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DEVOTED TO NEWS* POLVICS , LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE AND GENERAL PROGRESS ---INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS,
VOL, X.
92 OO a l’cnr in Advance.
■'MApNie.^
San Marino Lodge. \o 31.
GREENES BORO', GA.
Regular Meetings—First Wednesday
night of each month.
M. MARKWALTER, Sec’y.
Greenesboro’ IS. A. C., \o, 37
GRE'eNESBORO’, GA.
Regular meeting—Third FiiUay night of
each month. C. (’. NORTON, Sec’y.
Fnion Point Lodge, \o. 3BG.
UNION POINT, Ga.,
Meets regularly the 2d and 4th Thursday
day evenings in eacli month.
W. O. MITCHELL, Sec’y.
Feb. 4, 1875—tf
#irir&
Greene Lodge, \o. 11, I O O F.
GREENESBORO’, GA.,
Meets regularly every Monday night.
J. R. GODKIN, NT. G.
D. S. Holt, R S.
Greencsborongh Lodge, \o.
5120, Independent Order Good Templars,
meets at Odd Fellow’s Hall, on 2d and 4tb
Friday nights in each month.
w. it. DTtANCII, IV.
G. W, Mii.lek, See’y.
BUSINESS CARDS,
JAMES B. PARK,
ANI)
COUNSELOR AT LAW,
GREENESBORO\ - - - GA.
WILL give prompt attention to all bu
siness intrusted to his professional
care, in the Counties of Greene, Morgan,
Putnam, Baldwin, Hancock and Taliaferro,
K?*©lllce—With Hon. Philip B. Rob
inson. april 8,1875 —(Ims
M. W. LEWIS )> H. G. LEWIS.
M, W. Lewis & Son,
Attorneys at Law,
EREEXESKOROIJGII, - GA.
april 8, 1875-ly
Philip B. Robinson,
Attorney at Law,
GREENBSBORO’. . . . GA
Y\J ILL give prompt attention to busines?
' * entrusted to his professional care.
Feb. 20, 1873—Gms
Wm. H. Branch,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
UKKFYENUORO", A.
f CONTINUES to give his undivided ntten
t J tion to the practice of his Profession.
Returning thanks to his clients for their
encouragement in the past, he hopes by
close application to business to merit a con
tinuance of the same.
g£jyOffice over Drug Store of Messrs. B.
Torbert & Cos.
Greenesboro’ Jan 16th 1874—1 y.
H7E7iv7 PALMER,
Attorney at Law,
GREEXESUORO”, - - - GA.
ALL business intrusted to him will re
ceive personal attention.
jt£gp*OFFlCE—(With Judge Heard,) in
the Court-House, where he can found
during business hours. oct 15,’74-tt
IV, W. LII!IIPKL\.
attorney at law,
UNION POINT, • - Ga.
OFFERS his professional services to the
people of Greene and adjoining coun
ties. and hopes, by close attention to busi
siness to merit and receive a liberal share of
patronage. jan23 74 ly.
Medical Card.
Drs. BODKIN & HOLT,
H AVING associated themselves in the
Practice of Medicine, respectfully tender,
their services to the citizens of Grf.fxes
boro’ and surrounding country.
March 4. 1875—tf
Z\)t (Su t cncsborc* , Herald
Ur. Win.
RES3ENT
15m9B^iiE.TisT
GREECE SB OR O’G A.
_ feb. l 1874.
T.MiRKIUjrM,
Ma.rJj.lQ Wq&s
BROAD Street, AUG ST A, Ga.
MARBLE Monumen s, 'imb-stones*
Marble Mantles, ami Fiiiture Mar
ble of all kinds, from the pklest to the
1 most elaborate, designed and Irnished to
order at short notice. Ail \>rk for the
ountry carefully boxed. n4s,lS71 —tf
JEWELRY!
Wf SHING to devote mysif entirely to
TV the legitimate luisinss of Clock
iml Watch Repairing, from tite date, 1 of
fer my entire Stock of Watch sand Jewel
ry at cost, finding that it iitivferes too
much with the business 1 preer.
M. MARK WALTER.
Greenesboro’, Ga., Sept. 24. K74-tf
C EXT It A LSlOim
BY
Mrs. W. M. THOMAS,
AUG L S T\A . Gev
Jan. 21 —Ty.
