The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, February 26, 1897, Page 3, Image 3

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TITLES AND STRIPES.
SCIONS OF EUROPEAN ARIS
TOCRACY NOW IN PRISON.
Nnrrj Mm of I'lifnrtuii.iK' Mttln of
tlm llii'tltiillc l')iifiiiriirr f lillc
AniCHlr -Tho IIiiMiiii Printed Suffer
for h hliiKltliiB Murder.
HE sentence of
Lady Scott in Lon
don for circulating
tjrr- yl I IIUL'13 I'UIIll'I IIII1K
I '.'IW Q RuhfgII, calls at-
tcntlon to tho fnct
that there nre nt
present In Europe
qulto a number of
other people of tl-
tie nnd rank undcr
folng more or less lengthy terms of
mprlsonment.
Iady Gunning, widow of Sir Henry
Gunning nnd granddaughter of the sec
ond Lord Churchill, Is serving a term
of several years' penal servltudo for
having forged the name of her father
to a number of notes, on which she
subsequently raised money from Lon
don note discounters and tradesmen.
She might have escaped with a punish
ment less severe hnd the fact not been
brought to light during tho trial that
her frauds had extended over a num
ber of years, nnd that the financial ne
cessities which had prompted her to
resort to this means of obtaining mon
ey had been caused by her reckless
ness In betting on tho races.
Another lady of high soclul standing
who was recently called upon to under
go Imprisonment with hard labor was
tho wife of Captnln Osborne, of the
crack cavalry regiment of Scots Greys.
Mrs. Osborne, who belonged by birth
to the aristocratic house of Elliott, and
who had Inherited in her own right
a little fortune of about $8,000 a year,
had purloined the pearl necklace of her
dearest friend, Mrs. Hargroavo, whllo
Flaying at the latter's castle, and had
then sold it to a London Jeweler In or
der to pay some pressing liabilities.
Equal severity was extended to
Gwynneth Maude, granddaughter of
iho Earl of Montalt, who was senten
ced to a couple of years' Imprisonment
nith hard labor for obtaining goody
under false pretenses.
Tho Dowager Duchess of Sutherland,
aioro fortunate, was exempted from
hard labor and convict garb during tho
fix months' imprisonment that she re
cently underwent. Sho was convicted
of destroying, In the presence of law
yers and Judges, a document which
had been Impounded by the court and
which was stated to contain evidence
that would have doomed her to defeat
in a suit against her son-in-law, the
present Duke. Sho completed her
term in Holloway prison, where Lady
Scott is now undergoing her punish
ment, and, like the latter, was per
mitted many little luxuries beyond the
reach of ordinary overy-day prisoners.
Mrs. Montague, daughter of Lord
Robert Montague, was convicted a year
or two ago of the most shocking cru
elty to her children, one of whom suc
cumbed thereto. The popular feeling
waH that she deserved hanging. But
owing to tho tremendous Influence ex
ercised In her behalf by all the rela
tions of the ducal house of Manches
ter, to which sho belongs, she was
let off with a term of two years' lm
prlsonmcnt without hard labor.
In times gone by an English duch
ess, namely, Her Grace of Kingston,
underwent imprisonment for bigamy
and forgery. At tho present moment
there aro actually relatives of the
Queen who aro "doing time." They
benr the name of Count and Countess
Lclningen and belong to the princely
and sovereign house of that name. The
first husband of Queen Victoria's moth
er was a Prince of Lelnlngon. Whllo
TRINCE VALLARDA.
the Count is wearing stripes in An
English penitentiary, the Countess Is
in Jail at Vienna for a long series of
crimes, Including forgery, blackmail
ing and swindling.
Tho Marchioness of Donegal, a peer
ess of Great Britain, has time and again
been sent to Jail, generally for brlof
periods, following her arrest In the
streets of London for drunkenness and
disorderly conduct.
American visitors to Baden-Baden, a
couple of years ago wero brought Into
contact with a Baroness von Glelssen
berg and her very pretty daughter. The
latter was in great demand owing to
hor magnificent contralto volco. She
took part In many of tho charitable
entertainments during the season.
Roth of these ladles nre now serving
a Ecntenco of four years' Imprisonment
for larceny nnd fraud, During tho
course of tho trlnl It was shown that
although they belong to ono of tho
oldest families of Prussia, yet for four
years previous to their conviction they
had boen living almost exclusively on
tho proceeds of crime. Among their
fellow Inmates in prUon is Countess
siijY
jj i
In!
