Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 March 1894 — Page 4

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KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. EAULK LODGE NO. 1H. \Vn.. M. Brown 0 David Hiiurliea Seir Every Friday night on 3rd floor over Thos. Ah rams store. GKKENCABTLK DIVISION 1MI. W. E. Starr Gspt K.Strattmi .. Sec First Monday night of each month. A.O. U. W. COLLEGE CITY LODGE NO. 1». .loan Denton... . M. W A. B. Phillips. See Second and 4ti» Thursdays of each month.

DRGKKE OF HONOR.

r*. of II

JVC

First and third Fridays of each month. Hall on 3rd floor City Hall Block.

vf.«. ?i i, Hi Kelt

Min. Black

And the ’ .est Pittsburgh and Anthracite. Coal yard opposite Vandalia freight oftiee.

F.l.HI’HANTS CARI Il I OR.

house I or sale or rent, and “elephant on yonr hands, “ let us iook airer it. We’ll >ell it or let it. as you wish, if there’s a possible customer in town. Rivet that fact in yonr mind, then call and we’ll clinch It. J. f M. f HUKLBY, Insurance. Real Estate, and Loan. • • • Second Floor, First National Bank Building 1-ly

CITY DIRECTORY.

(TTY OFFICERS. Mayor. Charles B. Case Treasurer Frank L. Landes Clerk James M. Hurley Marshall William E. Starr Engineer Arthur Throop Attorney Thomas T. Moore See. Board of Health....Eugene Hawkins M. I) COUNOILMEN. 1st Ward... Thomas Abrams. J L Kandcl 2nd ’’ Geo. E. Blake, .lames Bridges 3rd ’’ John Hiley. John H. Miller Rtreet Commissioner J. D. Cutler Fire Chief Geo. B. Cooper A. Brock way. ) Mrs. Mary Birch, J*School Trustees. 1>. L. Anderson, 1 K. A. Ogg, Superlntend<»nt of city schools.

an ocean mmm By CHARLES B. LEWIS M. QUAD). [Copyright, 1W4, by Charles B. I^wis.] On the 13th of July, lHt>7. while the whaling ship Emma Kane of New Be.lfortl was off ('«[»> St, Roque, iH>ast of Brazil, a big whale shot half his 1 <ngth out of water half a mile ahead, and after his fall he lay there rolling on the water and evidently taking a good look at the ship. Two boats were lowered for him. 1 was in the second mate’s boat, and as we got away we pulled to the northeast, intending to hold that course until we could approach the whale from behind.

We were hardly clear of the ship when j could not take an observation, hut it was

he made a rush. His head was high ov.t |

of water, his under jaw swinging like a

pendulum, and when he was fairly under i way he piled up white water in front of |

him 10 feet high.

The only chance to avoid him was to pull straight ahead, but while we were lifting the boat almost out of water he caught it in the sweep of his terrible jaw ' and sent us all flying. The second boat ] was between him and the ship. Without making the slightest pause he curved to I the right, struck out with his tail and smashed the boat to fragments and then j settled down and passed under the ship. He scraped her keel the whole length of his body, but did no particular damage. | Everyl>ody expected he would reappear

Mose. dnl not come near me. but at 3 o’clock in the afternoon my fever subsided, all pain went away, and an hour later 1 crawled on deck. Mose had already repented of his action in remaining behind. He looked upon me as dead, and the idea of night coining down and . he l>eiiig alone in that floating coffin had so worked on his nerves that at sight of me he fell down and began to plead sml pray, and it was 10 minutes before I | could cuff any sense into his hard head. ! When he found that I was a live man and meant tocontinue living, he was half

crazy with delight.

The wind was light, and the weather i had a settled look. When the cook had ‘ got calmed down a little, we visited the cabin and had a look at the chart. 1

The Parliament—iv* 41—Of Religions! yit the Columbian Exposition.

. N. G ... Sot! ; Hull, ill

S<»c ' Hull in

(’apt St‘t* !

FOKEST HILL < EMKTEHY HOAKD OK DIHK.UT-

OHS.

J.8. MeClary Prrs •Tobn i .Browmink V Proa .1. K. Lunirtloti Sec H. S. Rrnick Treas James Duirury .Supt F. K. Blaek. A. O. Loekridifp. Meetimr tlrst Wednesday iiijrh( eaeli month at .1.8. McClary’s office. SE< RE i S< K21ET1ES.

