HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1889-3-7, Page 6roa EBB BRoTiaas, Rag
*low* Adverourerieweiederveu rik *Writ
ora murderer
A Unieville sitechil iteyer: The- me of
IWOhleM L. Kennedytoonfined intile &gith-
tD Indna penitentiary at jefferoonSilie
Io r merder, meet angular, end Itli aiStor's
adevotilen has given his cauee teeny powerful
irked', '1/4
The OtiMB 10V which Kenney wee atilt
toprieettoourred at Greensburg Indlitna
in lliete. On that day Gen, John A. Logan
deliveeed a Greepshurg the last epeech of
bli eempedgit fer the Ittee-Preeidency of the
Voted States. David Baker, a prominent
, attorney of Greeveleing, wee standing in tne
Oros(4. IBA VaCket wait picked by a thief.
Ne Imaged the roan, but the letter Wel and
kilted Wm. Keepetly woe arreeted fox' the
mime, teed, corancted, and eget to the
itentiary.for Mann howevar, ba-
wd him tenocente and Clamorous petit
Kane hove been tent. to the GoVezeer of k-
erma
Aennete Fett. gas !APPOIT•
Ilemedy had a sister named Kate; a
'blight and intelligent woman of 25- At the
thereof her beotherte West tthe walk A Clerk
in tbe dry goods house of John Shill* ee.
in Cineitteatt, She WAS EntiOgod of the
fame:Moe of genteedy, to who she wee
greertly attached. She at onee resigned her
paceat Shillitee and took a pledRe thee ithe
"mold prove her brother *tweet if le took
all her life to dome For four years the Ites
been engegati woe this task, and she third,*
the time at her rowed is now at hand,
diffieultiee corifrouted her when she
Wipe, her mieelon. Bee' lint step wee to
takea journey through Indium in egareh of
*eidetic% She went direct to greenehurg.
Wring_ the time Kentely was in goal at
greeeelierg Sheriff Sent became convineed
that he was net guiley. When that 'Agar
berme that aim Kennedy wee at 'Gretna -
he went to her and offered to male her
all he meld. Together they teurzeyed
over the country seeking evidence They
'ebbed ell the wintry peoplewho were Pre.
am*
at the Loom Weetztv
xernia TO IOWAN Soisurato
from them gee day when they were out
together Sheriff Stant told the entuog WO3Man
Oa* he did not knew where be ;cub! find
Ferber:1y else who had witneeeed the kill -
Ho. said, he would let the Imre at -
to their beegy go in Whetever (thee.
clime, and treat he 'luck.
Keetencely agreed, end preyed that
led In the right way. The hone
wandred en with them for about two mile*,
hen they met a roan who gave a deserlp.
don of thermion who tired the she; whit*
killed Baker. Be was an sp./statues. This
deeoriptioncliel riot fit Kennedy et all. great-
ly enoceraged, they ectithined their *carob
and bend. telex* Who gem* alrallar dee
aorlption although semeedd, that the savor
looked like Kennedy.
The remit of Sheriff Stout's and Ills
Kteenedee investigation* produced * greet
sereeitien wee= they led te the Arrest of
the County kleverder, a Man named Moult:Pe
Recorder Modem, however, had but tittle
tractile fuerovipg hi innocenee. Ile WAS
at 6)st anipeatod beettuee hograly MOM.
bled Kennedy, and might ently have been
zatetakett for him. But the
=UAL DISCLOaRD TEA eAcre
the deer of the Logan pe ug there
was third men -meant who looked, just
IIkc Kennedy. The faithinl sliter won oou.
erheeed thee this third men was the murder.
en, 7.nd she uudertoole the great end clifileult
teak of solving his indentity.
Wu Kennedy now declares that she has
diecovered the third man, although the will
not yet ten. kb name. This mysterione per-
son, Recorder Moniton. and Kennedy have
all been seen by Gov. Grey of Indiana, and
be hes been compelled to admit thee if piec-
ed together In the seine room and dressed
just wake he coed not tell one from en.
other. .
Last Saturday Mils Kennedy, reletives,
and witnesses visited Gov. Gray at Indian.
*polls end laid all her evidence before rim.
She Imploreda pardon for her brother. The
Governor promised* take the mate of evi-
dence and emu:tine it closely, but as his
term of offiee then hake& only a few days
of expiration he had not the time to devote
to the meter, and conseuently It goes
aver to Ms sucioessor, govt Hovey.
Mies Kennedy has eneountered many dan-
gers in her four years' labours in her 'bro-
ther?* behalf. Many people superstitiotudy
inclined believe that she has been protected
by a special providence. They say that
every one who has been unkind to her in her
workhas mist with some misfortune, while
those who heve assisted her have prospered.
M. B. Ingalls, President of the Cincinnati,
Indians)** St Louis and Chicago and
teiesapeake and Ohio railway!was one of
tbe &OM beoome interested in her behalf,
and gave her an unlimited pais over all his
lines. When her little steak of money gams
out, he again helped her. At Greensburg
the hotel keepers furnished her with board
free of charge. Her life has frequently been
in danger during 1113r trips over the country.
