The Dawson journal. (Dawson, Ga.) 1878-18??, June 06, 1878, Image 1

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|aii SllUii I Bl ™ l fOBtISUSt) SYXtIT THURSDAY. rf . lIS-Mriclly In Advance. Three J. **l **! 11 ‘* j 25 Sis ® un,t>e || 2 00 Oae year * ‘ , . fr tise)‘S The money for ad considered doe after first inser lio.n;„,rdseaentß inserted at interval* to be A ~ now each insertion. !S “,;£!? M . “£pc . !v O , ce-' " ill be inserted for 15 cents nl w for the first insertion, ar.d 10 cents P cl >• 'fnr escb subsequent insertion. 1 *• HI „ Inserted at *25 cents per line for the per line for each subse- or letters on business nicnded for this office should be addressed (•This Dawson Journal i LEGAL ADVERTISING RATES. {jlicriff safes, per levy of 1 square... .$ 400 j Mortgage sales, per levy 8 0 r , v Mies, per levy • q t’l’ lor betters of Administration 4 00 Auction for Letters of guirdla* # ship for Dismission from ministration •••-.-*. 10 t,u ; , ~iilic itio’* for Dismissions .toia ‘(iinnlianship ,*,’,"‘V 8 00 Application for leave to sell Land au, $5, each additional equare 4 00 Application for Homestead 3 00 Notice to debtors md creditors ... 600 j.md sales, per sqiaie (inch) 4 00 -aloof Perishable properly, per sq 300 jjjtray Notices, sixty days 8 00 Notice to perfect set vice 3 00 gale Nisi, per square 4 00 piles to establish lost papers, per sq 400 , Kales compelling titles, per square.. 400 Hulcs to perfect service in Divorce cases 1° 00 The above arc the minimum rater oflegal advertising now by the Press of Georgia, and which we shall strictly adhere toin'thti future. Wc hereby give final no lice ihat no advertisement of this clasp wil he published in the Journal without the fee if paid in advance, only in cases where we have special arrangements to the contrary a!rof*ssicwl (Sard*. j, ||, GUFIIUY, JAS, G. PARKS. GUERRY & PARKS, jitlipvj and Colijigeior? at Lais, DAWSON, • - GEORGIA. MRACTICK in the State and Federal ! (lourte. (lolleciions made a spociaify.— Promptness and dispatch guarantied and insured. Nov ltf B. F. SIMMONS, Iffy ai LalK & Ileal Dawson, Terrell County, Ga t’PE.'IAL a tention given to collections, 1 1conveyancing nd investigating titles to Real Estate. Oct. 18, tf T. J L. PICKETT, I llfy & Counselor ai Law, OVHCE with Ordinary in Court House. All business em usled to his carp will i"c ive prompt and i Slicienl attention. JalO J. J. BICCK, Ai (o rne y at Law, rnlhoHii 4'onuty. Ga. Will practice in the A!buy Circuit and else *iiere in the State, by Contract. Prompt - eirion given to all business entrusted to Ills eare. Collections n specialty. Will also tn vesti^ratetitles and buy or sell real Estate in Caibaun, Baker aud /iarly Counties, march 21-I f C G CART' LEDGE, Attorney at LtiAV ’•ORO.W, - - GEORGIA. i\ ILL ivo close attention to all busi , boss entrusted to life care iu Albany, Circuit. 4-ly L. <:• HOYLi Attorney at Law' Dawson, Bcorgia. 3 - t. JAKF.B. C. A. MCDONALD. Janes & McDonald, Attorneys at Law, DAWS OY, - GEOIiGIA. Cfflce attho C urt IJnuse. 7an.7 ()B ; R GAT4I.OUDE foe 1878. 01 100 printed an cioted paper, Tt vo dfCGtil Colored *® ll!us'ratd'witb a great rum. • i° , eri K r^ y i*'B <5 , giving prices, t’escription I " cu ''ivatioG of plants, flawer ar.d vegeta - ?e<P, t li’bs, trees, shrubs, elc , wilt be " 3: <;HoriO cents, which we will deduct " 81 or der. hnuiled free to onr regular •Omera. Duelers price list Iree, Addrees M ANZ 4. NECMCR, ouisvi le, K_v, uervous, eihauatlßg, and painful dis uses spaed,]* yield to the curative influences u‘ r ’j Puiecraiaeher’s F.lectiio Belts and r *j“ s ' They ate safe, simple, and effective ", c * r ‘ c-rsilv applied by the pedant p''' S6l! - Booh, with lull particulars, uiatied , .dress Pulaermacfeer Galvanic Cos., Ui '- nui.Ohb. \\ -To make a permanent ' t-Hgemeat ;'b a clergyman having 4 Bib e P.*ader, to introduce in i CI . The C. labrated K> • Cen i -mn of the Hoi) Bible. For . 1 1 , notice editorial it) last week’s ■i> papei Address at once Tab iak , *’• B. HOTON * CO., ■oere.v Booabiadeie, 60 E MaiketSt. Iltdisnapoiia, Irid. Tli* *f lb* lWlh fnlarj, Barham'® Infallible (If HU CURE. gfc“ A SMiA- f-tCat ..Surtao,H.B. > ftre Jl. x.orrh* iu* i '?