Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 20, Number 29, Jasper, Dubois County, 2 August 1878 — Page 3

WEEKLY

COURIER

f , MIX, reeUeaer. JASPER, INDIANA ITEMS OF INTEREST. JfsssissJ sumI XsltttHMrVe "Bill Arp" has bean laoturiaf be tut nuimw wumivt uh "a oousia ia ueninw aims (yvMwHWMOH speaks liltrlilv nf the sffrirt 4 America's younr contralto. Hattfc Glenn, of Iowa Citv. Iowa, who tor four years has been pursuit W musical studies in Europe, mate amoet coful dsbut at Malu rSly -Thewholeofth8uBnnWiBw The whole of the unnublkhad soripU of the coaaposer Rossini have lust oee 11 soiu at auction in London. They were purchased from Madame Rossis!, who inherited them under the AMrAAAlTl Will VVassfwva r? as Peter Cooper was first a coach ui mou uauiuev-niHKcr, wen a grocer, ana failed in all three. It was not till his fortieth veer that'h h making glue, and then laid the foundstion of his fortune, now estimated at ?iu,wu,uw. Frederika Hallin. a RwmKbIi rtri rri rrr has just received a royal permit to pubib wbbjuv pper in mar. country. SS not only writes bar artlolai. hnt seta tnem up and prints them. Women oaiv are upioed In her office. This makes the third printing establishment ia Sweden carried on exclusively by 7" " . . , t n When informed of Mr. Brvant 's ni. nf- t i 1 1 1 tV ueon m . iaiiikwhow muu ; ue was mv " voiee, uau Years ana mora m: iv senior, and throughout my whole ie warmest reverential life I have had the regard lor Him. His first thin little volunie of poems, of thirty pages or so. containing his Tbanatopsis rand other youthiui performances, lies ble to-day." On a certain occasion bverai visuoii tue comDOfiintr the Boston Advertiser at a late hour, to read a proof of an oratiou which he had failed to see at an earlier hour. Ex tremely particular about his style, ho r - roared out: "Cut it short, Everett coniounu ir, cut it short. Tbero's no time now for patchingup bad English." Among Americans present at the recent Literary Congress in Paris were rremaent Andrew D. White, of Cornell : wi- iv. niggioson ana Air. wm. umuu, vi uoswii. xtussia was represontea dv m. lurgenief.and France had v ictur nugo to preside over the sittings : but otherwise theConfrraM wa mma?!-. able rather for the absenco of literary lights. Tho principal question dis cussed was that of international copy"sb" hu iue nguts 01 autnors generThe Bev. Joseph Cook was about 1C years old when be delivered his first lecture. From earliest boyhood he had a passion for delivering addressee. He was born near Ticonderagx, his parents being plain country people. His full name is Flavius Josephus, and until he S-ew up he was known as "Flare." nbecoffling a man he dropped the " Flavius," nobody knew exactly why. When he was suite a lad he wrote a history of Ticonderoga, which was published in the villara navatuiur Uta uiwourses are now more extensively puoiisiied than those of any other preacner la this country. 8heel aad Cttarek. A convention of the educators of ooumera states will be held in Chattanooga the 6th, 7th and8th of August. Three Chinese youths have gone to a Boston preparatory school with the Coll evenuwiy entering Harvard ?Stree thousand teachers gathered the annual meeting of the American jj.aui.uw 01 instruction, at the Fabyan House, N. II., on the 9th of July. Several excellent papers were read and the occasmn was every way both pleasant TJTSP'yywng men attended Colorado College, at Colorado Springs, durveral are studying --. .. .mHu xt is young ana growing and is described as beinsr 600 mile S Christian college, and -,wv, Aivm a uieoiogicai seminary. rl1 JLf Jfoi Spurgeon, -vft, uu ait 01 tnose pastors wuo are rrPT 10 reive many children intheir churches, that they make more "juiojcincai, reliable, aad less troublesome members through their lives than received as adults. mi - . 7? bPntJKltt (Mass.) Union fs: "An earnest and able Christian gutsier now doing a good work in a 5?i?fJ??SL2i!! from Springfield 7""J a year, &uof which fZZ ""use-rent, and all donations rom nuniluKnftk.. 1.. against this salary account. -The Presbyterian Church South has arod war against the evangelists. t'Vm,il Assembly adopted a report wrongly condemntnir lav nreachlnr as raryto the Word of Ijod, against aS md harmony of the Church, It J BtrRfy,to the Caurcb eovsrament. JnK ?lnl?terfl aot to allow them to ulsr their folds. evlSL!0t wmarkable results of f3lllslicw,ork RBWBf the Jews are 2f Sweden. Great mulUtudee atWi tfiWwwrvices of the Rev. Mr. Ifc0' Klnd, and Mr. Adler, MOortenberg, the chief seaport of Swel Sv llT th hhlk 4,!00 people, ent

