Dodge County Citizen (Newspaper) - June 28, 1860, Beaver Dam, Wisconsin DODGE COUNTY CITIZEN A lo anil the of Ike wry Thursday morning In Dam Win by il Proprietor per annum In To five the r wl 41 per annum In advance In by Carrier at per year OF I COl Ton HUM or lew constitute a at Statute notices at 60 per cont over tho ami Probate must be p C fur In we will not Insert thorn Professional Carda SLOAN fc M Attorney and Beaver Dam fln Batik or Dam front Struct A SCOTT K 0 11 W anil at Law Do aver Dam BoUgo KYI mi A and Bearer Dam County f r il Collection ana VHn cl MANTA anil Kox Lake rl 3 T SI ami Dnm Wla tlin ntv at Will promptly calln In cor and Kast lias tlin OM nil i tilt in pru r of C Dnm Muv c hi ill promptly ou DR 3 C the S M Mi t ovtr k Dam To all who faror In o MHO to operation in p n C AV one loor of Thompson's Shoo Tiu If T II ami Main Fancy nn of Panoramic ami 111 M Tli on nl their Mar front St a full supply ot nil of In which In mad Tor rurally will do vi I In call at market AS LOW AH AT ANY Anv at tho will On to nny of tho City T Miss L A Of or Ut on of Thu of this are held at Hall t It CHAPMAN O I A J O 1 itr M I O of T IN nt If nil of to II K C T T M W K DAH NO K of T Tin ol HIM nr T Block r1 month Straws who aro of r to P H THORP U.S St ore W d BAM to AH I In hr ImM nn in i I up nil now And now a WATCHES CLOCKS Ware Goods Bird MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Of all rUht from IHn Import amt to ho your Among bn found OOLD AND SILVER WATCHES 01 nu 1 of Cf MO -i A 1C 1 ami KAK now at MKVKU coin toe rind I mul til and Olorlci ami on short no- for Hold null Silver w nunn Dam Juno 14 1859 CALL AT THE City Boot and Shoe Store n of the On Street attention will pnM to boa mmt luuko tho foot and thy of tho nml of Dim vicinity tUo of no i or t como nil in tow wn tho Our oltl too not exclude you If tho not Of all our you Boots Shoes Gaiters ado anil In otl horl BOOtS AND or tho TOL 5 DAM THURSDAY JUNE 28 1860 11 BELOIT PAPER MILL COMPANY ALL and Book Printing Paper G PAPER on hand at their In which It tola at Ih Tho paper a Ih Cnp Demy Folio Post And of papers on hand KIT canh for A Kir il Co WH FAIRBANKS PATENT s C A OF ALL KINDS FAIRBANKS WRIGHT Ft O C3 TEA DEALERS Slate Street CHICAGO i ILLINOIS at low as any In tin City Fire Insurance OF HARTFORD CONN Paid in 04 Assets July 1st Company liui with tho laws or tho ural In It doing f t WAITE C K Pren Branch Office nt Chicago III Through which hit the or the Company In the W extern Is S II and a Statement of tho affairs or tho Company and or apply to JJ O Agent 40 For and GOODS SPRING AND SUMMER just returned mth of tho BONNETS FLOWERS RIBBONS And all of GOODS would return Tor aiu ehn It for tho Spring Hur Tin will ho at PRICKS FOR will ho for ot the Indies ol this vicinity JDam Wis they now prepared to for nil of nt and will const lor o of p Die aro Fully to call t All work ct tbo warranted M attention of of in ill bo g P A P K R II A I N C the of for ale for cmh tn film In rhw Ciry at A L1 Lawrence's Grocery NEW LIVERY Still Come nml stock yet on Moi m tho of tho 1 that nl n Dutli tnr tho execution In tho HM of b to him lo g opened n In thu ot Mm In Id nt to the public with Carriages and Horses nny of tho in nr on bo at our low Dnm JiTo m n cut I WM TJ GUN V you want your Mze In tho of tho Arr or colored co to If row n j coplea to anil go tu If you lit tho picture lino under tho jou will second to lour anil taken In tylu HERE AND HEREAFTER BY THOMAS HOOEK Calm an beneath Us In infant Bot by nil tho at night Yon landscape Bleeps In light And while the away Like of Tolcod lont for many ft day round Oh youth I oli LOTA t yo glory fled f ray of light that down the Art pointing Mca an wand If to guide that lie In that bright Who but in brighter deep Than errn that tmnqnll main Some land may lii where who weep Shall wako to 1 Cousin Sue's Visit in Tto wore written without nny expectation of being rend by the public consequently their style is familiar and imperfect Aa tho question will OJ course be naked why I consent to their publication I will only say they meet the of nn editor wlie insist eel upon having possession of urging that bo to show how much or the world could be seen in n small town ond hoir society resembled that of sonic Cousin Sue's consent been obtained J havo the names of persons and sui rendered loiters to tnr friend the editor hoping they mny the as much en- ns they given mo pleasure One Dot 5 COUSIN I lust stur you in your charming home I did rot I should so Boon bo out of tho city nnd from you very evening I was nt your house Inst on returning T found a letter from my oM friend Eva Horton now Mrs Slillman containing n rao to make her a of n few weeks Yon know I Imd been saying evening I wished I could go from home for n short time ns I hud become tired of ou gay life there and was rost- less and uncomfortable for n variety