Newspaper Page Text
OX THE TRACK AGAIN.
A> FNHINJ'ER TFl.T,-> nnv ME OI1T
MAD AM) LEFT HIS HIKE 1ft IN.
DIANA.
ile is Advised to Wush Bis Face ami Go
Bark East at Once and >ee What C an be
Done.
[From the Milwaukee Sun. ]
An engineer on B. & M. railway in
Nebraska writes as follows: “In 1878 I
was working on a farm in Indiana, and
was considered a very steady boy until I
was about twenty years old. In the
meantime I made the acquaintance of
one of the best girls in the neghbor
hood; we had been keeping company
for some time, and 1 thought more of
that girl than I did of my life. Now
about this time I fell in with a lot of
wild boys, and we used to ‘ ‘paint the
town red,” so to speak. One day while
under the influence of liquor, my girl
happened to see me. She did not say
anything to me about it at the time, but
the next Sunday, when I went to spend
the evening with her, she greeted me as
usual and asked me in. She then told
me she had seen me while I was in an
ShatTdirnofhOTe^v^rr^S ^ Zd
iboZbt Sd See that h i
l&r if I henZorth not ud wo“d and let
liquor alone, henceionn we we womu be oe
strangers. But if at any tune, I made
np my mind to be a man, I would be
received by her with a hearty welcome,
and she would do all in her power to
th? the dm^to time to 6 have have he“ ner a twit twit m mf me (as J.
thought) of being drunk, and I left her
house in Dot a very good humor. After
thinking the matter over, I was so
ashamed of myself that I made up my
mind that she would never see me in
that condition again. The next day I
packed my grip and started west, and
have been out in this country ever
since. I have lived up to my resolution,
and I now have saved up enough money
to get me a quarter section of land, and
have a snug little bank account. And
ill through these years 1 have never
'em© across a girl that came up to the
one I left in Indiana, in my estimation.
-fly love for her has never been
quenched. The otoel day I heard
through an old friend of mine that she is
still single. If I could call that girl my
own, it would be the happiest moment
of my life, but under the circumstances
it seems I haven’t the nerve to attempt
to make np with her. If you can help
me out, I would not only be very thank
ful to you, but would promise you a big
feed, and a week’s good chicken hunt
ing,_if you can come out this way this
Well, Mr. Engineer, tee. jjp,
the biggest fool of the whole lot. That
girl is worth walking on your knees for,
all the way from Nebraska to Indiana.
She did not get mad when she saw you
drunk, and treated you like a gentle- told
man, as she knew you to be, and
you if you wanted to be anything to her
you had got to quit drinking, and brace
up, and she would she help felt, you. Poor she
thing 1 imagine how after
had sko.A you that you held her heart
in your grasp, to h$ye get mad and
light out. You cared' were more on^glthose fO your smart own
•
feelings than you did for the feelings of
one of the best girls in while all
Hoosierdom. And for six years,
you have been looking for another girl
to take her place in .your heart, and
couldn’t find one, she has been trying to
avoid seeing any one that would take
your place in her heart. That is always
the way, the girls will be the truest, and
suffer heartaches and tortures, while the
boys go all o\er the world and forget.
fihe lias been noble all the time, and you
tro just beginning to be. If that poor
girl has got the nerve to stand up against
the pleadings of Indiana young men
who want her to marry them, and remain
true to an idol of her heart who got
drunk six years ago and left her in a
huff, you, you great big stand-up-alone,
that can manage a locomotive with one
band, ought to have nerve enough to
write to her and tell her wliat a fool you
have been, and how you have loved her
all the time, and how every night, as
yon have run your engine in the moon
light hundreds across of the people prairies, in with hand, the lives
of your you
have thought more about her than all
the rest, and that the vision of the poor
little girl away back in Indiana, with
fears in her eyes, has broke you up
Te^lZr than accidents The mZorv^f or loss of sleep “e
Sher that eiZs toTou^when her
a gen 8 ‘ you did
, ..w •
Zd “ B #’vou could havJher for your wife
you would wouiu be ue i happier i P than vou would
-
LTadTpaX ZSoK 1 Z7
™ Or vou might leave out the
Tell her that if she is willing, yon will
come back to Indiana so quick it will
make your head swim, and she can see
that vou have braced up, with her help;
for the love of that girl, and what she
said to you at the time yon left, is what
has doue it, and dou’t you forget it,
And if you write such a letter to her ,
that little girl’s heart will jump so it
will scare her, and it will emarge and
expand so it will break her corset
strings, but she won’t care for a corset
string or two, as long as her engineer is
coming back. Say, boy, you can be
mighty happy if you play your cards
right just this one hand You have
played in hard luck and with poor judg
ment for six years, and have not taken a
trick. If you lead right now, got you to can get
win the game. But you have
up gall enough to first understand that
you have been a fool for six years and
make up your mind that at last you
have learned sense. In regard chicken? to pay,
we can t come out shooting
tkis vear but vou can do us a favor.
