Lawrence Daily Kansas Tribune (Newspaper) - November 21, 1882, Lawrence, Kansas VOLUME PERSONAL AND Train lives in New lork at an average expense of per week for Ten years ago his cigars cost than that per the journal who recently died in was the author of a Manual of Political which has been adopted as a textbook in several foreign universi and which has been Henry Harris Ameri can missionary in has printed the poems and rhymes from Nicholas in the Arabic language at The volume was issued in June aud is the first of its kind ever book has just been issued in Ver mont entitled The Resurrection of Christ from n Lawyers it is an investigation conducted according to the laws of and it ends with a full acceptance of the resurrec tion of Christ as a historical Abbic of has been a reporter in the courts there for ten Other female shorthand writers are Miss Alce of Chicago Miss of Washington and Jf of who reported in a speech delivered w German without wellknown and favorite nursery Three dates back to during which year appeared in i the authorship cannot be The fa miliar nursery rhyme of Little Jack was written in the sixteenth though by whom cannot be an NOVEMBER NUMBER FARM AND the deir mav have the best book forthe guidance of some enterprising students in Now believing that there is frond in every religion and no re ligion is have compiled what they consider useful in all the writings and published it under the of The New Thi work lo i c a the heavens and earih for the past of South is in his in ho was left an orphan at the ige of sis and buried the last of hi brothers over Aftur living years farm m his native lie concluded to seek fortune in the land of the making the voyage with litte discom lie his wife forty years and is cared for by five of his chil dren living lie hears and sees never took and was saws wood anU walks for and has still on his head locks of his own of which the genuine Irish auburn has never been silvered by widows of India having boon prevented by 1 he tyrannous English from cremating themselves along with their lead have taken to second marri determined to sacrifice lawyers into street fight the other Each n ho had a pistol hed kill the At once a dozen were offered to each by When they found how the populace was to get rid of extend much further than may be Strawberry roots range outward fire feet from rtx to and trees send out roots to a distance often as great as thirty Indianapolis all of the field crops which the farmer grows there are few if any thai afford a more certain profit than winter whether it be sown for the gran and straw or for a green crop to feed stock in In fact it is good crop to grow for any early spring past ure evaporation of black ries by the new process is so successful that it keeps up the price of this fruit during the Three and a hall quarts of green fruit will make one pound when It takes a bushel of apples to make six pounds of dried boiled cheese put a tablespoon ful of milk in a saucepan with a small piece of butter and half a pound of food cheese grated Boil over a slow and when it commences to bubble add one egg well beaten stir ly and turn into a dish and Serve very composed entirely of timo thy though not so for horses as those mixed with yet are pre ferred by and clear timothy the There if hay is to be timothy alone should be sown but if wanted for home use a mixture with clover is no detri excellent pudding is made of one pound of mealy sweet onehalf cup of three of a cup of white one tablespoonful of teaspoon fnl of four the whites and yelks beaten and one J the potatoes and grate them when perfectly cold rub the butter and sugar to a cream add the the and lemon beat the potato in gradually until then stir in the whites of the and bake in a deep Farm Journal talks in this way the good times upon which the farmer has fallen This will be a ood year for farmers that the price of their products will be So of next year and probably the Times will be good until the crash The sun shines farmers make Be be keep down ex buy little and sell all you Make every acre do its and clear off that Your time has now come this is your and if you do not make your books balance on the right side of the ledger by the time the bottom again drops out it will be your own not Selection of a they swore friendship ami vowed to live spite the is an able Ho brilliant reads Greek and is one of the best schol ars at the same time he jumps around and howls like an in a a hole in the toe of his causes valuable article to shoot way back around his Rabin Forest Tree from It is a good general rule to sow seeds of all kinds as soon as they are They will vegetate sooner if sown mediately after being gathered from the plant than they at any future Exposure to the air hardens the outside covering of which has a tendency to retard germination so that whether a seed will germinate in one one two or more years after it lias been put in the will depend very much upon the amount of drying anil exposure to the air that it was subjected to before it was But it is not always practicable or convenient to sow seeds immediately afier they are ripe and have been gath ered the alternative is to try jo preserve them in the best manner so as to retain their vitality so that they will germinate as speedily as possible when There are many seeds which ripen during late summer and in the There nrc many things to be consid ered in the selection of a To the gentleman who wishes to retire from the noise and tumult of city a farm has a different meaning than to the poor man who must toil daily for the maintenance of himself and The former will look through golden eyeglasses and seek for luxuries in the while the latter must obtain the necessities of The one will let in dividual taste rule in the the oth er asks himself Is this the