BGLL-Rl
MAIN STREET, ’
G IIEEVINROROIGII, GA.
eJ. 1, OX7 LA r J', jI,
I,WAYS keeps on hand the choicest—
LIQUORS,
CIGARS, annd
TOBACCO.
His BILLIARD
— 1 j
TAISLSS
Is new and elegant. Call and see.
Feb. 18, 1875 —(ims
VARIETY STORE!
FAMILY GROCERIES,
BAR-ROOM AND BILLIARD SALOON,
Corner Main and Broad Streets,
GREENESBORO’. -n GEORGIA.
W. C. Cartwright,
Always keeps on hand a full assortment of
Family Gtoceries,
and the finest brands of imported and
domestic
LIQUORS AND SEGARS.
ITis Bar is always supplied with pure im
ported London Porter, Bass’ Ale, French
Brandy. Holland Gin, Jamaica Rum,
Wines and Champagne; and
GENUINE CINCINNATI LAGER,
always fresh, besides all qualities of do
mestic Liquors.
TF”Ca!I and purchase your Groceries,
imbibe pure Liquors, smoke fine Segars.
play a game of Billiards, and be happy.
W 0. CARTWRIGHT.
Corner Broad and Main St’s.
March 25, 1875.
Fits Cured Free!
NY person suffering from the above
disease is requested to address Hr. TRICE,
and a trial bottle of medicine will be for
warded by Express,
FREE !
The only cost being the Express charges
which, owing to my large business, are
small.
Dr. Price has made the treatment of
FITS OR EPIE.EPSY
a study for years, and he will warrant a
cure by the use of his remedy,
Do not fail to send to h : m for a trial hot
tie ; it costs nothing, and he
WILL CURE AOI ,
no matter of liow long standing your case
may he. or how many other remedies may
have failed. Circulars and testimonials
sent with Free Trial Roffle.
Be particular to give your Expiess, as
well as your Post Office direction, and
Address,
Ir OILS. T. PRICE,
67 'William Street, NEW YORK.
Feb. 18, 1875—1 y
Special Hotice.
BE Stockholders of the Greene County
Fair Association are hereby personally no
tified that unless they pay up their pro
rata share of an execution I hold against
said Association, 1 will be forced to havo
executions issued against them severally,
for their proportional parts of said claim.
Capt. W. M Weaver is authorized to re
ceive and receipt for moneys so paid.
fehlStf JAS. N. ARMOR.
GREENESBORO', GA., THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1875.
%
21 ail road Schedule.
Arrival and Departure of Trains.
Georgia. Kail road.
Day Passenger Train.
Leave Augusta, 8.45, a. m.
Leave Atlanta, 7:CO, a. m.
\rrive at Atlanta, 6:45, p. m.
Arrive at Augusta, 3:30, p. m.
Night Passenger Train.
Leave Augusta, 8:15, p. m.
Leave Atlanta, 10:’0, p. m
Arrive at Atlanta, 6:25, a. ni.
Arrive at Augusta, 8:15, a. m.
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN
Leaves Atlanta, 5:00 p. m.
Leaves Stone Mountain, 6:45 a. m-
Arrives Atlanta, 8:00 a. m.
Arrives Stone Mountain, 6:15 p. m.
S. K. JOHNSON, Sup’t.
:G:
Western Jto Atlantic R R
Night passenger Train — Outward.
Leave Atlanta, 6:00 p. m.
Arrives Chattanooga, T. 30 a. m.
DAY PASSENGER TRAlN,—Outward
Leave Atlanta, 8:30 a. m.
Arrives Chattanooga, 4:28 p. m.
Night Passenger Train — lnward.
Leaves Chattanooga, 3:45 p. m.
Arrives Atlanta, 11:20 p. m.
DAY PASSENGER TRAlN.—lnward.
Leaves Chattanooga, 5:45 a. m.
Arrives Atlanta, 1:20 p. m,
I) A ETON ACCOM MOD ATION
Lsaveg Atlanta, 4:35 p. m.
Arrives at Dalton, 12:20 a. m.
Leaves Dalton 2:00 a. m.
Arrives Atlanta, 9:50 a. m.
Jos. E. BROWN President.
iwii m,
AND
f Iwtn M- ( s<iQ,c
PATENT MEDICINES,
FINE PERFUMERY,
TOILET ARTICLES, WIN
DOW GLASS, all sizes, LAMPS
and LANTERNS.
