Newspaper Page Text
CHEROKEE ADVANCE.
VOLUME V.
THE CHEROKEE I0VINCF.
PUBLISHED EVERY "SAtURDAY !
Bj Si Ni HIHIE, Editor and Manger,
1*1 i\d m» men
I
— "We had rather be right than to be President.”
CANTON, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING. MARCH III, 1888.
NUMBER 16.
Ofice Up Stairs rorner Gainetrillr an■’
Mari'Un Street—over afore of f\ M. ' .. irr.v
Official Organ of ('herok'
.<*« Comity.
TER’’ —
Single copy, one - s
Single copy, si- /ear $1 26
Single copy * months (35
,th tie months 85
Pro'
_ •ewtonal and Business Cards.
o D. M ADDOX,
LOCAL AO HUT
VIBE AND LIFE INSURANCE CO
Offlee m store of J. M. McAFEK.
J. W. J4RVIA.
JEAVELERAND PHOTOGRAPHER,
CANTON, GEORGIA.
Can he found at hi* Gallery, at sip
time where he is always r* ady lo doyoor
work at a low price fjulylGtf
W. I. S G. I. TEASLY.
ATTORNEYS at LAW,
CANTON, GEORGIA.
Will give primpt attention to all bus-
idesa Intrusted to them. Will praeilc#
in all the courts ’of the crunty, a"d In
the Superior © urti of the Blue Ridg*
« lr cuH. [j,n7 ]T
B. F, PAYNE, P. P. Du°REF
PAYNE ADuPREE
Attorneys at Lsw,
CANTON,
GEORGIA.
L. J. (IARTRELL,
Attorney at Law,
8$ Whitehall Sc., Atlanta, Georgis
Will practice in the U. S. Circuit an
District Courts of Atlanta, and the So
prano and Superior C >urt of the State
W. NEWMAN.
JNO. T. ATT WAV
NEWMAN & ATTAWAY,
Attorneys at Law,
CANTON, : GEORGI*.
Will practice in the Superior Court of
ii u* *djoinlng counties. Protniii
attention Riven to all bnsineas place ! in
their hands. Offlee In the Court House,
H. H. McENTYRE,
Brick, Pla«i f erinR,
AMD STONE WORKMAN.
CANTON, GEORGIA.
I am fully prepared to do any kind
Masonry or P ast-ring at the lowest possibl.
rates, and solicit the patronage of tho«c de.
•Irina work in mv Bn*. h. H. McIntyre
JOHN H. BELlT
Carpenter,
Having permanently located in Car
ton—He i« now prepared to do all kin<G
of carpenter’s work. Buildiny and r« •
pairing promply done at natisfactorv
Prices. Parties contemplating buildiot’
will find it to their interest to getm-
prices before closing contracts with oth
er workmen. J. H. BELL.
TIN SHOP.
-J. H. STEADMAN,
Manufacturer ol all Tinware, roofing
guttering, stove pipes, gas pipes, stean
pipes and anything made of tin, etc.
Repairing.—Will repair any and ev
erything from a tin cup to a forty hors-
engine at abort notloe. All charges low
and work warranted. Marietta street
Canton, Ga. [mar25 ’82 ly
MEDICAL CARD
DR. N. 8EWELL returns thanks to the
citizen* of Canton and vicinity, for their lib
eral patronage.
Being permanently located, will continue
to practice medicine, anrgery and midwi’en.
Hoping by industry, energy and str ct aj>
plication to business, to merit an increased
patronage and confidence.
Office in Dr. W. A. Green’s Drag Store
Residence adjoining W. H. Warliok.[nov3
J.M BURTZ,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW
CANTON, GEORGIA.
Office in the Court House. [mar25 1)
COME
A. 1ST 2D
SEE ME.
I HA VE just opened a Complete Stock
direct from the manufactory of Fancy
Candies, Mixed Candies, Plain Candies.
Crackers of all sorts Also Fresh Raisins,
Nuts, Oysters, Canm d Goods, and every
thing wanted in this line. I respectful
ly ask patronage of my friends, both in
the store and job work. Blanks, Deeds,
Ac. always on band.
CLAUDE F. EDGE.
n,vi*, im,
-BY-
G. W. EVANS,
Gaiiieiville St net, : CAN.ON, jr A
* ear the Railroad Depot.
