The weekly Union times. [volume] (Union C.H., South Carolina) 1871-1894, April 27, 1883, Image 1
t." BRi :
HE WEEKLY g?| BSIBI TIMES.
Dijootyd lo ^gi[icnlluri), gorfiqultur^, jlomqBtiq dtqoiiomg, polite IJolitiqs, and the Current glncs of the Jlng.
XIV.?New Series. UNIoff C. H., SOUTH CAR(%&A^ APRIL 27, ISgfc NUMBER 17.
o jimi?liili hi liiwiiiixttiinr^r n??rii i ?-??
Hp VVuiV
aWjiw
r 5. vfi
ILrtUILO tttUU
THE GREAT FIE
THE FAVORITE PR!
WOMEN'S MEDI
cK- UsTTS USTZD^, 17
j?V-V (FOUJIEIU.Y I
^ w Prolapsus Utorl or Falling of the Wo
' o\ rv.. displacements, L,eucorrhu:t or Whites
kv1' d Nervous Headache, Indigestion, D
H| \ ?"* Scrofula, 1'uins In Side, IMiiinrss, 1
\ depression of Spirits. For Cliango
MA "LADIES' REGE
H:/ual In tho world. If you havo tried (
|^B /* d, but give " I.ADIKb' Kkuulatin
Pfsjt' V 1 permanent relief.
I ,vrl t '^u nro troubled with a?1 WMklFW o
I. wK^bri presort ption for once, and try " Lad
li tee will positively cukk you.
I t&OO will tie giv< n for any cn?o of To
II BBOOI.ATINQ Tojtio " will Pot cure. Tills
I who know/Tom experience what441, a nrF.V K
[ The grcntsncccss that this romoilv Irs rut
L ties to endeavor to Imitate Its name find stylo
[V see thst the wonlM ItKOULATt so" is on wrs
L, Medical Institute, Nun<ln, N. Y.) Is at bottom
II We will give 8500 'or Information end
II haying. or in any way handling nev pre^
ILsT 1*Regulating,"or"Tonlo," with Intention of
I t believe tlint It Is our preparation.
It'tf Bold by Druggists. Prioe, #1 00 per
III If your druggist cannot furnish or decline
I ])iWill be sent direct from our InstTtutk upon
lb* accept any stale, patent stuff he has hndonhia
I Imitations whichhe makes a larger protlt on
\ scarcely a town In the United States where wo r
Iff to health by using our remedy. If It does not
j We stake our reputation as wives and me
I ,. 1Mb special prescri ption for women.
1 LsnoorTliats Wash. An Injection w
"I tng/8martlng and Pnlnful Sensations of tilt;
} Bold by druggists. Price,25cents, or sent by
1 Ladles' Rsgnlating Tonlo Plai
1 porous plasters. Especially adapted to the
ocnts. or sent by mail, postpaid, for SO cents li
The Women's Medical Institutk Is r
cess fully treated the diseases common to thcli
feting from any disease, either by mall or ni
tors can obtain advice concerning their hcalt
? torus and description of disease.
If we can be of any service to you or any c
we trust you will write us. it will cost nothing
"" "> ? stamps tor our pamphlet to women. Please i
WOMEN'S MEDI
i -?:i *
npru u 1
A REGULAR MARKET.
ON Thursday next?ApriI 0, I intend to open
a regular Market in the upper storo of
Harflla' building, for the purpose ol' providing
tho citizens of Union with
Fine Beef, Mutton and Pork,
* BUTTER AND EOttN,
Vegetables of all kinds, &c.
la fact, I shall do my utmost to keep a supply
of those articles mostly needed by Housekeepers
in the culinary department, and what
I soli shall be of the best quality.
GIVE ME A TRIAL.
" " >. J. W. HIX.
M*wli SO . 18^ lm
KSJ ^^ er patent*, caveat*,
HI trade-marks, copyright*, etc.,for
B Kg the United States, and to obtain pat*
pKl V onta in Canada. England, Franco,
I I Germany, and all other countriee.
MMM Thlrtf-?lx jreari' practice. No
charge for examination of models or drawInge.
Advice by mail free.
