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Waukesha Evening Journal Monday, April 28, 1890,
Wisconsin

Waukesha Evening Journal Monday, April 28, 1890,
Wisconsin

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Wisconsin

Waukesha Evening Journal Wednesday, April 30, 1890,
Wisconsin

Waukesha Evening Journal Wednesday, April 30, 1890,
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Waukesha Evening Journal Thursday, May 01, 1890,
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Waukesha Evening Journal Thursday, May 01, 1890,
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Waukesha Evening Journal Friday, May 02, 1890,
Wisconsin

Waukesha Evening Journal Saturday, May 03, 1890,
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Alton Daily Telegraph Tuesday, June 10, 1890 ,
Illinois

Atlanta Constitution Tuesday, June 10, 1890 ,
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Bismarck Daily Tribune Tuesday, June 10, 1890 ,
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Colorado Springs Gazette Tuesday, June 10, 1890 ,
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Daily Nevada State Journal Tuesday, June 10, 1890 ,
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Waukesha Evening Journal
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Waukesha Evening Journal

   Evening Journal, The (Newspaper) - June 10, 1890, Waukesha, Wisconsin                               EVENING JOURNAL RUST Publishers OUR BOYS AND FACT AND FICTION FOR ESPECIAL DELIGHT It Els Plucky tittle A Young Side Flower Hon Thad Stevens was law at Lancaster a boy up to his desk off your Mr Stevens Slid I aint got my hat replied the do you mean by contradicting demanded Mr Stevens aint got my hat persisted the the my brother Joe's Mr Stevens as he re- pressed a smile the next time you have an errand here bring Joe with so that he can take oft his Harpers Young People A Little Girl There is a little girl up at North who possesses rare presence of mind She is Susie age 8 years A few days ago while in her father's she put her hand into the the crank a and out three of her tiny nicely sliced off Without stopping to little Susie calmly picked up the ringers and took them to the house Her mother immediately hitched up a team aud drove her child to tiie family who neatly at- the several fingers to the stumps Though he took some chances of failure ia the operation it is now re- ported that the fingers are growing on arid the doctor says they will be just as good as Way Side Flower Crosses Many of the little girls and who live in which is in have to watch all day the cows in fields or on the hills And often while sitting on the green earth the cows sleepily chewing their or the sheep browsing on the grass little peasants find the hours grow long and tedious So to help pass them away they busy selves in making flower crosses They always foim a cross with the branches of the thorny evergreen with beautiful yellow very com- mon 1 and then fasten to it sies and other pretty wild blossoms and when the cross is done they set it up by the wayside in the hedge fence Sometimes a long row of these flowers may be making the wayside bright and lovely A young them away from but I held oa and she couldn't get them The Superintendent said any one wanted to ask a question they and I got up and is a Uncle Jank said he would give me a silver dollar if I found out you stop pulling I'll tell mamma of you when I get home Then they all laughed again and wouldn t and the Superintendent guess it is a little girl tha means but makes mistakes And T said I guessed it was Then they all stood up and and I said as as I could Going I Said to it I'm going every But Minnie wouldn't and mada me walk I almost down we came to Mr Jennie by the gate und Minnie stopped to talk to her I looked through the gate and saw some flowers and I went in it was so many I picked a nice bouquet of red the mamma has in the house These grew in the ground Then I was smelling a rose and an ugly big fly jumped out of it and bit mo on the and it burned like fire I screamed and and Minnie came running into the garden and pulled rue through the aud jerked me all the way home Minnie's an awful and I screamed and looked at me And one gentleman said to you ashamed to hurt your When I got home my nose was all swelled up and red Mamma put something on it and stopped ing Uncle Jack you look like Squire Roberts with that big red I a fly bite nose And Uncle Jack whisky bit his Minnie made a great fuss and myself at Sunday but she said the most about what the couldn't see why twenty weeks alter I went to Sunday school Squire Roberts and his wife came to see us The Squire and papa and Uncle Jack was sitting on the piazza smoking and talking politics 1 like Squire so fat and shines so I went out on the piazza and do you how's That's what papa said when he saw him The Squire all my come and sit on my and I went I kept looking at his nose and thinking how bad it must and at last 1 your nose ache He what do you Toot My nose don't ache at why should I it our noses was just and the thing didn't bite did A fly bit and whisky bit Uncle Jack says I guess papa swallowed something the wrong way just then cause he choked and Uncle Jack never laughed at all as he does when I talk Then papa said real in the house this and I went