The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, August 13, 1886, Image 3

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THE BED CLOUD CHIEF.
A. C. HOvMER, Publisher.
RED CLOUD. - -
NEBRASKA.
AFTER ILLNESS.
A one thrown.or a niUcr shore at iliwi
3!i;:i.i rln: unil, turiiiiiz from the shinintt
place.
'Ga7otreiiJt5lnr -where "oriie ktcwmiu shape
fcml jrone.
I turn urc, Hahi, to loot ujkki thy face
Hack uri!ixr the drift of strange vnmulnsU-d
tbt jrulf wt traversed through
the ii'tht.
1 see thee f.uie Into tie ji:ornint'" Ik'sibi,
-A memory imliilot! or a -en of ll"tit.
J hived llicewif nn -t til yet. thiit end
Which hinds ibe f'iJ with rilence me liad
won,
7I:id-t thou not Mimic sn- often, cruel friend.
And prrck'tl m t.n to tlnO til" healintr huh.
XV f to"ht: I fll the ntruirirh: !- had life.
Iiriink -with 'lyilan 4U.ft, truecJ with
fleHth:
none with t.e lulltUK sireum, unroued by
Mrtc.
Nor eared auln To iatt the 11 ! lor brejth.
Ihitd-fentnreil w.v.or! Nature'H wnruiiii,'
X'OII'l.
We ejll jh-' hitter mrae-.v 11 ml Jrown, and
Yet thou don trust! ri the tloaom'-d-honlen-d
loud.
And l.'.Je hath not m hitler triend than the.-:
I.o. did-1 thou iicicr M-tejrire tin. we uiijht Me
Numti w !li the hoii"-druie ol jioiron-.
IJOWCTH.
And !in itll tiidtle eiidn h"!i"ath the iky
'1 he lur-ol! fit! and object of the hour.
ibit thou. wi-- l'.i 11. i.hout all baneful fruit
jIot thisii the thtinin? word. and we are
HllVed;
Jo-t ever tinir n- forward from the brute.
And nil tie- 1 .tt 1 1 wiiU tjiiiek'uinjf thonn irt
pa-ed.
"XV
are tint tSilldreu;
cour. n!id hard t
please.
We eluleti the hurtful "Meet- with billy
moan,
J5ui thou Oo-i uhrfi u trout lx-ott:nr e:i-e.
And thou art I.oe. sent out to lirms uh
home.
-1'ri .Ifilfiiii Km; in CiincuL
THE WIFE'S OHEY."
"Why It la Otlon Omitted from
Miirriuijo Servico3.
The. pre-., thai ipilant H-ntinel upon
"the watch-lower of civil and reliiriou
liberly, like Si-ter Anne upon I'.Iue
Beanl'a turret, de-cried -tmiethinp
wronp in tlie cerenioiiv f the l'resi
tlent's weddinir. It whispered audibly
that ihe.Uevereiid Hoctor oniitt'd from
the service the word obe. and that j
the ladv Therefore became a wile with
out the Vf.'woi obedience to a husband.
'Thi- incident seriously ili-turbed cer
taitrnevvKpapers whose course for many
j, earn lias shown their profound con
cern for the inter -ts of relipiou. ami
many excellent per-on- al-o have been
4iiiioits to know whether. und"r .such
circumstances, the wife ha- been mar
ried properlv. Indeed, there an saitl
to be sonic voimp women who suppose
that ithe vow of obedience is the essen
tial iinarnapc vow -a view in which
they are resolutely supported by many
"very vvounp pentlenien who are not very
lonp emancipated from maternal con
trol. Ifmay allay these lender appreheti-
Fion.s to kuow-xiot .nlv th.it the wonl
obev is often omitted from the inarriape
cerenioiiv. but that many vailed ladies.
in wreath- of oranpe Mowers, in-ist up-
011 the omission. In fact, to use
tlip'vmxtic lanpuapc, the concession of
'the omission has been known to be
held in mauv ca-e- to be a preliminary
.."ok ii(i tutu upon the jiart of one of
the hiph con'raclinp jeirtic-. The
word wa- introduced into the ceremony
by men to express :md emphasize the
view of men that the man is the head
of the woman. Indee 1. the interested
im-uirer will Mud that m..-t of the j
traditional theories ot the relations of
the aexes which aie often nuoted as in-!
.i?iitlf tlk1a lflil i!wlifkir.i MVtriMii.'tifw
sn, ,.,,,,., iraxaa-a 411 ' liltll III
represent merelv the views of men.
"The law which repulati these relations t
the law- of divorce, of thc rights and
the control of property, of the disposi
tion ami care of children arc the vv.rk
of men. and .-imply express their will.
More than a quarter of a century apo
Mr. Gladstone aaitl the divorce law in
1-lnplaml were a ahame to civilization
and humanity.
Thc ladies, therefore, who suppose
that these laws and traditions and cer
emonial vows rest upon a Divine .sanc
tion, ami who are consequently solicit
ons to wear the yoke of unquestioning 1
Mibjugation, not of choice, but as a re
ligioua duty, need bend no longer for
that reason. If they prefer to obey,
indeed, they are not restrained by any
r-Iigious obligation, nor if they pre
fer to command. "But." interposes
at this point the youthful casuist of the
other ae. "aiirelv exipeneies of difler-
cnceari.se when there must be a de-1
cisive will, and. of course, that will '
must be the mans." Yes: so men j
have generally said. and their views have '
generally prevailed. But the general
t prevalence of ignorance was not a
I sound argument against the introduc
tion of general education, and in the
republic of reason and matrimony the
jrencral aent of husbands can not con-
elude the rights of wives.
In a matrimonial difference some
one must decide. Granted: and what
should determine the decision? i'lam
ly. the right of the case. Now a wife
is quite as likely upon the whole, in
deed, more likely to be right upon a
i family question than the husband.
