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Flesherton Advance, 10 Apr 1890, p. 2

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I-IBI 1 A- l> < K>Mr r fc . 1 1 '* ..f ii .... i..i . i r M. J . Mia*k*d a>y mm .p..rr A r..|,ulr til ur. I, .-!. * Tu>* Oat to b* Urln Hur jlr. A Mootoleir, N J , despatch says : One of the most astounding stories of pisty and crime has been broDKhl to light bar*, end ha* excited wonder and surprise amongst the citi/us of klontolair. One of the mewl respectable tod respected citizen* of tbu town bat been James Tulhill.a boa* maaon lie came here from l'or Jervn five yean CO. II* and bis wife joined Ibe Montclair Oongregational Church, and won the re- OS and esteem of their neighbor*. Talhill became wry popular wilh bit fellow townsmen. Be joined ExoeUior lioee Company No. 3 and MYeral locial oiube, and every on* wbo knew him liked him. lie never drank nor swore, wai ever ready to help any one ID need, and counted hit friend* by the icore. Many of the raaidenU ot Montolair are man of wealth, doing butineat m New York. Tntbill did woik for them all, wai re- ceived on friendly turn* in tbtir home*, and seemed in a fair way of amaiung fortane. HOIBAKU AXD Win MOW rBIHOHSBS. To-day all tbi* i* changed. Talhill i* a prisoner in the Ha) mond Btreet Jail, Brooklyn ; bia handsome wit* is locked op i jail at Newark, and their name* are execrated by the *ame people wbo only wek ago were proud to be seen on the street* with tbtm. The eminently re peclable Mr. TatbiU ha* been found oat to be the reokle** burglar wbo for the Mt few year* hae been robbing the Lome* ot ih. wealthy in Moatolair, Glen JUdge, Bloomfield, Orange and surrounding town*, and hi* wife i* suipscled of being hi* aooomplioe. Shortly after Tatbill came here to live Mv*ral bold bnrglerte* were oommitlrxi la rapid nui:oe.ion A* the borglar wa* alway* masked no one could ever give a etaonption of him. 1 uihill ttarted a .movement to bring Pinksrlon detective* here to cbaae down the thief. Mr. Tat- hill'* home wa* nev*r eulend, and while be wa* load and devout in hi* thank* to the Almighty, wbo (pared him taoh a visitation, be wai active in counselling thoee who had (offered by th* depredation* ot the midnight intruder. kOI UII- riUINLM Allfc HTBAMdlB*. A week eo laal Monday night the r**i- deooe of George Booth, a Ma*on and personal friend of Tuihill, wai entered by the lone borglar. Mr. Robertson, who i* Unking of moving to Monlolair, wan Mr. b'* guest that night. A* the village wa* tolling 12 be wai rooied by hi* i window Uing opened, and a ilim- built man lightly jumped into the room from the veranda. Mr. Roterwon watched him and MW him coolly itrik* a match on th* wall and look about Then be deftly abstracted Mr. Boberteon gold watch from hi* veet, and the match went oot. The thief wai link- ing another match, when Mr. Boberteon tamped oat of bed and grappled with him, bat th* fellow eeoeptd. Mr. Koberteoa awoke the booiehold. While he wa* wiling hi* experience the burglar wa* lee* then a block away getting into the residence of John Manuel, an- other Maeon, and a warm friend of the gaud Mr. Tuthill. Manoel wai aroused before the borglar got into hi* loom, bough, and gave him battle on the piazza. The thief* maek came off in the atruggle. Mid Mr. Manael could hardly believe hi* an*?*, for the face be recognized wai that of hi* friend, the village favorite, " Jim " Tuihill. The latter broke away and got off lately for the time being. Finally Robertson and Manael had a warrant issued to aearob Taihill'* hoace. la the cellar of the booae they foond a gold and diamond mine. Hurled in the party wall and thrown in oouotaled crevice* were ring*, watchee, diamond*, pocket-book*, money, bracelet*, breast pini, ear-ring*, weii h obaini and svery kind of jewelry, representing many thouasnds of dollars, acid torn* wbiob wsre stolen year* ego. MB* WHO MAUK MUBBT. i ri u r . or a ii. of 'oln Counterfeiters at Moirio. A Buffalo despatch of last night says For several week* past the polios have been i arrhir i; for a gang of counterfeiters wh were known to be operating in this city They were located this morning on a popu lar Weet side street, io a house occupied by Edward Bpaalding, wbo i* a plambrr