Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 25, Number 40, Jasper, Dubois County, 24 August 1883 — Page 2
Wema Ww
mMRAl AH UfOUBT.
Samuel Fiuecia Smith. II. D-.tht
author of iur National hymn, ' My
Country, 'tl of The." mow frntda. ai
ttiu w of eeveniy-iour, in awwwb
Center, Mass. ,
There i now no llvinsr member ot
the group ple'i'd by Carpenter's cele
brated iatnttng ot gumg tne rrociam.lLvn " linntoumw Hlair VU thtl
a scalp wound on top of the malum. n, three end one-half inches in leeirth, not I uMmtar Ku.ne Hale in thew-ac.
tUf cf law ha made a little fortune fur
Dr. C. W. Ffctaaer. of Loekport, N. Y., who waa one of ths alijfaieiaatboMUur a potK-mortotn ssamfasa tioa oo the bndy of Captain Webb, furnishes the following account of It: Thftr wu found marked rigor mor tie. The body we In a state of active lecmpoition. All the titan were mitlv distended by nam There waa
Involving the bony structure. No bone
were found broceu. rnore were evral other fecal injuries of the body, but unimportant at to the earns) of death. The scalp wound waa evidently produced after death. The muscular texture waa peculiar.
Bv a cut kmgitujdlaaliy with a sharp amlnel shreds of deaaicalarl muscie
would be carried alousr with and eolleot
on the edge of the scalpel. All the blood presented a dsmmofly red ooloc in mne olaoec imnartshly red
ahowiiur that the blood was not deoxid
bed by asphyxia in drowning, but that death eamwd prior to that oondition. None of the charactertatie symptoms of
death front cUxmaiasr ware preeeat, neither wn there any Toes! injury sufficient to ncceamrilv nrodnos death,
The muscles were paw and presented the peculiar appearance for which wc
coukl find no better name than ux
deskvation, the fhunamt being; ragged
and broken ami aenaratiaaT with remara
able facility. The exasaiaatioa on each
extremity and uioa the Tarious portion
or the trunk ana aeox urssemsu um-
formlv these conditions.
At the result of onrewaminntkm 1 am
ted to the cooeluskm. and in this I Monded bv bit ooUeasfuos. that d
was caused not by asphyxia or drown-
tar 1mm
THE LITTLS MAIDKSS.
IH tnll jtom a story, rtlstas; you a i It's not very atort end ft's aot vorj Of sis tttfls auUdeas: la wktte
and eeeh was the
very kMMT
teey
lavtted for
Wsitlatr wss
ism wees
feat wen. now. 1ft mesa dun, so uWr sot mere at tttOa Mist Katts aad is
himself of about $40,001) to UW.OUti.
Uis wife is said to have fl.M).(0, and
with her mother's interest 9 1,500,000.
Boston FtoU.
Isaac Adams, the Inventor of the
Adams power printing-press, died re-
eanthr at Sandwich. N. ML. where be
r . ....
bad restdett tor many years, ne wa eightv-ooe years of age and quite wealthy.
Senator Edmunds is home from the
Pacific coast, and is very enthusiastic about the Puget Sound scenery. Us
says the glaciers at Mount Baiter arc
grander than anyuung no ever saw m Switaeriand. Boato Journal.
-Mias Louisa de la Bamee. "Quids, "
writes to the London Time In favor of
making a copyright treaty with the United States with the concurrence of publishers. She opposes any admission
into KUgiana Of American ropruiae w Knirlbm works as ruinous to authors and
to literature.
Dr. Oliver 8. Taylor, of Auburn,
N. Y.. the one surviving member of
Dartmouth CollesV class of 1808, is
now in his 100th fear of life, and enjoys
perfect beaitn ot roma ana oouy. ne has never been sick but a day and a
half, and has never had a headache.
And little Mist It aught haw
Mar.
HOW Iff1 tWrSM!
(WW. . isth sad
sad Pour aad Pnie.