of reasons 1 obtained consent very and three days spent in active preparation TAILORING r HIRAM BOOTH a now Tailoring establishment In the shop Next door to the Post Office h N to execute all orders for anil clothing In tlu most style III in the to customers of Dam Ocf Gth 1860 HinAH BOOTH Facts for the Multitude WHKXr-oa want In buy for family at County Stori nnd lool nt Mint Crushed Brown am Cuba Sugar they say Id a little cheaper thau like to loll WRITS COFFEES In act everything In lino k nearer Dnm Nov IT I took the oars for Q station nnd then proceeded by stage to tin's quaint little village of I did not bid any of my friends good-bye not even you Will me on condition that I write you a series of tedious letters dry enough to atone for my absence which I know you must feel 1 I have had nil tho spuit of fun in mo and work for the whole week that I been here and indeed it was well aroused be- fore I reached the end of my j noy It one o'clock when I readied the nt G nml took fho 1 found I not destined to Standing on Hie platform wis a round faced in in with his h full of bundles he driver remind her of the days when she went to church in calicoes and her mother took in Don't you see it is unnecessary to make such contrasts I would be shocked exceedingly if any mischief maker should undertake to search the family records of society But ns I am stranger here Mid as I said my spirit of fAin aroused I think I shall open an outlet for my wicked ness by giving you an account of I sec Era me that Mrs Briggs is a in and that by keeping my eyes open I ean find many of the same sort So I haTe begged her not to make any effort to display me but to allow me to improve the opportunity to study human turo undisturbed Doctor joins in my plan and promises the assistance of his nnd I shall have anno time ne doubt But what a tiresome correspondent I am I must not stop to speak of my first Sunday in a or you will send a severe scolding to Your mischievous cousin To be continued J A DUEL AT BT from trie Boston Journal The officers of the navy and army in nil nations are supposed to acknowledge the dueling code that is resent an insult by a challenge to mortal combat or atone for an injury by nn to take the life of the person injured To disavow the code would them as men of honer in the estimation of their fellows their situations become uncomfortable and they would ho compelled to quit the vice Officers of untried courage would ly dare to follow the noble example of the brave old Admiral the hero of and ily to fight a duel on the ground it is an absurd nnd unchristian mode of settling a dispute A deficiency in moral stamina a nervous lest physical should be called in tion has often caused challenges to bo ed and fatal duels to bo fought by men if at liberty to follow the impulse of nobler ciples would trampled Iho code be- neath their feet Public opinion is ft regulator of the morals of ti people nnd it cannot bo denied that in this country this powerful agent bus effected much within the past thirty to bring into disrepute Bet even public opinion is not and firmly op posed to this method of settling dis- putes for while one man may be severely re- by the publio voice for sending a lenge another will bo sneered at and ed for declining an invitation to shoot or lie shot at or cheered or lauded if ho accepts it even with the condition that the combat is to be fought tho most destructive weapons insuring a fatal result thia singular state of things exist in spite of the severities of legal enactments the denunciations of tho pulpit nnd the press nnd tho ition of men of high character urd standing we can hardly expect that the bai custom of dueling will bo entirely suppressed Cases perhaps of fatal tendency will recur until public opinion throughout the shall take a more decided nnd tone and as the man who sends or accepts a lenge Were the of in which our i concerned correctly voM ir i to tho reputation of gentlemen and men of honor or signalize their they b ive bren antl which hoen public or are now for- with large eyes his pido nnd ing anxiously nt n which slip held in her hand 1 stood quietly on one feHo while the fussy gentleman m ringed his eels and stowed hn companion nnd himself snugly on the back seat of thi coach been much by these important persons that my humble ence had been quite overlooked two or These frequently originated in causes of iLe most trifling times in a disposition on the part of ono or both nnd it waa sometimes tho the party most injured or insulted compelled to meet his brother officer on tbe of expediency in violation of the three gentlemen who wove evidently no I of principle or tlie of conscience ns the only mode by which he could there hurl improved time to find h s for courage and pre- serve Ilia honor unsullied A remarkable cisc occurred years apo at notorious dueling ground on the Jersey shore opposite