Advocate (Newspaper) - December 3, 1880, Tipton, Indiana of a let ns one ir Me f snrr lisle note awaiting him M irii li had jaffi f bat or to afford iu Pick read I i ntc a curling tossing it lie Ik a iu chair and fan fig lo float around i precious liar the i I I leu minutes vata ul to me this driving willi ji dog of if lie had of got righl too it tue yuu tory f lulling y it been masters jji waving fro in i nud depre un TOUT poor little 1 uT tJi tor u but 1 vou Urt huv uil and wondering was doomed I you the friendly J just said to as yon came that be sallow skin and bald ou your you in look like sin old your Why dont jop take 1o life early hours aud up a bit dont you your and kindly me to attend to retorted now waiting for another word 1m around and uie mid pro at liis iH By this timo lie to feel who to HaT told already that lie was iul a 1 what was there left for him to Ho certainly had uit bo many people aud he hud he blonde licad half hidden Jt whom he had to tonight and whom liyo hours ago havo in distantly Hut for some niss lien modified in short a time and he felt a positive I bJt ne was the lust nothings his and lnr blue eyes uplifted with il admiring W his t have cost her a liua 3eal of to up its wan to sneer at tlie of Mich honest and endear ing The next minute Inwas liy her j haven it I looked very pretty her fair hair in bonie on of hir little head her bright face lit np and her white silk the colored with i wfl and shirting that pleased icks cultivated He i Of to whom a womans i 1 in here for a little she anbo terribly and is very Dont sijI aiKi jas than for opm I have while wherever J out nic Was Kut i fc i of ill Wat it ttC ttf o really a his waUb and wih fi groan into iiii j i very tud by he en e lituji house n Miss do you is dancing now with Torn J ai glare I itut all the tlie ii ijt of flIr although i v n iu half UJ i you were to IK J J iell and in i va thi it nap to i up for fv you k her lo bee if she face was You tre flattening so 1 don t the ani there i of who are aj ways yon cau bt rather you at your and she t f rum tu griet a Wat J rrer damned with ench faint thought 1 won 4er 31 am best For a taking a survey of tbe before bim were and only strange Bay there was ar ame piping in little treble in a to He thought of Mozarts saying the only tiling in the world worse a flute in an wan two and at in as long mi ut WM there be might as well fell a tl SI 1 dont know her never did she say to you She told me T was awkward aud a and intimated thoroughly a laugh as clear and mem as silver But yon she your 1 test friends do not claim for you that yon dance Uick and then recovered he was getting hardened I always nattered myself I he said She looked at him in some Of I dont mean to she that cannot get around with you at but only that you are not very graceful aud There are men here who dance for I should no said as a who held IK ho was packed with dynamite aud was in dauber every minute of moved past the that is the IKsi can nay for Miss 1 shall never have audacity yon dance and with a heavy hear he now f he had had enough Greys He took a glass of champagne in tho being freely discussed by the young men who lingered aud back to pay his palling respects to his were still plenty but a chill seemed to have fallen on tho dancers were and looked bored or discontented Grey was Baying the last words tTa party of guests who were abont Such a pity it should hava been a ho heard one of them whisper in a tone of And after all tlie yon have gone to Iain it must have been the fault of my returned for my part as well as I are you going so soon 1 if found my parly a stupid one Sha looked so harassed that Dick for got the grudge ho owed and would gladly have declared her ball both bril liant and bnt the words he wished to say his i absolutely could not give them An awful impulse WILS upon and to his secret horror and heard himself assuring her the that the most dismal affair he had ever witnessed iu his Then overwhelmed with shame at his turned and his eyes fell upon tlie crimson roses still blooming freshly over the What an idiot he must have been There in letters were tlie three Palace of As he looked and the flute pealed forth so and with BO shrill whoa be bad met 4t a triumph in its tone Pick he had ad and in of his start will die guarded and kicked the who leaped admiration pf a reteran f Ont of his masters way and gazed at him It they were F witli wonderful 1 toot vith 4heir ji as I am a living for a and in j and no ball until a lundi sent them why didnt you gainst another pair o j awaken j v ijj was He felt the arrant it Raid i of and bore it with M stopped to take breath j the equanimity of a f i said his as he of the brown lit his you did and as hem hie Vou I have had all the all tlie j you not in thaH more in my hfa 2wo limn i the candor I need for one you and I will go and gratefully to Mid Jt mart be aerer can i if have heard had A couple of negroes were talking One asked Uncle Hose I of a orator has