v ’ ‘'will fellov
o. mp j -5" von see a poor
J
walking on the truck with a bundle done
up in a handkerchief. He will be tirea
-and look sick, and yon wifi hear mm
cough, and you. will know that be has
been out to Colorado to cure his con¬
sumption, and has failed, and he is try¬
ing to get home, in the States, without
money, to die in the arms of his old
mother, or to see the giri he loves. You
may take him on tc your engine, fix a
soft seat ia the eab. give him a portion
of your lunch, and help him along to
k EMORY’S LITTLE CATHARTIC PILLS Mvadaoh*.
we the BEST EVER MADE few Covllven***, lndlg»««on. followed by
One pood dune ot three or £oar Emory 'a Little Cathartic PiUd, one
pill every night for a woek or two, makes the human machinery run as regular
as dock work; they purify the blood and put new life in a broken-down body.
Purdy VesotaWe, Harmless, Pleasant, Infallible, the youngest child may take
Sim tiem. Sold by all Druggists and Medicine Dealers at IS Cta. a Box, or by mad.
STANDARD CURE CO., Proprietors, 197 Peart St„ N. Y.
Emory’s Little Cathartic are more than is olaimed: they provr, to bo tbo
boat lltt ever used here. Worth twice the money asked.—W. w. H. uo her.
Harmony Grave, Ga.-Emory’s Little Ca*har«o are tlie most popular of ail
KMORY’3 LITTLE tho Cathartics.—W m. Bnarot>, Mills Eivor, N. C.-My aged mother used ono
CAVWAflTIC PILLS bus with wonderful results.—N. W. Baker, LocustGrove, Ohio. -1 recommend
pr??ar«l from them. — Job* Coxxikr. M. D., Athens, Texas. - They are excellent. —It. Benson,
£rt Jickson. Miss.-They are unexpolled.—M rs. Flizabrth Ksyser, Moberly^BlO^
IhLlSlA HS^v APPLF. Pills,
Emory's Standard Cure
tbe end 0 f your rnn, and if the conduc
tor 0 f your'train doing kicks the alxuit. job for, it, and tell him that
wbo you are
he can pnnc h the poor sick bov’s fare
out o£ the Sun. That will be all right
n(m< you go home and write to that
irl b e f ore vo u wash the smut off your
{ace .
The Bloody Band Print.
one of pinkerton s successful plans
to dete ct a mu rderer.
, . p; nkpr ^the f OI1 ’ H perseverance 07 ^ 0^88 and
■ secrete
in all his undertakings. If he could not
accomplish his purpose by one plan he
immediately resorted to another. His
mind was wonderfully j fertile in expedi
’ ra e thing for him to
. , n , ■ d Bet b j- m ; ud ori
^ y can form 80me { dea o£ hi s
^ • , md oapacity f for planning John- iu
of the cok)1 . (M murde rer
son, of South Carolina, who killed an
' d i )rnt al circum
J th t
8 •
1, pj nkerton „ as nrettv positive
man’s acom’nlete cnilt buHt was imnos- Zi
: to obtain obtain a compMechain chain ot^ of
° ,Zf his "nine Tohnson mZtrans refused fo? to fall into
^fZ^sion set him an
which was Pinker
, 1 , ’ After weeks of patient but
k a novel plan was hit upon,
' murderer was surprised one morn
. 8 ho went to take a plow into a
to fheld find it snattered with blood In
where he was to work tlie
iume found little wCs pools of Wood
■ « j he i to plowWhen
, . . . , b 8 table he was start
f^ • o^ i stabfe i ( j v i d“or mpr iut of a
hand the Every
ruke or ot p er £arm implement
J. nicked up X had blood on it.
wh naralfzed cam0 0 mar derer was
P with fear that his teeth
: ftn q 1|e Wim a f ra id to go
Z ^tim _ believed that the spirit P of
h,8 ^f^ wa Xe haunt hit ng assistant h m
te and noted
“ t t fi tZv. in a ft. r a S fashion and there
a t e ruoof the next day ^
, , . jj 0 p a q
himself rather than endure the
f j? „ n jji v conscience. I need
t P t at the blood marks which
, , t)|0 mxirf i ere r’8 guiltv soul
^ e £‘. WO rk of the detectives and not
{ P .. • phitadelnhia —.( Press. ’
Aristocratic Sheep.