wh aiiuinivr sentences ana making an- , : ' " "j uuuuuue u uiaiiainr 10 iau se

m . A I" I UU1DR lllllll IIII I1M. MIIII Rlfl D BTTainafl I T r 1 rw MnariHM a. A II

ditions while the forms were waiting iUB n V? 7 screens, in market tho as to get hurt as little as possible.

wnicu so irritated the foreman that fT s " v'0"u, n. The Shah of Persia lat 5fl nf

Dr. Willard, of Um Chicago High School, declares the Mhool-room walk, tor 'the sake of pupils' eyes, should b Wilted with kUlnkW rrMBiali ar bliiUh

tinge, aail the lesson-boards should be green, brewaish or drab ia eolor. He adds that kk a mistake to think that the board must be black tn mska rlu ohalk mark distinct, and thai, tamurfa t ka relief and oomfortto the eve mavseeai - ?Uht, it amounts to a great deal. tak'"a y r uay. ... . . ' ... Vf' uaP1B-01 StsebenvUIe, G.f : turn8d i.n,V8ntor. nl astonished the iron18 w machine which, if sue. will do away with puddling furnm' John B. Davis, bmtliar ni fi.n.tm uavis 01 west Virginia, has 400 acres in tomatoes on his farm Va., tlw 1 biggeet field of the kind in the uniiaa suites. lea raised in South Carolina, and prepared in Halthnnra hibited in Washington to daaWs. lm W8re uPble to distinguish it from simi1Hr P8"8 of Chinese and Japanese rowin I m iue London Knyimer concedes that with all the care the Knsrlfeh man. ufaturer takes, be can not produce the 7 ,"7"' 4,6UL ung8, sucn as iron u-DrcKeis, wnieft the American muiacturer does. The largest flour-mill in the world is now being built at Niagara Falls Its capacity wili be about 1,200 barrels a "ay- structure is placed on the hvdraulic canal, wit h & mnuyiui "n iaa . ' - rr 1 ut iw ieei. chusetts, Illinois and Maryland, each 5: dimensions as an industry in soma narta of Minnesota. Verv little labnr ia in. volved. The principal duty of the frograieer is 10 protect the eggs and tadTexas has nroduced a naw mi. cine, wmcbfrom its Intoxicant qualities, may yet be used as a tipple. It is derived from a bean growing on a plant known as the Sophoria Speclom. Professor II. C. Wood of the Uuniversity of Pennsylvania has discovered it in a new aiRaioia, wjucu ne proposes to call 80jmuna. na 01 one oean, it is said, will produce a delicious exhilaration followed by sleep lasting one or two days. The experiment of using superheated water for locomotives has been successfully tried on tho tramway connecting Reveii and Marly-le-Itoi, France. The engines are charged with water heated to 180 degrees C., which is allowed to vaporise as fast as required : and by doing away entirely with furnaces in the locomotives, the dane-era of . a. . ' w w t e t .. . ( explosion, as well as the cause of terror to passing horses, are easily avoided. A locomotive, propelled in this manner, and attached to two nam ascended a gradient of five and a half in the hundred at the rate of sixteen miles an hour. aafia aad Mlalu4i. Richard Hallet, aged 72, of Hillsdale, Mich., was killed by an infuriated bull. , The mother of Rev. A. C. John son, pastor of Wesley Chapel, M. E. Church, Madison, Ind., was killed by being thrown from a wagon while the horses were running away. Charles Phillips, a farm laborer, was instantly killed at Austintowa, O., while unloading hay with a patent norse-ioric. The tackle broke and Phil lips was struck on the head by a pally U1UUK. A 5-year-old daughter of William uurns, resiaing near saiem, u., was fa tally injured while walkinsr beside her latners team, with which he waa haul ing: a load of hav. A tusr broke, throw ing the singletree back violently against ner loreneaa. Mrs. Daisy Thompson, the wife of Dr. W. II. TbomDSon. a nrominant pnysician in ltusseii uounty, vs., wa stooping over a deep spring near her nouse, enueavonnr to get a lur of but termilk from the sorinsr. when she lost a aa a ' m. - . ner oaiance, leu in. became wedrsd in . 1 . , . . . 0 tne spring, ana was arownea. -A son of Mr. Samuel Athouser. aged about 12 years, residing four miles northeast of Upper Sandusky, O., was assisting nis latner nauiinsr in wheat from the field when he was struck bv leatninsr ana lnstanuv auiea. Mia 1 I 9 A . til mm father was also stunned. The load of wheat was burned up and the horses ran away. Jas, Duncan went to the large hayshed of Langley & Son, at Nelson, Ky., w 11 ere mere is riggeu a niammota aayhois tins: fork that works from the ground to the roof by horse-power. Duncan got upon oae of the large prongs of this fork to make a short ascent, with a tew to jumping out when be become satisfied, but in this he failed, and was carried up among the rafters, where he was squeeaed powerfully, aad iniured internally. Fnrle;a Netee. Count Herbert von Biemarok. the eldest son of the German Chancellor. and his brother, have both become eaa-

