Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 6, Number 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 31 December 1875 — Page 1
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Vol. 6.—No. 21
THE MAIL
A t'AI'ER FOR THK PEOPLE*
SECOND EDITION.
Town-Talk.
Tb# '-marry ChrtstmaV bit come tfnd gone, ami the "happy New Year" will 4egln to-morrow. With tonlay, Will end the "holy day*" which to children are
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full of pleasure, and to men and
women so full of that mingled pleasure and regret vrfcich la Uk© the spirit of autumn afternoons. The sacred season which, «somehow, is forever associated with a sentiment of fraternal love, and in which we could, if ever, be glad to make p^sce with our enemy and take him by th? band the season for reviewing the past and for laying plaus for the future for remorse, lor restitution, and fbr forgiveness tho season for exchanging presents which are to be mementoes for hearty greetings «nd kind wisJjcn for universal charity and for earnest Jollity, and in which everybody 1« exj»ccted, and should, love everybody in very open and cordial manner.
Cfcriitesa"! New Years! What a contrast betvvw 11 these two great days of the yew, wliieh in tho Gregorian calender ooa.s but BOven days apart. Christmas, fictitious day though it may be, is hallowed by the sanction and the memories of near nineteen hundred years. It is not so mach the reminder of death, of things gono and irreclaimable, as of life. It i4 Chri»t-Iay. If celebrated aright it most be with the sympathies and the heart. We remember that the climate of Judca is very much like our own that the cold and snow and dead vegetation, would very well correspond with ours at thla season, and that it is vory far from being proved likely that the slkcpberds to whom the meesago came, really watched their flocks at midnight on tho 24th of December. We cavil and carp at this as we may we dltclaiai any Intention of an alliance with either Puritan or Catholic some of ua may gc aa far us to deny that Christ was borr. at all, in the manner set forth In the story of 8alnt Luke. Yet, the annual celebration of ono day, dedicated to the imcmory of the birth ot a Jewish infant In stable at Hethlehem, for so many centuries, is a startling fact in the history of mnukind. It shows a general if a careless, bellof, that the little waif who saw tho light there, brought with him the hope of tho world.
The Christ-child was tho offspring of the utoivst obscurity and poverty. In the story of His birth, and His whole history afterward1*, there is no suggestion of any of those things in which mankind have ever been most interested, or which ordinarily take a place in the ctronicles of a race. (Jreater men than !:e, In the ordinary sense of that tern, arc lorn every century. Yet overy incurring Christmas day demonstrate* tho truth, that no name since the world was, save His alone, lives In the hearts, as .11 as the memories of men. It Is useless to enter Into a discusalpn of details of the forms of celobraUon of the ancient and modern Christmas, or what our sturdy German and English ancestors did or Uiought while the Yule log harried on the hearth. That II stands for the birthday of the Redeemer of mankind, stands for all, and invests it with an interest possessed by no other lime. If T. T. in those obscure lines might presume to glvo advice, or offer a auggastion, which should apply to all Christians of whatever creed or denomination, he would most certainly say: make Christmas day, always, the happiest, the brightest, the beet day of all the year. Teach your children. so teachable on this subject, that It is mcrib *vhlie to rest and rejoice at least one day in the calendar, for the aake and In the memory of Him who blessed litite children and above all, make them fkmillar with lib birth, His Ufa and the lemons He taught.
Hut Christmas IfCS, is gone—gone forever nod to-morrow, after one thousand, eight hundred and seventy, we shall bo learning ourselves (by forced thought* ,ln«ras) to write a figure six. And dk) you over think aa you were dating day-book or writing letters of the irony of custom which forces us to count off, each with his own bands, the lossenlug days of doomed men ami women So one thinks of bow we jot down «r» oor orery dsy occupations, the world —uturie* and our own fleeting days. v.e of Dm stnuigeai terta in mortal rooomy, is Uiat mervifnl fbrgetfolneae which reader* us ail so careless of *n cur impending flat*. The most unirtntti feature of life is decoy the roost 2 'j-ttlotta of cities is the cemetery. The ommonest triumphal proceesicn Is that eoinbre ono which celebrate* tke triumph of the master of all.
