The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
r ^PM hm w wmwppi The Cedarville Herald. . W. Hi BLAIR, FuMlstwr, - C E D A RV ILLE , : : OHIO, ' EARLY AUTUMN. Tbecountry lanes are bright with bloom, And gentle airs come stealing through, . Laden with native wild perfume Of balm and mint and honey-dew, And o'er the summer's radiant flush Lie* early autumn's dreamy hush. In way-side nooks the asters gleam, And frost-flowers dance above the sod, While, lapsing by, the silent stream Reflects the hue of golden rod, That flower which lights a dusky day With something of the sun-god’s ray. The grape-vine clambers o’or the hedge In golden festoons; sumacs burn Like torches on the distant ledger . Or light the lane'at every turn, And Ivy riots everywhere In blood red banners on the air. A purplo mist of fragrant mint Borders the fences, drifting out Of fostering corners, and Its tint, ' As halt of cheer and half of doubt, In like th'e dear delightful base Yfhlob robes the hills these autumn days. Jmd strange wild growths are newly met; ' Odd things but little prized of yore, Like somo old jewel well reset, Tako on a worth unseen before, ° t As dock, In spring a graceless wee<V Is brilliant In. its autumn seed. The cricket and the katydid Ripe low their sad prophotlo tune, Though airs pulse warm the leaves amid,' .As played around the heart of June; So minor strains break on tho heart, Foretelling age as yearn depart. Tho sweet old story of the year 4 - Is spinning onward to its close, Vet sounds as welcome on the ear As in the time of op’ning rose. ' hfay life for dll as sweetly wane As comes the autumn-time again! —Dart Fairthorno, In Harper's Bazar. ONE SLEIGH RIDE. Aleck Found a Lost Love and a Wife. ■Where I had just finished a hearty sup and had ordered my horses to be brought to the door, when the landlord of tho country inn entered the room, rubbing his hands in an awkward manner, as If he did not know just what to say. In fact, be was ..so slow about speaking that I removed my plpo from my mouth long enough to exclaim: “ Well?” Still continuing his rubbing, a thing which always exasperated me, he re plied to my oxclamation by saying: “ It is an odd roquost I havo to make, air, considering the state of the roads, but there is a lady hero to-night who is desperately anxious to get. to Brenton by morning.” ___“ Then why don*t sho go?” “ That’s tho point, sir;- she can’ t All iny horses are storm-stayed somewhere in tho country, and you can't hire a team hereabouts, as you may know.” As there was no houso within three xnilos, tho landlord’s proposition Boomed Incontrovertible. i , “ How did tho lady get hero?" I .asked; “ isho came just before you did. sir, with one horse; and tho young follow ’ that drove don’t appear to bare much sense. Loastwlao, he's most killed the horse, and it would finish it for certain to sond it out again on those roads.” v 1 am not naturally disobliging! but to b e asked to take a passenger in your sleigh when the snow is doop and likely to be drifted, and you are in consider able of a hurry, is not tbo most agree able request in the world, especially when the passenger Is a lady, and thero- ' fore more apt to be a hindrance than an aid In case of any difficulty arising on the way. Moreover, sinco Kate Mac: donald and I bad quarreled over the attentions paid her by hot rich and handsome cousin, which* sho either -could not or would not explain, I had never felt in the mood for ladies’ so ciety; and that was—could it be pos sible? two yoars ago. Where was Katie now? I often won dered. Perhaps at her home in Ken tucky; possibly married to the hand- acme cousin. A good many things may happen In two years. True very little, had happened to mo; but then not much Is to be,expected when one Is on a rail way survey outside the limits of civili sation. The winter drive I was now taking was not on regular business, but was undertaken as a special favor for the head contractor, who said that cer tain papers just received from England must reach his brother, a confirmed In valid living near the little town of Bren ton, by a certain day. Brenton was a long distance from any railway; for in the days of which I write, they htd not penetrated everywhere. Hence, X had to travel by team; and so bad had the roads proved, that I was very near being behind time. As It was, if every thing went well 1 would get through in good season. ’My plan was to drive through, If possible, but, If the, rO|ds should prove impassable, I resolved to leave the horses at some (arm-house and walk in on snow-shoes. Under these clwam* stances to be asked to take a lady pas senger was certainly tho last