-—#—
The building where the Central Park
sheep are housed is not a model fold. It
looks more like a fortress than a sheep
fold, and it seems to have been con
structed under the misapprehension conveniences
that sheep require all the The fold is
0 f the human family. block
pierced with port-holes, like a
house or the gun-deck of a man-of-war.
These holes, however, are now stopped
up with cobble-stones, bnt before this
was done there were many mishaps; tho
lambs, in a spirit of investigation, where often
squeezed through the holes to see
they led, and fell into the depths below,
a distance of eight or ton feet.
At either end of the fold, there are
rooms with fine panels and furnished
with oaken book-cases and tables. The
intention of the builders was to make
libraries of these rooms; but the sheep
j u the Park, though they do a great
j ea l 0 f thinking, and no doubt at times
hold long conversations with one
another, or with Shep, their guardian,
don’t care much for reading, and don’t
require any books. This fact, however,
seems not to have become apparent to
(.he builders until after the library was
completed, and these costly rooms have
been used, not as reading-rooms, bnt for
storing the wool that is clipped from
the sheep. parallel
Inside the fold, there are two
rows of pens, each having beneath it a
diminutive row of the same shape,
These pens are filled with hay in the in
<3oor season-when the ground is covered
leep, w ith snow—the tall £ pens being ior the
the short ones the lamb, - fit.
Nicholas.
-JiSSTssr
Close to , the ,, tt United jt at States l n Mint in -
Philadelphia, on the roof of a place of
business, there is a small bird-box which
is occupied by a pugnacious English
sparrow Among the girls and even
among the men, in the Mint, nearly all
of whom bring their dinners wih them,
this particular sparrow has been long a
favorite because of his boldness, and so
freely does he fly m the window and flit
m the back door of the smeltmg-room
to pick up crumbs, that they Jocularly
say he is the only;one who has the “free
ran of the Mnu.
A short time ago a boy in tbe building
went where the sparrow has maue his
nest, and peeping into the box to see if
there were any of the young folks at
home—as boys love to do—he was sur
prised up*n drawing his fingers out to see
(hem sparkling in the sunshine, bo he
seize d the box and carried it down stairs,
where it was found that the inside wag
not only flecked with gold dust, but that
the accumulations of tne precious metal
had formed a sort of carpet of gold, the
Paving a veritable bonanza.
The sparrow had gold reguiarlybeen feathers caarymg
off quantities of dust m its
which it shcKik oft when it made its toilet
{ _____ n -be morniLg. The nest is being as
saved,
A HAGismATE at Syracuse, N. Y.,has
decided that the tanning of a ham an
skin ia a crime, and that the persons
who engage in that business are liable
to the same punishment ....... as grave rob
her*. Schoolboys should cat this out .
and show it to their teachers.
ROWS THE ST. UWHENCE.
HOIV THE EDITORS ll'ENT DOWN
THE RAPIDS IS FLOW illONTltKAI,.
flow They Mnnnge the Steamer—Tlie IV
c‘uliar Sensation Experienced by the
Passengers.
“Several years ago, ’ says a traveling
editor ‘‘the e writer went * through j? Howe’s
a Ican o{ au ther artv gave
ou t B0 completely from fear at the
gloomy surroundings that bis entreaties
to be taken out at first aroused the
laughter of his friends, and then their
alarm, as he was so demoralized by the
cavern that he entirely lost his mental
balance; yet it was said that he was an
old soldier and a brave man. So with
the rapids; delicate women often take
delight in the lurches of the vessel and
the visible signs of danger, while strong
men retire below, though this is rare,
the most of the passengers entering
fully into tho enjoyment of the scene,
Long Sault Island forms two channels
iu the river at this place, the rapids be¬
mg on the Canada side, while the Ameri
can channel, though e swift, can be used
^ ^ ^ The turbulent water s
can be seen before the rapids are actu
Potions ally reached. The passengers take their
upon the sides of tho boat,
bolding on to the rails, and the down
ward rush commences—a slide down a
bill of water nine miles long. Four
good men are at the wheel. ‘But sup
pose the rope should break?’ wo asked.
