Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 16, Number 42, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 April 1886 — Page 1
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Vol.-10.-No. 42.
THE MAIL.
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
Notes and Comment.
It is unfortunate for the Missour Knights of Lobor that their power should have been put in Irons.
Telephone matters have become so muddled people don't know whether they are going to "hello" 'r not.
Another
week like last Monday and
Tuesday and we should have been compelled to boycott the weather bureau.
Senator Voorhees made many friends among the advocates of equal suffrage for his strong and manly speech last jpiursday.
The Prohibitionists have great cause for jollification ovor the elections. They got forty-one votes in Milwaukee, out ol twenty-eight thousand.
Kate Field is pushing her anti-Mormon crusade in Washington. She should try it some place whore the objectionable features of Mormouisra arc not so extensively practiced.
Once more Torre Hauto talent looms up prominently. Our own John Paul Jones is one of the attorneys in the KiddSteele contested election case, which was up in tho House of Representatives yesterday.
Ono of the Now York aldermen arrested for complicity in ilio Broadway franchise bribery ease, is said to bo worth ovor half a million dollars. In the.ui days of Justice it is safe to say ho will be ucquittod. _____
This is tho season of the year when everybody craves something to oat and the market offers nothing to tempt tho appetite tho family all are hungry and yet nobody can suggest anything he would like to have.
Tho man who stole law books from tho lawyors this weok, and tho Iogansport lawyers who stolo a horse, would make a great toam to manipulate tho unsuspoctingattornoys throughout the land. They should at once open up negotiations.
.Young George (Jould says that what is worrying him in the Southwestern strike is that his father has loot th/eo pounds of tlesh. Tf tlio strikers all" knew this they would certainly go back to work until Jay regained those three pounds.
Thoro is no use in denying that Governor Gray is after the Senatorial prize, and at a rapid gait. There Is scarcely a wook passes but that wo read of a convict being paroled from State's prison on the condition that he shall not become intoxicated. ____»»
Tho council has an ordinance bofore it proposing tochango the name of certain stroets in Torre llauto. Wo do not see Wall street, ^Rotten Row, Vinegar Hill avenue, Happy Alley or Gallatin street in tho list of now streot names, and no street nomenclature with those missing can bo oxpectod to "go."
The Indianapolis Journal was so olatod over the Republican victory in that city it discarded the time worn old otlleo Booster, that has done duty in so many jr« wvinpaigns, and hoisted at the top of its columns a full-blooded, thorough-bred ^fighting cock, with a topknot as big as the hat of a drum-major.
At tho time of Secretary Manning's paralytic stroke ho weighed 325 pounds. Vleveland is said to weigh a»sut the #Vtantc. This Is at least one hundred pounds more than any man should woigh and the excessive eating and drinking which create this avoirdupois generally end in apoplexy and death.
The Rose Polytechnic is still without a president. The trustees of the Illinois University have "arranged" with I)r. S. H. Pea body to continue in their service, which proliably means they gave him a larger salary than was offered bj the polytechnic trustees. He is thoroughly «omietont, and It is to Is? regretted that Tern* Haute fails to get him. rank Harmon, the slayer of Wesley (ferpenter, has lapsed Into a condition of utter lml»eeility and his death is dally exported. If the newspapers had
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IHKMI
|l allowed to manage the case he would have lioen spared the long confinement In the asylum and tho dying by inches.
It seems that a murderer really is insane sometimes, but the plea ofjnsanity has been so travestied for dishonest pur'poae* that it is not strange people have become somewhat skeptical on the subr'jeet. _____
Sa Jones got over three thousand dollars for the revival work he did in (hicalm the statement of the number of 'souls converted has not heen made public. There have been hundreds and hundreds of better, more Christian-like ortnons preached in Terre Haute pulpita, and yet none of our ministers can command three thousand dollars for a few weeks'work, and all because they ido not indulge In vulgar Jokw, slang and ['he like, which go far toward* smotherthe good thoughts sTOlwd hy the .Jeorgia preacher.
Talmage says, "I want to applaud the gymnasium. In twenty-nine years of professional life I have only missed one service through sickness, and I attribute it to the gymnasium, as for many years I regularly exercised." No one who ever heard brother Talmage will doubt that he was educated in a gymnasium and was a proficient pupil. No man could go through with such contortions and antics and gesticulations unless he had exercised with the dumb bell and the trapeze. Yes, indeed, brother Talmage owes much of his reputation to that early gymnastic training.