b; trade. The boarders in tbs house wer William Slattery, a book agent, and Mar; Blsttery, hi* wife, both of whom were sail to have passed counterfeit money. Upon searching the rooms several newly ooinrx ten oent pieces and a number of bogu silver dollars, together with moulds, dies metal, etc., were discovered and taken Blsttery threw a large iron spoon and quantity of metal oat of the window whit the officer* were searching the house. A police headquarters the man admitted ths he had made the money found, also that h bad been very laootssfol. He also slatei that Bpaalding bad manufactured a larg quantity of counterfeit money. A Govern ment detective assisted in the arrest Mailer v said that he and Spanldiog wer arranging to go into the bosineee on a larger scale. Tin cent piece* and dollar were the coin* mostly usurd by the coon terftiten, and were of aach excellent msk that it was with the almost difficulty ths they were detected, and a large amount o the sparioos coin has been circulated in th city. Bpaulding and Mn. Slattery wen arraigned before Commissioner Fairchil this af Ki noon. Bpaalding pleaded guilt and was held in two thousand dollars bonds. Mrs. Slattery's bonds wsre fixed a onb thousand dollar*. Blallery will be arraigned to- morrow morning. ABCHIII> iT ii Tuthill escaped daring ths sxcitemsnt, bat * constable traced him to New York, to Brooklyn and finally to Oreenpoint, where be arrcated him. Be wa* taken to Kaymond Street Jail. Tuihill slrennoualy denied hi* goilt, and claimed that if he were really goilty ho wa* not responsible, a* h* had no recollection of svsr robbing any oa*. While looking for Tatbill, Allworth dis eovered that be bad also robbed at least two hoaass in Oreenpoint, one the residence of fiobert Berriog, at No. 108 Oreenpoint venae. He entered the house by the second story window about 2 o'clock in the morning while the family were aileep. He aroused Mr. Barring tboogh, and the latter found Tatbill hiaiog in Ibe parlor nd smashed the lighted lamp on bis hsad, tting the loalp badly, bat the borglar jimped from the window and eioaped The wtfe wa* arrested yeeierday morning at her bom*, and arraigned before Justice Morris, wbo commuted her to the jail at Newark. It i* laid that tbs has made a toll confession. BBB WA> A Bl.ATTBBN. And Bo Bharpeaod BU Baior and Coolly rut Her Throat. A Boston despatch of last night says ('hsrlea Kersbaw, an Knglishmon, aged i>. years, made desperate by jealooiy, to-nigh! murdered hi* yooog wife in cold blood a 1 their home, 27 Melroae streel, in tbe soull sod. The affair was deliberate and butcher like in its ferocity. The couple came from Yorkshire, England, three year* ago. Tbsy wsre poor bat respectable. Th* husband a moroae, reserved man, was never popu- lar, but hi* wife, 26 year* younger, wa* vivacioni and liked company. Kerihaw disliked Ibis, but wa* particularly jtalous of on* at Ihe male boarders in tbe Metroes house. To night became home after bear ing a scandal about bin wife which mad dened him. Be found her lying en tbe bed, half dressed, reading, the day'* washing lying in th* kitchen untouched and thi house neglected. Be ordered her to rise and clean thinge up. She said aha would when she wa* ready. Be turned away, say ing, all right, he would shave himself, and got out hi* razor and mug. Th* former he sbsrpened, and, stepping across tbe room, soddsnly pounced upon the prostrate woman, and forcing her bead back, cut her throat olrar to the spinal column. Hbedid not scream, but in tbe struggle all her clothing wai torn off. Tbe murderer left the room, and going to that of a fellow boarder named Chanel Lovttt. coolly laid hi bad killed hit wife. Levitt, an ex policeman, carried tbe assassin to tbe ststion bouse, where be oonfeeaed the crime, *aid be was glad, and gave tb* above detail*. MOkB Illll 1 I SH <.