Bloomington Courier, Volume 15, Number 15, Bloomington, Monroe County, 2 February 1889 — Page 2

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THE COURIER.

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BY H. Jx FELTUS?

BLOOMINGTON,

INDIANA

At Point Labos, near -San Francisco, there is extended out in the waters of the Pacific a big wooden pendulum, so arranged that a surf ace six feet by twelve is exposed to the waves. The action of the waves causes the pendulum to swing, and the swinging of the big pendulum works a big pump, which raises the sea water to a height of 150 feet. It is proposed to conduct this water to San Francisco and use it for running turbine wheels and other motors, driving cable cars, supplying salt-water baths, sprinkling the streets, and flushing the sewers. ".

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A few years ago Greenbackism was a somewhat powerful element in the politics of this country. It held the balance between the big parties in some of the Slates, and was potent enough to secure recognition from one or the other of the treat organizations in turn. In 1880 James B. Weaver, its candidate for President, received 307,306 votes. It had no candidate in 1888, the few renaming members of the party dividing up between the Republican and Democratic organizations or supporting 8treeter, the Union Labor candidate. At one time there were, oyer a dozen Greenbackers in the House of Representatives. The last one of these will step down on March 4 next, when James, B. Weaver drops into retirement

West minster Abbey is getting crowed with the indistinguishable dust of - departed greatness, and Canon Farrar as . giving an annex; so that there will be

;-some motive hereafter for Englishmen to be great. He wants Parliament to take up the matter and devote a large 4 sum to inaugurate the movement, after 1- which, he tb into, private munificence will cover the balance. The funny part of it is the supposition thai they will be - aided, "doubtless," by munificent gen

erosity from America, it is very im

probable that tne Canon and the Abbey will be able to rouse the least interest in this country. " We take very little concern in the great departed, and too httie wihegreat living who are uot in

It has been asserted for some time by

careful observers that the power of the saloon is waning. In New York State, and the East, it has been observable for three or four years. The saloon is by no means the pflitical head center that it was ten years ago, Votes can not so easily be bought for drinks. Temperance -rotes are more sought for. Candidates are more careful about appearing as saloon representatives. Now it is asserted that the greater-saloons of New York City no longer pay expenses; not even Belmonico's and ttie Hoffman, while most of the others are passing under the hand of the Sheriff; One. of the finest was sold out last week. This state of affairs is not quite true of Western cities, but it is approximately so. ;

INDIANA STATE NEWS.

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Xenia is exploring for oil ligonier wants electric h'ght. Winchester has a band again. Lagrange has a building boom. Floyd county wheat looks welir'- " ,! South Bend-is enjoying sleighing. Ladoga will muzzle or kill its dogs.

:K Measles and mumps rage at Seymour.

Peru lost but, $4,200 worth of property

toy nre last year.

?r Peru Methoclists. have been having a

p succeeBiui revival. ,

Over 2,500 Muncieites have signed

r tne Murpny pledge.

: A general slaughter of Montgomery

; v county uogs is unnuneni.

SES-5'-.' wm. vapp oi uoiumpia City was

ajfrrVp crushed by a falhng tree.

m . A colony is forming at Greensbur&r for

f . nwwvw w fraanisgion territory.

- An oil well with a capacity of 4C0 bar-

F--' rsjssoay-MMie iatest wonder at Port-

ttad.-; :-,': ,,,'v..

John Glass, of Evansviile, fell thirty

Kciirom-a smoxe sacs, due wui re-

k cover. ; f T- 1 -

Munae anticipates five thousand ad

ditions to its population daring the com-

ing season. ' ; . -

. BoatriffhtL of Sullivan, was ar

rested while .manufacturing eonterfeit

suveruouaTB.

Jonn JE. Sullivan, clerk of Marion

county, made an assignment Tuesday of all his property. ' '

The buildiag boom at Anderson awful. Sometimes the demand is great that they run out of sand; '

jnaron Houseman, px Elkhart, at-

wmpied to Hasten a fire with gasoline. His wife and himself were frightully bunied. 'V.'V"; - . ' The police raided the gambling rooms of Manon, ; Saturday night, capturing $1,003 worth of tensila, and abouta dosen players.; ; ; - " . The broom vs. the dish rag, was vigorously .debated by the young ladies of a Orawfordsville colored club; Thank fortune, the broom wonrMuncie wants parks, lakes, monuments and popular resorts.' Good. But why not ask for mountains, oceans and a eliee off the moon as well?' m The second gas well put down at Manon for the proposed Soldiers' Home has proven a failure, and the lnrjtHnn

jpjH Home is againn ipen question. 'M. - ' Aniwriage h'cense was issued at Peru

vo james oassa rras and and Susanna Good-boo, both Indians. The groom is seventy years of -age and the woman

nity-two. ' f - The Terre Haute mad stone is in great demand. Geo. Bannan, of New Maysville, was the latest to apply it It adhered for fourteen hours and then for four hours. "' ' .;: "- -;-.J; ; ' '.. The public schools of Bi

9 WE' . 4cIiardBd Manon townships, Han4h T COCk COUntv. Ohio: watr rnmmllp1 A

close down Tuesday on account of the prevalence of diptheria. - JohnD. Oritcnfield, a lawyer of Mi. Vernon, began a suit in the courts Wednesday against his . mother-in-law for $100,000 damages. He claims that she deprived him of his wife affections. Dr. F. Jlaeger, a prominent dentist of Evansviile, suicided on the 20th by cutting his throat with a pen knife. He was 63 years old.' The loss of his property and failing health prompted the awful deed. y Country school houses in Fsvette

county are suffering from the depreda-

uonsoinamps, wno use tnem lor mating places atr night, and whenever the wood runs out take the books, and sometimes even the desks i r fuel; A sad death occurred at . ML Vernon, Tuesday night. Miss Gertrude Burtis, the sixteen-year-old daughter of Wm. F. Burtis, died of rupture received from a kick in the side, while asleep, by her lit fclajbrothery with whom ahe was -sleepi. ;:;,."V-;.; ... tT;:; The excitement over hydrophobia has

nearlT run its course at Annanohs. there

:hf' ' being only one well developed case with I : toe Btook tibe past weekr The resi-'

cm

3 3?

