The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, October 18, 1883, Image 1
VOL VII. NO. 7- , BARNWELL. C. H., S. C., THURSDAY,' OCTOBER 18. 1888.
i
< Brioksfi«d been taken ont, the hearth
tdknnp, and the wainaooatioga pulled
.^n aweeW down* Even the backboards of piotnre-
frames had been taken out, and the
bojfhadd' around the roots every
tree in Jnaad, bat still 1 Bo m&$f‘
had bee' t<l. The reward was too
large / ist, bnt I was nearly at oty
wits’/ ; Finally, I asked lot a horse
and W k J I wanted to drive abont a
bit and settle my mind. As I rode of,
the brother of the deceased said, ‘Ton’ll
find thMarm well laid off, he surveyed
it him^ell’
'‘These words kept coming to my
mind. The man hadn't concealed the
money & the houre, that was evident;
nor in the barn, for he seldom went there.
Why should he use the roots of trees or
stones, if he knew how to survey ? The
thought came like i flash.
“ ‘Where 4as the dM|gentleman ip the
habit of sitting V I asked.
'“Oh, he almost always sat by
that window,’ said the brother, ‘but
we’ve pulled everything-to pieces around
there.
“ ‘Sit down just as he did.’ The man
sat down.
HIDE MOT#.
ujr
*T h * T ® ^1 6 at tor very oftentn
my time,” said n sldeily detective, ‘yi
•carok for monel<oncea]ed by eooenfce
P®°pln Ther^lk more of this hidin
away of cash foft years «go than then
“now, owing pwlubly to the doubtful
character of soma of the old savina
banks. Still thernds more of it nov
than most people suppose, and whenever
a bank breaks the teapots and old stock-
mgs come into use again. Then, too,
here are persons wh4 have a delight in
concealing' mohey in'such a way that
they can get a sight at it now and then,
or ^ in whick it is concealed.
of ^ search ?
l w °rk set m^lh^ ds are%njy too opt to de-
ifeat the ends for whi^i they are put in
operation. Cjir proceedings depend
wholly upon circumstances. The char-
oter, hahM» K asd ssuvouBdluga «f Uy;
^oeal|»-W to be considered. A
i of human nature and an apt-
Pweefeng the aignifleanoe of
in nlnsMs of facts are especially
needful. X. *
‘‘For instttSfJC whs ones sent for to
find the numsy of a man over in New
Jersey wfto hod fUbd suddenly, and left
no visible trim of his wealth. The
family had jn4j'4 /careful, systematic
search before f sMiad. I learned that
he^wss not iiiiqMfy, and inferred that he
had not used S&y of those complicated
methods of esMsalsseat which an
of the miser f akief dharaoteriittoa.. I
found that hie hosiness took Um In-
quently frorTtefc^bd that he ha<H<i»
I asked what roopi
fnd they agid^’all
that they 'had
in which lie
to be. I asked
possible kind,’* said
*t get him to wear
merlybeen
he nsnally
over the hoeae, J
fully examined
had ever bee*,
abont hit eioth
“ ‘Oh, the
hie wife. ‘We
anything deeent
“ ‘May I
“ 'Why, we 1 e^keen all through it
with knittinf Of (Htte^hnd my girls ripped
up the lining* everywhere, bnt we found
nothing, suAgi re the old thing*' away. ’
“I indited, M econo, upon seeing the
dothce. Ton see, sir, I reasoned in this
way: The
therefore
meailtef
lymrfesh.
judged (hat
Ids person.
