HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1893-09-08, Page 3•
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O'DONNELL ITHIPS CATTANAC11
•
n a Four Round Contest•at C
_ Island Last Night
-ING: peteonS at - Coy
Island' last ..night w re
- treated to prize .fight
exhilettien s. • Ale
4.000 rpeeple. saw'
'glove eontetets at
Coney ..leland Athi
n Club last night. ,- T ere
l were
two o- - bouts, 'he-
, .....aeei " first- - betWeen : :Pitt
tihi4, ei Jereolicety,retad Stile Solliven,I. of
New rork - tor a puree. of $1 000 -and ilie
. - . t . it
eecileed bereeeett-Jack Cat.tanacbe of Protie-
deece, atel Stet& O'Doitriells of i Australite,
for $2 5ttato.Cithill and Sullivan are Mid art
weiaets, wliiee Caetavaoh.and.O'Donnellnee.
iti the leceoleeleighte cities. . -Cahill- *ape i 4-:
the event...at a eportby tome clever Elia& ng.
and Anal -jug, le..t the first tonna ended. with
.11.410AFirw'f,v0Ii. t -Sullivan was the aggeoseo,r
. threnehotitthe setiond retina and plerited
it ro.ii4 hOt Ori..itkt on Cahill'e • jaw. ..- Cahill woe
utelltle- to. reeponde -and. when -the- men Wene
t -o: . their. oek110.111 it Wes clearly Sullitinte
. vatted, it.
The -third roundt.laisted' bat 50
,-eatoiedie_golliv&roiandiree a airriflo Swing on
hte-oppoe-entts-jaw, 'knocking him .ont. t It
teok tive inintites to 'revive leien. Peen
Doeithete Weati referee. - . . • ' - .
. JOhnny Eekherdte the.: famene referee,
weetlineeter .-of eere.mories in The -sterol; tree-
titri. et the ' rfht, fAt - t -hoe call ..of '. i line .
...Citt5ontaill -and Caetanach sparred caublenely
for an openieg. After i‘little light eparting
t.47,6 ni&z:04-,s*, d hie and. tor 20. mecende there
, Nift.S:,tha hairiest kind of tigethig; - -, • .
Siteonci. -retintit-OCiettanachgotr his roan at,
kale rengc, , e. - . try doiog no. placed himself
I
eat greae .441 --yitie4e.. life kepb landing
_etreteht ieftelitinded jaiiii -with good effect.
-O'Donnell ii e. etroog itiflghtet- sila- his blows
--a - lotvg ,i-tttge were not so efftetive is his
..veiteenentiet bet he kept jebbing away With
- hielate and eet the: hottse in- an Uproar by
Nit eiever ta'oeics.,...-_ . .- -• - - ' -
IieirderonndeeCtittanseh pre&ed by the
_ Bret. ftlmil. -$.iliit aid. Alov: allosv. himself to"
get I g &Atom tetteeiteree .•Beth men leeded hard
unit often., bee Unbent -41 .hati -the test of.
the re'reitei ei he ehowed_ himself eupertor in
. every reepoot; Cretteetaele wee .itheitiong Biwa
7 of fetignet - - • - .-.. ' . .
.. Foeeth reural-eThe !nib fought all around
tta . ring; - 07Ponneil - . landing - when • ihe
4 leetad.- He seitt Cettaiteeli detin ,wiehout
the least af,pite emt Ofert;"- and kepb. pounding
hira 411.1,14•Vt=1" tile.riro.,while the blood flowed:.
-
in etre:a-ma f,ein Ceeetioesele'e. breast.. -;Cett-
esitach wao-heeten.nritil -lee Was :a . p'etiebler
ht to eve ht.& stagger Around_ under the
. trrtnendi.ue pienizhecteot,. he was receiving.
- RI:lee:tee -Eck eaed t attempted. te „atop- -iti vent
e ; attan init•e, but twit- as he pulled 0 Den.
Deli *away Ceteemaoh. ,niteite -pat . hiiii ' and
,ientied eteverid 'blows.. O'Depribll.then.went
tire like -an infuriated Lull end .latided
. eeepy .vie;1`.ne leloive.. It was enly the...gong
het: sae ed -Ceti auach 'ft on beteg knocked
meet Ceetaeaeh was eirrie.d... to eis tierner;
1-,it.t-,10 bik.' eight i o- a.,-- closer by Sin "My
7' 041-re31 ft roWirg tip' the - epc;r-ge. . it was
writ ieteeeeary to: cell F4 o•hysicien to do
., eeeeleitireblis iencie g. tied 'lixing up. abotit
s mouth- icral.r.g.:fiel. whioh were tia
a teightinityritattered :state.: •
ug
ut
he:
he
tie
GRATEFUL NATION
ears the Story of One of ,its Brave
Defenders.
