Daily Democrat, Volume 1, Number 20, Decatur, Adams County, 3 February 1903 — Page 4
Rural Route News. Route Number Three. ’Messrs, and Mesdames Hoss Har-, •'-r* and E. J. Ahr entertained at six ? dinner at the home of the lai* < ter Friday evening. Those present wore Mrs. C. Mumma, son and daughter and {,’lyde McClure, Magley. Miss Scott is visiting with friends ,„at Decatur. ■Oliver Reppert transacted business in Decatur, Saturday. Wilson Oettinger will in the near future build a new barn. School number six has been closed this week on account of smallpox. Jacob Bloemker has purchased two fine farm horses at the cost of $250. Mart Reppert was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. Bloemker last Sunday. Jacob .Reppert and son expect to build an addition to their house th s spring. Ernst Kruetzmann has purchased some wire fence and will improve his farm this spring. William Sellemeyer, Frederick Schlickman, Chris Reppert and son transacted business at Decatur, Saturday. Our old enemy, smallpox, has again I invaded our town. There are six families under quarantine end several cases in each family, all of which are very mild, but it is not known how ■con the disease may assume aviru-l lent form. W. hope that it will soon disappear and not come in sight any more. Route Number Six. Carl Moeen attended church at Salem Sunday. Revival in,sitings commence next Sunday, night t the V. C. church. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burrell will move to Fort Wayne in a few’ weeks, j Finest Light and Jennie Helm are visiting friends and relatives at Fort Wayne. • J. P. Spuller returned home after •lauding a few days with his mother a* Leo. William Worden and family spent ’»•» Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. C. Kurber, Harold, young son of Mr. and Mrs. Jassn Swartz, has been very sick for the ]>aat few days. Mr. and M rs. G. W. Cramer have se- * cured positions at Marion and will ■ move tbare in a few weeks. Rev. .Rungenburger and Mr. and Mrs. G. W Cramer took dinner with Mr. and Mrs. 0. C. Walters last Sunday. Barney Wertzlw-rger and sister, Louisa. and Frank Kurber are visiting friends and relatives at Fort Mayne. Mi-s Wertzlerger relumed home last Saturday. Dvka Frisinger came out to the eoHntry Sunday evening and got as far »a the Union Chapel church and gcA stuck in tie* mud and was forced to toiy all night at a neighbors. East lariiaa < biitrea. l«*t Indian children from their ten- ’ lierest years are more carefully trained in certain respects by their' mothers Uihn the children of th ■ m st civilized peoples. The moment the youngest baby ceases nursing its lips are ctbsed by its mother. If.the baby does not keep thenrdosed, she uses mechanical means . rigidly and even cruelly. When the ba- | by is put to sleep, it is strapped on to a ISmrd, its head slightly raised and its chin lowered, which teuds to keep the mouth shut. The result is that when • the teeth are forming and making their Mrsj appwirance they meet and conthiually feel one another. Thus they take th'-ir i■ ■latite positions and that health-ful-.ind phasing regularity that gives to the American Indian as a race the most manly and beautiful mouths in
