Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 13 March 1880 — Page 3

DAILY

SKAlfAX,

LEWIS

CO,

PCBLU

Pabtteation Office, 501H Ohio Street, mww 11 js: iswR .1

SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1880. safe* THE DAILY NEWS

'TtrrwRS years tjtgo Jfcackey, last wpefc paid his partner $5,000,000, for \m interest in the C'omsioek initio, was at work for Marie Oaggett, the present member of Congress frotp the State of gratia, as ayp^rinteruteut of a gang of minors, for $5 a (lay.

All.

.J-.J-JL.-J' ._i

VAUXHO.

A dispatch from Leadville conveys the startling intelligence that the orediody in the Little Pittsburg mine At Lendvllltf. is completely exhausted,)j^he Are tailed last week did not average fifteen ounces of alive* to the ton, and would .-• n6t pay the,eX$enBe of Wrtcltln^, Diamond drills are being worked in Uie Itopes of ftiidth# new body of ore, ands

only

es Irf the

printed every

week day Afternoon^ and delivered by couriers thiauglwuLthe city^M JO cents per week—ebUedfoitM made ivetkly. By rrui3 (jp08tagepcud by the PuJUis^r) one month4&eenl* three months $1 £5 9ix months jjtejO (w year $5M~Modlmb&&ripdcm$ ki adtfance:^ ,'

f" fi»

'OXlli-.UJX imj-au

A t'OPt of the will of Zacft Oliandler haa tcen AIM fof probate in Washington, D. C., where deceased owned considerable property. It fails. iiowflTer, to meet the requirements of the law of the District,! Inasmuch as ohty two witnesses signed the will, the law there, requiring threes' This will necessitate theselling of the property in Washington, that the., title may be kept clcar. ,« $»

In the ca*e of theState vs., Douglass,p« appeal from Fountain county, the Supreme Court yesterday made1 the following decision: It that Douglass was arrested for some ofleuse and gave bond on Sunday The lower court held that the bond wa$ invalid, on account of being executed .on Sunday. The Supreme Court reversed the decision, outhegreiiud that the lond was given for the public good, and that Its execution on Sunday, therefore, had no, «|fcct on its validity.

IfiNttMgft holders 0/ the old repudiated Mlssiataippi bonds which bear date of 1840 hdVe tnade a proposition to forego thq interest for 4ft years* amounting to about 118.000,000. They then propose that thc Slate shall issue tiew bonds to the amount of 17.000,000, the amount Of the original issue,' and thai the new bonds shfdl bear interest. for the ftest year, beginning on the 1st of January, 1879, the first payment being in July, 1870,! at the rate of 8 per centuiu-perannuin, increasing annually ylNtml the rate of 1 per centum per annum -until the original rate$8 reached.

one-fifth

of the land owned by the mine has been prospected, the owhCi^ feel certain of tbyAUig now pre ibodies, jTbe Little

(PiMs-

hurjaf was one of the richest mines at Leadvlfte, ahd WaHf supposed to IM?almost inexhaustible, 1.

'Cyi%easiraitv of Ne^r York, has introduced# int^ ConiP^f tp jprevent tbe members of the two Houses he ing sedttcfd frotn the path of Virtue by design* InilmntUea, &hd If6n talde tb pay the penalty of their folly. He ought, at the same tina* tti have introduced a bill to protect theiemalea emt^oy^ theQOy eroment in Oiedffrere^t depArtBxents from lecberons moiplMWg, for if tJUe reports from «fek«t dty acre emitted to credence,

W"^reiit many 'Tleprcsentirti^

an^fe(Dt|u*it6r» ap% la W^Wpgton whp art a dtegrace to tbe constitucaciei tliey rep« resent.1 There te no way to prevent bad me A' ife^ng into

