Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 21, Number 3, Jasper, Dubois County, 17 January 1879 — Page 6
tom Mosjutr or my vmaks.
Waj aaajawa jaBWa, SSaarw fmM
foam roMim Uic lfte Wv art
'JNMUM
JNtaawa ttt Ut(r Un by tfw ttow of tkek
Aa4tk- W Ujr Urn msmw f (Mr Jwart. Ttoe tHaUs of earth may show TholMmtkiMH tlm iUt of yawn :
raw er wany fay eota fw or ataxy Umv
I net by tWe aUvery gray . Tlwt ereps tkroatrh Uw tHmay hatr.
ami nee By the ei ttta vr pm oh ar
Ah41 Mt by the (urrowa the linger of ears On tb forehead and face have hm4 Xet nodowti eoaat our years ; Xet by the ran ef tin earth but the iia!e Of or kouls, ami th fall of oar tears.
For the yowttK are of ttfawe oitl, . Theaah their brow ba br bt and fair ; While their btooU beat warm their heartliea
eoMt
O'er them tit fcpriag time bat winter la
Ami the old are ofHlmee ymiRK, When their hair la thin and white; And they slug In a a In youth they sung. And they laugh, lor their oroee wan Ug-lit. Kut bead by bead I tell The roeary of my years ; From aerotM to a oro tney lead 'tis well, And they're blessed with a bbmiaic of tears. Better a day of strife Than a century of sleep; Olve me inetead of a ton stream of life, The tewpeet and tears of the deep. A thousand Joys way foam Oh the billows of all the years; JlHt never the foam briBg the bark back home; It reaehea the haven through tears. m
WIND OF TUX WINTERS NIQUT.
1
from a Wacr, but ws renmely
waouga to Keep mm m bread ami cmm aad elotklag. It will therefore be seen that Mr.
Temple was quits Tight. Matrimony . hugged m so closely at last that w luxury 1 ooald not afford. I ho. on my oars, aad olutohing the hit
lurnt ttUr. thai lUMiftr. luruliur
htilOMIt way ami
We floated rouad the turn in the
strumi. The wheel was revolving. I
fray sculls, ik) as to impede my j could plainly hear the splash, splash of endanger my safety. They ! iu moRotououa olaak and dank; tki
kuowkdKAfi it 9vm tkwi, ju I went hom dHodiag. Wkan I robd my lodffiHgs I found two UU9t awaiting me. One was from my brother, wko was eommandingadUokmeat of kw regimsnt in Irelaad, tka otkar wu frow my late father solioitor. I opened ttui " oiioial" aote first.
It contained onlv a few lines, reouaet.
if nw to oall oa him in London in a day or two. as psrhana I mieht he abla
to do some work for the good-natured lawyer.
The other letter was more cheerful.
aad bore a warm invitation to share mv
brother's country quarters for a fortnight, or longer if I liked," uext month.
Before I wcatto bed I replied to both
my kind correspondents, accepting both inritations.
Next day I went up to London, and
in the afternoon I called unon the so.
licitor nervously. 1T5 I t i . . .
nus uueinese was simple, via l Know French? I did. Was I acquainted with book-keeping? I was. 11 Well, then," said he, " will you go
iu utfiiera, anu transact mis ousin&se,
I lay
intrusive
hoards pulled them uUetke boat,wkr,
uruier tne thwaru, tiwyexchangea dripping contkletieee as to what they would do next. What they did shall be told
in due course.
Such great etfeete from trivial eawe Hpriiig
The blaring koeee was new almost
visible. The reflection waa' caught by the water just beyond me. On I scud
ded round the bend of the bank, the
stream hurrying me down, and now I,
nave opened up the town reach, and the burning and half demolished building is oraoklin and roaring half a mile oil. The smoke, dotted with a million sparks, Hies up to heaven, while screams and criee and the roar of falling timbers ascend with them to the lurid sky. Those tiny jete of water only servo to aggravate the thirst in that liery throat, and not to quench it; no man can live near such a fire as that ; the heat even
in ray gig was soon felt distinctly, and the two planks benoath my ieet winked to each other in the glare, and glistened side by side at the thought of what was coming. t i r i
a vhu, a ruarj rour people naa sol i
upon the crumbling parapet, some feet i
Sew Fhhhj' Newspaper JilHHieri, A great many columns kave been written concerning typographic errors, and many of the instances sound so wit' ty or o stupid that it seems as if they must be rather Inventions than actual happenings. Hut we never saw one oited so unlikely that we couldn't remember its match. Once we wrote that it was "like evoking the shadow of a shade " to quote forgotten writers. Tho phrase appeared ia print thus: "Like cooking the shadow of a shad." The printer had, in burlesquing the sentiment, actually preserved and intensified it in a most striking imaee of unsnli.
stantiality. At another time we had the proverbial opinion of Rosalind, Men have died and worms have oaten thnm
hut not for love." The nrinter mav
have been a misogynist; at all events ho substituted women " for "worms."
