Terre Haute Evening Gazette, Volume 6, Number 262, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 April 1876 — Page 7
I: l?t—'
Love.
Thy volco is on tlie rolling air, I hear thee where the waters run. Thou standost in the rising sun, And in the setting thou art fair.
Y7hat art thou, then? I cannot guess: But though I seem in ufar and To feel the same cliffn.-uve P^"cr' I ilo not therefore love thee l«3. My love includes the love Worcs,
My love is vaster .issfon mivr Though mix^
C!oJ
and nature thoa.
I seem to love tliw "lors
alld
muro.
Far oifthoii art. yet ever I have Hie" "till and I rcjoice I prosper circled by the voice shall not lose theo, though I die. —Tennyson.
fyj ...^njazoij's Reception
AN INCIDENT OF 1770.
'Tryon is coming! Tryon is coming!" was tlie cry tliat blanched many a clieek ia Connecticut in the month of July, 1779.
This news that spread like wilclfire about the towns of Fairfield and Norwalk was well calculated to incite r.larm in patriot breasts, for Tryon was a merciless' invader, and wherever he went the torch completed his work of files!ruction.. In the month of February of the year just written he had ravaged Kingsbridge and Horse Neck,and now, for the second time, had entered tlie Stale.
His soldiers committed, under jiis very eye, atrocities of the most shocking description they plundered without distinction old and young, rich and poor felt alike the merciless hands ?f the king's man. East Haven, Fairfield, and Norwalk were reduced to ashes, and a thousand acts of barbarous cruelty were perpetrated on the homeless patriots. A force sufficient to check the advance of the invader could not be raised in the State. Connecticut's able-bodied patriot's were absent in the army, and their homes were as defenseless as the lion's whelps when the parents are away in search of food.
Governor Tryon knew that he would (ind Connecticut completely at his mercy, and congratulated himself on the easy conquest that invited him to her shores. He succeeded in Ins errand of devastation, and returned to his superiors with victory in his hand. Eat he made his name odious throughout North America, and his memory execrable to every patriot in the land.
Not far from Norwalk stood the plain home of Barbara Bidlack, whose husband was an artillerist doing duty under Knox. She was a large, muscular woman whose strength was prodigious it had gained for her the singular sobriquet of "Mrs. Hercules," a title of which she was rather proud than otherwise. Her features were rather inclined to coarseness, and a close physiognomist would have concluded that there was Celtic bloocl in her veins. As she had no children, she was the sole occupant of her house, and her nearest neighbor was a young woman named Haven Wli6 had lost her husband at the battle of Brier Creek.
Mrs. Bidlack, who seldom exchanged visits with the young widow, was not aware of Tryon's second invasion until he began to approach Norwalk. The terror of the inhabitants, many of whom were abandoning their homes, acquainted her with the disastrous state of affairs, and her eyes flashed fire when she exclaimed to the fugitives: "You may go, if you wish but two hundred such rascals as Govgrijpr Tryon cannot frighten Barbara Bidlack one inch from her home! If the red-coated scoun-
Lifcing her eyes from the steaming meafcthat graced the little table, she beheld British officer Standing in the door. His aspect did not frighten her in the least,though she knew from his uniform that le was a soldier of lofty rank. "Ai&ther plate, Mrs. Hercules?" he eomnahded, in a haughty tone, striding forwffd, and, at the same time, putting his had on the hilt of his sword, as if to frighfen her.
Slwsmiled derisively as she slowly rose to heifeet. "Wio are you, sir?" "I im a man devilishly well known hereabouts, and I dare say that the rebels will iutsoon forget me! My name is Tryon!" "J)vernor Tryon, the British rascal— fhe nan who burns houses over widows' liea**, and robs the babe of its cradle? If you.re Governor Tryon I know you for the leanest villain that ever trod New Kngind soil."
Tron's face grew crimson, but smotherini his rage, he burst into a cruel
4 1
lang,
are just the vixen I heard you
..werer he exclaimed. "They call you Mrs. lercules throughout this region.
ana must say you resemble the stablecleansing god in build. Where is your liusband?" "Under the flag that wouldn't ov.n you as a defender!" was the reply. "He's a rebel, then!"' said Tryon with a sneer. '"Like his wife! lie's a soldier, too, and not a house-burner." "Mrs. Hercules, I discover that my clemency is not recognized by the people of this State, and that my king's heart is supposed to contain no good. Why, my dear woman, the existence of a single house on the coast is a monument of King George's mercy, and mine! But we will discuss this subjcct at the table. I have ridden several miles to enjoy a tete-a-tete with a woman of whom I have heard much, and, besides, I am hungry. That meat looks palatable." "It wasn't cooked for a British general!" exclaimed the fearless woman with flashing eyes, and the next minute she removed the meat and thrust it into her rude cupboard, to the consternation of the governor. "Come, come," he said, "I do not want to sit down to a cold dinner." "Then go somewhere else and get your dinner! Thei't? are sneaking tories about Norwalk who would rejoice to tickle your tongue with the best they have in the house."
