Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 5, Number 2, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 July 1874 — Page 5
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BARGAIMS,
nsjiai i_oWU)ii t.
ilmt i'lMl«( Ml Kale *f
ii
Summer Dry Goods,
tixijxr
0
KEtiAKDLiMI «F WT.
4\i
1 Liii.
HOBER«, HOOT fc COw,
OPERA iiorsi
Otter
exlmoraiMuy Ittduwineiits to CAHH BUYER&
t"
4
WANTKn—FIFTY
WANTED-ALLany
Jt?
A t-A REW ARD-FROM MY RESIDENCE, ^Ovl onm mile SOUTHEAST of Owaneco, CHRTStiau county, I lltnoi*,00 Tww*l«CT night, June 30th, 1(94, a Mack Mam,Tywar*tM, aboutIS hands high, a white spot on the hind part of on* ham on each side, near the flanks, spots or partially white hairs. She will weigh about lOOP pounds. I will W vara or I#5 far the MiMt and dnHOMi of the thief, and S£ for any Information that wiU lead to the recovery Of tba-mare, or 150 for both. AdMressW. T.BENNETT, Owanew, Christian county, Illinois.
pUBLIC SALE ...
A Paper
*,»
Do not miw Ui« opportunity of buy tag •omeof tfce HRArtm11)RY3t)ODH|N|r offered In TfmH.afr.
isa'ffii*.
Short-Horn Cattle,
FAIR GROUNDS,
NEAR TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
Thargia), Angudt 18,1874.
1 will «*il at the above time and plaoe,® head Short-Horns. CM nijifsand Welters,snd 6 Bull* and Iknll Calve«lof %e purest and s^^iaEWij£SEffJS afthe
TTA'/.WJ "RTiHK*}**BDBRD.
A Or** *«l1and ail quick fMdeta. tills will be a tare chance ftw AintMi deepens of ImproV'
ins their stock to procure some of thls vuluable and celebrated breed of Cattle. I will ab»aell«or8f«Hre
SOUTH-DOWN "^t?CK LAMBS, Also I choice
BRKK9HIRE Plfii.'
T«o««.-On sll aad over, a credit of si* months, without interest, Wfth
ssgt&Kf
rpHE «T ATE OF INDIANA, VI-
uakaown hejr« of Altmt WttaOB. deceaaeo, Bofdeen WiMw^Mytm ^tiwrn mm*
Ibrm, slMmrl: res)d«(H*W
r&'ss '•"-'n.f HaAiWUii
pSSBtoaissmSlWeeeeaa
Kyttrf Week's IsetaeU, la
J" V*"
Wanted.
YOUXG MEN III
the '-My And country to wit the but Hewing M-u iilne In th« market, Light work mdiMidMf. fall immediately and secure gootl territory. Kxtra inducements for live men who desire to invert In the business. Call on or address R. B. McDUPF, Manager. JSO Main street, Terr* Haute, lad.
TO KNOW THAT THE
Saturday Evwewro Mail ha* a larger circulation than newspaper published in the State, outside of Indianapolis. Also that It Is carefully and thoroughly read in the hontas of its patron*, and that It Is the vmjf b«tt advwrtlirtag medium In Western Indiana.
For Rent.
txr
rent-a hou»e of eight Room* and all other conveniences, on Ninth street, between Chestnut and Canal. Possession given on three days' notice. Call Immediately on A.C. MATTOX, rXR RENT-A HOUSE IN GOOD ORDER
on north Beeond street, room*, cellar, cistern, well and oat howw. Apply at southwest corner of Sixth and Walnut Bt*., of JAM. ROMK
For Sale.
SALE OR TRADB-A STRING
Music.