‘Oil, we have two men at the iron tiller,’
was the replv. mL'only ‘Suppose that breaks?’
But the shrugged his shoul
ders expressively and rolled his eyes. The
fact is if the steamer should set broad
side on, she would capsmo on the first
rock slic struck and go rolling down
stream, but tho chances are against it.
The steam is slowed down at first, until
a fair start is taken, and contrary to the
general impression it is not shut off, but
soon turned on in full force, ’way. to enable
the vessel to keep steerage Tho
bubbling water now whirling about in
the roar, the watchful appearance of the
men at the wheel, ’alongside, and the occasional
rock that appears give one a
sense of excitement and danger that is
quite agreeable. Some faces about ore
pale; a man has his arm wound about a
rope, the other around his wife; some
elmg desperately to the rail. Nine
miles of this. Quick turns, so sudden tbe
that at times it would seem as if
steamer would swing broadside on, but
away sh« shoots in the new channel,
headed for another target that looms up
on shore, for this is what these cuv ous
objects are that appear here and there,
ant i by keeping the ball on our bow
headed for those for certain distances
the rocks of the channel are avoided,
Tlie sensation is a singular one. slid- One
man sa id that he felt as if he was
ing down a hill on his back; another as
if he was falling; while a iady was so
affected by it that she became dizzy. bill In
fact, the steamer is sliding down a
G f water, and at the same time the vari
ously moving currents give the hull a
curious quivering motion hardly de¬
scribable.
“ ‘The first steamer that went through
here,’ said an officer of the boat, wiping
tlie spray from his face, ‘had a good
deal of nerve; they went down with the
chances all against them. It was the
old Passport. The trip was made in
1848, and a man by the name of Me
Ganon, who is still a pilot on the river,
h e hl the wheel. The first steamer that
ma< i e a n the rapids was the Gill. She
went down by accident, they say; got
going and they couldn’t stop her, so they
crowded on steam and let her rip, and
s ho went through all right.’ ”
^ painful Experiment.
----—
A Pans correspondent gives . an ac
count of a horrible experiment made by
M. Brown Sequard That experimenter
wanted to see whether life alter a vio
lentdeath is susceptible of being recalled
in an animal killed in a healthy s ate. He
therefore beheaded a dog familiar with
his voice. The blood of another dog
was beforehand prepared to be trans
head became animated, the eyes opened,
an j on (j ie pro fessor calling the dog by
his name an attempt was look. made When to an
BWer by a caressing the
arterial blood was exhausted life disap
This pain i u i experiment was
SU g geS ( e q hy one made by Dr. Lab orde
C n Campi’s head an hour and a half
ft execution, ’ and when presumably \
th cerebral ma tter hafl g r(; . L ly lo , t ex -
dtabi]lt ^ Nevertheless when arterial
blood injected into the bead, the
mouth appeared * to take a living clrnrac
. the elidfl were raised, flashed the pupils
contracted when light e was upon it
th s^en M1(1 bv an orific<i m - thc fiku! i
was that'circulation was momenta
ril establLshed in the intellectual con
volutions. Hr. LaWde wanted to op
f . ratf , on Carop i’ g keaf i directly after it
iaiinto the basket, but the rule in
virtue of which a form of a Christian
bnrjaj through at the Champ
^ NaveJe cemetery stood in his way.
It tobe lj0 p e d that it will not lie de
parted from in order to solve incom
j,] e t<ily a bead psychological could speak question. make A
detached not or
Bjgpg stations 0 r replies to questions put about
were consciousness for a mo
ment restored as it was in the case of
, bo d0 g y[ 0 reover, there is something
inexpressibly shocking to an experi
ment of this kind on a human being.
It ri said that the girls now have a
regular code of flirtation signals. When
the point of the parasol drags off anotb
er woman’s back hair it is a signal that
there k danger ahead.
[
THE BEST
OF ALL
LINIMENTS
FOIL MAH AND BEAST.
For more than a third of n century the
Mexican Mu8lAiig Linimenthnslmcn
known to millions all over tho world fte
tho only safe reliance for the relief of
accidents and pain. It is a medicine
above price and praise—t-he best, of i«s
k inti. For every form of external pain
the
EXICAN
Mustang Liniment is without muscle an equal.
