The Taylor County News. (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1886 Page: 3 of 8
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! i W - ! ! ' I I
B ' I.I J
'I I'; ';"'.." " 1 i - i ... . I ' ' ' f I
.1 '
Wj
M
I
i
mtiffiorOTit Sffl
JOES 1. LOWST PaMkiwaaijriefc
ABILENE.
TEJtAS
'Moat-Cxeao
Br Mm. Hexkt Woon
CHAPTER m. Coimxtrso.
Such was not Mrs. Dalrymple's.
-What plan can be adopted?" slid
skt:d quitting that part of the aabject.
Did iio positively rejfuse to come down
tnth you?"
"He! positively refused. I might as
veil have tried to move a. mountain
down here Something ought to be
done if you could only tell what Of
course things got wnrse night by
night Any night he may stake the
Grange."
"Stake the Grange!" uttered Sclina
Balrymplc. "Whatever do you mean?"
"Stake it arid lose it" added Oscar.
When the mania for play sets in on ;a
man ho is riot content to confine his
venture's to trifles.
"But I do not understand" returned
Selina. "How could he Flake the
Grange? lit is in the Dalrvmple family
and can not go out of itr
He might stake its value. .Mortgage
it that is for his own life."
'And jrotild we .not remain in it?"
Ehe milch lv asked.
"Scare id v.' It might take even
shilling
f its in-eomings to pay off the
in t -rest
nothing
"Wmtl
1 ou could not live here upon
I it be sacrificed; useless to us
for so loi
rg s diaries lived .- ' beunn
reiteraled not comprehending yet.
Oscar nodded. "I am only" -aying
what he night do; I do not sav he will.
He migh so hamper us and involve the
estate that he could never derive fur-
ther bcrjelit from it? Or- his family
either. .so long as he lived."
"Would it return to us at his death?
I am sure if he is to sit up all night he
will destroy his health and die" she
niournfujlry added.
It would return into the family1
spoke j)scar hesitating whore the
pau-e h:Ls been put
Alice dalrympie who had been buried
i:j a reverie looked up. A contingency
had occurred to her which she had
never thought of before; -so entirely
haTthe Grange been theirs in thmr
father's recent lifetime and in the cer-
tainty of it4 descending to Charles afi-
erward. "Suppose any thing were io
happen to Charles?" she said "whose
would the Grange be? Mamma's?"
No one answered her.
" Oscar. I ask you would it go to
mamma?" v
"No."
"To whom then?"
"My dear'' interposed Mrs. Da'l-
ry tuple "it would be Oscar's. -It goes
to the male line."
The :nswer took both the young hi-dic-
bJ .surprise .but they were silent.
They -tjole glance at him; a red con-
scious light had ilown into liis Usually
pale elswk.
- .! nl.T knew it breathed Selina.
"Ami it L- of little import your know- i
jng it now. iTiitl ()M-ar. "lamas
Jikely li come in to the ("raugeas I am
t Ih h ali' prime minister. Charle jis
a voungirr-man than Uam
Uittl
if Charles were to plav -it
away.
'ir;ir-.
r--iiniil Alice "it would be
ieu."
"A HI
are unu-muiv dull to-
day"
C'harh
satfl
Mrs.- Dalrympie. Were
1m- iiifatuatl which I j
to
Itavt
Ulllt
fenr (f: none indeed if
wouM Inut le ()-cnr"s any-niore than' it j
is now
7WI - then maninia? I was thiid'-
injr. of jtMiii-thing .else hen yMt wilre
talkiii::'
Ch
trie- still. Only he could not
i
enjoy
it. -Hi- creditors would take
care o:
that
r Charles! uttered Alice. "lb1
ha- h
has h
en left to hiin-elf uii there he
k1 uoliodv to turn to for advice
or counsel and I dare say he has only
done rthai he has done from thought-
Je.Htfiies. a vvoni iruni mamma mav
right Do you not think you
to iro to jum.tjnuiiima?
Alice. "1 have been r
nlvinr l
iow. :u we were talking
0
- me oiuv plan. returned us
- r-L
kin at Mr-. Dalrvmple. "He
ten Io hi
i!l j- tct-iiKirrow i Sunday-
t Jhiu on Monday
morning.
.;- ..). . oinicttiv m ()car.
ku wi-h it 1 will."
Mou
lav morning dawned and alH
got Up
to tie e:s I hre.-iVf ..vl-l:dil. - '
. i.i
c en
UiT- uliiS l-iiti.-t.c -. t
- - -- -- B- . .' II
aiilo-j
Jn tin
Ku. a ii
W
minute
V
v for not risi i- ':irlr in rfiinrHl. i
. - -j fmt
midst 01 tn-4ki:i-t. James came
loketl :it (War Dalrympie. 1
ii ou plea-'- to step here sir a
at f.r?"
III!
k for a
mi.iute sir" reiH'atcd
(iaia-
()-c:ir went out. -oine bread -and -but
lev in us hand tor 'here wa- no tim!
t -pare. .James shut the dooc 1
IP re s Keillteli come low 11. sir! hV
the iii; lit mail." he whi-pered: 4IK
-tohl mevtfep-h you out to him. hut
ipit to say; to mUtre that it was him."
' t )-" r w a Iked fuiekl.y acros the hall.
Reulte i. who was peeping for him.
from t e kitchen jwju--agi' turiuil into
an eiuU r..iu. (War followed. !
j VVIiat i- it? Vhat has brought you
frmi UJW11?'"
'JhejoM senant trembled with agita-
tion and rraspHl hold of the back of a
chair. "Oh Mr. O.-car! it is all over.
My pc or young piaster is gone."
. Osciir .-at dojvn seeming! v uncon-
scioiut what he lid and the saiuc red
light rame into liis cheeks.
Tlie verv nSgl
t you left sir. he went'
hose men. Before he
oui again yvii.ii
went
he told rae he was ruined and
more
back.
than ruijied. He never came
He followed on the fate of the
first CI
harles Dai
rvmple: but he' did not
-come
"H
"Hi
i.. ... .i :.
IIU ill O LU UU JM
t
has destroyed himselfP" 1 i
P has! he has!" !
Hbw? In what manner?" j
'Drowned sir. He jumped oyen
Wf-suninster-bridge right into tho
water. Oh. what distraction his oor
minit must have been in to urge him1
to subh a death a that! ;
Osl-nr rsn and looked -from the win
dow.! Cold as was his nature the ifews
could not fail to shock him although;
he wUs -the inheritor.
