Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 160, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 July 1911 — When the Day Awakas. [ARTICLE]

When the Day Awakas.

Only the country liver can fully fed it this dying of night with the birth of day, this supreme moment when the mists and dimness and low voices of the one exhale into the melody and brightness of the other. It is a daily miracle, this sudden transition from gray to rosy light, this unrolling of the dew covered landscape, this assumption in delicious crescendo of sound, this quickening of the day’s life over tbe sleep of night, this flying of darkness, as of a ghost pursued, before the flooding of light this oldest of all earth's stories again told. , Awake, for the day has dawned!—BL H. Arr In “New England Bygones.” % The fact that she knows her husband to be a burglar or a bigamist doesn't disenchant a woman half so quickly as the fact that he eats with his knife, wears an unbecoming collar' or smokes a stale pipe. A man who can marry and won’t ought to be introduced to a widow.