A _GALLANT ii3OLDIER'S )1EWAND.
YESTERDAY in the Sun
'wee. - told .. the life story.
-
of John -Tyrell, an old soldier
who,' after years of serviCe in
the dense of his oeuntry, has
beenieft to.starve in a London
lodging-house.as a reward for
hs god ciondoct.
Atnirf all the terrible ditapt.
poi ntmeriii-whieth come to'eech
tt ns. the • tough 'end
tumble etruggle for life,. when-.
- the hand. of ;every . man above
Whomevie beVe. riten' is raked to pull us
down, and the foot of every _man. -who has
cltmbed above drawn. pp. to kit& us.
under, there always • retest:is With us one
great hope; one laetiog ambon. - Garvaiser,
. . , -
the heroine of thet.great novel 44 14 Assem-
moir," summed. up • the reward of a life's
Work as to have eneugh to eat and a .bed
to
die in, spa io the desire of every -heart
in the and, no &ater how lofty our ambi-
tioris may have been,. nte matter _how de-
servingly' we may have fought Fate, and no
matter hew miserable may• have been- our
••••••-•-•••••••-•,••••,ever•ersue•••1 •••••••••evearieeemes•••••••Wereenenarrea
to bring hhn I few shillingi wttli :Which to
pey his rent.' end' buy him food before -14e
:winter- cornea iincl" fib& hint standing in -the
street, with tie :.01tuih. :nenetreating hi. eld
.boots and the sneW felliegenhta old hea41.
It is te verb his end to., a worthy life, 'spent.
in the :nervier.) of- -1.2is 600;0*o:that.: these
ee are .written, :end.. if anyone . will -send ne
subecriptitins for this :ptiepesit.we ,will tee
they are Well #pp1Ied._AtLtoYCU8iflL0fld0Th
Sun.
I I WOKEN 1119
. are'. eanderson, 'Used
- :Olga:reties,
" I b mind Wetness -talc& g:thgaiet
. - .
failure. -
story of John Tytell-has been told in
deteil from the time 'when, as. a young Irish
lad, -he left 103, own .-grepi country arid,
_sallied out late the great, roaring-- Woeld-to
do battle for _ :bread wtth his' own strong
arms. It -was - how he had otitis' to
London-, and, net fincliog wark, had.enlieted
in the 12th Lancers, end had gone to
India
with his regiment • hew he encountered
dangers by land alasea.; how he marehed.
servos the - pardlitd plain* in the furione
sun;. hew he endured' the Cold and oittelty
of the Otimeitt.War,:and ehere Went:beak to.
India to .tekii: part in, the terrible :times
which, rite before Pine oyes of every- Eng-
lifiliman when :the :Indian
tleted. And.. Whegtthis bletidy • bush:tete
was ended-, wseinarrateci how the. -young
auldieee who --had se 'fee risen to the post-
ti4n: of corpora, tried te'il.orVe his --Queen
and hie. country ;by 'volunteering into the
5th Ilargal CAValy3i,: :only to find. that by.
some -misunderstannin.' g; 'which was none of
-his wish, he -wee: 5lischargd, without pay,
pension or employment end 'aloe more .
iertieowtN upON THE_ wo4±,D
madroar;:e4;Roviabeiwor•fona
WOMEN RULE IN WASIIINGTOL
The-,Vair-teit.-:rood,i4-imory Department
ef #e) Government,:
-
BOY'S FUTURE.
Did -it lEvet -Occur to Yon 'That
- . . - -
9penjigs Ate Growing-F:00e
1 H
-
NO -LOBS 011 CASTE.
ASHINGTON is ge
ting to be woman'e
paradise. There is ne
other place in the Wide,
.wide world where wo-
men earn as muoh
money.. are as indepen-
dent and are as defer-
entially treated. by men
as they ire inWashing-
ton. The influence of
1. . . - '. - I_ .
or if they. are old -wernen . lis eking .h d
I 1.
tobeccol in. clay pi pee,"-isaid A Oiorpo Teittle.
