Cambridge City Tribune (Newspaper) - December 28, 1911, Cambridge City, Indiana DECEMBER 28, 1911. NO. 4] AMERICAN Interested the Judge Up to a Certain LOURENE was at Lake and at one of the small and quiet that Judge D. S. was told by the will be glad to learn that 1 have a compatriot of yours She has been here a She is a I believe she is from it isn't Mod asked the will at once find out all your mind just I'd like a few rest before meeting the American or If you will be so kind you needn't mention to her that I am I came away from my home in to escape a you I don't want to bump up against another too We Americans always want to walk around awhile before getting is your and youi wishes shall be said the obsequious does the widow happen to be here inquired the judge with out much show of brother is at He is a buyer of silks for Americans He will soon be she good looking and asked the 1 your that had such handsome women I should have gone there for my second As for she has my best rooms and orders what My against her will be very she's on the I saw and knew that you were an American I said to comes from same He looks like a He appears to be Why should not the wid ower marry the widow and thus make each other for your interest in the old but go An Amer lean widower and an American widow will always find each other in good time If you leave them Just leave it to met at the but were not A sharp eyed person would have noticed that they were sizing each other Two days as the widow gat on the veranda with a book In her the landlord and the judge and the former indulged in a dozen and scrapes as he have the utmost felicitation in presenting Judge Fordham to Mrs. judge found the widow to be a woman not much over She was bright and keen and self She found the Judge to be a man of about hale and hearty and inclined to be frank Of course they became Interested at and after a few minutes the landlord re entered the office to say to hia I have done a noble The widower will marry the and when they return to America they will probably live in New and be happy all their Did I not tell you when we were married that as a landlord 1 should be a magnificent the Widow Chatham nor Judge Fordham had a story to It came out casually in conversation that she was the widow of a Chicago wholesale grocer and had taken the trip abroad at the instance of her brother who was a silk buyer for a New York house and who soon be with It came out the same way that the judge had retired from the bench In New York and was now it easy abroad while his bonds went right on piling up They found themselves agreeing on almost all especially on the greatness of Chicago and the purity of American and now and then the landlord looked out to smile and turn to his wife compliment me on my The widower and the widow are becoming more and more interest ed in each Judge rather took charge of Mrs after the first rode ont they boated they climbed the The of love wasn't even hinted but there were other persons than the landlord who smiled la a knowing Just a bit of mystery the He was to ar at such and sach a but he didn't It was ail the fault of the silk be wrote They were taking things easy and refused to be He would be along in good and in one of his letters be wrote that it would be a pleasure for him to meet the The judge smiled when this extract was read to him He seemed to doubt their had lasted two weeks and one day just after a telegram bad been received by widow the jodge strolled into the railroad and her about to take a he she Sbe bad no and appeared to ite M ttet ilM was she made some excuse and left the depot in his She was a bit glum for but soon rallied and was very gay that Two days later a telegram announced that Brother Tommy was 111 at The widow said she would run over there for a day or and the Judge said he would accompany He had a curiosity abont the silk and this would be a good time to gratify it. The widow suddenly decided that Tommy might get over his Illness without any of her She had her fair share of sisterly but Tommy was one of these fellows that always played baby even with a cold In the mornings later the judge took an early morning It was an hour before breakfast He walked down to the depot to see the 6:20 train go out He was on and he saw the Widow Chatham She dodged him and returned to the hotel Instead of taking the When they met at breakfast neither one said anything about the but the landlord rub bed bis bands and smiled and said to his my magnificence The widower and the widow were out for a sunrise walk this That means love and I was the one to Introduce them and bring two happy hearts Of course It will go into both bills as an Is a pretty fair mountain at It is high enough to have precipices and rugged enough to put a man out of wind to climb it. When you have followed far enough you strike into high and a quarter of a mile farther you debouch upon a platform called The Judge and the widow had been up there twice On the afternoon of the early morning walk they took the path again When they had reached the plateau and found seats and had a few words to Bay about the view the widow looked the judge fair in the eyes and in about three unless you promise to leave Lau Sanne by the evening 