- A, /' r Mir-. Triiwn , fir? ! Mlitbla, •*** ' tut ni hpt cite (ftnertiJi ffcWk*., sp&Uf&Uca THE DAWSON JOCK by j. r>. HOYL <fc CO. AN INFURIATED ELF PHANT. How ho KilhTlliiif a Dozen I eople aud Terrified a Com munity. Ghuzipore April B—The.e was a dreadful scone here on Tuesday af-.er uoou, when a very large mud ele phant ran through the station and killed half a dozen persons. The-lo pliant bo'enged to the Rejah of Vizi I ftbiigrata and waa brought here from I Benares hy a wealthy Mahomo’an j 00 tlle occasion of the marriage of a lelafiva of his. The animal was, ns the mahout reports, kept in tire sun, overworked aud not properly ratioued j dur ‘ n K its journey. The mahout states ihut lie asked for some money for mediciuo from his master, who I ordered payment of four annas or so which lie declined to receive. There were a couple of men od the houdah aud the mahout was on the shoulders of the elephant when it inn away. The ritlets got free of the unimul by catching hold of tile branches of trees by which it passed. The mahout remained for some time on its back and tried his best to ke ip it in check, but when be saw it waa impossible for him to control the ani mal he jumped from its hack. The bruite killed six persons and injured two. Oue of the deceased climbed up a bamboo ties in tru endeavor to -es cape, but the animal uprooted the tree, the man fel cc the ground, and the elephant killed him on the spot. At eight o’clock in the el’ouing the el. pliant turned towards the Govern ment Treasury and the Reserve Pol ice lines. Some of the sepoys, leaving their charpoys, climbed up tho mango trees and some bolted towards the English quarters. Continuing its mad career, the elephant entered the compound of Mrs. Cooke’s bungalow, t ow occupied by Mr. Nicholson, sub- Doputy Opium Ageut who fired and hit the animal ou the head. This made it more furious, aud it endeav ored to enter the room occupied by Mr. Nicholson and bis brother. See ing the elephant in the veiranda he fired again, hitting it on the trunk, and blood poured profusely from the wound. Ike animal was at large until next morning, when it was with difficulty secured with chain* by the mahout and several others. The ele phant v.as kept here till Saturday*, the 7th irist , and then taken to Ben ares under guard. Tf.o Mahometan has been celled upon by tho Magis trate to explain why he did not take proper stops when lie was informed of the symptoms of madness in tiro elephant. The case is pending in the criminal courts. Fish by the Square Mile. Somo faint idea of the vast and inexhaustible number ef fish on our shores may perhaps be obtained by a consideration ot the fact that yester day no fewer than six thou-and bar rels of porgies wore caught off New port. If the son, through the Vine yard and Long Island sounds, is any wltero near as rich in porgies, moss bunkers, and other varieties of the most abundant kinds of fish, what an unimaginably teeming world of life thorn must he beneath tlio waves ! And it is, even moro than the striv ing, pushing world of human life, a scene of rapacity and destruction— the stronger pteying upon the weaker and “the sutvivat of the fittest ” Enormous as this singlo day’s catch of porgies seems, it is surpassed by some of the big hauls of bony fish or moss-bunkers —the “white fish” of the evil smelling fish oil mills on the shore. These creatures actually swarm in millions and are caught and haul ed in by the cargo. Schools of*vorac ious blue fish pursue and drive them flipping and flashing to the surface where they are promptly pounced upon by the sailing fish-hawks and sea-gulls that wait for them out of water. In the sow and on the land the world seems to boa scone ofslmrk and tig r, in one or nttother fotm ol . dostiuctive tapaciy.— A. F. Sun. The Rural World says: “If you , want to keep hogs, horses, cattle and 1 sheep healthy, give them ealt regu latly." There is no bettor vermifuge thau salt. Much of the so-called hog | cholera is due to inteslinnl worms: I Plenty of salt will p t-vent the acci- I initiation of these *■,.mts All nni | mals desire salt, show tug that it is a l went of their nature, ar.l ur, fvtibted- I ly for a wise purpose.” , How one Mother Trained Her Little Girl. ‘‘Maybe lam foolish Mrs.