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About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 15 Dec. 1899, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1899-12-15/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
< £ t, t 1“ h ; l I r- h* Th* tMfMg* of glove* to now M l f prom alga ted. Young non have tone aadsrettod with loir and trembling toe language of the ntttan. A dear trust with a capital of ♦15,- 000,000 has been formed. This Is prob ably tbs only recent trust whose prod uct ft expected to go up in smoke. A man In tha Bast has deserted his wife because she made unpalatable custard pie. Yet there are wore* abuses of the pie hablt-ahe might, tor example, hare made them of dried ap ples. _ _ _ _ _ After the wars In the Philippines and Bouto Africa and all other disturbing Issues are settled It will probably be found that Don Carlos has kept pre tending right along without missing a day. . Tbs causes for whatever decline In Interest In base-ball may have come about In recent years are to be found In tbs attitude of the men at the head of base-ball—their petty Jealousies and their failure to run the game In the Interests of its patrons; la syndlcate- Uin, a system diametrically opposed to true sportsmanship; In the transfer ring of games and buffettng about the players of certain dubs, setting the regularly provided schedule at defi ance; In the rowdyism which goes un rebuked and In the jnlsersble method of appointing and aslgnlng umpires The resemblance between Admiral Dewey and General Grant Is strikingly dose. The merit record of the one In the naval academy Is almost Identical with that of the other In the military academy. They were at about the same place above the bottom of the class, they were deficient In the same studies, and their conduct marks were much alike. The one reached the highest po sition In the army and the other In the nary, la modesty and dignity of per sonal bearing they are singularly alike. They resemble each other also In their disposition to award full credit to their subordinates In every achievement Their manner of speech Is Identical, to direct, terse, right to the point, and In plain, vigorous English, such as the plain people can understand. In an ether respect they ere also alike—name ly, in securing the cordial admiration of all foreign powers with whose repre sentatives they tamo In contact. Both of than), la the words of Dewey, ’‘scratched gravel,” and bad their re ward. Victoria Nyania, probably to connect at Tabeca wtth tha gn a t “Capo to Cairo” read. The Interior wlB also he ponouatsd hy roads now being planned, thus giving access to all por tions of the continent Tmaaeoatto- ental lines from west to west win Join Portuguese territory on both sides of the coattasnt and the Germans will probably alto have similar meant of communication between their settle ments. At the north other lines will skirt tbs Mediterranean coast and thus Africa will ho banded to civilisation by Iron rails and the telegraph, and the cohqueet will be complete. s Revenge. n There hat been eome controversy of tots relative to the authorship of “America,” or, more properly speaking, of ”G«d Bars the King.\ It le settled beyond all question by the highest unaleal authorities, such ts Chappell, Ohrysender von Fallereleben, and G m s, that both word! and melody were written by Henry Carey, and that he sang It himself for the first time at a dinner given In London In 1740 to celebrate the capture of Porto hello by Admiral Vernon. J. Christopher Smith, Handel’s amanuensis, who wss proseat at the dinner, teetlfle* to Car ay’s authorship. The Rev. Samuel F, Smith, who oompoeed the word* of “America,” and borrowed the melody from a book of German songs, Is re- sponslbls for the general impreealon that the melody earn* from German sonrees. It to purely English, and was not onto borrowed from the English by Beethoven, but wae utilised by Schu macher for tbo German national an them, “Hell Dir Im Slegerkrans,” and by Hrtnrieh Harriee for nee In the Daatah hymn, “Hell Dir, d*m Lichen den.” It to an American national hymn only In text If human existence Is relieved of its Struggle, the Mew York Sue to afraid that the human race will multiply too tepidly for the food producing abilities of tho eorth and that In consequence taminee and scourge* wilt come. That to kfalthnsiaa to the core. There le no gWeei t proepect, however of human •xtotene* becoming a picnic. A paucity of children to becoming the rule la many funnies of the middle class, as well ad of the families In the so-called upper chases. If It were not for the tafinx of tbo foreigners to this country A* population would not Increase very rapidly. The “nalHF* populations are Mt totiflptotog at rapidly as they need I* dm The child hearing to, largely per formed by women who a rt foreigners _ I m m e t t f a t o foreign dc smut ’ The State# when foreigners bars net settled la large numbers dur ing the past gnaeraHoa show a com pere Chety low rate of lacreaas la popo- to*to.