t!je world. • PUBLIC SALL The undersigned will hold a pub- # lie h. ile al his home three and onehalf miles northeast of Decatur on Thursday, February sth, 1903. The followi* ; prop, rly towit: Four work horses, one Durham bull, four Wnilch flows, one with calf at her side, others will be fresh in the spring, 2 two-vear-old steer*; 3 brood sows, one fullbloode iy.-rsey, 7 head of full-blooded shoals, 2 Poland China sows, one wnh pigs at her side, one will farrow soon, 2<> Lead of ewes, X nice buck, 50 chickens, several turkeys, one Deering binder, self dump hay rake, Osborne mowing machine, grain drill, corn shelter, spring tooth harrow, disc harrow, spike tooth harrow, 2 breaking plows, 2 two-horse walking cultivat-1 ors, fanning mill, 2 narrow tire wagons, new one-horse corn cutter, single 1 shovel plow, two-shovel corn plow, : four runner corn marker, log bolsters, hay rack, grind stone, hay rope, pull-1 ies, fork and carrier, bob-sleds, wood ; racks, one almost new-, three-inch i tire Harrison wagon, good spankey with pole and shafts, top buggy, good double set of work harnesst 2 single buggy harness, several log chains, 2 I rolling cutters for plow. 2 cross-cut j saws, several hay forks, shovels, crow J bars, 2 grain cradles, corn planters, seed sower, seed corn, a lot of good. I bright fodder, a lot of gixxl sorted corn in crib, 12 or 15 tons of bated hay, oats in the granary, a lot of potatoes and other articles not mention lionet! here. Terms of sale A credit of twelve months will lie given on all sums of SS.(X), purchaser giving note to the satisfaction of the undersigned Howard W. Shackley. Fred Reppert Auctioneer 16-6
| HOME MARKETS. NOTICE TO HERCHANTS. You are invited to insert in this ' column, free of charge, the price you will pay for any farm product. Accurate prices paid by Decatur j merchants for various products, Corj rected every day. GRAIN. BY E. L. CARROL, GRAIN MERCHANT. Wheat, new $ 71 ’ Corn, per cwt, yellow (new) 57 Corn, per cwt., (new) mixed 55 Oats,new 33 Rye .„. 45 ; Barley 45 i Clover Seed 4 50 @ 5 57 ’ Alsyke 5 50 @ 6 60 Timothy 1 40 Buckwheat 50 ■ Flax Seed _ 1 10 TW.EM SUM MARKETS. Changed every afternoon at 3:00 o’clock by J. D. Hale, Decatur. Special wire service. Wheat, new No. 2, red, cash S 78J | May wheat 81J I Cash corn. No. 2, mixed, cash 45.1 : May corn ! 44.1 1 Oats, cash 36| Oats. May | Rye, cash 53| STOCK. BY FRED SCHEIMAN, DEALER. ■ Lambs 4J (d 5 Hogs, per cwt. $6 00 «/ §6 50 Cattle per lb .3 (ci 4 Calves, per lb. _ 5J @ 6 Cows .. 2 tn 3 Sheep, per lb. 2J (p 3 Beef Hides, per lb. .....j 61 — POULTRY.
BY J. w. PLACE CO., PACKERS. Chickens, per lb .09 Fowls, per lb. 08 to X)B| Ducks, per lb. ... .10' Turkeys, per lb. .12 j Geese, per lb. ..... .......07 WOOL AND HIDES. BY B. KALVER & SON. , Wool 15c to 18 Sfieep pelts 40c to $1 00 Beef hide*, per pound 06.1 I Calf hides 074 Coon hidea . 60o£ 1 10" Possum hides 15c (g 60 | Skunk hides 25c g 1 50 Mink irides .. 50c irA 2 25 j Muskrat .hides .... tOc ((i t 16 Tallow, per pound . 4| C8C464 xwun. Chicago market clo®d at 1:15 p. m. today as follows: Wheat, May S 78g i Wheat, July 741 Corn, May 44’I Corn, July ~ 434 Oats, May 364 Oats, J uly ..... 32| May Pork ~«16 72 JuR Pork _....! 50 Lard* per cwt 9 12 HAY HARXET. No. 1 tfmothy hay (ba ed) .: , ■.. .. f 10.00 @ $11.25 No 1 mixed hay (baled) No. 1 clover hay (baled) Losse hay SI .25 less. COAL. Anthracite. ...... ...$ 800 Domestic, lump 4 75
Domestic, nut .. 450 OIL HARKET. Tiona 51.67 Pennsylvania 1.52 Corning 1.35 New Castle 1.29 North Lima 1.14 South Lima 1.06 Indiana 1.06 OTHER PRODUCTS. ; BY VARIOUS GROCERS AND MERCHANTS. Eggs, fresh, per doz v 16 Butter, per pound 14 Potatoes, per bushel.. ... 40 nARKffI NOTES. Liverpool market was j to | cents higher on wheat. Corn was jto J cent higher. Receipts at Chicago today: 'Vheat si cars ! Corn 537 cars ! Oats 359 cars j Hogs 27,000 The estimate receipts for tomorrow ’ are I Hogs .... 