request I could have desired. “ She rsally seems In great trouble, air because she can’t go on,'* said the landlord, as I pauaad before replying to h it previous remark# “ Well, tell her to get ready,” I said. “ 1 suppose l will have to s sy ’yea,' ” “ By the way, air,” said the landlord, “ if you havo not bean over the road be fore, you want, when yon get past (he burnt land, ten miles from here, to keep a sharp lookout to the right for a road that turns off there’ Take that. The straight road leads to Brenton, but nobody live* on i t Ob, y$B, it is traveled some," he added, in response to myiquestlon, ''but in case: you have to leave the team, you know." *, “ All right: I’ll look out. But tell tho lady to hurry; for the horses are com ing.” ' The landlord vanished, and I pro- •pared for the drive:' When I hod donned my overcoats, turned up tho'collar of the outer one, pulled down my fur cap, and taken two turns around my neck with a huge comforter, I caught a glimpse of myself in the glass, and laughed at the thought that my intend ing passenger would not bo able to tell .whether she had a young man or an old one fpr a companion—scarcely,, indeed, whether I was black or whito. Going out to tho sleigh, 1 arranged, the robes to my liking, and was just be ginning to get Impatient to be off, whon an animated bundle o f clothes, with,a suggestion of femininity about It, emerged from the inn-door, followed by tho landlord. “ Hero’s yoqr passonger, sir, ” be cried, adding: “ By gracious, but it’s a cold night!” A muffled voic.o from out o f the bun dle of clothes said something that l.did not quTte catch;’ but 1 made no reply to either. Tho lady took her place in the sloigh, I sprang in beside her, the land lord and tho hostler tucked in the robes, bade us good-night, and we wore off undor the shining stars, with much tinkling of bells, the. sleigh-runners singing over the frosty snow. It was twenty-four miles to Brenton, and the loneliest road ln the State. 1 did not feel sufficiently reconciled to having a 'companion to bo much dis posed to conversation; but, as the wind came with more than unusual fierceness through an pponing in tho trees, I in quired of the lady'if she felt cold. Sho hesitated for almost a minute.before-re plying, when she assured me by a curt monosyllable that she .was not. So ciable—very! thought I, and made no further effort to talk. The going was heavy, but not especially so, for the way lay through the forest and was not drifted.' Four miles brought us to the. burnt land, a long, wind-swept space, whore there were just enough fallen trees along the roadway to catch the driven show, ft soon appoarod that the road boro was a succession of drifts, not deep, but solid, and that, if. any teams had been over it during tbo day, their tracks had long since been filled in. Indeed, I could aoQ|ln tho bright star light that flno snow, almost like ice dust, was moving swiftly over the groat white surface spread out before us. The- borses could no longer trot, but sottled down to. a walk, tho wind whistling through the barnoss and blow ing their manes and tails till .they pro jected almost horizontally. Howpcold It was! In the northwest the bright disk of Vonus shono with wonderful splendor, and tho pitiless wind scorned to oomo straight from tho star. /There seemed to be a^morclless glnro in tho splendid planot, and I longed for a cloud to covor it from sight I shivered under all my clothing and began to feci un easy for my companion. “ Are you cold?” I sboutod, for the wind rendered it useless to' speak in an ordinary tone, muffled as we were, and not facing each other. Sho answered thatsho was,whereupon 1 told her to get as low down in the sleigh as possible^ which she did, and I pulled tho robes over her bond; sho nestling very closo to mo. Somehow this was not altogOtbor disagrccablo, and in my imagination I began to pict1 uro what my companion was like. I concluded that sho was young and beautiful, without any reason whatever except, that It wduld be vastly moro pleasant to be taking care of such a girl than of ono who was old and ill- favorod. The wind-swept stretch of road was six miles long, and when wo had gone about a third ot the distance the iiolsCS stoppod. Looking ahead 1 found that the drifts had deopened and that they were standing in It up to their bodies, I urged them a little, but soon saw that it was of no use. They only plunged in a manner to endanger thomsolvc-s and the sleigh. There was but one thing to do—get out and break a road. Telling my companion to crouch low In tbo sleigh I coverod her well with tho robes, and going In front of the horses began to