Horsef and Buggies at rcasonab’i
pnces. •
Carriages and H >reen always re ady.
Will send to any part of the country
with careful drivers and gentle teams.
All kinds ol stock le i and well carec
or.
HAULING AND DECAYING
lone at lew rates.
Customers will be politely waited or
• t all hours, dav or night.
G. W. FVAN8,
nov2G ’81 til Proprietor.
1 UK —
’CONSTITUTION’
FOIt 1882-3.
fa better equipped in every sense than
ever before to maintain its position
IN THE FRONT RANKS OF SOUTH FAN
JOURNALISM.
It calls the attention of the readim-
oublic to the folio ving points that car
be claimed. Namely, that it is
1. The largest and best paper in Geor-
is, A’nSsma, the Carollnas, Florida and
Mississippi.
2. More reading mattes than any pa
per in the South Atlantic States.
8. The fullest telegraphic service and
latest news.
4 The blightest, best and fullest ocr-
respondence.
5. The completcst election returns,
6. Verbatim Legislature reports.
7. Official Supreme Court reports.
The Great Georgia Paper— Better than
fnU
Ever.
No Intelligent Georgian
can do without it.
Every Georgian should take a paper fron
the Capital during the next 3 months.
The Dailv Constitution $10 per an
num; $2 50 3 months; $1 00 1 month.
Weekly $1 60 a year; Club of 10 $1 25
vith tree enpv to getter up of club;
Ciubs of 20 $1 00, with free copy.
Address The Constitution,
Atlanta, Ga.
C. D. MADDOX,
ATTORNEY at LAW,
CANTON. GEORGIA.
J. M. HARDIN,
House, Sign, Cart la ere
—AND —
Orn&nental Fainter.
FRESCO & SCENIC ARTIST.
CANTON. GEORGIA,
CEO. R. BROWN,
Attorney at Law,
Will practice in the Superior Court*
of Cobb, Milton, Forsyth, Pickens and
Dawson © u tides, and i i the Superior
ind Justice Courts of Cherokee.
Office over Job. M. McAfee’s store.
Special attention given to the collec
tion of claims.
Business respectfully solicited.
Jan 13, 1883.
A NEW W0KK SHOP.
D. W. Bridges has opened a shop one
loor shove Geo. Lathem’s store
builda houses, mills. Bridge* makes and
repairs all kinds of furniture, and does
nytbiDg that can be done with wood.
Gill and see bim. [janI883.f
PAINTING!
BRIDQES & F0BRISTEB,
House ail Sip Pal ter,
Will paint wagons, buggiea, furniture,
and nil other plain ann ***>#▼ painting
Se» or address J. W. BRIDGES cr J B
FORR'STER Canton, G«. [feblO ’83
R. E. CASON,
DENTIST,
Has now located in Gartersvllle, H e
solicits patronage from bis old friend
and offers his professional services to all
feb3’83t<]
eslngiun I- IlTlug
TUB DBVN.
BT JAMBS W. U1LBT.
O, tbs dram I
There Is soms
Intonation In th-r gnira
Monotony ol utterancs tbst strikes the anlrtt dumb,
As wc bear
Through theeloar
Jnd unclouded stm-aiihsrs,
Thy rumbling palpitation, roll lu upon ths earl
There’s • pert
in the art
Of thins avste-lhrolihlns hear
Thai thrill* • aouicthlug lo us that awaken, with a
■tart.
And, tba rhyme
With the chins
And esactitude of lima,
Goee marching on to glory to tlijr melody subllm*.
And the gue-t
Of the breeat
That thy rolling roha of ret
ti • patriotic aplrit aa a Continental drcaaei;
And he loom.
From the glooms
Of a century of tomtit,
And the blond he spilled at Lea
beauty bluouia.
And his eyre
Wear ths gulas
Ol • nature purr and wire;
a.ad the lore of them is lilted to a aomcthlng lu the
aklea.
That la bright
Red and whit*.
With a blur of atnrrr lluht,
As It laufha In silken rtpplee to the brve* • -lay and
night.
Them are deep
Hushce creep
O’er the pnlaee is they leap.
And the murmur I,Inter growing, on the aUeiice
fall, asleep,
While the prayer
Rising there
Wills the sea and earth and air
As • herttags to Freedom’s sou, and daughter, every
where.