States in th. 13!.I T" colors of his naUon. The bouquet placriasf It hL K?LfT?ind07 ore the Turkish envoy represented

TVlAta A 1 1 a . I

on mvta- TnrtiBn. T. rL " ..T.' Pans, that city of queer

I IIUBb V 11 VH1I.1 MTlf I H1fiUZ.mm Annh I . Zw A

and Iowa: i anUnT fr " ' a'" tem . mhI. not of

Edward ' ,.r , .... mdlyirtual member loafs mlong

.rnnm n I atmiueu. lu suae varu uu ne seee a vehicle d

dldates for the German Parliament.

-According to the Rome correspond of the London Globe, the Pope is That

likely to accept the advice of hk ahvai-

eiaa aad speed part of the summer

out I

oi tae vaueaa. Immense scandal ia Vienna.

Jo - I

nana btraues, withia two Months after hie wife's death, ha married again, hk second spouse being Angelica Dktrieb, a peptl of Prook, the Viennese staging PSSbSSSI e None of the members of the Prus sian Knabassy at Paris attended the fua m . m aenu at tne ex-jung oi Hanover, pro-

oaoiy oeoause tae lavitauoes to tbe funeral describee him aa "George V..I

I r"1 gu, anOVr uy tae grace 01 uoa. -The Berlin police have found it neeessary, in consequence of Dr. Nobelin'a discharge of Wrd-shot at tlve EtnperSr, ? prohibit the performance of. Julius that city, and even Schiller's William Tell has been withdrawn fmi the Royal theater. Less than 300 men ia the English array wear me Victoria uross a scran I of gun-metal inscribed "for valor," and carrying with it an allowance of I fW) a year to non-commissioned officers nd mn-. They are of all ranks, from I ururauier-ooys up to uenerals. The l'rinoe of WsJae has nro-ania B l ... oneme by wmch arttoans will be seat to the Paris Exhibition free of cost, on con. dition that each man on his return subir" nn.vu miwiun uiamimcias m dustry. The scheme is warmlv mm. ported in the manufacturing districts of Angiana. ai, iue uiiiucr nvBD in ijeriin nv rn Crown Priuce of Prussia to the members of the Congress the table was arranged with great skill. Before each plenipotentiary flowers were artistically placed so as to represent the different national profession in professions masaars. . the bouleriven bv a man who can afford to pay coming along, then sets out as if to cross the street, ets confused, and manages to fall under the wheels, the art of th hU an caskets of cold at Paris, wham huanont foW.WU. His expenses at the Grand Hotel were f680 per day. Extracts from bia disputed bills at Fontainbleu are published. Ho was charged $300 for flowers, $12 for a melon, flfor a cigar, $160 'or three carriage drives, and $4 ecn Ior