tramp down the snow. The poor animals stood shivering in the wind, and I worked with all my speed; yet it was more thin an hour, I judge, before I had a track made for them. When I returned to tho sloigh 1 was thoroughly heated, and as wot from per spiration as if I, had boon plunged into water. I knew 1 was running a fearful risk in sitting down in that piercing wind, but there seemed to be no alter native; so, protecting myself as well as posslblo from the blast, which seemed to grow in strength, X urged tho horses along. As they proceeded slowly my companion threw the covering from her head and said; “ You must have got heated, working as hard as you did, and you will take cold unless you tike something at once# If you sit there till the cold strikes you you will die.” The voice Seemed to havea tr^ce o f tears In it, hut that was doubtless dud to the fact that she herself was' far front oomfortable. " I do not think there is any danger,” 1 said. “ But I know there is,” she answered# Then throwing down the' robes she .00 stood up in tho sleigh end added: “ Give me the reins. Get down (here out of the wind and cover yourself up." “ I will do nothing of the kind,” I re plied. “ You must,’ ’ sho insisted, “ or you will die," At this moment a shudder passed over me, and I realized what truth there might bo in her words. Sho di vined the reason for my silence and said: “ You kuow I am right. Oh, why Will you not do what I ask?” “ But you—’’ “ Never mind me, I will be all right; besides, it will only bo for a' little while.” A second shudder, worse than the first, roused mo thoroughly to my dan ger, and, protesting that it was only for a minute or two that I .would avail ray- self o f the shelter of the sleigh-box,. I crouched down and allowed her to cover me over. 1 was soon shaking like one in an argue-fit, growing hot and cold by turns. How terribly slow we seemed to be golngl Two or three times I tried to ' ise and take the reins, but was unable; and my companion assured me each timfkthat she was hot cold and was do ing famously—the excitement kept her warm, she said, ld id not believe her then, and I know now that what she said was not true—that she suffered terribly; but I did not know until the'y told me, weeks afterward, at the hotel in Brenton, that she took off her own wraps to make my covering heavier; for I. was insensible' when they lifted mo from .tho sleigh.. .1 remember when the grinding of the runners on the drifts soemed to cease, and have a con fused recollection of the quicker tink ling of the bolls ac tho horses struck a trot, whon ,. the woods wore reached again; but, of tbo .remainder o f the journey I remember nothing. ■ When, three weeks later, weak from fever, I employed my first conscious minute in inquiring after roy companion, the nurse told me that sho had driven the horses into Bcenton at a gallop. Not knowing about the two roads, she had naturally onough followed tho straight ono. and so for fourteen mileB had driven alone through the forest, with me lying unconselous at her feetr The bostier of tho only both] that Brenton boasted was at tho door looking for tho mail-stago when ho saw a team coming down the forest road at a terrific*pSao, a woman standing in the sloigh and ply ing the whip with all her strength. She had drawn rein before tho door, and springing out, exclaimed: . “ Never mind me! See to him!" and pointed to where I lay, Thoy carried mo into tho houso and put mo to bed, while the lady fell hoforo tbo fire in a faint, caused half by wearlnoss and half by tho reaction of her nervous power. Strange to say, sh o . was not roally much the worse for her torriblo expe rience; but I had waked up in a fever, and for three weeks had been out of my mind. “ Whore is tho lady now?” I asked, but added: “ Of course, she has gone. 1would liko to havo seen her." Tho nurso stepped .aside without re plying. I looked up for somo explana tion, when my eyes rested on the face of Katio Macdonald. “ Katie 1” was all I could say. “ Aleck!” she replied, and took my out stretched band In hers. “ Katie,” I asked, after a tnomafit of happiness too deep for words: “ Is it pos slblo that you wore my companion and savior?” She smiled in her old, swcot way ss sho answered: “ I do not know about my being the last, but I certainly was tho first.” “ And I did not know.” “ But I did,” she said, with a merry laugh. “ And, what is more, I know j you after you first spoke to me.” I looked at ber bands. There was no ring upon tho small white fingers. “ Katio,” 1 said, ’ they toil mo you saved my life; but you bad'better have lot mo loso it unloss you promise to ■hare it with me.” ■ She did