Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 21, Number 10, Jasper, Dubois County, 7 March 1879 — Page 7

WEEKLY COURIER

C. MAUI, FaWisasr. JASPF.K, INDIANA. ITEMS OFJNTEREST. r.n T'.Wl A. Earlr savs it is sot true that he is going to prepare a school history of the War of th Rebellion, as iJkWHl on the authority of aSouthera newspaper. Joaquia Miller has written a play lor Kitty Blanehard, oalled "49." Miss Blanehard, however, is somewhat dubious about playing it. as she fears that those figure may be takea as her . . The Vatican is to hkvb its own ioornal, published ia Italian, Freach, FnjclUh, Germaa and Spanish. All the papal briefs and allocutions in the origin! text, but with translations, will apprin it. The exiled editor of the suppressed German socialistic paper, The Tocsin of tie German Empire, has founded in Switserland aa association for live protection and aid of the politically persecuted." Sarah Helen Whitman left behind ber the materials for a prose volume, which will include a little monograph, " Edgar Poe and His Critics," that was first published ia 1860 as a defense of the dead poet. The Emperor of Germany has sanctioned the publication of the political Mirt-MftnndHBce of Frederick the Great. It will comprise about 80 volumes, of which one or two will appear every -rear. " The official list of German books published during last year has just been Issued by the Leipsic Booksellers' Asaocialion. lne total nuBioeroi nuvwu-, together with new editions, was 13,9 iz, Against 13,924 in the preceding year. The State Library at Albany, N. Y., has received a copy ot the celebrated Caston Memorial Bible, which was printed, bound and lettered in 12 hoars at the Oxford University Press, on the Occam of the opening of the Caxtoa celebration ia 1877. Paris has 47 daily papers, 27 of them being published in the morning. The Jarge papers ha-e a circulation every day of 630 uOO, and of that circulation 400,000 advocate Republican politics. The smaller sheets hive a daily circulation of over a million, threequarters of which is Republican. Tenavson is extremely fond of crooking the long clay pipe called the churchwarden." The venerable poet has a rough deal box holding about 20 pounds of tobacco, and in an upper -chamber, with this box near and a long "churchwarden " in hand, fee will talk by the hour to chosen cronies. The Jhrlimr FremtlenUaU says that the late Prince Henry of the Netherlands has lef; no will His immense fortune will therefore go to his brother .and sister, the King of Holland and the Grand Duchess of S axe-Weimar. His widow is entitled to a yearly allowance -of 40,000 thalers, and to the Chateau of In'eisseastetn ae a rewdenee. The Crown -of the Netherlands will have to maintain this residence in repair. A Kentucky man has been looking over the editorial stock of Cincinnati, and be declares that Murat Hals lead of the Otrnmerdtl kt the handsomest and the ablest; Deacon Smith of the Gazette toe crookedest in the legs and tne strakhtest in the morals; Col. A. C. Sasds of the Times the bisxest around the middle and the shrewdest ; Johnny McLean of the Enquirer the sliar pestnosed for news and the quickest to get it, and A. Minor Griswold of the Safariy Si'jKt the funniest and the surest on i::ir what's in a bottle irora tne smell of the cot k. $ctne ami ImlHotry. A new street railway track has been' sseceessfully tried in England. The rail a nat plate regularly pierced witn boles which ft protuberances on the wheels. English hams, prepared at a cost of from 10 to 15 cents per pound more than ours, find a readv sale and are pre ferred to American hams in the Braailiaa market. A novelty in the export line at Boston was the seeding: out last week of ken of heroes hoe for the use of certain London, Liverpool and Cork 'Omnibus lines. The honey crop of San Diego county. Cal., in 1878 was more than 787 Was. Saa Diego County prodttoee more honey than all the rest of the State taken together. A native of Marseilles has purchased the right of extracting chlorate of potash from the Dead Sea and expects to net $8 a ton on an indefinite quantity of it delivered at London. In Lyons, France, a kind of okth is now prepared from the down of bens. docks, etc. Seven hundred and fifty grms. of leathers yield one square meter of a light and very warn fabric, whieh water-proof, and admits of being dyed a all shades. The Ice-Trade Journal says the cost of barreetiag this winter's ice crop in the United States will be larger than ever before. Four million dollars, it is estimated, will be paid for cutting, haulsg and storing, and at least six times that amount for marketing ia spring and summer. A few small boats are said to have gathered some $10,000 worth of sponges two days, within half ait hour's sail f a Florid wharf. A Key West paper

