Bloomington Progress, Volume 17, Number 1, Bloomington, Monroe County, 18 April 1883 — Page 1
iRecordec's Office jaSfta
BEFDBLIGAH WML
BUMWMCTOM. INDIANA.
Catty
Sbdk
. , ; ' ' .
VM VII II it-
;A Republican !Paper Devoted to the Advancement of the Local Interests of Monroe County.
BOTTOM toBATOB.
beslchambsrot thehoose;
i -. My m ami. WWW HUH. . Taarastoodanantfcmathea&or imral
ford n wood with brasses bright OnesOTnawoian,frfliHigTn r. Bta totterfafly Mm the soar M Inj- aha wtff 'iiw light ct day. - Than; Jean; antoek the bottom drawerr" . ,. . Tho girl. In all youth's loveliness, . . r Knelt down with eager; cartons facet Mehanosaba dreamt at Indian silks, MMls sad of rare old face. Bit when the summer sunshine leu Open the treasures bosrdect there. The lean rashed to hoc tender eyas; Bar bear was solemn 9 a prayer.
m anas 'shosomyjagbed; .XJMaca withered rose and palm; Batontbetlder nue wu mrcsht ' But sweat eontent and peeoeM calm, iliarnitngnpon hCTstaH, she gassd Upon a baby's balf-wom ahoa; A Bole frock of finest lawn; ".-A hat with tiny "Dow of blue - A ball, Bade fifty yean ago: A Ittue slove, a I aaeded cap; A hatf-doae loos division enm; Some school-books fastened with a strap.
rare touched them all, with lrenKiM:; H-,;
srosam. Tne neart can Bear.
THo
wbjre fie was at
.lqomington; Indiana, Wednesday, april is, lm.
JSew Series. VOL. XVII NO. 1.
i!" said Gertrude,
Ah. Jfwn! IflwmditthasVahaaMdla
The day that flat I laid tbyn there. ; t "Bat now it seani so (ood to know -That th; onsh all thoa weary ycaia - Tarir hfarta hre been nntoaeaid by ftricf, i Theii eyea haTe bean nnatnlned by tears. Do Jean, we aoe with clearer iht, Whee earthly love is almost o'er; Tboae cAIWrrn wait me In the skies, , For nfl I toc&ed thai tecrod drawer." 5P CoahnenL
.. Tee Th ee Sbahotbebs. v "And 71m 'wxrald uavny this fellow," aid Grandma Von B reeks Ttn Starch, i -bar tMaaooniesi (that ra the only word I eaa thisk of with which to deeribe thera) tones, "if yon could?" ."Tfes, uAd, replied Gertrude, eseUybrjt firmlv. "The idem is comply preposterons! deebured Grandmother Haffey3 fife-like
''Prepoeteroiis indeed t" responded the liavwuHt. "More than preposteross ;djgtaiefoH a mechanic! a common wbrtohgmaiil a tonse painter!"
;ne fresce-pajnter, bnudly oor-
uertznde.
t amnnnte to the same thinsi"
tthehassooa.
L AurbIo " be iran Gertrude.
"Pearen preserve asl HhriHed He
10 qwcnsBWo now! no ment, nuss.
tp- WXU not hear aaother vfsm from jou. & j j 1, 3 -i-z
. .- nminraanu uuuuhw, asniuu lor - - a&'thst if tiut person-oaUahereto-nior-
- row,, which r.odoabt he will have the
- InpeiHuence and assnranco to do, rou
v are- w. wmmimi am hkiwmimy, vr ce
?Aaa endearor to beinn the new year"
maimer befittmg s deseeodaat " 6i fiwflgtrioos Gen. Yon Bieeks von .. SfaiylC "arhose unexampled braTBir ' Wfttia in and Bergen-op-Zoom the -r-'-'IStx of his birth famous not oatv
VJ'' apfarlnT' eA" a. AlmA wrlimi rmi wmm Trt
-Ab for Great-graa Peekr, she sat iblreejiitd.and from her cuah- , aaw,. rocker, mrntohmg her caraway
1 jaj I eja aj suav v HHMU CUM UwafO
cfrrieajBa little sacbel snsgended at v.,-.paae aitoepay regarding the group
Q'H'iaiaenk antaayjiur mn a wuru ner
' .Bat that, was nothing strange for M'-1aW" ;S.Vei.acaTcelTever spoke say in
ijFjBptmTlUuW and never even m them
Ifadaiae Yon Breeks tok Starch
fee-by) to flernmta, tradee-people or
icuxtgnteruertrnoe. And tbe last
.titat ooold harooeeiufW to either
amiahle lawmakers vonld hare
itihe fitea of appealing to the old -rt matMi -ihom that ;a
wots in
And 6b it happened that Gertrude; trying t9'lay an r tram ttjiemory; and fin itritmuallf elndher; aboZwW i tip m ivntibK ,wheii someone softly whistled it behind her ;
ana, Turning quietly on ut rewi
BjKjin, sue saw un Tuyug vnuinn:,' i in .hand, standintr lit the doorway.
"Beg pardon; but that is fioii you wanted, is it not?" he' ;ajpked,a8 he ceased whitling, in avojoe as deep as
"Oh, yes, thank
witflADi
cUCaUDfL.
fnUy and srracefully.
"Ifs a beaxttifnl thing," said the
painter, sou standing m the doorway; "but I think the sonit becinninar in this
way" and he prepared to whisft gaan'
when he encountered the frozen frown
of lladanv Yon Breeks von
she stepped into cear. andfledl !
anil locked, ana ike fair perfome a
prisoner m her own room; and Grandmother Hnffey, meeting i Mr j EverdeB Tremlett as he came to work, requested
him in one brief sentence to "get through his irork and go about his bnsirfeSs as
soon as possible "
iks and flocksmiths.