<,! H To be I vested In Marine up Yaakee r>pet ".I Palp Ills. A Walertown. N. Y, despatch says : Messrs. Bertram, of Edinburgh, Scotland, and Wegalin, March, and Yoong, of Lon- don, England, representatives of the great Knglub psper mill syndicate, are in Water- town making an investigation of plant and bminese of the Remington Paper Co., which ha* exteneiv* paper and palp mills in tbl* oily. A big deal sterns about to be contaminated. If the report of the expert! iafovorablethis and other large plants will become ths property of the syndicate within a fsw weeks. The concerns involved in the Irsnsaotion are the Remington Paper Co , of this city , the Hudson River Palp and 1'sperCo, of Palmer's Kails; tb* Oleo's Kails Paper Manufacturing Co , and ths Houhester Taper Co. The syndicate repre- sentative* hav* now visited all the Rochester mills, and when that plant has been lu speoted thsy will rnske a report a* to the entire property. If their report i* favor- able Ihe transfer will probably be made within a few weeks. The united mill* will be managed upon a oapitaliiation of about five million dollars. On* third of the stock is to be held by the prestnt owner* of the plant. .iuco vie. OB a Tear. A I .in .li: n oabl* isys : Among the im- pediment* with which tbe (jueen itsrted on her Continental tour on Monday may be mentioned throe ooschmen, nine grooms, eight horse*, one donkey, tbre* carriage*, evenly two trunk*, threw special bed*, a specie! cooking stove, wine, two doctors, one sorgeon, one surgeon aoooucher for the Princess Beatrice, three ladies in waiting, nine women servants, on* lord, two equerries and seven dog*. Bsr Majesty wa* io an unusually gracious mood, and on ths Dover train (nailed (weetly on Prino* Batlenberg, now completely restored to Hovel favor. Indeed, she addressed him twice M ' l.i. ht r Betnrioh" (Dear Bsnry) > snob a load tone of voice that Ihe Queen evidently intended thai the** of her liege* within earshot should hear. OeorgiO* Mturirr, the. famous cartoonist f London I'IM,-*, i* writing a novel which b* will illusiiste runnel/. fbe new German Chancellor, General Caprivi, is an inveterate snoktrand mod- erate .TH >. . H* manifests a marked prefercr . e for win* over beer, which be toorhrs very rarely and sparingly " It* Ihynis you roeemsry," a* ths floriit oli.d lu his dsughur in Ibe early -"log. A iugmr Beflaerv Bs plosion. A Chicago despatch of last night lay* ; An exploiion occurred here tbi* evening in th* Chicago Sugar Uc flurry Company's plant. One man was fatally hart, and twenty others aeverlsy horned. The MO m*n in th* building, when they heard the report of Ihs sxplosion and *aw th* glare of ths names, wsre panic-stricken, and rnsbsd down the long, narrow etairway headlong, and n 11 1 into the air. It wa* som* moment* before they realised the position of those wbo wero working on the floor below where tbs explosion took place. Wilh the aid of eighteen flie engine crew* the big refinery was barely aaved, and by lively work a core of braised and maimed victims were soon deposited on hastily improvised aouohe*. He M...I . Priest. A Baltimore despatch say* : The town of Trias, thirteen mile* from here, wa* thrown into great excitement to day by an attempt to aitaasinat* Rev. Patrick B. Leoneghan.asiistant psstor of Bt. Joseph'* Calholio oharoh. The priest wa* to officiate at a funeral, and wa* in the church resdiug his office, while waiting Ihe arrival of Ihs Body. Richard MoNichols, without a word of warning, flrsd at him five shots from a revolver, three of which took effect. Fslher Linnrghan now lie* in a critical condition. MoNiuhol* ha* been sexton of WHY POVEBTY EXISTS. . Symposia! of of Virkmsly THE BLIQHT OF WANT. Opiaioos Men Bum. Bad (duration and l.silBeM Heavily Debited Boeaerollor 1 * Or*** Uhe*k O'Belllj and MoOlvoa l..- K i.l.ti..i. nt fault. The New York World, interested in di* covering why it i* that there is, every winter, an army of 100,000 idle men in that oily alone, many of wbpae f annlirs are charges on the city charities, b as nubniilted to a number of divine* and other promi- nent men the question : " What, in year opinion, i* the chief cause of poverty at the present time .'" Our reader* msy liod a S) nopsis of the answers interesting : BDW4BD ATKINSON. "What" Ignorance and inctpacity. " Why "Voluntary idline**. CHimiCBY M. DKI-KW. Lack of aalf-coundenca is often the cause ef failure. Many men seem to have no (sub in themselve*, consequently no assertiveness, no independence, no pluck and no push. They aeemi to be afraid to itand np and ipsak out for themselves and prefer to lean on other*. Poverty in such oases is inevitable. Lack of