Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 39, Number 47, Jasper, Dubois County, 30 July 1897 — Page 1
Weekly GlWief
VOL. 3).
JASPER, INDIANA. FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1897.
NO. 47.
IN'
0UHED KVKKY KKIDAY, AT JAS-
pKK, lriIolSio('.TY, IM'IANA, OT CLEMENT DOANE. OKKK'K. In Oodkikk Brums..
W'kst Sixth Stkkkt. PRIOI Of BUBSCBIPTIOlT
per Year, )2 Ntiiutiers, Postpaid, l.u.
g, (rtT MM " proportion.
BATES OF ADVEETI8ING. ......... i. ..... tool ..iinu
10 lines 11.00 lor tirst insertion ; .mi-. I . . 1.. ... H..II ( i nunrl i. .it
For yeuriy
tracts
titers. ( i iM M ERC I A 1. AND JOB WORK Of all Kind Promptly nnl Neatly ex
mm at ubhui raicst.
We invite inspection and htiHinesH.
W. C. T. U. COLUMN.
CONDUCTED BY MKS. M. I.. IMBlts.
THE CONFLICT.
By Rev. Elmer Smith, Read at a Meet injc of the Rpworth League.
Columbus, Ind.
e arc prone to look at tin re
OHM of hi. agents. Tin? stately palace- of hell are all along our streets. There is ju-t enough heat in the front for tin- beautiful So won to grow. By the way, Satan tpendt a great deal f money beautifying these reetibulei of hell. Kven a littlle ways hack the elegant curtains and fixtures are QOt scorched, hut the smell of hriinstOBS pervades the place-, and the sickening roar of
. the s ething, raging "lake" is heard
Milt, and nut at the cause ami prog- w -11 Pack in tin- "palace.
ress of Conflict. Kvery one knows A young lawyer enters with the result of the late war. hut how companions.
. . . ' .1 i. i .
i..: ...i- ..,.. mi iiiiv . In. hit., t i. einiscs nni sum i usi eiiowgn nt.u u ;is
Hiurii priii inn Iii" i it i ' "ii ij i iv . h - - m w
will le made to regular adver
hi:
PROFESSIONAL CARDS. M. Ml I.BI'RK. M. A. KWKKNKY.
ULRIKE A AWKRflBSi ittorney s at Law,
JA8PKK, IINI., j HI fjaJtlM lath Court of iuiu Md
I (dJoiniliK miniH'. l urm umi ' " en to cnlUH-tloni. ! nrHI K .lnok-on St., opioiilt flril...!" County Hunk. Dec. t, TO. W. E. COX, ittorney at Law, I A8PER, INDIANA, l'r.... .vitiiiK Attorney for th lltli JmlL-lul n ..... ..f ,i IH nil. nil In lilt V i'IV ll
i irfu ii. im . iii ...... ..... tiu-.ii. -H -iitriiHti cl to him In any MMtMJf -r
"oflkie In sPny .Cm iMlMlMg I'otiiu- s.iuare !. . VJ-IV W. A. Tr-ylc. W . Hunter. TRAYLOR & HUNTER, Attorneys at Law, ,JASIElt. INDIANA. V.'lll practicf in ti e Court of IHil.oi and 1 11. in In i-mintlen. . ,rliHt(.(. ov.t Imbol County statu H April S, TO. BRUNO BUETTNER,
attorney at Law,
And Notary Public, IASPKH, IISlI-VIN A,
VIII nractic. la thf Court of iHiboi and
'orry countlt H. Indiana. Jan- . ernt. P. B. WOODS, D D . S , OPERATIVE DENTIST, JASPER. - INDIANA.
s.oo er of tkcth
in
nm-i-M nt ihm mUhtif strife :ill till' trollt to pcl'llllt the CXIstenC" ol
thromdi those dark dnvs of the nil- fl0W0l. This (lower" of the grad-
tion's history'' uating class has noticed the peculiar
The conflict of which I will) to ,mi,1 lmt &v "t know it is bumspeak to-night i-that of the home "g brimstone. He is fascinated. Mid smil lu-ainst the tiendi.-h traffic He Ukos a dainty glass of port.
in intoxicants. Again, and ha passes the lovely l et ..... oict'iir.. vim n fw clr-ohenile curtsina. His olifactorv
llic nil one nerves are deadontd now to the odor
,,f the onrhundr d and twsntv-fivfl f brimstone. Kach time he goes a
- j , . . . I ( t mi e III
tnousand souls that yearly till the nimwr nack. i ne man tooa
lias lett his taee, his speeches at the hJbar are looi brilliant; he loses
trunk.
case in urt : be goes home Don't varnish the truth, ay "under the intluence in
Don't
strong
yearly
gravel of drunkards. A voting mother tit rocking in
easy chair ; a beautiful baby hoy in her arms, he smiles in his innoMnM B.VM1 coos in Iiis hal.v DPIfM.