I. O. O. F.

GHEKNTASTLE LODGE NO 34*. Bruce Frazier I. . M. Hamm Meetinir niyrhts. every Wednesday Jerome Alien’s Block, 3rd floor.

PUTNAM LODGE NO. 45.

John A. Michael

E. r. t’hatree

Mrctlnir nltfht*. t vcr> Tuesday., 1 Central National Bank block.3rd floor.

CASTLE CANTON NO 30, I*. M.

J. A.Michael— ('has Meikel First and third Monday nitfhts of each

month.

D. OF H. NO. 10(>.

Mrs. John Merry weather.

I). E. Badger Meeting nights, cvrry 2nd and 4th Monday of each month. Hall in uentrai Nat. Bank

building. 3rd floor.

O KEEN CAST LE LODGE (!. U. O. OF O. F, Wm. Hart wootl. —N.G H. L. Bryan P. 8 Meets flint and third Mondays.

MASONIC.

EASTERN ST AIL Mrs. Hickson . . ...W.M Mrs. Dr. Hawkins 8cc First Wednesday night of each month. GRKKNCASTLB CHAPTER It. A. M. NO 21. H. s. Kcnick • H. 1* H. s. Beals Sec Second Wednesday night of each month. BLUE LODGE F. AND A. M. J esse Ulchardson ....W.M II. S. Beals.. See Third Wednesday night of each month. COM MANDEHY. W.1I. II rullen E. C .1. Mel). Hays See Fourth Wednesday night of each month. HOGAN LODGE, NO. IP. F. & A. M, . H I..Bryan .>.W. M J. W. <ain See Meets st*eoncl and fourth Tuesdays. white lily chapter, no. 3, o.e. ft. Mrs. M. Florence Miles W M Mrs. M. A. Tel ft ter Sec Meets second and fourth Mondays

easy enough to follow the course pricked off on the chart and find our position.^ As near as 1 could make out we were about 300 miles off the coast. We decided to let her remain us she was until neat morning, as I was not yet strong enough to go aloft. After a hearty supper, a good night’s rest and a breakfast cooked from the captain's own stores 1 felt as well as the day before I was taken sick. The pleasant weather continued, and our

first move was to reduce sail.

Mose was a sailor as well as a cook, and though we could not accomplish our work in shipshape fashion we secured all the lighter sail after a way and reefed what we could not furl and stow. It was noon liefore we got the mainyard

and attack the ship, but nothing further j swung and the brig headed to the north, was seen of him. Out of the two boats’ j Under all sail she would have reeled off crews three men were lost, and only one seven or eight knots an hour, but stripescaped injury. The captain decided to P'‘<1 iis she was she did not make three, run into Pernambuco to put the injured 1 U was not a fair wind to make the coast, men in hospital, and it was months before but every mile to the north was a mile

some of them got about again. I had nearer Charleston.

only a broken arm and after a couple of For two days and a half after the brig months was all right again. I still be- V7 ‘ ls abandoned we did not sight a sail.

Were you to spread out a chart of the I north Atlantic ocean and note the nuinerj ous sailing routes laid down you would | wonder at onr failure to sight sail or steamer, as the routes cross each other like highways in a farming country. Something might have been seen from aloft with a glass, but we did not trouble ourselves tt) look. Weak handed as we were, we believed we could work the brig into port somewhere along the coast. We took turn and turn about at the helm, and the first sail we saw was a French bark bound for Cayenne. She came down on us in the early morning, and though wo hud no signal of distress flying she saw that something was wrong and sent a boat al>oard in charge of the mate. When he understood the situation, he offered to take the brig into port if we would make a formal request. Our refusal to do this angered him. and he declared that if we would not turn her over we might get along as best we

could.

The bark had rescued eight men from a wreck the day before and could have put all of them aboard of us, but when she found she could make no salvage she sailed away and left us. The Frenchman was not yet out of sight when the American ship Harvest Queen, from Rio

Islander and a Spaniard. The brig was j to Philadelphia, came up from the south, outfitted in a way to excite ridicule from | She also sent a boat to board us, and 1

i 1 gave

A Narrative - -

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Grandest Achievement and .Most Importait Event in Modern

Religions History.