best place for me to do substantial farming No general rules can be given for the rich man who buys a farm for the purpose of spending while for the one who seeks to make a living from the laud there are some words of The size of a farm should be suited to the capacity of the Many young farmers make the mistake of buy ing a large with little money to pay for There is nothing that so binds a man as a heavy It cats the very heart out of the and hangs like a leaden weight upon every aspiration of his wife and chil It is better to buy a small farm and have enough capital to work it As the surplus it may be in vested in more or in a better culture Of those that have already proved There is a size bo low which many of the economies of the farm cannot be practiced to the best and on the hand there is danger of going beyond that acreage where the most profitable farming may be carried It requires considerable executive ability to manage a large and therefore many men arc excluded from such by a lack which they may not fully appreciate until the trial has been made and the failure re Farming is not like the taking a and cannot be done successfully with a rush and a It is a thoughtful and steady working out from well laid conquest for and the head must be clear that wins where the seat of a campaign for a lifetime covers town ships or even square mi The soil is the foundation of and it should be fitted to the that it is desired to The differences in the nature and capacities of sand and clay should be and a favorable mixture of the two obtained if there is an opportunity for A rich with proper means good crops at but it may be as profitable to invest much less in an equal area of and bring it up to a high state of cultivation by green manuring and other methods of The farmhouse is to be the home of the and therefore the locality for the farm should bo The richest land for the price may be on the border of a malaria breeding but the of the investment may be more than balanced by the doctors bills and loss of not to mention the discomfort of fevers in the His important that there be an abundant water supply on all both for the family and the live There are social considera tions that no farmer should overlook in making a choice of a He lives not to himself alone the children need the privileges of good in the community should be one in which goodness and intelli gence With a good farm of proper healthfully abundantly supplied with good and a handy a man is so well situated that he ought to make himself and those around him Choose and hold on to the Fees at tierman little rhyme Twin little been i rhetorical blast from em and ripen early and will not keep well these should be sown as soon as and they will prob ably grow to good sized plants before the growing season Silver ma ples may be had from three to four feet high by December from seeds sown tho preceding Among those do best when sown in the or imme after they are are the seeds of the sweet horse If these cannot be sown in the fall they must be kept over until mixing them with sand or dry of any and kept in a cool changed into the globule I thy in a the other of faith was when one young lady in the lan guage of Taul faith is the substance of things hoped and the evidence of things not sot Where spon a gentleman inquired Where is hai quotation from its from jokingly replied the young Is that so said the 1 thought it wis next Christmas present will be a copy of the New Testa ment revised couple of darkeys were seated on the steps of a store on Baldwin where was displayed a large quantity of when one said what would be the if wp should pluck one of dem melons an retire to de bed ob de to test de quality ob de core I isnt very well in de but you take de melon an walk off wid it under your meantime Ill young man from His Let the Light II H i U do comer and study de konse German paper has rather a good story about a lady not as well as she went to consult a said the doctor after looking at her feeling her and asking her sundry I should advise I should ad vise get Are you doctor inquired the fair with a significant yet mod est T mein Fraulein but it is not you for physi cians to take the physic they Massachusetts The chestnut crop is being gathered in These nuts bring high prices in the and are a source of increasing income to those who gather f hear that one very prominent public man of the State has sold worth out of his woods thus Bird lives in a chest nut tl trees from which were largely cut to make room for his grounds 3 left many of them stand Ing 09 and they mill bear of the besides Bird has one residences in natural 1 situation in the He does bis r H such as an open shed or a well venti cool cellar if kept in a warm place they will not be good con dition in spring as when kept quite cold and slightly Sometimes acorns and various kinds of nuts will keep in fine condition by them thickly on the surface of the ground in the open air and covering them over with four or six inches ol earth Small that are light and such as seeds of the tulip tree and mul as also some of the later ripen ing winged as the sugar maple and the various specious of should be gathered when ripe and spread thin ly in an airy to partially after which they can be stored in coarse bags and kept in a airy room until required for sowing in pine and generally seed of all conifer ous should be kept in a similar manner during To succeed in raising plants with a good root it is essentially neces sary that the seeds should be sown in loamy soil Clayey soils are not to be as they too readily harden on the surface and form an impervious so far as relates to the ushing power of the here no other Mil is There are few farmhouses in which at least one one of the best not kept shut up most of the time and the intended for vis in city