The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
The Cedarville Heraid. W, H. BLAIR, Publisher, CEDARVILLE, OHIO. MISPLACED COURTESY . A Man Picks Up a Package But thnOwnSf Refuse* to Puke It. There havo been a. good many lottorB; •written to the newspapers recently, and .consequently no littlo discussion, about th e “ dcCllndof oo'urtesy”—women's neg.- » loot to show gratitude for men's little civilities and men’s unwillingness to sacrifice tlffimselves for women who are strangers to them. A favorite examplo has been that of yielding seats in horse cars and elevated trains. Perhaps some one .had just boon reading one of those letters. At any. rate, the conversation turned toward' this sub'ject. and each man began to give his views on the sub ject “ I don’t know .how other people feel, about it," said the senior of, the group, a ,man about fifty years old, of digtiified ; appearance “and coprtly in demeanor, “ but I find that when lam. tempted to 'keop my^soat and see a woman stand 1 am ashamed of myself. Something makes me-feel cheap, So 'that I haven't • the courage to look her op any one else in’ the eyes. For my own peace of mind, therefore, I prefer to give up my’ seat •■ and stand, howover tired I am. I must say that I have seldom' me/t women who failed to recognize tin's,-,ljjllp coinplir ment to their sox by'.some '.sign of ap preciation, a pleasant nod, a graceful, smilo or a ;quiet and conventional ‘thank yon.’ Perhaps this is because I .am getting old,but that is neither hero •nor there. . •“ I can say, though, with perfect truth that I have had one experience where.a well-intended act-of courtesy not.only did,.not elicit any word of thanks, but on the contrary caused the woman evident annoyance. ■And I, could hardly blame •her, although 1 was terribly, embar rassed by her curt manner. * ' • / “ I was in Boston at the time and went to the Boston Museum. to. get seats for ■one of Booth’s performances. Thero was,a long line boforo the box office •when I took my place’ at the end. Tho one in line before me .was a woman, handsomely but. quietly drossod. The people moved so slowly and.the wait, wap so wearisomo that wo, kept no direct line, but were turned, some'one way, ■■some another. In this way I could not fall to notice the woman’s wonderful complexion. It was dazzling inMts del. icate' tints of roso and white, and one could almost see the roses jn herohook ■fade and blush by turns. I am afrald that I found her complexion’ bo perfect that l'waB impolite enough to stare at her a moment when I thought she was not looking m’y way;-far-8ho turned her head and after that I could only see. the pink and white of two delicately- fashioned cars. “When she reached tho box office and selocted her seats’ and wais opening her pookolbook do pay for them a small paokago slipped from her hands. I saw it and grabbed at it to’catch it boforo it -struck the marble of the floor. Of course I missed It; and as it foil 1 beard ■a slight crash of glass. Picking It up hurriedly, I offered it to her, but she crisply declined to touch it, saying: ‘Please let it lio on tho floor.’ - “ I stood there rather sheepishly, hold ing it, when I felt a cold, eream-Uko mixture steal between my fingers. Looking at tho package I saw, to my hprror, that the Wrapper had been torn enough,to show on-a bottle’s side just two words, 'Face Enamel.’ Tho Woman had started for the stairs with a crimson hue in her cheeks that no enamel, no paint, not even the most highly colored brush of-nature, could equal. As for me, I dropped the bottle with a.crash and fled like a coward, not waiting for my tickets. A sI mado„iny escapo I heard several,, snickers. They were all women's,’’—N. Y. Tribune, *An .Exceptional llu-lmml. Sirs. McCorklo (waking up as the clock strikes “ one’’ )-;-Therp, I hear .John’s night-key in the lock, and ho needn’t try to fool mo about what time; he got in. (Goes to sleep again. 1 Mrs. McGorkle (at Breakfast)—John, what time did you get home last night? Mr. MeCorkie—It. must havo been about one. I loft the, club at 12:80.— The J u r y . __ _______^ ___ According to Orders, Proprietor?—How did you enjoy yottr dinner? . ' Customer—Well, tho tripe had been injured. . Proprietor (with dignity)—you must be mistaken, sir!- Customcr-r-I tell you it had been bar tered.