New is not recorded in valuable Notes on but will serve to explain the mode by which but brave and determined turn be dragooned into this of nnd will also add one to tho thousands of the grace nnd facility with which n beau- but v iin can plunge n devoted into an unpleasant for in our by no capacious These being at length ed the driver turned and to vido and I responded in the tive while tho of of eyes was directed primely at me finally been crowded on one end of a Beat nnd my trunk securely strapped behind the fussy gentleman more if Ms long package nnd bis round safe his wife having clutched her with a firm hold nnd the having given one more look at the entire contents of his load wo off at a moderate puce I begun to reflect now my companions in the coach hnd not a very able of civility No one hud offered to assist me in charge of my no one had to offer me n scat I thought I could not have made much of in impression these people but na this VMS rather n idea to me I began to turn tho over in ft different light Lifting my yes I thought I would take observations of my fellow travelers I could not turn the back set but I hnd formed in opinion of tho occupants there Tho fussy man I knew had nn idea of his own importance his lady I judged 0 be vain shallow and to be a star of fashion in her little world thought I we'll an opportunity to scan the of this The gentlemen were all attiring me they were well dressed but very ordinary n appearance That is all I for My hasty glances satisfied me that I had net fallen among thoso who wore gifted with true politeness or refinement and I sat silently meditating and listening to an occasional re- mark concerning the news from the city and the prospects of a cold night until nt about 3 o'clock I alighted at Doctor's little and warmly welcomed by my friend I havo made n long story of this littlo trip cousin Bell but as I shall have more to toll you of the back seat passengers in the coach 1 thought it best to give an account of my Mr wis fi young officer of ho anil style of anil Heaver Produce for Wheat Hour Pork Boof In for al f V CARD Dam H TAOl A CO THE at one of the largest tier man Republican In IhK State It has an circulation In BANI anil other counties Cnm bo during tho copies for cent eople ror anil campaign will nub In tho If first meeting with that names are Mr I learn from Eva and Mrs Briggs and that my first impressions of them are nearly correct Mr B is a consequential sort of a man who has failed once or twice but lifts his head Hp with n pre tence to all the virtues J am afraid Mrs B early history is not often told by herself ru mor tells many strange talcs but she has doubtless forgotten nil that Well we nil like to forget disagreeable things don't vrc Bell And if Mrs Biiggs is very dainty and exquisite now and so exclusive in her nnd goes 10 the city with her to make nil her who would wish I tender with all my heart and soul for ing was farther from my thought than the idea of giving them offense I gazed upon them earnestly admiringly I admit urged by an impulse which I could not resist but I shall ever regret having been unconsciously the cause of ft of pain Then I understand continued Mr Brice with something liko sneer that you tender a humble apology for your Certainly sir an apology a humble ogy if you will But mark added he significantly noting ths tone anel manner of bis interrogator and handing him his card nn apology to the ladiet only Mr Brioe knitted brow and seemed at first inclined to demur to the limitation so de- indicated -a brief pause ever during which he glanced ot the card ho replied in a stately manner Very sir Placing fits address in the hand of tho officer ha turned OB bit heel nnd rejoined Ms party Tha officer remained nearly 3 week SB New York during which he was more guarded in the display of his admiration of female charms having accomplished the object of His visit he proceeded to join his ship ut which was ordered ou a cruise lo the Pacific Some before the frigate expected to sail Lieut Rossiter who had hitherto been on the best torras with his brother officers nnd was treated with ranch kindness dence and respect perceived a striking but unaccountable change In their demeanor wards him Their conversation with him hitherto so ru and easy was at an Their answers to Kit questions ivore monosyllabic and curt there was evidently a studied sition to avoid him Furthermore he beheld them sometimes in groups and versing earnestly with each other while his character or conduet beyond all doubt the theme of their conversation Ho knew there must bo something unusual in the wind to cause a change in their ment such studied neglect and contumely than which nothing can be more galling to a sensitive mind But what the trouble was what proceedings on his part hnd occasioned the ho could not even conjecture being unconscious of having given any cause