Bt.TST’S GARDEV SFEITS.
KEROSENE OIL,
WHITE LEAD, Colors, LIN
SEED OIL, BRUSHES, Ac.,
For sale by
Joins A. (fl'riffiu.
prescriptions carefu[ly
dispensed, april 8. 1875-ly
ALFRED SHAW
KEFI’S constantly on hand in Greenes
boro’ and Madison, a full assortment
of
ROSEWOOD and MAHOGANY
BURIAL CASES,
and imitations of the same. Also,
METAL.IC CASKETS,
of all grades.
In beauty, durability and price, these
Oases and Caskets will compare favorably
with any to be found elsewhere.
W. T. DOSTEE and H. C.SITTON
Are our authorized Agents atGreeieshoro’.
NOTE.—AII persons indebted for past
purchases, are requested to come forward
and settle their bills
ALFRED SHAM,
March 18, 1875—3 ms
n EORGIA- Graene County—
\T William R. Wilson Administrator on
the Estate of Henry H. Durham, deceased,
applies for Letters of Dismission, and such
Letters will be grantee on the first Monday
in May, 1875, unless valid objections there
to are filed.
Oiven under ry h.wd andofficial signa
ture, this January tOth, IX7;>.
3m JOEL F THORNTON, Ord’y.
Cy EOTTGIA-AJreenc County.
X Win. A. am/ John M. Colciongh, Ad
ministrators of John Cole oaglt. deceased,
apply for Letters of Dismission, and such
Letters will be jranted on the first Monday
in June, 187.% unless valid objections
thereto arc filed.
Given under tny hand and official signa
ture, this March Ist, 1875.
JOEL F. THORNTON, Ord’y.
mar.4,1875—3ms
Gt EORGI.Y-—Greene ly.
f Whereas James Smith, Executor ot
James Atkinson, deceased, applies for Let
ters of Di-mission. and such Letters will be
granted on the first Monday in May 1875.
unless valid objections thereto be filed.
Given under my hand and official signa
Lire this February Ist, 1875
JOEL F. THORNTON, Ord’y.
Feb. 1,1875—3m5* 1
FOR
Sale or Blent.
jA. fine farm containing (80) eighty
acres, (50 acres original forest), within two
miles of Greenesboro. Apply to
feblltf. W. M. WEAVER.
POET’S CORNER.
DIFFHTLTT OF RUINING
We parted by the gate in June,
That soft and balmy month,
Beneath the sweetly beaming moon,
And (wunth- -hunth—sunth—tr nth—l
can’t find a rhyme to month:.)
Years were to pass ere we should ssect;
A wide and yawning gulf
Divides uie from my love so sweet,
While (ulf —sulf—rlulf —mulf—stuck a
gin ; I can’t get any rhyme to gulf. I’m in
a gulf myself.
Oh, how I dreaded in my soul
To part from my sweet nymph,
While years should their long seasons roll
Before (hymph —dymph—ymph— I guess
I’ll have to let it go at that.)
Bcneatli my fortune s stern decree
My lonely spirits sunk,
For 1 a weary soul should b.,
And (hunk—dunk— rump—sk—Hint will
never do in the world.)
She buried her dear, lovely face
Within her azure scarf, .
She knew I’d take the wretchedness
As well as (parf—sarf—darf— Marf-and
harf; that won’t answer, either )
Oh, I had loved her many years,
I lovedier for herself;
I love her for her tender tears,
And also for her (welf-nelf —lielf—pelf!
no ! no ! not for her pelf.)
I took between my bands her head ;
llow sweet her lips did pouch I
I kissed her lovingly, and said-f
(Bouche- mouebe—louche—quch ! not a
bit of it did I say ouch !)
I sorrowfully wrung her hand,)
My tears they did escape, J
My sorrows they could not eonfmnnd,
And I was buta (sape—dape-i-fape—ape;
w.ll, perhaps I did feel like an ape.)
I gave *° ] ),',p T ,| ' .
I told her T would e’er tv true.
And always be a d'.ool—sool—mool—
fool: T come to tMr-< of it 1 was a fool, for
she fell in love w' l ' another fellow before T
was gone anv 1 ’” 1 -
ihmeuiTneoun"
iltirriitge of* First Cousins
MR. DARWIN ON THE SUBJECT.