- -Boston Herald, Wanted It Kept {Jutat* Mrs. Jones—Lot that pie alone, you little scamp, or I’ll give you a sound thrashing. . Johnny—Don’t make such a fuss or the neighbors will find out what bad raising I’ve had.—Texas Siftings. —Ho was a good man—a man whoso word nobody doupted—whose integrity and veracity were as good as a bond. And a friend said to him,. “ I saw you Speeding year horse tho other day." c“ Ye«.” “ JIo's a fine-mover.” “ Yes." “ Got lots of speed.” “ Yes." “ As near as I could catch ,him that day he was malting a 2:40 clip.” “ Yes, I think so." And that horse could not go a mile In five minutes, and tho owner know It, and tho other man knew it, and ho was fiitnply baiting a book to tempt the good man to lie. And he caught him.—Free Press, . THE BATTLE FIELD. PERSONATED A 6EAD MAN. HUtary of the Moat Remarkable Feniloa yraud on Record. “ Talking about pension swindlers,” •aid Major Harry Phillips, recently, “ the most remarkable .case that ever -same under my observation was that of an Italian by the name of Giusetto, He Was as keen ,as a razor, well educated, >but with a nerve ail'd audacity which few men possess. A year after the close of the war a claim for pension was filed for a man named Jacques Rollinger, of Springfield, O.i He. had enlisted as a private in one of tho Ohio regiments in 1802, and'had. worked his way up until he had obtained a commission as a Lieu tenant. His claim was on account of rheumatism' contracted in the .service. After"proving that, it was contracted in the service and that it. continued from the date of his discharge, up’to the date of the. •application,'*th.e ..question .was asked if he had been in the services pro; vjous to his enlistment in thoOhio regi-. mont. To this he answorod that in 1801 he had enlisted in tiio First Non* York Independent Battalion. Upon searching the roll of the First Now York Inde pendent Battalion, his name was found. The rfgjprds showed that Rollinger,, on January 30, -1804, had"'bben transferred to Company B, 'of tho Fqrty-sovonth Rogimfent,'N. Y. S. Volunteers, and that at the battle of .Olusteo, on February 80, 1804, ho was roportod wounded and taken prisoner by:.,the. Confederates.' (They further showed that his name ap peared on tho roll of the -An- dersonville prison, and that ho was’re ported as-having died there on August 27, 1804. He was, it’ was stated, buriod in the'prison grave marked 0,503, Upon further, search of ‘the YVafDepartment records it was found that in 1865 a man claiming to bo Jacquos Rollinger, ac companied by a little'boy, had •present? ed himself to Secretary Stanton, the thon War Miiiistor,-with a very plausi ble story, stating that he liad been in. the Andersonvlilo prison, was" sick there, and feigned death in order to es cape; that ho was carried out of the' prison enclosure with a'load ' of dead- men, all being dumped, to the ground together early in the-morning. Watch ing his opportunity when the coast was clear of the guards, he erawlod unob served- toward ’ a neighboring wood and finally escapod, reach ing the - Union •likes 'about the tlmo of tho goneral surrender.- Sec retary Stanton was impressed with, the apparent sincerity of tho man who read ily answered the questions concerning the prison and its surroundings satisfac torily. lie believed tirohtory, had the death record canceled and caused all the back' pay and allowances, to bo jfaid to the supposod Rollinger. Shortly Afterward tho man filod a claim for pension on account of disability re sulting from a gunshot wound incurred while in tho service, which was subse quently allovyed. A few yoarsaf ter this pension was secured, another claim, for bounty, romuster and allowances was 'filed in the Second Auditor's'office at Washington as being due Jacquos Rol- llngcr, of Company If, Forty-seventh New York Volunteers, by a party claim ing to lw> the 'father of’ Jacques Bolling er. Evidence was filed proving Jacques Rollinger's death and burial while a prisoner of war at .AmlersonviHo, Ga. About this time a -pension’ and claim agent, who did business "at thq New York City Hall, happoned to call at the office of another claim agent in that vi cinity. Upon ontering the office of the second agent’tho first agent recognized a man present and called him by the name of