not speak; but thelook in bor eyes was enough, and I did not press for an answer. After a few moments, ■be said: * “ You must not talk about foolish things, but burry and get welL Tho horses are ready, tho roads are good, and I want to get you safely on your homeward journoy.” Then, for the first time, my business came into my hoad, and I spoke about It, “ Never mind about that,” she said# “ It was very impertinent of me; but X looked at your papers, found out what you bad to do, and did it for you.” Seeing my look of astonishment, sho added: “ Ob, it was easy enough. You see, we came upon tbo same business. The gentleman whom you had como to see was my undo, and he had written me to be sure to bo bore on tbo day wo ar rived, as it was important that I should sign somo papers in his presence. They wore about property which comos to me when I am twenty-one,” the explained, “ and you had the papers# As it turned out, it did not really make much differ ence whether I got there* that day or not. My uncle thought it did, hut it seems he was wrong; so I need not have compelled you to tako an unwelcome companion for a sleigh-drive. And now, to answer your question: If you are satisfied to trust your future happi ness to a person who insists on going where she is not wanted, and Who looks over people’s papers without permis sion, why, Aleck, you can have ms,” What ensued doss not cen6ern say one hut ourzelvsa—Petefgon's Mage* sins, AMONG STRANGERS. What the Experienced Traveler Galas Bj ContactWith F#»p!e. To oorrectly estimate the real worth there is-nothing like getting away from homo, and being thrown upon one’s own resources among entire strangers. The friends, among whom a man has been reared are rarely ever capable of judging him fairly. They either criti cise h im .unjustly, or overestimate his worth. Thostranger views him with un prejudiced eyes; he perceives his foibles, is cognizant of his .faults, and has no knowledge of latent virtue, which might make him slow tocoud£mii and ready to excuse. Tho wise traveler comprehends this, and, not because he is a hypocrite, but beoause it is required of him, is in bis good behavior. He “ minds his man ners” and his speech. He is courteous to his fellow-travelers, and his self- conceit diminishes r.- pidly. Ho real izes that he is not so perfect & b his in judicious frionds have led him to im agine. He becomes aware of his limit ations, and, instead of an indispensable member of society, realizes that be is only a small fraction thereof. Perhaps this is tho reason such delightful people are to ho found upon cars and boats and in hotels, and-wherever else tourists most do congregate. They may bo divided Into two general classes—those who havo traveled little, and those who have traveled a good deal. Unless ho is a hopeless cynic and malcontent, the traveled personas like those little pebbles which are to bo found upon the seashore. They have boon-tossed about, to and fro, back and forth, until all their angularities have boon worn' aWay, and if not brilliantly polishod, a good deal of smoothing down-has been accomplished. Ho has learned to' be affable, patient and for bearing. The model traveler is the product of time and experience. He has had to serve a long and exacting ap prenticeship When he has spent a cer tain number of years deploring the trains bo has missed, anethamatizing the trunks that w ill get lost, the boats that are delayed—an evolutionary peri od marked by much whining and groan ing and scolding—he at last achieves resignation. ~H o bks learned that those are una voidable incidents, the bittpr to be swallowed with the sweet. The unpleas ant thtngs attendant upon trip-taking aro finally expected, as a matter of courso, and the good.fortune is received as a special manifestation of Providence. There aro, perhaps, a few who can never bo improved, at least in1the brief span of. this mortal existence. Tho ex perienced know them at a glance. They go with a limp, dejooted gait; their eyes are dull and languid, their voico is fretful and nothing pleases or interests. “ Good,” as Tennyson wrote in his optimistic days, is really to be the flnal.goal of ill,” then the poor souls have many leagues - to journey before thoy roach that blissful destination.