Fmiles
»R 8ALK-S* ACRKR southeast of Tern suited suited
or
LAND,
erre Haute. Weil and especially the place is a
for general purposes, and to fruit growing. Upon the] orchard of about 130 Apple
voung orchani or auoui lao Apple trees, of desirable varieties also Pear and Cherry tmes, UeapeviaeM, Ac. Also, a habitable house, and a desirable building site. Terms one-third down, and the remainder In three and four years. Ten month# free school and regular preachtng only mile distant. Inquire at my residence for Anther particu-
J. F. 80ULE.
lax*. fe-eow
Found.
Fniog
.II-IM
T^OUND-TH AT WITH ONE 8TROKEOF Jc
the pen you cm reach*
with an advertise-
rasntfa theftaturSayKwftng Mall, almost every reading family In $1.4 fty, as w.-U as tha isslilrnf nf the fnimi nntt country sorrounding Terre Haute.
UJND-THATTHE SATURDAY EVEMail Is the mast widely circulated newspaper 1b the
olis.
State outside of Indianap
Stolen.
WHA T8 IN A NAME!
A
great deal. It is not true that arose by any other name would smell sweet. Call it stink weed and then try the olfactories upon it. But people are constantly foiling Into the fallacy that names are of no consequence, in reference to other tilings as well at* in refer* ence to roeea, though it i*1o these that the clinching appeal is usually made How the idea that the name is of no consequence ever gained possession of the pMbik) mind it is hard to conceive. And it Is high time to bo done asking the question, What's in a name? in' atone indicating that it is the nature and not the name that gives character. Like a thousand other popular fallacies, people know tiu£ it is a fkllacy, or might
know it if they w'ould think a moment. In practical every-day affairs they never go upon the principle htat there is noth
ing in a name. They know there is great deal In a name, and they give and take names accordingly. The gambler seldom or never selects that title for himself or his class. If he bets on horse nMKk| cockfights, rowing or base ball matches, he is a "sporting" mttiu It he bets on cards, dice, roulette and such, he is a "professional." If he bets on the prioe of wheat, railroad stock, gold, Ac, he is a "speculator." The business of mot loses' half its bad odor, at least in their own nostrils, and probably in nostrils of the public as well, when these names are applied. They do not like to be called gamblers, bnt the other names they will apply to themselves with a delighted air, as much as to say, "My business is as respectable as that af anybody else." The liqnor business manifesto the same respect for names. "Saloon" has come to have somewhat of a bad od«r, and is going out of use. Bat ft was mighty fine at first. "A spaqiojB* mid elegant apartment "for the receptW of company," this istheorigi nal meaning, and it very effectually, for a time, suppressed the unpleasant odor which came from "doggeries," "rumholes," and "grog-shops." But tho stench was too strong for the name, and now "saloon" is not much better than the other names. Benceitis departing and "office," "sample room," "garden," though there be neither grass, trees nor flowers, are coming in. Then there is tho btntiness of "Rectifying." This is a componml of two words moaning to make ligbtr win obamiatry means a process b7 which the Aim parts aro separated irom tbe grosser, ilie man who takes pure liquors and concocts "benidne," "forty rod" and the like, by the aid ofa good deal of cheap and harmless rain water and a combination of all the worst known poisons, is a "rectifier." What's in a name? Give such a man and snch a business the names deserved, and it wonld soon appear whether he thought that a rose by any other name would smell as
If we go in search of examples in other directtoni we shall find that names are of mors importance than the popular aad oft r«pe*tSdfqtteiUei» would Indi cat*. The cross, snapping, iU-temperod, flamy old fellow Who makes things lively wherever he to, to* '*Wtry a«r*ous" man. Mrs. Smith had a child of that sort, and ebeaaldit was a very "nervous" child. She took it out and gave it a good sound spanking, and jwmprked, wiptt she returned, ttutt thfe lmd a upon the nerves. It is a pity some other "nervott* people"—not all, for there is a terrible disease oftiMl nervoqs system which demands more sympathy than it pi*gf«%geis~-IUKi not Mrs. Smith tor a mother, or physKlan. Then there is a «tingy old customer who never gives to
any
iltnbm, VermMlk* Co., lad.