al-

dents felicitate themselves that "the disease can not last much longer, as we are about out of dogs." Two midgets have boon born in Martinsville, within three days. Mrs. George Preston gave birth Tuesday to a girl weighing three and one-half pounds while. Mrs. Corda Thacker. went her a pound better by giving birth to a boy weighing but two and a half pounds. Both -babies are perfectly formed and well..., . - 7 Julian McClure, 'of Jackson county, guardian of minor heirs, is reported to have disappeared, with his accounts showing a shortage of $23,000. He made over hie estate to his bondsmen and fled in time to avoid a warrant for embezzlement. It is said that no report of his trust has been made in the courts for the past five years. ... The special election in tho First First Indiana district to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Gen. Hovey, was held on the 29tb. Tho candidates were the same as at the November election, the face of the returns of that election showing Judge Parrett, D., elected over Frank B. Posey, R., by 26 votes. At this election Mr. Posey is elected by a majority exceeding 500, . Not a vestige is left of the ancient town of New London, Jefferson County, which, in 1815, was . a busy mart, and which was regarded as "the. key of the Indiana Territory for business." The greater part of the site of the town has Been obliterated by caving in of the river bank. The remainder of it has been incorporated in a farm, owned by James H. Lee, and called "Riverside.n An interesting series of revival meetings closed a few nights ago at Whites Manual Labor Institute, five miles south of Wabash, where nearly seventy-five Indian pupils are being educated partially at government a expense. As a result of the meetings every one of the pupils has become converted. The revival is largely due to the efforts of Dr. Chas. Little. Several students of DePauw University have received notice of dismissal, and others it is thought, will be served in the same manner, m king ten or twelve expulsions in all. Their offenses are insubordination and intemperance. .The eight hundred students in attendance are noted for their exceptionally good deportment, and extreme measures were rendered necessary in this in -stance to maintain the good name of the institution. ;., For robbing "and setting fire to the store of Richard Nash, at Bethlehem, Ind., last week, Mrs. Mack Jeffers and Mrs. Ed. Powell and their four children, the families of the men who committed the crime, were taken into custody near that town on Satnrday. They were found in shanty-boats, and had in tbeir possession $5C0 of the stolen goods. The men made their escape as the arresting party came up. Mrs. Jeffers met the officers with a hatchet, but finally surrendered without a fight. Patents were granted to the following Indiana inventors Tuesday: Jas. B. Alfree, Indianapolis, flour bolt; Jacob Barrow, Windfall, pi essure regulator; Jonathan Beeson and J. H. Hirschfelt, Saline City, bee-hive; Rudolph W. Donmoyer, South Bend, wheel; Brenson Doud, Peru, fence; Horace L. Hewitt, Indianapolis, grain cradle; Jesse F. Fesler, Terre Haute, (2) regulator for dynamo electric machine, and dynamo electric machines; John P. Lancaster, Goshen, rail joint ;.Ott J. Meisel, guard for step-ladders: George J. Zimmerman, LaPorte, machine for making metal wheels. 5 .-'.. ' The Democratic members of the Legislature caucused Wednesday night for State Librarian, J. P. Dunn of Indianapolis was nominated on the fourth ballot. The candidates with the vote thev received on the first ballot were: Mrs." J. R. Gordon, Greencastle 7; Mrs Bosler, Indianapolis 7; Miss Holland, Vincennes, 5? Miss Pendleton, Franklin 4; Miss Cooper, Sheibyville 2; Mrs.; Ella Nave, Danville 5; Miss Nellie Ahered, Columbus 6; Miss Emma Porter, Peru 8; Miss Jones, Vermillion county, 6; Mrs. Shideler, Indianapolis 1, and J. P. Dnnn 19. Mr. Dunn is a. .young man of marked literary- ability, being the author of

several dooks. ine xcepnpucan caucus nominated Mrs. Virginia C. Meredith of Cambridge City, " The Commissioner of Agriculture has just issued a report on the crops of the past year, from which the foil owing, relating to farm products in Indiana, is taken: "Heavy rains during the early part of November caused serious damage to corn remaining on river bottoms and low, fiat lands. The loss was neaviest in the southeastern art of the State. The weather remaining cool and

damp delayed t h e gathe ring of the crop

ana a very large per cent, oi tne corn in

shock yet remains in the fields." Con

cerniug the condition of winter grain in

inaiana, tne renort says: "Tne usua

winter grain acreage will be fully maintained, with possibly a slight increase in

tho area of wheat The past month has

oeen tavorable to the erowth of whea

and the plants are vigorous and appear

to pe wen root so." SAM PAN AFFAIRS.

A Washington snecial savs. Mr. Petre.

the technical attache of the German Le-

fauon, has just arrived in Washington irect from Berlin. His mission is supposed to broadly cover a comprehensive and rapid survey of the military and

navai resources ot tne United States in ,1 f . nc 1 - mi t 1 . '

ueieuse ana ouense. .rarticuiariy ne is presumed to inspect the harbor defenses

oi tne principal seaports and incidental

ly to make a report, on our abilitv to

command seagoing steamers which could

oe speeouv convertea into commerce

destroying privateers.

xhe German side of the recent Samo-

an fight, as related by their counsel at

Apia, charges Klf in; the alleged Ameri

can, witn being tne instigator of the

wnoie trouble.

A number of obscure and doubtful

points in the Samoan complications are

explained by statements from Secretary

Bayard. Mr. Bayard says that Ger

many has Riven this country no casus

belli, that our flag has not been insulted

or American nronertv dfistrnvftH. and

tnat tne whole question is, shall this

country assert the indenendence of

Samoa by force of arms, if need be.

agmnii urerman aggressionr as this in

volves tne question of neace or war. tha

determination of which resides with

Congress, the whole subject has been referred that bodv. the President not

feeling authorized to take further steps

wmcn mignt precipitate hostilities.

urn mumm

BYE. KID BR HAGGARD.

CANADA'S PREMIER.

Sir John MacDonald, Premier of Cana

da, made a speech at the opening of a

drill hall at Montreal, Thursday, which is not very favorable to annexation. In

opening the address Sir John dis

pensed an unlimited quantity of tafly, for which he has been famous, and then, assuming a. belligerent attitude, said:

xiiio i& a una nan, duiu to make our

volunteers as proficient in drill and: tactics as volunteers can be. Now what will you do with it when Mr. Wiman and Mr. Butterworth hand you over to the United States? (Cries of Tight; whip them; and let them try it.) "That's the proper spirit,? continued Sir John, "you area practical people, I can see, and I have no doubt will put this drill hall to good use." His remarks were received .rith cheers and expressions of approval. At night he said; "The people of Canada are satisfied with their present position. They have no desire. I believe.

to change their political position. They

ip Duiusueu wiiu we goiaen or 8 u Ken tie which connects us with the mother

country. Cheers, They are tried and loyal subjects of Her Maiestv. When

she is called away, they would be equally true and loyal to her successor. Cheers. We draw our inspirations from the mother country; our constitutional laws are gathered from her: our

judiciary is modeled after hers;"

Borne was not built in a day, as ot the young westerneities of our fywere -i,..

