GREEN'S UNEASY GHOST THE FLITTINC SPOOK THAT BROKE UP AN INDIANA SCHOOL. A Pretty Good Floosler Ghost Story—Tho Various Ways In Which the Spirit Mnmfestcd Itself llow Green Cunto to lie Lynched. A special correspondent of the Chi cago Inter-Ocean writes from Flora, lud., as follows: There is one com munity in this State where there is no dissent on the question as to whether there are such things as ghosts. Walntit Grove, a village two miles west of here, is the place, and so firm is the faith of the residents there in spooks that they have forced the school trustees of the township to abandon the schoolhouse that for a— years has answered for their needs, jtTj and construct another that will bo free from the taint of being haunted. For some years the story that ghosts i were common visitors in the vicinity of the Walnut Grove schoolhouse have been current, but the trustees, who are hard-headed types of Hoosiers, j have always refused to give any cre dence to the reports. Tlicy have lived l\ > In hope that the stories would bo for gotten, and have done all that was in their power to cast ridicule upon the rumors. Their course was dictated by two motives. In the first place, they did not believe in ghosts, and In the second, they had an investment in the schoolhouse and resented the circula tion of stories that were liable to Im pair its value and usefulness. From tho standpoint of the trustees, this action on their part was all right, but it did not meet with tho approval of the pnrents of the children who find to attend tho school. When little Johnny Jones and his sister Sue, for Instance, came screaming home to their mother and told her of seeing a man swinging by the neck to a tree in i the immediate vicinity of tho school- T house, and that the hanging man amused himself by making ugly faces at them, It became a matter of mo ment to the parents, especially as lit tle .Tolinny and his sister Sue almost went into spasms when told to go to school as usual the next day. The story of Johnny and n!s sister had cor roboration from other children who at tended tho school, and finally the par ents began to withdraw their children from the place and send them to tills city or to some other place to get an education. Sometimes the ghost varied his ap pearance, and instead of hanging from the tree, would be seen strolling along the road, his head very much on one side, his tongue hanging out of his mouth, and an expression of indescrib able agony on his face. The children said that they would no more than get a, glimpse of him when ho would disap pear iu the most unaccountable man ner. The ghost would be walking on the road where there was not an ob , ject to afford him concealment, when, ' presto! lie would be gone. The children and the parents said that it was Amer Green's ghost Tho school trustees said "fiddlesticks," but the parents stuck to their belief and •accentuated it by withdrawing their children from the school. At tiie last term of the school, the one that lins just closed, there were only two schol ars, nud at Its termination tiie teacher told the trustees that she dfculd hot en dure the life at the school for another term, and must leave. The trustees tried to got a teacher to take the school for the fall term, but its fame as a ghost-haunted place had become noised abroad, and the quest of the trustees .was unsuccessful. In view of this fact, nud in deference to tho wishes of the taxpayers the trustees have awarded the contracts for the erection of another schoolhouse in lieu of the old one. It will have another site, nud the hope Is that tho ghost of Amer Green will not in future bother -a the children and interrupt their edu cation. The slim attendance at the school tho last term, as well as the change of heart on the part of the trustees, was largely due to the apparition that ap peared to Dr. Budford Karns of this city one night last falL Dr. Ivarns is not on emotional man, and his repu tation for truth and veracity are un questioned. The doctor had been making a professional call in the Wal nut Grove neighborhood on the night of November 30, and had to pass the vicinity of the schoolhouse on his way home. While passing a grove of trees near the schoolhouse he saw the body of a man hanging from a limb aud swaying back and forth. When the doctor told of what lie had seen the next day it settled the matter, aud the fate of the old schoolhouse was assured. While there has not been anything L new discovered to account for the ap- pearance of the ghost or the unearthly noises that have terrified the children at school, there is only one belief on the subject, and that is that the un canny object is the ghost of Amer Green. On a walnut tree lu the vi cinity of the schoolhouse some years ago Amer Green was strung up by lynch law and his body left hanging there. In view of the appearance of the ghost so frequently aud its appar ent inability to rest, the community is now beginning to take some stock in Amer'g dying declaration that he was Innocent of the crime for which he was lynched, and that he will never rest In his grave until his innocence is made plain. Amer Green was known in the neigh borhood as a "terror" aud was a gen erally notorious character. He was an admirer of Luella Mabhit, the daughter of William Mabhit, a well , to-do fnymer living near Young Amerl / ca, thirteen miles northeast of here. W Mabbit did not approve of the intimacy ' of his daughter with Green, and at his command the girl r-r.