"Ibis the body been found?" hd
presently askt-d. " J
"2s o. Perhaps it never will le. Thd
set hu
ought
on it.
-It
carriii
1 m.n !i
A -: 1 x
th- in
1
Y'H id
"If
j NoftWrs say not half lbs bodies that
I get iiitlD the Thames ever see the light
3m 11. j iut his iate is as certain sir
his if I it had been; and it may yet be
louiMi. tniriQUs to say a young man
who works for his tailor passed along
nd faw hmi there half hanging ovr the
para
fttt just as ii he wasoing to drop I
Sato iz. He pulled him1 back but be
e&ysjwhen he sw it was Mr. Dal-
rympie be begged jbis pardon and
walked on. At two the men in a
barge there heaps- the splash io. the
water and the aext id&y ok hat was
found in the strean and brought
home." . .
"It is sad news" said Oscar. "I and
Mrs. Dalrympie were- on the point ofsshion.
startiaff for London. It is of no user "What is bisnssie?" impertarbay
starting
now."
"Oscar" called outjtho voice of Mrs.
Dalrympie. "where are you? We have
not many minutes. ' j j
"However shall t break it to them?"
muttered Oscar Ij do not like the
mission."
He walked across the hall iotohia
own and re-entered tie breakfast) room.
He prpceeded with his task as well as
he could and got ihrc ugh it not telling
them the worst partic jlars at first and
almost tlfankful that Alice fainted and
fell on the floor because it caused some
diversion to Mrs. DatrTniplcs death-like
shock.
And ere the mid-dr y sun wad at its
height the estate was ringing with the
news that itsjgenerdu young landlord
had passed wway w th his faults and
his follies and that Oscar Dalrympie
reigned at the Urangi .
CHAPTEH IV.
London was ma commotion; nothing
was talked of in its gVv circles
but the
young and Hovel v 'ride. Mrs.
Bai
rvmple. Poors wenf oing mad
lor her
smiles; peeresses coin escunded tu court
them; commoners aid eommiflicsses.
who could not get uui; r affected
themselves indifferent! but thev
to hold
Iscarce-
ly made concealment of the fact that
the grapes wjeresoUr. Panics dj Some-
times conic ver tine fashionable world
of thi- grear metrroj
oli-.: now
it is a
rage for snepulatiori
mania jwiiich otuie
soher senses .'upside! d
like that
railway j
lurneii t eopie s
wn; now it is the
new and very ugly signora win is rul
iujt me ooani atut
tne boxes at tier
Majesty s l neater: m
w it is an inline
n the working
sympathy mano
with all" the black
Toms in the other 1
I'ncles and Aunt
tnisphere: lmt at
the time of which vje
ire wrtmg it
was the ad mimtiOnj of one oi
them-
seive. a w man
Dalrvmide.
le beautif d Mr;
She. was charnjir
g; not mean.-
fashion said it but' t
lat sue rea lv was-
T -..! t .!. t
auiraiiv mMriuaiitiEr m pers n. ue
homage .he reoeivpri the gay world
a new w rll to tier reiule eI her
..... ... :j.: :1k1.. . v..... . ..i
iHiiuinin ii ii-ni.-iiun 3U. xllli- j;ihi
wives staiu;anu jiiam wiio ha l never
been jruiltv i eourjtinjj a look in their
Hve add prided
heiiHelves on it.
avowed privtately t
kheir lords hat she
laid herM'lf
out U
achmiratM
and
was a com p.
MtlUl OI
k-anity ami
klanger;
and the lonjk nodd
1 a grave ai
Iproval
and the m
It
v could eL out of
sight went
tearmi
in the wale aftor
Mrs. Dalrviinde. i
-1
A stylish krehicle; somethinjr
etween
a break a in
stvlinh men
a daiifi v-horse wpth two
in it. especially in
the ex-
driving tent of their mtistii
cues was
He who
down Kegeit treet
reins ('nptifiii Stari
ieiu tne
ev was a
tending
lar more to! some o
jcct at a
distance
than to his horse; 1 is head w:j
s raised
errendifularlv. :U if an iro
ii an iiu i
vn his Um at
tly fixed f. l
joker
had Ihjcu tliru d
and
i eves wewj intenl
icfore
urn. A street ca whirled ?
uddenlv
nuind the I'urnerojfJArgyle phi
Cup-
tain Sttiiilei was tJ
aiisorlKnl
to avoid
it aid tho wo can
e in contae
.1
at came
he cab-
No damage was
of-it was a wonlv
one. All t)
w:ir; tor
in an's' itbu
was ujdimited and Cap
t;dn Stxftal' given
o angry explosions j
lle.eoucluded by
for Hi-oleiifee. and
hor-c agaitr.
oinisuijra s
ininiDiis
then
urge
on hi-
Is than the wtiv
vou
J3'lleRillV
drKe in Ljndon?t
quietly a.-
kctl hi-
companion
An in-
lent reu ile! He shall smart
for it.
I'll have him before thu magis
trate at Marlboromh street
"Don t fal! me a a witness.
riieii. It
was our fjault
low.- wav."
lou rot mtu
UlC fel-
"1 didn't get intci
hi wav."
"At anv rate vou
didu'rget Hut of it.
which aiuunted to
the same
Vmg. 1
ask if that is our asual mod
of dnv-
ing
"
t... it :. : o1
11:11 m II l-r I
"It's a aivle- o ie.ATl:
le nekt
time
-hall
von nll'or . ! t
:it. Stanley
reins'
1
jrojM-:e to take tle
1 I nought 1 saw
her earriasf before
US. ee:imed la
ptaui btaiil
v. in
more cYHiciliatorv t
me for he
1 as
ginning t ninn
"It lll.tde use o!l
cl-e Wilielltter
hi- goo
hu
mior.
thing
ions to e e
"Who ii "her?
WilieiieteT. j
" Hie hleliest Wl
demande
Lord
man uiei
have got r.
--tcr
I '
! .
P:UI ! -vnu .voM
lre.lt
111 1
- un - ; un-.i 1
...- - ...ii .... :
v
ieu u gt jsurori
UlleeO: to II er
it
have
h
oine
tliui1! h si
MPPinii
ihroad.
I "i:'.ii't
1 eivi.' add
d th.H(
iptain. ttt p
!ir.'
niu-taehe. '"withoftt
a d:iii
Hiit
f
hat anirel.