of Cit. iat the Southern, says -tit*
Post-.0koateh, ii hut I dok like to .bear
anything but our _idols in% the *mein
Inc thit?detrActe in the slightest fromethetr
dietiniteattip : ..,I heve peen-. !lois ef Women
.smelrecigarettes and Dome Iickt- en bit the
obey: pie, l, too,eand ineve- -pee et' 1 felt bad
about t.te :1 But I renierober that when Acme
.years fAgo net a lady in the streets.of • In,
Cieneti who Old tie that ihile [ had. ,ejuttit :left
Mary Andereon in .the Btit*et- House and
that eur Maty had her feet On the table and
wee smeking eigeretteet the Statentent.ma, de
me feel so wretched that -I -hid to Igo :itoon.
tato a nearby thug store and alt &if/32.--r I -
Ispoitid _reit: imagine sti , :4 desecration
of the goed -ii.nd the giettit .,Alary. Ander,
rson-whli ,*-- coffin lastil', a*, he boys ca# - a
cigarette, -..in her Month; Akew. would yeti
feel if etudd OD let •derifrante with , a:pietnre
of Mertha Weehlegton with a • :Agar .*Ibe-
twee:eller tete* or a nhotog pla ef Joan of
Atli or S. Ceeilla *Hit :stogy.. in !the
corner Of her .month ? Yo ..would • feel ilietie
there Weeltiomething Wrong ..:iV;ith it. *Odd
that made it poi Oita , foe eiielta thing to
. .. . ,
exist. iThat's ' the. wey- 1 eel -shout cigar-
ettes when. the euggeetion-hniade.that -litorly
Wenian II like may etu040 them. . All women
on- -this, I- pletsst .. are .weloegie to * use 1 the
- student's taint) ' if they _ mare : it, but I:
don't Went .ecy of e My ' female :relatives or
friends to teuch them with theirli ".. -
WV TAX BILIS:
orXers mho Pay -.61brinnes Eirery'.-tear-
.
tin elt.y lantes. 1-, „
Lcceideig- to the Itlaw- Yerk Prtss the
Pe4c-2/1 000. 'This is more than the entire
.11.7 t=zr 4,etute pay in taxes this year
eoneted etty taxes, colleoted 'in 1820.. There
nly ore -richer faintly- In NoW_Yer k than
Astta.4. and that is the Yanderlidit;
.pfx1,S $6081.0C10 131:it tbls. includes
z, city retiree& property the
16-A1.e-stabs, exclusively ()wetted .ley ths
*Nn-lf -0.: 1. -.u.--.4donlAmdly. the more valuable.
Te= femily'pays $181,000 in-taxee,
4,44.713. ri.lana that its City -propertv. le.-actu-
wor h mote. thara- $10,000,000. while
.jett Geoid _estate:- a;ssessed
wre the lour richest estates:in the
'tax jast made up it
3*.,eare _the rehet tratiehfe.hatidhlos in.
are the -Equttable, at Ne. 120
-tettw.ty, -areeseed. $3:800,000. ; the
nith .Avp,,ne ktotel, $1,800,000 ; the Mille
etaing, $1-760,0.00 -Mutuld Minding;
$L626,000 ; elees Western
:tertotei ate -Mit -gr. $1,500 000; the Astor
11 us- 400 and the Stewart but -M-
int, $1461.10 000. . Toe real values are nearly
df,ubfe-the rate -at- which they.
ars ee:led..F1r. inetanee, the .11eratdbnuld.
$1,100,000 his been offe-red,
apitralit-4 by the eity tax epeestir at $.1.60,!.
to begin life °e'er again,- having 'Wasted his
best yeare. -Bat be did not skulk or take
to driak and fuddle away his sinews -and.
- • .
his senses relatirg bis- -adventures' in re-
turn for liquor, as Other Men have done. Ile
turned up hie sleeves, went beck to his old
trade- and commeeced to- k earn hie living
honestly. If he did not expect to make ills
rtur e, at least he may bave-haped,-.
Having journeyed his stage and earned his
wa.ge, • • •
t -
• • '
WHAT WILL HE FOLLOW?
. .
T isevidentthail there
. was tiome-reaion, nye
the New York
Tribune, fer -the plain-
tive remark of a
etrugellog young law -
yet not long ego -that
it would have .nietinV
money in his pocket •
iL if he had been hem a
generation before hie
this mighty nation has ;
women -in the affaira of 1 s. -
Boys now have euperior edecational
eubject advantaged ; bee high- rchoole, colleges tilt
quent ceminent Many le ,
. raw and eneteicel riehooie they are ,, trained
i for sueceissinl eareers. ebut.whin they:enter
interesting Pod highly' imaginative ..otoriee
eet of their profesaions they : do - not get. on In
the discreet -wives of m
have been told of -the woman lobbyist until ,
et.lir inigi*ter" f, *the world neerly as . rep'altY at ther
etatostv ee lhave taken travelling around With i .fitthers . heve ''. done • before -..therq.
