Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 4, Number 31, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 31 January 1874 — Page 1
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a?
Vol. 4.— No. 31
THE MAIL.
OOQD MORNING."
We «re highly Dle*sed with oar venture is offering the beautiful cbronio "Good Morning" to each mail subscri ber of this piiper. As stated a few weeks since the mail edition has more than doubled since the first of October. The first edition of tbechromoe was exhausted about the first of January, and we have just received second edition. When tbta lot is exhausted, we will probably eease giving the picture to subscriber)*.
Send
in your subecrip-
tions or renewals immediately. On the seventh page of this issue we print a wood-cat representation ef the chrmno. Of coarse the plain black ink does not do justice to the bright colors ol the chroma, but it gives an idea of tbe design.
Hundreds of city patrons buy The Mail each week to send to distant friends snd relatives. We suggest that tbey band in two dollars for a year's subscription, secure tbe cbromo. and be relieved of all further trouble in mailtag tbe paper.
Town-Talk.
THAT to WK KNIUHT.
T. T. would respectfully suggest to thy Knights of Pytbiss, that diligent search be made among their number for tbe doughty "Knight" who, incens ed at T. T'a. suggestion that Crawf Hoott needed a bible more than be did aotne, mid tbepuraon a cane more than be did a bibie, burled a lance at T. T. through the columns of tbe Express and bo would further suggeat, tbat, when found, au iucb, or an inch and a half augur bole be made over tbe sp where tbe brain is supposed to be, in order that Jokes may be admitted. Uu til this is doue be bad better spell it without a K, us Nlgbt would be more appropriate, iie did well to leave off tbe I"st word of tbe name of his. order, for thougb be may be an ass, he certainly is uot a pithy ass.
SFIIUXS OSCK MORE.
Crowds flocked to the Opera House Monday night to see Baldwin and Miss Saille Cooper, it is ovident tbat very few people in tbo city "bonostly believe" tbat Spiritualism, as manifested at Pence's Hail, is a "humbug." If they did so believe they would not have been at the Opera House. (If tbo
Knight" reads Ibis, T. T. desires to say tbat tbe foregoing is intended to be sarcaatical.) Wo spiritualists have great reason to congratulate ourselves and the "baruioaial philosophy" tbat, at last, public attention is turned to the important question of tbe truthfulness of spiritual manifefttatioHS. Converts are multiplying by scores in the city, (a joke, dear "Knight") The leaders of the spiritual movement are happy us clams. Last Sunday night they bad triumphant seance, (No suoh thing, Sir
Knight") and all present were con vinced, aud these leaders werb in beau tiful humor, and urged Flske to come on tbe platform and investigate. (Dun' swallow that, good Pithy Ass.) Tb leaders were even a great deal happier after Baldwin's performance at the Opera House than they were before. Tbey all know tbat lie is a brstci medium, aud so Is Sallie Cooper. Tbe manifestations were ail made by spirits. Even Baldwin's opening speech was dictated by spirits. None bat spirits ever use such grammar aa thai (Dear "Knight," Baldwin's grammar was awiul.) The feats were entirely tbe w|rk of spirits. Just knock Baldwin, Bailie Cooper, or the little hoy, on the bead till the spirits are all out ot them and see if they oan do these things then. It's their spirits that do tlieae things. (Tbe "Knight" as«et understand that T. T. slyly alludes to their own epirits, snd not to the spirits of any dead folks teak on a vMt.| Spiritualism is more vigorous, and spread" ing more rapidly than ever before in this city. tThe "Kuight" must not expect to understand all this. But when he gets that bole bored, if he reods T. T. with the bang out, he will we that It is very funny. He should get the hole pttt i» qaiek, fbr he is losing half the swoots of Using.) wra saw**.
T, T. finds tbe people very anxious for more cards on the Sewer business. They jn«t hanker after this kind of literature. It was croel to out ofi tbe supply so suddenly. (Tbe "Knight" must understand by thla, that that controversy was an awfa! bora.) It was to be hoped that J*« Blake would pat Atrth some more pfioua eJfttstona. How the IWiow did quote neriptnre! Who would have thought it I There tuts beeo nothing like tt since the Devil attempted to set up that Job lathe wilderaesa. I* Uses Joe bests tbo devil In this, as he has in namberfcws insUacse heretofore.