The Briton's anger rose again. "1 command that meat to be replaced upon the table!" he said, drawing his sword. "Your accursed insolence is not becoming to one of your sex cud I will bear it no longer! I can assure you now that to-morrow's sun will shine upon a heap of ashes instead of this hot-bed of rebellion. Now bustle about and get the last dinner you will ever set before a guest beneath this roof." "You prefer a warm dinner?" Mrs. Bidlack replied, in a tone half-interroga-tive. "A warm dinner, of course!" answered Tryon. "A British general does not sit down to cold meat and potatoes."
The strong-minded woman did not reply but stepped toward the fireplace on whose smoke-begrimed crane hung a large iron kettle. A volume of steam that rose from the water in the kettle showed that it was boiling, and the British officer did not divine her intention—not even when he saw her seize a gourd dipper from the wall and thrust it into the hot caldron. "Yon shall be treated to a warm dinner in one minute if you don't leave my house!" cried Barbara, wheeling suddenly upon the renegade governor. "If }rou do not instantly make your odious self scarce, I'll scald you!"
Tryon's cheeks grew pale when he saw the steam that rose from the dipper which the patriot woman had suddenly jerked from tlie kettle. He saw by her flashing eyes that she would carry her threat into execution, and involuntarily moved toward the door. "Get along-" she cried, advancing with her novel weapon. "I wonder what John would say if he knew .*hat the infamous Tryon had entered our house. 'Twill take a week's scrubbing to erase your footprints from the floor." "No need of scrubbing, madam!" hissed Tryon, angrily. "I'm going to bum them, out!" "Then you will save me work," retorted Barbara "but move along! my water is getting cool, and might not hurt your brazen cheeks."
The officer retorted with furious oath, and for a moment turned his back upon the amazon.
His action changed the scene, for Bar
IIUU1 JUCA AXV/iixw. XXJO evwiv** dr?l enters my house he'll meet with a) jjara suddenly dropped the gourd and its petition he'll never forget!" steaming contents and seized him by the collar! "I'll hasten your retreat, you miserable dog!" she exclaimed. "For a shilling I'd shake your bones into a heap and she almost lifted him from the floor, as if to give him an example of her celebrated
reception he'll never forget! More than once she was urged to fly, bat disdained with a proud and defiant curl of the lip, and awaited with eagerness the arrival of the invaders.
She "was soon treated to the sight of Norwalk in flames, and saw the torch appliel to her neighbors' houses. But the spectacle moved her not she did not ever barricade her door, nor suspend for a mtment the performance of her household duties. But all the time there was an iidignant gleam in her eyes, and more than once she glanced at the old musket which occupied one corner of her kitohei. ltwas near the hour of noon one sultry day in July when Barbara Bidlack, about to discuss the frugal meal she had prepare!, was startled by a heavy footstep.
Btrength. Tryon, who at times enjoyed a joke could not appreciate theludicrousness of his situation. He was mad with passion, and it was well for his enemy that her hold was secure. She bore him toward the door, and all at once sent him whirling from the threshold into the yard where he had left his horse. "There! it is the best reception I can give a British general!" she shouted, when Tryon had checked his course. "Now go back to your house-burners, and send them here as quickly as possible. I've got a musket in the house, and a goodly supply of ball. And mind you, red-coat Tryon, keep your distance!"
Standing near the steed which had witnessed his master's inglorious exit from Barbara's domicile, the governor listened to the last threat. I dare say that never before had he been so angry. He bit his whitened lips till they bled, and the hand which he had lifted touched the butt of the pistol in the holster. "I'm coming back!" he said, "and in the fire that consumes your house my men shall cook their suppers." "But they will not enjoy them as you have enjoyed your dinner!" said Barbara, sarcastically.
The governor did not reply, but sprung into the saddle and gathered up the reins. "Good-bye, Mrs. Hercules!" he said, with mock gallantry. "Come again when you are hungry!" she shouted after him, as he put spurs to his horse, and galloped away toward Norwalk.