36,000 \\ heat 20 cars Corn .... — ..........155 cars Oats 110 cars BRIEF DISPATCHES j Fifty pstinnt* w*r* burned to death In a Lon--1 do.i hospital for th* heane. Emperor William'* birthday. *u cclabratnd wiili great cnremoidiMTnmMlay. Fire welt nigh destroyed the village of Back Creek. Ind., wiping out nil but two honae*. Bobber* entered the bank of Steelville, HI., and looted th* «»f* getting away with 13,000 Tb* <l*»ih sentence of Col Arthur Lynch ha* been commuted to Ufa Imprlaonment at penal Mrvitui',*, bamnel Peacock, a former poatmaater of Laacaator. Ky.. waa killed al Jellico. Tenn., by a lamp aaploaion. 7
Weather Forecast. Heavy snow north portion tonight and possibly Wednesday. Rain and colder south portion, followed by fair Wednesday. Colder Wednesday. MARKET QUOTATIONS Prevailing Current Prices for Grain, Provisions and Livestock. Indianapolis Grain and Livestock. Wheat—Wagon, 7ftc; No. 2 red strong To Corn—Steady; No. 2 mixed, 45 Oats Steady; No. 2 mixed, 86 Cattle-Slow at $3.5(>’j5.25 Hogs—Quiet at $6 •ft.w Sheep—Steady at $2 43.50 Lambs—Steady at $3j|5.75 Grain and Provisions at Chicago. (Opened. Cloned. WheatFeb $ .TB% $ .74 May J 77% .78% July f 4 .74% CornFeb May 44% .44% July 48% .43% O«te— Feb 33% May 36% .88% July 32% .32% Pork— Feb 16.45 Mav„ July 16.10 18.10 1.4 Feb 9.38 May 9.36 9.35 July 9.15 9.17 Riba— Feb ... May 9.05 a.OO July 8.95 B.x; Closing cash market—Wheat; 76c. corn u riba, $9. At Louisville. Wheat—No. 2 new, soc Corn—No. 8 white, 49c; No. 3 mixed, 4Ac < > Ma—N k - mixe .. Id ■ Cattle—Steady at $2.75 44.75 Hoga—steady at $.<56.85 Sheep—Steady at $2 q :'.50 Lamba—Steady at $3.50(45.25 At Cincinnati. Wheat—Quiet: No. 2 red, 79c J Corn—Steady; No. 2 mixed 47c Oats—Steady; No. 2 mixed, 3S~* Cattle—Steady at $21.44.76 Koga—Active al Sheep—Strong ar ft 44.35 Lambs—Strong at
Livestock at Chicago. Cattle—Slow: steer?, 10; stoekeri and feeders, [email protected] Hog*—Steady at 5r:[email protected] Sheep—Steady at f:l.lS<ar.9o lji»b»—Steaday 113.50'40 a.', At New Yorl* Cattie—Slow at f3.75V.i0 Hogs—Qmct at U.7>etl.s> Sheep—steady at tt.JpSI.6SW Lamb»-JBleady at S*.!\si>.2s At East Buffalo. Cattle-Steady at $2.7J,#».1* Hogs—Active at f5.75@7. Sheep—Steady al ft it $4.10 Lambs—Steady at Not Vneh of a Showman. The showman's little boy had a Noah’s ark which he examined with some contempt. “Say!” he exclaimed at last. “Noah wasn't much of a feller, was he?” It was suggested to the youngster that Noah succeeded in gathering together a pretty good menagerie. “Good!” exclaimed the boy scorn- ; fully. “Huh! Where’s the two headi ed calf and the six legged goat and the ishthybsaurus and the elegiantopard and the igagnicintelope? Why. if Noah set up as a showman in these days be couldn’t make expenses.” “He couldn’t?” “Os course he couldn't. Why, say, ht didn't have a thing In his ark ex- > ccpt animate that actually exist”— | Brooklyn Eagle. ’ rennsylvania Woman Kills Husuana. • Latrobe. Pa., Feb. J.—John Zane, an employe of the I-at robe Coal company, was found dead in hie home yesterday with his wife standing over him hold- ( Inga smoking revolver. Saturday was pay day and Zane purchased a quan- ’ tity of whfeky and beer, which he and his wife drank. Then they quarreled. It is said ZaTic charged his wife with being unfaithful. She retaliated by . taking a revolver from the cupboard | and shooting her husband four times, killing him instantly. When the : neighbors broke into the house Mrs. Zane dropped the revolver and fled, but was afterward arrest'd. Premature Explosion. Parkersburg. W. Va.. Feb. 3.