Patents obtained through us are noticed in
the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, which has
I the largest circulation, and is the most influential
newspaper of its kind published in the
world. The advantages of such a notice every
/ patentee understands.
I This large and splendidly Illustrated now*
paper is published wKKKI/V at $3.20 a year,
and is admitted to be the best psper devoted
to science, mechanics, inventions, engineering
works, and other departments of industrial
progress, published in any country. Single
copies by mail, 10 oents. Sold by all news*
| dealers.
' . Address, Moan A Co., publishers of Bo*?'
ttflo American, 361 Broadway, New York.
Handbook about patents mailed free.
^ "ITT 1" Q "lTg people are always on the lookJ
I \ H. out for ohances to increase
J WW XUJJ their earnings, and in time
hecnmn wnallliv? Itw.aa ?ti?
do not improve their opportunities remain in
poverty. We offer a great chancei to make money.
We want many men, women, boys and girls to
i srork for us right in their own localities. Any
one can do the work properly from the first
glart. The business will pay more than ten limes
ordinary wages, Uspensive outfit furnished
frM. one who engages fails to make money
.< rapidly, you can devote your whole lime to
jhe work, or only your spare moments. Full
Information and all that is needed sent free.?
jU Address Stiksom A Co., Portland, Maine.
? J* Feb 28 8 If
UNION HOTEL,
QIBBES & RODGER,
UNION, 8. c.
TKIIMH U0 PER DAY.
W. M. OIBBK3.
L. N. RODOKR.
gyp a . 86 * it
-
Itffs
Svi
Fa %
lO^ii
:male remedy.
ESCR1PTION OF THE
CAE INSTITUTE,
"ST., XX. 3. -A..
IOFFAI.O, N. Y.)
mh, Inflammation and TTlccrntlon of the Womb'
i, Irregular or Painful Menstruation, Flooding,
ivsticpsla, Heartburn, Weakness In Back and
vlilner Complaint, Barrenness, Ncrrous Proaol
Life, or the General Debility of Women,
EATING TONIC w
other remedies without success, do not he dl#?'
ur *i>niu m ting 14 trial. It neoer fall* to giro
?
r complaint common to onr b?x, lay aside the
i k j' Ukuulatinu Tonic," which we guaranmnlo
Weakness or Innblllty which " Ladies'
is a bona fi<l* oiTcr, mado bv responsible ladles,
rcouhATiNO Tonic "can do. . *
twiih has Induced aevcml unscrupulous par?>f
wrapper. Care should therefore be taken to
pner In red ink, and that our name (Women's
of name. I
conviction of any one manufacturing, selling,
sarntlon with any of the words, ' Xiadlcsy'
defrauding und deceiving tho public into tha
Bottle, or 6 Bottles for 95.00.
is to order It of Ills wholesale house for yon, It
receipt of price. Do not let him induce yon to
i shelves for a longtime, or any of the unreliable*
than onr genulno Female Kemcdy. There is
annot refer to some lady who has been restored
; rure got, we will refund the moneg.
thorn, and that of our Medical Institution, on
hlrh Is a positive cure for all Discharges, Stingi
Urinary Passages, In from two to five days,
mall, postpaid, for $0 cents In S-ccnt stamps,
iter. A great Improvement over all other
female system. Sold by druggists. Price, 25
a S-ccnt stamps.
in association of lailg Physicians, who hare sue
sex, for years. Treatment given to ladles suf?
t tho Institution. Wives, Mothers and Daughh
and diseases by mail, free, by sending symp>f
your friends who are'sufferlng from disease,
, and our advise may euro von. Knoloee two
nentlon this paper. Faithfully yours,
CAI* INSTITUTE,
ISTTJITX)^, 2ST. Ti
4 1w
'J
ONE MAN S CASH AS GOOD
AS ANOTHER'S AT
LUDDEN & BATES'
Southern Music House
Only House in America Selling
Pianos & Organs
On the One Price System.
ONE UNIFORM PRIOE to ALL,
AND THAT THE LOWEST
KNOWN.
The usual system of selling Pisnos and
Organs is for the dealer toehsrgeany price
he can get for them without regard to either
a fair profit or the customer's interest. But
we are proud to say that this has never been
our method of selling.