Tliere are Shakespeare emendations not much hotter than that, perhaps. In one of tho emmtrr wiMiklina tlimv waa
darlincr Itosie: till we meet in heaven contlv an account of the
farewell!" I had time to think so to some ono of a Iiiblo bound in
mucn no more. guut.' " in a discussion one spoko of " the divine totality of being;' " it was "lie's all right; don't you lubbers reported as 'the sublime brutality keep around like that; sheer off, can't of feeling." This may have vc? Lot a chan havo a mouthful nf airi 1 lutan tht ronnrfor'a army Knf
, Hunah, yer sowls! he's breathin' !" J so when a Motkmlist College President
He was, It was 1. Hut how weak. . spoke of sin as "a dark, iruiltr. riHmn.
now very m, mentauy ana bouuv. 1 tinff fact." and found t nubl shodn
water dripped and ran away from the grinding woodwork, and gladly escaped beneath to save being crushed to air on
the top of thoee mighty paddles. We iiad two channels to choose from one over the weir, the other beneath the wheel. The suction to the latter wa tremendous. I swam strongly for tho former. I reached the slippery piles and caught them. A bright light was burning iu a email window in the mill, 20 yards or so awy We were in an eddy for a moment. I called out loudly. A head was put out ; I yelled again. The plank whereon I lay slipped from beneath me, rose up again, and carried me headlong down the foaminsr lasher
like an arrow from a bow, while my companion was wrenched awav and
darted for the wheel. A loud cry escaped me as we parted. All was over
now. JJeatu at last, "un, itosiei mv
-"Wind of the Winter night! whenee eomeet
And whither, oh I whither, art wandering
HOW.' Sad. sad la thy voioe oh the desolate moor.
Afltl mournfuljoh! mournful, thy.howl at my
'Say
where hast thou, been onthyoloud
seen oh thyroamings
lifted ear?
Say, what ihast thou afar?
What sorrow impels thee, thou boisterous
Biaec, Thus to mourn and complain, aa thou Jour neyest past?"
' I have been where the snow on the chill
mountain pe&ic Would have froaen the blood In the ruddteet eheek; A Rd for many a dismal and desolate day. ' o beam of my sunshine baa brightened my way. " I have cone from the deep where the storm in ite wrath Sipr eads havoc and death on Ite pitiless path Wk ere the billows arose, as the lightning An d twieted their arma In the dun-colored sky. " And I saw a frail vessel all torn by the wave Drawn down, with her crew, to a fathomleee grave;
Ah d I heard the lead eraek of her keel as I paeeed And the ftapof her sail and the crack of her maet! " But it smote on my ear like the tocsin of death, As she struggled and strove with the waters for breath; 'Tie her requiem I rune as I howl through the sky
And repent of the furv that eaaeed her to
n.SZwri.-ii ousmess, above the table-ro5fs, and wore crying w ory hi, mentally ana bodily, I ting fact," and found it published as 'a Vn,7 ihiif gl-f yU t0" i and shrieking for as stance. Twenty f o" when I awoko again to life and ask- dark, quietly dawning fact," and dorZ ?L?ln ShHU p8,d f my menatoncerashedintoofterropea ana tm 4,"osio!" scribiup the death of Vfesus as "vicaritstnt'K,? MyUr0SpenMfi&nd8Omo hP- What could .they do? Tho un- , "Sure he's wanderin' in his mind, so jous," saw it in print "vivacious." This " Agreed " I said Hft,nP. T win inmates, clad in evening dross, is. J)inny, run u and tell the Cap- was in a very religious paper, and anAJ???- ..Kua "I will iooktKi weird and unoarthlv in t7m fiflrr. tain the gintleman's alive. Hurry, ; other into an eloquent hvmn admitt!