time Gertrude went
to the 0
tTO (rSiarl It
EtedJby:
Bnt:
hearts:
and the -very next
foe her smgimr le
she w&s ; always
-rs
'lor wjKstws to haxe saiM ar W&i
squeaked the fife. "Only John and inyseif know the; secret of the fasten ijunL'J Anii-"i Rarnlrl haVa dbenad i
shecertauily CotQd not have fastened' it
bahindJies fakune of the aeErantdcmuaty
nave nerpea aetr
..JBnt the servants emphatically de clrei1fefeerifce'1rinocence; "There's no use asking ma," said Mistress Huffey, looking rather .'spitefully at&tfbtS lady a she: rooked in hertfaTorite.rocker and munohefl; hit favefite refrfcshBnt. "Sineyeriseeorlielrs anything': But, however the ungrafelul minx irot but. I'm srlad she's cone, and
the pioJfio- 'paihy ofymonedoes iSfjpXf air Bkin-'I we-- - -
The great-gran's "little gift" proved to be a bonbon box filled with fresh caraway biscuits, in the midst of which lay a crisp ,$1,000 "DnitedStatcs treasury note-3ut heveHtdid' Everdoll or his wife hear from or seeier again, for very soon after thair .marrjage she passed qnietly out of life,!:and' soj mil remain an enfirmA'to thffni forever. I "
f And MadaaVen Breeks von BNrbhi aald Mistresa'Buffey, havhig suoeeeded-
m marrying the merchant irom tsergen-
Lop-j&oomto a distant relative of tfie Von
Starch family sought out and dowered
for that -purpttse-idopartedk with the-
bridal pair for that onoerenowned military town, and "the land of the free and
fjhe ho4o:of I-tWlrave" knew them no
pet's Weekly.
Madame Yon Breeks von Starch
grnmhting the greater part of I and her laithful henchwoman .the Duchesne
M 9f tbe hoasehotd out of te4 2 HnV: . ?ny for you. dear
which was to cease at her death,
l -IailJ wnt"MTWi.l flxnn Art' .11
to U(mtbev own way.
nanVcdlrra&dame Yon
yea Btareh in honor of the
of BerRen-OD-Zooin had
her parents in her infancy,
hasyniff been reduced to
iWWirtji some time before he died by
eiBweeniie
dependent upon her three
Great-frran Peeky .na ihn
b jGrandniother Huffej-, who,-
as the mother of Oertnule s bile Grandma Yon Breeks
.the same oMee relatioa-
to her father.
bassoon grandnwither 3wi at the
d m&m momma brancn'of her fatpfsae had been a Yon Breeks voa Siareh herself, nndhndmarrfcda eousin "f the same name) a family of great lrawess and many bags of gold in their -thpr-land some century and a half ago. 'e was. tall, stoat and solid, with a
faeej, big black eyes,; abradant
-ftgr, jodajcarnage Wat.mH,
S-1
rrm.niiaTfHl nrm
Cap
' ' The
sylhable of
-rThefife 0ranSito&r five years her
. jnuov directly her opposite, beiu r jitiai& dm sad limber, toB & Atop
em &use exneotei thm tur iunr. att
afll'lall lll'alit PaViVtr wv4wUsrfWJtsajf'!
v. r 1 'a 1
W no msaa. iw aca-lWaV" :imr of the three fthooffh she did look I
--jwmnB. twi-o, waoi juuicaiBg uur cacs' amy lwaoiiitii, eemewhat like a very-nice
jrfe Jreesee way ed prettily above her j'stodark eyebrows, beneath xrhich ' ..sfcrtinrMil with s mild, dreamy light her
;-palmatonber wTinkledface. , J:was from her Gertrude had re
as, munoBir uways oewoweu mu. jier-
fWJWWqW, f IjyW MV , UIUUUUI, . wwwiim. Yon Breeks von Starch supplying the fessons meroitment, and Grandmother Huffey ate whisper it) tbepunisinents, uittally inflicted with a slipr r or buck of a hair brush. BrA. . spite of tlsehictoresand lessons and ctiier diaagtiiealile things, Gertrude led a 'olerably happy life with her three AMdntotheraujtil her eighteenth birthdflSr: From that
BoryeiBanco, so much sarcaem, so many
scoxcungs, utn, even the hair-brush-and-sjer period i teemed h eomparison a Kgrcttable one. And aQ on account of the young man who earn to fresco the
.or ceumgt. a, nanasome vounir
he was, peesesmng the highly eu-
e of isverowu Tremlett. iCObd looks m hiaro-
mautie name ftiidm aught with the
wo Taanagmg graneanoaaere, wno saw
OUT aMawiwiasriw nw,
the Huffey and the Yon
Btorches had nothing in J
fewtth which
FAjadther4,withiHiB jKiimlilLyjW-af alaH!aNa
5l iB?9flRSliKr?RKaW?S 'IRPWt' afiSpSWPftlHffs SWfP?
A eoriespondent rjbently'irrptf to tka inquiring what kind of stuff was glugNe djAkuffiE- hadheard i iBoaaealf saW PoutT gcpeS and somelnwA we had imbibed the impression that it was some kind of a newly-dis-
kcOveredtflud. '. HOTfeverrbeihg anxious
tft-pleaso our readers, and "give univer-1
sal eatisiacuou all, . around, Awe etarted out k mvestignte the subject.
A Saginaw man once told us that
ia- tiy! interest ol x?pix- sciencej. we
or
a new
pupil with a nWcnmcaef bass-yolce, and
tbtnewpupil aslSe fafMaired, blue-
eyed young Iresco-pninter. JNot one
wocd'of ihis fceeting nor -of i the rpee inga that followed it two or three 'times a week for six months thereafter.' did'
the naughty girl -breathe to either of ht JfesS?"!11?' !?4 tm yonuser of the' trio exulted trrentlv
over; they atjiirSfaBoe with wiohj they guarded ile frotref bride faccerd ing tp theii IrfM-feif uflans) of Diedrichi
von -Creeks, jtaomcn oolland meroJhant,l
due in new lOrnwitti the new year. But their exultation came to an end on
New: Yeara.eve-. . Cm -that ewahig
Conservatory of Musio- gave, a. pup;
concert; tanorthet rvery arst aMw,
sung by Miss Gertrude Yon BreekBand Sir. Everdell Tremlett. f. In vain, hacl them redtdil; let otftoflfuV
programme; m vainhad.he srJmmVned f
to jus- sua a. rnystenouB wiroas OHease. His nrofessnr leelBrnI that ainir ho
luuaiw lue ii the;-'prepajtron----of--gswiuiilii,
i so ther
GOSSIP K0 THE LADIES,
Brarfcins;,
Wnan the etoors ate shot and the wmdws
olosed, Then' comes the sparking hour The silent kiss, tho Ktolcn huji Are mighty in their power. DftTjiEht for birds, and flowers and things That poets write about: Give me a candle short and thin
lib
bought a glass ojjNbeef, slid while aitlner 3 ar the sea foam siooel off a little va
remarked casud j"0 course,you put aplenty of goodr liure glucose; in your beer, dont you?" And may -we b Messatldf -that bAtrtejider didn't come round the enif of the counter as mad as
a hornet ahd as ireoVip tttaf faces as:
Douea snrunp, with a oig, crass lauoet in hiskand, and tried toiap us on the
f nose but wefi;wffta Wkfcglaugh.