iCongiie^

but wh^n

«TAI1 ltOUtAU OF •TATI8TI0I, t^The And report of ^he Bureau of StJiUstfH was aiint to tile pHnWr on Thursday, and wHl be ttjady foj distributioiv in about a monUb. Thft quwftion o^^ the Hin «f 1 Ute ^Vdlume ha* 3*' ndt he^f '.d^rtnlnetf, bttt"^#tll 1h Ih ft few da^.j The Vrotlble aHsfesut if the unexpected woam of the experimentt and tlw Bnreaa «#ds itself enbarmaed wWi'lrtrhea. Snough material yt*» fwtnudxed for aVoiutae of 1,200 pages, but ihat wa* ©ondenaed to 756. JSTow the Printing Mreau insiaU that not mom than 490 pages witt t*ri»ted: Tf that to done it will he neccssary 4o j&ye Uip totals on newspaper* and periodical«fc*naou£a turo9 and rtllgm«i ^TtntrdT»atto^ *|nstead of the de{*ils»'ft* at p^sent^**'pi^pl»djttiProf^iaor Colktt says tkc mqctm first ycar's eflnrt h« beett Hnexampied. In other States the experteiK* hns been that only about 10 per cent of Wtnrns were made the first year here the lowest per ceau of «ton»of any of the 10 or 80 forms sent ont was 48. while the average was about 80 per cent. If the tabulations of the Bureau could have been printed in full the volume would have been a moat valuable one as it is. It will be credit to the State.

been disproved by facts, the formula,, w^s. altered thread that doctors cotdd not be^ womeir that *8oMethiDg of "finenessf in& lytapswywasTostto

Here «uad there, still, there may be found a practuamier (otherwise va high-mifflded mahUoH^er^hirt ifMi4 intot^e inedical profession is edftsecti mere restlessness, curiosity or desire of notoriety, and by quitie other than the impulses of benevolent business that re?, cruit the classes of other mddical oolleges. There is no need to dilute such Mser^( tions They fall of themselves. These thoughts are suggested by reading able review, on scientific an^l human grounds, of the aspect of medical progress given at the commencement of the Woman's College, of Philadelphia, afew dajs ago, by Dr Frances Emily White, Pro* feisbr of Physiology.*1 Dr White, besides being a graduate of this college, arid no w, the occupant of one of its most, important chairs, is a distinguished writer on scien/ tific subjects. boUi in our owa and foreign jourriAls, and was a student-in the labbil^l

Htory of Professor Huxley, in the 'spe4af brancli of medical science which b^ teaches in England and site, teaches heref We give an extract from Dr Whiter address tV) the graduating classr

The points sought to be established,by the most recent writers against the libera) education of women and their entrance into the higher departments^f work arei in brief,

t^i!les8, dfflicntely balanced between, health and disease that the scale is liable, to tipMward the, iuvaljd side at almosjt any moment of her existence that she is, by her* very nature, unfitted for severe mental1 discipline or for posts of responsi^ biiitv requiring any continuous mental stram, for her physical weaknesses necesv

j.sarily

Involve rnental ones* and her eWCM' tions are peculiurly liable to assume morirfd proportions. History is Full' of irt^j stance^ of heroism on' the part of such women ns haVe been thrown, accidentally or otherwise, into positions demanding the exercise of those qualities denomfns* ted pur excellence, masculine and it would be difficult to prove that either physical, or mental weakness neCessai-ily accompanies the feminine phase of human nature, in face of the facts it^fhe ldstop' of women.

It will be still more difticult. to show, that intellectual training is.,undesirable for women,, considered ertber HS indrv Uruals or as the mothers and nurses of the iriuae. To this there needs hut,onq(anawur. Work (physical and mental duly balanced) is conservative of health and necessary to vigor responsibility strengthens!character, while passive indulgence Jh the immunities which society has so long granted to women, if beyond the necessin ties of the case* is enfeebling and demoralizing. It requires no argumeut to show, that the principles whkh underlie tlio deti velopment of both body add mind are.the same for all the physdeal law, that exercises increased muscular power, applies alike to men and women usa that men,tai training develops mental force and tends to secure that ascendancy -of lectual over the emotional a#idiw?tinctivfr traits which, more than anything else, distingiiishes man from the lower animal&

From every point of view, then, I would bid you Ood

speed

We

in tlie profession which

yon hawtUoseu. "vAs individuals majf^u find in It the sphere of your highest intellectual, mora^ and womanly development.