Often she has arrayed, herself inmates cloth-
ing and
TIMED LOW DRINKING RESORTS,
thieves' dens, and other places where crimi-
male abound. Once, at Madison, Ind., she
WU arrested for mateuerading in boy's at-
tire, but was released when she mide
known who she was and her object.She
made several trieon to Dayton, Ohio, and
found important evidence there. Disguis-
ed as a newsboy she went from point to
point.
In Indianapelie, &tin 'Kennedy found an
important clue, and while .he was treeing
it she was hermlf shadowed by persona who
sweated her oethaving unlawful design&
At last she beeame eccatainted wIth thieve,
who knew the meaz whom she ' comiden
the murderer' Of Mr. Baker." Thertalao bald
her their Plans for.' • fugue robberies. Shi
says that the recently met a number of
"Cenoinna,ti sports who told -het that they
were at the Logan meeting, elutt they Whether loud outories vex the startled,
witnessed the killing of -Baker, and. that her air,
brother was not theMan who fired the bnl- Or in dumb agonies of lose, Despair
let. ' ' • Lifts her still face, so Ilke tranquillity;
The °Maids at the.leffersethine prisonare Though each strained heartestring break,
pretty well convinced theiritennedy ie Juno- she never shrinku ;
cent. A convict Wiut received there a few Says, "Let this ,cup pass from me," stoops
days ago who,deolared,thattopeeks from Dan- and drhiks.
EC/WYSE BLAND.
carton* Askieben ofit leotere Artist.
That portion of the medical fraternity
which mikes a epeoialty of diseases of the
era are greatly exited over a curlew: :Mice
Sion hone which* young artist, Robert Win-
ter, who resides, In °althea and has a stn.
dioin San Francisco, leaufferiug, Durtngthe
eclipse of the ewe on New /ear's Dy, Win-
ter and a party of friends were walking he
the fields near Mills College and having no
smosed glass or other object. with which to
view the eolipse they were compeliedte use
their nalaxi eye:. The sue presented snob
a beautiful epeeteele that Winter gszed at
it wadi, tlezzlea by the rep, he was cone-
Foa to withdraw his eye. As MUon. as he
could see plainly he again looked at the
eclat*, notwithstanding the'proteetteridene of
hie friends, who warned him that he would
*jure his eyes. When the moon bad reced-
ed from the face of the BIM Winter idea hie
friends for their alarm and thought flabbily
more about the matter. When he retired at
night nothing had °evened to convince hixo
that his eyes were affected, but when be
woke next morning be discovered that he
was totally blind. A light .pateed in front
ot face made no tropremon on his or*,
and he was conseime of a alight burning sera
Wien in the optic nerve*, Dr, Adolph
Rinker*, who =shoe a epeolelty of gra
meet, pretorupeeelterenter'sease *be amoetr
curious one. Ito seems that Winter had
might the focus of the sons rays at exactly
the point where the heat was so intense al
to scorch mime of the nerVett in whet phyla -
cline teem the minor of the eye, while the
delicate gene bellied the pupilwas alco
serenely effected, Winters right: eye,
under the eare of the phyehelenr is etnedualtY
recovering the Welty of eight, but the
left eye is so weriously affeetel that
there is oonelderable deullt as to
whether he will be able to ;tee it again
for wend menthe D. Berke= liana that
the most OUriOnal thin about the elute is that,
with the aia, ef the moat powerful Instru-
ment he poiseeeeet he has b000 onable to
detect Anything tuntsted in the apPerelence
of his patient's optic*. The pupil of the left
eye has been enlarged with the aid of chord,
ea* but Winter hes discovered no perceRte
ible improvemeet 1 ita eight quality. Dr
Raritan Peet that unitise POMO improvement
bike; plice eleextly he will try whet virtue
there es 1 having bia patient melee A Pro'
loreged *ileum in A deekened rem. Winter's
cue has exulted mech. inteeeet *mpg the
decors, who hese seldom, lewd of ouch 0
ettrlOtte phenomenon. A colored men in the
y of Dr Ames Simpson was oleo a
by the eclip4e. lIe looked at the
tit bis eiliked eye while crossing, the
it was two weeks been* he recover -
ht.
The movement of 8110IM swam
found to be four time" that made in The
wiuter.
One ton of coals oeplible of yieldlui an
amount of fore* cquirelent to that o aix
and two-thirds mine
In teethe, forty-two boys between 9 and
16 even at age for color blindnewe not one
made an erre* in matching colors.
The prevervetion of rail; in use le dna to
the formation of magnetic oxide produced
by the compreesiou of the rust on the
motel.
Experimenta carrlid on at Astralcan :how
that the outline of the silk worm. oottid he
cerried ott Neter north ea the MO0tIt of the
Volga.
Recent reseerches dhow thee the electrical
organs are really modified txtuseular orgets
or the terminations of nervous stem:Wee in
reneeles.
