Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 50, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 June 1885 — Page 1
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Vol. 15.--*-No. 5o.
THE MAIE
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE?^
THE old settlers will swap 11—stories at the opera bouse next Wednesday morning,and it promises to be an interesting occasion.
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OF course a defect has been discovered in the telephone law passed by the last Legislature. The principal part of the work of that remarkable body was defective.
THE printers of the country have been holding a meeting in New York this week. One of the questions discussed is, whether the capacity of the "growler" should be one or two gallons. w-*-*
FROM the way the Marshall and Paris papers are howling about the recent races, the suspicion is aroused that some of those editors must have run against the "byronemus" man, with disastrous results.
SOME of the Terre Haute hackmen give evidence of having served an apprenticeship at Niagara Falls, and the Express is very justly agitating for a back ordinance to curtail their "gouging" propensities.
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RECENTLY a man in this city filed a charge of provoke against another man just bccause be found him undressed in his wife's room at a late hour at night. Some men will allow the most trifling things to irritate them.
THE new board of health officers are following In the footsteps of their predecessors, and are after the batchers, who have been notified to clean up. They are evidently in earnest, as tbey properly should be at this time of the yeai
THE can't-get-away club threatens to be largely Increased as to membership, this summer, many merchants and others being compelled to remain at home on account of dull trade, lack of employment and scarcity of money..
THE devil seems to be let loose, for a cyclone of crime of most hellish character conceivable is sweeping through the land. Not a day passe* withotftHa red record of murder, suicide, and outrage of the most revolting character.
A MAIN street bar-tender worked two months, and got away with $250, the proceeds of 5,000 beers. As he languishes behind the prison bars he wishes he had taken the 5,000 beers, as they would never have been able to prove it on him.
THE big end of the .city govern pent lies in the 8ixth ward. The ma^or^city clerk, city marshal, city attorney, eight policeman and four firemen aro residents of that lively ward. For their convenience it might be well to move the city offices down to the old glass works building, on Thirteenth street.
THERE is one branch of business that does not seem to be fleeted by the hard times, and that is iu the divorce line. Scarcely a day passes that does not record the filing of one or more suits of this class in our courts. Probably the bard times have reduoed the ruling prices for
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a commodity as a divorce,
SOME of the Democratic brethren will burst with indignation if things are not managed differently in this bailiwick. Here the new postmaster has been in office a whole week, and has fired only one clerk. At ibis rate it will take all summer to get rid of them all—and that will never, never do, say the Democratic partisans.
THIS week we give the concluding chapter* of Miss Braddon's powerful story "WyHard's Weird, and begin a short illustrated aerial story, "Vanity Hardware," by the noted English novelist Allan Mulr. It will be found one of the best that has recently appeared in The Mail. After the first few chapters there is an eager desire to find out the mystery attached to the heroine ot the story. __________
Rxv. H. O. BREEDKM in a sermon last Sunday on "Races and Racers" ad vanced some liberal thoughts on the subject, and said he could not "see any more righteouanea in a slow horse than a faat one, nor Is a mile traveled in ten minute* any more acceptable to God than one driven in three." It la safe to to say that Mr. Breedtu will receive a seasoa complimentary to the next meet ing of the Terr* Haute trotting association.
BsaiitaiKO with the awful accident to Mra. Ellis, the amputation of both her lower limb*, the suicide of old John McGinley, an insane man, in jail, the find ing yeaterday morning by John J. Mayer of his dead wife by his aide in bed, the amputation of a Pari# man's cruebed foot at St. Anthony's hospital yeaterday, with mwrdare an* violent deatba froqj lightning and accidents ia the near vicinity, this baa been a week Of horrors.
BAYIWW W. HAKNA is being profusely lied about or else is not deserving of any office under the new administra tion. In either event he la receiving enough free advertising to Justify him in gnhqjjf on the lecture platform. In view of the latter possibility, the entire nation will do well in petitioning the President to let the portly Bay lees have whatever ha wants.
THE glare of light in the west last Tuesday night wa^not a natural phenomena aa was thought by ao many. It was only the reflection from the Council chamber, where the electric light and gas people were laying themselves oat to outshineffaoh. The combined light was so ftoTTforrg that Clerk George Davis read half through the death roll before he discovered that it was not the minutes of the laat Council meeting.
