Elkhart Weekly Review (Newspaper) - November 1, 1883, Elkhart, Indiana NOVEMBER 1, 1883. 37 WEEKLY year in advance 8.1-50 not exceeding ten oo per local matter on lo line per line lor euch EVERY cent- per by at the city Rooms over Post Office ion to m in y o etc not he and aching treated teeth on any styles iu at Law Notary in At of Peace mi Insurance Clifton - - - Corner Main and PHYSICIAN CUronic with success on latent Diseases on the Send or Ur ne in the Hooms I VERY the Clifton of tin e that 1 been iii livery b has made me entirely miliar Ith this nnd it b my earnest tu nil the 1 7" 1 ' t lire always ii W i V lor I create do not Iniin ill We a cli to We want and to for lis right in their Anv one can do the work L. the business wiil lan times ordinary No one who fails to money You can d te whole lime lo the or only our sp ire Full and iS sent Address life is go ind before you 1 1 something and 6 t ' t lime leave behind to iion a week in own outfit We will you No Capital not are making Ladies make as as men and bovs and girls make ureal ii yon want a business which you can make great pay all the for to H. 1, mm A week made at home by business now I fore the Capital not I jL ed. We will start boys and girls wanted to work for Now is the Yon can work ill SI are tin or give vour whole time to the No other business will pay you nearly as No one can fail to make en by engaging at Costly outfit and Money made easily examination for teachers the public schools will be held at my the Court AND LAST SATURDAY of March and and on the last each nf the months of permitted to the room No tion if allowed during the violat ion of these rules may forfeit a certificate must bo on hand promptly at 9 if they wish to join the to present cert of Kood moral character from the Trv belles of society the is of to cultivate tlie tender or lonst to more or less it. of life o His woman's But women may be said to be always more or less with the it is they are at they have the most leisure and temptation to become of It takes a woman to understand a a man is an a iio long as he remains uncaptured he seems to tire in his to and lie often goes lo the summer resorts to enlarge his lield of ladies are more easy of especially if they are staying in than in the They may be to live most of the time under the public at any can be readily found by a diligent They are left a good deal to too in and about hotel parlors and take long or short as with of their recent At Saratoga they go to the springs or stroll around the Congress grounds with At Long Branch they go to bathe with sit iu tiie gloaming on the piazzas them for together in the with only nominal on the part of their mothers or other and in other ways they enjoy all the liberty girls are approachable that should be the favorite of and foreign and other adventurers of all as a easily and so much are people thrown who wish to be iti each the stranger of day may be tlie intimate of tlie thus often ripen into witli tuul engagements to are sometimes entered into almost before there has been any and between persons who know little or nothing of each other from common It may be that Jones is known or supposed lo be or that Miss Smith has or is likely to a good deal of of her and this is often foundation for the man or woman to rest upon in taking a step of tlie importance iu The motive is as contemptible as its folly is with nine persons out of money is always the prime consideration on both sides iu marriages should be the usual tlie reside of such laxity and mercenary motives in into engagements follows almost as a natural Hence we lind the courts untying by all tlie year the knots were not but by or some other divinity besides the true The throw temptations iu the way of sexes to anil make for wings the darts of Girls naturally more in need of protection from and the wiles ol adventurers than the and they get too little of it. and lor mothers iu in country allow their daughters too palli i. Not one pay till leader of a orchestra toward the close of last season was told that he must cut down He cut the man with the who was uot getting the biggest salary of the did you discharge that poor he was of some of tlie win the getting so 1 thought he would not feel the loss of it a i of stands six feet eight in his weighs 2-20 He lias four whom averaging six feet two inches in and weighing 2o0 and 240 newsboy who ever sold a of the New York Sun in the streets of that city became famous and Ho was ten years old and from His name was Bernard but he was afterward known as Barney tlie young man living in shipped to his brother in St. Louis a choice donkey of the diminutive species known as tiie Mexican The in making out his that meant and reported accordingly to his bureau missing and oue jackass farmer in Essex K had five of the fresh air fund boys from New York and a tough proved to The afternoon they were on tiie farm they hung the farmer's large pet Newfoundland dog to an apple and in the afternoon they placed his light wagon across the railroad the train was and ot course tiie was knocked into one the trouble to find out how far a farmer must walk to put in and lend forty acres of To plow the ground with a three-horse plow lie travels 350 to harrow the ground before lie wiil to travel 100 to mark out iie travels 50 to cultivate it afterwards he will have lo travel a orand total of 800 miles besides the tlie farmers keep would get rid of their curs and one well-bred shepherd not to each the wealth of every farming community would be vastly increased in many Farmers lind tlie saving them many a Eager and anxious to willing to do anything within his the young dog needs only a wise and and intelligent to a most useful on tiie years ago lady at a on a large calla lily she had potted in the lie was as the pet of tiie and made his home on tlie lily until last when he presumably iu the the He was not seen or heard of until a few when he his wife with Whether he evolved from tlie depths of his or he found her in the is a problem that is the Rural truly says is not one of the departments of agriculture that if a young man will study with a view of making it a life giving himself intellectually as thorough a training as he would be compelled tp have if he became successful in the professions or mercantile but he can make moneys with ten times