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Uthing wrung.
question in the Allis
I’dick is substantially of party; this
)U 1 irrespective the
r dictation support
isa»y Bi & c * tLiving-
ewers that he wiH go into
pocra tic Caucus and abine
L Ljy and if it i s against the
BiW, theH he is
Everett says he is a
and abide the Caucus
■m as it dictates, and will be
fin his vote Sub Treesu- Wind
Caucus.
a Democrat and win go
Democrat Caucus and a
•tion on every question.
■she will not support
Beasury Bill as it now
Use lour are the car.-
t by the Aijiance,
fC rv a . of them repu-
I Alliance Yardstick.
uicrn «0 support
■ (f acus.
BuJ '.i .ese men say that
'action of the
t'5 against the Bill
bte aganst it, one of
bates entirely, Now
n have been nominated
t Congress who favor
. ry B;D a- ! the bal-
_osed !, to it. Of course
going to control
a ■crat C aucus and as a
I ;ed to the Bill, the
■ ■ eit. This being
j .
■ Messrs Livingston.
^Hnn and Moses the
ten win all vote
; ;i Now an attempt
I .
e to beat Gov. Gcr.-
■gress. he vv( « vote
1 ■hi when aji r.r AHi.
-1 llsmen are going to do
Gordon says he
■n caucus. Livingston
1 Co. cay they will
■Cl ucas % Gordon says
ite lor the Bill if the
ecides. Livingston,
I j-o. say they wifi vote
11 if the caucus so
e difference de tween
very much like
thing rotton in this
°n. The pretext is
opposed to the
Bill, Mosses the
Iuidate in the 4th.
% |Ppo him. s ed to it, Why
it Livingston
\ / inn s ay they wi’d
I _
■ • Why don’t they
fhere is something
■ his and time wi!‘
Ih-'t I'Sessional to turn out and
election.
pe Pfluence and usefuN
>cr °f Congress wi th
! ( ‘i.s district only to
It looks like the char-
a - intimidation .ye re
Ok,
| ,n 11 r ‘t»w agitated
^’ a whether an effi ,
; c s by virtue of his
is ; nstallatioR. Tlie
I 8 10 have to have
I addressed the
on last Thurs-
Great
Sr' 170 and resolu-
- ' 4 * 4 ’® pass~
H K Ft
■ n^w _
I: 0' 3 42 iSI
X
Li'
iNf.
SELLERS OF SHEET MlLiG.
Salesmen \V3;o Have 2Iany p t i
a«.l Diverting 1 Incidents.
“The petty trials ami tribal:'
the*alesman who retails she: i
behind a count* r are a vexatio'
spirit ar.d a w eariness to the *
Tbo speaker was a well knor : V'
lisher of music and tbo senior r
in a West street firm. “I
, .
tedious apprentices hip to that sc
thing myself,” ho continued, “and so
I know whereof I speak. It is notori¬
ous that the musical world is ’ <Y 1
profession perhaps more with largely than supg‘ any other
cranks. -I
when a man is thoroughly absorbed
ho in the theory and practice cf h ; :
is prone to be jarred by the disoerds
of everyday life, and is disagrecab y
conscious of being out cf tune wkh
the universe. But, however we ac-
count for it, the fact remains t;
sic buyers are, as a class, she /•.
citing the time and they touchy cf custom :s.
haven’t the far
as to what they want, and k ;
frequently ing the clerk own to make this frankly, r> ! -
on to selection. for
them.