A mIom id lie.'ird tin- ViillllLf futhar drink," or "intoxicated," hut use
enters, buoyant with health nd the right yv.,rd drunk and en, phasie happiness, and together the parents t ; He then tries to "MM3 fondle and caress their hoy and !'." but again he talis. Again build fancy castles of his future. ',an(i again he r.-e- only to to down The years pass on we sec I man n bofort hit mighty foes. 1 nn. ,.f ,.,wl,n.. ,.,. w..,inl in, said foes. Are there more than
aasv uAa4fc;iinnj yi t uiiiu i.iiji , . , Tl.e orcliestr... strik.-s in. t li.M'rmi.l 'g in llVldlially
m..r,l, Hriirl.r i of el 1 i "en t man I v I COIllpush his overthrow. IheUevil,
WITHDRAWS HER SMILES.
HOW A COUNTESS CHALLENGED QOD.
Mr. Chaonoey M. De pew has just returned from England. He -ay-that the feelint in that country
towanl the I ' nid d States is unfi iend-
v now, while a rati ago it was DOT lial.
A Seed Forced Open Her Willed Tomb on Which Was Graven Her Defiance. "In the town of Hanover, in !ermany," Evangelist Moody writes in his it i hie Class discourse in the
THE YOUNQ OIRL IN SUMMER.
Not
There are thn
n 1 con h n
i work
d to ac
"o f O ' ' I . I I . . 1 . I
mmA Iwrnnlifnl ,w.li..rr4J HH' . . iL V ' fM II 1 ' U i , HUM Ul
ytmii 111 iif iiii in utuiiui, vuniiM UL , young ladies enter, a happy proccs- b-pmr tralh- have tonned a Corporasion. Speech after speeck hashed. tl,,n- t,R' bject of wind, is to exmade and applauded ; Oowen hav- e .amre whisky for aonkand money,
I - - - - A - - J At.. .
So long as the I'nited States con- August Ladies' Home Journal, atntt to everything proposod hyj' thereis buried a (ierman t'ountKngland thev can expect to have 'ss who denied the existence of the friendship of that country. (Jd, and ridiculed the idea of the Saving adopted a single gold Btand- Insurrection. To further show her arl in ohediem e to her suggestion, contempt fof Christianity she orand having considered an arhitra- dtred that on her death her grave tion scheme which would have been should he budt up of solid masonry wholly to her advantage, England and covered hy large stones bound .as naturally in a good humor together hy iron clamps. On this toward the I'nited States until she ton. h was engraved her defiant found that the arbitration tönerne hallenge that throughout eternity was not to be pasasd. Then she he- this tomb should never be disturbed, earns hottUe, and this feeling has Hut one day the seed from some been increased bv many of the pro- tree, either blown by the wind or visions of the Tariff Hill now under t arried by some bird, became lodgditCUttion. ''1 in a small crevis of the tomb, Mr. Depew saw that the English where soon it sprouted and began peopls cared nothing for the fulmi- to grow. And then, as if Nature nations of the prest M long as im- bad seemed to mock the haughty battadoi Baytld was there to as- infidel, she juietly extended the -ure them in his eloquent speeches delicate root- of that seedling under that the government of the United the massive blocks of stone and States did not sympathize with the slowly raised them from their place, sentiments expressed by the news- And now, although scarce four gen-
papers, hut that the President and erations are passed since that tomb
high ollicialt, as Wi as the wealthy was sealed, that most insignificant ciastea of Society, were in sympathy seedling has accomplished what with the measure which England (ii Himself was challenged to acdesired. It would seem that Am- complish." bassador Hay has not been lavish- ,, " '. ,
ianv amusing stones are 1010
One has
ing such
s.oo
0..1.I K.ll.nit
......I l v.. , ii .ii.l Hrlilffp work
hMlal'tf. Utt CtlMt anltrtai UgM
ii nrk vuiritiilrril Trrm. B1
. sii.ro. MiUW'l IUrdwr lore iu(Ul U. 186 ly
nable 0S)m
5. 5. STEWART,
RESIDENT DENTIST, Smith sid of Public Square, Spay.l BtoOfe. JASPKII. - - INDIANA operations flmt-elass as recommended
-11 work trnaranteed. Specialist