-t • her admirer % a letter requesting that be abandon bis suit for her band. Such a request did not suit the im petuous nature of Green, who became greatly enraged at the girl's letter and made numerous threats of what he would do. August 19, 1886, Green, in company with William Walker, ealied at the Mabhit house in the evening, and asked to see Luella. Her sister Cynthia, now Mrs. Walker, went to the door and told Green that Luella had gone to bed and did not wish to get up. Green raved at hearing this, and finally Luella got up and dressed and she and Green went out together. Cynthia went to bed and there was no one else in the house who knew that Luella and Green had gone out to gether. That was the last seen of Luella Mabhit alive. When she did not re turn home a search was made for her, but no trace could be found. Green was arrested on the charge of murder aud placed in Jail at Delphln. Almost six months afterward, on February 5, ISB7, the body of a woman was fished out of the rive: some miles be low Lafayette, and some of the rela tives of the girl recognized the corpse as that of Luella. There were doubts then, and always have been since, n:: to the value of the identification. When the Coroner's jury held an inquest on the body picked out of the river the verdict was that It was the body of Luella Babbit, and that she came to her v.nd at the hands of Green. He was held for the crime, but the State of ficials found so much difficulty in tracing his movements I lie night he had gone out with Luella that the trial was put off time and again in order that they might make out a case against him. This delay was not understood or ap preciated by the community, which was terribly aroused over the disap pearance of the girl, and was fearful tiiat her abductor and murderer, as they judged Green to be, might es cape punishment on some technicality. It was resolved that Green must die. About 10 o'clock on the night of October ill, 1887, a mob surrounded the jail at Delphln and called on the sheriff for the keys. When ho refused to give them up the mob attacked the jail with cold chisels and sledge ham mers, and soon forced an entrance. Green was taken out. placed In a wag on with n guard, and then the mob climbed In to their vehicles, which were standing around, and the proces sion came up its route to Waluut Grove. When they got there Green was con fronted with Mr. Mabhit, and to the latter's question as to what lie had done with Luella swore that the girl was alive and well and was then liv ing at Fort Wayne, Tex. Mr. Mabhit and tlio mob were of the opinion that tills was a lie and was told for the purpose of gaining time, so without any more parley the rope that had been brought along was placed around Green's neck and the other end thrown around the limb of a tree, nud In a few moments Green was a corpse. He pro tested his innocence to the last mo ment, and at no time exhibited the least trace of fear except at the ex pression of a wish on the part of some of the mob to burn him, and then ho begged them to "Kill him like a man," and not to torture him. In explanation of ills movements with Luella Mabhit cn the night they went away together Green said that he and the girl had planned to elope and had gone from the Mabhit house to Frankfort, where they separated, Luella going to Indianapolis, while Green went to Kokomo for money and they met in Indianapolis the day fol lowing. From there Luella had gone to Texas, while he had returned homo to settle up some affairs preparatory to joining her. In • lie meantime the people of Wal nut Grove arc satisfied that Green's spirit is walking the earth, and that it will never rest until the mystery of Luella Mabbit's fate is effectually cleared up. But he lias driven them out of their selioolhouse and forced the board to build them a new one, aud this is undoubtedly the first timo in the history of Indiana or any other State where a ghost has had that measure of official recognition. Lost Her Head at the Meeting'. "Yes, sir, I did my best to train my daughter up as an accomplished par liamentarian. I took lief to the meet ings to give her a chance to listen to the ruiiugs of able chairmen and I bade her learn the text-books on the Fubject by heart. I thought I had her perfect in the business, but I was mis taken. She attended a convention not long ago, and pretty soon she had a chance to appeal from a decidedly un- J .ist