKo of U,e fc.wn. and at.o aigh j ^

I aa ahc turned Rway and at«ri«l h.u,,c

Frank <'lift.,n < ante <iut on (ho plat/,

r«a.t*allt and nn

iaaih Th*

r^il lr aM<1 [>«i«»

Utrongh UM iTt4«n st«.1i»*ilT l-e

U,p .Ulkii. Hho «.,.n~1 a - a , ! w n m ^ i h , . ^ i . ^ , , r f Hf. «U If ^ i * , .

...ill .1«aki. l H and walked ...» j ( | w i m , . ^ ^ . ^ j u , f,, t r t , H « b U«.e ,

Tl... »liHht . «l hi... U, U,o .juiok. hat h- | „,,«,, , U f t ^ w iK. « . « - a . « » 4 UU !

foil there, waa aninrthiiig wr,.t.g Hl,,il*.n, ! . . i ^ ^ j ^ , ay^fc like a ft*-, 1 « . «»iy HaitOe '

' .•», . . ^h im^lf . 1 , - l . u ^ l o . l h . h m . l H I ! | , . . 1 * . „ /

>r a^aiuot him at laat He know

id hor iiHriher had alwaya

fl it hurl him U> he mlaun

11m« t«ta»o,l en end Frank kopt b, kit

work. llo had n<4 l«ei> (.. tho (-.awf.w.U' : | H a m U k Utlt

ilnoo Malud turnod hti l*ok .ut him Ma m i w M t o

K.1 .H..,(il,ilo.1 Ui ltlP«t (twtfga Hin>l«m at

Uio atalitm. Ui.mgh »ho di>1 IM4 <XUM 4..>»

ao oftan aa formerly Until..* ha.l

ilghi Fiank waa ailllog half aale*| , t m y ^ &&X rftDB *" «f *••• Ua» laaiaaj •»•»over hia key, »,«n <mt wlU. IMigue. abet ! t«4SkaH,MM aj»4 aw at.if aa fU|

> waa an>ua»1 t,y htmtini bU ..w« -ait «« | «».»lawored, aii.l Uu» f.41..w»ng .^1

Hhlo Ua.k, No 10. MMtb t-m*.d. Kttttf

alt.n, l l r • lt<4.t f»f E»ti» N.t 7. amitfe

mat In Iho <..«1-

A MATRIMONIAL ENTANGLEMENT.

Th« matrimonial misfortune* at th* Earlaf Etwton ar* certainly inToWed ia tm singu-lar a chain of facts aa ever formed thefoundation for a decree of nullity of mar-riage. Lord Etuton claimed such a decla-ration on the ground that his wife wasalready married when he married her; andthe present Countess defended the suit onthe ground that, if this was the case in one•ense, it was not an available plea, inaa-mnoh as her first husband was already mar.ried when she married him. It thereforebecame necessary for the jury to investigate,not only the circumstances of each of theseUleged marriages, but the date at which thewives and husband* supposed to be involved

ere said to have died.In the result, they found that Lord Eustom

was lawfully married to his present wife,haoanse, though she had a nominal husband•live when she married the Earl, yet thathridbftrid had a wife alive when she marriedhim, and was, therefore, not her husband atall.

If the first wife of the first husband of thi

present Lady Etwton, who may be still

alive, had been able to come forward and

my that iihe had a husband alive at the time

married Uio man who afterwards mar-

ried the woman who subsequently married

prnseut Karl of Euston, the result of the

petitioner's suit would have been Just the

nther way, if an ordinary non-jndioial mind

in capable of dealing rightly with such an

iutriodto ohaln of negatives. -

One good marringo followed by a bad on«

reaulUi in making Uie matrimonial obliga.

tlona of tho Petitioner indiwohible. 0n»

?ood mnrrtftgn, followed by a bad one and

then a good one, and the conclusion would

have been sxaotly opposite. Put into a

mathmniiUonl formula, if A married B, and

arrled 0, nnd 0 married D, ««jd so on

n to Z, and assuming that each letter of

the alphabet was alive when the next two

went through the ceremony of marriage, it

would appear to follow that all the odd

nnmbers would be valid and all the even

nnmhnm invalid marriages. If the series

began with a man, every man except the

would have gone through the cur lony

twice, the first ttme ineffectually. Every

woman would have done the same, but in

her oaae Uie second wedding would have

heen the nullity. The question might be

•Ul) further complicated by asking what

wmjld bo tho effect of a marriage ceremony

lietween the last women in the series and

tha first man.—London Standard.

