Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 6, Number 6, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 August 1875 — Page 1

6.—No. 6.

THE MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

ATALANTA.

Sunk.

[from the Atlantic.]

When spring grows old, and sleepy wind* Bet from the sooth with odor* nweet, see my love, In green, oeol groves,

Speed down dusk aisles on shining feet.

Bhe throws ft kWand bid* roe run, In whispers sweet as roses' breath ,'* 1 know I cantn* win (he raoo,

And at the end, I know, Is death.

ff Butjby fully I bare my limbs, Anoint me with the tropic breeze, And feel through every sinew rnn

The vigor of Hlppomsnes.

*T 1

tewlll

If

-V

Oh fWSft 6f lovo we all have nin Thy happy course through groves of spring. I And eared not, when at last we lost,

For life or death or anything! t-[.t a una MA.URIC*TNOJIPFW.V,

Town-Talk.

KNPKC'fAr.LY VOB YOCWO MEX.

1

Something leas than half a century ago, T. T. was a young man hirr.aelf, and he has not forgotten that he did many foolish things. They did not seem foolIsh to him thou, but looking back at them now, be wonders that be.could I havo been such an Idiot, or, being sucb, that some sensible man didn't kindly toll bim what a ridiculous ass ho was '3 making of himself. It seems amaaing that somebody didn't manifest enough

Interest In btra to warrant tho risk of giving offenao by speaking plainly of 4 faults which must have been apparent to all, and a mortification to evory friend bo bod. Such a friend, could he have mode him sonsiblo of bis folly and inspired iilm with courage to forsake it, might havo oarnod bis undying gratitudo, and miulo a man of bim ten yoars '.-isooner than thorough school of experience accomplished that—It may bo still doubtful—result-

4

At tlio age of fifteen, having neither

father nor mother, nor any wealthy or ^Influential relatives, bo was, In a tneas- ,. uro, thrown upon his own resources. A very worthy man came to bim ono day and said: "I knew your parents they '"wero my Mends I feel an interest in i^yau as their boy, and would glndly be-f-sfrlend you. Coin© Into my shop and I

teach you the trndo. You shall live ^in my bouso ami bo treated in every re&$spoct as ono of my family and I promise you that in four years yon shall bo as ^good a blacksmith as there is in tbe ^.jtown and if at tho end of that time you «fehall deal re It, 1 will give you a paying ^Interest in my bu*inesw.,,!?

T. T. was shocked at tho iQpft of being a blacksmith and his faco showed it though he hopes for the credit of young ^humanity that also showed some J|seu*o of gratitude for tho genuine kindliness that Inspired tho oder. "I see yon do not like tbe proposition," continue! this oxoellcnt man. "I 4tani sorry, though I shall riot insist on ft?'your accepting it. It Is an honest trade,

¥.and

a money-making ono, but I knew It Igfis not a bualnosa that would suit ovonr^body. Is tbw© any other you won Id fllkn bstter? I may bo able to do something for yon some place else."

T. T. replied—as so many other boys ~aro still replying every day—that bo ^thought a clerkship of some kind, if It jjwuld be procured, would suit bim bet•^p»r than a trad*, and gave several what ho considered very sufficient roaSons for making such a choice. Hie friend was

EVIDENTLY

disappointed, and said

CAM

MI

much, but promised nevertheless to do

a

,!wh*t he could towards obtaining for him the covrtrd situation. A few weeks la4er, aaa result of these faithful efforts, T. T. found himself installed in a dry goods store as a clerk, on tbe princely salary of ten dollars a month, with a prospect!ve increase to twenty at the end of a year, In

be was found to suit.

Ten dollar* month In those days was net a bad salary tor a boy learning a business. T. T. was quite satisfied with it, and congratulated klmselfon its being so much. But lie soon found that alter paying bis board—which was only one dollar and fc-balfa week—very little was lea tor dothlng and other neeeasary expense*. For almost a year be struggled •long, and by eloae management kept out of debt. A few weeks be tore tbe loee of hit first year In tbe

stQre, be

yielded to temptation and bought a suit «f olothee on credit. It waa the worst day's work he ever did. For, finding be had nothing to do bat choose, he of aouree eboee a salt which was much higher In price than he would have eboe«n had bo payed cash lor It. J,.. ..

