Elkhart Weekly Review (Newspaper) - December 6, 1883, Elkhart, Indiana 24. ELKHART, DECEMBER 1883. 42 tne ample lower garment he saw a VR A. l rounded chest clothed in a next a- shapely neck encircled with a No. 16 collar increased his then a head with black by a jaunty Derby filled him Hid in There Her Down Free The fair Imogene had been wedded bo the knightly Sam Tho had been Handed in cash to pay for the the guests were filling themselves with and everything was sliding along as smoothly as a mill sailing down on a spring when all at once the bride was newly found husband looked under the but she was not guests separated to Some looked down the down others iii the and and behind the pig pen. some said that she had been while others scoffed at the of a girl weighing 15)0 pounds and having a scream which could be heard two being carried off in broad and in a neighborhood where the Democrats had over two detective was called in. He looked at her old measured the length of her and decided that it was a mysterious He would take the case if but would not promise any satisfactory solution under a year and a fair Imogene's father hadn't betrayed much excitement up to this The wedding feast was the first square meal he had tackled for six and he wanted to fill up before giving way to He was now Ho turned around upon the excited and distressed them to hush their and disappeared up the coy Imogene slipped away from the feast it was to see if her husband would miss follow She slid up mounted to the and after brushing the cob webs off her nose she advanced to the big chest in the The chest had been made to hold her father's government and was hooped with iron and provided with a spring which never cost less than a Her mission was to hide in the chest and see if her husband would be soft to climb up there and throw up the lid and call As the reader he wasn't the man to catch old man walked up stairs and made his way to the garret through the same the bride had He thought she might up there to take a last farewell look at the hunches of moldy school books and broken He could not see He called but the whistle of the tug on the ri was the only He turned to but something whispered to him that he might find a plug of tobacco or a bottle of stomach bitters in the old He advanced with beating heart and threw up the is this cried the fair Imogene she sprang up and her bridal clear down the this is growled the old man what the are you doing from a tarnal mind to box your big as you Here raised a regular city convention all over the spoilt a dress cost me with the upset your and scart old Mrs. Spigot into a Drap yourself through that skip down there and tell the crowd that you don't know beans when the bag's the bride And her husband was so marl that he burned up a free railroad pass to and her mother and her father went off down town to play all in the coy bride and the old and the spring lock business didn't pay 10 cents on the It Free of a Detroit butcher shop yesterday a butcher sat cleaning a It was a rusty old which had not been used for years and was to be put in order and traded off. A shoemaker came along directly and course there'll be an I presume isn't is it will go never saw a revolver without wanting to handle it. Let me look at that I'm satisfied now that it doesn't contain any stray Do you suppose you could hit my foot at that I if she was loaded I'd take a dead sight like that and pull the trigger shoemaker jumped two feet and yelled like and when he came down he and kicked and galloped around until people thought him It was only after a crowd had collected and cornered him up in the shop that any one found out the The butcher Imd put a bullet along the sole of his foot close enough to draw told you she'd go howled the as he sat with his boot in his didn't I agree with innocently responded the a my exclaimed a not voice at the depot yesterday The tosser of personal property reached out hts homy hand with the bit of brass in the same nonchalant way that he has done it a thousand times But his indifference was dispelled when he saw the voucher in the pocket of a which was stretched over the skirt of a full-length lady's Lifting his astonished eyes from the and mystery was soon for in answer to a few Idnd questions the one robed in declared that she a that her name was Miss that she hailed from Oswego and was not a I doctor nor a disciple of Mary Walker or j Miss And she likewise ' that she was not a never knew of I any one who had adopted her mode of and did not know as any one Her I object was comfort and She ' heeded not the suppressed whisper of the I ladies or the glance of askance of the but busied in an apparent j reverie over a little bouquet toned on the lappel of her at A Texas debating society debated the a watermelon vine runs on to another man's who owns the The referee decided that the colored man who lived about a mile and a half from the two owned the tlie Children Paul Pioneer the little ones to bed in a happy frame of It requires some discipline and self-denial on the part of a weary parent to answer all the foolish questions and attend to the wants that multiply so fast as the of bed time draws but it is a labor of love that bring a large Children never They will with them through life's long and pilgrimage the remembrance of the face that bent over them at and that was associated in their immature minds with heaven and And tlie little tiresome last questions mean so much to What if we should not answer them and they never awakened Unanswered questions and unanswered problems have followed men and women life with harrowing never give a thoughtless answer to a child's Never tell the little ones the thunder is the voice of Think an idea they must of such a Do not tell them potty vague stories that will mislead them into tangled Hood says pathetically of his own I fir trees dark and I used to think their slender close against the was a childish now 'tis little joy To know I'm further off from heaven Than when I was d one can so gently and kindly prepare the little ones for the and disappointments of which are as the fathers and