The monotony of Wall street was unpleasantly diversified Thursday by a scrimmage between an attorney and a blacksmith in which fists, cuss words, pistols and hatchets were indiscriminately mixed up. No knock down, no gore, no cards, but a promise of more\fun in the future. This thing of indignant witnesses attac&ing lawyers for words said in defate is getting slightly monotonous (to the lawyers,) and there is talk of them forming a protective association It is a timely movement, for after a while, if this habit continues to grow on tho people who figure in the courts, tho poor lawyers will have no liberties at all.
The result of the election on Monday makos tho outlook for victory at the •May election a little brighter for Republicans than for Democrats, although this depends largely upon tho kind of men each party nominates. There is a growing tendency on the part of respon sible men to ignore party ties, in a great measure, and vot& for the candidates who are host fitted for the duties of the office. Whon this disposition becomes universal it will tend to break up corrupt political rings, for each party will realize the necessity of putting forward respectable mon. The remedy for all he evils that have crept into politics lies with the voters themselves. There is no abuse they cannot correct if they choose to do so.
Public Printer Rounds is to be kept in office indefinitely, it is said, because among-other excellent innovations he has introduced is the prompt delivory of the Congressional Record, not an issue having missed tho mail in four years. If that interesting sheet, filled to the brim with choice bits of local and telegraphic news, its excellent miscellany, thrilling romances and tender poems should miss tho mall, tU*^world won 14 undoubtedly pUurtf Ulltll It wAffT Ferro Hauto publisher—James H. Mcjfooly—was a candidate for the place Rounds now holds, and when he retires why shouldn't one of our Democratic publishers have their lines out for this dcsirahlo position? The Messrs. Ball and Seldomridge should come to the front.
Tho bill to increase the pension of soldier's widows from $8 to $12 a month has passed both branches of Congress. Thore was some objection to it on the ground that tho decrcpit old widowers would be pickod up by young women on account of their pension. These political economists
must
think that husbands are
hard to get and girls are anxious to marry if thoro is dangor that great numbers of them will tako up with infirm and crippled old men and assume all the cares and duties of a wife for $3 a week, with tho prospect of having to support the old gentlemen for a number of years. It is also quite a commentary upon the marriageable young men, if the girls would take a veteran, with one foot in the grave, to got a sure thing on fl2 a month, rather than marry a young man and tako their chances. Oh, no. The old heroes may bo snapped up by widows and spinsters but don't be alarmod about the blooming young maidens.
On the subject of woman suffrage which came up incidental to the question of admitting Washington Territory, Senator Kustis made tho brilliant argument that "if woman suffrage was permitted the State could send a woman to the Senate." And that "tho problem of secret sessions would be instantly solved!" Senator Beck remarked that "women would never be old enough to come within the constitutional limitation as to age!" Those arguments certainly have the merit of being antique, fifty years old at least, and it seems almost time they were laid on the shelf. If the introduction of a few ladies in the Senate would improve the manners of that honorable body, they cannot go too soon. Senator Kustis also characterised woman suffrage as a demoralising prop©-' aition and as "offensive and destructive to the institutions of the family." Same old argument that was advanced when women first began to speak in public and to enter Into all kinds of business, but the family institution still seems to flourish and the wives and mothers of the present generation seem Just about as good, taken on the average, as were those of the |*ist. But as It Is impossible to find any fresh arguments of course the stale ones will have to be brought out when the occasion demands that something shall lw said. If*"*
The London 1 Evident Insurance Com pany, organised forty years ago. for the purpose of insuring the lives of men who do not drink intoxicating liquor*, contributes some very interesting statis-
JosOilbert 1770
tics on the temperance question. By comparing its tables with those of other insurance companies for sixteen years, it is found that the temperance company has a margin in its favor in tho percentage of death losses of about 30 per cent. That there is only seven-tenths as much likelihood of a temperate man's dying during the year. An analysis of the causes of death among drinking men shows a fourfold increase in deaths from disease of the liver, two^fold in diseases of the kidneys, a marked increase in deaths from pneumonia and pleurisy, also in nervous diseases, debility, accidents, etc. On the other hand liquor drinking decreases the likelihood of death from heart disease, asthma, bronchitis, comsumption, etc. Nor does the the inebriate die of old age. Taken altogether the statistics give the temperate man a marked advantage over the intemperate one and figures won't lie. However the men who drink are generally willing to take their chances. There is no particular pleasure in the prospect of dying of old age. Most of our drinking men are ready to declare that they would rather have a shorter life and a merry one. To convert an inebriate you generally have to advance some other argument. Tho influence of liquor tends to make a man reckless of life and regardlessof consequonces.