He disappeared in a minute, and Barbara Bidlack reentered her house with a smile ofjriumph on her face,
•"f -j" \nr
"I allow that he will not soon forget me she said to herself, and then quietly resumed a discussion of the repast which the haughty Briton had interrupted.
After dinner she gat-llered up a few articles which she called valuable, and destroyed others which she thought might be called prizes by the plundering soldier}'. Having done this she left the house to the mercy of the foe, and satisfled with her victory over Tryon, sought safety in flight. A longer stay beneath her roof would be. the height of icily, for she knew that Tryon would carry lib rage to attempts on her life.
About Sundown a company of the governor's troops swooped down upon the house like so many destroying eagles, and having rftnsaeked it £ivm cellar to garret, applied the invader's torch. Tryon was not among the dv-r.-royer.s he feared the giantess who had given him such a warm reception, and k?r last threat admonished him to kc-=p his person aloof.
Mrs. Bidlack lived to help her husband build anew house over the ruins of the old one, and to recount to amused listeners, long after the war, her -story of Governor Tryon's reception.
now
to i»kt
Says a writer on canaries:—In this way I answer the question, "How I had .such luck with the birds Simply by allowing the birds to attend to their afiairs, and by letting thein understand that their mistress would never harm them. Also, by accustoming them to plenty of light and air and company, rather than as advertised in books, keeping the cage in a dark room, for fear of frightening the birds. Make just- half the fuss directed in bird books over the matter, and you will have, doubtless, better sucI cess in raising birds. Never give them sugar, but all the red pepper they will eat it is the best thing for thera. And if your bird feels hoarse at any time, put apiece of fat salt pork in the cage, and see how the little fellow will enjoy it.
Give him flaxseed once in a while, and if he appears dumpy occasionally, give a diet of bread and water, with red pepper sprinkled in. Open the cage door and give your pets the freedom of the room soon they will come at your call and fly to meet you whenever your voice is heard. I had one who came regularly to my desk a3 I sat writing each day and disputed with fluttering wing and open beak my humble right to the inkstand. He would take his bath as I held the cup in my hand and coolly dry himself on my head. Another would fly down or up stairs to me whenever I'called him, and many a time, when I have been out, he has welcomed my return by flying down the stairs and singing at the top of his voice all the while, until at. last-, perched on my shoulders, he would accompanj' me to mv room.
CHIJTKSIS HABITATIONS.
Eastern architects may get some hints of things to follow or avoid from a description which the Virginia City Chronicle gives of the structure erected by the Chinamen in that city: "Between lights the Chinaman is an industrious animal. Just now he is turning his energies to building, and like his fighting, some of it is contrary to law and also shocking to a correct architectural taste. On the Northwest corner of I and Union streets John has created a marvellous affair. It is built out far enough to occupy a third of the roadway. The front elevation (height live feet) is composed of odds and ends of stone picked up in the neighborhood. The one window is formed of three oil cans—two upright and the other laid across the top. The roof of this edifice—which has a frontage of about twenty-five feet and a depth of thirty or more—would make a handsome playground for a school, as it is perfectly flat and composed of earth. The iuterior, which the reporter doubled himself up to enter, is divided into numerous little dens and one spacious saloon, with earthen floor and one oil-can window. Tlie place is shortly to be' opened as a restaurant, provided the police don't interfere, which they should do. The idea of utilizing oil-cans for building material has been eagerly seized by other Celestials, and the consequence is numerous fireproof shanties. The cans, filledL'vjth earth and piled one upon another,C a solid wall, and no bullet can penetrate them—not a. slight consideration these times. Underground residences are also popular. A big square hole is dug into the hillside, covered in with stieks, straw, and an occasional plank. The door is naturally furnished by the Eastern slope. Although such trifles as light and air are left out of consideration, the bomb-proof character of the underground structure has a charm for the Chinese inhabitant. The only drawback to such a house is the probability that oh some rainy night an enemy may take it into his shaven head to dig a trench and direct the water of the street down the chimney."
The Bavarian Government, with a view to putting a stop to the practice of duelling, has decided that when one of the combatants is killed he shall be considered to have committed suicide, and therefore denied the privilege of burial. In conformity with this decisionthe body of a Bavarian Count, killed in a duel with an officer, has been turned over to one of the Munich hospitals for jli§jon.
TIIK TUI.I1' MANIA.