What a pity it was, too, tbat tbe tie,
It seems to me that some modern writers, instead of seeking words to express their thought, try to pat words together so as to *Nct£e thought. Instead of evolving from within tbey boild f-om without. Such persons are always hunting up quaint and obsoletetab worda, as
If
1 •,
waa net given "direct" among those eoanciimen. What would have been the result? Something very funny no doubt. But tbey are bigb-minded men, and only take tbe lie, as they take whisky, straight. Those who are uaed to it always take it tbat way. It is to be hoped that a movement all along tbe line will be made noon. If not, then efforts must be made to keep up the fight between
XILLIGAN AMD LEK.
Lee oagbt to get off something pretty good sgainst tbat testimony which Mil ligan publishes. These cooiounded lawyers do set op some mighty mean tricks, and it will^iot do for a fellow to be too confident about anything. For one to awe ^r tbat he cannot be mistaken, andthoa to be trapped into a mis take on the spot in reference to tbe vety point on wbiuh bo was sure be could not blunder, puts him in a tight place, and makes him feel that people suspect bts truthfulness. But Lee can pitch in now regardless of consequen ces, for Milligan has certainly done bis best, or worst, wbicbever it is, in play ing that card. But after all, if tbe public can be accommodated with further figbting over tbe sewer, T. T. would advise Milligan and Lee to sign articles of peace. But if pious Joe Blake, the icked Common Council, apd Miller
Co. will keeptill, then let tbe other two sacrifice themselves for tbe public good. Tbo public must have its victims. (Any points in the above which are not^lear to tbe "Knight" will be folly explained to him, if be will call at tbe M«il office. T. T. hopes be will not fail to call before publishing any criticisms upon this effusion. Let blm get that hoieput in at onee.)
Husks and Nubbins,
xox.
A CRITICISM.
Says Richard Grant White, in the Feoruary Galaxy: It is the free of words, without regard to their gri matical distictions of verb, noun, adjective and adverb, but with a clear apprebeosion of their inherent meaning, tbat gives to Blisabethan English that force and pungency and pict«r esqueness which, with all the lai.er refinements and enrichments of our tongue, even our best writers find it difficult,nay, quite Impossible to attain We are more exact, more precise, but we are comparatively tame aud weak."
Tbequery occurred to my mind, as 'I read this and the rest of Mr. White's article, Is it not our very struggle after exaotness and precision tbat makes tie tame and weak Is there not tendency to grow hypercritical in our use of language—to sacrifice sense for expression? We pause in our thought, perplexed to choose between words or hesitating as to tbe turn of our sentence. Wbeu these points have beesi decided with critical exactness, what wonder if our thought have lest something of its subtle essence? Doubtless tbe Ellaabethans were not so fastidious of word and pbrsse. More care had they,perhaps,that their thought should come out strong and clear through ita filter of worda, than that tbe filter it self should be unexceptionable. Not that their language was the worse thereby, for when the thought is fully expressed the medium of expression will perhaps be tbe fittest that could be (band.
tbey would surprise
their readers with their verbal smartness. Yet I think It will nearly al ways be found that tbe thoughts which particularly please or impress us are exactly those which are expressed In the simplest and commonest words. And it is undeniable that those writers who have produced tbe finest effects are remarkably Dree from this verbal affectation. Irving, WUUs and Dickens are examples.
And after all this critical choice of words ssd expression, what Is gained One might reasonably expect Richard Grant White to be guiltlesa of any sin against syntax or rhetoric. But he is not. We all remember how George Washington Moon cat up tbe Dean of Canterbury white ia the very act of defending the Qaetm's English. The poor Dean was almost made oat to be tbo siaaer of all. Even so, Mr. White to not infkfHbie, and In this very article from which tbe above extract la taken be is guilty of several isatevsetes and tnelegaociea.
TV» illustrate. Oo page fWotvurs the following senteoee: Oar jounaey Wings as back jast wbeoos we start•d.w If any school toscher in Indiana ma parse that *etttea«e I should Ilka to make his acquaintance. Oa page ITS we tad ibtst—" Ii lode*) tbe iaiser by tbo laterropWoa by A" of tbe continual hissing la mot tbo pleaasater,
etc.1* A eery awkard and uneupbos- taass loos expression, sty tbe tenet of it.
All are Invited, a eats me.