(XL J, W. Jndy of IlilaoK AweUk»®er.
'iSt\Sk rwlilslani
fin****, m+Tw*fum
oause if be can possibly help ft, and if hetnost gJvej inakesthe ram ss small aa pderible, and be calls himself frugal, eeenomieBl and the like. He don't like theodot tff stingy, and mesa. On the otter h«nd there is th« ®«so who seldoai navs htt d^bts, hof¥owl whenever he
psy* m,^lirt^lliwfs^litsieterhe wante, toeata all Ms Mewto, wastes Money «Mmgh «wli year to pay all bis honest debts, and he prides himself upon his generosity. In hot 1m to thief and swindler, hot it Is fMmmmUr to think of yumltfm the Ytmm of «U W gener0tm nrtfcir tbah of an ttmiar bonest na|«m. Itt ttie jails aad prisons, the tiimalSM al ss «m«V li^rr wibfiuwtillki rab iaan and gst
I SllslfeWtiNWWwBiiiS,
•I
JL JliX V-L V-lii .V A
THE MAIL
«k the
Peopl%
P. S. WESTFALL, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TERRE HAUTE,-* JULY 11,18H.
SECOND ED1TIOX.I
TWO EDITIONS
Qt this Pap« mw ft^Mtptied. Dm FIRST EDITION, on Friday Event Ag, has a targe circulation In the surrounding -»ow*s, «b«i« II to» soW by nrm*m a»d a^nts. 'j Tb« SECOND EDITION,« Satw^ay Ewulng, goes Into the hands of nearly every wading person In the city, r.ivl the farm en of this Immediate vlClalt
fluat, '-if 1
TWO NEWSPAPERS,
In whleh all Advertisements gppear for ONE CHARGE.
Tuk story dejtartinent of H»© Mail wiU be IbttiKl Interesting this week. Mm. Alice E. C. Jordan contributes Rhort bat attractive sketch entitled "Only a Look." The illustrated story "Beeapie I Loyfd Him,'* is written with great power. "IJfe in a Balance," which hag met with such fkvor, is completed Other Interesting stories of unexwpticm ablg chgryter will follow
taa name? Tbwa to much in a name. Andtthwxanea b««* peesfr wt** care for the welfiu* of •oetoty to call things by their right nac», and not to allow vtontofo about la ihe^'» clothing, nor to compel innocent
^#*r^^na^BaoBassne -Jm mot* of the larger cities a relenttesa war to now being waged against the d«g& Tbe people seemed to bo madder tHan the du3£BaBa8iegBaaB^
TirKSt. I»uis fireworks on the evening of the Fourth were a baae fkmod and a stupendous cheat, and the papers over tb*t« have the cmdor to admit theaamc.
Dbsfttk the Poland law, Brigham Young got another installment of converts this week, aboift 500 i« all. There are some good-looking wemdn among them, and Brigham Is thinking ot getting married.
This Chinese firo-cracker Is a costly a»i dangerous plaything. The Pittsburg Post has added up the cost of these explosives ?n the fourth of July in five towns, and finds the sum to be $550,000, not including lives Ipet and in eidental damages.
Ay exchange makes the suggestion that the Vice President of the United States should be the Governor of the District of Columbia. We second the motion. In feet, we'd second a motion for any suggestion which would show us way to make that officer either ornamental or useful.
Lacba Ream, in a Beecher letter to the Cincinnati Commercial, tells how beautiful and fascinating lady of Indian apolis, uneasy about her soul, sought a private interview with the great preach er, and, throwing her fair arms about his neck, said, "Oh, Mr. Beecher, save me!" "You must look to a higher power," said Henry, gravely unclasping the dangerous necklace. "Let us pray."
The Congregationalist suggests that the Beecher matter might be investigated with closed doors by three such men as Presidents Woolsey and Hopkins, and Hon. Wm. A. Buckingham and says if they were to declare upon their Christian honor that they had heard all the testimony belonging to the case, and that they remain satisfied of the entire purity and integrity of the pastor of Plymouth Church—who could ask more?