June. If ft bnja't bees
The art of the month, and s bvautfral dsr; .
Tber khMd when ther a, as ths tedles all
Kate, SuaisMMl WeU: Bess, Potty and Pnie. Tasr oanewi sad thmr ikippod. sad they ssat and they ptejwd. Ami thjg tkfXtXt?" rnUP" iM tb " And I saidwhea they askei me of which I - Bniaeues are the dearest, and so are the
And that night, as i bade them adieu at the
How 1 wished that "tood-bye!" eouM have been -bow-d'r'-do"'. ... And 1 said: "Cuaw at three!" so ss to set
. them st two! R. W. LtmrU. In SL Atchobu.
rL"lJ?? JJjil Tbeone slight attack of tJata., .ccur-
-eomimr in oontnet with any hard sub
stance, but by the shock from the reactionarv force of the water in the whirl
pool rapids coming in oontnet with the enbrnenrecLbodr with auea force as to
inatantlv destrov the reaairatonr power,
and, in fact, all vital action by direct pressure and force of oontnet a shook of sufficient intensity to pnraiyne the nerve centers, partially desiccate the nsuHnuar tissues, and forestall any
probable sequel of death by drowning. The cause of death in psmdng through these raoids bains thus constant, and
la no way accidental, as might be drowning or an Injury received from rocks, forces ths conclusion that no lirmr bodv can. or ever will, pass through
the rapids alive: a fact established of
i little importance, and an ominous
red some seventy-three years ago. N.
Mr. Charles A. Dana, of the New
A Lecture by
know what crying means, but it is so funnv to talk about that I do not
know how to tell what H is, very well.
but 1 will tell as well as I ean. When
water comes Into your eyes, and your face nuckers itself up, and you make
noises with your mouth and nose.
all that is crying. Sometimes you make a howling kind of noise, and amaaduMs rou make a sauealinff kind.
and sometimes you only snifle with
your nose. I know a good many rea
sons wny people cry. i wo am mean grown-up people, I mean boys add girls. You ory when you get hurt, and
York Smn, puts on a white beaver about WBea you hiSre to do things you do not two o'clock every afternoon and goes to wnt tn. and when vou can not do what
lunch. He straddles one ot the swing- you want to, and when you can not have ing seats at a counter, and, tilting his wnt you want, and when anybody hat gently back, nods familiarly to the plagues you. 1 do not know what
waacs me water won iw mi
waiter, and orders a ntate of soup. He
is as modest as if he did not have an in
come of 990,000 a month. Chicago
Tribune.
-Kev. Newman Hall's " Come to
Jesus' 1 has been printed in twenty lan-
snuuras and 8.0U0.0UO copies ot tt nave been sold Mr. Hall is tall in stature.
aot robust, awnlal in manner, and with
a face kindling with svinpathv. His home, called Ivy House, half hidden by
vines, is full of nictures and books
come Into
when you tret hurt, or when you have
to do what you do not want to. or can
not do what you want to, or can not have what you want, or anybody plagues you, and my father does not
know: but it comes there, and comes
without vour trying to make it come.
and my father thinks this is quite enrlouft: and no matter how far off the
hurt ia from vour eyes, if it is on the end of your little finger, or of your little
no little importance, amu an
TSver bedTthe whirlpool rapid, gathered from all parts of the world- toe is much narrowed, and dso suddenly I Vmeago Aruw. Z?",!:
nsMimes greatly increased precipitancy. -uayara layior nseu io The water strikes the unyielding rocky all men ho had ever seen Hawthorne
wa mr aKim nnauMPno tin (" ''"ft
eves that flashed Are, the pupils being
stunetimes so dilated as to render the
iris invisible. Gladstone has similar
pvml and some of his friends aitribuu-d
ness for that statesman. Her Majesty,
they say. has on several occasions been actually terrified by Gladstone's gam,
banks with great vtotoaee. and by reaction nuwrts with such resistance as to
form in the center a mountainous ridge , td etxi-nachinsr waters from twenty to
thirtv feet in beisrht. Into this Captain
Webb was subtnerged after passing the first brenker. nmi mstnnily subjected to
the immense pressure , hwueniea upon
bis body as the cause of his deatn. . Ffst'
The time was mhmlght, and the situatioa near the Wmld olios. The man
wit iaarfnlhr mad woasterfuflv full He
walked up to the Irs alarm signal-box
and placed s nickel in K. Xhenhe rdown on the curb. "Why don't ths ear stnrtr He received no answer. Why don't the ear startr mm no aawer.n Gimme back me fare, titeuP
It waa not returned.