Still, says the casuist, he must decide,
9 Xmj.Jffal.s tl, 1 till nT-4allilftMfl !?" otlrl
becauac ta is the stronger and can en-
; force his will. Very well: then the
reason disappears when the woman is
the bread-winner, and. in that case, it
lis plainly not as a man that thc hus
iband must decide, which ends the
xerelv masculine pretension. The
JLHther reason, that he can enforce his
till, it? appucaoie to tne control 01 a
rute or of a slave, but is it applicable
that of a wife? Moreover, when
speak of right, we do not mean
H
force. That one man may be
m
le to kaock another man down, or
Wat a woMaa, eUblhes no right
tl .l?: : ,'T !ui"
... i it 1I4IH ju-nij jmiu-'-j:.
In the matrimonial republic. indr-d.
p. in all oth-r communities, undoubt
edly force will dcide main- a differ
ence. It is notorious that the Km-li-h
law made by men. and interpreted
by men authorized the husband t-0
correct the wife with a Mick of rea
sonable thickne-s, anI upon appeal the
judge, who was presumably a husband,
decided that reasonable thickness w:h
about the thicknc-.- of a thumb. The
British Usage also permitted the sale
of the wife by the husband, a logical
deduction from the theory of the right
of the hu-band as founded in strength
of inu-clc. If the wife be bound to
obey the hu-band. certainly the hus
band is authorised to enforce obe
dience, and if the contumacy of the
v. ife comnfl- r.fiT-t t flu. ;..- ..
I . . '. . '
a tuumo - tnickne-,-, it may be yerv
painful to Homeo to adju-t hi-
relations with Juliet
iU that CHI-
..iatie manner, but who can deny the
npht of the hu-band t comjiel the
fibedience which he has the ripht to
',nan''
Doe.sKomeo Hippo, perhap-. that
if hi- bride protm.-es to obey, her
jiroiiiiM will make the stick unnet
.sary? 'J'Jic an-wer to his -tipositin
is printed i'M-ry day in the police report-.
KomMi, if he be a -ensihle
nrm and for -uch men only i- thi
debate opened will see that all difference-
between .Juliet and him-elf
uill n- de;rniin-d. not In her vow of j
olxdiencc or submission to his will
however unwise or danperou.s or cri
inwise or danperou.s or critu-
ill may be. but by their com -
inn hi- wi
J xnon pood sen-e. In the happv realm
i cinjural allection the .-trouper
nature will rule. howcv,.r mild and
icminine itsexpres.sion may be. an the
moon, "sweet rerei,t of the .sky."
awav.s the ocean tides. However that
penile repent may have vowed to fol
low the whinia of the restless -ea. ami
however the rajrinp -ea may to ami
ro-ir. her vow- will be rc-i-i.!cssly for
sworn, and all hi- fury vain, a- .-he
moves .softly on. and he up every covt.
ami bay run- obediently after.
As the eternal and Divine laws auscrt
themselves in the happy realm. Uomco
the husband will perceive that inar
riape vows are not promise- to be en
forced, but lovers' protestations to be
fullilled. They arc very solemn and
of miphty import. They unite two
lives for better or wors.. But th" vow
to love, tin vow to honor, how .shall
they be enforced when love has Med
ami honor is n Ionper possible? A
vow is a form of words, a heart-felt
purpose. But has it a charm to stay j
ine inorninp tar.- lias it the power
to hold a heart to it- betrayer, or
honor to tin; dishonored? The downy
bearded casuist, therefore, need not in
sist ardently that there shall be a vow
of obedience a.s bindinp his Dulcinea to
do what ouphl not to be done whether
he commanda it or 110L But, on the
other hand, the aweet repent that
shall be" need not hesitate to promise
to obev. since she pladly promises tr.
love and honor. Obedience is of the
will, but love is beyond iL Mie may
obey when she can no Ionper love, ami
if ahe hesitates at all. it should be at
the promise which duties her power to
fulfill. lieonjt' U'illtuiit Curtis, in
Harper' Maqnzitic.
MORE STRIPES.
Karly Hut Rrllakln I'cilntem for Autumn
Cost 11 mm.
Stripes will continue the favor which
they have enjoyed thi-season, ami they
will be in all size- and widths from the
merest hair line to wide stripes of two
ami three inches; they will be worn
verv much both for the street and the
hoiise. The hair line stripes :.re j
trial prounds. :,nd they are chiefly I
seen in black and whiMe. bine and j
vi.-ltit.ft -itiil f tl I w iti1 M ril ifiil llio liliitt .
1
. ,, aia i mt
and white will be a favorite combina- I
tion for the autumn, and thus continue I
thefavor it isenjoyinp this season in '
Paris, vv here it is all the rape this sum-
mer. There are other atiipea which
have a hair of bripht color tlirouph the
poods at intervals of about half an
inch. Some of the-e are extremely
handsome, ami will make a line dis
play on the counters in the autumn.
Those that are moat promi-inp of suc
cess arc nut brown, pround of sape or
foule. with a stripe old pold and white,
a small thread of each color heinp em-
ployed in the stripe: navy blue with
white and lipht blue stripes: navy blue,
with white ami old pold stripes: navv
blue, with lipht blue and old pold
stripes: garnet ground with light blue
and white atripes. and black with a
cardinal and white stripe. Next to
theae com? the atripes that an; de
signed especially for the tailor gowns
these reaemble very closely thc . striped
diagonal pantaloon cloths used foi
gentlemen. The stripe is the width ol
a twill in wearing, beinp a tritle wider
thau the hair line. Of course, it is no!
so heavy as the cloth u-ed for men's
clothing, but otherwise it resembles it
exactly. The leading colors are cardi
nal and a white and black mixed
stripe, old gold and blue, blue and car
dinal, blue ami tobacco brown, atone
color and white, nut browu and olive,
tobacco brown and green, olive and
canlinal. green and old gold, drab
and white ami moss preen and canli-
Hal. All the tints an rather subdued 1 .
the cardinal and white being the most .
showy Ine next line will show aerge I
aim ioule alternating in quart cA&Mh
stripes: those ahovv navy blue with
white, cardinal, or old gold stripes.
petl with pi
These follow very closely the lines of
color givea in previously described !
goods: these plush stripes are woven
aKo on herring-bone grounds, and
there is also made, a ttimming mate
rial of beaded frise and plush. Boston
Herald.