Of all things in the wor'.rl In winch to unike a corner, to excite :i Sj eotihition, to be puffed by brokers, it would seem as if llowers would be the last. But that a whole nation should grow mad over bulbs, that the industry of a people should be turned aside from the pursuit of agriculture to that of horticulture, and that the mania should spread from the phlegmatic Dutchman to the phlegmatic Englishman seems almost incredible. Yet in tlie beginning of the seventeenth century the desire for tulips had so spread over Europe that no wealthy man considered his garden perfect without his rare collection of tulips. From the aristocracy the rage spread to the middle and the agricultural classes, and merchants and shopkeepers began to vie with each other in the rarity of their flowers and in the prices paid for thein. A trader at Haarlem was actually known to pay half his fortune for a single root, not from any expectation of profit in its propagation, but to keep it in his conservatory for the admiration of his acquaintances. The first tulip seen in Europe was beheld at Augsburg, in Germany, in 1559, and was imported from Constantinople, where it had long been a favorite. Ten or eleven years after this the plant was in great demand in Holland and German}1". Wealthy burghers of Amsterdam sent direct to Constantinople for their precious bulbs, and paid extravagant prices for them. The lirst roots planted in England were brought from Vienna, in the year IflOO, and were considered a great rarity. For thirty years tulips continued to grow in reputation. One would suppose there must have been some virtue in this flower that made it so valuable in the eyes of so prudent a people as the Dutch. Yet it has neither the beauty nor the perfume of tlie violet nor the fragrance of the rose. It hardly possesses the beauty of the humble sweetpea. Its only recommendation is its aristocratic stateliness, and this should hardly have commended it to the only democratic republic on the globe. But it is by no means the first time that fashion has turned iigliness into beauty and rarity into wealth. In 1634 the rage for tulips among the Dutch was so great that the ordinary industry of the country was neglected, and the whole people turned to the production of tulips. As this mania increased, prices increased with it, until in 1G35 merchants were known to have spent $40,000 in the purchase of forty tulips. At this time each species was sold by weight. A tulip of the kind known as the Admiral Lietkin, and. weighing 450 grains, would sell for $1,800 The Admiral Von der Eycke, weighing 450 grains, was worth $500 a Viceroy of 400 grains would bring $1,200. Most precious of all, a .Semper Augustus, weighing-on-ly 200 grains, was thought to be cheap at $2,200. This last species was much sought after, and even an inferior plant would-readily sell for $800.— Harper's Magazine.,
CURIOUS CHINESE CUSTOMS.
Miss A. C. Safford, in a recent letter, speaks as follows of some1- curious customs preyalent in China:—
It is very common to meet blind men on the streets of a Chinese city, but blind women are not seen, so frequently. "Why is this?" I asked of an old missionary, one day. "Oh," was the reply, "when a child becomes blind, if a girl, it is almost sure to die, for no care is taken to preserve the life of. such a worthless creature. A boy can be taught toudo more things for a support, s6 he is allowed to live."
I mot a woman not long since who had lost a dear little baby by death. She loved it, and wished it might be buried. But this is not the custom in China.. If a baby dies, its soul Is thought to be that of an enemy of the parents, who came into* the world to cause expense and trouble, and then die. therefore a dead baby is seldom or never given a coffin or a grave. In some cases it is thrown into a canal or a river, or tossed out on the hills for the dogs or birds to feed upon. So this woman begged in vain. They took it from her arms and cast it outside tho city. Not long after, a Christian family living near lost a child, and the missionaries buried it decently, having prayer and singing at the grave. The poor heathen mother did not dare to go to the funeral for fear of her husband, but she sat at a distance, watching.
There is a strange custom in some parts of China called "sweeping the baby away." When it dies.a priest comes, and after many crackers have been fired off and cymbals beaten, he burns up a broom which has never been used, praying while it burns. Then he takes another broom, and dashes it as far away from the house as he can send it. Thus it is thought that the timid spirit is frightened away forever, and everybody tries to forget itj
5SA
geography
printed iu London in
1749 "describes California as an island, and publishes a map showing it to be entirely surrounded with water tells of a treb in Florida, the leaves of which, if bruised and thrown into .a large pind of water, all beasts which drink thereof will swell up and hurst asunder describes the air of Pennsylvania as 'generally granted to be clear and sweet, the heavens seldom being overcast with clouds,' and that 'the length of the days and nights is much the same as in New Jersey.'
A clever but intemperate ,sculptor having died at Montreal, recently, leaving three months' board unpaid, the proprietor of the boarding-house recovered part of the debt by selling the body to a dissecting room for §25..
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Peculiarity of Don CSrlos. Don Carlos is the habfit of walk I iiia room at Brown's Ho 0 Drtvcr street, draped
strv-i.i,«
VA'
hi
a sneet,
after hi* bath. Being a handsome youi'g man, he is likely, ihould h»jrernsmin England, to be&oroe the pet of-Jjondou society alifir Easter Although lie speaks jexcellent jFreuc'' he does not understand Eng1 is!i- His suite, with the exception of tin EnglisMnhii, are equally ignorant. The liitle black page, the ilwurf, which he owns according to roy^i nist m, and his Mnte,, state that Citrloa is merely here to pay his little war account. Nut his lt-ast peculiar trait is the hatred owns of having women near him :he female
a' the hotel ar
consequently obliged to mount by a srairca.se at the other end of the huildtug, and then to make, their wsy alona: the tcp passage in ord.er to descend into his room. The unfortunate domestics are fas' lo-it
Ueir admiration for the troublesome customer Spain has at last been lucky enough to get rid of. cirui. ttaeo sae-niRSBtwttieMxmr ikii illubi.'irOil'worx tjj 'pntres, a private cou jio
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tk* tn&rried nud uivr liveable oil the mystcnci
ot the sexual syetuii, iU abu*?* 2t9., latest ciscOTcriet tn lb-.
"Mati. Thft ftuihs? fin? br. consultedpsrsonftllyore4, ai! any of tnesubjecto nrcitfioned In his •riHTOWM—IIBn
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Rt In the woiltl.
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Hc'.vi'se lnis b3'.'ii examined by tlie pub--hisi'S of the CtHZJlts and fovpn't ns rfoio-en-f. rl—uoi ili the money. Watclicsgiver •way to all Agents. Circular free. Biuw-
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Each,
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|MW|1of•Bill—Win
II IIi IHT Til 'TIT! I III III lit———
Is Delayed and l.ife l'rnlonu'oil liy usini K. AT. Toilie Klixir will Uqui'J Esll'Bi't ol" Be*I. This medi -inu cannot li'idi-r jmy ciitiimstauec fail to euro ndigestion, Constiiiiition, Dyapopsia.Ile ul ielie.Nervoiisiiess, Loss ofSirensth and Appetite. Liins, Liver, Bladder, Kidnoy, .Stiina'cli, Uluod, and children's diseases. All Kenmlo diseases and weaknesses this medicine will positively cure. All cases of Piles arising from natural onuses or !»y the use of iiijuriouti medit'imw :iie permanently cured. The pirro Ueef Juice and J!ood prepared from raw meat furnishes strength and nourishment l'rof, E. S. Wayne. Cheiaiit KN-i-sident of Cincinnati CoHesc of i'h:irniafj-, says: SlF.ss.IlieiiARnsos S: Tci.Lincr.. ('in ti,April2, tu. a vi be ad ii in it composition of vour H5. A* T. Tonic Eiijiir and liiquid ol' Beef would say that it possesses valuable medicinal piupcrlU-s. as all the ingredients entering into its cnitipositiou havo well known anil positive mrrflcisial val:ie, which combined together must form an excellent tonio, cathartic and iiurriflvi. medicine, and one well suited to relieve many complaints incident to our climate." Respectfully. K. S. WAYIs'K.
If yoH do not find 'tis medicine :it one drug store, call at another, and it" it is nut 'ii sale in y»urplace, have your druggist order i! of indirect to as
I'ricc, 31.00 P*"1'1'oifle. sent, on receipt 01" price BICg^RDSON & TJLLIDOrE. Cincinnati, 0.
A BOOK FCRTiirmmor am -irf.tc! Counselor to tb# U, •-•J. ahout
to
l... rr-, .cn tho ,i!,rsioloEk»l
fjns "i r..-:v'.i.'5 ad n:ve!atipn» af J'fc.r* -i'-xijiil 8y«{eni, "Tith tbf !%teot dLicovcrits iu tl»« rw*iice or rtp»*ctlLction, prcaorrlnj in xi on
TbU Is na iuv^rc-i'ln^ of iw huoared
i»d 3
sixty
pages, with t.uaerw:? ua'J coattias valuable loformnticn fcr v.ho married nr couicraplatc ni&rrl»ge still it ii »i boi& that cupht to be kept uoder iocl •od key, ?iui r,o* Jcft a boat thohoasc.