I"
riSrf, 1 Mlr0U ithem bj-tho .l,v, J lJJra the
die.1
T11KOUG1I FLOOUTHKOUUII F11E. " I aeeure you, my dear boy, I am extremely sorry to appear unkind in this matter; but, believe me, I am acting fortke best."
" uut sureiy i may see itosie as us ual?" I asked.
" I am afraid not," replied Mr. Tern-
pie. "it wouia oe very injudicious.
lou are ootn too young and too romantic at present. Besides, your
meaas are utterly inadequate to main tain a wife."
"May I not bid Rosie good-bye,
laear" l persmeu. " una more meet ing can not hurt either of us!"
" ltosie is not at home," replied her
father, gently, almost sympathetically,
ae he shook me by the hand. " She
went to stay with some friends yester
day. Good night; and hope for better
aays." "Good night," I replied. "I sun
poee you don't mean to be unkind. Mr.
Temple; but you have made me very
auwnme," " My dear vounar friend." be reolied.
patting his hand kindly on my shoulder, ' were you in a position to maintain a wife, I would sanction your engage-
it in ubk ; out now, sucn a course,
f painful for us all, is the only
one Mrs. Temple and I can in instice
adopt. We shall be pleased to see you again after our return from the Contineat. Good night." I wade no reply indeed I could not k ave spoken just thea. My throat was c koked with tears, and big drops welled slowly from my eyes ae I walked away across the onen snace facing th hmua
This was to be the termination of our enfakement, then! Rosie Temple and I ad flattered ourselves that a seriee of
nances, picnics and charade parties,
witn a very good knowledge of lawn tennis and croquet, constituted housekeeping. We had only 800 a year between us, and dear Rose spent 40 at least on her dress annually. She had
iaey been very economical in the matter of gloves, and had made herself a on Ret which was in every sense beoomiag; still, we were not much nearer to matrimony then; and now So I pursued my way across the common, and I do not mind confessing that I shed tears ae I walked in that dark eyeaiag beneath the trees and into the gloomy and desolate high road, oaring for nothing and for nobody except Rome, my pretty, piquante Rose; woeaering whither she had gone. Wae it not a pardonable subterfuge on the part of Mr. Temple to induce me to leave the
mngNuornoour
to something better.
I wrung his hand and loft him, took the first train home, packed up, and next morning at 11 o'clock was at the olllce in London again. I wrote to my brother telling him the facts, mastered my instructions, and next morning I was in Paris.
I found the business at Geneva much more complicated than I expected. It
was a liquidation case. Dav after dav
passed ; the days ran into weeks, and at last, after six weeks' hard work and a run to Chamouni, I was on my way home
again.
" Well done!" was the verdict nassed
upon my efforts, and was very welcome, accompanied as it was with a check for
50 guineas. "Call on me when I return to town," said my friend, "in about five weeks' time, and I will tell vou something I
nuns, you win ue giau to near." My thoughts immediately flew to
Kosie. Aot that I had bv anv means
this, questionable temperance sentimentI ! "I praise The still." Sometitnos these
lady to the lower roof m safety. Such
a cheer arose for this. Well done,!
wtsu, in oil uuue. MULISH UlllVilliy is not yet dead whon Englishmen and Irishmen can act like this. I watched and waited; pulling in, tho hoat was great. I pulled away to the opposite
wing, abutting on the river, now almost
wholly clad in llame and smoke, but still itself unburn ing. What is that? Can it be a man or
woman kneeling there, and unobserved
now
l rememoor noimng more until 1 ' "i praise The still." Sometitnos these found myself in barracks, in nly broth-1 things are so funny that the writer can't er's quarters. Then I suppose I fell bo as angry as he would like, but still asleep. But when I again awoke to , that Virginian editor must have been consciousness, thoy told me in rauillod "hopping mad" when his powerful tones that I had only just pulled through , leador wound up with "Courage, tillers
oi tnoiand! and forcot, in tho excite.
brain fever, and had been in bed nearly five weeks. Piveweoksl I was duo in London! I told tho doctor so, or somebody spoke for mo at least, the voico wag not like my own.