w*|Jwot,e miser,
no extraordinary
t; and he oonstant-
>y* from home, So I
hia money upon
set down as a gen
eral tnls this mast men who conceal
money like to hare it a% near thorn as
possible. The M that he did not de-
aire to sMS hwSny particular room
showed th sty tsuey wss not hidden
in • room. JK WIS either in his clothing
m buried WPHfct**, » fh?o*ite phioe
for hiding mSBfT. -Bat he had been a
sailor. t » characteristic of a
Sor nottoder o»l mofteywn shipboard;
the risks from h» and water are too
vraeA Thhi' i> g would be likely tc
SattonslS* ’ “ —
ashore. Thw
habit of pttrji
you see, there l
gnen. >
clothes is »t
w'-
out snoc
binding i 0
bound,’ <i hi*
sewers.’ J"
soon had
Ue had settled down
too, a sailor is in the
his pay with him. So,
re good reasons to my
me oae brought the
and very shabby-look-
west ewsr them with-
J iny eye caught the
always kept them well
wife; ‘sailors are goflB
inding was wide, bnt we
. and there we found,
folded length** W4 protected with
‘ oiled *tk f fo« H. 0 00 bonds. A synte-
search “ good as w
gw-rr« « I P eri * , ^ p^* 00 -
•<Tes, thest sre men who conceal
we ehh s*»y}°» their Itoasee. Crimi-
fS d°
ids it, botwheit jthey
almost sore to hide il
they pern most <
# ’• -
i ago I went up to
ooonty, ss
sal
and bronxe image#, in vaaea with the
bottoms covered inside with plaster of
Paris, in black bottles weighted with
mercury and marked poison, in canes,
shoes, and vest linings, in tomato cans
and te* canisters, in. cracked walk cov
ered with wall papec, in all sorts of bed
ding and upholstery, sad in almost every
conceivable place.
“What is the best wsy to conceal
money ? I can’t say; but I will tell yon
about ft man whose method was a good
dgal talked about at the time among the
detectives. He was a bachelor, and well
known as a ‘concealer.’ He died of heart
disease, in Broome street, some years
ago. Many attempts had been made to
rob him, bnt without suoqpm. Thieves
ran off one night with all his clothing,
and ripped it to pieces, only to be disap
pointed. When he died, everything was
broken up to find his money. The cellar
had been dog ont to the extent of three
feet, the roof broken apart, and the eaves
exargined to no purpose. When they
were clearing ont the rubbiehj/juat alto
I'arrived, some one knocked down a
rickety shelf above the mantelpiece.
which was covered with old letters, med-
“ ‘In which direction waa he moet apA icine phials, dusty newspaper scraps.
to look?’
“‘Nowhere in particular; out of-the
window generally.’
'“Toward the horn f
“ ‘No, tUfway.
“I followed the look; it was in the line
of an old, used-up pump.
“ ‘Which way did he walk wheh he
went out to the field?’
‘Over to the pump, and then madeji
bee line to the pond 1’
“These answers had a certain signifi
cance. Men like .to have the place of
concealment in sight, sad it is well
known that they Will often walk over
money they have buried to see that the
«o<l is undisturbed. I had the pump
taken np and the excavations made—no
taoney. The pump was replaced. I
entered the room once more and stood
by the window. ‘Suddenly I saw a
bat peculiar-looking mark on tl\<
surveyor's point. I •‘lined
it np to the pt&ppMMpured out totht
exact centre of flic line. aRW^aiMn^ginp
began. A two-inch steam pipe wa.'
graok at a depth of four feet. The enc
was plugged; I took home a $500 bill
that night
“I had a curious ease two years agtfc
A wealthy man had been attacked with
partial paralysis, and his speech and
the greater part of his memory had left
him. He wrote out tho question
‘Where did I put my money?’ Th«
amount was large, $82,000 in bonds,
which he had been abont to take to >
safe deposit bnildiug. The heirs were
wild. I stopped all the tearing up and
cushion-picking business, to the man
was 4tot a concealer, though it was sup
posed by the doctors that he hod felt the
atta*|c coming on and had pat the money
falBQtne out-of-the-way place. Just how
or fa what spot in his library he had
fallen, could not be made ont. After s
day’s reflection my partner and I had
to conclude that he had been robbed.
Two qaatiea were open to us; we oould
make jyjuii arrests without say real
evidepoe/$ikwsys a hateful course for a
good detective to take, or we must find
the exact spot where the man fell and
‘line’ np from that The doctors helped
.ns here: ‘Ton had better examine the
gentleman’s body/they -said. We did
so, and found a long horizontal mark on
the hip, and bine marks cm the knee and
elbow. He had fallen sidewise over an
object not over sixteen indies high, and
having a narrow, rounded edge of metal,
for an iron mark was found on the cloth-
and other worthless rubbish. A quarter
of an hour later one of the heirs, a girl
of sia years, wa* found seated tm the
floor in a pile m bank notes, to which
she had vainly attempted to call her
mother’s attention on account of their
pretty pictnrea.