It contatai tr.c perisocd usd advice of phyatdu vhose reouuitiorj Is n'orld-vv'.^.e, unit ubocU ta in the prt Tfttadruwor of every tnV.o and feciate throughout the cctui globe. It em^rac .*3 evcrrthin- ca tbo su'ojtct of tho Gtafep atiTesyfltera thai is worth n*id nncU tbntiaft* published ia r.uy work.
Seatto ucy cni* .r^ c? po«ta^e)
tvr
Fifir Cents.
Address Dr. iiu'.is' Xc. 12 S. Eijfhch rtwt, St. Kotlco i.'.o A fill clad 8nd yr.fcrtunsie.
Before npfoWkit? *o tho tioy.r!«*ns qunrk5 who nlvsrtise4*
puoJic p-NHsrs 4: p^.-«.« IK feuitfi* vrrrk. :i.i w.t,.: vnu i.1 or b.^v. depkffAble vour cou.-litr.a trl mats ft daol-V- ''OUm: *f »n raons Is indorsed bf .n'j *'.f vhi n^. profea•or*of tWi country
,*"sTri
•OQtUy or by rru.ii.u:* voris. to'• pArlnra, X'*: i-
WHY IS THE
THEBESTWOODCOOKINGSTOVI TO BUY?
It Is The Quickest Baker, ihah Economical, ii|l\T -I Convenient IVI If O I {_ and Durable.
Sizes, styles & prices to suit every oner
manufactured by 9
WM. RESOR & CO., Cincinnati, 0.
FOB MI, i. it
SIttIT 55
01nmpiin ri ro Mni ajWt F-ourtli yjfiS MtK,—1
l-EliS HAU rE,
E 5 CENTS
E
jn
America He cures many cases giv« "P by THOROUGHNESS of cures, SAFETY of the medicines used and fair charges have brought him patients from every State. Office and addressf 6!7 St. Charles Street. St. Louis. Mo.
iji* Store i.i Uo
handsome nr-
idea to find I
joy's and Chil-.
jand Third to
)n.
B-
chain
ind jiriccs all
best placo is
tILD'S,
1 i»ia bench. His lory is over and he than ever, the lackey and the e, assumed re9pec^ i. Hugo Ikienweg anheimer, while importance iu xly represented by considering tbaC rs. Mrs Schellen fthe part cf Rosa lie receipts derived iDmeht, while not ed, were gratifying due consideration the bad niplit.
W
«se Eclii»e8. JAFi COUBT.fv.Vfl ,f? s„. State against Mack sarged wii.li assault J, wai calied in the
i'ne
atJmprnijig. .r.uiLs:e_. State was repr6ielley, Esq while tha jfdecl by Oariton and
as all iu, and Prose^ made the opening ry, when the court i. Judge Carlton and lake arguments for Kelley will close lor
i:
£rnoon. & 113
COURT.
drunk and disorderly
Ink and disorderly, idicioa that he leave Ijely. 8, fighting. JJiseharg-
rn TRANSFERS. XV. M. Koberts, 10 iwost. corner of tha of tho southeast irsnn. tt to Sarah 12. Smith, 53 feet on Third street
flB IjICKXSHS/ izson to Matilda A.
to Elizabeth Bry-
[ALS OF A SiY MAID.
ith a Moras. who lias been in the Uarsou, landlord of ise for the greatest months, as laundry lit against that genDookerly's court last iovery of $150, due 1 for money loaned
jf tesfsfied',
N'
that
int, iu July or AugJed of her $100 which time deposited in the I'be loan- «a? made
fily,
but It*te says
nable tu collect the .part of it. The fifty uin due her for work
Iry. On Tuesday her attorney, leizer Esq., slier .ttacbmeot uirecetd.. Is and chatties oi %aid[ 'it.was placed in the le (Jnlgley, who proj. Glair house and levients of the dining (jner bad been called, iced the constable to. ihment on the e&tabver to hito the furiwo rooms, The stood in the otel and garnlsheed lie came out of the l'he case"~wa8 taken jenl: .by the court and It atri ved at a concl
p—.—.j.'_.]• tov^ll" working girls ihard earned 'money leciiliiy. The.money ed -to Mr. Carson was '•i. several year« hard .*•. sh^nb.
4-
basorball cltib will Usbmen^or W. P-"to-morrow PWPPWfejKf arranging **lr: IS j-. j?:?
&'t*~
&
ll -c
J%r