-Tht ttotem art against popa- tottou eritiptotog to excess of the Ctod predactag eapobflfties of the soil St uhafiH alto he borne to mind that fheSmdtof too food prodactog capabfl- M touedhanrt h a th? as moans been naetoA. lt w S bo reached ody whoa to nfirivato more et groaad and makes i math as to new bar- -‘’♦mmrvtom aa etgkty-aar* farm. V M to r that e ta ha t o o or aet to a ; at the: •*t tbs .<■ *1 Tbompi IkeltonHarriton. tha Amaa lean diplomatic agent and consul gen eral iu Egypt, has an article to tb«| Forum about “Egypt Under Lord Cromer.” Mr. Harrison says that thi native working classes In the tergal cities are fairly well off, but that then It a class for which there Is little or no employment “Crowds of Egyptian youths, half educated, and more or toes well bred, are striving for small gov ernment clerkships, posts in the banka positions on the rail ways, and so on, They ifUl do no manual labor, and they must have what the French call ‘con sideration.’ ” They must have genteel employment Egyptian and American youths aro much silks in disposition If what Collins P. Huntington says of ths latter Is correct He assert* that they are overeducated to such a degree that they acquire a distaste for all labor which Is not “suited for a gentleman,” and that ae a consequence young men spurn manual labor and work when they may have to wear overalls and soli their hands, and compete for poor- j ly paid but “respectable position*. So Mr. Huntington wants the number of year* spent lu the school room cut down, and no attempt to carry the' education of the mas* of young boys beyond the point required to enable them to cope with the practical details of business. But If overeducated American boys and half-educated Egyp tian youth* shun manual labor, because It Is not genteel, and If glrla who have next to no education will not work In other women's kitchens because a so cial stigma attaches to domestic ser vice, then the possession or lack of ed ueatlon does not seem to have much to do with the matter. There appeara to be all the world over a preference for “genteel” employment Perhaps that preference l* stronger to Europe, where a young man would rather starve on the meager salary of a gov eminent employe and have a “social status” than do whet he consider* an Inferior grade of work and earn much better pay; but there are a great many American youths who seriously bellsv* that they would demean themselves by manual labor. Overeducation I* not *o much to be blamed for this aa In- herlted Ideas about the greater respect ability of certain kinds of work. What Is needed Is a crusade agaluat the curi ous classification of work as genteel and not genteel, rather than agalnat this alleged overeducation of which Mr, Huntington speak*. There wea a time when It meant teaching a boy more than hla parent! knew—even If they could neither read nor write—and thus “educating him beyond hie station In life.” THE BRITISH EMPIRE CLOCK. When It t* 13 o'Clock at Grstawich It It 7 OB o'clock ot MoatrooL When It Is 12 o'clock at Greenwich, the relative time both day and nlgbt In the different colonic* of Britain throughout tbo world la Shown by the several hands on the dials. TaotfaL A tttfla tact aometlme* saves a great deal of pain, and every! man whoso duty It Is to select or dismiss employe* will find Its nse as essential to hto owa comfort aa to that of the asm whom he dealt The Mew York Sun tafia the story of a case which eaBed for ex traordinary tact and received I t The conductor was trying the vole* or a young woman who wMhed to se cure a place to t a opera troupe. Tht manager was standing by. data was frail sad timid, her song with aa air of t “How to t t r asked toe OUR wife, Thornton! Why, seems only yesterday you »er* staying my books to school What do boy* know of lore?” And Nellie Rivera glanced Innocently np Into the face of him she addressed— as Innocently as though she bad not known for many a month the question Just put to her had been trembling on hie eager lip*. A