Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 5, Number 15, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 October 1874 — Page 1
I8stis«i«tesift»^4-Wi8
II Vol. 5*—N°# *5
I
-THE MAIL
A PAPER'FOR THE PEOPLE.
-S [VltftMlVllWllttt.} MOVE'S SIGNS. A' wet msrrr
JL
twnsthen
mnncH.
OWWtOIMMWtotl I MB T«HUM torn VOU *W Tell me howlmay discover if she loves nw, so that bolder,
I may speed me in my wxtof.* First, I c*utfa»»*d, a gray *»•"*.,_ Who has wtodom l^iaro«4 ftom stoolay,. Wbile mm* pan**, my foolish heart stirred, ^SSTSff^tSSm.*
Tb«m 1 wid, "Now tell me truly What she •nym. and how she Let
M*a*
U*
consider duly.
i'Vi
Aft
bow»i«d«-
After evident, ooowa judgment. lie began, "Oh she* theswevte*. Awl the dearest ever given
Y*
of tomw, she's the
rw»«* «he- xmlHnKly come to meet yoa, Joy light hwWne eyes dancing, On you, all hf*r light talk glancing,
Thisw»y do^sbi always greet yon." Does her langb ring oat the clearest, At wmc story you are telling, (Xx* she turn when you are nm«wt,
Welcome from her dear eyes welling, Does she always this treat yoaT" Does she spealt out proadly, boldly, Of you* goodness,aad your graces. Doe* she praise your name, noieoldly,
At all time*, before ail turn .. ... la your name thus by her spokenr* "Now, alas !M said this poOTlover,
They'd no need of farther speaking, If this way frmust discover, :Wlut my toad heart haa been scekia* fj. She loves not, by every token.
in her eyes what color lyifife know not, so seldom meeting, Kor ber eyvllds droop before me. "If I speak. In lowrtyiyiag, (She nmponiU with freqaent hushes, And It oWn se«cos bat si«h^|. •JThat so dyea ber cheek with blushes,
While ber eyes still droop before me. «If my name has ever stirred her, To entwine vrlUt glowing phrase*, I am sure I never heard her,
"Silly boy I by blushing, flying. By the name so seldom spoken, Bbows she how the land is mng,
vAnd
she lores, by every token,
•Jug
Gn my
honor, yon are master,
Do yoa doubt ft Q« and ask her?"
Town-Talk.
KUSCTIOK—A WORD TO TUB WISE AND OTHKRW1SX. A*
the day is at hand when "we 'uns" taen, the oaks of humanity, are about to assume the badge of our superiority over the "weaker vessels," the vines, and go to th? pails, T. T. feels it incumbent upon him to offer a few words of advioe. Advice la a mighty scarce article, and the voters generally can't get any. With a
BOS
re or two of candi
dates who have nothing else to do but ran up and down the land and who know Jtnt bow the people should voter and with all th« newspapers, the editors of which are as wise in this matter as the candidates, Mid with self-eacrifkiiig wire-puller* who know more than either, it is a shame, a burning shame that advice 1* so scarce, and voter* are compelled in such an importantcrisis to go It almost totally blind. Such la thaaad and sorrowfttl fact however, and T. T. fttels that he called upon toatamiin the breach, and give a soflhtin^aad endangered public the benefit of id* j^rier wisdom. Soberegc^a.
It i* very important that very smpae*able people, thoae who belong to the upper ciame* and especially the ilsw relil^oua nten who are the leaven (and the eleven) of aaefatjv should stay away from thepoila. Tbe dlrtyw»A of voting should bo given over to those whom it will not hart. l*eo|^e sixmld maintain their w|w!tbt% and «chtir«ti sts*dlnf «m If the country does goto the—4 bad. In a word atay athomeif yoa are respectable and rell^ane and want to kaepte.
In dtKiaas wh^her to tc«« the atr _tht ttelnc or not, yon shooldocroudder rv candWate e^yoor ewn pajty «t and competent till he ie proved in ad a reasonable or nnreaaonable du!-t to he a koava. nod aibol, and every caodtihet# oa wif iiiiiia tl^Atet a thief, swindler, liar, Mid bluett leg generally, vmtft there bi proof positive that h« mi nv\ «t has been, and never will w, or am u, any
OM
«t tfeaae.
With thi« fltocAf#* to«alde jw,ifU M»4M»»%i«ae3r jwb ««el»de that a oandldata of the oppwtte party la h«it«y than that of yw*r own, It win be a^» to **a«rateh.w Otbarwiso wte the MtraS^bt iiokot.