Professor Paiuchurst says the tail of the comet has grown One million miles in five days, and, all told, is five million miles long. Avery respectable tall, so far as length is concerned, to say the least. The mind staggersin contemplating the immensity of such figures and when it reaches beyond, and endeavors to realise that the comet will fly with lightning speed through unobstructed space for a thousand years before returning it loses everything uponwhich to an? chor itself. .,
Thk Freemasons have excommunicated Pope Pius IX., "one of their old brethren, for perjury. Charges were preferred against him at Palmero in 1865. The decree of on pulsion Is official ly promulgated at Cologne, and is as follows:
A man r&med Mastai Ferretti, who received tho baptism of 'Freemasonry, and solemnly pledged his love and fellowship, and who afterward was crowned Pope and King, under the title of Pio Nino, has now cursed his former brethren, and excommunicated all members of the Order of Freemasons. Therefore, said Mastai Ferretti is herewith, by decree of the Grand Lodge of the Orient, Palormo, expelled from the Order for petftuy.
The recusant brother, though duly served with a summons, failed to put in personal appearance at the trial, or to make any response to the accusation.
COMETS.
Mr. Rkbvhs, tho well known astronomer, is reported to have recently advanced, before one of the English scientific associations, an entirely new theory with regard to comets, and, by the use of diagrams, be showed that the part of the comet termed the tail being always in a direction from the sun, and therefore as often in advsnee as behind the nucleus, is not really a tall. He also argues that, as comets are transparent, and all matter is known to be either solid, liquid or gaseons, comets must be the latter, for solids and liquids are opaque. The only known power, be ssys, by which this gaseous matter can he held together to gravity, which must necessarily have a centra, sod ev«qr pstt of the body being fttttosw^isrtwstoriftotot^tow the eeotw of wfcfefc is is many esses ex ceedingly dense, gradually attenuating towards the Hrramfrrence. This being the case, the rays of the son are retraced In tHeir pstfvgf through the spherical
thus lUwnJnating the portion
beyond the esntov or nuclws, which illumination forms the tail, all this being to Mr. Reeves' theory, entirely in accordance with nature's universal laws. mmmmmmmammm
Tan World says the "average jutyto an ma." This to net at all co«h ptlmeuury to the
JTGir WE mUSBBA TJS. I Imt weak we aald that the peper* of tlis week would no doubt- taring Ike iwi»l wsortment of Fourth of J«»y ao etdeota. So they did. The molt of tho nfPiff»fofa and reckless oomb«stion cf gunpowder on this 4sy is brooght prom inently in review hy |be«tewi»f|itows culled toga many
A $300,000 fire occurred In Pittsburg the 4th, caused, it to supposed, by fire crackers.
The oelebraUoa of the ITotlrth In Chi eago footed up two killed and twentynine wounded.
CSroleville, Ohio, bad a fire-cracker bonfire on the Fourth, which consumed only thirteen buildings.
At Columbus, Ohio, JoHus Kremer, architect, was ferkmsly injured by pow dersnd gravel from a Roman candle striking him in the face arid penetrating the eye-ball.
In Brooklyn, a biasing ball from Roman cmdle entered the open window ofa house on DeKalb avenue, and upset a camphine lamp, setting fire to the house, which was burned, together with a child of the occupant.
Near North Bend, Victor Piatt, ten years of age, the oldest son of John Piatt, the Librarian oftlie House of Representatives, and well-known litterateur was killed by the explosion ofa bottle of powder from which ho bad been loading a toy cannon.
At Pontiac, Illinois,* afire caused fire cracker, entirely destroyed the Phoenix Hotel, the court house with all the records of the county, ami the union block, the finest In the town. Total loss, 9200,000.