says that the article was supposed to be extinet years ago, but it is discovered ,

that the bars in the bay are teeming with sponge of a superior quality. Formerly, all American locomotives were jacketed with Kuseia sheetiron.. Now, America makes its own plaiiislied iron, and the importation of the foreign article has fallen from te.eOO packages to 1,000 packages per annum. It is said that it costs just half as much to build a locomotive now as it did five years ago. A recent number of the Indian Ten Gazette reports that a new species of tea .shrub, resembling that which grows in China, has been discovered in Armenia, near Trebiaond. The peasants pick the leaves and dry them in the sun, and large quantities have been seat to Persia, where the new product is highly tu? tn into :.. appreciated. Tbe manufacture of toys by machin ery, instead of working destruction German toy-makers, has in many instances greatly benefited them. Small " villages have become cities, have I brougnt peasants togetnor, and scnoois have been esUbiisaed lor tnsircnimren. j Aurnuerg aiosc sends out l'j.ihju ions oi , toys, oi io,uw dinerent designs, sonneberg, in Thuringia, makes $10,000,000 worth of toyo annually. Seheal anil Church. Six counties in Iowa have lady Su recently reunited, has 44 annual confer- j ences, 1,200 itinerant ministers and 130,- . EoiscoDal Church, and Dakota, with 8 imrishes. and 316 communicants, is the I smallest. The clergymen of the State of New York receive 5.310.00O for salary vear-, ly. Of this amount the Methodists pay i liil W the, T'roshrter ana f)2.nO(l. ' the Episcopalians $8U,0w. Tne av age clerical salary is $840. rouowmg is ine onei crcea oi ibb

m.rintanlnt, r.f Cnrnrnnn SrO,la I V". . V.. 7 .7. "s " 7 -PP-"' UOWH.

- V, . V i u i n lan I'm, tne untnese Minister si pring no attention to the rasoing Benton. Davis. Decatur. Jasper. Osceo- iir.i.i. i. i ,a tn -fJlHS " awenuoa w ps

io w.-.' ' , " ugW' t 1Ufwu Ch'.namaa or to tbe swearing ot tae : mantles of

" . . u 'Km H creiui investigation miae kceper of the stand, Sam said: "That's hair The Methodist Protestant Church, means used in the various institutions ; ,a Tht' what fatebas 'em. mum

fW VI miBitun Tim vilna nl lha hnrr-h t rj: ..

wvw ....v 7 I mine nwiusiui. u niw uj -" i uBcer vu jw sru spun iui iranu mbuit 10 inoe oi im season, wiia iae property of the denomination is 3,- an intention which he has for a length 3 like a top. He spat oat a doable tooth, back fitted by three seams, aad clinging 000.000- 0f nmo entertainnd, that of visiting I was sorry, but he picked up the tooth, ' sides that drape the arm, and are fiaThe diocese of New York, with its ; England. He will not accept the hoa-, put it ia his vest pocket and came at ' )hed in square Hungarian fashion, ia195 parishes and 34,803 communicants, pitality of Lord Salisbury or ary other me red-hot. I gathered myself aad . stead of drooping in pointed wings like

is me lartresi uiocee in iae rrouwuiuu Kutiosmiini out win hup iutru uiucu i me aim ioe upper cut wna iae mu : rioimaas. xaesemanues are oi ae-

