Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 16, Number 29, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 August 1874 — Page 2

WEEKLY COURIER.

JASl'KIl.

C. DOA.KE, PubUihr.

INDIANA.

OUKUKXT NEWS. WAfcllltUTOk. Aujruat rfUirusof the I Hpart mentor Afrriculture show an improvement in the prospect of the cotton crop in all the large cotton Mute except Louisiana. CANT. The rlsMdnji price of (fold in New York, ou the l'.Hh. was l'W .Vh. The nijiht express train which li ft Hoston for Montreal on the evening of the 12th. via Passunipsieand Southwestern Kailroads.waa wrecked near llichford, Vt.,and th' engineer, rireman, conductor, roadma-ter, and a little sjirl were killed, mid ti(ten person Injured. The chum of the accident wrts the washing away of a brldifc over it branch of the Missisquol River. Through some negligence of employee the train wan not Hugged, and the loroniotlve was precipitated into the stream, the express car ran over the engine to the other fide, and the baggage and smoking cars were telescoped by the fourth car and a second-class: passenger car. The fifth and sixth earn, first-class, and a Pullman car, were uninjured. At a business meeting of Plymouth Church, Ilrooklyn, held on the 14th, a resolution wm adopted asking the Examining Committee to report " at a early a date a possible condiment with the best interests of truth and justice." Mr. Beecher it to go to the White Mountains fur a few week' recreation.

Following U ths comparative cotton stat-

ment for the week ending Aug. IS :

Net rmripU for pat Wcr

aji u. n. porui

Total n-ipt Iroru Srpt. 1 to iat all U. S. iort

wrrk

66,1:10 2.779,4) 141,611

173.

n,.ta 5.573,:

U.lt.7

137.1J6

I9.77H bC,ufl 4..ouo

t xKiru for paat

I mm all irw Total nrt from Hri) 1 to (Ut from ail oru. . . . Stork now on band at all IT. S. port SUx-.k now tin hand at all

inu-rmr town 30.7s fltock at Liverpool (vC.uO Stock of American afloat for Unit Britain 2.OriO

Colonel S. 8. Fisher, of Cincinnati, a wellknown lawyer, and formerly Commissioner of Patent, on Aug. 1 started with hi son, a lad ten years old, on an extended excursion In a umall open boat. They reached Elmira, X. Y., in aafcty, and had proceeded down the Susquehanna as far a Conewaga Falls, Y'ork county. Pa., when the boat wan wrecked and father and son both drowned. An accident to an excursion train on the Trenton Railroad, near Edingham station, ra.,on the 15th, resulted in the death of five persons and the serious Injury of fourteen other. The accident wm caused by a misp laced switch, causing a collision between the paaacnger train and a coal train. The M;msachu setts Republican State Convention la to be held at Worcester on tk-t. 7. According to the Ilrooklyn JiyM of tin 1hl, Moulton'a suppressed ttatement in reference to the Beecher-TUton affair waa then In the hand of the printer, and would appear in the paper f the 22d. Mr. Moulton is reported to have expressed himself in the following language: "The world now knowi that my honor has been impugnod, and I shall publish my statement in full, exactly an it waa written at first." It Is understood that the report of the Plymouth Investigating Committee will be made on the same day. Morris A Feanall, Tilton's attorneys, have notified Mr. Beecher of the commencement of an action against him, and were referred by him to his lawyers, Messrs. Shearman A Sterling. The Pennsylvania Republican State Convention, held at Harrtshurg on the IRth, nominated A. O. Olmstead of Potter county for Lieutenant-Governor, Harrison Allen of Warren county for Auditor-General, Col. K. B. Beathof Schuylkill county for Secretary of Internal Affairs, and Judge Painon for Judge of the Supreme Court. The resolutions eulogize Governor Ilartranft. and recommend him as the Republican candidate for President in 176; favor protection to all industries; denounce the reciprocity treaty ; favor free banking and a return to secie payment "at the earliest practicable day." A

resolution indorsing General Grant in the

event of his candidacy for the third term

was voted down, with bud feh"Uts of disap

proval. WI ST A XI KOt Til.