«r
11
tern*'-!*
-R ,- *e f"*^
On the same page is this: "Tbe gain whereby to their language in strength, significance, snd symmetry has been great, and no less ID nationality of character where the reader is pussled for a moment to know just what tbe writer intended to say. If for "no less" be had put "not less so," the sense would have been apparent at tbe first glance. On page 188, in the sentence: "As to the word proposed, however, there does indeed seem to him no necessity of transplanting it, to.," tbe intensive adverb indeed is thrown in where there is not only absolutely no use lor it, but where ail the meaning must be takun out of it before the sentence will express tbe id»a Intended. A glance at tbe context will prove tbe truth of this statement. Further along on tbe same page is an error of the same kind. As to other words brought forward it is not so certai* thateome of them might not well be spared." The phrase not BO certain" would naturally convey the kiea that xbe question of adopting some of these other words Is not so clearly settled as in the case of the former one. But Mr. White does not mean this at all. He only means that (throwing aside tbe awkard double negaitve) it is pretty certain that some of them might well be spared. A reference to tbe article will make the case plain.
So we find tbat even Richard Grant White,with all bis profound knowledge of the origin, derivation and primitive force and meaning of words, with all bis critical culture 'i himself fall into errors and inaccuracies which must be obvious to a majority of his uncritical readers. And as I noted these blemishes the thought occurred to me, Is not tbe very watchfulness and anxiety of tbe writer for etymological and syntactical infallibility. tbe main cause of bis stumbling?"
,«i* «A
W ***&' jg'**?'-.
l!!ini*LUage'
THE EXPRESS AND ST. PAUL. Editor of The Mall: Will you allow me space in your pa-
Let the deacon's be tbe husbands of one wife." It has generally been supposed that this passage meant to forbid tbe having but one wife, but tbe Express says it forbids any bat married men to be deaoons. We have heard this idea advanced as a good joke upon bachelors or widowers who had been made deacons, but never before saw it advanced in sober earnest by a learned student of the Bible. The query now rises In our mind whether, after all, it does not mean tbat all tbe deacons of a chureh shall have the same wife. It says plainly "Let the deacons also be tbe husbands of one wife." Hals is an interpretation that would suit the Ex-
Put no faith in
o®°nou °f
not to be admitted into tbe number of w,»hnrifth.Tnr—» thn .n n,iri deaconesses, or tbus supported by tbe ^tb*rlf M**
churclb. But of oourse tbe Express ia right, all other bibie students to tbe contrary notwithstanding.
LKARNKK.
CHURCH NOTES. Cfcu
Seats!
young maa In the Our country.*' The Bible Class, taught by Bev. S. P. Howe, Will beopenet, Dy request, to both sexes. Ladies as welt aa csotlcmen *re cordially invited to attend. Ctaaa meets at o'clock A. X. In the Sunday School
aertlos at the Universallat Church to atII A. and7 r.x,R v. M.CROA
spirit Valium,
Is uattbar dead mm tfyfug." MriUvna Ifcattbe gentlemen «b» oBet**ed aa an ta-
BK1
//.MinTA*-! v4T!f A.H i:(HH
«J-, *,*' vsn» M?*'* VP-*? A *#*nft»*»a. -p. ,» "^.i"- _•'''L' '•. ».- 1
JM'M i'k
',
TERRE-HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 31, 1374 Price Five Cents.
People and Things.
tale
bearers.:
When one will not, two can not qu»r ml. Warrick county has a seven year old horse-thief.
No cards" is what a Western gam bier attached to his wedding »tiee. Wben tbe name of Jobn Smith is called in tbe Ohio Legislature, eight men respond "aye." "Jesus Christ, the great misappre bended Spiritualist," is the title of Gerald Massey's new lecture.
A singular instance of skepticism is recorded in the case of a man who said the Bible was "too good to be true."
Dr. Holland says a newspaper, re cognized as strictly a party organ, is regarded as a newspaper without an.v soul.
ANew York professor is lecturing en tbe cultivation of tbe ear. He doesn't say wben is the best time to pull it.
The usesof an umbrella are various. One use it is to test the honesty by leuding it. The honest are as yet uudisoovered.
Somebody says if a man only has a little brains and a good deal of cheek he need not use his hands much In the battle of life.
If everybody would pay everybody what everybody owes everibody, bow easy it would be for everybody to get
d®e8|oat
of debt and not owe anything to anybody. Bishop Henne«sy, ofjKansas, has prohibited dancing in that diocese at catholic fairs and festivals, stating tbat hereafter churches will be built without dancing.