All the profit in farming comes
from crops above the average yieHL -Boston
PosL
'iii, f--...... 1,1.... ...:,i. 1 t. .: I
.u -v.-i4t miiiij nil iru; c?tcii ail lot 1 m -t i. lit. i
,. , , , v fere with vour prosped u "3Vidinp vou
is a solid colcr. In the stripes Used hav names 0 ,,,- of
only or panels, vests and tnmmmgs. wcoliaeildallim.riJ?" ,l, .
LINCOLN'S PORTRAIT.
Curirnj f!itrjr of tlif Orir- a: the Kirs
Iloiivr in Wa.lii.ictoit.
Many have, noticed tie full-length
portrait - President Lincoln which
hangs in tlie Ii.Ijrir- Hou.-e There i a
curious storv reparding it. The ffure
is of heroic -ize and repre-ent the
"Martyr President" standing at a ta-
ble holdlnir the con-titution in hi-
hand. Ils fidelity to nature ha- b.'c
commended by many old fnndofMr.
, Lincoln anJ po-itiv-h f-titied to by
hi-Mm. the ex-.S eretarv of War. It
h the work of a jouiij: Herman arti-t
named V. K. Travi-. and the cireum -
."taiice-i .-urroundiu"; iL- execution arc
quite romantic.
In the early .v.immcr of 1G2 a bright-
eyed German of about twenty aj-
eared at the capital. He wa the -on
of a portrait paiuter of rocal repute "m I re-idence in North Bridgeport L at the ' the Southern citie-. wauinpforbxt-in.'.
Krankfort-on-the-Main. According U ' corner of a large farm, which for fer- ' to dose; and when the crowd of pur
the son. the father had -erved under ' tilitv ha- no (ual in the country, cha-er- ha.- deiiarti-;! the bu3cznrd de- '
I l:ln-li.r fliiritwr Tin. ttt..,.lr-...l !.,.'
j that culminated iii the battle of Water-
J0. Younjr TraH had had a military
f education in addition to an admirable
' cour-e of in-trm-lion in the irvuina-inm
j of hi- native city. Like the Count d.
; J'ari-and other forci-Mier-, of -rrater
Llistiiictioii than the t.,.,.- Mrf.-t's -...
'Jraiscame to -e- some teal war. He
oflered hi- -erviees in New York be-
fore cimiiti"; to Wanhinpt'ni: h-ut been
taken to fiovernor-i 1-lund. but h:u'.
been rejected on ai-o.Mi!it of elearh
marked pulmonary atlecli m. When he
reached here Travis wa- despondent.
He wamlered about the c:tv for several
week-, but made few acquaintance.-be-
; , .;i, ,-,. f hi- limited know i-d-'c of the
J-;nirIi-.b laiiruape One dav he visited
the White Hou-e and . saw the tiortrait-
uf the e-lnsi'bnts. An idea occurred
to him. If he could not tiirht for the
.strnpplinp Nation, he could at least
paint a picture of it- l're-ident. who
occupied a hallowed place in the
ai list's heart. But a realization of his
fancy w.is not so easy. In vain he
personally applied at the White Hoiis
to nrranpe for a sktinp" with Mr.
Lincoln. He could not even petto -ee
him. But he continued to ro. One
dav he met Mr. Lincoln on th" stree.
He approached and introduced himself
in ver broken Knplish. ib told how
he. an alien, had tried to li;ht for tills
country, had been rejected, and what
he desired to do to leave somethiup a
a momeiiio to tlie -tranpe land he
loved so well. Thouph he probably
did not uiidcr-tand more than half
what the yfiunir arti-t said, the Presi
dent was impres-ed with hi- manli-
ncss and his earnestness. He pave
him an appointment for the bdbiwinp
day and kept it to the exclusion of
cverv thinp else. He sat for an hour
and told the atranper aeveral pood
stories not twenty words of which
Travis understood. A .subsequent sit-
tinp waa arratiped. but it w.is inter
rupted just after it bepan. and Travis 1
never aaw Mr. Lincoln :i"im. He I
went to New York and aailed for
luiuie.
Now conies the really curioti part
of the story.
(ieneral Webster, a relative of Ben
jamin 1. Butler, waa one of I'residetit
CJrant's lirst foreipn appointmeut-s.
He waa made Coiisiil-dcnenil at Frank
fort. In the aprinp of Mm. a tall,
full-bearded man entered the con.-ul-ate.
introduced him-c'f. and .-aid that
he had painl-d a ortrait of President
Lincoln, and asked that le mipht
brinp it there for inspection and crit
icism by Americans. General Webster,
aiipposinp that it was :i small portrait,
pave the pernii ion in a .spirit of
friendliness to the people amonp
w horn he was residinp. Imapine his
.surprise, then
i- a heavy truck backed J
"' before the tloor ami depo-ited thi
Jeanne piece oi canv.i.t. it rcpiire.i
:l ,,,)Z,'U ''"rtfis to place it on the wall-
' lilt (MUIhIUM!.
As those know who
1 ... ....
