Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 29, Number 29, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 January 1899 — Page 3

A KEY TO HEIl HEART

CUSTOMS MAY HAVE CHANGED, BUT WOMAN IS STILL SENTIMENTAL,

Her Better Kntarc fte«ftrad«i to the Tender Word or Ccstle Act—'To Be, Likened to

a

Flower

bjr

One Whom

She Kejgrarda With Favor I* Joy.

I always think of yon when I see violets, a man isald the other day to a girl. The girl blushed and smiled and, of course, asked htm why. "Oh, I don't know," sold the roan "1 jtist do."

And that was all I beard The noise of the train} as It rushed o«t fr ira the gray shelter of the station iibed Into the sonlight kept me from hearing. fuore. I would have liked to have heard, for I am sure there was a lot of pretty sentiment raised up In that conversation. It began well

The bunch of violets the man bad worn on bis coat was transferred to the girls

If he wanted to tell her these things, he made a good beginning. A bit of pretty sentiment is one of the best of keys to open a woman's heart. Talk to her of the pictures she paints, of the books she writes and the plnys she likes, praiso her ability arul good taste ami she is interested, but compare her to a flower, or use any other touch of tender sentiment that may occur to yon, and—if you are afnan—you will find that her heart responds. The cleverest woman in the world is sentimental. You may not guess it from her bearing nor frorft her conversation, but she is sentimental, not in a silly fashion, but in a good, natural fashion. A woman without sentiment is a sorry sort of being. She, misses so much that makes life worth living. She doesn't find music In the laugh of a little child, and sho nover discovers beauty in the small, lowly things of God's creation, and yet thoro is beauty thero. But who known such a woman? I do not. I think she lives only in books.

A, woman prizes one rose sent or given in a tender way more than she dpes two dozen hurriedly called for from the florist by teluphono. A big bnnch of roses is a delight in its own way—nothing can spoil its beauty and sweetness—but a pretty note that implies that the sender of toe flowers 1ms taken time to devote more than a moment's thought to the ono who receives them goes a great way toward adt' ing beauty and sweetness to the naturally lovely blossoms. I fancy the girl who re ceivos a tender little note with t\ bunuli of roses takes more care to clip the stems every day to keep the flowers fresh than she would hod no particular message come with the flowers. She may love them for their sakes alone, but It Is a woman's way $o lovo tbe smallest of gifts more for somebody's sake than for the btnuty or value of the gift nlalie. This Is a fact, and one tfcat It

nmf

Kroni a famwoy place a man wrote to a woman he hnii always admired—and something more. He always thought her Immensely clever, and when he was with her his nmbilion was to appear well in her eyes, and never a word did ho let foil that she could smile over aud say, "The silly fellow!" after ho had gone. But when ho was away he wrote her, "It Is spring and the apple trees are In bloom, and the meadows are getting green, and down in the hollows the wind flowers are blooming, and 1 never see the springtime flowers that. I do not think of you." The woman hns had other letters from the man— letter# thafcnre well written and brimming over with philosophy, but sho has not kept them. Tho same things might just as well have been written to some one else But she keeps the letter that refers to the dainty pink and white springtime bios eoms—and herself Why? Oh, well, that Is just a woman's way! Maybe down in her heart she loves tho one who associates her with the beauty of the springtime Mnvbo sometime she will tell him how I

•v "r:

jacket. He had offered them to her when note in his possession that was issued and ho told her fhat the dear pnrple blossoms

were always suggestive of her to him. Maybe be told her ho loved her that bright morning as the train sped alon^—maybe he told her that he had quite made up his mlnjl that the world, even though violets might bloom on every hill slope, would be a doll and colorless thing for him without her.

be well to remomher.