The New England Meteorological Society
proposee a loan exhibition of meteorologicel
appersens, phatograptee ate, in connection
with its fourteenth regular meeting in Bos-
ton.
There are propositions in Prance to con-
struct canals from Bordeaux to the seaboard
of the Atlantic and from Narboutne to the
Mediterranean ; total length, 330 miles, oast
$130,000,000,
The dauger from gases only in connection
with house drainage are add to be oompar•
atively easy to avoid, the main oonsideretion
being a continuous thorough ventilation of
the pipes.
To she chimed condition of a, vessel's
magnetisra by induction during a lengthy
voyage new be attributed the lop: of more
vessels thaztis nertally thought to bathe case
among maritime men.
Beeped the i3nrthen-
Great Garibaldi, through the etreets one
day
Passing triumphant, while the admiring
.throngs,
With acclamations and exultant songs,
For the uncrowned kingly man made way,
Met one poor knave, 'meth heavy butden
bowed, .
Indifferent to the hero and the crowd.
Hie zealots follcwere would have driven
aside
The sorry destitute but the good man
Leyinga kind hand on the suffering head -
"Respect the burthene" (Chant majestic;
eyed,
Re -panted, and painted on, no man saying
/Jim nay ;
The heavy -laden also 'erne his way.
Thou happy sod, Who journeyest like a king
Along a rose -strewn road, whate'er thy lot,
"Feeepect the hurtlien." Thou mayest see
it, or not,
Falcone "heart is to another-. sealed thing,
Laughtei 'there is whith hide* sob* or
t moans, -
Firm footsteps may leave blood -prints cei the
t atones.
Respect the barthen, whateemeer it be, "
ton had sent moneyttilGeeeneborgt* aseist„ , .
'in the convititim of Kennedy. Tia Convict, () heavy burthen 1 why 'tie borne, or hew,
/aye that tinetedneurderei 'Inalteejs now ; Noe know-seve those who bear, and He
serving a Heti net fortlinothete calm** the whose hand
Northern In teepenelfernehery , Has laid it on, saying, "My beloved, stand
Oity. ' - Upright -Ind take this chrism upon thy
brow,
1.4 1
A curious theng, has happened..
The election -40e mayor and 00*
-Salt Lake CilletalteLas on Mei
There werettiehr ; thee;711'
the Gentileeret. , Vert tenetliefee
Ing was shown, ,liiehetd1 ete blink
resorted toby the,p-oly - The
result, however, was that every Gentile
candidate was elected, inaluding the mayor.
"What ttetimate effect thii may have Aileen the
general' oheraotertof inunicipal" government
atinaStalt Lake it beet present intivm"),..1,4itt° Pr:3'
God's own anointed. Sore thy load may
be.
Dinna Bide the .fleart-Love
ten eenn Plattn, lononno,
Ohl dinne hide the heart -love,
Speak it oot 1 -tell it ocrt 1
A' gelid therein; come free above
0' that there is Mihe doot I
Whan, the teert wit *ye fu',
Bindle ower 1-rtuOin'' ower I
Let some drape, like /Coven's dew
Wit' sons wee thirty flower 1
Ithers cheer an weeltt yersee
We a smile 1 -we a Mlle:
Cheerfeeneee Sate like A sPella
Life's worries tae beguile 1
Angry worde cut like a sword,
Sister mire 1--brithee Wee
Speak the boneet kindly word
That mak's teal hearts entwine
life et Itt ete 00,110 ehoete
Mak' it goid 1 -mate it guid
Hurdle feeling's le nee sport,
Aft oaltshe hate tee bledd
Lift the fallen, shield the weak,
ye can 1-a" ye can 1
Aye the word o' oomfert speak,
Tee eheee yourkther-men 1
po
Whit ie eerie tied abet * port help, ebould
pest Otte- Sete merman.
Oit, 1 wonder it we ewe may meet again.
Or K forgetfulness will come with, rare
Bet thireleing thue-lilte esly give" me Wel
Andowslerheige into rave eye,' the blinding
I remember, deer, the dey when lint we
met,
That sultry Enamor day so long ago,
For new, else, we are het strangers 1 And
Ole, Gad,1 /PAW well why It meet be ie 1
I call to miud thee _golden %uterine dayt
ince to church m love, we welled t •
/other,
Tli peacefei priteere, tlie sweet text,
Wetele wed Fray,"
The liemeward etre% the clear, cloudiest
weather,
Now, thas parted by Time, the rothiess
Ocean,
Whoee weary rare are hitter warm el
pain,
vrill pot grieve, hue pray with deep demo -
thea,
Thet ." alter many (bye" we two eney
meet agabal
Nolte Levouss.
DAB Deer
11.0, tt000L
any thing stop that piano text deed
Beginning ati daylight, till midnight le
V. hammered aud pounded and mug at
and banged
yranitio pad people who ought to he henged,
I'm ewakned each morn when a eohool-
girl begin.,
To practice the :melee punlahed for
eine ;
Thou her overgrown sitter, who singe like
oow,
Keeiteup fattiest:nowt her eareeertaring row.