Giusetto. While conversing together thq secom agent told tho first that the’man ho had accosted was riot named Giusetto but Rollinger, and that evidently it was a case of mistaken Identity. Ho was positive of that be cause ho was then Engaged in-prospeut- ing a claim before. .Hie Government for back pay and bounty due on account of 1is son, who had died in tlio Anderson- ville prison. The first agent answered that lie could not be mistaken,‘for the reason that ho had already secured a .pension for the same man on account of gunshot woUqds undor the name of Giu- settp. - Tlio two agents on comparing notes, made up their minds that the*o was something Crooked Romewhere, and re ported all tho facts in their possession to the authorities at Washington. The -secret service officers of the I’ension Bureau, upon searching the records at -Washington, found that Giusetto .had been a member of .Company A, Forty- seventh Regiment, New York Volun- •teers; .that -Rollinger was horp in ‘France, near the Italian bolder, close to Giusetto's birthplace, and that whiles, both had been mustered into tho Forty- seventh New York Volunteers, though in different companies, they had become warm friends, understanding each other’s native language. They were both taken prisoners at Olusteo arid sent to Andcrsonville, whero Giusotto, dur ing their long and weary prison days, learned' all about-tho family story of Rollinger. The secret service officers, also ascertained that- Giusetto was the man who personated Ri lllngcr imme diately after the war and imposed oil tho Secretary of War. It was also as certained that through another claim agent Giusetto‘bad-secured a pension for himself in his own name, for wounds received when ho was takon prisoner at tho battle at which Rollinger was cap tured, Had ho been contented with the double pension he was re ceiving he might havo escaped detec tion, but his greed in attempting to col- loot the pay and bounty allowance duo Rollinger the second time by represent ing himself as Rollinger's father sealed his fate. When the second claim was filod in the Second Auditor's office for. pay and allowance by Rollinger’s -alleg ed father suspicions wore amused, and a special officer was detailed by the Pen sion Bureau to ascertain whother apy man by tho naihe of Jacques Rollinger was ever transferred from the First Now York Independent Battalion to the For ty-seventh Regiment, New York Volu*i teers, or whether it was simply a-trans- for paper to get rid of tho roll of tho battalion. The’ special agoni came to Brooklyn, to make investigations, and that was the first of my connection with the case. As Secretary of tho Veterans' Association of tho Forty-sov- enth regiment,' New York Volunteers, I have,made it a specialty to' gather up' all tho old records of tho regiment. I have not only a, complete record of our rogimont and all of its members, but ’also d f our whole “division, The special agent wont with me to find Michael Roden, the First Sorgoant of Company B- of our regiriient, at the 'time of tho transfer: from the First Now York Independent Battalion. Roden assured us that there wore no paper transfers from tho battalion, but ’ that a man.was transferred for every namo.rocoived on the transfer roll. We then weht ovOr to New York and found Captain Schmidt,1who commanded the company from which Rollinger:had been transferred. Through him wo solved the mystery. •Captain Schmidt informed us that Jacquos Rollinger, who served in the Ohio Regiment, was -tho Rollinger who was in. the-First Independent Bat talion; that Rollinger and ho botb-came- from the same place and-were well ac- quainted . with each other, living near tho Fronoh and, Swis.5 line. When the First Battalion was organized, he (Schmidt) enlisted .Rollinger, but on ac count qf rumors of pending trouble-be- tween tho United States and .Francs and England, Rollinger deserted- and went West to escape a possible conflict with those ho' consider ed ' virtually '.his countrymen of the French’ burden, Captain Schmidt remembered the instance well, for tho reason that Rollinger left his entire ini- form and escaped in citizens’ clothes. A ■ few days afterward lio enlistod another man and allowed him to take the name of Jacques Rollinger. This was in 1861, when the war first broke out He