Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 8, Number 13, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 September 1877 — Page 1
Vol.3.—No.
1 3
$ &
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR TIIE PEOPLE.
SECOND EDITION.
itfMm
own-Talk.
Town Talk taken great pride in tbe City of Torre Haute. He to proud of its beauty, its wide and abady streets, with their settings of beautiful residences in the midst of spacious and well kepi grounds. He is proud of its public buildings, its schools and school bouses. He is proud of its citizens, older and younger, especially of tbe sea worn veteran, reared 011 tbe banks of tbe raging and billowy Wabash, whom Undo Sain took from his native element and made Secretary of the Navy—and by (he by, T. T. was never quite so proud of him as he has been slnco he came home from Washington and has b,«0n driving about the streets, tbe same old "Colonel" as of yore, with hts cigar and hearty "How are you?" for all old acquaintances, without a sniff of salt air or Washington air about hiin, and none of tbe swagger of the sea or of office. If he Is proud of tbe distinction which he has won, and T. T. thinks be ought to be, he has a happy faculty of concealing it. T. T. is proud of the intelligence of Terre Haute, proud of the best behaved strikers iu the land in the day of strike*—(would have been more proud if none at all)—proud of the artesian wells wbose sweet breath perfume the air, and are of such richness that the Bilvir, If not even the gold, becomes dim by contact and contrast. T. T. is proud but he moat stop somewhere, and wherever he stops the enumeration of sources of pride, he will leave a vastly greater number unnamed than named, and he may well stop here.
All this is preparatory to saving, In the kindest way possible, and ho hopes without oflenoe, that, there Is one thing of whioh T. T. Is not proud, and which he names in the fond hope that It may jspeedUy lead to the removal of the offence, for it is an offenoe against good taste and long established customs of the "best society," If not against good morals. It is bad enough to be without a cow ordinance, or to have the Gazette think wo are without one bad enough to have the city turned Into a pig-sty during the watermelon season and bad enough to have the frequent murders which of late have prevailed. T. T. Is not proud of these thlugs in fact be laments them as heartily as any other good citizen who does not own a cow or a pig. But the matter to which T. T. prefers, if not morally worse than these, certainly tends to bring our city into greater disrepute with the rest of the world, especially the "higher classes." It Is an offsnoe too, of which—T. T. regrets exceedingly to say it—the gentler sen is guilty. Women, who in other respects, are exemplary, and have ethaart both their own and the city's good name •re guilty of this which in the eyes pf "good society" is a mark of exceeding ill-breeding, and brings both themselves tbQlr sisters of the same sex and rank, and this lair city, Into deserved contempt. -To make along story short, or shorter than it would be if It was made longer. T. T. will copae at once to the point, and say thai fee* refers to the reprehensible practice, in which mothers engage, of taking charge their own infant ehUdren on the T. T. bus repeatedly seen ladles who, as he knows, can well afford to keep nurses, and souie*»ho even do keep them wheeling baby Wriages with their own offspring inside. T. T. makes all allowance possible for excessive maternal affection, but when It comes to this that a mother must wheel her own baby *n *he street, T. T. feels that some protest nought to be entered. Utod' hi* Idaows that some ladles have a correct sense of propriety in reference to this, and will appreciate bis protest. It It only a day jor two abase T. T. chanced to be spending an evening with some Mauds in the room of a pair of his married acquaintlances, when the conversation tamed upon this very subject, and this woman *the mother of two beaotifol chttflran, iwlth nothing in the world to occupy her time bnt her own diess and these chlld,ren, (they.,were boarding.) said Indignantly: "Do you suppose l*dbeaeen wheeling my baby on the street, and have strangers take me for a nurse girl,
some 5f sttclt.