Central Choreh of Chicago (Prof. m Hlld for the benefit of hU health. Swing's) : " We believe in the divine , . . . .- character and mission of Christ; that -rhe very latest concerai DK"ABMnn : . .t.. : ut, cans abroad" is about a lady who

IlB I in klA k lt L IllBIl 111 LllZi lIlllUlAdLQ and sinfulness needs; that nil acce pils enrolletl is 16.S48. The school systern of the State is improving in every , way The school property of the State is valued at $474,771. There are 226 . - . .. m male teachers who receive salaries of $49.90 per month. Tbe 341 female teachers are paid $4G.95 per month. The cost per month of educating, each pupil laH year was $2.72. The University of Colorado has 84 students, and a new library. The chief Methodist school of theology in tbe Northwest, the Garret Institute, of Evanston, 111., will graduate the first lady student. Miss Mary A. Phillies, ef Olney, III., and the profes sors say that she is the first lady appli cant in Methodist the school disfavor reflection verted them clergyman; best man in gosoel oul Bit work. The Prino ual of the Northern In- 1 diana Normal School has recently made ' a judicious experiment with his students, He placed each week 50 copies of a good daiiv and other papers and inaga-. zines in the reading-room. At first the students seemed indifferent, but gradu-1 ally they began to read, and in a short time they showeu great interest in tne . leading topics of the day, and converseo in mend the use of newspap rs in gen-, end exercises aad ia reading classes. A bill has been reported favorably , in tbe Pennsylvania Seaate providing for the appointment of a commission to " select sues ior tne two inuusina. scaoois which it is proposed to establish. It purposes to take all soldiers' orphans who desire, at the age of 1G, when they are discharged from the schools, and teach them useful trades, at the same time giving them a scientific education. For this purpose a corps of teachers are to be appointed by a board of trustees. It will be, ia short, a graduating school for such as are admitted. The bill involves r n appropriation of $200,000 by the Legislature. Maa Mlatmpa. Wm. Stewart was struck on the head by the handle of a windlass at fronton, O., and he died ia aa hour. Rev. Dr. Sipler, pastor of St. Paul's German Lutheran Church at Fort Wayae, lad., received probably fatal injuries by being thrown from a skigh. The S-year-old daughter of P. C. Capk, of Waco, Texas, was fatally burned by her dress taking fire while playing in front of the grate. N. L. Greenfield, a Nashville (Teaa.) furniture-dealer, walked oat of a seeoad-story window ia St. dead, and fell thirty feet, breaking his skull, thigh-bone, and dying instantly. A 2-year-old child of Milton Hightower, who lives near Hanley, JaseamTne County, Ky., fell into the fire daring the absence of its parents from tbe house,

and obeying tins uijnst as wir way, , i;:: h I"k she h)l(1 no i n'tfly out oi aw motk aad tail down on piam g&tin, or with moire stripes, truth, and fife are fully entitled . to the , on J bnkinghm se where she had no floor in dj. There mast a-,. plaa a striped sadaol. name and hope of the Christian." uVSewels and the ieweler 1 two don-bU teeth, sia- that extends dowa each de of the -The number of school districts in , Jgi? h!ue Tr 'becausTli fears ! fte wisdom leeth' leeth w,t,B 8ld front to tbe ead of the basque, as if oatColorado is 372. and the number of uu- P861-. 10 ' "r?. 'VrrtTT.. : in 'em. aad all maaaer of teeth. He i;n;nr . v r.,r wJLuvm how

tuu wmin 1 -av , a UTUV-ie I MIO WTLE1 MilU LJI3 4.CP5 BHUb UOIVIC. a- a-a ,

Ha nAiintrt frit a i incrrax in n

theology. When slie entered I 1, SaW he: " Yoa see I pat up a little i b acceia aS

. . 1 . I D1HILM1. ' 7T - . -

ine proiessors iookbu wuu . ' . . . ,:1 ft Sam. iust to eaeoarare aim a mue . n

nIfnn J.r i.rini. but a vpar's ' . oome iniuips arc Kuuu Bl3 r-t::: r MTt t . wws

ami ann!ia?ntncft have con- . luc 8"IM tBUluvl . I -o ,'. tW., W. .

