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J. W ■ WKM«WBSt, Miler * .A ,
aw Ma a. BMivaM, rv£;"«. r rf* I
VOLUME I
rM4T TIKK n IT> ,
Wh*l It?
Ttos
Ttoe to »*• bettar
orr* up that *ru<u»~
Ar>rw»r that totter—
tft that kls-1 tonM, to ewretec • error;
0.- U>al *oo4 deed you woeld toare HD to-mome.
Tl»o to try hart
In that near «SlnrU™
Xtino lota 114 aj> on
A aobd tenndMtaL
attns «p nwUroiity mi u« and driftinn :
itartx* the qulrkssuas th>‘. ever are atuftinf.
WbarttMotottt
Time to to thrifty ;
t Fsntari. late vsrain* -
Plow tn tberprtsgtlmo-
Bow tn Uto ttKrrulnu
fan H romla*. Bspbjnuw Nowin*; . ’
Uearwi will attend to tjp qwtokaatun and (rowmg
Time to noent ooat -
’ I aura, erpenaoa
Tttne to took wall
To IN gaue and fairer ;
Makis* and msoCte*, aa food woriam ahrnttd;
HholUn* out aril ao<t kenpiug ttx- food.
, Whptttareintit.-
TlmetobeaaAiwt.
**' L*ri>W optreaeure ;
Tran to he thoughtful,
Cbooaang num ploaauro,
I.'ftn* atom truth Nm* fond;
Makin* you word Jost at food aa your bond.
Time to Uh happy,
■—■, eMa<yo«r bant
{Time Maty Wuatful,
I Tmltf hirat,
Knowing, Is wbareaan aountrj or rtiK,
Ma a can we Ban bant rain minute of Urn*,
*
TAKTVgJ JNMRDm
. ■ "*■ 1 - f "u
“It ™ a ecm dal, the neighbors said
** that Wise Delia should be obliged to
take boarder*, after all she’d been
through; and heaven knows tmardern
did not help a body to work out her sal
ration. Anri so much money m the fami
ly. too, taking it by small and large.
Wasn't her Uncle Ebon, over at Dover,
well-to-do, and not a chick of his own
to care for, except tliu boy he had adopt •
ed, who was no credit to him ? It
odd, now, that a mm with poor rt.
toons should take a stranger when his
own flesh and blood was needy; but
sometimes it does seem aa if folks had
more feeling for others than for their
own kith and kin. Then theft- were
cousins in the city, forehanded and
fuehi'ioable, who wen never worth a
row <d pins to Delia, and there was her
great-uncle John’s widow a-larkinon the
Continent, a-gatning at Baden-Baden,
and trying the waters of every mineral
spring in the three kingdoms, for no
disease under the sun bnt old age. She
had been known to say that her folks
were too rich already, and probably she
would endow aome hospital with her
property." Plainly, wealthy relatives
ware of no value to Mum Delia, To be
sure, she had never seen her great-aunt
since she was a child, when her
Unde John had brought her into their
simple life for a month's visit, with her
French maid and dresses, her jewels and
fallals, which won the heart of her name
sake. Since then Uncle John's widow
had become a sort of gilded creation, al
ways young and beautiful; for, though
Delia had received little gifts from time
to tome across the seas for the last fifteen
years, she had neither heard nor seen
anything of the being who had inspired
her youthful imagination, and was quite
uncertain if such a person us Mrs. John
Rogerson was in the land of the living.
Dead or alive, alio seemed to have made
no material difference to Delia's hum
drum life. After having nnreed her
father through a long sickness Delia
found that he had left a heavy mortgage
on the homestead and her mother and
hereelf on the high road to the poor
house, unless they should liestir them
telvea. As her mother was already bed
ridden. the stirring naturally fell noon
Delia, and she advertise-1 for summer
t ■carders:
CaovTsaosovoH, Me.—Good board in lb*
country to tta nrem.lt. it •? awrek. Large
mambera, broad piaxxaa, fine views, berries and
new milk. One ttik from the rtatiom Address
Dun Roasaaos.
"Cheap enough ! * commented an el
■lorly lady who happened upon it. “ De
ha Rogerson. Au old maid. I suppose,
"bilged to look out for herself. I've a
(rood mind to try her broad piaxzas and
new-nilk. If I don’t like it tere’U be n<>
liarm done."
