Elkhart Weekly Review (Newspaper) - July 26, 1883, Elkhart, Indiana 23 in months cards not exceeding ton tj per matter for ono 5 cents por line lor additional EVENING per by at the city ovor Post to I V in musical lottery etc will not be D. and treated and Artificial on any of 111 of Oold a 11 registered and in at Law Notary in At of Peace and Clifton - - - Main and WATER Diseases with on latest Diseases on the Send or Urino first passed in the THE Clifton of tin e 1 been In tao livery me miliar with the wants of thin and It a my earnest endeavor to 1111 the arc oti tor to their and in those who do not their ill Wo oiler a groat chanec to make Wo want many boys and to work for us right in own Any ono do the work the The business than ton times ordinary No ono who to make money You ean devote your whole to the or only our spare Full information and is needed sent Address 1 a and before you III f 1 and leave to a week In your own We will furnish you No not Many are Ladles make as as and bovs and girls make if want a at you can mako groat all tiie write for to H. week made at homo by the business now f fore the Capital not ed. We will start and girls wanted to work fur Now is tlie Yon can spare or give your whole time to the No business will pay nearly as No ono can fail to make by engaging at Costly outfit and terms Money acres Co ONAL MAP and FULL particulars to any Minneapolis Manitoba RR ST. hands with your and enter tho lo be nnd banish all how do you you mo fl nsk an n down of is tho mail who tho dance a round in nn awful tjio end fit the dance usual on nnd some I from lemons is n of though much the partners at a trillo usual you ilo not these men find eomo new tc talk of tho the to ll mnir you Whom you call to yourself Whom never In your may And if you the chances would be That to-morrow you'd cut and think no Where have 1 seen that face if partners such as those who'd go To a dance whore the dancers were all so I'm arc sometimes a waltz is a groat When lour feet trip it in perfect And two hearts ring out a single Hut this is what I'm I would not assort It. I'm not so Whilst cynics What tho charm Which lurks in a arm Put round your waist to you round how prosaic the words do Whilst you your well-gloved hand hold tho nnd waltz at But those arc the ones who Without loving or through thoy can they know us they ail that makes up a bid them ye all as this good little moral 1 would in life is ever heart nnd soul are in the SOPHRONIA TABEE AT THE that tho isn't a master And that It's got a if it's got It must have taken a sight of tallow to have riin them arc make believe with little jets of to give the of real to I wish was that this is a perfectly nnd respectable you don't that father would to our attending the opera if it other than a perfectly do I suppose But somehow city folks look upon such things from what wo do who in the Dear Do look way up there in the tip-top of the ever see such sight of excursion trains must have run from all over the a woman forgotten her Do just nudge and tell her of it. My Eliza Ann cut just such cajier that one Sunday last Got clean into the and half way down tho middle aisle before she discovered and tho congregation and Woodman Harrison shook the and I don't know but what a right out in meeting if his father hadn't given him one of his As I was bust a Just speak she'll feel awfully cut up when she it but 'tis a christian duty tell don't you know that she's in full ana left her at home See how beautiful her hair You don't she'd to cover up all that do a I do where's the You said something or other about a playing ti or something of that before the uproar ihe I Don't see those gentlemen in of the men with the liddles and base the the part of this opera is particularly want to Belong to the I They are an good-looking set of Is Mrs. a she's a of Spanish and She was born in but came to the States when only five years of age arid remained here until she was nearly She inherits her musical talents from both sides of the Her mother had quite a reputation in the dilettante name of Madame and Salvator her was a musician of considerable When was a mere might oi a thing she was such a musical chatterbox that oven her indulgent mother would sometimes chide her for her but her only reply to reprimands was as as it was can I dear Whenever I open my mouth and try to a little bird inside of me turns of my words to and so I have to I declare If this Woodman Harrison ail He used from till till sometimes it 3eeaied'|as if he would drive me it so and I bear to i I often used to iiim ofT out of I that's just about the way Children about same the world whether furren or if thoy have any kind of there's the belli and the curtain will in a there it I waht you to hear Signer he is considered a very line we to stand during prayer this is only a not a truly I only wish your Uncle Peleg was Somehow it seems kinder to be there's no need of feeling so conscious lots of church come to the It isn't like the you Its I can't just express but people who discountenance the through approve the what Parson Allen calls a distinction without a 1 a sort of wolf in sheep's what's the La lot's get out as spry as ever we The theatre's which is the way I wish that your Uncle do sit It Isn't a it's only the clapping and applauding because Patti is on the Don't you see is that I thought we were all atire or Hood had So that is Mrs I declare as spry as a and no how old is she? She looks scarcely out of her you be so aad ask such personal Ladies don't always want their ages sotto she's over it she's remarkably well there at it what's the matter Scalchi has don't you that dapper little follow a bowing and a and a Is he Mr. Madame only she's taking the