Millheim Journal. (Millheim, Pa.) 1876-1984, October 23, 1884, Image 1

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    THE MILLHEM .MURVU,
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY
R. A. BUMILLER.
Office in the New Journal Building,
Penn St., near Hartman's foundry.
SI.OO PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE,
OB $1.35 IF NOT PAID IN ADVANCB.
Acceptable Correspondence Solicited
Address letters to MILLHKIM JOURNAL.
B ÜBINESSCARDS.
BARTER,
Auctioneer,
MILLIIEIM, PA.
DR. JOHN F. BARTER.
Practical Dentist,
Office opposite the Methodist Church.
STREET, MILLIIEIM PA.
GEO. S. FRANK,
Physician & Surgeon,
BEBERSBURG, FA.'
Office opposite the hotel. Professional calls
promptly answered at all hours.
D. B. MINGI.E,
Physician & Surgeon
Offlice on Mam Street.
MILLHKIM, PA.
J. SPRINGER,.,
Fashionable Barber,
Shop 2 doors west Milliieim Banking House,
MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM,PA.
D. H. Hastings. W. F. Reeder
JJASTINGS & REEDER,
Attorney s-at-Law,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Office on Allegheny Street, two doors east of
the office ocupied by the late firm of Yocum A
Hastings.
O. T. Alexander. C. M. Bower.
Attorneys-at-Law,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Office in Garman's new building.
GEO. L. LEE,
Physician & Snrgcon,
MADISONBURG, PA.
Office opposite the Lutheran Church.
C. HEINLE,
Attorney-at-Law
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Practices in all the courts of Centre county.
Special attention to Collections. Consultations
in German or English.
J. A. Beaver. 14. W. Gephart
Attorney s-at-Law,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Office on Alleghany Street, North of High Street
JGROCKERHOFF HOUSE,
ALLEGHENY ST., BELLEFONTE, PA.
C. G. McMILLEN,
PROPRIETOR.
Good Sample Room on First Floor. Free
Buss to and from all trains. Special rates to
witnesses and jurors.
QUMMINS HOUSE,
BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA.,
EMANUEL BROWN,
PBOPBXBTOR.
House newly refitted and refurnished. Ev
erything done to make guests comfortable.
Rates moderate. Patronage respectfully solici
ted.
JRVIN HOUSE,
(Most Central Hotel in the city.)
CORNER OF MAIN AND JAY STREETS,
LOCK HAVEN, PA.
S.WOODS CALDWELL
PROPRIETOR.
Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Travel
ers on first floor.
gT. ELMO HOTEL,
Aos. 317 & 310 ARCH ST.,
PHILADELPHIA.
RATES REDDCED TO $2.00 PER DAY.
The traveling public will still find at this
Hotel the same liberal provision for their com
fort. It is located in the immediate centres of
business and places of amusement and the dif
ferent Rail-Road depots, as well as all parts oi
the city, are easily accessible by Street Cars
constantly passing the doors. It offers special
inducements to those visiting the city for busi
ness or pleasure.
Your patronage respectfully solicited^
Jos. M. Feger. Proprietor.
JpEABODY HOTEL,
9thSt. South of Chestnut,
PHILADELPHIA.
One Square South of the New Post
Office, one half Square from Walnut
St. Theatre and in the very business
centre of the city. On the American
and European plans. Good rooms
from 50ct8 to $3.00 per day. Remodel
ed and newly furnished.
W PAINE, M. D.,
46-ly Owner & Proprietor.
lie Mllieitti §®L
R. A. BUMILLER, Editor.
VOL. 58.
Business Men for Cleveland.
An Unparalled Turnout to Greet
the Governor—Thousands Upon
Thousands Wild With En
thusiasm.
NKW YORK, Oct. 15.—The business
men's meeting at the Academy of Mu
sic was a complete success. The build
ing was jammed within 10 minutes
from the time of the opening of the
door. Thousands upon Thousands of
people gathered in the vicinity of the
building to get a glimpse of Gov. Cleve
land, who was expected; The usual
pyrotechnic display on H magnified
scale was held in the adjoining streets
and the auditorium was tastefully dec
orated with flowers and bunting.Cheers
for Cleveland and Hendricks were
heard on all sides, the crowd being par
ticularly demonstrative and enthusias
tic. The stage was crowded with dele
gations from the various exchanges.
Ex-3/ayor Grace presided and speeches
were made by Governor Wallace, of
Connecticut, and 11. W. Beecher.