r-; . fccoBsm-echool-iuarm had hinted that she labored under the impression;
that the oandy manufacturers used giu-
three jgrantoctteriisittiniT m. great
state near the stage, were horrified
that is, two of them were, (great-gran munched her cam ways -us placidly: as ever) by seeimr and hearino- their
granddajightfn made Cperatic love' to, i
iu at Ti j im jvre-uiaujg wo.jr, utsiure most fashionable audience, by the young man who frescoed .their pefrkoa. ; . i-f -In a moment the whole truth flashed upon their minds, and how they sat' out
the rest of concert, so great, was their indignation, they never knew. Bnt at
last, mfleh fo-to fett reTf an end, and the ominous silence with winch they received rthe i pretty.culprit
prepared her for the storm (the after-
proved butter-sojOtch nd fugar monke;
we wen in aw skiu ay wim
if he had anyyftTiOlajariycodopeTjd
with glucose, and the man looked so
bad for a moment that we were sorry ' wFbgKl said anything about it, and then he pitched his coat into the coal box And his hat into an Epple -barrel, and aundforw on the dead run, and we had to out and seek further in the pur-
ISsnSt of the desireufiirsiation.
we spoEe to a retau grocer aoout buying a barrel of standard "A" coffee sugar, and told him that of course he
would see that there was the right quan-
if he didn't try to stab us with abutter-
tester. ..Thea we went home. . "V-e are'
Obliged to give up the conudnrum. If
claps of which I have recozdd,t theii the correspondent could only ask us an
beginning of my story) that burst upon'
hex head as soon as tuey reached home. When it was over Gertrude was allowed to seek her room. Here she threw off her
eloak,urriejd thClkey in hex. door and;
wwml inu w uvsvai a uuis, wiuuu nuts hastily read. ltx Abases (thus It ran)- suppose in fact, I know you will have a scans with her Boyal Highness Ton Breeks yon Starch
But don'D let them frighten you; and don't be frightened at what I am about to pro
posal xo-momnr wm oe JNew rears oayi Consent, I entreat' you, to begin the New Tear with ma, I have but a humble home to offer you, but la ft waits the blessed est of mothers and the best of grandmothers (who
welcome you. X
read'this note,
are -around: too nearest corner.
Our alto and tenor wilt be with me, ready to act as bridesmaid and groomsman. Your frrandnwUiers would never obcaent to our maroage, and artless yon take a decisive step they will marry you, to spite of yourself, to your Dutch fifth cousin. Come, my darling, come. Evkbdku. Ryoq? andf it tajweslble to make yenr escape, why, then I must beard the lions In their den to-morrow, and fight a duel with the Ton Breeks y oil Starch as soon as he arrives to. the-conntsr-, ., ,.; . Gertrude stood an instant m thought. Tben-sne glanced in the mirror. It redacted a bride-Eke fhrure. Dress of
Psome clinging creamy white' material.
ou6y-deeJked 3aaO a K olpud ., ot lace clasped' ;at tBe1 thrtot W'a tnty - gold cross. She smiled softly, reread her note; waited impatiently until half an hour had passed, and- then unlocked der door, opened it, and listened. All
was silent as the grave. Cautiously
"PooatEverdell
prepared'
to tme behcWaif she ventured out into the entry, groped
wisvuicrwp i ner way to the suiryay, and began to
descend the stair, pausing" on every other step to make sure that no one was astir and watching her. At last she reached the street door iu safety. It seemed as age to her until she had suc-
iceededin unfastening tkehea4 chain
across a m reality was just three
minuise nnn then slie felt for the key? It was. gone! Her heart sank wirhaa
her, r J' . ' i.
tr she said, and sadly
'f$1rctraee her' 'steps not dar
ing to try the basement way, because the'servants slept iu that part of the house when a faint light appeared above her head, and, looking up, she saw great-gran, ounrying a lighted candle in her hand, coming down the stairs as carefully as she had come down themherself. "She will can th - others as soon as she is sure 1 it is I, " she exclaimed, clasping her hands in an agonyof fear. -But great-gran came straight on, without a word, until she stood beside the frightened girl. - ' Here's the key,, my dear,'' she mid in a whisper, and with' quite 'a gtrnsh air. " I've got a key that fits the General's door, though she dont know it and I took this from under her pillow. Ohl if she'd caught me. But she sleeps like a soldier of the Bevolution. And 'here's a little gift for you" putting a small package in Gertende's band.' "Law, child, how much "you do look like me the night I ran away with Oliver Peeky I Your sweetheart's a good boy; I know aU about lum. Good-night, and a happy New Year to you both,!".. . And exerting all his strength Gertrude standing motionless in her great surprise the old lady unlocked the dcor, and gently pushed the girl out into the arms of her lover.
And when the flight was discovered next morning, the anger thereat was nearly equaled by the wonder in regard to the numnerof it.
She never went by the front door,
w w w under my pillow,"
I vm of toe
easy one, it little one for a- cent, we would try and wrestle with it. But there
is every appearance just now that we shall have to acknowledge ourselves stumped. Every day we hear of some town or community which wants to establish-a glucose factory, but what is the use of starting a manufactory to turn . out something which nobody wants, or knows anything about, and which seems to drive people into a frenzy when you speak to them about it? No, we don't know what glucose is, and, whafa more we dont care a continental. 'Cheek . Good Manners. The liondon Spectator contained the vehement protests of an English traveler against the want of polish in the manners of the Germans. He declared' that the wisest of men and fairest of women were to ' be found among them, but that they all ate with their knives and sipped their soup noisily. He had seen, he said, a whole family eating soft-boiled eggs with knives and forks, and that, say what you would, speak to whom you might, the universal answer was a stupid, staring Wa J" (What?) "The English 'I beg your pardon? and the French ' Platiil f which indicate that yon are not understood,, were trying enough 'to a foreigner, but this blunt Was F is intolerable. No wisdom, no domestio virtues,' will atone for it. It meets you everywhere, like a slap in the faco." Thus for the Englishman. Now hear the German. Herr 0-, a savant, who vkitediliondoa a -year ago, and was .admitted into the highest circles, waxes indignant at the coarseness of English manners. - "It is the habit in the clubs for gentlemen to 'chaff' each other; a vulgar, school-boyish trick. The Englishman is arrogant even in his- hospitality. He patronizes you, if he is your equal, or is sycophantic if ah inferior, " f An American in Paris complains that the French eat untidily, champ their food and leer at women whom they pass on the street. Each nation criticises other nations sharply to an exaggerated degree, to be itself in turn condemned. The lesson which our young American readers may learn from these remarks is that a man or woman is us ually judged by strangers not from his real-worth, knowledge, piety or wit, but by those! unconscious small Writs at the table or in the drawing-room that are acquired in childhood, and which probably seem to him insignificant. The manners of well-bred people are easily acquired in youth, and will serve us as a letter of introduction to such people through life. But; .if neglected'
wui iuiu iii auaBi- uipuswDig , vu- gam them. FbufA' Cotpanion., . ,
SchooI'Room Ventilation. A medical commission was appointed some time ago i$ermany to study and investigate certain questions relating to the construction of - school buildings. Inthe1" matter of Ventilation, the com-. mission states that each pupil in a
flchoolfcfc4bjt 0 hate 2,120 cubic feet of freshWeWour, at the Jaw. It is stated also that light from the rear is admissible, but it is not recommended, and windows facing the pupils are prohibited. TJhdeb ordinary circumstances there is no accounting for names, but there iii a clergyman in Illinois bearing the namo of Tool, in whose case it looks as if he
or some one of his ancestors had be come weary of a somewhat lowly appal
lason, ana uaq reversea
tAnd a wind that puts It gut.
