The Newberry herald. (Newberry, S.C.) 1865-1884, July 13, 1881, Image 1
e14
-VOI
A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, New s, Agricultuelakes c
Vol. XVII. NEWBERRY, S. C., WEDNESDAY, JULYf1,l 81.N
Vol. XVII
THE HERALD
IS PUBiLISHED
EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING,
At Newberry, S. C.
BY PIHOS. P. ORKKR,
Editor and Proprietor.
Ternas9 $.0O0 per extnufw
Invariably in Advance.
SThe paper is stopped at the expiration of
.ume for which it is paid.
, y- The ~4 mark denotes expiration of sub
- criDtion.
Waches, clocks, Jewelry.
1T IIE NDJ1EWWfEL1'
At the New Store on Hotel Lot.
Ihave nlow on hand a l--,r-e and elegant
ssorcmenx, of
*WATCRES, CLOcKS, JEWELRY,
Silver and Plated Ware,
VIOLIN ANl 1 B~A STRIGS,
SFEiIT. C AIM SPECTACLE CASES,
WMiIM: MO 'IRT?NA PRESENT&
'' t.KNDLESS QASI]ETY.
All- 'orcdes by:maii promiptlv attencied '
Watchmaking and Repairing
~~~. ~ p -Dn'Viapl~nd with Dispatch.
Call and examine my stock and prices.
7>E1AD SCHULTZ.
er-. g,4 t.
A cIUIU BOO JO eou s.I
An -01 Y1 -
By%pyn proal~a h ers f
PILLS
INDORSED BY
PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN, AND
THE AFFLICTED EYERYWHERE.
THE GREATEST MEDICAL
TRIUMPH OF THE AGE.
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER.
Loss of appetite,Nausea,bowels costive,
Pain in theHead,with a dull sensation in
he back asrt, Pain under the shoulder
e, ?ESess after eating, wit a disin
a-n~ation to eetoof dyor mmn
rritability of temper, Low spirits, loss
of memory, with a feeding of having neg
ected some du , weariness, Dizzin
eyes, Yellow Skin, Heada ce, Restless
ness at night, highly colored Urine.
ITIRSE WARNINGSARE UNHEEDED,
SERIOUS DISEASES WILLSOON BE DEVELOPED.
UT'jS PILLS are especially adapted to
such cases,one dose effects suchachange
of feeling as to astonish the suferer.
They IncreatiaAette, and cause the
body. to Take on F the system is
nourished.and by their TonicAction on the
Digestiie er gans, Regular Stools are pro
duced. Price 25 cents. 3 Murray St., X.T.
TUTT'S HAIR DYE,
GaAY HA= or RHuSKxBs changed to 4GLossY
BLAc by a single application of this IYM It
Imparts a natural color, acts Instantaneously.
Sold by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt of $I.
Of ce, 35 Murray St.,-New York.
~Dr. TLT1'S Di'11AL of 'al,qtbl Imforsatlom and)
Umek1 Seeeiptfs W be maled REU oa yl.sia
CEL ESSATED
i.
Feeble and Sickly Persons
Recover their vitality by pursuing a course of
Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, the.most, popu
lar inviorant and alterative medicine in use.
ontpatio, rhematsm an other maladies
are completely removed by it. Ask those
who have use it what it has done for them.
For sale by all Drug 'sts ;tud Dealers
generaly.
CROCKERY
-AND
GLASSWARE.
A nice assortment of CROCKERY and
GL ASS W ARE just received and for sale by
W. T. WRIGHT,
Who still has only a few of those CHE iP
STOVES left. Gall quick if you wiant one.
Who still continues to carry onl the TIN
BUSINESS in all its branches, and keeps a
full line of
Tinware and Stoves.
And last, though not least, who wiill do
all the ROOFING, GUTTERING and other
JOB WORK he can get, just as cheap as he
can afford it. Mar. 23, 47-ly.
A PERFECT_DAISY!
It is a perfect model of
STRENGTH,
NEATNESS,
COMFORT and
.DURABILITYi
AT MODERATE COST.
This Buggy is constructed of the very
best select material, and is so perfect it
construction (as well as simple) thatt there
Nothing to Get Out of Order!
The motion is so gentle as to enable the
2most delicate invalid, as well as those ii
Srobust health, to travel with perfect ease.
CALL AND BE CONVINCED,
Manufactured and for sale it
CARRIAGE SHOPS,
SOPPOSITE JAIL., - - NEWBERRY, S, C,
Mar. 2, 9-6im.