During the speech of the latter, Gov.
Cleveland was announced* Ilis recep
tion beggars description. Everv per
son in the vast crowd rose to his feet
and cheered and waved his handker
chief or hat as though out of his senses.
Mr. Beecher appeared to be greatly af
fected by the enthusiasm. Gov. Cleve
land came to the front of 'the stage and
made several attempts to speak. He
was not allowed to proceed for fully
five minutes. At last he said ;
CLEVELAND'S ADDRESS.
4 'Ladies and Gentlemen : I thank
you for the kind reception and I am
sure it is cause for congratulation that
so many of the business men of this
great metropolis have found season in
the pending political struggle for united
and earnest effort. It has been my
firm belief that one reason we as a peo
ple do not enjoy to the utmost the ad
vantages of our form of Government is
found in the fact tligit our business
men are apt to neglect their political
duties. The idea is too common among
them that there is a heroism and a vir
tue in refusing to hold office, and the
stern denial of any interest in politics
seems to be regarded by many of this
class as the best asseveration of their
private virtue and business integrity, j
The protection and safety of the inter
est they have in charge are closely con
nected with a wise administration of
the government,and it hits always seem
ed to me that if a regard for their duty
as citizens did not impel them to take a
more actiye interest in political affairs,
the desire and need of self-preservation
would do so. I believe, too, that the
best administration uf the government
is accomplished when it is conducted
on business principles, and it is quite
apparent that the active participation
of our business men in the political
campaign is an affective mode of im
pressing the principals upon the man
agement of public affairs.
"I construe this large and enthusias
tic meeting as the determination on the
part of the business men, from which it
had its rise, as the promise of a time
when they shall find the path of duty,
as well as interest, in a practical and
intelligent interference with political
questions and issues."
A LETTER FROM TILDEN.
Gproarous applause punctuated the
governor's speech. At every period the
cheers were deafening. A letter was
read from Samuel J. Tilden regretting
that his health prevented bis attend
ance. He says .*
"I remember gratefully that when It
was my duty as governor to engage in
a grapple with the canal ring which
then swayed all the administrative,legis
lative and judicial departments of the
state and a majority of the local organi
zations of the democratic party and of
the orginizations of the republican par
ty at the New York produce exchange
rallied to my support and stood by my
side until that gigantic power was com
pletely overthrown.
"I concur in your opinion that the
election of Cleyeland and Hendricks is
demanded by the best interests of the
country. I believe that their election
will be a substantial victory for the
cause of gootf government and that it
will assure us a safe and prudent ad
ministration of the chief magistracy of
the public in our relations with other
countries and that it will restore sim
plicity and ecouomy in the needs of the
federal government. So far that result
depends upon the executiye, for it wi'l
give business men immunity from sud
den changes of policy and enable them
to respond under the shelter of a stable
administrative system, free from favor
itism to particular classes and interests
and from the injurious fiunctuations to
which such favoritism and sudden
changes always lead.
(Signed) SAMUEL J. TILDEN.
KELLY CALLS ON CLEVELAND.
Goyernor Cleveland was escorted
from the Fifth avenue hotel to the A
cademy by a committee of members of
the different exchanges'. He was cheer
ed all along the route. The crowd al
most prevented the passage of carriages.
Such a rush is rarely seen, eyen in New
York. On his return to the hotel the
governor Was yisite'd by John Kelly*
MILLHETM, PA. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23., 1884.
General Spinola and Senator Cullen of
Tammany Hall. Mi. Kelly assured
him oftbesincere supportof Tammany.
The governor afterward reviewed from
the porch a procession from the four
teenth and other districts which occu
pied over halt an hour in passing.
Hensel Issues an Address.
The Promising Out-look—Timely
Words of Interest to the People.
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 16.—-Chairman
Hensel, of the democratic state com
mittee, has issued the following ad
dress :
To the Democratic and Independ
ent Voters of Pennsylvania : As
the returns from the October election
become more complete the magnitude
of the victory achieved by the friends
of good government is apparent. The
discomfiture of our opponents is mani
fest. In Ohio the republican majority
is cut down to one half of that of the
corresponding election of 1880, and
the democrats have elected more than
half the congressional delegation.
In Virginia, where Blaine's hench
men had boasted that a republican vic
tory was "a mere matter of finance,"
the democrats have won an unprece
dented majority over a fusion of all
opposition. The elections thus far held
show republican losses and democratic
gains in Alabama, Arkansas, Vermont,
Georgia, West Virginia and Ohio. Iu
Maiue alone by the greatest effort and
through the debauchery of the ballot
box, has Blaine been .able to bring auy
comfort to his party.