If yoa «wf to flm»r of ^Mflatioa of tiia eemncgr wtth gmlaal waanm«»ui» of payment vote Ilia 9t$t (ifct it ttw llotif yon believe in the gradual iwwiuptlwi Wfrnm-pitfmmii with inflation, vote U»e Rejwbttean Ueket, eapectally theecmnty tieket. The dlAn^ «M»hatwec« thatwo fwrtfea laaats^ pertaait oaa lot them who mm awK,
Oiwua siioold take ttdralR from the of both parties, and pot one la tto ballot box, ana the other In their poekete and aa to wMUi dMdl go into whkdb place, do aa fibay pkaaa. II may be well few Germans holding o»«efaivl wanting «o keep on holdleg, to nftoUa *'8Mi n.-Swfe, If th#y dral vnit
to vwy mueh they can pretend to do so. Pretending, if a man is food moat aa beneficial ca doing.
If the Temperance fclks think Wo* l^nnanthas let off some at the liquor •ellen easier than he ought, they abould vote for Kelly, who will let them all off.
Temperance people had better aae what e^LTZ tbe togidatur. the «doon keeper* vote for, and vote the same ticket. Nobody *els so had over the "failure ef the Baxter BUI," or iueo anxiotM for a more efficient temperance law, se the saloon keepeia. Temperance
people
MJV
should vote aa they do, especially
if they vote with the same party with which the leinperanoe man has heretofore voted. Thla advide fc partloalarty adapted to ^e chairman and members of Temperance Committee.
Democrats should* scratch Judge Long's name, for it is on the Republican ticket, and probably he is secretly in favor of civil rights and miscegenation. He haa a Black man to swear witnoasea in his court. Fact. The Bepublicana should not vote for Long, for the Democrats claim him. He hi on the fenoe, and it ia not at all certain that being a Republican would save a criminal from the penitentiary In his oourt, or even mitigate the sentence.
Grangers had better vote for the beet men irrespective of party. If they hove been Democrats heretofore the Democratic ticket has tho best men irrespective of party on it, and if Republicans heretofore, that ticket has the beat men irrespective of party.
Look out for tricks in the opposite party, and if you catch a man at any publish him Car and wide. Look out not to see aay tricks In your own party, and if you do see any keep still about it.
Read carefully the Express and Journal on Tuesday morning and believe every word printed in both papers, and if there should be any advice in them carefully follow it all. The editors are wise men unless they are mistaken, and thqy don't think they are.
The Irishmen aa a rule should vote the Democratic ticket, because that party takes almost all its candidates for important offices from the Irish voters. Those that cannot get office as Democrats, and want it real bad, had better vote the Republican ticket.
To get Into the saloons election day, go to the beck doors. The visits should be frequent,
If your candidates are defeated go borne early and sober, but if they win go home late and drunk, or at least drunk, early or late.
Any persona who have conscientious scruples about accepting this valuable advice without paying for it, can send a check to T. T., Mail Office. Don't make it payable to Mr. Westiall, as he might forget to pasB it over to the proper patty.
Husks and Nubbins.
j?oTm.
TUB FAJCMXn AS FOMTJCIAX. Professor Perry, of William*' College, delivered an address at the Nebraska State fair a few days ago which contain ed a good many valuable suggestions to Ote fermeta. One significant Idea pat forth was that the former* exert less influence on politics In proportion to their numbers than any other claw of citizens, the ceosua of 1K70 shows t£at, in round nnmbera, about half the working people of the United States are engaged in agriculture, about one fifth In mining and manu&ciuring, one fifth In professions of various kinds and one tenth In commercial panwlts. Yet, vast as their number fa, the termers have little in flaeaes in shaping the policy of the gwernment. Say* Prof, Perry, *1 can count yoa ISO Uwyem who haw exerted more jproeticai influe&oelnfcbe State* andnathm than the whole six million fiirtwt* have exerted.**
Why h* this so Prof, Peary explains it on tfce ground of party spirit. He says they have ranged themselves nearly evenly In both of the political parties •ad thus neutrsiiaed wurfi others influence. While tbeee were nearly half ofihem with each party It was not nee* esaary lor eltfeer to make any concessions to tbem they acted merely as so Bunch dead weight.