thus carried the’ name of Rollinger on his rolls- "through a -substitute. Ho never knew what the man’s .real name was who wont under Rollinger's name, but he. was the one who was -transferred to Company B, of the Fprty-sovonth Regi-! mont, N. Y. V. It yvas the body of the unknown, who assumed the name of Rol linger that was buried In grave No. 0503, in. the Andersonvillo Prison Come- .tory: These facts prove conclusively .that Giusetto bad-been deliberately de frauding the Government in tho most audacious manner. . He was tried, con-, vleted and sent to-the Sing Sing ’ State prison' for a term of seven years some time' in the- early 70s. After Giusetto served out his time ho returned to Rome, Italy, where a few -years ago ho was oc cupying a responsible position in a large business firm."—Brooklyn Eagle. IMMOVABLE AS STONE. TrrrllilR/EffMt of-Chronic Kliuuinatlam in • a W a r V eteran. A remarkable sjor'y comes from Con cord, Mass., of tho sufferings of James Melvin, who has fbif twelve yeats lain upon a- bed without changing his posi tion. The osseous portions of his body have united into one piece, and from the crown of his head to the soles ttf his feet there Is net a joint responsivo to his will. Every bono in ‘his frame has grown into the adjoining bono. Even tho bones of his neck and spinal column ate united firmly into one and are as rigid as a bar of iron. The ribs are joined one to another by their connect ing tissues, and the chest is nothing more nor less than a box of bone. It is utterly ineapablo of expansion, and breathing is possible only because of the. comparative freedom of tho diaphragm and the pliability of the muscles of the abdomen. . Iluroyn ingenuity .could hardly devise a more effective -arrangment of the limbs as a means of torture. Both hips are disjointed and tho lovvor logs havo been drawn sharply to the loft side of tho body, and thus ' eld through tho ossification of .tlio knee joints. Tho left leg crosses under the right, and the (eft heel is pressed so firmly against the r.iglit flip that.it is on ly-by' the use of considerable force that a strong person can draw themdpartsuffieiontly to insert a thin pioceof cloth. The upporamisaro pressed close to the sides of tho body, while the,,forearms rest .upon tho abdo men, the fingers upon tho ends of which are large chalky formations, pointing downward. The head is turned a quar ter to tho left, The jaws are fixed, and. food may bo administered in liquid form only through an aperturo made by the extraction , of several teeth. The muscles of tho face and throat are in good condition, and are tho only ones in the wliolo body that are moveable. Three years ago he became blind. Chronic rheumatism is the cause of his affliction, and the disease was con tracted in the army. H ols married- and lias a daughter seventeen years of age. His wife who has not boon out of bis presence an" hour at a time for all those fifteen years, with tho exception of a vacation o f two months winch her physician deomfcd necessary to restore her failing health, says that he never utters -a word-of complaint.—Boston Letter- - IN WOMAN’S BEHALF. »• ____________________ \ • » MEND ICANT WIVES. ° A Sensible Talk on Domestic Money M»t- • - ter*. Is a man to -regard his wifo, on the business side, as a partner, or a salaried employe, or a mendicant? For it must bo one or .tlio other, Porhaps she is re garded as a partner in the domestic firm, having the same right to draw her shard o f its profits as the other partner, even °if he keeps the books, and has the mon ey pass through his hands. It 1 b a very common thing in firms for one partner to do the selling,- or the manufacturing, or ,whatever it is, while the other acts as treasurer and cashier. But the latter does not for that reason claim any supo- riority over his associate. *. He, does not, ‘ merely because the . money passes through his hands, talk of "giving" bis partner what ho pays him; he. knows 'that tho hjonoy belongs to his partnor as much as to him. This-.is surely the.: ■n$iy in which tho marriage ^lartnershiji ought to bo viewed, op the businessaid'e; In tho great majority “of cases the wifo works as hard as the husband, though in a different way. Her management of the household and the children, if properly ' done, is usually tobesot againsthis work at his place of business; it is equally es sential >to the marriage partnership, and though tho money passes through his hands!, she has really as much right to it as he.