for a rupture of tho relations in which ho and his had hitherto stood towards each other and he waft too proud to osk nn explanation Tho first of the ship was a man already advanced beyond the of life for in our naval service tin officer whatever his merits cannot hope to attain tho rank of Post Captain or oven Commander until his looks are well bleached nnd his redundant energies subdued by the hand of time Ho was n man of generous feelings but his ners were somewhat bluff and his language nnd to the point He commiserated the situation nf Rossiter nnd gladly availed self of an opportunity when they were alone to inquire into his intentions and if necessary give him a word of advice I suppose said he Mr Rossiter you hardly expect to go out on this cruise to tho Why not replied Kossiter firmly looking his senior officer fully in the face Why after your extraordinary conduct in New York that affair nt the Theatre where you the white feather which his unfortunately leaked out your position on board this frigate will not be the most able and as a J would advise you to find some pretext by all means to leave the I am not aware Rossiter gentle disposition and He was much esteemed by thoso who had on opportunity to appreciate his worth and were notwithstanding his calm exterior his soul was attuned to honor nnd his bosom glowed with the noblest impulses Ho visited tho Park Theatre in New Yoik one evening and being an admirer of grace and in woman nnd this ever been a wenk point in the of sailors his nt tention was attracted by n of dashing girls who with more and parade than was absolutely ry entered olio of the boxes ind with remarkable self-possession arranged themselves comfortably and what conspicuously in the front seat They were arrayed in rich rnd brilliant costumes and conscious of the of and evidently seemed tn display their attractions The gentleman who acted ns escort to the having ushered thom in and them seated to tlieir s retired from tho box and to another part of the atre Our young naval officer willing to der hou-.iige their and without the slightest intention or expectation of giving offense took n position from which hs could obtain 111 and distinct view of most beautiful iu creation a beau- woman This pile Rossiter must have bcon what nnd admiration doubtless stumped on his honest face insomuch thot the ladies observed it and very foolishly took at his conduct nnd really were or affected to be greatly offended When Mr the gentleman who accompanied them to the theatre nnd who was the brother of one of the ladies nnd the accepted lover of the other returned to his post they complained to him of the conduct of the stranger who had been staring at thorn so nnd who in their opinion deserved a severu rebuke for his impertinence Mr Brice a high-spirited young man but self-conceited and vain of course participated in the of tho and like a chivalrous wna ready to espouse their quarrel right or wrong He determined to demand nn explanation of the stranger with he invited him into the lobby and to the surprise of and in a tone and manner rather decided than benignant ad- dressed him as follows I understand sir you have been staring at those ladies in a manner contrary to the rules of politeness proudly my conduct on any in New York or has been tent tho character of n I in- sist sir explain yourself en- lighten ia relation to what has leaked nnd been of the markeil change in thf fellings of my With and Bossiter now earned from the kind-hearted that Urico the gentleman whom ho ed at the theatre had given to his friends hit own varsion of the affair from which it eel that Brice hnd acted the part of a rous hero nnd Kossiter had shown himself a veritable poltroon who after Luring insulted tho ladies had avoided nn of only by getting down on life marrow and malting the most humble apology to all the parties for his The unfortunate officer no longer at tjie course which hnd been adopted by his associates He explained the whole matter to the worthy lieutenant and expressed a to set the matter right before ho the country I believe word said brother officer Blinking him warmly by the had nnd rejoiced to find you havo behaved liko a man Nevertheless tho affair is an awkward one and difficult to If you had more time the thing might be ar- but the ship may receive orders to anchor and proceed on cruise at any moment What can you Thero is only one replied ter in n determined tone I must em- brace it all risks I must proceed to New York nnd have nn interview with Brico and 1 hope for your good offices with the Cap- tain to account for my absence on tho ground of an important With the greatest pleasure in the I will also do what I can So remove the false impression unfavorable to you which has At the appointed time the parties met nt the and ns Brice persisted in his refusals to make nny concessions or indeed to atone in TMT