The
-them, and. -never udder any circumstatiges i
farilb lies_ .neitb.er With the. liChoele nem.
lot there rerneinealone mild-the-temptationswiththe boYie. There is an Improved
ef the capitel. This hi a :palpable injustice . .
atuff
y Seem Of training and there is better 's
to ti"-1"'givei-89. 44d. .in*°11r" an l'unecesi in the boys, . The difference lies in oppore
- t
eary hardiihip upon the • anxious matrons. i •
tuility. . Forty .'yeare ego. when new towns
. " In thie.tilecie of an imaginary4ind roman- :1
I were .spriuging tei on .all eides and the
tic -infidel:lee -upon the laW-making of i this -.
i Western Statee were ouipg with settlers, a
free for -oil -gotetriinent ' there has thus., ,-j,.-u ng
man with a fair education for bud -
given uPthe-reel and substantial biafiiience 1
nese or prefesmonal life had only to ,.clrift
exereisied by -the ever .preeent and .zealmiet., with the current then grown with the
.To retire as eves riOht -
to son* 1jt4home, where he might, • to
again- use to words ei Zola'shetoino, hato
eneugh te eat. an a bed' On which to die.
Not. a very • greet or a • very . anibitiont, . end
to itOpe•to- atteirr meet people.Will say, and
one te hlch it weuld almost eeette epitefitl for
fateto brealke Ad yet, what be ehe_teturn
:at the end of 64 veara in -:irked by Incessant
hard.., work, 4n.d :no 1 rewiads save tee:
godd-cenditcV oadgea on his bread, 'a
bundle' of old- yelOvii!_oer..dlicates. of :dili-
gence, 'i honeety and :and on. old
torn totter from an old soldier Who is_ dead;
tit say that he wa.s yverttly- of Ony geeition of
;trait? He Might • have . b�ped to end his
days, *heti his ,fitting Oree .are weakened
hy the sweat-od blood which he :gave up
..for his Country, when his heirs. are whitened.
by years and his brain itiftened.by .the raiont
•40,isuos of India,on small pensiim- and ik
place among the Citeleea•pensionets.
Instead of:that,- :he finds his cold:Ail has
- - =
•
AmeriCanising. Enettsti - trove],
The Louden It-NottliWesteenReilWay Com-
paityit the. ptender - cent lily'. -eft Eiegiliede
t
have adopted a ritoaificat cot Of the American
; : - - . - - e -
car system. .• There is no tram' !Atlantic' right
Of woy:.dotvn the .bentre. :of the certiageet lont
instead an • .einaloseid pe Which:. One
:along the side, -With doors which open 'tithe
seyers4 cempar,treents of a j carriage. - LTrhe.
stthe - . sic the . cornintrontett , ihtisinecees, Ay
• been.enrinited; 'The. first Cities beintabOtelos
only fer.leue ond the seconiclelaSs-lonleix. If:
he-Wielies the passengei May leave hiSseat
. . p ... . 1 . . , ,
in thecairdigo for one in the corridor._ gach-
train °Or:Ishii:a-of ten carriagesand the length
4,etteh \-petriago is from 42,- 401 to 60. feet.
The diding rititiomuiedetion --consisbi of three
(lets .nieishaled together. , 1The ',Centre am -
tains the kitchen - fitted W!.th a range. The
. - ., , - i ... - , , : . i , .. .
coo.kirg re ante by means -.of comprtssed otl
guardian Of her h.ushabe's • morals. Mean-
while, from beteg the
magi 1,0111)!s SOCKS
&Mary.- His .progress .was rap., an_
enemas almost -inevitable. Youog lawyerei
doctors engineera and clerks now have to
MANDEB OF
4
.
and, torn trousers, the•wife of ' the stateeman tetruggle hard' in order to make_a .
has come to Iodize that she can of cupy_ an- whether ID small or large eerates of popu--
. - € .
other ontil higher sphere in lite, and feeling , ,Oheracter, energy,. education . A
her pi) wer-hiet begun by makingall around biteinen, qualities, while more necessaxy
her feel it, who Tid turn -'ernuiate her in- ntiev then over before,
:are relatively lois
dependence. . -Bo it cornes-thet itom etoten.; valliable as steckin-trade --fat. success .in
'binotiOn • of -politic?, . ili:Oety bobbing and l �. • . Le : - ! •
febiele-denttrattion the women of :Weahhige 1'e*tit/44y ye4re the future 'of the boys
ton hate..estabitshed a status for themselves. 1 I8.beeet a- 'perple3Ong problem among the
Should al! - the inen be stiddenly calliid ritidd1e2oliteses. in England. It has been
a -Wei f ere-, tbe capital for a .jOnrney across 1U great diffienhy that openings could be
the Styx, .there IS no legitimate business found i.lhere i for the eons of _merchants,
that Would beleft Without - a votary, and ne 1 tradesmen, lawyers, -detgysmen, physicians,.