After diner thet tieepeo-Pialm Demands
With a horrible medley of one linger pounds
Ilrein children eerily, from hobs, and n000,
TLU 11* rackeb of discord eau lewdly be worse.
After supper *et family of musical mirth
Torment that piatto for all they ere worth;
All etreettorgen tent* that Wegnerite
All topical gongs that meth augalsh creates,
hates,
Are jingled and jams -led and warbled and
Planed
Till doge bowl in chorus and oats are afraid.
On Sundays, when decent pianos will rest,
This rattle -box nuisance is doing ita best ;
The min folks around it, with, crazy delight
Shout camp -meeting hymns with a steam -
engine's might;
Like fog -horns, liko thuoder, animals
roars
Their voioes, let loam, rattle windows and
doors,
And then ^while they take jure a moment
for breath,
Yea hear thee piano, that stops not for death!
If something don't qttencit the: piano next
door
The folks that torment ie will welter ingore.
A EZOITY-.MILE -FOX CHASE.
The Splendid Nun. Doughty "'old loan*,
gave Fort-3,1181mile sod Twelluriters.
A fox well known from Other foxes be -
cense othia unusual size, has for many mes-
ons ontwitted,the hounds and hunters of
Chester county, Pa., whose fox *otters and
hounds are not only numerous but /amens.
The Cunning big fax came to be knOwn as
"Old John," and scarcely a day has passed
during the hmitime semen for years that he
has nettled the riders and doge long and
luird. chases, only to glee them the slip at
the end.
; On Tuesday Prank MoCormlok and John
Miller, two noted fox hunters from the hills
of Upper Uwohlan, met with their pack Of
forty well-trained hounds to give Old /oho
e,nother run. They rased him on Forge Hill
at 6 o'clock in the -morning.. • ga led them
up hill and down dale towardWaynesburg,
over a *ugh (*nutty, Wailing them to the
Very edge of tir.0 whole ts ten tette.
from Forge. Hill, is the OrOw "'reeking
the eirmit of 'A eineaburg's ,OritskirM. Old
John bore away to the 'imitthevard, over the
'bills along •the betake 'hi the hieberie
Brandywine, leading the oho, sftatglat to the
yillagebiThOrndale: DeshingsorosethiPezin.
aylvenia Railroad eraelre elnioeb the 'sta.
tion, game old Reynard caroled around ' Thorn -
dale, and took hisbaoltereek. The distance
dirtiest from Wayneibtirg Thotridele is
tivelve, miles. Back over thohille Old John
led the way again, and_once ntore trailed
abed Waynesburg,' and, now hard' Preeeed
by the hoends, again.tented southward,' ,Ati,
7 otzlookin the evening, five miles below
Waynesburg, at Roakville,•thetrall Weeniest.
The scent„ was not ,fonnd, again, but the
keened:I, maeciiiiiingefert it, discovered
Old 'John in a deep ditels, Into whien•ne_li;ly
*reinstated, he had jumped and dragged hini-
delf. to a hiding, phew. ,eThe e ',ditch; was ego
deep that ther.dage:Mildpee plebe° it, and
when the liiiiitete.ereMee. tjti t thee peek were,
clustered piiti.,',hingniotaianit; lead
ohortte atithetaattititthtte fimentrdeneln,
earth. '
ut know -within it thou art carrying ite."
tBy Dinah //tar* ldttlock.
They Were Too Previous.
Old John was oaptared alive, and the hunt-
, ere who had fun,,theitilly fax doweegot Indy
cheeps se they returned heirtui.' 'The chase
had;lasted thirteen hones, and covered more
they date. Melee: Old Jelin 'the, 'hit/get:1r,
for. ever seeit ,thee Cheister "Ceitteey hill..
He will havea chance te oia,:tfrme
oamang .n(14)0,4,018
Aayy, when he Is be bedeOpPecit for „e &lie&
hob:nand.. and^ over , 169,
A couple of burglars were trying to effect
their entrance into a house. he master of
the -establishment heard than, and, "opening
? the window, he courteously observed, "You
had better come again after a while, gent-
ileums:4- as we 'haven't gone to bed yet."
Flints in Sieepinit-S00144-
Au ides somehow prevails, that planta
drew vitality frem peeple, end that certain
planes, the "live•forever," for instance, ere
SAMOA.