Crown and Bridge work, liw. 6. iw-ly. DENTISTRY
on
Dr. 13. A. MOIBYi
Resident Dentist, aUNTINOBUH, IISL. i
I Tr.iili.ra I.I. nnf....inl .-rV il'.'H t). II
PdiR Hi.y work in the il.ntal line, hiI roiui.tH to ive it his elnnoxt tt t n t H m . k"l' pliitt work Mpeclally -olii H.-.l. und nil urk wMrrnted. Ajrdulnbrldic TowiiMhip inn1tee's Notice. The undtrNignd, TrusUe i HmnWidjp. town-hip, DotMjie county, will toi to Town-hip BSStetSI on Stttuniny Jevry week, tU k rank H't'n othce on orth M&inatreet, btwtwn Kigtith and 'th, in Janper. The Townwhip U S nd lndUna,Hcli(Kl BooSJ t name rW. VVlLLlAH SHLUkK, TrimUJO. Ao It, 1SB6 f.
mm
EMI
.N DCCÄBIDNÄL
-AND AN OCCASIONAI i MEAL Alike in that Neither Does I Very Much Good.
Wimm REGULARITY
,STHK RULE FOR BOTH
1
kinuly encoiiring worm penned on the daintily perfumed cards attached. All have ipokeo hut one. In almost breathless silence the vast
audience watched the valedictorian
as tie advances to make the closing
address of the commencement exercises of this larn class, just tin-
ishing ita college course. All have made such remarkably good speeches that the audience wonder how he can excel. His grades show that he has excelled
all others in his class work, and thus
he is honored as valedictorian of
the class. The middle-aged gentlemen and ladv are all attention now ; thev have listened with interest to the speeches, but now their hoy, the baby boy of our story, is advancing ready to speak. The parents' hearts throb with pride as be proceeds. He is master of his tubject. He lifts his audience step by step, till he (doses in a blaze of glory. For an instant intense silence reigns, then jieal on peal of applause shakes the very foundation of the old college building. Flowers have been thrown to the others, thev were
showered in lavish extravagance on
him, till he seemed floating in an
ocean ol flowers, l tie proml inoth-i
er embraces her boy ; the three go
home together. In the twilight thev talk of the
future, and a bridge of fancy spans from earth to heaven, and the moth
er sees the angels of success come
Hitting across to crown the future
of her son. He enters his profession with high and noble ideas of his calling. Let us leave them there in their happiness. We shall go hack several years. The nation is in need of revenue. Its legislators cast about to provide
a ..... rwi a l
a means to nam money, i ney decide to legalize ( ?) the traffic in in
toxicating beverages. Did I say
legalize it? The nation says ho, but (iod says: "Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it ifiveth his color in the cup, when
1 1 i oootii it uil f nrurhf At t La 1 riLjt .(
11 iii''" iii iiwii niiiii. iii . i in nar t j
past . since
were
eminent and the saloons get the
money.
His hi one g a thing of the Mother and father have long
been laid to rest, ami if truth
written on
read ; ' Rum
slew them
But d not the people isy this
the land of homes, the nation that protect! boost? That is what they tay, hut localised saloons, and pro-1
politician figured,
and we venture to repeat it localise
we think it worth preserving. The peer, for some offence, was called out Of the politician and promptly responded to the challenge. On
arriving at home again after the
Q H . . t U ill...!) tlm UriilJi
' ' I - Upon III1 I 1111 . . . .,
... . Piinnri'ttu vlii i iw mir
v-1 i o nivu tun' n in wiiiiv iioi a ill 11 l with the rejection of the Arbitration recently been told in which an Eni
Treat v and' the Turin" Kill whirh dis- ,,sh Ieer anU a
. j ... .. criminates against British products, has revived the feeling of aversion which the English have felt tor American ever since the Revelation. Mr Hollow's imi.rowsions !r nr.-
donbtedlv correct. So long as the d.u,1 his lordship gave a guinea to
United States are willing to defer to Uw coachman wtjo DM unven V.,u,i, o..r.r..wt;..n i nmrvlhinir to 8111(1 from the gTOUnd.
