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Lawrence Daily Kansas Tribune
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Lawrence Daily Kansas Tribune

   Lawrence Daily Kansas Tribune (Newspaper) - October 2, 1882, Lawrence, Kansas                                VOLUME OCTOBER NUMBER TO An for tills paper shouM be accom liy tire name of author mi for luit as an of falili on part of Hie Writ only on one of ihc pa lie careful In to nave the letun ami plain anil cr an often 10 of tkr t to arc written Of A TRUE Just as thn closing WHS into twilight Tlie sun hail sot in wind swept the Sighing ns onward it passed to thn As u loaf we all do do that some neighbors came ping in Tbe lours of TII un Talk of tin of Nor n danger lurking till wilu Tlv 11 man to this company mil His uu uu Hut swuna tin With louden tongue vrith si mud left uvi Ho the only To him surely was to u ury Ami mill end in confusion in thy Unln string tiil do life of Ilia volco So sKni no choice Hut Ill Ttio bruin harm no 0110 but iIK ou iho AVith iron unto thr Till ail tho liis prisoner swift his ill torn out of to tn liis own workshop se 511 of Ion and so l to liU And chain i anvil Tiin will skill Ity none his did In tis Tin wo it is my to tmi my And 1 forgit nut U lray if Ih I iU will or morns Imd set and risen his Hti no of Ko of a ood on tho Ills chain Ihe anvil lint his tried son nad 1 left uiv of l to tin Will siand no other Will si in A PA IK OP Tom ami Kurt were on the of thu lill of b limy wont now of fun or to in ill li iS ken of hours they won not in The sun foil full and warm on the hero anil thoro with oaks ami low The were on the white clover and ill but their stood in tho very deepest of the chewing and switching oil the lies with a regular pendulumlike sway of Apart from the main herd a pair of pretty red and white yearlings wuri in a way that threatened disloca Toni had had some vague idea of itching them to the oxcart but what ould he do with two steers that pcr isted in traveling round in a circle as ar apart as they tie their tails aid struck witha bright o sooner said than done and the tails f the unfortunate pair were knotted nto indissoluble The boys their work with his last move had completely subdued he spirits of the They stood side y meekly awaiting the will of Hut just at that moment Tom espied he Deacon making his way down the Deacon Joness eyesight was lot and he was shading his eyes hand and evidently trying to make out the group at the extremity of he Bert said Theres quick Off came he yoko ina trice but alas the boys lad forgotten the knotted Tho pulled but the knot So were tlie hoys that they did lot once think of getting out of the vay but a despairing sense if awaiting the coming of thu as It is for me to attempt to picture s astonishment and The calves were and Tom and Hurt marched to tho house and put to as a not daring to say even me word for After which he Deacon sat in the kitchen door while ho his face and his round head with his yellow cot ton told the story to I Mammy sighed deeply while lis and as she took two apple turnovers from out the brick deposited them on the oldfashioned china she wondered whether it would lessen the of Deacons discipline if she should slyly slip them into the boys 1 for the Deacon wise a man to at to punish two by putting them to bid in one chamber in tlie day Bert was in atone extremity ot the and Tom was in the unfinished room at the The doors wero carefully Tho thought he hail cut oft all communication between the two but he had yet to learu the extent of the resources of two boys bent upon There was a very comfortable ir for the convenience of the cats at Deacon Catholes had been cut from the outer wall of the house through succession of lie cats could have access at any hour of day or night t the where often As Tom was lying in revolving in his mind all the of his position and casting about for way of old Towser walked se through the from the outside Instantly a way of with 15ert through Tours Me secured both catholes at so Towser not gut hunted up a si ray ot brown v in hi wrote the following note to tn i saw a north warf tim days is a i can no take tho rope out of ihu bd slid to I Inno t tnd Kit out the winder to wito til I Tom did not say how he expected to make his He was ex port in penmanship anil the composi tion of tlie above short note took so I much time it nearly sunset when it j was I laving folded he j fastened it with string around the cathole in the direction of ut him whence he proceeded next day in Captain Ingrams hid den in the and the following night smuggle themselves on board the In the meantime they must have something to without any they rilled the contents of jars and taking many thick slices oi pink corned beef and a couple of These were packed into one of Mam mys tin pails thus provided our two heroes started out on their trav with as delightful anticipations of the wonderful and surprising things in store for them as ever It was about three miles to North Wharf refreshed by tho enforced rest of the they trudged cheerfully munching and Captain Ingrains barn was a large as the haying season was it was well filled with hay from the floor to the topmost The boys selected the latter place in which to and excavated a large hole in the hay near the The moon had sunk low in the and the moon beams fell through the crevices of the lighting up