read dat in de and il sorter stumped Old whc never failed to answer any erei orator is one back on word when he promis yon a sObar for Booths Jenny in her New York letter o the Baltimore says The ast time Booth appeared in city it was at tho Madison Avenue Thea for the benefit of Poo Statue It was noticed j then that he with more mil than he had exhibited or aud the fact was commented upon witli pleasure and The ruth Edwin Booth had suffer ug for many years past the most severe due r to a physical ailment at onco mysterious and It was what is sometimes a tongue malady which baffled all the who first diagnosed his There was a pretty general agreement the eminent doctors ho consulted hat symptoms on his a cancerous Ono old him he liad cancer of the liver an located it in tho and all that his lli in his early life had been a pretty but since the death of his irst and if disease he has led an Being a nan of his tongue weighed upon his spirits and un affected his study and inter of favorite Ho lost nuch of liis fire and all of his spon supposed by the public nothing of his o have long iigo reached his and to 1m gradually jut chance or Providence made him with a physician who makes a of rare and mysterious which the 3ven no was at first closely the made up his mind that he disease was of parasitic and niit it was It required six months of treatment o effect a but it was finally jno grateful actor uade his physician a present of a atd to the spoon added a check The cup is now on exhibition at at and is a beautiful specimen if the art of the silversmith Booth vent away in such excellent spirits at the that the cloud had been dissi which had hung so long over his that he fully expected to do work in than ever before luring his professional of the opinion that he could kvp cured or at least greatly relieved her distressing It will IMS that hat great artist died of One removed twice and the other once during the continuance of her long painful bnt when urged icar the close to seek such aid as could c who grown of the whole med ial I prefer dying in any of their medica f Her experience was only that of the and witty Fanny Tames aud also our own lamented Alice these gifted women lied of the same dreadful after rom twenty to thirty years of and at in the case of Alice frightful A Poetic Then is a quite singular fact in con with Stiles iu Uie town of known to the country res dents living within sight of that For six decades two tall elm ives side by a little distance upon the topmost point of the levation these trees were visible for miles and from this fact hey noted More hau sixty years ago two little girls were to over the summit of this hill during the summer to their fathers cows to were impressed by tho at of the and often tar ied to gaze at the widespread One day they conceived the idea of each a tree upon the hid sum would be to them a reminder if their days in the years to They put ther idea into and two slender elm snoots soon waved heir green branches as solitary sentinels n the open space round Years by and the shoots grew into The girls to womanhood and passed out of the home into the wide Occasionally they would meet one an allude to the living reminders of youthful and often they would isit the familiar of their lood and would sit beneath the wide spreading branches the mammoth About five one of the jirls an aged lady of almost Scarcely had the of her death tho of her than tho neighbors discovered hat one of the elms was Its wilted and withered as though scorched by and although mid summer yet the foliage fell to the leaving the lifeless and stock looking Decay quickly followed in the tree and during a high ne night the following it fell to the earth The other though an still and the old elm which she planted in her tresh young girlhood still But the to the above circumstances are watch it with feeling that a subtle two and that the one will cease with the ill ef a The following of a murder which was committed in Bermuda in the autumn of 1878 is by the 3cneral of the Brownlow Gray In tlie autumn of 1878 a man com mitted a terrible crime in which was for some time involved in deep His a handsome and decent mulatto disappeared suddenly and entirely from after homo from church on October immediately fell upon tho a clover young fellow of about but no trace of tho miss ing woman was left and there seemed a strong probability the crime would remain On October a week after the woman had some looking out toward he as is their custom were struck y observing iu the Long Boy the surface of which was ruffled by a slight a long streak of such to nse their own of oil usually diffuses around it when in he The feverish anxiety about missing woman suggested sonic strange connection between this singular calm and the mode of her Two or three days not sooner cannot tell brother and three other men went out to the where it was and from which it hml not since and with a series of lish hooks ranged along a long ine dragged the