I'" ' f ' 1L.. .S-Il.A .U.. m m--. 1H HCn MWW- -V wa- I- -h',.ioHal

. She is the daughter of a . -rue leuowwno rang tne oeu ior a; . uamlai irUficial teeth tr"?r fr?

1 I . . t 1 . t imun zwjut ev a new - w. i.j:-- vt:

1 1 1 , I fal&A altirm ot nra tniiwi a lie. . crerv ihui ui i,ae

lino ivsiHQU muie iiiu o i - SLfUl . . -. rru-w k . . . to bv taem. x ney

tion at the tauie anu eisewncre cnaneea i -v- i. ... ,u a

very much for the better. His expert- on t0 giorf f0; tunes, thouch the

and upon their return was found liter allyroaeted to death.

A little daughter of Robert Hst, 1.- ".-. -. X..l. tally injured by tipping a saucer of oca-1 oentrated lye ia its face, burning its eyes , out, causing death ia five hoars. '

Mrs. Samuel Sholwater, of Honey ' ting up a lag muscle aaa repatauoa as Creek, Ogle County, 111., kindled the a hard hitter. Steve Gillis, telegraph Are with kerosene poured from a bottle. editor of the EnUrprtie, though a light The bottle exploded, and she was com- weight, is a heavy hitter. Sam's ambipletely enveloped with flames. Her ia- tioa has loag been to so traia himself inruu wn Mintraad to lie fatal. ! as to be able to get away with Steve. A

I a .-l .. --a- i Pope Io XIII. has issued an order , dbiting the sale of relics. The orsays tne traffic in relics has proI'ifrrwN ieirt - prohibiti tier savs duced great scandal and must be put down. The faithful are not permittee even to redeem relics that are kaowa to be genuine. Of 17 000 enins oonetructed bv Herr , 'V. u , : 1 , ., Z? , u I ' Krupp at his works in Lseex during the last 23 years, only 16 have burst, and' rn . . .i nearly all of these were destroyed dur jng trials undertaken to test their pow 0rs of resistance or endurance. 'f,e fUIUi iHemorial amounts tjie b&g;g tution for tle labonn clae aad poor, , uxuuv t lfDnHl13 BaiBda "High Protector." upiura-oating is under corners-, HUH UV LUG vuiOBe viu ui i un.uk i in this country for its cure. , A rumor is current in Berlin that. u!..-l, ,:ii nn ow mitton or Scarborough. vw PalMlnnia dnm not seem to have very great terrors for some French criminals. A young man brought be- j fore a Police Court on a charge of theft, l&tel-, nse an elaborate comessioB oi a lomoie muruer mai ne aau wmimi obi; t tK. ovrnof thOov - rtio' 0 he gossip that has been P" 5 w fL; nui ma a - raaorina ii Gsnn iinuvn i i n -Mme. Christine Nilsson bought, ia ioio, iruui . , n tret IB "1 J' ,i Xl Z: sTutl L pereor t-nd the line de Morny, on dition hat hie.,s.d'J'thfm J" .me, plac-e bu.ldmgs Pn t- 1 he lady auracuve conuiuua, wun uunm wmw around, it deetroys tbe harmony of its surroundings. otu. aa4 Kiids. Excellent wash for the face-Water, crave-robbers said when Ise police cnasea inem. wit uemve. The foundation for the meanest man is laid when a small boy turns the worm-hole in an apple for his com panion to bite from. litnding Time. An Illinois steam corn-sheller tarns out just half a bushel of buttons, bones aBd cloth when a Imy falls into tbe hop-r.-DciroU Fret Press. There WM s tide in the affairs of li AlA ti natri.arV- nisnagMl to kaan him Mid 8bove wslt!rt Rmi save the only com - pelti collection of wild and trained animals in the world." Xcic Orleans PicaOld lady to taxidermist: "You can . ge for yourself, maa ; you only staffed mv poor parrot in tne summer, ana here's his feathers tumbling oet before your eyes.' " TuTulsirimat 4 I .rvr iukye, 'r We i m, that's tne triumpa oi oar an. .. . . . . stuff 'em that natural that they moults in their proper seasoa." Botton Trnnserijtt. They begged him to play a little. ITsm1 toW bashful at first, but Misr a wniiB ueesn uiixtw hw - vigorously. What power!" saw a - ... .listener, to the owner of i the piano. i " Yes," exclaiaMd the latter, ia alarm. j " he seems to have considerable muscle; but he ought to know that this isn't a gymaasiam." AmirewM jrosar. Not bad for an infaat of Illinois: "One day," writes our oorrespondeat, u hum remedy for my little three-year-old.wKo had a cold. He stood waToamep tila procees, and asked if it was 4 good.1 Oa tettirg him taste, be exclaimed: It's awful good, mamma. Let's keep it all for papa!' " Harpers Magazine, j&t This morning (tilting war my winDow I epptal the rt roW; She nhtverel an she aroutMl Her throat In soarkt raa waa weead An iclele all hanl anrt ehill nrpearfert (mm her dreary Mil ; Then with a look dlont. In iHiHeaky voice hhio her mete Upon h twtr not tar away, 1'ijmhI thlsdeWelfwa roMwletay: " Now yfm ny rk,ht trah(ht Hack, kl maa, Go back and get the warm! Hg jh !"