for the injuries he had heaped on DO time lost in proceeding to business The seconds were of one accord there being no disposition on either to objections expose them to an official interruption and delay tho final settlement of the mutter It is how little trouble there is in bringing such to a close when both parties ore willing to fight TIvo vras marked out eight paces being the distance agreed on The word to bo given by Brice's second Are you The parties took their stations Brioe looking somewhat excited but affected an air of haughty defiance while Kossiter seemed cool and collected By tho time the pistols were placed in tho of tho several persons residing in tbe neighborhood learning that a duel was to be fought nnU by no better motive than idle curiosity hastened te the scene of action to witness tho proceedings At the word fire both were dis- charged each ot the combatants evidently been desirous of anticipating the fire of his antagonist nnd as been ex- from Brice's Tire no serious result the ball pistol having the wk ground the feet of Rossiter bullet whistled harmlessly over the head of The now interfered and urged an if the affair which was ed by Brice with scorn and in order to bring the mattor to an end without any more llboy F play as ho termed it proposed each of the principals should advance one stop thus bringing them within eighteen feet of each other This proposition was easily acquiesced in by The pistols were again tho word fire was given a second time Both pistols were discharged after the fire nnd before the word one was pronounced and the was at nn end The crown of hat was perforated by the bullet of his antagonist which grazed without ing the cranium while Rossitor with a truer aim lodged his bullet in tho of hia an- Brico dropped pistol and fell heavily to the ground He spoke not a word breathed with difficulty a few minutes died He paid n dear penalty for his ing his unworthy attempt which was so near ly to oast a stain on the reputation of n brave and honorable man having brought the affair to a termination by killing his min could now look his fellow officers in the faco with the consciousness of having successfully vindicated his honor Yet it is but able to suppose that which makes cowards of us must ha in future years have given somo severe him and thrown o cloud over his spirit for having de- taken the life of a follow being On ascertaining the result barked in iii boat accompanied by g he em- by his and crossing the Hudson River returned to New York aud before intelligence of the event hnd spread through the city he was on his wny to Norfolk to join his ships On arriving nt Norfolk he that ders had been received that very morning for proceeding to sen nnd the frigate was to sail on the following day He went on board and reported himself to the first lieutenant who greeted him kindly and eagerly inquired about the result of his mission you find said he 1 found replied Rossitor He would neither apologize nor sign a true ment of what passed between us at the tre We met at and I shot exclaimed the officer his hand You are an honor to tho service There is man on board this ship with a soul to be saved who will not be proud of such a shipmate t go THE WIFE FOR ME ore wives enough to be had There are English American Parisian ami even Norman clucking to broods of daughters On all sides tha cluck cluck reminds mo that when I may be in search of a wife I shall not hare far to I Hm sitting upon a pebbly shore on the coast of picturesque Normandy 1 been assisting at the opening of n splendid bathing establishment which is to make our port not only nn holiday place for tho Parisians but also a point fur n friendly foreign invasion i have breakfasted sumptuously with the mayor who let me add in confidence is the builder of the ing establishment in assisted -i I have had the Lyons beer with the mayor's adjoint But worldly honors oppress my humble I choose rather on this dny of savage beat to pull my felt hut over my eyes and mark the trim dies with their red nnd purple pass f like animated flowers perched upon leather styles before my unworthy na My rests upon Dr Brown's Philosophy of the and I cry Ah that I cannot drink deeper to-day of his doctrine He has put mo in 1 ant train of thought he hag warmed my heart he was a good man and I lift my hat to him listeners at an opening ball an satisfaction of drinkin been caused by the stories of the lying ton an the difficulty onT to from Rossiter to Brico in which tbe writer after alluding to the reports in circulation to his honor and which were ed to bavo originated with Brico referred to a statement in the hands of his friend hp himself had drown up nnd which ed a true and faithful statement of the circum- stances attending their meeting at the Park Theatre statement ho requested Urico wind than the of purple Not in my chambers his con- stant lamp