bottom of tho at first Shifting Iho position of the they dragged a little further to and presently he lino was caught i With water glosses lie men discovered that they had caught it in a skeleton which was held down by ionic heavy pulled ou the Free aaf Easy i When girls a swaggering man ner upon expres sions and greet each other with a rough hello they cannot much de ference from their male friends A manner always controls that of a manaud does not respect aro al I into the absurdities of meaningless it seems to dwarf them intellectually they ean find nothing of interest or to and therefore make up fcr by Ml ing every sentence with needless exclama or I misused It compelled to r and hear of I They line something suddenly gave and ip came the skeleton of and legs of from which almost every flesh had but from tho minute and tho terrible had evidently not lain long iu the The husband was a fisli IB U In the practical working out of his views on health which Mems to gain in favor with German Professor of socalled normal which 1 ex of and 2 to keep warm middle line of the front of i the The general ob ject is to prevent accumulation of tat and water in the authors leading principle being i that the greater the specific gravity of the human body the more it is able to resist epidemic To tlie Well known properties of as regards moisture and Professor makes a curious He claims to prove that in onr organism there aro certain gaseous volatile which are being liberated in tho acts of breathing and and have relations to mental Two distinct anil substances of pleasure aud the former are exhaled durin a joyful mid pleasant slate of and this state with lightened vitality if Of tho lat the reverse is readi ly that joy and happiness tho odor of inspiration is not while and great nerv ous excitement it is The sub of disliking a bad and in an atmosphere of them tho vitality is lowered in a state of anguish and fear is more sus to contagions Professor contends that sheeps wool attracts tho substances of pleas and this is distinct from its great while clothing of favors the accumulation of the offensive of evil A large amount of experimental evidence is adduced ill of these The experience of tlie many persons who may huve adopted his normal both for summer jand for is stated a and Long Bay Channel was a favorite and he truly that the would very soou all means of identification but never entered into his head that hey did so their combined with he process of would set reu the matter which was to write the races of his crime on tlie surface of the The case seems to be an interesting one tho calm is not mentioned in any book on medical juris prudence that I and doctors seeni not to have hod experience of such an A diver went down and bund a stone with a rope by which the body had held and also portions of the scalp and of the skin of tlie solo of the and of by means of which the body was The husband was found guilty and The Origin of the i The word morgue hod originally a far different meaning from that which it now In old dictionaries it is de fined as a haughty being derived from the word to to It is also used the to express the idea of inspecting or intently and closely any person of object Madame do in a letter to Madame do it when she writes writes mo from three leagues from where ho has gone to the The Morgue was originally the second or wicket at the When newly arrested were marched in the turnkeys used to halt them iu front wicket in order that the jailers might them at their that is to over and engrave their features in the It was there that tho corpses picked up on the public fir drag ged from tho deposited for in there was constructed upon the Qua du Marche at the northeast angle of the Pout a specially set apart for the exhibition of the un known The opening of new boulevards has singularly modified that and the morgue is today re moved to the extremity of the upon that little island a long time since united to the main and was in for mer days called La f ape lards The Hillock of the The consists of two separated by a glass partition running from the floor to the and trom one aide of the room to the through which partition the visitor sees lying on the twelve or stone the dead bodies sometimes partially again entirely naked save a little strip of linen about the One of the most pathetic sights we ever wit there was the corpse of a not more than 3 years of seated In a highchair as she was drawn trom the her baby rattle clutched still in her tiny her little white cap on her and wearing the cus tomary short blouse of the children of Poor little baby 1 she bid tumbled in the Seine while at per while her mother was busily at work in some Parti at in I a comical etory from the wife of ah American gentleman who resides in the It seems tobacco is a Government monopoly the raising of than dozen plants by any one person is strictly Tho gar dener engaged by my friend had rather land embellished several of his ornamental