ruling of the chair, aud how do you suppose she did it? She was ex cited, you know, and this is what site said: 'You are a mean old fright and I just hate you! So there!' And then she burst into tears aud sat down. No, sir, a woman's nature will have to change before she will ever become a parliamentarian." Cleveland Plain- Dealer. Size of the States. It appears from the geographical surveys accepted as a basis of the re cent Federal census that Texas is the largest State in the country. In the New England group the largest of the States is Maine, with nearly 30,000 square miles of land surface; none of the other New England States has as much as 10,000. Two States which are most nearly alike in area are New York and North Carolina. Two others which correspond very nearly are lown and Illinois. Arkansas nud Alabama ate of almost the same size and Ohio and Virginia differ by only a few rquare miles. The land area of each is about 40,000 square miles. World's hianufacturers use ninety tons of gold and 515 tons of silver a year. J WORMS FOUND IN SNOW. Interesting: Theory Atlvance<l to Accoant !For Their Presence. Scientific men seldom attempt to show the practical value of the work I they do. It is often a long time before | this importance is realized—and hence jwe often hear tho question, does science pay? This has many times | been asked in connection with polar expeditions. And though their value has often been demonstrated, yet tho same question is being put day by day. How valuable even a new fact of seemingly trifling importance may be I in widening human knowledge Is well ! illustrated by a paper recently pul>- ! lished in the proceedings of the Acad- I emy of Natural Sciences of Pliiladel ' pliia, which simply describes a spe j cies of "a snow-inhabiting Encliytra cid," by J. Percy Moore. It simply tells of the discovery—by Mr. Henry G. Bryant, one of the famous explor ers with Peary in Greenland, but on this occasion ascending Mount St. Elias, in Alaska—of a small worm, less than one inch long when in it 3 mature condition, that is born, lives aud dies in perpetual snow. This is nil. and what of that? I We may leave Mr. Moore's paper I here and recall the fact of the extra ordinary abundance of animnl life in these inhospitable lands. Fish and sea birds abound in such numbers that mau and land animals have no difficulty in preserving life during the long, dreary winters of those regions. It has been accounted for in a general sort of way by the broad statement | that "animalcula come down with tho i melting snow to the creeks and har , bors, on which small fish feed, and I then the larger on these, and so on ! through tho whole course." But the question has never been answered as ! it is in this paper. But how do these worms live? for all animal life must be sustained by vegetation in tho first instance —and it is here that tho practical man has to put this aud that together. Not only do these minute creatures live in snow, but the lower forms of micro- I scoplc plants do also. One species, of ! a blood-red color, known as i'rotococ | cus nivalis, is produced in such largo : numbers that the snow hills often seem as red as blood. Aside from this ' it is known that pollen may, at times, ' be borne on the winds many hundreds I of miles. The waters of the northern lakes have often been covered with what the unlearned have supposed to | be showers of sulphur from the clouds, i but in reality by pollen from Southern pine forests. It might as easily reach j the polar snow caps, and probably does—while In the short but tlorally | brilliant arctic summers native pollen I would certainly bo stored by the snow in abundance. Then there are the,gor | geous lichens, which abound to such i an extent that the rugged rocks are I covered with as many sheets of parti j colored patches as Joseph's coat, giv ing to the winds a continual supply of spores for the sustenance of the snow fields' inhabitants. Who will say all this knowledge is not practical? And yet we shall liea;. as long as the world endures, of what j use can these explorations be?—Mee | ban's Monthly. WORDS OF WISDOM, I 'Affinity is a word greatly maltreated, | Beauty apart from vanity is twico | beautiful. ) Inspiration, like death, always comes I unexpectedly. [ ' Fast talk is an error, but slow talk i drives friends away. I The eye of an egotist has a tremen dous magnifying power. "Making haste slowly," is the secret of every great achievement. Children are often less carefully tended than vines and plants. Beware of malice, it has been garbed in the gown of purest affection. "Everybody is against me," gasps tiie man who is his own enemy. Precept aud practice have the same relative value us charity and almsgiv ing. Love often turns to aversion, but rarely, Indeed, does the reverse hold true. The softest thing in the world is the hand of a loving woman when it caresses. The philosopher finds wisdom to con sist in being able to make the best of the worst. Generosity often follows the posses sion of riches, but riches are slow in coming to the generous. Providence is often blamed (oblique ly) for illness, when the sick one is a victim of outraged nature.