profession Would fall into.decline.. Beyond- -4rroy officersand farmers. 111-lield despond -
the clueing ,ot .a leW,Oharitable inebittitions, ortt -clerks and professional men hevereteched
thingt. wanid rim:nein as they are. Lttesuits• middle life without being able to matey and
would: te no 7 fewer • or. leas 'skilfully con- Settle down, ''*: . -' Whether artisans Were at
dneteda -doctor:it and druggists Would AIM Pettit ineoveredboatipg :their boys and yen,
get : in -their 'daily werk t ',butchers. and •deriing them:discontented withtheir natural
bakers .and - candiestiek,Makere Weald still -becepations, or whether the middle:elasees
be • stiffir.dently:n.unotirsiui ; 'preachers and themselves have made the* mistake .
merchants would equal tne•deinand ; bat- Of. rieglectin'g to .apprentice . their itions
bees:. Would- be more plenty_than beatels ; to nitchanical • 'callings,. ..,Ahe :fact, bas
real estate rigenti• would stili be forniing Obtained . 0.*t trades and - . -profes-
pools_ and *combinations, and speculating in felons have been ertercrovvded, and
city and isabueben. property.. An undertake: :that yoangireia .have net had .e. fair ohance .
is..about'the Only thing of tropertance which in England-: Relief has been - found in
:would not be - found. Thula : far -the .men iforeign fields of enterprise opened by the
haw -tidies business's -to themselves. _- - i-expaneion - of the colonial domain and cern-
- When • Spinner 7 opettOthe -departments irrerchil . exceargese The _middle :Wanes .
forgotten.him, that, he has lived too long
that his wife has broken down in health '
and his son is away itOittog Her Majesty on
foreign seas,- with: possibly, the same „re-
ward whioh he himself has earned -a deso-
3ate Cal& bench in the park where he has
tried
genson. for Doubt,
.A..Detri.it beau, . not over brilliant, butas.
geed ieile;oe who Is at present at the soae
ree-:ntIy took his first yachting trip,
i:zza
upofyoungladies, who Weregoed
t.t.11Pors,17/;.,re of the party. These girls were
tafkintz about the young fellow* during an
• -interval le themselves. "-I thlnk," repaid
wet, theretea- OM deal more in him than
appearo (,91. the aurface,7 doubt it," _gape-
1.:ionefl 'tale other , 44 -he's been dreadfully
-zelkeick for- an.h
' • •
- • .
.TO'END IT ALL
gate. .Thetti mire seate tir eighteen firettelass
paiserigers fOr !dining. the: cat,.ond•a _sect
end car tooCeininedetes.- sixteen itioreti The
1
third:0140 . ditting-cei,. -witieli- Is In front if
the kieheit- in eq-tiolly 'sPecietis and • Ion-.
*intent. j. i. Ir.:4e.d it ni* be ea -id tilet in apt
earairice - .attil::artangernent. the third -ease
-b- I .9:114 to the -i first-
"oarria.ges; are-Itig,
roltiti, ;itette cloth, and
Otte fine woedat : -In
s Used are teak tat&
4
olttering- .. stuffs. are
Of ... the ..firstiolate.-
,Lavatories. both : for 'men and women- .are
-placed a.1: -.--either: end. of _lie carriage. i - The
lightteg,.es by :1*eanli of. eitipprested.:011_ gee
on Pops eystero,- whichstria . been used for
' many years by. tile dem •. 1 y. The „ventila.:
.tion is , -ell thet. -could be wishedeend..the
train laii fitted throughout-. -With-. elebtrical
eeMmunioation- which- liifyl be : need. to Mint.
Mod the Ignattle and Saloon attendant*. -
.... -. 1.: , - . -- • • - • .--- f. I .-. - -
A. Green Illand
. - , . ., .