And sc Delia’s first boarder arrived
*n old lady with false front ha”, brown,
wrinkled akin, faded eyes, a blank al
-I‘aca gown, and » hair trunk. Delia
made her aa welcome as if she had bean
a Ihi cheia: lighted a wood tire in Mr*.
Clement'S room, as the night was damp,
•nd benight out her daintiest cup an<i
saucer, with the fadelres old roses
wreathing them. " Wonderfully kind,
reflected Mrs. (dement »r she combed
■■at her wis|« of gray hair and con&fad
the false front to a box. *' Wonderful
• mdnemfor 87 s week! Site's new to
the trade. Hhe’ll learn better. Human
■lafure doesn't change with latitudes
Columbia
&e'lt fl w lller Uj(<
HHr* ’ s \ • i creep
«<" &>■ -r
. V#.ltocon-
to demanil F JU multiply
bercarm.' T f co n fl l( . t
ing temper T roof was a
sew naner. " «■ MHiei, Mre.
Dresome c l> , mcaquito,k,
kith ati air •, w w sou were re
•possible fe J Ip. dMU, flics,
te if | fl intancre; of
»aat of ap JU-dfh Delia had
•greed to a- with berries
and new mil - as if she
had pledged , jKhere would be no
sudden chan, her boarders;
of Uashabbjr antiquated fur
nitnre, ■' tfwtfoM and not old
enough Delia doubted
if taking hour jjm was her mission.
" What makes WL. keen us. mv dear’"
asked Mrs. Cl«Klt, after a day when
everything and Jmrybody had seem< <1
to go wrong, didn't you ever
marryt You ii .pw lover, I dare say?"
'* Yes ; a I<jngjfcg time ago.”
"Tull me a)\Ziilim—it ? ”
" There isn te act to tell. He asked
mo to marry him fie was going to Aus
trtli*- I -*1 leave father and
mother, .jithey were both feeble)
and he couldn't, here. That’s all. '*
"And you—; ><»—— "
“ ' Now all m -buHi'l l ’ are to mo like
shadows.”*
“And you ha*, Me ver heard of him
since I " . jiM
“ Yea. He wAV: but where was the
tee ? It could uflcr come to anything.
It was better for fihim to forgot mo and
marry. I was a Nfilstone about his neck
-1 didn't answer i.a letter."
“And supixtaflMr he should return
some dev. marry him?/’
’•"ghed Delia, gently,
Smiliar, “ let the
nt /' '«> wisely. I've
if*
thought oi i. ) sitting alone,
when Ute world to'fißrrm and coinmon
l»tece. Ono must hare recreation of
some kind, you know. Everyboffy re
quires * Bule romance, a little poetry, to
flavor **ul dome I'm
afraid you think me a silly old maid,
Mrs. Clement”
" No. The heart never grows old
The skin shrivels, th,> color departs, the
eyes fade, the features grow pinched ;
bnt the soul is heir of eternal yonth
■—it is as lieantiful at four-score as
at •sweet 20 ’ Time makes amentia for
the ravages of tha body by developing
tbe spirit You didn't tell me your lov
er’s name. Perhaps you would rather
not.”
■‘ilia name was siophen Langdon.
Sometimes Capt Seymour runs against
him in Melbourne, and brings me word
how he looks and wliat he is doing ;
though I never ask, and Stephen never
asks for me, that I can hear. ’’
Delia's summer iKiarders were not a
suoceae, to be sure. If they took no
monev out of her pocket, they put none
in. She was obliged to ek« out her
support by copying for Lawyer Dun
more and embroidering for Mrs. Judge
Dorr. Ono by oae her Ixiardere dropped
away like autumn leaves; all bnt old
Mm. Clement
“I.lielieve I'll stay on,” she said.
“I'm getting too old to move often.
Perhaps you take winter boarders at re
duced rates. Eh 1"
“Do you think my terms high?"
“ By no'means. But when one’s purso
is low —”
••les; 1 know. Do stay at your own
price. I can't spare you."
She hail grown such a fondness for the
old lady that to refuse tier at her own
term* would have seamed like turning
her own mother out of doom ; l>esi<te,
one month more would not signify. But
die found it bard to make l»otb ends
meet, and often went to bed hungry
that her mother and Mrs. Clement might
enjoy enough, without there appearing
U> be •• just a pattern. At Chnstmar,
however, came a ray of sunshine for
Delia, in the shape of a 1100 bill from
m unknovn
“ It can't be meant for me," sheened.