A dutiful son at Atlanta set out to wheel his grandfather's corpse to the burying ground to save expenses, but
a
per to call attention to two very valuable expositions of Paul's writings, found in the editoriul column of tbe! Express last Thursday. It is very dedesirable that all new light thrown up-
«rowd gathered and argued with him
until he consented to hire a hearse. A Boston minister who complained tbat his salary was too small was told that he ought to be quite satisfied as he bad $2,000 while the orgauist re-
on these writings by those who have 1 «wi wd oniy |3,009. The parson lifted ovidently made them a subject of profound and careful study should be diffused as widely as possible. The first passage is that, in which Paul says,
his hands. The paws were emphatically expressive, if notexactly musical. In the New York Legislature, a few days since, Mr. Eastman rose and said: "I come here for |3 a day when I might make $300 a day elsewhere," and a still small voice was heard responding from the lobby: "You might make it here too,if you went the right way about it."
A St. Louis Medium has been com mnnicating with tbe spirit of Salmon P.Chase in reference to tbe appoint ment of M. R. Waite as Chief Justice. Salmon is not pleased with tbe selec tion. He considers Mr. Waite incompetent, but upon being pressed declined to give bis views in full.
Charles Dickens said that "tbe first external revelation of the dry rot in man is a tendency to lurk and lounge,
press' well-known friendship for Paul to be at street corners without intelliand the Bible even better tbau the one that it has found. In the same article It says "Tbe apostle was especially severe on widows. Speaking to tbe ctiurch at EpbeSUK, be says: "l«t not a widow under tbee score years be taken into tbe number. But the younger widows refuse: for thty wilt marry, and withal they will be idle, wandering about from hoo«e to house snd not wr
gible reason, to be going anywhere when met, to be about many places rather than any, to do nothing tangible, but to have an intention of performing a number of tangible duties to-morrow or tbe day after.",
The Boston Transcript says: "If the
M*rtohurch mcmbtrthip it oIcarly demied to swing open and all mankind to be asknnderJed on equal terms to enter into the It may be safely asserted tbat this is Kingdom, don't you know some peothe first time, that, even in joke, tbo
IdM has been suggorted that Paul for-
bade obureh membership to widow, LodTOme
under sixty year* of age. It has gen-
orally been supposed that tbey were
were
p)e wbo woald
other l9 were
i^,«1»2fcVJi i'rf
Mury Charlton,
•«idenly
refumnho.
the
«®-and-sos about
to enter?" Says the Louisville Courier-Journal: "Tbe 'Editor's Drawer' in Harper's Monthly, tbe depository of tbe largest collection of stale and atupid anecdotes in tbe worid, tells of a negro man 'wbo recently deceased at Bangor at the age
Services in the Ooagregational Obureh tomorrow at 11 A. X. and 71. Rev. E. Howe, pastor, ftatgect of evening sermon., the second of tbe series to young people no S of 110 years.' There used to be a younx the parable of tbe Ptod&al Son, "The!
man ia this office wbo waa addicted to writing deceased wben be should have written died, but we bad him taken out and shot."
Vice President Henry Wilson some times ssys queer things. Oooe be attempted to illustrate a point In parry
fcurs I cbopcbco. •fTtH Re arrecUoatoLifeaad Damn a dour11 toms. Be said In his blandsst tones, now In the Methodist Church, to which my wife belongs, and of which
Het«oe at W A. with a Btuie I IMCWI, eoomasted by tbe paster. I
I am an worthy member," "Amenf" shouted an enthoaasUc brother, and tbe remainder ot tbe illustration waa
1drowra,d
lo
tieoetftke ptaee ia tbe dark, awl te»oe» sotstion oa her lipa. Tbe young lady •uratetotfew ot*wm»t*e ud the audlepee 1
tbat tbey Save pea* teed afrsod aud deeep-
"tremendous applause." warning*dentists. rAf
the imbue seajMem fee!ib* sgoufro »hieb tbey infix*. A dentil* of Green Bay, Wis*, recently stopped bts work on fMr pa-tteot-s molars Impwes a little
(k.
w"*
nQt
tton iy^a tlarfr unswpaqtiag fruwkU. as sfte g**ebta» a atop mi tbe Jaw tbat art admiring tbe eccentric course of
warn mm Bsuiw CMBsaeuan at t% r. m. AtmM*
Hy order of tbe Ooxarrnr*.
sort, aod abe
innumerable- etara. Tbe oext d«y be b- a eery black-aud-tan eye, and tbe girl's father called oo him, sad after au
1
(tvcnuui iUail.