Then with eound
As profound
Ae the thundering, resound,
Come thy wild rererberatloua in a tbroo that al-tkes
the ground,
And s ery,
Flung on high
Like the flag It flutters by,
Wings rapturously upward UII U nettles In the aky.
0, the drum!
There Is aems
In’onation in thy grum
Monotony of utterance- mat atrikee the
•ind we n<
spirit dumb,
ear
Through the clear
And unclouded alinmphere
Thy rumbling palpitations roll in upon ths ear 1
THE FESTIVE OYSTER.
At the New York Microscopical Society
Professor Samuel Lockwoood, Ph. D.,
Secretary of the New Jersey State Micro
scopical Society, read a paper on the
“Natural History of the Oyster.” After
speaking of the grout systems in physi|f ^ Yor - ^vessel was in ftomjhtgluul,
ology known ns the negative, tho profess- ‘ ““ ’
sor took up the ingestion, respiration and
HE WOULD GO TO SEA.
Yhe Hamunrs sf t ninmnnder tiarrlagp’a
Keyhnod
' Commaudev Gorringe, of > United
StntoH Navy, is dosoondtd from nu an
cient Swedish family named Goring*.
Hia lather went to the Barlmdoes imme
diately after taking his degree at Oxionl,
slid there settled down its a clergyman
4f the Church of England. He ninrried
A daughter of a fellow clergyman ; and it
'eas in this charming sea-home Hint tho
two young people roared their live chit-
dri ll. Tliey had everything heart could
Wish for—position, means, health and
prosperity. The worst tronhlea they had
to encounter were vicarious—for they suf
fered only through tlieir parishioners—
and their days of joy grew to monthx ami
yeara, and still the sun shone.
Tile first jar came when the second l>oy,
Harry, walked into liis father’a study one
day and announced that ho could not
stand school-going, but must bo a sailor,
lidding with the honesty that has never
left him ;
“I tell you, papa, because if you do
not lot me go, I will run nwoy.”
Mr. Gorringe thought it over, and
next morning had a talk with the lniy
out of which grew tho following treaty ;
Ho was to return to school and stay one
year, which would bring him to tho age
/if fourteen ; then, if h« still felt Iuh hap
piness lay in a sea life, ho w as to bo
•hipped with a friend of his father’s to
team nis chosen profession. Tho subject
waa then dropped, and matters went on
so quietly thut Mr. Gorringe forgot all
aliout it Not bo tho boy; on tho last
day of tho year of probation, he wont to
his father and quietly said ;
“Tho year is up, papa. •
“What year, my boy ?”
“My year of waiting and now I
want to go to sea.”
Poor gontloman He went in dismay
to hia wife—aa the wisoBt man will do
when family puzzles ariso—and it wan
decided in oolemn conclave to aeud the
boy a suiloring under a captain who
wouid disgust him with sea-life once and
fTORT OF “RIP VAN WINKLE.”
circulation of tho oyster, which he illus
trated with the holp of the blackboard
and diagrams. In regard to tho inges-
tive system, he showed the oonrse which
the water took in conveying food to tho
mouth of tho oyster, and described tho
action of the lips of the oyster in elimi
nating tho food from the water.
The position of the stomach was then
shown with the involuted intestines, and
where the faccea were discharged at a
spot whero tho effete wator that had
been taken to tho mouth, returned in e
stream, thus carrying the foecul refuse
out of the shells. Further on he showed
the peculiar internal structure of the in
testines, by which the great surface wna
mode available for the absorption of food
into tho general system.
In regard to tho respiration, ho showed
how tho water entered the gills, and by
a series of innumerable millions of little
laches in action, like oars, carry the water
through the minutest part of the gills,
eliminating the oxygen from tho con
tained air. In respect to the circulation
he showed tho heart in pulsation, com
posed of the ventricle and auricle, the
latter receiving the aerated blood from
the gills, giving the same to the ventricle,
which by the two aortas distributed the
blood through the entire surface of the
animal.
He Bpoke of the oyster os having some
little capacity for education (tho Profes
sor is Superintendent of Public Instruc
tion in Monmouth County, N. J.,) in that
in a singular way it can adjust itself to
many new environments, and then went
on to describe the building up the oys
ter’s house—its shells. He told how the
Bhells were formed and how the age of
an oyster can bo told by tho shoots or
layers of the shells, by tho hingo lines
and by the position of the abductor
muscle.