Tbe Homely Woman .
"What ladies are the easiest to wait
UTJflnt"
"The .homely oneSi" replied the clerk,
emphatically. Seeing a look of incre
dulity upon the reporters face he con tinned:
'"Itfsso: Pin not bracing; you a bit.
The prettier they are the harder they are to please. ' A handsome girl lias
been so flattered and cajoled and petted,
from her youth up, that she hr lost
her head. She enters with a flutter
and must be shown half a hundred cosmetics. Then she settles down to a
steady twenty minutes' gossip between
them all. She is changeable, nnctuat
ing and peevish, and if you vent ure to make a suggestion she skips from the
store as though fired from the mouth of
a cannon. Sow, on the other hand, a
homely girl has a mind of her own.
She is not constantly cloved with admi
ration and petting from- her adaurcrs,
and has drunk but precious littlu from
the golden bowl of adulation. Hut she
knows what she wants, asks you for it decisively, and leaves you with a smile that would be oharming if her mouth was only a yard and a half smaller and her
teeth a little less like elephant tusits.
God grant us a prosperity of homely girls. Life would still be endurable withoutpretty faces, but Heaven help
us if we lose our homely ones, t - Beautiful Indian Women.
Many half-breed Cherokee women in
the Indian Territory are cultivated in mind, beautiful in person, industrious in habit and will compare well with the more favored woman in the North and East. They have magnificent heads of hair, long and black, all their own, and
with jet black eyes and pearly teeth, -dressed in that fashionable attire in which they all love to appear, they would not be recotmized in Eastern
drawing-rooms as that part of the orig
inal inhabitants of our country known as squaws, a name long since repudiated. Let it be known, then, that while men
of worth and character nre popular
among tne beauties of the Territory, and four out of five who come to make a home among them marry theso dusky maidens, get a citizenship, nrrounil themselves with ample acres and the comforts of -life, participate .in,, thej affairs of government and becouio lie most actiye and wealthy cit'iens of the Territory. A chief trait in tho character of many white men both in this' country and out of it is to get possession of its productive lands. By committing matrimony, they can kill two birds with one stone get a wife and farm too. Cor. Pittsburgh Chronicle, Woman's work. The quiet fidelity with which a woman will dish wash her life away for her husband and children is a marvel of endurance. Here is the servitude of woman heaviest no sooner is her work dono than it requires to be done again. Men take jobs, work on them, finish them, and they are over for good and all The prospect of ending them and drawing pay for the labor is alluring, but no such allurements are held out for the wife. She washes Mond ay after Monday the same garments until there is nothing more of them to wash; then they are replaced by others of new material just like them, and the rubbing and wringing goes on forever. She mends the stockings with tireless fidelity, the same holes meeting her gaze week after week, for if there is a darned place in a sock "he" invariably puts his irrepressible toe through it. Every morning the rooms are put in order, only to be in the wildest disorder by the time night falls. There are no jobs, each one different, no terms, no pay. Tho same socks, the same washing, the same room every time. There is too little brightness in the lives of women in the country. They have too little help in their domestio occupations. The "nurse" in a house where there is a baby to care for ought to be set down as one of the regular expenses as much as the potatoes for the family. A mother's health both of body and mind is worth more than additional acres of land, or finer live stock. Tho heart should not be allowed to grow old. Life should not have lost its charm, the heart its spirit, and the body its elasticity at 40. years. And -yet-hpw-many women are faded and wan,' and shattered in mind and health, long before they are forty. All the joy of life is not in youth's morning. Ii we so will it, we can, to the lost moment of liier be at least negatively happy. Women's Hoses. The nose is the most prominent feat, nre in the face, and is a more faithful indication of the character than is generally supposed.. In. dress, it gives the key-note to the whole structure by its size or shape. "Every woman is, or ought to be, a cathedral, " soys a poet of yestorday, ond M, Blano also compares, dress to a kind of architecture, throughout which a primary idea should be consistently carried, and no mingjing of styles allowed. When a woman possesses a Eoman
nose she must be extremely careful as
to her style of headgear and hair-dressing. Neither of throe must belong to the frivolous or coquettish order: Neither must be inadequately sraall. If the wearer of tho Brnnan nose fall into this error, that usaf ul organ will look larger than ever. Our aristocracy are given to inrgo noses. The air of paliices seems to bo favorable to the development of that salient feature, and;
.wove tiicro to bo ro mesalliances, thd
highbred type of no ie would soon reach
fa, -very terrific size indei'd. I always
look on the bright rude of things, and
when i near a man of gentle birth marrying'ft bar-maid, or a modern Copetutt and beggar moid, I always bethink me of the probable modification-of the lordly nosi-s of the next generation. With a Greek nose a woman may wear almost anything. She will bo eni-e to have the
-taste to divine what is suitable and be
coming, and grace enough to put it on straight an accomplishment more rare than might bo thought. But, alasl Greek noses are not exaotly in fashion. Our national taste has proved degenerate and our fickle fancy has timed to the nez retrousse, which has even found its way into the poets. "Trptilted like a flower," says our Laureate of suoh a nose. If the cogitative nose appear in full development on a woman's faco, she will probably be stvong-mindot'l and utterly careless of chiffons, if not of her