Among the miraculous stories related by Sam Jones when he set out to paralyze Chicago was one about "a gentle wife." Five gamblers pursued their usual calling until two o'clock in the morning when ono of them announced that ho "must go homo to his precious wife," adding also that she was "tho best wife in the world." Some of the gamblers doubting this, ho said, "Well, my wife knows I am out gambling but I will tako you four men home with me and lato as it is I'll tell her to go and cook suppor for you and she'll do it in a spirit of gentleness, with a smile on her faco." So they all went homo with him and when he requested his wife to prepare supper sho suid, "Husband, the fire is out and cook has gone home but if you'll all be seated and pationt I will get it as soon as I can." Then "she prepared supper with a smile" and "waited on the table with a smile," just as "she had been doing for twenty years." The result of all of which was that her hus
cottvoywas
rcpont when she has ono foot in the grave, bocanso ho liimsolf Ins grown so old that vice has lost It chains, but this is straining the obligation of the marriage vow. The husbandfr'ho comes in from a carouse at two /clock in the morning deserves eithe* very chilling or an exceedingly warrr reception. He has not the shadow of right to expect anything else. It maf be that upon rare occasions a man yen over to sin may be reclaimed by# meek and forgiving wife, but the majority of men have more respect a woman who
to get supper tj» worthier husband,
agent in th«*eparations, but such
Sarsaparilla wtitroduced into
TERRE HAUTE, ESTD., SATURDA1HEVENING, APRIL 10,1886.
band quit gambling and wont to preach-1 and afterward* a bath, as they very sening and converted the other four gam- sibly gpnsjjered that n|i»t.di»ei6Mg# arise biers. The lesspnjfclr. Jpnoiiintended' to jiMitn f*
spirit of gentleness. sickness. There is no law, written or unwritten which would require a wife to meet her I The New York Journal in an article^ husband with a smile when ho had been I "No Time to Marry," conclusively sets out gambliug until two o'clock in the I forth that there are actually over a hun morning. The woman who would go to I dred thousand young men and maidens the kitchen at that hour, make a fire and I in the city of New York alone who have get supper for him and his brother gam-1 literally no time to marry. biers, is not many removes from a fool, and if sho smiled all tho time sho was The American hen is working on two
doing It she deserves to be classed as an I big contracts—Easter eggs, and a crop of idiot. That a wife should exercise I spring chichons. patience and forbearance will bo admitted but there should bo a limit even to these virtues. It may bo thit if a woman has a dissipated husband and bears I The ladies' hour for swell breakfast with him patiently for a lifetime he will parties in New York is 12:30 noon.
stands upon hor d*ity and resents I
humiliation Imp solute husband. I cases each wife is it is not judicious old theory, that
knock you
dispenrfon.
been
talented liars lp Sam Jones can oc-1 bread, not counting johnny cakes, shortcasionally find kite who will crawl I cakes, pancakes, and puddings. out of bed at W'clock in the morning
butitissafetolate that style of wo-L,,
man is rapidlyf® ng away.
wjff,4 THE MAIL HE A RS:
That ©ue of the youthful dudes followed tho 'Bennett & Moulton chorus girls to Crawfordsvi lie, this week.
That the result of Tuesday's election may be considered as a "set back" for the anti-jLamb faction, taking the whole county |nto consideration.
That ri|pne of the anti-Lamb people are feeling very sore in consequence. That Hn proposed new evening independent daily, backed by the money of Indianapolis people, has onded in smoke.
That E^nory P. Beauchamp thinks he can run a lively campaign daily, if the Republicans will lend him aid.
Thafc'Lpuis Leveque wishes he had known l^efore that "the derned thing was loaded."
That tile Republican candidates for county offices have almost doubled in. number&this week.