—, but ■ever since my little one was given me I have loved to kiss the latln hands as well as the baby lips. I used to lay the solt little pink palms upon my mouth and kiss tl.ein till my baby laugaed. “As she grew oider I still kept up the custom, and when night came and undressing her I failed to kis the little bauds, Amy knew that it was because they wore not quite clean front naughtiness. If they had been lifted in angor during the day, if they had btruck at nursie cr a little play mate, mamma could not liigs them because they were not clean. And to miss the kiss was very bard for my ba-by, I assuie you. It waa the saute with the little lips. If a naugh ty word had escaped them—l moun wilfully naugiity words-or if my little girl had not spoken quite the truth during the day, 1 could not kiss the lips, although I always kissed her on cheeks and forcbetd, never allow iog her to go unbiased *o bed. But she cared mere for kisees on hands and lips than tor anything el&o in the world, 1 believe ; my loving little Amy? And gradually the naughty ways were done away with, aud each right my baby would say: ‘Tean hannic-8 to-night, mamma? Teal bunnies for ’oc to tiss!’ “And even now —though she is five years old I keep up . custom which she has known from her birth, because I think it helps tier tiy to b good. You will laugh, maybe, Mrs. —, but Ido want my little girl to grow up pure and sweet; und if the love of mamma’s kisses can keep, by God’s help, the little hands, lip? and heart cloau, I think I shall continue the cu.,tom until Amy is old enough to understand fully things too hard for her as yet.” My own eyes wore tearful when Mrs. Ilortun’a sweet voice ceased, and I envied little Amy her beauti ful young mother's cu,mpaiiioii-<mi(i. Did I think it a foolish idea? Ah, no indeed! But the truest, sweetest custom in the world keeping hoi small hands clean for mantra’s good night kis; and that is why Saliie ■Jones was net “paid in her own coin, as the saying is- That is why tho sweet lips made no angry reply. Mamma’s kis3 was too preo ous a thing to be given up for the gratifica tion of one mouion of evil speaking. Dear little Amy! —Wide Awake. How to Fjsii for Mkn.— At tho New York Press Club reception on Thursday night, Rev. T. De V\ itt Talmage told thefollowingstoiy. “An old fLhoinian once told me the rea son so few sinuers were convi rted lav in the manner in which the min isters angled for thpm. ‘When I go to catch fish,’ remarked the disci ple of Walton, I use a delicate pole, nu almost invisible line, a hook of the most artistic workmanship, and at the end of all a tempting bait, which I softly drop into the stream; but when you preachers stsrt out you take for a pole a weaver’s beam, to which you fasten a cart rc pe, with a pot hook attached and a snap ping turtle for bait. This you throw into the water with a splash and ex claim, ‘Bite or be damned!” Lively Mail Matter. -A number of living horned-frog?, silk-worms, and other reptiles and entomological specimens were destroyed by crema tion on Wednesday in the New York post office. These creatures had been sent through the mails as thitd-clftss matter to various addresses, one of the honied-frogs, (a beautiful speci mens) being sent from Arizona and destined toGeimany. All third class mattor is liabie to be openod and ex amined, and all pterishabie content?, liquids, fluids or explosives liable to ctoato damage or nuisance, arc inter dicted. This will account to many persons for the fact that fish, snakes, young nlligators, etc., sent by them to ft tends have never beeh received by the patties to whom they were directed. A proud and devoted wife, whoso husband had got a job on a cellar <*x cavalion, explained his absence by eaytng ho had gone to Wheeling. Never tell a man ho is a fool; in the first place he won’t believe you; in the next, you make him your en my. JDAWSOX, GEORGIA , THU RED. I Y, JUXE (>, 187S. How a Missouri Murder was Re vealed. Six years ago Julie Le Blanc mys teriously disappeared one July night from her homo in Jefferson county, Mo., and her white bare skeleton was discovered a few days ago by a negro shooting snipe along tho Mississippi river, iu a bca* ho overhauled as it lloated down the stream. When she disappeared, Julio was a blooming maiden of eighteen, aud that July night she had gone to attend a neigh boring party, Tho next day her con tinued absence exciw-d tho alarm of her parents, who found that she had not been at tho house whore the social gathering had ficen field. In the woods scaicimig