hot flush dyed Thornton May’s cheek* at her words. A flash of engsr leaped Into the dark eyes, a moment be fore so tenderly passionate. rfk'Urtl Hearties*I” burst In a mut tered whisper from the young man's wblta lips. Then ho rose with a dignity which seemed suddenly to have sprung lute Ufa. Without even extending hi* band, with simply a low bow of courtesy, be left her, she sitting motionless, the echo of the closing of the outside door ring ing In her ears strangely like a kneil * • • • • • * • “They aay Thornton May la engaged. What wonderful strides he ha* made In hla art!” “Wonderful, Indeed. But who Is the fortunate winner of such t prise?” “A Spanish girl whom h* met abroad. Hla last picture, about which every one la raving, Is said to be her counter part.” Such was the Idle conversation at sn evening party which fell upon Nellie River*' listening ear. And this wa* the meaning of his In difference, when she would have made atonement for the past—for the tolly of a girl, who did not know herself, ami who bad learned the lesson only through four years of bitter suffering, of which this was ths end. “Dreaming, Miss Nellie, and alone? What does this mean?” It was hi* voice which broke upon her reverie, bis eyes resting on her, from whom, at any coal she must hide tha truth. “I am growing old,\ she answered, lightly, “Like yourself I have put away childish things, though, unlike you, I have not tiaumed fresh responsible' ties, upon which, by the way, 1 'believe you are to be congratulated, although you hardly deserve It for keeping such a secret from your frienda.\ “You speak lu enigma*. Of what do you apeak?' “If so, It Is a Spanish enigma, and painted In lovely character, however cabalistic they may be.” “Ob,” a sudden light breaking In upon him, “you apeak of my picture. And does rumor give her to me aa my bride? 1 am Indeed, then, open to yoUr con gratulatlone. But come, aa I am not yet a Benedict, may I not have tble walta?” “And this le my revenge?” thought Thornton May, a* a few hour* later he eat alone In hli bachelor apartments moodily surveying the dying embers In the grate. “1. who fancied her voice could no longer thrill or her beauty move me, have but riveted the chains I thought struck off from me forever. To-night how Indifferently eh# con gra tula ted me upon my supposed en gagement! Had thing* been different how charmingly my pretty model might have helped out my plant I will put the ocean between ui ere, In my weak nest, I once more give her the right to mock me.” * * * * * * “Going away, Mr. May? Have yon tired so soon of your old frienda that j?ou must desert them? But I forget some one Is waiting for you.” “Yes,\ he answered, “1 most once more aay good-by, bat this time, Mlee Nellie, I hope you will add godspeed. I have not forgotten our last parting, though I hope my folly has long ceased to be remembered. Yon were right. It wae a boy’s presumption, and 1 musl thank yon for my leaaon.' This waa almost more than she could bear. For the moment tear* shim mered in the dark eyes, a sob root la her throat but she answered bravely: “It wss I who should rather ask your pardon for the Idle vanity of a girl who knew not the meaning of her own words, but who through them baa been tbe only sufferer. Good-by, Mr. May, and godspeed!\ fib* toe only sufferer? What could ah* mean? For a moment a wild hope crossed bis mlud, to be extinguished toe next aa be glanced Brie to* calm face and tbe eyes whence all trace of teora had fled, bat at-too hall door a moment later be paused. H* would return to dlsabase her mind of tots Idle folly as hit engage ment So, again crossing toe hafl and mounting too statre, b* stood upon to* threshold of to* loom b* had left so short a tlmo before. Bat O, how changed! Down ape* her face lay the figure of tbe girl who had haunted him all tosae years, white sob after sob racked her frame. Hla revenge was In hto hands at tost That Emperor William le keeping a dose watch upon the progress of the '.American army In the Fhlllpphiee la made manifest by tbe maneuvers of the German troops. Funeton’s men surpris ed the world by their wonderful swim ming feats, but Emperor William 1* the 'ouly military man who seems to have profited by the lesson taught by the Kansan*. In the recent maneuvers ot tbe German army the soldiers were re quired to swim through a body of water tn full marching order, rifle and all. Tbe lUuetratlon shows the lngenl ous contrivance for diving, by the use of which German troop* are expected to become even more expert military swimmer* than Funston’i heroes. happiness, Thornton Hay wreaked his revenge.