Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893, September 07, 1883, Image 6
THE TRAVELING TYPE-SETTER. A RrUl Dmrfplion of One Who in H«i Very Often* ir,. walked silently in. We knew him thr moment we mined our eyes and saw him standing there, In fact we had been expecting him, ho nearly always •comes when we are in just such a strait and needing him. He always wears the aemewtyle of clothes—coat of one kind and r>:m*s of another, he hasn’t any vest,’ Ins shoes arc worn and run down ftt the heels, and his hat is battered and dusty. There are spots of ink about his shirt which hangs over his waist-band, and his new paper collar is the only fresh, ■white thing he about just him, it and it with harks sofl, as d though had put on and fingers. He is pale, weak-eyed pre¬ maturely gray-haired; ho looks regular as though bo had never known arid hours, either for sleeping or eating, be must have come thousands of miles and lieen coming ever since ho was a boy. His starting point was so far away, and so long sgo, that he has almost for¬ gotten wlie.n or where it was; but we ha vo an idea that it must have been when his mother buttoned his little blue shirt band around bis white, boyish throat, put <>n hig little straw hat and sent him liWefootod to nek for a place to work in the printing lie office. How that proud night Ire was and when went home first allowed his new brass rule, and tolls mother ho has learned all the boxes and fans a free ticket to the eireiiH next week, and the editor gave him a big piece of wedding cake, a part of which he has brought home column for the baby, day and next if week he sets up ft in one lie eau go fishing on Saturday, tilt Yes, somewhere about there was e com riKnoemcnt of liis long journey, and here he is now, He asks perhafis “What’s two-thirds on show the way. us: the for* sit?” We give him a case, and by and by he says he feeis faint, and asks us if we had can't lend him a quarter—he hadn’t any breakfast yel. We know fain weakness, snd, as we need his work, we go down with him and order some breakfast for him at the nearest res tau rank When lie oomes back he looks happier and bettor able to work. In the evening, when he goes to distributing his coho, he recounts the history of liis fate circulation places of employment. He business knows dffac and amount of ■ of every paper in the Btuto, mid just why the Dispatch suspended the Omirinr. and why He the Advance sold out to is well acquainted with the unknown edi¬ tor of the Thunderer , and has friends on the editorial foroo of all tbo leading by jour¬ nals of the country. By and Italian be whistles low an air from the opera, and in reply to u question an¬ swers with » Latin quotation. He stays with us a week, and wo grow to like him more and more every day; lie has Huskiu rend every thing from Bliukspesre and to Mark Twain and Bill Arp; he knows more about our laws, national and State, than acquainted the best lawyer with in the city; of he is well the lives every eminent pctB BP of the age, and is ft per¬ fect encyclopaedia afford of keep current him events; longer, but we cannot to any and so pay him off mid he again starts oil the long road that leads—not to homes, for he has none; not to the so oiety of intelligent people like lfimself, (pr outside of The printing office he is unknown; may lie back to night work on wunii* city daily, or if too worn and old for that, a rapid descent from one coun¬ try office to- another, with whisky and laudanum for companions, lonely to wayside. an tm marked grave by some Hung on ClrciinndaiiUa] Evidence. In 1742 a gentleman on liis way to Hull was robbed by a highwayman. Ho ing’hi* stopped loss at the next inn, and in describ¬ stated that he always marked liis coins. Shortly after retiring to a private parlor he was waited on by the landlord, who informed him that he had heard of his (the traveler’s) adventure, asked the time of the robbery, and said he had suspected luuT plenty his of hostler, Continuing, who of late he said that siiorUy money. Iiefore he had sent the hostler to change a guinea, who re¬ turned after dark, landlord saving he could not cliango it. The noticed the coin was not the one ho gave him, but before he heard of the robbery he had paid it to a countryman. He suggested that the hostler, who was then asleep under the influence of liquor, lie searched, which lieing done, the marked coins, minus one, were found in liis pockets. He was tried and hanged, but years afterward the landlord, lieing at the jxfiut of Aeeih, confessed his Ue did the robliery, managing to reach inn by a abort cut, and having paid out one of the coins Indore finding they were marked, had he took advautage of an erraud he sent the hostler on and his drunken condition to place the marked coin in his pockets, sud the evidence of the countryman hanged him. The Pullet su4 the l oon. One pretty moonlight a coon teak a walk. lie saw a pretty pullet “piping” him off from her boudoir window. ■ “Come down, pretty ihunsel,"said the - 40 r.au “Lot's have a time. “Oh. no; yon would bite my neck, yon nasty beast, ’ she aaid. “I promise you miou my word of hou or that 1 will not,'' and then the silly little pul let flew down from her perch ami was about to go out and greet the 40011 . **l)o not go,” the mother said, “for lie is foolir.g thee, and it is too late for re¬ spectable The pullet people only to be chuckled out." and im¬ agined that she knew a great deal more than her mother, and went out. There vras a gentle flutter, a soft sigh, and all was over. The ooon had done liis work, «nd the puilet was lost forever. Moral.