%rt
••rh. 8^• tiW
1
4 v' =...«
,Wst- J|
amiable conversation, the dentist was so pleased with his remarks that be gave him a check for five hundred dollars. The young dentist doesn't think it pays to give oonsolation to the lips wben the mouth's in pain.
Sxne then htful person says: "It is unkind to ridicule those items in the papers about centenarians. It is no easy thing to become 6 centenarian several have failed."
A modern writer on social science divides tbe humsn race into three classes: Those who think it is HO, those who •hink it isn't so, and those who don't care ad whether it is so or not.
Feminitems.
Electric bells—Female telepraph operators. Strange as it may seem, orir belles are fond of colored bows.
Two things that are apt to be detest ed—A new mamma and anew dog-ma. Young ladies are now creating artificial dimples by sacrificing their four molars.
In some way *tvv h--»vo ascertained tbat only one Iowa woman in ten wears a corset.
A Soul Saved, by Gail Hamilton,"
is the head put on by tbe New York Independent. It is remarked that wood will last much longer ir left for the women folks to saw and split.
Mr. Gladstone has declined to receive a deputation to urge tbe claims of women to tbe suffrage. 'Lydia Thompson will retire from the stage," says an exchange. 8he will come bask if encored.
Properly to understand what a wonderful thing "woman's love" is, one must see her in a milliner's shop*
Mrs. Buckingham was knocked down
and robbed in the leading
thoroughfare
of New Albany the other evening. Tbe Rev. Mrs. Roberts of Kittery, Me., bad the pleasure of conducting the ceremony at the marriage of ber son last week.
It was an expressive remark of a
of
to
p,H(w
wbAt
geing
the
do about
wbo WU(fld draw back fo
Celestial City was getting vul
WBW wbo wou)d
clerk of the Illinois House of Repre-
from that, and other members from as many different persons. While this hi ordinarily the case, there is one femalo model in new York whose form Is nearly perfect. She will never accept pay, and always wears a veil. She is reputed to be tbe wife of a wealthy merchant, and it is difficult to gH*ss what her motives are. Her action Airnlsbea a curious bit of romance.
The prettiest new face—some say the prettiest woman— in Washington this year is the wife of tbe new Arkansas senator, Dorsey. She is a Spanishlooking beauty, with very long, black: lashes, dark eyes, and rather small, tidy figure.
Miss Cass, a Boston dressmaker, took, home the pieces of silk and velvet left over from an employer's work. She was arrested and upon her trial sho pleaded so earnestly the invariable custom of dress-makers as to "perquisites" that tbe justioe let her go witb warning.
Connubialitiies.
A Topeka girl has beeu left a qnarttr of a million dollars by her uncle, audi now all through trains stop at Topeku.
Nine Chinese girls jumped into tbo
rlver
t^^v^
oan girlsjump in because they cant get an offer. A well-trained family dog recently officiated at a Des Moines wedding bjr carefully holding a porftoo of tbo bride's dress during the ceremony.
A marriage in a "buggy is announse* as having occurred lately in Virginia. Butiwuhat any excuse for the bride bocoming a little sulky a few a ays afterwards?
Miss Milwaukee II. Smith, the fir*
Tbey playfully shy peanuts at the white child born in the village of Mtfheads of actn ssea in the New Orleans waukee, has succeeded in getting raartbeatres Instead of flowers.
ried at last, after carrying that nanw nearlv forty years. A Dulutb couple were nwriedon-tJi® ice tbe other day, and fl •wouid'hiivfc been highly romantic if the bride had«%
I fallen down and cracked her auburn
bead and kicked the minister's feet ou& from nnder him. Quilp and his wife bad a bit of contention tbe other day. "I own that youi have more brilliancy than I," said tts» woman, "but I have the better judg-
practical man regarding tbe woman of I Mid Quilp, 'your the period, recently, "She don't know
enough, sir, to bile hot water." I
choice ,n
wa®
marrtaK®*how8 that!" QuU*
'n'orme^ that he was a brute.
Wbo says woman is not getting her Victoria Woodhull is cavortlag rights" competing against men. Miss
an,und
,(*!, ur,nK
Chi ir waa elects °De
come
the
1
sentatlves. Do ffustibu.1 non est disputantum For there was a young lady in Louisville, the other day, wbo said she always felt well if she bad on only a nioe fitting pair of kid glove*, if nothing more.