tiie certainty he can iu any of the professions or We are constantly hearing of the struggle for wealth by who live in There is an interminable struggle for ami not one in a thousand of the population in all our cities has the least reason to believe he will ever bo or regard at except as he might long after the years ago when Missouri was but sparsely was a work of no small to a jury especially as the inhabitants were notoriously disinclined to the pleasure of The had been forced to adjourn many ti nes from day to day because the as often came in and reported an Finally tilings came to a The judge fixed a day no further forbearance could be When that day arrived the enthusiastic rushed into the and all your we'll have the by 12 I've got eleven of 'em locked up in a and wc are the twelfth with is said that a younger son of the Duke of Argyll to marry an untitled and asked his father's The Duke replied that personally he had no objection to the in view of the fact that his eldest son had espoused a of the he it to take her Majesty's pleasure on the subject before expressing his formal Her thus observed that since the death of the Prince Consort shp had been in tlie habit of consulting the Duke of on all family Tiie matter referred to who replied that since the of Germany he had made it a rule to ask the Emperor's opinion on important The case now came before the who decided as a constitutional he was bound to ascertain the views of hia prime Happily for the now anxious pair of tiie had no wish to consult and decided that the marriage take a car - load is 20,000 It is also 70 barrels of 70 of of GO of 2U0 sacks of G cords of soft 18 to 20 head of 50 or GO head of yo to 100 of solid 17,000 feet of feet of 40,000 less of less of scantling anil other large bushels of 400 of 40U of of 300 of oGG of 340 of Irish 3G0 of sweet anil 1,000 of to Pay funny is being told in Washington at tlie expense of W. W. tlie millionaire which goes to show that millionaires must step up to the and just the same as poorer It appears that Corcoran chartered a special car for himself and to take them to White Sulphur tlie wits switched off from the Midland road at Charlottesville to tlie new came lor Mr. Corcoran refused to on the ground that he had chartered the car for the The explained that the Pennsylvania roaa no control tlie and thac unless eighty-eight was forthcoming he would have to tiie will not pay another said Mr. who have tlie same if the amount had been eighty-eight I will spend before I will be imposed iu this are asked the of was the stalely reply of great twenty times was the vou are Corcoran you can better allord to lose than I cau to lose my He sahl he would his for the next station tiie reply came tlie This shown Mr. and lie was further informed that tlie car would be right there in tiie unless tlie fare was 1'he millionaire growled and swoi e and ami paid the Williamsport in are often valuable in tlie and Means Committee decided to increase the tax on whisky to two dollars a a number of fortunes are said to have made within a small circle of In the dark days of a treasury clerk kept for twenty-four hours a secret known only to President Lincoln aud Secretary Chase besides When it became officially it sent gold Hying and the country was in It was a secret too that could have been passed on without harming tiie Union It was simply a question of keeping faith till the time An hour after the news the clerk fairly staggered under a on his He heard and saw a banker whom he miserable cried the have given you one hundred thousand dollars to have known this twenty-four hours Ami the banker could well have afforded to do it. But the clerk the satisfaction of knowing that he had done his as many another government officer has done under circumstances of for Discomfited of Newport swells tolls this story of It is his pet It impresses different listeners Sometimes I think it doesn't them exactly as ho expects it but it is his way of informing the world that he dresses for the evening I'll try to put it in his deuced you know Did something just like don't you know? Valet was knocked lighted the gas myself when I got deuced stubborn mine have to curl it on an lighted gas to heat and forgot to put it Of course a fellah don't put on his morning clothes by aud I got into my evening By opened tlie front and stood in evening dress in Haven't got over it upset me Felt like a or a Deuced I don't you New England in Old in I caught a man in Windsor Forest who spoke to me in the of rustic New He was simply of the old and was speaking in tlie tongue they over witli them to It is going to tiie old it is the old steadfast human heart aud it is face matching and eye matching and footstep matching footstep across the gulf of 2uO For we go who cross the sea and lind out afresh how one day may be to us also as a thousand and a thousand years as one so deep and sure are the roots of this grand old life of the English-speaking Morning 8 o'clock yesterday morning a man smoking tobacco in an old clay walked out of a Michigan avenue saloon with a rat in a He looked neither to the right or the left until he had reached the middle of the Then he placed the trap on the ground and whistled for his the animal did uot but the public In less than two minutes thirty men were rushing to the Don't let him out till I get my shouted Wait for the yelled half a dozen voices at cool and form a commanded a as he took a firmer grip of his man with tlic trap spread a large handkerchief over it and He was not a bit On the contrary he was as placid as a chip sailing in the did ye ketch inquired a yo take fur asked but hia was Lue same silent four or live men came running up with dogs under their and ten or fifteen dogs on foot followed There was fight between a and a and there would have been a row between the owners had not a second policeman Order was finally The dogs were arranged in a circle and held by their and the placid man slowly knocked the ashes from his looked carefully and then raised the trap and shook the rat All the dogs made a but in ten seconds each and every canine walked off on his ear and seemed to be hurt in his A boy stepped forward and held the rat up to a crockery he yelled as he whirled it it und he cost me den calmly replied the placid man as he walked with Free for a old the