to whom their education should be a first The moral lessons taught at the mother's knee or by the bedside can never be nor cim the father shirk all responsibility in the matter of home That is a child to be pitied who is afraid to ask its father any question which arises in its young who dare not climb to tue parental knee and challenge the world to dislodge it. Dr. in his fine poem of Daniel which is said to typify his own had some notions that did not improve never kissed his so they feel sorry for the of a father so but we can afford to pity one who lost so much beauty and value out of his own Then kiss the children good night and i good morning and answer all their and you will find that in such work two are in the other in About Paul Pioneer is very likely no conservatism more difficult to deal with than that displayed by the young boy in regard to any change in his I must wear these said I an 8-year-old on Sunday am not going to The cuffs in question were entirely unobjectionable in the eye of man or They were probably but the boy discovered a morbid dread of appearing in as they were not a usual addition to He in to his as they walked that he dreaded the remarks his Sunday school class would make upon How little consideration is shown for the feelings of few parents realize that the child's as John of three feet has its tragedies and its fear of So many when garments are when the question is not of but of the children themselves might be allowed to within certain what they will lias not seen this when all the happy boys in the neighborhood are j wearing one small and weary soul appearing in pantaloons the exact of his father's and reaching to the heels of his This life is made a burden to and then and there is begotten an uneasy consciousness of self that will require years of thought and experience and of resolute care to consciousness of being well and suitably so dear to the heart of woman and so conducive to her is just as consoling to a and is no more likely to lead to a morbid fondness for dress than is the discomfort occasioned by the consciousness that there is something about his of the Stockton in There certain principles to be observed in a room if it is to impress the visitor with a sense of comfort or For one thing there most be a variety in it. It is not necessary to buy a whole set of out De one prevailing a solid basis on which to There should also be care taken to furnish the wall It is an plan to pull a but if in doing so a great empty space Is the room is made In a case the sofa could be turned so as tp break the stiff and yet remain against the walL But the great secret of comfort and of giving an immediate effect of pleasant the making of What does an open fire amount to if an easy chair does not stand in front of or a lovely view from a window of the has to be drawn up and the visitor stand to look what we want Ls the chair by the the light on the table and the lounge pushed near the easy seat by the window where a good light all ready and is all in vain to put baskets of bright or or portfolios of to give a home if the Convenient and comfortable seat is not visitor who coming in finds an easy chair hy the and near it the little stand with can endure waiting a few because he feels that his welcome has met The chair by the the ready to be picked the bench under the the scat on the are the successes of It is not given to every pne to appreciate or to feel but every one delights in being made of is the opinion of several doctors that women not only rob themselves but their children of the best part of their simply because they don't know how to use a comb or When the hair is loose and smooth use the fine end of the comb and let each application touch the Comb the hair in every from the poll and ears parting it at a dozen different lines from ear to The brush may be of metal or bristle so long as it is in intelligent Have a towel at hand and wipe off the brush after every few Brush little tresses at a if you would keep less hair in the than on the While short it is better to let the hair hang When started for the final growth braid it in one or two but not Always fasten the ends with as a cord or elastic will certainly cut the Don't try to crimp your little daughter's To be sure it has the appearance of just doubling the thickness and tickling the vanity of the little as well as warming the pride of ' her but at the same time it breaks off the individual hairs and keeps them of an uneven length for heavy heads of hair that many little girls are made to just because it is the or because some proud mother to cut it is not frequently the cause of nervous diseases and general ill Bight or ten inches of hair is too hot in too a strain on tho nerves in the and in nineteen cases out of twenty so impoverishes the hair cells that the product is ever afterward very Medical works on the subject are full of instances in which twitching of the facial Saint weakness of the nerves of the and various troubles can be traced to a heavy mane which some little one has been burdened with through the weakness of her father and the vanity of her highest of old maid has made no nor is she in any sense a for marriage as a state is not necessary to her idea of but she has none of that antagonism toward half the human race which Miss Priscilla makes her nor is she one who has set herself against or whom no man has ever wished to She is the woman who has never met with her and who has never been cunningly to accept anything short of In Texas they are paying servant girls a Indianapolis woman who wears a No. 1 shoe claims to have had sixteen offers of on account of her ladies of Cleveland hold an annual doll show for a charity called Open Their last one netted poor little widow is in a lonely bad She has been shocked so often by sudden in her family and then by the Milwaukee fire that she wonders she the Old Dio Let our girls have as regular daily duties as our Let idleness be forbidden Let recreation be indeed at times and in proper Let us open more numerous avenues of female and let ever women be clothed with the dignity of a useful Can