“That ‘concealer’ was the only really'
deep one I ever knew. The lady paid a
high compliment to the gentleman’s
acuteness when she remarked: ‘Why, no
one would ever have thought of looking
up there for money.’ ”
SOLDIERS’ HARD-TACK.
A KBOIlNIffCENCB OF THE LATE WAH.
T
THE WOODCHUCK MUST GO.
THE REPORT OF THE HPBC'IAI.
MtTTKK.
The New
BewseMve LaeMetare
HIm la Has*.
COM.
Takes
AcMethfee Sheet the CraSkers tke BaMler
Beys Filled their Haversacks wltk.
As I write, there lies before me on my
• ntebiwu iiumfl*n*ehv*fcian#racker, which
ing. Every piece of furniture in the |o getat it. It required some experienoe
• sMUgehar-
, aodjRftak try-
%
house Was inspected, bnt to no purpose.
The heirs apparent were in despair. Bal
my partner and I began to-be hopeful
“in detective wosfc, whenever yo^
come upon some detail that' seems ut
terly inexplicable, that ia the thing
which of all others must be explained;
and you feel, moreover, that in solving
the diffeeulty yon Will oome nearer in
some Unknown way. to yonfr point, We*
took all night to think the mailer over.
Then my partner said, ‘How abont the
cellar? That’s where the household
metal ia,’ They all laughed, ‘He
hasn’t been there in a year/ -they said.
We went down. My partner glanced
quickly around, and then gave me a look
that I can almost feel running through
my nerves to this day. He had dis
covered some, common household arti
cles which had not been used since the
family had been searching the flreplao^p.
He wai, in fact, looking over a lot of
coal hods. ‘There is our metallic edge^ ssseed hard-tack
he said. He turned the hods over care
fully, and from ont amlaMof waste papt*
there rolled at last the thirty-two thoa-
*sod doDars’ worth of bonds. The para
lytic hadlallen over, the hod, and the
money had dropped into it among his
ffafte papers. Before the general
seflheh wss made, all ‘rubbish’ had
beenHaken to the osllar. Our friends
had sought too deeply for what they had
supposed to Ids concealed psooey, and
groszy neglected the science of the
Some detectives do precisely
the s*a&'thing. My partner and I di
vided the flv& thousand dollars between
ns that night /''s. .
“Tee, they hide mohey in queer enough
places. I have found it ib the covers of
old family Bibles, behind nurtats, in the
bored-out legs at chain,
ttfhtjy to the waUs;
The Special Committee which was ap
pointed some time ago by the New Hamp
shire Legislature to consider the wood
chuck question. mads its report As is
well known, tbs woodchuck is the terror
of New Hampshire lenten, who de
manded early in the session that a bounty
of fifteen cents each should be put by
the State On their enemy. The petition
waa refused. Immediately the farmers
petitioned so strongly that the House
was constrained to* reconsider its action
oa the woodchuck question, and the
special oommiUes wss raised.
The report of the Committee first dis
cusses the various names given to the ani
mal, but the Committee state that they
“cannot be led a way from woodchuck
by all the savage, tribes and scientifio
dudeein Christendom." A description
follows in this wise:
“The body, svep in very young
woodchucks, is inclined to be gray—i
very significant circumstance in the
mind of yonr committee, when the total
depravity of the animal is considered.
The predatory habits of the animal make
it the oommon foe of mankind, for it is
a sneak-thief first, Inst, and all the time.
Like thieves in all climes, the wood
chuck remains securely concealed in its
hole to a great part of the day. Itsouly
purpose venturing! in forth during the
daytime is to get f tgood lay of the land.