— Chicago Inter Ocean. IMPORTANT IF .TRUE. DIs- A n A lle g e d , Cure F « r TuborcalOaU eov,ired lJy i'r o f. K o ch . The medical profession in Baltimore is talking about the announcement from tho Berlin. Modical Congress that a euro has boon found for tuboroulosis or con sumption in guinea pigs and probably m map. It has boon so frequently an nounced that a remedy had boon found for this irrepressible diseaso that phy sicians usually greet such a statement with unbelief. This time it comes from Prof, Robert Koch, the distinguished director of tho Hygienic Institute in Berlin, tho man who gave bacteriology a place in scionco. Prof. Koch said, ac cording to the lastrissuo of tho British Medical Journal: “ It Is not necessary, is has often been erroneously assumed, that bacteria should bo killed In tho body in order to mako them harmless; it Is sufficient to prevent their growth and multiplication. I have at last hit upon a substance which has the power o f preventing the growth of tubercle bacilli, not only in a test tube, but in the body of an animal. ' My researches on this subject, although they have al ready occupied me for nearly a year, are not yet completed, and I can only say this muoh about them—that guinea pigS, which, as is well known, aro ex traordinarily susceptible to tuberculo sis, if exposod to the influence o f this substance cease to react to tho inocula tion of tuberculosis virus, and that in guinea pigs suffering from general tu berculosis even to a high degree the morbid process can be brought to a com plete standstill without the body being in any way injuriously affected,” 1One of the officials of tho Johns Hopkins Hospital states that this is the “ most important discovery in medical scionco in many years, and is receiving serious consideration everywhere, as Prof, Koch is among the world's foremost medical experimenters, He has mado a number of Important and successful contribu tions to sc once, and any thing from him la accepted as a fact not to bo. de nied, It now remains to be seen what is tho remedial substance, and whether it will cure matt. That It will is thought highly probable. Every year one-sev enth of the country’s population is car ried off by tuberculosis, so a cure for the disease is an economic as well as a philanthropic and scientific question.” —Baltimore Sun, * A Matter ot Necessity# Fair Widow—I hope, sir, that my property will lie sate in your hands, ' Unmarried Solicitor—There is only one way of being absolutely 'oertain about that Widow (breathlessly)—What Is that? Solicitor—Marrying me.—Figaro. PERSONAL A ND IMPERSONAL. —Improvement societies are being formed in nearly every town in Georgia. —The aggregate wealth of all the rich men of half a dozon American cities is not equal to the sum possessed by New York’s richest citizen. —Signor Giordano Succi’Bfasting r o c -. ord isas follows: Thirty dayB in Milan, thirty in Lisbon, thirty-five in Brussels, and forty in London. He now proposes to treat Now York to a forty-five-day fast. —Leopold IL, King of the Belgians, is a tall, slim and remarkable handsome man/ Ho has a broad forehead, delicate/ features and a fine, full beard that has begun to turn gray. He is fifty-six years old. —The heir apparent of the Japanese empire became of legal age (eleven years) on November 8, 1889. He was appointed, to some honorary office, and given a sword that has been kept in the imperial family since 701. —Ecclesiastical nomenclature has floored many an ambitious reporter. . The other day a Western paper in a small town announced that tho rector of the Episcopal church was about to resign ■ from the. rubric and become an honorary chasuble. —Two eminent clergymen have re cently preached in a Hartford, Conn., church; and their sermons wero so near ly alike that people began to whisper tho awful word plagiarism. But it turned out that they both used the same book of sermon skeletons. UnlesB carefully used, a sermon skeleton is a dangerous weapon. —A modest epitaph'that may be read on a tomb in a cemetery at Madrid: “ Hio jaoet Juan Pinto, the Spanish Orpheus.. When he arrived in Heaven he joined his voice to those of the arch angels. ^Scarcely had He heard it than the Almighty exclaimed: ‘Be Filent, all, and allow the illustrious tenor, Juan Pinto to sing alone!’ ” —Tho venerable Henry W, Paine, of Cambridge, Mass., who has practiced law ever since 1844, still visits his office daily. It was he, the ..Boston. Herald say's,- who originated tho famous re mark, “ It was law until your honor spoke,'” tbo same-having been addressed to tho Chief Justice of Massachusetts, who interrupted,hi *»argument by saying, “Mr. Paine, you know that is not law,” —General Sheridan was troubled all his life by an affection-of the chest General Williams says that Sheridan nearly died in jih°. Yellowstone Park ■ /while making the. trip with President Arthur. His pulso was over 100 a minute and alarmed tho physician,, who was told by the General and, his brother “Mike" that tho normal condi tion of .General Sheridan was always over 100. —John Brown, Bon of John Brown, of Harper’s Ferry fame, lives quietly at Put-in-Bay, O., whore ho cultivates a small vineyard and fruit farm. He is an old man now, having boen ono of the prominont persons In the stirring poriod in which his father figured. lie is much annoyed by tourists, who insiBt upon hunting him up and discussing the exciting events around Harper's Ferry just prior to tbo war. “ A LITTLE NONSENSE#*' —-Some men buy umbrellas, some men achieve them, and,some get wet and swear.