.some coun-

CHAPTER VI-CbNTiNUKPv IN THIS CAVE. . " We rushed up to him, and theresure enough, in a deep cut or indentation on the very top ot tho sand koppie was an undoubted pool of water. How it came to be in such a strange place we did not stop to enquire, nor did we hesitate at its black and uninviting appearance. It was water, or a good imitation of it, and that was enough for us. , Wo gave a bound and a rush and in another moment were all down on our stomachs sucking up the uninviting fluid as though it were nectar fit for the. gods. Heavens, how we did drink! Then when we hail done drinking we tore off our clothes and sat down in it, absorbing the moisture through our parched skins. You, my reader, who have only to turn on a couple of taps and summon "hot" and "cold" from an unseen vasty boiler, can have little idea of the luxury of that muddy wallow in that orackish tepid water. . After awhile we arose from it refreshed indeed, and fell to on our "biltong," of which we had scarcely been able to touch a mouthful for twenty-four hours and lay down by the side of that blessed pool under the overnanging shadow of the bank, and slept till midday. AH that day we rested there by the water, thanking our stars that we had been lucky enough to find it: bad as it was, and not forgetting to render a due share of gratitude to the shade of the long departed De Silvestra, who had corked it aown so accurately on the tail of his shirt. The wonderful thing to us was that it should have lasted so long, and the only way that I can account for, it is by the Bupposition that it is fed by some spring deep doxn in the sand. Having filled both ourselves and our water-bottles as full as possible, in far better spirits we started off again with the moon. That night we covered nearly five-and-twenty miles, but, needless to say, found no more water,though we were lucky enough on the following day to get a little shade behind some

ant-heaps. When the sun rose, and,

for awhiie, cleared away the myBterious

mists, S oilman s Berg and the two maiestic breasts, now onlv about twenty

miles off, seemed to be towering right

above us, and looked grander than ever.

At the approach of evening- we started

on again, and?- to cut a long story short,

bv davlieht next .morning lound our

selves upon the lowest slopes of Sheba's left: breast, for which we had been

steadilv steering.. J5v this time our

water was again exhausted and we were suffering severelv from thirst; nor in

deed could we see anv chance of re

lieving it till we reached the snow line

far, far above us. After resting an hour or two, driven to it by our torturing

thirst, we went on again, toiling painfully m the burning heat up the lava

slopes, we found that the huge base of

the mountain was compose of lava , beds belched out in some far past age' 3 By eleven o'clock we were utterly exhausted, and were, genorally speaking, in a very bad .way, indeed. The

lava clinker, over which we had" made

our way, though comparatively smooth compared with some clinker I have

heard of. such as on the Island of As

cension for instance, was yet" rough enough to make our feet very sore, and

this, together with our our other mis

eries, had pretty well finished us. A

few hundred yards above us were some large lumps of lava and toward these

we made with the intention of lyin down beneath the shade, AVe reache

them, and to our surprise, bo lar as we

have a capacity for surprise left in us, on

a little plateau or ridge close by we saw the lava covered with a dense green

growth. Evidently soil formed from decomposed lava had . rested there and in due course had become . the re

ceptacle of seeds deposited by birds.

5ut we did not tase nincn lurtner in

terest in the green growth, for one can

not live on grass like Nebuchadnezzar.

That requires a special dispensation of Providence and peculiar digestive organs.. So we sat down under the rocks and groaned and I for one heartily wished that we had never started on this fool's

errand. As . we were Bitting -there

I saw Umpoba get up and bobble off

toward the patch of green,, and a few minutes afterward, to my great astonishment, I perceived that usually uncom

monly dignibed individual dancing and

shouting like a maniac, and wavm something green. Off wo all scramble

toward him as fast as our wearied limbs

would carry us, hoping that he had

found water.

"What is it, son of a fool?" I shouted

in Zulu.

"It ib food and water, Macumazahn

and again ne waved the green thing.

Then I saw what he had got. It was a melon. We had hit upon a patch of

wild melons, thousands of them, and

dead ripe.

melons! i veiled; to txood, ne was

next to me; and in another second he

had his faiBe teeth fixed in one.

I think we eat about six each before

we had done, and, poor fruit as, they

were, l doubt u 1 eer thought anything

ncer. .... ...

But melons are not very satisfying,

and when we had satisfied our thirst

with their out py substance, and set

stock tc cool by the simple process of

cutting them in two and setting them on

end in the hot sun to get cold by evapora

tion, we began to feel exceedingly

hungry. We had still some biltong

ieit,; out ... our , stomachs turned from biltong, and besides we had to be very sparing Of it, for we could not Bav when

we should get more food. At this moment

a lucky thing happened. Looking toward the desert I Baw a flock of about ten large birds flying straight toward OS- . ,.. ...... v "Skit. Baas, skit!" (shoot, master.

shoot), whiBpered the Hottentot, throwing himself on his face, an example

which we all followed.

Then I saw that the birds were a flock

of pauw (bustards), and that thev

would pass within fifty yards of my head. Taking one of the repeating Winchesters 1 waited till thev were

nearly over us, and then jumped to my feet. On seeing me the pauw bunched up together, as I expected thev would.

and I fired two shots straight into the thick of them, and as luck- would have it, brought one . down, a fine fellow, weighing about twenty poundB. In half an hour we had a fire made of drv mel

on stalks, and he toasting over it, and

we had such a feed as we had not for a week. . We eat that pauw; nothing was left of him but his bones and his beak, and felt not a little better afterward.

That night we again went on with the

moon, carrying as many melons as we could with us. As we got higher up we

tound tne air get cooler and cooler, which was a great relief to us, and at

dawn, so far as we could judge, were not more than about a dozen

miles from the snow line. Here

we. lound more melons, so had no

onger any anxietv about water, for we

knew that we should get plenty of snow.