. -
ae-commedatiou Is -alin
The *first-cless
holstered in an artistic
the panelling is in vim
the..third-olivet the Woe
eyes:more', oied the. up
rather plainer than thoe
With twopenny -I -Werth 'oelaudontim, only to
:wake op in -th-e- cell et a pollee st atien, to
find he has foiled:6'0n in this. But' even.
when the worstseems to _have _Come to the
wort in this cold and ornel World, the kind
old megietrete,sSir John .Bridge, listens to
his story, and fin.ditg it `hoe none of the
lying cant ef the dada! . Mendicant, makes
inquiries, and -finding his history *hi atied
One, .and true ineletaii, recommends hie case
to the soharitOble.public, and gives ...him his
freedom and'a stiveretsinfiem the-. poor box,
and hie.faithful wifeleads the worthy_ old
fellow away to their poor Mime, to wait for
the charitable public to find .theni out in
-
the 'great* hive • of ...goverty,„ - Rut the
charitable public * is busy, or occupied
ID-- perusing a bigger - stery, in which
Princes and- Lord Mayors are interested,:
and out of ithieli an advertisement is to be
got for thole Who do not care to do good by
-stealth, and -he is ogoin forgotten. - The.
journalist,.-bOwevert who tears human docu-
ments out of the book of life; and holds the
leSVeil;
Generous Man.
"1 do thiuk Jack is the most general,
MAla,".she said to her caller. -
" It is 'pleasant to feel that way toward
your buelN:nd. Has he been giving You
je welry ?"
- "N. But we had as little_ controversy
about sernething, and he bet me a box of
eandy egainst a oox of cigars. And do yen
know the fellow seemed dicadfully worried
ffir itEkbr 1 wmild lose."
. There's ReTal. Here;
Teliamy-I think grown teaks 18 a e.wful
•
_ - Jimmy -What for 't•
.Temuly---Vause when a feller tries to ta. lk
t • ' -
took in al new. man the otter day; •:Ido vvos
from' the -‘"country..",.. - The day, after his
arrival- there was I burst in the _water -pie
Of shouse neer by. He was told to go over
there,and 'attend to it. • Seeing the oWeer of
the housii3 in the shop, he went . up te him
and got .11it particulars eft the break, and
then- he made reedy ...,witir his .toole- .and
started. Just as he was.passing out of the
door tiff ;proprietor saw him. . *.*.Where are
you going ?".. Th.e nevi lean told hint. "Do
you mead te tell me thatlyou,eere going up
there to fix that pip ' Without -examining
:
It ?" he gipped:. "'Why; ' I am going
to. look at i • when . -I -get
there;" 'said the new man. - ii Merciful
A plumbing establitihnient in Glasgow.
-to them and entertain 'eau they..tell to
run -away, :hat when he . is epioylif hieself
ail by Iiieeeli thenthey always went to come
monkeying around -and bother him,
American Farmers.
Homestead farmers in that -country seen
-
8 er- centof the total *earnings of the na-
tion, and their farms and stook iepresent-7
tier cent of the netting wealth.' .
_SOILED. WITH TEARS: AND BLOOD, _
up to. the crowd,- Climbs up the stone
stairs of 'Southwarktenement, and,push-
!
Ing gentlY. by 'swan:Os, of -dittilpdreseed
and .-tithite.feleed cbilden, findithe goer
Old -Soldier • - in 0.• frowsy restirn'. on the
'reef, Whete,.:_theugh there 18 110 comfort ani:
leas food, his Wife watches over the prior' old
ihero, and fears to go to .i,v-or-lt; leat be ehodld.
Or.Ce more attempt to solve- the problem.
.The rough old rogue...Ft-meets; yoloo has
Sung . thi- pathos of the --fair .-helm-maker
grown old* and se -Might- Mr. Rudyarid
Kip-
ling,. Who ha* taken. .troinmy. Atkinit umiak
lait -poetic wing, piettire: :the.. *kW and
the feelingOOf the old -.hero„. kitting 'penal=
less -in -a. low. Louden leitigieg•henset and
re-
-91.eviiiing the :lusts .0 his. life; and -falling
eisleeti to dream. be was young and strong.
*gain, riding .hie beautiful:: :horse doWu.: a
street Sibs goes to the-. 'ever vilth the .gay
pennoniftwng *the anal:Usti-breeze, while
the band plays, and the
their hancikerehiels - and the. men cheer. -
And -the. dream changes to the &ergo- over
the hill, ivehite. the Call110116 beloh fire and
smoketthe bent fly teeleft and :right, and
Men and heries -roll ever In the Snow as
he 'charged., into the March' 'through:the'
l'Khyber Pass.- And then to Wake, and find
he is -grey and old, and is etttin in a stuffy
entail room nt the top of Exeter -buildings,.