For the benefit of purchasers and to seon
co I lio m 11< a full ? I 1 ! * *" """ ^
vmv ?hviu ?uv iuii vaiuo vi mcir muiirj , wc
estaolialicd at the outset of our business,
twelve year* tinee,
v The One Price System,
and to this we attribute our immense and
prosperous trade. Selling on this square
basis renders it imperative that the price be
the very lowest one that can be given. We
are pledged to this. We always have done
it, and we always will do it. It's our creed
and our practice. No niher I'iano aud Organ
House deals on this principle.
Our prices, in plain figures, are placed
on every instrument. A child can buy as
low as the sharpest trader. All other Houses
have "High prices and give discounts."
The "One Price" system saves time in
tradiug, and is the only satisfactory way to
buyer and seller; for, on the high prico and
discount system, even though the customer
buys, he is not sure that he has bottom
prices.
THE WORLD S BE8T MAKERS.
OHICKRIIINO, MASON A HAMLIN,
MATH 1)811 KK , ARION,
LUDDKN A DATKS. PACKARD ORCII KHTR A I.
Over 300 different styles to choose from.?
Makers' names on nil. No Sleneil Instruments
sold. ELEGANT PIANOS only $200. BEAUTIFUL
OHO ANS for $50. Easiest Installment
Terms, tent on 15 days' test trial. No money
required until Instrument is satitfactory. Privilege
of exohange within six months. Eeery^
inducement that any retfontibU House can offer.
Competition with the world. Don't fail to send
for our Catalogues and Price Lists, 1883.?
Address.
Ludden k Bites' Southern Music House,
SAVANNAH, OA.
The Ureal Wholesale Piano and Organ Depot
of the South.
May 16 20 1/
A .Tail Doinl?. X. C., AprlTf*k j
?All the prisoners in jail at Sraitlifield, N.
escaped last night.
The Continental Oil Works, at Denver, Colorado,
were destroyed hy fire on Wednesday
night. The loss is estimated at $125,000, partly
insured in several companies.
Another Flood in Arkansas.?Helena. Ark.,
April 12.?The water is rushing through the
Old Town break in tho levee. Many plantations
are again overflowed and the water is within
two feet of the late rise.
Thk Darlinoton Cotton Factory.?It has
beau decided to make the Capital stock of tho
Darlington Cotton Factory $200,000 instead of
$100,OOC. The shares are $100 each and are
selling like hot cakes.
Crowlet's Successor.?The attorney general
l... ? ? s- > -
..ppuimcu ncnjmiiin liiiiicrwortli otOhio,
special Uniteil States attorney to assist in
prosecuting the South Carolina election cases,
ice Richard Crowley, resigned.
Tho Government work under Oen. Ilobt. Ransom
on Trent River, an irrportant stream near
Ncwbern N. C., is great success. A .large
J earner made tho flrat trip -up . tha
tcrday penetrating Ihlrty-iiTe miles. It opens
up a fine section to steam navigation.
Bloom Revrnor.?Chattanooga. April 14.?
Je so Campbell yesterday murdered Wm. Sakes
and his wif?, who lived near Decatur, Ala, by
cutting open their heads with an axe. Campbell
had been accused by the murdered people of
slandering Mrs. Sakes.
Aj? Arkansas Marshal Indicted.?Little
Rock, April 12.?The United States grand jury
to-day indicted ex-United States Marshall J. T.
Brown for forgery, purjury and presentation of
falso accounts while he was chief clerk under
the late Marshal Tarran.
Careless Enrollinu.-Montgomery, Ala., April
12.?The Supreme Court holds that the revenue
law passed by the last Legislature is void because
of tho omission from the bill as enrolled and
signed of certain words in the bill when passed.
This puts the State on the old revenue law, unless
the Governor calls an extra session of the
Legislature. The new law reduces the tax to
five and a half mills.
.
Heavt Losses on Wiirat Transactions.?
London, April 13.?A few months ago large
quantities of American wheat were bought for
forward delivery, it having been assumed by
purchasers that the continuous bad weather
would cause prices to rise. Contrary to expectations,
however, there has since been a decline
ot five shillings per quarter. Heavy losseA have
' thus been caused in London and tho I'rnwinro. -
and a number of failures are probable.