my own child? Wo, indeed, wouldn't catch me doing that!" there wss spirit. Then was a propriety. Her husband, too, was a young—no matter about hit businea^ bnt he has only a small income, andean ill afford to keep a nurse, andT.lt doubts very much Whether the baby carriage is paid for yet. Bat this spirited woman wouldn't demean herself to tske care of bar own child in public. Now, If all the mothers in Terre Haute were possessed and controlled by the honest pride of this fond mother, the spectacle of women going about the streets In danger of being mistaken for nurses, or thought poor, or what is just as bad, economical, would ossee. Of course poor people, who have but little money, and tboee who can't get trusted, may, from necessity, adopt this vulgar custom, though it reveals their rank and poverty. And very rich people, people who are known to be very rich, may venture now and then to be seen doing this. But no mother who hss a proper regard for her atandlng iu sodety, willdescend to even "play" nurse in publie. If tbe msternsl instinct is so strong that any feel that it would be a privilege to take their cherubs out airing, or if, ou» ternal pride is so great that any desire that all who see the sweet child in its csrrlsge should know that it is her offspring, that she is tbe original stock from which shoots this olive branch, still let such remember the "claims of society," and the danger, the extreme danger of being misunderstood, and deny tbe maternal instinct and honest pride. But if they will not do this, let them tske a nurse along with them that people may know that they are doing this for pleasure and not from necessity. If tbey do not koep a nurse let them get some girl who may be mistaken for a nurse to »walk with .them, Many do this. VtV*
Tbe advice which T. T. takes upon himself to give here is important to all members of "good society," but it is particularly important to all wealthy people who were born in poverty and are ashamed of their origin, and to all who are poor and desire to be thought "as good as anybody," and to all who have too little sense or education to ontitle them to rank among the"apper classes." V*
T. T. in common with all the other best citizens, will not mind, if now and then, on a night when the moon Ikils to keepber engsgement with tbe gas company, he stumbles over a gently slum bering cow on the ride walk, or plants his foot in the midst of a soft, but not sweetly odorous cushion, or finds the best trees of his yard ruined by tbe sportive bovine he will not mind, if, now and then, a hog, who has been innocently foraging for tbe outer integument of hydropathic melon, becomes frightened, and to escape from danger dsshes wildly between the legs of T. T. and invites, rather compels him to an unexpected ride of a few squares, a ride as abruptly terminated as begun he will not mind the murder of a few of our best citizens each year In short, (he minor ills of life In this beautlfol and happy Piairie City, will be borne with Christlsn fortitude, if only his eyes may be spared witnessing the vulgar practice of mothers who aspire to rank among members of the first families, wheeling their babies on the street.
A word to the wise is sufficient*
Husks and Nubbins.
So. 271.
and acquaintances think I took care of 1 conclusion of a case feeling that from
THE AMERICAN WAY. many days ago a young lawyer
Not
made his first speech to a Jury in an im portant oass. The effort was a brilliant one and gained for the young tyro many words of warm praise from the older members of the bar, but a certain young member spoke of it after this fashion: "Yes, P— did very -well hot he's been laying low for this chanoe for along time. I happen to know that he's been preparing that speech for months pest and reeding up all the law he could find on this particular case." As muchas tossy, "Etumph, thats very fine but anybody could do the same thing if he chose to spend as much time at it!" And so the most praissworthy thing about the whole aftalr was set down as a detraction. For was net tbe very fact of this young man's steady application to his can until be bad thoroughly mastered it, the most promising indication of his future career? Nine times oat of ten the men who fail fall not by reason of a lack of natural ability but of steady aud persistent application. Indssd it is a matter of common observation that men of unusual talents frequently prove utter failures while others of very ordinary parte rise to respectable dietinetioa. A man Is really only deaarv Ins of praise when he has done the beet thst is hi him and when he that, whether it be much or little, he is entitled to credit. Xvjfew indeed to that modi. Bow ssldomisit when Ire have finished a task that we can honest ly say we have pat our best effort into U. We might have done better—might have been more thorough. Does ever a lawyer go oat of tbe court room at the
the beginning to the end of it he has done ail thstwsa poaslblsf
In view of these things we ssy that thoroughness, in a yonng msn, is tbe moet promising qusllty he can possess. Success in any field means the attainment of skill, and skill comes of hard and persistent spplloatlon. 80 a man be good in his ws it matters. little whether he be a down or a senator. Men who are not outranked always have enough to do and get well paid for It. The finest, highest places wait always for the men of keeneet ability and best culture. People are more and more coming to went what is good and genuine. As the country grows older and wealth increases, the desire for honest, thorough work grows stronger and more general. Tbe man at the head of the class may charge for his services pretty much wlist he pleases, whether it be Worth, the tailor, or Beecher, the prescher. We are learning that shoddy everywhere snd always is contemptible.' Better to buy one good thing than half a dozen poor ones. Persons of real educstlon and refinement take a singular pleasure in all that is genuine. If their means are limited they make tbe fewer purchases but still they want what ia real—and not shallow pretention. This is the kind of feeling to encourage. It is the foundation upon whioh all genuine Improvement, whether individual or national, is based. It encourages ex of Hence, by remunerating Itaccording to ita merit. This is the spirit which pieces tbe works of master paintere and authors in the parlor and library—which crowds the opera house when Nilsson sings and the theater when Booth plays —which gives the best preschers sslariee capable of supplying all their wants and desires and tbe best lawyers and physi dans incomes little Isss than princely— in a word, this is the spirit which is always hunting for the best and inviting it-to come up higher It is a spirit whleh is increasing and will continue to incresse in this land and is morally certain to fix its eye on every yonng man who is putting the stone "Thorough" ae the first end foundstion one in hie plan of life, and it will notfoiget him when the time of trial 001
Fashions' Fancies.