be lighted I am alone in the world and in proof of my determination to remain alone I have lately a patent which would enable me to cook a chop boll nn egg or turn out a cup of boiling coffoe in two I could only make it burn Wicked eyes tender eyas no mournful eyes timid upon me by to Mgn as the only means of relieving himself elbow upon imputations and justice on the of to Rossiter Brioi road tho letter thei er! over the in tlic of Belton lie found himself in an awkward He industriously busied himself in setting the the fabulous stories in circulation in which he figured as a hero ho could net deny it or sign a paper stating the genuine facts the case and which doubtless would be made public without forfeiting his ter as a gentleman Besides Rrice wan by no means destitute of that species of courage which gives firmness to tho duelist It wa- also he might not bo very ad verse to an affair of honor with a naval officers which would give him a sort of in the circle which he moved After tt few utes consideration he told Bel ton that he could not hold responsible for the true or false that had been circulated in re- lation to Mr Rossiter and Iio do to the paper This result was anticipated Belton then told Brice that must be aware that but ono course and requested him to refer him to a friend Leaving his own address he expressed an earnest wish that for particular reasons there might bo little delay possible in bringing the matter and good breeding and ns I am their friend J ation admiration hid been too strongly marked He was caught in the fief and being a bashful us well as n brave man was for a moment I have hate a right to an apology which that the affair could not be settled without at least one interchange of shots it was ar- ranged that n meeting should take pi nee the next morning at an earl hoar at affinity And I mark each goddess as she parses dimpling the wet sand with her dainty high-heeled boots Wicked eyes carries two volumes of the younger Dumas I feel tho old Scotch doctor trembling between his modest cloth COT crs at the scandal is proud and confident however and she lights presently upon the soiled pages in the shadow of n broken fishing smack The fingers in faint yellow gloves slender ns that turn young Dumns page would not I am certain set that right in my patent A thimble would sit awkwardly on any of thoso has a mother I tall stately dime who hopes to pass for the sister of her child But her foot marks in the ara not dainty I see the autumn withering under the stolen buds ef spring A little timid homely man creeps up to mother nnd daughter He is tLo working bee to the elderly queen and to the young Queen he is the creature who drawt cheques hands the queens onfc of their car takes the obscure seat in tho box carries the parasols is useful on board boats and is begged not to talk about his iness in the When was a child he looked after her the servants and the luggage while the queen bee sailed into tin stile cabin hopes that he will not invite any oi his city friends to mamma's next rout I wonder whether the simple little man con recall the days when he sat down in his bachelor chambers as it pleas ed him when lie wont and freely and when those homely sisters of Us who ing to bis queen bee lk never conld dress nt look his stock of linen set anything right that had gone wrong would my doctor a bore and n riau with bis notions about virtue and dom before rank and money And 1 Languidly fully sha reposes while an sister over her head Her mother her slave Her whims govern all people who in contact with her Special dainties prepared for her A suffices far Carry her but delieate tender Ja can pick food only breast of the plumpest of pigeons ii said to bo highly intellectual She talks ling about ferns anil sheila and mary tertiary formations Sha ii great on the primeval language and oti art her poor soft mother smiles bills Carry fetch her ter a stool for her feet lly blood freezes with to of meeting me on a certain merry morning at church Married to bow I jet to business every morning at ten o'clock would require me to butter her she would insist a very thick of butter I ant certain I should be seat to v library third volume of the Hammer or Knocks at of the Old by Mantilla 1 find her at the Hammer in the afternoon when I lo dinner she would suggest that I should take n chop at my in the evening loaded with scent pillows and phials I be c to her to the nuptial chimber My briefs never keep pace with my bills should bo crushed under the we of nt twenty shillings I should be dunned by the livery and consigned to prison by Fair Unlade lean n fiord only plain roast and boiled with a thicken on Sundays my good mother honors me with a so that hi mercy to you I tum and leave you there u pocket that can stand daily game nnd n chariot for the park and yearly for the German waters I am o the luckless band who have to