It la of these things that a reA«-cting person Is spl to be reminded on New Yearns day, and eren to unrefVeeting ooee, the time is ttnfed with so undefined aadnes*. But no memory of the jwst Is without its Srcoompan^ hope for the future. It T. T. infbi be par-,
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doned tor noting a very trite character iatlc of humanity again, he could say that here was another of the curiosities of psychology. There is one leeson which the grim schoolmaster of the fools seldom teaches,—to doubt or despair. No matter how severe in Its tendency to self-reproach the lessons of the dead and gone 1875 may be, no man desearv ing of the name, will awake on the sombre morning of the New Year, hopeless. It is this hope which Is life. It makes up the sum-tital of the*t restlew, toll ing years. To be something which we are not always better snd never worse, is the ceaseless desire which w»ta man apart in tho scale of creation and makes him man.
Hut even on the last day of the old year It is not right to take a gloomy or despondent vlow of the new. It is wrong. It Is a duty to go Jorward hopefully, choerfully and to act in all things with courage and manliness. And after all, why may not 1870 be tho happiest year we havo ever known T. T. hopes it may bo such fbr all who read what ho has written and with those exquisite lines from a well-known poet, he "closes tho books" for 1S73 "Wo begin anew year amid tho clashing »f joy-bells the pungent odor of evergreens is in tho air something tolls that the climax of the year is reached from this date wo gradually sink into a vale of flowers, and cross the smoking plains of summer, and then climb again tho brazen hills of autumn to reach tho very summit of events, where all things have their beginning, and where all things end." _____________
Husks iind Nubbins.
No. 1W).
THK SEW YEAR.
On tho eve of the first day of 1870. It is a time for meditation, for self-etudy a time for looking back over tho past and forwaid Into tho future—the future, which seems so long and may prove so short—the future, which promises such superfluity of happiness and may give such stinted harvest of blessings.
As tho merchant balances his books and takes account of his stock, so it is fit that each one of us should take an inventory of tho results ho has achieved during the past year. It is not alone a question of how many dollars wo have made or lost but also of what we have done for ocrrselvos and others. Not more should we seek to know what material progress we have made thau what intellectual and moral progress. A great lecturer is teaching tho people this winter what, more than almost anything else, they have need to know, that tho true problem of life is the development of a noble character, tho evolution of all the better elements of our nature. If that la true, and that it is no one can deny, does It not become us to ask, as we step from the old year across the threshold of the now, what we have done In the past twelve months towards the building up of our character Reader, what have you done fbr your mind In tho past year? Ilavo you Improved, enlarged and disciplined It Have yon devoted a good share of your spare time to study and reading and havo the subjects that engrossed your attention been of a profitable and elevating character? Have you jioaseW by all books of a solid and enduring value and occupied yourself enly with trashy novels—drinking the insipid whey rather than tho delicious cream of thought and genuine feeling? Are you wiser and stronger than yon were a year ago this day, with larger capacity for doing and enjoying, or has your mi ad grown poorer and ftobier than it was then? It is for you to answer and for you to account. Doubtless you have had many opportu nities for self-improvement If you have not used them wisely or if you hare wretchedly abused them, ths yeer 1*75 has not been an enviable one for you.
Then there is your moral nature. What have rou done for thai Have you gained any victories over your bene passions? Have you pulled any ugly weeds out of the garden of your heart and planted beonUtal and fragrant flowers in their stead Are yon conscious of possessing more kindness, patience, gentleness, charity, integrity than yon did a yeer ago ?. Have yon lived a yeer of oonstant struggle with the evil peealone that are within yon and have you gut the mastery of tbem somewhat?
We are what we make ounelrM. By birth we may be twiter or worse than others bteemd with a buoyant sonny nature or bringing with as into lift the irritability, despondency and hypochondria of many generations. No matter. We are not responsible for the sin* of oar fiuhem What concerns us and the world to know hi whether we have mode ourselves better or worst si nee oar birth whether we have nourished and developed all the good that was in os whether we have patiently and bepefal* ly fought against the Impulses Uiat were bad. It is a foetlah doctrine, that we cannot be otherwise than what we were bom. Decease a piece of land has a stubborn soil and is matted with roots Uh» farmer does not pronounce it worthless. On the contrary be set* pstienii to work to dig oat the tooU, and Lighten
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The mind and the heart—how much more these are worth than money, if people could only realise it!