"But the life of a music clerk has he
compensations. incidents The grotesque tmU
picturesque his numberless. that com; Yt un¬
der eye are ■ ■
whiskers that pale young there. man with the sakron
terday over beautiful, languorous Well, orb •
lady a tripped in here, and, eyed gild
young .
guileless youth, lisped dreadfully mV
i ‘Will you give me your hand inr ,
The cierk happened to be as hash ' i ■: ?,
he looks, and he was taken, completely
aback. He flushed a vivid sc;wl«. ,
stammered, if ‘Why, his hand, certainly/ me do
as to extend and then, be-
thinking himself and in time, climbed to
yonder ‘Your shelf brought down the
song, Hand in Mine,’ for which
the artless damsel had inquir ed in
such a bewildering fashion. And the
young lady, who was evidently not
without a sense of humor cf the situa¬
tion, dropped her languorous eyes and
smiled serenely.
“The man who gives the me
trouble is, perhaps, the funniest of ail
the bores that drift into-a music rdors.
He is the individual who wansa the
music to an air which he dc v> not
know by name. With the assurance
of a Mozart he says to the tiled clerk
who waits on him: ‘What I wart goes
something like this: “Tra-ia-la, La-i.a-
lee, trai-la-loo.” Don’t you remember it':
Ob, you must know it. ‘‘Trsvla ki, tra-
la-la, tra-la-leo. that If you’ll sound run like o\. V / th 1
names of songs .A
may recall tho title. Tra-la-la* La-
la, tra-la-loo.” ’ There’s only one L~.
to do with this particular crai) ,
that is tell him music, bluntly and that you hove
no ear for that come-
quently you have no idea of the Amo
he is trying to hit. Aft-c i' i o
reasonably sure to cease his cl; ; .h ,.,t
trilling and take his leave.
‘*Ono day last w eek a stalwart son
of Erin came in, accompanied by a
buxom young woman whose
costume ana affectionate maxiier
stamped herns a newly wedded bride,
In a timid tone, enriched by a.deiigl a«Led v
ful brogue, the young woman
one of tho clerks if he had the song,
‘Let Me Fold Thee Close, AcusLIa.’
“‘We have “Let Me Fold Thee
Close, Mavourneon,” ’ replied t,n.
clerk.
“ ‘Sure, it’s all one, me boy,’ broka
in the happy groom. ‘Acusbla or Ma-
vourneen, it comes to the busied same himself thing'.
“The smiling clerk
with wrapping up the music, while
the blue eyed bride slyly whispered aisy to
her spouse: ‘Arrah, Teddy, the be
now. How cud yer expect young
gintleman to have any Gaelic.’
“All in ali, there are some very di¬
verting incidents tone met with in an
establishment of this sort, at d you
study might pick a much worse side of place human forth
of tbo funny na-
ture.”—Boston Herald.
-- %-* ’
A SluBCul ar Ceoivtea*
A gentleman who was in Marietta
recently reported a museular feat per-
fonned byM. L^Fontain. Chattanooga lifting
A man from was
a chair by the bottom round to snow
his muscle.
“That’s nothing,” said Fontdra;
can lift tho chair with you in it.”
“i’ll bet you $50 you can’v said the
Tonnesst" _ >an.
“All right, sit down,” said Fontain.
and Tho when man he weighed seated about himecif lS5pou3> J’ontoxu i,
pulled up his sleeve and. gr uing .ric*a:lkd tbe
round of the chair final y, i
himself, and.with onts-rotchod arra
lifted the chair and man several fet
from the iioor. Then lowering the
bui-dcn, he set the chair back on t he
floor pocketed the $ 40 and walked oi?
—Atlanta Constitution.
Ifun^an Xittirre.
Wo rarelv seek what is within cur
reach. Persons living under tbo
shadow of Bunker Hill never dream
of ascending its monument I have
met distinguished Londoners who
have never visited V7cf;tiniz..-Ltr Ab-
bey; Americans cross historic a migiity walls, ocean it is
to stand within its
the unattainable that appcz!3 to the
average man and woman. Bard a witty
immoral woman once: “If drinking water would were
ta^te!” A how delightful have it learned
few of us
through water is physical sott>- and : is ng deluA that yot
a stimulant
in spite of the depressing fast thai ik§
morality still remains u. erTi-
—Eate Field’s Washington.
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