child must be entirely and soon ho must have daily a little undercooked meat up into a pulp and to which a ittle gravy and salt are potato finely mashed and covered with i an egg or a little milk On no account should he be allowed tea or though he cocoa and He should be given his meals and he should not be allowed lo at bread and cakes and sweet stuff in the Children best on fresh and little children must be kept always They cannot be by scanty clothing or cold Their need to be as well as their chests and they should wear long sleeves and when old cotton or flannel d be taken out of doors each that tiie is If they are sent out in a care must be taken that the feet and legs are warm to start and that they are so well throughout the ride that they are warm on the return Every a bitter wind is or it is the windows should be opened im- 'a for fresh air is as necessary for children as fresh At night if a child perspires ov kicks the he wear a long to be tied below his and the must be securely in. He should not be rocked or come it make him 1 the and night he should be all over in warm should not be exposed long to feel A handful of sea thoroughly may bo added to the Except in the very warmest weather no little should be put in a cold Edmund and runs away an almost impenetrable thicket AND to join a stream constant and gurgle we hear in the adjacent By the are the conveniences for washing large black with each of its three feet on a Hat under which a lire is built on washing a wooden bench and some heavy Part of our cooking is done by the whose capacious mouth yawns wide enough to in the largest back and whose stately brass andirons have come down from a former the rest is done on a little antiquated cook stove which was probably in use when Jefferson was We that the fireplace cooking tastes the certainly nothing in the way of modern conveniences could improve the salt raised chicken and huge peach pies which are taken from the old-fashioned oven on the heated by coals beneath aud on the bedsteads are of native and made one is varnished antl savors of the are Our beds are striped ticks filled with as we drop into sound refreshing slumber as soon as w e we have never perceived that they are not woven wire or curled Our chairs are hand made and made to which proves that are solid and have individual character qualities so much sought iu modern London J. Still man says in of in the October the intonation of the low-toned command is the highest expression of that except by generations of unattainable quality we call high In the reply to it is that perfect antithesis in which we ought to call and unhesitating prostration of self of the traditional hereditary disciplined like a as never permits him to a disturbing never himself an of surprise or a word of whoso is as as nis perhaps well appareled save when an order is whose bows and deference for his master's guests are graduated by the distance at which they sit from the head of the table; a human that sees knows and believes nothing which his master does not expect him to see and know and if he thinks of a heaven at never dreams that it can be the same thing for himself and his he hopes to meet his father and in the hall of that abode where his master and all the family for countless generations will dwell in their mundane state; his brains could no more take in the parable of Dives and Lazarus than the laws of aud the insensate chartist or radical never inspire in him an ambition to be anything beyond butler iu his master's Monotonous had a little boy with her as she sat down in the street car a lady and drawled you don't know how glad I am to get home We away seven long as Yoti don't kaow bow monotonous the roar of the sea becomes after a week or heard what sea are you talking put in Uncle George lives up in the woods in Isabella ami it was all wootis and mosquitoes and and such old and poor living that you cried to come home? Is that tho kind of roar yott other lady was awful She of the car began to talk about the 01dProph?oy the New England Magazine for 1832.a edited by J. T. and E. printed an article reviewing a book entitled to Prairie by Caleb Mr. vision of an interoceanic railway was thus presented in his the national when completed from Wheeling to in a railroad might be and from thence up the Piatt all the to the without a hill in the worth I know from personal that not a single hill or valley prevents the construction of a railroad from Wheeling to St and that I doubt is the part of the When locomotive engineers are brought to the perfection and ingenuity will soon bring goods aud passengers could pass between the two seas in ten That this will be the route to China within fifty years from this time scarcely admits of a doubt From sea to sea a dense population would dwell along the whole enliven the prospect with their and animate the was more than the gentleman who has resided several years in the western could and he demolished Mr. Atwater's railroad with the following when railroads shall have been constructed overa thousand miles of land almost as barren anil arid as tho desert of this may be the channel of communication between New York and the passengers in Mr. Atwater's locomotive carry their food with or will they stop to hunt the Will the Indians have been or will the steam cars run over them? Will forests have grown up on the road to supply his boilers with * * * That such a communication may take place between the Atlantic states and the East Indians some we will not for nothing is impossible with but that it will exist any time within the next two centuries we beg leave to The which exist at present are as The Indian title is to be extinguished over a route of about fifteen a must be laid thirds of that wood must grow along tiie and reservoirs must be constructed to supply the engines This seems to a wilder scheme than even that of Dar's more true in de den dar is in de De man what would abuse a enemy when he is in trouble would not help a in De sensible man sometimes reads de foolish but de foolish man reads de sensible In de Spring nature in de Summer she in de Fall she iu de Winter she slaps It ain't de brave man dat will fight when fer calls him a fur de brave man can more dan de De man what tells lies fur de ob de crowd ken be put up but de man what lies to make is a mighty