—News has been received from Tyler county that Frank H. Sanderson, an oil well > shooter, was killed by the premature I explosion of nitroglycerine with which ) he expected to shoot a well, and that I Frank Krebs was fatally injured. The engine Itfflise and rig were wrecked. BRIEF DISPATCHES The Cape Tira*? angpance* th* death nt th* former Hwr enramandant. Gen. Prinaloo Th* bituminous coat combine at New York la i broken and anthracite u retailing at |7.to per , ton. Two persona were killed and thirteen injured < Inn wreck on th* I. C. at Cloverdale, 111., cauwl ) by den** fog. John White, a storekeeper of Ardmore, I. T., >' wan shot and killed by an Indian while standing on hi* front porch. ) President Caatro aaya h» a still willing to ' ; treat all the creditor* of Venezuela alike, end II < this I* not satisfactory to th* alllea he will Hght. I i John B. Farrow, of Fleming county. Ky.. wa, , shot and fatally wonnded as he lay In tied by on* of thre* masked burglars who hsd antereil hl* house. Becanae of Inability of Kaators roads to h»ndle ell th* Iraflle offered to them. W eatern road, hav* leaned blockede notices that affect several • of the ni'ceaaarles of life. . Th* proclamation leaned last year planing I | thirteen district* in Ireland (under the Crimea i Act and maintaining anmmary jitriadictton Sy the magistrate I* revoked. Th* United Stalfe* armory nt Springfield, Maa*., ha* reeelved rnah orders from th* War Depaf ini. nl Jto ship Wt,OM krag jorgonscu , Hl** to.varlons arsenal* in tk* sountry. For Sate A first-class roller-tap desk and chair, practically new. Will Hell them right. Enquire of Charles F. Walters, Stone block, 30-3 t
SYMMES’ HOLE. The Peculiar Theerj Thai Wa» On< • Advanced 1» a Scientist Probably the odd*! id.-.i evr for a u.miietu entertained bj a ack ntist was that .'i ' ing the condition ot the interior of our globe. Svmmes was a jurist, a scieuj tist, or, as the French would say. a ’ -sava it," of international ' an explorer “on his own hook' and an all round man of letttvs. yet one would think s hat some of his ideas must ha'? originated with the king of bedlam. He believed and lectured before learn- ’ ed college societies in support of bis views that the earth consists of from five to seven hollow concentric sphe.es and that at the poles there is a round opening entirely through each of the several spheres. According to this queer theory, these spheres are placed one inside the othei like a nest of crockery ware, with an open space of a few hundred miles between each. Furthermore, he believed that both the outside and the inside of each of these bubblelike spheres are inhabited, which would give not less than ten and probably fourteen "theaters of action" instead of the one habitable surface with which we are all acquainted to a greater or lesser degree. Symmes lived for many years near Newport, Ky. The Ginas We Ent. “How much glass do you suppose you consume daily?'' a physician asked of one of his patients the other day. says el , on, in response to the other's interroga- ) tive look: "it is a fact that v.e all swallow eaeli day more or less class, the manufacturers not yet having reached the paint where t \ lous to the act drla.'