'zoar ttroot;..widgrig.isi'*alit for thit postinen.
for the-euipleynient of women he gave th,em ithere would net lave known what to do .
i Teething 'with their boas. if there had net been a
atopportunity for advancement; .
hotne. If. Beglish boys of this class had
hew:worked itself out novi andi 1Greti.ter Britain end a '.conareethial empire
. - 4
OLEAX4 . 1 -where they vould be employed away from
anestabliihed institution, so to speak, remained- et tome during the lest fifty raj%
ood 'standing,- with fair incorne,--and th4,woulo have worn themselves out in a
semetimed a -ftkix face - as welit-recogn zed. hopeless etniggle for Edgcess and have met
itild:- approved of 133'1306 e°6i•et•Yt tlici in-- 11-. the tote i.f- their fathers, who .had been
measure fashionable Her • Bocial.Atancling- f . and Old
th t iddle life -
, . . • - plodding from you • g m .
1
an'a alaSi COPIell,P0.rhaP8 .frojil tiO° fact OW' age Without -materially - improving their •
she is more often the friend of the 'Jetties ef - tsiti-oi , .
- In Ameritle. there are the very itch and
the Working poor accustomed to the :cleaner
to. me of -nitchanical labor; and between
these exeremei are found farmers owning
their faressmechonics lilting in cottages
of their own, and men of all eccupatiens in
town and -Country, whoa() contentment,
thrift ' and prtiperity have been unpatel-
leted in the history of notions. While the, •
European- "middle Glees " • -distinction -von- '
not, be opplied • to this greali section
of Ailiericest pepula,:leti, the onalegies of
education: and - social .ambition are -close.
While fathers have not ahvay0 been sure
theft their hue have chosen the right :pro-
fession Ot -occupation( they have always .hed
a feeling of cotfidenoe. that there was a
better ebaece .fer success of their boys in •
America -than could be found - any-
where eltie. Bat. the boys themselves -
of late years havenotbeed equallysenguine. -
With their _edneation they have no juili
cense for . cornplatint. They • are fully
equipned , for suceessful careers, but .from
the closing day of the schooLer eollege they
have had 'e hopeless ,feeling that it. would.
never be in their power to fulfil their own
ideals .er the expectations of their -friends.
Ethicatisn no longer !seems to count for
muOh,- since all the world Studies, readsad
has ;aetraitting of eoma pert. ., Evelf proles..
sion is crowded froui :garret to basemen,
and In the exchanges ofthemodern world
the young man "With o fair _educoticin is -op,
patently. the cheapest eiornmodity. •• It is net -
impossible that Amerlean'families-mity find
thernselveS as seriously concerned as English
houeeholds bay° teen with the problem, •
"'What to do with the boys." •
statesmi3n than of the -statesmen themselves,
those watchful guardians exercising some
discretion in the matter. of favors to their
-WWII 13132., • . -
Oat of this has come the' recognition of
Woman as a ref -supporting -iirtiature, with -
oat loss of stending, and not all being
&hie to . get 'into the depi;rtments -or to
alsiays hold places 'once secured they
have invaded othe:r occopations and
professions -once sacred to the wearers of.
trousers. Of condo female tetachere, deo-1
tors and lawyers are no longer -a novelty,,
and a greet many have egone. into a small
private( brokerage - bneinese. One Woman
has gene regularly Jute the real (satiate; lean,
trade and insiiranoe business, and has turned
out to be one of the these " bnitineiss men"
of -the thousand and one who, kee.e. their
eyes on every foot of ground -in an about
Washington. - She has opened' up new sub-
division, formed syndicates and done boom-
ing with the best of them. The girls have
almost • • .
. • DEIVEN. YOVNIG MEN OUT'''.
goodBi :r ejaculate Is employer; catch;
gt. 081n. jt: be poes)bie thab yen would_ do it
job at one vis'? Don t yen . know yodr
li
trade better then . th 1-, ?_ Have you no
i
pride in your business ? WilY, yeti'd ruin
the entire .comninnity- In , t elm than a yeait'l
And tlielipeaker burst into tears.: As wort
ai he greet* celmer he explained to the new
man that, he sliciuld &eV visit. the . house,
make a thorough examins*Ys of the build-
ing,r.get 'the:lay of the -str- etio find the
localttyof tho nearest bee- ant, go ,! up on
the roof of the 1-• house, -• d _their .return
thoughtfully to the shop Lc...I-. his teas, keep -
big ,an._aCeutate record of i.« i IMO. ,.. • -
1 The Jewelielr's iiinshe
Of the . stenography- and typewriting boat -
nes, and even around the political head-
quarters,:where men, only used to be em-
ployed, women' noW outnumber men two to
one. _ •
The best of it all is that with all-thiti the
Social status of the women iremaine un-
changed they are still treated. -with the
greatest deference and courteey, and a
. strong minded" woman 18 a rarity.