The first day be put the clotbee on, be made a diacevery which bad never betore occurred to him. It wse that his bat ,, -was shabby and his boot* large and clumsy. He Immediately bought a bat and ordered aoloaa fitting pair of fine, sewed boots—both, of course, on credit. '5 ftmntly he laid eelde the old dothea •Dtt rely end were the new ones every di^. H| began to smell of heir oil and

to be shaved by a barber. He indulged a little ia jewelry, and bought a cane. He was dressy and good looking, and pretty soon began to pay closer attention to young, giddy girls than be did to his business. On the day he received the first month's increased salary it soaieely amounted to enough to pay one fourth of his indebtedness. So he waa Impartial with hi* creditors and paid nobody. They did not trouble him yet. He felt rich with so much money in his pocket and indulged in many little extravagances which everybody knew be oould not afford. He treated bis young lady friends to Ice eream and took them buggy riding, and to various entertainments, snd all the,time g°t deeper and deeper into debt.

After awhile those people whom he owed began to ask him for money. At first it wae comparatively easy to put them off with promises, but in another month or two they grew more urgent. He made all sorts of plttlable excuses, and humiliating pleas for further time, bat still went on spending more money than he earned. Still continued to buy llasby ntckties, to wear expensive gloves, to baggy ride—to make an ass of himself generally. At last tho men who held bills against him grew clamorous. Tbey insisted on boing paid, threatened him with arrest and exposure and finally went with their com-' plaints to his employer. In this way be was allowed to overdraw his salary, for uo business man -will suffer the annoyance of being dunned for a clerk's debts. IIo received a severe lecture, however, and warning that he must get out of debt, and stay out, or loose his sitna tion. But he was already too deeply involved to make it an easy matter to get out, and his habits of extravagance clung to him although ho was without the means to Indulge them.

Months passed and things were worse instead of better. His reputation among business men was gone, his credit ruin .ed, not a person in the town would trust bim for anything. lie had rosorted to all kinds of miserable shifts to avoid paying honest debts, and honorable people who knew it, felt nothing but contempt for him. In his disgrace and shame he determined to go away Whero he went and what ho did—as well ss the application of this o'er true tale—will haye to be left for another number. In the meantimo thoso young men in this city who aro getting from twenty-five to fifty dollars a month, and living as if thoy were millionaires, will do well to ponder T. T's experience. Everybody with any senso knows perfectly well that thoy can not afford to spend the money they do. By their elegant dressing and expensive habits they not only render themselves ridiculot|s, but by it their honesty Is called into question and they aro mado the subject of remarks which it would be very bumttlaUiig for them to hear.

Husks and Nubbins.

,.vsf

No. 170.

BBiiot.n

TIIKMAN.

"To etne»ivo tho truth 1« Indeed not enough l» nmlftil to give Mncceas among men. For that, -ways less pare an? n«x**ary. I nrieod wr« the «o*pel confined to a few chapter* of Matthew and Lake It would more perfect and would not now iv« rise to #o many ottyectlons bet would have cunvi&ted tbe woritl Had .reomft died at the jwrlod \r« have reached in his career there would have been in his life no page which wounds un but, grander In the eyw» of tiod, he would have remained unknown of men he would have been lost In tlwrnultlttKleofgreat unknown mrabsthe best of all the truth won Id not have been promulgated and the world had not profited by the Immento superiority which hi* Father had Imparted to^nlm. Jesus, of Hiraeh.and Hfllel had enunciated aphorisms almost as lofty as hose of Jesus. Utile! however will never be considered the rati founder of Christianity. In morality, as In art, words are nothing, deedi are everything. Men of imlifttrent m«raIn have written very good maxima. Men very virtuous aim have done nothing ta continue the tradition of their virtue In the world. The palm belot-g» te hint who has been mighty in word and tu work, who has ftflt the truth and at the price of his blood has tuSide It triumph. Jeau*, from this double point of view, Is without equal te and will be reutAs's Lira or

bis glory remains complete and will be remembered forever."—(lucr Jicsrs,

For a long time I had desired to see this work ever since I had beard a masterly and never-to-be-forgotten criticism of !t by one who Is now a bishop in the church. 1 have road it and the impression which It has left is one of dissattshction and disappointment. There are many noble and elevated sentiments In It but its explanation of the character and career of Christ to totally Insufficient. Ernest Kenan says of himself that he had two great plans in life one waste teach In tbe Cbliegs of France^ the other to write the nib of Christ and the Apoatles. The termer he gave In order that be might devote himself to the latter. Re spent years of ariuooe labor In the task of gathering his materials. He visited Palestine and traveled It over on toot, seeking oat every tfook and eorner that wete tbe fcmOJar bean te of ASKS. He studied protoandly tbe works of writers who were eontemj»c»» ry with Christ sewell se

thaee

who had

lived betore Mm. He fhmlHailasd him•elf with the habits, customs and spirit •f tbe people of tbe East. In a word be apyieelated the vsetniss of the task he waa about to undertake and sought to prepare himsstf thoroughly tor lteexe-