There are eight of the Samoan Islands, all
volcanic: in origin, and ettnated, about nine -
specially dangerotte to BAOlt perapia. Tee; teen hundred tittles southwest of the kla-
tooeono
ettetne
ngoslurrstheonnindrawamweoateftreaoryotro
as walian Stour,- They ore he the direct line
h
of the Amerlian steamers runrong from San
and vigor from another. Theo notious are Veanoleco to Auckland, New Zealand, and
wholly erroneous. There is no philsophy Sydney, andtheyaro pemorevlbieto
seeseennanue4lnetugel
in them. A well person will lose no mo* advantagee, w
vitality in rubbing an invalid than he would 'United. States thau to any other country,
in rubbing apogee Vitality bearded through BY booty that country postieeees the harbor
rhu blood and the nerve!! ; through the blood ot Pago-Rago, the most beautiful, the larg-
M the form et nourishment, aud throeghthei 444s and safest barber in Polyneeiaif either
nerves by means of living impulses. There of the two projected gaols is ever bibbed,
is no chained by which either blood or nerve thie will updoebtedly be the MOBt important
force can be conveyed from one nem= to and valuable station in the Facifie, and he
another. If the Cettneetion is severed be, time of war would :command nearly all of
tweeo the brain and the band!, as fA ON* of the oommeece itt that eteasti and would be
retie]. Prairie, PO SoMmUtt of will -power lu invaluable to whatever power might possess
the inditiduel will -10400 to Centred motion it. Of ite value and Importance Germany
ID th0 hand. Much less can this will -power is well aware. The Germans find it proflt-
be tet another, able to run s. Una Of AMatners front Sydney
Now, plants hreathe through their /eaves to Apia.
very much as human, beluga do through their The climate 111 moist and tropical; OeVert
lungs. A plant decompose the carbon* of the fieeet texture and (vireo of the beet
acid it takes ur, and uses the carbonin build, eptality are produced, and sugar -vane grows
cinagiunpthweooadiry. AbeThrieWphroilecetasheortyage4Alligiovaren, abundantly when pleated. Copra, the dried
bon dioxide is, equivalent to eating. We
need, air se well as food, The Oxygen WO
breathe does not band' up the thine"; but
it is a purifier, -it vitalising agent by Mealli
of which we are able* perry on ail the pro,
epees of life. We need oxygen to utilize
the food. we eat, and the plant must breathe
in oxygen for the purpose of building up
woody fiber. It ie e very mien thief; thee
planta ami animal* grow meetly clereeg the
eight. Invalide get well mostly during the
night. Diming the day -time, the valetas
Aotivitte* of brain and muscle prevent oppete
tunity forlmildieg up Fel growtb. Therwg
the deg, plante take IA a lore of earl:mu
and during the night it is used In the e4r0;
eon%) ofgrowth and repair. Wee e
platit breathee oxygen just as we do, end
it doet uct petrify the Or as much as it 4001
its the daylime. There are certain platen:
which threw very strong ode*, tebereeent
for extroPlos and thee* are objectioeteele
A eleepieg.reent. °there, such as below,
pinetreee, eto., throw off volatile perfume*
which are very beneficial. Thole volatile
adore have the power of converting oxygen
tete ozone, which deateroye nearly alt. kinds
of oextaue vapors and germ.
As a, ride, the presence of plants in a
eleeping-reent ie a matter ot contequeeee,
if the room is properly ventilated. ,A rope
etas more air withplente 1st it than other.
wiee. It is something like pleolug mother
euireel in the velem. ,Ana plant in full
bloom requite' mare oxygen tbsin OUR SIMply
in feline,
Anettnlaelen
The Anstalt= girl la tali and slender,
She ,Ieeks semewhet in complexion, hut gen•
erelly she le probe . The Victorlen girl Is
decidedly goodelooking. The New Zealend
girl ha* e far better oemplexion than the
agreement haying been reached, the confer-,
eine adjourned until autumn, in order that
each member might consult hie government.
It was :dill taken as a matter of course that
the etatus quo would be preneryed. Bub
Germany had a way of her own, She re-
solved to act independently, proteot her own
mtereets, and dentand eatiabetion of Mal et
toe for the reit and guaranteesfor the future.
The domande of the german oereul were
immiliatiug and overbearing the extreme,
and of such a mauve that it must have been
ftreseen (and probably so intended) that
Malletoa could not pimply with them in
the few hovers *Rowed him, Two days
later' the revolutioniet Tamasese was pro-
claimed Keng by the Gorman e,onsul in spite
of clue protest of those of Great Britain and,
the United States. For two in, three Weeks
Malleboa was fugitive, but afterward,
was taken on beard fiag-thip of the Ge
man squadron.
Thust the Germane, by making floe Med
'natio Yettrairee ard benevolent estomitem
Great Britain and the United States, whli
carrying out a nameless policy -toward th
weak and haledvilized, gained all but the
full control of *gain in **ea. Their
aettons dureog the pot few months have
kernel of the coconut, JB the mate invert- differed from their (Artier ones mainly in
*nit Prodn'tb• Annually many hundrItch '9f `degree merely, and are of too recent date let
tone are exported to Germsuy. Fruits of make their mention neceseary.
the maoY tropical veriettes grow. in profe-
don, which with asht tug, and brWeirine
furnish feedfor the natives. 'Dee elunate
beleg warm* the natives require **little
clothing, which usuelly crensiste re.f a piece
of American cotton print, or Menem °loth
mode from the inner bark of & tree, worn
ghoul: the loins.. Their limners are simple
aid are made 414 COCOSOM4 leaves planed
together to form ***Idea, and roofs thetehed
with euger.eene twee, meek in the form of
a big beehlvee
Pbysicelly the Semeane eeeM to he aletopt
are Urge, well proper-
„••••
What to Avoid,
Do not merifeati irapatdeueve
Do uot engage inargumente
Do not interrupt -another -when voicing,
De not find feolte thee& yonPw.Y gently
criticise.