their little den and lending to it a sense of comfort and It was sometime before they were composed to think of They talked in low their talk dwelling mostly on catching cod fish and on the between schooners and and such nauti cal Once Bert ventured tc wonder what Mammy would when she found they were gone but this sub ject was illicitly thrust asido as disa greeable and At last they began to grow and Tom was just dropping when he thought he heard a movement ol some not far He was wide awake in an He knew there was not an animal in the for the cows and horses were always left in the pasture during warm summer lie clutched Berts hand and found had heard and was wide In a moment or two there was a sub dued Ahem coming apparently from the mow just under Cold sweats started out all over Tom when he heard and his mind turned in voluntarily to the unfinished chamber ami empty bed How he wished himself back in it They sat with clasped hardly daring to 1retty although it seemed to the boys there was another and a louder Ahem Who or what was it It was before the days of though occasional ly a stray vagabond was seen in Canter Could it lie a handorgan man had heard fearful stories of capture of children by handorgan men he had heard how they and beat and how tired the children got walking all day and shading the tam What if this handorgan man should carry them oil Somehow a life did not seem so desirable and charming to him as it did when he and Tom were talking about And Tom A few before lie hail heard Sam Ellis telling at the about a crazy man who had escaped from tlie Danvers Lunatic Asylum ami encil from among the was wandering about the tcr trowsers aud j rifying the women and it bo thought that that am t they asked pointing them out to Bert was a Boston summering at Fat her give em to me I lets yoko tell Joe the other day its about these boys were spoiling for some They had been try ing to be good all the in consideration a few of n promise made to Mammy Jones the day Joe fished them out of the into which they had while trying to capture a huge The was a slippery perhaps a rod in and full of So Toms proposition was very wel without a moments hesita they leaped from the fence and went together to the barn for the little j yoke used in the breaking of taking care to keep out of range of the windows and door of the where Mammy was If she should chance to see she would be sure to ask what they were going to with all their Tom and Bert wOro truthful and would never have thought of getting into or out of a scrape r by telling a It was work of time tho little Just as Bert or Tom almost had his hand on he would and kicking up his With a series of Hying leaps they dashed hi among the followed by the the sharp briers seizing their making numberless little ragged down to the furthest end of the over a bit of bog that ominously under the footsteps of both boys and calves now in among the feeding cat who looked up with an air of sur pnt went on tranquilly feeding cattle understand you then through thn running the mud over the boys the destruction tte blackberry Vines had begun tired tbe were caught and yoked the the next question was what to do with Obstinate and they would not but pulled attaining their ful v on his as utterly unconscious of the weighty message he bore as a United States In due time he returned with the following TOM 1 always to RC I hope we shall lie like in so and live OH u island Hint vat broth ItKUT You will notice that Bert shows the superiority of his Boston schooling by writing the capital I where it Toni waited night till lie knew everybody was in Joe was always the last to go to Tom heard him come up to his which was next to the unfinished He heard him take boots and toss them into the Then he sang averse of A wet sheet and a flowing Joe an old sailor and al ways when he wa asi gentle shore was which increased might ily in volume settled into a regular which indicated Joe was off for the Toms hour had crapt noiselessly up the flight of steps leading to tho scuttle iu tho roof verj cautiously somehow it fell from his grasp and dropped upon the floor with an awful the snoring icart was in his But an old who had slept through many a roaring was uot to be awakened jy so trivial a noise as that by a falling The snoring began Tom out upon the Ho could climb like a cat and every inch roof on the farm was to He ran lightly along the jumped down upon the thence to a and then to He put on his shoes he generally went barefoot in warm v but he felt that this was an occasion which demanded like Sunday or town and went round to the east porch and who was vary man was in the barn with them Or perhaps dreadful beast had es caped from a menagerie and in the or a or a huge It was not They had heard of such It was with thn greatest effort that the two frightened follows kept from shrieking To their great there were no more terrifying but a regular breath ing was breaking into an which indicated that the creature was to Vie quite and ling down from their perch on the they crept out of the barn and started for running almost every stop of the The moon had gone down and it was quiet dark but this they thought if the or handorgan or or whatever it might awakened by thir exit the barn should follow he could not readily sec They reached finding the back door crept up to bed with a happy sense of safety and It never to them to ask how that door chanced to be open at that time oi They were only too glad to as certain that without asking any questions about it if they had been looking out about ten aftet own they would have seen a familiar figure bolt the and walk softly up to Joes The next morning they sound ly Mammy had to ring the an un precedented for they were generally up at They came down very very happy and quite content to find themselves in their own places at the cosseted by Mam instead of waking up in the hay on top of Captain Ingrams seen by plan Oriental Traffic and How many German and Italian cities owed to this toilsome Oriental and magnificence Thorold Rogers brings this out clearly in his most interesting book on the History of Agriculture and Prices in He says In the fifteenth century such towns as and and were at the height of their The waterway of the bears ble traces of the wealth which was car ried down it in the numerous castles of the robber tlie extirpation of whom the first object to which the resources of were direct The trade of tho East enriched burghers of the Low Countries after a long and tedious the abundant spices of the in creased in price a hundredfold by the tolls which rapacity exacted and tbe profits which merchants were sold in small parcels by the grocer or or purchased in larger quantities by wealthy consum at the great Stourbridge or in the perpetual market of Then came a mem Western Asia was repeatedly ravished by the Turkish and Tartar Jn many fertile md famous countries the cultivated returned to their primitive deso great cities shrank into miserable country and the people incurable and hopeless The merchant found it more and more less and less o penetrate info the interior of At length the Turkish conquerors reached the Bosphorus and the Helle The Greek gave place o the Ottoman and under their new masters tho and Asia Minor were closed to Christian com From Constantinople the Otto mans spread their conquests to the Danube on the one and the Eu the Finally Selam subdued the cities of Arabia and and stopped the last overland route a few years after Vasco de Garna had discovered the pas sage round the Cape of Good Thorold shown with great fullness how conquest of Egypt raised the price of almost every Oriental commodity imported into The same conquest struck a fatal blow at the greatness of many un Italian and German From this epoch we may date the decline of Ven and Venice scarcely suffered more than Augsburg and for many an many a silent reminded the traveler of that great change in the line of Eastern Then Portugal and afterward Kng land and seized on the sea route to and on the of the who added to that rich monopoly the empire of India and of ihj was to Europe sill that Venice and Augsburg and had been anil she was lini the of the Ottoman followed by the construction of the Suez Canal and of the Alpine has reopened the old path of The cities of Ihc Mediterranean are Tho Mediterranean States have gained much nnd we have lost even in the last two and as time goes on they will continue to gain and we to who as I the cities of Europe forty years then cities of the would hardly recognize them activity nnd 15ut we must not for the session in their yellow thor A prefer the latter distributing them among tho libraries and newspapers in their or sending them direct to favorite That the stenographers task is no easy one can readily be owing to the complex character of public He must adapt himself to every form of from the resonant tones of the scholarly orator to the utterances of the insipid t Coupled with this is the vast dif j in the rate of The average rapidity of ordinary conversa tion is one hundred and twentyfive words per or about two per second but this is by no means an un qualified A stenographer is often obliged to report at thn rate of one hun dred eighty words per and sometimes as low as which is mere Strange as it may the latter rate is exasperating to nn expert and his notes are not as readily deciphered as if compelled to report at much As most of the speaking in both Houses is done under the rule allows a member five minutes to debate any pending it will readily be seen that tho reporters art is often taxed to its utmost A amount of matter is printed in tho which is never de livered by tho under the con venient yet rule of leave to Five minutes debate often covers columns of the Record under the above Among the fastest speakers in the House arc the n in the order of their rapidity of Jowa of Kentucky of Kentucky of Massachusetts of Ohio of Kentucky of New The majority of the members sire average talkers yet there are many who never rise in their not pos sessing the faculty of extemporaneous Most of this class are silent and what they lose in debate they gain by soliciting aid upon meas ures in which they are interested from This method of legislation has its direct and many important are thus legislated through The Senate possesses but few rapid them being of Kentucky of Maine For a moi of to sea looked very silly aud and Toms I on the watch and had already fastened the bedcord to the opened the win swung down to the roof of the mysterious incident It and reached from bered that the boys packed their they were eating Baasha said there must have been a traveler along the night Traveler was the old country name for The grass was trampled about the buttery and she had found a deficiency