twenty chickens : his room . a 1 . . a. v were set down at $ 10 a day each; two boxes of cigarottes cost $10, and $2 awiTCu jur a uu.en peacnes. lie received during his stay in Paris 5,400 begging letters, asking amounts varying from 60 francs to 3,000,000 francs, the STOirate amount SOUPht haincr naarlr300000 francs. " J Odda aad Kad 1m Rhjrme. How stealthily from patch to patch Proceeds the youtljlul felon. And many a luokleee (anaer man lieuioans the watermelon. Yenkert GauHc. Tin sad when the sunbeam la winging IntO vour Htlll hed.rontn ut mnm H hen the wren in the tree-top is rtnalnx; And the ShanKhafs devouring his corn; When londly the bumble-bee doth hover Kound flowers ot scarlet and gold. To xet down stairs but to discover lour breakfast Is cold. mid Oatt. O visions of celestial ease I with no one but yourself to pleaee. How happy in the shade to sit And drink your beer. Mortals less favored, miad away, o rest for them by nhtht or day. For editors must "up and git" Year alter year. The cuoutnber floats In the acid, The melon site back in the Ice: The 1 butteimllk's surface ia placid. The blackberry looks at the rise. Who says that the weather la hotter Than e'er old Inhabitant knew. Is plainly a KTumbleeome plotter, Kofleotliig the plaee where he's due. CoHrtor-JeHrml. S0NO or SUMMER. Tis now the happy harvest time Comes to the little ante ; "Via now the playfal bumble-bee Crawls Hp the small boy'a pasta. Tis now the Jingling- Ice cream man Makes sultry hnusebolde glad ; Tki now the festive yellow-Jacket Gets petulant and mad. Tis now the pert thermometer Uoea on Its annual tears: And sweetly the average cltijen Gets on his ear and swears. AVw Ortemt 77mm. 4 TH6 OLOKIOUS FOURTH. The nobleet lay of all the year ie the Glorious Fourth of Jul v: The satoonlst sells more lager-Veer. And the small bdy shoots out his eye. The police give the " weary arrest. The Sunday-schools plonk: in style : The windy orator pulls down bis vest. Aad speaks an awfully long while. The cannon's boom makes sicker tseeick. .J.i,!,,ketltrR,lM ry and redT A25,V.,e trherow, dceceading stick Splits open tke spectator's headT JVorrfstown AeraW. A SABBATH MORN IN THE COUJrrar. Hoy still tha Mrnliurrvf Uu k.iiai I ai8olr I . song, nw - " " And the ie Wlek IiiisIhmI. Tke seyMie lies in teuuee mum That yestermorn breeaa: And when Utm old mu And finds it shere. he will nSrag.. Of the haltowedlaFw ahoata aid retn And takings on ef mm "Vrttor min41snjtJ Wat attraet the ear-me he ean net elimb a tree! -01 OMy DhtM.