Sentiment, may hove been repressed, but it fortunately is not killed. Tho man who gave the bunch of violets to tho girl did not look a bit like "a gentleman of tho old school." But maybe his father may. He perhaps inherited his gallant ry—something more than gallantry, though It was He meant what he sold It was not merely a pretty compliment. it is born In every man to show tenderness and gentleness toward a woman, and tho present generation has by no means got away from those old ideas that belonged to its fathers There afe a lot of men who would like to send tiny little gifts—they cannot afford elaborate ones— at Christmas time, together with a noti expressing a pretty sentiment, If they thought they would le appreciated, but the modem young man hesitates. He knows only too well that the day of the Ince paper valentines and original verses and that sort of thing is past.. And so he makes no sign and gives no token, and It is to eneourogo tho man with a drop of sentiment still in his veins that 1 have written what 1 bellevo is true—that, never has there lived a woman under the sun but whose heart responded to sentiment.

happy she was to know that she, and she gelling me a bottle of yoar justly oelebrat ed hair restorer.—Pick Me Itp.

alone, floated through his tiny drowns as he watched the tender white wind (lowers nodding on their slender stems and the petals of the apple blossoms falling dowt. like lost fairy wings to the ground. And maybe that ho will never know that a bit of sentiment unlocked the woman's heart. Men, you know, are sometimes very stupid,—Margaret Hannls tn St. Louis Hepublic

A Clever Trlek.

Anything printed on paper with ordinary printer*' Ink can be transferred to a dean sheet of paper in the following manner: Take three drams of common yellow •octp and dl**olvo it in ono quart of hot water. When cool, add one and a half fluid ouncos of spirit* of turpentine. Put in a bottle, cork it and shake we)) to* gel-ber. Take a sponge or «oft brash and apply eomc of the solution to the printed surface. Let It soak for a few minutes Lay it fafte down opon the pa per on which the tmnslor la required. Prww both together evenly betwten the leaves of a thick book plmvd nnder weight*. In a time varying from half a minute to #ev«rs*l hours, according to the newness of the primed original, it will fc*s transfesred in reverm* Another way is to hoKI th» orig- houseA ihe tor 1 jwl liver, leal for a few *coml* over the fame* that bil!ou«ne«s sick 1 headache. mdfce. •rlsefrew iodine, to dip a sheet of: nausea, indijtt^f tkm, etc. Tbey are In* paper Into waw that mni«ii» a little valnable to prevent a cold or break uu a laundry starch, dry It and tbea to dip Into *, \nki $er*!e, certain, they ar- Tr-hr vr*u»r made *!tghtiy aetd with a few drops wntkfcwe. Purely tw Of Milphurie w4d- ^hen again dry, pws* can be taken by ehiidmi or del aore of the #heew together will, It If Price, 25c. at ail medicine deafer* •aid, jtfodtiee copy. o(CL ilooo Cow Lowell. Mf»«.

GIFTS.

%. tliank thee, God, for good and bad. For all the tangled skein Of Wows that made my manhood glad

And Joys that were a pain!

Defeat I thank thee for and strife In this blind year gone by! 'Tis he who lives the lightest life

The darkest death roust die.

And he who doth a star pursue Both home and fire must leave, As he who guards a life or two

A death or two must grieve.

uget|

jn iOWa at one time.,

1

It Wm Excellent Security as Well as it Fnnmnker. E. P. Angur, in tbe employ of the Union Trust company, has a very curious

It reads as fol­

lows: 'One year after date, for value received,

I promise to pay Gruber & Hardkass, or

^arer, dollars," and then in small „tinnfirt _t

type: "Without relief from appraisement, stay or exemption laws, and in case suit is instituted for its collection anything and everything in my possession can be levied upon and sold, including the last suit of clothes, the schoolbooks and food of the children, with the coffin or coffins any of the family may be buried in, and in case that after every article is sold there remains anything duo on the note I agree that the services of myself and family shall be sold until the demands of the noV are satisfied. And I further agree that in case suit is instituted for its collection to pay reasonable attorney fees, together with board bills, hack hire, saloon bills and other miscellaneous expenses for himself and near relatives while suit is pending. And I further agree to live on corn bread And sorghum molasseu until the demands of this note are satisfled, with interest at the rate of 10 per cent from date, payablo annually. Signed"—

This note, says Mr. Augur, was issued by a man named Ackley Hubbard of De Mars, la., 20 years ago. He was a lawyer

and editor combined. He made it to have,

some fun with the boys. Whenever a man

is alleged that Hubbard had a lot of fun

out of tho blank until tho boys learned tho trick.—Detroit Tribune.