And the and his wife vent right off and they've never come here Free Press THE WORLD OF WOMEN A GOLDEN GRIST FOB OUK FAIR Nice or Mrs u Wife Mannish Maldons The floral bracelet 13 the very latest in the flower aud it it coming rapidly into favor The bracelet is made by little pansies or and making the arm circlet on little pieces of fine wire These floral decorations are then worn on the bare high up near the when full dress is in or else can be worn over on the street or at receptions N Worn left Boston for sojourn in the says a writer in the Boston Ti grandpa gave each of the lads twenty-five apiece to spend I who lived in while I her a brother of A man said that hh idea of a nice woman was one who was charmed with what he and paid very little at- tention to the things he did A nice woman ii one who says good morning with a smile and good night with a blessing A nice woman is one who doesn't make you at with her nor expect you to think there 1 was but doctor in the and that hs is the one of her A nice v is one who is evenly pleased with the the does not affect her and when skies rain water she does not shower tears and groans where A nice woman is one who can eat what is set before wear the clothes she possess and do both with lity and without envy A nice woman is one who sees the niceness in you and me and all the rest of the worl and us she obliterates our faults she makes us try to do too That's thn nice woman held out against it for a bul as all tho mothers and aunts are mous in declaring that nothing but sea water and sea air can do Mariechen any I know that if I every cold in the head which mav befall the seventieth year ot her age will be set down to my avarice and ternal Again he I was reduced to such a state of despair by all plannings that I was positively determined to give up the whole and I went to bed with the firm resolution at all to travel right without stopping anywhere on the way But Johanna attacked me ia tho night with the youngster in her by dint of all the arts that drove man out of Para- she of course gained her and the original scheme is to be carried It is fair to the Princess after this to quote her husband's loving letter from have had a bad con- because I am seeing so much that is beautiful without you If you could only be carried hither through the I would go with you this very moment back to San don Da lly Memory A curious instance of memory in infancy took place in our family My mother went on a visit to my grand- She took who During our whole journey in the i H mouths and hh who Paul's whole conversation was of the many purchases he to and no sooner had the IDK stage coach deposited us at our than he slipped away from me and ran to the with fifteen cents worth of sticky try molasses candy aud a dime I confiscated the with a view to doling it out in limited quantities from time to and him to deposit the dime in my telling him that it would be just like depositing the money in the that I would keep it for that at any time when he really wanted it he come to me and draw it I had no occasion to use any money for four or five when on going to my I was surprised that the supply of loose coin had noticeably diminished At I could not count for but aiter a 1 ittle thought I concluded to question the small boy Calling him lo I did you take your ten cents out of mamma's I have tooken it out four and now I want it Miss or All women out of their teens are entitled to he styled is merely a and is properly confined to voung just ap is commonly confined to school boys In the days of was the common appellation of unmarried Ladies Sir Walter speaks ot Joanna as Mrs Joanna Baillie There n plenty ot spinsters insist on being addressed as and at one or two places in curiously the married lady is and lady receives the title of The same custom is found in many parts oi Ireland The form was one time applied ently to persons at all ages Among the whether married or expects to be called So do though unmarried In point ot Mrs or Mistress is a title of respect that the plain devoid of Why j Healthy Women The Lancashire at arc the strongest set of women im- of on days and when repeated j and have removed j eVal 1 avers of coal and it is that at a most of I them aie fully equal in physical power i to their masculine colleagues At home they are not inferior to almost I of working or otherwise Be- i ing engaged in the open air all j they can naturally turn in the evenings with more than ordinary zest to hold duties In a they are domesticated is the great and conduct are ab- unimpeachable As to the working dress ot pit that is tainly looked at from a con- standpoint Up to a few years they were attired like men up to the with buckled clogs on their above the knees came the j end of a a composite sort of half half with some sacking material i tied round the waist as an A I limp tied under the or a j sort of so arranged as just to I show the neatly plaited hair and the bright the and very odd it especially at a which in this case did not lend enchantment to the view out ot deference to the feelings of peculiarly sensitive people the tunic is worn a little so as nearly Jo hide the masculine the head dress is a little in addition a short jacket is worn This diess is certainly not but as a means to an as allowing the utmost freedom oi motion and obviating ib