flowerbeds with it So one day the lady was waited upon who informed her as ahe had transgressed the rules respecting the cultivation of to by ahe would have to pay a fine of iome the Dep uty bom the district WM great intimacy with the sod them out of the He to call on and to him that the offending wen of of a other Who wag Bluebeard A gentleman who saw the ing of rising tho s lion of tells who the frightful hero of the nursery was Some reader may Who was this historical Bluebeard i I answer that in Brittany ho was tho Gilles de a feudal vast estates and great power in this neighborhood in the latter part of the fourteenth and beginning of the fifteenth and a marshal of This castle wus his and he rilled it and the country around with a hand of iron arid a sword of Gifted in youth with physical strength and aud an enormous lie impaired both by sorts of in i When too with a defiled and bloated ho found himself lashed liy the scorpion whip that ia always sure lo follow j Instead of he only became moro bloody and Seduced by a wicked and cunning alchemist to that by bathing in Iniman blood he could back his vanished and he children and young persons of murdered them in the dun geons of the castle with his own and bathed iu their warm It was that more than a hun dred were thus After years of impunity the matter lie so much fear through the country that the people rose in a mass against made him a and carried him to i There he was tried by j his suzerain the of and con to be burnt alive at the a judgment carried into execution in 1440 IHI what is now the Chanssee de Ia Made on the in front of where the great hospital now Died ss a King written a book On the in which occurs the following was fond of telling the following story i as his experience of American exemplified in a Western of lithe In thei last act of said I was very anxious to havo the who was rather of a democrat ic turn of i to when I stabbed over the steps of the throne and on JL i3 the righthand with his in order that when I was feet to the to fall I should have the center of stage to as befitting the principal per sonage of the was made to this request on the part of the but at to myi great sur he wheeled directly round after receiving and deliber ately feU in the middle of the on the spot where I was in tie habit of as a dead nun cannot move and as thevi was no time for others to do the Kings body remained in possession of my ana I was forced I to find which I and turned tie scene in the best way I i 1 with Maj esty for the hWy he had the coolly replied Western people know nothing abont Kings excepting that they have an odd trick of domg as they please I I was I h to do whatever I and I fell back upon my kimj ly from you i there is hearty laugh what I Uke erring over a moment John native of at the infract he tlie uba To ihe prairie and d so no three or i MIB On the frim where log cabins are in sod house is made as a build a man goes OB with hij team and turns a straight smooth f our inches This When sufficient has he sod is cut into i wall though it were i rames and i window h the wall When story is reached a small it each and a laced and the sod walU uilt up or On this ridge rest for and on Iliew u the courses other like so he Tlie only caused by windows an i milt the house will one may a to the tho walls ore In others some ar ft cheap some with and wall ovi are and mode any heed to O ice would not know but or brick Then I roil limes find elegant f of better s the skill to play it 1 literary tastes the anil sh up with T t to kuow l f and inako a the vast What fligl Some one has made calculation of what d sL cry over laid up in s e set in as Wone x is set up or into it is laid iping each to If well for i In eft with ing Komo in it stone will sonie Ilio e piano and latest pii w ny being life mi mil ley dot con f Ik ve ry and lo with his income from hi bonds is represented i 95 which is our minute or over 5 cents end suming that he is lie cannot possibly hi lie could riot select his pii re down tho prices not throw it away to p pick up and cast f piin liim two i through the hoi rs he could not i of i ne By living ecoi imk up for four he pieces side by sid belt around the i f by converting his savings into 1cent ces fnd mount ing them in a he ir uld in twenty erect a road to the mo in and have jot s and child and have t possibili fi ncy of the go to glasses of left to get afford to i one liis income 1500 to when Should his amusement tn to t lie out of donate to every w in the United States 20 Oth ent vai lie money left TI ties occur to the glovir j In one different pints of drink OIK lemonade and have mil icy l his boots HW cai have 1 shirts ed and on the day will buy ten firstclass f j i mil i ter most striking fea ro i f the dairy much of in jan Mateo is the new dairy i nisi Clough recently compU ed It is 18x36 iq gr finished i ostic styl and inside is as trim anil thrifty t an it li feet in is as The apparatus for making the butter n 01 i and is designed