Newspaper Page Text
IE BLACKSHEAR HEWS.
PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY
Z. BYRD,
EDITOR ASD PROPRIETOR,
6A.
CRIPTI0N, $1.00 PER YEAR.
to Advertisers c~ application.
COUNTY DIRECTORY.
Qm>inary. -A. J. Strickland.
Cukrk,—J. W. Strickland.
~E. Z. Byrd.
Co asurkk. —B. D. Brantley.
Oo vkyor.— Davis Thornton.
Tax bb.—J ohn J. Smith.
Tax Go roR.«— Alfred Davis.
lURT CALENDER.
Clxnob ^ ■ hr.—First Mondays in March
and Ootob
and AeruNo(wP['V—Second October^^ft. Mondays iu March
and Waihs October.l^^^^ Go^^BAThird Mondays in Murch
and Pikkck October. Cou^^^H^irth Mondays in March
November. Wabs CocNTT^^^^Mf^days in April and
('offkf. Coi’sty. after second
Monday in April fr^^Bfcalay after
Chablton County.— No^^^^Bto
third Monday in April and Mona^^H
Camden County.—F ourth ^ April
and November.
Glynn County.— and December, Commencing and on continue first
Monday in May the business to
two weeks, or so long as may
require. Merahon, Judge, Brunswick, Ga., and
L.
G. B. Mabry, Solicitor-General, Brunswick. Ga.
TOWN DIR ECTORY.
__
Mayor.— Wm. It. Phillips.
Aldermen.— Dr. C. H. Smith, T. J. Fuller,
J. M. Shaw and J. W. Strickland.
SECRET SOCIETIES.
BLACKSHEAR communications LODGE NO. 270, F. & lodge A. M.
Regular of this
will be held on the first and third Fri¬
day nights in each month.
C. T. Latimer, W. M.
A. J. Strickland, Secretary. aug-tf
P ROFES SIONA L CAR DS.
W. & PHILLIPS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
aug4-tf Blackshear, Ga.
A. E. OOCHRAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Blackshear, Ga.
Practice regularly in the counties composing
the Brunswick Circuit lynd in the District and
Circuit courts of the United States at Savannah
or the Southern District of Georgia. myl6-6m
Q. B. MABRY,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Brunswick, Ga;
Practice regularly in the counties of Glynn,
Pierce, Ware, Wayne, Camden, Coffee, Appling and
of the Brunswick Circuit, and Telfair,
of the Oconee Circuit. aug4-tf
S. W. HITCH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Blackshear, Ga.
Practice regularly in the Brunswick Circuit.
aug4-tf
^ B.‘ESTES, JR.,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Blackshear, Pierce Co., Ga.
Practice regularly in the Brunswick Circuit,
feb23-ly
^PHYSICIANS.
J^R. A. M. MOORE,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
Blackshear, Ga.
Calls promptly attended to day or night.
aug4-tf
lySTEDIOAL AND SCRGICALNOTICE.
DR. C. H. SMITH
Offers bis professional services to the citizens
of Pierce and adjoining counties.
Blackshear, Ga., March 1, 1880-tf.
DENTIST.
B. WM. NOBLE,
A
DENTIST,
Blackshear, Ga. •
Office on Maine street, opposite Postoffioe
irits-tf
___
~
MARBLE WORKS
j^HN KMELL^ ' T
MARBLE AND STONE WORKS.
juatee Manumeots, Tombs, Beadatones, etc. Eeti
furnished on application for all kinds of
-orr.etery Work.
205 and 207 Broughton Street,
jj25-6jn Savannah, Ga.
HOTEL.
JESUP HOU8E,
T. P. LITTLEFIELD, Proprietor,
Jesup, Ga.
iirected The attention of the traveling offered public them by is
to the inducements
hi* hotel.
'hate* 4inale per Meals'........................... day.......................,...$1.50 *0
% £ w;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;:;:;:: * w
jt-era* discount to fan.die*.
Blackshear News.
E« Z. BYRD, Editor and Proprietor.
VOL IV.
THRIFT OF THE PEOPLE.
Some Facts Concerning ihe Diet riba lion ef
Government Bonds.
Circular No. 222 from the census
bureau presents facts of more than
ordinary interest to the people. Its
purpose is to show registred as nearly as bonds, possible
the distribution ownership of of"he or
rather the national
debt. It shows the number of male
and female holders and the amount held
in the several States and in 117 cities;
also the amounts held by individual
(“ bloated ”) bondholders, varying from
less than $500 to $50,000 and upward.
According to the register of the treas¬
ury the whole amount of the registered
four, four and one-half, five and six per
cent, bonds owned by foreign and do¬
mestic holders and by banks at the time
the census was taken was $1,173,749,-
250. It appears that the aggregate
number of holders of bonds were as
follows:
Per
cent, of Per
Hold- Hold- cent of
Rate. era. Amount. era. Am’nt
4 per cent....55,278 3386,742,800 68.41 46.58
i x / per cent.. 10,745 123,631,300 13.30 15.22
5 a 7.091 134,616,300 8.78 16.29
per cent....
6 per cent.... 7,688 180,926,700 9.51 21.91
Totals.....80,802 3825,917,100 100.00 100.00
Omitting the six per cents from the
calculation we find that of the whole
number of holders of the other bonds
42.262 were males, 29,325 were females
and 1,527 are coporations, and of the
held the males owned $327,185,-
500, the females $90,353,350 and cor¬
porations $227,451,500. The average
per head adds: For male holders,
$7,741 84; for females, $3,081 10; for
corporations individuals (of course representing
of both sexes), $148,953 20.
No less than $410,279,400 was held
in amounts of over $50,000, $58,730.-
600 in amounts varying from $25,000
to $50,000; from $10,000 to $25,000,
$59,153,850; from $5,000 to $10,000,
$41,079 900; from $2,500 to $5,000,
$33,070 950; from $1,000 to $2,500,
$22,032,550; from $500 to $1,000, $13,
097,250; less than $500. $7,555,900.
The number of persons was as follows:
Classes. Males. Females.
Exceeding 150,000 ...... 830 168
From $25,000 to $50,000 1,018 281
From $10,000 to $25,000 2,326 953
From $5,000 to $10,000 ...... 3,416 1,571
From $2,500 to $5,000 5,490 2,681
From $1,000 to $2,500 7,505 4,871
From $500 to $1,000......... 8,368 6,372
From $50 to $500 13,309 12,248
Totals 42,262 29,325
Classes. Corpora¬
tions. . Total.
Exceeding $50,000.......... 531 1,529
From $25,000 to $50,000..... 224 1,523
From $10,000 to $25,000 ..... 259 3,538
From $5,000 to $10,000..... 196 5,183
From $2,500 to $5,000....... 149 8,500
From $1,000 to $2,500....... 53 12,429
Fiom $500 to $1,000......... 59 14,799
From $50 to $500............ 56 25,613
Totals.............. 1,527 73,114
It is gratifying to observe that in
putting small savings into government
bonds the women nearly equal the men.
More than one-halt of the 73,114 hold¬
ers reside in cities, and they hold 85 per
cent, of the bonds.
The following table shows tho geo¬
graphical distribution, omitting cor
porations, giving per cent, of males and
females in each section:
Male Per Female Per
Section. hold’rs. cent, bold’rs. cent
New England.. .14,633 34.62 11,986 40.85
Middle Slates.. .18,723 44.30 12,580 42.90
Southern States . 1,721 4.07 914 3.13
West, and Territories. 7,185 17.01 3,845 13.12
The thrift cf New England is appar¬
ent and the disinclination of Southern
people to take the obligations of the
goverment is signally apparent. Of
nearly thirty thousand women who have
laid by something in government bonds
for a rainy day but a ti ifle over 900 are
in the South. This does not come from
want of means, nor from distrust of the
securities, bnt from the memories of
the war. Massachusetts shows the lar¬
gest number of holders in any State,
16,855; then New York, 14,80.3; Penn
sylvania, 10,408. These three States
have 57 1-2 per cent of all those (indi¬
viduals) doubtless who hold bonds. Massachu
setts gets her pre-eminence
from the proverbial thrift of the females
who work in her many manufactories.
With regard to amounts held it is
hardly necessary to say that New York
stands far above all other States, hav
ing $210,264,250, or 32.60 per cent,
nearly one third of the entire invest
ment of 8644.990,400 (omitting the six
per cents). . Massachusetts, „ , , Fennsyl- _ ,
vania and Ohio follow in order: then
the District of Columbia — an exeep
tional location, for it is natural that
many of the thousands of government
employes should put their earnings
into the bonds with which thev are
necessarily so familiar. The Territories
are hunched Hunched toffe‘her UJge.her so so that tnat the the small- email
■ est investment appeared to be in Oregon
| with fourteen investors holding in aU
, 8126,300. The sectional distribution
» amounts beid, »as follow* (corpora
j tioas omitted.): .
BLACKSHEAR, GrA., MARCH 2, 1882.
Section. By Hales. Ter cent.
New England State#.... 150,142,500 15.38
Middle States 223,225,150 68.22
Southern States........ 10.241,250 3.13
Western State# 43,176,600 13.32
Total.. 1327,185,500 100.00
Section. By Females. Per cent.
New England States.... 120,829,550 23.06
Middle States........... 55,788,100 61.74
Southern States......... 2,898,550 3.21
Western States.......... 10,842,150 11.99
Total. .190,353,350 100.00
Perhaps a clearer view of the dis¬
position of the people in the various
States to invest in government securi¬
ties will be found in the table showing
the number of private bondholders to
each 100,000 of the populat ion-of Buch
State. That table we give, excluding
the District of Columbia;
Massachusetts.... 950 Kansas... 30
New Hampshire.. 850 Louisiana. 30
Vermont..... 570 West Virginia..... 30
Connecticut.. 380 Colorado., 30
Rhode Island. 300 Nevada... 30
New York.... 290 low&£.... 20
Maine......... 260 Tennessee. 20
Pennsylvania. 240 Territories 20
New Jersey... 240 Florida.... 20
Ohio......... 130 South Carolina... 15
Illinois....... 100 Texas 10
Maryland..... 100 70 North Carolina.... 10 10
Delaware .... Alabama ..
California.... Indiana...... 50 Mississippi 10
4C Arkansas .. 10
Missouri...... Minnesota........ 1 oo
Kentucky..... Nebraska. 1
Michigan..... 30 Oregon.... Georgia...
Virginia...... 30 •to*
Wisconsin.... 30
Statistics are given from 117 cities.
The bulletin closes with the distribu¬
tion among banks and other corpora¬
tions, as follows:
National Corporations. No. Amount. Per capita.
banks.. 335 310,251,400 33,060 12
Savings banks.. 483 131,224,400 271,686 13
Private banks... 88 1(^994,150 124,933 62
Insur. companies 478 60,857,450 127,316 84
Trust companies 137 13,484,050 98,423 72
Exp. companies. r, 640,100 106,683 83
Totals........ 1,527 3227,421,500 $148,95K 20
—New York Herald.
Owned to His Record.
The editor was sitting in his revolv
ing cane bottomed ohair when Tornado
Tom, the traveling terror of Texas,
came inland demanded retraotion of the
statement that he had swindled an
orphan out of $4.
“ It’s a lie dear through,” said the
Terror, striking the table with his
fist, “I’m as good a man aa smells the
atmosphere “Perhapfc in this section.”
you are better,” said the
editor, mdekly.
“My record’ll compare favorably
with yonrn,” said the Terror, with a
.sneer; back “ perhaps there are a few little
rackets in your life, sir, that
wouldn’t bear a microscopic investiga¬
tion.”
“Oh, sir,” said the editor, visibly
agitated, “don’t recall the past; don’t
bring up tho memories of the tomb; j
know I’ve led a hard life—I don’t deny
it. I killed Shorty Barnes, the Bowery
pieces boy of with New Yoik—hacked him all to
a knife. I have atoned for
it a thousand times. I blew a man’s
head off at a log-roll in Kentucky, and
bitterly have I repented of my folly. I
slew a lot of inoffensive citizens of
Omaha over a paltry four-dollar pot,
simply because I got' excited. Oh,
could I but eheat the tomb of the men
I have placed in its maw I would be
happy. But it was all owing to my
high temper and lack of early training.
I know that I have been wayward,
wicked, and you have a right to come
here and recall those unhappy memo
ries; but it’s mean for • all that. No
body with a heart would treat a man
like you have me. Don’t leave, stranger;
I’ll tell you all. I sawed a man’s head
off with an old army saber just for —”
The Texas Terror was downstairs and
half way around the comer, while the
editor, taking a fresh chew of rattle¬
snake twist, continued his peaceful
avocations as quietly as a law-abiding
citizen .—Salt Ixike Tribune.
Bv a large majority the people of the
United States have declared their faith
in Kidney-Wort as a remedy for all the
diseases of the kidneys and liver. Some,
however, have disliked the trouble of
preparing it from the dry form. For
such a new candidate appears in the
shape of Kidnej-Wort in liquid form.
It is very concentrated, is easily taken
and is equally efficient as the dry. Try
it — Louisville Courier Journal
When tt-v, __ little B Belle .. was tWw ,_________ years old ,j'
she used to admire the fall moon very
much; bat when her aunt pointed out
the new moon she exclaimed, in the
most distressed tone, “Oh, ; tis broken !
’tis broken 1” Johnny, who was just
learning to talk, being asked if he saw
the new mood, said : “Yes, I see the
rind of it.’’
... __
In 1531 the wandering bands called nx
gypsies were so numerous in England
that an act was passed to banish them
from the realm on P a.n of imprisonment
Slid confiscation Of property.
Subscription, $1.00 per Year.
NO. 45.
EXCITEMENT IN ROCHESTER.
The Commotion of Caused hr the Statement
a I’hrslclan.
An unusual article from the Rochester, N.
Y., Democrat and Chronicle, was republished
in this paper recently, and has been the sub¬
ject of much conversation both in professional
circles and on tho street. Apparently it caused
even more commotion in Rochoator, as the fol¬
lowing from tho same paper shows:
Dr. J. B. Uonion, who is well known not
only in Rochester but in nearly every part of
America, sent an extended article to this paper
a few days since which was duly published, de¬
tailing his remarkable experience and rescue
from what scorned to be certain death, it
would be which impossible to enumerate the personal
inquiries the validity have of the boon article, tnado but at our tho/ office
as to have
been so numerous that further investigation of
the subject was deemed an editorial uocessitv.
With this end in view a representative of tfiis
paper called on Dr. Henion, at his residence on
St. Paul street, when tho following interview
occurred: “ That article of yours. Doctor, has
created quite a whirlwind. Are the statements
about the terrible condition you were in, and
tbo way you were rescued such as you can sus¬
tain?”'
“ Every one of them and many additional
ones. Few people over get and so near tho grave
as 1 did and then return, I am not sur¬
prised that the public think it marvelous. It
was marvelous.”
“How in tho world did you, a physician,
come to bo brought so low ?”
“By neglecting tho first and most simple
symptoms. I did not think I was sick. It is
true I had frequent headaches; iclt tired most
of tho time; could eat nothing one day and was
ravenous the next; felt dull indefinite pains
ami my stomach was out. of order, hut I did not
think it meant anything serious.”
“But have theso common ailmonts anything
to do with tho fearful Bright’s discaso which
took so firm a hold on yon ?”
“ Anything first ? Why, they are the sine indica¬
tions of the stages of that dreadful mala¬
dy. The fact Is, tow people know or realize
what ails them, and l am sorry to say that too
few physicians do oithor.”
“That is a strange statement, Dootor.”
“But it is a true one. The medical profes¬
sion have been treating symptoms instead of
diseases for years, and it is high time it ceased.
Wo doctors havo been clipping off the twigs
when we should strike at tho root. Tho symp¬
toms I have just mentioned or any unusual
action or irritation of tho water channels indi¬
cate tho approach of Bright’s the disease oven
moro than a cough announces coming of
consumption. help the We lungs. do not Wo treat tho cough, but
try to should not waste
onr time trying to relieve tho headache, stom¬
ach, but pains directly about to the the body kidneys, or other the symptoms,
go source of
most of these ailments.”
" This, then, ia what yon meant when yon
■aid that more than one-half the deaths whioh
occur arise from Bright's disease, is it, Doctor ?
“Precisely. Thousands of so-called reality diseases
are torturing people to-day, when in it
is Bright’s disease in some one of its many
forms. It is a Hydra-headed monster, and the
slightest symptom should strike terror to every
one who has them. I can look back and re¬
call hundreds of deaths which physicians at the
time declared were caused by paralysis, apo¬
plexy, fever and heart disease, pneumonia, malarial which I
olhor common complaints,
tee “And now did were all caused those by Bright’s simple disease.”
casos have symp¬
toms at first ?"
“Every oue of them, and might havo been
tured as I was by the timely use of the same
remedy- I Warner’s Safe thoroughly Kitlney and Liver Cure. in
this am getting my eyes oponod
matter, ana think I am helping others to
see the facts and their of possible possible danger danger also, also.
subject, Why, vvny, ui there If are no want end to t truths know truths bearing beariuir about on on this this it
ir you you want to know more
go and see Mr. Warner himself, He was sick
tho same as I, and is the healthiost man in
Rochester to-day. He has made a study of
this subject arid can give you more facts than
I can. Go, too, and see Dr. Lattimore, tho
chemist, at the University. If you want facts
there are any quantity or them showing the
alarming increase of Bright’s disease, its
simple is but and deceptive symp oms,and escaped.” that there
one way in which it can be
Doctor’s Fully satisfied of the truth and force of the
day and called words, the reporter bade him establish¬ good
on Mr. Warner at his
ment on Exchange street. At first Mr. Warner
was inclined to be reticent, but learning that
tho information desired was about tho alarm¬
ing increase of Bright’s disease, his manner
changed instantly and he spoke very earnestly:
“It is true that Bright’s disease has in¬
creased wonderfully, that and we find, by reliable
statistics, in the past ten years its growth
has been 250 per cent. Look at the prominent
men It has carried off: Everett, Sumner,
Chaso, others. Wilson, This Carpenter, Bishop Haven and
is terrible and shows a greater
plaint. growth than that of any other known com¬
It must be plain to every one that
something must be done to check this incrmno
or there is no knowing where it mav-end.”
it to-day “Do you who think do not many realize people are afflicted Warner with V
"Hundreds of it, Mr.
thousands. has I have a striking
example of this truth which just come to
my leans notice. medical A prominent college professor in a New Or¬
class tho subject was Bright’s lecturing disease. before his lie
on of
had various fluids under microscopic analysis,
and was show ing the students what the indica¬
tions of this terrible malady were. In order to
draw the contrast between healthy and un¬
healthy fluids which he had provided a vial, his the con¬
tents of were drawn from own per¬
son. ‘And now, gentlemen,’ he said, ‘as we
have seen the unhealthy indications, I will
show you how it appears in a state of perfect
health,’ and he submitted his own fluid to the
usual test. As he watched the results his
countenance suddenly changed—his color and
command both left him, and in a tieinbiing
voice he said:‘Gentlemen, I have made a pam¬
ful discovery; I have Bright’s disease of the
kidneys,’and “Yod believe, in then, less than that a it year has he was symptoms dead.’’
no
®£ !t « own, and is frequently' unknown even by
of'i£ ‘own .ml ver.
often the none at all. Usually frequently no two people death have
same symptom-, and is
the first symptom .The slightest indications<,f
any kidney difficulty I itoiM what be enough I to talking strike
terror to any one. know am
about, for I have been through all the stage* oi
kidney : Yoaknowof du»ea»e.’’ Dr. Hentou’seaesr
s : ; ( L r ; v : 0 tWriut i.‘u Jftr °‘
« A verv prominent ease, but no more soth*:.
THE BLACKSHEAR NEWS.
#
RATE* OF ADVERTISING!
sguAin. 1 TIME 1 MO. | 3 MO | 6 MO. YKA*
.
One ♦ io>~ 00 * 2 50j| 3 25 I 8 00 lira
Two 00 4 00] 8 50 00 S3S38
Four... rhree...... ec (HI 6 50 12 00 00
00 7 50 15 00 00
Eight.. 00 15 00 25 00 00
Sixteen • ••• 00 25 00 40 00 00
Trenaient advertisement# 11.00 per first ia
-ertion: 80 cente for each subsequent one.
Special notices 10 cents each insertion.
Bill# dne immediately after first insertion.
a great many others that have come to my no¬
tice “ You as having believe, been cured by the same means. ”
be cured.” then, that Bright's disease can
“ I know it can. I know it from the experi¬
ence of hundreds of prominent persons who
were given up to die by both their physicians
and friends.”
“ You speak of your own exjierienoe, what
was it ?”
u A fearful one. 1 bad felt languid and un¬
fitted for business for years. But I did not
kuow what ailed me. When, however, I found
little it was hope, kidney difliculty I thought there was
and so did the doctors. I have
since learned that one of the physicians of this
city pointed me out to a gentleman on the
will street be oue day, saying: ‘There goes a man who
dead witbiu a year.' I believe hia
words would have proven true if I had not for¬
tunately secured and used the remedy nov
known aa Warner’s Safe Kidney and Lives
Cure.”
"And this caused yon to manufacture it F*
“No, it caused me to investigate. I wont to
the principal cities with Dr. Craig, the discov¬
erer, and saw tlio physicians prescribing and
using it, and saw that Dr. Craig was uuablay
with his facilities, to supply the modicine to
thousands who wautod it. I therefore deter¬
mined, as a duty I owed humanity and the
suffering, to bring it within their reaob, and
now it is known in every part of America, is
sold iu every drug store and haa beoome a
household ueoesity.”
The reporter left Mr. Warner, much im¬
pressed nisetatements, with the and earnestness next paid and visit sinoerity to Dr. of 8.
a
A. Lattiraore at his residence on Prince street.
Dr. Lattimore, although busily engaged on
some matters connected wi'h the State Board
of Health, of which he is one of the analysts,
courteously answered the questions that w«n
propounded "Did to him:
of Mr. you make a chemical analysis of the
case II. II. Warner some three yean
ago, Doctor f
"Yes, sir.’’
“What did the analysis show yon ?”
“Tho presenco of albumen am) tube caste is
great abundance.”
“And what did the symptoms indicate ?*’
“ A soiious oisnaso of tho kidneys.”
“Did yon think Mr. Warner could recover
“No, sir; 1 did not think it possible. It was
seldom, indeed, that so pronounced a case had,
np to that time, ever been cured.”
“Do you know anything about the remedy
which cured him ?” •
*' Yes. I have chemically analyzed it, and
npon critical examination find it entirely free
from any poiconoiw or de’eterious substances.”
We publish the foregoing statements iu view
of the commotion which tho publicity of Dr,
Henion’s article has caused and to meet the
protestation* wtiich have been made. The
standing Lattimore of Dr. Hniiort, Mr. Warner and Dr.
in the com munity is beyond question,
and the statements they make cannot for a
moment be doubted. They conclusively show
that Bright's disease of the kidneys is one o#
tho most deceptive and dangerous of all die
eases, that it is exceedingly common, alarming¬
ly increasing, and that it can be oured.
Straw for Fuel.
“The Americans burn money, we
bum straw," says the Mennonito settler.
cook How the they keep warm in winter and
year round with no other Inel
than loose straw, is a mystery to the
average American. The Mennonite
emigrant, when choosing a^locality, is
quite of unconcern id at the total absence
timber, and will settle many miles
from wood or coal with indifference as
to the fuel question, in localities where
an American would never think of mak¬
ing a farm. He sees fuel for the first
year in tho miles of grass about him;
the second and succeeding years he wiU
have the straw from his crops, and Btraw
stacks are his favorite substitutes for the
wood-pile and the coal-bin. We first
saw straw in use for fuel at the bouse of
a Russian Mennonite bishop in the col¬
ony of McPherson county, Kansas. Din¬
ner for four of us was to be prepared.
A vigorous young Mennonite girl van¬
ished with a bushel basket, and re¬
turned with it full of loose straw, then
placing her kettles, etc., on the top of
the cook range, opened the flre-d( oor,
and thrust in two large handfuls of
straw, touched the match, closed the
door, and the kettle commenced sing¬
ing almost immediately ; in about two
mihntes the door was again opened, and
two more handfuls of straw,were thrust
in and the door closed. Our dinner
consisted of ham, eggs, potatoes, Rus¬
sian waffles and excellent coffee, all
cooked in less time than an ordinary
stove could have befcn made “ hot for
biscuits.” The fire was “dead out”
before the dinner was half consumed,
and the house none the warmer for the
lire, the surplus heat all escaping
through the broad chimney .—American
Agriculturist.
Astronomical : “ Isn’t tha moon
beautiful this evening?” said Alonzo,
as he snuggled his arm just as close
upon hers as he could, “ Y-yes, but I
know another moon that is s perfectly
ecstatic in its loveliness.” “ Do you ?
What moon is that, ducky ?" • “ It’s the
honeymoon, think it Alonzo, and don’t have yen
is about time for ub to
one T* The cards are out .—New Haven
Register.
A certain amount of opposition is a
great help to a man. Kites rise against
and not with the wind. Even a head
wind is better than none. No man ever
worked his passage anywhere in a dead
calm.
A man to wiser for hto learning, and the
sooner he learns that the only proper way to
care a Cough or Cold, to to am Dr. BuiTa
Cough Syrup, the better be to off.