I,:m' MM' Ul' picmrr at tlie Mr:. tlie
''' - fHy ten teet Inph by -ix lect
"road. The tranio is nearly one foot
In 'vvl,ll-
Thc picture attract-d much atten-
""" v oiis,-v,encrai tomit ur
chased it. Ten vears later it was sent
to the Centennial Kxhibition at Phila
delphia. At the close of that show the
pictures reniaininp unclaimed were
stored in thy vaults of tlie Academy of
Fine Arts, in that city. There it nar
rowly e-caped destruction by tire.
About this time two grown children
of Mr. Webster died: his w.fe soon fol
lowed, ami he pas-ed to the grave in
1S77. The existence of tlie picture was
totally forgotten by his only immediate
heir. Mr. Bcn'ic Webster, of Loweil.
Mass. It alumbetcd iu the darkness
of th" cellar, in Philadelphia, until the
winter of 152. when it was rediscov
ered. A friend of the Web-ter family
broupht it to the attention of the onlv
surviving heir. He placed it in the
cu.-tody of that friend, who brought it
to Washington last year, and by Mr.
poffords courtesy, found it a place at
the Kipps IIou.se. Surely a curious
story, but true. (10. take a look at thu
picture Washinyt on Hatchet.
Not a Serious Obstacle.
Young Woman And do vou think
there is much chance for me then to
secure the position of teaWier?
-xrhool Superir.tenderi I don't
know. Miss. It's h:laccd',iup in these
' llMV
nar.
omg WomanTV -it graduated
fromV.ls?ar:imI rfk wnrj fa mv
claas. TT uf
School Superinteniud Well. I
llllV
don't think that wotifl Itciousiy inter-
'tift tfe
The fact that tbeni of pi,s in the
water pipes in Bangor, r!tnn-s led to
a new swindle A nfll"Vtiaa from
house to house offering si jecn js for
sale- He asks peroiisikjit thiten
one to the water pipe aaXvery feWu:r
pass through it for a $e partiian-jj.
-i .1 ,. . . VnwTn tilMti
n nen me niter u taKen f""- vra
c. j. ... ,- -. .tie last, em
uh IU"""'
mum urn a iuw miwfk 1,, -c;-rU03
AN ECCENTRIC MILLIONAIRE.
Ilr .ro. 12m Tisil-r !r .'IUOti nffln
stmt T.io ..I III. wi.a.
Mr. Jo pit Iiu hard oit. ! thi kr.
probably the .-akh..-3t man in on-
neeticut. was born in Knglaud fv-txtx-
:'.to year a'T). lie remained :n thai
country lonir enot:rh to becornc tin-
tued with tie spirit of it,- wa- r.nd
-ocial ameni:i-. and with a fair edu-
' cation came to this country with bti
father, after u horn he w:v? natnnl. Tie
father xva immen-ely uealthy. and
J hi property wa- divided amoty: threo
! chihlren-two sou.-. atd a daughter,
jMr. Ilichard-on Mem to hae po-
M--)--d the happy faculty of tiirniii'
cery thinjr he touched into money, and
what in the way of transformation
j failed him he wa,- made ;ood by accu-
I mulation through patient waiting. Hi
l-'nrtv vi-ir; nifi, ),,. vi.1,1 in Vnirlnml fr
an elm .sapling. It reached him iu
! March, and in the followmj; montii he
planted it with care near his dwell-
iST- ! JTrew and developed to a
miphty tree. Durinp the thirty-
three vear- it was LTouiuL'
! Mr. Kichartl.-on often called the
J attention of hi friends to the fact that
. i" hi- native land, amonp the educated
J classes, 1; va-s the custom for men. by
' way of .-howinp -pecinl repard ftr their
persona! triend-. to present themuith
' elm timber for their collitii. and that
this tree had been planted and fo-tcrrd
with that end in iew in his ea-e. He
j often talked aim tit the tree, and would
! ii.t allow the unuiinz a to be an-
' plied. Mr. Kiehard-on'.s jrreat uvalrti
I ha-broupht him into asif iutioii with
the b.-.-t people in the country, and
only amonp those who failed to in hon- pt.it(. to the movement of the tide-. ( which it had been attached, the wmlt .fcor. Wltrri arc yott
ored with his intimate acquaintance is i All animals that pen-h inland are -anv as bap. now full and of consider- ptijr " skd Awiuv " Aftor my
he looked upon ami pronounced penur-' found bv the buzzard-. It is r-ven -.thi , able weipliL A UhicIi of the M:t-xb rubbers" ad Kmily. Uttrjr faur.
ion-. Tnrouph life he ha.- abhorred all ( that Mock- of thoe bird will hover for : ' t" b:,P fbilW the blood Tltr .u-( H.t-I ,b.rk tu farmer) - WHI
that savored of display, and in all his , day - :i,l nipht- over a hor-e or cow '''"'' ,,'1'. th terrible chill tt pa. oH .,,.,. pa - r'nrmnr
busincss coun-el-he has taken pains j that i- on ita la-t leps. A Northerner ' u " MiMply not to If d.-cnlftl. Cut- .. VM j whtP " nrk " llp
to inculcate the importance of economy, was driven out of Southern ieorpta "' P,,n lh" !S- -Mr Briinlrr di-- t.r vMr Hmmm in tj,j, j,
In the matter of funeral ceremonies. ; l.Lt winter by aome one tellinp him played a mas-of beautiful white, ap- ; Karwu-r-" Nt mwrli. vouii fillnr.