the saving of fiftytwo gallons of from 100 to 120 jdf It u worked the being i eighteen feet with and operates a sh 1 the dairy and ti i with in operating the wheel natural foe they apply The herd fmR its of great The herd ten grandmother and whiskers down to the over a foot their I they one an run for the only trouble after is the excess of are apt to it in frolicsome I Wht a n l the to cor and with Concerning the i the Christian Union is rapidly a l expect the issue at the i id or the beginning of i New will by The Old be If we should its say that t to i J many changes we doubt not be thing better and those who tia Ita 5 men know 1 1 dw 1 i ra i be pleased with a in are Weare nc I style any more than in men go the Protestant what is good much they will X to keep quiet Sill the then let ns to say whit it curious could 01 Van in incut 000 jKr lie as lu ses He could would take worked all his saving ce a nickel k i he isn ed ter iBut Our idr Po werfal with Twenty years ago tho largest steamers known in as in all such neglecting the Great which was a prodigy of engineering skill did not reach SJO feet in 4 feet in tons in or have before us at this moment a list of 50 merchant steamers in the year from Southampton and other southern which largest vessels then and the list includes bnt 10 ships of moro thaii 300 fee tin none of which reached tho limits of size and power and the whole of which to two tho Mail and the Peninsular and At the present moment we have afloat and at work the Star some of iu 15 feet iu and nearly indicated ttm ing such ships as the City of feet by feet and of thn sami the of 115 feet by with engines developing the of alunit saine with still greater sUUm and speed and many other splendid vessels hut little inferior to any of tho grand of which the of New York with greater punctuality thau railway trains reach London from Vict iria and and reach our punctuality if they coultt avoid the sands that bar are the of still larger and vessels shape upon tile banks of the Clyde and else The steel the now of 501 feet by M over and a speed considerably tif that of fastest in the The City of building of iron at will be still having a 546 a breadth of 52 a gross registered tonnage of and a steam power nearly cimal to that of tho The Onion to be increased by ships of almost size and Allan line others equal to the finest of the White Star Notwithstanding the number aud magnitude of the steamers now running between America and this country the traffic is so great that it has only been possible to secure iou by arranging passage many and even iu while the rapidly increasing population and wealth of States ami of Canada make t certain interchange of tural produces and manufactured goods them and ourselves will go on it a cost of dimen as the Th a le in every for lium holds i out bi Her at connects into turn con the their work with stone from the tho not from great land and which their of their i t ie thn Bie i lium by trci whi sh 1 1 r nning ii torn w irking The Chinese A womans necklace and bracelets il the familiar Time and with They ie the revival of the era whf as a was and wore an iron i The Chinese or plait of coiled on the was once a badge of by the 51 when hey took the The origin of he appendage how long been for and a Chinaman now values his as he values his j with out one is a social i A Chinese gentleman was once riding in a he carriage by a which China has imported from A jolt or two caused liis plait to all his head and over the side of he The the being was soon caught iu the which wound it unfortunate man shouts to they coolie to thinking tho shouts were commands went faster and as tho poor fellow was ag dragged out of the an English sailor saw the plight he was his he cut the queue rom the Jack thought ie had done a kindly and was not a ittle surprised to receive curses instead of He had saved the mans rat disgraced him in the eyes of hia fel the Bible The work We I this year The published can before be eei ment minds that will be thoughtful a the but be l ishop thi t old En it is no version ap but in the All hsr nrn writing how the other half A NEVADA ball report X was full of the lady present You cant play that on me said thei piano to the amateur down a piece of of makes the whole world as the boy said when his mother boxed his DARLING she am I not your treasure 3 he re and I should like to lay you up in THE editor of tlie Cincinnati Commer who has farming thought that to have buttermilk he must buy a York ONE of the first requisitions received from a railway station agent was Send me a gallon of ml oil for tho danger IIES you see two dogs growling anil getting ready to remember that it is only a joint and tho liveliest dog will get away with tho joint Do you get any holidays in your of fice asked a returned divine of a worker in secular we get a day to get buried School boy kept Lets fins oughts ought Twice oughts ought Three tms ought must lie it down A lonso lady at an in grammar