Whatever the republicans have secur
ed for their candidate has been only by
the most desperate contest his party
ever made by the degradation of his
own candidacy and the prostitution of
the civil service and the expenditure of
vast sums of money, all concentrated
by turns or. a single state. Henceforth
the enemies of administrative reform
must confront a different situation.
The battle lines are now formed on a
field that stretches across the entire
couutry. An harmonious and aggres
sive organization in New York, Indi
ana, New Jersey and Connecticut, as
sures the electoral votes of these states
for Cleveland and Hendricks, and se
cures their election beyond doubt. In
California, Nevada, Wisconsin, Michi
gan, Illinois and Massachusetts, our
friends make hopeful battle.
It remains for the democracy of
Pennsylvania and all tho friends of
better public methods to strenghten
the cause by ceaseless efforts in our
own state. From this time until elec
tion day the democrats and their allies
in Pennsylvania must be vigilant and
untiring to elect the electoral, con
gressional, legislative and local tickets
which represent the couse of good gov
ernment. Its friends haveevery incen
tive to push forward to the victory
which certainly awaits them on the 4th
of November.
Let there be no laggards in the
ranks. Forward along the whole line.
W. U. HENSEL,
Chairman of the Democratic State
Committee.
While a New Jersey ferry-boat was
crossing the river, the other morning,
there was a booming of a cannon,which
caused many of tho people to rush to
the windows.
'I shouldn't think people would jump
up for such a little thing as that,' said
an old lady to some one who was with
her.
'I shouldn't think so, either,' was the
response.
Then her little boy spoke.
'l've seen a smaller thing than that
make a man jump up.
'What was it r" old lady.
'A carpet-tack,' replied the boy, as he
moved off a respectable distance to get
out of reach.— Puck.
The law about the admission of the
Chinese is so rigidly enforced on the Pa
cific coast that a Chinaman resident in
San Francisco found, on going across
the line into British America, that he
could not get back without making the
journey to China and return, in order
to obtain a certificate that he was a
merchant* and not a laborer.
PAPER FOB TIIE HOME CIRCLE
Cleveland and Hendricks,
Democratic Candidates
FOR
PRESIDENT
AND
VICE PRESIDENT.
A LUCKY DISCOVERY.
"And so Miss Dorinda Beam is dead
au' buried !"
"Yes, au' hain't left no will—that's
the wust of it."
Mrs. Grimes stopped churning to lis
ten to the news brought by Neighbor
Jlockins.
"You don't say I"
"It's so," declaied Neighbor Ilock
ins, emphatically.
"Beuly Bittersweet won't get noth
in' after all, then," observed Mrs.
Gritnes, lifting the churn-lid to see if
the butter was coming
"Not a stiver. Au' her alius brought
up to think she'd git it all."
" 'Tis too bad. I reckin Peter Fogg
an' his woman'll come iu fur the prop
pity, then ?"
"Course they will, bein' they're the
nighest of kin. All the kin-folks site
hed, I reckin, fur her an' Beuly wasn't
no ways related."
"I shouldn't think Miss D irindy'd
sleep quiet in her grave, with them
Foggs a-handling of her things. She
hated 'em like pizon while she was a
live," remarked Mrs. Grimes.
"She hadn't ort to pui off makin'
her will then. But that's alius the
way—folks keeps a-putting off an' a
puttln' off, a thinkiu' they're goin' to
live forever, an' then all atonce they're
gone 'fore they know it. An* then it's
too late. Miss Doriudy died awful sud
dint, they say—nppellexy or the like. I
dunno what Beuly is a-goin' to do, I'm
sure."
And indeed poor Beulali herself
scarcely knew what she was going to
do.
"Everything here will be yours,
Beulali, when I'm dead and goue,"
Miss Dorinda had often declared.
"That miserly Peter Fogg an' his stin
gy wife won't get a stick or a stone of
what belongs to me I I kin tell him, if
he is my nephew."
And now Miss Dorinda was dead
and gone, sure enough,and Peter Fogg
and his "stingy wife" were the heirs
at law,
The place had teen thoroughly
searched for a will, but none could be
found, and Lawyer Green, who attend
ed to all Miss Dorinda's affairs, declar
ed that he had not been called upon to
make any will; and so poor Beulah was
left penniless and alone in the great
world.