such a reformation be brought My dear begin it Rule your household on this Have the courage to defy fashion where it Be a bold leader in this and you will soon see a host of follower glad to escape from the old Paul Pioneer Cut off from all intercourse with their fellow and unable to read or the life of the Brahmin women can be easily at 10 years is mothers at 13, they are faded and old at the beginning of their fifth and die of sheer age at about 30. Their time is passed most aimlessly in the care of their children and the mysteries of the as Six ladies having graduated with honor from the South London College of mean to begin life as Thav co is a profitable field of and is one well suited to being neat and cleanly and and there is no doubt that female druggists would be more accurate and reliable than There is as much art in cooking a rich as there is in molding a piece of and there is as much skilled delicacy and artistic fancy required for an exquisite piece of embroidery as there is for the making of a A writer in one of the medical journals he has found the application of a strong solution of three or four times a by means of a camel's hair to be the best and easiest method for removing I shall begin to believe there its some such principle as chivalry influencing our when more than of the drudgery and servitude of the world shall cease to be performed by under the an old is going to be revived iu fashionable society this in Nevada wear hop buds for CHINESE Problem That Is oi Up on the in St. Louis the of the restriction act ovar 12,000 have gone home on passports or return and not of have yet Ihe e 12,000 are the very pick of the skilled and industrious and have gone back after years of toil to live in noble ease on the finite of From to is tho average fortune on they going to with such a a man can buy a small farm and live a a nabob forever With no in and only a copper currency that has to be carried by the the Chinaman generally puts his money into some commodity that sells high in the Celestial and realizes a handsome percentage on his All the Chinamen that can be smuggled across from British Columbia can not fill the places of the 12,000 trained and laborers that have gone from this port within eighteen two steamship companies that run ves sels between San Francisco and Hong Kong have had a terrible falling off in their passage receipts since tho restriction act went into The steerage passage from China to this country is and for the return trip From this source the Pacific Mail and the Oriental and Occidental companies realized per annum in the years before congressional The steamers sailing from here fortnight returning Chinese by the but have empty steerages on their The sailing a few days carried back 800 and the sailing will take out 1,200 tho steerage passage of this one ship amounting thus to a problem that is soon to stare them in the face more tho present Chinese question is not an agreeable one to those who besieged the doors of congress two and so wildly I against the pig-tailed With tainty and anarchy in the i question is being brought home to the in the and with labor growing and laborers scarce anl inde the of large ranches see an era of trouble before compared to which blight and phylloxera are The emigrants from European countries come here to settle upon railroad or take up and when they do consent to labi r immediately demand higher wages than ai e paid to as a tribute to the superiority of the Caucasian The African does not do well on California and from feeling himself superior to the soon gets to be an unmanageable factor in the social these things with a citizen who was prominent for the energy with which he demanded and fought for the it was asked if California had not gotten herself into a worse box by stopping coolie emigration than if she had let the heathen horde pour in and reduce wages by close The citizen dropped his voice and is exactly the but Pll be the last one to dare say so and all Californians were violent in tho matter of restricting emigration that we will have to suffer ten years in Auction 9Iart. San Francisco The is the auction whither all the trash of the kingdom finds its way for and antiquities are the fine names they give to these Let us a look at The consists of a number of wooden sheds and stalls in the street a number of shops which surround the The entire space is filled with old Here are a few that attract my A Moorish a lot of Roman a Spanish dollar of 1719, ditto of 1762, for warming the hands and feet used in from to a French general's captured in the peninsula the hilt set Moorish any for devotional all with these antiquities were a heterogeneous lot of modern chiefly cheap cutlery from cheap and pewter wares from cotton goods from Besides the stalls and the ground was covered with while the air was filled with the shouts and clamore of salesmen and traveling pistol for his meant my humble the pistol was a muzzle-loader of the year 1). 'Twill serve to keep off th bandits ot that She is abusing my ana from thieving a ticket in the The wheel turns and sure handsome face will bring you I had heard similar arguments in The smallest coin will buy something on the It is always thronged with and to the curious traveler is not a bad in which to study the history of past in the curiosities offered for the present in the appearance and manners of tho people who sell the future in tho mien of the Use of Alfred every man of not to say for halving done anything above the is pestered by autograph Many of these are ignorant as their letters are peddlers in clerks in and young Hebrews intent on money from who have heard that there is to be made in autographs and that they cost and while underlings or beg in to bog them by use these autographs are put to is little short of A patent medicine man recently used them for his A as his parents described having gotten from various by letters their encouragement or autographic bits of re cently published them in a as proof of the of the he probably like who study a that he wrote the A to give this young Nimrod of autographs respectable philosophy