An Indejx-nJt ut Slate Convention is to be

railed to tue t at Lincoln. Neb., on Sept. ts,

The primary convention which authorized

the call t be made; was composed of d-lcates

from twenty counties, many of whom, it Is

stated, were Granger. A dispatch from Memphis, 13th, savs

"Men who wont to Austin returned this morning, satisfied th tit the Austin riot was al

most as much a fiasco the Somerville one. and that afftlrs there had tiecn much exaggerated during the entire disturbance. One negro was killed, and no white man even

wounded. Only one store was sacked by ne

groes during the time they had possession of

the place. Seventeen of the leaders or rather the more llstrous ones, as they seemed to have no leader were arrested and confined in Jail to await trial." The Republicans of the First Alabama Histrlct have nominated Jere llaralnn (colored) for Congress. The Arkansas Ik-morratic State Convention Is called to meet at Little Rock on Sept. . A telegram of the Kith rejmrts continued disturbances In (Georgetown sounty, S. C, growingoutof the political canvass by two negro members 0f the Legislature. Rowley and Jones. A number of persons had been seriously wounded. Three buffalo hunters were recently found dead In Frontier county, Neb., each with a bullet hole through his heart. A card pinned to their clothes stated that they had been executed for setting (Ire to prairie grass. One of the slain whs ulmut forty-five years old and the otVr two (mite young men". lrd Iiiff. rin,(io'vernsr-(leneral of Cansda, and suite, visited Chlcs-o on the l.Mh and

was hospitably entertained by the municipal authorities. At the recent election in the Choctaw and Clilckasaw nation in the Indian Territory Coleman Cole was elm-ted Governor of the Choctaw nation, and Frank Overton, Governor of the Chickasaw nation. This is understood to he a triumph of progressive principles. A remarkable case of death by hydrophobia occurred at Chicago on the 15th. The last week m June, a small terrier dog owned by John Sollitt, who lives on Western avenue, suddenly became laz and irritable, and one day, as Mr. Sollitt little daughter Lettie attempted to put blut in the kennel, he bit heron the cheek, drawing blood. The dog was soon after killed, on account of his temper. The wound caused no alarm, and soon healed, but on the 12th Inst. lactic w as i.cd with sickness, which gradually increased until the 1Mb. Her face grew livid, and her breathing becume very irregular. She frothed at the mouth, gasped continually, and with her Itody writhing convulsively, died. The case is deemed remarkable, because it disproves the theory of I r. Hammond's disciples, that children do not die of hydrophobia, and becau- death ensued in this case much sooner than usual. The Ixiuisville Courier-Journal ol the 17th publishes report from correspondents in fifty counties of Kentucky, representing sev-cnty-tive per cent, of the crop of the entire State, which indicates an unparalleled failure of the tobacco crop. The aggregate estimate deduced is that the crop of IsTl will be only thirteen per cent, of the yield of last year.under the roost favorable future conditions. An Omaha ili-paUh of the isth says : An expedition, under command of Colonel Anson Mills, consisting of three companies of the 3d cavalry, one company of the 13th and one of

he 4th infantry, is now encamped near Rawlins. Wyoming. Three other companies of cavalry and twenty Shoshone Indians will

join the command in Sweetwater Valley. In

tractions are to thoroughly scout the valley

of the Sweetwater, Powder, and Big Horn

Rivera, and the country to the southern ex

tremity of Yellowstone Lake, and to admin

ister the severest punishment possible to all

Indians found out of their reservations. Much

is expected of this expedition, which Ij finely-

equipped and will be in the field about three

months.

The Kansas City rimes of the ll'th pub

lished a letter from John T. Morris, IVputy Sheriff of Collins county, Texas, in which are given the particular of the capture and

death of James II. Reed, who robbed one of

the stages of the Austin and San Antonio

Stage Company. Before dying, Reed con

fessed to the robbing of stages in Nevada, California, Oregon and Arizona; that he was

the leader of the Iowa and Gads Hill, Mo

train robberies and the Ste. Genevieve bank robbery; that be shot young Rosier at Ste. Genevieve; and that Mc

