Newspaper Page Text
~... , j a l»nMtate*r I
.44'1-m mmun A. iniva**, |
■ ' VOLUME 1
» 1< r it »
{nuuu at/rjuu
notra.)
naar.
v«*4n Dmil st Ma mateuoteMi »u*.
Stood wit* uia and Mr;
tma nd him ipraad *!■ rich mtete.
Waar ram Ute manaloa fair,
A*S wta* a iMl«hbor, n«cod, aadk
Ualaarnad, ;oaaml that way,
Tb» fathar tamed, aadde tba lad I
Them Madly words did any;
•*t*aro tear poor Magftaa: U.ny«,
r How ikanhfal we UioaM Im
4 That oar rapabttc rlraa a ohanoa
To iaUowa aooh M be I ”
t- twxbx>.
Ul *" M’-gala, biased In Jeweled 11**1,
eoept in ailkaa sheen;
fc. o9 *?**" U,OD « 111 • “tod so br.jbt
•Mid btaateoos ne'er was seen.
Aloft she bald bar haughty head,
Hartayed Jwr Palis atou.es I
"diaM a>ae< patron .sr, »abeea>4, to *
** Mias <MI, I soppoas.
**She's poor, eha teachaa, baa n* ttytef "
In Borope, acw-bet dli* A jX r -
In th*« republic, ve'rv oompeUed
wl T» yoakaowj” , r s
-.snihfr'i Mtarmna.
T£U£ Lil TLE BOOTS.
In the morning, on leaving my room,
I used to see hi* *hoe*_ carefully p ] aoe< j
•*» ide jflfown before trig door' They
wore LitMm, laced “boota, rather worn ami
iu > .el.£ by the rough *ag.> to which
j- Mfejeoted them. The note* *ren-
TWnewhal thin tn and tt jittlo
ijHa menaced tfo toe the rightjfoot.
Ifee strings, lopi Ignpf Mng t-.ir-
to tho rig® Ind! left By the
.IconJd •Juuly •'
j»hi by bib
-
**’ mnvwsrwn.iof & fooQ had left
traced jffcr ui dMp or a&uutot im - I
vrorjtilJe inmQgtiona.
Why has mesnfoy ching to all this v )
know drill sro my
.1. .. A.,r*r t>, ■ YJ'ahiKltfnwrfT placed by
my own—two grains of sand beside tw<.
living -stones, a goldfinch i n compan v
With an eieptumt! They wet., hi.
“everyday” IxaXa, his play corn pan
jobs, with which he traversed his san,l
mountains and explored the depths o!
the neighbor juf Hff4* irf-Watfir Jl teir
existence was *o l '*s | kd to ana partook
so much of his own that eometiiiug of
himaglf seemed to have been transferred
to them; to me they appeared to possess ;
a peculiar physiognomy; I felt that an
visible bond attached them to hitn,
uid I could not look tipon their still itA
decided form, so comically graceful,
without thinking of their master and
avowing that they resembled him.
Everything that comes tn contact
with babies grows a little babyish also,
and becomes charactenaod by that awk
ward grace peculiar to them.
8.-Hide these laughing, gay, good-hu
mored little boots, demanding but to
•xr.Hir the fields, my own appeared tnou
stmua, heavy, grow and absurd, with
their gigantic heels. Looking upon
them, as they stood there, with heavy,
undeceived aspect, one could not bnt
feel that for them life wan grave, the
road long and the burden to be born*
altogether aerioua.
The contrast Via rfikrtred and the !<*-
m profound. I ua«-i to approach these
tiny* boots wry gently, sh order not to
wakp the old man who still slept sound
.f io V l9 adjoining chamber. I used to
tap them, turn them over and over a* 1
examined them on all aides, and j felt *
delicious smile mount from my heart to
my lipa. The old glove, perfumed with
violet, which I have so long kept hidden
in the most secret depths of my drawer,
never filled my soul with so sweet an
emotom.