is be- 1855 RATIONAL 1865 I A J FIELD Vice K ML E JR Assistant P H Buys and Sells Drafts on Europe Boxes for Rent in the Safety Deposit Department i 1 1 i Steamship Passage Tickets for sale by the best and English Soutes J A Dealer Etc Cor Main aud Clinton If you want anything in the line of Milli- FINE HAT or call on MISS M A Clinton St C PLUMBER M Gas find Electric Light Fixtures ed and promptly at- tended to 53 Waukesha NATIONAL THE ANO RAILWAY unrivaled facilities for transit tho most important cities aud North and South and Wyoming Tho train service adjusted to meet the requirements of aud local and includes FAST DINING CARS and DAY COACHES Running Solid between Chicago and ST COUNCIL OMAHA AND DENVER OF E If Pieu H A Vice Pres W P M Jameson S A Fox John H A D D L A g neral banking business transacted Draws drafts on all principal cities in Pas tickets to and fiom always on hand MARK'S I've been wanting to go to Sunday school n long time Mamma atu aid would not be a good And Minnie you let her mamma She will be sure to do something Uncle Tc you are a and shall go to Sunday if I have to take you I what is a and he find and I will give you a big ver So I went to Sunday school All the way Minnie kept ing you mustn't do this and you do and I said I I liked the he looked like a long black lead He do you my to me And I O How are just line our hired Minnie jerked my hand and made me sit down I the I know the but I sang tle Sallie as loud as I and once they all got through Before I and Minnie jerked me awful The teacher was prettier than nie She had roses in her hat and two little holes in her cheeks she laughed She told a beautiful story angels going up and down a der They said they was white with big And course none of yon ever saw an I said as loud as I could she said I I said got em at pur more'n fifty of em They're while with big and they say Then all the laughed and the teacher those are They passed around a plate in and I took two bright and Minnie waited on her as her maid One day this nurse brought the baby boy into my mother's room and put him on the which was carpeted over There he crept and amused self according to his lights When my mother was dressed a certain ring that she genei ally wore was not to be found Great seaich was but it was never and the visit all went and it was almost ten Exactly a year after they again went to visit the grandfather The baby was now a year and 11 months old The same mirse took him into the same and ray mother saw after looking about deliberately walk up to a certain turn a bit of pet back and produce the ling He never gave any account of the nor did so far as I remember it afterward It seems almost likely that he found the ling on the floor and hid as in a safe under a corner of the carpet where it was not He probably forgot all about it till he saw the place and lie was far too infantile at the tame it was missed to understand what the talk that went on was or to know what the which perhaps he did not was in An Heiress Umbrella Miss Paula von der a buxom young lady of fell heir to a legacy of marks a few months ago One of her first chases was a superb and one of the first results of the news of the legacy was an ardent lover in the son of Johann Welslau Mr Welslau after they became that they make their future home in and when Paula acquiesced he prevailed on her to let him go on ahead to New York with marks of the legacy and prepaie a home in its avenues for their happy She saw Johann off ou the steamer P Caland and went home to count the days until he should send for her She had only gotten as far as three when she missed her umbrella and missed also from her usual haunts a former sweetheart of Johann's named Louisa Rothert Miss von der Lippe's love turned to hate with electrical and ing the remainder of the marks in the inside pocket of her polonaise she started for America and revenge via the steamer which landed her at the Barge Office She enlisted Detective Gordon in her and they traced and Louise to Jersey catching them at Taylor's 500 and um- brella were all locked and the for- saken heiress will get her and her York Times actresses who are married women should seek lo disguise that fact by allowing the prefix nf to be attached to their names is a that admits f no intelligible Tlie L Modern Have wo not noticed within the last few years a change in the demeanor of sir's the other How shall we define A kind of brusque audaciousness in with a soupcon of slangy an of to know more of what is than their mothers and grandmothers were ever permitted or supposed to snow Do they not often go perilously near to the border which convenience prescribes shall not be overstepped We do not mean this last in the sense in which it is and that our ancestresses of the last century thought it n 3 shame to call a spade a and heu praise the women themselves are conscious of and take the earliest op- of changing it for male attire as soon as they get home from work It has happened now that while proceeding to or from they some oi been made the subject of attack by somebody with an undue proportion of tongue to mav be paid with salety more than once by the sarre in- dividual In addition to possessing a highly vigorous they are so hardened by Lo the and developed by the nature of their that they can give c good account of even