own looks. Of th? Jewish noe tii sameobsda-yiticnsaM-fe trUaifts with reM
gttfd to tho;KoraanhV.,jfthftt $vhMg
tituuy ic
T FE' ITS --
ornied, and not too large for our
modern notions of feminine loveliness. It may then be treated as 1 have suggosjajij hi roraarkjag on the, Greek! varThe turn-up nose may be adorable, or it niay be a trial t Much depends on its- complteiorij. mjjh op tiie precise degree of up'o'lfrorcurvo.- This curve -should be similar to those at the corners of the lips, and, when it is, what a piquant harmony .is tho result 1 Oh, lucky girl with such a nose,,what a queen of hearts syou may beil Add but the instinct of cqusjbry to this nose and you have a, creature as dangerous as Helen to the peace of man. It must not be a shaky, fleshy, flabby thing: a curt decision and a spice of dainty self-
assertion must characterize it- Jt was such' ah ideal none that? irispiretl the foP
lowing sentiments: . "We: confess a lurking penchant, a sort of sneaking affection which we cannot resist, for the celestial nose in a woman. It does not command our admiration and respect like the Groek, tea which we could bow down as to ji gpddoss, but it make, sod worko odr affeotKms. Tho Eoqb; too, is not so itnUearhblc as in a miin. 3f is a grelit marker of beauty, undoubtedly; but, merely regarded as an index of weakness, it chums our kindly consideration. Afwpnian,Emoreovor,'has geuer-i allyltact snfEcento conceal (often-to
thei entifa.' aunibllatiog) tho unpe possessing charaoferisti& of pie snub and ythe celestial, whiohin a weak raan become every day mSro and moro
strongly marjteu. - celestial jpose in;
woman iaj mequemuy an muea or wn. v And this, be it rememlwred, was written
long before the apotheosis of the turned-; I Beu A
And what starle.of architecture are.w
to; construct ' our dress upon ?' ask' then'
uwuKis oi uucu jiuaua.f miYuuHg coquettish and airyt frivolous and quaint.! Severe simplicity consorts not with thej enubi A little jnaalence of ornament? suits it; floating ribbons, a rampant ai-j
Kretu?, jieiui sunning over witu curls;" a flounce turned back andforth; i 1,-4. .;., .--1 .-,.,!. .7 M. -1 I
west. Such as these would be incongruous with the Greek, an insult to thfJ Bonian, tin injury to tho Jowish( and a flftt contradiction to the cocntativeJ
With the ."tip-tilted" they make a happy-
narnionv,
REPUBLICAN PMG
k VALUABLE ADVERTISING KEBjUl
Circulates Aneng the Best Famssrs fat. Monroe Couty,
Khas .
And la Read by Every Member at Each Family.
TO Patent Medicine Aiwidmm milted to that Goltmmt.
AFTER THE K0OISATI05.
How Could He Have Known Itl Italians love to converse with Aiaericana, and listen, like children, to what' is' told them .about, the United States.
They nr'o so ignorant that anything tliat
is told tnera alio it Ainonea is rconvod with expressions of surprise a-ad dMight.) Mr. Story, the sculptor, ears ht pover, knew an Italian sfaggcrod 1y an."t!iii::ii ho narrated but once; and then he stated a frimple fact: I was walking with my respectable' old padront, Nisi, about his Utile gar-, deh, One day, when au ambition to know!
something about America inflamed hisi
breast. "Are there many mountains?" ho
asked. !
"Yes," "And have you any cities ?" "Yes, a few little ones." He was evidently' pleased that they
were small, and, with a feeling of natural pride, said, "Largo as Home, of course, they Could not be. And lifers, too, have you any rivers?" '
A tew. "But not so large as our Tiber," hq
replied. s
"We have some rivers 8,000 miles
long,-1 l answiired'.' - w ' " "
The effect was disastrous. The good
man stood and stared at me, as, if Petri-, fled, ;fcr' a moment. JThep' tlio blood rushed into his face, and, turning on his. heel, he took off his hat,and said sudden lyi "Gpo mpfeing,'' and carrieplmy foq and;liis-ophiicmsftogethe to his private' room. From that time forward hq asked me no more questions about
America,, ,., -ait t
A monk oaeo'iiiforrilcl metfist Cot-
umbus was an Italian, and that he had discovered America and tiiat he was a romorkabts inah; tp all of 'wjhifbf I assented as being true, If not now.
.but now a severe abstract questioq
began to tax my friend's powers. Ha
said. "Butdioar conld he ever ufragjaaij.
That's thoSueetiati. It is extraordinary,
indeed!"
At last his face lightened, and looking
at me he said, ".Perhaps he may havj
m The Way Abraham Lincoln Appeared
Visitor in 180O. . . rftemlulsecnce by Judge Park, of Jollet.
Mr lost interview with this extraor
dinary man was iu Spriugfleld in June,
1860, and but two or three weeks after he had been placed before the
American people as a candidate for the highest honor, as I account it, in all this world, lleing in that city en route
to Jacksonville and compelled to lie ' over for a few hours, I sauntered from the depot to the State House, and the
weatner being hot . betook myself to the shades of the library, then com
municating with the office Of Secretary
of State. Hardly had I got settled in my retreat before "Uncle Jesse" spied
mo out -'as he was pacing his morning
rounds" Uncle Jesse, " I say, . the genial Auditor whom some ill-mannered
men sometimes called Mr. Dubois, al
though his true nanio was "Uncle Jesse." Arrestinir me on the spot, he informed
me that Mr. Lincoln (pro! ably he called
him "Old' Abo"; was then in his room and for tho first time since his nomina
tion alone, addincr on his own responsi
bility, of course, that he would be glad
to see me. X had then no alternative but to go forward and pay my respects, although I confess I was at first a little panic stricken with the sudden prospect of a royal audience. Following Undo Jesse I entered lus room, which was indeed void of visitors, save one elderly gentleman from St. Louis, who was eu route for Jacksonville, like myself; a preacher I conjectured from his appearance and dress,-which contrasted amazingly with that of the other man.