THE
Wnldeck. n member of the reigning
family of that nnme, and first cousin
of that Princess Wnldeck who married
Queen Victoria's youngest so;.. She is
undergoing punishment for perjury nnd
forgery of so aggravated n character
that not all the Influence brought to
bear by her princely relatives was nblo
to exempt her from penalty.
It enjoys the distinction of possess
ing two convict dukes. They arc the
chiefs of the grand old Sicilian princely
house of Villarosa, and aro undoi going
a term of penal servitude in tho great
penitentiary of Maddelona, near Na
ples, for the cowardly murder of a
young Infantry lleutennnt named Le
one, who was betrothed to their sister,
the Princess Catarlnl. Tho assassina
tion took place at Palermo, In the mag
nificent Villarosa palace, which they
own there. They hnd invited tho
young offlcer to dine with them In tho
most friendly manner. After dinner
tho two princes took his life by stab
bing him as ho was nbout to leavo tho
palace.
In tho same prison Is the Prince
Caracclolo, sentenced to ten years'
hard labor for the murder of his wife.
A very beautiful woman, she notori
ously deserted him, nnd when ono day
she was found poisoned with arsenic
purchased by him, and lenvlng a will In
which her Immense property was be
queathed to him, he was very natur
ally arrested as her murderer.
Powerful llptll rind.
The Sportsmen's Review tells of the
strength of the devil fish, which aro
caught regulorly as a pastimo nt only
ono point on the gulf. Tho fishermen
of Naples on the Gulf of Mexico fish
PRINCE CHARICOLA.
for devil fish and get them. "Col. Dob
Hnllowny," according to the Review,
"wns fishing for tho monsters with
a party of friends, from a naphtha
launch, when they hnd a strike. The
launch wns twenty-five feet long and
contained ten persons. This the fish
towed around for an hour, uttnlnlng
a speed of six knots nt times, in spite
of the fact that the propeller of tho
launch was backing. Tlio whole light
was in sight of the hotel guests, who
had assembled to seo the battle be
tween fin and propeller. When the
nnlmal was finally tired out and
towed nshore it required six men to
drag it out. On propping Its mouth
open, a. salt barrel could have been
rolled Into it. It measured twenty-two
feet from wing tip to wing tip."
Another Naples fish story follows:
"Mrs. Hugh McDonald was Ashing for
sharks. She had a bite. On pulling
In, the head of a shark that had been
at least four feet long was found. Somo
shark had bitten the first capture In
two. Later the big fellow wub hooked
by Mrs. McDonnld and was pulled In.
The Bccond shark was more than Of
ten feet long."
Crnre for Striding Ilomex.
One of the most peculiar prisoners
in tho Georgia penal camps is Gyp
South, a twelve-year-old white boy, the
son of rcspcctablo parents, who has
been sentenced to five years for horso
stealing. It is shown that up to ten
years of age he was an exemplary boy.
At that period he had an attack of
brain fever. After this attack ho
seemed to have a mania for horses,
and his father bought him a horso and
buggy. Within three dayB Gyp drovo
to a wagon yard, and gavo the rig
away. The next day ho went down to
a coal yard and stolo a mule and
wagon. Strange to say ho Is normal
for threo weeks, and in the fourth he Is
uncontrollable. In the ponnl camp he
carries this peculiarity, and each fourth
week goes about stealing tho prison
horses Just ns If he were free.
nang'ra of (loir.
How easily a fatal accident may oc
cur nt golf wa3 recently shown in
England. It is pretty certain that a
ball driven hard will kill a man, but
In this case death was caused merely
by tho raising of tho club preparatory
to striking. Tho report says that an
Inquest was held nt the Neptune hotel,
Old Hunstanton, on tho body nf Hu
bert Coker Rldgers, 10, who died on
tho golf links, having been accidentally
struck on the back of the head by a
follow caddy named Uoverley, tho de
ceased being behind him when lie
raised the club preparing to strlko the
ball. Ho died in a few minutes from
concussion df the brain. San Fran
cisco Examiner.
Much llf-tlnr.
Nervous Prisoner "Had I better get
hold of a lawyer, do you think? It's
threo years If thoy convict me."
Friendly Constnb!o "Humph! In
that case you'd better get hold of n
Juryman." Truth.