In the field of industrial statistics the Ithaca Journal figures that two drinks of whisky cost a pound and a half of beefsteaK two beers, a dinner of mutton chops One cocktail, an egg plant or a head of-jcauli flower. "What will you take, Chlrlie?" stands for a nice oyster stew for! the whole family on Sunday morning| "Set 'em up again!", means sugar in the house for a month.
A
legend says that the devil gave a hermit the choice of three groat vices, one of which wa3 drunkenness. The hermit chose this as being the least sinful. Ho became drunk and then committed the the othfer two. And It still remains a fact that a man is capable of any crime, however revolting, when under the influence of liquor. Whisky is tho devil's Samson and Delilah.
The Cincinnati Herald and Presbyter reports that, notwithstanding the Sam Jones movement, many, if not a majority, of the churches in that city have received fewer members this year than during tho corresponding period last year. The actual figures for tho periods named show only about half as many persons received into the church this yoar.
Every ancient Egyptian considered it his duty to purify himself once a month by tak*ng|ah emetic, then a purgative,
ut«rfjr'«rpance,
ai^ -fcliat baiL-3HefctTi&rthnt
WOMEN'S WA YS.
Mrs. Hancock will receive the largest pension, $2,000 a year, paid to the widow of any soldier.
A California girl has sold eight hun dollars' worth of feathers plucked from wild geese that she shot last fall.
A San Francisco woman asks for a divorce on the ground that her husband "dyed his hair with offensive and bad odored compounds." "A woman is a good deal like an" ac cordion," says Lawrence O'Rilley. "You can draw hor out all right, but the music
be£ins
when
y°u
tr-v
with spirit the iglect, abuse and I Ex-Minister Washburn was a witness ipon her by a dis-1 in the Storey will case in Chicago, and true that in such Ion being asked if he considered Mrs unto herself and I Storey a young woman, discreetly anffor advice, but tho I swered: "All women are supposed to be you have
young." s-
struck upon ono c^k you should turn good housewife in Ridgeway, Mich., tho other and arfyour adversary to I says that for a family of six she has in the
dowiJs not recognized in last year baked 4,905 cookies, 592 pies, the new
A lady in
With spring-po patent blood medi* I tell you I felt like a tramp—going to all oineii begin to |m. For the next six I those strange houses without knowing a weeks the popf- brands of Sarsaparilla soul inside." ', will find a larg^arket. It is notgener- Mrs. Frank Leslie has come otu in deally known thi is not really the sarsa-1
parilla which lie active and valuable con^.
drugs as manfce, iodide of irm,, etc. lpreUy
Enrotoldre8!W8,
are not yet a$d as^ to what spedfir
action it has oe body.
some three hired years ago, from yjptoria unless yon wear them low. South Aniericid medical authorities weU
A St, Louis plcian cured a case of alcoholism by u» of opium be then then cured theum habit through the agency of coca and now he to search-1
the oocaine hal
"Snagging thekwbeat" la the latest inelegv»cy fori ng the cake.
Mr|y
Ing for somotl with which to cars I ways. Did It ever occur to the mind of a
shut her
It may be that 263 cakes, 987 doughnuts, 098 loaves of
UP
Washington spoke of social
obligBtion8 foUo*B a list of
the dutyKail|s hftd to mak«, and
wentj
mum! and stuck to it until I first made them and, when I was done,
fense of thc
iow.and-behold stvle of
8he
told a reporter last 'week:
never knew a woman vet who a
5ust
that object^! to low-neck
You can not go to see Queen
the Queen in her
days had a beautiful bust. She
hasn't forgotten it yet. do."
Women never
-4 DOMESTIC POSSIBILITY. [Frankfort Times.] It la spoor rule that don't work both
Knight of Labor what the consequence would be In ease his wife should strike for more wages and eight or even tea hours a day. Would he accede to the demands, is the question?
[Written for The Mall.]
FARMER GREEN'S OPINION.
I tell ye thar aint a mite o' truth In thet ol' sayin' ye so offen hyar, I "IN SPITK OV POVERTY thru out his youth,
He wurked tell he gained the Senator's chair.
Ov course he did. TharVs nothin' in thet So very strange, es I kin see A man ez wuz borned in "Poverty Flat"
Is bound to git to the top ov the tree.
A man ez hez got the least, mite ov grit,
He's petted, an' doctered, an' stuff'd ter doth Is^pale, an' lank, an' ez sick ez kin be He moves aroun' ez tho ev'ry breth,
Wuz 'bout the last he expected to see.