Parental love is not a passing aff.o
tion cast upon the winds ; it has its fol
lies and its weakness it is either puer
ile or sublime. It never analyze* itself
ami never seeks to explain its emotions;
it makes itself feltand 1 allowed my
self to drift with its delicious surrent.
l*t the papa who is without weak
Hess cast the first stone at me—th<
mammas will avenge me.
Remember that this little toned boot
recalled to my mind a tiny, dimpled fool
to which was attached a thousand cher
‘•bed souvenirs.
1 can still see my dear noy swung
upon my knee as I cut his finger nails ,
how be straggled and pulled my >*asd,
'anghingtn spue of himself for !*• •“
ticklish.
b I caunttl M# hi> When, in th- ♦ven- I
mg. beside the bright. warm fire. I r "
moved his ihfle stockings. How de
lightful it wsa ! • •
to say: “One two— Ant
he, fflvetoped in his vast night-gown, hi
hands.lost in the sleeves, which were by
far too tong, with sparkling eye* *■*
ready to bunt out laughing, awaited th •
Wterkma “ Three. ”
Mkl tongth, toter s thousand dels'
' —r /
Columbia Itdrerliser.
■»« a ihonaaud attempt* at tetann,
which excited hie i ßpatl * n ~
»” "‘'Wortnnity to st-ai fi Ta orwx
khw» s> Y orfe,! “Threw ”
iJeasuru. He thrst- himself back in mv
. and Ids barn legs cleft the airJ
From his wide-open month, in which ]
sonorous Uaghter. "
Hi' mother, who laughed also, would
"*T. o *“ or two ;
" ( oma, baby ; oorne, angel, y otl
will etch, cold | Hold lam I ’•Will y OU
be quieM little'wretch I ■
Then she would wish to scold him,
but oould not oppress the unmistakable
smile upon her lips. And who could
have looked sprious in the presence of
tha| flaxen hwul of hair, of those rosy
cheeks, flushed and happy, and of
baby lips that opened but U> vent bis.
little heart hl peals of merry latyhwu
as he bounded upon my knee f
My wife turned toward me, saying:
"He is intolerable I flood heavens I
what a child I’• But I
well that she meant : *" Look how
pretty, hnw healthy ami hiwr*happv he
is, our little man, our dart ug baby f"
And in truth he was adorable ; at least,
I thought so 1
I was wise enough—l may my it now
that my hair is white— not to let i>aaai a
•ingle one of those joyful moments
without enjoying it amply; and, truly,
I did well. Let us pity those fathers
who know not how to be papas as often
as possible, who never roll upon the
carpet, never play at hide-aad seakt I
never imitate the barking of dogs orXhe
roaring of lions, never bite with all their
might without doing harm, or hide be
hind the arm-chair, taking care tho Widle
to let tjiemselves be seen I
Let ns sincerely those poor un
fortunate ones! Theae are not onjy
childish and agreeable pastimes that
they neglect, they are real joys, delic
ious pleasures; they 'are trifles • that,
taken together, compose that happiness
-to Web rn> Many pemmßrslamU r and ac
cuse Ol j .—.. T ...«„0U,
beoauae they expect it to fall from
heaven in the form of an ingot when it
is beneath our very feet, in pieces which
need only to be gathered up. Let us
tlxm is.tlier theae httla opd
learn to drop our continual cry of com
plaint ; every day brings its bread and
[xjrtion of happjuese I
Ijet us walk slowly, with our eyes,
uow and than, hied upuu Urn. ground J
let us look around and peer into the
little corners ; U is there that Provi
dence hides the tresMires.