But the ascent had now become very

precipitous, and we made but slow pro-

but , saw" nc' iPiOKt melons,: having, ; the neck hung a yellow ivory crucifix, evidently; paused oitJ of their district, j The corpse was frozen perfectly stifl. Saw no game of any sort. Halted fori "Who on the earth can it bo?" said I.

the night at and own, had no food for many hours;" Suilered much, during tho night from cold; ? V 22d,- Started at sunrise again, feeling very faint and weak! Only made five miles all day fount! some patches of snow, of which we eat,but nothiiig else. Camped at night under the edge of a platue. Colcj bitter. Drank a little brandy each, aiid huddled ourselves together, each wrapped tip in our blanket to keep ourselves alive. Are now suffering, frightfully from starvation and weariness. Thought that Yentvogel would have died duiing the night. 23d Struggled forward as soon as the sun was well up, and . had thawed our limbs a little. We are now in a dreadiul plight, and I fear that unless we . get food this will.be our last day's journey. But little brandy left. Good, Sir Henry and Umbopa bear up wonderful, but Yentvogel is in a very bad way. Like most Hottentots, he cannot stand cold, Pangs of hnnger not so bad, but have a sort of numb feeling about the stomach. Others say the same. Wq are now on a level With the perci pitous chain or wall of lava, connecting the two breasts, and. the view is gloiious. Behind us the great glowing desert rolls away to the horizon, ana before us lies mile upon mile oi smooth hard, snow almost level, hut swelling gently upward, out of the center, of which the nipple of the mountain, which appears to be some miles in circumference, rises about four thousand feet into the sky. Not a living thing ii3 to he seen. God help us, I fear our time has come. And now I will drop the journal, partly because it is not very interesting reading, and partly because what follows requires perhaps rather more accurate telling. All that day (the 23i May) we struggled slowly on up the incline of sncrw, lying down from time to time to rest. A trange, gaunt crew we must have looked, as, laden as we were, we dragged our weary feet over the dazzling plain, glaring round us with hungry eyes. Not that there was much use in glaring, for there was nothing to eat. We did not do more than seven miles that day. Just before sunset we found ourselves light under the nipple of Sheba's left breast, which towered up thousands cf feet into the air above us, a vast, smooth hillock of frozen snow. Bad as we felt we could not but appreciate the wonderful scene, made even more wonderful by the flying rays of light from the setting sun,, which hero and there stained the snow blood-red, and crowned the towering mass above us with a diadem of glory.

"lsay," gasped Good, presently, ought to be somewhere near the

the old gentleman wrote about." "Yes." said I, "if there is a cave." "Come, Qiiaterman," groaned Sir Henry, "don't talk like that; I have every faith in the Don; remember the water. We shall find the place soon." "If we don't find it before dark we are dead men, that is ail . about it," was my consolatory reply. For the next ten minutes we trudged on in silence, when suddenly Umbopa, who was marching along beside me wrapped up in his blanket, and with a leather belt strapped so tight round his

stomach to 4,make his hunger small," as

he said, that his waist looked like a

girl's, caught me by the arm.

"Look!" ho said, pointing'toward the

springing slope of the nipple.

I followed his glance, and preceived

some two hundred yards from us what

appeared to be a hole in the snow. "It ia the cave," said Umbopa,

We made the best of our wav to the

spot, and found sure enough that the

hole was the mouth of a cave, no dourbt

the same as that of which Da Silvestra

wrote. We wore nono to soon, for just

as we reached. the shelter the sun went

down with startling rapidity, leaving

the whole place nearly dark.. In these latitudes there is but little

twilight. We crept into the cave,

which did not , appear to be

"we cave

to

re-

gress. not more than a mile an hour.

Also that night we eat our last morsel

of biltong. As yet, with the exception

of the pauw, wo had seen no living

hing on the mountain, nor had we

come across a single spring or stream of

water, which struck us as very odd, con

sidering all tho snow above us, which muBt, we thought, melt sometiineB. But as we afterward discovered, owing

to some cause, which it is quite beyond

my power to explain, all the Btreams

flowed down the north side of tho

mountains.

We had now began to grow very

anxious aoouc iooa. wo naa escaped death by thirst, but it seemed probable

that it was only to di e of hunger. Tho

events of the next three miserable days are bestdescrbed by copying the entries made at the time in my note book. .

21st May. Started 11 a. m.j finding

the atmosphere quite cold enough to

carrying some water Struggled on, all day

travel by day,

onsmel with us,

very. Dig, aud huddling ourselves gethe for warmth, swallowed what

mained of pur braudv barelv a mouth

ful each and tried to forget our. miseries in sleep. But this tho cold was too intense to allow us to do. I am convinced that at that great altitude the

thermometer can not have been less

than fourteen or fifteen degrees below

freezing point. hat this meant to us,

enervated as we were by hardship, want

of food, and the great heat of the desert,

my reader can imagine better than

descrine. eumce it to say tnat it was

something as near death from exposure

as I have ever felt There we sat hour

after hour through the bitter nignt

feeling the frost wander round and nip us now in the finger, now in the foot.and

now in the face. In vain did we huddle

up closer and closer; there was no warmth in our miserable carcasses. Sometimes one of us would drop into an

uneasy slumber for a few minutes, but

we could not sleep long, and perhaps it

was fortunate, for I doubt if we should ever have woke again. I believe it was

only by force of will that we kept our selves alive at all..

Not verv long before dawn

I heard the Hottentot Ventvosel.

whose teeth had been chattering

all night like castanets, give

deep igh, and then, his. teeth stopped

chattering, I did not think anything

of it at the time, concluding that he had

gone to sleep. Hits back retting agaia&t

mine, and it seemed to grow colder and

colder, till at last it was like ice.

Atiengtn tne air began to grow gray

with light, then swift golden arrows came flashing across the snow, and at last the glorious fiun peeped up above

the lava wall and looked in upon our

half frozen forms and upon Yentvogel.

sitting there amongst us stone dead. No

wonder his back had felt cold, poor j el-

low. He had died when I heard him

sigh, and was nov? almost frozen stiff.

Shocked bevond measure we dragged

ourselves from the corpse (strangle the

horror wo all have of the companion

ship of a dead body), and left it still jut

ting there, with its arms clasped about

its knees. .

By tins tune tne suniignt, was pounng

its cold rays (lor nere . they were cold) straight in at the mouth of the cave.

Suddenly I heard an exclamation of fear

from some one, and turned my head

down the cave.

And this was what I saw. Sitting at

the end, for it was not more than twen

ty feet long, was another form! of which

the head rested on the chest and i;he

long arms hung down. I, stared at it,

and saw that it tot? was a dead man, and

more a white man.

The others saw it too, and the sight

proved too much for our shattered nerves.

One and all we scrammed out of the cave as fast as oar half frozen limbs

would allow.

CHAPTER VII. Solomon's road. Outside the cave we halted, feeling rather foolish. "I am going back," said Sir Henry, "Why?" asked Good. "Because it has stnick mo that what we saw may be my brother." Thiu was a new idea,and we re-entered the cave to put it - to the proof. After the bright light outside our eyes, weak as they were with staring at the snow, could not for awhile pierco the gloom of tho cave. Presently, however, we grew accustomed to the semi-darkness, and advanced on. the dead form. Sir Henry knelt down and peered into

its face..

"Thank God." ho said, with a sigh of

relief, "it is not my brother."