NOW OFFERED BY

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HE FELL DOWN AND BEOAN TO PLEAD AND

PRAY.

longed to the whaler, but as she had gone down Cape Horn way I looked for a craft to make a short voyage. One day a brig called the iloly Angel put in there for repairs. If the name was curious, the crew excited still greater surprise. The captain was a Frenchman, his mate ft Portuguese, and the cook and three foremast hands were of different nationalities. There were a negro, a Sandwich

all sailors, but she had a valuable cargo of coffee and other stuff for Charleston. She had lost a foretopmast while creeping up the coast. Such an accident scarcely interrupts the routine on the average eraf!, but Captain Thone came limping into port to get up a new stick and make a great ado over the accident. The Holy Angel wanted two more hands, and a native Brazilian and myself signed for the voyage to Charleston and return. That gave her a crew of eight, with no two men belonging to the same nationality, although each one spoke and understood enough English to

remember that the mate gave us his name as Williamson. Brat for the fact that the ship had two men sick she would have given us assistance. She offered to lay by and take out what cargo she could and give us a per cent on the salvage, and our refusal did not anger the officer. On the contrary, he marked our position on the chart, had his men make us fgs

he had made up his mind to kill me, it would be an easy thing to do, and he would never even he suspected of it. I was still picking at the scraps of food and wondering what 1 should do when the breeze died out anil left tiie sails flopping. At the same time the clouds were banking up in the west, and one could feel that a storm was brewing. When the breeze died out. Mose left the wheel and came forward, and standing just outside the door of the galley and revealing Ins ugly spirit in his posture as well as his words he commanded: **Yo’ git aft to dut wheel mighty lively, or I'll gin yo’ a rope’s eand ober de

back!"

1 realized that he was seeking for an excuse to attack me. and I left the galley and started aft. Instead of going to the wheel, however, I made a rush for the cabin and dashed into the captain's stateroom and bolted the door. I had overhauled tills room a bit and hail seen a revolver in one of the lockers. The door was hardly bolted before the negro catre against it. While I was after the revolver he commanded me to ojien the door and kicked it so vigorously as to shatter the lower panels. I did not know until I had the pistol in my hand whether it was loaded or not. I found it fully charged, and 1 approached the door and called to Mose to know what he wanted and what I had done to put him in such a temiier. He demanded in reply that I open the door, and his threats of what he would do when he got hold of me assured me that he intended murder. 1 had the right to protect myself, but I hesitated to use it until he finally smashed in the door. He had his knife in hand and was coming for me when I fired and killed him in bis tracks. When I saw what I had done, I grew sti weak that I had to sit down for many minutes. By and by I caught the hope that I had only wounded him, but when I bent over the body I found it already growing rigid in death. I was about half crazy for the next hour. But for seeing the storm about to break l think I should have hidden away in the

fo'castle.

The gale did not come with a rush, ami the first few puffs wen-from aquarter which enabled me to get the brig's

before the blast like a frightened deer, I expensive full-page engravings of the Art Palace, Portraits of though it wasn’t five minutes after the the Speakers and Delegates, Principal Officers and Foreign storm struck- down before the little sail Keprcscntatives. It contains a full account of the Origin of we had set was blown clear awav. Had. , .. t ^ , Mose been alive and all right we would the 1 arliaincnt ol Religions, Proceedings of every Meeting of have brought the brig about and made' the Parliament, Speeches delivered and Papers read at every

«*»**** Nol «i A 1«CW explanation of the

and hope that she would outrace the O cat Religions of the Earth; the beliefs of the various Eewaves rolling up behind. ligious Denominations. Narrative as to many gatherings held

»> connection with the Parliament. ’

then the gale began to abate, it was Notices of leading men representing Catholics, Evangel likely that l only got the northern edge j ca l Protestants, New Churchmen.Theosonhists.Friends.Morof it, for many ships farther to the south i ,i i-.i • i i. t- • . 1 . r met With disaster. Night came on, but Jews, the Ethical Culture Society, and Religionists of I dared not leave the wheel. On three other kinds. Opinions of Eminent Divines in regard to the different occasions seas rolled over her I p ar ij ament< Influence of the Parliament upon Religious stern and swept her decks, but without nn \ * c \\r y ^ \ • i i • ii -^i doing any damage of moment. By mid- 1 nought oi the World. An index rendering hII miltCFlcll clt

night all danger had passed, and I | once available,

cait-ht a few winks of sleep now and

the as I held her nose jiointed into the /"A • • ITT blackness. When the sun came up. the UOlillOllS clIlU. J 1 LCiOTSOUieiltS ! breeze was so light that I dared lash the | i

wheel and prepare a breakfast.