part of the commander of the Assyrian you you are sure that this is proper I only was hero then perhaps I shouldn't feel so sort o' skeery like just isn't that this beats the Haymakers that had in Slowtown last winter all out and and we thought they went a little ahead of on this But what is it all I can't understand anymore of their lingo than if were singing in road you the and then perhaps yon can follow They arc singing in want to know if that is I only wish Peleg was He a kind of faculty for understanding anything I heard him tell a French who worked for us in haying last that he might and or the other mang off and and a man than that Canuck you never He and hold on to his sides like to till I was afeared ho d raise the whole Poor I suppose it kinder good to him to hear his own lingo and so He looked in a sort of and when could for if it no odds to I ' ril help the other man To be sure book laming but I believe he could travel from Dan to Beersheba and make himself au we t speak another word till the opera is we disturb other suppose we but whenever anything happens nudge me and I 11 nudge or we can squeeze that is the way and I do when wo go to the It's sort o' And everybody can hear just as tW e dl sang the glorious rang all ci the aunt sit 1 in keep Peleg were only got so I The just a rolling off o' mo and I'm as weak as a rag I wish I had my turkey that might of a fan yours don't give wind enough to do keep You'll hear and won't get so 1 suppose you are but that sound like an angel certainly very One is you've heard Patti at her so glad I Peleg was only I going to speak till the is so the opera went and Claudio a background of deep tono to the of the soprano and what are them half nude statues a standing up in the back there? Don't they realize that tho congregation can see and haven't they anv that's the bare there they Isn't that the very poetry of Sophronia Taber just you pick up your regimentals and needn't me. Just get your and we'll trave Thank goodness your Uncle Peleg Taber is not Don't let me see you give as much as a glance to where graceless nudities are big as you I'll box your I only I had my thickest for I'm positively ashamed to be caught in this unchristian and don't raise your thank we're in air at I thought were I have nothing to agin the Thorn grace a celestial this I say with all but I wouldn't have had my Eliza Ann nor my Woodman Harrison a witnessed what wo came near a witnessing for a thousand pound And iHn that your Undo Peleg was not morally and metaphorically as if I'd like morn till from noon till do ' and human body never ceases to Even in the most profound slumber some of the functions of life arc going for the circulation of the when there is food in the and it follows that some part of the nervous system is therefore awake and to all the day and night long. In the act of some of the substance of the body is being constantly The amount of work done by the heart in ono day in propelling the blood is now estimated as equal to the work of a steam engine in raising 125 tons one foot or ono ton 125 feet We in weight by Weigh a man after several and ho will lie found two or in several pounds If wo do not wish to become we must replace by food the amount we have lost by Hunger and thirst are the instincts which prompt us to do They are like automatic alarm which stop the engine at oints to fuel and In a man as much is taken in as is to maintain the weight of the body Nature keeps the On one side is so food spent in on the so much received into the stomach for They should balance like tho accounts of an honest In an unhealthy person the instinct of hunger becomes disordered and does not sound and so the person goes on working without eating Until he becomes or the instinct works too and he eats too much and clogs the vital A of the business done in body reveals the fact that for a hanl working person about 8 J pounds of food and drink are up some bodies use inore arid some this the The profit which the body on tile transaction been and may interest onr up in pounds of food to raise 3,4<.)0 tons one foot of this in keeping the body warm and its functions About can be spent in our bodily The on tho is about ten per cent. is enough to raise 810 tons one foot high each A profit which is quite enough for earning -a if rightly and it is amy more than most but alL to to reach this point if ' i nvm be by the cut his and the he so it his nativity be told by the i way he ' A Boston | man uses his with a sort of motion A j Now Yorker uses his with ii j The hr spreads it over his bosom like a The conceals his in his lap like a jewel Tho philosopher who discovered these things failed to tell us of the German's windmill napkin the Frenchman's serviette the Italian's balloon napkin act. We supply If Lilliput into those who broke their eggs at the big and those who chipped them at the little why cannot the two great for want of any actual political divide on those favor tho aristocratic napkins and those - corner of the tablecloth good enough for the citizens of an untrammeled Y. Morning were all a trille nervous over the noise the little candidate made and I could see that the ohi cure's hand trembled as he held the holy chrism above its his gentle eye beamed but he waited reverently until she ceased her wildest wriggle antl her lustiest yell before anointing a slie will never be a one of the little they scream so my godmother says they will be healthy and she is the my but she is The weather has been so the spring has been so that baby's invalid mother delayed the christening of her until a sunshiny day in May and baby full six weeks It was a pretty in which the baby framed the The cherub had soft hair and deep blue eyes