Indftfid. thnn. it's onf. n
I ment of politics, your pantry and your
nursery!" Ho had written "novertv"
and "misery." And how must Astron-
onier l'roctor havo felt when, having written of "lines, bands and stri
this ye t tho violet end of tho spectra." ho was
law-1 represented as seeing "links, bonds and
no
don't stir, me lad, lawyers or
amid the shrouding ftmnt-n hv n i,n vers. (Juict now, or I'll ive ve a coin
rest, who are gazing at the gallant men ' P0 anfl sentl y to stop for another I Perhaps, as if he around the stables? The soldiers had! montn!1' 'spiritual lunatic
stripes for the violent kind of specters ?" Perhaps, as if he had had a peep into a
asylum which must
be necessary enough, if tho mediums have got tho richts of it. to store Diak.
kas in. Spriny field (Mass.) llcpublican. A Xonster Locomotive.
The largest locomotive evor construct-
I 1
tho real uu 1,1 country was Drought here last I Friday by the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne &
mi idflii Chicago Railroad. This monster U on
: J I . 1 . a -IT 1 1 i V .i v
airiveu anu were uomg goou service; ' suoiuuicu, anu got ooitor. in a but no ono else perceived tho solitary fortnight I was down again in tho anteform wrapped in an ulster coat, and room, whore I was welcomed as a " hetrembling on the wall above tho river, ro of romance." The cood-natured
, Not a moment was to be lost. I pull-1 quizzing and congratulations on mv rej cd in hastily. oovery were incessant. At last, noticing " Leap!" I shouted, "lean!" As I' my puzzled look, my brother said
, spoke l rose up in tho boat. The planks "remaps he hasn't hoard winked once more and rattled. ' facts-have you, 11?"
I it T.- Ml T It 1 J . . . I lit 1. a. a. I. x
fnr,Atan i.r. . w r . :a1-S- " "P 11 j "i my excitement, i " i u nut iuo very sngnt
I fSt mar Xwt2i Z S, " 0ne look to oaven-a glance down what you are all talkin- about, " I reLiauidaSca are nomiSnf tho wifUy rwnntar river, and tho plied. " If its a joke, f don't sec it." TwS noViH ?r30n 1 addre98e RPl et first. "Now, look, here she is again! t1llrtT 10 :10111 m: brot.h: Unthinkinclv. I moved suddenlv : the I Lucky fellow 1 " 5
oi. a loiwrrauneu at once, anu at n i:i. j x r . : .i ,.i.i.. ... .. i. " i i. - .
o'plnnV that nranincr t u-sa irvJi i "S"1' s'S rwseu vain ji auempteu j ami)-uui wiwi sno rines over "5,luWi ul- u"gi evy grace to uka in XSSy kn0cke1 UP I to recover my balance ; the boat tipped , to inquire." r j at a point on the Rocky .Mountain. It
now covered with debris. " Tell them to come in Ilamblyn, and i dated pattern, having" eight driving. The two planks started after me to. se the preserver of the 'sole daughter wheels, and a pony ftwo.wheel1 truck.
, gether from beneath the thwarts. ; of his house and heart.' " The cylinders measure 20 by 20 inches, I sank ; and as I did so I thoueht of 1 I heard, but scarcely hooded, all this and the driving-wheels are but-1'2 inches
i t , . a 1. k.'n " I ,'C; .n!
itusiu, suu uuue up my ninu to die, ii"vibu. juiuuii. iiiu uunur is enormous, oeI must, but I strusrcled manfullv fort Thndnnrnmv.iivl? a lalw in wnii.fi. i'msc straight, 58 inches diameter. It has
its way to tho West, and will be used on
the New Mexico & Southern Pacific Branch of tho Atchison. Toneka &
Santa Fo Railroad, and is especially in-
It was short and to the point. It ran thus "Come along, old fellow; stay as long ae you like." I went. I lived with the detachment ; and what fun we had ! Fishing in a fine
ing, forSepteiber waJ upon us now"; tfJffiJB.1 StrU -nfully for -The ,door opeued; a lady la well-fit
dtah? wff ?hed 0hSp S&fSf rS ; l ne h unT1Iin nd?r " ' S asThe SSSTl looked It her , tank, almost the entire length of the dentsf made up tWotW ! brief ond, the next I had d-P !&lJSL SS1
after parade or inspection. T," I VTIm m " vl wu wul i ue.r. ? J arm8: " "T.V 'Vr.i.:' " V. rYr,
One guest-nieht-for we had our little ? TjZZJt t?"iu "A 80 eac t WM " 1 os.ie W. uF1,n Ko81 ca be
rial Trtioa c:niw. m i w ox my iue. . you, lnuef' '
Circumstances looked, from my mental J 2sTo doubt alraut it. She had come to point of view, very different from what thank me. For what? For saving her they had to my bodily eyes. I had plen-' life that night when Sir Jehn Carney's ty of time to repent of my rashnoss, to , house was burned, utter a praver, and to forarive mvnn.i Tt, was Itnuin r hmi
mies; and then I struggled, knocked i wonder my heart had beat so fast while rP en"ie wll0 in working order,
my beau, naif sank asrain. nut out mv w lloauwl down thn simam wi woign na.ow pounds. The irrcat
right arm and grasped something. It, Rosie was my own at last. She is weat ,RI1d size of tho boiler and the was a plank. mine still, thank Heaven! Ismail driving-wheels combined form a
At that time I had. vnfortanatelr. no
I had been a clerk in a
oooapatioH.