And so we could go on with reports from every section of the country of fires and accidents, of killed and wound ed, only to be repeated with the coming of another Fourth of July. ui* ______________
MURDER MOST FOUL." Hie harvest of the annual crop of mid summer murder has commenced, and If anything promises to exoel any previ ous year—thanks to lax execution of law, our rules of evidence, our dilatory proceedings, new trials, bills of exceptions, appeals, our jury system, and our pardons. Men evilly inclined see clearly how nineteen out of twenty murderers escape, and the small risk of the twentieth chance is too shadowy to restrain them when passion moves to deeds of violence. The Cincinnati limes, of Monday evening last, puts together list of murders appearing in the morn ing papers of that city, on Sunday and Monday mornings. We condense and quote from that paper:
The list opens with the finding of murdered manin the Mississippi, below Qulncy, on Friday morning. His throat had been cut from ear to ear with heavy iron mining drill, which lay beside him. The instrument had also been driveS clear through the head at the tenv
V!l
Those who complain oi the exactions of the Baxter Law should know the difficulties encountered by saloon-keep-ers down in Mississippi. The law in that State not only embodies the principles of local option and personal responsibility of the liquor seller, but forbids the issuing or renewal of any license except on petition therefor, signed by a majority of the men over twenty-one and of the women over eighteen years of age, in the township, w^rd or precinct where application is made. This feature of the law mwk adopted about thfee months ago, and it is claimed by its friends that during that period very few, if any, licenses have been issued in the State.,,,
St. Louis is the next contributor in the shape of a man with his skull pounded into a shapeless mass by a hatchet. The object of the murderer being to obtain twenty-four dollars paid to the man on that day. In the same city, on the next day, Saturday, a drunken soldier, passing a young man on the street, man aged to get into a controversy and was killed with a knife at about the fourth sentence.
Boston brings to the list a most horri ble murder of a young girl in her sleeping chamber. The weapon was a carv ing-knife, the murderer having stabbed her nine times, five pf the cuts penetra ting the skull. The bed and pillows clotted with blood furnish a ghastly pic ture, on which the sensational reporter loves to gloat.
Brooklyn comes next to the front, with a drunken laborer who finds his wife asleep on her pallet, and leais tier head into a jelly with a soda-water bot tie, scattering brains and blood about the room and against the walls and^il-
In New York, a poor vagrant is clubbed to death by a policeman, a sailor stabbed by his comrade with an ordin ary pocket-knife, and an Italian murdered by his companion in misery because they differed just two cents in their private cash accounts.
Geneva, N. Y., furnishes its quota in the shape of ajform laborer who saw fit to vary the monotony of agricultural pursuits by splitting his employer's skull with a hoe.
Providence, Rhode Island, sends the sad case of an old couple butchered at night by a burglar. The old man raised cry for help, and was ruthlessly murdered in his bed, while the old lady died from the shock.
On Saturday a man at Lancaster,Ohio, knocked down his aged fether and brutally struck his invalid sister as she lay her bed. The old man retaliated with ids kaift, laying tho dutiful soft open from collar-bone to abdomen.
At Leveland, Ohio, sn Irishman displayed unusual energy by stabbing German shoemaker nine times.
In Covington, Kentucky, a couple of celebrators warmed up Into a little altarcation, when the kaito argument wash*, traduced with efltat, the victor remarking suavely "that that was the way to get away with *em."
In Cincinnati three men attacked a policeman, with alleged iutent to kill twe others curved eeeh other with penknives, while a woman attempted suicide with both poison aad knife.
Ripley, Ohio, closes the list with the greatest horror of all. A young man making lo Id* sweetheart In her parlorTls ordered out by the fhther. He forthwith shoots the stern parent, and being puraued by two brothers of the girt, kills one of them.
And these are the nword of butt wo days and only those ftw cases from the many whose inddents were safllrientlv out of the common to JnstlQr the pee of
?SSSS3SSSSS2tt£BS£gS&
THK MODEL HUSBAND. He never interferes with his wife's plans in any way, shape or manner, but is in nil things and at all times her most willing and devoted subject.