called tears. When more cry-water
comes into your eyes than they can
hold, then it runs over, and runs down vour face In little round drops, and these are tear-drops. Sometimes they run down so fast you have to take your handkerchief, if vou have one in your
pocket; but If 'tis lost, your fist will do.
Wh n I was a little fellow I cried a good
: "Get
ta enrt
s a rety ood sfysr."
0ns tune a kind lady stayed at ats mssv and she said she could make s
better rhyme than that, and it was: Jew. Jew. kaews how to be ewrry P
and asked him if he had not bm n
s frr good cryr.
long enough; and he mid he had. and when he began to cry she would sayt
"Jerry. Jerry, snows how to as awry;
and that made him laugh, and pretty
he thought of It himself, and as
grew to be quite a merry deny.
Aowiwiu tea you mo
Once when grandma was a child sue knew two children, a boy and a girl. They did not live in ths house with each
other, me girt wss nnnivu ww Holmes, and the boy was named James
Adams, and Ruth Holmes learned now not to cry. Homebody told ben how. Once a great ugly boy pounded her and she did not ory then, for she was very brave about crying. She was a hop-skip-and-jump little girl, grandma said.
nod liked to play out doors, une urao she fell off a fence and broke her arm. and while the doctor was taking hold of
it, and It was aching a good deal, sbe
cried only two tears, and they came of
themselves, just at we enu wneu u
pain was very bad. Somebody asked
ber how sbo kept herseii irom crying, i
and she said ahe kept thinking to herself.
fast as sbe could: l can bear u: i can
bear it." This was the way the one told
her that showed her how to keep from
crying. Grandma said the boy. Jam?
Auauts, was a ainu i a wry-uuj. heard how it was that Ruth Holmes
kept herself from crying when she had
her broken arm, and he thought he
would try the same way and top himself from being such a cry-baby. So every time be got hurt or the boys plagued him, or be could not do an he liked to, or had to do what be did not like to, or could not hare what he wanted, he said to himself-said It
thinking, not talking-"! can bear it; I can bear it," and he stopd himself from being a cry-baby. And after he was a man be told grandma' that when very bad things happened to him h remembered that little girt Roth Holmes and thought to himself. "1 can lar it; I can bear it;" and he remembered it till he was an old man. At the close of the lecture Superintendent Dick asked that all who never cried shonld raise their hands. Next he asked that all who would like to boar crying should raise their bands. Not a hand went up. Next he asked that all who liked to bear themselves cry should raise their hands. Three bands went up slowly, part way, and then went dow n. Lastly he asked them all to show how they cried; whether with a wou. wou. won. or a wi, wi, wi, or a
squealv. wealy. weely, They all began to show how they cried, but this made them laugh, and some of tbemlaughed so, trying to cry, that they tumbled over in a heap together. Afrs. A ML Mat, t Wide Awake.