banking-house,
times"
but the "bad
a aeeewitatea a change in the " staff," aaa I wae one of thoee seat away at a mouth's notiee and a mmitUi. LuJr
True, I bad a small income derivable
social parties ocoasionallv we were sit
ting at the open windows, when the sub. of the party exclaimed "What a glare there is yonder! It's a fire, I believe." "Bedad, you're right!" said one of our guests. " It's down by Sir John's ; he has a house full. I hope it's not the house itself." " Shall I turn out the picket?" asked my brother. " Why, look, it's increasing; they may want aeejstaaoe."
ae spoae ise names mounted up and the lurid smoke rose hirh into the
glare above. 1
" Sound the fire-call and turn out th
pickets, Hamblyn," said my brother
"Take the men down at the double. We'll drive over. Come alonp. Look
sharp!" I hurried out for a coat to covar mv
dress clothes. Of course, being in a hurry, I was delayed. In the dark I
groped unsuccessfully, and at length when I crossed from my room I found that the others had driven off in the cars
oar eueets had come over ia.
The sentry at the gate civilly " shouldered " his rifle as I passed, and in re-
A . m -
piy to my question told me that the Captain and the whole party had gone, leav
ing woru lor me to xoiiow, if
in Dutnowr xnevve
oars, sentry."
-IBB, mr; ouimere'stne gig, mr. "Whose rig?" , 66
" The boat, eir. You can scull down
imost aa quicK ae itiey'll anve, yer
uunor. r
erably to tho weight. The fire-box is ten feet long. The truck-wheels are thirty inches m diameter, and are of paper, with steel tires, similar to those
now being used so extensively under the Pullman sleeping cars and on the Metropolitan Elevated Railroad. New York.
beemg a body ruling up close by, I raised the head. The person I had tried to save was sensible, evidently.
i wae uengnteu to una that he too was floating on a plank, the twin supporter of my arm ; and how thoee good friends tossed about, and drove up against each other in sheer delight, ae we all floated away fast down stream together, baffles description. I impelled my plank towards tho other, and, no doubt aided by that wonderoue law of attraction and sympathy which exists even in wood, I succeeded in getting close to mv comnan-
ion. Leaning my arms upon the trusty plank, I managed to support the form
Vftrv llttln iYn tnvlinn m nuinuam- I
near me; but all this time we neither of us spoke a word, nor could we discern
each other's features. The fast subsiding fire was far behind us now. Thft atoailt' til antra l-anf-. fir. at ;
" - "Kfa , us towards the bank, but I was not very taicen all the anxious to go ashore just then, as the I DwtAiV ttfdva A. f . t
. s'a, m.- mreuiliaa d Unnt look attntnlit-a
The moon had been obscured by heavy clouds: but we could discern the stonos which here and there rose up from out I
ine water, irom a snoai m mid-stream. We should soon be in safety. The planks apparently thought otherwise. They bobbed about and grew very impatient
w reacn me snore.
tremenduous power, well suited to the
Mrs. Temple and her daughter had been I wofK "ie engine has to perform. The paying a round of visits, and whilostay- p'f?ht dnving-wheols are merely to dising at Sir John Carney's house the i nbutc the weight, for if it rested on but
lire bad Broken out. Rosie had been ' 1IU evor 1Rlu coum Sl&nu U,B my companion during that twonty min-1 ProS8"ro. The weight is so great that utoe in the water. Wrapped up as she 1 lhc . WosUirn railroads over which it was, and, silent as we both wore, we did t mur DafW n?t permit t to go over not recotjnize each other in the dark. J br,dK08 m ,fc havo to be takeu to The miller had stopped tho wheel and 1 moC0fl Land CRrrioi ovr in sections. It nulled Rosie oat of th l.i? iaf i f passed over the Pennsylvania Railroad
time. (Without being dismantled. Vhi&igo
For a day or two Rosie had been quite unable to give an account of her rescue
from the fire: and when her father ar-1
rivnd. n rlwulinnr tn u inlmrmm
learned at the barracks where ho had
Tribune.