1 The iM-iAml yji
iVlle.f. He
lle'.l
m . of
! -'
went
Id. apt -1111 ianleh
rop.ii-.
into heroie
-t
liii't them In in f
"Mr. Stanlev to I
Olllel
f upon t
?" yk.-.l 1
ejtMOIl
' iinlf
ferelith. I :i tjtfl
a ni'.' -otaeti
hing
"NoiMleh luck. j
"Oh!" !
"llv Jove! hen-
M
te s uiarru
d."
lie come-!
She has.1
turned back aaiii
Th
gr.Vn car-
riageatid dark !iv
Isu"t she " j
"Take cajre of
rupted Lorti Wine
rv. 1 kn
.CIV
-aw it
Kour nors'.
inter1
s uii-
le-ter; "the
i other cab." . 1
"Shoot the hors4
f
Look at Mer."
An open baroucl
One ladv sat in-uh
was appn
it Inl '
aching.
lIlclH'S-
tcr caught sight ifi
an exquisite toilette.
and then the Hih
lace para-- I leing
rennved ot an
iexquisite luce.
young face looking younger perhaps.
than it really wa;
features: cheeks
clearly cut
delicate-
if a rich
ilamask:
brown glossy hair
and soft d
irk eves
of excei ding brigh
tiess.
" There s a
picture tor 3011
!" mui
ur-
mured the enamori
d Captain
-tanley.
letting his horse g6 as it won
d to a
-pill if it liked; "a
id the fiiCK?
s noui-
ing to when you 'eme to tink
to her.
rht eyes
She has sent half I
oaulon wild!
Off went his hatj
for the bri
were smiling and
he fair head
lKjwmg
to him. But off v ent Lord Winches
ter's also far a brighter smile and a
more familiar recognition which
seemed to have "in it somewhat of sur-
prise greeted bin .
"Halloa Winch jster! I say that's
too bad!" cried Cf ptain Stanley when
tfrnyiiad passed
"You know her!"
"Before I know
Dalrympie."
you. She's Selina
Selina: ves. til
at is hor Christian
name: I saw it on
kerchief. Wltcrb
dny on her hand-
vas the pull of your
story over it? Whv
lat you knew her?T'
makjug such a mJ
couldn't you sayl t
I made no my
low. I did notf
rtery. my good fel-
:nw it was Sclina
Dalrympie you were speaking of. Who j
has she married?
What's her name?"
Married! her
name! What d'ye
mean?"
"Xthoastut job said she te4- sts
ried."
"What is theasitef with yonF crifti
Captain Stealey looking at. the Vis
count. viYqu-call hec SeHni Dalrya-
plct and. then ask who she has married
and what her name is. Do yon sup-
Eose she bears one name and her hits-
and another? That's not Englki
continued the Viscount
"Dalrympie. What should it be?"
"She has never married Oscar Dal-
rympie!" exclaimed Lord Winchester
in a roused tone. "Has she?"
"Her husband is the only Dalrympie
I know of in the laud of the living. A
cold dry wizen-faced man. Yon are
given to mystifying to-day Winches-
ter. "
"Not at all. She was Miss Dalrym
.pie. How was I to know she bore tha
same name now?"
"Miss Dalrympie was she! Some re-
lation to him?"
"A cousin; three or four times re
movcd. So ho Oscar Dalrympie! It'i
better "to be born luck3 " than rich.
Moat-Grange and its fairest flower!
You did not bargain for that onceupoa
a time." I .
"How did youjknow her?"
"Oh I have often seen her. They art
neighbors of my Uncle Cleveland's.
Where are th Dalrvmples living in
town?"
"May Fair. Onlv a part of the house.
Thev art! not rich5'
Mrs. Dairy mplu's carriage had con
tintU'd its course. It was now on ita
wa to her dressmaker's. Mine. Dame
reau. An enormous custom clientele
-he always said had Mine. Damereau.
Thoroughly well established wa
madame. lfer house was handsome: its
rooms a mixture ot ran-iau taste and
English comfort with their velvet-pile
carjiets rich crimson furniture brilliant
mirrors and oniumeiital objects ol
porcelain all delicate landscape paint-
ing and burnished gold. Surely rooms
so elaborate in their iitting-up were
not needful to the house of a milliner
ami dressmaker? Needful or not thej
were there. There was a spaeiou.
.-how-room and a lounging-room ami
a trying-on room and an ante-room
Igith a handsome hall and a staircase
leading to them whence the cus
clientele caught vague snatches-
through a painted window of a paved
court and shrubs and plants. Mine.
Damereau was as fascinating in her
line as Mr.-. Dalrympie in hers; ask
the ladies who Wen! forever paying her
vi-its anil they would tell you that
once within reach of the fascinations ol
herself and her show-rooms there they
were contentedly lixed; there was no
getting away anil there was no trying
to. Madame s expenses were great
and she had feathered her nest pretty
well; somebody paid for it When
madame' s ne.-t should be sufficiently
well feathered or what she would con-
sider so it was her attention to return
to la belle Frajicc pays cheri! and
quit England and its natives les bar-
bares! forever. ! Every thought ol
madame had reference to this enchant-
ing tinale; not a dress did she make
a bonnet sell a mantle improvise but
the "stieking-oiii ' (very strong where
she could) bore 1 the desirable end in
view. There had beun a Mons. Damereau
once upon 11 time. He had something
to do with the theaters though not in
the wav of acting. But he grew too
fond of English porter and of lingering
madame's prolits. Madame inveigled
him into a jtMiruey to Paris with her:
let him have his Hing a little while
and one fital morning the poordeluded
man awoke ti lind that he and his
wife were two; ihe had obtained a sep-
aration from !im "de corps et de
biens' Madame returhed to England
the same day jand what became oJ
him she neither know nor cared.
We have Munitioned a mania that
was riil'mir overplus gay world at thu
period chiellv over tin male portion ol
11 me nu mi. u Min 01 w-enr jJiumupic 3
wife; we mu.-t
low confess to another
which cxcliisivi
fly touches the female.
A love for druss.
:V wild rampant
not-to-be -cont
oiled - within - any-limit
love for ex tray
agant dn-s-. rJo fever
3et known was
(like unto it; and Mme.