The Professor then described the com
panions of the oyster and their habits,
detailing their efforts in gathering food
lor the mollusc, and also die enemies of
the oyBter, such ae the drain fish, that
grinds them up, destroying millions of
them in a night; of the drill, that bores
a hole through the shell and then sucks
out the life and body, unless the oy ster
rebels and defeate the attack by plugging
up the hole. The sea-star and the couch
were added to the list of enemiee, each
one’s operations begin minutely described,
A Swindling Where.—A roulette
wheel in u Cincinnati guinbling room was
stolen, and the thieves turned out to be
rival gamblers, who desired to have one
made just like it. They testified in court
that it was a new invention, containing
a spring by tho means of which its vic
tims could be lobbed at will, the dealer
being able to make the boll stop on
whatever number he pleased.
commanded by an old commercial friend
of tho pastor; and to him he unfolded
the case. Ho shipped his son as cabin-
boy; and after putting a sum of money
and a kit of “store-clothcj” in tho cap
tain’s charge, bade adieu to him and
wont home lieuvy-hearted.
Captain Gorringe says his first taste of
sea-life tame os he hung over the rail,
with a lump in his throat, and looked
and looked at his home. As he gazed at
it through a haze of tears that twisted
and distorted its outlines into all sorts of
fantastic shajies, a rough hand took bin
by the car, and a rough foot kicked him
forward with an xith-garnishcd order to
go aloft, or else take a taste of rope's end.
After this he did see sea-life in its most
trying phases, but reached England un
dismayed, and was there arrested by liis
uncle, and shut up until a letter from tho
West Indies assured him that his nephew
huil not run away, and that tho whole
sociul system of the Barbadoes hud not
gone to wreck, even though its pastor’s
son was shipped as a sailor before the
mast on a merchantman.
lly the time this letter came the first
ship had sailed; but the plucky boy en
listed on another and started for India.
Connecticut Valley Sandstone.
Mr. Elias Nason reports, in a Boston
paper, that some very fine specimens of
tracks have lately been uncovered in the
famous quarry at Turner’s Falls, Moss.
One of the slabs has on it a scries of
16-inch tracks (three toed), the stride
measuring five feet. Mr. Nason wus per
mitted to take with him several beautiful
specimens, one of whipli exhibits the
delicate tracery of the feet of on insect
escaping over the soft mud; another ex
hibits the ripples of tho wavo, another
the drops of rain, and others have well-
defined imprints of the tracks of liirds.
He also saw the impressions of sor era!
kinds of ferns and grasses. Mr. Staugh-
ton, who is working this geological mine,
considers some of the largest slabs to be
wort h from $600 to $1,000; but the cost
of excavating them is heavy.
This whole region is supposed to have
Ijoen originally covered by the sea. As
the waves receded, birds and quadrupeds
whose species are extinct left the impres-
nions of their feet upon the mud, which,
Hardening into stone, has held them
through the ages for the examination of
the scientists of the present day. Com
pared with these tracks as to age, the
pyramids of Fgypt »rc but ps of yi-nter-
lay. ^
—Mrs. Maria Baldwin, of Jerusalem,
Yates County, N. Y., married John A.
Enos in October, 1882, on condition that
ae would give her his note for $3,000.
After a few months she left him on ac
count of his cruelty. When she sued
him to recover the amount of the note
the jury gave her a verdict in full,—N.
Y. Tina, .
There sccnis to lx> good reason for l»c-
licving that tho story ot ‘Rip Van
Winkle’’ existed in similar form long ls>-
i fore Washington Irving gnvo it to (i t
| American public. Mr. Griffis, in hir
I work entitled “Tho Mikado's Empire,’
says: “Tho story (of Chinese origin) is,
as told by Japanese story-tellers, as fol
lows: Iat-wen was a pious wood-cutter,
who dwelt at the base of the mnjcHticni<d
holy mountain Tendai, tho most glorious
jH-ak of tho Naulin range in Chiun
Though ho thought himself familiar with
the paths, lie for some reason on#, day
lost his way, and wandered about, baring
bis ax with him. Ho did-not 'bare,
however, because the lioauty of tho land
scape, tho (lowers and the sky seemed to
jxissokh liis senses, and he gave himself
up to tho ecstasy of the hour, enjoying
all tho pleasant emotions of holy ooti-
t< niplation. All at onoe ho heard u
crackling sound, and immediately n fox
ran out boforo him and into tho thicket
again.