homes seldom fares much so far as the admission of and air are Then we put blinds on our windows to keep out the heat in summer and let them keep out the light all the year we hang tip cur tains for purposes of household deco and regard the resulting gloom as a necessity of modern life ve even devise all fantastic forms of colored for our dwellings in order to mod ify what little light does get No can be clean that is dark and no house that is not clean can be Pure light is a it destroys the poison of organic Its efficacy in this respect maybe illus by the fact that the poison ol that most dangerous of the which will retain its fatal power if kept in the becomes Innocuous after continuous exposure to the action of sunlight Let the into every every available except a we have seen good results attained by the seed with sand there is a clay soil to prevent growth when once the yonng plants show themselves above the The soil should not only be deeply but it should al ways be u rich and fertile w In general altogether too little account made of very the failures in fiat attempts in the cultiva tion of specialties such M of rate Fall and winter plowing has many Among them may be men pulverization of the soil and de struction of insect and vegetable The turning up of the earth in the fall affords an opportunity for the frost to work through the as every one loosens the ground by sep clods and hard It raises the ground How often have farm ers in clay soils seen their wheat roots raised out of the earth and when dried The atmosphere does good to the winter It tempers so to and makes for the spring And then grass and weed seeds and roots are destroyed and turned into mold instead of pests the coming of aliso and larvae are destroyed by myriads in the freezing I cannot better give an idea of ihe manner in which strangers are by the hotels than to give an experience of myself and a friend in re We put up at a ho and took rooms ou the second It was a very chilly evening when we anil I rang for the and told him 1 would Lite to have a jire in the Me bowed and Mv friend was visiting some friends in the Mid I was left After wait ing something about the lire ior about fifteen minutes I rang and waiter appearing I asked him if it was not possible to have a lire made this or 1 wait for some other He told me that the houseman was very but he would This was a plain bid for a so I gave him a mark and told him to hur ry up with tho Three minutes later the houseman appeared and inside of ten minutes there was a blazing fire in the The houseman stood at the door before and hinted as broadly as he could that he wanted but I paid no attention to He went out and returned in a few when he deliberately carried cir the hod of coal which was intended to re plenish iny I rang again and the waiter I told him I must have The houseman returned the stood in the doorway and hinted for a aud this time I was compelled to comply with his 1 was afraid that if 1 refused to see him he would carry off the Before we had retired that night we had feed the chambermaid for bringing in a lamp in stead we had feed wait and we had feed the Next morning as we descended tho stairs we observed a portier a bell He detained us in the hallway for a few and in the meantime nearly all the employes of the house gathered around want ed some more and the portier had pulled the so a to call them We gave them ail around and My who was born and bred iu old me what I have since learned from actual that this biggarly system of doing business is throughout Central Why the proprietors tolerate it is something I do not unless the fees ae divided with them The native Ger mans arc as thoroughly disgusted with the fee business asthe and almost as often It may be thought by those who have never had any experience of this that it would not be a very difficult matter to refuse to pay fees you wished to do Jt not You can refuse to pay fees unless you feel inclined to do You can walk in if you do not care to by your eyebrows to the roof of a You can stay at home in Chicago if you do not care to run the risk of being You neednt live in Chi ago if you dont like the You can be just as independent in Ger many as you are in You can order the waiters and tell them they are already paid for their services or you can tell the portier biggest a Eu ropean and almost as insolent as the hotel clerk in that you will not pay twice for everything that you will not give any You may disappoint tho portier and the and the rest of but in the long run you succeed only iu yourself There are two kinds of tho judicious and the injudicious You must learn to put your money where it will do the most The judicious lee will sometimes secure you the greatest comfort it will always assist in making your stay in a hotel The injudicious fee may occasionally have a good but usually it only protects you from annoyance without giving you any other Gen Americans are the distribution of their They usual ly give too much and too Fre they give large to per sons who do not expect and small ones to those who The result is and you will see it in your in your in your in your or in your llion there are people who fees as a matter of They as a matter of no benefit de rived from Others wive fees in an improper They allow the re to see that the fee is not given and the services which ae given in return for it are not given cheerfully The experienced tourist or traveler will always find in the first the persons upon whom he will be dependent for the numerous little comforts so essential to ones happiness in a European He will give them a little at enough to make them promise them If he makes the right kind of promise his attendants will do their best to earn his good wilL It is much better to allow them to live in hope of a future reward than to pay them