The*®maybe soaneHroib in un«bat His not the whole truth by any means. One main reason why the Homers have
In
hav« net demanded any skate to II, have not insisted oa mm Mt. They have Tim mm* been wmdwtedon certain net suppeaed to afibet ooa^mtauehBBore than another. The tenner* have net instated oh any particular principles beliig embodied In the platform and faeaee no eoeh have been eaahodled. If the the banker* wanted any fcrot* «T g«tenaasnt they took care to get They went to the esacosee and tfcsesfrJHMMMftijiiMi Ihitafl iSiii nliiiil il w*M««WWMP| eiMPH wW wB^pOHHCPQ Oftt KM fBoolattoa eommlttees ""t pQ| gn^ into the pia^w as jdeMsd then. When the ejection waa ovw they went to Ooagteai and hung around their representatives like watdi do^a, making suratlMt ihey dM what th^y
ed te do. If a little money was needed they generally managed to raise it and all went on smoothly. While things were going on thus the fiutners stayed at heme like honest men trusting to the integrity and wisdom of their legislator to make beneficent lsws for them. It did not oecur to them that they had any frvors to sak or that any lnJustioe might be done them. It appeal* they did not think about the subject at all. And this la Just the point ot the matter. They have not Influenced politice because tbey have not thought upon what they need—have not atudtad their profession to find out what kind of legislation waa beneficial and what kind detrimental to it. And they would not be thinking to-day, as they sre, If some one other than a farmer bad not incited them to it. Now that othem have looked into the matter, studied out some of the natural laws which govern their profession in its relation to other professions and pointed out the evil of certain laws which bear mere oppressively on them than on others,they have begun to think on the sutyect with a view to ascertaining what they caw do for themselves.
This awakening on the subject of politics will benefit them in more ways than one. Not only will It tend to give them influence in the convention and in Congress, in the framing of laws favorable to agriculture, but it will stimulate them to thought in other directions. Once in the habit of acting In concert, of uniting^their efforts for the accomplishment of some end advantageous to all, the wall of isolation which has kept them asunder for so long will be in a measure broken down and they, will meet and mingle more together, greatly to their benefit in many ways. The drawback of the farmers has net been so much the lack of political influence as the lack oi thought and intelligence in conducting their business. With the latter would have come the former. If they had reduoed agriculture to as scientific a basis as somo other trades and professions have been reduced, if they had been as shrewd, enterprising and watchful of their interests, they would not have overlooked their proper place and influence in politics for so long. And they will not effect so much in the halls of legislation now as they expect to do, unless they push their study and investigations further than mere politics. After all the former has less need to be a good politician than a good farmer, for if be is a good farmer he will take his rightful place and exert his just influence in politics, but if he is a bad former all the laws in the universe will not make his crops grow and keep his stock healthy. Let not the former be carried away from his field and barnyard to become a professional politician for he will lose more than be will gain in tho transaction. But let him study thoroughly all that has a bearing en the business of agriculture, giving politics its due share of attention with the rest, and he will find himself becoming as important a factor in conventions, elections and legialaturea as he can have any reason to wish.
A FASHIONABLE PARTY IN 1787. In a book recently published, containing numerous incidents of fashionable life at the beginning of this century, the following anocdote is related:
Prom the opera I went to Mrs. Crew's, where there wss a large party, and pleasant people among them—for example, Tom Pelharn, Munday, Mrs. Bberitfan, Lady Palmerston, etc., beside all which were three young men so drunk as to puzzle the whole assembly. They were Orlando Brldgeman. Charles Oronvlue, and a Mr. Gilford, who is lately come to a gvxad estate of about five thousand pounds a year,the whole of which he's in the act of spending In one or I way ears, at most—ana this without a grain of sense, without any fUn to himself or entertainment to others. 110 never littered a word, though ai drunk as tho other two, who were both riotous, and began at last to talk ao plain that Lady Frances and Lady Palmerston fled from their sidetable to ours, and Mrs. Sheridan would Jbave followed then), but did not meko her escape till her arms were black and Mt% and her apron torn off. 1
miO VLD THKY 11VK VP PASTOfiAI* vmrrisof fprniu the New York Trlbaae.)