The London Times says:
Mr Darwin read a paper last night
before the Statistical Society ea nun
viaaes between first cousins in Eng
land, and their effects The subject
was divided into three separate heads
first., the proportion, of first cousin
marriages to all marriages ; secondly,
inquiries in asylums as to the harm
likely to arise from such marriages ;
thirdly, literature on the subject. With
regard to the first it would appear from
a series of carefully prepared statistics
compiled from Burke’s “ L inded (Jen
try,” the English and Iri-h Peeiage.
and the General Registry of Marri
ages, at Somerset-house, that such mar
riages are in London, including all
classes, ab ut 1( per cent.; in the
uiban districts about 2 per cent.; in the
rurai districts about 2} per cent.; in
the landed gentry about per cent.;
and in the aristocracy probably 4£ per
cent. The lecturer said his impression
was that these statistics were reliable,
and that on the whole there would not
he found an error of 1 per cent, in the
proportion he had assigned to the arts
toeracy, and still less among the other
classes; but at the same time admitted
that it was an impression which he
hardly knew how to justify, and one,
therefore, which left an ample field for
adverse criticism Passing to the
second branch of his topic, the lecturer
confessed that his inquiries in lunatic
and other asylums and hospitals were
incomplete, and not altogether as satis
factory as he could have wished, not
from any difficulty placed in his way
by the gentlemen to whom- he hud ap
plied for information, but from the io
ability to answer the necessary ques
tions of s, many of the patients, aud
the untrustworthy nature of the replies
of still more. From the figures sup
plied it would appear that out of 8.17 G
lunatics and idiots in asylums in Eng
land and Wales, 4 308 are the children
of first cousins, and in Scotland 541
out of 1,179; while from Ireland no
return tvas obtained. Front the fact,
then, that the percentage of offspring
of first cousin marriages is nearly that
of marriages in general population, the
negative conclusion only is to be drawn
I that, so far as insanity and idiocy go,
no evil lias been shown to accrue from
consanguineous marriages. Nor, con
tinued the lecturer, were his researches
into hospitals and other asylums at
tended with much more success.though
from the almost insuperable difficulties
which from the outside beset his efforts
he did not pursue them further than
with respect to deaf mutes. On the
whole, and taking into account the un
certainty of his methods ol finding the
proportion of such marriages iu the
general population, Mr. Darwin was ol
opinion that the percentage of such off
spring in asylums is not greater than
that in the general population to such
an extent as to enable auy one to say
positively that the marriage of first
cou ins has any effect in the production
of insanity or idiocy, although it might
still be shown, by more accurate uicth
ods of research, that it is so. With re
sped to deaf mutes the proportion of
offspring of first cousin marriages is]
precisely the same as the proportion til
such marriages for the large towns and
the country, and, therefore, there is
again no evidence of any of the tcsults
accruing to the offspring in conse
quence of the coosinship of their par
ents. Turning lastly to the third head
of his subject, the lecturer stated that,
so far as lie knew, the most thorough
investigation ever made was contained
in some papers “On Blood Relationship
in Marriage," published by Dr. Arthur
Mitchell, a deputy commissioner of lu
nacy in Scotland. ’J his gentleman’s
inquires were confined chiefly to Scot
land. in which country, as the figures
already quoted will show, the propor
tion of first cousin marriages is larger
than in any other portion of the Uni
ted Kingdom; and thc. eonclusj
oonditions of life, the apparent ill effects
were almost It if. while if the children
were ill-fed, badly housed and cl thed.
the evil miuht become very marked.
This, said the lecturer, was in striking
accordance with some unpublished ex
periments of his father’s ‘On the In
and-in Breeding of Plants,” in which
he found that in-bred plants, when al
lowed space enough and good toil,
would frequently show little or no'de
terioration. hut when placed in conipe
tit ion with another plant would fre
quently become stunted or altogether
perish. Reference was also made to a
work by Signor Paola Mantegnzza. pro
fessor at Pavia, on the same subject, in
wlych it is contended that consanguin.
eons marriages are, ou the whole, more
unfavorable to the offspring than
others, and the nearer the kinship the.