that boldly at aristocratic little ears and Her upper lip was a perfect Cupid's a dancing dimple low down in her left and her though good enough in was like all The little one was robed like a The front of her christening was of solid frothy and of a delicate cream the soft tone that only time can give such Over the laee there opened another robe of pale blue and soft turned back with old point ceremony was long and again baby In vain the big fat nurse kept up her musical crooning imder the cure's Latin and jolted her charge up and Baby was sleepy and hungry and wanted neither the gentle hand of her beautiful that was laid soothingly upon her little nor the entreaty in the kind eyes of the priest could The little old who acted as assistant to the was as he made the looked over his spectacles at the as if he would suggest In artistic argot would tell you the was The tall ligure of the ecclesiastic bonding over the its sad-faced dressed in the fat old nurse in the funny little sexton and the extemporized at the splendor of not often displayed in a little The ceremony had been strictly so it in the sense of The sexton had come hastily in from the garden of the where ho had been put on his funny spectacles and a funny of white cotton gloves fully an inch too long in the and hastily presented himself in response to the cure's He made no other concession to the occasion than the wriggling white not even a white collar to apologize for his gray flannel He was ail funny his his his but all put was not as funny as his said the cum responded the he is intelligent and explained the to me after the ceremony was over and we stood chatting on the porch of his can keep accounts and make an weave a hammock and is an excellent lib sounded these praises the was ringing the bell the christening filed up the rood on the Ottawa The mistaken mother had sent the sexton a fee of a and as 1 verily believe he rang the two a dollar must be in this little an extraordinary had nearly like a geme over into a P. S. It was a pin after The confessed it with to her Her mistress told the and as we were whist last night the cure told Con Philadelphia Salt of the Philadelphia Ledger gives an interesting account of near the Clinch mountains in. West ( where the southern people obtained their salt during the The locality is a basin including about six hundred the of a former forming on of those rich bottoms that are worth a fortune to the underlying it is a Here is made the salt that n and Northern and In 1858, George W. a New York from came to and went into the industry in a small Wells were piercing the salt the water beneath it was to the boiled in and the salt thus The industry was in operation when the rebellion and it then extended in an amazing The blockade of the southern ports cut off all the outside of and here almost the en tire confederacy had to come for it. The manufacture was made a national each southern state established its paying a royalty for the salt and Col. extending his took in Gen. Stuart as a They are now probably the two wealthiest men in During the war federal troops destroyed the but after they left the was It was enormously profitable for the who turned out as much as ten million bushels a The receipts of confederate money were at times so heavy that they had not the opportunity to count but bundled it taking the account as sent As gold and the paper bought In this wav Stuart got seventy thousand and Palmer bought all the region surrounding Salt thus getting estate of twelve thousand on which he now lives with his and breeds many sheep and hundreds of fine The salt industry by this process often produced them an acre of land for a bushel of salt in the high war bnt the production has now fallen about 600,000 bushels being turned out tear is de jewelry ob do tongue dat will tell a will lick dat don't ter ain't de little scrub man dat is de Sometimes de stalk in de field ain't got no corn on de eyes ob de de death ob a man is a but de death lOb a rich man is a a man ain't got de money it is de bery time dat folks wants him ter pay a Ef he's got plenty ob it doan make so much Art of the Light of Other about accidents in I was looking at one- of Ryder's enigmatical pictures in the American Exhibition when an acquaintance came you ever see Ryder he a treat in I have enjoyed it. He lays in a picture by pell-mell on the and then painting whatever their may suggest to I was in his studio one day looking at his One canvas attracted mo it was a clump of a and with a white alongside the figure a good spot I said didn't put a figure in here it looked at it and a candle he it does help it doesn't he scraped and painted in a figure in its Y. didn't you marry your husband fifteen years he would have taken you asked an Austin lady of a but fifteen years ago he was too old to suit a Ton of Silver a have been turning out about v ton of silver a day for some time said Supt. of the most of this is and some small notably The demand foi 5-cent nickels is a little ahead of and although we turn out worth a weighing some 16.000 we find that we are behind but we will catch up before the end of the About three quarters of a ton of pennies and they are in demand as fast as It strikes me that the south and west must be beginning to use pennies more especially the For some yoart pennies were an almost unknown quan tity south of but they art gradually creeping into We are not doing more than foi months except that the count is being and we are getting ready to submit the annual report to tht director of the Our fiscal yeai in a few is a favorito amusement with New It has long been known that of New York ladies often find it to keep their own above and their wives wil l help