The Chicago Method!* mltiistem are troubled about the proper arrangement and moral limitation of pastoral visit*. At their regular social meeting last week they took up the etttyeet aeriooAly and did largely talk It over. Mr. Leonard thought''* good man in no danger whatvmft* vM&ig any kind of home." Mr. Mulflnaer "had never beau tamjpt»d~not in ibe least." Mr. Gloss, when ho thought it nooeNsary, always took Mi*. Gloss with him. Mr. McKooun adduced the example of Softool, who "shunned not the females ef his floek j" and yet "he gave great cautkma.* Dr. Jutkin thought "the difltorence between past ie»l and social visiting should he dStlnrtly marked." Ue tbought alio thai the fiveashar should 80 sa a aa a Bishop «f Hauls. peeled that clergymen **w« oa the soda! «i3* and loo weak on the religiooaside." "That I* the only trouble™ saM Dr. Ps«k. As might have been expected, the meeting earn* te mo definiteeooetvaton upon apotntwhlch admits of none, judges ha that "a true mintster," as Mr. Malfttiger observed, !eouid-IWl^* tempted"—a very just re-
Twa piekpockets operated laa email way, ou the show grounds, last Moii^y,
TERRE HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 10,1874. Price Five Cents*
People and Things,
Goed management often accomplishes mors than hard work. George Alfred ftwidbd iatends to turn lawyer next Spring.
Don't fret. The world win move on as usual after yon are geae. Small obituary notioss of Sumner occasionally arep out In the Boston peper* yet.
Be that maketh every man his enemy is a fool he thai has no enemies Is a
A Dartmouth student supports himself by acting ss barber for the other eollegians.
If a man has but ene Idea, what need has be of a Webster's dictionary containing 30,000 words?
It is now fashionable in New England to itave a few words of French on the tombstone over the grave of a relative.
On-dit that Theodore Tllfconisto be the editor of the A rgns. That journal might do worse, but we d«ubt It.—[Brooklyn Sun.
The whY oito Cincinnati editor tak$s to call another liar is this: "He is known to impart an unhealthy swelling totrath.w
Postmaster* who edit newspaper* are said to be pretty generally "doubled up" just now by a severe attack of the "Third Term Colic."
One can visit a Japanese theatre for twp cents, which is collected at the door, and a fan worth five cents handed him to use and take home.
Fred Grant was a sufficient jLatln scholar to decline honor, honorist, etc., until be came to Honors, and then he could dsdino no longer.
Tennyson is said to have bestowed infinite pains upon "Come into the Oarden, Maud," rewriting It fifty times, and spending nearly a month upon it in all. .,
A Boston philosopher says that you want to look at men's boot-heels to discover their energy. A slow slothfal man never .runs his boots over at the heels. •,Vv .»*• •,.....
(^v,
,,i-' -j 5,
You can find hundreds of men who wouldn't loan you a quarter if you were starving, but you will rarely find one who cannot tell you the beat way to swallow a pill.
ANew Jersey clergyman says there are about twenty different kinds of religion, but a man .who wont wash and shave and put on clean shirts can't enjoy auy of them.
One of the Creed moor marksmen has such confidence in Ms skill that he kas been endeavoring te get his mother-in-law to place an apple upon her head and let blm shoot at it.
Sick people, as a rule, like to lie on the side feeing the light. It's different, however, with a man who comes home "sick" from the club. He'd juat as lief shove his head into a coal-scuttle as not.
A Cedar Rapids (Iowa) man paid for a ticket to Dubuque and return, recently, but reftised to receive tho pasteboard when the clerk handed it to him, on the ground that the bills said he waa entitled to around tlckot.
There was something lovely about them, even in death. It waa on aKansss prairie, and they lay side by side, Tom's thumb in Jack's left eye, and Jack'a revolver pushed into Tom's right ear. They had fit it out.
Well make a solemn agreement with the test of the prow to publish Woodhull's statement, TUton'a reply, Moul ton's new defense and Beeoher*s denial, and then drop the whole thing iorever, —{Detroit free Prass.
The stream* of religion run deeper or shallower," says Calcott, "as the banks of the Sabbath are kept up or &eg|eeted." A prcaober in Holland calJed the Sabbath "God's dike, shutting out «it ocean ofetil#."
A -Cheater, Jtenneylraniat man can smoke a cigar until It is entirely consumed without emitting aay smoke from Ida mouth or suae, can follow this feat by eatiag a hearty meal, and afterwards emit all the smoke through his nostrils. day or so ago the daughter of a German grocer In Rochester* N. Y., was married. Her father, with pride and a epiee of humor, placed a placard in the window, bearing this device I "This atar* i* closed on eooount of some ftin in tike fondly."