An' ef he lives ter grow up a man, Ev'ry spark ov spunk hez long since expired He's no erthly use in the Almighty's plan/
An' his lot's not one to be desired. ',..
Tho greatest ov blessin's, In my idea, Tor a man ez wants ter do enny good, Is ter be borned in poverty,
An' earn his schoolln' by choppln' wood.
His helth is good, an* his wants is few Whatever happens he keeps his wits An' when we want good men an' true,
We sends HIM ter Congress, an' thar ho sits.
Don't waste yor tears on a pore man's son, Ncr think he aint got no chance ter rise: No chances air better under the sun
No prospecks fairer under the skies.
Thot ol' sayln's clean gone out ov stile, 'Bout a man's rlsln' in poverty's spite, The mnn on whom great riches smile,
He'd better be pore, a gol-darn site. JAMIE TRUK.
WOMAN'S CHAT.
A VISION.
Tennyson had his "Dream of Pair Women." In my visions, and in the dreams that como to my heart in my waking hours, the women are workingwomen. That was the sort of a vision that brought the tears to Tom Hood's eyes when ho wrote his "Bridge of Sighs."
Said a lady to me recently, "If I had a daughter,
into Clio world to work. would shelter her so securely thatshe need never know the things I have suffered and known.
What parent does not feel so about her children—and especially so about hor daughters?
Women are so sensitive—fine, high souied women always are. And it is pitiful to know how much they endure hear of it every day. I know, of a hun dred women right in this city who are 0flduring evory day—every hour—to whom life is not a glad, free, joyous thing, but a purgatorial existence.
I close my eyes as I sitalono to-night and I think of tho sad and cruel lines in which so many working-women's lives lie, and a girl's faco- comes before my mental vision—a tender, childish face, a face made for the love-light of a happy heart to shine through. But often there are traces of tears there, and there arc lines coming a)Kut tho fine eyes, and the beautiful mouth is growing to have a hard look, as if sho were learning daily the lesson of submissiveness and endurance I know the story well—too well! Hard work, moderate ability, exacting employers, daily economy, proud, outreaching soul, an unsympathetic business world to meet—these are tho things that make her life only an existence. But in my viftion I see a new raco of women, strong women strong-limbed, strong minded, strong-souled, who dare ail things, and who help each other May heaven hasten this millennial time
A POOR AMBITION.
I was reading In an eastern journal this morning of some woman who has spent years in trying to get recognition from the haut ton of New York city. Shfc has spent a fortune in dresses, ser-i vants, jewels, and elegant house appointments has been abroad, has seasoned at Newport, has dabbled in art and music, and has agonized in soul with longings unutterable, after this ono thing, the entrance to fashionable society. How pitiful it all is! That immortality awaits such a woman's soul, and that there will be two extreme classes in that land "from whose bourne no traveler ever returns" is cause for reflection. Our little lives rounded with a sleep, as they are, are too short to spend in such a struggle for something far more ephemeral than the "South Sea Bubble."
Somewhere in my old story-books, when I was a little girl, I used to read of man who visited the earth from some other planet. He was charmed with everything, in wonder and amazement at the beauty and resources of the world. But one dayf he happened in a graveyard. In surprise he asked what the place was for and what the words "departed this life" meant. When told, he replied: "Why, do you only stay here a little while? Is it all over after a few years? Then what are the people doing? Why, I would not live here for all the world! Let me go back—It drives me
sA
5
Aint goin' ter wallar aroun' In the mire Ef thar's a higher niche thet he will fit, He'll git It, an' fit hisself fer a higher
I'm thinkin' yer maxim ud have more truth, Ef y'd make It fit the rich man's heir, "IN SPITE OV RICHES thruout his youth xs
He wurked tell he gained tho Senator's chair." 1 Y'd better besto' yer pity on him
With a silver spoon In his mouth at burth The son ov a man wi' plenty ov tln,\ Aint got no chance ter show his worth.
Sixteenth Year.
wild with fear to livo in such a land as this!"
4
v"
V*
And yet we do not seem to care for the dreams that may come in that sleep of death!
WHAT THE HAtrr TON WILL DO.
1
"New York's best society has been cold aw ice to Miss Chamberlain, the grent beauty, because she permitted, while in London, the admiration of the Prince of Wales. But if the Prince of Wales himself should appear In New York, the best society would trample his toes off crowding around him."