greater the danger. Other authorities
wi re also quoted. Mr. Buxton, of the
Liverpool institution for the deaf and
dumb, in the Menicochirnrgienl Jour
nal for January, 1859. found one deaf
mute in ten to be the children of first |
cousins; Dr. Peet, of the New
institution, gives the same proportions;
Mr. Lewellyn Pratt, in the American
Annual of the deaf ar.d dumb, Janu
arv, 1875, found that out of me hun
dred and ten deaf-mute children in
Halifax school fifty-six were the off
spring of first cousins; and Sir \1
Wilde, discussing in an appendix to his
“Aural Surgery” the causes of dcaf
mutencss, considers consanguinity may
be regarded as paramount. In conclu
sion, Mr. Darwin held that sneh a gen
eral consent as to the ill effects of cou
sin marriages would have far greateri
weight than his “purely negative” re
sults. But in no case had the investi
gation been free from flaws, for in no
case had it been really determined
what was the proportion of consan
guineous marriages in the whole popu
lation. He trusted, however, that
though he himself had been unable to
give a satisfactory solution to the ques
tion he had raised, her had said enough
to show that the assertion that- the
question had been already set at rest
could not be sustained, and he hoped
that his endeavor might lead more com
peteut investigators to take it up from
some other side.
A Kansas hy pocbondi iac, medi
tating upon the death of a dog
fancier in his neighborhood, gives
vent to the mournful thought:
“Our great met are petering out
sort o’ rapid like these times.
Whisky kills most on ’em; some
tumbles overboard, and ’casionally
one gets hung.”
A Itesuiaisceiice of the Pro
visional Gmsreis.
Under this head we qu tc the fol
lowing from the Atlanta Constitution :
Among the most active members of
the above named fatuous body were R.
15. Rhett, ol South Carolina, and C. M.
Conrad, of Louisiana, They seemed,
however, to be antipodes upon any and
every point raised in discussion ; so
much so that if Rhett had moved a
resolution that the •sun was in mid
heaven at 12 o’clock, M., Conrad would
have spent an hour iu arguing that it
was an entire mistake. One morning
upon assembling the chaplain was ab
sent, and Mr. Speaker Cobb found great
difficulty in procuring some suitable
person to open the sitting with prayer.
Alexander 15. Clilherall, thereupon, got
off the following capital hit :
No chaplain is oh hand to-day,
And Cobb is filled with care,
For want of someone used to pray.
Soon as lie takes the chair
lie eails to perform,
Who smilingly refuses—
’Tis not the mission at this time
The gallant Colonel chooses.
Bob Dixon, then, the Georgia clerk,
Fun sparkling in his eyes,
When thus the pray did shirk,
Proposed this compromise :
“ The post left vacant by (lie priest
Just call on Rhett to fill,.
For if the Lord don't answer him
I'm sure that Conrad leill!"
A Young Man’s Unpifnl.
There arc many young men who ate
in the habit of excusing (heir idlenc
and inefficiency with the plea that they
can do nothing without capital. The
lack of means is the ready reply they
make to every appeal to action; th
all 11 P°‘ ssess within theniselv .-
capita? ilitfß Jf -E'-I'T s-- bo:
tion to their other imagined virtues,
they would do great things in the
world ; they would astouish the natives
with the boldness and brilliancy of their
enterprises; they would grow im
□tensely rich, and then lay the world
under perpetual obligations of grati
tude by the magnificence of their bene
factions. This is the way they think
and talk, and they roll Che vainglorious
idea over in their idle minds until they
come to imagine that the world is an
immense loser by their poverty.
These persons forget one important
fact—that all capital is the product of
labor; that nearly all rich men in this
country were once poor; that nearly
every personal fortune they cau enum
erate is cither tiie product of itsowuer’s
toil and skill, or the representative of
his lather’s toil and skill.
How did the maker ai'these fortunes
manage to get along without capital ?
Had they spent the vigor of their
youth in idle and foolish lamentations
over their poverty, they would have
lived and died poor, and left nothing
but an inheritance of honesty behind
them, Capital allied to labor and skill
cau work wonders in the way of mater
ial enterprises; and the man who pos
sesses money finds it easy to make
money. But capital is not indispensi
hie to young men of the right stull. for
all this. There are other kinds of
capital besides accumulated money;
brains, muscle, industry, honesty, dili
gence, truth, fidelity, skill, tact, ener
gy, education —all these are capital,
aud all of them have a commercial
value, which the owner will be able,
sooner or later, to command in the
market. Provided with these, any
young man may make more than he
needs to spend, every year, and thus
have something, at the end of each
year, to invest as money capital. If he
needs money, let him go to work and
make it, and thus give proof of his
ability to use it profitably and judici
ously. If we go into any great city, or
into a prosperous agricultural district,
wc find the capitalists are those who
have wade their fortunes without out
side aid. They did not waste their
time in repinings at their poverty, and
in silly dreams of wliat they could do
if they only had money to do it with.