Yet,aitarall this, hie hooklmQM an being erode, hasty sad

dogmatic. One reason of this is perhaps that It is too powerfully condensed the one small volnme should have beon expanded into at least four times the space. In its present shape it Is a chronicle of results, of conclusions. To one who had gone through all tbe previous preparation of the author it would be Intelligible enough to one who knows nothing of this tbe book seems a collection of oracular assertions which may be true or false but tbe truth or fhlsity of which the resdor has no means at hand of demonstrating. All explanations, all reference to sources of information are exeluded. You must have complete faith in the author's honesty and take everything at his word. This is certainly a very concise but by no means satisfactory way of writing history.

The Jesus of Rensn is simply a msn, nothing more. There was no miracle or mystery In his birtb. His father was a carpenter. His mother had other children besides him. God was his father only in the sense thst bo is tbe father of us all. Jesus was, however, a very superior being. Possessed of incomparable personal charms, so that hy a look or a word he could, under certain circumstances, win almost anyone to him, ho had an inconceivably exalted nature and a purity of mind arid tenderness of heart that surpassed all others. It was common in that age for men of superior gifts to set themselves up as toachera, expressing any peculiar views they entertained in tbe peculiar views they entertained in the synagogues and elsewhere. They were called rabbis and each had his band of followers or disciples. Jesus took to tbo profession of a rabbi. Ho taught the people, oom mencing his career by simply repeating the beautiful aphorisms which had been uttered by others long before his time. He was so gentle and noble that great success attended his labors. The simple Qallileans thronged about him and listened to his words. A few of them he chose for his more intimate companions and disciples. By-and-by his teachings became morn ambitious and he invented speeches and doctrines of his own.

Is was an age of miracles. Everyone who claimed to bo a wise teacher or prophot was required to perform wonderful things. This power was the seal of his divine commission. The people demanded miraclcs of Jesus and he must needs gratify them or fail in his object. He could not afford to do that so ho lent himself to the necessary tricky of the thaumaturgist. Tho wonders he performed were forced upon him. Tho populace required them at his hands and so, rather than really doing any miraculous things, ho suffered his disciples to say that ho had done them—to give him the name of a wonder-worker. Jesus himself despised this rolo of a miracle porformer but consented to it "in order that the truth might be promulgated." For tho snme reason ho permitted the-multitude to call him "the son of David," "the son of God," etc.,that he might have more influence among them. But at length tbe sky grew dark a tempest gathered over his head. He had gono to Jerusalem several times and had aroused tho anger of the powerful sectS of Pharisees and Sadducees thore. Harder and harder it became for him to maintain himself in the perilous position he had reached. Tho tolls wcro gathering closer around him. It would be impossible for him to hold out much longer. Severe testa would bo applied to his pretended miracles and ho would fall. He felt and foraaw this. How should ho escape? The door was opened before him—tbe door of death. Hefblt that he was approaching it but he did not shrink. He was ready to die, for death waa his only salvation. He bad taught tbe truth he could die tor the truth. He did not appear to his disciples alter death this was an invention of theirs to make complete the story of his supernatural origin.

Sucb Is In brief tbe theory of Renan. It Is weak and insufficient. There have existed in various times great men, men of almost divine genius. Tbey have led tbe world. Millions have worshipped and followed them. Tbey did supernatural things. All the ages are daxxled by their brilliancy and awed by their power. But where la he whose life is so wonderful, so mysterious as that of Christ? In three years that gentle, simple, humble man (If he was man), without a soldiery or an empire, a simpte teacher of a simple people on the borders of a lake twelve miles long, accomplished infinitely more than any other being that ever lived. .1he years of the world* history are eonnted from his birth. Ihemla no one In any Christian land but la fkmlllar .with his teachingsand his life. ThechUdnm toarn to lisp his name on their mstheis* knee. If he

WM only the simple man which If he taught oaly tbedoetrinsa that had been taught betore him by others, how ia it that Ma over the globe thstbeoeeupiee hi all Matecy? quateeanae tor the phenomenon. His

TERRE HAUTE, IND„ SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 7, 1875. Price Five Cento

People and Things.