Mwnhtid ay them is bs aasha
toiiowtaa. dstosiMf i. ins. fMn. w. a. i
Hi. Lewrii Mat. . U ta(t ir of Una ltMMMt4 irMMtibSt cwmi that aw betas mesa hf ihta wwaiertat bvhU. das. Mr. SJesrhswi mjtw "I have Uit KVatly UiiulSidSjf etTtUrJ was aewekldatT Stecaat, tMren!MShtawtarfesa4Miw- 1 ttmnrity fafSrd m Ike naMosasd LewrU IhMfiHid, bat wu eettcrd, owtat to Uw omtaM Jar. iiste stUic rail. mad iMilarai, at masy lm ha h-ra ototiiM t da.
of kiitar r aWk-aar. I kart trV maar
lMrratY4aMtM'at iritrf. AfrMai
-aSi S bk tu aa llual'i ItraiHir. 1 putrtaac4
abotUaaf am of o Sfacyjati te Lowell, and comMkubS to imofurc at oQor.atid afwr uaUwtvu tMtikr I wm eaHwIjr ttm from a aaln, and oieatSft earrd. ead I rhWMftdlr iwwwimI tbta wnMhtlul
hum nrwmy, lu ail we emrivri troei
aaSlivw diacaar."
AT UUKKTT.
yr aaambrrof yven I waa aSMrted with kfderjr ad grawl AuMm, aad mSttrd with eaiaa la ay Vmb aad lawk at Usim ao aeverrljr Uwt U awawd ttst I ewl4 aot eadere It. I eaed anrarai ao-calk-d eamrmtmawsdtd tat ttwae Slaat a, katttry did vm bu kuo4. A MeadeCataw tkal had aard Moat'a aramlr. aad
It the beet to eae. arerd me to trr It. aadl
UetUa at Oeera K. MatTa drac mofp ta
Maersrwer. and hefo tt I bad wwd oaa hwttta I Imm teflnch inter, Uweataa tot the Madder aatkMwrit wrre Mdaeed a pud draL and aftir utltayflva botUra 1 fuead Utat Hunl'i Rt mmljr bad dune all that It WMitwoaunradcdtudo. li bad rvmovrd all th' pata. tay aepnth keerovMt. aad I Jtalad artrral asuada hi a low wrrka. I have rriwwil rlwor aad UvoeUi fur eae of sir ran (M. aad I ran unlr UMakthr prprktora of Hnnt'i Rrro -dy for hit ipmmI health of tvdar, atd foa arr a( Mbrrtjr to pubUah thta. that it aarh Iter tax-aaiof umc unr btlax carrd r thr wuf yaer truly wonderfnl rrmttly. W. M. Tusua. OorraTOWH. K. M., May 7. ISSL
Thaaeawde Haateaad to Tktr Oravwat Belying on testimonials written In vtvkl gtowittg laiiituagti of some mlraculout curei made by stine lankly pufTtMl up tloctor sr patent medicine lus h.-tsteiied tliotuwiids Is their grave; believing in tlwir almost lt. sane faith that ttw same miracle will be performed on them, and that tltete testimonial make the curnai, while the m calkd medicine Is all the time hsMentug titeut h) their KTaves. We have voktI wlUtahha testimouishi, as they do not inske the cures, alttwugh we have TUoi'sAxim rrox timh'.haxih of them, of the most wonderful curia, voluntarily sent ua. It U imr meiliriiio, lion Bitten, tlist makes the cure, it has never failed and never csu. We will give reference to any one for any ilianasv similar is their own it desired, or will refer to any neighbor, a there lit Hot iteiKuborttuSJd hi the known world but can show its cures by Hop Bitters. ; A IXMISO JOKE.
A nroaatKrat rdrlu of rtiutmnrtt jolttesfr MM
to a lady naiuai tto wa ruBtttotMiiR ot tmr nS
III hraMh. uat of M luatxtuy to rmtm me.
n m nruwat aa
tnrd the ann-tn. tmm wh
lady t.uk
h lth-
Matanatao Well ek-aKU with tt. aU euatUai
blrk alH itlMahnM I
ttK now biuti at hr dor' or for hli JW. aot
inea
deal and mv father used to say:
bottle, tiulck! A bottle to catch
a
the
mummm. A eleiwvman said that he addressed
his congregation of ladies and gentlemen as brethren, because the brethren embraced the ladies.