I have always laughed nt Hiosc per
sons who go through Un with the 1
reins slackened, the n.mtvtls ddtitod and
the eyes f.isteiled oil the horizon J l
seems that the present burfis theu fee'.
and if you any to them : “Btop au in
stout, let yonr feet .read tipon the
in th, and takuj l glass of this good old I
ainc ; let us eliat awhile, amHo a sec- I
,ii I and embrace our children 1 ” they
p’ply ; “Ini J osHihl( r ;*Wi'"are awnftei!
down there. Down tliuko wo shall chat,
down there we shall be happy I " And
4hcn they have arrived down then,
breathless and broken, when they cry
<>nt, claiming the reward of their
fatigues, tile present laughs under her
-jiectaclea, saying : “ Gentlemen, tho
.-»de,iM Joelssd up I”
•Hie future promises and the present
pays, and we must cultivate thf»ac<juaiu
tance of the cashier who brills the keys
of tho safe.
Why imagine that we are tto< du|*s«>J
Providence!
Do you supjmse that thia good Provi
dunce has sufficient leigproto serve each
me of un with perfect happiness, de
liciously cooked, already ent and ffre
■srvd njxin a plate of gvld, sad, m>'re
.Tver tp tscklS. oitt wltl ‘ " w ‘*‘
•trains of music during the repast? A
C ri-TT ‘5 hQ ”
T We mint be reasonable, roll up oui
cook our own food and not ex.
noct Heaven to make our pot boil
I thought of an this, in the ewfinng,
when boy toy in •*"! •-»
regular, mout breath came .gainst my
hand. I thcmeHk of ftll **PPX ml '
ruenU which I already owed to the Utts
;u*u, ami I wan thankful to »im to.
«Htomytolt
,-tob. happy-^lw^*^’* 1 *
1 it is to seek that hap,nnw- ™ Chm.
“ Mv wife the —opn
, remained hoars at a to®-
“ e bright file, of that of wtnch
"°. r . my «toa< £
•■ tw your low * •* *
U.eiy dtfi-rtml nature tram m in. ? P-
Parotid lhe Interests of Column County and the State of Georgia.
HARLEM. GEORGIA,.TUIDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1881.
pas oalculaU Their afltoottoa is rite
trade. Tbsypem love their child:
wSU-riutri thrnr egotism to flatted
There la something of the propneto*
the papa. You can analyse your p
cntal affection, discover ita oausea, 1
say: 1 1 Jove my child bacauae it to tk
and thus.’ For tlie miunma thia ana.
sto to aadtopossibility. She dose |
love her child because it is pretty or «
ly, intelligent or absurd, because it i
Si-toblas her or does not reaemble hi
or because it has her gestures and teal
or because it does not have them. S
lovee it liecause she cannot do othl 1
wise; with her it is a necessity. Mat*
nal love is an innate feeling in worn
In men parental love is the result of A
eumstanefla. With her it to an mating
with him it to an involuntary colour
tion, but, at ths same time, the reaolt
Various other feelings !**
“Ohl very wall," I replied, "spa
your mind. We have neither heart it
tout w« men; wa are bloodthirsty os
mbals. Tuxrible sentisaants, thoad’
Aad I plunged the poker into the 6-
with a violence that caused the sputa
to fly in every dirocriou.
And yet I could not but ecknowledp
that my wife was nght. When a ohfl
makes its entrance into the world, lb
mother's affection cannot be oomparfl
to that of the father With her, it •
already love. It seems that she he
known her darling a long time.
seems to say: “It is he." She takfl
trim to hnr without embarrassment, hi
gestures are easy and uuoonstrainiZ*
and, folded in her arms, tho baby fl&
a place exactly to his measnro—a S'H,
warm nest made expressly for bus. in
which he sleeps in happiness. It n<al|y
leemH mis women had served a mte-
U'rious apprenticeship to maternity.
Men, on the contrary, are.plunged i,to
deep trouble on tho birth of an in fait
The Meat cry of the baby touches th-tei;
but there is more astonishment tlian
lore in this emotion. Tho father's affec
tion is not yet liorn. His heart has need
of reflecting ni>on and habituating itaolt
to him.
