Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME VIII.
Church Directory.
METHODlST.—Douglasville—Fi rst, third
cad fifth Bundays.
Balt Bpbimgs—Second Sunday, atd Satnnhr
before.
Midway—Fourth Sunday, and Saturday I*.
fore. W. It, morE. Pasroa.
Baptist—Douglasville, first and fourth Bun
days. Bev. A. B. Vaughn, pastor.
Masonic,
Douglasville Lodge, No. 289, F. A. M.,meets
on Saturday night before the first and third
Sundays in each month. J. R. Carter, W. M.,
W. J. Camp, Secy.
County Directory,
Ordinary—H. T. Cooper.
Clerk—S. N. Dorsett.
Sheriff—Henry Ward,
Deputy Sheriff—G. M. Souter.
Tax Receiver—E. H. Camp.
Tax Collector—W. A. Sayer.
Treasurer—Samuel Shannon.
Surveyor—John M. Huey.
Coroner—F. M. Mitchell.
SUPERIOR COURT.
Meets on third Mondays in January and Jnlj
and holds two weeks.
Judge—Hon. Samson W. Harris.
Sol. Genl.—Hon. Harry M. Reid.
Clerk—S. N. Dorsett.
Sheriff—Henry Ward.
COUSTY COURT.
Meets in quarterly session on fourth Mon
days in February, May, August and November
"'and holds until all the eases on the docket are
sailed. In monthly session it meets on fourth
Mondays in each month,
Judge—Hon. 11. A. Massey.
Sol. Gent-Hon. W. T. Roberta.
Bailiff—D. W. Johns.
ORDBURY’a COURT I
“ Meets sot ordinary purposes on first Monday,
and for county purpose* on first Tuesday in
each month.
Judge—Hon. H. T. Cooper.
JUSTICES COURTS.
730th Dist. G. M. meets first Thursday in each
month. J. I. Feely, J. P. ( W. H. Cash, N, P.,
D. W. Johns and K. Hunt, L. C.
786th Dist. G. M., meets second Saturday.
A. R. Bomar, J. P., B. A. Arnold, N. P., 8. C.
Yeager, L. C.
784th Dist. G. M. meets fourth Saturday,
Franklin Oarvvr, J. P C. B. Baggett, N. I’.,
J. C. James and M. B. Gore, L. Os.
1269th Dist. G. M. meets third Saturday. T.'
M. Hamilton, J. It, M. L. Yates, N. P., 8. W.
Biggers. L.C., 8. J. Jourdan, L. 0.
1260th Dist., G. M. meets third Saturday. N.
W. Camp, J. P., W. 8. Hudson, N. P., J. A.
Hill, L. 0. ’
12715 t Dist. G, M. meets first Baturdav. 0,
0. Clinton, J. P. Alberry Hembree, N. P.,
-—L. C.
4272nd Dist. G. M. meets fourth Friday.
Geo. W, Smith, J. P., C. J. Robinson, N. It,
|l. C.
■ 1273rd Dist. G. M. meets third Friday. Thoa.
■White, J. It, A. J. Bowen, N. P., W. J.'Harbin,
■U Ca
Cards.
■RrTiviftssFv’.
MffORNBY AT LAW
' DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
(Office in front room, Dorsett's Bnihlrtig.j
Will practice anywhere except in the County
Court of Douglaes county.
W . IL JAMES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Will practice in ell the courts, Slate an
Federal. Office on Court House Square,
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
WM. T ROBERTS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
Will practice in all the Courts. All legs
huaiinas will receive prompt attention. Office
in Court House,
C. I>. CAMP,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
Will practice in all the courts. Al* buainoM
tn trusted to him will receive prompt attention.
O. GRIGGS?
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
DOU3LASVILLE, GA.
Will practice in all the courts, State and
Federal.
JOHN M. EDGE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DOUGLASVILLE, GA.
Will practice in all the court*, and promptly
attend to all businees eu trusted io his oare. I
_____
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
DOUGLASVILLE. GA.
Will practice in the courts of Dongiaw,
OatnpbslL Carroll, PanMiug, Cobh. Fulton and I
adjoining counties. Prompt attention given ■
to all btninm,
j. a. McLarty,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
DOUGLASVILLE. GA.