Arsenic won't kill rtie«. How gawky a giraffe must feel. It rains grandfathers.—[St. Louis ex.

Silver given in change" is one of the extinct signs. Why does a man oome three times, to tbe surface before he drowns?

Our amusement managers deserve to reap a rich harvest next year. A Texan was found with 22 shot In him and his death is a riddle, ,.

A very large number of muscles are employed in the act of writing. Grand Rapids, Mich., enacts that "mediums" shall be treatod as vagabonds.

The Roman Catholic clergy of Troy are determinedly trying to stop round dancing at Irish picnics.

The Scriptures tell us that we always have the poor with us. The rich go out of town In tbe summer.—[Courier Journal. "No, ma'am," said a jeweller to a beautiful lady. "I don't trust anybody these days. I would not even trust my feelings."

There are 168 remedies warranted to afford Instant relief to a patient suffering with toothache, and there ought to bo less swearing.

Let her drive" is a phrase to be' found in the Bible. So also is "skin of my teeth," snd "his driving was like unto the driving of Jehu."

A Maine exchange says: "A large number of students in Bates College have obtained situations as waiters in the different watering places."

No doubt the happiest dogs that ever lived were the two taken aboard of Noah's Ark—for they had but ono pair of fleas between them.—[Brunswicker.

Youn^ men are so scarce at the watering places this season that the ladies have given notice that no flirting will be allowed that does not mean business.

John McKenna of Troy must have had a queer sensation when the hook of a pulley caught one of his legs, and carried him like a rocket to a height of ninety feet.

W

1

Prussia must be a paradise in one respect. It has only one lawyer to each 12,000 inhabitants. In this unfortunate country we have ono lawyer to every 879 inhabitants.

Kothftig cheers man so much as to sit on a cracker box in the shade of a groccry awning and read an item about the terrible scarcity of harvest bands.— [Detroit Free Press.

Watermelons mado their appearance on our streets yesterday, but thoy refuse to go home with a man who don't own a carriage and keep three servants.— [Easton Free Press.

A Boston man has forwarded sixteen cents to the conscience fund, and proba bly feels a great burden off his mind, or is mad to think he couldn't have stolen enough worth keeping.

A painter walked down street,.yesterday, with a window shutter under bis arm. AMend meeting him, said, "Hel lo! been working, havo you?" "Oh, no! I carry this for a Mind

In Norway tho longest day lasts three months. Tho man who six months ago promised to call in a day or two and settle his little bill, must have gone to Norway on a visit.—[Turner Falls Reporter.

Says the Philadelphia Star: Of all helpless men in the oommunity when thrown out of their regular employment none are more so than men bred up to the business of banking, whether it be as cashier, tellers or clerks.

Mr. John Neal, aged eighty-four, Jerked the cigar from the mouth of a loafer who was smoking in a Boston street oar, and then sat down on him. Tbe old man had got nettled because the fellow had asked him "what hp waa going to do about it."

When the leading New York papers devote ten csluma and a map apiece to a college regatta, and only two columns to a college commencement, there Is not much Inducement for boys to sit up half the night ptucxling their brains ov«r cube roots and things.—{Nonristown Herald.

Some excursionists who recently visited Cleveland were Intently examining the soldiers' monumsnt upon which are bronse medallions of Sherman and Sheridan, whan one of the verdant tiiauger* remarked: "Why, I never knew before that S&eridan waa a nigger!" "Lydia Thompson la eomlng," say* the Albany Bvenfcig Journal, "bat blonde hair hi out of fcvor now.** Yea, blonde hair may have gooe outof Ikvor, but se long as the bald-headed Christian can find a seat near the toot-Ughla, do yousuppoesthat blonde legs will go out Sf ^-[Cbarier Jonrmi

q—ntinn

The relsisou

following

says thai a

neighboring flumer rseklsasiy veatwes the

Feminitems.

«sa_»

Nilsson te getting tot and huaky. An unruffled lady Is a sight nowadays. There waa never abetter time to buy black silks.