A YEAR year or ao ago one of our attorneys attempted to kill one of bia fellow lawyers on a public street, and was never indioted for it. A few weeks ago another attorney attempted to kill hia wife in open court, and last Saturday he was indicted for "drawing a deadly weapon," the slightest penalty for which is five dollars fine and costs. The moral of this is, if you want to go on the warpath, first be admitted to the bar.
THERE are some persona in this city so contemptibly mean and malicious that the evil one himself would be puzzled to select aJQ adequate punishment for their offenses. Some person has
been
stealing flowers from the soldiers' graves in Woodlawn, and Tuesday night a miscreant poured some strong acid on gome fine flowers in a Fourth street yard, destroying them. A good sound horse whipping would do for a starter UU ""'ft for these maraudfrs.
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IF the pastor $| a certain church in his city knew hk|r much preaching the devil is doing in afcd about thebuilding he would move hia pulpit to the front of his church, where Ills congregation could hear his words while he kept an eye on the boyB and girls who make church going a cloak for mashing. As such a move is hardly practicable, it might be well to detail a few of the sanctified to patrol and report the goings on within the sound of hiB vote*. ~K. .T
A Charleston reformer thinks he has met all possible objections to round dances. The Immorality of such dancing is supposed to consist in a man's catching hold of a woman's walat and whirling her around. If, therefore, this custom of putting his arm around her could be abolished, there would be no more harm in whirling a woman around a room than spinning a chair on its legs, or trundling a sofa about. He has, therefore, invented a knob or handle which can be fastened to a female partner as a knob is fastened to a door. We do not know the particulars, but probably every young woman who pre ferstnis knebby way of dancing wears some kind of a belt or fixture with a slot in it, corresponding to the shank of the knob. When a young man asks a young woman to dance, therefore, be slides the knob into the slot, gives it a turn which secures it and then waltzes as long as the young woman finds it agreeable. But the question will still arise whether those opposed to dancing will not now find some other handle against it.
THE latest craxe in our sister city of Indianapolis is the Twilight Organ Recital. The proper thing ia to go in the early twilight when all nature is quiet and serene and, In the "dim cloister's stillness and seclusion," to sit apparently forgetful of all the world while the spirit soars aloft on the magnificent strains ef the great organ touched by a master hand! Not to attend thene Twilight Recitals is to acknowledge that one is "fit for treason, atrategem and spoils,'*—in short that he hasn't a particle of style about him. Cultured people go because tbey enjoy the music, the rest of society attend because it is the fashion. Older people go because they love the hour of rest and recreation, young people go because,—well—yum
The distinguished qrganist Wm. Horatio dark has been prevailed upon to give a series of six of these Twilight Recitals at the Congregational church on the large new organ, beginning next Thursday evening at 7 o'clock, and continuing six consecutive Thursdays. brilliant programme of popular music will be given. 'Ticket# axe oa sale at Button's for the full course of six eon certs, one dollar single admission twenty cento. IgLawa chairs {and* settees, and almilar articles of faradtare, are no longer paint-
SEVEN1EEN YEAR LOCUSTS. The predicted coming of the so-called .. seventeen year locusts has beon proven correct. They swarm the city in countless thousands. They have such a peculiar way of conducting and propagating themselves that there are are many popular fallacies about them. Their scientific name, given them by Ldnneus is "Cicada Septemdecim," and they are not locusts at all, but belong to the same family as the ordinary harvest-fly.
The locust spoken of In the Bible is our common grasshopper. According to a number of authorities the last visitation of the locusts in this country was in 1868 and their return this year was first announced by Professor C. V. Riley, entomologist of the Agricultural Department at Washington. The insects are very susceptible to cold and moisture, and for this reason their arrival id often delayed on account of the weather. They are buried very deep in the ground, where they have resided, It is supposed, for seventeen years, and when they come out they are encased in a heavy black shell or jscket which comes o£f after exposure to the hot sun—and they are then ready for business. As a matter of fact the male insect is a purely ornamental cuss and does nothing particularly but loaf about and make a disagreeable noise, something like a tattoo on a drum. The female is kept extremely busy. She attaches herself to the small limbs of trees, preferring the oak, but using almost any kind, and in these she makes small fissures, sometimes forty or fifty in a limb, in which she deposits eggs. She goes from tree to tree until her four or five thousand eggs are exhausted, and then she complacently lays down apd dies, her mission on earth having been fulfilled. The young insect is hatched out in about forty or fifty days, falls to the ground and burrows in it, remaining there for seventeen years, deriving his sustenance from the roots ot trees. So far as is known, the locusts, during their brief stay on the surface, eat nothing—their only mission being reproduction. The principal damage they do is by boring in the limbs of trees, which generally drop off. They do not sting or bite people themselves, as is commonly supposed, but when they are plentiful tbey are frequently accouapaniedJuy a verydan^ gerous. kind of a wasp, which lives off them, and whose sting is very painful and dangerous, sometimes being fatal.