Coy, the Younger brothers and the James boys had nothing to do w ith the train rob

beries, and were irnocent of those crimes. He further states that Reed had on his person one thousand dollars In gold, and had

twenty thousand dollars in gold buried. bul

would not tell him where. Reed was thirty years old, five feet ten inches tall, with light

hair, fair complexion, and weighs one hun

dred and thirty-five pounds, intelligent and brave. A man named B. II. Johnson and hi wife were chloroformed and then killed with an ax at their home in Lexington, Mo., on the night of the 16th. A cousin of the murdered man, named Lorenzo Johnson, from Kentucky, is suiected of being the murderer, but no positive evidence was found against him. He was arrested, however, and lodged in jail on a charge of horse stealing. The Iowa State Gran ire has recently donated twelve thousand dollars in aid of the sufferers from the grasshopper raids. Ohio voted on the new Constitution on the lth. But a small vote was polled, and from the meagre returns received up to the following morning it was thought the new Constitution had been defeated. The License law had probably leen carried. The Democrats of Tennessee have nominat

ed Judge James P. Porter for Governor. The resolutions " favor the abolition of the

present odious national banking system and the payment of the bonds of the Government by issuance of Its non-hearing interest notes according to the contract expressed and Im

plied at the time of the creation of such obli

gation, and a repeal of the present oppressive federal tariff, and the enactment of a law solely with a view to the collection of the necessary revenue.'' They also "denounce all legi-lation that seeks to interfere with the individual rightof citizens, and particularly w hat is known as the supplemental Civil-rights bill pending lx-fore the Federal Congress, as a palpable violation of the Constitution, Intended to vex, harrass, oppress and degrade the eopIe of Uih Southern States, and which would bo productive of untold social and political evils

to both races, and which we should resi-t by

an iceai anu constitutional means in our

power." Joliet, 111., had a $100,000 fire on the Pth;

about one-half insured.

In the parish of St. James, La., on the 1Mb,

Dr. Gray, a member ol the Legislature, ami M. Richard, Ieputy Sheriff, fought a duel with Smith k Wesson revolvers, at fifteen paces.

The first two shots neither were hit. At the third shot tolb fell, mortally wounded. Each man was hit in the right side under the armpit. Gray expired almost Instantly, and Richard a few moments after. The quarrel

grew out of factional difficulties In the recent parish Republican Convention.

fort w here the Marshal was imprisoned have been arrested. The statement of the sugar crop of the Island of Cuba for the past year shows that 7U.JW per cent, of the total exports of sugar and molasses went to the United States, or was taken by the United State. It Is now known that the Spanish Republic ba bocn formally recognized by England, France and Germany. Russia hesitate to recognize the Republic. The Spanish Government has thanked Germany for taking the Initiative In this movement. Marshal Bazalne arrived at Cologne on the 15tb, w here he was to remain a few days awaiting the arrival of bis children. He declares that only his wife and brother-in-law assisted him to escape. Eight person have been taken into custody, charged with assisting the prisoner to escape. Dispatches from Ottawa, LYnada, 17th, report that extensive bush fires were raging in that vicinity. Near Ay liner the fire extended for a distance of three miles, and the village was threatened with destruction. The New York Frernum's Journal claim to have positive kuowledge that the Madrid Government has agreed to cede to Germany, in consideration of her assistance in putting down the Carlist insurrection and the revolt in Cuba, the island of Porto Rico. It is also stated that the reason of Admiral Polo's resignation as minister to this country was

on account of bis refusing to sanction the

agreement.

A Bayonne dispatch of the lsth says : The Carlist chieftain Tristany has captured Zo de

Urgel, sixty-seven miles northeast of Zerida,

The fighting was desperate, and losses on

both sides heavy. An immense quantity of

stores fell into the hands of the Carlists.

Hon a Journillst Hccame a XHIIoiuIrt.

The asbinjrton correspondent ol the

Chicago Iit and Mail writes : Not lon

airo the tHttwa or the? country wen iilht

with accounU of the steamer Fanulav am

the new cable kIic was landing on the coast

ol New Hampshire. IhU cnJM to nno(

the history ol a young journalist of this

city, and I n-ix-at it as of Interest. Tin

young man referred to came here soon af

ter the close of the war. to corn-sjoiid fr

the Chicago I'oat and Albany Journal. He

waa very young and inextM-riencil, but

good b-lcgraph oerator. Failing to PCcure the news he wanu-d by peoonal ob-

s nation aim investigation. In adopted

nu-tnou Anion was a novel as it was successful. He could read the Morse alpha-

ts-t ly sound, i tils was hi stock in trade. UHri it lie operated, and for months waa

recognized as one of the most clever and

enterprising news-gathen rs at the Card

td. And all without any labor on his part. lie would rine late, stroll down to

the Capitol about noon (just when the oth

er corrvsjM)niienM were M-iniingon their

dispatches), wander luto the telegraph otliee, liven to the click of the wires, and