talk and study tot my money In the dingy ible feet cased in boots large enough to be bear ii s had me I had turned from here then assuredly was rny Elizabeth Fry herself would not her 1 flirt friend Martha a rigid little keress of my acquaintance could not found with ber homely goirn and bonnet She was as sedate as any feminine secretary to t suburban Bible society could be She ia reading Bonn's edition of Jeremy pencil in hand Every now and then she dipt the pencil between Ber lips then marks a sage Do I sigh that I not that Do I sigh to be the paw in the torpid month has a voice that ther rises nor falls She has precious little all the world is very wicked Her brothers are very even her mother is not nil that she should be sees into very bre sulphurous regions indeed Echoes of universal gnashing of teeth assail her Her voice is one of warning ancT tion It is her own conscientious belief that all men women and children with sole exception of those happy people who sit with her the leadings of the Reverend bias that the exception of this chosen band all men are doomed and that looks at me as any woman with heart in her would look at a culprit mounting the steps of a gibbet STarry me I doubt whether would shake hands with mo Let Dr Brown and his duties of affinity past from my memory I am not a marrying mm I am tco homely for these sparkling brightly dressed ladies around me I of the homespun kirtle school with a liking for tho busy useful sunny litlle bodies with their aprons and dainty kerchiefs lored their nurseries than their and were vastly proud of their home made jams and pickles in the closet in the days gone by My own listers called me a Goth A breezy stride then to the quiet wayside I remember in its setting of ehall give me a zeit for nnd o couch of poppies at night With n healthy glow about an tile pretty sharply set I returned to my hotel The wru ringing nnd of girls with highly and were ing from every passage and turning np at ery earner I ell into tho merry stream and flouted to my place at the table where I found my napkin properly tied about tilt bottle of Banane of I shall nof in this year of this century a French talle They are all alike from the soup to the es ami dried up from the loud tilker who monopolises tlie conversation Cb lie presentable widow who is the subject of un- scandal I ate my v mot should eat we are The young ladies tittered on all eyes liko forked lightning about me and er gentlemen who happened to be under but I kept my eye upon my did homage to my Almost at my elbow a quiet little body sat silent There had not any lightning from thit quarter It was only when the stir and silken rustling of tlie ladies rising drew my attention ly to them tint T noticed this quito little body with her simple silk collar hair When nnd eyes they threw their rumpled but when the body rose she paused nnd carefully folded the cloth she used and laid it in an orderly manner upon the table I cried to that is the My eyes raet and she blushed n 1 thought that she had been found her playing with the children in the courtyard of the hotel Sho has with children of her own since them Whether she married my or my enemy why should I TUB women who for the White Flouse must not bo forgotten They may quite much to do with destiny of the country in their way ns their more mentioned Mrs Lincoln is a charming woman of intelligent social and easy and in manner She is in religion a Presbyterian Mr Lincoln attends the church bat is not n member is n moral man find a strict teetotaler A temperance president with a Presbyterian lady to preside at the White House nny some changes in Washington Bell is a lady of decided character and gy nnd is not bitterly in principle At the murder nt the hotol in Washington by of occasion to express her strong abhorrence of the of southern rufli ins who ed to obtain scats in the national legislature Douglas has been for a few ever since her marriage in of queens of Washington society Whatever people think of tho Little Giant it is by a unanimous vote that Mrs is charming If wru a candidate for no convention would ignore her claims If she were running fir president she would unite nil suffrages unless some fanatics went her on religious tor Mrs Douglas is on earnest practical man Catholic of deficient in was accompanied by his little 7 years old in driving Iho cows to pasture nt Delhi Delaware county Y several On his w ly he playfully tied one en of a rope around the body of sister ami the other end to the tail When the con- had proceeded short distance in this wny followed by the girl the latter and fell which the cow ran off at a rate dragging poor girl After running gome distance the girl's head struck a solid TOOK crushing in skull and at the time the tail pulled out so great was the force of the anee The girl breathed but or after this pickpockets were crowd at ehe Japanese fa y j