- Of course,-'in cases whore tho wife has nu children, and lives at a hotel tor boarding-house, and simply spends- the husband’s money, while doing little in return', it is less of"a grievance to talk of his' ’’giving” her money. 'Even thon, perhaps-they live inthiswajj by .' his dcsiro. There are such cases, .no doubt, just as there are cases at the otli- -er extreme, .where the wife actually earns—or owns—the . money, and the husband merely spends it. But neither of these is tho normal state of-things, tho normal condition* is for the wifo to be as liard-worked at homo., as is her husband abroad, and in this case'it is fair to regard it as ■an equal partner ship, in which-partners, have a right to ’share the profits, and there is no “ giv ing-’ about it liut-suppose that, for any reason, the wife can.not convince her husband that tb'is theory of an equal partnership is a just ono, sho has a perfect right to put -the matter in another way. "If I am not a partner,” she may fairly say, “ I have a just right to. be regarded as aq employe. If I am not a partner, I at. - least render certai|i services to the . household, -and I-can claim as of right— not by ’giving'—whatever compensation you would pay to any third 'person for the"same services. But it as a matter of cqujJ partnership or of employment, whichever you please,, only do not ovade the obligations at.both." Surely,^this, demand at least is reasonable. If. the wifo Is simply an official, let her be paid for the official work; and call tho com pensation her own. If she keeps house, sho hi -at least entitled to what you would pay ahousekeeper; if she does tho duty Of a governess, let her have the compensation pf one; if'she does the du ty of a cook; she’ earns a cook's_wagos. Do not regard all these economics simply as something saved to the husband’s pockot; the saving has no piaco in his ! pocket, for it belongs in tlidto’f ills wife.’ You do not expect any one else to keep house, or teach thoqhildren, or cook tho dinner merely for her board or lodging; why should you ask tho wife to do it? If a penny saved is a*) good, as a penny earned, her saving should'count'-as earn- lnff- . , - It is not enough to say, “ But we do not wish to complicate matters with these;tcchnlcalities.” (Observe, that it is always a technicality when it'is a question of money’s going to tho wife, but it is a vast and simple business prin ciple whoever it goes to tlio husband.) “ When .my wifo asks mo for money, I. give it to her." But is that tho kind of rcliftion you like to havo with your own employer—ono of “ asking" and “ giv ing” ? You prefer to fool that you earn it, and that tlio very moment pay-day 'comes it is yours, and there is no “ giv ing" about *t. From that moment the law itself makes it yours, . If 'men, who are trained to rough it~in the world, feel this shrinking, women can not escapo it? Only long and patient observation, I suppose, can enable any mere man to understand the continual and unjust hu miliation undergone by multitudes* of admirable women—tho pinching and contriving and patient enduring they will undergo first—because of this per petual ordeal of “asking” thoirliusbands for money. The husband may be the boat-n.attired man living; the wife-may know that asking means receiving; but that which annoys her is the asking it self. In many cases tho moneyjs paid without It, 1 know, as an “ allowance"; but in that case the word is still oho which implies a favor given and re ceived; it is hot an “ allowance" proper ly speaking, but is simply her share of the income; if you regard her as a. part ner; or her salary, if you view her as an employe1. - Why does sho need this sense of inde pendence in her possession of what is duo her? She needs it in many ways. First,' that she may feel that she is a- woman* not, a child:-that she is of age, not undor tutelage. Secondly, that.sho may feel free, as her husband, would feel, to subscribe for such* charities as. may seem, to her dfsirablo. As it is, any subscription agl tho husband puts d" ten dollars without] own judgment; vvhij ventures on a substl Missionary