Notorious Characters Captured.?Chattanooga,
Tenn., April 14.?News reached the city
yesterday of the capture of Andy Taylor, one of
the notorious Taylors who captured the train on j
the E. T. Va. & Ga. railroad last fall, murdered |
the Sheriff and his depot) and liberated their
brother. One of the three brothers was killed '
several months ogo. There is F8.000 reward >
for the other two. He was captured near Em- <
poria, Kansas. '
Hite, one of the James gang, was captured to- i
day atTonesboro by a Chicago detective. I
ThkHaytikn Revolution.? Lewes, Del., April
12.?The brig Jamts Miller, from Mi<-ngone, ,
Hayti, confirms the report of the revolution
headed by lloyer Boxselais, On March 31st two
steamers arrived with Government troops, and
the battle resulted in the Government fcrces being
scattered, with a loss of 85 killed and 350
wounded. The loss of the revolutionist was ?,
slight. On April 1 the Government steamers,
left apparently driven away by the arrival of a 1
Spanish frigate. Tho shipping in port was
undistuibcd by the revolutionary party.
A Cyclone in Newberry-.?Last Friday night ^
a furious wind, hail and thunder storm passed
over Newberry. It struck the town at 11 oclock *
P. M. and lasted about five or ten minutes.? g
The two story brick building adjoining Mr.
Cline's work shop, two chimneys on the opera c
house, a large oak tree in front of Mr. Coppock'a a
resilience and a number of fences about town
were blown down. At the old McCracken place [
in No. 4 the wind storm was terrific. Mr. M il- i
liam Wicker's corn crib was leveled with the""j
ground, and the roof of Mr. Calvin Baker's gin
house was blown off. We learn that the storm |
was felt and damage done in various parts of
the County. In places the hail was vory severe, ;
but it did no injury. In town, on the Brooklyn
ide, houses quivered and*quaked before the j
wind as if about to be hurled frntu their foundations
and for a few minutes the quaking inmates
were in a very trying suspense-?Herald.
CoNCKAi,r.i> Wrap nr.?Tlio sixteenth volume ?
of Shand's reports, just out, contains a very in- f
teres!lug and important decision construing
the act forbiding the carrying of ooncealed c
deadly weapons. It is the first decision that a
has been rendered by the -Supreme Cou.t upon
that subject and it might be well for all our read- F
ers who make a practice of carrying pistols to (
read it carefully with a view to keep themselves
within the requirements of the law. The Court v
held that "where one is indicted under the act t
of I880for carrying a pistol concealed about his
person, he has a right, on dem tnd, to ha7e the
jury oxplicity instructed that it wns necessary 8
to a conviction, that the State should prove that f
the pistol was concealed about his person. The
offense is complete under the Statute, if prohib- l
itcd weapon is so concealed as to he generally j
hidden from ordinary observation. It is not
necessary for conviction to prove that the wea
pon was eutirely or completely hidden from ob- s
servation.?Press and /fanner.
. #?- --
Brkwstkr Vbrsiis Mki.ton.?Columbia. April. ?
11?I have heard authoritatively to-day of two g
interesting lettero. One was from AttorneyGeneral
Brewster to ex-Governor Manning, who F
was an old college mate of his, assuring liira v
that he had no heart in this work of prosecuting
the white men of South Carolina, but that ^
he was unable to help it, that he had no feeling ii
against our people and that Melton was the
cause of it. Melton, he said, hnd reported to
the Government that there was cause for the J
prosecutions and that conviotions could and
would be had.
Brewster's statement in the above letter deserves
at least a semblance of truth from the c
other letter to which I have alluded, and which
has been read by prominent gentlemen. It is a ?
latter from Melton himself in reply to a Re pub- (
lican of Sumter County, who wrote to Melton
to entreat him to abandon tho oaee against Su- v
pervisor of Registration Qaillard. Melton in n
his reply said that he would grant thaprequest
in this instanoe, but asked him not to make suoh 8
a plea again, for although those prosecutions
might have no effect now they would bare great
effect on the election of 1884.?Cor. Newt and j.
Courier.