When that had been disposed of, I took

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| FUKDKBH K <*. BUOMBKIH*. < ommiHHioncr from Alalmma to the World’s < oluinhtan ! Exposition—It Is invaluable art presenting a

the glass and went aloft, but though I body of statements of religious beliefs and searched every inch of horizon nothing "nEMn hkiiowitz. n. I). PhihKlelphia.was in sight. I was greatly troubled Future generations will, I doubt not. date over the fact that I must dispose of the thUoveni thce|MH hol irencralielizimis

snug as could lie aloft and gave us some ] y noon before I could muster up courvaluable advice as to what to do if heavy I age to make a move. It took me a full weather came on. hour to get it on deck and ’over the rail. Up to the time the American left ns and though it was a case of self defense

M.W Y< »KK WOULD.- W. H lloiiirliton lias ooinpllod the perfect record of that memor-

able conference.

< I I.M STUDEBAKEU, Commissioner of the World’s < olumhiun Exposition. I believe that Hie Parliami'iit of Religions will result in bringing religious denominations closer fo-

gel her.

i: vm

r B« AEE\. II.LFISM\K. New Fork. Two features of this magnificent Exposition pre-eminently type the progress of the ecu-

make himself intelligible, and all orders strength and had taken upon himself all from captain and mate were given in the hard work. On several occasions he that langnage. had stood double tricks at the wheel and Opposite the mouth of the Amazon we let me sleep eight hours at a stretch. We got a strong northwest gale which drove had figured that we should make about us out into the Atlantic, but we escajied $3,000 apiece if we could get the brig damage and at the end of three days 1 safe into port, and he had his plans all

READ ouR PROPOSITION.

BED MEN. OTOE TRIBE NO. 140. Jacob Kiefer Sachem Thos. Sage ... Hoc i Every Monday night. Hall on 3rd floor i City Hall Block. HOY A L AHCANCM. LOTUS COUNCII. NO. 320. W. G. Overstreet It Chaa. I. See Second and fourth Thursdays of each mouth j Meet in <J. A. H. Hall. KNIGHTS OF HONOR. MYSTIC TIE LODGE. NO. W A. Howe J I >. Johnson . .. H** »rter j

. .

OREENCAKTI.E POST NO. 11. A M. Maxnn.. C I. P. < hapln ... .... 'ii Win. H. Buik - M Every Monday evening at ' o'clock. Hall corner Vine and Washington streets, riml WoM \ S < HI I.IKK < OU I’S. Alice K < hanin Pres Louise Jacobs See 1 Meetings ever\ second and fourth Monday at 2 p. m. t». A. u. Hall. FI HE ALARMS. 2— 1 College ave and Liberty hi. 3— 1 Indiana and Hanna. 4— 1 Jackson and Daggy, 5— 1 Madison and Llbertv. ■ ' —I Madison and Walnut. 3 2 Hanna and Crown. 4 2 Bloomington and Anderson. 5 2 Seminary and Arlington. »l -2 Washington, east of Durham. 7 2 Washington and Locust. 2 3 Howard and Crown. 4 3 Ohio and Main.

5- 3 rt- 3

College ave. and DcMotte alley

Locust and Sycamore,

i j I Plreout. The police* call is

i one tap then

then follow the box mimoei

pause and

( OI NTY OFFICERS.

i»oo. M. Black

F. M. Glldewell.

Geo. Hughes

Daniel T. I>arncli Daniel S. Hurst

I. F. O’Brien. F. M. Lyon. T. W. Me Neff

Wm. Broads!rcct. G W. Bence, M. D. J. D. Hart. Y

Samuel Farmer ^ Commissioners

John S. Newgent)

Auditor

Sheriff

Treasurer

( lerk

Recorder Surveyor

Scuuol Superintendent

('orouer Assessor

Sec. Board of Health

were heading our course again, seemed that both captain and mate had undergone a dreadful exjierience on board a fever ship and were in mortal terror of the epidemic, but I had heard nothing about it. Jest as the gale broke I wan ouddtmiy taken ill. I have always thought that a pipe which I found hidden in the fo'canle and made use of was to

blame for my sickness.