Society nt will tell you that :vn his dollar or his hesitation, on his the wife rarely pilon even to the the Seaside Home for Sick Children, withqut requeuing the agont to call again, that she 4iave had an opportunity to ask her bus. hand; Thirdly, that sho may makeprei- 'ents, and feol that they comefrom mon ey that is justly hers, and which, she is notmerely requlringhor husband to.givs something to Cousin Sarah; to whom1h» is quite indifferent,, or to Aunt Mehit- abel, who onco broadly hinted tbath* was not a good provider for his family. That may be a very good*reason whyhr should not be taxed for them; but inw-, much 'as it was Aunt Mehitabol who brought the wife up fr.om childhood, and Cousin Sarah who nursed the baby through diphtheria it is perfectly right that the wife should givO:_them a Christmas present out of ■’ her own money. And there lies just the point; ,it is not her own money, or never seems• like it to her delicate conscience, so long as she has to ask anybody for it,'oven her husband. Therefore she will sit up late at night, after the children’s mend ing isdone or ^superintended, knitting- the last fibres of her nervpus system in to a pioco o f fancy-work l&c the aunt or the -cousin, when thero is something which they need a groat -leal more, only that it costs a,dollar or two to buy. And 'then the Christmas present to the hus band himself! I am,satisfied that if there could come a sudden revelation of all hearts, we should, be astounded at the amount of soroness and chafing and gecret unhap- pinoss which exists beneath amultitude, of roofs in the hearts of seemingly hap py /wives; and' which-could be instantly removed, by theocertainty of even a small income which they, could call thair own. . Either aw ife should he in ' tho domestic establishment a recognized partner, witotbo rights q jji partner, or she should be a salaried officer, with the rights which that implies.—In no.case should sho be a mendicant One of the. best—'wives and mothers .1 ever know once said to me that she never should consent to the marriage of her daugh ters without a perfectly definite under standing that- whatever money, they were to havo from their husbands should be paid to them on definite days, as regularly as if it worom salary, without any application on their part. “No man can possibly understand,” she said, “how sensitive woman shrinks, from asking for money. If I can help it, my daughters shall never have to ask for it.”—1Tl W./H., in Harper’ s Bazar. • i TFhnt Politic* Should Bo. Rev. pharles G. Ames lately said: •f “ Thero is. nothing that looks worse among us than the low esteem in which we hold our own Social affairs; which -, wo christen by the- term “ politics;” nothing looks worse than that, politics should represent trickery rather than principle; and so long as the regret to see women interesting themselves in politics comes from the feeling that politics are'ignoble, this is_jn itself an indication of the need of a very deejf .and radical.change. One hundred years ago, the most accomplished woman in Europe, Madame De. Stael, was filled with a noble passion for the improve ment of the condition of humanity, and she said; ‘To be.occupied with politics is religion, morality, piety, all togoth- ’ or.’ You SOo what a noble conception of politics she had; and heroin let us trust she speaks for the coming woman, and also for the coming man—to be occupied with a nobler politic* which shall include every line of human re form that comes within tho social cir cle.” - ____________ 0 ■ WHAT WOMEN ARE DOING. ‘ T ub N ow York Central railroad has twenty-six female station agents. .’ Foil tho first thno in its history, tho Boston Dental College will graduate a woman. M me . L eon : B ehmaux , tho ominent sculptress, has petitioned the French Government to establish a free school of art for women. ’ M ips E leanok L. F i , eujiy , of tho Lon don School of Medicino for Women, has a record in three medical colleges of tho highest honors that a woman can attain. T re old saying that tho world moves was forcibly illustrated when the New Hampshire Historical Society for the first time conferred upon two women tho distinguished honor of a corresponding membership. It will be some time prob ably before women will be granted the full prerogatives of the association.