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DEATH ROLL.
During the month of May interments were made in Woodlawn Ceme-
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tery as follows: 2 Davenport, 81, consumption. 4 Ora D. Atkinson, 1 mo., congestion. 7 Alma Hager, 00, cancer. 7 Geo. Hactsh, 16. fever.
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lfeyi^drowning. silt"
7 Geo 7 Emetine Harrington, 56, cancer. 10 Oelestia Hill, 27, typhoid fever. 12 Sadie Wagoner, 2, lnflamation of brain. 12 Sadie Wagoner, 2, in 12 Lucy Rock wood, 74. 12 J. J. Fisher, 90, railroad accident, c,• 18 Emma Monninger, 6 days, spasms. 18 Samuel Crites, 48. 15 Frank Burcli, apoplexy, f. 16 Roba E Bcvis, cerebrltis. 17 Mary Tate, 47, heart disease. 17 Kate Huester, 18, brain fever. 18 John Furguson, 58, heart disease., 20 Infant of Li. Jackson. 20 Permelia Burroughs, 72, ulceration of stomach. 20 Savannah G. Dunn, 20.
8 John Keller, 78.
JM Jamui Jackson, 66, heart disease.! 25 Infaiu of Hervey Crisp. 25 Cora Mattox, 22, consumption. 25 Charlotte Kirkwoood, 53, softening of brain.
City, 21 county and elsewhere, 2 Tetal, 26.
•k ,"gr MARRIA QE LICENSES. The following marriage licensee have oaen issued since our last report:
Wm. H. Krapf and Mary M. Ostrander. Ephraim Baker and Amanda Mayfleld. Edward L. Halbrlter and Hattle Stump. Edward Piker and Allie Hussong. Henry Mlndetmann and Alice Richards. Henry C. Nevltt and Laura E. Glavls. Lorenz Crimm and Mary E. H. Sanderson.
COATES COLLEGhE. 1 WVK .ft idwfed 4.i
To the Citizens of Terre Haute: The undersigned trustees of Coatee College make this appeal to yon in its behalf. This institution is now the owner in fee simple of four acress of land on "Strawberry Hill," in the south part of the city, commonly known as the Duy property. The purchase of this property upon very resonable terms was affected through the kindness of Mr. Josephus Oollett, and the money to pay therefor baa been secured by Mrs. I. P. Coates, of Greencastle, after whom the institution is named. This college has bad a legal existence only two months and a half« having been favorably recognized in March, 1885.
We now confidently appeal to oar friends and fellow eittaen»-tbe good people of Terre Haate for help. We are assured of liberal aid from abroad provided Terre Hante will give testimony of its Interest in the enterprise by furnishing efficient aid.
Money to needed to repair the present buildings and to erect additional ball dings both for dormi Funds are also
and school purposes. the board
ruuuiKviw uwnJcd to enable un to open the college in September, with a oorps of capable, experienced and efficient teachers to provioe furniture and apparatus to sQoeesRfnUy illostrauug the sabiects taught, and to guarantee the sneoessml operation and eoatlnaance of the institution through the oollege year, closing in June. 1886.
The board baa selected ma president, G. Hay. D. IX, and they have good reason to believe be will aocept tf the College receives it- lieve be will aocept tf the College receives encouraging support from Terre Haute. Can
ed by hand, bat dipped Into vatA of TIWIW will call upon tbectUasas at an early paint, and theo set to drip la troughs. tht
The varnishing Is done in tbeaame way.
A hco*e at Schenectady was for along time infested by roaches and water bug*. Last fall a servant, beariag that toad* were an antidote, caaght three ordinary bop-toada and pat them in the kitchen. Not a roach or water-bog ean BOW be foiu»d to t)» hove*.