.e- ? i
Youth is in danger until it learns to loik i
upon debts as furiost c
* /
f
i '
pw much a man is like old shoes;
Tor instance, both a soul may lose ;
Both hare been tanned, both are made tight
By cobblers. Both get left and right.
Both need a mate to complete,
And both are made to go on feet.
They both need healing, oft arc sold.
And both, in time, turn all to mold.
With shoes the last is first; with men
The first shall be the last ; and when
The shoes wear out they're mended new.
And when men wear out they're uicn dead too.
They both arc trod upon, and both
Will tread on others, nothing loath.
Both have their tics, and both incline,
When polished, in the world to shine ;
And both peg out,?and would you choose
To be a man or be his shoes ?
MtmuKttous Strikers.?Springfield III., April
lft,?The situation nt the roiling in til is becoming
very serious. The mill lias been filling up
with non-union men quite rapidly of late and
members of the Amalgamated Association seem
to be getting dospcrate. Assaults on the men
who have taken llio places of the strikers are of
daily occurrence. Several of them have been
badly beaten. Yesterday a party of t wp or thraaJ
Ivti fU .yi tof a Walk into ttu wuniry. They
were followed by*a party of strikers, and when
aboat imt miles distant they were beaten and
thrown off a bridge. Two of (lie number hare
not returned, and one is said to be very serions1>
injured. Two or three physicians left lust
night to attend them, but becoming alarmed returned
without reaching the spot.
The crowning infamy in the series of outrages
heaped upon these working men was perpetrated
last night. A parly of them was leaving I lie
mill about 7.30 o'clock. They had hardly got
AMlttiitA <1. - 1 ?' '
.....Mv ...? gubiwure ?urn h gang oi sinkers
opened fire od them with rifles, sliot gitns and
pistols, and it is said that fifiy shots were tired.
John Waldrnn, a young man who recently arrired
from Pittsburg, fell dead. Thirty-four
buck shot had penetrated his side, breast, throat
and face. Ilrainard Mulkunt was shot in the
chest and arm. His wounds arc serious, but it
is thought that he will survive. Samuel Itritton
received a slight wound. Great excitement
prevnils. No arrests have yet been made, as
the murderers, who tired from an ambush, are
unknown. The working men are unarmed and
ex< ;?ss their determination to run the mill.
A Gallant old gentleman by the uauic of
Page, finding a young lady'sglove at a watering
place, presented it to bor with the fob
lowingj^words :
If from your glove you lake the letter G,
Your glove is love?which I devote to thee."
To which tho young lady returned the
following neat answer :
"If from the Page you take tho letter I*.
Your Page is age, and that won't do for me."
What seed shall we aow ? is the all important
question with the farmers iu seed
time, especially as we arc told that as we
tow, of any kind ot seed, we shall reap the
tauie grain in the harvest season. So, too,
in the spiritual world, in the formation of
s.iaracter, in the unfolding of a barren or
fruitful life. The poet well says :
A wonderful thing is a seed.
The ono thing deathless forever ;
The one thing changeless?utterly true,
Forever, old and forever new,
An fickle and faithless never,
Plant blessings, blessings will bloom ;
Plant bats, and hate will grow;
uu cnu bow io-uBjr. lo-morrow will bring
I'he blossom that proves what sort of thing
Is the seed, the seed that you sow.
Wo don't call it stealing when wc take
vhat belongs to others, because wo expect
o return the loan some time and then forget
ill about it. The difficulty with us is that
tur memory is defective, not that our morals
ire bad. A colored gsntleuiau has the true
>hilosophy of this matter and he puts it
nto poetical form, as follows :
wasn't Htcalin' when I went nnd fetched de
wood away,
"or ebery stick I spected to return some oder
day ;
tn' if a man hain't bory wood dot's layiu' out
ob nights
,'d like for you to tell me what's de use ob equal
rights.