As members of society,1 jroii' tribute largely to thfe sex in the truest and highest sense phrase and, whenever the medSUi%

elevation oWdui? L' ttf that of

y6ur success or however great the dftcouragements you may encounter,' may yott reAlite the truth of that Sfigniflcatft utteranee of Goethe: it

fjl HAtlONAL *0ARD 0? WEAXT^m The National Board of Health have. Jar sued a call for.a National convention to meet In "Washington, May 6,1,88^,

(for

the

purpoee of considering the beat metlxod for the collection and publication of mortuWjr statistical' All reglfeiers of vital tistics are requested to be, forwarded ,to the board, as soon as posaiye, their »ug gestions as to nomenclature bIa"nkB,formft| etc., irtcluding the fa It Wot to acceot for the oresen

nd tfjiot, whaft substitute U- s«!iggesLT-! 3, PhraisL a copy of Uw State qr, mur al law or orainacce relating, to the __^tration of births and deaths sUteihe objections to it and the cljkanges whigh should be,made in.it. an 8. Furnish copies of the blank forms for reporting Cases of death or bStt h, actually in use. with criticiims. 4. Furnish specimen pages of the record or registration books for births and deaths with criticisms and mggeitto&s. tfi. Furnish copies of such forms as are recommended for a weekly report «i deaths, from a city for a monthly repwrt of deaths and birtha from a city the saarf from a State, and for annual reports from *ctty'tt«&ftom*8tat*»"tft -.?'i ri ft. Furnish also conies of snch femnsoi statistical repoHs asare mxwuaendedfor a« bv asrhxms, difipwwaries. hoafytal#, priaoBs and other public institutions.

Furnish snch fcMxm for registration* of births and naarHages as are reco«&mended. & Please state whether ragfetratioo of certain contagions or inffsetioua diaemea should be attempted and if Mcats the diseases and give forma.

Mr W prijscipial tifizff^bf

"I'M tlffflft UftWK tflIM ek^rilhrVaK «el«biated. e^er xthAl ^of

I. W. Lewis, administrator 01

of Jacob ihurhaa% Durham,

IUJU llvi UOffvBWi, (yyw**

ing that they ^^bTSt^jde- On al cross bill itgal nst all the ^he eWiftiln that the farm wl»ere she nOw resides is," in point of fSR*rr*tn?r"wnrpropmv. Th statement of the case by the attorneWbc cupied all of Mbnday afternoon and part of Tuesday morning, at the conclu^ sion of which-the hearing of »he evidence began. The pgseja not

concluded .until sometime next wee

The o3|v

which cor Live withi moderate!

^|tlk 'ulariarly Us

estate wy

liam H. Durham, Jame* T. Rachel G. Durham and Lucmdn Carver and her hmtlwiBd, John T. Cwrver

estate of Jacob Durham of which W. Mil Durham was the administrator, on the ADont Eloquence, ground of,Imud^.ThfijlfitoidimC Rachel G. Durham, admits the:fraud of th«! »et:. tlement and reports^,=j^lAHning that she ti-uo Hpiyived into awning llicri'ln

Wa Ann wttlmiit f^ia.

reserve a conscience "void of

S8\*

inc

1

ai

and Mrs Carver, Moore Brothers for the defense, Jiagg^-aud Kenll nedy & Brush, of CrawfordsviHtJ. ~~ri T' 'I-: tfi .Han and Ml« Present Cositume. ji 5

utlf!

®?rt®T A Coffej.

Nineteenth Century

ieetually developed. In the y.ery earli^f. stages of hMMtfiatapca w« havft. proof in scjBatched oi^llines^ aniuia|s servesJ with curiosity, and "1 nineties of animal' fOi^m WH him. In his progress toward modern civi ilization Ire rejoicesin-bettutifnl--combina-tions of line itt^l gorgeotU i»Tahii?eniei«»! !of color, All through, the long a^ajtUl the seventeenth century ^ts is .distinctly visible, but imMiinitMteiLi^fhe klxtee ant.. plhce^ —Ypower of gratifying'thW iafetlnot-that it

uw5ts?ls and fwefepM^teeWe bte ortfa"4' men ted,'. or. are ornamentud witlyat conscious effort inajb^d.of natural imputee beauty ofJ.o^a ^li^lox^oJ.P.ngel• has aijy ch»nn. and the-eye becpm©8 ent. A well-dressed gentleman ready for, dirinttif attlrea for any, d^enidhy. Is & pitiable ex«mple-^liisvestufe hdttriyfdrtri^ less and ^fe^dT^sTi^iraCTiave his will.' H!s tegtf, 'titiimdpiti pfbjis^hia sll!# front,-a void—hisdfess-coat, an«nspeitk. able piece of ignoWLepess, Put it into sculpt ure-and eoo the result,- The genius sculpt ure-and eeo the result,- The genius of Phidias might be defied to produce ftny#

involves some $25,000 or $30,000. Tlie attorneys are—for the plaintiffs, PQnohne & Lewis aqfTGrW, Paul,, CraWfGrdsyilleu ^ow wa are engagea in a greav civ for Rachel G. -Thiflmnv SmilTev- & 'Kelr8' war testing whether that natiou, or an

of BraaiV. for Mr

W A

th£s'e!