purpose, vacillation, want of continuity in pursuing a chosen vooation and the foolish wish to make a fortane in day. Hum is the greatest cause of poverty ; it is the cause of more poverty than all the other oanaee put tnqetbrr. Wb*n a man drink* to exoess he let* go ot everything. There is a vast amount of poverty caused by men bo would rather loaf than work. When a man find* hi* mission in the woiU he should remain constant to it, and no* leave one trade or business to engage n. another for which be may be unfitted. Poverty often result* from such aimless nee*. Bat the ls/.y man i* alway* a poor FBor. si MMU All our civilisation has consisted iu an attempt to abolish poverty, to pot the human race in possession of HOOD resource* of existence that il may keep distress and misery at arm's length, if it will ener- getically employ the mean* within it* reach. We have pauper* among ua peo- ple, that i*, who oauiiot pay their way, sannot earn th* minimum required to sxitl in our society. They fall a burden oo tb* red. Huoh oasts are accounted for either by misfortune, or folly, or vice. So long a* they exist want of material comforts, which oan only b* won by industry, tem- perance, prudence, self control and 'rugiluy, will be suffered by aoms, and poverty M ill be s phenomenon ot human Kxjiely. That all should ever become nob can only be pal forward as an interesting speculation, nevsr a* a praolioal proposi- tion for the essential conditions would be hat persons who fell below a taiuUrd of ibysioal health should nsvsr marry at all ; bat no one should marry unless be already KMsessed income enough Io maintain a amily on tbe established standard of com ori ; lhal not only crime but also vice should be pitilessly punishsd and rooied nt by the segregation or sxeontion <J Ibe guilty, and that all children should b* sou oated with more than Spartan severity upon standard* distinctly modern. Like all other prescriptions for tbe same par- e, however, Ibis is only proposing that be society shall hit itself by it* boot trip*. VIO-IIKABTBU rOBT KC11XT. Th* masses are poor, ignorant and di*. rganized, not knowing the right* of man ind on the earth, and never knowing that be world belongs to its living population, aaoee a small olaa* in every country has taken possession of property and govern- msnt, and make* lawe for it* own safety nd the security of its plunder, educating be mas***, gensrstion after generation, nlo the belief that thi* condition i* tb* atnral ordur and the law of Ood. By long raining and submission the people every- where have com* to regard tbe assumption t ilnir ruler* and owners a* the law of ight and common aense, and their wn blind instincts, which tell them that all men ought to hav* a pl*nteou> living on thi* rich planet, a* tbe prompting* of evil nd disorder. '1 he qnalltie* wa naturally dislike (and ear in a man are those which insure uooess under oar present social oraer, eiuely shrewdness, hardness, adroitness, selfinhusiB, th* mind to take advantage of eoessily, the will to trample on the weak n Ihe canting name of " progress" and civilisation." The qualities we love in a nan send him Io the poorhoaae gensros- "IT, troth, trustfulness, friendlin***, unsel- sbae**, tb* ill-Bins to help, the heart lo ity, th* mind to refuse profit from a eighbor's loss or weakness, Ibe defence of he weak". Our present civiliMlion is organised in ostioe and inlelleotoal barbarism. Our rogress is a march to a precipice. Ihe Sermon on the Mount and natural mice oan rale the world, or they cannot. f they 'in our present rblmg i* tbe invsn- on of Ibe devil ; if they cannot tb* devil a* a n K ht to rule if the people lot him ot be ought not to uall hi* rule " Chris- au civilization." I hav no doubt the teudeney daring the last thirty yean in tbia country has keen io tb.ii direction. cimvs sen. POBTXK. In my opinion the cause* of poverty in Dm country are to a very large extent traceable to individuals themselve*. I be- lieve that mnoh poverty and distress could b* prevented if parent* would insist that all their children, boy* and girls alike, should be taught some useful and honor- able means of earning their living. There is no reason why in a country so vast a* oar* and to spsriely populated there should