If he happens home occasionally and finds the morning's work undone, and the wife of his bosom in morning di and slippers, hair uncombed, with foot on the hearth, deep in the mysteries of a love story, or absorbed in the perusal of tho last "Woman's Rights Convention," or "temperance crusade," while dinner Is still a thing of the far distant ftiture, he never grumbles, and growls, or turns on his heel with looks of dark despair and goes off down town to get a feast. Nothing of the kind! He first kisses his dear wife, and then replen-
look
in the direction
AN
of all imaginable
uTMMAJt signatures. [Hcsuth aad Home.} It Is almost an unheard-of thing for
Kin'snssuHacw the tags and fiUal ramftg people will per-1 stotentlyoommit suicide by starting fires with tonassne. At Huntington, ^{ofa womim. Butwom4m havea curio^8 Stat^, yesterday evening, a little girt, I fondness for tho assumption ef maacufiAsenyean of ags, daughter of Oeo«ge I line namea. George EJloLGeorge Sand, Fulton, while attempting to kindle a Am nub»- .7.VT* ,. j^,K who has made amputation in Germany ore with kerosene, was burned to death, novelist under the name of Carl the explosion of the msk setting fli» to Dotlef—are conspicuous examples of her dram.
death, on Thursday, of a Proftgssor while tively belong to women. Women either attempting to fly from a balloon to the do not know women as thoroughly as earth. After rising a short distance the v*iy "Ifu i. to express their knowledge. Whichever Professor was lowered, snd hung sm- supposition ia true the fuet remains that pended from the balloon and by a rope no woman—a!vrays excepting George with the wings of the flying machine ex- Eliot—has drawn womanas true to lffb tending. Tl»MiooBi»«»tedlo«ter.
rible height, and at a signal the rope was The reason for this" frequent assumpcut, when the Professor descended with tlon of masculine names has undoubtedfright Ail velocity to the ground amlwas instantly killed.
dinner. his fingers, but be knew it was beating He has no "old flames," or new ones its last. He trembled for Elizabeth, he would I a™* dared not tell her. She anticipated either, shuns secret societies as the plague, and was never known to look in the direction of a bonnet on the
have not been so skillftilv pi*p«redas
country as aids to digwAUm. Will Utnler-
,1!S7vmib
him.
of
a bonnet on the
Dortor,"
head of any woman but his wife. He so passionless that it might almost have
A..Mo th» OR'.NHIA TAotnrM'I HAIIVAIV belonged to a disembodied spirit—"l endures the "(Caudle Lectures" deliverI ed by his better half with a touching meekness unexcelled by the original Caudle himself, and regards with pity, not mixed with contempt, that most miserable specimen of the masculine gender, a hen-pecked husband!
Galk Forest.
COOKING.
There is no more important branch of "preventive medicine," tho lancet asserts, than cooking. Bad cooking may cause a dwindling of the race, ruination of the temper, and deterioration of the morals. Good cooking, on the other fy®* w*"5
E^
not
aAd keep their noses everlastingly imon nm&»ine#, nor nsapets heir respective grindstone^ seldom ^Tmowem. l|ey are fifty yeara beknow thai good dig«.tion which shouM
wait on appetite. Hitherto their dinners
aml
to demand the least possible eflort ftom ^&el|ghtftlk-t old soula in the world, »faded stomach but Ict us ho|R that ti»s how to get every diwof national disgrace pleasure out of life there to in it. tma no Juiiger dimthe
fcri^t.ie«
Htui
if
to write undw the asaumednamo
a nag an inn all Y*»«#
this tendency on the part \f women novelists. Few ef them succeed In oon-
If the multitude of suicides now oo- eeallug their true sex from their readers, curriag, anything out of the uaual order Indeed, George Eliot ia the only wt»man
ir* teste? Kdcide of the year hss occurred In Men- b^traval to uot found in the crrorieouH ua. A mother and two adult daughters, drawing of male charaetera—gs we might charming ladies all of them, were dis- *»tamJIJ' ««ppose--but in the unoonrn'nnrart In thfAr had rhimlsr «»|. w«h Which the Writer covered in their bed chamber, oack with jreflations describing women. The men a pistol In her hand, and each with a I of women novelists aro usually untrue ball In her brain. The cause was tho I to nature, but not more so than are tho of ft. hmJmnd in u» 2? WSCi P«i«. -isiss&s^asss&za! I create a heroine that she betrays her sex
TWtc"-v.