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all upon
and the board, which intends to make sea lasting benefit, an ornament and object of pride to tfae city, hopet that all will Join In giving a hearty support and that every one wul give as generously as possible. Donations in materials will be acceptable fi. K. KHOADSS, Present, a. P. DAVIS. Secretary.
CHAS. W. OOXK,Treasurer. GEO. B. PIERCE. LBUID. THOMAS. K.M. Mbsomq. ACXBRISSIII. I. T. BOOVTLL. H.P, TFCWWMRR,
TERRE HAUTE, END, SATURDAY EVENING. JUNE 6, 1885. Fifteenth Year
PURELY PERSONAL.
J. H. Briggs is on the sick list this week. Rev. jr. K. Wheeler has returned from the east.
A. C. Duddleston. and .wife are in Chieegbl I. H. C. Royce has returned from a trip to Nebraska. V,
Miaa Leta Rice, of Rockville, Bpent Monday in the city.
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Miss lizzie Allen kas returned from a short visit in Rockville. Miss Hattle Sleight, who has been quite sick, Is convalescent.
Eugene V. Deb&and Miss Kate Baur will be married next Tuesday.- 'J1«« John Ryan has moved into C. L. Braman'aoottage on Mulberry street.
Alf Hoberg is steadily improving and will be able to sit up in a few days. D. S. Danaldson is still confined to his bed, but is somewhat improved.
R. S. Tennant's mother, of Greencastie, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Tennant. Mrs. Carrie Green, nee Fuller, is visiting her parents on north Center street...
Mrs. J. P. Crawford and daughter started on Tuesdav afternoon for New-
J. H. Tundt went to Lafayette on Tuesday to attend a family reunion at his father's.
Miss Emily Allen, returns to Cincinnati on Monday, to be absent about three weeks.
Allyn G. Adams has resigned his place at W. H. Paige's, where he has been fur three years.
John A. Tucker, who went to Florida last October, came home on Monday, with health fully restored.
James Maher baa been appointed de puty clftrk in plaoe of Frank Heany, who resigned to go into tbe post office.
A. B. Saisich and Louis Finkbiner went to Des Moines, Iowa, this week as delegates from this State to the
Supreme
lodge the A. O. U. W. Col. ^ookerly, who has been suffering with a iumor on the brain—not paralysis as slated in the papers—Is improving eg:of speecb. Dut is now regainingiU S"
Dr. If. D. Stevenson has received BO of his appointmeut as government physician at tke Yankton agency. It pays f1.200 a ysar and he is to report by the flr.totJ.ly. ,, :.\
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Harvef W. Carry, of Fayette township, wis on Monday elected County Superintendent of schools, to succeed Mr. Vaicleve, who leaves tbe schools in excellent condition.
Card^are out announcing the marriage of Mis^ Emily Early to Mr. Othnlel De Fores tion Tuesday morning, Jane the 9th, ij half past eleven o'clock at her reslieace on .Ohlo street.
Hjury C. Nevitand Miss Laura Glavis werft lapplly wedded at St. Stephens, at nocjaim Thursday, and are now visiting Mr, a's parents in Washington. They comeback in about three weeks and wijl fo housekeeping. 4/
Rei Mr. Corning and daugliter/lkfiss Ntllij, went to Indianapolis, this afterRev. Corning will occupy Rev. longh's pulpit to-morrow. Dr. an, of Greencastle, will fill tbe ational pulpit here to morrow, ng and evening.
H. Scudder has been elected a member of the board of city school trdees, to take the place of James Lalrum. whose term has expired. Mi&cudder is a good man for the place •ncucceeds one of the most efficient me the schools have had in that capacity. 4t. D. D. Wheeler arrived here yes tetny afternoon on his way from Fort Mroe to San Francisco, to which post heius been tranferred. He will journey onbe latter part of next week. He is mtb pleased with the transfer—the position being more Important and altogefer more desirable. iob White was on Tuesday appointed tneral delivery clerk at tbe post offlot Tbe next morning he* set up the dgjs for the boys, took the oath and bi^ositlon at tbe little window. One ho^s confinement there was enough fodm, and be tendered bis resignation of a least desirable place in the office. rbaps you have talked the matter ovand decided to get a new set of p*»r or bedroom furniture. If so drop in R. Forater's, 820 Main street and aefce elegant styles he has oa exhibits
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iere are many ^euut walks la thcity, but we know of none more Intaftlag than a walk through Button A's Central Bookstore, and it la not a t»rt walk either, from the front to tireer, being onf of the longest store itna ia the city. All along tbe path ofcelvea, counters and walla will be the standard aad moat popular bks, elegant stationery, a fall line of bk booke, beautiful pictures, the (ftieet baby wagons yon ever set eyes oand—well, we cannot tall all that be seen.