Insurance companies claim that bi
cycling is moro dangerous than trav
eling either by rail or ship.
ilf:ilSlll
RED CLOUD CHIEF, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26 17.
THEATRICAL LETTER.
SAYINGS AND DOINGS OF THE
PLAYERFOLK.
Snt Vitrk Corrmrmnilent Tll of tlm
New Pin mill Plu)rr of the I'wtl
Month Mnry MnnnrrlnR mill Limine
Hiwilrt 'fnhti Hare AriiIm.
HE new produc
tions of tho month
in New York in
clude "Castle Som
bras," by Richard
Mansfield, nt tho
Garden Theater;
"The Rogue's Com
edy," at Wallack's,
by E. S. Wlllard;
'The Girl From
Paris," at tho Her
ald Square Theater, by Edward E.
Rico's company; "An American
Heauty," at tho Casino, by Lillian Rus
sell; "The Seats of the Mighty," at tho
Knickerbocker, by Herbert Recrbohm
Tree; the opening drama of the Empire
stock season; two now plays by tho
Lyceum Theater Stock Company; tho
production of "Tho Hobby Horse," by
John Hnre; and the first New York per
formances of Charles Hoyt's "A Con
tented Womnn." The Now York pub
lic certainly has no reason to complain
of either the quality or the quantity of
the mntcrlal brought to Its considera
tion In the theaters. Thcro has not
been a season within the writer's
recollection when the stngo offerings
have been so rich or so widely vnrled
as they have been thus far during the
MARY
winter term until surprise is felt that
the supply has not been exhausted.
A Pronounrcil l'allurr.
The most undoubted failure of tho
season since the production of "The
Liar" at Hoyt's Theater early In Sep
tember, was "The Seats of tho Mighty,"
with which Mr. Tree opened his New
York season at the Knickerbocker.
The play was announced as a dramati
zation of Gilbert Parker's novel of tho
same name, but proved to possess very
few if any of tho good qualities of
that tale, demonstrating either that
tho book was not suited to dramatiza
tion as is often tho case with really
interesting examples of current fiction
A
YVi iTTiiW "
ii i
f VHMJ 'I ' '
LOUISE BAUDET.
or thut It was very Imperfectly
treated In its transfer from the library
to tho stage. Its conversations wero
long drawn out, and at times there was
an evident and undlsgulsable effort at
epigram which proved to bo anything
but diverting. The action was nlow
and halting, and the' character assumed
by Mr. Treo fell short of expectations.
So also, wo may add, did Mr. Tree's
assumption of it. The play was placed
upon tho stage In an elaborate and lav
ish way, and only the most completo
weakness In the drama itself could
havo occasioned tho failure. It was
abandoned, after a single week, in fa
vor of "Tho Dancing Girl," nnd other
pieces in Mr. Treo's repertoire. Theso
served to fill out the Now York en
gagement. Mr. Tree's company this
year Is not brilliant. Tho only mem
bers commanding prnlso aro Koto
Rorko and Lionel Brough.
"Tlm ItoKue' Comedy."
Tho offering mado by Mr. E. 8. Wll
lard upon bis return to New York, at
M.
yr & m:
Wallack's (formerly Palmer's) Thea
ter on the evening of Dec. 7, was a new
play from the pen of Henry Arthur
Jones, called "Tho Rogue's Comedy."
The iltunui hnd already been plnod In
England with considerable success, nnd
had also been presented In Boston pi lor
to Mr. Wlllard's Now York engage
ment. This actor first won his spurs
In London an nn Interpreter of what
nre known to the people of the theater
ns "heavy parts" -otherwise, villains.
In the melodramas produced by Wilson
Barrett at the Princess" Theater, Mr.
Wlllaid was for several seasons ob
served In various phases of rascality,
and he plncd these parts so well that
ho won the cordial approbation of the
critics and the corresponding nnd more
vociferous hostility of tho occupants of
pit and gallery. He acquired In that
IIbo of acting a certain Immobility of
countenance and repression of the emo
tions which ho was never able to en
tirely shako off In his subsequent In
terpretations of moro sympathetic
roles after he becamo a star.
Illilinril MMtiftflelit' StieccM.