—Y oung and innocent lambs •iiouid heed their mothers, and above •11 shake the intruder that entices inno «ene* abroad at night -goncRR primer—Why Hot weather? doe* thoae Is men Pun so fast this any Lodv Dvmg ? No. How Red their faces «M,' T’hey will bust a Blood-vessel, they are aim oat Painting, fellows! bnt Have they try to Run. Poor tBey just Escaped from Prison? No, «nv child, Thev have summer cottages out of town, and are merely trying to oateh a train. SO ME BOD Y’S DA JtLING. Into a ward of the whitewashed walla, Where the de*d and the dying lay— Wounded by bayonets, shells and balls— Somebody's darling was borne one day. Somebody’s darling so young and so brave, Wearing still on liis pale, sweet face, Soon to be hid by the dust of the grave, The lingering light of hi* boyhood’s grace, Matted and damp are the curls of gold ■Kissing tile snow of that fair young brow; Pale are the lips of delicate mould— Back Somebody’s from the ilarlih^ beautiful is dying blue veined-face now. Brush every wandering silken thread; Gross his hands as a sign of grace— Somebody’s darling is still and dead. Kiss him once for somebody’s sake, Murmur a prayer soft and low; One bright curl from the cluster take— They were somebody’s pride, you know. Somebody's hand hath rested there— Was it a mother’s soft and white ? And have the lips of a sister fair Been baptized in these waves of light? God knows best. He was some body's love; Homel-ody’s heart enshrined him there; 8omebody wafted his name above, Night and mom on the wings of prayer. Somebody wept when lie marched away, Looking so handsome, brave and grand; Somebody's kiss on liis forehead lay, Somebody clung to liis parting hand. Somebody's watching and waiting for him, yearning to hold him again to her heart, There he lies with his blue eyes dim, And smiling, child-like lips apart. Tenderly bury the fair young dead, Pausing to drop on liis grave a tear; (larve on the wooden slab at his head, “Somebody's dai ling lies buried here.” A. Cool Hand. THE BTOBY OF AS ENOLIHH OKTKOTtVK. The story I am about to relate is a very simple one, but is a type of a par licular oloss, and will show how little we detectives have to go on, and from what slight evidence we sometimes have to act With this short prelude I will be¬ gin my story. the chief culled into One morning me his office, and I saw at once by the look of his face that he was somewhat trou¬ bled. “Fox,” he said, “here is a very nasty piece of business im hand. You know Viscount Loriwer”— (I need not say the names given here are false ones)—“M. P. for ——, and in the Ministry?” “Yes; I should think I did. One of the nicest follows that ever lived,” said I. “Well, there has been a most daring robbery committed at his house at Park lane; but fivm wlmt I can make out from his lordship's hurried letter, and his valet’s statement—he sent the note by the valet—the whole affair seems wrapped in the greatest mystery. ” “That is just the case I like,” I replied. “Ah, I thought so,” said he, with a laugh. too confident. “I only His hope beiug that you high are not in it rather so up power might make awkward if it became public slid we did not find it out. Those newspaper fellows like to get hold of a thing like that—it is capi¬ tal to them.’’ “We all have onr little faults,” I laughed, “and I think, os a rule, that they are very good fellows.” But had better “They may he. from you liis lordship’s be off at onoe; for, note, I should guess that the matter is sorious.” I said no more, but jumped into a oab and (lashed off to Park lane, and was instantly shown lordship into the library, where I found his engaged in earnest conversation with his brother in-law, the Ho 11 . Colonel Malverton, the brother of Lady Lorimer, the viscount’s wife. “I am glad you have come, Sergeant Fmc You have heard of my loss V” “1 have heal'd that your lordship has had a loss; but liow you came by it I have not heard.” “The amount”—he began, when I •topped him, book. at the same time drawing out mv note “Wait a moment, my lord. Now, just let ns go through this matter in tike regular form. In the first place I should you to tell me what you know of this matter. I ask you to pardon me, my