in which, it mu-t be admitte.l. there ii that the buzzards were bepmninp to parently crystal, lee. but by iu -tde Y dWt pit me u. irn'tuv nnHi uii
more cheap porpcoiisiicss sometimes
than penuine sorrow for the departed,
he ha.s emphatically declared that the
money thus expended could have
been put to better u-e. ."some -i
or aeven years apo Mr. Kichard-011
took a tmal view of his elm and
re.-oiveu to put in Jorm the reaolution dav of scarehinp in the cypres, .-vvamp-he
had adojitcd resjectmg the tree tht" searchers sal down iii the shade of
more than a peneration precedinp. I their liu,i' and -ahl they would wait
The tree was felled, the best part of the j three day-, when the buzzards would
trunk taken to a mill, and sawed into j fmd ,;,", .in,i then they would lind the
plauka. l-'rom theae Mitlicieul material I buzzard-.
was selected for three cotlina. To make The turkey buzzard, despite his fr
his own collin he enpaped the .services ,idab!c look, i, a harmless bird. Not
of a Mr. .ludd. of this city, who was in- OJ,iy dot- he never strike a creature
atructed to pradiee economy. This f tillit U down, but he hanllv ever
artisan dovetailed the ends of the strikes it till it is dead. Buzzards'
plank., thereby renderinp the employ- ,.,.,, art. nol edible. Indeed, it is a-
inent of iron
Screws Unnecessary.
When the collin was delivered Mr.
Bichardaon ronounced it perfect in
every part, ami had it packed away in
his parrel to await the owner's linal
call for its use. In reply to a triend's
piestion he said: "No. there will be
no enpraved plate. It costa too much,
and it is not essential. 1 have had my
old brand-iron, diaplaviup
: j. itufi.uiso.s. :
heated, and with it I have burned my
name at the top and on both sides. I
pueas that will aiiawer." "But what
will you do for a date?" hi? friends
aaked. "Oh. no matter for that.
There will be no trouble in retneniber
inp when .Joc' Kiehard-on dies."
But the peculiar feature of this tim
ber matter follow-. Lonp apo Mr.
Uichard.-on made the acquaintance of
Key. Dr. lb. I). I)., rector of Trinity
Church, New York, ami there prew up
between them a warm friendship. Mr.
Kiehard-on addrca-ed to hia friend the
following note:
Kkv. Da. Dix J'nr ltroth'r: I .C!id you
niatcriu! eunuch to make a collin. l'leu-
accent. Vour. J. ICicu ki-on.
Dr. Dix acknowledped the receipt
of the pilt and expressed thanks. He
at once proceeded to have a collin
made, but instead of fo'lowinp Mr.
Richardson's siippestion of siipplvinp
dove-tails for economy's sake he had
it made up iu modern style, brass-fastened
at the corners, adorned and
strengthened. When the piver was ap-
pri-eu 01 xr. iix expen-ive niea- he
protested and felt sure that the pomps I
and vanities of this world were tie- '
tined to take precedence over the plain
and sub-tautial matter of fact. Re
maining planks from the tree were pre
sented by Bichardson to his only broth
er in New York, who likewise wsn
thankful, but could not bring himself
to appreciate the economy measures
in collin construction followed by the
giver.--Ilridtjejfort (Court.) Cor. A. 1.
Herald.
In a Terrible Hurry.
"If I buy some dress good-." asked
a lady in a dry-goods sjore, "can yuu
deliver them at once?"
"Yes'm." said the clerk.
"There will ie no delay?"
"No 111." said l: e clerk.
Because 1 ;im in great hnsfe-
Yes'm." saui the clerk.
Very well, you may -how me your
summer silks."
In four hours and forty minutes thc
lady had selected what she wanted,
and the tired clerk ordered the good
delivered at once. A". Y. Sum.
The Macon (Ga .) Tclcyruph has
applied for a copyright on its new
word, "ai'scoot." which it thinks is far
better than ab-eoed, and convey a
clearer meaning. WA bank president."
it explains, nia,y go off on a leave of
absence and drift away to foreign
shores with yrrat deliberation, and. his
accounts btJng short, be termed an
absconder. But the cashier, who jumps
aboard the lightning express and
strikes for Canada, is an abeooter. from
scoot, to slide out; ab, from." Wl
come, abscoot."
Suspended animation The girl ia
the hammock. Xircbomt TrmtUr,
THE TURKEY BUZZARD.
m. rnrntimmittl Vri n to lit
, Nature. I ltt.tr ani ,l?,-.tlti-.
, The so-called turkey buzzard i an; a
t-uxmrd. tat a vulture- By ir.istmg
upon ihi- dt.)aU.n the biizzanl trilx
coubl improve it .-. unluUoti !or elran-
lin..,,. I: i. n.in.! id.. U- nl.!
oer SjnJtirn Mate to hc-l a turkcr
Wt.i. 1Tu.t r. iu- .MlUm -..
.jii for this prohibition tb- buzzard-
are the M.-acn-er of the South. a:l
there i- no tellin" what -or: of a pc-ii-
Ience a dead turkeT bjard would
bntij: on if anbo-lv -hotibl kill one.
The turk-v" buzzard i- a knovrm-
bird, lit Lnows he i not pood to b-
eaten laou"h hu knowing th: doc-,
not imply that he ha- tupenor know-
ledire and be b not hr of mankind.