The woodchuck devours corn, vegeta
bles of all kinds, sfen pumpkins, and it
jnst dotes on nice fpnss. Tour commit
tee was very much impressed with the
similarity existing jbetween the office
holders and the woodchuck. They both
prefer to live in clover. Tour commit
tee does not, howffrer, regard this pe
culiarity in any way as an extenuation or
palliation, either to the woodchuck or
for the postmasters. The woodchuck,
despite its deformities both of mind end
of body, possesses some of the amenities
Rto* after the manner of the squirrel,
apd^s its fur aftqr the manner of the
eat T<rieopMotitteefcjfo.ffipa. Wesat..
to be deceived by was purely superficial
observance of bettor habits. Contem
poraneous with th^ark, tha woodchuck
has not made any giaterinl progress in
it f social science, and it is now too late to
attempt to retomAhe wayward sinner.
“While yonr committee does not wish
to advance any startling theory relative
to the hibernation of the woodchuck, it
begs leave to say that it has a strong im
pression that it is a hibernating animal
Experiments oooerining this particular
feature have hem tried in various parts
of the world, and $is almost the unan-
I have faithfully preserved to ye'ata. * l«t * higher civilisation. ^ It cleans its
ii/sbont the sise and has the appearanoh ~~ *’
an ordinary soda biscuit If you take
If in yotur hand yon will find it sdmewhat
heavier than an ordinary biscuit, and if
gnu bite it—bnt, no; I will not let you
bme it, for I wish to see how long I can
keep it But if you were to reduce it to
fine powder, yon would find that
wqnld absorb a greater quantity of water
than an equal quantity of ordinary flour.
Tou would also observe that it is very
hard. "Tins you may, perhaps, think is
to be attributed to its great age. Bnt if
yon imagine that its age is to be meas
ured only by the years which have
elapsed since the war, yon are greatly
mistaken; for there was a flomiaan belief
among tits toys that oife hard-tack had
been baked taag before the nmamsnee
meat of the Christian era! This opinion
was based upon the fact that the letters
C. were stamped on many, if not, in-
all of the cracker boxes. To be
sore, there were boom skeptics wboahook
thoir heeds, sod mrfnUmod that Aeas
mysterions lexers were the initials of the
name of somVanny contractor or in
spector of si$plies. Vat the belief wm
wide-spread and deep seated that they
ware certainly intended to set forth the
era in which oar bread hod been baked.
For oer hard-tack were very hard. It
waa^ difficult to break them with the
teq^h. Boom of them you could not
fracture with your fist. Still, there wss
an immense amount of nourishment in
them—when onee yon had learned how
And no little hunger to enable one to ap-,
predate hard-tack aright, sod it de
manded no small amount of Thventive
power to understand how to took hard
tack as they ougll#\> be cooked. IS I
remember correctly, in our section of the
anqy we had not less than fifteen differ
ent ways of preparing them. In other
parts,! understand, they had discovered
on»«rliiipMJMl; but T$th ns, |f-
teen wss the Titnitntf the culinary art
when hard-tiHk wtufon board.
On the march they were nsnally not
eooked at all, but eaten in a raw state.
In onto, however, to make them some
what mors palatable, you simply out
downs shoe of nice fat pork, laid the
pork on yonr cracker, put a spoonful of
brown sugar on top of the pork, and you
had a dish At for a—soldier. Of coring
the peril had jnsl corns out of thegfekle
and wss consequently taw. Whan we
halted to coffee, we sofeetimes had fri<v
-prepared by toasting
them before hot coals. When, as was
generally the case cm a march, our hard-
task had been broken inh> aqiall piece*
in out haversacks, we (hiked these in
water and fried them in p«k fat, stirring
well, hod seasoning with salt and sut
ler’s peppeL thus making what was com
monly known as a “hkhydisahy,” or «
"hot-fired stew.”
Thus you see what vast and unsus
pected possibilities reside in this inno
cent three-and-a-half inch square hard
tack lying hate on my table boioce me.
Three like this speeimen made a meal*
andnine ware a ration; and this is what
MgMthe battle* fee the Union.-,*.
JfleAefos/ri*
THE LABOR QUESTION.
INVRMTIQATION RRFORR THR UNITED
HTaTErt RRNATK C OM H1TTRR.
Bmm latsrMttea MtattatlM Ulvra hr Fr**«
PE HpOROUS PAPERS.