As I entered Mr. Lincoln instantly recognized me, came forward and took
mo by the hand with the old rough heartiness of manner, a little empha
sized, I thought, by the altered oircum-
inceg. ijut what a bgnre I
There stood before me, on that summer's morning,' the' most distinguished and interesting American of . the age, and how do you suppose he was cos-' turned for his part? The day, I have
saidi was hot, and it was evident that
he hod flanked the meteorological con
diticms with a minimum of clothes; a
straw hat manifestly the worse for wear in hand ; no cravat, no collar and no vest, as I will depose to tho best of my remembrance; a common, cheap linen
coat, short for him, of course, limp and
wrinkled by perspiration; his nether garments none too lon for his long legs.
and his feet in slippers of no. great
market value. Thus royally arrayed was tho man whom- the
great new party which had
recently taken the field to contest for the control of tho national administration had singled out to bear its standard in the impending battlo. We soon set-
tlediaiown to a familiar chat, in which
it itta impossible for me to feel tljo least embarrassment or restraint. As evidently I had not come to instruct him in regard to the policy upon whioh he ought to conduct the Government when elected, he naturally dropped into-his old rut of "little stories," of which he told two or three not particularly Presidential in their character. The Missouri gentleman sat apart- and listened with manifest amazement, for Lincoln, you know, was of Quaker stock, and sometimes used the plain language. The interview was short, perhaps twenty minutes, and I thought he seemed to enjoy his little respite from the relentless pressure of crowds, processions; committees, delegations, professional politicians and importunate office-seekers and offloe4rokcrs, that had incessantly pursued hint since lus.noniipation.
read that jt eras there ui seme, old pooka
Vainly.I endeavored to show him that
this view would deprive Columbus of his createst distinction. He answered
invariably, "But without having read it, how could ho ever have known it?"
The Yalue or Willow Wood. On aocountfof its comparative iucora-
bustibpitv, ttie willow is eminently rueful fori the floors of buildings designed to be &re-prdpf. It grows to a-' large 6ize and furnishes a great amount of lumbor. Thero is a white willow growing at Stookbridge, Mass., which, at, four .feet from $lp. ground measures., twentr-two foot in bircmuferaaco, arid
extends its brdineiep. fifty ?eet in every,, diccciion.vi .Erudition says it- Wis?
Artlllciol Flowers for Churches. - Ten dollars' worth of artificial flowers, tasfefullf arranged in a different way
each Sunday by some of the skillful '
ladies of. tho church, will last a whole season and do the work of $100 worth of the real products of the hot-house, i It is believed that this artificial
'business was first introduced in Brook-
r" . It may bo a 'comfort to genuine jsts to know that one of the ohurohe3 which conspicuously engaged in this sort of work came to grief at the hands of the Sheriff, and is now used as a place of worldly entertainment. A clergyman, who was supplying for-the day a pulpit which was decfied with "artificials," happened to bring into his sermon au illustration on the growth of the flower from the seed. To clinch this illustratioa with the. very best effect, ho reached to a basket of flowers which stood near th pulpit and was about to pluck from it' pretty ilower. "Boa," said he, "sua riolt, colors of this dainty flower. Note its delicate fragrance It grew from a little sued no larger than the head of a pin." Just then, with thumb and finger, ho laid hold of tho stem of tho delicate, dainty and presumably fragrant thing- with n view to romovingit frorx the ba .ot and holding it up to view. Great wua his sudden disgust to find tho stem made of wiro inwrapped with groon muslin. When in the next moment the horrid revelation dawned on his mind that the wholo basketful was a lot of counterfeit!, ho looked as if green potatoworms Lad suddenly crawled upon him from out tho pulpit desk. The con-
tgrcgntion smiled, and tho preacher pushed on with his sermon as best be ieould. l'h Uadelphia i'resi.
account
on an ex
WereX
treo i:
WOU1U I won! be tho
brought from Connecticut rin 1607 by a
traveler, who used it as a riding switch.
The Hon. Jesse w. Fell, in giving an
exvoi-ime-pts in
lfciKt Renin in XflinsSs.
A upon to desinnnto .oiic- 'J
more than ill others, Sf
nimend for g-ni-al)!an
y, nheint&tinlgy', -p shor
Ite fr-illowj BJrof.ffirevi
EHglaJawheto ft is dfteM
fifty or sixty feet high m twenty years,
there is no wood m greater demand than good willow. It . is light, very tough, soft, takes a good finish, will bear more'? pdiuidiiig and knocks tlflin
any other wood fcrown there, and is
used for cr-icket bats, -for floats to pud-
it )o wheels .of steamers, and praise
blockf aii jars. It is used'.xtenHively for turning, planking, coasting vessclo furniture, ox yok., wooden legs, shoe lasts," etc, Fijllor says : "It growjjUi hicrediblv 'ast. it boinc a bv-word tiiat
tho profit byrillows will'buy the owner a horse-lief (ire that W other trees will
pay for a saddle." Tho basket willow, well cultivated, will yield a net income
of SjilfiO a year to tho aere On tho whole, therefore, it would seen? that the various kinds of willow, the 'economic value of which has lieen hitherto entirely overlooked in this country, aro eminently deserving of attention, and will amply reward those who cultivate them. Popular Science Monthly.
. ( i.7nrelle Smoking. Tho vice of cigarette smoking, which is provident everywhere, is attracting
lantiiigiserious attention iu Eastern cities. . A
iccnsu.s uuy tu iih? jjuuiiuouuuuiq wiiu use tobacco has lately been taken in Boston. It shows that many lads less than a dozen years old are habitual ci
garette smokers, and that among boys
sgr-ljovpr 15 the vice is almost universal. -1' , j i , i ,i i .1.:, i.-.t,
gin x luiuueipuin win uauuiuu uooojuesiu
alarmingly prevalent that it has been niiide the subject of social agitation. A crusade against tho smokers of the cigarette has been inaugurated by tho young ladies of that city, and not long ago tho local papers loomed with communications from tho fair sex expressing a linn resolve not to kiss any young man who was known to be a cigarette smoker. What effect this action has had upon tho young man is not known, but ilo form uf agitation has bfcu able to banish the vice from tho public schools. It is estimated that 75 per cent of the male pupils use tobacco in this form. 'Dhe teachers are trying to break up the habit by mo'iNil suasion, and a circular set ting 'forth tap abominations and hurtfuluess of cigarettes is pasted inside the cover of every text-book.
DunNfa 1882 the murders committed
in tho United States averaged two a day,
while the exeetttiona only averaged two
a week.