—Philadel phia Record. Tricks in All Trmlca. A clergyman, taking occasional duly for a friend in one of the moorland churches of a remote part of England, was greatly scandalized on observing the old verger, who had been collect lug the offertorj', quietly abstract a half-crown before presenting the plate at the altar rails. After service he called the old man into the vestry, and told him, with emotion, that his crime had been dis covered. The verger looked puzzled. Then a sudden liglit dawned on him. "Why, sir, you doan't meunt that ould half-crown of mine! Why, Oi've 'led off' with he this last fifteen years!" —London Spare Moments. The Youngest Editor. Probably the youngest editor in tho United States is a sixteen year old girl, Lillle Miller, who successfully manages,a weekly paper at Camden (Pa.), and supports her widowed moth er and brother and sister. Her fath er, who was the proprietor, was killed in a railway accident recently. Jfe^oUSEHqUD JOYS OF THE CHERRY. Dericinui Rtclpus For tlio lloly-I'oly end Shortcake. The cherry is the fruit of the poets and songmnkers, for has it not been a standard i'or the lover to liken there to his sweetheart's kiss. The fruit ou every side has had deservedly its full share of praise, for its mission is to combine the ornamental with the use ful. Its beauty begins with the flower and does not fade until the ripened fruit is gathered, and it has the furth er merit of keeping its flavor better than any other small fruit when cooked or preserved. For breakfast, clusters of ripe cherries—white, red or black—arranged with their leaves, will tempt the most capricious appetite, and the acid of the fruit is an excel lent tonic. • * * To let the season pass without a cherry roly poly for dessert is to mako a sad mistake. A rich biscuit dough Is made, rolled very thin, covered thickly with stoned cherries and rolled together. Tut this in a bag and plunge In a kettle of rapidly boiling water, to bo kept boiling briskly for half or three-quarters of ail hour, according to the thickness of the roll. The cover to the kettle must not be lifted during this time, nor the water cease rapid boiling, or tie pudding will be heavy. Serve hot, with Devonshire cream and sugar, or with a hard sauce colored a cherry pink with tlio juice of the fruit • • ¥ For a cherry pie use a rich pastry In a deep dish, with plenty of sugar and a dredging of flour. For cherry tart% cook the cherries with sugar and a lit tle water until they make a rich pre serve. Fill the tarts or pastry shells just before serving and cover with whipped cream. • * M Cherry Betty—Soak stale bread crumbs in water, squeeze as dry as possible, and beat until they are fine and light; butter a deep baking dish, and put in .'. layer of bread crumbs, then a layer of stewed cherries, and al ternate until the dish is filled, the bread crumbs being the top layer; scatter over the top bits of butter and bake until brown and serve hot with sugar and cream. Steamed rice may be substituted for the bread crumbs. Cherry Cake—Make two layers of sponge or any light, delicate cake, cov er with whipped cream and arrange very ripe cherries close together over the entire top. Stone the cherries care fully that they may present a whole appearance. Place one layer over the other r.nd serve at once. Cherry Trifle—Line the bottom of a pudding dish with pieces of stale sponge cake, moistened with cream, and cover with a layer of ripe cher ries, sprinkled with powdered sugar; then another layer of berries and so on until the dish is nearly full. Pour a boiled custard over all, and then add well-beaten whites of three eggs made stiff with fine sugar, and put cherries here and there among the froth. * * * Cherry water or shrub is an old time beverage refreshing on a hot day. Stem two pounds of cherries, pour over them two quarts of boiling water and let steep for two hours ou the back of the stove. 801 l a pint of sugar with a pint of water rapidly for ten min utes. Strain the cherry Juice into the syrup, pressing the fruit to extract all the jjuiec. When cold put on ice for several hours, when it is ready to serve. For cherry sherbet, boil throe pints of water and two pounds of sugar for ten minutes. Strain the sy rup and add one pint of cherry Juice and the juice of a quarter of a lemon. When quite cold freeze.