then write ami aend a telegram containing

all the Important Items the other men had

gathered. It was ea-lly done and etnl-

uiently suceciudul. Complaint was made

oi nun. out it was unavailing, lie over

reached, however, and fell. The Wash

ington Treaty was la ing considered In

ecutive M-aslon of the Senate. The doors ami windows were tlos-d ; but nothing could hinder our hero. He (limbed to the topof the building, crept over the Senate Chamber, and, lyin Mat ou his laoe.shorT-

handed every wonl of the tn-aty m it came from the lips of the clerk and arose to the

ceiling. He sold it to the New York Tribune. The New Y'ork Time corresioiHl-

ent was angry, ami exposed him, and hid

iatK-rs dismiss)! nun.

Lq willing to Im Idle, he set his active

orain at work inventing b legniph instruments. When the Fn-nch cable had been

I d I, he had Is-en commissioned to report

the event. He boanlcd the cable shin and

watched the oin-rations of the telegraph

ers. 1 he method was this : A needle, like

mat or a if iiipa.s. swung on a pivot. I he

i-urn-nt of electricity coming over the wire moved it to the right or left. A deviation to the rijfht meant a dot : to the left, a

lah. Thus the Morse alphalsvt was used. The movements of the needle were so slight that a mirror of great magnifying

I ower was ncis,-,ry'(rits profitable ivadng. Even then but tlflccn words could be

couimiiiilcarcd in a minute. Our hero

thought he could (In Is-tter. So, as I said, he set his w it to work. and. alter two

years' hard lulnir, has ju-t produced his

iniictilne. JSy it he can take hfty words a minute, or toon than three times the num1T that could In n-ccived by the old process. A company of New Y'ork capitalists ha lcvn formed toos-rate the patent, and our hero is a millionaire, and but twenty-five years old.

Au Arithmetical Dog.

roKr.iuw. It has been ascertained that the plan for

Marshal Itazaine's escape from the Island of Sainte Marguerite was arranged some six weeks in advance. The Marshal refused at first to fly, but finally, owing to a failure to

obtain some modification of his sentence yielded. He sailed from the island in the steam yacht Baron Rleasoli, lielonglng to an

Italian company. The prisoner refused to

employ a French vessel. Lie was accompa nled In his flight by his wife and brother. His place of refuge Is not known. Some persons say he is In Spain. The domestics at the

The gentleman who witnessed the event was a short time since on a visit to Scotland, and during one liUof walks he came across some men who were washing rdiecp. Cloe to the water w lmn the operation wen Is inir carried on was a small lcn, in w liiili a detachment often Mii-cp wen- placed liamlv to the men lor wash

ing. WHIc watching the icr!ormiuice his attention was culled to a slurp dog lying dow n close hj . This animal, on the n-ii liceoniing nearly empty, without a word from any one, started off to the main Isrxly ol the flock and brought back ten o their number, and drove them into the

empty washing pens. The fact of the dog bringing exactly the same number of sheep as had vacated it lie looked upon as a strange, coincidence a mere clinnoe. Hut he contisjiied looking on, ami, muc h to his irprise, as soon as the men had nduccd the number to thiee diccp, the dog started off again and brought back ten ninre; and so he continued throughout the afternoon, never bringing one more nor one less, and always going for a fresh lot when only thne were left in the pen, evidently being aware that during the time the lat thn-e were washing he would be aide to bring up n fresh detachment. hand and Water.

" Would my little Ezra." a-ked a fond mother, ' like to la a ml-slonary, mid go nreai h to the stiflering heathen ? Tears bright s-arly drops of f- ling glistened In little Ezra's eyes as he murmured : " No, I wouldn't ; but I'd like to he on the perlice long enough to put a tin root on the big liinunux that stuck sli's inakcr's wax on my neat to-dny at school."