Then I went and looked. The corpse was that of a tall man in middle life with aquiline features,, grizzled hair, and a long black mustache. Tho skin was per

fectly yellow, and stretched tightly over the bone?. Its clothing, with the exception of what seemed to be

the .. remains of a , pair of woolen hose, had been removeti,leaving

the skeieton4ike frame naked. Kound

"CWt you guess" asked Good.

I shook mt head; " W hy , the old l)on. Jose da Silver tra, of course who else?" -"impossible," ! gasped "he died three hundred yeaia ago." "And what is there tb prevent his lasting fofr three thousand years in this atmosphere I should like to know?"asked Uood, "If only the air is cold enough, flesh, and blood will keep as fresh as New Zealand mutton forever, and Heaven knows it is cold enough here. The sun never gets in here; no animal comes here to tear or destro3r; No doubt his slave, of whom he speaks on the map, took ofl his clothes and left him. He could not have buried him alono. Look, here," ho went on, stoop ing down and picking up a queer-shaped bone scraped at the end into a sharp point," "here is the cleft-bone that he used to draw the map with." . We gazed astonished for a moment, foi getting our own miseries in this extraordinary and, as it seemed to usj semi-miraculous sight. "Ay," said Sir Henry, "and here is where he got his ink from," and he pointed to a small wound on the dead man's left arm. "Bid ever man Bee such a thing before?" There was no longer any doubt about the matter, which I confess for .my own part perfectly appalled me. There he sat, the , dead man whose directions, written some ten generations ago, had led us to this spot. There m my own hand was the rude pen with which he had written them, and. there round his neck was the crucifix his dying lipB had kissed. Gazing at him my imagination could reconstruct the whole scene, the traveler dying of cold andstarvation,and yet striving to. convey the great secret he had discovered to the world the awful loneliness of his death, of which the evidence sat before us. It even seemed to me that 1 could trace in his strongly marked features a likeness to those of my poor friend Silyestre, his descendant, who had died twenty years ago in my arms, but perhaps that was fancy. At any rate there he sat, a sad memento of the fate that so often overtakes those who would penetrate into the unknown; and there probably he will still sit, crowned with the dread majesty of death, for centuries yet unborn,to startle the eyes of wanderers like ourselves, if any such should ever come to invade his loneliness. The thing overpowered us, already nearly done to death as we were with cold and hun.ger. "Let us go," said Sir Henry in a low voice, "stay we will give him a companion, and lifting up the dead body of the Hottentot Yentvogel, he placed it near that of the old Don. Then he stooped down, and with a jerk broke the rotten string of the era cinx round his neck, for his fingers were too cold to attempt to unfasten it. I believe that he Btill has it. I took the pen, and it is before me as I write- sometimes I sign my name with it Then leaving those two, the proud, white man of a past age, and the poor Hottentot, to keep their etermd vigil in the midst of the eternal snows, we crept out of the cave into the welcome sunshine and resumed our path, wondering in our hearts how many houm it would be before we were even as they are. Continued next week. r A New Story About Slvarts?' New York Graphic. The latest story about .Senator William M. Evarts, whose dry wit is proverbial, is told by ex-Governor Van Zandt, of Rhode Island. The Governor was one of the party that accompanied President Hayei! on his famous tour into the South. Cincinnati was the starting point of the trip, and Nashville was the principal objective point. Mr. Hays liked to have the train stop at every station so that he could make a little speech, He went by a circuitous route in order to mingle with the people, as he expressed it. Senator Evarts, who was his Secretary of State, was one of the party. He was sitting in a rear car enjoying a quiet smoke with Governor Van Zandt, when the train drew up at a station, which the Governor declares was like nothing so much as Charles

Dickens's description of the town of

Eden in "Martin Chuzzlewit." There were a doaen houses besides the station. There were twenty or thirty lank and dirty looking males, and twice as many women. The latter had no other cloth

ing than blue jean dresses which barely

fell below their knees. Their ankles and

feet were bare of covering. The entire

populance looked as if shaken to pieceB

by ague. Postmaster-General Key came

hastily into the car, almost before Evarts and Van Zandt had: taken this inventory of the town. Addressing

himself to Mr. Evarts, he said: "The President would like to have you come

out and speak to the people." Mr.

Evarts set his peculiar old silk hat firmer

on the back of his head until it crushed

the lobes of his ears, heaved, a sigh, and

got up to obey the request, as he said

"Well, I presume I must do as the

President .desires. This town looks

about Cabinet size!" FOB ASO ABOUT WO&EJi.

In fashionable households, instead of

the parents sending out announcements of the latest family addition, the

new-comer announces himself or her

self by a t iny visiting-card, the date o

the birth and the address following the

name. 4

Here are a few rules for debutantes:

Never show temper, however much you

feel it. Never be late in keeping an en

gagement, JNever resent a seeming slieht. but smile and bear it. Never

confide anything to another debutante.

Never betray your feelings in public or

vour preference for a member of the

male sex any where.

The woman-suffragists are greatly

pleased with some utterances made by

President-elect Harrison 'recently in re

gard to the woman movement, and they

are predicting the new administration

will encourage the appointment of women in the departments, poatoffices, and

to other places now held almost exclu

sively bv men. Mrs. Harrison herself

favors tho pecuniary independence of

her sex q uite as much as she does tem

perance, women s suurage anaouier re

forms. It may be that the reign of

Lucy will yet be much outdone.

Senator Palmer's kittle Problem,

Washington Tost.

Among the other good things that

Senator "Tom" Palmer, of Michigan, has

said is recorded in the following:

In a little gathering at his house a

young Congressman from Massachusetts,

said: "Senator Palmer, I presume that

between legitimate lumbering, timber

thieves,, forest fires, etc., Michigan '1b pretty well denuded of her timber crop."

Senator Palmer looked at the young

Congressman commiseratingly for a few

seconds and then said in his fine German-silver voice: "Young man there is enough lumber standing in Michigan to-day to build a fence .fifteen boards high three times around the earth once a year for fifteen years. Now, that's an easy thing to reckon, as it is 25,000 miles around the world. Go aud reckon it np and you can get the number of feet of lumber Michigan is prepared to furnish theworldi"

SLANDERS AGAINST GOD.