lord, hut the fact is that I have to diaoover the thief and recover the prop¬ erty, and therefore must tliiuk more of means than mauners.” “By Jove, the fellow sava 6eorge, truly!” oried the colonel. “Come, tell him all about it” “You must know, sergeant, that last night tlie —- bill came before the House, and the discussion was a very long one, and owing to the absence of •ome of our party I had to take a long and very unexpected part in it. On re¬ turning home this morning I was thor¬ oughly exhausted, and undressing my¬ and self rupuliy, drank some light claret wont io bed. ” “Your volet ?” I inquired. “I dispatches as soon as I possibly oould, giviug him orders not to wake me, or even to enter my dressing until room, I iu case he should disturb me, rang my bell. This be punctually car¬ ried out, for waking earlier than I thought, I sprang out of lied feeling .wonderfully I should well—far better than debate, I thought after so long a and being glorious over my party's tri¬ umph. Wrapping myself in my dress iug-gowu, riod into I leaped dnsoing-room, out of bed where and I hur- be¬ my gan to write some letters which were of groat importance. While doing this I noticed that the things in my dressing room were in the same state of contu¬ sion in which I hail left them. I know I am somewhat eccentric, but the slight ,«( noise wakens me. Henee my having ordered James to leave them where I threw them.” “I see. I pray yon, my lord, go on.” “Well, the letters finished, I rang for James. He came with the usual choco¬ late, and so forth. I sent him down with the letters for a footman to poet. While he was away I had occasion to go to my trousers’ pocket for sometliiug. My purse was there, but empty 1” “Hump I Was there much in it ?** “About seven or eight pounds, some silver and two five-pound notes. No more.” “And is that all you have missed?" I inquired. “Of course, it is a hard and dangerous thing for any gentleman about to have a dishonest person him: but the loss of that sum is so little to your ' lordship, that—” loss that “But it is not the of sum. The keys of my private safe had been removed. Hastily dressing myself, I hurried to the library and examined the safe. The key was in it, aDd, on search¬ ing. 1 found that coupons and papers <A great value had been stolen. One—a letter, which, by accident, I brought home from the—office—was most im¬ portant. It must be kept private at any cost. ” “Come, come, my lord; do not speak so loudly—there may be listeners, ’ said J. “Was anything else gone ?” “Not a thing.” “The family plate—that on her the side¬ board; your jewel case, and lady¬ ship’s?” touched.” “Not a thing “Any way found out how tire thief broke in ? ’ was my next question. “Only the fanlight ■ over the pantry door—the door leading into the garden _that has been out and out removed. That must be the way the thief came in.” “Perhaps so, my lord, Will your lordship give directions for your valet— Mr. Jones, I think he is called—to show me over the house ? That is, I want to see your dressing-room and bed-room. The safe—” “The safe is here,” said Lord Lori mer, opening an oaken door, on which had been fastened a number of backs of books, so as to make it seem part of the library. the safe, and there Behind this was was nothing to be discovered there. His lordship declared that no one knew of the safe but himself, that he found the missing key in the door of the safe, and soon afterward discovered that the papers had gone. “So much for the safe,” said I. “Now, my lord, if you will be so kind, I should like to be shown over the place by the valet.” “You cannot suspect him,” said Lord Lorimer, with an incredulous smile. “I have had him in my service since he was a youth of eighteen.” him, lord. On¬ “I do not suspect my in ly, because he lias been longest your service, I should like him to be with me.” “Very well, I will send for him.” This was soon done, and I was ush ered by the valet into his lordship’s dressing-room and bed-room—handsome enough, heaven knows! Bnt there was no trace of anything to be found there ; so then I went down to the pantry door and examined that. Here came my first puzzle. I saw something wrong iu a moment; but I took great care that James should not see it. “That glass,” I said, “has been cut from the inside, I’m sure. Don't you see that the cuts are not straight ? They slant outward.’” I looked at James, and from that mo ment felt convinced that lie was the thief, for liis under lip trembled—a sure sign of a thief. However, ho in some way, aliont the glass having been smashed, pretended to explain it away, and I to' believe him, although I knew that a glass cut in that manner must have been re mored by some gummy stuff, turned sideways, and then pulled into the house and smashed on the doormat. Examina tion of the pieces proved ground,” I was correct. I said. “Now to examine the He was about to step out