I was horribly nauseated and had a high fever, and I had not been in my bunk three hours when the captain pronounced it a case of yellow fever. If he had lieen a cool hand, ho could have found something in the medicine chest to relieve me. but the idea of having a case of the dreaded fever aboard com- j pletely upset him. The first idea, as I afterward learned, was to throw me 1 overboard and shut up the fo'castle. but; although the captain offered $100 to any two men who would bring me up and imU* — ' K . come near me. Each one felt that it I was death to enter the fw’castlc. Ar> thr winds w*‘re light end the brig was a slow sailer, the captain decided every man of them would Ui dead before be could BUk* a"j,A' T .*’.v rv - ■ mined to abandon the craft at sea and make their way to the coast in the yawl, i The brig was abandoned at noon. My fever was then at its highest, and I was delirious. Every man was for going at first, but when the boat was ready to shove off the negro cook declared bis intention of remaining behind. I don’t think he had any great, amount of sympathy for me, but was guided by his l>elief that the derelict would lie sighted the by some vessel within a few days, and he would come in for a nice little lump jf salvage. The others didn't care whethtr he remained or not. and they hastened their departure as if the ship was on tire and had a cargo of jsiwder aboard, j Three weeks later the yawl was picked up 50 miles off the coast with two dead bodies in it—skeletons of men who had

died of thirst and hnngpr.

What became of the others could only be surmised. In leaving the brig they had forgotten to take chart, compass or sextant, and failing to signal a vessel had simply knocked about until the end j came The neirro cook, who was called '

I i Ih‘1'1 y.

body lying in thecabiu, and it was near- 1‘ltok has id -winc; c hti-nim- -<>ut of all theftc inquiries and greetings soinuthinff new _ isromiiui namely, ii tfreat nJiglon. iiiry. thoolivtrical dlftpfay and tlm ( oduto-s M \ L’^ ATWATER NEELY.—Tin* lijfht ami 1 of IJrliurioiiH. Unity is tho tnxt of both. Elot:j nobility of idcaa displayed in the Uoimrosn | trii it> hrintfs ont'th’a end* into mental unity of Religions by Brahmins, Mohammedans ami the < ongr<*ss points earfh’s spiritual unity in

■ « - .other Oriental philosophers has been a sur- human brotherhood ami I >ly file fatherhood. the cook had been not only cheerful, but and I had nothing to fear from the law ! l ,ri8C to the whole oeeidental world,

enthusiastic. He was a giant in size and I found myself ready to run away and

hide from the light of day. The removal of the remains was a great relief, how-

ever, and when I had secured about Tin: D wi t H.annkr Timkh will fiirmsh this great work to any one at the three hours' sleep I felt like a different prices iiaiucd lu low. which arc the regular subscription prices, and, in addition to being. the book will jfive one month’s subscription to Tits. Daily Bannkk Timks, the While I slept the wind hauled to the i '' 0sl w,| R‘ h included in the regular price for the hook. No coupon i- required.

. - south and breezed up. The wheel being 1 Th V '»“>• I’" *'<•'' «t Thk Banskr Timks olHce, where it will be delivered It arranged asto how he would spend his lashed the brig had smashed off before I "'I.IT! 1 ’ 1 V f ""d an order lor the Daily Ban nkh Timks for one month

- 1 ... » “ * ' will lie hooked without extra charge.

UNDERSTAND FI LLY that the complete work in one handsome volume, weighing about w\ pounds, will he furnished for the regular subscription price; and you also get Tiik Daily Bannkk Timks one mouth without extra eharge.

money. I noticed a great change in him it like a raft, hut when 1 got her nose to as soon as the Harvest Queen had left us. the north she jogged along at quite a reI have never been able to arrive at a sat- ; spec-table gait. As the weather had a

isfactory conclusion regarding the cause. He might have figured that he could take the brig in alone and thus secure double salvage, or h- might have decided that we had sacrificed ourselves by refusing

the offers made ns.

I am inclined to the first idea, however. No living thing is as selfish as humanity, aud the spirit is displayed on

steady look, 1 went aloft and cast off the r gaskets of soino of the sails, and ns they loosened themselves on the yards the \

brig get something more than

way on her.