Dameijeau blel-etl it "heartily and
petted' 1
uttediit and nursed and prayed that
it would never
abate. Pew had fallen
into tliis Jast 1
rymplk Bred
simplik-itv .and
iauia as had Mrs. Dai-
up in the country in
comparative seclusion
- attractions had burst
Londqn and it-
upon licr with
irresistible power daz-
1 .ling her judrn
ni
ent and taking captive
1 her -h-e-. T
pamplij i- . e.
m
pa-sioii for dress -ex-
Magiou-. rival rv so rife
in hunt an heail .-eizd linn hold upon
.-: toiuething like another pa-ion
j had friuerl -e t'l iimh audde-troed j
Iwr dufortitiiat
brother. Every Innly
"must IhaVe a iMir-uit. a daily passion
jt :l j.
epr- 11I: and if tluv
lo not have it ti
te :ire .ipid and indif-
f-ren. and pi
ote-t that the world l?
not wjiirth liMn
I 111. 1 he pur-tut mav
b orth r it
111a v lie iinworUiv; we
don't1 Uiucn uiHn that now. but it must
- M. -oiiicUiing. Selina Dalrympie found
h r- u 'he nev ni-Ii af:-r dre-; what
t. jai he tu find it 111? Not caring
particularly for her hu-baiid (but thief
is oiIy bete'n oir-elve-. mind) no
loved and intiniate friend- aroused her
hjildren nc che
oli: nnthiiHr bin
no
rL-hed home oi-cii-
1 patioii; nothing but the world s horn-
ajre 'u the batt-rtHtm in the park i
in
the home vl-i
Tliat homage soon
gn-w verv clean.
and dp--; in her vain
hearty U-canie
f it a part and parcel.
Her carnage
stopped at the door or
iuiucj iaiuen
alxvkMMuig
an. tlthiT carnages.
here drew a-ide for it.
and Ilis. Dalrvmple descended.
Bath
er tail very 'elegant hrr dress of lilac
silk llouncel tji the w.ii.-t became her
well land her rich white "lace mhntle
became that
The Damereau footman
threw open tlie
door tor her and -he
went up to the
show-room. A lady in
it than which nothing
nlainl attire h
could be more
rich than the silk mate-
rial with a
mall can on her head of
costly lace ana living costly streamers
of the same di -engaged herself from a
group to who 11 she was talking and
came forward bowing: such bows that
only :i Krenchvoman can achieve. It
was 31 me. Jamereau. A clever-
looking woman with a fair .-kin and e
smooth forehead.
What could! she have the honor of
doing to-day for Mme. Dalreemp?
Mrs. Dalrvmple scarcely knew. She
would walk iround first and see
Wa? there any thing fresh?
fit) IE CONTINUED.
Fashicnah
not afraid of t
their place of
their visiting
why this is
creajtures are
down in a fit
dress precisely
e young men who are
leir creditors now hava
residence engraved oa
cards. Nobody knows
thus unless the poor
afraid they may drop
and as thev look and
alike the cabby might
to the right abode.
not carry then
Wood intended for paper pulp is
shaved by a machine devised for the
purpose so thinly that it takes seven
hundred and iftv thicknesses to ms&e1
1 an inch. Cincinnati Times
OF NOTORIETY.
SUiy .SGaa ox4
fWomcm Who
Zeva is
to
Talked About.
l
Some people are so fond of notor'y.tj
tkit they aye jvilling to make great per-
soaal sacrifices to attain it It is un
qn jstionably a weakness in human
nature and can ba endured provided
it iansea no harm. A few are silly
enbugh to confound notoriety with
pobnlarity and eccentricity with
gehius; other j more silly still gladly
make themse ves ridiculous in order to
attract attent on. The dudes and oil
others who a 3ttmo the outre in dress
beiongtothit class. Some are lilted
into notoriety by an in-rolling wave of
circumstance then irotto find them-
selves strandi d when the wave recedes.
So mo glory in notoriety obtained
through the nost foolish avenues for
it such as p tying an enormous sum
foj a pew a painting or an opera ticket
a heavy subscription to a charity fund
orj expensive dinners to prominent
men. Their ranitv is flattered and it
scarcely matters to them if there is
nojthinir either creditable or lastiujr
lling
about it
le paragraphist has his
lliii": at them; thev are
epigrammatic
hounded and
nlerviewcd. and if they
.ly sigh for retirement
lev are either too vain or
dojnot eventu
it is because t
too stolid. '1
!he man who has becomo
noted throng
1 sheer merit is .-oldom
alluded with
vanitv. He simply ex-
re its the praise tendered hum conscious
th it he has ilijserved. it It stimulates
hi: 11 to renewed effort and enables him
to seem self-contained.7 Persistant
homajre wearies him. and he often
. 1 i- ... --.
ve irns for less publicity.' Aware of
th i demands which are made upon the
tit 1 c energies and resources of many
of
our public men we oftun think of
th
:m in a commiserating wav.
The man must beat tunes envied bv
th
em who rocU to his quiet home at
ni
ht-fall. wit
h the work of the dav
duipleted su
e to be disturbed bv no
tit
in
1.1
timely
visitors or impertinent t
puries.
If
he liaipens to make a
uider or s:ijy an injudicious thing.
it
m
1
pi
w
Es not procl:
imed to the world anil
irniiied unt
I it is inade to look like
rune lie can indulge in ins little
culiaritics i 1 politics ami theology.
thout being dragged before the 111-
isition of public opinion. He rejoices
1
in hisaplacid h t; he le-ens
iibilitit's; no ii terviewer d:
his respon
ses to bold
ln;n to an aec unt He does not envv
th
f
notorious man; he will no't 0 out
his way to make obeisanco .to the
pular man;j he doesn't yearn to
iliate with either of them. liladri-
l
at
lA
ia Call.
A BUSY PRINCE.
tljiTr the Hnir-Apparrnt to the Throne of
Gre.it IEritalit KUIm Time.
I
No man in E:
hgland pursues pleasure
pre persist
ntly than the heir-
inparent to the throne of Great Britain.
I' he restless
activity of the Prince of
Wales is simp
Dis monthly
mould appall
y amazing. A peep at
linrv of engagements
most men. What with.