THE DOCTRINES OF THE CHURCH BEIilTTJjKD AND MALIGNED. But trie Truth Still Prevails and tho dospel Will SurViepr. Talmage Hits Hard at Scoffers. Hev. iir. Tdltiiage preached at the Brooklyn tabernacle lant Sunday. &ubjeet: 4 'Slanders Against. Religion Answered." Text: Itov. x,: 10, 11. He said? . - . ,:. .,. .... AM intelligent people have creeds

that is, favorite theories which they

nave adopted.

theories about tariff, about finance.

about civil service, about government Social creedsthat is, theoiies about manners and customs and good neighborhood. 3thetical creeds that is.

theories about tapestry, about bric-a-brac, about styles of ornamentation, lleligious creeds that is, theories about the Deity, about the soul, about the great future. The only being who has no creed about any thing is the idiot. This scoffing against creeds is; always a sign of profound ignorance on the part of the scoffer, for he has himself a hundred creeds in regard to other thiings. In our time the beliefs, of evangelistic churches are under a fusillade of caricature and misrepresentation. Men set up what they call orthodox faith, and then they rake it with the musketry of their denunciation. They falsify what the Christian churcheB believe. They take evangelical uoctrines and setihem in a harsh and repulsive way, and put them out of the association with other truths. They are like a mad anatomist, who, desiring to tell what a man is, disBects a human body and ban as up in one place the , heart, and in another place the two lungs, and in another place an ankle bone, and says that is a man. They are only fragments of ;a man wrenched out of their God appointed places. . .. ,. , Evangelical religion is a healthy, symmetrical, well-jointed, roseate, hounding life, and liko the scalpel and tho dissecting -knife of the infidel or the atheist can not tell you what it is. Evangelical religion is as different from what it is represented to be . by those enemies as the scare-crow, which the farmer puts in the cornfiekl to keep oil' the ravens is different from the farmer himself. ... . For instance, the enemies of Evan gelism say that the Presbyterian Church Believes that God is a savage Sovereign,., and that He made sorae men just to damn them, and that there are infants in hell a span long. These old slanders come down from generation to generation. The Presbyterian Church believes no such thing. The Presbyterian Church believes that God. is a lov.ng and just Sovereien, and that we are free agents. fNo, no! that can noli be," say these men who have chewed up the creed and have the . consequent stomachs. "That is impossible: if God is a Sovereign we can't be free agents." Why, my friends, we admit this in every other, direction. I, Do Witt; Talmage, am a free citizen of Brooklyn. 1 go whenI please and I come when I please, but I have at least four Sovereigns. The Church Court of our denomination; that is my eccleeiastical Sovereign. The Mayor of tMs city; he is my municipal Sovereign. The Governor of New York; he is my State Sovereign. The President of the United States; he is my National . Sovereign. Four Sovereigns have I, and yet in every faculty of body, mind, and "i30ul 1 am a free man. So, you see, it is possible that the doctrines go aide by "side, and there is a common-sense way oi presenting it, and there is a way that is repulsive. If you have the two doctrines in a worldly direction, why not in 'a religious direction? If I choose tomorrow morning to walk into the Mercantile Library and improve my mind, or to go through the conservatory of my friend at J amaica, who has flowers from all lands growing Under the .. arches of glass, and who has an . aquarium all asquirm with trout, and gold fish, and there are trees bearing oranges and bananas if I want to go there I could. I am free to go. If .1 want to go over to Hoboken and leap into a furnace of an oil factory, if I want to jump from the platform of the Philadelphia express train, if I want to leap from Brooklyn Bridge, I may. But suppose I should go to-morrow and leap into the furnace at Hoboken, who would be to blame? That is all there is about sovereignty and free agency. God rules and reigns, and he Lis conservatories and bhist furnaces. If you want to walk in t he gardens, walk there. If you want to

leap in tne lurnace, you mav.

Suppose now a man had a charmed

key with which he could open all the jails, and he should open Raymoud street Jail and the New York Tombs

and all he .prisons on the continent.

In three weeks what kind of a country would this be? all the inmates turned

out of those prisons and penitentiaries. Suppose all the reprobates, tho bad

spirits, the outrageous spirits, should be

turned into the new Jerusalem. Why the next morning the gates of pear

would be round off hinge, the linchpin would be gone out of the chariot wheels.

the "house of many mansions," would be

burglarized. . Assault and battery, arson

libertinieni ajid assassination would re

side in the capital of the skies. Angela o

God would be insulted on the streets.

Heaven would he a dead failure if there were no great lock-up. If all people

without regard to their character when

they leave this world go right into glory,

I wonder if in the temple of the skies

Charles Guiteau and John Wilkes

Booth occupy the same pew. Your com

mon sense demands two destinies! And thon as tike Presbyterian Church believ

ing there are infants in perdition; if you will bring me a Presbyterian of good

morals and sound mmd who will sav

that he believes there ever was a baby

in the lost world, or ever wi ll be, I wil -l 1 1 1 i . T 1 -V

maKe mm a aeea to tne nouse i nve m

and he can take possession to-morrow.

, j5o tne episcopalian unurcn is mis

represented by the enemies of evangel

ism. They say that church, substitutes

forms and cerem'onies for heart religion.

and it is ad a matter of liturgy and genuflexion. False again. All Jilpiscopaiians

will tell vou that the forms and creeds

of their church are nothing unless the

heart go with them.

So also the Baptist Church has been

raisrepresented. The enemies of Evangel-

l- t . i 1 i it a

ism Bay me japiisd uurcn ueueves urni unless a man is immersed he will never

get into heaven. False again. All the Baptists, close communion and open communion, believe that if a man ac

cept the Lord J esus Christ he will be saved, whether he be bap-

twed by one drop of water on the fore

head, or be piunged into he Ohio or Susquehanna, although smmeirsion is

the only gate by which ono enters their earthly communion.

The enemies ot Jivangelism also nna-

ropresent the Methodist Church- They

say the Methodist Church believes that a man can convert himself, and that con

version in that church is a temporary

emotion and that all a man has to do is

to kneel down at the altar and feel bad,

and then the minister pats him on the back and says: Itis all right," and

that is all there is of it. False again.

the Methodist Church believes that the

Holy Ghost alone can convert a heart

and in the church conversion is an earthquake of conversion and a sunburst of

pardon. And as a mere "temporary

emotion," I wish we all had more of the "temporary emotion" which lasted

tJishop James and luattuew fcimpon

or a hali-century, Keeping tnem on nro or God until their holy enthusiasm

consumed their bodies.