I got a bite to eat at sunset and then prepared to put in a long night of it At It) o’clock, however, I was overhauled by the American man-of-war Tecumseh, which came so near running over me that my hails were heard, and she sent a boat aboard. She at once took charge of the brig as a matter of course, but not to the detriment of my legal rights. Ont of ship and cargo f got salvage money to the amount of $<>,000. It was found that the lost captain was also the owner of the craft, but up to three years ago his heirs had not been found, and the piivcnni ' tit h M -cvcral thousand d<-liars in charge tor ins next 'oH—• ***“

Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded. The ,111.-mil paid will he mo-t cheerfully refunded to ;mv not perfectly siitfslicd, i i i he Ihmi'k i- let in net! „ hi., iw. 1 .t i - ., f;, i 1;.. ,,,, , TWO \ OLLMKS IN ONE- FULL Y I I.Ll STKATKD. A magnill, .-ill hook for any library. Itnlispensiblc to the .Scholar, Ti-achcr and Reader. Bound in Fine Engli-li ('loth, (void Back and Hide Stamp jjij 50 Itoiind in Full Hhccp, Library Style ... I ''ll Bocks on exhibition and ready tor delivery at Tm: Bannkk Timks office to-day

CorlM-tt Favors r.iialumt. Baltimoke, March ti.—Champion Cor- I belt and wife are stopping in Baltimore this week. The all-absorbing topic in ! circles where he is king is his approaching tight with Jackson. Cornett ex- i pects to win it. Next to the tight itself j in importance is the place it is to come -A—Qggfag*t (ft tucBtied to favor England, to which place he satis iTexfnnmtS. ’

“Simplest and Best.” THE FRANKLIN

l’nwnarokcVs’ Bribery Fund.

Albany. N. Y., March (i.—The asser-

tion was made last night on the Hoor of .. . , „

Double Tragedy.

Brooklyn, A Larch (>.—Laic yeblculay nflurnoon Fritz Nolle, a 40-year-old

!Mmit Avnit

HE HAD HIS KNIFE IN HAND, most unexpected occasions.

The

man had been respectful if not servile up to this time. He now tiecame churlish and impudent, aud once or twice 1 .-aught him looking at me in a way to make me shiver. He cooked dinner that day in a sulky manner, and after eating his fill relieved the wheel while 1 went

forward.

When I entered the galley, I found he had been sharpening his knife on a whetstone, and to this was added the fact that he had left me only what he did nut care to eat. His change of conduct frightened me. I was only 18 years old, and as for strength he could have lifted me clear of the deck with one hand. If

bill to incorporate the Provident Loan society of New York, an organization backed by wealthy and U-nevolent men for the purjioee of loaning money to pixir jieople at reasonable rates of interest.

Dr. Simon lii«ane.

BERUN, March tt.—-Dr. Hinton, formerly editor of the New York Ker Handles Zeitung, an 1 well known to the public through his interviews with Prince Bismarck, is hopelessly insane and has been placed in an asylum at Munich, due to influenza.

shot 15-year-old Clara Freund on account of a fear that she would reveal his iutprojier relations to her. He was a friend to the family, and it was while the two were sitting m tiie kitchen that

the tragedy was enacted.

•** * • «v <1 •

Illinoi* Scimtor«hip.

Chicago, March fl.—At a meotiu# of the Democratic state central committee yesterday gossip turned to the senatorship, and the names of William R. Morrison and Franklin MacYeagh were ! chiefly discussed. Governor Altgeld nor Mayor Hopkins were mentioned.

lloH«*<l <;hirk<*n.

When a chicken is to lie Imiled, place a few slices of lemon on the breast, wrap in a buttered paper and then in a floured cloth and see to it that it simmers very slowly. Always accompany with boiled pork or ham and serve a parsley, cream, celery, oyster or mushroom sauce with

it. In boiling a chicken after making | ilnndmi out of Work, any of the above sauces tjiere will still 1 Patterson, N. J., March tt.—The Dolbe sufficient liquid foranexcellent soup, phin Manufacturing company's jute which may be thickened with rice, oat mills in this city has closed down indeflmeal or barley. , nitely, throwing 800 people out of work.

For stealiiiK From uu Actor.

New York, March tt.—William Bell, the colored valet charged with the larceny of $1 tw left in (he clothes of Actor William II. Crane, who had given them to Bell to get cleaned, was yesterday

sentenced for five years.

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