'.ek'ces. drawing-rooms public 1 in ners
ika presiding at music exh bitious
xnd Masonic meetings laying corner
sSones visiting hospitals shooting off
into reinotv shires to open doe s tun-
nels and briilges assisting at t ic erec-
tion of statues to statesmen varriors
a id poet- what with these fu letious
to say nothing of looking in ajt hors.
c lttlo and llower shows steamii g down
t 1 Windsor or Osborne to con er with
liis Queen mother and tuning- up
j roraptly ait most of the premieres at
t ic dozen or -o London theaters lie in-
tjariablv attends one would re isonably
infer that the Prince of WaL's i.- not
qnly as bispy as a bee but jnev r has n
diiiiute to himself. Doubtless jthe par-
tial rettrejnent of tfie (uelin ' hrows a
great dealf of soqial routine work upon
lliin but he is epi:il to the leinnud.
lle has been 1 known to leave a
ball at Rhreu a. m. ami be in
the train! equipped ior a shooting
expedition a hundred miles r more
away from town! the same iik rnmg at
'J:Hn1 Pui there is one evening of the
week tlintP the Prince reservi
to him-
self and no amount of inthuM
ce or in-
engaga triguing will induce him -to
limself toianv formal function
no mat-
on that
ami on
derstfiod
knot of
ler how
: light It
mportaut it may b
is his night oil."
hat oceriMon it is quite ui
anion' hi-1 'sef asms littii:
utimates -. termed that he i
to ell 1.1V
limself i -' f'f i. II
d die-early with
the night is hi-
ds fauiih!
am
then
iwn. anl ie ii-u-tiiv iu ins jn-r-oimi
riends. Ufril' de HothiThild is the
rinee's aiost .Silc-e .fulj host. 11 is
generous. Ieuitiv.'iled. po-e - grear
Ivealth. aipl his line luse i ai mu-eiioi
f tho lo'Hest and edstlfest hrt tr.a
ires. Hejlias the advantage itf koow-uguio-tin
the imiHing tx-on of l.on-
loil. He
knows mo-t ot
tie pre4ty
iclrees
riiul tht; rmgning
I.
Illt'e
of
"'' tf" ' "" "" r I "
Ocity. afnl al' n goHl tiii.
lie IS
made aw:re at tine ctHHing of
hi- rovil
ie It. Hi
truest. .
itw aid again M.
Child wil
engage a great vi
ll ill i-t like
Joaehtui.
a pianist ot tm
H'llll-telll
Kaure or
nitre or
a singer such a-
C-apoul t
take part in the ie-tiviiie-.
Hut m a
gonerial. way th- p -rfrmrrs
itre the In
nored gnesis of tn hol ami
ovpect net
ther i:a nor rewan . Ilrwk-
ign fragfe
fi
curaous COINCIDE
NCE.
Tho llMVreiKM- Itetueen h Oil
k
if Hi
bitijit ami a OHiiiollioi I
v-r.
The otlfer dav while a Mic
igaii (n-Thoma-
a
tral train
young in:
to be clo.-
Bvas waiiuig at ri.
11 of twenty-live wajs observed
lv regarding
a so
id-looking
old rent elf liftv who had conte through
from (."hiJago. Finally tho tou"? "
stepped tn and Impiired.
Isn t tfits .Air. u 01
aiicago?"
Yes. sir.
I am Mr. J r- forn
formerly
of the
same blade but now of loronto
Do
you remember me?"
Keally but I do not"
I wasli clerk in your perk house.
I aspired ko the hand of your daughter.
You drove me hence because I had no
ducats." j
'0. yea it seems as if I do recall
something ot the sort."
Wellisir. 1 want you' to understand
that you made a mistake. I am now
worth eighteen thousand dollars' and
could give vour daughter overy lux:
ury." '
Eighteen thousand dollars ehr
That's quite a sum."
Yes iir and I'm the man you drove
hence." f
"Eighteen thousand dollars" mused
the old gent What a curious coinci-
dence! That's exactly the sum my
daughters husband gave her the other J
day to buy Rummer pug doga with! I
must jottiii coincidence down."
Somebody held the young man up
until thui weakness left his knees a little
and thon he went hence some more.
Jktroit !Frec Press.
LOVE
I
TflAtH
NQ Ti
Botmlag "WTmmAs
s WroBff&t tef SMisUlstal
S5y lalzeu ""
; ""The eyea ar
i of. no use withoolthe
oorrmg powi
r a great writer has
said and can
it be denied that nc
faculty we po
sess is capable of sc
sanch cnltivat
on as tnat of sisratt
roets naye o
themes the emc
ten chosen for their
tions which find expres-
aion through ti
a eyes and have e.ven
iresa preferences as to
Tenttueato ex
color but tho W
ariety in color and ex-
pression of the
evo is as nothing com-
pared to the differences in the powei
of observation.
In the story of "Eyei
and No Eyes"
re have types of people
who go througl the world some seeing
sverv thing an
d others comparatively
nothing. Muc
Juo to early oil
of this is doubties
Itcation
The naturalist' bofcinist artist and .
the specialist
n cver department ol
science devote
niuiseu ciodeiv to tne
examination of
the details th:it nrlst in
his own particllar lino and no doubt
fiar line anu no uouuc
if his perception would
the cultivation
j 5eno him in ot
I are closely allit
or departments which
Ito
x-ls
tne
m. 1
I he natural:
tt- does- not allow
WE EYE.
smallest in-ect to pass unnoticed and fe nf "" nie -: t 1 eveiop-
histraineil eve perceives at once the 4ent m cf o ?ttlb. Advance!
variety of specie s in which to classify it. ' couUl -f1 wsisted and steam
How Ilifferentl the botanist examines . vas atlmitted as. an auxilu ;v; but our
a llower iro m a
flight who sees
neuonof ordinary eve-
in it little save the col-
or shape ami
may be able ti
erfume. The botanist
traco in the llftwer's
ces to other tlowers to
parts resemblaij
which it is clo;
lv related.
I have knowr
children four years of
lge to select tit wers of the rose family.
which embrace
not onlv the rose theni-
ielves but the fi
nit tree blossoms apple.
pear plum cierry and quinces th?
mailer fruits.
strawberry.
raspberry!
om other i
and blackberry
blossoms from
blossoilis of the
lily and pink families.
simply by the r-emblance-they saw in
tne petals am
the peculiar serrated
leaves which ne
hrlvall the familv Iuitp.