The gallant secretary hfa life tamrrosspony being In immmand of a platoon during the late unpleasantness at New Orleans, struck up the gun of tma of hie men about to fire an a staff afBesr,wtth the exclamation, "D—n it, dont afcoot at hltn, we've got a policy oa him.
Staunton, Va^ haa a men who eale glass* not only without itgury, bat to the appaiaal benefit af Us digestion. He expresms a pteference to watoh crystals, as they are more easily chewed, b«t will eel wlndow-glsm or even thick tumblers on a small wager. There la no
There te an old Indian in Kaaasawho aa good a wsathsr prophet as Old Probs. When asked the other day what the weather would be during the nest week, he replied: "Mebbe enow anehbe beep dam het, B^ter wail a little while, you bet."
The Saturday Review sees nothing la Mr. and Ma. TOton hut a couple of weak, oommonplaoe erestunas, gifted with a diseased htenury fluency and fondness for 1% words, who we perpetually wishing themselves In a state of rhapsodical frengy,
Dewn In Texas two gentlemen bad a alight difficulty. One of them decided to quit this world. He was Induced to do this by tho persuasive power* of a bowie knife. When the coroner held an Inquest it waa discovered that his name is Testament. The ooroner said to the o&her party In the difficulty "Why did you kill Mr. Testament?" "He called me a biped. I cant stand being called such names. I'd killed him if he'd been a whole Bible instead of a Testament—for slinging such a name as that at me.H Tho intelligent jury of Texan gentlemen very justly gave a rdict of "justifiable homicide." A man's got to be careful what kind of language he uses in Texas.
Feminitems.
Women need one hour more of sleep than mexfc Never attempt to form an opinion of a woman's weight by her sighs.
Mrs. Lovejoy, 08 year* old, living Baldwin City, Kansas, has just become the mother of a fine boy.
A good judge says you can most always trust a blue-eyed woman, without regard to the length of her fingernails.
Bleeding Kansas seems to be doing pretty well. One of her daughters paid 9475 for her wedding dress in Chicago, last week.
They strive to make the girls at Vassar college iady-like by feeding them on weak tea and baked apples, and having them sleep without pillow*.
The strongest propensity in woman's nature, says a careful student of the sex, is to want to know what is going on, and the next strongest is to boss the job.
ANew York family containing four daughters, came near starving to death last week because the cook left and none of the girls even knew how to make tea.
Hall's Journal of Health says that when a woman gets to be over 30 years of age she should not marry, but who ever heard of a single woman over thirty?
It is said that Miss Minnie Sherman had one hundred pairs of stockings with which to commence her married life. Well, there is ene good thing about it she can not wear them all at once.
Father Chaucer was sound on the main question. Witness: "What Is better than gold? i«n»r.
What Is better than Jasper Wisdom. What is better than wisdon? Woman. What is better than woman? Nothing, The proper way for a lady to direct a letter this fell is to run the direction from comer to corner, scatter three one-cent stamps oyer the envelope, and write "Important" on any vacant space left, ft
Never have we penned an item more cheerfully or with greater satisfaction. A female book fiend had a thumb sawed off the other day in a Michigan saw-mill, while laboring with a workman to get him to stfbeeribe for a hook.
Boston ia to have a ladies luncheon club where women can procure a cup of coffee, oysters, sandwiches, and tho like at a reasonable rate, and where they can meet for a pleasant chat for an hour or two, and discuss politics and pronch-
The wood "milliner" Is derived from Milan, the most feshiouablc city In Italy, and the center of its silk business. We used to think It get its name from the feet that a woman invariably ex"Ml'lan!" when she aeea a new bonnet.
T.ilra any ttvMDd conscientious worker in art, Miss Braddon thinks no realistic detail of her stories too insignificant foroarefoS accuracy. Her descriptions of the dresses of her modern heroines and of the ftirniture in their aristocratic homes are verified by vistte of iaapeo. Uen which she pay* once aad often t«teea month totheprl»c^alm«i»lnee of fechien and great fhrnlture ware-
MMsa In Begent atmat, London. "There seems to be a mania ust now Moon* our star actressee," say* Wilkes' Spirit, "for discarding their husband's Christian names for their own pretty ones. Mm. J, B. Booth set the example whenahe oommeoced billing herself as Mrs. Aggie Booth, and Mr*. F. S,Chanfranistobe henceforth known ss Mr*. Henrietta Chanfrau. Ifiai Katberf oe Hogsce goes erne better, and took* on the surname ef Randolph. Wedont see the point in this practice, unless It isona ef the processes of n^nvenatton which none of thsae
Hi
In Iceland the women receive exactly the same book education that the meat do. There are no eohoola, ss fkmiUea live for apart but fethaw teach their sons and daaghtera alike, and the girl beoomee aa learned as her bfotter^wbich isn't saying much.