So all tho evangelical denominations

are misrepresented. Ana tnen tnese

enemies of evangelism go on an d hold

up tho great doctrines of Christian

Churches as absurd, dry and inexplicable

echmcalities. . There is your doctrine

of the Trinity," they Bay, "absurd be

yond all bounds. The idea that there is a God in three persons. Impossible. If

it ia one God He cant be in three, e nd

if there are three, they can't be ene. At

the snme time alt of asthey with-us-acknowledge trinities ' all around us. Trinity is our own mjilie-up-body, mind, soul. Body with which" we move mind with which wo 'fchink, sdttl Urith which we love. Throe, yet one mail. Trinity in the air light, heat, moisture yet one atmosphere. Trinity in ;the court-room three Judges on the bench, but one court. Trinities all around about usf in earthly government and in nature. Of course, ail the illustrations af defective.' for the reason, that the natural can not ftll illustrate the spiritual. But suppose afi ignorant man should come up to a chemist and n&fi ltl denv what you sav about the water and

Political creeds that is ! about the air; tney are not made ot om

it finance ! erent pkrfcs. .Tne.uir is one; l preatne it

everv day. The water is one; l dnnk it

if

every day. You can't deceite me about

the elements that go to make tip the air and the water," The chemist TPould sayi "You come up into my laboratory and I will demonstrate thiB whole thing to you." The ignorant man goes into the chemist's laboratory, and sees for himselr'. He learns that the water is one and the air is one, but they are imide up of different parts. So hero is a man who saysi "I can't understand the doctrine of , the Trimty." God says: "You come up here into the laboratory alter your death, , and you will see--you will aee ifexplained, you wilU see it demonjjtrated." . The ignorant man can not understand the chemistry of the water and the air until he goes into the laboratory, and we will never uadenittand the - Trinity until we go into heaven. The ignorance of the man who can not understand the chemistry of the air and water does not change the fact in regard to the composition of air and water. Because we can not uaderstand the Trinity, does that change the: fact? , ? "And there is your absurd loctrine about justification by faith," say these antagonists who have'; chewed ' up the little book of Evangelism and have the cona(jquent embittered stomach. "Justification by faith you can't explain it." I can explain it. It is simply this: When a man takes , the Lori Jesus Chri st as his Savior from sin God lets the offender off. Just as you have a difference with some one he has injured y ou; he apologizes, or he makes reparation; you say: "Now, that's all right; that 8 all right." J ustification by faith is this: A man takes Jesus Christ as his Savior,and God tayato the man: , VNow, it wjiB all wrong before, but it isi all right now; it is all right." That was what made Martin Luther what he was. Justification by faith, it is going to conquer all nations. ,.;-...:"'':,;. "?here is your, absurd doctrine about regeneration," those antagonists of evangelism Eay. Vhat is regeneration? W by, regeneration is reconstruction An)-body can understand that. Have you not seen people who are all made o ver agai n by Home wonderf ul influence? In other, wordu, they are j ust different from what they used to be as possible. "There is your absurd doctrine of vicarious sacrifice," aiy these men who have chewed up the little b book of " creeds, and have the "consequent embittered stomach. Vicarious sacrifice! Let every man suffer for himself. Why dofl want Christ to suffer for me? I'll suffer for myself and cai ry my own burdens." They scoff at the idea of vicarious sacrifice, while they adniire it everywhere else except in Chi ist. People see its beauty when , a mother suffers for her child. People see its beauty when a palaiot suffers for his country. People see its beauty when a mail denies himself for a friend. They can see the beauty oi vicarious sacrifice in very one but Christ. vy Be it ours to admire and adore these doc trines at which others jeer. Oh, the depths of the riches both of the wisdom anc knowledge of God! How unsearchable is His wisdom, ,;and His ways are past finding out!' Oh, the. height, the depth, the length, the breadth, the infinHy, the immensity, the eternity of that love! Let our earnest prayers go

out in behalf of all those who scoff at

the doctrineB of grace. , " . .; : When the London plague was raging in 1665, there was a hotel near the chief burial -place that excited much comment, Er gland was in fright and bereavement The dead carts went through; the streets day and night, and the cry: "Bring . out your dead!" was answered by the brihginjj out of the forms of the loved ones, and they were put twenty or thirty in a cart, and the wagon b drove en tb the

ce metery, and those dead were not

biuned m graves, but in great trenches, in great pits in one pit eleven hundred and fourteen burials! The carts would come up with their, great burden of twenty or thirty io the mouth of the

pife, and the front of the cart was lifted a:Hd the dead shot into the pit. All ths CLturches in . London were open , fot prayers day and nigitt, and England wae hi great anguish. At that very time ar a hotel at a wayside , inn near the chief burial place, there-was a group of b ardencd m en, who sat day after day and night after night blaspneming God and imitating the grief-struck who went by to the burial plaie. These men sat there day after day and night after night, and they scoffed at men,and they scoffed at women, and they scoffed at God. But a f ter a while one oif them was struck with the plague, and in two weeks all of ttie group ' were . down in the trench from the margin of which they had uttered their ribaldry. My friends, a g reater plague , is , abroad in the world, ilillions have died torn it Millions are

smitten with it now. riairue ot sin.

plague of sorrow, plague oi wretchedcess, nlacub oi -woe. And consecrated

women and men from all Christendom

are going out trying to stay the plague

and alleviate the anguish, and there is

a group Oi men in mm uuuutry "e eaouch to sit and deride the worx. They

& toff at the Bible, and they scoff at

e rangelism, and they scoff at J esus Christ, aud they scoff at God. If these words shall reach them, either while

they are sitting here to-day, or through

the printing presu, let me ten , tnem to romember the fate of that group in the

wavside inn while the placue spread its

two black wings over the doomed city of London. Oh, instead of being scofiers

hit us be -dis oi pies! "Blessed is the man

that walketh not in the, counsel of the u rigodly, nor standsth in the way of sinners, nor sittetb in, theseat ot the B.:ornful!",: .

Why Oklahoma is Covotedl,

G iliforuia Jbtntuincr. ..,.,,..'

& "T wns down in thiit Oklahoma coun

try three years ao," said an oflScer of

Gen. Miles's staff at the Cafe Royal yes-

t nday, speaking of the likelihood of a

fight between the troops and the Oxla-

1: oma boomers. "Gen. Sheridan and

Gen. Miles went to Fort Keno to quiet

disturbance among the Cheyenne

Indians.and I was in the party. It is cer

tainly a beautiful region for the agricul-

turalist,and it is no wonder the lands are

c oveted. The soil is rich and well watered ,the country is a rolling prairief the

c limate is mild and equable, the grass

ri Summer is belly 'deep, and two rail-

loads are now built through the heart of the vast, unoccupied domain. Any-

hing can be grown t here that will grow n Missouri or Arkansas. It would be he finest fruit country in the world. t Fort Reno peaches, pears and plums

are raised which cannot be equalled any-

.v here outside o f California. The . most

naguificent corn I ever saw is raised in )klahoma by the few half-breeds allow-

d to till the soil. There are splenaid

ntreams, the Canadian liiyer and its

iorth fork, which course through the and. There is very little frost and

lever a sign of a blizzard. It dose seem

pity that such a suorb-agricultural re-

ion should be shut out, from settlement

ind given oyer in perpetuity to a worth-

ess lot of Indiana, who cannot use it is

a hunting ground." - ' '

MATTEL W fcAW

4 jir e me Co art .

me-.-?; 'hp-,'--'?