Tbe marriage of Miss Rose Kendall to Dr. Goodhew, ot Dayton, Ohio, takes place on the 16th inst.
Mrs. Jos. Gilbert was called to Crawfordsvilie this week, on account of the serious illness of her mother.
Miss Nettie Jones, of Paris, who has been visiting Miss Mame Hudnut, returned to her home on Tuesday
Wm. E. Dwyer, one of the shrewdest and most efficient men on the force, has been appointed a sergeant of police.
Dennis Wakefield, of C. C. Wakefield & Co., bankers, Moreaci, Mioh., is visiting his niece. Mis. J. Irving Riddle.
Maurice Brown, head clerk at Hunter's, has returned from the south, where he went In search of better health.
Mrs. Dr. Stetson has gone on a visit to her old home at Newcastle, Maine. She will not return until the first of October.
Daniel Reibold, tbe shoe dealer, will celebrate the Fourth of July by geting married at Carico, Iowa, to Miss Fannie Reynold.
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Dr. M. H. Waters attended the annual meeting of the American Institute of Homoepathy, in session four days this week at St. LouisI
Judge Mack and L. B. Martin, delegates from St. Stephen's church te the Diocesan convention at Fort Wayne, returned Thursday night. r,
Miss Elder and Miss Elgo, of Indianapolis, visited several days this week with the former's brother, Ed Elder, a Btudent of the Poletecnnic.
W. T. Beau champ and son, Edwin O'Boyle, Thomas Gist, R. G. Watson, John Burnes and A1 West attended the races yesterday at Crawfordsvllle.
Chas. W. Carrithers, who has been with Hoberg, Root & Co. some eight or nine years, has resigned to take charge of the dress goods at Abdill fe Brown's.
P. P. Miscbler went to Wichita, Kansas, yesterday called there by the death of his brother-in-law, Nicholas Baiter, a cigar manufacturer, formerly of this city.
Gen. John S. Koontz, commander of the National G. A. R., has honored exMayor Armstrong by appointing him bis aide de camp with the rank of colouel.
Mrs. Fairbanks had rented her furnished house for three months to Mr. aud Mrs. H. C. Nevitt. Mrs. Fairbanks and her daughter will spend the summer in the east.
On the same principal apparently that the young woman who, after "getting religion," found that her Bealskin sack and other finery were dragging her down to bell, and gave them to her sister, a western liquor dealer advertises as follows: "Having experienced a change ot heart through the blessed efforts of Brother B. and Sister S., I desire to state to my numerous friends and patrons that at the end of the current month I shall retire from tbe accnrsed liquor traffio forever. Until that time my stock on hand will be offered at greatly reduced rates. Come one, come all!"
"Tbe person who should charge herself with tbe duty of keeping home healthful is tho woman of the house," recently remarked Colonel Ludlow, in a lecture delivered in Philadelphia. "The majority of people who die in this country are children under five years of age, and this high rate is due almost entirely to bad food and worse sanitation. It is tbe duty of the woman of the bouse to see the good sanitation of tho dwelling. Tbe necessity should be impressed on women of studying to enable them to inspect and put in practice good rules a a ==f-M &
A Buffalo dog under tbe course of instruction in carrying articles in its mouth inadvertently swallowed a silver dollar. Tbe money being out of its element gave trouble and threatened tbe life of the valuable animal that bad so suddenly withdrawn It from circulation. A medical student chloroformed the dog, cat into the stomach and recovered the silver, and sewed up the wound. The dog is now as good as ever and so is the dollar.
A large furniture warehouse in Philadelphia was destroyed tbe other day by tbe explosion of a can of benzine, which is being sprinkled upon tbe furniture to guard against motbs. As this Is the season when housewives are waging war upon tbe motbs, it might be well for them to be careful what kind of ammunition tbey use againat the pest.