Richard Matisfleld'H season nt the
Garden Theater has been gratifying In
every respect. He began with the re
vival of a series of plays already made
familiar by him -somo of them by oth
er nnd older actors and the reception
Hint awaited him was so cordial that
It became necessary to postpono "Castlo
Sombras," she play which had been
prepared ns the principal novelty of
his New York senson, It was finally
presented during tho fourth week of
his stny at the Garden, nnd will form a
worthy addition to the list of stage
workB controlled by him. Mr. nnd Mrs.
MANNERING.
Mansfield (Bcatrlco Cameron) have con
tinually grown, not nlono In personal
favor, but in artistic rango. Mr. Mans
field Is easily at the head of the dra
matic profession In America, with no
apparent danger of receding in favor
of other players.
Tlio (llrl from I'urU.
In lighter vein is tho Imported mu
sical comedy called "Tho Girl from
Paris," which had Its Initial American
performnnco nt tho Herald Square
Theater, Tuesday evening, Dec. 8.
This piece has enjoyed an extended and
prosperous career thiough the English
provinces under tho title, "Tho Gay
Farlslenne," but Its namo was changed
for America owing to Its similarity to
"Tho Gay Parisians," which ran tho
better -part of last winter at Hoyt's
Theater. Tho cast contains Josephine
Hnll, Joseph Herbert, Clara Llpman,
Louis Mann, and other comedy players
of note.
.John Hum's Iteturn.
Mr. John Hare's return to American
soli has not been marked by any new
production of great import. His repor
tolre for this season consists principally
of such time-worn but always charming
plas as "School," "Ours," and the
other Robertson comedies. His only
now piece, at the Knickerbocker Thoa
ter January 4, wns "Tho Hobby
Horse," by A. W. Plnero. Tho piece Is
noticeable principally for Its literary
merit, which is of tho high order
alwuys to be expected from this nuthor.
Mr. Haro as an actor grows upon his
audiences. When ho first camo to this
country ho did not seem llknlv tn win
i success, but as his engagement prog
ressed his popularity Increased, and he
found a warm welcomo awaiting him
upon his return the othor night.
Tlm Count I.eoule.
"The Courtship of Leonle," tho first
play of tho regular season at tho Ly
ceum Theater, was snmowhat more
melodramatic in tono thnn tho pntrons
of that establishment had been accus
tomed to, but was received with de
cided favor and ran for soveral weeks
to largo attendance. In addition to its
own merits, It Introduced to New York
Miss Mary Mannerlng, who had not
pievlously played In this city.
The Itleh.
Panfry Peto frowned heavily. "See
here, tenderfoot," ho snld, "that brogue
of yours is too rich. It'll get you Into
.trouble. Our peoplo aro powerfully
down on plutocracy." Detroit Journal,
ARM MADE OF GLASS.
A NEW YORK MAN HAS A VAL
UABLE MEMBER.
ItcinMin for thr I'liinnul Mntrrlut-
Mitrti-loiM Mrilmiilmn In I In- Inlrrlor
SiiimII Mtllehliimril with Ucitrlr
Hut tun.
HE uso that glass
Is being put to
nowadays are truly
legion. Houses have
even been built of
that fragile ma
terial, statues have
been cast In it,
furniture of nil
kinds, from beds
to tables and
chairs have been
fashioned from It, whllo for a long time
past all sorts of surgical Instruments
and appliances have been made of It,
says the New York Recorder. With
out glass Sir Joseph Lister's princi
ples of nntlseptlcs and tho present sys
tem of asteptle surgery would bo well
nigh Impossible. Nothing can bo so
easily kept clean as glass, and as
cleanliness is tho key-note of the
miuvultiiisly hiiccessful surgery of
today the modern operating room
Is n veritable, crystal palace. The
operating tables, tho Instrument enses
and often even tho cellng nnd
walls of theso rooms arc all of purest
polished plato glass.
Glass eyes have long replaced the
lost organs of vision nnd enn bo made
50 cleverly as to almost defy detection.
Glass noses nre even made, nnd If we
so far back In history, even to tho his
tory of fairyland, wo would probably
discover that tho existing Impetus to
the glass Industry dates back to Cin
derella's slippers of fabled famo.
But theso are fin do slecle days, and
the most recent nnd nt the same tlmo
most innrvelous uso glass hns been put
to Is In the making of artificial limbs.