One of tbe lady teachers of Boston derstand bow It was, for be used to flgspeaka ber mind with freedom. Thus: are it out ss he sat with bis arm rotMift Tbe most boorish, most ignorant man I ber waist on Sunday nights, snd all ft
tbat wss ever made one of tbi School Committee treats a lady with some consideration, simply because she Is aj tady, but from their own sex tbe teachers can, and Jo, expect nothing but!
Grangers of low^
iove,y GraDSeret»«ot
out of a sk*
10 WH,t for her far,n8r
tb°
dT"
of Wood hull's grange, and then abo
raked all the hay-seed out of bis lies# with a broom-handle.—[St. Louis Republican,
A young lawyer at Monroe, Iowa, engaged himself to two ladies. As tbo time arr'ved for bis nuptials with one
You can judge bow cold it is around be went to plead off with the oiber, but St. Paul, Miun., by tbe fact that a It be paternal relative of tbe about-to-be young ladv froze to death in a sleigh deserted girl appeared on tbe spot and while riding four miles, and a feller oompeiled tbe fellow to rry his had his arm around her all ths time. I daughter then and there.
Slime person i* put upon tbe mar- President Nott, in his wise old sge, ket a preparation for coloring tbe guma once took a newly-married c«upie a delicate and be utiful pink. It is in-1 aside, and said: "I want to irlv« you tended ftr ladies only, says tbe label— I thia ad vice, my children: Don't try bit of superfluous iniormation, we to be happy. Happiness is a shy nyinph think. I and if you chase her you will never
Mrs. Burnhsm, of the it. Louia Re- catvh her. But jast go quietly on an* publican,say "Economy must
I do your di^ty, snd she will come to
in somewhere. Wben ladies wesr so I you." A young lady of Lyons, Iowa, recently said: "Some men are always talking about patronising their own town
much lace and silk about their necks and collars, dress skirts must rily be nsrrqw and scant."
I ways harping on that duty- a4 yet they go abroad to get married, while here we all stand waiting, waft-
Washington society" is disposed to turn up ite nose at Mrs. Delano, because .be receives callers with knitting I ^obo^'tbaT^Tneof tta me", in band. And yet, if tbe country had who marry Eastern women will get to choose between tbe dowagers knit-1 cheated I" ting their brows snd Mrs. Delano knit- y«ung man in Detroit who ting her stockings, their voloes would I oiarrisd about six mentbs age waa robe a "you knit" for the latter.—[Com- Lently finding fault with the prk**« at tnerciai Advertiser. I ,„arjtet. He said be coo id r»o* no-
would cost them to live was t-'7& a week, and now be sprat 416 «tul «se hungry half tbe time,
A love-smitten gentleman, afier
any change. 11 must ai.awer'no,'" "Weil. well, thst A writer In tbe Daily Graphte tells of will do," said ber pbU«e»p»'te'« tbe art studios lu New York, and tbe IM snd now suppose we change female models wbo apply tor employ* jject." meat. The applicants are numerous, F«r 'he benefit of tboee alr*««df^ but good female models ato extremely I ried snd those unfortuu»*e» »*«««,: «4 rare. While some portions of figure jto be, exchange may be so deveolpsd ae to earsptureI wedding anniversary /*h tbe artist, other portions may be mXmt-1 Tome days,angary sixty d*\n late deformitiea. Oerssta, tight g«r- first sowiversary, irosttflt'b ters, sod aboes, and Imgolar living| ry, wooden tenth
wilt reader any woman unfit to be a 1 teesth anniversary, crystal i**tb
modeL A dissolute life will deotmy aooivenMry, cbiua twenty tbe besaty of woman** %ore,*aod eerMry, rilrer tblrtletb e«nle#(Nwrj^v' beoes it Is tbat good models are alwsys eotton 'hiunb ebast* and motet. Artieu ate com-] fartieife aonlrensry, wnr.i. polled ia almoat every Imunee. in or-: fir 'frsary, e»lk fi'' t«»i, .*v•*d«r to complete their ideal figurss, to sen, a seventy-L,i» take an arm from this model, a neck ry, di
Tra
versing awhile with a 3aiy no the mb-
barshness.and snubbing." Knowing Ij^ ef matrimony, concluded at l«et those things, tbe teachers of Boston are, with th* mpb*tic queation, "Will von as a body, willing to remain under the! imve me?" ®"I am very tori) in «jpresent masculine government, and point jou," replied tbelndy, "unci fe-'pe ouiy a suffragist here and there desires
mjreu«a)
will not give y«»u pain i»ut
tin
4