Not Caught That Time. Years ago, whqn all clossos an Sootland drank often and deeply, a parish school-master was charged with habitual drunkenness. Tho presbytery met
' to try him, and one of the school-boys was called to prove tho allegation. The ; first question asked was: "When yon 1 attended the eohool did you notice that
the master had a habit of going into a closet which opened out of the schoolroom?" "Yes, I did," answered the boy. "Did he frequeitl7 enter into this closet?" "Yes, sir." "Have you ever been in this closet?" "Yes, sir." "Do you remember what it contained?" "Yes, sir." "Now tell us what you saw in it." "There was a good many bottles, and they wero all arranged on shelves." - " Very good. And when the master entered had you the curiosity to look at what he was doing?" "Yes; I and the other boys used to look in after the master, and see him. there." "You did? Well, now tell us what you saw the master do on these occasions?" "He was handling bottles." "Handling bottles! Very good. And can you tell us what the bottles contained?" "Yes, sir." "Well, now, just tell those gentlomen what the bottles contained.'' "Yes, sir. It was ink, sir; they were .fok-bottlesl" , Brave Lying. "That thunder-shower was one of the worst things of its kind I ever took a hand in." "Would you replenish your glass and tell us the' details ?" asked the heavy man, politely. "It was in the winter of '40," said the stranger, stirring his glass reflectively. 'Td heerd there was a good deal o' walnut timber in them sections, and I was keen to get it. So me and my son took a steamer and went up on the Northern coast, where no whito man had ever been before. As soon as we landed we knowed we bad struck it rich. Gentlemen, there was millions of acres, all cut and ready for the market." "Might I inquire, who cut it?" interrogated the heavy man, solemnly.
"You say no white man had ever been there."
"The polar bears had gnawed it off
searching for honey r' replied tne stranger, calmly. "Go on with your thunder-shower." "Well, as I was tolling you, we started right in, and in three weeks we were richer than any eight men in the States. There was no end to the luck. Everything went our way from the start. We had all the logs down on the dock and were only waiting for the boat to come and take us off, when I seen clouds making to north'ard and I knowed it was going to settle in for thick weather. I told my sou to look out, and in less than half an hour there broke the doggondest storm I ever seed. liain t Why, gentlemen, it rained so hard into the muzzle ol my gun that it busted the domed tiling at the breech! Yes, sir. And the water began to rise on us, too. Talk about your floods down South! Why, gentlemen, the water rose so rapidly in our house that it flowed up the chimney and streamed 300 feet up in the air ! We got it both ways that trip, up and down 1" "Do we understand that you are relating facts within the scope of your experience?" demanded the heavy man, with his mouth -wide open. "Partially mine and partially my son's," answered thd unabashed stranger. "He watched it go up, and I watched it come down! But you can get some idea of how it rained when I tell you that we put out a barrel without any heads in it, and it rained into the bunghole of that barrel faster than it could run out at both ends !" "Which of you saw that?" inquired a istener. "We each watched an end, my son and
me," returned the stranger". "Pm tell-
iubt you about a storm now, gentlemen.
But the worst of all was the lightning! It wasn't in streaks; it just stood still in one flash, and when it got through you shpuld have taken a look at that timber! That timber was chopped into the finest sawdust you ever got your eye
on ! Fme as snufii Wasn't a sock left half an inch lone ! You never saw any-
thfcK-like it! There was over $12,000,-
000,000 gone! We thought we might
save the sawdust to mix points witn, and save a couple of million out of the wreck, but while wo was thinking that
over the wind sprang up, and then there
was music! I ve seen some wind in my
time, but no such wind as that ever blowed before or anywhere else ! Well, you can get au imperfect notion of how that wind blew when I tell you that it blowed that sawdust right back into its former shape, and when that Btorm possed off there stood them trees just
where thev stood before the bees gotj
after them r The Bear and the Bam. Little Johnny tells the following story about a bear and a belligerent old ram : "One day the bear he went among a flock of sheep and picked out n nice little lamb, and cot it, and the lamb it said ba-ba-ba, cause it knew it was going for to be ot every little tiny bit up. But the bear took it up in his fo-je poz, like it was a baby, and set it up full length ond .rockt it ond sed: 'There, there, never mind my precious dtirlin', where does it hurt ye? But the lamb kept hollerin louder and louder, cos while the bear was a smilin' and singin' a hush-a-boy he was a skaweozin' titer and titer all tho time. Bime by the old rainb he seen wot was up and he dropt his hed, the old ram did, and come like he was shot out of a gun and let him have it in the stumaok of his belly, and dubbled him up like he was a razor, and sent him a rollin over and over without his precious darlin'. And when the bear had pulled hisself together ogain and shuko tho dust out of his hair, ho sed: 'I have obserfed that lambs tails was quickern lighenin', bnt I didn't konow tltey wos powerfuller, too.' Just then he see how it was, for there stood tho old ranib a holdin'down his hed ready for to let him have it agin, and shakin' it like ho sed: 'Thnt little shaver wudont make more than a moufle for a feller liko you. I guess you better serve up tho old man.' But the bear he wooked off, say in: I don't hanker after a dinner which goes aginat my atummack liko that.'" It Hurts Just as Badly, Though. It was not many years ago that the best American dictionary defined the familiar word "Boil" as o circumscribed subcutaneous inflammation characterized by a pointed pustular tumor and suppurating in a central core ; a peruncutus. What was simple and familiar was made ludicrously complex. In the "Imperial" tho samo word is disposed of satisfactorily as "an inflamed and painful suppurating tumor." 2few York Tribune. We are never rained by wont wnt, bat by what wo think we want,
V
If,:.' jfitA -sv
INDIANA STATE NEWS. 1 AGii-n-i-Hi)UBOcowrecenUyga'--elu-thtoa ' calf with two heads, four eyes, six legs and ' two tails. -. The large and handsome residence of Mfc A. J. Montgomery, In Lawrence county, wtor burned, tavolvlng a loss of $2,500, ' ' ' . ". Has. it Atdeuotb, a well-known Terrs Haute elocutionist, has' been adjudged of unsound mind and removed to tfc Insane -Asylum. F&4NK Cmskoh, of Shelby county, baa)-' bronght suit agahut the J., K. Si Bidbroad Company for 95,000 damages' sustained by . collision with bis buggy some time agio. Iornsli-SBST, a young man, was found "-'' murdered in a hut at Areola TJie pnpos,.i of the crime was robbery, & a pockst-book containing bis month's wages, was' found',' " empty. .-'3.1jfi 1. B. McKtsset, of Green township, Ban. . dolph county, has kept nearly 7C0 load ot ' cattle and 4G0 head of hoes, with lbs hh '
of one hand denting the winter, fed$f eighty bushels of com per day. ..