Will nxa'twe tu all the courts, both State and
FVd.i*! CviiecUona » specialty
JOHN 0.
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DOUGLASVILLE, OA
JOB PRINTING
NEATLY IONE
AT THE “STAR” OFFICE
She lleehto Star
The correspondent of the Cleveland
Leader says that old friends of the Presi
dent whisper that he will never marry.
They say the only woman that he evfer,
really loved has been in her grave more
than twenty-five years. He met her, they
say, when he was a school teacher in a
little town of New York, when the down
had just begun to come upon his lips,
and she was sweet 16. They loved, but
they were too poor to marry. Cleveland
had decided to go west to make a for
tun, when his sweetheart became sick,
and, within a few days, died.
Robert Garrett’s small hobby
through railroad line to Philadelphia and
New York; but his big hobby is walk
ing-sticks. “His canes, hats, and patent
leather shoes,” says a Baltimore corre
spondent, “are positively numberless.
People who go into the hallway of his
house, while he is at dinner, usually con
clude after a brief study of the hat
rack that he is entertaining a vast con
gregation of his friends, whereas there is
no one there but his mildly eccentric self.
If he should ever be dragged down to
poverty, he can subsist in comfort during
the balance of his days upon the sales of
his old canes and clothes.”
A New York paper contains a sketch of
the career of George M. Pullman, the in
ventor of the Pullman palace cars. He
lived in Albion, N. Y, where he was
born, until he was twenty-five or there
about, and followed his father’s business,
the removal and raising of buildings. He
was very careful in dress, good-looking,
popular and exemplary in conduct. He
was very ingenious and fond of figuring
out schemes and drawing diagrams of
many kinds, to show their feasibility.
He was so liberal in his dealings that he
never saved any money, and indeed, in
so small a town, naturally did not make a
great deal. Several years before the war,
when the level of the streets of Chicago
was to be raised, Pullman went there and
took the contract for elavating the Sher
man house a certain number of feet. It
was thought to be a prodigious task, and
many persons predicted that it could not
be done. PuUinan went to work scientifi
cally however, and achieved his
That gave him such a reputation, that he
had all he wished to do. When the min
ing excitement occurred at Pike’s Peak
he hurried to Colorado, and started a
miners’ supply establishment, which was
very successful. While there he devised
the plan of sleeping cars, sold out his in
terest in the supplies, and returned to
Chicago. He showed his diagram to a
number of experienced persons, and they
all encouraged him in his undertakings.
After working a long while in perfecting
his plan, he had it patented. Thereafter
his progress was rapid and. his fortune
sure.* He is a man who likes big opera
tions, being a natural speculator, and
makes and loses largely with equal
equanimity.
How “Ruin Blossoms** Come.
A correspondent of the American An
■ alist ask: “What is the cause of red
ness and pimples on the nose *” and re
i ceives the following answer: “Judging
' from the liquor saloon heading of your
i note and the mom de pl >tme you have chosen,
it is fair to presume that in your case rum
is the cause, and medical men would call
your disease dipsomania and the skin’dis
easc acne, while in common parlance it is
called ‘ruin blossoms.’ The explanation
is very simple. The circulation is through
two sets of blood vessels, arteries and
veins, both obtaining their motive power
from the heart acting as a force-pump.
Alcohol increases the pulsations, and as
the blood is sent' from the heart to the
extremities faster than the veins can take
it up again to return it, congestion re
sults, and the nose, being at a remote
jxirtion of the circulation, reddens and
finally becomes diseased. This, however,
is not different from other organs of the
body; ail are congested and similarly dis
eased by alcohol. The best remedy is to
discontinue the alcohol, and stimulate
the absorption of the blood by the fre
quent application of cloths wrung out of
hot water.!’
They Rather Prefer Fourteen.
“I am thoroughly convinced that there
is such a thing in this world as supersti
tion,” said a photographer. “For many
years I have noticed that business was
dull on Fridays, but that is nothing com
pared to the number of people who re
fuse to take thirteen photographs. The
style nowadays, you know, is a dozen
photos for so much, with a panel thrown
in. Nearly everybody wants the panel,
but fully one-tenth of our customers
leave one of the photos here, that the y
may avoid taking the unlucky number of
thirteen home with them. More women
than men are affected in this way,
though they usually waist us to put in
another one so as to make fourteen.