“It’s directed to Delia Rogerson,”
mud her mother; “and there’s nobody
else of that name, now that your Aunt
Delia's deml. "
•• We are not sure she's dead," ol>-
jected Delia
“ Horrorw! Don't you know whether
your own aunt is dead or alive ?' asked
Mm. Clement, in a shocked tone.
“It isn’t our fault Shew nch and
bves abroad. I was named for her. I
used to look in the glass and try to be
lieve I’d inherit her beauty with the
name, though ahe was only our ffreat
uncle’s wife."
“ She ought to do something for you.'
• • How can she, if ahe is dead ? I
Devoted the Interests of Columbia County and the State of Georgia.
ARLEM, GEORGIA. TUESDAY. DECEMBER 6, 1881.
(lou t blame tier, anyway. Her money
is her own to use according to tier pleas
ure. Undo John made it himself and
gave it to her,”
g|* But it ahe should come back to you,
having run through with it, you’d di
vide your last crust with her. I’ll lie
bound.”
' I suppose I should," replied Delia.
The winter wore away aa winters will, “
mid the miracles of spring liegan in
fields and wayside; and Delia's Ixiardera
returned with the June roses, and
dropjMxl away again with the fading
leaves, and still Mrs. Clement stayed on
and on. Just now ahe bad lieeu some
weeks in arrears wiui ner reduceu ooaru.
No money had been forthcoming for
some time, and she was growing more
feeble daily, needed the luxuries of an
invalid and the attention of a nurse,
both of which Delia Iwstowed upin
her, without taking thought of tbe
morrow.
“ 1 must hear from my man-of-bnsi
aeaa to-morrow, Delia; Pm knee-doep
in debt to you,” she Iwgan one night.
" Don’t mention it!" cried Delia.
“ I’d rather never see a cent than have
von take it to heart. Yon are welcome
to stay and share pot-luck with us;
yon are sucli company sot mother and ■
me.”
“ Thank you, my dear. I’ve grown
as fond of you as if you were my own
flesh and blood. There, turn down tbe
light, please. It grows chilly, doesn’t
it ? You might kiss me just once, if
you wouldn't mind. It’s a hundred
years or so since any one kissed me."
And uext morning, when Delia car
ried up Mrs. Clement’s breakfast, hen
lioarder lay cold amt still upon her pil
lows.
The first shock ovur, Delia wrote to
the lawyer of whom ahe had heard Mrw
Clement speak ai having charge of w
affaire, begging him to notify that ladv*t
relatives, if she had any. In reply Mr.
Willis wrote : “ The late Mrs. Clement
appears to have no near relativon.
Home distant cousins, who have an
nbimdanoo of this world's goods, yet
served her shabbily when she tested
their generosity Ste she fried yours, m .
all that remain of her family. In the
meantime I inclose you a copy of her
last will and testament, to peruse at
vour leisure."
“ W bat interest does he think 1 take
in Mrs. element's will ?" tb eight Delia;
but she read, nevertheless :
Being of sound mind, this I6Ui dsr of June, .
IS—, I, Heli* Rogerson Clement, do hereby
leave tlOOtoesch of my cousins, ami I be
qnesth the residua of my property—vix.: $30,-
000 invested in the Ingot Minin* Company,
•50,000 In Unitel Blates bonds, $20,000 iu the
Bertune Flannel Mills, and my jewels-to tbe
beloved niece of my first husband, John Roger
son. Delia Rogerson, of Oroftstorougb, Me
“ For I was a stranger and ye took me in ;
hungry, and ye ted me ; Uck, and ye miris
terod unto me."
“Goodness alive!” cried tbe neigh-
Ixirs, when the facts reached their ears.
" What a profitable tiling it is te> take
Ixiardcrel Everybody in town will be
trying it. Os course Hteve Langdon
will come and marry her if ahe were for
ty old maids. You may stick a pm in
there I"
Delia did net open her house to board
ers the next season. Hhe found enough
to do in looking after bar money and
spending it; in replying to letters from
indigent people, who seemed to increase
alarmingly; in receiving old fnenda, who
suddenly found time to n memlier her
existence. And, sure enough, among
the rest appeared Bteve Langdcu. and
all the village said, “I told you ao."
“ It's not my fault that you and I are
single yet, Delia," lie said.
“ And wo are too old to think of it
now, Steve,"
“ Nonsense! It’s never too Ute to
mend. I'm not rich, Delia, but I’ve
enough for two and to snare."