Il Outfit furnished free, with full in
structions for cond(ucting the mos1
profitable business that any one car
engage in. The business is so eais'
to learn, and our instructions are. so simnpl
and plain, that any onc can make grea
-profits fromi the very start. No one. car
Vfail who is willing to work. Womecn are af
L~successful as men. Boys and gir ls can eart
large su-ms Many have made at the busi
- ie over one hundred dollars ini a sigli
Sweek. Nothing like it ever know n belore
ll who engage arc surprised at the east
ad rapidity with which they. are able tA
- inke money. You can engage m this bus
dness during your spare time at great profi
- You do not have to invest capital in it.W
ntake all the risk. Those who need read.
1 none , should write to us at once. All fir
e, free. Address True &o. - 1~t
ALONZO REESE,
SAVING AND HAIR DRESSINI
S.ALOON,
Plain Street next door to Dr, Geiger's Office
I COLUMBIA, S. C.
Room newly fitted and furnished, and ge1
tlmen attended to with celerity, after ti
.s -mroed styles, Nov. 22, 47-tf.
THE AMATEUR FARMER.
I dreamt of a beautiful time
When the world shall happy be!
When the elephants and byenas
Shall blossom on every tree;
When tamarinds and potatoes
Shall cease their dreadful roar,
When turnip trees shall blossom
In the garden for ever more.
I dreamt of a great republic
When the people shall all go West,
Sow plums and reap tomatoes
In the laund they love the best;
When pig iron and molasses
Shall bloom on every hill.
And chickens low in the barnyard,
While gooseberries toil at the mill.
I'm weary of seeing the cabbage
Handle the rake and the hoe:
I'm weary of watching and waiting
For the grasshopper bush to grow;
1 l(:ig for the time when spinach
Shall cope with bread and milk;
When hens shall lay potatoes,
And horses spin raw silk.
Oh ! sweet were the vanished hours
When I wandered down the glen,
And wreathed my brow with tomatoes,
Or plucked the ripened hen;
When the donkey twined up the trellis,
And the cucumber chirped in the grass;
And the sweet potato whistled
To its mate in the mountain pass.
But gone are the days of childhood,
And manhood's dreams are mine;
Yet I long for the by-gone hours,
As I sit 'neath this Turkish vine.
Oh! wreath your blossoms, about me
And soothe my aching breast;
While gooseberry plaintively warbles
And lulls me into rest.
I tittt t0 .
A COLD DAY FORABBATUCCI.
-0
'Dally,' said Mrs. Dalrymple to
her husband as he was perusing the
columns of an esteemed contem
porary, 'What: is the news this
morning? Who is married ? Who
is dead ? Has Fertsel got his
divorce?'
'Hush, Tillie,' said Dahlgreen,
and he read a second time this
local brevity :
- A bbatucci Tamnbourini, an Ital
ian peanut vender in Mulberry
street, was yesterday assaulted
by Poindexter Ryan, whbo upset
his stand and robbed him of $3.22.
Ryan was arrested and will be
tred this morning for the larceny
and assault.
It,so happened that M5r. Dalry m
pie sat among the spectators in
court that day when the case was
called. He had a sublime respect
-not uncommon among those
unfamiliar with its workings-for
the administration of jutstice, and
e -expected confidently to see
Tambourini's goods restored to
him and Ryan sent to a deep
dungeon cell. He listened, and
this is whbat he heard.
Counsel for Tam bourini, rising,
said ..
'If it may please the Court, the
prisoner at the bar is charged with
aggravated' and unprovoked as
sault upon my client ; but, in con
sequence of the repeal of the
statute of 1791 by the now general
law of 1873-an error, as your
onor will remember, until after
the negatory act had passed both
houses of the Legislature and ob
tained the Governor's signature
there is no law covering this case.
You will find, however, in an act
passed in 1843, and entitled, 'An
Act to prevent mock auctions and
to secure efficiency in the Nation
al Guard,' a clause in the second
section of the third amendment
whieb bears directly upon this
matter. It has been held (Brown
vs. Brown, 23, 75, Maguiness J.)
that an assault upon the person of
an alien is a misdemeanor. Thbough
Abbott (in Blake vs. Snoogles,
40, 11, 44,) held otherwise. In
an act passed- in 1835, entitled 'An
Act to witbbold water franchises
from the Union Ferry Company
for ninety niine years,' it was pro.