He hoyer.- oyer the market place- in
. I ..-.I .U .l.l -...
ends that have fallen from th-butcher-'
am the fishmonger-' knives. The
scarcity of hash, mince pic and Ji-h
chowder in the ?outhern Mat. - i--me-
thin- for which the buzzard .-h.M
hav,crediL In Charlaiii tb.-n- is a
;,;,- u;,. Pi-.., ,!,,., i.v !... --..r
and the buzzard ala- ce!t l5p a::er
bu-itie-s hour-. The wi-dom of the
turtev buzzard is -howu alo b tiB-
of it- expedfeiits " for rettip ritl
of w-rk. which ib fatipuiup in the
.Southern Stale-, He m-s to the
mouths of rive.-?, when the couliiriiitp
fore of current and tide deim-it on
the bank- a con-iderable proportion of
! ;,e carrion and other unuaolesome
! thiit", that are Wiie touar.1 the ea
on the river's ilood. and lher h ac-
commodates hi- not verv fastidious ap-
keep an eye on him. La-t .summer the
shenfl" of a county in Florida disap
peared in the woods after havinp load
ed up a bip revolver, and told hi- wife
he w:i poinp to .shoot himself. ouie
. Jjul,. elbirt wa- made to lcain whether
he had kept hi- promise, but after a
' much ... n imreiir. bird e:m .Midnre to
.-it over them while hatchmp them.
........ .. .,.-... ...... ...... ........ . -w
with only two epp-in the ne-t at thaL
Kvrn under those conditions the male
bird ha to take hi- turn on the nest
part of the time iu order to let the ma- ' hi,i!-v of listermp. follows its admim
ternal buzzard po ofT and pet .some l''- T' substance i, a !.-! an
frcsh air. '''' ''tic. but it i claimed that its ac-
Up to thi- date the buzzard has
been chosen by any nation as its em
blematic bin!. Iluzzard'.i UoujI ((u. 1
' 'or. A. Y. Sun.
UNREWARDED PATRIOTISM.
A Man Who W Not Apprrciated In III.
.... ' Vllle.
"I alkinp about fourth of .lulv cele-
. " , -
bration-, said a tia-ti-nwr from Iowa.
"pueas I had the boss celebration in
.1.: .. ' i .1....
tins coiuiiiy. 1 tu -ei 1 jii tiio- oi lii:ii
kind of men who do a thinp all over!
when they Mart out to do it at all. No
half-way business for me. I'm a thor- f
ouphbred. I am. And when I po in i
for a celebration I have one that ,
counts. Well, out in the Iowa town
where I come from I ow ned a bip
building. It was bout two hundred ,
feet .Miuare. and all lumber, and no
partitions in it. nor nothin' of that
aorL .lust one great big room. Thinks ,
I U myself, what it would be to have
a Fourth of July celebration in there, i
So 1 went out and bought about two !
barrels full of these big cannon crack- j
er ywii've -een 'em-and a bu-hel or
two of other thinp-. and carted 'cm J
into the big building of mine, and
heatetl 'em 1111 in the middle id the ,
lloor. I waited till the other 1kvs had .
done their prettiest at the noi-e-mak- '
ing business, and then 1 told Vm to ol)ld h" u"1! to -" - He little
just prepara to hear some noi-c that . Jk,,rw at th" txm what he wa- doing,
wa noise. Aff r I had got the je-o- I Tu' r three day afterw-vrd. however.
ph's exjectations raised purty hiph I j h chancd to olwrv.- bird Hying
thrf w a lighted match into that arnst that sain. window, and biu
big heap of lire-works. Noise? Why. 'mZ against it with ail iu might, again
no man ever heard such a racket. Jt ' aDfJ ". if trying to break it.
sound aa if the world wa coming , JJi v'npatliy and ciirio-ity we.-n
to an eod. or Jupiter had lallen down S wfum1- Whal eoiiM th. littb- thing
and broken through the ice at the ! W3a-' if- at once went to the room
North Pole, or su.hin'. Thc racket , nd "I'n-d lm window to -. Tlie
was heard at Des Moines, one hundred . window oeiL the bin! Hew traipht
and eighty miles away, an' some, po- j to ODV particular sKt in the rwm.
pie lirin' in the country- thought they'd l wk itepherou saw a n- that lit
been an earthquake You . the hip si" bir1' n- t(' V b5ri1 J"k'd
room, with iu boanl sid,- an roof. ' at il uoV tl,p d tory in . a plane
acted jus liKe a aounamg board, an 1 1
tell you the honest truth wlim I y
that thirty per cenU of lvz people in
that town are deaf to thL day. It waa J wx tilled with unpakab!e orrow. j rbwer mot w pre-reS uv
the greatest Fourth of July oIcbriion ' Then sat the mother bird, and under j many nvnthi bv &rAw th-t -rs-ever
known in the State of lowv." i it four tiny title young oa mother fsllr. s rtx -ib-Tl i -M-f-.tlir
"Should think so" 1
"Yes. There wa one drawback to '
; tl.n.ie-K The limlritno-ti-x.k-rir in.1
burncl down ia about aixtn minntes. ,
And then there were, ntfonl mean
enough to -ay thai the skating-rink t snd Jn - n beak, and ear?
business ha- been bad of late, and that ifuil.T t-"1 to renie it; but all his rl
I had tried to .;11 out and couldn't, ' fortA frov'd m n Ji Idnjr died.
and so oa. You know there are aV xnd " oorne.J for aAjr
wars people aroond to talk that way ; a J?- As that time the fojwj of
about a patriotic nan who meet with )
mUfonane in trying to celebrato tee
r
independenne of his country. Ainllhe
fact is they talked so much that 1
wn't abk t collect a rent of in
surance, and waen they pot a cnr
ataftte oat lookin' for me I ODcl4e4
1 would rnc 4wn Eat to ee my
ttak aad lt Ue ld skating .aiok go
to fikaader. The ptrioiio man aervr
waa afwiaciatad in tat catxj, aav-
hmwr-chf ternUL
SULID WATER-CAS.
Vii?c tl tbemim-tr w niartr
fevn I:rt- in tin .Jijm! a aw.
Tko w IhJ iw actually torn down
m. J. -i . . -
: t"1 tbr J- tal w manutwiurwl.
i ai ' wi' wrfrct :on wilr th '
' ww lat4l. It a.- th" rih of orne
' -tni4ixj: rp-rinient- jv.'orm-H! br
j iJsc wo from (Jfrminy to U:
' !",n machinery which - to If 1 a
lRr Wuluicof waJr-ca. at the pr4-:.