The reign of striped hosiery is over. The new "Meet Coat" is to supersede theuleter for ladiee'wear.,
The newest shawl strap has a pocket book and ticket holder attachment. Skirt draperies, though clinging, are not nearly so much tied back as former* iy.'«
The faahionable engagement ring is, a plain gold circle with two ruby hearts linked. (l The fashlonsbTe complexion is a delicate brown, with a cardinal tipped nose to Indicate freshness.
The most stylish bosisryJor ladies is of plain or solid colors. Stripes and plaids are quite passe. «.
A new invention toilet soap, on which is made the initials of tbe owner, which will not fade away until tbe last scrap is used.
Worth bee decreed that the next change will be start paithiuats, colored open work stockings, low cot buckled sbo«*, displaying tbe ankle.
A new departure in WWtill announced. Following the guUBng principles of the season, sll stylish t*1 vets will be figured or like a riehbtooede.
If on the street you look st a lady very intently yon araimpfdlte, hot if yon meet her ia awaits yon maty hug her all you pisses, nomsttsr whose wife she Is. -Herald,*. I.
Suggestion by the Detroit Free Press: women hold np their dresses to show thsir skirt*, why notes* thedream ahova the bollam the (dttaisr and save doth and vaxattoa.
Bathing corssta for ladies are the lafaaf Parisian iavaaAlaa* Thenars made ofa eort af lattlcowack, which pernrile the water to have free aoceas to fteMy, while yaw ling 111 shape.
It is said thata very novel and rich trimming for fall dretsee loin the ofallnmnnftHtwrasat lt leeoamosed of coioreJ beede mixed with pas riea, and intended to match the colon of the diaseea. The heads ate of all
TERRE HAUTE^ INK SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER $ lg$
•$?*
The common sin of Americans 'Is crudeness. We do not as. a general thing master our trades wall. We pick up some- of tbe rudiments and make haste to hang out eur sign, more anxious te, obtsin customers and clients than to know how to nerve them. The doctor learns his piofeseion by killing a score or so of innocent victims and the lawyer learns his by plunging a dosen honest people Into bankruptcy. Do I ssy learn thsinT For the most part they remain unlearned even then. The number of butchers and bunglers that infest every trade, business and profession in this country Is sosolutely appslling. Men who grow old end gray in a profession and are slipshod and incompetent after it-all. Is there a more pitiful and contemptible alght? And yet it is tbe sight we see all around us every dsy.
and oolors-^topss, bruls, laple, lasull raby, emerald, garnet, sapphire, tur qooiae, and amethyst being need aecordIng to the eolor Of the dress.
TheIdea of combination in materials used in the same costume, which has bad Ita fiuotnations the Jest year, ish? be an established rule thia Autumn, few rsssss being made of any one material.
What the civilised world ia waiting for now is not exaotly the icenlt of the war in Turkey, bnt whether women, the coming sesson, 'will continue to dive down aud yank np their drats skirts with their right hands,
Half the faablon plsles sent from Paris are colored by female oonvicts.—Philadelphia Star. We always hsd a eonviction thst If the people who got those platea np were not In jail they ought to be.—Easton Free Press.
Our Mail Box.
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
COIUIXSFQHDKKTB
must have their In
qulries at this office by Wednesday of eseh week to expect an answer In next edition. Questions not plainly vrittten with tyk will go to the basket.