.s bier consumes the most glass. A chemical analysis of any I" ttled beer inevitably reveals some of glass' constituents. But the water drinker, too. swallows his share. In a carafe or in a glass pitcher have you never nutF'd the oild line which marks the 1. vol that the water has had? Well, that line shows how the water has changed the appearance of the glass slightly by absorbing some of its components. And so every day. when we drink beer or water or milk, weconsumeu little glass. I But it does us no harm. 1 have yet to hear of any disease that it has ever caused.” Horses With Four White Feet. In France and I believe in European countries it is a most ominous sign for a rider, and especially i soldier, to want a horse with four white feet. The famous general Lasalle, who was wrysuperstitious upon this point, never knowingly mounted such a horse The day of his death, after several ominous events which had happened to him that day, such as a broken mirror, a ■ broken pipe, rt... pfctui• of his vi broken at the very moment when he • went to look at it for the last tme. lie 1 j mounted a horse not his own without i glancing at the feet. The horse had 11 the unlucky signs. Mounted upon this | horse, he was struck by a shot tired at a moment when fighting had <•..<.<! by a Croat among the prisoners just taken at the battle of Wagram. On the other hand, these four white feet are a mark ai b | eratlon with il. •> fail to mention of their horses. Tl liat Im Snid About Ears. You never saw a poet or a ptinter with large, coarsi . rs th stand at from the bead like extended wings. That kind of au auricular appendage betokens coarseness of mind. A long, narrow ear that lies flat to the bead is . a sign of pugnacity. Never trust a man i with a thin, waferlike ear. He was ~ born a hypocrite, if not a thief, a very r small ear betokens n trifling mind, lack . ing decision. Ears set very high on i the head indicate narrowness of mind. . ! A large, well shapt d ear that loes not I spread itself to the breeze is indies* ve . generousness. Most of tin world i; compellers had large ears and well de- , 1 veloped noses. Although there are so I' “““X millions of • _ no two pairs of <ars are alike. Each has a mar : <1 n • 77 Military SalutrN. Os military salut-s, raising the right hand to the head Is > era lb ini.-.j I to have originated from the days of the , tournament, when knights tn,,i part , the throne of the queen of beauty, an d , byway of compliment, raised”their , hands to their brows to imply that her ; beauty was too dazzling for unshaded eyes to gaze upon. The officer's salute J with the sword has a double meaning The first position, with the hilt opixs ' site tlie lips, is a repetition o f tho ( •atler’a action io kissing the cross bilt ■ l ,f .^ is "> '<*en of fmth and ,| fealty, while low, ring the point after ward Implies either stibniissi , n ( , r frieutlshlp. meaning In either ease that ! ■ guird'."’ DS ‘ r nm ' ssar y ,0 «»nd on I — E\ndlr»ic ■ I,aw J When Ben Butler was „ y oun _ . ■ yer, the selectmen of Lowell, then . , town, Issued a mandate that nil u should wear muzzles. Tl X ° 8 ’ L7hu n b lß Xw; its tall. Ben remarked, "Mv doc i wearing a muzzle " k * ' — —_ ( FoUowed Order,. Mnx. did you peel the apple tbit t i gave you before you ate it nsiinti ’ ■ to?” ■ n * ,ol ' l you “Yes. ma.” . Hint's a good Imyi tvi,.. , ido With the peeiy ‘ 1 Uld ton “Ate It!” defect when the weaving' 7 ' *** thM U unrolled. of « Retime
■ ffl[ FOR WK I —-— ——- — ' legislature Seems Inclined W Favor Memory el Hardy ‘ Pioneer. I. ‘ Republicans Made Appropriation Bill a Caucus Measure, Thus Insuring Its Pa»safl e - I——— 1 Minority Wanted Statue for Hendricks, ? But Fell Before Superior Numbers. Indianapolis. Feb. 3. The Bena <> ■ day when the bill for an appropriation ■of t ■ for a otetue in :"■ °‘ “ s eral George Rogers Clark was consfd- • ered as a sp«ial order of 1 Barcus of Terre Haute, and at his sug gestlon the Republicans made It a cau9 cus measure, thereby insuring its pas sage. The Democratic members introduced a minority