Svided that where robbery follows
:assault, the power ot the Judge
shall be discretionary. But where
they are coincident, his pow er is re
stricted to : 'A fine of $50, or more,
or less, or six months' imprison
ment, or more, or less, or both, or
neither.' And we find that atconm
mon law the same rule holds:!
Esto quod esse videris. I admit
that in the present condition of
~'the statute it is impossib leto say
whether an offence of this nature
is, technically, a misdemeanor.
my client has lost his peanuts and
is entitled to some redress.'
Ryan's counsel here arose:
'If it may please the Court, this
case turns on the old law of 1821,
entitled 'An Act to empower-the
State Surveyor to sue for damages
sustained by reason of county or
dinances.' The first ease is re
viewed by Mills, C. J.. who in the
matter of Shillito vs. Guiteras,
held that a man may suffer the
same injuries if assaulted in the
street as if assaulted in a house.
Two Judges coucurred and three
dissented. By one of those lacbes
which seem almost inevitable the
clerk mislaid the opiniou of the
dissenting Judges, and the assault
ed man was sent to jail, where he
died some time afterward. That,
however, is not material. Parsons
on Contracts states clearly that
where a mau enters into an ar
rangement whereby there is a
reasonable likelihood that be will
be knocked down, he can only re
cover damages in the event of his
being killed. Your Honor will re
member that Parsons lays down
this rule as peremptory ; but, as
Chalmers truly observes, 'How can
the dead man sue ?' Bis peccare
n bello non lictt. I will not waste
the time of the Court to inquire
whether my client did really rob
and maltreat this Italian. I admit
that be did. We concede premed
itation, the assault and the lar
-eny. But what has that to do
with it ? Has not Hope, in Down
ing vs. Durande, 19-45, decided
"hat where warranty is not speci- i
ied it is not to be presumed.? 1
Does anybody come into this court
.o guarantee these peanuts? No,
SIr. Tambourini swears the pea
uts were his. Let us concede it.
W hat did he have them for ? Pre- I
supposing no illicit intentions on
is part, and waving how be got I
:hem, I will say simply : He had e
bhem: to dispose of. To whom ?
['hat is no business of the Court.
Ryan comes along. He takes
bem. They are disposed of. And
,en, this sallo w-faced, coal ey'ed,
an tern-jawed, hungry - mouthedi
Peninsulan comes here and asks <
~bis august Court to resolve itself
to an investigating committee <
o ascertain whether the consid- ]
~raion wss adequate ? An d in
be same breath that he says he;
Leceived nothing for the peanuts
be swears that he got two black
'If your Honor please,' said the
talian's counsel, 'the black eyes
referred to were given to Tam
bourini by the gentleman's client.'
[Unsu ppressed merriment of the<
Court officers.]
The Judge rapped heavily for
order, and when silence was re
stored, thus spoke:
'This case is a peculiar one.
About once a month 1 hear it.
Sometimes I decide it one way,
sometimes another. It is gen
erally appealed and always over
ruled. Authorities conflict. Judge
Timothy Campbell has beld that
an assault is not an assault when
premeditation is shown ; but J udge
Patrick G. Duffy has decided
otherwise, basing his decision on
the old common law of torts whbich
presumes violence as the occasion
of blood flowing and contusions. It
was so held by Talley, in Morey
vs. Tom Collins, 4,11, 329.'
'If your honor please,' said
Ryan's counsel, 'I move the dis
charge of the prisoner.'
'On whatground ?'
'On the ground that the com
plaint is defective. It states that
Tambourini is an Italian, and re
sides at 365 Mulberry street. Now
I offer to show by parole evi,
dence that he is a native of the re
public of San Marino, arid does
not. reside 'at' lhut 'in' 365 Mul
berry street. His Honor J udge
Dowling, i'n Weston vs. O'Leary,
658, 2, has held that tbe sub'sti
tution of the word 'at' for 'ini' is
fital. Judge Bridges in the mat
ter' of Hood vs. Sighs (A bbott's
Reports 96, 18. margin of the in
dex,) says: 'Public policy de
mands the suppression of lot
teris.' The same principle gov
ers tbhis case-1axc olimi meminisse
juvabit.'
'If your honor please,' ventured
the Italiau's counsel, 'Gedney has
deided that. a writ of. Ne .Eeat
covers this case. We may be per
mitted to amend the complaint by
substituting in' Ior 'at ;' mean
while it may stand pro foru.'