!roi O. Hnmlrr cwmlucUn! the rjfri-f
ncv and aii to the snonUiic rntle-
tueu as-mbled
i projwiMj to ihow yoi omUi;j :
ni.r !rt! Aul.tii n' i Jir-ttifc-v.
, i .1 . , . " r
3!ui then oniv a an f peraiirMl. I
will take thii water-pa- ad make ft j
-oltl and of arctic pnffrne. bide ',
which ice w !l -ei like fcr 'I1ii i
ad-COcr that w ill Mhli !th ! a n.
tu ! wonderful ihrn- in U, ws? of
rr!i tap pnia."
1 :Jr- niul-r then attnrbed to th
machinery u-el m the work of chnrp-
' P lht w''r tht.rouphU -tnadr can-
vji-bap and ptne the onbr tu stnrt th
machiurr. Ihc buttlmr-rtH.iM wa m-
' hot. but .Mr. ltninb-r a ob-
rved to button, up his evat to tiie
! roM If fore startmp up. and lit
' ",:ort tl t'mperxtttp- w.-v- en
to be c-tt:np arctn. ltthe complete
-urpn-c of tho-e pre-et -now b.can
to ' itu 'lnke- lirst. tut xmi
lhlrk and fast, ixllinp the nn.m xim!
,-'api:ii: thruuph the dojr in a thn-k
flotid. The profe-or ntt-ed ht bsMl.
the machinery .s:opp,-,l. ami the -ow
di-appcaret
Then Mr. Itritnlrr
' :,'k
from the machinery. to
common ice melted
to tire.
towiirncxjioH'U
Mr. Brintler eclaitneil. a a irexiU-
mati reached out his hand to the ma
'Ibm't touch it. it will burn von
"That ice burn me Absurd waa ih .
r,,J"-v- L,,,! Uir inie-sor iiisi.ie.i ui 11
be let alone, except to pive it tun
sliphtest touch. One unliickv indi
vidual wa- piveii too pro'onped atomh
on the back of the hand, and found
that hi hand was devoid of all 'eehup.
The professor looked at it and ..iid:
"That tixea it for four hours, siter that
it will ache for forty iht hoq will
blister and make trouble; it tuchcd it
too hard." All of which fo'Iowod.
,r'or four hour the hum! ws .tbrolut
ly without fe'Imp; a needle :n.-itsl
produced no pain, and yet tha band
, wa- ""l !" '-rle". No blood M'-a-wed
th puncture, ii ,, cii.imed tht Uni
ZA uin completely take the place o!
ether. No ill eflect. except the psjU
! t:on is complete, and on the mtaul
the tiiemlM'r touched is completely
jiumled. tin Mow of blood arresteiL,
and operations can be performed with-
out .suffering on the part of the patient
or lo-e of anv considerable amount of
i blood. A prominent physician her
( who has been experimenting With it
j believes that it Will be m ,e.,rlv eyrr
. ... t .. ., '., . , '
ca-e a substitute for ether. Mr. Bnmler
.. .1 , n ,1 1. .. .
' says that all the di-coverr coincetel
...,. ., ... , . , ,
with this a is the iiroccn liv which it
"
is taken from the i.ermnn mineral
1 sprinps. - Portland (.!'.) 'or. Itostoik
IIcraUL.
MANLY TENDERNESS.
A Creat lnrnlnr' I'n.x-Kk mMv snrrnW
u! raltlifol Itlr.r lratli.
!''' are sometime, tempted to thmk
thut l" U' tender-hearte,! . to be weak
aml "nmanh. Yet the fmier-xi
"art may be a-socialed with thi
stronge-t and most fonible ini.nl ami
wi,L Tuk''- for 1',J'1,. the -tory
:ld of him to whom we ow our
wonderful railway -n-N-ni. .'eorge
t-ple'';i went one day into an upp-r
rr,om of hin ho,,, Utl b-ed the
window-. It had been Mt ojk-h a long
tiin because f jhe gn.tt heat, but
uow "" weather wa tteeominp colder,
:uvi -Ir- Mephe:-on thought i:
",,u .. w-.i.w uu .w Mc ...,
broken-hearted, almtr-t d-ad.
m r lMf t..i.r .' . m.- . . i..aw
MepbTwm. drawing -ar lo look,
and young all apparrntlr uV:uL
SPenn cril aloud. He tenderjr
lifted th? exhausted bird from tb
flo,r lntf woan li liad " IonJ xn
Cav eiy itruggU to onng to it Horn
VtvmX St-phcnsou mind wn ebang.
tag the fact of tb earth, yet "W arp4
at the slrght ol tht dad f.aauly. and
, deeply grieved, becau az h5 hiiali
had acoacouly bn the cac? of
daath. Manc&cUcr (Ety Tvutu.
AyoBgrnaa at. Lubeck. Teaa..
recently slid off a kaytack and wa
killed br the pror4f of a pitchfork ea
teriog hx4lea'i& aad di-aibowrUBj
FULL Or FUN.
T tef ftl !? Sf.
U U x: :: " 'ism tar
tth li sriri
-rfw;T rrie.r
rat
a:
nttk Wr. furmmJkmi (J.'ua.
liiiidMr (u ys: lMHiolti?jT)
I kav noiikiMC it. mMv. Im; jthind
quartrr f Ismb anl &;." Yn
I IcHTMsktrtfK.r- VrT wH. Y m.r
fXHi a maQ kllttactr- vl Ji.'.-.'