WHAT WR WIND IN THEM TO RttlRSd
EVER THIS WRBK.
imoua testimony
sachla the fact,
say, takes its had
becomes torpid
men that
so they
1, end
Richard Powers, of Chicago, General
Superintendent of the Seaman's Union
of the Lakes, waa a witness before the
United States Senate Committeeman Ed
ucation and Labor. He testified that
seventy-five per oent of the sailors on
the lakes were members of tke organisa
tion. There are about seven thousand
members banded together to ameliorate
their condition, to shorten the hours of
labor, and to increase their wages. They
have improved under the operation of
the society so that they are no longer
run by the ram shop. They want the
Government to supply .some place of
refuge like Sailor’s Snug Harbor for dis
abled sailors. One abuse that ahould
be corrected is the overloading of ves
sels, which makes voyages dangerous to
the lives of seamen. The sanitary con
dition of the vessels also calls to re
form, The custom on the three thou
sand-ton steamers is to carry six men.
Many accidents occur because vessels
are shorthanded. The owners depend
more upon their machinery than they
do cu God. Probably the vessels are
well insured. If the machinery breaks
the ships have not sailors tnoughtosave
them. It is the same with passenger and
freight vessels. Before the organisa
tion the wages were s dollar a day.
As to wages now the witness said:
“We get $2 a day now. In a short
time we will get $2.60, and to a tew days
at the end of the season, $4 a day.
Borne vessels we would not go on to
less than ten dollars a day, because they
are not seaworthy. We raise the wages j
by refusing to work with those who do
not belong to our organization. The
mates, cooks, and captains need not be
long to thaodtiety. What we want is a
Piimsoll to look after the rotten vessels,
and prevent their being used when they
are nasals/’
Of the seven thousand membeh of
society, the witness said, not five
savedR&ikousand dollars
ladjCSMa*
saved fdnr handled dollars,
saved three hundred, dollart, sad: ^
fifteen hundred had saved one hundred
dollars each. In 1878 not a ■nm had
saved one thonsand Aollars, and notjtwe
men had saved one hundred doltsm,
two-thirds of ^the men MR'AnpriDjUi
citizens. , ** *
George G. Block, representing the
journeymen bakers, told the committee
that the bakers began work at 2 p. m.,
and work along np to various hours ia
the morning, sometimes a* late as 9 aytn.
of the following day. Mttt of them are
unmarried, because they oaunet
A Sensation.—A asRRsliomrkas bean
MuSS ia Baxter streati'Afc York, bj
mamagasi-a Christian
h . ter Ore* in t!A aBht Bidi.
modftmse, ia named after Iks mnob
■s*
jT\
dead. Unfortunately jar
thk infartWlfrig habit ooly goes into
Iset at that season of ft*
body cares a snap about,
or the clover crop.
lieves that this torpidity has nothing to
do with a smitten Ronarisnoe. It has
|Bea Mt(odin aosss quartern that the
paasage of the bounty law treadd amount
16 legalizing trespass, and that farms
adjacent to the woodchuck farms ought
thereby become ovnrnn and aerionsly
damaged. In answer to this >!ar com
mittee would say that it is one of the
worst of oommoafoss, and every owner
who may feel aggrieved by the bands of
eager avengers whqjpverran his seres in
the chase, must, on maturer reflection,
remember that his exemption to-day
Rriy become his liability to-morrow.
“Tour committed has given this im
portant subject a most thorough exami
nation, and finds the woodchuck one of
the wont enemies ever known Ho me
farmer; and unlessJh*. Legislature will
do something tanf^tlie State of these
animals, the dmnom are that the wood
chuck will Vsil fltip 1 its own wsy.”
5s Vacation.
Acting Postmaster-Gsffsral Hatton
says that as the *Bprop0atians t to the
tree-delivery service sre inetafficient for
current and ordinafy and reasonable de
mands upon it to additional carriers end
promotions at ea|riers and incidental
expenses, the apAication to leave of
absence for carrieiT must be declined at
least till Congress provides in the appro
priation a sumrantoient to meet the$K-
penses of granting vacation to so large
a body of man. When this ia done, the
Department will
oacricm the
relief.