—Texas Siftings. —You might as well try to squoleh an Irishman’s lovoof country as undertake to convince ayoung mother that her baby is not “ forward for its ago.”—Ram’s Horn. ' m —It soomsnow to bo very certain that William Toll did not refuse to bow to Gcssler’s hat. What Mr. Toll roally did was to ask Mr. Geasler where ho got i t —Louisville Courier-Journal. —How Should He Know.—Harry— “ Does your girl blush vory much whon you say sweot things to her?” Tom— “ Do you tn lnk l have eyes like a cat and can see in tho dark,” —Boston Herald. —A Trifle *Hard.—Sergeant at tho morning parade—“ Rooruit Meyer, tho next t mo you appear to mein my dream in such a disagreeable way as you did last night, I’ ll g.ve you three days In tho lock-up'.” —Flicgohdo Blatter; —Daughter— “ But, pa, all the peoplo whom Mr. NIcofcllo.has dealings with speak of him as a perfect gentleman.” Practical Pa—“ That's because theyoung follow is such a fool that he nover knows whon he's being swindled.”—Good News. — “ Why are you crying, Frank?” “ Be cause John go t a slice of bread and but ter.” “ John, why areyou crying?” ‘ Be cause Frank didn't get any bread and butter.” “John, give your bread and butter to Frank!” — Humoristischo Blatter. » —A throe-year-old girl was heard whispering to hersolX though quite in* audibly at the table, “ What were you saylngr'tfortrude?” her father asked. “ I was just saying: ‘If no one was tak ing oaro of me, I should help myself to fchoso preserves.' ’’—Boston Transcript —Young Wife (after the dinner par ty).—“ There was a young man here that Wo mustn't forget to invito again. He was a perfect gentleman,” Husband— “ Who Is he?” “Mr. Martut.” “ Oh, yes, I remember him. I noticed ho was the only one who ate any of that pud ding you made.” —Yankee Blade. —They were talking o f howling. “ Aren’ t you afraid, Henry, dear,” she taid softly, “ that such excessive exorcise a ill make your right arm larger than your left?” “ I never thought of it ir that light,” he replied thoughtfully “ Perhaps you had batter change around oh the other Side.”—N. Y, Sun. A. I RSONAL. 1* are being —D In,Georgia. wipin o f ail tbo a d o t American wouh’ . possessed —T u band’. sating reo- provi s,ia Milan, wate: n Brussels,' turpe w proposes —Ii them ty-flye-day skllli . Jolgians, la Add i handsome ly, t ,d, /delicate d that has Beast often Servt Is fiftjr-slx /—A i Japanese ent o e (eleven that ’ >. He was rag o office and •an ea rept In the lcttir. are b iture has iburw i reporter. stage r in a small —I ctor of (he beef to resign a pin n honorary stanc boile . have re* it wi ird, Conn., boil. .ire so-near- from ■ to whisper , draii utit turned Bost' same, book • . - 1 s carefully. next danger dus ter-e pain aay be read ' dray at Madrid: gold he Spanish ber ' in Heaven atio f the arch- sup! . tard it than a d< ‘Be Filent, . spa< ; tenor; Juan ren; Paine, of will i practiced mat fcs his office and ton Herald ' and famous r e - ' the four honor wit a addressed P^- saehusetts, a q t by saying. gra » not law. ” - - roubled all 1 ha the chest: mi t Sheridan tal . stone Park snr i PresidOht let >ver 100 a th< physician, 9tt *al and his ad rmal condl- 1 SO was always cu it a Brown, of quietly at of II; lultivatos a irm. He-is— een one o f a bi C d* n w ' i* d s 0 i* n D l i ‘.1 * i i ;he stirring Igured. Ho , who insist ■cussing the fper’s Ferry ; n s e .” s, some men ot wot and ■squoleh an s undertake latherbaby ?e.”—Rcim’s cortain that s to bow to ill really did re ho got i t 1, w.—Harry—- much when ?r'/’ Tom— ' Ike a cat and an Herald, ant at tho Meyer, the in my dream t as you did tree days in latter. 1 tho peoplo ealings with gentleman.” iso theyoung never knows —Good Nows, ’rank?” “ Bo* *oad and but- eying?" ‘ •Be ly bread and r bread and# umorlstische » Was heard igh quite in* lat were you ather asked, ano was tak* dp myself to i Transcript, 1 o dinner par* , nan here that xi again, He ‘ Husband— wtnr,” “ Oh, oticed he was jr o f that pud* - Blade# o f bowling, ry, dear,” she ' tsivo exercise , &i larger than night of it in ; thoughtfully I hange around Sun# , j
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=