The time for collecting autumn leavea is approashing and young women who rely upon their domestic virtues to secure husbands will he seen coming home with bundles of parti-celored vegetation* saying: "They brighten up the room, so nicely, you know."
Connubialities.
If you want to "get the drift of things" go into the room where your wife Is sweeping.
There tea man in Swanton, Vermont, who recently cut off his wife's hair, sold it for |S, and boaght rum with the money. I**'T
A Dubuque cooper, whose wife was always scolding, barrelled her up and rolled her around the shop unUl she, solemnly promised to reform.
A very happy matrimonial match at Des Moines, Iowa, has been broken off because the young man bought twelve boxes of pills at auction, and sent half of them to his intended a» a sort of a birthday present. f*"j I
New York Commercial' Spllkiaa groaned audibly, yesterday, when he saw Mrs. Spilkins aad the hired girl engaged in getting down several lengths of rusty stovepipe from the attic. He knows what that means.
Detroit Free Press: Marry for love, young man, but remember that it's aa easy to love a girl whose pa has a hundred thousand in bank as one whose old man aits up behind a pair of mules and yells: "Whosl yoa Pete, or 111 take your ear off 1"
How Is it that girls can always tell a married man from a single one? The feet te indisputable. Blackwood says that "the feet of matrimony or bachelorship is written so legibly in a man's appearance that no ingenuity can oonoeal It. Everywhere there is some inexplicable instinct that tells us whether an individual (whose name, fortune, and circumstances are totally unknown) be or be not a married man. Whether it tea certain subdued look, such as that which characterizes the lions in a nfenagerie, and distinguishes them from the lords of the desert, we cannot tell but the truth is so we positively affirm."
A jneoently-made benedict writes as follow* concerning his young wife's habits: "If there was a bed-room a mile long, and her entire wardrobe could be packed in a band-box, still you'd find portions of that wardrobe scattered along the whole mile of dressing-room. She's a nice thing to look at when put together, but this wonderful creation ia evolved from a chaos Interminable of pins, ribbons, rags, powder, thread, brushes, combs and laoes. If there were seven thousand drawer* in your room, and you asked for but one to be kept sacred and Inviolate for your own private use, that particular one would be frtll of hair-pins, ribbons and soiled cufEi. Some provision, some protection in this matter should be inserted in tie marriage service." 1
Shakespeare tells of an ancient worthy who, at the doee ef the marriage ceremony, "Took The bride about the neck and ktased bar lips With soeh a ctamoroos smaekthatat the parting .« All the church echoed."
This must have been rather embarrassing to the poor maiden. A kiss has always had a "sounding name," but, alas, how base its origin. We are informed that a shrewd Roman caught fats wife sucking his best wines out of
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A?
bis
casks with a straw, and that after that the custom beoatse general for husbands to kisa their wives that they might discover tfca quality of their good ladle*' stolfeu Hhaiions. In dsfeult of any belter story, aims husbands will accept this as theorigin of the kiss, but only of the post-matrimonial variety. All other klnde must have a different origin.
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A pleasant little love aflfcir lately culminated at Cold Spring Harbor, L» I. A gay yonng pastor, the Rev. Mr. Vogel, who, though only 69 years of age, bad led three happy brides to tho altar, met, while making pastoral oatl* Mr*. Jaokaon, who had three Umea worn a whits veil and orange bleesoms at the bridal party, and three times had worn widow's weeds at the giare af the "loved and lost." The similarity thetr hereavementa touched theUr aad hearts, had they concluded that a providence had brought ttMNn together. It waa tens the lady waa Kv but she
FMI
well preserved for ona af bersge &*- skies she had a hsMilsome property overlooking the sea. Tbey both fdl that they
WOTS
lonetyvaad wteety poo-
eluded that twenty jiaMf difference la ages was not of mailt account at tQstr time of life. So the fsa maluh waajplebrated the next Oa**y la church,* neighboring minister called lalo perform the ueitaaoay. Let as ill unite In wishing thafair many happy returns of the day.