-Spare Momenta. t The moment had corns to mock h aras sto had merited him; but surely to* ' fight (rowing in hto eyes had no moek- Itog ray, as hectoapedtos aobbtog girl .. . ----------- CHIM 9 1 ' IMMHEPf . W H9 MSn» ■ ■: ■ ......... eyes c t toe g irl Set be l i t Kb M y t “Jo thto tow m torih*?\ bo snML ** - Bh t rack tome Mflas sn \Aid tern-ear g i a f h s e a -mas mar pesos afi tils\ massy that? o. rrSIl*. my 'ftito;>tlw l ^ i i t o 'l n i t . me Asst. tB e e s t l Mel Couldn't Fill Mia Teeth. Iu one of the rurul district* of the Borough of Brooklyn Is a little church which pays to Its pastor a salary of fewer hundreds a year than the aver age city clergyman gets thousands. Ills women parishioners, especially on* who poses aa the Lady Bountiful of the church, but whose contributions! scarcely fit the part, attempt to make! up to him In cordiality what he lacks* in fiuanclal support. They surrounded* him at the picnic of tho Sunday school. of the church the other day aud urged him to eat dainties from their baskets Finally Mrs. Bountiful pleaded with him to try a piece of fruit cake that! looked aa hard as the heart of a sum mer girl In October. “1-1 really can’t,\ said the minister. My teeth are not good.\ “O. why don’t you get your teeth filled?\ burst forth the sympathetic architect of the cake. , The underpaid clergyman fastened! bis eye on her and said, with a volcei as dry as a truck garden at the end of jthe drought: “Generally I hive a hard enough) time to keep my stomach filled.”—New •York Tribune. si CHINA'S GREAT WALL. ■(production of ( l u of tho Host Pict ure* of It Kv*r Taken. ' Every one has heard Of the great wall of China. And we produce here wbat Is perhaps the best photograph of It that waa ever taken. It Is well known that this wall Is one of the wonders of buttons on the coat-tails aforesaid—and bit off the starboard aide of the lieu tenant's after uniform. Dewey jumped to hla feel and, well satisfied under the circumstances to relinquish hla coat-tail, ran up the aide of the ship. The “Doctor,” who had viewed <h* pro ceedings from the rati of the vessel, approached him presently with a grin of the utmost width. ‘‘Ah, ba!” he. said, taking advantage of the familiarity customarily allowed him on board, “Perhaps, Massa Dewey, yo’ b'lleve now dat sharks won't bite a pusson. Wbar’s yo’ coat-tail, eh?” \My coat-tail,’’ replied the lieutenant, with his habitual sangfroid, “bis been removed by an act of Providence.” Ths Penalty of Cariosity. A somewhat distressing but un doubtedly righteous retribution recent ly overtook a clerk In the British postal service at Birmingham. Among the packets received at the ofilee one day was one containing a pair of hand cuff*, which were being sent from Derby to a manufacturer In Birming ham to be fitted with a key. The pa per covering of the parcel bed been torn during transmission so that toe handcuff* were eiposed to view. They were an object of curiosity to tho clerks, and presently one of the young men jocularly clasped one of the cuff* around hie left wrist. It wan then that he discovered that there waa no key to nnfasten It The handcuff was on bis wrist “to stay.\ The young mnn went to the police station, and an officer found a key that he thought would fit But In turn ing it round, he broke It off In the cuff. THE IGREAT WALL OF CHINA. toe world. It was originally' buflt to be a defend* against the tofcwstonr of toe northern tribe*, and fwss com menced in the year 214 B. O. Itnlengto In a straight 11ns would be l£86t miles, bat if measured along It* stmnasltles tola distance mast bo Increased to 1,600. It to formed by two strong re- -tatohif vnrfis of brick,-rtetef from granite foundations, too space between being filled np with stones and,earth. The breadth of It ait toe b u s to About 25 feet at tbe top IS foot w fl toe height varles from 15 feet to SO feet H e 1km ootoe wsm B A fi, rnSm •PSE i b k i i f c W t o i Another Dewey Anoedota. At Mobile Bay, after tbe fell o f Now' Orleans, Dewey was t Jaator wtorh’ officer ee toe steam, stoop Tht ship's cook—eMled in s n f l lanes the “floctor”-w a s t oM.darky, with aa extrsas dread of B t tried 1* a s s t Dewey to a ftfltk t» the dsasger «T Atoka* M Dowsy MM oat that thsff wwdd M e A Samaa being. m sslsni toapirtrenan/ taMN^Deweywaa \ _ ' “ W tk fiat i t * m d . a _ _ __ ___ __ ibA eiitol ka harried ‘ *c Now too broken ikey weald'have'to be drilled out, or