An apprenticeship must be served to
the art of being a papa ; there is none
to that of being n mamma.
If the father is awkward in loving his
new-to>m baby, wo must Acknowledge
that he is none the less awkward in
handling iL
Trembling and with a thousand cm
tortions, a thousand efforts, he hucc**U
-hi raising this insignificant weight. Ho
taahvodef .breaking the puppet; kis
ptippetabip is aware of the fact and
bawls accordingly. He exerts mare
muscular force in raising this child,
|wior man, titan would lie necessary to
shatter his front door. If he kiss it, kis
I Hard pricks its face; if he touch it, ii»
fingers hurt the delicate lieing. He las
the air of a l>ear attempting to threat a
needle.
And yet, this IHtle baby must gtfn
tiie affection of it* poor father, who,at
first, meets only with misadventuns;
it must win him, enchant him, cai*e
him to conceive a love for hia pooitou
and not force him to «rdure his robot
conscript too long.
Nature has provided for this, and he
jiaps is advanced to the rank of Oorjw
al the day his baby stammers ite fist
syllable*.
And how sweet is this first effort'to
speak, and how admirably chosen, few
well calculated to touch the heart ofthe
father is the first word: papa. lis
strange that the v*ry first word of ahn
man being expresses precisely the fail
profouml ami texaler of all feelings I
1* it not touchUig to see tin* littWie
mg find, without assistance, that on*
word which must surely gain the aieo
tioti of him of whom ft haa the grMeat
ne*d that word which says: “lam
your own ; love me, give me a pla4 in
y>>V heart, stretch out your arms tope;
you see that I know nothing a* yt-r, I
have just lonite-1 m the worid, and Uink
of yon alraody; I amonnuf your fa4ly
I shall eat of your fool and bean ,tmr
name- po—pa—po—pa.”
He has found at o»ce the mot deltate
of all flatteries *’•' "weakest of all .J.w
How*. H« tbe wrwM with a tta»-
*er etewAo-
c*. | tii* boi >v*d darling I Pa— ja—
I r*n still hear his hasitauag
littb votco *nd *uji *e« hi* tiny rod lip
n*4au.l fail We were on our kne«4 ii,
» tede around him, and even then v
toured above like giant*. We sail U
fofy “ ttay that again, little man, m)
khatiwln | Where i* your papa F'
i-bearoii t>y to* bright faorn
turned his eye* toward m<
*4 ote hi* little arm*.
Oh ! bow I embracod the darting My
voice was choked with team.
From that moment I was a papa, so
nonaly a papa.
I had been baptised !— From lAs
MvncA.
WTBOJrre 4-OKM.
Not withstanding Byron’s assumed con
tempt of death, nothing could exceed
his abject terror when laboring undes
even the slightest illness. He was dining
at Pisa, with Hunt, Trelawney and
Shelley, one day, whan he was suddenly
seised with a violent attack of colic. Hs
hastily arose from the table, threw him
self npon the sofa, and liegau to say, i
* Oh, my Qod I I am dying, I am dy
ing I" Trelawney, who was a very pe
culiar man, went up to tbs terrified
bard, and said, “Oome, come, Byron, if
you arc dying, you needn't make such •
oocdounded funs abont ik* The tone in
which he said this was so irresistible
that the sick tnan could not help joining
in ths laughter which Trelawney's non
aiiatance caused. Byron, who really at
heart was a very kind man, and whose
nature rose at every oppression, was
verv fond of making himself out a very
bad one, and when he had indulged
him self "with a little more gin and watei
Than usual he would frequently grow
almost maudlin over his imaginary
wickedness. One night h" was jiartio
ularly dismal over hto own iniquities,
and expressed great repentance. Ho
was very much put 'tent by Mrs. Hunt
saying, in a tone of affected consolation,
“Oome, mv Lord, you are not half to
wicked as you flatter yourself you arc ”
He gave hta puHtohar, John Murray, as
a birthiMy present, a Bible very nicely
bound. On the outside, stamped in
gulden letters, was the macripriou,
“ From Lord Byron, to his friend, John
Murray, Esq." This was oefentetioualy
laid on the center-table es the great pub
lisher's drawing-room, and Murray was
very proud of the gift At a Large party
at his house, one evening, a Mead was
turning over the leaves of the ißagnlfi
cent Bible, when ha suddanh cned:
oeen altering the Bibl*." Haying
ho pointed out to trio a*tonuih.»l and in
dignant publisher that Byrou had al
tered a verse by drawing his pen through
the won! “robber” and substituting »n<
other word, so that the verse ran thus:
" Now Barabbas was a publisher. ” After
that unlucky discovery the book disap
peared.— TAonuM Powell.