What would you think te BOO a ahop-giii
°in a tailor made riding habit galloping
through Central Park on a stylish horse'?
It Would not be a common oigh.p..lb is'not
at all uncoinmon to see -park* of elioperle
dressed and well
mounted, riding along thee -most feshionebie
drives, looking as stylish and pretty and
enjoying themselves as much • as the'
richest daughter of fashion whom they may
past on theroid. The girls in some of the
larger stores belong to riding clubs and
hive riding maters who teke them out twe
or three times a wee. -Baltimore Blum.
Whenirbege are sent atjewellor for re-
pair he alwaye cleane -the states and our-
priftes the- owners by their briliiertey;-The
Steep:initiation of dirt On the.undereside of O
diamond or other transgarentgem- 18 10 ale*
'that the i dulling of the itone is hardly no
-
deed. Ustialiy they are domed, ::without
removal from their settings, with the chewed
ends -of wooden toothpicks, but they cannot
be made entirely Wight. without taking
them tent- ef their deeps.. The dirt that
gets into the epace.between thering and the
stone iSoften as hard as clay. - -
The ..main wheel of a .watoh makes 1,460
.revolutiens in as year the second Or 'centre
wheel, -8,760; the third wheel, 70 080 the
fourthlwheel9 . 525,000 and thefifth or
•
scope- wheel, 4,731,860. The number of
beats or vibrations* Is -141,912;000 in a
year. • . . f
•
-A greab deal *ef - -unpleasant *odor from
.boiling t, egetables may be avoided by put-
ting-4.piece of bread into:the Witter with
the vegetables. -
•• •
You are very impolite to -night," Said
the butter-dish/to thelamp. "Why, *hat
did Idcir &Wed the !Arup.._:" You smoked
dinner," said the- butter disb.
•
vernehed.
64 Aw-7-4ty the way -do you keep doge'
pantshere?" asked the would. -be homy
dude, as he looked quinzically.at the sales-
man. • - - - - *
"Yee, eir,". rep ied the meek -looking art-
eistent-; that is, we have some for curs
and puppies. Would you like to to on as
pair?"
--The•tenile faded out of the dude's face
like . as midsummer night's dream, as the
young lady who was' _with him giggled in a
oigh soprano through her cambrio -handker-
chief. .‘
• Sufficient and Enough.
The teacher asked the •class wherein lay
the difference in meaning between the words
"sufficient" and ."enough."
"--`13nifiCient,'" answered Tommy, "18
When mother thinks it's time ti ab I stopped
eating pie ; 6 -enough' is when `I think it is."
- ' •
• Poet's day at the Exposition will be
August 29th. Poets who intend to walk to
Chicago to be present then should be start-.
ng pretty' soon. • .
*Language was given to lawyers te conceal
the thoughts of their clients. -
Instioit of tlie WE.
It ha9 of. en ben proved- that doge are
able te track -their masters thre-ugh orowded
etreets Weete it -would be impossible to
attribute their accureety to anything except
the sense of emelt alone. A -naturalist once
made k0010 .111-terEqedlig expeyitnentir at to
thie timer at exhibitsd in his own dog. .In
these vets' 'the naturalist found that his
dumb.friend' .coull easily- fellow In the
tracks -of his Mester, though he was far vet
of sight, end-thet, atter no less . than
eleven persenti had followed, stepping
exactly in the tracks made by his master,
it being the deliberate intentionto confute:
-
the senses ef te dog if possible. Far-Wm-
experinient proved that the dog treakekthe
boots instead of the man, for when the
naturalist gat on *neW footgear the dog
-
failed entrap.
- -
; A.--1110nrnent to Chevalier Bayard.'
A monument has just been unveiled at.
Mszleree in ottor of Bayard, the Chevalier
sans pour et seas reprisals, who defended
that town with such remarkable -success -
against -32,090 of the soldiers Of Charles.
V., Emperor of Germany, In the year 152i.
The height of novelty has • been reaOhd-
in
shirlustuds. lbsy are devil's heads;
man and block. There are five of them
:connected by a fine ‘gold hain. Imagine
the iensation they reate whenlseenon as
delicately -tinted uhirb front
-4
Lve is blind ; but its imag tittle ig"
equipped with doable-barrelle tele'
Ines.
• ,.
.14