It ]>euetraitig ilt sli and to
tbe very bone—making tho continu¬
ance of pain and inflammation impos¬
sible. Its effect8 upon Human Flesh and
ful. the Brute Creation are equally wonder¬
The Mexican i
USTANG
Idniment is needed by somebody in
every house. Every aivful day brings news ot !
the n“oily of nu scald or hum
smbdued, of rheumatic martyrs re¬ i
stored, or a valuable hovic or ox
save d by tho healing power of thw
LINIMENT
which speedily cures such ailments <»:
the HUMAN ____ FI LKSH as
Itlic u iuaUsin, SwclHiigft Muscles, Burns} NtlfFi
Joints. Contracted
and Sealds, Guts, Bruises and
Nprnius, Poisonous Itite* and
Stings, Ntimiess, Lameness, Old ™.
Sores, tJlcers, Krostbites, t'hilldninH. h
Sovo Indeed Hippies, form faked of external Breast, ni!«l| tlis-JJ
every
case. It hrnls wllliout scarn.
For the llui'TK Creation it cures
F|n*nt»8, Swinny, Nliff Joints,
Founder, Foot TIarms. ICol, Screw .Sores, Worm. Hoot Sen ills- It. |? gp
eases, Scratches, Wind- R
Hollow Horn,
Ralls, Spavin, Tliruali, Itlnttlxmc, M ft
Old Sores, Foil l lvll, FUm upon
the Sight and every other ail:m »t E
to which tlie occupants of thc w
Stable rail Stock Yard arc liable, tu
The EeiiciU) Mustang I.lnltncntffit
always or.rtvi and never disappoints;^
anti it Is, (H)wiUvely,
THE BEST
OF ALL
l
i
FOE MAN OR BEAST. i;
m
NEWnOME
Aacfflfi 6
f
l
1 mm \ - ; ¥t
7® g ’s***
IjWr 3 IE
;
Cj
qflN EVER' n NEVER
equa*- OUT OF ORDER.
cy *As no
HEffHOM* SkMlKG *
lS
1 30 UNION SQUARE NEWYORK.
r^\CAe a No N TtA/Vb
nu. MASS. GA
L FOR GALE BY
J. W. DARRACOTT.
b , IGOROUSHEAITHfdbMEN
PROF. KKBvoca weak&e«aao4 Dsnruxv,
% ic 1 i*
cay- in ft ounwiv.ua rib
ecxre ftiaeaw;*, ta.Ch
ekUifui pbyaiGiaos, reaui
- from youthful iodmr<
•
tiorj.H, too tt oe iafttliger^e fu»
*v^ -vi-ys ooft ovtr braia work.
not temporite white W:h
«aetuks lurk in your *yf
tMD. Avoid bfelb?
A Btdieal Care on by pretentioo# dala* o#
other other remcftica r fhr tbrntj
FOB trouble*. Get our free circa uA
lor l<Jarn Baft triel package fact# k:i<pj befor* tuA I
SPERMATORRHEA _ imi/irtant elsewhere.
inking remefty treatment that hue cvrA
Tvike Tvike a a rumMy that dm curea
thouMu lx, ooil does out fa
^POTENCY, terfere with atiteotkA 1.0 V> bu&f*
or caoHo paia or iticon*
vtalcoco. ffooofteft on ecb
ttlTToetefl forovorG cntlflo owsfthal principle*.
Growlru? lo fav'ir atft tvyu*>
yoturs by tuk> 1a thou- tion. Lrirectapplications tbo
aanda of cacao. ■eatofdiiaaari makes ft« ep»:
elfio Infloonce felt
i tJ'Jny. Tho nakur&l faiw
! TJ^ee ® TBIAL aflH 2 m tlouK firm aotma^Btf &/o of tho restorvL h ol^n-tetiU a u-nti or hee® — n of - .
PACKAGE. a Wt I life which given have her. it.
v. TjfVFl a TV,
■ Tho patiutit beootni;*
SEND ADDRE88 ' leheerfa Pf I awl ydu*
> «tr<«.jfth rapidly.
HARRI8 REM CO. f M’f g ChemUti.
Kwrth Kith St., St. Loop., Mo.
Ox 1 toon imtxumn. Id 1 9 sostms. tC i 'i mostms. U
|
An American Steel Gun.—A new
steel gun, thirty-two pounds calibre
made entirely of American steel, which
was completed a few days ago at the
Watertown Arsenal, has been taken to
bandy Hook to be tested. If this gun
j proves as successful as is expected, will the be
; excellence of borne made steel
| proved beyond question. It is intended
i to supply our batteries with tbtee steel
! breechloaders 0 n the mtexrupted screw
} system.