parties iourrl her ' tracks and those of a man leading to u creek emptiog into the Missisippi, : where Mr. Le Blanc’s boat bed Loon j moored, but was now missing. Tho father suspected Philip Konealy, one of the young woman’s admirers, as responsible for her disappearance, but Mis Le B ane persuaded him not to arrest the youug man, who disnp peared in a few days 6njing that he was going to New Orieans to ac cept a permanent situation there, as his great love for Julio would not per mit him to lemuiu in the neighbor hood now that she was missing. Two detectives were put upon tho case, who could find no trace of tho daugh ter nor of Kenesiy. When the negro overhauled the boat after this lapse of years it was nearly ready to sink with its leeord of almost lotgott”n crime. The mysterious skeleton had biacele’s upon its wrists which were removed before its burial. Mr. Le Biaric heard of this discovery, and visiting the spot, recognized the brace iets as ilioso of his daugt.-r; hut when he went to recover her skeleton, it was found that the gieidy Mississippi had washed sway the place of buiiul Mr Le Blanc hi sno doubt now that K'mealy murdered his daughter, and placed her body in tile b at, a file boat, stout.y constructed of wood and copyer, fastened it to the cieek bank where the undegrowth had success lutry concealed the plo-.e of its con sealmeut. Finally the ropes decayed when the boat drilte] down ttie creek and into tho Mississippi’.- cuirent with its revelation of a rnyste y long un solved. The E'.lijay Cam us gives the follow ing account of serious consequences arizing from trusting to a traveling quack calling himself a physician •* .‘A few weeks ago there appeared jn this county a mai jby the named Nash who professed to be an Indian doctor lie also claimed that be could euro a cancer in a very fe", days. There rs no telling how many of our citizens have been imposed on' By this scoundrel but of one we are certain. A short time ago ho visited tire residence of Mr. Elisha Dc Bord near town, and at bis house was a litt'e girl about eleven veurs of age liie daughter of Mts. Gentry, a widow. The little girl had a very small sore on the back of her bead, and ibis so-called doc'or declared it to be a cancer and for one dollar he would cure if. The money was willingly paid aDtl he adiuines tered bis poison. Instead of curing the child the drug has ec.ten a bole to the 6knll bene about the size of a silver half dollar. Ibo sight was a sickening one. Dr. Johnson pronoun ced it a dangerous case, and unless groat care is taken it may cause her death. From the descr ip ion we have of this impostor, we are led to bo ieve he is the drunken vagabond and rock breaker who has lived in Atlanta for several years past. He has doubtless appeared before the Police Court of that City i fierier thau any other - man there, and was known as “Cob Nash” j The lußt Vo lieatd of him he was in j Pickens county, scateringlus medictus fore and aft. Our people are two easily and two often taken in by just such humbugs, and it doas seem that they would leprn to avoid them. The officers of the law and citizens generally should keep a sharp watch for Lint, a6 he certainly deserves able sentouce ou the chain gang. Somo sensible writer tiuthlully says th at‘most diseases of cattle are produ ced by wrong treatment —two much I feed at one time, two lii’.lo at another two rich at one time, two poor at an other,. etc., If all horses and cattle were fed aud watered and used prop erly there would 1 o littlo disease, and afl ailments could be cured by simple remedies, which cveiy matt has *erj may have at hand.” MILLIONS OF FISII. ! A United States Ooimnissionel* at work in Georgia. Yesterday a reporter of the Consti , tut ion met Mr. J. F. Eilis of the Uni ted States fish commie ion. He is in Georgia for a purpose which our peo ple will highly appreciate, for there’s “millions in it” He lias just returned from Coving ton, wheri ho has been for the pro of stocking tire Yellow liver with shad. Through tho efficient labor? of Congressman Blunt, tho rivers iu his district aud some outside have recei ved a duo sharo of governmental pat ronage. Mr. Eiiis ias just placed in the Yellow liver at tho point where tho Georgia railroad crosses it SKVKXTY EJVR THOUSAND SHAD of a fine variety Mr. Eiiis goes to carry an equal number