or
ly been the belief that men are sure ofa better hearing from the public than are women. Of late years this reason has ceased to exist. Women have taken so high a rankss writers of novels and romances that they bid fair to establish a monopoly In that department of literature. And henceforth it may become the fluhlon for men about to make their first appearance as novelists to hide their, personality behind an Imaginary skirt, and seek for recognition as members of the great army of women writers.
LADY CLERKS AT WASHINGTON. I am acquainted with a lady who writes Spencerian pages in the'Patent Office at Washington for (800 a year. Her father was a naval officer of long and meritorious service, and died a Rear Admiral. Her husband put $70,000 on the wrong side of the stock sale in New York, lost, sneaked to the hereafter through the back door of the suicide. Patient and lovable, she works as steadily as if some mighty reward were near at hand. I suppose it is hope on, hope
ishes the fire, which he finds in the last ever, with her, tnough nobody can see "stage of consumption," puts the house anything she has to expect more than a "to rights," and prepares, to the best I life of routine and an humble grave. In of his manly ability, a sumptuous Paris she would have flown first to tho lunch for two," of which he-Invites I streets and then to the charcoal brazier, her to partako in his blandest society In London, it would have been tho Artone. gyie rooms, gin and the waters of Black-
When there is a "woman's rights" or] friars bridge. "crusade" meeting in town, he attends] As you pass the tables of tho ladies in his wife thither, or remains at home and the Treasury building, you are moving takes care of tne children, as she may among better materials for romances see fit and as he doesn't bring them than exist in the teeming brains of Hugo into the world, it Is for her tosaywheth- or Turgenieff. "You see that second era dozen "olive branches" shall clus- woman .to your left," whispered Spinner, ter around their loving knees, or wheth-1 "Her father was onoe at the head of two er they shall be forever free from baby railroads. The '57 panic laid him out. cares. She married a Baden baron, and he left
He never bothers his wife with sewing her in a year or two for some Dutch on his buttons he didn't marry her for I flame. She has a noble little boy fivo that but when his buttons are missing, years old now. Says she is going to fit quietly procures a needle and thread, nim for Harvard, by and by^and then adjusts his thimble, and sews them on I make a Senator of him. Watch her himself. He is never jealous of his wife's count that money. You cannot move "lady friends," but is perfectly willing I your fingers up and down in the air as she shall have just as many as suits her I fast as she brushes off the single notes, own sweet will. He never opens and Never did a day's work of any kind in reads secretly the letters to these friends her life till she came here." which his wife intrusts to his care to] All honor to the lady clerks at Washmall, nor accidentally carries them, ington for adding the strongest proof yet nor their answers in his pocket a month I given of woman power to lose friends or two before he delivers them. I and fortune and still retain virtue anain-
He never groans at the extravagance I dependence. God bless the multitude of of woman, or preaches economy at I faithftil workers who are showing each home, ana indulges in oysters and I day how possibly it is for them to earn champagne suppers abroad but makes I their own living, and yet remain culhls pocket book a family concern, or I tured, respected ladies.—[Exchange, deals his wife money with a lavish band.