irDDJoIx coirivFraTiojr.
The practice of calling in an add Hi >nal
doctor, when the one already in attend
ance feels the case becoming grave, haa,
if the latter is a akillflil and experienced
man, somewhat tho uune reasons in its
favor as Parliamentary Oovaruinrut.
The appearance of doctor the second
strengthens the nerves of the (wtient'a
family, aad sometimes, though not al
ways, these us the attendant phymciau.
Tlie patient himself is generally startled
and alarmed by it. In flinety-nine oases
out of 100 it baa not, as everybody
knows, any influence whatever on ths
manageiuent of Vie case The consult
ing doctor almost always approves of
what the other doctor lias done; seldom
or never does ha suggest anything Me.
But he makes the other doctor decidedly
more comfortable in his relations with
the family, and makes the family com
fortable in the foaling that they have left
nothing in reason untried. Nation.
•io rant.
The immense fans suspended in the
great hospitals at Madras, India, ter the
purifiosrion of the air, the movement of
which has hitherto lieeti by hand, are
now operated by steam power, the aob
stitattoti being both effectivs and econom
ical. The machinery by which this is
accomplished is quite simple, all of the
fans in the greet establishment lieing
[lulled by a steel wire Line some 1,700
feet tong ; that is, the whole number of
fens—loo, presenting a total area of
3,060 feet—are all palled as case pendu
lum, giving a swing of seven or eight
feat, «n<«'Udy, steadily and without
noise of any kind. The long swing and
uulioriu contriiuoua motion perxluoed by
this arraugrment insure the desired
' h>ngc of air, without occasioning a
draught.
Jokm H Wlujams, United Blates
H*n*U»r, recently sold his crop erf u,b*<'-
co, raiaed on seventy-five acres in the
“blue grace" section of Kentucky, for
Ml, 419.06. There were ninety-five
liogaheeds, and ttke yield from each sore
was Merly fIBOU. He was ssatatad by a
ioeh of 7W) tarkeys, who kept the plan to
•leer of worms.
Tsa total area planted with tobacco in
-be United States as flifo.Ml acres, pro
dnmng 473,M1,1W pound*.
DXXDVOOI) as XT X*.
Deadwood, writes a correspondent at
the Biatoci Journal, is a town of 8.60 C
to 4,000 people. Enthusiasts claim 6,000.
Search all New England for tho deepest,
narrowest valleys between the highest
hills in the "Bwitaerland of America,"
not excepting the White mountains, nor
the Franconia Notch, stretch the ravine
two, three, five, ten milee, and you have
a conception of the lay of the land about
- Along the lowsat line of
the ravine run the tho combined waters
of the Whitewater and l>eadw<xxl creeks.
Whitewater is the last name on* would I
think of applying to the red stream of
thin mud that comas down from the
quarta mills of Ijead and Central, through
the placer claims of hard-working men
who are seeking to “ wash ” their way to
wealth.