A Lawyer Complimented. Jim Webster was being tried for bribing a colored witness, Sam Johnsing, to testify falsely. "You say the defendant offered you $50 to testify in his behalf?" asked the lawyer or Sam, •'Yes, sah "Now, repeat what he eaid, using his oxaet words." "Ho said ho would gib me $50 if I"— "Ho didn't speak in the third person, did he?" "No, sah ho tuck good caro dat dor wero no third pusson round dar was only two—us two "I know thntj but ho spoke to you in tho first person, didn't he?" "1 was do fust pusson myself, sah." "You don't understand me. When lie was talking to you, did ho say, 'I wiU pay you $50?"" "No, sah he didn't say nothln 'bout you payln me $50. You* name wasn't mentioned, 'cepfcln ho told jnoef eber I got Into a scrape you was do best lawyer in Ban Antono to fool de judgo and de jury— in fao' you was do best in town to cover up ruskelity."

For a brief, breathless moment tho trial was suspended. Detroit Free Press.

Dmvnon City** lnolntlon. It Is a curious and almost anomalous position that Dawson occupies.' There ore few, if any, towns of its size in all the world so locked nway from the outside world for nine months In the year. Think of it I A city of 1(5,000 souls, and the center of a district of 30,000, a live, busy city with the streets thronged with men, its big warehouses, its growing interests and civic p' /lams, shut away entirely for at least nine months in tho year, during those seasons when the ice Is forming and breaking and with only occasional and laborious communication during the three other months. Whatever happens of flre or flood or fortune, it must remain for many weeks or months unknown to tbe larger world outside.—Toronto Globe.

.Conjaitrnl Felleitiei*

Mrs. Spntts (nee Gotrox)—You're a perfect brut©! 1 actually believe you married me simply because of my money.

Mr. Spatts—Well, my dear, you'd hardly expect a man to take such an important stop without some reason.—Harlem Life.

Thin.

other bodily forces hy food.

Barber (Insinuatingly)—Your hair is a trifle thin, sir. Victim (grimly)—So is your chance of they would bo glad to get anybody or any

A \VI«h,

Gwcian women had longer feet than tto •Terage man ha* now.

OODS

ILLS

-5

........

»,5"

CONVICT MARRIAGES,

PAIRING OFF THE JAILBIRDS AT ANDAMAN, INDIA.

Reception* at Which the Brides Are Selected—A Brief Courtship—Suitors* That Are Hard to Suit—Wedded

Life on a Prison Island.

m-

And he who wins shall lose again And, having lost, shall win. Since they are strong who saw great pain

And wise who knew great sin. —Arthur J. Stringer In Ainslee's Magazine.

A CURIOUS NOTE/

"I have known of some queer marriages in the 20 years I have knocked about tbe world." said sea captain the other day, "but I think the pairing off of the jailbirds at Andaman was the strangest thing of them all. For a couple of years I Commanded the steamer that runs down monthly from Calcutta to the peual colonv for British India on the Andaman and Xicobar islands. I was a youngster then and interested in all sorts of things, and it didn't take me long to strike up an ac quaintancc with the ohief commissioner or president of the colony, who used to let me go all over the place. "The prison is as inaccessible

-j

wau

as

any

sultan's harem. It is built on a proiuon torv and protected on the side toward the sea by a sheer cliff 200 feet high, while on the land side the grounds are surrounded

a

There are several guards

thn

stationed at the entrance, and in order to get by the first of these a man has to give a certain password. In return this guard gives him another password, which takes •him by the second, and so on, past half a dozen maybe. These police, as they are called, are tho oldest and most hideous women in the jail. To be eligible a woman must have gray hair and a face that would stop a clock, besides a record for sobriety and obedience. "All the prisoners have to work, and in the female prison they weave all the cloth for the mep's clothes and their own, and make them up, too, I believe. If any of tho women refuse to do their stint of work, they are punished. The first punishment is to out off their hair. This they don't like very much, and tho threat of it will generally bring them to terms, for they are just us vain as other women and don't want their long hair cut off. If this doesn't convince them that it's better to work in the shop, they are made to wear men's clothes and work in the grounds, which are beautifully kept, entirely by the women prisoners. The trousers and jackets given to those who are punished