liLACkltKUUVIM.. It was perfect hiipplnesa. Just to lie iu the shade of that old apple tree, gazing Into the blue depths of a July ky, and watching the ever-changing figure of the clouds in their dance w ith the wind. Like faint, far-ofl'falry music, came to my ears the hum of myriad iusocu and the warbling of joyous birds. Just to lie there in a dreamy, aeinl-cou-scions state, building alr-castles up to the clouds Mupciidous cdillot'H in comparison with which St. Peter's would apcar a hovel, and the Capitol at Washington a hen-ooop ami as each one was completed to have u Goddess of Liberty in rainbow rols-s, come from heaven knows when, and execute a grand pas de aeul upon its highest pinnacle and smile dow n upon me a mnile that somehow reminded me of Heavens! what waa that ! Sly castle had fallen ou my no.-e and broken it ! No; It was only a great rosy upjde. Ureal conseouctices follow the full ol an apple soiuctinu-H. Mr. Newton naw an apple fill and thereby discovered th attraction of gravitation. I felt an apple tall and thereby discovered the attraction of well, another kind of attraction. 1 started up rubbing the unfortunate member which, by the w ay. Is one ot the eh let ornaments of iny handsome and into 1lectual countenance just in time to catch a gliiniise of a w ide straw hat and calico dress flitting along behind the lilac bushes that adorned the lawn. Of course I hadn't been living in this old farm-house six weeks without learning to know Kitty's dress. Kitty was the daughter of Fanner Grove, at whose pleasant home I Usually sjK-nt my summers, and was num-over the prettiest thing In the neighborhood and that ngiou is famous for its scenery too. She had been living with an aunt for several years, ami hence I had not met her liefore this summer. However, it had not taken long to get acquainted, and w e were now the liest ol" friends. " Kitty, Kit-ty." ' Ned, Ne-cd, came the answer in a voice that made music even of that monosyllable, "what awakened you?" The world lell on my nss And rous-l me lrom ruy !ie."

What exoui-ite iioetry. The harmony

of the versification is only excelled by the

beauty and striking originality ol the sen tinien't. Did it hurt you much?"

"Which; the 'smking originality,' or

the being struck " Both."

' I scorn to reply. Whither dost thou

stray, gentle maid so gay, with basket on thv arm ?"

Ned, pray talk Bense.lf the catastrophe of your nose' has not also Hoftened your

uraui. " Where are vou irolnir. Kittv f

' Johnny and I are going blackberry-

ing." Johnny was a young brother of Kitty, whose prominent characteristics wen- a

knack for Is ing in everybody way and a ....... ...,.. r .....!.. i. , ...tj

1 IU 114111 ifl lOl-FUIIlK UIHIl Il " May I go witn you ?" You'll art euiiburned.'

44 A planter of add cream w ill restore the lily to my check, will It not?"

You'll iret vour hands M-ratchsl."

44 Time, that hej.ls all other wound.s, will

sun-lv heal them."

4 Well, since there's no getting rid of

you, 1 must accept the situation; get Uo-ket. come along, and Is have your-elf.

Most noble lady, 1 hasten tootiey your

triple command.

So on through the pleasant meadows

we wended our way with swinging bas

kets, past fields where the new ly cut grain wa.s standing in great golden sheaves, past

armies of gns-n -orn w ith silken banners, through the shadowy woods, client except for the binls, out into the sunlight again,

where bushels of the riiss berries were

waiting for our eager ringer.

A h. that day I Shall I ever forget it ?

Ilownrettv Kittv wa. with In-r lace

flushed bv the exercise and warmth, her

brown hair esiisjsl trfni It confinement

and rippling about her neck in delightful

confusion, her eyes sparkling with fun.

and her nil lips smiling and pouting In the most bewildering way imaginable.

I could do nothing but look at her. My basket didn't till up very fat.

How gracefully the tripts'! around the

hushes, ami how nimbly flew her white

fingers.

; V. isn't it a beauty r" said Mie,

holding up an urnuiially large tierry.

44 Lovely." sigh-d I, seeing only her face. "The bhickls-rry, I mean,"' she said.

blushing afi she placed it between her lips.

I almost envied that ulackta-rry, auu told Kitty so.

II r reply seemed to me very irrelevant.

She said :

" V hat a gfMe J M I determined to pav her lor that. " Kitty, you're looking beautiful." " 'I hank you." " Yes. you've such a very becoming

blarkls rry stain rljzht on the end ol your

noe, and your ti Hi are a lovely shade of

blue, and " Just here a blackln-rry hit me in the eve and I was forced to sus-

H'nd my complimentary remarks. When we were picking from the same

bush it was really surprising how often we

found ourselves reaching alter the same

Is rry. Kitty irn-w quite confused, and s.iid that if I didn't leave her hands alone she would go aw ay.