Omt of the State House Comml I doners' ' Bays It is no w quite evident that wort; on tbn : , building must cease, and there see w now, to lie no way of securing Its oonilnuanoe ' until the meeting ot the next Igisliitdre. Bavtoet, Bpahb and bis wife, Jra i fyelrr aged 80 and 73 years respectively, of Connersvflle, who have managed to live ibrongh, ' -sixty years of married life, sre now Seeking, divorce because of a quarrel over th llr joint accumulations of property.' Tim clothing of a young' colored ohfld ot
4 yesra, tho dnughter of Stuart Waslilngfton a night laborer at the car-works, 1 layette accidentally caught fire, and was burned so severely that the child's flesh fell off the ,f; : , bones, and from the effects of whicl ft died. Remus It HABBrwrox snot and Instantly" killed Lyman GlUUand, bis son-in-law, at -New burgh, Warrick county. Glial Jnd bad . reonntly deserted his wife and destroyed her furniture. He and Harrington mot, quari '' reled over that matter, and the killing lotlowed. "i A nrer days since, a child of Jamei Henry, residing south of Wabash, ran a ehtrp stick H Into itffeye. Inflicting a painful wound. ;; The parents called a physician, but the baby was not considered In -a danjreroun eondU . tton The child became worse, sad dto4,wf fron the effects of the wound. . -,' - Ik Butler townhip, Miami county, Solomon Feijley met his death under horrible cirbum-' ' stances. He lived aone in a log house. TbOrfhou:e took fire, and, in endeavoring to .save some money from a trunk in the loft ot the --' . house, tho old man wns burned, to.iloath , la i,the presenoe of his nelfirhbora. t .- PnEsroENT E. E. Wiot-e, of Purdue tTover '. -elty, on his retirement the 1st of J uly, win" devote hirase'f to certain literary wirkatha1 have been under preparation for a number of years. He will first, however, finish the ' reyl-don of Ills series of art throe Slcs, -to wWch he has devoted much time for over a year. , r A WBTQrowNhartlcultuTlstln the vicinity of Greencastle gives the followiug as there. ' ;. suit of hi! observation and inquhles oeo oerning the fruit, ouijook: Peaahes kfftod. . N and chen-tes partly so. Grapes uumjurod. ; Berries of all kinds look well. Apples, pears and other fruits cannot be forecast till bud- .
sdingtima
A tragedy was imminent forabriof period in the court-room at Lafayette, during the , . t progress of the libel suit of GonfraTagafastj - '.' ,' Handler. Lawyer Wallace objected to a ; qicstion )ut to a witneea, and threatened to - . ' shoot the witness if he answered lb in the ., afBrmative. A scuffle ensued, but officers ' '
Interfered before blood was shed -'J VA tottk j man named Grimley. of Wg Bone, Ky., whfle visiting at BielngSnn, wam' out on a lark the other night, and wnV-'; shot at by some person unknown, and. bo for a plug ot doublo-thick tobacco and a' ' memorandum book In his breast pocket, the shot mlgbt have proved fatal As ft was, Hbs;?-!' ball went; through, the tobacco and lodged , j.. to his pocket , . It Is ed that Gen. Craft, of Terse Haute, died Intestate, as thus far a searching hv
yestlgation has failed to reveal the whereabouts Of .iny will. If none can be found tba. estate, estimated at from t200,0C0toa,r. COO, will be equally divided between bis brothers, Edward and X W. , hts Ulster, Hrs. . a P. Putnam, and the son of a deceased -sister, Mia Fannie 3eobuiy. Tbb Hon. Walter March, one of the oldest . and . most respected ostiiens of Huncie, as ' dead. Ab out one year go Starch received ' ' , t "'
paralytlo stoke from which he never faBy i v
reooverel, and from the effcotaC which he died In 1853 b was elected Judge pf Mf ?; , Court of Common Pleas on the Demooratkt, , , ,(' ticket Iu 1856 he was elected State 8enr ... tor, where he served for eight years, and' ift throughout that period hi the history of the) '" '
Indiana Senate embraced between the year ' -
1880 and 1864. He was born fa KiUbury, Mass. B'is age was 67. '.; Jkbccah T7srptEa died last week at Ms 'K ;-''
residence at Batobridge, at the age of ICt fc "i years 9 months and 25 days. He was born at "a Wytheville, Fythe county, Ta, In 17K, and ' , was married to Miss Kebeooa Hall, of Wvtb. . yule. Ta., Bept 4, 1821, after which he mi- , grated to Bedford, where his wife died, leav- f,7 tag Mm care for seven children. Ha subsequentlj' remove from Bedford to Gos , port, Owen county, where, ta a short time, . he marrted Hiss Elizabeth Horehead, From', :p Gosport came to Bainbridge, jpriwttat .: v county, where he remained workg at M .-'.' trade nntll a few days of his death. HO was 'v. a veteran of the war of 1813 inOapt. Lewi , Hall's company of Tirstoia militia NotwJth-,. v standing Ma age, he oonld read and write li without) (he use of glasses. $f Sdcoh VfmMm, Deputy Sheriff of TOtt-i. f i rickoonntv. shot and Instantly kffleUaokt ig
son Wallwe, In Walker Trisler's A
isoonvuie, ana an m mura w tnvimmax. : -- wounded Thomas Wallace, bis IT-year-rb,.,. ML- A-A-l 1I(T1 II ..Ii uf.. rtVt1 . -J
grudge tetween Thomas Wallace and WHlllama, but which had been partly aettled.-:, AVlmeWlUiama waain he saloon, Ows wi: : writ. k uimim! tV4mW)b"' '
oame in, and tin alder WaUaoe mripWiw&ii
It idTftnoeR to WUliains. and the pfbttv. rrtm
gather; Tom Wallace, though, seemed t0.ob--
loot to his father's intimacy wnA W1UII
and, it is sold, applied the term thief
WUhaws. Otto Nestor, a friend ol
seeing fhat trouble was brewing, seised
to push him back. At this Williams "Let go, or they'll kill me." He then
his pistol and opened fire. The first
struck Tom Wallace in the groat,
through i5he lower part of his bodyy
Waluvo turned, as soon as ait, ami
o; the saloon. His father then
Williams, the latter continuing to
ting Jckson Wallace twice, one
tag bli heart Wallace foil Into
arms, cmd, being laid on theflj
most distantly. Wallace had
a saloon, bnt had repent WilUatiB Is brother of
ot Wanrlok oounty, and a.
theprtiscntSheria. Heitt
thwibJldreo. Heistjkp!
and la of
when
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