One year ago, Beulah was the pi Orn
ish wife of Richard Barrymore, a stal
wart young farmer, who lived with his
mother in the old homestead, with its
greeu orchard trees, its meadows of
sweet grass, and its waving fields of
wheat and corn.
But Beulah was young aud giddy,
and when the new physician, Dr. Clar
ence Verden, began to pay lover-like
attentions to lier,Richard grew jealous,
a quarrel ensued, and a broken engage
ment was tlie upshot of the matter.
Since that time, Dr. Viyian had con
tinued his attentions, until Miss Dorin
da's death occurred, and Beulah's un
fortunate position was made public.
Then his visits suddenly ceased, and
he found it convenient to "pass by on
the other side."
A week later, Mr. Fogg and wife
came to take possession.
lie was a hard-featured,miserly man
and she a sharp-nosed, avaricious wo
man.
"The ole woman hed a heap o' plun
der" remarked Peter, as he went lum
bering through the parlors with his
heavy cowhide boots. "That there
pie-annoi won't be here long, though,
nor them pictors on the wall !" he de
clared, eyeing the articles named with
a calculating gaze. "I reckin they'll
fetch a right smart sum o' money at
the auction-rooms, an' I'll cart 'era off
an' sell 'em."
"There's a hull trunk full o' the ole
woman's good clo'se," put in Mrs. Pe
tei who had been exploring the upper
rooms. "You mout as well cart them
off, an' sell 'em, too, Peter. I kaint
wear 'em."
"Course you caint," said Peter,
gruffly. "What do you want of any
more clo'se, anyhow ? Them you've
got on your back is good enough far
_ • •>s7i
anybody."
Shocked and pained at their coarse
remarks,Beulah went to her own room,
to think over her plans for the fu
ture.
"\ r ou kin stay here, if you work fur
your board," Mrs. Peter had inform
ed her, but Beulali had the of
fer.
"I had rather beg my bread from
door to door," site declared to herself,
"than to stay with them. But where
can I go ?"
"Beuly I" called Mrs. Peter's sharp
voice. "Come down—here's a feller
wants to see you."
Beulah sprang up with flushed cheeks
aud sparkling eyes.
"Could it—could it be Doctor Vir
den ?"
She caught her breath, her heart beat
so violently with a sudden hope.
She hurried down with a phik flush,
like the tinted he irt of an ocean shell,
staining Iter cheeks, to meet—Richard
Barrymore.
He took her hands in a firm, gentle
ciujp.
"Get your things, Beulah. T have
come to take you home with me. Moth
er has a room ready for you, and you
are to live with us."
"Oh, Richard,l—l don't deserve it !"
sobbed Beulah, remorsefully.
"Hush ! Get your things," ordered
Richard, authoritatively, "and let me
carry out vour trunk ; inv wagon is at
the door "
And half reluctantly, though with a
feeling of relief in her heart, Beulah al
lowed him to lift her into the wagon,
where he hid already placed her trunk,
and they drove away.
Peter Fogg was as good as his word,
and before many days he drove into
town with his lumbering farm-wagon
filled with the big piano, the handsome
pictures, and Aunt Dorinda's trunk,
containing her "best clothes."
* * * * * *
The honeysuckle and madeira vines
clustering about the old Barrymore
farm-house were full of bloom, and
the scented petals of a tall cinnamon
rose-bush were dropping lightly ou
Beulah's nut-brown curls, as she sat
on the south porch with a basket of
yellow September peaches beside her.
"Dick is so fond of peaches and
cream," commented Buhih to herself,
as she peeled and sliced the ripe, gold
en-hued fruit. "He shall have them
every day while they last."
Just then the sound of wagon-wheels
was heard in the lane.
"What on airth is that Richard's got
in the wagon ?" asked Mrs. Barrymore,
comiug out on the porch just as the
wagon came in view. "Kin you make
out what 'tis, Beuly V Your eyes are
better'n mine air."
Beulah shaded her eyes with her
hands and looked again.
"It—it looks like a big box," she
said, doubtfully.
And so it was a big box, with a pi
ano inside of it. There was another
box, also, filled with pictures, aud a
trunk.
Richard drove up to the door.
"I've brought you a present, Beu
lah !" he cried gaily. "The piano and
and pictures we'll put in the parlor,and
this trunk I'll just carry up to your
room."
And calling Sim, the hired man they
carried it up at once.
Beulah could only look her thanks,
and then ran upstairs to hide her tears.
Half an hour later she came dancing
down stairs, laughing and crying to
gether.