Then we except, and reserve
right to appeal.'
'Exception noted and right to
appeal granted.'
'We,' said Tiarn bourini's counsel,
'except to the ex.ept.iou, and re
serve right to appeal from the ap
peal.'
'So ordered.' said the Judge. '1
do not believe that there is any
statute decisiou governing the
case. Alon lux, sed crux. Judge
O'Reardon, on the day before his
impeachment, held that redress
for injuries to the person, where
accompanied by robbery of pea
nuts, comes under the act of 1811,
entitled 'An act to protect ia
riners on the high seas, and to se
cure minors pending the probate
of contested wills.' In the 23d
clause, which relates to codicils,
it is said: 'The lav does not pre
suppose violeuce when none ex
ists. But evidence on this point
is only admissible in quo war
ranto proceedings, and then may
be stricken from the record on
motion of opposing counsel.' Story,
in iuldoon vs. Gilhooly, 2, 40 s. h.,
holds that peanuts being contra
band, trade dollars must be ac
,epted in payment, though it is
Lrue that this is not altogether
analogous to the present case.
Mens sana in copore sano I so
ield in Percival vs. Tee Pythago
eas Art Association, but was over
uled. There is anothez Judge on
he bench of the Appellate Court
20w, so I will risk the decision
again.'
'If your Honor please,' said
rambourini's counsel, 'Ryan is a
)igamist.'
'0 !' said the Judge, 'that alters
,he case entirely. Justun et ten
icem propositi virum.'
'rhis is collateral evidence,' re
ponded Ryan's counsel. 'Tam
ourini is a judgment-debtor.
What standing can we have in3
ort? Besides, be is a litigous
>crson, and is defendant in the
ase of Sam Yong, Wab.-Lee et
dl. vs. Tambourini, in the matter
>f the Mulberry Street Empire
Laundry.'
'Can y ou prove it ? asked thbe
[udge.
'Your Honor, it is a matter of
record.'
'Then~ I don't see that Tam
>ouri*ni has any caseC against
Ryan.'
There w as a.brief'consultationl
etween Tambourini and his
younsel. The latter, rising, said :
'The case, your Honor turns
~pon whbether the laundry is in
~orporated. In Magoon vs. Apgar,
Burke 7 to 8, Radcliffs Reports,
t was held that the articles of in
sorporation are necessary to the
suit.
'Relying on the decision of Wal
lr, in McGlannaban vs. McGlab
berty, 1881, under the statute of'
frauds, according to the act of'
1869, entitled: 'An Act to pre
empt homesteads and reclaim
waste lands,' we rcst our case.'
The Judge wrote on a visiting
eard: 'Will b'e with yon directly,'
and banded it down from the
bench. He then rendered this
decision:
'Ryan is to be released pending
the framing. of' a new complaint,
the present one being defective.
Tambourini is sent to the House
of Detention till the case is called
up again in the August term,
Ryan is to hold the peanuts. The
Court stands adjourned.'
'A cold day for Abbatucci.' mur
mured Mr. Dalry mple, sadly, as
e left the balls of'justice .and got
into a bobtailed car.-Earncst
Harvier, in Puck.
We should always do the best
we can in the circumstauces in
wich we ar-e placed, not idly
dreaming of the great things we
would (do if' they were differe'nt.
Those wvho would do much else
where accomplish little any
where.
Learning without knowledge is
but a bundle of prejudice :a num
ber of' inert matter set before the
threshold of the understandfg,r to
e exdnsion, of common sense.
FoR THE HERALD.
Waterii Place Novelt ieo
l'ichfieldl Sprsings.
An extremely fashionable lady now
prides herself on nothing more thau a
pair of tan colored gloves of kid or
chamois skin that she wears in a mass
of wrinkles above her wrist This is
the badge : the sign and symbol of
veritable "style" and she who bears
it looks complacently on herself and
disdainfully on surrounding existen
ces. If allowed to follow its destiny,
that stretch of kid or goat skin ought
to reach from half to all the way up
to the elbow; being made without
outtons or perhaps only a few at the
wrist. Thither, however, it must
never be allowed to go. but must
crumple and wrinkle as previously
described. Not only is this fashion
adopted when costumes of silk or wool
are worn, but in case of, thin mnuslins
or even white satin. Yet the greater
number of ladies are dontent with a
kid glove worn in a wore conservative
way, or with lisle thread, silk or lace
mitts, of which there are no end in
the market. But lace is certainly the
color of the hour; being preferred to
shades currespoudirg with the dress
and influencing all the lighter sunmmer
substitutes for kid. Still there are
other stylish hues worn even by ex
tremists and these are gold, golden
brown, gray or black. Both gloves
and mitts of high and low degree are
long on the wrist and there is much
less open work than formerly.