Main street, Deadwood, lacks few of
the kinds of business houses to l>e found
in Minneapolis, for example, and has
many Uiatewen Chicago has not. Miners*
tools and materials make a distinct and
1 rofltabte liranch of bnauirsa. Schools
as good aa town* of that eiae often anp-
. ft,■flhttf.'bte--Congregational, Mvtho
distf Episcopal apd Catholic- -as well
organised, houfled and mann.xl a* the
saiiitliost oould ask. Houses aa neat,
tasteful and refined as culture ear earry
to the froat, invite the bnsiiuiu, man,
with hia family to settle for life. Hnch
is the mthlligenoeaf the place—eo many
of the people are educated and accus
tomed to iim beat society furnishes
ev sCßMPsthat a second-rate pMacher,
teacher or craftsman of any sort
would stand far less of a chance than
among the staid oommumtina of-good
old England. Daßnees, stupidity,
tramps and quacks are advised to go
East.
Deadwood is tho hub of the hill*.
Everything centers in there— radiates
from there. It is the distributing point
for Uncle Bam, for the miner*, for the
ranobeca and th* proapectora. Bejpn
aing with tower town, " Elk town OHy,”
and passing through “Elizabethtown”
(th* portion that was burned July 2fi)
11 *-> Itaadwood praurr.
.- one would see rongnnees. vm-m**,
wretchedness. Buch appendages Lang
to every town. Civilisation sloughs
them aa soon as the social machinery is
I fairly in motion. Bo it will be here.
Deadwood is a marvel of growth, en
terprise and morality, when we con
aider its isolation and the material
that floats on the first waves of civiliza
tion.
Tnomi who have suffered from the
lodging of a locomotive-cinder in the
I eye have scarcely ever recognised it as
a bhaaing in disguise. Indeed, curses
I undisguised, together with weeping,
wailing and gnashing of teeth, rubbing
of tlie inflamed organ with only th<> ef
fect of making it worse are the usual ac
oomponiments of the affair. A Ixiy,
blind in one eye, suffered for several
days from the intrusion of one of these
peats, but when the bandage was re
moved he discovered to hia intense de
light that he could sue for the first time
iu several months, Th* cinder had re
moved the scar of an ulrsr which had
troubled him a year ago, but which the
surgeons could not cut away.
It is of no use trying to explain to
children that there is a diflerenew be
tween canary bird* and women. A lady
who was visiting at u neigh toir’s was
asked to aing, and said that she really
, could not <le *o in any circumstances,
when a little girl went up to her and
asked, “ Please, is you a-moulting
/‘roitotence Star.
JAW MILLS, GRIST MILLS, W
Plantation and MUI Machinery. Engine* and Bolters. Ootton tfotwwa, BhaMtog
Pulleyx, Hangar*. Journal Boxes, MUI (tearing, Qud*oo«, Turbin** Water y
Gin (tearing, Judson’" Oovurno'*, Diaaton'a Circular Bswi, ilummcn dad Fitss,
Belling, Babbitt Mstal, Bras* Fittings, Glob* and Cheek Valves, Whistle (bwfltifltrs.
•te. Ireo and Bros* Osatioga, Gin Rib*, Iron Front*, Bxloonte* and Feoee B4Ml|pg
OKO. R. LOMBARD A 00.,
FOBEKT CITY FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKfel **
1014 to lOlfi FENWICK STREET, AUGUBTA, GW -qt
toe Water Tower.] fl^*Repairing promptly dene at lotatet erietai
floiler repair* of all kinds done promptly. -- fleeflS-apw
OPERA HOUSE GARDES
BEN NEISZ, PROPRIETOR
oom WINKS, UQIIIRB AND I’IGAKS.