in thig aro of tho conrsest luaterial,

1

would strike him for a small loan, he would shove tho blank out for tho borrower to sign. The words in lino type no one would over stop to read. Then, after tho victim had signed, Hubbard would hold him up and read the whole thing tc him to see him squirm and perspire. It:

and are very unbecoming, nnd the women have to trundle wheelbarrows and dig in the dirt, just liko men. If even this fails, they aro further punished by being put to sleep in a cell with tho floor covered by branches laid in rows and then in cross rows, grill fashion. The branches are full of sharp thorns, which mako it impossible

Hjt or

jj0 down in comfort

'Generally one night of this is enough to make the worst case roudy for tho workroom, but there was ono girl who stood tho extreme penalty of throe nights in this room and still refused to do a lick ol work. Sho wouldn't work, and nothing could mako her work. So finally they gave her up as a bad job, and made her sit all day long in tho workroom in men's clothes on a sortwf elevated dunce block. She'll never get a chance to make ono of the marriages I'm going to tell you about, because those aro rewards for good bohavlor, and sho is tho worBt woman on tho island, "When they have moyho dozen tickot of leave men and women, thoy have a sort of matrimonial reception. If any matchos aro made the couples aro allowed to go up to tho Nieobar group somo distance away nnd settlo on tho government laud. There they get a certain number of acres, a hut and somo commissary stores, and are loft to themsolves. The tickets of leave don't take them anywhere except to tho Nicobars, for they nearly all have life sentences. These matrimonial receptions aro the funniest thing I ever saw. The men are brought ono by ono into a sort of »recoption room, where tho women are standing in a long row. There are generally several breaks In tho line, to separate those of different castes and religions, for they aro very particular about that in India. Some of these men haven't seen a woman for ten years, maybe, and thoy look very curiously ot them. "When a man is brought into this room, a statement is made of his name, his history, his religion, his ago, the crime he is there for and so on. There are maybe half a dozen women of his religion on the eligible list and he is taken to tho first one in the row. If after talking with her a few minutes he doesn't think he would llkoher he goes on to the next one. Ho is nlways covertly casting his eyo along the line to see if there ore any farther down that he likes better than those near tho top. Sometimes he sees ono near tho end of the line that tnkes h,'s fancy, nnd ho will walk straight by all tho others and goto her. If sho likes him, too, they go up to the table and her history is read to him. He may possibly object to tho crime sho was sent up for, and if so the affair is declared off. But usually tbcro Is no trouble about that. "When they have paired off as many as possible the keepers let the different couples go out and walk about in the grounds for the rest of tho ufternoon, to get acquainted with each other and spark a little, maybe. Sometimes they don't make more tbnn one or two matches in a whole afteynoon, for they are very hard to suits, those convicts, though you wonld think

thing, just for change of lifo from that in the jail. "These marriage parties nlways take place on a Saturday, and just a week from that day the man is allowed to visit the woman again for an hour and continue their acquaintance. .If at the end of three

"Do you think plagiarism is unforgivable?" asked tho young woman, "By no means," answered the man who poses as a severe critio. "I only wish somo Saturdays they are »feill of the samo mind, of our modern writers would do more of they are married and taken on tho boat It."—Washington Star. down to the Nioobara, where they begin their married life. As I said, they give

often moans to rrat tbe nerves, and the refreshment of the eye is as necessary to oom for table life as tbe renew

Green rests the eyo. Resting the eye I them a hut, a few acres of ground and

id

of the

some provisions, and let them alone, These couples generally get along pretty 1 welt together, though sometimes thoy have a fight and one kills the other from mere force ot habit. In that ease the sorvivor is sent back to tbe jail at Andaman.