I clip the above from the Lincoln Journal. It tells a true story, if a sad one. And who, pray, would soonest denounce the fair girl who had charmed his royal highness? These ladies, of course. "Jealousy, thy name is woman!" "Inconsistency, thy name is woman!" 1 feel like going on in liko manner endlessly, when I see what women do to each other. \$VrY 'V
The Prince of Wales did visit Now York, and the ladles almost "begged a hair of him for memory," which they might "bequeath in their wills unto their issuo, as a rich legacy!" Tho same thing would again occur, should fortune favor.
THE REMEDY.
I once drMined the world was ft golden Eldorado, a cloudless sky in which ovory cloud was
a
ploasuro-boat, bearing its
members to an enchanted land. But I yield my happy beliefs—the facts of human life have made a conquest of mo in the matter of creed. Hardships, hoartache3, and miserios will come soon or late. Is there no remedy, no alleviation for the pain of disenchantment? Yes! It lies in work. Work brings strength, and strength, ondurance enduranco, hope and hope gives contentment if not happiness. I believe that more than half our happiness comes from the posfession of physical strength and health. Ahead that never aches, and aback that never givos out, and
a
stomach that is
unconscious of dyspepsia, can do much to allevlato a sorrow and give courage to go bravely on in a rough path.
I have just read an item in some paper that says something good: Most, mon—and women, too—prefer as compnnlons girls who can walk half a nillo to see a beautiful view, or who, If tho cook or chambermaid gives sudden warning, can make a bed or flourish a curpet-sweeper. or toss together a toothsome meal. There isn't a man living who would fall to appreciate such a wife, mother, or daughter, especially If she were strong enough to do It cheerfully and well, and nave nerve enough (or lack of nerves) to treat tho matter ns a Joke rather than a misfortune. And she would be far more beautiful while so engaged, than If attired in the most becoming toilet, helplessly' bewailing her fate. —[Carrie I Wall.
LITTLE SERMONS.
Every one can master a grief but he that has it. Every man wants to be great, but comparatively few know how.
Character is made up of parts—is not the expression of a solitary virtue, but the combination of many.
It is folly to lose tho good of lifo iu anticipating its evil—that will como soon enough without going to meet it.
An undoubted reputation for faithfulness and capacity is an iuvestmont of capital that is always sure of its returns.
Thore is no employment that can compare with character building. Who gives it most thought will be best rewarded.
With every dishonorable action we plant a thorn, that will pick us as ofton as memory throws ojT the armor of forgctfulness.
Doubt and hope are tinrelontlng antagonists, and .can stir up much bitter agonies in the heart as can no other conflicting emotions.
Ignorance is an ill-fitting garment and no matter how the possessor may strut and boast, he never feels comfortable in its disordered folds.
Life presents no greater trial to tho wayfarer than to act contentment when the heart is full to bursting with thc anguish of treasured hopes violated#
AN ERA OF EXTRA VAG ANNE. Wash. Cor. Chicago Herald. I was talking the other evening at Mrs. Whitney's reception with a lady who has been in Washington society over since the war, and has witnessed the tips and downs of at least two generations. She said that never lcforo in her knowledge or experience had there been so much money spent in Washington in dress and entertainments as this winter. ,The Leiters and the Whitneys and other wealthy people who have recently come to Washington have set a fashion that has prevented many people ho would like to entertain front doing so. "Until last year,' continued the lady of twenty-five years experience, "I have always given a reception each winter. I have usually served coffee, claret punch, salad, oysters and that sort of thing, ana it has cost me $500 or ftiOO, including music and flowers, but I've had to give them up because I cannot make such a spread as others do with champagne at S35 a case, and terrapin at $00 a dozen. One does not like to nave their entertainments contrasted wich those of other people. If only one familv was doing this sort of thing there would be no difflctilty, but it lias gotten to be the style,: and one might as well be out of the world as out of the fashion. Ho we poor folks have been driven to "teas." I've not the slightest doubt that Mrs. Whitney's entertainments cost her not less than $2,000 a week, but everybody enjoys them and she can afford it." 3...
CUBE FOB HEAD A CHE.
•«:v-
McAyeal in Des Moines Sat Eve.
•*r
#-^11.
^iil§
*4
1
Slices of lemon bound tightly upon the temples are said to be a sure cure for a nervous headache.