At Swampscott the bridee bathe in white flannel. Airs. Sartoris ia bewildered with congratulatory poems snd presents.

Western belles say the pinback dresses interfere with horseback riding. A white hat on a. bride la no loager considered "oountry."—[Phlla. Star.

An irreverent exchange calls the pallback skirt "this bandage style of dress." Nine women oat of ten in this country are invalids.—[Sweeping cotemporary.

You've pinned it back," he cried with grief. Much farther than you'd orter Your stomach standq out in bold relief—

My darter! oh, my darter!" When you observe a lady drop a handkerchief in tbe street, and not atop to pick It up, the chances are ten toOnejthat she hasn't got her atoop-over dress on.— [Whitehall Times.

She leans over the counter now and tells the olerk he had better cut off two yards for that dress pattern, as she will not have the skirt made as scant as some wears them.—[Norwalk Chronicle.

An exchange says: "It is astonishing to see how little there is of some ladles in these days of contracted skirts." Yes that's so and yet, we can aee a great deal more of tbem now than before—[St. Joe Herald.

A young lady was heard to remark, the other day: "With being tied around above, and tied around below, I haven't had a square sit-down sinoe the introduction of the new fashion'"—[Vioksburg Herald.

City belles who in summer rustication try to get over fences and into boats, and all that ^ort of thing, remark In confidence that beyond what meets tho eye there are other drawbacks about tbe present style of skirts.

Mother Shipton, who wrote execrable verses but admirable prophecy, four hundred years ago, who predicted telegraph, steam, iron-clads, tunnels, bal loons, aud even the Kceley motor, also asserted that the world would end in 1881, six years hence.

Poor women! When thoy wear loose, ample skirts, everybody condemns thsir extravagance. Now that tho pretty and graceful tie-back skirt comes in, the newspapers call it indecent. Why, it's the prottiest thing in the way of dress siuce Eve left Eden, and what's the use of howling about it?—[Ind. Sentinel

Tho Indianapolis Herald thinks that if instead of orgauizing rowing clubs and natatorial coteries, the girls would Inaugurate tournaments to ascertain which could, lu a given time, pin the mainsail on a week-old baby, a living mass of moustaclied humanity would dally surge against the County Clerk's door, demanding licenses or blood.

Hie Boston ladies at Swampscott have peculiar ideas of surf bathing. They put on the most elaborate bathing costumes, and then run down to the breakers in high glee. A little foam is allow ed to wot their pretty feet, wberoupon they all scream and run back to tbfe bathing houses, and put their hotel fin ory on again. Then when they come out tbey say the bathing was "perfectly splendid."

Ob, yes, gimme ten cents worth of hair pins," added an up-river farmer, as be was about to leave a store, and while they were being handed down he continued "It's b'ar pins to-day and ribbons to-morrow and a tooth-brash the next day. The gal is always wanting some flim-flam thing, and I shouldn't be surprised if she'd someday get up and want to bring home one of them oombs with a brass back."

When Vassar college wss built and filled at once by about tour hundred Inhabitants, none of whom could find one eloaet in the whole immense building, Matthew Vassar wMaatoondedat being told that the girls wanted closets. "Why," be said, "tbey can hare two nails In the wall, one for their school dress, and one for their best dress and what do tbey want more?" But in spite of tbe unreasonableness of tbe demand, the elosets had to be boat after alL

The Cleveland Ledger dosa not believe the "pin-bask" drawee are desirable tor ladies who expect to make a sea or lake voyage. It mentions the case of a young lady who entered a street ear on the way to take tn emntea ttefes* tor a lake plonk. Alter bar departure two boys held a conversation as toUows: "Isagr, Joat they*r gain' on the *seur»

Joer»

challenge "I will bet

fttJfr that my hired BMuseea take laager to gat to the cornfield, get basktodhftMT4Uieker(eniiM»re,dolaa^ and hair down harder on panel of fsooothan any ether hired nun withbi ten inilaa of tbe city hall of Fataaaeo."

ht baft foogn, yea bat!" (lemMB the tot bay 'ens ap like slaty, mh

to be

«It*i And it'll

she'll get over t*, mm the gunwale iat «kattheoi

It's too bed to plan bee got to

ospfle that git-op.

Connubialities.

Many a widow's weeds are wilted by the simple phrase, "Wilt thon?"