It is not possibl
i to estimate the benefit
nn the early and can-
children to observe.
to be derived fr
ful training o
Many are less opsorvant naturally ami
need to have
things pointed out tc
them until th
closely is forn
habit of examining
ed or like second na
ture. Kuskin hvho has been a elos
observer of ijrt and nature saw
'There is no
bush exactly like an-
other bush: not!
whose branches
wo trees of tho fore-t
bend just the same
way; no two leiJves
on the same triv
which could m
other nor two
alike." How f.
be told from each
ravos of the sea exactly
w of us are able to de-
scribe or even d
commonest trin
raw tne leave- ot our
s the oak maple 01
elm accurately
How many ot us
after gazing upon a face can outline the
face give the
orrect shape of tho
nose or height
f the forehead? Out
lhes are less to
this lack of spct
An expert in pr
ever deceived b;
tell at a glance
us in consequence ol
ial training of the eye.
ious stones is scarcely
counterfeits but can
he value of each gem
which comes to
his notice. Without
the habit of obsi
rvatiou no Agassiz. no
HumlKildt. no
would have hell
Newton no ('alileo
.d tne world eacn in
their several wa
W.iere unthinkinj"
persons observe
nothing men of iuteili-
gent vision stud
tin phenomena pre-
senti'd to tin
lloiuig uillerenees
making comparisons and grasping their
inderhing iN:i
(mlih
was n
t probably the firt
d seen .a suspemletl
mea-ureil beat but
person who h
weight swing bv
was the first to d
ne that tin principle
could be appliec
1-ifty years f study
ocfssarv to complete
and labor were 1!
the invention of
im'Hirtance in ti
and astrononii
scarcely be ov
lion of the t.
astronomy to
invention of tin
thu petiflulmu. but its
e measurement of time
cal calculation can
rrat'il. The inven-
Ieseopo 'has reilueed
a science.
Th
telescope was accom-
l observation of irhait
:r had given to the
plished by earefi
a speetacle-mak
second son of
instrument by
illiam of Orange alt
rhieh distant objeetjs
appeared nearer
... .1... i.i.i.i..- 'p..
in iiiu ucnuiiiui. aiub
suspension bnd
... iQll... riibnf .h.
. .. ... ...- .. .- .-.-
careful study of
a spitler's web. which
inventor who had in
was seen by the
mind the constr
iction of a bridge ov.jj
tho Tvi ed. Th
idea occrtrred to him
1 that a bridge of
iron ropes might he
1 constructed in til
same manner. The
Thames tunnel
. lesson iijMin the
forate- wood wil
was the reuit ot a
hip-worm which per-
1 its head hrst in one
direction and ti
archway is comp
gent eye of a ear
tlie-e seemingh
en another until the
ete. Only the mteJii-
fill oler r can giv
trivial hIk-iioukmi 1
life of Il'i.-h Millar
illu-rr.it fii of tile
iillg giioTll-e. f th
o! 1 ii.niiiiii'-r f his
their value Tin
give no anotlu
'advantage ot 111:1
'ee-. With an
grarelf iiher's he
vent -looiit ehiiiiiing
iikin.- acoN
Mi pieces of -t.i
ami 111
..;.i -ru.i
lection ot -i :
Lell- of t
and other -torn
whenever hv h:
whieji eanie in
a-ked if be was
-tines " IL.-. le
-. arid hunting up.
I' a d iv. i-iirii)sjt"te !
ii wav. ft'-u i-ittg
etting "--il!er in tbe
ve -r. continued to ;
".eeditFrrences. an
dgie-ant! peeuliari-
ties when other 1
ten -aw nothing. !! '
sim:d keot his ev
es oien. never lon"m 1
-ight of h's hj
. an I years aft'tr- j
g work n the Old
1 ward his inttre-ti
' el .iiel-101ie el
tablis!ted his repuji-
tion as a s -ienthii'
geologist. ''!'-
k
i A GOOD
REASO
Why tho Twelfth .1
nir -iiccfM'Ii-iI lit 1Vlnt
I Otlit-r Kleven. j
1 . . . . . 11
i- idiiR Ox'tr th
' A In. t ..fc..tcft.
ot eleven Imiwih !
men ami nn old fel
creek retireil to t
foreman when sel
ow from acrosw the
ie mrv rowm. itw
. !
eted. reimtrkifl Uiat
he thought the pri
honer oh get
to hje
vearsj.
ient to the peniten
iarv for five
"That ain't long lenough." said
old fellow. "Lets I nit -it on" hint
trije
fur
1 old fellow
; ten."
(). no. that won
Wall then.' str
t do."
'tching himself out
on a bench. "I'm w
ithyer."
; to hang the jury?"
"What vou got"
"That's about it.1
"Mv dear sir. we
Lire anxious to get
back to our busincs
"Then send him'i
"Rut that would h
"Then squat an
comfortable."
p for ten." '
a great in justice.7
.make vourselvds
"Have you any sr
the prisoner shoul
tcial
reason
wlrr
up
for teiu
vears."
"Think I have." t
tobacco at the spittc
irowing a quid ot
on.
"Will you please 3
ame it?'
"les fur it won t
is my son-in-law an'
portin' him eversim
tike me long.
He
3llt-
I have been
e he was married."
He went up for ton
vears. Arktinsote
7rt.?r.
Progressive Jaci
straws i3 slowly
but surely snppla
euchre among the
itmg rogressie
lite. Progressive
Simon-savs-tliunibs-u
p will probably bo
the next fireside va
ary.rcTCA; s bun.
WOODEN MEN-QF-VAR.
VesMl to th9 Statat3'2
In referring ti tke navyo' tke pas
ii is impossible to ayold
yeallmg the
feeling of pride with wh
ch an Arneri
msi walkec
can seaman ofllcer or
the deck of his ship.
This fielingwai
common to the naval and coxxunercia
marine. Our wooden si ips that sailot
the ocean from "1840 to I860 were th
finest in the world. Tt e rid frigati i
Congress in 1842 was the noolest speci-
men of the frigate of the dy and tin
aloop of war Portsmouth Tas unsur-
passed as a corvette. Tie clippei
ships of that period ned no eulogy
beyond their ovta recori . ""hese shipt
were the models for the mi-ition of all
maritime nations and s mong the con-
SltllUlUlS Ut MIO JJCliUU till 'V ItltfTOHl
without dettiment to m.nv
detriment to m.nv others
omitted tne names 01 tpn an ateers
. . m v l - t i .
""" " "vv. -;i r -; -
g reacueil lUf zcunu una-
j Por'01--
v""" . ' 1
I . Bu"herp Mj ncjsentimont a progress
i "? --" - ... n . . .n..-
j tive. and tne grear moi ve power.