He never chews, smokes, or drinks in 4 TH the house under any circumstances, I never ventures out unaccompanied by I There came a morning at last when his better half after nightfall, and never the baby's eyes did not open. Dr. Erbrings a friend home unexpectedly to
8^i"e fe"
throb faintly under
she said—and her voice was
belonged know that my darling is dying/ He bowed tils head mutely. Her very calmness awed him.
Is there anything you can do to ease herT" Nothing. I do not think she suffers."
Then you will please te go away She is mine—nobody's but mine, hi her life and
in
her death, and I
rfry
promoters of the National 1 ear,—a wild, passionate prayer that it -Cookery, who aro undoubted-1 remember her, and know her ly right in the main, and are deserving jn
suocess,
rv
^l«g*ln
as an art we are not greatly concerned, although our profession would undoubtedly suffer in pocket should tine-art cookery go out of fashion. "Elegant" dishes are generally wbited sepulchres, and the forerun nera of blue
wnnt
her
quiet to myself at the last." Sorrowfully enough ho left her. Elizabeth held her child closely, but gently. She thought in that hour that she had never loved anything else— never in this world should lovo any thing again. Sho wanted to cry, but her
t?nd,,^!rnlr'5'
tear fell on the little upturned face,
hand, is accompanied by nattonal pros- J^gw «, fast to marble. She bent perity and domestic bliss. Souv the over
ang
whispered something in baby's
the Infinite snaces. A look
in 10
P'l^nd other dlsagreeaMe correctives• hieh 1 ay upon her Thungty heart was We hope that the school will busy Itself Ltone.-ILoube Chandler Monitor's mainly In Imparting a knowledge of tho Bocientilic principle** of cooking, and will teach their cooks the quality "par excellence" which all food should have is wbolesomness. The bulk of the Enggliah peop^ ji veIn big cities, snd if we weri asked to flame the moat predomin-. atlng characteristic of our urban popu- toms. Goaheadati vensss to. in the very lation, we should gay "dyspepsik" I air we breathe, and we all would rather ImZtL wear out than rurt out. Germans have °rr5?» eonmxmne rooms,
infinite spaces.
*or its pro-1 geemed to answer her,—a radiant, loving look, which she thought must be born of the near heaven. She presped her lips in a last despairing agony of love to the little face,from which already as she kissed it, the soul bad fled. Her white wonder had gone homew This
'Some Women's Hearts."
of our coun try women,' ^rtttiig
from Berlin, says:—No American can fully adopt the German habits and cus-
invented any telegraphs, nor steam-
hlnd
times in all modern eomforts
conveniences. But what of tht.tr
am tho je«**,
of ourhoj- ,nto
»fclo
dullest, one idea-
one
PjWity,^the number Qiem.and don't stand where they can icinea whleh are sold so .lstyl^ in thto
their ruts with
you
at
and they art ss
niabie and pleasant, and benignant as
go a rapid diminution. I po^ihi® and will tell you more about
fo v* I tlurt particular rut than ever you rearo- & S A
I
ed of. But if you try to dig them ouk
(New York Dttlletls.} jt tnirsts dreatlftiHy. Then transplant Our sxchanges, far and near, are show- them Into a new country, where the ing the first effects of the adjustment of} path is pretty broad, and they breathe a the financial question by Congress, and I Tree air that is not ladened with musty the adjournment of CongreMitself, upon tradition and imperial rule, and they the business of their respective localities, wabble and roll round like so many Theae are all favorable, and hat for the owls in the sunlight, snd even Imagine fact that we are approaching midsum- that they can comprehend and manage mer, when merchants arc accustomed to 1 the new State of snWrs better than those seek relSxatlon and rest, n^hor than to born and bread to R. court new trade, these indication* doubt-1 ommammm—-— toss would be even mere strongly mark- Do vou bvjm thwk that a neglected ed than they am The anticipations of cotigh or cold may lead to serious wnsean early and active fall trade which are quwcest^ In the earl^ stages of^L^^ entertained here are shared at all the disease ioading buslneas centers. C'-rdi^l." It can«lw«j-s be relied upon.
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