TWO SCHOOLS IN SLEEVES.
Two schools in sleeves, as wide
apart as homnopathy and alipathy now
prevail. The Gigot or bishop sleeve
is +he head and front of a new rebel
lion ; this being followed at a respect
ful distance by sleeves imbued with
similar ideas but of more modest out
line. The Gigot, however, comes
boldly out and shows the veritable
balloon top of olden time with cuff
shaped in to the arm. Unlike the
leg of mutton, however, it is cut all
in one piece; the puff at the top be
ing put on separately. Sleeves of
lesser note are crowned with smaller
puffs while at times we see two puffs
divided by rows of shirring. Mean
time the close coat sleeve holds its 1
own and thereby no small advantage
to the public at large accrues. An
arm too thin can hide securely under
those friendly puffings and show to I
the world as if it were the plump est,t
and she who dreads no scrutiny can
wear a sleeve that follows nature's fair
proportions. Each one does well andi
each is stylish.
FASHIONS FOR THE THIN.
But if a thin arm can be made to 1
pass, wherefore not the individual ?
This pertinent question can be an
swered in thae affirmiative and the re
sult so satisfactory is brought about I
by the aid of shirrings.- This the
more so, bec~ause they are a veritable
rage. You cannot misplace themi. I
Put them about the neck, on the front,(
on the back, around the waist, on the
sleeve of your corsage and you commit 1
no error. Have your skirt shirredI
from end to end :you touch the ex- I
tremist's limits, but you do not over
sten them. Even the hat and parasol
may be shirred, a pretty example of I
such an outfit being one prepared of I
cream white mull for Emma Abbott,
who is spending the Summer here.
Another tastefal costume showing
similar ideas has been gotten up fort
the same well known singer. It is of,
silk and wool: a combination of pale j
blue and golden brown, and is made
Aurelian waist in surplice style, with<
shirred belt and sash; sleeves with
two puffs and shirring between. The<
overskirt after the Carita model shows
the front arranged with a shirred
aprou draped high in the middle- and:
falling in points at the sides. Closei
akin to shirrings, come puffings.
T hse because a moure pronounced
type are used with some caution ; you
canot cover your whole outfit withi
putis, but they are very popular. For
the bottom of the skirt, nothing is
better liked than a puff; one or more (
puffs around the neck are quite the
thing, while a puff at the wrist some-t
times supercedes a cuff. But runfles(
may come in to complete the magnity
ing process ; puffs can be united with
shirrs, till if need be, one can: become (
a perambulating mass of shiras, puffs t
and ruffles, to which plaitings- can be I
superadded. Let me atone .at the I
llevena i} our. owever. tvr a .: tiu
aeglect of V stouter cut ttuuE.
'or theui, t he .iroliina poiuua:Lt
ouild be a tasteful choic: i
l U. 1n the hi's, flib. in a .imwl
hiapedl painit at thie left :mid dtraped
iigh on the zides. In (c"u:;lusi)on, r
:cr'e feel that
AN Ai' L(a;Y
s needed bec:iuse I have taken you {
*roi New York at a time when all
.Ih:it is fashionable has fled. Next
Iionth I wili tell you what is going
)u at ,aratoga. At present, life at
Richfield Springs is elaruiug nough
od I wish my readers w;re all here
u cujoy it likewise. Since lat season
be American House has been virtual
y rebuilt by 31r. Welch. of the New
ork St. Nichl:as. Wa!ls are newly
)apered and painted, flours rlcarpeted,
jeds aad bedding fresh and (lean.
ihe ild kit:heu and laundry are
jolishI;d and new ones are Ioeated at
le e:d of a win. two hul:dred feet
o:;g Adjoining is the dining room,
vhile leading to it is a grand hall fif
:een feet wide by one hundred and
ifty long. The old bar room is taken
roi the piazza and iustead is a wine
nd reading rootu ; an intermediate
pace, formerly used as a sort of gen
;ral receptacle, is now a pretty park.
hile for the little people a "childreu's
)rdinary" is set apart, where, as a
:unning idea, the walls are covered
ith successive pictures and nursery
-hymes so prettily done that a grown
ip child might spend hours in study.
ng them. Lucy CARTER.
