Jasper County Democrat, Volume 2, Number 27, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 October 1899 — In [?]rror. [ARTICLE]

In [?]rror.

Mr. Sealove (at his seaside cottage)— My dear, please tell our daughter to sing something less doleful. Mrs. Sealove—That is not our daughter, my love. That is the foghorn.— Tit-Bits.

Traveling on the Burlington Railroad on the way to Denver, a little town called Atlanta, near Hastings, Nebraska, is pointed out as a point of interest because of the corn cribs built there along the tracks. In all there are twenty-four separate cribs, 12 feet wide and 12 feet high, with a total length of 5,904 feet, or a distance Of nearly a mile and a quarter. This year’s enormous <*rop (three hundred million bushels for the State of Nebraska) will test their capacity. Everybody seems prosperous in Nebraska. Nobody complains but the bankers, who find it hard to lend their money. Nobody wants to borrow it.

A man who does not learn to live while he is getting a living. Is a poorer man after bis wealth is won than he was before.—J. G. Holland.