too baadeaff filed through before!to* clerk could get it off. Tbe day was Sunday, and afi the abopa, Including toe manufacturer's jplace, were dosed. Tbe clerk returned to too poetofflee, sad explained bta plight to to t anpertotendaH Tblg of ficial ordered him to take toe first tnla to Derby toe next morning, explain toe whole drcamstaac* to the owner of toe handcuffs, apologise to h la, and then return to Birmingham and go to the amaafnetarer’a and have to* haad- caff Sled ML A O n flsr Dyspepsia. A yoaag Anatrlaa phyaMaa has dis covered that hypnotism may be nsod ■with saKsmtneasm of dyspepsia. He had a dyspeptic woman patieat who ooedd aet retaia any sort of Bearish- mesa. When she,had heat hyfHttud he arflewd her to eot sad keep dawn m kaarty meal xtfla woCfcsd Ml right JwMftF-Ykp- hypnotic .Mai* M t f t JNt ''who ha* Just constructed *sm e f Ms , “tr*n*porter*\at Bones. The ferry-s* H may perbap* tft calleA-coaskt* of two skeleton steal towers, across which are stretched tv e h o . atrpsf Mari Bone idea of the Inferiority of the' c*ble,■ «*fi.«m lj |x*d to Filipinos and their insignificance as tb* ground on either aids of ths river, compand with Americans can b* had ***w*^1 ***• curve formed by thl* from to* sis* of the uniform. It would,ctbto brid** » * skotetoa bo a good fit for a 12-yetr-old Ameri can boy, and It ts easy to believe' all that baa bees sold concerning tbe di minutive Filipino* after examining thl* nnlfnrm Tbo trouser* t i the uniform are* of red calico and are mad* regular pa- ' m i style, being Ued at tbe top with a drawn atrtog. Along tbe outer seam of tbe leg* are stripes of black velvet. The blouse Is made of heavy cotton material which 1* woven with alter nate pin stripe* of white and* black. Tbe collar of tbe blouse la of red calico and Is adorned to front with two stripes ot yellow calico. Tbs caffs of the blouse are gtoo of red calico aud bear tore* stripe* of yellow. Tbe front of the jacket beers six stripe* of red and yel low calico combined. 1 _____ rauav ar'aobaa. Altogether tbe coatum* looks as If It platform between fifty and sixty yard! might have been designed by some above the level of the river, sufficiently child who had a fondness for bright high to allow of the passage of the The sewing on the garmeuti highest-masted vessel*. This platform colors. ba* been done with a sewing machine, and the blouse ba* been fastened with hook* and eye* and buttons similar to those to common use to this country.— Dei Moines (Iowa) Capital. law a s interpreted . Public parka, maintained at public expense and the buildings and appli ances of a fire department also, are held. In Owensboro vs. Com. ex rel. serves simply to carry four courses of rails, upou which run sixty small wheels In pairs. From these depend thirty steel cables of great strength, upou which to hung * large car—to reality, the actual ferry—at an exact level with the quays on each side of the river and, of course, some distance above the water. Upon this vehicles of all kinds—even trams and oinulbuaee, and, of course, people and merchandise—ore embarked Stone (Ky.) 44, L. B. A. 202, to be pub- An(| (,j. in,.gQS nf ,,|ectrle power, gently lie property need for public purposes, floated over the river to the opposite within the meaning of an exemption qlwy. The movements of the ferry are from taxation. | controlled from n ainall tower at the A fair contract by which a parent top of the car. give* the custody of a child to another person, although uot bludtag upon the minor, to held, In Anderson va. Yodng (8. C.) 44, L. B. A. 2T7, not to be un lawful or against public policy, If It Is hot prejudicial to the minor's welfare, which Is the principal consideration to determining his custody. A life-insurance policy taken out by a person on hli own life for the pur pose of assigning It to another having no Insurable Interest therein to held, to Steinbeck vs. Diepenbrock (N. Y.) 44, L. R. A. 417, to be Invalid. But, If the policy was not taken out with that Intention, tbe Insured mey tell hto policy and give a valid title to the assignee. The cost to the purchaser In posses sion, and not to the seller, who at tempted to retain a secret Ilian, to held, In I’oet Printing and Publishing Oom- pany vs. Insurance Company of North America (Pt.) 44, L R. A. 272. to he tbe value of property Insured under A policy stating that the loss Is payable to vendor and vendee as their Interests may appear, when the seller asserts no claim under Its lien. The ferry and rolling apparatus weigh