of doughnuts and and there was not so much cold beef for as fho thought there Tom and Bert did not to look up while she was telling II they they would observed an unusual twinkle in Joes as he looked at and a suspicious twitch at the corners said who al had a tender spot in her heart foi I hope the tasted good to In I will add one verj It will be remem pro thence by a ladder which Tom j visions in a large tin and they cer to the a j tainly never thought of taking it with square with two hern on their rapid retreat from the Toms father rigidly carried ont his but yon should haw seen Toms eyes when he pointed pai to as it stood on the kitchen tentions of and the had been kept on bread boys milk the good for but considered rather deficient to sup plies of Mamma Jone delectable 3 Tom at once opened his plan to dresser Frances in Inde punish a child f or pet that political freedom bns had as tunch effect as the return of Eastern commerce in the renewal of their pros The English merchant is not as to complain of a change which lias benefited the producers and con sumers of the Instead of sitting down with his hands before his hard fate or living upon a reduced he has out new if not so even more beneficial to mankind than those which ho has Congressional Since the foundation of the Govern ment the name of this publication has several From 17118 to 1824 it was known as the Annals of Congress from 1821 to 1837 as Con Debates from 1837 to 1871 it was called the Congressional Globe and since the latter date it has been known as the Congressional There is no daily publication in the world so vast as tho Typo graphically it is a marvel of taste and It is printed in nonpareil type on a inch the columns running in a three inch stick is easy to and of good mailing It contains an average of from seventyfive to 120 In the House a corps of five steno perform the entire work of reporting the each receiv a of per The re porters alternate in what are called each estimated to fill a column of the varying in time from ten to fifteen retiring successively to a room specially fitted for their in which there are ten amanuenses in two for each both taking from nis dic tation at the same While employed the stenographer corrects and trims the manuscript already banded in bv the After this careful revision it to sent at once by special messenger to tbe foreman of the at the Government who distributes the technically called among A is taken and sent to the of whom there are it is then and then returned for a second and after being re it is ready for final print in the to be issued to Congressmen and In the Senate the work is in charge of one who salary of twentyfive thousand dollars He usually employs two assist ants and a corps of Hie mode of dictation is similar to that em ployed in the tlie reporter is responsible for In the House jeach stenographer is held personally i Vi of Kansas of Delaware and of It goes without saying that much must be left to the intelligence of the stenographer to make a sensible All grammatical errors in and tautological ex which arc by no means infre quent with many of cent to the National Capital to represent the people of their must be elimin ated by As an instance of the ludicrous sug gestions sometimes made by our illus statesmen in rogard to the ap of their I will you a verbatim nf a the submitted by a prominent Upon the announcement of an and nay vote the pairs were The next thU promi nent member from onu of the Western States found himself duly announced as with the gentleman from Rhode The illiterate member gazed long and wishfully at tho reporters or not being satisfied wrote flic which lie handed to the reporter a liis version of how the matter should read 1 nm Road isl m actual and not the produc tion of a reporters creative the reportorial staF in each the every marking the of the and paragraphs punc s it for its linal appearance in One copy in is placed on the desk of each Represent Senator for the days Congressional reporting is greatly facilitated by the use of arbitrary which often mean whole I rise to a question of is represented by one char In tho reportorial work needs peculiar minutest per and excessive It is sin difficult in the heat of debate to one member from another the eye and hand must work in as in discussions the reporter is often obliged to write looking at his During the delivery of long speeches the reporters occupy seats ad joining or very near the member speak Washington En The Copper Cent in For the first time in tho history of copper cents are coining into smallest coins in circulation have been the nickel and silver half The reason that the Texas people have come down to pennies is not because they have be come impoverished at but it is all owing to the late which compelled the railroads to carry passen gers at three cents a In order to make the conductors have been supplied with copper which are regarded with intense not to say by a great many who have never seen any Tho copper cents will supply several long felt There is the irascible indi who is to bo met with in every and who is always saying for three cents he would give somebody a sound or perform some other rash We once heard a man at make a proposition of that down on a to a man who was smaller than For three he said I would peel oil my coat and clane you ovit in less time than it would take u donkey whip a The