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SUPERIOR COURT.
Hon. B. B. Bower. Judge; W.N.Spence,
Solicitor General; J. H. Corain Clerk,
^jiring term convenes on second Monday
la j, luc Fail term on second Monday
tu Deieemfter.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
GUddU Hecefvrt, Tax M <A Collector, unKlv; E. .SvJpnA; Treasurer,C r«
H. Gee; County' School CmniisBioner, (.L
yitili-i'; Surveyor, C. Y Norton; Cor
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cdu.VTY COURT. Quarterly
,L.G Cartlcdge, Judge. May. eee- Au
iions 4th J/onday in February,
gust aml November. Monthly sessions,
every 4th Monday.
COMMISSIONERS R. R.
John Colli-y, J. G. Collier and J. T. B.
Fain. Coarts held 1st Tuesday ii- each
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JUSTICES OF THE PEACE AND
,V.? , NOTARIES PUBLIC.
_ C.
T ;a4ti; District- IF Jftbeckcorr , J.P.;
F Blocker, N. P. and Ex-officio J- P.
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It23d District.!. L. Wllkerson, second
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0-261.11 District— J, C. Price, J. P.; N. W.
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incH'h j. ■ f!-| _ Price, . I. , P.
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I34.fi—Thos. W. Holloway: -V
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DOt— Phos. II. Saturday
Cordfay,"N P. Courts held 1st
.
iu each mouth. ____
Safcsr gounly Blteetcry
SUPERIOR COURT.
B. B. Bower, Judge, IV. N Spence, So
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, COUNTY COURT.
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COMMISSIONERS R. R. v.
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t i /, W. T. Uvin-rston; Shcrlft G.
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J t/S" IJUS OF THE PEACE AND NO -
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CTlct. District—S. J. Livingston, P.;
V7. G Odoiu. N. P.; Courts held 1st Sat
urday iQuaoh month. ’ . ,
1903th “tttrict—G. T. Galloway J. P.;
T. H Caskie, N. P-; Courts he.d 2nd
Fatui iu each month. !
av ,
■/ 937 th District J. ft. Evere't J, P.', F..
V. B am, S. P- Courts held 3d Satur
day a each mocth.
JT 3 District—L. J. Matlils. J, P. R. E.
M 'all m, N. P. Courts held 4th A’atur
-lay each rsontl
•teaves BDkeWdad™^^. m.; fcf .
nves at Irltmrton at {»;19 *. m ; arrives at
Leary at H :I3 a. m.; arrives at Albany at
12:00 a. m.
LeaVt-s Albany at 3:35 p. m.; arrives at
/.eary at 5:04 p. m.; arrives at Arlington
at (5:06 p. m.; arrives at Blakely at 7:0o
p. m.
Sunday Schedule.
Leaves Blakely at 7:30 a. m. arrives at.
leaves Albany at 3:20 p in. arrives at,
1 vary at 4 34 ji." m. ari-ives^at Arlington at
* oii arrives Blakely at 0:00 p.
tmmm i u\i.
A SELECTED STCRT.
Kansas City Journal.
A pretty, dark-haired girl bpgao to
work it, whose lover was over the sen.
She was a French girl, anjl camo of a
good family Vif lace-makeis. \
“I’ll work my own bridal vcit'jn my
leisure time,” she said, Vso when "Will
^er comes to marry me. I shall be a
guy bride.”
But she never finished the Veil.
Walter came too soon. She married
her English lover—ns poor as herself^
uud webt with him to London, and the
half finished bridal v eil went along,
carefully folded hwov at thV bottom of
a trunk, and, for time being, quite for
gotten . forgdlfcen
It lmve been in earn
est during twelve years, for aught I
know; certainly it lay that long unno
ticed. A lively 10 year-o!d girl was
the faiiy that broke its lone sleep at
|a»ti She huil dark eyes, like the little
peasy.tit of twelve years ago, but Wai
te i’s goldvn hair.
“Oh, the charming lace!* she cried,
clapp-ng her hands and dancing de
lightedly as Elsie shook it out of the
folds. “Deag mamma, what is it? and
who made it? and why is it hut half
done? Can I h ive it for a dress for my
dolt, mamma?"
The pretty, dark haired matron
laughed and shook her. hynd and llai!
sighed. Then she to'd her child the
history df its mtkiiigr. J i 1
“But it shall tint lie hidderi cb ‘long
fr<fm the light again,” 3be said tender
ly. ‘I will finish it, and when the time
comes for my little Adeieto be a bride,
she will have a veil to be proud of.”
Again the little taper fingers toiled
meirily and busily over the delicate
;sce, and fairy-like icins and masses
of graceful flowers grew steadily under
them. Adele watched the progress of
the woik with Die keenest interest.
“Mamma, loach me to work it,” she
said one ifcay. “My fingers are much
tim vjand tinier than y^urs.”
After that she would bring Her little
work-basket to her mother’s side and
-work at a Aerl tor her doll. Thefacilitv
with which she leaino.i the graceful
art was ltsioni>hing. At fhevge oi fi -
teen s-» expert was she that Elsie did
not, fear to let her take part in the
creation of the Widal veil itself, but
they worked only now and then ns the
fancy seized tln-m.
* j* it * * *
,
Louis Riviere WHS from France, like
Adele’s mother—that l ad been the
bond between th< m fr< m the firkt—for
Adele loved her mother’s country for
her mother's-sake, tin-ugh -he herself
wa- proud ot hema c iILd English, ..nd
she also ioved the'young Frenchman
Louis CMtne of tiohle blood, and
w-eli to do He had some money—not
enough to live upon in idle luxury, hilt
plenty io seenrJ- hi'tr bi.ai fair stait in
husinfess life. Unwilling to enter njmn
this course in Paris, where his noble
rela'ives would not scruple to oppose the
him, he had cIn sen London as
-oene of hi- future efforts, and embark
ed iu bnsiuessasK nn reliant there..
T' e happy weeks and mouths grew
jnto years Ade'e wa- now seventeen,
it was agreed and promised that when
the spring-rime cauie she would he
Rivit re’s hride •
“We must finish the bridal veil.’’
cried Elsie, eagerly. ‘ I tel!yon Mon
Cfetir Louis no lady of” your proud
b' Use ever wore n luce cv-re exquisite
an l rich Ah, shall I not he proud
when I look at my beimiifnl child in
her marriage roliie and think Of the
poor lift e peasant girl of h-ng ago.
„ij,, toilet! at the lace to earn coarse
bn ad so far awav over the sea!' 1
Lotus turned qotcklv . at these words,
w look of displeased surprise iu his dark
eyes.
“Wl-Ht peasant girl, madame? ’ be
qnestion-d noeasilv.
“Mvself,” slio answeiYd, happily,
not mnrkingthe look *>r tone. “What
was I but a poor little lace-maker wbon
a ,.. eeneroufi.'vuung lover married me,
the btthj-r of AdeL.”
Hu a. Swcve.i nothiue, and Elsie w»nt
njpTnly cl.ntferiua on, but Adele notic
‘ * I is sndden downcast air and gloom
ed eyes, though she was far from sns
n»r tbe cause ol either.
ij is i. aus Lty fsuiily priile bad
LEARY......GA. MiOAY^.OifiL'EMREiri^lBya:
ed a blow.
•‘A W-makPr!" h* $ni<l to himself.
“a oeasuot girl! If I had but known
it!”
All' that night, and for days and
nights afterward, the thought of his
bride's humble extraction tortured
Him; the stiug to his pride would not
be removed.
Unconsciously to Ifimself his nanny -
Mice affected his temper; he became
irritable, fretful, impatient, something
to the very verge of impoliteness even.
Above all. lie conceived an absolute but
violent dislike to the bridal Veil.
“I detent the sight of it!” life cried
one evening, in a moment of Self-for
getful ness, and when he and Adele
were alone. ‘ If. indeed, you love me,
neverrwovK at it in my presence, Adele,
and if I dared nsk one special fsvor
of you it should be—”
He paused suddenly. She was listen
ing in great surprise.
• k Well,” she said. “It should be—”
“Wear any other veil in the world
but that Oi e to be nultf ied in."
She folded her work and let her fair
hands fall on it in her lap,- one could
st e that those little bands wc- e treinb
ling Sue was greatly stirpiised at his
manner and reque-l, also vaguely hurt,
she scv*«v!y knew how or why. Indeed,
she had wondered often lately at a sub
tle and unpleasant change in LonL
(.'dulyl it i>e possible that she was about
to discover Us cause?
“You us a singular favnr,” she said
w;th forced quietness. “Are fou aware
that my dear mother worked this Veil?”
! The hot, impulsive temper answered
■nstkntly. without ,’4 thought—
“It is for that very reason that I
hae it!”
Aiid theo she^-understood him. The
daughter of England fiad bt-cu very
aluw to suspect or cOuipretierid ihe
pride . f the Frencii arLtoc ut. but site
saw- all id a ly m>wj and -he w<<uld not
iiiatry the man who thougla he stoop
t-d to tuki In r She folded up the veil,
and gently, but firmly snid:
“You bid not know wn«u first yau
sought -'lie for a bri>le tout mafUu.a
was a luce-worker iu Fiance; h yu > oad
perhaps vi u ivnul'd not hive ioved me.
Since you have Ivaroed tln-< fall y >-u
have legrettod our engagt ment. You
nee not sp ?1K; 1 have seen a change
iu'you—I led (hut it s< ! Rut th< re is
no harm douc,” she went oil w ith sim
ple digi itv, “since I have learned t .<
ti utii before it i- tm) late; .-i ni -o’’ — she
held out him h* little tierubling 1
to
hand, which he took m.iclianically
, ‘and so I will grant you the favor you
covet, my friend. Your bride shall
not wear my darling mother's bridal
veil”—here dm kissed the haud'hiid sue
drew it quickly away—"but !*:at is be
cause 1 snail not be ymir bride."
,• Vo need t‘> d a ell oil what foil wed.
His prayers, his p oti-stious— h tube
at first,’ then angry—his tears had n
power in them to -ap t' e streng'h ot
her resolnti.-n Tnejf part a col-tl( at
lust—lnveri still In ht-iiit, f r love die-,
not so easily—but untwardly seeming
scan-i ly even fnends
• She 8t.aid piondly as h B lmt the
room, vvin-ii the sound ot tin -tt- e
door closing alter him struck like a
knell of hope t-> liar young, passional•
heart. Shi- flew to the window and
watched him out of sight ij
•“Ou g<>!” sin- cried. da8liiri?? awav
the reii'S that blinded her. ‘Go from
my eyes, hateful tears, and let tne see
rov love f -r the l tff tun 1 Mv !t*w!
my b«ve! And I have behind”
She sunk down subbing. Jus* then
^he sound of iter m- th. r’r vofi-e. sine
j tl g merrily au ol<l French 8,mg n a
pocmi above, came to her ears Otne
more she dashed the tears a-va* .
“He despised yoti, mv darling mum
ma—you! No, no, I will never paidon
himl”
Her parents questioned her in vain,
gp e had quarieled with Louis, fcliiit
was all they could learn. And 1)-!' T-i
a chance of reconciliation came. E!-ie
smitten with mortal tllness and
died iti three days; ai.d Ade’e, over 4
whelmed by the owfnl ealrfinity, was
prostrated with brtiin fever.
At this junctnre a summons came fee
Louis from F.r.nce.dcfnaiiding his im
mediate presence there. Strange
changes had taken place. Two or
throe lives that stood between him
and the title atm e>tato of the Maicjni*
de l> Reviere had liceti swept away
an<* t-be third, » fral' and delicata
ol, *W« *»J <1 -> i«»«. The patent marq d»,
*»t«ueel» a f-eble old man, was also at
bas tl,e P oi for ut Loins, of^leatlqY ;ho ’so heir they of the »-nt dy iu
e as
ing nobleman. ,
The news bewildered him. His heart
swelled with exultation a d delight,
but it sunk again. AdClef Hud lie
lost Adde?
“I care not for rank or wealth un
less .-•he shares them!” cried his heart
“I will go and implore her pardon "
He made the attempt, but iu vuiil.
He Bought her father and said r few
words to him, however, that might
have made'all ris- t a^ain, had she ev
er heard them; but die never did.
When her long aud wasted aicku ss
was over «t last and she began slow l.r
un i feebly to take hold on lif *, she
found heiS' lf au orphan hi very truth!
Walter had followed Elsie to a b> tier
world.
Hot even then had sh 2 chained the
cup of Borrow to the dregs; h- r fathm’s
affairs had been terribly involved; when
all was settled she was penniless. Poor
Adele! Truly might it b said that
ber sorrows “camo not in single spies,
but in battalions,” father, mother, lov
er, iiome, all gone! What hud life Eft
to offer her hut patience and pain?
Aud Louis? He Would have written
to her iinmeniatelyrupou his arrival in
Puns, hut he felt ”o blissfmiv sure
that her fatli. r would make all wc 11. A
few wieKB later he did write, mb-rm
iu her ot Ills strange y altered f.ntuu
e's, and imjiloiing her to paulo i and
accept ouce m >re a#Tier tru--love the
love of the M laquia de la Reviere.
And the le er never r. ached Iter.
The house to which it came wa-empty
and dest it< d. but the hit happy homo
was tnoke up, and (hi little English
giii, or wnouiit busband ii d title and
lortune weie wastiag iu •Intiy FrenCe,
was earning a so rowiul living as a
iaCe-Worser. bucti me some of the le
verses Jf real life; more won ierful than
any iiciicti
So tin- uia qui- waited for an answer
in vatu. Th u piioe iov- up> m arcus.
“dne scorn- uie,” he thought, ‘•'the,
a q.-oi pens tut s clti.d. v 1 am punished
for my tolly I”
He resolved to drive h-r from his
heart. Rut after many mouths Ins
lei ter t«-Adele was returned mossed
and rectos-ed with strange address-s .
Ii wasa uv-sage of hope to him. She
mol net scorfied him; perhaps she had
not ce.is.-d tt? love. Relore a'nothi r
da.v and eight nad passed tin* marquis
was on hi- journey to L n.
Need I tell yiAi of hi- Welcome there?
When dia wealth and title fail to find
a'wurm'iiU'-? <J< oi toe friends of fortii
years who flock to clajm acquaint
it nee? Rut none could ,'iell film oi
A-iv e. bey bud the histo y of her bittm
ti ut tv. And dor tlnee inou ti»*
search Im nud faded to find her. He?
had ma le m t:ey, influenee, d epes»
heart uueie-i tc/.i l ins s-al'ch. ami
y t, iu spite of all. he failed.
Sue is dead,” h- ihoCgli' with i4n
temsti, "1 have come too ate—it is in
tin- grave I shall find my darling If
it be suD'i I pr"Vo it so, indeed, I
wdl live an t die single tor her sake.”
Rut diai was Ids bear’s resolve, nn
a .Rjjeeted by anyone, nv/ny u guy b*-l!e
ud brilliant beauty had spread her
net-t-.soqriie the Bpleouid pr.ze of a
titled liii bund. Foremost among the
many Rosalin i Hale; she has the lair
esi and <ve d'hie.-t ot tlieru all, aud her
^ol l-m i air was not unlike Adele’s.
It was tins that attracted him to waul
h-r more than others—the memory of
an olden 1 Ve. She never suspected
this, however; her vanity made sore
lie »as i?j her mils. She arranged
charadec, tableaux, plays in which
e s amid sustain a part with her. I.
in vet occurred to her that lid wus at
once too good-natured and too indiff-
■rent to relu-e.
The tubleanx were Suggestive ciiuugh.
On" upon which Miss Hale had quite
-et her heart , was that i f a
need it be euid that Louis was thy
bridegfdom, her elf the bride?
“He will speak now. surely.” «!te
thought, as she blushed and trembled
liesido luui, while the curtsino CaCit;
si wly down.
Rut, no, b*- only bowed aa holed her
fr m the platform;and then ouo of the
buttons of his oo't caught til her bridal
veil.
It ha- been said that ’“trifles uiako
rp tUo sum ofhun:a:i kappinesj.”
i-eeius *o"how. As tho nmrqui-j stopped
to disengage the lime, suddenly he ut
tetvd a strange cry. It is Adele’a bri
dal veil.
“I borrowed it of a lace maker,”
Miss Hale mi id, in reply to bin nn-nioun
questioning. *'I bud ordered onQ like
it; tint her health is bad, and she fail
ed to iiuve it fi^iislied in time. ;-Jo,
then, I made her l^od me this. She
was quite unwilling to,” she adued,
pouting, “just because it was her moth
er’s work. Such fancies for a poor
prtH.it.I” y
“Oh, n»l Very tniu ami worn end
sad.” she said, in reply to uuother qm-ti
lion of L -uisA; ‘ with line eyeB but
t"o dull and pah- to bo called pretty.
Rat an exquisite luce-maker. I shall
he giad (O give you her address if you
have any rfo^lt for her."
Yi n, he had work for—work, .Hint
they would share together; the bleksed
work oi building tip au almost broken
lu-art, of restoring love and happiness
to both their lives.
Mibh Hale never received her veil—
the marquis elaiiiLd it. In its Ntoad
h- hi nt tier a coitiplete aet of laces,
timt made her—in that respect at least
—the envy of society; and Loan mar
ried Adele.
Pale and thin and somewhat care
worn still w as ti*e bride of the,Marquis
ou her wedding day, but to his eye-—
the eyeadi f eithfui l ive—it was si ill
tin- sweetest face it: the tVlinle world
that smiled aud w.-pt, beneath Elsie’s
bridal veil. And, he kiss> d tht-.vld lace
and bl< sseti it because through it he
had found lier arruin.
“I love-it now(” said he, “I prize
it next to ymirs- Tt, deanst. It shall
t>e kc-pt as a treasure always.”
ARIZONA JOURNALISM
PI-rilTE ABOUT CIKCULATIOX ESPINO
IS THE PltETTIEST FIGHT EVEI' SEEN.
Bed Gulch Hipsuiortrr,
Tin- clrCiimturn uf the Bipsnorter is
simply para y zing. It everlasiin^ly
knocks the a'mightv sputa out ot tv
eritiing in this section cf the country
sud duo’t you forget t6 remember it
/Torn theBowk- Kidlc, Aug. 7.
Every salouii-kedper in the buig
knows that the Rowie-Kmie gi ts out
mure papers than any utner blanket
--hiet in Arizona,
From the Ripanorter Aug. 13.
When me editor of tbut skitilliili
sheet, the Row ie-A'uite, guys bo prin s
more papers than we do*, we answer
that he is u lur and Z Mugwump.
We ou’t want to set m uiigen'Ji tnan
ly oi/severe, but he is a white-livered
Cl.Will I and >1 horse illlrt, ami we can
jam -.he Ido aly eye <>nt ot him tn three
slnke of a pig’s ear. Our fighting
hours ts 9 a. m and w«- can always i>e
f mid at that time in Rl- ody Dick’s
salouii. where we have rented tV u fight
ng pen aud a private graveyard. All
corpses buried at our expeuce.
:
/Tom the JJowic-A'tfife Aug- 22.
T/.at ciiwaidiy car,tin editor of the
Uip-norti r, ca talk fight, tint every
ouo knows what kind of a hair-pin he
is. Why an ordinary gia-a of good
budge will knock him out, aud when
he duckies u dose of genuine Roecy
Mountain tangle-foot, he is laid out as
stiff as a poker. He’s tho word lop
sided, cros-eyed,, one-eared son of a
galoot iu these diggings, and wt> warn
bitn itiiit he’d better carry blschootiug
irou8 with hiru, ter (ve'te going t«* put
gome lioies in idk carcrss the liist time
we see iurn. Our name is Two-linger
ed Jake and we are laying for him.
From the R Ipsnortcr Aug. 29.
Two-fingeted Jake had lietter have
Kime iuore fiugeia s|<liceil on be lore
h , ]u y 5 ft)l Oue twet! BHIy. We knmv
jq,j a ar ,» coining down to
hun. Tim apologv for a "mule
Imugs out at Red-headed Jimmie’s
,d U co aud if cheVioys uatit t.i «e«
oon ie fun they had better drop m
,j jere t«,.|,ig,jt Jimmie, old tnan.
you’d better cot your crockery down
behind y„ U r breast works, for wo’U
opeu jnst as so.>n an we lay eyes ot ,
the galoot.
/Tom tbc Ripsnorter, Beptemfier 5.
lFrtlea by the Office Boy,
A HtLtr FIGHT.
Tho purtiest fight t/tts town ever see
sence Bloody Dick shot Champagne
Charlie, was Ihe one wiieie
t( q Rlllio the editor of this paper, kick
cd the bncktr It vrtu jest a
iSo. i<S.
i r. Tbe bo.vs ha 1 a 1 h. on warned' #>f
the picnic, so >M-h aded Jimaue’s
whisky shop wvm fnll-as wnz U !b.> dl
the boys. Ji,nti»L sto d he! i id th»
bar ai.d look in the chips and ) i\8b«i
out the piaWj. waiter* all the while lot
Two-finger, cilia d Jake to glmw up. Party
Boon he and every one u-hh really
fo? bnsiner,r. ( . for 'ioln-d two Colts mid
a bo win. He stepped up the bu
and ordeied drinks for the crowd, «t
the saute t ime askin’ U Ms fneud
One-eari-d When iVe Billiejiud been, hadn’t, ’i-ouud yep
w'uz'hid lie ho , eajd
he liad A little bicnes ntnl lie gu-sswl
he’d w ait for him. Jest theu a bullet
cum thro the wind \v and ktiocketl
Jake’s glas- oaten his hand. Every
body dropped, and us Jake cocked his
revolver he said;
•‘Vjf/dJ. Ik's u denied perlite f. lT^,
any way, for hcaehds his curd iq ub.-a f
of him. ” i!i 1
.
Ri-d-heade^l Jimmie had dropped
behind hL steel-plated bur (or pertee
fion, but he put Ins liend up once and
sed;
• Don't waste no shots, Jake. The
place is party will banged up now ftjd
-alo.q} fix in’s cost dust.”
“AH l ight. Jimtni.i.” s> z Jake, and
the. my boss cum In.
Talk ub'jut, your purty fights Why
this w tis the fiiiyyit show this towife ever
Sse. Eacli o(|'em got behind, a table
and tlieu thq eport begun. Tlieri
wnz .’trio bnlJpts wasted.. Every time
th^y shot somebody wus hit. Ousi
carol lliljie gut his other stir taken off
the first blaze f,nd Two-fttigerfed Jake
lost some of bis iu.es. Wlu-n their
ammunition give out they wus carry
ia’t Ii- bullets iu their curcHBsos. Bat
tne b sr pa t of the show wna
when (hey cum together with bowies.
T'hiji wuz just purty T no bgiiglin’,
but jest artistic carvin'. It doe-a fil
ler good to Qeo a fight where both par*
tiesund rstood ttieir bizuess. When;
they got tjliro they wnz so sc|ittdred
you c--uld.h’t toll which be oufed to
which. The or. ly, thing identified wus
BillE's ear, aud that iz on exnibitiori
at this office. The Coroner decided
t at tli y^ebt up Ih- Jliuiip by special
dl p -1 sashtiii ot Providence. He had
to sn on batn bodies at once been*, ns
I sen, you couldn't tell which wnz
wliHi. ^
O’le-eared Bdlio.uuz a bully boy
aud a hustler. He wtiz a good boss,
but if. wuz Wurth while to lose him to
such a bn|iytftfght. *
A 8ye?t Voice.
Jew ish .Messenger.
There ii no power of love eo hard to
an i keep as a kind voice A kind
hit!!d is deuf and dumb. It may be
rough in flesh and blood, yet do the
work of a soft, heart, mid do it with a
soft touch. But there is no one thing
timt love so much needs ai a sweet
v- ic-to tell whitt it means arid feel*,
wml it is bard to g< t it afid keep it So
the right tone, (jhe must start in
youth, and tie on tho watch night ami
d.tj, work and pp*y, to get mid keep
a voic. bait shall rj/aali at all times
the tin-tights of a kind heart. But
this is the time w lieu a sfi;n p voice is
mosti pt to bs got. h Yam often he.*r
giilk and boya Say Words nt p!»ywitn
quick sharp tone,-as if it the ■t
a were
sir ip of a whip. When one of them
gets vexed you will hear a voice that
sounds tit if it were made of a snarl,
a whine, aud a bark Such a voice
often speaks,worse than the heart
! L .«ic. It shows moro ill vtiill iu the
^ |}l||n lQ t()e -. on ,.. R ^ ^ -
yoniU W Ht l >,■
* ° Btt **"* * ° T * ' ne
.
that is sharp, and sticks to hut:
>Iirougb life, itud stirs op ill will and
grief, and falls like a drop of gail ou
, hw 8 , Vfc ,^ t t’; yh ^ 1)0 , oe> y u ,. n
thww « et 8 8harp , h , °»" toe »*’
l?e.-t those ,
Bil l kc-cp tlii ir voice for
they meet’ bl»e*y(lure. I wool i say to
all boys and girls; “Use your gues*
roico ut homo ” Watch it i>y day ysn
pearl of great price. b»r it will he
wortli to you in days to com • more
than the host pearl hid in tho ssu. A
sweet voice is * lark’s song to a heurtk
0!,<i 1,0(,,e ' lb ' M i,eart
bght is to the eye.” ------