FHILADXLPHIA AND CINCINNATI MBR. '
BROAD AND HLLW BTRKCTfI, AUGUNTA, •<.
foDlllT
"“■frVtvWcj"** *
NUMBER 50.-«
PULISANTBaS. o
Ws wonder if grass widow* svss
bay fever. -> ~u
Evnv man of honor haa a uwthtagfor
a low Hung. , JW( ,|
It is hard to persuade a man a
rich widow isn’t handsome, 4l oW «d
Two msm in Newburyport played 0,2f13
games of dominoes Isst ywati Hliey
must reckon that year as Anan Dweasio
Con. Mnorui is the
United States Hay Fever
this year. He feels as muckles a manes
Julius Hnccser. ‘
It isn't because a wooum Is
afraid of aooW thit She huis Wdyffthd
screams. It is becsAwb
not fashionable, •< v mA
Atrvton that is given away taMiwtiap
preciated, and it is given away<bhaHflM
the giver has no use for it hfoMgMU-
Hntton I'ranirript.
Tn proprietor of a
factory announces that peteooi- leUrfog
i their tomes with him can iiiriti*tb*n.
ground at short notice. I sxiita val
•' Wht is it,"uakod a tedj.
ple lose their interest in 4nircl>-exjui t .
nowadays?" “Because tiiey ‘EavTtos'
their principle,*Lwaa the wWf WpJf*
Im some Htate| the «vidapM oCgrpnan
who habitually goes fishing twte* ayyr
will lie received in ine courts. tHu
renaon for this bit of judicial
< obnous.— /Jurliofton /fovk-itiia. xlf
A BBinan oouplo Irani
at breakfast in a Bono hotel, converse
as follows: Het.*' Hhall I stW“MP a
l>ertat*r, honey F* <he—“ MbJ* tihitik
you, deary, I have one already.akwg.,’;
FsKnaaaow says he haa of jpare
time on hia hands sine* he began lb at
tend cxdnsivaly to hia own kwiiatei
Formerly he wa* th* hardentatterited
man in the city.—Boston JVanacrfjpf.
“ (lows, now, it i* time for vou y>
to bed,” said an Austin lady to
children! " y<m must ge to bed. Dte'l
you know all the little ohickena ,have
gone to led? ’* “ Yea, but the old hen
went to lied with them. Dwdlt
-Tmx, aonp** full ofdßteiri
tin.- dugnsted boarder. “I fcaow U,"
coolly returned the landlady. “And do
you mean to go on ladling it out to us f"
" It’s the beet I can do. I can’t board
folks at H a week anti pay for fly-paper."
—Brooklyn Eaglo. *1 ’ ' ’•O
Tin name of Maria is eta jfopular in
Ottumwa that when e eat-Miiaba a M»k
fence in a well-pepaJated.
and plaintively vooaliate
twenty windows are
and twenty female heads are thrust out
wildly answering, “I* that JfOu* Bfir-
Ottumwa Drew. “* 4 " * w *“**
Wass Nuaon'a musls-nsiSiW ■ hw
Solwtel MM* lau sail uMSSgta.*, . fl j
H, wUUmI U>s« ste »*• btatataWs
Tb«l *• ••» bsr IIMs trv"rfbte' , 't W> -1
*ad, wh«n U» pvroi.l >ta<l l*rfMP»,,l>
I*l. >»ry wim u.u.l<n*n
Would cutely lasts Ita Items, lidS’l 'aiTJ
F.>r teschla*. •wn-sete»*lv vj tox*
I— Yonktrs
Mio exaajx'ratod th* other hJToffe
by s|>eaking alurriagly of a beiKtMWi*
had purchased. “ Ton nmit MMtt - gflt
ton it of an Irish
" There's nothing Irish aliont 4k F->4»-
tortad she, spiritedly. “Oh lq hafljit
must liav* oom* from soma wdhffok ga»
tabbshment," was his calm MgfiQdes.—
Yonkert GatotU.
w-ww-swewaw 1 ’teaLA.
Tims does not stop broeaaeia teaa's
watch runs down. No mor* dutw a
news|>aper because one man hnppetia to
lose hia hood ami orders the paper dia
continued to hia addraaa.— JBfo-