There Is a man In New York today
a prominent downtown business man
it that who, so far as his friends, or,
at least, all but his most Intimate nnd
:onfldcntlnl friends, know, hnB two
irms ns good and ns serviceable as any
jiio'b else, whoso left arm Is mado of
(labs. i
Tho only thing, so fnr as appearances
ire concerned, that would indicate that
mythlng Is tho matter with his arm
Is tho fact that ho Invariably carries
his left hand In his pocket. When
Vtestloncd about It he settles all doubt
by simply answering: "Ithcumntlsni.
I'm subject to it. If I don't keep my
hand warm It gots chilled and I suffer
in consequence, so I keep it my pock
et that's all." And tho questioner
.isually goes away perfectly satisfied.
But the story of this wonderful glass
arm tho only ono In cxlstenco Is well
worth being told. Some yours ago
Mr. B y, the gentleman In question,
wns out shooting. Somehow or other
the muzzle of the weapon became clog
ged up with nand nnd exploded when
discharged, lacerating Mr. B y's left
arm In tho most frightful manner. He
was taken to his uptown homo nnd tho
most skillful surgeons summoned, but
to no avail; tho arm hnd to amputated
to save tho man's llfet for symptoms
of blood-poisoning speedily developed.
To be maimed and nn object of pity
for the rest of ono's life Is unythlng but
pleasant, nnd so soon ns ho was able
to be about Mr. B y sot sail Tor Eu
rope, "for his health," It was said, but
In reality It was In search of an arm.
A lingo ulster and bandages Innumer
able concealed tho fact of his loss
from his fcllow-passongers until he
hnd once reached his state-room and
thcro ho remained until the end of the
voyage.
Tho only persons who nccompnnlcd
him wero his young dnughtor, n beau
tiful girl then 17 years old, but now
one of tho pets of tho exclusive society
set of Murray Hill, and ono man. This
man Is an Inventor of nntlonal reputa
tion nnd, so far ns the public was con
cerned, went to Europo simply for a
holiday. His name is as familiar to
tho public as that of Edison and his
marvelous laboratories arc in tho heart
of New York.
Ho had little to do with cither Mr.
or Miss B y during the course of
tho voyage, but a weok after tho ar
rival of tho French liner nt Havre the
trio met at Vcnico and tho most skill
ful glassblowcr In that Italian city was
taken into their confidence.
The result was that some threo
months later Mr. B y returned to
New York, halo and hearty, with two
arms. Tho hand of his left nrm Is
never gloved unless its mate is also
gloved, and tho closest Bcrutlny falls
to reveal any difference between it and
tho natural hand, and yot It Is nothing
but glnss to within five inches of tho
elbow.
Some time ago It was discovered that
it a small quantity of oil wero poured
Into molten glass it would greatly
lesben Its friability and mnko it voj-y
elastic, and of this peculiar elastic
glass is the arm made. It has a( dull
finish, giving an exact appenrunco of
natural skin, and tho coloring is the
work of an artist and burned In. Tho
nails nro of separate pieces of trans
parent glass, fused into place, and
havo to be kept clean like ordinary
finder nails. The arm lUelf Is hollow
nnd the hidden parts, above the wrist,
are colorless, transparent glnss. It is
mr.de in three pieccB tho one reaching
to tho elbow, tho center piece to the
yrlst, nnd tho third tho hand.
'V.HCUptlt
"Aren't you Into in getting homo
from Sunday school, Bobby?" "Well,
I guess! Thcro was a man there who
mado an all-day speech and I thought
he would never get out." "Who was
he?" "Aw, I forgot his name, but he
was an escaped missionary." Judge,
USE OF SLANd.
IMIrntr Aiill ntlim of It Mmta
Hlilllful Ailrptn.
The really amusing fenturo of slniifc,
sas a wilier In the Illustrated Ameri
can, Is not the expression Itself so
much as the dellenlo nnd fanciful ap
plication of it niacin by skillful bauds.
"Dontcher know" has been establish
ed so extensively and generally that
the listener's ear tnkes no moro notleo
of It thnn of a punctuation murk.
Nevertheless, It Is an Irritation to hear
It constantly repented. "You under
stand me, you tee what 1 mean?"
thrown In nt tho end of every sen
tence, even though the conversation
may be about the simplest matter,
causes a nervously Intelligent nutlltor
to feel that he is being mistaken for
an Imbecile. To ask a man with special
rmplinslH if ho understands, when tho
subject before him could bo under
stood by n child of 2, borders on Insult.