to put in tho Flint river near Montezuma. He ! talks very hopefully of the Gtorgiui rivris and their capacities fur advan- j tngeons fish culture. It seems proba- j bly that tire southern livers will soon receive more attention from congress in the matter of fish than they lravo himeitp. They are now scarcely worth anytl ing iu tin it finny products but with such attention as they ar„ now receiving they will oro long be a fortune to those who live near them and to the state generally. Atlanta Constitution. How to set Cabbage Plants. As soon as your plants are largo enough take up a dozen or so ut a time, and take to tire place you wish to se'. Have a dish of water with you — I prefer raiu water —make a hole and put in your plant, fill in the dirt and press it firmly, around the mots until the hole is nearly full. - Then turn in half a gill or so of wa ter, and h ul fresh dirt upon that* but don’t press it. This will prevent the grouud from baking, and the plaut is almost sure to grow. Mr. Potei Cooner. in a recent con versation with a reporter at Char ottaJ N C., s id; “About thit'y yeirs npr al n an cumo into my office audolleied tfll sill uio a great secret lor tlaity dol-J bus. lie was so persistent and liisl condition was so pitiful that 1 finally] concluded to buy it. I paid him the] money out* ho fold mo the seciei, —] Mi, C npei said it was a process on treating join which would double its] productive power. The corn should] lie covered with glue and rolled sue] cessfuliy in lime, guanno, etc , ami planted with the accumulation Ibul gathered around it. ‘ I gave the re] ceipt,” continued ire, “to a man it] New York State, aud lie reported thal tiia yield ct corn so tren ed was doub| led that of coi u planted in the usua| way. I have a barrel of gue witll me and intend to tij* tho ex peril ment. I ] Tho real secret ot i-uccessful farm! ing in this or any other country is t(| produce everything needed for domes! tic consumption, selling only the sur plus. To plant single crops, both for profit and exchange for necessaries of life is two much gambling risk. Oue may win occasionally, but the final re sult will be ruin. Yet ‘.ho 6aine in fntuatbn which keep 4 tho gamb’er at the card table induces our m st iriteii gent and enterpiising planters to again stake their *ll on the single chances ot success with oue crop, when every indication points to low f rices aud limited demand A diver sity of ci‘ ps ins;.res success —a single crop ibiij result in a harvest of utter ruin.— Our Home Journal. Sow Clover. —Do not forget to sow a few acres in clover this very spring. The seed is lew. Prepare the field for the plow, acd tow early as you can. It will inako good hay, good pasture and enridr the soil. Clover is the salvation of farming. Its val ue cannot be estimated. Wo oust put our farms into such shape as to make farming profitable. We must put tho prodhet o! our faim into fat 6tock that can be got to market at little expense, more pasture taufls on eutr tar ms is u ended.— Cleveland Banner. They say that the surest, quickest and best means of stopping the nose of bleeding is a vigor* us motion of the jaws. Just so! That accounts for this complaint almost exclusively confined to tho bearded sea. floor caught and soon it was imposi bie for the children to escape. Eveiy o”e of the six, rSItISIIFD IS THE FIRK. The father ar.d moiher only reach ed the scene just uttei the rafters had fallen in, and theii children hud been killed. Tho Ilawkmsviila Bup'lch records a sad and shocking casu>l - y which cccured tn that vicinity on Sunday evening last As Mr. D. P. apaintet, was takiug a stroll "jj the river a short.distance below town, he discovered soma magnolia bloom* and at once commenced climbing the treo after them. When ho had reached a height of about forty feet he nii>seJ liis footing and fed to the ground, re ceiving injuries which caused hisdeaih 1 n about three lionri. lie was placed in uc comfortable a position as possi ble and a party of gout’emeu were coon collected and tho sufl rer was conveyed to ilie Hudspeth House where he received every attention that . surgical skill could devise or kind and sympa hiziug f.tends con'd bestow. All were without avail, however. “From papers found on the jsorson ; of deceased,,’ says the l)lp:;tch “we learn that ho left New York city, win re ho Ims a wife and two children, on the 9th day of October last. He arr.ved in H.iwkiasvilio about tho 2-2) of January, and had been engag ed on jobs of painting for different patties in town tip to tho timo of his sad and untimely end.” 1 Chicken €bo'era. I Tlio Poit'tr<t World gives the fo'* Iwing a '.vice in regard to chickcu ■inters: I “When you see a chicken a little Broopy find its comb getting dark, ro nove it at once and decor it for cho!