“ Tho wood-outter started to pursue it.
Ho ran some distance, when suddenly ho
emerged'into a space whero two lovely
ladies, seated on the ground, were en
gaged iu playing a gnmo of checkers.
The bumpkin stood still and gazed with
all liis sight at tho wonderful vision of
’oeauty la-fore him. Tho players apjionred
to Ikj unaware of tho presence of an in
truder. The wood-cutter still stood look
ing ou, and soon lteeumo interested in
the game us well us tho fair players.
After some minutes, os ho suppuBixl, lie
lietliought himself to return. On at
tempting to move away, his limbs folt
very stiff, and liis ax-handle fell to pieces.
Stooping down to pick up tho worm-eaten
fragments, ho was amazed to find, iustead
of his shaven face of tho morning, a long
white Itoard covering his bosom ; while,
on feeling his hood, he discovered on it
a mass of silken, white hair. The
wriukled old man, now dazed with won
der, hobbled down tho mountain to his
native village.
“He found the streets the same, but
tho houses were tilled with new faces;
crowds of ehildrun gathered round him,
teasing and laughing at him ; tho (logs
barked at the stranger, and tho piu-cuta
of the bliildmn shook their hoods and
wondered nraong themselves as to
whence tho apparition hod oomo. Tho
old man, in tho agony of despair, naked
for his wife and relatives. Tho incredu
lous people sot him down as a fool,
knowing notliing of whom ho asked, and
treating his talk os the drivel of lunatic
senility. Finally, au old grandam hob
bled up and fluid she was a descendant of
the seventh generation of a man named
Lu-wen, Tho old man groanod aloud,
and, turning his back, retraced liis
weary steps to the mountain again. He
was never heard of more, and it is be
lieved he entered into tho company of
the immortal hermits and spirits of tho
mountain.”
B. M. Baumann, a traveler, says ;
“I may add that during niv recent:
rambles in Jupiui, not only did I hear
• the tale, as told by Mr. Griffis, con-
| firmed by the natives, but I was also
i shown a Netsuke or ivory representation
' of Rip as a very old man with long hair
and beard, leaning on an ax.”
A Monopoly of ’40.
Mr. Henry I#. Goodwin, of East Hart
ford, Conn., made a good share of his
large fortune by a curious sort of mo
nopoly. He was a California “forty-
niucr,” and ~in (hose early days, when
Ban Francisco and its vicinity had a
wretchedly poor supply of drinking
water, he was one evening charged half a
dollar by a man who mvned a well for a
drink for his oxen. That made bim mad
and he resolved that he too would be
come known as man-who owns a-well.
With the aid of his partner, an engineer,
he bored eighty feet deep on liis town
lot and there struck an inexhaustible
supply of the best water yet found on the
whole coast. Then he established a free
drinking fountain for all pas-ers-by but
for all othei purposes he sold the water,
six gallons for a cent. Cattle owners
could have their stock watered for fifty
cents a yoke per week. For a long time
everyone who wanted pure water had to
go to Goodwin’s well tor it, and a hand
some fortune was realized therefrom.—
Hartford (('onn.) Currant.
Tho Mail in Early Days-.
Boston's first newupaper, the New*.
Letter, contained the following adver
tisement in one of its early issues :
By order of tlie Postmaster General of North
America. These are to give Notice, Thai on
Monday night the Hixth of this Irutant, Decem
ber, the Western Post Between Boston find New
York, sets ont at onco a Fortnight tho Thru)
Winter Months of December, January and Fen-
rnary, and to go Alternately from Boat on to
Havhrook and Hartford to Exchange tire Mayle
of" LetUrs with the New York Ryder on Satur
day Night the i 1th Currant. And the Becond
Turn he seta out at Boston on Monday Night
the 200) Currant to meet the New York Ryder
at Hertford ou Haturday Night the 20th Cur
rant to Exchange Mayle*. And all person* that
send I/etters from Bojton to Connecticut from
and after the 13th Instant are liereby Notified
first to pay the Postage on the name.
Texas claims a goose sixty-five year#
old. The Baltimore Day wants to know
wh«r« that goose was during tbs wax.
• WIT AND WISDOM.