Soaking Seeds.?I am often asked
vhnthcr it does any good to soak seeds beore
sowing them ? In general I believe it
loes more harm than good,nnd if done at all
good deal or judgment should be used to
irevcut mischief. Thus, peas, beans and
oru aro nfteu soaked to hasten germination,
rith the belief that they will eoinc a day or
wo earlier, but in ca?c the weather is cold
tud wot for some time after sowing the
ccd it will be more likely to suffer injury
rom the woather than if sown dry. Care
s required iu steepiug seeds that foruicntaion
does not occur, which will frequently
;il! tho (feed. To steep seeds in chemical
oiutious with the belief that this will answer
n place of fertilizing tho land. I believe is
hecr humbug and imposition upon common
cose. The only chemical stuffs that have
itovedUiscful, so far as I know, arc the blue
itriol to destroy germs of suiut, strychnine
o destroy srows and blackbirds, and smearng
of tar on ccrn seed for protection from
heso birds.? W. I). ]'hi/brick, in New
England Farmer.
Johnny'* mother trim reading to him akout
leuolincss. "In Africa," she read, "It is
readful to think there nrc many benighted
ribes who do not know what Roup is, and
rho do not wash from one year's end to
nother." " Wiss I was 'nightcd tribe,"
J T_l
Jk IU tfUIIIIUV.
A Young lady, having rend ftbout n man
laving invented a stove which will consumo
ta own smoke, hopes he will next devise a i
nethod whereby tobacco smokora can be ran
in the sauie economical principles.
DIYORCS*
IIartford, April 1G.?The sequel to the i
elopement of Miss Nellie Hubard, the youn.
gest daughter of ex-Governor Hubbard, and '
her marriage to her father's coachman, Fred- l
crick Shepard, four years ngo.hasjust been >
made knotvn to her friends here, who learned ?
for the first time to day that Mrs. Shepard <
had secured a divorce from her husband, t
The story of Miss Hubbard's hasty action, in 1
deceiving her father and marrying a man 1
so far beneath her, not only in the social i
but in the intellectual scale, has had the t
ending which such stories generally do have '
?repentance at leisure for what was done 1
in haste. Miss Ilubbard, who was at the
tiuio a young girl scarcely 18 years of oge> 1
was secretly married to Shepard at West- '
Geld, M ass., on March 11, 1879, while her 1
father's family were absent from IIartford. I
Shepard, who was about 30 years old, had j
| notes at st>:.w.*wW iur cx-TjrOv?frnor llubbard I
for about u year and a half. So fax as his I
' character wcut, very little could be urged
against hiui, except that he had formcily
been a hnckrnan, a fact from which it wak
argued that he must havo been accustomed
to associate with characters of doubtfu'
morality. lie was a young fellow of good
address, and did not drink or swear, but
he was very illiterate. Miss Nellie undertook
to teach him to read and write, am
while engaged in this laudable effort to bene
fit his condition she lost, or imagined that
she lost, her heart. The fact of the marring'
was not made known to ex Governor Iluh
bard until March 22, eleven days after tin
ceremony, when the marriage certificate
was sent to hiui by tho groom's parents
His daughter was preparing to leave th
house to join her husband when the doer
mcnts was placed in his hands. The hear
broken father conrrouicu tier with the cc.
tificatc, and she then candidly acknowledged
that she was married to Shepard, declared
with the cuthusiasui of a woman in love
that her husband was fully worthy of her
and left the house to join him despite the at
tempts of the grief stricken father to retail
her. From that time to this Nellie's nam'
it is said, has been a forbidden word in th
nousenoiu 01 ex Uovcnor Hubbard. Th
old gentleman disowned the girl who ha
hitherto been his favorite child, and pos
tivcly refused to receive any coinmunicatio
from either her or her husband.
After the sensation created by he*j^*M'?.?
riage had died away, Mrs. Sliepai
quietly out of sight of her former aristm.
tic friends, and she would have bccu almos
forgotten but for her proceedings to sccurt
a divorce, which have once more revive,
the memory of her romantic marriage.?