A PRICELESS WOMAN.
The late Mrs. Baker-for that
?as her latest name-was not so
ragile that she could not be ban
led by a careful man, but still a
ery light blow would usually
)reak her. She was very proud
>f her fragility. and by its aid her
insband managed to amass a corn
ortable fortune within three
rears after their marriage. She is
)erhays the only fragile woman
mu record of whom it. can be said
hat her wvhole value consisted in
er fragility ; but, as her story
ows, her fragility was the sole
~apital invested in her husband's
>usiness. In January, 1870, Mrs.
aker-then a single wornan, as
, whose maiden name there is
ome uncertainty-waS married to
ir.Weelwright-Jamnes G. Wheel
vright, of Worcester, Mass. Hecr
iusband married her on account
>f her well-known fragility, but
ie,treated h.er w it h such kin dness
hat in the whoie course of their
narried life he never once broke
er, even by accident. In Feb
uary, 1870, the Wheelwrigh s re
noved to Utica, N. Y., and one
lay Mr. Whbeel wrigh t took his1
vife to the railway station. and
ad her break her leg in a small
iole in the platform. He at once
ued the railway company for
10,000, being the value set by
~imself on his wife's leg, and ten
ays afterwards accepted 853.000,
s a compromnise, and withdrew
he suit. rThe Wheelrights left
tica in Juue ,1870, and in the
olowing August the dutiful Mrs.
heelwright, who row called her
elf Mrs. Thomas, broke her other
g in a hole in the platfor~m of
,he railway station at Pittsburg.
gain her husband sued the rail
vay company for $15,000, and
:omprmised for 86,500. Thbe leg
vas mended successfully, and in
uly, 1871, we find the Thomases,
iow passing under the name of
d1r. and Mrs. Smiley, at Cin
innati, where Mr. Smiley, after
ong searching, discovered a piece
>f ragged and uneven sidewalk,
mon which his wife made a point
f f.lling and breaking her right
r. This tim3 the city was sued
or 815,O00 and Mr. Smule y pr-ov
d that his .vife unas a school
eneber by professsion,. and that
he breaking of her- arm rendered
t impossible for her to teach. for
~e reason that-she could not
ield a rod or' even a slipper. The
.ity paid the $15,000O, and the
miley's having by honest indus
r thus made 626,000, removed to
3bicago, and entered their names
u the hotel register as Mr. and
Irs. M'Ginnes, of Portland, Me.I
)n the second day after their
,rrival at the hotel, Mr. AI'Ginnes
ound an eligible place on thej
siazz for Mrs. M'Ginnes to break~
ID EI T ISI,6 RA TES~.
1?v t"'r:j.""Tuc"nt- in.er;''1 at tllc rate 0l
S1.ul per s quire t, iii(i1 f ;r first inserncrpfl
::n1? .' )1o .1 zl~qi.nt itl 'rt$
I )o r:Jiutiinl adU je11-lfle!ts ten per c- it.
utl auuve.
',Ut r'r ":el.l. 1srte' Der .1uire ais orelal:ay
new'. ~ Y
%L ve\ ratc,
TEIRMS CASH.
:il:utlt':'r lg. 'vitli thiat excellent
wOtnan pro!liptiy (id. '1he usual
stitt tor 615,OO0) was brought, and
the~ hlC-iceper, fearing~ th.{t the
:ltuiietOty~ of the tlui, Nvouid inj ure
ilisie. l %":, iac to ~ornprOmise
oyy p"yiig ~S UOO By this time, it
is tuudersto)ood, Mrs. T'ifnnis was
Wj" jjh3ir 0) 1cith'e fromr business, but
her hub::n.i l,ad set his beart on
making ;-30.000, and like a good
%wife. she coth:M'rIted to break some
IIor"e bone& It should be said
LthatL.ere '.as cver " little pain at
t:nitga fracture of any one of
the !ady's botles, and that she did
not inI the least mind the monotoonf
of lying in bed wvbily the tbroken
bones knitted together. There
can, therefore, be no charge of
cru lty b1rought against the hus
bani-". Indeed: shca herself entered
With hlearty goodwill into, the
scheme of mhaking a living with
her bones, and would go out to
break a leg with as much cheer
fulness as if she was going to a
theatre. In March, 1872, Mrs.