on to the soft ground, but I pulled him back, saying: I look for “Stay a moment. want to I tke footprints If. you go there, shall find yours.” Again that trembling of the lip, and a paleness came over his face. 11 What do you mean, sergeant?” he demanded. “Oil, nothing; only I must have no one pass over this ground until I have examined it. That is all. I say, there is not a footmark hero ! That is rather strange.” and I “Very,” he exclaimed; lip. again noticed the trembling of the Sud¬ denly he cried out, “Perhaps did you are this right, sergeant. He He in not other come and in escaped wav. came some this way. That will account for the glass being cut from the inside.” through “By Jove! A good idea! He crawled the window and leaped down upon this grass plot. ” “Exactly, exactly !” he done cried that, eagerly. “Yes, he might have but where are the marks of his fall ? If he fell fiat on his side he would make a pretty the good dent, If for the earth is soft from rain. he was lucky enough to come on his feet, bis heels would plunge into the earth a good depth. No, we must look for the solution some¬ where else. ” I had now made up my mind about the matter, but I permitted him to show me all over the house, and lay out the most marvelous theories, all of which I not only listened with surprise to, but appeared to lie overcome at their acute nee*. Then I asked again to be shewn into the library. His lordship and the colonel were both there waiting anxiously for my return. “Well?” they both aried, as I entered the room. “Hush ! Wait!’’ I replied, as I closed and locked the door. Then approach¬ ing them, I said in a low tone, “I know the thief.” “You do?” cried the colonel. 1 ‘Then give the knave in charge thin moment. Take him up.” “Stay, If a moment, colonel, stay a mo¬ ment. his lordship likes to giva him made in charge, I’ll take I him. But if I have a mistake, will not lie answerable for the action for false imprisonment, loss of character, eta” “What do you mean, sergeant ?” cried Lord Lorimer. I told him as briefly as I could the results of my examination, and the dan¬ ger of arresting an innocent person on sueh a charge. He listened patiently and then asked my advice. “I’ll tell you, my lord, what I should do,” I replied. “I should call your valet into this room and tell him that I, Sergeant Fox, of the-division, had made careful examination of the case, and had grave suspicions lordship that he was the guilty party.” ready—those His for was legal to have his wages warning as well —to hand them over to him, and order him to quit the house as soon as possible. This was done. I never saw a man take a thing so coolly. He protested indignation his innocence; turned with virtuous upon me, denounced me as one of those police men who would get a msn hanged to advance themselves in the force, and so on. I listened unmoved. He had his turn then—I knew I should have my turn soon. sergeant,” inquired both of “Well, when he left the the gentlemen think ?” room, “what do you now “I am more positive than ever that’s the man. Now, gentlemen, you know nothing of these matters. How should vou ? Just you be guided by me, and ■.>, <- will not only have him, but the property back; for it is still in the house.’ cried i . Good heavens !” the colonel. “Why do you not search his boxes, then ?” “Because, colonel, I should not find them there. Our friend is too cute for that. Not he. And, as I said before., to accuse an innocent person of such » crime is rather too risky to suit me. Now, gentlemen, I have two constables, who will be stationed at the corner of Mount street. I shall go and join them, and keep watch upon this house. You ge t the fellow turned out as soon as you can, and leave the rest for me to look after. That is all, gentlemen, and I wish you good morning.” I left the room and the house, joined the uniformed men—I, of course, was on plain clothes duty—and gave them my directions how to watch, while I strolled up and down, smoking a cigar. which In a quarter of an hour the rain, had been threatening, came down in showers. It most certainly threw a damper on my spirits. In a very little while I was wet through, but I could not move from my post. Presently I saw the colonel come out, and very well he acted his part, appear¬ ing not to know ns until he had come round the comer, and then he told me that James had requested his lordship to give him time to pack his boxes, and his lordship, not knowing instructions, how to act, wishing to follow my and yet not to be hard upon the man, had sent the colonel out to ask my advice. It was—“Let him pack his boxes. I will wait until he goes for a cab. That will be my time.’’ Back went the colonel, and two more wietched hours did I have to wait until I saw James appear, He glanced eagerly round as he stood on the steps, and then made an advance toward me. _ _____ lt _ _ j . t .pped forward and beckoned him. j n a moment lie started off right down Park lane, I after him, up Grosvenor street, into Grosvenor square, and there j collared him, giving him one on the side of the head which made it tingle, I know. “You vagabond,” I said, “you back. have given me all this run. Come I knew from the first that yoa did it. Come back !” His manner changed suddenly, and in tone he said: “I saw that you suspected me from the first, and was foolish enough to get frightened. So, when half charged, I ran away. But I see my ioUy now, and am ready to return. Do with me what you like. I am innocent.” The fellow’s coolness knocked me over. Could I have made a mistake? If so, I had made a big one, with a vengeance ! But I brought him back, and into his lordship’s presence. possible,” cried Lord Lori “Cau it be mer, “that you have been guilty of such a deed after the kindness I have shown you?” “My lord,” replied the fellow, young with the greatest coolness, “a detective must have a victim. If he do not find out a fellow creature to suffer for the, crime which has been done, he is called a fool. Therefore, guilty or innocent, he must catch some one.” “Enough of this,” I said. “I must search you.” ‘ ‘Search me I” he exclaimed, as he held up his armB. “Hallo 1” thought L “No one does that before they have been in prison once or twice. A fresh man drops his arms by his side, and he is hopeless, helpless. I have a queer customer to deal with.” Well, I examined his clothes most carefully; I emptied his pockets, passed iny hands round his body, legs, and even made him take off his boots—not a single thing. the Had I mader a mistake ? As to things being in his boxes, that I knew could not be. The gold in his pocket proved notKing, as he had received good wages, and was reckoned a waistcoat,” saving man. “Take off your ooat and I laid. He did so, and threw them carelessly on the table. Only a click; something hard struck the table. It might have been a button _a coin—but my suspicion was roused. I was up and at it iu a minute, feeling the coat all over. Yes, there, justuudei the arm of the coat, was something sewn iu. sleeve Out with my pocket-knife, there the the was ripped open, and were stolen coupons—the valuable letter—in fact, all of the things but the coin; but what had made the noise was a gold medal which Lord Lorimer’s father won at Waterloo. The thief once found out is always a coward. No sooner did he find that he was detected than he fell upon his knees and called upon his lordship for mercy, and—well, I cannot say I’m sorry, but he had it. Shingles were split by hailstones in Tennessee the other day and women who are obliged to split kindlings in the morning are thinking seriously elements of mov¬ ing to Tennessee where the are more considerate than thoughtless hus¬ bands. ‘•Mr dear,” said a sentimental wife -home yon know, is the dearest spot v.n earth.” “Well, yes,”said the practical husband. "It does cost about twice as much as any other spot. A NAVAL WEDDING. AN AML’SING EPISODE OF THE WAR. Romance on the Sliip Rover— Difficulty In Preparing the Bride’s Trousseau—De¬ scription of the Ceremony. It was the practice during the civil war to ship colored refugees, when com potent, under the tifie of “contrabands.’ Among such candidates for muster on the Hover of the Mississippi Squadron was a tall young buck with goggle eyes, of high cheek bones, a great splotch shark’s a nose, and blubber lips, a mouth like a a skin which shone like polished asked ebony. clerk, “What is your name ?” my when this Apollo was presented for en¬ rollment. “Gasper, sah.” ‘What else?” “Nothin’, sah.” “What! No other name?” He scratched his wool and looked be¬ wildered. “All right,” said I, as I was in a hurry; “put him down ‘Nothing. f >f So “Gasper Nothing” was inscribed on the records of the United States Navy. So much for the groom. But the bride ! How can I picture her ? In need of an assistant washer¬ woman, we sent aboard of a boat load of colored refugees, like and captured compromise some thing that looked a between a giraffe and ourang-outang. Language is inadequate to paint her portrait. She was wondrously tall, and ugly, and angular and awkward; long neck, long arms, long legs and long all over. Clad in her long, gray plantation frock, she loomed up like a walking Cleopatra’s Needle. When she appeared at the office I asked what they called her. “Thai, thir,” she lisped. “Sail what ? Anything else ?” “Not-th I knowth on, thir I” “Let’s call her Long Sail,” whispered the clerk. So Long Sail was she chris¬ tened—in ink. The first step taken in Sail’s behalf was to devise some amelioration of her wardrobe. I contributed a bolt of blue flannel, and one of our old sailors, dexterous with the needle, took Sail’s latitude and longitude, fashioned a stylish gown and petticoats, trimmed with Barnsley sheeting, and Sail shone forth a like full-fledged should blue jay. It