1 shall begin to he calmly shall run down the path shouting for shall meet people and declare that you threatened me. I think you will understand what that will mean but there are loopholes in your For I have no than three witnesses concealed be hind the rocks up Then I have a telegram to the effect that your brother Tommy Is in custody at Ly ons I also have a second stating that his extradition for which 1 have been waiting these many are ready for do I come she asked after don't come in. Tommy did the and you simply ran away with So far as my instructions you are to be left behind here in Europe to enjoy yourself as you may No doubt you have some of the stolen money to pay your bills but I was not instructed to arrest I was simply keeping tab on yon until the papers were ready for Is there anything more to I do not know answered the widow as she arose and started down the path by her so you go away to repeated the landlord after the Judge had announced his I have to the widow from must leave her In your keeping We have had a misunderstanding You know how cantankerous American widows said the landlord to his wife that may be and I may The widower and the widow have and he has started for and it may be that he will never come back to plead for a The main Is that I charged him two extra for falling in lore with another guest of my house and falling out and maybe I am magnificent after and Sir Boyle Boyle a famous Irish character of a century was proud of his alliance with an English family of ancient lineage and was fond of referring to his titled kindness in giving him his eldest a boast which provoked Cur ran's retort Sir de pend on it. if had had an older one he would have given her to it was this sarcasm which provoked Sir Boyle's hostility or that an enmity had already been created between Roche and it is certain that the two men were perpetual ly sparring at each other in the house of as the debates of the Irish parliament was the witty advocate and or ator always successful in these had observed one somewhat that be needed aid from no one and could be of bis own whereupon Sir Boyle instantly inter bis sarcastic congratulations to the honorable on his possession of a Forty Years Have a different world the people of the present generation are liTing ta from that which existed forty years Then there was no were no and there were no flying What will be the now unknown Ute for which people be Mk money in AMBROSE L. by American Press 1911. hundred years ago everybody believed In a personal devil whose business it was to mingle with human beings and tempt them from Bewner was a suitor for the hand of Gretchen Gretchen's father was much respected in the com for his probity and and young Hans was so religiously ed that he thought of being a But so deep was the love between him and that he realized that he would wreck her happiness as well as his own if he entered a church where celibacy is imposed on the and he gave up what he really preferred Nevertheless he was considered to be well nigh a evening Hans and Gretchen and their relatives and friends were gathered at the Staebel home to celebrate the betrothal of Hans and In the midst of the festivities a knock was heard at the and a young strikingly was who said that he was a traveler on his way to Munich and begged to be permitted to pass the night in the Hospitality of this kind was usual In those and the young who gave his name as was not only promised a night's but was invited to take part in the stranger soon became the life of the Brilliant fell from his tongue that astonished and delighted the He suggested different methods of amusement and at pulling from his pockets cards similar to the playing cards In vogue offered to show those assembled a All were pleased at learning some novel amusement and assented Herman proposed first to show three of them how to play the after which the rest might divide Into sets of each three playing chosen to be taught the game were Hans and The teacher dealt the cards and showed them how to play one hand and then another and by this time they knew enough about it to play it. Those looking on then proceeded to arrange themselves at and presently the whole company were deeply immersed in the amusement Introduced by the handsome was extremely deferential to Every now and again he would show tils white teeth in a smile under his exquisitely cut Hps and the carefully waxed ends of which pointed his eyes were meeting hers and seemed to produce upon her a marked At first she at tempted to turn hers but she soon lost the power to do she seemed like a bird charmed by the eyes of a was not long before Hans noticed that his betrothed was being fascinated by the being a mild mannered more devoted to saying his prayers than to he held his hoping that no great harm was being done and on the morrow Herman would have journeyed on and been But Gretchen seemed not only attracted by the but to have been seized with a sudden aversion for her When Hans called her attention to a mistake she was making In her play she gave him a sharp When he pro tested at some unfair advantage taken of him In the cards by Herman she abused taking the latter's soon came about that the game was rather between Hans