—Washington Star. Dissolve sal. in alcohol to take out grease spots. For finger marks on doors use whit ing, then rub off thoroughly. Though floors bo bad, rugs are much saner every way than carpets. Cover sandwiches that are not to be served at once with u damp napkin and bowl. Give the lamp burners a good boiling often for twenty minutes in watef with a little washing soda. In roasting meat turn with a spoon Instead of a fork, as the latter pierces the meat and allows the juice to es cape. . An excellent gargle for sore throat or hoarseness is made by bniflng a tea spoonful of pure honey in a cup of water. When making cold-water starch. If put to soak a few hours before mix ing, It will he found to be much smoother. Sideboard scarfs do not necessarily come to the cuds, and as for hanging far dowr, many thinl: it too much like the scarf on a dressing case 01 a chif fonier. 'EROCiOUS CRAY WOLVES. Vormhlable Creature of the Plalnß—Dan gerous Foe to Domestic Animals. " Lib Vincent, one of Wyoming's old time cow punchers and now riding on the Powder River ranges, says that the gray wolves of his section are le gion in number and as fearless us they are ferocious. These.gray and greedy scourges of the Powder River stock areas do their raiding in hands ranging in numbers of from six to thirty, each band being organized and disciplined under the leadership of an old dog wolf espe cially chosen for his wariness, speed and endurance. To this captain these gaunt and grizzled marauders yield an implicit and unswerving obedience —a statement evidenced from the fact that if one of these wolf leaders Is slain or crippled his band at once amalgamates with some other troop possessing a lender of like capacity. The age or size of their quarry is of little' moment with these wolves, as they pull down and devour alike cows, calves, steers, mares, colts and geld ings. Their attack is always strategi cal and systematic, one portion of the hand assaulting from the front and fastening on to shoulder, ear or muz zle, and thus giving the big, wild gray dogs who are ever closing in from the rear the objective opportunity of ham stringing the victim. Once hamstrung it is all over with the quarry, and the entire hand feasts at leisure. Mi-. Vincent has often seen on the Powder River ranges the mere empty hide and polished bones of what was once a lusty steer or polished gelding as sad souvenirs of the raid of a gray wolf hand. . The cattle herds are open and easy prey to the bold canine bandits, the cattle fleeing from the pursuers and thus ronderlug individual attack easy and successful. The horses, however, with their superior intelligence, very frequently heat off the wolves by forming on the open ground an cquino square, with the mares and colts in the centre, the gallant stallions on the corners, and the best and bravest geld ings distributed In the outer lines of defense. Not only do these equine squares frequently beat off their as sailants, hut they sometimes rout the wild dogs entirely, slaying numbers of them by striking, kicking and trampling. This is an especial result when the horse herd has with it a stallion expe rienced in range life. He can smell a wolf farther than he can see him, and at his shrill and warning tjeigh the herd rushes together and quickly forms the protecting square. The wolves fully appreciate this fact, aud instances have been known of a gray band numbering scores of raiders trot ting leisurely around one of these em battled squares and then ceeking other and easier prey. The gray wolf reaches a weight of 325 pounds, and boasts alike brain, brawn, a noiseless, tireless foot, a sav nge ferocity In a given length of time than any other known animal. He Is a prolific breeder,- eight or ten pups being a not uncommon litter, while there is a Powder River instance of thirty-five pups being slain us the progeny of three wolf dams. Up to six months old the gray wolf pup is awkward and unwieldly, and it is a favorite cowboy pastime of the Powder River ranges to locate a gray wolf litter on the prairie and shoot the pups from horseback as they skulkingly roll and tumble from their coverts in the grass and sagebrush. Crack shots with the pistol have been known to get a pup with every bullet from their six-shooters.—Rocky Mount ain News. YVtiy Ttiey T-ongetl For Home. "One meets odd characters on ship board," said a Baltimore woman who Visited the Paris Exposition. "I recall vividly a lean Yankee of about fifty-five years who on my re turn voyage spent hours near the prow of his ship with his face steadfastly turned to his native land. " 'Yes, I'm glad to he going hack,' he said one day, when inclined to con versation. 'l've done Europe as my family said I should, aud when I left Rome, the lust place I had to do, I shook my fist at her and said: Goort by, old Rome, I'm going hone to pumpkin pie.' "An equally amusing fellow-passen ger was a young man from the far South, who confided to me his iutenzo yearning to get back in order to enjoy cnce more his mother's buckwheat cakes. 'I can scarcely wait for them.' ho said. 