1 mi 1

inev nave a nmwtr

la nrawnrnl tl.nt il i . , ..... I X (VHBrVCLa nf aiffad uimi.. tn I !tt- J

glMerinaintka dwv wr-u, 5 "."L U1 ,m. l wmt? I w in w urieans dariiur Butler's

. with faded 1 2 mm, wim tae rrated rind and I stav in that oitv. II iHmi .,

bloom'd wavlni in Uui I Strained lUKMI nf ! lirn lamnn. Tkl Ts luMtiU.ujLi..r.L'

" GIVE US QUANT" O Rive m, ery Mm WMeky Mae. AttlMur ud BiAlilM fiay " wwwww w iniMHMt Oerwttleyon ty we eatfijr mint, Our iif mHouu pre aeeriy pwnt. A Whteky GovernHtent w waMt; Then aHvs, O give He baek er UraMI Give m a stronaer Government! Ttee arwyliMMHiriM4 twy : More muMer-roiia'MoreuRiforKM, AhU rawk, and tdleaewi a4 wy. The rule ol &lKuWw-rtrHij we want: TJin iflve, O give an back oar Grant I We aee4, saya Seeer Kobeson, A Uovrawei3t Utat'a atroaic at sea. That aeattrt) wide the people's eaea, Anil kMrea an ample atoare tor e) Contractors' rule In what we wast: Tttett Kivs, O give us bask our GraatI Give us, the corporations ery, The rule of strenatH and lavlshneM,

xuai nvH iiie peonie in our power. a lid beliw uh Htnlk) at tltelr dlatrMa! To keep them down ia what we wast: Then Kve, o give us baek our GraatI O give ue, say the traveled fools, A Government like those abroad! If eaoh aa we can hold the top, What do we care for foree or fraud? The rich man'H rule la what we want: Then give, 0 gle us back our Grant! Give us a stronger Government! Spoilsmen and ringttters all implore; With poorer poor, but richer rich, And whisky and oigars galore ! Tite rule of strength and itteal we want: Then give, O give us baek our Grant ! . Xttr York Sim. All Haaas Provided fer. It was John Sherman's nromite to tke heeitatlsf Anderson and Don Weber that if they would " sUad irat." and ake falee rnturaa. & vratnfnl nartv wmilil uwfsnrat n 91 uum. aau taev saouia ne wen "earad I or" , , , , , . aii annua nave neen provmeu xor. Let us see. There are a good away of taena, first and last, who were concerned la the Florida and Louisiana iniquity; but they have all been quietly looked after and " oared for." Only look at the lists for the two States: FLORIDA. Noyee, of Oh io .Minister to France. KaKn,oi Iowa ..Minister to Austria. Mpl .1 n ... . .fuutlMA In Vaor Ifavfnn (Jov. Stmruew Com'r of thellotSp'gs. P,e"?ii;K-""- i"!"?-Ah'8 OMc' 1 rcauKa nnuaiiitiiiunmafluir. Blaok In the Treasure Vace In Post Oflice Dep't. Clerk Howell..., .Colieotor of Ciiirtoms, nowies, 01 jeon In the Treasury. "Judge" Bell Govem't Timber Agt, oiuanrs attcniary.....iii me treasury. Striker Maxwell Lieut, ia the Army. 1'helpe Commissioner to l'arle. armun Receiver Land Office, Taylor, Uouaty Clerk.ln Land OHlee. Truly a (food lift: and here are a few of the Louisiana arrangements; LOUISIANA. KelloKar United States Senator. lum Anuernon.. collector 01 Gustome. Marks ..Tax Collector. Brewster Surveyor-General. Clark In the Treasury. Hill Naval Storekeeper. Campbell U. S. IHntrkt Attorney. There are others. And nn aot one of them can remember how tke returns were forged. Hut they have been "well eared for." . John Sherman teems to have taken a liberal puare. We Knd no fewer than eight that he has taken under his wings. And it looks as If Mr. Hayes had " had an eye" on luiHg-s. xte rijora ximes, CeleradeSeateeratlc Flat fe rat. The platform affirms a strict construction, of the Constitution, with all the amendments as follows: Supremacy of eivil over military power; complete severance of Chureh and state, and tbe protection of the eomatoa school system. Ever' honest voter should approve of an investigation aad exposure of tbe monstrons frauds by which the will of tae American people has been set aside, and tueiresotce 01 1'reeldent and Vlce-rresi-deat deprived of the high offices to'whloh they were elected. It disclaims any purpose ef Interfering with the title of the President naue valid by tke order of Congress. To the ead that such crimes be rendered Impossible in tae iuture ana tne perpetrators made infaneus, it demands that such investigation be fair and searching, aad the author of tbe crimes be held accountable. That the comawreial and industrial distress that prevails M the result of vicious financial legislation ef the moneyed power, effected through the ageney of the Republican party In Congress by the demonetization of silver, tbe enact ment of the Resumption law, the retirement aaa uestruction 01 legal tender notes, tbe exchange of boads originally redeemable ia greenbacks for those which are te be re deemed la eoia, and the maintenance of the national banking system. That before trade ana business enterprises can be checked In their downward course, an increase in the volume ef the currency is imperatively nquired. It demands free and unlimited ooiHage of silver; also, that the Government snail issue to depositors or slver bulllea eetn eertlMeates for circulation as money. It deneunees the Senate amendments to tbe uver bill because they enabled the Secretary ef the Treasury to entirely control the celaage ef silver, and to board the same ia the Treasury. It demands the repeal of the Kesumptlon aet and a substitution of United States legal-tender paper for national bank notes, aad its permanent re-eeUbllsbment as the sole paper money of the country, to be nuue receivable for ail dues to the Govern meat, the amount of sueh issues to be regulated bv 1 emulation of erranlc law. If annas tke exclusive right and duty of Con grm to furatsh to the people of the n v via . u mvi no jaSTvUI UIH I whether gold, silver, or paper, aad it should eountry their elrculatiag medium always maiatala the se as to meet the demands of trade. The full faith and credit ot the Government should be pledged to maintain whatever currency it hi lurnisuoi eouairaiueaauiMMrsr. i iwr shall be no further increase in the bonded debt and no further sale of bonds for the puronaee or coin for resumption purposes. A gradual extinction of tbe publkdebtby the redemption of tbe Interest-bearing portion thereof , In such eurrency as tbe law will perTlhl")!,!? .w..50li ? uemaetled bv thelettsr at th law. uni ! silver equally with gold wherever sola Is required. L'm .-Bsst well together oaaoee of fresh butter to a cream, and a - m m. - . ; I 4 m!ut1H 1d V tow dgrees. aad stirred briskly to the other inrredintS. Bake the tHMtdin la . HUk it j .7. . . " . "uai twj vain pan-paeM ior tares- , A spaa of colts hitched to a mower belonging to Geo. W. Thwiar, of Fredoak, Mich., ran away, oarrying Mr. Jawing, who held the bits, rose tbe eld, running into a fcaee, the maohiae toagae eateriag hie bowels aad iaiieting probably fatal iajaries.