. .w. ... - i iUAuibui anil um rui r wnu: iui paiun kh n .t a t rf tka a r l. o

ot tii bmperors escape , ts 4ru Vn- w&irhthU ,k...

to over 100, (XX). ItlStO lorm , - tkj Hr siul suiting .i.ni iw. ..u 1 n:M

Ul nuiUUU IUJlu 'iu- l Ik. n. in ka .nl L uyin inilliu II!. I.I ....

f .:! :nnnM,n .el . - u.unuou mm nvun. in uniiiann)

in it whatever, it was lound teat his er mi mi bj i.u; i w uuij u mornings oat o towa. autcaea eages 1 woa a Hu! tn ha unt tn T OHM that's all.1 With that He let dnVe nf cknrv hnMnaa will Kb tka nalv

t O v utliinli elia ai A a rlarl

condemned to comply with tne - 1 QIeTe ) three or illustratioa has the front breadths lions or forfeit the ground, as ui its un- PV.- hig sm opeainr from the waist liae, carried

A Terrific Set-Te In Whieh Mas j Teeth Were Leet.

The Virginia (Nev.) SnUrprite tetk Seat Davis, ot tmMimiHg Okrwf this: Sam ids, is taking boxing leesoae and is getmorning or two ago we met Sam, who , 1aaLhwmh aVea mA sUnviaflP mil u vr eao WaimE. lMj HVivv mm suvnins. tbe swagger of aa eeUbikhed desperado. 1 nkl wordj . .tI to f, WOW3 AWMlw Gillis " Any thing particular?" asked we. "Well, there's bad news for him, " What! Asr of ki folks dead?" 1 ,y,. l . f Tf f , . " O, no: I believe not, bat if he's in ' ' to fA Slade some of LJSL era s prewy sksk ma aaoraiag. that's all." 1 You will be good enough to axplain." "Certainly. See this!" and Sam on hk t th s-tM tiastrikinr a ! fearful blow, which took a pass&g Chinamaa in the " bread-basket " and ianded him acroi the uiner siorvot an &niKsSiaBU. M. . Tbe grst tiiae r tried it on Hob, down the rvranasium last night. I took him' i i . r i r l. r 1 I taking him a lifter under the right jaw that make him groggy. He spat oat two more back teeth, bet pocketed them aad came at me like a tiger. I got back, for I didn't want to hurt aim just because he was fool eaoagh to get mad. and 1 savs. saw 1 : aat is tne at me, and I had to defend myself, lie maoe it so not ior me iaa a b w - sort to the upper cut again. I didn't mean to do it, but I took him square nader the point of the chin a lifter aad ARB u m im.cw) 0v ri v. . 1 weBt M Pwkia, 'era ?P iai tto f me to stxy and give him a chance to get