"There is a tied hi the affairs ot ... . A i 11
men woicn jenus on to wnww, w
markeda young man after marrying
an heiress CmdU, MerckaiU ana Traveler. A four-year-old child, visiting, taw i. M 1 LLuv .... - Ami a ft. I
J,1netdtei inr u thaheTel sph-pois around the waist, and at- ... ,nLo th fire at Aunt AuMUSta's.-'
srranh-oois
tempted to trip It up. There was a pirited tugging for seveisl seconds, and tU he nmde a twrrtte kirk at ahe
-"feet' of his adversary, and the result waa that he kicked Msnsetf over on his
mtm tar aid
As be exectttivrsed bhneetf he moved diff, saying: - "Yar a smarter conductor than I
Ihought ysr wwa, ha I believe now that fdatnrowed ver If yer coat hadn't s
An old man was arntlgaed before an Arknasnw Cosnt for sosae trifling ofJtose, and among the witnuaini was an ild wonsan who, in giving b testimony, made such etbrti to shield ths old anon Hint the Judge asked: "ItasJam, have yen known this man ''Manshsbkae iJusmfJW Tea7ir.,, the oM woman replied. " I knee known Mm a very long time. When I was n young girt this man used to viait me. In fact. Jwdne, we were
ewestltesrta.'' and she twisted her apron
and toeewi down. Ah. T m!" the Judsw reulied.
-----w . 17 -a .a a
ho be swertaearta, ana ntma so
of each other new because you
alid mat marrv each other tnenr
Ya am nmlataka. Judse. for W0 dhi
marry each other then, and are husband
ana wife now. Tndwxl!" the Judee exclaimed.
"this !s a remarkable caws. Liberate
the old fellow. Mr. Ottett.0 ifrlansem
Trtmtter. '
At the great aehery wkbtatlon in UasJomtheetuU Amerieau hseeaiiotoB and Amirinsw drink was
tawabiad over bv Lneir Wateriow, wife
of Sir Sidnev Wittertow. M. F. for
flravassnd Governor of the Irish 80
elatv. and Lord Haver of London In
leTf-TS. Ldtdy wateriows matoen 1 waslasuvaret HamHtoa, and she
reared at Kapa, Cel.
bv Mrs. Pajret, Miss Chasnbsrlin, and
A'
was
-IHiah Cote, of Norlltyillo. If. T.
six feet and a half tnlL and known as
the " Giant of the Mortal Woods," died
-recenty, aged mtsnty jenm.
wind into the fire at Aunt Augusta:
The Household. A. Boston school-girl can not be made to speak of overalls. She prefers to call them super-omoes. Mow let seme of those wild Western sheets again
sneer at our culture. If they dare: wfen Trtnueriat.
One of the Wveltest seeetaoles In
this world Is to watch the expression of rapture that passes over the face of the dude as he sucks lemon up through a straw, roll Ms eyes and rubs his ears to
gether at the back ot fttt neea. uaw my.
Ths fair thinsr: " Sow. MX. Uver-
ehaige, what will it oust to have hot
ana eow wwer put an (wwgii j
house." "Well, I can't give a very
close estimate until the job is completed. I will do the fair thing by you, thoowh." 80 the plumber went to work and three months latter he owned
the home. Detroit FM.
A musical journsi discusses " Music
as a Healing Art." If a man were to be treated to a ferenade by a couple of
bagpipers, he -vouW hare to be pretty Iirn the inspiring strains didn't infuse
strough snrengui into nis system insiua at fire raiuutes to cause him te jump
out of bed and look around for a snot-
gua. ScofeA "wn.
John Bull (who is asked toward
the Cottage Home for over-workea School Board Children): Confound it!
my band s never out ot nw ptiesr. First I have te par for their education, and betjause that has made' em so queer
I mm new asked to pay urn ooctora Wf'-AiMf Folk.