altogether nearly fifty tons, and to this was added, when the concluding experiments were carried out a few days ago, a load of over fifty tons, which was safely transported. The width of tbe river at thto point to about 150 yards. The work Is a triumph of englnerlug skill, and It, besides, a most slegsnt construction. CHINA’S REAL RULER. The Chief Jsstlos's Rories, Anecdote* of Chief Juetlce John Mar shall generally emphasise the simplicity of hit nature. Like most men wlq> are truly great, he was too generous and unsuspicious to comprehend toe petty device* of small men. A correspon dent of the New York Sun tells thto to illustrate the point: The carriage horse* of the chief jus tice were exceedingly thto, and hto fam ily told him that It wo* currently hint ed that Jerry, toe colored coachman, exchanged too great a proportion of to* horse-feed for whisky for personal use to allow the horses food enough to keep them to t good end eredltabl* con dition. The judge went to toe stable and di rected Jerry's attention to tbe poor ap pearance of the horses, told him of the rumor about bis exchanging oats aid hay for whisky, and thereby deprivthg toe horse* of their necesesry supply of food, and spoke of toe sleek, fat team driven by hto neighbor Brewer. “Lawe, Massa John,” said Jerry, “It’s ths natnr’ of the animals. Look at Mr. Brewer hieaeif, sah; a shot, f a t greasy gen'leman, that ain’t seed hto hoots, after hto feet waa (n ’em, for yeaha, while yoh, sah. to tall an’ roun’-sbonl- dered an’ sees yonr feet all de time you** walkin’; an’ look at hla coach man, thicker through than be to long, whiles I’** only skin an* honest Of course to thin. It's their fat kin’, an’ ws all belongs to de lean kin’. It’s natnr'.’’ Perhaps that to So,\ Said to* judge, reflectively, and wafted away as If satisfied with the explanation. Dswssor Csiprtss Is III, sad Chaass* In tisvsraaitat Are Llksl.v. Out from the walls of the forbidden and prohibited city, where live to* members of the Chinese Imperial fina lly, comes k rumor that the Dowager Empress of Chins has been desperate ly 111 and Mint great chingei are Ini- peudlng w the government of tbe ce lestial kingdom. Tbe fact that ths Empress Dowager and nil tbe member* af the court are absolutely cut off from tbe outside world makes It almost Im possible to get accurate luformttloa about inf of the roytl family. A largo now a s m imfbsss or cbiha . lection of tbe capital city of Peking to surrounded by a high stone well. In side of which are tbe royal palaces and other state buildings. No one but the highest officials, coming on business ot Imperial Importance, to ever allowed Inside tbe walls. Even they ire ob liged to dismount upon reaching the gate to tbe well and proceed on foot to the palace. Nor do toe member* ef toe Imperial family stray outside the same boundary. Only once or twice he* either tbe Emperor or hto mother appeared beyond the wall. Within the blank to the world outside unless the old lady herself directs that toe news be given out Good Bpongem Although toe difference between a good and n bad sponge le very marked, hut few people seem *We to appreciate t Tbe first requisite of a good spongo is that it should be dork in color. The beautiful yellow sponge* commonly If Wishing Were B s r ts q Hey, Httto lassie* wttk eyes ot M m , And brave llttl* laddies with eyes brown! What if a faby 'Mould com* to you And show yes to* way-to Geown-uy ^ flriigftstr WtMtoWI IF* a ' » Town! • lumen and a ware. The natural eriof crs-. '* * ,, km to med‘ni* «•* **• Tbnt toto la to* gUt yonr heart hold* (po{|(et been bleached by it vitriol bath. Which destroys toslr Would you drop your dolly and leavt stoaticHy and makes them wear on* yew boll mneh sooner. And qtot year ftrito* to Arid and filen, 1 i--------a --- — j ----- r Far too Mho «f fsritog yourselves grew Troon C M d rss t* Bond Mnmfi t A mother shoMd take great palm to 1 tench her <&0ften to rend alond ac ceptably. Mneh time sad money sre tfm» expended to eafltinttog tos rstco for atogteg. n d yet qteto aa roaefe • plusroi nmy be gte*i'%f the n trsen. i who reeds atond to a i , _ J f r i an g l O j a i t e n s i t t i < as toe word tsH, far to* Mbs *C betas m l wosmb ate Rsy, irtl* ksrisn sad teddies, too. Stow ten t tolar to * wbnt you would do? T«B a * eh, warns* with sristM eyas. And s i s whs pied on JUs's tofianu ■■'wny.' ; What If htod to to to asms fahp gM*% toyto*' at tom’s teas I W VsBi pBly rsfmdftfltocastofe a t l 1 M t o n A l E - i w m J & A a * : ‘ - ‘ \V - - -- .