" Kitty." "Ned. do be still. You will never get your basket full." " Hut. Kitty, I have something very lin(MirtMiit to any. Wnuldn t It I nice if we could pick blackbt rries together forever Y' 44 No, it wouldn't.' Figuratively "peaking, you know, Kittv, wouldn't It?'' " No." The July sun blazed away with unabated ardor, and only the voice of the katydid bnke the silence, a we picked the rips fruit. Then Kitty said : " Oh, dear S" "I lid you sjs-nk tome, Kitty?" 44 1 have got a brier in my finger and can't get It out." Well, then I had to hold the little trembling hand In mine, you know, and that brier was such a remarkably obstinate brier that one woold reasonably expect It took considerable time to get It out. Ami when my knife had finally extracted the plaguey thing I couldn't help kissing the poor, suffering little linger; and Kitty

blushed so'prettllr, and tioutcd - ro-y lip o temptingly, and her la-v was if, such close proximity to uiy uwu that that I And then Kitty was blushing tuwrvthan ever and haying, "Hon't t j M again, tdr." Well, of course you know what a young man generally doc when a girl tells him that; so then Kitty said she won-lcred w here Johnny could be, and we set out to hsik lor that enterprising yougu-r whom we found up a tree busily in warding otl the attacks ol an angry par. cut bird who- home he had approached with hostile intention. The sun was sinking to rest in purple splendor, and the shadow s of twilight settied o'er woods and meadow as westrollcd homeward. 1 thought I had never heeii a uiorela autiful sunset, and Kitty agreed w ith n. All that was live years ago. F look up from my writing and catch glimpse through the o-n door of the brown head of my little wife; .and as watch her flitting to and fro I m-c her, in fancy, again with flushed and iM j-ry-ftain-ed face, as she looked on tlmt afternoon, so long ago when I took my first liv. Hearth and JIutne.

A Honejinoou Uicrrast. A letter from New burgh, N. Y., Aug. 12, says: At lL.'IO o'clock hot ldght Fn-di Shcwart, hailing lrom no plav in particular, but lat known as a .It r- iuaii, wa arrested in this city on the charge of stealing a horse iu Ifc-rgen county, N. J., some time iu the month ol .Inly la.U and selling it at Athens, I 'a., some time during the preent month. Alter disputing f the animal, as alleged, for$J."si, Miewait went to 1'aW-rson, X. J., and on Thursday evening last was married, after a short aequaint-MiKv-hip, to n yowng lady of wry r .-liable family, wiio, it seems, was entirely ignorant of his antecedent. They went, alter the ceremony, to New York City, thence to this place, arriving here on Saturday. The young couple (Shcwart Is twenty-four) put up at the Odi 11 House, remaining there until Monday, when they went to live at a hoarding-house on tinhill. On Tuesday nLiit the Taterson Chief of I'olice, John R. Iliee, having received Information of Shew art's w hereabout, arrived hen in company with i harle Iay, the man to whom 'it was claimed Shcwart hold the stolen horse.

With Chief Forsyth, of this city, tlay went to the boartlini? liou-e Ut niht in quest of the allegitl horse thh f. lie was found In bed with his bride of rive days. Chief Forsyth knocked at their door, and in a few moment he apjx-ared. riartially dressed. He was. taken to the room w here Hiee and Hay were, and the lat.'er promptly identified him a the party of w hom he (l)ay) bought the horse, shewart was then put under arrest. Hi bride was In anguish when she found out what had been done. This was the first intimation fclie had that her husband was even charged with criminal practice. She went into convulsions, and for a time serious result were feared. Rut by the kind attentions of the family she recoven-d and b-canie calmer. Thl morning she took leave of her husband, and thcsvne was a very affecting one. Her grief w aii)o-t (Kiignant, and b ars started to the eye of the beholders of the sad fcpcctacle. AU the money she had remaining, after paying their tioard and her own fare to Fab-ron, was forty cenU, and this she Invested in a breakfast for her huhaiid. He and the otliccr took one train for the place where he had sold the horse, and iie took another for Taterson. Having married in haste, her n-cntence at lei-ure commenced very early in the honeymoon. Minute Ixal Cake. 11 cup sugar, i

cup butler, 1 cup of milk, J cups of tlou

2 tcasjvoontuH cream tartar, 1 of soda ; nutmeg.

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