A Splendid Wife.
. ,
across anu aeipeu me to "That's a big fire, sir
it's at the lis 11 below.
" Good!" I would pull down. It was not far; the moon wae still bright. I knew the river pretty well. No sooner thought than done. A soldier from the sraard-room came
launch the gig. : they do sav
Poor craattirAat
i nope they'll all escape. All right, sir?" I replied in the affirmative. lie let go the painter, aad with two vigorous strokes of the light seuUs I wae Tn the stream. Fortunately I knew almost every turn aad bead of the line river, or I should have more thaa once had a
very narrow escape, if I had aot bean quickly upset. Urged by a reckless daring, I soulled rapidly on alone. Alone, all bat for the company of two good planks. Whence came they, and whither thev were bound. I did nt
think; bat I noticed they kept close to
ureHuw owiriing away, now m tae dim
called with Sir John to thank tho com
manding officer for his timely assistance that his daughter's preserver was myself. The reader will almost misss tho se
quel. Soon after my return to London
We onco knew a man who was always praising his wife. On the corner, down the street, at thePost-ofilce.atthe race-track, in the skating-rink, at the theater, in the sal that is, at tho choirmeeting, he was always telling what a happy man he was, just because ho had
sucti a splendid wife, and he talked ev-
wag appointed Secretary of a nice lit- ry man he met into a perfect fronzy of tie company, with a nice little salary, 0nvy about her. Well, one winter
anu wont to maicn, ail tnrougn tbe in- I morning when it was not yet too light fluonco of the good solicitor. This em- in ..nnnnay. 'nni.t;nm.
There's distant thunder! A storm is
coming up. No, it must be a train passing the bridge above. No; the noise increases! tho sound is borne continuously on the wind. The planks got very restless now. The banks oven came closer to us, but the stream ran all the faster. The noise was getting louder every minute. I knew what it was at last. I knew too well. It was the Mill Weir ! If the sjuiee were open to the hiifre over-shot wheel oar doom was sealed. Nothing much short of a miracle could save us. Striking out for the bank. I
called to ray companion to do the same,
wit encumDereu wiin tne ulster coat his
progress was not great.
We would and footinr on tlm lajha-r.
probably ; the eddy would assist us,
, , r . , j iu in ana uiiu nullum uvouv usiuuuuiuub, ploynient left me leisure for other work wo sneaked into that neighbor's yard to which I was lucky enough to obtain, and j steal a fence-board for kindling, and had
my success emboldened me to ask for
Uosie once more. This timo I was not rofused. We were married the year following; and now, when we wander " over hill, over dale," we often recall how we struggled together for life that memorable night, "through flood through fire." CtrntWa Magazine.
London exults over a rara avis in the shape of a polyglot elocutionist. A young Portuguese lady, by name Mile. Antonini, of a good family in her native land, has been giving lately several recitations in private (trawing-rooms. She has a wonderful memory, and declaims in the purest accent in French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and English. The latter language she has made her special study. Her Lady Macbeth is said to be admirable in tone, fire and, passion. She has a fine voice and great facial expression.
to wail before we could safely obtain it
until that man's wife came out and sawed a couple of armfuls of wood, shoveled out three snow-paths, fed and groomed the horse, and cleaned out the cowshed, and then when she went into the house and we heard her call to her husband that the sitting-room was warm enough for him to dress in if he wanted to get up now, we were so amazed that we forgot what we were waiting for, and wont back and kindled the fire with a corn-cob and a pint of kerosene. Exchange, I don't insist upon pedigree for a man or horse. If a horse aaa trot fast the pedigree is all right; if he kan't, I wouldn't give a shilling a yard for hU pedigree. Joth Billings. An English paper says that American-made lamps are more elegantly designed and better finished than their own.
aaam. Jsaaa1' aaaameeaVaVaV i.