before they have earned If they think that you have given them all you intend to they soon forget that 3ou have given them and become careles regarding vour happi Chicago Male Escorts to There is stopping in the city at the present time a gentleman whose name it would be unfair to but whose mission here is certainly a novel It in the establishment of a pri vate bureau which will have for its object the loaning out of young For in stance A wealthy maiden lady of un certain age desires au escort to the thea Despite the glitter of wealth and all the arts of the mo diste she fails to and per enjoy the distinction of a male escort by the role of to a younger aud fairer niece or as is more frequently the re main at To all such the founder or this bureau will prove a sincere The young men to be employed will be thoroughly sufficiently esthetic to suit all edu and They will prob ably come but ihe old maids will have In a social sense they will perform the same duties that are now performed by the nimble but hum ble District Telegraph with the dif ference that the former adds tone and while the latter is mere ly The modus operand is briefly thus The maiden lady sends for the man ager and informs him of her The manager opens his album and dis plays the different styles of ac companying each photograph with a de scription of the manners aud character of the The lady chooses her who immediately If the terms are next agreed If the lady be particularly she will probably board the young man at a fashionable where he will simply be known as a gentleman of ele gant The manager will see that lie has a large and suitable wardrobe befitting a young gentleman of his social Until the contract expires he remains the property of the it shall be his duty to drive her out in the take her to the different public places of as her to the houses of fashionable be introduced as an old the family temporarily residing in the If it be the pleasure that he talk interestedly entire squeeze her hand or look ble love at her as glides through the whirl of he of ex to do The dummys com will be regulated in a great though the slightly shirred scarf or the fronts of tho shirred upon a arc still Tucks around the skirt and on the over skirt are more used even than last sea and quite rival the lengthwise This is especially true of French as the 1arisian dressmakers have lately made the entire front and side breadths of tucks in cash mere costumes not only in but in The is that of and the edge is trimmed with a niche or with a narrow Vests are worn in such varied shapes this season that they afford excellent ways of freshening up a partly worn A velveteen or brocaded velvet vest may be added to almost or or satin If the bottoms ani In iles are a Breton vest is st as it is all in one or have a scam down the and can be sewed on the right side with edging of and is lapped across to the where it is met by similar and may bo fastened by hooks and or there be a row of small buttons down each If the skirt front is also a breadth of velvet may bo inserted there in simi lar and the vagaries of the styles are such that a bit of chenille or jetted fringe may be used at the foot of this even though it does not appear elsewhere on the dress there is a fancy for leaving the wide side breadths without any trimming at the no matter how elaborately the other par s of the skirt may lie If the Breton vest is not there can be a narrower vest put under scal lops of the dress or with a ruche to conceal the or there may be a more with double points in and slits for watch and change This vest is in the underarm and is often of with the cashmere front of the basque drawn back gradu ally from just beneath the Two gathered frills of doubled Ottoman silk or of each an inch and a half and boh turned toward the loft and placed down the basque from neck to waist are tasteful trim mings for any and will conceal the sailed a dress of last SECRET M LAURA Excelsior Ine Thursday at their hall In Kortt Lawrence L erery lit 7 at tho hall street JOHN Lodge meets Monday at in tho the Court All of rood are cordially invited to The Lawrence of the Aid meets every Thursday at Mil ler s All members iu pood nre cordially Invited U A if oed literary en every The No other domestic animal is or can bo as thoroughly adapted the wants of When from cattle of the J he homelier and more get exacting she is the greater the But the utility does not end Young ladies will find them useful In his duty as an will not be a but simply to arouse the jealousy anil pique the feelings of some other young man who may be too backward in coming It is ex that the manage things so admirably that the object of the young ladys affections will declare his feelings in short lest the stranger step in and carry off the prie he has so long been playing fast anil loose Looked at from a philosophical stand point the scheme is a good At all the experiment will be tried here next branches will be speedily opened m every large city in the Jhi cago Black A nice black wool dress has become almost indispensable in a ladys is valued alike by the young and For young the present fancy is to 11 1 1 m brighten black dresses with facings and vests of colored or to wear an entire of a gay or else a Jersey but the greater number of black wool dresses are now in the simple styles adopted for cloth as these are more serviceable because less likely to go out of and are inexpensive because they re quire no trimming but or else very simple The cashmere of nice and jet black without a we get their milk and and from oxen their we are done with the bovine aud can find no other possible use for The hog is useful only for what it furnishes for food and mechanical purposes in its bodily es From the we expect only 1cece and outside of food purposes and not n few races of