And so we pass into the new year—"a happy New Year," as pcoplo wish oach other. And what does that moan? Simply a day of feasting and good cheer? Or does it mean rather to express the hopo that all the months and days of tho whole year may be filled with a serene coutentment and peace? This can only come of a constant endeavor to do some worthy deed and learn some profitable thing. Looking twelve months into the past we can soe where we wero weak, where wo stumbled, where we failed. Look twelve months Into tho future none of us can, none of us dare but if so much time is permitted to us wo shall mako a poor return for Heaven's bounty, if wo not live somewhat hotter and accom plish semewhat more than we each have done in the year that is just de parting.
CVMIXG A MUSXMEXT.S.
Charley Shay's Quincuplexal, a favor ite organization with our people opens the new year with two performances at the Opera IIouso to-morrow afternoon and evening. Charley gives a lively rattling show—one just suited to a holi day. His company consists of thirty three people, five popular comedians two full bands of music, in all consti tuting what he terms "the best enter tainment on earth." Seats can be secur cd at the Central Bookstore at popular prices.
THE Wallace Sisters—Jennie, Minnie and Maude—are coming. Thoy will bo here on Tuesday evening next, and on that evening there will bo a brilliant assembly at tho Opera House, for no company of artists that visit our city are looked upon with more favor. Their Ifirat visit, some fouror five years ago Is remembered as a grand success—filling tho Opera House nightly—and with each return visit tho hearts of eur people, the manager and trio of talonted sisters hav* been made glad. At the request of number of our citizens they have changed the play from that first an nounced, to the new romantic drama of "Jacquette or, In the Tolls," written by Fred Marsden, tho author of I^otta'i groat successoa, "Zip" and "Musette Llttlo Bright Eyes." Of tho company and this new play, written expressly for Miss Jennie, the Des Molncs Register says
Last evening witno«*ed as fine an au dience in tho Opera House as has gath ered there In many a day. The Wallace Sisters were on the bill, and their famo had preceded them. Whateverof choer and incentive there could be in a crowd ed house, they had whatever of worth there was in the play or the acting, the audience had for there was never a trip nor halt. With clock-like regularity tho play piogreused from beginning to end, gaining in interest with each act and culminating in a denouement that sent the audience home delighted with the performance, and ready to awear by the dashing Jack, the heroine el the drama.
It is a play full of Impossible situations, vet so well acted, so elegantly costumecf, so charmingly set to music, and fv acteu with such vigor that the improbabilities are lost sight of, and the andN ence settle down to the thorough enj ment of eeclt some, beguiled into enj nt even against their will. Critici has no chance in a race with "Jacquette."
Callender's original (Georgia Minstrels come again on Wedneaday evening next Mrs. as. A. Oatea Comic Opera Tioope will be here Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, January 11th and 12th.
Tho Rlchlngf-Uonard Opera Troop* come two weeks from to-morrow, and tb«n we will have mule.
Uijmen orercoata may be very comfortable, but they are, as the girls say, awfully ugly. 8U11 they are becoming fashionable, and when the wearer la topped off with a conical far or cloth cap, be ia a boat as unsightly a creature as one would desire to look at. When a young man first dons an Ulster—they are never seen on aged men—be for several reasons feels dreadfully awkward first, because the thing la a novelty in the way of build and second, because the wearer of sodi an uncooth garment is generally the observed of all observers. However, time emoothe* down all things, and despite their uflitwe*, the Ulsters will find wearer*, and after awhile what now seems so deridedly outre in them will beoerae sgreeable features to the eye.
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TERRE HAUTE, IND., FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 31. 1875.
and pulverise tho soil, and though it Is hard work, every farmer knows that such ground is often tho best on the farm. If one has a poor body bo does not give it up In despair. He makes the most of it. He studies the laws of health, Is careful in his food and clothing, changes his location if necessary, makes any sacrifice In order to strengthen and build up bin constitution. Woil, the soul is worth nioro than the body and the man who gives up his moral nature in despair bccause it is a bard and intractable one, docs a feollsh and unnecessary thing for if he takes hold of it with vigorous hand and a firm will and gains tho niastcrv over 5t, the victory is all the greater ami such an ouo will be better and strongor by reasou of bis very struggles than he who had no such battles to light.
A Ilerz, of the Popular Ladies' Bazaar, wishes a "Happy^New Year" to everybody.
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People and Things.
Bishop Ilavan Is a millionaire. Tho toydfil wave ^has subsided. A polite man is born, not made.
There is a marked wane in Mark Twain's Industry. Tho tiinoa have becfimo so hard that even the days are "short."
The "Gilt-odged Gallopers" is a Worthington, Ind., dancing club. Christmas comes but once a yoar^ and old Gruff ssys he is glad of it.
A Georgia stabbing item says Rn old uogro was "cut to tho hollow." Tho trouble Is it tnkos man too long to find out when he reully Is rich.
Two "Henry Wilson funeral marches" have already been published. It is sold that Chicago aldermen, although they receive no salary, grew rich.
Soelng Is not believing. There are many men you can see and yet can not believe.
Sonio people ore very fond of telling other people their duty, who seldom discharge their own.
Weak men aro the hardest kind control. Thoy have no more backbone than an angleworm.
In these days of ulsters for men, and overcoats for ladles, it is sometimes difficult to dotcrmine sex.
Did
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ever do any harder work
than to select Christmas presents for the good wife and six little ones ?, A man's position is society is virtu ally determined by his own conduct As he sowetli, socially ho reap.
Mr. Hartpence, of North Vernon, put the muzzle in his mouth and touched it off with the ramrod. A success.
The half pound baby, recently born at Dubuque, belongs to a Mr. S. M. Dick ens. This beats the other Dicken': "Tiny Tim."
It is very seldom that we seo a man too much for the business he is engaged in, but it is quite common to soe the business altogether too much for him.
When you come to look at it squarely In the eyo, what right have you fellow to yelp at pull-back dresses Don't you pull-back your trowsers by tho strap in the rear, hey
Tho New York Tribune thinks Tweed did not run away from his jailor, but from his lawyers. Their enormous fees were rapidly eating up his possessions vast as they wero.
Postage from here to Japan has been reduced from 15 to 12 cents. This ought to ease up on the rigors of our Northern Winter amazingly and allow us to drag through in tolerable comfort.
Some genius has invented a now ho tel annunciator which will register on the dial what guests want who ring the bell. It is claimed to obvlato all super fluousgoing up and down stairs.
Governor Peck, of Vermont, seeing an old woman in Jericho sawing wood, tho other day, stopped his horse, took off his coat, and sawed and split enough to last her and her aged husband for some time.
A patent has b£cti applied for on a new and ingenious "Ulster ©levator," which is guaranteed to effect the object in graceful festoons, and without undue exposure of the old trousers underneath.
Nick Thompson, standing on a scaffold In Quitman, Alabama, with the noose around his neck, sang, "The Ninety and Nine" all through, and prayed for ten minutce. Then he said. "Let 'er go," and the drop fell.
The law holds the loser of a game of billiards who pays the shot to be a gambler, and llablo to indictment and if bo don't pay the owner of the table holds him to be d. b., and liable to be bounced. Wbat'a a follow to do? Pretty kettle of fish, isn't it
Tho St. Louis Tlmea refffet dear old memories by remarking: "There are young men who cannot bold a skein of yarn for their mothers without wincing, but will hold one hundred and twenty five pounds of a neighboring family for the best part of the night with a patience and docility thai are certainly phenomenal.
How the smile of confidence which wreathe* the foes of the young man as be enter* and draws from a package that little statement of indebtedness fhdea away Ilka a thistledown on the Autumn gale as you take down the ledger and point him to aa account which mora than balances his! And bow hetnt ao anxioos to settle aa he waa!
A remarkable Instance of calculation was recorded at Ayhnar, Canada, where harber named oh neon, for a bet of illty cents, ran under the cars of a railway train that was passing at a rapid rate of speed. He won Um wager, tteogh lost the heel of one hoot by a wheal that came unpleasantly does as he emerged. The man who lost the bet said he had expected to win and get a eaople of doHare for attending the fa-
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Feminitems.
There isn't a town in the Weet that hasn't a "head woman." She Stoops to Conquer" was written before the days of pin-back skirts.
A New York journsl figures out that it takes $10,000 to rig out a fashionable female.
It's fun to see a lady reach around her pin back to And where her ptcket has gono to.
A woman never looks 1ms interesting than when sho is pulling on a tight rubber in church.—-[Danbury News.
A woman in Yieuna has committed sulcido by drinking red ink. We never read of anything so ink-red-able.
Mrs. Case, of Peru, blew out the gas in her room at a I^afayette hotel, and was found in convulsions on the floor.
The most fashionably cut and delicately tinted note paper will not wholly turn attention from bad spelling and ungrammatical writing.
It matters little how much beauty a woman may have, there are lots of times in her life that she would be willing to swap them all off for brains.
A lady cries out in solf-defenee: "Oh, lot poor wwman'a clothes alone They're none of your concern
Hli nvver makes DO fun or your'n, Th-n why poke fun at her'n A young lady of Lowes, Del., was found in an out-building in tho gardon, where sho had goue to road a novel, five hours before, nearly frozen to death. It was with much difficulty that she was aroused.
Miss WilhelminaTownsond, aged sixtoon, dropped dead whilo dancing at a social party in Chelsea, MBSB., last Thursday night. This is an awful warning against dropping dead, If you can help it.—[Chicago Tribune.
There is said to bo a baby in Nashville that was born In a private box at tho theater there tho other night during the performance of the play. If that infant had boon half as old that night as its mother it would havo had sense enough to stay at homo.
Mrs. Coolidge, of Washington, D. C., Is the originator of what may bo termed "sewing matinocs," TU« attractive lady gathers around her, every morning, a number of society belles, and while they sew for the poor sho entertains them with reading choice selections.
An exchange "wants somebody to In vent a new dance for the girls." Yes, do! Get up one where the young ladies dance around the house holping the old lady to get breakfast, wash the dishes and sling dirty shirts in a wash-turf. Do and soe how the girls wont—dance worth a cent.
One of those newspaper chaps who know everything says: "Thore is at least ono moment of woird anxiety In tho life of a woman, and that moment is tho only moment during which she can look In all directions at once it Is when sho gathers up her trail previous to climbing over a rail fence."
It is Mary Murdoch Mason who di vldes her sex into three claa»o»—the giddy butterflies, tho busy bees, and the woman's rigbters. Tho first aro pretty and silly, the socond plain and useful the third mannish and odious. The first wear long, trail ng dromes, and smile at you while waltzing the second wear aprons and give yon apple dumplings, and the third want yonr manly preregativee, your dress coat, your money afcd your vote.
In the early day* of Pennsylvania there waa a law that started as follows: "That if any white female of ten yean or upward should appear In any street, lane, highway, church, court-he use, tavern, ball-room, theater, or public place of reeort with naked shoulders (I. e., low-necked dromes), being able to purchase nscewaary elothlog, she ahkll forfeit and pay a fine of not leas than one or more than two hundred dollars." The closing paragraph of the law, bow ever, "permitted women of questionable character* to bare their shoulders as a badge of distinction between the charte and the unchaste."
It la said women caanot role. No nun daresay that, alone to Ida wife. Not rule! look through history. Where are Cleopatra aad Semlramia, and Zenobia and Catharine, and Elisabeth and Victoria Not rule? Did not Joan of Arc save France when the king had cowardly fled, and the armlet were scattered, and KttgUsh sokBers did their wili in all that land Well did England born her aa a witch, for aha bewitched her nation Into hope, unity, seal, courage aad mastery, wntil it had expelled every triumphant KngUahtnan from ita shores. So KUaabeth picked ap a prostrate nation, low sat of the low, deaptawl of emperor, king and pope, and ande it the sovereign pewsr of £sropa So Victoria held back PalmenAon and RtsaseU and Gladstone aad Derby, who woald have plnnged England Into war wttb aa, aad aad left as free to aubdae oar enemy. Had not a woman ruled England we
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The old custom of having wedding invitations given orally by the bride herself, is being revived. V»*:
Husbands, be oareAil a Virginia woman recently died from fright at aooing her husband's coat-tail sot on fire by a hot stove.
In a breach of promise case tried in Iowa the other day the judge said that once in four weeks was often enough for lovers to sit up and apark. ^%.n"
A Chicago observer notes that "probably one of the most trying times in a man's life is when he introduces his second wife, 17 years old, to his daughter past 20.
The cause of woman's rights progressetli. None flow dlaputo the prerogative of a woman to get up two or three times on a cold night to see if the children are covered up, ctc.
A professor who has lately been lecturing in Newark, N. J., advised yopng ladies never to marry men "whose heads were flat, whoso nocks wore thkk, and whose ears were low dowu on the sides of their faoee."
A Duluth girl married a young man because ho Uflod his hat so beautifully as he passed her. She got a divorce because ho lifted tho tablo so beautifully when his diuncr did not suit him,— [Dotroit Froe Press.
Tho Courier-Journal says that "a poetical Now Y'orkor, learning that the lato N. P. Willis named his residence 'Glen Mary,' after hlsftwifo, concludcd that that was just about the right thing to do, and so ho callsjjhls houso |Glen Matilda Jane.'"
Sensible woman that. A Quincy, Ills, butcher having run away with tho servant girl recently, his wife remarks,
IIo's a good riddance," and philosophically continues to vend steaki and chops at the old stand, for tho support 1 the eight children loft on her hands,
A correspondent gives a vory touching description of scene or domcstio felicity ho wltnewed at the homo of a young married couple in Connecticut. "I camo upon thorn quito unexpectedly," he writes. "She was sitting in the front parlor eating peanuts and ho wss crawling around on his knees picking up the shells."
According to an inviolable rule among tho Piutes, when twin cherubs come to tho lodge of ono of tho tribe, the father of the superfluous dispensation is compelled to take chargo of the extra pappooso for tho first two years of its careen This is the penance that has lately overtaken a noted sw^ll Injun at Virginia city. v.y'
A QUI ST Sir A VE,
A man who had been noarly talked to death by loquacious barters went into a shop the other day which he had never patronized before, and handed one of the artists a card bearing the words, "Give ine an easy shave." Tho barber motioned him to a chair, and then turning around, winked at his fellow-labor-ers, and said "Here's a deaf and dumb 'un, bovs. Wants an easy shave." "Well, if you gash him ho can't talk back, replied one, who was lolling in a chair, waiting fbr "next." "No, you bet ho can't," returned the first. "An easy shavo be bio wed I Why. he's got bristles on him like a Texas boar, arid his skin looks tongher than a canal mole's." The boys laughed, and the operator, who in the meantime had lathered the man's face, indulged in further comments as he urged tho ranor over the fkOM territory before him. "What a nose that is," said he. "If ho should sneeze, where would I be? Well, his cheek is harder than a razorbone."
MDo
SUBii
•Price Five Cents
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Connubialities.
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Norer chide thy husband before company, saith Erasmus, quaintly Man leads woman to the altar in tha act his leadership begin a and ends.
TOO want ua to help bold
his nose back while you go over his Hps, Johnny?" asked another of the Idle razor wielderw, "Don't know but I will want a little help." "Be careful, and don't drop your raaor down his ear, or yon HI lose it," admonished another. ''What a dirty bead he's got," observed Johnny, as be ran his fingers through the man's hair.
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say, some of you
fellows write a card, and ask him If he doat want a shampoo." The card was written and presented to the num. who shook his head at it, and. the job being finished, be roae from too chair. "It's all right, boys," ssld he as he laid down fifteen rent*. "I didn't mind your talk any. I could stand it first rate ao long asyoodidnt say anything about base ball, third term, or the whisky ring frauds." He disappeared, and these barber* sat down and thought about him. _________
Thk Burlington Every Sunday Morning pointedly enquires: Why don't Harper's Monthly keep a file of itself? It might save a lot of humiliation (if. there is anything like humiliation in' those sslf-conoeited know-nothings.) They are constantly printing new jokea which they have printed, just aa new, rears and years ago. Perhaps they do because they haven't sense enough to remember tbcm and perhaps they do It because they think that other folks haven't sense enough to remember them. The last one we hare noticed is the smoking-ln-e-rail way-car Joke, whlcb was printed In the last number. Harper's Monthly stole that same story firotn Punch, and printed it, fully fifteen mars ago. It haa better keep a closer watch of Ita stealing*.
Do nor permit youraelf to be led away" .by the molt! tode, for you will be alone*
•heokl have a harder task than we Ad when yow die and wbiso yon render yonr. by hr.—[RtshopOiibert Ham last account.