Take that pair of oei fromnndor your osnt,M demasaJed a merchant of an oM negro, or Tli hswo you nrfL "Who's got n pa'r of shoes un'er Ms oontr' "Yon havo; I sawyou when you picked them up," "la fUm de shoesr; (produeinar them.) "Toti hand them hero." "Whydkln't roe teB ms de was do sfnajn, sted oh jreP' ms fused roue' heahF Botternt S maa 'ease he dean ua'srstaa' yer. Want town lebber seed. White folks traasna on de niggers like dawns afoot
tog.,f-
tears! Johnny s tears are running
away! They'll gut lost! Get a bottler If tears get into your mouth they taste salt. Once when it was my bed-tinie
and I cried to stay up longer, my brother told me there was too much at tn mv toar unil aaid If I would CT
some fresh water tears he would ask my mother to let me stay up till her bed-time, and I took a piece of a tear on ths tin end of mv finger, and touched it
to jny tongue, and it was salt, every time I tried. Hove and trlrls err more than crown-
up people, and small boys and girls cry more than large ones, and babies cry
more than anybody. The ones who are crying do not know how funny their fsces look and what bad noises come out of their mouths. If they knew, maybe they would stop. The best way to stop is to shut your teeth tight toStber and your lips tight together. If at does not stop it, then take hold of
your nose, bard, with your pockethandkerchief; but If that Is lost then take hold with your thumb and finger, but keep your Hps aad teeth shut, too. The best time to stop it is just oefore it oomes;just when It ia beginning. A fellow told me he had tried It, and stopped it every time by doing all these things. My brother made this verse when I was a little fellow:
"What Is It to err?
Tto to have s wot era.
And to eob sad to 1
With your fare an wry. Aad to Itftyourvoloshlfrh, So that no ens who bears yew seats tthrh.
a txrr with a m wmi
MMae with isif wi! wU
to
wt some with a areV. waabr. wealy,
wIsjstwujs nt astre-ti "
TlmvdUr.
Ike tMawrwIcarwlss
When t was a little fellow they used to eaU me Fretter-and-Growler, because I cried so much, and my grandma used to tell me stories to try to cure me of crying. I will tell you two of them:, When grandma was a child there was another child lived in the next house. He was a boy and his name was Jerry. He cried so much that when the people
about there heard any strong noise they would say: "What's that noise?
Jarnr nrriturf" Mo mutter If it was a
eow mooing, or a cat squalling, or a don howliair. they would
saw: "What's that noise? Jerry
crying?" He cried when he wa being dressed, and when he itad hut face and
hands washe r, ensu tor tin tigs to eat that be mustn't hare, and cried to go .0 places, and for what he wanted, if he Maalda't have It: cried If he felt downs
cried If the boys laughed at hhn, and if they just touched Mm without hurting kite? blwdlw aav. ha would err about it.
ho would erv beoauM they oniled him cry-baby. His real name wu. Jeisjaainh, and when the boys found that out they
aeedtosay:
WlWeH Mne. Willie was visiting Ms grandmother, who lived in the country. He thought he was iiuite a man, but he was only seven. His grandmother had a very wise horse named Dobbin. Sometime John would put Willie on the borse'e back while he led him to water. Ut was never allowed to ride him alone, though he often wanted to do so. One day every one ia the house was busy, and no one thought of Willie. He thought of himstflf, the naughty boy! and this is whst he did. He went to the stable iust to look at Dobbin. John
was not there. Willte thought he would take a little ride. He managed to untie the halter and climb upon Dobbin's
back. Slowly be walked the horse out of the stable, in the yard, and to the road. No one saw Mm, He wanted but one thing, a whip! Just then he saw a tree with a little branch growing on it that would do. He rode up. and with nome trouble broke it off. Then be struck iJobbiu a shsrp Wowharder than he meant to. The good old horse was much surprised. He kicked up his heels and started at a quick pace down
the road. Willie couirt not stop mm.
He did his best, but the old horse was
too much for him. The poor little boy
was very much frightened. He dropped his wl lp and clung to Dobbin's neck.