Gasper. was de¬ cided that Sail marry But here arose a difficulty. What was to be done for a trousseau ? Sail’s blue caparison had become greasy and de¬ faced, and, besides, it was scarce comme ilfaut for a bride. We determined, as we were going to have a wedding in the family, that it should be first-class, if possible. In this desperate emergency I remembered that onr navy had recently captured a small contraband trader, and I had seen the little vessel lying under the port quarter of the flag-ship. I called upon the captain and stated our dilemma. Nobody ever loved fun bet¬ ter than Admiral Porter, nor could any¬ one sympathize more than he in such an enterprise as we had undertaken. For reply he arose, opened a back door of his cabin and went below. Presently b ck he came with his arms full of bolts of calico, gingham and the like. I selected what seemed most suitable, thanked him, and left an invitation for the wed¬ ding. mantan-maker again Our man set ty work with a will, and under his artistic touch Sail soon was gorgeous. W 7 e even fabricated a set of stays and laced her up like a tenor drum. Next to be looked for was the wedding-ring. This was furnished by the wife of an officer of the Marine Brigade; also, some artificial (lowers for the “bar,” and a pair of white kid gauntlets, which, by dint of soaking and stretching, were at last adapted to Sail’s taper digits. W T hen we had her all rigged, Solomon in all his glory cer¬ tainly never shone as she did. She was fairly aghast at herself, and it was per¬ haps fortunate that we had no furl length mirror in which she could have seen herself as others saw her. All being ready, time was fixed and the wedding invitations were issued to the notabilities of the squadron. The nuptial knot was to be tied in the Rover’s wardroom at 10 A. M., just after the Sunday muster. Our fleet surgeon, a natural orator, than whom no one could render the Episcopal text with more impressiveness and unction, assumed the role of master of ceremonies. Our cap¬ tain undertook to give away the bride. As the decisive hour drew nigh the wed ding guests assembled, arrayed in full naval uniform. The bridal party came on deck, escorted by the “contrabands” in blue jackets and white pants. One of Gasper’s messmate’s officiated as groomsman, while my clerk endeavored to do the honors as a sort of he brides * maid. The fleet surgeon began the ser¬ vice with a dignity and solemnity be¬ fitting All the occasion. well until he went came to “Who giveth this woman to be married to this man?” Then otrr skipper stepped forth. He was an old salt who always took things in dead and serious earnest, and talked from the bottom of his heart. “Sail,” said he, “you’ve heard what the minister has just read ! Now, mind, there’s no foolin’ about this ! Gasper is to stick to you and you're to stick to Gosper ! No more runnin’ round among these other darkeys! Gasper's Gasper wife, is your and husband and you are you’re to love and honor and cherish and obey him ! Do you understand that ?” “Yeth, thir,” lisped Sail. “And, Gasper, you re to look out for Sail and take care of her and keep her to yourself, and see that she don t go gallivanting about with anybody else. Do you understand? groom. ‘ Then I give this woman to be married to this man. Go ahead, fleet surgeon. The doctor maintained his aifd gravity throughout this little interlude, con ™ e „he T e,o (lie ring business and with all my goods I thee endow, a b’ ac £. meal in the rear ranks, overcome by his feelings, chuckled and snoit d out: “Whar s de gopd® • Then he stuffed his blue cap into Ins mouth. His mal-apropos slightly rippled the general serenity, but we survived it, and came at last happily to tne benedic ion. Such was the union of Gasper and Long Sail, who can boast of being spliced under more novel conditions than fell to the lot of any other couple during the late war. JOINING A LODGE. SOME ADVICE TO A MAN ABOUT NOT IIKING TOO PREVIOUS. A Married Man has Enough to do to Take Care ot his Household AUairs Without Taking Decrees. [From the Milwaukee Sun.] A woman who has been married four weeks to a clerk in an agricultural im¬ plement agency in a country town, writes to know what The Sun thinks about her husband's joining a Masonic or Odd Fellows' lodge. She says they have talked it over themselves, and he is twenty-one years old, gets fourteen dol¬ lars a week, and they are boarding with her aunt, and they have agreed to leave it to The Sun. This paper does not wish to encourage or discourage any young man from joining any order that he feels it his duty to join, but the indecision of this young married man is the best evi¬ dence in the world that tlic time has not arrived for him to join a lodge. Lodges are not made any more powerful by the addition of young fellows who have only been married four weeks, and who are boarding with their wives’ aunt. A man can join