Fakn if.; You aie right It is better to
return a kiss for a blow. And a great
dew sweeter.—ChiHttian at Work.
A s.an in Syracuse boasts that he hao
Ltd &02 colds ii tho head in one year,
lin'd Ix-tter lent his hoad tor nn ioe-box
Q >T-J X., “A court of common plots
1/ what I call my atoro i
An, the pleas yon hear the most are ihssst
*Good frienda, plraae thut tho door.’**
A man in Tompkins County, N. Y.,
thought lie hod discovered tho secret of
preserving eggs, but after 120,000 had
sjtoiled ou his hands ho concludod that ho
hadn't.
If you meet a lion just right he will
drop his toil uiui fine, hut there are so
many chances that ho will drop you in
stead that the meeting had lietturbe post
poned ns long as possible.
IIorhkh sometimes appear to lie almost
human. One in Ht. Louis chews toliao-
co. Tho habit does not show a superior
intelligence, but it illustrates whnt •
horse oun do when associated with men.
What is the difference between econ
omy and meanness ? Well, if n man
squeezes to save a little money, he colls
it economy; his ncighliors call it mean
ness. It dopeuds ou who does tho call*
iug.
A new IxHik is called “ How to Keep a
Store.” It is a work of several hundred
pages, aud life is too short to read it.
The best n ay to keep a store is to adver
tise judiciously, and thus prevent it fall
ing into the hands of the sheriff.—Nor-
rlitown Herald,
Vknnor’h almnnno for 1883 lies before
us. Don’t misunderstand us. We don’t
mean to say-well, what we do mean is
that we have roooived a copy, and that it
contains sixty pages of statements re
garding tho extent, quality and durabil
ity of next year's weather.—Texas Sift-
Ingt.
Illinois is worrying over the question,
“Who shall step into David Davis's
shoes?” Tho next Senator may step
into David's shoea, hut by tho great
American desert, he’d better keep oat of
the old man's trousers, if he want* to be
found in time to draw any pay.—Hawk-
eye.
A little fellow being told by a young
man to get off bis knee—he waa too
heavy to hold iu that way, made quite a
sensation among tho persons present by
yelling book : “ Too heavy, hey ? Bister
Sul weighs a hundred pounds more than
I, and you held her on your knee for
four hours Inst night.”
Amonu some old pajiers sent to the
Austin jai), says Sift Inge, waa the elec
tion circular ol one of the local candi
dates. One ot the prisoners, who has
been in the jail tor tho last year, looked
at it, and said: “Look here, boys, this
is not intended tor us. It is addressed
‘To the people at largo.’ That don’t
mean us."
One Kentucky stage robber success
fully plundered the driver aud threa
passengers, rifled the mail, took a wheel
off tho coach, and calmly went his way.
Hud there lioen two or three more pass
engers amt a guard, he would havo sent
his boy to do tho job, while he went
down to Texas to do some man’s work.
A Kansas man, upon being aroused
from his bod at 6 a. m. to split some
kindlings, indulged in heathen language,
and wished sometliing would come along
and convert everything combustible into
kindling wood. Next day a cyclone
tune howling along and knocked his
house into kindlings, and yet he waa not
satisfied. It is impusiblo to please soma
en.—Norristown Herald.
Overworked Americana: A travel-
stained tramp was sitting under the pro
tecting engis ol a stone-wall with a news
paper in his hand. "Yes,” he remarked,
sadly, “Herbert is right; overwork ia
what’s raising tho deuce with ns Ameri
cans. But us long as I live it shall be
my endeavor to stand os a living rebuke
to the spirit of unrest which animates so
many vt our people, and which is hiding
so roauy of our young and promising
men ui early graves,”—Boston Trass-
script.
The Rise of Oleomargarine.—In tho
census returns ol 1870 oleomargarine
does not uppear. According to a census
bulletin just issued the amount made in
the United States in 1880 reached a value
of nearly seven million dollars. This in
dicates lively progress of the infant in
dustry during the post decade in spite of
the legislative and other obstacles thrown
in its way. The census of 1890 will
doubtless show a far greater advance of
the new product in the zealous competi
tion with its old-fashioned rival.
^
That seems to me very great and
noble—that power of respecting a feel
ing which he does not share or under-
stand.—George Kliot
The smaller the husband, thebiggw
tho bundle* his wife ttftlw him cony.