Ph net telk of lour privete, pommel, or
family Metiers.
Do not &ppm to notice beteeureciee of
eoh In others
perfeot. The meet,
timed; paid bemoome apedmeni othiauhood. Do not allude to enfortnnete peculteritiee
The women are gentle in diepeettlon, WACO. 01 *0700e Pre/10k
tee of form and movement, and .attritotive Dc' not &lw&ya commerme a oonversetioe by
with their eimPle, weevil manner*. They allusion to the weather.
bevel eteafghti Week hair, which, like their
pereone, they keep ;well anointed with cocoa-
nut oil. Like all relyneidaest they nem ta
be itetni-ecetelle-owien like fisliewhieh they
capture very eleverly la a number of ways.
They are not a warlike people, but peaeeble
0214 quiet in diepoeition, and bevel a strong
love for their borate. When, however,
aroused to fight, they -become wild, cruel,
aed desperate. Witte foreigner', they are
kied, and generous and. heepimble, and than
whose fortune it may he to visit their homes
amulet help becomiog interested in them.
Someone in writing of there his 'aide "Tak-
la; the Samoans for all and all, relgiug
feein, their past and present oonditteu there
I* ant' A people more worthy of oonsid4ation
and proteotion. more seeeeptible al improve.
ment, or mere willing to he taught to take
the position amongst the entie.;htened ram
thee they have so often end oo ottrneetly
"eaglet our help to win.”
Until within a little more than thirt
ear" SIMI* hid no oommeroe althoug
Australian. girl, and le fresher, end more abed Stetee end British °ousels were firet
heathy, perhape, for the climate Is ralhiert Ilene there over fifty year* ago, About 1857
She resembles the English gfrl much more Powerful Hamburg firm et:looted Aide, the
chief city of the islaude, as a ceetre of their
aperatious itt the South Peedie. AtnerICAP
interests in Samoa maybe 'aid to have begun
eboub 1872. itt 1878 a treaty was made
whereby the 'flatted Settee was granted, a
ocrallug etailoniu the herbor of Fago.Pago.
in 1873 a speetelleeent was sent to the Uni.
ted Shaer with the muesli thet ibe 'should
protect all of the Wends. But neither then
nor later has the United State, wished to
alieuros a prate:genes. Secretary BAYARD**
tint Icing deepetcle ,dated JIMA 19,, 10t31$:
Stated that it WO4Kbe our polioy to remain
neutrally aloof from the internal feuds of
Same* so tong AS Amelia= rights wore res.
peoted and the dominion over the islands
was not treesferred to e single foreign gag.
rurtter evidenoe of our nentrlity is found
hi the fact that the firstformal International
treaty which Seines made Was one with the
United. States in -1618, In witielt was reoonie
ed the irtdependent nationality of the native
government of the group.
Owing to the helf-eivilized (rendition of tme
Samoan*, and frequent bloody rivalries
among themselves, no adequate protection
was given to foreigners. To mute this a
convention was in 1870 entered into by the
Englitth, Getman, and .Amtrioan consuls for
the purpose of establiehing it good local
governmentfor the town and adjacent terri-
tory of Apia. Thin was signed only by the
two former, lent the American consul co.
operated vrIth them. -Althciugh there has
been a constant contention among the chiefs
for the kingship, 'Zing Maliet,oa was the
repreeeutative of the, native authority by
which the foreign treaties had been, made,
end iterate therefore consideredto be the
better policy to countenance, him es the one
moat likely to king about, 'table govern-
ment.
The fineneidend local intereste of the Ger-
mans in Samoa have far outstripped those of
any other nation. Ti* British and the
Americans emit lay claim to 'about twice as
much "land it: the Germans, bu b unfortunate-
ly this is nee oriteabin. The Germane are
the Only :toes who have invested large sums
of money m the improvement end my:nomad°
cultivation of their lands. They own and
work enormous plantations, employing many
hundreds of taboret's. They raise and ex-
port cotton,: coffee, cobalt -nut!, •and ' oopra,
the dried kernel -Of the het .From the brisie
of these -facts the Germans' have „lammed a
right to control Samoa albite. They began
in1880 by ,encouraging thepative opposition
in.. a War, upon: /Niatiestote November.