"Oh, Dick ! Oh, Aunt Laura 1" she
cried, hysterically. "There was a will
after all ; aud here it is ! It was in the
bosom of Miss Dorinda's dress,between
the lining and the outside. I thought
I would hang up the clothes, to air
them, after beiug shut up in the trunk,
and just happened to feel this in the
bosom of her silk dress. It was one
she had not worn for a good while."
It proved to be a genuine will, made
three year 3 ago, in St. Louis, where
Beulah and Miss Dorinda itad spent a
few weeks one summer.
Thi3 accounted for Lawyer Green
having no knowledge of it.
Beulah was soon reinstated in her
Terms,|sl.oo per Year, in Advance.
old home,and Peter Fogg and his wife,
after refunding the money paid for the
piano and other articles, went back to
their farm, greatly chagrined at the un
expected turn of affairs,
"I wish the pesky trunk had of burnt
up 'fore ever wo went an' sold it,"
grumbled Peter.
In which unavailing wish Mrs, Peter
coincided with him.
Among the visitors who soon flocked
to congratulate Heulah on hergood for
tune, was Doctor Clarence Virden ;
but much to his discomfiture he was
informed that "Miss Bittersweet was
engaged."
And so she was, in ra >re ssnses than
one.
For when the first October frosts had
crimsoned the trailing ivy-leaves and
turned tho sumac and sassafras
leaves to scarlet and gold, Beulah Bit
tersweet was transformed into Mrs.
Richard Barrymore.
PAYING CATTLE RANCHES.
Possessions ot* a Cattle King in
the West.
Wonderful Success of a Young
Frenchman in an Immense
Industry.
A Miles City, Montana,letter to the
New York Times tells about the thriv
ing cattle trade of the northwest. The
writer says :
The Marquis de Mores is a great
cattle king of this region, and besides
having a largt amount of capital ready
at hand to invest in ranches, cattle,
sheep, or horses, es the fancy strikes
him, is the possessor of an unusual a
mount of nerve,good sense, and pluck,
to back up whatever he undertakes to
do. lie is the son-in-law of Baron von
Hoffman, who is now in Miles City
making arrangements for the building
of slaughter and cold storage houses
here. The Marquis is uot more than
26 years of age,and first landed on our
shore in August, 1882 iu the city of
New York. Before long he became
attracted by the stories of the new
country along the Northern Pacific
Railroad, and came out to inspect for
himself. The prospect pleased him,
and he bought six square miles of laud
where the Northern Pacific crosses the
Little Missouri River. Here he laid
the foundations of a city. The new
metropolis was pitched in the very
worst spot on the North American
continent—so many wise men said—
in the midst of bad lands and extinct
volcanoes ; a country always shunned
by the red men, and said, by people
who knew all about it, to be unfit for
agriculture, grazing, or anything else.
Notwithstanding the warnings and
predictions ot disaster which were gra
tuitously poured in from all sides for
his benefit, the Marquis went right on
with the work he had mapped out. On
April 1, 1883, he pitched a tent on the
banks of the Little Muddy, which was
the commencement of building opera
tions. He broke a bottle of wiue over
the canvass house and iron tent pins
that held it in place and christened the
the embryo city Medora, in honor of
his wife. Herds of cattle and flocks
of sheep were purchased,and cowboys
were employed to mind them. The
Marquis turned his animals loose a
mong the bad lands to pick up a living
as best they could, sent for his wife to
come from her luxurious eastern home
to the little wild western city named
in her honor, settled down on one of
his ranches hid away among the
buttes in the midst of his new posses
sions, and soon became established as
a cotton and wool grower.
The enterprising young Frenchman
was secure from interference and mo
lestation of any kind so long as he
went about his business in his own pe
culiar style, without attaining success
in any of his undertakings. Just as
soon, however, as it begun to draw
upon the bewildered miuds of the as
tonished natives round about that the
foreigner was not so crazy after all,
but that he was in reality to make a
fortune out of the bad lands and ex
tinct volcanoes which they had consid
ered worthless,there was a general up
rising of the "terrors of the bad lands"
and other big men of the country to
try to put a stop to the bold proceed
ing. The Marquis was not to be
frightened. Although his opponents,
with a great deal of bluster, appeared
in force and presented innumerable 16
pound Spencer rifles and other deadly
weapons to scare him out of his wits
and drive him from the country,he re
ceived them with the choicest lan-
NO. 42.