'First you smear them over with butter and theu you smear them ever with molasses, and then'—his eyes took on a rapt expression—'you tat them I' "—Baltimore Sun. A Victor Hugo Museum. Thanks mainly to the munificence of M. Paul Meurice, says the AVestmins ter Gazette, Paris is about to he pro vided with a A'ictor Hugo Museum. The house which is to be used for the purpose is the one in which the poet lived from 1833 to 1348, and ill which much of his most successful work was written. Among the treasures with which the building will be stocked are a library of some 5000 vol umes, a large collection of drawings made by A'ictor Hugo himself and a number of bronze and marble busts. Under present arrangements the mu seum will be formally opened on Feb ruary 20, 1002. This date is particu larly appropriate, Inasmuch as it is that of the centenary of the Doet's Lirth. rrogre*s In Telegraphy. If progress in telegraphy continues the next few years at the same ratio as lu the past it will soou lie possible to telegraph a verbatim runnlag re port of a woman's congress. It is now possible to send eight messages over oue wire at the same time.—Montana Record. G D <?E j 'T*vas a Merry Jest. "Oh, will you share my lot?" the lover cried. So they were wed, and soon, alas! he died. 'Twas not till then she found —a jest quite merry— His only lot was in a cemetery! —Philadelphia Pwecord. "What is It?" Willie—"What is the blue room 111 the White House, pa?" Pa "That's where the President gives officeseekers the turn-down."— Baltimore World. Unfailing Signs. Angeline (aged eight) —"I t'ink Claude means ter propose ter-uight." Agnes (aged seven)—" And why?" Angeline "He's drefful pale aud smells uv hair-oil!" —Puck. Ills Mild Inquiry. "There is no doubt that this scheme will pay," said the promoter. "Yes," answered the purchaser of stock, "I suppose so. But who is to get the money?"— Washington Star. Made It Worse. "The old idea," said the lecturer, "was an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth." "Yes," coincided one of his hearers, "and there were no painless dentists in those days, either." Gosgip. First Hen—"Mrs. Cluckatuck is a very young looking lion to be Gladys Cutcutcararcut's mother." Second Hen—"Oh! She's only her stepmother. Glady's mother was a patent incubator!"—l'uck. A Safe Guess. "I was just reading here that they have discovered the grave of Hippo crates." "Who was ho?" "Must be some fellow who's dead, I guess."—Cleveland Plain-Dealer. Isolated Danger. Mrs. Fly—"lt looks mighty cool and comfortable in that screened-up par lor." Mr. Fly—"Don't you believe it; a fly I know got in there once—and he was so lonesome that he lost his mind." RlglitneftP. "Be sure you're right," exclaimed the Confident Philosopher, "and tht go ahead!" "Be sure you're right," protested the Married Man, "and then get down on your knees and ask to be forgiven!"— Puck. Tried to Realize It. Mrs. Poscrlelgh (who flatters herself she looks young)—" This is my daugh ter, Mrs. Snyder, I suppose you'd hardly think it." Mrs. Snyder—"H'm! Your youngest daughter, I presume?"— Boston Tran script Hustling If onychoid. Careful Housekeeper—"Bridget, you may get all the preserves we canued last year, aud boil them up again. I am afraid they have begun to work." Bridget "Like enough, mum, like enough. Everything 'rouud this house has to."—Harlem Life. Concerning Savants. Polly—"Wisdom is generally depict ed as a mau with a long flowing heard." Doily—"Yes. but my idea of wisdom is a man who lias sense enough to wear trimmed whiskers—or, none at all."—Detroit Free Press. Excluslvcness. Mrs. Purseproud—"l see where sev eral millionaires chartered n whole steamboat in order to come across the ocean." Mr. Purseproud—"Well, wheu we go over we will lease the oceau for a week."—Baltimore American. Heading Off Mr., P. "The doctor says that I must go away for a change of climate," said Mrs. Dukane. "If that's all you need." replied Mr. Dukane, "stay right here, aud the change of climate will come to you."— Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. f Rloodshcd Avoided. Jones—"What would yo do if your burglar-alarm went off in tne night?" Brown "Well, iu the dark you know, it would take me a good while to find my shoes and my pistol, and that would give the burglar time to get away."—Detroit Free Press. The Lightning Gossip Route. "Well, that's quick work." "What's that?" "A man from San Francisco told his cousin in New York a secret he hndu't told his wife, and before he got homo in ten days his wife had a letter from his cousin's wife, tolliug her all about it." A Foreboding "We ought to be careful about how we handle the Chinese." "What danger do you foresee?" "Well, they may become so discon tented with their own country that they will all want to come over hero and open laundries." Washington Star. Close Distinction. "Didn't you tell me you had no rea son to distrust that mau?" asked the indignant visitor. "I believe I did," answered Senator Sorghum. "You must have known better." "Not at nil. He hasn't a cent of my money in his hands, aud I don't pro pose that he Rhall have. I never sail that you had no reason lo distrust Mm."—Washington Star.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers