Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, November 05, 1908, Image 2
THE DREAM. At noon, in the valley of far Duah(-stan, With a ball in my breast I lay silent and stark, While %mp h{ drg;l)(, slowly, the red life-blood ran From the still smoking wound that showed hollow and dark. Alone T lay there on the bare sandy ground, The fierce sun of noontide was scorching the gteep. Brown crests of the mountains that hemmed me around, And it fell on me, too—-but I slept the death-sieep, BLGPRT T A N b And 1 dreamt of my country; of revels by night, g halls that were brilliant with cressets aflame; Of maiders whq;w chaplets of roses gleamed bright, And amid their gay gossip I heard my own name, But one of the maidens sits pensive apart, 5 Nor Joing in the laughter: and God alone knows | What sinfster fancies engulf her young heart, 8o silent she sits while the revelry girows, Does she sce in her vigion the corpsc of a man With a ball in hig breast, lying sllent and stark At noon, in the valley of far Dakhestan, While the still smoking wound with his life-blood is Aark? ~Michae¥ Yourievich Lermontov, translated by Rosga Newmarch, KS&WJWJQ-E?J[WOJCOJC?J@JC?JF?JEOJV’ ][ V,yr-j[pj[nf.[f ]Cn fl)f'%] & The Son of Big Mountain & By Fra;k_ll;l -\;/»el!;s_‘Ca:kl:s g? D O A o o o “My boy, I am going to leave you now to go on the other side of this hill. Look well to Plenty Boy till 1 I get back, Remember. you are a Sans Arc and the gqn of Big Moun tain,” Such, or something like it, was the dialy admcnition of Yellow Belt's mother during the berry-picking sea son. Among the rough lands of the Powderhorn, the red raspberry was wonderfully plenty. The Sans Arc women gathered great quantities, not only to meet the enormous dzily ca pacity of their families, but to dry for future use. The berry range extended on all sides of their village, so the women beecame scattered in all directions. The children were usually taken with their mothers, because a herd of them, left at the deserted teepees, were too likely to get into mischief, And older children were put to guard younger children, because they were of no account in picking berries. Yellow Belt's case was very trying to a twelve-year-old boy. He had no sisters to relieve him, and his charge was a mischievous and freakish three year-old child. However, the older brother was very faithful for a num ber of days. He kept one eye on Plenty Boy and the other on the look out for small game. Sonietimes a chipmunk or a small bird came within reach of his blunt end arrows, and the excitement of the affair would occupy his mind for a long time. And when a bush rabbit ran by, and was actually hit by one of two arrows, the lad elaborated a . story which he carried home to his playfellows. - When there was no game to be seen Yellow Belt would divide his time in admiration of two war arrows which his uncle, Gray Bgll. had giwen him; and which he did not trust himself to shoot among the bushes. One of these was somewhat worm-eaten in the shaft, and its iron teeth played loose on its rivet for want of real sinews to bind. The other had a bone tooth, and was not a weapon for the buffalo, Yet these arrows and his confidence in them were to bring him out of the greatest adventure of his life, one which, after forty years, furnished him with his most thrilling tale of personal encounter. On the day when his mother left him to go behind the big hill, she had spread her blanket for Plenty Boy, whe was sound asleep. Yellow Belt did not mean to go to sleep when he lay beside the young one, but he had eaten to repletion, and despite some fighting, his drowsy eyes closed. He awoke because the sun had shift ed so that its hot rays were beating directly upon his face. He rose, dig ging at his heavy, burning lids, and was reminded of hig charge by hear ing the voice of Plenty Boy, sounding faint and far away, but with a fierce accent which spoke of infantile wrath. At first Yellow Belt believed that his mother had come and had carried Plenty Boy away as a rebuke to his own remissness, and that the child was angry at leaving him behind. Feeling very crestfallen, he gathered his bow and arrows and made his way among bushes and rocks at the foot of the ledge, toward the sound of Plenty Boy's scolding, For some hundred steps or more he heard nothing of the small brother; then, nearer than he had expected, he heard the young veice in an explo- | sive shout, repeated two or three times. Plenty Boy had evidently wan dered off alone, and was shouting—as he often did at the village—at -some crow, buzzard, or other live object which had attracted his attention, Yellow Belt hurriea along the face of the ledge, not daring to call, for it was a trick of the mischievous lad to scamper off and hide when any one was thus seeking him. So the elder boy ran softly forward, and turning an angle of the rocks, again heard the volce of the youngster geolding in sharp tones of infantile bravado: “He-e-e! Ya-dra! Come-—come down here, sunkila!™ So! the young brother was calling, and to a “little dog.” Yellow Belt ‘climbed to the top of a boulder, and looked about among wne rocks and juniper bushes. The voice seemed to be coming out of the lace of the ledge, and for a moment the lad stared in bewilderment at the bare rock walls, ... Then a protrduding bhugh betrayed a cleft near at hand, and its ledges, of seeming jointure, were, he knew, some steps apart. He hasiened to ward the half hidden opening, imag ing that the small hunter must have cornered a rabbit in that nichs. . To Plenty Boy's mind all animals smaller than horses were dogs, and the horse, as to his elders, was a big, “mysteri ous dog,” a sunka wakan tanka. Yellow Belt hastened to peer in at the crevasse, and as he approached, his ears were ctartled by a rumbling growl that set his stiff black hair on end. He knew that voice—the threat of ignu hanska, the long yellow cat of the mountains,—knew it for the good }reasml that there was, at that mo ment, one pa:tly tamed, a pricorer at the Sang Arc village. “Ho,* gond-for-nothing! Bad—bad— bad!” yelled the small brother, an grily. With his knees knocking, Yellow Belt strung his bow, fitted an arrow, and stepped softly into the crevasse. The sight which met his eyes might ‘well have appalled the heart even of his father, the chief, Big Mountain. The youngest scion of the family, breech-clouted, but otherwise naked, was standing erect and defiant, sturd ily confronting a big cougar and her ‘young, insisting, as he angrily stamp ed his feet, that the sunkilas come down and play with him! As he ghook his fist at them, he leaned backward—so close he was to the face of rock upon which they were perching—and the belt of his clout leggings ereased his fat sides in double folds. 3 Yellow Belt saw all this at a glance, and by his native instinct fully undger stood what had happened. . The little brother, wandering along the face of the ledge, had come upon the tiny spotted kits, got accidentally between them and the mouth of their lair, and had followed them into this notch. The old one, prowling upon the top of }?e ledge, had heard her young ones’ distressed miauifigs, and had ‘de scenlled @’ scarp which they Were un:. Sy v b ey - The snarling cld beast, her Kits al most within reach of Plenty Boy, was waiting’ to pounce upon the intruder should it become necessary to protect her young. Yellow Belt was frightened enough; for the moment his legs shook go that he could hardly stand. He called softly to Plenty Boy, hoping to coax him away. But his words were of no avail. The little lad had his eyes glued upon the spotted kits, and the desire to play with tnem was the only emetion his infantile mind could hold, j He answered the brother’s entreaty by a forward movement and angry whoops at the Kkits, And why was this tiny Sans Arc not afraid of the mother? Yellow Belt knew too well it was because of the big mountain-cat which Lone Elk kept in a stake tee pee, fastened with a white man’s iron rope, and at which creature, snarling impatiently, little villagers at home were wont to launch their puerile de flances. Yellow Belt's legs were yet weak and his teeth clicked with fear, as he stepped cautiously toward the fierce old cat, now snarling down, her muz zle within three arms' length of Plen ty Boy's face. He knew better than to call again to the sturdy urchin. He sought to attract the angry beast's attention to himself, He re membered his . mother's parting charge, and grew Dbraver. Heolding bow and fixed arrow in one hand, he clenched the other and beat his breast as he advanced. “Ho! Look at me, igmu hanska!" he shouted. *“1 am the son of a chief, Big Mountain. 1 do not fear you!” Then, as the old *cat seemed to draw back against the rocks, he took fresh courage., “Ho! ho!” he whooped. “See, I will send an arrow through your body!" The sound of his own voice greatly heartened him, but so also it embold ened Plenty Boy, who now tiptoed agalnst the rocks and beat his tiny ficts against their hard surface as he renewed his shouts to the “little dozs” to come down, Within &ix paces of the glaring cougar Yellow Belt halted. Should he drop his weapons, leap forward, snatch Plenty Boy and run? This he was about (0 do, when the remem bered gounsel of old hunters re strained him. “When in close quar ters you mmust never run from igmu hanska or from mato-hota, the griz zly, for then they a.e sure to attack. You must always face them warily, weapons in hand.,” Such was the wis dom of the elder hunters, and the boy heeded. He took another step forward, and now the two lower kits, with barely space to cling against the rock, began to crowd each other for safer and higher footing. One of them shoved the other nearly off its perch, and this ong made a desperate scramble to reach the dam above. For a moment the kit fought, then lost its‘?:)othtg, and rolled to the feet of Plenty‘{.%‘ Who pounced upon it with a cry of de light. : 7 » And now the big cat, glaring fi@' open mouth, crouched for a fin'ing, 2nd Yellow Belt leaped toward her and let fly his arrew with the iron: tooth: Etraight at, the muzzle of :the beasi he ghot, and his shaft m.riw:g her red and gaping maw and stuck in? the cougar’s threat. With a growl of rage, igmu hanska leaped from her perch, o e She launched herself at the daring boy, striking him upon the chest, and together they rclled uposn the rocks. Thinking his last moment was at hand, Yellow Belt fought desperately. He somehow got to his feet, and his surprise was equal to his‘f‘rlghti when he gaw the great yellow beast rolling in agony. At a glance he gaw that his arrow had entered her throat. and stack, that a blow from her paw had gnapped the chaft, and the iron tcoth was wedged fast, holding her jaws wide apart. In vain che strove to tear out the offending weapon. She rolled to and fro, uitering hoarse chest nctes and tearing at her mouth. until her jaws ran red with blood. The animal was crazed with pain, oblivious of everything else as she fought to rid herself of the weapon. Plenty Boy, ¢prawling at the foot of the ledge, fiercely scratched by the small Dbeast, which had already fled, was howling lustily, Yellow Belt gave the youngster but a glance tc note that he was not seri- I ously hurt; then, fitting his bone-’ toothed arrow, he circled warily about f the fighting cat, watching his oppor-] tunity for a deadly shot. It came at last. At three paces he launched his arrow, burying its tooth behind the old beast’s shoulder, iA truer shot and straighter to the iheart no hunter could have made. In a moment all was over, and the long{ cat lay stricken dead at his feet; and for several minutes thereafter thel rocks rang with his exultant whoops; of victory. - While he was still shouting, his ‘mother found him and saw what he had done. She caught her youngest, still screaming with pain, into her arms and examined his hurts. Finding nothing to alarm, she turned to the exulting son c¢f Big Mountain and said: l “My boy, you have indeed done well.”—Youth’s Companion. - | « QUAINT AND CURIOUS. The ostrich has been known to trav el as fast as a mile a minute. s % ; In the seventeenth century, absence | from church was a punishable offense | in England, e O 4 ;"“ ';‘ »"v e ”"-e"‘;‘_x"):,g’sj.fvi ’:j,,fl ¢ fl‘? Wrgest” park in- Euroge is the square milege et T L Seven tons of bad eggs seized in Detroit ‘were destined for use in a ; cookie factory. ! Manhattan borough of New Yorki city has a population of 161 persons | to each acre. l Alfred Soderman, of Worcester,| Mass., has succeeded in growing pola. | toes and tomatoes on the same vine, I Cigarette smoking is greatly on the , increase, and New York city consumed | 2,775,000,000 of them during the last! yvear. 1 | Ptz | An Italian nobleman, who is a wid-; ower for the seventh time, has erect- | ed a castle with seven towers at Biar- ; ritz, one in memory of each of his | wives. i Mrs. Mary McGeehan, 106 years old, ‘ has lived on oatmeal all her life, and} works about the farm at Brockagh, ! Donegal, Ire., with her children and | grand-children. i The decline of Canada's shipping, ! which has been in progress for thir-i ty years, apparently has been arrested, l for last year's shipping register shows | the first net gain since 1878. ’ In the county jail at Lincoln, Neb., | Dr, Earl Truell, a dentist, forcibly' took three gold teeth from the mouth of Edward J. Reed, a prisoner, who had given a bogus check to the de/fi --tist. A cheap yet durable pavement has been laid by the city of Mankato, Mich.,, consisting of a mixture of' crushed fine stone, gravel and tar, top-dressed with cement and sand. It cost but 80 cents a linear foot, thirty feet wide. Though the wild American bison has practically become extinct there is ia promise that the race may be pre served by domestication. The New } York Bronx Zoological Garden added twelve to its herd during the last 1,\'0:1:- by births. | Many of the Japanese porcgiain fac tories, it is said, are not paying ex penses, and production has been re ‘duced by 20 to 40 percent. In Tsu Maki-Mura twenty-eight of the eighty| porcelain factories have suspended, | owing to the decrease in American and Chinese imports. i Under the law not one of the million and a qearter immigrants who entey tue port of New York each year, is! fully admitted to this country,. for! each euters only under parole and| the government has the right to return | bler to the port from which he ecam: | at any time within three years afte: | hig arrvival. % FE - THREE BANZAIS! ; | 3 k - ..“ s 3 - MA"' s v /4 “N\ f — \\ N *:A"A'”).“J XY 5 Al & )7 AN @ ; /@ 4 A ‘R )\ Ey. & > ; (NS <) ¥ in ol = E vt %’ LS ot e =E S /= é (= '(/\GE'Z CUa ¥y , Y ot N d‘\ la\ \ ) P ==Y oy /LN 5N ; AT S, LN g&:\ b 35 &l A I:,;‘_V'j}# / - £ S )y 'r)f“,:\ LR - SHZN TSN . @ WA ; o I / i s XY 1, NER e 7 / 3@_555%\ WA BEY ’“s / \ =‘é g =F) - | ; s T SN |y O\ T & 1\ SRS 3,\ \ 7 } / ]7, _«9 <G * = ] 7 / Him ¥ N\ B AR By — 70 L 157 Bz AW /{8 ‘-E‘""‘ Bl S o '},fic},'” ,f’ ’;./'-lg’// 1 % /?\_ 4 : é :4‘ ko h&” '*/;; Qi ,:/, S/‘ % \\'\‘\ i e ‘ e . 2 254 4/ \\ . & J / 4,,1 - ‘./ %) \\ ¢ | PR f‘ . 9// ’," / { P <« 3 / Y ¢ / / / ! j % \ : a 4 e N R : -+ —Cartoon by Triggs, in the New York Press. - GOLCONDA FOUND IN THE CANAL ZONE. Commissioner Coljlins, of Washington‘, D. C., Says Life is Pleasant and Living Economical at Colon--Indians __Trade in Geld Nuggets--Gambling Not Populare L { ; Ali American Games Pursued as '| - | ' $ ! \"‘; & Q.,mf Outdoor Sports. gujw sl ¥ “-35 z New York City.—After spending fourteen months on an investigation along the canal zone regarding the allegations that have been brought against certain officials in the employ of the Canal Commission, J. H. Col lins returned from Colon, en route for Washington, D. C., to make his report. He declined to discuss it be fore submitting it to the authorities. Mr. Collins said Yast month was a record one for the amount of money gsent to the United States by men em ployed along the canal. He found them ail in good spirits and fond of bageball, bowling, tennis, rowing, and all kinds of healthy outdoor sports. Gambling is not popular nox drinking to any estent, Mr. Collins found, and this had been so marked during the last year that many of tl:f‘ saloon and gambling house pro prietors in Colon and Panama have lefid up and gone to pastuies new. ;; ie. héalth of the employes as a , o'r‘?‘*was good, he said, and the labor conditions at the present time .flac&on. Exeellent food at cost PECE isPwent-down by the Canal Com mission twice a weask for the em ployes and their families. - ‘“Just Dbefore leaving Panama,” oseld Mr. Collins, “I met Baron von Tuber. He was ‘sent out by the Smithsonian Institution to study the conditions of the San Blas Indiang, who live in the interior of the Re public of Panama, about seventy miles up the coast on thes Pacific side. He told some of the most JAPAN’S CORDIAL WELCOME, The Reception of the American Fleet Was Ciaborate ! and Perfectly Carsried Out. Tokio, Japan.—The reception ac corded the American Atlantic fleet by the Government and people of Japan is conceded by the American naval officers to be the heartiest and most perfectly carried out of the maay re ceptions received by the fleet since it sailed from Hampton Roads. Rear- Admiral Sperry said that he was ut terly unable to say how it had been accomplished, but that the welcome given the fleet and its officers and men here had been so carefully planned and carried out to the most minute details that lasting impression has been stamped upon the mind of ;avery American who has witnessed R It is impossible to doubt the sin cerity of the Japanese. The Ameri can officers and sailors are already beginning to understand the fact that the evident desire on the part of the Japanese for the friendshir of Amer ica is not founded upon opportunism, but finds its sourcé in a sincere wish to show that such friendship, at least on the part of the Japanese, has ex isted always, and that this visit of the * FORTY FOOT FOSSIL FOUND. & / Complete Tyrannosaurus Rex Now For Alllex-ifian Natural History Musecum. New York City.—Dr. Henry Fair fleld Osborn, president of the Ameri can Museum of Natural History, re ceived word from Great Falls, Mon., that a research party from the mu seum, headed by Barnum Brown, had discovered part of the skeleton of the Tyrannosaurus rex, a prehistoric ani-l mal, in the Bad Lands several miles gouth of Glasgow, Mon. The fossil, which is forty feet long and twenty-two feet high, has a per-t sect skull, an entire set of ribs, back bono and hip girdle and practically | supplements the specimen discovered in the same section in 1902, Ever since the first fossil of the “king of the reptiles,” as the Tyran- | m—————————“———c——-——w Nebraska University Orders | el Girls to Go Bareheaded. | Lincoln, Neb.—The State Uni\'er-l sity senate adopted a rule forbidding | young women students to wear hatsi in classrooms. . The order was made | necessary by feminine headgzear which | had grown so large that it not only ! tested the capacity of the ('iassroomsl ‘but interfered with recitations, An-| other rule adopted prohibits students | indulging in shirt-tail parades or Lid naping class officers to break up so m gatherings, on penalty of imme- ; diate expulsion. . i thrilling adventures I have ever heard. His companions, two Ameri can boys, were killed by the Indians last January. ‘““The Baron described the San Blas country as being very rich and the natives warlike. He was certain there is plenty of gold back in the mountains, as the Indians traded for merchandise in gold nuggets, which had evidently been washed down some mountain stream. He said that the difficulties to be encountered in the San Blas country were very great, as there were no roads at all, the only means of travel being by canoes and navigating tortuous waterways, where an exploring party could be easily ambushed. In addition to the Indiang there was the malignant black-water fever to be contended with. “The Baron is making monthly ex peditions into the San Blas country on behalf of the Panama Govern ment to teach the natives how to get rid of the swarms of locusis that de stroy ‘their crops. He stays in as ‘i long as his provisions last. He is ac ~conipanied by Ms brother, a Heidel berg student. The baron said it would be perilous for any white man ' to attempt to reach the mountains in search of the gold, as the natives have never allowed any strangers to penetrate into the interior. He was only there on suffrance, and had to be always on the alert. Their coun try is rich in ccal and all kinds of minerals.” e fieet has merely afforded the Japan ese an opportunity for that expres sion. Admiral Speiry was received at the imperial palace. On the next day the admirals and captains of the fleet wers the guests of the Emperor at the palace. Admiral Sperry conveyed to the Emperor a message from Pres ident Roosevelt, This message breathes a spirit of friendship and svmpathy and expresses keen expres sions of the traditional friendship be tween the two nations and an earnest wish for the sirengthening and con tinuance of the friendly relations of the nast. Three thousand sailors from the American fleet were granted shore liberty deaily, and it ig remarkable that notwithstanding their long con finement aboard ship not a single dif ficulty has bzen reported, bearing out the statement of Admiral Sperry, made in one of his speeches here, that the American sailor of to-day is the result of that development and edu catlon which Japan is seeking .in every department of her national life, nosaurus rex is called, was found, re search parties from the American Mugeum have been searching through the Bad Lands for a specimen that would compiete the missing parts. The first fossil had good hind limbs but incompiete back bones. Dr. Os born said that he believed the two specimens are about the £ame size and that the museum will now be enabled to mount the animal com plete, During the five vears of search fragments of Tyrannosaurus rex have been found from time to time, Dr. Osborn said zoologists would be highly elated over this second dis covery, e e v L Shirt Sleeves For Church, Says Bishop Mamilton to Ministers, Boston, Mass. — Bishop John W, Hamilton, formerly of California, speaking to Methodist ministers of the immigrant and how he chould be assimilated, said: “1 reiurn to New England and I find a new New Eng land. I tell you to gather them into the churches. Break down your preje udices, social barriors, They will come in if you want them, Get down to shirt sleeves ang make a pair of them tle Methcdist church’s coat of arms.” SFEI DD ROADE | il T ANy ' “ Roads Doomed by Autos, Logan Waller Page, director of the Office of Public Roads of the Depart ment of Agriculture, commissioned by President Roosevelt, is on his way to France to tell the highway engi neers of the world what, in his opin ion, the automobile is doing to mac adam thoroughfores and what should be done to counteract its destructive effects. President Roosevelt summoned Di rector Page to the White House and conferred with him about this high way problem. He learned that an al most incalculable amcunt of damage was being done daily, and then he informed the director that it was his wish that the United States be strong ly represented at the coming interna tional road congress in Paris, aud asked for the names of two other ex perts. Mr. Page named Colonel Charles S. Bromwell, superintendent of buildings and grounds of the Dis trict, and Cilifford Richardson; an | authority on bituminous road ma i terial. They were appointed, and Mr. ‘ Page was made chairman of the dele | gation. Although this congress will not as semble at Paris until October 11, Di rector Page decided to sail somewhat early to inspect some of the roads of England, Germany and France before the congress is called to order. He wished to see if the speeding automo biles worked the same damage there as they do here and study the rem edjal work that is being done. Here he has learned that by the tractive force of the rubber tires of the speed ing motor cars the surface binding dust of rock roads is drawn from its resting place and is sent swirling io the adjacent fields. Inasmuch as the integrity of the macadam road rests absolutely in this rock dust, which acts as a bind ' ing and surfacing crust, a dissipating { of the surface leaves the road nothing 'but a mass of loose, round stongs. The tests on the Conduit road, near ! Washington, D. C., prove this conten i tion absolutely, and he carries with ' him a collection of photographs taken | during the progress of those tests. ' These pictures will be submitted to . the congress. . ! The greater question that will arise i will be how to overcome the effect of . automobile traffic on hard roads with ! out restricting the automobile or Pre | venting its development. ‘ Two solutions there are to that question: One, to find a material of which roads may be made which cre l ates no dugs, oly secondly, to so treat ! the roads aiready constructed that . the dust will be retained upon them. That, of course, is now being done in many parts of the country by spraying with calcium chloride and by the wuse of various bituminous I preparations. .. Director Page and- his assgociates { will have much interesting informa tion to contribute along those lines, for within the past few months many, miles of America’s roads have been treated with these various prepara | tions, many of the tests under the di | rection of some expert from the Fed eral Office of Public Roads.—Washe ‘ ington Star. The Split Log Road Drag. There are thousands of highways in the rural distriets, which while only being excuses for roads, may be put into shape by the use of the road drag, and it is important to know, that farmers’ bulletin, just issued by the Depariment of Agriculture, gives a description of the split log road drag for use on earth roads. The split log road drag is by no means a new institution, but this fifteen-page pamphlet tells why it is sometimes a failure. For one thing, it is often made too heavy; it should be light enough for one man to lift easily. A dry cedar, elm or walnut log is the best material for a drag—far hetter than opk or hickory. Another mis take is in the use of squared timbers instead of those with sharp edges, whereby the cutting efiect of sharp edges is lost and the drag glides over instead of equalizing the irregular ities inethe surface of the road. . By the ordinary process of ditch cleaning, scraping, ete., it is estimated that road improvement costs from S2O to SSO per mile, while by the use oi the split log drag and plank ditch cleaner, ranges from $1.50 to $5 per mile, and a far better road is the result. ' The advantagss to be gained from the use of a road drag are emphasized in the bulletin thus: First, the main tenance of a smooth, serviceable earth road, free from ruts and mudheles. Second, obtaining such road surface with the expenditure of little money and labor in comparison with the raoney and labor required for other methods. Third, the reduction of mud in wet weather and of dust in dry weather, This publication (Farmers’ Bulletin 321) can be had free upon application to the Secretary of Agriculture or to your member of Congress.—lndiana Farmer, Sh TR A How Maine Fishers Caught Sulmon. Mr. and Mrs. Gross had a funny experience with an eight pound sal mon at Green Lake recently. After being hooked the salmon Jjumped right into the arms of Mrs. Gross and slid through to the bottom of the hoat. Mrs. Gross promptly sat on the fish and made good iis capture.—Kennebec Journal. : An Qld Story, “She tells me that theirs is a pla tonic love. What does that mean, hubby?” “Means that we'll have to dig up for a wedding present in about two monthbs.,"—Louisville Courler= Jaoutanal. gL E