Frequently tbe best thing a man can do for bis life is to resolutely cut adrift from old associations and occupationa and make a frenh beginning as though be bad been born anew.
The "Problems of Oar Times" Is tbe title of an article in a prominent magazine, bat it does not explain why 76 eeata worth of material should oust flO when matte Into a bonnet.
Prince Bi»marca has been moved to tears at hearing tbe Naahville Jubilee Singers. There is something American that cornea nearer the old man's heart than pork.
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MENS SA YINQS ABOUT WOMEN
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With many women religion and fash-, ion are synonymous terms. There is nothing that a woman so much despiaes as indifference.
There is no sacrifice that a woman will.. not make for the man she loves. 4 Men love women because men generally are so unlovable, that women only will accept and submit to their love.
Load some women with fine silks, laces and jewels and they will uncomplainingly go without food for a week.
How easy it is for women to be deceitful I All she gets, she must win by love or strategy. Nothing comes to her by force.
A woman's hate is her love, into which she has thrown a drop of gall. A woman never truly hates a man whom she has not loved.
Give a woman a man's mind and she would no longer be a woman. Tbe feminine weakness and tbe masculine tyr-, anny would make her an unreasonable monster.
Not all women are constant but constancy is the natural inheritance of womankind. Where one man is con--stant and true, a hundred women are— yea, a thousand.
Woman is easieat caught if the pursuit of her be not too hot. Many a man has lost the prize by pushing his suit too eagerly. A man may win by dalliance what he would lose by a fierce onslaught'
WOMEN'S WAYS.
In Iowa there are 905 farms owned by' women,£18 managed by women, 20 dairy farms directed by women, 125 women physicians, and 5 lady attorneyB-at-law.
Not a great while ago the University' of Mississippi opened its doors to the female sex. and tbey have shown their gratitude this year by winning all the prizes, tf »t 1
Everywhere in Europe the women do a heavy share of the labor, often tbe roughest and most burdensome, while tbe wages are one-third and one-half Qi^le| then for male labors
The husband of a fashionable lady in Chicago asked tbe police to run her in that he may have an Interview and ask about the children. Sbe was obi the go so much that be hadn't seen h£r for twelve days or more.
A fancy of Mrs. Frederick Vanderbilt is to have breakfast and tea served upon polished mahogany tables. A napkin with a colored border is placed under each plate, and others in tbe center of, the table for the various diBbes.
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Women are like jewsbarps-^-'wlthout tongues they are no good. A woman makes friends just as she throws a club—at random. "1
In Sweden, young girls place under three separate cups a ring, a coin and a piece of black ribbon. If the ring is first accidentally exposed she will be,, married with in the year if the money, she will get a rich husband if the rib bon, she will die an old maid.
Sallie Ward, tbe Kentucky beauty who has buried three husbands and jpto married the fourth, has erected a mon-. ttment bearing the simple inscription^ "To my husbands." That is as Inolusive* as simple and will necessitate no change* If the much-sought beauty ahall survive* No. 4. .v*
Mlas Etta Lewis, of Newark, N.
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sired to see life as a man and enjoy some of tbe pleasures of tbe opposite sex. She dressed in her brother's clothes and was successful In her masquerade until sbe came to the supremacy of man's pleaa-! urea and courted another girl, when she was found out and is now under arrest.
To show what a girl can do, it is related that a Mias Taylor, who went to Wahpeton three years ago, took a pre- ,' emption and bad an offer of marriage the first year. The second year sbe toofer a homestead .and a tree claim, and bad four offers to "jine" farms. She has now a section of land, twenty-seven cows, and Innumerable calves, and is* ready to consider tbe offers to marry*
LITTLE SERMONS*
Fashion makes debauched hearts as well as giddy beads. Every evil thought, word and action' recoils upon tbe guilty doer.
Wealth and happiness seldom trot to» gether in double harness. Tbe thought of distant things is %l-" ways stronger than tbe sense of present* ODM
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Tbe feasts of passion are but tbe delirium of a moment—disappointment 1» sure to follow possession.
There te nothing that can contribute to our mental and physical equilibrium so effectively aa tbe regimeq .of temper and good manners.
An exchange well suggests, if you oao manage it at all, pay your little debts promptly. It may be a benefit along an extensive circle. An old resident remembers an Incident In his own business experience wherein a certain marked coin came itito bia till' three times In. one day.