j -j..-it:L IT? ' y .rr..r r""" aw jen Bauer,

Mr. Teate mi Ttoy Tie.

At a reeeat aaaaai tHaaerW the K74 Tha , Fa4 Sat IadJa, Mr. J. L. Tee4e, the Chafe-Mao, toM thefeilowing story: I will tell yen of a eaatriaaee at HP supper wUeh the aaaae el Mr. Oharles DiekeM reoalki to aae, ad whioh is not without ito beariac ea the business before us. I was playtaf Befe Cratohett ia the Chrfetmw Carol' at the Adelnhi, under Mr. Webstera mu-

fft, smd every sight at eight, for 'forty nights, I had to earve a goose ad a muss puddiiig Mr. Webster geeerously provided a real goose and a real plunt pudding, which were served ssaoking-hot, for Mrs. Cratohett aad the seven little Cratcbetts. of oottrse iaoludisgTinv Tim. "The children always had eaorssoae portioas given then, aad they all ate heartily every night; but what really troubled me was the oondtMt rJ tk MtL tl?t&rl wbo P1 Tim. That child's appetite appalled me. I eoeld aot help noticing the extraxrdiaanr rapidity with which she ooruwrnad W I gave her, aad she looked so waa aad thin, aad so pitiful, that her faee used to positively haunt me. I usedtoav to myself before I baraa. WaIl. 1W Tina shall nave enough this tinte, at all eveats, aad I'd pile her plate more aad more eaoh eveninar. until 1 she bad on oae occasion nearly half the L.tS 1 . a " tnra, aim poafoes. aaa seanowiny. apple-sauce until I hardly knew how she could carry it away to the fireplace, where she sat on a low stool, in accord ance with the story, far less eat it. To my amazement she cleared her plate as quickly aad as eager as ever, nashim forward for plum pudding with the others. " I grew alarmed and a noire tn Ura Alfred Mellon, who was playing Mrs. Cratohett, respecting the phenomenon. 'I don't like it.1 1 said. ! oan'tooMalva where a poor little delicate thiag like that puts the food.' Beside, although I like the children to enjoy a treat aad now they kept on enjoying it for forty nights was a mystery for I got into a condition that if I dined at a friend's house and a goose were on the table, I regarded it as a personal ofiroat. Bat I said, referrine to Tinv Tim. T dnar. like greediness; it is additionally repulsive I said, in a refined looking, deliw jilub luuig jixe tnis; Destaes, it destroys the sentiment, and when I as Bob ought to feel most pathetic, I'm alwaVS WOnderinir wllflra t ha mnu ! pudding are, or whether any thinr seriI Ous in the wav of .1 fit will lonnAn Tinv Tim before th amiUnn i quence of her unnatural srorrinr.' "Mrs. Mellon lauf tied at me at first. but eventually we decided to watah Tiny Tim together. Well, gentlemen, we watched as well a?, we could, aad the moment Tinv Tim was seated and beraa to eat we observed a curious shutting movement at the stage Jire-plaoe, aad every thing he had given her, goose aad potatoes and apple sauce disappeared behind tbe sham fire, the child n rotat ing to eat as heartily as ever from the empty plate. When tbe performaaee was over Mrs. Mellon aad myself asked tbe little rirl what became of bar fond she did aot eat, and after a little hesitation, frightened leee she should aret lain trouble, which we assured her should not happen, she confessed thai her little sisters I should mention they were the children of one of the scene shrftara waited oa the other side of the stare fire-place, aad the whole family enjoyed a hearty supper every night out of the plentiful portioas to which I, as Bob, bad assisted Tinv Tim. Whaa I told tbe story to Charles Dkkeae he replied, Toole! you ought to givo that child the entire goose.' " M'Glaty's Leag Trame. The famous traveling srlatar Jnk T. McGinty, better known among the fraternity as Texas Jack," after more ' than a year's wanderine- ia the Waal: aad on the Pacific Slope, has agaia tamed up ia this oity. McGintv is the ariaoe among wanderinsr nrinter. Hi ku walked from California to Quebec, aad to Boston and back again. He has made several trips from Lake Itaeoa to Lake Ponchartraln and tm. ;. a iTfoSL 5 !T 7J . " mver ue tweea St. Faul and New Orleans. Not content with wandering over the North American continent, he has crossed the Atlantic aad tramped over a great part of Europe. U l.nl- 11 ia a ! J v n amen w waeiuw able intelligence aad keen perceptive would make an interesting romance. tain runniae of whose current has had much to do with his tireless travels for aearlv a Quarter of a centurr. Tbsinb. Ject of his yoathfnl affections is still liviBf m " ntAire city. Boston. He said yesterday that in all his wanderiags his thoughu had ever been fixed apoa Boswn, nis old parents, whom he had nt . . . Te , . - seen in eight years, aad the object of bw juntnrai love. He served as a Union soldier la tk late war. As drum-maior of th Fnrtv. 1 u. . .. .1 J Hek now oa his way to Boston te join his old nareate. marrr hU ahI mmA aw lnv mmA . ... n1""" re u mm aays. am York Stm. Jul 19. The salaries of the ftiakoe a! tka Methediet Kpiecopal Church are $8,000 each per annum, aad aa altowaaee ler aoase-raat. The same sum k paid te! nnalr nii hJ n.M-lmi .t.-. A n York. OtwmanaU. aad -St. T,m.U OiUaedHera reeeive salaries varying from

f l,s00 Ie $2,600.

"'1, ,'

mm