smile of unv' ' aipears m nue oeen nu c.
ceptionanv honest, siniiue man
He was surprised by the largeness c .-J J :l
i i... .I..,. .:n ........ ...1 o.. 1... oi me sum preseiueu aim sain.
tin w.i v mil limit: nur uic iici- , ,, , ,v, 1 'Mv lord. I only took vou to .
i' i ooiLLiii' iii "i on- i"-oiPii- ji mi- T " , - , United 8tatet will attertittelL when XM' " I.know' that- But l e we shall have a financial policy of 9tÜamt.k fr bringing ine back ; not
ammsltd by England's tor takl,,K m" oUt- enjoyed the
him
The
orcM. :m l lrum n tl.V(.,lll( England's smile of then tombttonei it would ;1)lI;ri,v;l,. ,ut u it woltll havin ... damned then son, and Rt the rice we must for it?
, . - r . . 1 1 t . uof r
tected homes never did, neve u.U. intcrfcrence, ami when the Ameri- JW holn(l niuch' hu not nml nnenv . i . . v t i i . . . I . ...... J . . 1 '11 . . I. a I .
and never can exist under
banner. ti... at i .1 .
I .1' ...-.,, . OIM Ml, , , ! . f (. ,
modified by concessions or disturbed,.
th.
one , . ... .. .... i. . inve out. lhat in what nav von
lent Monroe will again become a for Harper s Round lable.
over the "land of the free and the
home of the brave ; " hut over the
Punt ot rn m and the hovels ol its
in jinv v;iv b viinwvi II,- I ,.nr..r
I " J '-J ' " "
slaves
This drunkard, for drunkard lit
is now, dies at last in the torment -of delirium tremens, and the wife and children are thrown on charity. This picture is not overdrawn. OfM hundred and twenty-live thousand men die every year from the effects of rum, and the men of this nation vote to continue the partnership with the devii to fill the coffers of hell.
Oh, this terrible revenue! Shall
we continue to pay it, not draw
ARBOR DAY PROCLAMATION.
Governor Mount Reflections
Indulges in on the Day.
Some
Mrs. Rorer's Tomato ketchup. Mrs. S. T. Rorer, the famous
cooking expert, gives this, her favorite receipt for making tomato
ketchup, in the August Ladies' Homa Journal: ' 4 Use half a bushel of sound August tomatoes. Wash and cut them into pieces. Cook
Governor Mount has issued the l'nt,.v fur h:,lf an hour' then press annual Arbor day proclamation in through a sieve. Cook again for an which be designates Friday, ()t.t. hour ; then add one ounce of ground 29, to he observed as Arbor day I0!8, one ounce of mustard, one throughout Indiana. In his pru. gill of salt, half a pound of sugar. ... ..mi . . f . . . ...... v .... 1. a a.
Clsmation the governor indulges :n ;,,lu 'I1"" v.ui,,. vu mm ..liilosni.l.ie r..ile,.ii,ia rv,n. the pioiHT consistency : add five
1
The Uacoaveattoaal Outdoor Life
Without its Dttfera. Edward W. Bok, writing under
the caj tion of "Breaking Down tl s
Fences," gives some wholesome and
sensible advice to young girls in the
August Ladies' Home Journal, and
sounds a warning against allowing
them too much freedom of action too much liberty. Mr. Bok dis
cerns that summer brings greater freedom to young girls than any other season, and presents to them
many more optortunitien to un
consciously break down the fences
the barriers of the best and wisest deportment. "City girls," he contends, ''often think that they
are freer to do things in the country
or at the seashore than in the city.
Little licenses seem so much more natural in summer when we live an
outdoor life. We feel that we can be more unconventional. We can
be, but it is just when we are most unconventional that we are in great
est danger of going just a little he-
vond the point where we know and
ought to feel we ought to stop. It
is a magnificent tribute to a girl s character when she can be unconventional and yet preserve in every sense the dignity of girlhood. That is what commands the highest respect for a girl. It is a very fine line which divides unconventionally in a girl's deportment from a certain license and freedom of action, which is so fraught with danger a very, very fine line. And yet on one side of that line lies a girl's highest posessions : herself respect, and on the other side her loss of it. That line is the fence, and a girl cannot be too careful about removing one stone from it. She may think it smart or clever, or not very harmful, if she just seeks to remove the small stone which lies on the top. But in that very act she shows lack of cleverness. It is the clever girl who can leave the first stone untouched. That is the cleverness which wins the only respect worth having: the inner respect of herself and the lasting respect of others.