Gwnton S.—"What is the- best Way to avoid mnsquitos?" Climb a tree. M, H.—"How can I get rid of bed bugs?" Change your bosrding house*
MAST L.—"What is considered the moet tasteful ornament for a lady to wear?" A emile.
IGJCOHAST.—Asks whst a Communist Is. communist, dear sir, is a man who ia jealous. 1
Juiits MAHTI^EBADO.-Wants to know bow to practice wrestling. Practice with a half grown calf.
QUANTITY.—Two melons at a meal is usually considered a sufficient allowance for oonaumptive persons^
RBCRXATION.—"Is it right to patronise Sunday excursions.M We do not propose to be the keeper of your conscience.
Tocm FABMKR.—"W bat cows ahould farmers keep?" We would respectfully suggest that they should keep their own ss serious Inconvenience sometimee arisee from a propensity to keep things belonging to other people*:
Yorcto CLKBK.—Noncbaletot la nonnoed thus: "Non-ahs-long" Srfofi accent on lest syllable. It moans 4lje peculiarly indifferent look whichispnt on by men who never pay when dunriid for money. It should be written, non shellout.
ESCHAKTKD!—Your poem1 entitled "Parting at the Gate,V is too enthuslsstie. We can bear the first line, "My warm kisses thawed his moustscbe but when you state:
Bis
left-hand «ar Sras Ms
When I laid my cheek on hl»,
the effeotnpon na is aimpiy maddening. DisratSBED.—A wife has, at times, the hard ordeal of standing between her husband and temptation, eo ae to •hleld him from the infiuencee and infatuations of the gentleman "who keepe a slate." A broom stlckora rallerpin are considered among the moet effldent shields.
CHAJU.ES.—You are right tbe popular motto, "ourgreateet glory ia not in never falling, but in rising atery time we fall," waa written by Oonlhdus, bnt it waanot written in theeenee thatyon view It. It waa Intended to cheer the heart of the lone pedeatrian immediately after rising from a banana skin. qtsSTAST^Mr %M| uperitnoe in human nature ezfablee us to' give It ae our opiniott tbatihemaiden^BOonductin anflhring you to wait at the door every evening for half an hour bafoie ihe answers your ring, and then asking you to allow her tbe pleasured ssyiag"Goad night,w ia an' IndtoafIon that ah»hap but very little affcetion for you, and that ehe doM notjmm to getnsarried at^w ant. at: I-.', hi .tiift} 'f
MBaAiw^-wgiio abian" tea tach* nical term which meaas old fashioned
and defknmed flguree of every ind. Anything odd, aid, maty, awl c*tre*n shape, oolor or dtolgn, is ^brio-a-btac. It ia a vary faahkmaMa, Uing to dotoon jnst now, and the lady who haant one or two bine jogs with pug lived In vain and might juaLaajreU Jb*Te
"•Uk
FABSOOM with bountihil cropa, in which there are good pilo^ ooghttopayap the first retains from sales. Once get the money Into drculatlon in this iegitl way and teade -will heginto p«l-
ass and holds fa** hM harvaetain otdar togsthighpiluea snmmitaanaetthatia ateaet criaslaakia Mself and aM* ia
PnvnalafaaaM
bathawwdwhafithalaadaadttattliata have beenao
tki
Order ofU vtfl
The
will baatOonrt Boose Park, snd a hell in the evening wUlMtosniy
-nntii
People ancIThingi.
In Iowa a good pinner iaaaM tis ttibw
Drinking whlaky atral^ WIR nol t^taka your head leve|.,
(.-nAn
Arksnssa tombstone lecrnamented with a six shoobs^ cai^ed npon it. No book ever writta* waa half aa intereeting as a child learningtotolk.
Ton wiU often have to get roond a man inordectogetaquaiewithhimt Who can tell the falua of a amlle?— Exchange. The bartender.—J9oston GLOBEK^R '.-T
We 1&6% ^^»wd made a fortune cultivating weeds. They ware' a widow's.
Do not be too hard on the looomotive engineers tkay are often moce dnder 'gainst than sinning. never will be perfact poUttml sstis faction till evaiy man has a party ot bis own.—Pittsburg Dispatch.
It Is not impolite to est corn off the cob, bnt it Is impolite to watch any one elm doing it.—'Philadelphia Frees.