Steam was being crowi ed to the froi
! even during thiai the grvatct develo
froiit
1 ... . . 11 : .1. .. .1 i
deve opment.in navaieonsi ueuon sum
I stood 'tis m gol stead and enabled us-
; s H.V .VW w.n :fu.XI V tuc:iI
power which continued w oe prolix-
in nt liar mitnv vearsi as ijtindards to
which others! found it to tjfcnr advah-
tage to confirm
Before the tiiial abamlonment in the
navy of sailidg 4hips. pure and simple.
an effort at 1 coaiproml-e w:is made-lay
limiting stei.m to side-wfceel ve-sejs.
n'' """"b'ur of line Hhijw were built
t1j f'rties wfcich dhl giod service.
jand vvfere a ojreitu to tpe country ajn-
iweriig :is tliey did the demands of the
time. The Mississippi Missouri Sus-
i(Ueh.uia S"aranacand Powhatan car-
'ried tjie llaglto .all parts of the wofld
fur many yeak-s. ispnie of tlieni enduriTg
to beat their ihare in the late war while
the Powhatan is even now borne on. the
list oflvesselsi of the navy. I
The1 Princeton of great fame :tnd
.he Slim .lacfntui. were tine only snips
with crew propellers that appeared in
the pijriod under consideration the use
of thei -crew beihg considered of doubt-
ful propriety t4be tested by tentntive
experiments '"these ship have "Vung
since disappeared but tiie screv; re-
mains and side Wheels are relegated to
boats for inland ivvaters. f
Confidence being established hi the
screw-propeller' construction on the
principle of aux0iary stpum-powerf was
decided on and shins of different
slassVs were added to pie navy inj.sluch
numbers as the jraried-iluties required.
Thjre werje those at that time wtho
wise beyond their generation reeog-
nizedj tho full meaning of the advjenlt of
steam and saw that it mut supphint
sails (iltogether as the motive -power
for ships. TjheMu advocated that new
construe tin4 should be provideil vi'ith
full sjteam-power. wiith .-ails as an aux-
iliary: but ths did pride i the sailing
-Uip wiiii lie-1 iioii .11111 liivi-tui ?(iiia
't ("nitjl not li mjule to viejd at one ; to
1 the ipiiovatiun;jold traddioiis )intir
S to the nevr.sityjof full -ailwiwer uld
not be .dispjleij: it was coit-idertyd a
fciillicieiit v-oili-ef-ioii to admit stifan on
: un jterms ami ' thus the conservntivi '
i anil temporising eoiuifse vv3 aitotecU
; of retaining fulfsail-poweq and uUiiz-
i ing steam sis an auxiliary. j '
Th irnited istate ( 'uvernment jwa
not alone n tis jHlicy. It.vyas tlnn
course piirsuetl by al othr mhritimei
natious. ami frsomcyearstIie United!
States: retained the tyad inl producing
the most perjpet type- in this new
phase of naval coustrnctioil Hear Ad
mtr.tl E. inrnthon. in. Ua&ter's Ahuja
f 1 ;
.. L !
DISTILLING KEROSENE!.
1
Tho XnniKrniH Unt-fut Flidili .-ocarfil from
tho- Cuilo l'ctrieuni.
Petroleiifti colisists of a great many
i:n. .. d ... u:..i. .....
"i-i'-""-I'i''v" ""
cftatu-
. m 1 . .1 .
" iro " " rH"l "l WJt ' -'
neaily a nil ;heat. Such beii g the
case as soon as the ji is Heated at ab
th. most volatile prwluct lMpn to
come over at first colorless as
v
iter.
but very gifcerally assuming a 'yellow
tinge un! ill the nio-t dense
Coming over at thel Ifcist is
brown in volori -o tljiat if
distiIlation
pnte dark
:ll the di-
tillate wcrp- alhiwi-1
(..getiier. lr u!d
t.-rell'h tTiilll the I
! run
iin to; a tank
nt loo
very ditV
fnginal
Mtroeiilil.
In the opriiarv
dnary pr"ee-s
Hd feruling
m Tre'.-M
ijnto thre
llgllte-t.
iitei dl-fiipation
i- 'divided i
i in iristiu-: 1 ne
fir-ti is) thi.i
oi.jrSe-5s jHrtion.
mfarlv as
T.datil. as etb.1r.a1M i.- e:
Ilejl cVud. '
liaitha. of b.tiin. . l.ikL- Uie vi'udij
! jH-lroleimi. ripsf criiiie nnpiBia may imi
! disttlted alel liMlei 1 into
gasjdine. Ai
It and ' nan! tha. whi.-h' :
re uVd inj
painty anil
. g.iH urte'Mui -J for 'iMixing
. otle-r -ubihir 1 piir- s.
' aNo. f-.r : .i.Hiig m lamp-
I The middle irti-ii f flu
I.mpetime-J
uid -fovesj
dUdiate
which i- Jieimifr v tfv ligh
nor
VeH
or if
heavv. and lifing
hit
e ol
the crude :!hikian.diBgo.il.
o
r kirene
As it run-t ir-ton th
! it H
1- a vi-rvt
otfen-iviT in lor. ilue to deeon
M-Uhu ot
certain itortioiks if the pettroA-um
R-um at
the hi''h temiranife reached tin th
4
ni-
st ill.
To renfve the ofRtnaie c
unjtoundsi j
abblit five
tho oil i I
(first ajittteil with
per ci'lit
stron" oil i v
vitrol. This L
cocmbine h itii
he otlen sive O
ti .-..nj
' j iiy
ing a blai-k. ta
ry residue that falls tb
r the Udtfrfii of tpie til k as sdon :ls the l
ii oil is brought to rest. The mittilre of j
3 acid ami ;n! ia tailed "siudge"' rtnd is j
uscfl iii Inrgo qhnntit ea in tM mamjh i
facture of comfiercial f"rtili::es. lAfujr !
the acid s uran oil' and thejoH wisheil 1
with water it ife again va.-h Ml wth la
strong solutiouj of canst c so:U. vvhicii
removes 1 the. 1 tire-: df mini uric ackL
and jilsoi some peculiar acid Loftnpoumia
I that ixi.-it in tlt oil. I T ie oi . lafter an
other washing .with water is nearly
colorles with! the peculiar i balsamic
odor of kero3jaej and pos jesses. tlW
slight opalesct-ncp jieculiar to thee
oils. As usually prepared the? belong
to tho cass knovrm asi "high test" kero-
senes and consist almost entirely pf
oils that exist Jrr the petroleum alreailiy
formed lieing : irierely separtateil from
the largest aini heaviest portions. Such
oils are called .the educts of the petrol-
eum.. The heaviest portions of tne
distillate contain narafline ils. Tbey
also are mainly eduetB of tlate original
oil; they however contain a much
larger proportion than the kerosene lot
the products ojf the oil. A Wrry residue
remains in the stillcjilied "pesmuun.
.uutuinti inqntMrvu iozirf.
Uneon Victoria's rein 5s now the
fourth in point of length chronicled jby
.nglisli history fad vard lilt; naTtog
reigned fifty Henry UL lu tv-si m
George! UI. sixty year.