be any poverty that cannot be traced to lack of thrift, or, ia other words, to cause* which no human law oan prevent. Although my life daring the last nine months has almost been made a burden through the innumerable application* of all son* and condition* of people for em- ployment, I am more itrongly impreued than ever that the cry ing need to-day in this country i* healthy, vigorous, itrong and clear-minded men and women wbo are capable of doiog aomeibiog wbo oan, in other words, txeriise alike their brain, thiir mniole and their skill in doing some one thing well. PBor. ANDRBWH. It m fsr from clear that the deepest cause* thereof do oot, in spite of all our philanthropic wish to the contrary, lie in human nature itself. I, however, frankly avow my belief that a considerable part of th* at present existing poverty i* curable. There are dreadful incqualitiea in the ocial system which need not be there and ought not to be there. Many are very poor wbo deserve to be better off. The fortune* of men are not ia accord with their econo- mic doierti. I hope much from the new thought now directing iteelf to tbie subjoci. As the last century ba* been one of great advance in the physical sciences, the next I* to be, I believe, one of equal or greater advance in social science. BBV. nil. LITCHMAM. Unequal distribution of the product* of labor is the chief cause of poverty at pre- sent or any other time, and the reeion wby ' is that when one man gt* what h* ha* not earned another man i* robbed. The factors in the protlt m are rum and usory. There oan be a condition Ood grant it may soon come when enterprise and labor will be identical by reaaoo of labor owning the machine of which it now form* a pan. While usury crashes enterprise, ram robe labor. Thsy are twio agencies of bell to ruin mankind. Whsn natural luonopulies are owned by all tb* people, when the pro- ducer and the consunu rare brought nearer together, when nanry i* eliminated and the rum tieud destroyed, only tbs man born tired will suffer poverty. LABOa UtADBB H'VBn.. In a aentoooe I would answer that pov- erty ia oaosed by the unchristian and un- scientific methods of the) production and distribution of wealth. Wealth is the health of society ; it is that which is for ths good cf man. Material wealth con- sists of all material things that tend to material health. There are two grand division* nnprodnoed and produced wesllh. The msthod by which wealth U controlled, value addsd and distribution effected Is unchristian beoau** it i* unjuit and inequitable, unioiantifio because it is wasteful of human life and material. 1UNATICS 1'uVMU.l. There is more prodn. live power, and therefore more property to-day than ever btfure. Therefore poverty U not due to a decrease in the quantity of property. The cans* of poverty is tb* unequal and un- fair distribution of property, wbersby those wbo create it obtain little of it and these who handle it become possessed of most of it. Wbat i* the remedy T Governments! intervention, in the interest of " the general welfare," to increase the reward* of labor and decrease the accumulations of canning. In other word*, to inortas* Ihe income* of the million* and decrease the wtaltb of tbe thcutaod*. Vast fortune* tion begin* and then poverty make* its ap- pearanoe. At first it i* physical foroe that mskea one man richer loan his neighbor. He lakes what he wants n i ansi>, but M he become* more refined he uues hi* intel- lect to accomplish his object, and skill, tact, cunning, knowledge bring him to tbe front. As long a* some men have more brains and more muscle than other men, poverty will rxiit. To gel rid of il we bonld have to return to that period of the world * history when man began to t merge fiom a lower form. BEOKEE CLEWH. Drink ! In one word that tells the chief oanse of poverty at the present lime in tbi* country. Of course I mean excessive drinking, tbe kind that lead* to babitoal drunkenness, and by slow degress paral- yze* a man mentally and physically. In this country, with it* msgnittcent resource* awaiting development and it* abundant opportunities in every direction to develop ability and win success, there is no excuse for poverty. But for tbe drink evil there would be no poverty to speak of. I