. a . . . . i J t n -SI k e Al .

eTeB, bat I got oet of there. ldHta'tlo- ovw.sWrts. When the back drapery

. ' to" knoc tWwiow to pieces. I . i i .1 t ' L.v at u-. . believe another upper cat would aave knocked out his wnole jaw-bone." .Tte ony wonder is that yoa dida't kill him, Sai.!" Howhestoodit with . . . i-:u: : .t. down tQ ?ymniUDi iatrodace him to the "upper cut." ' Half aa boor later we met Bob Slade, who begaa te tell about the Wg fea lie , . M wkA followed." pMM-. n-n it' -.mi Sam is aow ia seareh of conjiat that his 'upper cat' wm gjj :0ioncc ia tie ooaatry." ; Iyo?" , Ya!"

: s-La t-fii- VawiAVsasI vitr wi la iiwar-t tbn T t rurtJLin nvr. irirt duGminAiit from tktt m

vsTir Wea Teace fer Spala.'kept than this one, which two girk ' "8W L pirtir ne" MC "r P 'cev on. They are renfied and gentle

. 1 " . . A . .1 v. .n n. M M A

I have mrased maay aa obiteary boi (uana Uankil Kva.rtrn. mit. 1 M&VS ' hum nowhere the real story of the great J achkvemeet of his life, the pacification , of Bergara. The Carlkt army had safj fared great losses bat could still have held the field for soase time; oa the other hand, tbe laoerai army, aer sevea years' campauraiag. felt truly sick ef the business. Don Carlos had goae to France for a holiday: on each s4de ... . . . ri Z 1 X1 the teaaers eaa a Etma uwins iw -wlowing example. It was under these circumstance that hspertero hsd a eoe- , fereace with Mareto, the Carlist Geaeral, fer the purpose of negotiating a trace, They were old churns of the bouta - , .. . ABiencaa wars, oev as mm. ume i t wcb5b "j .1- va--k Cl vsrvylei dition to more than one fierce proclamatioa. When they met ia a lonely farm at night, ia the greatest secrecy, ft was feared by maay lest a quarrel, or a perhaps a personal eecoaater, mtnM Rdk , " i 1 S l.ul, a tnKla ZSSbooHAtk cu.xhxwc, f thi fivTUu? thev wet i '

there closeted. What were they dotag "T i t-f all this time? Simply this: Oa seetng ! by others. He imsgiaesthat heis safEaDartero. whom he knew weU for the , fenog from a disease of the head, by

..mUm. tkn Mnt-Kvail.lfarntotwU

tla ukat oet of his pocket a pack of

cards aad challenged Vis foe at (restik. Pfrsoa caa tell what he js thiakiag Esaartero had always been lucky. He'sbout. To preveat this ae keeps h woairstaU the cash of his oppoaeat, onk aad ears plugged with cotton, tbe he woa his own terms for tbe trace, bat this seems to do him ao good. IrH T LTX !r?tT k. t Whea he iiaasnnes his thoughts are thas

eetire submission of the Carlist army. jaarete) pate juumuiw, wHhm tweaty-iear hoars, aad se eaded the trst Car-et war. Lm4m Truth. . ? J 1 I - .I.Lj. t-aa

FASMI0X X0TK5.