party of the second who was a wiry sort of deliber ately produced a and tendering it to Ihc party of the first told to sail in and get his moneys But 1 cant make the mind the Just take tho live and begin to carry out the I dont want to accept any presents from I dont want to im poverish your 1 am a man of lay I said that Id thresh you for and Ill do it soon as you hand me out the three As there were not three copper cents on the parties were obliged to cancel the The en and all were declared This was a great disappointment to the party of the who can now find other parties who arc tinan able to accept his for in a short time Texas will be covered with copper Some amusing mistakes occur on the owing to the resemblance the new copper cents have to a two dollar and a half gold Not long just after conductor on the lu in making gave a passenger a dollar and that Hie correct As soon as tin conductor was out of the SECRET iab LAURA R tt their tall In North Lawrence at 7 at ball Henry JOHN Monday ut 7 tn tho op tni Court All of soot cordially to Thn Lawrence Aid every at Mll All in rood j invited to A good literary uo every Cash Grocery House LARGEST STOCK FINEST GOODS At Bottom Prices Corner and War ren Everybody marie happy who at the Cash ENDSLEY JONES pared with tho membro from Road is and until further not This is u Sorrows of a were plenty of seats in the but as he walked down tho aisle ho looked the right and left un til he reached a pretty girl who was sit the lucky passenger examined the coin critically by thi rather dim and indulged in a of Finally hu leaned over and whispered to a friend Ive stuck that of v conductor for two dollars and a He it to me by Tell the boys to get out at the next nnd Ill Sure about half a dozen cow boys accompanied the who had so suddenly acquired to a nnd after ilog was surprised beyond meas ure by the barkeeper pushing back tho deceptive with tho remark Hand out half a if you That is about the tenth time today L have had your sort of galoots trying to poke oft copper cents on me for two dollar and a half gold Texas Fall Styles for In neckwear tho pulT scarf is to tako the place of all the various shapes of Hat This is an adaptation of the French and the manufacturers are vying with one an endeavor to produce the handsomest The small figures nnd polkadots that have been so pop ular the past will be superseded by flaring colors and rich All the grounds are brilliantly lighted and cov ered in the brightest tints bright Tho designs are mostly in spots and and all over tissued In new designs are shown in linen with very striking figures mostly of a plain color surrounded with a brilliant of colors and large Tho siik handkerchief is scarcely shown save in the variety known as English and plain white is to be more popular among the ultra fashionable than it has been i or eight In Roman colors will be all the rage terracotta shade is to a strong In pure for full dress black will be generally but other solid will find pur In there will be no material the standing closefitting collar finding the greatest number of ad PIANOS Fliat dor North of AND WHITE Hardman and Hale Seat Miss he with a knowing stammered the looking around in Down he plumped and braced hint self for the He was a regu lar and held his commuti ticket in his roared the who had watched him from The regular passenger smiled sweet ly at the pretty girt put up his out of which two rides were promptly Tickets Hold on protested the regular pas you punched this This lady replied the but you walked set down and went to work on the regular married styler it was your Too late Take a vacant seat next and Promptly Sheet la large BOOK CAMPAIGN AND Erery Member and allowed Be proposed that they 8ay the have disobeying but copies of the and H in ancer and never let him know thai is optional whether betakes them every he ia pamphlet or at the end of And the passengers went to the con offered him cigars and bought train boy fpc they said Ive seen him but this is the first time it cost him a couple of dol lars to play Do you know who the lady asked an inquisitive My replied the a Mind musician A has been appoint teacher in the Royal College lor tbe Blind at In heavy gan suits are shown in esthetic tints terra and terra with silk though solid colors of the same tints be These suits are very and will sell at from seven to fifteen dollars a Pure silk underwear is unchanged in every thing it is a trifle too expensive to manufacturers to attempt to force any decided colors into and in the well known it cannot bo imitated and shows for Suits tor winter will cost from fifteen to dollars depending on the quality and size Suspenders will be silk in rich sporting and the polka dot will be variously mounted with and gilt chains and white The favorite color for gloves be mahogany aud red tan the material will be line It to thoroughly stamp out the standard though will be In jewelry the unique French patterns will find a ready sale for as there is an increasing tuste for designs that are not worn by everybody else and as the fashions in this article change so gentlemen prefer to chase the imported article in to pure gold and jeweled pins shown by the In rings and tons and plain Roman will be The stones to be worn are aqua and though much latitude ia allowed in Home AN In tbe Held with men thu AUD oca  

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