The good-humored, pachydermatous
spenker has no appreciation of tho Ir
rltatloti he Is causing nor of the keen
sarcasm of the occasional reply hn
elicits. Slang seems to bo tho natural
mode of expression for tho boy nt
school nnd college. From him It
spreads to his slstcra nnd not to know
the meaning of all the complicated and
arbitrary terms argues one's self out
of the world of youth. To bo In sym
pathy with It one must hnvo at least n
bowing acquaintance, with this strange
nnd ephemeral InngunRC.
Aniiwerrtl. '
James T. Fields, the Boston publish
er, had n good memory, nnd his knowl
edge of English literature was well
known to be both accurate nnd exten
sive. An exchange rclntcs an amusing
story of a would-be wit who once tried
to entrap him. The incident occurred
at a dinner pnrty. Before Mr. Fields'
arrival one of the gentlemen informed
the other guests that he had written
some lines which he Intended to sub
mit to'Mr. Fields as Southcy's, and to
ask In which of that author's works
they could be found. At n lull in the
conversation after the dinner was tn
progress the would-be wit began:
"Mr. Fields, I have been somewhnt
puzzled of late In searching out In
Southoy's poems his well-known lines
running thus," repenting tho lines he
hnd composed. "Can you tell me when
he wrote them nnd whero they are to
be found?"
"I do not remember to have met
with them before," replied the publish
er; "nnd there were only two periods
In Southey'H life when such lines could
possibly havo been written by him."
"When were thoso?"
"Somewhere," snld Mr. Fields, "about
that early period of his existence when
he was having the measles or cutting
his first teeth, or nenr the close of his
life when his brain was softened. Tho
versification belongs to the measles
period, but the Ideas betray the idiotic
one."
The company roared,
r f"
i J i
IliillcU Ilellrctnl by Klectrli'ltyT v
At a recent ride meeting in Switzer
land it was discovered, according to a
Geneva Journal's report, thut the stcel
Jackcted bullets of tho marksmen
were swerved from their course by tho
Influence of telegraph and telephone
wires running alongside the range.
Experiments wero then mado at Thun
by plnclng four steel cables parallel
with the range, nnd about 40 yards
distant from It, nnd sending a cur
rent of 8,000 voltB through thom. Tho
effect, It is said, was to turn the bul
lets so far from their courso that tho
deviation amounted to 24 yards on a
range of 2C0 ynrds. Tho bullets on
being tnketi from the tnrgets wero
found to be magnetized. Next, on an
artillery rango of 3,000 yards, the
electro-magnetic Influence was gen
erated 200 yards in front of tho targets
nnd 40 yards to ono side. Tho pro
jectiles were swerved 14 degrees from
a straight line.
Uinta KtrmiRrly Concealed.
Mr. A. H. Thayer, an artist, believes
he has discovered that the light color
of tho under parts of birds and small
mammals serves to conceal them from
their enemies. At a recent meeting
of the American Ornithologists' Union
ho proved by experiments that an ob
ject nearly of tho color of the ground,
like a potato, Is very conspicuous -when
placed u few inches above tho soil
und viewed from a Uttlo distance. But
whon tho under side Is painted white,
and gradually shaded Into tho color of
the upper part, tho object disappears
by blending with tho ground; tho
whiteness "beneath counteracts the ef
fect of the shadow of the body.
White Hluvi-e of Old Kiiiclund.
. Eight hundred years ago all of tbt
large cities of Engln)id had regular
slave markets for tho salo of white
slaves from all parts of the kingdom.
In the "Life of Bishop Wulfstand" tha
writer says: "It was a moving sight to
seo in the public market rows of young
people of both sexes tied together and
sold like eattlo men, unmindful of
their obligations, delivering Into slav
ery their relatives, and oven their own
children." In another part or this
work It Is noted that among these
slaves wero "particularly young wom
en, of flno proportions and of grca
beauty."
Don't Like Poorliouneg.
There Is such a deop-rootcd dislike
among paupers In Ireland to enter th
workhouse that In tho county of An
trim, for instance, there aro only 1,000
person's in six workhouses Uvit hav
room for 5,000.
In the Vermicular.
Teacher Will some little boy kindly
give a modern version of tho saying
that there Is no roso without a thorn?"
Flddsy Dey Is no push wldout a
knocker. Indianapolis Journal.
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