and Her man for Gretchen than In the cards Herman became bolder and bolder In his attentions to and she seemed to have been bewitched by He ridiculed Hans for his stupidity in the and Gretchen supported him in his And all the while he was darting love glances at her which she returned In this time the others had be come so absorbed in the game the stranger had Introduced that they knew nothing of what was going on between him and Hans and They were suddenly made aware that something was wrong by Hans loudly cursing the stranger and attempting to thrust a dagger into his But Herman easily turned away the blow by raising his and all three rose and Hans glaring at Herman and Gretchen glaring at Hans Such was the tableau when the door was opened and the priest he gazed in a mild surprise at the scene before Herman's back was toward so that he could not see bis But noticing that all eyes were turned toward the looked His eyes fell upon the rosary worn by the father and the suspended Instantly the took of Injured Innocence his face bad worn deserted A door near him stood he withdrew it and out into the moment he was gone Gretchen fell fainting into one doubted that the stranger was Satan in human come to corrupt both Hans and Gretchen and that he had been away by the sight of the The legend has been handed down for centuries among the descendants of the and some of them tt Is believed to that hj the OF In Working or Thinking It Helps on to or thinking without the mind and leaves the mental faculties in a clogged so that they do not work The mind must be kept clear and clean for the present so that it may seize and grasp with all Its might the thing it is to is only one best way to learn how to act. That way is the way of Systematize your your your Learn early in life to do and it will prove the master habit that wins men are always surprised that the heads of great enterprises can find so much time for social for for They cannot understand it at They do not realize that a man of great organizing with a splendid can do more effective business in a single hour at his office than a systemless man can accomplish In It Is not the number of but the effectiveness of the that of the advantages of a college course Is that it trains the mind to work by Whether he likes to or the student is forced to concentrate his mind when the time no matter what his mood or how he Four years of training in this should put the mind into working It should tune the intellect so that all the strings will be in A good college education should train the mind to think effectively at Orison Swett Marden in Success IN A Danger Afoot When Captive Wild Beasts those who have charge of wild animals in and especially dread most among the large beasts is that change of temperament on the part of the animal known in the parlance of the menagerie as are likely to go bad about the tenth year of two or three years The male tiger is the dread of the profession when he reaches this because he is more likely to go into a frenzy without and once gone bad nothing will satisfy him but will leap for any man within and when once his teeth are on the bone nothing but fire will make liim relinquish it. and not always may in the nature of a sudden attack or it may develop slowly and be counteracted if taken in An old trainer can usually detect the symptoms of this curious ailment It seems to be in the nature of a and other animals recognize it and shun the affected its progress is apparent the is not groat All that is required then is a level head and the wisdom to refrain from further interference with the this bad temper will last but a short and again it will the permanent condition of the In that case he is sent to the cage to spend the rest of his life in comparative disturbed by the passing crowd and his dally of Dead royalty was treated with scant respect at a century C. K. the friend of writing to Robert Chambers in 1825. recounted some of his experiences during his wanderings among the tombs in remember many fragments of the royal bodies shown in the chapel of Holyrood saving the * In later times I paid a visit to the chapel after the royal vault had been said the female In ye had cam here a while syne I cud hae showed ye muckle malr In this the shuther and Lord Darnley's thigh and o gude bit o' the Earl o' Buchan's good said the social children seem to be slightly Have you any clearly defined theories about bringing up your little ones by scientific I answered the much tried mother as she firmly grasped a squirming child in one hand and her slipper In the bringing them up by - Baltimore Terrible most violent storm that ever ravaged England occurred Nov. 26 and 27. 1703. The loss in London alone was Eight thousand people were drowned in the Twelve with more than 1.800 men on were Trees were of them in lighthouse was and Its was killed with several right way to fe Isn't Why do you wish to know? 