think prohibition an interference with the liberty of the individual that i* contrary to the pirit of our republican institution*. Ex- cessive drinking is the evil and I think it can be mat by wise restriction and regula- tion. blANi'ASU OIL IHC8T ttHk-t ftLLKR. When aiked, What i* tbe ohitf cause of poverty in this country ?" lUa possessor of a 119,000,000 income squeezed out of the public by tbe methods of the gigantic Trust of which be is Chief Pirate, instantly called hi* *tenographr and began to dictate hit aniwer : Intemperanoe." And there ht 'topped. That i* all," he aid, turning to the reporter ; " that one word answers tbe question fully." Saying wbioh he was immersed in multi- farious papers on hi* desk, while bis secre- tary wrote out and handed tbe reporter the epigrammatic aniwer. STOCK arECCLATOB BUSHBLL SAOB. That'* too big a question for me to aniwer. My view* ? I haven't any ready on that subject. You'll tave to let me out ; I'm too busy." When aeked if be agreed with hi* fellow millionaire, Mr. Rockefeller, the sapisnt Russell declared : Rockefeller say* it'i drink doei it, eh ? Well, Rockefeller ba* a gieat head be'* all right in hi* upper (lory." MlLIJONAIIUl TBATT, Cr BBOOILYS. By far the large at clais of poor and idle people which we always have in our large cities are thode wbo bavs come to want through intemperance. Next to drink, tbe fcreeiesi cause of poverty it th* restle** and aimles* character of mewl of the young men whom onr school* are now turning out. But, of coarse, there i* dUtree*. poverty, trouble and sorrow in the home of many a good man bo is not to blame for it. Thousands so If er on account of a lack of usefol education or because of a felat education -that i*, they are not educated to make work a pleasure They have been perversely brought up to look upon wcrka* a punishment or a curse. A* for m*, after years of consideration, I said I would try to help work out the problem at the start wilh tbe child. The only remedy that oan be successfully applied it the substitution of a true education for ths false. tb* oharoh six drink. months. B* is given to l>r lire ult, sn eminent Paris physician fiprsssee ths be) let that cancer iiamiorobi disesss. Mr*. BUpbea Collins, of Boipsnilon Bridg*, committed suicide on Monday st rBoi. 1 think we ihall all be obliged to admit tat poverty is one of the neoeaeery con- ingenoies of civilization. In a country here liberty pievail* th* diligent and capable have the opportunity of riling above the indolent and incapable. Wbere there is perfect liberty en the part of Indi- vidual men, some will ri** and olhsrs will fsll. This is the result partly of sopsrior intelligence, partly of inability and partly of srror, but there oan b* no possibility of removing poverty, excepting by a ooorss of legislation which will take away opporlont- Us*. B*noe il will probably always be found thai where there ia ths largest liberty of individual aolion there will be thelargast inequalities among man. Another oanas of poverty i* no doobl In tb* nature of mooh tf our leglalation. It ha* tended, I think, in many wayi to in creese th* opportanillt* of th* rich and to dimmish the opportunities of Ihe poor. Il Lookport, H. r., by ratling her throat. ' < not easy to potot these oat In detail, but are a source of dangsr to th* nation* and a threat to republican institutions. Any superfluity of wealth above a ssfficieooy to purchase the comforts and luxuries of life is a matter of oeeleas vanity and a (topping- lone, through destructive corruption uf the poor, to ondoe power ia th* Ouverameot, wielded alwsy* to procure farther accumu- lation* of wealth. BKV. UK. M'ABTBCB. Whatever may be tbe cans* of poverty, we ought to give, and give wisely aud liber- ally, to tbe poor. There is no duty urged wilh greater frequency and greater em- phasis in th* Old .Testament or the New. KBV. I>B. BDCBUT, Forty years ago there wa* no need for real poverty in tbe United Stales, except io very few esses. Bui with Ihe advance ot civilization we have developed new wants. Most of the thing* otedful for th* poor have I] be obtained by money. In th* country you oan get whatever you need by barter, bot in the oily you oannot. Thi* shows that poverty is caused by lack of