Gear ov
pleased to grant tha
and greatly needed
to get married. Much of their
goes to beer., ttglfio# obtained mm
606 baton showed that only 180 urn* VlF _ _
»t $4 s week. They work in a vary hot ,
atmosphere for long hours; few have
decent sleeping rooms. Mr. Blosk
tit* sommtitaa that ttosw
employed in the bre
work long and
bakers, at wages raSrtft liomj^to
$100 s month. Only a'Ww get
wages. They formed amdp^/af 2,000
members. They were larajpa treated,
and the foreman or bom msIfttoEi toe
to please himself. / 7
Adolph Stramar, President #1 the dgar
Makers’ International Union,'gave {& the
committee an aosoant of that organiza
tion, which, be said, is pretectiVs, benev
olent, edncflbnal and moral iirita pur
pose. Last yehr it paid $1^648.79 in
sick benefits. Workmen travqUgrfHm
place to place in search of wbrmtove*
their traveling expenses paid, which b-
elades actual fares and 60 cents fof *
meal in each place. For this purpose $19,-
722.60 Wrie paid last year. Ztojfhtt
wages inwne ui
BA mao AD BOOXOMT.
'Nothing is wasted on our road,”
plained a railroad pmaiilaik who
under examination tbs other day as to
the condition of hia line. “There is no4
s oonton in the country that ntiUaes
everything as we do.”
Do you pat every thing to some me?”
inquired an Incredulous laapar. » *
We faO in nothing/' reptied the pres-*
ident "Ton can’t name a thing that ws
do not derive some bimsfll |W1H1 ”
'Ever had a Vutoout?” asked toe
“To what ate did yoa put that?”
“We watered the stok toth it!” and
the witness was aJlowed ^depart in 1*$
umph.—Traveledt Magatsbfa.
BVTDSMCa RNOUOH.
A New York broker, who left the
street three or four
received a call from a man up the river,
who announced that old Blank wis dead.
“Old Blank. Tee, I remember him;
so be ia dead ?’’ > '• ’
“Yes, and his heirs are trying to break
the wffl.”
"They are ?”
Tea, and they are going to have It he
waa crazy. They want yon as a witgess^
“Want me? Why, I know nothing off
the old man, except that I onee invested
$19,000 for him.”
“Well, that’s all they expect to prove
by you.'A *
Wlu^ehr
“Why, if you’ll ectoe into court and
swear that the old Ran let yaa havu
$10,000 to invest to him tM tog* fe
made ont When can yon oeme t r
He never went— Wall JStraet^ewi.
THAT LITTLE SROO—g!
“ Little Shildren should kffver get
angry ?” sai|Grandpa Bintoio the little
second-stoygBinks. “Uttlf Shildren
should always think twice before saying
naughty words!" -
There waa a bad boy in tha Bisks
found an old nurd
the
ont
-■ **
He got the lather all nice and mady,
pat s towel onto his chin sad palled
the razor from the box.
“Remepber whaU to)dyou this morn
ing !” he said as tha chUdrea ia amwer
to a wjnk from th^bad boy bfegan to
qaaritta “always think twice before you,
-if-- Wtot - if#* ffiT
— A — ! 1 — BdT f f J » _ |
4 ! - T ! J/ A
And then,* as Grandpa Bin)p inc%ed
at the bad boy, he tpsk another lock at
the razor and remarked that he fijrasul
he’d go on! and too if it looked tike
three or in torso Ml of tea plto
the bank, dPlao mstttr how
wfgl to iomn to
and. If he plays big and hm
tha daalar aoon fata «a to H
strock on a otod or plays
ride/ or ‘odd tod swtoT fito
against tha IridfBa,' Ik «fll
dealertime toiadtoi
^hia duly to protest tha
shuffle the oazdsso ae to kf
out cold. Ifcej *
hisayrtnq sad
are a numb
it II
plators, who srsj
’s money, sod
no notioai aa II'
whether to wtoa «r
(or emdKrorkman; in 44 unions the wages.
moves In a mys
terioos way, not his own domin
ions, but also wD leaves thsto It
is sniprising thf ^KmhedOopeimsgai
on a visit to UFli^aer-indaw, the King
of Danmark. No annonnoement has
bean made of his leaving Si Petersburg,
mine scoount had bean given at the
time torironmntanam of hia departure.