And when she is a few years older, when things assume a different asjiect to her, she will look back to that summer time when she heard
the warning voice of her parent, and,
although she did not understand it, thank God from a full and grateful
heart that she heeded it. No great
er satisfaction than this can come to a woman : the consciousness that she preserved, at all times in her girlhood, the precious possession of her future womanhood. And one little slip can dim that satisfaction."
but pay it with human souls? Our
supreme court has virtually decided
. cerning the propriety of
the aay as louows :
"The rapidity with whi
observing dropi of oil of nutmeg, and the same of celery, or a tablespoonful of cele-
otir ry Htet. Bottle, cork and seal."
MEERSCHAUM.
rapidity with which
. . t , . i
th tn. Hi. hm- ,.mv..wiii,; I inauve mn'sis are nemg destroyed
Vv t 1 l v " Ol UUIIIOHUI.I . . nn.l vet i,rfessinfr (M.ri.ii.. M,i should c.Ul-e deep concern. Many
ministers vote to sustain that which "f V'" "aionf.of the old world have The name of meerschaum originali;.,d nJ the wm..-...,.o ;..ti f o,.. realized the disastei that has attend-, ly comes from the Turkish term
I nited Still, .s l.nvo s n',1 ,,r. ,vr... .r i''1 t,lf! destruction
( ,.. v,n. do it and heiniwicent ' v. by the passage of wise economic' given the mineral, which is
' 1...., ..... .i. ..t :: r
nannnl I . u-ill I, I I 111 c " ' " oui.iuij; mu iiuim-i wiouuei ui un em i"-uion in
" i".u . . . ., . - - .. . .. i - .
ling oi trees, many ot me states of pentuie. at the place where it was
is the name
but
sir; vou
you responsible for your vote.
Hon. W. T. Zenor, of Indiana, is one of the clearest thinkers among
t'ie new members of Congress. Judge Zenor was on the bench in his State for many years and it is evident that his judicial training has more than fitted him to take a front seat in that wagon, which is reserved only for intellectual mind? of some weight. In the world of politics, w here the machine rules, we do not think the Judge would cut much figure, hut in that arena where
" state-mien meet, and mind backed
ser-ii... ... j i. .1 .i l u
o mnuuiii hnui Bwy, e sunn ex-
Do I blame tho saloonkeeper?
Do I biame the drunkard .' Not half N much as I bla.ne the man, professing Christ, who votes to perpetuate a party, or empower with office any man whose principles or example are in harinonv
with or even friendly toward the tiendish business. The Bible says: "At last it biteth like a serpen! and -tingeth like an adder. ' ' This nation has deliberately made
the oontnact. ami the "bite" has
this union now recognize the necessity for planting trees, and the observance of Arbor day is becoming general. "It seems eminently wise and propel1 thai a day be designated which the people of our commonwealth should be urged to observe
by the planting of trees, vines
llowers. Homes should be made more attractive through the beauty of these natural adornments, to which is added the pleasure of refreshing shade. Fruit trees and
Sj-v ti -wl 1 1.. m I t mm am I ill a J
originally discovered, and where it Ji : Washington ews I etter was exclusively mined for a longl ' n "B100 eW8 VmWt time at Brussa, in Asia Minor. TUo . . ,vi, m .... ... , I he largest melon grown in the At the present tune meerschaum a l -- u: , . ...
r i . . i . j j . .Ji'uiu v 1 1 . ocar.u nan riuiiiiüu 1IUII1 K tniin.l mile i 1'irlliprin ..nH in p in. . . - . . .