of wrote for can be happiness without meaning that the mind and duty and disinterestedness gave more joy than vulgar This Samaritan found himself speedily credited with the can be no happiness without at sends no more The goose is killed that laid those cabalistic THE ORCHARD York is Abbey like the great asked a musical gentleman of an artist up near Union the other can't see any was the I'll tell said the is a great leilow to bring out prima isn't so was Raphael a great at bringing out prime The raving or tlie York Mail and practice of the law is now very much like that of any other connected with it is done on business Large offices have a staff of each with his special There will be a bookkeeper and and the of the day will be as methodically entered and charged up as those of a wholesale dry goods or grocery Many lawyers are becoming Some devote themselves wholly to the trial of and are experts in the cross-examination of unwilling witnesses and appeals to the The argumentum ad hominem is a favorite of jury but it can be used to thwart During the excitement caused by the taking of Mason and Slidell from the we heard an action tried against an English In summing the plaintiff's counsel had hardly touched upon the merits of the they were made what might been called a of July He told the to remember the hatred of the English for the north and their sympathy with the south and not to give the defendants a The patriotic feelings of the jurors got the better of their sense of and they found for the are who sit in their office the day long and give advice to clients in do no business but that connected with real examination of titles and conveyancing There are admiralty patent lawyers and divorce The last have an though profitable Criminal law is a separate branch of and is in the hands of comparatively With rare no man who has an average civil practice will take criminal We speak of city for to the lawyer all is comes to his He is expected to undertake the defense of a horse as willingly as he sues on a It has become a custom for prominent lawers to form Two or three or even will to use a common their in any way which may be agreed Legal or at lesist the most important and the most has a tendency to centre in a few well-known Dec. 3.^Ten years ago Sunday the Episcopal church was and in of this fact there were special services in. all the churches of that The chief celebration at Christ in which edifice the now Bishop sowed the first seed of the denomination by a slight verbal omission in the which gave what proved to be schismatic offense to Bishop His Dec. 3.The body of H. L. head of an extensive clothing was found floating in tha lake at the breakwater There will be a dispute over the large reward Tha became slightly embarrassed but might have through had Eisen stood by but the anxiety made him in sane with suicidal J. in Boston It to me I no use out in couldn't swing the scythe the new-mown so I thought I'd jest sit here among To rest awhile beneath their shado watch the Can't say I'm but I To be away from everything seemed sorter to be every time I go around whore there I kinder hunger after what I 1 cannot how in the The it to know pick of It's only rugged can the The frail and delicate are made too beautiful to right here in the among I had a nice young apple tree out to when the storm come the It tore that while to the rest didn't do no so you've been away a things in Dare say it's close hot To take I like the country I'm glad to see Tilings don't do jest right with I scarcely can say The crop is looking I've to My com runs I have got a of My hay is almost She's so She never is as hearty as she ought to you They're in the medder lot the old mill As fine a piece of grass ground as I've the It's queer when the grass grows to That the time to cut it It's so with all the things in I The for all Some Out 1 can't understand jest best The Lord knows He fixes things to own wise laws; yet it's oftentimes to figger she's she now About the A likely gal to a I am not haE the man I were ten year then the will tell upon the best of you onr Lizzie were the best them Our so Jest like a always yet We laid her hi the over why I felt I no uie out in I somehow couldn't swing the scythe nor new mown so I thought I'd jest sit here among These things come harder when we're but then the Lord knows The good of Louisville were shocked the other day at a party of real pretty young As they were standing on the sidewalk in front of a hotel a man man came along leading a here comes here's Jei the girls sang and they ran up and hugged and caressed the and seemed so delighted that the quiet citizen began to think of Titanias and and wondering if he had not got among the The jackass having been sufficiently fondled was led the girls out after Next morning quiet in cautiously relating what he had was informed that the girls were ballet and that they and the a great belonged to the same but had to be separated during the railroad travel they were about to to be Chicago Variety negro minstrels and low comedians concerned in burlesquing are numerous in the Irving Have they suddenly become interested in higher forms of stage art than those which engage their No. They are studying Irv ing for the of It will not be necessary for you to pay the high prices demanded for a view of the long before he gets to your some of those mimics will have come and you may rest upon my assurance that none of them will be able to exaggerate his They will give you a sufficiently accurate idea of J. a recently secured a in New York as bookkeeper at per and rewarded the generosity of his employer by with intimate friend of Samuel J. states that the latter's Gramercy park residence has been remodeled us a future gift to the public for a under The property is valued at secretary of war reports the for the year of Hia estimate for 1885 is The number of desertions the army for the past year was nearly 3,600. One soldier was killed and nine wounded in actual Attention is especially invited to the defenseless condition of the sea coast and lake and the importance of aiding in the formation militia