people not make his exception do we not expect of the horse For work or for pleasure he is the intelligent and capsule servant of the human lie enters with most cheerfulness into the hardest of carries mans heavy hauls his heavy breaks up his tough cultivates his mar kets hirt produce doing in that his rare intelligence at all fits him In administering to our pleas ures he is the samu unfailing The sporting the man of and the man of leisure alike go to the horse for their Entering with the keenest zest into the ment of the lie furnishes by far the most sport of the In the shafts or under the saddle he gladly rests and refreshes the worried tlm mpr Cash Grocery House LARGEST STOCK FINEST GOODS At Bottom Prices and War ren Everybody made happy who deals at the Cash ENDS LEY PIANOS North of WILCOl AND WHITE brain the imprisoned mer and the wearied He in alike subservient to child and to the gentler or to the sterner refus ing no service which his strength will enable him to The breeding of horses received more thought and unremitting study than any other class of and the result is that there are strains and families perfectly adapted to a every special fhe draught ciuc is of itself so pleasing a fabric the general purpose the harnes that trimming is not needed to enhance the the the trot but the tubular many the all been bred t or a small quantity of exactly till the required of them ga loon made ot twisted or some Is it any wonder that in such a creat velvet folds are generally added to urc man best friend in ali th camel s hair If a combination j brute creation Is it strange that th is liked or there arc partly worn skirts of last season to be the wool goods is used for a panier pol or a pelisse with cuffs and collar of the material of the The Jersey webbing that is sold by the yard is also purchased for a waist to be used with woolen skirts in sin gle widths this is now sold for a and is made up with few and more and Hale of while nursing her dying began to abase the live other ind vowed that they should never have a cent of the old mans as she would control him in making a wilL He all his property to ihe had bat her own words proof that she unduly influenced his en and the will has been set so admire stork is that he can t on one leg and look M though a poor found 300 Spanish doubloons under the stump of a tree near the Pamlico in orth the other The finding of the coin has caused great ex Harris was offered for his During the past hun dred years periodical searches have been made on desolate sandbars and islands on the North Carolina coast for treasure supposed to have been buried by the Captains Kidd and Black From time to time money has been visiting in a ministers where the parents were very in regard to the childrens patn was confidentially in the Prls she to be a minister inquired the rather puzzled to given the child so sudden an admiration for that She b tne e fitted than less elastic as it and expands with the Some young ladies add a and sash of dark bright Turkey or turquoise blue cashmere to com plete these waists the buttons are usually black and very Plush that is no longer the first is now used for the with camel s hair for the The skirt mav be perfectly with a narrow box of tenderest regard thus frequently up between master and servant In deed the man who regards his horse with other than kindly feelings is un worthy of the Slack Dogs in A curious story of canine sagacity is reported in the Cologne The of at the or it may have some lengthwise plaits ad ded in the front or sides where the overdress discloses or it may have most of its fullness in great box plaits and the ever garment be cut with long side and a short postilion back that is cut oft straight across on the This makes a warm looking winter dress for ladies who do not find the suits The woolen repped staffs that are liked best have the reps lengthwise instead of across the because they are more easily cleansed by brushing downward these are sim ilar to what was formerly called Biar ritz but the reps are more prom inent Beaded trimmings are not liked for black wool the ladies who consider expense think it a risk to buy jet because they have been worn so The embroideries done on the fabric are liked lor more costly black dresses of cashmere or of cartels Tbe Henrietta cloths that were for merly confined to ladies dressing in mourning are now by those owner of a number of rabbits near Bar nicu found that for six successive nights one of his rabbits was stolen from the house which he had made for them of a wooden case which stood a few inches above the At the top ol it an opening had been made about the width of two which was closed at night by a board which heavy stones were The house having thus been and as it was found each morning that only one rabbit had been and that all the rest were quite it was considered im possible for a weasel to have effected the It supposed that human hands had been at The owner consequently first made the opening more secure by nailing down one side of the and covering it with grass and and himself in order to watch for the At one oclock in the morning he heard a noise at the and was not a little astonished to see two dogs in stead of a man on the top of it One was a large dog of the well known to a cross between a Bernard and a large woolly collie by all other dogs the second was a a small just slender enough to get through the hole in the The big on other never noticed his smaller bad evidently come loan understanding with his little friend about the nocturnal The bie dog scratched away all the grass and the stones dragged np the and let the terrier ump through the The later returned hi a vew minutes wt b a rabbit n Toning and Repairing Promptly Attended Sheet and Books la large CAMPAIGN TIM AND 1881 Are In the field than AHB