AD tiie millions of Us Mjbjeois, excepting
a very fef favgfed persona, will be
hear of hia being
W«to $14 a weak, ih.iwo nniona tha aver-
ago waa $16 a weak; and in 100 unions
troSa Which statistics were obtained the
wages variedfrom $6 to $16 s week,. The
cost at supporting % family of five was
variously reported to be from- $0 a weak
to $16 a wefk. In most'cases the so
cieties reported that the workers did not
earn enough to support them decently..
The boon of labor vary from 48 to 60
per week; without the organization the
boon if labor are from M to 90 per
w«ek. Jn the last eighteen yearn there
have been 868 strikes of dpr makers,
of which 187 have failed and 204 have
been suoesmfnL The cost of these
strikes Kafre been $288,444, bnt they
have added $1,800,000 a year to the
wageaof the strikers, and have prevented
jeductionsesUmatadto $00,000.
rare 5.56ADemons empkrrad 1*
FSLAUOHTRR aoesn.
ditto late
they did
Omtla at a
the follow-
and being ft M<
diction, rehearsed his
wise: “In that fearful day al!l
although entitled to a 1
foot. > With each blow
Englishman’* head from 1
a hnge pila of htodt Uf'
great pooii of blood dn
myshoea wertio ftB <
ful fluid that my fsU
me. dost then I felt a
•boulder, and, looking \
behold but the great i
ton .himself 1 Never shall I
majesty and difnity oA his
pressing hffl hand span
yonng friend, re«|pdto L
heavenW sake do not mato R
house of yourself/# The j
tooghter that greeted tois ate
fiat the Oofflrnor hadYsad* a
t finding I
slip tha t
wlOS flgN
ttoaaMby!
a fallow'
m • mm mm
jk raa jDtKm'i n
Ay# editor m OkieMO j
a pdk of trowsera freak
tryin^them on I
inohas too kng.
toy night, the
and the
wife and
hem them
tfinnof
brusquely refused. The
followed Ah ^ppliostiqn
atoarunl ttoaf
fore bedtime the
the grits and, cuttiai
the sga,
tiered them tha
k«hi>
turn
to ant them
The good lady, Whole
to]
wto^
baHelwa^
ing mnrir fb laooa,
lucKr JJbmthnaa
‘ *;'• the last the totoaaaa of dial
ohaMaa am if to toa |$ atl
hell emaa haok, i
hkmatoy WtoRirin
llfrahantlt a$
‘HJanl taro b* beaten V*
“Not; ‘
the frontiri of hiAempim
itiatokiMlrtlnl ittotofir for
htototoveUngo^ariOW
InWiaoop:
they hoy nothing bqt
are 5,BMvencm . __ _
honaca^kaking cigars #4,920
tome are 80,000 coolies employed; uldt-
ing tigam in Sen Franeisoo. Them are
186 branches of the International Uhion.
They have managed toi
tiie Bkaks of New York. ^
the
Btoto
titortook
rix indies frtgi
np nicely and
Half an boor
< taken with eongpuno-
oondnet, took the
catting off’slx
replaced tosto^
felt tho:
|bs too
operation on im ga**
the editor appaMad a#
ftnnday tke famfiy thonght
ohieftaa had arrived.—
^iat sick pig, in* rik
thei
t tokiij
dtise
Ter Ciariaaton (8. 0.) Nem am
th# lower i rin and
‘‘ X ,
Ths»a’u gettin’ along right smart,
the graugw cheerfully re-
plled. . ' * <
“And how Is the rest of your folks?'
continued tha-desoon,
Tha farmer said nothing but
down, picked qp an over-:
feed It ri#tt at t^e deaoriPs head
“There,” he esriafem^; “by tha time
yer git thfg ’em aaada ont o‘ yar ha’i
that Gov. Thompaon and Lieut-^
nnmbarof
4. Vand to to 000 '
*r a^Aong
i her
^ft of d«/pcmdency
tity of matches in water
and drank the solutioA At the boqpita^
tl»e rinu) rmodies were prescribed, bnt
^ Mon jVrtmfW A’-m
tVoetcR.
tisea;”
every
visible totor I
side ini
Tha
* K- ik. I »* ,i*: