Newspaper Page Text
! MI Editor.
1. .1. WAIKOSI, Pnblislier,
VOLUME 111.
A roxSBNSE.
BY MYRTLE MAB.
0, fiddlesticks! I wish I was dead; w
Boys haven’t got half sense—
iohn wanted to know awhile ago
If “future” was in the past tense;
And when I told him ’twas “ present, of course,”
He looked fes glum as a crab,
•And only said, “0, what a head
IJtis our dear little Myrtle Mab.”
And once when I asked him to show me how
To write a composition,
He said, “ Phe-e-ew 1 When will you
Acquire one acquisition? ”
Still, he helped me all the same;
He couldn’t well refuse;
Hut the other day I heard him say:
“ Mab’s always got the blues.”
And when I asked him, tauntingly,
If he had “ snakes in his boot,”
He gave a smile that could bo heard a mile,
And played “ The Old Man’s Drunk Again ” on
his flute.
Oh, if I just knew a single boy
Who had one grain of sense,
I’d give him my doll and pretty Poll,
And push him through a hedge-fence.
THE HISTORY OF PA PUR.
Preceding the use of papyrus by the
Egyptians, records were kept and cor
respondence carried*on by inscribing on
day bricks, metal plates, ivory tablets,
etc., the matter to be preserved or com
municated. This was the common
method of Egypt at the time of the exo
dus of the children of Israel. Stamped
upon a clay cylinder, an Assyrian ac
count of the deluge has been found, and
a similar cylinder in the museum of the
East India Company contains a portion
of the annals or decrees of Nebuchad
nezzar.
According to authorities, papyrus, a
reed which could bo unrolled into
sheets, began to be of use as paper 3,-
1)51 years before Christ, and thencefor
ward, for 3,000 years or more, papyrus
Was the only paper. The prophet Isa
iah speaks of this material when he says
in chapter xix., “The paper reeds by
the brooks and everything sown by the
brooks shall wither, be driven away aud
be no more,” a prophecy that has been
literally fulfilled, for the papyrus plant,
once abundant enough to be the world’s
only paper, is found no more anywhere.
The use of parchment began 200 years
before Christ, and had thus origin:
Ptolemy 111., of Egypt, heard that a ri
val King was beginning the formation of
a library to equal his, which consisted
of thousands of volumes of books written
on papyrus. To prevent the success of
the rival, Ptolemy stopped the exporta
tion of papyrus. The rival then had
recourse to parchment, the prepared
skins of animals, and thus parchment
came into use. As late, however, as
the twelfth century, papyrus was used,
a Papal bull, dated 975, written ou
papyrus, being, until 1871, in the Mu
seum of the Louvre, Paris. The books
■of ancient Rome were written on papy
rus by slaves educated for this business.
Europe learned the art of paper-mak
'hig from the Saracens, or Arabs, in the,
seventh century, and they probably
learned it from the Chinese. The pro.
cess that the Saracens brought to Spain
after their conquest in 704 had been in
vogue in China over 1,000 years. The
process was simply beating to a pulp, in
mortars, of vegetable fiber, and then
drying it in sheets. The Chinese make
paper the same way to-day, as they are
opposed to the use of labor-saving ma
chinery. The only machine admitted
to the Flowery Kingdom is the Yanke,
sewing machine.
The use of paper for documents uegan
about the tenth century. The use of
Tags for paper-making began in the
‘eleventh century, prior to that cotton,
tflax, etc., being used. The earliest rec
ord of the building of a mill for paper
making is 1370, the mill being erected
in Germany. The mill was, however,
only for reducing the fiber to pulp by
stamps run by water power, and was in
no way like our modern mills. In 1588
a German made such good paper that
Queen Elizabeth knighted him and gave
him a'monopoly of gathering rags in the
kingdom for ten years. The real value
of paper-making began to be best appre
ciated when tlie art of printing was dis
covered in the fifteenth century. Hail
printing been discovered earlier there
would have been little use for it, as
neither the bark nor straw paper of the
Chinese, the papyrus of the, Egyptians,
nor the parchment of the Greeks would
have been sufficiently plentiful for the
demands of the printing press. Ger
many, using cotton, flax and rags, and
her water and wind power for their re
duction to pulp and fiber, was ready for
the printer and his press, and these
made possible the Information.
The rag engine, bv which the raw ma
terial is reduced to pulp, is a German
invention less than ‘2OO years old. As
* late as 1756, in this land of ingenious
workmen, rags were reduced to pulp by
RISING FAWN, DADE COUNTY. GEORGIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1881.
stamps or iu mortars. In 1798, Louis
Robert, of France, invented the so-called
Fourdrinier machine. He had so little
encouragement at home that he took his
invention to London, where he interest
ed the Fourdrinier brothers, wealthy
stationers, in his work. In 1801 these
Fourdriniers purchased the patents and
experimented with them at a cost of
$300,000. Their experiments ended in
the present Fourdrinier machine of our
mills—a machine that has made possible
the enormous paper industry of the
world, an industry of which Pliny wrote
1,800 years ago : “All the usages of civ
ilized life depend in a remarkable de
gree upon the employment of paper.”
The brothers Fourdrinier reaped no ad
vantage from their invention. They
spent their entire fortune and died in
poverty, the eldest In 1855, aged 90
years.
The first paper-mill in the United
States was established iu Germantown,
Pa., in 1690. The first paper company
in Massachusetts was granted a patent
in 1728. The mill was started in Mil
ford in 1730. It was run with varied
success for some years, and then ceased
operations. Iu 1760 a Bostonian got a
furlough for an English soldier who un
derstood paper making, and the mill was
again started. In 1776 the Legislature
passed resolutions for the appointment
of suitable persons in each town to re
ceiveneags, and the people-of the State
were urged to save their rags for paper (
making. In 1779 Zenas Crane, of Wor
cester, journeyed to Dalton, and there
began the business which his sons and
grandsons are still engaged in in the
same town; and his fellow-pioneer,
David Curson, has also descendants en
gaged in the business and owning the
original mill site.
The address took up the art of paper
making from this time to its present
perfection, describing the process, the
inventions, improvements, etc., and the
importance of paper making in an edu
cational view. The different materials
used, the many and various paper prod
ucts, from boats to collars from oar
wheels to petticoats. Holyoke is now
tlie great paper-manufacturing center of
this State and of the United States, tin?
mills of that city having a capacity of
150 tons per day. The iaily production
of paper in the United States is estimat
ed at 2,000 tons, of which 150 are for
writing purposes. About 4,000 tons of
fiber are used daily to produce the paper
mtlde. — Pap<>r Trade Journal,
HISTORY OF A SOSO.
Will S. Hays, of Louisville, Ky., has
made a small fortune by writing songs.
Among liis popular compositions are
“ Mollie Darling,” “ Norah O’Neal” and
“Evangeline.” But lie got no money
from the latter, though it gave him a
start in his business. “ Just before the
war,” he says, “ I was with some young
visitors up in Oldham county, Ky.
Among them was a beautiful girl who
resembled the ideal pictures of Longfel
low'*! Evangeline ’so closely that I called
her by the name. We danced at an out
door frolic one evening, and soon dis
covered that four of us could sing to
gether. We tried popular quartettes,
and got along so well that we became
enthusiastic. About 2 o’clock in the
morning we started to walk home. The
night was as bright as day, with the full
moon hanging in the sky, and as wo
walked we sang. We sat down in a nook
pi rest, and 1 Evangeline ’ began to sug
gest other songs to sing. ‘ I*ll write a
song,’ said I, ‘if you’ll promise to sing
it before we go home.’ This was agreed
to. On the opposite side of the road
was a white plank fence. Where we
were sitting a party of negroes had been
roasting ears of corn, and the charred
sticks Lay all around. With them I
wrote the first verse of the song on the
top plank of the fence, and the notes for
four voices on the four planks beneath.
Then we stood off and sang it. The
girls were delighted, and insisted on hav.
ing a chorus, so I wrote the chorus on
the planks. Well, we sang it over and
ever, and went home singing it. Next
morning ‘ Evangeliue ’ came down stairs
humming the air, and asked me to write
it out and finish it. I told her I couldn’t
do it, but she might go down and copy
it off the fence. She took au umbrella
and sheet of paper, and soon camepback
with words and music. Then she in
sisted on having another verse, so I
wrote another verse, on condition that I
was to have a kiss for it, and she to have
the music. ”
Havs sent the composition to various
music publishers, but couldn’t sell it,
and it was at length made public by the
voice of Campbell, the negro minstrel.
Three hundred thousand copies have
been sold, but the kiss was the only pay
the author has received.
“ Faithful to the Eight, Fearless Against the Wrong.’
now M'PHERSOX DIED.
Gens. McPherson and Logan, who
had been to Gen. Sherman’s headquart
ers (before Atlanta), rode up to the rear
of the Seventeenth corps and dismount
ed in a clump of trees in front of an
open stretch, which had probably been a
field at one time. This was about 10
o’clock. Shortly after they had dis
mounted picket firing began on the left
and apparently to the rear of the main
line. After listening to it for a few min
utes, McPherson said he would go out
in that direction and see what it meant.
Calling to Capt. Kilburn Knox, of his
staff, to follow, he mounted “ Blackie,”
his favorite horse, and galloped down
the lane or narrow road, running in the
rear of the Seventeenth corps, at an
angle of 45 degrees from the main line,
toward the point where the firing was
heard. Gen. Dodge, commanding the
Sixteenth corps, had been ordered to the
left, with instructions to form at right
augles with Gen. Blair’s line, but he had
not had time to get into position, conse
quently the firing could not be on his
skirmish line, which led to the conclu
sion that something unusual was going
on. Hood’s tactics being well known to
McPherson, he was on the lookout for
dashes, hence his anxiety. It was not
more than fifteen minutes after McPher
son and Knox, accompanied by their or
derlies, had dashed down the lane until
“Blackie,” the General’s horse, came
galloping back with a wound in the
shoulder, from which the blood was
pouring in a perfect stream. The cry
was instantly raised that “the General
has been shot. ” Closely following the
horse came Capt. Knox and the two or
derlies. Knox dashed up and in an ex
cited manner exclaimed, “He is dead.
Get an ambulance quick,” Gen, William
E. Strong, now of Chicago, and Capt.
D. H. Buell, ordnance officer, started at
once with the headquarters ambulance
down the lane, followed by several of
the mounted men. Buell rode ahead
aud skirmished with the rebel P ;oL„*..,
keeping tnem back until Gen. Strong
got the body into the ambulance. They
drove back with all speed to where Gen.
Logan and the other officers were. Dr.
Hewitt hastily opened his coat aud dis
covered that the bullet had passed di
rectly through his heart, killing him in
stantly. The body was taken at once to
Gen. Sherman’s headquarters,' from
where it was sent, in charge of Gen.
McPherson’s personal staff, to Marietta,
where it was embalmed and sent with
the same escort to the home of his aged
mother at Clyde, Ohio.
Cant. Knox, who accompanied the
General, said they had gone but a short
distance down the lane when a shot was
fired from an ambush, taking effect in
tlie shoulder of the General’s horse.
They reined up, but had not time to
turn until another was fired and the
General fell heavily to the ground. He
neither spoke nor moved a muscle.
After the fatal shot several skirmishers
made their appearance, one of whom
rushed up and took off the General’s
waist belt. As soon as be retired, a
member of tlie Union pioneer corps ran
up and rifled the General’s pockets, tak
ing a pocket-book containmg about S7OO,
—Pittsburgh Telegraph.
TUB DA ROB OB DANCES.
Scotch reels and country dances were
the fashion in 1814; then came the
quadrille in 1815, and then the waltz,
the pioneers whereof were Lord Pal
merston, Mine, de Lieven and the
Princess Esterhazy. “No event, ’ ’ wrote
ltaikes, “ ever produced so great a sen
sation in English society as tlie intro
duction of the German waltz.” Up to
that time the English country dance,
Scotch steps, and an occasional High
land reel formed the school of the danc
ing-master and the evening recreation of
The British youth, even in the first cir
cles. But peace was drawing near;
foreigners were arriving, and the taste
for continental customs and manners
became the order of the day. The young
Duke of Devonshire, as the “Magnus
Apollo” of the drawing-rooms in London,
was at the head of the innovations; and,
as the card-playing dowagers, with their
quadrille, whist and maeao, went out,
the young continentalized world came
in with its French quadrille and German
waltz. The war being over, too, those
young people drank champagne, to the
great horror of the old-fashioned lovers
of old port, punch and propriety.
At a picnic party the youth who reck
lessly hugged all the girls was put down
as a free-and-squeezy fellow.
A Ph m Aiu:LPHiA drug clerk blundered
m compounding a dose for his own tak-
I ing, aud lost his life thereby.
PLEASANTRIES.
Follow the example of trees—keep
some things in the shade.
Many of the richest plauters of San
Domingo live on coffee grounds.
Never write the word “finis” back
ward. It will be a “ sin if ” you do.
A pig was never known to wash, hut
a great many people have seen the pig
iroi).
A dby-gioods house advertises lawn
dresses that will wash. Isn’t it the busi
ness of a laundress to wash?
The hog may not be thoroughly post
ed in arithmetic, but when you come to
a square root he is there—the hog is.
“■What makes the hair fall out?” asks
a correspondent. Usually it is the prop
erty of the deceased that makes the liens
fall out.
A river's mouth is larger than its
head, the sea has arms but uo hands,
and a mountain has a foot but no legs.
Queer, isn’t it ?
Rev. Georgs H. llepworth has writ
ten a romance entitled “!! 1 ” It is iu
§s§, and the interest is 4 1ling and un||cd.
—Lowell Courier.
A correspondent writes : “ Will you
tell us what Mrs. Langtry’s maiden
name was ?” Certainly ; her maiden
aim was to marry Mr. Langtry.
Many a newspaper has been assassin
ated in the same way as the late Sultan
Abdul Aziz, by means of scissors. —New
York Commercial Advertiser.
A little 3-year-old said to her mother
one day, “Mamma, you married papa
so that no one else could get him, didn’t
you ?*’ Her ideas of human nature were
quite earnest.
“ What is the greatest charge on reo
ord?” asked the Professor oft History.
And the
swered; “Seventeen dollarsjfor UhA
hire for self and girl fur-two
As Arkansas journal Siivs
have in that State a sprint
impregnated with iron
Worses which driuk at it never have to
be shod, the shoe growfpff||l their feet
naturally.
Cadght in the act: Clara—“ 0 Char
ley, you naughty boy 1 I saw you throw
your cigar away just as I came round
the comer,” Charley—“ Why didn’t
you say you wanted it ? How was Ito
know ?”
That geninL>ld proverb manufacturer
who wrote, work and no play
makes Jack a dull boy,” forgot to add
that all lay and no work makes Jack a
professional sport at 20 years of age,
and lands him in the penitentiary at 30.
“ Henry,” said his wife, with chilling
severity, “I saw you coming out of a
saloon this afternoon.” “Well, my
darling,” replied the heartless man,
“you wouldn’t have your husband stay
ing in a saloon all day, would you ?”
Physicians have decided that a man
hailing from a small town in Kansas has
two hearts. What a predicament he will
be in when his girl asks him, “Do you
love me with all your heart ?” He will
have to say, “ Which heart?” and that
may break the engagement.— Philadel
phia Sun. •
ABOUT JUAN.
Man that is married to a woman is of
many days and full of trouble. In the
morning lie draws liis salary, and in the
evening, behold it is all gone. It is a tale
that is told; it vanisheth and no one
knowetli whither it goeth. He riseth up
clothed in the chilly garments of the night
and seeketh the somnambulent pare
goric wherewith to soothe the colicky bow
els of his infant posterity. He becometh as
a horse or an ox and draweth the chariot
of- his offspring, He spendetli hif
shekels in the purchase of fine linen to
cover the bosom of bis family, yet him
self is seen in the gates of tlie city with
one suspender. Yea, he is altogether
wretched.- -Exchange.
TUB SATISFIED BOY.
It is happiness to be in as contented a
frame of mind as was the boy of this
anecdote:
A small boy was hoeing in a sterile
field by the roadside, when a passer-by
stopped and said :
“’Pears to me your corn is rather
small. ”
“Certainly,” said the boy. “It’s
dwarf corn.”
“ But it looks yaller.”
“ Certainly. We planted the yaller
kind.”
“But it looks as if you wouldn’t get
more than half a crop. ”
“Of course not,’’ said the boy, “We
planted her on shares. ”
QUININE SUBSTITUTE. .
THERMALINE
The OnSy 25 Gent
AGUE REMEDY
IN THE WORLD.
CURES
CWUS&FEVER
And all MALARIAL DISEASES.
From Elder Thomson, Paaor
of the Church of the Disciples of
Christ, Detroit,^Mich. —"My son
was dangerously ill and entirely prostrated from Chills
and Fever. Quinine and other medicines were tried
without effect. Mr. Craig, who had used Thbkmaline
as a tonic, advised a trial of Thirmalinu, which was
done, resulting In his complete recovery within a few
days.”
AX ALL rsxasisxs, C 2 E 7 HAIL, 23c. PEE BOX.
DUNDAS DICK & CO., 112 While Street, N, Y.
SEiDUTINE POWDERS,
W3l a I11?Ell1 Jk \ EKUG3I3TS.) Bill
LAXATINE
LOZENGES B a 'SSSIwi
Regulate the Bowels easily rd gI 14 )1
and pleasantly. Cures Cons
tination, Piles, Biliousness,-**™
Headache, Heartburn, Ac. All KEfS
Druggists, or by mail, 25c. per ■•■■■ l
box. % DUNDAS DICK & CO„ 112 White
Street, New York. g.
Capsulets.
The safest and most
reliable Cure for all
DOCUTA
Diseases of the Urinary Organs. Certain
Cure in eight days. No other medicine
can do this. The best medicine is the
cheapest? Beware of dangerous imitations.
All Druggists, or by mail, 75c. and $1.50
per box. Write for Circular. DUNDAS
DICK & CO., 112 Wlpte Street, New York.
MOTJ Instantly relieved by the use
of MAHJITjEN MATIO’O
OINTMENT, and PJEljjTJ?|after several
applications of it.
Druggists, or mailed on receipt ol PPJB
by DUNDAS DICK & CO., M’fg EMM
Chemists, 112 White Street, New York. ■
THE BEST |
OF ALL
LINIMENTS
FOR MAN AND BEAST.
For more than a tlilril of a century the I
Mexican Mustang Liniment has been I
known to millions all over the world a* I
the only safe reliance for the relief ofl
accidents and pain. It Is a medicine I
above price and praise —the best of Its 9
kind. For every form of external pain I
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment is without an equal.
It penetrates flesh and muscle to
the very bone— making the continu
ance of pain and inflammation impos
sible. Its effects upon Human Flesli and
the Brute Creation are equally wonder
ful. The Mexican
MUSTANG
Liniment is needed by somebody in
every- house. Every day brings news of
the agony of an awful scald nr lmrn
subdued, of rheumatic martyrs re
stored, or a valuable horse or ox
saved by the healing power of this
LINIMENT
which speedily ffres ailments ol
the HUMAN FLESH as
Rheumatism, Swellings, Stiff
Joints. Contracted Burn*
and Scalds, Cuts, Bruises and
Sprains, Poisonous Bites and
Stings, Stiffness, Lameness, Old
Sores, Ulcers, Frostbites, Chilblains.
Sore INipples, Faked Breast, and
Indeed every form of external dis
ease. It heals wit hont scars.
. For the Brute Creation it cures
. Sprains. Swinny, Stiff Joints,
Founder, Harness Sores, Hoof Dis
eases, Foot Bot, Screw Worm, Seal),
Hollow Horn, Scratches, IVlnd
galls. Spavin, Thrush, Ringbone,
Old Sores, Poll Ex-il, Film upon
the Sight and every other ailment
to Which the occupants of the
Stable and Stock Yard are liable.
The Mexican Mustang Liniment
always cures and never tlisuppoints;
ami it is, positively,
THE BEST
OF ALL.
LINIMENTS
FOR MAN OR BEAST.
Ten years ago a blast furnace which
w ould make 400 tons of metal per week
on 600 tons of fuel was considered a big
tiling. We have blast furnaces in Pitts
burgh which produce 1,500 tons of met
ai per w r eek on less than 1,500 tons of
fuel. *he old method of heating per
mitted the flame to pass out the fur
nace stack at a temperature of 3,000 de
grees Fahrenheit. We are now using
the regenerating stoves. in Pittsburgh,
and do not let the gases out until we
have utilized all the heat except 300 de
grees.
j TKRMS:—SI,O4 per Annnni,strictly in Ailvniy*
NUMBER 46.
SUBSCRIPTION KATES,
One Year, iu advanee $1 00
Six M >nths. “ 75
Three Months, “ 45
1* not strictly iu advance 1 50
GBNBRAb DIRECTORY.
CHURCHES.
Preaching by the Circuit preacher, on
ihe 3 and Sunday in each month, at 11
o’clock a. m. and at the Furnace at 3
cVock p. in.
Preaching by the Missionary Baptist
at the Furnace on the first Sunday and
Saturday night b fore, in each month,
by the pastor, Rev. T. C. Tucker.
MASON TC :
The regular meeting ol R’xing Fawn
Lodge No. 293, F. A A. M., the Ist and
3rd Saturday nights in each month. T.
J. Lumpkin, W. M., J. W. Russey, Sec
retary.
Tren'oi Lodge No. 179, F. & A. M.,
meets on the 2id and 4th Friday nights
in each month H. A. Russell, W. M.,
J A. Bennett, S.crctary.
Trenton R >yal Arch Chapter meets
on the 3rd Wednesday in each month. ,
M. A. B. Tatum, H. P.; W U. Jaco
ivay, Secretary.
COURTS:
Sopeiior Court meets on the 3rd and
4 h Mondays in March and Septan
C >arl of Ordinary meets on the first
M >ndiy in e3h mouths. G. M. Crab-*
tree, Ordinary.
Tae J istir o Ciurt for the Rising
Fisru district, on the 3rd Saturday in
, e i :h month.
EDUCATIONAL:
T ie county B >ard ol Education meets
' >iu the ea ! l or the chairman. F P.
Kelcberside, Cmnty School C j minis
! sioner. •
PHO B’ESSION AUCA KbS.
T. .1. LUMPKIN I j H I’. LUMPKIN,
RUiug Fawn, t 1 Lsfsyette.
r|l J. LUMPKIN & BRO.,
Attorneys at Law,
Rising Fawn & Ls'ayette, (i t
Will nay prompt? attention to the col
lection of claims and all bminess < in
trusted to their care, in the several
courts of the counties of Dude,. Walker,
Cuattoog-t arid Cutoosa. Dtf
Alatoa Gut Southern Mind.
Tim; car a
Taking effect Februaiy 20th, 1881.
NOB I II BOUND.
No. 2 Mail.
Arrives. Leaves.
Meiiclian, I ®2O a. in
York, 629 a - nl ! 8 30 “
Livi'.gston, 654 “ j ti 55 “
Epes, "17 “i ‘ '
Mi hr, 727 “ 7 2.8 “
Euta>v, 805 “ 820 ‘
Tuscalosß, 951 ! 958
Cottondale, 10 11 “ 10 12 “
Coaling, 10 28 “ 10 30 ‘
Woodiitock, !H 00 “ II oi
Birmingham, j 1214 p. ni.j 12 19 p. ,
Trussviße, 1 12 5> “ 12 56
Springville, 122 “ 431
Whitney, j 209 “ , 2 10 .
Attalla, 256 “ j 311 *
Collinsville, 407 “ 408 ‘
Branden, 434 “ 430 '
i I'ort Payne, 4cl “ 452
Sulphur Springs, I 543 “ 540 ‘
Rising Fawn, !fi 00 “ 60|
Trenton, 624 “ 62a ‘
Waufcatebie, • 7i3 ‘‘ | <
Chsttanooeo, j 720 " I
NORTH BOUND.
No. 1 Mail.
Arrives. Leaves.
Chattanooga, 8 00 a. m,
Wauhatchie, 815 a. in. 8t “
Trenton, 851 “ 852 “
R : s ; ng Fawn, 9 14“ 915 ‘
Sulphur Springs, 9 ,80 “ 932 “
Valley Head, 955 “ 955 “
Fort Payne, 10 21 “ 10 22 ‘
Brandon, 10 26 “ 10 38 ‘
Porteraville, 10 50 “ 10 50
Collinsville, 11 02 “ 11 03
Greenwood, II 36 “ 11 26 “
Attalla, 11 50 *' 12 11 p. m.
Whitney, 12 58 p. on. 12 a7 “
Springville, ,1 31 “ 133 “
Trussville, 207 “ 208 “
Birmingham, 243 “ 248 “
Woodstock, 402 “ 403 “
Coa'ing, 434 “ 438 1
Oottondale, 452 “ 453 “
Tusea loots 0 , 512 “ | 515 “
Eubrw, ’ 618 *’ j 7 03- “
MiH r, 7 4’> 742 “
Livingston, i S1 1 “ I Sls “
Yoik 840 “ i 841 “
Meridian, I 950 “I
( has. P Wahace L. B Moirison,
Si pn u'i l r'fi L Gm’lPess As’t.
SrTEßFLirot's : “And so you learn
dancing, Bob ? And how do you like
valsing?” “Oh, it’s not bad! lean
manage very well myself; but Ithnk a
girl’s rather in the way 1”
•ano of moj fb si epiorn? jmmoa
oqii uemo.w of twin jo uoifjodoid anj.