report urging that the appropriation be made for a statue 1 in honor of Thomas Hendricks, but f they were outnumbered. The house ’ oy an almost unanimous vote, passed ■e, ed to the senate today. The dentist ' bill, backed by the State Dental assoi elation, was defeated on third reading in the house, because the dentists refused to accept an amendment to pro- ' vide that dentists with five years ex- ’ perience could stand an examination [ whether or not they were college graduates. The county superintendents j bill was recommitted and if it passes i at all, it will be after several amendt ments are inserted. A proposition to , amend it so that superintendents will . be elected by popular vote seemed to meet with much favor in the house. s . compulsory use of voting machines in e ■d • providing » superior court for Wabash, Miami and Huntington counties. In the senate the merchants' garnishee . bill passed tc engrossment without opi position, but. the labor men will fight i it on third reading The barbers' bill > was also engrossed and the effort to ‘ amend it so as to give the colored men representation was defeated. A bill providing a new primer for public “ schools was defeated in the senate. 1 ration of the woman's prison and girls’ industrial school was reported favorably. Senator Grey Introduced a bill » claim of 112*'.000. The house was In session until after dark yesterday, i passing a number of bills Memliers of the senate and house today received petitions from all parts of the state urging them to defeat the brewers' I bill. THEY WERE SURPRISED Two Oil Well Shooters Amazed That They Are Alive. Hartford City. Ind.. Feb. 3.-Jaeob i , K. Tubbs, an oil well shooter, and a man named Reed were driving away from a nitroglycerin magazine, south of rhe r tv. w t , h M Tlar , s of thf , ex plosive ip a wagon. They were sn * rapidly, the axle broke The Jar failed to touch off the nitroglycerin. The! shooter and his companion regarded > each other for a few moments ln lent astonishment because they were alive and then carried the explosive 1 back to the magazine, over a mile
Two Young Hunters Drowned. Indian Harbor, Ind., Fob »_* w .t WTi-K !■;.■, r th, * . aKe Oe <ch bore Is the first word a# tn o, < , ander Murray an ,, Chester old UD r g U wbT rS - ’ h ° ’ ere ,Mt !n « th. lake ?.« <ler. bUSy Manin»A« lamXaVr* » lo ne. and forced hie T waa house. sh P ~j ? way '“to the *h~ hlm ,0 l —' l itoized her bv th* th'* * knlfp and b*. Frasn La Bhe ’h*r* ah* aelze.i . ‘° a krooni, at Reynolds Sh ° iv,>r WI fired “ tha •»» dtnn D,lnUtd to ah ->' fin' 1 ** The two tXTf'’ fr ° m ‘ h “ m,i™,. ’-“'initiQ ,)n the Interurban road h, ’ m t. ‘ n '‘ nglnp wa " rut off Hna th( , ad a ’hen one log ’* r * crushed, ui. h anrt hie head ous. «'■ eoMltfon lg g(j an 1 Good. * ot machines hav* i money £>® this dty &n 7* been r.. mo ved been stopped. pollc Tpl»yln <
’ NO SPORT IN | T How northern indiau, ««•<.„ * aon For Their I.arde r 7 '’ ,l - A N«v Yorker who llveg a s j tlon of the time in the city, bein,, I I ly long distiiuceH uwuv i u " ffi ! game, telle of the method puS»| j the Imiiausof British Colli:.,|„Q Ing deer. They have evolved .- this huntsman says, that tk-al skill and sympathy and i, E of natural conditions. He s n M 1 -‘The Indians, to begin with a, E limit deer f- r the pleasure O s ’B Tln-y go for deer aa a hous. k,, ■ to market for Ixu-f, and. what's- - British Columbia, nt any rat, j don’t go often. Salmon is p| entif ■ k the rivers and is easily caught. »> chase animals when they , all fish? It is something as'it is ah foundiand, where 1 went a seasons ago. There the pr- vaiih,!'