1884, the. Germans infimichited the Weak
King Mille:toe into eigning a treaty whereby
nearly the entire:central of' Samisen affair/
was surrendered 't-ce the Gerteensi When
Melietoe, a, little'later, -refused to carry out
this convention, and.gave -offence to the ger-
man cerlitil.geneeel in some • other renpeote,
they, seised the sovereign right" of.the King ,
in the menicipality of Apie, and drove
Happen, replied she, " that it b a ooerup reisfromedh-thse".Gleormtgatv"fieterre cr•at "flan. im and
tion deorreetgate." "Yen are eight, niter," Milietoa ,then offered theislande eo the
replied her informant; "as women is an Ameriaanoomiuli andinduced him to mamma
abbreviation of we to man." , ; theAuthority of extending tore frielietroit and
,Luoid interviari. vam
-poesesaie the, ormelepeotectorate . of
the Unite d ,SMte e. This intien Wee- PrOMPte
A geod-natured but extremely silly duke disavowed bythe (J. S.' goveridetent, and
one elose,4wohoene,zie.ad"uyGermany and nglapd were., so *formed:
confroetedzthravimiunAo:who,ant.
Tin State Departmeeteontineted in ite form;
veyirtg,••01,3,d-ow teeth an speottliabuf ,,k,polioyi holding that as ea,olepower had it:
,weeeheye,dhlt,hsesiviryS330..alry, ,otrieattY, with,thenative eoneremeht, their eeve
rights ran nide; Ityesidet so that any
said the duke-; "why, the man keowe nie 10 I'mix),nde'rtb4Ge °r°4 w-m1;:l'°4nh ,with th°
11 Oh, luold ytetv*itt,,,sd the, governor;,he ornitetartiete,tiosf,osftattoptrhoistibts."" aT,ihoatiLerir)rdder,snilhbttirhye
7,7 reeistablisbed On .a &Ca his* the'lL 8:
Following, 6,43;ei—pturai. tinoetion: • anitPrince -Bisine,tok that rerpesentatives of
, • . the three poWeriedevieeseplan for, the deo',
Amelia," Oh 1 you dear thing ; how good- tion of & suitable, chief by the nativesewho
of you to oottle ?" • should he niphildhy.Englance, Germany, and
Belinda-" Yondarlingthe 'Unfted-Stateset The Plan was, adopted„
,'-(They onoulate.) and hiihee lituinmer of 1888 mesh power Tee
Uncle Bill-" Can't you 'girls get' along -lent a 'commie', liner' to Seiner; mak a
without itisiingteseti other t. Beit - then, a report on •-•iti condition: ' Onacaeoutit .fo_f the
supper. you ,,eter onty following - the e Settee' 'eheipathiete beteben'; the -J consuls ze- he
turd injunotieren -powereliwepAgreedio,replacte them,t
; mai
Atelia and Itedinde- et Whet tdo ,yon also'nuderstoodethate,the smote quo ; should
" , ' • be 'inteintained Pending tliereenit.of ,theinne
e':„Unele ,..r."0„ Oing•titito'estob.'ether as fere-nee,- _ _
yen 'would have de mite youe'e-tchicar The cooferenoefiret mete, tn., leashing" tone, t
iro Ameries. ••` • • • '' ------------------' ' June, 1887, . ,After severa • 00
than she dose the Anetrallen, and her dove-
lopmetit keeps pace with the former, But
Tatananla is Salli to be the home of beauty,
and it certainly ileum to heves more than
its share of fair maidens, Itt Is not se alt
unoommon for the Melhourulen to run 'taro**
to the little blend, for the purpose of enjoy.
ing a well earned holiday end 'tpickingeip
e wife.
Not ee Green u Re Looked.
A. fellow was an trial haters a Pollee ma-
gistrate for stealing chickens. The proof
was 0 nm blether main thing :teeming
a time f�otm,.rks were found* the mow
neer the rood, exactly correeponding with
the prisoner's boots-patohes, nails, and alL
The prisoner's counsel thought he had a
green one in the prosecutor's wit:tees, who,
was apparently all thet fumy painted
Counsel put this question;
"Now, how do you know my client bid
on these hoots lad niabt? Row do von
know I hadn't them on. 7" The witness de.
mnxely answered: .
"'Cause you didn't know they's; any
oldokens there."
Wonders Nola Cease,
Proprietor Poterit Medians (in a hosplt-
e1)-" My poor friend, I hear you met with
a terrible accident on the railroad, near
Smith's Crossing."
Patient-" !es; I was thrown fifty feet,
and given up for dead."
"So I heard; and when you regained
consciousness you were gazing on tie big
rock which contains an advertisement of my
Stomaoh Bitters."
air.n
" Well, you have been *nettled from
the jaws of death, and I have called for a
testimonial."
--WI Very Bad Way.
Mrs. Malapropos -"How is your peps get-
ting along, my dear ?"
Miss Precise--" 013, he's convalescent."
hire. Malaretpos-" My, eh my--!_ Bowunfortunate he is, to be sure 1 First he had
newmoneye then plumbago, and now ow-
valesorint."
Mise Pretisio-" How do you feel, Mrs.
Malapropoe 2"
Mrs. Malapropos-" The doctor aliya I've
gob two buckles on my lunge, and I'm going
down to the druggist's now *eget 'Some
Brown's Bronical Breeches for my henfiew•
endways."