A MOTHER'S MAXIMS.
aisrar Ckll4rtt StwaM Tm
j As th boys grow $p make coapaa
Ions of tls2a; then they will not seek
oompanlonahip elesewhere.
LetthoflhiHrsttmake anoisoj doste-
times; their happiness is as Jjamortant
a your nerves. i
Bespeot their little- gecrets; V thejr
have .littlo concealments wonying
them will never make then tsll and;
patience will probably do ita wc rk.
Allow them as they grow oier. te
have opinions of their own; mat a lhera
individuals and not sere echoet .
Remember that without physical
health mental attainment is worthless;
tet them lead free happy lives j -nrhick
wiu Duvugiucii uoin mma aim ecay.
Bear in mind that you are largely
responsible for your child's inherited
character and have patience with faulti
and failings. I :
Talk hopefully to your children ol
life and its possibilities: you h ive nd
right to depress them because you have
suffered
Teach the boys and girls tho actual j
facts of life as soon as they a:o old!
enough to understand them and give;
them the sense of responsibity vithout
saddening them.
Pmd out what their special tas lesare
and develop them instead of spending
time money and patience in forcing
them into studies that are repugnant ten
them. !
As long as it is possinle kiss them
good-nigTit after tlujy are in beii : they
do like; it so and it keeps themi very'
close t (
If you have lost a child remember
that for the one gone there is no moroi
to dos-for those remaining every thing:
hide your grief for their sakes.
Impress upon them from early in-j
fancy that actions hare results aadj
that they can not escape consequences
even by being sorry when they havei
acted wrongly.
As your daughters grow up. tach
them at least the true merits of house-
keeping and cookery; they will thank
you for it in lator life a great deal more
than for accomplishments.
Try 1 and sympathize with girlish
flights of fancy even if they seem ab-
surd to you; by so doing you will retain
your influence overyour daughters and
not teach thorn to .seek sympathy else-
where i
Kcmomber that although they are-al
your children each one has1 an mdiyid
tial character and that tastes and qual
ities vary indefinitely.
Cultivate them separately and not aa
if you were turning them out by ma
chinery. t
Encourage theni to take good walkj
ing exorcise. Young ladies in thi
country are rarely good walkers.- They
can dance all night but ar&tirod out ifi
they walk a mile. Girls ought to be
able to walk as easily as boys. Half the
nervous diseases which aJllict young
ladies would disappear if the habit oi
regular exercises were encouraged. J
Keep up a high standard of princi-
ples; your children will In your keenest
jjndges m the future. !) b honest
With them In small things as well as in
jfreat If ui can not tell tlumi whnt
Ihey wish to know say so rather tha 1
deceive them. .
Reprove your children for talf-beit
ng; a child taught to carry capona
roni tho kitchen to the parlot isdi-
esttble.
Send the youngster to bed early;
decide j upon the proper time ami m.1
here tu it
Remember that visitors pr.ii.-e tlie
children as much tp please you as be
cause- mev ueserve iu aim inai meir
presence s oftener than not an alHic-
tion. IfvsUm ffuttfjtp.
m fl
A HIGI FEE
. . y
"Twenty-Urn ThouH.aI Uullnri 1'alfl for
l'hmtvlHw'H VUlt.
About a month ago a IiottdoH
eian had a telegram frono the w
physt-
feof
a
noble patient at Cannes: "Com hr
consultation; ld)J." The
... j .
greit
C:in
doctor reiilied: "Anxious case.
not come." tfter 'ladyship seems io
hare thought that this wks but a way id
making a better bargaiu. for h iii-
crened her offer ii( four success ieteBr
grams ti' the l:it read: "tme at
once. ..0Ki." Whih- the firs(t tele-
grams and replies vi;ere bing seit back-
ward ami forward.; the uxiousica.H-j4"
considerately dielor gH better; s o4r
dcxrtor. in his last ireply- wirel C01J1-
big. ' After he had seet hi- patiejit at
Cannes. uv lath iiqiiin I what was his
fetr? i He said '-All ih.s liivi r.t doctors
with English client met auti tied tie
fee ffr ctuilt:iui he eon-oiltajit
coming epns-li friti Loudn at
jCI.ooo." A cheek fur l."o vvns aJL5-
cortliiigly presM-ntletl tojh'ia. Callirjg
on. his way to his tjrarn n-fxt day. niefeiy1
to ay goinl-bye ami iippure after his
patient the lady 'handed him an e 1-
velope "not to he op iel till ty-ahl-by."
The dfx-tok- sai.L -l have hid
m.y fee. Thivi-t is not ppfeion-al.
but eomplimentatv:" bit bhig totdlto
put theeiivelofie in Irs jwieket. he ttitl i
i. loiter on h1 foniiil ii contained a
"heck for J.V-i:i
Particular relate n
-urn which had 00
to the i telegraphic
bids Xor is tliis ail. Four checks
camji on sece.s.ive days their unitM
rabfc being 3.i. all signed by hir
ladysthip: and at the bink letters we
received preparing the cashier for their
presentation- The doctor wrote say-
ing he had his ff-e. and could tak no
morej He ofierel to return iUJ0 or
ilistribntH it among useful in.ititntiona.
As the inonev was left in hi hands hs
adopto! th Utter cour with the re-
sult thai l00li was given to the Mcjdi-
cal Examination Hall. 1.000 to each
of two hospitals w and .Ll.OcKJf to ORifl of
the medical ina'ituttotts. Ion
Truth.
LEGAL NOTE.
The AccompllhmjnU of a Pros pec Ura
Member of tflie Dakota Umr.
Two residpnts of tlii3 Territory were
talking of a young; man. a. friend
one. who was coining out from
States. Said one l them:
of
the.
"What are you going to hava
him
be when he gets uu jT"
"Well I don't 1 ardly know whechec
to advise him to s t up for a - doctor or
a lawyer." J
"Why not have him say he's a news-
paper man?" j
"I might of CMirse he really haa
had a little experience in that business
used to drive the dray that carried
the paper over to the editor down there
where he lived 1 Kit he "has always been
used to living pri tty well and I dpn'fe
know as he'll bki it"
i-Yes that's soJ tJuess you'd bettor
call hhn a lawyer.
"Yes. I reekonl Court will be in
sessUm here them ami he can stop! in
and get admitted to the bar while Je"s
cominir over front the deoot i&to'i
(J). T.l Bell.
I
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Lowry, James A. The Taylor County News. (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1886, newspaper, August 13, 1886; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth329836/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.