All morning toilets for the street sbeahl be short and very dark or biaek. The materials may be vigogne, cashmere, eamel's hair, and all weelea geeds, bat the trimmiagsmay be of silk. Light summer silk, whieh will be much employed for street saiU, have ebieebilla stripes, or aarrow clouded chine stripes set close together aa brown eardi ial, garnet, blue aad other ootored groaads. , . " VjMHWIJ tor traveling-cloaks single-breast-are shown in the Eacliea hoaiespaa cloths that are loosely woven ,nJ'? of lo:br?!;B aad in heather grays. Tbe belt of these is confined in the back, aad is very wide. Circular wraps of light gray cloth, black, brown, aad navy blue, are also trn, for travelisg. They are made wit long polated hood, and have a howv clasu of oxidised silver at the .uZl! 1 01 oxwiaeu suver at iaa '" - a - i , Clinging draflnoa are going slowlv Clinging dresses are going slowly but surely out of fashion; tied-back dresses have entirely become thisgs of the past. They have recently earned a ,kivn. or to tknLjTi nhw Uelp 'was givea them, to the fact of their being incumbered with the tight-dinging skirts, whioh h-ld tb CIOWB " Dressy wraps for spring will be Cnaduaa or piaia camel's trimmed with rick fringes. Black tlfM! will Tm mrutt iiBfli. thongb Kghl: drab or beige-colored wraps will tie ocasideredmo re dressy. Theshaoesareverv n . . i 1 . ... ' dium length, covering the tournure I hips, and are trimmed with one or aad with three braided points down the back and on the sides. A great deal of imitatioa lace m French thread patterns will be used for trimming, these fine wool wraps. Coats of soft light cloth will be trimmiags for these. Gray tweeds aad twilled cloths will be chosea for Jackets, in remodeling silk or woolen suite 0f s asoa the short pointed revers collar meeting at the top of the darts Will Dm IIIBCtI lleea. JL DIB Will Dm mftiM that form a jabot partly dowa each side ffiad(s tin and ased " rXE.ti " weT r . j r "v:-- - . - tbe trimmine material will be added oh Qne ?ide, or else ia the middle, aad bunched up irregularly. A great deal of leagthwise trimmiag wiU be ased ea I the Tfroat and sides o? cver-skirts. A ,X .. .;!. this ta handsome when made of plain J silk, while the front gore of the lower skirt-which k sbowa its whole kagth m etnpim. Iness Wemea. the flourishing Fifth Street shoe eatirely by two yeaag aad Miss Lineaart. business is attended keep the books, attead to tbe stock, and open the store ia ' the morning aad close it at night. When boxes of goods arrive they opea them with head aad hatchet, quite ae . well as a young man could do. They ) give orders for new goods. About the 1 only duty the owner of the store has kt the not unpleasant one of coming ia occasionally to relieve tbe cash-box. Not a shoe store ia tne city m better nolite ia business that they are said to lu hn iHiav an nihM truu. I turn iS of Jewish, tbe other of Irish descent, 5 xhey have beea ialimate friends for five years, having been fellow-clerks for that J leagth of time. Both are the daughters of widowed mothers, ami akl largely ia snpnortinz their families. These ex CeUmt girls are only another iaetaaee -0 show that when a woman works for w living there is slwavs a rerv rood. r .. . . . . . CJ reason for it. it s not too muca k say that three-fourths of tbe women who earn money have others than themselves to -upport. Of triple-plated meanness, therefore, is tha spirit which seeks to restrict woman's labor ia anyway what-erM-t 0r which gradges her equal pay t ftft" "'i"- vj WK ,or eqaai wots. . . Commercial. A Strange Hallaciaatiea. . orge a. u rmmoa was yeewruaj takea to the iiudsoa Kiver btate uoept George A. Ormistoa was yesterday UU at I OtHf HKBlM UB M UHWl lJUUim. by County Judge Brown, a commissioa ' Bousced him a monomaaiac. OrmiMoa I his nostrils and ears, aad that every ' escaping he shots his eyes and goes through all sorts of facial contortions ia order to stop them. He is apaareaUy saae ia every thief, eta.

eh hut thoughts escape aim taroaga