The Borrow Gate.
A young lady asked 'a gentleman th
meaning of- the word ourrogett "1* I!,
replied he, "& gate through which partie
on, their way to get married." "Than,
Never fail to be punctual at the time ae
pointed, ';
Nem foil to give * polite lielWer tO A
RiVII question,
Never melee youreelf thebere of yourown
OtOrY•
Never petbeub. a gib alien le fa of PR Ine
to yourself.
Never queation aeervane or a child ebont
fatally reettera.
Never puillelayour ehildfor Abele to which
you ere addicted yourself.
GABISOROMIOALLY INCLINED
Verteldgesi and ienleoh ere out of Itelien.
Rebhan are plentiful, and Tull and equab.
are plump end juicy.
Silence and expedition are the thief aerie-
teriiities of a Turkish meal.
Plum trees are blooming and leentene
trees are putties out new leeves In Florida.
Stowell fruits require less aweeteuing if
the auger la added after the fruit gate odd,
aqua patrons allege that the average omit
Emmet Is nothing but hot waiter very *light.
ly colored.
Cold slioed potatoes fry and bate better
by sprinkling a imp:toilful of limn over
them while frying.
A company hes been formed rto prepare
poultry for the tilde titter the stuffing plan
approved by the French.
"The Romano tumor had pouch at din-
ner," and, Nereid remarks, "the otuff we
put forth under thee name le a fro= fib."
Scones of our gesbenemb contemporaries
eomplAin that olchieshioned, apple.dump,
ling, boiled In a bag, to too much of a curl.
catty nowadays.
Whittier's Cabbage Plant.
"Did you ever beer the story of 'Whittier
and the cabbagel" asked an eta frimod one
day, It may hive been told before, but it
is worth repeatipg now. Be hates the odor
of cabbege, like moat 'both° men, and has e
cordial horror of the right emellin the wrong
place, as Henry James male the fragrance of
a dinner in the hellwey. One day, however,
a cabbage was Cooked at Oak Knoll, and
Moot of it was left over. In deference to her
cousin's olliotories, the mistress of the house
direoted her crook to put the oold cabbage on
the top shelf in the pantry until the next
day. In the course of the afternoon Mr.
Whittier was seen digging in the garden.
A member of the family asked him what
he was going to do, but he put her off with
tr, merry twinkle in his eyes. When in the
course of household events tbe cook sought
the cabbage, it wu gene. Mr Whittier hod
traced it to its eyrie; he had climbed up and
had borne it awayin triumph, and in defiance
of domestic economy had buried ie in the
garden. I tell the story as it was told me,"
said Ids friend. "Call it: 'How the Poet
Planted a (trolled) Cabbage.'"
Their Ineonsistena.
Some men are too inooneistent for any-
thing. A giii vieited a dime inusettn. i and
fell m love with and married 'the 91811, who
eats broken glass, oyeter shells and pebble
stones. Two weeks after they went to
housekeeping her husband refused to eat
any of the biscuits the baked, saying that
they would ruin his digestion. LE0'.4980 un-
reasonable. An ostrich could have digeeted
them. -[Norristown Herald.
,
'Nothing too Good to
Editor (to gentleman jueb arrived): "We
don't want any peetry."
Gentleman:" Not"
Editor: "Nor prose."
Gentleman : "No 17
Editor : • "Nor blank verse."
Gentleman: "How would a two dollar
bill suit you for a year's subscription in ad-
vancer ' •
Editor : "Why, my dear sir, why didn't -
you say BO at first? (To,offitie boy) Jemes.
give this gentlemaze a cort.ple of 'chairs and
the floor for his taboo jume."
• " Teitt
' • DeAehoebeing., tie
.
The niece ,Of 'tette:if' old -gentleman "way ,
down in Maine' 'tenuity married en of the ,
beet musictiit'etithie of the west. On thole -,
bridal toutteheehishind was for the first
timeepreseeted to this relative, who Diked
another nieee, in aliend whisper -77" What,
dote he do " Retie, mnalcal critic," was '
the lend *ply. lt"Wal," :raid ''the • Miele.,
essiug yonng•Man," ne acounritin'
fer,taetee but why did ebe Marry him', ,if -
11:08' a 10041e'er,ilit0:1"•:!'.
.•Tho inperintendent of the Philadelphia
Public telsoOla ' has advised toachers 10..
"•ttioh their pupil. the ovlls:114-,'Cigarebte
smoking andlighklacing.",„ A *boiler, paire
of ,•sins "te,•Cliboee'iperha*- eA periimpteey
rule forbidding Parente Wetild
onelder„iiiere•,'SfficassiOne,' 404as r,o„. oier. '
send, the et -edit' , Jute brene” tattght e tie
lOttg. theirIt bi "dittibiful 'Whither -,the ,Pittiere 7 ,
delphia teachers will eoldeee Watt geitit inc
'614s• -