A Maine tradeaman failed the other dayj and being aaked If ha thought hie sssets would warrant ah offer of SO per cent replied: "That'a too much, tbey are only paying about 25 per cent., and I 4^n't pay more than other people do." ^riVdward Kimball, of Chioago, came heteSatorday and took aoontract to frSe the First Congregational ohurch fron^ debt, Yesterday he taokled tbe job, and in two houreraieed over |82,00Q irom tbe most astonished congregation ever seen in Illinois^—Peoria Telegram,
Five yonng gentlemen in Columbua, Ohio, thought it would be a good Joke to drive off with a team which a friend had procured to give some young ladisa a ride. Afterward tbey Were token into custody on the charge of horse stssllng, and are greatly surprised at the turn the joke hm taken. "Why is this called Jacob's ladder?" aaked a charming woman aa ha and aha were going up tbe ateepeat portion of the Mount Washington Railway "Because," he replied, with a look that emphastaed hie woida, "there are angela ascending and deecendingoocssienally." He eqneesed her hand.
Wri|iam Young didn't put on hlstorie elxa when |t oame Jto the "lsat word*." His son asked him if &e knew him. "I should think I ought to," reeponded the indignant candidste for sn obituary. This is ctaly eqoalled by the hlstorie dao» larstlonof Mrs. Ward when confronted by her elated hnaband, disguised in his mglmentala. "Know jou^aald she, •'of ooureeido, you old Ibol!"—Springfield Republican
An exchange obtnea atki1ntlda style: *«Tba atrika haste Ike public heabad ita eyaaopeoed to the fact that the man with antoeratiealr who alams the ear door and ysttse 'Wsopempllrsjana,' oa eoasething llke that, doae not own tbe road, but la dasply a hired haM. at ths rata of adolttt ^agt^aitaradaf."^
RObart Hale Owen waa botb married and buried by a Presbyterian minister. When melting, befloce hia death, srnu^emenU forhls fonssal, ha aidd,MMr. Huntington marrled Ms and may as watt bu«j me tiatri|» ^do nol iUkk aMtooail tbaologleal polnta, but wa smahlp the asms God, and hope to Una In the aama heaven."
Bar. Adliondaslr Mnnqy thinkatha Chrfatianity of the AsUtra will hsftpthe poor and Ignocant toigood hamsa, wholeaome food, adequate, and aeaaomieol
burial. OesayahahaanOt eoaeolted a 1 iimiiiwdaij .fnr sft jrteiii im—y todHs hwt tli* l»»s a«ddtotlsan»y for two jiuaaadslH^
BtaahaadHdngiodsai HMjM, aaa although'' OHhod^Ut
liai|«( if«. JDbMaiafljrwaB^la
thebadplaaalw
sMd hlm thsaa.
wsil,ifthaaalwaya bOWUnartai got had died itfiSTT he
ladtf. Tfha
=3=
festnCv
'vq «U
."W
r'
Another Nathan murderer hss been discovered. It Is astonishing what a number of men took part in that battle.
An enterprising New York undertaker advertises "A whole fbneral for twentyfive dollars." Too chettp we dont want any.-
An Arkansas editor sayathat when he was In prison for libeling a Justice of the peaoe, he wss requested by tbe Jsllor ,kto give the prieona pnfL" .. .The Hawkeya ssya tha conventions hsve "viewed with,alarm" and Vpointed with pride," andlnv Uie candidate who gets Worsted in a joint dlacnssloi^will "repudlata»wlth scorn." C,V -A pbiloSophio Benedict ssya "To be nagged at and blown np by a beantifol being of your, pwn, who lovea you all the while like apple pie, and whom you love like plum pbddlng, ia, to my idea, the hap|deat privilege of matrimony."
*#0!tiSd llim.,
it.—Ba^togtoii afawkeva,
A
Prici Five Cents
Feminitems*,
3
ill hsal|h are Utohopeoftha, ui'«-
woaaaa of gmoaChi xaasrve ia a moa% naentoffkosen impulse.
m,
A yoangladf of Athens, Ga., fifteen yeaisoldandiaa.Wfd?w. Betterto havil loved a short girl tbsfaL never to bavaloswd atoll. I
A little misa of Syracuse, oh a visit tb1 tbe country, said she liked »w milk bet-' tar tbaiidty milk^^ :.'