though a fight should and the opponent have reason to admit the wisdom of Providence in endowing women ally with the will and keeping from them the power 67 MAIX WIS The Only First-Class in Call and See Us and be Happy Putney 1 The lo Put in Mia young demoiselles of i do ye be goin this eaily in the You can always please a good man by telling him he has a devilish twinkle in them and tried to take 1 his Globs sensibility and vivacity used to sigh over the mi of Clarissa lowe or divert themselves with tbe ad- ventures of Tom Jones and Sophia Western is something quite ent from that that the present race of young women It is rather a tal want of sentiment that prevails In former days the sex were wont to peal to from their weaker side Now it is the reverse They to aim at meeting men on their own platform and consorting with them like to a standpoint rather than from a woman's A girl nowadays her male rally amuse in his own in his own and in the way he would her This is we understand as the female ness so noticeable in the beau monde of and we may so unlovely It seems to be forgotten that what a man desires in woman is not a caricature of Blackwood's Magazine 13 Wife If lit tie is known in England of Prince private still bays Mrs is known of the lady who for more the forty-two years has shared his home The Princess Bismarck is described as the very model of a methodical German with an eye for every detail of household ar- rangement and and a heart for the comfort and well-being of each from the highest to the liest it has been not seldom give rise to other weddings It was at the wedding of a friend that Bismarck first met Johanna von She was one of the and the stately lady then and there made an impression on the young Baron which culminated in an offer of marriage three years later The key to the Princess character is to be says the same in her my is a public character is a to which I often find it painful enough to resign But as fOJT his v w hat have I to do with publicity I do not exist for but wholly and solely for Tlis perfect union o Mrs has not pre- vented the Princess husband posing as a to family claims In one letter he referring to excursion to the ladies and Children's Cutting and Done in approved stylo and examine our stock of TOOLS and HAIlt DRESSING MATERIALS Not to the liquor I an its great ye are on the Mis O'Flaherty Ye are always hopin this an hopin that and half the tonne ye don't rally hope ye say ye do Av all the Lord do it's a an I Mrs it isn't me ye do be a it hopin agin better be hopin the good Loid will for- give ye yer bins than to be hopia yer lyin hopes about me An to cut a long story I'll tell ye now tor I'm no that to the liquor shtore that I'm goin at but to the grocery for some au to put in the pray is Mrs an if so ignorant that ye don't knew that is Frinch boup I'll uiver tell for it's not duty av hoigh quality to be their toime in to the common stock do ye pit the to make the wid in the bottle ye got there under yer none av yer an ye can j tako that an put it in yer an State nal He Had Money in the Bank won't you lend me asked a boy of a man in the street cried the ing for breath a good deal for a little fellow like you to want to the went and bought one of those banks in which you have to put before you can get anything out I've got in it and now the circus is here and I can't get any of my money If you will lend one I can get it changed into ten-cent pieces and put it all when the bank will come open I can pay you right But the man said he could not wait that long and left the boy with a begone pondering over the care and misery of one who has a bank I Manufacturer oE OPERA HOUSE BLK Repairing Neatly and Promptly Executed PHOENIX Wo ara the bost Krades o and a Specialty ot the FIDELITY Brand Ask your grocer for FIDELITY Sack CHAS G Prop AND WAGNER SLEEPERS CHICAGO to SAN CHICAGO to WITHOUT CHANGE COLONIST SLEEPERS CHICAGO to AND SAN FRANCISCO FREE RECLINING CHICAGO to Via Council Bluffs and Omaha For time ot aud all to oi the Chicago ir to the Gen Pass Axt at Chicago H NEWMAN J M P 3d Vice Man Agt THK f RUNS Fast Pullman Ing Boom and Coaches of latest between Chicago and waukee aud St Paul and Fast Pullman Qg Room Dining of atest between Chicago and kee and Ashland and Duluth Through Pullman Vestibuled Room and Sleepers via the ern Pacific between Chicago ani Ore Convenient Trains to and from Northern and Central Wisconsin affording seivice to and tram Fond du Chippewa Eau aud and Mich For tima tables and other apply to of the lino or to Ticket Agents auj where in ths United blates or Canada 3 E H C BARLOW General Manager Gen Traffic Mgr LOUIS Gen 1 WIS PAST MAIL ONE with between St Paul Minneapolis between Council and the Coast SKEAT NATIONAL between Kansas City and St Mo MILES OF reaching all pal points in Missouri and Dakota For mapi time rates ot and apply to the nearest station agent of tbe ST or to any Agent anywhere the Roswell General Manager A V H and Agt in reference to Lands and Towns owned bv the Siv PAUL write tc II G Wisconsin It OF- Shakespeare the world's A rather slower than it Critic the world was is Wholesale Dealer ia Smokers Supplies SMOKE THE CELEBRATED WESTERN Clear 5 Cent Box Trade a Specialty are always prepared W do ON SHORT NOTICE REASONABLE   

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