"I wouldn’t"be contented not to drive
in my carnage and have servants under
me now," laughed Delia.
“ Indeed I Then perhaps you have a
lietter match in view. Capt Seymour
naked me, by the way, if I had come to
interfere with Squire Jones' interest."
“ Yew. Squire Jones proposed to me
last week.”
“ Now, see here. Della. Have 1 come
all the way from Melbourne on a f<toil's
errand? There I was growing used to
mv misery and loneliness, when Um
mail brings in a letter tn a strange
hand, which tells me that my dear love,
Delia Riigeneon. loves and dreams of me
still, is poor and alone and npmls me
me I And the letter is signed by hei
annt, Mrs. Clement, who ought to know.
I |«rked my household g<»*i» and
came."
“ I’m glad that yon dvl"
"In ofilrr that 1 n,ay cougratul t e
Squire Jones ?"
< - •
“ But I haven't accept'd him. In
fs#. I’ve refused him—liecause—"
F Because you will marry your old
le*e, like the leas in the song, Delia?”
l«. In Oroflsborough jxMiple are not yet
tired of telling how a woman made
money by taking lioardera.
vnMNona rtf Miri cioranta
p It is curious to note bow great are the
slbauge- in men's costume. Looking
only at one detail, the waistcoat, which,
last century, was the cause of andlrae
extravagance, we find that it is now of
the utmost simplicity and is, for the
most part, hidden by Uie coat But the
waistcoat had its day. There wm a time
when dandies made it a matter of pride
to have dgpons—nay, scores—of waist
ooata. In Germany, during tbe last cent
ury, the luxury was considerable, and
the love ol display uioalculable. * One
of the Ministers under Frederick the
Great useil to boast that ho had 800
waistooste and 300 wigs. “So many
wige and so little head," said Frederick
: the Great, speaking of him. Men of
jx wittons were required to have a posi
tive museum of waistcoats in the eight
eenth century. There were cloth waist
ooata, silk waistcoats, waistcoats in vel
vet, waistcoats in doth of gold. Tbe
waistcoat was a work of art, a painter’s
canvas filled with subjects. It was oov
ered with admirable representations of
hunting episodes, of court scenes, of
famous fables, of village festivals. The
waistooek of the gallant of the period
was enlivened with the pictorial history
of the loves of Mars and Venus, the
Marshal's waistcoat was embroidered
with military scenes, while-one of the
court dandies acquired fame (which he
would not have otherwise enjoyed) by
reason of the illustrations of popular
•plays to be seen on hie manly breast.
The rage for these illuminated waist
•oate lasted till the and of Louis XVI. 's
reign. Tbe buttons by which these gar
ments were fastened were not lees
•rortliy of notice. They were, for the
moat part, of about the rise of our sil
ver dollars, and were in steel, in silver,
in precious stones, aometimre even in
"tflamouda. The (fount d'Artois, after
ward Charles X., was celebrated
for the magnificence of his but
tons, some of which wore in
enamel, and embelliahed with
miniatures of the celebrated beantiea, oi
classic heads of the gods and goddesses.
Home men of lower type wore on their
buttons the portraits and initials of the
queens of tlicir hearts. The revolution
brought about some changes. Tbe
waistcoat was shortened, and its buttons
Ixire the jiortrait of Rolieepierre, who
was known among the d indies aa the
man with the beat-powdered hair in
France I or of Haiut Just or Fauquier-
Tinville or others. But tiiis fashion
s>x»n disapjieared, end the waistcoat has
gradually lost its importance aa an arti
tide of masculine apparel, and is now
considered useful iv, u depot for the
witch, but aa an ornament ia none.
“ Tub vaat strides which have been
imule in the commercial growth of Win
nqieg during the past three months."
according to the Montreal (latrtte,
“ have surpassed the dream* of the
most aauguinx lielievare in preeent and
future prosperity. Within that period
property in and around Winnijxig, which
baa deeervedly lieen styled the Chicago
of the Northwest, hsa advanced in value
D i tb<> astounding extent of from 200 to
300 per cent Buch ia said to be the
rrare for the possession of lota around
the city that auction sales are lieing
held every night with the greatest suc
<>eaa. The ex ft naive soale upon which
building ia going on there is real
ly wonderful. In all directions new
stores and residences are going np a*
faat aa tbe trowel and hammer can rear
them, and in a very lew years Winnijieg
will undoubtedly become the greet
magnet among the cities of the North
w»«‘ " r a
<mujt or thk Mint am kakth.