It takea a girl aeven weeks to learn tt)i use her arms and legs at the same timaK when swimmings
Itdoeentlook well when men ependf more money in buying their wivea| than they do in keeping them.
TbeNew York World tells of "a newL cure for women," and the BostonGlobo|" iaauiprlaedthatthereiaany cure. 1
Bibs M. R. Thompson has been ap-^ pointed sa poet master at Oxford,Chaster county, Pennsylvania, salary fl,200.
Men who exerdaa.a controlling lnllu-r ence, the master spinU, with a few ex-l oeptions, have had country born mothers.
And now the notable housewife' de-^ soribea to her younger and less expert-* enced udgbbor her method of making! plcklee.
An lowajustioe refused to fine a man' for kisaing a girl agdnst her oonsent.! He thought she ought to have consented,
4,Madame,
JJ
—Rochester Democrat. Marie Antoinette's milliner bad, oncb! upon a time, a profound thought. 8aid! ahe:
there is nothing hew butt
whst hss been forgotten." Fort Wsyne baa a Murphy saloon!, Where real lady waiters pass aroundi lemonade and buttermilk. Tbat*a thOf way tbey fight the* gin mills.
Fsshlonabla lafflea In Puis have be-^ gun to wear dreeseethat permit the feetj to be aaan, and there are rumors thatt the day of long thdla Is over.
One would think that a good part oti the dialogue about "That Huebandot Mine," would take place over the hackL. fence with the Woman next door.
The other morning a Fourth htieati lady received a telegram that her father^ was dead.
MNow,"
said aha, "Johnf!
can't help buying meaorne new dothea.'V "tam btuqr plowing, and1cannot anjtertais company/^ waa, the auhatance oL.{ a note sent by a Michigan belle In reply, toan intimation that a gentleman dc4-: sired to sse her.
The woman who wean a dlamondf ring over kid gloves could accomplish the same object by carrying around a sign reading:
MI
am a shoddyite."—
[Detroit Free Prem.
f!
Anew ladles' periodical devotee nineteen pegeetofashion andonetocookingw And there la an eternal fitneeein this. Fsshlon costa nineteen timee sa much aa mfcif, and baa more than nineteen times ae many devotee* "There ia said to be agirl somewhere In New England whoae heart waa to wartn that It burnt through her boeom.'1 Sayaan exchange: Thia ia nothing to I good looking girl wa know, whoae heart iaso cold that ItfreessetoafeUow'atit no time. .• "Gail Hamilton'a" name la Miae Abigail Dodge, and It turns out that aha Es not a dster-in-law of Senator Bla^aa, after all, bnt only a particular friend and' achoolmata of Mra. Bleina, and when In Waahlngion haa made her .borne With Blaina'a|MnUy. "What aahatae," remarked therid lady aft the bop the other evening* where asi after net of lady partner* famed* «wWhaia I waa young the man waa alien under foot* Now you poor fftr]eean*fio4 hide nor hair 0,f 'em."— Watering Plaae letter.
Jhr.Maiy Ifaikar, feaUng thaishiatQl laeked eoaoe manly accomplishment^ took a chew of tobacco one day last weak, and In twenty minutee tbereaAer sha waa aollmp she hsd toewal|o*« mauod before ahe could sit,, upjajj* etsastcar^—{Hawkays.
Tlia*ladlea of the waat end of St. jLotda am mgaaling aaodal dubto becompoeed entirely of ladies between the ipia of efc^tef? and thirty yean, Who wUlgiveduring the fall eeeoonsseriea ofauiptlae when, all the member* wm bedtagulaed with false noses.
In Now Haven the other ni^itawo* mancametotbe police etatlon and aakl sheMtSoremoraafhl for having tried to elrika her hjnahaad that dm wanted to nf»aa a puwlahment. If this ecomes anyway oOmmon the iljltTlmtoMtdil^of new
An ob*^ phOoe^r*iio pesasatata maitlBg of a ladiee' eoclety MaMt|yfheadlai*veasd onapecnliarity ofafaariahtodehato. Wbeasdebetresa WM upon hfrftorhttaking atrong pointo for her aMa of the question, all the flaaa ofthoeetoflrmpathywithherweregenti^ aad alawly manipulated by their iwinais. alilU llie fans of the ladleaot yoead ^reiW In a atato of violent sgita-
t:
^beratta good deal of expreasion
ham fait in a Jsdy's hand.