THBTBXA8"NBSTaR.«»

The nester In Texas is the cattle king's

neighbor, but between them thore Is a wide

gap In rank. A man may own a section of

land and have fifty, one hundred or two

hundred head of cattle, but he is only a

ne«Ur. His 600 acres may be worth $3, $5,

|10 an sore, and with his stock his posses-

sions may foot up from $ 15,000 to a)20,000,

but hs nevertheless is a neater. Hb land is

" a farm " and his stock " a hunch." When

be oounto hia pasture, owned or leased, by

UM ssoUon instead of by the acre than he

has got " a range," and when his stock is

turned on by the thousand Instead of by

the hundred head he ha* "a heTd." Then

ha ia a genuine oowman. Hs joins a live

stock aaexwiation. He has kis brand known

and recognised from Uie Bio Grande to UM

top U«r of Pan-Handle counties. When he

go*s to tha city the papers refer t* him as

Mr. Bo-anrUo, the oattle king.

" TWe a/a two ways of treating these

witan," said Oharles B. Brown, a young

ootintry stockman, to the Slobe-Dmoormt

eorr«rpond«nt. " Tvs *MQ '«m both tried.

On on« aide of me I've got a neighbor who

fenced his range without any particular re-

gard to what the n«st«rs wanted. When

they ooraplalned he talked back pretty stiff-

ly and told them the road would have to go

where h« wanted it to. Wall, they'vs odt

down twsnty miles of fence for him. An-

ottur of my neighbors Is Eelskia Davis.

That first name ia Uie one tha oowboys gave

him. Eelakia gate through th* yaar with

Is* arrpenaa for Us herd than any oowman

In T«IM, I bvUsve, When hs wants td

round up or get hb oattl* together, h« «ys

to UM tM*t«n around bin, who'v. all got

UUU buMhsa of mayb* fifty or a faondnd

baaxl of a.11 la, • Hare, you fallow*, oomc

wtth m . Ws'll ran this iking togethar.'

Tb*y all join In with him aad g«t tt)«lr <Mt*

tie M»rted oat and branded. It's ddts oa

ttte mutajal plan. Tlu naatar il hslpcd oat,

•od Z*lafcte doasB't h*v« to hlrs h«rd«ra, t

dosttki«k fats oattU (K*tbin

POUND IN A CHICKEN'S

The Dlacsvery of a Lost Screw

Speaking of chickens piokinj up tad

allowing diamonds," chispas " rf gold and .

Dther bright bite of stone .nd meW

reminded Judgk , of tl is d^y, «f

an experience with! the chicken t sea. ID

une, 1850, he made the trip froi a Maxatlan

o San Francisco oji the French bark Sur-

prise. One day, when about ha t way TO

the coast, the steward had out tl e binnacle s

lamp and was engaged ia cleanis ; aa4 pol.

iahing that bit of (nautical apptratw. Ht

had it on the deckj had taken it all apart,

and had the debrLi, wreckage, o • whater*f -

you would call it when at sea, s attend alt

about The vessel was rolling s ightly, and

as it rolled it caused a brass s irew about

half an inch in length a travel down the

deok. Some ohiciens were loit« ring about,

and the flash of thle screw caugh; the eye of

ui old hen. She dashed at the >it of brass)

and in a moment jt was in her o op.

the transactibn and hu

knew there would

Unshed upth i

fnee to pay

t d hdup

butting it together again

The judge sawwardly chuckled,soon be Davy Ji•orew. When Uie

:he lamp and was _

he miased a particMar and important somr,

After uearching fcb- the screw fo •

tttes In vain the steward spoke a

io some of the sailors. They j< ined in the

»earoh, but no soi ew could be f »und. 8oon

the attention of tie captain was

the group of Bear (here, and the

obliged to tell him of the loss.

The skipper fle^ into a rage 11 once, and

used muoh profane language ii i

with Uie frequent reference h<

ipon to make to Uie steward's

steward was on the point of taking a

short ride on the jtoe of the caj tain's boot,

when the judge thought it tim i to appear

upon the scene. He told the aptain tt&t

if he wanted the screw it cou i be found

with little troubled He had oily to order

ope of Uie men to catch an ol I black hen

that he pointed obt, cut off her head, opea

her crop, and the screw would >e found.

At this the sailj>rs gazed upo i the judge

as though they t^ougat hint wme, practk

tioner of the blAck art, and the steward

gave him an appealing look, ae muoh as to

beg him not to j^in Bides with his i

The captain hfld the fowl oai ght at once.

Its head was outjoff, ite crop opened aad

out rolled the lost screw. Sai low and all

aboard were astounded, and eien the cap-

tain changed color. The'face o! the steward

showed a queer mixture of deli ght and awe.