Damages may be recovered for an in

jury inflicted on Sunday by tbe : negl

gence of the defendant although te

injured person was working on Sundajrp ' in violation of the law on that subject This tnle is applied in thia .case ,jto brakeman on a mlroad trains A rail ,?J road company is liable for an iajory to -a brakeman caused by requiring'hiin w:f: use rriacbinery which it knew to be-vdet-.: fective, but oi the demctiw ; which the employe had rib knowledge; -and could have none except talda unusual and extraordinary precautions , J This rule'is applied to an inju while coupling cars by a defective bratebeam, the condition of which the brake" man could only see by; stooping down V-

and looking under the car. Decrononfiv which were the natural emanations ojr outgrowths of the act or oceurrence iii litigation, although not preciat ly con-; current in point of time, if they weieyefc? voluntary and spontaneously made

nearly contemporaneous as to be in ttf

nresence of the transaction which theiv

illustrate and explain and were jnadiaf

under such circumstances as n

m

' mm

to exclude the idea of design or delibei-.-!-. ation , are admissible as part of the res1 L T 4-l'Sa Anna 4 Vn . lan1amlinnc

which are held admissible, wemmade

within two minutes of the injury aadiii response to a qiieatipntp JiowiiiriliA?

J .- . . -. w

x by.

4'-

. , ' 'AJi-awaxa wmra u jtuvu vkyvuni face can not be unpeacbed except for causes enumerated in Section 846, R 1881. (2) The Court, when it ia eonii to have judgment reodGryc i awar, can not hear extrinsic evidB

as to the merits of tne case or- the- fB3: tice of the award,' or : inquire as ti : ; . whether the arbitrators decided accOroV; ;. ; ing to the weight of the evidence or ob- v served strictly to the technical: raW-c:!'. law in bearing or.; refusing- tp hear ebj vi4 1

evidence, but it may 'heai'; wiaeji-;. pertinent to the statutory groa6j of : objection. (3) W.be& tfe , hears aflidavita and cpunavji upon a question triable by it, and thua makes a decision upon conflicting eyi "r ; dence, the Supreme Court will ric vof - 1 1. view the decision. :(4JI In& tbe -con eration of a motion to mocfy or corrw ' - v

an awara, unaer wjcuon ow ii. w. -

the Uourjt win De timicea w wuw ap - pears upon the fax5eofthe sabani ;r" and the award. " - 'k -4 Appellees complaint charges that jje? is the ownersof lot 68 in th toi r RuBhville, on which he iesio and ;1 .;

resided with his family for manv "eati that the appellant is the?owner Of jot

adjoining lot 6, an4 twexi distant from appellee's; leeidenee; tit on appellant's lot there is irime ' fript which appellant and another are verting into a public blacksmith ahopJ for the purpose of shoeing horses . aiafc doing a general blacksmithing businefs; Av

that such business will greatly interfere ; with the comfortable enjoyment of ap?

pellee's property etc, wnerefb&aalt

that the defendants may ?be - t enjoin 2dl

v

building as a blaclunnith shop. . He That the complaint is bad, it not ; made to appear therein that the tlerf

fendants threaten and intend to

dacUhe'bu

nuisahce.5 4 . - V

A11 assignee, believing that : certwia?5" . lands conveyed to hirii by the idefexwr

v.

forocldrre

within -wfcefer:

:2f - - v.

possessed a value above the amount' ;ot .f

a mortgage lien thereon; and bein

notified by the mortgagee that a part of

the mortgage was due and

imminent, to secure time

to make an effort to sell the -land p

fcuo. mortgagee u. -tuwicoii ouu

part of the principal due on his mfr v (' gage butofthe trust funds in -his;- Iwl the mortgagee agreeing to repays 'ft ' y ; ; same on demand of the assignee :;ii . court or geneial creditors, should :aoi -

sanction the payment;;; Jlb inbrteige ii:f

wag subsequently foreclosed and nothing was realized for the several credito.f &

Action by the assignee to recover me amount so paid, the complaint alleging

the facts stated. The aneW;:.;l.W'' assignee's bond, on, their application were made parties, and jainUflfisi nlmt?? nomoiaint alle&ins that thel "crediiximJs

had obtained judgment upon the irc

signee's bond partly for the breaeli . of i v,.v duty represented by such pay menl iin; j ' that they had been compelled toPHiL '

the judgment therefore they asked to ;4 be subroited to the rights of the51 ifcg ' signee and creditors as against this t'y -aforesaid mortgagee. Heidi. ThattJlie: morteacee must repay- the money 801

paid to him. HeWi also, Thafe- th

M . .

r

VS.;

. !

v.

sureties nre en titled to be subroted ; - f.

im-

Held, also: That there was not ;aii

proper joinder of parties plaintiffs; 4nd

that a joint judgment in favor of piatn-

tifis was proper. .

OLDSAWSESSEI

-sr. ss

" WH

','4SZS

lioox not a gut norse m tne mpum paj -

Keep your. eye on uuj u&uu uwufcMurdei will -oul- ani: Uie ; murdie ttiM set out iLthelawyer knows- his basi? '

ness. , -tX. ' - ; A wild goose never Md.tatibat its eggv will grow tame k It ;tejbj Icb.J

enough,-,:; . ', v

There is no fool like an; old fodll ex ;

eenc 11 ne wie vouuk iuui wuu iwiB fiiui. :. s y-,- .

Faint heart never wori a fair " liidy 1

unless r the owner 01 the bearMd

Fortune toocks once at least at e n C

man's door. But the trouble is that a

great many poor chaps are . npt enough to be home at the time. . ,

-

a OUTRAGEOUS MUROIR

A .stableman named Henry Adams was killed by thfe Brooklyn eteei strikers Saturday night? 4 rX- ' ti;

Adams was murdered in a most -cmt--r-; rageous manner. ; Adams was deejtxv; on a blanket in one of the bins ' Two ofl four strikers took hold of the endi of, , i ; the blanket, carried him to; a door threw him out to the street belowvblull , ' . .

A general strike of all streetcar -ioeiij.

inevitablei ; t rg

is. . . :na

. .v : , -. iii.-;'-

A BIG STgiKE A long threatened street car

war inaugurated in New York on the

29th. . The men, numbering vJyTf 5,500 have been preparing for the sb-uja i gle for some time; Nearly every surface W road in New York and Brooklyn 4k ;et'-r:

fected, soverai rows occurred betneea strikers and the police, but up to this

writing no great damage has been dme

5'