Bat this very seldom happens. If they have children, which they generally do not, these are left with their parents till they die off, fir the N icobars art so onhealthful ana full of fever that people

There are 3.064 langnages in the world, and Its inhabitants prof eat mow than 1,000 reli

to

don't live very long there. "There Is only one reaidint officer at the Nleobsr oolony, for there has only been one^ Englishman found who ooald stand the climate. He Uvea there all alone with the convicts, and though the governn.ent h*a built hiiu a fine boose be leads the loneliest kind of life, for, of course, he oan't keep a family there, be- I cause tb*«y would get the fever and die Inside of six months. Tbe chief coremlsdoner of Andaman oomes down to see him ocoMionaliy.New York 600.

IJdthyllappyGiTis

often, from no apparent cause, become t&nguid &nd despondent in the early days of theiT womanhood. They drag alwig, always tired, never hungry, bre&thles* and with a palpitating hearHtafter slight exercise so that merely to walk up st&hrs ia exhausting. Sometimes a short.dry cough leads to the fear that they are "going into consumption!'

was as tired in the mornm emaciated that her friends

—Buffalo (N. Y.) Courier

Den Fran kiln's mother. In Franklin's autobiography thero lf only the barest mention of his mother, Abiah, and merely as tho daughter of "one of tho first settlers of New England." Presumably this silpnee was duo to the eighteenth century attitude toward women more than to nny want of affection, for the two corresponded with regularity even after tho mother was "very weak and short of breath—so that I cannot sit up to writo altho' I sleep well o' night and my oough is better and I have a pretty good stomach to my victuals," nnd she hod to beg her son to "please oxenfo my bad writing nnd inditing for all tell me I am too old to writo letters."

To her Franklin sent gifts of various kinds, including "a nioidoro which please to accept toward chaise hire, that you may rido warm to meetings this winter." Upon her death in 1752 ho wrote his sister Jane: "I received yours with the affecting news of our dear mother's death. I thank you for your long continued care of her in her old ago and sickness. Our distance made it impracticable for us to attend her, but you havo supplied all. She has lived a good lifo, as well as long one, and is happy."—Paul Leicester Ford in Century.

A Zulu Woman's Opinion. Mrs. Dube, a native Zulu woman, who was educated in an American mission school in Natal, says that on coming to thiB country the strangest thing to her was the quantity of clothes that tho women here have. The women seem to be always buying new clothes or having them made in new styles. "Now in Zululand," she says, "those ol as who wear clothes wear them until they are old. American women demand much attention. You want to be made a great deal of and you want/the men to wait on you so much. In Africa it's different, I tell you. The women wait on the men there. Not but what I guess I like the change a little," she admitted meditatively, "but you go to tho other extreme here. When you have ever so little a trou ble you feel it so much. That is because you have been petted until you do not know how to to strong."—New York Tribune.

-#Tl»e Boy Gatllnff.

Mr. Richard Gatling, the Inventor of the famous gan which bears his name, was a dabbler in science at the age of 12. At that time his father was pnzzllng over a machine for sowing cotton needs bat, try as much as he would, he ooald not perfect it, and at last, In a fit of despair, he called In young Richard to his aid. The lad listened attentively to tbe details of tbe proposed invention, folly grasped the difficulties, shot himself up

think^ a°d U^,while

lonff thorn •Wasted away oat of them. This was eagerly adopted by the elder Galling, with

tbe result that the machine WM perfected and became a great soooesa.

HI* Reasom.

"Why do you always ride is the smoking car? You don't smoke." "I ride ln-4be ynoking car," replied tbe' man to whom tbo question waa addressed, "to escape tram the effusive gratitude ot tbe yonng women to whom I alwayv have to give np toy seat when I ride la any of tbe other ana."

Bat there was a bard, metallic, ironical Mat of ring In hi* ?oioe.-~Chicago Tr£b-

They are anaemic, doctors tell them, which means that they have too little blood. Are you like that? Have you too little blood

More anaemic people have been made strong, hungry, energetic men and Women by the use oF Dr. Williams* Pink Pills for Pale People than by any other means. They ^fpare the best tonic in the world.