CAiroye UeraU.
FAWNING TO NONE-CHARITY TO ALL.
DOUGLASVILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY J JULY 6. 1886.
LAKES_OF FIRE.
Extinction of the Greatest Vol
cano in the World.
A Description of the Fiery Beds Which
Make up the Orater of Killanea. '
Recent advices fronr the Sandwich Is
lands to the effect that there was no
more fire in the crater of Killanea, if true,
means that the largest active volcano of
the planet had been snuffed out. The
new lake of molten lava of Halemaumau,
which is mentioned as having disappeared,
has not been in existence many years,
and the period of volcanic activity and
earthquakes, which accompanied its for
mation, immediately preceded the last
great eruption from the neighboring
crater on the summit of Mauna Loa in
November of 1880.
The island of Hawaii, which is the
iouthmost of the Hawaiian or Sandwich
group, is in the form of two great twin
peaks, Mauna Loa and Manur Kea,
each of which rises to an elevation
of nearly 14,000 feet. On the summit
of Mauna Loa is a crater which is in
termittently active. On the slope of
Mauna Loa is the crater of Kilauea (Lake
of Fire). Kilauea is unique among the
volcanoes of the world. It is situated in
a great pit in the side of Mauna Loa,
1,200 feet deep and three miles in diame
ter, the walls of which are almost perpen
dicular, so that they- can only be de
scended where zigzag pathways have
been made. The lakes of fire which
make up the volcano of Kilauea are in the
southern end of the pit. There is at all
times more or less volcanic activity in
these pits, and they are constantly chang
ing in form and position. In the ordinary
condition of the volcano people can de
scend the sides of the great pit and walk
over the floor to the lakes. The floor is
black as coal and so hot that it scorches
shoe leather. There arc great scams in it
at intervals, from which issue steam and
sulphurous smoke.
The shores of the lakes themselves are
high and steep. One can go close to the
edge on the windward side, and by hold
ing a hat in front of t,he face or wearing
ft masK,.*pcep over as the infernal bub
bling which is going on iu the abyss.
The surface of the lakes, when quiet, is
covered with a thin layer of black, newly
hardened lava. The surface is never
quiet long nor over its whole extent. A
pulsating mound makes its appearance at
some point and swells by slow degrees,
until cracks appear running from the
apex. The fiery molten lava appears
welling up through these cracks; the lay
er over the surface breaks into great
cakes, and tilting on edge, these cakes
disappear and are swallowed up by the
red liquid underneath, which boils and
bubbles and sputters in the vent it has
found, throwing up, spray which is caught
by the wind and spun out as fine as silk.
In this condition it is found in crevices of
the lava on the banks, looking much like
bunches of blond hair. The native Ha
waiian term this stuff Pele’s hair, Pele
being the goddess su|> posed to inhabit
this Halc-mau-mau (House of Everlasting
Fire). Natives who visit the spot throw
coins or edibles into the lake to appease
the wrath of the goddess. The high
banks of the lakes are swallowed up in
Mie seething cauldron below. In periods
of great activity the surface of the lakes
rises and sometimes overflows the banks,
when a long stream of lava creeps over
the floor of the. great pit, disposing itself
in smooth folds like giant taffy.
Kilauea is 4,000 feet above the sea lev
el. and is about twenty miles from the
erater on the summit of Mauna Loa which
% over 9,000 feet higher. Yet there
teems to be some connection between the
aununit crater and the vent in the side of
the mountain. During the summer
months of 1880 there was great activity
in Kilauea and several severe earthquakes
on the Island of Hawaii. The new fire
lake of Halemaumau, which the report
•ays has disappeared, made its appear
ance during this period. One night in
November of that year an eruption broke
cut on the summit of Mauna Loa
with a loud explosion, and the streams of
lava came pouring down the mountain
side in floods. The c.mntry through
which it came was wild, an impenetrable
tropical forest. In the first nights after
the eruption broke out, the stream could
be seen from far out at sea, looking
like a fiery serpent lying on the mountain
side, As the months went on, the upper
part of the stream cooled on the surface
and crusted over, serving as a conduct to
carry the liquid to the terminus of the
flow, where it broke out and pushed its
way more slowly. The flow of lava con
tinued into the summer of 1881, when it
stopped about a quarter of a mile from I
the little tropical town of Hilo, having
eaten its way sixty miles through the
forest, which was utterly swallowed up ;
in its path. No such flow yf lava had :
come from Mauna Loa since the great
flow of 1859, which reached the sea.—
jYe/e Yorli tyun.
Bismarck’s Lovo of the Country.
Bismarck loves the country, though
most of his life has been passed in cities.
“What I like best,” he once said, “is to
be in well-greased top-boots, far away
from civilization.”
It is said that once, while at school in
Berlin, and walking in the suburbs, he
came across a plough. His homesickness
expressed itself in tears. In one of his
earlier letters he wrote:
“I am quite homesick for country,
woodside, and laziness, with the indis
pensable addition of loving wives and
trim, well-behaved children.” Phrenolo
gists say that one of the largest organs on
Bismarck’s massive head is that which
indicates his love of children.
The German statesman is never so hap
py, say his friends, as when he is gazing
at a beautiful landscape, or walking
about his farm. “Believe me,” his wife
once said, with natural exaggeration, ‘‘a
turnip interests him more than all your
politics.”
His friends point to Lenbach’s portrait
of Bismarck, which hangs in the Nation
al Gallery at Berlin, as the one in which
his features assume their noblest expres
sion. “We were engaged in conversa
tion,” said Bismarck, describing how
that expreasion was caught by the artist,
“and I happened to look upwards at a
passing flight of birds. Suddenly Len
bach exclaimed, ‘Hold hard ’ that will do
capitally; keep quite still,’ and forthwith
made the sketch.” #
The chancellor, when at Varzin, his
country estate, banishes the cares of
State and becomes farmer . and forester.
In “well-greased boots,” with staff in
hand, he wanders about the woods and
fields, noting nature and his farmers.
He takes lessons iu practical political
economy from his tenants, and questions
his laborers. The result is that he is an
evenly-ltalanced statesman, and talks in
parliament about farming and forestry
with such good sense and knowledge as
to command the respect of practical men.
—,
Then Wis ndjv iu thia city a young
tntist niWhed B»nott who has-done some
noteworthy things in this direction. In
an artist’s studio the other day my atten
tion was called to a drawing bonrd stand
ing up against the wall, the artist saying
that he had an order to make a picture
of it. •
“A picture of that?” I asked. “That
is a curious notion.”
It was an ordinary drawing-board, elo
quent of long and haid usage. There
were pencil sketches on it. Three or
four cancelled stamps were stunt hero
and there, and a photograph of an act
ress, such as is given away with a pack
age of cigarettes, ornamented a corner of
the board. Some one had cut his initials
into it, and the knife had not been very
sharp; and some one else had struck a
match across it.
“I am expected,” said the artist, “to
make an absolute copy of it—one that
would be mistaken almost for the origin
al.”
“Pshaw! it can’t be done.”
“And when I get through, I have an
order to paint the other side.”
I went up to the board and turned it
over. Tke other side was canvass. It
was the picture of a drawing-board after
all.
“Harnett is always doing things like
that,” remarked the artist. “He paint
ed the picture of a ten-dollar bill a year
or so ago, put it into the Academy exhi
bition and gentlemen visiting there made
bets that the bill was a genuine one.—
Aew Fori Mail and
Why the Hunter Misses.
Most of the rifles now turned out of
the factories have a front sight upon
which the brightest point will shift from
side to side and from base to tip, In all
quick shots this must have some influ
ence, whether you are aware of it or not.
Take a rifle so sighted out in the sun, and
with your eye on the sights, swing the ri
fle all around the horizon, watch the
change of light upon it, and see how you
may be deceived when in a hurry. Then
point it up hill and down hill, with the
sun behind you and ahead or you, and
see if you can discover how you ever
missed any game.
Limit ®f Hearing.
it has been found by Dr. Tait that the
w in women can perceive higher notea
that is, sounds with a greater number ol
vibrations per second—than the ear ir
men. The highest limit of human hear
ing is somewhere between 41,000 and ■
42,000 vibrations per second. Few per
sons have equal sensibility to acute sounds
in both ears, the right ear usually hear
ing a higher note than the left The
lowest continuous sounds have about six- I
teen vibrations per second.
MONTE CARLO.
Tragedies at the Notorious
Gambling JResort.
j The Number of Suicides Among the Play
ers Averages One a Day.
“My impressions of Monte Carlo?”
said Prof. Joseph Bauer. “I have but
one—it is a dream. On entering, one is
delighted, surprised, amazed, astounded,
and stunned seriatuim. Flowers and
music, coin and notes, despair and suc
cess, beauty, fashion, wealth—all com
bine to impress the beholder, and it is
some time before he can begin to study
systematically his surroundings. It is
only when he emerges qgain into the cool
air that one can appreciate his own ident
ty. • ■
“Do not credit the recent denials of
suicides at Monte Carlo,” continued the
Professor. ‘ ‘They are inspired. I have
visited the gambling hall there fifteen
times pr6fessionally, in addition to a
number of trips made for my own pleas
ure. I was born in French Switzerland,
200 miles from Monte Carlo and am fa
miliar with its ghastly history during the
past twelve years. You may take my
word for it that the number of suicides
caused directly by the Monte Carlo gam
ing tables averages at least one for every
day in the year. The real total probably
exceeds this estimate.”
Prof. Bauer is one of the youngest,
handsomest, and most popular guides in
central Europe. As so much has been
written and so little accurately told con
cerning Monte Carlo, he was requested to
describe the world’s most famous gam
bling hell. He said:
“I have spent many months there al
together, and it was a rare day when no
ruined and despairing man killed himself.
On some days we had as high as tlyjee or
four such casualities. If a stranger kills
himself, his body is dragged away, the
blood cleansed from the floor, and the
game goes on. I have heard players
mutter curses at a corpse for having in
terrupted their ‘series,’ or confused their
‘system.’ If the victim be a stranger,
nobody knows what becomes of the body,
except some of the special police, whose
duty it is to conduct such funerals in
their own mysterious way. If the ruined
player goes into the grounds before
shooting or stabbing himself, or drowns
himself in one of the beautiful fountains,
even the players who sat beside him a
moment before never learns of his death.
These things are know to the habitues of
the tables, but they never speak of the m
outside. The newspapers of Monaco and
Nice arc heavily subsidized, and those of
Paris, Lyons, and Marseilles pay no at
tention to such trifles. Letters to the
editors on this forbidden subject are
quickly thrown into the great interna
tional waste basket. With a large and
well-trained [x>lice force constantly at
hand, with an indifferent set of patrons,
and a willfully blind press, these little epi
sodes are much more easily screened than
you would imagine. If the suicide be a
powerful noble or a celebrity in any way,
the affair is mentioned briefly in the
French and English newspapers, and the
announcement cabled to this country.
Everybody knows why the man made
away with himself, and the only question
is; “Who will be next?”
“It is almost impossible to prevent
these self-murders, as the act is usually
committed under sudden powerful im
pulse. Everybody's mind and eyes are,
of course, intent on the game, and so
many liaggnrd men get up from the
tables that the sight is too common to .
ea g»g® the attention of the ever-present j
detectives. It is but just, however, to
say that the managers do everything in
their power to prevent suicides, except
closing their doors. Mechanics and ar
tisans are not permitted to live either in
Monaco or Monte Carlo.
“If an unfortunate player gets up from
a table and act} wildely—‘crazy,’ they
calHt, for all suicides are by courtesy es- |
teemed crazy at Monte Carlo—-he is host- •
led off by a couple of stalwart policemen
and put on a train for Nice. A guard is
constantly with him, his board bill at
Nice is paid by the company, and, if he i
finally talks reasonably, he is given '
enough money to take him home iu first- ;
class style. The management also en- 1
deavor to discourage dying on the prem- I
ises by aiding destitute gamblers. If one j
has lost heavily and frankly states his ;
condition of temporary poverty, his case !
will be promptly investigated. Should
it be found as narrated, he will be given ;
fwo or three hundred dollars to take him
home, or an order for two weeks’ board j
at one of the company’s first-class bo- ■
tela.”—-Veer Y&rk San.
In olden times the heart was considered
the seat of understanding. 'With the
ancients also the heart was considered
the teat of courage.
NUMBER 22.
A Texan Sheep Herder’s Life.
We will suppose, byway of illustrw--
tion, that a practical herder has been en
gaged to run a flock, and in the eurij
morning, as the first gray streaks of
dawn appear m the eastern sky, he sullies
forth to take charge of his woolly fioidk„
who are just beginning to awake awl
leave their bedding place. If he is a.
Mexican he looks extremely picturesque:
in his bright blue jacket, with its douUe
row of silver buttons, which, by the way,,
are not for use, but solely for
for a Mexican never buttons his jacket*
else he would hide his gaudy calico shirt-
On his nether limbs are leggings of leath
er or buckskin to protect his legs from
the sharp thorns through which he will
be forced to march. These a(e kept in
place by a crimson, orange or blue sasdi,
over which is buckled a broad? sash fall
of cartridges. On his head is inevita
ble sombrero, with its ornam<iiitation cf
gold and silver lace. If he is a seusahte
man, his serapc will be tied over one
shoulder and under the opposite arm and.
he will carry a Winchester rifle and a
sharp butcher knife. As the sheep begin
to move off he saunters slowly along be
hind them, keeping a sharp lookout for
stragglers. Sheep do not travel fast, but
they keep moving. At about meridian
they will begin to feed back toward the
bedding-place. There the herder will
eat his humble dinner of tortillas and
chili, washed down by a draught of wa
ter, is he is fortunate enough to be in.
the vicinity of a spring or water-hota.
About sundown the sheep will reach
their camp and begin to select beds for
the night. The herder has a rude shelter
nearby. H? builds himself a fire and
cooks his tortillas. Possibly he may Imre
killed a quail or a jack rabbit during the
day. If so, he makes a savory soup.
Then he smokes his cigaro and walks
around the flock to see that none are
missing. If all is well he returns to his
camp, and, rolling himself in his serape,
lies down. He may have a good night’s
sleep and he may not. A careful herder
will be aroused if a single sheep moves
and will immediately rise up to see what
is the matter. If a bear or cougar or ti
ger-cat is lurking about he wi ll Aunt for
the varmint and either kill?
en him .'way. Above all
guard against a stampede,
id sheep once get started then h’tso J
ping them—the herd would become
tercd, many would be lost and the hen.ic?N|
would be charged up with the missing
sheep. Long before daylight he, in up,
and by the time the sheep begin to mow
he has cooked and eaten his breakfast
and is ready to take up the march again.
Imagine what a picnic a man must have
who performs this dreary routine three
hundrc.l and sixty-five days in the year!
Sheep herding admits of no holidays and
it is all the same to the herder whether
it be Christmas or Fourth of July.—PAiL
(ideljdia Times.
How Coal Made the “Bad Lands.
The “Bad Lands” of Dakota are said
to owe their origin to the burning of the
coal deposits that once existed there.
They are situated principally along the
Cheyenne and Grand rivers and the lit
tle Missouri. They are from two or three
miles to, say, twenty-five miles in width.
In the long ago, the valleys of these
streams must have been filled with drift
wood. Then followed a period of drift,
which buried the accumulation of wood
and two or three hundred feet of sedi
ment, sand, and gravel. The buried
wood in time became coal, the veins be
ing in some instances twenty odd feet i*
depth. Either from spontaneous con*-
bustion or from electricity, fires were
started in these veins, and they gradual
ly burned out, restoring in part the r4d
water courses by means of the overflow
from the accumulation of water in these
newly formed basins. Looking upen
them, here you sec patches of slag; there
great bowlders, showing unmistakable
evidences of great heat, and on every
hand scoria or burned clay, risenddiiqg
broken brick. Where the' fires vrere
checked by the caving earth and the coal'
did not burn, mounds two or three lati*
dred feet in height stand.
And according to the Black Biajiwnd,
a newspaper de voted Ho the coal
published in Chicago, in parts of Wyrew
ing the same process is now going oa;
vast fields are undermined by suh terrane
an fires, and the blackened,
plain is filled with desolation. Tra(>pcre
say these fires have been in existence fto
a long time, and the traditions of ths
Indians point to the same conclusion.
Bat and Bawl.
Stern Parent—Here, here! What’s ill
this racket? Mirror broken, two vaac»
demolished—what are you doing?
Small Son—We were just
fair the match next week.
“Very well; just come up into the g»r»
ret and I’ll exercise you. I’ l finfl th»
bat and you can furnish the bawt”