Hideral
being
More than lOJMM) men are work
Vi ',u,,k " ' f J. ' ! ' Atlanta for Washington, where it able quanU ties, Kski-Suehr Wednwd; and i,,nnu!TkwIr" Jswntsd to President McKinley at re than 10,000 men are work- ,K;.a , M Tu
1 ,1 , .vi t . V.l.: nmic .. .tl lie UICIUII TV fin ami ing there in some 1 ,000 shafts, there mtnm' S n . .aJK- --
being a solid UyersomtaO feet in V 5 ZZTZm . . P J " i l ht iw-tlinilu mi. I took thn nrifa rvf
$25 offered by W. N. Mitchell,
southern agent for the B. & O. road.
it hiteth like a serpent and stingeth
like an adder."
Do you say this passage applies
only to individuals? Let us see.
Did not our lawmakers turn to the wine for revenue? I guess they as
our agents "looked upon the wine,"
and in tue act of legalizing (?) the
ICV VWIIl IO' 1 UM Wll "MIL , 111 l.i 1 ome in the I ah r question, tbs tariff J?1 bf' 'ivoted, both for
j i men m-miiy aiiKi. lor ineir irilll. Towns and cities should lay the
foundation for future beauty and
otiestion, and many others, whii
will be settled, only when we, a nation, settle the liqaor rjoettion, May (iod give us grace to redeem this land from the blasting breath of hell, and wipe from the nation the curse of drunkenness !
Satan in pleased if he can keep us
O B X ....... , 5
saloon we became a drunken nation ?.KI"K "l u" ,;l"u nM'1 ",nn,ll,r.v
hills as tfie rohhers ot the laborer.
whib
the real thief alcoholism-
d
is
VVho says this is a Christian nation? ft i- f:iUe l.UMtdv fulse It is tbr
devil's own language that is used I"l",M r" Vy in,we f' .. .
When it it said that we live in a Iü" mim a s
Christian nation. The Bible says r"! "is ears anu cup nis mane, mti
that no drunkard shall enter the 1S a an" T" K1" '
kingdom of heaven. Now, if a driinkur.l cinnot l.e i. Clirislinii
neither car. a nation that lets con- l h.,tmr trnllic Don t wa-tetunc . I. i.i.tiiiw t,. ,,i.t Hu. toil ,df 1 . . Lili
Iro.du , main i ennbun u w. o ''1,IIIIK l'M"1 ""i VW Rill
l I tU l IV I I Id r ' Ui iiiironu i" . .
The mass of evils ami national rjuettiOM are only antiendages ot
a i ü
Christian nation. Neither can it b
the beatta and
called such, only by the devil or naturally.
the
VV.
t .il
K.
will dit Smith.
attractiveness through the location
of parks and the planting of trees.
-limns and vines. me children ol
the public schools, by appropriate exercise's, should observe the day in thus beautifying school grounds. Many harren spots in the country may be made attractive and mnde the basis of future profit by putting into äfftet practical examples of this honored custom. Let us all appropriately observe this day, and I trust that the work of individuals may lie supplemented hy the efforts of societies, communities, and especially by the teachen and pupils of our schools." aarSubscribe for the Coubibb.
about 2(K)
thickness at a depth of
feet under ground.
Smaller ipuontilie.': of the mineral
are also found on the island of The illustrious John Randolph Negroimuto and near the Thebes of once said: 44 When I try to make antiquity in (ireece. myself an infidel, I fancy that I feel Meerschaum, when found, is the hand of my mother ov my head neither white nor hard, but is and her voice sounding in my ear, formed of a doughy, soft, light gray aH ,e taught me to say, 'Our Ftthmass, which hardens when exposed ,r, who art in heaven.' No child to air and becomes considerably ,.V(-r started out in life a skeptic, lighter and whiter. I'hila. Record. The child believes everything told ! it until it has been deceived by parAn old Ceorgia darky, on being ents and persons who fail to keep asked if the w hale swallowed Jonah, tiloir promises. Infidelity begins replied : es, sub j Jonah didn't in lhe fan)iiy when the fir8t lie ia have nowhars else ter go: kase U, when the firgt pPonn8e B Drolt. house rent yvuz due an' de bailiffs rri( an,i wnen deception is practiced wul arter n"P" by old heads. The American. An American who has been vis- Her christian name was Mary, it ing Barops says that the people in ami she took the r away; ehe wantthis country Iniil tlnur jHjtatoes too ed to be a fairy with the lovely long. In the foreign restaurants name of May, then a young man the chefs leave a hard spot in the came and wed her, in a year his middle of the potato, which is said name was pa; be took away the y to add to its sweetness. and made poor Mary, ma. Ex.
i