I-
I "Mev 1UkI rkxrtlr k W to M
mad of old rebWr JNm WV oft
en Wrd tjK- remark thrrfl Let
hr ;i raWtof.' Wrt u wvr vj
' ioh! iW frUar rder, chow
, "
Jot. 1 'mibrr Stntrjtmn.
" La eve-ltttmral Mr. !!tHnvinn.
after rm4ne; r-erjt arprafl cmler
tie huudtap. Ditrw Ntt " th;y
taY call it tr' rw if tie at to;
but tt -ntU to tit) rar a o4 deal
jxhmt like kitchen poWp,
"ilr vwi sot thnw-h rimnlnjj.
Bndp:" ", ntx. not tmU.iy
I'e cHirud tb bHi-k m m )iauy.
! I'm jt pm- Je Miliar fi..-
ik -m! u Wpt tW rvS of lh
lurwtern." Btm Trmiwrift,
; M U? tiuit gwl RTi iifcad ho
' alter kt.kmp ki-rh wwl l.. !r .r (,-f
her Wp HuIUMls. wklrh kl ct off
br -crk. shr m UtM f4ttU t ih -Jm
rt-ok--fang, 'hjr br ttotier had ml
Uka u !or 3 kU wvr. IM n$vKa
( Mrrtse.
.nie awl ltmUt vr imlm-nt:
tJb,r tlr-t buti b- xJk rlotKM kt al
t W Urrhark It W:n u mix hMK.
tiv w nv in iW watr. hunt Uirte.f
lHt jmjM.r yV0 Wm Wj. ,,,u anJ
that's 'Mottph.' CiUruo Trtimn.
Iik heri" remarked Ii Wlpjj
." to tlt evrtw-r jfrer, tix pv tttiMt
i- riv ttxliy slippery. Why dtrn't yx
throw -owe aMd n H" 'X'sa't gut.
a bit." replied th gr-er. WnW.
throw sowe sttgar uwr U. lb pxkv
men; wtm't know th diller-Miae."
"lhstnot'" veit iUr groer
Mrs. ;Itlory "1 think It a
shame I hav u rWe nnntitd Im llmt
old coupe, when Mrs. jrendagl m
always getting somethiup nnw in thu
wv of a vehicle." Mr "Why.
my luve. I pnsv she Uimi't a iw
equipip. hais ihe ' Mr. tl. -"Of
course she ha. I heanl her y at bsr
party the other evening thttt her hu-
! band had given her a carte hi audi".
Mr. ;. " It'-i one of ths basket
phai:toiis. I guesv ' I'he I'.nu.bUr.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
--The Fourth of July will not romi
on Sunday again uuul lH!i7.
A Butlalo (N V ) aliKn hii a fliMr
which is studded with stiver dollar".
Iu the center is plnced n twenty dollar
gold piece. The .due of the floor 1
-aid to be four hundred dollar.
Little Claud Caughell, nine, yenr
old. was bitten In the foot hy a rattle
snake, in the foot hills, ne.tr I'mmm.
('.tl.. anil died within three hour. Ir
-jite of whitky ami other albgl anli-
lotCs.
A crdored gentleman who in m
popetl in the mttney-Iendinp buduen at
(Quitman, (Ja.. alway rcfuc to lt
ut motiMt to any otic of hi ow n re.
no matter how pood or how nuumrou
the ae-uritb are .V. f) TttnrM.
Ir Bichardson. of London, a mo,
celebrated phyiotau and one w bo bu
given several year f tudy on tbr
beneht of cycling, i emphatically of
thr opinion that there U no exenjl?
for women that it uporinr u triey
clinp. A man of Dav County. Minn.,
live on the bank of 3 larpw lak
where wild duek make their tn-!.
He hunts up their nest and replace
the epp with I'iz truttt hi hennery.
Die wild duck have hatched out a
nunilr of fine bno-l of chicken. fr
him. Hi hen have no tlm for ltv
ting around.
Atlanta 1 the thin! Jargt ru.1
market in tbe wttrld. Ind'n cmw
fir-t. New York n- anl Atlanta
third. J-onlbrd s4bl "i-JK "utidi
of nuff in that ntr la! year, and oth
er maker abtKit I.VU' poind.
houe there j-M C.l ;Mjtid. In
Macon Iorilbnl t-dd ITi.Ulrt. .V. ',
Trxlinr.r
A Nonralk (Cor.n.) nctb:r. tk
inp a final nrrr-i ! Iter little ime be
fore they .t,rh-l lor Sunday -bot.
notice! vKiifthing mmatural ia tlvi
hang xf a four-y tar-b! 4r. Ji
inve.tjga:ej, and foMttd crW t.j
mm
non. wnit txr-. y. ur protst nj
daughter u huwh ba-4w x dog Uuty Zt
a Urjcu -JlrirrJ IJ,
- a - - - -m - m ww- ,
. . -
itapui rtirvj water .Vfter allow tag
th-3i v irai for :wi ur three miaalrt
arraage lijeia xi $v. Th gutai
toriM a ct:V. ctinz oa t)ij ttftM
aaj pKai, and prr-Trc tlnnr hapt
and color long a!tr tley haTe tocoa:
dry- lrrij JUraUi.
A fm.iT td rprrrw built tbtir ai
tb- xd vf ti walking beam of a
HutUoa riTrr truuboat. Tb boM
lat at th wharf at the tinxr. afJ
lb? tgjf wrv laid in th-s fct Urforw
W wa ready to go. TV: old bird
were in a pitiful flatter whea ti great
Ua began to more up aa-d dowa
attd for a time tasry emtxl to qoetoa
tke adriaabilitr of trying to aialauba
a home ha aek aa unsteady pt- FI
Bally they becaaae reeoacxled aad wwl
o tie bJat to Xew York aad Wet
avreral trip before ike IkU
mm,cl4.Mb1 Tim.
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