monsy. Yel only those who do not work lack money. Paupers may be divided into three olecsts. Tboa* wbo will not work, those who cannot work and thoee wbo would work if they could gal it. Those who will not or oannot work moat bag, steal or die. Aa for thoee who want woik and can't get it, from my soul I pity them. The reason of their failure is gener- ally that they oan do only one thing and thai nobody want* done. BBV. nil. M'OLTBN. Tb* Rev. Dr. Edward McQlynn *ayi : "Poverty i* chit fly caused by injustice, and the greaMit injustice of onr time is the denia^Ho men of their God-given birth- right of access ta th* land and it* natural opportunities. There would be little or no poverty anywhere if the mooopolizttion of ilie land by a favoted few was prevented, by th* legal recognition of th* truth enun- ciated by Jtffsrson, thai the land belongs in usufruct to the living.' The remedy for poverty, Ibe one thing that would elevate the masaee of men, I* not charily bot justice. I do not believe that Ood gav* the eaith to any act of men, wbo thereby wer* Io be able to become rioh by taking pretty mooh all the product* of labor." swift KI) ing Insects. It has been computed that th* common boost* fly in ordinary (light makes tiOO troke* per second, and sdvances 25 feet, but that rate of speed, if tb* insect b* alarmed, may be increased six or seven- fold, so that under certain oirounstance* it can outitrip the Uoetest race horse. It 1* no uncommon thing to see a flsa or wasp ndeavoring to get in at the window of a railway train in full speed, and it is calcu- lated that, if a small insect oan fly faster than a race horse con ran, au insect M large as a bora* would be able to travel M taut as a cannon ball. Leuowtholk relate* an exalting obaee which he beheld in a menagerie about 100 feel long, between a iwallow and a dragon fly, among th* iwiftent of inseols. The insect flew with iucrwible speed, and wheeled with suob rapidity thai ths swal- low, In (pile of it* utmost effort*, oons- pletely failed to overtake sod capture it. A pigeon fancier of Hamme, Otrmany, recently made a wager that a dtv, -n bcei liberated three mile* from their hive would reach it in better time than a dozen pigton* would reach their cote from the same dis- tance. Tbe competitors were given wing at R>h*rn, a village nearly a leagoe from H son me, and tbe first bee reached home a quarter of a minote in advance of the first pigeon Three other bee* reached the goal before tbe second pigeon, th* msiu body of both detachments finishing almost simultane- ously an umlaut or two later. Ths bet*, it may be mentioned, bad been handicapped in the race, having been rolled in flour be- fore darting, for tb* purpose of identifica- tion. According to Cbabrier, the mal of tbe silk worm moth travels upward of 100 miles in one day ; and there are many British moths, as entomologist* well know, which can cover long disltnoM in an in- credibly abort Oatttte. space of lime St. Jamet' I'B. HiHMOND. IB my opinion the chief cause of poverty I th* present lime is civilisation. Poverty never exists among utter barbaiiana. Bat A Slaader PuuUhed. Rev. J. H. Kylanoe, rector of Bt. Mtrk's Episcopal Cboroh, New York, has jusi been awarded $10,000 damage* from Law- yer Nicholas Qiaokenbu*. one of his vestry- men, who, with others, act-need him of undue attention* to ladiv* of hi* flook. When first accused, the reolor, to prevent oandal, offuied bis resignation, but when he *aw that did not (top talk he withdrew it and brought suit for scandal with the result noted. with It il considered atrooioo* taite to wear a ring on the first finger. Chicago 'ha* 600 woniV* societies, in- cluding 30,000 women. Biamarok is laid to hav* a wonderful oaracily for tobacco. He ha* been called a kttttr-raucHtr, or " chain imoker," thatie, a smuker who anile* dinusr to breskfaet witb an endless chain of o>gar*, lighting a fresh one as scon M the on* before it has bnrnad to a stump " Humph," Mid Mr*. De Porqn* at an* laid down her book, " thii writer lay* the dodo I* txtioot." " Well, mamma, sup- pose it does?" " Why, ny boar of ordi- nary intelligence know* that. They DM t and education differentia. ' ditto mark* nowaday*.'

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