After that bit & legerdemaii the steward

could find nothing good enc ugh for tt»

judge, and when the wind fail id he heard

bints among the sailon thai th»y i

have a ton knot breeae any tine they i

ed it, provided a oertain

should see fit to give it t

City (Nee.) Bnterprtu.

y

easinr than through tfc

* (Tm.) iMUr.

j.rough rrolght. .IM i»«

leaa aigoa,Ua.t U» 4..

Tho oi«ut m K h i kMM dowu itt ah—ta. U*a «1»4 14.W,

i to

TIM tfla«ll rn«ti UM Hurt* M > « > h*a»»

*«4 H « M «b- mm mi <*f «Nfr

M#«aaK IS <** ajajl fmm. « M y t l l t j a . j * -*i i t T^iqTi. Vfir -tmjpu .f UM « M « M '

im^m*********** **m **t ^ X r ^ w < ^ ^ ^

SOUTMIRM NCORO'SDOOS.

When you ooraa to Uie study the matter

rou will find Juct as muoh difference be-

lwaat> ttt* rkratharn negro'e dog and the

white man', dog, as there Is between the

eanin* owned by aa Indian and one which

romaa when a Senator snaps hie fingers.

Th* Stmthern colored man who is too poor

to k*v* a aaale, ox, pig, fowls, doors, win*

dows or Araplao* in his oabin, bis a dog—

rnmmtimm Ivor or five. When he comes to

tows af Uaaat as0 followai him. When yon

pees his bone the whole family of oanines

bark at you from a dtotaaoe or silently gaze

at row frets UM doorstep. The negro's dog

Is a okxMB. He Is built oa wrong prindplee

to begia with. It would seem as if half of

•tm had been on earth for a year or two before

UM other half WM hitched on. He

raeitM Utat tie ba t " purty " aad be be-

bevas accordingly. He la almost invariably

of a 4nA^olor. He eldtea along where other

Ur*. aod if ho lao't rtum jvUilad ae k

a Itvdiy eMta«. lie follows along !a a hum-

r, mU begflag pardon for being

m a«rU». aad UM vmalleet whiffet eaa

i «yee beac put like peekd

Toe never aee oae misbehave ia

IU «H» «>der the wagon, If there is

mm. V aot, he follows hie master's heels

«t.a4-ld«»»aa4»xw.i>diDab>o»bQinUity,

* tb* ellghti

llaot show a tooth,

k to hta, .awl he attps 9«l with his Isfl

t l » m*M m»y be * w

k'*J

felt oalledeyes. The

MISTOOK THE I

From the .Chicago Herald

you think should be done i ith the

tariff?" inquired aa inqui* ve p e * - ,

of a tall, sombre man who sal beride b$B

stiff as a barber pole. i

" Don't know anything about it, sir," M»

plied the stiff man, curtly. Lfter a pmM j

Uie questioner braced up hit oourage aad \

began with:

What breed do you prefe •?

Breed, sir I" toe aombie nan eji ._

lated, in astonishment "'.' don't know .

anything of breeds, sir. Do you mean to j

Insult me, sir?" inquired th stiff person,

iharply as he arose from th* seat/ << Top '

should be ashamed of yourse f, sir." ' ,

•' Darn it all, stranger, kee > cool. Didai

you teU me you had the hoi tor to predde

over the first flock at Aaron r

" Oertelnly I did, you «tu] id man; but I

am a minister of the Gospel.'

A look ox blank and uasp akable > „ « . .

ment o'erspreed the other's i toe, which WM '•

K>on broken by his opening lit month aad |

•Ting: ,

" Ooah darn it all, strut fer, tit down,

tad we'll change the subjecf"

HIGH PRICBS FOR lOVBLS,

LreatpreVent

j popular aooe]

Tbe noveliai* are at

among us, so far M

goes. It has

oertained that Mr.'

a year by hit poetry. That

tat WilUam Black makes 1

Mr. Walter Besant, who waa;

of a

nations of the novelist's art,

any one of bis romances thaj

ed in tbe first ten yean of bis

, l$Uty M-

T«nnysod ,mak« £4,000

Mr. Charles Beade aVerages,

Here, 45 per page for hit

Herbert Speacer'e remuneration

exceeds fire shilliagi per p «e. Mr. Mat.

thew Arnold's imaginative | n r a i e*n ~~

antnoomeatleastfour tim<s smaller

Mr. WUkie Oollins' imagJn ttloa

g ,

tJwioe M much,

seduced from

Cambridge djm by the fud-

art,[eamo more for

tbak Oarlyle eam-

« , w% be. jwritings. M r , j

l : 1

paying h m more than il,000 a ya*r tor ,

whatever he looses to wri*>. H 1

written a po<m as good «i

he might stti have been as

void ofmoome as Elijah in ,the de ser t -* .