* | as you might say. is cod. apj ? there is no end to the vari-ty ofß tisli that can be taken. t -. H er think of eatihg‘anything is plentiful, and they form the hal.- H suppoae This is so ing;.; . call codfish ’fish’ simply. T!u>ge II » ? l - divided into cod and the nst of *(? I ••Well. When the British * lumbfaj . dian makes up his mind f. ir v . goes at it aystematically ~n , | v HR . sentiment. A group of h.i f ' '.BP t ten men split and take , .. valley. Then they pr <| . lßlr - T*'. , the center, i ■ wau I side of the valley on w seek to escape the wind F . covers the mount is fo* t ami some at tin- t. ° . IV , tween the liDM, kem imitated owl hoot. The w ’ ‘V cc ing' pursuit, have the tl» ♦ I t s which g-o up, and thus io es getlor at the middle <f i , go. d sized herd will tl ' ents w<-<’ks by two or thrw , . — New York Tribune. ~ as re HE WOULDN’T BE SNUE jittee te co Colonel Orhlltrer Illdrd Hi* . fttitio ■nd (nrrled Off the Honon wer General Gr r,t was . gr, ive tl jmmi n nu_- of the men of *, iiv.- uded * As a result • , ropei an incident whereby they w iwer insid a uproi America, and the committee actoi put Ochiltree’s name on t ■ - :te coi tlnguished men to meet 1: :u. ig of Ochiltree bided h t tat tn ■« • now nto ■ ■ ; instri go to the ship tu w Ini Grant. He took avant . ;»... beet ■ iwd that fill* d4h - ’ rent • , i com WS of C* b-' . [wish guard duty along the > ■!. .f i aon carjiet which ran fr i t.. -, U RK’ steps to the curb. The r- • ne co - roven the hotel door, waiting to . toe. le P r oral the gladsome hand Ochiltree watched it:.' I tie ■••WF* and Mrs. Grant had - ■ if:; earring!*, and then 1 -RS the line. He rushed ib>v. .* earjiet. shook beartlh .. <i a * .. . old friend and. .fl .- - ‘ Mrs. Grant, marched i 60 00 the* rank and file of tie .: . 9 into the hotel. Th* Qr | Q ma tided a speech fr- n the and. constituting him- If ; : ' of one. Colonel Ochiitr* * ppearrii ere him in the hotel *• - i .ppjiai duced Grant as one of fi!.* •■*•: -, n n and bravest friends. Tl - w time the men in <1; ■ - . :■'•■ ay rol snub him at a social fm fc., st
g It Made niatory. I Such a slight etrci’m- ■ .if tt4 of wine changed the I - ry ■g for nearly twenty y< 1 lipp« king of the J-\. •‘j i the Duke of Orleans. throne who always <!' 4 tain numlier of glue*'- "f ’i fiuse even one mor k <>n <t memorable m in 't < Hint tile number " u | took one more than u-' i taring his carriage, he "■ ? mu. In attempting t'> 1 i' ■ carriage his head strin k I' al ■ and be soon dli-d. Tii.'ii -l:i'“‘" overthrew the Orhnns . their property of t- « the whole family into < x.l< Adam anil <li- I alter “Thia." said the guid' . : ' i of Adam." .■ Historic spot! With r ' in —nay. with u feeling of deep iJ* n< Baa the waalt ' '!■ hi« first trip to the orient lire’ In and cast n flower on the tom lit Ing ancestor," he murmured. • ’-.M be the last man on earth to rf ’ ' h memory. To your sin I owe mJ n< Izerity." -Chicago Tribune. 11 •— ■ Weitlcln* For Hl»- * “His wife has treasured ua ♦era he wrote her when he « “ M Ing her; keeps them by fl time." fl "Gracious! Hbe doesn't f fl over, dot’s she?' . Iw “No, but she threati n* t" ” to him whenever he git» obatrii | "-Philadelphia Pre."’* j fl Galvani'* Dlworerf It la to the wife of I's f , arl of Bologna that la due !li .. hir having discover<*d the <1 ■’ - gia tery which bear* his Bklnneil frogs lay upon the ‘ ( | ( noticing; a coovnteive \ ’he their limbs, ahe called h (, r attention to the strange ' "tltuted a awlea of '''l"' r^lll “ in 171 H he Isid the fuim< llin '* « haute