was asked why tho man bach elor was singular Shu imme it ia very singular they dont get You wouldnt take a mans last cent for a would you Certainly 1 remarked the here it passing over a me the A WESTERN writer thinks chat if the proper way to spill is ate is and is tho proper way to Ispell potatoes in Are No Birds iu Last is the title of a Probably If it were equally sitre that thin are no nils in rat holes the public mind would bemore at TIIK Vermont housewife who read that have lots of hares in then says she tried it to the extent of putting a whole chignon into some aud the jam didnt seem a hit better we sell or abandon onr girls asks the editor of the Do a girl given if she is not he young man a majority of Two Indies iu the horse car were talk ing about an actress whom they had just She is too said replied the who slightly ended towards She is aore than stout shes fat THE truly affectionate and sensible wife approaches her husband with a be expression of and ently laying her hand upon his please dont any more money for cardamom Ill try and stand it if you wont dss me the A LADY correspondent of the Cincin nati says I know a fashion ible belle who has her arms lathered and from end to end by a barber onco i Aha This explains why emale arms become baldheaded at early LITTLE clambering on his fath ers what is humbug what on earth do you want to know that for heard rou say it to ma a minute Father my Humbug is when your ma pretends sho loves and thero are 10 buttons ou the neck of my shirt A GALVESTON gentleman hired old Un Mono to remove a lot of but old man Billed ou such little loads hat he to make an extra Look if you put de loads ou your cart you could mvo carried all tho rubbish off in one I knows it boss you see Ise a the Society for do Prevention ob Cruelty and t would hab been agin my principles to nive put too heavy a load on my The gentleman but paid over tho Aint yer gwine to row in a dram asked the old working his I Un cle to give you a dram Thank said the old winking iis eyes and smacking his Isay would like to give yon a but I am a member of the Galveston Sons of and it would be my principles to The foundation of every good govern ment is the The best and most prosperous country is that which has the greatest number of The Holiest among men is mar It has taken the race of countless to come up to the condition of mar Without be no no human no life worth living Life is a failure to any woman who has not secured the love sod adoration of good Life is a mockery to any no matter whether he be mendicant or who has not the heart of some worthy Without love and mar the priceless joys of this life would be ashes on the lips of the children of Too had the emperor of me loving and tender and she the empress of than king of the The man who has the lore of one good woman in this it matters not though he die in the ditch a his life has been There is a heathen book soys Man is strength woman is beauty man is courage woman is When the oneman lores the one and tile one woman loves that one Jhe rr angels leave heaven and sit in the house and sing for Statistics of the ef Some official tables connected with the production of beer in all the countries and tho United States have lately issued under authority of the Austrian Government The following is a summary of the production during 1879 The whole German Empire pro or 117 British barrels Great or barrels the United States of Korth or or barrels Bcl or or or 67V A Female If De Foe had only known of a female Crusoe living on on ocean he have wrought out a superior to his Bobinson Alex ander brief life on Juan Fernan either in the hardships endured or the difficulties compared with that of a native woman on an island opposite Southern Cali The Catholic Fathers at South Barbara were transporting the natives of the Is and St Nicholas to Among was a mother who her babe had been left She begged that the ship might be put tat the captain She leaped into the sea to swim but as a storm they all thought she was Eighteen years after a company landed on the They found traces of and after long scorch discovered the wo and took her with The poor mother found her bnt had id to live in comparative very Alter her long life in the open she could noti bear tho confinement of a and soon sickened and in English Marvelous changes both in quality of English novels and in the personal their writers have been witnessed since Dickens and Thackeray passed away Shirley George Lawrence and White no Anthony Trollops along at the wellknown pf ce on the same old Charles Besde has the Collins grows increasing more spectral and and like his old George Eliot keeps for the most part when she breaks does so only to bore a public which would fain Miss Edwards and Oliphant are still weaving the familiar plots ont of tho accustomed Miss Bronghton has almost exhausted the resources of her prurient Onida atone possesses that in fall IT ia annoying to The fact I forget says There are lotsof people whom