— Springfield Republican. A f in e illustration of the growing popularity of women as public speakers is the fact that two of the most import ant -courses of lectures at Chautauqua this season -are to he given l.ty-women, while the address on the greatest of Chautauqua occasions. Recognition day, is to bo delivered by Alice Freeman Palmer, former president of- AVellosley Collego. T iie British Royntl Society for the pro tection of life from fire has lately awarded throe prizes to women for brav ery and humanity at the burning of tho Forest Gate'1Asylum to Miss.Maria Julia Bloomfield an illuminated testi monial and £8, and to M-.s. Eliza Koe and Miss Laura Terry, a niece of Ellen Terry, certificates and prizes of a sover eign each. L oud K n e ts f o r d , Minister for the Colonies, London, states that wompn havo school .and municipal suffrage West Australia. This great province has 07((,000 square miles andabout .' i O.OOO people. It is much larger than all the United States east of the Mississippi. Australia, in every province of whirn women are now ascertained to have tfcis form of suffrage, has 8 , 000.00 square miles. * t h r o u *y>getber we wa Above us the > And bo bent bis if be held ’ Ob, it was s And ourpatbwa ffarrow that j , But be was m-ai ja ii the Star:-. Ob, It was K Softly be spolw. Softly Of blc? Close to bis anr The corn-tloUi Oh, it was a* Orayer the HgUi -The rooks HU shade. Tbe'nlghtingul high: As I walked v- Ob, it wasp Andthe latest i • My band in hr *We swept the <1 j*or narrower, •' Oh, It Was h He loooked in-t ‘•Sorrow and ( .But together w>; life • Close as we wheat," Tl How They County, Vir us snow, i wrinkles on her lit,tle fig when she wa' She sits a: door in the t •the fields,, which ones^ brothers an’ She alone b who now o kind to her. :■ 'It is not 1 of “ the twi reminds her! hood itself.! “ Dah was Johnan' Mar her had but maid when .^.do twins con { '.Idey kin tal, Beeny lias d speaks de w< “ I tell yot ' —Sukoy ai Marso Chai-1 lays cryin’ < conspic’ us. •, curly liair. , quiet. You chile was tl: his bruddor1 “ Well, so school up brung lots genolm’s fo an’ dancin’ I ohsuhv’d ( timato frie gyurls doy dem. " “ Same wi lef’ do prop .doy choose, Jenny, derc “ ‘Yoii ta “ ‘No; vo “ ‘You hounds. ’ “ ‘Do yot De hossos i “ An’ whf stead, wlilc tried to heart it settled ij stead, an In all dc ■ “/A n ton,’ J„i “ IJev dere rye “ So's : fo* two \ Iren, wlthoi _all ’again, ; ipqrtunity tr , .that sho mi that they co y hors, and liringherhu /ousin Sarah, ’erent, or to .s broadly provider- to v.qry good saxed for tb as Aunt Ml feiup from c who nurse ioria.it is pi i should- g esont out here lies ji m money, oi olieato consc ; .isk anybody ■Therefore si ’ ,fter tlio chi suporintont of hor n'ervo •incy-work f. hen there’ d a great dc - dollar or tw txpas prosen 1 that if the: elation of founded at riafing-and s . xists beneat hearts of sc : which coulc ,he certaint ■ wljich the -.ther a wife, stahl ishmon the rights of .a salaried oil that impli-e- a mendicant id mothers me that she marriage of perfectly dc . whatever com their ku: .hem on .de: it were a s n on their pa understand, .ve woman uey. If I ca ill never ha , in Harper’ Politics Slioul s G. Ames la nothing th n' the low ost wn social _by the ter ■worse than sent trickery l so long as interesting t s from the -noble, this i the need of tange. One l accomplish! ime Do Stac passion ■ for audition of h be occupied orality, pioty what, a nob i had; and h >ks. for tho co the coming a ;a nobler every line .es within tt OMEN ARE York Centra male station st time in it tl College’ wil B ermaux , as petitione to establish nen. con L. F leuiv Medicino fot ree medical c "s that a worn: ;ing that the Ilustrated w) Iistdrical (so ferred-ftpon tl -•honor of a c It will be so omen will be ves of the (•publican, .istration of women as pu at two of the jf lectures a.t ire to bo give ddress on. th xxasions, Roc- ivered by AI er president a Royal Socief ifo from firo ft prizes to wel lanity at the ite Asylum- t eld :in ilium 3, and to Mr ira Terry, a ni cates and piizi tsforo , Minl iidon, Htates and- munidpa ISa. This rgr uarc miles ant much larger s east of the i (-very provil nv aycertaineil sage, has 3,O
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=