'Cause I'm writing an English composition about the Senior son from how have things been going with yon this WIVES 1911, by Associated Literary had Just opened at Strawberry hill diggings when something to put as all in a happy frame of Deacon who bad left us in the fall to pass the winter In the returned to He brought with him a grand and a public meeting was called that he might unfold it I can clearly remember him as he stood on the head of an empty pork barrel to address the 250 miners He was tall and angular and Whenever a man died within twenty miles of us his comrades sent for the deacon to conduct the funeral and the deacon did it in such a smooth way that everybody en Joyed the I also remember bis opening He us git right down to This 250 is out like the children in the wilderness you two thar's plenty of meat Pun kin pie and feather we no use fur What our hearts Is fur is 250 wives to soothe our weary No place is home without a No man kin be happy without a and Para dise wouldn't be wuth shucks without When our work for the day is over we bev no homes to go no wives to welcome nobody to smooth us down and comb our hair and sing songs to rest our weary we got wives and demanded the deacon as he raised his right arm and extended It toward the we gone at it to git Away off thar in the east are 250 women out fur husbands and continued I kin almost hear 'em They want and they want 'em most intense excitement prevailed when the deacon stepped He had been east where there were He must know that they were pining to He was followed by Judge who had two or three wives back in the but who feelingly declared that he wanted one of the drove of 250. Then Colonel who had run away from bis second or mounted a barrel and shed tears as he drew a picture of a happy home at Strawberry home made happy by the presence of a Two or three others had some thing to say In the same and then Deacon Turner unfolded his The camp was to raise as large a fund as and the deacon was to return to the collect the 250 females and conduct them by the quickest route to Strawberry We were playing In luck Just and the smallest contribution was I believe the deacon took away with him in cold cash nearly Every man's name went down on the list according to the amount he and the following schedule was posted on the front dollars gits the pick of the dollars gits a dollars gits a grass dollars gits a dollars gits an old maid or whatever is left departure from these rules under any seemed perfectly fair and was accepted by The deacon left us In and we could look for him back in September at the was three months to a day before the lookout posted on the hill signaled to us that a caravan was in Had a barrel of powder exploded in camp the excitement could not have been Everybody got into his vest at according to pro we marched to the and by the cavalcade Deacon Turner appeared first Behind seated on a came a female one lone That was She was years gray haired and almost and she didn't look supremely the other 249?" demanded 100 voices in while a score of men ran to the top of the explain later replied the deacon as he continued his way to the After he had tucked the old woman away in a shanty he came out to us and me to introduce my our yelled the we didn't Jest continued the I got east 1 found that women had rlx like all git out and could git married I didn't want to cum back empty and ao I paid that critter in thar to the to marry me and cum The balance of the fond was In I'm but If has ris no one is to blame fnr got the dracon under a tree and a rope a but wiser counsels and his Ufe was His dlid in about two weeka she struck and as a result wm forgave him and Ist him stake out a new was the same to us again He had left us 349 gtC ALL JEEM WELL COAL WE HAVE YOU WANT THE HOTTEST THE KIND WE 63 Too Away a Bank Account FIRST NATIONAL a Safe and Conservative Depository for Your y. Vice W. Per Cent on Time Bonds and Securities Bought and YOU BUY AN ENGINE Call anil see how it is built learu why you should buy D. 322. ive you tried Heat No to white Ask your lbs. One F. Prop. Office Phone 411 So. Foote St. Phone 408 E T. is hereby given by tlie undersigned of the estate of Isaac that by virtue of the power conferred upon him by the Wayne circuit court In his petition for the sale of real estate in said estate to pay at the October 1911, of said he will for sale at public sale at the and residence of the late decedent in Wayne January 17, 1912, the hours of 10 o'clock a. 4 o'clock p. m and commencing at 1 o'clock p. offer for sale the following described real rods and twenty-one and three-fourths links south of the northwest corner of ihe southeast quarter of section in township sixteen and range twelve south Ave and one-half 5) thence east twenty thence north live and one-half thence west twenty rods to the place of containing one hundred ten square more or in Wayne and state of Also being a part of the southeast quarter of twenty-nine in township sixteen and range twelve beginning at James southwest corner In the town of running thence east along said Hadley's south line to the north line of a street deeded by A. and wife to the town of Dublin thence west parallel with the north line of said road thence north to the place of excepting above described tract of land of one hundred ten square rods in the northwest of the formerly owned by and two and forty hundredths more or in Wayne sale will made subject to the for the year 1911 due In OF In hand on day of one-third fn months and In froin date of by 0<^4)rs lU the court with the