Soon they came w a large mun-pmi-
llc m the middle of the road. Willie
could hold on no longer. He siippc off, and fell with a splash Into the muddy water. Dobbin turned and trotted home. Willie's mother Happened to look out of the window as Dobbin came into the yard. She ran to see what It meant, Willie was missed, and hU frightened mother and grandmother ran down. the road to find him. They were much relieved to see a muddy little figure coming toward them. He was too muddy and too much ashamed to look at them, but be was not hurt. Not very much was said; but for one month Willie, the seven-years-oW, almost a man, had to bo followed about by a nurse, because he wmld not be trusted!--Our Lttlk Om,
rr.Knor nocroa. The fee of doctors i an item that very many iieranns are. iuteradrd In. We believe the schedule for visits is $3.00, whirh would tax s man rammwd to bis bed for a year, and in need of a dally vblt, over 1 1,000 a rear for medical sitmtdsnre alone! An one single bottle of Hop Bitters take In time would save the 8-1,000 snd ail tat
year's sickness. A I.AlY' WWK. Oh. how I do wtati my skin was Msteersnd soft yours," said s lad to her f rnd, Yoa eaa eaetlr atahe It ao." noewerwd tbe rrtend. "Hwr Iwmtred Out nret lady. "Br ushw Hon Bfttcra that mhos .pare, rich bsawt sal MomMlmr heaUh. Hdidnior e,M yeueb serve." otrnx rr nr rmt norrom. ' U It iKMslble that Mr. Godfrey 1 P and st work, snd cured by so simple a remedyr " I assure, you It Is tnie that lie b entirely cured, and with nothing but Hop Btthss, and only ten days ago his doctors save hha up sad mid be must die, from Khmer ted Liver trouble I
II rJMHI imi Smil's Tonic Srrn FOR TMK OURK OF FEVER and AGUE Or CHILLS ami FEVER,
AND ALL MALARIAL
Ths srssrtstaref this eslsbratsadtetse justly slabas for it a saperierlty ew alt reasdiearrer ehVred to the FblbrteeUFS, CMTAW , IFStSr aad PlsWsjmtTssrs sf Affus sad Fever.sr Chlln sadPrwwbeUsrsfshsnsrleaftisadug. ernrstsths astirs Wsstsra aad teathsra seastry te best hist tatthaeay te ths trata sf tb sasrtha thatta as ess whatever will it fsM te sars lf
thsalrstttsasawsttmiywiewessaaer eat. Is s great aay esset a slsf J"" hem taffleiest fbr a ears, aad wfiM have kemsarei byaslMlshsttwltks
Jset rsstsraUea sf ths aessrai aeawa. kewevsr, sradsat, aad fa every sen merow-
tmtm m aare. u lis ase is eesMa m - " del f eraser twssftsr thelaHbbeta shewed, mere eepeeisllr Is dlateuM a
Uafrusdiaf esses, wtwyiy",. wiUast refalrs say aid Mkeeebewehts geedsrder? hesiths ntlt,bewevsrMurs a esthertU -JL1!!! three sr fear de-sssf thsJftejhiHS
ef luLLf TZOXTAH wUlhstaRelsst. ,
DR. JOHN BULL'S SMITH'S TORKJ YWM,f SUUS SAflSAPARlUa, BULL'S WtM SlimtTt. The Peaelar WmeSles ef the mmh
A girl at Long Branch speak with an acquired Ixmdon aooent. " Mo mwL me eawL at five o'clock,'1 sbe
said to the family ooachmsn, in a voice loud enough for a veranda full of peonla to hear. "Caturht what, infamr"'
tliat man Innulrad. A repetition of the
ortler did not make him anderstand It,
and sbe had o say, In plain American nrtHiunriatlon. tbouait she towered her
rnlne and stetmed closer la ooteg so
My cart, stupid: my rmnfe enrt, at Jive
o caoew. ir. 1. mm.
the
au, Wmmr
loo Qosti ufi'.
the people, but
schoolajtMtiir sways the nirere. I
Balers sway
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