Aftor the wedding the couple remained
in th is city for about two years. For a
few days they kept themselves perfect!;
secluded, and Shepard feared to show himscl
in public lest ho should be assaulted by h:
former master and now father-in-law ; b'
finding that the ex-Governor took i
more not ice of him than if he were dead, I
secured a clerkship ia a Hartford shoe stor
where he worked faithfully. His younj.
wife had plenty of money at this time?
some that was hers in her own right, ant
more, it is said, froui the rcadv nurse of he
J I -heartbroken
mother, who, while bowir
meekly to the will jf her husband, eoi
no? suppress all love for her darling chi
The couple lived very happily foij.ft time, .inu
a child was born to them, a girl, to cement
their union. Abcut two years ^o they removed
to New Havcp/where Shepard started
a large livery stable in State street with 1
money furnished by his wife and her friends. 1
The stable is connected with a large hotel,
and yields quite a revenue to Shepard. who '
is still running it. They engaged a cosy '
cottage iu a pleasant street, and here for a
lime all went well. l>ut the domestic peace (
was to be shattered in Now Haven. Mrs.
Shepard became tired of her unlettered '
husband, and they began to find that their 1
tastes in almost everything ran in counter
directions. Shepard attended strictly to
his business, and Mrs Shepard, who was not 1
received with open arms by New Haven c
society, showed her contempt of the fash ^
ionablc world, of which she had formerly 8
becu a belle, by purchasing a dog cart and 8
? I. :?l. ? -t. ? '
a aumwuiii wim which sue appearcii v
in the streots, elegantly attired, on every '
pleasant day. The beautiful woman nalu '
rally attracted admirers, and among them f
one is said to be an aged and wealthy mans r
ufacturer of New llaven, and auother a 1
mi'lionairo of New York, who frequents 1
the Turf (Hub in that city. Shcpard became
jealous of his wife, with or without
cause, and the result was that the two scp^ 1
arated several months ago and have not
lived together since. 0
Whtu ihc breach occurred Hhepard wont 1
to livo at a hotel, and his wife remained in
the cottage with her child. The hnsbaud c
called frequently to sco his child, and on t(
such occasions Mrs. Shepard left the two
together, Some four months ago she gavo h
up her cottago and went to live in the Sel? ci
New Unven. The breach btf- . ^ ^
tween her and her husband was enns' t it?f
widening, although it was very apparent
that Shopard still idolized his wife. Sonic
ihtcc idol (lis since, when the rumor that
she w.is seeking for a divorce was first
spread, a friend of Shepard's spoke to him
)n the subject. He t ried like a baby then,
ind said that he had always been true to
tor, aud should always love her devotedly.
He acted like a child that was being punshed,
refused to believe that his wife would
tsk for a divorce, and scouted to be confident
bat she would ultimately return and live
with him.
It is tlioiglit by some that Mrs. Shepard
having disembarrassed Iter?elf of her plebeian
husband, will be welcomed hnel in !>< r
fathers bouse, but the geucral opiniou is
that cx-Govcrnnr Hubbard will never recall
the denunciation which he pronounced
njiainnhis daughter four year? n?0.
Cooking Rice?A Rome, Ga., correspondent
says: I think the following an
excellent way to prepare rice. Put into a
saucepan six cupfuls of broth iD which
some tomato sauce or the pulp of tomatoes
boiled and passed throught a sieve has been
iissolvcd ; salt and pepper it to taste. Lot it
:ouiC to !i boi! ; add for every cupful of
itock half a cupful of tico washed clean and
Iried. Let it remain on tho fire till all
tock is absorbed by the rice; melt a large
>icce of butter and pour over the rice.?
\fter removing from the fire siir the rico
ightly to separate the grains.
Gumbo Soup.?Cut up and fry brown
n half a pound of lard, one chicken, four
mions and four tablespoonfuls of I rowned
lour. To this add four raw Irish potatoes)
licfd, and a gallon of water ; season with
lalt and popper ; add so.nc pounded whole
doves and allspice tied up in a bit of coarso
liuslin. to bo taken out V ef.iro a.?riMnrr?.
?..
before dishing up add two tablespoonfub
>f dry sassafras powder. In summer okra
nay be substituted and two quarts of peeled
oinatocs. Hoi I a pod of red pepper with
t for i moment.
Thcro is always a spot in our sunshine ;
t is the shadow of ourselves.
Whoever makes too much or too little
f himself has a false measure for cveryhing.
Advance the upright and act aside lie
rooked, and the people will be submissive
3 the laws.
The years write their records on human
carts, as they do on trees, in hidden, inner
irclcs of growth which oocyo cau so?.