•uage in which the artist haft" Ji7™the noblest study for the art»t

form the lan to speak. and most interesting is distqrttffl, ift t^q.ca»e,9f dress by sucb monstrous flairments, and in the case. (/f: women's dWss by eirthtvagant -arranfife^ ments which impede all simple nobility

.rt•,'.ill)

I, UHIIIJIMI

MD .nil

Hm ,i

INPGGG If

S)nololV

Cor. Ohio StaU fqpal.j

Tf give you an item of, home news Which is not vetin the hdinb pabtefe. witV iirt

Alb

gWes'?6f tf' try'.5

wailan

itffBthoritfes haw^^infoaaatj^ft

Gene^ d^lr- allr-ooaiing to Honoit^u-t General Granlivis reportwM« foil

«Jtg. VT \/l iVI W^V/V|/ lt»V ftU"

YOT iftiiy ftnow ho#1 'MrefT

the secret ho» been feeptwhen I tell you that all thr HBWHtmpefH tiwrw lmve had intimitiobs thatr ttie^ fetivP 'liigh authority" fOfc ermouflciig ito' theln refers Uiat j^ftJerai Gcant jap^ p^^il^

will take him on'feoarid, atodi/uthiiii ddWtt at HonolqWr W Of itlwmt tilt 15th of btmncto The Bfftji^-of the fnterit?H»» Mr Wilder, an Amrtican^-hfrs a magnificent new ^i^e^m^, finished, ^nd

is the finest rokidkibe W&onohilu, and on what tftW CM! JlfiM "KOb HUT: about one s^uJtre rttiA fWe5 Ametitntb 801V0U 8«CitWill bei quiife cohvaytieirt a^ tWidy fay9,! ^,d0iW^vtei0W theGeheraJ really cdmmg., I, qan not get the AnienCa^i ^tihwer to say whetmh* he expectg^ he ,dc .Joes starii qoakel and wteanoe^, sptcfcacleifjfg jitfltfeJbiV

stance »f

pwh*se«oQd#

Wr.,r

Reports from the wheat are very etfconnudng. There are fistterlng prospects in thfe and other State* and an average crop expected everywhere except in Wisconsin.

,ff^

iWvfertl#-

ing," it may be WfehflOTftg tftt IS Arms whose adrertiMme«tr *&&& oii-tlw a oert4« ^»d leading out of theeity, apy^fUff ^xistfence,' afid onen^Tcnap#edfU lpmibQ. Sbtne the S^Wflwriwede^J i^a ghsMly iMUEcaaiki ib an imritatioB to

^th^wtal^fl^bif a

tM on feiwar 'tf yb«! Wish W fet ria/ advertiae&a raqjecttfele "newspaper Hurt has a good iJimilalluii- mmng^he people who alu^ya buyprouCigoodA,,

Ttmonfi cny, a* yntas a^o» witk^ lSOi han^ abcan^ tlNad W

_ut was nevfef able «o carry mt the project. The cottrte of the liver has siooe changed, «»d the whisky, which now lies about forty feet under ^e, sarid is soon to be dug for.

OL

ense.

•void of

Muwimwi1 eat iheiusel»es tcrdeatli.

OUtlt|l6L

„c course of conduct he is planting the. seeds of decay in his own. constitution, and acthe

£LOQUEKCE A GIFT

some

lolence, and

$oM! \fy oYCr-eiertfofi5, ^hil^ not a few mm limi 'thBgum umlei ttre' effects iif vicious practTces% All the medicines in creation are not vrbrih a farthing to a man who is constantly and habitually, vii the laws of his own nature. All the

WHICH THE

6.

POSSESSOR

.oTn^ speech at Gettysburg ^ov.

1863,) attracted no attention until some ricis time after his death, provoked such a variety of priticism that the speech itself williotbe unintere«tir.g reading "Four «core and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated/ to the proposition that all men are created equal.

Nov wa are engaged in a great civil

natiou so conceived and so dedica can long endure. Wo are met on a great battle-field of that war. We are met to dedicate a portion of it as the final resting place of those who here gave their lives that the nation might live. It is

rt it

litnrtwa-mere- animal,

other sehsea become intelt

mi Aim

tr fitting aiid proper that we

lim lntereSf ahd dellgb# consecrated it far alove our power to ,Ar ann^B Vvmnif- intnh h^j qj. detract. The world

aenae we cannot dedlconsecrate, we cannot

Will

Hi|:Mylred6fveihat have died in vain, that the ufifltfr God, hiaveAnefVf birth land that the government of by the people, and fbt the *p not perish itapn thei earth."

Uule

note nor long remember what we say liere, bpt it can never forget what they lid iiere^. It is for us, the living, rather to bo-dedicated to the great task remain-itlg-bgfbmis^lmt from these honored dead we take infafeaied devotion to tho (SLwe tpj which they gave the last full

If iarevity, "be the eoal of as it is of ^it,then thisaddre: the very highest praise And analyse tlie manner and tlie^na indeed difficult to see how anysmnB substantially better could be crowded intfr thft ft!"?1! "Q jvilnt.nf

the dullest Slid in that' simple and earnest language of which Lincoln wa£ a perfect master. Only an orator can am)reci«.te an orator, and it is reported that Edward Everett—who was to follow the President in an elaborate effort lasting over an hour-said to him: "Sir. your address will be remembered and cherished when mine is forgotten." And so it ha* turued out. Yet Everett was perhaps the most thoroughly accomplished orator1 America has produced,

fective than hti predeoeaMJi it was because 4he one appealed to the head and th^ other to the heart and, at *t«

mom consequence than Elo^t^ice ih la hfivn is

a^^^lesci^^^^om^hing wMch. cae-

amesMi

hisi to enablo the memfbers t« regain1

conunocuir diu do that for Sheridan#i None will deny to W ebster fixa^eiaaa

Burk^ and Webster will k^o forever in ^tfctvSheriiteh and Clay.^itt braditaon which is quite aa imp# if rtot ar satisfactory. Sarpent tiss, Wa« probably wore eiogW eiUier Sheridan or Cky. yet 1 only a a dim and fading memory doubtful whether the very

divided iWe,

j,

Pjreit than

eloqueocw may be said to die with the breath that carries it to the •ar. Demtethteii* lheg ifiih dalighty bot what must they iur^ been to toone who faeard the wordsof

mSSSSMi

all«sorts- of A jrlp J'JW FTTTSS

Jtbrai In AiT^Wtirtn*

Bin

contemporAries, was the^rsi OnUor of hi? day, hdt b^ siia^/tirttoriad^ remains are flat enough to us. little things contrtribote to what is "fl h*DD^ h^' In o: during Qaeiamoiis joj»€ dftbatA o, in pi a a democratic—said "It wfR mtf little differe-no*, ferioWKdthtens, whether my friend Jtfd^e Daufl^Ul or myself is the iu rutedStatessenate

n,on which, he and I ,vi On wh^n pur podr,

stammeritig toingtlefl are sfientln

the grave." The patbo» pot i»to thia, andihe^ad, weaif e*p®e«k)Bof countenance thuLaccampapwd it stirred every soul prftserd to the very, aepttis. Komethlng similar Mfl dofiGW l^ a speech at Altoiffl 186fo R» £fca«dAdadpd btt political mttkuka, and changing ihif ^oipe. to a tone, made asvort defense, of his dertidn\ chAhrtil pre'1

this way: ^%entv-three y»rg geaeaUtea that Wtxsaofmy brftther, abed the» street ran down and, mingled with the waiter as the mighty stream that sweeps past your city to the aea--wM#a* Vlrttwfeliia*— ilult Wjdt-, ter"

fwas rocked as if by a mighty was no applause, but some* applause could not ntter. hdlips, who preaches occale a tremendous hit once in erical fashion. He was ad-

draming an immenHft andiannftin ,Ro»tnn

i» viffsuom and Willi ant langnaga tha-

perils and sufferings of the poor man in his escape from bondage, and lifter hav•roper "low,

st*r

Mn

what tioes Unssadittsfctts do wretched fugitive who has price 1«r liberty and is Clnh tection of her tree soil? Does she sttilfft off his fetters and bid Wati breathe !h peace the ^ir Of freedom W5^M«sskchtosetts aends him back to. slavft [A lon| pause.] "At the ton bf a^, pt

Btate

sucha

papera we read thefamiluurle 'God save the commouweaith. of y* chusetts.' 2 say, (Sop p^' the_ moHarealth pf Massachusetls^ plosion of a hundred-pound gup. not have startled his hea^f^ the.^hout wldclt followed was

com-

The Bulged, .we liave, marel« ..gli a|is a.niost fruitful, one.aud Jtas ii&vi beeu even,partially exhausteid. Ehouijtij toi^y, in TOnchi^ot^that the ^reatogt

highest oi^er of, e^oqponce is a gift which the possessors can neither ex-. plain nor account for. It-is, iu ahort,, the noblest- form of God-given inspira- .. tiou.-5-^. Ijntis Rrpubli&Oi.

••"is ^'reHlons for Making a Shirt. The very first thing to do Is to set tho linen bosom on the front. Stitch it twice across the lower edge, and cut out the neck by the sliirt pat tern. Next finish the back. If a yoke shirt is to be made, gather tlve fulness, and placing it between the front and back of jt|te

yokes

sow the seam and turn the yoke, leaving the seam inside. If it be a sack-sliirt, face the back for a depth of twelve inches. Next sew up tlio shoulder seams, racing of the back, or 4 to sUtch dowh"on ..ght side. This mokes aU smooth and well finished. Then take tlwe sleeves, whidi have already had the wrMbanda sewed on, but are still open from.Mfrialband to shoulder, sew them into the body of the shirt, leaving'half an irrh to turn down for a facing,' ThiB makes unnecessary the troublesome armliole facing and gives the requisite strength atid nnishi! Now comes th© long seam, closing both the sleeve and the body, and almost finising the garment. This sefffiimum:be^ffilTr^"^'^lrPrWr~ narrowest hem possibleround the bottom of the shirt. Stay tlie ends of seams With tiny gussets or a tape stitched firmly iacross. The pattern ought to be

BO.pe'pr,

fed. that tbe neck- will need no trimming out. A circular band is the best fitting hnd this requires a pattern. Rcimember that upon the set of the ncck-band depends the fit of tlieboiiOm and Uicticotnlort Of the wearer, and use a tape measure tliat it may be neither too latge nor iShirt btosoms are seme coarse linen lining, "but the ordinary linen bosom Sewed over the front, and the cloth bar neath allowed to remain instead of cot* ft^ay *a qulte g°°^'

•'^.The Way to Handle Sheep, A '^reatmany men will catch thesBteep by the wool on the back with both hahds, and lift the animal clear from tWb#' ground by the wool only. We have slaughtered a great many sheep in yeajgi past, and when removing tho pelts OF such sheep as bad been handled by tlia.. w^ooi we never failed to observe Oiat be* :neatti the skin wherever the animal beeA, bauglit by the woSl "blood 'tied! 'lit 'many instances the skin. been separated from the body so that fat« flnmfttJon

Was

wparent, We have kfowi

proprietors of sheep to be so strict.in r# gara to handling them, that they would' order ahelpejr from were to eaten a sheet part of the body. 'W n«n »w«y

to be taken, until y6u are gttfflcieijtil near to spring quickly and seise the baast bt both hands, then pasft one Hai^ around the body» grith th®. brisket, ahv lift the sheep clear from the ground. The wool: must not be pulled. If the sheen is a heavy one let, one hand and wnst W pat around the neokand the arm pressed against the leg. We hate always hand*? led sheep iu. the/way alluded tyv I never grasp the wooL Others seise tie sheep by a hind leg, then thro# one arm,around the body

aiid

^kejhp

the brisket with one hand. But with lambs should never be GaOfWj by the hh'd 1 witn ext mo care.

The Only Ohio Joke*

Ononr way to Cincinnati tbe fat flattens his fkee agftinftt tho looking out into the

town, there are Ifeon^inds of men in Ohio who would never make a joke. But ftsit Is, evenr day, ^ertl merfli^ ev^ry station on the line of thisand bOnnt^lng rrr^ifArM1aA ticket agent, 'I wanfc aUdiet to-morrow that is, I want a ticket to Morrow to-day

A A I 1

doea not want a ucaet, ttenaa prowwy never been, and never will be, in Morrow fri ail his life, but he wants tow his joke and lie says ft. That ia.wh/the town was so named. There is one man in Xetiia bhssatd it 865 «tnefl(a

know, to save couldn't tell to north or south of

msverrdyinc soul, ho r,r-wHefher Morrow is

iy: recitation in Nevada most

tie invomunff* Jftttt itttagfn© boy standing up and gravclyrettling off the following before a comimtiee of toe

Eden, about-ton

Knock fit

and