I3SE&S
Engines, Gins, Saw Mills, Etc.
WM *•* *f ;
ts
1%
* 1
* PERKINS BROS.
V
-DEALERS IN
ALL KINDS MACHINERY.
m
“"v S :
- ’
or; M ^ - 1 .
m
1 ,0 ' ■ ^51
I 1 V. ?
KSh « 3 EM
j a
m ri
■
nmm ul::—^ s ■.
Tlio largest dealers in the South in Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw
Mills, Circular Saws, Steam Pumps, Boiler Feeders, Jot Pumps, Steam
:■ Gauges, Whistles, Piping, Wrenches, Shingle Machines, Planing‘and
a Matching Machines, Water Wheels, Grist and Flouring Mills, Separa¬
tors, Horso Powers, Cotton Gins, Feeders and Condensers, Presses,
I Plows, Brass Goods, Engine Fittings, Bolting, Machinery Oil, etc.
IfcV ’ Second-hand Machinery at low figures. Got our prices before
■
buying.
I l PERKINS BROS ■ ?
ATLAUTA, CA.
S. H. MYERS,
(SUCCESSOR TO MYERS & MARCUS)
-JOBBER BUT-
fVy G(;ood^, Jvfotioq^ hntl Tlo^ieiv
Boots, Shoes, Hats and Olothiner,
rpHE undersigned would respectfully inform the merchants ol Taliaferro and
jL adjoining counties, that his FALL Stock has is now being been brought received, to and this in market. prices
and assortment is unequaled by any that ever
A special feature of my business is the establishment of a
AY II O L E S A L E—
BOOT SHOE AND HAT HOUSE
chasers to examine our stock before purchasing e .iowhore.
S« H . ]\1 Y 1 ^ 1 vS, 286 and 288 Broad St., Augusta, Ga.
Mar-30 ’82-1 y___
ICE! LC^!! ICE!'-!
E. LIEBSCHER’S
BOTTLING WORKS
Corner Jackson and Ellis Streets, AUGUSTA, GA.
T I TAKE THE LIBERTY of informing the people of Taliaferro and adjoining
counties that I have considerably enlarged my business facilities and 1 am now
ore oared to furnish my patrons with tho following articles at wholesale and retai
and at lowest prices: ICE PACKED AND SHIPPED TO ORDER.
CINCINNATI LAGER BEER IN 1-4 AND (-S KEGS.
FRESH AND SALT WATER FISH, OYSTERS IN CANS SHELL A I3HLK
T HAVE also added a BOTTLING ESTABLISHMENT to my already extea*
Lsive business, and l am now prepared to furnish you with a first-class article of
Bottled Beer. It is the best in the market and recommended highly for its teazl¬
ing qualities, especially so by some of our leading physicians, also by a great num
her of our best merchants and citizens.
goods fair trial, and . also , that will ... kindly ..
I loping that you will give my a RESPECTFULLY, you
give me a share of your patronage. I remain,
E LIEBSCHER, Augusta, Ca.
83-1 y.
I li PURGATIVE *ti£ pj^j^O
U,.l will coniplvtefy *han«« the’bloo.l in th« entire eystem In three W
E,m* P w«V;££ Cm, ***, no^-i.
(jroup, Asthma» Bronchitis, ’iohwiI
gin, Klieamalinm. JOMWrtON'at AH<*~
T>YKR LiHiMBWT (for InU'mnl tprul /karwtf
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dlteofee, ainl wnl jAnfftlvdy curt: nluc cams
o<]t of ton. Iriforrriatioii tliat wiiJ aave laaujr
liven sem in;e by mail Don't doh^y a UhabouL
Prevention i» \»M*t than eure.
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ty f ‘ioiWand Nothing WlU«: iv/tler A if is worthier; a _ it wftll al/solol/-! SboriilWxCondition UattW- on knovm Karth that |v#v/dt Vpnn- far.t KhcrMaa will r a that Jd very rrjwko In mewtof n tht* Condition valuator*. Dow- coun¬ h™« the MARE SENS LAY
hu,d&l.»-™n. strike Srfdeol, her and . she thoogU asked
hetme < ( crned to r’ »”
sweetly: ‘Adolphus, are you a ‘V tx>iw.r r.lL .
Snd’d > , , ij 10 old ueuUeman’s footstep
on the top stair, and a.s he
wildly gratilied his hat A.lolphns an
fcwered: “Ye», darling—good-bye.
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s. 1.-7 h, ml.
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