The moon revolves round the earth in an
elliptic orbit, witii the earth in the focus;
the eccentricity of ths ellijise being
equal to .W4Ol of half ita major axia, or
more than 3f times that of tbe earth’s
orbit Tha point st which the moon is
nearest to the earth ia called the perigee,
and that at which she la farthest from it
her ap -gee. ami the line joining these
two jxnnta is called th” line of apsides.
When the moon ia at the pengee, ahe is
within 225,000 miles, and when at the
apogee more than 251.000 miles from
the eartli. The txlh of the earth ia not
strictly a eirete, but an ellipse of small
acceatricity, in one of tbe foci of which
ia tbe sun. It is nearsei the sun, or in
nhalton, at tbe Ix-gir.niug of the year,
|»r when the northern hemisphere baa
winter
•sr» roxnw muk.
The following story, •“T* *be Waab
mgtoti ia true in every detail:
A milliner of respectability married a
diaaipeted tailor, who abused, neglected
and abandoned her. Several yearn hav
ing peaaed without a clew to his wherea
bouts her friends advised divorce and
her acceptance of an advantageous offer
of marriage. The woman persistenUy
declined every offer, and when ahe had
•ocumulated a sufficient sum started of!
in tbe direction her husband was sup
posed to have taken when he left her.
At Halifax, N. 8., ahe received a slight
ctew, and took the steamer to Portland,
Me. Thence she followed his track to
New York, where ahe ceased for many
months to beer from him. Finally she
found that he was working hi Albany,
for which place ahe immediately started.
She was about a week too late ; ho lual
been discharged for drunkenness. Bpcnd
ing her days al lucrative work and her
evenings at detective service, the un
wearying wife at length discovered that
ho was employed by a large firm in
Chicago. Hhe wrote there, mid was an
swered that her Husband liadgopo away,
nobody knew where. Not satisfied with
this, she fravelwl to that city and ran
sacked every concern interested in
tailonag business there, until ahe met a
fellow-countryman who said that her
husband, when last heard from, was iu
Omaha She wrote there, got no an
ewer, bnt went on. There she hoard
tliat he had certainly loft for Han Fran
cisoo, where he had obtained a fine
place aa cutter in a large firm. She, of
couree, went thither, only to bo told
that her husband had l>een several days
away from work and was drinking har<L
Ho had not boon even at his Ixiarding
bouaea. Thia lod her to visit the station
house, and in one of them she ascer
tained that her husband was in jail tor
ten days. Ho was released and prevailed
on to return home after six years' absem-c
AU this occurred eighteen yean ago,
and to-day the prodigal husband of yore
ia a strict temperance man, in independ
ent etwevmatennaa, a model huabaml and
talker and a respected oitiseu.
XOITA.
It will surprise many to learn of the
singular political changes the State of
lowa has undergone. Originally, by
virtue of the diaoovery of Marquette,
lowa became s jxisseasion of France.
Afterward it was transferred to Hpaiu
by secret treaty in order to prevent it
falling into the power of England. By
ths treaty of HU Ildefonao in 1800 Lows
Itecams French soil once more. Then
in 1803 came the Ixiuisiana perchae*
by which the United States gained title
to the great tract of land weet of tha
Miasiasippi and including the preeent
Btste of lowa. A temporary Govern
ment was immediately formed, and what
now constitutes lowa was part of a dis
trict placed under the jurisdiction of
Indiana. Afterward lowa peaaed through
various changes, being flrat a part at
the Territory of Miseoun, then of Mich
igan and lastly of Wisconsin. In 1888
(owe was flrat organised as a Territory.
-De* Meinae Nsptater.
“I hava known more than one gen
ius," says Oliver Wendell Holmes,
“ high decked, full freighted, wide
xailed, gay jx-nnoued, that, but for the
bare, toiling arms, and brave, wwm,
lieating heart of the faithful little wife
that nestled doee in his shadow and
dung to him, so that no wind or wave
could part them, would soon have gone
down the stream and been beard of no
more.”