- fcia. Its discharges are green, and fallowed to run loose would spread he disease. Asa preventive, I use i handful of salt twice a week in a wash basin full of bran mixed with i little rnoal, aai three times a week *ive corn at night, on which put a ittlo coal oil, just enough to coat ev 3*y giain and uo ninre. My nuigh iiors all abound have been losing their jhickens, both young and mil, end I iave lost but one, and that was cne of my imported Brahmas. She was aii’eoted so differently (rom uthef cas es I have seen that she died before I know it was cholera; none have died (•irce. Clean out your chicken houses, while-wash thorn and scatter carbolic acid around.” The model husband lives in Stars hip g, Pennsylvania. He revet allows his wife to do more than half the work. Che ptits up all the canned fruit in the summer, end ha puts it down Li, the winter. The Son. T. W. Allyu has given §IOO,OOO to .ho city ot Hartford, to be devote'i .o ilia free education of boys and girls in the business avoca tions of life, m agriculture and the mechanic ai ls. For twenty-four hours ufter farrow ing a sow should he fed on soft food or slops, which should bo given in a warm, though not hot, state* A mash of bran ur men! answers vory well. A little green bug is destroying the blue grass in Kentucky. Great fields are said to bo ravaged y it,the grass looking ns if it had tufbred a pro tracted drought. Peas and horns cootiia neatly double the flash-forming natters that are found in wheat, con., tts and bailey, but far leas starchy and beat giving matters or fat. Southern poli.ies appear to be lean ing to agr ic-Pure,as the New OrUao* Time* advises the people of Louisiana to “laieo less hell and more sugar.” An exchange gives this piece of ox cellent advice ,to, its leaders, “don’t [)!ato a mort gags on year fat or unless your laud is rich enough to raise it.” Oats are the most exhausting ot all ceteuls.so far as the phosphates and other minerals are concerned; than conies brrley, and after that wheat. The thin pious man, u iroGs contir-* uully groaning over the wickedness of tho world is more troubled with dyspepsia than Llessod by r< i.g ron. W hen tl o Assessor came around to fix his tux, and asked Mr. McDotcbua how to spell l.isname, he, wishing to he vory ,*di*e to his neighbor, lepiisd, Spall ir just aa you do your own, Smith.” “Vlion a follow makes his arm around his gal, uod she likon dot poo y well, dhen dot was Shk.ibt’jra on abound it was ruaken hahbiisi cone on some waist blaces, ain’t it!” “I curse the hour wo wore niatrio I t exclaimed an enraged husband to his better half. To which she mildly replied, “iJou’f, uiy dour, for that was the only happy liortr wo hsve ever seem” The hoy tvidi hi- first cigar and the negro with his mule both tried to back her and couldn’t. If there is anything'in this w ill to make a mule laugh his tail off it a to see a man with a glass eye frying to wink at a prettyjgirl. Widow Winlow, of Roanoke, led ; has two broken ribband many biui&oa —die result of flirting with an ou,i getie woman’s husband. .*. “I have my opinion of that mat:," remarkod a local philos<>ph r the other day,“who, when I ask Inin to take a cigar goes hunting atound in tho fit tetn cent box!” ‘ Porter," asked an old lady of art liisli railway porter, ‘ when does tho nine o’clock tiain leave?” “Sixty minutes past eight, ttium,” wasMiko’a reply. When a girl begins to take aft in terest in a young man’s cravat, it is a sign she does not love him us sis ter. *4- AVoid an argument with ladies In spinning yarns among silks and satins, a ir.ttu will always he wo is led and tws!ed, and fioaily wound up. "I am astouished, my dear young lftfly, at you* sentmeuts; you <nak* me .-tart. ’ “Well, i havo ben; wau.- ingyou to snt for the la? hou.r” H itmj is organizing a veteran asso ciatmn of ex-C mtedeiate s ' diets ami cotit tnplafea a reunion so n.