An Iowa girl let her grandmother plok her a husband: and separation ia theieault

Mother-ln-Law" ia tbe name of a favorite mixture of ale in London. It Is old and bitter.

Naah A Nash Is the title of a Columbia (Me.) law firm. The partners composing it are partners In matrimony as well as in law. "John MoMillen and intended wife,'* were registered at the Woodman house, Ogdensburg, the other day. The first business after registering waa to send for a minister. "Madam," said a gentleman to his wife, "let me tell you, facts are very stubborn things. "Dearie me, you don't say so!" quoth tbe lady "what a feet you must be!" "After all, there's no place *e hoe'm," as Spilklna remarked yesterday when, on hia return from the excursion, Mrs. S. promptly ordered him out to his regular dutiee in the potato patch.

Mrs. Clinch, of Georgia, offers to bet a mule that she can whistle hotter than any other woman in America. Mr. Clinch is naturally indignant at such a device to get rid of him.—[Brooklyn Argus.

That ain't the way you used to treat me," exclaimed a bride of a few months to ber liege lord on the street, recently, as he turned a deaf ear to her hints that soda water was good in warm weather. —[Cleveland Voice.

While stopping over night at a firm bouse out West, a traveler waa astonished to see his hostess walk up to her husband about evory fifteen minutes and box his ears or give his hair a pull. In the morning the guest, seeing the woman alone, asked an explanation of her strange oonduct, and her reply was: "You see, stranger, me and the old man has been fightln' for ton years to see who shall boss this 'ere ranch, and I havo jest got bim oowod, but if I should lot up on him for a day be would turn on me again, and my work would all be for nothing.

Eat, Amanda," said a Kow Orleans husband lo his wife ono morning recently. Amanda wasn't disposed to partako of food, ami said slio wouldn't. Mr. James Madison—that is tho hus band's name—insisted upon being obeyed. Agsin she deolared she would not. Then he said sho must or he would blow her brains out. Still sho was obstinate. Thon he kept his word and putf a bullet into her bead. And oven then she wouldn't cat. James is in jail now, and Amanda is in the hospital—but whilo he is still languishing, she Is sustained by the supreme satisfaction that sho carried her point.

Not long ago an Agency man wanted togotoOttumwatotbedrcus,and wasn't at all anxious, as men usually are not, to take his.wife along. So ho told her be was going a hunting, and put his shooting traps on over his good clothes, shouldering his gun, and affoctionately kissing his wife good-bye, went dowa to tbe store, took off his NI in rod things and hied him to the depot. When he got off tbe train at tbe circus his smiling wife slipped her hand in bis arm, and looking up sweetly in his horrified face congratulated bim on the nice time they were going to have at tho circus. She bad oome down on the same train, although, she told her spotiso sho wasn't such a fool as to start for the circus with a gun on her shoulder and two suits of clothes on. It is needless to say that tbe cheapest looking man at the circus hailed from. Agency,—{Burlington

A MAN WHO HASN'T 8POKE1?TO HI8 WIFE IN TWELVE YEARS. The Cobeee Bulletin says there is reaiding In Harmony street, Co hoes, a man aged seventy-five years, who bias not spoken to bis wife in twelve years. He has been married fifty years, hasan amiable wife and several children and grandchildren, and considerable property. The old man and his wife always lived together happily, not a ripple ever appearing on their course thrmigh life until about twelve years ago, when ono morning tbe wife came down-stairs and saluted ner husband In a gentle manner as was ber wont to do, but to bar astonishment ha made no reply to her salutation. She spoke to him sgaln and sgaln. hot always with the same effect, and eversinoethat July morning inlaw, the husband never opened hia lips to his Vila No flense ia assigned for his strange proceeding He always apeake femuMufr, with the rest of hte fiimlly and Miak but on

friends, bat on no occasion or under any senslili—llua would be speak ono He always tiasla her and kiadnees. always want* with the most i—t nrti om word am be ooaxed out of histtpeto i*fertoMs strsagi way of trsatlng ber. His wife aadhimasif always partake of theaamo bad. they eat at the same table, they mill to draacfa #de

word to hia wife.

by

side, yet n* one

ihat manVlipa for tbo

past twelve yeaiatothat woaun. Hia 55e granddaughter Uvea with him and through ber he alwaya knows Ma wife's wanta. and no request of ham la left an* hniii. Several Mends of Ih^tallv have tried ripsntsdly to MUm hh but they have alwaya it