SAW Him, GRIST MILLS, CANS MILLS
* ft "'* .vtf
Plantation and Mill Machinery. Engines and BoUera, Gotten fierpffK
Pulleys, Hangers, Journal Boses, HUI Gsaring, Godsons, Turbin's wnnTWheels,
Gib Geering, Judson’s Governors, Disstoe’s Circular Basra, Go masers and Fites,
Bel tire, Babbitt Metal, Brass Fittings, Globe and Check Valves, Whistle Sangeaa,
•■x. Iron and Brass Castings, Gin Ribs, Iron Fronts, Balcootea and Beusts!ting.
GEO. R. LOMBARD ACO.,
FOBEBT CITY FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS, ».
1014 to IOTA FENWICK STREET, AUGUSTA, <M-
[gVNear the Water Tower.] promptly dene at totrari prices.
Boiler repairs of all kinds done promptly, dwal-ly
operaTouse garden
BEN NEISZ, PROPRIETOR.
CHOICK WINKS, UQM AND W
PHILADELPHIA AND CINCINNATI BBUL
BROAD AND BLLIH STREETS. AUGUSTA, PA
P»iMy
TERMS-$lOO
NUMBER 51. -
tbjt unor Lmuir.
Differences lietween the hvary stable
man and the hirer of the horse are vary
frequent, and generally, though this
owner of the aafrsal may get pecuniary
redreaa, it is the poor brute that inoatly
snfiera. To ride or drive a borrowed or
hired horse to the devil has beooma a
common raying. Ono or two recent
English caeca are worth commenting up
on. as showing that that j|glj -much
abused pcreou, the livery etable keeper,
has certain rights.
A mm hired a horse and carriage at
Ipswich, with the underetandiiag that he
would drive to Colchester add totalu
the same day, a distance at twenty miles
each way. Tha person whp had the
horse md vdiido drove not only to tha
place specified, bnt to a town tan aMtes
further on—working the horse 'ataty
miles within the specified tune of hiring
The horse died next day. The Teterina
ry surgeon was of the opinion that the
animal had been overdriven. The da
fendent’s counlMM argued that the rgrn
mont was to drive “ through" GolchaMer,
but the jury did no* think ao, and tbe
plaintiff won the case, with a verdict of
CH, the value of thiFhotw. q
Deviations from a fixed route between
two places,*when a home ia hired and in
jury b sustained by the lirgr
may bring a penalty on the hirer. Be
tween New York and afflatt’ailfid A
the distance may be thirty diliaajtaud
the livery stable keeper taiiiwi thtadis
tmoe. But if the hirer tahta round
about ways to reach there, Moreeaiag
the distance traveled, knowing ' the
proper or shorter road, he ia, nalem he
has specified to a go-aa-yuu-giease
method of journeying, liable to dam
ages. Aa to damages to ao
constant with awkward drivers, it would
be quite wine if a tariff of chargee ware
put up in livery stable*. Than amm
would know before ho started what his
rig was worth. Omrter. ,
Very few know just what a barbeona
means. Welt,* if you want to see one in
ell its glory go to Maryland. Tbs' bar
liecue ground is generally located near a
fine afwtag. Awiunii its dear waters are
hung a score of gourd dippen. Starting
early in the morning we find the oampua
already humming like a hive. Long,
broad ditehec have leui dug, md thsos
are floored with coals a foot deep, over
which are laid great spite, and ad thrns
lingo carcaasce of hogs and bolloeks.
Farther on beyond theca trenohgs are
great log fires, which are kept constant
ly biasing, co that at my time tbe ditches
may l>e replenished with eeala. > Buch
hissing md crackling aa there is above
theee immense fires es tbe mounting
flames curl md wreath themselves into
great volumes of smoke I bocyiee of
coaches, ml wagons am pour
ing in, filled with a laughing jolly
crowd, all intent upon a day’s iralici
Families some on horseback, tMte not
infrequently cm be seen three riders on
one mule. Gayiy-dreesed laijMa coma
with their eeoorta, md negrpee pour in
on foot. Tlie whole counted itotaas to
have entered into the fhdic. Dtfwn by
the greet boiling kettles uMr til* spring
the darkiea are dressing ahoeta, sheep
md greet beevea. Every animal, is left
whole, but ia split to tbe backbone.
Long tabtea are spread beneath the
pines. Tbe horn is blown foe dinner.
As the baud • trikes up a Hveiy air the
people wind in a long, fantastic line in
and out among ths trees to the wide
spread tablas beneath. Ha Mee crow and
prattle, mothers chat together, while
old people find they have Act forgotten
bow to laugh, (fortaialy 'nothing can
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