Miss Lulu Stevens, of Gasport, Niagara Co.. N. Y., had been a very healthyg® girl until about a year ago, when she grew weak and pale. She lost her appetite, woe ac tirjari tn th*» nmrnmcr ac An rAtirinrr onrl Inct flocVi until cha

CAUTION• Most druggists are reliable Some are not.^ If a dealer tells you he has something "just as good.'* as

HerveloTuc

NAMK

OF

CITY. TOWN

as on retiring, and lost flesh until she became so nardly knew her. The doctors j^eclared tbe disease, ^4*/^

anaemia, and gave her up to die. A physician who was vising in Gasport pre-^-s's vailed upon her to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. She aid so, and was benefited at once.

She is now well and strong—the very picture of health.,0^$

-r- Pink Pills for Pale People, he is unreliable. Insist on having the genuine. Sold only in yj packages like thisMp^^^

Tax Levy for 1898.

LfiVlKD BY

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Si At all druggists^wP from the DtXilliams Medicine Co,,1 Schenectady, N .Y. Price 5(Tp«r bo*.

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Dir.Williams^

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Notion Is hereby tfiven to tiio taxpayers of Vijto Comity, liuliim.a t.hnt tho Tax Duplicates of 1KSH urn now in my liiiniR and that I am ready, to receive the tuxes charged thereon iind now due. The following table shows the rate of ta.xat.ion for each $100 taxable property and I 'oil Tax in the several townships and corporations for thpyplvrWUif payablo at tiie County Treasurer's office. Court House. Torre Haute. Indiana

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TOTAI, RATE

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9 11 5 3 41H 13

The first installment of taxes (which includes all the road tax) must, be paid on or before the first Monday in May. or the taxes for the whole year will become delinmwnt and 10 per cent, penalty on the tax for the whole year and cost of collection will be addifl. as provided K« IjlW

The second installment must be paid on or before tbe first Monday in November following. or 10 per cent penalty will be added, as provided by law but any taxpayer may, at ids opt ion, pay the full amount of taxes for tho whole year on or before tho first Monday In

Assignees, guardians, administrators, and others who pay taxes on property in trust, and? persons whose taxes are complicated, such as undivided.estates, e^to., are quested to set tie such taxes before tin- last few days, as It often requires much time to, make the divisions and separate receipts therefor.

If you have property in more thar one township or mrporatlon. or if you wish to pay taxes on land not in your own name, do not fall to call the Treiwnrers atwntlon to It. You are taxed for what you own on April 1st of each year and all taxes become alien on the property at that time.—Section 6438.

The sale or transfer of property does not affect- the lien for taxes. Sec. 6440. (Iforner Annotated Statutes. 1807.) ... _, .. ... Carefully examine your receipt before leaving the office and see that It covew all yoj'r property, and If there is any mistake have it corrected at once. Call on the C«urty Auditor for reduction claimed. The Treasurer can not make reductions or'eomrtwrm* Taxpayeni will find it greatly to their advantage to call immediately and get a memorandum of the taxes due from them. v-

Boad receipts will not be received except on the first Installment of taxes. 0 county order will be paid to any person owing delinquent tax. Taxpayers who have free gravel road or drainage tax to pay should see that they nave a separate receipt for each road or drain for which the property is assessed.

Persons owing delinquent taxes should pay them at once. ^ii„„ The late law is such that there Is no option left the Treasurer but to enforce the flection of delinquent taxes however much he may regret to collect. the same, by sale or property, Tbe sale of delinqnent lands and lots takes place annually on the^sccono .Mont day In February of each year.

Pay Your Taxes Promptly and Avoid Costs.

O'NEIL & SUTPHEN

AUXITOtt*8 NOTICE.

Persons having school funds on which tbe interest is not paid ONE YEAR IN ADVANCE aa required by law, will p!ea»e give tbe payment of said Interest their attention at once, as tbe law compels prompt collection of interest on school funds.

Machine Works

Manafactnrers and Dealer* in Machinery and Supplies. Repair* a Specialty Eleventh and Sycamore Sts., Terre Haute, Ind.

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2 74 3 50 2 74 50 2 74 2 74 2 74 2 50 74 50 2 50 2 74 2 74 2 GO

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1 r,j 1 1 53 1 38 1 58 1 52 I 42 I 55

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JOHN WAL«II

Treasurer of Vigo County'.

5 a S

1

JAMES KOUI.KS, §JS Auditor of Vigo County*