They went boldly and resolutely to
work ; they toiled, and thought, and
planned, and kept on toiling, thinking
aud planning, until their rugged hands
grasped the fortunes that others envy.
In nine cases out of ten, the man who
will not work for the capital he ima
gines he needs, would not know what
to do with it if he had it
FACETIOUS
—Something about dogs—fleas.
—♦ T'
—The home circle—walking around
with the baby at night.
—• —i
—ln what ship has the greatest
number of people been wrecked T
Courtship.
— rnrnmm* •
—Those who rise to eminence sud
denly are very apt to come back by the
□ ext train.
—Those old Greeks were pretty wise
fellows. In their vocabulary maiden
is translated nothing, and marriage is
gammon.
——■**- ♦
—“ No eetiu appu'ls in skool ours,’’
reads a sign on the blackboard of a
schoolkouse iu enlightened old Massa
chusetts, where education is supposed
to sit on the top rail and make faces at
ignorance.
—A father, in consoling his daugh
ter who had lost her husband’ said :
“ I don’t wonder you grieve for him,.'
my child; you will never find his
equal.” “I don’t know as I can,” re
sponded the sobbing widow, “ but I'll
do my best!” The futher felt com-'
foiled.
— *
—A good way to restore a man ap
parently drowned, is to first dry him
thuro -ghly inside and out, and then
clap a speaking trumpet to his ear and
inform him that his mother-in-law is
dead.
—As a rich and pretentious man wag
looking at some paintings which he pro
posed to buy, the dealer pointed to a
fine one, aud said, “ That is a dog after
Landseer.” “Is it, really ?” exclaimed
tlp&- j roT‘T —
A matt whose appearance indicated
that lie was staggering from the exces
sive weight of a brick in his hat, being
asked if he was a Son of Temperance,
replied, “Hie no—no relation—not
even an acquaintance.”
—“ Well, I always matte it a rule to
tell uiy wife everything that happens,”
said Brownwig. “Oh, my dear follow,
that’s nothiug !” said Smithwig, “ I
tell my wife lots of things that never
happen at all.”
—
—A Thomas street school hoy had'
just got his face fixed to sing, “ Let us
love one another,” when a snow-ball
hit him in the mouth and’so much con
fused him that be yelled : “ Rill Sykes
just do that agiu and I’ll chaw your
ear off.”
m
—An Indiana woman dreamed that
she saw her husband kissing the hirec*'
girl, and she got so mad over it that
she discharged the girl before breakfast
next morning
—A young lady wants to know why
she shall pay eight dollars for a pair of
silk hose, when she must keen them out
of sight ail the time.
A handkerchief of William Penn
is to he or; exhibition at the Centen
nial, anti a curi- us correspondent write.'
to ask if it is the original Penn wiper.
—“John! John! wake up; there’s
a burglar in the house!” said the wife.
John sat upright in bed. “ Burglar —•
b-u-r g-l-e-r—burgler” —and he rolled
over waiting for a harder word.
n-T a ■—- —
“ Oh ! I’ve loved before,” said a De
troit woman to her fourth husband, as
she took a handful of hair from his
head because he objected to hang out
the week’s washing:
—A hoy found a pocket-book, aud
returned it to its owner, who gave him
a five cent piece. The hoy lookpd at
the coin au instant, and then handing
it reluctantly back, audibly sighed as
he said, “ I can’t change it.”
A gentleman drove a sorrowful
looking horse into town last Saturday,
and stopping in front of Bank block.he
requested a small boy to hold him a
moment. “ Hold ’im !” exclaimed the
boy. “Just lean him up against the
post; that’ll hold ’im.”
Nevada brides won’t stand much'
foolishness at a wedding. Recent
ly one of them, while going up the
aisle of the Church,, stopped short
and kicked all the skin offthe shins
of a groomsman who trod on he? 1
train.
NO. 17