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If subscribers refuse or neelect to take their
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they are held responsible until they have settled
the bills ar.d ordered them discontinued.
If subscribers movefoother places without in
forming Ihe publisher, and the newspapers are
et i othe former place, they arc responsible.
1 11 ■ 1 111 , J" " U I. "LI
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One Inch makes a square. Administrators
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al Insertion.
guage and the.politest manner poss
ible. He showed however, about as
many deadly weapons—all nicely sil
ver mounted—as the other fellows
bad, although not quite as heavy, and
gave the impression that he was cap
able of defending his right and title to
the land purchased by his own money.
After one or two "terrors h had been
kill 3d and a couple more maimed he
was allowed to stick, and he has stuck
there eyer i ince. Medora is now a
thriving, bustling little town of nearly
1,000 inhabitants,has a real live news
paper called the Bad Lands Cowboy,
with Mr. G. Packare, formerly ot Chi
cago, editor, and is destined] before
long to become one of the greatest
points along the whole line of the 1
Northern Pacific Railroad for the shipß
ping of dressed beaves to Chicago.
The Marquis' original experiment
has grown into a wonderful business
of surprising magnitude. He has a
dozen or more ranches scattered all
through the bad lands; abattoirs have
been built at Helena, Billings, Bul
locks, Miles City, and Medora, and re
frigerators at Portland, Jfandam,Far
go, St. Paul, Brainerd,Duluth,Grang
er,and Winnipeg. The slaughter house
now in erection at Me dora will be
when completed one of the largest of
the kind in the world. It will be built
entirely of brick,and will contain room
for killing and cooling of 500 cattle a
day. At present about 200 lead are
killed a day, and emdloyment is given
to 150 men for that purpose. The
business will be increased still further
by the addition of glue factories, tan
neries, and horn works, and by the in
vestment of nearly $1,000,000 this
year in sheep alone. Besides his
sheep and cattle venture De Mo res has
30.000 acres of wheat lands near Bis
mark, Dakota, and over 50,000 acres
in the bad land, which are used for
grazing purposes alone. He now
contemplates the building of a dairy
on a grand scale for the exportation of
butter, cheese, etc., and is already en
gaged in transporting in refrigerator
cars fresh salmon from Portland Ore-1
gon, to New York City. It is said
that a carload of salmon costs S9OO in
Portland and sells for S3OOO in New
York. The total expenees in handling
shipping, etc., are $llOO, leaving a
clear profit of SIOOO per car. Taking
his various ventures into account, the
Marquis promises before many years to
become one of the great millionaires of
the country.
'Are you going to make your bus
band a Christmas-present this year ?"
inquired Mrs. Tibbs of her dear friend,
Mrs. Sweet.
"I'm afraid not," responded Mrs.
Sweet: "I was designing to, and had
saved up quite a sum of money for that
purpose ; but I saw such a love of a
bonnet at Jordan & Marsh'shat I
could not resist the temptation to buy
it. lam afraid Mr. Sweet will have
to go without his present. Shall you
give Mr. Tibbs anything ?"
"Oh, yes. I shall giye him just a
splendid present."
"Indeed 1 What is it to be ?"
"I shall give him a box of those yery
expensive cigars of which he is so fond,
and which he complains that he can so
poorly afford to buy."
"How have you managed to save so
much money ?"
"Oh. I haven't done it that way.
When he leaves his box carelessly on
the library table, I tske out one or two
cigars and lay them away carefully, so
that by Christmas I shall have enough
to fill a box."
"What a perfectly lovely ideal
Won't he be surprised ?"— Boston
A Land Where There are no Elope
ments.
Elopements are not believed in in Lap
land, for if a man marries a maid with
out her parents' consent the penalty is
death. When a young man has formed
an attachment to a female, the fashion
is to appoint their friends to meet, to
behold the young parties run a race to
gether. The maid is allowed in starting
the adyantage of a third part of race,so
that it is impossible, except willing of
herself, that she should be overtaken.
If a maid overruns her suitor the mat
ter is ended; he must never have her, it
being penal for the man to renew the
motion for marriage. But if the virgin
has an affection for him,though at first
she runs hard to try the truth of his
loye, she wilßwithout Atlauta's golden
balls to retard her speed) pretend to
meet some casuality, and voluntarily
halt before she comes to the mark or
end of the race. Thus none are compell
ed to marry against their wishes, and
this is the cause thatm this poor coun
try the married people are richer in their
contentment than in other lands, where
so many forced matches make feigned
love aud cause real unhappiness.