a lodge when he is twenty-one years old, but lodges are not searching the birth records to see when a man ar¬ rives at that age, in order to get him to join. When a man becomes of age, and gets married, he has other duties to per¬ form, which are more important than j oining a lodge. Several things are liable to occur that will make the fourteen dollar a week look tired without joining a lodge. The girl that the young man has married is liable to want something besides day board. She may want a dress or two, or a hat, and a time may come—at least we have known it to come in a great many families—when the bride is not as well as could be expected, and the fourteen dollars a week bridegroom has to pay a doctor. She is the only bride he ever had, and sho is the dearest bride on earth to him, and the best doctor in town is none too good, and -;ome of the best doctors knock a serious hole in fourteen dollars a week. So it is not best to hurry about joining a lodge. Any well regulated lodge will wait until you get the doctor’s bill paid. Then the young bridegroom when should does begin to think about the time he not want to board with his mother-in-law, or any¬ body else, and he has got to furnish a house out of that fourteen dollars a week. It will take two weeks of that pay to buy a cookstove, to say nothing about things to cook, and one week’s pay for dining room table and chairs, and several weeks pay for a bed room set. But it is not right to discourage young people by telling of the things they need a great deal more than they do a mem¬ bership in a lodge. A baby it wagon can bo bought for about what would cost to join a lodge, and a young couple al¬ ways want the best baby wagon that can be bought, the first time they buy one. Of course, the young parent might get trusted for the baby wagon, but it is awful hard to pay for it after the baby has got so it can walk, and the baby wagon is stored away in a pigeon hole in ( the attic. So it can be readily seen that joining a lodge is thp last thing to be thought of, until the candidate has all these necessaries of life paid for, and is not cramped for money. The trouble with many young men who join lodges, is that they want to take all the degrees in sight before they have a second shirt to tlieir backs, or their wives have much more clothes than they were married in. They see men who have taken degrees above them, and they want to get there, and it takes money. After a man has got a home to shelter him and his wife and little ones, and he feels comparatively at ease financially, and his children are not barefooted, and their pants out at the knees and vice versa. The Sun would not discourage such a person from joining a lodge, if he felt like it, and after he joins it, if he can afford it, he is at liberty to take a thousand degrees, but as long as he owes every man that will trust him, and hasn’t got credit enough to buy a sack of flour, and his family is pinched for (lie necessaries of life, if he yearns io for expensive degrees they ought be drove into him with a club. Hot Weather and Cool Drinks. Will any one ever solve the standing mystery of the drinking habit ? asks an exchange. Half a year ago all men of bibulous inclinations were taking whisky, brandy and gin at intervals throughout t he day for the sole purpose of keeping warm; now the same men are drinking the same kinds of liquor, in the same quantities, in order to keep cool. Most of them pour ice water into their liquor or take it after their liquor; but they do the same in the depth of the winter. Can any drinking man tell the public, :or a certainty, whether alcohol makes the lrinker *ool ? If the stuff is cooling why does he take it in the winter to make him warm ? Or if he says the effect is not ■ooling, but heating, why does he drink tt freely when the mercury is in the lineties? If such apparent inconsis¬ tency was displayed by a politician there would seem nothing strange about it; out when it is manifested at considera¬ ble expense, the money coming out of the drinker’s own pocket, public curiosi¬ ty is inevitable. The Garlic. The violets charm your eyes, but You mns t be blind if you couldn’t hear the ^ ij rhc smelL They say this fragrant er b -was introduced into Pennsylvania by a farmer who came from over the seas locate^ near Westchester. He sowet ] a field of it for green fodder for hia cattio . It fell upon good ground, because there is no other kind in that grew and brought forth the fairy dell, verdant hillsides £2. and in on an( j j n f] le daisy-sprinkled meadow, wherever two or three blades of grass are gathered together there is a bunch of garlic in their midst. You never saw anything like it out West. Sometimes the cow wanders into it and devours it f or a re ji_qb -with the clover. And then u -p en you drink a glass of milk yon go around 1 eathmg on the flies in wanton erne }ty i just to see them die